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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 28, issue 5</text>
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            <text>Take Back The Night</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>, &#13;
I n s i d e&#13;
14 To thine own sell be true&#13;
P utting words into the&#13;
mouths of celebrities&#13;
13 Record couectlon&#13;
Mens soccer coach Rick Kilps&#13;
gives us a piece of his mind&#13;
8 Saletv In numbers&#13;
Enlightened men and women dispel&#13;
the darkness of domestic violence&#13;
1 Monev tor nothing?&#13;
Po:,sible PSGA budget increase raises&#13;
salaries, debates, and tempers&#13;
5 on the beat&#13;
Sex, lies, videotapeAll&#13;
in a night's work&#13;
s e C t i&#13;
News&#13;
Things 10 do&#13;
Police Beal&#13;
Features&#13;
Q11es11on 01 the Week&#13;
Spons&#13;
Entenalnment&#13;
Classified&#13;
0 n s&#13;
3-1&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
8-11&#13;
11&#13;
12-13&#13;
14-15&#13;
15&#13;
s t a f f B 0 X&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Becky Duba&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Elst&#13;
Des ktop&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Ad Designer&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Photo Editors&#13;
DaniclYaris&#13;
Jeff Alley&#13;
Tim Overocker&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
Columnist&#13;
Vito Tribuzio&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
pl!.. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax Z6Z.595.2295&#13;
Staff Photos&#13;
Tim Overocker&#13;
'nw Klllnj\tl-1' bl publl..t!M "'-'€'I')' ()CN'r Th~~&amp;y throughout the~ by ~audener, of tho Ur\lV(&gt;.r&amp;ity Qf W~~Pntbldc. whc) 111'\"&#13;
f,Qlety "-~\Sil,lt {&lt;;w its~ poU,:y wwJ content. Sub:lcrtptlonll are ilV.ill~bk;_,.&#13;
I~ ti) IN fi,,1 iw;,r p(llk.y: ~ ~ ~ ~ to the £d.itor. L.::l~nl "'&lt;)uld hl)t ~ 250 wocdil ~ :lhau.ld bot d(,li~T("\.I&#13;
to the Rllng-tr QUi&lt;w;o (WYLL l&gt;IY)C) or t'-mailc,d IQ jil,oob('l02.@l.1~h,,1, ~~bl' typed Mid indudc- 1.1w omthor't; 1\AIIJ\e and&#13;
phc:,nt, numi.--, ~ must be- '7tt from mi:e;k&lt;Qdll'lg cw 11tx&gt;lnu;; 00.,\t(&gt;Rt, ~ th;J.t filiJ to comply will not bQ p,.t,IJ8he,d, Ju pubtio:ation&#13;
~-authcw',.ll'lllfflec:an bewilhlx-ld, but only~ f'("Q;ut"St. The Ranger~ the righ1 to l'dJt au ,~ &#13;
• l&lt;risty Deetz arts sh 0\¥, Communication Arts Gallery, through N&lt;&gt;vember&#13;
29.&#13;
• Art Department trip t• Art Institi,te of Chicago, Nov. 11, 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
• Fri.ends. of the Library: Arti.~ts ¾&lt;&gt;ks-Victory in Peace (VIP) prog.rrun, Nov.&#13;
11, 7 p,m., Ovtirlook Lounge, Level 2 of library, free&#13;
• Model Organization of Amerkan States competitioll, Nov. 11 &lt;!k 12&#13;
• Talking Color: u•the Black and Whitt- of-Crime and .Punishment," p1.1blic&#13;
discussion, Nov. 11, 2 p.n1., room l 03, Gteenquist Hall.&#13;
• Foreign film series: "Waking Ned Devine," Nov. 11 /12, 7:30; Nov. 13, 8 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 14, Z p.m., Union Cinema Theater, adn:ussion by season pas,&lt;;&#13;
• UW-Padcside fami),y Weekend., Nov. 12 to 14, includes magic show and Dr.&#13;
Suess Festiv,d, free admission, open to the public, for information call&#13;
Felicia Ganther, ext. 2279.&#13;
• UW-Parkside H.S. Science &amp; Technology Competition, Nov. 13, 7:45 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p .m., free&#13;
• Inter.national Collegiate Prog,:amming Contest, Sal;l,lrday, Nov. 13, 12:30&#13;
p.m, features teams from Beloit, Carthage, Clarke, Loras, and Luther colleges&#13;
as well as U\'V-11,f.ad~.n, UW-Pl.atteville, UW-Stout, and two from&#13;
UW-Parksi&lt;ie, winning team advances to Woi·ld Finals in Orlando, FL.&#13;
• PAB Film:" American History X," Nov. 15 and 18, 8 _p.m., Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, ~tudents $1,non-students $2&#13;
• Worldfest Wwk'99, Nov. 15 to 18,&#13;
Olyrnpi&lt;; Gam&lt;lS, Then &amp; Now w /Daniel Taylor, Lawrence Univ ersity&#13;
Nov: 15, 1 p.m., Union Cinema, free&#13;
Acoustic Warriors &amp; International Food Fair, Nov. 17, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.,&#13;
Main Place, m-ePlowshare&#13;
Vendors, Nov. 17, 10 a.m. to 2 p .m ., Union Bridge, free&#13;
War &amp; Propaganda w /Deborah Buffton, UW•LaCrosse, Nov. 18, 2 p .m.,&#13;
Union J,04--106, free&#13;
• Women 8reaklngThrQUgh the Glass Ceiling, Nov. 16, 7:3() p.!TI,, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student ~ital, Nov. 17, free, Union CinEln\a 'theater&#13;
• Soup&amp;: Substance; "Social Costs of Problem Gambling," w / Ron,tld&#13;
Pav;:,llco,&#13;
Nov. 17, Noon, Union, 1-oom ·104;, free, w / freec soup, bread, crackers $el'ved&#13;
• Psychology Department Colloquium Series: "ln Praiwe of Psychology's&#13;
Myths Qr Little All&gt;crt Dieq {oi: Our Sins" w /DW-Parkside's B(?njamin&#13;
Marrii,, Nov. 17, noon, Molinato 109 ·&#13;
• Open Fonim: Univ~rsity follce weapons carry policy, Nov. 17, nooi,,&#13;
M(,linan) 105, free ;,nd open to tt&gt;e public, sponsored by the Health, Safety,&#13;
and Physicai EnviroJ:l.TJ\ent Committw .&#13;
• Field trip: Chicago Shake;,pea.re n,eater productioll of" Antony &amp; _&#13;
Cleopatra," Nov. 18, $45/person, includes ticket and l'{)und-trip coach from&#13;
Tallent Hall lot, coach leaires at $:30 p.n,., &lt;:all ext. ~12.&#13;
• Ra'~, Class, c!,: Cender 6oQk Study: "J'lying Bome .-md Other Stories;' Nov.&#13;
19, .3:30 p,n,.1 Molin,u-o Hall room 111, free-&#13;
• n,rcc Rs o f 1"crsona1 liappm.ess and Busmess Suc:ces,;,, a seminar sponsored&#13;
J:&gt;y Alpha Sigma Otnega Latu;,a Sorv rity, Saturday, Nov, 20, 1():30a.m. to 3&#13;
p .m,, registration deadline: Friday, Nov. 12.&#13;
• UW-Park$ide Jazz Ens,;,ml;,le and Jazz Combo, Tuesday, Not1Em1ber ~. 7:30&#13;
p.m., COJ11Jllunication Arts Theater, TI1Ckets: $.5 f(&gt;r adults, $'3 :for wnior,s/&#13;
students. ''&#13;
• Noon Concert: M ilton Pecka:ts.ky and Car-ol Haywood, N·ov. 24, free, Unlon&#13;
CiJ&gt;ern'il Theater&#13;
.. .&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
nnger , tblRDS •• de 3&#13;
T h e In Box&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Rcspon$C from last weeks column wo,a gt:cat. So far eight&#13;
new writers have come looking to add their thoughts and&#13;
ideas to the paper and I hope more will follow. Goals for&#13;
our growing staff include returning to a weekly distribution&#13;
and addillg color to a couple of spreads.&#13;
Now that our staff is growing, we are looking for more&#13;
stories to cover on and off campus. Any students, faculty,&#13;
staff, organizations, or clubs that has a story that would be&#13;
important to the students of OW-Parkside should run as&#13;
fast as possible in a circle. Repeat until dizzy. Then, drop by&#13;
the Ranger office at Wyllie D•l 39c and talk to any of the&#13;
staff or leave a note in our in box. Organizations and faculty&#13;
can send information throi,gh interdepartmental mail also.&#13;
We're also looking for construc tive criticism and ideas to&#13;
make the paper a more informative and entertaining experience.&#13;
As usual, an occasional compliment )eaves us weak&#13;
kneed and weepy.&#13;
Help us do a bette r pape r by letting us know what is&#13;
important to you. lf you have free time and would like to&#13;
write a couple stories then drop by and get paid for your&#13;
work. Positions are not limited to writing. The Range r is&#13;
a lso looking for Desktop Publishers, Cartoonists, and&#13;
Busin ess A ssistants. All three positions present valuable&#13;
opportunities. to gam ·experience, have fun, and get paid&#13;
while doing tt.' Any Question? Stop by our office, near the&#13;
booksto re, in Wyllie O-139c and will do our best to answer&#13;
them .&#13;
Letter to the editor&#13;
Ignorance must be a virtue here at Parkside. The first&#13;
Black revolutionary is set to be legally executed since the&#13;
d ays of slaves and sharecroppers. Those who don't listen,&#13;
those who refuse to listen are just like the ones who are trying&#13;
to silence Mumia Abu-Jamal. Those who don't listen&#13;
and those who re fuse to may one day find themselves in the&#13;
same situation: sitting on death row for speaking the truth.&#13;
Who will be le ft to speak for you when your time comes?&#13;
You ignore your rights and they'll go away.&#13;
Wisconsin for Mumia is made up of over 100 groups and&#13;
individuals fighting for the life and voice of Mumia AbuJamal&#13;
and all political p risoners. lf you want to find out&#13;
mo re or become involved, please contact ajrc@execpc.com.&#13;
In struggle,&#13;
Lisa Fanning&#13;
My roommat-e const-ant-ly leaves t-he&#13;
t-ollet- seat- up. One night- at 3 a .m .&#13;
I foll inf Whc:rt- should I do?&#13;
Next t in e yoi.a- roommate leaves the seat ._., td&lt;e&#13;
pl0$t ic wr&lt;ip and put it O\ler the toi et and dose the&#13;
lid. Md&lt;e sU"e yout-e not crot.nd, COJSe the next mornirlg theyll have o little surprise of thei- own. Or,&#13;
you cOLld t~e the high rood and post rem nder above&#13;
the toi e-t for )OS absent mnded friend .&#13;
·:&#13;
&amp;iv. ,. your qw,,;ti- for our&#13;
IHtW t1tllliet1 eolumn in n,,. Rt1trgt1r&#13;
G)uestions COil b e anonymous Slide&#13;
them unde r the door in W yllie D-13 9C&#13;
Questions SUbMitted ore 'the property of TM Rangier&#13;
GIid ore subject to edit l"9. . .. &#13;
--&#13;
4 ranger I news briefs&#13;
Color or crime &amp;&#13;
punishment discussed&#13;
UW-Parkside's Talking Color series continues Thursday, November 11, with&#13;
a program titled "The Black and White of Crime and Punishment." This public&#13;
discussion will take place from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in room 103 of Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Organized by the University's Center for Ethnic Studies, Talking Color stimulates&#13;
discussion on important social issues among people from all sections of&#13;
the community. Audience participation is strongly encouraged.&#13;
The Talking Color p rogram is free. For more information, call the UWParkside&#13;
Center for Ethnic Studies at ext. 2701.&#13;
second one• forum offered . on weapons polic1&#13;
OW-Pad&lt;side "Vil.I hold Open Porum JI, a dis..-ussion of the University&#13;
PQHi=c we11pons carry poUcy on Wedrictiday, Nov. 17. Sp&lt;msored by the&#13;
l;.r~vf.ri/ity'll H:ea.lth, Safety, and Pl\Yi!I~ EnvirQnment CQnunittec, the&#13;
funi)nwill tal&lt;e p~ceinMolittaro 105 {:rom noon tol p.m.&#13;
\JW-P~k,ude students are encoura~ to attend and participate in this&#13;
. open discussion. University faculty and staff as well as residents of&#13;
:.ss&gt;'-'th,ecaste,.-n Wi,sco,:,sin also are welcome. With thousands of visitors&#13;
· &lt;'&lt;&gt;l'il.lttg to the UW-Park$h:ie c:ampus each year, the University Police&#13;
weapons cany poµey is a puj;,llc' safety .issue. Everyone is efl(:ouraged to&#13;
atterld and expre$$ his or her opinion. This will help committee members&#13;
ga.in ttll!' jriformation na.--essary to reach an informed decision.&#13;
Dr. Herbert Pitts, l.JW-Parli:s;de'is assismn! 10 the Cl;l.an~Jlor for Equity&#13;
and biv~ity,wil,l ~noderate the forun,. l'he Health, Safety, and Physical&#13;
Environment Cbtnrttii:t..e will make recommendati&lt;&gt;n« &lt;&gt;n the policy to&#13;
Univ~i&lt;.i'.ty q,.,,ncell&lt;,u Jack K..-.at.ing. The forum is free.&#13;
UW~Parllslde Celebrates&#13;
