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            <text>Careers in Student Affairs Month</text>
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            <text>Men's Soccer&#13;
Page 6'&#13;
20000&#13;
""""&#13;
BYMEGAN WHEELERSHUEMATE&#13;
plmomm@yahoo.com&#13;
The Memory Walk,&#13;
which brought between 300&#13;
and 350 participants, came to&#13;
UW-Parkside on Oct. 7. The&#13;
Alzheimer's Association of&#13;
Wisconsin and Uw-Parkside.&#13;
work together to make the&#13;
walk possible every year.&#13;
The UW-Parkside walk&#13;
was one of four that day&#13;
throughout southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
At the walk, there were&#13;
numerous stories of family&#13;
members who were either&#13;
affected by Alzheimer's&#13;
or who had passed away&#13;
from the disease. Helen&#13;
Sakalowski supports the&#13;
chapter through_donations in&#13;
the memory of her father.&#13;
Sakalowski said,&#13;
"After my husband passed,&#13;
] prayed to God. He sent an&#13;
angel and that angel helped&#13;
push me to volunteer at&#13;
Daybreak ... "&#13;
Daybreak is a program&#13;
for those affected with&#13;
Alzheimer's or dementia. It&#13;
is a way for loved ones to&#13;
remain at borne instead of at&#13;
a nursing home. Sakalowski's&#13;
father "attended Daybreak&#13;
three days a week, and 11&#13;
was a blessing [... ] it was a&#13;
way to keep him in his own&#13;
home,"&#13;
Five-time gold medal.&#13;
winner Bonnie Blair also&#13;
attended the event in memory&#13;
of her mother. Two weeks&#13;
after her mother's passing,&#13;
she came to Uw-Parkside&#13;
for the walk. "I have been&#13;
coming to the walk for fOUT&#13;
years now. My mother&#13;
had dementia. She was&#13;
diagnosed in 2002 and passed&#13;
away two years ago."&#13;
"1know the jus&#13;
and outs don't only affect&#13;
the patient. but the family&#13;
members as well. Some&#13;
patients can even cover&#13;
up their symptoms, since&#13;
.different parts of the brain&#13;
are affected. like my' mother&#13;
did," Blair said.&#13;
The walkers hope the&#13;
Memory Walk will help&#13;
to stamp out Alzheimer's.&#13;
Donations for the walk were&#13;
given either individually or&#13;
through businesses. The&#13;
walk is a major funding&#13;
source for the southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin chapter of the&#13;
Alzheimer's Association.&#13;
Paulette Kissee, regional&#13;
services manager, works in&#13;
an office,located in Tallent&#13;
Hall, for the Alzheimer's&#13;
Association. "There are&#13;
numerous opportunities&#13;
for students to volunteer.&#13;
Students can come to my&#13;
office and fill out application&#13;
forms whenever they have&#13;
the time. They can also&#13;
call m~ at 595-2387 for&#13;
more information on ways&#13;
to volunteer or for any&#13;
information."&#13;
Kirby Awarded&#13;
" ,&#13;
October J 7, 2006&#13;
OGSOUT?&#13;
PAGE 3&#13;
Careers in Student&#13;
Affairs Month&#13;
highest award any faculty or&#13;
staff member can receive.&#13;
On receiving the award,&#13;
Dr. Kirby said thaI "anytime&#13;
you receive an award where&#13;
your peers feel that you have&#13;
done work that is befitting to&#13;
the institution, 1think it is a&#13;
very humbling [and honorable]&#13;
experience."&#13;
Dr. Kirby's started her&#13;
career teaching for about eight&#13;
years elementary and middle&#13;
school students with learn mg.&#13;
emotional, and/or psychiatric&#13;
disabjIities.&#13;
She then left the field of&#13;
teaching for a business position.&#13;
from Student Activities, and&#13;
Steve McLaughlin, the current&#13;
vice chancellor for Student&#13;
Services and the dean of&#13;
students.&#13;
Four days after the open&#13;
bouse. the Career Center&#13;
offered to help guide students&#13;
toward perspective job&#13;
opportunities. "The program&#13;
focused on professional&#13;
organizations, how to write&#13;
a vita. getting involved,&#13;
assistantships and much&#13;
more."&#13;
The last of the activities&#13;
will be offered on Tuesday.&#13;
October 24, where a Bagel&#13;
Brochure Bash is scheduled&#13;
to take place on the Union&#13;
Bridge from 9-11 a.m, "This&#13;
programs gives students an&#13;
opportunity to browse through&#13;
over 15 regional universities&#13;
that offer Graduate programs&#13;
in College Student Affairs."&#13;
Kwiatkowski believes&#13;
that those who attend all four&#13;
activities will&#13;
gain a wealth of knowledge.&#13;
"I thiak the true benefit of the&#13;
month will be for students&#13;
to get a beuer understanding&#13;
of aU the career possibilities&#13;
that fall under Student&#13;
Affairs. Student Affairs&#13;
offers positions in Student&#13;
Activities. Residence Life.&#13;
Intramural. career counseling.&#13;
academic advising. Student&#13;
Support Services. international&#13;
programs. multicultural&#13;
student affairs. and the list&#13;
goes on and on.&#13;
11'e field offers a&#13;
variet"· of career paths.&#13;
and the amount of Job&#13;
available IS quite endle .......&#13;
Generally. students enJOY&#13;
their experience ...and the&#13;
individual thcv meet while&#13;
thev are at ...ch~)I. and&#13;
Ihi~ month gives them an&#13;
opportunity to learn more&#13;
about these influential&#13;
profe ...sional-. ,.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
FUND&#13;
Page 10&#13;
BY BRETT HOUDEK&#13;
houdeOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
Dr. Renee" Sartin Kirby,&#13;
UW-Parkside's coordinator of&#13;
Disability Services. received the&#13;
Academic Staff Distinguished&#13;
Service Award this year. This&#13;
award is presented each year&#13;
to a faculty or staff member&#13;
who has a record of ex.ceptional&#13;
service within the university.&#13;
She was nominated by&#13;
her peers in the spring of .&#13;
2006. Chancellor John Keaung&#13;
presented the award to Dr. Kirby&#13;
during a ceremony on Aug:&#13;
31. This particular award IS the&#13;
BY ROBERT ROSATI&#13;
robertrosatl Obotmail.corn&#13;
Careers in Student Affairs&#13;
Month was bracketed for the&#13;
month of October by Student&#13;
Activities. Tony Kwiatowski&#13;
organized four different&#13;
activities on campus aimed&#13;
toward making information&#13;
available to students interested&#13;
in pursuing careers in student&#13;
affairs.&#13;
This year is the first that&#13;
Careers in Student Affairs&#13;
month will be implemented&#13;
here on campus according&#13;
to Kwiatowski. "I consulted&#13;
many professionals across&#13;
the campus to gel their input&#13;
on what they thought would&#13;
work. The fine professionals&#13;
at the Career Center were very&#13;
instrumental in the planning&#13;
process as was the Director of&#13;
"Student Life;' he said&#13;
Once be received&#13;
feedback, Kwiatowski&#13;
carefully selected the four&#13;
'activities that were to be&#13;
held on campus. A Panel&#13;
Discussion was held Oct. 9&#13;
"thatullcwed students the&#13;
opportunity to ask a variety of&#13;
Student Affairs professionals&#13;
questions about their career&#13;
tracks and some of the positive&#13;
and negative aspects of their&#13;
jobs."&#13;
An open house was&#13;
held in Main Place on Oct.&#13;
12, which gave students&#13;
the opportunity to speak to&#13;
representatives from various&#13;
departments in Student&#13;
Affairs who work on campus&#13;
about the job industries in&#13;
which they work. Among&#13;
those available for students&#13;
to talk to were Tina Wagster-&#13;
Plamier from the Advising&#13;
Center. Michelina Young&#13;
from the Counseling Center.&#13;
Mary Xiong from the Office&#13;
of Multicultural Student&#13;
Affairs. Shauna Hodges&#13;
from Residence Life. Amber&#13;
Engle from Alumni Relation s,&#13;
Stephanie Sirvataka-Marshall&#13;
he became a consultant for&#13;
a management convuhing&#13;
company. However ....he suid me&#13;
job involved 100 much traveling,&#13;
Dr. Kirby switched ge ..t.n.&#13;
again and applied for a po,ilil?"&#13;
at UW-Parbide. The umvcrvtty&#13;
was looking for a coordinator 01&#13;
Disability Services. which was&#13;
a new ~siuon at the time&#13;
There were only 1')0&#13;
students on the campu ...who had&#13;
disabilities at thar ume. AOOUI&#13;
75 of those studenL....ho\\c\ er.&#13;
had learmng di"b'lines. uWparkside&#13;
was lookmg fnr&#13;
someone who had a backpround&#13;
in learning disabilities. Dr.&#13;
CONTINUE page 3&#13;
"Come get tha. t good copy.T"&#13;
Men occer&#13;
P e6&#13;
y Awarded&#13;
8 RRE1TH DEK&#13;
hour.ieO(l( J@u, p.~d u&#13;
1 Co11ze get that good copy!&#13;
V R 'ITY&#13;
D&#13;
age I&#13;
Career&#13;
Affai&#13;
t he r I , 006&#13;
n&#13;
j&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha. WI 53141&#13;
Phone:(262)595.2287&#13;
Fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Ads: uwp_ods@yahoo.com&#13;
Website: rangernews@uwp.edu&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Andrew C. We~brook&#13;
WeslbOO/@uwp.edu&#13;
Design Manager&#13;
Soohyun Kim&#13;
Kim00009@uwp.edu&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Porminder SinGh&#13;
SinghOOOO@uwp.euu&#13;
Advertising Manciger&#13;
~ Henry D. Gaskins&#13;
GaskiOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
News Poge Editor&#13;
Koitlyn Ulmer&#13;
eopoe666@Yohoo.com&#13;
Sports Page Edit"r&#13;
Tyrone POylon&#13;
POylo004@uwp.edu&#13;
Arfs and Cuiture Page Editor&#13;
D. While&#13;
White041@uwp.edu&#13;
Photo Manager&#13;
Don Torkilsen&#13;
dlorkO/@yohoo.com&#13;
Illustrator&#13;
Brihany Farina&#13;
ortzyonimegirl@ool.com&#13;
Design Assistant&#13;
Erica Knutsen&#13;
knu~008@uwp.edu&#13;
StaH Reperte"&#13;
Robert RosoH&#13;
RosoIOO!@uwp.edu&#13;
Bre" Houdek&#13;
DopeyOl@wi.rr.com&#13;
Jon; Denecki&#13;
Sffimil33@uwp.edu&#13;
lennifer PinIer&#13;
pinle006@uwp.edu&#13;
TIno S~ouss&#13;
slrouOl/@uwp.edu&#13;
(ossondro Wheeler&#13;
wheeI019@uwp.edu&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
- Tony Kinnard&#13;
dork~or 13_ 200 l@yohoo.com&#13;
