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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Questions Surround UW-SP Student's Death</text>
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              <text>THE &#13;
Questions &#13;
Surround &#13;
UW-SP &#13;
Student's &#13;
Death. &#13;
t,y &#13;
Kelly &#13;
Leeker &#13;
UW-Stevens &#13;
Paint &#13;
While &#13;
officials &#13;
have &#13;
called &#13;
the &#13;
death &#13;
of &#13;
a UW-Stevens &#13;
Point &#13;
student &#13;
a homicide, &#13;
several &#13;
aspects &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
investigation &#13;
remain &#13;
in &#13;
question. &#13;
Vicki &#13;
Schneider, &#13;
21, &#13;
was &#13;
found &#13;
by &#13;
a &#13;
maid &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
first &#13;
floor &#13;
room &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Best &#13;
Western &#13;
Royale, &#13;
Highway &#13;
10 &#13;
East, &#13;
shortly &#13;
before &#13;
1 p.m. &#13;
on &#13;
Aug. &#13;
7, &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Stevens &#13;
Point &#13;
Police &#13;
Department. &#13;
Officials &#13;
would &#13;
not &#13;
release &#13;
the &#13;
cause &#13;
of &#13;
death &#13;
Tuesday &#13;
because &#13;
they &#13;
feel &#13;
it &#13;
may &#13;
harm &#13;
e investigation, &#13;
said &#13;
Police &#13;
'ef &#13;
Robert &#13;
Kreisa. &#13;
1-lolding &#13;
certain &#13;
details &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
investigation &#13;
allows &#13;
us &#13;
to &#13;
test &#13;
the &#13;
reliability &#13;
of &#13;
witnesses &#13;
and &#13;
suspects," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Kreisa &#13;
said &#13;
the &#13;
investigation &#13;
is &#13;
focused &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
couple &#13;
of &#13;
people, &#13;
and &#13;
police &#13;
suspect &#13;
the &#13;
person &#13;
or &#13;
people &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
murder &#13;
knew &#13;
Schneider &#13;
and &#13;
were &#13;
with &#13;
her &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
hotel &#13;
preceding &#13;
her &#13;
death. &#13;
Police &#13;
based &#13;
their &#13;
ruling &#13;
of &#13;
homicide &#13;
on &#13;
interviews &#13;
with &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
knew &#13;
Schneider &#13;
and &#13;
guests &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
motel &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
as &#13;
test &#13;
results &#13;
and &#13;
evidence &#13;
gathered &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
scene. &#13;
No &#13;
evident &#13;
of &#13;
physical &#13;
trauma &#13;
was &#13;
found &#13;
on &#13;
Schneider's &#13;
body &#13;
and &#13;
autopsy &#13;
and &#13;
toxicology &#13;
reports &#13;
finalized &#13;
last &#13;
week &#13;
revealed &#13;
no &#13;
trace &#13;
of &#13;
drugs &#13;
or &#13;
alcohol &#13;
in &#13;
her &#13;
body, &#13;
said &#13;
. &#13;
Partage &#13;
County &#13;
Coroner &#13;
Scott &#13;
Rifleman. &#13;
Police &#13;
found &#13;
a sticky &#13;
adhesive &#13;
substance &#13;
on &#13;
Schneider's &#13;
wrists &#13;
during &#13;
their &#13;
investigation, &#13;
but &#13;
Kresia &#13;
said &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
sure &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
nature &#13;
of &#13;
that &#13;
substance. &#13;
"It &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
tape, &#13;
but &#13;
we &#13;
don't &#13;
know &#13;
what &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
and &#13;
I'm &#13;
not &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
jump &#13;
to &#13;
any &#13;
conclusions," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
While &#13;
all &#13;
the &#13;
tests &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
received &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
Milwaukee &#13;
County &#13;
Medical &#13;
Examiner's &#13;
Office, &#13;
where &#13;
the &#13;
autopsy &#13;
was &#13;
performed, &#13;
officials &#13;
are &#13;
still &#13;
awaiting &#13;
test &#13;
results &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
Crime &#13;
Lab &#13;
in &#13;
Madison. &#13;
TDDENT &#13;
EXPERIENCES &#13;
IRKING &#13;
HORROR &#13;
t,y &#13;
Alan &#13;
R &#13;
Cook &#13;
asst. &#13;
news &#13;
editM &#13;
-i &#13;
would &#13;
never &#13;
want &#13;
this &#13;
to &#13;
ppen &#13;
to &#13;
anyone &#13;
else. &#13;
That's &#13;
hy &#13;
I'm &#13;
telling &#13;
you &#13;
about &#13;
this," &#13;
says &#13;
Ms. &#13;
Laura &#13;
Howard, &#13;
a &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
student, &#13;
as &#13;
she &#13;
deacribes &#13;
her &#13;
introduction &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
sometimes &#13;
harsh &#13;
parking &#13;
regulations &#13;
on &#13;
campus. &#13;
"I &#13;
know &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
wrong &#13;
to &#13;
park &#13;
there &#13;
and &#13;
I'll &#13;
take &#13;
full &#13;
responsibility &#13;
for &#13;
that, &#13;
but &#13;
I &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
think &#13;
it &#13;
should &#13;
have &#13;
gone &#13;
to &#13;
this &#13;
extreme." &#13;
It &#13;
was &#13;
September &#13;
3, &#13;
the &#13;
second &#13;
day &#13;
of &#13;
classes. &#13;
Howard, &#13;
arriving &#13;
for &#13;
classes &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
morning, &#13;
found &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
parking &#13;
lot &#13;
was &#13;
barricaded, &#13;
llldicating &#13;
that &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
full. &#13;
She &#13;
parked &#13;
her &#13;
car &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Visitors' &#13;
Lot &#13;
near &#13;
Union, &#13;
taking &#13;
special &#13;
care &#13;
_to &#13;
display &#13;
her &#13;
student &#13;
parking &#13;
permit &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
prominent &#13;
spot, &#13;
"What &#13;
upset &#13;
me &#13;
most &#13;
wa• &#13;
tbatI_had &#13;
a parking &#13;
permit &#13;
in &#13;
t &#13;
Window. &#13;
I felt &#13;
like &#13;
that &#13;
w &#13;
.iS &#13;
; &#13;
YI &#13;
was &#13;
towed," &#13;
she &#13;
expla'.ns. &#13;
he &#13;
put &#13;
a quarter &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
m &#13;
der &#13;
d went &#13;
to &#13;
class. &#13;
When &#13;
she &#13;
returned &#13;
to &#13;
her &#13;
king &#13;
space, &#13;
she &#13;
found &#13;
her &#13;
~~ &#13;
not &#13;
there. &#13;
"Yoi; &#13;
know &#13;
ow &#13;
ll &#13;
is," &#13;
she &#13;
says. &#13;
"Y)u &#13;
start &#13;
;n&lt;lering &#13;
if &#13;
you &#13;
forr,ot &#13;
where &#13;
::i &#13;
parked &#13;
or &#13;
what &#13;
.&#13;
.. &#13;
Finally, &#13;
I &#13;
t &#13;
back &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
in &#13;
,ormation &#13;
desk &#13;
in &#13;
Union &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
knew &#13;
anything &#13;
about &#13;
it. &#13;
They &#13;
told &#13;
me, &#13;
'They &#13;
towed &#13;
your &#13;
car.'" &#13;
Howard &#13;
went &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
offices &#13;
of &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
University &#13;
Police. &#13;
There &#13;
she &#13;
demanded &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
the &#13;
"person &#13;
in &#13;
charge." &#13;
She &#13;
talked &#13;
to &#13;
Chief &#13;
David &#13;
Ostrowski, &#13;
who &#13;
explained &#13;
to &#13;
her &#13;
campus &#13;
policy &#13;
on &#13;
these &#13;
matters. &#13;
"I &#13;
ended &#13;
up &#13;
telling &#13;
them &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
all &#13;
· &#13;
needed &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
a &#13;
course &#13;
in &#13;
psychology &#13;
and &#13;
learn &#13;
how &#13;
to &#13;
deal &#13;
with &#13;
people," &#13;
Howard &#13;
says. &#13;
"They &#13;
seemed &#13;
so &#13;
cold &#13;
... " &#13;
Howard &#13;
made &#13;
her &#13;
way &#13;
to &#13;
Romano &#13;
Towing, &#13;
a &#13;
company &#13;
used &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
for &#13;
these &#13;
situations. &#13;
There &#13;
she &#13;
was &#13;
told &#13;
that &#13;
she &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
pay &#13;
$85.57 &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
possession &#13;
of &#13;
her &#13;
car &#13;
"I &#13;
asked &#13;
them, &#13;
'Did &#13;
you &#13;
wr&#13;
,&#13;
rk &#13;
on &#13;
it &#13;
while &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
gone, &#13;
or &#13;
v &#13;
hat &#13;
... &#13;
' I &#13;
do &#13;
understand &#13;
that &#13;
chere &#13;
was &#13;
some &#13;
extra &#13;
charge &#13;
because &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
a front-wheel &#13;
drive &#13;
car." &#13;
Howard &#13;
was &#13;
told &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
would &#13;
not &#13;
take &#13;
personal &#13;
checks &#13;
for &#13;
payment. &#13;
She &#13;
also &#13;
found &#13;
a $15 &#13;
ticket &#13;
from &#13;
Parkside &#13;
on &#13;
her &#13;
windshield. &#13;
"It &#13;
cost &#13;
me &#13;
around &#13;
$102, &#13;
plus &#13;
all &#13;
the &#13;
time &#13;
and &#13;
aggravation, &#13;
Howard &#13;
summarizes. &#13;
"It &#13;
completely &#13;
spoiled &#13;
my &#13;
first &#13;
week &#13;
of &#13;
classes &#13;
... &#13;
I was &#13;
so &#13;
angry &#13;
... &#13;
I &#13;
understand &#13;
it's &#13;
policy &#13;
and &#13;
I   . &#13;
could &#13;
see &#13;
a  ticket, &#13;
but &#13;
to &#13;
tow &#13;
it &#13;
away: &#13;
that's &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
ridiculous, &#13;
if &#13;
you &#13;
ask &#13;
me." &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
Chief &#13;
of &#13;
Police, &#13;
Mr. &#13;
David &#13;
Ostrowski, &#13;
gives &#13;
his &#13;
perspective &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
case, &#13;
saying &#13;
"I &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
Ms. &#13;
Howard &#13;
doesn't &#13;
like &#13;
me &#13;
too &#13;
much.'' &#13;
Commenting &#13;
further, &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
says, &#13;
"I &#13;
try &#13;
to &#13;
talk &#13;
to &#13;
people &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
non-accusatory &#13;
way, &#13;
but &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
she &#13;
was &#13;
just &#13;
not &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
position &#13;
to &#13;
listen &#13;
to &#13;
anyone &#13;
... &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
think &#13;
I &#13;
could &#13;
have &#13;
made &#13;
her &#13;
happy, &#13;
no &#13;
matter &#13;
what &#13;
I &#13;
said." &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
points &#13;
out &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
Visitors' &#13;
lot &#13;
has &#13;
three &#13;
large &#13;
signs, &#13;
warning &#13;
motorists &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
restrictions &#13;
and &#13;
consequences &#13;
operative &#13;
there. &#13;
He &#13;
also &#13;
observes &#13;
that &#13;
many &#13;
people &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
read &#13;
the &#13;
parking &#13;
brochures &#13;
provided &#13;
by &#13;
safety &#13;
personnel. &#13;
"People &#13;
need &#13;
to &#13;
read &#13;
their &#13;
brochures &#13;
and &#13;
pay &#13;
attention &#13;
to &#13;
signs &#13;
... &#13;
Ms. &#13;
Howard &#13;
admitted &#13;
that &#13;
she &#13;
had &#13;
not &#13;
read &#13;
her &#13;
brochure." &#13;
He &#13;
reminds &#13;
students, &#13;
faculty &#13;
and &#13;
staff &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
can &#13;
pick &#13;
up &#13;
a copy &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside's &#13;
parking &#13;
regulations &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Safety &#13;
Office &#13;
in &#13;
Tallent &#13;
Hall. &#13;
Asked &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
decision &#13;
to &#13;
have &#13;
Howard's &#13;
car &#13;
towed, &#13;
he &#13;
explains, &#13;
"The &#13;
problem &#13;
with &#13;
citations &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
people &#13;
are &#13;
willing &#13;
to &#13;
pay &#13;
$10 &#13;
or &#13;
$15 &#13;
to &#13;
park &#13;
where &#13;
they &#13;
want, &#13;
sometimes. &#13;
It &#13;
does &#13;
not &#13;
serve &#13;
as &#13;
These &#13;
include &#13;
tests &#13;
for &#13;
fingerprints &#13;
and &#13;
hair &#13;
fibers &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
rape &#13;
test &#13;
kit, &#13;
Kreisa &#13;
said. &#13;
The &#13;
police &#13;
department &#13;
is &#13;
continuing &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
investigation &#13;
and &#13;
has &#13;
interviewed &#13;
probably &#13;
over &#13;
100 &#13;
people, &#13;
Kreisa &#13;
said. &#13;
"We're &#13;
trying &#13;
to &#13;
put &#13;
all &#13;
the &#13;
pieces &#13;
together &#13;
and &#13;
find &#13;
out &#13;
all &#13;
we &#13;
can &#13;
about &#13;
Vicki &#13;
Schneider &#13;
and &#13;
what &#13;
happened &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
motel." &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Schneider &#13;
checked &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
hotel &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
credit &#13;
card &#13;
at &#13;
approximately &#13;
1 :30 &#13;
pm &#13;
August &#13;
16. &#13;
A &#13;
maid &#13;
found &#13;
her &#13;
lying &#13;
naked &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
bed &#13;
of &#13;
her &#13;
first &#13;
floor &#13;
room &#13;
the &#13;
next &#13;
day, &#13;
Kreisa &#13;
said, &#13;
and &#13;
their &#13;
was &#13;
no &#13;
sign &#13;
of &#13;
her &#13;
clothes &#13;
or &#13;
any &#13;
identification &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
room. &#13;
A &#13;
French &#13;
major, &#13;
Schneider &#13;
had &#13;
lived &#13;
in &#13;
an &#13;
apartment &#13;
on &#13;
Fifth &#13;
Avenue &#13;
all &#13;
summer &#13;
and &#13;
was &#13;
attending &#13;
summer &#13;
school. &#13;
Her &#13;
friends &#13;
said &#13;
the &#13;
UWSP &#13;
junior &#13;
had &#13;
planned &#13;
to &#13;
travel &#13;
to &#13;
France &#13;
second &#13;
semester. &#13;
Students &#13;
should &#13;
not &#13;
take &#13;
this &#13;
murder &#13;
as &#13;
a sign &#13;
that &#13;
Stevens &#13;
Point &#13;
is &#13;
an &#13;
unsafe &#13;
city, &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Kreisa. &#13;
"We &#13;
can &#13;
never &#13;
guarantee &#13;
safety, &#13;
but &#13;
this &#13;
is &#13;
not &#13;
a &#13;
random &#13;
murder," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
"Based &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
information &#13;
gathered &#13;
I &#13;
highly &#13;
doubt &#13;
that &#13;
her &#13;
being &#13;
a &#13;
student &#13;
had &#13;
anything &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
with &#13;
her &#13;
death. &#13;
RESTR\CTED &#13;
METE.RED &#13;
AREA &#13;
. &#13;
SMJR1, &#13;
HRM &#13;
v:sinm &#13;
i'A?\:N{: &#13;
ex' &#13;
. &#13;
MAW-flt. &#13;
i &#13;
A~&lt; &#13;
f'~ &#13;
PAi~J;·!~~i~)~(!;;.~~l\\V/i &#13;
~\"&gt; &#13;
~Vi\ &#13;
\:-&#13;
.. &#13;
;-..:-::,:;-· &#13;
··•::' &#13;
; &#13;
:·_,,:,.·_ &#13;
:: &#13;
an &#13;
adequate &#13;
deterrent." &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
observes &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
present &#13;
strict &#13;
policy &#13;
is &#13;
one &#13;
that &#13;
has evolved &#13;
over &#13;
several &#13;
years. &#13;
"It &#13;
is a strict &#13;
policy, &#13;
I'll &#13;
give &#13;
you &#13;
that, &#13;
but &#13;
it's &#13;
a policy &#13;
that &#13;
has &#13;
evolved &#13;
over &#13;
time &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
only &#13;
way &#13;
to &#13;
handle &#13;
the &#13;
situation." &#13;
"People seem &#13;
to &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
their &#13;
inalienable &#13;
right &#13;
to &#13;
park &#13;
as &#13;
close &#13;
as &#13;
possible &#13;
to &#13;
their &#13;
class &#13;
or &#13;
office &#13;
or &#13;
whatever. &#13;
We &#13;
just &#13;
cannot &#13;
accommodate &#13;
that. &#13;
No &#13;
campus &#13;
can," &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
observes. &#13;
"We &#13;
strive &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
as &#13;
customer-service &#13;
oriented &#13;
as &#13;
possible &#13;
here &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
... we &#13;
try &#13;
to &#13;
accommodate &#13;
everyone &#13;
... &#13;
sometimes &#13;
that &#13;
means &#13;
strict &#13;
regulations &#13;
and &#13;
strict &#13;
enforcement." &#13;
He &#13;
points &#13;
out &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
Tallent &#13;
Hall &#13;
parking &#13;
lot &#13;
has &#13;
never &#13;
been &#13;
full &#13;
despite &#13;
the &#13;
frustration &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
first &#13;
two &#13;
weeks &#13;
of &#13;
parking. &#13;
Summarizing &#13;
the &#13;
Howard &#13;
case, &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
firmly &#13;
states, &#13;
'There &#13;
were &#13;
no &#13;
mistakes &#13;
made &#13;
here. &#13;
We &#13;
legitimately &#13;
towed &#13;
that &#13;
vehicle &#13;
and &#13;
we &#13;
will &#13;
continue &#13;
to &#13;
strictly &#13;
enforce &#13;
our &#13;
parking &#13;
regulations." &#13;
Laughingly &#13;
referring &#13;
to &#13;
himself &#13;
as &#13;
"Parking &#13;
Czar," &#13;
he &#13;
says &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
one &#13;
part &#13;
of &#13;
his &#13;
job &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
would &#13;
most &#13;
gladly &#13;
give &#13;
up. &#13;
"It &#13;
is &#13;
an &#13;
axiom &#13;
of &#13;
police &#13;
work," &#13;
he &#13;
says, &#13;
"that &#13;
people &#13;
get &#13;
more &#13;
upset &#13;
about &#13;
parking &#13;
problems &#13;
than &#13;
do &#13;
about &#13;
drunk &#13;
driving &#13;
or &#13;
anything &#13;
else." &#13;
Both &#13;
Howard &#13;
and &#13;
Ostrowski &#13;
hope &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
story &#13;
will &#13;
serve &#13;
to &#13;
spare &#13;
others &#13;
the &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
unnecessary &#13;
aggravation &#13;
that &#13;
parking &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
can &#13;
bring. &#13;
RANGER   NEWS,   PAGE  2&#13;
Professor Richard Brown&#13;
Directs Business School&#13;
of the allocated  time by the&#13;
national board.  The&#13;
accreditation  would gain the&#13;
Business School national&#13;
recognition.&#13;
The second objective is to&#13;
meet the expectations  of the&#13;
major stakeholders  of the&#13;
School of Business who are&#13;
students, alumni, faculty and&#13;
local busnesses.  These&#13;
expectations  are&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
identified  through  three&#13;
advisory boards; two of which&#13;
have been developed  and&#13;
directed by Dr. Brown. The&#13;
advisory boards include UW -&#13;
Parkside's  current Business&#13;
Board which has been doubled,&#13;
sitting twenty professional&#13;
business' representatives,&#13;
represen ting firms such as&#13;
Northwestern  Mutual Life,&#13;
Abbot Labs and Gander&#13;
Mountain.  In addition  the&#13;
board seeks to represent  a&#13;
greater portion  of the area's&#13;
service industries,  Kenosha's&#13;
Lakeview Corporate  Park&#13;
region, and a greater portion  of&#13;
northeastern  Illinois. The two&#13;
new advisory boards  to&#13;
Parkside's School of Business&#13;
are the Student Advisory Board&#13;
(currently under  selection)&#13;
which is to be selected as a&#13;
representative  sample of the&#13;
students attending  the Business&#13;
School to offer suggestions and&#13;
concerns  regarding  future&#13;
,------------------1&#13;
and direction  Dr. Richard D.&#13;
Brown has to offer. A few of his&#13;
major accomplishments  while&#13;
serving at Northrn  Illinois&#13;
University's College of Business&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
• Responsibility for&#13;
adrninstering  an undergraduate&#13;
program for 5,000 majors and&#13;
500 minors in the College of&#13;
Business.&#13;
• Leading and developing  a&#13;
successful accreditation  of&#13;
undergraduate  and graduate&#13;
Accountancy, programs  and&#13;
reaccreditaion  of the&#13;
undergraduate  and graduate&#13;
business adminstration&#13;
programs.&#13;
.Establishing  a career Advisory&#13;
Board of four business&#13;
executives, a director  of Career&#13;
Planning and Placement,  one&#13;
alum, three facuIty, and two&#13;
students to plan ad implement&#13;
a career program for&#13;
undergraduate  students.&#13;
Dr. Richard D. Brown's&#13;
greatest asset to UW - Parkside's&#13;
School of Business is his clear&#13;
management&#13;
by&#13;
objectives&#13;
philosophy.  Major objectives&#13;
currently identified  for the&#13;
Business School.  This process&#13;
is given a standard completion&#13;
time of five years, however, Dr.&#13;
Brown has set a tenatative date&#13;
for the Business School to&#13;
become accredeited  near the&#13;
end of 1995, three years ahead&#13;
by&#13;
Mike Stukel&#13;
Professor Richard D. Brown&#13;
is the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside's new acting dean for&#13;
the School of Business.  Many&#13;
business studen ts may recall&#13;
that UW - Parkside's  Business&#13;
school has been absent a&#13;
"permanent"  dean for nearly a&#13;
year in half. In that interim&#13;
period Professor Art Corr and&#13;
Professor Ronald Singer have&#13;
shared time as temporary&#13;
deans. Prior&#13;
to&#13;
Singer and&#13;
Corr's&#13;
temoporary  position,&#13;
Beverlee Anderson  served as&#13;
Dean from 1988 to 1992, and&#13;
Art Dudycha served from 1977&#13;
to 1988).&#13;
Dr. Richard D. Brown&#13;
officially took over the position&#13;
as Dean of the School of&#13;
Business this past July, after&#13;
serving as Dean at Northern&#13;
Illinois University's College of&#13;
Business from September  1984&#13;
to July 1993. Wen asked as to&#13;
why he left the Northern&#13;
Illinois University for UW-&#13;
Parkside he stated,&#13;
"It&#13;
was time&#13;
for a change, I was looking for a&#13;
smaller school, in the Midwest,&#13;
with a strong business program&#13;
and a faculty which had the&#13;
desire and poten&#13;
tal&#13;
to become&#13;
accredited.  UW - Parkside met&#13;
these criteria."&#13;
UW-Parkside will greatly&#13;
benefit&#13;
from&#13;
the exerpience&#13;
the University  of Illinois&#13;
with&#13;
majors in Marketing&#13;
and&#13;
Economics.  His current&#13;
interests  and hobbies include&#13;
various outdoor  activities such&#13;
as camping  and outdoor&#13;
sporu&#13;
Dr. Richard D. Brown&#13;
has&#13;
the academic  background&#13;
and&#13;
professional  experience to&#13;
lead&#13;
the UW - Parkside's  Business&#13;
School&#13;
to becoming a&#13;
competitive  force in the&#13;
professional  job market,&#13;
which&#13;
will greatly enhance  the&#13;
school&#13;
and community  in the&#13;
proces&#13;
We look forward to a&#13;
productive  future.&#13;
majors/concentrations    and&#13;
related curriculum  for the&#13;
BusinessSchool.   The second&#13;
Board is the Alumni Advisory&#13;
Board (currently  under&#13;
selection),  which will reflect&#13;
eurrentjob  markets and career&#13;
trends of the local professional&#13;
business area.&#13;
Dr. Richard D. Brown&#13;
academic  background  includes&#13;
a BA from the Universi ty of&#13;
Kansas with a major in&#13;
Journalism,  a M.S. in Education&#13;
from Emporia  State University&#13;
with a major in Business&#13;
Education  and a Ph.D in&#13;
Business Adminstratino  from&#13;
-Bag a great fall job!&#13;
~&#13;
\a'   ,&#13;
-&#13;
At Ga~der Mountain, you can eam good money, work a convenient  schedule,&#13;
a~~ still have the time you need for family, friends, school or relaxation. We're&#13;
hiring&#13;
upbeat individuals to help us sell and distribute our premier hunting,&#13;
fish·&#13;
mg and camping equipment,  and we have hours that are flexible enough&#13;
to&#13;
fit&#13;
most any lifestyle. So ifyou're looking to "bag" a super job this&#13;
fall,&#13;
consider&#13;
the&#13;
following.&#13;
1993-94    STAFF&#13;
Edltor-In-ehief   ..•••...................•..••.•.•......•..•.•••..••...•.............••.••.Steven Moore&#13;
Managing  Editor ................••...••..•..••••••••..••.••..••..•.......•....Stanley Washington&#13;
Assisting  Managing  Editor ...........•.•..•..••.••..••.•••.•••............•.•.•Joseph  G. Kane&#13;
Business  Manager ....••......•...•..•.••.••.•..•..••..••..••••...........•:•••••••Tanya M. Oomlk&#13;
Assistant  Business  Manager ...•...•••••.....••..••..•....•.......•••.•••Christine&#13;
L.&#13;
Wilson&#13;
Layout  Editor/Designer&#13;
Raymond   G. Wlgglna&#13;
Newe  Edllor&#13;
Nicholas  W. Zahn&#13;
Assistant  News Editor&#13;
Alan R. Cook&#13;
reemre&#13;
EdKor&#13;
Chrislophar   S. Tlehuk&#13;
Sports  Edllor&#13;
Kevin  C. WIIII.ms&#13;
5~&#13;
i~~:::·:·:·:·::~:::·::::·::·:·::::·:·:·::·:·:·:::·::·:.:.:.:::.:.:.:.:.:::.::~::.:.::::~::.:.:.::.:.::.:.:.:&#13;
.:.:.:.::.:.&lt;~=E!~=&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Editor&#13;
Betly  C. Mcllv.lne&#13;
Photo  Edtor  •·&#13;
Mich.el   D. Paupers&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Greg  Lebriok&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeffrey M. Weniger&#13;
CartoonlstIDealgns&#13;
Moss Ingram&#13;
Co!urrnlall"   Mary Rit&lt;:hle,&#13;
Gabe&#13;
R&#13;
KIul&lt;a,&#13;
C. J. Nelson, Joseph G. Kane, George&#13;
Horns Jr., Reglnsld Slaughter,  Jeffrey Weriger,  Jeffrey B. Wooaley, Regis Brost,&#13;
Sondra Sw_,&#13;
Albrey  Wslker, Yolands Jackson, .nd  Bri.n  Malsen.&#13;
Advisors, JlAle&#13;
King,&#13;
And-ow Mclean,  SlIJart Rubner,&#13;
Jan Nowak, and Jl&lt;ly  Logsdon&#13;
General  Staff:&#13;
Ginger Helgeson,  Gregory GalAhier,  Greg Jones, Violel C~er,&#13;
M.rqulta  Hynes,&#13;
Joe Buenker, Brsln Malaen, Van....    WoodB, Julie Bchteter,  Mike Stukel, R~k&#13;
Exner, Susan Luepkes, Nath.n  CarrIlio,  Vlhkas Jethw.nl,  Msry Dunnington, Jared&#13;
Briesla, Cory&#13;
R.&#13;
Roth, ,Derak Brown, Jera""   Haudt, Eric Tegen, Rcbb Vanselow,&#13;
David Foss, Msr1&lt;Lowe,  Scott Gragsle, Wendy Christopherson,  Myron Jackson,&#13;
Mike SllNel, AI Heppner, Melinda Vssatko, Todd Rhode, Kay Sagsl, Gsry Snlth,&#13;
and Jessica Preiss.  .'&#13;
. Telephone  Sales Reps&#13;
Work full or parr-time, day evening or night.&#13;
A&#13;
pleasant phone manner  friendly&#13;
personality and basic typinWkeyboard skills are&#13;
all&#13;
you need.&#13;
'&#13;
Warehouse Personnel&#13;
Returns Clerk-&#13;
Full-time, first shift. Typing of 40-50 wpm. Must be able to&#13;
lift&#13;
50 lbs.&#13;
P&#13;
4&#13;
ickers, Packers -&#13;
Full-time, day shifts or part-time  evening shifts&#13;
from&#13;
pm-8 pm   5   9'·&#13;
'&#13;
h&#13;
or  pm-  pm are available. Perfect for anyone with free eveni,08&#13;
ours or anyone looking for a second income.&#13;
Retail&#13;
Full or part-time, day, evening and weekend  shifts available.&#13;
Cashiers -&#13;
Retail cashiering  experience  a plus.&#13;
Sales Associates -&#13;
Familiarity with hunting,  fishing or archery&#13;
is&#13;
helpful.&#13;
Our team members enjoy:&#13;
• Good pay&#13;
&amp;&#13;
incentives&#13;
• 20%merchandise discounts&#13;
• Paid holidays&#13;
• Paid&#13;
training&#13;
~n~erest;t  Co?,e by our personnel  office, and we'll&#13;
fill&#13;
you in on&#13;
all&#13;
the detail&gt;&#13;
8 ae&#13;
0&#13;
12&#13;
Ice IS open Monday.Friday,   7 am.5 pm and Saturday,&#13;
Fri:-   8 noon  .t P.O. Box 128, Hwy.&#13;
W,&#13;
Wilmot,  WI 53192  or Monday'&#13;
(Co::;'ni&#13;
an;;&#13;
r&#13;
m&#13;
at 8338 W.shington  Ave., Suite 105, Racine, WI 53406.&#13;
en y ocated next to Ensenada's Restaurant.)&#13;
RANGER &#13;
NEWS, &#13;
PAGE &#13;
2 &#13;
Professor &#13;
Richard &#13;
Brown &#13;
Directs &#13;
Business &#13;
School &#13;
t,y &#13;
Mike &#13;
Stukel &#13;
Professor &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
new &#13;
acting &#13;
dean &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
School &#13;
of &#13;
Business. &#13;
Many &#13;
business &#13;
students &#13;
may &#13;
recall &#13;
that &#13;
UW &#13;
-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
Business &#13;
school &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
absent &#13;
a &#13;
"permanent" &#13;
dean &#13;
for &#13;
nearly &#13;
a &#13;
year &#13;
in &#13;
half. &#13;
In &#13;
that &#13;
interim &#13;
period &#13;
Professor &#13;
Art &#13;
Corr &#13;
and &#13;
Professor &#13;
Ronald &#13;
Singer &#13;
have &#13;
shared &#13;
time &#13;
as &#13;
temporary &#13;
deans. &#13;
Prior &#13;
to &#13;
Singer &#13;
and &#13;
Corr's &#13;
temoporary &#13;
position, &#13;
Beverlee Anderson &#13;
served &#13;
as &#13;
Dean &#13;
from &#13;
1988 &#13;
to &#13;
1992, &#13;
and &#13;
Art &#13;
Dudycha &#13;
served &#13;
from &#13;
1977 &#13;
to &#13;
1988). &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown &#13;
officially &#13;
took &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
position &#13;
as &#13;
Dean &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
School &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
this &#13;
past &#13;
July, &#13;
after &#13;
serving &#13;
as &#13;
Dean &#13;
at &#13;
Northern &#13;
Illinois &#13;
University's &#13;
College &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
from &#13;
September &#13;
1984 &#13;
to July &#13;
1993. &#13;
Wen &#13;
asked &#13;
as &#13;
to &#13;
why &#13;
he &#13;
left &#13;
the &#13;
Northern &#13;
Illinois &#13;
University &#13;
for &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
he &#13;
stated, &#13;
"It &#13;
was &#13;
time &#13;
for &#13;
a change, &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
smaller &#13;
school, &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Midwest, &#13;
with &#13;
a strong &#13;
business &#13;
program &#13;
and &#13;
a faculty &#13;
which &#13;
had &#13;
the &#13;
desire &#13;
and &#13;
potental &#13;
to &#13;
become &#13;
accredited. &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
met &#13;
these &#13;
criteria." &#13;
OW-Parkside &#13;
will &#13;
greatly &#13;
benefit &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
exerpience &#13;
and &#13;
direction &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown &#13;
has &#13;
to &#13;
offer. &#13;
A &#13;
few &#13;
of &#13;
his &#13;
major &#13;
accomplishments &#13;
while &#13;
serving &#13;
at &#13;
Northm &#13;
Illinois &#13;
University's &#13;
College &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
are &#13;
as &#13;
follows: &#13;
• Responsibility &#13;
for &#13;
adminstering &#13;
an &#13;
undergraduate &#13;
program &#13;
for &#13;
5,000 &#13;
majors &#13;
and &#13;
500 &#13;
minors &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
College &#13;
of &#13;
Business. &#13;
• Leading &#13;
and &#13;
developing &#13;
a &#13;
successful &#13;
accreditation &#13;
of &#13;
undergraduate &#13;
and &#13;
graduate &#13;
Accountancy, &#13;
programs &#13;
and &#13;
reaccreditaion &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
undergraduate &#13;
and &#13;
graduate &#13;
business &#13;
adminstration &#13;
programs. &#13;
•Establishing &#13;
a career &#13;
Advisory &#13;
Board &#13;
of &#13;
four &#13;
business &#13;
executives, &#13;
a director &#13;
of &#13;
Career &#13;
Planning &#13;
and &#13;
Placement, &#13;
one &#13;
alum, &#13;
three &#13;
faculty, &#13;
and &#13;
two &#13;
students &#13;
to &#13;
plan &#13;
ad &#13;
implement &#13;
a career &#13;
program &#13;
for &#13;
undergraduate &#13;
students. &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown's &#13;
greatest &#13;
asset &#13;
to &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
School &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
is &#13;
his &#13;
clear &#13;
management &#13;
by &#13;
objectives &#13;
philosophy. &#13;
Major &#13;
objectives &#13;
currently &#13;
identified &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
Business &#13;
School. &#13;
This &#13;
process &#13;
is &#13;
given &#13;
a standard &#13;
completion &#13;
time &#13;
of &#13;
five &#13;
years, &#13;
however, &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Brown &#13;
has &#13;
set &#13;
a tenatative &#13;
date &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
Business &#13;
School &#13;
to &#13;
become &#13;
accredeited &#13;
near &#13;
the &#13;
end &#13;
of &#13;
1995, &#13;
three &#13;
years ahead &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
allocated &#13;
time &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
national &#13;
board. &#13;
The &#13;
accreditation &#13;
would &#13;
gain &#13;
the &#13;
Business &#13;
School &#13;
national &#13;
recognition. &#13;
The &#13;
second &#13;
objective &#13;
is &#13;
to &#13;
meet &#13;
the &#13;
expectations &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
major &#13;
stakeholders &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
School &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
who &#13;
are &#13;
students, &#13;
alumni&#13;
, faculty &#13;
and &#13;
local &#13;
busnesses. &#13;
These &#13;
expectations &#13;
are &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
identified &#13;
through &#13;
three &#13;
advisory &#13;
boards; &#13;
two &#13;
of &#13;
which &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
developed &#13;
and &#13;
directed &#13;
by &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Brown. &#13;
The &#13;
advisory &#13;
boards &#13;
include &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
current &#13;
Business &#13;
Board &#13;
which &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
doubled, &#13;
sitting &#13;
twenty &#13;
professional &#13;
business &#13;
representatives, &#13;
representing &#13;
firms &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
Northwestern &#13;
Mutual &#13;
Life, &#13;
Abbot &#13;
Labs &#13;
and &#13;
Gander &#13;
Mountain. &#13;
In &#13;
addition &#13;
the &#13;
board &#13;
seeks &#13;
to &#13;
represent &#13;
a &#13;
greater &#13;
portion &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
area's &#13;
service &#13;
industries, &#13;
Kenosha's &#13;
Lakeview &#13;
Corporate &#13;
Park &#13;
region, &#13;
and &#13;
a greater &#13;
portion &#13;
of &#13;
northeastern &#13;
Illinois. &#13;
The &#13;
two &#13;
new &#13;
advisory &#13;
boards &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside&#13;
's School &#13;
of &#13;
Business &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
Student &#13;
Advisory &#13;
Board &#13;
( currently &#13;
under &#13;
selection) &#13;
which &#13;
is &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
selected &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
representative &#13;
sample &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
attending &#13;
the &#13;
Business &#13;
School &#13;
to &#13;
offer &#13;
suggestions &#13;
and &#13;
concerns &#13;
regarding &#13;
future &#13;
majors/concentrations &#13;
and &#13;
related &#13;
curriculum &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
Business &#13;
School. &#13;
The &#13;
second &#13;
Board &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
Alumni &#13;
Advisory &#13;
Board &#13;
(currently &#13;
under &#13;
selection), &#13;
which &#13;
will &#13;
reflect &#13;
current &#13;
job &#13;
markets &#13;
and &#13;
career &#13;
trends &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
local &#13;
professional &#13;
business &#13;
area. &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown &#13;
academic &#13;
background &#13;
includes &#13;
a &#13;
BA &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Kansas with &#13;
a major &#13;
in &#13;
Journalism, &#13;
a &#13;
M.S. &#13;
in &#13;
Education &#13;
from &#13;
Emporia &#13;
State &#13;
University &#13;
with &#13;
a major &#13;
in &#13;
Business &#13;
Education &#13;
and &#13;
a Ph.D &#13;
in &#13;
Business &#13;
Adminstratino &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Illinois &#13;
with &#13;
majors &#13;
in &#13;
Marketing &#13;
and &#13;
Economics. &#13;
His &#13;
current &#13;
interests &#13;
and &#13;
hobbies &#13;
include &#13;
various &#13;
outdoor &#13;
activities &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
camping &#13;
and &#13;
outdoor &#13;
sports. &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Richard &#13;
D. &#13;
Brown &#13;
has &#13;
the &#13;
academic &#13;
background &#13;
and &#13;
professional &#13;
experience &#13;
to &#13;
lead &#13;
the &#13;
UW &#13;
-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
Busineu &#13;
School &#13;
to &#13;
becoming &#13;
a &#13;
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force &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
professional &#13;
job &#13;
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which &#13;
will &#13;
greatly &#13;
enhance &#13;
the &#13;
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and &#13;
community &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
process. &#13;
We &#13;
look &#13;
forward &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
productive &#13;
future. &#13;
•aag &#13;
a &#13;
great &#13;
fall &#13;
job! &#13;
1993-94 &#13;
STAFF &#13;
Editor-In-Chief &#13;
.......................................................................... &#13;
Steven &#13;
Moore &#13;
Managing &#13;
Editor &#13;
.............................................................. &#13;
Stanley &#13;
Washington &#13;
Assisting &#13;
Managing &#13;
Editor &#13;
............................................. &#13;
, &#13;
....... &#13;
Joseph &#13;
G. &#13;
Kane &#13;
Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
................................................................. &#13;
Tanya &#13;
M. &#13;
Domik &#13;
Assistant &#13;
Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
............................................. &#13;
Christine &#13;
L. &#13;
Wilson &#13;
Layout &#13;
Editor/Deslgner &#13;
.................................................. &#13;
Raymond &#13;
G. &#13;
Wiggins &#13;
News &#13;
Edltor &#13;
......................................................................... &#13;
Nicholas &#13;
w. &#13;
Zahn &#13;
Assistant &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
................................................................ &#13;
Alan &#13;
R. &#13;
Cook &#13;
Feature &#13;
Editor &#13;
............................................................... &#13;
Christopher &#13;
S. &#13;
Ttshuk &#13;
Sports &#13;
Editor &#13;
........................................................................ &#13;
Kevin &#13;
C. &#13;
Williams &#13;
Copy &#13;
Editor &#13;
............................................................................ &#13;
Joseph &#13;
G. &#13;
Kane &#13;
Copy &#13;
Editor &#13;
.......................................................................... &#13;
; &#13;
... &#13;
Gabe &#13;
R. &#13;
Kluka &#13;
Copy &#13;
Editor &#13;
............................................................................ &#13;
Vanessa &#13;
Woods &#13;
Calendar &#13;
Editor &#13;
................................................................... &#13;
Betty &#13;
c. &#13;
Mcllvaine &#13;
Photo &#13;
Editor &#13;
..................................................................... &#13;
Michael &#13;
D. &#13;
Paupore &#13;
Photographer &#13;
.............................................................................. &#13;
Greg &#13;
Lebrick &#13;
Entertainment &#13;
Edltor &#13;
.......................................................... &#13;
Jeffrey &#13;
M. &#13;
Weniger &#13;
Cartoonist/Designs &#13;
..................................................................... &#13;
Moss &#13;
Ingram &#13;
ColLmlisls: &#13;
Mary &#13;
Ritchie, &#13;
Gabs &#13;
R. &#13;
Kka, &#13;
C. &#13;
J. &#13;
Nelson, &#13;
J088ph &#13;
G. &#13;
Kane &#13;
George &#13;
Harris &#13;
Jr., &#13;
Reginald &#13;
Slaiqrter, &#13;
Jeffrey &#13;
Weniger, &#13;
Jeffrey &#13;
B. &#13;
Woosley, &#13;
Reg~ &#13;
Bros~ &#13;
Sandra &#13;
Swantz, &#13;
Atbey &#13;
Walker, &#13;
Yolanda &#13;
Jackson, &#13;
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Brian &#13;
Matsen. &#13;
Advisors: &#13;
Julie &#13;
Klng, &#13;
And'ew &#13;
Mclean, &#13;
Stuart &#13;
Rubner, &#13;
Jan &#13;
Nowak, &#13;
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Jllly &#13;
Logsdon &#13;
General &#13;
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Ginger &#13;
Helgeson, &#13;
Gregoiy &#13;
Gauthier, &#13;
Greg &#13;
Jones, &#13;
Violet &#13;
Crulll)ler, &#13;
Mal'(J.lita &#13;
Hynes, &#13;
Joe &#13;
Buenker, &#13;
Brain &#13;
Matsen, &#13;
Vanessa &#13;
Woods, &#13;
Julie &#13;
Schuster, &#13;
Mike &#13;
Stukel, &#13;
Rick &#13;
Exner, &#13;
Susan &#13;
Luepkes, &#13;
Nathan &#13;
Can'blo, &#13;
Vihkas &#13;
Jethwani, &#13;
Mary &#13;
Dunnington, &#13;
Jared &#13;
Brie_sle, &#13;
Cory &#13;
R. &#13;
Rath, &#13;
Derek &#13;
Brown, &#13;
Jerem,, &#13;
H~ &#13;
Eric &#13;
Tegen, &#13;
Robb &#13;
Vanselow, &#13;
David &#13;
Foss, &#13;
Mark &#13;
lewis, &#13;
Scott &#13;
Gragate, &#13;
Wendy &#13;
Christopherson &#13;
Myron &#13;
Jackson &#13;
Mike &#13;
SIINel, &#13;
Al &#13;
Heppner, &#13;
Melinda &#13;
Vasatko, &#13;
Todd &#13;
Rhode, &#13;
Kay &#13;
S~gat, &#13;
Gary &#13;
Smith: &#13;
and &#13;
Jessica &#13;
Preiss. &#13;
#t &#13;
At &#13;
Ga~der &#13;
Mountain, &#13;
you &#13;
can &#13;
earn &#13;
good &#13;
money, &#13;
work &#13;
a  convenient &#13;
schedule, &#13;
a~~ &#13;
still &#13;
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the &#13;
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you &#13;
need &#13;
for &#13;
family&#13;
, friends&#13;
, school &#13;
or &#13;
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~mng &#13;
upbeat &#13;
individuals &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
us &#13;
sell &#13;
and &#13;
distribute &#13;
our &#13;
premier &#13;
hunting, &#13;
fish· &#13;
mg &#13;
and &#13;
c~ping &#13;
equ~pme?t&#13;
, &#13;
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have &#13;
hours &#13;
that &#13;
are &#13;
flexible &#13;
enough &#13;
to &#13;
fit &#13;
most &#13;
any &#13;
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looking &#13;
to &#13;
"bag&#13;
" a super &#13;
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this &#13;
fall &#13;
consider &#13;
the &#13;
following&#13;
: &#13;
' &#13;
. &#13;
Telephone &#13;
Sales &#13;
Reps &#13;
Work &#13;
fu~ &#13;
or &#13;
part-time, &#13;
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evening &#13;
or &#13;
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friendly &#13;
personality &#13;
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are &#13;
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' &#13;
Warehouse &#13;
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Returns &#13;
Clerk· &#13;
Full-time, &#13;
first &#13;
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of &#13;
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Must &#13;
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5 &#13;
9 &#13;
• &#13;
' &#13;
h &#13;
m &#13;
or &#13;
pm-&#13;
pm &#13;
are &#13;
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for &#13;
anyone &#13;
with &#13;
free &#13;
eveni.ng &#13;
ours &#13;
or &#13;
anyone &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
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or &#13;
part-time, &#13;
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-&#13;
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cashiering &#13;
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Associates &#13;
-&#13;
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fishing &#13;
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• &#13;
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• &#13;
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on &#13;
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~&#13;
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8 &#13;
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at &#13;
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Box &#13;
128, &#13;
Hwy. &#13;
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53192 &#13;
or &#13;
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(Co::• &#13;
. &#13;
am: &#13;
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338 &#13;
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105, &#13;
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WI &#13;
534()6. &#13;
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Y &#13;
ocated &#13;
next &#13;
to &#13;
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_ &#13;
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              <text>Professors Participate In Academic Exchange with Nigeria</text>
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              <text>SPORTS: College Be&#13;
Professional Football&#13;
Predictions&#13;
pg.14&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Columns&#13;
Observing the steps to&#13;
making sense of suPPly&#13;
and demand.&#13;
pg. 5-!)&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Early Years:&#13;
A Retrospective Look At&#13;
UW-Parkside's&#13;
Formative years.&#13;
pg.3&#13;
I&#13;
- THE NEWS September 16th, 1993 • Vol. 22 • Issue 3&#13;
PROFESSORS PAR,.ICIPA,.E IN&#13;
ACADEMIC EXCRANGE WI,.R NIGERIA&#13;
special to the Ranger&#13;
"I am having experiences that&#13;
no book can capture," says Dr.&#13;
Wole Ogundele, a visiting&#13;
professor from Nigeria, who is&#13;
teaching a one semester course&#13;
in African Literature at&#13;
Parkside this fall. "I have been&#13;
to the United States twice&#13;
before for brief visi ts, staying in&#13;
hotels, but now I am getting the&#13;
real feel of the place.'&#13;
"In books I can read about&#13;
I palm wine drinkers," continues&#13;
Dr. Leon Van Dyke, Professor of&#13;
Dramatic Arts at UW-Parkside,&#13;
"but in Nigeria, I could actually&#13;
drink palm wine ... I can read&#13;
about the talking drums which&#13;
are quite famous, but when you&#13;
I really experience it, it is really&#13;
quite indescribable, as they sing&#13;
your praises with the drum."&#13;
Ogundele and Van Dyke are&#13;
participants in a cultural&#13;
immersion program sponsored&#13;
by the United States&#13;
Information Agency. Van Dyke&#13;
was to be in Nigeria for two&#13;
months, this summer past,&#13;
teaching at Obafemi Awolowa&#13;
University in Ile-Ife, a school&#13;
roughly 1000 times the size of&#13;
Parkside where Ogundele&#13;
teaches 19th century English&#13;
Literature and poetry. Despite&#13;
a carefully planned program,&#13;
he was only able to conduct a&#13;
small workshop for advanced&#13;
acting students. "The&#13;
University faculty was on strike&#13;
... the actual reasons behind the&#13;
strike are somewhat&#13;
mysterious," states Van Dyke.&#13;
Ogundele explains that it has&#13;
much to do with the newly&#13;
appointed Minister of&#13;
Education unilaterally revoking&#13;
many parts of a former&#13;
agreement between faculty and&#13;
the governmen t. As a resul t, "I&#13;
was only able to meet with&#13;
University faculty and members&#13;
of a residential acting&#13;
company,' Van Dyke says.&#13;
"What Lee did was on his own&#13;
initiative,' Ogundele&#13;
I Cbalce Between Proteetlon 01&#13;
""'ven80n against Crime and VloI8nce'&#13;
alarms is that, "people may&#13;
ignore these like they do car&#13;
alarms,' noted Schlecht. She&#13;
continued, "my best advice is to&#13;
be aware of your surroundings&#13;
and know how to react and&#13;
avoid the situation in the first&#13;
place .•&#13;
When asked about spraying&#13;
dye in the face of an atacker,&#13;
Sgt. John Rohde, of the&#13;
Kenosha Police Department,&#13;
expressed concerns of legality.&#13;
However, Officer Schelcht&#13;
spoke with the office of the&#13;
Kenosha District Attorney and&#13;
was told that the product She&#13;
was referring to was legal.&#13;
DYEWitness Criminal&#13;
Identifier is the means of&#13;
protection against attack.&#13;
"Although it is not a&#13;
technological breakthrough it&#13;
may be a novel idea,' said an&#13;
employee of a local paint&#13;
factory. The employee went on&#13;
to say that a solvent to remove&#13;
any stain from the dye could&#13;
chemically be determined.&#13;
Nonetheless, it would seem that&#13;
an attacker marked with dyed&#13;
green skin, would be at a&#13;
disadvantage.&#13;
Continued on page 2&#13;
IJy Marquita Hynes&#13;
feature writer&#13;
Raised consciousness,&#13;
behavioral changes, and&#13;
SItuational adaptations: are&#13;
these attempts to protect&#13;
oneself from an assault? Are&#13;
these attempts to prevent an&#13;
assault? Information abounds&#13;
regarding the protection&#13;
against personal assaul ts.&#13;
Prevention is another matter.&#13;
Staff from the Women's&#13;
Center on this campus relayed&#13;
their concerns in a recent&#13;
interview to the Ranger. One&#13;
such concern was that un til&#13;
American society decides to&#13;
teach nonviolence&#13;
(prevention), people can only&#13;
protect themselves against&#13;
attacks.&#13;
Protection is a marketable&#13;
idea. Officer Marlene Schlecht,&#13;
of the Parkside Campus Police&#13;
showed this writer a box filled&#13;
with items that attempt to&#13;
protect a victim from an attack.&#13;
The mechanisms ranged from&#13;
hand held alarms to vision&#13;
obstructing solvents. Schlecht&#13;
said the campus police could&#13;
not endorse any such product.&#13;
A problem with hand held&#13;
emphasizes. States Van Dyke,&#13;
"My atti tude became one of&#13;
learning as much as I could&#13;
from the drama that was taking&#13;
place around me ... I was&#13;
saddened because of not&#13;
meeting with students.' After a&#13;
month in Nigeria, Van Dyke wa&#13;
asked to leave by the American&#13;
Consulate because of the&#13;
decaying political situation.&#13;
Despite his shortened visit, Van&#13;
Dyke reports that "I feel richer&#13;
for having been in Nigeria at&#13;
all. •&#13;
Describing his hasty&#13;
departure, Van Dyke quietly&#13;
says, "I was as close to a real&#13;
revolution as I'd ever like to be.&#13;
I was frightened sometimes,&#13;
especially on the last day as we&#13;
were driving to the capital.'&#13;
Van Dyke remembers driving&#13;
around and through burning&#13;
road-blocks. He remembers&#13;
feeling the heat licking at his&#13;
face and arms. "I was not&#13;
comfortable,' he describes in&#13;
an understated tone. "I felt&#13;
Dr. Leon Van Dyke with Dr. Wole Ogundele&#13;
that I was in the middle of a of children, starting a&#13;
mob action that could get revolution is a scary thing."&#13;
worse at any time. I was on Ogundele speaks of Van Dyke's&#13;
their (the students') side ... situation. "A white man is&#13;
Nevertheless, seeing a road full Continued on page 2&#13;
Book Store's Fresh Image a Success&#13;
Nicholas W. zahn&#13;
News Editor&#13;
someone collecting the books&#13;
for you. The old way that we&#13;
were doing it only caused&#13;
longer lines, not convenience&#13;
for the student.'&#13;
"At first students are a little&#13;
intimidated when they see that&#13;
they have to find their own&#13;
books. But after we give them&#13;
some direction, they have a&#13;
positive reaction."&#13;
The advising center moved&#13;
into the bookstore's old&#13;
location in WLLC 107 next to&#13;
the new teaching center.&#13;
"There are plans to renovate so&#13;
as to make the center more&#13;
easily accessible to students the&#13;
new location on the concourse&#13;
is a plus," said Jack Elmore,&#13;
director of the advising center.&#13;
According to G. Gary Grace,&#13;
assistant chancellor for student&#13;
affairs, money will be made&#13;
available in the upcoming year&#13;
for those renovations. The&#13;
renovations for the new&#13;
bookstore area, however, were&#13;
paid for completely by Follet,&#13;
the company contracted to run&#13;
the store. "Follet paid for all&#13;
the remodeling, which ended&#13;
up costing about $70,000.&#13;
Though that sounds quite&#13;
expensive, it's actually modest,&#13;
considering the cost of&#13;
masonry and labor. That&#13;
doesn't include things like the&#13;
shelves and furnishings ... •&#13;
Grace wen t on to explain&#13;
that "the bookstore's&#13;
renovation is actually an anchor&#13;
for remodeling of the entire&#13;
coffee shop area. We're&#13;
looking at upgrading food&#13;
service operations. n This&#13;
includes the possibility of&#13;
national fast food vendors.&#13;
Grace's goal is to get&#13;
campus operations up to&#13;
speed with students "If I had&#13;
a singular goal it would be to&#13;
reduce all lines on campusincluding&#13;
registration.'&#13;
"The campus store's new&#13;
look is more professional.&#13;
Students tend to like the selfservice,"&#13;
said Nancy Schroeder,&#13;
manager of the Parkside&#13;
Campus Bookstore.&#13;
Schroeder is referring to the&#13;
revamping of the bookstore&#13;
that took place over the&#13;
summer. The old bookstore&#13;
located in WLLCI07 moved to&#13;
WLLC Dl74 - the advising&#13;
center's old location.&#13;
"It was a much needed&#13;
change," said Schroeder. "Very&#13;
few college bookstores have&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
• I&#13;
-...... __ -&#13;
- - - ~... - --&#13;
SPORTS: Colleg &amp;&#13;
profi ional Fo otball&#13;
Predi tions&#13;
pg. 14&#13;
THE&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Columns&#13;
Obs erving the steps to&#13;
making ens e of supply&#13;
and demand.&#13;
pg. 5-9&#13;
P OFIISORS PAR ICI ATE I&#13;
ACADI IC IXC ANOE WITB NIDIBIA&#13;
Special to 1M Ranger Wa.\ to in. igena for tw&#13;
11:111111:11 le&#13;
Prnullan&#13;
bJ 1 la7VUht1 ff ml!'s&#13;
fi al'Urt writer&#13;
mo th , thi umme.r past&#13;
teaching at Obafi n11 wolowa&#13;
Dr. Uni er ity in De-lfi , a boo]&#13;
roughly 1000 tim lhe size o&#13;
Parksid wher Ogundele&#13;
lt!:ache 19th cenlUT}' Engli h&#13;
Literature and poetry. D . pite&#13;
a carefully plann d program,&#13;
he was only able to o dun a&#13;
ma.I workshop for advan d&#13;
acl!lng t denLS. "The&#13;
1 niv r · q1 faculty wa n 111lr.e&#13;
... th cmaJ reason beb'nd me&#13;
trike are somewhat&#13;
ID) t rious," tat Van Dyk,e.&#13;
OgU11dele explain. that it ha&#13;
much t d wh.h the ·ly&#13;
appointed Milliner of&#13;
Educ.atlon unildl&#13;
many par of a former&#13;
agreemenl ben,,·cen fa uJty d&#13;
the govermn lll. i a r u lt, ~1&#13;
wai; onJy a le ro meet with&#13;
ni r ity faculcy• and m mber:&#13;
ofa r idential ting&#13;
company,'" an Dy •&#13;
"\VbaL Lee did mu on his own&#13;
e initiati\\ , Ogundel _,&#13;
RA EWS - YO&#13;
I ak lar 'a&#13;
• richatas ~ ZuJm&#13;
rm, EditlJJ'&#13;
'The campu 5Lor ' nev,•&#13;
look is more pro essional.&#13;
tudenu tend to 1ike th elf"&#13;
r ,ce," d ·an hroeder,&#13;
theParbide&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Early Years:&#13;
A RBtrorpective Look At&#13;
UW:.Pamside 's&#13;
Formative years.&#13;
pg. 3&#13;
NEWS 1&#13;
that I was m the middle of&#13;
mob action tha c uJd get&#13;
worse at any tim . I n&#13;
their (the tudcn ')side ...&#13;
e\·erth e1e . , full&#13;
C&#13;
• 3&#13;
B&#13;
th&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 2&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
IIlgerla, caat.from PI.I&#13;
highly visible and vulnerable to&#13;
being held hostage no matter&#13;
what his sympathies." he&#13;
explains. "He is very&#13;
conspicuous. "&#13;
The civil unrest was&#13;
precipitated by an election held&#13;
in Nigeria on June 12, 199~.&#13;
Nigeria's military leader,&#13;
apparently dissatisfied with the&#13;
results, has annulled the&#13;
election. "It is illegal to even&#13;
speak of it." claims Ogundele.&#13;
"It is as if it has never&#13;
happened." He chuckles and&#13;
says, "The best way to respond&#13;
is to laugh and regard it as a&#13;
comedy." Van Dyke hastens to&#13;
add, "Yet it is the lives of our&#13;
friends and family which are&#13;
effected ... It is a comedy with a&#13;
tear in the middle of it."&#13;
Ogundele's wife and three&#13;
cl ildren remain in Nigeria.&#13;
Vs.n Dyke sums up his hopes&#13;
at: d fears: "I want a sane&#13;
resolution to this mad situation&#13;
and 1 fear for one ... I fear for&#13;
the friends that 1 made."&#13;
On August 23, Ogundele left&#13;
Nigeria for his portion of the&#13;
planned exchange. He spent&#13;
some 20 hours in the air, flying&#13;
to Chicago by way of Brazil,&#13;
because there are no longer&#13;
any direct flights available&#13;
between Nigeria and the U.S.&#13;
He says that he is not overly&#13;
concerned about not being&#13;
able to return. "Even if we&#13;
wanted to be a totalitarian&#13;
regime," he claims, "it would be&#13;
impossible, because of our&#13;
history and culture ... This is a&#13;
government that is trying to&#13;
please everyone ... They won't&#13;
restrict movement." Ogundele&#13;
summarizes, "As of now, I have&#13;
no fear of not being able to&#13;
return anytime I like."&#13;
Ogundele reports that in&#13;
comparison with his home, he&#13;
feels fairly safe here. "We know&#13;
that there is serious violence&#13;
here." he says, " but the&#13;
violence here is more&#13;
predictable and hence more&#13;
avoidable than what I am used&#13;
to ... Violence in Nigeria is&#13;
inimical, random,&#13;
un predictable."&#13;
Ogundele describes his&#13;
reception at Parkside as "very&#13;
satisfying." He speaks of the&#13;
advantages of a small campus.&#13;
"here, I was able to have lunch&#13;
with the Chancellor. In&#13;
Nigeria, I would have to make&#13;
an appointment weeks in&#13;
advance, for just a word."&#13;
Asked about his initial&#13;
impressions of the U.s.,&#13;
Ogundele responds. "Well, in&#13;
Africa. we tend to know more&#13;
about the U.S. than we do&#13;
about ourselves .., We get&#13;
almost daily reports of what is&#13;
happening in the U.S. through&#13;
the BBC and in our&#13;
newspapers," he chuckles. Van&#13;
Dyke teasingly says, "Yeah, he&#13;
knows Springsteen and Dylan&#13;
better than I do." Ogundele&#13;
goes on, "In all seriousness,&#13;
though, there so far has not&#13;
been any disappointment ...&#13;
The reality has not fallen short&#13;
of the expectations."&#13;
Ogundele, a bright, witty and&#13;
personable scholar, can be&#13;
found in his office or in the&#13;
coffee shoppe or courtyard,&#13;
chatting with students.&#13;
Immersing himself in the&#13;
culture of Parkside, he adds to&#13;
Parkside an incisive and&#13;
refreshing presence. We at the&#13;
Rangt'&gt;' bid him welcome and&#13;
best wishes.&#13;
1993-94 STAFF&#13;
Edltor-ln-Ohlef Steven Moore&#13;
Managing Editor ...•.. ,•...••••...•....•........................•.....••.....• Stanley Washington&#13;
Assisting Managing Editor .........................•••..••.••....••••...•..•... Joseph G. Kane&#13;
Business Manager Tanya M. Domlk&#13;
Assistant Business Manager Christine L. Wilson&#13;
Layout Editor/Designer Raymond G. WIggins&#13;
News Editor Nlcholas W. Zahn&#13;
Assistant News Editor : Alan R. Cook&#13;
Feature Editor ....•.................•....••..........••••...................• Christopher S. Tishuk&#13;
Sports Editor Kevin C. Williams&#13;
Copy Editor Joseph G. Kane&#13;
Copy Editor Gabe R. Kluka&#13;
Copy Editor Vanessa Woods&#13;
Calendar Editor Betty C. Mcilvaine&#13;
Photo Editor Michael D. Paupore&#13;
Photographer Greg Lebrick&#13;
Entertainment Editor Jeffrey M. Weniger&#13;
Cartoonlst'Deslgns Moss Ingram&#13;
Colurmists: Mary Ritchie, Gabe K1uka. C. J. Nelson, Joseph G. Kane, George&#13;
Harris Jr., Reginald Slaughter, Jeffrey Weniger, Jeffrey a. Woosley, Regie Brost,&#13;
Sandra Swantz, Awey Walker, Yolanda Jackson, and Brian Matsen.&#13;
Advioors: Julie King, Anci"ew Mclean, Stuart Rubner,&#13;
Jan Nowak, and Jt.dy Logsdon&#13;
General Staff:&#13;
Ginger Helgeson. Gregory Gauthier, Greg Jones, Violet Crufll)ler. MarqJita Hynes,&#13;
Joe Buenker, Brain Matsen, Vanessa Woods, Julie actueter, Mike Stukel, Rick&#13;
Exner, Suoan L.uepk .. , Nathan Carrillo, Vlhkas Jethwanl, Mary Dunnington, Jared&#13;
ari.. le, Cory R. Rath, Derek Brown, Jeremy Haudt, Eric Tegen, Rotb Vanselow,&#13;
David Fose, Marl&lt;Lewle, Scott Gragale, We"", Christopherson, Myron Jackeon,&#13;
Mike ShNel, AI Heppner, Melinda Vllllalko, Todd Rhode, Kay Sogal, Gary Smith,&#13;
and J888lca PnHss.&#13;
Studying Abroad Made Possible&#13;
Grant Larset: is definitely "no". don't know where to apply for a :/&#13;
