<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4043" 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/4043?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-23T05:53:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4097">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/d64e1e0283b17dd3e93a99ebff7041c2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>594b0c7338b63dba2b62b6467301f791</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="84831">
            <text>Volume 33, issue 2</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="84832">
            <text>UWP loses professor, artist, and friend</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="84842">
            <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="90928">
            <text>&#13;
_&#13;
.....&#13;
---&#13;
=&#13;
The  Ranger News&#13;
Sept  26 - Oct  I0, 2002&#13;
Page]&#13;
uWP&#13;
loses   professor,&#13;
artist,   and  friend  continued.&#13;
enthusiasm.&#13;
Art&#13;
gram  flourished, he&#13;
Department&#13;
Chair&#13;
flourished.&#13;
David   Holmes    said&#13;
Matthew&#13;
nur-&#13;
Matthew was  "brought&#13;
tured  and  em bod-&#13;
in to  rebuild  the  pro-&#13;
ied   joy,  creativity,&#13;
gram,and conceptually,&#13;
and  passion  in  all&#13;
physically,and spiritual-&#13;
that   he   did ...and&#13;
ly, he   accomplished&#13;
those   gifts  remain&#13;
that.  He  spent  .seven&#13;
with us:'&#13;
days a week rebuilding&#13;
His&#13;
students&#13;
the program.&#13;
couldn't&#13;
agree&#13;
Matthew always said&#13;
more.  Linda  Waw-&#13;
'Whatever   the    team&#13;
. iorka is a student  of&#13;
needs,l'1Ido.'In his own&#13;
Matthew  and  says&#13;
energetic, buoyant, boy-&#13;
"Matthew would  go&#13;
ish way he  was  giving&#13;
the  extra  mile  for&#13;
everything  he  had   to&#13;
all his students.  He&#13;
the university.We lost a&#13;
had a great sense of&#13;
good man that students&#13;
.humor,  an  electric&#13;
loved. He will be  very&#13;
personality, and was&#13;
hard to replace."&#13;
a very talented, spe-&#13;
All you had  to do  is&#13;
cial  person:'  Jamie&#13;
walk down the  hallway&#13;
Cassar,&#13;
another&#13;
and you could  feel the&#13;
ceramics    student,&#13;
energy   coming    from&#13;
said  "Matthew  was&#13;
the  ceramics    studio.&#13;
like a  freight train,&#13;
Instructors  from  other&#13;
moving and  doing."&#13;
oepartments&#13;
would   '-----------------&#13;
..................""'-Jamie&#13;
heard&#13;
take the trip to witness  MatthewBynumDualityStoneware&#13;
25"x  I 0"x7  ,&#13;
2000&#13;
Matthew  say at  the&#13;
Matthew  and   his  stu-&#13;
beginning&#13;
of   the&#13;
dents  totally  revitalizing   the&#13;
ated  captivating  and  powerful&#13;
semester  that he finally felt free;&#13;
space.  He  brought   everyone'&#13;
images  and  impressions  of the&#13;
he was the happiest  in his work&#13;
together  as  a  team  and'  gave&#13;
world   around   him.  Matthew&#13;
that he had"ever been, and was&#13;
them the sense of direction  and&#13;
loved  to share  lis&#13;
.assons'or&#13;
vorxing&#13;
now&#13;
ne  nao&#13;
always&#13;
'arnilv&#13;
we need  so badly  these&#13;
ife  and  art  WIth his  students&#13;
wanted.  "He would  always say&#13;
oays. Dr..Jean  rohnk,  UW·Park·   and  friends. He was absolutely&#13;
"'clay breaks', he wasn't holding&#13;
side Theatre  Art  Dept  started&#13;
dedicated  to his calling to be a&#13;
on to anything".&#13;
work the same  day as Matthew&#13;
teacher    and   an   artist,   and&#13;
Matthew's classes were can·&#13;
and had  his office  across  the&#13;
worked  tirelessly  to  create  an&#13;
celed   but  students   went   on&#13;
hall. "Matthew  loved  life, and&#13;
atmosphere   and  space   where&#13;
working. One student, Nathaniel&#13;
livedeach and every day to the&#13;
true creativity had  the  roont to&#13;
Hunter,  said,  "He  would  have&#13;
fullest.Matthew  loved  to  work&#13;
develop&#13;
and&#13;
flourish.    As    wanted    us   to   keep   going,"&#13;
withclay of the earth  as he ere-&#13;
Matthew's   students   and   pro-    adding, "Matthew  has  touched&#13;
if&#13;
MatthewBynumCruet SetStoneware6"x3"x3"1999&#13;
many  lives. Ceramics  was  his&#13;
first love, mother earth".&#13;
Matthew not  only touched&#13;
the lives of students  and  facul-&#13;
ty at  UW-Parkside, out  also  in&#13;
the  community. Friends at The&#13;
Junction,  his favorite hang  out&#13;
in Racine, had  a nickname  for&#13;
him, the  professor. Linda Waw-&#13;
iorka  said  it reminded  her  of&#13;
the   show   Cheers.  "Matthew&#13;
would walk in and  the patrons&#13;
would shout "Professor!"&#13;
Matthew passed  his incredi-&#13;
ble energy to his students  who&#13;
used it to create a lot of beauti-&#13;
ful work. A two-day pottery sale&#13;
last  May sold  out  in  a  few&#13;
hours.  Not only  did  he  teach&#13;
Iunction-vs-aesthetics&#13;
of&#13;
ceramics,  he  helped  students&#13;
understand   the  mechanics   of&#13;
ceramics   by  involving  them&#13;
with the building of a new kiln.&#13;
He would take them on trips to&#13;
the  University of Notre Dame,&#13;
and  Chicago. He loved  to talk&#13;
about  Notre Dame and shared&#13;
all   of   the   knowledge&#13;
he&#13;
received  from  there  with  his&#13;
students,&#13;
David  Vateia,  a  'riend   of&#13;
Iatthews   from  Notre  Dame,&#13;
said  "  I  hope   everyone   will&#13;
remember    Matthew   for  his&#13;
great  personality   and  always-&#13;
smiling face. He gave a passion&#13;
to the  arts  that very few have&#13;
the.   talent    and    means    to&#13;
express.  He  enjoyed  teaching&#13;
ceramics&#13;
and&#13;
gave so much to&#13;
his students:'  Professor  Robert&#13;
Pierce  Sedlack  Jr, Department&#13;
of Art, Art History and  Design&#13;
at   the   University   of   Notre&#13;
Dame  said, "Matthew was  full&#13;
of both  talent  and  joy.He will&#13;
be greatly missed  by all those&#13;
he touched.  But it is those  he&#13;
would  have  touched  that will&#13;
miss him even&#13;
more".&#13;
In mid November there will&#13;
be   a   memorial&#13;
show   of&#13;
Matthew's work, and  a collabo-&#13;
ration that was created  from a&#13;
demo  piece  Matthew  started,&#13;
which  some   of  his  students&#13;
will  complete   in  his  honor.&#13;
Matthew's work will remain  at&#13;
UW-Parkside until  the  end  of&#13;
the show. The University hopes&#13;
to purchase  a piece  to be per-&#13;
manently displayed.&#13;
Everyone  is wanted,  wel-&#13;
come  and  needed.&#13;
Open  Positions&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Sports  Writers&#13;
Opinion Writers&#13;
Entertainment  Writers&#13;
Join The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Stop by The Ranger  News&#13;
office wyllie D139-C&#13;
or call 595-2287&#13;
Meetings  are  Mondays at&#13;
noon. Anyone can join at any&#13;
time.&#13;
To Matthew ...&#13;
derful  Notre  Dame  tales ...Go&#13;
IriSh!!!!!Thank  you  for sharing&#13;
