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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Provost Ostheimer to retire</text>
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              <text>--&#13;
Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
_______ ~~~~~~~ ~W~~~~~~~--O-c-to-:b-e-r-12_:/-20':,O~O:_::" " = Issue5 Vo1.30&#13;
Provost Ostheimer to retire&#13;
Flanked by his wife Nancy Ostheimer and chancellor Jack Keating,&#13;
UW·Parkside Provost and Vice Chancellor John Osthheimer discusses&#13;
University policy. Ostheimer will retire at the end of June 2001.&#13;
Piele leads US team to&#13;
gOld in Beijing&#13;
UW-Parkside Mathematics&#13;
Professor Don Piele calls it the&#13;
most successful team he's ever&#13;
taken to an international competition.&#13;
Piele and his team of&#13;
four high school students&#13;
recently returned from the&#13;
International Olympiad in&#13;
Informatics (101) with four&#13;
medals. The week-long competition&#13;
was held in Beijing,&#13;
China.&#13;
The team, which was picked&#13;
during an eight-day training&#13;
camp at UW-Parkside this&#13;
summer, included Reid Barton&#13;
of Arlington, Mass, John&#13;
Danaher from Springfield, Va.,&#13;
Percy Liang of Phoenix, Ariz.,&#13;
and Gregory Price from Falls&#13;
Church, Va. Each won a medal&#13;
at the 101, with the team winning&#13;
a gold, two silvers, and a&#13;
bronze.&#13;
Teams from more than 70&#13;
countries competed.&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Provost and Vice&#13;
Chancellor John Ostheimer has&#13;
announced he will retire at the&#13;
end of the academic year.&#13;
Ostheimer has served as the&#13;
University's second-in-command&#13;
since July 1995.&#13;
A graduate ofYaleUniversity,&#13;
Ostheimer taught Political&#13;
Science at the University&#13;
College in Dar es Salaam,&#13;
Tanzania, and at Northern&#13;
Arizona University in&#13;
Flagstaff, Ariz. He also served&#13;
as Dean ofArts and Sciencesat&#13;
University of the Colorado at&#13;
Denver and East Tennessee&#13;
State prior to coming to UWParkside.&#13;
Ostheimer has served the&#13;
community while serving UWParkside.&#13;
He has been a member&#13;
of the education committees&#13;
of both Racine Area&#13;
Manufacturers and Commerce&#13;
and the Kenosha Area Business&#13;
Alliance. He has been a board&#13;
member of the Education&#13;
Foundation of Kenosha and the&#13;
Racine Community Coalition&#13;
for Youth. His also is a familiar&#13;
face at UW-Parksideplays, concerts,&#13;
lectures, exhibits, and&#13;
sports events&#13;
Ostheimer's last scheduled&#13;
day on the job will be June 30,&#13;
2001. His plans for retirement&#13;
are unclear at this time; but&#13;
travelling, being outdoors and&#13;
fishing, and enjoying the arts&#13;
are part of those plans.&#13;
UW-Parkside's Don Piele, center, with his medal-winning, from left, Gregory Price,&#13;
John Danaher, Piele, Percy Liang, and Reid Barton.&#13;
2 THE RANGER&#13;
Ins d e&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
3 Parkside has low student debt&#13;
Reasons why 57% of Parkside's students were&#13;
debt free.&#13;
4' Rape: Keep it from happening&#13;
Spread the word and be safer.&#13;
5 Student Voices&#13;
Students speak out about issues they see&#13;
as injustices.&#13;
6 Movie Review&#13;
Remember the Titans, overcoming&#13;
racial barriers.&#13;
1 spons&#13;
Goaltenders move soccer teams ahead.&#13;
STIFF101&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Business ManagerlBusiness Team&#13;
. Open&#13;
Designers&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Jennie-Leigh Morris&#13;
Phptgraphy Director&#13;
Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
jax 262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout ttIl" semester by students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, who are&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy; The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered&#13;
to the Ran~ o£.fke ~L D-139C).Letters must be typed and include the author's name and phone number. Letters must&#13;
be fn.e from ITUSleading or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not be published. For publication PIlI'f'05eS, author's&#13;
name can be withhekL but only upon request. Tbe Ranger reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
Thin at t&#13;
o·&#13;
• David Holmes' "Mystical Mechanical Menagerie," Fine Arts Gallery,&#13;
Mon./Thur. 11 a.m, to 5 p.m., Tue./Wed. 11 a.m, to 8 p.m., through Nov. 2&#13;
• BadWater Book Invitational Exhibit, UW-Parkside library, through Oct. 31&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 12&#13;
• Alcohol Awareness Week, through Oct. 13, Peer Health Educators'&#13;
booth, Main Concourse, bring an alcohol ad and get a surprise.&#13;
• InfoBreak: Intro. to PC Pine E-mail, 2:15 p.m., Instructional Tech&#13;
Center, Wyllie 01500, free&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: Artists' Books lecture w /Max Yela,&#13;
7 p.m.. Overlook Lounge, second floor of library, free .&#13;
• Women's Volleyball: vs. Lewis, 7 p.m., SAC; UW-Parkslde students&#13;
admitted free to all games. .&#13;
Friday, Oct. 13 . . .&#13;
• Biological Sciences Colloquium: Effects of Age on Circadian&#13;
Rhythms of Siberian Hamster, noon, Molinaro 105, free.&#13;
• Men's soccer vs, Northern Kentucky, 2 p.m., Wood Rd. Field&#13;
• Women's soccer vs. Northern Kentucky, 4:30 p.m. Wood Rd. Field&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14&#13;
• Parkside Invitational Cross-Country meet, 1 and 1:45 p.m. starts,&#13;
National Cross Country Course.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 15&#13;
• Men's soccer vs. Indianapolis, 12:30 p.m., Wood Road Field&#13;
• Women's soccer vs. Indianapolis, 3 p.m., Wood Rd. Field&#13;
Monday, Oct. 16&#13;
• University Activities presents: Herps Alive: Reptiles for All, Union&#13;
Square, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., free.&#13;
• Irene Farrera, singer I guitarist, noon, Main Place, free, part of&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Month.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18&#13;
• Soup and Substance: "Nuts &amp; Bolts of School Reform, noon, free,&#13;
w Ifree soup, Union 104-106.&#13;
• Noon concert: Carla Trynchuk, violin, Union Cinema Theater, noon&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: Olympic Games: 776 BC through&#13;
AD 2000, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge, second floor of the library, free&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 19&#13;
• Plays at Parkside: "A View from the Bridge" by Arthur Miller,&#13;
10 a.m., Com Arts Theatre, tickets: $7 students I faculty I staffl seniors.&#13;
Events Hotline: (262) 595-2408.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours:&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m,&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside pool hours:&#13;
Thursday: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., 4 to 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 to 9 a.m., 11 a.m, to 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2 p.m,&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6 p.m.&#13;
Monday: 7 to 9 a.m., 11 a.m. to U:30 p.m.,&#13;
2 to 3 p.m. and 4 to 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., 4 to 6:30 p.m ..&#13;
Wednesday: 7 to 9 a.m., 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.,&#13;
2 to 3 p.m, and 4 to 8 p.m,&#13;
Pool Line: (262) 595-2780.&#13;
-&#13;
UW-Parkside has low student debt&#13;
by Gina Ciardo&#13;
The September 18 issue, U.S.&#13;
News and World Report ranked&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
second in the Midwest&#13;
for low student debt.&#13;
According to the study, students&#13;
who graduated with debt&#13;
from the university in 1999had&#13;
an average debt of $7,725 per&#13;
student. The University of St.&#13;
Francis in Indiana was ranked&#13;
first with an average debt of&#13;
$3,216 per student among its&#13;
graduates who incurred debt.&#13;
Chicago State University, on the&#13;
other hand, had the most debt.&#13;
Fifty percent of their students&#13;
graduated with a debt of&#13;
$23,000.&#13;
In addition to low debt, 57% of&#13;
Parkside's students were debt&#13;
free. Again, the University of&#13;
St. Francis was ranked first,&#13;
only 5% of their students were&#13;
without debt. In fact, of the&#13;
five universities ranked for&#13;
low debt in the Midwest, only&#13;
Saginaw Valley State&#13;
University in Michigan had&#13;
more students debt free, 65%.&#13;
When U.s. News and World&#13;
Report compiled the information,&#13;
they took into account&#13;
loans taken out by students&#13;
from the colleges themselves,&#13;
from financial institutions, and&#13;
from federal, state, and local&#13;
governments. For Parkside&#13;
students, this primarily entails&#13;
Federal Stafford loans which&#13;
are allocated by the Great&#13;
Lakes Higher Education&#13;
Corporation, the guaranty&#13;
agency that serves this area.&#13;
In 1999,nearly 2,800 Parkside&#13;
students borrowed, 44% of the&#13;
enrollment. The total amount&#13;
of tuition loaned was around&#13;
$8 million dollars.&#13;
Reasons for Parkside's low&#13;
debt may be a combination of&#13;
several things. First, low debt&#13;
may be contributed to the university's&#13;
low tuition. Among&#13;
the thirteen, four-year, public&#13;
universities in Wisconsin,&#13;
Parkside ranks third for lowest&#13;
tuition rates. UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
UW-Superior narrowly beat&#13;
out Parkside both having a difference&#13;
of under $100 each. If&#13;
students are spending less,&#13;
they will owe less.&#13;
Secondly, a large majority of&#13;
Parkside's students are commuters.&#13;
In 1999, only 714 students&#13;
lived in the dorms--that's&#13;
9% of Parkside's overall student&#13;
population. This means&#13;
that Parkside students are&#13;
owing the university less&#13;
money every semester than the&#13;
average college student at other&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Thirdly, many students are&#13;
qualifying for grants. These are&#13;
sums of money used toward&#13;
university fees that do not have&#13;
to be paid back. Ingrid Austin,&#13;
the acting director in Parkside's&#13;
Financial Aid &amp; Scholarships&#13;
office, explains, "We have a&#13;
number of students who show&#13;
quite a bit of [financial] need&#13;
when they go through the financial&#13;
aid process. So a lot of those&#13;
students are receiving grant&#13;
funds either from the federal&#13;
government or the state government.&#13;
A lot of students are finding&#13;
out that they are able to&#13;
cover a large percent of their&#13;
tuition through grants."&#13;
Lastly, Parkside has a large&#13;
percentage of non-traditional&#13;
students and students who&#13;
nave Jobs outside of school. In&#13;
both cases, these students can&#13;
pay their tuition or payoff their&#13;
loans before they incur a large&#13;
amount of debt.&#13;
3&#13;
Trager trip an exchange between (riends&#13;
By Will Brinkman&#13;
Professor I:.i1lianTrager left on&#13;
October 5, 2000, for Nigeria,&#13;
Africa.As a part of the faculty&#13;
exchange program between&#13;
UW-Parkside and Obafemi&#13;
Awolowo University in lie-He,&#13;
a southern region of Nigeria,&#13;
she will spend two semesters&#13;
in Africa. In addition, Trager is&#13;
participating in the sociology&#13;
trip to Ghana, Africa.&#13;
"I have a very long standing&#13;
connection with the university&#13;
because of a faculty exchange&#13;
which I directed, and also&#13;
because of my research.&#13;
Between 1991 and 1996six faculty&#13;
members from there came&#13;
here to Parkside and several&#13;
Parkside faculty members&#13;
went there."&#13;
According to Trager, when&#13;
most people think of Africa,&#13;
Professor Lillian Trager leads&#13;
sociology trip to Ghana, Africa.&#13;
more specifically East Africa,&#13;
they think of going on safari&#13;
and viewing wild animals.&#13;
This is not the case in West&#13;
Africa.&#13;
"This is not the trip for people&#13;
who want to go to Africa to see&#13;
animals. It's much more exciting&#13;
for people who are interested&#13;
in other cultures and history,&#13;
learning about and meeting&#13;
people from Ghana. What you&#13;
have in West Africa is lots of&#13;
people, culture, religion, ritual,&#13;
art, dance, and music."&#13;
Along with the faculty&#13;
exchange program that Trager&#13;
is participating in, there is a&#13;
sociology trip to Ghana, West&#13;
Africa. The trip to Ghana is&#13;
tied. to an eight week course&#13;
between October 26 and&#13;
December 14 of this year. The&#13;
class meets between 7 and&#13;
8:45p.m. on Thursday&#13;
evenings. The curriculum is&#13;
geared towards familiarizing&#13;
the students with the culture,&#13;
history, and arts of WestAfrica.&#13;
"The class will be taught by&#13;
James Stills. Because I'll already&#13;
be in West Africa, I expect to be&#13;
able to meet the group in Ghana&#13;
for the trip itself," said Trager.&#13;
"The first part of the course is&#13;
an orientation to the culture,&#13;
history, and background of&#13;
Ghana. The second part is about&#13;
practical things such as health&#13;
issues, clothing, living conditions,&#13;
questions quite usual for&#13;
people who haven't previously&#13;
visited that area of the world.&#13;
For information on this trip to&#13;
Ghana and the corresponding&#13;
curriculum, contact Lillian&#13;
Trager at 262-595-2543 or at&#13;
trager@uwp.edu, James Stills at&#13;
262-619-6640 or stillsj@gatewaytec.wi.us,&#13;
or Joe Lambin at&#13;
262-595-2177or lambin@Uwp.edu.&#13;
Persons interested also can log&#13;
on to www.uwp.edu/academic/&#13;
sociology/ ghana.html.&#13;
4 Fed UP With Campus Food&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
When buying their food in the&#13;
Union, University Of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside students are tired of&#13;
paying more and getting less.&#13;
They say that the quality and&#13;
quantity just is not there. They&#13;
wonder where the extra money&#13;
is going when they do not use&#13;
up their entire meal plan. Will&#13;
they be able to buy in bulk at&#13;
the end of the year or receive a&#13;
refund on their money? This&#13;
was a foremost question on&#13;
every student's mind at the&#13;
meeting on Monday, October&#13;
2nd, led by DeAnn Stone.&#13;
All students living on campus&#13;
are required to have a meal&#13;
plan. For the 2000-20001 academic&#13;
school year a block meal&#13;
plan has been designated.&#13;
Everyone but the seniors are&#13;
required to have a meal plan&#13;
that includes block meals. The&#13;
smallest of these plans costs&#13;
$715 and each individual block&#13;
meal costs $5.80. The price is to&#13;
include an all-you-can-eat-buffet&#13;
or some meals sold down at&#13;
the Union Square. Students are&#13;
complaining that they are not&#13;
getting a wide enough variety;&#13;
for example stir fry was served&#13;
two nights in a row. Most of the&#13;
students are not eating their&#13;
blocks worth. One reason for&#13;
this is the dining room is only&#13;
open at night from 4:30-7:00&#13;
p.m.; this causes problems for&#13;
those students who work or&#13;
attend classes during the&#13;
evening.&#13;
Marriott, the food distributor&#13;
for UW-Parkside, did not&#13;
renew their contract because&#13;
they were losing money. UWP&#13;
reached an agreement with&#13;
them to continue; Marriott&#13;
gave UWP various options.&#13;
The meal block program was&#13;
one of the options in which&#13;
UWP chose in the best interest&#13;
Rape: keep it from happening&#13;
By Brenda Dunham&#13;
Ten unsuspecting University&#13;
.Residents thought they were&#13;
going to a Hawaiian Luau&#13;
sponsored by Resident Life.&#13;
They all received a leigh and a&#13;
drink. However, some of those&#13;
drinks were in previously&#13;
marked cups indicating, the&#13;
,possibility and ease in which&#13;
someone could receive a date&#13;
rape drug.&#13;
Knowing that this scary possibility&#13;
could be a reality,&#13;
Parkside Police Officer&#13;
Marlene Schlecht was there to&#13;
help students realize there are&#13;
things everyone can do to&#13;
keep rape from happening.&#13;
The first thing to know about&#13;
preventing rape is understanding&#13;
more about it.&#13;
According to the surviving&#13;
sexual assault advocates,&#13;
"rape is an act of violence. Itis&#13;
an attempt to control and&#13;
degrade using sex as a&#13;
of the students.&#13;
UW-Parkside was supposed&#13;
to get a Taco Bell a couple of&#13;
years ago, but they declined&#13;
saying not enough students&#13;
lived on campus for the business&#13;
to be profitable.&#13;
Students would also like to&#13;
see specific meals set aside on&#13;
an a la carte menu. The prices&#13;
of individual food items are&#13;
too high, and according to&#13;
Dennis Casey, "the main reason&#13;
for that was the high price&#13;
0.£ gas during the summer&#13;
which caused delivery backups."&#13;
The new system of the dining&#13;
room is also causing havoc&#13;
for UWP students who live in&#13;
the apartments as well as faculty&#13;
and staff. A la carte is not&#13;
offered at night, and so many&#13;
of the professors refuse to eat&#13;
here anymore. According to&#13;
Professor Randy McKee, " it is&#13;
easier and cheaper to pick up&#13;
something from a McDonald's&#13;
than to stand in line for an allyou&#13;
know. "Rapists rape again&#13;
and again, until caught."&#13;
To keep rape from happening&#13;
to you, be aware 0.£ your surroundings&#13;
and walk with confidence&#13;
and purpose. Don't' let&#13;
Eric ROChe:Mar~eneSchlecht, and Katie Lohre cleverly teach students&#13;
how to avold being a victim.&#13;
weapon." It can happen to any&#13;
person no matter how old or&#13;
what sex they are. Rapists can&#13;
be anyone, especially people&#13;
drugs and alcohol cloud your&#13;
judgment, trust your instincts&#13;
by leaving an uncomfortable&#13;
situation or place. Lock all the&#13;
you-can eat buffet when you&#13;
really only want a bowl of&#13;
soup." Apartment students are&#13;
starting to cook since it is less of&#13;
a hassle and cheaper, and they&#13;
think that there needs to be a&#13;
different arrangement for them&#13;
other than the meal block program.&#13;
Meals that have not been eaten&#13;
during the fall semester will&#13;
carryover into the spring term.&#13;
There is currently no solution to&#13;
the problem of meals not eaten&#13;
after the entire year. Meetings&#13;
are being held to come up with&#13;
a solution. Buying bulk may be&#13;
a possible option, which is now&#13;
available with the a la carte.&#13;
The meal plan is not going to&#13;
go away; however, there may be&#13;
solutions to the problems. If&#13;
any student is concerned with&#13;
these issues, then they should&#13;
feel free to attend. The next&#13;
meeting will be on Monday,&#13;
October 23rd in Moln 114 at&#13;
noon.&#13;
doors and windows in your&#13;
home and car. Use a peep hole&#13;
and make sales or service people&#13;
show identification, never&#13;
enter your house if it shows&#13;
signs of forced entree. Be sure&#13;
to get to know your neighbors;&#13;
you might need to go to them&#13;
for help. Be wary of isolated&#13;
spots such as apartment laundry&#13;
rooms and parking lots,&#13;
park in well lighted and well&#13;
traveled areas, never hitchhike&#13;
or pick up hitchhikers, and&#13;
always have your keys ready&#13;
before you get to your car,&#13;
home, or office.&#13;
If you do get into a possible&#13;
rape situation try to get away&#13;
and make a lot 0.£ noise.&#13;
Screaming may just be the&#13;
thing to discourage your&#13;
attacker. You may also stall or&#13;
attack. Attacking must be quick&#13;
Continued back page...&#13;
--&#13;
Student Voices&#13;
AIDS Walk&#13;
and its&#13;
protestors&#13;
by Chris Cantir&#13;
Around five thousand people&#13;
raised $692,544 during the&#13;
AIDS Walk in Milwaukee on&#13;
October first.&#13;
The weather was perfect and&#13;
people walked for a good cause&#13;
AIDSis a disease that kills people&#13;
every day. The walkers collected&#13;
donations that will go to 15&#13;
local organizations that raise&#13;
awareness and help people&#13;
diagnosed with the HIV virus.&#13;
Close to the end of the walk,&#13;
the participants were heckled&#13;
by a small crowd of protesters.&#13;
They thought we were raising&#13;
money for a gay cause. They&#13;
should read the final press&#13;
release of the AIDS Walk&#13;
organization: "Sharing the&#13;
stage with national spokesperson&#13;
Jackie [oyner-Kersee was&#13;
Nile Sandeen, the young man&#13;
who inspired the creation of&#13;
Media takes sides&#13;
Political review&#13;
by Shane McDonald&#13;
It seems that the media do not&#13;
cover each candidate equally.&#13;
It does not cover third party&#13;
candidates like Ralph Nader&#13;
and Pat Buchanan. It emphasizes&#13;
Governor Bush's mistakes&#13;
and ignores Vice-President&#13;
Gore's. Right now, many of you&#13;
are probably saying, "thatis&#13;
your opinion, but where is your&#13;
proof?"&#13;
Well, how about the facts.&#13;
Fact #1 Negative&#13;
Repablican coverage&#13;
RATS...A Republican ad&#13;
attempted to convince voters&#13;
that Democratic plans would&#13;
involve to many bureaucrats.&#13;
The words of the ad were fragmented,&#13;
and when they fragmented&#13;
the word bureaucrats it&#13;
ended with the word "rats." I&#13;
have no opinion on wether it&#13;
was intended to poke fun at the&#13;
Democratic party or not. I didn't&#13;
make the ad. My point is the&#13;
Democratic Party felt that the&#13;
ad contained subliminal messages&#13;
and the story was covered&#13;
by the national media.&#13;
@#!$%%...When Governor&#13;
Bush used obscene language&#13;
toward a member of the media,&#13;
it was covered.&#13;
Fact #2 Lack of negative&#13;
Democrat coverage&#13;
Fund raisers at The White&#13;
House? On Friday, September&#13;
22, the CBS Evening News and&#13;
ABC's World News failed to&#13;
report anything about the&#13;
White House's sleepover lists,&#13;
which were lists of Clinton&#13;
campaign donors who had&#13;
slept over at the White House.&#13;
You would think that the&#13;
American tax payers have a&#13;
right to know who is staying in&#13;
our government buildings.&#13;
It is our taxes which pay for&#13;
government buildings such as&#13;
the White House. The politicians&#13;
in those buildings should&#13;
be our employees since we pay&#13;
Camp Heartland, a summer&#13;
camp experience for children&#13;
with HIV."&#13;
People who came out to&#13;
protest the walk should know&#13;
that AIDS affects anyone - gay&#13;
or straight. The 5,000 walkers&#13;
for them with our tax money.&#13;
The fact that major news networks&#13;
tried to hide this information&#13;
aggravates me and it&#13;
should aggravate you, too!&#13;
Look for the Union Label...In&#13;
a meeting with union workers,&#13;
AI Gore stated that when he&#13;
was a child his parents sang&#13;
him to sleep with the Union&#13;
song "Look for the Union&#13;
Label." There was only one&#13;
problem with this, the song&#13;
was written when Al Gore was&#13;
27 years old. Now I'm not&#13;
going to judge the vice-president,&#13;
it may have been an honest&#13;
mistake. My real concern is&#13;
that (with the exception of the&#13;
Fox News Network) none of&#13;
the major networks pointed&#13;
out Gore's mistake.&#13;
Fact #3 No third party&#13;
coverage&#13;
It is upsetting that none of the&#13;
third party candidates get consistent&#13;
coverage. You would&#13;
think that in America everyone&#13;
gets to have their voice heard.&#13;
Our diversity is what makes&#13;
our country great. But, once&#13;
again it seems that the mainpassed&#13;
by those clowns and had&#13;
to ignore them. Nobody was&#13;
going to stop walking and ask&#13;
for forgiveness. Nobody was&#13;
going to agree with what the&#13;
protesters were saying.&#13;
If it was a gay cause, who&#13;
cares? It's about helping people.&#13;
Bottom line - walkers got&#13;
together and raised more than&#13;
half a million dollars. And people&#13;
protestingmade fools of thernselves.&#13;
If you would like to get more&#13;
information on the AIDS Walk&#13;
and the disease itself, go to the&#13;
AIDS Walk Web site&#13;
www.arcw.org.&#13;
stream networks have decided&#13;
to censor the campaigns in&#13;
order to get their boys elected.&#13;
Strong accusation you say?&#13;
Well according to Fox News&#13;
several of the heads of the news&#13;
media were on the White House&#13;
sleep-over lists, including the&#13;
head of CNN. In the 1996 election&#13;
90% of the media voted for&#13;
Clinton/Gore. I wish that the&#13;
heads of the media would&#13;
refrain from endorsing candidates.&#13;
I must admit the first presidential&#13;
debate was a pleasant&#13;
surprise. The mainstream&#13;
media did not show as much&#13;
bias as in past months.&#13;
However, it is still disappointing&#13;
that Nader and Buchanan&#13;
were not allowed in the debate.&#13;
They were allowed to state their&#13;
views after the debate, on Fox&#13;
News, which I feel provides the&#13;
best political coverage on TV.&#13;
Itis important to vote, but it is&#13;
equally important to be&#13;
informed. All this talk about&#13;
"Rock the Vote" is fine but make&#13;
sure you know who your voting&#13;
for. You wouldn't want to vote&#13;
for a candidate with different&#13;
views than yours, would you?&#13;
-&#13;
trying to force a loss on&#13;
Boone's Titans. He threatens to&#13;
publicly expose any, and all of&#13;
the officials who are trying to&#13;
bring down Boone's career as a&#13;
coach. Yoast and Boone form a&#13;
lifetime friendship, based on a&#13;
mutual respect of each other,&#13;
which still exists today. They&#13;
continued to coach together for&#13;
several more years at T.e.&#13;
Williams high school, until they&#13;
both retired in the early eighties.&#13;
This film is a certain Oscar&#13;
contender with its superb story&#13;
line that is both heart wrenching&#13;
and heart warming. The&#13;
entire cast did an exceptional&#13;
job of bringing today's audience&#13;
back into the mindset of&#13;
the turbulent early '70s.&#13;
For those of us who were not&#13;
a part of the segregation&#13;
upheaval, we can certainly&#13;
appreciate the efforts of this&#13;
team, and its coaches, to break&#13;
down skin color barriers and&#13;
show the rest of the world how&#13;
to be friends with their neighbors.&#13;
6 Movie Review'.· &lt;:.&#13;
of their games.&#13;
The friendships among the&#13;
Titans become so strong on the&#13;
field, that they also believe in ,&#13;
and stand by, the integrity of&#13;
each other when they are off&#13;
of the field. The white players&#13;
learn first-hand about the public&#13;
contempt the black players&#13;
must endure daily, and they&#13;
work on changing their community's&#13;
archaic beliefs about&#13;
blacks. The black players&#13;
.....---;... .. learn to trust in the friend- When Herman Boone (Denxel Washington, second from right) is hired&#13;
over veteran football coach Bill Yoast (Will Patton, second from left) to ships of their white counterlead&#13;
the T.e. Williams High Titans, the players, are forced to overcome parts, and they, in tum, teach&#13;
personal obstacles in Disney's drama "Remember the Titans:' The their white friends how to&#13;
film is based on a true story. relax and be more exuberant&#13;
in their daily lives.&#13;
Coach Boone and his family&#13;
also go through a tough period&#13;
of acclimation into the&#13;
white community. He has to&#13;
worry all season because he&#13;
finds out from the board that&#13;
losing just one game will&#13;
result in the termination of his&#13;
position with the school.&#13;
Yoast sees that the board of&#13;
education and sports officials&#13;
are unethically, and illegally&#13;
Remember the Titans&#13;
By Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
Disney's latest film Remember&#13;
the Titans may be rated PG, but&#13;
it is a must see for people of all&#13;
ages because it is an inspirational&#13;
story about life that is&#13;
not just for kids.&#13;
The film retells a true story&#13;
about the racial segregation of&#13;
a public school in Virginia in&#13;
1971. Once totally white, T'C,&#13;
Williams High School is forced&#13;
to combine with an all-black&#13;
high school. The result is a&#13;
volatile mix of hatred, misunderstandings,&#13;
and lack of&#13;
mutual respect between the&#13;
students and the parents, of&#13;
both colors.&#13;
As upset as the parents are&#13;
about the forced segregation,&#13;
the tensions in the community&#13;
really mount when long-time&#13;
favorite white football coach&#13;
Bill Yoast, played by Will&#13;
Patton, is replaced with black&#13;
coach Herman Boone, played&#13;
by Denzel Washington. White&#13;
parents and players immediately&#13;
object and resent being&#13;
coached by a blackman. But&#13;
Boone holds his ground and&#13;
abides by his number one rule:&#13;
treat everyone the same,&#13;
regardless of color, and expect&#13;
no less from anyone on his team.&#13;
"Respect, I always demand it&#13;
of myself. Iwas taught to&#13;
respect another man's beliefs,&#13;
his culture, his space.&#13;
Whatever Imight think of&#13;
him, Imust treat him with&#13;
respect," Boone states during&#13;
the film.&#13;
Boone puts his players&#13;
through rigorous and intensive&#13;
football training, but the&#13;
players refuse to bond. To&#13;
truly unify his team, Boone&#13;
makes the players sit, eat,&#13;
sleep, and learn about each&#13;
other until everyone on the&#13;
team is like a brother. The students&#13;
resist his tough ways of&#13;
coaching, but it doesn't take&#13;
long before racial barriers&#13;
begin to crumble and out of&#13;
