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              <text>UWP club finsing it hard to use the SAC</text>
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              <text>Flie University of 1 ^'isconsin-ParksiJe's Student Newspaper&#13;
Issue 4 Vol. 33 Oct 24 - Nov 7, 2002&#13;
UWP club finding it hard to use the SAC&#13;
AlexVoskuil&#13;
Reporter&#13;
The new addition to the&#13;
SAC was completed in August&#13;
of 2000..The addition was built&#13;
with the primary intent of providing&#13;
needed space to meet&#13;
the increasing academic needs&#13;
of the University as well as&#13;
added facilities for both the&#13;
intramural and varsity athletic&#13;
programs. The addition was&#13;
also intended for student use&#13;
with students being invited to&#13;
use th e facility for open recreation&#13;
during regular business&#13;
hours. Outside vendors&#13;
appeared last on the list of priorities&#13;
for the building of the&#13;
SAC addition.&#13;
"This is a student-first facility,"&#13;
said Athletic Director&#13;
Williams when asked to comment&#13;
on the purpose of the&#13;
addition.&#13;
The SAC is funded the same&#13;
way as the Union is funded. It&#13;
was built with 80% student&#13;
money and 20% funding from&#13;
outside sources. Day-to-day&#13;
operations are funded by segregated&#13;
fee money, which is&#13;
money that the SAC receives&#13;
from the Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee&#13;
(SUFAC). In addition, the SAC is&#13;
funded in large part by community&#13;
memberships and by rent&#13;
paid by organizations and vendors&#13;
who use the facility. UWParkside&#13;
student clubs fall into&#13;
this category. They are charged&#13;
rent for use of the facility for&#13;
any special events they hold in&#13;
the SAC. These clubs, however,&#13;
- " v . J&#13;
The Sports Activity Center addition was finished in August 2000&#13;
receive a reduced rate because&#13;
of their affiliation with the University.&#13;
Outside memberships&#13;
are just a part of the SAC's&#13;
fundraised money, which&#13;
equals more than two-thirds of&#13;
the overall annual operating&#13;
budget.&#13;
"The purpose of our whole&#13;
rate system," according to&#13;
Williams, "is to protect the&#13;
integrity of the people that are&#13;
paying for the building.The students,&#13;
through SUFAC, are paying&#13;
for the building."&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB) is currently trying to&#13;
obtain use of the SAC for its&#13;
annual Spring 2003 Main Event.&#13;
In so doing, President Morgan&#13;
attempted to contact SAC Facilities&#13;
Director J.R. Reed, but her&#13;
phone call has gone unanswered.&#13;
This is not the first time&#13;
that the PAB ha s experienced&#13;
difficulties when trying to contact&#13;
Reed. Last year, then PAB&#13;
president Lee Riopell experienced&#13;
the same situation&#13;
when trying to contact Reed to&#13;
make arrangements for the&#13;
Spring 2002 Main Event.&#13;
AlexVoskuil&#13;
According to Morgan, Riopell&#13;
made several phone calls to&#13;
Reed that went unanswered.&#13;
"He was very hard to get in&#13;
Continued pg. 4&#13;
on the Inside PSGA President responds&#13;
Page: 3&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Page:9&#13;
UW- P Women's Soccer&#13;
Page:6&#13;
Page 2 Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 The Ranger News&#13;
Things to do «4. +U ~ I I&#13;
Oct. 24&#13;
Take Back The Night, 5&#13;
p.m., Upper Main Place,&#13;
sponsor: Womyn's Center&#13;
Friends of the Library presents:&#13;
"More than Just&#13;
Mounds, Part II: Reflections&#13;
of Ancient Native&#13;
American Cosmology in&#13;
Wisconsin," 7 p.m., Overlook&#13;
Lounge, second floor&#13;
of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Library, free.&#13;
Oct. 25/26&#13;
Plays At Parkside: Noel&#13;
Coward's delightful comedy&#13;
"Blithe Spirit," 7:30&#13;
p.m. Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre; tickets: adults&#13;
$12; faculty, staff, students,&#13;
senior citizens $9;&#13;
children 5-12 years $5;&#13;
discount &amp; group rates&#13;
available; call Diane&#13;
Smith at (262) 595-2564&#13;
or access dsmith@&#13;
uwp.edu via email.&#13;
Oct.26&#13;
Cross-Country Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
Meet, National Cross-&#13;
Country Course; noon;&#13;
UWP students admitted&#13;
free w/ID; adults: $5; high&#13;
school students &amp; children&#13;
14 and under $1.&#13;
Oct. 30&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Choirs, James&#13;
Kinchen, conductor, noon,&#13;
Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
free&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
Plays At Parkside: Noel&#13;
Coward's "Blithe Spirit,"&#13;
at the U&#13;
10 a.m., Com. Arts Theatre;&#13;
tickets: adults $12;&#13;
faculty, staff, students,&#13;
senior citizens $9; children&#13;
5-12 years $5; call&#13;
Diane Smith at (262)&#13;
595-2564 or access&#13;
dsmith@ uwp.edu via&#13;
email.&#13;
• Black Student Union Halloween&#13;
Movie and Food&#13;
Drive, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, 7 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 1/2&#13;
Plays at Parkside production&#13;
of "Blithe Spirit," final&#13;
two performances, Com.&#13;
Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.;&#13;
tickets: adults: $12; students,&#13;
faculty, staff,&#13;
seniors: $9; children 5-&#13;
12: $5; call Diane Smith,&#13;
ext. 2564 or access&#13;
dsmith@ uwp.edu&#13;
email&#13;
Northwood, final home&#13;
game, 2:30 p.m., Wood&#13;
Rd. Field; UW-Parkside&#13;
students admitted free&#13;
w/ID; adults: $5; high&#13;
school students: $3; children&#13;
14 and under: $1&#13;
for more information&#13;
Nov. 6&#13;
Nov. 2&#13;
UW-Parkside Experience&#13;
Days: Natural Sciences,&#13;
cail ext. 2355 for more&#13;
information&#13;
Nov. 4&#13;
Perspectives on Religious&#13;
Issues: "Women in Islam,"&#13;
w/Sahar Al-Masri, Union&#13;
106, noon, free&#13;
via Nov. 5&#13;
Nov.1&#13;
• Men's Soccer vs. Northwood,&#13;
final home game,&#13;
noon, Wood Rd. Field&#13;
• Women's Soccer vs.&#13;
Executive in Residence:&#13;
Jerry Ryder, President,&#13;
In-Sink-Erator, (add time&#13;
&amp; location information&#13;
here)&#13;
Arts: ALIVE! presents&#13;
"Grease," Broadway touring&#13;
production, 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
tickets: $24; call ext. 2345&#13;
• Noon Concert: Jayne&#13;
Latva, piano, noon, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater, free&#13;
• Orientation &amp; advising&#13;
session for current &amp;&#13;
potential Spanish&#13;
majors/minors, Questions&#13;
about the program? What&#13;
course to take next? Get&#13;
the answers here! noon,&#13;
Comm Arts 136, free&#13;
Slice of Leadership&#13;
Series: "How to Say 'No'&#13;
Without Feeling Guilty" w/&#13;
Therese Fellner, 4 p.m.,&#13;
Union 106, refreshments,&#13;
call ext. 2278 for more&#13;
reservations&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Drag Show, 5 p.m., Union&#13;
Square&#13;
Nov. 6-8&#13;
Friends of the Library&#13;
Book Sale, Nov. 6 &amp; 7: 9&#13;
a.m.-5 p.m., Nov. 8: 9&#13;
a.m.-noon, Upper Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
PHE&#13;
Students wore 'I Am Dead' T-Shirts on Wednesday October 16 2002 These students&#13;
represented the number of drunk-driving fatalities in Wisconsfn evl^day.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
A.LSmith|&#13;
i better hurry and gather my&#13;
winter provisions!&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tracy Brown low&#13;
Layout Team&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Kim Meyer&#13;
Lauren Mikrut&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Cartoonist&#13;
Jason Meekma&#13;
Photography&#13;
A. L. Smith&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Jackie Pace&#13;
Sarah Masik&#13;
Alissa Pfeffer&#13;
Ashley Russ&#13;
Holli Brown&#13;
Bridgette Schaefer&#13;
Doris Washington&#13;
Brandon Drake&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Arts&amp; Entertainment Editor&#13;
Amy Rogers&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editor at 595-2287 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at&#13;
noon. Please stop by and&#13;
participate as the meetings&#13;
are open to all those&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-I39C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every second&#13;
Thursday throughout the semester by students&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
who are solely responsible for its editorial&#13;
policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy:The Ranger&#13;
encourages letters to the Editor. Letters&#13;
should not exceed 250 words and should be&#13;
delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D-&#13;
139C) . Letters must be typed and include&#13;
the author's name and phone number. Letters&#13;
must be free from misleading or&#13;
libelous content. Letters that fail to comply&#13;
will not be published. For publication purposes,&#13;
author's name can be withheld, but&#13;
only upon request.The Ranger reserves the&#13;
right to edit all letters.&#13;
Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 Page 3&#13;
Letter to the editor: PSGA President responds&#13;
Marco Morrison&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
Dear Ranger News&#13;
I am writing in response to&#13;
the a rticle that was printed in&#13;
your last issue entitled,&#13;
"Problematic&#13;
PSGA." It is no surprise&#13;
that PSGA has&#13;
had its fair share of&#13;
difficulties in the&#13;
past four or five&#13;
years. When I took&#13;
this position, I knew&#13;
that it would take time and&#13;
commitment in order to correct&#13;
some of the mistakes that have&#13;
PSGA has made. I will be the&#13;
first to admit that PSGA in the&#13;
past has not been an active as it&#13;
should have been and producI&#13;
have a vision of&#13;
restoring the&#13;
power of student&#13;
government back&#13;
into the hands of&#13;
you, the student.&#13;
tivity is something that the student&#13;
body deserves.&#13;
This year PSGA has held&#13;
four meetings but only two of&#13;
them have been declared valid.&#13;
At our last General Assembly on&#13;
May 3,2002, Adam&#13;
Deform was elected&#13;
temporary Pro-&#13;
Tempore. It wasn't&#13;
until our first&#13;
meeting, which&#13;
was held September&#13;
20, 2002, that I&#13;
had any contact&#13;
with him in regards to what&#13;
would be on the agenda.&#13;
Ranger News was correct in&#13;
reporting that Adam was persuaded&#13;
into making unconstitutional&#13;
decisions. Throughout&#13;
the meeting, Adam, repeatedly&#13;
and knowingly violated the&#13;
constitution which resulted in&#13;
me sending numerous appeals&#13;
to the Judicial Branch. Our second&#13;
meeting was held on September&#13;
27,2002, at this meeting,&#13;
the Justices Queina&#13;
Staszewski and&#13;
Jamie Freeman gave&#13;
their verdict (which&#13;
is open to the public)&#13;
on the appeals,&#13;
which verified that&#13;
the actions taken on&#13;
the September 20th&#13;
meeting were unconstitutional.&#13;
Our third meeting was then&#13;
cancelled in order to get things&#13;
more organized.&#13;
Before Friday, October 11,&#13;
2002, PSGA had only six senators&#13;
and no directors. In the&#13;
we first&#13;
needed to get&#13;
students who&#13;
wanted to see a&#13;
change involved&#13;
in student&#13;
government.&#13;
past few years, PSGAs membership&#13;
has dwindled from fifty&#13;
senators to a mere twentyseven.&#13;
I feel that twenty-seven&#13;
senators is not a sufficient number&#13;
to represent the over five&#13;
thousand students&#13;
who attend this university,&#13;
and contrary&#13;
to the previous article&#13;
written, we are&#13;
making due with&#13;
what we have. PSGA&#13;
has for years been&#13;
plagued by corruption&#13;
and deceit, and I fel that if&#13;
were going to get on the right&#13;
track, we first needed to get students&#13;
who wanted to see a&#13;
change involved in student government.&#13;
Yes.we have had problems&#13;
getting started Out onlv&#13;
because of the chaos that has&#13;
been accumulating over the&#13;
past years.&#13;
PSGA has been a problematic&#13;
organization that many have&#13;
not wanted to confront. I have&#13;
a vision of restoring the power&#13;
of student government back&#13;
into the hands of you, the student.&#13;
But I can only do so much&#13;
as a n individual. It will take a&#13;
collaborative effort on the part&#13;
of each individual student and&#13;
a more proactive approach&#13;
from the administration to&#13;
ensure that the old type mistakes&#13;
do not happen again.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Marco Morrison&#13;
DSGA President&#13;
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Page 4 Oct 24 - Nov 7, 2002 The Ranger News&#13;
UWP club finding in difficult to use the SAC continued from page I&#13;
contact with," said Morgan. As a&#13;
result, the PAB ended up holding&#13;
last year's Main Event on&#13;
the Union Patio. It rained the&#13;
day of the event, which forced&#13;
the event into the Union&#13;
Square and the Union Bizarre.&#13;
This facility was too small to&#13;
accommodate the displays and&#13;
consequently, the success of&#13;
the event suffered because of&#13;
it. Had the PAB been granted&#13;
use of the SAC facilities, there&#13;
would have been ample space&#13;
and the event would not have&#13;
been compromised by the&#13;
weather.&#13;
According to Morgan, the&#13;
real issue behind the SAC's&#13;
reluctance to accommodate&#13;
the PAB began when the addition&#13;
to the SAC was being built.&#13;
Morgan had stated that Advisor&#13;
to the PAB, Stephanie Siravatka-&#13;
Marshall was asked by Reed to&#13;
contribute funds toward the&#13;
purchase of a floor. At the time,&#13;
he indicated that, if the PAB&#13;
helped in this way, they would&#13;
be able to hold their events in&#13;
the SAC. The reasoning behind&#13;
the request was that the PABsponsored&#13;
Main Event attracted&#13;
such a wide attendance&#13;
(where people(s) from outside&#13;
the University attend) that&#13;
there is increased wear and&#13;
tear on the floor. PAB's purchase&#13;
of a floor would be a&#13;
way to offset some of these&#13;
costs. The PAB did not respond&#13;
to this request and were not&#13;
forthcoming with any funds.&#13;
Sirovatka-Marshall did not&#13;
return any e-mails as she is currently&#13;
on leave from the University.&#13;
Senior Jamie Freeman has&#13;
had many conversations with&#13;
Reed about renting the SAC&#13;
and he has always found him&#13;
to be more than willing to&#13;
accommodate outside vendors,&#13;
for example, student&#13;
clubs.&#13;
"I've spoken to J.R. Reed&#13;
many times and know him&#13;
pretty well as far as this issue&#13;
and I think he is more than&#13;
willing to grant use of the Athletic&#13;
Building."&#13;
According to Freeman, the&#13;
real issue is whether or not the&#13;
organization requesting facility&#13;
use came to Reed in a timely&#13;
manner and with a well-organized&#13;
plan. Athletic Director&#13;
Williams agrees with Freeman's&#13;
assessment of the situation.&#13;
"We are very willing to work&#13;
with any outside club organizations,"&#13;
he stated. "We want to&#13;
be very student-friendly, but&#13;
those clubs have to abide by&#13;
our rules. Clubs must contact&#13;
the proper people early&#13;
enough so that both parties&#13;
have more than enough time&#13;
to plan things outs correctly"&#13;
The SAC can be looked at&#13;
as a business, which caters first&#13;
and foremost to the needs of&#13;
the students. However, fundraising&#13;
money as mentioned earlier,&#13;
is crucial to the success of&#13;
this business. As Williams stated,"&#13;
Anytime an event comes in&#13;
that raises our expenses, it's&#13;
either going to do one of two&#13;
things. It's either going to raise&#13;
the amount of money we have&#13;
to fundraise extra to pay for&#13;
that, or it's going to lower it."&#13;
Any event that is held in the&#13;
SAC must help lower the&#13;
fundraised portion of the budget.&#13;
Many factors play into the&#13;
expenses that the rental is&#13;
responsible for besides purchasing&#13;
space for an event.&#13;
These expenses can include&#13;
extra security help, janitorial&#13;
work after an event, and/or&#13;
even the excess use of toilet&#13;
paper, which the SAC is&#13;
charged for anyway&#13;
Morgan views this as an&#13;
issue of sour grapes. She&#13;
believes that the PAB is being&#13;
punished for not contributing&#13;
funds when the new addition&#13;
was being built. Williams said&#13;
that clubs were not asked to&#13;
contribute any funds, although&#13;
he had not yet arrived as Athletic&#13;
Director when work was&#13;
being completed on this project.&#13;
Reed was asked to comment&#13;
about this but he&#13;
declined.&#13;
The SAC was built for academics&#13;
and athletics. Outside&#13;
rentals, including student&#13;
clubs, play a key part in the&#13;
overall annual budget of the&#13;
facility.&#13;
The Main Event is not until&#13;
the end of the spring semester.&#13;
The parties may come to a resolution&#13;
by that time.&#13;
Breast Cancer aware&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Reporter&#13;
National health organizations&#13;
seek to promote awareness of breast&#13;
cancer during October. The National&#13;
Cancer Institute (NCI) estimates that&#13;
about 1 in 8 women in the United&#13;
States (approximately 13.3 percent)&#13;
will develop.&#13;
All women are at risk for breast&#13;
cancer, whether it runs in the family&#13;
or not (American Cancer Society).&#13;
Breast cancer does not only affect&#13;
women: The National Breast Cancer&#13;
Foundation reports that this year&#13;
1,600 men will be diagnosed with&#13;
breast cancer. It is a good practice for&#13;
both women and men to perform&#13;
breast self-exams.&#13;
The NCI recommends that&#13;
women aged 40 undergo annual&#13;
mammograms (x-rays of the breast)&#13;
to detect any cancer that may be present.&#13;
Deaths from breast cancer have&#13;
been reduced by 44% since the mammography&#13;
program began. (8/1/02&#13;
issue of the medical journal CANCER.)&#13;
It's never too early to take meamonth&#13;
sures to prevent breast cancer.&#13;
According to the medical journal The&#13;
Lancet (Vol. 360: 1044-1049), women&#13;
who smoke within 5 years of puberty&#13;
double their chances of getting breast&#13;
cancer; smoking at any age weakens&#13;
the immune system's protection&#13;
against the development of cancer&#13;
and all other illnesses. Alcohol also&#13;
raises the possibility of getting breast&#13;
cancer: Women who consume just&#13;
one drink per day increase their&#13;
chances from 1 in 8 to 1 in 7. In addition&#13;
to abstaining from drinking and&#13;
smoking, a diet with plenty of calcium&#13;
and vitamin D from dairy products&#13;
(such as sour cream, yogurt, and&#13;
cream cheese) can help prevent&#13;
breast cancer.&#13;
The best prevention of breast cancer&#13;
is regular examinations and mammograms.&#13;
Many women do not get&#13;
mammograms because of the cost&#13;
factor. This is why the American Cancer&#13;
Society offers an online search for&#13;
low cost or free mammograms nationwide&#13;
along with instructions on how&#13;
to do a BSE at www.cancer.org. It&#13;
could save your life.&#13;
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The Ranger News Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 Page 5&#13;
UW-Parkside student competed&#13;
for "Miss Wisconsin USA" Title&#13;
Jackie Pace&#13;
Reporter&#13;
One of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside's very own students&#13;
represented the city of Kenosha&#13;
in the "Miss Wisconsin USA"&#13;
pageant held earlier this month&#13;
in Madison. LaTarah Turner, a&#13;
junior here at Parkside majoring&#13;
in criminal justice and sociology&#13;
with a minor in education,&#13;
was crowned "Miss Kenosha&#13;
USA" earlier this year. The "Miss&#13;
Wisconsin USA" pageant was&#13;
the first major pageant that&#13;
LaTarah has ever competed in,&#13;
and even though she did not&#13;
win the title, she says that she&#13;
does plan on going back to&#13;
compete next year. Contestants&#13;
LaTarah Turner&#13;
in the pageant were judged on&#13;
the basis of four different&#13;
areas: a personal interview,&#13;
bathing suit competition,&#13;
evening gown competition,&#13;
and observation of their personalities&#13;
throughout the weekend.&#13;
If she were ever to receive&#13;
the title of "Miss Wisconsin&#13;
USA", LaTarah says that she&#13;
would use the role "to promote&#13;
youth awareness of drugs and&#13;
gangs and develop programs to&#13;
keep them away from these&#13;
things." She hopes to have a&#13;
career someday where she can&#13;
work with juvenile delinquents&#13;
in the community. Besides&#13;
keeping herself busy with her&#13;
studies, LaTarah is also&#13;
involved here on campus as a&#13;
DJ for Parkside's radio station -&#13;
WIPZ, and she also manages&#13;
the girl's basketball team.&#13;
Punk cinema a hit&#13;
Joshua Diefenbach&#13;
Reporter&#13;
The Sex Pistols, The&#13;
Ramones, The Clash, Black&#13;
Flag, and The Germs.These are&#13;
some of the bands from the&#13;
late 70's early 80's that may&#13;
come to mind when you hear&#13;
the word 'punk". Here at Parkside&#13;
one class is looking at the&#13;
elements of this four-lettered&#13;
word a little more closely&#13;
The class is called Punk&#13;
Cinema and is taught by Professor&#13;
Jay McRoy who has&#13;
been with the English Department&#13;
for two years. Punk Cinema&#13;
is a class which as Professor&#13;
McRoy put it "Is to provide&#13;
a forum and to talk about a&#13;
mode of expression both cinematic,&#13;
literary, musical, etc. that&#13;
doesn't get the attention it&#13;
really deserves." McRoy later&#13;
went on to say "Because one&#13;
of the things I'm hoping these&#13;
films show is that the image&#13;
that people associate with a&#13;
term like punk has been&#13;
mobilized so diversely in cinema"&#13;
Despite being one credit,&#13;
this course is taken by&#13;
approximately forty students&#13;
showing people are there&#13;
because they want to be&#13;
there not because they necessarily&#13;
need to be there.&#13;
With so many people&#13;
attending this course it has&#13;
brought into question&#13;
whether or not Punk Cinema&#13;
should be a full 3-credit&#13;
course rather than a 1-credit&#13;
course held once every other&#13;
week as it is now..The idea of&#13;
making Punk Cinema a full&#13;
course might be made possible&#13;
due to the new Film Studies&#13;
Certificate. This is a 15-&#13;
Continued pg. 8&#13;
Voted Best Music Club&#13;
by the&#13;
Racine Journal Times&#13;
Hwy. 11&#13;
Microtek&#13;
«&#13;
©&#13;
Behind&#13;
Georgetown Mart &amp;&#13;
Ferraro's Pizza&#13;
Vst mile from Microtel&#13;
Taylor&#13;
AN IRISH PUB WITH A ROCK AND ROLL ATTITUDE&#13;
Bands we've had in the oast:&#13;
Black 47 (NYC), Brother (Australia), The Blarney Brother s (Texa s), Danu (Ireland),&#13;
Old Blind Dogs (Scotland), Shame MacGowen and The Popes (Londor\/lreland)&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
$1.50 Lite Pints&#13;
$2.00 Sky Biue&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
Available for Parties&#13;
8-10pm No Cover&#13;
The John Bunic&#13;
Big Band&#13;
$3.50 Pitchers of Lite&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
9pm -1:30am&#13;
Karaoke&#13;
Every 3rd Wed.&#13;
Live Irish, Local&#13;
National &amp; International&#13;
$2.00 Long Islands&#13;
7 - 10pm&#13;
No Cover&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Open Acoustic&#13;
Jam Session&#13;
20 oz. Miller Lite $1.75&#13;
20 oz. Rolling Rock $2.50&#13;
20 oz. Rails $2.50&#13;
FRI-SAT&#13;
Live Local&#13;
National,&#13;
&amp; International&#13;
Music&#13;
Racine's Home&#13;
of Live Music&#13;
SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S LARGEST SELECTION OF IR!SH&#13;
ONE OF RACINE'S LARGEST SELECTION OF PREMIUM &amp; IMPORTED BEERS&#13;
AND SINGLE MALT SCOTCHS AND IRISH WHISKEYS&#13;
554-9695&#13;
3700 Meachem Road&#13;
Page 6 Oct 24 - Nov 7, 2002&#13;
University Sports&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
UW - Parkside's Women's Soccer&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
UWP Women's Soccer Team&#13;
stays among top; elite in GLVC&#13;
Its' happening all over&#13;
again. At this time last season,&#13;
the women's soccer team&#13;
found themselves looking up at&#13;
Northern Kentucky with every&#13;
other team in the GLVC (Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference) taking&#13;
a back seat. This season is&#13;
no different. Only two games&#13;
remain in the GLVC for Parkside&#13;
(9-1-1 overall). Again, they find&#13;
themselves sitting in second&#13;
place to Northern Kentucky&#13;
with every other team looking&#13;
up.&#13;
A victory against Southern&#13;
Indiana last Sunday, October 20,&#13;
2002, kept the Rangers (6-1-1 in&#13;
GLVC) in sole possession of&#13;
second place in the conference.&#13;
The Rangers held the&#13;
Screaming Eagles scoreless in&#13;
the game winning 2-0. This is&#13;
their shutout in a row after giving&#13;
up two goals in a loss to&#13;
Northern Kentucky on October&#13;
6, 2002. The victory gives them&#13;
nine shutouts in eleven games&#13;
overall.Sophomore goalie Abbigale&#13;
Wild, sophomore&#13;
Stephanie Strauss and freshmen&#13;
Lisa Gorski, all had big&#13;
games defensively for the&#13;
Rangers against Southern Indiana.&#13;
Head Coach Troy Fabiano&#13;
credits the defense for the victory&#13;
as he said the offense was&#13;
a little flat on the field.&#13;
Although the Lady Rangers&#13;
scored twice, Fabiano saw&#13;
10/24&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
10/25&#13;
UW-P Men's Soccer&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
5:00p.m.&#13;
Missouri-&#13;
UW-P Women's Soccer @ Missouri-&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
UW-P Women's V-Ball&#13;
anapolis&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
Itidiareas&#13;
to improve in on offense&#13;
before heading into the championship&#13;
season.&#13;
"We were very average," said&#13;
Fabiano. "We were a much better&#13;