with  us the "Do what  it takes"&#13;
attitude ...Thank  you  for teach-&#13;
ing us words like Fecundity and&#13;
Anthropomorphic  ...Thank  you&#13;
for sharing your family with us&#13;
by   putting    your    beautiful&#13;
nieces&#13;
picture&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
studio   you&#13;
where&#13;
so&#13;
proud   On a personal  level, as&#13;
your very first ceramic graduate&#13;
this  December...Thank  you  for&#13;
taking me under your wing and&#13;
giving me a self confidence  that&#13;
I never  thought  possible  and  I&#13;
continued ...&#13;
am eternally  grateful. You were&#13;
. my  professor, my  mentor,  and&#13;
most  of  all  my  dear  friend...I&#13;
will miss your smile forever...but&#13;
I will keep  your  vision  alive...I&#13;
will&#13;
never&#13;
forget&#13;
your&#13;
dream ....for  it  will  live  on  in.&#13;
your  students.  God  bless  you&#13;
Matthew Bynum.&#13;
Our  prayers   are  with  the&#13;
Bynum  family  and  may  God&#13;
grant  them  grace  and  strength&#13;
during this very difficult time.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Linda Wawiorka&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Sept 26 - Oct 10,2002&#13;
-&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parkside campus remembers 9/1 1&#13;
Faculty,staff and students attended one of the many memorials commemorating September II&#13;
Doris Washington&#13;
Reporter&#13;
On September 11th, Resi-&#13;
dence life hosted an all after-&#13;
noon event in the remem-&#13;
brance of the turmoil of a year&#13;
ago. The event began at four&#13;
o'clock in the afternoon with&#13;
the sidewalk chalk memorial&#13;
where people in either Ranger&#13;
Hall or the University Apart-&#13;
ments wrote their thoughts and&#13;
feelings about that day. Many&#13;
wrote such things as " I love&#13;
New York" and biblical scrip-&#13;
tures.The writings occurred on&#13;
the new walkway between the&#13;
University  Apartments  and&#13;
Ranger Hall. At six o'clock that&#13;
evening, the residents could&#13;
come within the core building&#13;
of the University Apartments or&#13;
the Atrium of Ranger Hall and&#13;
make bracelets  of memory.&#13;
There were beads of red, white&#13;
and blue being used. At nine&#13;
o'clock in the evening, the resi-&#13;
dents in the Apartments gath-&#13;
ered near the walkway and the&#13;
residents of Ranger Hall gath-&#13;
ered for a candlelight vigil. The&#13;
Resident Advisors passed out&#13;
programs and candles for stu-&#13;
dent residents. The programs&#13;
had an agenda of what was to&#13;
occur and the words to certain&#13;
American songs such as the&#13;
Star Spangled  Banner  and&#13;
America  the Beautiful.  The&#13;
pledge of Allegiance was spo-&#13;
ken as everyone near the resi-&#13;
dence halls could  hear the&#13;
three hundred  eighteen resi-&#13;
dents that were present.&#13;
After the songs and pledge&#13;
were given, there was a affair.&#13;
When all the can.&#13;
dles  were blown&#13;
out, there was a&#13;
small group of stu-&#13;
dents from Ranger&#13;
Hall that cried and&#13;
prayed  with their&#13;
candle  still going.&#13;
Student&#13;
Brain&#13;
Brzeznski wasasked&#13;
what   were  his&#13;
thoughts on thatday&#13;
and he stated " as&#13;
soon as we found&#13;
~I~~&#13;
out what had hap-&#13;
;:&#13;
pened,  we  were&#13;
gassing  up  the&#13;
planes, getting ready&#13;
to fly out. We knew&#13;
that war was going&#13;
to be the next thing." Whether&#13;
they were wearing t-shirts with&#13;
the flag on them or wearing a&#13;
flag, September 11th is a day&#13;
that will forever echo in the&#13;
hearts of not just the country,but&#13;
in the Residence Halls aswell.&#13;
I&#13;
111111111111111&#13;
i&#13;
1111111&#13;
111111111&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
Dining Service and Student life&#13;
er es&#13;
Lunch&#13;
Thursday, October 3&#13;
Parkside Cafe&#13;
Menu&#13;
11am-1 :30pm&#13;
$7.95&#13;
Bratwurst&#13;
wi&#13;
Sauerkraut&#13;
Wiener Schnitzel&#13;
Braised Red Cabbage&#13;
Potato Pancake&#13;
wi&#13;
applesauce&#13;
&amp;&#13;
sour cream&#13;
Spatzel&#13;
Bavarian Vegetable Mix&#13;
Strudel&#13;
German Chocolate Cake&#13;
REAL EXPERIENCE&#13;
28&#13;
years of&#13;
businesslfinance  and&#13;
realestate appraisal experienc&#13;
FAMILY MAN&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
NNELL?&#13;
Sept26 - Oct 10,2002 Page 5&#13;
,OJjoins the multicultural office&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Parkside    graduate&#13;
Damian Evans,known&#13;
to many as "DJ" (for-&#13;
mer  Resident  Life&#13;
Director), is now Coor-&#13;
dinator  of Retention&#13;
Programs/Advisor  in&#13;
the Office of Multicul-&#13;
tural Affairs.DJ shares&#13;
in   managing   the&#13;
Always    Reaching&#13;
Upward (ARU) Men-&#13;
torship program.&#13;
As&#13;
an&#13;
alumnus  mentor, he&#13;
meets  with  student&#13;
proteges   to  guide&#13;
them  in  selecting&#13;
classes,   developing&#13;
study  habits, begin-&#13;
ning&#13;
internships,&#13;
securing financial aid&#13;
and  grants,  solving&#13;
problems,  and  any-&#13;
thing  else  students&#13;
need to succeed.&#13;
In 1991,DJ enrolled here at&#13;
Parkside. In those days, orienta-&#13;
tion used to extend beyond a&#13;
school  tour during the day.&#13;
Prospective students  used to&#13;
stay  the  night  on  camp'us&#13;
before orientation, experienc-&#13;
ing more of a taste of typical&#13;
campus life:This was what OJ&#13;
was about to discover.&#13;
Having registered for orien-&#13;
tation at the very last moment,&#13;
DJ ended up in the only cam-&#13;
pus apartment available with 5&#13;
other 'students. After spending&#13;
tM"entire evening with the ori-&#13;
entation guide, he came back&#13;
to the apartment to find it in&#13;
shambles  - A party involving&#13;
under aged drinkers went on&#13;
while he was gone! The Direc-&#13;
400hamsters and a cadaver?&#13;
Kenosha County Homeowner and Farmer:&#13;
A family man wi.th a commitment  to Kenosha County, Patrick is the first&#13;
can~idate&#13;
t~.&#13;
articulate&#13;
a plan to save t~xpayer dollars while increasing&#13;
services to Cltlz~ns of Kenosha County. Patnck offers a combination  of fiscally&#13;
sound leadership and commonsense.  Vote for integrity and experience.  Come-&#13;
out and meet Patrick while he welcomes  guest speaker former Congressman&#13;
Mark ~eumann at the Brat. Stop on Thursday, October 3, from 6:30·8:30 pm&#13;
i~&#13;
the Bnstol Room. For details call 262-857-82222.  With a UW-Parkside  10, only&#13;
$5&#13;
at the door.&#13;
There is more to being.&#13;
AAPF By citizensfor Patrick&#13;
O'Connell for Treasurer,B.&#13;
Kenosha County Treasurer&#13;
O'Connell Treasurer&#13;
than a name ... Experience counts&#13;
c'&#13;
g!&#13;
H·A·R·S·O·R·S·I·D·E&#13;
~:&#13;
EYE   CARE&#13;
E '&#13;
~ill&#13;
CONTACIlENSES&#13;
ri&#13;
COO&#13;
G&#13;
WPEXAPlt~;-&#13;
~:&#13;
~7&#13;
P&#13;
I&#13;
T :&#13;
Come find the look&#13;
IjOIA&#13;
like&#13;
H,&#13;
I ,&#13;