the world Wltb Worldfest&#13;
week '99 ·&#13;
¥kh~lle 1-'iilye\l';&#13;
\JW-Parksldc and the World.fest W~ ~ommittce are spol'so~tog&#13;
Worldfest Week"99 November llii ~ougl118. The purpo,,e of this week&#13;
. 'of adl.vWes is :to celebrate different cultures thui; givjng pe.:,ple a chance&#13;
tQ experi,el)ce traditional other thari th¢l,:; owt,..&#13;
Kitkirig off Wotldfe!it Week '99 on Monday; 1'.'Qvember 15, is a showing&#13;
o( ".American HHltpty X" in,the l,.Tr\ion Cirtett,a af 4:;!0 p,m.&#13;
·· Admissioa is si to:r students and $2 for guests. Later that evening,&#13;
Daniel Taylor ~ Uwre~ Ul).iv~ty will give a prcS&lt;'lltation. titled&#13;
"The Olympie C'.ames, Then and Now" in the VniQll Cj1'ema from 7:00&#13;
to &amp;30 p.m. , . .&#13;
Or&gt; W~s.;lay1 N~v~.r:iiber 17, ah InternaHonal Food Palr will be held&#13;
,in Y12rer MaiJ:l Place ofWyHi:e . .Hall fr-0m t 1 a.m. tb 1 p.rn. Fratenuties,&#13;
sorb,itie,i;, anti ivarlous cultural groitps Will~ sellin~ ethnic fQO&lt;i indica-&#13;
,Hve of their cultW-es. l'lease. be .aware that stud&lt;'nf c:n-t"!J'izations canndt&#13;
a~ e~ at their tables. Food tickets will be available at Tal&gt;le- 6 for 50&#13;
cents' e'31;h, or at ;l'able 12 for student"! :who wish lo ~leir Range!'Cata&#13;
• q.1ex·Pt,a:rn:it11:9'). .. . . . ,&#13;
Al.sq 9n W~9nes&amp;ay, ther~ will be ~ perfo.rmance by Acoustic&#13;
War,;iors, a Native Ameticart mµsic and ~torytellin.g g:mup, :t:'his also&#13;
will be held in Mab-I~~ J l lil,.m. to, 1 p.rn.&#13;
The final d:ay &lt;1f Woddfest Week •1)9, 'l'hl.(rtlday, Nov. 1$, features&#13;
De~ah Bufflon Qf :lJW.-LaCrosse speaking on "War and Propaganda"&#13;
from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in Union 104/~06, The week's events end that&#13;
evening ,with a se,;:ond showing of "American History X" in the Unic&gt;n&#13;
Cine.ma at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
. For more informati&lt;,m on any World fest Week '99 event, call th/;) UWPi.uks{d(!&#13;
Student I:ife Office at el&lt;t: 2278,&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Victor, In Peace: Art fof a&#13;
Good cause&#13;
Jason Henson&#13;
Gang intervention and forming a creative mind are the goals of the&#13;
Victory in Peace (VIP) artwork currently on display ~t the UWParkside&#13;
Library and the subject of a program m the hbrary. The&#13;
exhibit, sponsored by the Wu.stum Museum of FinP_ Art..::;' Book Artct&#13;
Workshop Program, features books ranging in subject matt_er from&#13;
collections of black and white photographs and poetry to conuc books&#13;
and other assorted art forms.&#13;
The program is a summer course that helps ~each y_oung children&#13;
between the ages of 6 and 11 to vent their emotions usmg art instead&#13;
of violence. In the program, children are taught how to make and&#13;
design their own paper along with various art techniqu~. .&#13;
The program was developed in Racine and began in 1992. This&#13;
year's exhibit is the fourth that the Friends of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Library have sponsored. The books illustrated by the children are limited&#13;
editions, only 20 to 30 copies will be available. They arc considered&#13;
non-traditional books and each of the books is unique, showing&#13;
the emotions of each child and their different personalities.&#13;
Caren Heft and Kelly Gallaher will be the speakers at tonight's program.&#13;
They will talk about the exhibit and how to get children&#13;
involved in VIP. Heft is a book artist and has been published in such&#13;
places as the Library of Congress. KeUy Gallaher is the artist-in-residence&#13;
who worked with the children in the summer program. 80th&#13;
Heft and Gallaher will stress the importance of VIP and why it works.&#13;
Their presentation will be held in the library's second floor Overlook&#13;
Lounge.&#13;
The exhibit remains on display through November 19. For more&#13;
iniormation about VIP, call Margarat Such land at (262) 639-84J0&#13;
DECEMBER NURSING GRADUATES&#13;
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• A personalized orientation&#13;
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• Advancement potential based on clinical development&#13;
• CNS support on each unit&#13;
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• Attractive Wages&#13;
• Perfect attendance rewards&#13;
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• Incentive Savings Plan&#13;
Auror~ Health Care offers one c~nveni~nt location where appJications can&#13;
be malled or dropped off. This location cover~ the Metro Milwaukee&#13;
facilities including;&#13;
Sinai Samaritan Medical Center • West Allis Memorial Hospital&#13;
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Milwaukee Psychiatric Hospital • Friendship Village&#13;
Call TODAY to set up an interview or to be mailed an application! Let&#13;
Aurora. help you make- the right deci~ion!&#13;
AURORA HEALTH CARE&#13;
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Milwaukee, WI 53234-3910 (414) 389-2600&#13;
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We-support a S..'l.fo, healthy and drug free work environment through ,crlrnlrtal&#13;
back.ground chc:-cks and pre-employment drug tt.-&gt;sting.&#13;
J &#13;
-Po-iice&#13;
10/22/99 Inc 99-695 Traflic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road., 9:52 a.m. Vehicle whose driver&#13;
foiled to stop at a stop sign was stopped&#13;
and a citation was issued for Failure to Fasten&#13;
a Sea1belt-Oriver.&#13;
10/22/99 Inc; 99-696 Person:.) Property&#13;
Theft, Library, 3 rd Floor, 10:22 a.n:i. Student&#13;
reported her wallet had bt.--cn stolen. No sus- pects Or witness..-s.&#13;
10/22/99 i,\C 99-697 Fi.re A larm, Union,&#13;
7:38 p.m. Student reported a fire alarm soundb,g.&#13;
"there was no audible alarm when the offiCCT&#13;
orrivt.-d, howev"-r, a mu5i~ OJ wa6 I.I.Bing a&#13;
fog machine in the rec centt!'r which had set off&#13;
the.- smoke sensor. The OJ was irtstructed to&#13;
shut off the machine and the alarm was then&#13;
reset.&#13;
10/22/99 Inc 99-698 D;sorderly Conduct,&#13;
Greroqulst Hall, 8:12 p.m. Two employees had&#13;
a verbal d.isag.-eement which developed into a&#13;
physical confrontation. lnve:;tigation continuing.&#13;
&#13;
10/22/99 Inc 99-699 Fire A larm, Union.,&#13;
9:11 p.m. Power Plant worker notified UPP$ of&#13;
a fire alarm in the Union. Officer could detect no fire in tlw building:. Alarm was rL'SL-t.&#13;
10/22/99 lnc 99-700 Agency Ass;s~ Comm.&#13;
Arts., 9:23 p .m. Kenosha Joint Services n."guested&#13;
UPFS officer check th(' D-1 level for a 911&#13;
hang--up roll. When officer arrived at the scene, a large group of people we.re exiting from a&#13;
theatre event. There was no evidence of anyone&#13;
with an emergency.&#13;
10/23/99 Inc: 99-702 Agency Assist,&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept., 22nd Ave,, 3:53 a. . .m.&#13;
UPPS officer assisted with a vehicle acx:1dent&#13;
1,.mtU sheriff deputies and Somer's Fire&#13;
Department arrlved.&#13;
10/23/99 Inc 99-703 Unauthonzea&#13;
Presence, Greenquist Hall, 2:33 p . .m. St.-ff&#13;
member report~d someone had entered his&#13;
office without permission. Investigation co.ntinwng.&#13;
&#13;
10/23/991.nc 99-704 Mcwcal Assc;ts, Soccer&#13;
Field, 2:32 p .m. UPP$ officer responded to a&#13;
reportc-d injury.&#13;
10/24/99 Inc 99-70.S Harassing Phone&#13;
Calls, Ranger Hall, 2:46 a.m. Student reported&#13;
receivi.n~ a th.reate:n.ing message on his answering&#13;
machine. Student is to report any further&#13;
calls of that nature.&#13;
10/24/99 Inc 99-706 CrlmU'lal Damage to&#13;
Property-Personal, University Apartments, 4:30 a.m. Unknown perSOn sfo.shed aU four&#13;
tires on a visitor's vehicle. No suspects or wit•&#13;
ncsscs to the incident.&#13;
10/24/99 Inc 99-707 Criminal Damage to&#13;
Property /Personal Vehlcle, UnlversHy&#13;
Apartments, 2:10 p.m. Student reported the&#13;
front tires on his vehicle had been slashed.&#13;
10/24/99 lnc 99-708 Criminal Damage to&#13;
Prop~rty /Personal Vehicle, University&#13;
Apartments, 5:17 p .:r:n. Student reported&#13;
Student reported hV"O tires on hls vehicle wf:re&#13;
slashed and a mark scratched on the passenger side. No suspects o.r \•,.-i~"S.&#13;
10/24/99 Inc 99-709 Crlm.inal Damage to&#13;
Property/Personal Vehicle, University&#13;
Apartmc-nts, 5:25 p.m. Visitor reported two&#13;
p.'lSSCnger side tin.&gt;s slashed on his vehicle and&#13;
dents on hood and comer panel. No suspects or witnesses.&#13;
10/25/99 Inc 99-710 Fire Alarm, Wyllie&#13;
Hall, 10:28 a.m. Power Plant reported a fl.re&#13;
alarm. Upon officer's arrival, no evidence of&#13;
smoke or fire could be foW"Ld.&#13;
10/25/99 lnc 99-711 n,eft, Unlvers;ty&#13;
Apartments parking lot, 1:56 p .m. Student&#13;
reported unknown person rote.red h(&gt;t' vehid~&#13;
and forcibly removed a CD playe&lt; and stereo&#13;
equipment.&#13;
10/25/99 Inc 99-712 The~, Union Building,&#13;
2:37 p .m. Student reported theft of a coat&#13;
which had been left on a chair during a dance&#13;
on 10/23/99.&#13;
10/26/99 Inc 99-713 Fire Odil,&#13;
Commun.ication Arts 8uilding, 10:31 a.m. An&#13;
annual fire drill was conducted and the building:&#13;
was cleared 1n eight minute$. Alann was reset. •&#13;
10/26/99 Inc 99-714 Theft, Personal&#13;
Beat&#13;
SUSDICIOUS&#13;
Circumstances&#13;
Case of: the Week&#13;
10/22/99 tnc 99-701 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
University Apartments, 9:51 p.m. Student reported&#13;
four individuals knocked on her door ' requesting&#13;
food and shelter. One subject was fi1ming the&#13;
other subjects. Student declined the shelter&#13;
request and closed the door_ Officer checked th~&#13;
area with negative results.&#13;
Property, Wyllie Hall, 1:33 p.m. Student&#13;
n:.,,orted the theft of a text book. Investigation&#13;
continuing.&#13;
1))/26/99 Inc 99-715 Agency Ass;st, WylUe&#13;
Hall, 2:56 p.m. Kenosha Sheriff called to report&#13;
a 911 hMg•up call from a pay phone by the&#13;
Bookstore. Officer checked the area but did not&#13;
finrl anynni&gt; thPn&gt;-&#13;
.10 / 26 /99 Inc 99-716 Lost and Found,&#13;
TaHent Dock, 4:35 p.m. Custodian found a&#13;
oolly at the loading dock which wlll be kept at&#13;
CJ.PPS until the owner is located.&#13;
10/26/99 Inc 99-717 Property Oa.mngc,&#13;
Ranger HaJJ parking lot, 5:00 p .m. Student&#13;
reported finding two deep scratches on h~r cac&#13;
which had~ pa.rked in the lot. No wi~&#13;
es 10 the i.ncJdent.&#13;
10/27 /99 Inc 99-718 flre Equipment&#13;
Tampering, Molinaro Hall, 4:50 a.m. While on&#13;
routine patrol, UPPS officer saw an ex.tingui5h- er which had been discharged inside it class•&#13;
room entrl\I\ce. No suspects of witnesses at this&#13;
time. Extinguisher will be replaced.&#13;
10/27 /99 Inc 99-719 Disordedy Conduct,&#13;
Union and Ranger Hall, 7:16 p.m. Student&#13;
r&lt;..-portt.-d a visitor hara..c..sing her and causing a scene, first in. the Un.ion ;.\nd tlu."f\ RanhP(?r Halt&#13;
The suspect, is not a student but is rumored to&#13;
have been living at Ranger Hall for over a month. Victim requested. no further action&#13;
taken at this time other than to report the incident.&#13;
&#13;
10/18/99 Inc 99-720 Criminal Damage to&#13;
Property /State, Tallent 188, 10:21 a.m. An&#13;
offioe window was found to have a 1" round&#13;
hole in it with re:.-ulti.ng cracks tlU"01.1gh• out the&#13;
window. Facilities Management was contacted&#13;
