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              <text>Infants Abandoned at UWP Loading Dock: One-year old boy, girl found crying</text>
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              <text>&#13;
jib&#13;
-Russian Performers  Limpopo&#13;
visit UW-Parkside/page  4&#13;
.. -"Tin Cup" movie review/page  8&#13;
-Six Flags Great America's  Fright&#13;
Fest/page  8&#13;
-Donnerbauer  leads Men's Cross&#13;
Country/page  9&#13;
BY MARK  HAHN&#13;
NEWS  EDITOR&#13;
Two one-year-old  infants were discovered&#13;
unattended  in the backseat  of a 1982 Chevy&#13;
station&#13;
wagon&#13;
parked&#13;
outside&#13;
the&#13;
Communication   Arts Building  loading  dock&#13;
at 2:29 p.rn. Sept.  18.&#13;
"I talked  with the people  going  out to buy&#13;
supp-lies   for  our&#13;
Dracula&#13;
production,&#13;
and&#13;
they  told me they   were  pretty  sure  the car&#13;
was   there   when   they   left,"   explained&#13;
University   of  Wisconsin-Parkside    theatre&#13;
manager  Keith  Harris,  who  initially  report-&#13;
ed the incident  to University  police.&#13;
"They  made  about  three  stops  and  when&#13;
they returned  about 35 minutes  later, the car&#13;
was  still there,"  said  Harris.  "Another   ser-&#13;
vice  gentleman   told  me  there  was  a  child&#13;
VOLUME 25 - ISSUE 5 - OCTOBER 3, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
students   tapping  into&#13;
their e-mail  accounts  in the  Molinaro  Computer  Lab.  The&#13;
Computer Center  will soon be installing  a new "it.uwp.edu"&#13;
machine.&#13;
Photo by Scott Malik&#13;
University  Outreach&#13;
Teaches Inmates&#13;
Lessons  Behind Bars&#13;
BY MARK&#13;
HAHN&#13;
NEWS  EDITOR&#13;
About  twice  a  week,  a  new&#13;
group  of  inmates   are   shuttled&#13;
\- - into   the   Racine    Correctional&#13;
:y-&#13;
Institute in Sturtevant,  Wis ..&#13;
Upon  arrival,   inmates   are&#13;
required to attend  a reception-ori-&#13;
entation  program  where  they  are&#13;
given a rule book  and  briefed  on&#13;
prison  rules,  available   programs&#13;
0:&#13;
and what expectations   are set  up&#13;
for them by prison  officials.&#13;
This  week,  another   group  of&#13;
individuals   are   being   escorted&#13;
through    those&#13;
same&#13;
ragged&#13;
barbed-wire&#13;
and   chain-linked&#13;
gates  and  given   instruction   on&#13;
prison  policy,  procedure  and reg-&#13;
ulations.&#13;
But the  members  of this group&#13;
aren't  being assigned  to a room  in&#13;
the housing  unit  and given a roo-&#13;
mate.    Where    they   are   being&#13;
placed,   however,   are   in  class-&#13;
rooms  set up specifically  to intro-&#13;
duce  inmates  to nonviolent  mod-&#13;
els  of heroism  through  the study&#13;
of humanities.&#13;
The  classes   are  part  of  the&#13;
Prison  Outreach  Award  Program&#13;
that  is underway  this  fall   at the&#13;
Racine    Correctional&#13;
Institute.&#13;
The  program   is open  to  inmates&#13;
with  a high  school  diploma,  and&#13;
are   taught   by   a  group   of   15&#13;
instructors  from the University  of&#13;
Infants Abandoned  at&#13;
UWP Loading  Dock:&#13;
One-year-old boy, girl&#13;
found crying&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks  ide.&#13;
Classes  in philosophy,  sociolo-&#13;
gy,  theatre  and  literature  will  be&#13;
taught  with  the  expectation   that&#13;
participating   inmates  can  use the&#13;
skills  learned  in these  classes  to&#13;
help them  make the right choices&#13;
when  they  return  to  society  and&#13;
not   become    repeat   offenders.&#13;
There   are   15-20   inmates    per&#13;
class,  which  are  being  taught  on&#13;
Mondays  and Wednesdays.&#13;
"I have  five returning  students,&#13;
