<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3740" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3740?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:39:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="5007">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/7864de57bdfb6658e4e9193dc59e90bb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7623becc43f69d96b7223a59519dcef7</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="80328">
            <text>Volume 19, issue 16</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="80329">
            <text>UW-President issues challenge</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="80339">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="91536">
            <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Volume 19, Number 16 Thursday, January 31,1991&#13;
anMHBHnMaajjfe ]&#13;
UW-President issues challenge&#13;
Kenneth Shaw&#13;
MADISON — As the war in the&#13;
Persian Gulf continues, Kenneth&#13;
A. Shaw, president of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin System, today&#13;
called upon the University community&#13;
to "acknowledge and respect"&#13;
five principles vital to free&#13;
expression of personal opinion and&#13;
appropriate university action.&#13;
"The current war in the Persian&#13;
Gulf presents significant challenges&#13;
for all Americans," Shaw&#13;
said. "Those of us in the University&#13;
community are inextricably affected&#13;
by its events and citizen&#13;
reaction to them. I believe that it is&#13;
essential for the University Community&#13;
to acknowledge and respect&#13;
five principles as we address this&#13;
issue in the days ahead."&#13;
In summary form, these principles&#13;
include: 1. The University&#13;
must be a place where all issues can&#13;
be discussed and debated freely&#13;
and openly—in both instructional&#13;
U W-Parkside student is brought&#13;
up again in sexual assault case&#13;
bv Dan Cbiapuerta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
. : • • • ' • •&#13;
: • •.&#13;
7&#13;
::&#13;
person on October 19,1^0.&#13;
Complex. She was invited imoa&#13;
apartment to condoct her&#13;
presentation. Afincompleting her&#13;
-presentation^ she joined the males&#13;
j She then filed a repeat- with UW-&#13;
• : : : : : :: ; •&#13;
Lathrop's conrt appearance is&#13;
sehednied lor today where the&#13;
they have been ttnablo to make&#13;
contact with ihe t8-year-old» but&#13;
hearing. If found guilty, Lathrop&#13;
copldfacettp to ten years in prison,&#13;
a $10j5OO finet or both, Heeould&#13;
also face suspension or expulsion&#13;
from the fintverstty, .&#13;
settings and out-of-class activities.&#13;
2. Universities must maintain institutional&#13;
neutrality, in order that&#13;
faculty, staff and students have the&#13;
freedom to express and pursue their&#13;
individual beliefs. 3. Strong&#13;
dissent and protest are an accepted&#13;
part of the democratic process, and&#13;
it should be expected that such&#13;
expressions will occur on our&#13;
nation's campuses. 4. The University&#13;
community must encourage&#13;
its members to obey campus policies&#13;
and local, state and federal&#13;
laws. Those that protest should want&#13;
itnootherway. 5.TheUniversity's&#13;
commitment to its ongoing responsibilities&#13;
of teaching, research&#13;
and public service must continue&#13;
regardless of war or other external&#13;
conflicts.&#13;
Crisis in the Gulf&#13;
Worth the weight?&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
UW-Parkside's weight room&#13;
A UW-Parkside student uses newly acquired, used equipment in the&#13;
weight room facility which is located on the second floor of the&#13;
Physical education building.&#13;
Troop support decals available&#13;
by Gloria Secor&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
Operation DcsertStorm is now&#13;
over two weeks old. Although&#13;
Americans hold differing opinions&#13;
regarding our involvement there,&#13;
we should all agree that we must&#13;
support our men and women serving&#13;
there.&#13;
Graphic Resources Inc., of&#13;
Hartland, Wisconsin, has come up&#13;
with a great idea to help all of us&#13;
express that feeling of support.&#13;
They have created a special&#13;
OPERATION DESERT STORM&#13;
- SUPPORT OUR TROOPS decal,&#13;
and are distributing them free of&#13;
cost to anyone who wants them.&#13;
Here at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside they will be available&#13;
to all faculty, staff and students&#13;
at the WLLC Advising Center, the&#13;
Union Cafeteria, the WLLC Coffee&#13;
Shoppe, the Issue Room window&#13;
on the firstfloor of the Physical&#13;
Education Building, Physical Plant&#13;
Office, Personnel office in Tallent&#13;
Hall, and on the display case in the&#13;
entryway to the LI level of the&#13;
library.&#13;
A decal will also be distributed&#13;
to all of the students living&#13;
in our campus housing units.&#13;
If anyone would like more,&#13;
just send a stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope to:&#13;
Graphic Resources Inc.&#13;
520 Progress Avenue&#13;
Hartland, WI 53029&#13;
and they will send you twenty-five&#13;
decals.&#13;
If you want to order a larger&#13;
quantity, simply call their office at&#13;
(414) 367-1300.&#13;
The decals will be sent UPS&#13;
C.O.D. (The cost for mailing 1,500&#13;
to our area is about S5.)&#13;
The one burning question in&#13;
the hearts and minds of all Americans&#13;
serving in the Gulf is whether&#13;
or not the people back home are&#13;
supporting them.&#13;
Let's make that answer a resounding&#13;
"YES"!&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Editorial .....Page 2&#13;
PSG A Report......... .Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate.....Page 3&#13;
Spotlight PageS&#13;
Gabe'sGab..............Page 6&#13;
Life After....... ...Page 7&#13;
Winter Carnival Page 8&#13;
Sports.... ...Page 9&#13;
Winter Carnival Page 13&#13;
This Week Page 18&#13;
Classifieds... Page 20&#13;
Correction :&#13;
An error appeared in last week's Ranger story titled Another arrest&#13;
made by Dan Chiappetta. The victim provided a statement to Dave&#13;
Ostrowski, Director of Campus Police and Public Safety, admitting that&#13;
he had struck her and had engaged in sexual intertcourse. There was no&#13;
statement made that the victim engaged in sexual intercourse without&#13;
consent. _&#13;
Ranger, Page 2 Editorial January 31, 1991&#13;
Letters to theEditor&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
It's that time again to get involved. Winter Carnival '91. with the&#13;
theme "Parkside's Playhouse," will begin Monday. This is one oft he best&#13;
events of the year and a great time to be involved with your club or&#13;
organization. Many events, ranging from the "Smurf Fling" to "The&#13;
Rocky Horror Picture Show," will highlight the week. Your club or&#13;
organization can also win prize money which will go toward your private&#13;
account, so you can do whatever you want with it. The Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee has been putting in many strenuous hours to make this the best&#13;
one yet, but we need the support of you, the students, to make this a&#13;
success.&#13;
"Parkside's Playhouse" will kick off Monday with a Cartoon Parade in which many clubs and organizations&#13;
try to outdo each other by forming the most creative float to wheel through the concourse. The Volleyball&#13;
Tournament will start on Monday and end on Wednesday. This is the perfect opportunity to spike the ball down&#13;
the throat of someone that you can't stand. The College Bowl also begins on Monday. This is the year to set&#13;
big goals and get rid of the WarGamers once and for all. They have dominated several College Bowls and now&#13;
it's time for a different group to capture the title. To round out the evening, Comedian Happy Cole will be&#13;
performing free of charge in the Union Square. Don't Worry, See Happy.&#13;
On Tuesday, the festivities begin with the Bart Simpson Balloon Toss. Test out your balloon tossing abilities&#13;
and win some great Winter Carnival apparrel. The Scavenger Hunt takes place right after the balloon toss; this&#13;
a great workout because you have to hike all over campus with your leg tied to your partner's leg. College Bowl&#13;
preliminaries begin on Tuesday night Remember, beat the WarGamers. The Gnome-Pin Tap begins on Tuesday&#13;
night for all the Earl Anthony's on campus.&#13;
On Wednesday, give the gift of life: BLOOD. There will be a blood drive conducted all day in Union 104.&#13;
At 12:30, the Ranger will be sponsoring the "Smurf Fling". Come to the Union Pad and take your frustrations&#13;
out on a stuffed smurf. Rumors have it that Chancellor Kaplan will be judging this contest. Volleyball finals&#13;
and College Bowl finals also take place on Wednesday. That night. Comedy Sportz will be back by popular&#13;
demand. They will be performing in Union Square at 9:00, free of charge.&#13;
On Thursday, the famous "Twister Tournament" will take place in Union Bazaar. This tournament is always&#13;
interesting, especially for many spectators. Family Feud will take place in Union Square, so come and watch&#13;
different organizations and clubs fight "neck and neck" for the Family Feud title. At night, is the ever famous&#13;
Lip Sync contest with Musician/Comedian Sigmund Snopek III. Snopek alone is worth coming to see.&#13;
On Friday, the Tug O' War competition will take place. Hopefully, there will be lots of mud out on the&#13;
ground to make it more interesting. Draw or Die and the Family Feud Finals round out the afternoon festivities.&#13;
And back by popular demand, 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show". This performance of "Rocky" won't be as&#13;
messy as last year, but it will be just as fun.&#13;
There is no reason why you should be bored around campus next week. So join in the fun and participate&#13;
in Winter Carnival '91. You will be glad you did.&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
In March of 1982, the Reagan&#13;
administration removed Iraq from&#13;
its list of countries that support&#13;
terrorsm, even though it was well&#13;
known in the international community&#13;
that Baghdad provided safe&#13;
haven for many terrorist groups,&#13;
including the May 15 Organization&#13;
responsible for several airline and&#13;
hotel bombings. The lifting of&#13;
"Terrorist Nation" status was done&#13;
in order to allow our NATO allies&#13;
to sell the Iraqis arms which would&#13;
aid them in the war that they had&#13;
started against Iran. France and&#13;
Germany were especially eager to&#13;
help the Iraqis by selling them&#13;
aircraft, and helping them establish&#13;
plants which were ultimatly used&#13;
for manufacturing chemical&#13;
weapons and refining Uranium.&#13;
Throughout the Iran/Iraq war,&#13;
the Reagan administration did litle&#13;
or nothing to protest the Soviet&#13;
Union giving massive quantities of&#13;
arms- including the Scud missies&#13;
which arc now being used against&#13;
Israel and the United Nations&#13;
coalition forces - to Iraq. President&#13;
Reagan made formal protest when&#13;
Saddam Hussein used internationally-&#13;
banned chemical weapons, not&#13;
even when he used them against&#13;
the Kurdish people living within&#13;
his own borders fthese atrocities&#13;
were glossed over until George&#13;
Bush exploited them recently to&#13;
drum up Pro-war fcrvo r).&#13;
Saddam Hussein has always&#13;
been a sadistic megalomaniac; the&#13;
only differance between the present&#13;
Hussein and the one that Ronald&#13;
Reagan helped elevate from&#13;
neighborhood bully to international&#13;
menace nearly a decade ago lies in&#13;
the tragically mistaken notion that&#13;
he could be "our" sadistic megalomaniac.&#13;
By bowing to the rabid&#13;
public hatred of Iran (no matter&#13;
how justified that hatred may have&#13;
been), Ronald Reagan allowed&#13;
Hussein to amass a great deal of&#13;
military power. Now, innocent lives&#13;
on both sides must be spent in order&#13;
Continued on Page 4&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
Subscription rate for one year is S5.00.&#13;
Please address all correspondence to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Post Office Box 2000&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial Office (414)553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414) 553-2295&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Craig A. Simpkins&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
,T' :,;U;v Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Terri Fortney&#13;
Classified Ad Manager&#13;
James Chomko&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Ronald Hansen&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
Elizabeth Spalla&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Sunni Beeck&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Todd Goers&#13;
Kurt Geilfuss&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
Paul R. Grundberg&#13;
Chris Ingram&#13;
• Glen Kelly&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Daniele Chiappetta&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Gwenevere Heller&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Theodore Mclntyre&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tod McCarthy&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. Layout Editor&#13;
Sara Kahl&#13;
Advisors&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
Jan Nowak&#13;
General Staff:&#13;
Donald Andrewski, Len Anhold, Chris Deguire, David Doherty, Debra&#13;
Halverson, Emily Heller, Latesha Jude, Gabe Kluka, Susan Luepkes;&#13;
Sarah Minasian, Mike McKowen, Jim Newcomb, Mona Shannon, John&#13;
Taylor, Kimberly Tenerelli, Rufus Thome, David Wick.&#13;
January 31,1991 Opinion Ranger, Page 3&#13;
The Devil's Advocate&#13;
Northern climate freezes all but the mind&#13;
*&gt;y&#13;
Donald R.&#13;
Andrewski&#13;
In case you haven't noticed or&#13;
have been on vacation in a more&#13;
balmy climate, we have been in the&#13;
middle of a deep freeze for the past&#13;
two weeks. If you were recently in&#13;
Florida or Mexico you are a lucky&#13;
stiff. With the weather colder than&#13;
the proverbial polar bear's nose, I&#13;
suppose that it is better to be lucky&#13;
stiff than frozen stiff.&#13;
This past Friday I woke up&#13;
extra early to drive to a class at&#13;
UW-M. Aside from the fact that I&#13;
lost two hours of beauty sleep that&#13;
probably wouldn't have helped&#13;
anyway, I drove thirty miles (one&#13;
way) in a car with no heat only to&#13;
discover that the class had been&#13;
cancelled.&#13;
Walking the six blocks to my&#13;
parked car, I was amazed to see my&#13;
breath hang in space for fifteen&#13;
seconds. This proves to me how&#13;
cold it was. In all fairness, I must&#13;
say that aftera good spicy Mexican&#13;
dinner I can see my breath in the&#13;
middle of July, but that's another&#13;
matter.&#13;
Needless to say I was not a&#13;
happy camper. Here I was sailing&#13;
down the Interstate toward UWParkside&#13;
hoping that if I drove fast&#13;
enough the friction of the car&#13;
moving through the atmosphere&#13;
would keep the car warm. With my&#13;
teeth chattering like a pair of castanets&#13;
I came to the realization that&#13;
I did not achieve the desired resul ts.&#13;
I parked in Tallent parking lot&#13;
to take advantage of the shuttle bus&#13;
and guess what? The "Green Machine"&#13;
was not in service. In its&#13;
stead was a conventional red family&#13;
van. Apparently the green&#13;
shuttle has been out of comm ission&#13;
all week.&#13;
The way my day was going it&#13;
was merely par for the course.&#13;
Twenty people crammed into this&#13;
van like sardines. Had I known&#13;
that it would be that tight of a&#13;
squeeze I would have brought a&#13;
gallon of Mazola! As I scrunched&#13;
down in the narrow isle and felt the&#13;
welcomed heat pouring into the&#13;
compartment, I remembered that&#13;
on warmer days I would opt to&#13;
walk to Molinaro Hall. Today,&#13;
however, I figured that if I wanted&#13;
to trek across the frozen tundra&#13;
with a blast of arctic air whistling&#13;
up my back I would simply have&#13;
parked in the Union LOL&#13;
This leads me to challenge the&#13;
traditional concept of what is&#13;
"smart" and what is "dumb". Iam,&#13;
of course, referring to the ideas that&#13;
animals are "dumb" animals and&#13;
require our attention and protection.&#13;
No one has to tell the bears or&#13;
the squirrels what to do when the&#13;
seasons change. They actually have&#13;
a pretty good system going for them.&#13;
They store up food, eat until they&#13;
can't eat anymore, then go to sleep&#13;
for a couple of months. (I seriously&#13;
considered this option when last&#13;
semester's final exams approached.)&#13;
"Consider the birds of the air",&#13;
Jesus said, and consider them I did.&#13;
These "dumb" animals can sense&#13;
when the wheather is changing,&#13;
and will pack up and get the flock&#13;
out of here.&#13;
Right now I can envision a&#13;
flock of geese splashing around in&#13;
some pond in Florida. Some are&#13;
undoubtedly sitting at the poolside&#13;
with a Pina Colada within easy&#13;
reach and commenting "Yep, I sure&#13;
am glad that those 'smart' humans&#13;
are up north making sure that the&#13;
corn is planted for us to eat when&#13;
we get back."&#13;
The unfortunate thing is that&#13;
some humans have a similar concept&#13;
of other humans. For example,&#13;
many Northerners think that&#13;
Southerners are not as smart as&#13;
they are. I personally do not agree&#13;
with this. The Southerners that I&#13;
have met are a delight to be with.&#13;
People are people and if we want to&#13;
get technical, how "dumb" can&#13;
Southerners be if they live in a&#13;
warm climate and don't have to&#13;
freeze their keisters in winter? This&#13;
anti-South bias sounds like a case&#13;
of "sour grapes".&#13;
So while we Northerners prove&#13;
to the world how allegedly "smart"&#13;
we are for staying in this region in&#13;
the winter, why don't we really get&#13;
"smart"? Let's admit that we can't&#13;
handle it, shut everything down,&#13;
and all go South for the winter. All&#13;
of you diehard Polar Bears can&#13;
have my share of the cold. Just&#13;
don't be surprised to see frozen&#13;
tumbleweeds rolling down Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
Me? I have an appointment&#13;
with a flock of geese in Florida. If&#13;
I get there soon enough, maybe&#13;