the ruble emerges strong&#13;
friendships that will last a lifetime.&#13;
Assistant coach Yoast&#13;
begins to see Boone as the&#13;
strong leader that he really is,&#13;
and he respects the honesty&#13;
and integrity of the new head&#13;
coach's ways.&#13;
The players must convince&#13;
the rest of the students at the&#13;
school and all of their parents&#13;
that an interracial community&#13;
can work. They do this by&#13;
playing strong and winning all&#13;
Will Patton (center, left) and Academy Award-winner Denzel&#13;
Washington (center, right) star as high school football&#13;
coaches Bill Yoast and Herman Boone, respectively, who In&#13;
1971 take an Alexandria, Vir., football team and transform&#13;
the players into winners.&#13;
Former UW·Parllside tracll star&#13;
Carl Oliver an Olvmpian&#13;
Carl Oliver, a 1995 graduate of&#13;
UW-Parkside, ran the third leg&#13;
of the men's 4x400 event for the&#13;
Bahamas track and field team at&#13;
the recently completed 2000&#13;
Olympics in Sydney, Australia.&#13;
Oliver's team had the third&#13;
fastest time in the semi-finals&#13;
and settled for fourth in the&#13;
finals, just .45 seconds out of a&#13;
medal. The Bahamas was in second&#13;
place when Oliver handed&#13;
off the baton. The squad's time&#13;
was 2:59.23.&#13;
Carl improved every year he&#13;
was here, said UW-Parkside&#13;
coach Lucian Rosa, who guided&#13;
Oliver through his collegiate&#13;
career at UWP. Rosa said&#13;
you . could tell he was an&#13;
Olympic-level athlete.&#13;
At UWP, Oliver ran the quarter-mile&#13;
in 49.21 in 1993; 47.63&#13;
in 1994; and 46.84 in 1995. He&#13;
came to the University clocked&#13;
at 53.3. In 1996, Oliver competed&#13;
in the Atlanta Olympics&#13;
games. Rosa, a 1972 Olympic&#13;
marathoner representing Sri&#13;
Lanka, is a 1976 graduate of&#13;
UW-Parkside and has coached&#13;
Ranger teams for 25 years.&#13;
Peerless Peer top GlVC plavers&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer goaltender&#13;
Thorn Peer, who was&#13;
second in the nation going into&#13;
this weekend's games with a&#13;
goals against average of 0.36,&#13;
was named the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference Player of the&#13;
Week. It was the second time&#13;
this season Peer has received&#13;
the honor.&#13;
Peer earned the award by&#13;
shutting out the University of&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis Sept. 29,&#13;
and closing the door on Quincy&#13;
College Oct. 1. It was the first&#13;
time Quincy was blanked this.&#13;
Peer had eight shutouts going&#13;
into this weekend's games&#13;
with IUPU-Fort Wayne and&#13;
Hillsdale College. He has&#13;
played in every minute of&#13;
every game for the Rangers.&#13;
The&#13;
Right&#13;
at the Place&#13;
Ri ht&#13;
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=&#13;
UW·Parllside soccer teams flving )&#13;
The UW-Parkside soccer&#13;
teams couldn't have asked for&#13;
much better results from their&#13;
second straight weekend on&#13;
the road: four wins-two in the&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC)-12 goals scored, just&#13;
one goal allowed.&#13;
The teams swept into Indiana&#13;
on Saturday, Oct. 7, and&#13;
topped Division I IUPU-Fort&#13;
Wayne, 3-0. In the men's game,&#13;
the combination of goals by&#13;
Dan de st. Aubin, Raymond&#13;
James, and Bill Weidel along&#13;
with shutout goaltending of&#13;
Thorn Peer led to the win.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps' team is now&#13;
4-3 in the GLVC.&#13;
The women's team rode the&#13;
shut out netminding of&#13;
Marissa Monroe-DcVita to a 2-&#13;
o win. Coach Troy Fabiano's&#13;
crew is now 3-3inthe conference.&#13;
On Sunday, the venue was&#13;
Hillsdale College in Hillsdale,&#13;
Mich., but the result was pretty&#13;
much the same: two wins. In&#13;
the men's game, Raymond&#13;
James buried an overtime goal&#13;
12:13into the extra session and&#13;
Thorn Peer provided his tenth&#13;
shutout in a 1-0 win. The&#13;
Ranger men are now 10-3overall.&#13;
The women's team fell behind&#13;
Sllde.1I IICIIII&#13;
loccer Slldll&#13;
It can't be called a grudge&#13;
match but UW-Parkside students&#13;
and their professors may&#13;
have a little extra motivation&#13;
this Sunday, Oct. 15. At 11 a.m.,&#13;
the faculty and staff will face&#13;
students in a soccer match at&#13;
Wood Road Field prior to the&#13;
regular soccer matches with&#13;
Indianapolis University.&#13;
Students and staff who aren't&#13;
playing are invited to come out&#13;
and cheer their favorites. UWParkside&#13;
students are admitted&#13;
to all athletic events free of&#13;
charge.&#13;
1-0 on a goal just 1:34 into the&#13;
contest, but six goals by six different&#13;
players and 88-plus minutes&#13;
of shutout goaltending by&#13;
Marissa Monroe-Devita resultMarissa&#13;
Monroe-DeVita&#13;
Goaltender&#13;
ed in a 6-1 win. The Ranger&#13;
women are 7-3-1 overall.&#13;
Both soccer teams are at home&#13;
this weekend hosting Northern&#13;
Kentucky on Friday at 1 and&#13;
3 p.m., and Indianapolis on&#13;
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. and 3&#13;
p.m. UW-Parkside students&#13;
are admitted free to all contests.&#13;
UWP runners at&#13;
NO Invitation II&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's cross&#13;
country team finished in 15th&#13;
place out of 18 teams in the&#13;
Gold Division of the Notre&#13;
Dame Invitational. Joe&#13;
Donnerbauer was the Rangers'&#13;
top runner, finishing 35th out&#13;
of 125 in a time of 26:25.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Invitational&#13;
cross country meet will be held&#13;
at our National Cross Country&#13;
Course this Saturday. The&#13;
men's race begins at 1 p.m.&#13;
with the women's race to follow&#13;
at 1:45 p.m.&#13;
B&#13;
Rape: Keep it from happening&#13;
(continued from page 4)&#13;
and effective, so target the eyes&#13;
or the groin. Inthe case where&#13;
the rapist has a weapon you&#13;
may have no choice but to submit.&#13;
In this case do whatever it&#13;
takes to survive.&#13;
If you become a rape victim,&#13;
get medical attention as soon&#13;
as possible. Do not shower,&#13;
wash, douche, or change your&#13;
clothes. Important evidence&#13;
can be destroyed. Then seek&#13;
support for emotional trauma.&#13;
If it happens to someone you&#13;
know, support him or her by&#13;
accompanying them to where&#13;
ever they need to go whether it&#13;
is the hospital, the.police station&#13;
or counseling center.&#13;
There are about 50 Surviving&#13;
Sexual Assault Advocates over&#13;
campus. If someone needed&#13;
help, they could go to them or&#13;
to the campus police. "There&#13;
are defiantly people who can&#13;
help," said Eric Roche. The&#13;
Surviving Sexual Assault&#13;
Advocates will be having a&#13;
training session January 25.&#13;
"The more advocates we&#13;
have the more survivors we&#13;
have," says Katie Lohre. "If it&#13;
helps one person who has&#13;
been a victim who never had&#13;
the help then it was all worth&#13;
it," said Schlecht.&#13;
"Spread the word and be&#13;
more safe," says Roche.&#13;
UWP receives diversity award today&#13;
The first-ever Wisconsin&#13;
Diversity Award will be presented&#13;
to UW-Parkside during a&#13;
ceremony in' Madison today.&#13;
The University is being honored&#13;
by the state's Department&#13;
of Employment Relations&#13;
(DER) and the Council on&#13;
Affirmative Action.&#13;
UW-Parkside's comprehensive&#13;
recruitment plan and what DER&#13;
Secretary Peter Fox called its,&#13;
"Tremendous change in diversity&#13;
hiring" were reasons for the&#13;
award. UW-Parkside was one of&#13;
26 UW System campuses eligible&#13;
for the award. Another 27&#13;
state agencies were invited' to&#13;
apply. Each campus' and&#13;
agency's diversity program was&#13;
reviewed for its impact on their&#13;
overall diversity achievements.&#13;
"Receiving this award is a&#13;
major honor for UW-Parkside,&#13;
and is indicative of the effort&#13;
put forth by the entire campus&#13;
and community," said&#13;
Chancellor Jack Keating.&#13;
"Every academic and administrative&#13;
department has made&#13;
a conscious effort to bring&#13;
greater diversityto theirprograms.&#13;
I think we have not only&#13;
attracted a diverse workforce,&#13;
we've attracted a talented&#13;
workforce that also happens to&#13;
be diverse."&#13;
Of those hired by UWParkside&#13;
from June 1, 1999 to&#13;
May 31, 2000, 12 percent were&#13;
African American, 6.3 percent&#13;
were Hispanic while 4.1 percent&#13;
had Asian backgrounds.&#13;
Positions filled included faculty,&#13;
classified staff, and academic&#13;
staff.&#13;
"We are recruiting a more&#13;
diverse student population to&#13;
meet the UW System's Plan&#13;
2008 goals. It's important for us&#13;
to have a diverse staff," diversity&#13;
guru Herbert Pitts said. "A&#13;
diverse faculty and staff gives&#13;
students role models and mentors&#13;
they can emulate during&#13;
their education."&#13;
Keating added the entire community&#13;
and the region worked&#13;
in partnership to achieve this&#13;
recognition.&#13;
"We now have to gear up to&#13;
improve our record. But for&#13;
now, all who worked toward&#13;
our goal are to be congratulated."&#13;
_ ..........--&#13;
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              <text>With many thanks, SAC expansion opens</text>
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              <text>Student Newspaper of th U' . f' . . e ruversity 0 Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~Jr October 5, 2000&#13;
~ ~~~~~~...;;..;.~~~~&#13;
Issue 4 Vo1.30&#13;
With manv thanks, SAC expansion opens&#13;
When a project has a $12.3 million&#13;
price tag; when it's funded by several&#13;
sourees ranging from the sta te governmentand&#13;
private donors, to students&#13;
and the university foundation; when a&#13;
variety of people sweat the details of&#13;
gelling the building started and slill othes&#13;
sweatout getting it finished, a lot of&#13;
people must be thanked. The thankssincere&#13;
thanks-flowed like water over&#13;
Niagara Palls as the Sports and Activity&#13;
Center expansion officially opened for&#13;
student and community use Friday,&#13;
Sept. 29.&#13;
Muchof the thanks wen t to Governor&#13;
TommyThompson and the area's state&#13;
legislators for their support of the projeclln&#13;
tum, Thompson, who also was on&#13;
hand to break ground for the facility two&#13;
years ago, thanked donors and students&#13;
for: "This wonderful addition to this&#13;
beautifulcampus."&#13;
"It will be a key to attracting more&#13;
students to the University of WisconsinParkside.It&#13;
also will attract more diversity&#13;
from student athletes in our urban&#13;
1l!lIlers," Thompson said.&#13;
Thompsonalso praised UW-Parkside&#13;
stu~~ts for voluntarily raising their&#13;
IlCliVity fees to help with the funding of&#13;
theexpansionproject. About a hundred&#13;
students were on-hand for the Friday&#13;
afternoon ceremony.&#13;
. The fieldhouse portion of the expanSIon&#13;
will bear the name of Kenosha&#13;
builder Prank Petrelli. Petrelli's daughter&#13;
Rita said her family was thankful for&#13;
theopportunity to help UW-Parkside.&#13;
u':y ~atherhad an early interest in the&#13;
~lty. He could identify with the&#13;
ge of building something from&#13;
thel\I'OUndup:' she said. "My family is&#13;
gla/efuJ that we could contribute and&#13;
serveas an example of a public/private&#13;
Plrtnership."&#13;
UW-ParksideChancellor Jack Keating&#13;
l!Illphasizedthe building's value as a&#13;
tonununity asset. He said in addition to&#13;
With Chancellor Jack Keating, alumnus Carmelo Tenuta, and Associate&#13;
Athletic Director Linda Draft looking on, Governor Tommy Thompson&#13;
helps UW-Parkside open its expanded sports facility. The dedication ceremony&#13;
took place Friday, Sept. 29.&#13;
being available for use by area residents,&#13;
the Petrelli Fieldhouse will be&#13;
open for conventions, trade shows,&#13;
and other large gatherings.&#13;
"Our students will make great use&#13;
of this facility, but it's also open to&#13;
you:' Keating said. ..&#13;
Elsewhere in the building. the arena&#13;
used for basketball and volleyball will&#13;
now be called the Alfred and Bernice&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium in honor of&#13;
long-time UW-Parkside benefactor Al&#13;
De Simone and his wife. The second&#13;
floor has been named the Carmelo D.&#13;
Tenuta Hall for Sports Sciences and&#13;
Athletic Busine~s.&#13;
A UW-Parkside graduate, Tenuta&#13;
said after spending his college years in&#13;
Molinaro and Greenquist Halls, it was&#13;
"An unbelievable feeling to have a&#13;
'Tenuta Hall.:"&#13;
He added, "This dedication validates&#13;
one of the things that I truly&#13;
believe: Do things that make a positive&#13;
difference. People will remember you&#13;
and the rest will follow."&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association President Joe Rucker also&#13;
spoke during the ceremony. He&#13;
thanked Chancellor Keating and&#13;
Governor Thompson for having the&#13;
vision to construct this much needed&#13;
facility.&#13;
"We are so thankful," said Linda&#13;
Draft the University's associate athletic&#13;
director. "Let the games begin!"&#13;
Information&#13;
Technology&#13;
Practice&#13;
Center open&#13;
for business&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
UW-Parkside opened a new laboratory&#13;
on Thursday, Sept. 28, that will give&#13;
students an advantage over undergraduates&#13;
from many other universities. The&#13;
Information Technology Practice Center&#13;
(ITPC) gives students hands-on experience&#13;
with current technology and&#13;
employment possibilities with some of&#13;
the nation's top Fortune 500 companies.&#13;
The ITPC began with the vision of a&#13;
former UW-Parkside student, Cory&#13;
Mason, who is now the ClO (the highest&#13;
position in MIS) for Harley Davidson.&#13;
Mason teamed up with Snap-On Tools,&#13;
SC Johnson Professional (a division of&#13;
Johnson Wax), the former dean, and faculty&#13;
members within the Business programs&#13;
to turn his vision into a reality.&#13;
Information technology is a profession&#13;
that is less than 20 years old and&#13;
has an unusually high demand for&#13;
skilled, qualified graduates in&#13;
Management Information Systems&#13;
(MIS) and computer science.&#13;
"Information technology involves&#13;
the computers, the hardware, the software,&#13;
and the telecommunication networking&#13;
infrastructure that supports a&#13;
business. In its simplest form, information&#13;
technology is built by computer&#13;
science and MIS uses the technology to&#13;
solve a business problem" said Dirk&#13;
Baldwin, associate professor of MIS.&#13;
The benefits of the ITPC are multifaceted:&#13;
first, the students learn how to&#13;
solve business problems through technology,&#13;
the faculty keeps up-to-date&#13;
See ITPC, Page 6&#13;
Ins ide&#13;
3 Welcome to Beijing&#13;
Professors Wang and Olsen lead local teachers&#13;
on a month-long exploration of China.&#13;
4 Take a walk in the PARC,find help&#13;
Need help with a subject, any subject? We'll tell&#13;
you where to go to get it.&#13;
6 Meet the new UW-Parkside top cop&#13;
University welcomes former Chicago police officer&#13;
Dexter Yarbrough to campus as new police chief.&#13;
1 Sports&#13;
Men's and women's soccer teams hit bottom,&#13;
then rebound; vball suffers lost weekend.&#13;
8 Artist view of animal future&#13;
David Holmes' Mystical Mechanical Menagerie&#13;
debuts at Fine Arts Gallery.&#13;
STIFF III&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Sheree Horner&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Jennie-Leigh Morris&#13;
Photgraphy Director&#13;
Designers Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place Business Manager/Business Team&#13;
Open&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout the semester by students of the University of Wisconsin-Packside who are&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. '&#13;
Letters to the Editor p?licy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger office ~L 0-139C). Letters must be typed and include the author's name and phone number. Letters must&#13;
be fret. from ~sleadmg or libelous content. letters that fail to comply will not be published. For publication purposes, author's&#13;
name can be Withheld, but only upon request. TIle Ranger reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
Things 2 Do @ The U&#13;
Oct. 5 -11, 2000&#13;
• Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: Richard Thieme, recipient of&#13;
the Gamaliel Chair in Peace and Justice from UW-Milwaukee, Thursday, Oct. 5,&#13;
7 p.m., Overlook Lounge, second 1I00r of the UW-Parkside library, free.&#13;
• Art Exhibit: David Holmes Sabbatical Exhibition: "The Mystical&#13;
Mechanical Menagerie," through Nov. 2; UW-Parkside Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery, free; hours: Monday &amp; Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp;&#13;
Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., closed Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.&#13;
• Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: Badwater Book invitational,&#13;
exhibition of artists' books, through Oct. 31, UW-Parkside library.&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Cup," Bhutan, subtitled, Oct. 5-8; pro-rated season tickets&#13;
still available; films are shown Thursdays and Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at&#13;
8 p.m., and Sundays at 2 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theater. For more information&#13;
and a brochure, call ext. 2345.&#13;
• Concert: The Other Quartet, Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre; tickets: $8 for adults, $4 students &amp; seniors.&#13;
• Noon Concert: The Other Quartet, Wednesday, Oct. 11, noon, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, free.&#13;
• Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: Artists' Books Lecture&#13;
w /Max Yela, Oct. 12, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge, second 1I00r of the UW-Parkside&#13;
library, free.&#13;
• UW-Parkside Athletics: Women's Volleyball: vs. Lewis University, Friday, Oct.&#13;
12, 7 p.m., Sports and Activity Center; tickets: $5 for adults, $1 for high school&#13;
students and children 14 years of age and under; UW-Parkside students admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
Coming up:&#13;
• Irene Farrera, singer/guitarist, Monday, Oct. 16, noon to 1 p.m., Main Place of&#13;
Wyllie Hall, free, part of Hispanic Heritage Month celebration.&#13;
• University Activities presents: Reptiles for All, Union Square, 11 a.m. to&#13;
1 p.m., October 16, free.&#13;
• Soup and Substance Series: "Nuts &amp; Bolts of School Reform: Innovative&#13;
Ideas for Education," w /Milton Thompson, principal of Kenosha's Wilson&#13;
School, Wednesday, Oct. 18, noon, free, with free soup, bread, crackers, Union&#13;
104-106.&#13;
• Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: Olympic Garnes: 776 BC&#13;
through AD 2000, w / Lawrence University Professor Dan Taylor, October 18, 7&#13;
p.m., sponsored by the Wisconsin Humanities Council, Overlook Lounge, second&#13;
1I00r of the UW-Parkside library, free.&#13;
• Plays at Parkside: "A View from the Bridge" by Arthur Miller, Oct. 19 at 10&#13;
a.m.; Oct. 20, 21, 27, 28 at 7:30 p.m., Communication Arts Theatre, tickets: $10&#13;
adults; $7 students/faculty /staff/seniors; $5 each for groups of 20 or more.&#13;
Contact Diane Smith (262) 595-2564 or e-mail smithd@uwp.edu&#13;
• Rocky Horror Picture Show, Friday, Oct. 27, Union Cinema Theater; showing&#13;
ofthe original film with a live cast; pre-show begins at 11 p.m., movie begins at&#13;
m'd.rught; students w /ID: $3, general public $5.&#13;
For the latest information on UW-Parkside programs and events,&#13;
call the Events Hotline at (262) 595-2408.&#13;
"!!!J1!r.===- "'" ,,'" -&#13;
3. UW-Parkside librarv can be more than just books&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
The UW-Parkside library can be&#13;
used for more than just research, quiet&#13;
studying, and, as some students would&#13;
prefer, napping. The Friends on the UWParkside&#13;
Library offers students a variety&#13;
of interesting activities this semester.&#13;
Tonight, students can listen to a lecture&#13;
given by Richard Thieme titled&#13;
"Technology and justice." Thieme is&#13;
the 35th recipient of the Gameliel Chair&#13;
in Peace and justice from UWMilwaukee.&#13;
In addition, he is a graduate&#13;
of Northwestern University and the&#13;
University of Chicago where he earned&#13;
a degree in English Literature.&#13;
On Thursday Oct. 12, the library&#13;
will host the BadWater Book&#13;
Invitational. Artists from all over the&#13;
United States have submitted their&#13;
works for this exhibition. Max Yela,&#13;
the Special Collections Librarian at the&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Golda Meir Library&#13;
will be speaking. The artist's books are&#13;
currently on display in glass cases just&#13;
inside the entrance to the library.&#13;
From Nov. 15 through 17, the&#13;
Friends of the Library will hold its&#13;
annual book sale (9-5 Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, 9-12 Friday). Books will&#13;
range in price from $1 to $1.50. The&#13;
money goes to the Friends of the&#13;
UWP prols. lead China lour&#13;
By julie Thompson&#13;
While some of us were busy working&#13;
or relaxing on the beach this past summer,&#13;
UW-Parkside professors Dwayne&#13;
Olsen and George (Xun) Wang, along&#13;
with teachers from Kenosha, Racine and&#13;
Burlington, four of whom are UWParkside&#13;
alumni, went on a month-long&#13;
study tour of China in july.&#13;
When reflecting on the purpose of the&#13;
trip, Professor Olsen said, "The purpose&#13;
was to have them write curriculum dealing&#13;
with China. Our idea was that as a&#13;
result of this experience [teachers]&#13;
would write a more accurate curriculum&#13;
and they would interpret China more&#13;
accurately to their students as opposed&#13;
to presenting distortions or stereotypes."&#13;
Although the trip mainly served area&#13;
school districts, UW-Parkside students&#13;
will benefit as well.&#13;
"My students that I'm teaching to be&#13;
teachers of social studies, benefit from&#13;
my having had this experience, and&#13;
being able to talk more authoritatively&#13;
about another culture, and culture is a&#13;
major concept in social studies.&#13;
Hopefully, 1 will do a better job in&#13;
preparing these people as social studies&#13;
teachers, so they will go beyond&#13;
themselves, so they will see the diversity&#13;
that they have within their own&#13;
classrooms."&#13;
Besides benefiting UW-Parkside&#13;
and other area students, the trip&#13;
reflects nicely on the University. The&#13;
group was featured in newspapers in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, and interviewed&#13;
tluee times by WGTD. However, their&#13;
presence didn't go unnoticed in China,&#13;
as they had the honor of being featured&#13;
in two newspaper articles and one television&#13;
news report.&#13;
Professor Wang stated, "We met&#13;
UW-Parkside Professor George Wang, second from right, meets with Chinese education&#13;
officials including Chief of the Education Department, Jiang Zhou, left, and&#13;
Jiang Zhelin, sister of the Chinese President Jiang Zemln, second from left.&#13;
Library. In past years, the organziation&#13;
has purchased things like the book&#13;
drop outside the library. This year, the&#13;
board is funding the soon-to-be Friends&#13;
Reading Room which for the moment&#13;
is the sectioned area behind the atlases&#13;
on the library's main floor.&#13;
Comfortable sofas will be arriving at&#13;
the end of Oct. and the room will be&#13;
fully functional for the spring semester.&#13;
Students will be invited to bring in&#13;
snacks and relax. .&#13;
Dina Kaye, an academic librarian&#13;
and the library liaison to the Friends of&#13;
the Library Board comments, "We get&#13;
a lot of community people not only on&#13;
the board, but also who come to these.&#13;
[events]. It would be great to see a lot&#13;
more students and campus people."&#13;
Other activities include a lecture&#13;
given by Professor Dan Taylor from&#13;
Lawrence University titled "The&#13;
Olympic Games, 776 BC to AD 2000," a&#13;
debate about the presidential election&#13;
on Nov. 2, and a lecture titled "Making&#13;
of the Medieval Illuminated&#13;
Manuscript" given by Professor&#13;
Michael Orr, Ph.D. of Lawrence&#13;
University, on Nov. 30. .&#13;
Aside from the book sale, all activities&#13;
will be held in the Overlook Lounge&#13;
(Level 2 of the Library) at 7 p.m.&#13;
Tour group in front of the Palace Museum: (bottom row from left to right) Steve&#13;
Benkert, Wilma Dunn,Jennifer Gemignani, Sandra Barry; (top row) Tim&#13;
DeGroot, Debbie Bornhuetter, Prof. George (Xun) Wang, Paul Prozanski, Ellen&#13;
Hiatt, Paul Heynes, Sue Roth, Sharon Kelley, Prof. Dwayne Olsen, Mary aln&#13;
(tour guide)&#13;
many school teachers and university&#13;
professors in China, and so it enhanced&#13;
our public image internationally as&#13;
well."&#13;
A highlight of the trip was when the&#13;
group was able to meet the sister of&#13;
President jiang Zemin while visiting&#13;
Shimin International School.&#13;
Additionally, Professor Wang received&#13;
e-mail from members 01 Parkside&#13;
administration.&#13;
"They all praised our work, our&#13;
project, they thought it was a great&#13;
project to enhance the image of UWParkside."&#13;
The trip was made possible due to&#13;
the joint effort of Professor Olsen and&#13;
Professor Wang. Together they prepared&#13;
the proposal for the Fulbright-Hughes&#13;
grant, but securing the grant isn't as&#13;
easy as one would imagine.&#13;
"This is a national competition,"&#13;
Professor Wang said. "This is not just&#13;
money you can grab without any effort;&#13;
this is a collective effort by us. Every&#13;
school has the opportunity, not only universities,&#13;
but non-profit organizations,&#13;
high schools and middle schools can&#13;
also apply for the grant."&#13;
Now Professors Wang and Olsen are&#13;
looking for at least one or maybe more&#13;
students who can teach conversational&#13;
English. Professor Wang said, "It doesn't&#13;
have to be an English major, just&#13;
someone who is willing to teach English&#13;
as a second language for five months in&#13;
China."&#13;
Those who are interested should contact&#13;
Professor Wang in the Sociology&#13;
Department at 595-2180, or Professor&#13;
Dwayne Olsen in the Teacher Education&#13;
Department at 595·2177.&#13;
Student Voices .&#13;
This week's question: Are you going to&#13;
Kristin Ovef&#13;
Yes. I think everyone should&#13;
vote because not enough&#13;
people do, and every opinion&#13;
counts.&#13;
A Walll·in the PARC&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
Did you fail the last test in history&#13;
and are now afraid of failing the course?&#13;
There is no need to fear, as there is help.&#13;
Tutoring is available free to all UWP students.&#13;
According to the Parkside&#13;
Academic Resource Center (PARC),&#13;
tutoring is similar to supplemental&#13;
instruction as it is used as a guide and&#13;
aid to the classroom. Every year, alumni&#13;
donate money to PARe. PARC is&#13;
located in Wyllie Hall D180 near the&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
Students can receive help at any level&#13;
with any academic problem that they&#13;
might have. Last semester, Claudia&#13;
Calel Easterling&#13;
I have to vote because it's&#13;
my opinion. As far as my&#13;
choice is concerned, I have&#13;
to. It's a must.&#13;
Villalba received help in writing for&#13;
English and received a better grade for&#13;
it. She went from a B to an A. Another&#13;
student, Karen Malonee has been to&#13;
PARC on numerous occasions. She&#13;
received help in both writing and theatre&#13;
makeup. Writing help allowed her&#13;
to organize her thoughts more clearly,&#13;
while the help received in theatre&#13;
makeup got her a better grade. She&#13;
went from a C+ to a B+. Writing·and&#13;
math help is provided on a walk-in&#13;
basis. Specialized areas, such as biology&#13;
or French are made by appointment.&#13;
Students should come well prepared&#13;
to PARC and ready to explain&#13;
their problems. This way the tutors will&#13;
know how best to help. The normal&#13;
tutoring session is 50 to 60 minutes.&#13;
vote?&#13;
Rachael Carlson&#13;
I'm not much into politics,&#13;
but I probably will end up&#13;
voting because it's important&#13;
that you give your&#13;
. opinion. If you don't vote,&#13;
your opinion won't be&#13;
heard.&#13;
Each student is allowed a maximum of&#13;
two hours per week, unless other&#13;
arrangements have been made with&#13;
the PARC coordinator, [aci HaleyRenaud.&#13;
Tutors are used as a guide to help&#13;
the students understand their problem,&#13;
but they are not there to do the work&#13;
for them. They also do not determine&#13;
the grade the student receives.&#13;
Students have the responsibility of&#13;
attending classes, taking good notes,&#13;
and attempting to do the homework&#13;
as well as studying in order to do well&#13;
on tests. Attendance is mandatory at&#13;
the tutorials, unless there is an emergency.&#13;
Ifthis occurs, students should&#13;
then call 595-2044 a couple hours&#13;
before their appointment so the tutor&#13;
SAAC getting. involved with students, community&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
Many of the students and faculty at UW-Parkside&#13;
have no idea what the Student Athlete Advisory&#13;
Committee (SAAC)is or what the organization does.&#13;