and they keep coming  back when&#13;
classes&#13;
are&#13;
offered,"&#13;
said&#13;
Roseanne   Mason,  a specialist   at&#13;
the Writing  Center  who  is partic-&#13;
ipating  in the program.   "We have&#13;
one student  who has been coming&#13;
crying  inside of it and  [he&#13;
1&#13;
wanted  to know&#13;
who  the child belonged  to."&#13;
Harris  said that  he reached  his hand  into&#13;
the  window  and  unlocked   the  back  door,&#13;
and that  was when  he saw there were  actu-&#13;
ally two  children  inside  instead of  one.&#13;
"Surely  someone  shot off for a second,  but&#13;
why give them the benefit  of the doubt hav-&#13;
ing  two   infants   unattended?"    explained&#13;
Harris. "I'm  not sure where you get a mind-&#13;
set to do something  like that."&#13;
UW-Parkside   police  chief  Robert  Deane&#13;
said  that  a check  was  run  on the vehicle  in&#13;
an  attempt   to  find  out  who  the  vehicle&#13;
belonged  to, but no one returned  to the car.&#13;
University  Police  are currently  withold-&#13;
ing the name of the vehicle's  owner  pending&#13;
investigation.&#13;
...  INFANTS,  cont,  on page. 2&#13;
since  our  very first  grant  project,&#13;
and  we  also  have  a  'lifer'   who&#13;
keeps  coming  back.  It's fortunate&#13;
that  they  are  trying  to  make  the&#13;
best of their situation."&#13;
Mason  said the theme  of the&#13;
class she teaches  is "What  is an&#13;
everyday  Hero?" The class is cur-&#13;
rently   reading   a  book   called,&#13;
Warriors Don&#13;
t&#13;
Cry.&#13;
The  book  is&#13;
about  school  integration  in Little&#13;
Rock, Ark.  in 1957.&#13;
Mason said that her students  are&#13;
being asked to pick out characters&#13;
in  the  book  that  they  think  are&#13;
heroes.&#13;
"We expect  certain  conflict  of&#13;
ideas  to  develop,   but  it  can  be&#13;
helpful,"  explained  Mason.  "The&#13;
topic  lends  itself  for  getting  dif-&#13;
ferent  perspectives,   and  one  of&#13;
the  main   requirements&#13;
is  that&#13;
inmates  both  listen  and  respect&#13;
other people's  opinions."&#13;
Mason  said that next week, her&#13;
class will be discussing  what this&#13;
means  on  a  broader   scale,  and&#13;
examine   why   individuals   have&#13;
these   perspectives    and   explore&#13;
where  they come  from.&#13;
At her  last class,  Mason  said&#13;
inmates    were   asked   to   write&#13;
down  their  description   of a hero.&#13;
"One man said. 'It's easy to find a&#13;
television   hero,  but  they're   not&#13;
real heroes.'&#13;
•  LESSONS,   cont.  on page 2&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Books&#13;
by Ralph Hollenbeck&#13;
UWP Team walks for AIDS&#13;
BECKYSCHLEVENSKY&#13;
RANGER  REPORTER&#13;
AIDS kills. How many peo-&#13;
ple have known someone who&#13;
has died from AIDS? If they&#13;
haven't,  statistics  show  that&#13;
everyone will be effected by this&#13;
disease somehow.&#13;
On Sept. 22, 12,614 people&#13;
rallied  and walked  in a fight&#13;
against -AIDS at the 7th annual&#13;
AIDS  Walk  Wisconsin&#13;
In&#13;
Milwaukee. The rally began with&#13;
an Opening  Ceremony  where&#13;
Bette Midler spoke and 'revved'&#13;
everyone  up. The  Ceremony&#13;
intensified  the  overwhelming&#13;
spirit  of the struggle  against&#13;
AIDS.  Following  the Opening&#13;
Ceremony,  the 6.2 mile walk&#13;
began   at  the  Summerfest&#13;
Grounds. All walkers, receiving&#13;
donations from sponsors, raised&#13;
together $1,005,042,  surpassing&#13;
the goal of $1,000,000.&#13;
Sandy Puzerski, along with&#13;
Jeanne Sanchez, assembled the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
team which participated in AIDS&#13;
Walk Wisconsin event. The team&#13;
of 25-30 students and faculty&#13;
were motivated&#13;