team than they were, but we&#13;
got caught playing down to&#13;
their level."&#13;
The Rangers were held off&#13;
the scoreboard for most of the&#13;
first half. Freshman Erica Kollatz&#13;
put the Rangers on the&#13;
UW-P Women's V-Ball @ St.&#13;
Joseph's&#13;
1:00p.m.&#13;
10/27&#13;
UW-P Men's Soccer @ Quincy&#13;
Noon&#13;
UW-P Women's Soccer @&#13;
Quincy&#13;
2:30p.m.&#13;
10/28&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
10/29&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
scoreboard with 43:17 gone by&#13;
in the first half. The goal gives&#13;
her four on the season.&#13;
In the second half the&#13;
Rangers found the back of the&#13;
net as senior Carla Gomez&#13;
added some insurance with&#13;
28:55 left on the clock. The goal&#13;
was Gomezfs sixth for the season.&#13;
This was a big win for the&#13;
Rangers. "After Northern Ken-&#13;
10/31&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
10/26&#13;
UW-P Men &amp; Women's Cross&#13;
Country @ UW-P&#13;
10:00a.m.&#13;
10/30&#13;
UW-P Women's V-Ball&#13;
Lewis&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
1 1 / 0 1&#13;
Northwood @ UW P Men's Soccer&#13;
Noon&#13;
Northwood @ UW-P Women's&#13;
Soccer&#13;
2:30p.m.&#13;
UW-P V-Ball @ Edwardsville&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
11/02&#13;
UW-P Women's V-Ball @ Missouri-&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
1:00p.m.&#13;
11/03&#13;
UW-P Women's Soccer GLVC&#13;
Quarterfinals&#13;
tucky, now, we were able to get a&#13;
couple of wins to get our confidence&#13;
back up,! said Fabiano. It&#13;
was a momentum building victory&#13;
as they now take to the&#13;
road this weekend for games&#13;
against Missouri-St. Louis and&#13;
Quincy. This will conclude the&#13;
conference portion of their&#13;
schedule.They will return home&#13;
to play the final game of the regular&#13;
season against Northwood&#13;
on November 1,2002.&#13;
t.b.a.&#13;
11/04&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
11/05&#13;
No Events Scheduled&#13;
11/06&#13;
UW-P Men's Soccer GLVC&#13;
Quarterfinals&#13;
t.b.a.&#13;
Quincy @ UW-P Women's VBali&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
UW- P men and women cross country teams keep rolling&#13;
into the championship season&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday October 19.&#13;
2002, the UW-Parkside Men and&#13;
Women's Cross Country Team&#13;
took part in the 20th annual&#13;
Parkside Invite.This was the second&#13;
of three meets at Parkside&#13;
this season. On an overcast,&#13;
blustery day with temperatures&#13;
only in the lower 40's, both&#13;
squads for Parkside were solid.&#13;
The women finished third&#13;
overall out of 30 teams as they&#13;
accumulated 132 total points.&#13;
Bradley University, IL won the&#13;
meet tallying only 55 points.&#13;
Kathleen Brice of Elmhurst College,&#13;
IL was the overall winner&#13;
of the women's race with a time&#13;
of 18:06 for the 3.1 mile run&#13;
On the men's side, the team&#13;
totaled 234 points. It was good&#13;
for ninth place overall out of 25&#13;
teams that qualified for the&#13;
race. UW-Platteville won the&#13;
meet for the men's side with 85&#13;
points. Ryan Kleimenhagen of&#13;
Platteville was first overall. He&#13;
finished with a time of 25:01 in&#13;
the 8K race.&#13;
This Saturday, October, 26,&#13;
Men's Results (8K)&#13;
Name Place Time&#13;
Women's Results&#13;
Name&#13;
(5K)&#13;
Place Time&#13;
2002, the men Cal Kromm, FR 26 26:19 Robyn Stevens, SO 14 18:44&#13;
and women's Jason Matousek, FR&#13;
(* Y HCC Pniinfnr -i-LJU. .. : 28 26:20 ErinEnright, SR 20 18:55&#13;
cross country Tom Obehauf, FR t"PP*m T A/ill o rt ^ i n 41 26:43 Jessica Kranfz, 3R 25 19:03&#13;
"pl2ay hh ost ,tog ?t/h e _P aBl^ G u, tm»„ -V ^&#13;
Great Lakes Val- Colwell, FR&#13;
65 27:12 Janna Weeden, SR 32 19:15&#13;
74 27:19 Anne Favolise, SO 41 19:22&#13;
ley Conference Soper, SO&#13;
Championship. T.C.DeWitt,SO&#13;
78&#13;
87 •&#13;
27:24&#13;
27:39&#13;
Amanda Bergeron, SO 81&#13;
Lexie Burrows, SO ; 82 III&#13;
19:57&#13;
19:58&#13;
This is the final Matt Hudson, FR&#13;
meet to be held Adam Anderson, FR&#13;
P^rk^iHp fhic&#13;
00 27:54 Lindsay DeWitt, JR 00 20:09&#13;
00 27:58 Dottie Boyce, FR 00 20:20&#13;
season Michael Terantino, FR 00 28:00 Emily Junion, FR 00 20:46&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s Lorie Karls, SR 00 20:48&#13;
overall team _ Mandy Sisk, FR 00 21:47&#13;
results tor the men and&#13;
women's squads are as follows:&#13;
University Sports&#13;
The Ranger News 2002 Page 7&#13;
(Through i0/24/02)&#13;
Men's Soccer Scoreboard&#13;
GLVC Overall&#13;
W L T Pet. W L T Pet&#13;
Lewis - 7 1 0 .875 12 3 0 .800&#13;
Quincy 5 1 2 .750 9 2 2 .714&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 6 2 1 .722 8 4 2 .643&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 5 2 1 .688 6 6 1 .500&#13;
Southern Indiana 5 3 0 .625 8 7 0 .533&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside 4 3 1 .563 9 4 1 .679&#13;
Bellarmine 3 5 0 .375 9 7 2 .563&#13;
Northern Kentucky 2 5 1 .313 5 7 2 .429&#13;
St. Joseph's 2 5 0 .286 5 11; Oil .313&#13;
Indianapolis 2 6 0 .250 2 10 3 .233&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 0 8 0 .000 0 12 Oil .000&#13;
Recent Results&#13;
Friday, October 18,2002&#13;
Parkside defeats&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 4-0&#13;
Sunday, October 20,2002&#13;
Parkside defeats&#13;
Southern Indian 2-1&#13;
Upcoming Games&#13;
Friday, October 25,2002&#13;
Parkside @ Missouri-St. Louis 5:00p.m.&#13;
Sunday, October, 27,2002&#13;
Parkside @ Quincy Noon&#13;
Friday, November 1, 2002&#13;
Northwood @ Parkside Noon&#13;
UW-P athletic results&#13;
from the weekend&#13;
The UW-Parkside soccer&#13;
teams are flying high after two&#13;
victories each. The women&#13;
obliterated Kentucky Wesleyan,&#13;
7-0 on Friday. That win came&#13;
right after the men had handed&#13;
KWC a 4-0 whitewash. Neil&#13;
Couch had three goals in that&#13;
game.&#13;
On Sunday, the men beat&#13;
Southern Indiana, 2-1 to&#13;
improve their record to 941&#13;
overall and 4-3-1 in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference. The&#13;
women beat Southern Indiana&#13;
2-0. They are now 9-1-1 overall&#13;
and 6-0-1 in the GLVC. All nine&#13;
victories of the women's team's&#13;
wins have been shutouts and&#13;
goalkeeper Abbigale Wild has&#13;
been credited with eight. Her&#13;
goals against average is a stingy&#13;
0.28.&#13;
The volleyball team had&#13;
mixed results. Northern Kentucky&#13;
beat the Rangers in a&#13;
tough five-game match Friday&#13;
but the team rebounded with a&#13;
three-game sweep of Bellarmine&#13;
Saturday. UW-Parkside&#13;
is now 12-8 overall, 5-4 in the&#13;
conference. The next-and final!-&#13;
home match is against Quincy&#13;
on Friday, Nov. 8, starting&#13;
at7p.m.&#13;
At this weekend's UW-P&#13;
Invitational Saturday, the UW-P&#13;
women finished third in a field&#13;
of 30 teams and the men were&#13;
ninth out of 25 squads. Only&#13;
Bradley, which is favored to&#13;
win the Missouri Valley Conference,&#13;
and Northwest College,&#13;
ranked No. 2 in the NAIA, finished&#13;
ahead of the Lady&#13;
Rangers. Robyn Stevens led&#13;
UW-P with a 17th place finish&#13;
in 18:44 for the 5K course. The&#13;
Ranger men were paced by&#13;
Cal Kromm who finished 26th&#13;
UW-P series of player profiles:&#13;
cross country runner JannaWeeden&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Senior Janna Weeden has&#13;
been running competitively&#13;
since the seventh grade. However,&#13;
she didn't lace up her shoes&#13;
for cross-country until her introduction&#13;
to the sport at the start&#13;
of her collegiate career.&#13;
In grade school and&#13;
throughout high school, Janna&#13;
participated solely in track and&#13;
field."When I was in elementary&#13;
school we always had this one&#13;
little track meet every year with&#13;
the other elementary school&#13;
where I gr ew up," said Weeden.&#13;
Both schools shared the same&#13;
Physical Education Teacher,&#13;
who orchestrated the annual&#13;
Meet. The event proved to be a&#13;
formidable rivalry between the&#13;
two grade schools in Richland&#13;
Center, Wl. Richland Center,&#13;
Weeden's hometown, is located&#13;
60 miles West of Madison.&#13;
Her transition from track to&#13;
cross country has been eased&#13;
due to her own dedication in&#13;
adjusting to the sport. She also&#13;
contributes her success to&#13;
women's cross country coach&#13;
Mike DeWitt. The events that&#13;
Weeden participated in high&#13;
school, including the 800 meter&#13;
race and the 3200K, helped prepare&#13;
her for competition on the&#13;
collegiate level in this sport as&#13;
well.&#13;
Janna Weeden&#13;
In each cross country meet,&#13;
there are five players who&#13;
count as scorers and two players&#13;
who serve as blockers. A&#13;
scorer is one who counts in the&#13;
overall team's results. Blockers&#13;
simply push other team's runners&#13;
back a notch by finishing&#13;
ahead of them. Weeden has&#13;
been a scorer in each of the&#13;
meets so far this season even as&#13;
she battles through a severe&#13;
hamstring strain,The injury has&#13;
bothered her off and on since&#13;
her freshmen year. "Being a&#13;
scorer is an accomplishment&#13;
because I didn't know if I&#13;
would be ever be a scorer&#13;
again," commented Weeden on&#13;
the injury&#13;
Weeden is planning on graduating&#13;
in December 2003. She is&#13;
currently working on a major in&#13;
Biology and an Environmental&#13;
Science minor. After college she&#13;
plans on continuing her education&#13;
by obtaining a Teaching&#13;
Certificate to one day teach sciences&#13;
at the high school level.&#13;
She is looking to stay within the&#13;
UW-System to obtain this&#13;
degree.&#13;
In her three plus years at&#13;
UW-Parkside, Weeden has&#13;
received Academic All-American&#13;
honors for her sophomore&#13;
and junior years. Freshmen are&#13;
ineligible to receive such an&#13;
award. Recipients must be fulltime&#13;
students and maintain a&#13;
3.25 cumulative GPA for the&#13;
award. They must also finish in&#13;
the top 40 of the Regional Conference&#13;
Championship meets&#13;
for Cross Country. Weeden has&#13;
also appeared on the Dean's&#13;
List twice, which requires a&#13;
3.5GPA per semester.&#13;
Weeden is currently preparing&#13;
for the championship,&#13;
which will get underway this&#13;
weekend.The event is the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Championship. It is&#13;
a home event scheduled for Saturday,&#13;
October, 26, 2002. The&#13;
men's cross country team will&#13;
also be in action this Saturday&#13;
as they begin the Championship&#13;
portion of the schedule&#13;
as well.&#13;
in a time of 26:19 Girls &amp; Sports by: Justin Borus and Andrew Feinstein&#13;
for the 8K course.&#13;
A total of 298 runners&#13;
finished the&#13;
women's race,&#13;
while the men's&#13;
edition had 317&#13;
runners. UW-Parkside&#13;
hosts the&#13;
Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference cross&#13;
country meet this&#13;
Saturday to close&#13;
out the season.&#13;
LOOK AT THAT SOY&#13;
READING A BOOK V&#13;
R HOW CAN yoo N&#13;
CONCENTRATE IN A&#13;
COFFEE SHOP WITH&#13;
CUWTEA LGKIIRNLGS ABLYW? AYS&gt;&#13;
Managing money for people&#13;
with other things to think about.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
ONLY SUPERSTAR&#13;
ATHLETES SHOULD&#13;
COME OUT OF RETIREMENT.&#13;
Page 8 Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 The Ranger News&#13;
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credit program in which students&#13;
obtain an interdisciplinary&#13;
concentration in film&#13;
studies. Professor McRoy thinks&#13;
that sometime within the next&#13;
year or two Punk Cinema&#13;
would a make good addition&#13;
to this innovative program.&#13;
This newfound interest in&#13;
Punk Cinema despite having&#13;
no advertising or publicity&#13;
shows that it could make a&#13;
beneficial full 3-credit course. It&#13;
also shows that this a subject of&#13;
importance to those attending&#13;
here at Parkside, and hopefully&#13;
will be seen as a full course&#13;
within the next few semesters.&#13;
Join the Ranger News&#13;
Come in on Mondays at Noon&#13;
Wylli D- 139c&#13;
Punk Cinema. Continued from page five.&#13;
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The Ranger News Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 Page 9&#13;
RANGERCARD&#13;
ONLINE!&#13;
10-8-02 INC #02-653 Fireworks.&#13;
University Apartments. 6:30&#13;
p.m. While on routine patrol officer&#13;
observed fireworks from a balcony.&#13;
Investigation continuing.&#13;
10-9-02 INC 02-654 Medical&#13;
Assist. Outerloop Road. 1:13 am. A&#13;
student with head injury was transported&#13;
to Kenosha Hospital.&#13;
INC 02-655 Traffic violation. Hwy.&#13;
31/JR. 1:51 am. Driver cited for&#13;
speeding - 71 mph in 45 mph zone.&#13;
INC 02-656 Agency Assist. CTH&#13;
A/22nd Avenue. 2:36 pm. Kenosha&#13;
County Sheriff's Dept. requested&#13;
assistance at traffic accident. Traffic&#13;
was&#13;
redirected until officer was relieved.&#13;
INC 02-657 Fire Alarm. SAC Building.&#13;
5:45 pm. Officer dispatched to&#13;
SAC due to smoke detector alarm.&#13;
After investigation it was determined&#13;
that the smoke was due to&#13;
improper ventilation while making&#13;
popcorn. Alarm was reset.&#13;
INC 02-658 Traffic Violation. Wood&#13;
Rd/Outerloop Rd. 10:21 pm. A citation&#13;
was issued for failure to stop.&#13;
10-10-02 INC 02-659&#13;
Theft/personal property. CART.&#13;
11:26 am. Student reported purse&#13;
missing from sitting area. Case is&#13;
inactive until further information is&#13;
developed.&#13;
INC 02-660 Lewd &amp; Lascivious&#13;
Behavior. Innerloop Rd. 2:45 pm.&#13;
Officer responded to report of a&#13;
nude male driving around Inner&#13;
Loop Road. Vehicle was stopped.&#13;
Subject was arrested and transported&#13;
to Kenosha County Jail.&#13;
Charges will be filed thru the DA's&#13;
office.&#13;
INC 02-661 Theft/personal property.&#13;
Ranger Hall. 6:27 pm. Student&#13;
reported items missing from her&#13;
room. A r eport has been filed with&#13;
the Twin Lakes Police Department.&#13;
10-11-02 INC 02-662 Traffic&#13;
Accident. Outer Loop Road. 5:28&#13;
pm. Student reported damages to&#13;
her vehicle's bumper from a bolt.&#13;
Student given a self report.&#13;
10-12-02 INC 02-663 Underage&#13;
alcohol. Ranger Hall. 12:44&#13;
am. Students were cited for underage&#13;
drinking.&#13;
INC 02-664 Speeding. STH 31/STH&#13;
E. 3:16 am. A citation was issued&#13;
for speeding - 66 mph in a 45 mph&#13;
zone.&#13;
INC 02-665 Suspicious Circumstance.&#13;
Union. 7:18 pm. Student&#13;
reported snack machine was open.&#13;
Machine was emptied and contents&#13;
taken to Parkside Police. No witnesses/&#13;
suspects.&#13;
10/13/02 Inc 02-666 Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Comm. Arts parking&#13;
lot, Between 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. A student&#13;
parked in the lot reported finding&#13;
his left rear wing window&#13;
smashed. A CD player was missing&#13;
along with several miscellaneous&#13;
personal items. No suspects&#13;
or witnesses to the incident.&#13;
Inc 02-667 Agency Assist, 4300&#13;
12th Street, 6:11 p.m. Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff Dept. requested assistance&#13;
a their traffic stop.&#13;
Inc 02-668 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Wyllie Hall MAC lab, 6:48&#13;
p.m. A student reported her cell&#13;
phone stolen while she was in a&#13;
computer lab. No suspects or witnesses&#13;
to the theft.&#13;
Inc 02-669 Theft from Motor Vehicle,&#13;
Ranger parking lot, 10:14 p.m.&#13;
A student reported her car window&#13;
had been smashed and her purse&#13;
taken. No witnesses to the incident.&#13;
10/14/02 Inc 02-670 Fraud -&#13;
UWS Chapter 18, Ranger Hall&#13;
parking lot, 10:25 a.m. While performing&#13;
parking enforcement, officer&#13;
observed a vehicle displaying a&#13;
10/17/02 Inc 02-678 Operating&#13;
While Intoxicated, CTH E, East of&#13;
CTH G, 12:43 a.m. Information on&#13;
a driver who had been stopped for&#13;
speeding, indicated his license was&#13;
suspended and subject also was&#13;
wanted on a warrant through a local&#13;
police agency. Tests indicated the&#13;
driver to be intoxicated and he was&#13;
arrested and transported to the&#13;
Kenosha County jail. Citations were&#13;
issued for speeding 70 mph in a 45&#13;
mph zone, operating while intoxicated&#13;
and operating while suspended,&#13;
2nd offense.&#13;
Inc 02-679 Medical Assist, Comm.&#13;
Arts, 10:41 a.m. Officers were dispatched&#13;
to check on a female who&#13;
had passed out in class and was&#13;
unconscious. Kenosha Med Unit 5&#13;
transported subject to Kenosha&#13;
Memorial Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Inc 02-680 Harassment/Threats,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 7:07 p.m. A student&#13;
reported getting harassing Instant&#13;
Messages from another student.&#13;
Incident pending further investigation.&#13;
10/18/02 Inc 02-681 Agency&#13;
Assist, CTH JR, .5 miles West of&#13;
Outer Loop Road, 2:41 a.m. While&#13;
on patrol, officers came across an&#13;
overturned vehicle. The vehicle&#13;
owner, a student, could not be&#13;
located. Officers stood by while&#13;
vehicle was removed from the&#13;
scene.&#13;
fraudulent parking permit which&#13;
had been made with a copy&#13;
machine. Parking citation for display&#13;
of forged permit and state citation&#13;
for Misuse of Parking Services&#13;
(Fraudulent Permit) issued.&#13;
Inc 02-671 Traffic Accident, Union&#13;
parking lot, 4:39 p.m. A student&#13;
struck another student's vehicle&#13;
when she pulled into a traffic aisle.&#13;
State accident report filed.&#13;
Inc 02-672 Fire Alarm, Wyllie Hall&#13;
level 1 concourse, 8:10 p.m. Officer&#13;
responding to an alarm&#13;
checked the area but found no&#13;
smoke or fire. Alarm reset.&#13;
10/15/02&#13;
Inc 02-673W&#13;
Security Alarm,&#13;
Tallent Hall,&#13;
8:43 a.m. Officer&#13;
responding&#13;
to an alarm&#13;
found it had&#13;
been set off&#13;
accidentally by&#13;
an employee.&#13;
Area checked&#13;
and found&#13;
everything was&#13;
in order.&#13;
Inc 02-674&#13;
A c c i d e n t ,&#13;
Union parking&#13;
lot, 4:52 p.m. A&#13;
driver backing&#13;
out of a parking&#13;
stall struck the&#13;
passenger side&#13;
of another&#13;
vehicle. State&#13;
accident report&#13;
completed.&#13;
10/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-675&#13;
Alarm Malfunct&#13;
i o n / F a c i l i t y&#13;
Repair, Heating&#13;
&amp; Chilling, 3:18&#13;
a.m. Officer&#13;
responded to&#13;
an alarm which&#13;
kirl Kaon activated&#13;
due to a power loss. Officer&#13;
assisted power plant personnel in&#13;
starting the back-up generator and&#13;
electrician was called.&#13;
Inc 02-676 Traffic Violation, Outer&#13;
Loop and .4 miles West of CTH&#13;
JR., 1:47 p.m. A driver traveling at&#13;
a high rate of speed was stopped.&#13;
Citation issued for failure to fasten&#13;
seatbelt-driver and verbal warning&#13;
for speed.&#13;
Inc 02-677 Traffic Violation, STH&#13;
31, South of CTH A, 2:20 a.m. A&#13;
driver was cited for speeding 4o&#13;
mph in a 25 mph zone and failure&#13;
to stop at a stop sign.&#13;
H-A-R'B'O'R'S'I'DE&#13;
Y E C A R E&#13;
Comefmd the look you like&#13;
262 625.2020 5754 -6th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
4th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration&#13;
COLLEGE STUDENT ESSAY CONTEST&#13;
X&lt;)63-2O0^&#13;
—The** **&#13;
Topic: A Comparison of Then and Now&#13;
Judging Criteria:&#13;
1. Entrants must address the topic in a 400-word type-written essay.&#13;
2. Essays should relate the student's own personal ideas or experiences to the topic&#13;
and show an understanding of Dr. King's ideals.&#13;
3. Essays cannot be a biographical sketch of Dr. King.&#13;
4. Essays will be judged on the basis of sentence structure, clarity of thought,&#13;
spelling, content, development of thought, and grammer.&#13;
Recognition: 1st place winner receives $200 bond and a plaque&#13;
For judging purposes, please type your name, address, and phone number on the back of your essay.&#13;
For more information Contact:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Road/Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(262) 595-2731&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 2, 2002 (postmarked by November 30th).&#13;
Each ™™er will recieve their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration on January 24, 2003 at 7pm.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin- Parkside provides services for patrons with special ^&#13;
needs. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345. J&#13;
Slice of&#13;
Lparlovckin V&#13;
College and Life can be a challengelet&#13;
us prepare you for both.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 6th&#13;
Union 106&#13;
4pm-6pm&#13;
*How to Say \No' Without Feeling&#13;
Guilty" presented by Therese&#13;
Fellner, Director, UWP&#13;
Community Research&#13;
Development Institute&#13;
For all clubs, organizations, group members,&#13;
leaders, and anyone who is interested!&#13;
Pizza and beverages served. Attendance is limited,&#13;
so sign up now! Stop by Union 209, call 595-2278,&#13;
or send an e-mail to: engel@uwp.edu&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
&lt;°' with special&#13;
ase contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345.&#13;
n&#13;
j&#13;
The Ranger News Oct 24 - Nov 7, 2002 Page I&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
By Madame Esme Cerridgynere Dragonfiheinerstige&#13;
Aries: (March 21-April 19)&#13;
Today you will be&#13;
mooned by a squirrel, but do&#13;
not, under any circumstances,&#13;
attempt a debate. It will only&#13;
end in tragedy for the both of&#13;
you. . ' ))§||ll;&#13;
Taurus: (April 20-May 20)&#13;
Your window of opportunity&#13;
will close this week. But&#13;
don't worry, the screen door of&#13;
possibility is pretty easy to tear.&#13;
Gemini: (May 21-June 21)&#13;
When you were a child&#13;
everyone said you had an&#13;
inventive mind. The FBI is&#13;
much smarter though. You're&#13;
just a damn good liar.&#13;
Cancer: (June 22-July 22)&#13;
A treasure awaits you,&#13;
but as you struggle to dig it out&#13;
try not to ruin the cereal.&#13;
Leo: (July 23-Aug 22)&#13;
Think of many excuses&#13;
to leave. Got a couple? You&#13;
will be bombarded for honest&#13;
criticisms on art. To keep from&#13;
making a four-year-old cry, use&#13;
your excuses.&#13;
Virgo: (Aug 23-Sept 22)&#13;
Your fear of midget&#13;
devils becomes too much for&#13;
you this time of year. Keep your&#13;
porch light off and eliminate&#13;
all candy from your cupboards...&#13;
they are coming.&#13;
Libra: (Sept 23-Oct 23)&#13;
Internet threats&#13;
Holli Brown&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Students at UWP are just&#13;
one group that uses the Internet&#13;
everyday Many students do not&#13;
know that computer crimes are&#13;
four times higher than last year&#13;
A UW-P Resident Advisor&#13;
was a victim of these crimes at&#13;
October 17, 2002 While online&#13;
she received an instant message&#13;
from an unidentified person.&#13;
The innocent message&#13;
quickly progressed to vulgar&#13;
and hostile threats.The student,&#13;
whose name is being changed&#13;
Your life reaches an all&#13;
time low as an Aquarius laughs&#13;
at your homemade Freddie costume.&#13;
5&#13;
Scorpio: (Oct 24-Nov 21)&#13;
Even though you have&#13;
closed all your windows a Taurus&#13;
refuses to accept that you&#13;
have no candy corn and tears&#13;
through your screen door.&#13;
Sagittarius: (Nov 22-Dec 21)&#13;
You and your Piscean&#13;
sibling decide to wreak havoc&#13;
on others. Your bare-butted&#13;
squirrel costume forces your&#13;
sibling to embark on a debate&#13;
of mammoth proportions.&#13;
Capricorn: (Dec 22-Jan 19)&#13;
Beware of Virgos when&#13;
going trick or treating with your&#13;
child. Their lack of understanding&#13;
Halloween is beyond your&#13;
control.&#13;
Aquarius: (Jan 20-Feb 21)&#13;
Your difficulty finding&#13;
a man who will cut to the chase&#13;
finally ends just after you sell&#13;
your soul to a midget devil. The&#13;
timing of the Libra leaves you&#13;
in a state of hysterics.&#13;
Pisces: (Feb 22-March 20)&#13;
You decided to go as a&#13;
devil this year, but a Virgo can't&#13;
understand that you're dressed&#13;
up. Vent your anger on an Aries&#13;
who doesn't understand the&#13;
humor of a mooning squirrel.&#13;
to Elle for safety, had no intentions&#13;
of calling UWP Police. As&#13;
the harassing comments&#13;
became death threats she&#13;
knew she was in danger.&#13;
Officer Kelly Peroutka was&#13;
on duty that night . Peroutka&#13;
encouraged Elle to keep e-mailing&#13;
in order to pick up a trace.&#13;
Elle did as she was told but her&#13;
stalker would not cooperate&#13;
nor meet with her anywhere.&#13;
This case is currently being&#13;
investigated and Elle is undecided&#13;
as to whether or not she&#13;
wants to press charges. The 50-&#13;
minute dialogue of their conversation&#13;
is not yet being&#13;
released as it is evidence.&#13;
HORROR FILMS&#13;
By Amber Smith&#13;
MASSACRE&#13;
BEER&#13;
SEX&#13;
BLOOD&#13;
WOODS&#13;
NUDITY&#13;
KNIFE&#13;
MASK&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
SCREAM&#13;
JASON&#13;
FREDDIE&#13;
CHAINS AW&#13;
GORE&#13;
AX&#13;
SURVIVOR&#13;
PARTY&#13;
SUSPENSE&#13;
DEATH&#13;
INSANITY&#13;
VIRGIN&#13;
:R&#13;
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University Clubs&#13;
Page 12 Oct 24 - Nov 7,2002 The Ranger News&#13;
UW-Parkside Aikido promotes&#13;
nonviolent conflict resolution&#13;
Rebecca Rydzenski&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Amber Smith Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Interview&#13;
Editor-in-&#13;
Bridgette Schaefer&#13;
I want to share a little information&#13;
about some very special&#13;
students at Parkside. They&#13;
are the ones giving more than&#13;
the average student and in turn&#13;
reaping more rewards. In this&#13;
issue I will get up and personal&#13;
with the Ranger News' Editor in&#13;