they'll buy the first round of drinks.&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
What is United Council all about?&#13;
By Senator Latesha N. Jude&#13;
United Council is thestate student&#13;
association for students in the&#13;
UW system. United Coucil was&#13;
organized in 1960 and is entirely&#13;
owned by and operated by the&#13;
students. United Council is the&#13;
oldest and one of the largest student&#13;
research and lobby groups in the&#13;
nation, representing over 170,000&#13;
students.&#13;
UC help students in three ways.&#13;
First, UC provides information,&#13;
materials, and advice to students in&#13;
the fight against tuition increases.&#13;
Second, UC research issues and&#13;
lobby policymakers on issues of&#13;
student concern. Third, UC promote&#13;
programs and services to help&#13;
women, minorities, and other students&#13;
and student organizations.&#13;
Parkside Student&#13;
Governement Assocation will be&#13;
going to UC on February 1st and&#13;
2nd at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Oshkosh. Our PSGA delegation&#13;
will be discussing the crisis in the&#13;
Persian Gulf, tuition freeze, and&#13;
much more.&#13;
You will have a great opportunity&#13;
to discuss political, social,&#13;
and economic issues to UC representatives&#13;
on March 1st and 2nd.&#13;
The UC representatives are Brenda&#13;
Leahy - President, Karla Handel -&#13;
Executive Director, JenniferSmith&#13;
- Women's Affairs Director,&#13;
Beverly Jenkins - Minority Affairs&#13;
Director, Lance Walter - Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director, Elliott&#13;
Madison - Shared Governance&#13;
Director, and Pamela Imm-Thomas&#13;
- Academic Affairs Director.&#13;
I encourage all of you to participate&#13;
or become more familiar&#13;
with Parkside StudentGovemment.&#13;
PSGA is here to help and support&#13;
the students at this university. If&#13;
you don't tell us your concerns or&#13;
problems then we cannot tell other&#13;
UC members what your feelings&#13;
and ideas are on campus. Do&#13;
something positive on campus, get&#13;
involved with PSGA,and help your&#13;
fellow students.&#13;
More...&#13;
by Bill Homer&#13;
For those students interested&#13;
in what is taking place regarding&#13;
the change in the Math 016 course,&#13;
here is the latest. The change was&#13;
recently discussed with the chancellor,&#13;
and she stated "The change&#13;
from remedial (016) to creditbearing&#13;
(101) was made in response&#13;
toaUW-System mandate designed&#13;
to take effect in September 1991.&#13;
We accelerated the change by one&#13;
semester in order to make it possible&#13;
for students who were taking the&#13;
course thi s semester to earn credit".&#13;
There are several openings&#13;
available for students to participate&#13;
on University/Faculty Committees,&#13;
as well as two positions as Justices&#13;
on the PSGA Judicial Branch. The&#13;
Committee on Teaching has one&#13;
opening. The Course and Curriculum&#13;
Committee has one opening.&#13;
PSGA is also seeking a student&#13;
to serve on a Ad Hoc Committee on&#13;
Academic Policies and Procedures&#13;
Related to Students With Learning&#13;
Disabilities.&#13;
Please Be aware that all students&#13;
who serve on these Committees&#13;
must meet "Current Student&#13;
Life Eligibility Requirements,"&#13;
whichconsistofa2.00Cumulative&#13;
GPA, and be registered as a fulltime&#13;
degree seeking student.&#13;
Senate meeting minutes&#13;
Senators: Simpkins, Riccio,&#13;
Lindblom, Finch, Schuh,&#13;
Rosier(E), Sikora, T.Jensen,&#13;
J.Jensen, Yee, Jude(E), Olson,&#13;
Hanford(U), E.Jensen(U), Bovee,&#13;
Kadolph&#13;
Guests: Chief Ostrowski, Officer&#13;
Schouten, Peggy James, S teve&#13;
McLaughlin, Dan Lehmen, Lika&#13;
Morishita&#13;
Executive Branch: Bill&#13;
Horner, Chris Daniel, Maggie&#13;
Frymire&#13;
Motion Lindblom/Olson 1/25/91&#13;
: 1 To approve the minutes of 12/&#13;
14/90.&#13;
Passes 12-0-0&#13;
Report of the President (Horner)-&#13;
Had a meeting with Chief&#13;
Ostrowski of the Campus Police&#13;
Department, on the matter of possible&#13;
rallies occurring on campus&#13;
about the Gulf war.&#13;
-Chief Ostrowski addressed the&#13;
matter and answered questions&#13;
from the Senators. He claimed that&#13;
the Police Department will attempt&#13;
to accomodate any rally or demonstration&#13;
as long as there is no violence,&#13;
vandalism, or destruction of&#13;
property. He also requested that if&#13;
there is a planned rally, it would be&#13;
better for everyone concerned if&#13;
they contact the Department prior&#13;
to the event.&#13;
-There are openings in the Teaching&#13;
Committee, and there are three&#13;
openings on the Judicial Branch.&#13;
-The Chancellor has given us a&#13;
chance to respond to the recommendations&#13;
proposed for the potential&#13;
smoking ban.&#13;
Motion Executive Committee 1/&#13;
25/91:2 To approve an allocation&#13;
of S68.40 for a state flag for the&#13;
U.C. meeting here in March.&#13;
Passes 12-0-0&#13;
Report of the Vice-President&#13;
(Daniel)&#13;
Motion Schuh/Finch 1/25/91:3 To&#13;
approve the allocation of $220.00&#13;
for the U.C. meeting in Oshkosh on&#13;
Feb. 1st.&#13;
Passes 11-0-1&#13;
Motion Sikora/Simpkins 1/25/91&#13;
:4 To approve the following to&#13;
their designated committees.&#13;
Finch-Shared Gov., T.Jensen-&#13;
Presidents, Jude-Legislative Affairs&#13;
Gosey-M.A.C., Daniel-&#13;
Directors, Morishita-Womens Affairs&#13;
Passes 11-0-1&#13;
Report of President Pro-Tempre&#13;
(Schuh) -Senator Jude will write&#13;
the Ranger article next week.&#13;
Report of Legislative Affairs&#13;
(Lindblom)&#13;
Motion TJensep/Sikora 1/25/91:5&#13;
To move the issue of the Domestic&#13;
Abuse Law into the Legislative&#13;
Affairs Committee.&#13;
Passes 11-1-0&#13;
Motion Riccio/Lindblom 1/25/91&#13;
:6 To adjourn the meeting.&#13;
Passes 12-0-0&#13;
Campus Police and Public Safety fills vacancies&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
UW-Parkside's Campus Police&#13;
and Public Safety welcomes&#13;
two new members to its staff. Thomas&#13;
J. Kniter is the new Assistant&#13;
Director of Campus Police and&#13;
Public Safety and FayeSchouten&#13;
is the new Sergeant of Campus&#13;
Police and Public Safely.&#13;
Knitter, who started on December&#13;
17,1990, is the Operation&#13;
Commander for the department's&#13;
day to day operations and activities.&#13;
"Vm also responsible for coordinating&#13;
major investigations,"&#13;
stated Knitter.&#13;
Sdiouten's firstday was Januaiy&#13;
14,1991. She is in charge of&#13;
UW-Parkside's Campu s Police and&#13;
Faye Schouten&#13;
Public Safety's 2nd shift police&#13;
officers, reserve officers, and student&#13;
officers, in regards to scheduling&#13;
and training.&#13;
Knitter and Schouten both&#13;
have experience working in a University&#13;
setting. Both of them formerly&#13;
were police officers at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Milwaukee.&#13;
Schouten worked at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
for over six years. She&#13;
believes underage drinking is one&#13;
of the more major problems on a&#13;
college campus.&#13;
"Underage drinking is a big&#13;
problem on college campuses and&#13;
the problems that come with that,&#13;
relating to my experience at UWMilwaukee,"&#13;
said Schouten.&#13;
"Physical violence, verbal abuse&#13;
and property damage are usually&#13;
all related to some kind of alcohol&#13;
use."&#13;
Knitter spent 6 years at UWMilwaukee,&#13;
before spending over&#13;
7 years with Caledonia's Police&#13;
Department. Knitter is pleased to&#13;
Thomas Knitter&#13;
be back on a college campus.&#13;
"I'm more satisfied working&#13;
in a campus environment than&#13;
municipality. In municipality, it's&#13;
a neverending struggle, while on&#13;
campus you have a semi break and&#13;
graduation in which you can take&#13;
time in defining positive progress&#13;
and in grading the safe environment&#13;
to the students, staff and faculty,"&#13;
said Knitter.&#13;
Knitter and Schouten both&#13;
agree on the importance of a quality&#13;
work relationship between the administration&#13;
and the different de-r&#13;
partments.&#13;
"I've seen the close communication&#13;
lines between the administration&#13;
and the different departments,"&#13;
said Schouten, "and their&#13;
general concern for student welfare."&#13;
"The open communication&#13;
between Campus Police and the&#13;
student body is great," said Knitter.&#13;
"In general, the police department&#13;
has a good working relationship&#13;
with the administration."&#13;
ALL YOU CAN BOWL&#13;
NOON-1PM Monday thru Friday&#13;
$100 per day or $20 for the semester&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Continued from page 2 "&#13;
to prevent him from wielding this&#13;
power.&#13;
To those who would hail Mr.&#13;
Reagan as the hero who provided&#13;
us with the marvelous weaponry&#13;
being used to fight the present war,&#13;
I hope that they will not forget that&#13;
he also directly and indirectly&#13;
provided the need for it.a Il so hope&#13;
that in November of1992, America&#13;
will remember George Bush not&#13;
only as the man who saved the&#13;
world from Saddam Hussein, but&#13;
as the self-professed "integral&#13;
member" of the administration that&#13;
made Hussein a threat to world&#13;
peace in the first place.&#13;
Donald Hill&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
The Library Research Paper is&#13;
aCollegiate Skills requirement that&#13;
must be fulfilled by all Parkside&#13;
students by the end of sophomore&#13;
status. It is a requirement designed&#13;
to prepare students for research&#13;
and writing skills needed in upper&#13;
level classes. There are different&#13;
routes students can take to complete&#13;
the requirement First, the&#13;
paper can be completed by taking&#13;
English 102, the Library Research&#13;
Paper class. Second, students receiving&#13;
a B or higher in English&#13;
101 can complete the requirement&#13;
on their own. Finally, a research&#13;
paper written for a class can be&#13;
submitted. Some students,&#13;
however, decide to fulfill the requirement&#13;
by submitting a paper&#13;
they did not write. Take this advice&#13;
from one of your fellow school&#13;
mates, this is noat good idea. The&#13;
attitude of far too many students&#13;
toward this requirement is that, "It's&#13;
no big deal, just get a paper from&#13;
someone." Contrary to this popular&#13;
belief, it is a big deal, and it&#13;
should be taken seriously. Most&#13;
importantly, if you think you will&#13;
not get caught, you are sadly mistaken.&#13;
And the results of getting&#13;
caught-plagerism-can be as severe&#13;
as permanent expulsion from&#13;
school everywhere. Take it from&#13;
someone who almost learned the&#13;
hard way (I got caught and nearly&#13;
expelled) copying a paper is not&#13;
worth tire risk. Imagine some of die&#13;
long term effects it could have in&#13;
your future. If you have not&#13;
fulfilled the requirement yet, set&#13;
aside some time to do it yourself.&#13;
When you finish, you will have&#13;
learned something and will feel a&#13;
sense of accomplishment. If you&#13;
find that your procrastination has&#13;
left you without enough time to&#13;
submit a paper, visit the office of&#13;
Learni ng Assistance in CADI They&#13;
are very helpful, fair, and more&#13;
than willing to help. Handing in a&#13;
plagarizcd paper is not the&#13;
soulution, it is the problem.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Editorial Policy&#13;
The Ranger encourages letters&#13;
to the editor and will print all&#13;
letters that follow Ranger editorial&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
Letters must be signed by the&#13;
writer orrepresentati vc of the group&#13;
submitting the letter and must contain&#13;
writer's name, social security&#13;
number, and phone number for&#13;
verification purposes. Names of&#13;
writers will be withheld on request&#13;
Deadline for letters is 12:00&#13;
noon on Monday before publication.&#13;
Letters containing offensive,&#13;
libelous material or misleading information&#13;
will be given back to the&#13;
writer to correct All letters should&#13;
be typed and doubled spaced and&#13;
350 words or less. In case of space&#13;
restrictions, shorter letters will be&#13;
given preference over longer letters.&#13;
The Ranger will not correct&#13;
spelling or grammar mistakes in&#13;
letters to the editor unless requested.&#13;
Opinions expressed on the editorial&#13;
and opinion pages are not necessarily&#13;
those of the Ranger staff.&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
- » ^&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
Pictured from left to right, Evelyn Truesdell, Program Asst, Joann Goodyear, Director, Bev Burneli, Career Development Coordinator.&#13;
January 31,1991 Ranger, Page 5&#13;
UW-Parkside's Career Center&#13;
By Tod McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Have you ever asked yourself&#13;
"What do I want to be when I grow&#13;
up?" If you have (regardless of&#13;
your age) or are unsureof the qualifications&#13;
necessary to be successful&#13;
in achieving your goals, the&#13;
Career Center is for you.&#13;
The Career Cen ter is a branch&#13;
of Learning Assistance and Counseling,&#13;
under the direction of Carol&#13;
Cashen. Career Center Director&#13;
JoAnn Goodyear generally assists&#13;
seniors, alumni, and employers, as&#13;
well as overseeing internships in&#13;
the department. Beverly Burneli&#13;
serves as Career Development&#13;
Coordinator, dealing with career&#13;
decisions, self-assessment processes,&#13;
and establishing career&#13;
plans. Carol Engberg is Student&#13;
Community Service Officer, coordinating&#13;
student in volvement in the&#13;
community, whether that involvement&#13;
is voluntary or compensated.&#13;
It is important to pay a visit to&#13;
the Career Center early in your&#13;
collegiate career. Proper planning&#13;
can be the key to success, and SIGI&#13;
PLUS, the user-friendly computer&#13;
system in the Career Center, can&#13;
solve many career planning mysteries.&#13;
SIGI PLUS is capable of&#13;
assessing individual needs and&#13;
preferences, can indicate which&#13;
professions would most likely satisfy&#13;
according to its findings, and&#13;
can help to chart a course to effectively&#13;
achieve success in a chosen&#13;
field; You not only can learn more&#13;
about yourself and your strengths&#13;
and weaknesses, but can obtain&#13;
specific information regarding&#13;
employment trends, monetary&#13;
compensation; and employment&#13;
prerequisites for most positions. I&#13;
intend to gain entry into the" system&#13;
soon. Each question I have solved&#13;
has raised several more, and SIGI&#13;
should prove to be an interesting&#13;
vehicle to examine myself and the&#13;
feasibility of my present goals while&#13;
searching for answers.&#13;
The Career Center is also the&#13;
last place many of us will turn to&#13;
before exiting the university. A&#13;
proper resume and cover letter are&#13;
required by nearly every employer&#13;
in the labor market. The Career&#13;
Center can assist you in developing&#13;
introductory composition&#13;
stressing your qualifications arid&#13;
achievements to offer the best possible&#13;
impression to a prospective&#13;
employer. Experience is important,&#13;
and according to Ms.&#13;
Goodyear, many employers are&#13;
most interested in "what you can&#13;
do, not what you studied." The&#13;
information you present should&#13;
stress that whenever possible.&#13;
, Volunteer and community&#13;
service work offers many rewards,&#13;
including a high degree of selfsatisfaction&#13;
and work experience.&#13;
Training and experience unavailable&#13;
elsewhere may be gained. "It&#13;
may be the key to a job in some&#13;
cases," stated Ms. Goodyear. One&#13;
can also-get a sense of whether a&#13;
particular career is suitable before&#13;
making a long-term commitment.&#13;
I Browse through the listing of op-&#13;
; portunities offered by the Career&#13;
Center and see if any of them fit&#13;
your schedule and present career&#13;
I goals.&#13;
The Career Center offers a&#13;
{ number of workshops. Though&#13;
j most services rendered by the Ca-&#13;
? reer Center are primarily through&#13;
j an individual process, workshops&#13;
make it possible to efficiently instruct&#13;
small groups in resume writing,&#13;
job search skills, interviewtechniques,&#13;
and to provide graduate&#13;
school counseling. A resume&#13;
• writing workshop, aimed primarily&#13;
at seniors, is offered on Friday,&#13;
February 8, from 12-12:50 and&#13;
another on Job Search Communications&#13;
on Thursday, February 7,&#13;
from 5-5:50. Sign up at the Career&#13;
Center for whichever workshops&#13;
you'd like to attend. A mock interview&#13;
workshop is also anticipated&#13;
focApril, and could serve tqpolish&#13;
one's presentation skills to&#13;
smoothly enter the workplace. A&#13;
proper presentation may be the&#13;
advantage you need over the competition&#13;
and the deciding factor in&#13;
obtaining lucrative employment.&#13;
More peop.le than ever are&#13;
graduating from our university&#13;
system each year, and it is increasingly&#13;
important to organize yourself&#13;
to be distinguished from the&#13;
competition. Begin planning now&#13;
to package yourself in the most&#13;
attractive manner. Stop down to&#13;
the Career Center in WLLC D175&#13;
and make an appointment -to develop&#13;
a strategy to obtain success.&#13;
The staff is available from 8-4:30&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday,&#13;
and until 6:30 on Monday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Think critically of yourself and&#13;
your goals. As is stated on the&#13;
Career Center's brochure, "What&#13;
could be more important than your&#13;
future?"&#13;
Next Week's Spotlight: The Student Organizations Council&#13;
Ranger, Page 6 Opinion January 31,1991&#13;
Oahe's Gab&#13;
Greetings from Disneyland Of Sand and Sno-Slugs&#13;
by&#13;
Sgt.&#13;
Gabe&#13;
KJuka&#13;
Editors note: GabeKluka&#13;
is currently serving in the US&#13;
Army and is over in the Middle&#13;
East fighting for our country.&#13;
We received his column, which&#13;
was dated 15 January 1991, on&#13;
January 23, The Ranger staff&#13;
wishes Gabe the best of luck,&#13;
and we hope to see him back at&#13;
UW-P real soon.&#13;
Greetings from Disneyland!&#13;
You may remember me from last&#13;
semester when I wrote a little column&#13;
known as Gabe's Gab. Well,&#13;