Zochory Keehon&#13;
Keeho003@uwp.edu&#13;
Copy Editors&#13;
Advisor&#13;
. Aaron Fanning&#13;
zodio~hodoW@holmo;l.com&#13;
Kotie Zimpel&#13;
timpe001@uwp.edu&#13;
. TJ Hysell&#13;
Hysel001@uwp.edu&#13;
lud.h logsdon&#13;
logsdon@uwp.edu.&#13;
Mission Statement&#13;
The Ranger News strives to&#13;
inlorm, educate, and engage&#13;
the UW-furkside cammunity&#13;
publishing well-written,&#13;
accurate student [ournolisrn on&#13;
. a basis.&#13;
The Ranger News has meetings every Monday&#13;
at noon. All Students and faculty ofUw-Parksidc&#13;
are welcome. Please feel free to attend. Have any&#13;
comments. concerns, questions. or Story ideas?&#13;
Please e-mail us at: rangemews@uwp.edu .&#13;
We are located at WyllieD139C&#13;
Each person may take one newspaper per issue&#13;
date. Extra newspapers cart be purchased for $1&#13;
apiece. Newspapers can be taken on a first come,&#13;
first serve basis, meaning thai once they are gone,&#13;
they are gone. We work. on the honor system,&#13;
but violators will be prosecuted ffi for theft. Faculty members and&#13;
students organizations who&#13;
wish to use The Ranger News •&#13;
in classrooms should consult the ASSOOA1'm&#13;
editor-In-chief to reserve however COUIGIoQl&#13;
many free copies they wish to use. 11II55&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
GS TO DO&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18,2006&#13;
11:00 8:00 MICHELLE TOBI#ol6: MARGARET&#13;
LEININGER&#13;
Arts 00 1:00 ,&#13;
INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSHIP HOUR&#13;
12:00 l:00 NOON CONCERT: MARK EICHNER, TRUMPET&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
12:00 PM-l :00 PM&#13;
RAINBOW ALLIANCE AMENDMENT DISCUSSION&#13;
Main Place&#13;
4:00 PM-8:00 PM&#13;
WIPZ PATIO CONCERT&#13;
Outside Unton&#13;
9:00 PM-11:00 PM&#13;
FOREIGN FILM: 'PARADISE Now'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19,2006&#13;
11:00 AM-5:00 PM&#13;
ART. EXHIBITION: MICHELLE TOBIA Be MARGARET&#13;
LEININGER&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
12:00 PM-l:00 PM&#13;
CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES STUDY ABROAD&#13;
INFO, SESSiON&#13;
Tallent Hall 180&#13;
4:00 PM-6:00 PM&#13;
MEN'S SOCCER VS. UPPER IOWA&#13;
Wood Road Field&#13;
6:30 PM-7:30 PM&#13;
THEATRE GALA CELEBRATION: 'PRIDE AND PREDJUDICE'&#13;
HOUR&#13;
Communication Main Theater&#13;
7:00 PM-11:00 PM&#13;
JNl"'~~IPJIIIRI!QWM "",, .. _~&#13;
The Den&#13;
7:00 PM-9:00 PM&#13;
'GREGOR MENDEL: PLANTING THE SEEDS OF GENETICS'&#13;
WITH GREG MAYER&#13;
Ubrary Overiook 2nd 30 9:45 PM&#13;
UW"PAR,KSIDE COMMUNITV BAND REHEARSAL&#13;
Arts 0-118&#13;
7:30 PM-10:30 PM&#13;
THEATRE GALA CELEBRATION: 'PRIDE AND PRE.JUDICE'&#13;
SHOW&#13;
Communication Arts Main Theater&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2006&#13;
9:00 4:00 WORKSHOP: HELPING DYING PEOPLE ATTAIN DIGNITY 81:&#13;
PEACE&#13;
Mt. Pleasant Lutheran Church&#13;
10:00 AM-12:30 PM&#13;
PA.RKSIOE THEATRE PRESENTS 'PRIDE 8c PREJUDICE'&#13;
3:30 PM-5:00 PM&#13;
GENDER, RACE, AND CLASS BOOK CLUB-: THE SPARROW&#13;
Union 207&#13;
7:00 PM-8:30 PM&#13;
VOLLEYBALL VS., BELLARMINE UNIVERSITY&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium, SAC&#13;
-&#13;
7:30 PM-l0:00 PM&#13;
PARKSIDE THEATRE PRESENTS IPRIDE &amp;: PREJUDICE'&#13;
Com. Arts HEA {TBA}&#13;
8:00 PM-9:00 PM&#13;
FALL FEST: FREDERICK WINTERS, HYPNOTIST&#13;
Union Square&#13;
SATURDAY, 9CTOBER 21, 2006&#13;
10:00 AM-l:00 PM&#13;
FALL FEST: FUN FA.IR&#13;
Union Square&#13;
1:00 PM-2:30 PM&#13;
VOLLEYBALL vs. NORTHERN KENTUCKY&#13;
De strnone Gymnasium, SAC&#13;
2:00 PM-6:00 PM&#13;
FALL FEST: DODGEBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
SAC&#13;
6:00 PM-9:00 PM&#13;
FALL FEST: CASINO NIGHT&#13;
Union Square&#13;
7:30 PM-l0:00 PM&#13;
THEATRE 'PRIDE 8c PREJUDICE'&#13;
Com. Arts Theatre HEA {TBA}&#13;
9:00 PM-11:00 PM&#13;
. FALL FEST: PAT MCCURDY Be BONFIRE&#13;
Union Square&#13;
October 17, 200&#13;
P LICE&#13;
BLOTTER&#13;
10105/0606-614&#13;
Medical Assistance. Greenquist Hall. 8:30am. A professor&#13;
called and reported a student appeared lethargic and struck&#13;
head on a counter top. Officer on scene, student appears in&#13;
daze. Medical Units on scene, student transported to Kenosha&#13;
Hospital. All Units cleared.&#13;
10/05/0606-615&#13;
. Theft - All Other. SAC Lot. 3:52pm. Officer observed Stop&#13;
Sign at SAC Lot Exit had been taken. Officer cleared.&#13;
10/06/0606-616 Theft - From Building. Ranger Hall. I:47prn.&#13;
Complainant reported the theft of cash from the Residence Life&#13;
Office. Officertakes report, Officer cleared.&#13;
10/06/0606-617&#13;
Alarm - Fire. PHY ED BLDG. 8:29pm. Caller reported a kid&#13;
had pulled the Pull-Station. Officer on scene, no fire or smoke.&#13;
Alarm reset, Officer cleared.&#13;
10/06/0606-618&#13;
Traffic Violation. 4)00 Block of CTH E. citation issued to&#13;
Milan Zivanovic for Disorderly Conduct. Officers cleared.&#13;
10108/0606-619&#13;
Traffic Violation, University Apartment. II :36pm. Citation&#13;
issued to Keyauna J lrby for Driving on Sidewalk. Officers&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/09/0606-620&#13;
Alarm - Fire. Molinaro Hall. 5:46pm. UWPPD Alarm Panel&#13;
activated. Officer responded, No firelNo smoke. Alarm panel&#13;
re-set. Officers cleared.&#13;
10109/0606-621&#13;
Theft- From Building. University Apartments. 9:20pm.&#13;
Complainant reports theft of wallet. Officer takes report.&#13;
Officers cleared.&#13;
10/10/0606-622&#13;
Disorderly Conduct. RangerHall. 1:39am. Officer respond&#13;
to Heated discussion in process. One verbal warning issued.&#13;
Officers cleared.&#13;
IO/LO/0606- 623&#13;
Agency Assist. Pike River Woods. 1O:45am. Complainant&#13;
reports smoke coming from the Pike River Woods area.&#13;
Officers respond, 4 subjects were issued citations by DNR&#13;
warden for Snagging Fish. Officers cleared.&#13;
1O/1lI0606-624&#13;
Fire Drill. Cbild Care Center. 8:51am. Officer conducted Fire&#13;
Drill per request CCC staff. All evacuated safely, no problems&#13;
noted. Alarm reset, Officer cleared .&#13;
10/11/0606-625&#13;
Fire Drill. Greenquist Hall. 12:43pm. Officer conducted Fire&#13;
Drill per request Safety Officer. All levels evacuated safely, no&#13;
problems noted. Alarm reset, Officer cleared.&#13;
10/11/0606-626&#13;
Theft - From Building. University Apartments. 8:09pm.&#13;
Complainant reported electronic items being stolen. Officer&#13;
takes report, Officers cleared.&#13;
10/10/0606-627&#13;
Other UWS ) 8 Violation. Ranger Hall. 8: 15pm. Citation issued&#13;
for Skateboards, Rollers etc. - On UW Lands. Officer cleared.&#13;
10/12/0606-628&#13;
Liquor Law Violation. University Apartments. 5: 06pm. Citation&#13;
issued for Underage Drinking/Consume. Officers cleared .&#13;
10112/0606-629&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop Road @ CTH JR. 9:30pm.&#13;
Citation issued to Jessica L Evans for Fail/Stop at Sign.&#13;
Officers cleared. .&#13;
LO/12/0606-630&#13;
Traffic Violation. 4500 Block of CTH E. 9:32pm. Citation&#13;
issued to Shawn A Kelly for Speeding. Officer cleared.&#13;
10/12/0606-63 J&#13;
Traffic Violation. RSDC Lot, 4056 12th St. 9:40pm. Citations&#13;
issued to Joshua J Wiinamaki for Operating While Intoxicated&#13;
and Deposit of Human Waste on UW-Lands. Wiinamaki&#13;
transported to Kenosha Public Safety Building "Jail". Officers&#13;
cleared.&#13;
2&#13;
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..--,,News&#13;
DWood Rocd&#13;
Keno,ho, W1 262}595 2211&#13;
Fo.x; 2&amp;2) 595.229.5&#13;
Ads; uwp adi@ychOG.com&#13;
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zodiacs'1cilaw@ho1m11ll.mm&#13;
leZ.I&#13;
zimpeOOl @uwp.iioo&#13;
TJH~&#13;
Rys DOl@uwp,t!LJ&#13;
Ju ,1 · La.gsclfll\&#13;
l.ogsdori@uwp.edu&#13;
Mi11ion Stalemenl&#13;
Rori9er i nfurm, ed uccte1 end engo_ge&#13;
VW·f\nk,,ce c0rnrnunrly&#13;
by well•writttm,&#13;
occyrate loomcli5m c weekly New&#13;
WEONESDAY,OCTOBER 11 :00 AM-8;00 PM&#13;
ART EXHIBITION: MICH LL OBI &amp; MARC.AR T&#13;
LEIN NGER&#13;
Com. rt Gallery&#13;
12:00 PM&#13;
l :OO PM ~&#13;
INTE NATIONAL F I OSHIP" HOU&#13;
Molinaro Hall 109&#13;
2:00 PM-1 :00 PM&#13;
ARK EiC R, T LIMPET&#13;
M OM N DI CU -10&#13;
C T&#13;
FORE G FILM. PA ADISE OW'&#13;
LI.. TO IA MA~ il.RET&#13;
TUDIE TU Y BRO D&#13;
""' N' 90 C V . UP ER to A&#13;
30 7:30 T EATRE CELEBR TIO P ICE A DP OJUDI E&#13;
SOCIAL Communlca ion Arts Mam Thea r&#13;
00 11:00 W'IPZ UNP~lltC~II~&#13;
Th Oen&#13;
00 9:00 PL TING SEE.O GEN IC '&#13;
MAVER&#13;
Library Overlook Floor&#13;
7:30 PM-9:45 PM&#13;
UW•PARKSIDE COMMUNITY REHE.AR&amp;AL&#13;
Com D-118&#13;
30 10:30 CELEl!IRATION: PAE.JUDICE&#13;
Thea er&#13;
20. 2008&#13;
9;00 AM-4:00 PM&#13;
WORKSHOP: DYING DIGNITY 8c&#13;
P!:ACE&#13;
Churc-.h&#13;
00 12:3Q PARKS DE THEATRI! 8t PREJUDICE'&#13;
Com. Arts Theatre HEA {TBA}&#13;
30 5:00 G£ND R, .i.NO Boo CLUB~ TH~ 00 8:30 V • 8ELLARMINE U&#13;
Gymnas um_, 30 10:00 ER51TV&#13;
PA K 1DE: RI!'. E 6 'PRIDE &amp; P ~JUDli=&#13;
Theatre 00 9:00 F' ST: FR DERICK Un,on quar&#13;
OCTOBER 21 00 1:00 F L Fu FAI&#13;
00 2:30 VOLl.E A.LL- V • NORTH RN KEN'rUCKY&#13;
simon 00 6:00 ALL F ST: DCDGEBAl. 00 9:00 FA L F' T: CA INO Squa&#13;
30 10·00 PARKSIDE TtH!ATRlt PRESENTS •PR D£ &amp; Com BA}&#13;
A.LL EBTr PA.l" f',tCC:U F!DY 8c BON I A&#13;
I W'l0/0606-622&#13;
17. 2&#13;
pin, it.arion&#13;
al • Offic&#13;
. Uni..,·eniry p rtmentJ • ·t w et. tak s ConducL Ranger Hall. Offic r discu s.ion proce!&gt;~. Onu v rbal is~ued.&#13;
lO/HJ/_&#13;
gency i. l Pik~ Ri-.. OO&lt;f_... 10:ornpla.inanl&#13;
rep ns moke tbc Pi Rii.erWo area,&#13;
0 I.ken; ubj cu h•med ciratio D R&#13;
nngging fi~h Offi rs I 1 l /06 06--62&#13;
Child Can: Center- :.51 [lffi. condu.cled riJI requ l s ff. ev nated af ly, problem~&#13;
r t. cJ are I W I 1 /06 {:IM)25&#13;
Drill Greenqnist l 2;Office c-ondu.cted fire&#13;
Drill Pef reque t afety Offi er. l el· e\·a,cu ted safel}". oo&#13;