by I discovered during the few program; (insert your favorite&#13;
"It's th . ceofa months I lived in Ireland that excuse here). Yet, regardless of ,&#13;
-lifettims e!"e expenen statements such as these are not th ese "reas ons" , students of&#13;
_"I learned so much and had a merely advertisements for every age, racekgsr'ex, andd ~&#13;
great n.me dooimg it!" capitalistic ventures They are economic bac oun manage I • • tak t in these program&#13;
_ "You have to see the place and the honest expressions of many to e par s&#13;
meet the people to understand students who have had a every semester '. How they ill&#13;
how beautiful the country is!" profound experience manage to J?aI:uopate IS not a JJ&#13;
Are th ese su. np Iy thousands of miles . away from moyrskte,ry. It IS not even hard /&#13;
overpunctuated statements their local uni~erslty. w " ~&#13;
made for the benefit of the Excuses for ignormg the On Sept. 22, UW-Parkslde s 4'&#13;
rro' reign touns.t. 10dus tr'y. opportunity to study abroad ,are Cendteir for IInternatioDn'al SIP' .M&#13;
Rhetoric used to sell tickets? many: I can't afford it; I don t Stu es we comes iane 0 es~,&#13;
For students abroad, the answer speak a foreign language well; 1 from the University of . ,&#13;
Wisconsm-Madison. She will rJ&#13;
give a presentation and will I"&#13;
encourage discussion regarding "&#13;
study abroad programs. Also in I'&#13;
attendance and willing to ~&#13;
answer questions will be past ~&#13;
participants of such programs. IjIo&#13;
Parkside students are welcome ,J&#13;
to apply for programs&#13;
throughout the UW system (of I~ which Madison offers 5~ iii'&#13;
programs in ~2 countries). (!II&#13;
Simply attend the meeting next II"&#13;
Wednesday at noon in Moln. Ilfb.&#13;
109 to begin planning your jjll&#13;
"experience of a lifetime". r-r&#13;
11-&#13;
1\&#13;
,1&#13;
iii&#13;
III&#13;
I~ll! Following UW-System ."&#13;
approval, declarations of III&#13;
majors in French and German 111&#13;
Studies are being accepted with m.&#13;
Fall 199~ at UW-Parkside. The Ii&#13;
revised majors consist of a ~4 1M&#13;
credit minimum for French III&#13;
and 35 credi ts for German. III&#13;
Interested students or those na&#13;
seeking further information I&#13;
should consult with Professor ((J&#13;
Zepp (CA 256, 595-2~63) in l(]&#13;
French or Professor Christoph Il'&#13;
(CA 242, 595-2~96) in German. III&#13;
~~~&#13;
I~ Starting September 20, the ~&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Organization will meet&#13;
Mondays at 4:~0 in CART 129. ,&#13;
The student senate voted to I&#13;
change the date and time from&#13;
Fridays at noon. It was decided .&#13;
that a longer meeting at the IC&#13;
new time would allow more p&#13;
students to attend and better I&#13;
facilitate discussion. I I:&#13;
1'i"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""'iI1&#13;
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Prevention, contlrom pg. I&#13;
Dan Mitchell, Kenosha&#13;
resident and seller of the&#13;
product, views the price of the&#13;
spray dye to be comparable to a&#13;
trip to the hair salon. He&#13;
became interested in the&#13;
product when he saw it at a Las&#13;
Vegas trade show. Mitchell&#13;
supported his product by saying&#13;
it is legal, unlike pepper spray.&#13;
Protection is indeed a&#13;
marketable concept; but, it&#13;
does not preven t crimes.&#13;
Several Parkside students&#13;
did say that they try to protect&#13;
themselves from physical&#13;
attack through behavioral&#13;
changes and situational&#13;
adaptations.&#13;
Mike Morrone, a senior&#13;
studying geography, said that&#13;
when in a leery situation, "I&#13;
look around, I watch." He&#13;
avoids areas in large cities that&#13;
may be troublesome and has&#13;
had, on occasion, had to&#13;
present himself in an&#13;
imposing manner.&#13;
Jenny Punzel, a&#13;
communication major, always&#13;
tries to keep alert when at&#13;
school in the evening. She&#13;
recalled how, in her&#13;
neighborhood, "walking home&#13;
once I had someone fallowing&#13;
me, so I just walked up to a&#13;
house and acted like it was&#13;
mine." It worked.&#13;
Parkside senior, Stephanie&#13;
Ritter relays another sentiment.&#13;
Said Ri tter, "I have a really hard&#13;
time with this idea of always&#13;
having to be cautious. We have&#13;
to go to extremes to be safe.&#13;
There's no privacy left in our&#13;
lives. 1 think that really hurts&#13;
me more than anything else. I&#13;
have to rely on others for my&#13;
exercise (not jogging aloner-for&#13;
my transportation. If I don't I'll&#13;
partially be at fault (if&#13;
assaulted). It's a difficult&#13;
situation. It frustrates me and&#13;
makes me angry."&#13;
There are attempts to stop&#13;
violence in American society.&#13;
Makato State University in&#13;
Mankato, Minnesota teaches&#13;
classes in nonviolence. Anyone&#13;
interested in more information&#13;
on the subject can stop by the&#13;
Women's Center.&#13;
Frencb 8&#13;
German Malols&#13;
Reinstated&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
PIGATo Meet&#13;
On Mondays&#13;
"&#13;
========~~~~~=---:-------------I\ RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
$&#13;
RA S llgarlll, GDaL ba• pg.I&#13;
94 Col - : Ma,y Rl!Dhle, G R.&#13;
rra Jr., Reginald Sllltq1!11r, J&#13;
s.oora swana. Attirey w&#13;
AcMsofs: Juli&#13;
J&#13;
RA&#13;
a '1t's th riem:e o&#13;
lifelim I"&#13;
a I learn d 110 much and had a&#13;
gr at llme doing it!&#13;
- "You have to the plareand&#13;
m t the people to understand&#13;
ow b utiful the cou uy · !&#13;
fb.e3-e impl'&#13;
0\-erpun tu d tatements&#13;
made for che benefit of 1h&#13;
foreign touri l industry?&#13;
Rhetoric u ed to sell ·ck.e&#13;
For stud nts abroad, Ner&#13;
Mi c ell, Kl n h&#13;
reiident viell.'I! ,pra b com iarabl LO th H&#13;
beam inter ed th&#13;
sa ¼:gas ho . by it: i pra .&#13;
mark 1:able nc , t, d preli nl trim.&#13;
ra! Parui e tuden&#13;
th o-y pr-o ec&#13;
tbemsehi; from ph ical&#13;
au.act beha1.ioral&#13;
chang ituational&#13;
adaptatio&#13;
• like Morron , enior&#13;
tudying g lfrapby; said that&#13;
wh n in a leer')' i tu.ation, I&#13;
loo watch. H&#13;
avoiru area larg ' tie lt at&#13;
C"ou ble ome h&#13;
had, on occasion, had lo&#13;
pre t himsdf m an&#13;
imp ing J nny PuT1Zel, ommunicati major: I ys&#13;
alen h 11 t&#13;
1lr mpg. WANTED1&#13;
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tinations I Spring&#13;
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Sun S lash ours 1-426-77 0&#13;
R #1 NEW ALL 595-2287&#13;
2&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 3&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993 CAMPUS&#13;
NEW S&#13;
Recollection of Parkside's Early Days&#13;
A l/£/rospectrue View Of the Personal Histary of Our Great University&#13;
by Greg Gauthier&#13;
This is Part 2 in a series of&#13;
articles commemorating Parkside 's&#13;
25th amlivmary year. By iJrillgillg&#13;
its history to today's students we&#13;
bring in the hope that we aU might -&#13;
be better able to embody the letter&#13;
and spirit of this annrumary year's&#13;
motto: "Knou: the Past / Imagine&#13;
theFature"&#13;
As pointed out earlier, the&#13;
selection of the Petrifying&#13;
Springs property in Kenosha&#13;
County was, at best, a last effort by the selection&#13;
committee to produce a site&#13;
which would, at the very least,&#13;
please President Fred Harvey&#13;
Harrington. At the time, that's&#13;
about all that it did. In&#13;
retrospect, the property was&#13;
probably the best of all possible&#13;
places that Parkside could have&#13;
gone, few were willing to&#13;
concede the fact at the time.&#13;
The committee's selection of&#13;
the Petrifying Springs property&#13;
marked the climax of Parkside's&#13;
early development. Rather than&#13;
quieting the storm surrounding&#13;
the selection committee's&#13;
various other doomed&#13;
decisions, the Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park property selection raised&#13;
the amplitude of public&#13;
discontent to it's highest level.&#13;
Indeed, many of the area's&#13;
residents were anything but&#13;
ready to welcome their new&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
In a letter of objection to the&#13;
committee's plans to&#13;
acquisition privately owned&#13;
property, one resident lashed&#13;
out at former President&#13;
Harrington as valueless,&#13;
comparing the decision to the&#13;
"ruthlessness" of industry, and&#13;
chastised the president thus:&#13;
"When the schoolmaster joins&#13;
with 'trade's unfailing train', he&#13;
loses his identity, and reason for&#13;
being." Others were less hostile,&#13;
as was another local resident,&#13;
who offered 16 acres of his&#13;
farm adjacent to the Parkside&#13;
property, and even submitted a&#13;
plan to construct a swimming&#13;
pool on the tract.&#13;
period lingered long into it's&#13;
early growth period.&#13;
WIthin the soil of that fight,&#13;
though, lay the seeds of a&#13;
vibrant and growing Universityin&#13;
the form of a master plan&#13;
developed by the architectural&#13;
firm of Helmut, Obata, and&#13;
the structure.&#13;
Greenquist Hall, the original&#13;
classroom building upon which&#13;
the majority of expansion has&#13;
taken place, was named for&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist, a&#13;
prominent member of&#13;
University of Wisconsin's Board&#13;
In a process which progressed&#13;
from negotiation to outright&#13;
condemnation, the county&#13;
finally aquired 31 contiguous&#13;
properties amounting to $2. I&#13;
million, which constituted the&#13;
whole of the Parkside Campus.&#13;
According to Parkside's own&#13;
original Academic Philosophy&#13;
statement "A University gains&#13;
strength by relating itself to the&#13;
region in which it is located."&#13;
Much of this strength had been&#13;
sapped by the events of the&#13;
previous year-and-a-half. This&#13;
process crowned a period of&#13;
aggravation and acrimony, and&#13;
the hostility fostered during this&#13;
Kassabaum of St. Louis. They&#13;
proposed a $6.5 million plan,&#13;
which initially included&#13;
Greenquist, and Tallent Halls.&#13;
The Library Learning Center,&#13;
the PhyEd Building, and the&#13;
Communicatjpn Arts building&#13;
were all part of the original&#13;
master plan designed by Gyo&#13;
Obata, a partner of the&#13;
architectural firm which took&#13;
the project on in 1966,&#13;
specifically to "de-emphasize&#13;
clearly defined stories, or&#13;
floors", and to center visual&#13;
attention and student activity&#13;
around the Library Learning&#13;
Center, intended as the hub of&#13;
Volunteer Opportunilie.&#13;
CLINICAL ASSISTANT for&#13;
Planned Parenthood of&#13;
Kenosha. Volunteer will be&#13;
asked to answer telephone,&#13;
maintain cross index files, work&#13;
with charts and other office&#13;
duties. Must have good&#13;
communication skills and use&#13;
professional telephone&#13;
protocol., See Carol in the&#13;
Volunteer Office.&#13;
UMOS OF KENOSHA is&#13;
requesting volunteers to&#13;
become a companion for&#13;
clients who have an alcohol&#13;
abuse problem. Must be&#13;
patient, recovering, able to be&#13;
supportive and preferably, bilingual.&#13;
Contact Kent Cairo at&#13;
694-1204 or the Par kside&#13;
Volunteer Office.&#13;
HOT UNE OPERATOR for&#13;
Safe Haven in Racine. Become&#13;
aware of Current community&#13;
resources, develop counseling&#13;
skills and learn how to react in&#13;
a crisis situation. Training will&#13;
begin soon. Ask for more&#13;
information in the Career&#13;
Center-Volunteer Office.&#13;
BECOME A BIG&#13;
BROTHER/BIG SISTER to&#13;
children from-dysfunctional&#13;
homes. Your friendship and&#13;
guidance can influence&#13;
someone's life. Ask for details.&#13;
jERSTAD AGERHOLM&#13;
MIDDLE SCHOOL IN RACINE&#13;
needs help in the after school&#13;
study sessions. Help out 1&#13;
afternoon per week for 1 hour.&#13;
out interpersonal and&#13;
tutoring skills with 6th-8th&#13;
graders in a supervised study&#13;
hall. Education become&#13;
your station in life. Visit the&#13;
Volunteer Office in the Career&#13;
Center.&#13;
HOSPICE ALLIANCE IS IN&#13;
NEED OF DIRECT SERVICE&#13;
VOLUNTEERS. An 8 session&#13;
training course is being offered&#13;
at the Hospice offices. Classes&#13;
are conducted on Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday nights from 7-9 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha classes begin Sept.&#13;
28th, Burlington classes start on&#13;
Oct. 19th, and Racine classes&#13;
sta"' November 2nd. Prehean.,&#13;
students welcome.&#13;
Volunteers must be 18 years old&#13;
and make a 1 year&#13;
commitment. Get more&#13;
information in the Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
LOCAL ELEMENTARY&#13;
SCHOOLS want Parkside&#13;
student volunteers. Bose&#13;
Elementary School-in Kenosha&#13;
and Dr. Jones Elementary in&#13;
Racine are waiting for patient&#13;
and enthusiastic students who&#13;
can help individual children&#13;
with reading, math and&#13;
spelling. Call 595-2011 for an&#13;
appointment.&#13;
CANOE GUIDES, TICKET&#13;
MANAGERS AND FOOD&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS are needed&#13;
for a one-time event called&#13;
Harvest Fest at River Bend&#13;
Nature Center in Racine on&#13;
Sunday, September 19th from&#13;
12:0Q.4:00pm. See Tonya in&#13;
the Volunteer Office today.&#13;
Contact Carol in. the Volunteer&#13;
Office, WLLC-D175 or call, 595-&#13;
2011. Visit the Volunteer Office-&#13;
WLLC-D175 far mare infomuuion:&#13;
of Regents (and president, at&#13;
the time of his death in April,&#13;
1968). Greenquist was a vocal&#13;
supporter of plans to develop a&#13;
four-year university in Southeast&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Tallent Hall was named after&#13;
Bernard C. Tallent, the first&#13;
director of University of&#13;
Wisconsin's two year Kenosha&#13;
center. Tallent ran the center&#13;
for 17 years, until his death in&#13;
1965. Tallent was particularly&#13;
known for his devotion to&#13;
education and community&#13;
service, and was awarded an&#13;
Honorary Doctorate&#13;
of&#13;
Humane Letters in 1965.&#13;
These original buildings were&#13;
not large enough to handle&#13;
many of the necessary&#13;
requirements of the university,&#13;
and several temporary&#13;
structures had to be erected to&#13;
bear the burden. Even more&#13;
interesingly, several of the&#13;
administrative and support&#13;
services - including the library&#13;
utilized many of the old&#13;
buildings abandoned by their&#13;
unfortunate owners.&#13;
The Library Learning Center,&#13;
which replaced makeshift&#13;
temporary buildings as the&#13;
reference center for the&#13;
university, was not approved for&#13;
construction until October of&#13;
1969, along with the plans for&#13;
the PhyEd building, in the&#13;
midst of a $20.3 million&#13;
construction program in the&#13;
1969-1971 biennium. The&#13;
library cost $7 million to&#13;
construct, and the P.E.&#13;
builiding was slated at $2.2&#13;
million.&#13;
These two buildings were not&#13;
ready for occupancy until fall of&#13;
1972, which would be the same&#13;
year that Parkside was to receive&#13;
it's own separate accredidation,&#13;
apart from the parent facility&#13;
UWMadison, from the North&#13;
Central Association of Colleges,&#13;
and secondary schools. The&#13;
Comm Arts Building would not&#13;
be ready for use until fall of&#13;
1973, and the Union, attached&#13;
to the main campus, would not&#13;
be available until 1976. The&#13;
Physical Education Building's&#13;
original plans included an&#13;
extension for future growth,&#13;
and was actually considered&#13;
during the 1975-77 biennium,&#13;
but has not been -looked at&#13;
since.&#13;
Next Issue: Political Activity in&#13;
Patkside's "Tender" Years.&#13;
Dr. Peace to Speak OR&#13;
Education&#13;
On September 20, at NOON,&#13;
Dr. G. Earl Peace Jr., UWSystem&#13;
Academic Planner in&#13;
the Office of Academic Affairs,&#13;
will be speaking on "Process&#13;
Oriented Science Education" in&#13;
Moln 0-137.&#13;
While Dr. Peace was a&#13;
chemistry faculty member at&#13;
the College of Holy Cross,&#13;
Worcester, MA, the chemistry&#13;
department developed a&#13;
laboratory-centered approach&#13;
to the teaching of general&#13;
chemistry entitled Discovery&#13;
Chemistry. This approach&#13;
emphasizes the connection&#13;
between a theory and the&#13;
supporting empirical data. New&#13;
topics are first introduced in&#13;
the laboratory and then&#13;
discussed more fully later in&#13;
lecture. The students&#13;
participate in a cooperative&#13;
effort in which they are&#13;
partners in the learning&#13;
process. The inductive nature&#13;
of the laboratory format&#13;
appeals to the students' sense&#13;
of drama and, during the postlaboratory&#13;
meeting, provides&#13;
them with the opportunity to&#13;
experience the meaning of&#13;
discovery - that flash of understanding&#13;
which draws many of&#13;
us to the study of science.&#13;
Campus events succeed&#13;
hen published In&#13;
the Ranger&#13;
tel. 595-2287&#13;
7&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-228.7&#13;
a&#13;
RA - EWS laHl•cllan al Parkalda'a ,-\ ~it,y V-lffi' Ofth, Ptmmal H'mary o/Cmivmiiy&#13;
· 2in m a 'cln a:nnmemcmt 1,g PadcsidR's&#13;
1Jlh am1m ary year,; B,y bringing&#13;
IU histary lo toda 's students~&#13;
/Jmig • , hojJt wt all rmght&#13;
,,,, t,rttlr abu w tmhooJ tmo lRtn'&#13;
f1Jld ann.ivmary ear~&#13;
,r1otto.· Ktiow &amp;At PasJ I lmagiu~&#13;
t Futurr•&#13;
. poin d arHe. th&#13;
sel ction tl1e pnng Keno h&#13;
las gasp&#13;
df rt election&#13;
prod i te&#13;
whlch ety lea&#13;
Pre iden l larrin.gt.on. he I.hat'&#13;
al.I tba retro pect, ro rty lhe be lo all arksid ouJd g nc, we 10&#13;
ncede th l Tb ommiUee' selectlon P trifyin prings mack d clima." Park.side'&#13;
earl dei.•efopmenL Rath r qweting he to _ u.rroundiog&#13;
lection commiu '&#13;
-a.nous otbeTdoom d&#13;
decisiom, prings&#13;
]eel.ion rai ed&#13;
amplitud p blic&#13;
ont n o it' 1 el&#13;
lndeed, oft e id ts wer, anythi g hut&#13;
elcom thcir :11&#13;
neighbor,&#13;
In l e:r f LO th&#13;
committee' plaru; a.cqu· 'lion p.rivat l own d&#13;
properly, oner 'd ntwhed&#13;
al formtt Pr · d n&#13;
-aluel •&#13;
compari g decinon Lo th&#13;
•ruthl " ch3.lti d Wh n oolma5ter jo.im&#13;
trade•~ train'. h&#13;
pr w · ch progres ed&#13;
negotia ·o ouuight&#13;
on emnation, finally 1 contiguo&#13;
propertie amowiting 2.1&#13;
m' lion, co.a tituted wh le me Cam.pm.&#13;
LO Paruid ' cadernic Philo phy&#13;
tatemem ~. Univ rsity gain&#13;
· e&#13;
it i J ch o tbui sr:reng!.h b~en&#13;
pped by Ule e,i u oftbe&#13;
previo } ar- nd-a-half, proc cr wned ape ·oo of&#13;
aggra....ation a.nd&#13;
Lhe h tility fo :r d lhi!i&#13;
riod ling red int if&#13;
gr Within il r:h ugh, la}• ~eeds ,.;branl niver icy~&#13;
in pl n&#13;
de\· loped ar i ectural&#13;
o H I ut, Oba , Ka · baum t. otili. propo d 6. 5 Ian,&#13;
initiall)' includ d&#13;
Tall n L Hall&#13;
TheLmraryLe.amingCent~&#13;
BuiJding, Commumcation Ar w e an of onginal&#13;
m.aater th&#13;
.ftrm. look.&#13;
o 966,.&#13;
;pecifically ~de-emphasize&#13;
defined tori . r&#13;
.lloor.s , cent.er vi ual&#13;
nudcnL earning&#13;
Lhe Oppartunitie&#13;
ASSISTA.."IT of&#13;
Keno5ha oJu.nr.e r an!W r telep one.&#13;
CTOM · dex f:tles, w:ith chan, otb er duues, hare oommun.ication kilb and we&#13;
pro.fi · onal te1ephone&#13;
protocol.. caro1 Offic, .&#13;
L'MOS Of KENOSHA.&#13;
r u.esting olun lo&#13;
compan.i on tlien ha\•e abw.e he&#13;
patJ.ent, reco-.,rering. upportive and pr ferably, bilingual.&#13;
Contac: a&#13;
694-1204 th Parbid&#13;
Volunteer Offic .&#13;
LINE f. r&#13;
Sare Ha11 n llacin . a CWT nt . ommuni&#13;
resource , d op counseling&#13;
kills and learn how lo :,eatt in&#13;
a cruis situation. Training will&#13;
gm so n. mor&#13;
Care r&#13;
Volunteer Offic .&#13;
BECO~i!E BROTHER/IUG SISTER to&#13;
children from d),sfun tion.al&#13;
h rne. Vj u fri ndship guidanc inOuence&#13;
om one' life for detail .&#13;
]ERST.AD AGERHOU.1&#13;
need h lp c.hool&#13;
tudy 5iom. l&#13;
'Cc Try your in erper on.al ~kills 8 h&#13;
grad r upervi.sed rudy&#13;
hall, Ed ucat.i n may }'Our talion lifi , Vi 't VoJunt er Volun tee~ mWil be I 8 yean ld&#13;
andma ear&#13;
com.mibnen.L hlunteer&#13;
Offi .&#13;
CmitlUI 'n 111l' \-blunt •&#13;
Of/fo , \Vl.LC-Dl '7J ur caU. 595-&#13;
2011. tsit w \" !O 'Uf' Oj]iJ:, -&#13;
WLLCDJ 'Jj /M more irifurmalion.&#13;
EPTEMBER 993&#13;
NEWS&#13;
Reg n presid l, ofhi!I de.alb m A: ·1,&#13;
968). Gree q tmL ~ ,·oca.I&#13;
~uppOTter o plaru Lo d - · lo (our-1 ar un h•eni l}' Sou.theru;L&#13;
Woconsi.n.&#13;
Tall.en H II was afte&#13;
Hernan:! Tall , rst&#13;
dir LOr U · i;versity ¼1 onlin' y; ar .Kenosha&#13;
C!el1~ • 7) ar. unti.1 hi dea ·&#13;
965. partirularly&#13;
h1. derndo to&#13;
ommunity&#13;
sen-ice, and"" warded Leu.en ·nee.&#13;
J 'o.-1 J w: Pol'ti al aiuit:, i'1&#13;
Parlr.rnu's ... Temter• Yea ,&#13;
P ac• lo an&#13;
Science ldacallan&#13;
publlshed 1287&#13;
RA EWS - YOUR# EWS 228_7 a&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 199j&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 4&#13;
Univelsity&#13;
Oilers&#13;
Services to&#13;
the Disabled&#13;
In today's growing society,&#13;
individuals with disabilities&#13;
offer a substantial statistic for&#13;
the United States (and world)&#13;
population. Unfortunately,&#13;
these people are often&#13;
neglected by barriers created&#13;
upon myths, prejudices,&#13;
stereotypes, fears, and basic&#13;
ignorance of which concern&#13;
their true disability. This misguidance&#13;
can be eliminated&#13;
with facts, understanding, and&#13;
common sense. Along with&#13;
Renee' Sartin Kirby&#13;
(coordinator of students with&#13;
disabilities), an academic&#13;
support group for students with&#13;
disabilities is being cofacilitated&#13;
by Cheryl&#13;
Montgomery and Sonya&#13;
Rhutasel to take the first step.&#13;
Prior to admission, students&#13;
with disabilities are encouraged&#13;
to schedule an appointment&#13;
with an admissions officer and&#13;
the coordinator for students&#13;
with disabilities (as for now,&#13;
Renee' Sartin Kirby). Note that&#13;
students with physical&#13;
disabilities are also encouraged&#13;
to contact Student Health&#13;
Services for support, not only&#13;
those with a mental&#13;
impairment. Students with&#13;
disabilities, admitted to the&#13;
UW-Parkside are further&#13;
encouraged to take advantage&#13;
of services offered to them&#13;
under Section 504 of the&#13;
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and&#13;
the Americans with Disabilities&#13;
Act ofI990.&#13;
Accommodations available to&#13;
students with disabilities&#13;
include. but are not limited to:&#13;
taped textbooks; enlarged&#13;
materials; preferential seating;&#13;
alternate format (black/white&#13;
copy); taped tests; extended&#13;
time; distraction free&#13;
environment; computer&#13;
assistance; braille materials;&#13;
and note taker services.&#13;
Eligibility for such services&#13;
include a form of records&#13;
and/ or evaluations from a&#13;
physician, psychiatrist,&#13;
psychologist, or a licensed&#13;
diagnostician.&#13;
The academic support group&#13;
for students with disabilities will .&#13;
be meeting in CART 143,&#13;
Wednesdays from 12:00 to&#13;
12:50. On September 29th, the&#13;
planned topic is, "Is Time&#13;
Manageable?" Followed on&#13;
October 27th, addressing,&#13;
"How Can I Get What I Want&#13;
and Need?" As the semester&#13;
comes to a dose, November&#13;
17th, the issue at hand is. "Is&#13;
There a Better Wayto Prepare&#13;
for Exams?"&#13;
For more information about&#13;
this support group, contact&#13;
Renee' Sartin Kirby in WLLC&#13;
D175, 595-2610. For further&#13;
references, the Office of&#13;
Admissions is MOLN Dill,&#13;
595-2355 and Student Health&#13;
Services is MOLN DI15, 595-&#13;
2366.&#13;
Captain Goon&#13;
\Jo\J!&#13;
\&#13;
?ll.Clr(SSO~ 'Z..E(,51-11"\\""&#13;
~OLl'£.L. A (" E:tJIUS! ':IOu'VE.&#13;
t/I~t&gt;(, l'\E \N~IS,al..(,\&#13;
\&#13;
I CAREER PLANNING GROUPS&#13;
FOR&#13;
STUDENTS STRUGGLING WITH&#13;
CAREER/MAJOR DECISIONS&#13;
SIGN UP NOW--GROUP SIZE AND SPACE IS LIMITED!&#13;
",.1' .1a'U"'·'.&#13;
STARTING SEPTEMBER 2 7TH&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR&#13;
THE CAREER CENTER&#13;
WLLC D175&#13;
595-2452&#13;
,&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
R&#13;
Uni malty&#13;
0111118&#13;
l•vlcasta&#13;
Ula Dlsalllad&#13;
In Loday' gro"'ing society,&#13;
indi 'idual · ""''ith disabtli Ii&#13;
offi r a u.bstantial tatistic for&#13;
Lhe ahed w rld)&#13;
U of. rtunatel ,&#13;
I.he ar fre&#13;
negl cted by barriers created&#13;
pr~judice ,&#13;
t:er type , feara, d ignorana of hi on rn&#13;
heir lrue disability, This maguidan&#13;
an with facu undentanding, and&#13;
n , Alo g Renee• Sar · {coordinat r of tudenu rith&#13;
disabili ·es}, ruppor studen d15.ahihti is being cofacilitated&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
Moncgomery and Sonya&#13;
Rhu el to take lhe fi&#13;
Prior to admi ion, t1tude&#13;
with disabiliti art! encouraged&#13;
to hedui~ appointmen&#13;
"'iirh an adrni.Mio officer and&#13;
the coordma or fOI" t.ud nt!i&#13;
with diia di ti (as for now,&#13;
enee' Sartin Kirby). ote that&#13;
students Ii.th ph kal&#13;
disabititie ar also n ouraged&#13;
o conra.ct tuden ti e for upport, not only&#13;
th wi lh a mental&#13;
impairment. tuden with&#13;
disabilities, admitted to the&#13;
iW-Par kl id are further&#13;
en cou d to take ad :aotage&#13;
of seni . offered to them&#13;
under nion 504 of the&#13;
Rehabili tion Act o 197!&lt;, and&#13;
the erican whh Disabilitie&#13;
Ac of 990.&#13;
. ccommodation av.ti bl to&#13;
tudencs wnh disabm i&#13;
mdude, to:&#13;
taped t .·tboo ; enlarged&#13;
materials; preferen tw a.ting;&#13;
alternate for al w 1itc&#13;
c py}: taped te ts: exte ded&#13;
t1 m ; di ractmn free&#13;
1.:0\1 onment: compul r&#13;
a~1 tance; bra.ill materials;&#13;
no takr.r St.-n1ce .&#13;
Eligibin · f r ch se ·ca&#13;
1nd11de a form of records&#13;
and/ or e,•idu tion. from a&#13;
physman. psychiatri 1.,&#13;
p:; ch logist. or a li en d&#13;
diagno ncian.&#13;
Th· academic upportgroup&#13;
or mden~ 'li\,ith di · .biliti will&#13;
be meeting in CART I 3,&#13;
W dn , da from 12:00 to&#13;
12:50. On September 29th, lbe&#13;
planned t pk 15,, ·J un&#13;
. ianageabler Followed OcLOber 27th, addressing,&#13;
"How Can l Get Whal I • t&#13;
d . eed?"&#13;
R&#13;
s&#13;
"-t'\ ? "::tou. c.w i"c.t ME:!&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
PLAN ING FO&#13;
MAJOR START G TO REGISTER CONTACT:&#13;
WllC 0175&#13;
2452&#13;
I&#13;
,,.,.,,&#13;
WS YOUR#&#13;
BER 16 199&#13;
'j)i2,.crES~ Z.E: E:.sl-\~\~I&#13;
yo :tr. A. C!,t 1u. ! ldoll'vt&#13;
~"N:. 1"'\E. \tJ\h StS E. ~&#13;
r __ ,-·.N-G-E-R-N-E-W-S-,-P-A-G-E-5----- ----.:S:..:E:.P:n..T~=RE.1=6M, 1993&#13;
DBSERVA710NS&#13;
....o.ords&#13;
G.J. Nelso... defense. Baloney, on both&#13;
counts. If one keeps a hand&#13;
weapon properly in a house.&#13;
You keep it in a locked place&#13;
and unloaded. Ifyou did have&#13;
and intruder in your house, by&#13;
the time you got the weapon&#13;
ready to go, the intruder would&#13;
most likely have the upper&#13;
hand on you. Ifyou keep a&#13;
hand weapon unlocked and&#13;
loaded thinking, "My kid will&#13;
police officer. I have yet to&#13;
meet a police person not in&#13;
favor of handgun control.&#13;
There is no reason, NONE,&#13;
for a civilian to have a assault&#13;
weapon, Those weapons are&#13;
designed to do one thing very&#13;
well. Kill people! The tragedies&#13;
that have happened all over the&#13;
country with regards to these&#13;
kinds of weapons are appalling.&#13;
It is only by God's grace that&#13;
a&#13;
disaster concerning automatic&#13;
weapons was recently averted&#13;
here in Kenosha at a local&#13;
McDonald's.&#13;
To the argument that&#13;
criminals will always be able to&#13;
get guns: true, but a lot more&#13;
killings would be averted with&#13;
control than without it.&#13;
II we must have access to&#13;
handguns than why not have&#13;
state-run armories. In the Navy,&#13;
if! wan ted to own a personal&#13;
weapon, I was required to&#13;
check it in and out of the&#13;
armory. Why not the same in&#13;
civilian life? Lastly. people are&#13;
required to obtain license to&#13;
drive, to fly, to teach. to practice&#13;
law. Why not a requirement to&#13;
show that you have been&#13;
properly trained with a weapon&#13;
before being allowed to obtain&#13;
one? At least it would help.&#13;
This week I would like to&#13;
comment on two words. These&#13;
two words are guaranteed to&#13;
create controversy. The two&#13;
words are ( Rush Limbaugh,just&#13;
kidding) gun control. More&#13;
specifically, hand gun and&#13;
assault weapon con trol.&#13;
The Second Amendment to&#13;
the Constitution talks about the&#13;
need of a well armed militia&#13;
being necessary, the right of&#13;
people to keep and bear arms&#13;
shall not be abridged. This&#13;
amendment has never been&#13;
read into the 14th amendment&#13;
by use of the due process or&#13;
equal rights clauses, The&#13;
Supreme Court has rarely ruled&#13;
on the second amendment.&#13;
As a conservative I&#13;
nonetheless believe that the&#13;
second amendment at the lest pertains to shoulder&#13;
weapons (shotguns and rifles)&#13;
only. I am more persuaded that&#13;
a well-armed militia refers to&#13;
the military or police and that&#13;
civilian ownership of weapons&#13;
can be regulated.&#13;
The argumen t in favor of&#13;
uncontrolled access to hand&#13;
guns and, to a lesser extent,&#13;
automatic weapons is for self&#13;
Vignelles&#13;
by Cal&#13;
the bastard semi-colon; being&#13;
born of legitimate&#13;
punctuational parents; the&#13;
period and the comma semicolons&#13;
are half one and half the&#13;
other;and therefore half&#13;
useless; or at least half assed;&#13;
and have added at least&#13;
half wrong to the punctuation&#13;
of this misarable little critique.&#13;
Out; Damned Spot! C.J. Nelson&#13;
Havingjust finished my&#13;
entrance exams ; I realized that&#13;
there is a vast disparity in the&#13;
waysentences are to be&#13;
puncuated. I have a particular&#13;
problem;maybe have it.tool&#13;
It comes down to the way I was&#13;
taught; if two disparate&#13;
thoughts are joined into a&#13;
single sentence; by means of a&#13;
semi-colon; aren't they&#13;
complete enough thoughts to&#13;
desereve there period,exclamation point.or&#13;
question mark?&#13;
I think so; I say do never find it,' than you will&#13;
likely come home to a tragedy&#13;
someday.&#13;
A loaded weapon in a home&#13;
is an invitation to trouble. It is&#13;
to easy to reach for a weapon in&#13;
a moment of anger and, Bang!&#13;
If that does not happen, than&#13;
you may have an incident like&#13;
the one in Florida several years&#13;
ago. A boy found a gun,&#13;
accidently shot his brother&#13;
dead, then left a note to his&#13;
parents explaining this and&#13;
shot himself as atonement. If&#13;
you don't believe me ask any&#13;
•,&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION HOURS&#13;
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nd emicolom&#13;
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Hwe ha\· a ce handsun Lhan ·h · nm ha,·&#13;
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if I wanted per nal&#13;
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chetliLin om flh&#13;
annory. \ fl1 nol m&#13;
cililian Lastly, peopl ar-t&gt;&#13;
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Union.&#13;
B Sq are Ber&#13;
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a.m. 9 Midn·ght&#13;
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p.m. • p.m.&#13;
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al Iba in "Union Dining Raam" far a drawn&#13;
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On Octoller I, 199311!&#13;
Isl B1cycle&#13;
2nd loll 3rdPriz•&#13;
A&amp;• Ra Beer naat Kil&#13;
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.t .I.&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 6&#13;
A Step Towards Peace&#13;
by Jeffrey M. Weniger Esq.&#13;
"There are very few moments&#13;
in history that are comparable&#13;
to this moment."&#13;
-Hanan&#13;
Ashrawi, PLO representatioe to&#13;
Washington talks&#13;
"Right here, right now.&#13;
There is no other place I'd&#13;
rather be."&#13;
-fesus J(JII1!S&#13;
I normally take a very cavalier&#13;
look at life when I write my&#13;
article, but events this past&#13;
week have moved me to take a&#13;
step in the more serious&#13;
direction. The prospect for&#13;
peace in the mid-east had been&#13;
brewing for about a week and I&#13;
didn't much think about it. It&#13;
was finally announced that the&#13;
PLO and Israel both formally&#13;
recognize each other. This step&#13;
is an important one in world&#13;
history, if it is a start of a&#13;
journey of true peace. The&#13;
twentieth century is one which&#13;
has been defined by war and&#13;
violence. It is encouraging to&#13;
see people of different cultures&#13;
trying to overcome their&#13;
differences to keep the peace.&#13;
I remember watching an&#13;
episode of Head of the Class on&#13;
year when the class was given&#13;
an assignment to report the&#13;
news twenty years from now.&#13;
The overly pompous Alan&#13;
talked about many unlikely&#13;
events, mentioned that the&#13;
Israeli/Palestine team looked&#13;
promising to win the gold in&#13;
track and field. At the time it&#13;
was funny. Now it seems that&#13;
there migh t be a chance that in&#13;
twenty years Israelis and&#13;
Palestines might actually find&#13;
they have more in common&#13;
wi th one another.&#13;
War is a great deal like&#13;
alcoholism, you first have to&#13;
admit you have a problem.&#13;
From there you have to work&#13;
on staying sober, one day at a&#13;
time. I can only hope that the&#13;
mid-east can remain sober after&#13;
nearly thirty years of&#13;
unrelenting hostility. The&#13;
differences between these two&#13;
cultures are centuries old,which&#13;
means that a secure peace isn't&#13;
going to be a certain ty&#13;
overnight. It will take a great&#13;
deal of work, dedication,&#13;
understanding and patience.&#13;
The longest journey begins&#13;
with a single step. Let us hope&#13;
that its a long and fruitful&#13;
journey.&#13;
. .:.•.... -':'.;; --- .&#13;
595-228Z&#13;
by George Harris.Ir.&#13;
In recent years. some people&#13;
have been invoking the name&#13;
of McCarthyism to silence&#13;
conservatives. We are taught&#13;
that McCarthyism, at its height,&#13;
was the ultimate evil that&#13;
government can perpetrate on&#13;
its citizens. I shall bring to your&#13;
attention an overlooked&#13;
chapter in American History.&#13;
The fairness doctrine, which&#13;
came into being during the&#13;
19110'sand lasted until the early&#13;
1980's, was used during the&#13;
Kennedy/Johnson&#13;
administrations to monitor&#13;
right wing broadcasts - whether&#13;
they were extremist or not.&#13;
Under this rule. a radio station&#13;
can lose its license to broadcast&#13;
if enough people object to its&#13;
programming. Many times it&#13;
became a way to legally censor&#13;
unwanted free speech.&#13;
Here is an example of how&#13;
the fairness doctrine would&#13;
work: WAYChires me to be a&#13;
conservative talkshow host. I&#13;
become very popular and very&#13;
controversal. A group of&#13;
disgruntled liberals, for&#13;
example, can petition the radio&#13;
station, when their licence goes&#13;
for renewal, to either get me off&#13;
the air or balanced with other&#13;
hosts who have a differing view&#13;
point.&#13;
The most liberal among us&#13;
can not defend what the&#13;
government of the sixties did.&#13;
The government basically&#13;
dictated who should get to&#13;
speak out and who didn't. The&#13;
fairness doctrine is silently&#13;
being proposed by liberals, like&#13;
George Harris,fr.&#13;
Barbara Boxer of California,&#13;
who are concerned about the&#13;
popularity of conservatives on&#13;
the radio.&#13;
They feel that it isn't fair that&#13;
a guy like Rush Limbaugh&#13;
reaches millions of people&#13;
while they are left in the cold.&#13;
They also want a way to run&#13;
conservatives off the air by&#13;
pressuring radio stations. When&#13;
we had mandatory public&#13;
affairs programming, panel&#13;
shows - before Reagan&#13;
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Th r is no other pla e I'd&#13;
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--Je sjm~&#13;
nonnall ta "' ry ca\'aJ" er&#13;
look at life hen 1 write m ,&#13;
articl , but ·en ~ pasr&#13;
week hme moved rn 10 take a&#13;
t pin the rnor _riou&#13;
direction. The pro peel for&#13;
p ac 10 the mid ·t h d been&#13;
br 'lllg for about a eek an&#13;
didn't rnudt l.hin about it. It&#13;
was finall announced lh t che&#13;
LO and l!rael both formaJly&#13;
r n· teach o h r. hli!! tep&#13;
i an important one in world&#13;
l:tl!ltor,; if jt ts a tart o a&#13;
j umeyoftru peace. The&#13;
tw nneth cenh.ll'yi onew 1ch&#13;
ha been defin d by wa'f and&#13;
, olenc .. [L is eacouraging l&#13;
ee peop1 of dilieren culture&#13;
1ryin to °' ercome their&#13;
diffi rence o k p Lhe pea&#13;
I n_member tching an&#13;
0&#13;
The Ranger News is&#13;
looking/or taJent:ed writers,&#13;
graphic designers, and page&#13;
layout artists.&#13;
Be a part of the UJinning&#13;
ream.&#13;
595-2287&#13;
RA EWS YOU&#13;
MBER 16 1993&#13;
Making lansa Dal of II .Ill&#13;
A Blatary l.aNa: a Falrnaa Dae Ina&#13;
by Georg Harri Jr.&#13;
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'ifANGER NEWS, PAGE 7&#13;
-Bag a great fall job!&#13;
Ai Gander Mountain, you can earn good money, work a convenient schedule,&#13;
and still have the time you need for family, friends, school or relaxation.&#13;
We're hiring upbeat individuals to help us sell and distribute our&#13;
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are flexible enough to fit most any lifestyle. So if you're looking to "bag"&#13;
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Telephone sales Reps&#13;
Work full or part-time, day, evening or night. A pleasant phone manner,&#13;
friendly personality and basic typing-keyboard skills are all you need.&#13;
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to lift 50 lbs.&#13;
Pickers, Packers - Full-time, day shifts or part-time, evening shifts from&#13;
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• Good pay &amp; incentives&#13;
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Interested? Come by our personnel office, and we'll fill you in on all the&#13;
details. The office is open Monday-Friday, 7 am-5 pm and Saturday,&#13;
8 am-12 noon at P.O. Box 128, Hwy. W, Wtlmot, Wi 53192 or Monday-&#13;
Friday, 8 am-6 pm at 8338 Washington Ave., Suite 105, Racine, Wi&#13;
53406. (Conveniently located next to Ensenada's Restaurant.)&#13;
I!y Vanessa Woods&#13;
Envigion that there are two&#13;
haIlds of two males. One hand&#13;
iswhite and one hand is black&#13;
and they are handcuffed.&#13;
Whicb is the captor or which&#13;
one could be a criminal?&#13;
Benetton's Parisian agency,&#13;
Eldorado crafted the picture.&#13;
This past summer, I&#13;
completed research for an&#13;
Indepent Study&#13;
Communication course. I&#13;
realized how numb I had&#13;
become over my short lived&#13;
years to propaganda&#13;
(advertising) and how it&#13;
exploits and neglects people of&#13;
color. Racism is a major .&#13;
drawback in advertising. There&#13;
are roles ads play in our&#13;
country's racial unrest and&#13;
consumer marketing.&#13;
Racism in advertising means&#13;
a negative message conveyed to&#13;
people of color from the media&#13;
promoting the idea that they&#13;
are inferior. Therefore, the&#13;
media implies or suggests to&#13;
non-whites that they have an&#13;
obligation or right to distort&#13;
the images of people of color at&#13;
will.&#13;
First, ironically there not&#13;
only is the presence of racism&#13;
in ads, but the lack of people of&#13;
color as well. Negativity in&#13;
portrayal creates hostility for all&#13;
people of color. However,&#13;
Ward remarks, "The absence of&#13;
blacks in advertising, more than&#13;
stereotyping, makes black&#13;
people irate about their&#13;
situation and status," said&#13;
Marilyn Kern-Foxworth, a&#13;
journalism professor at Texas&#13;
A&amp;M University who is writing a&#13;
book on the history of blacks in&#13;
advertsing" (35) .&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
conjures up all the negative directors. Ads produced within Cosmopolitan and Vanity Fair.&#13;
stereotypes. (52) the last few years support this There were many stereotypes&#13;
Then, there is the aspect of concept. This idea goes with and much lacking in the&#13;
the niche ads. Niche ads are the female characters that presence of any person of color.&#13;
when producers engage in a promote supplies who have In conclusion, long ignored&#13;
strategy that continues to found younger looking skin in by white merchants and&#13;
market consumers in a certain a bottle, fast relief from manufacturers, Black&#13;
area specifically to protect their headaches, or a really great consumers are now estimated&#13;
assets whether or not it is at the gum(19). What about the to have, in aggregate, more&#13;
expense of the consumers. darker sisters? This kind of than $270 billion worth of&#13;
There are cigarette, alcohol, racism has played a role for the buying power, according to&#13;
and sneaker niche ads, but last half century. Lena Horne, statistics provided by Andrew&#13;
sneakers are the biggest Dorothy Dandridge and Brimmer &amp; Associates a&#13;
problem of all. Predominantly Diahann Carroll became the Washington, D.C., consulting&#13;
white companies are using first black sex symbols accepted and marketing firm ("Black&#13;
black stars to promote more bywhites. Now we have Consumer 60"). It's all a&#13;
than a hundred bi11ion dollars a Vanessa Williams, Sade,Jasmine matter of supply and demand.&#13;
year in ghettos for sneakers. Guy and many others in music People of color do have the&#13;
The sneakers are retailed for videos and movies. To my option to buy or take their&#13;
$50-$70 and generally worn dismay, the presence of other money elsewere.All people of&#13;
between two and five weeks just ethnic groups in ads especially color are making tiny steps&#13;
to make a fashion statement. Native-Americans are almost forward in the market because&#13;
Then the person replaces the non-existent. they have a significant amount&#13;
sneakers with a totally new Next, there is the aspect of of buying power. People of&#13;
model. According to Nike consumer marketing. color want quality products, so&#13;
figures, Leo shows black males According to Fischer, Hispanics eventually their needs have to&#13;
ages 1~24 all applied in the (62%) buy the same food, be met. The U.S. largely&#13;
9.8% of the 10.3 billion' beverage and household item depends on a wealthy economy&#13;
annually for shoes (20) . brands on a regular basis while to be a viable nation-state.&#13;
Companies heavily market $150 only 35% will be lured away by America needs money to&#13;
shoes at the expense of those a sale, Miami-based Market provide for things like military&#13;
who can't afford them. The Segment Research found. defense, government spending&#13;
media is encouraging the Asian-Aericans are almost as and foreign trade. This is why&#13;
compulsive obsession with likely to buy a sale item as a the consumer market is so&#13;
shoes. familiar brand (45%each). Ag important right down to the&#13;
Yet another issue has risen for African-Americans, 54% last dollar. America truly&#13;
but this time it's distinctively said they consistently buy the wouldn't be what it is today if it&#13;
cast at black women. Brown same brands and 41% buy wasn't for its democracy and&#13;
states the light-skinned black what's on sale(6). capitalism and the thanks is due&#13;
woman is the most common Some of the magazine's ads I to the people and that includes&#13;
black woman in visual media found most offensive were all its citizens of color.&#13;
and the preference of many arAt!!!!!~N.~ew!!!!swe!!!!e~k,!!Good;!!!!!!!!!Iwus!!!!!!!!ekeefri!!i!!!·'~Ig~ani!!!!d!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!c!!!!on~Lon page 8&#13;
Vanessa Woods&#13;
Next, Clarence Smith,&#13;
president of Essence, a magazine&#13;
targeted to black women was&#13;
invited to preview a group of&#13;
ads accompanied with other&#13;
Essence staff members.&#13;
Benetton buys a lot of pages&#13;
from Essence magazine.&#13;
However, one of the eight ads&#13;
did not pass. Benetton's&#13;
Parisian agency shot photos of a&#13;
racially mixed rowing crew and&#13;
a white teacher tutoring a black&#13;
child. Smith pointed out the&#13;
pictures has a natural, equal&#13;
and beautiful approach about&#13;
them. A handcuff photo was&#13;
even acceptable. Yet a portrait&#13;
of a topless black woman&#13;
nursing a white child was not&#13;
acceptable. Generation of&#13;
black women were forced to&#13;
nurse white children while their&#13;
own went hungry. Smith&#13;
thought the picture was an&#13;
anathema to blacks because it&#13;
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SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT&#13;
ChanceUor's "Drop-In" Office Hours&#13;
forVVednesday, Sept. 22nd&#13;
wID be changed to&#13;
Monday, Sept. 20th, 3:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m.&#13;
The original day ~ hours of:&#13;
3:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Ivery VVednesday&#13;
wiD tben resume back to Its original schedule&#13;
lnWLLC353&#13;
TIMnlc You&#13;
-RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
Supply a Demand: TIie lconomlcs ol laclsm&#13;
tereotypin.g, ma lac conjures up a11 the negativ directors. Ad&amp; p educed within Cormqpolitan and Vi: ni • Fai.&#13;
P opl irat about. their tereotyptl!. ( '2) the t Few years pport this The w r man l ,- otyp&#13;
Envi&amp;ion tltal th r: arc c O itua · and taUIS, "' said h n, the is th ipeCl f n ep. Thi id . goo "'i.th and mu h lacking in Lhe&#13;
hand of ·o male · O e and Marilyn lu:rn·Foxwort.h, a th niche ads. iche ad ar the femal. c.haracte II tba preM."nce of pe 50 of lor.&#13;
is white and on hand is black j our ism profes or al exas when produ!i:er mgag in a promote mppli who ha rn conclusion, ong ignored&#13;
and t.bey are handcuffi d. A&amp;M Univer • 'who is writing a trat gy lb.at continu~&amp; to found youn er looking kin in by whlte mer hams and&#13;
Which i the captor or which book. n tl e hi tory of blacks in market con umers in a c rtain boul , fast r lief from manufacture , Black&#13;
one could be a cruninal? advertsiogn(!5) , area spoci.fically m protect their headache.s, o a really great co mer are no e timal d&#13;
Belletton' Parisian agency, a.MeU wheth r or nor it u at the gum{ 19). What about e to have, in a.ggr te. mor&#13;
£Idorado crafted th picm.r • ex.pen e of the con ume:rs. dark:er · u : This kind f than 70 illion wonb of&#13;
This past summ r. f There are cigarette, alcohol, raci m has played ro}e for the buying JXJWer, a ordmg w&#13;
coinpleted raearch fo an and n le.er niche aw, bu ,t hut half century. Lena Home, r.a · ti prmoided by uirew&#13;
ln.depenl tu&lt;ty m ak.en arc th~ big e t Dorothy Dandridg and Brimmer &amp; oci.al.J a&#13;
eommunication coune. Vanena Woods prohlem fall. Predo:minant..ly Diahann Can-oU became the Washington, D.C., consulting&#13;
rtalized how numb had wlut..e companie~ are wing fin · blac sex symbol a...cc.epted and marketing Iirm c•Bfa&#13;
l)ee()ID ai.· r my shon )iv d black. tan prQm.oi.e more by whi Now we ha: e Coruurne.- 60~) , It's, all&#13;
yem to p opaganda ext, Clarence mi , than a hundred billion dollan a Va.new Williams, Sad • Jamune m ttf'r of upply and d em , .&#13;
(adver'li!ing) and how iL p · eudenl of~. a magazine y ar i ghet for meat.em.. Guy and trumy oth in mu.sic Peop e of col r do ha e th&#13;
exploiu and n gl H ~o le of rar~trd to blacll 1omen W2.!l The mealu:n are retail d for "id and m0\lle11. To ,ny option to buy or take etr&#13;
color. Racimi iu major inv:i.Cc d top mew a group, of -,o- 70 and g nenilly wo:r di may, the pre ence of othCT money uewere.All people of&#13;
(lra~·back. in m·ertrnng. Th re ads a companied with other bet'!-t.een two and fiv wee-kl ·u t ethnic groups in ad · specially color are malun tiny p.&#13;
are role ad: playm out &amp;s.tnustaITmembera. to ak.e a fa hion r.at@mmt. ~ ati~ American ar-,ea1most forward in the market becau e&#13;
w11Dtry' racial unre and Benetton buys a lot of page11 TheP t.he pen.on replaces the non..e,ti_stent. l.h ha -ea cignificam amounl&#13;
coosumer marke · ng, from &amp;snu:e magazi e. , ea~n with a totally new ext. there i the aspecl of of bU}'lng powe:r. Pe pie of&#13;
Raci&amp;m in adverti 'ng means However, one of th eight ru model According to ike con um.tt marketing. colo wanl quali woduca,&#13;
negative message c nveyed to did not pa . Ben tton' figure Leo shows black mal According to FiK.her, Hispamc et· ntuaU, tbe1r n ed b.wc to&#13;
people o c.olo:r from th media Parisian age ty b t photos ofa: ages 18-2 an app1i din the (62%) buy the sam food, b meL The U .. largely&#13;
promoting the idea tha[ they racially m · ed rowing crew and 9.8$ f l:h e l0.8 billion be\ erage and homehoJd item depend on weal y e onomy&#13;
are inferior. Therefor~, the a white teacher tutoring a black an ually for hoe (20). branw on a regular b.lli hil to be a ~i· ble nation-stat .&#13;
media implif's or Uigg to child. Smith pointed out the Compani · heavily market 150 only 5% wi l be Jured away b)· Am rica a~ch money to&#13;
11.on-white8 I.hat they ha\•e an pic.tur h a. narural, equal shoes at th expert e of th e a sale, Miami-based arke provide for things like miluar •&#13;
oblig· tion or right to di tort and beautiful approach bout who can't o d them. h Segmen Re&amp;eatthfound. defense, gO\· mmenl spendin&#13;
the images of people of color at them. • handcuff photo was media i encouraging the • ·an-Aericans ate ahno. t and foreign uad . TI.ti I why&#13;
will. en ccep1ahle. li a .Portrait compubive bie:ssion 'th 1.ikeiy to buy we item rui a Lbe con wnt::r marke 1&#13;
Fir: t. ironically here not of a to leg black woman .!hoe . familiar brand (45%ea ) . importam righ n to the&#13;
on.Jyi tbep:re nc ofrarim uringa"'•hitechildwasnoL Yetanothe.rissuehasri n for rican.aA.merican -4% lastdoUa:r, Am ricatruly&#13;
in d , bu the lac of people of acceptabJ . Generation of but t i time iI'll distinctiv y said ey con iltent:ly uy the wouldn't be wh tit i today if il&#13;
color as wi ll. egat.M.I.}' in black wom n were forced to cast al black. worn en. Brown same brands and 41 % buy wa n 'l for iu democra an&#13;
portrayal create hostility for all nurse white c hildren while lh ir slate th light kinned bl ck hat'tt on sale(fi). c pitalis:m and h wan· i du&#13;
people of color. However, own went h ungry. Smith woman i th mo t common Some of the znagazine' ad I to the peopJ and lh t include&#13;
Y..ard remarb, 'The absence of thought the picture was an black woman in vi uaJ m di.a found most offen!live were all i citizen of color.&#13;
blac in adv :rtising. mor~ than anathema to b]a.cb because i L and the p:rtlerence of many art w~dr,, Goodlwu.stlrapif,g and Com. on ~ 8&#13;
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premier hunting. fishing and amping equipment, and we have hours mac&#13;
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Wi rk fuU r pan-am • day. evening or night. A Jeasant phone anner,&#13;
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Al l£NTION STUDENTS:&#13;
I SPECIAL ANNOUN·CEME T&#13;
C anceUor' "Drop•ln' Offl ours&#13;
for W dnesd i, Sept. 22 d&#13;
will be c. ang d o&#13;
onday, Sept. Z , 3:30 p. • 5:00 p.m.&#13;
lbe o nal day &amp;. 01115 of:&#13;
3:30 p.m. - 5•00 p.m.&#13;
lvery Wednesd J&#13;
wlll then re e IN.ck to Its orlpaal edule&#13;
In WLLC 353&#13;
TIMnlifou&#13;
LL 595-2287&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 8&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
EYE on the EDGE&#13;
!Jy Steven Moore&#13;
editor-illrchkJ&#13;
Mycolumn, Eye on the Edge,&#13;
will attempt to explore several&#13;
controversial issues in an effort&#13;
to stimulate thought and&#13;
discussion. Whenever you&#13;
.... -ee or disagree with my views,&#13;
1:o\~~1Ieyxpress yourself with a&#13;
"-&lt;el~l.-to the Editor.&#13;
ihave noticed a sensitive&#13;
issue still lingering in our&#13;
consciousness todaycommonly&#13;
called The Battle of&#13;
the Sexes. Some people&#13;
continue to debate the subject&#13;
with misunderstandings and&#13;
preconceptions about men and&#13;
women. Bookstores try to offer&#13;
answers by loading shelves with&#13;
variations on the same&#13;
themes-women's guides to&#13;
understanding men and the&#13;
complete guide to&#13;
understanding the female&#13;
gender. Talk shows like The&#13;
Oprah Winfrey Show also try&#13;
desperately to offer answers to&#13;
this "heated" issue. I get&#13;
extremely agitated, especially&#13;
when I read or hear that "men&#13;
will always do that" or "women&#13;
will always be that way."&#13;
I work at Wal-mart as an&#13;
Electronics Associate, and I&#13;
often notice silly squabbles&#13;
between couples. As I was&#13;
selling a VCR to a couple, I&#13;
laughed as I noticed their use&#13;
of common stereotypes. The&#13;
man stated, "Oh honey, keep&#13;
quiet ...you know that women&#13;
are not electronically inclined,"&#13;
and the woman looked across&#13;
at him and said, "men think&#13;
they know everything." At first&#13;
this seemed funny, but the&#13;
expressions on their faces&#13;
revealed something tragic&#13;
about their relationship. They&#13;
continued their back and forth&#13;
exchange of harsh and cruel&#13;
statements.&#13;
It's disappointing to see how&#13;
petty arguments can split a&#13;
couple apart. Most of these&#13;
disputes are largely due to how&#13;
society has programmed us&#13;
about men and women. We&#13;
need to tear down these&#13;
barriers, and eliminate the&#13;
misconceptions about the&#13;
sexes. James Thurber once&#13;
said, "The wife who keeps&#13;
saying, 'Isn't that just like a&#13;
man?' and the hushand who&#13;
keeps saying 'Oh well, you&#13;
know how women are,' are&#13;
likely to grow farther and&#13;
farther apart through the&#13;
years."&#13;
lapply 8 .... and, cont. from pg. 7&#13;
I hope this will give all the people the incentive to contact the&#13;
television networks, consumer product companies or even your&#13;
local restaurant to give constructive criticism and compliments&#13;
when thy are due.&#13;
To see is to believe. Here are the sources I used for my study.&#13;
One can find them at the Racine library.&#13;
Amiel, Barbara. "Through the Lenses of Gender and Ethnicity."&#13;
Maclean's 27 May 1991:15.&#13;
Brown, Clinton J. ·Which Black is Beautiful?" Advertising Age I&#13;
Feb. 1993; 19.&#13;
"Inventing the Black Consumer Market." Ebony Nov. 1992:1.&#13;
Fisher, Christy. "Minority Shops Hinge Sell on Specialty."&#13;
Advertising Age 1Jul. 1991:18&#13;
"Poll: Hispanics Stick to Brand ..Asian Americans Shop For&#13;
Good Price, and African Americans look for quality." advertising&#13;
Age 15 Feb. 1993; 6&#13;
Leo,John. "The Well-Heeled Drag Runner." U.S. News 30 Apr.&#13;
1990;20&#13;
Phillips, Carol. "Data Cap" Wall Street Journal 19 Feb. 1993 R18.&#13;
Rodkin, Dennis. "How Colorful Can Ads Get?" Mother jonesjan&#13;
1990;52.&#13;
Ward, Adrienne. "What Role do Ads Play in Racial Tension?"&#13;
Advertising Age 10 Aug. 1992:14.&#13;
1Letlefs to QJe qebitOf&#13;
Dear Mr. Moore;&#13;
I would like to rectify the&#13;
optical illusion that Jeffery&#13;
Weniger was trying to create in&#13;
his most recent article in the&#13;
Ranger. He stated that he&#13;
•...Iived through the seventies&#13;
once ... ., Well, I'm sorry to say,&#13;
that if it happened allover&#13;
again (the seventies), it would&#13;
be the first time he could&#13;
remember. Jeffery is trying to&#13;
create the impression that he is&#13;
a veteran, experienced writer&#13;
who has seen more of the world&#13;
than his fellow "fresh out of&#13;
high school" students. 1 know&#13;
for a fact that Jeffery is at least&#13;
two years younger than myself,&#13;
with me being twenty-two. Even&#13;
I don't really remember the&#13;
seventies except from what I&#13;
see in family pictures and a few&#13;
debilitating flashbacks of the&#13;
hideous clothes my mother&#13;
dressed me in when I was a&#13;
child ...a very young child.&#13;
Kids born in the late&#13;
seventies spent most of that&#13;
decade in diapers. Bythe time&#13;
most kids born in the early to&#13;
mid-seventies have memories&#13;
they recall vividly,those&#13;
memories occured in the&#13;
eighties. Stuff like Blondie and&#13;
roller skating at the local rink.&#13;
Those year we can saywe lived&#13;
through. And personally, the&#13;
thought of going through that&#13;
again terrifies me more than&#13;
the seventies ever could I&#13;
And by the way, bell bottoms&#13;
were out offashion in the first&#13;
few years of 1970. My ·70's"&#13;
expert says that when she&#13;
married in 1975, all that was&#13;
left of bell bottoms was a slight&#13;
flare in the in the hemline. Bell&#13;
bottom belonged to the sixties.&#13;
I hope you don't say that you&#13;
lived through that decade also!&#13;
The next fashion to become&#13;
extinct was the "young yuppie&#13;
in the business suit"look.&#13;
Before you attempt to insult a&#13;
lifestyle you have not truly&#13;
experienced. as you say you&#13;
have, why not talk to those that&#13;
have. There are plenty of&#13;
people who would be willing to&#13;
oblige you. You may find that it&#13;
wasn't as bad as you&#13;
"remembered ."&#13;
p.s. We the readers would love&#13;
to see a photo of you in 1970 so&#13;
we can approximate your agel&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Brigitte Hauser&#13;
Dear Mr. Moore:&#13;
I wish to reply to Brian&#13;
Matsen, author of "The Silent&#13;
Cry-A Christian Perspective."&#13;
During the 1992/'93 school&#13;
year, Mr. Matsen's writings&#13;
appeared regularly in the&#13;
Ranger- News. While 1 found his&#13;
ideas to be somewhat&#13;
unorthodox and radical, I was&#13;
able to dismiss them as simply&#13;
over-zealous. Now, however, Mr.&#13;
Matsen has gone too far. In&#13;
calling himself a "voice for the&#13;
mainstream Christian&#13;
population," he has taken a&#13;
great deal too much upon&#13;
himself.&#13;
I consider myself a Christian;&#13;
however, I would never allow&#13;
Brian Matsen to be my "voice."&#13;
While I believe that Mr. Matsen&#13;
may have the right ideacertainly&#13;
it is good to be a&#13;
Christian and to share those&#13;
beliefs with others-he does&#13;
not or cannot communicate&#13;
those ideas effectively. I feel&#13;
safe in saying that I, and&#13;
probably the majority of this&#13;
campus (Christians and non-&#13;
Christians alike), find his&#13;
articles extremely offensive.&#13;
The Lord does not want us to&#13;
point fingers or pass judgement&#13;
on others. Instead, he asks us to&#13;
"Co and make disciples of all&#13;
nations, baptizing them in the&#13;
name of the Father and of the&#13;
Son and of the Holy Spirit&#13;
(Matthew 28:19)."&#13;
Instead of following this&#13;
command, Mr. Matsen's&#13;
method of sharing his faith&#13;
appears to involve simply&#13;
spewing rhetoric and&#13;
misinterpreted Bible passages.&#13;
The Bible can be interpreted&#13;
any way that anyone chooses;&#13;
even Satan can quote the Bible&#13;
(see Matthew 4:1-10 and Luke&#13;
4:1-13). As they read now, Mr.&#13;
Matsen's articles are confusing,&#13;
non-sensical gibberish; people&#13;
are being turned away from&#13;
Christianity, rather than to it.&#13;
Remember, we must "open&#13;
men's eyes, not tear them out."&#13;
Until you can get off of your&#13;
soap box and have a reasonable&#13;
Christian discussion of your&#13;
beliefs, Mr. Matsen, please do&#13;
not presume to call yourself a&#13;
Christian voice.&#13;
A Concerned Christian,&#13;
Traci A. Kitelinger&#13;
Dear Mr. Moore:&#13;
I too am one of the many&#13;
students who have viewed the&#13;
new Ranger format and like it.&#13;
However, all of the fancy prin t&#13;
styles and pictures do not seem&#13;
to override the fact that the&#13;
Rang",' has changed drastically&#13;
in content - I'm not sure it's&#13;