262.6252020&#13;
5/34 -&#13;
6t/11/ve&#13;
tcenoono&#13;
S ,&#13;
Ashley&#13;
Russ&#13;
Reporter&#13;
The  Biological  Sciences&#13;
department of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside has been&#13;
conducting  experiments   for&#13;
quite some time. These experi-&#13;
ments range from small ani-&#13;
mals to one human cadaver. In&#13;
1974 the department  began&#13;
experimenting  on small  ani-&#13;
mals.Currently the department&#13;
is&#13;
focusing on hamsters  The&#13;
biology department also has a&#13;
~uman cadaver that is used for&#13;
,vanous educational  purposes.&#13;
The cadaver has been at UW-&#13;
·Parkside for the past fifteen&#13;
~e    biology department has&#13;
IlIPproximately400-500 Siberian&#13;
,hamsters. These hamsters  are&#13;
~\(ept&#13;
in a building across cam-&#13;
Ipt!s·&#13;
A committee,  including&#13;
jl'rofessor Edward  Wallen, is&#13;
!handling these  experiments ..&#13;
Theirpurpose is to see how the&#13;
~arnSlersbreed at different ages&#13;
i"lld how they react to different&#13;
11''''' .&#13;
It""tmg arrangements.  These&#13;
~ments&#13;
are being done in&#13;
~=",&#13;
..  '&#13;
&gt;&#13;
OJ Evans is happy&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
the Multicultural  Affairs team&#13;
tor of Campus Life and the&#13;
Dean of Students confronted&#13;
OJ.Fortunately,Yolanda Jackson'&#13;
- Lewis, the orientation guide,&#13;
was able to vouch that he had&#13;
not been at the party.&#13;
Overcoming a rocky start,&#13;
DJ went on to complete  his&#13;
bachelor degree in Communi-&#13;
cations at UWP.While in col-&#13;
lege,he gained some of his first&#13;
experience  helping other stu-&#13;
dents, working as a peer advi-&#13;
sor.After graduating in 1996,OJ&#13;
went on to do much more with&#13;
youth and multiculturalism.&#13;
For three years DJ did com-&#13;
munity work with a project&#13;
called "ujima" (Swahili for "col-&#13;
lective work and responsibili-&#13;
ty"). Project "ujirna" is the third&#13;
of the seven  principles  of&#13;
Kwanzaa, an African celebra-&#13;
tion lasting from December 26,&#13;
to January&#13;
1.&#13;
In this effort, he&#13;
'ielped ""ormalize" youth who&#13;
lave been 'nvolved with inter-&#13;
personal  violence, aiding  in&#13;
their  recovery  from  these&#13;
events.&#13;
Later, OJ became  a Coun-&#13;
cilor Advocate for the Boysand&#13;
GirlsClub.&#13;
As&#13;
a recruiting coun-&#13;
cilor, he would promote neigh-&#13;
jee! to inspections&#13;
by&#13;
the fooer- '.biological department&#13;
possess-&#13;
al&#13;
government. The lab could   es is th one that they have&#13;
be shut down&#13;
If&#13;
those involved  worked with the&#13;
1aSl&#13;
15&#13;
yeatl&gt;&#13;
do not adhere  to 'the proper   Currently;there are talks&#13;
about&#13;
rules and regulalions&#13;
adding a female cadaveI: These&#13;
In addition  to the&#13;
experi-&#13;
cadavers can only be obtained&#13;
ments on the llamsters, the Bier  through Madison after the uni-&#13;
logical Sciences  Department   versity has filled the necessary&#13;
has  a  human  cadaver. The  qualifications. The cadavers are&#13;
cadaver t-hat the UW-Parkside  bodies that are donated for&#13;
sci-&#13;
&gt;~o&#13;
;;$10&#13;
.~;W&#13;
borhood  youth involvement.&#13;
He tracked them to enhance&#13;
their participation in the club's&#13;
wealth  of recreational  pro-&#13;
grams geared to help and sup-&#13;
port  youth. These  induded&#13;
social   gatherings,   sports&#13;
leagues,  academic  competi-&#13;
tions, Black History Month,&#13;
teen job searches, and many&#13;
other activities.&#13;
After his work with the Boys&#13;
and  Girls Club, OJ became&#13;
Parkside's Director of Resident&#13;
Life.He describes it as being a&#13;
"high energy, student-involved, .&#13;
goal-oriented  position".  He&#13;
says that there really were no&#13;
parameters  to his level of&#13;
involvement  in helping  stu-&#13;
dents. They came to him with&#13;
anything ranging from school-&#13;
related problems to personal&#13;
issues.&#13;
All of these  experiences&#13;
had something  important  to&#13;
offer:"With'ujima' came reality;&#13;
with the Boys and Girls Club&#13;
came responsibility, and with&#13;
the Residence Hall came lead-&#13;
ership,"He has yet to see what&#13;
more he will learn in the Office&#13;
of Multicultural Affairs in the&#13;
days that lie ahead.&#13;
enliflc use. The cadaver&#13;
at&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
is&#13;
used&#13;
for demonstra-&#13;
tions and&#13;
is&#13;
cared for&#13;
at&#13;
an&#13;
limes.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
kept in a steel&#13;
tank&#13;
and taken out&#13;
lot&#13;
academic&#13;
demonstrations.&#13;
The  Biological  Sciences&#13;
l;&gt;epartment has many different&#13;
research  projects  underway;&#13;
these are just two examples.&#13;
d&#13;
conjunction with Northwestern&#13;
University in Evanston, Illinois.&#13;
Professor Wallen, who also&#13;
serves as the chair of the Bier&#13;
logical Sciences  Department,&#13;
stated  that  the  experiments&#13;
being conducted  are noninva-&#13;
sive studies. The hamsters do&#13;
not need to be euthanized  for&#13;
the experiments that are being&#13;
conducted  at UWParkside. The&#13;
animals  are  given  different&#13;
sleeping meat cations to see if&#13;
the sciennsts can change the&#13;
sleeping and activity habits of&#13;
the hamsters. Some hamsters&#13;
are studied by their use of an&#13;
activity wheel, which is con- ;&#13;
nected to a computer  to see ,&#13;
exactly when they areactive.AJj ,&#13;
~~-~-----------~---------&#13;
of these experiments  together&#13;
are being conducted  to devel-&#13;
op research on these animals.&#13;
The  hamsters&#13;
are&#13;
not&#13;
bought or sold; only bred. They&#13;
either die of natural causes or&#13;
toe overflows 01 hamsters are&#13;
sent&#13;
10&#13;
Northwestern University&#13;
for further  experimentation,&#13;
The UW-Parkside laboratory is&#13;
located on campus and is sub-&#13;
0*&#13;
,,~&#13;
Page 6 .&#13;
Sept  26 - Oct  I0, 2002&#13;
University Sports&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
;Parkside's&#13;
pool receives&#13;
a face&#13;
lift&#13;
Get  in the&#13;
game!&#13;
By Brandon Drake&#13;
o.;~",ep",o"!rt-"e",r&#13;
j&#13;
One  of  the  many:&#13;
major&#13;
programs;&#13;
offered at the UW-P is'&#13;
the  Intramural  pro- ..&#13;
gram. The intramural,&#13;
program  is targeted:&#13;
toward  anyone   on,&#13;
campus who is inter-&#13;
J&#13;
ested in playing sports;&#13;
in their spare time for&#13;
recreational purposes. ~[&#13;
As&#13;
student  or  aluJImi:&#13;
member  of UW-P,you  have&#13;
many recreational  opportuni-&#13;
ties available regardless of your&#13;
skiU level.The&#13;
first&#13;
six weeks of ..&#13;
the   intramural    schedule'&#13;
already has started; and semes-!&#13;
ter long activities have also got-~l&#13;
'ten underw~  But there&#13;
is&#13;
no~&#13;
need  to panle, as there  are I&#13;
more  opportunities   to  get~&#13;