things have changed drastically in&#13;
my life, as will be evident. For&#13;
those of you who know me, you&#13;
know that I was activated in my&#13;
Army Reserve Unit. Currently, I&#13;
am sitting in Ft. McCoy, WI, waiting&#13;
to be deployed to the largest&#13;
beach in the world. Nothinglike an&#13;
extreme climate change to keep&#13;
you healthy.&#13;
I am assigned to die 1st Platoon&#13;
of the 822nd MP Co., or the&#13;
Sno-Slugs. My platoon consists of&#13;
around 30 people who, for the most&#13;
part, are from Chicago. We decided&#13;
that Sno-Slugs would be a&#13;
good name for ourselves, seeing as&#13;
Ft. McCoy has been getting snowed&#13;
on for 5 of the last 7 days. We've&#13;
even erected a little mascot in front&#13;
of our barracks to commemorate&#13;
the name. We call him "Sluggo,&#13;
the Killer Sno-Slug", and boy,is he&#13;
a handsome fellow. He comes&#13;
complete with antennae, and we&#13;
salute him every time we pass.&#13;
Everybody in our platoon has&#13;
been initiated as a Sno-Slug. This,&#13;
"initiation" consists of getting&#13;
gang-tackled then white washed&#13;
with snow. It's loads of fun, and&#13;
very cold, but there isa lot of bonding&#13;
going on, so it's worth it&#13;
The Army does strange things&#13;
to people. It takes people of varying&#13;
social backgrounds and makes&#13;
them comrades by shoving them&#13;
into very extreme and bizarre circumstances.&#13;
While this has been&#13;
interesting, so far the tension that&#13;
underlies the surface really hasn't&#13;
broken through yet. Hopefully,&#13;
when it does, we will all be strong&#13;
enough to help each other through&#13;
it. We are all watching the situation,&#13;
unfold with anticipation. All&#13;
the pro-war rhetoric aside, everybody&#13;
is nervous and is hoping for&#13;
the best. All we can do is watch and&#13;
wait. The deadline is less than 7&#13;
minutes away at this point, and we&#13;
all hope that Hussein blinks. Well,&#13;
that is it for now, hope for the best,&#13;
and wish the Sno-Slugs luck before&#13;
you go to sleep at night.&#13;
Alleged assailant remains&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
James Rutherford, UWParkside&#13;
student, has been removed&#13;
from his apartment at UWParkside's&#13;
Residence Hall Complex.&#13;
Rutherford was arrested by&#13;
UW-Parkside's Campus Police on&#13;
January 19, 1991 and charged by&#13;
Kenosha's District Attorney's office&#13;
with battery, disorderly conduct,&#13;
and having sexual intercourse&#13;
with a child age 16 or older.&#13;
According to the DA. .' s report,&#13;
Rutherford, 19, would not let the&#13;
victim leave hisapartment, in which&#13;
he used force by sitting on top of&#13;
her, straddling her body. He later&#13;
punched her, slapped her, and once&#13;
covered her face with a pillow,&#13;
while stating, "I'll kill you."&#13;
According to Steve&#13;
McLaughlin, Dean of UWParkside's&#13;
Student Life Office,&#13;
Rutherford is still living at housing&#13;
due to his appeal action to Student&#13;
Life.&#13;
Rutherford is toa ppear inc ourt&#13;
on February 1, 1991. He faces&#13;
$21,000 in fines or 21 months in&#13;
prison, or both. UW-Parkside is&#13;
also conducting a separate investigation&#13;
for University disciplinary&#13;
action.&#13;
LOOKING BACK;&#13;
MOVING FORWARD&#13;
1991 UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
BLACK HISTORY MONTH&#13;
1/31 Armenia Hummlngs, pianist. An evening ol classical and African-American music.&#13;
8:00PM. Comm Arts Theatre $6.00 public. $2.00 UW P students&#13;
Black History Month Kick-olf reception, 7:00PM, Comm Arts&#13;
2/1 The Urban League &amp; NAACP; "Looking Back and Moving Forward"&#13;
a presentation by Rodney Brooks (Director. Urban League ol Kenosha. Racine Inc.)&#13;
George Stinson (President, NAACP ol Racine) and Darnell Mason (President,&#13;
NAACP of Kenosha). Noon, Union 207&#13;
2/4-8 Black History Month Cultural Market Place, featuring artists and vendors.&#13;
10:00AM - 2:00 PM, Union Bridge&#13;
2/4 Happy Cole, comedian. Winner of 1 986-87 "Star Search" Competition.&#13;
9:00PM, Union Square&#13;
2/5 "A Bit of the Bard" with Darryl Maximilian Roblnson.An original&#13;
one-man show of Shakespeare and time-travel comedy incorporates the best of&#13;
Shakespeare in a modern day setting. 7:00PM. Union Cinema&#13;
An Evening With the&#13;
French Impressionists&#13;
Treat your eyes and ears to the;&#13;
artistry of French Impressionists&#13;
Claude Monet, F.douard Manet,&#13;
Edgar Degas, and Auguste Renoir&#13;
during an evening presentation on&#13;
Thursday, January 31.&#13;
The evening will be led by&#13;
David Holmes, professor of art at&#13;
Parkstde who will utilize a multimedia&#13;
presentation, featuring Impressionistic&#13;
art and music.&#13;
Held from 7 to 9 prn in&#13;
Moltnaro 105, admission is $6.&#13;
For more information on the&#13;
program call the Office of Continuing&#13;
Education at 553-2312.&#13;
DA Darkside&#13;
by&#13;
Chris&#13;
Toliver&#13;
I'm a black man surrounded&#13;
by a white man's world, as I struggle&#13;
day by day for equality for all men/&#13;
women. Blinded by the ordinances,&#13;
posture, predjudice, and the masquerades&#13;
put on by the (one who&#13;
thinks he's superior and better than&#13;
everyone else) devil. Our&#13;
generations have struggled for over&#13;
400 years, and are winning slowly&#13;
but surely. But then I observe my&#13;
brothers and sisters, and sometimes&#13;
it's so pitiful it makes mc want to&#13;
breakdown. So I look on the bright&#13;
side of things and I sec a positive&#13;
brothers and sisters doing the right&#13;
things, then I smile and wipe my&#13;
tears. Even though I'm broke in&#13;
capital, rich in heart, raped in the&#13;
past, captivated from my original&#13;
land, I'm am still a multi-millionaire&#13;
in color. Also I'm a child of the&#13;
almighty, a friend to a needful&#13;
brother in need, and the most nasty&#13;
BLACK AFRIKAN I'LL EVER&#13;
KNOW. Peace.&#13;
UW-Parkside Blood drive underway&#13;
by Emily Heller&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
As part of Parkside's Winter&#13;
Carnival activities next week,&#13;
Student Health Services, in cooperation&#13;
with the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Blood Center, will be&#13;
sponsoring a blood drive. Sandra&#13;
Riese, director of Student Health&#13;
Services, hopes to exceed the seventy-&#13;
eight donations from the November&#13;
blood drive.&#13;
Riese hopes the Persian Gulf&#13;
war will inspire people to donate.&#13;
Riese stated, "There is a great need&#13;
and desire for blood now. Each of&#13;
the Blood Centers in the country&#13;
must send a certain percentage of&#13;
blood to the Persian Gulf to support&#13;
the war." Knowing that the&#13;
blood could very well be used for&#13;
American soldiers in the gulf,&#13;
people may be persuaded to give of&#13;
themselves in this time of need.&#13;
Donating blood is a quick and&#13;
virtually painless procedure. The&#13;
donor starts out at a registration&#13;
area where personal data is taken,&#13;
as well as a quick medical history.&#13;
A small blood sample is also taken&#13;
to determine the donor's blood type.&#13;
The actual donation takes between&#13;
five and seven minutes followed&#13;
by a rest period. Fluids and energy&#13;
can then be replaced by drinking&#13;
juices and eating cookies provided&#13;
by the center.&#13;
To donate blood, one must be&#13;
at least seventeen years of age and&#13;
weigh 110 lbs. A donor should eat&#13;
a healthy breakfast and get a good&#13;
night's sleep before donating.&#13;
Noone should donate if they are&#13;
feeling ill in any way.&#13;
As an activity of winter carnival,&#13;
any members of participating&#13;
clubs will receive points toward&#13;
their club's total points for donating&#13;
blood. Appointments can be&#13;
made to donate by stopping in or&#13;
calling the Student Health Services&#13;
office. Walk-ins are also welcome.&#13;
The blood drive will take place in&#13;
Union 104-106 on Feb. 6 from 9-&#13;
1:30.&#13;
January 31,1991 Feature Ranger, Page 7&#13;
Dr. King honored in school salute&#13;
by Gwen Heller&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The words and ideas of several&#13;
influential Afro-Americans&#13;
emanated through Upper Main&#13;
Place on Wednesday, January 23&#13;
during a commemorativeceremony&#13;
in honorof Dr. Martin Luther King.&#13;
The memory of Dr. King and his&#13;
ci vil rights campaign was rekindled&#13;
by several Parkside students and&#13;
faculty in an hour-long tribute.&#13;
A panel discussion focusing&#13;
on the "Civil Rights Movement"&#13;
led off the program. Dr. Barbara&#13;
Shade, Dean of the Sphool of&#13;
Education, Dr. James Kinchen,&#13;
Associate Professor of Music, Mr.&#13;
Doug Townsend, Advisor ot the&#13;
Cultural Awareness Leadership&#13;
Council, and Ms. Delorse Stewart,&#13;
Director of Pre-College Programs&#13;
discussed their experiences in the&#13;
turbulent days of sit-ins, marches,&#13;
and demonstrations.&#13;
Several students entertained&#13;
the audience of roughly eighty&#13;
seated spectators and many others&#13;
who passed by on their way to&#13;
class. Poetry readings by Yolanda&#13;
Jackson preceeded student por-&#13;
Raiiger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
Delorse Stewart, Director of Pre-College Programs, speaks about the&#13;
Civil Rights Movement at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative&#13;
Holiday Celebration on January 23.&#13;
trayals of famous Black Americans.&#13;
:&#13;
Tabitha Cole, Cheri Foster,&#13;
Kim Roberson, and Tatia Jackson&#13;
brought to life the words of Coretta&#13;
Scott King, Charles Drew, an inventor,&#13;
Benjamin Banaker, designer&#13;
of the US Capitol in Washington,&#13;
D.C., and Phillis Wheatley,&#13;
the first Afro-American poet, in a&#13;
dramatic sucession of monologues.&#13;
Yolanda Jackson remained poised&#13;
on stage wrapped in a white chain&#13;
signifying the struggle of the civil&#13;
rights movement.&#13;
Tina Gosey, a Parkside student&#13;
who works in the Center for&#13;
Cultural Advancement, chaired the&#13;
event and served as Master of Ceremonies.&#13;
"We had a great turnout&#13;
with people from Kenosha and&#13;
Racine attending. The feedback&#13;
we have received has been very&#13;
positive. The Dr. Martin Luther&#13;
King Commemorative Holiday&#13;
. Celebration was definitely a success!"&#13;
Life After Parkside&#13;
Kimberly Tenerelli&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Carlene Heard is an inspiration&#13;
to anyone who has started on&#13;
the manufacturing flooras a factory&#13;
worker and worked their way up.&#13;
Carlene started as a racker.&#13;
This was a factory position where&#13;
shechecked for defective products.&#13;
She then moved up to press operator.&#13;
Later, she became a trainer&#13;
for the press operation. Today,&#13;
Carlene is an Employee Education&#13;
Coordinator.&#13;
In this position, she works with&#13;
different departments to determine&#13;
the training needs. She writes&#13;
training and safety procedures, as&#13;
well as company policies and she is&#13;
involved in the hiring process. She&#13;
also provides facilitator skills to&#13;
managers and employees. Quite a&#13;
step up from a racker. This position,&#13;
because it was newly developed&#13;
within her company, was hard&#13;
to get a salary on. Carlene estimated,&#13;
however, approximately&#13;
$20,000 a year to start out.&#13;
She majored in Business with&#13;
a concentration in Personnel, currently&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations&#13;
and Personnel, and Administration&#13;
Management. AtParkside,&#13;
she was involved in the American&#13;
Society Training and Development&#13;
- Student Chapter, currently Society&#13;
of Human Resources Management&#13;
Here, Carlene and others&#13;
talked about what was happening&#13;
in the field and heard guest speakers.&#13;
She felt this organization was&#13;
very helpful and developed skills&#13;
she would later need.&#13;
Carlene felt Parkside taught&#13;
her to learn and to use different&#13;
resources. The most positive thing&#13;
about Parkside, said Carlene, was&#13;
the teachers who had students work&#13;
on semester-long projects instead&#13;
of only text book learning. The&#13;
skills Carlene used in these projects&#13;
were very close or were the skills&#13;
she needed out in industry.&#13;
"A teaching major, to me,&#13;
seemed like it might be helpful in&#13;
this position so I asked Carlene&#13;
why she chose a Business major&#13;
rather than a teaching major.&#13;
Carlene said in this position, you&#13;
have to know how business is run&#13;
as well as knowing teaching skills.&#13;
She knew of teachers who are now&#13;
in similar positions as herself who&#13;
lacked the business skills. She was&#13;
happy with the major shechose but&#13;
felt that ac ourse in designing course&#13;
work or policies and procedures&#13;
would have been helpful.&#13;
Before graduation, anyone&#13;
pursuing this type of career should&#13;
try to become a leader in a group or&#13;
organization or coach someone to&#13;
get training experience, suggested&#13;
Carlene. She also suggested to get&#13;
as much experience as you can and&#13;
design some sort of training.&#13;
The advice Carlene gave to&#13;
students was identify your weaknesses,&#13;
define the area you want to&#13;
get into, strengthen the areas you&#13;
will need for this position, and go&#13;
after it.&#13;
Carlene is an example of&#13;
working your way up to the top.&#13;
She went to Parkside for 7 1/2&#13;
years part-time, starting days, then&#13;
changing to nights. So to anyone&#13;
out there working and going to&#13;
school - don't give up. . Carlene&#13;
didn't and look where she is now!&#13;
Black History Month&#13;
activities&#13;
Poetry readings by Pulitzer-&#13;
Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks,&#13;
music, panel discussions and films&#13;
are just some of the activities&#13;
planned at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside to commemorate&#13;
National Black History Month in&#13;
February.&#13;
Most events are free and open&#13;
to the public. Events are sponsored&#13;
by a number of UW-Parkside organizations,&#13;
including Black History&#13;
Month Committee, English&#13;
Club, Black Student Organization,&#13;
Student Activities, Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee, and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
The following list of events is&#13;
the UW-Parkside Black History&#13;
Month schedule of events for the&#13;
upcoming week:&#13;
January 31- Music- Armenta&#13;
Hummings, internationally-acclaimed&#13;
pianist, will perform classical&#13;
and African-American music.&#13;
8 pm Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Admission $6.&#13;
February 1- Lecture- "Looking&#13;
Back and Moving Forward," a presentation&#13;
by Rodney Brooks, director&#13;
of the Urban League of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine Inc., and&#13;
George Stinson, president of&#13;
NAACP of Racine. 12 noon, room&#13;
207-Union. Free.&#13;
February 4- Comedian- Happy&#13;
Cole, winner of 1986-87 "Star&#13;
Search" competition. 9 pm. Union.&#13;
Free.&#13;
February 5- Theatre- "A Bit of the&#13;
Bard," featuring Darryl Maxmilian&#13;
Robinson. A one-man show of&#13;
Shakespeare and time-travel comedy;&#13;
7 pm. Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Free.&#13;
February 8- Lecture- "The Current&#13;
Situation in Southern Africa,"&#13;
a presentation by the Mozambique&#13;
Solidarity Organization, Chicago,&#13;
Illinois. 12 noon, room 201-Union.&#13;
Free.&#13;
For more information on Black&#13;
History Month, call the UWParkside&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
at 553-2278.&#13;
a different&#13;
set of jaws.&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED&#13;
Friday Night February 8.&#13;
Pre-show at 11:00, show starts at midnight.&#13;
Tickets $2.00 for students, $4.00 for guests.&#13;
Advanced ticket sales only!&#13;
Ranger, Page 8 Winter Carnival January 31,1991&#13;
Winter carnival needs participants&#13;
By Dennis Brown&#13;
Winter Carnival Chair&#13;
Are you ready for this year's&#13;
Winter Carnival? You may have&#13;
noticed that the Concourse is starting&#13;
to look much like a comic strip.&#13;
That's because this year's theme is&#13;
animation, combined with comedy&#13;
and a bit of general silliness. During&#13;
the week of February 4th,&#13;
weirdness will be the norm,&#13;
supplementing your acedemic life&#13;
with a little fun and friendly competition.&#13;
This is the time of year when&#13;
you are encouraged to join a cl ub or&#13;
become active in your organization&#13;
in order to defeat opposing&#13;
clubs in a slew of games and activities&#13;
offered throughout the week&#13;
by the Winter Carnival Committee.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to join&#13;
in the festivities. If you are interested,&#13;
please look for the insert in&#13;
today's Ranger for a list of events.&#13;
Clubs that participate in Winter&#13;
Carnival events will receive&#13;
Competition Points for winning&#13;
events (First, secondand third place)&#13;
and also Spirit Points for attendance,&#13;
participation, overall spirit&#13;
and co-sponsorship of events. Each&#13;
category of points will be totalled&#13;
at the end of the week and prizes of&#13;
S I0 0, S75, and S50 will be awadred&#13;
for each category. Also, individual&#13;
events, those events in which the&#13;
teams consist of two or fewer&#13;
people, will receive Winter Carnival&#13;
sweatshirts, t-shirts and mugs&#13;
for first, second and third place,&#13;
respectively, in addition to&#13;
Competition and Spirit&#13;
points. For more information,&#13;
see your club&#13;
president for a copy of&#13;
the Winter Carnival&#13;
booklet or call the Student&#13;
Activities Office&#13;
(Union 209) at 553-2278.&#13;
A event schedule, game&#13;
rules, point breakdown,&#13;
prize information and&#13;
some registration&#13;
forms are included in&#13;
the booklet. Be&#13;
warned, you must&#13;
registeryourclub&#13;
in order to be eligible&#13;
for cash&#13;
prizes, and you&#13;
must register for&#13;
the Up syn c and&#13;
College Bowl in&#13;
order to participate.&#13;
Club/organization&#13;
and lip sync registration&#13;
forms are included in&#13;
the W. C. booklet. College Bowl&#13;
registration form and extra club&#13;
and lip sync registration forms are&#13;
available from Carole Girsh in&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