But this year the SAAC hoping to change all of that.&#13;
SAAC is a group of student-athletes who have been&#13;
selected by their coach and the Athletic Director Dr.&#13;
Lenny Klaver to represent their teams at weekly&#13;
meetings.&#13;
SAAC has two main duties: one is to be a voice for&#13;
the student-athletes and the other is to implement&#13;
service projects that involve the community and students&#13;
at UW-Parkside. Student-athletes can bring&#13;
any problems they might be having with coaches or&#13;
players. They can also express any opinions they&#13;
have on facility operations or other matters.&#13;
Some of the community projects the SAAC will&#13;
take on this year include a Thanksgiving food&#13;
drive, a inter-athlete carnival, and fund raising&#13;
efforts for a UW-Parkside student-athlete awards&#13;
banquet.&#13;
"One of our service projects at this point is the can&#13;
food drive," said SAAC President Brian Coffman.&#13;
"What we are going to do is have people be able to&#13;
use can foods as a way of admission into UWParkside&#13;
athletic events. By combining the efforts&#13;
of all the sports teams we will, hopefully, have a&#13;
large amount of donations to give to the homeless&#13;
shelter and hospice before Thanksgiving."&#13;
Furthermore, the SAAC wants to increase student&#13;
and community involvement at UW-Parkside athletic&#13;
events.&#13;
"One of our goals this year is to get more students&#13;
who live on campus to attend athletic events, possibly&#13;
by doing giveaways at some of the games. We&#13;
also need to start branching out into the community,&#13;
which is tough because we've never really had that&#13;
before," said Coffman.&#13;
One of the objectives of the SAAC this year is to&#13;
make the organization more visible on campus. It&#13;
would like the opportunity to work with other campus&#13;
organizations.&#13;
"By working with student government and other&#13;
groups on campus we will, hopefully, get our name&#13;
out and get some support from different organizations,&#13;
as well as our organization supporting theirs,"&#13;
said Coffman.&#13;
SAAC members ask any organization or anyone&#13;
who would like to help SAAC in organizing service&#13;
projects to e-mail SAAC President Brian Coffman at&#13;
coffmOOO@Uwp.edu&#13;
Ivan Socava&#13;
Yes, I'm going to vote just&#13;
because it's important to&#13;
get your views across, even&#13;
if [your candidate] doesn't&#13;
win. Get your voice out.&#13;
can be notified. If a student misses two&#13;
scheduled appointments, they can no&#13;
longer be tutored due to others on a&#13;
waiting list.&#13;
Haley-Renaud says that the writing&#13;
and math help is used the most. Math&#13;
help is requested the most often because&#13;
it requires extra attention. As for writing,&#13;
Haley-Renaud says "I am pleased to discover&#13;
that students are using our writing&#13;
area for papers that are assigned in aU&#13;
academic areas whereas in the past, it&#13;
was evident students only looked at&#13;
writing as part of an English assignment."&#13;
Anyone who needs help with- brainstorming,&#13;
grammar, editing, developing&#13;
a rough draft, or proofreading, feel free&#13;
to stop by PARC and ask for help.&#13;
i.UWP 10 hOSI Russ Johnson's&#13;
The Olher Quanel OCI. 10&#13;
Called a jazz/improvisational group, The&#13;
Other Quartet defies pigeonholing by mixing&#13;
original compositions with interpretations of&#13;
works by composers like Igor Stravinsky and&#13;
Anton Bruckner. This unusual combination&#13;
prompted Marke Andrews of the Vancouver&#13;
Sun to say they "Have a fresh approach that&#13;
makes you wonder why more jazz groups&#13;
don't sound this good."&#13;
Andrews said The Other&#13;
Quartet brings structure and&#13;
improvisation together "for a&#13;
happy marriage."&#13;
Along with Johnson, who is&#13;
a Racine native, the other&#13;
members of The Other&#13;
Quartet are Ohad Talmor on&#13;
saxophone, Jim Hershman&#13;
on guitar, and Michael Sarin&#13;
on drums. While reviewing&#13;
the band's CD "13 Pieces,"&#13;
[azziz magazine called the&#13;
composing and arranging by&#13;
Johnson and Talmor "consistently&#13;
fresh and skillful"&#13;
adding "There's a good&#13;
chance Johnson will be one of&#13;
the next important cats on&#13;
trumpet."&#13;
Catch a raising musical act&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 10, when the&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;sideMusic Department&#13;
presents the Other Quartet at&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
TIckets are $8 for adults, $4&#13;
for students. For more information,&#13;
call (262) 595-2457.&#13;
Jazz fans and those who like their music to&#13;
be free of the shackles and strictures of beat&#13;
and measure should hit the ticket line early&#13;
for Tuesday's concert by The Other Quartet.&#13;
This New York-based foursome, featuring&#13;
former UW-Parkside student Russ Johnson&#13;
on trumpet, plays the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater Tuesday, Oct. 10 starting at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Other Quartet here Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
New York in spring,&#13;
vou can be there&#13;
The UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Department is once again offering&#13;
its New York Professional Theatre Seminar over spring break.&#13;
Students must enroll in a one credit course to be eligible for the trip.&#13;
The class will meet Tuesdays, Feb. 13 through March 27 from 5 to&#13;
7:30 p.m. Students do not have to be dramatic arts majors, therefore,&#13;
anyone can attend. Once the class work is completed, the students&#13;
are off to New York.&#13;
This trip has been held for the past 19 years, and past participants&#13;
say everyone who attends really seems to enjoy it. The group&#13;
attends four theaterical productions ranging from comedies and dramas,&#13;
to musicals, and off-Broadway shows. This is the only time the&#13;
group is together as a whole. The rest of the time is generally spent&#13;
sightseeing or experiencing the many things that New York has to&#13;
offer.&#13;
"This is an incredible trip," said Theatre Manager Keith Harris.&#13;
"I've gone three times, and each time had its own distinctive flavor&#13;
to it,"&#13;
Betsy Hurlbut, who won a scholarship that paid for her trip three&#13;
years ago, echoes Harris' sentiments.&#13;
"It really is a wonderful experience:' said Hurlbut. "It was well&#13;
worth the time and money."&#13;
"1 heard about this trip freshman year, and I've been looking forward&#13;
to going," said this year's scholarship winner Steve Sorenson.&#13;
"Everyone who has gone really loved the trip. They loved just being&#13;
there and experiencing New York."&#13;
Fees for the trip are $795 for quad rooms, $1,020 for triple rooms,&#13;
$1,100 for twin/ double rooms, and $1,600 for single rooms. This&#13;
includes round-trip airfare on Midwest Express, ground transportation&#13;
to the Hotel Edison for seven nights, four theatre tickets, guest&#13;
speakers, and a $25 tax deductible contribution to the Thomas&#13;
Newman Memorial New York Scholarship fund.&#13;
Space is limited, especially for quad rooms, so a non-refundable&#13;
deposit of $150 is required as soon as possible to guarantee the airline&#13;
seats. Students have until October 16 to sign up. Deposits,&#13;
including address and phone number, can be dropped off at the&#13;
Dramatic Arts Office between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m., or they can be&#13;
mailed to: Louise Jones, UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Office, CA 221,&#13;
900 Wood Rd. Box 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141.&#13;
II f •• all 'IUlb 'rlara.S, 'arkslde Grabs&#13;
by Tyrone A. Payton&#13;
Last April 14, UW-Parkside held its 11th annual&#13;
Women in Math, Science, and Technology Day. The&#13;
annual event focuses on recruiting an assortment of&#13;
top students from schools across southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois. These students, numbering&#13;
roughly 125-150 youths, are all young females&#13;
from primarily Racine, Kenosha, and Zion, Illinois.&#13;
However, the program extends to all public, private,&#13;
and rural schools. In the past, Parkside has accepted&#13;
only eighth grade students. This year, a selection of&#13;
seventh graders were invited to enjoy the guest speakers&#13;
and hands-on career experience as well.&#13;
Margaret M. Gename, head of Youth Programs at the&#13;
Center for Community Partnerships, invited female&#13;
Parkside students to the field day every year to raise&#13;
the awareness in young females about math, science,&#13;
and technology studies. "Studies show that by eighth&#13;
grade females drop in math, science, and technology.&#13;
Young females end up lacking math, science, and&#13;
technology from a loss of interest, a fear of difficulty,&#13;
or even intimidation from peers," states Gename.&#13;
These guest speakers share their experience with the&#13;
children to help the program grow and become more&#13;
interactive, thus raising its influential possibilities.&#13;
Also involved in the event are about twenty&#13;
Parkside professors lending their skills and knowledge&#13;
in experimental hands-on labs with the children.&#13;
These labs include biology, engineering, health&#13;
care, physics, nursing, teacher education, and others,&#13;
which are all being taught by our certified faculty.&#13;
People such as Frances Kavenik on women studies,&#13;
Susan Haller and Timothy Fossum on computer science,&#13;
Paul Boyer on science and technological education,&#13;
Alma Renish on science, and Penny Lyter on&#13;
health/weliness. Basic high school science studies&#13;
are also focused upon by Ben Greenebaum on&#13;
physics, Esther Wilson and Randy McKey on anatomy,&#13;
Daphne Pham on molecular biology, and Gary&#13;
Wood on chemistry.&#13;
In August, for the effort Parkside put into this program,&#13;
the 11th annual Women in Math, Science, and&#13;
Technology Day received the 2000 Equity Initiative&#13;
Award for motivating young females. It was awarded&#13;
by the American Association of University WomenWisconsin&#13;
for excellence in achievement by not only&#13;
school staff, but especially young females. The program&#13;
received financial help once again this year from&#13;
Allegiance HeaIthcare and Dairyland Greyhound&#13;
Park, respectively.&#13;
If you have any questions or wish to make a donation&#13;
to the Women in Math, Science, and Technology&#13;
Day, contact Margaret M. Gename at (262) 595-2309 in&#13;
the Talent Hall. To all that inquire or sponsor this program's&#13;
purpose, the Office of Youth Programs appreciates&#13;
your help for next year's Math, Science, and&#13;
Technology Day set for April 6, 2001.&#13;
-----------=~~.&#13;
09-24-00 Inc 00-705 Theft from Motor Vehicle,&#13;
South SAC lot, 12:26 a.m.; three&#13;
students reported their cars&#13;
damaged and items stolen&#13;
while parked in the lot. No wit9-21-00&#13;
Inc 00-701 Fire Drill, Child Care Center, nesses or suspects. 09-24-00 Inc 00-709&#13;
10:48 a.m.;fire drill was conducted Theft from Motor Vehicle, SAC&#13;
h 57 hild d 09-24-00 Inc 00-706 d&#13;
at the center wit c ren an lot, 2:00 p.m.; student reporte.&#13;
14 adults safely evacuated in 57 equipment stolen from his vehiseconds.&#13;
Alarm was reset. cleo Access was gained from a&#13;
9-21-00 Inc 00-702 Harassment, Wyllie concourse, rear window which was not&#13;
1:05 p.m.; student reported an secured. No witnesses or sus- 09/25/00 Inc 00-710&#13;
ex-girlfriend became disorderly pects to the theft.&#13;
to him and two friends on the Medical Assist, Ranger Hall, . ti di 09-24-00 Inc 00-707 concourse. Investiga on pen mg 3:48 p.m.; Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
contact with the girlfriend. Dept. dispatch advised a stu09-22-00&#13;
Inc 00-703 Traffic violation, CTH A and .2 dent had called to request&#13;
miles east of CTH G., 6:32 a.m.; rescue. Student was located at&#13;
driver stopped for traveling at the 01 entrance and taken to a&#13;
high rate of speed. Citation was local hospital for treatment by&#13;
issued for failure to fasten seat- Kenosha Med. Unit 5.&#13;
belt-driver and written warning&#13;
09-24-00 Inc 00-708 2911 Hangup-Fire, University&#13;
for speeding. Apartments, 6:08 p.m.; UPPS 09-22-00 Inc 00-704 Harassment-Stalking, Library, 11 11&#13;
db' dispatch' answering a 29 ca 7:09 p.m.; student reporte emg heard yelling and screammg&#13;
followunkned,stared at alnd sbt~lkted and the word "fire" in the backby&#13;
an ownmaesu lec. di&#13;
Officer advised complaintant to ground before. the phone .IScall&#13;
UPPS if this occurs again. connected. Officer responding&#13;
Yarbrough appointed police chief&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
By Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
New UW-Parkside police chief&#13;
Dexter Yarbrough arrived on campus&#13;
Sept. 21, just in time for the autumnal&#13;
equinox, and like the seasons, UWParkside's&#13;
new police chief will soon be&#13;
changing the ways of campus policing.&#13;
Yarbrough comes to UW-Parkside from&#13;
Chicago with an impressive background .&#13;
in law enforcement, ranging from community&#13;
policing liaison and tactical&#13;
team member, to police recruit instructor.&#13;
Yarbrough even spent five years as&#13;
an Executive Protection Specialist at&#13;
Harpo Studios.&#13;
The new chief has received many&#13;
awards throughout his career for his&#13;
exceptional policing skills, and he continues&#13;
to serve as a featured speaker at many&#13;
community functions addressing the&#13;
ideas of community policing. He was also&#13;
recognized in Face Fonoard: Young AfricanAmerican&#13;
Men in a Critical Age.&#13;
Coming to UW-Parkside presents&#13;
Yarbrough with new perspectives and&#13;
professional challenges. He is looking&#13;
forward to implementing a new community-policing&#13;
program around campus.&#13;
The campus police plan to become&#13;
more "student oriented" by walking&#13;
through University buildings and&#13;
around the grounds, so that they are&#13;
more accessible to students' needs.&#13;
Yarbrough wants to focus less on street&#13;
patrol, and more on programs that will&#13;
benefit the safety of the students.&#13;
Programs such as assault prevention&#13;
and educating students on the pitfalls of&#13;
driving while intoxicated.&#13;
To ensure the success of these programs,&#13;
Yarbrough wants more organizaNew&#13;
UW-Parkside police chief Dexter Yarbrough, left, gets some advice from outgoing&#13;
chief John Ernst. Yarbrough, a veteran at the Chicago Police Department,&#13;
began his duties here Sept. 21&#13;
tions like the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association and the&#13;
WOI)lyns' Center to sponsor and promote&#13;
safety programs in conjunction&#13;
with the police.&#13;
"I want to ensure that the community&#13;
understands that public safety is not&#13;
just a concern of the police, but that it is&#13;
a shared concern of all University community&#13;
members," Yarbrough said.&#13;
"Crime prevention, public safety, and&#13;
problem resolution are essential goals&#13;
that all of us must share in order to&#13;
have a safe campus environment."&#13;
If your club or organization is interested&#13;
in sponsoring a safety program&#13;
with the police, call Yarbrough at ext. 2455.&#13;
Yarbrough says that his most&#13;
important job will be to ensure the&#13;
safety of the University community,&#13;
and he will do this by setting the tone&#13;
for his department, so that his department's&#13;
goals fit in with the overall mission&#13;
of the University.&#13;
Yarbrough wants the student body&#13;
and faculty to know that "I am a capable,&#13;
high-energy administrator, and I&#13;
will always expect that my officers will&#13;
give the best service possible to the&#13;
University community."&#13;
to the location found a fire had&#13;
been extinguished. A piZZa&#13;
inside an oven had caught ~&#13;
but fire went out when the oven&#13;
door was opened.&#13;
Agency Assist, KSD, CTH Aand&#13;
STH #1, 9:48 p.m.; Kenosha Joint&#13;
Services requested UPPS officer&#13;
assist with traffic control wherea&#13;
downed tree was blocking a&#13;
roadway.&#13;
Abandonment/Neglect, 900&#13;
Wood Road, Child Care Center,&#13;
9:47 a.m.; staff member reported&#13;
seeing a child wandering outside&#13;
of the Child Care Center.&#13;
Investigation revealed a 21-&#13;
month old child in shirt-sleeves&#13;
and no socks in 55 degree&#13;
weather had been able to leave&#13;
her parent's apartment through&#13;
an unsecured door while they&#13;
were sleeping. One parent was&#13;
located and child was returned&#13;
to her care.&#13;
ITPC&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
with current technology and training,&#13;
and the companies are able to train students&#13;
earlier on the software that is necessary&#13;
to the top strategic objectives in&#13;
the field of information technology.&#13;
Students who train at the ITPC will have&#13;
an advantage with companies such as&#13;
Harley-Davidson because Harley only&#13;
recruits information systems graduates&#13;
from UW-Parkside- and UW·&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Students who are not majoring in&#13;
MIS or computer science may also benefit&#13;
from the ITPC. "Our vision is not&#13;
totally computer science or MIS oriented.&#13;
I think we would like to be broader&#13;
than that" says Professor Baldwin.&#13;
Baldwin would like to see students&#13;
from the graphic arts program work&#13;
with student teams on potential projects&#13;
such as web design and for English students&#13;
to perhaps produce a pamphlet&#13;
using technical writing documentation.&#13;
The ITPC is located on the second&#13;
floor in Molinaro Hall, room 218. If you&#13;
are interested in learning more about the&#13;
center, contact Dirk Baldwin at 595-2449.&#13;
Setting the Record Straight&#13;
In last week's edition of The Ranger,&#13;
Calel Easterling's name was incorrectly&#13;
spelled in the article "Parking, food top&#13;
PSGA topics." We apologize for the nustake.&#13;
Also last week, in the article&#13;
"Introducing: Your PSGA," reference to&#13;
the U.S. government helping to fund the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association was incorrect. The PSGAis&#13;
funded by student fees. Again, we apol·&#13;
oglze or . f thi"s error.&#13;
l· V-ball splits on road,&#13;
suffers lost weekend&#13;
at home&#13;
The UW-Parkside volleyball team&#13;
hadn't played a home match in nearly a&#13;
month when it took the De Simone&#13;
Gymnasium court Friday, Sept. 29&#13;
against Northern Kentucky and&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 30 against Indianapolis.&#13;
Afterward, they may have wished they&#13;
had stayed on the road&#13;
Coach Melissa Wolter's team earned&#13;
a split of two matches played away&#13;
from home Sept. 22 and Sept. 23. On&#13;
Friday, the Rangers were swept, three&#13;
games to none at Southern Indiana.&#13;
They rebounded on Saturday, winning&#13;
at Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, three&#13;
games to two.&#13;
., It seemed that everything from the&#13;
, elements to the opponents were stacked&#13;
; against UW-Parkside's soccer teams on&#13;
I Friday,Sept. 22 and Sunday, Sept. 24. But&#13;
; things were much brighter both in the&#13;
· sky and on the scoreboard a week later.&#13;
On Friday, Sept. 22, it took four hours&#13;
to complete the men's game against&#13;
Southern Indiana University. A 45-&#13;
I minute lightning delay held up the start&#13;
· of the game, followed by an additional&#13;
I 1 hour and 25 minute delay in the second&#13;
half.&#13;
Shortly after the second delay,&#13;
I Southern Indiana broke a scoreless&#13;
'I deadlock and eventually won 1-0. There&#13;
· was barely enough daylight to complete&#13;
I the contest. The women's game was&#13;
postponed.&#13;
I On Sunday, things got even worse.&#13;
I True,the weather was better, but so was&#13;
Southern Illinois UniversityEdwardsville.&#13;
SIU-E's men's and&#13;
I women's teams shut down the offenses&#13;
of UW-Parkside's teams and left town&#13;
with identical 2-0 wins.&#13;
Both teams traveled to Missouri-St.&#13;
I Louis on Friday, Sept. 29, and found the&#13;
· Gateway.city to their liking. The men,&#13;
led by the shutout goaltending of Thorn&#13;
Peer and goals by St. Louis-area native&#13;
I Raymond james, along with Dan de St.&#13;
Aubin and Mike Samer, polished off&#13;
UMSL3-0.&#13;
In the women's game, Lorrie jones&#13;
and Bryanna jurvis each scored twice to&#13;
The Rangers were unable to repeat&#13;
that success at home. On Friday, Sept.&#13;
29, Northern Kentucky, which&#13;
advanced to the NCAA Division II&#13;
Final Four last year, swept UWParkside&#13;
15-5, 15-6, and 15-10. NKU&#13;
was 12 and 2 overall and is a perfect 6-&#13;
o in the GLVC.&#13;
On Saturday, Sept. 30, despite good&#13;
play by Amy Reilly and Angela Zoiss,&#13;
the University of Indianapolis beat&#13;
UW-Parkside 15-9, 15-0, 5-15, and 15-&#13;
12. Reilly had d.Z kills and Zoiss contributed&#13;
18 digs in a losing cause. The&#13;
loss dropped UW-Parkside to 4 and 13&#13;
overall and 2 and 4 in the conference.&#13;
Bryanna Jurvis, above, and Lorrie&#13;
Jones both scored twice against&#13;
UMSL&#13;
lead the Rangers to a 4-2 win.&#13;
The teams were in Quincy, Ill. on&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 1 and came away with&#13;
mixed results. The men rode the&#13;
shutout goaltending (again!) of Thorn&#13;
Peer and scored off the feet of Andrew&#13;
Nijoka, Andres Cerritos, and jeff Hines&#13;
for a 3-0 win. In the women's game,&#13;
Lorrie jones again scored twice and&#13;
UW-Parkside out-shot Quincy 23 to 12&#13;
but lost 3-2.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps' men are now 8-&#13;
and 3 overall and 3 and 3 in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference. Coach Troy&#13;
Fabiano's women's team is now 5-3-1&#13;
and 2-3 in the conference.&#13;
UW-Parkside players Angela Zoiss, far right, and Nicole Gruber crash the&#13;
net to block a shot against Northern Kentucky. Janel Kinn backs up the&#13;
play&#13;
Golfers, runners show well on road&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's golf team&#13;
finished ninth among 22 teams at the&#13;
2000 NCAA District IV Tournament&#13;
No. 1. Coach Dave Williams led the&#13;
Rangers to Hawkshead Links in South&#13;
Haven, Mich., Sept. 24 and 25 for the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
The team score of 627, 33 strokes&#13;
off the pace set by Findlay. Chad&#13;
Cantwell was the team's top golfer&#13;
with a 151 for 36, good enough for 13th&#13;
out of over 100 golfers.&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
At the Warhawk Invitational hosted&#13;
by UW-Whitewater, UW-Parkside's joe&#13;
Donnerbauer was third overall.&#13;
The next home cross country meet is&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14. The UW-Parkside&#13;
Invitational starting times are 1 and&#13;
1:45 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
~C~mpany ..... ··Wu&#13;
•&#13;
WHen THe P"'rht Be~;m/&#13;
Disc Jockey's &amp; Video OJ's&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
-No experience necessaryWe&#13;
are looking for outgoing people&#13;
to work in the music and video business.&#13;
Must be able to work weekends and&#13;
have a valid drivers liscence.&#13;
Part-Time positions are available for&#13;
Fall &amp; Winter 2000.&#13;
Call to set up an interview!&#13;
262-632-6828 X 5&#13;
1-aOO-Oisc-Jockey&#13;
UW-Parkside Art Explores ,&#13;
Mvstical Mechanical Kingdom&#13;
One of the strange animaVmechanical creature in David Holmes'&#13;
menagerie&#13;
50~NIGHT&#13;
FRIlMY NIGHT, OCTOBER6, AFTER 6:00 PM. YOU CAN CASH IN&#13;
ON THE FOUOWINIISOC SPECiAlS: 12 01. MlllEJl UTE DTiAFT&#13;
BER, 12 01. StJFT DltINl(S, IlENETiAl PARKINII, IlTiANfflAND&#13;
ADMISSION, UVE l1ACEPf/OIITiAM, HOT OOIIS 6 A$$OIlfEt) /JAIlS&#13;
Of CfJIPlr&#13;
.:. DOORS OPEN ff:OO AM&#13;
-:- SIMULCASTING BEGINS AT fI:30 AM&#13;
.:. LIVE RACING ACTION AT 7:15 PM&#13;
WATCH I; WAGER!!!&#13;
Tllf (oTII RUNNING OF THf GRfYII(JtJNIl NtGIIT OF STIlIIS&#13;
SAl""'" N/GII1,O.,.8FR 7&#13;
16 ~"crs~OM 16 o-Jnruur IWfnolC¥S CtJ411,.1G-&gt;CfMSt(Fl1m?w fi:3(') pM)&#13;
AtwA-Ntl WAGERINO fHlfHE NNW! (Jf STAAS $fMIJLCMf AVA/tABU Ocr. 6&#13;
___ theBe_. Bet&#13;
1800) 233·3357&#13;
Cchh~Ckus out on the World Wide Web: www.dairylandgreyhoundparkcom&#13;
I....ren Uflder 12 not admiltecl to the ClUbhouse or Sports L . . •&#13;
performances at 1:00 pm Wednesday &amp; Saturda S d . ounge dunng evenmq performances. Live greyhound matinee&#13;
Tuesday, Thursday thru Saturday. Simulcast wa~rin~~ ::y~h::kat~: imd ~ive ~reYhound ~venlng performances at 7:15 pm&#13;
Kenosha F01----' I f . ryan rey ound Park IS localedoff 1-94exil HWY 158 in&#13;
. 'I'........... n onnatlon please call (800) 233-3357.&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
invites area art lovers, animal&#13;
fanciers, and the curious to a most&#13;
unusual-and visual- of "zoological" displays:&#13;
David Holmes' Mystical&#13;
Mechanical Menagerie. The sculptures,&#13;
created during Holmes' recent sabbatical,&#13;
will be displayed in the&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery now&#13;
through Thursday, Nov. 2. Admission to&#13;
the exhibition is free.&#13;
Holmes said this collection of oddly&#13;
formed" animals" appears to be part of&#13;
a circus sideshow gone terribly wrong.&#13;
"For ages we have selectively bred&#13;
and crossbred animals until we converted&#13;
them into the most acceptable archetype&#13;
attainable circumventing the laws&#13;
of natural selection," said Holmes.&#13;
"What will the next step be?"&#13;
His vision of the "next step" is the&#13;
combination of the animal and the&#13;
mechanical. These "new" beasts of&#13;
servitude emerge as Frankenstein-like&#13;
creatures, a jumble of flesh and&#13;
chrome. The affect is an arresting array&#13;
of beasts that at-once frighten and&#13;
amuse.&#13;
"While the purpose of the&#13;
Menagerie is to confront the audience&#13;
with what we have done to our fellow&#13;
creatures, I have attempted to empha,&#13;
size a more humorous approach to the&#13;
issue." Holmes stated.&#13;
The Mystical Mechanical Menagerie&#13;
by David Holmes is open to the public.&#13;
Gallery hours are Monday and Thursday,&#13;
11am toSp.m, Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The gallery is closed&#13;
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. For more&#13;
information, call the UW-Parkside Art&#13;
Department at (262) 595-2581.&#13;
Part robot, part bird, this modern oddity can be seen now in the Fine Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
Vote NOV. 7- Yeah,&#13;
it is important!</text>
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              <text>Student Newsp' ape f th U' . roe ruversitv of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~1J7..~~~~~~~~_S;;;,;e;;;£p;,;;t~em=b~er~2::;;8~,F20~O~O&#13;
" :: Issue 3 Vo1.30&#13;
InirO du ci ng: Your PSGA fi'l.Ba:::::icki:':"':":ya::-::rdi'""'i"iS:":""':asL"""hin---g -------.&#13;
by ShereeHomer&#13;
Who are the leaders of the Parkside&#13;
StudentGovernment Association (PSGA)&#13;
andwhat do they do? Every student has&#13;
arightlO know this information. Not only&#13;
doesthe U'S, government help to fund the&#13;
P&amp;;A, but student tuition is also used.&#13;
JoeRucker is the president of the PSGA&#13;
andCorey Mandley is the vice-president.&#13;
Ruckerhas been president since March&#13;
2()()().He is 23 years old and criminal,' ustice&#13;
is his major. Rucker is the Back&#13;
Student Union representative, while&#13;
MandleyISthe PIC rep.&#13;
According to the PSGA's constitution&#13;
the president and vice-president only&#13;
have.voting rights and the power to&#13;
appointsenators. The senate runs the student&#13;
government. No rules are passed&#13;
without senate approval.&#13;
~ators are el~cted for a full year,&#13;
so if the senator IS elected in the fall&#13;
he or she is not up for reelection until&#13;
the following fall. To be reelected, a&#13;
senator needs to get 50 signatures&#13;
and be voted for by the student body.&#13;
The top 15 vote-getters earn the seats&#13;
because of a majority rule.&#13;
There are 15 senators for fall and 15&#13;
for spring and some for specialized&#13;
clubs, such as the Gay ana Lesbian&#13;
Organization. There is a total of 38&#13;
senators. They must maintain a 2.0&#13;
GPA in order to remain a senator.&#13;
Meetings are held every Friday at&#13;
noon in Molinaro 137. Students are&#13;
welcome to come and hear the various&#13;
issues being discussed.&#13;
I&#13;
JOtheoeRucker, left,PSGA President and Corey Mandley, PSGA Vice President.&#13;
r PSGA executives are pictured on page 5.&#13;
IIPe Opens Todav&#13;
The Information Technology Practice Center (ITPC), a trend-setting cooperative&#13;
b'ucational laboratory, will officially open for student use today. The Center&#13;
p~ together UW-Parkside and Harley-Davidson, Snap-on, and Johnson Wax&#13;
r? essiona] to help Management lnlormation Systems (MIS) and Computer&#13;
Sciencestudents gain hands-on experience with the latest computer hardware and&#13;
software.&#13;
ITheITPC represents a new trend in education because the companies are activey&#13;
Involved in the Center supplying on-going technology and expertise to ~derff,a?uate&#13;
students and working to improve faculty knowledge. WhIl~ h,elpmg the&#13;
fuIUversltyrecruit and retain students, the ITPC helps the comparues potential&#13;
ture employees with more precise skill development. Through the ITPC, the&#13;