inv,dved starting next month.'&#13;
•&#13;
The second eight weeks of the&#13;
j&#13;
ITsemester  features  sports  like:&#13;
basketball  leagues, volleyball,&#13;
I&#13;
indoor soccer, ping-pong, and&#13;
j&#13;
different  basketball  touma-j&#13;
rnents.   ..&#13;
,&#13;
·.i   ~&#13;
,&#13;
Another program iliat intra-&#13;
j&#13;
murals provide&#13;
is&#13;
semester long]&#13;
activities. You may· join these&#13;
activities at anytime during the l&#13;
semester.  Water  aerobics  is&#13;
J&#13;
being offered on Tuesday and:&#13;
...Thursday nights between 5:3()':&#13;
6:30 in the Student ActivityCen-IT&#13;
ter pool. Also you may add your l&#13;
name to the challenge ladder.&#13;
at any time f"r -sports such as&#13;
j&#13;
racquetball, disc golf, and ten&#13;
nis.&#13;
Intramural sports are f&#13;
all  students.  UWP's  fa&#13;
members,  staff  and  alu&#13;
must purchase  a Sports and&#13;
Activity usage card to paltici-]&#13;
pate.  For more information,&#13;
contact Intramural coordinator&#13;
Tamie Falk-Dayin SAC257 or&#13;
595-2656.&#13;
:   Alex  Voskuit&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
For the second time in&#13;
less than two years the&#13;
swimming pool, locat-&#13;
edinthe&#13;
Athletic Building, has been .&#13;
repainted. This comes less than&#13;
eighteen   months   after   it&#13;
received a new paint job back&#13;
in March, 2001.The Pool's latest&#13;
face lift occurred over the last&#13;
two weeks of August, 2002.&#13;
Earlier this summer  paint&#13;
began chipping away off of the&#13;
bottom of the pool. It&#13;
was so  bad  that  people&#13;
using the pool could literally&#13;
bring up chunks  of paint in&#13;
their hands.&#13;
On July 29, 2002, the pool&#13;
was drained and the prepara-&#13;
tion process to repaint the&#13;
pool began. Showers Build-&#13;
ing Restoration Co. from Madi-&#13;
son,  Wisconsin,   were   contract&#13;
ed to carry out the work.This is&#13;
ceramic tile&#13;
deck.&#13;
The&#13;
paint   that&#13;
was proven&#13;
-c&#13;
to be defec-&#13;
~  tive&#13;
was   a&#13;
o&#13;
'i3rubber&#13;
"based&#13;
:;&#13;
:cpaint,&#13;
~   which    was&#13;
Rebecca Brawnei takes a dip in UW-&#13;
Parkslde's&#13;
pool.&#13;
applied&#13;
to&#13;
the same company that paint-   the pool in March of 2001.The&#13;
ed the pool in 2001 at a cost of   paint that was just used this&#13;
of $53,195.They were to paint   past August was a water based&#13;
the  pool  this  second  time   Epoxy paint  The change  in&#13;
around at their own cost Nei-   paints  as Kolbe commented,&#13;
ther UW-Parkside nor the State   "was approved  by the Project&#13;
contributed  any money to the   Representative    from   DFD&#13;
project&#13;
(Department    of   Facilities&#13;
Parkside's Director of Facili-   Development), who is the dele-&#13;
ties   Management,   Donald    gated  State Authority of this&#13;
Kolbe, had said that their work   project.Thts  new paint match-&#13;
included caulking the control   es the original  existing paint&#13;
joints in the pool and walls,   surface.&#13;
painting  the pool, walls and&#13;
No reports were released as&#13;
the  steel  trusses,  removing    of press time to UW-Parkside&#13;
pool lights and seal penetra    concerning  what caused  the&#13;
tions, removing the  3 meter   paint to peel in the first place.&#13;
divmg board, and repairing the   The paint supplier for Showers&#13;
Building  Restoration  Co. con-&#13;
ducted  the laboratory testing&#13;
of the paint.&#13;
On September  18, 2002,&#13;
employees of Showers BUilding&#13;
Restoration came back to Park-&#13;
side to correct certain areas of&#13;
paint that have become jagged&#13;
and very sharp. "We really did-&#13;
n't notice it until it got filled:&#13;
commented  Wendy Miller,&#13;
Park-&#13;
side's Aquatics  Director. This&#13;
was something  that Millerhad&#13;
said  never  happened  to the&#13;
pool before. Due to safety con-&#13;
cerns the problem  had to be&#13;
corrected.As  minor as it was,&#13;
all we needed was one person&#13;
to cut  themselves  and then&#13;
we're in big trouble."&#13;
The pool has since made its&#13;
Grand   Re-opening,   which&#13;
occurred  on Monday, Septem-&#13;
ber 23. It is now open for class-&#13;
es and the general public. The&#13;
operation of the pool is not yet&#13;
running  at 100%, however. To&#13;
ensure that it is as safe as pos-&#13;
sible, its usage will be limited&#13;
for the next couple of weeks.&#13;
Men's soccer team evens the score with Lewis&#13;
AlexVoskuil&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
Coming off of a tough&#13;
3-1 loss against  SIU-&#13;
Edwardsville to open&#13;
the conference season&#13;
last Friday night, the&#13;
men's  soccer  team&#13;
needed a victory Sun-&#13;
day Afternoon. That is&#13;
exactly what they got&#13;
taking it to a strong&#13;
Lewis team  1-0. This&#13;
win evens their all-time&#13;
record with Lewis at&#13;
11-114_&#13;
Heading   into   Sunday's&#13;
game the Rangers were ranked&#13;
15 in the national poll for Divi-&#13;
sion IIplay.&#13;
With  the   victory   the&#13;
Rangers improve to 5-2 overall&#13;
and 1-1in the Great Lakes Val-&#13;
ley   Conference&#13;
(GLVC).&#13;
"There's no question  that we&#13;
were the better team today.We&#13;
deserved  the win, we earned&#13;
the win, we got the right to&#13;
win," replied Coach Rick Kilps&#13;
after his team's victory at Wood&#13;
Road Field. "We knew where&#13;
their [Lewis&#13;
1&#13;
weaknesses were&#13;
and where their strengths were&#13;
and so we tried to play to their&#13;
weaknesses."&#13;
Senior Seth Pearson found&#13;
the back of the net with 30:39&#13;
left on the clock in the second&#13;
half of play for the only goal of&#13;
the contest  The assist on the&#13;
goal went to freshman Derek&#13;
Kilps.Kilps was making his sec-&#13;
ond start on the young season .&#13;
Pearson's goal adds to a pletho-&#13;
ra of players who have stepped&#13;
up to score so far for the men's .&#13;
soccer  team, which  is what&#13;
Kilps has been looking for. No&#13;
one player is expected to carry&#13;
the load. Rather the game plan&#13;
has' been to scoring by com-&#13;
mittee for the Rangers.&#13;
Senior Riley Mewes and fel-&#13;
low senior  Andres  Cerritos&#13;
were solid as usual leading the&#13;
attack on numerous occasions&#13;
for the Rangers.&#13;
Junior Joey Alessi was the&#13;
staling Goalie for Parkside. He&#13;
has been the goalie all season&#13;
long. Alessi made a number of&#13;
nice defensive stops to improve&#13;
on  his goals against  average,&#13;
which was at 0.80 entering play&#13;
last weekend. This gives him his&#13;
third shutout  of the season in&#13;
seven  games. "Joe  was very&#13;
strong as goalkeeper. He knew&#13;
he had  to come  to play. He&#13;
knew they [Lewis] played long,&#13;
direct stuff," said Kilps on his&#13;
goal keepers performance. "He&#13;
[Alessi] was there, he as on the&#13;
spot."&#13;
The  Rangers  will  be  in&#13;
action next this weekend with&#13;
an away game against St.Xavier&#13;