by&#13;
the intense&#13;
spirit of this fight. Many of the&#13;
.people who participated are look-&#13;
ing forward to rallying again next&#13;
year.  Puzerski  stated,  "I am&#13;
already  strategizing  for next&#13;
year's AIDS Walk Wisconsin and&#13;
hope that a lot more students will&#13;
join us."&#13;
Carthage   College   also&#13;
attended the Walk with a busload&#13;
of 100 students and faculty who&#13;
made their presence known. Next&#13;
year UW-Parkside's  goal is to&#13;
organize a team that will be big-&#13;
ger and more enthusiastic than&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
CORRECTIONS&#13;
If you see an inaccuracy printed in the&#13;
Ranger News,&#13;
call 595-2287&#13;
and leave a detailed message.&#13;
ISSUE 2 (Sept. 12, ·1996) 'In the article about PSGA, it should&#13;
have specified that "wargamers" should-not be associated with or&#13;
specify the members of the UW-Parkside Association of Wargamers.&#13;
ISSUE 4 (Sept. 26, 1996) • Danielle Kirk competed in a&#13;
15&#13;
krn&#13;
race, not the 1.5 km race that appeared in the headline.&#13;
-Homecommg Queen candidate Baisha Strother's' biography was&#13;
inadvertently cut off on page 5. The complete biography appears in&#13;
this week's issue.&#13;
-The photo caption for the&#13;
"One-Handed&#13;
Idea" story was incorrect It&#13;
should have read: Engineering students in instructor Dennis&#13;
Stevenson's ENGR 210 class designed and made this car for a com-&#13;
petition against universities like Purdue and Michigan State in the'&#13;
summer of'95.&#13;
.&#13;
-t'Observations : In Case You Missed&#13;
It"&#13;
was an unintentional reprint&#13;
from a 1995 issue.&#13;
'The article informing students, faculty, and staff of the annual fire&#13;
alarm schedule was incorrect. The schedule is as follows.&#13;
Lessons&#13;
cont. from&#13;
page&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
thought it was good that he&#13;
could  make  the  distinction&#13;
between the people held up by the&#13;
media as heroes and those who&#13;
are heroes for a day."&#13;
The Prison Outreach Award&#13;
Program is the onIy one of its&#13;
kind at any Wisconsin  prison.&#13;
Inmates could previously acquire&#13;
Pell Grants to pay for college&#13;
tuition, and this prompted many&#13;
universities to offer courses on-&#13;
site at prisons. But the federal&#13;
government   prohibited   an&#13;
inmate's access to Pel! Grants in&#13;
1994.&#13;
The program has served 120&#13;
students since its inception in Jan.&#13;
1995, funded  by consecutive&#13;
$2,000 grants from the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council (WHC).&#13;
This year, the university was&#13;
awarded a $10,000 grant from the&#13;
WHC to continue  its Prison&#13;
Outreach Award Program.&#13;
Other UW-Parkside staff mem-&#13;
bers involved  in the program&#13;
include: Ngure Wa Mwachofi,&#13;
Farida Khan, Roby Rajan, Jean&#13;
Thieme, Anne Statham and John&#13;
Schmidt.&#13;
4th Monday (9123); 2nd Tuesday&#13;
(10/8); 4th Thursday (10/24); 2nd&#13;
Wednesday    (11113);   4th&#13;
Wednesday (3/26); 2nd Monday&#13;
(4/8); and, if needed, 4th Tuesday&#13;
(4/24).&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
regrets the&#13;
above errors.&#13;
Infants&#13;
cont.&#13;
from&#13;
page 1&#13;
"We couldn't tell if someone&#13;
had just ran into the building or&#13;
abandoned   them,"  explained&#13;
Deane. "We were lucky the chil-&#13;
dren  weren't  injured  and the&#13;
weather wasn't  too hot or too&#13;
cold. We were also lucky that no&#13;
one came by and walked away&#13;
with them."&#13;
The police chief said Social&#13;
Services was notified of the inci-&#13;
dent,  and referred  University&#13;
Police  to the Juvenile  Crisis&#13;