companiesmay be able to lower their cost of preparing emJJloyees for work.&#13;
ChTheInformation Technology Practice Center, is located m Molinaro H~II 218.&#13;
eck future editions of The Ranger for more details about the ITPC.&#13;
Students enjoyl.ng the sounds of Fade To Shade at the Backyard Bash Sept. 22&#13;
Photo by Jeff Alley&#13;
Your PSGA at work&#13;
Parking, Food top PSGI topics&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
The first meeting of the 2000-2001&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) was held Friday,&#13;
September 15.At the meeting, four senators&#13;
were appointed, three for fall and&#13;
one for spring. Cleo Ensterling, Adam&#13;
DeFord, and Rebecca WilliamsBrawner&#13;
are the new fall senators, and&#13;
Chelsea Crane is the new spring senator.&#13;
. As a senator, each has to serve on both&#13;
a PSGA committee and a university&#13;
committee. They get to choose the comnuttees&#13;
they wish to serve on a firstcome,&#13;
first-served basis.&#13;
According to PSGA President JDe&#13;
Rucker, the main campus issues discussed&#13;
at the meeting and that need to&#13;
be resolved are the price and quality of&#13;
food, the price of making copies, and&#13;
problems WIth parking. The senate is&#13;
considering discounted rates to be&#13;
given to those students who park at&#13;
the Tallent Hall lot. The other problems&#13;
have yet to be resolved.&#13;
Many students and faculty are upset&#13;
WIth the closmg of the cafeteria at 5 p.m.&#13;
everyday. Under this proposal, no one&#13;
can sit in the cafeteria to visit' with&#13;
friends, study, or enjoy a quick snack.&#13;
It 15 now strictly used as a dining room&#13;
for those students who have a&#13;
RangerCard on hand. Students who&#13;
live on campus or faculty who stay at&#13;
school after hours are especially affected&#13;
by this new rule.&#13;
Students who have comments or&#13;
ideas on how to resolve this issue&#13;
should contact Joe Rucker at&#13;
ruckeOOO@Uwp.eduor Corey Mandley&#13;
in the government office at 595-2036.&#13;
Ins ide&#13;
3 Keith Harris&#13;
Creating magic on stage for production of&#13;
"A View from the Bridge."&#13;
3 Campus Police&#13;
Get to know uw Parksides' men and women in&#13;
blue and what they can do for you.&#13;
5 Making the Commitment&#13;
Diversity is a major goal at UW Parkside.&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
1 Sports&#13;
Men's and Women's soccer teams get a dose of&#13;
reality from GLVC rival. .&#13;
8 Community awards&#13;
Fivearea women honored for community&#13;
service&#13;
STIFF III&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Photgraphy Director&#13;
Jeffrey Aliley&#13;
Designers&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place&#13;
Business Manager/Business Team&#13;
Open&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Jennie-Leigh Morris&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax 262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout the te b tud f '. .&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. semes r y s ents 0 the University of WlSCOnsm-Parkside,who are&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy' ~e Ran~r _encourages Jette 10 the &amp;f '-~~&#13;
ered to the Ranper office (WYLL D-139C) _Letters mUst ~ ~~ Letters should rn,'t exceed:E(l words and should be delivbe&#13;
free from misleading or libelous content. Letters that fa~ comply ~~ ~u~~Fand P~ number. Letters must&#13;
name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to edit ~ letters.' or publication purposes, author's&#13;
Things 2 Do @ The U&#13;
Sept. 28 to Oct. 4, 2000&#13;
2,~&#13;
• Art Exhibition (FINAL DAY): Two-person show: "Inspiration: From Illustration to&#13;
Installation" with Patricia Casteneda- Tucker (ceramics) &amp; Chuck Richards (paintings)&#13;
UW-Parkside Fine Arts Gallery; Thursday 11 a.rn. to 5 p.m., .&#13;
• Da~id Holmes Sabbatical Exhibition: The Mystical Mechanical Menagene, Oct. 2&#13;
to Nov. 2; gallery hours: Mondays and Thursdays 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesdays&#13;
and Wednesdays 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., . .&#13;
• Foreign Film Series: "Lucie Aubrac," France, subtitled, Sept. 28 - Oct. 1; a limited&#13;
number of season tickets remain: $25 adults, $23 students/seniors (covers 13&#13;
remaining films). Films are shown Thursdays and Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays&#13;
at 8 p.m., and Sunday, at 2 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theater. Season tickets&#13;
holders can bring a guest to three films during the year. For more information and&#13;
a brochure, call (262) 595-2345. .&#13;
• InfoBreaks: Uncover Reveal, keep current with Uncover Reveal; have the table&#13;
of contents of your favorite journals delivered via email, Instructional Tech Center,&#13;
Wyllie D150D, Friday, Sept. 29, 10 to 10:30 a.m.&#13;
• Biological Sciences Colloquium: "ConseNation Genetics of the Andean Condor,"&#13;
wiSher Hendrickson, UW-Madison Zoology Dept., Friday, Sept. 29, Molinaro Hall&#13;
105, noon, free.&#13;
• Study Circle Kick-off, Sunday, Oct. 1, 4 to 6 p.m. Union Dining Room, free program,&#13;
sign up for Study Circles will be available.&#13;
Special Event:&#13;
• Ballet Folklorico Mexico de los Hermanos Avila, authentic regional dances of&#13;
Mexico, Monday, Oct. 2, noon to 1 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, free.&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious Issues: ''The Supreme Court and the Demise of&#13;
Religious Liberty," w/UW-Parkside Associate Professor of Political Science Carol&#13;
Tebben, Monday, Oct. 2, noon, Union 104, and at 7 p.m., Molinaro 167&#13;
• Soup and Substance: "Speeding Up Your Metabolism:' w/Dr. Tom Folecki, health&#13;
and wellness educator from Sports and Family Practice, Wednesday, Oct. 4, noon;&#13;
free, w/free soup, bread and crackers. .&#13;
• Noon Concert Series: -Eun-Joo Kwak, Wednesday, Oct. 4, noon, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater&#13;
Coming up:&#13;
• Plays at Parkside: "A View from the Bridge" by Arthur Miller, Oct. 19 at 10 a.m.;&#13;
Oct. 20, 21,27,28 at 7:30 p.m., Communication Arts Theatre, Tickets: $10 adults;&#13;
$7 students/faculty/staff/seniors; $5 each for groups of 10 or more. Call Diane&#13;
Smith (262-595-2564) or e-mail smithd@uwp.edu&#13;
UW-Parkside Athletics&#13;
Men's Soccer (Home games)&#13;
• Northern Kentucky, Friday, Oct. 13, 2 p.m.&#13;
• Indianapolis, Sunday, Oct. 15, 12:30 p.m.&#13;
• Saginaw Valley State, Saturday, Oct. 28, 12:30 p.m.&#13;
Women's Soccer (Home games) .&#13;
• Northern Kentucky, Friday, Oct. 13, 4:30 p.m.&#13;
• Indianapolis, Sunday, Oct. 15, 3 p.m.&#13;
• St. Cloud, Saturday, Oct. 28, 3 p.m.&#13;
Women's Volleyball (Home matches)&#13;
• Indianapolis, Saturday, Sept. 30, 1 p.m.&#13;
• Quincy, Friday, Oct. 6, 7 p.m.&#13;
• Missouri-St. Louis, Saturday, Oct. 7, 1 p.m.&#13;
• LeWIS,Thursday, Oct. 12, 7 p.m.&#13;
SAC Hours:&#13;
The Sports and Activity Center is open:&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Pool Hours:&#13;
Thursday: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., 4to 8 p.m.&#13;
Fnday: 7 to 9 a.m., 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6 p.m.&#13;
~onday: 7to 9 a.m., 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 2to 3 p.m 4 to 8 p m&#13;
uesday: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., 4 to 6:30 p.m. ' ., . .&#13;
Wednesday: 7 to 9 a.m., 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., 2to 3 p.m., 4 to 8 m&#13;
(These fours are subject to change. For the most up-to-date pool hotfrs and swim&#13;
c ass in ormation, call the Pool Line at 262-595-2780).&#13;
Bridge" set&#13;
--.---.---.--~&#13;
3.Harris'·magic creates "&#13;
The first stage. of building a set st~rts ':'lith an artists concept, Keith&#13;
crew then beg onto shape the set, onthis case a house in New York.&#13;
Anyone who has attended a play at&#13;
UW-Parkside in the last 16 years has&#13;
witnessed some of the uruque and&#13;
complex set designs Keith Harris has&#13;
created. Harris is currently working on&#13;
the Drama Department's fall production&#13;
of Arthur Miller's" A View From&#13;
the Bridge."&#13;
Keith attended the University of&#13;
Kansas, where he earned an M.F.A. in&#13;
Scenic Design. He intended to go into&#13;
acting, but changed his major to design&#13;
scenery several years into college. He&#13;
has worked here at UW-Parkside for&#13;
the past 16 years, usually designing&#13;
two to three; sets of scenery a school&#13;
year for each Drama Department show.&#13;
Harris and his&#13;
Drawing up the plans for a set is not&#13;
something that Can be done m a few&#13;
days. Depending on the project, it&#13;
takes from four to five months to draw&#13;
up plans. After reading over the script&#13;
numerous times, researching the play,&#13;
and talking with the directors and his&#13;
staff, Harris goes to the drawing board.&#13;
For this current play, "A View From&#13;
the Bridge," he started talking about&#13;
ideas with the directors at the end of&#13;
last semester. He designed it around&#13;
early July, and started building it about&#13;
two weeks before this semester began.&#13;
The set should be completed by midOctober.&#13;
The play will run the last two&#13;
weekends of October.&#13;
Many of the materials used in building&#13;
a set are not used as the manufacturer&#13;
intended. For instance, Keith has used&#13;
basics like plywood and paneling materials,&#13;
along with Styrofoam insulation&#13;
and bug sprayers for painting. When&#13;
working on a set, he finds good uses for&#13;
things people normally wouldn't think&#13;
of as materials used on stage.&#13;
Keith receives help from some of the&#13;
cast members, stage crew, and from&#13;
people who have nothing to do with&#13;
the Dramatic Arts Department. So students&#13;
taking classes for college credit,&#13;
are eligible to work on productions.&#13;
Between his duties here and his family,&#13;
Harris doesn't have a lot of time to&#13;
work on scenery outside of the&#13;
University. Although he has done&#13;
repertory work and set painting in the&#13;
past for The Fireside Dinner Theater in&#13;
Ft.Atkinson, he hasn't done any movies&#13;
or Broadway shows. However, some of&#13;
his former students have. It is his hope&#13;
that more of his students succeed to&#13;
that level.&#13;
"Keith has been our rock, He's creative,&#13;
timely, a fine designer and an&#13;
indispensable member of our team,"&#13;
said Dramatic Arts Professor Skelly&#13;
Warren. "He's the link which holds our&#13;
department together. He's been a colleague&#13;
and friend for 18 years, and I&#13;
couldn't picture this department without&#13;
him and his dedication. 'A ViewFrom&#13;
the Bridge' is just another outstanding&#13;
design from a person who puts only his&#13;
best forward. He and his work are irreplaceable.&#13;
His work always pulls out&#13;
the best in others as well."&#13;
Master craftsman ·Keith Harris works on the set of A View from the Bridge. Answers to vour questions about... ~~;~a~y o$:~s J&gt;~~~~hr19 in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Campus Police Patrol More Than Just Parking lots&#13;
ByLisa Whitcomb&#13;
The UW-Parkside campus police do According to officerMarlene Schlecht,&#13;
more than just patrol crowded parking "Students need to become familiar&#13;
lots looking to issue parkinil citations. with the rules of the campus. They&#13;
These officers also maintam campus especially need to be aware of their&#13;
safety on the roads surrounding the own safety."&#13;
university, patrol the scenic paths A good way to do this is to attend the&#13;
around campus on bicycles, provide free classes sponsored by the police&#13;
security at sporting events, and rou- and other campus organizations&#13;
tinely inspect campus buildings. They throughout the year·&#13;
are around all day, everyday, protect- "Students should be aware that most&#13;
ing students, staff and visitors alike. In crimes committed on campus are&#13;
addition to responding to campus crimes of opportunity," OfficerSchlecht&#13;
crime calls, the university police assist said. JlWatch your purses, coats and&#13;
in many other ways, such as escorts at books, and always lock your car."&#13;
night, unlocking cars, conducting cam- While Parkside enjoys a relatively low&#13;
pus wide safety programs, as well as .crime rate, the campus is not entirely&#13;
personally counseling students on free from criminal activity. -For&#13;
safety issues as needed. instance, students think that the camParkside&#13;
officers are all full-fledged pus library looks quiet and therefore&#13;
State of Wisconsin police officers. They must be safe, so they tend to leave their&#13;
have the authority to arrest or detain belongings unattended. Thefts can and&#13;
individuals, as well as the sanction to do occur at the library because there is&#13;
enforce all state laws pertaining to ample opportunity for someone to steal&#13;
speeding, drugs, drinking, and any things and never be noticed. Students&#13;
other campus policies that are listed on campus should always take their&#13;
under the University's Chapter 18 posseSSIOnswith them, even if they are&#13;
... (campus bylaws). only going to be gone a few moments.&#13;
"If you don't leave your things unattended&#13;
then someone else can't come&#13;
along and steal them," said Schlecht.&#13;
For incoming freshman, and even for&#13;
those who are returning to UWParkside,&#13;
it is always a good idea to&#13;
familiarize yourself with the rules and&#13;
regulations on campus to optimize&#13;
your personal safety. Freshman entering&#13;
the university straight out of high&#13;
school should especially take notice of&#13;
the university's policies on drinking&#13;
and drug use. No drinking under the&#13;
age of 21 is tolerated anywhere on&#13;
campus, and anyone serving, or buying&#13;
alcohol for minors is legally liable&#13;
as well. All women on campus should&#13;
be aware that date rape drugs are&#13;
known to be circulating around southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and may already be&#13;
on this campus. Always keep a close&#13;
-eye on anything you are consuming,&#13;
and don't accept anything that you are&#13;
not sure of. Schlecht strongly reiterates,&#13;
"Students have to partake in the&#13;
responsibility of their own safety."&#13;
The Parkside police are more than&#13;
happy to assist students with any questions&#13;
or concerns they may have at any&#13;
time. If you are in need of immediate&#13;
assistance on campus call 2911.Even if&#13;
you are unable to speak, the officerscan&#13;
tell where the call is coming from.&#13;
Additionally, call boxes are located in&#13;
parking lots. Otherwise, all non-emergencies&#13;
situation can referred to 595-&#13;
2455. Officers are available to the students&#13;
and staff 24 hours a day, 7 days a&#13;
week.&#13;
A great way to learn more about the&#13;
Chapter 18 policies on campus, fines,&#13;
and other services offered by the police&#13;
is to go to their web site at&#13;
www.uwp.edu/admin/university.poli&#13;
ceo It's very informative and well&#13;
worth the look. Students can also drop&#13;
in anytime at Tallent hall to pick up&#13;
helpful brochures about social issues&#13;
such as domestic violence, drinking, etc.&#13;
Officer Schlecht wants students with&#13;
questions to call" even when they don't&#13;
think that we'll have the answers. If we&#13;
can't answer something then we will&#13;
do our best to find someone who will."&#13;
SAC Effects on Community&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
As many UW-Parkside students know&#13;
the new Sports &amp; Activity Center (SAc)&#13;
?ffers many experiences not available&#13;
in the past. What many do not know is&#13;
w~~ UW-Parkside will use the new&#13;
facilityto open Its doors to the community&#13;
UW-Parkslde plans to make the facility&#13;
.available to the public by selling&#13;
facility use memberships and by makmg&#13;
the facility available for rentals.&#13;
Rentals at the SAC include the fieldhouse,&#13;
meeting rooms, and the pool.&#13;
According to Athletic Director Dr.&#13;
Lenny Klaver the community has&#13;
already shown quite a bit of interest.&#13;
Rentals have already been put into&#13;
place for bridal shows, volleyball tournaments,&#13;
use of the pool, and preliminary&#13;
possibilities for the Kenosha Expo.&#13;
The number of facility use memberships&#13;
has also increased because of the&#13;
new Wellness Center and weight room.&#13;
W,th all of the activity in the SAC some&#13;
students wonder if this will interfere&#13;
with their use of the facility. "The new&#13;
facility was designed and will be operated&#13;
for students first," said Dr. Klaver.&#13;
Much has been said about the increase&#13;
in membership fees. "The reason we&#13;
need to charge for memberships is that&#13;
we have an obligation to support 20%&#13;
of the operating costs of the buildin~",&#13;
said Klaver, By making the facility&#13;
available through rentals and memberships&#13;
the University will be able to support&#13;
the increased operating costs of the&#13;
new $12.3 million building. Dr. Klaver&#13;
said a committee worked on pricing for&#13;
the rental and membership prices by&#13;
doing research with other Universities&#13;
to come up with the fee structure.&#13;
UW-Parkside also plans on advertising&#13;
the new facility to prospective&#13;
renters and members through the use&#13;
of newspaper ads and articles, as well&#13;
as mailers. By advertising the SAC&#13;
more people will be exposed to the universities&#13;
programs and its students.&#13;
"The oniy drawback I can possibly see&#13;
is that demand might be so heavy that&#13;
we are going to have to limit the number&#13;
of people who can join the facility.&#13;
But again with the facility being primarily&#13;
for student use that's were the&#13;
emphasis should be," Klaver said.&#13;
Student Voices&#13;
This week's question:&#13;
Are you going to vote?&#13;
uw-p Mini-Courses lighten 4&#13;
Your load&#13;
Ifit seems as thought all of your classes&#13;
are way too serious and you need to&#13;
lighten things up, here are two words&#13;
to remember: Mini -Courses, The&#13;
University has a number of one- to sixweek&#13;
classes with an emphasis on&#13;
learning AND enjoyment.&#13;
Whether it's physically with QiGong&#13;
and Reflexology, spiritually with Feng&#13;
Shui and Emotional Freedom&#13;
Techniques or creatively with oil and&#13;
watercolor painting, UW-Parkside&#13;
mini-courses help you relax. There are&#13;
no exams-not even a pop quiz-to&#13;
worry about and no term papers.&#13;
Fitness classes include QiGong,&#13;
Mondays from 7 to 8:30 p.m. starting&#13;
Oct. 9.; and Self Care Reflexology, for&#13;
one evening, Wednesday, Oct. 18 from&#13;
7 to 9 p.m. In addition, a one-night&#13;
course on Herbal Remedies for&#13;
Common Ailments is offered&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25 from 7 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Michaela Gaines&#13;
"Yes. Because not enough people vote, and it's important.&#13;
It affects us, so we should vote." .&#13;
For the mind and spirit, Feng Shui is&#13;
offered as a two-week class from 6 to 8&#13;
p.m. starting Oct. 4. Or try some&#13;
Emotional Freedom Techniques during&#13;
a one-night class, Wednesday, Oct. 18&#13;
from 7 to 9 p.m.&#13;
For the creative, Oil Painting meets&#13;
Thursdays from 7 to 9:30 p.m. for six&#13;
weeks starting Oct. 5; and Watercolors&#13;
is a six week class, Tuesdays from 6:30&#13;
to 9 p.m. beginning Oct. 3. For the&#13;
financially creative, Debt Free Living is&#13;
a one-night class offered, Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 25 from 6 to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
For those with a taste for the good life,&#13;
Wine Appreciation meets Fridays, Oct.&#13;
6 and 20, and Nov. 3 from 6:30 to 9:30&#13;
p.m. Participants must be of legal&#13;
drinking age.&#13;
Registration is required for each&#13;
course. For a brochure with more information&#13;
on course content and costs,&#13;
call ext. 2345.&#13;
Tim Bohn&#13;
"Yes, I am. I:m &amp;oing to vote because I am a well informed citizen&#13;
and I think It's every well informed citizen's responsibility&#13;
to vote."&#13;
Aomi Gordon&#13;
"Yes, It's the right thing to do."&#13;
Katie Dane&#13;
;~ th~n~ it's ~pohrtant t~ vote. I'm graduating this year and all&#13;
e c oices t at t e president makes are really goin to a I&#13;
to me ?OW mor~ than ever because I'll be out in the qreal pp y&#13;
world, too. I think we should be involved in that not iu t b&#13;
==~==-:...=--:::::::===::-a_b....:y_s_t_an_d_er:-"-,..:.[a_n_d~]~sit back and let everyone else do it.'} s e&#13;
Study Abroad Can Be Yours&#13;
•&#13;
ByJennie Morris&#13;
Have ~ou ever dreamt of studying&#13;
overseas.The thrill of travel, of seeing&#13;
newthings and places, and maybe even&#13;
leaming a new language? The Center&#13;
For International Studies can help&#13;
makeyour dream, become a reality.&#13;
In the recently passed Wisconsin State&#13;
Budget,the legislature has appropriated&#13;
tunds to support study abroad opportunities&#13;
for those students who nave&#13;
beendeemed eligible for financial aid.&#13;
Upto $2,000 worth of grants are available&#13;
from the University to assist students&#13;
wishing to study overseas.&#13;
Students planning to apply for a grant&#13;
must have their financial aid eligibility&#13;
certified by the Financial Aid Office&#13;
(WYLL0191), and must apply to participatein&#13;
a study abroad program.&#13;
This is an exceptional opportunity to&#13;
take part in a unique learning experilence,especially&#13;
since academic credits&#13;
earned through study abroad can be&#13;
transferred to UW-Parkside.&#13;
There are two deadlines left for submitting&#13;
applications for financial aid.&#13;
The applications are due in the Center&#13;
for International Studies office by&#13;
Friday, October 20, or Friday,&#13;
November 10. Applications should&#13;
include certification of financial aid eligibility,&#13;
and confirmation of participation&#13;
in, or application to, a study&#13;
abroad program. Applications will be&#13;
reviewed by the Center for&#13;
International Studies, and the awards&#13;
will be announced for the first round&#13;
on Friday, September 29.&#13;
For further information about the different&#13;
types of study abroad programs,&#13;
and more financial aid for study overseas,&#13;
students are encouraged to contact&#13;
the Center for International Studies&#13;
(MOLN 367) at 595-2701.&#13;
Health care meeting at uw-,&#13;
As part of its Engaged University&#13;
effort, UW-Parkside was the site of a&#13;
Community Health Care Initiatives&#13;
meeting Sept. 20. The program, jointly&#13;
sponsored by the United Auto Workers&#13;
(UAW) and DaimlerChrysler, took&#13;
placein the Com Arts Theatre.&#13;
Both the UAW and DaimlerChrysler&#13;
haveexpressedconcern about the qualit,Y&#13;
and cost effectiveness of the region s&#13;
healthcare delivery system. To address&#13;
theseconcerns, the union and company&#13;
invitedcommunity members and businesses,health&#13;
care professionals, hospitals&#13;
to attend. They are asking these&#13;
groups to work with them to assure&#13;
high quality health care services and&#13;
improve the quality of life throughout&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To gauge the region's health care environment&#13;
and delivery system, the&#13;
Lewin Group, a company specializing&#13;
in health care consultation, will survey&#13;
the local health care market and compare&#13;
it to other cities. From the resultmg&#13;
data, problems will be identified,&#13;
action groups will be formed, and their&#13;
suggestions will then be rolled out to&#13;
the community.&#13;
DaimlerChrysler's Gerry Wade said&#13;
this is the seventh initiative his company&#13;
and the UAW have made since 1994.&#13;
Survey result are expected to be available&#13;
in six months.&#13;
GerryWade, DiamlerChrysler, announces a survey of 10c~1health care delivery s.ystemsduring&#13;
a program held at UW Parkside. The study will compare Kenosha WIth&#13;
~ealthcare systems in other major cities nationWide.&#13;
hOloby Jeff Ailey&#13;
Your PSGA Officers&#13;
Azeza Hammad, Senator,&#13;
Secretary &amp; Election Director&#13;
Martha King&#13;
Academic Director&#13;
Rebecca Williams-Brawner&#13;
Interim Shared Gov.&#13;
Jamie Freeman&#13;
President Protem pore&#13;
Shana Hopkins&#13;
Public Relations Director&#13;
Kara Norton&#13;
Diversity Director&#13;
A Commitment to Diversit,&#13;
by Gino Ciardo&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
beat out 27 state agencies and UW campuses&#13;
to earn the first Annual Diversity&#13;
Award. The Department of&#13;
Employment Relations and the Council&#13;
on Affirmative Action cited UWParkside&#13;
for achievement in "recruitment,&#13;
planning and diversity hiring."&#13;
Herbert Pitts, assistant to the chancellor&#13;
of Equity and Diversity asserts,&#13;
"None of this would have been done&#13;
without the cooperation of the provost,&#13;
the chancellor, the deans, the chairs of&#13;
the departments, the directors and the&#13;
managers here. Achieving diversity&#13;
goals IS a delicate ballet, and if you do&#13;
not conduct the dance properly with&#13;
the other individuals who are your&#13;
dance partners, you will achieve nothing.&#13;
All the things we accomplish, we&#13;
accomplish as a UW-Parkside team."&#13;
According to UW-Parkside's letter of&#13;
application, 12.9% of the university's&#13;
work force (full- and part-time) were&#13;
minorities as of October 1999. Between&#13;
June 1999 and May 2000, 40 minority&#13;
employees were hired constituting&#13;
21.97% of all hires in that time frame.&#13;
At the same time, UW-Parkside reported&#13;
17% of the student body were&#13;
minorities as of August 2000.&#13;
"It was a situation where we were&#13;
increasing our enrollment of minority&#13;
students, but our work force was not&#13;
reflecting that increase or the demographics&#13;
that are taking place in the&#13;
surrounding area," Pitts comments.&#13;
In order to increase the number of&#13;
minorities employed at UW-Parkside,&#13;
several steps were taken to make the&#13;
university available to more applicants.&#13;
UW-Parkside placed ads in ethnic and&#13;
minority publications, s.ent out bulk&#13;
mailing shells introducing the school&#13;
and announcing job opportunities,'&#13;
advertised vacancies on national career&#13;
websites and collected business cards&#13;
at career expos.&#13;
Pitts explains, "In a tight employment&#13;
market you have to become more creative.&#13;
Our big push this year is going to&#13;
be campus climate. Wecannot continue&#13;
recruiting people if we cannot keep&#13;
people. We have to retain people'Iromote&#13;
people, tenure people, an in&#13;
order to do that we have to make sure&#13;
that the atmosphere here is conducive&#13;
to people of diverse backgrounds."&#13;
He added, "If we are educated to&#13;
think that the world consists only of&#13;
people who look like us, then we are&#13;
being educated to fail. It is impossible&#13;
to get a good education without beinl7&#13;
exposed to the diversity of the world.&#13;
Diversity hiring is also Goal 5 of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Plan 2008, which concentrates&#13;
on combining diversity and the&#13;
curriculum in order to improve the&#13;
learning environment.&#13;
The award will be presented on&#13;
October 12 at the Pyle Center in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
r&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
09/15/00 Incident #00-687: Fire Alarm, Greenquist Hall, 12:59 a.m.,&#13;
officers responding to an alarm found no smoke or fire, Alarm&#13;
was reset and officers cleared.&#13;
Incident #00-688: Underage Drinking, Union Lot, 1:17 a.m.,&#13;
subject observed to be under the influence of alcohol was CIted&#13;
for underage drinking.&#13;
Incident #00-689: Personal Property Theft, Tallent 101, 9:41&#13;
a.m., staff member reported a decorative candle/lantern was&#13;
missing from her office when she returned from vacation. No&#13;
suspects at this time.&#13;
Incident #00-690: Personal Property Theft, Off Campus, 12:15&#13;
p.m., student reported his UWP parking permit was stolen&#13;
from his vehicle while it was parked at an auto dealership off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Incident #00-691: Theft from Motor Vehicle, Ranger Hall Lot,&#13;
2:08 p.m., student reported her housing parking permit was&#13;
.. stolen from her vehicle which was not locked. .&#13;
09/15/00&#13;
09/15/00&#13;
09/15/00&#13;
09/15/00&#13;
Incident #00-692: Agency Assist, crn JR, .2 miles east of srn&#13;
31, 8:40 a.m., while on routine patrol, UPPS Officers came across&#13;
an intoxicated individual. Kenosha Sheriff Dept. was contacted&#13;
to handle the incident as it was in their jurisdiction. Subject&#13;
was arrested for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.&#13;
Incident #00-693: Vandalism, S.w. corner of CTH G and crn A,&#13;
9:43 a.m., while on routing patrol, officers observed several sets&#13;
of tire tracks across the grass and ruts and torn-up grass. No&#13;
suspect vehicles were found. .&#13;
09/16/00&#13;
09/16/00&#13;
lunch With Author Roger Axtell Makes&#13;
learning Fun&#13;
Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
For those not in attendance at last&#13;
Wednesday's luncheon, best-selling&#13;
author and international travel expert&#13;
Roger Axtell carne to Parkside to speak&#13;
about the new global community, and&#13;
(.. America's place in it.&#13;
Axtell, a Kenosha native, has been on&#13;