on Friday, September, 27. They&#13;
return home two days later on&#13;
September  29, to take on St.&#13;
Joseph's  at 12:00p.m. at Wood&#13;
Road Field.&#13;
University Sports .&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Sept26- Oct I0,2002 Pa e 7&#13;
Men'sand Women's cross-country fair well in recent meet&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
SportSEditor&#13;
With  temperatures&#13;
soaring into the upper&#13;
seventies and  not a&#13;
trace of clouds in the&#13;
sky,   UW-Parkside&#13;
played host to the Mid-&#13;
westOpen on Saturday&#13;
September  21, 2002,&#13;
The ground was still a&#13;
littlewet and soft after&#13;
three days of rain but&#13;
that did not affect the&#13;
outcome of the meet.&#13;
Boththe men and women's&#13;
teamsput up respectable num-&#13;
bers.The women finished fifth&#13;
overall battling  some  30&#13;
schools.The men were just a&#13;
step behind racing to a sixth&#13;
place finish out of 32 schools&#13;
BRADLEY, ARE&#13;
YO&lt;)&#13;
SEEI~ SOMEONE&#13;
ELSE?&#13;
Quinn Newton competes inthe September 21.2002 race&#13;
that qualified.&#13;
Sophomore Robyn Stevens&#13;
led the Lady Rangers with a&#13;
10th  place  finish  for the&#13;
women's 3.I-mile race. Stevens&#13;
covered the course in 18:54just&#13;
40 seconds off the pace of win-&#13;
ner Caitlin Compton, a senior&#13;
from Northern Michigan Uni-&#13;
versity.&#13;
Northern Michigan landed&#13;
the top two spots and went on&#13;
to be the number one team for&#13;
the women's portion of the&#13;
invite. They totaled  just 32&#13;
points. Parkside finished with&#13;
142total points fortheir top five&#13;
scorers, which was good for&#13;
5 overall. Bellarmine suffered&#13;
through a miserable year in&#13;
2001 with a 1-14record in con-&#13;
ference play."Wecan't look past&#13;
anyone in our&#13;
conference&#13;
this&#13;
season" commented Wolter on&#13;
the conference portion of the&#13;
schedule,"our strategy isto min-&#13;
imize our mistakes and keep&#13;
everyone in the offense."&#13;
Alter going undefeated to&#13;
begin the season at 5-0, the&#13;
Rangers have cooled off most&#13;
recently going 14 in the last five&#13;
filth place, overall.&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt com-&#13;
mented,&#13;
"As&#13;
a whole I think we&#13;
ran real strong today.Welooked&#13;
a little tired, but if everyone&#13;
looks tired I'm not worried&#13;
about it"&#13;
The other four scorers for&#13;
the women's team included&#13;
senior Erin Enright,sophomore&#13;
Anne Favolise, junior Jessica&#13;
Krantz and senior Janna Wee-&#13;
den. They placed 26,28,29 and&#13;
49, respectively. Enright com-&#13;
mented alter the meet "we ran&#13;
well today,it wasn't a bad race&#13;
for anyone on our squad."&#13;
For the men's team junior&#13;
Quinn Newton was the top run-&#13;
ner. He finished fourth overall&#13;
with a time of 25:54 for the&#13;
men's five-mile run. This was&#13;
just 33seconds offthe best time&#13;
ofthe meet.lt was Newton's first&#13;
race of the season. The top fin-&#13;
isher on the men's side was Ser-&#13;
games prior to last weekend.&#13;
The only change Wolter sees&#13;
fromthe team that started out at&#13;
5-{)&#13;
to the one that has lost their&#13;
last three games through Sep-&#13;
tember 19,2002, is an injury to&#13;
junior setter Natalie Wildes.&#13;
Wildessuffered a broken thumb&#13;
before the team lelt for Col-&#13;
orado to partake in the GUAC-&#13;
GLVCcrossover two weeks ago.&#13;
She isn't expected to return&#13;
until early next month. Until&#13;
Wildes  returns  Wolter  has&#13;
decided to go from&#13;
a 6-2offense to a&#13;
5-&#13;
1 offense. Senior&#13;
Leah Dugan is cur-&#13;
... rently running the&#13;
i&#13;
offense single-hand-&#13;
edly as the sale set-&#13;
ter while Wildes is&#13;
OUI.&#13;
One surprise that&#13;
Waltner welcomes&#13;
this season is the&#13;
emergence of fresh-&#13;
man Megan Coffey.&#13;
AND I HAVEN'T&#13;
SE:EN&#13;
YOJ&#13;
FOR&#13;
WEEKS!&#13;
gio  Reyes, a  senior  from&#13;
Cedarville University.Ohio.&#13;
Freshmen Jason Matousek fin-&#13;
ished second for the Rangers&#13;
and 25 overall. Rounding out&#13;
the final three of Parkside's five&#13;
scorers included freshmen Paul&#13;
Goutmann,  sophomore  Cal&#13;
Kromm and freshman Michael&#13;
Tarantino. They finished 50, 52,&#13;
and 55,respectively.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa was&#13;
impressed by his freshmen as&#13;
he has been all season long.&#13;
Lucian commented, "They are&#13;
progressing very well.They have&#13;
been improving week to week.&#13;
This group of freshmen are&#13;
going to help us all the way&#13;
through."&#13;
This coming weekend the&#13;
women will be traveling to the&#13;
University of Minnesota for an&#13;
NCAA&#13;
II&#13;
Invite.The men's team&#13;
will be in action in Beloit,Wis-&#13;
consin for the Beloit Open.&#13;
Coffeyhas been inserted in the&#13;
line-up as the starting Iibero&#13;
(full time defensive specialist&#13;
position). Senior Katie Raasch&#13;
along with Dugan have both&#13;
been solid as usual. Together&#13;
they continue to provide leader-&#13;
ship to a team that is beginning&#13;
to turn things around on the&#13;
court.&#13;
UW-P's volleyball team is&#13;
now looking to begin the home&#13;
portion of the schedule. They&#13;
have played their first 12games&#13;
on the road. They will face SI.&#13;
Joseph and Indianapolis this&#13;
weekend. The game plan is sim-&#13;
ple&#13;
as&#13;
Wolterexplains,"Our strat-&#13;
egy is to minimize our mistakes&#13;
and keep everyone  in the&#13;
offense,'&#13;
replied Wolter. The&#13;
Rangers will be in action&#13;
against SI.Joe's on Friday,Sept&#13;
27,at 7:00p.m.Game time forthe&#13;
contest against Indianapolis is&#13;
set for I:oop.m.on Saturday,Sep-&#13;
tember 21.Both games are with-&#13;
in their conference.&#13;
Page 8  Sept 26 - Oct 10,2002&#13;
SpriJl!l  Breakers!  Spring  Break  2Q03&#13;
to&#13;
Cancun,  Acapulco,  Mazatlan,&#13;
Jamaica or&#13;
the Bahamas  for FREE! Call'us  now as&#13;
1-800-795-4786&#13;
or email us at&#13;
sales&#13;
@ suncoastvacationsx:om&#13;
!&#13;
fe'&#13;
ING&#13;
BREAK 2003&#13;
is now sponsored   by Student  ExPTess! Cancun,  Acapulco,&#13;
,Jamaica,  Bahamas, South Padre,&#13;
Las&#13;
Vegas, Florida, and lbiza: Book early&#13;
FREE MEAlS! Student  Express sponsors  the BEST&#13;
PARTIES&#13;
and is NOW&#13;
G&#13;
salaried  Salespeople,  Campus  Reps, and OIHIite Stall. Contact&#13;
wwwstu-&#13;
denteJq)reSS.eom  or&#13;
1800-787-3787&#13;
for details&#13;
;Spring&#13;
Break&#13;
2003&#13;
with S1'5 Americas&#13;
#J&#13;
Student Tour Operator  Sell Trips earn cash&#13;
.  '!lavel Free InlormationtReservations&#13;
1-8Q().{)484849&#13;
or www.stslravel.com&#13;
~:&#13;
#1&#13;
Spring BreakVacations!  Caneun,Jamaica,Acapulco,&#13;
Bahamas,  Mazatlan,F1orida,&#13;
Spadre,&#13;
J&#13;
10%&#13;
Best&#13;
prices! Book Now&#13;
&amp;,&#13;
get Free Parties&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Meals! Group Discounts.&#13;