problem~ res.e OffiCL'T clcari;:1:t&#13;
~r&#13;
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iquor La~ Violation nive ity Apruum:nL,. pm. is~ued for ml rage Drill mg/Con Uffi{:'. ornce cleared.&#13;
1olutiun. utc Lu R , d @ 3Upm.&#13;
i w.:-d Lo Je~ ic LEvan. for FaLI/ to at deared.&#13;
r c-rn E. :Jlpm. i1.ation&#13;
pecding. Offic cleare •&#13;
L L, 05 lNth t 9:4-llpm. Cit.auuns&#13;
is. ucL.l t Joshua 'iiruun I for mllm:: V ile lmoucnti!(!&#13;
und Ot:po~il 11f \/astc n W-Land . · 11nam· ·1&#13;
lfun p rtcJ lL ~enosha ubli afe1y •J T'. Oftl •er.,&#13;
cleared&#13;
..&#13;
'11491 ;&#13;
.,,'&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
er from the Editor&#13;
110UW·Parkside. It's been a while since we've had a Letter from tbe&#13;
'. not something that Iplan on doing on a regular basis, but there are&#13;
that Iwant to say. There have been some shake-ups in The Ranger&#13;
as of late, and we decided that if these things had happened in any&#13;
_tioitI_ZIIli'on, we would have reported On them, so it would be unethical of publish our own internal affairs in the same way.&#13;
aoyone who regularly takes the time to read our staff list on page&#13;
y have noticed my promotion to editor-in-chief after the second issue.&#13;
Yo Christina Fanning, who had been editor-in-chief, was not eligible to&#13;
a student organization executive board. Our executive board met and&#13;
that we would create the position of managing editor, which we then&#13;
to Christina during that meeting.&#13;
After a week or two, the point was made during our executive board&#13;
that we may have done something unethical in that action. According&#13;
~ Ranger News' constitution, we should have an editor-in-chief, executive&#13;
. ~ graphic design manager. business manager, and advertising manager. Our&#13;
board felt that the position of managing editor. a non-exec board position.&#13;
essentially be laking tbe place of the executive editor pcsition. We decided&#13;
t.bis was unethical of us on two counts. First, we would be effectively&#13;
iug anexecutive board position for which we could potentially have&#13;
. ed, eligible candidates. Second, we had created a position, managing editor,&#13;
not offered it to the rest of the staff; we had just created it and offered it to&#13;
ristina Without announcing the position to our staff and accepting applications&#13;
r it&#13;
Because of this, the four of us left on the exec board decided to close&#13;
managing editor position and announce that we would be taking applications&#13;
an executive editor, who would complete the five-member executive board&#13;
our constitution demands. Christina wanted to emphasize to the staff that&#13;
would still be there for the organization. Sbe said that she was sad with&#13;
change of 'Position and the situation but proud of The Ranger News for&#13;
ngthening the organization through the most important article, the constitution.&#13;
We may not fill the position (We won't !ill the position if we cannot find&#13;
right applicant.), but we deemed it necessary to try. As an executive board, we&#13;
e an error in judgment, and Ipersonally regret the way we went about things.&#13;
Honestly, this isn't a letter Ireally wanted to write. However, if The&#13;
ger News is to be trusted as a source of news and information, we have to be&#13;
Ie to report on ourselves as we would report on anyone else. Also, we feel that&#13;
e need to be fair and ethical in our hiring process. On that point, I want to use&#13;
is forum to let the student body know that we are hiring right now, as always. In&#13;
ovember, we will be nominating candidates and voting for a new editor-in-chief.&#13;
I(if! don't fail any of my classes) will be graduating in December. I want to&#13;
assureeveryone that I will still do my best to serve The Ranger News, as 1 have&#13;
orthe last year and a half.&#13;
That's about all J bave to say. I hope that this will be the last letter that I&#13;
vrite this semester, both because I feel thai The Ranger News has more important&#13;
eas On which 1 can spend my time and because [ doubt that any of you really.&#13;
"antto hear from me on a weekly basis. So. with that in mind, thanks for reading,&#13;
d here's hoping there no next time.&#13;
DR. KIRBY CONTI NUE&#13;
Kirby was hired for the job on&#13;
October 21, 1991.&#13;
At the lime, Dr. Kirby&#13;
was finishing her Master's&#13;
degree. SInce she is a firm&#13;
believer in lifelong learning,&#13;
she decided to continue her&#13;
'education. She went on to earn&#13;
her Ph. D., with an emphasis In&#13;
curriculum and instruction.&#13;
Thinking about her&#13;
career choice, Dr. Kirby said, "1&#13;
still get up in the morning and&#13;
love coming to this job."&#13;
Dr. Kirby always hears&#13;
questiODsJrom students about&#13;
which jobs or career paths will&#13;
allow them to make the most&#13;
money. "People make a living by&#13;
doing what they love and what&#13;
they're good at," she said. .&#13;
Dr. Kirby wanted to give&#13;
the student body at UW·Parkside&#13;
some advice: "Find your niche;&#13;
find out what it is that you're good&#13;
at doing; find out your passion and&#13;
what you love to do." She added. ':If&#13;
you learn to think outside the box, It&#13;
will really translate into a career, one&#13;
that'll help [you] make a living."&#13;
WHO LET THE&#13;
BY AMANDA GRANDKE&#13;
mandLnoe@gmaU.com&#13;
Going for a nice jog on the track&#13;
at school, tbe last thing that you&#13;
expect to see is a dog. The Ranger&#13;
News office received a call from&#13;
community member Tom Struma this&#13;
week, claiming that he often sees&#13;
unleashed dogs on the track creating&#13;
a disturbance for runners.&#13;
Officer Bergendahl of the&#13;
Parkside Police said, "According&#13;
to UWS Chapter J 8.06 (5) a pet,&#13;
be it a dog or a cat, needs to be on&#13;
a leash while on campus premises.&#13;
ff found in violation, the pet can be&#13;
impounded and the owner fined."&#13;
He also said that in the ten years&#13;
that be bas been at UW-Parkside he&#13;
has "never had to write a ticket [for&#13;
unleasbed pets]." He added, "II is&#13;
very common to see unleashed dogs&#13;
by the soccer field and also on the&#13;
disc golf course." In these situations,&#13;
he informs the people that their dog&#13;
does need to be on a leash,&#13;
Bergendahl couldn't answer&#13;
whether there are any different rules&#13;
for the premises by the Student&#13;
Activities Center. JR Reed. director&#13;
of the Student Activities Center,&#13;
said said that he didn't know if&#13;
there were any signs posted near the&#13;
soccer fields Or the cross country&#13;
field stating that no dogs were&#13;
allowed Bergendahl said that there is&#13;
a law that a person has 24 hours to&#13;
clean up after bis or her pet, but no&#13;
one enforces that policy since no one&#13;
really "polices" the track. Reed said&#13;
that athletic teams have to practice&#13;
where people 'are walking their dog!'&gt;.&#13;
and it's not appealing to have to play&#13;
where dogs have not been cleaned up&#13;
after.&#13;
Strama could nOI be reached for&#13;
additional comments,&#13;
CORRECTIONS&#13;
In "Keating on University Funding" from the October 10 edition of The Ranger&#13;
News, tbe following errors were made: The cut taken from Uw-Parkside was&#13;
$880,000, nor $75 million. Chancellor John Keating oversees the director of&#13;
admissions. and Rebecca Martin oversees the head of the Advising department. The&#13;
donation to UW-Parkside toward the expansion of the Communication Am buildmg&#13;
is for 10 percent, nOI 80 percent. and the donor will be announced Oct. 9. but not at&#13;
the Adventures of Lifelong Learning meeting.&#13;
c••cEarl" Slay Laic&#13;
an(,[,',-',1'&#13;
lick WIll&#13;
Friday, 3-7pm Union Patio FREE&#13;
BaIlIe lillie"&#13;
Check out the great music! Each band wili playa tnbute to UW·Parl&lt;slde, so&#13;
come and vote for your favorite. Climb the rock wall and eat a picmc dinner&#13;
on the Union Patio as you listen to bands battle. Rain Site Union Square&#13;
Friday, 3-8pm Union Patio FREE&#13;
cancec EIIer1IiIcr lillie Jar ZIIC·&#13;
IIypIItist rrcllcrick WillerS&#13;
I LOVE to "swing my watch for a good nme. OK. I dont actualiy use a walch&#13;
but I sure have fun hypnotizing people and you wili have fun watc/lu'9' WInters&#13;
is an annual favorite and has been selected as the 2006 Campus Entertainer&#13;
of the Year. Don't miss this hypnotizing and funny showl&#13;
Friday, 8-9pm Union Square FREE&#13;
hr.......&#13;
Free refreshments.&#13;
Friday, 9pm·Midnight The Den FREE&#13;
PllIIIck1ds&#13;
First 100 people free and every mocktail&#13;
there after only $1.00. we_.secrets"'.--&#13;
3&#13;
D~ . K IRBY UE&#13;
irby ww, hircJ &lt;")T tJ1 jnb ln&#13;
Octo ~r '.!I, Lhe time. Wu limshin h r faster'·&#13;
cg •. ill C. he j,., nm,&#13;
hehe,, ·r li fel rmg I · 1min}!.,&#13;
,he d tit.k J to onlioue h ·r&#13;
· dui: ti n. She wi:nl 011 l I e;:irn&#13;
t\tr D .• :in c.rnphai.' · in&#13;
CUJTiculum and im,rrucli n.&#13;
Thinking bout her&#13;
Ctl.fter choiL:e, Dr. Kirby i.a.1d. ··1&#13;
~till fl't up in tl1e mumin~ , nd&#13;
ave corniag m ' b:·&#13;
K,rh1 alwa) ~ hi:!&#13;
(,[u~-..;tion from .-tL1denl!&gt; abom&#13;
jub:s ca.rcer path!&gt; \i ill&#13;
al low mak.i: lbt.: mo t&#13;
n nc~. ··Pcuple m e I lh·in h~&#13;
Jnin!:! wha,t Lllcy lmc. nd \\I al&#13;
the)- :n: gt, J t," hi:~. td •&#13;
Kirhf wan!c-d 10 g.i ·i:&#13;
the .·rudent ut \\-l¾ ·&#13;
urne ad\·ice: ~Fin ur ni tie:&#13;
iind oul \dnrl 1\ i&lt;. thal you· re gOl'id&#13;
al doing~ find out )OUr pas,;icm and&#13;
\\ hat yo I do... : lf&#13;
vou killil LO thin!.. vnt ide 1h bn:,-,., 11&#13;
~ill w, lh' nslate rnto a career, ~c&#13;
that' ll heip you Ii\ in£:."&#13;
LETT E&#13;
Early.&#13;
lay Late&#13;
I Octo,l2 IJ&#13;
Fri RE&#13;
Friday,&#13;
RT&#13;
4&#13;
October 17,&#13;