All events and entertainment&#13;
are free and open to everyone, except&#13;
the Rocky Horror Picture S how&#13;
Winter Carnival point system:&#13;
A guide to the program&#13;
Compiled by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
With Winter&#13;
Carnival rightaround&#13;
the corner, not to&#13;
mention the Window&#13;
Painting Competition&#13;
already at&#13;
work, organizations&#13;
and clubs&#13;
might be worn&#13;
dering what the&#13;
point system is like&#13;
this year. The folowing&#13;
information in&#13;
i "this article contains&#13;
\ changes from last year.&#13;
* The two methods&#13;
of obtaining&#13;
points consist of&#13;
a "Competition&#13;
Point Category"&#13;
and a&#13;
pint Point&#13;
Ca t eg o r y . "&#13;
Events are&#13;
open to all&#13;
s tu de n t s ,&#13;
faculty, staff and&#13;
alumni; however, only&#13;
teams sponsored and registered&#13;
with the Student&#13;
Activities Office (Union&#13;
209) will be eligible for&#13;
Spirit and Competition&#13;
Cash Prizes. WINTER CARNIVAL '91 There are rhree&#13;
ways to earn competi-&#13;
Ifaiverefyofwisconsfo-^ tion points. The first one is&#13;
team events and points are as&#13;
follows: first place - 300 points,&#13;
second place - 200 points, and third&#13;
on Friday night. Tickets and additional&#13;
information for this is available&#13;
at the Union Information Desk.&#13;
Deadline for the three registration&#13;
forms is Friday, February 1. Good&#13;
Luck!!!&#13;
College bowl&#13;
Competition coming to UW-Parkside&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside will compete in College&#13;
Bowl, "The Varsity Sport of the&#13;
Mind". College Bowl is a game&#13;
of academic knowledge and quick&#13;
recall. Now in its 14th year, the&#13;
College Bowl Campus Program is&#13;
a popular tradition on America's&#13;
campuses. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is among over&#13;
300 institutions of higher education&#13;
playing College Bowl 1991.&#13;
Like the popular radio and&#13;
television series of the 50's, 60's,&#13;
and 70's, the game features two&#13;
teams of four players each competing&#13;
to score points to Toss-Up&#13;
and Bonus questions. The questions&#13;
cover every conceivable topic&#13;
of literature, science, history, geography,&#13;
religion, social sciences&#13;
and the arts, to popular culture,&#13;
sports and current events. College&#13;
Bowl is organized and administered&#13;
with the cooperation of the&#13;
Association of College Unions-&#13;
International (ACU-I). Our Campus&#13;
Tournament is run by Mary&#13;
Ellen Wesiey, Student Activities&#13;
Office. Competition at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside begins&#13;
with the Campus Tournament&#13;
to select the Campus Champion&#13;
Team, scheduled for Febuary 4,5,&#13;
and 6th (if necessary). Our Varsity&#13;
Squad will advance to the Regional&#13;
Tournament, March 1 -3. This&#13;
year's Regional Competition will&#13;
be held at Madison. The National&#13;
Championship Tournament, held&#13;
April 26-28, features the 15 regional&#13;
Champions and a 16th Wild Card&#13;
team.&#13;
To sign-up for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside College&#13;
Bowl competition, contact Mary&#13;
Ellen Wesley at 553-2277 by Fri.,&#13;
Feb.l.&#13;
place -100 points.&#13;
The second way to earn points&#13;
is by placing in individual events.&#13;
Individual events include the following&#13;
point structure as well as&#13;
the following awards: first place -&#13;
Winter Carnival Sweatshirt, second&#13;
place - Winter Carnival Tshirt,&#13;
and third place - Tin Winter&#13;
Carnival Mug.&#13;
Finally, the third way to earn&#13;
competition points is by co-sponsoring&#13;
an event. 300 points, the&#13;
equivalent of first place, will be&#13;
awarded to clubs that co-sponsor&#13;
an event. The club cannot compete&#13;
in the event they're co-sponsoring;&#13;
however, they will be allowed to&#13;
participate as an exhibitional group.&#13;
The other method of obtaining&#13;
points is with spirit points. A&#13;
change this year is that spirit points&#13;
will be awarded based on four&#13;
factors: (a) attendance, (b) participation,&#13;
(c) overall "spirit" and&#13;
(d) event co-sponsorship. Each&#13;
factor will receive 25% of the&#13;
overall amount of spirit points.&#13;
(A): Each club member that&#13;
shows up at an event will be allowed&#13;
to register for attendance points for&#13;
their club or organization. Participation&#13;
in the event is not required;&#13;
however, the person must be present&#13;
at the event in order to earn points.&#13;
Look fortheWinterCamival Ballot&#13;
Box to sign-up. Attendance points&#13;
will be given at every event. _&#13;
(B): All clubs and organizations&#13;
will receive participation&#13;
points simply by participating in&#13;
each event. Total number of points&#13;
is based upon the total number of&#13;
events offered.&#13;
(C): Judges will be members&#13;
of faculty and staff not associated&#13;
with clubs/organizations. Three&#13;
criteria will be judged at each event:&#13;
sportsmanlike conduct, chants/&#13;
cheers, and visible banners. Team&#13;
members and audience arc judged.&#13;
HINT: Being more visible (define&#13;
"visible" your own way) will gain&#13;
more points.&#13;
(D): All clubs and organizations&#13;
have the opportunity to gain&#13;
one fourth of the total spirit points&#13;
by co-sponsoring an event. Cosponsorship&#13;
means that a club creates&#13;
and oversees an event using&#13;
the rules provided in this booklet in&#13;
the GAME RULES section. Additional&#13;
rules may be added by the&#13;
co-sponsoring club, and should be&#13;
announced at the start of the event.&#13;
Three criteria will be judged for the&#13;
event that a club co-sponsors: ere-,&#13;
ativity, organization, and promotion&#13;
(posters, banners, flyers on&#13;
campus). The more work and fun&#13;
you put into an event, the more&#13;
points you will receive. Let Mary&#13;
Ellen Wesley at 553-2277 know by&#13;
Friday, February .1, if you are interested&#13;
in co-sponsorhip.&#13;
The last bit of information is in&#13;
regards to team event and spirit&#13;
point prizes. Competition points&#13;
for all events will be added together&#13;
at the end of the week and the top&#13;
three organizations/clubs will be&#13;
awarded the following cash prizes:&#13;
first place - $100, second place -&#13;
$75 and third place - $50. Spirit&#13;
point cash awards will be handled&#13;
in the same manner and with the&#13;
same cash prizes.&#13;
All cash prizes will be deposited&#13;
into the organization's private&#13;
account. Only organizations that&#13;
submit a clyb/organization registration&#13;
form will be eligible to receive&#13;
cash awards. The deadline&#13;
for all registration forms will be&#13;
Fri,Feb. 1, at 4 pm in the Student&#13;
Activities Office (Union 209).&#13;
A WRAP-UP ON WHAT'S INSIDE&#13;
BreakiiU the tape Ranger women run to&#13;
afirst place victory as the indoor season kicks&#13;
off at UWM 's Klotche Center. B2.&#13;
Crackdown! NewNCAAruieswill&#13;
hurt "minor sports" says columnist Dave&#13;
Doherty. B2.&#13;
7 tip Men's CCX earned seven first place&#13;
victories at their indoor season opener a&#13;
UWM. B4.&#13;
Swarmed The women's basketball team&#13;
lost by 42 to St. Ambrose as the Queen Bees&#13;
stung our Rangers. B4.&#13;
The Great One? Hockey player Frank&#13;
Casalena is Athlete of the Week scoring 12&#13;
points in two games over the weekend. B4.&#13;
Spanning the Globe Col umni s t&#13;
Jim Newcombsaysthe WorldFootballl.eague&#13;
could Hop with international competition as&#13;
the USFL did- B2.&#13;
Taken down RangerGrapplerslose&#13;
dual meet to Central State University in its&#13;
biggest test of the season. B4.&#13;
Lend a helping hand R e f e r e e s&#13;
scorekeepersand statisticians needed. Call&#13;
Phy. Ed office ext 2245.&#13;
By JEFFLEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The slide continues. The UW-Parkside basketball&#13;
team continued its hunt for the first home victory&#13;
of the season, and an end to a 13 game skid, in a home&#13;
match-up with Quincy College. The 3-16 Hawks&#13;
seemed to be ripe pickings to end the losing slide&#13;
which began at the end of November. For almost 30&#13;
minutes, it looked like it may happen.&#13;
Quincy, without the services of two of its premier&#13;
front court players, and the Rangers, with just eight&#13;
players suited up for action, matched up well in height.&#13;
The Hawk's interior consisted of 6'6" center Garland&#13;
Grant, and 6'4" Bret Kasubke. Across from them, the&#13;
Rangers lined up at 6'6" and 6' 5" with Todd Lubkeman&#13;
and Tim Roberson. It was Roberson and Kasubke who&#13;
led the charges in the first half for both squads.&#13;
Roberson was involved in 11 of the first 14&#13;
Ranger points. He had three assists and four points in&#13;
the first nine minutes of play, and by half time, he had&#13;
totaled nine points and eight rebounds. His fifteenfooter&#13;
witli 1:20 left put the Rangers on top 23-22 as&#13;
they regained the lead in a half which saw seven lead&#13;
changes.&#13;
Kasubke scored six points and grabbed six rebounds,&#13;
helping Quincy to a 20-15 rebounding edge&#13;
by half. Two of his baskets came on rebounds of&#13;
missed shots, as second and third chances kept the&#13;
Hawks in striking range. Despite shooting just 29% in&#13;
the half, Quincy found itself down just two at the&#13;
intermission.&#13;
UW-Parkside clung to that lead in the opening&#13;
minutes of the second half. Doug Burns con verted two&#13;
of three freethrows after he was fouled from beyond&#13;
the arc, making it 36-33 with 13:40 left.&#13;
Quincy responded with full court pressure,&#13;
unravelling the Ranger front court and sparking a 7-0&#13;
run to take their first lead of the half. In that run, the&#13;
Hawks forced two turnovers and had a pair of steals&#13;
see Quincy, B2&#13;
Where's the D? Yes, that is a Parkside defender, Tim Cates, behind&#13;
Quincy's Bret KaSubke. Basket was good and Parkside lost 71-62.&#13;
Weitzel's 26 paces wii&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst Sports Editor j&#13;
Diana Weitzel scored 26points&#13;
as UW-Parkside used a UNLV style&#13;
fast break en route to a 82-57 victory&#13;
over North Central College of&#13;
Illinois Tuesday at the UWParkside&#13;
fieldhouse.&#13;
The win lifted Parkside to the i&#13;
.500 mark at 9-9.&#13;
"We were really up on the&#13;
boards and we played good defense,"&#13;
said Weitzel. "The win felt&#13;
good," she added.&#13;
The Rangers pressure defense&#13;
shocked the Cardinals as turnovers i&#13;
turned into fast break points early, j&#13;
Parkside scored the game's first 14&#13;
see Women, B2 Diana Weitzel&#13;
SECTION B THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1991 SECTION B&#13;
Climbing To The Top&#13;
Senior grapplers Dennis DuChene and Mark Hemauer are moving in on Ted Price's alltime&#13;
career victory total. Below are the top ten victory totals at UWP:&#13;
Ted Price (85-90)&#13;
Rangers rout&#13;
Redmen in&#13;
ice-breaker&#13;
Mike Muckerheide (81-85) 142 By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Dennis DuChene* (86-Pres) 131 Sports Editor&#13;
Mark Hemauer* (86-Pres) 127 UW-Parkside's home ice-&#13;
Dan Winter (79-62) 124&#13;
Ted Keyes (83-85) 113&#13;
breaker could safely be called a&#13;
smashing success. Playing against&#13;
crosstown rival Carthage College,&#13;
Bob Gruner (76-80) 110 the Rangers piled up 9 goals, outshot&#13;
theRedmen 38-34, and moved&#13;
Mike Vania (82-84) 107 to within one game of the .500&#13;
Jack Danner (84-88) 105; mark at 3-4.&#13;
Playing in front of an estisee&#13;
Hockey, B4&#13;
P O R T s&#13;
Tim Whiting* (87-P) 99&#13;
Deja vu with new&#13;
football league&#13;
By&#13;
JIM&#13;
Columnist&#13;
During the Superbowl, there were a number of ads for the World&#13;
Football League, a new set of teamfsr om such exotic locales as Barcelona&#13;
and Hamburg. This looks to me to be about as promising as the USFL and&#13;
Arena Football.&#13;
Maybe it's because I can't swallow the idea that the same people who&#13;
run with bulls at Pamplona can run with the Bears in Chicago, at least not&#13;
for a while, or maybe 'ist because I believe that there is as hortage of good&#13;
football coaches. Maybe it's both.&#13;
But what if I'm wrong, and American football spreads across Europe&#13;
and the rest of the world? Hey, who knows for sure that it won't. But, I'm&#13;
worried that it'll be as lackluster as the USFL, producing such forgettables&#13;
as Doug Flutie and, urn, who were those other guys?&#13;
The theory behind this new league seems to be an old one. "If you&#13;
throw enough s t against a wall, some of it is bound to stick." Well, if&#13;
it dosen't stick, we can at least hope it doesn't stain.&#13;
Rangers dash for&#13;
win in indoor debut&#13;
at Klotche Center&#13;
By MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
UW-Parkside took the Klotche&#13;
Centerin Milwaukee by storm. The&#13;
Rangers came home with 12 place&#13;
winners in the 9-team meet A&#13;
team score wasn't kept, but the&#13;
Rangers racked up some solid individual&#13;
performances for the first&#13;
indoor meet of the year.&#13;
Three race victories highlighted&#13;
the season opener for the&#13;
Ranger women tracksters.&#13;
Veronica Chamlee took the only&#13;
individual title by winning the&#13;
800m run in a time of 2:20.9.&#13;
"Veronica jumped out quick and&#13;
ran very well. Her times will improve&#13;
with better competition,"&#13;
stated DeWitt In the 4x400 relay,&#13;
Ann Stokman, Lori Wilkens, Kia&#13;
Avery and Veronica Chamlee ran&#13;
to a 4:20.7. The Distance Medley&#13;
Relay completed the victories for&#13;
the Rangers at 13:18.0.&#13;
In the 1500 meter run, Jenny&#13;
Gross and Erin McDermott took&#13;
second and third respectively with&#13;
a 4:51.6 and a 5:02.7. Coach&#13;
DeWitt felt the two ran nice controlled&#13;
races. A good start to the&#13;
indoor season the two will keep&#13;
improving on.&#13;
Freshman Jane Kunz in her&#13;
first collegiate race took second&#13;
with a 1:03.3 in the 400 m dash,&#13;
which was one-tenth of a second&#13;
behind the winner. The second&#13;
place finishesbegan to roll in: Kelly&#13;
Watson in the 1000m run with a&#13;
3:12.5, Kia Avery in the 660m run&#13;
with a 1:44.5, Lori Wiliams in the&#13;
300m dash running a :41,5 and&#13;
Ann Stokman in the 3000m run wit&#13;
a 10:21.6. Along with Ann, Wendy&#13;
Orlowski took 5th and Tara Roy&#13;
finished 6th for the Rangers in the&#13;
3000 meters with times of 10:56.1&#13;
and 10:59.2.The Rangers handled&#13;
the field, comprised of UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Loyola, Lawrence, Lewis,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Carroll, MATC,&#13;
and Ripon very well for the first&#13;
meet of the year. Coach DeWitt&#13;
stated, 'This was a very good meet.&#13;
In all cases I felt that wer aced well&#13;
and looked good for a first meet."&#13;
The Rangers will be heading to&#13;
UW-Stevens Point this weekend.&#13;
They will be breaking in a new&#13;
track which is made to use spikes&#13;
for the indoor meet. This could be&#13;
a good opportunity to turn in fast&#13;
times for the early season. The&#13;
indoor season is short and the Lady&#13;
Rangers have their work cut out for&#13;
them in their quest for qualifying&#13;
runners for the National Indoor&#13;
Meet.&#13;
Women . . • Team effort equals important win&#13;
continued from page B1&#13;
points and North Central used two&#13;
time-outs and nearly six minutes&#13;
before scoring a basket.&#13;
Coach Miller substituted perfectly,&#13;
keeping fresh bodies and&#13;
tight pressure on the passing lanes.&#13;
Brenda Van Cuick capitalized on&#13;
the passing lanes to initiate the fast&#13;
break. Her steal and fast break&#13;
basket with 9:31 in the first half&#13;
turned into a three-point play and&#13;
Parkside led 24-8. North Central&#13;
managed to whittle the lead to 11&#13;
by the half at 43-22.&#13;
Parkside did just about everything&#13;
it wanted. The Rangers ran&#13;
their motion offense well and made&#13;
transitions from offense todefense&#13;
smoothly. About the only thing&#13;
Parkside did not do well was de-&#13;
Ouincv Rangers&#13;
streak is&#13;
now at 14 continued fron page B1&#13;
within 40 seconds.&#13;
The Rangers were able to&#13;
regroup momentarily with an 8-2&#13;
run of their own. John Evans hit a&#13;
19 footer with just two seconds on&#13;
the shot-clock to move the Rangers&#13;
ahead 44-42 with 9:25 remaining.&#13;
That would be their last lead of&#13;
the game, as Quincy's Mike&#13;
Harlow, scoreless to that point,&#13;
drilled three three-pointers within&#13;
1:08. This fueled a 14-pointHawk&#13;
run to put the Rangers down by&#13;
twelve with 6:11 left.&#13;
UW-Parkside never fully recovered&#13;
from that run, getting to&#13;
within five with :24 left before&#13;
Quincy's Fred Devoe hit four&#13;
freethrows to account for the 71-62&#13;
final.&#13;
UW-Parkside committed 20&#13;
turnovers in the contest. That,&#13;
compounded with eight Quincy&#13;
steals and a 39-30 Hawk rebounding&#13;
edge, painted a pretty clear&#13;
pictureof the Ranger's 14th straight&#13;
loss.&#13;
Evans led all scorers with 23&#13;
points in his first strong outing&#13;
since an ankle injury two weeks&#13;
ago. Roberson finished with 14&#13;
points and 16rebounds for Parkside&#13;
before fouling out late into the&#13;
game.&#13;
For Quincy, Tommy Gill and&#13;
Devoe had 16 each..as four Hawks&#13;
scored in double figures.&#13;
fend the low post. North Central's&#13;
Sandy Eberhardt posted up time&#13;
and time again, and although she&#13;
missed numerous puppies down&#13;
low, finished with 16. Van Cuick&#13;
pumped in 21 with five assists and&#13;
four steals, having a nothing less&#13;
than typical BVC game.&#13;
A milestone mark&#13;
Brenda Van Cuick, Parkside's;&#13;
senior Ali-American guard and last&#13;
week's IBM Ranger Athlete of the&#13;
Week, recently reached another&#13;
milestone in her basketball career&#13;
with the Rangers.&#13;
Van Cuick eclipsed the 1000&#13;
point mark on the 15th, scoring 20&#13;
in the Ranger's 79-41 trouncing of&#13;
Wisconsin Lutheran.&#13;
Freshman guard Ann Schmid&#13;
was outstanding at the point with&#13;
no-look fast break passes scoring&#13;
six points with four steals.&#13;
At the 12:02 mark of the second&#13;
half, Parkside was up 62-33&#13;
and coasted to the victory.&#13;
"It was a good game. We&#13;