Now Hiring Campus  Reps!&#13;
1-800-234-7007&#13;
endlesssummertours.cQm&#13;
Parkside activities board&#13;
Sabrina Morgan&#13;
Guest Reporter&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board  (PAB)  is a stu-&#13;
dent  run  organization.&#13;
Its purpose  is to orga-&#13;
nize events and activi-&#13;
ties that  appeal  to the&#13;
diverse spectrum&#13;
01&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside  students'  inter-&#13;
est. In the past PAB has&#13;
held  events   such  as&#13;
Backyard  Bash, Casino&#13;
Night, and Apollo Night.&#13;
We provide  an array&#13;
01&#13;
entertainment&#13;
from&#13;
new events such as cof-&#13;
fee house  to novelties&#13;
such as hypnotist.lf  you&#13;
would like to see a pro-&#13;
gram or artists brought&#13;
on  campus   drop  off&#13;
your idea or call x2650.&#13;
PAB  holds   meetings&#13;
every Friday at noon in&#13;
Union 207. PAR Where&#13;
you choose  the enter-&#13;
tainment!&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Ranger News Classified Fornj&#13;
($O.25/work for&#13;
students)&#13;
Name:&#13;
_&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2nd&#13;
Union 106&#13;
4pm·6pm&#13;
"The&#13;
Art&#13;
of Effective Decision&#13;
Making" Dr.Rebecca&#13;
Martin&#13;
ProvDstlVice Chanceflor,&#13;
Academic Affairs,&#13;
Phone.:&#13;
_&#13;
Email:,&#13;
_&#13;
Add as you would like to see&#13;
it:&#13;
This form can be dropped at The Ranger News located in&#13;
lower Wyllie Hall 0 139C across form the Bookstore and&#13;
Career Center.&#13;
For more information, call (262) 595-2287&#13;
Payment must be made in full when as is dropped off.&#13;
UWP-SPRING BREAK '03'&#13;
with&#13;
StudentCity.com!&#13;
Cancun, Mazatian,&#13;
Acapulco,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas FREE&#13;
FOOD, FREE DRINKS&#13;
and 150% Lowest Price&#13;
Guaranteed!&#13;
REPS&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
Sell 15 and&#13;
get&#13;
2 FREE TRIPS,&#13;
-aOO-293·1445&#13;
or&#13;
sales@studentcity.com!&#13;
Slice of&#13;
LA=aI'lA.-ehl ..&#13;
-_...........·~···r&#13;
Series&#13;
.College and Life can be&#13;
a&#13;
challenge-&#13;
let us prepare you for both.&#13;
Forall clUbs, organizations, group members. ~&#13;
leaders,&#13;
and anyone who&#13;
is&#13;
interested&#13;
I  ~~&#13;
.  IIil)IDlIIIII&#13;
Pizzaand beverages&#13;
served.&#13;
Attendance&#13;
Is&#13;
limited&#13;
so&#13;
sign up now!&#13;
Stop&#13;
by Union&#13;
209,&#13;
call&#13;
595-227S:&#13;
or&#13;
send&#13;
an&#13;
e-mail&#13;
to:&#13;
enge/@uwp.edu&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
Student  Activities&#13;
of&#13;
coIIeIe&#13;
studllllts..&#13;
modenl:e&#13;
Oas&#13;
dRI&#13;
5&#13;
*inks&#13;
P.'I'&#13;
week)&#13;
ornon ........&#13;
UitEiiEF&#13;
Most&#13;
students&#13;
Will Be&#13;
Chotces!&#13;
~of=.tad.i1ts&#13;
... _~&#13;
....&#13;
~&#13;
orfitllC··multilfd.,.or&#13;
a1use.&#13;
TIKn's ......&#13;
In......&#13;
Beco.tedl&#13;
,&#13;
...&#13;
•&#13;
•••&#13;
'.&#13;
•.&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
09/12/02&#13;
Inc  02-588   Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances, CTH  G  and  CTH  A,&#13;
3:10p.m. A visitor  reported  rrussmq  a&#13;
bus and while  walkIng  home,  noticed&#13;
a vehicle follow;nll   him.  The  vehicle&#13;
descriPtionwas&#13;
given&#13;
but  no  license&#13;
late&#13;
#.&#13;
Officers  checked  the  area  but&#13;
~ere  unable  to   locate   the   vehicle.&#13;
Subjectcalled  again  49  minutes   later&#13;
to  report  the   vehicle   was   following&#13;
himas he was  riding  his  bike.  Racine&#13;
Sheriff  Dept.   responded,&#13;
took    the&#13;
information   and    will&#13;
put    out&#13;
an&#13;
"attempt to   locate"   on   the   vehicle.&#13;
Subjectwas advised  to call  911 in the&#13;
future  so   he   could    get   immediate&#13;
response trom  the  police   agency   in&#13;
hisjurisdiction.&#13;
Inc 02-590  Underage   Alcohol,   Ranger   Hall&#13;
Sidewalk,  11:03  p.m.   While   on  foot   patrol,&#13;
officer observed  a  female   sitting   on  a  side-&#13;
walk consuming   alcohol.   SUbject  fled   when&#13;
she saw the officer  but was  located  in  Ranger&#13;
Hall.  Subject   who   was   17,   was   cited   tor&#13;
underage  alcohol,    possession&#13;
of   tobacco&#13;
products   (under&#13;
age&#13;
18)    and    resisting/&#13;
obstructing a police  officer.&#13;
09/13/02&#13;
Inc  02-591   Trespassing/Unau-&#13;
thorized Presence,   Sports   &amp;  Activity   Center&#13;
locker room,  4:55   a.m.   Custodian    reported&#13;
two male subiects  stole  a binder  ciip  from  his&#13;
cart and were  using&#13;
it&#13;
to  pick  the  locker  room&#13;
lock&#13;
to get  items  for  a  soccer  trip.&#13;
Officers&#13;
arrived and  searched   the  area   but  subjects&#13;
had  left.  All   exterior    doors   to   SAC   were&#13;
secured.&#13;
Inc 02-592 Theft  From  Buiiding,   Union,  2:01&#13;
p.m. A start  member   reported   a  bowling   ball&#13;
and bag  stolen.   Union   staff   had  previously&#13;
removed items  from   old  lockers   and  stored&#13;
them in a locked  room.  No  witnesses   or sus-&#13;
peetsto the theft.  Loss  estimated   at  $70.00.&#13;
09/14/02&#13;
Inc  02-593   Personal   Property&#13;
Theft, University  Apartment's   parking  lot, 2:17&#13;
a.m.&#13;
A&#13;
pizza&#13;
delivery&#13;
person&#13;
reported&#13;
unknown  person    entered    his   vehicle&#13;
and&#13;
removed  a   large   pizza   valued    at   $30.00.&#13;
Nothing else  was  missing.&#13;
Inc 02-594  Underage   DrinKing,  Ranger  Hali,&#13;
2:30 a.m.  While   investigating    a  noise   com-&#13;
plaint,  officer   found    an   underage    drinking&#13;
party. Underage  alcohol  citations  were  issued&#13;
to  four  students.   Alcoholic   beverages    were&#13;
destroyed by the  officers.&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
09/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-595  Medical  Assist,  Stu-&#13;
dent   Health  Services,   12:04  p.m.  An  ill  stu-&#13;
dent  was  transported   to Aurora  Medical  Cen-&#13;
ter.&#13;
Inc  02-596   Fire  Alarm,   Ranger   Hall,   3rd&#13;
Floor,   11:42  p.m.   While   attempting   to  reat-&#13;
tach  a  pull  box  cover,  a  student  accidentally&#13;
set  off  an alarm.  Alarm  was  reset  and the  "all&#13;
clear"  given.&#13;
09/17/02&#13;
Inc  02-597   Criminal   Damage&#13;
to  State  Property/Underage    Alcohol,  Univer-&#13;
sity Apartments,   1:06 a.m. A student  reported&#13;
another   student   had  broken  a  window.  Offi-&#13;
cers  found  a male  SUbject at the scene with  a&#13;
bleeding  hand.  Subject  admitted  to  breaking&#13;
the  window.  Citations   were  issued  for  under-&#13;
age  alcohol  and  vandalism.&#13;
09/18/02&#13;
Inc  02-598   Personal   Property&#13;
Theft,   Comm.  Arts   lot,  1:01  p.m.  A  student&#13;
reported  her parking  permit  missing  from  her&#13;