for the better.&#13;
I recall when reading the&#13;
Ranger-consisted of pertinent&#13;
student news. Things that were&#13;
important regarding students&#13;
directly, not the political games&#13;
being played while discussions&#13;
of religion, upward mobility,&#13;
and abortion are being&#13;
discussed. My original concern&#13;
is that, while the new-&#13;
Chancellor is very irn portan t to&#13;
our student lives, the&#13;
publishing of his complete&#13;
speech may have been a bit&#13;
overboard. I personally hope&#13;
that all will go well, and I&#13;
welcome Chancellor Stockwell&#13;
to the position with open arms.&#13;
However, as a student who&#13;
has been burned one too many&#13;
times by all of the "great&#13;
expectations," I just wonder&#13;
how much of the promises will&#13;
really come true. My advice to&#13;
the Ranger is simply cut down&#13;
on the overpowering publicity.&#13;
Students will come to a&#13;
Chancellor who is willing to&#13;
listen to students, not to a man&#13;
who is overpublicized.&#13;
Finally, my greatest&#13;
disappointment with the new&#13;
Ranger is a pair of articles&#13;
regarding religion. I have never&#13;
been so appalled as I was when&#13;
the rash generalizations of&#13;
Christianity were made.&#13;
Furthermore, my anger was&#13;
intensified when I saw the same&#13;
author's article about abortion.&#13;
A man who uses nothing other&#13;
than biblical references to&#13;
attempt to support his weak,&#13;
colored view of abortion should&#13;
be taken out and shot. What&#13;
person ever gave him the power&#13;
of authority of the effects of&#13;
abortion. Granted, I believe&#13;
that every individual should be&#13;
allowed his or her own opinion&#13;
of what is right regarding&#13;
abortion however, when writing&#13;
this opinion, state that it is only&#13;
an opinion. As a woman who&#13;
stands strong and proud&#13;
behind the Pro-Choice view&#13;
point, I really wonder how he&#13;
can sleep at night knowing that&#13;
not only does he think that by&#13;
writing this article he has the&#13;
authority to tell me what to do&#13;
with my body, but that his view&#13;
was accepted by the Parkside&#13;
student body. WRONGI I !&#13;
Things are deftnitely&#13;
changing at the new Ranger.&#13;
Now, let's take the time to&#13;
change them for the better or&#13;
ALL students on campus, not&#13;
just the ones who have a&#13;
column in the Ranger.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
7&#13;
R S, b_j Siet't:'11 MWl't&#13;
ed.itor--iu-cl:iif&#13;
2: -l.&#13;
BER 16 th&#13;
d Ethnicit .9&#13;
r.&#13;
Ad. Pl. Ra al&#13;
1Letters ta &lt;!ellitor&#13;
Dear Mr., re:&#13;
r would Ii e to rectify the&#13;
optical ill i n th.at Jeffery&#13;
, 'emger rrvu1g to cre te in&#13;
b1 mo t rec.enc article m t.he&#13;
Rm , He tated tha l he&#13;
~ .. .livr-d through the a·e a&#13;
one ~ W ll, rm sorr)' lo say.&#13;
t.ha.1 t l bapp n(:d al] over&#13;
again (d1 . •entie,), it would&#13;
be lhe first nm he ould&#13;
remember. efle ts lr i.ng LO&#13;
c ace the tmpr ·s · n that h i&#13;
\'eteran, expen a ed writer&#13;
who ha., more of tlu~world&#13;
Lhan bi fellov,,r ~fresh out of&#13;
higl hooi~. tud n . know&#13;
For a fact thatje ry 1 atleas&#13;
twn y r }'ounger t.han m elf,&#13;
w1tb mt" bei g Mem:y•two. E ·en&#13;
I don' r 11)' remember the&#13;
e\'enrie e -cept from bat 1&#13;
see in family icture and a few&#13;
debih ·ng f1a3hbac of the&#13;
hideorn clothes mother&#13;
dre sed m hen child ... a ,·ery young chtld.&#13;
Kid! born in he late&#13;
·¥en lies .pen m f of thac&#13;
decade in du.pers. By the um&#13;
mo l kids born in th arly&#13;
mid eutie ha,e memolie&#13;
th ·yre(.'..3.\1 i\idly, lhose&#13;
mexn rie~ ocrured inc rely,&#13;
Brigitte Hau er&#13;
D ar tr. Mo r •:&#13;
ear r. Moor ;&#13;
ucemed Christian,&#13;
Traci Kitcling r&#13;
Thank ou.&#13;
7&#13;
'ifANGER NEWS, PAGE 9&#13;
"Someone you can tell&#13;
everything to and&#13;
someone who is with&#13;
you during good and&#13;
bad times"&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
,.he Greal Gambling ftaseo of 1113&#13;
Gabe Kluka&#13;
"Viva las Vegas"&#13;
-Elvis Presley&#13;
"Hit Me."&#13;
-Isabella Rosellini in Blue&#13;
Velvet&#13;
"Andy, we should get the hell&#13;
out of here 'cause we're broke."&#13;
-Me&#13;
Three weeks ago, Andrew&#13;
Patch and I decided to take a&#13;
little trip up to the Oneida&#13;
Casino in Green Bay to try and&#13;
win a big pile of money. Itwas a&#13;
trip that was inspired by a&#13;
monetary thrashing we both&#13;
took a week earlier, while&#13;
betting on dogs running in&#13;
circles. Oddly enough,&#13;
gambling out of spite does not&#13;
seem to be the wise thing to do.&#13;
After work, at about 5;30,&#13;
Andy picked me up at my&#13;
house in Racine, and on the&#13;
night before school started, we&#13;
started out on a trip that I was&#13;
sure would only take two hours.&#13;
We also figured out that we&#13;
didn't know the directions to&#13;
the casino, but we saw a sign in&#13;
Milwaukee, and figured that we&#13;
should easily be able to find our&#13;
way. Our plan was to speed 'up&#13;
to Green Bay, gamble until ten,&#13;
and then be back at home by&#13;
midnight counting our&#13;
fortunes. So, with three dumb&#13;
assumptions under our belt, we&#13;
headed off into the north&#13;
woods.&#13;
Two and a half hours later&#13;
Patch and I were at a Citgo&#13;
station somewhere in Green&#13;
Bay asking directions; we had&#13;
apparently taken quite a large&#13;
wrong turn, but fortunately we&#13;
were back on track and&#13;
standing in awe of the Oneida&#13;
Casino about fifteen minutes&#13;
later.&#13;
The Oneida Casino is&#13;
essentially a large pole barn&#13;
with a lot of slot machines,&#13;
Blackjack tables and Bingo&#13;
seats. There are a lot of flashing&#13;
lights, but not much in the way&#13;
of wall decorations. We&#13;
wandered through the forest of&#13;
one arm bandits, and found&#13;
two seats at a Blackjack table.&#13;
The game of Blackjack is&#13;
relatively simple, even odds&#13;
game of cards that moves very&#13;
quickly, which is why it is so&#13;
popular with gamblers. I am&#13;
sure that the majority of you&#13;
out there in Parkside land have&#13;
played it so I won't go into the&#13;
gory details. I do wish that&#13;
someone had gone over the&#13;
gory details with me, because&#13;
my wallet began bleeding at a&#13;
rapid pace as soon as I sat down&#13;
and started to play.&#13;
As I was losing more and&#13;
more money, Patch seemed to&#13;
be winning, and was at one&#13;
point about fifteen dollars&#13;
ahead. Now this may not sound&#13;
like a lot of money, but when&#13;
you are down forty, it is flfty five&#13;
bucks away from where you are.&#13;
Fortunately for my ego, the&#13;
dealer put together a&#13;
remarkable string of hands that&#13;
included back to back&#13;
"Someone who you&#13;
can trust to stand&#13;
behind you."&#13;
Blackjacks, a three seven twenty&#13;
one, and a seven card twenty, to&#13;
put Mister Patch's money in the&#13;
same crapper mine went down.&#13;
At about ten thirty, we had&#13;
taken enough abuse and&#13;
walked away from the table&#13;
shaking our heads at the&#13;
brilliance of our plan to gain a&#13;
fortune, or at least the price of&#13;
one book. However, I had not&#13;
quite had enough, and in a&#13;
desperate act, I got about five&#13;
bucks in quarters, and threw it&#13;
into a slot machine. Well, oddly&#13;
enough, I won back about half&#13;
the money I lost ( I am being&#13;
an optimist). so I only threw&#13;
about twenty-six bucks away.&#13;
At about twelve thirty, Andy&#13;
and I stopped in the&#13;
"SuperSaver" in Port&#13;
Washington to get some food,&#13;
and some caffeine, so that we&#13;
would stay wide awake for the&#13;
ride home. We browsed&#13;
through the health food, and&#13;
picked up a bag of Ruffles,&#13;
some "Garlic Toasties", and a&#13;
twelve pack of Diet Pepsi. This&#13;
little stop started a conversation&#13;
that basically went like this until&#13;
we got back to Racine;&#13;
"Gabe, we suck at gambling."&#13;
"Yeswe do Andy"&#13;
"This was a dumb idea Gabe,&#13;
probably dumber than going to&#13;
the dog track last week."&#13;
"Yesit was Andy; it was&#13;
definitely dumber than going&#13;
to the dog track last week."&#13;
"We're stupid Gabe."&#13;
'Yes Andy, we are."&#13;
"Someone who&#13;
doesn't tell your&#13;
business to your&#13;
parents!"&#13;
Wendy Orlowski (Benlor/art education) Wendy M. Wise Ounlor/soclology)&#13;
"Someone you can&#13;
share many secrets&#13;
with and not have to&#13;
worry about finding&#13;
out those secrets"&#13;
"A person you can talk&#13;
openly with and who&#13;
you can trust wholeheartedly."&#13;
Joshua Bruschuk (8ophomorelpr.med) Craig Rebro Ounlor/communlcatlon)&#13;
"Someone who's&#13;
always there when the&#13;
going gets tough."&#13;
Deborah Morgan (senior/psychOlogy)&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
PAGE 9&#13;
OFFICIAL QUOTE .&#13;
OR THE DAY&#13;
by Raymond G. w·ggins&#13;
Grap ic Designe fo 1h19' R~~&#13;
"Cope witli it. "&#13;
Teri Jacobsen&#13;
"'Someone you can tell&#13;
everything 10 and&#13;
someone w o is with&#13;
you during good a d&#13;
ba times''&#13;
E P T EMBER 16, l 93&#13;
ha Gr• at Iambi I sea • 111 3&#13;
"'Vi,-\'a la egas"&#13;
-ElVl!i Pr q•&#13;
Hi Me."&#13;
•I be'lla Rmellini i.n Biue&#13;
Vel 'el&#13;
~Andy, we should ge the hell&#13;
out of her 'c:au · w 'n: broke."&#13;
•Me&#13;
Three weeks ago. Andrew&#13;
Patch and decided to take a&#13;
little trip up to he On ida&#13;
~mo in Green Bay to try and&#13;
wm a ig pi1 f money. t, a&#13;
trip that was lll pired by a&#13;
monetary t.h.rashing both&#13;
LOok a ee · earlier, while&#13;
be ting n dog, numing in&#13;
circ1a Oddly nough,&#13;
gambling oul f pite doc noL&#13;
seem to b th wi thing t do.&#13;
After work, at about 5:30.&#13;
Andypic d me p tmy&#13;
hou in Racine, and on t.he&#13;
night before chool t.arr d, we&#13;
started ou on trip I.hat 1 was&#13;
!'iure wo · ld on.I take two hours.&#13;
1e al figur d out I.bat e&#13;
didn't know th dll' tions. to&#13;
casino, but e 1a • a flign u.1&#13;
"MJ.Jwauk. e, d figured that we&#13;
hou.1d easily be abJe to find o r&#13;
way. Our plan was to speed up&#13;
10 Gree1 Bay, gam 1 un tiJ ten,&#13;
and men be c'k at home by&#13;
midnighr counting our&#13;
fo runes. So, "'--ith tb.r dumb&#13;
assumptiom under our ell, e&#13;
beaded off into th north&#13;
woodr..&#13;
Two and a half hour I ter&#13;
Patch and ere at a Cltg&#13;
tation omewhere ·n Gr; n&#13;
Bay asking dir tio ; we had&#13;
apparently taken quu.e large&#13;
\IITong turn, but fortun tely w&#13;
were bac n tra and&#13;
Atanding in awe of the Oneida&#13;
c.asino abou fif en min te.&#13;
la er.&#13;
Th On ida Qui.no ti\&#13;
· tially a lar · e polt: bar "',t a lo or lo ma hi.n&#13;
Blackjac · tab e and Bingo&#13;
a . There are a lot of fl.ashing&#13;
ligb , bu n t mucll m. th wa&#13;
of wall decoration , \V&#13;
:andcrt:d through the forest of&#13;
one ar bandi ~. and found&#13;
two a ata Bladjadoablc.&#13;
The game of 81ac:kjac.k. is&#13;
retati el)' s·mple, e'\'e odd&#13;
game of Carra that O\' \ •r&#13;
qui.c y. ·hich h)' ; ti so&#13;
popular i.th gam le . I am&#13;
ure that lhe majority of 'O&#13;
oul 1ere in Par 1 land ha\·&#13;
played it so 1 ·on't go into he&#13;
gory det.ri . T d wish that&#13;
!ltOmeo had gon o ·er the&#13;
gory details with me, beraw&#13;
my wall t bepn b}eetling at a&#13;
rap· d pa oon I !ia.L down&#13;
and staned to play.&#13;
M was losing mo e and&#13;
mor money, Patch med to&#13;
be winning, au at one&#13;
pomt abo l- fifi en dollars&#13;
ah d .• • ow lhil may not • n&#13;
like a lot f ntonev, but when&#13;
you are down orcy, Lt i1I fifty five&#13;
bu away from ihe e ou are.&#13;
Fortuna.tel}' for y ego, th&#13;
deal r put together&#13;
remark.a.bl~ i.nng hand th t&#13;
incJuded ba LO bac&#13;
"Someo e who you&#13;
can trust to stan .&#13;
behind you."&#13;
·Someone who&#13;
do sn t ell your&#13;
business to yo r&#13;
parents!"&#13;
andy Orl owski (Sanlorial't Id catlo ) Wendy M. Wtsa Ounlorlsoclology)&#13;
"Someone you can&#13;
share ma y secrets&#13;
with and not ave to&#13;
worry about finding&#13;
out hose secrets"&#13;
R EWS - YOUR #1&#13;
.. A per on you can ta k&#13;
openly rth and who&#13;
you an trust wholeheartedly."&#13;
IJon)&#13;
OURCE -&#13;
'Someone who's&#13;
always there en the&#13;
gain ets toug . ."&#13;
or/ cho ogy)&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 10 SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
;;1 I&#13;
TRY A WHOLE OR HALF•••&#13;
ANYWAY YOU SLICE IT,&#13;
IT'S SUPER! An overly generous portion of freshly shaved roast&#13;
.... -._. ._._._. __ ._._._._._._._._._._._._.... beef and turkey, Swiss and cheddar cheeses, sliced&#13;
tomato, cucumber, and red onion ... all on a freshly&#13;
baked (AND REALLYBIG)french roll.&#13;
_', ,;~,,,~j,\$W.:~";:'m,,,.~I1Th'l\fu~W~';~'W'9tt*Pi&gt;j i&amp;'f~~' ~,~EiiiiRTAIN&#13;
SECTION.... .A' mt, ;.d--i-@.~~&#13;
Entertainment Week&#13;
NT&#13;
Television can be a wasteland&#13;
for the average viewer.&#13;
Thankfully, there are some&#13;
good television shows out this&#13;
season. There are many duds&#13;
out there but there are a few&#13;
quality show you can watch.&#13;
Get Mad on Thursdays. On&#13;
Thursday nights, NBC runs a&#13;
well written show called Mad&#13;
About You. It's a funny, well&#13;
written show about married life&#13;
and relationships. The&#13;
characters are believable and&#13;
fun to watch.&#13;
If you like police drama, I'd&#13;
highly recommend The&#13;
Comrnish. The series revolves&#13;
around police commissioner&#13;
Tony Scally. He looks like a&#13;
real life person, not a perfect&#13;
model. The stories are well&#13;
written, the plot holds you&#13;
attention, and its fun to watch.&#13;
Saturday nights, ABC 9 PM.&#13;
The John Laroquette Show is&#13;
a great show which revolves&#13;
around Jack Hammond,&#13;
a recovering alcoholic. The&#13;
humor is dry and has an edge&#13;
to it, giving the show a grip in&#13;
reality. The sets look like&#13;
something from the movie&#13;
Blade Runner, a definite plus.&#13;
Tuesday nights, NBC 7 P.M.&#13;
Monday nights are&#13;
dominated CBS. At 8 P.M.&#13;
you should watch Murphy&#13;
BTOW1. Its topical humor is&#13;
witty and well written. Loue and&#13;
War, which I think is Mad lite,&#13;
isn't all that bad ofa show.&#13;
Nothem Exposure has to be the&#13;
dominating show on 1V right&#13;
now. Ifyou don't know what&#13;
it's about, you don't know what&#13;
you're missing. It's a funny&#13;
show with a little bit of drama&#13;
thrown in.&#13;
Myfavorite show on any&#13;
network has to be Stm' Trek: The&#13;
Next Generation. Ifyou hate&#13;
science fiction, please skip this&#13;
paragraph. Next Generation is,&#13;
in&#13;
my opinion,&#13;
the best&#13;
television show&#13;
in years ( Next&#13;
to HiU Street&#13;
Blues.) Where&#13;
else can you&#13;
find drama, full&#13;
characters, and&#13;
a hint of subtle&#13;
comedy every&#13;
week. Plus you&#13;
cano zip off&#13;
into the 23rd&#13;
century and&#13;
have fun.&#13;
Roadhouse&#13;
Saloon &amp; Eatery&#13;
657-7888&#13;
6208 Greenbay Rd. Kenosha&#13;
1'2 Mile North of Hwy, 50 on Greenbay Rd.&#13;
Come 'or the Food, Stay 'or the Fun!&#13;
~'J..~~.~.~..r~.~~c::':.'.:~..,~!.'~~~I..c~.:::'.~'..r.'.,~..~!'~~.~. .~~.'!~.~&#13;
EveryThursdayNight EveryFriday Night EverySaturdayNight&#13;
FreeRailDrinksand LadiesNight BuckNight&#13;
TappedBeer:Miller, FreeDrinks $1.00Rail Drinks,&#13;
MillerUte,Genuine&#13;
$1.00 Bottles(domestic)&#13;
Draft.&#13;
in 16oz. taps&#13;
From9 p.m.to 1a.m.&#13;
From8 p.m.to midnight From8 p.m.to midnight&#13;
$5.00Cover $3.00Cover $2.00Cover&#13;
Looking for Fall Volleyball T~ms&#13;
-No Fee-&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PREVIEW&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 16 compiled by&#13;
Betty Mcilvaine&#13;
Athletics for Students: call 2159 regarding use of pool and gyms&#13;
w/validated !D.&#13;
Foreign Film Series: "Proof' (Australia) award winner, 7:30 pm,&#13;
Union Cinema. Season ticket averages $1.00 per film w/student&#13;
discount.&#13;
Sierra Club Meeting, program; "The Importance of Butterflies,"&#13;
7 pm at Messiah Lutheran Church, 4901 Durand, Racine.&#13;
SATURDAY,SEPT. IS&#13;
Cross Country Annual Midwest Collegiate Open, Women's; Noon.&#13;
Men's: 12;45 pm, At Parkside.&#13;
Indonesian Shadow Puppet Play &amp; Gamelan Orchestra at the Field&#13;
Museum in Chicago (Roosevelt Road at Lake Shore Drive).&#13;
Performance at I pm.&#13;
1-312-922-9410, ext 288.&#13;
Foreign Film Series: "Proof," (Australian) award winner, 8 pm,&#13;
Union Cinema: season tickets at the door.&#13;
Kenosha- Spaghetti Dinner, Noon to 5 pm., Moose Lodge, 3003&#13;
30th Ave., $5.50.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 19&#13;
Afternoon Open House w/ movie break and potluck; sign up at&#13;
the Women's Center (2170) for location and directions.&#13;
Foreign Film Series: "Proof," 2 pm, Union Cinema- Australian&#13;
award winning film,&#13;
Monthly Stamp Show, VFWHall, 661839th Ave., Kenosha. 10 am&#13;
to spm.&#13;
MONDAY,SEPT. 20&#13;
Panel Discussion, "How Student Aid and State Aid Affect Each&#13;
Other."&#13;
w/ The Welfare Warriors, the Financial Aid Dept. and Social&#13;
Services. Molinaro 113 at Noon.&#13;
TUESDAY,SEPT. 21&#13;
VOLLEYBALL AT HOME, Robert Morris, IL, 7pm.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
HISPANIC HERITAGE WEEK&#13;
SOCCER AT HOME, Lakeland College, WI at 4pm.&#13;
MUSIC- Noon Concert Series; songs of Margaret Bonds- soprano&#13;
and piano. Free, CART 0118.&#13;
Recruitment Fair, Main Place. 9am to 3pm.&#13;
Movie; "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," Union Cinema, 7pm. $1.00&#13;
for students, $2.00 for others. ..&#13;
OVERBEARD&#13;
Official who remains&#13;
mnamed in East Hampton,&#13;
".Y., about the threat of a ful1-&#13;
:hrottle paparazzi assault fueled&#13;
)y rumors thatJohn F. Kennedy&#13;
ir, and Daryl Hannah plan to&#13;
ie the knot Saturday at the&#13;
~ong Island beach burg of the&#13;
ich and famous:&#13;
"There'll be helicopters all&#13;
over that beach. It'll look like&#13;
Vietnam."&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALl':. 595-2287&#13;
RA EWS 19,93&#13;
PBftllll&#13;
RSDAY, S 16&#13;
Athl ti for Srud n ; c:all 2159 regardin · use of po and gym&#13;
/validated ID.&#13;
Entartainmant Weak ustralia) wiRner. m.&#13;
•erage rum w / tud nt&#13;
Tclevisio can be a. w.i5teland&#13;
for vievi'er.&#13;
hanliully, then-me&#13;
h . OU t .&#13;
eaon. Th re ai-e many duds&#13;
but ther ar-e few&#13;
how watch.&#13;
Get Mad on Thursdays. On&#13;
Thunday nigbr.s, NBC run a&#13;
well written b call d About You. It' a v.•elJ&#13;
written: how abou married life&#13;
and relatioruhlps. The&#13;
characters are be iew.ble and&#13;
fun to watch.&#13;
Hyon like police drama, I'd&#13;
hight r mmend The&#13;
CoDl.lDllh. The~ r ·olvea&#13;
arowid police commi.Slione,Tony&#13;
He looks Ii e a&#13;
real r e person, no a perfect&#13;
m,odel. The torie.5 are ell&#13;
wrinen th plot holds you&#13;
ttention. and ii&amp; fun to wa ch.&#13;
Saturday nights. C 9PM.&#13;
T john Laroqu tte ow&#13;
a great mhow which revoJ s&#13;
Every Tburaday Night&#13;
Free RaI D nks and&#13;
Tapped Beer. MIiier,&#13;
1Ue11" Ute, From 9 pm. a.5.00 Cover&#13;
aroundJa k. Hammond,&#13;
a recm•ering alcoholic. l'he&#13;
humor i11 -dry and h ~dge&#13;
to it,, giving the how a grip · n&#13;
r al" ty. The :rem look like&#13;
m thing fr m t:be mo-,.&lt;ie&#13;
Bl rl Runner, defin·te plu·.&#13;
Tu day nigh P. •&#13;
'lond y rugh u, are&#13;
dominat d by CDS. At P,yo should v,,atch Mu,,-ph:,&#13;
Brown. Its topical hwn r i&#13;
witty and welJ written. Low-W4T, v,•bi 1 ink i lite,&#13;
· n l all that had of a how.&#13;
otht:ro &amp;:porurt bas to be th&#13;
dominating ow on 1V rigbt&#13;
now. rr you don't know wha&#13;
it's abo t, yo d n't what&#13;
you 'r n• a fwmy&#13;
show w:ilh a Little bit of drama&#13;
thrown iy favorit how on any&#13;
network has to be Siar Dt · ~&#13;
!-.~ Get,emii(m. If you bate&#13;
cience fiction, please !kip lhi5&#13;
paragraph. • exl Genm1tian i •&#13;
m opinion.&#13;
th best&#13;
televi · n how&#13;
iin yean - L&#13;
toHiU :rm&#13;
Blua.) Where&#13;
els (aD. find&lt;lm.a.. fun&#13;
Characle • and&#13;
·n o subU&#13;
comedy every&#13;
week. Phu you&#13;
cano zip off&#13;
into the 23rd&#13;
century and&#13;
hav Road ouse&#13;
Salaon ery&#13;
65'1-'1888&#13;
6ZG G-rl~W Rel. K&#13;
1/Z 11• wy. Sa ~&#13;
E e,y Fr1day Nlghl&#13;
ladtes Night&#13;
Free Drinks&#13;
From 8 p.rn. mid ight&#13;
$3 00 Caver&#13;
Ev ry satu y N 1&#13;
Buck Nigh&#13;
$1.00 Rai Dri ks&#13;
1.'00 Bottles (domestic)&#13;
In i 8 oz. taps&#13;
rom B p.m. to midnight&#13;
2.00 Covar&#13;
~I&#13;
ena Club!\. ling, p.rqgram: '"The lmporumc ofButterilies,"&#13;
7 pm at ie · h Lutheran Gbur • 4901 Durand, Racin .&#13;
SATUBD , SEPT. 18&#13;
GrOM Country Annual · ~e t Collegiate n, Yl men' · oon.&#13;
M o' ; 12: • m. Par 'd •&#13;
ludo wi had&#13;
Mu umi Chi&#13;
Performance a&#13;
1-312-922-9410,&#13;
Puppel Play Gam 1an Oreb tra t e F1eld&#13;
(RoO!C\'cl.L at Lake hor Drive),&#13;
pm.&#13;
288.&#13;
( wtralian) award win , 8 pm.&#13;
atth d&#13;
oo to 5 pm., foose l.odg , 300&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT.19&#13;
After -oo H u movi t". • k potluc~ a&#13;
the Women' ~te (2170) or location and direction&#13;
Monthly lamp bow, VFW Hall, 6618 39th ve., Kenoma. IO am&#13;
o4pm.&#13;
MONDAY,S • 20&#13;
Pan l Di ion, H d and tale Aid . ect Each&#13;
0th .&#13;
'fA•/ The Welfare ~arrion, the Hnancial Aid DepL cial.&#13;
Services. olinaro ll3at N n.&#13;
TUFSDAY. EPT. 21&#13;
, THOM:£ , Ro rt Morri I I , 7pm.&#13;
WED ESDAY, SEPT. HI AM • HEJUTAGE WEEK&#13;
HOME Lakeland College WI 4pm.&#13;
MUSIC oon Concert Series· ,o.ngs MargaceL Bond&amp;, soprano&#13;
and iano. Free. CART Dll .&#13;
.&amp;eauitm Dl Fair, Main Place, 9am to 3pm.&#13;
tor ~ ms&#13;
Fee- Movie: "'Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Union Cinema, 7pm. Sl.00&#13;
for tudent:5, 2.00 ' r others.&#13;
RA EWS - YO&#13;
- ~·-;- .:-r , I ·. . .&#13;
',&#13;
~ -&#13;
I&#13;
RY WHO E HA&#13;
SLIC&#13;
SUPE&#13;
•••&#13;
overiy g nerous sha d beef a d turkey, Swiss and cheddar cheeses, sliced&#13;
onion... 11 bak:ed (AND REALLY BIG) fr nch roll.&#13;
_.. ..&#13;
0 1ria] w h remain .&#13;
mnamed in Eas Hampton,&#13;
• ..• about the threat of fuU.&#13;
hroule paparazzi a.Mault fueled&#13;
JY rumo LhatJohn .F. Kenn d)&#13;
r. and Daryl Hannah Ian LO&#13;
je lhe knot Saturday at the&#13;
.. ong bl d beach burg of the&#13;
· ch famom:&#13;
''There'll b helicopter all&#13;
er that beach. L'll look. hk~&#13;
RCE - CAL 595-2287&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 11&#13;
iiiii.····· M&#13;
•R••E••V••I•E••WS ~(7'!~1~"&#13;
FORTRESS&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
NT&#13;
(DavisEntertainment) R&#13;
Stafring: Christopher Lam bert&#13;
(Highlander), Kurtwood Smith&#13;
(Robocop), Loryn Locklin.&#13;
desert. We don't know what desert,&#13;
which is only part of the problem with&#13;
this film, Owned and run by the&#13;
Men'&lt;Iel Corporation, prisoners are&#13;
easily regulated with a behavior-eontrol&#13;
device called the "intestinator," and can&#13;
become intestinated for such things as&#13;
unauthorized thought processes or&#13;
failure to behave, all at the discretion of&#13;
a somewhat sadistic&#13;
prison director&#13;
(Kurtwood Smith).&#13;
Our hero realizes he&#13;
must find a way to be&#13;
reunited with his wife,&#13;
although he knows that&#13;
once you're inside the&#13;
fortress, you do not&#13;
escape alive.&#13;
Director and&#13;
"carnage-meister, ..&#13;
Stuart Gordon, better&#13;
""illiiiI known for the 1985&#13;
• horror film, Re-&#13;
Miiillilliill Animator, tries science&#13;
fiction for a second time after his 1990&#13;
big screen failure, /Who!fox. His horror&#13;
movie gore tends to surface in this new&#13;
science fiction thriller, and the special&#13;
effects may be disappointing for some&#13;
science fiction aficionados. While the&#13;
idea is fresh, it is spoiled by several&#13;
implausible scenes and too many gaps in&#13;
the unanswered questions of the plot.&#13;
What starts om with a spark of appeal&#13;
ends with a dissatisfying fizzle.&#13;
Director: Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator)&#13;
lmagine a world&#13;
where a form of&#13;
identification is a&#13;
universal product code&#13;
tattooed on your&#13;
forearm. Imagine a&#13;
world where an&#13;
authoritarian&#13;
government deems&#13;
having more than one&#13;
child a crime and a just&#13;
cause for incarceration.&#13;
This is the United States&#13;
of the future in Fortress&#13;
featuring French actor&#13;
Christopher Lambert, best remembered&#13;
for his role in the film Highlander, and&#13;
newcomer Loryn Locklin who portray a&#13;
hushand and wife team illegally&#13;
attempting to cross the U.S. border into&#13;
Mexico. Consequently discovered by a&#13;
border guard, they try to escape. But&#13;
Lambert is wounded and captured by&#13;
border police. He is sent to a hidden,&#13;
maximum security prison called the&#13;
Fortress, a 3~story underground&#13;
penitentiary located somewhere in the Rating: 4&#13;
SW£LL~ 'A- ~&#13;
'1(;;,"'.~' .&#13;
~&#13;
INSTANT&#13;
VIDEO GUIDE Joe Kane&#13;
AU videos are rated on a scale from zero to ten.&#13;
.......•;.....•&#13;
Job Openings .&#13;
In The Parkside Union&#13;
Applications being taken now for:&#13;
Student Manager - must be 21 years of age or older&#13;
and have a minimum overall GPA of 2.5. Evening and&#13;
Weekend work.&#13;
Bartenders - for special events. 21 years of age or&#13;
older. Evening and Weekend work.&#13;
Bowling Mechanics - Lane Maintainence and light&#13;
mechanical work on AMF Pin-Setters. Experience .&#13;
Preferred.&#13;
Clip on dotted line and save r---------THE-PARKsiIiE--iiNioN---------~&#13;
"You've Got Our Number"&#13;
595&#13;
Menu Hotline 2689 Info. Center 2345&#13;
Union Square Pizza Delivery 2690 Rec. Center 2695&#13;
Facilities Reservations 2294&#13;
~------------------------------------------------------------------~ Clip on dotted line and save&#13;
HEY&#13;
GANG!&#13;
IT'S ...&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN UNION SQUARh&#13;
Sept. 20&#13;
DENVER&#13;
at&#13;
KANSAS CITY&#13;
8:00P.M.&#13;
Big games coming .&#13;
Oct. 25 - VIking/Bears&#13;
Nov. 8 - Green Bay/Kansas City&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
EWS E II&#13;
ENTERTAI&#13;
SECTION&#13;
•••••••••• REEL&#13;
REVIEWS~( .••••••••.• ?),,&#13;
FORTRESS&#13;
(Da" · Enc.ertamim n t) It&#13;
!arring: Chn toph r l.amber&#13;
(Highlander), urt.wood mith&#13;
(Robocop), Loryn ocklin.&#13;
IhreCtO.r: Sruar Gordon (Re-Animator)&#13;
Imagine a orld&#13;
her' a. form of&#13;
1dentifica -on i a&#13;
unh:enal product code&#13;
tattooed Oil fO f&#13;
forearm, Im gine a&#13;
w rld here an&#13;
authontarian&#13;
gm mm md n&#13;
having m r th n n&#13;
child a crime and a just&#13;
cause for incarceration.&#13;
Thi~ is the U ited Sta.ta&#13;
of the f tur in f'm1rm&#13;
featuring French acto&#13;
Christopher Lambcn, best rem m bered&#13;
for hi role in the filin High/a uter, and&#13;
nrv.·comer Loryn Locklin who portra a&#13;
h band and wife tJ am illegally&#13;
attempting to cro Lhe U. . bo der mto&#13;
Mexico, Consequently di O"o' ed by a&#13;
border guard, they try to escape. But&#13;
Lambert 1 ounded and capmr d by&#13;
border po.lk . He i e L ta a. hidden,&#13;
maximum erurity prison called the&#13;
Fortre· , a S!-story underground&#13;
penhenliary located ,omewhere in me&#13;
deserL W.e don't know what de n,&#13;
whi h i only parl of th p obkm wilh&#13;
ilii film. Owned and run by e&#13;
~•'IeJ Corporation, prhone are&#13;
easily r gulated with a behaYior- trol&#13;
de oi.c called th "intestinator, • and can&#13;
become int tinat d foi;- uch !hin.g&#13;
unauthorized thought p oce es or&#13;
failur o behave, all at the discr ti n of&#13;
a somewhat di tic&#13;
prison director&#13;
tKurtwood ' th).&#13;
Our hero realizes he&#13;
must find a way to be&#13;
reunited wi llis wife.&#13;
although he know11, that&#13;
ce you•re inside th&#13;
forire you do not&#13;
exape alive.&#13;
Director and&#13;
INSTANT&#13;
VIDEO GUIDI JoeKa,ie&#13;
All videos ar. ra ttd on a scale from :urn lo ten.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
NT&#13;
JobOpen"ng&#13;
In he Parkside Union&#13;
Appllcatians being taken now for:&#13;
Student Manager - must be 21 years of age or older&#13;
and have a m,inimum overall GPA of 2.5. Evening and&#13;
Weekend work.&#13;
Bartenders - for special events. 21 years of age or&#13;
older. Evening and Week ,end work.&#13;
Bowling Mechanics Lane Maintainence and light&#13;
mechanical work on AMF Pin-Setters. Expenence&#13;
Preferred.&#13;
Clip on dott d line and sa e&#13;
r - -T 1HE PARKs1DE- uNioN ,&#13;
"You've Got Our umber''&#13;
1 nu Hotlin&#13;
l Union Square Pizza Del' ery&#13;
I Facmties Reservations&#13;
2689&#13;
2690&#13;
2294&#13;
Info. Center&#13;
Rec. Cante&#13;
Cl'ip on dotted lme and are&#13;
HEY&#13;
GANG!&#13;
IT'S ...&#13;
at&#13;
KA SA CITY&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
CALL 595-2287&#13;
595&#13;
2345&#13;
2895&#13;
--------------J&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 12&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
1&#13;
10. escort the movies faster.&#13;
i,",',',','.:. ~v~~~~~~ t~~:;::1 with the&#13;
8. After they sign a there's&#13;
:;: ~t~fo;:U~lb:~~our left eye,&#13;
Co"" seal reads&#13;
::~:i: ofthe ~"", ~'~'"6. I get I~·~~&#13;
be get invited Letterman.&#13;
3. french&#13;
President can't 2. have be a 1. Secret service code name:&#13;
"Buttafuoco."&#13;
Tap Albums&#13;
1. Billy Joel&#13;
'''Sleepless in Seattle'&#13;
Soundtrack"&#13;
"Blind Melon," Blind Melon&#13;
"Janet," Janet Jackson&#13;
5. "Black Sunday," Cypress Hill&#13;
"Core," ''The Bodyguard'&#13;
Soundtrack"&#13;
8. "Prornleee and Lies," UB40&#13;
a Grip," Aerosmith&#13;
"Unplugged ... " Kidding&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Here's what every American could have if money owed on&#13;
national debt were distributed nationwide: II&#13;
1. A 1993 Escort&#13;
2. Nine Day Caribbean cruise&#13;
3. Fifty compact sound discs&#13;
4. Four 24-inch color 1V's&#13;
5. Ten Super Bowl tickets&#13;
6. Four hundred bags of peanut M&amp;Ms&#13;
Ten shares of Ford stock&#13;
thousand Big Macs, with fries&#13;
World Features Syndicate&#13;
lil!1&#13;
Johnny Carson, retired talk&#13;
show host, will be one of five&#13;
American to receive the&#13;
distinguished Kennedy Cen ter&#13;
Honors for lifetime&#13;
contributions to American&#13;
culture. The other recipients&#13;
announced Wednesday in&#13;
Washington, D.C., will be&#13;
Arthur Mitchell, founder of the&#13;
Dance Theatre of Harlem;&#13;
conductor Georg Solti; gospel&#13;
singer Marion Williams; and&#13;
the composer and lyricist&#13;
Stephen Sondheim. Their&#13;
contributions will be celebrated&#13;
at a Kennedy Cen ter gala&#13;
December 5, which will be&#13;
taped to air later.&#13;
x&#13;
TOPPING CHOICES&#13;
Sausage, green peppers, onions, pepperoni,&#13;
Canadian bacon, black olives, mushrooms,&#13;
hot peppers.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
8" Cheese Pizza $3.20&#13;
8" 1 Topping $3.99&#13;
4.15&#13;
8" 3 Topping $4.35&#13;
10" 1 Topping $4.99&#13;
10" 2 Topping $5.49&#13;
10" 3 Topping $5.69&#13;
14" Cheese Pizza $5.45&#13;
14" 1 Topping $6.10&#13;
14" 2 Topping $6.59&#13;
14" 3 Topping $7.09&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
Grilled Chicken Filet $3.49&#13;
Bacon Burger Basket.. $3.39&#13;
Pizza Burger Basket.. $3.09&#13;
Alpine Burger Basket $3.09&#13;
Jack Burger Basket $3.09&#13;
Cheeseburger Basket... $3.19&#13;
Plain Burger Basket.. $2.99&#13;
DELIVERY PROGRAM&#13;
FOR CAMPUS HOUSING&#13;
Hours for Delivery: Monday - Thursday 4:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Tap Singles&#13;
1. Drearntover" Carey '(~&#13;
2. Can1 Falling Love,"&#13;
UB40&#13;
.&#13;
3T.a"gWTheoaommp! Ther.e it L~~f~fi~~fs~;~;;:ylum '.J,.I.,&gt;,.,!:,.I.",&#13;
Will There,"&#13;
Michael Jackson&#13;
8. Lately," 9B.il"lTyhJeoerliver Dream ,"&#13;
.1TOo.n"yIfl TI ohandilTnoonLeolot,"&#13;
'I. ~ r J)&#13;
t&lt;.',..,, ~ -,' ,.&#13;
\~J1L' .~'&#13;
ill 1.~.t&#13;
:~lJ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;:::::::::::::::::~::;::::::;::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;::'::::::;::i::::::;::::::::::::::~;::::::::::::::;::::;;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::.~::::.:::;:::::::::::::~:::;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::;:::~;:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::.~:&#13;
MISCElLANEOUS&#13;
U.F.O.'s : $.99&#13;
with Ranch or Pizza Sauce&#13;
Chef Salad ~ $2.75&#13;
Garden Salad $2.99&#13;
BEVERAGES&#13;
Snapple $1.29 ea&#13;
Ice Mountain $1.09 ea&#13;
Pepsi $1.15 It&#13;
Diet Pepsi $1.15 It&#13;
Mountain Dew $1.15 It&#13;
Slice $1.15 It&#13;
&amp; RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
Top Teo: Poking fun •• his l deadly earnest image, Vu»&#13;
IT ~:~~~~: ~=y~D ;;:~• :J Sep1embcr 8th. He compiled a&#13;
,1 «&gt;p ten list whb the bcSI puu of&#13;
•· thejob7&#13;
4. You don't have to funny&#13;
to oet Invited on Letterman .&#13;
You get to eat all the trench&#13;
fries the Preeldent get to.&#13;
You don't have to a great&#13;
speller.&#13;
servioe t. "Buttaluoc:o." Police eeoort gets you to&#13;
❖• the movies faster. Tap Albums :',?- 9. I played tetherball with the&#13;
;.'.f.'.;.: Inventor oflethertlell. "River of Dreams," Billy ,.. bill, 2. •s1eep1esa in Seattle'&#13;
tots of free pens. Soundtrack"&#13;
\ 7. If you close your left 3. "Blind Melon; Blind Melon&#13;
} the &amp;eal on the podium reads 4. "Janet; Janet Jac;bon&#13;
·l "President of the United&#13;
5. "Black Sunday; Cypress HIii&#13;
t.i States."&#13;
6. "Core; Stone Temple Pilots&#13;
l ~~ intellectual rights to my 7. "Thndte ~guarcr&#13;
,... ..,,.,_,es. Sou ra~~ 1 5. Dan Quayle and Gerald 8. "Promises and Lies; UB40&#13;
~ Ford are pretty easy to beet 9. "Get a Grip." Aerosmith&#13;
~, during Vice Presidents Week 10. •unplugged ... And&#13;
··" on •Jeopardy!" Seated, · Rod Stewart&#13;
ffi&#13;
Slngl•&#13;
1. "Oreamlover" ,Mariah Caltty&#13;
"Can't Help Falllng in Love."&#13;
3. "Whoo111p! (There It is),"&#13;
Tag Team&#13;
4. •11; Janet Jackson&#13;
5. "Runaway Tarin,"Sou/Asy/vm&#13;
6. "Right Here (Human&#13;
Nature)-Oowntown; SWV&#13;
7. "WIii you be There;&#13;
Michattl Jackson&#13;
"Lately; Jodeci&#13;
9. "The river of Dream;&#13;
Silly.Joel&#13;
10, "If I had no Loot."&#13;
· Tony/ Tonfl Tone/&#13;
~,,·· , ,,;,; I ,&#13;
' 111,,"l&#13;
·: ,:.-,❖"«;i/.(,:V ;- ❖X•W ::; ,x- &lt;:»»~ ... '.:&lt; ?"-0{~/..:;:: ~ :r...:~:•··;.::-,v.r.❖•. :&lt;~~:?;::-:.:,..9.•~•:(.«.,:~:--;~-:«_:(.•.-:x ,x· .. , ". .,. ·-~,r,·•· ··.·,:.;,;.&#13;
No&#13;
Here's what every American could bav~ money owed on&#13;
nauonwide:&#13;
I. 2. Nine Day Caribbean crwse&#13;
S. F'tfty 24-inch color Ten Super tickets&#13;
ofpeanul 7. 8. One Macs. Kudos&#13;
host. dutinguished Kennedy Center&#13;
HonOI'$ for lifetime&#13;
t0 rulcure. recipien1S&#13;
announced Wednesday in&#13;
washington, D.C., will be&#13;
Arthur Mitchell. founder of the&#13;
Dance Theatre of Harlem;&#13;
Sol ti; the composer lyricist&#13;
Stephen Sondheim. Their&#13;
contributions celebrated&#13;
al a Kennedy Cent.er gala&#13;
December which will taped tO air later.&#13;
Pan iltPi.z.za·&#13;
~&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
............................... ..................................... 8" 2 Topping ..................................... $4.1 S&#13;
..................................... 10" Cheese Pizza ............................. $4.25&#13;
1 O" ................................... ................................... 1 O" ................................... ............................. ................................... 6.I0&#13;
................................... ................................... TOPPING CHOICES&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
........................ Basket. ........................ Chicken Jack Basket ......................... $3.15&#13;
Basket. ......................... ........................ ............................ Basket. ........................ Basket ........................... MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
.............................................. ........................................ .................................... 2. 99&#13;
BEVERAGES&#13;
........................................ ............................... ............................................. 1.1 S ...................................... 1.1 s .............................. 1.1 S .............................................. TO PLACE YOUR ORDER PLEASE CALL EXT 2690 (UNION SQUARE GRILL)&#13;
CASH "COB CARDS" ACCEPTED&#13;
.&#13;
2287&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
'I&#13;
£&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 13&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993 (LUBCOLUMNS&#13;
Rangerwelcomes articles announcing club events, for more&#13;
Information call 595·2287 or stop in at the Ranger office.&#13;
PAl bringing FUN and Enjoyment&#13;
to the Student lady Club QIA&#13;
Chris Tishuk&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
For this week's edition of&#13;
club Q&amp;A, I met with the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB)&#13;
president Rebbeca Stenstrup.&#13;
She began her work on PAB&#13;
four years ago on the live&#13;
entertainment committee and&#13;
worked up to team coordinator&#13;
of film and video. Last year, she&#13;
served as vice president and&#13;
this year president&#13;
I discussed with her the&#13;
responsibilities of the PAB and&#13;
their plans for the upcoming&#13;
year.&#13;
CT: What does the PAB do?&#13;
RS: We put on approximately&#13;
95% of all campus activities&#13;
ranging from comedians,&#13;
hypnotists to bands, movies,&#13;
and plays such as Oklahoma&#13;
and Lost in Yonkers.&#13;
CT: What goals do you have for&#13;
this school year?&#13;
RS: Over the summer we made&#13;
five or six goals for ourselves.&#13;
We wanted to do an open&#13;
house- which was last week. We&#13;
have recruitment goals. We&#13;
want to have 15 people by the&#13;
end of October.&#13;
CT: How could someone join&#13;
the PAB?&#13;
RS: Just stop down. We are&#13;
located down the hallway&#13;
behind the Union info desk.&#13;
Just stop in and we'll make you&#13;
part of the family.&#13;
CT: What events do you have&#13;
planned for this year?&#13;
RS: Last night we had the&#13;
comedian Brad Perry. We have&#13;
a lot of events planned for this&#13;
year. Tonight we are showing&#13;
Who Framed Roger Rabbit&#13;
which is free for all students.&#13;
CT: Are all the movies going to&#13;
be free this year?&#13;
RS: Yes! All the movies will be&#13;
free for students and one dollar&#13;
for guests.&#13;
CT: How do you decide which&#13;
acts to book?&#13;
RS: That is very difficult. We&#13;
get so much information and&#13;
there are so many acts. What&#13;
we do is we like to see all of the&#13;
performers before we book&#13;
them. We go to the NACA&#13;
conference, which is the&#13;
National Association for&#13;
Campus Activities. Many of the&#13;
acts we book are there and then&#13;
we get the chance to see the&#13;
performers before we book&#13;
them.&#13;
.CT: What are your duties as&#13;
PAB president?&#13;
RS: To make sure all the&#13;
different committees are doing&#13;
their job. Make sure&#13;
promotion is up on time and&#13;
there is some diversity in each&#13;
of the committees and the&#13;
performers. Basically, I oversee&#13;
everything that happens in the&#13;
PAB.&#13;
CT: Who are the other officers&#13;
ofPAB?&#13;
RS: There are many. They are&#13;
Amanda Lawrence, Melisa&#13;
Halverson, Aaron Sens, Katie&#13;
Klingsporn, Desaree Franklin,&#13;
Claudia Foertsch, Bryan&#13;
Halverson,Jenny Punzel, and&#13;
Patti Jefferson.&#13;
CT: How do you get student&#13;
input into the performers you&#13;
book and the activities you&#13;
plan?&#13;
RS: Well, it's very difficult to&#13;
get student feedback. We have&#13;
tried more than once to send&#13;
out surveys to the student body.&#13;
Last year we sent out a survey&#13;
about "The End" asking&#13;
students to mark which types of&#13;
music they like to listen to and&#13;
we based our entertainment on&#13;
that. But generally those type&#13;
of things don't work to well.&#13;
The easiest way to give us input&#13;
is to stop in the PAB office and&#13;
talk to somebody or to join.&#13;
Just join.&#13;
CT: Does the PAB have any&#13;
type of motto or founding&#13;
principle?&#13;
RS: Yes! We take your fun&#13;
seriously!&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
BOWLERS!&#13;
SOC Defines&#13;
SeRlester Goals.&#13;
I1y Morten Sunde&#13;
Another semester has started,&#13;
and all the clubs and&#13;
organizations are coming hack&#13;
to life. As the president of the&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
(S.O.C.) I would like to take&#13;
this opportunity to&#13;
congratulate all the new&#13;
officers with their positions. 1&#13;
look forward to working with&#13;
you in the upcoming year.&#13;
For those of you who don't&#13;
know what S.O.C. is, it is one of&#13;
the five major status&#13;
organizations on campus. All&#13;
smaller clubs and organizations&#13;
are funded through.S.O.C.&#13;
Together we represent a wide&#13;
range of interests, and most&#13;
clubs sponsor different events&#13;
throughout the semester. Every&#13;
two weeks on Mondays we meet&#13;
in Molin~ 0-137. The next&#13;
meeting will be September&#13;
27th.&#13;
If you are interested in&#13;
joining a club, just stop by the&#13;
S.O.C. office in Union 203, or&#13;
stop by the Student Life Office&#13;
in Union 209. If you can't find&#13;
a club that you would like to be&#13;
in, then start your own. It's not&#13;
very difficult, and we'll help&#13;
you along the way.&#13;
1 will try to actively work to&#13;
create better communication&#13;
between the different clubs and&#13;
organizations, so if any of you&#13;
have any suggestions to how we&#13;
can improve S.O.C., please let&#13;
me know. It is not mandatory&#13;
for the clubs to attend the&#13;
meetings, but I strongly suggest&#13;
Morten Sunde&#13;
that each club send a&#13;
representative. We will inform&#13;
you of upcoming events, try to&#13;
avoid clubs having an even t at&#13;
the same time and give&#13;
deadlines for budget due dates.&#13;
On September 22nd. S.O.C.&#13;
will be holding a recruitment&#13;
fair in upper main place from 9&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m. I hope to see all&#13;
of the clubs represented. It's a&#13;
good opportunity to increase&#13;
your club membership, and for&#13;
students not involved it is a&#13;
good time to look at what clubs&#13;
are active on campus.&#13;
I hope I see a lot of you&#13;
there.&#13;
modem dance club&#13;
3790 Meachem Rd•• 554-9695&#13;
Corner of Meachem &amp; Taylor&#13;
D.J. Wednesday· Saturday&#13;
Alternative • Top 40 • Rave· Rock&#13;
-Nightly Drink Specials-&#13;
Men's Intercollegiate Bowling Team Now Forming.&#13;
For Tryout and Qualification Information&#13;
Contact the Union Office.&#13;
Room 209 or Call 595·2027&#13;
Also: New League Bowling/or men and women.&#13;
Leave name &amp; telephone number with union office.&#13;
Every Thursday - College Night!&#13;
$3.25 pitchers of beer 9:00 p.m. - close&#13;
D.J. starts at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Mix-It-Up Music (Alternative, Top 40, etc.)&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
Every Friday- Ladies Night!&#13;
Ladies $5.00 cover&#13;
Ladies drink free rails &amp; tap beer 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 59!&gt;-2287&#13;
GE 13 S E P T M BE R 16, 199 3&#13;
CLUB -COLUMNS&#13;
Ranger welcom , . artlcles announcing club events, for m,or•&#13;
Informal on call 595-1187 or stop In at the Ra gar office.&#13;
PAB bringing FUN •d Enjoyment&#13;
to Illa lladanl Body Club Q&amp;A&#13;
Cl:ris Tishwi&#13;
Ftatun Editor&#13;
or dm week's edition of&#13;
club Q&amp;A. I met with th&#13;
Parkl!id Activitie Board (PAB)&#13;
pr sident Rebl a. temnrnp.&#13;
he began berwork on PAB&#13;
f'our years ago on me live&#13;
enrertainmentcommiueeand&#13;
worked up to am coordinator&#13;
film and vid o. La J'tar, &amp;be&#13;
served \1Ce presiden and&#13;
[his year president&#13;
l di1cussed with her tbe&#13;
rcspon ihiliti.es of the PAB and&#13;
their plam1 for the upcoming&#13;
~-&#13;
Cf; What does the PAB do?&#13;
R&amp; We put on approximately&#13;
95% all campus activities&#13;
ranging fr m comedian ,&#13;
bwno - ts to band • mov' e I&#13;
and plays such Oklah a&#13;
and Lost in \lonk •&#13;
: VtrJiat gool.s d you have for&#13;
th" school year?&#13;
RS: Over the um.mer we made&#13;
fi ·c or ix. goal for ounelves.&#13;
We wanted to o an open&#13;
house- which was last wee We&#13;
run recn:ribnent goals. W&#13;
wan to have 15 people by lh&#13;
end of October.&#13;
CT: How could someone join&#13;
the PAB?&#13;
RS; Jmt top down. W. are&#13;
localed down the hallway&#13;
behmd lhe nion · nfo desk.&#13;
Jwt .t pin and we'U make you&#13;
part of th family.&#13;
CT: What events do you have&#13;
iaan d for lhi year?&#13;
RS; . t night · d the&#13;
co edian Brad Perry. Vii have&#13;
a lot of event&amp; fanned for tlili&#13;
year. Tonight w are howm&#13;
Who Framed Roger Ra.bbi&#13;
whi i free for all rud nu.&#13;
CT; Are all the mories going to&#13;
be fr"tt this year?&#13;
RS: 'res? All the morie will be&#13;
free for stud n and o e dollar&#13;
for gue m.&#13;
CT: How do you decide hie&#13;
C ,obook?&#13;
RS: That Ui very diffirulL Wi&#13;
get ucb inform · on and&#13;
th re are M&gt; many acts. What&#13;
w do · we like to see all of the&#13;
pedormer be£ re book&#13;
them. \\'e go to th Ac.A&#13;
conferen , which it th&#13;
atlonal · tion for&#13;
Campus cth"i ties. Many of the&#13;
acts we book are there and th n&#13;
w e the cha.nee Lo see the&#13;
performen before we book&#13;
them.&#13;
.CT: What are your du .&#13;
PAB pre "dent?&#13;
RS; To m le sure all lhe&#13;
different committee are doing&#13;
their job. Make sure&#13;
promorion is up on rim and&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
BO~LERS!&#13;
Men'&#13;
there l some dh•emity i11 each&#13;
of the committees and the&#13;
performer . · cally, I oversee&#13;
erythlng at happe in the&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Cf: Who are lhe other office&#13;
fPAB?&#13;
RS: There are many. They are&#13;
Amanda L.awr~nce, Mrli.Q&#13;
Halvenon, Aaron Sens, Kati&#13;
Klingsporn, Desaree Franklin,&#13;
Claudi Foertsch, Bryan&#13;
Hal n,JennyPUllZJ , and&#13;
atti Jeff c:non.&#13;
CT; How do you ge tudem&#13;
input into th performen you&#13;
boo and the acthn ti you&#13;
plat,?&#13;
RS: Wi U, it'11 very difficul to&#13;
get 1 dent feedback. V, ha1·&#13;
tried mo:re than c.e to send&#13;
out rve-ys lo t e studenl body.&#13;
Last year we se.D'.l out a urvey&#13;
about -rhe End asking&#13;
students to mark which type of&#13;
mu 'c they like lo lliten to and&#13;
we ba3ed om ent rtainm n on&#13;
LhaL But generally th 08!e type&#13;
of things don't work to well&#13;
Thee ·est way to gi"·e input&#13;
1s to top m the PAB office and&#13;
tal to somebody or tojoin .&#13;
Ju tjcin.&#13;
GT: Does the PAB have any&#13;
type of motto or founding&#13;
princip] ?&#13;
RS: Y~sl We t.ake your fun&#13;
seriously.&#13;
ng.&#13;
SOC Deftnas&#13;
la•aster Boals&#13;
An the aeme let" baa tal" d,&#13;
and all the ciu and&#13;
o~anizatiom ar co~ back tor . As th r "dent ofth&#13;
Student Orgaruzatio Counci&#13;
(S.O.C.) 11 would like to ke&#13;
thls opportunity Lo&#13;
ongratulate an the new&#13;
officers with their poai tions. I&#13;
loo forward to "''Orking with&#13;
you in the ~ ming year.&#13;
For those ofyou who don't&#13;
know what S.O. is. -tis oae of&#13;
e five major tatu&#13;
or~anization on campw. All&#13;
unalJer dubs and orgamzatlon&#13;
are funded through .0.&#13;
Together w represent a wid&#13;
raage of inter ts, and mo t&#13;
dubs :sponsor different enu&#13;
throughout the seme ter. Every&#13;
o weeb n Mondays w meet&#13;
in Mor aiiJ D-137. The next&#13;
meeting wiU be September&#13;
27th.&#13;
U you ;:n,e interi sted in&#13;
joining a club, ju t to by lhe&#13;
S.O.C. office in Union 20&#13;
stop by the tudeo1 Life Office&#13;
in nion 209. ITyou can't find&#13;
a club that you wou1d like LO be&#13;
in. then tart your own. It' not&#13;
rery d.ifficuJt, and we' help&#13;
you along th w y.&#13;
I will try to act:i Jy work to&#13;
creat:e better communication&#13;
between Lhe diffi rent clubs and&#13;
organizations, if any of you&#13;
have any uggeslioru ro how e&#13;
can improve S.0.C, please le&#13;
me know. It i not mandatory•&#13;
for the dubs to att nd the&#13;
m tings. but I l'.JIOngly ~ugge.!n&#13;
Mr.mm Sunde&#13;
that each dub ~d a&#13;
repr ntative. We wiU inform&#13;
YQU pco ing en • try to&#13;
avoid dub having .an event aL&#13;
the wn time and gi e&#13;
deadlines for budget due'. date .&#13;
On September 2'lnd. S.O.C.&#13;
will b holding a recruitment&#13;
f'ai.r in upper main place from 9&#13;
a,m.. to !I p.m. I hope to see all&#13;
of the dub$ repl'eKm d. I • a&#13;
good opportunity to incr ue&#13;
your club me:mbrnhip, and for&#13;
midents no invohi d it i a&#13;
good lime lO look a Whal ciubl1&#13;
e live on rampw.&#13;
I hope I see a loL f ·ou&#13;
there.&#13;
modem dance club&#13;
3790 Meach d. • 554- 695&#13;
Comar of Maache&#13;
D . W ne day-&#13;
Altematlve • Tap 40 • Rave .. Rock&#13;
g y DrinkSpe a -&#13;
very Thursday - Col age Nigh I&#13;
$3 .25 p·tchers of beer 9:00 p. . - close&#13;
U.J. starts at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
M·x It-Up Music (Alternaf ve, Top 40 etc.)&#13;
NOCOV RC ARG&#13;
Also: New Leagu Bowling/or men and women.&#13;
Leave nan, &amp; telephone number ,with union o.ffice.&#13;
RA YOUR #1&#13;
very r"day- Ladies N'ght\&#13;
Ladies 5.00 cover&#13;
Ladies drink free rails &amp; tap beer 9:00 p. . - 1 :00 a.m.&#13;
EWSSO&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 14&#13;
SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
- :.:.:..•:•:.:.:•.:•.:.:.}}.}??p ..••%•••••••••••~•~••,•~•~••~••.~ NEWS In Case You Missed It&#13;
.:.;.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.;.:.:.:.:.:.:.;.:.:.:.:.:.:.:, ..:.'," :.:: :......... :::::::::::}::::::::::.:&#13;
San Diego outfielder Phil&#13;
Plan tier went nuts with the bat.&#13;
This week, St. Louis Cardinal,'&#13;
outfielder Mark Whitten had 4&#13;
home runs and 12RBI's against&#13;
the Reds.&#13;
The Chicago teams fared well&#13;
as the White Sox built their&#13;
lead in the west to 6 1/2 by&#13;
taking two out of three from I&#13;
New York and sweeping Detroit.&#13;
George Bell returned to action&#13;
with a homer in each game&#13;
against theTigers. The Cubs&#13;
have won six in a row, including&#13;
three against the division&#13;
leading Phillies.&#13;
In the divisional races,&#13;
Atlanta has closed to within 2&#13;
1/2 of the Giants; Montreal is&#13;
six behind Philadelphia.&#13;
Toronto, New York and&#13;
Baltimore are still fighting it&#13;
out in the American League&#13;
East; all are within a game of&#13;
each other.&#13;
Huffing and Puffing: Finally, in&#13;
the spirit of Remington Steele,&#13;
who once said to Laura Holt&#13;
"Laura, why spoil a perfectly&#13;
good day by running?", a new&#13;
record in the mile run was set.&#13;
yards, and the defense allowed&#13;
no touchdowns. All in all, it&#13;
was quite an enjoyable weekend&#13;
for Wisconsin football fans.&#13;
In other NFL action, Joe&#13;
Montana returned by throwing&#13;
three touchdowns to lead the&#13;
Kansas City Chiefs over the&#13;
lackluster Tampa Bay Bucks.&#13;
Despite a cheap shot by Kevin&#13;
Green of the Steelers, Steve&#13;
Young and the San Francisco&#13;
4gers beat the Steelers in&#13;
Pittsburgh. In Chicago, the&#13;
Bears continued a trend of&#13;
losing games in the last 3&#13;
minutes, when the New York&#13;
Giants scored a late touchdown&#13;
to beat them. Finally, the&#13;
defending Super Bowl champs&#13;
(or maybe in this case chumps),&#13;
the Dallas Cowboys, came to&#13;
Washington D. C. to play the&#13;
Redskins, and left 35 -16 losers.&#13;
No Hits: In baseball, onehanded&#13;
Jim Abbott of the New&#13;
York Yankees no hit the&#13;
Cleveland Indians 4 - 0, and&#13;
Daryl Kyle of the Houston&#13;
Astros no hit the New York Mets&#13;
7 - 1 (the Mets run scored&#13;
courtesy of errors). Last week,&#13;
C.J Nelson&#13;
Match Point: Six of the top ten&#13;
seeds at the V. S. Open Tennis&#13;
Championship have been&#13;
eliminated. These include the&#13;
top mens seed Jim Courier, past&#13;
womens winner Martina&#13;
Navratilova. For only the&#13;
second time in the Open's&#13;
history, and the first time since&#13;
1963, there will be no American&#13;
in the women's semifinals.&#13;
Kickoff: The Wisconsin&#13;
Badgers won their first game of&#13;
the season beating Nevada 35-&#13;
17.&#13;
In Milwaukee, the Green Bay&#13;
Packers dominated the Los&#13;
Angeles Rams, winning 36-6.&#13;
This was one of the most&#13;
impressive and lopsided&#13;
opening day wins in Packer&#13;
history. Quarterback Bret&#13;
Favre spread passes all over the&#13;
field. 'Tight End Jackie Harris&#13;
and All-Pro Sterling Sharp were&#13;
outstanding. Receiver Mark&#13;
Clayton (a cast off from Miami)&#13;
also joined the parade with a&#13;
circus touchdown catch. The&#13;
Packers rushed for over a 100&#13;
Sports Calender&#13;
Men's Cross Country:&#13;
14th Annual Midwest Collegiate&#13;
12:45p.m. (H) Sept. 18&#13;
(OPEN)&#13;
V.W. Parkside Oakland&#13;
University 1:30p.m. (H)&#13;
Sept. 25&#13;
Volleyball:&#13;
V.W. Parkside v, Robert Morris&#13;
7p.m. (H) Sept. 21&#13;
Women's Cross Country:&#13;
V.W. Parkside Midwest&#13;
Collegiate 12p.m. (H)&#13;
Sept. 18 V.W.Parksidev. MSOE&#13;
7p.m. (H) Sept. 28&#13;
Soccer:&#13;
V.W. Parkside v. Lakeland&#13;
College 4p.m. (H)&#13;
Sept. 22&#13;
Time For Intramurals&#13;
Hey all you athletes out&#13;
there! Intramural Sports are&#13;
about to begin. Intramurals are&#13;
a great way to keep in shape&#13;
and also remain competitive.&#13;
Here are the Intramural sports&#13;
offered this fall.&#13;
VOlLEYBAlL:&#13;
Entry deadline: Fri. Oct. 1st&#13;
Play begins: Tues. Oct. 5 SWI" VIEWS ONSPORTS&#13;
College and Pro Football Predictions&#13;
and get the legend of Joe&#13;
Montana(four Superbowl wins)&#13;
off of Steve Young's (no&#13;
Superbowl wins) back.&#13;
As for the Packers, they will&#13;
improve and make the playoffs.&#13;
But as far as a Superbowl run,&#13;
they will fall short. The 4gers&#13;
opponent in the Superbowl will&#13;
be theJoe Montana led Chiefs.&#13;
Montana gives the Chiefs that&#13;
final element to make a&#13;
Superbowl run and the Chiefs&#13;
vs. the 4gers will be a storybook&#13;
match up. But, don't look for a&#13;
marvelous Joe Montana come&#13;
from behind victory. Steve&#13;
Young will be the hero of this&#13;
year, and he can finally say "I'm&#13;
going to Disneyworld. "&#13;
In college football look for&#13;
the Florida State Seminoles to&#13;
reign and finally win a national&#13;
championship. Florida State&#13;
simply has the most talent of&#13;
any college football team out&#13;
there, and they will finally bring&#13;
Bobby Bowden that elusive&#13;
national title. Michigan will win&#13;
the Big Ten and make a bid for&#13;
a national crown, Michigan&#13;
problems will arise against&#13;
Notre Dame and Penn State.&#13;
BASKETBALL:&#13;
Entry deadline: Fri. Oct. 1st&#13;
Play begins: Tues. Oct. 5&#13;
FLAG FOOTBALL:&#13;
Entry deadline: Mon. Sept.&#13;
20th Play begins: Wed. Sept 22&#13;
You can pick up a form to play,&#13;
any of the intramurals at the&#13;
Phy. Ed. building. Good luck&#13;
and most of all have fun.&#13;
Kevin Williams&#13;
Spurts Editor&#13;
Wisconsin will make an&#13;
improvement and return to&#13;
competition in bowl games this&#13;
season. Wisconsin will not win&#13;
the Big Ten title, but they will&#13;
be a team to watch out for.&#13;
Other surprise teams to keep&#13;
an eye on are Parkside favorite&#13;
Northwestern, Stanford and&#13;
Penn State. Teams which will&#13;
fall short of dreams for a&#13;
national title are Notre Dame,&#13;
Miami and Colorado.&#13;
This looks to be an exciting&#13;
year in both college and pro&#13;
football. The new football&#13;
season brings with it a need for&#13;
new things, a new battery a new&#13;
remote and a new meaning for&#13;
the word coach potato.&#13;
The '93 football season is&#13;
finally underway, no more preseason&#13;
anxiety. The games&#13;
being played now are for real&#13;
and it's time to either put up or&#13;
shut up. It's also the time of&#13;
year when we sports fans make&#13;
our predictions on what teams&#13;
we think will be the big winners&#13;
in 93. Well, here are my&#13;
predictions for college and pro&#13;
football 93.&#13;
Let's start out with pro&#13;
football: News flash, the Dallas&#13;
Cowboys will not repeat as&#13;
Superbowl Champs in '93.&#13;
Why? Because with the long&#13;
holdout of Emmitt Smith the&#13;
Cowboys don't have their most&#13;
effective offensive weapon in&#13;
the line-up. Without Emmitt in&#13;
the game, it makes it harder for&#13;
all of the other offensive&#13;
weapons that Dallas has to&#13;
make big plays. One message to&#13;
Cowboys Owner Jerry Jones&#13;
:PAYTHE MAN. The team to&#13;
beat in '93 will be the San&#13;
Francisco 4gers. They will&#13;
return to the Superbowl in '93&#13;
SOFrBALL:&#13;
Entry deadline: Mon. Sept.&#13;
20th Play begins: Wed. Sept. 22&#13;
Don't tell him Tennis season is over.&#13;
GETA&#13;
TALL&#13;
COOL&#13;
ONE&#13;
SPORTS INFO&#13;
BangBn BI.B to IbB Occasion In each KBtcbam'. Bome DBbat.&#13;
Gm., L. Smith&#13;
sports Information Director&#13;
important. Not only was it the&#13;
Rangers home opener. it was&#13;
the first victory for new head&#13;
coach Susie Ketchum.&#13;
Ketchum, a graduate of&#13;
Idaho State, was satisfied with&#13;
her team's performance. "We&#13;
didn't give up, we played a little&#13;
sporadic, but we are a very&#13;
young team, and we keep&#13;
learning" This years team only&#13;
has three seniors on it's roster,&#13;
so the younger players must&#13;
step up and play big. After the&#13;
game, Ketchum did admit she&#13;
had a few butterflies in her&#13;
stomach before her first game&#13;
in front of the home crowd. "I&#13;
was a. bit nervous, but I felt&#13;
comfortable because I knew we&#13;
would play hard: I really wanted&#13;
the win."&#13;
Parkside is 1-4, but don't let&#13;
their record fool you: these&#13;
ladies work hard. They travel to&#13;
Mankato State, MN this&#13;
weekend. Parkside's next home&#13;
game is Tuesday, September 21&#13;
against Robert Morris College.&#13;
Tip-off is at 7p.m .. Come out&#13;
and support the team and new&#13;
coach Ketchum.&#13;
Parkside's women's&#13;
Volleyball team defeated St.&#13;
Joseph college in a very tight&#13;
battle Tuesday night. Ranger&#13;
player Tammi Rickert sparked&#13;
the team out of a deadlock tie,&#13;
in the fifth and final match.&#13;
With a superb example of&#13;
leadership, Rickert, a&#13;
sophomore displayed great&#13;
defense with 19 digs. Jessica&#13;
Morrison, a freshman, also&#13;
stepped up her play and had 19&#13;
kills. This game was very&#13;
IN A DESIGNER CUP $1.49&#13;
AVAILABLE IN ALL RESTAURANTS&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
RA GE NEWS&#13;
Calendar&#13;
en' Cr - Coun cry:&#13;
l4t A.nm.1.al Midw t 4 ·p.m. pL 8&#13;
{Women•&#13;
U.Par&#13;
Collegiat&#13;
SepL 1&#13;
ro Connery:&#13;
ideMidwe.\t&#13;
m.&#13;
v, .Park..\id&#13;
Coll ge 4p.m. p. 22&#13;
Im Far&#13;
}'OU atb]e lh r ! lmramural Sport&amp; abom begi . Intramu gr at hape&#13;
ah •main otnpetitive.&#13;
H r ntramural m&#13;
ffi red thi fall&#13;
Fl.AG En tty deadlin ; Mon. Sept.&#13;
20th Play b£&gt;gin ; Wed. Sept 22&#13;
OFTBALL:&#13;
deadJine: pt.&#13;
begin : SepL 2-2&#13;
U.armde v. Oat.I d&#13;
Umvcrsi l: Op. l pl.. 2::i&#13;
VolJ 'ball:&#13;
.Parbide . obim Morri&#13;
m. e-pL 2&#13;
amurals&#13;
ou pi p o m pla ,&#13;
a y intnunurals building, luc&#13;
d ail hai,e tel seasan AVAIL&#13;
ADESIG RCUP&#13;