Chief, Amber Smith.&#13;
Amber has been&#13;
attending UW Parkside for&#13;
three years now. She is majoring&#13;
in English and is in her second&#13;
semester as Editor of The&#13;
Ranger News. Amber decided&#13;
to join to the paper to utilize&#13;
her strengths and as a way to&#13;
get out of the restaurant industry.&#13;
The Ranger News also provides&#13;
Amber an opportunity to&#13;
use her intellect more than she&#13;
had previously done. In addition,&#13;
Amber can use her experience&#13;
with the newspaper as an&#13;
internship.&#13;
Amber enjoys reading&#13;
in her spare time. If she could&#13;
do anything it would be to own&#13;
a rare bookstore. Amber has&#13;
gained a lot from being a part&#13;
of The Ranger News. She has&#13;
If you are looking for an&#13;
exciting club which provides a&#13;
non-violent approach to conflict&#13;
and is beneficial in both an&#13;
L McDonald aerobic and SPiri,Ual ^P001'&#13;
Parkside Aikido is the right&#13;
choice. Aikido is derived from&#13;
three Japanese words: (ai), harmony&#13;
or coordination; (ki),spirit&#13;
or energy; (do), the&#13;
method, the "way" .....&#13;
Morihei Ueshiba, AlkldO peace&#13;
1883-1969, now called action Iflltia-&#13;
O-Sensei (Great Create a&#13;
Teacher), founded philosophy&#13;
the martial art known that one Can&#13;
met a lot of different people, today as Aikido. He us® in every&#13;
been able to interact with a felt it necessary to day I lie.&#13;
variety of clubs and organiza- create this type of&#13;
tions and has sharpened her approach to violence&#13;
writing skills. She has also after seeing his father practicallearned&#13;
to work in an environ- ly mauled by political oppoment&#13;
in which she had been nents when he was a young&#13;
previously unaccustomed. boy. Prior to creating Aikido,&#13;
When asked to reveal Ueshiba was educated broadly&#13;
the worst thing was about being in quite a few varieties of jujitinvolved&#13;
with the newspaper, su, as well as sword and spear&#13;
She replied "Working at the fighting. Discontented with&#13;
newspaper until 3 o'clock in simple strength and technical&#13;
the morning with room for two mastery, Ueshiba also absorbed&#13;
more articles and realizing that himself in studies of religion&#13;
you don't have two more arti- and came up with a philosophy&#13;
cles and the disk has to be at devoted to universal sociothe&#13;
printer by noon." political synchronization.&#13;
I also asked her if she Including these values in his&#13;
could tell the students here at martial art, Ueshiba created var-&#13;
Parkside anything, what would ious characteristics of Aikido,&#13;
that be. She smiled and said," coordinated with his philo-&#13;
To get involved. When I first sophical and religious ideology&#13;
started here at Parkside, my and left a legacy of nonvioplan&#13;
was to just to focus on get- lence and human integrity to&#13;
ting a degree and nothing all humankind,&#13;
more. A classmate persuaded Dr. Rozanne Leppington, a&#13;
me to join The Ranger News professor here at the University&#13;
and I have realized that being of Wisconsin Parkside, and&#13;
involved is easier than people members of the Midwest Aikido&#13;
think it is and more beneficial Federation, including instructor&#13;
than I initially though it was Rock Lazo, started the Parkside&#13;
going to be." Aikido club about two years&#13;
ago. They believed that the&#13;
Parkside students would&#13;
embrace Aikido's philosophies&#13;
and pass them on, and what a&#13;
response they received! Currently,&#13;
there are about thirty students&#13;
who attend the practices&#13;
and much, much more on the&#13;
mailing list.&#13;
As a member of Parkside&#13;
Aikido, you would not need to&#13;
practice on the mat if you did&#13;
not want to. That is&#13;
not necessarily the&#13;
goal of this club. This&#13;
club promotes activities&#13;
that foster alternatives&#13;
to violence in&#13;
personal and public&#13;
life. "Parkside Aikido's&#13;
main goal is to&#13;
pass along the teachings,&#13;
philosophies,&#13;
and spirit of Aikido as taught by&#13;
the founder," says Jamey Johnston,&#13;
a member of the Parkside&#13;
Aikido. "We don't fight against&#13;
another person; we take their&#13;
energy/momentum of attack&#13;
and bring it to the ground." Dr.&#13;
Leppington, when asked what&#13;
this club's main goal is,&#13;
answered, "For the practice of&#13;
Aikido, to foster public awareness&#13;
of non-violent responses to&#13;
conflict, from domestic abuse to&#13;
international terrorism."&#13;
The benefits of studying and&#13;
practicing Aikido are plentiful.&#13;
If you checkout Parkside Aikido's&#13;
website, which can be&#13;
found at http://uwp.edu/~leppingt/&#13;
parksideaikido, you'll be&#13;
able to find a list of aspects of&#13;
this unique martial art that&#13;
instructor Rock Lazo believes&#13;
are beneficial. They include&#13;
increased flexibility, strength&#13;
and balance, exposure to the&#13;
culture of traditional, yet progressive&#13;
martial arts, ethical selfdefense,&#13;
stress management,&#13;
development of 'KI' (internal&#13;
energy,) a regimen of ongoing,&#13;
scheduled workouts and aerobic&#13;
fitness, spiritual exploration&#13;
and growth, and participation&#13;
in a non-violent, non-competitive&#13;
martial art. As you can&#13;
plainly see, Aikido's peace&#13;
action initiatives create a philosophy&#13;
that one can use in&#13;
every day life.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin's&#13;
Aikido club is a part of the&#13;
Mid-western State Aikido Federation.&#13;
Every year, this group&#13;
holds a summer camp here at&#13;
the school. Meeting times are 7-&#13;
8pm, Mondays and Wednesdays&#13;
at the Sports and Activity Center.&#13;
Other activities concerning&#13;
non-violent approaches to conflict,&#13;
like discussion forums and&#13;
educational outreaches, will be&#13;
arranged by the members at the&#13;
general club meetings and&#13;
announced on the email list.&#13;
Classes are structured so that&#13;
you can jump in at any time.&#13;
Each member practices at a&#13;
level and pace that is best fitting&#13;
with their stage of experience.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
the Parkside Aikido club by&#13;
emailing them at parksideaikido@&#13;
uwp.edu.&#13;
Parkside Aikido carries&#13;
healthy philosophies, and members&#13;
use them in their everyday&#13;
life. Picture it: when faced with&#13;
a violent situation, you will be&#13;
skilled in ways to neutralize the&#13;
confrontation, be it a physical&#13;
or not. When you are looking&#13;
for a club that will be beneficial&#13;
to you for the rest of your life,&#13;
check out Parkside Aikido; it is&#13;
definitely the way to go.&#13;
Email:&#13;
parksideaikido@uwp.edu&#13;
Website:&#13;
http://uwp.edu/~leppingt/parksideaikido</text>
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              <text>&#13;
The&#13;
Issue 3 Vol. 33&#13;
The  University   of Wisconsin.PuksiJe's&#13;
StuJent   Newspaper&#13;
Oct  I0 - 24, 2002&#13;
"Show Me the Money"&#13;
Jackie Pace&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Have  you   ever   won-&#13;
dered   what   kind    of&#13;
salary a state employee&#13;
earns working  at a uni-&#13;
versity  such    as   UW-&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
Although working at a state&#13;
universitymay not be at the top&#13;
of your  list  of  high  paying&#13;
"dreamjobs," you may be sur-&#13;
prisedto learn that many of the&#13;
positionshere pay fairly decent&#13;
moneyAs students who attend&#13;
astate-fundeduniversity here at&#13;
UWParkside,we have access to&#13;
information that  many  of  us&#13;
maynot even have known. This&#13;
information  includes   salary&#13;
amountsof anyone and every-&#13;
one who is employed here on&#13;
campus,ranging from the chan-&#13;
cellor,to the custodians, to the&#13;
presidents of the student-run&#13;
organizations   and    clubs.&#13;
Becauseeveryone who  works&#13;
here is a state employee, this&#13;
information is public  record,&#13;
andwe as students are entitled&#13;
to this information&#13;
if&#13;
we ask for&#13;
it. It should be noted that this&#13;
article is not meant to publicize&#13;
or comment  on  any specific&#13;
person's salary but is meant for&#13;
the sole purpose of informing&#13;
the student body of what you&#13;
could  expect  to earn if you&#13;
were interested in obtaining a&#13;
job at a state university The fol-&#13;
lowing charts list some of the&#13;
salary information  for some the&#13;
teaching  instructing  positions&#13;
along with some of the admin-&#13;
istration  and  other  positions&#13;
here at the university Informa-&#13;
tion  in the second chart was&#13;
obtained  from the UW System&#13;
Redbook&#13;
online&#13;
at&#13;
www.uwsa.edu/budplan&#13;
red-&#13;
book book3/index.cgi.&#13;
For some students, obtain-&#13;
ing a job such as one&#13;
0'&#13;
those&#13;
listed above, may seem a little&#13;
bit too far away right now.&#13;
As&#13;
first or even second year stu-&#13;
dents here at Parkside,you may&#13;
not even be sure of what you&#13;
. want to major in yet, much less&#13;
be able to envision your long-&#13;
term future career plans right&#13;
now. Perhaps you  have been&#13;
toying with the idea of getting&#13;
r-r-r-r-:&#13;
Position&#13;
Average  Salary&#13;
Range&#13;
I&#13;
H.!&amp;.b&#13;
Low&#13;
Professor&#13;
$66,800&#13;
$99,300&#13;
$52,100&#13;
Associate Professor&#13;
$57,100&#13;
$85,000&#13;
$44,650&#13;
Assistant Professor&#13;
$48,400&#13;
$79,500&#13;
$40,000&#13;
Position&#13;
Salary&#13;
Academic Advisor&#13;
$35,400&#13;
Academic&#13;
Dean&#13;
$103400-   $109,000&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor for Eauitv&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Diversitv&#13;
$56,100&#13;
Athletic Coach&#13;
$5,000 " $39,000&#13;
. Athletic Director&#13;
$63000&#13;
. C hancellor&#13;
$153000&#13;
Counselor&#13;
$36,000&#13;
Director&#13;
Career&#13;
Center&#13;
$58,800&#13;
~~r. -&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
$47,600&#13;
Club/Organization&#13;
Yearly  Salary&#13;
Ramler  Editor&#13;
$61hour&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Adult  Student&#13;
Alliance&#13;
$614/vear&#13;
Parkside&#13;
International   Club&#13;
$3,500/year&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student  Government  Association&#13;
$4,OOO/vear&#13;
Student&#13;
Organizations Council&#13;
$8001year&#13;
Black  Student  Union&#13;
$650/vear&#13;
Latinos  Unidos&#13;
$500/vear&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities  Board&#13;
$2,500/year&#13;
Parkside  Asian  or"anization&#13;
$1,OOOIvear&#13;
Sacred  Circle&#13;
$300/year&#13;
Rainbow  Alliance&#13;
Not Paid&#13;
Students  of India  Association&#13;
$I,OOO/year&#13;
Director,  Academic  Advising&#13;
sss.ioo&#13;
Financial&#13;
Controller&#13;
$61,920&#13;
Librarian&#13;
-&#13;
$36000-  $53,100&#13;
Police Officer&#13;
819,300 - 838,900&#13;
provost/Vice Chancellor, Academic Affairs&#13;
$120000&#13;
Risk Manaeement Officer&#13;
$45,000&#13;
Senior Financial Auditor&#13;
$41600&#13;
involved with one of the stu-&#13;
dent  organizations  here  on&#13;
campus.You could start out by&#13;
staying low-key,but maybe one&#13;
day you could  end .up being&#13;
president of one of the organi-&#13;
zations and get the chance to&#13;
earn a little bit of extra cash,&#13;
while building up your resume&#13;
at the same time. However,the&#13;
university  as an  employer  rec-&#13;
ommends that students who are&#13;
employed   on  campus  not&#13;
exceed twenty hours of work in&#13;
Continued on  a e 8.&#13;
on the&#13;
Inside&#13;
Player Profile&#13;
Page: 6&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Page: 9&#13;
Problematic   PSGA&#13;
Page: 3&#13;
...--&#13;
-,-&#13;
.-&#13;
~---&#13;
--&#13;
Page 2  Oct 10- 24,2002&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
RTcfilgerNews&#13;
Oct. 10-13&#13;
•  Foreign  Film:  "No  Man's  Land,"  2001  Best  P'oreign Lan-&#13;
guage  Film, show  times:  Thursday/Friday:   7:30  p.m.;  Sat-&#13;
urday:  5 and  8 p.m.;  Sunday:  2 p.m.;  Union  Cinema  The-&#13;
ater; prorated  season  tickets  available  by calling  ext. 2345.&#13;
Oct. 10&#13;
•  UW-Parkside   Wind  Ensemble  &amp;  Community   Band,  Mark&#13;
Eichner,  conductor,7:30   p.m.,  Com.  Arts  Theatre,  tickets:&#13;
adults  $6, students/seniors   $4&#13;
Oct. 11&#13;
• VIP Leadership  Series,  Union  106, noon&#13;
Oct. 12&#13;
•   UW-Parkside&#13;
Symphony,    Alvaro    Garcia,    conductor;&#13;
Mozart's   "Bastien  and  Bastienne,"   7:30  p.m.,  Com.  Arts&#13;
Theatre,  adults  tickets:  $6, students/seniors   $4&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
• "Strange  Like  Me,"  interactive  theatre  production  exploring&#13;
issues  of  diversity  w/Gestic  Theatre,   noon-1  p.m.,  Union&#13;
Cinema  Theater,  free&#13;
Oct. 16&#13;
• Noon  Concert:  Lisa White,  mezzo-.soprano;  Carol  Wallace,&#13;
piano;  Tim  Rush,  percussion,   , noon,  Union  Cinema  The-&#13;
ater, free&#13;
•  Information   session  for  potential  &amp;  current   Modern  Lan-&#13;
guages  majors/minors  (covers French,  German,  &amp; Spanish&#13;
stucentsjnoon,&#13;
Com Arts  136, free&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
•  Men's  Soccer  vs.  Kentucky  Wesleyan,   1:15  p.m.,  Wood&#13;
Road Field&#13;
• Women's  Soccer  vs. Kentucky  Wesleyan,   3:30 p.m., Wood&#13;
. Road  Field,   UW-Parkslde   students   admitted   free  w/ID'&#13;
adults:  $5;  high  school  students  &amp; children  14 and  unde;&#13;
$1.&#13;
•  Volleyball   vs.   Northern   Kentucky,   7  p.m.,   DaSimone&#13;
Gymnasium,   SAC;  UWP  students  admitted  free  w/ID;  adults:&#13;
$5;  high school  students  &amp; children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
•  Hispanic  Heritage  Program:   Laura  Fuentes  residency,   noon,&#13;
Union  Cinema,  traditional  music  from vanous  South  Amencan&#13;
regions&#13;
•  Hispanic   Heritage   Banquet,   6  p.m.-2   a.m.,   Par.kside  Cafe,&#13;
reception/banquet!   dance:  $15,  dance  only  $5;  tickets  avail-&#13;
able  at Ranger  Card  Office,  call  (262) 595-2345&#13;
• Women's  Studies  Gender,  Race,  and  Class  Book  Group:  "A&#13;
Passage  to  India"  by  E.M.  Forster,  discussion   led  by. Mary&#13;
Lenard,  Union  207,  3:30  p.m.,  free,  refreshrnents   available,&#13;
book  available  in book  store&#13;
• UW-Parkside  Family  Faire; for information,  call (262)  595-2278&#13;
Oct.19&#13;
• Friends  of the Library:  Special  program:  "Reflecting  Forward:  A&#13;
Genealogy  &amp; Local  History  Workshop,"  8 a.m.-4:30  p.m.,  UW-&#13;
Parks ide  Library,  $22.50  in advance,   $28  at  door.  For  infor-&#13;
mation,  call (262) 595-2215.&#13;
•  Cross-Country   Parkside   Invitational,   National   Cross-Country&#13;
Course;  noon;  UWP  students  admitted  free  w/ID;  adults:  $5;&#13;
high school  students&#13;
&amp;&#13;
children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
• Volleyball  vs. Bellarmine,  1 p.m.,  DeSimone  Gymnasium,   SAC;&#13;
UWP students  admitted  free w/ID;  adults:  $5;  high school  stu-&#13;
dents  &amp; children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
• Racine  Concert  Band  Chamber  Winds  E:oncert,  Mark  Eichner,&#13;
conductor,  8 p.m.,  Union  Cinema  Theater,  tickets:  adults  $8,&#13;
students/seniors   $7&#13;
Oct. 20&#13;
Men's  Soccer  vs. Southern  Indiana,  noon,  Wood  Road  Field&#13;
Women's   Soccer   Southern   Indiana,   2:30   p.m.,   Wood   Road&#13;
Field;   UWP  students   admitted   free  w/ID;   adults:   $5;  high&#13;
school  students  &amp; children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
Oct. 21&#13;
• Jack White,  internationally  famous  pocket  billiard' and trick  shot&#13;
artist,  11 a.m., The  Den, free&#13;
Oct. 23&#13;
Noon Concert:  Bob Acri Jazz  Quartet,  noon,  Union  Cinema  The-&#13;
ater, free&#13;
Always  working   hard for  the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Amber  Smith&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Deborah I-1ahrn&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tracy Brownlow&#13;
Layout Team&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Kim Meyer&#13;
Lauren Mikrut&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Cartoonist&#13;
Jason Meekma&#13;
Photography&#13;
A.&#13;
L.&#13;
Smith&#13;
Alex voskuil&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
AJex Voskuil&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Jackie Pace&#13;
Sarah Masik&#13;
Alissa  Pfeffer&#13;
Ashley Russ&#13;
l-Io11iBrown&#13;
Bridgeue Schaefer&#13;
Doris washington&#13;
Brandon  Drake&#13;
Renee Currington&#13;
Will&#13;
Brinkman&#13;
Ranger Advise&#13;
Judith  Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editor a1.595-2287 10'·&#13;
more information.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at&#13;
noon, Please stop by and&#13;
participate as the meet-&#13;
ings are open to all those&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-I39C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger  Is published  every second&#13;
Thursday  throughout   the semester&#13;
by&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents  of the University  of Wisconsin- Park-&#13;
side. who are solely responsible  for its edi-&#13;
torial  policy and content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor  pollcy:The  Ranger&#13;
encourages  letters  to the Editor. Letters&#13;
should  not exceed  250 words and should be&#13;
delivered&#13;
to&#13;
the Ranger  office (WYLL&#13;
0-&#13;
139C) _Letters  must  be typed  and Include&#13;
the author's  name  and phone  number.  Let-&#13;
ters must&#13;
be&#13;
free&#13;
from misleading  or&#13;
libelous  content.  Letters  that fail to comply&#13;
will not be published.  For publication  pur-&#13;
poses, author's  name  can be withheld,  but  _&#13;
only upon request.  The Ranger  reserves  the&#13;
right to edit all letters.&#13;
</text>
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              <text>UWP loses professor, artist, and friend</text>
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              <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;
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P&#13;
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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;
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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;
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of Effective Decision&#13;
Making" Dr.Rebecca&#13;
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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;
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,&#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;
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N&#13;
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..........?!&#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>
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                <text>The Ranger News, Volume 33, issue 2, September 26, 2002</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>&#13;
i,;ue&#13;
I 9 Vol.&#13;
32&#13;
Alissa&#13;
Pfeffer&#13;
IlepOtlOr&#13;
On September   11th  of  last&#13;
year,&#13;
tragedy struck  America.   A  •&#13;
groupof UW-Parkside students&#13;
enrolled in a  University   Semi-&#13;
narcourse believed  they  could&#13;
do something  to  support    the&#13;
people of New York, and   they&#13;
did.&#13;
The   University&#13;
Semmar&#13;
class,   taught&#13;
by&#13;
Sandy&#13;
Puzerewzki,raised  over  one&#13;
thousand  dollars   which    was&#13;
sent to the  people   in  need.  A&#13;
pnrtionof the sum  was  usea  to&#13;
purchase a  sugar   maple;   me&#13;
statetree of Wisconsin  and  New&#13;
York.&#13;
The tree is planted   here  on&#13;
the UW-Parkside's Anna   Maria&#13;
Nature&#13;
Trail&#13;
and  a special   cere-&#13;
monywill be held  at noon  Sep-&#13;
tember U th  to  dedicate&#13;
the&#13;
sugarmaple.The ceremony   will&#13;
be at the planted  tree  and  con-&#13;
sistof four representatives    giv-&#13;
ing speeches  about   how   they&#13;
are feeling  a  year   later.  Vice-&#13;
ProvostDr.Rebecca   Martin  and&#13;
ParksideStudent   Government&#13;
PresidentMarco  Morrison   will&#13;
be two of the  individuals    that&#13;
will'be addressing   those   who&#13;
attendthe ceremony.   "Amazing&#13;
Grace"and "America  the  Beau-&#13;
lilulwill be  performed   by  UW-&#13;
Parksidemusic  major   Karolyn&#13;
Peterson.All of those  attending&#13;
the dedication  will  be  given  a&#13;
chance to tie  a  ribbon   on  the&#13;
tree.&#13;
There will also  be  time   for&#13;
other students   and   faculty   to&#13;
expres.their thoughts   and  feel-&#13;
Ingsabout the past year  and  the&#13;
Yearsto come. The  sugar  maple&#13;
Willbe a living memorial   to  all&#13;
thatWaslost on  September    11,&#13;
2001.&#13;
Photos&#13;
by&#13;
Al.   Smith&#13;
on the&#13;
Inside&#13;
The&#13;
University   of WisconsinolParkside's&#13;
Student   Newspaper&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parkside Faculty and&#13;
Staff Awarded&#13;
Get the Police Beat&#13;
for Superb Service&#13;
Page:3&#13;
Page:9&#13;
UW -&#13;
Parks ide&#13;
Remembers&#13;
Page: 10&#13;
........&#13;
-&#13;
-:"&#13;
~--&#13;
,&#13;
Pagel&#13;
September&#13;
II  -  16,1001&#13;
The  Ranger  News&#13;
Sept. 12&#13;
•  Friends  of the  UW-Parkside   Library  presents:  ''The  Sopra-&#13;
nos:"  An Analysis  and  Evaluation  of  Cable  TV's  Most  Suc-&#13;
cessful  Series  wfTV  writer  Nick  Pepitone,  director!  pro-&#13;
ducer  Dave  Dahlman,  and  "Soprano-ist."   Christa  Pepi-&#13;
tone;  7 p.m., Overlook  Lounge,  second  floor  of the UW-&#13;
Parkside  Library,  free.&#13;
Sept. 12-15&#13;
• Foreign  Film:-"Innocence"   show  times:  Thursday!  Friday&#13;
@ 7:30  p.m.;  Saturday   @ 8  p.m.;  Sunday   @ 2  p.m.;&#13;
Union  Cinema  Theater;  student  season  ticket:  $23 tick-&#13;
ets at Ranger  Card  Office.  Sept.  13&#13;
• Scholarship  Day, 4 p.m.-8:30  p.m.,  Union  Dining  Room&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
•  Dance:  Black  Student  Union  "It's  Getting  Hot  In  Here"&#13;
Jam,  9 p.m.-1  a.m.,  Union  Square&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
• Hispanic  Heritage  Month  Kickoff  Celebration,  11 a.rn-z  p.m.,&#13;
Upper  Main  Place,  free&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
• Noon Concert:  Elaine  Skorodin,  violin;  Carol Wallace,  piano,&#13;
Union  Cinema  Theater,  noon,  free&#13;
•  Coffeehouse   featuring   Jason   Levasseur,   8  p.m.-10   p.m.,&#13;
Union  Square,  free&#13;
Sept. 19-22&#13;
• Foreign  Film:  "Me You Them"  show  times:  Thursday!  Friday&#13;
@ 7:30  p.m.;  Saturday   @ 8 p.m.;  Sunday@  2 p.m.;  Union&#13;
Cinema  Theater,  admission  by season  ticket  only&#13;
Sept.20&#13;
•  Women's   Studies  Gender,  Race,  and  Class  Book  Group:&#13;
''The  Saving  Graces"  by  Patricia  Gaffney,  discuss   led  by&#13;
Frances  Kavenik,  Union  207,  3:30  p.m.,  free,  refreshments&#13;
available,  book  available  in book  store&#13;
Sept.  20&#13;
• Men's  Soccer  vs.  SIU-Edwardsville,    1:15  p.m.,  Wood  Road&#13;
Field&#13;
•  Women's   Soccer   vs.  SIU-&#13;
Edwardsville,&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Wood   Road   Field;   UWPark-&#13;
side   students   admitted   free&#13;
w! student  ID; adults:  $5; high&#13;
school  students  &amp; children  14&#13;
and  under  $1.&#13;
•  Lecture:   "  Health   Effect  of&#13;
Inhaled  dusts:  Idaho  farmers,&#13;
Libby   Miners,   &amp;   New   York&#13;
Firefighters"&#13;
w!&#13;
Mickey&#13;
Gunter,  U. of Idaho  professor&#13;
of   Geological&#13;
Sciences,&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.,  Greenquist   109, free&#13;
Sept.  21&#13;
•   Cross-Country:&#13;
Midwest&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Meet,    UW-Park·&#13;
Try some golf frisbee at the U&#13;
side   National    CrossCountry&#13;
Course;  noon;  UW-Parkside   students  admitted  free  w!  stu-&#13;
dentlD;   adults:  $5;  high  school  students  &amp; children  14 and&#13;
under  $1. Sept.  22&#13;
.&#13;
• Men's  Soccer  vs.  Lewis,  noon, Wood  Road  Field&#13;
•  Women's   Soccer  vs.  Lewis,  2:30  p.m.,  Wood  Road  Field;&#13;
UW-Parkside   students  admitted  free  w!  student   10; adults:&#13;
$5; high  school  students  &amp; children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
Sept.  24&#13;
I&#13;
If«ihger  News&#13;
Hug  as many  trees&#13;
as you  can  - I do!&#13;
Deborah   Halm.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Amber   Smith&#13;
Advertisi&#13;
ng   Manager&#13;
Deborah    Hahm&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Tracv  Brownlow&#13;
Layout&#13;
Lachlan   McDonald&#13;
Kim  Meyers&#13;
Arts&#13;
and&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Amy  Rogers&#13;
Phototography&#13;
Lachlan   McDonaJd&#13;
A.  L   Smith&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page&#13;
Editor&#13;
Alex  Voskuil&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Judith&#13;
Logsdon&#13;
Contact   the  editors   31595-2287&#13;
10'&#13;
more  informacion.&#13;
•  Parkside  Adult  Student   Alliance   (PASA)   Dialog   Dinner,   5&#13;
p.m.-7  p.m.,  Union  104-106  Sept.  25&#13;
• Noon Concert:  Paul Gmeinder,  cello;  Frances  Bedford,  harp-&#13;
sichord,  Union  Cinema  Theater,  noon,  free&#13;
Meetings  are  Mondays at&#13;
noon.  Please  stop  by and&#13;
participate   as the  meet-&#13;
ings are  open  to  all those&#13;
at  Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
0·1&#13;
39C&#13;
phone:  (262)  595·2287&#13;
fax: (262)  595·2295&#13;
• Milwaukee  Area  Alumni  Regional  Reception,  at Swank,  628&#13;
N. Water  St.,  Milwaukee,   5-7:30  p.m.,  $5,  cash  bar;  RSVP&#13;
by.   Sept.&#13;
18   to    Karen&#13;
Reiher,&#13;
(262)&#13;
5952443&#13;
or&#13;
university.advancementssuwp.edu&#13;
via  email&#13;
•  Hispanic  Heritage  Month  Welcome   Back  Social,  8-10  p.m.,&#13;