for repairs.&#13;
l0/28/99 Inc 99-721 Theft from Vehicle,&#13;
Union Lot, 7 :35 p .m . Student reported&#13;
unknown person removed a UW-F parking&#13;
permit from her locked vehk:k-. No other itet:l\S&#13;
wt:!'nl' missing. No :;,l.Cjpects or witnesses.&#13;
10/28/99 Inc 99-722 1-Jarassment,&#13;
University Apartments, 6:55 p .m. Student&#13;
rcportOO being verbally harassed by another&#13;
student. Com.plaint will be forwarded to residell.:e&#13;
life officials.&#13;
10/28/99 Inc 99-723 Traf!ko Violatlol\, CTH&#13;
E and CTH J.R, 12:22 a.m. While on patrol,&#13;
UPPS ofik"er observed a vehicle with one&#13;
headlight ouL A 00T check revealed drive.r,&#13;
(no university affiliation) was suspended for&#13;
failure to pay a fine. Citation was issued for&#13;
that offense.&#13;
10/29/99 Inc 99·724 Personal Prope,ty&#13;
Theft, Comm. Art·s Lot, 10:30 a.m. Student&#13;
reported his UW-P pern,it taken from his&#13;
unlocked vehicle. No sw.pects or witnes9e5.&#13;
10/29 /99 lnc 99-725 Fire Alann, Creenqwst&#13;
Hall, 2:17 p.m. Power Plant advised of an&#13;
alarm. Officers chec-ked the buJlding but&#13;
foW\d no smoke or fl:..'\mes.&#13;
10/29/99 Inc 99-726 Agency Assist,&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept., lnne, Loop Road, 2:54&#13;
p.m. UPPS received a report of two vans driving&#13;
erratically and throwing beer cans out the&#13;
window. Officer checked the area but found&#13;
no vcltlcl(.-s matching the description.&#13;
10/29/99 Inc 99-727 Traffic Violation, 900&#13;
Wood Road, 10:39 p .m. office, obse,ved a vehicle&#13;
with a missing tall light. A cht.:.ck of the&#13;
DOT fUc rcv-.takd driv,n (no 1,.S,Oiversity affiliation)&#13;
was revoked and vehicle licen.cie expired. ~ citation was issued for Vehicle Operated&#13;
.\fter Suspension and Operating While&#13;
Revoked, 4th offen.cie.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-728 Traffic Stop, CTH E,&#13;
1:30 a.m. Officer stopped a vehicle that was&#13;
swerving over the roadway. A OOT c.he&lt;:k&#13;
revealed plates did not match the vehicle descrJpt1on and driver had no lio..-nsc. The driver,&#13;
a lucine motorist, was issued a citation for&#13;
Oisplnying Unauthorized P lates and&#13;
Operath,g Without• Valid DL, 2nd offuru;e.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99.729 Agency Assist.&#13;
Warrant, CTH E, 2:31 a . .m. While on a. traffic&#13;
stop1 the driver, a Racine Motorist, was fowid&#13;
to have an outstanding warrant through the&#13;
Racine Police Oept. for contempt of court.&#13;
Subject was transported to the Kenosha&#13;
County jail.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-730 Traffic Accident,&#13;
University Apartments parking lot, 3:05 p.m.&#13;
Student's vehicle struck another vehicle while&#13;
backmg out of• pa,kmg stall.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-731 Bu.ming Violation, XCountry&#13;
Course, 4:41 p.m.. Anonymous com•&#13;
plainant reported a burning violation in the&#13;
pine forest off SJH 31 and CTH E. Orncer&#13;
cru..."Cked. the area but could find no signs of fire.&#13;
The next shift on duty will also check the area.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-732 Burning Violation, XCountry&#13;
Course, 4:42 p.m. While on patrol,&#13;
Offie(!-r came across a visitor who had built a&#13;
small tempo.rtlry shelter and h:id a cooking&#13;
fire. The subject advised she was homeless and&#13;
had been living in the area a couple days.&#13;
Subject was told to extinguish the fire and&#13;
vacate the area. Verbal warning was Uo"\led for&#13;
Chapter 18 bu.ming violation.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-733 Assist Citizen,&#13;
University Apartments, 6:34 a.m. Student&#13;
wanted to speak to an officer along with housing&#13;
R.A.'s on problems that appeared to be&#13;
academ.ic and stte:18 related. R.A.'s c:owisclt.-d&#13;
&amp;."tUdent and will meet with her again.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-734 Ffre Alarm, Union,&#13;
10:14 p.m. Power Plant reported an alarm.&#13;
Officer found a f~-i.ng machine set up for the&#13;
haunted tunnel may Mvc caused the alarm as&#13;
there was no evidcore of smoke or fire. Alarm&#13;
system was reset.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-735 Medkol Assb-t, Union,&#13;
10:56 p .m. Student was found unoonsdous.&#13;
Kenosha Med. 5 responded but $tudent&#13;
.refused tra.nsport.&#13;
10/30/99 Inc 99-736 Alarm, Wyllie, 11:13&#13;
a...m. Student rt."f&gt;Ortcd nn emergency exit alarm&#13;
SOW\d..iJ'\g. UP.PS officer was able to gain access&#13;
n111er I law &amp; order 5&#13;
to the aJ..,nn box and cf.is.. connect th~ alarm..&#13;
10/31 /99 Inc 99-737 Recovered Stolen&#13;
Property, University Apartments, 2:23 p.m.&#13;
While speaking to the driver of an accident,&#13;
UPPS officer saw several parking signs hanging&#13;
on an apartment waJI. S igns were confiscated&#13;
and are being held pending proof of&#13;
ownership.&#13;
10/31 /99 Tnc 99-738 Recovered Stolen&#13;
Property, Creenquist Hall, 4:53 p.m. Student&#13;
advi.st."Cl of a chemical spill in a lab. The safety&#13;
/ risk manager was co,,tacted and he&#13;
assessed. t1,o Situation and ~-:r-..u-..,g ... -&lt;1. !Or ctcan .. up.&#13;
11 /01 /99 Inc 99-739 Explosive Oevke&#13;
(Bullet), Union parking Jot, 8:44 a.in. Staff&#13;
member reported finding a rifle bullet u, the&#13;
parking lot. Bullet was tu.med over to UPPS.&#13;
Owner unknow,, at this time.&#13;
11 /01/99 Inc 99-740 State Property Theft,&#13;
Wyllie Hall., 10:16 a.m. Staff rnember repotted&#13;
p...~ nnd state property had been removed&#13;
hom an office.&#13;
11/01/99 Inc 99-741 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Wyllie Hnll, 10:16 a .m . Staff member&#13;
reported property taken frc.,m an office.&#13;
11/01/99 Jnc 99-742 Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances, Cl Arts 8uildjng t"nd Union&#13;
Lot. Student reported an unknown male had&#13;
followed her from the building to Union lot&#13;
and qu(Stioned her and then left the area.&#13;
11/01/99 Inc 99-743 UWS Chapter 18,&#13;
Vandallsm, Ra.ng-..T Hall parking Jot, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
SluJ~nt •~pvrt-:,..1 vam,h1.H:s01 tu her vehicle&#13;
~tween Oct 28-29th. The ante1ma had been&#13;
bent.&#13;
11/03/99 Inc 99-749 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop at Wood Road, 12:05 p .n,, Driver, a&#13;
student, who did not stop for a stop sign was&#13;
issued a citation for that offen:5e.&#13;
11/03/99 lnc 99-750 Fire Drill, Sports &amp;&#13;
Activity Center, 2:30 p .m. An annual fire drill&#13;
was conducted at SAC with approxima~ly 75&#13;
pt.-oplc evacuated with no problems noted.&#13;
11/03/99 Inc 99-751 Alarm· Bookstore,&#13;
&amp;19 p .m. AJann panel showed an alarm at the&#13;
Bookstore. UPPS officer checked and found all&#13;
doors 64...~. Bookstore manager was contacted&#13;
and alarm canceled nnd ....._.._&#13;
11/04/99 lnc 99-752 Traffic v;olation, CTH&#13;
Eat Wood Road, 12.:29 a.m. Driver (no Wliver--&#13;
sity affiliation) who failed to stop for a ,top&#13;
sign was dted for thatofk.""t\Se,&#13;
11/04/99 T,,c 99-753 Ttt\£6.&lt;: Viofotion,, CTI-I&#13;
£ at Wood Road, 12:48 a.m. Driver, a student,&#13;
who fo.ik-d to stop for a stop sign wns cited for&#13;
that offense.&#13;
11/03/99 lru: 99-754 T,affic V;olation. Sil-I&#13;
31 &amp; CTH JR, 7:52 a.m.. Driver, a student, was&#13;
cll'ed for faill.ll'e to stop for a stop sign.&#13;
11/04/99 Inc 99-755 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop &amp; W()()d Ro..,d, 10:~ n.m., Driver,&#13;
a student, was dted for failure to stop for a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
11/04/99 lnc 99-756 Found Property,&#13;
Tallent Hall, 7:21 p.m. A staff member brought&#13;
a jacket to UPPS that had bL"CI\ left in a class--&#13;
room. Owner ca.lied to clalm jt\c.ket and it was&#13;
tu.med over to him airer proper idcntific:..1.tlon.&#13;
11/04/99 Inc 99-757Traffic v;olation, CTH&#13;
JR at Cl1i E., 5:58 p.m. Driver, a student, was&#13;
issued a citation for failure to stop for a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
11 /04/99 Inc 99•758 Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances, Wyllie Hall, 10:-09 p.m. Staff&#13;
.mcm.bt.-T re_p&lt;&gt;rtt..-d n.&gt;cciving disturbing e-mail&#13;
messages Involving another t:&gt;mployee.&#13;
Investigation pend.i.ng.&#13;
11/04/99 Inc 99-759 Troffic Violotion, CTI-I&#13;
JR at CTH E, 8:21 p.m. Driver, a studcm, was&#13;
issued a cit,,tion for failure to stop for a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
11/04/99 Inc 99-760 Tr.iliic V;olation, CTH&#13;
G a.nd Outer Loop Rood., 5:54 p .m. Driver, a&#13;
student, was issued a dtatlo1, for failure to&#13;
stop at a stop sign.&#13;
11/04/99 Inc 99-761 Tral6c Violation, 30th&#13;
Ave. at CTI I E., 10:22 p.m. Driver, a student,&#13;
was issued a citation for failure to stop for a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
-&#13;
--&#13;
6 ranger I news&#13;
Get out to&#13;
''Getting out''&#13;
fielen Vasiliou .&#13;
Judging a play by its script""" be very risky. Even if&#13;
you took that risk, however, "~tting Out" would still&#13;
beawiono,r.&#13;
"Tt's !In awesome play, ~•d. seruor .Katie Vane, who&#13;
plays the chara&lt;;ter Arlie.&#13;
"Getting o.,e• i;s about a young WOTil&lt;ITI (Arlene)&#13;
played l;,}1 j-1.1nior Jenny Toutant, trying to fight for the&#13;
great potenmu she sees In her fumre after befog released&#13;
from prison.&#13;
Thi&amp; off-Broadway SU~"«'SS is one of the plays written&#13;
by Marsl'la Norman. Norm.-n h11s also written plays&#13;
such 11s "The Holdup" ;;md "Traveler in the Dark."&#13;
1".i.J&gt;ding new strength .i:P religion, Arlene atten1pts to&#13;
move on and put her crim.inal life b&lt;&gt;.hi11d. Flashbacks&#13;
from her past, dealiJ;&gt;g with prison guards, .her ex-pimp&#13;
boyfriend and her &amp;plit personality (Arlie) still haunt&#13;
h.e:r; however.&#13;
The New York Times calls "Getting Out'' a pJay&#13;
-whic:h "with a blaze of theatrical 11nergy, light_,; up the&#13;
off-Broad-y scene as nqthi.r\g els&lt;: this season. Moves&#13;
w; to joyo\1s tears."&#13;
Dil'OCIQrTom Sllll$\r9ll\ has confidence in this talented&#13;
&lt;::as! and in their petfoonances in this production.&#13;
"Getting Out'' will be performed in UW-Parkside's&#13;
S,:udiQ Theater on Pee:. 3-4 and Dec,. 9--10 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
'The nlatinee showing of ''C~tting Out·' wj]J be on Dec. 9&#13;
at 10 a.m. Ticket cos\/, are $10 for adults and $7 for&#13;
seniors,. student,,, faculty and staff. Group$ of '.W or more&#13;
~-an buy discounted ticketi, (or 5$ each.&#13;
======-c=-==- =- •c=-,..,--------------------------=• ... ~ :..,~&#13;
Familv weekend offers&#13;
wholesome entenainment&#13;
Dan Bullock&#13;
University Activities and Residence Life of UW-Parkside have planned a&#13;
weekend filled with programs and activities for all ages and&#13;
are callmg it, appropriately enough, Family ~ -&#13;
Weekend. This weekend has been set aside to&#13;
welcome families of faculty, students, and staff&#13;
and give them an opportunity to see first-hand&#13;
the many elements that make UW-Parkside such an&#13;
important part of the southeastern Wisconsin community.&#13;
\&#13;
Activ ities include a magic show featuring not one "'" ~&#13;
but two illusionists, Midnight Madness at the Sports&#13;