Center  in Kenosha  for further&#13;
action.&#13;
"A worker came out with the&#13;
intent ofturning the children over&#13;
to their parents, " said Deane. "It&#13;
was a happy ending to what could&#13;
have been a sad story."&#13;
Deane said that students and&#13;
staff are encouraged  to notify&#13;
University  police  if they find&#13;
children or animals unattended in&#13;
a parked vehicle.&#13;
"It could become a health haz-&#13;
ard," Deane said.&#13;
SUSPECTS,  by Thomas Berger&#13;
(Morrow: $23,(0). A meld of Sir&#13;
Walter Scott's "Oh, what a tangled&#13;
web we weave" and Sir William&#13;
Gilbert's "The policeman's lot isnot&#13;
a happy one" would provide anideal&#13;
summation  of THomas Be.rger's&#13;
latest novel. Berger, author of such&#13;
best-sellers as "Little Big Man" and&#13;
"Neighbors," himself has one of&#13;
his&#13;
characters describe the commitment&#13;
that uniforms and plainclothesmen&#13;
(and women) in law enforcementas-&#13;
sume. "The job makes a lot&#13;
of&#13;
demands on you, and usually comes&#13;
before your personal  life," Nick&#13;
Moody,  Detective  First Grade,&#13;
states. "The public never&#13;
sees&#13;
the&#13;
worst of what you confront day after&#13;
day ... Sickening stuff you never&#13;
suspected was possible, at least not&#13;
in this country. You're not only sup-&#13;
posed to handle it but rise above it&#13;
and go on to something that's worse,&#13;
and then rise above that and still&#13;
be&#13;
human." Ironically, Moody, diverted&#13;
from his planned suicide, offers that&#13;
advice to one Lloyd Howland,&#13;
whose&#13;
sudden appreciation of&#13;
Moody&#13;
and&#13;
the Force is one of those&#13;
O.&#13;
Hen-&#13;
ryesque twists in Berger's narrative.&#13;
Lloyd, a drifter, had been one ofthe&#13;
suspects in the particularly&#13;
gruesome&#13;
murder of his sister-in-law, Donna,&#13;
and his young niece. So was Lloyd's&#13;
half-brother, Larry, the rising young&#13;
salesman whose supposed business&#13;
trip masked a tryst with his&#13;
boss'&#13;
amoral wife. Even the police arenot&#13;
as true blue as one could hope.&#13;
Berger's  burrowing  beneath the&#13;
green sod of suburbia lays bare the&#13;
rather unpleasant reality of much&#13;
small-town life in a most engrossing&#13;
fiction.&#13;
'puAs&#13;
Sa.rtl19a..oJ:&#13;
Bu!}I&#13;
.&lt;q&#13;
96610&#13;
pJeAJeH&#13;
'8~.IPpl~.&#13;
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~~uo.~&#13;
~Wtl'Ztl'4S&#13;
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~uosl~N&#13;
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'f&#13;
:uel,(a&#13;
qog&#13;
·Z&#13;
~puel'.zll"'S&#13;
·1&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
encourages   Letters  to the&#13;
Editor  Letters should&#13;
110t&#13;
exceed 250 words&#13;
and should be delivered to the&#13;
Runger News&#13;
office  (WYLL  D I39Cj  or  e-ntailed  to&#13;
hansen8@iLuwp,edu   by noon the Monday&#13;
before publication,  Letters must&#13;
be&#13;
typed and&#13;
include the author's name and phone number.&#13;
To be published, letters must be free from mis-&#13;
leading or libelous content. Letters that fail to&#13;
comply will not&#13;
be&#13;
published&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
----&#13;
In Memory of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom, former ManalJinlJ Editor,&#13;
AUIJ.&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
..&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Entertam.ment Editor&#13;
.    Columnists  C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
M&#13;
.  Ed'&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Smith Corey Mandley Morgan&#13;
anagmg&#13;
ttor&#13;
S'&#13;
"&#13;
A&#13;
·1&#13;
S h  b&#13;
ports EdItor&#13;
Harcey&#13;
pn&#13;
c oen erg&#13;