2&#13;
The&#13;
~&#13;
~~&#13;
~L..- ---''--..:...;J;&#13;
"machismo" .&#13;
Professor James Kincheo&#13;
said in 2006 that it is easier&#13;
for men to be sensitive, admit&#13;
their fears, and honor their&#13;
women. "If Idid not listen to&#13;
my wife, Iwould miss out on&#13;
opinions of someone who is a&#13;
bright woman."&#13;
The panel agreed that&#13;
the stereotype of machismo&#13;
has changed over the years.&#13;
Kinchen said today, women&#13;
have ample opportunities to&#13;
work outside of the home.&#13;
Theron Snell, an advisor,&#13;
said he felt he was an odd&#13;
person to be on the panel&#13;
talking about machismo and&#13;
said he was not sure if he can&#13;
display it. "Relationships are&#13;
becoming a two-way street,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Machismo creates a&#13;
perception of superiority of&#13;
the male and belittlement of the&#13;
female sometimes leading to&#13;
domestic violence. Machismo&#13;
also emphasizes that males are&#13;
the sole provider of family and&#13;
the female is the caretaker of&#13;
family.&#13;
Nydia Adames-Petty, an&#13;
Academic Advisor, said&#13;
she grew up understanding&#13;
machismo, but it was not&#13;
present in her family. She said&#13;
machismo becomes an issue&#13;
when it involves domestic&#13;
abuse. HAre you strong enough&#13;
to challenge what you are&#13;
taught, she said?"&#13;
Professor Zaibert&#13;
provided an example about the&#13;
characteristics of machismo. H&#13;
said in a boxing match, when&#13;
someone is losing and will not&#13;
give up and continues to displa&#13;
honor, that is machismo.&#13;
Kinchen said he agrees&#13;
there is a line between what&#13;
we can do in our privacy and&#13;
actions with our family. "I&#13;
most admire men who are just&#13;
themselves all of the time," be&#13;
said.&#13;
President of Latinos&#13;
Unidos, Yazmin Romero en&#13;
the panel discussion event&#13;
by saying the purpose was to&#13;
educate about machismo and&#13;
evaluate if it has or has not&#13;
changed throughout the years.&#13;
.,......... ...bcIIs .&#13;
ROCkYVall a.- of Ole eendt&#13;
SiIIe Sleepover Chedc.ln&#13;
PiCnic on the Petio&#13;
Women', VCkybtII \1$, Bela'nin.&#13;
Frod.rIok Wlnttts&#13;
~&#13;
307Pfl\&#13;
30epcn&#13;
3-4:30pm&#13;
4-7pm&#13;
5pnl-&#13;
Wpm&#13;
9pm.~&#13;
Union Pallo&#13;
Unlonhtlo&#13;
RsngerHell&#13;
Union f&gt;alio&#13;
SpMI &amp; ActiVity C.nter Gym&#13;
Unton~.&#13;
TheOen&#13;
BYD. WHITE&#13;
WHITE041@UWP.EDU&#13;
A panel consisting of ow-&#13;
Parkside professors, advisors,&#13;
and coordinators gathered&#13;
to discuss machismo in the&#13;
Union Square on Oct. 11. Panel&#13;
members were James Kinchen,&#13;
Leonardo Zaibert, Theron Snell,&#13;
Nydia Adames-Petry, Consuelo&#13;
Clemens, Mary Louise Edwards,&#13;
and Brandon Clark.&#13;
The program was&#13;
entitled The Good and Evil of&#13;
Machismo and was sponsored&#13;
by Latinos Unidos and the&#13;
Office of Student Multicultural&#13;
Affairs. Machismo describes&#13;
as an exaggerated feeling of&#13;
masculinity.&#13;
Machismo is derived form&#13;
the Spanish word "macho"&#13;
and has a strong presence in&#13;
the Hispanic culture. In Spain&#13;
Macho can mean "bravery",&#13;
which adds some positives&#13;
to connotation of the word&#13;
......... Z&#13;
CartOClll Morning&#13;
flln Fetr with Dav. Rlldolf &amp; Ken Scdl;t&#13;
Cel'llflU$ ~re ~20% discount on seleel items&#13;
AnG*ty&#13;
Nature Trail Hike&#13;
880 Lunch&#13;
Q'''' S1ep &amp; Stroll Elltlillition&#13;
Women's VOIeybeil 'IS, Nortlem Kentucly&#13;
Foreign FIlm-P4nldlse Now&#13;
The "'eglc of M8lJWlUI.&#13;
Dodgeball ToumllY&#13;
Dinner Th.. tr.. ~" p~ (~G 7 3Opm)&#13;
CIWIOMfIll&#13;
Pat McCurdy &amp; Bonfire&#13;
9-t1am&#13;
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S1Udent lJnlOcl ElcJ*lSlon Olsplay&#13;
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\VHITE.04 l @ WJ' .EDU&#13;
c.on.•isting UWParkside&#13;
profesw~~ aclvi ors,&#13;
and oordinato gathe d&#13;
discusi; th&#13;
ni n quare H. m_ mbC'rs wer J me Kinche.11,&#13;
Z..1.ibert, Th " ne 11,&#13;
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Fri&amp; t erving fo d in bar until Midnight&#13;
SMALL &amp;LARGE BA&#13;
lJl4 -Parbld Wood Rd.&#13;
Bnr :SB * H .E&#13;
' •&#13;
2 DARTBOARDS&#13;
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FOOSEB L TABLE&#13;
DA CE FLOOR&#13;
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6 The Ranger News October 17, 2006&#13;
Men's Soccer Ties Twice on Road ,&#13;
BY JENNIFER PINTER&#13;
pirite006@uwp.edu&#13;
The Men's Soccer team&#13;
went on the road to Missouri&#13;
this weekend to take on&#13;
the Drury Panthers and the&#13;
Rockhurst Hawks. Both&#13;
games ended ill..fies with only&#13;
one point being scored by the&#13;
Rangers. Friday, Oct. 13, the&#13;
Rangers played Drury to a I-I&#13;
final. Bojan Jovicic scored&#13;
the tying goal, 7 minutes&#13;
(46:40) after Drury scored,&#13;
receiving the assist from Greg&#13;
Walasek.&#13;
The following game at&#13;
Rockhurst on Sunday, Oct. 15,&#13;
ended with the similar result,&#13;
having a score of 0-0. The&#13;
Hawks had five shots on goal,&#13;
out-shooting the Rangers who&#13;
had four. Over the weekend&#13;
road trip, goalie Jamie&#13;
Lieberman&#13;
added 220&#13;
minutes&#13;
of time&#13;
with&#13;
only&#13;
one goal&#13;
against&#13;
him.&#13;
The&#13;
UW-&#13;
. Parkside Men's Soccer team is&#13;
now 11-2-3 overall and 8-2-3&#13;
in the conference. As a result&#13;
of this weekend's ties, the&#13;
team dropped to the third seed&#13;
heading into the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference tournament.&#13;
The Rangers will host sixth&#13;
seed Missouri-Rolla in the&#13;
quarterfinals, Sunday, Oct. 22,&#13;
at noon at Wood Road Field.&#13;
The team defeated Rolla&#13;
3-0 during the regular season&#13;
in a road' win. Before the&#13;
tournament begins, there will&#13;
be a game against the Peacock,&#13;
of Upper Iowa at home;&#13;
however, the game is scheduled&#13;
. to be at Carthage College at&#13;
7:30 p.m. this Thursday, Oct.&#13;
J9, instead of at Wood Road&#13;
Field.&#13;
. '.",'1-&#13;
Rangers Who Run Together, Win Together:&#13;
Women's XC Claims First Place Again and Again&#13;
BY TYRONE PAYTON&#13;
payto004@uwp.edu&#13;
Fulton. "It is so much easier to&#13;
run with someone, It's fun too!&#13;
We get to talk. and encourage&#13;
each other throughout the race."&#13;
The method of running&#13;
in a pack has been routinely&#13;
involved in the training for&#13;
these women, By running in a'&#13;
pack, the women can focus on&#13;
their own goals, but it becomes&#13;
evident that almost all the&#13;
teammates are on the same&#13;
level.&#13;
"It was a good indication to&#13;
each of the four team members&#13;
that raced together of just bow&#13;
strong they are right now and&#13;
how close in11bility they are at&#13;
this point," said DeWitt about&#13;
his top four tumters. "That is a&#13;
good cooIi~ booster as we&#13;
narrow mOll the~p&#13;
season comm up"&#13;
"E the-tlOn nng&#13;
m of leamare&#13;
At Waverly, Iowa, the&#13;
Ranger Women set a milestone&#13;
for Women's Cross Country _&#13;
on Saturday, Oct. 7, at the&#13;
Warthurg Invitational by having&#13;
four members best the school's&#13;
previous record of 14:58.&#13;
. With Naomi Fulton .&#13;
finishing third place in the 4K&#13;
course at 14:33, she was quickly&#13;
followed up by her teammates&#13;
Jill Wink.ler, Jessica Lamp, and&#13;
\'alerie Kelly with posted times&#13;
~&#13;
J4:35, 14:38, and 14:39-,&#13;
ctively. According to the&#13;
-Parkside Athletics Web .&#13;
ite, these times trumped the&#13;
previous UW·Parkside record&#13;
t the Wartborg Invitational of&#13;
4:58 set bt helle Boldon in&#13;
a team as we do in practice,&#13;
we can directly apply it in our&#13;
meets, Seeing the results of&#13;
the work we do at practice is&#13;
rewarding. I think our strongest&#13;
asset is that we work well as a&#13;
team,"&#13;
Bringing their team.&#13;
momentum and No.5 NCAA&#13;
Division II ranking back to the&#13;
Wayne E. Dannehl National&#13;
Cross Country Course at UWParkside,&#13;
the Rangers showed&#13;
their home pride by winning the&#13;
UW-Parkside Invitational on&#13;
Saturday afternoon, Oct. 14.&#13;
Posting a team score of 25,&#13;
in which 15 is the best score a&#13;
team can achieve, UW-l'arkside&#13;
outran the nearest Division&#13;
IIranked ~t in No. 14&#13;
NOI1herq mctligan with ..&#13;
score of 42, and sub§I'll~y&#13;
Div' ion I COI~NOl'lIRlrlI&#13;
II.IinOis; Who Db&#13;
finish line were unattached, but&#13;
the Ranger women then charged&#13;
to the front to secure the first&#13;
four collegiate spots.&#13;
Fultdn headed up the pack,&#13;
clocking in at 18:20, followed&#13;
by Kelly, Winkler, and Lamp&#13;
at 18:23, 18:27, and 18:30,&#13;
respectively. Coming in fifth for&#13;
the Rangers and 19" overall for&#13;
the race at 19:54 was freslunan&#13;
Jessica Enderly, who accounted&#13;
for the Jastteam point for UWParkside.&#13;
The next stop for the&#13;
Rangers is in Illinois as the&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
meet is set for 11:00 a.m. on&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 21, at sm·&#13;
Edwardsville. UW·Parkside·&#13;
won't host again until the&#13;
. NCAA regional meet scheduled&#13;
for Saturday, Nov. 4, at 11:15&#13;
a.m,&#13;
6 Jhe Ranger News October 17, 2006&#13;
Men's Soccer Ties Twice o Road&#13;
l{ PINTER&#13;
ut m lhc road to M" oun&#13;
thi wcd,.cnd Lo lake on&#13;
lhc rlll)' PanLhen. and th e&#13;
R ·lhun.t Haw · . Both&#13;
gam ended in Lie "11.h only&#13;
one piJi nt being rnrcd b lhc&#13;
Rungcrs. Friday. Oct 13. th&#13;
Rangers playetl rury to a 1- l&#13;
inal. Bo·an Jo\•icic 5eoreJ&#13;
he 1yi g £ll,tl, 7 Llll11Ul!&#13;
: 0 after D :...rn~d ,&#13;
rec1.:i.ving thi: assi t rum Gn:,g&#13;
I• se&#13;
The fo lJ ~ ing ~amc at&#13;
Rockh N nn Sunilily, Oct. 15.&#13;