LE IN LL RESTAURANTS&#13;
R GER NEW&#13;
BER 16 I II&#13;
.J. 'el.set&#13;
1nv1av1 o&#13;
Ca I ga and D ball Pr diction•&#13;
Ktviti Willia&#13;
'rf)ort Ediu:,r&#13;
IPDRTIINFD&#13;
:;;iaiii1iiiil8&#13;
Gary mith&#13;
sport lnf r.mna ·q;1 Dfrn:tor&#13;
coai&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
.S~:~~~..~."..~..~I.Iii"~····~.~~~•I•I•I·•I ·_·! RANGER NEWS, PAGE 15&#13;
, - SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
"HEAR YE, HEAR YE"&#13;
Student Services&#13;
Will Be Open&#13;
Monday and Thursday Evenings&#13;
Until 6 p.m.&#13;
(When classes are in session)&#13;
Admissions ... Career Center ...&#13;
Center for Educational and&#13;
Cultural Advancement ...&#13;
Information Center (Union Bazaar) .&#13;
Learning Assistance &amp;\ Counseling .&#13;
Registrar/Student Records ...&#13;
Student Life/Activities ...&#13;
Student Health .&#13;
Financial Aid .&#13;
Professional Food-Service Management&#13;
is now taking applications for:&#13;
Pizza Delivery· Catering Waitstaff • Counter Personnel&#13;
Dishroom Personnel· Dining Room Attendants· Office Clerk&#13;
For an interview call 595-2601&#13;
UW·Parkslde·s Dining services&#13;
P.F.M., Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer&#13;
"tropical rainforests are home to at least 5-10 million species of&#13;
plants and animals approximately half of the world's life forms?"&#13;
"the energy saved by recycling one glass bottle could run your&#13;
t.v, set for three hours?"&#13;
"there are biodegradable pens made out of corn and recyclable&#13;
typing paper?"&#13;
Did you know.....&#13;
iSu€cessfultc}iibs&#13;
utnlf~:"the~ger.&#13;
-;: ... .-., -, . Write aBout&#13;
campus events&#13;
.ancfgain the&#13;
prestige you&#13;
deserve ,.,&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
a&#13;
RA - EWS PAGE 15&#13;
'' HEAR YE, HEAR YE '1&#13;
S udent SeNices&#13;
w·1 Be Open&#13;
Monday and Thursday Evenings&#13;
Unf 6 p.m.&#13;
(When classes are in session)&#13;
dmissions ••• Career Cente ••.&#13;
Center for Educational and&#13;
Cultural Advancement •..&#13;
Information Center (Union Bazaar) ...&#13;
Leaming Assistance Ii Coumeling ....&#13;
Registrar/Student ltecords ...&#13;
Stud nt Life/ Adivitie.s. •&#13;
Student Health ...&#13;
Finan~ial Aid ...&#13;
,.---....,,_~..--...~~-----&#13;
~~&#13;
Professional Food-Service Manageme t&#13;
is now taking appl·ca ions for.&#13;
Pizza DeJivery • Catering Waitstaff • Counter Personnel&#13;
Dishroom Personnel• Dining Room Atte dants Office Clerk&#13;
Far an Interview call 595-2601&#13;
UW-P dt's Dining Servl'Qi•&#13;
P.F.M., Inc. is an Equal Opportunly Emp oyer&#13;
Did know .....&#13;
»th energy ved y r 'ding one gt . bottle could ru your&#13;
L • . t for ree ou ?"&#13;
there ar biode.gradabJe pen m de out of com and recydab e&#13;
typing paper r&#13;
Successful cl bs&#13;
tilize the Ranger.&#13;
Write about&#13;
campus events&#13;
and gain the&#13;
prestige you&#13;
deserve&#13;
RANGER NEWS, PAGE 16 SEPTEMBER 16, 1993&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
To place an ad call 595-2287 or&#13;
stop in at the Ranger Office&#13;
~usEvents&#13;
GE().SCIENCE CLUB stop&#13;
by the GEO-SCIENCE CLUB&#13;
booth during the recruitment&#13;
fair, Wednesday 9/22 from 9-&#13;
3. Rome "Rock" with usH&#13;
PRE-HEALTH CLUB&#13;
welcome back picnic,&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 19 at Pet's&#13;
Park, 12:00 the volleyball&#13;
area. Call Alma Venish (595-&#13;
2611) for a reservation or talk&#13;
to an officer. Be There!&#13;
AA·Alcoholics Anonymous&#13;
meets every Monday at noon&#13;
in MOLN 0133. Call 595-&#13;
2366 for more information.&#13;
Anyone interested in&#13;
participating in the foilowing&#13;
Support Groups, Narcotics&#13;
Anonymous, Codependents,&#13;
AI-Anon, Eating disorders,&#13;
Sexual Assauh or Abuse&#13;
Survivors Support Group?&#13;
Call 595-2366 or 595-2338 to&#13;
express interest&#13;
l&#13;
Free Nicotine Patch&#13;
Program to stop smoking will&#13;
start in October. It you are&#13;
interested, call Heaith&#13;
Services at 595-2366.&#13;
Heartburn Suffers - Men and&#13;
Women asked to participate&#13;
in FDA approved heartburn&#13;
study through the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin. Study&#13;
will take place campus at&#13;
SI. Catherine's Family&#13;
Practice Center. For more&#13;
information call Ms. Wick&#13;
553-9500 between 9 a.m. and&#13;
12 p.m. or contact Health&#13;
Services.&#13;
FREE MEASLES AND&#13;
TETANUS IMMUNIZATIONS&#13;
- Health services MOLN.&#13;
0115&#13;
PRE·HEALTH Special pre-health club&#13;
speaker of the month - Dr.&#13;
James Concannon, Kenosha,&#13;
Memorial Hospital ER&#13;
physician - Tuesday,&#13;
September 21 at 7:00 Union&#13;
104. Be there!&#13;
Opportunities&#13;
GREEKS &amp; CLUBS raise up&#13;
$1,000 in just one week!&#13;
For your fraternity, sorority &amp;&#13;
club. Plus $1,000 for yoursell!&#13;
And a FREE T-Shirt just for&#13;
calling 1-800-932-0528, ext.&#13;
75.&#13;
FREE! convtsor Duffy CPA&#13;
Review (Choice of the Big&#13;
Six) is looking for campus&#13;
reps to market out course on&#13;
campus in exchange for a&#13;
Free Review. Candidates&#13;
should be on/off campus&#13;
acctg clubs &amp; organization. To&#13;
apply please call 1-800-328-&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Wanted: Preferably Christian&#13;
Female to lulor math &amp;&#13;
English (7th &amp; 8th level) for our 13 year old&#13;
daughter in our home. $8-$15&#13;
call 414/652-1646&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Renaull1965 Alliance, auto,&#13;
air - $1,000 or best offer. Ph.&#13;
595-2899&#13;
Contraceptives for sale at&#13;
affordable prices. Condoms&#13;
10 for $1.00 and birth control&#13;
pills $4 per packet. Contact&#13;
UW-Parkside Health&#13;
Services, 595-2366 or Moln.&#13;
D115 for more information.&#13;
Free&#13;
Free Pregnancy Testing·&#13;
Contact UW-Parkside Health&#13;
Services Moln 0115 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
Second Nature byMosslngram&#13;
el993 Moss Ingram&#13;
Our last resort to save the Earth from an alien attack,&#13;
Secret Weapon: Mick Jagger&#13;
RANGER NEWS - YOUR #1 NEWS SOURCE - CALL 595-2287&#13;
s&#13;
RA 6&#13;
stop in at the Ranger ,Qffice&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
GEO.SCtENCE step&#13;
by SC lENCE recruttm nt&#13;
raI,, 9122 rom Rock• p1Cnic,&#13;
S nday, at votteyball&#13;
area 595·&#13;
ta k&#13;
AA-A co ones ev ry at neon&#13;
In MOLN Di 33. Call 595-&#13;
or i formation.&#13;
interes1ed In following&#13;
Aoonymou • C&lt;xiep8Jl'lden1s,&#13;
Al-ir,g Assault SuNivors Support Group?&#13;
express interest&#13;
Nlcot ne to stop smoking will&#13;
lf ara&#13;
Health se rvlces a1 SuHe11 and&#13;
In heartbu m&#13;
he edical&#13;
Co lege of Wlsalnsin. wllll Laks pl ca on St Calhenne·s Ptactioe Centef. informatio 553--9500 am. aoo&#13;
Heall&#13;
Services.&#13;
MEAS ES lMMUNIZATIONS&#13;
Heal h servle OLN.&#13;
D 15&#13;
PREaHEALTI-1 CLUB&#13;
pre eallh 01 Kenosh.a,&#13;
Memorial Hospital ER&#13;
• S ember Unio&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
e&#13;
THE&#13;
Severalimportant  con-&#13;
sequenceshave emerged  from&#13;
theunsolved sexual assaults of&#13;
thelastacademic year,&#13;
accordingto Interim&#13;
Chancellor,Dr. John  Stockwell,&#13;
buta continuation  of the Safe&#13;
Escort&#13;
Service may not be one&#13;
them.'The Escort Service will&#13;
be&#13;
brought to the table again&#13;
university of wisconsin-parkside&#13;
concerned   a female  student&#13;
who was sexually assaulted  in a&#13;
wooded  area ofthe&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parkside  Cross-country  Trails.&#13;
The area of the assault was near&#13;
the Intersection  of STH 31&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CTHE.&#13;
In all three  cases, the&#13;
perpetrator   wore a mask, dark&#13;
clothing,&#13;
and displayed  a knife.&#13;
He&#13;
IS&#13;
described  as a white male&#13;
5'10" tall, medium  build, short'&#13;
hght-eolored   hair, very fair&#13;
skin, no facial hair, and heavy&#13;
veiny eyelids (see sketch).&#13;
Further  investigation  into&#13;
these three sexual assaults&#13;
indicate  that the perpetrator&#13;
of these incidents  may be the&#13;
same person.&#13;
If you have any information&#13;
regarding  a possible  suspect,&#13;
please contact  Lieutenant  Larry&#13;
C.&#13;
Zarletti&#13;
at 656-7333 or Police&#13;
Officer  Marlene  Schlecht  at&#13;
595-2455.&#13;
If&#13;
you live in Western&#13;
Kenosha  County  call 1-800-773-&#13;
7333.&#13;
Service that was conducted&#13;
during  the last five weeks of the&#13;
spring semester was funded&#13;
through  Parkside  Student&#13;
Govern-ment  Association.  "For&#13;
a program  that was established&#13;
rather  rapidly, it was rather&#13;
successful  .. It's not there this&#13;
semester  because  there is not a&#13;
continued  on&#13;
page&#13;
2&#13;
Parkside  as a whole.&#13;
By&#13;
appointment,   anyone  who&#13;
wishes to talk about any specific&#13;
topic should feel open to do so.&#13;
This includes  faculty and staff&#13;
members.  Dr. Stockwell&#13;
stresses, "The office of the&#13;
Chancellor  is here to&#13;
serve the university."&#13;
By carrying  out this&#13;
service.  his office&#13;
welcomes  all student&#13;
activities. Different&#13;
organizations  are&#13;
encouraged   to use the&#13;
Chancellor's  office as a&#13;
part of their relations  as&#13;
well. Dr. Stockwell says&#13;
that he is open and&#13;
anxious  to get involved.&#13;
He plans to do his best&#13;
by&#13;
stressing accessi&#13;
bili&#13;
ty&#13;
and&#13;
participation  in various&#13;
student  functions.&#13;
As in any "open-door"&#13;
program,  the objective is&#13;
to&#13;
form a relationship&#13;
that is sincere  and honest&#13;
to bring forth a positive&#13;
outcome  among  those&#13;
involved. Dr. Stockwell&#13;
and the staff of the&#13;
Chancellor's  office hope&#13;
that this type of attitude&#13;
will catch a flame and&#13;
spread across the&#13;
entire university.&#13;
case&#13;
#&#13;
113-57131&#13;
Wanted  for sexual  assault&#13;
Date:&#13;
5/29/93&#13;
Time:&#13;
4:20 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
Location:&#13;
N..E. Corner  of STH&#13;
31&#13;
&amp;CTH&#13;
E&#13;
Description&#13;
Sex:&#13;
Male Age: 25-30&#13;
Race:&#13;
White&#13;
Hair:&#13;
Very Short&#13;
Strawberry  Blond&#13;
Height:&#13;
5'10" -&#13;
6'&#13;
Eyes:&#13;
Blue&#13;
Complexion:&#13;
Very Fair/Clear&#13;
Build:&#13;
Thin&#13;
Clothing:&#13;
Cotton&#13;
Carnoutlaqe&#13;
Gloves&#13;
Hat:&#13;
Dark Heavy Cable&#13;
Knit Ski Mask.&#13;
Shirt:&#13;
Dark&#13;
Long Sleeve  Pants:  Very Dark&#13;
Jeans&#13;
Shoes:&#13;
Black Leather&#13;
Field Type Boot Building eyes -&#13;
heavy veiny eye lids. Suspect&#13;
armed with a&#13;
5"&#13;
folding knife.&#13;
Simulated  wood handle  (white&#13;
&amp;&#13;
black). Suspect  hid in a&#13;
wooded  area of trails and&#13;
sexually  assaulted  the victim at&#13;
knife point.&#13;
Kaplan's Contributions&#13;
Sheila Kaplan&#13;
greatly&#13;
miss my many friends&#13;
and acquaintances."&#13;
"It has a delightful  and&#13;
talented  student  body, said&#13;
Kaplan. "It's been great.J'tl&#13;
miss&#13;
it."&#13;
Kaplan came to UW-Parkside,&#13;
one of the&#13;
youngest&#13;
comprehensive   universities  in&#13;
the UW System, in 1986 and&#13;
served as the university's third&#13;
chancellor.  Under  her&#13;
leadership,UW-Parkside&#13;
aggressively worked&#13;
i.i&#13;
improving  the&#13;
recruitment&#13;
and&#13;
retention  of minority faculty,&#13;
staff, and students.  She also&#13;
spearheaded  a plan for&#13;
academic  infusion  of issues of&#13;
race, class, and gender&#13;
throughout  the curriculum  and&#13;
student  programming.&#13;
In response  to the UW&#13;
System's Design for Diversity,&#13;
UW-Parksid:  achieved,  on&#13;
balance,  the most diverse&#13;
student  body in the UW System&#13;
in percentages  of students  of&#13;
color (II&#13;
%),&#13;
of part-time&#13;
students  (38%) and of non-&#13;
tradition  students  aged 25 or&#13;
older (34%). In 1991 and 1992&#13;
continued&#13;
0'//&#13;
pagr'&#13;
2&#13;
f&#13;
"tI.,NEWS&#13;
SEXUAL ASSAULTS REMAIN UNSOLVE&#13;
Thisweek Kenosha Area&#13;
CrimeStoppers is offering  a&#13;
rewardof up to $1,000 for&#13;
information leadmg to the&#13;
arrest ofche subject(s)  involved&#13;
inthe sexual assaults which&#13;
tookplace in&#13;
an&#13;
approximately&#13;
onemile radius of the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-&#13;
ParksideCampus.&#13;
Three sexual assaults have&#13;
occurred since October  of 1992&#13;
inthe above described  area.&#13;
Thefirst&#13;
assaul&#13;
t,&#13;
which&#13;
occurred on October  27, 1992&#13;
at&#13;
6:40&#13;
p.m., involved a female&#13;
studentwho was sexually&#13;
assaulted.4 miles west of&#13;
Highway31 on Highway E. In&#13;
thesecond assault, which&#13;
occurred on March 29, 1993 at&#13;
approx-imately 8:15 p.m., a&#13;
femalestudent was sexually&#13;
assaultedas she walked from&#13;
theacademic complex  to Wood&#13;
Road.The third and most&#13;
recentcase, on May 29, 1993 at&#13;
approximately 4:15 p.m.,&#13;
SexualAssualts Continue&#13;
To&#13;
AHed Campus&#13;
"OpenDoors" From The Chancellor's Office&#13;
by&#13;
Stanley Washington,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
The doors of the&#13;
baocellor's office are being&#13;
pened this semester  to&#13;
~&#13;
tudentsevery Wednesday  from&#13;
:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
to 5:00 p.m.,&#13;
a appointment  needed.&#13;
~he interim Chancellor&#13;
.ohn Stockwell will    '&#13;
rovide&#13;
servic~s&#13;
from&#13;
his&#13;
ffieedUring this time to&#13;
anystudents who desires&#13;
them. In this new "open-&#13;
door"approach, Dr.&#13;
Stockwellsays he hopes&#13;
tohelp maintain a&#13;
~ealthyenvironment,&#13;
h,ch he beheves is&#13;
ess    .&#13;
enUalto the success of&#13;
thestUdents.&#13;
Students are&#13;
:COuraged to drop in at&#13;
b&#13;
}'tUneduring these&#13;
ourst di&#13;
.&#13;
0   lSCUSS&#13;
whatever&#13;
~tontheir minds.  Dr.&#13;
th&#13;
oekwellhas informed&#13;
bee~ger   that this will&#13;
wi ~&#13;
e student's time&#13;
,,~ their agenda.&#13;
"nether th   .&#13;
probl&#13;
ere&#13;
IS&#13;
a specific&#13;
take these concerns.&#13;
idea em, concern,  or just an&#13;
Although  this period  on&#13;
pe&#13;
-.,'ther  institutional  or&#13;
Wednesdays  will be prOVided&#13;
rsonal  th  d&#13;
I  h&#13;
"0&#13;
en&#13;
Ch    -   e  oors of the&#13;
for students  on y, t e   p  -&#13;
ap aneellor's office will be&#13;
Door" invitation  extends&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
ened wide. This&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
r--..---.._~~~~--::::;~~;WZ~RCE~LL5~~----&#13;
-RANGER  NEWS  - YOUR  #1  NEWS  SOURCE  - CALL&#13;
595-2287&#13;
this year. Its implementation&#13;
will depend  on interest  and&#13;
funding,"  states Stockwell.&#13;
"We do not have funding  in&#13;
our current  operating  budget&#13;
to continue   this operation  out&#13;
of security funds,"  states Chief&#13;
David Ostrowski  of Parkside's&#13;
University  Police. Ostrowski&#13;
explains  that the special Escort&#13;
communication   between&#13;
student  and upper&#13;
administration,   it is hoped,  will&#13;
fulfill the student's  desire to&#13;
discuss matters  of importance&#13;
to them.  Often,  in the past,&#13;
students  didn't  know where to&#13;
Nicholas&#13;
W. Zatm,&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sheila Kaplan, chancellor  of&#13;
the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, announced   her&#13;
resignation.  effective  Monday,&#13;
Sept.&#13;
6.&#13;
On that&#13;
date.john&#13;
Stockwell, vice chancellor  and&#13;
provost, will become&#13;
chancellor.  Howard Cohen,&#13;
dean of the School of Liberal&#13;
Arts, will become vice&#13;
chancellor  and provost.&#13;
Kaplan was named  president&#13;
of Metropolitan  State College&#13;
of Denver May 17. She is&#13;
replacing  Thomas  B. Brewer&#13;
who, after five years as&#13;
president,  is retiring.&#13;
Last December  when the&#13;
Board of Trustees at the Denver&#13;
college started the search for a&#13;
new president  they decided&#13;
that candidates  should  have&#13;
experience  as a senior&#13;
administative&#13;
executive,  a&#13;
commitment  to diversity, an&#13;
understanding   of the special&#13;
needs  of urban education,  and&#13;
knowledge  of Colorado  higher&#13;
education.&#13;
She is the first woman&#13;
president  in the college's  21&gt;-&#13;
year history. Approximately&#13;
17,500 students  are enrolled  at&#13;
the school and there are about&#13;
850 full and part time faculty&#13;
and staff -.&#13;
The school is 100%&#13;
commuter.  It offers four yea,&#13;
degrees in Technical,&#13;
Professional,  and Liberal&#13;
Arts.&#13;
"It is&#13;
with&#13;
extremely  mixed&#13;
emotions  that I have accepted&#13;
this position,"  Kaplan said. "I&#13;
have enjoyed beyond words my&#13;
years at UW-Parkside.  It is an&#13;
excellent  institution  and I will&#13;
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              <text>Chancellor responds to fee hike</text>
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              <text>an 'er ',', "&#13;
, ,&#13;
1" ' .....&#13;
,~ &lt; &lt;,V" ,&#13;
..,,,.;:::~:;::::::::::.:.. :.;';::;::~:::':'::.:'._'.&#13;
Editorial ...&#13;
Andy says goodbye, after addressing&#13;
one final concern.&#13;
See it On Page 6&#13;
nside ...&#13;
The Wall provides a forum&#13;
for student views on homosexuality.&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Campus forum focuses on&#13;
minority issues. Page 4&#13;
Cabe provides some sage&#13;
.advice on exam preparation.&#13;
Page 7&#13;
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29&#13;
"Let me start by saying that&#13;
nobodylikes to raise fees and nobOdylikes&#13;
to raise tuition," Dr.&#13;
SheilaKaplan, Chancellor of the&#13;
University, tared when commentingreceml&#13;
yon the controversy that&#13;
has emerged surrounding student&#13;
fee increases forthe 1993-94 school&#13;
year.&#13;
"I understand ...I know the studentsthat&#13;
go LOthis university. I&#13;
knowthat 80 or 85 percent of the&#13;
studentswork and that every buck&#13;
ishard to come by. I know thaI.&#13;
But, we are not solo players here,"&#13;
Kaplancontinued.&#13;
Speaking of recent pressure&#13;
by the Board of Regents to raise&#13;
monies to cover administrative&#13;
COSts, Kaplan says, "Many of the&#13;
ihingswe do. we have to do, are in&#13;
response to iniuauves by the Regentsof&#13;
various kinds and also in&#13;
response to the fiscal reality of the&#13;
SIDle."&#13;
"When I became Chancellor,"&#13;
explains Kaplan, "even now, basically,&#13;
my own philosophy is you&#13;
don't nickel and dime the students.&#13;
Youdon't put lots of nuie fees on&#13;
10000flittiethings and make people&#13;
veryangry at you. That's kind of&#13;
UNfVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSlDE&#13;
Continued on Page 4&#13;
Physical Plant announces candidate&#13;
Ch~n~~~llorsh~~~~!?a~~e t~rai!~O~Y' ~!~:e&#13;
News Writer circumstances here that have basi- behavior. "What we have seen&#13;
cally changed the situation." what the experience has been a;&#13;
Kaplan quickly points out other UW campuses, is that the&#13;
"...that not all those fees we putout drop fee changes behavior.&#13;
are designed LOgenerate money People will drop the course beand&#13;
I think that's important La fore the tenth day so that it beknow."&#13;
In this context, Kaplan comes available to other&#13;
explains the tenth day drop fee. people ...so we have a very good&#13;
"We are really not designing reason for doing that, We believe&#13;
to raise money for the institution. that itwillchangcbehavior. More&#13;
The Board of Regents has set a importantly.it won'tcosuhe stupolicy&#13;
that basically sets a five dent a nickel, if the students do it&#13;
percent cap for the number of stu- right.i.it's only those people who&#13;
dents who drop after the tenth day. abuse the system who are going&#13;
The concern of the Regents was, to be penalized by that." Kaplan&#13;
and still is, that students stock up concludes her views on this issue&#13;
on registration, then decide not to by saying, "So I think we have to&#13;
take the course. put that one aside:'&#13;
By the time they drop out after Addressing the issue of the&#13;
the tenth day, it's too late for some- graduation fee, Kaplan explains,&#13;
body else to get into that course. "We're the only school in the&#13;
That delays their graduation; UW System that has not charged&#13;
they're angry with us; we don't use a graduation fee ...we do have&#13;
ourresourceseffectively ...we'rethe some direct expenses related to&#13;
worst offender in the UW System. graduation ...Ijust signed a requi-&#13;
Things have galien better because sition.last week, fornearly a thouwe've&#13;
been prodding people and sand dollars for the honor&#13;
asking people and counseling cords ...." The graduation fee,&#13;
people not to do it, but we're stil! then, Kaplan says, "is designed&#13;
the worst offenders:' basically La recover our direct&#13;
"We've got LOput a stop to costs ...LOrecover our direct COSL&#13;
that." was not an illegitimate thing LO&#13;
Kaplan goes on to say that the do,"&#13;
tenth day drop fee is designed, not&#13;
Gregory M. Gauthier&#13;
News Writer&#13;
The University held an open&#13;
meeting last Tuesday with Don&#13;
Colby, acting director of the Ph ysical&#13;
Plant, giving members of the&#13;
UW-Parkside community the&#13;
chance to individually scrutinize&#13;
thecandidate for permanent Physical&#13;
Plant Director.&#13;
The Physical Plant is the department&#13;
responsible for maintenance&#13;
and upkeep of the Campus'&#13;
building and grounds, and includes&#13;
maintenance workers, grounds&#13;
people, mechanics, electricians.the&#13;
various shops, and custodians. The&#13;
responsibility of the director's position&#13;
is for coordinating and overseeing&#13;
the efforts of each of these&#13;
areas.&#13;
The afternoon meeting, organized&#13;
by Howard Cohen, Director&#13;
of the Search Committee, was attended&#13;
by several University faculty&#13;
and staff members, while the&#13;
only member of the student body&#13;
presem was the reporter.&#13;
Colby began the meeting with&#13;
an opening statement in which he&#13;
highlighted some of the changes he&#13;
has been making as acting director,&#13;
and pointed out his experience as&#13;
an engineer prior LOhis current&#13;
position.Inhiscomments.he stated&#13;
the need for a "mission statement"&#13;
for the department, and he believes&#13;
that the department needs to "set&#13;
goals."&#13;
Colby also pointed to several&#13;
projects in process since he has&#13;
taken the new posi tion, such as&#13;
new computer work -order software&#13;
which is intended to help Physical&#13;
Plant employees keep better track&#13;
of the work performed on campus.&#13;
Colby stressed that he wanted&#13;
supervisors who were more accountable,&#13;
and stated that the department&#13;
needs to combine planning&#13;
with other areas of the University&#13;
in order to provide better&#13;
and more efficient service. Among&#13;
the changes he stated were needed,&#13;
he included, "it would be nice to&#13;
add an HVAC [Heating/Air Conditioning]&#13;
Specialist," but concluded&#13;
that it was not very likely&#13;
due to current budget constraints.&#13;
During the question and answer&#13;
period following Colby's&#13;
opening, Colby stated that he&#13;
would not have difficulty with&#13;
the role change from engineer to&#13;
director, because the acting position&#13;
has given him a head start,&#13;
allowing him to work into the&#13;
position.&#13;
Another concern of the attendees&#13;
was control of the Physical&#13;
Plant budget, which was apparently&#13;
poorly managed during&#13;
the tenure of the previous direc-&#13;
LOr. Colby, frustrated at the&#13;
present situation of the Physical&#13;
Plant budget, stated that he did&#13;
"not understand why things were&#13;
done the way they were," that he&#13;
wanted to "change to focus of&#13;
budget control,' and that "Ultimately,&#13;
I am in charge [of the&#13;
budget]."&#13;
When asked about his long&#13;
range goals, Colby stated that he&#13;
wishes the Physical Plant to "communicate&#13;
more" with the other&#13;
departments, computerize as&#13;
much of the Physical Plant as the&#13;
Continued On Page 4&#13;
!.~\.. t&#13;
,'" ----~_.-------"--&#13;
4,,&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1993&#13;
Steven Moore, recently appointed Editor-In-Chief of The Ranger News&#13;
for the 1993-94 publishing year, is all smiles. See the story below.&#13;
Moore chosen for 1993-94&#13;
Ranger News Editor position&#13;
Andrew J, Patch&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Last Wednesday, after approximately&#13;
two and one-half hours of&#13;
interviewing and deliberation, The&#13;
Ranger News Editor-In-Chief search&#13;
committee appointed Steven Moore,&#13;
junior English major, as next year's&#13;
Editor-In-Chief.&#13;
Appearing before an interview&#13;
panel of eight members, Moore was&#13;
one of two candidates running for&#13;
the position.&#13;
A recent transfer student from&#13;
the College of Lake County, Moore&#13;
began anending the University last&#13;
fall and immediately noticed problems&#13;
with the campus newspaper.&#13;
"I was extremely dissatisfied LO&#13;
sec such a low number of students&#13;
participating on the staff. I was also&#13;
disturbed about students complaining&#13;
and protesting that 'The Ranger&#13;
News never expresses my viewpclrus&#13;
and feelings,' or 'There's nothing interesting&#13;
to read in The Ranger.' I&#13;
ran forEditor·ln-ChiefofTheRanger&#13;
News because I believe that I can&#13;
change these situations.&#13;
Moore has, in fact, already&#13;
recruited heavily, and has compiled&#13;
an extensive staff in preparation&#13;
of the upcoming year.&#13;
A former resident of an American&#13;
military hase inPanama,Moore&#13;
is an honors student, a writing tu-&#13;
LOr,the President of the University&#13;
Writing Club, and a member of&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta (the international&#13;
English Honor Society).&#13;
While a student at College of&#13;
Lake County, Moorealso served as&#13;
a writing tutor, a student senator. a&#13;
feature writer on the campus newspaper,&#13;
and a member of the Black&#13;
Student Union.&#13;
Lastfall, representing the University,&#13;
Moore took partin thcNinth&#13;
National Conference on Peer Tu-&#13;
LOring at Indiana University of&#13;
Pennsylvania. Throughout the&#13;
course of his two semesters at UWParks&#13;
ide, Moore has served as a&#13;
writing assistant Iiaison, has served&#13;
an internship in writing and editing&#13;
with the University Writing Cen-&#13;
Continued on Page 10&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
gramming by the student group. A&#13;
large majority of those polled by&#13;
this reporter also indicated their&#13;
suppon for gay and lesbian rights&#13;
on this campus.&#13;
Out and About Week, April&#13;
19-23, was the first campus-wide&#13;
programming effort sponsored by&#13;
GLO. The week was designed to&#13;
highlight issues of affectional orientation,&#13;
with a focus on the perspectives&#13;
of gay, lesbian and bisexual&#13;
people.&#13;
Most students indicated&#13;
whole-hearted support of Out and&#13;
About Week when interviewed.&#13;
Typical comments were, "I'm all&#13;
for the group," "These issues&#13;
shouldn't be justa one-week splash&#13;
__ there should be on-going programs,&#13;
because it was a great idea,"&#13;
"Homosexuals should be included&#13;
here," and "I had a chance 10 learn&#13;
a lot." .&#13;
Some students also indicated&#13;
that they have begun 10 rethink&#13;
issues they had previously taken&#13;
for granted. One student listed a&#13;
few gay rights issues he had discovered&#13;
and supported, then concluded,&#13;
"Iguess I'm for gay rights!"&#13;
A very small number of students&#13;
interviewed stated opposition&#13;
to GLO programming. All&#13;
used personal interpretations of&#13;
Christian teachings 10 justify their&#13;
Editor's note: The following&#13;
story is the result of an informal&#13;
campus poll taken last week. Many&#13;
of those polled are not named because&#13;
of the large number of similar&#13;
responses. A few individuals&#13;
asked 10 remain anonymous.&#13;
Despite the controversial content&#13;
ofThe Wall responses posted&#13;
in Upper Main Place recently as&#13;
Part of the Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Organization's (GLO) "Out and&#13;
About Week," most of the campus&#13;
community has indicated a high&#13;
level of support for continued pro-&#13;
Thursday May 6&#13;
Foreign Film Series: "Mediterraneo" (Italy);&#13;
Union Cinema, 7:30 pm, $4.&#13;
Special Library Hours: 7 :45 am - 1 am.&#13;
Music: Parks ide Wind Ensemble &amp; Parkside Community Band. 7:30 pm, CART Theatre&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball- at Kenosha vs. Carthage, lprn.&#13;
Athletics - UWP pool, gyms. etc. available for walk-in use of students wjvalidated I D'S.&#13;
Friday May 7&#13;
Music: Southern Lakes Conference - Large Ensemble Conference, free; Sam&#13;
CART Theatre.&#13;
UWP Women's Track - North Central Invitational,&#13;
4pm. Naperville, IL.&#13;
UWP Men's Track &amp; Field - NCC Open,&#13;
3pm, Naperville IL.&#13;
Special Library Hours - 7:45 am to IOpm.&#13;
'0 5pm;&#13;
Saturday May 8&#13;
Foreign Film Series: "Mediterrano" (Italy).&#13;
Union Cinema. 8pm, $4.&#13;
Speeial Library Hours: 9am '0 6:30 pm.&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball at Kenosha vs. Lewis University, Noon, Doubleheader.&#13;
Sunday May9&#13;
Foreign Film Series, "Mediterrano" (Italy),&#13;
Union Cinema, 2pm, $4.&#13;
Special Library Hours: Noon to 1 am.&#13;
UWPMen's Baseball at Marion College (Doubleheader) in Fond du Lac ,WI- Ipm.&#13;
-&#13;
Just weren't there," she said. "'Ilia '&#13;
freespeech,though,3ndfrees Is&#13;
belongs here." Ptech&#13;
Kaplan and Assistant Ch&#13;
cellor for Student Affairs G Gan-&#13;
Grace both stated strong . ary&#13;
C • sUpPan lo. r ianlcrieased awareness ofon.enla_ lion Issues on campus.&#13;
"We need 10 learn not to be&#13;
threatened by those who aredilf&#13;
f I ,ec&#13;
ent rom us," Gracesaid. "Weneed&#13;
to put such issues out on the table&#13;
so we ca.n dISCUSSthem. Where&#13;
else but 10 a college env'~n uu mem&#13;
can we do that?"&#13;
Kaplan said she remembe~&#13;
five years ago when gays andleSbians&#13;
felt hesitant 10 even holdmeet. mgs on campus. Pleased with&#13;
GLO's successful week, she said&#13;
"We need thesepeopleheretohel~&#13;
educate the rest of us:&#13;
GLO co-coordinators Angie I&#13;
Nuter and Morten Sunde saidthey&#13;
feel satisfied with theresullSofthe&#13;
week. "Some bridges were buill,"&#13;
Sunde said. "Oureventswerep!elly&#13;
well-attended. Some negativereo i&#13;
sponses turned positive when&#13;
people approached me and wegot&#13;
a chance to talk."&#13;
Jeans Day was one eventthat&#13;
Sunde found himself talkingabout&#13;
a lot. On Wednesday, studen~&#13;
were asked to wear jeans to show&#13;
their support of gay and lesbian '&#13;
Continued on Page 4&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
[&#13;
I I&#13;
VOLUNTEER&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES ...&#13;
Monday May 10&#13;
Special Library Hours: 7:45 am to I am.&#13;
Tuesday May U&#13;
Special Library Hours: 7:45 am to 1 am.&#13;
Festival on the Lake ..Afro Fest needs booth workers. Volunteerfor&#13;
a 3 hour shift on July 2, 3 or 4 at the Festival Site in Racine. Sell&#13;
raffles, food or merchandise. Be scheduled to work with a friend.&#13;
Freeentrance. Enjoy the fun. Sign up in the Volunteer Office NOW.&#13;
Wednesday May 12&#13;
Speeial Library Hours: 7:45 to 11:30 pm.&#13;
5th grader needs patient, understanding tuiorlfriend. Volunteeras&#13;
little as 1 hour weekI y through first week ofJ une. Eleven yearoldis&#13;
failing all subjects but needs help most in reading and math. Mustbe&#13;
sensiuve to child's problems. See Carol today.&#13;
Thursday May 13&#13;
Classic Film: ''The Wizard of Oz" , 4'.30 and 7pm, U'man C'merna&#13;
$1 for students, $2 for adults. '&#13;
Special Library Hours: 7:45 am to 1I:30pm.&#13;
Computer specialist placement is available. Student who enjoys&#13;
computer work, is accurate and dependable, please inquire about the&#13;
2 hour w~k1y request from the Racine Literacy coum;il.&#13;
Go to Volunteer Office, WLLC-DI75 for more information or call&#13;
Carol at 595-2011.&#13;
Friday May 14&#13;
UWP Women's Softball- NCAA Regionals (5/14 &amp; 5/15)&#13;
UWP Women's Track - North Central Last Chance, Naperville Il.. " 4&#13;
UWP Men's Track &amp; Field _ NCC Last Chance pm.&#13;
Naperville IL, 3pm. '&#13;
Speeial Library Hours - 7:45 am to 6pm.&#13;
Special Interim Library Hours - 9:00 am to 4:30 pm&#13;
Monday thru Friday; closed Saturday and Sunday ,&#13;
and also 5/31, Memorial Day.&#13;
Volunteer in Children's Safe House in Kenosha. Read bedtime&#13;
stories to children who are in Safe House while parent is in treaUOenL&#13;
A maximum of eight children are cared for by paid sraff and&#13;
volunteers. All workers must be tested for drugs and agree to police&#13;
check. Ask for more information in the Volunteer Office.&#13;
Willife Horizons need volunteers. Help feed baby squirrels for 2-3&#13;
evenmg hours a week beginning immediately. See carol1oday.&#13;
...~..~. ~~~================~------~--------------------------------- ~e3 p~~b~~~idd'e~p~lan;s~2~5~th~anm~~.v:e=rs:ary=~--;-:~~-=======~T;H[;R.~NC~[R N;[W~S,;pag~e3 celebration&#13;
The Adminisuative Council Joan Fecteau La G Wh t' U ? hiS recentlyapproved a few initia- JoeHannem~. Th~~ eliott, and 1994, the University will host a a s p_~ _ \ai'S tSand timellnes for the celebra- may be used 0 go and theme umversIty-wide dinner celebration&#13;
~h tpiIlnoft/le[lni.v' ersuy '2S5lh Anni-. pocket mugs n dcamhpus banners ,r fo the occasion of the 25th anni-&#13;
. ' an Ol er merchan- versary. G&#13;
~. . dise, name tags, the postage meter MAT deadl ine M 18 Ian· The first UW-Parkslde Stu- indIcia and pri t d In addition to the regents and ay lary dellts were enro IIed iIn 1968 and lhroughout the ceIlneberatiopnr'ograms U.W syStem Ieadership, commu- In.dividuals' 10teresled'10 taking the Graduate Management Adrnis-&#13;
POn ~ncethen they have celebrated the Anniversary ban . period. nuy leaders, alumni, retired faculty sion Test (GMA1'),tobe administered at the University of Wisconsinn~.&#13;
graduating class in Spring of' ners, Incorpo- and staff, current faculty and staff, 2Pakrls.ide on June, must compie the registration process by Friday, May&#13;
fIlS! .••. ratIng the logo and theme will be&#13;
1970.the Univershy WIll irnple- hung on light I I and students will be invited to at-&#13;
~be ment acelebration timeline around Loop Road an:Oc:' a ong Inner tend a special dinner. . The GMAT is required for all individuals interested in enrolling&#13;
,,:'; tItSC dateS,observing the official lots during the annive~sarypUaSrking Alumni Relations: This initia- 10 any master's of business administration (MBA) program. Appli-&#13;
""'. ear from Se t be year. tivewillbealong-tennplanforthe canons for the GMAT can be obtained from the UW-Parkside&#13;
lble ,.ntversar)'y p em r Community businesses and the development of effective Counseling and Testing office, Room D175 of the Wyllie Library&#13;
'ere 1993. through Audgcdus1t.9&#13;
1&#13;
94.. I.n organizations will beasked tospon- alumm.re Iall.ons seeking to involve Lear.ning Cemer. AppI"icauons must be'mailed to the national testing&#13;
'enl ~uon,anexten ume me will sorasericsofnewspaperads which alumni iznifi service and postmarked no later than May 18.&#13;
ude th 25lh A Dc . ' more sigru icantly in the&#13;
0"1 e .nmversary - theUniversitywilldevelop,accen_ life of the University and to The GMAT examination will be given at UW-Parkside on&#13;
~-s vdopmen. t Camp.a.! gn.. . tuating the University's ach,'eve- tr th th Saturday, June 20.&#13;
M II be s eng en eUniversity'stiesand&#13;
sbi. Five maJ?r m,uauvcs WI . ments and contributions in its first relationships with its graduates. Individuals interested in learning about the MBA program are&#13;
eel. inCOlPOrated mtO the 25lh Anm- 25 years. They will also initiate a 25th encouraged to attend an Open House at 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 4 in&#13;
lith ~Celebrauon plan: publicity These ads would run lhr h- . . room 104-106 of theUW-Parkside Student Union,located at the north&#13;
'•;d, lid public rel.ations, University-. out the ann,'versary year. Theocuogm_ ahnonnIovreinrsgartyherefuirnsitognrcaldausastpinrgogcralamss, end of the main campus complex. Admission requirements, prereqlelp&#13;
wide celebrauon events, alumm mitlee will also approach RAMAC during Commencement 1994, ex- uisites, curriculum overview and the evening class schedule will be&#13;
relalions, 25th Anniversary Dcvel- and lheKenosha Chamber of Com- pecting to make each following discussed.&#13;
gie ~t Campaign, and campus merce about sponsoring special 25thanniversaryc1asspartofCom_ For more infonnation on the GMATcall (414) 595-2046.&#13;
ley lIOuvlUeasnd events. events in recognition of the mencement activities.&#13;
the The Office of Univer ity Re- University's anniversary. Development The Founda-&#13;
I,' IaIions will umeprimary respon- Media kits will be distributed tion is expected to announce a 25th&#13;
11y sibilily forplannmgand implement- in August to area media rcpresen- Anniversary Development Camreo&#13;
iog the ftrst four. initiatives, i.e. tatives. Thepossibilitiesofspecial paign, a major fund-raising prolen&#13;
publicityand public relauons, cel- sections will be discussed with the gram to support scholarship enlOt&#13;
IbIationsevent, alumni relations. KenoshaNewsand theRacineJour- dowments, equipment needs, and&#13;
celebrationevent, alumni relations, nal Times. other University priorities.&#13;
Iat and development. The August 1993 issue of Per- CampusActivitiesandEvents:&#13;
lUi Ot/lereampus divisions, pro- spcctive will be a special com- The archives will work with Public&#13;
,~gJ3IlIs,andorganizationsareaskcd memorative edition, detailing lhe Relations to develop an historical&#13;
lw 10 plan additional programs and University's first 25 years. Suc- exhibit using documents, photos,&#13;
an cvenlS. ceeding issues through August of and other artifacts from the ar-&#13;
!4 Publicity and Public Relations: 1994 will include items of interest chives. l The 251hAnniversary Year will be pertaining to the 25th anniversary. Olher campus divisions, deolftciallyannounced&#13;
by the Chan- The committee will work with partments and organizations are&#13;
cellordunng Convocation in Au- an advisory group of students, encouraged to incorporate the 25th&#13;
gust1993. alumni and bookstore personnel to anniversary into their schedules of&#13;
The Anniversary logo/theme promote and sell 25lh anniversary events, athletic contests, concerts,&#13;
"Knowthe Past, Imagine the Fu- merchandise. productions, etc.&#13;
ture"hasbeen dcveloped byacom- University-Wide Celebration Public Relations will maintain&#13;
mitleecomposed of Jan Nowak, Event: In conjunction wilh the a campus-wide calendar of such&#13;
Pauick McGuire, David Holmes, Board of Regents meeting in April events.&#13;
Time for summer paintball&#13;
Sam's, has six different fields of&#13;
play. Some of lhem include ridges&#13;
for ambushing attacks; huts and&#13;
forts for the feel of a battle in a&#13;
village; or woods for a forest fight._&#13;
All equipment, including&#13;
clothes and safety goggles, are rentableand&#13;
the average price toplay is&#13;
around twenty five dollars.&#13;
All of the various playing areas&#13;
have different times they're&#13;
open. Paintball Sam's is open every&#13;
weekend, with free camping&#13;
during special events, all yearround&#13;
except for Christmas, Easter, and&#13;
hunting season. In addition, groups&#13;
of twenty or more can rent the&#13;
fields during the week for a private&#13;
go at it.&#13;
Paintballing is a sport, lhat&#13;
when done safely, can result in a&#13;
great deal of fun. The exilement&#13;
and energy of the battle, the chase,&#13;
and the victory creates a feeling&#13;
that is hard to compare. For more&#13;
infonnation about Paintball Sam's&#13;
or paintballing in general, call&#13;
Nicky Kludt at 1-534-3197&#13;
Tom Ambelang&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
You peek carefully over the&#13;
lOp of the forl. You don't see anyone,&#13;
butthey'reoutthcre. Thewind&#13;
licks around your ears as your&#13;
muscles tighten, anticipating.&#13;
Someone appears on your left.&#13;
You quickly train lhe gun on&#13;
him, ready to shoot. but he's on&#13;
yourside. You ease off lhe trigger.&#13;
Heruns up lhe field and you must&#13;
decide whelher to hang back or&#13;
move.&#13;
Summoning lhe guts from&#13;
deepinside, you dart out of the fort.&#13;
You run in behind him, but your&#13;
making too much noise. The twigs&#13;
andleaves beneath your feet sound&#13;
like firecrackers.&#13;
SUddenly there is a barrage of&#13;
gunfue. You see lhem appear all&#13;
around you as you dive for cover&#13;
behindahutwall. Youthinkyou've&#13;
made it until you feel the slight&#13;
sting. You've been shot. An air&#13;
hom blows in the distance signallingtheendofthegame.&#13;
The purple&#13;
paint on your leg clashes harshly&#13;
wilh the green camoflage. You've&#13;
just experienced the thrill of&#13;
paintballing.&#13;
Paintballing is a sport that has&#13;
been growing in popularity over&#13;
the past decade. It is a fast paced&#13;
team or individual game that allows&#13;
lhe participants !o play an&#13;
adult fonn of wargames.&#13;
Paintball Sam's, owned and&#13;
run by Nilcki Kludt and located on&#13;
Highway K, west of 1- 94, is believed&#13;
to havesome of the best, and&#13;
safest playing fields in the midwest.&#13;
The only requirement you need to&#13;
play is to be eighteen years old.&#13;
The game is usually played&#13;
with two teams. The object is to&#13;
snatch lhe flag off lhe opposing&#13;
team's fort and return it to your&#13;
own.&#13;
This is much harder to do lhan&#13;
it sounds because teams can set up&#13;
ambushes and snipers to "kill" the&#13;
opposing team members as they&#13;
venture into the open. Paintball&#13;
New course offerings&#13;
According to Dr. Dale Bower, Assistant Vice Chancellor for Extended&#13;
Services, new course offerings and more upper level courses&#13;
are contributing to an increased number of registrations for summer&#13;
session. Enrollment is running more than 25% over last year.&#13;
One of the new courses, 210 Ethnobiology, will be taught by&#13;
Professor Surinder Datta. It is listed in the schedule under the heading&#13;
of Ethnic Studies, and will also fulfill the diversity requirement.&#13;
The school of education is offering new courses in both Teacher&#13;
Education and Physical Education. For Teacher Education, 490&#13;
Enhancing Adult Development and 490 Teaching The Adult Learner&#13;
are designed for individuals across the curriculum and not restricted&#13;
to education majors. Physical Education has several new courses:&#13;
195 Fencing, 195 Angling, and 195 Personal Protection. An additional&#13;
section of 141 Golf! and 142 Golfll will also be offered in the&#13;
evening.&#13;
A second evening section of 201 Advanced Composition has&#13;
also been opened. This section will meet on Monday and Wednesday&#13;
from 6:30-9:30 pm and will be taught by Rosemary Hunkeler. This&#13;
course is a requirement to declare a major in business.&#13;
Course schedules for summer session are available in the&#13;
Registrar's office, Advising Center, and the Assistant Vice&#13;
Chancellor's office.&#13;
Although the mail registration deadline for summer session is&#13;
June 4th, students may register in person through June 14th. Students,&#13;
however, are urged to finalize their summer course selection&#13;
as soon as possible since some courses are already filled.&#13;
Wind Ensemble to perfonn&#13;
The UW-Parkside Community band and the Parks ide Wind Ensemble&#13;
will conclude the concert season with a joint program on&#13;
Thursday, May 6th. The concert is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. Both ensembles are conducted by&#13;
UW-Parkside professor Mark Eichner.&#13;
Robert Rummage will perfonn Robert Jager's Percussion Concerto&#13;
(1985) as soloist with the Parkside Wind Ensemble. Mr.&#13;
Rummage is percussion instructor and director of the Percussion&#13;
Ensemble at UW-Parks ide. He is an active professional in the&#13;
Chicago area including tour perfonnances with the Woody Hennan&#13;
Jazz Orchestra, and he has twice perfonned at the prestigious Chicago&#13;
Jazz Festival in Grant Park. Other works by the Parkside Wind&#13;
Ensemble include Pineapple Poll by Sir Arthur Sullivan, New Dance&#13;
by Wallingford Riegger, and The Immovable Do by Percy Grainger.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Community Band will perfonn Scherlo by&#13;
Anthony Iannaccone, Second Suite in F by Gustav Holst, and&#13;
Trauersinfonie by Richard Wagner. The enure tuba sectton consIsting&#13;
of David Boyd, Steve Carlson, Charley DIckson, and Paul&#13;
Sandvick will be featured in lhe novelty selecllon The Bass In the&#13;
Ballroom. The UW-Parkside Community Band is an Outreach&#13;
Program of the university, promoting paruc,patton In musIc as a&#13;
lifelong activity. .&#13;
Admission to the concert is $4. Students, staff, and semors, $2.&#13;
Tne RASGERNEWS,Page 4 -&#13;
Kaplan responds to controversy&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
Kaplan stresses, again, that the&#13;
decisions made by UW-Parkside&#13;
are a direct result of Board of Regent&#13;
mandates. "The Regents put a&#13;
committee together to look at the&#13;
whole question of fees and they&#13;
made changes in the System's&#13;
policy and what those changes basically&#13;
involved was to remove all&#13;
restrictions from those campuses&#13;
charging specific fees for specific&#13;
purposes.&#13;
"The message they were sending&#13;
was: 'If you have costs that are&#13;
legitimate costs, you need to look&#13;
to recoup those costs."&#13;
Kaplan continues, "We had&#13;
almost no fees and I though that&#13;
was good, but the message we were&#13;
getting from the people that we&#13;
worked for was 'you've got to look&#13;
for fees as a possible source of&#13;
income, where appropriate, to recover&#13;
direct costs."&#13;
From that message emerged a&#13;
study by Dr. Gary Grace, comparing&#13;
all possible fees used at other&#13;
System schools. Kaplan quickly&#13;
points out that UW-Parkside rejeered&#13;
most of those possibilities.&#13;
"Most of them were ridiculous,"&#13;
Kaplan chuckles.&#13;
Kaplan summarizes, by again&#13;
talking about behavior change and&#13;
direct costs. "We think some of&#13;
OUf actions will improve behavior,&#13;
as we would like to see them&#13;
improved ...and others we think will&#13;
simply recover some of the direct&#13;
costs that the Regents are telling us&#13;
that we need to find ways to recover.&#13;
So that's the long and the&#13;
short of it."&#13;
Asked where this new money&#13;
would be allocated, Kaplan responded,&#13;
"We think we'll raise a&#13;
couple of bucks the first year, but&#13;
then it will dry up." Like every&#13;
other souree of money in the University,&#13;
it wiII go into the&#13;
institution's Supply and Expense&#13;
Budget and be allocated where it is&#13;
needed.&#13;
"We really view that drop/&#13;
add money as short-term&#13;
money ...By the second year, we&#13;
expect that income stream to dry&#13;
up...So we're not looking for big&#13;
bucks there."&#13;
Responding to a final question&#13;
about veteran's benefits, Kaplan&#13;
replied, "We apparently were the&#13;
only campus in the UW System&#13;
that were basically allowing veterans&#13;
to delay their payments. There&#13;
was no policy of the Board that&#13;
allowed us to do this.&#13;
"As far as we understand, Gary&#13;
Goetz, for all sorts of good, heartfelt&#13;
reasons, simply was prepared&#13;
to grant waivers to veterans, because&#13;
he felt they had a special&#13;
need. We goraudited and the audit&#13;
found that we were doing this and&#13;
the audit basically says: 'Youcan't&#13;
do it.·n&#13;
Kaplan concludes by saying,&#13;
"So ...it was simply a practice that&#13;
we alone in the UW System were&#13;
undertaking without any policy&#13;
support; it was something we were&#13;
simply doing, because at that time,&#13;
we thought it was a nice thing to do.&#13;
"Unfortunately, the world is&#13;
not made like that and you can't&#13;
always do things that you'd like to&#13;
do, when you've got auditors out&#13;
there who tell you that this violates&#13;
all of the appropriate standards that&#13;
you have to follow for when you&#13;
collect money and how you deposit&#13;
money and all of that kind of&#13;
stuff."&#13;
Physical Plant director interviewed&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
budget will allow in order to increase&#13;
efficiency. and assemble a&#13;
"policy and procedures" manual,&#13;
which he stated would assist supervisors&#13;
in maintaining consistency.&#13;
and order within the department.&#13;
He also stated that one other&#13;
way he is working to improve the&#13;
Physical Plant was to study the&#13;
manner in which other UW-Systern&#13;
campuses are running their&#13;
plants, and to actively participate&#13;
in the biannual information-sharing&#13;
meetings with the other campuses.&#13;
Colby further stated that the&#13;
University commiuee could help&#13;
improve Physical Plant operations&#13;
in a number of ways. He asked that&#13;
work orders be detailed more completely,&#13;
and that individuals make&#13;
an effort to be more descriptive&#13;
with problems.&#13;
Another of Colby's goals is to&#13;
reduce the number of Worker's&#13;
Compensation claims, pointing out&#13;
that the safety committee is in the&#13;
process of replacing dangerous ladders&#13;
and that he isconsidering safety&#13;
training for Physical Plant employees.&#13;
When asked about the campus'&#13;
"commitment to diversity,"&#13;
Colby said that he feels it to be&#13;
important, adding that he personally&#13;
feels that "if (someone] isqualified,&#13;
Idon't care where they come&#13;
from." When pressed as to whether&#13;
or not he would hire a woman or&#13;
minority over a white male, provided&#13;
they were equally qualified,&#13;
Colby stated that he would, and&#13;
that as far as he knew, he has "an&#13;
obligation under law" to do so.&#13;
A semi-controversial issue&#13;
Colby was asked to deal with during&#13;
the session deal t with the spring&#13;
and summer insecticide spraying&#13;
on campus, and the possible danger&#13;
it poses to local geese. He&#13;
responded that it was Physical&#13;
Plant's responsibility to maintain&#13;
the grounds, and that most of the&#13;
spraying would be done on the&#13;
weekends in order to avoid any&#13;
discomfort for the University population.&#13;
The geese, however, will&#13;
"have to fend for themselves." He&#13;
suggests that if the campus felt&#13;
strongly regarding the situation,&#13;
perhaps it should consider a petition,&#13;
but added that he would not be&#13;
signing it.&#13;
Colby added that he would be&#13;
maintaining an "open-door" policy&#13;
of the campus, and that anyone&#13;
with questions will be welcome to&#13;
stop by and present them.&#13;
GLO gains suIm-=-o=-...:rt'-------- _&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
issues. Jeans, being common student&#13;
dress, there were many who&#13;
wore them without paying attention&#13;
to the week's promotions and&#13;
unintentionally made a statement.&#13;
"Some people thought wewere&#13;
trying to make them dress a certain&#13;
way or to trick them," Sunde responded.&#13;
"I would say to them,&#13;
'Now you know how it is to be gay&#13;
every day.'"&#13;
Comedian RickBurd was also&#13;
criticized, Sunde said. Students&#13;
had strong negative reactions to&#13;
the comedian's act, with many not&#13;
finding the performance in the least&#13;
bit funny. "OK, we gambled. We&#13;
saw a six-minute promotional tape&#13;
to decide whether to have him here&#13;
or not. He was funny on the tape.&#13;
That happens once in a while," he&#13;
added.&#13;
Nuter said her favorite pan of&#13;
the week was the Friday night social&#13;
event in Union Square. "It felt&#13;
so good to be able tohaveeveryone&#13;
together. Theatrnospherewasvery&#13;
relaxed and happy," she said. "We&#13;
had a great time."&#13;
Now that the Wall is gone, it&#13;
will not be forgotten.&#13;
GLO co-coordinators Nuter&#13;
and Sunde have kept a few&#13;
momentos -- actually a complete&#13;
record of all comments written on&#13;
The Wall during Out and About&#13;
Week -- to help us all remember&#13;
what the climate was like at UWParks&#13;
ide during mid-April 1993.&#13;
So, if you wrote on The Wall,&#13;
you've just become a part of campus&#13;
history.&#13;
Have a&#13;
GREAT&#13;
SUMMJEJR&#13;
May 6,1993 -&#13;
Forum focuses on&#13;
campus minority issues&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Wednesday, April 28, minority&#13;
students met with Chancellor&#13;
Sheila Kaplan to voice concems.&#13;
Minority students were upset&#13;
that at the recent KRS-One&#13;
lecture campus police brought&#13;
firearms and more officers than&#13;
should have been necessary for&#13;
an event with 50 or less people.&#13;
Kaplan responded that when she&#13;
found out about that she "went&#13;
ballistic."&#13;
Parks ide police aren't allowed&#13;
to carry guns at regular&#13;
campus events. "In general,"&#13;
said Kaplan, as Parkside's policies&#13;
regarding campus police are&#13;
written, they are not appropriate&#13;
a university." Kaplan said that&#13;
policy is in the process of being&#13;
revised so that it reflects an educational&#13;
environment.&#13;
Students wondered how expansion&#13;
of the Phy Ed building&#13;
was possible when more facilities&#13;
for minorities, wether&#13;
through expanding the CECA&#13;
center or building a new facility,&#13;
are not. Kaplan pointed out that&#13;
80% of money for the addition to&#13;
the Phy Ed building will becoming&#13;
from the state. BUildings&#13;
such as the Union and&#13;
Multicultural are paid for by Students&#13;
and not the state. Said&#13;
Kaplan. "We will work with yOU&#13;
recognizing that what we've got&#13;
we've got."&#13;
Another topic brought up&#13;
was the selection proccess of Ihe&#13;
Senior Resident Advisors. Students&#13;
thought that the prossess&#13;
was unfair since there was no&#13;
minority representative on the&#13;
selection committee. DeAnn&#13;
Possehl, Director of Residence&#13;
Life said that next year there&#13;
would be.&#13;
Bryan Lyday, the new president&#13;
of HOP, thought the the&#13;
forum went well. "It was healthy&#13;
to vent some of our frustration.&#13;
We had a chance to be heard and&#13;
hear the Chancellor's response.&#13;
Now it's time for students to action&#13;
and make sure changes take&#13;
place."&#13;
Kevin Williamsalsothoughl&#13;
that the session was good for all&#13;
concerned. "Hopefully we'll&#13;
have more meetings like thisand&#13;
the Chancellor will come tomore&#13;
student functions. People need&#13;
to get to know the Chancellor."&#13;
French student enjoys&#13;
American culture&#13;
Karina Horochena&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Some students want more&#13;
from their college experience than&#13;
partying for four or five years and&#13;
eventually gelling a degree.&#13;
French student Karine Iglesias is&#13;
one of these students.&#13;
Karine, 20, is studying&#13;
abroad from Dammartin, France,&#13;
a small suburb of 6,000 people&#13;
outside of Paris. Karine came to&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside this year and plans to&#13;
stay until August. Karine had previously&#13;
been to the United States&#13;
last spring on vacation visiting&#13;
friends in Racine.&#13;
She decided to attend Parkside&#13;
because she wanted to study&#13;
in the United States and she&#13;
wanted to improve her English&#13;
speaking skills. Itdidn 't hurt that&#13;
she would already have a place to&#13;
stay either. Karine is currently&#13;
staying with Parkside English&#13;
Professor Andrew Mclean and&#13;
his wife Carol Ruxton in Racine.&#13;
An English major at the&#13;
Sorbonne school in Paris, Karine&#13;
contends that her classes overseas&#13;
are harder and the teachers&#13;
expect more from their Sludents.&#13;
She does, however, recommend&#13;
studying abroad. "Studying ina&#13;
foreign country, especially Ihe&#13;
U.S., is a good experience. I've&#13;
learned a lot of things."&#13;
Karine points out that certain&#13;
aspects of American culture,&#13;
like fattening foods, are negative&#13;
but in general, "likes American&#13;
people - they're nice and&#13;
friendly."&#13;
She says she will missschool&#13;
here because you can socialize&#13;
more, unlike school in Paris&#13;
where it is all work. She also&#13;
points out the differences in&#13;
nightlife activities between the&#13;
two cultures.&#13;
According to Iglesias there&#13;
are more things for young adults&#13;
to do in Paris but they are more&#13;
expensive. It costs about $1510&#13;
go to a nightclub in Paris and&#13;
they are usually open from II&#13;
p.rn.to j a.rn. WhileintheU5.,&#13;
Karine has made many lasung&#13;
friends. "I'd like them to visitme&#13;
inFrance. I'll come back to visit&#13;
them for sure."&#13;
May 6,1993 -&#13;
University students display their&#13;
talent in Senior Art Exhibit&#13;
Susan Luepkes&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Upon entering the doors of the&#13;
University Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery,one is immediately greeted&#13;
byarust-colored, abstractly twisted&#13;
steelculture. This figure, inspired&#13;
byanistHilary Rinke, isjust one of&#13;
theseveral an attractions currently&#13;
displayedin the Senior An Exhibit&#13;
untilMay 16.&#13;
Each semester, graduating An&#13;
majors arc given the opportunity&#13;
through their Senior Seminar&#13;
coursework to produce a collaboraledisplay&#13;
of the talent and skills&#13;
they accomplished through their&#13;
undergraduate study. This spring,&#13;
the Art Department held two an&#13;
exhibits to accomodate the expansive&#13;
abilities of their len graduatingseniors.&#13;
This second Senior An Exhibit,&#13;
which began Thursday, represents&#13;
the craftsmanship of Sara&#13;
Hainstock, Heidi Nolan, Debra J.&#13;
Richter, Hilary Rinke, and Ginger&#13;
Moungey.&#13;
The exhibit contains a wide&#13;
variety of subjects and themes.&#13;
Death, nature, emotions, and societ&#13;
y are represented through such&#13;
media as lithographs, oil paintings,&#13;
three-dimensional collages, and&#13;
ceramic sculptures. The artist expressed&#13;
themselves through the&#13;
inspiration of such styles as romanticism,&#13;
formalism .and expressionism.&#13;
"I attempt to give the viewer a&#13;
place to escape, a place to meditate,&#13;
and a place to find peace within&#13;
themselves," said Hainstoek.&#13;
Art Department Chair Doug&#13;
De Vinny states that the pupose of&#13;
this an exhibit is for the seniors to&#13;
establish themselves in the outside&#13;
exhibition market.&#13;
"The exhibit documents that&#13;
the student has achieved a professional&#13;
presence as an artist," said&#13;
DeVinny.&#13;
The students must work together&#13;
to produce a collaborative&#13;
presentation that will not only display&#13;
their individual talents, but&#13;
also accentuate eachother's techniques.&#13;
Beside demonstrating a&#13;
portfolio of their artistic capabilities,&#13;
the student must construct&#13;
slides of their work, a resume, and&#13;
a thesis about themselves and their&#13;
artwork.&#13;
Students and faculty are encouraged&#13;
to attend this exhibit. An&#13;
opening reception will be held this .&#13;
evening from 7 to 9 p.rn., where&#13;
guests will be able to meet and talk&#13;
with the artists,&#13;