needed the win," said Van Cuick.&#13;
Sophomore Becky Lulloff&#13;
played a great game, hustling for&#13;
every loose ball and scoring 12.&#13;
Jenny Newbert was tough off the&#13;
bench scoring 13 points and held&#13;
the team together when four&#13;
freshmen were on the court with&#13;
her late in the game.&#13;
"This was a much needed win,"&#13;
said coach Miller. "It was our best&#13;
game since our Florida trip."&#13;
NCAA lays down law&#13;
hurts "minor sports"&#13;
By&#13;
DAVID&#13;
DQHERTY&#13;
Columnist&#13;
On January 9 of this year, NCAA delegates approved the recommendations&#13;
of its Presidents Commission, reducing practice time and limiting&#13;
scholarships for its member schools.&#13;
The proposal, which passed overwhelmingly, reduced scholarships&#13;
in Division I football from 95 to 85 starting in 1995, reduced basketball&#13;
scholarships from 15 to 13 starting in 1995, and reduced scholarships in&#13;
all other sports by 10 percent effective August 1,1993. It also limited&#13;
practice time to 20 hours a week during the season with a guaranteed one&#13;
day off. During the off-season, practice is limited to eight hours per week&#13;
with three days off.&#13;
By approving this proposal, the NCAA is going to see a dramatic&#13;
decline in the quality of competition in all" minor sports". Because of the&#13;
limit on practice time, many of the high quality college athletes will be&#13;
forced to leave school to train for Olympic or professional careers.&#13;
The athletes who will be hurt the most will be swimmers, gymnasts,&#13;
and tennis players. The top athletes in these sports must practice more&#13;
than 20 hours a week to be competitive. Those athletes who want to&#13;
remain at the top of their spotr will not be able ot compete for their college&#13;
teams. Many of these athletes have already made great sacrifices in order&#13;
to compete at the NCAA level and this is how the NCAA shows its&#13;
appreciation.&#13;
The only reason I can see to limit prcatice time iss o athletes will have&#13;
more time to concentrate on their academics. So why did the delegates&#13;
also on January 9 reject proposals which would require that athletes&#13;
achieve a certain grade point at various stages of their academic career,&#13;
and one which would penalize Division I schools which graduate less than&#13;
50 percent of their athletes?&#13;
The answer is very simple. These proposals would hurt schools&#13;
football and basketball programs. These programs bring in far too much&#13;
income to be bothered by little problems like academic achievement&#13;
The scholarship cut also hurts the minor sports. Sports like swimming&#13;
and track already have less than half the scholarships required to field a&#13;
complete team. Cutting their scholarships by 10 percent will only make&#13;
the problem worse. I don't think many football teams are going to miss&#13;
the ten scholarships they lost&#13;
UW-Parkside at North East Missouri&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE (58)&#13;
fg 3fg ft rb&#13;
min m- a m- a m- a o-t a to blks pf lP&#13;
Pepelea 11 0- 0 0- 0 0 - 0 0- 1 2 4 0 0 1 0&#13;
Allen 28 1 - 4 1- 1 0 - 0 0-0 1 2 0 1 0 3&#13;
Evans 14 2- 5 1- 3 0 - 0 0- 1 0 4 0 0 0 5&#13;
Roberson 40 8 - 16 0- 0 6 - 6 4- 12 1 4 1 4 2 22&#13;
Cates 39 3 - 6 2- 4 2 - 2 1-7 0 4 1 1 3 10&#13;
Bums 36 2- 5 2- 5 0- 0 0-2 2 4 1 0 5 6&#13;
Lubkeman 27 2 - 8 0- 1 4 - 5 2-2 0 0 0 1 3 8&#13;
Wheelock 5 2- 2 0- 0 0- 2 1-1 0 0 0 0 2 4&#13;
TOTALS: 200 20-46 6-14 12- 15 9-29 6 22 3 7 16 58&#13;
NE MISSOURI (83)&#13;
fg 3fg ft rb&#13;
min m- a m- a m- a O-l a to blks pf fp&#13;
Brock 13 1 - 5 1- 5 0 - 0 0 - 3 0 0 0 2 1 3&#13;
Matthews 22 3 - 7 0- 2 0 - 0 0 - 2 2 2 1 2 1 6&#13;
Chilton 12 3 - 6 1- 3 0 - 0 2- 2 1 1 0 1 0 7&#13;
Clements 21 3- 5 0- 0 3 - 9 5- 8 0 1 0 2 4 9&#13;
Schieppe 27 6- 9 5- 7 0 - 0 0- 4 1 3 0 1 0 17&#13;
Printy 22 4- 5 3- 3 0- 0 0- 3 3 1 1 0 2 11&#13;
Linnemeyer 18 5 - 13 3- 10 2 - 4 2- 2 I 2 0 2 2 15&#13;
Lewis 5 0- 2 0- 0 1 - 2 3- 4 0 1 0 0 2 1&#13;
Parmeter 12 0- 1 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1 0 0 2 1 0&#13;
Rigsbee 21 4- 6 0- 0 0 - 0 3- 5 2 1 1 1 1 8&#13;
Reid 27 3 - 6 0- 0 0- 0 2- 5 1 0 1 2 0 6&#13;
TOTALS: 200 32-65 13-31 6-15 18-39 1212 4 15 14 83&#13;
PERCENTAGES: Fieldgoals- NE Missouri 49.2%, Parkside 43.5%. Freeihrows-&#13;
NE Missouri 40.0%, Parkside 80.0%.&#13;
Team 1 2 T&#13;
Rangers 31 27 58&#13;
Bulldogs 41 42 83&#13;
Quincy College at UW-Parkside&#13;
QUINCY (71)&#13;
fg 3fg ft • rb&#13;
min m- a m- a m- a o - t a to bks pf tp&#13;
GUI 37 7 - 10 2 - 4 0- 1 1 - 3 3 3 1 2 2 16&#13;
Harlow 26 3- 7 3 - 4 1 - 2 1 - 4 0 0 0 1 2 10&#13;
Kasubke 28 5- 6 0- 0 0- 3 3 - 9 2 2 0 1 1 10&#13;
Noore 35 3- 5 1 - 1 1 - 2 1 - 3 3 3 0 2 0 8&#13;
Fluckey 11 1 - 3 1 - 3 0- 0 0- 1 2 2 0 0 4 5&#13;
Priebe . 5 0- 0 0 - 0 0- 0 0- 2 0 0 0 0 0 0&#13;
Devoe 28 6- 15 0- 2 4 - 5 2- 7 0 2 0 0 3 16&#13;
Gram 11 2 - 8 0- 0 0- 0 0- 1 0 1 0 0 0 4&#13;
Young 19 1 - 5 0- 0 2- 2 1 - 2 0 1 0 2 1 4&#13;
TOTALS: 200 28-59 7-14 8-15 12-39 10 12 1 8 13 71&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE (62)&#13;
fg 3fg ft rb&#13;
min m- a m- a m a o - l a to bks Pf *P&#13;
Pepelea 5 0 - 2 0 -2 0 0 0- 0 0 2 0 0 0 0&#13;
Allen 8 0 - 3 0 -2 0 0 1 - 1 0 1 0 0 0 0&#13;
Evans 32 9- 15 5- 11 0 0 0- 2 1 6 0 0 1 23&#13;
Roberson 40 5 - 9 0 - 1 4 6 1 - 16 4 5 0 1 5 14&#13;
Cates 38 5 - 1 4 3 - 9 0 0 1 - 5 4 5 0 0 4 13&#13;
Bums 40 2 - 3 2 -2 2 3 0- 2 3 1 1 0 2 8&#13;
Lubkeman 37 1 - 5 0 -1 2 2 1 - 2 2 0 1 0 1 4&#13;
TOTALS: 200 22-51 10-28 8 -11 5 -30 14 20 2 1 13 62&#13;
PERCENTAGES: Fieldgoals- Quincy 47.5%, Parkside 43.1%. Freeihrows- Quincy&#13;
53.3%, Parkside 72.7%.&#13;
Team&#13;
Hawks&#13;
Rangers&#13;
1 2 T&#13;
22 49 71&#13;
24 38 62&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
Scorers and officials needed for intramural season;&#13;
Contact PE office (x2245) for pay rates and details.&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
UW-Parkside vs St. Ambrose College&#13;
UW-Parkside 57&#13;
St Ambrose 99&#13;
St. Ambrose (99)&#13;
fg ft rcb&#13;
min m-a m-a o-t a Pf 9&#13;
Langbehn 13 5-6 0-0 1-3 7 1 11&#13;
Nutrop 9 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0&#13;
Karom 30 7-8 3-4 0-1 0 0 17&#13;
Tegeler 11 2-4 2-2 3-6 0 0 6&#13;
Frommelt 4 2-3 0-0 2-7 3 3 4&#13;
Johnson 29 6-13 0-0 0-0 7 1 12&#13;
Grarert 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0&#13;
Qarke 23 8-10 0-0 1-4 5 4 16&#13;
McKinley 4 0-0 1-2 0-6 0 2 1&#13;
Born 24 7-11 3-4 2-5 1 1 17&#13;
Sikkcma 27 6-9 3-4 1-10 2 5 15&#13;
Totals 200 42-62 12-16 10-45 27 18 99&#13;
fg ft teb&#13;
min m-* m-t o-t a Pf 9&#13;
6 0-1 0-0 0-1 1 0 0&#13;
11 0-2 0-0 1-2 0 2 0&#13;
30 4-8 2-2 0-2 4 3 11&#13;
24 4-8 1-2 0-0 0 1 9&#13;
9 0-2 2-3 0-2 0 1 2&#13;
27 Ml 0-1 0-2 2 2 5&#13;
4 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 2&#13;
13 0-1 2-2 0-3 0 0 2&#13;
11 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0&#13;
23 5-8 1-2 2-4 1 3 11&#13;
29 6-12 3-5 2-3 3 1 15&#13;
13 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 1 0&#13;
200 22-57 11-18 7-24 11 15 57&#13;
1&#13;
UW-Parkside 27&#13;
St.Ambrose 50&#13;
2&#13;
30&#13;
49&#13;
T&#13;
57&#13;
99&#13;
UW-Parkside vs North Central College&#13;
North Central--—— ——57&#13;
UW-Parkside——— -82&#13;
North Central (57)&#13;
fg ft reb&#13;
min m-a m-a o-t a Pf 9&#13;
Stamm 9 1-5 0-0 2-4 0 2 2&#13;
Burch 8 1-4 0-0 0-1 0 1 2&#13;
Essingtoo 9 0-2 0-0 1-3 0 2 0&#13;
Miller 35 4-7 0-0 0-1 0 3 8&#13;
Free 26 2-9 0-0 0-2 2 3 7&#13;
Kuneit 32 3-6 4-4 1-1 0 4 10&#13;
Zurawski 9 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 2&#13;
Eberhardt 32 7-17 2-4 2-8 2 1 16&#13;
Pirkle 30 0-5 2-2 0-1 0 0 8&#13;
Kircbdfr 4 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 0 0&#13;
Ogilvie 6 1-3 0-0 0-1 0 0 2&#13;
Totals 200 20-61 8-10 6-23 4 1*&#13;
PERCENTAGES:FG-.328 FT-.800 3-PT: 3-6 300&#13;
TURN'OVERS:22(Eberhsrdt-5, Miller.Free-4,Pirkle-4,&#13;
Burch.Essington-2, Ogilvie,) STEALS:5(Eberhardt-&#13;
2^iUer, Ogilvie)&#13;
UW-Parkside (82)&#13;
rg ft reb&#13;
mm m-a m-a o-t a Pf 9&#13;
Preund 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0&#13;
Neubert 11 6-8 1-1 1-4 1 2 13&#13;
VanCuiek 28 8-11 2-2 14 5 2 21&#13;
Weitzel 28 9-15 5-8 2-5 4 0 26&#13;
Hack 6 0-1 0-1 0-1 0 0 0&#13;
Bcnn 5 0-2 0-0 2 -3 0 1 0&#13;
Schmid 26 3-8 0-0 1-3 2 2 6&#13;
Wallner 11 2-5 0-0 3-6 0 2 4&#13;
Raniewicz 9 0-1 0-1 1-1 0 0 0&#13;
Mayer 10 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 1 0&#13;
Lulloff 28 5-9 2-2 3-8 0 2 12&#13;
Bloyer 23 0-5 0-0 2-5 2 3 0&#13;
Tibbetts 10 0-1 0-1 0-2 0 1 0&#13;
Totals 200 33-68 10-16 16-4217 16 82&#13;
PERCENTAGES:fg-A85 ft-.625 3-pt.\182&#13;
BLOCKS: 7(Wallner-3.Neubert-2.Hack. Tibbett*).|&#13;
TURNOVERS:14 (Raniewicz-3,Schmid-2,Van Cuick-2,1&#13;
Hack -1 Freund-1) STEALS: 14{Van Cuick-4, Scbmid-4,|&#13;
Wallner.Lulloff-2, Neubert, Bloyer)&#13;
1&#13;
North Central 22&#13;
UW-Parkside 43&#13;
2&#13;
35&#13;
39&#13;
T&#13;
57&#13;
82&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Central Oklahoma State Dual&#13;
1-25-91 in Edmond. OK&#13;
CSU 26, UW-Parkside 10&#13;
Individual Results:&#13;
118 Randy Zellner (CSU) won by forfiet&#13;
126 Kevin Bird (UWP) maj. dec. Jantz Kinzer 10-2&#13;
134 Jeff Gowens (CSU) dec. Dennis DuCbene 4-2&#13;
142 Todd Drake (CSU) (fee. Kelly Becker 13-7&#13;
150 Tim Whiting (UWP) drew withC. Skidgel 10-10&#13;
158 Keith Cunningham (CSU) dec Chris Buckley 7-1&#13;
167 Mark Hemauer (UWP) maj dec B. Roasset 14-4&#13;
177 Wayne Cole (CSU) dec Darin Tiedt 8-7&#13;
190 Greg Oplotnik (CSU) dec. Scon Wessley 11-6&#13;
HW Fay Bamett (CSU) dec. Jim Bezooe 11-4&#13;
How They Scored&#13;
DUAL RECORD&#13;
UWP 28 UW-LaCrosse 6 1-0&#13;
UWP 10 Central Oklahoma 26 1-1&#13;
UWP Ferris State (2-1-91)&#13;
UWP Grand Valley State (2-1-91)&#13;
UWP Lake Superior Sate (2-1-91)&#13;
UWP Central Missouri (2-2-91)&#13;
UWP SIU-EdwardsvOle (2-2-91)&#13;
UWP UW-Whitewater (2-5-91)&#13;
UWP Marquette University (2-13-91)&#13;
PERCENTACES:FG-.623 FT-.750 3-PT: 1-2 300&#13;
BLOCKS:4(Bora)TURNOVERS:20(Langbehn-&#13;
4,NuUop-4Fromelt-4,CI ark-4,Born-3 Johnson-1.)&#13;
STEALS:16(Johnson-6, Nutrop-5 Langbehn, Qarke,&#13;
McKinley, Bom, Sikkcma)&#13;
UW-Parkside (57)&#13;
Freund&#13;
Neubert&#13;
Van Cuic&#13;
Weitzel&#13;
Hack&#13;
Schmid&#13;
Wallner&#13;
RarJcwic&#13;
Mayer&#13;
Lulloff&#13;
Bloyer&#13;
Tibbetts&#13;
Totals&#13;
PERCENTAGES.fg-.386 ft-.611 3-pt:.143&#13;
BLOCKS: 2( Hack. Bloyer).TLRNOVERS:24(Schmid-&#13;
6. Frcund-4, Van Cuick-4.Maier-4, Neuben-2,Bloyer-&#13;
2.Weitzel. Hack) STEALS:13(Van Cuick-8. Maier-2,&#13;
Tibbetts-2.Schxrud)&#13;
Takedowns&#13;
Reversals&#13;
Near-falls&#13;
Escapes&#13;
Penalty Points&#13;
CSU 19&#13;
CSU 1&#13;
CSU 3&#13;
CSU 13&#13;
CSU1&#13;
UWP 13&#13;
UWP 3&#13;
UWP1&#13;
UWP1&#13;
UWP 5&#13;
TOURNAMENTS&#13;
VW-Stevens Point Open: 6 Chimps. 11 place winner*&#13;
Northern Open: No Champs, one place winner&#13;
VW-Whitewater Invite: 2 Champs, 11 place winners&#13;
Wisconsin Collegiate Open: 1 Champ, 12 place winner*&#13;
Drake Open: 5 place winners&#13;
Midwest Classic: 3rd Place (86 jXs) 6 place winners&#13;
VW-Eau Claire Invite: (2-2-91)&#13;
Wheaton Invite: (2-8-91)&#13;
1990-1991 Wrestling Statistics&#13;
Wrestler m sn 112 REV ES 3NF 2£E EI EES VL L PIN MP IE&#13;
Kevin Bird S R 126 58 5 23 U 3 2 8 22 7 4 4 2&#13;
Joel Dutton SO 126 24 1 8 3 2 0 1 7 4 2 1 1&#13;
Shane Seymour FR 126 4 6 8 0 2 0 2 4 2 0 0&#13;
Dennis DuCheae SR 134 37 3 38 20 18 2 3 18 9 4 0 7&#13;
Kelly Becker SO 142 35 4 22 1 1 0 4 9 8 1 2 0&#13;
Steve Skarda JR 150 54 4 23 S 2 0 I 13 2 3 4 2&#13;
Tim Whiting SR ISO 104 6 26 4 0 2 3 22 % 4 6 0&#13;
Chris Buckley SO 158 42 4 27 3 0 2 16 9 0 2 1&#13;
Kevin Schmitz FR 158 12 4 21 1 4 0 1 12 7 3 1 0&#13;
Mark Hemauer SR 167 164 13 28 8 6 4 3 33 8 3 9 3&#13;
Troy Brockman FR 167 39 1 16 3 2 2 2 13 3 1 3 0&#13;
Darin Tiedt SO 177 47 1 21 3 0 1 8 14 9 0 2 1&#13;
Scott Wessley JR 190 29 11 20 4 2 3 1 16 8 7 3 0&#13;
Tom Keefer SO 190 17 1 10 0 2 0 1 7 7 0 0 0&#13;
Rick Hufiius SR HW 20 0 4 3 0 1 8 9 0 2 2 0&#13;
K. Trcmelling JR HW 7 1 5 2 0 0 1 3 2 1 1 0&#13;
Jim Bczdtte FR HW 39 6 28 4 2 2 16 19 13 8 2 0&#13;
RACEWALKING&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Indoor&#13;
01/26/91 at the Klotche Center&#13;
Women's 3000 Meter Walk Men's 5000 Meter Walk&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
Michelle Rohl&#13;
Dee Collier&#13;
Ali DeWiu&#13;
Jennifer Zalewski&#13;
Maggie Pagan&#13;
15:08.2&#13;
15:23.1&#13;
16:17.0&#13;
16:27.8&#13;
17:03.0&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
Rob Cole&#13;
Tim Seaman&#13;
Jon Jorgenson&#13;
John Matter&#13;
Paul Tavaras&#13;
20:45.2&#13;
20:45.3&#13;
21:15.1&#13;
21:16.5&#13;
21:53.2&#13;
Next Meet: UW-Stevens Point Indoor Saturday 2-2-91&#13;
LTD.&#13;
MOkJ: .5C^ tappers&#13;
*2.75 m-hers&#13;
1m tZtf-fMers&#13;
WEDS: 2)ance +o -H-uZ&#13;
^Os ISO s lyilh £&amp;£($ iERu/ALL&#13;
ir&amp;! foil drink wlib 'TturUsHe. IT&gt;,&#13;
-Ihurs tJamatjuinwiih&#13;
T^rksldas t^efP LennmemQM&#13;
-ffjUiSfirl: LtjJza's'BuL Ke«M&#13;
^ AUVfiY/.':&#13;
tyfteacheM c/c!oaofr&#13;
Stacine 6&amp;i-9GQ5&#13;
Ranger, Page B4&#13;
January 31, 1991&#13;
Grapplers lose duel I Rgnger skaters find home ice is nice&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The Ranger grapplers took their&#13;
1-0 dual record into Edmond, Oklahoma,&#13;
on Friday, looking for a victory&#13;
against NCAA Division II Regional&#13;
rival Central State University. Despite&#13;
wrestling well, the Rangers came up&#13;
short in what was aso mewhat misleading&#13;
final score of 26-10.&#13;
After forfeiting the 118 pound&#13;
weight class, which the Rangers have&#13;
all year, KevinBirdtooktothematand&#13;
decisively defeated Jantz Kinzer 10-2.&#13;
Bird, down 2-1 after th e first period,&#13;
scored nine unanswered points in the&#13;
second and third periods to win and&#13;
pull the Rangers within two points.&#13;
At 134 pounds, Dennis DuChene&#13;
lost a hard foughtmatch to Jeff Gowens&#13;
4-2. Gowen's third period take-down&#13;
and a DuChene reversal accounted for&#13;
the only scoring of the match. Kelly&#13;
Becker, wrestling at 142, lost to Todd&#13;
Drake 12-7.&#13;
With the Rangers down 12-4 in&#13;
the match, senior Tim Whiting stepped&#13;
onto the mat looking for career victory&#13;
100. His opponent. Chance Skidgel,&#13;
ruined his "chance" at 100 by wrestling&#13;
Whiting to a 10-10 draw.&#13;
Whiting's season record is 22-9 and he&#13;
is tenth all-time at UW-P with 99 career&#13;
victories.&#13;
After a 7-1 loss by Chris Buckley&#13;
at 158 pounds, Mark Hemauer took to&#13;
the mat to try and put a dent in Central&#13;
State's 11 point lead. Hemauer made&#13;
easy work of his opponent, scoring two&#13;
takedowns in each period on his way to&#13;
a 14-4 major decision over Brady&#13;
Rousset. Rousset was taking the place&#13;
of Central State's number one 167&#13;
pounder who was out with a shoulder&#13;
injury.&#13;
With the lead cut to seven, Darin&#13;
Tiedt faced Wayne Cole at 177pounds.&#13;
Cole, a transfer from Division I Oklahoma,&#13;
defeatedTiedt 8-7. Tiedt evened&#13;
the score 6-6 early in the first period,&#13;
but a Cole takedown with 42 seconds&#13;
remaining made it 8-6 and Tiedt's escape&#13;
at the 27 second mark ended the&#13;
matches scoring.&#13;
At 190 pounds, Scott Wessley&#13;
had the unenviable task of facing last&#13;
year's NCAA Division II Champion&#13;
Greg Oplotnik. Oplotnik scored six&#13;
points in the first period and fought off&#13;
Wessley the rest of the way for an 11-&#13;
6 victory.&#13;
Freshman heavyweight Jim&#13;
Bezotte, wrestling for the injured Rick&#13;
Hufhus, lost the final match of the day&#13;
to Fay Bamett 11-4.&#13;
The final score of 26-10 was a&#13;
little deceiving, as the Rangers lost six&#13;
points by forfeiting at 118, had two&#13;
losses by one point, and one draw.&#13;
"We had three matches that could&#13;
easily have gone our way. We wrestled&#13;
very well against what I consider the&#13;
front runner for the National Championship,"&#13;
stated coach Jim Koch. "Now&#13;
that our guys have had a look at what&#13;
they've got, we should be ready for&#13;
them at regionals. I think CSU is the&#13;
team to beat."&#13;
This weekend the Rangers will&#13;
travel to Grand Valley State University&#13;
in what will be the toughest wrestling&#13;
weekend of the season.&#13;
The Rangers will be competing in&#13;
the Grand Valley State Duals. On&#13;
Friday, the Rangers will duel Ferris&#13;
State, Lake Superior State and Grand&#13;
Valley State. Then on Saturday, the&#13;
Rangers will do battle with SIUEdwardsville&#13;
and Central Missouri&#13;
State. All these teams are ranked in the&#13;
top 25 and two are in the Ranger's&#13;
regional. "After this weekend, we will&#13;
have seen the top three teams in our&#13;
regional and will know how we stack&#13;
up against them." Added Koch, "This&#13;
may be the toughest weekend of&#13;
wrestling we've ever had here at UWParkside."&#13;
While the varsity squad is doing&#13;
battle in Michigan, the JV grapplers&#13;
w i l l head north t o defend UWParkside's&#13;
title at the UW-Eau Claire&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
IBM/Parkside's ftthCete of the 'Week:&#13;
Frankly outstanding&#13;
In the same weekend which the UW-Parkside Ranger hockey club&#13;
notched its first home victory (and sweep), it also notched its first athelete&#13;
of the week award.&#13;
An accounting major from Kenosha, Frank Casalena turned the&#13;
Carthage defense inside out in their recent two game set. In their first&#13;
meeting, Casalena tallied a natural hat-trick (three goals in one period) in&#13;
the second period, after getting a goal and an assist in perioid one. If that&#13;
wasn't enough, he added a pair of assists in the final period, giving him&#13;
seven points by nights end in a 9-4 Ranger win.&#13;
For an encore, Caselina scored two goals and an assist in the first two&#13;
periods as the Rangers jumped out to a 4-0 lead on the Redmen. Just so&#13;
nobody would forget about him, he added a pair of assists in the final&#13;
period of the Ranger's 7-4 win, giving him five points on the day.&#13;
IBM and the UW-Parkside Ranger salutes Frank Casalena for his&#13;
twelve points in two nights, netting him this week's Athlete of the Week.&#13;
continued fron page B1&#13;
mated crowd of about200, the Rangers&#13;
came out of the gates in very disorganized&#13;
fashion, playing sloppily early&#13;
on. The Redmen were in a position to&#13;
jump out on top, but missed twice on&#13;
loose pucks in the Ranger crease.&#13;