The  Den,  refresh-Trent   served,  free,  campus  only  program&#13;
The  Ranger i5 publi5hed everyThunda)'&#13;
throughout   the  semester&#13;
by&#13;
5tudents&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide,&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely responsible for  its editorial&#13;
policy  and&#13;
content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the  Editor  policy:The  Ranger&#13;
encourages  letters  to  the  Editor. Letters&#13;
should  not  exceed  250 words and should&#13;
be&#13;
delivered&#13;
to&#13;
the  Ranger  office (WYLL&#13;
0-&#13;
IJ9C)  • Letters  must&#13;
be&#13;
typed  and  include&#13;
the  author's  name  and  phone  number.&#13;
Let-&#13;
ters  must  be&#13;
he&#13;
from  misleading or&#13;
libelous content.  Letters  that  fail&#13;
to&#13;
comply&#13;
will not&#13;
be&#13;
published. For publication  pur-&#13;
poses, author's  name  can&#13;
be&#13;
withheld, but&#13;
only upon request. The  Ranger  reserves&#13;
the&#13;
right&#13;
to&#13;
edit  all letters.&#13;
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              <text>THE Rt=lNG&#13;
May 9,2002 Veritas University of Wisconsin.Parkside Aequitas Issue 20 Vol. 32&#13;
Dance causes controversy Chancellor&#13;
update&#13;
On Friday, April 26th, the&#13;
Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) sponsored&#13;
the event "Straight Kickin' It."&#13;
This title superseded the&#13;
name, "Straight Pimpm," since&#13;
this name caused controversy&#13;
both on and off campus.&#13;
Three weeks prior, the&#13;
event was advertised with&#13;
window paintings, posters&#13;
and flyers "if you read the&#13;
advertisement, it clearly states&#13;
that "Straight Pimpin" is a&#13;
dance," said Sabrina Morgan,&#13;
PAB member.&#13;
The Ranger and others,&#13;
were unable to locate the&#13;
'clearly stated' words. During&#13;
a slew of e-mails that were&#13;
received Friday and the following&#13;
days, Professor Francis&#13;
Kavenick reported she, too,&#13;
had to stop by the Ranger&#13;
Card office to clarify the meaning&#13;
of the posters. She was&#13;
concerned as "over 100 7th&#13;
grade girls and 20 or so of their&#13;
PSGA election results in tions while campaigning. hav~ the power to freeze any-&#13;
By Alex Voskull Morrison said that, "the one s budget. Hie would also&#13;
fir t thin to do is to check to consider 'mp ementmg a&#13;
Staff Reporter se: if thegconstitution is valid. salary cap on student orgarn-&#13;
C rtain guidelines from the zations to prevent any club&#13;
paest may not-bev alid ." from Ihbavidng an outrageous&#13;
Morrison is planning and annua u get. .&#13;
Id like to see put in place Morrison wants to get nd&#13;
woum u . school ear of this cloud that has hovered&#13;
for thetupcobmtwmegtehne h~ads over the PSGA. Morrison said&#13;
a meemdg t e organizations of PSGA"s 'mage, "I wan tt 0&#13;
of stu en -1ins this would show that this student govern-&#13;
~ornson exp :e what we ca~ ment is not always there to&#13;
dallo;" t;:;"st~c~ool as a whole attack people and take away&#13;
o a iust as se arate clubs." jobs." Mornson said he would&#13;
and not J hat P1JGA he says welcome a larger number of&#13;
This is w II alon senators, which should accomshould&#13;
havle dilie :ntire sc\';ool modate Parkside's diverse stu-&#13;
To invo ve e. dent bod&#13;
Morrisdns~ff~~t~~ebl~;~ :~f~At an~' rate, PSGA looks to&#13;
u1ty an PSGA What that role have a new face for the&#13;
within t : not yet deter- upcoming 2002-03 school year.&#13;
m~gh~ ?,;f::1 we should have Adam DeFord,. who was amrrune&#13;
. . t to see what ner up to Mornson in theropmore&#13;
faculty inpu h d " ular vote commented," am&#13;
they feel n~ds ~ b~ t.~~~n',- hopeful that the new leadersaid&#13;
Mornson. s'. ship in PSGA next year can&#13;
dents who hay~ ~e ;'%C~fstu- learn from the actions taken by&#13;
The finanCla a p. ludin those who currently hold&#13;
dent orgarnzatIOns mc o~ office in PSGA so not to repeat&#13;
PSGA are aHlsoal consc~[!'ata any of the events of this years&#13;
Mor~.s on's . I e calmhouldULnot pres,.d,enha I eIech.ons. " preSIdent, a one, S&#13;
By Michelle Ragar&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
On Monday, April 22,&#13;
2002, the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association's&#13;
judicial branch&#13;
(PSGA) named, Marco Mornson&#13;
and Vik Sidhu President&#13;
and Vice-President of PSGA,&#13;
respectively. This decision&#13;
comes six weeks after the elections&#13;
were held. On May 10,&#13;
2002, Morrison and Sidhu are&#13;
set to be sworn in to their new&#13;
positions,. making the elections&#13;
official.&#13;
Once Morrison takes over&#13;
as president, he plans to~~e&#13;
some changes within "I feei&#13;
According to Mornson,&#13;
that as the 2002-2003 school&#13;
year approaches, that PSGA&#13;
needs to undergo a reconstruch&#13;
· " This may be to due to a&#13;
nuonm.ber of reason~, wh'ch&#13;
include lack of cOIDffiltrn~~&#13;
certain members w,thin ti:&#13;
technicalities within the cons&#13;
b r&#13;
tuho. n, or as' 'gndifi'canrut lneuvmiolaeof&#13;
appeals base on&#13;
parents, teachers and counselors&#13;
running around the&#13;
campus."&#13;
"All organizations like to&#13;
catch people's attention with&#13;
catchy themes," said Morgan.&#13;
At the same time, it brought&#13;
with it connotations of ethnic&#13;
/ racial and gender stereotypes&#13;
of an activity which is&#13;
also illegal under local, state&#13;
and federal ordinances, and&#13;
therefore inappropriate for&#13;
learning institutions.&#13;
Herb Pitts, assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor for Equity and&#13;
Diversity was prompted to&#13;
look into the event through the&#13;
eyes of Parkside's policy 54&#13;
due to phone calls and e-mails&#13;
he received from numerous&#13;
sources including students&#13;
and representatives of the&#13;
community, both prior to and&#13;
the day of the event. The policy&#13;
states, in part, that everyone&#13;
should "treat all members of&#13;
the university community&#13;
with dignity and respect;&#13;
Make ongoing efforts to actively&#13;
prevent harassment by&#13;
behaving as role models and&#13;
encouraging open, hones communication."&#13;
Pitts went on to&#13;
ask PAB to take "appropriate&#13;
steps': to make sure this event&#13;
would not take place. But&#13;
added if PAB could not cancel&#13;
the event, they should&#13;
announce disclaimers during&#13;
the event venue.&#13;
Pitts additionally stated in&#13;
his e-mail, PABwas advised of&#13;
the problems with sponsoring&#13;
an event with such a theme.&#13;
Morgan denied this when&#13;
asked about having their'&#13;
posters and flyers approved&#13;
by Union 209.&#13;
"No concern was brought&#13;
up" said Morgan, junior.&#13;
After Pitts' e-mail, other faculty&#13;
members and students&#13;
agreed with Pitts. The event, to&#13;
them, did not appeal to the&#13;
vast majority of LJW-r: students.&#13;
PAB's own m'SSIOn&#13;
statement, states II our mission&#13;
is to organize events and activities&#13;
that appeal to the diverse&#13;
spectrum or UW-P students'&#13;
interest."&#13;
Chancellor John Keating&#13;
By Sandee Cornell&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
Chancellor John P. Keating&#13;
has returned to campus&#13;
on a full-time basis&#13;
after a successful cancer operation&#13;
that took place in the middle&#13;
of March. Chancellor Keating&#13;
would like to extend his&#13;
thanks to all the faculty, staff,&#13;
and students for supporting&#13;
him during his recovery.&#13;
Provost/Vice Chancellor of&#13;
Academic Affairs, Rebecca&#13;
Martin, filled in for Chancellor&#13;
Keating while recuperating.&#13;
,,,&#13;
~rr' he Univen;itj' of Wiscotl-' !~:;cir~~~t:C:s:~= jts deepest apologies in reference&#13;
to a party that was ,;pQnsored&#13;
by our organization on&#13;
Friday, April 26, 2002. It was&#13;
brought to QUT attention that&#13;
the. theme "Straight. Pimpin"&#13;
:may have been •offensive to&#13;
'Some, or may have even heen&#13;
considered stereot:y,pical.&#13;
Though the word "Pimp may&#13;
l1ave had a negative connota-&#13;
'tion in past generations, please&#13;
be assured that its use m our&#13;
theme was not meant to be&#13;
derogatory in any sense. Again&#13;
we apologize to anyone who&#13;
may have taken offense or&#13;
~ressed their concern.&#13;
Sincerely, Liza Herbst Co-&#13;
President SabrinaMorgan Co-&#13;
President Randy O. West&#13;
Party Coordinator&#13;
(&#13;
(&#13;
(l&#13;
1&#13;
THE A~NG&#13;
- ,.,..&#13;
I ·--·-,=&#13;
~&#13;
~ ..&#13;
= ..&#13;
~ -·-..&#13;
~ = = --~&#13;
Veritas&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Issue 20 Vol. 32 Aequitas&#13;
Dance causes controversy Chancellor&#13;
By Michelle Ragar&#13;
Staff Re porter O n Friday, April 26th, the&#13;
Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) sponsored&#13;
the event "Straight I&lt;ickin' It."&#13;
This title superseded the&#13;
name, "Straight Pimpin," since&#13;
this name caused controversy&#13;
both on and off campus.&#13;
Thr weeks prior, the&#13;
event was advertised with&#13;
window paintings, posters&#13;
and flyers "if you read the&#13;
advertisement, it cle arly states&#13;
that "Straight Pimpin" is a&#13;
danc ," said Sabrina Morgan,&#13;
PABm mber.&#13;
The Ranger a nd others,&#13;
were unable to l ocate the&#13;
'cl arly tat d' words. During&#13;
a slew of e-mails that were&#13;
rec iv d Friday and the foll&#13;
wing days, Professor Francis&#13;
av nick reported she, too,&#13;
had to top by t he Ranger&#13;
Card office to clarify the meaning&#13;
of the posters. She was&#13;
c ncemed as "over 100 7th&#13;
grad girls and 20 or so of their&#13;
parents, teachers and counselors&#13;
running around the&#13;
campus."&#13;
11 All organizations like to&#13;
catch people's attention with&#13;
catchy themes," said Morgan.&#13;
At the same time, it brought&#13;
with it connotations of ethnic/&#13;
racial and e;ender stereotypes&#13;
of an activity wfuch is&#13;
also illegal under 1ocal, state&#13;
and federal ordinances, and&#13;
therefore inappropriate for&#13;
learning institutions.&#13;
Herl::i Pitts, assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor for Equity and&#13;
Diversity was prompted to&#13;
look into the event through the&#13;
eyes of Parkside' s policy 54&#13;
due to phone calls and e-mails&#13;
he received from numerous&#13;
sources including students&#13;
and representatives of the&#13;
community, both prior to and&#13;
the day of the event. The policy&#13;
states, in part, that everyone&#13;
should "treat all members of&#13;
the university community&#13;
with dignity and resp~ct;&#13;
Make ongoing efforts to actively&#13;
prevent harassment by&#13;
behaving as role models and&#13;
encourae;mg open, hones communication."&#13;
Pitts went on to&#13;
ask PAB to take "appropriate&#13;
steps" to make sure this event&#13;
would not take place. But&#13;
added if PAB coula not cancel&#13;
the event, they should&#13;
announce disclaimers during&#13;
the event venue.&#13;
Pitts additionally stated in&#13;
his e-mail, PAB was advised of&#13;
the problems with sponsoring&#13;
an event with such a theme.&#13;
Morgan denied this when&#13;
asked about having their&#13;
posters and flyers approved&#13;
by Union 209.&#13;
"No concern was brought&#13;
up" said Morgan, junior.&#13;
After Pitts' e-mail, other faculty&#13;
members and students&#13;
agreed with Pitts. The event, to&#13;
them, did not appeal to the&#13;
vast majority of 1JW-P students.&#13;
PAB's own mission&#13;
statement, states "our mission&#13;
is to organize events and _activities&#13;
that appeal to the diverse&#13;
spectrum of UW-P students'&#13;
interest."&#13;
PSG A election results in&#13;
tions while campaigning. have the power to freeze any-&#13;
By Alex Voskuil Morrison said that, "the one'~ budg~t. H1e wou:1d also&#13;
first thing to do is to check to consider imp ementmg _a&#13;
Staff Reporter see if the constitution is valid. salary cap on student orgaru- O n Monday, Al'ril 22,&#13;
2002, the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association's&#13;
judicial branc~&#13;
(PSGA) named, Marco Jv!omon&#13;
and Vik Sidhu President&#13;
and Vice-President of ~A,&#13;
r spectively. This dec1s1on&#13;
com six weeks after the elections&#13;
were held. On !vfaY 10,&#13;
2002, Morrison and Si~u are&#13;
set to be sworn in to their new&#13;
positio~,. making the elections&#13;
offiaal.&#13;
Once Morrison takes over&#13;
as president, he P~~ to~~e&#13;
some changes wt~ II f i&#13;
According to Mo mson, s1 ee 1&#13;
that as the 2002- 2003 rsc1&#13;
year approaches, that&#13;
needs to undergo a reconstruction."&#13;
This may b e to duet? a&#13;
number of reas ons, which&#13;
include lack of co~!ID~~&#13;
certain members within ti,&#13;
echni alities within the cons -&#13;
t c . . . t umber&#13;
tution, or a s1gnjfid can ntle violaof&#13;
appeals base on&#13;
C rtain guidelines from the zations to_ prevent any club&#13;
e t be valid " from havmg an outrageous&#13;
pa~:ds~~ is plaruting and annual ~udget. .&#13;
ld like to see put in place Mornson wants to get nd&#13;
fo~uthe u coming school year of this cloud that has_ hover~ tir{ b tween the heads over the PSGA. Momson said&#13;
a meed g - e r anizations of PSGA's image, "I want to&#13;
~ 5!0 ent ~~ ~s would show that this student govern"&#13;
llmson ~J see what we ca~ ment is not always there to&#13;
a ow u~ chool as a whole attack people and take away&#13;
do /t i~s tas separate dubs." jobs." Morrison said he would&#13;
an. n~ JUS hat PSGA he says welcome a larger number of&#13;
This 15 w all 1 senators which should accomshoul~&#13;
ha1e d~e enti:/;J·ool modate Parkside's diverse stu-&#13;
To mvo ve . f dent body&#13;
Morrison would like ~o see ac- At an · rate PSGA looks to&#13;
ulty and staff take a bigger role y ' f f th&#13;
. . PSGA What fhat role have a new ace or e&#13;
w~thin b is· not yet deter- upcoming 2002-03 school year.&#13;
m!ghd ,,j feel we should have Adam DeFord,_ wh? was runmine&#13;
· . ut to see what ner up to Momson m thefopmore&#13;
facu~f b changed " ular vote commented, " am&#13;
they feel n_ s i ~ . the sh!- hopeful that the new leadersaid&#13;
Morrison. 1 is . shi in PSGA next year can&#13;
dents w~o hay~ the ~~c~f stu- le~ from the actions taken by&#13;
The fin~cia. asp . ludin those who currently hold&#13;
dent orgaruz:ons m~em 0, office in PSGA so not to repeat&#13;
PSGA are a al uns~on -that a any of the events of this years&#13;
M · on's He ca 1 l · " 01:15 · 1 hould not presidentia e ections. president, a one, s&#13;
update&#13;
Chancellor John Keating&#13;
___ By Sandee _C_omel_l __&#13;
Staff Reporter C hancellor John P. Keating&#13;
has returned to campus&#13;
on a full-time basis&#13;
after a successful cancer operation&#13;
that took place in the middle&#13;
of March. Chancellor Keating&#13;
would like to extend his&#13;
thanks to all the faculty, staff,&#13;
and students for supporting&#13;
him during his recovery.&#13;
Provost/Vice Chancellor of&#13;
Academic Affairs, Rebecca&#13;
Martin, filled in for Chancellor&#13;
Keating while recuperating.&#13;
Apology&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Activities&#13;
Board wishes to express&#13;
its deepest apologies in reference&#13;
to a party that was sponsored&#13;
by our organization on&#13;
Friday, April 26, 2002. It was&#13;
brought to our attention that&#13;
the theme "Straight Pimpin''&#13;
may have been offensive to&#13;
some, or may have even been&#13;
considered stereotypical.&#13;
Though the word "Pimp may&#13;
have had a negative connotation&#13;
in past generations, please&#13;
be assured that its use m our&#13;
theme was not meant to be&#13;
derogatory in any sense. Again&#13;
we a1&gt;0logize to anyone who&#13;
may have taken offense or&#13;
expressed their concern.&#13;
Sincerely, Liza Herbst CoPresident&#13;
SabrinaMorgan CoPresident&#13;
Randy 0. West&#13;
Party Coordinator&#13;
Pancakes&#13;
Orange Juice&#13;
Milk&#13;
Sausage&#13;
Coffee&#13;
Donuts&#13;
Fresh Fruit&#13;
U\lt ,04~&#13;
&lt;It - ,•&#13;
1 800 GAMBLE. 5&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Problem Gambling&#13;
~" ,if ,&#13;
Sports Page Editot&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
'tors-in-Chief&#13;
. Schmidt&#13;
r Smith&#13;
\ Assistant Editor&#13;
DeboraJ;&gt;Hahm&#13;
"*tJ¥1&#13;
Editor&#13;
Pembie&#13;
·~t~"5~~~idt ;0J,,-&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursdfjy .. .. t the semester by&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Edil&#13;
misleading or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not be&#13;
Enjoy Breakfast with the Chancellor!&#13;
SHAt1ArI ()f t~e&#13;
fOREST "WWW.SHAMAN.US.COM&#13;
BUY&#13;
A&#13;
TUX&#13;
FOR&#13;
$50&#13;
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COAT, SlACK,&#13;
VEST&amp;TlE&#13;
c.w. MIKE BJORN'S.. = ~ TUX WORLD .::..&#13;
AS SEEN ON 'WILD CHICAGOTV!!!'!&#13;
7&#13;
Ajivertising&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
•.s Michelle Rag THe A~NGeA&#13;
/&#13;
f .Ranger Advisor&#13;
Prof, judith Logsdon&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
;w' those at Parks ide. , A&#13;
i'f /&#13;
Contact the edito at 595-&#13;
2287 for mo information.&#13;
who are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. ~&#13;
should be delivered to the Ranger office (WYLLD-139C) . Letters must be typed and include the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
r's name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ra!]?er reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
Pancakes&#13;
Orange Juice&#13;
Milk&#13;
Sausage&#13;
Coffee&#13;
Donuts&#13;
Fresh Fruit&#13;
fnl .. liG;! I I&#13;
• • I II • '&#13;
If gambling is a problem,&#13;
it's never too late to call for help.&#13;
1 800 GAMBLE • 5&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Problem Gambling&#13;
Co-Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Ben" · Schmidt&#13;
=Smith&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Keeley Pemble&#13;
Design and Layout&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi Agoro&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Michael Coghlan Jr&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Amber Antonia&#13;
Matt Grace&#13;
Amy Rogers&#13;
Michael Pawlowicz&#13;
Sandee Cornell&#13;
with&#13;
Enjoy Breakfast with the Chancellor!&#13;
Mav13th&#13;
1oam-12&#13;
Dining Ro om&#13;
Opento&#13;
all stude nts&#13;
sttAMAtJ of the&#13;
f&lt;&gt;RESi&#13;
FOR&#13;
$50&#13;
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COAT, SLACK,&#13;
VEST&amp;TlE = MIKE B~!"J-S.. =&#13;
HOURS1 TUX WORLD .::. WWW.~AN.US.COM AS SEEN ON ''WILD CHICAGO TV!!(&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Prof. Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editors at 595-&#13;
2287 for more information.&#13;
THe AANGet=I&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The~ is published every Thursdaly throughout the semester by 91udenls of the University o{WISCl)ll$iJ&gt;-Padcside, who are so1e1y responsible for its editorial policy ~nd content.&#13;
letter,, to the F.ditor policy; The Ranger enoourages letters lo the Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered lo the Ranger office (WYLL n-139CJ . Letters must be typed and include the author's name and phone number. Lettena must be free from&#13;
,ni.sJeading or libelous content. Letters that fail to romply will not be published. For publication pwposes, author's name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves lhe right to edit all letters.&#13;
Vice Provost Dr. R. Martin&#13;
helps out the Chancellor&#13;
Dining Service&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Co·Edltor·ln-Chlef&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Martin&#13;
While Chancellor Jack&#13;
Keating was absent&#13;
from the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside to&#13;
under go surgery, ViceProvost&#13;
Dr. RebeccaMartin stepped up&#13;
to complete the Chancellors&#13;
duties.&#13;
Totake over the responsibilities&#13;
of the Chancellor after&#13;
only being at the University&#13;
for a short time was a challenge,&#13;
e~pecially since it came&#13;
at the time of the admissions&#13;
freeze but the vice provost&#13;
stated; "The people here are a&#13;
great help. Chancellor Keating&#13;
put together a great team.'&#13;
The Vice Provost likes the fact&#13;
that at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside "access to&#13;
education is a priority" and&#13;
she also feels that "The quality&#13;
of the teachers here is excellent."&#13;
In the Spring 2002 issue of&#13;
Perspective Dr. Martin stated&#13;
that she looks "forward to&#13;
being here in 2007. I really&#13;
expect Parkside will provide&#13;
me with room to grow, plenty&#13;
of challenges, and the opportunity&#13;
to contribute."&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Martin came to&#13;
UW-Parkside after spending&#13;
12 years at the University of&#13;
Vermont where she had served&#13;
in a number of positions&#13;
including senior vice provost&#13;
and interim provost! acting&#13;
president.&#13;
.&#13;
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Vice Provost Dr. R. Martin&#13;
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Dr. Rebecca Martin&#13;
W hile Chancellor Jack&#13;
Keating was absent&#13;
from the University&#13;
of Wisconsin P a rkside to&#13;
under go surgery, Vice Provost&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Martin tepped up&#13;
to complete the Chancellors&#13;
dutie .&#13;
To take over the responsibilities&#13;
of the Chancellor after&#13;
only being a t the University&#13;
for a short time was a challenge,&#13;
especially since it came&#13;
at the time of the admissions&#13;
freeze but the v ice provost&#13;
stated; "The people here are a&#13;
great help. Chancellor Keatin&amp;'&#13;
put together a great team. '&#13;
The Vice Provost likes the fact&#13;
that at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside "access to&#13;
education is a p riority" and&#13;
she also feels that "The quality&#13;
of the teachers here is excellent."&#13;
In the Spring 2002 issue of&#13;
Perspective Dr. Martin stated&#13;
that she looks " forward to&#13;
being here in 2007. I really&#13;
expect Parkside will provide&#13;
me with room to grow, plenty&#13;
of challenges, and the opportunity&#13;
to contribute."&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Martin came to&#13;
UW-Parkside after spending&#13;
12 years at the University of&#13;
Vermont where she had served&#13;
in a number of positions&#13;
including senior vice provost&#13;
and interim prov ost,/ acting&#13;
president.&#13;
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Just a taste of&#13;
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Clockwise from the top leftKyle&#13;
and Conne Wolf working the print&#13;
studio. Josh with a work progress.&#13;
TrishaLuke 'Movie College' Nicholas&#13;
Knuth 'leaf Skateboard Series', Panitan&#13;
Kayasit 'Brochure Pag 3&amp; 4', John&#13;
W1lsori 'Sineware', Elizabeth Pezoldt&#13;
'Barbie Picnic Set'&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
leftK yle&#13;
in in Trisha Luke .Nicholas&#13;
Pani~&#13;
tan 3 &amp; Wilson Page5&#13;
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At last, my friend,&#13;
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the blood's red song.&#13;
squawk&#13;
You would write a poem with a stem&#13;
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You would piece and fuse&#13;
glass poemette,&#13;
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is be 'In Conclusion'&#13;
By Leon Williams&#13;
Jl1 »1.1( b'l4i.h aU J G411 tlti&gt;tk oilS pain.&#13;
!J'h. mlf liie theu is tto use l11 kih~ pet'li-lled (vld lame.&#13;
eal1 JUtl(bodi( help me; J'm oat: herte aUJI1.evou.. see.&#13;
J gt'l.u.~,leto gt'letch a dolLa'l, ",/'i./..e la%'f people hve ",e.althlf·&#13;
When 1lJi1l j tiltft.f1.1( 'lest UtOh! thi9 OPP'U!S9Io11?&#13;
School ",as but j hilllf.'. UhithShleud qu~tlohS.&#13;
j have plahS to mitke It, but ",hlte clouds CDVe'1m~ vtston.&#13;
the~ ",ill never see H1eC'l~ 'caase h~poc'1ltl!9 dOh't '1tAU~ llStI!h.&#13;
thiS blood Wtde'l m~ iih~e'lhiti./.s j ",il1 CDhtlhue to 617ht.&#13;
Besides "''li.tih~, j hope the decisWhS j mitke it'le 'l~ht.&#13;
984)&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
Dining Service's Evening Meal is Moved Monday, May 13th&#13;
and Thursday, May 16th.&#13;
Questions? Contact Dining Service atx260 I&#13;
Evening Meals on these days will be served in the Union&#13;
Squarewith the ParksideCafe prices honored.&#13;
Special Menu Items Include:&#13;
May 13th: Grilled Brats, Burgers, and Chicken Breastswith all&#13;
the trimmings. Will be outside if weather permits.&#13;
May 16th:&#13;
Top your own pizza special. There will be other items also served.&#13;
* These special-days will allow the meal plan discount.&#13;
•&#13;
'Blood Truck'&#13;
Kummings&#13;
"How we wobble when we have the collywobbles" -James Joyce&#13;
You would make a poem out of musk ox hide,&#13;
leaving the coarse hair on.&#13;
with jewellike blue and green&#13;
a stained-glass poem.&#13;
You would even settle for a poemene,&#13;
if tiny, about a pebble, maybe two,&#13;
of some small pain.&#13;
Kummings, you Midwestern Daedalus,&#13;
you laze about, dream of stepping forth&#13;
labyrinthine indeed, you would fly off, and up, and high&#13;
yet evidentally you're afraid&#13;
the sun will melt the red wax of your heart.&#13;
Your lines, therefore, are fishermen&#13;
crowded round an inkwell,&#13;
witlessly staring, sullenly waiting;&#13;
your images are cold, made of wire;&#13;
your metaphors forget to eat and sleep&#13;
and thus are weak, anemic;&#13;
your symbols are white bells&#13;
that have no tongues;&#13;
your ideas stand on this foot, that, and&#13;
squawk:&#13;
demented parrots perching on such flimsy&#13;
limbs.&#13;
Pal, you're growing old.&#13;
You sit and stroke your sisal fiber beard.&#13;
You stare at wide, wintry fields&#13;
of the page,&#13;
white as the bones of bison.&#13;
Is there any doubt ·that you need help ?&#13;
But who is coming to the rescue?&#13;
Where is the sag wagon?&#13;