AIH&#13;
News Editor&#13;
eppner&#13;
Reporters  Kerri Bachler, Becky&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
BUSiness Manager&#13;
Schlevensky, Tim Gaiser, Aaron&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Derek Blsh.op&#13;
Kappellusch, Walt Shirer, Tim&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Layout EdItor&#13;
Mote, Margaret Ditchburn&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jp.uhliatlngram&#13;
Advisor Roseann Mason&#13;
00&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
J h N&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
n unn&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
.&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Copy Editors Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
is published  every Thursday&#13;
throughout  the semester  by students of the&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parkside,   who are&#13;
solely responsible  for its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Subscriptions  are available at the cost&#13;
or  $10  for  28  issues   Member  of the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press&#13;
,&#13;
(&#13;
,&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Volume 25, issue 3</text>
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              <text>Tuition Shortfall Costs Parkside: Fewer Continuing students, better jobs, could be ket</text>
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              <text>'Geology Students Explore Grand&#13;
Canyon/page 11&#13;
'Maria's Melange: I am&#13;
Woman/page 8&#13;
·He Said, She Said/page 9&#13;
'Girls' Cross Country/page 13&#13;
-Hepp's Hype Picks/page 14&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 3 • SEPTEMBER 19, 1996 ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside students were randomnly picked to be models.&#13;
Clockwise, from bottom: Stephanie Knabel (Nursing); Nicholas Walls (Computer&#13;
Science); Jaimie Roberts (Elementary Ed.); Matt Sheahan (Marketing); Erin Vosberg&#13;
(Nursing); top left, Dan Tredo (Athletic Training), and Lisa Schaich (Sec. Ed.)&#13;
Photo by Amber Nichols.&#13;
Tuition Shortfall&#13;
Costs' Parkside:&#13;
Fewer Continuing Students,&#13;
Better Jobs, Could Be Key&#13;
• Ranger News Staff Report&#13;
A dip in enrollment will cost the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside an estimated $697,000 this year, under a new UW&#13;
System policy which penalizes campuses for missing their&#13;
enrollment targets when student numbers fall.&#13;
Parkside projects a student full-time equivalent (ITEJ of 3,&#13;
160 for the 1996-97 academic year. Administrators at the university&#13;
said this is 3.1 percent below the fall 1995 enrollment&#13;
of 3,262 ITE's.&#13;
The projection is also 8.7 percent below this year's enrollment&#13;
target of 3,461. This will cost the university $697,000-&#13;
the amount it missed in its tuition target of $7,324,704.&#13;
Under the new UW System policy, each campus is assessed&#13;
the full amount of any shortfall. In turn, campuses are&#13;
"rewarded" by being allowed to keep 75 percent of any tuition&#13;
they collect that exceeds projected targets.&#13;
"It looks like we'll be able to identify enough sources to&#13;
... TUITION, cont. on page 2&#13;
Student Counselors Ready for Health Office Move&#13;
• Julia Ingram&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
Green dots pimple almost everything in Barbara&#13;
Larson's office, including her computer, table and&#13;
moving boxes. She even has some stuck on her window&#13;
and hlinds. .&#13;
"I was told that everything I put a green dot on&#13;
I could take with me to put in my new office, but our&#13;
new offices don't have any windows," Barbara&#13;