UW-Parkside cleaned up its act&#13;
mid-way through the opening period.&#13;
Breaking out on a three-on-two rush,&#13;
Frank Casalena fed right winger Mike&#13;
Cacciopo who was closing from the&#13;
left side. Cacciopo's back hand was&#13;
deflected back to Casalena who put the&#13;
rebound home for the first tally of the&#13;
game at the 7:05 mark of period one.&#13;
Carthage struck back shortly after.&#13;
With both teams one man short,&#13;
Jeff Moore beat Ranger defenseman&#13;
Mike Klaus down the left side. Left&#13;
with a one-on-one with Craig Goluki&#13;
in goal, Moore connected with a wrist&#13;
shot to the upper right comer of the net,&#13;
evening the score at one.&#13;
Carthage took their first lead of&#13;
the contest a little more than a minute&#13;
later. Wen Fonk's one-timer from&#13;
beyond the left face-off circle eluded&#13;
Goluki, making it 2-1.&#13;
After a pair of penalties on the&#13;
Redmen gave the Rangers a five on&#13;
three advantage, UW-Parkside'spower&#13;
play unit evened the score with just :45&#13;
left in the period. After failing to&#13;
Runners hit lucky 7&#13;
as indoor season&#13;
begins at UW-M&#13;
By MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The indoor season for track is&#13;
underway, and the men's 15 man team&#13;
came home from the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
meet with 7 place winners. In the&#13;
800m race, freshman Ken Byum placed&#13;
second with a 1:58.9. The 800m race&#13;
turned out to be the strongest race for&#13;
the Rangers as three UW-Parkside&#13;
runners finished in the top six finishers.&#13;
Following Ken Byum was Kevin&#13;
Collins in 5th place with a 2:023, and&#13;
Tom Schmierer in 6th with a 2:04.6. In&#13;
the 3000 meters, M ike Nelson took 6th&#13;
and needs to improve about 20 seconds&#13;
to get in qualifying range for the indoor&#13;
championships.&#13;
Coach Rosa feels Mike will get&#13;
better and has a chance to quali fy as the&#13;
season goes on. Eric May place 3rd in&#13;
the 600 meter run. A 1:26.9 for Eric&#13;
puts him about 3 seconds behind qualifying&#13;
time for Nationals. May, Byum,&#13;
Collins and Derek Brown then combined&#13;
to run the mile relay in 3:42.7&#13;
which was good enough for second&#13;
place.&#13;
The biggest surprise of the day&#13;
for the Rangers was Kurt Johnson. His&#13;
8.3 was good for 3rd in the 55m High&#13;
Hurdles. Why was this a surprise? A&#13;
hurdler has not been seen in recent&#13;
history at UW-Parkside. The Rangers&#13;
have always been known for the great&#13;
distance runners to come out of this&#13;
school, but rarely do we have anyone&#13;
ever entered in the field events.&#13;
In the next meet, the Rangers will&#13;
mount any offensives in the first 1:30&#13;
of the two-man advantage, UWParkside's&#13;
Chris Hamstedt fired a shot&#13;
from the right side of the net which was&#13;
knocked down by Carthage goal tender&#13;
Mike Parsons. There for the rebound&#13;
was Cacciopo, who flicked home goal&#13;
number two, and the score was tied&#13;
after one period.&#13;
Carthage took advantage of a&#13;
Ranger defensive lapse in the opening&#13;
minutes of the second period. Breaking&#13;
out on a thre on one rush, JC BeiTy&#13;
beat Goluki with a slapshot from short&#13;
range to again retake the lead.&#13;
The Ranger checking attack&#13;
picked up as the period wore on,&#13;
wearing down the Redmen attack.&#13;
Offensive pressure also came about&#13;
from the hitting, but poor shot placementkept&#13;
the Rangers out of the net for&#13;
the first five minutes of the period. A&#13;
two-man advantage rectified that situation.&#13;
After being penalized for playing&#13;
with a broken stick and interference&#13;
gave the Rangers the advantage,&#13;
Buencamino cashed in by knocking&#13;
home the rebound of a Casalena&#13;
backhand.The offensive pressure continued,&#13;
as Casalena went on a scoring&#13;
rampage of his own in the second period.&#13;
Taking advantage of a five on&#13;
four advantage, Casalena maneuvered&#13;
in untouched from left of goal and&#13;
scored with a wrist shot, beating Parsons&#13;
to the near-side comer. He followed&#13;
that with a breakaway goal in a&#13;
four on four situation. Casalena skated&#13;
in on Parsons, beating him high after&#13;
Parsons bit on a low fake for his hat&#13;
trick. Goal number four for Casalena,&#13;
and his third of the period, came after&#13;
Hamstedt picked up a rebound of a&#13;
Cacciopo shot. Hamstedt fed Casalena,&#13;
who beat Parsons with a slapshot from&#13;
the right wing, and the Ranger rout was&#13;
on.&#13;
By period's end, the Rangers had&#13;
out-shot the Redmen 18-6, building a&#13;
6-3 advantage moving into the third.&#13;
Carthage was unable to mount any&#13;
serious threat throughout the period,&#13;
scoring just once on a rebound goal&#13;
midway through the period.&#13;
UW-Parkside's offensive onslaught&#13;
continued in the third, as they&#13;
scored three times including a pair of&#13;
goals by Mike Cacciopo and one by&#13;
Hamstedt. The final: a 9 A Ranger&#13;
victory, their first home-ice win on&#13;
record.&#13;
Casalena scored seven points with&#13;
four goals and three assists in the victory,&#13;
while Cacciopo had four on three&#13;
goals and an assist.&#13;
No anecdote for Bees sting&#13;
as Rangers buzzed in Iowa&#13;
By TED MclNTYRE&#13;
Assistant Sports Editor&#13;
Sometimes a nickname just fits i&#13;
Ask the UW-Parkside Women's ;&#13;
Basketball team. They were stung, and&#13;
stung bad. by the Queen Bees of St&#13;
Ambrose Saturday in Davenport IA&#13;
99-57.&#13;
St Ambrose swarmed Parksidc's&#13;
guards all afternoon forcing |4&#13;
backcourt turnovers. St. Ambrose used j&#13;
a 1-2 pass quick shot offense which i&#13;
turned the tables on Parkside's up- i&#13;
tempo style of play.&#13;
The Rangers knew they were in&#13;
for a battle at the outset. St. Ambrose&#13;
is currently ranked third in the NAIA.&#13;
and is returning from last season's loss&#13;
in the NAIA Championship game to&#13;
S.W. Oklahoma. The Queen Bees are i&#13;
currently 17-3 and have lost just six :&#13;
games in the past three seasons.&#13;
Parkside coach Wendy Miller has a&#13;
great deal of respect for their program,&#13;
i "They (St. Ambrose) are a premier ball&#13;
club, they play a tough schedule, and&#13;
are very well prepared, Wejust wanted&#13;
to see how good we could play against&#13;
them," added Miller.&#13;
ParksideplayedSt. Ambrosebas- :&#13;
ket for basket in the first five minutes i&#13;
of the contest but then the bottom fell&#13;
out on the Rangers as die pressure&#13;
defense and St. Ambrose's constant&#13;
onslaught on the hoop was just too&#13;
much for Parkside. St. Ambrose, who&#13;
averages 85 ppg., lit up the Rangers,&#13;
shooting 62 percent from the floor.&#13;
"They shot so often and so well wejust:&#13;
could not keep with them," said MiUcr.&#13;
By the half, Parkside found itselfdown&#13;
50-27 on 13 for 29 shooting with 14&#13;
turnovers.&#13;
In the second half, thing? stayed&#13;
the same as St. Ambrose shot 60 per&#13;
cent to Parkside's 32 percent&#13;
outscoring the Rangers 49-20 in the&#13;
final 20 minutes. The Bees swarmed&#13;
the boards, too. grabbing 33 to the&#13;
Rangers 17.&#13;
St. Ambrose was led by the trio&#13;
of guard Stacy Karom at 17 pts, and&#13;
for wards Cindy Bom, 17 pts and Kim&#13;
Clark, 16 pts. The three paced the&#13;
Queen Bees with 22-29 shooting from&#13;
the field. St. Ambrose attacked offensively&#13;
all game and had six players in&#13;
double figures.&#13;
"We were flat emotionally," said&#13;
Miller of her club's performance. "We&#13;
got caught playing their style of play&#13;
and that run and gun hurt us."&#13;
Jody Bloyer played well in the&#13;
power forward spot, scoring 15 while&#13;
giving up seven inches to her defender.&#13;
Becky Tibbetts, a freshman eligibility&#13;
wise, is now eligible to play&#13;
and will jom the team at an important&#13;
juncture in the season.&#13;
Position by position, Parkside&#13;
looks strong as the season begins to&#13;
wind down. If the backcourt can cut&#13;
down on the turnovers and the team&#13;
can improve from the free-throw line,&#13;
Parkside could challenge for the Dis-&#13;
• trict 14 Championship.&#13;
pack their bags and head to UW-Stevens&#13;
Point and help break in their new track&#13;
at the inaugural meet for the new indoor&#13;
surface the Pointers have just&#13;
completed. This will be one of two&#13;
meets the runners will have an opportunity&#13;
to run on a spiked indoor track,&#13;
a valuable opportunity to cut some&#13;
time off from the slower tracks. The&#13;
indoor season only has four more meets&#13;
and then hopefully some of the Rangers&#13;
can qualify for the National Meet.&#13;
.January 31,1991 Feature Ranger, Page 13"&#13;
Joe Bob's America&#13;
by Joe Hob Briggs&#13;
Facts we should know about&#13;
the Iraqis:&#13;
1. Twelve thousand years ago,&#13;
they invented irrigated farming.&#13;
They got to be so good at it that,&#13;
today, they can still produce all&#13;
the food they need even when&#13;
'sanctions" are imposed.&#13;
2. They invented writing.&#13;
3. They figured out how to tell&#13;
time.&#13;
4. They founded modern mathematics.&#13;
5. In the Ctxlc of Hammurabi,&#13;
they invented the first legal system&#13;
that protects the weak, the&#13;
widow and the orphan.&#13;
6. Five thousand years ago, they&#13;
had philosophers who attempted&#13;
to list every known thing in tire&#13;
world.&#13;
7. They were using Pythagoras'&#13;
theorem 1,700 years before&#13;
Pythagoras.&#13;
8. They invented artificial building&#13;
materials, some kind of prefab-&#13;
crete stuff used to construct&#13;
high-rise towers.&#13;
9. Ur, in southeast .Iraq, isassumed&#13;
to be the place wc Ve a! 1 descended&#13;
from.&#13;
10. They were the first people to&#13;
build cities and live in litem.&#13;
11. For thousands of years, they&#13;
wrote the greatest poetry, history&#13;
and "sagas" in the world.&#13;
12. Because they were great horse&#13;
breeders, they invented the cavalry&#13;
in war.&#13;
13. The Iraq Museum at Baghdad&#13;
contains some of the most outstanding&#13;
stone, metal and clay |&#13;
sculptures and inscriptions created&#13;
in the history of the world.&#13;
Some of them arc more thai??-,000 -&#13;
years old. Ifa bomb hits this place,&#13;
art lovers around the world will go&#13;
into mourning.&#13;
14. The first school for astronomcrs&#13;
was established by Iraqis. This&#13;
is how the "wise men" got to be so&#13;
wise. They knew how to follow the j&#13;
star.&#13;
15. Beginning around 800 A.D.,&#13;
die Iraqis funded universities that&#13;
imported teachers from throughout&#13;
the civilized world to teach&#13;
medicine, mathematics, philosophy,&#13;
theology, literature and poetry.&#13;
16. For the first 1,200 years of its&#13;
existence, Baghdad was regarded&#13;
as one of the most refined, civilized&#13;
and festiveritjesin the world.&#13;
17. Abraham, the father of Israel,&#13;
was from Iraq.&#13;
18. Abraham, the father of Islam,&#13;
was from Iraq.&#13;
1.9. Abraham, the father and&#13;
NmodelN of Christian faith, was&#13;
from Iraq.&#13;
20. Saddam Hussein doesn't regard&#13;
him self as hte heir ot Abraham,&#13;
or even as the heir of Mohammed.&#13;
He regards himself, first and foremost.&#13;
as the heir of&#13;
Nebuchadnezzar. He identifies, in&#13;
otiier words, with the enslaver, not&#13;
the eoslavee.&#13;
Everything we know about the&#13;
rest of Iraq tells us that he is the&#13;
exception, not the Iraqis.&#13;
To discuss the meaning of life&#13;
with Joe Bob, or to get his world&#13;
famous "We Are the WeirdN&#13;
newsletter, write P.O. Box 2002,&#13;
Dallas, TX 75221, or leave your&#13;
name and address on Joe Bob's&#13;
comedy line, 1-900-4-JOEBOB&#13;
($1.50 first minute, 75 cents each&#13;
additional). Joe Bob's Fax: 214-&#13;
368-2310. COPYRIGHT 1991&#13;
P R E G N A N T ?&#13;
Let's talk about it.&#13;
Our staff of trained social workers are caring,&#13;
sensitive, and understanding of your needs.&#13;
We'll explore your choices in a nonjudgemental,&#13;
confidential manner.&#13;
s&#13;
CHILDREN'S SERVICE SOCIETY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
5455 Sheridan Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI53140 Fees based on&#13;
(414) 652-5522 ability to pay.&#13;
Red Cross Chapter reaches out to&#13;
service families of U.S. Troops&#13;
Kenosha, WI - The Lakeshore&#13;
Counties Chapter of the American&#13;
Red Cross is working to help U.S.&#13;
forces in the Persian Gulf and service&#13;
families at home as part of the&#13;
Red Cross's most extensive military&#13;
support operation since the&#13;
Vietnam war.&#13;
"No matter what happens in&#13;
the weeks ahead, the Red Cross&#13;
will be there, supporting National&#13;
Guard, Reserve and military members&#13;
and their familes," said&#13;
Michael Bemier, Chapter Chairman.&#13;
"Red Cross chapters across&#13;
the country are Teaching out to&#13;
theircommuniues, as they always&#13;
do in times of trouble. No matter&#13;
what happens in the weeks ahead&#13;
the Red Cross will be there."&#13;
Lakeshore Counties provides&#13;
a bridge to service members abroad&#13;
by staffing a 24-hour-a-day emergency&#13;
communications system that&#13;
allows family members to contact&#13;
service personnel in times of crisis.&#13;
This service nationally has transmitted&#13;
some 64,000 messages to&#13;
and-from the Persian Gulf since&#13;
August 1990, including nearly&#13;
3,000 birth announcements for&#13;
proud parents.&#13;
Service members and their&#13;
families who need emergency&#13;
communications assistance, want&#13;
to join a family support group, or&#13;
need referral services should contact&#13;
the Lakeshore Counties&#13;
Chapter at 553-4060.&#13;
We're more&#13;
than just&#13;
in&#13;
a faraway&#13;
place...&#13;
More than 4.000 times a day. the American Red Cross&#13;
provides worldwide emergency communications to&#13;
members of all branches of the Armed Forces. We also&#13;
provide other critical services for their families back&#13;
home&#13;
The brave men and women in our Armed Forces are&#13;
working hard for all of us. We're proud to work hard&#13;
for all of them.&#13;
The American Red Cross —&#13;
Providing service to the&#13;
Armed Forces and&#13;
their families.&#13;
+&#13;
American Red. Cross&#13;
The Parkside Union'&#13;
iiiinfflJS&#13;
'5W&#13;
HOURS&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
Monday-Thursday&#13;
9 am -11 pm&#13;
Friday:&#13;
9 am - Midnight&#13;
Saturday:&#13;
Noon - 12 am&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
Noon -10 pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE BAR&#13;
Monday-Thursday&#13;
10:30 am *11:00 pre&#13;
Friday:&#13;
10:30 am - 7:00 pm&#13;
MINI-MART&#13;
Monday-Friday&#13;
11 am - 7 pm&#13;
Saturday: 11 am -1 pm&#13;
Sunday: 4 pm - 7 pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
GRILL&#13;
Monday-Thursday:&#13;
11 am - 2:30 pm&#13;
8 pm -10 pm&#13;
Friday:&#13;
11 am - 2:30 pm&#13;
4:30 pm - 6:30 pm&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
5 pm - 7 pm&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
CENTER&#13;
M.TR: 8 am-6:30 pm&#13;
T.W: 8 am-5:30 pm&#13;
F: 8 am-4:30 pm&#13;
DINING ROOM&#13;
Monday-Thursday:&#13;
7:30 am - 7 pm&#13;
Friday:&#13;
7:30 am-2 pm&#13;
COFFEE SHOPPE&#13;
Monday-Thursday:&#13;
7:30 am-8 pm&#13;
Friday:&#13;
7:30 am - 2 pm&#13;
Saturday, Sunday:&#13;
10:30am-1pm&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
Monday, Thursday&#13;
8 am - 6:30 pm&#13;
Tues., Wed., Fri.&#13;
8 am-4:30 pm&#13;
Ranger, Page 14 Feature January 31,1991&#13;
Prism&#13;
What is co-dependency?&#13;
by Nancy Gentry&#13;
Student Health Services&#13;
Many of us struggle with the&#13;
questions: What is co-dependency?&#13;
Am I co-dependent?&#13;
Most co-dependents have been&#13;
searching for ways to overcome&#13;
the dilemmas of the conflicts in&#13;
their relationships and childhoods.&#13;
Many were raised in families where&#13;
addictions existed-some were&#13;
not&#13;
In either case, many have&#13;
found in each of their lives that codependency&#13;
is a deeply rooted,&#13;
compulsive behavior and that is&#13;
home out of our sometimes moderately&#13;
or dysfunctional family systems.&#13;
Co-dependents have each experienced&#13;
in their own ways the&#13;
painful trauma of the emptiness of&#13;
their childhood and relationships&#13;
throughout their lives.T hey attempt&#13;
to use others-their mates, their&#13;
friends, and even their children-as&#13;
a sole source of identity,value and&#13;
well-being as a way of trying to&#13;
restore&#13;
within themselves the emotional&#13;
losses from their childhoods. Codependents&#13;
histories may include&#13;
other powerful addictions which&#13;
at times they have used to cope&#13;
with their co-dependency.&#13;
We believe that recovery begins&#13;
with an honest self-diagnosis.&#13;
We came to accept our inability to&#13;
maintain healthy and nurturing relationships&#13;
with others and ourselves.&#13;
We began to recognize that&#13;
the cause lay in long-standing destructive&#13;
patternsof living. We have&#13;
found these patterns to fall within&#13;
two general categories: compliance-&#13;
pleasing others, and controlmanipulating&#13;
others. Following is&#13;
a checklist of&#13;
characteristics,behaviors, and attitudes.&#13;
We suggest it might be helpful&#13;
to use the notations-&#13;
Always,Usually, Sometimes,&#13;
Never.&#13;
CONTROL PATTERNS&#13;
I must be needed in order to&#13;
have a relationship with others.&#13;
I value others' approval of&#13;
my thinking, feelings, and behaviors&#13;
over my own.&#13;
_J agree with others so they&#13;
will like me.&#13;
1 focus my attention on pro- _I use sex to gain approval I value others' opinions and&#13;
tecting others.&#13;
; __i believe most others are incapable&#13;
of taking care of themselves.&#13;
- __I keep score of "good deeds&#13;
and favors," becoming very hurt&#13;
when they are not repaid.&#13;
_I am very skilled at guessing&#13;
other peoples feelings.&#13;
J can anticipate others needs&#13;
and desires, meeting then before&#13;
they are asked to be met.&#13;
_I become resentful when&#13;
others will not let me help them.&#13;
J am calm and efficient in&#13;
other peoples crisis situations.&#13;
I feel good about myself only&#13;
when I am helping others.&#13;
I freely offer others advice&#13;
and direction without being asked.&#13;
I put aside my own interests&#13;
and concerns in order to do what&#13;
others want.&#13;
I ask for help and nurturing&#13;