ABC's "Good Morning America",&#13;
NBC's "Today Show," and several CNN&#13;
news programs. New Yorker described&#13;
him as "an international Emily Post."&#13;
At the luncheon, he humorously covered&#13;
some of the highlights from his&#13;
latest book in The Do's and Taboos series,&#13;
which outline proper behavior, gestures&#13;
and body language rrotocol for&#13;
business people who trave abroad.&#13;
Axtell points out that people traveling&#13;
to foreign countries need to become&#13;
aware of others' cultural customs. This&#13;
is in-order to prevent unintentionally&#13;
insulting those that they wish to do&#13;
serious business with. "It's a big world&#13;
out there. We as Americans have two&#13;
problems that lead to miscommunication.&#13;
The first is that our culture is deal&#13;
focused 'time is money' ... much of the&#13;
rest of the world is relationship&#13;
focused. They want to get to know&#13;
you, trust you. The second problem is&#13;
that we are ethnocentric. We think that&#13;
the world goes right down through the&#13;
United States, and the world revolves&#13;
around us.We do things without realizing&#13;
it, and. our awareness needs to be&#13;
sha;'per." Things like firm handshakes,&#13;
looking someone in the eyes, or using a&#13;
first name are construed as rude and&#13;
disturbing behavior in other countries.&#13;
One comedic example of how cultures&#13;
are different that Axtell likes to&#13;
tell is the story about hygiene, which he&#13;
points out, is perceived differently all&#13;
of over the world. He tells us, "As&#13;
Americans we like to think that we&#13;
rank very high when it comes to&#13;
hygiene ... but I was in a country one&#13;
time where they spit a lot. Very common,&#13;
spit in the streets, spit in their&#13;
offices, even blew their noses out that&#13;
way [with no tissue].&#13;
"We say, 'That's repulsive, that's terrible,&#13;
spreading all those germs around'.&#13;
But,not to them, [they see this as1 very&#13;
hygtemc because they are nddin!? the&#13;
body of a bodily waste. Th7 said to&#13;
me, 'Well what do you do? I said,&#13;
'Well for goodness sake, I carry a hanker-chief&#13;
.. , I blow my nose carefully&#13;
like this.' They asked, 'Then what?' I&#13;
said 'Well, then I put it back in my&#13;
pocket.' They said 'You mean you&#13;
carry it around with you all day long!?'"&#13;
Many students from Parkside will&#13;
one day travel abroad for work, or will&#13;
have to work with foreign business&#13;
people on American soil. Either way,&#13;
students should begin to prepare them- .&#13;
selves for the challenges of communicating&#13;
successfully in the new global&#13;
village of tomorrow.&#13;
"Wehave to get to know and appreciate&#13;
other people," says Axtell. The best&#13;
way to do this is to t~ke advantage of&#13;
the rambow of activities that Parkside&#13;
is always offering for free or a minimal&#13;
fee. Not all learning takes place in a&#13;
lecture hall, and luncheons like this one&#13;
are a fine example of a fun way for students&#13;
to enhance their global&#13;
communication skills.&#13;
Incident #00-694: Agency Assist, 56th Ave. and Green Bay Road,&#13;
9:07 p.m., Kenosha Joint Services requested UPPS officers meeta&#13;
housing resident regardmg a vehicle hit and run complaint,&#13;
Investigation determined accident occurred off campus so&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept. was contacted to handle the&#13;
incident.&#13;
Incident #00-695: Traffic Accident, Comm, Arts Lot, 3:08 p.m.,&#13;
student failed to yield in a parking aisle and struck another&#13;
student's vehicle. A passenger complamed of suffermg a sore&#13;
arm. A state accident report was completed.&#13;
Incident #00-696: M~dical Assist, Molinaro Hall, 12:19 p.m.,&#13;
UPPS officer responded to a report of an III student. Kenosha&#13;
emergency medical unit was called to transport student for&#13;
treatment.&#13;
Incident #00-697: Fire Alarm, Greenquist, 1:32 p.m., officer&#13;
responded to an alarm from a smoke detector. The area was&#13;
checked but no smoke or fire was found. Simplex Company&#13;
alarm system technician was at the scene and he disabled the&#13;
smoke detector and reset the alarm.&#13;
9/17/00&#13;
09/18/00&#13;
09/19/00&#13;
09/19/00&#13;
Incident #00-698: Recovered Stolen Property, Ranger Hall&#13;
parking lot, 3:15 a.m., UPPS employee working on parking&#13;
citations, advised officer of a vehicle displaying a stolen license&#13;
plate. Vehicle was located in the Ranger Hall lot. At the request&#13;
of Milwaukee Police Dept., license was removed and placed in&#13;
evidence. Investigation pending.&#13;
Incident #00-699: Agency Assist, 22nd Ave., .2 miles north of&#13;
crn A, 8:56 a.m., UPPS officers assisted with traffic control at a&#13;
traffic accident involving injuries. Injured subjects were&#13;
transported for medical treatment and vehicles towed. UPPS&#13;
cleared the scene.&#13;
09/20/00&#13;
09/20/00&#13;
9/21/00 Incident #00-700: Agency Assist-DNR, CTH A, East of 22nd Ave.,&#13;
1:13 a.m., UPPS officers assisted in an attempt to locate suspects&#13;
illegally fishing from Pike River. Subjects could not be located.&#13;
Studv Circles: A Dialogue on Race&#13;
by Christine Agaiby&#13;
Issues of racism and race relations&#13;
are central issues in our nation and&#13;
communities. Many people have discovered&#13;
that public dialo/?Ue about&#13;
race is an important step in combating&#13;
problems of prejudice associated with&#13;
race.&#13;
Study Circles call for a dialogue&#13;
about race that help everyday people&#13;
examine racism and race relations and&#13;
work together to make progress on&#13;
these issues. Thegroup provides an&#13;
opportunity for people to get to know&#13;
one another, listen to different experiences&#13;
and points of view, delve into&#13;
disagreements, and discover common&#13;
ground.&#13;
The group looks at social issues and&#13;
discusses ways to take action to&#13;
chan~e these issues. Roseann Mason,&#13;
who introduced this nationwide program&#13;
to Parkside stated, "It's important&#13;
for people to know that we're not&#13;
just discussing problems. We actually&#13;
move from diafogue, to action, to&#13;
change." With thousands of pearle&#13;
working together devising practical&#13;
actions and strategies to promote&#13;
change, a positive world may be in&#13;
our future.&#13;
Mason also pointed out that students&#13;
get a chance to connect with people&#13;
they don't normally connect with&#13;
through study circles. Last year, a&#13;
!\"oup worked with homeless people&#13;
inRacine, breaking through the lines&#13;
of classism and working together to&#13;
solve an on-going problem. Mason&#13;
likes t? describe study circles as the&#13;
oppostte of hate groups, "We are peace&#13;
groups promoting peace."&#13;
Study Circles are not limited to only&#13;
student participation, all faculty and&#13;
staff-are encouraged to be involved in&#13;
the dialogues. Study Circles consist of&#13;
small groups of only 8 to 12 participants.&#13;
At tile last meeting there were&#13;
four professors among those in the&#13;
dialogue. Community members are&#13;
also involved as the study circles prepare&#13;
for their Community Kickoffs.&#13;
StUdy Circle kick·&#13;
off Sunday Oct. 1,&#13;
4 to 6 p.m., Union&#13;
Dining Room. All&#13;
students are urged&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Last February, over 100 community&#13;
members drove in blizzard-like weather&#13;
conditions to join the Kickoff. This&#13;
year, the group invites students and&#13;
area residents to their kick-off program&#13;
this Sunday, Oct. 1. The prgram&#13;
will be held in the Union Dining&#13;
Room from 4 to 6 p.m. They leave on&#13;
the weekend of October 20-22 for their&#13;
retreat in Madison.&#13;
There are two meeting times for&#13;
those who are interested: Mondays 7-9&#13;
.p.m. in Moln 111and Tuesdays 8-10 p.m.&#13;
in Ranger Ha}l47. For more information,&#13;
contact Roseann Mason at 595-&#13;
2606 or e-mail:&#13;
roseann.mason®Uwp.edu&#13;
I¥&#13;
SI. Joe's Returns UW-'&#13;
Soccer to Realit,&#13;
7.Ranger men top Div. II&#13;
I Rankings&#13;
we're #1&#13;
..&#13;
Fabiano's team pasted Lewis&#13;
University, sending then back to&#13;
Romeoville (Ill.) with the sour taste of&#13;
the 3-D loss to contemplate on the bus&#13;
ride home.&#13;
Sunday was a different story. St.&#13;
Joseph's College from Rensselaer, Ind.,&#13;
proved to be rude guests, beating the&#13;
Rangers 4-1. The team is now 4-1-1.&#13;
The men and women played at home&#13;
Friday and Sunday, Sept. 22 and 24.&#13;
Southern Indiana was the opponent for&#13;
both on Friday, while Southern Illinois&#13;
University-Edwardsville came to&#13;
Kenosha on Sunday. Results of those&#13;
games will be in the next edition of The&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
UW-Parkside students are admitted&#13;
free to all games. Tickets are $5 for&#13;
adults and $1 of high school students&#13;
and children 14 years of age and under.&#13;
It had to happen sometime. Even the&#13;
most skilled teams lose a game or two&#13;
during the season. But for a while, it&#13;
seemed the UW-Parkside men's soccer&#13;
team was not only invincible, but that&#13;
they had a sheet of Plexiglas covering&#13;
the goalmout\:l.&#13;
On Friday, Sept. 15, coach Rick Kilps'&#13;
crew defeated Lewis University by a&#13;
score of 1-0. That ran the Rangers&#13;
record to 6 and&#13;
°&#13;
and its string of&#13;
shutout to six games. Then reality set in.&#13;
Facing St. Joseph's College at Wood&#13;
Road Field on Sunday, Sept. 17, the&#13;
Rangers were beaten 1-0. Despite the&#13;
loss, the men ranked number 1 in the&#13;
NCAA's Division II Central Region&#13;
and are number 9 in the nation.&#13;
The women's games on Friday and&#13;
Sunday yielded the same result as the&#13;
men's games. On Friday, coach Troy&#13;
steady at No.1 and No.2 respectively.&#13;
HIthought we would be somewhere&#13;
around No.8," said UW-Parkside head&#13;
coach Rick Kilps when he learned of&#13;
the new ranking." We are deserving of&#13;
the No. 1 regional ranking because we&#13;
beat Lewis and Truman State which are&#13;
top competitors in the region.&#13;
Nationally, I feel we deserved to move&#13;
up despite our loss. We have beaten&#13;
some pretty good teams."&#13;
The Rangers played home games last&#13;
Friday and Sunday. They hosted&#13;
Southern Indiana Friday and SIUEdwardsville&#13;
on Sunday. A summary&#13;
of those games will be in the next edition&#13;
of The Ranger.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
men's soccer team is ranked number 1&#13;
in the Central Region of NCAA&#13;
Division IIand has jumped from number&#13;
15 to number 9 in the nation in a&#13;
poll released Sept. 18.The Rangers "urrently&#13;
have a record of 6-1-0.&#13;
During games played Sept. 15 and 17,&#13;
the team knocked off Lewis University&#13;
1-0 (Lewis dropped from number 7 to&#13;
number 16 in the national rankings).&#13;
The Rangers then dropped a 1-0 decision&#13;
to St. Joseph's College, ending its&#13;
unbeaten and unscored upon streak to&#13;
open the season.&#13;
The top two teams in the nation, Barry&#13;
(Florida) and Dowling (New York) held&#13;
Vball Team Wins One,&#13;
loses One Midwest Open Brings&#13;
Crowd to Campus weekend with matches at Southern&#13;
Indiana on Friday, Sept. 22 and SIUEdwardsville&#13;
on Saturday, Sept. 23.&#13;
Check the next edition of The Ranger&#13;
for results.&#13;
The next home matches are tomorrow&#13;
night, Sept. 29, against Northern&#13;
Kentucky starting at 7 p.m. and this&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 30, against&#13;
Indianapolis at 1 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside students are admitted&#13;
free to all games. Tickets are $5 for&#13;
adults and $1 of high school students&#13;
and children 14 years of age and under.&#13;
The UW-Parkside volleyball team&#13;
played a pair of matches on the road ,I on Sept. 15 and 16. Coach Melissa&#13;
Wolter's team split the matches, beating&#13;
St. Joseph's the first game, but&#13;
fallingin Fort Wayne the next day.&#13;
On Friday, Sept. 15, the Rangers won&#13;
in Romeoville, Ill. three games to two&#13;
against St. Joseph's to start the conference&#13;
schedule on the right foot. The&#13;
next day, however, the Ranger fell to&#13;
InclianaUniversity Purdue UniversityFortWayne,&#13;
three games to one.&#13;
The team was on the road again last&#13;
came away near the top of the pack.&#13;
In the women's race, UW-Parkside&#13;
placed third out of 30 teams. Amber&#13;
Antonia led the Rangers with a second&#13;
place overall finish in a time of&#13;
18:21 on the 5K course. In the men's&#13;
race, the Ranger runners finished number&#13;
12 in a field of 34 teams.&#13;
Your next chance to watch our runners&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14. The women's&#13;
race will start at 1 p.m., the men's race&#13;
at 1:45 p.m.&#13;
There was a lot of sweating and heavy&#13;
breathing at UW-Parkside last&#13;
Saturday but it had nothing to do with&#13;
the premiere of the Foreign Film Series.&#13;
It had everything to do with crosscountry.&#13;
More than 700 runners from school&#13;
throughout the region gathered at UWParkside's&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
Course for the Midwest Open ..When&#13;
all the sweat was wiped away and the&#13;
heavy breathing subsided, the Rangers More Backvard Bashing&#13;
,.&#13;
r&#13;
9&#13;
1. Stephanie Williams (Left) and Charity Briggs-Harris run against the bungle to see&#13;
who can get their marker closest to the end at the Backyard Bash.·&#13;
Photoby Jeff Ailey&#13;
Sylvia McKinney steps into the gyro at the Backyard Bash&#13;
Photo By Jeff Ailey&#13;
Five Honored With UW-P&#13;
Communit, Awards&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
recently named five area women as&#13;
" recipients of its Focus on Women&#13;
Community Awards. Presented by the&#13;
" University and the Women's Studies&#13;
Community Outreach Board, the honors&#13;
are given for excellence in volunteerisrn,&#13;
education, business, health&#13;
services, and hwnan services.&#13;
The recipients included:&#13;
o Adelene Robinson, coordinator,&#13;
Equal Employment Opportunity,&#13;
Kenosha County. She received the volunteer&#13;
award for her participation in,&#13;
among others, the Urban League,&#13;
Kenosha United Way, Boys and Girls&#13;
Club of Kenosha, Gateway Technical&#13;
College Affirmative Action Advisory&#13;
Council, JOBS Program Advisory&#13;
Council, Kenosha County Workforce&#13;
Investment Board, Leadership&#13;
Kenosha, and the Coalition for&#13;
Dismantling Racism. Her focus is on&#13;
the issues of diversity, equity, and&#13;
efforts that benefit the entire community.&#13;
Adelene holds a BA in AfricanAmerican&#13;
Studies with a sociology&#13;
minor, from Indiana University.&#13;
* Guida Brown, director, Women and&#13;
Children's Horizons, Kenosha. Guida&#13;
received the award for her contributions&#13;
to education. While teaching the&#13;
community about domestic violence,&#13;
Guida teaches Human Resource&#13;
Management and Introduction to&#13;
Writing as an adjunct faculty member&#13;
of Concordia University's Kenosha&#13;
branch. She also has several volunteer&#13;
roles, one of which is as a mentor in the&#13;
Kenosha Area Business Alliance's student&#13;
mentoring program. Guida has a&#13;
BAfrom M~rquette University, having&#13;
majored In [ournalism, Public&#13;
}. Relations Sequence, with a minor in&#13;
Psychology. She also holds an MS in&#13;
Management from Cardinal Stritch&#13;
College.&#13;
o Maxine Erby, owner, Salt &amp; Pepper,&#13;
Racine. Maxine's award resulted from&#13;
her contributions to area business.&#13;
Maxine is co-owner of Salt and Pepper,&#13;
a north side Racine tavern. She blends&#13;
her professional and personal roles to&#13;
create a stronger community through&#13;
racial harmony. In addition to her business&#13;
career, Maxine volunteers as a&#13;
Neighborhood Watch block captain,&#13;
and she is a member of the Ladies&#13;
Auxiliary of Racine's St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital. Maxine has an Associate&#13;
Degree in Human Relations from&#13;
Gateway Technical College's Racine&#13;
campus, a ~A from Carthage College in&#13;
Social Work, and her MA from the UWMilwaukee&#13;
in Social Work.&#13;
o Maria Godina, community outreach&#13;
worker, Kenosha. Maria's award resulted&#13;
from her contribution to area Health&#13;
Services, especially for the program&#13;
nicknamed the "Maria Concept." This&#13;
community-wide program of prenatal&#13;
care helps Hispanic women with inadequate&#13;
health coverage. Services range&#13;
from prenatal education and regular&#13;
check-ups, to providing food and clothing&#13;
for mothers and babies. With support&#13;
from a cross section of the Kenosha&#13;
community, her work makes a difference&#13;
in the lives of expectant mothers.&#13;
Maria holds an Associate Degree from&#13;
Gateway Technical College and a BA&#13;
from Concordia University.&#13;
o Caroline Stephens, director, Children&#13;
and Family Resource Center, Racine.&#13;
Caroline's Focus on Women award&#13;
came from her contribution to area&#13;
Human Services. She was on the&#13;
Center's staff for five years before being&#13;
named director. Currently, she monitors&#13;
the well being of the staff and the program's&#13;
participants. In addition to her&#13;
responsibilities at the Center, Caroline is&#13;
a member of several community committees&#13;
such as Weed and Seed, the&#13;
Garfield Education Center committee,&#13;
and the program committee for Family&#13;
Service of Racine, Inc. Caroline also volunteers&#13;
for Habitat for Humanity. She&#13;
has a degree in Food Service and&#13;
Cosmetology.&#13;
The five award recipients were given&#13;
their honors and had their accomplishments&#13;
celebrated during a program at&#13;
the UW-Parkside campus.&#13;
uw-p Booil Group Meets Oct. 21&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
has announced the dates and books to&#13;
be discussed by the Race, Class, and&#13;
Gender Group for the 2000-2001 school&#13;
year. The study group will meet for inI&#13;
depth discussions of contemporary and&#13;
modem Iiterature through May 2001&#13;
(no meeting will be held in Nov.).&#13;
The schedule includes:&#13;
o "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall&#13;
Down: A Hmonp Child and Her&#13;
American Doctors' by Anne Fadiman,&#13;
Oct. 20;&#13;
o "Waiting" by [in Ha, Dec. 1;&#13;
o "Mansfield Park" by Jane Austen,&#13;
Jan. 26, 2001;&#13;
o "Bird by Bird" by Anne Lamott&#13;
Feb. 23,2001; ,&#13;
o "Palace Walk" by Naguib Mahfouz,&#13;
March 23, 2001;&#13;
o "The God of Small Things" by&#13;
AI;mdha~ Roy, April 2~: 2001; and&#13;
o Hanna s Daughters by Marianne&#13;
Fredricksson, May 18, 2001.&#13;
Participation in the Race, Class and&#13;
Gender Group is free and open to all&#13;
students and area residents who have&#13;
read or will read the books. Discussions&#13;
take place room 111 of Molinaro Hall&#13;
from 3:30 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Copies of each of the books to be discussed&#13;
will be available at the UWParkside&#13;
Campus Bookstore. Call ext.&#13;
2301 t? determine book availability. For&#13;
more information, call Linda Madsen at&#13;
ext. 2162 or contact her at&#13;
madsenl@uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
Sponsored by Women's Studies.&#13;
Foreign Film Review&#13;
The Parkside Foreign Film Series started&#13;
on September 14. The series, which&#13;
will last till April 29, will show 14 of the&#13;
best international movies around. For&#13;
people-who missed the first and get to&#13;
the Union Cinema for this one:&#13;
PHRPA (THE CUP) (Oct. 5-8) The Cup,&#13;
the first feature length film ever to be&#13;
made in Bhutan, is delightfully innocent.&#13;
Inspired by true events, The Cup&#13;
is the story of an Indian monastery&#13;
housing children with assorted international&#13;
roots. Awaiting the two new&#13;
arrivals to the monastery is Orygen, a&#13;
self-confident and adventurous 14-&#13;
year-old monk. Orygen has his own little&#13;
near-religious cuIt that is celebrating&#13;
its holiest of events which onIy occurs&#13;
once every four years: The World Cup&#13;
of soccer.&#13;
Soon the children find themselves in a&#13;
bind when they are caught sneaking&#13;
out to watch part of the tournament one&#13;
night and are threatened with expulsion&#13;
should they ever do so again. But&#13;
the crafty Orygen wouldn't let the&#13;
approaching final match pass by without&#13;
his audience, and soon a surprisingly&#13;
innocent plot is hatched. (Bhutan&#13;
2(00) Director: Corrante. 93 min. '&#13;
Here are some excerpts from a review&#13;
of "The Cup" written by James&#13;
Berardinelli: "In addition to being&#13;
charming and uplifting, 'The Cup'&#13;
possesses an undeniable sense of&#13;
verisimilitude, and many of the j'erformances&#13;
are so unaffected tha tit s difficult&#13;
to believe the men giving them&#13;
aren't professional actors. 'The Cup' is&#13;
sure to be a crowd-pleaser,"&#13;
If Iwere you, Iwould buy a season&#13;
ticket right now, because the films are&#13;
a very ruce getaway from Hollywood&#13;
and the like.&#13;
For more informa tion on the Foreign&#13;
Film Series, check Parkside's website&#13;
''http://www.uwp.edu''&#13;
www.uwp.edu.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS BAllET FOlKLORICO&#13;
As part of its Hispanic Heritage Month celebration, the University presents&#13;
Ballet Folklorico Mexico de los Hermanos Avila, Monday, Oct. 2. This colorful&#13;
and exciting program will be held in the Union Cinema Theater at noon.&#13;
For nearly three decades, the Ballet Folklorico has brought authentic regional&#13;
folk dances of Mexico to life. Through exhilarating movement, vibrant music,&#13;
and elaborate costumes, the troupe celebrates the traditions that are Mexico.&#13;
Experience the Ballet Folklorico Mexico de los Hermanos Avila and join in UWParkside's&#13;
month-long celebration of Hispanic tradition. Admission to this onehour&#13;
performance is free.&#13;
For more info~ation, call Jessica Malacara at (262) 634-1418. This program is&#13;
sponsored by Latinos Unidos, the Plan 2008 Diversity Monitoring and&#13;
Assessment Committee, UW-Parkside University Activities, and Sacred Circle.&#13;
Disc Jockey's &amp; Video&#13;
OJ's Wanted!&#13;
-No experience necessaryWe&#13;
are looking for outgoing people&#13;
to work in the music and&#13;
video business.&#13;
Must be able to work weekends and&#13;
have a valid drivers liscence.&#13;
Part-Time positions are available for&#13;
Fall &amp; Winter 2000.&#13;
Call to set up an interview!&#13;
262-632-6828 X 5&#13;
1-aOO-Oisc-Jockey</text>
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              <text>English 104 Basic Reporting Class Makes Debut</text>
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              <text>Student Newspaper f th Universi . . . o e niversity of Wlsconsm-Parkslde&#13;
=&#13;
~Jr: September 21, 2000&#13;
-, --------.-;~.;.;;,~;;.;~..;,;,;,;.-&#13;
-------- Issue 2 Vo1.30&#13;
English104 Basic Reporting&#13;
ClassMakes Debut&#13;
~Udy'screw: Judy Logsdon, third from left, takes a break from class with her reporters Sheree&#13;
omer,former class member Marci Olson, Zach Robertson, Craig Braun, and Gina Ciardo.&#13;
s~XPectto see the names Craig Braun, Gina Ciardo,&#13;
eree Homer, and Zach Robertson in The Ranger&#13;
earlyand often during the semester. Each is enrolled&#13;
In~udyLogsdon's English 104 Basic Reporting class&#13;
~ll also are members of the paper's reporting staff. . t:required to write one article a week originatIn~.&#13;
m tneir ."beat." Braun will cover the campus&#13;
po Ice, adrmsslOns and curriculum, and entertam-&#13;
:nt news. Ciardo's beat includes the chancellor's&#13;
the~' U~versity Relations, the office of the 'prov,?st,&#13;
th JWn s cabinet, affirmative action, Alumm Affairs,&#13;
eoe System, university marketing. the library and&#13;
COll~utercenter, the faculty, the TeaChing Center, the&#13;
B . ge of Arts and Sciences and the School of&#13;
e,illmess and Technology, ethnic studies, weekend&#13;
studge, and evening school. Homer covers donns,.&#13;
ent government, clubs, tutoring, and student hfe&#13;
in general, while Robertson will track the UWParkside&#13;
Ranger athletic teams and the certification&#13;
programs / within the Physical Education&#13;
Department.&#13;
From those beats, they will be writing a variety of&#13;
stories from straight news to features and profiles.&#13;
Their responsibilities are to seek out story ideas.&#13;
However, if an event or breaking news or a story&#13;
idea about personnel or students occurs within their&#13;
beats, they will be open to covering these news stories.&#13;
If you have a potential news story that falls within&#13;
the English 104 students' beats, contact logsdon@Uwp.edu&#13;
bye-mall or call ext. 2404.&#13;
As Logsdon puts it: "The students and I look forward&#13;
to the upcoming semester and to their published storiesinThe&#13;
Ranger on your personnel and departments."&#13;
Foul Weather&#13;
Fouls Residents'&#13;
Monday Night&#13;
by Brenda Dunham&#13;
Lightning struck close to home the rainy night of&#13;
Monday, Sept 11. How close? One report said a bolt&#13;
touched down in the University Apartments volleyball&#13;
courts, Just 25 feet from the buildings. According&#13;
to resident Paul Nault, "The surges set off fire alarms&#13;
in buildings two and four."&#13;
Hollie Carpenter, building two resident assistant&#13;
(RA), said all of the RAs were assembled in the core&#13;
building for their weekly staff meeting.&#13;
"The coni building alarm goes off whenever any&#13;
building alarm goes off.. We followed procedure by&#13;
findmg out which buildings had alarms going off,&#13;
clearmg out the people in tliose buildings, and giving&#13;
the 'okay' to go back in," she said, "The police are&#13;
automatically dispatched. They figure out if they&#13;
need to call the fire department and then go around to&#13;
help reset the alarms."&#13;
Carpenter said the lightning and rain made for an&#13;
eventful birthday.&#13;
"That's a birthday I won't forget. I got so wet, my&#13;
pants are still drying two days later," She recalled.&#13;
Carpenter, along with the rest of the RAs, was out in&#13;
the storm from 9:30 to 10 p.m. The residents were&#13;
outside as well.&#13;
"Most of them crowded under the eaves or went into&#13;
their cars," said Carpenter&#13;
Eventually everyone got to go back to what they&#13;
we~e doing, but Hollie said if there's anext time, "All&#13;
residents should evacuate the building and as soon as&#13;
we know everything is okay then we will let everyone&#13;
back into the buildings."&#13;
2.&#13;
I n d e&#13;
•&#13;
S 1&#13;
3 WIPZ-FMback on -air&#13;
Radio free Parkside ready to rock campus&#13;
4 Briefly&#13;
Schripsema leads orchestra; Trager leads Ghana&#13;
tour&#13;
5 Hispanic Heritage Month&#13;
Celebrate, whether yor're Hispanic or not&#13;
6 AI Crist, Meet our enrollment gUY&#13;
Here to help students get the most out ot UW&#13;
Parkside experience&#13;
1 Sports&#13;
Men's soccer perfect after five games; women&#13;
tie&#13;
8 Backyard Bash&#13;
Join the party on the patio&#13;
STIFF&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen Photgraphy Director&#13;
JeffreyAlley&#13;
Designers&#13;
Sam English&#13;
EricPlace&#13;
Business Manager/Business Team&#13;
Open&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
TyronePayton&#13;
Jennie-LeighMorris&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
WyllieD-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax 262.595.2295&#13;
The, ,Ranger is.pu,bfo~ ev~ry .Thu~ay throughout the semester by students of the University of WlSCOnsin-Parkside who are so e y res~lbl.e r It;;editorial policy and content. '&#13;
Letters to the Editor ~hcy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. Letters should not exceed 2SOwords and should be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger 0 . ce (WyLL o.l39C) , Lcth:!rsmust be typed and include the author's n3)TIeand phone number Letters must&#13;
be free from Ill!sleadmg or libelous content. Letters that fair to comply will not be published. For publication ~ author's&#13;
name can be W1thheld,. but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
:- - - - - - - -Diiliii 2-iii- @-die if - - - ---"i&#13;
I I&#13;
: 9/21109/2J/2000&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
ISpecial Event! .&#13;
I" Today, Thursday, Sept. 21: Backyard Bash, Union Patio, mUSIc by&#13;
IFade 2 Shade laughs from comic Alexandra McHale, and novelty&#13;
levents throughout the day, 3 to 11 p.m., free. Don't miss this!&#13;
I&#13;
:" Today, Thursday, Sept. 21: InfoBrea~s (a fast way to get l:lp-t~-date on&#13;
Inew technology). "How to Bac~-up Files on Your Hard Drive,&#13;
IInstructional Tech Center, Wyllie D150D, 2:15 to 3 p.m., free.&#13;
:" Tonight, Thursday, Sept. 21: Friends of the Library presents "Italian&#13;
IAmericans in Major League Baseball," w /Professor Lawrence&#13;
IBaldassaro of UW-Milwaukee, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge, second floor&#13;
lof the UW-Parkside library, free.&#13;
I&#13;
:Special Event! .&#13;
I" Hispanic Heritage Month Cookout, Friday, Sept, 22, w / food&#13;
I(arracheras and ~amburgers), games (basketball; volleyball, etc) and&#13;
unusic, stop by, it s free! Sponsored by Latinos Unidos, Alpha SIgma&#13;
IOmega Latina Sorority, Inc. Delta Chapter.&#13;
I&#13;
Ie Art Exhibit:&#13;
ITwo-person show: Patricia Casteneda-Tucker (ceramics) &amp; Chuck&#13;
IRichards (paintings), through Sept. 28, gallery hours: Monday &amp;&#13;
:Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.,&#13;
Iclosed Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.&#13;
I I&#13;
." Race, Class, and Gender Study Group: I&#13;
I"The Red Tent" by Anita Diamant, Friday, Sept. 22., Molinaro Hall I&#13;
troom 111 from 3:30 to 5 p.m., for more information, call Linda Madsen&#13;
lat ext. 2162 or madsenl@Uwp.edu bye-mail.&#13;
I I&#13;
:" Noon Concert:&#13;
IMcKeever Duo: James and Susan McKeever, piano, Wednesday, Sept.&#13;
127,Communication Arts Theatre, free.&#13;
I&#13;
I" InfoBreaks: I&#13;
I"Duplicating Tips," learn to create the kind of original you need to prot&#13;
Iduce good copies, Wednesday, Sept. 27, Instructional Tech Center, I&#13;
IWyllie D150D, 2:15 to 2:45 p.m., free. I&#13;
I I&#13;
IAthletics I&#13;
:Men's Soccer (Home games) :&#13;
I" Southern Indiana, Friday, Sept. 22, 3 p.m. I&#13;
I" SIU-Edwardsville, Sunday, Sept. 24, 12:30 p.m. II&#13;
IWomen's Soccer (Home games) I&#13;
I" Southern Indiana, Friday, Sept. 22, 5 p.m. 'I&#13;
I" SID-Edwardsville, Sunday, Sept. 24, 3 p.m. I&#13;
~----------------------------------~&#13;
UW-Svstem undergrad research&#13;
grants available&#13;
Grants of $2,800are available to uwParkside&#13;
juniors and seniors through&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-System.&#13;
The grants can fund research projects&#13;
dealing with solid waste management.&#13;
Students from all academic&#13;
departments are encouraged to&#13;
~pply. Previous grant recipients&#13;
include students with science, history,&#13;
business, and engineering majors.&#13;
Projects can focus on waste reduction,&#13;
reuse, recycling, cornposting, or&#13;
waste disposal topics. Applications&#13;
are due October 27, 2000.&#13;
The grants will be awarded in midNovember&#13;
with final reports due&#13;
June 30, 2001.&#13;
For more information about the program,&#13;
call 608/262-8252,or visit the&#13;
UW-System Solid Waste Research&#13;
Program website:&#13;
http://www.uwsa.edu/oslp/ehs/sW&#13;
rpfund.htm&#13;
p&#13;
.Ioba-, Olseo to Co-editRao.lr&#13;
The new academic year has brought a&#13;
new management team to The Ranger,&#13;
the student newspaper at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. At&#13;
the top of the org charl are co-editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham and Sarah Olsen.&#13;
. They will be responsible for the productio:,&#13;
of this weekly rublication&#13;
includmg deterrrunation a news content&#13;
and editorial direction. Both were&#13;
members of The Ranger staff during&#13;
the 1999-2000 school year.&#13;
In addition to the reporters mentioned&#13;
on the front page- Craig Braun, Gina&#13;
Ciardo, Sheree Homer, and Zach&#13;
Robertson from Judy Logsdon's classTyrone&#13;
Payton returns from 1999-2000.&#13;
General assignment reporting positions&#13;
and specialized beats, including sports,&#13;
entertainment, cartoonist, and others&#13;
are still available. Contact The Ranger&#13;
at ext. 2287 for more information.&#13;
The tagteam of Sam English and Eric&#13;
Place will design each issue of The&#13;
Ranger. They will alternate the design&#13;
duties from issue to issue. Thanks to&#13;
Alan Goldsmith for his help with arl&#13;
direction.&#13;
Making the paper's visual presentation&#13;
standout is Jeffrey Alley. Jeff also&#13;
returns from last year's Ranger crew.&#13;
The very important position of&#13;
Business Manager remains open. The&#13;
paper's management is looking for&#13;
four people to handle this department:&#13;
the Business Manager to perform&#13;
accounting, payroll, and billing duties;&#13;
two salespeople to generate advertising&#13;
revenue needed to upgrade the&#13;
paper's equipment and otlioe;andaninformatim&#13;
specialist 10 manage the llow ci data&#13;
throogh:iJltheoperatioo.&#13;
If you are interested in running a&#13;
small business, managing the P&amp;L&#13;
statement, and leading the profitable, .&#13;
thriving organization, contact advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan at ext. 2404. This is a&#13;
perfect hands-on way to gain experience&#13;
in every aspect of business.&#13;
The Ranger also needs help from&#13;
every person at UW-Parkside. If you&#13;
see news in the making, if you have an&#13;
idea for an article or two (or more!)&#13;
and if you want to write it yourself,&#13;
please let us know. The paper is written&#13;
by and for UW-Parkside students.&#13;
We want everyone connected with the&#13;
University to use this forum.&#13;
Make your voice heard! Join&#13;
The Ranger staff.&#13;
WIPZ returns to airwaves&#13;
Co-edotiors Brenda Dunham, left and Sarah Olsen will run the day to day&#13;
operations of the ranger.&#13;
charge of repairing and maintaining&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Working to maintain the computers&#13;
and the software along&#13;
with designing the WlPZ website&#13;
is "Timmy" Dresen.&#13;
Brian Nielson is the Sales&#13;
Director who sells' on-air ads to&#13;
finance the necessary equipment.&#13;
Mike Duchac is&#13;
Promotions Director, doing the&#13;
off-air promotional posters and&#13;
other such things. And Mall De&#13;
Will, News and Sports Director,&#13;
collects and produces the news&#13;
for on-air play.&#13;
Currently two positions are&#13;
vacant. The first one,&#13;
Programming&#13;
Director, provides&#13;
programming&#13;
for all onair&#13;
time. The secand&#13;
is the&#13;
Production&#13;
Director who&#13;
~akes lror~lOtions&#13;
an aSSISts&#13;
with commercials&#13;
for on-air&#13;
play. There are&#13;
also multiple&#13;
Music Directors&#13;
and other volunteers.&#13;
Station Manager Miller said, "We all do this&#13;
because of our desire to provide something back to&#13;
our university and have fun while doing it."&#13;
He hopes this year will be "new" and "different".&#13;
He adds: "We will be expanding our board, planning&#13;
various events for both on- and off-campus,&#13;
and we'll continue to expand our on-air music&#13;
library. [The station] will begin doing Internet&#13;
broadcast" at wipz.welcome.to.&#13;
The staff of WIPZ. Radio free&#13;
Parkside is ready to rock the&#13;
campus. Right WIPZ's conservative&#13;
and staid management is&#13;
• from left, Mike Dicello, Matt&#13;
DeWitt, Tim Dresen, Jamie&#13;
Freeman, adam Miller, and&#13;
.Brian Nielson.&#13;
By Brenda Dunham&#13;
Quick! Turn your radio to&#13;
101.7 FM; UW-Parkside is on&#13;
the air!&#13;
Maybe you already know about WlPZ, the on-campus&#13;
radio station, but you don't know about the new&#13;
officers and their up and coming plans. Cerlain positions&#13;
have been established to make sure each part of&#13;
the station is running smoothly. If one of these positions&#13;
isn't working well, it makes it harder for the&#13;
rest of the radio f'rocess to be carried out.&#13;
Adam Miller is the station manager. He overseas all&#13;
operations of the station. Jamie Freeman is the&#13;
Assistant Manager. Mike Dicello is the Engineer in&#13;
Then. with a smile Miller says, "We are developing&#13;
a strategic action plan for future growth."&#13;
I'm not sure what that means but I do know it's&#13;
top secret!&#13;
You can find the radio station in Molonaro Hall&#13;
room D131.&#13;
"We have meetings every Wednesday at noon,&#13;
so talented individuals may show up," said&#13;
Miller.&#13;
You can also call the station at 262-595-2527.&#13;
Students, lacultv save&#13;
on plavs at parkside&#13;
UW-Parkside has four great plays plarmed for&#13;
the 2000-2001 academic year. And a new ticket&#13;
plan can save students, faculty, and staff on&#13;
every ticket for every production.&#13;
The plays include Arthur Miller's classic drama&#13;
"A View from the Brid~e," Oct. 19, 20, 21, 27, and&#13;
28, and "Lydee Breeze' by John Guare, on Dec. 1,&#13;
2,7,8, and 9. Plays in 2001 include Eric Bogosian&#13;
controversial "Talk Radio" in Feb. and March,&#13;
and "Lysistrata 2411A.D:' in April.&#13;
Tickets for each production are $7 for UWParkside&#13;
students, faculty, staff, arid seniors, $10&#13;
for adults. A money saving coupon book provides&#13;
four tickets to UW-Parkside students, faculty,&#13;
staff, and seniors for just $22 (adults $32).&#13;
The coupon book offers maximum flexibility. It&#13;
can be used to attend each play or all four can be&#13;
used for one show. The books also give you first&#13;
choice of prime tickets, ticket insurance to&#13;
replace lost tickets, and priority· renewal for the&#13;
2001-2002 season.&#13;
For more information or to order tickets and&#13;
coupon books, call Diane Smith at ext. 2564 or&#13;
fax your order to ext. 2271. Orders also can be&#13;
purchased through the Internet at&#13;
diane.smith@Uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
4. Answering Jour&#13;
questions:&#13;
UWP Bus Pass&#13;
Okay, the high price of gas is beating up your&#13;
budget and you want to find an inexpensive&#13;
alternative, right? How does this sound for&#13;
inexpensive: free? That right-zero, nada, zip!&#13;
Here are some answers to your questions about&#13;
this money saving, relaxing way to get to campus.&#13;
Q: What is a UW-Parkside Bus Pass?&#13;
A: Parkside Pass is FREE transportation on the&#13;
Racine bus system. It's a semester long bus pass&#13;
that, when used in conjunction with your UWParkside&#13;
student 1.0., will allow you unlimited&#13;
free rides on any Racine bus. It's yours free;&#13;
paid as part of your tuition and fees.&#13;
Q: How do I get my UW-Parkside Bus Pass?&#13;
A: It's easy. Your Parkside Pass is available for&#13;
pick-up beginning Monday, the week before&#13;
classes begin each semester. Pick up your&#13;
Parkside Pass at the RangerCard/Information&#13;
Office or at the new Visitors Center in the Sports&#13;
&amp; Activities building. You will need to show&#13;
your valid student ill at the time of pick-up.&#13;
Q: When can I start using my UW-Parkside Bus&#13;
Pass?&#13;
A: As soon as you' get it. Your Fall and Spring&#13;
semester and Summer Session Parkside Passes&#13;
are valid starting the Monday of the week&#13;
before the first day of class. Start using it and&#13;
save money right away.&#13;
Q: Who can I call for information?&#13;
A: Call the University Information Center at&#13;
595-2345 and ask for route and schedule information.&#13;
Q: Is the Parkside Bus Pass only good for my&#13;
trips to UW-Parkside?&#13;
A: No. You can use your Parkside Pass to travel&#13;
for "Py purpose to any destination on any&#13;
Racme Belle Urban System (BUS) routes. Use it&#13;
any time buses operate.&#13;
Q: Who can use the UW-Parkside Bus Pass?&#13;
A: Only UW-Parkside students taking at least&#13;
one course for credit.&#13;
Q: Why was the UW-Parkside Bus Pass created?&#13;
A: The UW-Parkside Bus Pass offers you a great&#13;
opporturuty to use your car less, and provides&#13;
access to students who live in Racine. By riding&#13;
the bus, you are guaranteed to save money you&#13;
would spend ma.mtauung and operating your&#13;
car; help the environment; and reduce parking&#13;
related stress.&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
q: How is it .that I can get a Parkside Bus Pass&#13;
simply by bemg a UW-Parkside student?&#13;
A: You and everyone else who takes a class pay&#13;
to support the program. It is included as part of&#13;
your tuition and fees-just like other UWParkside&#13;
services like the Parkside Union&#13;
Student He~1th &amp; Counseling, etc. The remain:&#13;
ing costs is being offset by federal and state&#13;
transit operating funds.&#13;
Q: How much can I save?&#13;
A: You can save hundreds of dollars in&#13;
reducedgas and maintenance costs, wear and&#13;
tear on your car and the hassle of driving.&#13;
Questions? Call the UW-Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center at (262) 595-2345.&#13;
Volunteer opportunities Abound&#13;
By Michelle Wegner, Volunteer Coordinator.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Volunteer Program would like to&#13;
extend a hearty welcome to all of our new and&#13;
returning students! This year will be one of exceptional&#13;
opportunity for students to give back to. the&#13;
community while addressing personal or professional&#13;
goals for themselves. There are volunteer opportunities&#13;
for people in all majors. Students c:m parttcipate&#13;
in one-time volunteer events or ongomg/ weekly&#13;
volunteer projects that will fit with most any&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Various community agencies are sponsoring&#13;
upcoming training sessions for volunteers:&#13;
• Kenoshans Against Sexual Assault: Learn how to&#13;
provide a listening ear for victims of sexual assault&#13;
and domestic violence. Available opportunities&#13;
include: answering a hotline providing support to&#13;
victims on the telephone, responding to victims&#13;
while at the hospital, supervising children while in&#13;
group, and providing administrative support.&#13;
Training is scheduled for the following Saturdays&#13;
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Sept. 23, 30, and Oct. 7.&#13;
• The Kenosha Literacy Council holds its Fall&#13;
Volunteer Tutor Training on the following dates:&#13;
Sept. 23 from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Oct. 7 from 10:30&#13;
a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; and Saturday, Oct. 14 from 10:30&#13;
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Call Michelle at ext. 2011 now to register,&#13;
and learn how to teach adult learners how to&#13;
read.&#13;
• The Racine Literacy Council holds its training ses,&#13;
sions on the following dates: Oct, 1. 6, 8, 13, and 15&#13;
from 6 to 9 p.m. each night.. .&#13;
• River Bend Nature Center IS looking for volunte&lt;&gt;'&#13;
naturalists who would lead small groups of fourth&#13;
and fifth graders through specially aesiFoed explor,&#13;
ing hikes. Inquire soon. about this one. Training ~&#13;
required but can be provided through one-to-one and&#13;
job shadowing sessions.&#13;
Hold these dates:&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 15 from 8 a.m, to 6 p.m. (shifts avail,&#13;
able): Special Olympics District Bowling Tournament&#13;
Volunteers are needed to be lane helpers, scorekeepers,&#13;
and awards presenters. This is a popular event&#13;
with UW-P volunteers!&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 28 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. (shilts avail.&#13;
able): National "Make A Difference Day." Join a team&#13;
of students who will volunteer at various agencies&#13;
throughout Racine and Kenosha. Last year's worksites&#13;
included Boys and Girls Club, Urban Outreach&#13;
Center, Kenosha Humane Society, Habitat for&#13;
Humanity, and River Bend Nature Center.&#13;
Whether you like to coach football, help kids with&#13;
disabilities learn how to ride horses, greet patients in&#13;
the hospital, teach kids a hobby, comfort people who&#13;
are terminally ill, answer a crisis line, or represent a&#13;
child in court, the community needs you! Please cal&#13;
Michelle Wegner, Volunteer Coordinator, at 595-2011&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Schripsema to lead chamber orchestra&#13;
The UW-Parkside Chamber Orchestra will be&#13;
under the able baton of conductor David Schripsema&#13;
durmg the 2000-2001 academic year. The Orchestra is&#13;
open to all students and community members. Area&#13;
residents are encouraged to join the Tuesday evening&#13;
practices held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. in room 0-118 of&#13;
the Co.mmunication Arts building.&#13;
Schripsema brmgs an impressive resume back to&#13;
UW-Parkside where he once conducted the university's&#13;
srmphony orchestra. He has been a music educator&#13;
in the Kenosha Unified School District for more&#13;
than a quarter century. His talents have taken him&#13;
around the globe. In addition to guest conducting th,&#13;
Grand Rapids Symphony, the Peoria Symphony, the&#13;
Michigan State University Symphony, and many otb&#13;
ers in the US, he also has led the Berlin Philharmonic&#13;
the Florence Opera Orchestra, and the Mozarte&#13;
Orchestra of Salzberg, Austria. An active violini&#13;
and clinician, he was Wisconsin Teacher of the Yearil&#13;
1987.&#13;
Musicians interested in joining the UW-Parksid,&#13;
Chamber Orchestra can call the Music Department al&#13;
ext. 2438 or 2457.&#13;
Trager leads Ghana tour&#13;
A personal experience of African culture is available&#13;
at UW-Parkside. A seven-week course about Ghara&#13;
begins in October followed by a 17-day tour of the&#13;
West African nation. The class and tour are open to&#13;
students and the public.&#13;
UW-Parkside Sociology Instructor James Stills will&#13;
teach the class. Stills ana UW-Parkside Anthropology&#13;
Professor Lillian Trager will conduct the tour.Trage&#13;
said the people and past make Ghana interesting.&#13;
"Ghana is rich in liistory and culture. It's a small&#13;
country but there are many cultural variations, and a&#13;
lot of important history," she stated.&#13;
Tour participants will sample Ghana's artistic and&#13;
cultural hentage by VISIting an Ashanti village, th'&#13;
center for kente cloth weaving, wood carving, and&#13;
other crafts. The group will visit villages and towns&#13;
m northern Ghana and major cities in the south. The&#13;
trip includes a visit to the Kakum rain forest and&#13;
canopy walk. The trip also includes a visit to the&#13;
'slave castles' in Cape Coast.&#13;
The course runs Thursdays, Oct. 26 to Dec. 14, from&#13;
7 to 8:45 p.m. (no class Thanksgiving Day). Tour par'&#13;
ticipants are expected to attend the UW-Parkside sessions,&#13;
Trager said, so they can understand Ghana's&#13;
culture.&#13;
The classes and tour c":,, be taken by students for&#13;
three credits, There IS a lmut of 15 participants. The&#13;
deadline t,:, regi~ter is Oct. 1, but Trager encourages&#13;
early regtstration. For more information cail&#13;
Sociology / Anthropology at ext. 2177 or c~ntad&#13;
Trager at lillian.trager®Uwp.edu '&#13;
Hispanic Heritage .Month Celebrations 5.&#13;
I,&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Guitarist and UW-Milwaukeefaculty member Filipe Rodriquez&#13;
helped kick-off Heritage Month&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Month,&#13;
September 15 through October 15,&#13;
began Wednesday with the Kickoff&#13;
Celebration in Main Place. Students&#13;
and staff members of all races came&#13;
together to enjoy the folk guitar&#13;
music of Felipe Rodriguez, sample&#13;
Latino food, learn the&#13;
Salsa/ Merengue style of dancing,&#13;
and watch.Parkside students perform&#13;
traditional Mexicandances.&#13;
"The next month will be filled with&#13;
activities, dances, and events that will&#13;
encourage ithe entire community to&#13;
learn about Hispanic heritage, and, at&#13;
the same time, the Hispanic students&#13;
[experience] a pride in celebrating&#13;
their heritage.t'says Carmen Ireland,&#13;
minority program manager and faculty&#13;
advisor for Latinos Unidos.&#13;
Ireland stresses that the events on&#13;
campus and the memberships to&#13;
Latinos Unidos, Omega Delta Phi&#13;
International Fraternity, and Alpha&#13;
Sigma Omega Latina Sorority are&#13;
open to all students curious about&#13;
Latino culture. Students interested in&#13;
attending a Latinos Unidos meeting&#13;
should go to Monilaro 107&#13;
Wednesdays at noon,&#13;
For further information about&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Month or the&#13;
events on campus, contact Carmen&#13;
Ireland at 595-2496in the Office of&#13;
Admissions.&#13;
Professional Athletes Choose Chiropractic&#13;
~t:t&#13;
...&#13;
....\.....&#13;
Dr. Ralph Filson witb Mark McGwire '&#13;
1-800-533-9210&#13;
Logan's national reputation as a premier&#13;
chiropractic college is due in large&#13;
part to faculty members like Dr. Ralph&#13;
Filson.&#13;
In his private practice, Dr. Filson acts&#13;
as consulting doctor of chiropractic to&#13;
the St. Louis Cardinals and the&#13;
World Champion St. Louis Rams.&#13;
In both capacities, Dr. Filson treats&#13;
some of the world's best athletes in&#13;
professional sports.&#13;
If you would like to learn more about&#13;
an exciting career in chiropractic.&#13;
please contact Logan Collge for an&#13;
informational packet.&#13;
!l'ww.logan.edu loganadm@logan.edu&#13;
185t Schoenler Road, Chesterfield.MO 63017&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Institution of Hillher Education&#13;
p----------------. , ,&#13;
:Hispanic Heritage:&#13;
:Month Festivities&#13;
,&#13;
:. Hispanic HerilageMonth Cookout&#13;
, Friday, September 22, 2000&#13;
, Union Patio&#13;
'11am-2pm&#13;
, Admission: FREE&#13;
, For more information, contact&#13;
: Miguel Ortiz (262) 645-6057.&#13;
:. Alpha Sigma Omega Dance&#13;
, Friday, September 22, 2000&#13;
, For more information, contact&#13;
, Maria Negron (262) 909-5479.&#13;
,&#13;
I.Ballet Folklorico Mexico De Los&#13;
: Hennanos Avila&#13;
, Monday, October 2, 2000&#13;
, Union Cinema&#13;
, Noonv lpm&#13;
, Admission: FREE&#13;
, For more information, contact&#13;
'Jessica Malacara at (262) 634-1418. ,&#13;
,&#13;
,. Irene Farrera&#13;
I Monday, October 16, 2000&#13;
, Main Place (Wyllie Hall)&#13;
, Noon -lpm&#13;
I Admission: FREE&#13;
I For more information, contact&#13;
: Amy Lechuga at (847) 401-1176.&#13;
'. HispanicH~ Month Banquet&#13;
Friday, October 20, 2000&#13;
Pre-banquet reception in Union&#13;
Bazaar-7pm&#13;
Dinner in Union Dining Room&#13;
7:30pm '&#13;
Dance in Union Square - 9:30pm&#13;
Admission: Dirmer/Danre$10/&#13;
~~ Only $5/person&#13;
•Latinos Unidos Essay Contest&#13;
Open to UW-Parkside students&#13;
only&#13;
Prize: $50 Follett bookstore gift&#13;
certificate&#13;
Essays are due by Friday, October,&#13;
6,2000 ,&#13;
Essay Topic: Why do Latinos eel,&#13;
ebrate Hispanic Heritage Monthjj&#13;
For more information, contact ,&#13;
Luis Benevoglienti at (262) 595- ,&#13;
2731. :&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
Clip and Save Schedule&#13;
---------------_.&#13;
sure we [faculty and staff] have a good&#13;
working relationship to allow us to&#13;
continuously improve what we are&#13;
Doing."&#13;
In addition to working with the faculty&#13;
and staff, Crist also works with&#13;
the Marketing and Communications&#13;
departinent as well as Publications to&#13;
promote the University in the community.&#13;
"We have to promote ourselves; we&#13;
have to market ourselves. I've seen it&#13;
work at my previous institution,&#13;
where by investing in good informational&#13;
advertising and promotion, we&#13;
were able to increase enrollment significantly,&#13;
and change the image of the&#13;
institution."&#13;
When asked why some students&#13;
leave UW-Parkside short of graduation&#13;
or sooner, Crist responded: "Some&#13;
students leave because they haven't&#13;
done well and we hope that they come&#13;
back. We will never give up on a student."&#13;
Crist received both his undergraduate&#13;
and post-graduate degrees from&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
and said he is happy to be back in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
6. Meet UW-' enrollment guru Alan Crist&#13;
by Julie Thompson&#13;
In an effort to increase enrollment&#13;
and improve retention rates, the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside created&#13;
the new position of assistant&#13;
vice-chancellor for Enrollment&#13;
Management and then hired Alan&#13;
Crist to fill it. Crist started at UWParkside&#13;
in July after spending ten&#13;
years at Indiana University-Purdue&#13;
University Indianapolis (IUPUI) as&#13;
associate vice chancellor and executive&#13;
director for Enrollment Services.&#13;
When asked why he came to Kenosha,&#13;
Crist explained, "What really helped&#13;
me make the decision to come to UWParkside&#13;
is the vision Chancellor&#13;
Keating has for the University; looking&#13;
at the University as an engaged&#13;
University and connecting with the&#13;
community is something that means a&#13;
lot to me in terms of where I think the&#13;
University needs to be. Also looking&#13;
at the other aspects of building a&#13;
strong and quality diverse student&#13;
population."&#13;
Crist plans to use the strategies that&#13;
worked at IUPUI here, tailoring them&#13;
to meet the needs of UW-Parkside, in&#13;
order to become more student&#13;
AI Christ&#13;
vice chancellor,&#13;
Enrollment Management&#13;
focused. His job includes looking at&#13;
ways to help students get off to a&#13;
good start by pulling together acade&#13;
mic and student support services in&#13;
order to eliminate barriers students&#13;
sometimes face.&#13;
To achieve this goal, he said he&#13;
will be, "Bringing together the&#13;
offices of admissions, financial aid,&#13;
registrar, advising, and student&#13;
academic support services, as well&#13;
as working with other offices."&#13;
He also will look at ways to&#13;
decrease the obstacles that make it&#13;
difficult for&#13;
non-traditional students to return&#13;
to school. His aim is to increase&#13;
diversity atUW-Parkside at all levels.&#13;
Crist believes building a strong&#13;
sense of conununity between students,&#13;
faculty, and staff is important&#13;
for UW-Parkside.&#13;
"The faculty and staff play an&#13;
important role in both the recruitment&#13;
as well as retention of students.&#13;
Follow-up from a faculty&#13;
member with a student who IS interested&#13;
in a specific program can reall;,&#13;
make a difference in that student s&#13;
understanding in what is here. It is&#13;
the faculty wfio spend the&#13;
most time with the students,"he said.&#13;
He added that he wants to "make&#13;
Police Beat Visitor pulled out in front of an emrloy Investi~tion revealed damage inconsis&#13;
ee who wastraveling in the traffic aisle, tent wi being struck by a car. It&#13;
striking her vehicle. State traffic accident appears driver ma.rJ'ave struck a tree&#13;
report completed. or Eost with his ve .cleoIncident&#13;
The new school year is here and, un ounded.&#13;
09/12/00 Incident # 00-676: Personal Property with more people on campus, the Theft, Union Square, 10:12 a.m. Student 09/13/00 I Incident # 00-681: Traffic Accident, Hit&#13;
UW-Parkside police are busier than reported his book bag containing text &amp; Run, Union Lot, 3:04 p.m. Student&#13;
they were during the summer. Here is books was stolen from the Square. reported her car had been struck while&#13;
a summary of recent police activity: Susftect was identified and admitted the parked in the lot. There was a scrape&#13;
the t. Investigation and follow-up and large dent on the driver's side with&#13;
09/11/00 Incident # 00-671: Traffic Violation, continuing. paint transfer. No witnesses or susOuter&#13;
Loop Rd., 10:58 a.m. pects at this time. .&#13;
Driver was cited for speeding 46 09/13/00 Incident if 00-677: Personal Property&#13;
mph in a 25 mph zone. Theft, Conun. Arts parking lot, 4:49 p.m. 09/13/00 1 Incident # 00-682: Agency Assist, 979&#13;
Student reported passenger side window Wood Road, 9:55 p.m. While on routine&#13;
09/11/00 Incident # 00-672: UWS Chapter 18 had been partially rolled down and patrol, UPPS officer observed a vehicle&#13;
Fireworks, Ranger Hall Lot, someone was able to unlock the door on fire. Officer had negative results by&#13;
10:52 a.m. While subject was being and steal money from a book bag. No using an extinguisher. Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
issued a parking citation, UPPS other items were missing. No witnesses Dept. and Somer's Fire Department&#13;
officer saw fireworks in the vehi or suspects at this time. were called for assistance.&#13;
cleoDriver surrendered the materi&#13;
09/12/00 Incident # 00-678: Suspicious als and was informed of the 09/13/00 Incident # 00-683: Elevator Alarm,&#13;
restrictions of such items on uni Circumstances, Ranger Hall, 11:40p.m., Greenquist, 12:12 a.m. Officer respondversity&#13;
property. UPPS respondint to a 2911 hang-up call ed to an alarm an found the elevator&#13;
found it to have een caused w en a stu stuck. Officer was unable to silence the&#13;
09/11/00 Incident # 00-673: Agency Assist, dent misdialed. alarm so elevator was turned off and&#13;
Kenosha Police D~t., 12:15 p.m.&#13;
09/13/00 Incident # 00-679: Disorderly&#13;
signs posted.&#13;
30th Avenue @ 16 Place - Off&#13;
Campus. UPPS officer came across Conduct/Warrant, University 09/14/00 Incident # 00-684; Traffic Accident,&#13;
a vehicular accident and after Apartment, 1:02 a.m. Housing RA Union Lot, 10:11 a.m. Student pulled out&#13;
determini~there were no injuries, reported a loud party in progress which into a traffic aisle, strikin!. another stu&#13;
contacted D as it was in their had not quieted down after being dent's vehicle. State acci ent report com&#13;
jurisdiction. warned. An involved student was found pleted.&#13;
to be wanted on an active warrant for&#13;
09/11/00 Incident # 00-674: Fire Alarm, probation and parole violation. Subject 09/14/00 Incident # 00-685: Theft, Union Lot, 5:04&#13;
University Apartments, 9:39 p.m. was issued a state citation for disorderly h·m. Student reported the hubcars from&#13;
Officers responded to an alarm conduct and obstruction of a police er vehicle were removed while It was&#13;
and found alarm audible from a officer and transported to Kenosha parked in the lot. No suspects or wit&#13;
pullbox. Occupants of the apart- County jail. nesses to the theft.&#13;
ment were questioned but had no&#13;
knowledge of who activated the 09/13/00 Incident # 00-680: Traffic Accident, Hit &amp; 09/14/00 Incident # 00-686: Theft, SAC Level 2&#13;
pullbox. Alarm was reset. Run, unknown location, 12:44 p.m. Restroom, 9:30 p.m. Staff member&#13;