and Activities Center, The Dr. Seuss Festival, campus&#13;
tours, and fireside chats with various campus organizations.&#13;
There also will be basketball games and recreational activities at&#13;
the Parkside Union. In addition, a series of self-improvement&#13;
workshops will offer insights on how you can optimize your&#13;
finances, deal constructively with stress, and gain a sharper perspective&#13;
on college life. .&#13;
Family Weekend activities will begin Friday, Nov. 12 and will&#13;
continue through Nov. 14. Register at the desk in the Union&#13;
Bazaar. All programs and activities are free. The only cost is for&#13;
lunch and dinner.&#13;
Area h otels have reduced rates for those attending the Family&#13;
Weekend. For information on lodging, call the visitor's bureaus of&#13;
Kenosha or Racine&#13;
It's been 18 years since UW-Parkside has opened the Family&#13;
Weekend to the public, and everyone is encouraged to attend. Invite&#13;
your family and enjoy a weekend of fun at UW-Parkside.&#13;
You don't need a business degree GE I EXPER:tENCE&#13;
AND GET PA:tDI Q Q Q ()&#13;
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.... •&#13;
PSGA debates 2001&#13;
Buduet increases&#13;
ranaer I news&#13;
"For many years committee Chairs&#13;
were given nothing for their work.&#13;
U..c:ky Duba&#13;
The meeting was c:alled to order at&#13;
12:15, which is the latest time this&#13;
semester. New senators were sworn&#13;
in, immediately followed by a discussion&#13;
of the 2001 senate budget.&#13;
the budget to pass, 2/3 of the senate&#13;
would have to agree on the change.&#13;
Otherwise, it will be placed in front of&#13;
SUFACasis.&#13;
The budget mu.st =,,&#13;
first be approved by the _J - f&#13;
Other areas, such as Travel and&#13;
Registration, also saw dramatic&#13;
incrca::,c:;. Thi:; fund wos&#13;
increased from $6560 a year to&#13;
How can we justify a $48,000&#13;
increase? Think about the students&#13;
you're representing here_"&#13;
Chief Justice Terri Jacobson.&#13;
senate, then taken to&#13;
1 SUFAC for approval,&#13;
and finally put in&#13;
front of the&#13;
Chancellor for his&#13;
consent.&#13;
Each senator was&#13;
given a copy of the&#13;
budget, and a heated&#13;
debate ensued when a&#13;
$48,890 increase in&#13;
funds for the senate&#13;
was proposed. The main&#13;
area of increase focused on the a Uotted&#13;
amount Chairpersons of committees&#13;
will receive. Each Chrurperson, or&#13;
the head of each committee, is&#13;
allowed $250 a semester according to&#13;
the current budget. The new proposal&#13;
includes a $750 jump where each&#13;
Chairperson receives $1000 a semester&#13;
for work done. That is a 400%&#13;
increase in committee funds.&#13;
Many senators were confused and&#13;
outraged at this, saying the increase&#13;
was not necessary.&#13;
"This [committee work] is not supposed&#13;
to be a part time job," said&#13;
President Pro Tem, Veroljub&#13;
Radulovic.&#13;
It was also revealed during the&#13;
debate that committees may not be&#13;
meeting according to their schedules&#13;
and that Radulovic, who is responsible&#13;
for keeping track of each committee's&#13;
minutes, has not been getting&#13;
information on what the committees&#13;
have actually been working on. The&#13;
question was posed if the committees&#13;
deserve to be paid more, because of&#13;
the questionable work production.&#13;
Many senators voiced their concern&#13;
about what committees have actually&#13;
done for the students of Parkside.&#13;
"If this budget goes into effect as is,&#13;
it is going against campaign promises&#13;
to keep student costs low," said&#13;
Senator Chris Leipski.&#13;
"For many years committee Ch.air:s&#13;
were given nothing for their work.&#13;
How can we justify a $48,000 increase?&#13;
Think about the students you're representing&#13;
here," said Chief Justice Terri&#13;
Jacobson.&#13;
A motion was brought to the floor&#13;
to cut the $1000 to $650, still over a&#13;
SOo/c, increase. However, under immediate&#13;
vote, the motion passed, but not&#13;
before President Corey Mandley stated&#13;
Iha t he would line item veto the&#13;
budget. This means that in order for&#13;
$22,300.&#13;
"What are we supposed to&#13;
be, a travel agency?" said&#13;
Senator Leipski.&#13;
President Cory Mandley&#13;
stated afterwards, "ln order&#13;
for the Senate to function&#13;
properly, we need about&#13;
$30,000, which is less than&#13;
other UW campuses our size.&#13;
We arc asking for so much, fully&#13;
expecting SUFAC to chop it down.&#13;
But we do have a lot of hard working&#13;
people here that deserve more than&#13;
what they're currently getting."&#13;
The budget was not agreed upon&#13;
and many senators walked out before&#13;
the meeting was adjourned. Aproposal&#13;
to 'have an emergency senate meeting&#13;
on Monday 11-8 about the budget&#13;
was rejected. It was decided that the&#13;
budget -would be put forth to SUFAC&#13;
as it stands and any further changes&#13;
made to it during next Friday's meeting&#13;
would also be put in front of&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
PSGA meeting 10-29-99&#13;
Bec:kyDuba&#13;
The meeting opened with the new senators from the recent elections being&#13;
sworn in. After this short process, nominations for the three open SUFAC&#13;
seats were taken. SUFAC, the Segregated University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee, is the committee that disperses aU the funds from the Parkside&#13;
Budget to the different organizations and clubs.&#13;
1n all, seven senators were nominated for the three seats: Kevin Matson,&#13;
Chds Liepski, Maria Negron, Shana Hopkins, Tarajec Amin, Theophist&#13;
Mclntyie, and Tony Milton. Following nominations, each senator was given&#13;
only a couple of short minutes to state why they deserve to be on the committee.&#13;
All of the nominated senators were very well qualified.&#13;
After their short speeches, the vote was taken. Maria Negron, the current&#13;
chairperson of the Committee, was reelected. Tony Milton was also elec:ted.&#13;
He is a junior, with a double major in Finance and Economics. There was a&#13;
tie for the third seat between Kevin Matson and Tarajee Amin. Matson was&#13;
on the committee last semester and Amin had experience as Treasurer at her&#13;
High School.&#13;
Because of the tie, a second vote was called. A second tie c:aused a third&#13;
vote to be taken. Finally, after this last vote, Kevin Matson won the seaL&#13;
in&#13;
__. __&#13;
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•&#13;
ranger I features&#13;
Womvn's Center advocates&#13;
''Take Back the Night'' Following a tradition&#13;
stilrtcd i.n Germany&#13;
in 1973, Park~ide&#13;
students banded&#13;
together, chanting in&#13;
front of a forge bon·&#13;
fire in ·ar attempt to&#13;
"Take Back .tl-t..&#13;
Ni)?ht. '" Assault vie&#13;
tims, victims of&#13;
dom('stic violence,&#13;
and conct."rncd sh.1•&#13;
dents tlnd members&#13;
of the community&#13;
m~de this y('ar's&#13;
event, sponsored by&#13;
the Womyn's Center&#13;
and Ke nosh ans&#13;
Against Sexual&#13;
Assault, a resound&#13;
ing success.&#13;
Trissa Groff&#13;
"One, two, three, four, no more&#13;
violence anymore."&#13;
"Five, six, seven, eight, we want&#13;
freedom we won't wait." 11Two, four, six, eight,. no more&#13;
date rape."&#13;
These were just a few of the&#13;
chants shouted by enthusiastic&#13;
advocates that marched around the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
dorms Thursday, Oct. 28. Around&#13;
75 people of different races and&#13;
genders gathered together in the&#13;
Union Bazaar .for Take Back the&#13;
Night&#13;
Take Back the Night started m&#13;
1973 in Germany after a handful of&#13;
rapes. The people wanted to end&#13;
the violence and hold the violators&#13;
re~ponsiblo for their actions. The&#13;
violence continues and people gather&#13;
everywhere, not just at UWParkside,&#13;
to try and end this epidemtc&#13;
&#13;
Betsy Ade filled the hall witt&#13;
music by playing her guitar, while'&#13;
candles, whistles, and information&#13;
about violence were distributed by&#13;
Joni Calhoun and Jackie Buzzel,&#13;
coordinators of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Womyn's Center. T-shirts were sold&#13;
with proceeds going to the Aids&#13;
Resource Center of Wisconsin.&#13;
The Womyn's Center, in association&#13;
with the Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Organization, organized the rally.&#13;
The agenda for the night involved&#13;
two guest speakers: Althea Knutson&#13;
who represents Kenoshans Against&#13;
Sexual Assault (KASA), and&#13;
Marlene Schlecht, a UW-Parkside&#13;
police officer. KASA is a non-profit&#13;
organization that helps 24 hours a&#13;
day. It has a hotline, support&#13;
groups, and one-on-one counseling.&#13;
These women spoke to raise the&#13;
awareness not only of women, but&#13;
men and children, too.&#13;
After the speeches, a march was&#13;
held around the UW-Parkside&#13;
dorms to break the silence. Then&#13;
there was a bonfire built by the&#13;
Kenosha Fire Department. During&#13;
this time, the advocates observed a&#13;
moment of silence for all the&#13;
assaulted. This also gave people a&#13;
chance to speak out if they had&#13;
something to say about being a victim&#13;
or knowing someone who is.&#13;
Much was learned during this&#13;
event. For example, one in three&#13;
women will be raped in their lifetime,&#13;
85% of them by acquaintances.&#13;
One in si-x men will be&#13;
assaulted in their lifetime and 40%&#13;
of those committing the assault are&#13;
strangers. A child has to tell of his&#13;
or her assault an average of seven&#13;
times before anyone takes any&#13;
action.&#13;
For these reasons, people gathered&#13;
to "Take Back the Night."&#13;
Schlecht stated that if everyone at&#13;
the event talked to five friends&#13;
about what they learned and those&#13;
people talked to five more, maybe it&#13;
would be a start to help break the&#13;
silence among people. Photos: Jeff AJley&#13;
The Parkside Ac-t-ivi-1-ies&#13;
Board Wishes to Thank&#13;
Everyone Involved with&#13;
the Wonderful Safe&#13;
Halloween!&#13;
UW-Parkside Adrrinistraior, The Parkside&#13;
Booksfore, Jerry Srrith Produce &amp;&#13;
Country Siore, University Activities&#13;
Office, Volunteer Center, University&#13;
Police, Residence Life, SWEA,&#13;
Latinos Unidos, Art Club, SOC, Omega&#13;
Delta Phi, College Republicans &#13;
c1a - .&#13;
•&#13;
u,z:&#13;
How can you ge&#13;
3°/o cash bac&#13;
----&#13;
on stuff you'c:J • • ' -c - •&#13;
buy anyway? ...&#13;
'1isit. ouf ~e.b s,t.e. at.&#13;
wW"". st.ude.nt.c.te.dit.c.atd .c.ofl'\&#13;
~&#13;
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aS&#13;
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~ ..........................•.•............•..... ····-···· .•.............. ·•···· .........•..............•........... ······ ........................ +••····· .. ········· ...............• ·- Pleose Tw He,e&#13;
&amp;&#13;
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Please fill out all informarion below to ensure your application is processed in a timely manner.&#13;
Please use blue or black ink.&#13;
TEU US ABOUT YOURSELF·&#13;
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PLEASE READ CAREFULLY.&#13;
Bv :&gt;ignin11 tlu) l,on1 of rlli) !\j,vli(Uiion, 1 ,ec:1&#13;