By God! Where the blood truck?&#13;
Even now it should beating up,&#13;
bright and throbbing at the curb,&#13;
the smocked doctors disembarking,&#13;
red syringes in their large, poetic hands.&#13;
Reprinted from Root River Voiced (1984)&#13;
SlJITS!!&#13;
But You Do Get A Free&#13;
Sizes 36 to 60, Shorts, Reg., Big &amp; Tall&#13;
CASSIN! Sl49.99&#13;
SANS-A-54&#13;
CALL FOR !J,. "''f 6taih ail. J ca11 thmk ~ tg paltr.&#13;
J,. my ll.6t tl.ttt /g 110 tlSt l,i 6em7 ptttl61td a11d l.amt.&#13;
ea,. ,my6ody l.dp J'"' out l.tte t1lo11e you gu.&#13;
!!1ttu.771L to !lttttch t1 dollm, whllL /.A;r;y /.J.11t k!taltl.'f.&#13;
Wl.t&gt;t ,.,i.Ll !J 6111aU., test 610m ti.lg oppuggto,i?&#13;
Sclwol ,.,&lt;ts cool, 6ut !J still l.a11e u,ia,ig,.,eud quutto&gt;ig.&#13;
!J lta11t pf.a,is 1&gt;1ake Lt, 6ut these ,,,l,ite cfuuds co11tt m'( 11ls/011.&#13;
But ti.el( ,.,i.Ll htlltt su mt Cf'( 0cat&lt;St l.'(poctites do,i't ttt1llit llstoi.&#13;
With tltts 6lood u11de, m'f 6"'7tt11ails !J ,.,111 co11tmu.t 6'7ht.&#13;
Besld.es 1tJtiti"7, !J I.ope tl.t declslo1ts !J n111kt ate t'7l.t.&#13;
Square with Parkside Cafe Breasts with special days ~uestions? at x260 I&#13;
{&#13;
Activities'&#13;
Page?i&#13;
i&#13;
BY~r Carl Lindner&#13;
"As mandated inUWS 8.025, all faculty and academic staff must file a&#13;
report on their outside activities. " -Vice Chancellor ([he ",e",6-.s 06 ([he 'Ra"'Jet sta# sooald like to thaM all the attists a"d poets ",ho donated theit ceeattve&#13;
JVo'lks to ma.ke out&#13;
litetM¥ issue a success. We look 60t"'Md to tecei"i"'J all ¥out MUstle ",otks 60t next ¥&lt;tltSlitettlt¥ issue.&#13;
Every day, religiously,&#13;
I change my underwear.&#13;
When I leave my house,&#13;
I always lose my way.&#13;
I no longer pay&#13;
attention to the news.&#13;
When my cat meows,&#13;
I listen to the syllables.&#13;
On my back, I study&#13;
the language of clouds,&#13;
the wheel of jay,&#13;
the swoop of cardinal.&#13;
At the close of light,&#13;
I wrap myself&#13;
in the blanket of night.&#13;
I pray the blackness&#13;
finds in me good company.&#13;
Morning showers me with gold.&#13;
Less and less I count&#13;
the change in my pockets.&#13;
More and more I grow&#13;
rich from these activities.&#13;
,&#13;
';11~'Real '[I'U"d'&#13;
By Sandee Cornell&#13;
'Vortex'&#13;
By E. Merrllt&#13;
J can t'lust me J1Jith H11f sectets.&#13;
j C4h t'lust me not to lie.&#13;
j ca" ttust tka t j ",i/J. 6e tkese&#13;
0" the "et~ da~ j die.&#13;
!J ""i1lnevet stea.l »tlf mO),{2.1(-&#13;
j ",ill "e"et sta6 "'~ 6ack.&#13;
And j ",i/J. al",a~s ha"e the da",n 'J0odtaste&#13;
'lhat "'ijht j add, ~ou lack.&#13;
!J ",i1l11eVe'l put me second.&#13;
!J will1telle'l salft "xoe 110W('.&#13;
7fO'l !J knokJ tha.t time is 'P'Ucious&#13;
And is lost "'ith ~ou so",eho",.&#13;
j ",i/J. al",a~s hell' me tijht.&#13;
j ",i/J. al",a~s "'tltch m~ 6ack.&#13;
And it j should 'J0on a 'til',&#13;
j'll al",a~s hell' me pack.&#13;
j kno", that j am much like me&#13;
;11~selt, and e"en j,&#13;
And j kno", that j ",i/J. hold m~ hand&#13;
Until the da~ j du.&#13;
Once, there was a warm, storied ,white rambling house&#13;
with earned acres to savor, roam, ride, tend and mow.&#13;
There was a hig fertile garden with black crumbly&#13;
dirt to dent, sow, plant, weed, water, and harvest.&#13;
There was a laddered library with bound shelves&#13;
of treasured prose to read, dream and know.&#13;
There was a papered bedroom with much&#13;
quilted comfort to sleep, love and owe.&#13;
Then, there was a pink condominium&#13;
on an acre' of sandy cacti borders&#13;
to stalk, walk, guide and muse.&#13;
There was a redwood planter&#13;
with black crumbly dirt to&#13;
fuse, dent, seed and feed.&#13;
There was a bookshelf&#13;
of choices beside gifts&#13;
to please and feel.&#13;
There was a room&#13;
'Son Signs'&#13;
By Uriah Heep&#13;
hold a two-wheeler&#13;
like a heart&#13;
until it doesn't dump&#13;
from side to side&#13;
legs pump&#13;
out of sight&#13;
marrow not enough&#13;
to graft boy-bone&#13;
to mind&#13;
son sides split&#13;
teenage guff&#13;
asif&#13;
you'd never been&#13;
the distance before&#13;
don't claim it as yours&#13;
until you know the&#13;
black of it set the sideroad&#13;
out of the way&#13;
Test Drive a hood up leaking&#13;
Cheeseburger.&#13;
,t's worth a&#13;
drive ftom-==&#13;
wherever you&#13;
are to put us to ~&#13;
the test!&#13;
• Try our lamous"5)(5" • Wine&amp; Beer &amp; liquor&#13;
• Cur1y frieS • Fun kids menu&#13;
• ~ 0fl10fl hnllS • Everylhltl\l is lresh&#13;
• Root Beer onTlIP • Everylhltl\l is cooked1Ootder&#13;
• Grilled Chicken • Loaded Surger from $3.95&#13;
• IliC Salads &amp; SandWiches • Pub AtmoSj)here&#13;
Call For Luncheon Reservation&#13;
flag man down&#13;
gripped by the highway&#13;
streaked by winters salt&#13;
fistmetal dents&#13;
pulls around&#13;
and passes&#13;
am't no more&#13;
broken teeth&#13;
to kick \&#13;
'A Reflection'&#13;
Ron's Place ~&#13;
~~ (262)U7-1107 ~' ,.~ '.V 3301 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
THE AANGEA&#13;
•outsiae Activities '&#13;
By ProfMSOr Carl Lindner&#13;
"As mandated in UWS 8.025, all faculty and a cademic staff must file a&#13;
report on their outside a ctivities. " -Vice Chance llor (];,he 111eml,e'ls ot (];,he ~R,v1,e'l sta# hlould like to thMk all the a'l.tists and poets "'ho do1tated thei'I. cuatl11e&#13;
hlo'lks to make ou'I.&#13;
Every day, religiously,&#13;
I change my underwear . llteM'l'f issue a success. We look to'l.hla'ld to 'leai11ln'j all 'fou'I. a'ltlstlc '110'1.ks to'I. next 'fetl.'I.S lltt'l.tl.'I.'( issue.&#13;
When I l eave my house,&#13;
I always l ose my way.&#13;
I no longer pay&#13;
attention to the news .&#13;
When my c a t meows,&#13;
I listen to the syllables .&#13;
On my bac k, I study&#13;
the language of clouds,&#13;
the wheel of jay,&#13;
the sw oop of cardinal.&#13;
At the c lose of light,&#13;
I wrap my self&#13;
in the b lanket of night.&#13;
I pray the blackness&#13;
finds in me good company.&#13;
Morn i ng showers me with gold.&#13;
Less a nd less I count&#13;
the change in my pockets.&#13;
More an d more I grow&#13;
rich from these activities.&#13;
'/11 'f 'Rea l 'g-'l le1td'&#13;
By Sandee Cornell&#13;
!) can t'l_ust 1ne Nith m11 secuts.&#13;
!) CM t'lust m e not to lie .&#13;
!) cttn t'lust t ha t!) 11Jill k the'le&#13;
On the 11 e'l'f da'f !) dte.&#13;
!) Nlll 11e11n s tea l m11 mo1tf'{!)&#13;
JtJlll 11 e11e'l s ta6 m11 6ack.&#13;
;4nd !) ,,.,llJ, alJtJ 1.u1s haue th e dam11 good taste&#13;
&lt;z:,ltat m½ht !) Ad d, 'fou lack.&#13;
!) JtJill ne 11e'l put me seco11d.&#13;
!J Nill neue,z Sa'f, u not noJtJ!" .&#13;
'g-o7 !) lvtoJtJ that time is p7ecious&#13;
;411d ls lost JtJ ith 'fOU somehow.&#13;
!) &gt;vill al1i1a 11s hd p me ii7l,t.&#13;
!) will alNa 'fS wa tch nt'( 6ack.&#13;
fl11d i6 !J shou ld j O 011 a t'Zlp,&#13;
!)'ll alNa'f s hdp me pack.&#13;
!) k11011J that !) a m much like me&#13;
/11'(sdi, and e11e11 !J ,&#13;
;4nd !) know that !) .,_,llJ, hold nt'( ha11d&#13;
Z&lt;ntil the da11 !J dte .&#13;
Test Driv a&#13;
Cheeseburger.&#13;
It's worth a&#13;
drive from&#13;
wherever you&#13;
are to put us to ~&#13;
the test! ~&#13;
• Try our famous·sxs• • Wine &amp; Beer &amp; liquor&#13;
• Cu,ty fries • Fun kids menu&#13;
• Hand-Cut oruon ri s • EWfY(.hin&amp; is fresh&#13;
• Root Beer on Tep • E...ef)'thin&amp; is cooked to Ofder&#13;
• Gritted Chicken • ~ Burger from $3.95&#13;
• Bit Salads &amp; SandwicheS • Pub AUnosl)hent&#13;
Call For Luncheon Reservation&#13;
'A Reflection'&#13;
'Vortex'&#13;
By E. Merritt&#13;
Once, there was a warm, storied , white rambling house&#13;
'Son Signs'&#13;
By Uriah Heep&#13;
with earned acres to savor, roam, ride, tend and mow.&#13;
There was a big fertile garden with black crumbly&#13;
dirt to dent, sow, plant, weed, water, and harvest.&#13;
hold a two-wheeler&#13;
like a heart&#13;
until it doesn't dump&#13;
from side to side&#13;
legs pump&#13;
out of sight&#13;
marrow not enough&#13;
to graft boy-bone&#13;
to mind&#13;
son sides split&#13;
teenage guff&#13;
as if&#13;
you'd never been&#13;
the distance before&#13;
don't claim it as yours&#13;
until you know the&#13;
black of it set the sideroad&#13;
out of the way&#13;
hood up leaking&#13;
flag man down&#13;
gripped by the highway&#13;
streaked by winters salt&#13;
fistmetal dents&#13;
pulls around&#13;
and passes&#13;
ain't no more&#13;
broken teeth&#13;
to kick&#13;
There was a laddered library with bound shelves&#13;
of treasured prose to read, dream and know.&#13;
There was a papered bedroom with much&#13;
quilted comfort to sleep, love and owe.&#13;
Then, there was a pink condominium&#13;
on an acre of sandy cacti borders&#13;
to stalk, walk, guide and muse.&#13;
There was a redwood planter&#13;
with black crumbly dirt to&#13;
fuss, dent, seed and feed.&#13;
There was a bookshelf&#13;
of choices beside giAs&#13;
to please and feel.&#13;
There was a room&#13;
for one - to nap,&#13;
sleep and remember.&#13;
Now, there is a sterile&#13;
whitewashed room with&#13;
framed acres on the wall.&#13;
There is a psalmed book&#13;
with gilded pages to&#13;
thank and praise.&#13;
There is a blue&#13;
vase with black&#13;
crumbly dirt.&#13;
There is a&#13;
railed cot&#13;
for resting&#13;
and attempts&#13;
\&#13;
l&#13;
-;&#13;
if&#13;
Photo by A.L. Smith&#13;
Going Home lor the Summer?&#13;
UW·Baraboof&#13;
Sauk County&#13;
UW·Barron County&#13;
(RiCe Lake)&#13;
UW·Fond du Lac&#13;
CS&gt;Aurora Health Care'&#13;
Be our guest for the&#13;
experience of a lifetime.&#13;
Aurora Hcalth Care. the first health cam s)Stem in the country to eam&#13;
. your protesston's h.ighest honor from the American Nurses Association,&#13;
woukllike in t.'Ordiall}' invite you to 00 OUI guest.&#13;
We are pleased t) eetend an invitation to you 10 join us for a&#13;
specialized tour designed around your interests. 'bu will ha va&#13;
the opportunity to tour our units, network with staff, talk with&#13;
other Graduate Nurses and Nurse Imams who have successfuly&#13;
translucoeo through our nurslqg career path, and learn about the&#13;
endless opportunities available lot you within Aurora. we are&#13;
comrrnrec to !eamlng about your career goals and designing a&#13;
path 10 help you moot them.&#13;
Posjtcns a vanabe in the Pick up college credits.&#13;
following areas:&#13;
Caraiac Telemetry&#13;
Ac&lt;.lIB ca» tor lha EkIelly&#13;
BehaJioral H€alltl&#13;
Long Term cere&#13;
Medica~~rgical&#13;
OrlhopOOj.~slR&lt;e&gt;habil~aiion&#13;
Women's Servkea&#13;
Criiical Care&#13;
OnCOlogy&#13;
EmeJgency Department&#13;
Operating Rooms.&#13;
SurgtGalrNeum&#13;
Call'! Lub/EP teu&#13;
Ea,rncoaege credns lhiS summer at a Urllvarslty of WIsconSin&#13;
two-year campus In or near your hometown&#13;
• Expo-nonce small ctassos tawgh! by professors on campus&#13;
Of take classes online at WW"h U'wcolfegos com&#13;
• Ensuro you' crocus transfer by consU!hng the UW lr8nsfOl&#13;
lrdofmatloo System {"TIS} at www uWsa.OOu:11S/&#13;
To accept}' our invitation, cease cal! (414) 328-6900 to&#13;
oesign at tour around YOUI&#13;
We are interested in talking wit h you about oppor tunltes&#13;
available in the following pr oqrame:&#13;
- Graduate Nurses&#13;
• Nurse interns&#13;
• Entry Lesel Leaning Opper hmitfes For tradltlonal summer classes V,Slt www.UWC.edu&#13;
Experience the Excellence of a Magnet Organization For onilno classes v.su www.uwcolleges.com&#13;
Please cermet lIS 10 lind out&#13;
more about these oPPOrtunities&#13;
and our Student Nurse&#13;
Financial Support Program.&#13;
1-888-INFO-DWC Fa-ticia \tlIkert&#13;
Academic Li~1190n&#13;
Wes! Mis Msmcrial Hospital&#13;
P.O. Box 27901&#13;
west Allis. WI 53227--9983&#13;
Phone: (414) 328 6000&#13;
pattida.volkert@auma.org&#13;
A\J!om Health cee&#13;
cerwaueec Employmem&#13;
3307 West F01!!St Home Ave.&#13;
PO. 60x 343910&#13;
Mi~""UI.!k$e,WI 53234-3910&#13;
Phone: (414) 389 2602&#13;
Fal.:: i414) '671 8111&#13;
www,AuroraHellhhCara.Olg&#13;
UN WISCONSIN&#13;
COLLEGES&#13;
UW·Fox Valley&#13;
(Menasha)&#13;
UW-Manitowoc&#13;
UW.Marathon County&#13;
(Wausau)&#13;
UW-Marinetle&#13;
UW-Mar.mfiekl/&#13;
WoodCounly&#13;
UW·Richland&#13;
(Richland Ccnte~&#13;
UW·Rock County&#13;
(Janesville)&#13;
UW-Sheboygat1&#13;
UW-Washington County&#13;
(West Bend)&#13;
UW·Waukes/la&#13;
Photo by A.L. Smith /&#13;
C"~ Aurora Health Care·&#13;
Be our guest for the&#13;
experience of a lifetime.&#13;
~·&#13;
Aurora Health Caro. th8 first health care s)&amp;lem in the country to eam&#13;
your profession's highest hooor from the American Nurses Association,&#13;
would like to cordlalfy In vita )'OU to be our guest&#13;
We are pleMed ti extend an invitation to you to join us for a&#13;
specialized ~r designed around your lnmmsls. 't&gt;u will ha ve&#13;
u,e opportuMy to 100r our units, network with staff, alk with&#13;
other Graduate Nurses and Nurse lntlms who have sucoessfuly&#13;
transllioned through our nurslflll ca Mer path, and learn about the&#13;
endless opportunitlOS available lor you within Aurora. We aro&#13;
commited to learning about your career goals and designing a&#13;
path 1o help you meet tl'lem.&#13;
To acceply our lnvilallon, please call (414) 32lHl900 to&#13;
design at lour around YOU!&#13;
We are interesild in talking with you about oppor tunities&#13;
available in the following programs:&#13;
• Graduate Nurses&#13;
• Nurse lot ems&#13;
• Entry La,el Leaning Oppor hmities&#13;
Posrtions a va!able in Ille&#13;
following areasc&#13;
Ca!dia&lt;: Telemetry&#13;
Aeu!• ca., 1or the Elooily&#13;
B&lt;lhalforal Heanh&#13;
Long Term Ca;,,&#13;
Medical/Surglcal&#13;
OrlllopooicslRohab!I~ ll!0fl&#13;
Women' s Se!Vlces&#13;
Ceffical Care&#13;
Oncology&#13;
Eme,gency Del)&lt;lrtment&#13;
Operabng Rooms&#13;
Su!ijicallNeu,o&#13;
Calh Lab/EP Lab&#13;
Experience the Excellence of a Magnet Organization&#13;
Please cooact us lo find out&#13;
more about these opponunilles&#13;
an&lt;I our Student Nurse&#13;
Financia l Support Program .&#13;
Palriae.\otlll&lt;en&#13;
l\cadomlc Ulllson&#13;
West Ams Memorial Ho&amp;plla!&#13;
P.O. 8""27901&#13;
West Allis, WI 5322'7~&#13;
Phone: (414) 328 6900&#13;
patrlcia,\/Olkel!Oauora.org&#13;
Au,ora Heallh COJO&#13;
Contralil.8d Empl~ent&#13;
3307 -t Foes! Home Pw.&#13;
P.O. Boo&lt; 343910&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53234-3910&#13;
Phone: (414) 389 2602&#13;
RlX: (414) 671 8111&#13;
www .Auro&lt;aHea1thCare.0&lt;g&#13;
Going Home lor the Summer?&#13;
Pick up college credits.&#13;
Eam college credits this summer a t a Univers,ty of Wisconsin&#13;
two-year campus ,n or near your omotown&#13;
• Expenenco small classes 1,11.Jghl by pro!,jssors on campus&#13;
or tak e classes onhne al www uwcon s com&#13;
• En suro your credits transf er by consulhng th o UW Tr ansfer&#13;
lnformallon System ( TIS) al www 1.JWsa odlL11s/&#13;
For 1rad 1!looa l summer classes \11S11 www.uwc.edu&#13;
For on hno classes v1s1t www.uwcolleges.com&#13;
Call tOl l tree for m ore 1nf0fma1 K&gt;O 1 •888-INfO-IJWC&#13;
uw. B.: boo'&#13;
Sa County&#13;
UW-Barron Coonty&#13;
(RIC )&#13;
UW-Fonddu&#13;
UW-Fox Valley&#13;
(Menasha)&#13;
UW-Manrtowoc&#13;
UW-Marathon County&#13;
rt" us.au)&#13;
UW-Mannetle&#13;
UW-MarshMldt&#13;
Wood County&#13;
UW-Aichland&#13;
(Richland Center)&#13;
UW-Rock Col.nty&#13;
(Janesville)&#13;
UW-Sheboygan&#13;
UW-Washington ColX!ty&#13;
(West Send)&#13;
UW-Waukesha&#13;
UN IVERS ITY fflt-WI _ C_ O_ N SIN&#13;
COLLEGES</text>
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              <text>r&#13;
THE ~N&#13;
April25 May 9, 2002&#13;
INSloe ...&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do @ the U&#13;
Page 3&#13;
How Healthy is the health&#13;
care center?&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Faculty Profile:&#13;
Donald Kurnmings&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Sports:&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
I&#13;
Plays at Pa-rkside "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a magical escape&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
uw-p Public Relations Director&#13;
When Director Dean&#13;
Yohnk began workmg&#13;
on the Plays At&#13;
Parkside production of "A&#13;
Midsummer Night's Dream"&#13;
he was faced with a dilemma&#13;
four centuries in the making:&#13;
how to take a 400 year-oldplay-&#13;
even Shakespeare's most&#13;
beloved comedy-and make it&#13;
fresh for today's audience.&#13;
Part of the solution came from&#13;
the actors who view this tale of&#13;
love and comic confusion with&#13;
a fresh perspective.&#13;
fIAnytime a show is done,&#13;
it's 'new' because you have a&#13;
totally different group of&#13;
artists working on it," Yohnk&#13;
said. "What any group of&#13;
artists do on any classical piece&#13;
•&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
Rehearsals are currently underway for "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which opens on Friday April 26th&#13;
Photos by Deborah Hahm&#13;
is to find what the play says to&#13;
us in the present world and&#13;
then take that and make it&#13;
clear to our audience."&#13;
In essence, If A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a tale of&#13;
escape, Yohnk said. In this)&#13;
case, two couples escape the'&#13;
restrictive court wor1d of&#13;
Athens for the fantasy world&#13;
of the forest.&#13;
As Theseus, the duke of&#13;
Athens, and his bride Hippolyta&#13;
prepare to wed, lovers&#13;
Hermia and Lysander escape&#13;
to the woods so she can avoid&#13;
marrying Demetrius as her&#13;
father demands. Helena, who&#13;
secretly loves Demetrius, leads&#13;
him to search for Hermia in&#13;
the forest, which is filled with&#13;
mischievous spirits.&#13;
What follows is an amusing&#13;
series of mistakes: enchanted&#13;
lovers&#13;
falling in&#13;
I a v e&#13;
with the&#13;
wrong&#13;
people,&#13;
spir,its&#13;
playmg&#13;
tricks on&#13;
a troupe&#13;
of comic&#13;
actors,&#13;
the&#13;
queen of&#13;
the&#13;
fairies&#13;
falling in&#13;
I a v e&#13;
with a&#13;
human&#13;
who has&#13;
the head&#13;
of donkey.&#13;
In&#13;
the end, of course, loves conquers&#13;
all and the duke invites&#13;
the two couples-now correctly&#13;
matched-to join him and his&#13;
queen in a triple wedding.&#13;
Puck, played by Ed Jenkins,&#13;
controls the action on stage.&#13;
Jenkins sees Puck as a basically&#13;
good spirited character who&#13;
simply can't keep himself; he&#13;
must create trouble. And Jenkins&#13;
loves him for it.&#13;
"He's just a great fun character.&#13;
[Puck] is very energetic&#13;
and he has great language,"&#13;
Jenkins said. "Doing Shakespeare&#13;
is really fun. I love the&#13;
language of Shaksepeare."&#13;
Yohnk said with a cast of&#13;
nearly two dozen actors and a&#13;
stage that changes from reality&#13;
to fantasy world in the blink of&#13;
an eye as well as the prose of&#13;
Shakespeare, the audience&#13;
should expect magic.&#13;
"The audience will be able&#13;
to see Puck on stage doing the&#13;
magic; causing lovers to fall in&#13;
and out of love and leading&#13;
lovers on wild goose chases, '&#13;
Yohnk said. "We'll be able to&#13;
see Puck create the magic theatrically."&#13;
"A Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" is presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 26 and 27&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, May 1 and 2 at 10&#13;
a.m.; and Friday and Saturday,&#13;
May 3 and 4 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $10for adults and $7 for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
Group rates are available. For&#13;
more information or to reserve&#13;
tickets, call Diane Smith at&#13;
(262) 595-2564 or access&#13;
smithd@Uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
(&#13;
(l\!&#13;
}&#13;
f&#13;
THE ANG&#13;
April 25 May 9, 2002&#13;
INSIOE&#13;
Pagel&#13;
Things to do @ the U&#13;
Page3&#13;
How Healthy is the h alth&#13;
care center?&#13;
Page4&#13;
Faculty Profile:&#13;
Donald l&lt;ummings&#13;
Page7&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Sports:&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Plays at Parkside "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a magical escape&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
UW-P Public Relations Director W hen Director Dean&#13;
Yohnk began working&#13;
on the Plays At&#13;
Parkside production of "A&#13;
Midsummer ight's Dream"&#13;
he was faced with a dilemma&#13;
four centuries in the making:&#13;
how to take a 400 year-oldplay-&#13;
even Shakespeare's most&#13;
belov d comedy-and make it&#13;
fre h for today's audience.&#13;
Part Qf the solution came from&#13;
the actors who view this tale of&#13;
love and comic confu ion with&#13;
a fr h perspective.&#13;
"Anytime a show is done,&#13;
it' 'new' because you have a&#13;
totally different group of&#13;
arti t working on it," Yohnk&#13;
said. "What any group of&#13;
arti ts do on any classical piece&#13;
is to find what the play says to&#13;
us in the present world and&#13;
then take that and make it&#13;
clear to our audience."&#13;
In essence, "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a tale of&#13;
escape, Yohnk s!,)id. In this 1&#13;
case, two couples escape the&#13;
restrictive court wor1d of&#13;
Athens for the fantasy world&#13;
of the forest.&#13;
As Theseus, the duke of&#13;
Rehearsals are currently underway for "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which opens on Friday April 26th&#13;
Photos by Deborah Hahm&#13;
Athens, and his bride Hippolyta&#13;
prepare to wed, lovers&#13;
Hermia and Lysander escape&#13;
to the woods so she can avoid&#13;
marrying Demetrius as her&#13;
father demands. Helena, who&#13;
secretly loves Demetrius, leads&#13;
him to search for Hermia in&#13;
the forest, which is filled with&#13;
mischievous spirits.&#13;
What follows is an amusing&#13;
series of mistakes: enchanted&#13;
lovers&#13;
falling in&#13;
1 0 V e&#13;
with the&#13;
wrong&#13;
people,&#13;
s pi r_i ts&#13;
playing&#13;
tricks on&#13;
a troupe&#13;
of comic&#13;
actors,&#13;
t h e&#13;
queen of&#13;
t h e&#13;
fairies&#13;
falling in&#13;
l o v e&#13;
with a&#13;
human&#13;
who has&#13;
the head&#13;
of donkey.&#13;
In&#13;
the end, of course, loves conquers&#13;
all and the duke invites&#13;
the two couples-now correctly&#13;
matched-to join him and his&#13;
queen in a triple wedding.&#13;
Puck, played by Ed Jen.kins,&#13;
controls the action on stage.&#13;
Jenkins sees Puck as a basically&#13;
good spirited character who&#13;
simply can't keep himself; he&#13;
must create trouole. And Jenkins&#13;
loves him for it.&#13;
"He's just a great fun character.&#13;
[Puck] is very energetic&#13;
and he has great language,"&#13;
Jenkins said. "Doing Shakespeare&#13;
is really fun. f love the&#13;
language of Shaksepeare."&#13;
Yohnk said with a cast of&#13;
nearly two dozen actors and a&#13;
stage that changes from reality&#13;
to fantasy world in the blink of&#13;
an eye as well as the prose of&#13;
Shakespeare, the audience&#13;
should expect magic.&#13;
"The audience will be able&#13;
to see Puck on stage doing the&#13;
magic; causing lovers to fall in&#13;
and out of love and leadin§&#13;
lovers on wild goose chases, '&#13;
Yohnk said. "We'll be able to&#13;
see Puck create the magic theatrically."&#13;
"A Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" is presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 26 and 27&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, May 1 and 2 at 10&#13;
a.m.; and Friday and Saturday,&#13;
May 3 and 4 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $10 for adults and $7 for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
Group rates are available. For&#13;
more information or to reserve&#13;
tickets, call Diane Smith at&#13;
(262) 595-2564 or access&#13;
smithd@uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
Page 2 THe F1QNGeFl April 25 May.200-2&#13;
THINGS H&#13;
Apr. 25-28 Apr. 29&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Yi Yi" show times: Thursday IFriday: 7:30 p.m., • War, Terrorism, and Conflict: Armenian Genocide WI Hilmar&#13;
Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater Kaiser, 1 p.m .. Molinaro 0-101, free May activities&#13;
Apr. 25 May 1&#13;
• Info Breaks: Word: How to Work Around Unwanted Features, • In Her Footsteps &amp; Making Her Mark Award Luncheon,&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie 01500, 10 a.m., free location &amp; time to be announced, campus only program&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Wisconsin's Birds of Spring" • Noon Concert: Tom Hooper, tenor, noon, Union Cinema The&#13;
ater, free&#13;
wi Charles Hagner, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge&#13;
May 1-4&#13;
Apr. 26&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: "A Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "The Last Report on the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, May 1,2 at 10 a.m.: May 3, 4 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Miracles at Little No Horse," by Louise Erdrich, Molinaro Hall room 111, 3:30&#13;
May 3&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student Recital, noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
Apr. 26-27&#13;
May 4&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: UA Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
• Wisconsin School Music Association (WSMA) State Solo and&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.; tickets: $10 adults, $7&#13;
students 1faculty 1staff / seniors&#13;
Ensemble Contest, various campus locations, all day&#13;
MayS&#13;
Apr. 27&#13;
• UW-Parkside Choirs, James Kinchen, conductor, UW-Parkside&#13;
• Softball vs. Missouri-St. Louis, 1p.m., two games&#13;
Apr. 28&#13;
Orchestra, Alvaro Garcia, conductor, 3:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
ArtsTheatre, tickets: $51$3&#13;
• Softball vs, Indianapolis, noon, two games&#13;
Co-E"ditors-in-Chief&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
'Arr!1r Smith&#13;
" Assistant Editor&#13;
DeboraJ;tHahm&#13;
~&#13;
y.,j:lditor&#13;
Pemble&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Deborah Halim .&#13;
Michelle Rager f&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi Agora&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
Voskuil 'if&#13;
Col';hlan Jr&#13;