parked  vehicle   which  had  a  partially  broken&#13;
window.&#13;
Replacement&#13;
permit&#13;
was&#13;
pur-&#13;
chased.&#13;
Inc  02-599  Traffic   Violation,   HWY  31  &amp;  E,&#13;
10:08  p.m.  A driver  was  cited  for  violation  of&#13;
traffic  signal/Red.&#13;
09/19/02&#13;
Inc 02-600  Unauthorized   Pres-&#13;
ence,  University   Apartments,   4:58  a.m.  Offi-&#13;
cer   answered    a   report   of   a   male   subject&#13;
refusing   to   leave   an  apartment.   Upon  offi-&#13;
cer's   arrival,   subject    had   already   left   the&#13;
room.  Officer  located  and  spoke  to  the  sub-&#13;
,-------------------------------,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
:&#13;
WIPZ NEW MEMBER    \&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
INFORMATION FORM&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
Perks ide Community   Radio :&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I   ~~:&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
E-Mail  Address:&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
Phone  Number:&#13;
:&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
Area  of  Interest&#13;
:&#13;
:  o&#13;
On-Air  Talent&#13;
:&#13;
:&#13;
r.J&#13;
Production&#13;
of&#13;
On-Air  Material&#13;
:&#13;
I&#13;
Cl  Promoting   the  Station&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
u&#13;
Equipment   Related  Tasks&#13;
:&#13;
:&#13;
r.J&#13;
Selecting&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Creating   On-Air  Programing&#13;
:&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
Return  To MOLN 0131 or&#13;
:&#13;
"&#13;
Drop  In the WIPZ Suggestion   Box&#13;
"&#13;
,-------------------------------~&#13;
Sept  26  -  Oct   10,2002&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Inc  02-605   Fire   Drill,   Molinaro   Hall,   11:12&#13;
a.m.   An   annual   drill   was   conducted    by&#13;
Parkside   Police.   The  building  was  evac-&#13;
uated  without  incident.&#13;
~&#13;
09/20/02&#13;
Inc  02-606  Medical  Assist,&#13;
Ranger  Hall,  3:00  a.m. Officer  responded&#13;
to  a  report  of  a visitor  with  possible  alco-&#13;
hol  poisoning  as  he  had  been  consuming&#13;
vodka  all  night  with  friends.   Subject  was&#13;
transported   to  Kenosha  Medical  Hospital&#13;
for treatment.   All alcohol  in the  room  was&#13;
confiscated  and destroyed  by the officers.&#13;
ject&#13;
regarding'&#13;
his  behavior.&#13;
Inc  02-607   Underage  Alcohol   Law,  Uni-&#13;
versity&#13;
Apartments,&#13;
3:43&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Officer&#13;
responded  to  an  anonymous  complaint  of an&#13;
t&#13;
under-age&#13;
drinking&#13;
party.&#13;
Officer&#13;
found&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
numerous  bottles  at the scene  but no signs of&#13;
an active  party.  Verbal warning  issued  to stu-&#13;
dent  tor  hosting  a party.&#13;
09/21/02&#13;
Inc 02-608  Underage  Alcohol&#13;
Law, University  Apartments,  12:39  a.m.   Offi-&#13;
cers  responded  to  a  complaint   of  an  under-&#13;
age  party/noise  complaint.   One  student  was&#13;
issued  a citation  for  underage  drinking.    Ver-&#13;
bal  warning   issued  for  hosting   the  drinking&#13;
party.&#13;
Inc 02-601  Traffic Accident,  Comm.  Arts  lot,&#13;
10:20  a.m.  A visitor  driving  in  a  traffic  lane,&#13;
was  struck  by a student  pUlling out of a park-&#13;
ing aisle.  State accident  report  completed.&#13;
Inc 02-609  Fire-Auto,  Ranger  Hall parking  lot,&#13;
5:09  p.m.  Officers   responding   to  a  car  fire&#13;
call,  found  the  vehicle  completely   consumed&#13;
in  flames.   Kenosha   Fire  Dept.  extinguished&#13;
the fire and and a fire investigator  responded.&#13;
'il'&#13;
No  other  cars  were  involved  and  there  were&#13;
no  injuries.Vehicie  was  towed  from  the  lot.&#13;
Inc  02-610   Traffic  Accident-Hit   &amp;  Run,  Uni-&#13;
versity  Apartments   parking  lot,  6:46  p.m.    A&#13;
student   reported   her  vehicle   had   been   hit&#13;
sometime  the  previous  day.  No  witnesses  or&#13;
suspects.   State  accident  report  completed.&#13;
Inc 02-602 Traffic Accident,  Outer  Loop Road&#13;
at CTH JR,  12:10 p.m. A student  whose vehi-&#13;
cle was  stopped for a stop sign was struck  by&#13;
another  student  who  advised  her brakes  had&#13;
temporarily  failed.  State  accident  report com-&#13;
pleted.&#13;
Inc  02-604   Agency   Assist,   30th   Av.e.,  50'&#13;
South  of  12th St., 3:24  p.m.   Officer  who was&#13;
dispatched   to  check  on  a  vehicle  in  a ditch,&#13;
stood  by until Kenosha  Sheriff  deputy  arrived&#13;
to  handle  the  case  as  the  incident  was  in&#13;
their  jurisdiction.&#13;
B&#13;
The Ran er News&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
If"""'"&#13;
Esme Cerridgynere Dragonflheinerstige&#13;
ArleS:&#13;
(March 21-April 19J&#13;
....OUl&#13;
economic&gt;  class&#13;
baS-ielt&#13;
you&#13;
befuddled about per-&#13;
centalJe&#13;
tipping. Do the servers a&#13;
lavOfandstay home to make one&#13;
ofJllUr&#13;
potato chip and Taco Bell&#13;
File&#13;
Sauce casseroles.&#13;
lllurus:&#13;
(April 2Q-May20)&#13;
Youfinally figure out that&#13;
'jOO1&#13;
daily planner is tailored for&#13;
people&#13;
with more important lives.&#13;
ClJall8ing&#13;
your section  tabs to&#13;
"Doodles&#13;
ofVarious Sandwiches,"&#13;
"RlIIldom&#13;
Thoughts"&#13;
and "Other&#13;
Stull"&#13;
could be a helpful step.&#13;
Gemini:(May 21-June 21)&#13;
Spice up your life by trying&#13;
something new and daring. Wear&#13;
your&#13;
flammable   pants.  But&#13;
beware.&#13;
it's gonna be a scorcher.&#13;
Oh,&#13;
and a Scorpio  wants  to&#13;
'observe"&#13;
you.&#13;
Cancer: (June 22-July 22)&#13;
You realize your getting too&#13;
old&#13;
too fast when sleeping till&#13;
4&#13;
pm&#13;
seems wasteful.  Find your&#13;
'inner&#13;
under-ager"&#13;
and learn from&#13;
your&#13;
true identity and beer your&#13;
selfto sleep on time.&#13;
Leo:&#13;
(July 23-Aug22)&#13;
Your stress could  be com-&#13;
pounded by troubles  in your&#13;
imaginary life, but trust me, your&#13;
real&#13;
life doesn't compare to the&#13;
hole in you imaginary Blowup&#13;
Brittany.&#13;
Virgo:&#13;
(Aug 23-Sept 22)&#13;
Your not paranoid;  the&#13;
lawn&#13;
mower man is following&#13;
YOU.your latte has an odd tasting&#13;
cream, and there is a "This end&#13;
up"sign tattooed to your bottom.&#13;
And&#13;
ifyou're a hamster that's not&#13;
a scientist it's an undergraduate.&#13;
Libra:(Sept 23-oct 23)&#13;
Your Aries  significant&#13;
other&#13;
decides to treat you to a&#13;
home cooked casserole. Remem-&#13;
ber&#13;
to bring your Pepcid ACand a&#13;
llOOdbook.&#13;
SCOrpIO:(Oct 24-Nov21)&#13;
Find  fulfillment  in small&#13;
ways. Setting your own pants on&#13;
fire may be painful, so find an&#13;
unsuspecting  Gemini and see&#13;
how they deal with this sudden&#13;
change.&#13;
Sagittarius: (Nov 22-Dec 21)&#13;
"You can't  succeed  if you&#13;
don't&#13;