ucs, 11,01 0 Vi:so aedit oo1d oc&lt;oont be opened and cord(s) be iswed os trdcoled, ond I oultiooJe ~•ores Norionol Bank (Ddov,ue) 10 rocewe ond e:uhoAQe .nbmation and,~,. !he rfflllf!O(~ ond&#13;
doto col0&lt;1od p.;..irioent 10 my cicdifwOfth,ooss. 1 tt!p,esen, rhat me information I hove 9h•f!n Associolos No1ionol Bonk (Delo'Mlfe) rego·ding my finon&lt;iot condlhon rs complete ond lOntCI ond rhar I hcr...e no presei,f ,nremoo ro Me b boMl\lptcy&#13;
AssodoMS IMflOuol e,ui.k (OeloWOl'e) moy use information oflout me lo, attic, bu:.ine-ss purposes. iricluding 91(),mg mbmotion wirh off-ilioted c.ompornEI\. unless I elect noc IO allow~ NC1tionol Book to sho,e rhor ilroio-.JIK.W• I WIii norlv As$oooto-.&#13;
Horio,r(II Bonk. ({)Qlo,l.(lrO) o# ony mor(lliCJI CN.fllOJS-O ~noe ... mv finonriol &lt;ondihon. 1 og,ee robe bound by allot me terms olld &lt;.O!Oliorl!. of lfl4l &lt;otdmembe, og1een)tnt whidi v.,.11 be deflVBfed 10 me n.s oppl,cot~ is n&lt;&gt;111onsfetoble If vou ore nor&#13;
11,c 1»son w li&lt;.i lCHJ 01 ii vou 1CS11Qnd ¢lte1 1he cxpilotion date., we MIi review thi:i oppli&lt;oMn subject to ou nonnoloed,1 aueoo. lbs Vi~ 01XOU1d ISO prog1omt.lAsioool~ t~ Bonk(~),~ OakMOl8&#13;
Annual Percent age Rate for Pur&lt;hoses&#13;
Variable Rate Information for Purchases&#13;
Groce Period for Repaymen1 of&#13;
the Balanto for Purchases&#13;
M&lt;ithod of Computing tho&#13;
Balanco for Purchases&#13;
Annual Fees&#13;
Minimum Finance Charge&#13;
Transaction Fee for Cash Advances,&#13;
and Fees for Puylng Lotc or&#13;
Exceeding the Credit Limit&#13;
Credit Ca rd Information&#13;
The mre is vorioblo, os described he1ein The vmioble rote, 1f colcukned roday (July 15, 1999), hosed on the cunenl Prnne Rote of 8 OC)C\4:,, 'NOi.itd be 17 49% APR&#13;
You, onnool peu.e-11090 role (APR) moy vory The ,ote will b8 odjuSlod monlhty ond will be deleurwood bv odding o Margin 10 !he IOCUIX. The Index will be rhe h1ghesl&#13;
Prime Role published in the "Utoney Rotes"' section of The Woll Srreet ]Of.ltnor on the firsl bu!tln~ doy of fhc moorh 1n wh1&lt;h lhe b,I mg cyde beg1M rhe Morgm will&#13;
be 9.49%. Howeve,. If your occovnr becomes 30 days past due 01 1s closed be&lt;0use of defouh, the Morgm will be 13 49%&#13;
If you pov vou, previous bC1lonce in full on o, before lhe due dore shown on you, prevtous s1a1emen1, you WIii hove o groce perKXI on pt.uchose5. of 1S day.. {from rhe&#13;
s1oremen1 closing dote to the poymenl due dore).&#13;
Ave1oge Ooify Bolante (indudin9 new purd)O~)&#13;
Nono&#13;
S.50&#13;
T,onsoction Fee for Cosh Advances: greater ol $4 00 01 4% of rhe ornoun1 of the cosh OCM&gt;n&lt;e lote Poyment fee S29 00 each hme o poymenl rs. lo1e&#13;
Ove,-rho-(,ocliH.imil Fee S29 00 each month 1he balance exceeds the &lt;1edit limit.&#13;
Til8 role for cash tronsoctions will be o vorioble rote eQuol ro the Prime Rote plus 13 490/4. Based upon 1he Prime Roro of 8 00% os ol Juty 1 5, 1999, rhe ,are for rosh O&lt;Mlnces would be 21 49% APR liov.&lt;."Yfll'. 1f )'OUI otc.ounl becomes&#13;
30 days posa due o, cs dosed lmoouse or defoufl, lhe i'.i\a19in on cosh rronsoaions ....,-U be 17.49%. Bosod on rho cunonr Pume Rore, fhor would be 25 4~ APR&#13;
The i11fofl11(ltion oboUI rhe&lt;Osts of the credit cord desaibed in rhis oppli«mon is ocwrote en or July IS. 1999 Thi\ infotmooon mov ha... changed dJcr ~, doie lo hnd ovr ""1ot moy t-cMt chonv,,d. 'Mlle I.I\ Of ~m Uol&gt;OOOI Ekm• (Oeluwure).&#13;
P.O. BO)( 15687, Wilming10n, OE 198S0-5687.&#13;
Re-bate Ten:ns ond Conditk&gt;ns: You oom o 3% rebate on net purdtases which ore purchases m ,eturm fot aedit mode during each bl.II~ (V(te in which The toml ol poymem, ond oedrr. to your otCl1U111 I\ 1,P.&lt;,~ rhc 1~ PrtMOUS Balance on y0u1&#13;
CU!l(fll sro1cmon1. Cosh fl-Ot1soctions. 1nduding oosh odvoncos ond bolonce rronstois, do nor quo•fv lo, the rebore fhc 10001e will be cdc.vlo~ tlOth colln:lc&gt;1 .,u,r hosed oo (\.l'ldo!M1 nur pus~ po•,rmg io 'IOUf ~ rhlc.,gh ~ ~ bi!I rg uot~&#13;
and 'MIi be p:rrd by d 1ecl:. oow o voor befo,e Marth I 5. If VO\.lf to-' mbote 1s $2 Of less, d "41 be forfer1ed The ITIOlUmum tebote YOO con eom I'\ $20 per bilhng mtemenr. SI 00 per OJlendo, yea, YOIA' OCCOU'• nlU',,I n.•mo"" ope,i ond f1 gc:oOd •JO!'idu&gt;v ,, '"&amp;,., 1 reooive the rebate. If ot anytime yo111 occount becomes delinquent, 6 dosed o, 1s m default~ will forfa-1 otl rebores occrued through rhe bill,ng (ycle en~ it. occoun1 \IIQS dos«I. 01 rht ~ 01 d.Awh o«uned Reblrttf" ~ot: ro w-J -.o.oe Ol'.d ore oor eomed unr.4 lheo, ore rcdoemcd. Tho tem1s ond cond1ll0ns of !he 1ebote progron'l n'IO'( be dwlQOO °' wrlCeled 01 any ,,me ond lor Ol"f reoson&#13;
New Yol'k Residents: Co11SUtl'lOf Kll)OflS n'l(Jy be ,~ed in wr111oc:rion with rhe processing of lhe endosed opp1Kol100 and ony ~ring O&lt;rounl o, update. 1f!l'lf'WOI. o, ~ cl lhe occount Urion iOJ ec;oe-J .,,. 'l'fl 1.,.(1 yoc. wt 1:t!ll;lf 01 r1o1 0 m1nume1 iepo« 'MJS f8Qll8Sled ond rhe nomas and addresses of any mnsumer repomng ogenc,es mo1 tiove p,OV!Cled vs Wllh ")U(h 1C1)C)(h.&#13;
Ohio Residents: rhe Ohio lows ogoinst discriminoboo ,equ,te rlw oil ciOOl!QrS mok.c &lt;rl»I oquolly O\,'Oiloblo lo utl uedito'IIOlffty corrwmer.. ond that cred11 ,epomog ogenoeo. motnlOlfl 'A!C)Olaft '.-11 .r-0 on 80(ti ,ndMduor upon •~ The Ohio fo,I&#13;
Rights Commission odminisrers comp•nf)(e within !hes Sow&#13;
Wi~in ~ld°"!ts! Wisronsin low pr,avides that no p10,.,S1on ol OflY ,ncm1ol property 01:11ooment. unloleroi Wlemenr. or cooo decree ope,t,,ing to moi tol p,oper,y "WJI ~ ~ o rredito1 ·~ ll'Ul@fesrs unless lhe oed,101, p,o to the 1111w ued,1 i\&#13;
g,onted,. ,s furnished with a copy of lhe ogreetl',on1, Sk)fomc111. or dwoo, °' hos &lt;Ktuol knowledge of rhe 00\lllfse Pl'OYISIOO whet! rhe obllQOllOO 10 me oed.ior .., nwrivd&#13;
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Going to class: Universitv Seminar TLamb of Ood Lutheran Oturch&#13;
Divine Service every&#13;
SUoday at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
Stocke.- Elementary School&#13;
6315 67th Street, Kenoaba&#13;
LC.M.S. Pastor John Berg 652-4695&#13;
Jeanie Schober&#13;
University Seminar is designed to&#13;
help students achieve academic and&#13;
social success at UW-Parkside. The&#13;
class has undergone some major content&#13;
changes in hopes of tailoring the&#13;
subjects to the individual student.&#13;
College Student Inventory testing&#13;
has been added to determine which&#13;
areas would best benefit the student.&#13;
As a result, seminar sessions will better&#13;
relate to each student ori a more&#13;
individual level. For instance, if the&#13;
student scores h igh in academic&#13;
skills, chances are the student will be&#13;
exempt from those seminar sessions.&#13;
The Passport to Learning is another&#13;
change made to allow students to&#13;
work with juniors and seniors and&#13;
the community outside of class. The&#13;
class is covered over a ten-week period.&#13;
To access Passport information,&#13;
students can go to the Worldwide&#13;
Web in the UW-Parksidc library. The&#13;
students will do the work outside of&#13;
class then meet with the instructor to&#13;
reflect on the experiences the class&#13;
had.&#13;
The class is designed to help the&#13;
student chose a major, set goals, and&#13;
learn about the many opportunities&#13;
UW-Parkside has to offer.&#13;
"The program is designed to offer&#13;
more variety to the students, " said&#13;
Deanne Stone, head of housing.&#13;
The class is a new pilot for the&#13;
semester to see whether or not the&#13;
changes have made a positive effect&#13;
on the s tudents. The results on the&#13;
success of the pilot will be determined&#13;
after the 1999 fall semester.&#13;
IN TWO SHORT YEARS WITH&#13;
US, YOUR VALUE&#13;
WILL REALLY GROW.&#13;
New spin on 0011&#13;
Dieter Kehrhahn&#13;
A beautiful park, with many trees,&#13;
shrubs, and terrain changes surrounds&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Thus, it is the perfect setting&#13;
for the newest variation of golf caUed&#13;
disc golf. UW-Parkside has added the&#13;
sport to its recreational offerings and&#13;
it is quickly gaini.ng popularity.&#13;
The sport was founded in the&#13;
1970's, but only recently has it become&#13;
to flourish in the United States. It is&#13;
fun, challenging, and perhaps best of&#13;
all, cheap alternative to golf. AU a student&#13;
needs is a disc - a Frisbee to most&#13;
people. The rules of the game arc basically&#13;
the same as those of "ball golf"&#13;
with the object of reaching the target&#13;
with the fewest number of throws.&#13;
Disk golf is a good excuse to get&#13;
outside for some fresh air, a healthy&#13;
walk, and an aerobic workout. It is a&#13;
sport that can be enjoyed by anybody,&#13;
regardless of disability, age, or skill&#13;
level. lt can also be played yearround,&#13;
since you're less likely to loose&#13;
a disc in the snow. A game of disc golf&#13;
usually involves no waiting and there&#13;
arc no course fees. Oise golf makes&#13;
use of the large open areas around the&#13;
school, with little cost to the school or&#13;
the student.&#13;
For a game of disc golf, students&#13;
can go to the Rec Center to check in&#13;
and take a course map. And if the&#13;
sport catches a student's interest, he&#13;
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or she is encouraged to sign up for the&#13;
newly forming Oise Golf Club.&#13;
Students residing on campus can&#13;
check out discs at no charge from the&#13;
Residence Life Office using the&#13;
Ranger Card. Until equipment&#13;
becomes available at the Rec Center,&#13;
players may purchase disks for $8 at&#13;
the Ranger Card Office.&#13;
Log on to www.discgolf.com for&#13;
rules and more insight on the sport.&#13;
On campus~ contact the Rec Center at&#13;
ext. 2695.&#13;
A two-year hitch in the Anny is all it talces to become&#13;
more valuable to employers. Because the two years after training you spend as a&#13;
member of an Anny team will give you discipline, maturity&#13;
and the ability to work with others-the qualities that will&#13;
help you build a good career in a worthwhile job. Fmd out how you can make this solid investment in&#13;
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10 ranger I features I i : 1 I ; 1 ; 1 ~ c B 4 ;J&#13;
Parkside students, tacultv support&#13;
Kenosha brownfield proiect&#13;
The Ranger newspaper is looking&#13;
for qualified candidates to&#13;
fill several openings for paid&#13;
positions&#13;
News Reporters&#13;
Quarll/ oeslltop&#13;
Business Assistants&#13;
Jay Steffenhagen&#13;
The room at Kenosha's Lincoln Middle School library&#13;
was packed with local residents, city officials, and concerned&#13;
business owners when UW-Parkside students and&#13;
faculty members presented information and proposals to a&#13;
neighborhood forum on local brownfield issues on&#13;
October 26. A brownfield is an abandoned or unused commercial&#13;
and industrial site where expansion or redevelopment&#13;
is hindered because of contamination. The brownfields&#13;
in question were the Frost and Outokumpu manufacturing&#13;
sites located in the heart of the Lincoln neighborhood.&#13;
&#13;
The presentation by UW-Parkside was the second such&#13;
neighborhood forum and the culmination of a yearlong&#13;
project spearheaded by Sociology Professor Anne Statham.&#13;
The UW-Parkside group presented background information&#13;
and community involvement issues. They also presented&#13;
economic development possibilities compiled and&#13;