enJed ,,,.ilh 1.he in1iJur rcsllll,&#13;
ha\'ing a c(m.:: of0-0. The&#13;
Hawks had ln·e. hots on goal,&#13;
ut-shoot..iog h Rang •ho&#13;
had our U11e1 1..he Wtxkcm.l&#13;
ad ip, goali~ fami e&#13;
Liebennan&#13;
dda.l 220&#13;
111lnuu::&#13;
u(Gmc&#13;
wfth&#13;
on!&#13;
nc goal&#13;
ugainsl&#13;
h1m_&#13;
Th"' u-.. -&#13;
Parkside Men• S ccr le~m i,&#13;
now 11-2- o 'C II nd 8-~-3&#13;
in I.he confori:ncc. ~ re .uh&#13;
of Lhi. week1.:nd's lie~. lhc&#13;
t ~ m dropped 1u thr.: t hrrd .- :J&#13;
heading imu lht: Great Lakes&#13;
Valley onfen:t1cc toumamenL&#13;
The R.1111g . \\oi 11 hu~t ,;;ixlh.&#13;
seed Mi imuri-Rolla in the&#13;
uarterfinal • unda . Oc1.. :?~.&#13;
at noon al ooJ Roa&lt;l ,h::ld.&#13;
The ream defo-ated Rolla&#13;
~ -U dunug the regular ·ea,;,on&#13;
in a ruad win. Bt'.fore th&#13;
loumamcnl bcgirn;, ln re will&#13;
be a g:mu.:. again~ t the Peat:cx: ~ ur Upper lowa al hnme~&#13;
howc, i:r. Lhc gam is -ht:dul~d&#13;
to be al arthage Colli!g.: at&#13;
7:30 p.m. this u_rsda). Oct.&#13;
I . m tend of t 'ood RoaJ&#13;
tr.:l •&#13;
Rangers Who Run Together, Win Together:&#13;
Women's XC Claims First Place Aga·n and Again&#13;
BY TYRONE PAYTON&#13;
p yto004@uwp.edu&#13;
Al Wavr.:rly, Iowa. lhc&#13;
Ranger Women set a milestone&#13;
for Womc:n's Cro , Country&#13;
on Sarnn.iay. Oct. 7. tu !.he&#13;
W bur• Invitational by having&#13;
four m inbt:~ t lh hool'&#13;
i a esome;· ai Lamp. Fulton. "Tl i&#13;
be learn J l k~ps getting&#13;
~u:on ger, Tl t • s.t !ht: lop four o&#13;
u cilhc:r. 1e whol team jm,1&#13;
keep· impmvtn , and t.h:a1 is ju,;t&#13;
the refkc1ion of having a great&#13;
coach I ike we du."&#13;
Coach Mike De ~n ·a.id&#13;
hi forrncr rurm r Bo ou that.&#13;
"f he] i. one of the kty r :;m ns&#13;
lhi.:~c women ure running ~o&#13;
L:IL h.: '-l!l g~...11 . , mple&#13;
lhal thi rour is to.ll owin rig t&#13;
much nsie-r to a tcmn we o in p lice.&#13;
t: can dire tly aflp y if io o r&#13;
1 ts. Seeing the re~ul o ·&#13;
th work we du t prncticc i!i&#13;
ITW rdtng. f lhin 01..lf sl!ronge!'.t&#13;
asset i. that we w rl.. ' II as a&#13;
· ., &gt;"'" " " " .. \ \ ,,.. , ,&#13;
... ,,\ \ ,,. \&#13;
, ,&#13;
"&#13;
october 17, 2006&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
7&#13;
The Troj~nRoundtable Highlight&#13;
·Women's Soccer&#13;
Stumbles&#13;
Heading into&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
Drug Administration on June&#13;
8, Gardasil was approved for&#13;
the. public, according to the&#13;
FDA's Government Web site.&#13;
The magnitude of&#13;
having Gardasil available&#13;
is especially directed at&#13;
females. "Women bear the&#13;
biggest burden of STDs "&#13;
said Dr. Drew. "You oe~&#13;
cervical cancer; you g~t the&#13;
pelvic inflammatory diseases;&#13;
you get the life-threatenine&#13;
conditions." 0&#13;
Dr Drew added, "In&#13;
my career. that is the biggest&#13;
headline. I've been practicing&#13;
medicine for 20 years, and&#13;
here is a vaccine that will&#13;
eliminate a major source of&#13;
mortality in your age group.&#13;
Cervical cancer kills young&#13;
women."&#13;
The number of&#13;
females who could be affected&#13;
in their lifetimes is substantially&#13;
high. "80 percent of women have&#13;
HPV by the age of 50, and most of&#13;
it goes away on its own:' said Dr.&#13;
Drew. 'The more serious viruses&#13;
are covered by this vaccine. The&#13;
question is could you bave one of&#13;
the other ones 7"&#13;
It was brought to the&#13;
roundtable's attention from&#13;
Dr. Drew that the focus of&#13;
administering this new vaccine is on&#13;
twelve-year-olds. "That's the age&#13;
of optimum immunogenic response;&#13;
they can have a lifelong response;'&#13;
said Dr. Drew, and he later added,&#13;
"It's a pure medical decision based&#13;
on the immunogenic response to the&#13;
vaccine."&#13;
The most important subject&#13;
that I had little information on when&#13;
I arrived for this discussion was&#13;
HPV and the creation of Gardasil.&#13;
Dr Drew urged every female,&#13;
"Get your Gardasil HPV vaccine.&#13;
please," and asked of everyone,&#13;
"Are your vaccines up to date?"&#13;
BY JJ MULREADY&#13;
dapokerplayerI3@yahoo.com&#13;
The UW-Parkside Women's Soccer&#13;
tec:m wound up on the losing side of a&#13;
pair of one-goal games last weekend.&#13;
The first loss occurred in overtime&#13;
against the Drury Panthers on Friday.&#13;
Oct. 13.&#13;
The home learn Panthers scored&#13;
the first goal of the game late in the first&#13;
half at 43:49 taking into halftime a 1-0&#13;
lead. The Rangers answered back with&#13;
two goals in the second half at 68:32 and&#13;
72:06 to take the lead. However. the&#13;
Panthers scored at 82: 16, tying the game&#13;
and sending it to overtime. Drury didn't&#13;
waste a minute in overtime to reclaim&#13;
the game: scoring a goal 15 seconds in&#13;
and notching the win.&#13;
The second game of the weekend&#13;
was on Sunday, Oct. IS, in Kansas City.&#13;
Mo., against the Rockhurst Hawks. The&#13;
Hawks scored at 61:29 in the second half&#13;
to give them a 1-0 lead. the only lead&#13;
they would need. Rockhurst prevailed&#13;
to win while putting seven shots on goal&#13;
compared to the Rangers three ShOlS on&#13;
goal.&#13;
The Rangers, now with an 84-&#13;
I record in the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference and a 10-5-1 overall record,&#13;
were playing for victories in hopes of&#13;
claiming a high seed for the upcoming&#13;
GLVC tournament. Instead, when the&#13;
tournament starts on the weekend of&#13;
Oct: 21-22. the Rangers will be the sixth&#13;
seed, and they will have to play on the&#13;
road against the third seed Cougars of&#13;
STU-Edwardsville. The previous regular&#13;
season contest between the Rangers&#13;
and Cougars ended in a 0-0 tie nearly a&#13;
month ago, on Sept. 15.&#13;
BY TYRONE PAYTON&#13;
Email: payto004@uwp.edu&#13;
Word Count: 582&#13;
In the wake of the Trojan&#13;
Sexual Health Report Card, a&#13;
survey of 100 public and private&#13;
schools on how well informed the'&#13;
universities of this &lt;nation are on&#13;
safer sex and prevention of sexually&#13;
transmitted infections, I, along with&#13;
10 other studenrsfrom across the&#13;
U.S .. were invited to participate in&#13;
a roundtable discussion of sexual&#13;
health awareness by Trojan on oct.&#13;
6&#13;
In an effort to reach out to&#13;
-universities to establish better&#13;
sexual health awareness. Trojan&#13;
brought in the credited Dr. Drew&#13;
Pinske, of MTV's "Loveline" fame&#13;
and alumnus of the University of&#13;
Southern California, to host the&#13;
discussion. He engaged us all in&#13;
a variety of topics ranging from&#13;
availability of condoms on campus,&#13;
sexual health awareness information&#13;
open to students, the application of&#13;
a sex column in student newspapers,&#13;
the dangers of anal sex, the proper&#13;
use of condoms, and the importance&#13;
of HPV know ledge.&#13;
Here at UW-Parkside, the&#13;
Student Health &amp; Counseling&#13;
Center provides condoms for a&#13;
relatively cheap price to students as&#13;
well as sexual health information&#13;
and my submission of this article'&#13;
is a prototype for health awareness&#13;
through the student newspaper.&#13;
As _foranal sex and the dangers&#13;
that follow, Dr. Drew warned of the&#13;
damage that can occur through anal&#13;
sex. The tearing and anal fissures&#13;
that can result have an enormous&#13;
affect on health as a person grows&#13;
older and becomes incontinent with&#13;
bowel movements or even just has&#13;
trouble maintaining the weakened&#13;
body cavity. .&#13;
For condom use, roughJy one&#13;
third of the time is a condom used&#13;
during sexual intercourse amongst&#13;
couples. When it comes to using&#13;
condoms during oral sex toward&#13;
males. Dr. Drew cited from a recent&#13;
survey of sexually active couples&#13;
that was done and said the number&#13;
was, "zero percent."&#13;
In the significance of&#13;
understanding HPV, or human&#13;
papillomavirus, which can cause - .&#13;
cervical cancer. precancerous&#13;
genital lesions, and genital warts,&#13;
we discussed the breakthrough of&#13;
the Gardasil HPV vaccine. In a&#13;
press release from the Food and&#13;
Photo from CHICAGOnOlAN&#13;
ROUNDTAIlL.Epage on www.facebook.com&#13;
Stop Renting ...&#13;
BY TYRONE PA"fI'o&#13;
paytoOO4@uwp.edu&#13;
In recognition of health&#13;
awareness, the month of October is&#13;
dedicated to breast cancer awareness.&#13;
With pink ribbons being the flag of&#13;
support for breast cancer awareness&#13;
and recently adopted pink baseball&#13;
caps being seen worn throughout&#13;
Wisconsin in support of the Deanna&#13;
Favre HOPE Foundation, breast&#13;
cancer awareness is easily noticeable&#13;
in society. However, the routine&#13;
breast exam is what is of importance.&#13;
"A woman should check her&#13;
breast every month on a designated&#13;
day to do it," said Michaelina Young.&#13;
M.S.N. and director of the Student&#13;
Health &amp; Counseling Center at .&#13;
UW-Parkside, "preferably, after&#13;
their period." Young also suggested&#13;
that using a date familiar to the&#13;
individual. such as their birthday,&#13;
is helpful. She also mentioned&#13;
for women that an annuaJ clinical&#13;
breast exam with a doctor or nurse&#13;
practitioner is advised- for good&#13;
health.&#13;
Besides women, men can&#13;
also get breast cancer and even&#13;
that they should i:Iieck tor&#13;
any abnormal lumps on their body on&#13;
a regular monthly basis as well.&#13;
In regards to maintaining&#13;
a healthy body, Young said, "I&#13;
think that early detection is the best&#13;
protection. Early detection is that&#13;
people check their own bodies." For&#13;
more information on detecting breast&#13;
cancer, there are brochures available&#13;
for anyone at the Student Health &amp;&#13;
Counseling Center located&#13;
next to the police&#13;