only when I am ill, and then reluctantly.&#13;
I cannot tolerate seeing others&#13;
in pain.&#13;
I lavish gifts and favors on&#13;
those I care about.&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
AND&#13;
WINTERCARNIVAL&#13;
PRESENT&#13;
SMURF FLING f91&#13;
Wednesday, February 6, Union Pad at Noon.&#13;
"Come take your frustrations out on a Smurf" 1 1 . . . . . . . . . / . T J ' j y . ' j ' : 1 —-&#13;
and acceptance.&#13;
I attempt to convince others&#13;
of how they "truly think and "should&#13;
feel, perceive myself as completely&#13;
unselfish and dedicated to the wellbeing&#13;
of others.&#13;
COMPLIANCE PATTERNS&#13;
I assume responsibility for&#13;
others' feelings and behaviors.&#13;
I feel guilty about others'&#13;
feelings and behaviors have difficulty&#13;
identifying what I arn feeling,&#13;
I have difficulty expressing&#13;
feelings.&#13;
I am afraid of my anger, yet&#13;
sometimes erupt in a rage.&#13;
I worry how others may respond&#13;
to my feelings, opinions,&#13;
and behavior.&#13;
I have difficulty making decisions.&#13;
I am afraid of being hurt and&#13;
or rejected by others.&#13;
I minimize,alterordeny how&#13;
I t ruly feel.&#13;
I am very sensitive to how&#13;
others are feeling and feel the same&#13;
way.&#13;
I am afraid to express differing&#13;
of opinions or feelings.&#13;
feelings more than my own.&#13;
I pu t other peoples needs and&#13;
desires before mine.&#13;
I am embarrassed to receive&#13;
recognitions and praise, or gifts.&#13;
I judge everything think, say,&#13;
or do harshly, as never "good&#13;
enough."&#13;
I am a perfectionist.&#13;
I am extremely loyal, remaining&#13;
in harmful situations too&#13;
long.&#13;
I do not ask others to as a&#13;
lovable and worthwhile person.&#13;
I compromise my own values&#13;
and integrity to avoidrejeclion&#13;
or others' anger.&#13;
After completing this Checklist,&#13;
you may find that&#13;
attending a Co-Dependents&#13;
Anonymous (CODA) support&#13;
group will be helpful.&#13;
No matter how traumatic your&#13;
past or despairing your present may&#13;
seem, there is hope for a new day in&#13;
the program of CODA.&#13;
Meetings are held every Monday,&#13;
12 - 1 in Moln. D114 This&#13;
group is anonymous,free, and open&#13;
to anyone at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Accent/&#13;
w &lt; '&#13;
jjuiEjv n it'll MRNI_&#13;
\ .&#13;
Internationally Acclaimed&#13;
Pianist&#13;
Armenta Hummings&#13;
. - YX&#13;
An evening of Music from&#13;
i' ?\ r Mozart to Joplin \\I j \; ] v \&#13;
k s / • s $2 Students&#13;
$6 Non-Students&#13;
TONIGHT&#13;
For (lckct Information contnct the Union Info&#13;
11&#13;
Desk 553-2345&#13;
BLACK HISTORY MONTH KICK OFF RECEPTION&#13;
7PM COMM ARTS, L-l LOBBY&#13;
I'i&#13;
January 31,1991 Feature Ranger, Page 15&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Housing&#13;
Office&#13;
can help&#13;
YOU...&#13;
Find off-campus housing in&#13;
near-by communities&#13;
Apartments, flats, houses in a&#13;
variety of price ranges are&#13;
available&#13;
Call 553-2320 to find out about&#13;
listings and services available&#13;
through the Housing Office&#13;
G R E 'A Til it&#13;
TIME: Wednesday, February 6 9:00 am-1:30 pm&#13;
PLACE: Parkside Union Room 104 -106&#13;
Fitness, fun, and it's free&#13;
by Lorraine Meyer&#13;
Student Heatih Services&#13;
Would you like to do something&#13;
fun that also increases your&#13;
flexibility, strength and stamina,&#13;
recharges and energizes you, releases&#13;
tension and anxiety, and&#13;
gives you a more positive mental&#13;
outlook? Sounds like just what the&#13;
doctor ordered, right? Well, it is&#13;
and it's EXERCISE. While you're&#13;
planning your schedule for second&#13;
semester, take time out for exercise.&#13;
With an activity that you enjoy,&#13;
exercise is fun and rejuvenating.&#13;
Two forms of aerobics exercise&#13;
classes are available to Parkside&#13;
students and staff this semester at&#13;
no charge. These classes are being&#13;
co-sponsored by Physical Education&#13;
and Student Health Services.&#13;
Classes will begin on Monday,&#13;
!•!m•m• m•&#13;
February 4th.&#13;
New this semester is an&#13;
AquacizeClass which will be held&#13;
Mondays and Thursdays from&#13;
5:00pm-6:00pm in the pool in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Aquaeize is a great way to get a&#13;
good workout with little or no impact&#13;
on your joints. The 60 minute&#13;
routine includes warm-up and&#13;
stretching, an aerobic exercise&#13;
phase with cool down, toning exercise,&#13;
and ends with relaxation exercises.&#13;
Exercising in the water provides&#13;
a good workout because of&#13;
working against the pressure of the&#13;
water. No swimming skills are&#13;
needed. All parts of the routine are&#13;
done with your head above the&#13;
water so you don't have to get your&#13;
hair wet and you don't work up a&#13;
sweat!&#13;
Floor routine aerobics classes&#13;
are available again this semester&#13;
and will be offered from 4:30pm-&#13;
5:30pm in the gym in the Physical&#13;
Education Building on Mondays,&#13;
Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and&#13;
Thursdays. Persons interested may&#13;
choose to attend all four workouts&#13;
or choose a combination of two to&#13;
three days as it fits into one's&#13;
schedule. The routinesare of moderate&#13;
intensity and pace and are fun&#13;
and energizing.&#13;
To take advantage of either of&#13;
these classes, complete a registration&#13;
form available from Student&#13;
Health Services, Molinaro D115.&#13;
Class size is limited, so register&#13;
early to ensure "your spot". As&#13;
with any form of exercise, if you&#13;
are over 35 or have any type of&#13;
chronic health problem,you should&#13;
check with your physician before&#13;
engaging in vigorous exercise.&#13;
«a i&#13;
la*?&#13;
w THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
MARCH 16-25,1991&#13;
-HIGH QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 7 NIGHTS AT THE&#13;
PANAMA RENDEZVOUS RESORT AND BEACH CLUB ON THE BEACH&#13;
-LAGOON POOL AND WATERFALL. MINIATURE GOLF. JACUZZI&#13;
-ROUND TRIP MOTOR COACH&#13;
BEACH -PLANNED PARTIES-ON SIGHT&#13;
-ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
CITY&#13;
„ -HIGH QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 7 NIGHTS AT THE&#13;
OU.r AJJKE • " BAHIA MAR" CONDO/HOTEL ON THE BEACH&#13;
-POOL TENNIS COURTS. HOT TUBS. KITCHENETTES&#13;
-ROUND TRIP CHARTERED MOTOR COACH&#13;
-PLANNED PARTIES-ON SIGHT&#13;
-ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
¥ The Blood Center&#13;
of Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Ranger, Page 16 Feature January 31,1991&#13;
Rubin Williams and Robert DeNirostar in Awakenings.&#13;
Child Care Center serves community&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
Kris Sigler performs one of her many duties in Munchkin Manor.&#13;
by Sarah Minasian&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Children learn what they live.&#13;
At the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside's Child Care Center, located&#13;
just south of Tallent Hall on&#13;
Wood Road, children are guided&#13;
toward accepting individual responsibility,&#13;
solving problems, and&#13;
cooperating with others.&#13;
Specifically serving the needs&#13;
of the students, faculty, and staff,&#13;
the Child Care Center follows the&#13;
University's calendar, including&#13;
several interim programs which are&#13;
held over school breaks. Registration&#13;
is held each semester where&#13;
either fulltimc or half-day blocks&#13;
of time can be reserved with continuing&#13;
users getting registration&#13;
priority.&#13;
Since 1982, the state licensed&#13;
center has been a part of the Uni •&#13;
versity System and is primarily&#13;
funded from 84% user fees and&#13;
16% student segregated fees. Child&#13;
care rates are comparable to other&#13;
quality child care facilities and&#13;
students, taking a minimum of 6&#13;
credits, are given a reduced rate.&#13;
A staff of for ty-eight part-time&#13;
teachers, half of whom ar e Parkside&#13;
students, are under the direction of&#13;
Sherry Thomas, who holds a&#13;
master's degree in Administrative&#13;
Leadership and Education, and&#13;
Janet Robbins, who holdsa master's&#13;
degree in Early Childhood Administration.&#13;
Meeting the state of&#13;
Wisconsin's requirements, the staff&#13;
must complete a forty hour training&#13;
program over a semesters period&#13;
of time. In addition to this,&#13;
several staff members have associate&#13;
degrees in Early Childhood Development.&#13;
Currently the staff governs&#13;
over 127 pre-school children. 75%&#13;
of the enrollment are Parkside&#13;
students' children, 22% are&#13;
the children of the staff and faculty&#13;
of the university, and the remaining&#13;
3% are children of the surrounding&#13;
communities.&#13;
Taking an alternative path to&#13;
the common academic approach of&#13;
formal teaching, the center's developmental&#13;
program is carried&#13;
through a variety of structured and&#13;
unstructured play activities. Children&#13;
learn the alphabet, counting,&#13;
colors and shapes through story&#13;
telling, poem and finger plays,&#13;
puzzles, creative dramatics and&#13;
various learning centers that include&#13;
science, art, and cooking.&#13;
Before I left the Child Care&#13;
Center, I hypo the deafly asked&#13;
Sherry Thomas how she would&#13;
discipline little "Sarah" for riot&#13;
wanting to share her toys with a&#13;
playmate she claimed she didn't&#13;
like. Thomasstated thatnopunitive&#13;
measures would be taken; however,&#13;
she would explain to Sarah that it&#13;
was okay not to like someone, but&#13;
she still had to find a way to do&#13;
what she wanted without hurting&#13;
others.&#13;
Children learn what they live.&#13;
Or is it children live what they&#13;
learn? v V&#13;
Art/English publication seeks&#13;
student input&#13;
Altar Ego which recently&#13;
Student writers, poets, and&#13;
artists are encouraged to submit&#13;
entries for a student publication&#13;
produced by the Art and English&#13;
clubson campus. The intent of this&#13;
yet unnamed collage of student&#13;
achievements is to encourage creativity&#13;
at Parkside and to instill a&#13;
tradition of artistic expression, both&#13;
visual and written, that all of&#13;
Parksidecantakepridein. Amixed&#13;
panel of faculty and students will&#13;
evaluate each anonymous en trya nd&#13;
will publish the selected pieces of&#13;
poetry, fiction, non-fiction and art&#13;
in a quality book form.&#13;
All written submissions are&#13;
due in the English Club mailbox in&#13;
the SOC office (WLLC D139A)&#13;
by Friday, February 15 at noon, or&#13;
entries may be mailed to Tod&#13;
Gagliano, 6904 Whitewater Lane,&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
won the Purchase Award&#13;
Racine, WI 53402. Submissions&#13;
must be typed and double spaced.&#13;
It is recommended that entrants&#13;
retain a copy of their writings, as&#13;
the materials cannot be returned.&#13;
Poems must not exceed fifty lines&#13;
and fiction/non-fiction pieces must&#13;
be under 1500 words.&#13;
A registration form must accompany&#13;
each separate entry and&#13;
may be obtained from the English&#13;
Club mailbox in the SOC office.&#13;
Do not put your name on the work&#13;
itself. Artistic entrants shouldcontact&#13;
the Art Club for more information&#13;
concerning entries.&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
con tact Tod Gagliano at 639-9225,&#13;
or attend an English Club meeting&#13;
in CART 135 on Wednesdays at&#13;
noon.&#13;
Movie Review&#13;
Awakenings- Dramatic breakthrough for Williams, DeNiro&#13;
by David Wick&#13;
Staff writer&#13;
Who would have thought that&#13;
a guy who started his career playing&#13;
an alien named Mork from Ork&#13;
would become one of the best&#13;
dramatic actors of our time. Robin&#13;
Williams has proved to us that there&#13;
is a fine line between comedy and&#13;
tragedy, and he might get an Oscar&#13;
nomination for it He has been&#13;
nominated twice before for hisr oles&#13;
in Good Morning Vietnam and The&#13;
Dead Poet's Society.&#13;
Awakenings is a film based on&#13;
the true story written by Dr. Oliver&#13;
Sacks. Sacks is also well known&#13;
for writing the book The Man Who&#13;
Mistook His Wife for a Hat. Sacks&#13;
also served as a technical adviser&#13;
on the film.&#13;
The film stars Williams as Dr.&#13;
Malcolm Sayer, a reclusive neurologist,&#13;
and Robert DeNiro as a&#13;
patient, Leonard Lowe, who has&#13;
been in a sleep-like state for three&#13;
decades. Sayer experiments with a&#13;
drug called L-Dopa and awakens&#13;
Leonard.&#13;
DeNiro is very effective as&#13;
Lowe, who loses thirty years of his&#13;
life. Try to imagine being a person&#13;
who goes to sleep as a teenager and&#13;
then wakes up a man in his 40's. I&#13;
don't want to give anything away,&#13;
but the performance thatDeNiro&#13;
gives at thee nd of the movie is very&#13;
emotional and there were a few&#13;
tears being wiped away by a couple&#13;
of audience members. DeNiro may&#13;
be the greatest actor in the world&#13;
and the best thing about this film.&#13;
For Williams, this film is a&#13;
major breakthrough, because he&#13;
does not add any of his stand-up&#13;
comedy bits that he is so popular&#13;
for. This is straight acting for him&#13;
and he has surprised a lot of pe ople.&#13;
This is, without a doubt, Williams'&#13;
best performance.&#13;
Penny Marshall directed&#13;
Awakenings, which is her first&#13;
drama and only her third film.&#13;
Marshall has also directed Big and&#13;
Jumpin'Jack Flash. Marshall pays&#13;
great attention to detail and adds a&#13;
lot through her direction. There is&#13;
a scene in which DeNiro takes his&#13;
first steps out of the hospital. He&#13;
takes little baby steps down the&#13;
stairs while a small child takes little&#13;
baby steps up the stairs. Who would&#13;
have thought that the woman who&#13;
played Laveme from "Laverne and&#13;
Shirley" would become a bigtime&#13;
movie director?&#13;
Awakenings ijs w ell written,&#13;
well directed and it has two of the&#13;
best performances of the year.&#13;
Awakenings is one of the best films&#13;
of the year, and I give it four stars&#13;
out of four.&#13;
January 31,1991 Entertainment Ranger, Page 17&#13;
Record Review&#13;
Iron Maiden: No Prayer for the Dying&#13;
by Chris DeGuire&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Eddie's boys are back for their&#13;
eighth studio release, NoPrayerfor&#13;
the Dying. If you enjoyed 1988's&#13;
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son you&#13;
should really like this one. Keyboards&#13;
again have been added to&#13;
enhance Maiden's distinct sound.&#13;
No, it's not Killers (my personal&#13;
favorite), or The Number of the&#13;
Beast, or Powcrslave, but does it&#13;
have to be? Each album has had a&#13;
different quality about it and this&#13;
one is no exception: a definite&#13;
original work.&#13;
The most noticeable difference&#13;
is the replacement of long-time&#13;
Maiden guitar ace Adrian Smith,&#13;
who left to pursue a solo career.&#13;
Replacing him is Janick Gers of&#13;
Gillan fame. Gers played on&#13;
Maiden vocalist Bruce Dickinson's&#13;
solo disc, last spring's Tattooed&#13;
Millionaire. Adrian's writing will&#13;
be missed for sure, although he did&#13;
co-write the track "Hooks in You."&#13;
This leaves room efw guitarist Dave&#13;
Murray to help with the writing,&#13;
which he rarely does. But if you&#13;
remember 1980's "Charlotte the&#13;
Harlot" or 1983's "Still Life" you&#13;
know how well he can write. This&#13;
time around, check out "Fate's&#13;
Warning," co-written with Bruce.&#13;
It's one of the heaviest tracks ever&#13;
recorded by Maiden.&#13;
The disc's most original track&#13;
is the first single, "Holy Smoke," a&#13;
stand against television evangelists&#13;
and other pray T.V. services that&#13;
manipulate people into sending&#13;
them money: "They ain't religious&#13;
but they ain't no fools/When Noah&#13;
built his Cadillac it was cool/Two&#13;
by twoand they're still going do wn/&#13;
And the satellite circus just left&#13;
town."&#13;
Other standouts include&#13;
"Tailgunner" and "No Prayer for&#13;
the Dying." My personal favorite&#13;
is the song Bruce wrote last year&#13;
for the Nightmare on Elm Street V&#13;
soundtrack, "Bring Your Daughter&#13;
to the Slaughter." Its sound this&#13;
time around is much sharper, especially&#13;
with Steve Harris' bass and&#13;
Nicko McBrain's drums, giving the&#13;
song much more life than the&#13;
soundtrack version and is very&#13;
reminiscent of the Killers days.&#13;
The disc also contains the epic&#13;
"Mother Russia," about the sweeping&#13;
changes that have occurred in&#13;
Eastern Europe over the past few&#13;
years. It's not as long or complex&#13;
as Powcrslave's "Rime of the Ancient&#13;
Mariner" or the Seventh Son&#13;
title track, but it has the richness of&#13;
Somewhere in Time's "Alexander&#13;
the Great"and is ac lassic in itso wn&#13;
right.&#13;
The guys are showing little&#13;
signs of age and this outing is their&#13;
heaviest in a few years. If anything,&#13;
buy this one for the cover.&#13;
Artist Derek Riggs again gives life&#13;
to Maiden's macabre mascot Eddie,&#13;
who still seems to be in search of&#13;
his brain which was taken from&#13;
him in 1983's Piece of Mind.&#13;
In addition to the new Maiden&#13;
disc, a live video, Maiden England,&#13;
has also been released. It's a full&#13;
length 90 minute video recorded at&#13;
London's NEC Pavilion and features&#13;
almost the entire concert. It is&#13;
also one of Adrian Smith's last&#13;
performances.&#13;
The video was directed and edited&#13;
by bassist Steve Harris and was&#13;
originally supposed to feature only&#13;
three songs: "Infinite Dreams,"&#13;
"Killers" and "Still Life." The&#13;
band did not want to release a full&#13;
show such as 1985's World Slavery&#13;
Tour. But they obviously&#13;
changed their minds and the result&#13;
is Maiden at their best.&#13;
Featured are standouts from&#13;
the Seventh Son disc and rarely&#13;
performed favorites "The Prisoner,"&#13;
"Still Life," "Die With Your&#13;
Boots On" and "Killers." Classics&#13;
"Iron Maiden," "The Number of&#13;
the Beast" and "Hallowed be thy&#13;
Name" have never been as intense.&#13;
No one puts on a show quite&#13;
like Iron Maiden. The stage set is&#13;
a massive recreation of theic e fields&#13;
depicted on the Sevent h Son cover.&#13;
The video also features the appearance&#13;