DeVinny states that UW-Parkside&#13;
is one of few campuses in the&#13;
area that allows students this opportunity&#13;
to display their an. The&#13;
exhibit is open Mondays andThursdays&#13;
from I to Sp.m.and Tuesdays&#13;
and Wednesdays from 7 to 10p.m.&#13;
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wanted. If you're a graduate of a fouryear&#13;
college, graduate school or registered&#13;
nursing program, Toyota has&#13;
special finance rates for you. Rates with no money down. And a gO-daydeferred payment'&#13;
What's more, the Toyota Retail Financing Program is available a year after and up to SIX&#13;
months before you actually graduate. And you can finance any new Toyota - the Paseo shown&#13;
here, or a Cerolla, Tercel, 4x4, whatever moves you. Should you want to lease your new Toyota,&#13;
an attractive leasing program is also available. For complete information&#13;
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Toyota dealer,just callI-800-S-COLLEGE.The car or truck ofyour dreams,&#13;
and financing you won't lose sleep over. Bet you can really get mto that.&#13;
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See YourLocal Toyota Dealer. @TOYOTA&#13;
Marquita Hynes&#13;
News Writer&#13;
THERANGERNEWS,Page 5&#13;
/University gains a treasure&#13;
The sounds of creativity are&#13;
about to reach their crescendo for&#13;
Agbo Folarin. His copper sculpture,&#13;
"Diversity of Creation&#13;
Myths," is soon to be installed.&#13;
By the middle of this month, the&#13;
campus community will be able&#13;
to view the mural, which he and&#13;
his students have created. The&#13;
east wall of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center mezzanine area&#13;
wil become the permanent home&#13;
of the fourteen copper panels&#13;
which comprise the mural.&#13;
Molinaro D-130 has echoed&#13;
with the pounding of hammers&#13;
and the whirring of drills throughout&#13;
the spring semester. Interested&#13;
students, faculty, and staff&#13;
have been dropping by the classrooms&#13;
throughout the semester.&#13;
Intersted students, faculty and&#13;
staff have been dropping by the&#13;
classrooms throughout the semester.&#13;
"They come all the time,"&#13;
exclaimed Folarin, who was&#13;
happy to have so many people&#13;
intrigued with the project.&#13;
Likewise, "I was intrigued&#13;
by the multitude of ethnic backgrounds&#13;
in this country," stated&#13;
the artist. Comparing his native&#13;
Nigeria to the United States, he&#13;
added, "I'm jealous. You have a&#13;
very rich country; but American&#13;
people should try to get together&#13;
more."&#13;
Students who worked together&#13;
on the mural shared some&#13;
of their thoughts in an earlier&#13;
interview: Edward Moczulewski&#13;
was happy for the chance to learn&#13;
atechnique that has been used for&#13;
thousands of years, while Rick&#13;
Bedore said that the experience&#13;
was an "opportunity to work with&#13;
someone from another culture -&#13;
an internationally-known artist."&#13;
He stated that the ideaoftheciass&#13;
was "to see how public an's hung&#13;
in public places."&#13;
Initially the mural was to&#13;
hang outside the main entrance to&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
It was conferred by the artist,&#13;
however, that a location inside&#13;
would be preferable to prevent&#13;
possible damage to the work. In&#13;
an enclosed environment potential&#13;
damage due to wind, rain, and&#13;
oxidation would be minimized&#13;
and/or eliminated.&#13;
Folarin stated that he has enjoyed&#13;
his time at UW-Parkside,&#13;
but is looking forward to returning&#13;
to Nigeria at the end of the&#13;
month. The sculpture, however,&#13;
will remain and bea lasting "treasure&#13;
for the University," he&#13;
proudly declared. Folarin may&#13;
be at Northwestern University&#13;
during the fall t993 semester,&#13;
where he would be working on a&#13;
fellowship.&#13;
Stop in&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
office (D139C)&#13;
or&#13;
~ call 595-2287.&#13;
"",--VI _''''''__ ~ .-/&#13;
If your interested in:&#13;
• News Writing&#13;
• Sports&#13;
• Layout &amp; Design&#13;
• Copy Editing&#13;
• Advertising&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
is looking for people&#13;
for the 1993-1994&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Tus R"~GER NEWS, Pagc 6&#13;
Editorial&#13;
It's been fun, but. ..&#13;
Andrew J, Patch&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Well, it's finally here, About&#13;
eight months ago, I remember saying&#13;
to myself "wcll, one down,&#13;
twenty-eight to go" - meaning, of&#13;
course, issues of The Ranger News.&#13;
At the time, this year seemed like&#13;
some interminably long, incomprehensible&#13;
thing, sort of like infinity.&#13;
Icould picture the end of&#13;
the year just as easily as Icould the&#13;
Packers winning a Supcrbowl&#13;
(these, of course, were in the pre-&#13;
Reggie days).&#13;
But it carne, it's here, and I&#13;
finally get to say good-bye.&#13;
But first, there's a small matter&#13;
tn attend to... •&#13;
On page one of this week's&#13;
issue, Alan Cook wrote a story&#13;
presenting Sheila Kaplan's response&#13;
to and reasoning for the&#13;
new student fees recently imposed&#13;
on University students.&#13;
I have several concerns regarding&#13;
her arguments.&#13;
. First, Kaplan opens by stating&#13;
that "I know the.students that&#13;
go to this University .... " This to&#13;
me would seem to be a slight&#13;
impossibility, unless by 'students&#13;
of this University' she means Lhe&#13;
gifted few that auend the yearly&#13;
scholarship and award banquet or&#13;
those angry enough to eall area&#13;
newspapers and radio and televisian&#13;
statements to air their complaints&#13;
about her and the adrninistration.&#13;
It remains a simple fact that&#13;
the majority of the students at this&#13;
university, when seeing Dr.&#13;
Kaplan in person, have absolutely&#13;
no idea who shc is.&#13;
She goes on to state that "not&#13;
all those fees are designed to&#13;
generate money " Among those&#13;
not used to generate money is the&#13;
highly controversial Add/Drop&#13;
fee, which states that we will now&#13;
have to pay $10 for every credit&#13;
that we add or drop after the tenth&#13;
day of class next semester. Rather,&#13;
this measure is meant as a 'behavior&#13;
promoter,' to get students to&#13;
stop dropping classes half way&#13;
through the semester.&#13;
She states that the Univcrsity&#13;
is shooting for less than a 5&#13;
percent tenth day drop total, and&#13;
that instituting the new fee is the&#13;
most efficient way of achieving&#13;
this goal.&#13;
According to one source in&#13;
PSGA, the University is currently&#13;
at 5.2 percent - which comes to a&#13;
grand total often students. Even&#13;
ifthis percentage is off, is it anywhere&#13;
near fair that everyone attending&#13;
the university has to pay&#13;
because maybe 25 morons can't&#13;
get their schedule right? This of&#13;
course is to say nothing of the&#13;
poor souls that find themselves&#13;
hopelessl y lost after the first exam&#13;
(rarely before the first ten days)&#13;
and find they must drop or perish&#13;
in academic suicide.&#13;
Further, I would think that in&#13;
an issue that affects students as&#13;
much as these potential new fees&#13;
that the students would at least&#13;
have some say in theirimplementation&#13;
or where the money taken&#13;
in from these fees is to be directed.&#13;
We, as far as I am aware,&#13;
had none, and the monies collected&#13;
as a result of the new add/&#13;
drop fees as yet have no designated&#13;
destination.&#13;
So. basically, we get to pay a&#13;
530 slap on the wrist each time&#13;
we drop a class into an account&#13;
that has no accountability. Ah&#13;
hah. Cool...&#13;
Then, of course, there is the&#13;
"graduation fee," which is a fundraiser&#13;
to help defray the costs of&#13;
the graduation ceremonies to the&#13;
University. So that 525 isn't paid&#13;
somewhere in the 510,000 or so&#13;
we spend to attend this fine institution&#13;
over the course of the four&#13;
to five years it takes to complete&#13;
a degree? Oh, OK, no problem ...&#13;
I would think,after four years&#13;
of putting up with a Chancellor&#13;
that has met maybe one out of one&#13;
hundred students and academic&#13;
policies and requirements that&#13;
change on a dail y basis, we might&#13;
be able to expect a reasonably&#13;
nice, "free" graduation ceremony .&#13;
Kaplan seems to lay a great&#13;
Continued on Page 10&#13;
-&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
May 6,1-993&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
During a chemistry 102 lecture&#13;
this semester, Dr. Cashion informed&#13;
his students that chemical&#13;
agents are being released into our&#13;
atmosphere today that will continue&#13;
to cause destruction of the&#13;
ozone layer three decades into the&#13;
next century.&#13;
The world has become engaged&#13;
in mortal combat with an&#13;
evil entity far deadlier than the&#13;
diabolical beings of fiction. Govemmentsare&#13;
aware of its presence,&#13;
but are powerless to stop it.&#13;
The goal of this being it seems,&#13;
is to make homo sapiens one of the&#13;
shortest lived species to 'have inhabited&#13;
this planet. Can you name&#13;
it? Hint: it is also pouring kilotons&#13;
of chemical and radioactive&#13;
waste into the land and oceans&#13;
which we have neither the technological&#13;
nor the economical means&#13;
to deal with.&#13;
Surely this menace must be&#13;
from another world, since it seems&#13;
to care little for ours. Maybe&#13;
you've seen it. Its vehicle is apathy.&#13;
Its weaponry is ignorance and&#13;
greed. If we cannot identify this&#13;
menace in time, perhaps the next&#13;
intelligent species to dominate this&#13;
planet will not succumb to the same&#13;
fate. Think about it!!&#13;
-In loving memory of a once&#13;
beautiful little blue-green world,&#13;
Jeff Appenzeller&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Thank you. On behalf&#13;
of the Dramatic Arts Department&#13;
and myself, we thank you-the&#13;
students, faculty, administration&#13;
of Parks ide and the communityfor&#13;
your fantastic support 6f our&#13;
production of Guys and Dolls,&#13;
which closed last weekend to&#13;
virtually sold out audiences.&#13;
Your attendance and enthusiastic&#13;
response to our musical are most&#13;
appreciated.&#13;
Your positive&#13;
acknowledgement and backing&#13;
prove that although extracurricular&#13;
activities on campus are&#13;
generally not well supported and&#13;
therefore often negatively&#13;
criticized, eventson campus such&#13;
as other theatre productions,&#13;
student musical concerts, athletic&#13;
events, student' organized walks&#13;
and protests, and even poetry&#13;
readings are indeed significant&#13;
and advantageous to both campus&#13;
and community.&#13;
It is so encouraging to&#13;
see this kind of appreciation for&#13;
all of our efforts and hard work.&#13;
It is promising not only because&#13;
it helped to make Guys and Dolls&#13;
a wonderful success, but it will&#13;
potentially encourage this kind of&#13;
support for all of the other terrific&#13;
student and faculty supported&#13;
events. So for this, we thank&#13;
you. Hope to see you soon.&#13;
-Sincerely,&#13;
Susan Mcintyre&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega&#13;
Dramatic Arts Fraternity&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I found it very humorous and&#13;
typical for an Anglo-Saxon student&#13;
(Truth and Intelligence) to&#13;
comment on racist acts on campus.&#13;
How can he/she make a statement&#13;
on anything that pertainsto racism?&#13;
For his/hers founded America&#13;
by stealing people from their&#13;
homes, raping women of color, and&#13;
murdering the native Americans.&#13;
Since the beginning, many white&#13;
people have treated minorities (the&#13;
majority) unfairly, unequally, and&#13;
asa nonexistent entity. The seed of&#13;
racism has been planted in our society&#13;
and like a plant it has bloomed;&#13;
therefore if racism existed back&#13;
. then, what makes (Truth and Intelligence)&#13;
think that it doesn't exist&#13;
within our beloved campus police&#13;
station?&#13;
-Sincerely,&#13;
Miss Nicole R. Stanley&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Truth and Intelligence lacks&#13;
knowledge of the situation. I feel&#13;
sorry for him/her.&#13;
First of all, a white person will&#13;
never be able to complctely com.&#13;
pare themselves to a black person.&#13;
Therefore, they will never know&#13;
the de fin iuon of racist or prejUdice.&#13;
One can't sympathize with this is.&#13;
sue; they must empathize to make&#13;
a truthful statement!&#13;
Second, your alias is a joke.&#13;
How can you call yourself Truth&#13;
and Intelligence?&#13;
Prior to writing about the Cam.&#13;
pus Pol ice, I took a poll and discov,&#13;
ered that 98% of the minorities On&#13;
campus have been harassed in some&#13;
way. Did you do a poll? If you&#13;
were really Truth and Intelligence,&#13;
I challenge you to take a poll. See&#13;
what I saw. The real truth is you are&#13;
full of it.&#13;
You call yourself Intelligence&#13;
but the books you have read are full&#13;
of lies! Columbus didn't discover&#13;
America! How can he discover&#13;
something that belongs to the real&#13;
Americans?!? Cleopatra was not&#13;
white! A white man did not discover&#13;
the North Pole! Bell didn't&#13;
invent the telephone! Ancient Africans&#13;
were real Kings and Queens!&#13;
The first humans alive wereBlack!&#13;
I challenge you to do your research&#13;
like I have and then the TRUTH&#13;
shall set you free!&#13;
Consequently, by not looking&#13;
up the truth on your own, your&#13;
education is phony and your cornment&#13;
regarding Campus Police is&#13;
null and void! You lack knowledge,&#13;
therefore you say NOTH·&#13;
ING!&#13;
A real intellectual would see&#13;
racism existing and admit there is&#13;
nothing to prevent our potice officers&#13;
from following their forefathers.&#13;
In closing, until the day your&#13;
skin becomes as DARK as mine&#13;
without a suntan and your hair isas&#13;
NAPPI as mine then you can step&#13;
up to me and compare situations,&#13;
but until then, Mr./Mrs. Truth and&#13;
Intelligence, MIND YOUR BUSINESS.&#13;
-Justice and Reality&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
900 Wood Road Box 2000, Kenosha, WI53141·2000&#13;
Editorial (414) 595·2287 Business (414) 595-2295&#13;
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academic year except over breaks and holidays.&#13;
The Ranger News is written and edited by students of UW.&#13;
Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content.&#13;
THE RANGER NEWS STAFF h&#13;
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nity issues. A representative sample may be published when&#13;
numerous letters expressing similiar viewpoints are recieved.&#13;
Letters to the Editor should be typed and double-spaced and&#13;
include the author's name, social security number, and telephone&#13;
number. Letters may not exceed 250 words and should&#13;
be delivered to The Ranger News, Room WLLC D-139C&#13;
before 4 pm on Friday prior to puiblication. Letters that do net&#13;
meet the aforementioned requirements, as well as those containing&#13;
offensive,libelous or misleading information, will not&#13;
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right to edit all letters.&#13;
Letter to Editor Policy&#13;
The Ranger News encourages and invites letters to the&#13;
Editor. Letters disagreeing, or agreeing with an editorial,&#13;
article, or feature published in The Ranger News are welcomed,&#13;
as are readers' viewpoints on campus and commuWbe'S&#13;
Gab&#13;
Some tips for surviving finals week Gabe KI~ka portantthings,likememorizingthe&#13;
Columnist entire periodic table and learning&#13;
eight chapters of Calculus in one&#13;
night, No need to worry at all.&#13;
The Big Two: Get some X-ray&#13;
specs. X-ray specs come in handy&#13;
during those reall y tough finals that&#13;
you haven't studied for. They give&#13;
you the ability to see through the&#13;
body of the class genius, whom&#13;
you should be sitting behind. It's&#13;
not that I am suggesting you cheat,&#13;
I'm just suggesting that you get&#13;
some "guidance in the right direction."&#13;
It is also advisable to take the&#13;
little swirly things off of the from&#13;
of the X-ray specs, so as to avoid&#13;
drawing suspicion to yourself.&#13;
Hint Three: Try sex. Hey, there&#13;
is always someone willing to go for&#13;
a "walk" on the cross country trails.&#13;
Clue Number Four: Caffeinate&#13;
your brains out, As a disciple of the&#13;
caffeine gods, I personally know&#13;
that drinking two liters of Mountain&#13;
Dew and popping three&#13;
Vivarin, will certainly keep you&#13;
awake long enough to cram a&#13;
semester's worth of Psychology&#13;
into your brain. However, care&#13;
should be taken by strapping yourself&#13;
down, and inserting a rubber&#13;
bit in your mouth to avoid grinding&#13;
your teeth down to the gums. The&#13;
little gnomes you start to see after&#13;
36 hours of sleep deprivation will&#13;
tell you all of the answers you need&#13;
to know.&#13;
Pearl of wisdom number five:&#13;
Slip a Cvnote in with your final. If&#13;
Welcome to the final issue!&#13;
Yesfolks, another year of hijinks&#13;
andhilarity is drawing to a close,&#13;
and this means one thing. Finals&#13;
are upon us.&#13;
In past years, as well as this&#13;
one,Ihave taken exciting courses&#13;
like Calculus for the Criminally&#13;
Insane,Elementary Word Voodoo,&#13;
andFigures for the Mathematically&#13;
Inane.Because of courses like this,&#13;
I have enjoyed the mouth-drying,&#13;
gutwrenching phenomenon known&#13;
as finals with more relish than the&#13;
average Joe/Josephine Student.&#13;
This year, however, I only have&#13;
one such final, SO my usual feverishpanic&#13;
will be relatively limited.&#13;
Judging by the fact that I have&#13;
been here since dirt was invented,&#13;
Ifigure that I am somewhat of an&#13;
authority on how to take finals and&#13;
survive with a good portion of your&#13;
braincells still intact, So, out of the&#13;
goodness of my heart, and some&#13;
deep seated urge to spill my guts&#13;
upon the printed page every week,&#13;
Iwill provide you with some of my&#13;
own personal hints on how to survive&#13;
finals.&#13;
Hint Numero Uno: Don't&#13;
panic. All the studying you should&#13;
have done during the semester is&#13;
not worth worrying about. Long&#13;
hours spent trying to avoid being a&#13;
responsible academian are past, so&#13;
you should concentrate on the im-&#13;
Plugged In!&#13;
Edutainment:&#13;
mind candy made&#13;
Timothy E. Kretsehmann teeth, they put in educational&#13;
Feature Writer subtext so the kids Icam-making&#13;
parents get a case of the giggles.&#13;
Each of the parties think they pulled&#13;
one over on the other, so everybody&#13;
is the winner.&#13;
This is the practice of the old&#13;
"spoonful of sugar helps the medicine&#13;
go down" to its obvious conclusion.&#13;
We've taken this old adage&#13;
to the bank, and its paying&#13;
dividends. Children's videos are&#13;
the biggest sellers at the vid stores,&#13;
and the educational subtexts keep&#13;
the kids' curiosity engaged.&#13;
In the good old days, educational&#13;
films were as stale as shoe&#13;
leather. We all remember the physics&#13;
films that began the promising&#13;
careers of Dr. Bartles and Professor&#13;
James that went on to make&#13;
some very entertaining TV commercials&#13;
but bored you silly in class.&#13;
Students like me looked forward&#13;
to movies thatcombinededucation&#13;
and entertainment like&#13;
"DonaldDuckinMathmagicLand"&#13;
and "Herno the Magnificenl." (Do&#13;
you remember these?)&#13;
Ever since Disney dropped out&#13;
of edutainrnent, little has been&#13;
done-until now. Brederbund and&#13;
the renovation of Disney have rediscovered&#13;
the industry. The return&#13;
was slow, and long in coming, but&#13;
Well, this is it for this column.&#13;
Next semester, I run offto become&#13;
an English High School Student&#13;
Teacher and I leave such frivolity&#13;
as technology and film and ... well,&#13;
maybe not.&#13;
The hottest, fastest ex panding&#13;
section of computer technology and&#13;
theemertainmemindustry iscalled&#13;
EDUT AINMENT. Edutainrnent is&#13;
a blend of computers or television&#13;
shows or what-have-you with educational&#13;
sub-text, And kids can't&#13;
get enough!&#13;
Take a look at Where in the&#13;
World is Carmen Sandiego? After&#13;
being the hottest computer game of&#13;
home computing history, it spun&#13;
off into the first popular PBS game&#13;
show for kids. The trick is to entertain,&#13;
as well as educate, the audience.&#13;
This is accomplished by em-&#13;
. phasis on the entertainment angle.&#13;
Here's how it works. You&#13;
make a show entertaining with 10Lsa&#13;
bright colors for the anklebiter set&#13;
and lotsa funny, yet hip, quips for&#13;
the ultra-cool pre-puberty pups.&#13;
This brings the kids to the program&#13;
(or software, etc.) on their own&#13;
accord.&#13;
Then, so the plot has some&#13;
sweeter with profits&#13;
is strong and profitable.&#13;
Philips has gotten into the&#13;
act as well. They've introduced&#13;
a new line of interactive CD's.&#13;
Instead of emulating Dirk the&#13;
Daring in Dragon's Lair tradition,&#13;
these new CD's leach everything&#13;
from counting to&#13;
Mozan-though it seems that&#13;
its golf emulator is its mostpopular&#13;
title.&#13;
Nonetheless, daddies that&#13;
buy it to improve their golf&#13;
games tend to get the kids a few&#13;
of the edutainment titles as well.&#13;
(Just so they won't beat their top&#13;
scores, iffornothing else.) What&#13;
is the old saying? The difference&#13;
between men and boys ...&#13;
If you are interested in&#13;
Edurainment titles, see any computer&#13;
software catalog (most&#13;
have incorporated an&#13;
"Edurainment" subheading in&#13;
their listings) ortestdriveoneof&#13;
those Philips deals at a Sears&#13;
near you or the Magnavox Outlet&#13;
just south of us on 1-94. 1/1&#13;
~_ I'd like to thank everyone&#13;
that has read this column the&#13;
past five weeks, and those that I----j--L::--;-~-.-\--.-,I,-JV)-({...J A ----'I&#13;
read the original batch a few ~'.. j\ ~ / -......",&#13;
semesters ago. Hope you can all ItJ' A.A&#13;
stay, Plugged In! .fYl--&#13;
questioned about it, wink and&#13;
say, "Oh, I must have dropped&#13;
that in there by mistake! But hey&#13;
prof, everyone knows it's a finders&#13;
keepers kinda world." It is&#13;
never bad to grease the wheels&#13;
of success.&#13;
Desperate Tactic Six: Take&#13;
a hostage. This hint is really not&#13;
that advisable if you are not well&#13;
armed and have an untraceable&#13;
phone. However, ifyoudochose&#13;
this route, be brutal. "Listen man,&#13;
either I get an A, or Twinkles the&#13;
cat gets to play clay pigeon!"&#13;
Ploy seven: Make up excuses&#13;
for why you can 't take the&#13;
finaL Try some of these. I can't&#13;
take the final because: I have&#13;
urgent business down in Waco;&#13;
my mid-wife duties are pressing;&#13;
an old friend is suffering&#13;
from goiters; I CAN'T TAKE&#13;
THE PRESSURE DAMMIT!!; _&#13;
I have to defend my backyard&#13;
from Japanesesubs raiding along&#13;
Lake Michigan coast; I am suffering&#13;
from depression after&#13;
watching "Old Yeller" 38 times&#13;
over the weekend.&#13;
Ifnoneof these helpful hints&#13;
are all that helpful, you can bet&#13;
that you're normal. On the other&#13;
hand if they do help, don 'tblame&#13;
the results on me.&#13;
Have .a safe summer, and ...&#13;
good luck to all of those bastards&#13;
who are escaping from this house&#13;
of pain before me. See you next&#13;
year ...&#13;
Tnt RANGERNEWS,Page 7&#13;
Observations&#13;
At random ...&#13;
CJ. Nelson&#13;
COlumn Writer&#13;
I want 10 thank the staff at&#13;
The Ranger News for granting&#13;
me this forum to pontificate this&#13;
spring. I have enjoyed this opportunity&#13;
and hope to be back in&#13;
the fall. Thank you for reading. I&#13;
have tried to be provocative and&#13;
not provoking.&#13;
Lastly, as the graduation season&#13;
approaches as well as summer,&#13;
I want to urge one and all to&#13;
use alcohol responsibty. I do not&#13;
drink but I know many in the&#13;
student body do.&#13;
Ihave had my uniforms ruined&#13;
by drunks vomiting on it. I&#13;
have watched good careers ruined&#13;
by alcoholism. Most importantly,&#13;
I have seen people killed&#13;
due to irresponsible use of alcohol.&#13;
My wife and daughter were&#13;
almost killed by a drunk driver.&#13;
Pleasethis summer if you&#13;
drink, don't drive. It may sound&#13;
trite, but friends don't let friends&#13;
drive drunk.&#13;
Have a good summer -- see&#13;
you in the fall.&#13;
As this school year comes to an&#13;
-end, I would like to make several&#13;
unrelated comments.&#13;
When I started at UW-Parkside&#13;
in 1991,1 had many preconceptions&#13;
about what I would find returning to&#13;
school after a 20 year hiatus. I&#13;
figured that I would be a conservative&#13;
marching into the jaws of&#13;
unalloyed liberalism. 1 would be&#13;
forced to defend my views at every&#13;
tum.&#13;
I found these fears to be baseless.&#13;
I have been accorded respect&#13;
and my view point has never been&#13;
made fun of. Not every professor&#13;
agrees with me (Professor Pernacaro&#13;
calls me his resident right winger).&#13;
But none has held them against&#13;
me or my grades. I have read that&#13;
political correctness is alive and well&#13;
in academia in this country. Maybe,&#13;
but not here at UW-Parkside, A full&#13;
-throated "Bravo Zulu" to the professors&#13;
and administrators here at&#13;
Uw-Parkside.&#13;
Tlhf RfD11l1lg~r NfWS&#13;
congratulates&#13;
all May graduates&#13;
Best of wishes&#13;
and&#13;
Good luck always!!!&#13;
Second Nature by Moss&#13;
e 1993 Mos'&#13;
An amusing element added to an annoying scene&#13;
TnE RANGER NEWS, Page 8 May 6,1993-&#13;
1993-94 SCHOLARSHIPS AND AWARDS - . . . d h e received Academic Achievement Awards. These awards&#13;
The Awards and Ceremonies Comittee is pleased to announce that the followmg stu ents av b d . orous selection process which requires th are&#13;
given to studens who demonstrate academi.c exce IIence r.n theeiir coIIege careeers . The awards are eamseberonfroamngher or his declared major. A student rna raetceeaich I&#13;
nominee have a cumulative grade point average on.5 or higher and be nominated by a faculty m . Y elVe,&#13;
this award only once in a single major - either as a junior or senior. i~&#13;
Ii&#13;
ACCOUNTING: Christine Brummel, Steven Ashpole, Melody Harper; FINANCE: Nancy Otis, Brenda Betke, Lori FOSler;&#13;
GENERAL BUSINESS: Alice Busch, Mark Pietkiewicz, Jeffrey Koca; MANAGEMENT INFORMA nON SYSTEMS: II&#13;
Lynet Saldana; MARKETING: Lori Lorenzen, Marilyn Meyer .' . I&#13;
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION PHYSICAL EDUCA nON: Paul Connell, Michelle Kerkman; TEACHER EDUCATION. Enc Elhngham, Helena Boles, 19&#13;
Catherine Ackley . . ~&#13;
ART: Susan Soehr; COMMUNICA nON: Beth Adelsen, Ronda Coats, Rachel Donahue, Jenmfer Rakowski; DRA~TIC '&#13;
ARTS: Susan McIntyre; ECONOMICS: Craig Salzer; ENGLISH: JosephKane, Andrew Patch; FRENCH: J. DeLaine&#13;
Rogers; GEOGRAPHY: Randy Prideaux, Karen Davidson, Roberta Cottrill, Pamela Glassford, Sarah R.lchards, Robert ~&#13;
Rogers; MUSIC: Karen Yonke; POLITICAL SCIENCE: Russell Beckman; PSYCHOLOGY: Joyce Corsica, Andrew Patch, '"&#13;
Dennis Meinecke . '. i:'&#13;
SCHOOL OF SCIENCE &amp; BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES: Melissa Kennedy, Jeff Van Bendegom, Dawn Weber, Cenon Buencarnino, Lisa Lmdgren, (&#13;
TECHNOLOGY Katherine Turk, Leonardo Montemurro, Charles Hejny, Vincent Rizzo; CHEMISTRY: Amy Muleski, Ashley Caner, Renee&#13;
Weeks; COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING: Ling-Jane Lin, Karen Kent; MATHEMATICS: Tracy Pees,&#13;
Madhurya Nanayakkara, Craig Hartnell&#13;
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS&#13;
SCHOOL OF LIBERAL&#13;
ARTS&#13;
01'1&#13;
Scholarships and awards at the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide are given in recognition of demonstrated outstanding academic performance, leadership, ;~&#13;
school and community involvement and potential. An, music, and dramatic arts scholarships are based on aesthetic achievement evidenced by a ponfoho, ~!&#13;
performance auditions, and/or service to the department. This year, UW-Parkside will offer 163 scholarships and special awards to entenng and continuing JIX&#13;
students. Total dollar award this year is $117,000. This is a 20% increase over last year. ,a&#13;
mil&#13;
SPECIAL STUDENT AWARDS, 1993 me&#13;
American Institute of Chemists Award: Jennifer Melik; The Financial Executives Institute Award - Outstanding Graduate: Christine Brummel; Chemical !Ix&#13;
Rubber Publishing Company's Chemist Award: Kevin Mason; S.c. Johnson Wax Science Award - Outstanding Graduate: Charles Hej.ny; The Teres~Peck foc&#13;
Award - Notable Feminist Perspective Research Paper: David Chmielewski, Nancy Mortell; The Sam Poerio Memonal Award - Education: Barbara Fiedler; ~(&#13;
Racine Art Guild Scholarship: Wendy Orlowski del&#13;
ENTERING AND CONTINUING STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS, 1993-94&#13;
Academic Excellence Scholarships: Ashley Caner, Daniel Gehrand, Elizabeth Johnson, Bryon Kozak, Leonardo Montemurro, Laura Niles, Brian Schulz,&#13;
Jeffery Van Bendegom, Brian Washburn; Sahag Akgulian Scholarship in Engineering: Roger Field; Shikh Abdullh Al-Sabah Scholarship: CynthiaSpetnagel;&#13;
Alumni Annual Fund Scholarship: Ashley Carter; Theresa Dickison, Russell Minton, Brian Washburn; Alumni Association Scholar Awards: Paula Crary&#13;
(Liberal Arts), Ken Byom (Education), Eric Ellingham (Science &amp; Technology), Amy Grubb (Business), Robert Rogers (Athletics); Alumni Founders' Club&#13;
Scholarship: Enith Contreras, Dawn Elfe, Laura Ervin, Jennifer Jacinto, JacquelineJacinto, Benjamin Krenke, Kara Peters, Carrie Walker, Kristine Wenniger,&#13;
Becky Willis; An Department Scholarships: Charles Monte, Robert Crum, Edith Murhpy, Carolyn Nehring, Evette Sapp; Band of Elmwood Endowed&#13;
Scholarship: Cathryn Christenson; Bank One Endowed Scholarship: Diana Vargas; Robert Bauer Memorial Scholarship: Paul Dickfoss; J.r. Case Scholarship:&#13;
David Fleury; Communication Department Endowed Scholarship: Jennifer Campbell, Alan Cook; Donald Corr Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Andrew&#13;
Patch, Makoto Tokuhisa, Ronald Wentzell, Catherine Rice, Karen Smith; Decker/Buchaklian Memorial Scholarship: Traci Kitelinger; DeRose Marketing&#13;
Scholarship: Sara Hughes; John Drozd Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Emmily Sladek; Mabel B. Duncan Memorial Endowed Geography Scholarship:&#13;
Karen Davidson; Teacher Education Scholarship: Jennifer Zalewski; Educator's Credit Union Scholarship: Melloney Wilson; English Department&#13;
Scholarship: Michael Freeborn, Stephanie Ritter; Ferwerds Physical Science Endowed Scholarship: James Bruce, Karen Diehl, Sara Markham; Jamesand&#13;
Lynn Filipek Scholarship: Dana Durkee; Firstar Bank, Racine Scholarship: Jill Hertzberg, Jacqueline Yanca; Julius and Alice Goldstein Endowed Scholarship:&#13;
Susan Stoehr, Kenneth L. Greenquist Memorial Scholarship: Stacy Brown; Alan Guskin Scholarship: Sara Klink, Amy Pivovar; Guttorrnsen Scholarship:&#13;
Cecile Jutley; Harly Hagen Memorial Scholarship: Linda Heanley; Heritage Banks Endowed Scholarship: Jennifer Perkins, Jared Weber; Lillian James&#13;
Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Jin Ahn; Joseph Johnson Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Teri Jacobson; Johnson's Wax Fund Scholarships: Daniella&#13;
Bigham, RochelleBoyd, Marcie Gonzales, Angelica Tovar, Charese Chatman, Sergio Correa; Johnson Worldwide Associates Scholarship: Mary Dunmngton;&#13;
Jupiter Corporation Transportation Systems Scolarship Fund: Robert Crum, Jennifer Campbell, Mark Horswill, Joseph Kane, Kimberly Kovacs, Timothy&#13;
Kretschmann, Susan Kutz, Naomi Lawler, Sonya Lawler, Kristina Niemi, Jennifer Peacy, Jeannie Sanchez, Anthony Schwarz, Elizabeth Unz; MaryM.&#13;
Kamakian Memorial Scholarship: Valerie Pogue; K-Mart Good News Scholarships: Geoffrey Thompson, Dawn Nahf; Kenosha Foundation (The Cropley&#13;
Trust) Scholarships: John Aalto, Veronica Alshouse, Mary Beatty, Russell Beckman, Jennifer Boris, Christy Hoff, Jacquelyn King, Rhoda Misurelli, Matthew&#13;
Nighbert, Kristin Schlavensky, Rebecca Swenson, Corinne Watson; Steven M. Madsen Memorial Scholarship: John Zittel, ill; Brian John Martin Memorial&#13;
Scholarship: Kristina Niemi; McConnell-Robinson Scholarship: Desaree Franklin; Modine Science and Mathematics Endowed Scholarship: Mary Jo&#13;
Hesprich, Gina Stelzer; George and Madeleine Molinaro Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Todd Bell, Lisa Henriksen, Michelle Sneider; Music Deparnnenl&#13;
Scholarships: Erika Sorenson, Sara Kahl, Edina Ziga, Jeanne Weidner, Jennifer Kreuser, Jennifer Spanske, Shari Barker, Barbara Churchill; Michael Albro,&#13;
Gary Blevins, Laura Ervin, Thomas V~lbrecht; James Polczynski Memorial S~holarship: Dawn Salentine; SI. Luke's Hospital Nursing Scholarship: Amy&#13;
Marchese~ Manuel Hernandez, Linda Richards, Juhe Anne Sandleback; St. Mary s Medical Center Nursing Scholarship: Debbie McWhorter; Science Faculty&#13;
Scholarship: Elizabeth Osinga, Gregory Stollenwerk; Joanne Sokow Memorial Endowed Scholarship: Susan DeWitt: Miriam Harrold Spottswood&#13;
Scholarship: Karen Kent; Ruth ~: Stice Memorial Scholarship: Sandra Je'Taime; ~ernard C. Tallent Memorial Scholarship: Kraig Luczak; Unico, Inc.&#13;
Scholarsh. ip: R.usse.ll Minton, Miriam Petersen; Un. iversity .License Plate Scholarships: Daniel Buschmann ,nJno,el Buschma L'lsa J0hnson', UW-ParkSlde&#13;
Foundation Minority Students Endowed Scholarships: Jenmfer DeGuzman, Calesa Lee; UW-Parkside Foundation Scholarships: Debra Young (Liberal Arts):&#13;
Beth Adelson (Education), Sher H~ndrickson (Science &amp; Technology), Bryan Weber (Business); UW-Parkside Memorial Scholarship: Steven Moore; VillaOi&#13;
and Becker Acco.unting Scholarship: Sand..r..a Perrault, Norbert Wielenberg Memonal Scholarship' "Jill Beronich, AMnn'a aria Will: E d d ScholarshiP. Melany Bushweiler, James Madsen; Irvin G. Wylhe Mernonal Scholarship: Jay Smith, Erika Sorenson . I lams n owe&#13;
 lay6 199j -T--h- e summer begins with "The End"&#13;
Tbomas J. Kerkman&#13;
Fealure Writer&#13;
~ Hrnlu. MIMftl ...&#13;
Ulllwnit, IOItIoI&#13;
-""'" ~ .... th Itoo-Int&#13;
... /DutI'Nl"IfI(T11/(# I&#13;
...~,._&lt;tlo~"'Piot.&#13;
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Tue RANGER NEWS Page 9&#13;
PAC loses President Ritacca&#13;
nication conferences, and planned&#13;
many social activities such as a&#13;
trip to the "Jenny Jones Show,"&#13;
picnics and pizza parties. The&#13;
Career Development division&#13;
worked with the Career Center to&#13;
plan a career workshop exclusively&#13;
for communication students.&#13;
This year at Liberal Arts Career&#13;
Day, PAC displayed communication&#13;
student portfolios&#13;
from the Media, Message, and&#13;
Design, Senior Seminar and Approacbes&#13;
to Communication&#13;
classes.&#13;
"I feel that the more active&#13;
PAC is, the more UW-P's great&#13;
communication program will be&#13;
recognized. The program here at&#13;
Parkside is excellent in every&#13;
sense of the word, and the professors&#13;
and commonication students&#13;
are first rate," says Ritacca, She&#13;
also added that being the President&#13;
of PAC has helped her to&#13;
develop strong leadership skills&#13;
and that it was a great opportunity&#13;
to gain public relations, advertising,&#13;
and promotion skills. .&#13;
Ritacca will be entenng&#13;
graduate school in communication&#13;
studies with an emphasis 10&#13;
media theory and women's studies&#13;
in the fall at Northern Illinois&#13;
University.&#13;
pany, who will return for an all&#13;
request session preceeding the&#13;
grand finale'.&#13;
As the grand finale' for The&#13;
End, Milwaukee based recording&#13;
artists, Modem Art, will perform&#13;
their alternative dance music from&#13;
9:30p.m. to 12:30a.m.&#13;
Tickets are available in advance:&#13;
$4 per night or $6 for a&#13;
weekend festival package. Tickets&#13;
will be $5 at the door eacb nigbt.&#13;
All validated UW-Parkside J.D.&#13;
holders are allowed to be accompanied&#13;
by three guests. Guests&#13;
must be 21 or older. For ticket&#13;
information please call the Union&#13;
Information Desk, at 595-2345.&#13;
in eacb group category. Anding&#13;
says she uses this exercise to help&#13;
students develop their own purpose&#13;
statement or core that can be&#13;
constantly built upon, added or&#13;
deleted.&#13;
Anding strongly encourages&#13;
juniors and seniors to use the advantages&#13;
of the Career Center's&#13;
services. The center offers individual&#13;
counseling, help with resumes,&#13;
and placementfiles,toname&#13;
a few.&#13;
Placement files include a&#13;
.... riM S",""",,, UW&#13;
"'iI~ ",., • (vii-lim" co!l"Bf'&#13;
.en;o, at lhc Un,venilYof&#13;
Wiscon$in·Mllwauk""" mv&#13;
e&lt;pell'mee wirh 'oklO'&#13;
mabJ..d rr&gt;e 10 e.iI'" O\oe!&#13;
J/O,OOO, .11 while ,,~m8 my&#13;
mind, nol my b.lckt"&#13;
"Pad"(the Outside of the Union&#13;
Square). At 8:00p.m., the White&#13;
Brothers will take to the stage with&#13;
The big tOP tent is going up their rhythm and blues sound.&#13;
bands are coming with a The night continues with the&#13;
and ~d packed full of music and sounds of country rock band South.&#13;
r.utneI.T&lt; he Parkside Activities Board em Knights, who will jam to tunes&#13;
sors -''The End" on Friday, from Garth Brooks,Jimmy Buffet,&#13;
IjlOn14and Saturday, May 15. and Alabama. Tbe music festival&#13;
MayChairmanof "The End," Edris doesn't stop here.&#13;
~wana stated that, "'The End' is "The End: Part 2" begins, SataceIeb:&#13;
ation of the close to the urday, May 15 at 6:30p.m., when&#13;
1992·1993scboolyear, where stu- doors open to the music of The&#13;
dents faculty, staff, and friends Pany Company OJ service. Then&#13;
canbiowoff some steam,". at 7:00p.m., UW -Parkside's Sixth&#13;
"The End" begins at noon, Annual Battle of the Bands winner,&#13;
Friday,May 14, with a variety of Confusion, will conquer the stage&#13;
venders selling their crafts and with a set of funk metal songs guargoodsinthe&#13;
Union Bazaar. Then at anteed to rock the tent. The night&#13;
l:lOpm the doors will open to the continues on with The Party Com- Careercenter ready to help center your career&#13;
Amy Savaglio By using an exampleofa room full&#13;
Feature Writer of people at a party, each student&#13;
Julie Anding, Career Devel- was instructed to stand next to a&#13;
opmenlCoordinator for the Career pre-placed letter on the wall that&#13;
Center bereat Park ide.conducted corresponded to a list describing&#13;
acareerworksbopon campus Tues- different types of people you would&#13;
day,April 20. The workshop was be likely to associate With at this&#13;
ipOIlSOrebdy PAC and geared to- party. . .&#13;
.1lId communication majors and Three urne Anding told stuminors.&#13;
dents to do this, and by thde enthd of&#13;
Julie Anding's purpose state- the exercise everyone hac a ree&#13;
memisto motivate tudents to think letter code that ranked their prefer-&#13;
Ibouttheirown interests and to get ences of types of people tbey most&#13;
focused.Anding began the work- enjoy. This code.was then transshopwith&#13;
an exercise intended to tared into potential careers -that&#13;
determineone's personal interests.&#13;
Dana K. Jackson&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
It is hard LOsay good-bye to&#13;
a leader like Monique Ritacca.&#13;
Riiacca, who has been the PresidentofLbe&#13;
UniversityofWisconsin-&#13;
ParksideAssociationofCom_&#13;
rnunicators (pAC) for the past&#13;
two years is graduating this May.&#13;
During her presidency sbe bas&#13;
helped PAC to grown into an&#13;
organization that is very beneficial&#13;
to all students.&#13;
When Ritacca was club secretary&#13;
she noticed that manycommunication&#13;
students wanted to be&#13;
involved with PAC, but were&#13;
scared off because they didn't&#13;
feel they would fit the image that&#13;
was being promoted, and she&#13;
wanted to cbange tbis.&#13;
Ritacca's number one goal&#13;
throughout her presidency was to&#13;
make PAC more visible campuswide,&#13;
and to make it a club all&#13;
communication students as well&#13;
as other majors could benefit&#13;
from. In order to do this, Ritacca&#13;
and club advisor Dr. Monica&#13;
Strom worked to create four diverse&#13;
divisions: Festivities, The&#13;
forum (debate), Career Development,&#13;
and the Reading Circle.&#13;
PAC has been I()()% more&#13;
active this year. For example,&#13;
PAC members attended comrnu-&#13;
"-l,ECTOR OFFERS&#13;
• Practical Experience.&#13;
• Scholarships Awarded .&#13;
• Flexible SChedule.&#13;
• Excellent Summer.&#13;
Income Opportumty .&#13;
CALL TODAY:&#13;
Oshkosh: 414-232-6112&#13;
Appleton: 414-730-1558&#13;
Green Bay: 414-469-9671&#13;
Glendale: 414 228-7424&#13;
Racine: 414-632-1558&#13;
Brookfield: 414-827-0442&#13;
La Crosse: 608-782-8949&#13;
Stevens Point: 715-345-6555&#13;
Madison: 608-833-8208&#13;
Rockford: 815-.229-1700&#13;
-&#13;
T~~~~~~~~~ !HE RANGER NEWS, Page 10 ---============-:M.::a::,y~6~3 _&#13;
Moore appointed Editor&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
ter, and has given several guest&#13;
lectures in English classes on how&#13;
towritecritical essays and research&#13;
papers.&#13;
As a college student, Moore&#13;
has been named to the High Honors&#13;
Dean's List, has been awarded&#13;
the Phi Theta Kappa Award (National&#13;
Honor Fraternity) and the&#13;
Student Senate Appreciation/Leadership&#13;
Award at College of Lake&#13;
County, and was recently awarded&#13;
the University of Wisonsin-Parkside&#13;
Memorial Endowed Scholarship.&#13;
The University's approach toward&#13;
expanding ethnic diversity is&#13;
akey issue to Moore, "The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside is not&#13;
becoming more diverse, with students&#13;
and professors from different&#13;
ethnic backgrounds. As Editor-&#13;
Chief, I want to strive fora true&#13;
representation of the student population.&#13;
Our future staff will encourage&#13;
all ethnic groups to become&#13;
involved in the newspaper.&#13;
Personable and energetic,&#13;
Moore believes in a facilitative,&#13;
accessible approach to his&#13;
Editorship, and should provide a&#13;
fresh, exciting face for the paper&#13;
next year.&#13;
Those interested in joining&#13;
The Ranger News should stop by&#13;
our office (WLLC D139C) or call&#13;
595-2295.&#13;
Editorial farewell&#13;
Continued from Page 6&#13;
deal of the blame for the new fees&#13;
on the Board of Regents. I guess&#13;
that works, but then, Nazi Germany&#13;
blamed a lot of their behavioron&#13;
some doorknob named Hitler,&#13;
too.&#13;
Anyway, back to the goodbye.&#13;
As this year began, our one&#13;
main goal at The Ranger News was&#13;
to reduce our astronomical deficit&#13;
into something resembling more&#13;
my pocketbook than the national&#13;
debt. Toa great extent, we've been&#13;
able to do this.&#13;
At the sarne time, we've been&#13;
able to produce each week an informative,&#13;
decent product (and yes,&#13;
I realize it's a good thing we didn't&#13;
expect any Pulitzers this year).&#13;
There are a great many people&#13;
I need to thank, both for their work&#13;
on/with the staff and in helping me&#13;
get through what's becn easily one&#13;
of the most turbulent times in my&#13;
life. In no particular order, here&#13;
they are:&#13;
First, anyone that's been involved&#13;
in the least with The Ranger&#13;
this year; your work and dedication&#13;
are truly appreciated.&#13;
Next, to Eric Bovee, Bruce&#13;
Rocco, Dan Blake, Vince Bomer,&#13;
and other members of PSG A; your&#13;
suppon was and is greatly needed&#13;
and appreciated.&#13;
To Diane, Carol, Mike and&#13;
Steve in Union 209; I only wish&#13;
they would have discovered whata&#13;
wonderful resource you are last&#13;
year ...&#13;
To Gwen, just for being you.&#13;
Career Center&#13;
You'll always be an inspiration.&#13;
To Anna, Ted, Mike and Scott&#13;
for teaching me so much and putting&#13;
up with an Editor that had less&#13;
experience than any of you.&#13;
To our advisors, Jan, Judy and&#13;
Stu - each one of whom really came&#13;
through in a time of need, whether&#13;
they know it or not. (And yes, you&#13;
do serve a good purpose with us,&#13;
Jan!)&#13;
To Steven Moore, for actually&#13;
laking this job!&#13;
To Dennis, for proving that&#13;
there actually is someone on this&#13;
earth as weird as me.&#13;
To Gabe, for showing that the&#13;
best way to deal with anything is by&#13;
laughing (and only thinking about&#13;
shooting them in the belly with a&#13;
12-gauge).&#13;
To Sam, for being arare,longtime,&#13;
true friend (even if you haven't&#13;
written a damn story this semester).&#13;
To Carlise - our three hour&#13;
lunches will be a tradition sorely&#13;
missed. By the way, has yourlaxative&#13;
kicked in yet?&#13;
To Pamela, for being there.&#13;
To my entire staff, for believing&#13;
in me and having the faith and&#13;
dedication to stick with it throughout&#13;
this year. '&#13;
And finally, to the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, for giving&#13;
me this opportunity and not lynching&#13;
me when things didn't go exactly&#13;
as planned.&#13;
Have a great summer, good&#13;
luck toall you lucky bast-er, graduates,&#13;
and I'Il see most of you in the&#13;
fall.&#13;
.&lt;&#13;
Continued from Page 9&#13;
student's resume, a personal data&#13;
sheet, and a consent form. Anding&#13;
says businesses call UWP everyday&#13;
searching for potential employees.&#13;
The Career Center helps to&#13;
match these employers with UWP&#13;
graduates by pulling files with&#13;
qualifications specified by thecompanies.&#13;
Anding concluded the&#13;
workshop witli some personal philosophies&#13;
and encouraged students&#13;
to visit the Career Center.&#13;
If you are uncenain what your&#13;
interests are, what career you desire,&#13;
or what occupations you can&#13;
use with your major, the Career&#13;
Center can help.&#13;
The Career Center is open&#13;
Monday through Friday. WLLC&#13;
0175. 595-2452. Call today and&#13;
get serious'about your future.' &lt;-&#13;
How safe are night classes?&#13;
Julie Ingram&#13;
Special to The Ranger News&#13;
.Are night classes safe?&#13;
According to some UWParkside&#13;
students who are currently&#13;
enrolled in night classes at&#13;
Racine's St. Catherine's High&#13;
School, they're dangerous.&#13;
When students voiced their&#13;
concerns with the instructor, they&#13;
were told to leave the building in&#13;
groups if they were concerned.&#13;
Also, they were also referred to&#13;
Dale Bowers, who is the Assistant&#13;
Vice Chancellor and is in&#13;
charge of the University's Outreach&#13;
Program.&#13;
The Outreach Program is&#13;
disigned to attract that part of the&#13;
population not regularly enrolled&#13;
at UW-Parkside on a full-time&#13;
basis, and to be located in the city&#13;
so as to make Outreach classes&#13;
more accessible to non-University&#13;
students.&#13;
A poll of the St. Catherine's&#13;
classroom, however, revealed that&#13;
98 percent of the students are&#13;
enrolled fu!l-time at UW-Parkside,&#13;
with approximately 50 percent&#13;
of them living in Kenosha,&#13;
thus effectively negating the beneficial&#13;
effect of holding the class in&#13;
Racine .&#13;
Bowers attended one of the St.&#13;
Catherine's class sessions in an attempt&#13;
to address issues of safety.&#13;
Dave Ostrowski, head of Campus&#13;
Security, also attended the class.&#13;
Bowers reported that she is&#13;
personally responsible for her students,&#13;
and offered all of the class'&#13;
students a full refund, even though&#13;
the full refund deadline for the&#13;
University had already passed.&#13;
Students pressed forth with&#13;
questions and concerns about their&#13;
safety in the Racine location. Bowers&#13;
then introduced Ostrowski, and&#13;
promptly left the room.&#13;
Ostrowski assured the students&#13;
that the area was just as safe as the&#13;
main campus. He went on to say&#13;
that he knew this because his "friend&#13;
on the Racine Police Department&#13;
staff told him so."&#13;
The main concerns of the students&#13;
included physical safety and&#13;
safety from properly theft. Many&#13;
expressed a desire to relocate the&#13;
class. Instead, they were offered&#13;
f.ull. refunds or the assurance of a&#13;
januor that could call the RaCine&#13;
Police Department after a crime&#13;
was committed.&#13;
Dr. Howard Cohen, Dcanof&#13;
the School of Liberal Arts, later&#13;
visited the class. He informedthe&#13;
students that Bower had no authority&#13;
to offer full refunds and&#13;
that the offer was being recinded.&#13;
Students were advised to write&#13;
letters or form a petition and for.&#13;
ward them to Cohen if they felt&#13;
the need to voice an opinion inthe&#13;
matter. Cohen also informed Sill.&#13;
dents that any input received&#13;
would be viewed for potential&#13;
policy or class placementchanges&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Malcontent among the stu.&#13;
dents remain, as they are forced&#13;
to continue attending classes ina&#13;
decidedly unsafe area. Further,&#13;
the professor of the class hasbeen&#13;
asked not to teach any more offcampus&#13;
classes and has report.&#13;
edly had other on-campus classes&#13;
taken from him as a result of the&#13;
students concerns.&#13;
PAB: We take your fun seriously&#13;
Stacy Leonard Without the input of more and meet the performers, and&#13;
Feature Writer Parks ide students, the struggle to have a lot of fun!&#13;
satisfy the interests and diversity "PAB is an organization&#13;
of the campus may continue. that allows you to ~x.ploreand&#13;
Therefore PAB would like its develop your creauvuy. workmembership&#13;
to expand. PAB ing alone or in a team, there isno&#13;
wants you! greater satisfaction than watching&#13;
Once you become a your hard work and contributions&#13;
member of PAB, you may come together in a single&#13;
discover potential you never performance. What greater&#13;
knew you had. As a member, reward than the applause you'll&#13;
you not only meet new people, receive from both peers and&#13;
but you establish a knowledge of communityalike.&#13;
business and communication In addition, you'll be&#13;
skills such as: amazed with the professional and&#13;
." Advertising and personal satisfaction you'll&#13;
Marketing Experience receive knowing that youwe~e&#13;
." Improve your part of a successful organIZation&#13;
working toward a common goal.&#13;
I joined PAB for&#13;
something productive to do with&#13;
my spare time. Now when I look&#13;
back, I realize it was my firstand&#13;
best career move so far. I havea&#13;
solid resume to prove it" Edris&#13;
Saldana, 1992-93 President,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
PAB is an acronym that&#13;
stands for the Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board. PAB is the programming&#13;
organization of and for the&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. As Slated in&#13;
the PAB constitution, "the intent&#13;
of programming is to appeal to&#13;
the wide variety of interests and&#13;
tastes of the students." Meaning,&#13;
PAB wants to entertain students&#13;
the way they want to be entertained.&#13;
"As a student organization&#13;
funded through segregated&#13;
fees and event revenues, PAB is&#13;
responsible for programming&#13;
activities and events that are&#13;
primarily intended for the benefit&#13;
of Parkside students."&#13;
PAB must appeal to the&#13;
interests and diversity of the&#13;
campus. As easy as this may&#13;
seem, this is one of the most&#13;
difficult tasks of the current PAB&#13;
members and coordinators.&#13;
resume&#13;
." Learn fiscal management&#13;
." Develop cooperative&#13;
teamwork skills&#13;
." Develop leadership&#13;
qualities&#13;
In addition, you have a&#13;
chance to work behind the scenes&#13;
cIDIIDcdl&#13;
M&amp;lJk&lt;e l'f CQl1Jlll1' C&amp;lmJP&gt; 11ll~&#13;
A §cIDft® (Q)Iill®~&#13;
Section B&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY 6,1993&#13;
Rangers prepare for post season&#13;
By Cory Rath&#13;
sports Writer&#13;
Just when it looked like the Parkside&#13;
baseball team was headed for&#13;
another typical .500 winning percentagethis&#13;
season the Rangers decided10go&#13;
on as tear. The ducks are&#13;
nowon the pond, and all the baseball&#13;
team has to do is pull the trigger.&#13;
Arecent 14-2 spun by the Rangers&#13;
has raised their season record to&#13;
23-14-1. Not 10 mention that eight&#13;
of those 14 losses are by only one&#13;
run. The baseball team is staring at&#13;
arecord that isjusta few runs shy of&#13;
being 32-6. In just his second season&#13;
as the skipper for the Rangers&#13;
Peerenboorn has turned a sub-average&#13;
program to contenders for the&#13;
NCAA tournament.&#13;
On the 28th of April the Rangers&#13;
headed lakeside for a seven inning&#13;
game with cross town rival&#13;
Carthage College. Carthage took&#13;
the field fired up for the rivalry but&#13;
they might as well have stayed in&#13;
their dorms. This day was to be&#13;
owned by the Ranger fireballer Paul&#13;
Phillips. Phillips went the distance&#13;
on the hill allowing only two runs&#13;
on five hits while striking OUlfive.&#13;
The Ranger bats responded to the&#13;
occasion a well as they rallied for a&#13;
12-2 victory.&#13;
Two days later the Rangers left&#13;
for Mquon, Wisconsin for doubleheaderwith&#13;
Concordia College. The&#13;
Rangerpitching stumbled a little bit&#13;
in this one allowing I I runs. Fortunately&#13;
the Ranger sticks again were&#13;
dominating opposing pitching as&#13;
they answered the call with IS runs&#13;
of their own. The Rangers were led&#13;
atthe plate by Jason Wesemann and&#13;
Jeff Lonigro each of whom collected&#13;
three hits a piece. Delrose,&#13;
Coughlin and Davis each added a&#13;
pairto the cause as well. Homeruns&#13;
came from Wesemann and Hyde.&#13;
In game two Concordia jumped&#13;
out to a quick 7-0 lead after two&#13;
innings when Peerenboom motioned&#13;
to the bullpen for the&#13;
lefthander Ross Kakinowski. That&#13;
would be all the singing the fat lady&#13;
would do for Concordia that day.&#13;
Kalinowski pitched the final five&#13;
frames a1lowingjusltWO hits while&#13;
striking out seven to pick up the win&#13;
as the Rangers battled back for a 9-&#13;
7 victory. Domonic Delrose and&#13;
Marc Thompson led the hitting attack&#13;
with three a piece followed by&#13;
Dave Coughlin who collected a pair&#13;
including eighth homerun of the&#13;
y~.&#13;
On the first of the month it was&#13;
time for the Rangers to head south&#13;
again as they were hosted by Northern&#13;
Kentucky University for a&#13;
doubleheader. In game one it was&#13;
all Steve Grzeskiewicz as he threw&#13;
all nine innings of the scheduled&#13;
seven inning game allowing just&#13;
two runs. At the plate Dave&#13;
Coughlin knocked in his second&#13;
game winning RBI in three days.&#13;
Game two played host 10 an&#13;
array of hitting by both squads as&#13;
the Rangers out hit No. Kentucky&#13;
11-10. However, the Rangers did&#13;
most of the cpitalizing as they were&#13;
able to walk away with a8-4 victory&#13;
to complete the sweep. Sterling,&#13;
Bills, and Fletcher sparked the&#13;
Ranger offensive by collecting two&#13;
hits a piece. On the hill senior&#13;
southpaw Kelly Zielinski raised hIS&#13;
record to 4-0 pitching all seven in-&#13;
Can't save?&#13;
At ECU, saving is easy&#13;
... and you earn more!&#13;
Regular savings earns 3.50%,&#13;
yielding 3.55 %!&#13;
Serving all UW Parkslde&#13;
employees and students.&#13;
Tallent Hall Rm. 286 595-2150 9:30-4:00&#13;
ning allowing just three earned runs.&#13;
The very next day the Rangers&#13;
headed to the FIB state to take on&#13;
Lewis University for a doubleheader&#13;
as the Rangers saw their 10 game&#13;
winning sreak come to an end. It&#13;
was all Lewis on the mound and at&#13;
the plate as the Rangers could only&#13;
muster four hits to their 10. Therun&#13;
scoring pretty much went the same&#13;
way as they ousted 10-0.&#13;
In game two the Rangers would&#13;
turn the tables and regain their winning&#13;
form as they crushed their division&#13;
II rivals 10-2. Again the day&#13;
belonged to the Ranger lefthander&#13;
Paul Phillips as he spread seven&#13;
Lewis hits in nine innings to pick up&#13;
the win. At the plate the Rangers&#13;
were led by Marc Thompson who&#13;
collecte four hits including to&#13;
doubles and the sophmore powerhouse&#13;
Scott Fletcher who added&#13;
three more to the occasion including&#13;
his fourth and fifth dingers of&#13;
the year. Domonic Delrose also&#13;
contributed a pair of hits to the win.&#13;
On Monday Concordia College&#13;
rolled into town for another doubleheader&#13;
with the Rangers and fortunatel&#13;
y for them the rain clouds came&#13;
in and only permitted one game to&#13;
get played. The Ranger bats battered&#13;
Concordia pitching forthe third&#13;
timein four days as theycmshed the&#13;
opposition 12-1. Eight Ranger hitters&#13;
got in on the act as they collected&#13;
18 hits in a game that was&#13;
called after five innings due to the&#13;
ten run rule.&#13;
Macintosh excells as&#13;
two-sport Ranger athlete&#13;
By Karen Mllosch&#13;
Fall semester 1992. A freshman&#13;
walks into UW-Parkside's&#13;
doors and overwhelms the campus&#13;
with his baseball and basketball&#13;
skills. The student, Frank&#13;
Macintosh, became UW -Parkside's&#13;
only two sport athlete.&#13;
Macintosh, born and raised in&#13;
Peoria Illinois, was recruited by&#13;
Ranger basketball coach Many&#13;
Gillespie from Peoria High School&#13;
last year and is the universities only&#13;
true star athlete, excelling at two&#13;
sports.&#13;
Macintosh was the bright spot in an&#13;
otherwise dismal season for the basketball&#13;
team. His led the nation&#13;
among NCAA Division II freshman&#13;
with 20.7 ppg. and was second in&#13;
rebounding with a 4.7 average.&#13;
Macintosh also shOlS8percent from&#13;
three-point field goals which put&#13;
him fifth in the nation among all&#13;
athletes. "He has a chance to be one&#13;
of the best players in the country at&#13;
the 0 II level if he continues 10&#13;
play," said Gillespie.&#13;
Macintosh also excelled as a&#13;
walk-on baseball player pitching&#13;
left-handed. In ten games,&#13;
Maclntosh has a record of 3-3. He&#13;
has a 4.00 ERA and has helped the&#13;
Rangers on their current ten game&#13;
winning streak. Maclntosh has&#13;
showncareeraspirauonsasapitcher.&#13;
Six Pack pours on power to take&#13;
.intramural volleyball crown&#13;
Today the Rangers will be hosting&#13;
Carthage College at3 p.m. and&#13;
Lewis University on Saturday. On&#13;
Sunday they scheduled to travel to&#13;
Marian College for a I p.m. doubleheader.&#13;
HELP WANTED:&#13;
OUTGOING&#13;
STUDENT~GRADUATES&#13;
FULL AND PART TIME&#13;
Expanding marketing&#13;
company is seeking&#13;
motivated, outgoing,&#13;
and successful minded&#13;
individuals for&#13;
immediate openings.&#13;
Despite injuries, Brian Giannetto's Six Pack defeated Matt Anderson's&#13;
Vaccinators to win the intramural volleyball championship for the fourth&#13;
straight semester IS-II, 15-8.&#13;
There were no upsets in the entire tourname~t as the fou~,fav~red&#13;
teams reached the semi-finals. Six Pack beat KeVInRutkowski s Mixed.&#13;
Deck to earn their way to the finals.&#13;
FREE MEN'S SUITS !!&#13;
Don't WeWish!&#13;
But You Do Get A Free Shirt, Tie, Belt &amp; Socks&#13;
W"lh Every Suit Purchased! All Wool, Blends, All Poly&#13;
I Sizes 36 to 60, Shorts, Reg., Big &amp; Tall&#13;
Open Mon. - Fri. 11-5:30 • Sal. 10-3 MIKE f)JQgt~:§.'dM....m&#13;
5614 6th Ave., Downtown Kenosha • 652·0648&#13;
GREEI{S &amp; CLUBS&#13;
RAISE A COOL.&#13;
'1000&#13;