station in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
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Call Julie lang for more deta or to schedule a showW19&#13;
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October 17, 2006 Th e Ra e r News&#13;
The Trojan Roundtable Highlight&#13;
fo :i ·1fort l re,1cb out li..1&#13;
unive irie co c:-.tabli-.h heUt'T&#13;
s • ual health •arcnc.'s, Troj'&#13;
brougnl in th C erliteu Dr. e&#13;
Pins e, f M ''s .. Lovelin.c·· fame&#13;
and alumnus of th Univcr,il}' f&#13;
Southern nliforni , LO host the&#13;
discu iun. H en ag d us II in&#13;
a anel)' f topic, rr:inging from&#13;
avail.ib1lily f L'-Ondnn ,; o ca.tnpu5,&#13;
.i,cxual he 1h awarcn s information&#13;
open lO tudents. l.h applic;1tio of&#13;
a :ex c hmm in student newsp pe •&#13;
th danger of anal : .x. the proper&#13;
use of oodoms and e - port.on e&#13;
of HPV knowledge.&#13;
H -re al -Parksid . the&#13;
Student Hea.ilh Cmrn r n&#13;
Center p \·ide. 1:ondoms for a&#13;
relatively cheap price to !.lude11 a:&#13;
•11, xu c-alLh i ti rmat'on,&#13;
and my suhmi!&gt;~TliD of tlus article&#13;
i!-i • protul)" e t t llc..il uwaren ~&#13;
lhrough tht..: &lt;;IUli nL ne · per.&#13;
As tor anal sex amhhe dunge.&#13;
thaL foUow. Dr D V.' warned uf lhc&#13;
uamage thm can 1 ·or lhroucll anal&#13;
sex. TI,e. tearing .uid anal fi -.,Url'..&#13;
Lhal can re ul1 ha e an en 1111ou&#13;
u.n do ht"alth ,ha per on gmw&gt;&#13;
ldeT an flm im:ontmi.;_nl ·iLh&#13;
bov.-el 1110 erne.nt u evc:n ju.it&#13;
trouble mammining lhe we2kened&#13;
b d; cuvity.&#13;
For cond m u-.e. roughl) on•&#13;
th"rd of I.he nm 1. a condom u&#13;
during exual int rcour t' -um n t&#13;
~uplei;. WJ1cn it come tu using&#13;
und m during. r I e. h.&gt;ward&#13;
males, Or. &gt;rew cited from rec ·nt&#13;
ur\/c}' of se:1.ually acl..ive couple&#13;
that · a ' don and · th· number&#13;
Photo Imm cmc:Aao TitUJ&#13;
Ult ITTA!! ~ W • j · t:k .... ~&#13;
[I&#13;
.women' occe&#13;
Stumb&#13;
Headin into&#13;
a o&#13;
J&#13;
cl.ape,&#13;
2645 11 h ~08&#13;
8&#13;
OPI&#13;
GUEST EDITORIAL&#13;
BYDANIEL ROCKEL&#13;
igimaster@yahoo.com&#13;
Major space has been&#13;
given to pitching the slogan&#13;
"A fair Wisconsin votes no"&#13;
to voters on campus. No&#13;
group has come out in favor&#13;
of the amendment for fear of&#13;
accusations ofletting religion&#13;
get involved in their political&#13;
view, being anti-gay, or even&#13;
being all around unfeeling&#13;
inconsiderate codgers.&#13;
This amendment is&#13;
not about gay marriage but&#13;
representative democracy.&#13;
This amendment would mean&#13;
a change to our definition of&#13;
marriage that would require a&#13;
constitutional amendment to&#13;
change it rather than one session&#13;
of the legislature and governor&#13;
or one renegade judge.&#13;
Many opponents of the&#13;
amendment feel action should&#13;
be taken to end this unfairness&#13;
even if it circumvents the&#13;
proper method because the&#13;
system changes so slowly. The&#13;
wheels of change grind slowly&#13;
to protect minorities from truly&#13;
Draconian Societal reaction.&#13;
Which is worse, a government&#13;
that, because, of society won't&#13;
let gay couples marry or a&#13;
society that is allowed and&#13;
supported by government to&#13;
stone gays to death when they&#13;
come out of the closet?&#13;
Whether I support or&#13;
oppose expanding the legal&#13;
definition of marriage.to be&#13;
available to same sex couples, I&#13;
don't support the change being&#13;
approved on some sort of moral&#13;
basis outside the system that is&#13;
OUf government. Morality is,&#13;
at its core, religion, whether&#13;
organized or individualized.&#13;
This is not a theocracy, and law&#13;
is not ratified based on morality&#13;
or fairness. Law is ratified based&#13;
on the will and pressure of the&#13;
people. Do voters want tobe&#13;
under the authority of someone&#13;
who answers to no one?&#13;
Currently, the Democratic party,&#13;
the sitting party that shows&#13;
more support for gay marriage&#13;
bypassing legislative channels,&#13;
is constantly complaining&#13;
about the way the President is&#13;
handling affairs because he's&#13;
not doing what they would do,&#13;
whatever that may be. Imagine&#13;
what it would be like to have&#13;
a dictator that was never&#13;
accountable to anyone. While&#13;
many would support allowing&#13;
such power in order to get&#13;
something they desire, I oppose&#13;
it on principle regardless of the&#13;
bait on the hook. I don't want&#13;
someone making laws to take&#13;
away my freedoms if they can't&#13;
be replaced in the future by&#13;
voting someone else into office.&#13;
Ruling by majority&#13;
through a democratic republic&#13;
does work. Laws against&#13;
murder exist still because the&#13;
majority agree it is necessary.&#13;
Speed limits exist because&#13;
representatives have not bedTl&#13;
voted into office who would&#13;
remove them, Drinking, a&#13;
formerly taboo activity, is legal,&#13;
because enough people voted&#13;
for it to be legal again, ending&#13;
prohibition.&#13;
Is the legal definition&#13;
of marriage more important&#13;
than the free flow of alcohol?&#13;
If so, why shouldn't it have&#13;
to be voted on to change the&#13;
definition to a fair one? If&#13;
not, why does a legal status&#13;
as married matter? If it is&#13;
about insurance companies&#13;
or employers, vote with your.&#13;
time and money to lobby&#13;
them to be gay friendly. Other&#13;
parts of this legal agreement&#13;
we call marriage would be&#13;
possible to replicate through&#13;
legal documents agreeing to&#13;
all the exact terms entered. into&#13;
under marriage. Think of that&#13;
combination as a legal still of a&#13;
sort.&#13;
To those people&#13;
who are morally opposed to&#13;
gay marriage, marriage was&#13;
created outside of government&#13;
(in the Christian belief by god&#13;
in the garden of Eden) and&#13;
can survive quite well as a&#13;
separate entil}' (read my lips&#13;
nomads). Legal marriage is&#13;
a completely separate animal&#13;
from two people dedicated&#13;
to each other before god till&#13;
death. If you think we can't&#13;
allow gay marriage because two&#13;
people of the same sex can't&#13;
morally be married, you need&#13;
to consider separating the terms&#13;
in your head. Think of the legal&#13;
part as a comrel (committed&#13;
relationship) agreement,&#13;
similar to a written agreement&#13;
when going into business in&#13;
a partnership. It defines two&#13;
people's responsibilities to&#13;
each other in a way similar&#13;
to a company's responsibility&#13;
to its share holders. Marriage&#13;
was not killed by gay marriage&#13;
in ancient Greece or ancient&#13;
Rome. Marriage will not&#13;
die because of legal comrel&#13;
agreements between two people&#13;
of the same sex also known in&#13;
our society by gay marriage&#13;
a homograph( words that are&#13;
rendered the same, but having&#13;
different meanings) with two&#13;
meanings, legal and emotional.&#13;
As important as it&#13;
is to have a fair marriage&#13;
definition, it is only fair to vote&#13;
yes to the amendment to assure&#13;
Wisconsinites get to give gay&#13;
marriage an affirmative vote&#13;
before it can be legalized.&#13;
The alternative passage of&#13;
gay marriage would lead to&#13;
harassment from the publicand&#13;
would become a riot at the&#13;
courthouse, along with massive&#13;
efforts to make gay marriage&#13;
illegal. A group of people would&#13;
exist to fight gay marriage, not&#13;
on the basis of morality, but&#13;
on a violation of their right to&#13;
representation.&#13;
A Fair Wisconsin Votes&#13;
YES to Preserve our Right to&#13;
Vote.&#13;
LS&#13;
October 17, 2006&#13;
t&#13;
My name i Robert Ro ti, I joined WIPZ in the&#13;
fall of 2002. Myself and Andrew $cbeeler co-post&#13;
'The WrestJ,ing War Room ~ch can be heard on&#13;
the air Thursday nigflts from 6 to 8. Anywa 8, here&#13;
are top five songs that you will most likely hear on&#13;
The Wrestling War Room.&#13;
•&#13;
B&#13;
0&#13;
GUEST E&#13;
BYDANIEL ROCK L&#13;
igim r@yaboo.com&#13;
M ·orsp ce n&#13;
given to pitching the slogan&#13;
' :A fair Wi amsiTI vote no"&#13;
c,o voters on c mpu . o&#13;
group has come out inf: vor&#13;
of the amendment fo fear of&#13;
a c~ation-s ofletting religion&#13;
get involved in m ir politioa.l&#13;
view, being anti -gay, or e ·en&#13;
being all aroun,d unfeeling&#13;
inco.11.sidenu.e codgers.&#13;
This amendment i.s&#13;
not about gay mama C but&#13;
re-pre . m.ative democr y.&#13;
i. arncmlmenl would roean&#13;
a change LD oar definition of&#13;
marriage Lhat w ukl require a&#13;
n titutiomtl, am1:mdmenl LO&#13;
ange it rarncr t±tan on cs:ion&#13;
of the legislature ru d govcrnar&#13;
or one re11 ga c, judge.&#13;
L any p nent.'! of lhe&#13;
amendrnenl fc 1 ac 011 h u.ld&#13;
ll tak~u lo en thia unfaime · ~&#13;
even if it c:itcumvenl'i Lh&#13;
proper metho ecau · he&#13;
~y~tem ch,mg s so lowly. Th&#13;
wheels of ch ngc grind Jowl&#13;
to pmtecl minoritie .rom truly&#13;
Dr onian Societal n:ui.:tion .&#13;
Which i worse. a gov~mment&#13;
that. bee use, ohocietv woo't&#13;
1~t ga)' couples marry ~r a&#13;
. ociet) th l is allowed and&#13;
ppon.ed by VCOl'lllCli\\ \0&#13;
tone gay lu death when they&#13;
ome out of th clos t?&#13;
Whether I ,iuppon or&#13;
op se ellponding the legal&#13;
definition of marriage ta be&#13;
a\lailabll! 10 ame i:x couplt:~, l&#13;
don't 5Upl)O.rt lhe change being&#13;
approved on ·ome ort of moral&#13;
has· ou ide lhe system th t i&#13;
our go\'ernment. Morality is,&#13;
at 'ts c , religion, whether&#13;
organized or indi i uali7,ed.&#13;
Thi ia not a th ocracy, and law&#13;
; s JIOl rati fled ba. cd an morafuy&#13;
or from s. Law i railli d based&#13;
on the will and pres :ure of lhe&#13;
pc: pie. Do \/Oters wanr to be&#13;
under the u1horit of ome ne&#13;
who an wer to no ne?&#13;
Carre!Uy. 1h Democratic party,&#13;