developed by Professor of Economics Dennis Kaufman&#13;
and his class.&#13;
After much hard work, several UW-Parkside class r,rojects&#13;
are coming to fruition. Classes that provided input&#13;
into the project were Society and the Environment,&#13;
Environmental Studies Seminar and Environmental&#13;
Economics. Students from these classes represented a wide&#13;
variety of disciplines wjth majors ranging from biology to&#13;
dramatic arts.&#13;
"My observation is that involving students in community&#13;
projects deepens the learning experience," said Statham.&#13;
Students took pictures, talked to local residents,&#13;
researched environmental issues, kept journals, worked&#13;
with city officials, completed reports on economic development&#13;
proposals, conducted a summary of public files,&#13;
researched funding possibilities, and made presentations&#13;
to the community.&#13;
Sociology major and Lincoln Middle School alumnae&#13;
Tracy Hawthorne was one of the presenters.&#13;
"I like the project because it has to do with the community.&#13;
Helping my own community is especially gratifying,"&#13;
said Hawthorne.&#13;
The project has allowed UW-l'arkside students and faculty&#13;
to interact directly with the local community, providing&#13;
a forum for positive social action. One of the goals was&#13;
to provide materials for use in educating and involving the&#13;
neighborhood residents in the decision making process&#13;
about future uses of the sites.&#13;
'Tm just glad to see Parkside involved, it's nice to see&#13;
them doing something in the community," said local resident&#13;
and radio persona)jty Louis Rugaru.&#13;
Several audience members expressed similar sentiments.&#13;
&#13;
Students were able to utilize some of the expertise located&#13;
right here at the University. Several faculty members&#13;
agreed to act as consultants. With students acting as&#13;
liaisons, compiling data and creating reports, this broad&#13;
knowledge base was able provide the city of Kenosha with&#13;
expert consulting on a pertinent and meaningful issue. ·&#13;
Kenosha officials involved ID the project since its inception&#13;
are UW-Parkside graduate and Kenosha Mayor John&#13;
Antaramian, Director of Cip Planning Ray Forgioni, and&#13;
Alderwoman Katherine Marks. The two sites were chosen&#13;
because they figure prominently in the Lincoln&#13;
Neighborhooa , he Frost site involves approximately four&#13;
city b locks The Outokumpu site involves nearly three&#13;
times as much area. Not only is the Outokumpu site larger,&#13;
the issues surrounding it are more complex. The site ;s currently&#13;
vacant, but up for sale. The company owning the&#13;
Frost site went bankrupt, making it easier for city officials&#13;
to start redevelopment. 1t is now owned by the city and&#13;
demolition is under way.&#13;
"I feel real good about Parkside's involvement, we&#13;
would have never known about this issue without their&#13;
involvement, I'm very grateful," said local resident Louise&#13;
UavJ.S.&#13;
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I t'ti one reason why Morningstar says.,&#13;
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• Question 01 me we·e-..... k-~:---- -=---- --U-L.f.otl-~-&#13;
what are you most thankful for? :&#13;
Photo&amp;: Oa.nlel Ya.ris&#13;
Harry Balian,&#13;
sophomore&#13;
"I'm most thankful for&#13;
stolen cable.&#13;
Josh Slamka,&#13;
senior&#13;
"I love erasable pens&#13;
and SOE."&#13;
Drew Makela,&#13;
freshman&#13;
"Cherry Pez&#13;
Jason Weniger,&#13;
senior&#13;
"I'm glad God gave&#13;
me two middle fingers&#13;
and I wish he had given me a third.&#13;
Cheeseburger,&#13;
food item&#13;
"I always say a word&#13;
of thanks for all the&#13;
vegetarians. Viva la burgers&#13;
I&#13;
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APOiio lands at&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Kathleen Meyer&#13;
Oohs, ahhs, h09ts and !lolle~ we~ all pa.rt of the experiel\Qe,&#13;
as the audience helped create the second annual Apollo Talent&#13;
Show sponsored by the Park,,ide Activities 13&lt;:&gt;ard an ove,wheln1-&#13;
iu.g :SUt.:L~~&#13;
On October 20, the audiCJ:l.oo in the Union Cinema was entertained&#13;
by l-0caJ talents using the formal of "Showtlme At 1'he&#13;
Apollo" amateur night 1elev1i;ion progra11,. As on 'lv", peoplepe,;-&#13;
fornwd and let. the audience judge th1,11ir tal@t. 'file aui;lie.r;u:e&#13;
made their preference t.htougl;t eith,et enthusiastic cheers and&#13;
applause or confiden.;:e- br¢a\&lt;i,ng tiooo and 'heckles.&#13;
This was llOt the ki.nd of sl:).ow where you sit politely in your&#13;
seat and only applau!f on cue. On the contrary, this was the kind&#13;
of show made more exdHng a1,1 the \\t.!dience jum.petl fro1TI their&#13;
seat to 7 •• ea.lously cheer on the performers.&#13;
U\N-Park,;ide's own mascot was there tb sweep anyone off.-&#13;
stage who didn't perfo1.·m to the audience's $ati.$£acti6n. However,&#13;
on thi$ night, no one got "the hook.» , , ,&#13;
Night Life Coordinator Martha lOng presided as ~tei: of&#13;
Ceremonies. Although there were di.Eficulties with sound early on&#13;
in the show, King and the pe.rformers petliE'Veted to tlllthrall the&#13;
audience.&#13;
When it was all said and done, HSaydee" was the act of ch.Q4;e.&#13;
Thomas Harris and Lasac Simpson perfo,v,ed the song 1'$Qft,aJ\d&#13;
Wet." As the intensity of the song escalated, they were joined ,on&#13;
stage by Mc,nique Wilson and Jasmin~ Wooclruff to perform a&#13;
preci:;cly choreographod dance routine.&#13;
The night was a success for ev,:ryone. The audience cotll.dn1t&#13;
help but leave with smiles on thelrJaces and the winners with an&#13;
extra $50 in their pock- ' '&#13;
"ThiS yeat's show was a great sucress," King said, ,&#13;
With an attendance of over 200 people and quality p.er:fonners&#13;
on stage, she hopqs thQ show generated enouS):l mterestto continue&#13;
ii$ annual run next year.&#13;
A11'ENTION STUDENTS&#13;
Stop by the Ranger office and find out&#13;
how you can place free classified ads!&#13;
Wyllie D-139C &#13;
"&#13;
,.&#13;
12 ,. ••• , 1 a,urta&#13;
Rangers take&#13;
Quincey 3-1&#13;
Alex Kulig&#13;
A cold and windy November 3&#13;
brought coach Rick Kilps to his&#13;
299th win. The victory came against&#13;
Quincey and prodded UWParkside's&#13;
mens soccer team to the&#13;
semi- final aeain,c:;t Fnrt WaynP&#13;
Saturday, November 6.&#13;
"Everybody made their adjustments&#13;
at half time and did their job.&#13;
That brought us the win," said an&#13;
ecstatic Coach Kilps.&#13;
Quincey drilled hard in the first&#13;
half. Scott Rogles, number 8, scored&#13;
the first and only goal by Quincey,&#13;
as Parkside goalkeeper Dan Tredo&#13;
foiled all other scoring attempts.&#13;
Eight minutes before the half,&#13;
Raymond James, number 7, slammed&#13;
in a decisi've first goal for Parkside.&#13;
James had another goal in the second&#13;
half. Justin Meredith, number 18, also&#13;
put one in the books for the Rangers.&#13;
"Feels pretty good. I think the second&#13;
half was our best effort. We&#13;
probably haven't played this well for&#13;
half the season. We're looking forward&#13;
to playing the number one team&#13;
(Fort Wayne] in the region in the&#13;
semi-finals. Fort Wayne is, I think,&#13;
ninth in the nation right now. They&#13;
beat us earHer in the season, so we're&#13;
looking for revenge. We haven't been&#13;
in the final of a tou rna men t in, l&#13;
think, two years. So, we're looking to&#13;
get back there and, hopefully, win it&#13;
for the first time," said Adam Riesz,&#13;
number 9, who made many excellent&#13;
saves and several scoring attempts.&#13;
'We came out more together on """°&#13;
ond half with more intensity. We capitalized&#13;
on opportunities for the whole second&#13;
half, so that was a big half for us,"&#13;
said Adam Chwala, number 15.&#13;
Good lives up&#13;
to her name&#13;
For the second time this season,&#13;
Kari Good of the Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
women's volleyball team has been&#13;
selected Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Player of the Week.&#13;
The senior form Davenport, Iowa,&#13;
led the Rangers to a win over St.&#13;
Joseph College, November 6, which&#13;
allowed the team to qualify for the&#13;
GLVC p ost -season tournament.&#13;
Good recorded her seventh tripledouble&#13;
of the year. She had 15 kills&#13;
(.325 hitting percentage), 28 digs and&#13;
42 assists. On November 5, against&#13;
IUPU Fort Wayne, sh e barely missed&#13;
another triple-double by one kill.&#13;
Good recorded nine kills (.308 hitting&#13;
percentage), 16 digs and 44 assists.&#13;
Photos: Tim Overocker&#13;
Halloween Kids&#13;
On 11tursdny. Oct. 28 Halloween Hoopla brought&#13;
kids of alJ ages to a basketball carnival and scrimmage.&#13;
Mcmb&lt;.-rS of the men's and women's basketball&#13;
teams ran different statiOJ\S a.nd help..._-'d kids&#13;
have fun and learn the game. (top) 7 year o ld David&#13;
O'Loughhn leaps into lhe air and shoob a lay up.&#13;
(Jcp r;ghl) Tn.."Vor Dorgan, 9, looks around the ball&#13;
to see the hoop before h1s free throw. (right) Emma&#13;
Oster, 4,. chast.-s after a ball that rolled awav&#13;
vo11evba11 post-season sealed bv win&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
women's volleyball team&#13;
needed to win the final match of the&#13;
regular season to earn a post-season&#13;
bid in the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference tournament. The Rangers&#13;
did just th at as t hey defeated St.&#13;
Joseph's College at the Sports and&#13;
ActivHy Center, 5-15, 15-2, 15-8, 16-&#13;
14.&#13;
The Rangers earn a N umber 3&#13;
seed in the Blue Division of the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference (in volleyball,&#13;
the GL VC is spHt into two, sixteam&#13;
division s with the top four in&#13;
each division qualifying for the postseason&#13;
tournament).&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside concludes the&#13;
regular season with an 18-16 overall&#13;
record, 8-8 in the GL YC.&#13;
"This match was like playing in a&#13;
single elimination tournament&#13;
because if we would have lost, our&#13;
season would have been over/' said&#13;
UW-Parkside head coach Lenn&#13;
Johns. "We're excited about being in&#13;
the tournament."&#13;
The coach cited the play of Kari&#13;
Good (Davenport, IA) who had a&#13;
triple-double and Nicole Melograno&#13;
(Bristol, WI) for providing a spark.&#13;
The Rangers will play in the&#13;
G LVC tournament against Green&#13;
Division Number 2 seed Bellarmine&#13;
College in quarter-final action on&#13;
Thursday, November 11, at noon&#13;
EST, 1 p.m. CST. Northern Kentucky&#13;
University, Highland Heights, KY,&#13;
will host the tournament.&#13;
Rangers prove challenge for Challengers&#13;
Wisconsin's only NCAA Division&#13;
II mens basketball team, WisconsinParkside,&#13;
opened the 1999-2000 season&#13;
in an exhibition game against the&#13;
Chicago Challengers at Parkside's&#13;
Sports and Activity Center on&#13;
Saturdoy night, N ovcn-.be.1 7. The&#13;
Challengers, made up of former college&#13;
stars, many with professional&#13;
experience, fell to the Rangers, 77-67.&#13;
Brian Coffman, a 6-0 junior guard&#13;
from M ishawaka, Indiana, led UWParkside&#13;
with 24 points.&#13;
The Rangers will play their second&#13;
and final exhibition gam e a t UWParkside&#13;
on Saturday, November 13,&#13;
a t7:30 p.m.&#13;