try"&#13;
What kind of lame&#13;
advice is that? You can't fail if&#13;
you don't try either! Trust me,&#13;
your better off spending the next&#13;
week  not  trying  to do any-&#13;
thing ...except trying not to try&#13;
DUHI&#13;
Capricorn: (Dec 22-Jan 19)&#13;
Lonely? Depressed? No one&#13;
answering your calls? Help is on&#13;
the way. Unfortunately, the para-&#13;
medics will be pissed that you&#13;
called 911 "just to talk," Oh well.&#13;
They're on their way, might as&#13;
well see what happens  when&#13;
you drop your radio in the bath-&#13;
tub.&#13;
Aquarius: (Jan 2Q-Feb21)&#13;
If&#13;
your disgusted with&#13;
your career, just think back on&#13;
some of the ridiculously horri-&#13;
ble jobs you've held to get you to&#13;
where you are today. No,no, no!&#13;
Fries to grill is a big promotion_&#13;
Pretty soon you'll be off to the&#13;
true college.  Hamburger  Col-&#13;
lege!&#13;
Pisces: (Feb 22-March 20)&#13;
A priest, a buddhist and&#13;
Fidel Castro walk into a bar and&#13;
sit down next to a Catastrologer:&#13;
Castro leans over and demands.&#13;
"What are you writing?"  The&#13;
priest thinks it is blasphemous&#13;
and  the buddhist  doesn't  so&#13;
there is an argument and Catro&#13;
dropS his cigar on the Pisces For-&#13;
tune Tea Leaf-shaped tarot cards&#13;
burning the horrorscope. Not so&#13;
much a joke as an ex£use lor&#13;
you lack of a reading.  Pretend&#13;
your omnipresent and read the·&#13;
other signs.&#13;
8&gt;2"':  .'"'~~_:;~~~&#13;
Set26-0ctIO,2002    Paell&#13;
BOARDGAMES&#13;
CANDYLAND&#13;
By&#13;
Deborah G. Hahm&#13;
GUESSTURES&#13;
PICTIONARY&#13;
AXIS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
ALLIES&#13;
BALDERDASH&#13;
BATILESHIP&#13;
TABOO&#13;
CHESS&#13;
CHUTES&#13;
&amp;&#13;
LADDERS&#13;
CLUE&#13;
CHECKERS&#13;
MONOPOLY&#13;
OUTBURST&#13;
PAYDAY&#13;
LIFE&#13;
RISK&#13;
SCATTERGORIES&#13;
SCRABBLE&#13;
SORRY&#13;
TRIVIAL PURSUIT&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
A&#13;
X&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
A&#13;
L&#13;
L&#13;
t&#13;
E&#13;
S&#13;
E&#13;
-&#13;
H&#13;
S&#13;
A&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
E&#13;
0&#13;
L&#13;
A&#13;
a&#13;
R&#13;
T&#13;
A&#13;
T&#13;
t&#13;
U&#13;
N&#13;
M&#13;
E&#13;
y&#13;
R&#13;
A&#13;
N&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
T&#13;
C&#13;
t&#13;
P&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
E&#13;
L&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
A&#13;
R&#13;
C&#13;
S&#13;
T&#13;
T&#13;
U&#13;
C&#13;
A&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
C&#13;
H&#13;
E&#13;
S&#13;
S&#13;
a&#13;
E&#13;
y&#13;
S&#13;
S&#13;
0&#13;
U&#13;
R&#13;
a&#13;
s&#13;
c&#13;
A&#13;
T&#13;
T&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
G&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
S&#13;
S&#13;
A&#13;
L&#13;
H&#13;
L&#13;
N&#13;
•&#13;
T&#13;
F&#13;
Y&#13;
U&#13;
U&#13;
0&#13;
U&#13;
C&#13;
y&#13;
T&#13;
A&#13;
e&#13;
H&#13;
U&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
A&#13;
P&#13;
0&#13;
a&#13;
s&#13;
e&#13;
L&#13;
T&#13;
T&#13;
0&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
M&#13;
e&#13;
y&#13;
L&#13;
e&#13;
B&#13;
T&#13;
R&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
A&#13;
L&#13;
0&#13;
K&#13;
C&#13;
e&#13;
A&#13;
A&#13;
L&#13;
B&#13;
0&#13;
U&#13;
p&#13;
0&#13;
F&#13;
A&#13;
E&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
G&#13;
A&#13;
A&#13;
0&#13;
M&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
K&#13;
S&#13;
R&#13;
R&#13;
W&#13;
V&#13;
•&#13;
Y&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
N&#13;
y&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
S&#13;
R&#13;
H&#13;
S&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
F&#13;
A&#13;
A&#13;
M&#13;
0&#13;
,&#13;
0&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Y&#13;
A&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
R&#13;
0&#13;
F&#13;
R&#13;
P&#13;
M&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
R&#13;
0&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
p&#13;
T&#13;
N&#13;
J&#13;
0&#13;
S&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
U&#13;
T&#13;
S&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
u&#13;
G&#13;
y&#13;
r&#13;
..........?!&#13;
Sept 26 - Oct 10.2002&#13;
eat to maintain a healthy diet? Well a survey&#13;
was conducted  to see what&#13;
ems keep in their fridge.&#13;
It&#13;
is not surprising to&#13;
what cOllege studentS deem "healthy' or a "necessity".&#13;
Fridge #1&#13;
Fridge&#13;
411&#13;
1 jar  01 mild&#13;
pi~nte  sauce. half lilled bottle&#13;
of ketchup, 1 butter container,&#13;
but is it really butter?  12 pack&#13;
of mountain lightning soda 1&#13;
unidentified  bowl bowl cov-&#13;
ered only with ding wrap. odd&#13;
smell.seems to&#13;
be&#13;
originating&#13;
from here. 1 jar 01 PB&#13;
&amp;&#13;
J&#13;
mixed. 4 containers of milk, 1&#13;
spoiled   -  expiration   date&#13;
8101102,1 contents unknown. I&#13;
a third 01 the way lull, I with&#13;
about a swallow left but obvi-&#13;
ously still enough  to save,  2&#13;
carton 01 eggs maybe one is&#13;
spoiled. also could be adding&#13;
to odd smelll l , 3 hall eaten&#13;
loaves 01 bread,  I to,&#13;
go&#13;
box&#13;
(surveyor not brave enough to&#13;
check contents ), 2 tupperware&#13;
containers not sure what was in&#13;
these either and  its probably&#13;
best to keep  it that way, 1/3&#13;
filled juice container,  I jar of&#13;
Prego spaghetti sauce, I box 01&#13;
stick butter - half gone&#13;
Fridge #2&#13;
3&#13;
bottles&#13;
of&#13;
Bud&#13;
Light&#13;
and 8 cans of Bud&#13;
Light&#13;
(Must&#13;
have&#13;
been  a ~&#13;
good&#13;
weekend!)&#13;
</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="84828">
              <text>The Ranger News, Volume 33, issue 2, September 26, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="84829">
              <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="84830">
              <text>9/26/2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="84833">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="84834">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="84835">
              <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="84836">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="84837">
              <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="84838">
              <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="84839">
              <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="84840">
              <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="84841">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3823">
      <name>9/11</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3692">
      <name>hispanic heritage month</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3824">
      <name>multicultural office</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2913">
      <name>pool</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