a dictator th t w~· never&#13;
aocountable to anyone. 1hile&#13;
many woul upport allowing&#13;
~uch power in or er lo e&#13;
met:hmg they ire, I opp&#13;
it on principle regurdle s of the&#13;
ooil on th hook. I don't want&#13;
someone ma · na l rnk&#13;
av. ay my freedom if they&#13;
be pieced in the future b&#13;
\'oLing omecme el ·c into office.&#13;
Ruling by ma1onty&#13;
through ad mocratic republic&#13;
d es work. Laws 1gainst&#13;
murdt~r exist still bec au"e the&#13;
majoril}' ag1 u Hi n e. ~&#13;
ed limii.s t:. i~t be ' ·e&#13;
rep entativcs h L: not b&#13;
le into office who ' uld&#13;
remov th !II. Drinking. a&#13;
fonnerl · taboo a tivity. is legal.&#13;
because enough pMpl voted&#13;
for it lo be legal again, endi11g&#13;
prohibition.&#13;
l Ule 1 gaJ d llniti&#13;
of marriage more Tmportfillt&#13;
lh n the Crtc flow of al uhol?&#13;
lf so, why~:;iti0u,1on't it h.av&#13;
to be uted on to change l c&#13;
tlctin.itlon to a fair one? If&#13;
n t.. wh d ~ a le1al tatu&#13;
ru; married m llc • 1f il i&#13;
ubout utSunmce mpanies&#13;
or mploy , occ wi y, UT&#13;
ti me and money tO lobby&#13;
tlu!m to be gay rri ndly. Other&#13;
parts of lh1 legal agreement&#13;
"E call marriage wo11ld be&#13;
pos.tjble to :r pU te 1M ugh&#13;
I ga.l d cumenLS gn:eing to&#13;
all me e acl tenn entered mlo&#13;
under marri~e. Thill k of tha.t&#13;
combina. 'on ~ a lega! tin of a&#13;
on.&#13;
To Ibo people&#13;
ho are m rally opposed lo&#13;
gay marriage, marriage was&#13;
created out ide f gov rnmem&#13;
LS&#13;
October 17, 20 6&#13;
October 17, 2006&#13;
2&#13;
SSUE&#13;
WHAT DO YOU THINK&#13;
OF HOW STUDENT&#13;
FEES ARE SPENT?&#13;
•&#13;
I really don't know how the fees are spent.&#13;
Heidi Ertel, 18, Mathematics&#13;
It's going up every year. it's not fair.&#13;
Jose Ortiz, 20, finance&#13;
Iam okay with it. The only thing Iam&#13;
opposed to is the parking permit fee.&#13;
Fidel Mangwiza, 24, MCIS&#13;
I don't get financial aid, so it's all out of pocket. It's&#13;
to be expected .&#13;
Shantel Shultz, 26, Biology&#13;
That will be shown in the parking lot expansion.&#13;
Adam Maurer, 21, Information systems&#13;
....... 1IlI ,.rtI.. lty Dtm to~&#13;
.. \ .. ,&#13;
9 October 17, 2006&#13;
UESTION&#13;
SSUE&#13;
WHAT DO YOU THINK&#13;
OF HOW STUDE T&#13;
EES ARE SPE Tl&#13;
lly don'I o how lh ee arc .pent.&#13;
Heidi Ertel, 18, • th matii;:&#13;
' goin up C\.'c y r. ifs o fair.&#13;
·z, 20. fin.an '&#13;
I am okay •jth it The only lhin I&#13;
o posed to i the parking pe..nnit fee .&#13;
. i d la.n!lwiz.a, " MCI&#13;
it' all out of pocket. It'·&#13;
hanteJ hultz. 26, iolog)&#13;
That ill nown in Ill p ~.ing lot cxpan · i n.&#13;
A am M urct:. I , information ·y letru OTO&#13;
PYE&#13;
SI&#13;
0&#13;
ITORS&#13;
EMA&#13;
RT SING&#13;
PHIC DES&#13;
9&#13;
10 The Ranger News OCTOBER 17,2006&#13;
A Look at the University Budget THE RANDOM STUDENT&#13;
Whitewater. In 2004-05 tuition and fees&#13;
for the Wisconsin Comprehensive Average&#13;
was the lowest of any state in the Midwest&#13;
at $4.724 for resident undergraduates. The&#13;
highest in that category was the University of&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth at $8,415.&#13;
Non-residents pay more for&#13;
attending a Wisconsin university, much&#13;
more. In the 2004-05 year, a non-resident&#13;
undergraduate student paid between 140%&#13;
and 204% of instructional costs at the&#13;
universities' while resident undergraduate&#13;
students paid between 29% and 41 %.&#13;
The cost of a university degree in&#13;
the state of Wisconsin is still well below&#13;
BY MEGAN E. WHEELER-SHUEMATE&#13;
plmonun@yahoo.com&#13;
Funding for the U'W-systern is&#13;
decided at the time of the budget process and&#13;
is shared between student fees and general&#13;
purpose revenus (GPR).&#13;
When deciding on the budget the'&#13;
governor, legislature, and Board of Regents&#13;
focus on: the amount of revenue generated&#13;
from tuition; instructional costs paid by&#13;
students; levels of tuition; and comparisons&#13;
with other universitites in other states.&#13;
The state Board of Regents try to&#13;
keep the ratio of such funding at 35% fees&#13;
and 65% GPR. As per the Regent Tuition&#13;
Policy which 0000&#13;
was revised by&#13;
the Regents in&#13;
2004: "As a&#13;
matter of fiscal 15000&#13;
and educational&#13;
policy, the&#13;
state should;&#13;
... provide a 10000&#13;
GPR funding&#13;
share of 65%&#13;
of regular&#13;
budget requests 5000&#13;
for cost -tocontinue,&#13;
compensation&#13;
and new&#13;
initiatives,&#13;
and fully&#13;
fund tuition&#13;
increases in&#13;
state financial&#13;
aid programs."&#13;
PHOTO BY JONI DENECKE&#13;
Methods with Rome.&#13;
When asked if he had&#13;
a dream or a goal in life he&#13;
laughed and said he wanted to&#13;
be rich and happy, then added,&#13;
"I want to be happy with my life&#13;
at the end,"&#13;
Bryant works at Olive&#13;
Garden and says "Right now&#13;
my life is pretty boring. I may&#13;
be the wrong person for this&#13;
interview." said Bryant, "I have&#13;
school, work, my girlfriend, and&#13;
sleep and tbat is about it."&#13;
For fun he rides his 2006&#13;
Ninja crouch rocket. He also&#13;
tries to play soccer or basketball&#13;
when he can.&#13;
BY: JONI DENECKE&#13;
schmi I 13@uwp.edu&#13;
Every person has a story&#13;
and a dream. Not just the star&#13;
athlete or the bonor student. but&#13;
the random student, walking&#13;
down the hall, going to class,&#13;
doing their best to make their&#13;
own dreams come true.&#13;
Logan Bryant is a&#13;
sophomore here at Parkside,&#13;
his home town is Racine and he&#13;
is hoping to graduate in 2009.&#13;
While he has not declared his&#13;
major he is working towards a&#13;
career in Criminal Justice. He&#13;
says right now his favorite class&#13;
is Criminal Justice, Research&#13;
:;: V&gt; &lt;:: :;: c 0' n ii' &lt;'0" 3 0 a '"" zr c S' 0 "" :J ;;:&#13;
&lt;3' '" S' 3- a &lt;0 -o&#13;
'" ::;: :J '" :J ~ ::0&#13;
:J b '" 0 m&#13;
I ro' ~ c: a. ::;: m&#13;
n (j) C V~&gt; :J Z&#13;
rr- '&lt; t~r '~" ~ V&lt;&gt;: ~ rn LJ m '~" U ~ U'" ;;: a m::0 tr :;: :SJ' o' 'Gm""I ii' '"~0 tr ~ ::;;&#13;
&lt;0 '" Vi' '" n :J 0&#13;
:J "'.&#13;
cQ&#13;
S' o&#13;
Vi'u&#13;
u&#13;
Statistics from Wisconsin legislative Fiscal Bureau's january&#13;
2005 University of Wisconsin System Overview&#13;
that of our peers, however the&#13;
sharp increase of tuition in&#13;
the last two years is a concern&#13;
for the student body. UWParks&#13;
ide alumnus and State&#13;
Representative Jim Kreuser,&#13;
"I'm a firm believer that higher&#13;
education should not be out&#13;
of reach for any Wisconsin&#13;
resident and the consistent rise&#13;
in tuition for In-state students is&#13;
an ongoing concern."&#13;
"That is why I&#13;
have consistently supported&#13;
increases in financial aid and&#13;
higher education grants to&#13;
keep pace with rising tuition ...&#13;
budgets are about pnorites and&#13;
the UW System must remam&#13;
among the top." Kreuser said.&#13;
State Superintendent&#13;
Elizabeth Burmaster, "The&#13;
student body deserves the&#13;
opportunity to achieve at the&#13;
highest levels.,. the-state of&#13;
Wisconsin should fufill that&#13;
promise. if the state does not&#13;
pay now, it will certainly pay&#13;
later in social and corrections&#13;
programs or in a generation of&#13;
young people unprepared for ...&#13;
high-end jobs of the global&#13;
economy."&#13;
However, the governor and&#13;
legislature can make changes wherever they&#13;
see fit as they did for the 2004-05 budget.&#13;
In that budget. GPR funded 25%, or $992.9&#13;
million and tuition $807. I million of the&#13;
$3,882,8 million budgeted. That 25% is well&#13;
below the 65% stated by the 2004 revised&#13;
Regent Tuition Policy.&#13;
lf the state does impose a tuition&#13;
increase, it is the effect of one or more of the&#13;
following: increases in instructional costs; ~&#13;
enrollment changes; increases in the percent&#13;
of cost assessed; or GPR funding increasing&#13;
or decreasing.&#13;
If tuition remains stable, the&#13;
governor or legislature can increase the&#13;
instructional budget. such as for pay increases&#13;
and the student body still pays more. Since&#13;
student fees. o~tuition only supports&#13;
instructional costs in the UW budget.&#13;
Most of the budget therefore goes&#13;
towards other services like project proposals.&#13;
If it was not for the funding of such projects.&#13;
Parks ide would not be able to make such&#13;
changes as expanding its Communication&#13;
Arts building.&#13;
The UW-system is compared&#13;
with other Big Ten states where tuition is&#13;
concerned and Wisconsin increases have&#13;
been both above the average and midpoint&#13;
increases. However, student tuition.&#13;
in Wisconsin for resident undergraduate&#13;
students is still well below that of many of&#13;
our com parables.&#13;
Parks ide is Jumped into a category&#13;
called "Comprehensive Average" with other&#13;
4-year Wisconsin campuses, such as UW-&#13;
10&#13;
A Loo at the Unive&#13;
BY 1EGA . WI&#13;
... provide a 10000&#13;
CTPR funding&#13;
share of "i~&#13;
uf n:gul•&#13;
budget reque t: 5000&#13;
for osl-'L -&#13;
ootirnllc.&#13;
1.;ompens.ation&#13;
Jlld Dew 0&#13;
mi.ti alive ·,&#13;
und fully&#13;
I nd tuition&#13;
1ncrea,e in&#13;
, te finnf!cia l&#13;
,1iJ pma-ram,. "'&#13;
I . , R- Hl lEM , TE&#13;
,-&#13;
- - ,- ... ~&#13;
II I I '&#13;
i g. :i ::,&#13;
c.. C. .,, ;;· ~- - ii"&#13;
~ I» :, ::I \0 Ill ::::, 0 !:!I&#13;
~ C "' :i s· tii "' &lt; lt' - g _ nJ ::,&#13;
"' 0 LJ =-~&#13;
i'll .,,&#13;
::l ...&#13;
0 i_J c;·&#13;
S""&#13;
c.. c:;·&#13;
:::,&#13;
1:11&#13;
-&#13;
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,&#13;
' L II I I&#13;
C: ~ VI&#13;
Ill&#13;
0 ;=;; IO ...,. ;,:- 3 · ::i t6' 0 Ill&#13;
~ ~ rl :,&#13;
':T ~ l'D 'rf} .., n 1ii" ::I ::r&#13;
0 '&lt;&#13;
"' ! s&#13;
iT1&#13;