Student reported his vehicle had been rehfrted his hand-held Motorola radio 09/12/00 Incident # 00-675: Traffic Accident, struck by an unknown terson on Sefcl. w .ch had been left in a restroom, was&#13;
Comm. Arts lot, 9:40 a.m. 12 while parked in the onun. Arts ot. missing when he returned to retrieve it.&#13;
Soccer: men win twice,&#13;
women tie once&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer coach Rick&#13;
Kilps and his goalie Thorn Peer probably&#13;
didn't want to talk about&#13;
shutouts after last week's wins over&#13;
Rockhurst and Truman State.&#13;
That might raise the specter of&#13;
sports' least favorite four-letter&#13;
word: jinx.&#13;
Jinx or no, the men's squad beat&#13;
Rockhurst on Saturday, Sept. 9, by a&#13;
score of 2-0. They carne back the next&#13;
day and beat Truman State-the&#13;
fourth ranked team in the nation-on&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 10, by a score of 2-0.&#13;
That gave the Rangers a perfect 5-0&#13;
record for the year. And during those&#13;
five garnes, Peer and his teammates&#13;
have not surrendered a goal. Not&#13;
one! The team's composite score&#13;
is 16 for and 0 against.&#13;
The record was good enough for a&#13;
ranking of 15th in the nation and&#13;
fourth in the region.&#13;
The women's soccer team took a 3&#13;
and 0 record into their game with&#13;
Wmona State on Saturday, Sept. 9.&#13;
CoachTroy Fabiano'ssquad battledto a&#13;
1-1standoff.&#13;
Both teams opened play in the&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference last&#13;
Friday, SeJJt. 15 against Lewis university.&#13;
Both also played St. Joseph's&#13;
on Sunday, Sept. 17. Summaries of&#13;
those games will be in the Sept. 28&#13;
issue of The Ranger.&#13;
Admissionto all UWcparksideatheltic&#13;
events is freefor University students.&#13;
Adults are admitted for $5 and high&#13;
school students and children 14year of&#13;
age and under are admitted for $1.&#13;
Freshman Sara Beebe steels the ball from the Flyers.&#13;
Photo by JeffAlley&#13;
Uball team third in Ohio&#13;
First-year UW-Parkside volleyball&#13;
coach Melissa Wolter continued to&#13;
tune her squad for Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference play with a third place&#13;
finish at the the University of Findlay&#13;
(Ohio) tournament. The team posted&#13;
a 1-3 record to wind up in the middle&#13;
of the five team field.&#13;
Now things get serious. The spikers&#13;
opened conference play at St.&#13;
Joseph's on Friday, Sept. 15 before&#13;
traveling to IUPU-Fort Wayne on&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 17.&#13;
The team doesn't get a taste of&#13;
horne cooking until Friday, Sept. 29,&#13;
at 7 p.m when they face Northern&#13;
Kentucky. They follow that up with&#13;
a 1 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 30 match&#13;
with Indianapolis.&#13;
Admission to all UW-Parkside&#13;
atheltic events is free for University&#13;
students. Adults tickets are $5 and&#13;
admission is $1 for high school students&#13;
and children 14 year of age&#13;
and under.&#13;
Go Rangers!&#13;
1.&#13;
Thorn Peer muscles a save in route to his 6th consecutive shut out&#13;
of the season. This photot was taken during the Sept. 15 game against&#13;
Lewis University&#13;
Photo by JeffAlley&#13;
Fall Phonathon helps&#13;
VOU, helps UW-Parkside . .&#13;
You or your organization can profit&#13;
from a unique job opportunity&#13;
offered by uw- Parkside's division&#13;
of University Advancement. The&#13;
office is organizing a phonathon to&#13;
contact UW-Parkside alumni to&#13;
updated information and financial&#13;
support. University Advancement&#13;
wants to team with students and&#13;
organizations / clubs on campus to&#13;
make the event a huge success.&#13;
The J?honathon will be held at UWParkside&#13;
October 2 through&#13;
November 9. Itprovides an opportunity&#13;
for the University to raise&#13;
money for its annual fund while&#13;
allowing students and organizations&#13;
on campus to benefit as well.&#13;
Student clubs and organizations can&#13;
raise money quickly and easily&#13;
instead of coordinating small-profit&#13;
bake sales and other exhausting&#13;
fundraisers. Each caller earns $7 per&#13;
hour working the phonathon. Those&#13;
returning from last year earn a little&#13;
more. Volunteers can set their own&#13;
schedule and, in most cases, work as&#13;
many hours as their schedule allows.&#13;
Organizations can earn up to $525&#13;
for their cause.&#13;
"We are continuing this new tradition&#13;
that helps students, student&#13;
organizations and the University&#13;
raise the funds they need throughout&#13;
the year," said Andrea Simpson,&#13;
the director of Alumni Relations and&#13;
the Annual Fund. "The phonathon is&#13;
providing a flexible, part-time job&#13;
opportunity that can help students&#13;
make extra spending cash, As one&#13;
student put it I don't know too many&#13;
c- college students who couldn't use an&#13;
extra buck or two during the school&#13;
year."&#13;
Positions are available for callers and&#13;
a limited number of positions are&#13;
available for supervisors. Callers earn&#13;
$7 per hour and supervisors earn $9&#13;
per hour. There are numerous other&#13;
benefits for students and organizations&#13;
to getting involved in the&#13;
phonathon this fall. Prizes are included&#13;
every evening for all participants.&#13;
Training is provided for all.&#13;
Students acquire great sales experience&#13;
and build valuable interpersonal&#13;
skills for future careers and resumes.&#13;
The phonathon allows students and&#13;
organizations to reach out and get&#13;
involved in the University and its&#13;
alumni. All this while having a (;feat&#13;
time in a fun and exciting environment.&#13;
The phonathon is held to gain financial&#13;
support for UW-Parkside and is&#13;
part of the annual fund, which supports&#13;
student scholarships, campus&#13;
equipment and operating expenses.&#13;
The fall fundraising event runs&#13;
Monday through Thursday evenings,&#13;
6 to 9 p.m., October 2 through&#13;
November 9 in the new phone bank&#13;
center: WYLL 3100. Students and&#13;
organizations can find out more by&#13;
calling Andrea Simpson at 595-2233,&#13;
andrea.simpson@Uwp.edu or by picking&#13;
up a brochure in the Career Center.&#13;
Don't miss out on this great opportunity&#13;
to earn extra money, help your&#13;
organization, and support the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
,,8.&#13;
,&#13;
TIlVllBDAI', SBPTB.BBa' 21&#13;
, .&#13;
VNION PATIO ,- 10 P•.&#13;
Free, Free,Free,Free&#13;
, OffSfW&#13;
3-7 PM Bungee Run &amp; Gyro&#13;
7:30-10 PM Mocktails&#13;
.i&#13;
OnS~&#13;
7-8 PM (Comilc Alexandra McHale&#13;
8-9 PM Live Ba:ruj!Fade2Shade&#13;
,8:58-9:10 Alexandra McHale&#13;
9:15-10 PM Fade2Shade'&#13;
.Sponsored, By:Parikside Activities Board,&#13;
PHE</text>
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              <text>SACExpansion Readv lor Student Use&#13;
Afternearly two years of tom up&#13;
landscapes, showers featuring&#13;
cold and cold running  water&#13;
(sorry,no hot water in the build-&#13;
ing today;  this  week!;  this&#13;
month!!),  and dodging  mud&#13;
streams after rainstorms,  UW-&#13;
Parkside students  are finally&#13;
enjoyingthe benefits of the Sports&#13;
and Activity Center (SAC)expan-&#13;
sion. The new fieldhouse, class-&#13;
rooms, dance studio, and fitness&#13;
facilities-financed  in part with&#13;
student fees-are  now open. The&#13;
formalgrand opening takes place&#13;
Friday,Sept. 29.&#13;
The expansion  is expected to&#13;
easethe crunch for space experi-&#13;
enced in the original  SAC.&#13;
Between finding time for classes,&#13;
fitting in practices and games for&#13;
men's and women's  athletic&#13;
L&#13;
...,..&#13;
............  -:&#13;
learns,wedging in intramural stu-  The $12.3Million SAC expansion project is now open for student use. The&#13;
dent sports, packing in camps,&#13;
formal opening is September 29.&#13;
tournaments, and special events,&#13;
then shoehorning in fitness and&#13;
community activities, the SAC was&#13;
practically bursting at the seams.&#13;
"Thisis a very active facility, espe-&#13;
cially in the winter months," said&#13;
UW-Parkside  Athletic  Director&#13;
Lenny Klaver. "Thebuilding was in&#13;
use from 5:30 in the morning until&#13;
after midnight, closeto 1a.m. some-&#13;
times. We had runners coming in&#13;
during  the  morning,  classes&#13;
throughout the day, winter sports&#13;
practices  during  the day and&#13;
evening, intramural sports in the&#13;
evening. For example, baseball and&#13;
softball practice times were usually&#13;
at 9 or 9:30at night.&#13;
So&#13;
the schedule&#13;
is packed."&#13;
Built For Students&#13;
Although UW-Parkside athletic&#13;
teams will benefit from the expan-&#13;
sion, the primary focus of the new&#13;
Petretti Fieldhouse will be individ-&#13;
ual students.&#13;
An inside look at the Perretti Fieldhouse&#13;
"The building was built with stu-&#13;
dents in mind-not  how well our&#13;
track teams run in there or how&#13;
much space we're going to have for&#13;
basketball  or volleyball  camps,"&#13;
Klaver stated. "It's for students; to&#13;
expand their recreational opportuni-&#13;
ties. Wewant to keep people on cam-&#13;
JUS, gIve   them   more   activities,&#13;
and&#13;
create a better balance between a&#13;
healthy lifestyle, studying, and fun&#13;
activities that are part of the college&#13;
experience.   "&#13;
To help students build that healthy&#13;
'ifestyle, the Petretti Fieldhouse fea-&#13;
tures 70,000 square feet of open&#13;
recreation space. There isa 200meter&#13;
walking /running track, and plenty&#13;
of courts for basketball, volleyball,&#13;
tennis, and other activities. Two&#13;
workout areas are available: the&#13;
Ranger Power Center with weight&#13;
See SAC, Page 7&#13;
d&#13;
.&#13;
S 1&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
e&#13;
.Things to do at the U&#13;
Want something  to do? You'll find plenty to do&#13;
here.&#13;
4&#13;
A Different  Voice&#13;
Patrick McGuire talks about&#13;
his love for learning.&#13;
5&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Phonathon  details, award ~g&#13;
UWP artists&#13;
6&#13;
UW-P Alumni on OIvmpie Team&#13;
Three members  of the US Olympic  team have&#13;
ties to UW-Parkside.&#13;
1&#13;
Ranger Soccer&#13;
Unbeaten,  untied  men's and women's  teams off&#13;
to fast start.&#13;
8&#13;
Foriegn  Films&#13;
Time to explode some myths ... and see some great&#13;
movies.&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax&#13;
262.595.2295&#13;
Designers&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
The&#13;
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to   e Ranger  office  (WYLL  D-139C)  or e-mailed   to&#13;
Jilcob020@uwp.edu.&#13;
Letters  must&#13;
be&#13;
typed  and  include  the  author's   nam&#13;
d&#13;
~one   number.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
free&#13;
from  misleading  or libelous  content.  Letters  that&#13;
fail&#13;
10 comply&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
be&#13;
published.   For pU~I~~-&#13;
tion&#13;
purposes,&#13;
author's  name  can&#13;
be&#13;
WIthheld,&#13;
but&#13;
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edit&#13;
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              <text>---&#13;
-&#13;
Issue&#13;
71&#13;
Vol.&#13;
291&#13;
May&#13;
4, 2000&#13;
l&#13;
r'a uu&#13;
IOn&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
N&#13;
J&#13;
~&#13;
X&#13;
I:'-&#13;
~&#13;
Ul&#13;
Ul&#13;
H&#13;
9&#13;
Ins   1 d e&#13;
New Ranger Editors&#13;
'Becky Duba will be editor with Brenda Dunham&#13;
and Sarah Olsen as assistant editors.&#13;
5    Busted&#13;
Final police beat of the school year.&#13;
Savor it.&#13;
6    Grad list&#13;
Congratulations  to all the Class of 2000. Catch all&#13;
the names on pages 6-7&#13;
8    Kinchen Awarded&#13;
10th anniversary of the Master Singers program&#13;
marked with plaque.&#13;
12   Main Event&#13;
Wrap up the issue with a picture from Main Event&#13;
featuring Swing Bop.&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
c&#13;
t&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
n&#13;
s&#13;
News&#13;
3-1&#13;
Calendar&#13;
3&#13;
Police Beal&#13;
5&#13;
Graduates&#13;
6-1&#13;
Features&#13;
8-9&#13;
Sports&#13;
10&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
11&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
f f&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
KreggJacoby&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Assistant  Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Desktop/  Design&#13;
KreggJacoby&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Ad Designer&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
JeffAlley&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Daniel Yaris&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Writers&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Elizabeth .George&#13;
Jennie-leigh Morris&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax&#13;
262.595,2295&#13;
The Ranger  is published   every  other  Thursday   throughout    the semester  by students   of&#13;
the&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely responsible for it's&#13;
editOriaI&#13;
policy&#13;
and content.&#13;
Letter.&gt;&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
policy:&#13;
The Ranger  encourages   letters  to the Editor.  Letters  should  not exceed  250 words&#13;
and&#13;
should  be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger office&#13;
(WYLL 0-139&lt;::)&#13;
or e-mailed&#13;
to&#13;
jacob020@uwp.edu.&#13;
Letters must be&#13;
typed&#13;
and include the author's name and&#13;
phone  number.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must  be free from  misleading   or libelous  content.  Letters  that  fail to comply  will not be published.   For publica-&#13;
Iicm&#13;
purposes,&#13;
author's   name  can be withheld,   hut only upon  request.  The&#13;
~ger   reserves the right&#13;
to&#13;
edit&#13;
all&#13;
letters.&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside honors retiring faculty&#13;
&amp;&#13;
stan&#13;
The&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kregg  Jacoby&#13;
With the end ofmy&#13;
reign&#13;
Iwould liketo take the&#13;
tim&#13;
to&#13;
thank&#13;
'&#13;
.  tTh&#13;
Ran&#13;
d&#13;
zi  .&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
rew&#13;
people forhelp-&#13;
ing&#13;
ou  e  ger, an givmg&#13;
us&#13;
the opportunity togiveParkside the kind ofnew a-&#13;
per Itdeserves.&#13;
Thank&#13;
you to our&#13;
advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan'&#13;
his&#13;
h&#13;
I&#13;
sP&#13;
N&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
McQu  .&#13;
ror&#13;
ep and encourage-&#13;
ment,&#13;
ICO&#13;
e   estion for making sure the money keeps&#13;
fl    .    .&#13;
th&#13;
T&#13;
.  f&#13;
be'&#13;
I'&#13;
.&#13;
owmg&#13;
m,&#13;
e Journal&#13;
imes&#13;
or  mg&#13;
cruent&#13;
WIth&#13;
us&#13;
missing our deadlines D&#13;
Y"&#13;
lakin&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
after&#13;
h&#13;
'&#13;
an ans ror   g pictures&#13;
even   e was no longer a student, Chancellor Keating fur ha .   ood&#13;
h&#13;
. .  taff&#13;
t:&#13;
all&#13;
vmg a g  sense of&#13;
umor, my&#13;
writing&#13;
s  ror  their hard work, and reader&#13;
Zac.&#13;
A&#13;
thanks&#13;
and good luck to&#13;
this&#13;
years staff and&#13;
Becky&#13;
Duba who took over as assis-&#13;
tant editor and helped me keep everything under control&#13;
Becky'&#13;
al&#13;
.&#13;
edi&#13;
,.&#13;
.&#13;
15&#13;
so&#13;
gomg to&#13;
be&#13;
next&#13;
years  tor and Ive given over the rest ofmy space&#13;
so&#13;
shecan introduce herself.&#13;
,.golng EvenlS&#13;
Senior&#13;
Arts&#13;
Show featuring A.J. Prindle, Joel Engwall, Cat Brogan, Jessica&#13;
Zellner,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Matthew Margosian, May 7to 14,Communication Arts Gallery, .&#13;
~nday  &amp;Thursday, 11a.m. to Sp.m., Tuesday &amp;Wednesday, 11a.m. to 8p.m.,&#13;
Race, Class, and ?ender Book Study: Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora&#13;
Neaie Hurston, discussion led by facilitators Mary Lenard and Michele Gee,&#13;
Fnday, May 19,3:30 p.m., Mollnaro 111,free.&#13;
Slid&#13;
HSyour evenls&#13;
~roup~, organizations, dubs, team,&#13;
and departments&#13;
send your information to be pub-&#13;
lished.&#13;
m&#13;
The Ranger Calender. This service&#13;
is&#13;
free and intended to promote awareness of&#13;
campus even~. Please.indicate that this information&#13;
is&#13;
to be used&#13;
in&#13;
The Ranger Calendar.&#13;
Any&#13;
event or information not&#13;
in&#13;
accordance&#13;
with&#13;
this&#13;
intention may not be published.&#13;
Any&#13;
events longer that 3 days&#13;
in&#13;
duration will be put&#13;
in&#13;
the Ongoing events section. Questions&#13;
abo.ut~ppropriate content may be directed to the editor at x2287or in person at The Ranger&#13;
Office&#13;
tn&#13;
Wyllie D-137C.&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
When someone retires, and they've&#13;
been&#13;
at a job for several years, it's cus-&#13;
tomary that someone&#13;
will&#13;
say some-&#13;
thing like, "Joe's been here so long,&#13;
they built the building around&#13;
him."&#13;
For several of the faculty and staff&#13;
who were honored on Tuesday, May&#13;
2, many of the buildings on the UW-&#13;
Parkside campus were built around&#13;
them.&#13;
People like Associate Professor of&#13;
Geography  Curtis  Richards  and&#13;
Geology Professor  and Department&#13;
Chair James Shea have served UW-&#13;
Parkside and its students for 33 years.&#13;
That's as long as the University has&#13;
been&#13;
in&#13;
existence.&#13;
Others  like  Professor   and&#13;
Department  Chair of Economics&#13;
Richard Keehn, Associate Professor of&#13;
English  Peter  Martin,  Assistant&#13;
Director&#13;
I&#13;
Control1er James Marks,&#13;
Professor of GeOgraphy Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran,  Senior Assistaut to the&#13;
Dean Alma Renish,  Professor  of&#13;
Spanish Constantin  Stathatos,  and&#13;
William  Misamore  of Computer&#13;
Service have helped nearly two gen-&#13;
this&#13;
HpellotoallPar&#13;
h&#13;
ksidestudents, faculty,and others.&#13;
This&#13;
is&#13;
Becky&#13;
Dubaand I'm filling&#13;
age space ere&#13;
with&#13;
an'&#13;
trod  .&#13;
f&#13;
It's anicetitlethat&#13;
will&#13;
m  ucnon&#13;
0&#13;
myselfas next semesters Editor....&#13;
in-Chief,&#13;
entail, I'm sure it&#13;
won,t~~&#13;
~v~ ruceron&#13;
~y&#13;
r~ume. But,asfor&#13;
all&#13;
thework it&#13;
will&#13;
ward&#13;
to.&#13;
as mce. Even&#13;
so,&#13;
Itwill&#13;
be&#13;
agood challengethat Ilook for-&#13;
The challenge Irefer to-with avid trepidation-is the&#13;
fact&#13;
of putting out a weeki&#13;
l:per; Now Iknow, ~weekly paper&#13;
excites&#13;
allofyou. But,it does mean that we&#13;
wili&#13;
fa: :&#13;
':t ';: page ~lZedown from&#13;
16&#13;
to&#13;
8,&#13;
with a periodic length of&#13;
12.&#13;
Along with&#13;
g  ee&#13;
y&#13;
de~dline,we stillneed&#13;
to&#13;
boostup our staff. Lately,we've&#13;
been&#13;
gettin&#13;
sola&#13;
me newEdiwnters&#13;
m,&#13;
but we&#13;
still&#13;
need more. We&#13;
also&#13;
need a BusinessManager and ~&#13;
yout  torswhoarevery familiarwith Quark&#13;
R&#13;
Leaving&#13;
all&#13;
our&#13;
staff&#13;
problems behind,&#13;
some&#13;
issues I want focused in on at The&#13;
anger nextyear&#13;
will&#13;
be the pay toprint problem inthe labs,thefinding ofanew food&#13;
service&#13;
that will replace Marriott, the continuing parking hassles, and the familiar&#13;
attacks of the&#13;
geese&#13;
on students. I&#13;
also&#13;
will make sure PSGA&#13;
reports&#13;
will&#13;
be kept&#13;
with;&#13;
so,&#13;
wecanall&#13;
try&#13;
to figure&#13;
outexacllywhat itistheydo.&#13;
up&#13;
111&#13;
be&#13;
graduating in December,&#13;
so&#13;
youll only have to put up with me for the one&#13;
semester. Ihope to&#13;
carry&#13;
on the Stranger legacyand question oftheweek Plus break-&#13;
mg any new journalism ground we happen to come across.&#13;
So,&#13;
until then-enjoy the&#13;
summer,&#13;
drink&#13;
beer,&#13;
and 111seeyouinthefall.&#13;
.&#13;
3&#13;
UW-Parkside Wind&#13;
Ensemble!&#13;
Community Band&#13;
7:30p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theater, admission: $5&#13;
for adults, $3forseniors!&#13;
students&#13;
MIly6&#13;
Wisconsin Music&#13;
Association Solo&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Ensemble Contest&#13;
8a.m. to5p.m&#13;
UW-Parkside campus&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-&#13;
Parkside Brass&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
noon, Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
free&#13;
Future of UW-Parkside Food&#13;
Service&#13;
4-5p.m. Union 104&#13;
free refreshments&#13;
Baseball: UW-"Parksidevs.&#13;
Northern Kentucky&#13;
(2&#13;
games)&#13;
May 6-7,noon, free&#13;
May&#13;
7&#13;
Noon Concert:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
3:30p.m., Communication&#13;
AIIs-DU8, free&#13;
Overcoming the Matrix:&#13;
Living in Reality&#13;
8p.m., Molinaro 132;Free,&#13;
presented by UW-Parkside .&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
li?&#13;
&gt;4&#13;
..&#13;
Senior Arts Show featuring&#13;
Mary Lou Viola, Frances&#13;
Zieman&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jason Weniger&#13;
Communication&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
11a.m. to 5p.m.&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Commencement&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
erations of students to excel at UW-&#13;
Parkside.  Each was honored along&#13;
with Director of Admissions  Chuck&#13;
Murphy, Computer Science Lecturer&#13;
Robert Luke, Program  Assistants&#13;
Audrey Keehn, Barbara Hawk, and&#13;
Judith Gaal, and custodian Kathleen&#13;
Banks during the program  at the&#13;
Galbraith Room&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie Hall.&#13;
UW-Parkside  Chancellor  Jack&#13;
Keating  expects each of them to&#13;
remain busy despite having plenty of&#13;
free time.&#13;
"Retirement&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
an opportuni-&#13;
ty&#13;
for them&#13;
to&#13;
explore, to research, to&#13;
spend the time they never had before&#13;
pursuing their passions and asking&#13;
questions," said Keating.&#13;
lilt&#13;
is the&#13;
beginning of the future and that is&#13;
always a good reason to celebrate."&#13;
Keating  then  spoke  for the&#13;
University family as well as students&#13;
past and present when he wished&#13;
each of the retirees a long, safe, and&#13;
healthy retirement,  success&#13;
in&#13;
their&#13;
professional and personal endeavors,&#13;
and a request that they return to carn-&#13;
pus often.&#13;
f&#13;
..&#13;
~&#13;
'"&#13;
*&#13;
~&#13;
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              <text>Issue&#13;
6 1&#13;
Vol.&#13;
291&#13;
April&#13;
27, 2000&#13;
-&#13;
11&lt;&#13;
:z::;:&#13;
--&#13;
Ins   ide&#13;
13&#13;
Main Event&#13;
Get all the latest info to plan out your time&#13;
at Parkside's biggest party of the year.&#13;
5&#13;
Busted&#13;
The police deal with eggs, shears, and a&#13;
visit from the stranger.&#13;
12   Questionof the week&#13;
What should be done about all the cars in&#13;
the parking lots?&#13;
1&#13;
Stranger&#13;
Come inside our twisted littleworld.&#13;
Last Stranger of the Semester.&#13;
15&#13;
Keelling the Faith&#13;
Apriest, a rabbi, and [enna Elfman walk into&#13;
a movie. Youknow the rest of the joke.&#13;
Sec&#13;
t&#13;
Hews&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Police Beal&#13;
Stranger&#13;
Features&#13;
spons&#13;
Entenainment&#13;
ion   s&#13;
3-1&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
1-10&#13;
11-13&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
f  f&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Desktop! Design&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Ad Designer&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
JeffAlley&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Daniel Yaris&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Writers&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Elizabeth George&#13;
Jennie-leigh Morris&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax&#13;
262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every other Thursday throughout the semester by students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, who are&#13;
solely responsible for it's editorial policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
policy:&#13;
The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor.&#13;
Letters&#13;
should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger office (WYLL0..139&lt;::)or e-mailed to jacob0200uwp.edu. Letters must be&#13;
typed&#13;
and include the author's name and&#13;
phone number.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must be free from misleading or bbelous content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
thai&#13;
fail&#13;
to comply will&#13;
not&#13;
be published. For publica-&#13;
tion purposes, author's name can&#13;
be&#13;
withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to edit&#13;
all&#13;
letters.&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
The&#13;
Box&#13;
•&#13;
3&#13;
. A little&#13;
info&#13;
to bring our readers  up to speed.&#13;
First, I&#13;
can officially announce  that we&#13;
have one&#13;
new reader. Zac emailed me&#13;
that&#13;
he enjoyed&#13;
The Stranger  and had  a&#13;
few&#13;
story suggestions.&#13;
~'m~ot ~at sure zac isn't just a figmentof my&#13;
unagmation,   but&#13;
if&#13;
he's  real that could put our&#13;
readership  up to 6.&#13;
Second,  this&#13;
is&#13;
the last 16 page  Ranger  and&#13;
the last issue of the Stranger for the semester. We&#13;
will&#13;
be putting out a small 8 page paper next&#13;
week to finish of the semester events. The&#13;
Stranger  broke into some of the serious  sections&#13;
this week so I can't guarantee that he won't&#13;
show  up next week. I'll write  a little more next&#13;
week&#13;
with&#13;
my thoughts on Parkside and my&#13;
time with the Ranger. Until then, enjoy the lssue.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kregg  Jacoby&#13;
0.101.1    Events&#13;
tjw-parkstde  ~rama Dept. presents Moliere's "Scapin," April 28, and 29, 7:30 p.m:; Com.&#13;
Arts Theater, tickets: $10 adults, $7 students, faculty, staff, seniors.&#13;
tjw-Parkside  Senior Art Exhibition, May 1 to 12, Communication  Arts Gallery, hours:&#13;
Mon/Thur,  11 a.m. to 5 p-m-: Tue/Wed,  11 a.m. to 8 p.m., free.&#13;
S••  d  US wour  events&#13;
Groups, organizations,  clubs, team, and departments  send your information  to be pub-&#13;
lished&#13;
in&#13;
The Ranger Calender.  This service is free and intended to promote awareness  of&#13;
campus events. Please indicate that this information  is to be used in The Ranger Calendar.&#13;
Any event or information  not&#13;
in&#13;
accordance with this intention may not be published.  Any&#13;
events longer that&#13;
3&#13;
days in duration&#13;
will&#13;
be put in the Ongoing events section. Questions&#13;
about appropriate  content may be directed to the editor at x2287 or in person at The Ranger&#13;
Office&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie D-137C.&#13;
Noon Concert:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
noon, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, free&#13;
Info Break: E-mail&#13;
Attachments  w/Pat&#13;
Eaton&#13;
9:45 a.m.,&#13;
Learning&#13;
Tech&#13;
Center, Wyllie D-15O&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
Meeting&#13;
Join the planning  for&#13;
next semesters Ranger!&#13;
Perspectives  on Religious&#13;
Issues: "The Age of&#13;
Spiritual Machines:  What&#13;
Happens When Computers&#13;
Exceed Human&#13;
Intelligence?  w /UW-&#13;
Parkside Computer  Science&#13;
Professor Morris Firebaugh,&#13;
noon, Union 104,&#13;
free&#13;
Baseball: UW-Parkside  vs..&#13;
Carthage College (2 games)&#13;
3 p.m., free&#13;
Future of UW-Parkside&#13;
Food Service&#13;
3-4 p.m., Union 104&#13;
free refreshments&#13;
UW-Parkside  Jazz Ensemble&#13;
and Jazz Combo Concert&#13;
7:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theater, admission:&#13;
$6&#13;
for adults, $3 for seniors/&#13;
students&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Continuing  Ed.&#13;
Breakfast Seminar:&#13;
Taste and Smell Loss:&#13;
Implications  and Remedies&#13;
7:30 to 9:30&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
room 281, free&#13;
Info Break: Evaluating Web&#13;
Sites wIJoe Buenker&#13;
2:30p.m., Learning Tech&#13;
Center&#13;
Wyllie Hall D-150&#13;
Friends of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Library present "Birds of&#13;
wtsconstn,"  w/Greg Butcher&#13;
7 p.m., Overlook Lounge,&#13;
level 2 of the library, free&#13;
Foreign Film: "The&#13;
Dreamlife of Angels,"&#13;
France/subtitles&#13;
April 27 to 30&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m. Thursday/Friday&#13;
8 p.m. Saturday&#13;
2 p.m. Sunday&#13;
Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
admission by season pass&#13;
UW-Parkside  Wind&#13;
Ensemble/&#13;
Community  Band&#13;
7:30p.m.. Communication&#13;
Arts Theater, admission: $5&#13;
for adults, $3 for seniors/&#13;
students&#13;
Future of UW-Parkside  Food&#13;
Service&#13;
4-5 p.m. Union 104&#13;
free refreshments&#13;
Overcoming  the Matrix:&#13;
Living in Reality&#13;
8 p.m., Molinaro 132,Free,&#13;
presented by Uw-Parkside&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
Future of UW-&#13;
Parkside Food&#13;
Service&#13;
noon, Union 104&#13;
free&#13;
refreshments&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
student&#13;
recital&#13;