The regular season opener will be&#13;
Friday, November 13, also at UWParkside&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. The team then&#13;
travels to Beloit College on&#13;
Wednesday, November 24, before&#13;
taking on Kent State, Number 11&#13;
seed in NCAA division I last year, in&#13;
Ohio on Monday, November 29.&#13;
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Interview with&#13;
Alex Kulig&#13;
UW•Parkside mens soccer coach&#13;
Rick l&lt;ilps has sealed his place in&#13;
Wisconsin history. He has been&#13;
named NCAA Regional coach of the&#13;
Year twice, WSC Coach of the Year&#13;
once, NAIA Coach Area of the Year&#13;
three times, and NAIA District coach&#13;
of the year six times. He has also&#13;
received an award for Meritorious&#13;
Service for his contribution to soccer&#13;
by the Wisconsin Soccer Association.&#13;
Here's what the coach had to say&#13;
when interviewed about this monu•&#13;
mental achievement.&#13;
How does it feel to have 298 wins&#13;
under your belt?&#13;
Feels old. Tt sneaks up on you.&#13;
One day, you turn around and&#13;
you've got::. lnt nf er1mPs unrler your&#13;
belt - games played whether they'd&#13;
be wins or losses - you realize that&#13;
you've been around a long time.&#13;
How long have you been coaching?&#13;
&#13;
I've been here 16 years as a head&#13;
coach. Plus my seven yea.rs at Aurora&#13;
College in Aurora, Tilinois as a head&#13;
coach makes 23 years as a head&#13;
roach. Another two years as an assistant&#13;
coach, one here at Parkside in&#13;
'75 and one at Bowling Green. So&#13;
that's 25 years.&#13;
Why soccer, out of all the sports?&#13;
Well, T played soccer as a youth.&#13;
When I was young, there was not&#13;
very much soccer around. It was just&#13;
a sport that I picked up on it and I&#13;
enjoyed it. As a graduate, I came&#13;
here. I played soccer in college and it&#13;
became my way of life.&#13;
Have you enjoyed all your years&#13;
coaching mens soccer at Parkside?&#13;
For the most part. There have been&#13;
ups and downs, but you know the&#13;
majority have been ups. I have a lot&#13;
of feeling for OW-Parkside being an&#13;
alum. For 16 years, I have taken the&#13;
program that was very shaky and&#13;
made it very stable, and created a&#13;
nice facility, a solid program and a&#13;
great deal of fantastic alumni.&#13;
Do you have any memorable&#13;
plays or moments in all the years&#13;
you've been here?&#13;
I can remember when I took the&#13;
job in summer of '84. I called everybody&#13;
on the roster. I had seven players&#13;
in July and you need 11 to play a&#13;
game. Our alumni and the foundation&#13;
director, Tom Krernnal, was the&#13;
guy who encouraged me to take the&#13;
job. l went to his house, I remember,&#13;
and about at 11:00 at night 1 said,&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Alex Kulig&#13;
"Tom, I can't do this. I'm leaving a&#13;
good job and this program is a mess.&#13;
There's no players, there's no uniforms.&#13;
Tt' s in dire straits." We sat in&#13;
his family room until 3:00 a.m., and&#13;
he convinced me not to tear up the&#13;
contract. Remarkably, that first year I&#13;
grabbed some kids that were going&#13;
to Aurora College that I'd recruited,&#13;
a couple of kids off the street, and we&#13;
went for the first time ever to the&#13;
National Tournament. So it was a&#13;
Cinderella season and a whirlwind&#13;
start. Ultimately it has proven to be&#13;
the right thing and ('m real happy&#13;
with it. As far as individual games,.&#13;
there's so many highlights and low&#13;
lights. Every game is a new game.&#13;
What made you want to coach?&#13;
I don't know. T ju.st kind of fell&#13;
into it. Tt wasn't by design originally.&#13;
I played the game. I was in&#13;
Secondary Education, in sociology as&#13;
a major and a coaching/training certificate&#13;
here. But I had a lot of injuries&#13;
during my college career, including a&#13;
broken leg that needed surgery and&#13;
two knee surgeries. I spent a lot of&#13;
time in the training, so I got involved&#13;
in sports medicine quite a bit. When I&#13;
graduated from Parkside, I actually&#13;
stayed on for one year as an assistant&#13;
while I was student teaching and I&#13;
ended up going to graduate school in&#13;
the sports medicine area. I got in as&#13;
an assistant coach there and it just&#13;
kind of evolved. As I got out of graduate&#13;
school, the college job at Aurora&#13;
became available and that was coaching&#13;
and teaching. Tt was like, "Hey I&#13;
need a job. Lei's do it!" And I liked it.&#13;
Did you play any other sports&#13;
besides soccer?&#13;
I played a little bit of baseball.&#13;
That was pretty much it. Football&#13;
wasn't my game, and basketball was&#13;
a little bit of size difference there.&#13;
When I was in high school there was&#13;
no high school soccer. There were the&#13;
ethnic clubs that were playing soccer.&#13;
There was a little bit of baseball, a bit&#13;
of track, but dominantly soccer was&#13;
my full time sport.&#13;
Did you spend all your time in&#13;
sport in high school and college?&#13;
My life is soccer. It's non-stop. In&#13;
addition to coaching a college team&#13;
all year round, we run camps and I&#13;
coach my sons youth team and I&#13;
have for the last eight years in winter,&#13;
spring, and summer, as well. It's&#13;
one thing on the mind and that's the&#13;
round baJI with the spots on it.&#13;
Do you feel that soccer and many&#13;
Coach Kilps ranger I sports 13&#13;
sports need more s upport from the&#13;
student body at Parkside?&#13;
Absolutely. All sports here need&#13;
more support from the student body.&#13;
What we did this year in mens soccer&#13;
is create an "Adopt a Ranger" program&#13;
for youth teams who come out&#13;
on Monday nights and work with&#13;
our kids and the college. It was fantastic&#13;
because our attendance went&#13;
up. We were averaging 250·:JOO {"'Opie&#13;
a game this year. Tammy Day&#13;
helped create some things to give&#13;
away, like throwing T-shirts and&#13;
water bottles into the crowd, free&#13;
sandwiches if they call your name,&#13;
and stuff like that. The sad part is&#13;
that more Parkside students should&#13;
attend those type of events. Not just&#13;
mens soccer but women's soccer, volleyball,&#13;
basketball, all the sports,&#13;
rather then just sitting in their rooms&#13;
playing Nintendo or watching videos.&#13;
Do you have any advice for aspiring&#13;
coaches?&#13;
You have to put in the time. It's a&#13;
school of hard knocks. You have to&#13;
learn by doing and get involved, as&#13;
soon as you can. If you really want to&#13;
coach, you have to jump in hook line&#13;
and sinker. You cant just dip the&#13;
hook in the water and think, "Well,&#13;
coaching will happen." You have to&#13;
put your whole life into it, 24 hours a&#13;
day, seven days a week. It has to be a&#13;
full commitment to it. If you work&#13;
hard, maybe your time will come.&#13;
When you were a child, did you&#13;
have any mentors or heroes?&#13;
I have to think about that one. I&#13;
think maybe in soccer there was an&#13;
individual that was in our club team.&#13;
Jt was a gentleman who was in the&#13;
U. S. National team and was a professional&#13;
player and captain of the&#13;
Olympic lean, and American games&#13;
team. He played in our city a·nd he&#13;
was like a god when it came to soccer.&#13;
Since that time, as J grew up and&#13;
went into the adult world and got&#13;
into coaching, he and I became partners&#13;
in a camp business. He coached&#13;
the World Cup team in 1990 in Italy&#13;
and the US Team. He's currently&#13;
coaching in the MLS, the Kansas City&#13;
Wizards. That person is Bob Ganzler.&#13;
Truly h e was my idol as a youth&#13;
player. Ironically we've become the&#13;
best of friends and business partners.&#13;
We've been together doing that kind&#13;
of thing over the last 20 years now.&#13;
Ultimately, he coached at the highest&#13;
level in this country, so I"ve learned a&#13;
lot from him. Not just from him&#13;
being my idol at the time when I was&#13;
a youth, but as adults and coaching&#13;
peers. I-Ie's given me a lot of confi ...&#13;
dence. It's great to be able to share&#13;
knowledge with a guy who's on as&#13;
high a level as he is.&#13;
And still get to class on time.&#13;
Take classes online.&#13;
We're tallong fully•l&lt;M$1-"""o lJW&#13;
freshmanlsophomore credits taugrt totally&#13;
over the Internet by UW professors. So you&#13;
can study when you want. where you want.&#13;
earn some extra crodttS. Mel&lt;o up a class.&#13;
F uffill requiretnents. GradUate on ti,,,..&#13;
For more Information or to r99lster, \Aslt&#13;
www.uwcoleges.com&#13;
or gfve us a call tollfree at 1-888-INFO-UWC&#13;
Spr1ng 2000 Online Cou,_.&#13;
COM 203: News &amp; lnfom,ational Writing (3 er.)&#13;
ENG 101: Composition I (3 er.)&#13;
ENG 102: ~ II (3 er.)&#13;
MAT 110: College Algebra (Ser.)&#13;
MAT 271: Ordina,y Differ. Equations (3 er.)&#13;
MLG 100: Intro 10 Meterclogy LS (4 c,.)&#13;
MUS 273: Jazz HlstOfY &amp; Appreciation (3 er.)&#13;
PHI 101: lntrodUcuon to Philoeophy(3 er.)&#13;
POL 275; ln'lemational Politic&amp; (3 er.)&#13;
SOC 250: "-"'• O&lt;ganlz .. SOCIO!)' (3 c,,)&#13;
UN IV 2 RS IT Y Gil ... SC ON S I N&#13;
COLL EGES&#13;
,.._&#13;
co&#13;
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14 ranger I en1enaI•men1&#13;
The spirit of Henrv David Thoreau takes on Bill&#13;
Gates and his apostles&#13;
Columnist&#13;
Vito Tribu zio&#13;
I went to Bill's Country Saloon because I wanted to drink excessively, to suck&#13;
down every drop of significant booze that was set within my reach, and to see&#13;
whether the bartender had any dirty jokes to tell me, NOT to get insulted by a&#13;
bunch of Bill Gates people.&#13;
That's just what happened, however, and once again I had to go home early&#13;
because the computer-,,,nart people who frequent Bill's Country Saloon were in&#13;
a talkative mood and I wasn't. Kelly Sanchez, a computer programmer who 1&#13;
met when my hard drive was on the verge of collapsing, kept telling me that the&#13;
newer and more advanced devices she's been using can enhance h ard-drive performance&#13;
by 69%, while Jim Bennett, the Microsoftologist who has been dating&#13;
Kelly Sanchez, kept agreeing with everything she said.&#13;
Several other computer-smart people joined us at the&#13;
bar, and soon, everyone in the joint was splashing m e&#13;
with terminology, confusing me with such difficult&#13;
wordo no "Mykcgo.hcrtz, slosh rny polka dot&#13;
shortz@zippy-dee-doo-dah com," wh.ile l just sat&#13;
silently because I couldn't th.ink of anything smart to&#13;
say except "Simplify! Simplify!"&#13;
1#1TO!&#13;
XM SEN01111G MY&#13;
ROOOT MINIONS TO&#13;
OESTROY YOO!&#13;
These people, particularly Kelly Sanchez and Jim&#13;
Bennett, think that Bill Gates is God, or some sort of golden&#13;
doughboy, and they've p laced him on a pedestal so high that his&#13;
golden aura can be seen from Heaven.&#13;
Now, I believe that th.is high-and-mighty place would suit Bill&#13;
Gates just fine were it not for the fact that the spirit of naturalist&#13;
Henry David Thoreau dwells in Heaven. Thoreau is resting in a&#13;
modest place he built with his own two hands (with scrap lumber&#13;
he found near Mahatma Gandhi's place), and he doesn't like it&#13;
one bit when he is disturbed by the glare emanating from the&#13;
golden doughboy on the high pedestal.&#13;