IN JUST ONE WEEKI&#13;
PLUS $1000 FOR 11IE&#13;
MEMBER WHO CALLSl&#13;
No obligation. No cost&#13;
And ,FREE&#13;
IGLOOCOO~&#13;
if you qualily. Call&#13;
1-800-93z.0528, Ext. 65&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Recycle Me!&#13;
Call Steve for interview&#13;
635-0632&#13;
SOME OF OUR STUDEm&#13;
ARESTARPUPILS."&#13;
From 90210 to your zip code, safe motorcycle riding is essential. So,lake a Motorcycle&#13;
RiderCourse likeBrianAustinGreenof Fox T. V:'s Beverly HIlls, 90210.&#13;
You'll learn techniques that not only make you a safer nder, but a better nder as&#13;
well. Call1-BQ0.447-4700to be the star of your class. _OLE sum __&#13;
Tus RANGERNEWS,Page 12 April 29, 1993 - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING&#13;
. Th R er News office located in room D139C in the Wyllie Libraryllearnlng&#13;
To place classified advertising In the University of Wisconsln·Parkside . The Ranger News, stop In blic /ng Allclassified ads placed by full or part time UW·Parkslde stUdents or&#13;
Center, next to Ihe Coffee Shoppe. Deadline for classified advertising Is 12:00pm friday prior to pUdast rde ts are $5.00 per week run. Paymenl must accompany order. Ifan&#13;
UW·Parkside slaff are 50e per week run. Allclassified ads placed by anyone other than uw.par~. e s u. i-Parkside _The Ranger News, and its employees, staff and members&#13;
-error occurs, the ad willbe run free of charge the following week. No refunds. The University of '~;::'::~reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertising at its discretion.&#13;
are not responsible for the content of advertising placed by its customers. The UW-Parkslde Range -2295&#13;
Please direct all inquiries to The Ranger News' Assistant Business Manager, Karen Slater at (414) 595 . -&#13;
~C.L.U.B.E.V.E.N.T.S_I I HELP WANTED II. PERSONALS&#13;
GLO sponsors a Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Support Group. For more info.&#13;
contact Morten at ext. 2650, John&#13;
at 2244, or Angie at21 70.&#13;
GLO the Gay and Lesbian Organization&#13;
meets every Wednesdays at&#13;
noon in CART 142. Friends, family,&#13;
and supporters of gays and lesbians&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
Pre-Law Club meets on Mondays&#13;
at lOamin Molinaro 128. Comeon&#13;
you Pre-Lawyers, Get Involved!&#13;
PAC meets every Wed. at noon in&#13;
CART 133. Everyone welcome!&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
FeUowship(IVCF) meets Wednesdays&#13;
at noon in Molinaro 107.&#13;
Christians of any denomination and&#13;
anyone curious about Christianity&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Please donate clothes for charitable&#13;
purposes to The Activities&#13;
Connection at 3C (Nicole) or 6C&#13;
(Shantay).&#13;
College Republicans meet every&#13;
Monday at 2:00pm in Main. 112.&#13;
Now more than ever you need to be&#13;
in the party!&#13;
How 'bout something good for a&#13;
change. Good New for Life; Moln.&#13;
112, Fri. 3:00p.m.&#13;
The 1993 Homecoming Committee&#13;
is looking for students who&#13;
would like to be involved. For&#13;
more info about this leadership&#13;
opportunity. Contact Carla in&#13;
Union 209/Ext. 2277.&#13;
HELP WANTED'&#13;
Responsible person to clean house&#13;
for family in Salem, WI. Help!!&#13;
Mom got a job! 843-3578.&#13;
EVER WONDERED IF WHAT&#13;
THEY TEACH YOU. ABOUT&#13;
MARKETING IS TRUE? I did.&#13;
Starting new marketing project.&#13;
Need help to try out new plan.&#13;
Part-time. Hrly.s-Bonus to people&#13;
who will make customer project&#13;
work and track results. Available&#13;
for summer and during school year&#13;
in evenings. Call Mr. Chris Smith&#13;
634-4000.&#13;
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRINGEarn&#13;
52,OOO+/month+worldtravel.&#13;
Holiday, Summer and Career employment&#13;
available. No experience&#13;
necessary. For program call&#13;
1-206-634-0468 ext. C5646&#13;
$200-$500 Weekly Assemble&#13;
products at home. Easy! No selling.&#13;
You're paid direct. Fully Guaranteed.&#13;
Free Information-24 Hour&#13;
Hotline. 801-379-2900.&#13;
SERVICES'&#13;
AA-Alcoholics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Monday at noon in MOLN&#13;
D133. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Free pregnancy tests. Contact UWParkside&#13;
Health Services, 595-2366&#13;
orMOLNOl15 formoreinformation.&#13;
NA-Narcotics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Wednesday at noon in&#13;
MOLN 0133. csu 595-2365 or&#13;
595-2366 for more information.&#13;
Free measles and tetanus immunizations.&#13;
Contact UW-Parkside&#13;
Health Services, MOLN OIlS or&#13;
call 595-2366.&#13;
Weight loss planning-use our computer&#13;
to develop your own plan.&#13;
Health Services, MOLN OIlS.&#13;
Student Walking Group- 12 Noon&#13;
on Monday- Wednesday-Friday.&#13;
Inside walking for 20 minutes,&#13;
UWP D2 Level. Starts Friday,&#13;
March 4,1993. Meet at Molinaro&#13;
entrance near elevator. For more&#13;
information contact Health Services,&#13;
595-2366 or Main OIlS.&#13;
Need a buddy to walk you safely to&#13;
where you are going? Call the&#13;
Campus Police Ext. 2455 for an&#13;
escort. They are available Sunday&#13;
7:30pm to 11:00pm, Monday-&#13;
Thursday 7:30pm to 12:ooam.&#13;
FOR SALE I&#13;
Contraceptives for sale at affordable&#13;
prices. Condoms 10 for $1.00&#13;
and birth control pills $4 a packet.&#13;
Contact UW-Parkside Health Services,&#13;
595-2366 or MOLN D115&#13;
for more information.&#13;
CHEAP! FBW.S. SEIZED&#13;
89 MERCEOES $200&#13;
86VW $50&#13;
87 MERCEOES $100&#13;
65MUSTANG $50&#13;
Choose from thousands starting&#13;
$50. Free Information-24 Hour&#13;
Hotline. 801-379-2929&#13;
To the guys in 3D: It has been a fun&#13;
year &amp; great knowing you. But,&#13;
Please do your dishes! Your RA.&#13;
To all RHA graduates: Good luck&#13;
&amp; congratulations! Your Pres.&#13;
Sarah.&#13;
Congratulations and good luck to&#13;
all graduates in PSE! From, Sarah&#13;
&amp; George.&#13;
Andy, Anna, Karen, Sam, Gabe,&#13;
Nick, Chris, Ted, Carlise, Betty,&#13;
Moss, Shala, and the rest of the&#13;
staff. It's been cool see ya! MP.&#13;
Gennaro mio: Thanks for making&#13;
my last semester so hard. How was&#13;
I supposed to study thinking about&#13;
the next time? Looking forward to&#13;
a HOT summer with my favorite&#13;
underclassman-Soddisfauo Uno.&#13;
Gina B.: Who luvs ya, baby? From&#13;
one who would of never made it&#13;
through litis semester without you!&#13;
We're graduating! I Congratsl&#13;
S(P)AM-You just keep pounding&#13;
and pounding and pounding and&#13;
you never get tired! -Riding the bus.&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
A loving couple who wish to adopt .&#13;
a baby are asking for your help.&#13;
For free information please call&#13;
collect Debra Johnson, (414) 273-&#13;
BABY.&#13;
Found: I library vending card with&#13;
many copies left. Call 633-1799&#13;
and give amt, of remaining copies.&#13;
ATTENTION FUTURE TEACHERS:&#13;
Finally ,aCOMPLETEART&#13;
CURRICULUM FOR GRADES&#13;
K-8 in two books: TEACHING&#13;
THE EASY WAY: For gradesK-3&#13;
and 4-8. Send $22.55/book to&#13;
RAINBOW ARTISTS PRESS&#13;
P.O. BOX254 SALEM, WI. 53168&#13;
(414)843-3430.&#13;
Is your GPA 3.0 or higher? Completed&#13;
the research paper requirement?&#13;
Consider working ($5.00&#13;
'per hour) or doing an internship as&#13;
a writing assistant in the Writing&#13;
Center. Contact Roseann Mason,&#13;
WLLC-DI75, 595-2606, or stop in&#13;
the Writing Center.&#13;
Good&#13;
Luck&#13;
on&#13;
Finals!&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
is looking for people&#13;
for the 1993-J994&#13;
academic year.&#13;
If your interested in:&#13;
• News Writing&#13;
• Sports&#13;
• Layout &amp; Design&#13;
• Copy Editing&#13;
• Advertising&#13;
Stop in&#13;
The Ranger News office (D139C)&#13;
or&#13;
call 595-2287.</text>
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              <text>&#13;
l&#13;
Editorial...&#13;
The SafeWalk&#13;
Program&#13;
has experienced&#13;
decreased&#13;
use and may be cancelled.&#13;
See &#13;
it &#13;
on Page 4&#13;
nside ...&#13;
University&#13;
art faculty&#13;
creates&#13;
aesthetics&#13;
fora cause.&#13;
Page3&#13;
Gabe&#13;
examines&#13;
the merits&#13;
and&#13;
demerits&#13;
of&#13;
marrying&#13;
off&#13;
his best friend.&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The Volunteer&#13;
Center&#13;
pre-&#13;
sents their "volunteer&#13;
of the&#13;
week"yearlyreview.&#13;
Page6&#13;
VOLUME&#13;
21 &#13;
ISSUE&#13;
28&#13;
Alan R. Cook&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
Majorcurriculum&#13;
changes&#13;
wi&#13;
II&#13;
be &#13;
implemented&#13;
for lbe Fall 1994&#13;
ocademic&#13;
term,&#13;
as a result&#13;
of a&#13;
carefully&#13;
considered&#13;
and crafted&#13;
proposal&#13;
submitted&#13;
to  UW-&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Senate&#13;
by &#13;
the&#13;
lith &#13;
General&#13;
-ducation&#13;
Task Force,&#13;
a&#13;
As.  &#13;
campu&#13;
-wide&#13;
faculty&#13;
committee.&#13;
186-  &#13;
Theproposal&#13;
was unanimously&#13;
approved&#13;
and adopted&#13;
at an April&#13;
20 &#13;
Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
~3()&#13;
According&#13;
to the Task Force&#13;
clOr&#13;
Proposal,''The&#13;
Faculty&#13;
of &#13;
the&#13;
Uni-&#13;
l45&#13;
'crsily&#13;
of Wiseon&#13;
in-Parksidc&#13;
is&#13;
committed&#13;
to &#13;
providing&#13;
opponuni-&#13;
tes &#13;
for undergraduate&#13;
students&#13;
to&#13;
~PI&#13;
develop&#13;
their &#13;
analytical&#13;
and &#13;
prob-&#13;
'"&#13;
em-sotvmg&#13;
kills,&#13;
to develop&#13;
un-&#13;
en&#13;
call delSlandings&#13;
of &#13;
theirs&#13;
and &#13;
other's&#13;
7). teltures&#13;
and &#13;
ethniciiies,&#13;
10&#13;
develop&#13;
ilie&#13;
skills and awareness&#13;
necessary&#13;
lorcitilens&#13;
of an advanced&#13;
techno-&#13;
klgicalsociety,&#13;
and todevelop&#13;
hab-&#13;
1~&#13;
of mind &#13;
that&#13;
promote&#13;
life-long&#13;
learning,&#13;
re ponsible&#13;
action&#13;
and&#13;
mdependentthinking.&#13;
The General&#13;
Education&#13;
Pro-&#13;
gram at the University&#13;
of &#13;
Wiscon-&#13;
sin-Parkside&#13;
is a plan that incorpo-&#13;
rates a variety&#13;
of courses&#13;
and ex&#13;
pe-&#13;
nences,&#13;
designed&#13;
collectively&#13;
to&#13;
fulfill the process&#13;
and content&#13;
prin-&#13;
ciples&#13;
noted&#13;
above."&#13;
.  In order&#13;
to more&#13;
effectively&#13;
Incorporate&#13;
these&#13;
goa-s&#13;
into&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
curriculum,&#13;
the&#13;
Task&#13;
Force&#13;
suggests&#13;
anum&#13;
ber &#13;
of&#13;
changes.&#13;
One of the most&#13;
important&#13;
changes&#13;
proposed&#13;
is a one credit&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Seminar.&#13;
Its purpose&#13;
is&#13;
threefold,&#13;
according&#13;
to Dr. Arthur&#13;
L.&#13;
Dudycha,&#13;
professor&#13;
of business&#13;
management&#13;
and co-chair&#13;
of Gen-&#13;
eral Education&#13;
Task Force.&#13;
"The &#13;
primary&#13;
purpose&#13;
of the&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Seminar&#13;
is to assist&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dents in making&#13;
a suecessful&#13;
tran-&#13;
sition&#13;
to &#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
and to the.&#13;
aeadem&#13;
ic process.&#13;
II&#13;
will &#13;
be de-&#13;
signed&#13;
10&#13;
let students&#13;
know&#13;
what a&#13;
collegeeducauon&#13;
isall &#13;
about.,&#13;
what&#13;
they should&#13;
expect&#13;
to &#13;
get&#13;
out of &#13;
it,"&#13;
explains&#13;
Dudycha.&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page?&#13;
French&#13;
Club dulls the blade&#13;
in &#13;
Bastille&#13;
Day celebration&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
ews Editor&#13;
Eleven&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
and&#13;
jWllfessors&#13;
found&#13;
themsel&#13;
ves &#13;
under&#13;
!be&#13;
bladeof &#13;
the&#13;
guillotine&#13;
W&#13;
cdnes-&#13;
dayApril 21.  The event,&#13;
spon-&#13;
SOred &#13;
by the French&#13;
Club, honored&#13;
Bastille&#13;
Day in an effort&#13;
to raise&#13;
IIIOneyfor lbe club.&#13;
The crowd&#13;
bid for the oppor-&#13;
lUnityto execute&#13;
lbeir favorite&#13;
(or&#13;
leastfavorite)&#13;
professor&#13;
or student&#13;
011&#13;
amock guillotine.&#13;
Bids went as&#13;
highas &#13;
$&#13;
I9 a head.&#13;
Students&#13;
and faculty&#13;
had been&#13;
~inated&#13;
and subsequently&#13;
issued&#13;
I&#13;
Writeof Arrest.&#13;
The French&#13;
Club&#13;
marched&#13;
from the Union&#13;
bridge&#13;
area to&#13;
'llLLC&#13;
Main place weretheguillo-&#13;
Unewasconsuucted&#13;
and the"crimi-&#13;
nals"awaited&#13;
trail.&#13;
During&#13;
lbe&#13;
marchlbe French&#13;
students&#13;
attracted&#13;
lItention&#13;
by chanting&#13;
"No more&#13;
finals,off wilb lbeir heads."&#13;
The "criminal"&#13;
charges&#13;
ranged&#13;
lromneedless&#13;
use of chalk&#13;
to &#13;
Lak-&#13;
~gasabbatical&#13;
inorder &#13;
10&#13;
work for&#13;
~eClinton&#13;
Administration.&#13;
Gaven&#13;
DeGrave,&#13;
upon reading&#13;
the charges,&#13;
gave &#13;
the&#13;
accused&#13;
10&#13;
10 &#13;
15 seconds&#13;
to make a &#13;
statement&#13;
in defence.&#13;
The crowd&#13;
was not moved&#13;
to&#13;
sympathy&#13;
by anything&#13;
the&#13;
accused&#13;
said.&#13;
In fact, comments&#13;
such as,&#13;
"you are not worthy&#13;
to suck the&#13;
slime off my feet" and "I am not a&#13;
crook"&#13;
only&#13;
prompted&#13;
the masses&#13;
to demand&#13;
a swift chopping.&#13;
The&#13;
more&#13;
insulting&#13;
lbe criminal,&#13;
the&#13;
higher&#13;
lbe bid to let lbe blade&#13;
fall&#13;
upon his head.&#13;
The group&#13;
was dressed&#13;
in 18th&#13;
century&#13;
costumes&#13;
courtesy&#13;
of Kim&#13;
Esteveland&#13;
lbearistocracy&#13;
awaited&#13;
execution&#13;
eating&#13;
lunch&#13;
at a table&#13;
complete&#13;
wilb food, drink,&#13;
candle-&#13;
opera,&#13;
and cake.&#13;
This year's&#13;
traitors&#13;
were:&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Buenker,&#13;
Dr. Christoph,&#13;
Dr.&#13;
DeVinny,&#13;
Dr. Greenfield,&#13;
WOOl&#13;
Hohenstaufen,&#13;
Dr. Holmes,&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Lindner,&#13;
Dr. McGuire,&#13;
Andrew&#13;
Patch,&#13;
Edris Saldana,&#13;
and Madame&#13;
Zepp.&#13;
This&#13;
was the 3rd Annual&#13;
Bastille&#13;
day at Parkside.&#13;
Past trai-&#13;
IOrs have&#13;
included:&#13;
Dr. Sheila&#13;
Kaplan,&#13;
Dr. Cohen,and&#13;
Eric Bovee.&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
APRlL&#13;
29,1993&#13;
~Ue&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF WISCONSIN&#13;
- &#13;
P&#13;
ARKSIDE&#13;
now&#13;
General&#13;
ed requirement&#13;
guy&#13;
to&#13;
be changed&#13;
in 1994&#13;
'eat.&#13;
of &#13;
I&#13;
~!y&#13;
rear&#13;
Ra"!c'&#13;
News&#13;
photo&#13;
by&#13;
Mike&#13;
Pauporc&#13;
Le~&#13;
D~laney.&#13;
Susan&#13;
Mclntyre&#13;
and Jennifer&#13;
Boris&#13;
put on the charm&#13;
in&#13;
order&#13;
to sell brats and com &#13;
to &#13;
raise money&#13;
for the&#13;
Um~ersll~&#13;
Drama&#13;
Club.&#13;
Al,lare. incostume&#13;
for "Guys&#13;
and Dolls,"&#13;
the last of this year's&#13;
Plays&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
series.&#13;
The&#13;
musical&#13;
WIll&#13;
be&#13;
presented&#13;
thiS&#13;
Fnday&#13;
and Saturday&#13;
evenings&#13;
at7 p.m. Balcony,&#13;
sealing&#13;
remain&#13;
for both shows.&#13;
Tickets&#13;
are $7 for students.&#13;
$8 for non-students&#13;
and can be reserved&#13;
at ext. 2564.&#13;
'&#13;
African&#13;
refugee&#13;
problem&#13;
discussed&#13;
Marquita&#13;
Hynes&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
Are refugees&#13;
from &#13;
the&#13;
New&#13;
World&#13;
Order&#13;
or are &#13;
they&#13;
finding&#13;
relief&#13;
in the New World&#13;
Order?&#13;
Now &#13;
that&#13;
theCold&#13;
War is over,&#13;
more&#13;
refugees&#13;
are being&#13;
pro-&#13;
duced.&#13;
Is &#13;
the&#13;
New World&#13;
Order&#13;
to blame?&#13;
The Hom of Africa&#13;
presentation&#13;
on April&#13;
21 in&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
107discussed&#13;
thesedif-&#13;
ficult questions.&#13;
Dr. Terry&#13;
Plater,&#13;
African&#13;
scholar&#13;
and professor&#13;
of urban&#13;
planningatUW-Milwaukee,gave&#13;
a two hour lecture&#13;
and &#13;
slide&#13;
pre-&#13;
sentation,&#13;
which&#13;
provided&#13;
a fuller&#13;
picture&#13;
of lbe refugee&#13;
problem.&#13;
Allbough&#13;
the program&#13;
focused&#13;
on lbe countries&#13;
contained&#13;
wilbin&#13;
the horn&#13;
of Africa&#13;
(Somalia,&#13;
Ethiopia,lbeSudanand&#13;
Djibouti),&#13;
Plater&#13;
made it clear lbat any per-&#13;
son in any cpuntry&#13;
could become&#13;
a refugee.&#13;
She hopes&#13;
that the&#13;
atrocities&#13;
occurring&#13;
in Yugoslavia&#13;
have made that point clear.&#13;
"Refugees&#13;
on television&#13;
make&#13;
us feel that they're&#13;
always&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
be like that. So, we &#13;
then &#13;
feel that we&#13;
have no responsibility&#13;
to them - that&#13;
we can't help them,"&#13;
said Plater.&#13;
However,&#13;
she says, there are&#13;
solutions&#13;
10&#13;
the refugee&#13;
problem.&#13;
Plater&#13;
prefers&#13;
local integration&#13;
solutions.&#13;
She believes&#13;
that an&#13;
orgaization&#13;
in Ethiopia,&#13;
staffed&#13;
by&#13;
Ethiopians,&#13;
does a much better &#13;
job &#13;
at&#13;
integrating&#13;
refugees&#13;
back &#13;
into &#13;
the&#13;
country&#13;
than does an outside&#13;
organi-&#13;
zation&#13;
such as the United&#13;
Nations.&#13;
Not all outside&#13;
help was &#13;
criti-&#13;
Ciled,&#13;
however.&#13;
UNICEF&#13;
and Save lbe Children&#13;
are &#13;
two groups&#13;
that she has been&#13;
impressed&#13;
with through&#13;
her research&#13;
and field work in Africa.&#13;
The non-&#13;
governmental&#13;
agencies,&#13;
according&#13;
to&#13;
Plater,&#13;
are more personal,&#13;
know lbe&#13;
language&#13;
of the country&#13;
they are&#13;
working&#13;
in, and are deeply&#13;
com-&#13;
mutcdtosolving&#13;
iheproblem.&#13;
They&#13;
do not want people&#13;
to be perma-&#13;
nent refugees.&#13;
Refugees&#13;
are people&#13;
who flee&#13;
their &#13;
homeland&#13;
due toenvironmen-&#13;
tal and political&#13;
reasons.&#13;
"The real&#13;
problem&#13;
is Political&#13;
and...&#13;
the &#13;
just&#13;
distribution&#13;
of resources,"&#13;
stressed&#13;
Plater.&#13;
Inlcuded&#13;
in &#13;
the&#13;
political&#13;
rea-&#13;
sons for refugeeism&#13;
were:&#13;
inde-&#13;
pendent&#13;
struggles,&#13;
internal&#13;
ethnic&#13;
conflict,&#13;
class conflict,&#13;
and inter-&#13;
elite power&#13;
struggles.&#13;
Such com-&#13;
plex reasons&#13;
behind&#13;
the problem&#13;
are still solvable,&#13;
believes&#13;
Plater.&#13;
Her knowledge&#13;
of research&#13;
materi-&#13;
als dealing&#13;
with lbe problem&#13;
and&#13;
lbe solutions&#13;
are deLailed&#13;
and ex-&#13;
tensive,&#13;
and she is readily&#13;
willing&#13;
to &#13;
share her expertise&#13;
wilb lbose&#13;
who are interested&#13;
in the subject.&#13;
The Hom&#13;
of Africa&#13;
lecture&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page &#13;
2&#13;
•&#13;
Disability&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Week closes&#13;
with lecture&#13;
and discussion&#13;
Gregory&#13;
M. Gauthier&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
UW-Parks&#13;
idecompleted&#13;
this&#13;
years'&#13;
Disabilities&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Week acti,vities&#13;
wilb ashortsemi-&#13;
nar Thursday,&#13;
describing&#13;
the&#13;
Americans&#13;
With DisabilitiesAct,&#13;
and a panel discussion&#13;
on !:riday&#13;
involving&#13;
several&#13;
disabled&#13;
mem-&#13;
bers bf lbe KenoshajRacinC'com-&#13;
munity,&#13;
a University&#13;
alumni,&#13;
and&#13;
several&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
employees.&#13;
Thursday&#13;
afternoon's&#13;
lecture&#13;
on&#13;
the Americans&#13;
Wilh Disabi&#13;
Iities Act&#13;
was held in the library's&#13;
second&#13;
floor&#13;
Overlook&#13;
Lounge&#13;
at3 p.m., and was&#13;
given byBonnie&#13;
Peterson,&#13;
a member&#13;
of theNatioal&#13;
Federation&#13;
of lbe Blind.&#13;
Peterson,&#13;
who is visually&#13;
disabled,&#13;
was an active&#13;
panicipant&#13;
in efforts&#13;
supporting&#13;
the passage&#13;
of ADA leg-&#13;
islation&#13;
in Congress&#13;
in 1989 and&#13;
1990.&#13;
The presenLation,&#13;
which&#13;
was&#13;
given before&#13;
asmall group ofUW-&#13;
Parks ide employees&#13;
and students,&#13;
focused&#13;
mainly&#13;
on the broader&#13;
is-&#13;
sues surrounding&#13;
the act itself, and&#13;
several&#13;
of iis most imporLant&#13;
provi-&#13;
sions.&#13;
Pelerson&#13;
stressed&#13;
the Act's&#13;
emphasis&#13;
on equality&#13;
of opportu-&#13;
nity, flexibility&#13;
incompliance,&#13;
and&#13;
it'S foundation&#13;
based&#13;
upon com-&#13;
promise&#13;
with competing&#13;
interests,&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page &#13;
2&#13;
______________&#13;
-------------&#13;
I&#13;
Tns &#13;
RASGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page 2&#13;
General&#13;
ed requirement&#13;
changed&#13;
Continued&#13;
from Page &#13;
I&#13;
"Its secondary&#13;
purpose&#13;
is to&#13;
provide&#13;
an orientation&#13;
to the Uni-&#13;
versity&#13;
an awareness&#13;
of services&#13;
offered&#13;
a guide to correct&#13;
con-&#13;
duct ... an understanding&#13;
of poli-.&#13;
cies and procedures."&#13;
Its third pur-&#13;
pose is to provide&#13;
students&#13;
with&#13;
skills in "information&#13;
literacy."&#13;
Students&#13;
will learn how &#13;
to &#13;
use the&#13;
library,&#13;
its resources&#13;
and its elec-&#13;
tronic data bases.&#13;
"This component&#13;
of theFresh-&#13;
man Seminar&#13;
will eventually&#13;
come&#13;
to replace&#13;
the currently&#13;
used li-&#13;
brary Workbook,"&#13;
Dudycha&#13;
states.&#13;
Another&#13;
significant&#13;
change&#13;
pro-&#13;
posed&#13;
by the Task Force&#13;
is the&#13;
discontinuation&#13;
of English&#13;
102. "&#13;
The research&#13;
paper&#13;
require-&#13;
ment is being replaced&#13;
with em-&#13;
phasis&#13;
on research&#13;
and writing&#13;
in&#13;
breadth&#13;
of knowledge&#13;
courses&#13;
and&#13;
the majors,"&#13;
states the Proposal.&#13;
Math 102, a general&#13;
course&#13;
de-&#13;
signed&#13;
for &#13;
arts &#13;
and humanities&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents will be introduced,&#13;
as an al-&#13;
ternative&#13;
means of satisfying&#13;
basic&#13;
computational&#13;
skills requirements.&#13;
Dudycha&#13;
hastens&#13;
to add that "stu-&#13;
dents already&#13;
here will not be &#13;
ef-&#13;
fected by these changes."&#13;
Current&#13;
students&#13;
will be ex-&#13;
pected&#13;
to fulfill the requirements&#13;
of the catalogue&#13;
from the year in&#13;
which&#13;
they entered.&#13;
Asked&#13;
about&#13;
how these changes&#13;
will be imple-&#13;
mented,&#13;
Dudycha&#13;
admits,&#13;
"There&#13;
are always&#13;
so many loose ends &#13;
to &#13;
a&#13;
proposal&#13;
like this.&#13;
There are quite a number&#13;
of&#13;
items will that will need tobe clari-&#13;
fied before&#13;
full irnplementation&#13;
takes place ... The general&#13;
Aca-&#13;
demic&#13;
Steering&#13;
Committee&#13;
will&#13;
have &#13;
its &#13;
work cut out for them."&#13;
Disability&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Week&#13;
Continued&#13;
from Page 1&#13;
stating&#13;
that the Act's intent was to&#13;
"meet each other half way."&#13;
Sensitive&#13;
to vocal concerns&#13;
over some of the legislation's&#13;
more&#13;
. controversial&#13;
provisions,&#13;
Peterson&#13;
stated,&#13;
"Noone&#13;
isexpected&#13;
to &#13;
have&#13;
all the answers&#13;
...there is space to&#13;
experiment,"&#13;
further&#13;
pointing&#13;
out&#13;
that "neither&#13;
side is going &#13;
to &#13;
be&#13;
completely&#13;
satisfied"&#13;
with the law.&#13;
When&#13;
questioned&#13;
as &#13;
to &#13;
why&#13;
there was a need for ADA,&#13;
since&#13;
most of its provisions&#13;
already&#13;
ex-&#13;
isted insome form inother legisla-&#13;
tion, she responded&#13;
that ADA&#13;
helped&#13;
to organize&#13;
"all of those&#13;
elements&#13;
under one resource,"&#13;
and&#13;
that ADA provided&#13;
a more formal&#13;
process&#13;
under&#13;
which&#13;
cases of dis-&#13;
crimination&#13;
could&#13;
be &#13;
resoJved.&#13;
The final event,&#13;
which&#13;
oc-&#13;
curred&#13;
Friday&#13;
afternoon&#13;
in Union&#13;
104-106,&#13;
was apanel of discussion&#13;
with several&#13;
members&#13;
of the&#13;
KenoshalRacine&#13;
Disabled&#13;
Commu-&#13;
nity.&#13;
Included&#13;
among&#13;
the panelists&#13;
were a Kenosha&#13;
businessman&#13;
and&#13;
political&#13;
activist,&#13;
a dental&#13;
office&#13;
secretary,&#13;
a sales representative,&#13;
and an accomplished&#13;
criminal&#13;
and&#13;
business&#13;
attorney.&#13;
Present&#13;
in the&#13;
audience&#13;
were &#13;
Dr. &#13;
William&#13;
Streeter,&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Chancellor,&#13;
Dale&#13;
Wheeler,&#13;
chemistry&#13;
instructor.and&#13;
several&#13;
other University&#13;
students&#13;
and employees.&#13;
Much of the discussion&#13;
at the&#13;
meeting&#13;
was centered&#13;
on the ac-&#13;
complishments&#13;
ofeach panel &#13;
mern-&#13;
ber, &#13;
and how they hadeach learned&#13;
tocope with and succeed&#13;
inspite of&#13;
ttheir disabilities.&#13;
As phrased&#13;
by&#13;
Gerry&#13;
Miller,&#13;
the Kenosha&#13;
attor-&#13;
ney, "the only handicap&#13;
is a bad&#13;
attitude&#13;
...a disability&#13;
does not have&#13;
to be a handicap."&#13;
Other&#13;
points&#13;
of interest&#13;
dis-&#13;
cussed&#13;
included&#13;
how other family&#13;
members&#13;
learn to cope with dis-&#13;
abilities&#13;
and a brief description&#13;
of&#13;
how someofthe&#13;
ADA's&#13;
new provi-&#13;
sions&#13;
would&#13;
be affecting&#13;
the&#13;
Kenosha/Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
Soup and bread were served&#13;
to&#13;
attendees&#13;
of the panel discussion,&#13;
which&#13;
was organized&#13;
by Andrea&#13;
Davis,&#13;
a member&#13;
of the college&#13;
Committee&#13;
for Disability&#13;
Aware-&#13;
ness Week.&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
April&#13;
29&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film Series:&#13;
"Ju Dou''&#13;
(China)&#13;
7:30 Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
$,5&#13;
UWP Men's&#13;
Baseball&#13;
at Lewis&#13;
U; Romeoville,&#13;
IL; 2pm.&#13;
RB-JAZZ-FUNK;&#13;
Wax &#13;
Lips, &#13;
Union&#13;
Square,&#13;
8:30, free.&#13;
Musical-&#13;
Guys and Dolls -  Matinee&#13;
at lOam,&#13;
COMMART&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Friday,&#13;
April 30&#13;
Athletics,&#13;
- UWP pool, gyms,&#13;
etc. available&#13;
for walk-in&#13;
use for students&#13;
UWP&#13;
Women's&#13;
Softball&#13;
at home&#13;
vs. UW-Stevens&#13;
Point,&#13;
3 pm, Doubleheader.&#13;
Musical-&#13;
"Guys&#13;
and Dolls",&#13;
COMMART&#13;
Theatre,&#13;
Students&#13;
and Seniors,&#13;
$7;&#13;
Others,&#13;
$8, Matinee&#13;
at 10 am, evening&#13;
at 7 pm.&#13;
Jazz Vocal&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
-  CART&#13;
0-118,&#13;
Noon,&#13;
free.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
May 1&#13;
UWP&#13;
Men's&#13;
Track&#13;
&amp; &#13;
Field-&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Open,&#13;
Madison,&#13;
WI, Noon.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Women's&#13;
Softball&#13;
at home&#13;
vs. College&#13;
of St. Francis,&#13;
lpm.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Women's&#13;
Track&#13;
-  LaCrosse&#13;
Track&#13;
Classic,&#13;
Ipm, UW -LaCrosse.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Men's&#13;
Baseball&#13;
at Northern&#13;
Kentucky&#13;
in Highland&#13;
Heights,&#13;
KY&#13;
(5\1 at Zpm and &#13;
5'2 &#13;
at l l am).&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film Series&#13;
-  "fu Dou" (China)&#13;
8pm, Union&#13;
Cinema,&#13;
$5&#13;
Musical&#13;
c-c&#13;
Guys and Dolls,&#13;
COMMART&#13;
Theatre,&#13;
Students&#13;
and Seniors,&#13;
$7, Others,&#13;
$8; &#13;
7pm.&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
May &#13;
2&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film Series&#13;
-  "Ju Dou"&#13;
(China),&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema,&#13;
2pm; $5&#13;
Monday,&#13;
May 3&#13;
UWP'Men's&#13;
Baseball&#13;
al home&#13;
vs. Concordia,&#13;
Ipm.&#13;
Tuesday,&#13;
May 4&#13;
UWP&#13;
Women's&#13;
Softball&#13;
at UW-Whitewater,&#13;
3pm, Doubleheader.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
Tim Bell, dir. Students&#13;
and Seniors,&#13;
$2; Adults,&#13;
S5;&#13;
7:30, COMMART&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
May 5&#13;
UWP&#13;
Men's&#13;
Baseball&#13;
at Home&#13;
vs. UW-Oshkosh&#13;
lpm, Doubleheader.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Ensemble,&#13;
Gee. Lindquisl,&#13;
dir. ; Noon,&#13;
free, CART&#13;
0-118.&#13;
April29, 1993 ~&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
/&#13;
Amencan&#13;
minonty&#13;
conference&#13;
~&#13;
Juan A. Reynoso&#13;
Ydunatesaid,"Itwasaverye'&#13;
r&#13;
b&#13;
l   &#13;
.&#13;
nJoy_&#13;
.&#13;
Feature&#13;
Writer&#13;
a e &#13;
trip, &#13;
and I learned&#13;
a lot &#13;
fr&#13;
his exoeri&#13;
am&#13;
t &#13;
IS &#13;
expenence."&#13;
The Hispanic&#13;
group &#13;
"Ac .&#13;
L&#13;
.&#13;
..  .&#13;
Cion&#13;
anna,&#13;
which&#13;
consists&#13;
of&#13;
6P &#13;
k,&#13;
'd&#13;
d'&#13;
a~&#13;
Sl e stu ems, performed&#13;
Frid&#13;
April 2 from 8-10 p.m. Theyp::  &#13;
III&#13;
ticipated&#13;
10 &#13;
a play called&#13;
L  &#13;
¢l'&#13;
V &#13;
di&#13;
d   &#13;
"(&#13;
m&#13;
en  os,  the sell-outs).&#13;
The &#13;
l3!&#13;
play, written&#13;
by Luis &#13;
M. Valde&#13;
;;j&#13;
ridicules&#13;
stereotypical&#13;
thinking&#13;
b&#13;
Z&#13;
'&#13;
~&#13;
following&#13;
up on an oddball&#13;
sy;  &#13;
ill&#13;
belie &#13;
premise&#13;
- the sale ofmexican&#13;
r;g&#13;
robots&#13;
to then-governor&#13;
Ronald&#13;
'"&#13;
Reagan's&#13;
administration&#13;
in Cali- &#13;
j'.6&#13;
fornia.&#13;
Valdez&#13;
is best known&#13;
for ~&#13;
his hit movie&#13;
"La &#13;
Barnba,"&#13;
which&#13;
""&#13;
he wrote and directed.&#13;
The three day event wasasue. &#13;
13k&#13;
cess according&#13;
to many students&#13;
'JtU&#13;
who attended.&#13;
This conference&#13;
is&#13;
held every year, but at different&#13;
college&#13;
campuses&#13;
SO &#13;
in order &#13;
to&#13;
find out where the nextonewill&#13;
be,&#13;
please&#13;
contact&#13;
the CECA&#13;
office.&#13;
Video&#13;
lectures,&#13;
Job Fair ex-&#13;
hibit workshops&#13;
and student&#13;
pre-&#13;
sentations&#13;
were the universal&#13;
is-&#13;
sues discussed&#13;
during&#13;
the 10th an-&#13;
nual American&#13;
Minority&#13;
confer-&#13;
ence at the University&#13;
of Wiscon-&#13;
sin-Eau&#13;
Claire,&#13;
April 2-4.&#13;
This year's conference&#13;
theme&#13;
was, "Celebrating&#13;
a Decade&#13;
of&#13;
Change:&#13;
Looking&#13;
to &#13;
the Future."&#13;
A student/staff&#13;
panel&#13;
discussion&#13;
was held at the end of the confer-&#13;
ence and enabled&#13;
the students&#13;
to&#13;
ask any questions&#13;
about the three&#13;
day event.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
and staff attending&#13;
were&#13;
Anthony&#13;
Brown,&#13;
Walter&#13;
Gutierrez,&#13;
and Lucia Herrera.&#13;
A total of 32&#13;
students&#13;
also &#13;
attended&#13;
the three day&#13;
event,&#13;
which&#13;
was open &#13;
to &#13;
college&#13;
students&#13;
only. University&#13;
of Wis-&#13;
consin-Parkside&#13;
student&#13;
Joseph&#13;
13\1&#13;
~&#13;
If'&#13;
tlI&#13;
Campus&#13;
clean&#13;
up promotes-&#13;
Earth&#13;
Day involvement&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Last Friday,&#13;
April 23, in com-&#13;
memoration&#13;
of Earth&#13;
Day, The&#13;
Recycling&#13;
Task Force sponsored&#13;
a&#13;
campus&#13;
clean up. The Recycling&#13;
Task Force is a committee&#13;
formed&#13;
by Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
and is in-&#13;
tended&#13;
to promOle recycling&#13;
and&#13;
environmental&#13;
awareness.&#13;
Students&#13;
and faculty&#13;
who were&#13;
interested&#13;
intaking part in the clean&#13;
up meet at the Union&#13;
Information&#13;
desk at noon. In a hour's&#13;
worth of&#13;
work the volunteers&#13;
filled four &#13;
55&#13;
gallon&#13;
garbage&#13;
bags with trash&#13;
found in the wooded&#13;
area near the&#13;
Comm&#13;
Arts building&#13;
and on the&#13;
Refugees&#13;
!J\l&#13;
illl&#13;
lawn adjacent&#13;
to &#13;
the University.&#13;
Id&#13;
Faculty&#13;
that &#13;
participated&#13;
were&#13;
Eva Frink, Ricci Knutson,&#13;
Robbie&#13;
:11&#13;
Mabry,&#13;
Joyce&#13;
Wisch,&#13;
and &#13;
Mary Ill'&#13;
Ruetz.&#13;
The student&#13;
was Larry &#13;
iii&#13;
Reutz,&#13;
liel&#13;
Said Mary &#13;
Reutz,&#13;
"We'd like &#13;
oere&#13;
to see this become&#13;
a regular&#13;
Eanh &#13;
I)in&#13;
Day event with more student&#13;
and &#13;
1111&#13;
faculty&#13;
involvement.&#13;
It's upsetting&#13;
~1&#13;
to &#13;
see the disregard&#13;
for our cam-&#13;
pus."&#13;
Ilon&#13;
TheRccyclingTaskForcehas&#13;
~ih&#13;
already&#13;
planned&#13;
programs&#13;
and n&#13;
I&#13;
events&#13;
for &#13;
next &#13;
fall. One suchpro- &#13;
oisl&#13;
gram is the Pile Up Project.&#13;
Alu- ~rl&#13;
minum,&#13;
Plastic&#13;
galas and&#13;
metal &#13;
will ",e&#13;
be recycled&#13;
in and &#13;
effort &#13;
to &#13;
reduce&#13;
is&#13;
waste.&#13;
A&#13;
VOLUNTEER&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
One-Time&#13;
Event&#13;
needs&#13;
YOU.&#13;
If &#13;
you have musical&#13;
talent&#13;
and enjoy&#13;
performing,&#13;
you may be interested&#13;
in &#13;
playing&#13;
an instrument&#13;
&amp;/or &#13;
singing&#13;
at&#13;
the Brookside&#13;
Care Center's&#13;
Mother's&#13;
Day Tea on Sunday,&#13;
May 9th a12:00&#13;
PM. The public&#13;
will be invited.&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in the Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Foster&#13;
Care Program&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
requests&#13;
child care.&#13;
Provide&#13;
child care for&#13;
pre-school&#13;
children&#13;
(0-5) while&#13;
foster&#13;
parents&#13;
attend&#13;
training.&#13;
Read stories,&#13;
hold, soothe&#13;
and feed between&#13;
7:30am&#13;
and 12:3Opm.&#13;
Makethisasmall&#13;
group&#13;
ritu&#13;
project&#13;
that can help children&#13;
with special&#13;
needs.&#13;
~Ie~&#13;
~g&#13;
Training&#13;
limes being&#13;
planned.&#13;
If you are a psychology&#13;
or sociology&#13;
major&#13;
and are looking&#13;
for experience,&#13;
read on.  Racine's&#13;
Safe Havcn&#13;
Holline&#13;
tfd&#13;
t&#13;
Operator&#13;
training&#13;
will begin&#13;
the end of May for 35 hours.&#13;
Learn&#13;
hoW&#13;
to&#13;
rOr&#13;
respond&#13;
La &#13;
family&#13;
and personaJ&#13;
problems&#13;
and &#13;
be &#13;
there when people&#13;
needyou.&#13;
~UOI&#13;
Women's&#13;
Horizons&#13;
in &#13;
Kenosha&#13;
has scheduled&#13;
their sheller&#13;
care lraining&#13;
the&#13;
;Urn&#13;
end of May for a total of 18 hours.&#13;
If&#13;
you can relate&#13;
to women&#13;
who have been&#13;
~ICl.l&#13;
battered&#13;
or are willing&#13;
to learn,&#13;
see Carol&#13;
in &#13;
lhe Volunteer&#13;
Officc.&#13;
ir\&#13;
Fe~tival&#13;
on the Lake ...Afro Festneeds&#13;
booth&#13;
workers.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
for a3hour&#13;
~e&#13;
shift on July 2, 3 or 4 al the Festival&#13;
Site in Racine.&#13;
Sell raffles,&#13;
food or  ~&#13;
merch~dise.&#13;
Be scheduled&#13;
to work with a friend.&#13;
Free entrancc.&#13;
Enjoy the&#13;
~&#13;
fun. SIgn up in the Volunleer&#13;
Office&#13;
NOW.&#13;
~&#13;
Go to Voll!T).$.er&#13;
Office,&#13;
WLLC-Dt75&#13;
for more infonnation&#13;
or call Carol at,  &#13;
~'as&#13;
595-2011.&#13;
led&#13;
Continued&#13;
from Page &#13;
I&#13;
discussion&#13;
was the third install-&#13;
ment in a series sponsored&#13;
by the&#13;
Center&#13;
for International&#13;
Studies&#13;
in&#13;
cooperation&#13;
with the Ceter for Eth-&#13;
nic Studies.&#13;
Approximately&#13;
30&#13;
people&#13;
attended&#13;
the presentation,&#13;
which&#13;
was followed&#13;
by an open&#13;
question&#13;
session.&#13;
Concluding&#13;
the series in the&#13;
spring&#13;
semester&#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
a program&#13;
r~&#13;
entitled,&#13;
"United&#13;
Slates &#13;
Irnrnigra-&#13;
fUl&lt;!&#13;
tion Policy,"&#13;
which&#13;
is scheduled&#13;
~cl&#13;
for May &#13;
5.&#13;
'Ie&#13;
The&#13;
11m&#13;
Ills&#13;
~~&#13;
I~&#13;
It,&#13;
Itti&#13;
Ike&#13;
</text>
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              <text>&#13;
1,199]&#13;
~&#13;
A&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student  Govern-&#13;
mentAssociation (pSGA) meeting&#13;
washeld in Upper Main Place on&#13;
Friday,April16,toprovideanopen&#13;
forumfor discussion  and dissent&#13;
regardingnewly instituted fee in-&#13;
GIl)&#13;
creasesset to go into effect in the&#13;
fallterm of 1993. Roughly  thirty&#13;
peopleattended the assembly which&#13;
cappedoff a two week period of&#13;
7:30&#13;
frustratedquestioning  and&#13;
confu-&#13;
~'~&#13;
sion&#13;
since the fee increases  were&#13;
iaIa&#13;
announcedin the catalogue of up-&#13;
comingfall course offerings.&#13;
'is...&#13;
Many of the fee increases came&#13;
as&#13;
a complete surprise to students&#13;
andfaculty alike. "All we ever&#13;
re-&#13;
Wi'&#13;
ceived&#13;
were drafts,"  states  Eric&#13;
:. It&#13;
Bovee, President  of PSGA.  "We&#13;
/in,&#13;
neverreceived the final&#13;
report."&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Greenfield,  vice-chair  of&#13;
)&#13;
!he&#13;
faculty's University  Commit-&#13;
tee,&#13;
expresses  similar  confusion.&#13;
''We were never really consulted&#13;
on&#13;
this," he says. "This is of great&#13;
ICb&#13;
concern to us ... we are certainly&#13;
/.s.&#13;
intending&#13;
10&#13;
find out more about&#13;
86-&#13;
thisissue."&#13;
Responding to the question of&#13;
whetherthe way in which the fee&#13;
to';&#13;
increases were   decided    and&#13;
insu-&#13;
die&#13;
uued&#13;
might  be in violation  the&#13;
ill!&#13;
WisconsinAdministrative  Code's&#13;
ng  policy&#13;
of shared  governance,&#13;
or&#13;
Greenfield replies, "Alas, I'm not&#13;
sure if that's true. We are asking&#13;
formore information  about this."&#13;
Among  the most  controver-&#13;
sial&#13;
fee increases to be instituted in&#13;
fall are a graduation  fee and a&#13;
feefor dropping courses after a ten&#13;
daygrace period. "These drop and&#13;
,addfees will become a serious fi-&#13;
nancialburden for all students, es-&#13;
peciallythose receiving DVR fund-&#13;
Editorial...&#13;
Andy questions  the new student fees for&#13;
1993-1994.&#13;
See&#13;
it&#13;
on  Page&#13;
4&#13;
ing and other financial aid," pre-&#13;
dicts a student leader who chooses&#13;
to remain anonymous.&#13;
Dr. Gary Grace, Dean of Stu-&#13;
dent Affairs, explains how the fee&#13;
increases came&#13;
to&#13;
be instituted. The&#13;
Board of Regents was delivered a&#13;
thorough study of the University's&#13;
administrative  costs.&#13;
Even though the study showed&#13;
UW-Parkside  to be relatively low&#13;
in comparison to other UW System&#13;
schools, the Board demanded a cut&#13;
in administrative  costs. With that&#13;
mandate, the Chancellor commis-&#13;
sioned a special study&#13;
to&#13;
examine&#13;
other System schools and the fees&#13;
they have in place. From this com-&#13;
parati ve study, emerged the present&#13;
fee package.  "It's  a sign of the&#13;
times," states Grace. "We live in a&#13;
period  of declining  budgets  and&#13;
increasing demands.&#13;
People are saying 'we don't&#13;
want  our  taxes  raised,'   so  the Uni-&#13;
versity&#13;
must reduce services or&#13;
find&#13;
addi tional sources of revenue." Dr.&#13;
Stephen&#13;
McLaughlin&#13;
concurs.say-&#13;
ing, "As public education gets more&#13;
and more scrutinized by taxpayers,&#13;
who are already  stretched,  more&#13;
and more fees fall on the back of&#13;
students.  Nobody enjoys doing it.&#13;
In my opinion,  more tax dollars&#13;
should be used to support the Uni-&#13;
versity enterprise, but I am a realist&#13;
...I&#13;
don't have an alternative."&#13;
Certain fees are designed to do&#13;
more  than  raise  money&#13;
to&#13;
cover&#13;
administrative  costs, according to&#13;
Grace. The newly instituted drop&#13;
fee is ..... not intended  to raise&#13;
money.&#13;
It&#13;
is intended to encourage&#13;
certain  behavior."   UW-Parkside&#13;
has been very high in its percent-&#13;
age of drops compared  to other&#13;
campuses,  Grace  stresses.  "We&#13;
have  the  highest  percentage  of&#13;
'ghost  students,'  students  who&#13;
register for classes, but don't at-&#13;
tend, in the entire system." The&#13;
drop fee is designed to affect this&#13;
behavior. "Other system schools&#13;
have experienced a kind of 'one&#13;
year learning curve,' as students&#13;
learn about the impact of drop-&#13;
ping courses through their own&#13;
experienceorthrough  thatof other&#13;
students," Grace observes. "It is&#13;
our hope that 'normal' drop/adds,&#13;
the normal jockeying  of classes&#13;
will be worked out in the first ten&#13;
days.&#13;
For the majority of our stu-&#13;
dents, it will&#13;
have&#13;
no fiscal im-&#13;
pact at all ... if you don't drop,&#13;
you  won't  have  any  fees."&#13;
McLaughlin  'again .reiterates&#13;
Grace's  observations.  "Schools&#13;
that have instituted  this policy&#13;
have seen a behavior change, a&#13;
beneficial behavior change," he&#13;
states. "People do get into the&#13;
process and adjust to it."&#13;
Of concern to others is an appar-&#13;
ently unofficial change in policy&#13;
regarding students receiving VA&#13;
benefits. The new policy, report-&#13;
edly suggested through a recent&#13;
auditor's report, will force veter-&#13;
ans to pay tuition outof pocket, as&#13;
they wait for VA checks, or to set&#13;
up deferred payment plans, with&#13;
additional applicable fees.&#13;
"When Ienrolled in this Uni-&#13;
versity' I enrolled partly as a re-&#13;
sult of the liberal care afforded&#13;
veteran students ... Now, all this&#13;
seems&#13;
to&#13;
be changing,"  reports&#13;
one disgruntled vet. "This whole&#13;
thing has a very familiar ring to it&#13;
... a war was fought once in this&#13;
country over taxation withoutrep-&#13;
.&#13;
u'&#13;
resentauon.,&#13;
.&#13;
Student responses to the in-&#13;
Continued  on Page 2&#13;
Why&#13;
American  Disabilities  Awareness  Week?&#13;
Although many people know&#13;
that Beethoven composed  the fa-&#13;
mous hymn, "Joyful,  Joyful We&#13;
AdoreThee," few are aware that he&#13;
did&#13;
so AFTER he became deaf.&#13;
This immediately  brings&#13;
to&#13;
mindthe question of how someone&#13;
COuldcompose  anything  without&#13;
"hearing" the notes, least wise a&#13;
piecethat centers around the theme&#13;
of "joy."  What 'could  be joyful&#13;
abouta musician losing the ability&#13;
to&#13;
hear?&#13;
In actuality, there is never any&#13;
elation concerning  a specific dis-&#13;
'ability&#13;
in&#13;
itself. The "joy" is mani-&#13;
fested when  the  individual   is&#13;
granted  the freedom&#13;
to&#13;
continue&#13;
creating in whatever mode they are&#13;
capable.&#13;
Here at UW-Parkside,  there&#13;
are many disABLED students who&#13;
are seeking  to express their own&#13;
creativity in a wide varietyoffields.&#13;
Unfortunately,  many of the&#13;
handicaps  which affect these stu-&#13;
dents, are not visible and often not&#13;
understood  by the general "able-&#13;
bodied" population.  This is why&#13;
.there is a need to "educate the edu-&#13;
cators"  and enlighten  society  in&#13;
general.&#13;
The AmericiirWith  Disabili-&#13;
ties Act is not merely a piece of&#13;
litigation tobring down the physi-&#13;
cal barriers that make buildings&#13;
inaccessible.&#13;
It&#13;
is meant&#13;
to&#13;
be a&#13;
tool which will help dismantle&#13;
mental and social stereotypes as&#13;
well.&#13;
The accommodations  made&#13;
available by this law will help&#13;
make it possible for the largest&#13;
unemployed group in America to&#13;
join the rest of the nation in mak-&#13;
ing this country more productive.&#13;
Even more important, it will give&#13;
millions of Americans  the free-&#13;
dom to create their own Ode to&#13;
Joy.&#13;
nside  ...&#13;
Nationally   renown  poet and&#13;
writer   David   Kherdian   re-&#13;
turns  to his&#13;
TOotS.&#13;
Page  3&#13;
Gabe  and  his truck,  the  rain&#13;
god.&#13;
Page 4&#13;
R&lt;JftI'"&#13;
New,&#13;
photo&#13;
by&#13;
Mike Pauporc&#13;
Boogie Down Productions rap artist KRS-ONE speaks on education,&#13;
race relations,  and revolution during his lecture in Union Cinema&#13;
Sunday evening.  For futher information, see complete story below.&#13;
KRS-ONE promotes insight, revolution&#13;
Gregory  M. Gauthier&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
NationairaprecordingartistKris&#13;
Parker  (KRS-ONE)  appeared  on&#13;
campus for a lecture last Sunday,&#13;
April 18. The 7:30 presentation in&#13;
the Union Cinema attracted local rap&#13;
music fans, Group Home children&#13;
from the Racine/Kenosha area, and&#13;
UW-Parkside students.&#13;
Steve Murphy, who organized&#13;
and planned the event through the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB) and&#13;
the Urban League, introduced&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Parker by stating that what he and&#13;
PAB were interested in doing was&#13;
"starting a controversy" and "getting&#13;
people thinking."&#13;
Waleed Ahmed of the Urban&#13;
League of Racine/Kenosha  further&#13;
introduced Parker to the audience by&#13;
summarizing  Parker's speech, and&#13;
began by asking the audience to par-&#13;
ticipate in an opening prayer.&#13;
KRS-ONE's lecture, which was&#13;
themed  "God  Versus Education,"&#13;
was an amalgam of issues such as&#13;
race relations,  gang violence,  Ameri-&#13;
can education, religion, history and&#13;
philosophy.&#13;
At times, the lecture was in-&#13;
sightful:  "Education cannot start vi&#13;
end in the University; it must con-&#13;
tinue throughout life," "American&#13;
Education today is memorization,&#13;
more than it is thinking."  In other&#13;
places,  however,&#13;
it&#13;
was.  as charac-&#13;
terized by Murphy in an article in&#13;
last week's&#13;
Ranger  News,&#13;
"revolu-&#13;
tionary" in its tone:  "I want to&#13;
organize  the community  against&#13;
the  establishment,"   "Violence&#13;
against the community cannot end&#13;
without violence against the estab-&#13;
lishment."&#13;
Parker further stated he felt&#13;
that the Los Angeles Rodney King&#13;
riots of last July were a "beautiful&#13;
thing" because "it...was the whole&#13;
community against the establish-&#13;
ment!"  He also stated that there&#13;
was "No justice in a land of stolen&#13;
property, for a stolen people."&#13;
The speech contained within&#13;
itsomething foreveryone, and gen-&#13;
erated much contentious debate in&#13;
the question-and-answer  session&#13;
following the lecture. Most com-&#13;
ments centered on questions  of&#13;
bibletranslation,religiousdoctrine,&#13;
and, as put bya University student,&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Parker's "Recipe for a Revolu-&#13;
tion."&#13;
. The lecture and debate period&#13;
lasted until 10 p.m., after which&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Parker left immediately  via&#13;
personal limousine.&#13;
T~~~~~~~2.-&#13;
--;-_--::;-_--------------&#13;
--..:.A~P~ril22,1993&#13;
!HE&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page 2&#13;
--...::&#13;
Geography students at the peak&#13;
By' ten o'clock  Sunday&#13;
morning, the geographers were fol-&#13;
lowing aroute which encompassed&#13;
stops&#13;
atMill Bluff Slate Park, Castle&#13;
Rock, located in Camp Douglas,&#13;
and thesouth shoreofDevil's  Slate&#13;
Park. Balance Rock, the Devil's&#13;
Window, pot holes and ripples in&#13;
the rock formations, were the high-&#13;
lights of Devil's Lake Slate Park.&#13;
Heavy breathing could be heard&#13;
coming from most of those climb- .&#13;
ing the trail, which reached a peak&#13;
of approximately 1600 feet. In a&#13;
group of~tudents with an age rang-&#13;
ing from 19 to 35 (or so), it was&#13;
observed that the non-traditional&#13;
students did more than hold their&#13;
own on the climbing leg of the&#13;
weekend. Nancy Federmeyer was&#13;
seen to be blazing the trail, as was&#13;
Susan Christy - both of whom are&#13;
non-traditional students.&#13;
The "grand finale," ac-&#13;
cording to Richards, was the final&#13;
stop at Parfrey's Glen, adjacent to&#13;
Devil's Head ski resort. The glen,&#13;
in the words of club member Brian&#13;
Sweeney, who holds a degree in&#13;
geology, is an "island of pre-Cam-&#13;
. brian bedrock located on astream."&#13;
For Sweeney, "the weekend ended&#13;
with a big bang." For other geog-&#13;
raphy club members the weekend&#13;
ended with mumblings of a chal-&#13;
lenge-, Having hiked through the&#13;
glen, which some members de-&#13;
scribed as an enchanted forest, and&#13;
which all experienced as a muddy&#13;
Continued  on Page 3&#13;
I&#13;
Gays Mills, a small rural town&#13;
nestled below miles of apple or-&#13;
chards' was described to students,&#13;
An icy climb to an eleva-   withnopun intended,asan "Arneri-&#13;
tion over seventeen hundred, feet   can, apple pie kind of town." Strik-&#13;
high,probingquestionsfromapro-&#13;
ingly different was the economic&#13;
fessorwhosedrivingmotivatespas-&#13;
development   of the town  of&#13;
sengers to&#13;
wear-seat&#13;
belts, and a   Soldier'sGrove.  A&#13;
town&#13;
sign pro-&#13;
walk into a place that time seemed   motes the site as "America's First&#13;
to have forgotten: these were high-   Solar City."  After a&#13;
flood&#13;
in the&#13;
lights of the recent weekend trip   early 1970's, the once agglomer-&#13;
for UW-Parkside geography club   ated businesses decided to rebuild&#13;
members.&#13;
and incorporate the use of passive&#13;
Nine students, along with , solar energy.&#13;
geography   professor   Curtis&#13;
Travelling northwest on&#13;
Richards and Professor Michael   Highway 35, the van of geogra-&#13;
Thaller, of the Carroll College ge-   phers followed the Mississippi&#13;
ography department,  spent their   River and next stopped to view a&#13;
time on Saturday exploring and   lock and&#13;
dam.&#13;
Richards, an expert&#13;
observing western Wisconsin.  A   on trains, as is Thaller, shared his&#13;
guided tour, by the professors,   knowledge when the group crossed&#13;
pointed out drumlins, moraines,   aset of railroad tracks&#13;
whenreturn-&#13;
glacial drift and various other ele-   ing to the van.  The trip was&#13;
ments of the terrain travelled in   sprinkledwithbitsofrailroadfacts,&#13;
route to laCrosse.&#13;
which added another facet to inter-&#13;
The western upland of   ested club members.&#13;
(&#13;
Blue Mound Slate Park (west of&#13;
Upon reaching laCrosse,&#13;
Madison) was the first point of   the group travelled to the summit&#13;
exploration. With views of Mili-   of Grandad's Bluff. In contrast to&#13;
tary&#13;
Ridge, the Wisconsin River   the sunny skies at the banks of the&#13;
Valley and Devil's Lake to look   Mississippi River, they once again&#13;
forward to, the group cautiously   came in contact with snow and&#13;
climbedthe  icy overlook tower.   cloudy skies. After descending the&#13;
Once atop the observation deck,   bluff and eating dinner, a small&#13;
the geography  enthusiasts  ex-   contingent  explored the central&#13;
pressed cries of awe towards the   business district and observed the&#13;
sprawling landscape below~&#13;
primary economic activity to be in&#13;
Ice and snow were not to   the tertiary sector; specifically.tav-&#13;
be&#13;
found at the next two stops -   ems drew their revenue from the&#13;
Gays Mills and Soldier's Grove.   UW-LaCrosse students.&#13;
Marquita  Hynes&#13;
News Writer&#13;
Thursday, April 22&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball at Northwestern U. Evanston, IL, 3pm.&#13;
Choral Concert. 7:30 pm. Evangelical United Methodist Church, Racine&#13;
ALM - Showboat. Union Cinema; 4:30 and 7prn. $1- students, $2- guests.&#13;
Gay&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Lesbian&#13;
"Out&#13;
and About week".  Rick Burd, gay comedian, Union Square, 8pm., free.&#13;
Disability Awareness Week: Play- What does it mean to be disabled? Noon, Upper Main.&#13;
Understanding Americans with Disabilities Act: speaker,&#13;
Bonnie Peterson; 3pm, Overlook Lounge, free.&#13;
Friday, April23&#13;
Panel Discussion: Making It: Success stories of the Disabled; Noon; Union 104-106, free.&#13;
Voices of Parkside, CART D-1l8, Noon, free.&#13;
UWPWomen's Softballat UW Platteville,4pm.&#13;
UWPMett's Track andField, Apr.23&#13;
&amp;&#13;
24, HillsdaleRelays,Hillsdale,MI,4pm.&#13;
UWPWomen's Track, Apr.23&#13;
&amp;&#13;
24, Hillsdale Relays,Hillsdale,MI, Spm.&#13;
Film:&#13;
My&#13;
Beautiful Laundrette, Union Cinema, Sl-students,&#13;
$2-&#13;
guests; followed by a social&#13;
gathering/dance&#13;
in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Musical_ Guys and Dolls, CommArts Theatre, 7pm, $7~students, $8-others.&#13;
Saturday,  April 24&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball at home versus llT.,  Doubleheader, Noon.&#13;
UWPWomen's SoftballApr.24&#13;
&amp;&#13;
25 atMountMercy,IA.&#13;
Musical- Guys and Dolls, CommArts Theatre, 7prn, $7- students, $8~ others.&#13;
Sunday, April 25&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball at home versus lllinois Benedictine; Doubleheader,  Ipm.&#13;
Monday, April 26&#13;
UWP Men's Baseball versus UW-Mllwaukee,  at Milw., Doubleheader,&#13;
l&#13;
pm.&#13;
Brewer's Night Game sponsored by P&#13;
AB&#13;
&amp;&#13;
RHA. For the bus&#13;
and&#13;
a bleacher seat- $7.&#13;
Tuesday, April 27&#13;
UWP Women's Softball at Home versus NE Illinois, Doubleheader, 3:30pm.&#13;
Magician- Brad Montgomery, Union Square, Spm., free.&#13;
Wednesday,  April 28&#13;
UWP Women's Softball versus National Louis University at Chicago, 3:30pm.&#13;
Bard's birthday to&#13;
be celebrated&#13;
'Two Shakespeare  birthday&#13;
events will celebrate the bard's&#13;
429th birthday April 23. "Words,&#13;
words, words" is adramatic read-&#13;
ing on April 23 while the annual&#13;
Shakespeare birthday dinner will&#13;
be on April 25 at UW-Parkside,&#13;
The&#13;
readings&#13;
of&#13;
Shakespearean  selections at the&#13;
Old Book Corner,  312 Sixth&#13;
Street, Racine, begin at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Friday, April 23; admission is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Co-directed by Michael Lee&#13;
and Joseph Delorenzo,  the cast&#13;
includes Andy Di Salvo and Katy&#13;
Wilt  from  Racine,   Judith&#13;
Hohmeier from Bristol and Tina&#13;
Paukstelis of Kenosha. Lee and&#13;
Delorenzo  are recent Dramatic&#13;
Arts graduates of UW-Parkside,&#13;
The public is also invited to&#13;
participate by suggesting favor-&#13;
ite Shakespearean  lines.  There&#13;
will be free coffee prOvidedb&#13;
Centre City as well as oth  y&#13;
f  h&#13;
erre·&#13;
res ments.&#13;
The annual  Shakesp&#13;
B&#13;
' hda   .&#13;
eare&#13;
irt&#13;
y&#13;
dinner&#13;
is set for 5:30&#13;
p.m. at the UW-ParksideU .&#13;
"&#13;
mono&#13;
The&#13;
dinner&#13;
tshosted bytheTeach&#13;
ing Shakespeare ResourceC .&#13;
en,&#13;
ter (TSRC), which sponsors&#13;
id&#13;
a&#13;
state-wu&#13;
e sonnet ~ting  COn.&#13;
test. W&#13;
mners&#13;
are announced&#13;
th&#13;
d&#13;
·&#13;
~&#13;
e inner.&#13;
Professor  Joseph Chang,&#13;
UW&#13;
-Milwaukee,&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
th  '&#13;
speaker,  "Joe is an e.cellen~&#13;
speaker and -an interestingper.&#13;
son," Slates Andrew Mclean&#13;
professorofEnglishatUW.!'arl&lt;:&#13;
side and director of theTSRC."I&#13;
do hope many students willjoin&#13;
us inthis fun evening oftribute&#13;
10&#13;
Shakespeare."  Dinner is$9.50.&#13;
The public is invited&#13;
to&#13;
attend.&#13;
For reservations call 595-2002.&#13;
Fee controversy&#13;
Continued  from Page 1&#13;
creases in fees are mixed and var-&#13;
ied. "We, as students, need to stand&#13;
together and when the administra-&#13;
tion institutes changes with little&#13;
student input, we need to voice our&#13;
discontent,"  explains Ms. Dawn&#13;
Cunning,  in a statement  represen-&#13;
tative of many students. Others are&#13;
much more pessimistic "[ feel that&#13;
the student body as a whole, with&#13;
few exceptions, areas blind as sheep&#13;
being led to the slaughter ... we arc&#13;
being led toward significant finan-&#13;
cial hardship come the fall," says&#13;
another student.&#13;
The relatively small turnout at&#13;
Friday's PSGA assembly may in-&#13;
dicate that this opinion is indeed an&#13;
accurate assessment. "Take your&#13;
opinions and express them to the&#13;
administration ... Nothing is going&#13;
to happen if you sit backpassively&#13;
and wait for someone todoitfor&#13;
you ... Work within the governing&#13;
I&#13;
structure in a peaceful, consmc-&#13;
tive manner,"  admonishes Mr.&#13;
LarryTumer,aCECAadvisorwho&#13;
attended Friday's assembly.Inthe&#13;
nextseveral weeks, Turner'swords&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
heeded.&#13;
More forums will&#13;
be&#13;
held;&#13;
pe-&#13;
titions of protest will&#13;
be&#13;
circulated;&#13;
other avenues of protest will&#13;
be&#13;
explored. Student resolveandwill-&#13;
I&#13;
ingness to speak out inaconstnc-&#13;
tive way will be tested.&#13;
If&#13;
youare&#13;
concerned  about UW·Parkside's&#13;
newly instituted fee hikes,keep&#13;
your eyes and ears open foroppcr-&#13;
tunity to take an active partin&#13;
PSGA's work in upcomingweeks,&#13;
Make your voice heard.&#13;
VOLUNTEER  OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
Entertainers  for Mother's  Day Tea.  Instrumental and/or vocal&#13;
music requested by Brookside Care Center in Kenosha on SundaY,&#13;
May 9 at2 p.m. Thirty minutes - one hour. Please share yourtalents&#13;
with the residents and their friends on this special day.. See Carol&#13;
In&#13;
the Volunteer Office.&#13;
Habitat  for Humanity  in Racine needs workers.  Work days&#13;
are&#13;
Monday/Wednesday/Friday  from 9 a.m. to Noon and on Thursdays&#13;
from 5to 8p.m. Check bulletin boards for special work days forOW·&#13;
Parkside students or ask at the Volunteer Office in the Career Center.&#13;
No special skills needed.&#13;
MDA Summer  Camp Volunteer  Attendants  Needed. Can'yOU&#13;
give one week (June 12-19) to children with Muscular DystrophY?&#13;
Be the "arms and legs" for a child between ages 6 to21duringsummer&#13;
camp. Applications are available in the Volunteer Office. Don'tml&#13;
ss&#13;
this opportunity to help someone and have fun, too.&#13;
"Adopt  a Highway"  for Lutheran  Brotherhood  Branch 8038.&#13;
Volunteers are needed to help pick up litter between 31st and60th&#13;
streets on Green Bay Road on Saturday, April 24 beginning at9a:&#13;
m&#13;
.&#13;
A picnic lunch will be provided. This would be a great club actiVity.&#13;
Call the volunteer office, 595-2011, today.&#13;
GoJRthe  Volunteer  Office, WLLC D-175 for more info[!"a-&#13;
tion or&#13;
~~'ii&#13;
Carol at 595·2011.&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Volume 21, issue 25</text>
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              <text>Renovations to increase parking costs</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="91163">
              <text>side ... :er Out and About Week will&#13;
promote empathy and understanding.&#13;
Page 2&#13;
The UW-Parkside Women's&#13;
Centerhonored. Page3&#13;
Tim takes a look at the rebirth&#13;
of the Disney Empire&#13;
III Plugged In. Page 6&#13;
Editorial...&#13;
Take a chance to broaden your mind _&#13;
learn about gay and lesbian culture.&#13;
See it on Page 4&#13;
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 26 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
Renovations to increase parking costs&#13;
Gregory M. Gauthier schedule based on credi&#13;
News Writer been implemented: ~~ I~d has For a regular Faculty/Staff&#13;
In the struggle to meet it's $25; 6-10 credits $36' edits, Parking Permit, the merease will&#13;