of Eddie at the end of "Iron&#13;
Maiden", a giant puppet in the Seventh&#13;
Son cover pose. It's a spectacular&#13;
scene and is a must for fans&#13;
and collectors alike.&#13;
Noted African-American pianist to perform&#13;
Classical, contemporary and&#13;
Afro-American music will be performed&#13;
by Armenia Hummings, an&#13;
internationally acclaimed pianist&#13;
tonight in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
At age four,Hummings began&#13;
musical training in violin and piano&#13;
at the New England Conservatory&#13;
of Music in Boston. Twelve years&#13;
later she received a scholarship to&#13;
the Julliard School of Music, where&#13;
she won several awards.&#13;
Hummings then began a tour that&#13;
took her to five continents and 27&#13;
countries. She has won numerous&#13;
competitions, including the&#13;
Musician's Club of New York, the&#13;
National Association of Negro&#13;
Musicians, and the Leeds International&#13;
Pianoforte Competition.&#13;
During the 1960's, she worked with&#13;
Vladimir Horowitz teaching at the&#13;
Harlem School of Arts.&#13;
Selections performed at UWParkside&#13;
will include "Jesu Joy of&#13;
Man's Desiring," Johann Bach;&#13;
Mozart's Sonata K 576in D major;&#13;
"Before I'd Be a Slave," Undine&#13;
Smith Moore; Mendelssohn's Snncr&#13;
Without Words No. 21 in E major;&#13;
and "The Entertainer" and "Maple&#13;
Leaf Rag," both by Scott Joplin.&#13;
Admission to the 8 pm concert&#13;
is S6. The concert is part of&#13;
Parkside's 90-91 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series. This series is&#13;
funded in part by a Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board Grant. Tickets are available&#13;
at the door, but toe nsure yourselfa&#13;
seat, hurry down to the Information&#13;
Desk to buy your ticket now.&#13;
rjANDEE&#13;
JL/liqlor mabt&#13;
10% OFF IP&#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 Kit on 22nd Ave. (Moochurn)&#13;
Offer- Good Thru February 28&#13;
Enjoy&#13;
^ onr) bonofi&#13;
HEALTHY&#13;
BENEFITS&#13;
FOR HEALTH&#13;
CARE MBA'S.&#13;
excellent salary&#13;
and benefits working with a&#13;
worldwide health care system.&#13;
Discover an environment where the&#13;
needs of the patient-not costs of&#13;
treatment-come first Experience the&#13;
rewards erf being a commissioned Air&#13;
Force officer, phis advanced education,&#13;
medical/dented care, 30 days&#13;
vacation with pay each year and&#13;
much more. Call&#13;
USAF HEALTH PROFESSIONS&#13;
COLLECT&#13;
(414)291-9475&#13;
SET4IWT£AR4»WN WORKERS&#13;
Involves the set-up and tear-down of chairs, tables,&#13;
etc.. for dances, receptions, meetings and&#13;
special events. No prior experience necessary,&#13;
but applicants should be in good physical condition.&#13;
Must be able to work evenings and&#13;
weekends.&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB&#13;
OPENINGS IN THE&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
Ail positions available this Semester&#13;
with some special event work required.&#13;
Students must have a minimum cumulative&#13;
GPA of 2.00.&#13;
LIGHT AND SOUND TECHNICIANS&#13;
Involves set-up/teardown operation,&#13;
maintenance of electronic lighting and&#13;
sound equipment. Operating knowledge&#13;
and/or prior experiencerequired. Some&#13;
specific training will be provided. Must&#13;
be able to work evening and weekends&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN UN ION ROOM 2 09&#13;
TN PaitoMu IMor Is an aquaI opportunity ampfoyar. Woman and mlnofHloa aro oncouragod to apply.&#13;
Ranger, Page 18 Feature&#13;
January 31,1991 The Week at Parkside&#13;
THURSDAY, JANUARY 31&#13;
MUSIC: Pianist Armenta Hummings, Comm.&#13;
Arts Theatre, 8 pm. $2 Parkside students and $6&#13;
others.&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1&#13;
BLACK HISTORY MONTH runs from February&#13;
1 to February 28. Look around campus for&#13;
details of events and activities.&#13;
MOVIE: "Flatliners," 8 pm, Union Cinema. $2&#13;
public and $1 students.&#13;
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4&#13;
PRESENTATION: "The Urban League and&#13;
NAACP; Looking Back and Moving Forward,"&#13;
Union 207.&#13;
MARKET PLACE: Black History Month Cultural&#13;
Market Place, 10 am - 2 pm, Union Bridge.&#13;
Will run through Feb. 8.&#13;
WINTER CARNIVAL: Feb. 4 through Feb. 8.&#13;
Events to follow.&#13;
COMEDIAN: Happy Cole, Union Square, free,&#13;
9 pm.&#13;
DRAMA: "A Bit of Bard" with Darryl Robinson.&#13;
One man Shakespeare &amp; comedy delight, 7 pm,&#13;
Comm. Arts Studio, free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6&#13;
COMEDY: Comedy Sportz, Union Square, 9 pm,&#13;
free.&#13;
SPRING BGJEAK9T&#13;
CANCUN&#13;
FROM $399&#13;
COMPUTE PACKAGE INCLUDES:&#13;
• BotnofnD air to Ccrcui. Mexico.&#13;
• POCJY3 Mp (TcrtSea from expert :o hotel&#13;
• 7 nignti occommoocWa.&#13;
• 1 ha* teqiAO pcrty.&#13;
• On location protesSonc! to* •JCOrt.&#13;
• At hotel taxes arc services.&#13;
• Oottood tars aveSctie.&#13;
WEEKLY&#13;
DEPARTURES&#13;
! (800)BEACH I T&#13;
I J&#13;
UW-Parkside news releases&#13;
Bangkok trip offered&#13;
Bangkok, Hong Kong and&#13;
Singapore will be someof the stops&#13;
during the 15-day Southeast Asia&#13;
Study Tour offered through&#13;
Parkside's Center for International&#13;
Studies, May 28 - June 10.&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran, professor&#13;
of geography and director of International&#13;
StudentServices, will lead&#13;
the tour.&#13;
Cost of the trip is S2.695 and&#13;
includes roundtrip airfare from&#13;
Chicago, double occupancy accommodations&#13;
in first class hotels,&#13;
most meals and al tour fees. Early&#13;
registration is encouraged in order&#13;
to secure participation. Arrangements&#13;
for installment payments are&#13;
available.&#13;
For more information, call the&#13;
Center for International Studies at&#13;
553-2701 or 553-2600.&#13;
Master singers group&#13;
Do you feel like singing?&#13;
Parkside is seeking adult members&#13;
for its Masters Singers group. Individuals&#13;
of all music levels and&#13;
experience can participate.&#13;
Rehearsals will be held from&#13;
7-9:30 pm on Mondays. Concerts&#13;
are scheduled for April 7 and May&#13;
6. A diverse range of music is&#13;
performed including longer choral&#13;
works, show tunes, folk songs,&#13;
spirituals and a variety of contemporary&#13;
musical selections.&#13;
Participants in Master Singers&#13;
can choose to receive academic&#13;
credit or not. For details, contact&#13;
the Music Departmental 553-2111&#13;
or 553-2457.&#13;
Community Service Announcements&#13;
WASHINGTON PARK HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMEN NEED HELP. TNT program requests&#13;
assistance during 2nd and 3rd hour study halls (8:47am- 9:34 am or9:34am-10:26am). SC&#13;
Johnson Elemementary School could use volunteers in their Homework Assistance Progtam on&#13;
M/W from 2:30-4:30 pm. Fifth grader in Racine still needs math tutor. One hour weekly can be&#13;
a solution. Please respond.&#13;
COMMUNICATION MA J ORS....RE AD THIS. Racine Tourism Bureau is in search of someone&#13;
who is a creative writer, has good verbal skills and is a self-starter. Become Racine's "Visitor&#13;
Line" writer and reader for the telephone and for radio broadcasting. You can also write Press&#13;
releases for Journal Times. See Carol in the Career Center today.&#13;
GENERAL OFFICE WORK is requested by the Racine Literacy Council. Duplicating materials,&#13;
typing and filing are needed any time between 9 am and 4 pm or until 7 pm on M and W. Two hours&#13;
weekly flexible time.&#13;
KENOSHA SPANISH CENTER has several programs that can use volunteer help. Become a&#13;
tutor for high school youth on T/W or from 3-5 pm. Tutor older youth who arc working for their&#13;
GED. Spanish speaking adults are learning to read and write English. Become a PALS Program&#13;
volunteer. Internships are also available if more time is needed.&#13;
See Carol Engberg, in the Career Center—WLLC-D175 formore information or call 553-2011.&#13;
All graduating seniors are encouraged&#13;
to attend these seminars:&#13;
Thursday, January 31, 5-5:50 pm, WLLC D182&#13;
Friday, February 8, 12-12:50 pm, WLLC D182&#13;
Job Search Communications&#13;
Wednesday, January 30, 12-12:50 pm, WLLC D173&#13;
Thursday, February 7, 5-5:50 pm, WLLC D173&#13;
Come to The Career Center, WLLC D175, to sign up for&#13;
the workshop you plan to attend.&#13;
THE MOD ROCKERS&#13;
/GEEZMFTO! rwng tuition, buying&#13;
I BOOKS.GOtMG TO Al l MY C1ASSES,&#13;
IAMD SEEING M Y OLD FRIE NDS,IT&#13;
1 STILL DOESN'T SEEM L IKE THE&#13;
VSE/AESTER HAS ST ARTED! J&#13;
January 31,1991 Feature Ranger, Page 19&#13;
IBM Volunteer of the Week&#13;
Jennifer Burns has managed&#13;
her time well as a psychology and&#13;
elementary education student, wife,&#13;
mother, and volunteer since enrolling&#13;
in the Student Community&#13;
Service Program last March. Jennifer&#13;
has recorded over 100 hours&#13;
as a staff volunteer in the Women's&#13;
Center at UW-Parkside. She answers&#13;
the telephone and greets students&#13;
as they stop by the center.&#13;
Depending on the need, the student&#13;
receives a listening ear or a referral&#13;
to a campus or a community service&#13;
that can be an answer to a&#13;
more difficult problem.&#13;
In October, Jennifer chose to&#13;
volunteer at the Planned Parenthood&#13;
office located in the Lincoln&#13;
Neighborhood Center in Kenosha.&#13;
She runs the front desk assisting&#13;
with client intakes and testing. Dana&#13;
Barnhill, Site Manager, reported,&#13;
"I am very satisfied with Jennifer's&#13;
Jennifer Burns&#13;
work. She is friendly and outgoing&#13;
as well as sensitive to the clients'&#13;
needs."&#13;
Thanks Jennifer for your&#13;
willingness to help others here at&#13;
UW-Parkside as well as in the&#13;
community.&#13;
Ron's Place&#13;
Open Mon-Sun 11am&#13;
7 Days a Week&#13;
Luncheon Reservation 657-&#13;
5907&#13;
Famous For 5x5's (1/2 lb&#13;
Hamburger &amp; Fries for&#13;
S3.50)&#13;
Souvenir Long Island Mugs&#13;
Now On Sale&#13;
Ron's Carryout&#13;
Open Sun-Thurs&#13;
1 lam-Midnight&#13;
Fri-Sat llam-2am&#13;
657-4455&#13;
(carrout and delivery only)&#13;
We Now Deliver Broasted&#13;
Chicken and our complete&#13;
menu&#13;
3301 52nd Street,&#13;
Kenosha 657-4455&#13;
r GIVE LIFE.&#13;
GIVE PLASMA&#13;
i&#13;
Give us 2 hours, twice a week, and we11 use&#13;
your plasma donation to help save the lives of&#13;
burn and shock victims, heart surgery patients,&#13;
and hemophiliacs. And you could earn up to&#13;
$100 per month. Take the time today&#13;
MONTHLY &amp; DAILY CONTESTS&#13;
NEW DONORS&#13;
Bring in this ad and receive&#13;
$15.00&#13;
for your first donation&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha Inc.&#13;
6212-22nd Ave.&#13;
People Helping People For Life&#13;
M-W-F 8:30-3:30&#13;
T-Th 10:00-5:30&#13;
(414) 654-1366&#13;
Small S cale Humor by Chris Ingram&#13;
© Chris In gram 1 990&#13;
The origin of "The Wave"&#13;
J&#13;
Library/Learning Center Offers&#13;
Free CD-ROM&#13;
Workshops&#13;
Learn to find magazine and journal articles on one or&#13;
more of the Library/Learning Center's 20 CD-ROM&#13;
Databases&#13;
You can find magazine and journal citations on&#13;
everything from Iraq and Scud Missiles&#13;
to AIDS and Gun Control&#13;
to Ancient History and Dinosaurs by using&#13;
CD-ROM Databases&#13;
Come in or call the Reference Desk at x2360&#13;
to reserve your place at one of the following&#13;
workshops:&#13;
Ttiesday, February 5,5 pm&#13;
Wednesday, February 6,12 noon&#13;
Monday, February 11,12 noon&#13;
Tuesday, February 12,5 pm&#13;
Wednesday, February 20,5pm&#13;
Friday, February 22,12 noon&#13;
Monday, February 25,12 noon&#13;
Tuesday, February 26,5pm&#13;
Ranger, Page 20 Classified&#13;
January 31,1991 To place classified advertising in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger Newspaper, stop in the Ranger office located in room D139C in the Wyllie i rary earni g • Gx °&#13;
the Coffee Shoppe. Deadline for classified advertising is 3:00pm Monday prior to publication. All classified ads placed by full or part time UW-Parkside studen s are p r run.&#13;
classified ads placed by anyone other than UW-Parkside students are $5.00 per week run. Payment must accompany order. Ifanerroroccurs.thead will be run reeo c arg o wing&#13;
week. No refunds. The University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger and its employees, staff and members are not responible for the content of a dvertisng Place V ' s CUS smooqc'&#13;
Parkside Ranger reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertising at its descretion. Please direct all inquiries to the UW-Parkside Ranger Business Manager a ( ) - 5.&#13;
[ CLUB EVENTS&#13;
Hispanic Organization at&#13;
Parkside (HOP) first meeting&#13;
of the semester Feb. 1,&#13;
noon in the Center for Education/&#13;
Cultural Advancement&#13;
(CECA) office. All interested&#13;
people welcome.&#13;
UW-Parkside Geology&#13;
Colloquium presents Dr. John&#13;
Attig, Wisconsin Geologic&#13;
Natural History Survey,&#13;
speaking on Lake Wisconsin&#13;
Permafrost History and its&#13;
influence on landform development,&#13;
Friday, February&#13;
1, 1991, noon, in Greenquest&#13;
113.&#13;
Parkside Airborne Ranger&#13;
Association (PARA) meets&#13;
every Wednesday noon in&#13;
Molinaro 163.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon, the national&#13;
marketing fraternity, will&#13;
hold its Orientation Night on&#13;
Sunday, February 3, 1991.&#13;
All majors may attend. Orientation&#13;
Night will start at&#13;
5:00 pm in Molinaro Room&#13;
D137.&#13;
] [ FOR SALE | H HELP WANTED&#13;
Apple Scribe Printer - excellent&#13;
condition, $75. Call 654-&#13;
0095, after 4 pm.&#13;
*87 Chevy Nova (Toyota),&#13;
well cared for, west coast car&#13;
(no rust), automatic, 4 door&#13;
hatchback, air-conditioning,&#13;
55,000 mi., $4,500. Conie&#13;
Bailey, WLLC175, ext. 2610&#13;
or 554-0404 (home).&#13;
Meal tickets for sale. For&#13;
more information contact&#13;
Heather at 553-2806.&#13;
FUND RAISING |&#13;
Fast Fundraising Program&#13;
$1000 in just one week. Earn&#13;
up to $ 1000 for your campus&#13;
organization. Plus a chance&#13;
at $5000 more! This program&#13;
works! No investment&#13;
needed. Call 1-800-932-0528&#13;
Ext. 50.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
We need self-motivated students.&#13;
Earn up to $10/hr.&#13;
Market credit cards on campus.&#13;
Flexible hours. Only 10&#13;
positions available. Call now.&#13;
1-800-950-8472 Ext.20.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
Wake-n-Bake Spring Break&#13;
'91! Cancun from $459. Jamaica&#13;
from $539. Come play&#13;
in this year's hottest spring&#13;
break destinations. Don't be&#13;
left in the cold. Availability&#13;
limited. Sun Splash Toursl-&#13;
800-426-7710.&#13;
Party with MTV this Spring&#13;
Break. Sign up for Daytona&#13;
Beach now! Call 634-0192&#13;
for more information.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Partv at Paradise Lanes, 6501 ¥&#13;
Washington Ave. in Racine&#13;
on Sat., Feb. 2, 1991 from 8&#13;
pm - 2:30 am. Free beer!&#13;
Tickets $3, contact Deb at&#13;
553-2889.&#13;
Vaun. real cool taking the&#13;
rackets. Lynn thanks you for&#13;
her job security. Idiot!!!&#13;
RESEARCH NFORMATNN Largest Library of information in U.S. -&#13;
all subjects&#13;
Order Catalog Today with Visa/M C or CO D&#13;
800-351-0222&#13;
m Calif (213) 477-8226&#13;
Or, rush $2.00 to Research Information&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A. Los Angeles. CA 90025&#13;
The UW Parkside&#13;
Music Department&#13;
presents&#13;
Heather Hall, Soprano&#13;
Joel Boyle, Trombone&#13;
Junior Recital&#13;
Sunday, February 3,&#13;
1991&#13;
3:30 pm&#13;
Comm Arts Building&#13;
D-118&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
'Jm&#13;
Featuring 6 Wolff Tanning Beds&#13;
with Face Tanners&#13;
To Serve You&#13;
Get That Healthy Look Before&#13;
Spring Break, Look Good, Feel Good&#13;
$ 5.00 - 1 1/2 Hour Session&#13;
$ 20.00 - 5 1/2 Hour Sessions&#13;
$35.00-10 1/2 Hour Sessions&#13;
$65.00-20 1/2 Hour Sessions&#13;
Tanning Is All We Do&#13;
2311 Roosevelt Road - Kenosha WI&#13;
652-4484&#13;
h LSAT&#13;
GMAT&#13;
MCAT&#13;
GRE Test Your Best!&#13;
Classes Forming Now.&#13;
NEW LSAT starts 3/23 • GMAT starts 2/4&#13;
• MCAT starts 2/12 • GRE starts 2/25&#13;
Phone Registration 277-9990&#13;
»&gt; STANLEY H. KAPLAN&#13;
d=2 Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances&#13;
Available at the&#13;
Union Recreation Center&#13;
Monday - Thursday: 9AM - 11PM&#13;
Friday: 9AM-12AM&#13;
Saturday: Noon-12AM&#13;
Sunday: Noon - 10PM</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="80325">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 19, issue 16, January 31, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="80326">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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="80327">
              <text>1991-01-31</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="80330">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="80331">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="80332">
              <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="80333">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="80334">
              <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="80335">
              <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="80336">
              <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="80337">
              <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="80338">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2786">
      <name>black history month</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2773">
      <name>blood drive</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2755">
      <name>campus police</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2954">
      <name>campus safety</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2833">
      <name>career center</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2696">
      <name>child care</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2953">
      <name>red cross</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2754">
      <name>sexual assault</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2952">
      <name>troop support</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="809">
      <name>united council (UC)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