That's why, I think, Thoreau took a trip down to Bill's Country&#13;
Saloon last Saturday night. Thoreau was utterly angry because he&#13;
OVP.rhP;lrd whRt Jim. Bennett was saying to m.e,. so the naturali.Gt&#13;
came down to punch the Microsoftologist on the nose.&#13;
However, realizing that he was just a spirit, and that he had&#13;
Cha rlton Heston: The Second&#13;
Amendment shouldn't be used&#13;
as an excuse. After all, who really&#13;
needs assault w eapons?&#13;
Rush Limbaug h: People should&#13;
listen to both sides of an a rgument.&#13;
After all, I'm not always right.&#13;
Puff D addy: I really need to w ork 01&#13;
my songw riting.&#13;
Geraldo Rivera: But seriously folks&#13;
e nough about JonBenet Ramsey!&#13;
nothing solid with which to clobber Jim Bennett, Thoreau immediately looked&#13;
for a living body to inhabit. And, since one of rny fists was already clenched due&#13;
to the h eated argument I was having with Jim Bennett, Thoreau's spirit inhabited&#13;
my body and told me to do a very nasty thing to the Microsoftologist.&#13;
But I resisted. The urge to punch Jim Bennett in the nose was strong, but I had&#13;
nvo very good reasons for not following the flux of nature: 1,. I was w:inn.ing the&#13;
argument, anyway, and 2, Jim Bennett has a black belt in Karate.&#13;
And what do you th.ink the argument was about? No, it wasn't about Kelly&#13;
Sanchez. It was about monopoly money, but particularly about the monopoly&#13;
money Gates is supposedly do11ating to fund the education of minority students.&#13;
Like Thoreau, I can spot a d~gooder with a hidden agenda when I see one,&#13;
and I can see clearly that Bill Gates has plans. He's donating the money because&#13;
he's concerned about making more money, not because he cares about the future&#13;
of underprivileged students. I think Gates expects to earn trillions from this venture,&#13;
even though 1 don't exactly know how it will happen. All l know is that Jim&#13;
Bennett spends most his income on " n ew and improved" computer stuff, so my&#13;
guess is that Gates wants to make Jim Bennetts out of minority students.&#13;
I told Jim Bennett what I thought of him and his goofy-looking idol, and he&#13;
got offended because he looks like Bill Gates. That's why Kelly dates him. He&#13;
can have her. Who cares? I'm a Henry David Thoreau type, why waste any lime&#13;
on shallow Microsoftologists like her?&#13;
"You don't understand," said Jim Bennett, "you just don't understand. If&#13;
there were more people like Bill around when we were groWU--.g up, Ktdly cu u.J. I&#13;
would've gotten the education we always wanted. He's a great guy."&#13;
"lf Gates was as great a guy as you th.ink he is, he would&#13;
just keep enough money to support his family, say thirty&#13;
million dollars, and give the rest away to struggling Italian&#13;
writers. T guess some people are endowed with good&#13;
looks, like me, and others with enough brains to understand&#13;
that surplus money is useless, like Thoreau, and then&#13;
there's Bill Gates."&#13;
"You're just giving mea hard time because of what happened&#13;
with Kelly," Jim Bennett said, arrogantly and&#13;
doughboy-like. "Maybe with time you'll understand what&#13;
a nice guy Bill Gates is."&#13;
"Time?" I lashed out, "Time is nothing but the bar T go&#13;
drinking in: I try to drink my favorite drink there, and&#13;
while I try very hard, I can never drink enough of it&#13;
because you guys always prevent me from doing so. I&#13;
don't understand you.t· lvok:, I know not the meaning of&#13;
'you've h ad enough,' I've always been regretting that I&#13;
can 't get as drunk as the skunk I'd like to be."&#13;
Jerry Springer: Listen buddy, I don't&#13;
know what kind of show you think this&#13;
is, but I'm not going to let you make a&#13;
circus out of it!&#13;
Trent Lott: We have got to do some1ing&#13;
about campaign finance reform.&#13;
,fter all, we should listen to the public,&#13;
ot special interests.&#13;
-h e Spice Girts: My God, these outfits&#13;
re cheesy! OR Is our 15 minutes of&#13;
1me up yet?&#13;
Vin ce McM ahon: Certain things should not be&#13;
allowed in the WWF. After all, children make up&#13;
a lot of our audience.&#13;
Chris Summy overheard&#13;
these while hiding in the&#13;
b a th room. Reall y!&#13;
George W. Bush: Perhaps I should go&#13;
easy on kids who experiment with drugs. After&#13;
all, I did the same thing when I was young.&#13;
---&#13;
l&#13;
ranger I e•1enaI• men1 15&#13;
•music • art• theater• movies• music• art• theater• movies• music• art • t heater• movies• music•&#13;
Hl//provides chills with verv few frills&#13;
1999 is definitely the year for psychological&#13;
thrillers. Apparently, the&#13;
movie studios have finally d educed&#13;
that the movie-going pubUc is sick and&#13;
tired of teen-slasher flicks and want&#13;
films that scare with suspense rather&#13;
than gr055-out with gore.&#13;
"House on Haunted Hill," like "The&#13;
Haunting," is a remake of an older&#13;
movie set in a haunted house. But this&#13;
one has far more fright factor. And it&#13;
doesn't hurt that this has an R rating&#13;
instead of PG-13.&#13;
The story focuses on Stephen and&#13;
Evelyn Price (Geoffrey Rush, Farnke&#13;
Janssen), an unhappily married rich&#13;
couple (The star of the original flick&#13;
was Vincent Price. Naming Rush,.s&#13;
character Price is a tribute to him.). It is&#13;
Evelyn's birthday and they are going&#13;
to have a party in an old abandoned&#13;
mansion. Eventually four total&#13;
strangers are invited to the house.&#13;
Stephen is a carnival ride developer&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
American Hlstorv x&#13;
burns onto campus&#13;
What sort of people join hate&#13;
groups? Disillus ioned former "normal"&#13;
members of society? Weakwilled&#13;
people who just want to fit in?&#13;
Or, is it just twisted psychotics?&#13;
A perfect example of a twisted&#13;
psychotic is the character Derek&#13;
Vinyard (Edward Norton) in&#13;
American History X. He is definite ly&#13;
not a stupid person. In fact, he is&#13;
highly articulate. He refers to the Ku&#13;
Klux Klan as "low-rent rednecks"&#13;
who hide behind hoods, while he&#13;
isn't afraid to show his hate. As a&#13;
result, he ends up in jail for the murder&#13;
of two black men who were trying&#13;
to steal his truck.&#13;
His younger high-school age&#13;
brother Danny (Edward Furlong)&#13;
idolizes him. Not only does he join&#13;
O.,rek's group, but he also turns in a&#13;
paper on "Mein Kampf," claiming&#13;
that Hitler was a civil rights hero.&#13;
This does not please his principal&#13;
(Avery Brooks), who orders rum to&#13;
write a new paper. The principal&#13;
knows all about Danny's older&#13;
brother and his influence. So, in&#13;
order to save Danny before it's too&#13;
late, h e suggests that he write a&#13;
paper on his troubled brother.&#13;
Derek, now a reformed man, is&#13;
released from prison after serving&#13;
three years in prision. He knows the&#13;
experience has oosl hin1 a lot and he&#13;
wants to save Danny from the same&#13;
horrible fate. His past won't leave&#13;
him alone.&#13;
For one, his girlfriend Claudia&#13;
(Fairuza Balk) wants rum back. His&#13;
old friend Seth, an overweight grub,&#13;
has taken Danny under his wing to&#13;
help him fit in the movement. And&#13;
leader Cameron (Stacy Keach),who&#13;
plays on the fears of teenagers by filling&#13;
their ears with racist propaganda,&#13;
needs Derek to do his dirty work.&#13;
But, Derek knows· that the&#13;
strongest foe he has to face is himself.&#13;
He cannot hide from his swastib-scarred&#13;
mirrQr image.&#13;
For his portrayal of Derek&#13;
Vinyard, Edward Norton won his&#13;
second Academy Award nomination&#13;
(his first was for Primal Fear). He is&#13;
definitely a major reason to watch&#13;
this movie. Though the ending is a&#13;
little flawed, American History Xis a&#13;
great expose of the white supremacist&#13;
movement and how it succeeds&#13;
in getting people to join.&#13;
who is the best at what he does. He&#13;
will use the house as a testament to his&#13;
talent by having it rigged with surprises.&#13;
The four strangers, witnesses to his&#13;
genius, are each offered one million&#13;
dollars to spend the night at the mansion.&#13;
Collection of the prize, however,&#13;
implies survival.&#13;
The house used to be an insane asylum,&#13;
where a psychopathic doctor&#13;
used to conduct strange experiments&#13;
on his patients. In 1931, the patients&#13;
revolted and killed the doctor, his&#13;
staff, and themselves in a gruesome&#13;
manner. Because of this incident, no&#13;
one had anything to do with this&#13;
house, until now.&#13;
But it will not be an easy night, as&#13;
one should expect from a haunted&#13;
house. There is always that eerie feeling,&#13;
knowing that something bad is&#13;
going to happen to at least a few of the&#13;
guests. You should stick around for&#13;
the end of the credits for a big surprise.&#13;
This is not to say that it's a perfect&#13;
movie. But it works better than "The&#13;
Haunting." Not only did "The&#13;
Haunting" fail to frighten, but the special&#13;
effects were crappy, though colorful,&#13;
and the happy ending was simply&#13;
awful "House on Haunted Hill" uses&#13;
gloom, gore, and shock. Plus, they didn't&#13;
waste a ton of money. This film&#13;
cost a mere $15 million compared to&#13;
the $80 million spent on "The&#13;
Haunting". If "The Blair Witch&#13;
Project" taught us anything, it's that&#13;
you don't have to spend an arm and a&#13;
leg to be effective. You just need to be&#13;
able to know what scares people.&#13;
"House on Haunted Hill" is one result&#13;
of that lesson.&#13;
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UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
NOVEAIBER -a2--a4&#13;
FRIDAY, NOV. "12TH&#13;
6:30 p.m. Opening Ceremony and&#13;
Goodie Giveaway&#13;
(Parkside Union Bazaar)&#13;
7:30 p.m. A Night of Magic &amp; Illus/on!!&#13;
Come watch the illusions&#13;
of Bob Bahm, winner of the&#13;
international Houdini Magic&#13;
and Illusion Competition.&#13;
Don't miss this fantastic&#13;
magic show!&#13;
(Parkside Union Square)&#13;
SATURDAY, NOV. "1JTH&#13;
DR. SEUSS FESTIVAL&#13;
Come and play in the exciting&#13;
world of Dr. Seuss. There will , be movies, storytellers,&#13;
games, and fun for everyone.&#13;
Come and have your picture&#13;
taken with the Cat in the Hat!!!&#13;
(Parkside Union)&#13;
8:30 p.m.-THE RETRO HOP&#13;
1:00 a.m. Come and dance to your&#13;
favorite music of the 1900's ... That's right, it's your last&#13;
time to party to your favorite&#13;
songs from the 60's, 70's,&#13;
B0's &amp; 90's.&#13;
(Parkside Union Square)&#13;
FREE &amp; OPEN TO THE PUBLIC&#13;
~~~~~&#13;
Cosponsored by PAS, PASA, &amp; SOC </text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="84014">
              <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="84015">
              <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="84016">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3665">
      <name>university seminar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3663">
      <name>weapons policy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2822">
      <name>women's center</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3664">
      <name>worldfest</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