~ year 93'-'94 operating bud- credits $42 The , w.'d 11+ be 10 percent, from the current&#13;
JCl. the University has decided to also 00'invalid d e~e ~nruts will $70 to $77. For reserved parking&#13;
implementnew parking permit semester. Add::~g et:esummer privileges, the rate will increase&#13;
IllCS for the new school year. year of one-semesterg ~' a full fr~m $195 to $205. These per-&#13;
Newrates for students, which student laking 11+ edi ts for a mrts will be valid through August&#13;
. fC . . . er ts can cost of each year&#13;
WID takee teet dunng registranon $102. .-&#13;
for the next school year, vary in The new Summer Sem . According to Campus PolIIIount,&#13;
due to a plan to distribute Permit will not lake effect until bee Chief Dave Ostrowski, new&#13;
Ibe cost more effectively. summer of '94 unu ~evenues generated by the rate&#13;
For all students laking six or permitsarestill'v~:re~~iarkmg increase, which would not bemorecredits,&#13;
the two-semester per- B re uirin un ugust come tangible until some time in&#13;
mil will 00 available for $72 _ an permi~ th~Uni~e:~y~:~~p~g~g NOh~elmberOff1993, will be used&#13;
. rease f d II .' 0 to e p payor a variety of park-&#13;
IIlC, .0 twBO 0 rars over last solve twoproblemsatonce: .firstt 0 m. g program expenses .includi.ng&#13;
years pnce. ut, un ike last year, generate significant new revenues debt servicing for the .&#13;
ihispermitwouldnOlbevalidafter without having to drastically in- to the COM ARTS arkinalot&#13;
lbeendof •Spnng'11 semester. Sum- crease thepnceofregular semester and oth er previo. us p projegcts&#13;
mer .permthits WI codsdt' t.hose who pa.rking fees ' and second , to dis- ($70 ,000 peryear ),snowremoval&#13;
reqUire em an a itional $16. tnbute the burden of cost more ($10,000 per year), crack filling&#13;
Added together, this would consu- fairly on those individuals who will and line painting ($6 000&#13;
1lJ1e:m $18 rate mcre~ over this be using the parking lot during the year), as well as for b~ildin~e:&#13;
year.spnc.e for a year s worth of summer, and away from the regu- reserve fund which is to be used&#13;
[mkingpnvileg~s. . lar semester users who do not. to pay for resurfacing of the PHY&#13;
~Wdents Iak~ngfewer than SIX . UW-Parkside students are not ED parking lot, tentatively schedcmIits&#13;
are not eligible to purchase being asked to bear this new bur- uled to lake place during the sumdle&#13;
two-semester permit. den alone, since rate increases have mer semester of 1994&#13;
For students wishin~ to pur- also been scheduled for faculty and Arecentdecision by theResicbaseone-&#13;
semester permits, a rate staff parking privileges, as well. Continued on Page 2&#13;
KRS-One to lecture at UW-Parkside&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB), the Urban League of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha and the Black StudentUnion&#13;
are pleased to present&#13;
I1IpperKRS-One (Kris Parker) of&#13;
BoogieDown Productions on Sunday,&#13;
April18 at 7l30p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. KRS-One will be lecturingontoday's&#13;
society, politics, and&#13;
lite value of education and youth as&#13;
our future. Tickets are on sale at&#13;
Ihe Union Information desk for&#13;
$1.00 for studentS and $3.00 for the&#13;
general public. Advance purchase&#13;
oftickets is encouraged as seating&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1993&#13;
What a day! . ~--~---=--&#13;
Students check into joining the Parkside Association ofCommunicaLOrs&#13;
during Liberal Arts Career Day last Wednesday, April 7. For complete&#13;
coverage, see the story below.&#13;
Liberal Arts Career Day This activity took intense coordination&#13;
between UW-Parkside&#13;
and the community. One person&#13;
important to the entire process&#13;
was Waleed Ahmad. Ahmad of&#13;
theUrbanLeagueandalsoaUWParkside&#13;
student Slated, "Parkside&#13;
gets a chance to witness the&#13;
keen insight of probably the most&#13;
spiritual, radical rapper in the universe:'&#13;
Ahmad works with Operation&#13;
Survival of the Urban&#13;
League. Through Ahmad's work&#13;
several community youth will be&#13;
Continued on Page 5&#13;
is limited.&#13;
The lecture addresses issues&#13;
which KRS-One's HEAL. (Human&#13;
Education Against Lies) coalition&#13;
addresses in their music.&#13;
When asked why this event was of&#13;
interest to the campus, Steven&#13;
Murphy of PAB emphatically replied,&#13;
"This is important Every&#13;
student deserves to hear a powerful&#13;
message about peace and humanity.&#13;
KRS-One gives this campus&#13;
that cbance. 1993 revolutionaries&#13;
don't come to Kenosha every day.&#13;
Iexpect a seUout"&#13;
formed students of the rewards,&#13;
and opportunities available and&#13;
skills to be learned by volunteering&#13;
time.&#13;
Since clubs and student organizations&#13;
are an excellent way to get&#13;
on-campus career experience •&#13;
many attended career day in hopes&#13;
of enlisting more students and rais·&#13;
ing money lhrough fund raisers.&#13;
Also in Main Place was the Shadow&#13;
Day booth. Students signed up to&#13;
be malChed with alumm and spend&#13;
a day at !hal alumni's place of&#13;
employment&#13;
Preparation for Career Day&#13;
was a chance for StudenlS to do&#13;
internships. Cynd, Stevens, a tudenl&#13;
who inlemed as a Iiaison between&#13;
committees thought it was a&#13;
good learning expenence. aid&#13;
Stevens, "Although the tnternshlp&#13;
was five credllS. I learned more&#13;
from this proJCCtthan five CredIts&#13;
worth of work. to&#13;
Dean Howard Cohen of the&#13;
School of Liberal Arts thoughl that&#13;
the day wenI well. Cohen hopes&#13;
that for many the day helped answer&#13;
lbe question of "What am I&#13;
(the student) going to do wllb my&#13;
degree?" Continued Cohen. "We&#13;
reached a 10l of students Ihrough&#13;
Continued on I'aae 2&#13;
Niek zabn&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Wednesday April 7,Liberal Arts&#13;
Career Day was held at UW-Parkside.&#13;
The annual event was organized&#13;
by the School of Liberal Arts.&#13;
the Career Center, and University&#13;
Relations in an effort to bener inform&#13;
students of career options in&#13;
the field of Liberal Arts.&#13;
Panels were held in six different areas&#13;
of the Liberal Arts from 9:00am&#13;
to 11 :QOarn.&#13;
Panelists were all alumni and&#13;
came from all over southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
Their careers were very dj·&#13;
verse, ranging from Kenosha County&#13;
District Auomey Robert Jambois to&#13;
the Branch Manager of the Bank of&#13;
Elmwood Kelly Kading, to Mary&#13;
Ann Terry a Technical Writer for&#13;
Johnson ConlIols, Inc.&#13;
In Main Place a tremendous&#13;
amount of balloons auracted student&#13;
allention to tables set up by the Career&#13;
Cenler, the Volunteer Program,&#13;
and numerous clubs and organizations.&#13;
The Career Center display offered&#13;
infonnation about careers in&#13;
the liberal arts, the current joil market,&#13;
and graduate school progr.llJls.&#13;
The VolUnteer Program display in-&#13;
IPSGA works to improve campus safety&#13;
Nick Zahn campus, the Escort program pro- and Orchard Courts,thePhysical&#13;
Assistant News Editor vided by the campus police wasn't Education and TallentHa11 buildlarge&#13;
enough and measures needed ings, and any other location(s) at&#13;
to laken in order to deter further the discretion of Campus Police&#13;
attaeks on the UW -Parkside cam - Chief OSlIowski and/or his despus.&#13;
ignated representatives.&#13;
Escort Coverage times include The trail program is under&#13;
but are notlimited to the following: the supervision of the Campus&#13;
-Sunday 7:30pm to II :OOpmMon- Police who will maintain a runday&#13;
through Thursday 7:30pm to ning count or the number of es-&#13;
12:00am. Provide no coverage for corts provided. At the end of the&#13;
Friday or Saturday nights as the program the Parkside Student&#13;
Library closes priorto dusk on Government Association will be&#13;
these two nights. informed ofthe number of people&#13;
At present. escort is provided escorted so as to determine the&#13;
either in the form of a ride or group feasibility of installing a permafrom&#13;
Main Place in W.LLC to all nent Safe-WCaolnkt.plhr=uaemil.pon age 2&#13;
parking lots, the ReSIdence hall&#13;
Last Friday the Parkside Student&#13;
Govemment Association&#13;
. Passed a Resolution implementing&#13;
a trial escort coverage program&#13;
beginningApril 12 until the end of&#13;
IlteSpring1993 semester. Tofund&#13;
I~$552.00 was requested to be&#13;
tmnsfered from vending machine&#13;
fundsto the campus Police Depart-&#13;
Olent&#13;
The program, inlIoduced by&#13;
Senator Bruce Rocco, is intended&#13;
10 insure the safety of the univer-&#13;
~ty body. The Student Senale felt&#13;
thatin light of the recent rape on&#13;
________________-:-_--------------I~ I&#13;
Tns RANGERNEWS,Page 2&#13;
Out and About Week to promote empathy&#13;
and understanding for alternative lifestyles&#13;
Ginger Helgeson FlyerCryerinfonnationstands Wear you jeans and can come out&#13;
Special to The Ranger News will also be posted all week around of the closet- or, show support no&#13;
campus to provide information mauer what your orientation.&#13;
about gay culture. Read and learn! At noon on Wednesday,&#13;
On Monday, April 19,atnoon, "Cleaning Campus Closets" in&#13;
GLO will host Annie Holmes of Union 207 will give you the tools&#13;
to be more inclusive of the&#13;
gay people you interact&#13;
with every day.&#13;
On Wednesday and Friday&#13;
eveningsat7 p.m. the&#13;
gay themed film "My&#13;
Beautiful Laundreue" will&#13;
be shown in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets are $1&#13;
students, $2 others.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Organization&#13;
,&#13;
Comedian Rick Burd will&#13;
entertain Thursday&#13;
evening at8 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
A free, non-alcoholic gathering/&#13;
dance will close out "Out and&#13;
About Week" Friday after the film&#13;
in Union Square. All gay, lesbian&#13;
and bisexual campus and community&#13;
members and supporters are&#13;
invited to enjoy music videos,&#13;
snacks and camaraderie.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
GLO and "Out and About Week"&#13;
activities, call Morten at 2650 or&#13;
Angieat2170. Thestudentorganization&#13;
meets Wednesdays at noon&#13;
in CART 143.&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
the number of alumni that came&#13;
back and shared practical advice&#13;
with students. Through listening to&#13;
the alumni, the relationship between&#13;
their education and a career&#13;
became much more clear. It gives&#13;
them more options here at Parkside."&#13;
Julie Anding, Career Development&#13;
Coordinator at the The&#13;
Career Center also thought that the&#13;
career day was a big success. "It&#13;
was very time consuming planning&#13;
it, but the alumni were eager to&#13;
participate. It reassured many students&#13;
that there is a life after Parkside."&#13;
Both Cohen and Andio&#13;
agreed that in future Liberal Ans&#13;
Career Days they'd like to see more&#13;
classroom involvement In parting&#13;
Dean Cohen noted that a big pan of&#13;
the day's success was due to different&#13;
offices in the University working&#13;
together as well as student involvement&#13;
in preparing for the pro-&#13;
April 15, 1993&#13;
Battle of the Bands is Friday night ~&#13;
,Melisa Halverson&#13;
Special to The Ranger News&#13;
What consists of five local&#13;
bands, a battle for some awesome&#13;
prizes, a lot of fun costs&#13;
only$2.00? You guessed it, UWParkside's&#13;
"6th Annual Battle of&#13;
the Bands." The sixth installment&#13;
of this annual extravaganza&#13;
promises to be one of the best&#13;
ever!&#13;
There certainly have been a&#13;
lot of changes since the contest&#13;
was inaugurated six years ago.&#13;
When "Battle" began six years&#13;
ago, the winning bands received&#13;
cash prizes which were donated&#13;
from the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Two years later the "Baule&#13;
of the Bands" committee was&#13;
able to work out a performance&#13;
on the Summerfest Rock Stage&#13;
fortheflIStplace band. Regrettably,&#13;
the radio station that sponsors&#13;
the Rock Stage was unable&#13;
to sponsor the program again this&#13;
year, hence a new grand prize for&#13;
this year's "Battle",&#13;
On the brighter side, we have&#13;
an even better prize for the winning&#13;
band. Trax-32 recording&#13;
studio will be donating studio&#13;
recording time to the wining&#13;
bands. But wait, will also be&#13;
awarded with a paid perfonnance&#13;
at UW-Parkside's End.&#13;
Besides the changes in the&#13;
prizes for "Battle,' there also&#13;
have been changes in the admissions&#13;
policies. In the past,&#13;
"Battle" has been open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
This brought in a lot of high&#13;
school kids, and because of that,&#13;
we were unable to sell beer at the&#13;
event This year we are giving it&#13;
back to you UW -Parkside: no&#13;
high school kids allowed! It will&#13;
only be open to college students&#13;
(from any college) and ,their&#13;
guests. This will allow us to have&#13;
a beer garden and make itanadult&#13;
event. You no longer have 10&#13;
worry about all those "teenyboppers"&#13;
hanging around.&#13;
The competition for this&#13;
year's "Battle" is intense. There&#13;
will be five bands competing for&#13;
the grand prize. They are: TrouserGeese,&#13;
3800, Confusion,&#13;
Lunge, and Arcana Diamond.&#13;
Four of the five bands hail from&#13;
Kenosha: Arcana Diamond states&#13;
it'S roots as being Lake Geneva.&#13;
For some good, cheap fun,&#13;
be in the Union Dining room at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Friday April 16.&#13;
The cost is a measly S2.00 for&#13;
college students and $3.00 for&#13;
their guests. Be There!&#13;
L- ---j~&#13;
UW-Parkside's Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Organization (GLO) will&#13;
present "Out and About" activities&#13;
next week, April 19-23,&#13;
in an effort to get the facts&#13;
straight about gay, lesbian&#13;
and bisexual culture.&#13;
The relative status of&#13;
gay individuals has become&#13;
a national American&#13;
conflict. Reactions&#13;
to President Clinton's&#13;
plan to openly enlist gays&#13;
in the military have made&#13;
public much of the private&#13;
homophobic fears&#13;
and hatred we have all Kenosha in Union 104. Will God&#13;
been exposed to. still love you if you come out of the&#13;
Largely an invisible minority, closet? Holmes' lesbian existence&#13;
gay culture has been challenged to and spiritual background in main-&#13;
"come out of the closet" during a stream Christian churches promtime&#13;
of opportunity as well as re- ises an interesting exploration of&#13;
pression. one woman's journey.&#13;
Here on campus, you will have Also on Monday, the Lesbian&#13;
your opportunity all next week to theme film "Desert Hearts" will be&#13;
air questions, support and com- shown in Union Cinema at 7 p.m.&#13;
ments on the subject of gay culture. The film will be repeated on Tues-&#13;
"Tell it to the Wall" will be posted day evening at the same place and&#13;
in Middle Main Place all week - time. Tickets are $1 for students,&#13;
and all you have to do is post a note $2 for others.&#13;
card on The Wall. Wednesday isBlueJeans Day.&#13;
Liberal.Arts Career Day&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 15&#13;
MEN'S BASEBALL· at Northwestern; Evanston, ll..; 3 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S SOFTBALL - at NE Illinois; 3:30 p.m,&#13;
ATHLETICS - UWP pool, gyms, etc, available for walk-in use forstudents with&#13;
validated !D's.&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 16&#13;
MUSIC - UWP Percussion and Brass Ensembles; CART 0-118; Noon; free.&#13;
WOMEN'S SOFTBALL· at Augustana, ll..; invitational; 4/16 and 17.&#13;
MUSIC - Battle of the Bands; Union Dining Room; 7:30 p.m.; $2 students, $3&#13;
others; PAB.&#13;
SATURDA Y, APRIL 17&#13;
MEN'S BASEBALL - at Concordia; Milwaukee, WI; doubleheader; 1 p.m,&#13;
MEN'S TRACK &amp; FIELD - at Carthage; Kenosha; invitational; Noon.&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK - at UW-Whitewater; Warhawk In~tational; II a.m.&#13;
SUNDAY, APRIL 18&#13;
Choral Concert 3:30pm First United Methodist Church&#13;
UW-P Men's Baseball at home Ipm doubleheader&#13;
TUESDAY, APRIL 20&#13;
UW-P Men's baseball at home 2pm doubleheader&#13;
UW-P Women's softball at home 3:30pm doubleheader&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21&#13;
Faculty recital: The McKeever duo CART 0-118 noon, free&#13;
UW-P Women's softball at homew, 3:30pm '&#13;
Bastille Day march at noon from Union Bridge to&#13;
Main Place for trial and executions&#13;
Safewalk program&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
The program already has the support of the Women's Center, who&#13;
coordinators are Jennifer Bums and Heather McCullough.&#13;
Students and Faculty that have used the service so far have respond&#13;
enthusiastically. Said Boyd Frederick of his ride "It was most enjoyable.&#13;
It's nice to see something that PSGA put together actually working. 1just&#13;
hope it gets used."&#13;
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
One-Time Events need YOU. Racine Beach Clean-up is scheduled on&#13;
Saturday, April 24th from 9:00am-12:00pm. Join the members of the&#13;
Parkside Community Outreach Club (PCOC) and spend the morning&#13;
making Racine a beautiful place to live &amp; visit. Transportation will be&#13;
provided from Parkside. On the same day. same time, the Lutheran&#13;
Brotherhood Branch 8038 are-beginning a new project called, "Adopt&#13;
A Highway". They need volunteers to help pick up litter between 31 st&#13;
street and 60th street on Green Bay Road. A picnic lunch will be&#13;
provided. See Carol for both events.&#13;
Third grade girls are asking for troop leader. Eight girls at Winslow&#13;
Elementary School in Racine are eager to start a noon hour Brownie&#13;
troop. Flexible day of week. Finish school year with weekly activities.&#13;
Call Laura Lee Egli, Girl Scout Office - 633-2400.&#13;
St. Luke' s Hospuol, Racine has openings. Emergency Care Center&#13;
Volunteer, Life Span Clerical Assistant. East Manor Volunteer (elderly&#13;
care). Physical Medicine-Clerical Assistant, and TV Hostess. Great&#13;
opportunity for people interested in a health career. Range from 1-5&#13;
hours weekly. Contact Marilyn Leccese, 636-2297 or Carol in the&#13;
Volunteer Office in the Career Center.&#13;
Help Mobile Meals in Kenosha Celebrate. Volunteer atone-lime event&#13;
during Mobile Meal's 20th Anniversary Open House on Friday, April&#13;
30th held at the Women's Club from 4:30-7:00 PM. Assist with"food&#13;
serving. Contact Carol in the Volunteer Office after April 19th.&#13;
Go to Volunteer Office, WLLC· D175 for more infonnation or call Carol&#13;
at 595-2011.&#13;
~~~============----------------------- ~15, 1993 p~rO~~~~~n~~:e~setn~;O;~~f~iu~~,~~~:tu~sin~H~om;jof~Affricfa c~~:f:~~;TH=ER~~=G[.=N,ws,=Page=3====;;;;;;;:;~&#13;
Feature Writer from theNewWOrl~Ord~:~g~es re-orgam~tion and the expansion What's U ? The Hom of Africa program. ~es, of Afnca s desen.&#13;
ill 1980, estimates placed the and open to the public IS ree . Discussionattheprevioustwo&#13;
,«Id's refugee population at 7.3 Moderated by F~da Kh ;nSlallments of the series has been&#13;
jiltionpOOple. Onlyadecadelater, Professor of Economics at~' rely, With people in attendance&#13;
~nlestimates of the number of Parkside, the program wilI f - rom both the Milwaukee and ChiflOplewhO&#13;
have been forcibly ex- Terry Plater, an Africa SChOI::~ cago.:;:e~.&#13;
~4from their homelands are in Professor of Urban Planni W e Refugees from the New&#13;
~ 131014 million range. UW-Milwaukee 109 at orld Order" series is sponsored&#13;
arthecurrent total, the Hom In her talk ,-Refugecs. De I by UW-Parkside's Center for In-&#13;
. ts f 4 6 '. ve - ternauonal St di .&#13;
,A!ricareglon accoun or to opments and Development in the wi u es 10 cooperation&#13;
lillianof the refugees. The Hom Hom of Africa" Prof th the Center for Ethnic Studies&#13;
d Africa, comprising Somalia, will focus on the pos~ssor Plater and is ~nother example of the&#13;
Uganda,Kenya,Ethiopia, Eritrea, of th 1 . I ve aspects Umverstty'sdedicationtocommu_&#13;
DjlJOuti, and the Sudan, and its mali::;~~e';'n~i:~~:g~o~: ~~~~~e. ;lads,,;s are welcome,&#13;
m-"g' ee situation is the subject of tries wiIth hiig h. populations of dis- dents locaalr scShloeolfacteualtcyh and stu-d&#13;
Wf(ineSday,ApriI2Ist's3:30-5:30 placed peoples . ' ers, an&#13;
I ture and discussion pro PI· interested citizens are encouraged ,JI\. ec - ater, who taught for three to attend the two hour program&#13;
,".,m.. 10 be heldMinI·room 107 of yea. rs a. t the .Un l.verslty 0f Lagos in For more information plea.se&#13;
UWTh.Peatrhkisridde'isnst0allimnaenrot Haolfl. the NAifgriecraia' ' WIII d ISCUSSthe Hom of call the Center for International&#13;
ca s. current refugee situation, Studies at (414)595-2701, mornuw.&#13;
Parkside'sCenterforlnterna- eco nomic deve 1opments, political ings, Monday - Thursday.&#13;
Permitfees raised&#13;
serious traffic flow difficulties are&#13;
expected as a consequence of the&#13;
construction.&#13;
According to Wallner, construction&#13;
on the Residence Hall&#13;
Lot will begin J ul y 5 and tentatively&#13;
finish on August 20. The&#13;
project will expand the existing&#13;
parking lot from 220 pennit slots to&#13;
235, and will include new lighting.&#13;
It will also move the entrance nearest&#13;
building four to a safer location&#13;
along Outer Loop Road, sinceconcern&#13;
has been voiced about the&#13;
trouble seeing traffic around the&#13;
comer in the current position.&#13;
The cost of the Residence Hall&#13;
Lot renovation is estimated at&#13;
$100,000.&#13;
Women's Center to receive state award&#13;
Conlinuedfrom Page 1&#13;
~ceHall to renovate its parking&#13;
ilcilitieshas caused some confuion&#13;
as to the nature, and purpose&#13;
of the University's decision to increaseits&#13;
own parking rates.&#13;
Assistant Director of Resi-&#13;
~ Life Steve Wallner, howlver,&#13;
points out that the residence&#13;
OOlI~" ...separate from the univergly.&#13;
Our fees [are collected]&#13;
diroughresidencehalI student parking&#13;
permits,"&#13;
Chief Ostrowski, aware of the&#13;
confusion,also slressed that "[The&#13;
Universily] is not planning any&#13;
work this fiscal year ...The ResidenceHall&#13;
Lot is not a factor in any&#13;
o[[TheUniversity's] fees pricing,&#13;
becausethe Residence Hall has&#13;
Chris Tishuk&#13;
Asst, Feature Editor&#13;
The Women's Center of the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
bas heen selected to receive the&#13;
WisconsinAmerican Association&#13;
ofUniversity Women Equity InitiativeAward.&#13;
This award is given&#13;
0iI1five times a year and honors&#13;
\tlSonsorprograms who have con-&#13;
Uibutedto significant progress in&#13;
~xequity. The Women's Center&#13;
lias nominated by Doris Kazell,&#13;
chosen to maintain its on parking&#13;
program, so any costs thatare associated&#13;
with the Residence Hall Lot&#13;
will be paid for by the residence&#13;
hall."&#13;
Ostrowski and Residence Hall&#13;
officials are working on a temporary&#13;
parking solution for residence&#13;
hall students while construction is&#13;
taking place. According to&#13;
Ostrowski, the Union Parking Lot&#13;
will probably be considered in the&#13;
arrangement, and he funber stated&#13;
that "it will not be free parking.&#13;
We'll charge them back for the use&#13;
of our lots just like wedo everyone&#13;
else."&#13;
According to both Chief&#13;
Ostrowski and Mr. Wallner, no&#13;
EducationR.A.l.KenoshaAAUW.&#13;
Representatives of the UWParkside&#13;
Women'sCenter,Jennifer&#13;
Bums and Heather McCullough,&#13;
will be travelling to the Wisconsin&#13;
AAUW Convention at the Holiday&#13;
Inn-ManitowOC on Saturday, April&#13;
24, to attend the luncheon and receive&#13;
the award given in honor of&#13;
the Women's Center. .&#13;
The Women's Center at UW -&#13;
Parkside has only been in existence&#13;
for four years but theircombination&#13;
of programs and services&#13;
has made them a substantial and&#13;
influential force on campus and&#13;
has enabled them to receive this&#13;
award after just4 years.&#13;
This year alone they havesponsored&#13;
such events as the Health&#13;
Fair, Rape Awareness Week, Domestic&#13;
Violence Awareness Week.&#13;
Women's History Month including&#13;
l4differenteventsaroundcampus&#13;
during the month of March,&#13;
and many other events throughout&#13;
the entire school year.&#13;
Continued on Page 5&#13;
PEER HEALTH EDUCATORS&#13;
*Alcohol Awarenes Educational Programs and Activities&#13;
(Alcohol, Date Rape, AIDS, Sexual Health)&#13;
*Peer Listening&#13;
*Campus Referral Agents&#13;
Applications available in the Student Assistance Office Molinaro DI24 (595-2365)&#13;
or Student Health Services - Molinaro Dl15 (595-2366) beginning Friday Apri19th&#13;
Students will be selected before the end of the academic year.&#13;
APPLICATION DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY APRil.- 28th&#13;
G~,Ysand Dolls to open April 23&#13;
Guys and Dolls" will be performed by the UW-Parkside's&#13;
Theatre Depanment April 23-24 and April 30-May I. Matinee&#13;
performances will be held Thursday, April 29 and Friday April 30&#13;
both at 10 a.m. ' ,&#13;
The production is the final performance of the 1992-93 Play at&#13;
Parkside Series, Perfonnances will begin at 7 p.m. 10 the COMM&#13;
ARTS Thealre. Admission is S8 for the genem! public and S7 for&#13;
senior citizens.&#13;
"Guys and Dolls" is a humorous story of a ew York gangster&#13;
who takes a bet that he can romance a Salvation Anny lady. The&#13;
producno~, based on a story by Damon Runyon, features the jazzbased&#13;
musical scoreofFrank Loesscrand includes the songs "Luck Be&#13;
ALady,''''A Bushel and A Peck, ....Take Back Your Mink ""Sue Me "&#13;
and "Sit Down You're Rockin' the Boat," ' ,&#13;
For tickets, call the UW-Parkside Ticket Officc between 8 a.m.&#13;
and 4 p.rn, Monday through Friday at x2564.&#13;
Physician assisted euthanasia&#13;
The controversial issues of assisted suicide will be discussed in a&#13;
free public lecture at the UW-Parkside Tuesday, April 13.&#13;
"Physician Assisted Euthanasia" will be presented by Dr. Carl&#13;
Junkennan, assistant director at the Center for the Study of Bioethics&#13;
at the Medical College of Wisconsin. The lecture will be held at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in GRNQ 103, and is sponsored by the university Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Junkennan will address the issues of medicaloctions leading 10&#13;
death, arguments thal assisted suicide is illegal and unethical, and&#13;
effects on society. He will also discuss arguments fa\"Clring as lSted&#13;
suicide, including the realities of current medical progress and the&#13;
concept of ..ational suicide. OLhcrtopics covered will include m~t.-&#13;
ingful doctor/patient relationships, free will and incurable condiuons&#13;
and unrelenting suffering.&#13;
For more infonnation, call lbe Philosophy Depanmcnt at .,233 J.&#13;
Acquaintance rape mock trial&#13;
An "Acquaintance Rape Mock Trial" Will be held on campus on&#13;
Friday, April 16. The event is designed to increase awareness of the&#13;
issues involved in acquainmnce rape.&#13;
The free public program will be held at 5 p.m. In the Umon&#13;
Cinema. A question-and-answer period will follow. The program IS&#13;
sponsored by the Women's Center, Campu Police, Office ofSludeOl&#13;
Life, Dramatic Ans Department, Pre-Law Club, Peer Health EduCltors&#13;
and the Student Assisumce Program.&#13;
The mock uiaI participants will be: Judge, Hon Mary Kay&#13;
Wagner-Mallory, Kenosha County Circuil Coun; pro. ·ulOr, Shelley&#13;
Rusch, assistant districl attorney, Kenosha COlIOIY;and defense attorney,&#13;
Phillip Mary, atlOmey, Madrigano, Zievers, Aiello and laqulDla.&#13;
UW-Parkside students and staff will serve as the mock tnal&#13;
victim, accused, coun reporter, police wiUless and medical wilOC .. A&#13;
jury of 12 will be selected randomly from the audience.&#13;
For more infonnation on the program, contact Diane Welsh,&#13;
assistant director of Student Life, at .2278.&#13;
Indian scholarship deadline near&#13;
American Indian and Alaska ative college studenlS who nccd&#13;
financial help for graduate or professional school for the 1993·94 ~car&#13;
should consider applying to the American Indian Gradu:lte eCOler in&#13;
Albuquerque, New Mexico. This program provides h Jar hIps for&#13;
Indians in all fields of sludy for masters and dOClOrate degree .&#13;
To be eligible for an AIGC fellowship, an apphcaOl must an&#13;
enrolled member of a federally-recognized tribe or AI", ka all\C&#13;
group; planning to be enrolled as a full-time gradu:lleludent 10 a&#13;
maslersor doctorateprograrn at an occrediled U.S. college 10 I -94:&#13;
and an applicant for campus-based aid at their college fmancial aid&#13;
offices. If eligible, please contact AIGC irnmediaIel~ aL Amencan&#13;
Indian Graduate Center, 4520 Montgomery Blvd. NE, ulle I-B,&#13;
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109, (505 81-4584.&#13;
TilE RANGER NEWS, Page,4 April 15, 1993&#13;
Editorial&#13;
A chance to gain understanding ... LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Andrew J. Patch&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Homosexuality and so-called&#13;
"alternative lifestyles" together&#13;
constitute one of the most hotly&#13;
cootested topics in the national and&#13;
local media today.&#13;
On the six o'clock news, in&#13;
Time Magazine, even down toUWP's&#13;
First Amendment, we are bombarded&#13;
with stories and opinions&#13;
dealing with the legality, morality&#13;
and simple existence of individuals&#13;
that do not follow the "traditioal&#13;
lifestyles" ofmainstrearn America,&#13;
i.e., heterosexuality.&#13;
Constantly, it seems, we are&#13;
presented with heated debates over&#13;
gays in the military, homophobic&#13;
beatings, and other issues of similar&#13;
nature.&#13;
A great deal of these difficulties,&#13;
I believe, are based on misunderstanding&#13;
and miscommunication.&#13;
00 you - does anyone except&#13;
foragay or lesbian person themself&#13;
- really know what it is like to be&#13;
homosexual in a dominantly (and&#13;
of len fascistic) heterosexual sociely?&#13;
Did you ever stop to wonder?&#13;
Next week, you'll have your&#13;
chance.&#13;
The Gay and Lesbian Organi-&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
A strange case of library head&#13;
zation at UW-Parkside (GLO) is&#13;
sponsoring"OutandAboutWeek,"&#13;
a week-long celebration and information&#13;
fest of and for "alternative&#13;
lifestyles" April 19-23. This is&#13;
your opportunity to gain some understanding&#13;
of "the other side of&#13;
the issue."&#13;
For too long, Americans have&#13;
been content simply to sit back and&#13;
accuse anything we don't understand&#13;
or don't agree with of being&#13;
either outright wrong or morally&#13;
inferior, almost unavoidably regarding&#13;
whatever it may be with&#13;
fear and suspicion (if this is not the&#13;
case, explain the problem of gays&#13;
in the military).&#13;
It is time that we finally conquered&#13;
our pathetic little stereotypes&#13;
and machismo self-perceptions&#13;
and actually learned about&#13;
someone else rather than lumping&#13;
them iota some "weirdo"-typecategory.&#13;
Take the time next week to&#13;
attend one of the "Out and About"&#13;
events. Meet and talk to someone&#13;
that is homosexual, lesbian, or bisexual.&#13;
You may be surprised to find&#13;
they aren't much different than "normal"&#13;
people.&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
In some of the past editions of&#13;
The Ranger News (mainly April 8&#13;
) I have noticed that some people&#13;
have taken it upon themselves to&#13;
slander Andy Patch.&#13;
To those of you who don't&#13;
know, when .Andy took on the position&#13;
as Editor-In-Chief of The&#13;
Ranger News, there were many&#13;
obstacles that he had to overcome,&#13;
the main one being the incredible&#13;
debt that was created by the three&#13;
Editors-In-Chief prior to Andy and&#13;
then left for Andy to deal with.&#13;
When Andy began as Editor-&#13;
In-Chief, The Ranger News was in&#13;
a great deal of debt ($18,000).&#13;
Through Andy [and a devoted&#13;
staff], The Ranger News has&#13;
shrunken that debt by more than 75&#13;
percent (to under $4,5(0).&#13;
As Andy has stated in his editorial,&#13;
The Ranger News is also&#13;
understaffed. How do you expect&#13;
these very few people to put out a&#13;
newspaper any larger than it has&#13;
been when there is no one to write&#13;
forit? As Andy said, the rest of the&#13;
staff has to write numerous articles&#13;
each week, which is a lot for one&#13;
person. You also have to remember&#13;
that these people are students&#13;
just like you and me.&#13;
I give kudos to Andy Patch for&#13;
the excellent job he has done as&#13;
Editor-In-Chief of The Ranger&#13;
News for the 1992-1993 academic&#13;
year. I am sure that many students&#13;
take the student newspaper and all&#13;
of the hard work Andy and his staff&#13;
have put into it for granted. I just&#13;
hope that the 1993-'94 Editor-In-&#13;
Chief doesn't.&#13;
-Melissa Hal verson&#13;
knows and doesn't care ..."&#13;
This isa huge leap without any&#13;
evidence or substance to back it up.&#13;
And since that is the root of the rest&#13;
ofhislher argument, the rest falls to&#13;
pieces.&#13;
I also quote from his/her letter,&#13;
"All of the Afro-American students&#13;
on campus are here to get an&#13;
education. We have enough day to&#13;
day problems that we don't need to&#13;
be mentally beaten down like Mr.&#13;
Rodney King."&#13;
All of the students, regardless&#13;
of race, sex, creed, lifestyle, etc ...&#13;
are here to get an education.&#13;
Everyone has problems.&#13;
As far as the reference to being&#13;
"...beaten down like Mr. Rodney&#13;
King" is a huge exaggeration. If&#13;
any racist or harassing comments&#13;
were being made to you from a&#13;
memberofthecampuspoliceforce,&#13;
you should take your complaints to&#13;
the administration.&#13;
In reference to the "obscene&#13;
question," "00 you attend this college?"&#13;
It is standard amongst all&#13;
colleges to check !D's of students&#13;
going into campus events an&#13;
dorm's. And if it's any consolation,&#13;
I'm white (not that it makes a&#13;
difference) and I've been asked&#13;
that question, and even the "unnecessary&#13;
stares" from many other&#13;
campus police departments.&#13;
If you haven't read the paper&#13;
lately, no new campus police are&#13;
getting hired, one position is being&#13;
eliminated.&#13;
So before you file a lawsuit,&#13;
costing the university lots of money&#13;
on a lawyer, thereby raising&#13;
everyone's tuition, I'd like to make&#13;
a suggestion. Talk to the campus&#13;
police, talk to the administration,&#13;
and get facts instead of"probably' s"&#13;
before you start accusing good&#13;
people of racism.&#13;
Does she know that there are&#13;
more rapes occuring on campus?&#13;
Has she entertained the idea of&#13;
visiting a HOP or BSU meeting?&#13;
Does she know how the organizations&#13;
are run?&#13;
Is she afraid to be among her&#13;
minority student body?&#13;
Afterrecruiting,u here to maintain&#13;
your quota, what have you&#13;
done for us lately?&#13;
Did she ever think of offering&#13;
more ethnic courses during theday?&#13;
I believe Ms. Kaplan is too&#13;
satisfied with her position to care&#13;
about her minority students. Parkside&#13;
needs a change. Anew Editor-&#13;
In-Chief like Steve Moore would&#13;
add an ethnic poiot-of-view to our&#13;
blah and dull paper which has gone&#13;
26 long years without ever having&#13;
a black editor!&#13;
A new SOC President like&#13;
Vince Bomer would limit SOC&#13;
members from cutting up minority&#13;
organizations' budgets. Also, we&#13;
desire a new chancellor who would&#13;
take the time out of their schedule&#13;
to attend a BSU or HOP meeting&#13;
and make the minority students&#13;
feel more like students rather than&#13;
quotas to prevent her from losing&#13;
her job!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Frustrated&#13;
Gabe Kluka&#13;
Columnist&#13;
rhythmic twitching of the leg, and&#13;
occasional rnutterings of various&#13;
songs that will not leave the head of&#13;
the person who is suffering from&#13;
rom-tom-ins. To most people this&#13;
behavior makes the person suffering&#13;
from this ailment, to appear&#13;
lively and awake. Take heed, however,&#13;
as this is soon followed by the&#13;
next stage of library head, which is&#13;
catatonia.&#13;
Students studying all tltings&#13;
biological and psychological, will&#13;
be fascinated by the fascinating&#13;
display of catatonia that takes place&#13;
daily in our beloved library. Those&#13;
of you not studying the bio-psychology&#13;
stuff can view this phenomenon&#13;
as well, by taking note of&#13;
these easy to spot symptoms.&#13;
First, and most notably, is the&#13;
long blank stare that is usually directed&#13;
at fluorescent lights. The&#13;
long blank stare is usually accom&#13;
Continued on Page 6&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
CAMPUS TAKES ADVAN-,&#13;
TAGE OF STUDENTS!&#13;
Due to the increase in students'&#13;
tuition and fees also in housing k&#13;
many students may not be able to I&#13;
pay for all of their costs if they rely i&#13;
on financial aid (which may be nor ~&#13;
more than $5,960 per year because&#13;
of proposed budget cuts) to pay for&#13;
their schooling.&#13;
One of the increases is because&#13;
"the student housingparking&#13;
lot needs to be repaved," says student&#13;
housing personnel. Permits&#13;
will go up from $45 to $90, maybe&#13;
even $100 per year. Then they tag&#13;
on a plumbing charge just toplunge&#13;
your toilet if it is stopped up. I&#13;
thought that's what a maintenance&#13;
man was for; if this is such a problem&#13;
for that person then replace&#13;
him. I thought this was what these&#13;
types of people do for a living!&#13;
Continued on Page 6&#13;
Hello again, I'm back after a&#13;
short sabbatical due to library head.&#13;
Library head is a strange neurological&#13;
disorder that affects the&#13;
brain. It is similar to mall head in&#13;
most ways, except that the urge put&#13;
on walking shoes and infiltrate and&#13;
destroy the society of mall walkers&#13;
isn't there.&#13;
Scientific evidence presented&#13;
by several experts in the field of&#13;
library science, have pointed out&#13;
several symptoms of library head,&#13;
and we shall Cover them in order of&#13;
severity, from least to greatest.&#13;
Most people have suffered&#13;
from the earliest symptom of Iibraryhead,&#13;
which is known as tomtom-&#13;
iris, This is characterized by&#13;
an incessant lapping of a pen or&#13;
pencil on a desktop or table.&#13;
There is an accompanying&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I must disagree with 'Justice&#13;
and Reality' regarding their Comments&#13;
on the UW-Parkside campus&#13;
police.&#13;
The fact that there are no minority&#13;
police officers is irrelevant&#13;
to the accusation of racism. For&#13;
example, just because there are no&#13;
African-American CompUler Science&#13;
professors doesn't mean that&#13;
the Computer Science Department&#13;
is racist.&#13;
From 'Justice and Reality's&#13;
letter I quote, 'The chief probably&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Trutli and Intelligence&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Whatarethedutiesofourchan_&#13;
cellar? Ms. Kaplan, our chancellor,&#13;
wasn't present for the minority&#13;
leadership conference, again.&#13;
Has she noticed there's no&#13;
minonty campus police officers?&#13;
Does she know why the campus&#13;
officers harass minorities?&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
THE RANGER NEWS STAFF&#13;
Edltor.ln·Chlef Andrew J. Patch&#13;
~Layo:ut:E~dito;rd.::~~:.~::::.:::::::::.~:.A:n~n:am:~a:ria:~:se:xNt:on::~::~:.;::~&#13;
Assistant Feature Editor Chris Tishuk&#13;
Sports Editor Ted Mcintyre&#13;
Copy Editors·..··..····· Carlise Newman, Gabe Kluka&#13;
~~~~~;:.~r:::::::::::::::::::.:::·::::::::::::~~e ~~V;:: Columnists Gabe Kluka, George Harris Jr.&#13;
Tim Kretschmann, C.J. Nelson, Joe Kane&#13;
Canoonist. , , -•.... " "" .., ,.,Moss&#13;
General Staff Joe Buenker. LoriCarr, AlanCook, Joel Dahlstrom.&#13;
Greg Gauthier, MarquitaHaynes. ChrisIngram,&#13;
CindyMeekma,C. J. Nelson.Tracy Pees, TimRadke,&#13;
Cory Rath, Christine Wilson&#13;
Busln Manager ,,, Mike Paupore&#13;
Assistant Business Managers Shala Anastasio, Karen Slater&#13;
AdYI.~r·· "; , Judy Logsdon~ Jan Nowak, Stuart Rubner&#13;
Executive Committee Andrew J. Patch, Annamaria sexton,&#13;
Carlise NeWman, Gabe Kluka, Chris Tlshuk,&#13;
Michael Paupore, samuel Manchester&#13;
900 Wood Road Box 2000, Kenosha,WI 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial(414) 595-2287 Business (414) 595-2295&#13;
The RangerNews ispublishedevery Wednesdayduringthe&#13;
academic year except over breaks and holidays.&#13;
The RangerNewsis written and edited by students of UWParksiele,&#13;
who are solelyresponsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content&#13;
munity issues. A representative sample may be published&#13;
when numerous letters expressing similiar viewpoints are&#13;
recieved. Letters to the Editor should be typed and doublespaced&#13;
and include the author's name, social security number,&#13;
and telephone number. Letters may not exceed 250 words and&#13;
should be delivered to The Ranger News, Room WLLC D-&#13;
139C, before 4 pm on Friday prior to puiblication. Letters that&#13;
do not meet the aforementioned requirements, as well as those&#13;
containing offensive, libelous or misleading information, will&#13;
be returned to the 'author to be rewritten: The Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
Letter to EdItor Policy&#13;
The Ranger News encourages and invites letters to the&#13;
Editor. Letters disagreeing, or agreeing with an editorial,&#13;
article, or feature published in The Ranger News are&#13;
welcomed,as are readers' viewpoints on campus and comcontinuedfrom&#13;
Page 1 frankly with the bitter realities of&#13;
ablelD attend KRS-On~'s lecture, life in urban America with songs&#13;
KRS-One has an mterestmg like "Crack Attack," the group's&#13;
baCkgrounthdat shaped the lecture self-financed debut single, which&#13;
ibal the campus Will hear. A run- was an underground success. Soon&#13;
I'/Iayat 13, Parker devoted the thereafter the group began work on&#13;
nexlseveny~arsofhis life to l~- what would become the legendary&#13;
ingandsufVlval,spendinghoursm debut LP, Criminal Minded, retbe&#13;
public library between being leased independently in 1986.&#13;
IiOUIlced from subways to public Packed with bleak, hard-hitting and&#13;
shelterS. sometimes ironic portraits of street&#13;
Atthe Bronx's Franklin Shel- life, such as "Poetry," "Super How,"&#13;
ter, a public shelter for homeless "The Bridge is Over," and the title&#13;
men, Kris Parker met his greatest track "Criminal Minded," the&#13;
inspiration: a charismatic coun- record exploded on the streets.&#13;
5Olonramed Scott Sterling, aka OJ One night in August, Scott was&#13;
ScottLaRock,who encouraged him shot and killed after he and four&#13;
m honehis burgeoning poetic tal- friends had gone to a housing&#13;
enl. KRS-One (Knowledge Reigns project in the South Bronx to settle&#13;
SupremeOver Nearly Everyone) a misunderstanding. Shaken by&#13;
andScott then formed Boogie theincident,somemembersofBDP&#13;
DownProductions in homage to didn't want to carry on, but Kris, in&#13;
!he borough that spawned them, the spirit of'the group, had to con-&#13;
!he "Boogie Down" Bronx. tinue the battle: "Scott wanted us&#13;
From its inception, BDP dealt to move on and up." And so they&#13;
did.&#13;
In 1987,BoogieDownProductions,&#13;
now on Jive Records&#13;
released By All Means Neees:&#13;
sary, a landmark in establishing&#13;
rap as a tool for enlightenment&#13;
Using the Malcolm X-inspired&#13;
title and cover an, Parker appealed&#13;
to the criminal minded&#13;
elements of audience and then&#13;
focused them in a more positive&#13;
direction. "I'm concerned about&#13;
the kids who don't know what&#13;
time it is," says Parker. "I want&#13;
to show them that there are different&#13;
ways to be radical."&#13;
. During the last few years&#13;
KRS-One has lectured at universitiesacross&#13;
the country . The&#13;
lecture and extensive question&#13;
andanswerperiodgivessludenls&#13;
the chance to interact with the&#13;
undisputed rap rebel. His appearance&#13;
Sunday at UW-Parkside&#13;
should not be missed.&#13;
Second Nature b Moss&#13;
"C 1993 Moss&#13;
When Texan Ross Perot goes parachuting&#13;
Women's CenteLhm1ored __&#13;
Continued from Page 3&#13;
And this Friday they will besponsoring&#13;
one of their most ambitious&#13;
events, the acquaintance rape mock&#13;
trial.&#13;
It is because of this direct involvement&#13;
with school activities and&#13;
the services it supplies La women&#13;
around campus that they will be receiving&#13;
this award.&#13;
Two of the other four awardees&#13;
this year are the Optimist Club of&#13;
West Metro Milwaukee who hosts&#13;
The Optimist Charity Class-c. a&#13;
first-class lOumamemspotlighting&#13;
high school girls basketball and&#13;
Ethel Sloan, Professor at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
who has been chose by the&#13;
National Science Foundauon to&#13;
lead a 5250,000 project thal will&#13;
encourage women and minonties&#13;
inthe UWsystem 10 pursue careers&#13;
in science. mathematics. engineering,&#13;
and technology.&#13;
~.~..~=~==~~::=====---------------------------- ~~,1993 ObSe~rv:vaatiti:Oo~BBnll~ilJsI~:CClhu·nrttoonnvveenrsrrUlSs~thheenmliiTIlihta~-~======;T'I£~R~ANG~E.;NE;WS~Pa'g~e5&#13;
CJ. Nelson President Clinton kee s normi . ry Columnist upin the news and CPS popping man weanng the unifonm of the&#13;
on - pan to the military, or refusing to ride in&#13;
apparent amazement of reporters vehicles with military pe&#13;
and others rson-&#13;
I " nel. To the military these are&#13;
. am not surpnsed at the nega- extreme insults&#13;
ltihvePrreac.udoen the militar.y haass wWiIth ThiISPresi.d.em who ignored&#13;
e eSI nt, IservedmtheNavy his tum to serve now has the gall&#13;
for 17 years ,and to say the ntilitary to talk about service to the na-&#13;
ISconservative ISanalogous to say- tion, then insult its military leadm~&#13;
uruversiues tend to be liberal. ers. And now he wonders why&#13;
It s a given ge~eral tendency. By service members and veterans&#13;
and large the ,:"ihtary considers its are not supportive and in awe of&#13;
CoTmmander 10 Chief to be anti- his leadership . In the servic.e&#13;
muuary and a draft dodger, with yourespecttheofficeoftheman&#13;
good reason. and not necessarily the man.&#13;
In the last two months there William Blythe Jefferson&#13;
aren:ports of senior White House Clinton hasdonenothingto merit&#13;
officials belittling senior military the personal respect of the miliofficers,&#13;
refusing any help from a tary or its veterans.&#13;
In 1968 the United States reed&#13;
the presence of one Wil-&#13;
~ Blythe Jefferson Clinton to&#13;
jlSiStin some unpleasantness then&#13;
jlioldingin southeast Asia.&#13;
Mr. Clinton's response was to&#13;
lciII'C the country and to actively&#13;
'late against the United States&#13;
~eatJroad. What Clinton did or&#13;
did not do during the period of&#13;
\968-1972 in regards to opposing&#13;
Pl VietnaffiWar has never been&#13;
mid andlikely never will be.&#13;
''Wailaminute.''yousay. "that&#13;
vns almost 25 years ago. n True&#13;
tlIOUghho,wever, I notice that the&#13;
,ulitaI1a'nd its relationship to now ~S-One lecture on Sunday&#13;
APRIL 19TH 8:30PM&#13;
The heirs of a venerable swing tradition,&#13;
Harmonious Wail cuts new acoustic&#13;
groves with soul stirring enthusiam and&#13;
eloquence. String swing with a funky ring...&#13;
Harmonious Wail!&#13;
FREE, COME AND&#13;
SWING WITH us.&#13;
UNIOND&#13;
SPONSORED BY PAB&#13;
THERANGERNEWS,Page 6&#13;
April 15, 1993 -&#13;
Plugged In!&#13;
Finally, the mouse can roar again&#13;
Timothy E. Kretschmann&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
It's been a while since the glory&#13;
days of Disney. Disney has been&#13;
regarded as a joke around Hollywood&#13;
for quite a while-some&#13;
would even say from the day Walt&#13;
Disney died. (By the way, the rumor&#13;
of Walt being cryogenically&#13;
preserved as a popsickle for future&#13;
generations is absolutely false. I've&#13;
gone to great pains to dig up the&#13;
facts on this one and apparently iris&#13;
exactly what I wrote in the previous&#13;
sentence: only a rumor.)&#13;
Disney, for quite some time,&#13;
had resembled its failed foray into&#13;
Sci-Fi in the '70's,TheB/ackHole.&#13;
Nothing seemed to be able to break&#13;
free of its destructive forces. Disney&#13;
was a studio spiraling into a kind of&#13;
hell. Look at some of the animated&#13;
"treats" they had been dishing out&#13;
in the '70's to early 80's. (Anyone&#13;
who's witnessed The Aristocatscan&#13;
attest to this.) Yeech! They even&#13;
lost their TV series for a while&#13;
(though, I reallyean 'tsay I've ever&#13;
been much of a fan of anything&#13;
they've produced forTV since Walt&#13;
stopped introducing for it-something&#13;
I never had the pleasure of&#13;
seeing on live TV).&#13;
Recently, however, the king&#13;
of Family Entertainment has returned-&#13;
and big time. How? Some&#13;
will say a return of family values.&#13;
Some will say it's all the anklebiters&#13;
the yuppies have been spawning&#13;
recently. I think that is all a big&#13;
pile of crap.&#13;
Obviously, Michael Eisner is&#13;
one of the main reasons and his&#13;
lesson can teach anyone scratching&#13;
nickels together what to do with&#13;
their money. Diversify!&#13;
Disney has set up a slew of&#13;
new Disneyland parks including&#13;
Japan and Europe. In fact, Paul&#13;
Harvey recently reported that&#13;
Disney land-Tokyo had about 125&#13;
million visitors in its first year&#13;
which is approximately the entire&#13;
population of Japan. Disney opened&#13;
two new studios that have been&#13;
monikered Touchstone and Hollywood&#13;
Pictures.&#13;
It's this approach, along with&#13;
thereinvestment in the Disney Animation&#13;
Department, that has resurrected&#13;
the careening crew of Disney&#13;
Studios. The Animation&#13;
Department's revitalization has&#13;
become front page news ever since&#13;
thestanIing nominations forBeauty&#13;
and the Beast at the Oscars two&#13;
years ago. Now, with the mega&#13;
success of Aladdin it seems there is&#13;
no stopping Disney animators. (Of&#13;
course, some wonder if Menken/&#13;
Rice as songwriters will have the&#13;
same magical touch that Menken/&#13;
Ashman had.)&#13;
Then, there is Touchstone.&#13;
Touchstone was set up as the PG &amp;&#13;
PG-B sectionofDisney, thus keeping&#13;
the Disney name sacred with&#13;
family enterlainment. Touchstone&#13;
made some very successful films&#13;
includingSp/ash, which started Ron&#13;
Howard's directing career, and&#13;
Three Men and a Baby, which&#13;
should have ended Ted Danson's&#13;
career. (Well, I can dream, anyway!)&#13;
Touchstone also brought back&#13;
the idea of a talent stable (though&#13;
theword talent is being used loosely&#13;
here in some cases). Richard&#13;
Dreyfuss, Shelley Long, Bette&#13;
Midler, and others repeatedly appeared&#13;
in Touchstone films.&#13;
Some of these flicks were&#13;
pretty damned awful, which supports&#13;
my idea that Touchstone is a&#13;
return to the old "Studio" system.&#13;
Instead of going for the glory each&#13;
time, they were content to make&#13;
some programmers that were destined&#13;
for much longer stays on video&#13;
than celluloid.&#13;
Look to Moon over Parador&#13;
and Hello, Again as typical of this&#13;
philosophy. Now with the rise of&#13;
the direct-to-video market that has&#13;
been proven in the horror genre&#13;
most dramatically (especially a&#13;
wonderful little company called&#13;
Full Moon), perhaps some of this&#13;
mildly entertaining pablum will go&#13;
directly to the small screen.&#13;
Hollywood Pictures' direction is&#13;
far more interesting.&#13;
So far, it hasn't done a whole&#13;
lot. It was set up as the Adult, Rrated&#13;
wing of Disney.Thus far, its&#13;
.t back to yOU&#13;
We're g.lV'Ing k\ids a\lowed"..&#13;
high school&#13;
parkside··no&#13;
1.0. is r&#13;
eqUired to g .&#13;
et In&#13;
(18 and older) must be&#13;
Non-college studen~~ge student&#13;
with a co&#13;
$2 COllegestUd&#13;
$3 guests (18 ents&#13;
and old er) Of Coli&#13;
Prizes donated by ege SlUds.&#13;
Trax·32recording&#13;
studio&#13;
only films of note come from&#13;
Spielberg buddy director Frank&#13;
Marshall with his moviesAlive and&#13;
Arachnophobia (perhaps he'll&#13;
move on to the letter B in the future),&#13;
which have done some mild&#13;
box office. Other stuff, like Run,&#13;
has bombed out right-in the case&#13;
of Run, for good reason.&#13;
No matter the destiny of Hol-&#13;
Iywood Pies, Touchstone is very&#13;
strong and Disney is on a rebound&#13;
from nowhere. Heck, they can even&#13;
afford a hockey team of their own&#13;
now, named appropriately, The&#13;
MightyDucks. (By the way,Ducks&#13;
did tremendous box office and was&#13;
one of the best held secrets of big&#13;
films last year.&#13;
Family films tend not to get&#13;
covered by newspapers and TV&#13;
often because they aren't exciting.&#13;
Exception: Beauty &amp; the Beast and&#13;
Aladdin. Mainly this isdue to Academy&#13;
Award nominations. The Little&#13;
Mermaid didn't get a tenth of the&#13;
publicity Aladdin got when it&#13;
opened.)&#13;
Disney is back, but some still&#13;
question, as in the past, if this glitz&#13;
is good for children. But as 01'&#13;
Walter Elias Disney said when he&#13;
was alive, "I've never called this&#13;
an. It's show business, and I'm a&#13;
showman." Until next week, stay&#13;
Plugged In!&#13;
LEITERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Continued from Page 4&#13;
Just put a plunger on the list of&#13;
things a student can use when they&#13;
pay the $5 social fee.&#13;
We also have an increase in&#13;
minimum food budget from $455&#13;
to $475 that may not look like a lot&#13;
but when your money gets cutshort&#13;
by the people who are over in the&#13;
financial aid office, and other expenses&#13;
go up it will not work out!&#13;
Can we find some sort of solution&#13;
to this problem or are we going&#13;
to sit here and get nothing for something?&#13;
Take a look at what your budget&#13;
is for next year!&#13;
Take a look at what your expenses&#13;
are next year!&#13;
James E. Briggs&#13;
A STUDENT!&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
Continued from Page 4&#13;
panied by bouts of lead eyelids,&#13;
and the yips. The yips are theasso_&#13;
ciated effort of the brain trying to&#13;
wake up the body. Most people&#13;
suffering from the yips will usually&#13;
make strange noises while trying&#13;
to wake themselves up, but this is&#13;
to no avail. The body is consumed&#13;
by full-blown library head.&#13;
Full blown library head is&#13;
symptomized primarily by sleep.&#13;
However, there are some delightful&#13;
side effects such as drooling,&#13;
unintelligible grunts, and rubbing&#13;
of the face. You can tell a person&#13;
who has had a bout of library head&#13;
by several indicative factors: Cloth&#13;
marks or lines on the face from&#13;
sleeping on either a library COUCh,&#13;
ora spiral notebook; Smeared notes&#13;
and wet clothes from drooling; Hair&#13;
smashed on one side of the head&#13;
from sleeping on a table.&#13;
If you see a person coming&#13;
down with library head, you can do&#13;
one of two things, buy them a&#13;
caffeinated beverage, Or Slay&#13;
around for some good laughs.&#13;
The cause of library head has&#13;
not been proven, but theoriesrr c ge&#13;
from Iseus' theory of library air,&#13;
invented by Nancy Iseus and .onceming&#13;
the stagnation of the air, to&#13;
my theory of florescent lights,&#13;
which concerns the beautiful Ii: 11-&#13;
ing in the library and its reflecuon&#13;
of book pages. However, a strong&#13;
case can be made for boredom.&#13;
AITENTION&#13;
PROFESSIONALS AND&#13;
COLLEGE GRADUATES!&#13;
Get Networked!&#13;
Get Hired!&#13;
Send us vcar resume "nd plUIi&#13;
tete the counlry's llnl tvlll' compvlerlzed&#13;
Employment Network..&#13;
Employment Nefwork. Inc. of&#13;
Green Bay offers YOU ctr e cr&#13;
compuler access 10 hundreds of&#13;
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U9.9S! SAVE iSO! MONEY BACK&#13;
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for ONLY S49.'S! Check or Money Order .acceereo.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
NETWORK Inc.&#13;
Mon. lhru Fd. 9-5&#13;
1-8()().346-JOBS; 496-3130&#13;
Drama Club Presents ..&#13;
Brat &amp; Com Roast&#13;
Tuesday, April 20th&#13;
10:00-2:00&#13;
Also: Guys and Dolls&#13;
Ticket Reservations&#13;
&amp; Entertainment&#13;
Ranger Report ... Ranger pitching staff has teriffic trio v Bye Bye Blue By Corey Rath "&#13;
TheUniversity of Wisconsin Eau- Sports Wrrter SWIn and a drive&#13;
The University of Wiscon- ClaireAthletic Department has in- sin-Parkside Baseball team may&#13;
formed the NAIA it will drop its be only 9-7-1, but three of the&#13;
b hi 'th h . I Ranger starting pitchers are do- mem ers Ip WI t e nauona or- ing everything in theirpowerto&#13;
ganization and affiliate its sports keep that loss column stuck on&#13;
teams exclusively with the NCAA thenumberseven. Senior southpaw&#13;
Kelly Zielinski, Jason&#13;
beginning next season. Neitzel and Steve Grzeskiewicz&#13;
are three hurlers having terrific&#13;
season.&#13;
the pitchers mound, you can&#13;
bet they're going to see anothe&#13;
lefty in Jason Neitzel. Neitzel,&#13;
a native of Oshkosh Wisconsin,&#13;
in enjoyingabout as good&#13;
a year on the mound any freshman&#13;
could hope to have. He is&#13;
now 2-0 on the year, but is the&#13;
recipient of the team's only tie&#13;
which was called on the accountof&#13;
darkness with the score&#13;
standing at 2-2. The young&#13;
southpaw accompanied by his&#13;
virtually unhittable breaking&#13;
ball, is averaging 1.27 ERA.&#13;
One of Neitzel's victories included&#13;
a complete game shutout&#13;
of Illinois College, in which&#13;
he allowed only four hits while&#13;
striking out 13.&#13;
Finally, we come to the&#13;
hard throwing righthanded&#13;
Steve Grzeskiewicz who&#13;
transfered-to Parkside from&#13;
Oklahoma State. So far on the&#13;
hill, he has acquired deceiving&#13;
1-2-1 mark. Grzeskiewiczhas&#13;
found himselfmaking a trip to&#13;
the mound against the two&#13;
toughtest teams the Rangers Pitching prowess. Here's how the Rangers staff has&#13;
will face. His victory came stacked up against opponents this sea on.&#13;
against the defending NCAA W ERA SO BB&#13;
II National Champions, Wil- R 9 2.62 109 60&#13;
liam Paterson. Also included angers&#13;
in his record is a save against L__ 0.p.p.o.ne.f.lls 7_ .4•.•18_.8.J_ 8.7_~&#13;
DI Cornell.&#13;
V Play Ball&#13;
TheIntramural Softball season has&#13;
begun.Teamsare competing Tuesday,&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday at&#13;
PetsPark next door to UW-P.&#13;
These three Rangers, who&#13;
have accounted for 70 innings&#13;
pitched this season, have led the&#13;
staff to an outstanding 2.62 ERA;&#13;
and ERA definitely not deserving&#13;
of a 9-7-1 overall record.&#13;
Zielinski himself has contributed&#13;
a mere 0,48 to the teams&#13;
ERA in his 18 innings of work&#13;
on the hill. An ERA which has&#13;
earned him a team leading 3-0&#13;
record thus far, including a victory&#13;
over division I Cornell University.&#13;
Zielinski. averaging a&#13;
strikeout per inning, has allowed&#13;
only one earned run in his 18&#13;
innings. Included in that 3-0&#13;