e Rager&#13;
Antonia&#13;
Matt Grace Mi~r$;:'::~ SandeeC&#13;
$ A&#13;
Ranger Advisor JJ&#13;
Prof. Judilh Logsdon&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Contact tI:ie edito s at 595·&#13;
2287 for mo,~.information. Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Edi&#13;
The Ranger is p~blished every Thurs~~out~'the semester b t.e:tters ~ the ~ltor policy:The ~ encourages letters to the E2:&#13;
nusleadmg or libelous content Letters that fail to comply will not&#13;
e, who aresolely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
should be delivered to the Ranger office (WYlLD-139C) Lette be ed d i&#13;
's name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Rang~r re:~~Ut~e rig~ to ~it ~cll~er:~e author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
Page2&#13;
Apr. 25-28&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Yi Yi" show times: Thursday /Friday: 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Apr. 25&#13;
• Info Breaks: Word: How to Work Around Unwanted Features,&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie Dl50D, 10 a.m., free&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Wisconsin's Birds of Spring"&#13;
w I Charles Hagner, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge&#13;
Apr. 26&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "The Last Report on the&#13;
THe FIA GeFI April 25&#13;
Apr. 29&#13;
• War, Terrorism, and Conflict: Armenian Genocide w I Hilmar&#13;
Kaiser, 1 p.m .. Molinaro D-101, fre May activitie&#13;
Mayl&#13;
• In Her Footsteps &amp; Making Her Mark Award Luncheon,&#13;
location &amp; time to be announced, carnpu only program&#13;
• Noon Concert: Tom Hooper, tenor, noon, Union Cinema The&#13;
ater, free&#13;
May 1-4&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: "A Midsummer ight's Dream,"&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, May 1, 2 at 10 a.m.; May 3, 4 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Miracles at Little No Horse," by Louise Erdrich, Molinaro Hall room 111, 3:30&#13;
May3&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
Apr. 26-27&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: UA Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.; tickets: $10 adults, $7&#13;
students/ faculty/ staff/ seniors&#13;
Apr. 27&#13;
• Softball vs. Missouri-St. Louis, 1 p.m., two games&#13;
Apr. 28&#13;
• Softball vs. Indianapolis, noon, two games&#13;
Co--Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt -&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Keeley Pemble&#13;
Design and Layout&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi Agoro&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Michael Coghlan Jr&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Amber Antonia&#13;
Matt Grace&#13;
Amy Rogers&#13;
Michael Pawlowicz&#13;
Sandee Cornell&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student Recital, noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
May4&#13;
• Wisconsin School Music Association (WSMA) State Solo and&#13;
Ensemble Contest, various campus location , all day&#13;
May5&#13;
• UW-Parkside Choirs, James Kinchen, conductor, UW-Parkside&#13;
Orchestra, Alvaro Garcia, conductor, 3:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
ArtsTheatre, tickets: $5/$3&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Prof. Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editors at 595-&#13;
2287 for more information.&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and part1c1pate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursc:t..y throughout the semester by SIUde!'lts of the University of Wlec:onein-P · Ldters (O the Editor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor letters shoul n arkside, who are _solely ~nsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
11\lSleadmg or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply wiU not be Jmbllshed. For p~bu:.'ifo~~~~:,~':.'.~ ~d:-:~!fd :u~lyer office (WYLtLThD-13Ran99C) · Letters must bl: typed an_d indude the author's name and phone number. Letters must be fn!e ftoll1 , upon reques . e ger reserves the nghi lo edit all letters.&#13;
healthy the Health Center?&#13;
By, Tiffany Grant,&#13;
A&amp;E Editor&#13;
Have you not felt well&#13;
lately? Have you had a&#13;
slight temperature and&#13;
body aches for over two&#13;
weeks? You already know that&#13;
there is nothing that be done&#13;
for the "common cold," but&#13;
this has persisted for over two&#13;
weeks, and your gut tells you&#13;
there is something not right.&#13;
So, if you decide to go to the&#13;
Health Center on campus&#13;
think twice. The Health Center&#13;
may seem convenient and it is&#13;
basically free, but the care&#13;
equals the cost of the visit.&#13;
When you arrive at the&#13;
Health Center and get into the&#13;
exam room and describe your&#13;
symptoms all that is done is a&#13;
rapid strep test and you are&#13;
told to gargle salt water. You&#13;
are given some Sudafed, cough&#13;
drops, and a sheet on how to&#13;
manage the "common cold."&#13;
You know that something is&#13;
wrong and what you have is&#13;
not the "common cold." Well,&#13;
this is what happened to me.&#13;
I ended up having my&#13;
housemate drive me down to&#13;
lllinois the next day to see my&#13;
doctor. My doctor took one&#13;
look at me and was positive I&#13;
had Mononucleosis. She took&#13;
a blood test to confirm, but&#13;
was percent sure it was&#13;
Mono. The next day the test&#13;
cameback positive for Mono.&#13;
I know that the nurses are&#13;
not doctors, but Mono is very&#13;
common among college students&#13;
and they should know&#13;
the symptoms of Mono. I&#13;
remember while I was waiting&#13;
in the waiting room, I noticed&#13;
a l'amphlet saying, "So,&#13;
You ve been diagnosed with&#13;
Mono". Wouldn't you think if&#13;
there were a pamphlet on in&#13;
the waiting room, the health&#13;
care providers would know&#13;
the symptoms?&#13;
I had all the classic symptoms&#13;
of&#13;
Mono. Such&#13;
as: swollen&#13;
glands in my&#13;
neck, a slight&#13;
fever (as high&#13;
as swollen tonsils,&#13;
extreme&#13;
tiredness, and an inflamed&#13;
spleen, of which all these&#13;
symptoms had lasted for&#13;
about three weeks.&#13;
What would have happened&#13;
to me if I did not have&#13;
the luxury of going and seeing&#13;
my own physician? I would&#13;
still have been walkmg&#13;
around, trying to go to my&#13;
classes, and would end up&#13;
more sick than Ialready was. I&#13;
could have even ended up in&#13;
the hospital.&#13;
Not only have I witnessed&#13;
this treatment at UW-Parkslde,&#13;
but have also heard other&#13;
such stories at other universities&#13;
like Northern Illinois Uni- .&#13;
versity (NIU). A student had&#13;
had flu like symptoms for&#13;
about two weeks when he&#13;
developed a rash. He went to&#13;
the NIU Health Center and he&#13;
was told there was nothing&#13;
they could do and he would be&#13;
fine in a few days. He went&#13;
back horne to his own physician,&#13;
because he too knew that&#13;
there was something not right.&#13;
He was diagnosed with Scarlet&#13;
Fever.&#13;
Iknow that the care is limited,&#13;
but these&#13;
that should&#13;
be known to&#13;
a registered&#13;
nurse. I was&#13;
given the&#13;
option of seeing&#13;
the doctor&#13;
on campus. I was told that&#13;
should call my doctor in a&#13;
few days. What kind of care is&#13;
that? I went to the Health&#13;
Center so I could try and not&#13;
go see my doctor, because my&#13;
tuition includes selective treatment&#13;
at the Health Center, and&#13;
if I had to pay $20 to see the&#13;
doctor that is better than Ialso did not want to inconvenience&#13;
my housemate and&#13;
have her drive me to Illinois. I&#13;
ended up having to do both&#13;
those things, because the registered&#13;
nurse did not properly&#13;
diagnose me.&#13;
Wouldn't you think if&#13;
there were a pamphlet&#13;
on it in the waiting&#13;
room, the health care&#13;
providers would&#13;
know the symptoms?&#13;
;'..".;. 'Q"'&#13;
• ~&#13;
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To qualify. mwt he -lit least 18. ab.le to the UJIlt' Mooday.ftiday, &amp;: able (0 tift 5otb. boxes,&#13;
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Page 3&#13;
Editorial: Hello&#13;
Goodbye&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
With my time as Co-&#13;
Editor-In-Chief of The&#13;
Ranger drawing to a&#13;
close in these last days of&#13;
school, have found myself&#13;
reflecting upon the past year.&#13;
There were many times this&#13;
year that I wanted to pull my&#13;
hair out and I spent many&#13;
hours awake wanting only to&#13;
sleep, due to some of the oddball&#13;
hours that my job at The&#13;
Ranger demanded, and yet I&#13;
find myself missing the paper,&#13;
though have not even finished.&#13;
Being involved with the&#13;
paper has meant being&#13;
involved with the campus&#13;
community. I have had the&#13;
pleasure to make acquaintances&#13;
and some cases&#13;
befriend a number of people&#13;
that I would not have had the&#13;
opportunity to meet if I had&#13;
not worked for the paper. For&#13;
better or for worse they have&#13;
either inspired or forced personal&#13;
growth in me. The&#13;
Ranger has been by far my&#13;
most educational and rewarding&#13;
experience at UW-Park-&#13;
SIde.&#13;
I wanted to use this last editorial&#13;
as an opportunity to&#13;
invite anyone corning back&#13;
next semester to visit The&#13;
Ranger and consider joining.&#13;
Since I wilI not an editor&#13;
next year your participation&#13;
with the paper does not direct-&#13;
Iy benefit me. Working for the&#13;
paper will help you meet peo--&#13;
pie, it will help you deal WIth&#13;
adverse circumstances, and it&#13;
will put some very important&#13;
published material into your&#13;
portfolio. I invite you to join&#13;
The Ranger because believe&#13;
that it wilI benefit you as it has&#13;
benefited me. Stop in the office&#13;
that can say, "Hello," to&#13;
you before I say, "Goodbye."&#13;
If gambling is a problem,&#13;
it's never too late to call for help.&#13;
0.',0'·",.,·&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Problem Gambling&#13;
1 800 GAMBLE · 5&#13;
Apr1! 25 May 9 2002 THe R~R&#13;
How is rapia Illinois 90 came back students&#13;
famphlet it sympties&#13;
University&#13;
home physician,&#13;
I know limittoms&#13;
sli~t&#13;
100.7),&#13;
tonsils,&#13;
nausea,&#13;
ed, are diseases&#13;
not even&#13;
seeing&#13;
doctiredness,&#13;
happened&#13;
wo~d&#13;
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witnes~ed&#13;
OW-Parkside,&#13;
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$100.&#13;
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bo_th&#13;
registered&#13;
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,ouce ~nd uolo;id trucks am! trailers III M,lw::iuh~ terminal: Sh1hs avail,hle: !:30am •&#13;
30:un, I , 4pm ~ · 9pm.&#13;
• Part-time shifts avai!ll.bk&#13;
• Hou,-s to fit JIOIIT sd,&lt;&gt;01 sched.Je&#13;
assistance after days&#13;
• S.50/hr. increau after 90 days&#13;
qualify, you must be ,u lrast 18, ab_lc 10 work the same shift&#13;
Monday•Friday, &amp; to 11ft 50lb. boxes.&#13;
Q""1ifi~ candid,uc;. person Monday - Wcclneld.ty, 9am · ar.&#13;
X&#13;
Fed.Ex GroWld&#13;
5;oo S. Dr.&#13;
769-1983, pcompr (The tennsrial is off of&#13;
Pennsylvania ill the MrtcheU&#13;
Park. 1/2 mle •l011l• College A.venue).&#13;
Page3&#13;
By Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
---- ---&#13;
Co-Editor-In-Chief&#13;
CoEditor-&#13;
dose I _past yea_r.&#13;
oddball&#13;
pap_er,&#13;
I finished:&#13;
acquaintances&#13;
in personal&#13;
rewardu:'&#13;
g OW-Parkside.&#13;
editorial&#13;
will be directly&#13;
~ p~ople,&#13;
with&#13;
I will so I ttAl1Atl C)f th&#13;
foRESi&#13;
W.stlAMAN.US.C&#13;
00,c,,&#13;
• ~&#13;
• S&#13;
THe ~QNGe~ April25 9 2lI!! ;tNif-fariiS,. ~,ty Profile: Committee considers&#13;
.Protessor l1DlJaid Kumming~new value statement&#13;
I&#13;
man at numerous professional;&#13;
meetings induding the Wa1~&#13;
Whitman House in Camden;&#13;
=~::l~t"idi::a;:~~&#13;
~osco~, Russia. Professor&#13;
. Kununings is also the awardwinning'&#13;
author of a collection&#13;
of poems entitled, The Open&#13;
Road Trip. . 1&#13;
When asked why he choose!&#13;
UW-Parkside, Professor KUDlmings&#13;
stated the location as a1&#13;
factor. He said that he enjoyed&#13;
,gbeing situated between two&#13;
lmajor cities. He also feels that&#13;
IRacine and Kenosha "Are&#13;
. small cities with a lot to offer&#13;
the ElIIlIsll deparlment~diStinfllliSlIed in the~axs of symphonies and,&#13;
ProtessOl' Donald Kuilllllmgs theaters.' Professor Kum-&#13;
. y Dickinson, Henry mings also utilizes the racquet-&#13;
William Carlos ball ball courts at Parkside's&#13;
s and is&gt;considered "!" Sports Activities Center.&#13;
expert on Walt Whitman. He IS . If the picture above is nob&#13;
the .author of three books on enough to make you farniliar 'YffitInan, his .most recent IS with professor Kununings you'&#13;
titled, Walt Whltl1Uln: An Ency- ~iI1 be sure to recognize the.&#13;
clopedUi, a work that he co-edit- corduroy pants and checkered!&#13;
ed, He has lectured on Whit- shirts he so often sports.&#13;
Page4&#13;
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water to his house without electricity or plumbing. Seeing his first&#13;
Amencan movie at age ei!Jht, Albert witnessed the unparalleled&#13;
opportunities here. Attending a US college became a dream and&#13;
after "practically ,&#13;
living in the library," Albert received a four-year scholarship.&#13;
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Schools and businesses&#13;
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atmosphere of the workplace.&#13;
It should also provide a guideline&#13;
for employees and students&#13;
to follow.&#13;
UW-Parkside is no exception&#13;
since we have our own&#13;
mission statement as well as a&#13;
vision statement. Yet, few students&#13;
actually know they exist,&#13;
much less know their content.&#13;
This year, some members of&#13;
the University Planning Council&#13;
felt it was important to&#13;
include a value statement .to&#13;
the list.&#13;
uIt is an idea, acting on&#13;
what we want to accomplish,&#13;
and how we hope to do so,"&#13;
said Professor Peggy James, a&#13;
University Planning Council&#13;
member.&#13;
It will take months to write&#13;
the values statement since the&#13;
values of an entire university&#13;
community are so diverse and&#13;
complex.&#13;
"This is something we can&#13;
show the community and&#13;
prospective students, to give&#13;
them a sense of who we are&#13;
and what we do," said James.&#13;
It is also a tool tha t the univer·&#13;
sity can use in order to their growth and achievements.&#13;
Still, the proposal leaves&#13;
others wondering what purpose&#13;
the new statement would&#13;
have for students.&#13;
Those who question the proposal&#13;
point to other business&#13;
statements such as the Enron&#13;
Corporation's value statement.&#13;
Enrori's statement refers to&#13;
words such as respect, integrity,&#13;
communication, and excellence;&#13;
however, the values&#13;
obviously. had n? affect on&#13;
Enron officials, Still, the University&#13;
Planning Council still&#13;
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UW-Parkside Faculty Profile: Professor Donald Kummings rnan professional&#13;
including Walt&#13;
Camden, [Professor Donald Kurn- ",. . .,,.__ New Jersey, and at the Gorky&#13;
mings has been sharing Institute of World Literature in&#13;
his knowledge of liter a- Moscow, Russia. Professor&#13;
ture with the students of Park- Kummings is also the awardside&#13;
since 1970, when the .o:•~• winning author of a collection&#13;
school was two years old. He of poems entitled, The Open&#13;
came to the school because of .. ,..,11'....J. Roaa Trip. .&#13;
an advisor's advice to go When asked why he choose&#13;
where he could put his "two UW-Parkside, Professor Kwncents&#13;
in.'' He instructs such mings stated the location as a&#13;
subjects as Introduction to Lit- factor. He said that he enjoyed&#13;
erature, Literary Analysis, g being situated between two&#13;
American Humor, and he peri- l major cities. He also feels th.at&#13;
odically teaches a seminar on .w Racine and Kenosha "Are&#13;
Emily Dickinson and Walt • . . i.: small cities with a lot to offer&#13;
Whitman. Professor Kum- The English department~ distln1tt1slled in the wavs of symphonies and&#13;
min~ received both his Bache- Professor Donald Kummmgs theaters.,, Professor Kumlors&#13;
Degree (1%2) and his man, Emily Dickinson, Henry mings also utilizes the racquetMasters&#13;
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Purdue Umv~rsity in West Williams and IS co:151dered ~ Sports Activities Center.&#13;
Lafayette Indiana. He th.en expert on Walt Whitman. He JS the picture above is not&#13;
rec~iv~ ~ PhD from Indiana the . author ~f three books o_n enough to make you familiar&#13;
Uruvers1ty m 1971. . ".V}titman, his .most recent IS w~th. professor Kwnmings you&#13;
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such subjects as Walt Whit- ed. He lectured on Whit- shirts he so often sports.&#13;
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ew M~ority: The M tiple and e Dean of Students gra-&#13;
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Sauk UW·Bam:&gt;n ca, Lac&#13;
UW-FoxV~&#13;
Menasha)&#13;
Manitowoc&#13;
lJW.Ma,athoo Cotxlty&#13;
{Wausau}&#13;
up colega cradtts. UW-Marinette&#13;
co!loga Ct'edtts this summ&lt;tt at a University Wisconsin&#13;
two--~ar campus in or neat your ttornelown&#13;
Expenenco small cla.&amp;$8S tauQh! proh.tsso,s campua&#13;
or take Classes oohne at www.uwcolregos.com&#13;
credits transfer by conaulbng me Transfer&#13;
tntormallon www.uwsa edutbs/&#13;
FOi' tradll.lOl'lal summ&amp;r class~ VISll WWW.UWC.edu&#13;
fo, ooline ctasses v1S1t WWW.1MC01181181•COII&#13;
Catt toll tree for more informat,on 1-&#13;
UW-Marshfiek:V&#13;
WoodCounty&#13;
IJW.RK;hlal,d&#13;
Richfand C,ent~&#13;
lJW.Roci( Colxlty&#13;
Janesl/1Jae)&#13;
UW-5heboygan&#13;
UW-Washington Couity&#13;
{t.J,N-Wat.lM$ha&#13;
UNIVERSITY-WISCON IN&#13;
s&#13;
Ice ISet-U p ffice~and~nion209.&#13;
onsoredby student Life&#13;
Available&#13;
ce Assistant&#13;
Maintenance&#13;
Conference ice Assistant&#13;
Maintena /Set-Up Staff&#13;
Sponsored by Student&#13;
_APril 25 May9 2002 THe FlI:lNC!leFl Page 1&#13;
04/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-287 UWS Chapter&#13;
51, Crisis Intervention,&#13;
Ranger Hall,&#13;
1: 19 a .m, Officers&#13;
responded to a report&#13;
of a disorderly person&#13;
in the hallways.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in subject cited&#13;
for underage drinking-&#13;
2nd offense.&#13;
Subject was trans- I ported to local hospitals&#13;
for evaluation.&#13;
Inc 02-288 Liquor Law&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop&#13;
Road at the Union&#13;
parking lot, 1: 51&#13;
a .m. An underage&#13;
individual was found&#13;
to be ill and intoxicated.&#13;
Investigation resul ted&#13;
in a citation&#13;
issued for&#13;
identification card&#13;
violation.&#13;
Inc 02-290 UWS Chapter&#13;
18, Pike River&#13;
Woods off CTHA, 12:04&#13;
p.m. A visitor with&#13;
fishing gear was&#13;
informed of the Chapter&#13;
18 no fishing on&#13;
university lands regulations.&#13;
Subject&#13;
left the area.&#13;
Inc 02-291 Me die a 1&#13;
Assist, SAC Softball&#13;
Field, 3:41 p.m. A&#13;
visitor had been&#13;
struck in the face by&#13;
a softball. Kenosha&#13;
Med 5 transported the&#13;
subject to Aurora&#13;
Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Inc 02-292 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments, 8:28 p.m.&#13;
A student reported&#13;
that someone had broken&#13;
the front living&#13;
room window&#13;
to her apartment. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses.&#13;
04/17/02&#13;
Inc 02-294 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, Wood Road&#13;
&amp; HWY E, 12:26 a.m.&#13;
A driver was cited for&#13;
failure to obey a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 02-296 Par kin g&#13;
Enforcement-Tow, Visitor's&#13;
parking lot,&#13;
9:09 a i m, A student&#13;
illegally parked with&#13;
four unpaid citations&#13;
was ticketed and&#13;
towed".&#13;
04/18/02&#13;
Inc 02-301 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, CTH JR at&#13;
CTH E, 9:13 p.m. A&#13;
driver whose vehicle&#13;
had a burned-out&#13;
headlamp was stopped.&#13;
I n v est i gat ion&#13;
revealed restrictions&#13;
required driver to be&#13;
accompanied by another&#13;
person with a valid&#13;
license . Driver was&#13;
cited for violation of&#13;
license restriction&#13;
and a verbal warning&#13;
given for defective&#13;
headlamp.&#13;
04/19/02&#13;
Inc 02-303 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, 4000 Block&#13;
of Outer Loop Rd.,&#13;
9:07 a.m. A driver&#13;
going at a high rate&#13;
of speed&#13;
was stopped. A citation&#13;
issued for nonregistration&#13;
of vehicle&#13;
and verbal warning&#13;
for speed.&#13;
04/20/02&#13;
Inc 02-304 H a r ass -&#13;
ment-Threats, University&#13;
Apartments, 2:23&#13;
a.m. A student&#13;
reported feeling&#13;
threatened by two&#13;
individuals. Residence&#13;
Life office&#13;
staff will be requested&#13;
to meet with the&#13;
parties&#13;
involved.&#13;
My enjoyment of sports writing&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports page Editor&#13;
For my last article for The&#13;
Ranger I deceided to&#13;
write about my enjoyment&#13;
of sports writing here at&#13;
UW~Parkside.I have enjoyed&#13;
wntmg about sports for The&#13;
Rangera great deal, especially&#13;
because r was able to meet&#13;
otherswho were also interested&#13;
in the sports field. I have&#13;
alwayshad a passion for writmgand&#13;
sports, so I decided to&#13;
put them together and started&#13;
sports writing.&#13;
. ~e best part of sports writmg&#13;
IS interviewing coaches&#13;
and student athletes Interviewing&#13;
student athletes is a&#13;
lot of fun because you also get&#13;
a chance to know about the&#13;
student athlete as a student.&#13;
They may play a particular&#13;
sport but they also have the&#13;
same kinds of interests other&#13;
students. Do not forget that&#13;
they also have to study for&#13;
those,dreadful mid-terms and&#13;
finals. Interviewing coaches is&#13;
fun because you get to know&#13;
how a coach sees their players.&#13;
You also see that they&#13;
want their players to know&#13;
that academics are important,&#13;
not just playing a sport. The&#13;
coaches here at University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside also are&#13;
very helpful in getting statistics&#13;
and information to&#13;
reporters.&#13;
The main sport that I have&#13;
loved writing about is basketball.&#13;
In fact I now would like&#13;
to write for the NBA or&#13;
WNBA. Writing for basketball&#13;
here has helped me get to&#13;
know the plays, whether it is&#13;
the offensive or defensive&#13;
side. Coach Stein and Coach&#13;
Rutter were great to interview&#13;
and always gave me enough&#13;
information to write up my&#13;
article, both were always&#13;
available whenever I needed&#13;
to an interview," I was never&#13;
into soccer but after writing&#13;
about it, I got interested in&#13;
watching. Coach Kilps of the&#13;
men's soccer team was very&#13;
helpful in the interviews up&#13;
close and the interviews over&#13;
the phone.&#13;
Last year during the baseball&#13;
season I got to interview&#13;
former coach Sal Banda Jr.&#13;
For those who don't know&#13;
who-he is, he is Sal Banda Sr.'s&#13;
son. Sal Banda Sr. is a former&#13;
major leaguer and is currently&#13;
the Special Assistant to the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer's President&#13;
Wendy Selig-Preib, so it&#13;
was pretty cool to interview&#13;
someone who has a famous&#13;
family here in Wisconsin.&#13;
Not only have I gotten a&#13;
chance to write about sports&#13;
at Parkside, but I also got to&#13;
write about the professional&#13;
sports around Wisconsin and&#13;
the nation. I have writen&#13;
about Miller Park, the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers and the Milwaukee&#13;
Bucks. With the&#13;
Bucks article I did last year,&#13;
when the team made the playoffs&#13;
and won the Central Division&#13;
Tittle, I got to interview a&#13;
team official. The one article&#13;
that has meant a lot to me,&#13;
especially now, is the Salt&#13;
Lake City Winter Olympic&#13;
Games article. I did this on&#13;
the security at the Olympics,&#13;
because it all changed after&#13;
Sept. 11, 2001.&#13;
Knowing this is my last&#13;
article ever at The Ranger, I&#13;
thought it would be great to&#13;
do the article on letting everyone&#13;
at UW-P know about my&#13;
interest in writing and sports.&#13;
So farewell to all at OW-P,and&#13;
hopefully I will be seen on the&#13;
sidelines of TNT interviewing&#13;
those NBA players.&#13;
Amber Antonia leads&#13;
the women's track team&#13;
and in the 5000m Run, third in&#13;
the 10000m Run and forth in&#13;
the 3000m run. Other strong&#13;
performances included Lindsay&#13;
DeWitt,who finished third&#13;
in the 3000mSteeplechase and&#13;
Robyn Stevens who finished&#13;
fourth in the 5000m run and&#13;
fifth in the 3000m run. Amy&#13;
Scott also had a good performance&#13;
finishing fourth in the&#13;
High Jump&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter The Women's Track Team&#13;
competed in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
at St. Joseph College this past&#13;
weekend and placed 7th out of&#13;
nine schools. The team finished&#13;
with 47 points finishing&#13;
in the 7th position, three&#13;
points shy of fifth place.&#13;
Amber Antonia finished sec-&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The Parkside Women's&#13;
Softball team improved&#13;
to a 17-12 overall record&#13;
the past few weeks. The team&#13;
began their improvement&#13;
against Bellarmine by spliting&#13;
two games. Last Tuesday the&#13;
Ranger's split again, this time&#13;
versus St. Joseph's thanks to a&#13;
3-0 shutout in game two. Parkside&#13;
continued their tough&#13;