b&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
;:;·&#13;
::r&#13;
CII&#13;
:::,&#13;
ity Budget&#13;
-&#13;
r- ✓&#13;
/&#13;
~&#13;
-&#13;
•• v&#13;
,.-&#13;
_u l i I II&#13;
~ :1: C cf n&#13;
a 0 &gt; 3 c:: s:: 0 :,,;- ::, :i" :,- ... lCI -0 0 ::l 11) ::, "' 7l&#13;
b i!l, 0 m&#13;
C. r C ~ ~ c 1./"1 s: ~ ~ 1./"1 ::r .... &lt;&#13;
0 ~ ;:r :; o:· :I&#13;
"' 0 ....&#13;
tatJ..\Ut~ from \\'is · 11. in lc~i~lall c Fu,,.:al Buri:all' jauuat')&#13;
1005 L n i \ L:l',.W; uf V,. 1 :.cl n~i a Lc-n; her\ i-.: ..-.&#13;
H "" \ t:r. th1: gt1\ mo ;11 ti&#13;
legislature Lan ma e c-hnnge~ v.•here,er th~y&#13;
C'c tit as lhl.'~ did for the 2 -0 . hu lgl' .&#13;
Io 1.hat budget, GPR fonded 2.S fl, o r $91;1~ .9&#13;
mi Ilion and t LUU nn 117 . I m LI J ion of the&#13;
3. 2. million bud led . That i, 5cr. J:,, v. ell&#13;
he1 "" the 65% ~tated liy lhe 2004 1e\ is~d&#13;
Re}:!ent 1\m..ion Pt1li ') .&#13;
ur compar. le:s;.&#13;
Pai . i · lumpi.:-tl int a cal ory&#13;
cruled •· ompn:heru.ive verage"&#13;
4- ·ar Wi. ctmsm cu.mpu.~c , ~uch a!&gt;&#13;
u E&#13;
THE NDO&#13;
schrnil 13@11 p.edu&#13;
Ev1.: pe " n has a to&#13;
and dream. N l jus.l the ~tar&#13;
athlete r the h Tinr stuJcnL but&#13;
th~ rill Llom 1.1d nt. w· lk.ing&#13;
Jown lh~ hall. ~uing l cfo~ .-.&#13;
J. mig lhdr be l m. k the ir&#13;
own llrL:atru. co 1e true .&#13;
L u gan Bryant i:s a&#13;
hom n hen: at P~ 1 c,&#13;
h ' home to"'n ,~ Racim: and he&#13;
is hopinc- to gr.:tdu.ale ill 201.)9.&#13;
While ht· ha:-. n l ded d hi&#13;
OCTOBER 17, 2006&#13;
Method-; with Ran1e.&#13;
Vhen a~ked if he had&#13;
a dream or a goal in Ii ht&#13;
l :.iugh~d nd ai:d he want~d lO&#13;
he rich and happ . then :idded,&#13;
· I wanl to happy with m • J'fe&#13;
al the en ."&#13;
..., ,,\ , ... , .... , \ \ \ , , .,,&#13;
october 17, 2006&#13;
The Ranger News 11&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
Now Hiring&#13;
party time help. We will work around&#13;
your hours. Selling jobs and ski, board,&#13;
and bike service. Ski and Sports Chalet&#13;
(262) 658-8515 10 a.m. to 6 p.rn.&#13;
Christian family looking for consistent&#13;
child care provider in our home for two&#13;
children, 5 and 2, every Saturday and&#13;
Sunday. Must have own transportation.&#13;
$6.50/hour. 262-909-3074.&#13;
Famous Dave's is hiring! we're located&#13;
in Pleasant Prairie off Hwy. 50. Looking&#13;
for outgoing personalities for our&#13;
host counter position, Stop by for an&#13;
application and return.&#13;
Do you want to be a mentor? Are you&#13;
21? Do you have two free hours a week?&#13;
Contact Abbie Huck at 656-8420 ext.&#13;
175. •&#13;
Aurora Medical Center volunteers invite&#13;
you to join our hospital volunteer group.&#13;
We greet patients and visitors, transport&#13;
patients to their cars and much more.&#13;
Call for more information - Peggy Crane&#13;
948-5605. Located at 10400 75" Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
San Juan Diego Middle School,&#13;
Racine WI, Volunteers needed. One&#13;
day/evening/week. After school&#13;
activities program, M-T-W 3:30 - 5&#13;
p.m. Mentoring Program M-T-W-T 7&#13;
- 8:30 p.m. Dr. Pam Ray, Coordinator&#13;
rayp@sjdms.org.&#13;
Safe Haven of Racine, Inc. Relief&#13;
Staff openings. Part time, weekends,&#13;
holidays - 24 hr. residential shelter&#13;
and transitional living programs.&#13;
Applications online at: www.&#13;
safehavenofracine.org $7.501$8.50 per&#13;
hour. Flexible schedule.&#13;
Museums need you! Consider&#13;
. volunteering at the Kenosha Public&#13;
- Museum or the Dinosaur Discovery&#13;
Museum! Have fun and meet people&#13;
frotn around the world. Great experience.&#13;
Call (262) 653-4139.&#13;
Meet the World at Parkside&#13;
Join us for the weekly meetings of&#13;
Parkside International Club (PIC) every&#13;
Wednesday at 12:00 in Molinaro 109.&#13;
For more information, contact President:&#13;
komaldhindsa@gmail.comorVice&#13;
president: iakhalid@yahoo.com.&#13;
SERVERS-Part time eves.&#13;
Apply in person, THE YELLOW ROSE,&#13;
340 Main St., Racine&#13;
Cooks- Part time eves.&#13;
Apply in person, SEBASTIAN'S, 6025&#13;
Douglas Ave .. Racine.&#13;
Services&#13;
Call STS for the best deals to this year's&#13;
top 10 Spring Break destinations! Earn&#13;
the highest rep commissions! Ask about&#13;
our group discounts! Voted best party&#13;
schedules. 1-800-648-4849. www.&#13;
ststravel.corn.&#13;
Questions about abortion? Make an&#13;
informed choice. Call Alpha Center&#13;
(262) 637-8323&#13;
Care Net Pregnancy Center: Pregnancy&#13;
tests, parenting classes, material&#13;
assistance. All services free and&#13;
confidential. Call 262-658-2222&#13;
(Kenosha) or 847-731-8360 (Zion, IL)&#13;
Opening soon in Racine. Also looking&#13;
for volunteers and interns.&#13;
Need help with German? Linguistics?&#13;
English or Grammar? Tutoring offered.&#13;
$7 per hour. Call 262.497.3302.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Parkview Manor Apartments now&#13;
accepting applications.&#13;
Studio - $385&#13;
I Bedroom - $485&#13;
2 Bedroom - $585&#13;
Air, heat, appliances, underground&#13;
parking, balcony, on-site storage and&#13;
laundry, park-like setting, quiet and ,&#13;
secure, professional staff, on the busline.&#13;
2200 Washington Ave. Racine: Please&#13;
call for a tour today! (262) 898-3953&#13;
Studio apartment, 6505 22"" Ave. Rear,&#13;
Kenosha. Utilities and appliances&#13;
included. $400 per month plus securitydeposit.&#13;
Contact Betty at (414) 828-&#13;
5024.&#13;
Respectable, dependable, and easy-going'&#13;
roommate wanted to share spaCIOUS&#13;
2 bedroom apartment near GTC in&#13;
downtown Racine. No pets or smoking.&#13;
E-mail missmarilynbell@yahoo.com for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Responsible roommatewanted to share&#13;
large house. Northeast Kenosha, $400&#13;
per month deposit needed. CaU Mary&#13;
(262)·818-6818.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
1994 Ford Fl50 XLT 4X4. 5.8 LiterV8&#13;
FuUy Loaded. Standard cab, Long bed ..&#13;
Newer tires, nice rims. Runs great. New&#13;
transmission in Feb. '06. Priced below&#13;
blue book value. $3800 abo .or trade for&#13;
pop-up camper of equal worth. 262-279-&#13;
7929 or 224-715-7310.&#13;
Student Kaitlyn Ulmer's first poetry&#13;
collection: Inklings. Available online at&#13;
www.publishamerica.com.Price: $19.95.&#13;
2001 Chevy Monte Carlo SS, Good&#13;
Condition, $7,500 or best offer. 100,000&#13;
mi. Call or e-mail Kim (262) 498-6072,&#13;
schaw023@uwp.edu.&#13;
f&#13;
chlore Than&#13;
cal Students&#13;
• Attr ct Staff And Fae&#13;
1 ease The W-Par&#13;
octob er 17. 2006&#13;
Now Hiring&#13;
!-'art , time help. We ill work aroun&#13;
· ellin, 1obs and kl, board.&#13;
d bike 1c • ki 'IIJld Spt.l Chalet&#13;
, ~)65&amp;-8515 lO .m,to pm.&#13;
Mus.eum ne l Collii&#13;
lun~eriog at the no bli&#13;
·tu. um or th inos.aur DtsC'WefY&#13;
i fi rm d c:hm c. C ll Alpha Ce, tcr&#13;
262) 6. 7-8 23&#13;
For Rent&#13;
R spc le, depend hle ,&#13;
roomrm.ilc WIIDlcd t ~har pa · ou&#13;
2 hedroom apartrri at ear GTC in&#13;
wn, w 'Ra.cine. No p · r m&#13;
- ai missmari1ynbcll&#13;
re tn rma.tion.&#13;
For al&#13;
Mu euml Have fun iIDd m cl pe pl&#13;
from oi.md 1h w rld. Great flCrience.&#13;
Call (262) 653 l39.&#13;
S1udcnt Kalil) mer' fir poc~&#13;
collecuon: In lin~. A. ·tabk nhn~ al&#13;
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The Ranger News October 17, 2006&#13;
Moot Point by TJ Hysell&#13;
Meanwhile in En&#13;
Hey Reginald.&#13;
....... "emember that time we were J&gt;OO11&#13;
I • I JThe incoherent ramblings . I VV&lt;J0 of former m~dja target Tony Kinn d and current Jerk . ar&#13;
This week on&#13;
"Ironic&#13;
America"...&#13;
No deletreaste&#13;
correcto 'Tu&#13;
eres", tculo tonto!&#13;
Another Subplot by Matthew Gonya and Henry D. Gaskins&#13;
Translation:&#13;
You misspelled&#13;
·you're", dumbass!&#13;
Send all halemaillodarkslar13~2001@yahoo.com (Mandan tcece ccrreo odi() a d8r11.Siar13_2001@Yanoo.COIl1)&#13;
Not Enough Hour In The Day by1'7€'. DeWitt&#13;
WHAT -mE HECIO THE WEU... rr HE GETS HOW COME l'HEY&#13;
r;ID,ETA W:ATS THWE MATERIX.~ 'TEO BETARATGORON, I BEG'NDIG:E;~T~TOfS~f CO\~Ol, 'ANI) WHYCAN'TI&#13;
SE MORPHEOVs?&#13;
WAS MATRIX \&#13;
NOTa..EAR&#13;
ENOUGH?&#13;
\&#13;
Geek days by joey boarini&#13;
Charles the Hammer by Zack Keehan&#13;
Hand over the ml!ligical&#13;
Stick Figure Theatre by Joseph Marek&#13;
"Sigh" your right lt1!SJUSt&#13;
a ploy for altenbon. but&#13;
people ijke thts sluff so i&#13;
do II. Er90. you h&lt;MI to&#13;
do it too \&#13;
G.O.D. Tablet!&#13;
Damn II SJ, put a stupld&#13;
ccsaane fO( the soecre! fMJfy&#13;
eee Is getllng n;lady, except&#13;
you!\ WeMlhat WIlef-eyou're VlirOIlg my stick-figured&#13;
mend I can force you to do what i wantwilh fne&#13;
~ of my 5.FT GIobat Omnlpoter4: OIskJ11Jng.&#13;
TabIBt .0lhel"Wisa I&lt;;now as the&#13;
I ~~,"","""',"\ It along me to BIter&#13;
.... enythu19 withm this&#13;
rc strip; even the&#13;
harecters' moosen&#13;
as YOUl'"SeIt. SJ&#13;
weQ as long I tr'lEIlo;e other&#13;
.....changes&#13;
pease this is just yOUI'&#13;
desprate attempt at&#13;
getting POOPIe to read I, well that loa bad ,&#13;
not It 81'11.1 you can't&#13;
force me too l!1ijs&#13;
spaCIal I&#13;
we tIa\Ie a r&gt;llIoWeen pany spetlllllO&#13;
~ reaaylOf \ \ I rathllr - HOI..Y MONKEY&#13;
KNIFE FIGHT· J feel Dke I'm&#13;
abOUt to explode&#13;
there you going to ItIe Halloween&#13;
special as the your female versIon / \&#13;
weft I would have to - mn Irs compttoption&#13;
and a lot more interesting to&#13;
demonstrate&#13;
12&#13;
C by J ~ ~ph Mare&#13;
This week on&#13;
Ironic&#13;
America~ ...&#13;
October 17. 2006&#13;
A / d The 1n ~ nt ramblings&#13;
VV&lt;'."1 f( of OIT!l&amp;r media tare t T.ony Kin d&#13;
-.. I and C\JrreTTl )erk 11 na(i&#13;
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G O .. D. Tablet•</text>
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