recordis a complete game twOhitter,&#13;
in which he sat down ten&#13;
opposing hitters on strikes.&#13;
Ifa team for some reason in&#13;
adoubleheaderagainsttheRangers&#13;
dosen't see the left handed&#13;
Zielinski leering at them from&#13;
Intramural Softball&#13;
Results/Schedule&#13;
Tuesday's results&#13;
Kenieval's Crew 12 Firedogs 8&#13;
Hit &amp; Run 11 Barley Pops 1&#13;
Elbanos 13 Miller's Best 3&#13;
Thursday's Games&#13;
4:00 Kenivel's Crew vs. Elbanos&#13;
5:00 Johnson vs. Hit &amp; Run&#13;
6:00 Johnson vs. Gilbertson&#13;
Play Ball&#13;
What is your favorite major league&#13;
baseball team?&#13;
Brewers 39&#13;
Cubs 24&#13;
White Sox 14&#13;
Yankees 10&#13;
Twins 2&#13;
Pirates 2&#13;
A's 2&#13;
Source:1()()UW"~arkside students.&#13;
Section B&#13;
A Ranger batter takes a swing.&#13;
Free yourself,&#13;
Free your mind&#13;
Join the Ranger News&#13;
Tns RA~GER NEWS, Page 8 - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING April 15, 1993&#13;
To place ctassitieo advertising in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside - The Ranger News, stop in The Ranger News office located in room D139C in the Wyllie Libraryllearning&#13;
Center, next to the Coffee Shoppe. Deadline for classified advertising is 12:00pm Friday prior to publication. All classified ads placed by full or part time UW-Parkslde students or&#13;
UW-Parkside staff are 50¢ per week run. Allclassitied ads placed by anyone other than UW-Parkside students are $5.00 per week run. Payment must accompany order. Ifan&#13;
error occurs, the ad will be run free of charge the following week. No refunds. The University of.Wisconsin-Parkside - The Ranger News, and rts employees: staff and members&#13;
are not responsible for the content of advertising placed by its customers. The UW-Parkside Ranger News reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertisinq at rts discretion.&#13;
Please direct all inquiries to The Ranger News' Assistant Business Manager, Jackie Johnson at (414) 595-2295. -&#13;
.C.L.U.B.E.V.E.NT.S_' I HELP WANTED I 1__ .S.E.R.VI.C.E.s_ .. 1 ,1 _.F.O.R.S.A.L.E_.I I,_P.E.R.SO_NA.L.S_}&#13;
GLO sponsors a Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Support Group. For more info.&#13;
contact Morten at ext. 2650, John&#13;
at 2244, or Angie at 2170.&#13;
GLO the Gay and Lesbian OrganizationmeetseveryThursdayat2pm&#13;
in CART 142. Friends,family,and&#13;
supporters of gays and lesbians are&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Join the Revolution! The French&#13;
Club will hold it's annual Bastille&#13;
Day recreation on Weds., April&#13;
21st at noon in upper main place.&#13;
Bid for the right to behead your&#13;
favorite (or not so favorite) professor!&#13;
Pre-Law Club meets on Mondays&#13;
at lOam in Molinaro 128. Comeon&#13;
you Pre-Lawyers, Get Involved!&#13;
Bovwinkle: Hey Rocco! Do you&#13;
know about the new fees the administration&#13;
has thrown on the students?&#13;
Rocco: Yeah and I'm real peeved&#13;
about it. That's why I'm anending&#13;
the P.S.G.A. Forum at noon on&#13;
Friday, April 16.&#13;
PAC meets every Wed. at noon in&#13;
CART 133. Everyone welcome!&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship(IYCF) meets Wednesdays&#13;
at noon in Molinaro 107.&#13;
Christians of any denomination and&#13;
anyone curious about Christianity&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Please donate clothes for charitable&#13;
purposes to The Activities&#13;
Connection at 3C (Nicole) or 6C&#13;
(Shantay).&#13;
College Republicans meet every&#13;
Monday at 2:00pm in Moln. 112.&#13;
Now more than ever you need to be&#13;
in the party!&#13;
KRS-One wants to rap with you:&#13;
Sunday, April 18, 7:30 in the Union&#13;
Cinema. $1 UW -Pstudent/$3 public.&#13;
Reserve your seat at the info&#13;
desk.&#13;
GREEI(S &amp; CLUBS&#13;
RAISE A COOL&#13;
$1000&#13;
IN JUST ONE WEEKI&#13;
PLUS $1000 FOR THE&#13;
MEMBER WHO CALLS!&#13;
No obligation.No cost.&#13;
And a FREE&#13;
IGLOO COOLER&#13;
if you qWllify. Call&#13;
1-800-932-0528, Ext. 6S&#13;
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
-fisheries. Earn $600+/&#13;
week in canneries or $4,000+/&#13;
month on fishing boats. Free transportationl&#13;
Room &amp; Board! Over&#13;
8,000 openings. No experience&#13;
necessary. Male or Female. For&#13;
employment program call 1-206-&#13;
545-4155 ext. A5646. _&#13;
$200-$500 Weekly Assemble&#13;
products at home. Easy! No selling.&#13;
You'repaiddirect. FullyGuaranteed.&#13;
Free Infonmation-24 Hour&#13;
Hotline. 801-379-2900.&#13;
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT-&#13;
Make $2,OOO+/month&#13;
teaching basic conversational English&#13;
abroad. Japan &amp; Taiwan. No&#13;
previous training required. For&#13;
employment program call: (206)&#13;
632-1146 ext.J5646.&#13;
~SER_VIC_ES III&#13;
AA- Alcoholics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Monday at noon in MOLN&#13;
D133. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366'&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Free pregnancy tests. Contact UWParksideHealth&#13;
Services, 595-2366&#13;
or MOLN Dll5 for more infonma-&#13;
&lt;tion.&#13;
NA-Narcotics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Wednesday at noon in&#13;
MOLN Dl33. Call 595-2365 or&#13;
595-2366 for more infonmation.&#13;
Free measles and tetanus immunizations.&#13;
Contact UW-Parkside&#13;
Health Services, MOLN D115 or&#13;
call 595-2366.&#13;
Weight loss planning-use our computer&#13;
to develop your own plan.&#13;
Health Services, MOLN D 115.&#13;
Student Walking Group- 12 Noon&#13;
on Monday-Wednesday-Friday.&#13;
Inside walking for 20 minutes,&#13;
UWP D2 Level. S~ Friday,&#13;
March 4, 1993. Meet at Molinaro&#13;
entrance near elevator. For more&#13;
infonmation contact Health Services,&#13;
595-2366 or Moln Dl15.&#13;
Need a buddy to walk you safely to&#13;
where you are going? Call the&#13;
Campus Police Ext. 2455 for an&#13;
escort. They are available Sunday&#13;
7:30pm to 1l:00pm, Monday-&#13;
Thursday 7:30pm to 12:00am.&#13;
FOR RENT I&#13;
Summer Housing for rem at beautiful&#13;
Biscayne Gardens. 3 bedrooms,&#13;
1 1/2 baths, partially furnished.&#13;
Heal and water included.&#13;
Call 554-5497.&#13;
Subleasers needed for summer. 2&#13;
bedroom apt. only 5 min. from&#13;
school. $510/month &amp; electric.&#13;
Call Yanessa or Linda 551-9317.&#13;
,- FOR_SA_LE III&#13;
Contraceptives for sale at affordable&#13;
prices. Condoms 10 for $ 1.00&#13;
and birth control pills $4 a packet.&#13;
Contact UW-Parkside Health Services,&#13;
595-2366 or MOLN Dll5&#13;
for more infonmation.&#13;
CHEAP! FBI/U.S. SEIZED&#13;
89 MERCEDES $2oo&#13;
86YW $50&#13;
87 MERCEDES $loo&#13;
65MUSTANG $50&#13;
Choose from thousands starting&#13;
$50. Free Information-24 Hour&#13;
Hotline. 801-379-2929&#13;
PERSONALS I&#13;
Whether or not Sting is better than&#13;
Paul, don't even try comparing him&#13;
to that ugly old Lenny!&#13;
Kevin R., Toan, Kevin W., Josh,&#13;
Andre,Chris, and Reggie--Thanks&#13;
for all your help. Your kindness&#13;
and generosity is greatly appreciated!&#13;
All of you are truly some of&#13;
God's best children- Teesh.&#13;
John: Hey George! Get your&#13;
Snappy Bellbottoms out for the&#13;
Gig Friday night. I hear the Trouser&#13;
Geese even got hold of some&#13;
butterfly collars.&#13;
George: Hu, Hu, Hu ...You mean&#13;
the 6th annual Parkside Battle of&#13;
the Bands? Can we playT AXMAN&#13;
again?&#13;
Paul: No you P.O.S. We're playing&#13;
Magical Mystery Tour!&#13;
Ringo: I don't care what we play.&#13;
I'm just lucky to hangout with you&#13;
musicians!&#13;
Paul: If I go barefoot will they&#13;
think I'm dead like they did when&#13;
Abby Road came out?&#13;
George: If Paul goes barefoot can&#13;
I bring one of my little stone garden&#13;
elves from the ALL THINGS&#13;
MUST PASS album cover?&#13;
Find the&#13;
road home&#13;
with ECU's new Homebuying&#13;
information service.&#13;
Learn buying, selling, shoppIng and financing techniques&#13;
all in a convenient workbook complete with brochures!&#13;
Serving all UW Parkside employees and students.&#13;
NCUA "'- .... Tallent Hall Rm. 286 595-2150 9,30-4,00&#13;
John: OK! I'm wearing white and&#13;
Yoko's coming!!!&#13;
Paul: Please don't John. Linda I&#13;
can'tmakeiL Who'drollthejoints?&#13;
George: We were just kidding.&#13;
Yoko doesn't really have to come&#13;
to the Battle does she?&#13;
Ringo: I don't care. I'mjustlucky&#13;
to hang out with you musicians!&#13;
Let's make a movie, I feel some&#13;
tallent coming on.&#13;
I Am The Walrus! Goo Goo Goo&#13;
Joob.&#13;
But what I really need to know is...&#13;
Can I trade it in for z:z. Top?&#13;
Chris- See you at the rap, 7:30&#13;
sharp. For one cheap buck you've&#13;
got no excuse! LaDeDa &amp; Diana&#13;
Sony guys, I can 'I play tomorrow&#13;
night 'cause Igot an ear-ache. It&#13;
was either the treble or the gain,&#13;
I'm not sure. J&#13;
IMISCELLANEOUS II&#13;
Yenus International Model Search&#13;
is coming to Racine April 15. Aspiring&#13;
models contact RJ. at 886-&#13;
5151, for more info. I&#13;
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Bring your paper to The Writing&#13;
Center-WLLC Dl50, Bring your&#13;
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1Worried about financing1 ~our college education?&#13;
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Include your nBlTIC, address, and phone number</text>
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              <text>Editorial&#13;
...&#13;
A~d~&#13;
argues&#13;
administrative&#13;
decision&#13;
to&#13;
eliminate&#13;
campus&#13;
police&#13;
position.&#13;
See &#13;
it &#13;
on Page&#13;
4&#13;
VOLUME&#13;
21 &#13;
ISSUE&#13;
24&#13;
U&#13;
NIVERSITY&#13;
OF WISCONSIN&#13;
- PARKSIDE&#13;
Vniversityeliminates&#13;
officer&#13;
position&#13;
Gregory&#13;
Gauthier&#13;
News Writer&#13;
In an &#13;
effort to meet budget&#13;
lduetio&#13;
n   &#13;
llltgets for the upcoming&#13;
~dget &#13;
year, the &#13;
OW &#13;
-Parkside&#13;
Administration&#13;
has decided&#13;
to&#13;
diminatea vacancy&#13;
for a Campus&#13;
~IiceOfficer,&#13;
which&#13;
was to be&#13;
DUed &#13;
thisyear.&#13;
The &#13;
position&#13;
elimination&#13;
is&#13;
IljlOCted&#13;
to assist the adrninistra-&#13;
oon &#13;
in trimming&#13;
a little  over&#13;
~6,OOO&#13;
from the upcoming&#13;
bud-&#13;
itl&gt; &#13;
and reach budget&#13;
reduction&#13;
19e1S &#13;
which were enacted&#13;
three&#13;
jl3fS &#13;
ago in a "Quality&#13;
Reinvest-&#13;
ment &#13;
Program."&#13;
According&#13;
to&#13;
Clmpus &#13;
Police&#13;
Chief Ostrowski,&#13;
~decision&#13;
to &#13;
eliminate&#13;
the vacant&#13;
jl1Sitionwas"one of the least pain-&#13;
fDIways"of generating&#13;
the needed&#13;
"reinvestment"&#13;
revenue&#13;
for this&#13;
JQl.&#13;
SinceJanuary&#13;
of this year, the&#13;
Clmpus&#13;
Police&#13;
Department&#13;
has&#13;
Ieen &#13;
operating&#13;
with six full-time&#13;
~5ceofficers,and&#13;
supplementing&#13;
moo-falls&#13;
in staffing&#13;
during&#13;
peak&#13;
Ioors &#13;
with part-time&#13;
officers&#13;
as&#13;
budget&#13;
constraints&#13;
permit.&#13;
Chief&#13;
Ostrowski,&#13;
in a tele-&#13;
phone&#13;
interview&#13;
Friday,&#13;
gave some&#13;
recognition&#13;
to the growing&#13;
frustra-&#13;
nons &#13;
over the current&#13;
budget&#13;
con-&#13;
straints:&#13;
"The staff themselves&#13;
are&#13;
a little disappointed,&#13;
but you al-&#13;
ways are when you lose a full-time&#13;
position.&#13;
I think the staff is also&#13;
very cognizant&#13;
of the fact that times&#13;
are tough right now. Next year's&#13;
budgets&#13;
are going &#13;
to &#13;
be extremely&#13;
tight"&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
also added&#13;
that&#13;
while some frustration&#13;
and exists&#13;
.for the staff, he did not feel there&#13;
was "enough&#13;
documentation&#13;
to &#13;
be&#13;
able to say that this is an over-&#13;
whelming&#13;
burden"&#13;
10the staff. He&#13;
did admit,&#13;
however,&#13;
that it would&#13;
probably&#13;
make it more difficult&#13;
to&#13;
maintain&#13;
consistency&#13;
with &#13;
such&#13;
routine&#13;
duties&#13;
as parking&#13;
enforce-&#13;
ment.&#13;
Officers&#13;
and staff in the de-&#13;
partment&#13;
were not at liberty&#13;
10&#13;
com-&#13;
ment on the issue.&#13;
When&#13;
asked if he thought&#13;
the&#13;
lack of the additional&#13;
officer&#13;
might&#13;
affect&#13;
the ability&#13;
of the Campus&#13;
Police to respond&#13;
quickly&#13;
tocalls,&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
said, "No community&#13;
member&#13;
should&#13;
see &#13;
any effect&#13;
regarding&#13;
services,&#13;
or quality&#13;
of&#13;
services&#13;
...occasionally,&#13;
there&#13;
might be an extra bit of waiting&#13;
if&#13;
you need key assistance&#13;
into an&#13;
area, but as far as emergency&#13;
or&#13;
vital police&#13;
services,&#13;
no one &#13;
will&#13;
see any bit of difference&#13;
in any-&#13;
thing that's being done."&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
pointed&#13;
out that&#13;
any short-falls&#13;
in staffing&#13;
would&#13;
be filled by pan-time&#13;
officers&#13;
when&#13;
necessary,&#13;
and he &#13;
voiced&#13;
a&#13;
great deal of confidence&#13;
in the&#13;
competencyofthepan-timestaff.&#13;
According&#13;
to a recent publi-&#13;
cation&#13;
entitled,&#13;
"Crime&#13;
Aware-&#13;
ness," by the UW &#13;
-Parkside&#13;
Pub-&#13;
lic Safety&#13;
Department,&#13;
the num-&#13;
ber of thefts on campus&#13;
increased&#13;
to 134 incidents&#13;
in 1991, and a&#13;
recent rash of thefts and &#13;
automo-&#13;
.bile break-ins&#13;
- coupled&#13;
with the&#13;
decision&#13;
to &#13;
eliminate&#13;
the officer&#13;
position&#13;
this year -has some con-&#13;
cerned&#13;
that Campus&#13;
Police&#13;
may&#13;
have difficulty&#13;
managing&#13;
the&#13;
, Continued&#13;
on Page &#13;
7&#13;
Montana&#13;
study program&#13;
offers opportunity&#13;
for &#13;
student&#13;
exchange&#13;
of cultures&#13;
Marquita&#13;
Hynes&#13;
News Writer&#13;
'The &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
campus&#13;
is&#13;
~largeuniversity.&#13;
Students&#13;
are&#13;
llVolvedwith numerous&#13;
clubs, or-&#13;
!iIlizations&#13;
and activities.&#13;
The&#13;
~ysical education&#13;
facilities&#13;
are&#13;
lltellenl&#13;
And the union&#13;
is cool.&#13;
The&#13;
university&#13;
has so very much to&#13;
WIer."&#13;
Such&#13;
statements&#13;
were the com-&#13;
Iiln &#13;
sentiment&#13;
of a group&#13;
of stu-&#13;
tn~&#13;
that visited&#13;
the campus&#13;
re-&#13;
!llltly. A student&#13;
exchange&#13;
pro-&#13;
!Jam &#13;
set up by &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Surinder&#13;
Datta,&#13;
IUW-Parkside&#13;
biology&#13;
professor&#13;
~ ..~irector&#13;
of ethnic&#13;
studies,&#13;
~""lIhtthe contingent&#13;
here from&#13;
PonPeck Community&#13;
College&#13;
rcCl&#13;
during&#13;
the week of March&#13;
(thelrspring&#13;
break).&#13;
Anexchange&#13;
~  -Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
later trav-&#13;
to&#13;
the &#13;
Ft. &#13;
Peck campus&#13;
for the&#13;
~  of March&#13;
14 (our spring&#13;
). Fl'CC is located&#13;
on the Ft.&#13;
~k Indian Reservation&#13;
in Poplar,&#13;
·""lan..&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Datla, who has been work-&#13;
19&#13;
withthis program&#13;
for two years,&#13;
~PteSSed&#13;
his enthusiasm&#13;
for the&#13;
~u1tural&#13;
exchange.&#13;
He would&#13;
P1l&#13;
to&#13;
see this program&#13;
continue&#13;
to&#13;
w.&#13;
as&#13;
he&#13;
views the interaction&#13;
to&#13;
be an excellent&#13;
learning&#13;
opportu-&#13;
nity.&#13;
The learning&#13;
opportunity&#13;
was&#13;
the reason&#13;
given by all of the Ft.&#13;
Peck students,&#13;
when asked&#13;
why&#13;
they wanted&#13;
10 &#13;
lake &#13;
pan &#13;
in the&#13;
exchange.&#13;
AnthonyRunsThrough,&#13;
a sophomore&#13;
at FPCC&#13;
is majoring&#13;
in business&#13;
administration.&#13;
He is&#13;
an Assiniboine,&#13;
as are the other&#13;
visiting&#13;
students.&#13;
When&#13;
asked if he preferred&#13;
10&#13;
be called a native American&#13;
he and&#13;
all of the other students&#13;
said they&#13;
preferred&#13;
to &#13;
be called Indians.&#13;
He&#13;
further&#13;
said that the Assiniboine&#13;
view themselves&#13;
as adistinct&#13;
people&#13;
since the 1600's,&#13;
although&#13;
histori-&#13;
ans say they are a branch&#13;
of the&#13;
Sioux&#13;
people.&#13;
Runs&#13;
Through&#13;
wanted&#13;
10observe&#13;
a four year uni-&#13;
versity&#13;
because&#13;
he plans 10 con-&#13;
tinue his education&#13;
at the UM-&#13;
Missoula&#13;
(FPCC&#13;
is a two-year&#13;
col-&#13;
lege).&#13;
He believed&#13;
the exchange&#13;
had broadened&#13;
his thinking.&#13;
Another&#13;
FPPC student,&#13;
Paula&#13;
Owens,&#13;
is a sophomore&#13;
in the com-&#13;
puteroperations&#13;
program.&#13;
She said&#13;
the only pre-requisites&#13;
to enroll for&#13;
the exchange&#13;
were a desire&#13;
to go&#13;
and a required&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
Owens&#13;
sat in with one of Judy&#13;
Logsdon's&#13;
communication&#13;
claSses&#13;
(Media&#13;
Message,&#13;
and Design).&#13;
Owens&#13;
shared&#13;
a few of her own&#13;
thoughts&#13;
with the class and dis-&#13;
played&#13;
a confidence&#13;
of the sub-&#13;
jectrnatter.&#13;
Coming&#13;
from aschool&#13;
with a student&#13;
enrollment&#13;
esti-&#13;
mated&#13;
to be three hundred,&#13;
she&#13;
saw Parkside&#13;
as very large and&#13;
liked what she saw.&#13;
Chris Reddog,&#13;
a sophomore&#13;
inthe business&#13;
administration&#13;
pro-&#13;
gram at FPCC,&#13;
came with the&#13;
hopes of "making&#13;
some connec-&#13;
tions."&#13;
He liked the dorms&#13;
and&#13;
"all-the&#13;
activities"&#13;
offered&#13;
here.&#13;
He plans on going &#13;
10 &#13;
a four year&#13;
college&#13;
and thought&#13;
this exchange&#13;
would&#13;
give him more of an idea&#13;
of what student&#13;
life is like at a&#13;
larger campus.&#13;
While&#13;
the FPCC&#13;
students&#13;
were here they met with faculty&#13;
and students,&#13;
utilized&#13;
the physi-&#13;
cal education&#13;
facilities,&#13;
took pan&#13;
in admissions&#13;
procedures,&#13;
shared&#13;
dinner&#13;
at the homes&#13;
of Dr. Datla&#13;
and &#13;
Dean&#13;
Howard&#13;
Cohen,&#13;
and&#13;
various&#13;
other activities.&#13;
During&#13;
the week of March&#13;
14 the exchange&#13;
students&#13;
from&#13;
Parkside&#13;
shared&#13;
the &#13;
Amtrak&#13;
ride&#13;
with FPCC&#13;
students&#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Ft.&#13;
Peck campus.&#13;
Fred Stein, a Park-&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page 7&#13;
nside...&#13;
Trish Schaefor&#13;
brings&#13;
an&#13;
ovoning&#13;
of cabarot.&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Liberal&#13;
Arts Caroor&#13;
Day to&#13;
present&#13;
an informattonal&#13;
ex-&#13;
travaganza.&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
A &#13;
quick word from Gabe on&#13;
grape-slutfBd&#13;
chooks.&#13;
Page 4&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
APRIL&#13;
1, 1993&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
CIA takes part&#13;
in&#13;
Washington&#13;
model&#13;
NickZahn&#13;
Assistant&#13;
News Editor&#13;
TheClub&#13;
for International&#13;
Af-&#13;
fairs (CIA)&#13;
recently&#13;
represented&#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside&#13;
at the Model League&#13;
of Arab Slates.&#13;
The trip to Wash-&#13;
ington&#13;
D.C. &#13;
marks&#13;
the third time&#13;
UW -Parkside&#13;
has auended.&#13;
The &#13;
object of &#13;
the &#13;
simulation&#13;
is to present&#13;
resolutions&#13;
to &#13;
fellow&#13;
teague&#13;
nations&#13;
and &#13;
represent&#13;
your&#13;
country&#13;
as closely&#13;
in character&#13;
as&#13;
possible.&#13;
This year UW-Parkside&#13;
played&#13;
the role of Saudi Arabia.&#13;
The delegation&#13;
first met with&#13;
Habib Shaheen,&#13;
Director&#13;
oflnfor-&#13;
mation,&#13;
at the Saudi&#13;
Embassy.&#13;
There&#13;
the &#13;
group&#13;
gained&#13;
a more&#13;
informed&#13;
perspective&#13;
of Saudi&#13;
Arabia.&#13;
The bulk of the conference&#13;
consisted&#13;
of &#13;
committee&#13;
meetings&#13;
inwhich resolutions&#13;
weredebated.&#13;
The model was brought&#13;
to a close&#13;
at the &#13;
summit,&#13;
where&#13;
all the com-&#13;
mittees&#13;
mel&#13;
Paul &#13;
Pignotti,&#13;
a senior,&#13;
was&#13;
elected&#13;
vice-chairman&#13;
of the &#13;
po-&#13;
litical &#13;
cornrniuee,&#13;
Pleased&#13;
with&#13;
this year's&#13;
group,&#13;
Pignoui&#13;
said,&#13;
"The group&#13;
was well prepared.&#13;
All in &#13;
all &#13;
this was probably&#13;
the&#13;
besttearn&#13;
Parkside&#13;
has &#13;
sent,&#13;
We&#13;
had &#13;
the &#13;
right mixture&#13;
of students&#13;
this year. &#13;
ft &#13;
has been one of my&#13;
more enjoyable&#13;
experiences&#13;
at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"&#13;
David&#13;
Towle,&#13;
leader&#13;
of the&#13;
CIA agrees.&#13;
"Oneof&#13;
our delegates&#13;
won an award&#13;
for best delegate&#13;
and &#13;
we were able to &#13;
pass &#13;
resolu-&#13;
tions that we sponsored."&#13;
Arman&#13;
Mahdasian,&#13;
who won &#13;
the &#13;
award,&#13;
is a veteran&#13;
of such &#13;
simulations.&#13;
including&#13;
the &#13;
United&#13;
Nations&#13;
and&#13;
the &#13;
Organization&#13;
of Amencan&#13;
Slates.&#13;
He found this year's trip&#13;
was &#13;
special&#13;
due &#13;
to &#13;
the friend-&#13;
ships &#13;
that &#13;
developed&#13;
between&#13;
the &#13;
schools&#13;
who attended.&#13;
Sameer&#13;
Ah.originally&#13;
from&#13;
Kuwait&#13;
was surprised&#13;
that&#13;
Americans&#13;
would&#13;
have as much&#13;
interest&#13;
and information&#13;
regard-&#13;
ing the Middle&#13;
Ea &#13;
t as was &#13;
pre-&#13;
sented&#13;
at the model.&#13;
CherylVVoodyofConv~&#13;
College&#13;
in South Carolina&#13;
said,&#13;
"I enjoyed&#13;
getting&#13;
to know a lot&#13;
of different&#13;
people&#13;
and listening&#13;
10 &#13;
their ideas about nations&#13;
and&#13;
debating.&#13;
I &#13;
learned&#13;
so much&#13;
more about &#13;
Turusia&#13;
and Egypt&#13;
and Syria &#13;
than &#13;
I would&#13;
have&#13;
learned&#13;
from a text book."&#13;
"Going&#13;
through&#13;
the parlia-&#13;
meruary&#13;
procedure&#13;
was so &#13;
real-&#13;
istic," added Stephany&#13;
Crofton&#13;
also of &#13;
Converse.&#13;
"It &#13;
was like&#13;
you were a diplomat&#13;
for the&#13;
week.&#13;
It helps you decide&#13;
if &#13;
ir's&#13;
something&#13;
that you &#13;
might &#13;
want&#13;
to do later on."&#13;
The model&#13;
is similar&#13;
to the&#13;
Model&#13;
Organization&#13;
of Ameri-&#13;
can &#13;
Slates&#13;
which&#13;
the CIA and&#13;
the &#13;
International&#13;
Studies&#13;
office&#13;
co-sponsor&#13;
yearly at UW-Park-&#13;
side.&#13;
If you &#13;
are irueresied&#13;
10 &#13;
th&#13;
CIA, meeungs&#13;
are &#13;
held every&#13;
Wedensday&#13;
at noon in Moln 142&#13;
orstop &#13;
in the International&#13;
Stud-&#13;
ies office In Main &#13;
129.&#13;
Student&#13;
raped while leaving&#13;
campu&#13;
On March&#13;
29, 1993 at approxi-&#13;
mately&#13;
g:15 p.m., a female&#13;
student&#13;
was sexually&#13;
assaultedas&#13;
she &#13;
walked&#13;
from the academic&#13;
complex&#13;
toWood&#13;
Road.&#13;
The incident&#13;
occurred&#13;
adja-&#13;
cent to a sidewall&lt;&#13;
in the natural,&#13;
tall-&#13;
grass &#13;
area.&#13;
The assailant&#13;
apparently&#13;
fol-&#13;
lowed the victim as she wall&lt;ed&#13;
down&#13;
the &#13;
sidewalk&#13;
and attacked&#13;
her from&#13;
behind;&#13;
forcing&#13;
her intO the dark,&#13;
brush-covered&#13;
area.&#13;
The atlacker&#13;
displayed&#13;
a knife, possibly&#13;
a hunting&#13;
type. &#13;
His &#13;
face was covered.&#13;
After&#13;
ordering&#13;
the victim&#13;
to disrobe,&#13;
he&#13;
had sexual&#13;
inrercourse&#13;
with &#13;
her and&#13;
fled the scene on fOOL The victim&#13;
suslained&#13;
no other physical&#13;
injuries.&#13;
Tbe &#13;
vscum &#13;
has descnbed&#13;
the&#13;
suspectas&#13;
a&#13;
white malc, &#13;
18-20years&#13;
old, approximately&#13;
59" tall with a&#13;
muscular&#13;
build.&#13;
He &#13;
was &#13;
wearing&#13;
dark clotlung.&#13;
Campus&#13;
police&#13;
and Kenosha&#13;
County&#13;
Sheriffs&#13;
Department&#13;
lire&#13;
jointly&#13;
onvestigaung&#13;
the &#13;
mc,dent.&#13;
If you think you may have mfor-&#13;
mation&#13;
which&#13;
would&#13;
help, please&#13;
contact&#13;
campu&#13;
police&#13;
at x2455.&#13;
All faculty&#13;
and slaff are reminded&#13;
to useextracauuon&#13;
when walking&#13;
alone on or around&#13;
campus.&#13;
Safely&#13;
escortS&#13;
are available&#13;
by telcphon-&#13;
ing campus&#13;
policc.&#13;
-----------------------------------_./&#13;
THE&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
April&#13;
I,  1993&#13;
Trish&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
stars&#13;
in an evening&#13;
of cabaret&#13;
Alan&#13;
Cook&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
performance&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
much&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
music,&#13;
however.&#13;
"We'regear-&#13;
ing&#13;
this&#13;
one&#13;
in particular&#13;
as a &#13;
real&#13;
theatre&#13;
experience&#13;
... There&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
lots&#13;
of interaction&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
au-&#13;
dience."&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
joined&#13;
by&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
music&#13;
professors&#13;
Augie&#13;
Wegner&#13;
and&#13;
Tim&#13;
Bell.&#13;
Wegner,&#13;
a jazz&#13;
musician,&#13;
director&#13;
and&#13;
composer.&#13;
accompanies&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
on&#13;
piano.&#13;
Bell,&#13;
director&#13;
of theParkside&#13;
Jazz&#13;
Ensem&#13;
ble&#13;
and&#13;
leader&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
Tim&#13;
Bell&#13;
Quartel,&#13;
appears&#13;
as Schaefer's&#13;
special&#13;
mu-&#13;
sical&#13;
guest.&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
started&#13;
in&#13;
profes-&#13;
sional&#13;
theatre&#13;
some&#13;
15 years&#13;
aero.&#13;
She&#13;
has&#13;
enjoyed&#13;
diverse&#13;
accom-&#13;
plishments,&#13;
appearing&#13;
as&#13;
a  fea-&#13;
tured&#13;
actress&#13;
in the&#13;
Chuck&#13;
Norris&#13;
movie&#13;
Code&#13;
of Silence&#13;
and&#13;
sing-&#13;
ing&#13;
Showtunes&#13;
for Kids &#13;
on WGN-&#13;
TV.&#13;
Her&#13;
cabaret&#13;
work&#13;
has&#13;
re-&#13;
mained&#13;
a constant,&#13;
however.&#13;
She&#13;
has&#13;
performed&#13;
at  many&#13;
Chicago&#13;
nightclubs&#13;
including&#13;
Orphans,&#13;
the&#13;
Racoon&#13;
Club&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Roxy.as&#13;
well&#13;
as private&#13;
parties&#13;
and&#13;
outside&#13;
festi-&#13;
vals.&#13;
"It&#13;
always&#13;
bothered&#13;
me&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
had&#13;
never&#13;
gotten&#13;
my&#13;
degree,"&#13;
ex-&#13;
plains&#13;
Schaefer,&#13;
as&#13;
she&#13;
describes&#13;
how&#13;
she&#13;
carne&#13;
to UW-Parkside.&#13;
A&#13;
1990&#13;
graduate,&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
appeared&#13;
in &#13;
As You Like II &#13;
and&#13;
Peppermint&#13;
Bear,&#13;
as well&#13;
as working&#13;
tech&#13;
for&#13;
The Elephant&#13;
Man &#13;
while&#13;
she&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
student&#13;
here.&#13;
"It&#13;
was&#13;
wonderful,"&#13;
she&#13;
exclaims,&#13;
as she&#13;
talks&#13;
about&#13;
her&#13;
work&#13;
here.&#13;
Schaefer,&#13;
a gifted&#13;
and&#13;
enthusi-&#13;
astic&#13;
performer,&#13;
is sure&#13;
to  return&#13;
her&#13;
alma&#13;
mater&#13;
a wonderful&#13;
night&#13;
of entertainment.&#13;
Admission&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
show&#13;
is&#13;
$S.OO,&#13;
with&#13;
a &#13;
$5.00&#13;
student&#13;
rate.&#13;
Call&#13;
595-2312&#13;
for&#13;
more&#13;
infonna-&#13;
tion.&#13;
"Come&#13;
lO the&#13;
Cabaret!"&#13;
"It&#13;
was&#13;
one&#13;
of the&#13;
times&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
happiest,"&#13;
exclaims&#13;
performer&#13;
Trish&#13;
Schaefer,&#13;
as she&#13;
recalls&#13;
the&#13;
year&#13;
she&#13;
spent&#13;
at &#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside,&#13;
as&#13;
a  continuing&#13;
education&#13;
student,&#13;
working&#13;
and&#13;
finishing&#13;
her&#13;
degree&#13;
in Theatre&#13;
Arts.&#13;
"It &#13;
was&#13;
a very&#13;
busy&#13;
time,&#13;
but&#13;
wonderful.&#13;
The&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Department&#13;
was&#13;
and&#13;
continues&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
incredibly&#13;
supportive&#13;
of&#13;
my&#13;
work&#13;
and&#13;
studies."&#13;
On&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
April&#13;
3 &#13;
at &#13;
7:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
COMM&#13;
ARTS&#13;
DIIS&#13;
,&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
returns&#13;
to the&#13;
site&#13;
of her&#13;
fond&#13;
memories,&#13;
starring&#13;
in&#13;
an&#13;
evening&#13;
of cabaret&#13;
music&#13;
in a show&#13;
entitled&#13;
"Celebrating&#13;
What&#13;
Passes&#13;
B &#13;
"&#13;
.&#13;
y.&#13;
Schaefer's&#13;
act&#13;
includes&#13;
broadway&#13;
showtunes,&#13;
classic&#13;
tunes&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
'205&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
'60s,&#13;
torch&#13;
songs&#13;
and&#13;
character&#13;
numbers.&#13;
The&#13;
~ECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
!RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECY&lt;B~!~rr&#13;
Rf(]'CLl\t1f!@fYf~&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECY~~!~YI.L~UJJFL.lW!ID~Yfr.'E&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
;RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
~ECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLE&#13;
ME!!!&#13;
RECYCLEME!!!&#13;
RECYCLEME!!!&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
MARCH&#13;
31&#13;
FINANCIAL&#13;
AID - &#13;
meeting;&#13;
Noon;&#13;
WLLC&#13;
D-182;&#13;
bring&#13;
1992&#13;
tax&#13;
return&#13;
to complete&#13;
forms.&#13;
UW-P LEADER'S&#13;
PRESENTATION&#13;
- &#13;
panel&#13;
discussion,&#13;
"Insights&#13;
on&#13;
Achievement"&#13;
(Kaplan,&#13;
Kirby,&#13;
Kirk,&#13;
Riese&#13;
and&#13;
Shade);&#13;
reception;&#13;
Union&#13;
104-106;&#13;
3-5&#13;
p.m.;&#13;
SOA.&#13;
RECITAL-&#13;
Continuing&#13;
Music&#13;
Majors'&#13;
Scholarship&#13;
Award&#13;
Winners;&#13;
Noon;&#13;
free;&#13;
CART&#13;
0-118.&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
- &#13;
at Anderson&#13;
College;&#13;
Anderson,&#13;
IN;&#13;
doubleheader;&#13;
1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
ATH,LEJICS&#13;
- &#13;
pool,&#13;
gyms,&#13;
etc.&#13;
available&#13;
for&#13;
walk-in&#13;
use&#13;
of students&#13;
with&#13;
validated&#13;
ID's.&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
APRIL&#13;
I&#13;
.&#13;
FILM·&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film&#13;
Series;&#13;
"Rhapsody&#13;
in &#13;
August"&#13;
(Japanese);&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
7:30p.m.;&#13;
ticket&#13;
cost&#13;
for&#13;
four&#13;
remaining&#13;
films&#13;
is &#13;
$7.&#13;
FRIDA&#13;
Y, APRIL&#13;
2&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
- &#13;
guest&#13;
artist&#13;
recital-&#13;
Debra&#13;
Keil.&#13;
voice;&#13;
Noon;&#13;
free;&#13;
CART&#13;
0-118.&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
-&#13;
at Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan;&#13;
Owensboro,&#13;
KY;&#13;
doubleheaders&#13;
Fri.&#13;
and&#13;
Sat.&#13;
SA&#13;
TURDA&#13;
Y,&#13;
APRIL&#13;
3&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
TRACK&#13;
OPEN&#13;
- &#13;
at UW-Oshkosh:&#13;
Noon.&#13;
MEN' &#13;
S &#13;
BAS~BALL&#13;
- &#13;
at Aurora&#13;
University;&#13;
Aurora,&#13;
IL;&#13;
doubleheader;&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
CABARET&#13;
-&#13;
Trish&#13;
Schaefer&#13;
&amp; &#13;
Augie&#13;
Wegner;&#13;
CART&#13;
0-118;&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Tickets&#13;
at the&#13;
door&#13;
$8,&#13;
in&#13;
advance&#13;
at Tallent&#13;
Hall&#13;
with&#13;
ID&#13;
$5.&#13;
FILM·&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film&#13;
Series;&#13;
"Rhapsody&#13;
in &#13;
August"&#13;
(Japanese);&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
8 p.m.;&#13;
ticket&#13;
cost&#13;
for&#13;
four&#13;
remaining&#13;
films&#13;
is &#13;
$7.&#13;
SUNDAY,&#13;
APRIL&#13;
4&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
- &#13;
at Lakeland&#13;
College;&#13;
Sheboygan.&#13;
WI;&#13;
doubleheader;&#13;
I p.m.&#13;
FILM - &#13;
Foreign&#13;
Film&#13;
Series;&#13;
"Rhapsody&#13;
in &#13;
August"&#13;
(Japanese);&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
2 p.m.;&#13;
ticket&#13;
cost&#13;
for&#13;
four&#13;
remaining&#13;
films&#13;
is &#13;
$7.&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
APRIL&#13;
6&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
- &#13;
home&#13;
(Petrified&#13;
Springs);&#13;
doubleheader;&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
VOLUNTEER&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
MDA&#13;
Summer&#13;
Camp&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Attendants&#13;
Needed.&#13;
Can&#13;
you&#13;
give&#13;
one&#13;
week&#13;
(June&#13;
12-19)&#13;
to children&#13;
with&#13;
Muscular&#13;
Dystrophy?&#13;
Be&#13;
the&#13;
"arms&#13;
and&#13;
legs"&#13;
for&#13;
a  child&#13;
between&#13;
ages&#13;
6  &#13;
to&#13;
21&#13;
during&#13;
summer&#13;
camp.&#13;
Applications&#13;
are&#13;
available&#13;
in the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Keith&#13;
Gray.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
student,&#13;
participated&#13;
last&#13;
year&#13;
and&#13;
has&#13;
continued&#13;
to help&#13;
at special&#13;
outing&#13;
throughout&#13;
the&#13;
year.&#13;
He&#13;
would&#13;
be &#13;
happy&#13;
to share&#13;
his &#13;
experience&#13;
with&#13;
any&#13;
interested&#13;
students.&#13;
Try&#13;
this&#13;
short-term&#13;
volunteer&#13;
experience.&#13;
Help&#13;
beginner&#13;
swimmers&#13;
learn&#13;
to &#13;
swim&#13;
at the&#13;
YMCA&#13;
in &#13;
Racine&#13;
one&#13;
or more&#13;
times&#13;
during&#13;
the&#13;
week&#13;
of&#13;
April&#13;
12-16.&#13;
No&#13;
previous&#13;
experience&#13;
needed&#13;
but&#13;
must&#13;
enjoy&#13;
working&#13;
with&#13;
children.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
1 hour&#13;
or more.&#13;
Call&#13;
Julie&#13;
Neuman&#13;
(YMCA)&#13;
634~&#13;
1994&#13;
or see&#13;
Carol&#13;
in &#13;
the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Sign&#13;
up&#13;
now.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Spanish&#13;
Center&#13;
needs&#13;
tutors,&#13;
drama&#13;
assistant&#13;
and&#13;
basketball&#13;
coaches.&#13;
Work&#13;
with&#13;
youth&#13;
from&#13;
different&#13;
backgrounds.&#13;
Help&#13;
prevent&#13;
gang&#13;
involvement&#13;
by&#13;
being&#13;
there&#13;
for&#13;
children&#13;
ages&#13;
6-13.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
as&#13;
little&#13;
as 1 hour&#13;
weekly.&#13;
Ask&#13;
for&#13;
more&#13;
information&#13;
in the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Spanish&#13;
interpreter&#13;
for&#13;
written&#13;
materials.&#13;
The&#13;
Elder&#13;
Abuse&#13;
Program&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
needs&#13;
material&#13;
translated&#13;
into&#13;
Spanish.&#13;
Deadline&#13;
is May&#13;
l st.&#13;
Include&#13;
this&#13;
material&#13;
in &#13;
your&#13;
"volunteer"&#13;
file.&#13;
See&#13;
Carol&#13;
in &#13;
the&#13;
Career&#13;
Center&#13;
or call&#13;
595-2011.&#13;
Go&#13;
to Volunteer&#13;
Office,&#13;
WLLC-D175&#13;
for&#13;
more&#13;
information&#13;
or call&#13;
Carol&#13;
at 595-2011.&#13;
•&#13;
The&#13;
Education&#13;
Heavyweight&#13;
•  Father&#13;
of two&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Unified&#13;
Students.&#13;
•  Active&#13;
PTA&#13;
member,&#13;
computer&#13;
volunteer,&#13;
tutor,&#13;
band&#13;
booster.&#13;
•  Computer&#13;
engineer,&#13;
educated&#13;
at MIT&#13;
and&#13;
N.C.&#13;
State.&#13;
•  Consulting&#13;
engineer&#13;
for&#13;
NASA,&#13;
000,&#13;
ffiM,&#13;
etc,&#13;
•  Nine&#13;
years&#13;
on&#13;
N.C.&#13;
State&#13;
engineering&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Paid&#13;
for&#13;
by&#13;
Gary&#13;
Fostel&#13;
for&#13;
School&#13;
Board&#13;
- Gary&#13;
Fostel&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Need a&#13;
Car?&#13;
Get&#13;
your&#13;
homework&#13;
done&#13;
before&#13;
you&#13;
shop.&#13;
Use&#13;
our&#13;
FREE&#13;
Credit&#13;
Union&#13;
Car&#13;
Facts&#13;
reference&#13;
library.&#13;
Don't&#13;
pay&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
you&#13;
should!&#13;
Serving&#13;
all&#13;
UW&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
employees&#13;
and students.&#13;
1~.1&#13;
Tellent&#13;
Hall&#13;
Rm.&#13;
286&#13;
595-2150&#13;
9,30-4,00&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>ISSUE&#13;
23&#13;
The&#13;
election&#13;
results&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
elections&#13;
held&#13;
March&#13;
10th&#13;
IlIh &#13;
will &#13;
become&#13;
official&#13;
on&#13;
,March&#13;
26th when&#13;
the Stu-&#13;
Senate&#13;
ratifies&#13;
them.&#13;
ialy the results&#13;
are as fol-&#13;
Bovee:&#13;
213; Cheryl&#13;
Murphy:&#13;
, Dan&#13;
Blake:&#13;
236 Senators:&#13;
. er Punzel:&#13;
139; Ehsan&#13;
Ali:&#13;
163; &#13;
Vince&#13;
Bomer:&#13;
182; Deborah&#13;
Cuder:&#13;
142; Bruce&#13;
Rocco:&#13;
144;&#13;
!lily &#13;
Flores:&#13;
166; &#13;
David&#13;
Towle:&#13;
1; &#13;
Write-ins:&#13;
Pedro&#13;
Harury;&#13;
Hogan;&#13;
SUFACatlarge:&#13;
Tony&#13;
; P.U.A.B.&#13;
at large:&#13;
Vince&#13;
ler&#13;
Editorial&#13;
...&#13;
nside...&#13;
Liberal&#13;
Arts&#13;
Car&#13;
....&#13;
r Day&#13;
ot-&#13;
fers&#13;
oppol1un~ies&#13;
for&#13;
carrer&#13;
networking.&#13;
P8ge&#13;
2&#13;
Find&#13;
out&#13;
Whars&#13;
Up&#13;
on&#13;
cam-&#13;
pus&#13;
this&#13;
week.&#13;
Paga&#13;
3&#13;
Gabe&#13;
reflects&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
hell&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
tollways.&#13;
Page&#13;
5&#13;
Andy&#13;
raises&#13;
some&#13;
questions&#13;
oonceming&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News.&#13;
See &#13;
it &#13;
on &#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
The results&#13;
indicate&#13;
thatEric&#13;
Bovee,&#13;
the incumbent,&#13;
retained&#13;
the office&#13;
of President,&#13;
while&#13;
Dan&#13;
Blake&#13;
secured&#13;
his &#13;
first &#13;
term as the&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
The student&#13;
body also agreed&#13;
to representation&#13;
by the United&#13;
Slates&#13;
Student&#13;
Association&#13;
and to&#13;
continued&#13;
representation&#13;
by&#13;
United&#13;
Council.&#13;
The amendment&#13;
of the PSGA&#13;
Constitution&#13;
to in-&#13;
clude&#13;
a member&#13;
of the Faculty&#13;
Senate&#13;
on the &#13;
Student&#13;
Senate&#13;
was&#13;
also passed.&#13;
At the time of this printing,&#13;
there&#13;
were&#13;
no contestations&#13;
to the elec-&#13;
tion,&#13;
despite&#13;
several&#13;
indicators&#13;
that the USSA&#13;
referendum&#13;
may&#13;
be contested.&#13;
thnic&#13;
studies&#13;
minor&#13;
undergoes&#13;
revisions&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
-  PARKSIDE&#13;
fee secures&#13;
second&#13;
term&#13;
as president&#13;
and &#13;
UC &#13;
referendums&#13;
pass&#13;
Gabe&#13;
Kluka&#13;
Borner-&#13;
USSA&#13;
Fa . A   .&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
-   r.  &#13;
gamst:&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
UC-For:&#13;
Against:&#13;
Amendment:&#13;
Alan&#13;
R.&#13;
Cook&#13;
News&#13;
Writer&#13;
A &#13;
major&#13;
curriculum&#13;
revision&#13;
I1Ie&#13;
Ethnic&#13;
Studies&#13;
Minor&#13;
has&#13;
approvedbythecarnpus-wide&#13;
and &#13;
Curriculum&#13;
Commit-&#13;
leand&#13;
will &#13;
see &#13;
full &#13;
implementa-&#13;
1m &#13;
wilh &#13;
next fall's&#13;
new&#13;
course&#13;
1llI1ogue.&#13;
The&#13;
new curriculum&#13;
will in-&#13;
dade&#13;
fourcore courses,&#13;
stressing&#13;
a&#13;
IlImporative&#13;
approach&#13;
to ethnic&#13;
is-&#13;
lieS,&#13;
according&#13;
to Dr. Surinder&#13;
Dana. &#13;
Director&#13;
of the Center&#13;
for&#13;
&amp;hnic &#13;
Studies.&#13;
"We&#13;
believe&#13;
we&#13;
lavecreated&#13;
a curriculum&#13;
that can&#13;
be &#13;
or &#13;
use &#13;
to a wide&#13;
variety&#13;
of stu-&#13;
tIllS,&#13;
no &#13;
matter&#13;
what their life goals&#13;
Ie, .. &#13;
says Datta.&#13;
Thefourcorecoursesare"Eth-&#13;
IicSll.Idies-Concepts&#13;
and Methods&#13;
,""Ethnicity&#13;
and Race&#13;
in the &#13;
U.&#13;
S&#13;
A," "Cultural&#13;
Diversity&#13;
and U.S.&#13;
Ia",&#13;
.. &#13;
and a one to three&#13;
credit&#13;
"Internship&#13;
in Ethnic&#13;
Studies&#13;
...&#13;
These&#13;
courses&#13;
will provide&#13;
a firm&#13;
comparative&#13;
basis&#13;
from&#13;
which&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
can pursue&#13;
electives&#13;
focused&#13;
on particular&#13;
ethni&#13;
c yroups&#13;
and&#13;
other&#13;
areas&#13;
of personal&#13;
interest.&#13;
Thenewcurriculumrepresents&#13;
apulling&#13;
together&#13;
of existing&#13;
multi-&#13;
disciplinary&#13;
strengths&#13;
and academic&#13;
expertise,&#13;
states&#13;
Dr.  John&#13;
C.&#13;
Stockwell,&#13;
Provostand&#13;
Vice-Chan-&#13;
cellor.&#13;
"Our&#13;
real strength&#13;
is with&#13;
our diverse&#13;
and &#13;
committed&#13;
faculty.&#13;
..&#13;
The major&#13;
revision&#13;
in the Eth-&#13;
nic Studies&#13;
Minor&#13;
stems&#13;
from pres-&#13;
sures,&#13;
hath&#13;
internal&#13;
and external,&#13;
muses&#13;
Daua&#13;
. "All&#13;
faculties&#13;
con-&#13;
stantly&#13;
revise&#13;
curriculums.&#13;
There&#13;
is a sense&#13;
among&#13;
faculty&#13;
and ad-&#13;
ministration&#13;
that this is an area that&#13;
we should&#13;
work&#13;
on. Most&#13;
impor-&#13;
tantly,&#13;
perhaps,&#13;
we have&#13;
a plethora&#13;
of faculty&#13;
will ing to donate&#13;
their&#13;
time&#13;
and effort&#13;
to this enterprise."&#13;
Besides&#13;
this internal&#13;
pres-&#13;
sure,&#13;
Datta&#13;
proudly&#13;
states,&#13;
..... we&#13;
have&#13;
an increasing&#13;
number&#13;
of&#13;
minority&#13;
students&#13;
who&#13;
are ex-&#13;
pressing&#13;
their&#13;
needs&#13;
... This&#13;
is a&#13;
way to meet&#13;
those&#13;
needs&#13;
using&#13;
sources&#13;
already&#13;
available&#13;
to us."&#13;
"We&#13;
are encouraging&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
to look at this program&#13;
as a&#13;
compliment&#13;
to any &#13;
area &#13;
of major&#13;
study&#13;
Datta&#13;
enthusiastically&#13;
ex-&#13;
plains.&#13;
"Contact&#13;
a person&#13;
on the&#13;
steering&#13;
committee.&#13;
Talk&#13;
to your&#13;
advisor.&#13;
Plan your curriculum&#13;
to take&#13;
advantage&#13;
of this unique&#13;
oppor-&#13;
tunity.&#13;
Plan&#13;
to work&#13;
this minor&#13;
into your&#13;
program&#13;
of study.&#13;
We&#13;
are convinced&#13;
in our hearts&#13;
that&#13;
this curriculum&#13;
would&#13;
be an ex-&#13;
cel~ent&#13;
compliment&#13;
for every&#13;
stu'&#13;
dent on this campus."&#13;
Stockwell&#13;
wholeheartedly&#13;
agrees.&#13;
''We have&#13;
an excellent&#13;
program&#13;
here.&#13;
It's&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page&#13;
5&#13;
Annual&#13;
Fulbright&#13;
Grant&#13;
competition&#13;
opens&#13;
On&#13;
May &#13;
l&#13;
st, the United&#13;
States&#13;
Information&#13;
Agency&#13;
(USIA),&#13;
theJ.&#13;
WiD!"",&#13;
Fulbright&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Schol-&#13;
II!hip&#13;
Board&#13;
(BFS)&#13;
and the losti-&#13;
ilUeoflntemational&#13;
Education&#13;
(00)&#13;
~ce&#13;
the official&#13;
opening&#13;
of&#13;
~  1994-95&#13;
competition&#13;
for&#13;
bright&#13;
Grants,&#13;
and other&#13;
grants&#13;
-hich&#13;
pertain&#13;
to study&#13;
abroad&#13;
jn&#13;
-=ademic&#13;
fields,&#13;
and for profes-&#13;
I10naI &#13;
!raining&#13;
in the creative&#13;
and&#13;
Performing&#13;
arts.&#13;
10' &#13;
Thepurpose&#13;
of these&#13;
grants&#13;
is&#13;
~rease&#13;
mutual&#13;
understanding&#13;
S  een the people&#13;
of the United&#13;
Iates &#13;
and other&#13;
countries&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
exchange&#13;
of persons,&#13;
knowl-&#13;
edge&#13;
and skills.&#13;
Fulbright&#13;
Grants&#13;
are funded&#13;
under&#13;
the Mutual&#13;
Educational&#13;
and&#13;
Cultural&#13;
Exchange&#13;
Act of 1961,&#13;
through&#13;
an annual&#13;
appropriation&#13;
made&#13;
by Congress&#13;
to USIA,&#13;
for-&#13;
eign&#13;
governments,&#13;
universities.&#13;
corporations,&#13;
and private&#13;
donors.&#13;
Fulbright&#13;
Grants&#13;
are available&#13;
for&#13;
study&#13;
or research.&#13;
Travel&#13;
grants&#13;
are available&#13;
to&#13;
selected&#13;
countries&#13;
to &#13;
supplement&#13;
maintenance&#13;
awards&#13;
from&#13;
other&#13;
sources&#13;
that do not provide&#13;
funds&#13;
for international&#13;
travel,&#13;
or tosupple-&#13;
ment&#13;
the applicant's&#13;
personal&#13;
funds.&#13;
TheBFS,&#13;
compusedof&#13;
12&#13;
educational&#13;
and&#13;
public&#13;
leaders&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed&#13;
by the President&#13;
of the&#13;
United&#13;
Stales,&#13;
establishes&#13;
the cri-&#13;
teria&#13;
for the selection&#13;
of candi-&#13;
dates,&#13;
and has fmal authority&#13;
for&#13;
the awarding&#13;
of grants.&#13;
For all granlS,&#13;
applicanlS&#13;
must&#13;
be U.S. citizens&#13;
at the time&#13;
of  application&#13;
and&#13;
hold&#13;
a&#13;
bachelor's&#13;
degree&#13;
or ilS equiva-&#13;
lent by the beginning&#13;
date&#13;
of &#13;
the&#13;
grant.&#13;
Creative&#13;
and performingart·&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page&#13;
5&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
MARCH&#13;
24, 1993&#13;
A Buckminster-what?!?&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
R...,..&#13;
s... &#13;
JbaIo&#13;
by&#13;
Mib&#13;
~&#13;
University&#13;
students&#13;
constructed&#13;
a &#13;
plastic&#13;
foam&#13;
hall, wooden&#13;
dowel&#13;
and&#13;
fishing&#13;
line model&#13;
of a molecule&#13;
known&#13;
as BuckminSterfullerene&#13;
over&#13;
spring&#13;
break.&#13;
Namedfor&#13;
Buckminster&#13;
Fuller,&#13;
themolccule&#13;
I &#13;
thefirst&#13;
new&#13;
form of &#13;
carbon&#13;
discovered&#13;
in centuries.&#13;
The &#13;
mudel&#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
seen &#13;
m &#13;
MIddle&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
wbere&#13;
it &#13;
han&#13;
s &#13;
from&#13;
the ceilin&#13;
.&#13;
1st district&#13;
congressional&#13;
debate&#13;
Nick&#13;
Zahn&#13;
Assistant&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Association,&#13;
Common&#13;
C usc of&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
and th  League&#13;
of&#13;
Women&#13;
voters,&#13;
The&#13;
modcraJOt&#13;
wasWilliarnHauda.&#13;
tate &#13;
Director&#13;
of Common&#13;
Cause.&#13;
Boyd&#13;
Frederick.&#13;
a Parkslde&#13;
Senator&#13;
insuumental&#13;
inorganizm&#13;
the forum.&#13;
was &#13;
pleased&#13;
WIth&#13;
po&#13;
he&#13;
turnout&#13;
but drsappoimed&#13;
WIth&#13;
the&#13;
ooicome&#13;
from the tudc11t&#13;
body&#13;
and&#13;
student&#13;
govemmem.&#13;
"There&#13;
were&#13;
only&#13;
there&#13;
nators"&#13;
ho showed&#13;
up. &#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
people"&#13;
ho&#13;
dId&#13;
come&#13;
lcamt&#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
about&#13;
the &#13;
cand"&#13;
dates&#13;
and there&#13;
will &#13;
be&#13;
informed&#13;
voiers&#13;
at the &#13;
pole&#13;
."&#13;
Bruce&#13;
Rocco.&#13;
who&#13;
w&#13;
In&#13;
charge&#13;
of &#13;
ummg&#13;
the candIda!&#13;
and&#13;
isaIsoa&#13;
stUdent&#13;
senasor&#13;
thoug/ll&#13;
that &#13;
the&#13;
debale&#13;
was &#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
bopes&#13;
that VOlers&#13;
do &#13;
th &#13;
It&#13;
pat!&#13;
by&#13;
corning&#13;
out to vore.&#13;
Sall.lrday,March2Oth,a&#13;
1stDis-&#13;
trict &#13;
Congressional&#13;
debate&#13;
was held&#13;
at &#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside&#13;
in the Union&#13;
the-&#13;
ater.&#13;
The forum&#13;
featured&#13;
9 candi-&#13;
dates&#13;
interested&#13;
in the seatLes&#13;
Aspin&#13;
left vacant&#13;
after he becarneSecretary&#13;
of Defence.&#13;
DemocralS&#13;
who attended&#13;
were:&#13;
State&#13;
Representatives&#13;
Petet&#13;
Barca&#13;
and Wayne&#13;
Wood,&#13;
Dem.&#13;
StaleChair-&#13;
man Jeff Neubauer,&#13;
Dr. &#13;
Jeffery&#13;
Th0-&#13;
mas,&#13;
and Rev.&#13;
Sam Piau.&#13;
The Re-&#13;
publican&#13;
was State&#13;
Representative&#13;
Chuck&#13;
Coleman.&#13;
Mark&#13;
Neuman,&#13;
a&#13;
Republican&#13;
who&#13;
ran &#13;
against&#13;
Aspin&#13;
in the fall, did not anend.&#13;
The&#13;
Inde-&#13;
pendentcandidate&#13;
was &#13;
Karl &#13;
Huebner&#13;
and the &#13;
Libertarian&#13;
was &#13;
Mr. &#13;
Kozak.&#13;
The forum&#13;
was sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Sll.Ident&#13;
Government&#13;
REWARD&#13;
OFFERED&#13;
Campus&#13;
Police&#13;
are offering&#13;
a reward&#13;
for mformatlon&#13;
leading&#13;
to &#13;
the&#13;
arrest&#13;
and&#13;
conviction&#13;
of the person&#13;
or persons&#13;
responSible&#13;
for the theft&#13;
of &#13;
$3500&#13;
wlXlh&#13;
of equipment&#13;
from&#13;
the &#13;
Media&#13;
ServICes&#13;
area· &#13;
The &#13;
theft&#13;
occured&#13;
between&#13;
the beginning&#13;
of the semester&#13;
and &#13;
March&#13;
3nl.&#13;
All&#13;
responses&#13;
will be held in strict&#13;
confidence.&#13;
Pmons&#13;
WIthinfont\8lJOll&#13;
regarding&#13;
this theft&#13;
should&#13;
contaCt&#13;
Campus&#13;
Pohce&#13;
al &#13;
595-2455.&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page &#13;
2&#13;
Man:h24,1&#13;
Richard&#13;
Oberst&#13;
BrianLarsen&#13;
is &#13;
ajunior&#13;
majoring&#13;
in &#13;
Biologoical&#13;
Science&#13;
and &#13;
is &#13;
in &#13;
the Pre Health&#13;
program.&#13;
Because&#13;
of &#13;
his &#13;
interest&#13;
in&#13;
the health&#13;
field,&#13;
Brian&#13;
has been volunteering&#13;
in &#13;
the emergency&#13;
room&#13;
at Kenosha&#13;
Hospital&#13;
and Medical&#13;
Center.&#13;
Brian&#13;
as often&#13;
worked&#13;
double&#13;
shifts&#13;
and within&#13;
the last five months&#13;
has volunteered&#13;
over 100&#13;
hours.&#13;
Rickard&#13;
Oberst,&#13;
a Biology/Chemistry&#13;
major&#13;
with an interest&#13;
in &#13;
the Pre Health&#13;
Program,&#13;
has volunteered&#13;
over 100 hours&#13;
since enrolling&#13;
in&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Program&#13;
in September.&#13;
Rick&#13;
is &#13;
a Unit Commissioner&#13;
for the Boy Scours&#13;
of&#13;
America&#13;
in &#13;
Racine.&#13;
He also coaches&#13;
young&#13;
people&#13;
in&#13;
baseball&#13;
and basketball&#13;
for&#13;
the Racine&#13;
Optimists&#13;
Club.&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
Stahl&#13;
was matched&#13;
with a little girl through&#13;
Big BrotherslBig&#13;
Sisters&#13;
of&#13;
Racine&#13;
lastspring&#13;
and spends&#13;
valuable&#13;
time each week&#13;
with her little sister.&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
also helps&#13;
out &#13;
in &#13;
a kindergarten&#13;
classroom&#13;
at St. Rita's&#13;
School&#13;
in Racine&#13;
as well&#13;
as teaching&#13;
emergency&#13;
procedures&#13;
to latch&#13;
key children&#13;
during&#13;
the "Kid's&#13;
In&#13;
Charge"projecL&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
is ajunior&#13;
majoring&#13;
in&#13;
Math&#13;
and plans&#13;
to &#13;
be an elementary&#13;
school&#13;
teacher.&#13;
She has totaled&#13;
144 hours&#13;
of volunteer&#13;
service.&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
Stahl&#13;
Alaina&#13;
Whitney,&#13;
a senior&#13;
in &#13;
Dramatic&#13;
Arts, has been volunteering&#13;
for three years&#13;
as a guardian&#13;
for mentally&#13;
ill&#13;
and &#13;
developmentally&#13;
disabled&#13;
adults.&#13;
She has been&#13;
assigned&#13;
her 7th ward through&#13;
theKenosha&#13;
Guardianship&#13;
Program.&#13;
Along&#13;
with&#13;
some&#13;
special&#13;
event&#13;
assignments&#13;
with KIN,&#13;
K.Y.F.,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Homecare,&#13;
ere. ,&#13;
Alaina&#13;
has volunteered&#13;
a total&#13;
of 970 hours&#13;
since&#13;
enrolling&#13;
in &#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Program.&#13;
Alaina&#13;
Whitney&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
History&#13;
of fashion&#13;
- Union&#13;
207; noon&#13;
sponsered&#13;
by SAO&#13;
Guest&#13;
artist&#13;
recital&#13;
- CART&#13;
D-118;&#13;
noon&#13;
sponsered&#13;
by CECA&#13;
UW-P&#13;
men's&#13;
baseball&#13;
at St. Joseph's&#13;
College&#13;
- 1:30pm&#13;
An evening&#13;
with Rosa&#13;
Luxemburg&#13;
- given&#13;
by Prof.&#13;
Gellott&#13;
MOLN&#13;
105; 7pm;&#13;
$3&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Film:&#13;
The &#13;
African&#13;
Queen.&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
4:30 &#13;
&amp; &#13;
7pm;&#13;
$1&#13;
Susan&#13;
Julian's&#13;
Band.&#13;
Union&#13;
Square;&#13;
8:30pm&#13;
sponsered&#13;
by PAB&#13;
Friday&#13;
"United&#13;
for a Better&#13;
Community"&#13;
keynote&#13;
speakers-&#13;
Mauren&#13;
Dolan&#13;
&amp; &#13;
Debra&#13;
Kenner.&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
noon&#13;
to 2pm&#13;
UW-P&#13;
women's&#13;
softball&#13;
at Wayne&#13;
State,&#13;
MI; time TBA&#13;
Jazz ensemble-&#13;
CART&#13;
OJ &#13;
18; noon&#13;
Saturday&#13;
UW-P&#13;
women's&#13;
track at Wheaton&#13;
College,&#13;
ll..; &#13;
noon&#13;
Illinois&#13;
Gospel&#13;
Choir-Union&#13;
Cinema;&#13;
6pm&#13;
Monday&#13;
uw&#13;
-P women's&#13;
softball&#13;
at Pets;&#13;
3:30;&#13;
doubleheader&#13;
Thesday&#13;
Julie Schrader,&#13;
singer/songwriter.&#13;
Union&#13;
Square8:3Opm&#13;
sponsered&#13;
by SAO&#13;
The real winners&#13;
on Oscar&#13;
nigh&#13;
tact, but he did a good job in &#13;
sp.&#13;
of that.&#13;
The Best Adapted&#13;
Screenpla&#13;
category&#13;
isactua1ly&#13;
quite &#13;
easy. &#13;
Ru&#13;
Prawer&#13;
jhabuala&#13;
can be elimina&#13;
because&#13;
of unpronounceable&#13;
rule. So I suppose&#13;
that would&#13;
lea&#13;
the award&#13;
to Tolkin&#13;
for ThePlay&#13;
It's good&#13;
to se him back&#13;
to wo&#13;
after The Lord of the Rings&#13;
seri&#13;
Original&#13;
Screenplay&#13;
at&#13;
glance&#13;
might&#13;
be a difficult&#13;
pic&#13;
Unforgiven,&#13;
The Crying&#13;
Game,&#13;
an&#13;
Lorenzo's&#13;
Oil are all good movi&#13;
and Passion&#13;
Fish is a stupid&#13;
titl&#13;
But luckily&#13;
Woody&#13;
Allen&#13;
is norni&#13;
nated&#13;
for his screenplay&#13;
of Hus&#13;
bands&#13;
and Wives&#13;
so he is the au&#13;
matic&#13;
victor.&#13;
And now for the most&#13;
anx&#13;
iously&#13;
awaited&#13;
award.&#13;
(This is usu&#13;
ally the time&#13;
in the awards&#13;
cer&#13;
emony&#13;
when&#13;
they try and wake&#13;
u&#13;
all the viewers&#13;
that fell asleep&#13;
dur-&#13;
ing the first 14 hours.)&#13;
The best&#13;
picture&#13;
category&#13;
is dominated&#13;
by&#13;
high profile&#13;
actors&#13;
and movies&#13;
and&#13;
unfortunately&#13;
none of them can be&#13;
eliminated&#13;
with an absurd&#13;
title.&#13;
Unforgiven:&#13;
goodacting,good&#13;
story,&#13;
but the Westerns&#13;
are a thing&#13;
of the past and the actors&#13;
are too&#13;
old.&#13;
Howard'sEnd-&#13;
never&#13;
played&#13;
in Kenosha.&#13;
This is usually&#13;
a sign&#13;
of a good movie&#13;
but I think&#13;
this one&#13;
nilly be a little too obscure&#13;
to pick.&#13;
The Crying&#13;
Game-&#13;
best plot&#13;
twislSofanymoviesinceHitchcock&#13;
but none&#13;
of the wit of Hitchcock.&#13;
Scentofa&#13;
Woman-&#13;
title doesn't&#13;
sound&#13;
like a serious&#13;
movie.&#13;
A Few Good&#13;
Men-&#13;
The best&#13;
movie&#13;
nominated&#13;
for a best picture&#13;
and therefore&#13;
the clear cut winner.&#13;
I hope&#13;
these&#13;
choices,&#13;
however&#13;
absurd,&#13;
can help you as cheer&#13;
for&#13;
your favorite&#13;
movies&#13;
during&#13;
Oscar&#13;
Night&#13;
this Monday.&#13;
Chris&#13;
Tishuk&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Feature&#13;
Editor&#13;
1992&#13;
was a somewhat&#13;
slim&#13;
year&#13;
for movies.&#13;
Jack&#13;
Palance&#13;
wasn't&#13;
nominated&#13;
for any awards&#13;
and Jodie&#13;
Foster&#13;
wasn't&#13;
in any&#13;
movies.&#13;
But there&#13;
are some&#13;
re-&#13;
deeming&#13;
values&#13;
for the movies&#13;
of&#13;
1992.&#13;
Barbara&#13;
Streisand&#13;
didn't&#13;
make&#13;
any pictures&#13;
but I think&#13;
I&#13;
make&#13;
some&#13;
irreverent&#13;
picks&#13;
any-&#13;
way.&#13;
The 5 nominations&#13;
per cat-&#13;
egory&#13;
may prove&#13;
to be too many&#13;
choices&#13;
fortheaveragecitizen.&#13;
But&#13;
that can be narrowed&#13;
relatively&#13;
easy.&#13;
Any movie&#13;
with an absurd&#13;
or&#13;
indisguishable&#13;
title isautomaticall&#13;
y&#13;
dismissed.&#13;
Or &#13;
any actor&#13;
with an&#13;
unpronounceable&#13;
name&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
removed&#13;
from the ballot&#13;
because&#13;
it&#13;
wouldjustmaketoomanydifficul-&#13;
ties for anyone&#13;
to have read in front&#13;
millions&#13;
of people&#13;
and any Woody&#13;
Allen&#13;
movie&#13;
is an automatic&#13;
award.&#13;
I'll start with an easy category&#13;
like Best&#13;
Actress.&#13;
Although&#13;
I'm&#13;
sure these were greatperfonnances,&#13;
almost&#13;
all can be dismissed&#13;
by the&#13;
absurd&#13;
or indistinguishable&#13;
title&#13;
clause.&#13;
Someone&#13;
actually&#13;
wanted&#13;
to title a movie&#13;
Passion&#13;
Fish,&#13;
or&#13;
Indochine?&#13;
The award&#13;
has to go to Susan&#13;
Sarandon,&#13;
though,&#13;
if &#13;
for no other&#13;
reason&#13;
than she &#13;
was &#13;
to &#13;
The Rocky&#13;
Horror&#13;
Picture&#13;
Show.&#13;
The Best Actor&#13;
category&#13;
is a&#13;
liuJe more difficult.&#13;
Clint Eastwood&#13;
was good,&#13;
buthe'Il&#13;
never&#13;
Iivedown&#13;
doing&#13;
a movie&#13;
with an ape. Denzel&#13;
Washington&#13;
made&#13;
a good Malcolm&#13;
X, but nobody&#13;
who plays&#13;
a 60's&#13;
political&#13;
or social&#13;
figure,&#13;
no matter&#13;
how good,&#13;
could&#13;
possibly&#13;
win&#13;
So I'll  give&#13;
the award&#13;
to&#13;
Pacino,&#13;
Granted,&#13;
he seemed&#13;
to&#13;
have a liuJe trouble&#13;
with eye con-&#13;
Liberal&#13;
Arts Career&#13;
Day&#13;
Conference&#13;
offers career&#13;
networking&#13;
Julie&#13;
Anding&#13;
The 1993 Liberal&#13;
Arts &#13;
Career&#13;
Day&#13;
(LACD)willgivestudenlSachance&#13;
to explore&#13;
employment&#13;
possibili-&#13;
ties and make&#13;
career&#13;
connections&#13;
in the liberal&#13;
a-ts &#13;
field.&#13;
The half&#13;
day event&#13;
will be&#13;
centered&#13;
in Main&#13;
Place&#13;
on the morn-&#13;
ing of Wednesday,&#13;
April&#13;
7th. Parkside&#13;
alumni&#13;
and area&#13;
business&#13;
profes-&#13;
sionals&#13;
will be &#13;
par-&#13;
ticipating&#13;
in career&#13;
information&#13;
panels&#13;
and  speaking&#13;
to&#13;
classes&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
employment&#13;
po-&#13;
tential&#13;
ofliberal&#13;
arts&#13;
graduates.&#13;
LACD&#13;
also&#13;
features&#13;
the&#13;
chance&#13;
for students&#13;
to  sign&#13;
up  for&#13;
"Shadow&#13;
Day."&#13;
"Most&#13;
people&#13;
think&#13;
Shadow&#13;
Day has something&#13;
to do&#13;
with&#13;
groundhogs,"'said&#13;
June&#13;
Grogan&#13;
of the Shadow&#13;
Day com-&#13;
mittee.&#13;
In fact, the shadow&#13;
student&#13;
.will&#13;
spend&#13;
a day at work&#13;
with a .&#13;
,member&#13;
of the alumni,&#13;
and gain&#13;
first hand&#13;
exposure&#13;
to on thejob&#13;
experiences.&#13;
It &#13;
also offers&#13;
the op-&#13;
portunity&#13;
to build&#13;
a&#13;
career&#13;
network.&#13;
Among&#13;
the&#13;
day's&#13;
festivities&#13;
will&#13;
be displays&#13;
and demo&#13;
onstiationsbystudent&#13;
clubs&#13;
and organiza-&#13;
tions.&#13;
Candy&#13;
and &#13;
t-&#13;
shirt sales&#13;
as well as&#13;
prize&#13;
drawings&#13;
and&#13;
music&#13;
wiIl be part of&#13;
the fun.&#13;
The theme&#13;
for&#13;
LACD&#13;
this year&#13;
is&#13;
"Standing&#13;
On Top of&#13;
the World"&#13;
based&#13;
on&#13;
the Van Halen&#13;
song&#13;
of the same&#13;
name.&#13;
A&#13;
fuIl schedule&#13;
of events&#13;
will appear&#13;
in a future&#13;
issue&#13;
of The Ranger.&#13;
</text>
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