play on Wednesday splitting&#13;
yet another series, this time&#13;
against Olivet Nazarene. Parkside&#13;
went 2-1 on the weekend&#13;
losing to Findlay 5-4 and then&#13;
beating Mercyburst 7-3. Saturday&#13;
topped Saginaw Valley&#13;
State 61 on Saturday. Emily&#13;
StrobLusch leads the team&#13;
with a .354batting average and&#13;
16 RBI's.&#13;
BUY&#13;
A&#13;
TUX&#13;
FOR&#13;
$50&#13;
BUCKS&#13;
COAT,SlACK,&#13;
VESTA TIE =- MIKf BPN'S- = IIOlIlII TUX WORLD .:::.&#13;
AS SEENON 'WILD CHICAGO TV!!!"·&#13;
POllel - -----RIil _,. ___ _&#13;
04/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-287 UWS Chap ter&#13;
51, Crisis Inter vention,&#13;
Ranger Ha ll ,&#13;
1:19 a.m. Off icers&#13;
responded to a r e p ort&#13;
of a disorderly pers on&#13;
in the hallwa ys.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in subjec cited&#13;
for underage dr inking-&#13;
2nd of f e nse .&#13;
Subject was t rans ported&#13;
to local h ospitals&#13;
for evalua tion .&#13;
Inc 02-288 Liquor La w&#13;
Violation, Outer Lo op&#13;
Road at the Union&#13;
parking loL, 1:51&#13;
a . m . An underage&#13;
individual was found&#13;
to be ill a nd intoxicated&#13;
.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in a citation&#13;
issued for&#13;
identification card&#13;
violation .&#13;
Inc 02-290 UW S Chapter&#13;
18, Pike River&#13;
Woods off CTH A, 12:04&#13;
p . m . A visitor with&#13;
fishing ge ar was&#13;
informed of the Chapter&#13;
18 no fis hing on&#13;
university lands regulations.&#13;
Subject&#13;
left the area.&#13;
Inc 02-291 Me d i c a l&#13;
Assist, SAC Softball&#13;
Field, 3:41 p.m. A&#13;
visitor had been&#13;
struck in the face by&#13;
a softball. Kenosha&#13;
Med 5 transported the&#13;
subject to Aurora&#13;
Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Inc 02-292 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments, 8:28 p.m.&#13;
A student reported&#13;
My enjoyment of sports writing&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports page Editor For my last article for The&#13;
Ranger I deceided to&#13;
write about my enjoyment&#13;
of sports writing here at&#13;
U\-y~Parkside. I have enjoyed&#13;
wnting about sports for The&#13;
Ranger a great cfeal, especially&#13;
because I was able to meet&#13;
others who were also interested&#13;
in the sports field. I have&#13;
~lways had a passion for writmg&#13;
and sports, so I decided to&#13;
put them together and started&#13;
sports writing.&#13;
. ~e b_est part of sports writmg&#13;
is interviewing coaches&#13;
a~d _student athletes. Interviewmg&#13;
student athletes is a&#13;
lot of ft.in because you also get&#13;
a chance to know about the&#13;
student athlete as a student.&#13;
They may play a particular&#13;
sport but they also have the&#13;
same kinds of interests other&#13;
students. Do not forget that&#13;
they also have to study for&#13;
t~ose dreadful mid-terms and&#13;
finals. Interviewing coaches is&#13;
fun because you get to know&#13;
how a coach sees their players.&#13;
You also see that they&#13;
want their players to know&#13;
that academics are important,&#13;
not jus t playing a sport. The&#13;
co aches h e re at University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside also are&#13;
v e ry hel pful in gettin~ statistics&#13;
and informa hon to&#13;
reporters.&#13;
The main s p ort that I have&#13;
loved w riting about is basketball.&#13;
In fact I now would like&#13;
to write fo r the NBA or&#13;
WNBA. Writing for basketball&#13;
here has helped me get to&#13;
know the plays, whether it is&#13;
the offensive or defensive&#13;
side. Coach Stein and Coach&#13;
Rutter were great to interview&#13;
and always gave me enough&#13;
information to write up my&#13;
article, both were always&#13;
available whenever I needed&#13;
to an interview. I was never&#13;
into soccer but after writing&#13;
about it, I got interested in&#13;
watching. Coach Kilps of the&#13;
men's soccer team was very&#13;
helpful in the interviews up&#13;
close and the interviews over&#13;
the phone.&#13;
Last year during the baseball&#13;
season I got to interview&#13;
former coach Sal Banda Jr.&#13;
For those who don't know&#13;
who he is, he is Sal Bando Sr.'s&#13;
son. Sal Banda Sr. is a former&#13;
major leaguer and is currently&#13;
the Special Assistant to the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer's President&#13;
Wendy Selig-Preib, so it&#13;
was pretty cool to interview&#13;
someone who has a famous&#13;
family here in Wisconsin.&#13;
Not only have I gotten a&#13;
chance to write about sports&#13;
at Parkside, but I also got to&#13;
write about the professional&#13;
sports around Wisconsin and&#13;
the nation. I have writen&#13;
about Miller Park, the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers and the Milwaukee&#13;
Bucks. With the&#13;
Bucks article I did last year,&#13;
when the team made the playoffs&#13;
and won the Central Division&#13;
Tittle, I got to interview a&#13;
team officia[ The one article&#13;
that has meant a lot to me,&#13;
especially now, is the Salt&#13;
La'ke City Winter Olympic&#13;
Games article. I did this on&#13;
the security at the Olympics,&#13;
because it all changed after&#13;
Sept. 11, 2001.&#13;
Knowing this is my last&#13;
article ever at The Ranger, I&#13;
thought it would be great to&#13;
do the article on letting everyone&#13;
at UW-P know about my&#13;
interest in writing and sports.&#13;
So farewell to all at UW-P, and&#13;
hopefully I will be seen on the&#13;
sidelines of TNT interviewing&#13;
those NBA players.&#13;
that someone had broken&#13;
the front living&#13;
room window&#13;
to her apartment. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses.&#13;
04/17/02&#13;
Inc 02-294 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, Wood Road&#13;
&amp; HWY E, 12:26 a.m.&#13;
A driver was cited for&#13;
failure to obey a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 02-296 P a r k i n g&#13;
Enforcement-Tow, Visitor's&#13;
parking lot,&#13;
9:09 a.m. A student&#13;
illegally parked with&#13;
four unpaid citations&#13;
was ticketed and&#13;
towed.&#13;
04/18/02&#13;
Inc 02-301 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, CTH JR at&#13;
CTH E, 9:13 p.m. A&#13;
driver whose vehicle&#13;
had a burned-out&#13;
headlamp was stopped.&#13;
I n v e s t i g a t i o n&#13;
revealed restrictions&#13;
required driver to be&#13;
accompanied by anoth-&#13;
Page7&#13;
er person with a valid&#13;
license. Ori ver was&#13;
cited for violation of&#13;
license restriction&#13;
and a verbal warning&#13;
given for defective&#13;
headlamp.&#13;
04/19/02&#13;
Inc 02-303 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, 4000 Block&#13;
of Outer Loop Rd.,&#13;
9:07 a.m. A driver&#13;
going at a high rate&#13;
of speed&#13;
was stopped. A citation&#13;
issued for nonregistration&#13;
of vehicle&#13;
and verbal warning&#13;
for speed.&#13;
04/20/02&#13;
Inc 02-304 H a r a s s -&#13;
ment-Threats, University&#13;
Apartments, 2:23&#13;
a.m. A student&#13;
reported feeling&#13;
threatened by two&#13;
individuals. Residence&#13;
Life office&#13;
staff will be requested&#13;
to meet with the&#13;
parties&#13;
involved.&#13;
Amber Antonia leads&#13;
the women's track team&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter The Women's Track Team&#13;
competed in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
at St. Joseph College this past&#13;
weekend and placed 7th out of&#13;
nine schools. The team finished&#13;
with 47 points finishing&#13;
in the 7th position, three&#13;
points shy of fifth place.&#13;
Amber Antonia finished second&#13;
in the 5000m Run, third in&#13;
the 10000m Run and forth in&#13;
the 3000m run. Other strong&#13;
performances included Linasay&#13;
De Witt, who finished third&#13;
in the 3000m Steeplechase and&#13;
Robyn Stevens who finished&#13;
fourth in the 5000m run and&#13;
fifth in the 3000m run. Amy&#13;
Scott also had a good performance&#13;
finishing fourth in the&#13;
High Jump&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
_ _ B-'-y Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
day topped Saginaw Valley&#13;
State 61 on Saturday. Emily&#13;
StrobLusch leads the team&#13;
with a .354 batting average and&#13;
16 RBl's.&#13;
AS SEEN O,V "lr/LD CHIC~GO nr!!!":&#13;
Parkside Activities Board &amp;&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Alliance&#13;
presents&#13;
, ..&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
FEATURING I(ON%&#13;
. free &amp; open to the campus and community.&#13;
Enjoy a wonderful cookout! $5 admission for barbecue.&#13;
j&#13;
I i&#13;
I&#13;
WHERE: UW-Parkside Union Patio&#13;
WHEN: Saturday, April 27, 2002&#13;
TIME: 2:00pm - 7:00pm&#13;
In case of rain, activities will be moved to Union Square.&#13;
Novelties: 2:00pm - 7:00pm&#13;
Pat McCurdy: 2:30pm - q:OOpm&#13;
Hit Unit: q:15pm - 5:00pm&#13;
Iconz: 5:30pm - 6:30pm&#13;
i I&#13;
~.&#13;
.I&#13;
for more information ca1/595-2650&#13;
~ "-rhe University of Wisco~sin- Parkside provides services for patrons with special&#13;
~ '" ~eeds. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345.&#13;
I&#13;
• I&#13;
,r&#13;
) ;&#13;
,l&#13;
_,,, I I&#13;
ICON%&#13;
$5 WHERE.: WHE.N: TIME.: 1:_&#13;
1:Lf: lconz: more ca/1595-"t,,,ll?'rhe 'ff</text>
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              <text>&#13;
THE&#13;
A~NG&#13;
April 11-April 24, 2002&#13;
Veritas&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
INSloe&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Thingsto do at the&#13;
U&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
OPINION&#13;
Editorial:Some thoughts&#13;
about the elections&#13;
Editorial:Clarification&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Brewersstart new season&#13;
Page&#13;
5&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
UWPWomen's track team&#13;
competeswith the best&#13;
RangerWrestlers end a suc-&#13;
cessful&#13;
season&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
Crossword&#13;
Page&#13;
7&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Banscompete for Summer-&#13;
fest spot&#13;
Spring season's trends&#13;
Drawing the battle lines&#13;
Page&#13;
8&#13;
Onecredit for caring about&#13;
Community's literacy&#13;
Page&#13;
9&#13;
UW-Parkside students vol-&#13;
unteer in New Yorkcity&#13;
: Bakesaleheld for Murdered&#13;
!&#13;
Journalist&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
!&#13;
Backby popular demand!&#13;
Amanda Fitzgerald was much&#13;
loved&#13;
by&#13;
those who knew her.&#13;
By&#13;
Deborah&#13;
G.&#13;
Hahm&#13;
Assistant  Editor&#13;
T&#13;
he UW-Parkside  2001&#13;
Ranger Softball booklet&#13;
said Amanda Fitzgerald&#13;
made "an immediate impact&#13;
uw-p&#13;
loses former pitcher&#13;
twice and  pitched&#13;
time off to work back home.&#13;
two no hitters. She&#13;
Close friends say she was&#13;
tied the a NCAA&#13;
saving up to return to&#13;
single strike out&#13;
Parkside and The Rangers&#13;
record for 23 strike&#13;
softball team.&#13;
outs in one game.&#13;
Amanda enjoyed fish-&#13;
At Byron High&#13;
ing,&#13;
shopping,  chess,&#13;
School, she hel&#13;
oing to movies and&#13;
the    nationa&#13;
unting. In the 2001&#13;
record  at&#13;
59&#13;
Ranger Softball book-&#13;
strike outs for on&#13;
et, Amanda stated&#13;
season. She was&#13;
hat "to calm my&#13;
an  All-Confer-&#13;
erves before a game,&#13;
ence selection all&#13;
I like to sit in the&#13;
four years of high&#13;
shade and talk to my&#13;
school&#13;
an&#13;
dad."&#13;
received All-Dis&#13;
Tragically,&#13;
trict, All-Regie&#13;
our  months  after&#13;
J',nd  All-StateAmandawithhergameface tuming 20, Amanda&#13;
onors..&#13;
Fitzgerald died in a&#13;
WhIle at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
Amanda  car accident. This woman a&#13;
studied Athletic Training. She  powerhouse on the pitch~r's&#13;
was on the softball team m  mound, will be greatly missed&#13;
2000and 2001,but took some  at UW-Parkside.&#13;
PSGA keeps the&#13;
ball rolling in Presidential Elections&#13;
on the mound." But not only&#13;
was Amanda a phenomenal&#13;
pitcher,&#13;
she was an exceptional&#13;
person.&#13;
Q;&#13;
Jessica Siegal, a friend and&#13;
-E&#13;
teammate, remembers Aman-&#13;
~ da as "bubbly, outgoing and&#13;
8&#13;
alwa;ys&#13;
SIngIng&#13;
at practice."&#13;
o&#13;
Not Just&#13;
&lt;;m&#13;
the team, but many&#13;
~ of her&#13;
friends&#13;
found her opti-&#13;
'" mistic,&#13;
fun-loving and always&#13;
E&#13;
canng.&#13;
L........&#13;
......::li...&#13;
~...;ilw&#13;
On  the  field,  another&#13;
Amanda  Fitzgerald  arose.&#13;
Teammates  say  she  was&#13;
focused, in control and intimi-&#13;
dating to the other team. Her&#13;
focus on the field brought her&#13;
much recognition and her sta-&#13;
tistics are amazing.&#13;
In the Spring of 2000,&#13;
Amanda,  a freshman,  was&#13;
named Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Player of the week&#13;
By Alex Voskull&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
~&#13;
nosha,&#13;
WI  -  On&#13;
Wednesday, March&#13;
6,&#13;
002, the Parkside Stu-&#13;
dent Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) held its annual presi-&#13;
dential  elections.   As of&#13;
3:30p.m. on Tuesday, April&#13;
9,&#13;
2002 an ultimate and final&#13;
decision had yet to be reached.&#13;
However, steps are currently&#13;
being taken to come to a final&#13;
decision in what arguably has&#13;
become one of Parkside's most&#13;
dramatic events.&#13;
As it stands now, based&#13;
upon the election committee's&#13;
decision, Angie Comez has&#13;
been appointed President of&#13;
PSGA. Peng Her has been&#13;
named  Vice-President  of&#13;
PSGA. Technically, these are&#13;
the current winners based&#13;
upon the unofficial official&#13;
results of the PSGA Presiden-&#13;
tial Election held on March 6,&#13;
2002, as appointed to by the&#13;
election committee. The elec-&#13;
tion committee found errors in&#13;
all other candidate's presiden-&#13;
tial campaigns, which include&#13;
Marco  Morrison  and  Vik&#13;
Sidhu as a second party and  Branch.&#13;
It&#13;
is now up to the&#13;
Adam  Deford and Nicole  Judicial Branch, that consists&#13;
Mandley as a third party in the  of four justices and one chief&#13;
2002PSGAelection.&#13;
justice to make a final decision&#13;
Since the violations, which  on who should be named the&#13;
.were brought about by the  new President for the&#13;
upcom-&#13;
election  com-  ...&#13;
.&#13;
ing  2002-&#13;
mittee,   both&#13;
I believe the election&#13;
2003 school&#13;
Morrison  and&#13;
committee was not fair and&#13;
year.  The&#13;
Deford's parties&#13;
impartial in making their&#13;
justiceswere&#13;
have&#13;
written&#13;
. •&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
appomted&#13;
and submitted&#13;
declslon to disqualify me&#13;
by JoeRuck-&#13;
appeals to the&#13;
and other candidates."&#13;
er,&#13;
current&#13;
Judicial Branch.&#13;
president of&#13;
Deford commented by saying,  PSGA,  and  unanimously&#13;
"I knew the election commit-  voted on by the Senate.&#13;
tee would be looking for rea-   This is a decision that the&#13;
sons to disqualify me. I pur-  Judicial Branch has had towait&#13;
posely made sure that I had  to make because of the resig-&#13;
everything in accordance to  nation ofAzeza Hammad who&#13;
the  PSGA  Constitution."  previously held the position of&#13;
Deford went on to say that, "I  Election Committee Director&#13;
believe the election committee  and Chief Justice. Her resigna-&#13;
was not fair and impartial in  tion was submitted to Rucker&#13;
making their decision to dis-  in the form of a written docu-&#13;
qualify me and other candi-  ment dated April 3, 2002.&#13;
dates."&#13;
Rucker had this to say of her&#13;
As of the late afternoon on  resignation,&#13;
"Hammad&#13;
Tuesday, April 9, 2002, Marco  resigned on her own freewill.&#13;
Morrison was not able to be  I believe that she resigned&#13;
reached for comment.&#13;
because she knows she made a&#13;
Appeal letters were then  mist~ke whil~ running the&#13;
submitted by Deford and Mor-  election committee and I think&#13;
rison's parties to the Judicial  she felt that people were gomg&#13;
to ask for her resignation. To&#13;
avoid any further confronta-&#13;
tions she respectively stepped&#13;
down." Sincethen Ruckerhas&#13;
appointed a new Chief Justice,&#13;
Tarajee&#13;
Amin,&#13;
and three jus-&#13;
tices. A fifth and final justice&#13;
was appointed on Wednesday,&#13;
April&#13;
10,&#13;
2002.&#13;
When allfiveJustices meet,&#13;
which is scheduled for Thurs-&#13;
day, April&#13;
11,&#13;
according to&#13;
Rucker, "they ( the five mem-&#13;
bers of the Judicial Branch)&#13;
should be able to declare a&#13;
winner at the meeting."&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
their job to review and evalu-&#13;
ate all of the appeal letters&#13;
from the candidates who have&#13;
previously complained to the&#13;
election committee.&#13;
Of the judicial branch's&#13;
decision, Adam Deford had&#13;
this to say, "I am hopeful that&#13;
the judicial branch will be&#13;
unbiased and thorough in the&#13;
course of appointing a new&#13;
President andVicePresident of&#13;
PSGA."&#13;
Jaime Freeman, one of the&#13;
justices serving on the judicial&#13;
branch, was reached for com-&#13;
ment and had this say of the&#13;
Continued on page 8&#13;
-&#13;
THe   FU::::INc:.eR&#13;
April&#13;
11&#13;
"April&#13;
24,2002&#13;
THING_&#13;
Apr. 11&#13;
author Paul Rogat Loeb,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., Union Square, free, sponsored&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Community &amp; Development  in&#13;
by Parks ide Adult Student Association&#13;
Nigeria"&#13;
wi&#13;
Lillian Trager,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Overlook Lounge&#13;
• Stem cell program&#13;
Apr.&#13;
12&#13;
Apr. 17   • Noon Concert: Prometheus  Trio: Samantha George, violin; Scott&#13;
• Youth Program: Conflict Resolution&#13;
1&#13;
Workshop,&#13;
9&#13;
a.m., Tallent&#13;
281, $15&#13;
Tisdel, cello; Stefanie Jacob, piano; noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
• Noon Concert: UW-Parkside Percussion Ensemble, David Bayles,&#13;
• Info Breaks: American  Periodical Services, the Digital Collection,&#13;
director, Com. Arts Room&#13;
0-118,&#13;
noon, free&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie&#13;
01500,&#13;
noon, free&#13;
• Southeastern Wisconsin Educator Hall of Fame induction &amp;&#13;
• Softball vs. Olivet Nazarene,&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
dinner, Union Dining Room, social&#13;
6&#13;
p.m., dinner&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., induction&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Queers and Allies &amp; Parkside Activities  Board present comedian&#13;
• Midnight Madness, Sports &amp; Activity Center,&#13;
9&#13;
p.m. to midnight,&#13;
Sabrina Matthews,  Union Square,&#13;
8&#13;
p.m., free, open to campus &amp; public&#13;
free to students&#13;
wi&#13;
Ranger Card&#13;
10,&#13;
campus only program&#13;
Apr.&#13;
18&#13;
• "Is it Science or is it Fiction? The Journey from Scientific&#13;
Apr.&#13;
13&#13;
Researcher to Novelist&#13;
wlJim&#13;
Brewer, author of&#13;
"K!&#13;
Pax,"&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Molinaro&#13;
105,&#13;
• Baseball vs. Kentucky Wesleyan, noon, two games&#13;
free&#13;
Apr.&#13;
14&#13;
Apr.&#13;
19&#13;
• Women in Math, Science, and Technology Day,&#13;
7:45&#13;
a.m., Union&#13;
• Baseball vs. Kentucky Wesleyan, noon, single game&#13;
Bazaar,&#13;
$10&#13;
Apr.&#13;
15&#13;
• Noon Concert: UW-Parkside  Brass Ensemble,  Mark Hoelscher,&#13;
• Womyn's Center Poetry Reading,&#13;
6&#13;
p.m., Union&#13;
104-106,&#13;
open&#13;
director, noon, Com. Arts Room&#13;
0-118,&#13;
free&#13;
microphone, refreshments, free&#13;
• ''The Yellow Dress," a live dramatic periormance,  noon Union Cinema&#13;
• "Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in a Cynical Time"&#13;
wi&#13;
Theater, free&#13;
who are.solely res~nsible  for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
r':=~&#13;
:ndb:':rcli~ldt    b' R,&#13;
anger office&#13;
(WYLL&#13;
lh&#13;
D-13&#13;
R&#13;
9C).&#13;
Letters must&#13;
tu::&#13;
typed an.d include the author's  name and phone number. Letters must be&#13;
free&#13;
from&#13;
,  u only upon request.   e  anger reserves the&#13;
right&#13;
to&#13;
edit all&#13;
letters.&#13;
t&#13;
Editor&#13;
Hahm&#13;
Sports Page Editor,'&#13;
DenaCoady&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
Repbrters&#13;
i&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
I&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi&#13;
Agoro&#13;
Wilt&#13;
Brinkman&#13;
Alex&#13;
Voskuil&#13;
Mi&#13;
ghlan&#13;
Jf",'&#13;
~ger&amp;4(&#13;
. rua&#13;
j&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at noon.&#13;
Please stop by and participate as&#13;
the meetings are open to all those&#13;
at Parkslde •&#13;
;THe A~NGeA&#13;
41&#13;
.,--.----~~~"'"&#13;
ditor&#13;
emble&#13;
Wyllie D·139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
(262) 595-2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
(262) 595.2295&#13;
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&#13;
1&#13;
 March 28 - April 11, 2002 Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside Aequitas Issue 10 Vol. 32 INSIDE Page 2 things to do at the U Page 3 Black and proud Page 4 Smithsonian exhibit visits Chicago Album Review: Fugazi The Argument Page 6 student attacked in parking lot Mike Tyson Bites Own Ear Page 7 Student finds parking spot in Molinaro parking lot "Student gets naked doesn't get paid" Page 8 Student receive Gullible Per­son of the year Award Ray Allen to teach at UW-P Page 9 PSGA Elections still not validated Amber Antonia named scholar of the year Page 12 UW-P hosts panel on death and dying Amber Smith Co-Editor-In-Chief The Students of UW-Park-side turned out on Wednesday March 6,2002 to cast their votes on who they think should be the key figures behind the student government at the University of Wis­consin Parkside. The Presiden­cy, Vice-Presidency, Senate Seats, PSGA constitutional amendments and questions for United Council were all items that needed to be decided in the election. As of late after­noon March 26, 2002 the elec­tion had not been validated. On March 13, 2002 The Ranger sent the following memo to the Chancellor asking that the election be declared invalid due to the election committee not following the rules laid out before them. Students turn out for election day. Azeza Hammad works the election table. Chancellor2 we^are asking that you declare the PSGA election held on March 6, 2002 invalid for the following legal reason station Qf Artic|e x! section 1. Elections of the Constitution and By-Laws for the University of Wisconsm-Parkside Student Government Association A Spring elections for UW-PSGA shall be held on Wednesday and Thursday, during the first week of March. At that time, the President, Vice-President, and twenty-one seats, one student at-large seat on both TheFeEc1Fo1iwasBhlldaonbone day only, Wednesday, March 6,2002. Students who attend the university on a Tues-day, Thursday schedule were placed at hardship with voting and their rights as students to participate fully in the e'1;CbFierPtioneriS|trsaSanlarti,cle of the constitution of the UWP PSGA cannot be changed by vote of the election corn-mittee nor the full body of PSGA without a constitutional amendment first occurring. Article Amendmenlofthe Constitution of UWP PSGA states: A. The students upon presenting a petition with the valid^S^ures of. i _x ti.p ctndent bodv (head count) shall have the right to request a constitutional amendment to be present Eh E SL'VpnatP to hP voted uoon The senate shall have the power to amend this constitution by a two-thirds vote awvsasrA™ 2'iBS aVfhe9PSdGAn&amp;e^o0^ By'uaws stall undlr Candidacy Requirements number 4: Candidate must have a cumulative GPA of 2.00,(sic) special Judicial Branch of PSGA, how If a waiver to run for e^thP°^thp ?Sfained enforced"by the PSGA? We believe that this requirement has be made public to the student body, staff, and faculty of UW Parkside. We ask that you give this situation your highest priority. . Continued on page 10 &#13;
Page 2 Mar. 28 • State budget rally, bus leaves Tallent Hall parking lot 8:30 a.m., returns approx. 7:30 p.m., free • Youth Program: Classroom Mgmt/ ADHD/ LD &amp; ED students Workshop, 9 a.m., Tallent 281, $30 • Breaking the Concrete Ceiling: Women of Color in Careers, Overlook Lounge, second floor of library, 3 p.m., free • Friends of the Library presents "20th Century Philosophy as Illuminated by Monty Python w/ Gary Hardcastle, 7 p.m., co-sponsored by Wisconsin Humanities Coun­cil Mar. 29 • Youth Program: Cultural Sensitivity Workshop, 9 a.m., Tallent 281, $15 • Softball vs. Southern Indiana, 2 p.m., two games Mar. 30 • Softball vs. SIU-Edwardsville, 1 p.m., two games Apr. 1 • Perspectives on Religious Issues: Panel discussion: "Whatever Happened to Hell?" setting up the issue: Wayne Johnson, Prof. Emeritus Philsophy, UW-Parkside; Response: Rev. Paul Hardwick, First Baptist Church, Racine, Union 104-106, noon, free Apr. 2 • Baseball vs. Lewis University, noon, two games Apr. 3 • Noon Concert: Mark Eichner, trumpet; James McKeever, piano; noon, Union Cinema Theater, free Womyn's Center Poetry Reading, 6 p.m., Union 104-106, open mic, refreshments, free Apr.4-7 • Foreign Film: "Cinema Paradiso," show times: Thursday/Friday: 7:30 p.m., Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater Apr. 4 • Racial Profiling &amp; Imprisonment Rate: National Trends in Our Community w/ UW-Madison Sociology Prof. Pam Oliver, Molinaro 107, free • Student Organizations &amp; Advisor Leadership Recognition Banquet w/Jerry Taff of WISN-TV, Union Square, 5 p.m. • Friends of the Library presents "Why Good People Feel Obligated to Hate Politics" w/ Guido Diericks, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge Apr. 5 • Info Breaks: Digital Images for the Web, Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie D150D, 1 p.m., free Apr. 6 • Baseball vs. Northern Kentucky, noon, two games • Softball vs. St. Francis, 1 p.m., two games • "An Evening In Brasil" w/ Capoeira Batuque martial arts troupe, tour escorted by Prof. Gerald Greenfield, dinner, Union Dining Hall, 5:30 p.m., tickets: adults $25, UW-Parkside students $22.50 Apr. 7 • Baseball vs. Northern Kentucky, noon, single game • Softball vs. St. Joseph's, noon, two games Co-Editors-in-Chief Benjamin Schmidt Amber Smith Assistant Editor Deborah Hahm Copy Editor Keeley Pemble Design and Layout Lachlan McDonald Arts and Entertainment Editor Tiffany Grant Sports Page Editor Dena Coady Reporters Becky Olson Rosie Veziridis Adebesi Agoro Will Brinkman Alex Voskuil Michael Coghlan Jr Michelle Rager Amber Antonia Matt Grace Ami Sandee Cornell Business Mike Poludniak Advertising Deborah Hahm Michelle Rager Ranger Advisor Prof. Judith Logsdon Contact the editors at 595-2287 for more information. THE RPNGER Meetings are Mondays at noon. Please stop by and participate as the meetings are open to all those at Parkside. Wyllie D-139C phone: (262) 595-2287 fax: (262) 595-2295 responsible for its editorial policy and content. The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout the semester b&gt; P*e/f,to the ?J&gt;tor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delive^ to the Ranger office (WYLLD-139C). Letters must be tvped and include the author's name and phone number Letters must be free from misleading or bbelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not be published. For publication purposes, author's name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to edit all letters. &#13;