noon, Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Race, Class, and Gender&#13;
Book Study: "Eccentric&#13;
Neighborhoods,"  by&#13;
Rosario Ferre, discussion led&#13;
by facilitator Nancy&#13;
Ostheimer&#13;
3:30 p.m., Molinaro Hall&#13;
room 111, free&#13;
UW~Parkside Drama Dept.&#13;
presents&#13;
"Scapin,"&#13;
April 28, and 29, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Com. Arts Theater&#13;
tickets: $10 adults, $7 stu-&#13;
dents, faculty, staff, seniors.&#13;
Noon Concert:&#13;
UW~&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Brass&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
noon, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, free&#13;
Final Exams&#13;
April&#13;
29&#13;
• Baseball:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
vs,&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
(2&#13;
games),&#13;
noon&#13;
The Main Event&#13;
1&#13;
p.m. to midnight&#13;
west side of&#13;
Uw-Parkside&#13;
Student Union&#13;
UW-Parkside students, facul-&#13;
ty, and staff admitted&#13;
free&#13;
wIUniversity&#13;
IO;&#13;
communi-&#13;
ty&#13;
$5 ($3&#13;
w&#13;
/non-pertsheble&#13;
food&#13;
item)&#13;
Concert: UW·Parkside&#13;
Classical Guitar Ensemble,&#13;
George Lindquist director&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts&#13;
0-118, free&#13;
April&#13;
30&#13;
Baseball: UW-Parkside vs.&#13;
Bellarmine&#13;
(2&#13;
games)&#13;
noon,&#13;
free&#13;
Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Master Singers, University&#13;
Chorale&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Voicesof&#13;
Parkside,  James Kinchen,&#13;
conductor&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Communication&#13;
Arts&#13;
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$5,&#13;
seniors/students&#13;
$3.&#13;
Baseball:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside vs.&#13;
Northern&#13;
Kentucky (2 games)&#13;
May 6-7, noon, free&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-&#13;
Parkside Guitar&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
3:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts-011S, free&#13;
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              <text>Issue&#13;
51&#13;
Vol.&#13;
291&#13;
Apri1l3,&#13;
2000&#13;
,ranger&#13;
You know you want to read it.&#13;
1 •&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
(\j&#13;
r'i&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
oM&#13;
...&#13;
~&#13;
'"&#13;
Q)&#13;
~&#13;
1&#13;
III&#13;
III&#13;
H&#13;
Ins    ide&#13;
Stranger gets stranger&#13;
Don't  look now. We've completely  lost it and&#13;
there's  no turning  back.&#13;
5&#13;
Busted&#13;
Police Beat is back.&#13;
Are you ready?&#13;
6&#13;
INDEPTH:&#13;
Corey Mandlev&#13;
Mandley  talks about&#13;
his&#13;
term as president  and&#13;
plans for the future.&#13;
13   Scapin&#13;
Italian Comedia brings master mask&#13;
maker to Parkside.&#13;
15&#13;
High Fidelity&#13;
Can John Cusack hold on to&#13;
his&#13;
20 something  cult&#13;
following in this modem  tale of relationship  woe? .&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
c&#13;
t&#13;
i&#13;
0&#13;
n&#13;
s&#13;
News&#13;
3-1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Calendar&#13;
3&#13;
Police Beal&#13;
5&#13;
Stranger&#13;
1-10&#13;
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11-13&#13;
spons&#13;
14&#13;
Entenainment&#13;
15&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
f f&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Assistant  Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Desktop! Design&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Ad Designer&#13;
Nicole McQu~stion&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
JeffAlley&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Daniel Yaris   '&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Writers&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Elizabeth George&#13;
Jennie Morris&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Beth Reed&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax&#13;
262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
published&#13;
every&#13;
other Thursday throughout the semester&#13;
by&#13;
students of&#13;
the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, who are&#13;
solely responsible for it's editorial policy and content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to&#13;
the&#13;
Editor. letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered&#13;
10 the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C) or e-mailed to&#13;
jacob02O@uwp.edu.&#13;
Letters must be&#13;
typed&#13;
and include&#13;
the&#13;
author's  name and&#13;
phone number. Letters must&#13;
be free&#13;
from misleading or libelous content. leiters that&#13;
fail&#13;
to comply will not be published. For publica-&#13;
tion purposes, author's name can be withheld, but only upon request.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to&#13;
edit&#13;
all letters.&#13;
The&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
Box&#13;
The short amount of space this week&#13;
encourages me to be brief. We have a new&#13;
Stranger this week, and we went all out.&#13;
In&#13;
the spirit of the Onion we threw out all&#13;
the stops and took the humor to the edge.&#13;
Some might  find the content  a little&#13;
strong, or offensive and I want you to feel&#13;
free to send feedback to me at jacob020&#13;
@Uwp.edu&#13;
or stop by the Ranger Office&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie D-139C. As always,&#13;
if&#13;
you don't&#13;
like something don't read it. I would real-&#13;
ly appreciate knowing how the student&#13;
body  feels  about  this  experimental&#13;
Stranger.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kregg   Jacoby&#13;
OBIOlng Events&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Art Exhibition, now through April 20, free, Com. Arts Gallery,&#13;
hours: Mon/Thur,   11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tue/Wed,   11 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside   Drama  Dept.  presents  Moliere's  "Scapin,"  April 20, 10 a.m.. April  20, 21, 22,&#13;
28, and 29, 7:30 p.m.; Com. Arts Theater, tickets: $10 adults, $7 students, faculty, staff,&#13;
seniors.&#13;
SlId&#13;
us your evenlS&#13;
Groups, organizations, clubs, team, and departments send your information to be pub-&#13;
lished in The Ranger  Calender.  This service  is free and intended  to promote  awareness  of&#13;
campus  events.  Please  indicate  that this infonnation   is to be used&#13;
in&#13;
The Ranger  Calendar.&#13;
Any&#13;
event or Information   not&#13;
in&#13;
accordance&#13;
with&#13;
this intention  may not be published.  Any&#13;
events  longer  that&#13;
3&#13;
days  in duration  will be put&#13;
in&#13;
the Ongoing  events  section.  Questions&#13;
about appropriate   content  may be directed  to the editor  at x2287 or in person  at The Ranger&#13;
Office&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie D-137C.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
Meeting&#13;
Join the planning  for&#13;
next semesters  Ranger!&#13;
•   Noon Concert:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside  Orchestra,&#13;
Carter Simmons,  con-&#13;
ductor,  Wednesday&#13;
Union Cinema  Theater,  free.&#13;
Soup&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Substance&#13;
noon, Union 104, free soup,&#13;
bread, and crackers  served,&#13;
everyone  welcome.&#13;
Info Break: "Meet the&#13;
Instructional   Designer"&#13;
w&#13;
IJim&#13;
Robinson&#13;
noon, Learning  Tech Center,&#13;
Wyllie 0150. free.&#13;
Softball:  UW-Parkside   vs.&#13;
St.&#13;
Francis&#13;
3 p.m. (2 games)&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
Meeting&#13;
Join the planning  for&#13;
next semesters  Ranger!&#13;
Baseball:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside  vs. Viterbo&#13;
1 p.m. (2 games)&#13;
Softball:  UW-Parkside&#13;
vs. Olivet  Nazarene&#13;
3 p.m. (2 games)&#13;
Noon Concert:  UW-Parkside&#13;
Percussion  Ensemble,  Debbie&#13;
Katz Knowles,  director&#13;
Communication   Arts-D118,&#13;
free.&#13;
Out&#13;
&amp;&#13;
About event: "Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show," pre-&#13;
show&#13;
with&#13;
live cast from&#13;
Chicago begins at l.Ip.m. fol-&#13;
lowed&#13;
by&#13;
midnight  showing,&#13;
dry props only, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, admission:&#13;
$2,&#13;
open&#13;
to&#13;
the public&#13;
__----iii .............-&#13;
Baseball:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
~  Indianapolis&#13;
(2 games)&#13;
Criminal  Justice&#13;
Colloquium:   The&#13;
Interface  Between&#13;
Psychiatry  and Criminology&#13;
w&#13;
/Dr.&#13;
George  Palmero&#13;
11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Union 104-106, free&#13;
Latino  Film Festival:&#13;
"Golpes  a&#13;
Mi&#13;
Puerta"&#13;
(Knocks at&#13;
My&#13;
Door),&#13;
Spanish  w&#13;
I&#13;
subtitles&#13;
noon and&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema  Theater,  free&#13;
Friends  of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Library:  "Bird Watching,"&#13;
w&#13;
I&#13;
expert  from Kalmbach&#13;
Publishing&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Overlook  Lounge&#13;
Level&#13;
2&#13;
of the library,  free,&#13;
Next Issue of&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
including an all new&#13;
stranger section.&#13;
Out&#13;
&amp;&#13;
About event:&#13;
1&#13;
;;1i~&#13;
Blue Jeans&#13;
Day&#13;
wear&#13;
jeans&#13;
to show&#13;
support  for Gay and Lesbian&#13;
issues&#13;
Apri/15&#13;
• Women's  History&#13;
Month  Event:&#13;
Scavenger  Hunt,  9&#13;
a.m.&#13;
UW -Parkside  campus  and&#13;
surrounding   community.&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Brass Ensemble, Mark Eichner,&#13;
director, Friday&#13;
Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
free&#13;
Baseball:  UW·Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
Southern  Indiana&#13;
noon,&#13;
(2&#13;
games)&#13;
Softball:  UW-Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
1 p.m. (2 games)&#13;
April&#13;
16&#13;
Baseball:  UW-Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sill-Edwardsville&#13;
(2&#13;
games)&#13;
Humanities  Workshop&#13;
w&#13;
IFrank&#13;
Hubbard,  associate&#13;
dean, Marquette  grad&#13;
school&#13;
3 p.m., Com. Arts 140, for stu-&#13;
dents in English, foreign lan-&#13;
guage, communications,  phi-&#13;
losophy, music, and drama&#13;
Latino Film Festival:&#13;
"Danzon,'  Spanish w /subtitles&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Theater,&#13;
free&#13;
Softball:  UW-Parkside   vs.&#13;
Southern  Indiana&#13;
1 p.m. (2 games)&#13;
Student  recital:  Melissa&#13;
Devan,  violin; Michele&#13;
Chovan,  cello&#13;
3:30 p.m., Com. Arts Room&#13;
0-118,&#13;
free.&#13;
Apri/22&#13;
Baseball:&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
noon,&#13;
(1&#13;
game)&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
TwO oul&#13;
&amp;&#13;
About Week EvenlS Frida,&#13;
Out&#13;
&amp;&#13;
About Week,&#13;
Uw-Parkside's&#13;
celebra-&#13;
tion of diversity, concludes Friday with-appro-&#13;
priately enough-a party. Sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
the cam-&#13;
pus Gay and Lesbian Organization (GLO), the&#13;
week comes to a close with Blue Jeans Day.&#13;
Wear jeans on Friday to show your support for&#13;
gay and lesbian issues. Then wear something a&#13;
little more outrageous for "The Rocky Horror&#13;
Picture Show." The pre-show  featuring  the&#13;
Rocky cast from Chicago, starts at 11 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater. The movie starts at mid-&#13;
night. Bring your rice and playing cards but&#13;
leave the squirt guns and hot dogs home.&#13;
Admission to $2.&#13;
,0&#13;
8&#13;
(\j&#13;
A Word In Spanish&#13;
The first-ever  UW-Parkside  Latino Film&#13;
Festival continues Thursday and Friday with&#13;
the final two of five films to be shown at the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater. Both are free. Thursday,&#13;
April  13, "Colpes  a Mi Puerta"  (Knocks  at My&#13;
Door) will be shown at noon and 7 p.m. The&#13;
film&#13;
"Danzon,"&#13;
will conclude the series F-riday,&#13;
April 14,&#13;
at&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
If&#13;
you've never experienced a&#13;
foreign film before, this is your chance. And&#13;
don't worry, all of the films have subtitles so&#13;
you don't have to be fluent in&#13;
~panish.&#13;
Taking on Masks 01 RaCB&#13;
The Center for Ethnic Studies continues its&#13;
"Talking Color" series on race relations today,&#13;
April  13. The program,   titled  "Taking  Off the&#13;
Masks of Race:' features three short presenta-&#13;
tions  by  the  University's   Theater  of&#13;
Empowerment and a discussion involving&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, and the community.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
It&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
held&#13;
in&#13;
the Union Bazaar beginning at 2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Be Inlormed workshop APril 14&#13;
An&#13;
informational workshop designed specif-&#13;
ically  for UW-Parkside   students  in the&#13;
Humanities is scheduled for Friday, April&#13;
14.&#13;
Students&#13;
in&#13;
English, communications,  foreign&#13;
language, philosophy,  music, and drama are&#13;
urged to stop participate. The program features&#13;
Frank Hubbard, Associate Dean of Marquette&#13;
University's Graduate School, Kim Goldsmith&#13;
of&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Career Center, several Humanities&#13;
faculty members, and at least one alumnus-a&#13;
doctoral  candidate   in English  at&#13;
UW-&#13;
Milwaukee. The programs begins at 3 p.m. in&#13;
Communication  Arts&#13;
140.&#13;
For more informa-&#13;
tion, call Mary Lenard at&#13;
ext.&#13;
2644.&#13;
Unlle 10 flghl Hunger Rocks Racine&#13;
The UW-Parkside Circle&#13;
K&#13;
Club is hosting&#13;
the "Unite to Fight Hunger&#13;
2000"&#13;
benefit con-&#13;
cert.&#13;
It's&#13;
a five-hour event, featuring six live&#13;
bands and a&#13;
DJ,&#13;
at Racine's Memorial Hall,&#13;
Friday,&#13;
April 14,&#13;
from&#13;
6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
to&#13;
1&#13;
a.m.&#13;
A portion&#13;
of&#13;
the funds raised&#13;
will&#13;
go to the Hunger Clean&#13;
Up program to fight hunger in Wisconsin and&#13;
around the world. Funds also will be donated to&#13;
fight Iodine Deficiency&#13;
Disorder,'&#13;
the leading&#13;
cause of preventable birth defects and mental&#13;
retardation&#13;
in&#13;
developing countries. Admission&#13;
is $8, or bring a canned good to donate and&#13;
admission is just $6. Everything collected will&#13;
be donated to food pantries&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha and&#13;
Racine.&#13;
UWP hosts State Supreme Court&#13;
along with University  Cabinet,  attended  the infor-&#13;
mal session. Students  were able to ask questions of&#13;
the justices, The lunch gave students  the opportu-&#13;
nity  to hear  first-hand  about  benefits  and chal-&#13;
lenges  of a law career  and  what  it's like to have&#13;
black robes as everyday  wearing  apparel instead of&#13;
as a fashion statement.&#13;
uw-P&#13;
Student Art Exhibit now open&#13;
What do "Lassie the Rubber Chicken: Protector&#13;
of Mankind,"  "Man, Woman, Banana&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Bird," and&#13;
"Seahorse"  have in common? No, they aren't new&#13;
Marvel Comics, They are works of art created by&#13;
UW-Parkside  students,  which are now on display&#13;
in the Com. Arts Gallery,&#13;
The exhibition  features  dozens  of interesting&#13;
pieces ranging  from ceramics  to oil paintings  to&#13;
sculptures.&#13;
Kurt   Erdman   says   he  crafted&#13;
"Seahorse"  from blood, sweat, tears, and steeL The&#13;
Parks ide student  artists  involved  include  Heidi&#13;
Baehr, Laura Bahr,  James Berry, Rebecca Bigalke,&#13;
Christopher   T. Bray, Cat Brogan,  Erdman,  Joel&#13;
Hinds,   Darren   Holland,   Elizabeth   Hurlbut,&#13;
Rebekah  Ide, Kiirsten  Ketter,  Katie Lemke, Mary&#13;
Ann  Logic,  Nadia  Londre,   Brandon   Minga,&#13;
Dorothy  Reuter,  Paul Rhyne,  Nicole Schlitz, Kyle&#13;
Scuglik, Britton Sliwinski, Michael Theuer, Linda L&#13;
Wawiorka,  and Mandi Zullo.&#13;
The admission  price is free and the exhibition&#13;
continues   through  April  20, Gallery  hours  are&#13;
Monday  and Thursday  11 a.m. to 5 p,m.; Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday,  11 a.rn. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Enter 'Name the Newsletter' contest&#13;
and win $100&#13;
The Alumni Association&#13;
is&#13;
sponsoring a contest to&#13;
name the new alumni newsletter, The prize for your&#13;
creative genius?' $100! Entries must be received&#13;
by&#13;
noon on Friday, April 28 and can be submitted  via&#13;
email  at&#13;
simpson@uwp.edu&#13;
or in the Alumni&#13;
Relations Office, Wyllie 3320, Entries should contain&#13;
your name, phone, and suggestion.&#13;
The newsletter  will be sent to all alumni  four&#13;
times a year and&#13;
will&#13;
include UWP&#13;
I&#13;
alumni events,&#13;
updates  on alumni, and more. For further informa-&#13;
tion about  the alumni  association  please  contact&#13;
Mike Farrell, Alumni Association Board President at&#13;
mike.farrelleshaack.com&#13;
or  Andrea   Simpson,&#13;
Director of Annual Giving and Alumni Relations at&#13;
simpsoneeuwp.edu.&#13;
Campus community band and Belle&#13;
City brassworks perform&#13;
Erin Knobbe&#13;
Musicians  throughout  the community  and stu-&#13;
dents from Parkside joined together recently in the&#13;
Communication  Arts Theater to perform live as the&#13;
UWP Community  Band and Belle City Brassworks.&#13;
Students,   community   members,   and  Parkside&#13;
alumni from southeastern  Wisconsin compose the&#13;
Community  Band and Belle City Brassworks.&#13;
The Parkside  Band performed  Gustav  Holst's&#13;
"Hammersmith",   "Danse Bacchanale"  by Camille&#13;
Saint-Saens,  as well as John Phillip  Sousa's  "The&#13;
Invincible Eagle",&#13;
Professor   Mark  Eichner,   who  directs   the&#13;
Community  Band said, "We perform  about four&#13;
concerts  a year and this gives some of the UW-&#13;
Parkside band members the opportunity  to partici-&#13;
pate in more  than  one band,  About  nine of the&#13;
group are Parkside students, The rest are members&#13;
of the community' and some are alumni." Professor&#13;
Eichner not only direct the Community  Band, b'ut&#13;
he also directs  the UW-Parkside  Band and heads&#13;
the music departments  on campus,&#13;
The Belle City Brassworks, under  the batton of&#13;
conductor  Douglas [ohnson,  performed  the "Suite&#13;
in B-ftat" by Gordon Jacobs, "Death or Glory" by&#13;
RB. Hall, as well as "Fanfare"  and "Alma Mater"&#13;
by Sheldon  Mehr. For their grand  finale, the two&#13;
bands  joined  forces  to perform   "overture   on&#13;
Russian   and   Khirgiz   Themes"   by  Dmitri&#13;
Shostakovich,&#13;
The Parkside  Community  Band is 'expected  to&#13;
perform  again  on May 4 with  special  guest  Bob _&#13;
Gloppenn,  a tuba player from Chicago,&#13;
News&#13;
B&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
e&#13;
f&#13;
s&#13;
They are the stars of the Wisconsin judicial sys-&#13;
.,-------------1--&#13;
tern, and while none of them are as recognizable  as&#13;
Judge Judy, when they come to lunch it's an occa-&#13;
sion. Seven  justices  of the Wisconsin  Supreme&#13;
Court met with UW-Parkside  students  and faculty&#13;
on Friday,  April 7. The one-hour  luncheon  took&#13;
place in the Galbraith Room,&#13;
About  20 students  and ten faculty  members,&#13;
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              <text>-&#13;
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Climb lor Cancer&#13;
Four UWP students head for the top to&#13;
benefit cancer research.&#13;
5&#13;
Busted&#13;
Police Beat is back.&#13;
Are you ready?&#13;
•&#13;
6    Votes are In&#13;
Results from the PSGA elections and a&#13;
report from the first mee~g.&#13;
12&#13;
Hall 01&#13;
Fame&#13;
Gerald Greenfield's programs and teaching gains&#13;
him&#13;
a place&#13;
in&#13;
the Educators Hall of Fame.&#13;
13   Mission&#13;
Will Mission to Mars make it to sci-fi cult status?&#13;
Read the review and find out.&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
c&#13;
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i&#13;
0&#13;
n&#13;
s&#13;
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16&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
f f&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Desktopl&#13;
Design&#13;
Kregg Jacoby&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
BeckyDuba&#13;
Ad Designer&#13;
Nicole McQuestion&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
JeffAlley&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Daniel Yaris&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Chris Summy&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Writers&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Elizabeth George&#13;
Jennie Morris&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Beth Reed&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax&#13;
262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
published   every  other  Thursday   throughout&#13;
the&#13;
semester   by students   of the University   of Wisoo11sin-Parkside,&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely  responsible   for it's editorial  policy  and content.&#13;
•&#13;
letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
policy:&#13;
The Ranger  encourages&#13;
letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor.  Letters  should  not exceed  250 words&#13;
and&#13;
should  be delivered&#13;
to the  Ranger  office  (WYlL   D-139C)  or e-mailed&#13;
to&#13;
jacobOZOOuwp.edu.    Letters  must  be&#13;
typed&#13;
and  include&#13;
the&#13;
author's   name  and&#13;
phone&#13;
number.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
free&#13;
from misleading or libelous content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
that&#13;
fail&#13;
to comply&#13;
will&#13;
not be published.   For publica-&#13;
tion&#13;
purposes.&#13;
author's   name  can be withheld,  but&#13;
only&#13;
upon  request.  The Ranger  reServes&#13;
the&#13;
right&#13;
to&#13;
edit&#13;
all&#13;
letters.&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
The&#13;
Box&#13;
Editor&#13;
• Kregg  Jacoby&#13;
Spring Break ends, and I accomplished zero. I didn't even get to go any-&#13;
where exotic. How many of you are sitting there thinking that the semester&#13;
is&#13;
half&#13;
over and you have yet to begin. The work continues to pile up, and&#13;
time continues to slide by. Welcome to my nightmare.&#13;
In&#13;
homage to the 2.5 students that are caught or even ahead of the game&#13;
here are my suggestions for the end of the semester.&#13;
1. Get off work for the Main Event. The plans are starting to corne togeth-&#13;
er, and it sounds like a real sucess. Check next issue for a&#13;
full&#13;
update.&#13;
3&#13;
2.&#13;
If&#13;
you are a senior planning  on graduating  this spring  or next&#13;
December then get your graduation  summary. This will help you make&#13;
plans for what you need to accomplish .&#13;
3. Talk to your professors. Overall, these are nice people who want you to&#13;
succeed.&#13;
If&#13;
you are behind, they may be able to help you.&#13;
4. Don't get all stressed out. Sometimes a break can help you focus. So,&#13;
take advantage of the rec center and athletic facility. You do pay for them.&#13;
5. Join a club, organization or other worth cause. Don't waste all your&#13;
time partying. Not only will you be doing something worthwhile, you will&#13;
meet new friends and have&#13;
fun.&#13;
Plus,&#13;
it&#13;
looks great on school admissions&#13;
and resumes. While your looking for a group, consider the Ranger News.&#13;
There are openings for Editor, Business Manager, Assitant Editor, Reporters,&#13;
Office Assistants and more. The Ranger can provide a forum for your work,&#13;
and a chance to show the school what's important. Each staff&#13;
has&#13;
full&#13;
editori-&#13;
al control and the opportunity to do what you can't right now.&#13;
Be&#13;
your own&#13;
boss and make all the decisions.&#13;
,.golng  Evenls&#13;
• Foreign Film Series: "The Thief," Russia&#13;
W&#13;
/subtitles,  Apr. 6-9, Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
7:30p.m. Thurs./Fri.,  8 p.m. Sat., 2 p.m. Sun. Admission&#13;
by&#13;
season pass.&#13;
• UW-Parkside Student Exhibition, April 10 to 28, Com Arts Gallery, hours:&#13;
Monday/Thursday,  11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesday/Wednesday,   11 a.m. to 8 p.m., free.&#13;
• Out&#13;
&amp;&#13;
About Week 2000, April 10 to 14, events are free or reasonably priced, campus and&#13;
community welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
the Gay&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Lesbian Organization.&#13;
Sind us VourevenlS&#13;
Groups, organizations,  clubs, team, and departments  send your information  to be published&#13;
in&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger Calender.&#13;
This&#13;
service&#13;
is&#13;
free and intended to promote awareness of campus events. Please indi-&#13;
cate that this information  is to be used&#13;
in&#13;
The Ranger Calendar. Any event or information not in accor-&#13;
dance with&#13;
this&#13;
intention may not be published. Any events longer that 3 days in duration will be put in&#13;
the Ongoing events section. Questions  about appropriate  content may&#13;
be&#13;
directed to the editor at.x2287&#13;
or in person at The Ranger Office&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
D-137C.&#13;
----&#13;
Perspectives  on&#13;
Religious Issues:&#13;
"Hitler's Pope: The&#13;
Secret History of Pius&#13;
XII"&#13;
by&#13;
John&#13;
Cornwell, w IUW-Parkside&#13;
Prof. of History Laura Cellctt,&#13;
noon, Union 104, free.&#13;
Panel discussion&#13;
w&#13;
(Prof.&#13;
MichaeJ Pheyer, Marquette&#13;
University, Rabbi Dina Feingold,&#13;
Beth&#13;
Hillel Temple, Kenosha,&#13;
Prof.&#13;
Laura Gellott,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
103,&#13;
Softball&#13;
doubleheader::&#13;
UW-Parkside vs.&#13;
Carthage College&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Women's History Month: Guest&#13;
speaker: Lois VanderWaerdt  on&#13;
Affirmative Action, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater, April 3, 6:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Pac&#13;
Man VCR&#13;
novelty,&#13;
only&#13;
$1 per&#13;
video&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Union Square, open to the&#13;
campus community&#13;
sponsored by PAR&#13;
•&#13;
Sacred Circle:&#13;
"Maawanji'iding:"&#13;
Ojibwe Histories and&#13;
Narratives&#13;
W&#13;
/Carol&#13;
Lee&#13;
Saffioti-Hughes,&#13;
noon,&#13;
Com&#13;
Arts&#13;
233&#13;
Baseball&#13;
doubleheaders&#13;
Uw-Parkside  vs.&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
!&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Noon Concert: Paul&#13;
Spencer Adkins, tenor,&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Baseball doubleheader:  UW-&#13;
Parkside  vs.&#13;
Lewis,&#13;
noon&#13;
Sacred Circle: Seven Springs&#13;
Drum music event,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
Spring Poetry&#13;
Fling:&#13;
Poetry and&#13;
prose&#13;
by&#13;
English faculty, noon,&#13;
Overlook Lounge, second floor of&#13;
library&#13;
Women's History Month: "A&#13;
Musical Romp through Women's&#13;
History,"&#13;
w&#13;
/musidan  and artist&#13;
Gerri Gribi, 7 p.m., Union Cinema&#13;
Theater&#13;
Noon Concert:&#13;
University Chorale&#13;
and Voices of&#13;
Parkside, James Kinchen,&#13;
conductor&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Softball doubleheader:&#13;
UW-Parkside vs. Lewis&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
Seminar::&#13;
Sight Loss:&#13;
Implications and Remedies&#13;
Tallent28!&#13;
7:30&#13;
to&#13;
9;30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Sacred Circle: Film&#13;
"Po¥nNowHighway"&#13;
and discussion&#13;
w&#13;
IJudy&#13;
Logsdon&#13;
2&#13;
p.m., Greenquist&#13;
103&#13;
Noon Concert: Elaine&#13;
Skorodin, violin,&#13;
wfTim&#13;
Bell ,&#13;
saxo-&#13;
phone, and Dana Burnett,&#13;
piano, Friday, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater.&#13;
UW-Parkside Christian&#13;
Fellowship presents&#13;
"Overcoming  the Matrix:&#13;
Responding  to the Reality:'&#13;
8&#13;
p.m., Molinaro&#13;
132.&#13;
Next Issue of&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
including  an all&#13;
new&#13;
stranger&#13;
section.&#13;
Southeastern  Wisconsin&#13;
Educators' Hall of Fame&#13;
Banquet&#13;
Union Dining&#13;
Room, 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
For information, call&#13;
Joe&#13;
Kiemen at ext.&#13;
2400.&#13;
Science on Saturday&#13;
8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
to&#13;
1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
April!&#13;
For information, call&#13;
Carolyn&#13;
Fenske,&#13;
ext.&#13;
3340.&#13;
,&#13;
Baseball doubleheader.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne&#13;
noon,&#13;
April 1&#13;
.&#13;
Softball doubleheader.&#13;
UW-Parkside vs.&#13;
St.&#13;
joseph&#13;
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UW-Parkside&#13;
Precollege&#13;
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April&#13;
8, 5&#13;
to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Union Dining Room.&#13;
Call ext.&#13;
2416&#13;
for&#13;
information.&#13;
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