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              <text>SUFAC violates Open Meeting Laws</text>
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              <text>&#13;
-THE&#13;
March8 • 29, 2002&#13;
..&#13;
2&#13;
ShJdlsIIlQIIIlizationbudget&#13;
lI'llI\dlI&#13;
for&#13;
2001 - 2002&#13;
1'9&#13;
3&#13;
uw:.P&#13;
faculty&#13;
named in&#13;
hal&#13;
I&#13;
~fame.&#13;
Page 6&#13;
AIIIBl&#13;
Parkside success&#13;
Actlvib!s&#13;
and getaways for&#13;
spring&#13;
break&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Respondmg&#13;
to&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ranser&#13;
notified&#13;
of budget&#13;
freeze&#13;
Pagen&#13;
~~ueators&#13;
educate&#13;
""'uv&#13;
and AIDS&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
SUFAC violates Open Meeting Laws&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
T&#13;
he  Segregated  Universi-&#13;
ty Fees Allocation  Com-&#13;
mittee  (SUFAC), a com-&#13;
mittee  that  must  follow  the&#13;
rules  of  the  State  of Wiscon-&#13;
sin's  Open  Meeting Laws that&#13;
are also referred  to as the Sun-&#13;
shine Laws, failed to do so on&#13;
a  number   of  different  occa-&#13;
sions. The committee  failed to&#13;
work under  the laws that gov-&#13;
ern  them.  Due  to this  failure&#13;
at least one student  club, and&#13;
the  public's   rights  were  vio-&#13;
lated.&#13;
On  the  afternoon  of  Sun-&#13;
day   February   10,  2002  The&#13;
Ranger   Newspaper's    Execu-&#13;
tive Committee  had a meeting&#13;
to discuss  The Ranger's  bud-&#13;
get with SUFAC. At this meet-&#13;
mg  PSGA President  and  vot-&#13;
ing  member   of  SUFAC  Joe&#13;
Rucker   stated;    "This   is  a&#13;
closed  meeting.&#13;
It&#13;
is my con-&#13;
stitutional&#13;
right   not   to  be&#13;
recorded  [audio] and I choose&#13;
to  use  it."  Joe  Rucker  was&#13;
wrong.  The Ranger's  and  the&#13;
public's  right had been VIOlat-&#13;
ed.&#13;
According  to  the  State  of&#13;
Wisconsin's   Open   Meeting&#13;
Laws  19.82-3 an  '''Open  ses-&#13;
sion' means a meeting which&#13;
is held  in a place reasonably&#13;
accessible to members  of the&#13;
public and open to all citizens&#13;
at all times.'  Some of the rea-&#13;
sons a meeting may be closed&#13;
are  "(a)  Deliberating  a  case&#13;
which  is  the  subject  of  any&#13;
judicial  or  quasijudicial  trial&#13;
or hearing before that govern-&#13;
mental  body.&#13;
(b)&#13;
Considering&#13;
dismissal,  demotion,   licens-&#13;
ing or discipline of any public&#13;
employe  or  person  licensed  .&#13;
by  the  board  or  commission&#13;
or the investigation of charges&#13;
against  such person,  or  con-&#13;
sidering the grant or denial of&#13;
tenure  to a university  faculty&#13;
member,  and  the  taking  of&#13;
formal  action  on  any  such&#13;
matter;&#13;
(f)&#13;
Considering  finan-&#13;
cial, medical,  social or person-&#13;
al   histories   or   data,   or&#13;
involved  in such problems or&#13;
investigations.&#13;
II&#13;
According  to&#13;
the Sunshine  Laws the meet-&#13;
ing   was   considered   open.&#13;
Therefore   SUFAC  had   an&#13;
,obligation  to follow the laws&#13;
concerning  an open  meeting.&#13;
They did not.&#13;
The  Ranger  not  only  had&#13;
the right to record the session&#13;
they   had   the   right   to  be&#13;
accommodated&#13;
to   in   this&#13;
request.   According   to   the&#13;
State  of  Wisconsin's   Open&#13;
Meeting  Laws  section  19.90&#13;
"Whenever   a  governmental&#13;
body holds a meeting in open&#13;
session, the body shall make a&#13;
reasonable effort to accommo-&#13;
date  any  person  desiring  to&#13;
record,  film  or  photograph&#13;
the meeting."  The only stipu-&#13;
lation   to   this   is  that   the&#13;
recordin\\  may  not  be  con-&#13;
ducted    'in  a  manner   that&#13;
interferes with the conduct of&#13;
the  meeting  or  the  rights  of&#13;
the  participants."   Instead  of&#13;
accommodating  The Ranger's&#13;
request  to record  the session&#13;
the   committee    unlawfully&#13;
prevented&#13;
the   newspaper&#13;
from making  a taped  record-&#13;
ing of the meeting.&#13;
SUFAC also  violated  sec-&#13;
tion  19.88-3    of  the  Open&#13;
Meetin~    Laws.   This   law&#13;
states,  'The  motions  and  roll&#13;
call votes of each meeting of a&#13;
governmental   body  shall  be&#13;
recorded, preserved  and open&#13;
to  public   inspection".   The&#13;
repeated   attempts   made  by&#13;
The Ranger to obtain the&#13;
min-&#13;
utes  from  the  December  9,&#13;
2002  and  February   10, 2002&#13;
budget  meetings  have contin-&#13;
ually  been  ignored.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
necessary  for The  Ranger  to&#13;
contact Steve McLaughlin, the&#13;
advisor for SUFAC in order to&#13;
obtain   a  copy  of  his  hand&#13;
written  notes  from  one  of the&#13;
meetings.  The Ranger has yet&#13;
to receive its requested  copies&#13;
of  the  written  minutes  from&#13;
the budget  meetings of the fall&#13;
semester  that it began  asking&#13;
for on  February  20,2002. The&#13;
inaccessibility  of  these  meet-&#13;
ings  shows  the SUFAC com-&#13;
mittee  disregarding   the  Sun-&#13;
shine  Laws's  statement   that&#13;
the minutes  be "open  to pub-&#13;
lic inspection."&#13;
If&#13;
the minutes&#13;
are unavailable  upon  a direct&#13;
request  they are surely  unob-&#13;
tainable for public inspection.&#13;
The   Ranger   did   receive&#13;
copies of what SUFAC consid-&#13;
ered  minutes  from two  sepa-&#13;
rate  meetings   from  SUFAC&#13;
Chair  Azeza&#13;
Hammad.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger  was  required  to wait&#13;
while  Harnmad  "typed  them&#13;
up."  SUFAC's By-Laws state;&#13;
"The  Vice Chair  shall  main-&#13;
tain  accurate  minutes  for  all&#13;
SUFAC meetings."  These  are&#13;
the  minutes  that  The  Ranger&#13;
received.&#13;
continued page 8&#13;
Ranger budget frozen by SUFAC&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Co-Editor-In-ehief&#13;
O&#13;
n Friday  March Ist, the&#13;
day  that student  work-&#13;
ers  receive  paychecks,&#13;
The Ranger  received  nOhf1c~-&#13;
tion   that   the   newspaper   s&#13;
budget  was frozen by the Seg-&#13;
regated  University  Fees Allo-&#13;
cation   Committee   (SUFAC).&#13;
The document  dated  Wednes-&#13;
day&#13;
February&#13;
27th,    was&#13;
placed   anonymously   in  The&#13;
Ranger's  'Out'  box.&#13;
The   Ranger's    staff  feels&#13;
that  the notification  of a bud-&#13;
get freeze came just in time to&#13;
prevent  this very  issue of the&#13;
paper   from   being   released&#13;
because of the articles dealing&#13;
with  SUFAC committee  bud-&#13;
getary decisions. for 2002-2003&#13;
campus&#13;
organizattons&#13;
a~d&#13;
articles&#13;
about&#13;
errors&#13;
In&#13;
SUFAC's conduct.    Notifica-&#13;
tion also came just in time to&#13;
block The Ranger's   employ-&#13;
ees from receiving  their pay-&#13;
checks for work already done.&#13;
The  letter  including   gram-&#13;
matical   and   typographical&#13;
errors follows ...&#13;
SUFAC  has  frozen   your&#13;
budget   for  the   year   2002.&#13;
Since the school semester has&#13;
begun  you have only written&#13;
two news paper  (sic) articles&#13;
and  many  they  are  of  poor&#13;
quality  (sic).   You have  not&#13;
kept  students   informed   on&#13;
(sic) important  issues such as&#13;
Student   Government    Elec-&#13;
tions.  You have not generat-&#13;
ed interest&#13;
in&#13;
campus  events&#13;
and  programs  besides  a BSU&#13;
Calender   (sic).    The  paper&#13;
does not give a good example&#13;
of what  the  university  is all&#13;
about.   There are other  cam-&#13;
puses with similar size (sic) to&#13;
our  campus  and  their  paper&#13;
(sic) is more professional  that&#13;
(sic) The Ranger.  Your consti-&#13;
tution  needs  to be revamped&#13;
as soon as possible in order to&#13;
give a fair chance  for all the&#13;
students  that (sic) want  to be&#13;
active  with~   your  org~niz~-&#13;
tion.  There&#13;
IS&#13;
lack of diversi-&#13;
ty within  your  organization,&#13;
and  we recommend  that you&#13;
work   on  your   recruitment&#13;
and retention  (sic). Many stu-&#13;
dents   have   complaint   (sic)&#13;
about  the lack of quality  and&#13;
information."&#13;
The  document   only  gives&#13;
SUFAC  as   its   author    but&#13;
neglects  to list the committee&#13;
member   names   and   signa--&#13;
tures.&#13;
Which   committee&#13;
members  agreed  to the freeze&#13;
of The Ranger's  funding,  doc-&#13;
umentation   giving  proof  of&#13;
authority  to make  such  deci-&#13;
sions,    and   documentation&#13;
supporting    any  precedence&#13;
for such actions were all lack-&#13;
ing.&#13;
PSGA  Advisor   Steve&#13;
McLaughlin&#13;
acknowledged&#13;
that he was aware  of a docu-&#13;
ment being sent to freeze The&#13;
Ranger's   funding,   but   said&#13;
that  he  did  know  about  the&#13;
memo's  content.&#13;
==&#13;
'-.',,","!V·C,,"'&#13;
K"-'&#13;
,"&lt;0,0"''''=&#13;
THE!! Fi~NGE!!R March8·29,_&#13;
SUFAC Completes the Budgets for 2002·2003&#13;
It&#13;
is interesting to note that&#13;
each  member   of  SUFAC&#13;
belongs  to another  club as&#13;
well. Each member is also a&#13;
member  of  PSGA. SUFAC&#13;
Chair Azeza Hammad is also&#13;
a member of Latinos Unidos&#13;
and the International  Club:&#13;
Along with being the PSGA&#13;
President,  and a member of&#13;
SUFAC  Joe  Rucker  also&#13;
belongs to the Black Student&#13;
Union. There is no law forcing&#13;
the members  of SUFAC to&#13;
excuse themselves when the&#13;
budgets of the other clubs that&#13;
they belong to are being voted&#13;
upon. When asked&#13;
if&#13;
anyone&#13;
was going to excuse them self&#13;
from the PSGA budget voting&#13;
Joe Rucker explained that the&#13;
Senate had already passed the&#13;
new proposed budget and all&#13;
the voting members of SUFAC&#13;
are also members  of PSGA&#13;
and&#13;
"If&#13;
we didn't vote how&#13;
would it get passed?"&#13;
ley's  budget  making  the&#13;
amount  of student  dollars&#13;
requested by PSGA $49,500.&#13;
With  the  reductions  made&#13;
from   Mandley's    budget&#13;
PSGA's budget  is reduced&#13;
from $84,300 in the 2002-2003&#13;
year to $49,500for the upcom-&#13;
ing year.&#13;
Rucker  felt that  PSGA&#13;
"...had  reached  a comfort&#13;
level and to request the same&#13;
amount as last year would be&#13;
unjustified and inconsiderate&#13;
to the students of Parkside."&#13;
SUFAC voted to allocate the&#13;
full  amount  of $49,500 to&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
The reductions in the bud-&#13;
gets of WIPZ, and The Ranger&#13;
were decisions made by the&#13;
members of SUFAC. WIPZ's&#13;
proposed budget was $52,000&#13;
and they received  $33,000.&#13;
The Ranger proposed $62,139&#13;
and received $20,000. These&#13;
are the totals after the com-&#13;
pleted appeal process.&#13;
of SUFAC vote and majority&#13;
wins.&#13;
If&#13;
the club thinks that&#13;
the  budget  it  receives  is&#13;
unworkable  SUFAC will lis-&#13;
ten to an appeal.&#13;
Generally a club's budget&#13;
will increase from year to year&#13;
as the club grows. There are&#13;
instances where a club's bud-&#13;
get will decrease, though it is&#13;
Infrequent.&#13;
In&#13;
the past eight&#13;
years  eighty-nine  budgets&#13;
have been approved, and only&#13;
nineteen of the budgets were&#13;
decreased from the previous&#13;
year. For the 2002-2003school&#13;
year the only budgets  that&#13;
were  decreased  are PSGA,&#13;
WIPZ, and The Ranger.&#13;
After receiving  a budget&#13;
increase  of $46,300 for the&#13;
2001-2002 year, Corey Mand-&#13;
ley  proposed   that  PSGA&#13;
receive an additional increase&#13;
of $9,100 for the 2002-2003&#13;
year. Joe Rucker, PSGA Presi-&#13;
dent deleted $43,900from the&#13;
$93,400 requested  in Mand-&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
'McLaughlin,   the committee&#13;
----~---------'&#13;
consists of seven members.&#13;
Azeza Hammad is the Chair&#13;
while Steve McLaughlin Dean&#13;
of  Students   and  Dexter&#13;
Yarbrough Director of Univer-&#13;
sity Police and Safety are the&#13;
advisors, Tarajee&#13;
Arnin,&#13;
Joe&#13;
Rucker, Danni  Moore  and&#13;
Adam Deford are all current&#13;
members.  Corey  Mandley&#13;
was a member of SUFAC last&#13;
semester, but is no longer a&#13;
student at UW-Parkside. This&#13;
semester the committee is&#13;
running with only five mem-&#13;
bers, as two lost members&#13;
have not been replaced.&#13;
The members  of SUFAC&#13;
meet with each club to hear&#13;
the club's proposed budget.&#13;
Generally the clubs are enter-&#13;
ing  a  maximum  budget.&#13;
SUFACdecides the amount of&#13;
money the club needs to run&#13;
smoothly and have a success-&#13;
ful year. After proposing  a&#13;
budget number the members&#13;
Co-EdRor~n-Chief&#13;
U&#13;
w-parkside's  Segregat-&#13;
ed  University   Fees&#13;
Allocations  Commit-&#13;
tee(SUFAC) has finished the&#13;
budgets for the student clubs&#13;
around the university. Every&#13;
student enrolled at UW-Park-&#13;
side pays a segregated fee as a&#13;
part of tuition.&#13;
It&#13;
is SUFAC's&#13;
job to distribute the money&#13;
collected from the students to&#13;
the  clubs  and  committees&#13;
around UW-Parkside. The fee&#13;
that each student pays goes&#13;
towards  such things as the&#13;
printing of The Ranger news-&#13;
paper, or the hiring of guest&#13;
speakers for fund-raisers. The&#13;
University of Wisconsin Park-&#13;
side's radio station is also run&#13;
on the money generated from&#13;
the segregated fees.&#13;
According    to    Steve&#13;
Student organization budget trends from 1996 - 2003&#13;
1.P1C&#13;
540,000&#13;
535.000&#13;
35,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$25.000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
19116&#13;
$15.000&#13;
$10,000&#13;
$5,000&#13;
i&#13;
4,000&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
so&#13;
, 996&#13;
1997&#13;
1996    1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
S90,OOOr&#13;
,&#13;
590,000.--&#13;
---,&#13;
580,0001----------_------1&#13;
sao.coo&#13;
1------------------1&#13;
$70,000&#13;
t---~-------------I&#13;
$70,000&#13;
560,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
$50.000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
30,000   30,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
26,562&#13;
24,500&#13;
20,000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
\999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
..&#13;
""&#13;
$90,000&#13;
580,000&#13;
570,000&#13;
560,000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$.40,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
19,495&#13;
14,316&#13;
$10000&#13;
~o"&#13;
.~;.:it&#13;
61&#13;
0&#13;
1,2'39&#13;
~&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
• Queers&#13;
&amp;&#13;
iWes&#13;
$90,000&#13;
580,000&#13;
$70,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
520,000&#13;
$10,000&#13;
~&#13;
5~&#13;
E;&#13;
7&#13;
m&#13;
7[i&#13;
4,000&#13;
0&#13;
mm&#13;
2~&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
lS97&#13;
1998&#13;
1995&#13;
2000&#13;
ZOOl&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
a Womyn's Center&#13;
$90,000&#13;
r----------------.&#13;
$80,000&#13;
570,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
550,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
J----~~-----~-----~&#13;
530,000&#13;
t------~--~---------I&#13;
$20,000&#13;
1-----&#13;
9,200   10,831    10,800   11,286   11,286&#13;
9,550&#13;
9,250&#13;
9,350&#13;
$10,000&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90511">
              <text>February 21 - March 7, 2002&#13;
Veritas&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
INSloe&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do&#13;
@&#13;
the U&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Wrestlersdefend dual meet&#13;
record&#13;
UW-Pmen's baseball ready.&#13;
to go into&#13;
full&#13;
swing&#13;
PageS&#13;
Meet Professor&#13;
Li&#13;
English Society celebrates&#13;
13th year&#13;
Crowning Miss Kenosha&#13;
Parkside hosts high school&#13;
art&#13;
invitational&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Bar review&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
Page 7&#13;
I&#13;
Prof&#13;
M&#13;
Shahrani speaks on&#13;
ill&#13;
terrorism&#13;
~&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
---&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
Funding cutin&#13;
planned&#13;
budget&#13;
Guest Column,  Ranger News&#13;
By&#13;
Representative  Jim Kreuser&#13;
O&#13;
n January  22, interim&#13;
Governor Scott McCal-&#13;
lum.  introduced   his&#13;
budget  repair plan before a&#13;
joint session of the State Legis-&#13;
lature.&#13;
In&#13;
his remarks, the gov-&#13;
ernor laid out his plan to cut&#13;
fundrng for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System budget by&#13;
4.5%.  While 4.5% may not&#13;
sound substantial, it is a cut of&#13;
approximately $50 million to a&#13;
system that has already seen&#13;
over $50million in budget cuts&#13;
over the past decade.&#13;
The governor's budget plan&#13;
allows  lor  mcreases&#13;
in&#13;
tuition&#13;
of up to 10%for the 2002-2003&#13;
academic  year and includes&#13;
virtually   no  increases   in finan-&#13;
cial aid programs for current&#13;
and future students.   More-&#13;
over,   it  is  questionable&#13;
whether a 10%tuition increase&#13;
would even make up for this&#13;
governor's proposed cuts.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
also important  to note that&#13;
tuition has increased approxi-&#13;
mately $1,000 more than the&#13;
rate of inflation since 1992.&#13;
It&#13;
is my belief that  the  state&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Governor  McCallum's  budget cuts funding for the University of Wisconsin  Schools&#13;
needs  to  tie  any  tuition&#13;
increases  with financial  aid&#13;
increases as a matter of policy.&#13;
Budget cuts not oniy hurt&#13;
the pocketbooks of students,&#13;
but also in addition have an&#13;
adverse effect on the quality of&#13;
the education offered.  Past&#13;
budget cuts have resulted in&#13;
reduced funding for technolo-&#13;
gy,&#13;
building  projects, course&#13;
offerings,  fibrary  resources,&#13;
faculty,  academic  advising,&#13;
and academic staff hiring, as&#13;
well as safety programs.   I&#13;
Conversation With the Chancellor&#13;
Benjamin  Schmidt&#13;
Co-Edltor-In-ehief&#13;
C&#13;
onvocations are a gath-&#13;
ering  for  the  faculty,&#13;
staff, and student lead-&#13;
ers allowing Chancellor John&#13;
'Jack'  Keating  to  address&#13;
everyone, passing along infor-&#13;
mation and inspiration.  Most&#13;
students  never  get to hear&#13;
what Chancellor Keating has&#13;
to say due to the nature of his&#13;
job and the demanding sched-&#13;
ule he keeps, so I offered&#13;
him&#13;
the opportunity  to reach the&#13;
students  through  the inter-&#13;
view he was kind enough to&#13;
accept.&#13;
•&#13;
On&#13;
the rarely visited third&#13;
level Chancellor Keating wel-&#13;
comed and ushered me into'&#13;
his cozy office overlooking the&#13;
Chancellor  John' Jack' Keating&#13;
campus' south side.  Empha-&#13;
sized  were  the concepts' Tak-&#13;
ing .the Next Step' and 'Pride&#13;
in Parkside.'  With state bud-&#13;
get cuts affecting institutions&#13;
such  as  Parkside,  contribu-&#13;
tions from everyone in their&#13;
own  niches  need  to  take&#13;
responsibility said Chancellor&#13;
. Keating.  He added that the&#13;
-  campus' new Provost, Rebecca&#13;
Martin, was  a candidate with&#13;
an   "enormous   background&#13;
and  experience"  who   flgives&#13;
us a shot right away to move&#13;
out  to  a new  step  on  a new&#13;
horizon."&#13;
IlLife&#13;
is&#13;
too&#13;
ShOrt"&#13;
Chancellor  Keating  also&#13;
stated that collaboration with&#13;
other universities "to facilitate&#13;
exchanging  of ideas"  along&#13;
with the enhancement of Park-&#13;
side's relationship with techni-&#13;
cal colleges to reach further&#13;
into the region to take advan-&#13;
tage of current resources with-&#13;
out the benefit of additional&#13;
dollars _is  "pretty  positive&#13;
given the economic climate."&#13;
When asked about the cur-&#13;
rent state of the campus Chan-&#13;
cellor Keating said he was&#13;
"very pleased."   Growth in&#13;
diversity among faculty, staff,&#13;
and students  is "personally&#13;
gratifying" to Chancellor Keat-&#13;
ing.  He also expressed plea-&#13;
sure with the school's strong&#13;
liberal arts base, which gives&#13;
students "the ability to learn&#13;
and  critically  think"  when&#13;
placed in real world situations.&#13;
As a parting statement of&#13;
encouragement,  the Chancel-&#13;
lor opined, "Life is too short."&#13;
How people play  the cards&#13;
they are dealt' is what makes a&#13;
positive person." Constructive&#13;
thinking and finding the "rem-&#13;
edy of a problem" keep people&#13;
upbeat.&#13;
February 21 March 7,&#13;
2002&#13;
THING_&#13;
He&#13;
7 p.m., $3 ($2&#13;
wI&#13;
canned good)&#13;
Feb. 21   • "The Fusion of Art &amp; Science: Adventures in Creating living&#13;
Artworks"&#13;
w/Joe&#13;
Davis of MIT,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Mol. 105, free&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
vs.&#13;
Lewis 5 30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball vs. Lewis&#13;
7&#13;
45 p.m.&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: "Cosmic Orphans:  Finding Our&#13;
Place in the Universe"&#13;
wi&#13;
David Eicher&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Overlook&#13;
Lounge, 2nJ floor of Library&#13;
Feb. 22   • Youth Program: Gang Awareness Workshop,&#13;
9&#13;
a.m., Tallent 182'&#13;
$30&#13;
Feb. 28 to • Foreign Film: "The House of Mirth," show times:&#13;
Thursdayl&#13;
March 3   Friday:&#13;
7&#13;
30 p.m., Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cine-&#13;
ma&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "Disgrace," by J. M. Coetzee,&#13;
·;J:~~~:~~&#13;
Out the Textbook: Uncovering  History for&#13;
r:~~:=::"-::--_·J-~W~;E:=L~C:::'O::::M':E:=~B;;~A:-:C::K~-·"-·--·F'::::=_:::'1&#13;
UW"PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
STAFF!&#13;
LINTS&#13;
BUFFET&#13;
Molinaro Hall room 111, 3 30 p.m., free&#13;
Students"&#13;
wi&#13;
Dr. Lendol Calder, History Dept., Augus-&#13;
tana&#13;
/&#13;
College, 1 p.m., Galbraith Room, reception to follow&#13;
2/21-24    • Foreign Film: "Everybody Famous!" show&#13;
times:&#13;
Thursdays/Fridays:  7 30 p.m., Saturdays: 8 p.m., Sun-&#13;
days:&#13;
2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Feb. 27   • Noon  Concert:  Elaine  Skorodin,  violin;&#13;
Carol Wallace, piano;&#13;
noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
Feb. 28   • Black History Month: 3r- annual Fashion&#13;
Show, Union Square,&#13;
Theater&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
$5.29&#13;
DINNEUi&#13;
$6.79&#13;
2.&#13;
t&#13;
OS&#13;
2.2.ND AVE.&#13;
(NORTH BIDE)&#13;
KENOSHA,&#13;
WI&#13;
TEL. 652·3737&#13;
",,---_../~&#13;
-.-I "----__&#13;
...f&#13;
DINNJa:R  F'&amp;:ATUR.E:s&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SNOW CRAB L&amp;:GS&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
(INCLUDES  FREE&#13;
SOFT&#13;
DRINK&gt;&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
CARRY-OUT&#13;
8:&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
FISH AND S&amp;:AFOOD&#13;
""AsK ABOUT PARKS IDE DBCOUN"fiI,""&#13;
Sports Page&#13;
Edit";:&#13;
I&#13;
Dena Cpady&#13;
I&#13;
Reporters&#13;
,,§&#13;
Alexis MartirJ ..&#13;
it&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
f&#13;
Ruyayeem&#13;
Krisli Vol&#13;
Myron&#13;
Rosje&#13;
\!&#13;
Brenda&#13;
Adebest&#13;
D&#13;
Adverti$ing Matcl.ger'~&#13;
Katey&#13;
Thoennes&#13;
Advertising   Assls&#13;
tant.&#13;
Danny Nguyen&#13;
Ranger Advjsor  .&#13;
Pave  Buchanan&#13;
-f"&#13;
y'&#13;
NOW HIRING&#13;
Opinipil Page Editor&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
CoiWlinists&#13;
cReport&lt;!rs&#13;
NSHIPS AVA  ABLE!&#13;
~C!?mRlefe an intern-&#13;
,&#13;
e time.&#13;
Meeting•• re Mond.y•• t noon. Pl••••&#13;
atop by .nd p.rtlclp.te  •• the m•• tlnga&#13;
.r.  op.n to .11tho••• t P.rk.ld ••&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
D-139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
{262}595.2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
{262}595-2295&#13;
•&#13;
who are .solely responsible for&#13;
its&#13;
editorial policy and content,&#13;
.&#13;
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