explained. "We were all very sad and grieving our&#13;
loss of windows. Therefore, we had the brilliant idea&#13;
of putting green dots on them."&#13;
She is UW-Parkside's Senior Counselor in the&#13;
Student Counseling Office, presently located in&#13;
Molinaro D124.&#13;
Barbara and co-workers Marcy Cayo, UWParkside's&#13;
Prevention Program' Manager and&#13;
Counselor, have most of their boxes packed and&#13;
stacked as they prepare for their move to the new&#13;
Student Health &amp;. Counseling Center, as it will be&#13;
called. Because the Health Office required more&#13;
space for its clinic, which will help meet regulations&#13;
for a medical room among other things, the Student&#13;
Health and Counseling Offices will move to the new --- .....---------------&#13;
facility sometime this year, which is located behind ... HEALTH OFFICE, cont. on&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Barbara, a UW-Parkside employee since 1969, page 3&#13;
and Marcy, who has been here four academic years,&#13;
said that students, staff and faculty are questioning&#13;
why Counseling cannot remain on the main campus.&#13;
and they're just as confounded. '&#13;
Barbara and Marcy also stated that one reason&#13;
they cannot stay is because they are unable to get&#13;
approval for a full-time support staff. In addition,&#13;
they do not have the authority to decide whether&#13;
they will stay or go.&#13;
UniflersitlJ&#13;
Police&#13;
Beat&#13;
Sept. 3. Traffic Accident: A&#13;
UW-Parkside student's vehicle&#13;
struck another student's vehicle&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Parking Lot. Minor damage&#13;
reported.&#13;
Sept. 3. Traffic Violation: A&#13;
police officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 52 mph in a&#13;
25 mph zone on Outer Loop&#13;
Rd. Citation issued.&#13;
Sept. 5. Unlawful Use of&#13;
Telephone: A UW-Parkside&#13;
staff member reported the incident&#13;
when she received numerous&#13;
phone calls at the library&#13;
reference desk from a phone&#13;
sex service ..Several subjects&#13;
were observed using a computer&#13;
to do this activity.&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
Sept. 7. Medical Assist: Two&#13;
visiting school runners were&#13;
assisted medically at the crosscountry&#13;
course for an ankle&#13;
injury and an asthma attack.&#13;
The latter transported to St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Sept. 9. Traffic Violation: A&#13;
UW-Parkside student was&#13;
cited for failure to stop for a&#13;
stop sign. Student reportedly&#13;
ran the stop sign at Outer&#13;
Loop Rd. and the&#13;
Communication Arts Parking&#13;
Sept. 10. Theft of Personal&#13;
Property: A UW-Parkside student&#13;
reported the then of his&#13;
parking permit from the&#13;
Physical Education Parking&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Sept. 13. Disorderly&#13;
Conduct: Police officers&#13;
requested to break up a fight&#13;
in the Union Square at approx.&#13;
11:50 p.m. Figbt started as a&#13;
verbal disagreement.&#13;
Sept. 14. Liquor Law&#13;
Violation: Police officers&#13;
responded to a report of a&#13;
drinking party at 11:27 p.m. in&#13;
housing. Three students and&#13;
one visitor were cited for&#13;
underage drinking.&#13;
3806 52nd Street&#13;
652-3130&#13;
BETTER BREAD, BETTER SUBS.HI&#13;
*Subs' *Soups *SaJads *Party Subs&#13;
Free medium soda with purchase of any half sub with valid Parkside ID r--~~~~~~----------------------,&#13;
: 6/,1&lt;/ :!'c FREE SUB!! :&#13;
I ·-'~~··---."-V I&#13;
I Valid thru 9/25/96 Buy any 2 subs &amp; get the I&#13;
I Good for 1 free sub per person 3rd sub FREE! (of equal or lesser value) I&#13;
I Yourchoice of mini,half or Good only at: 3806 52nd S1. I&#13;
Iwhole subs. One coupon per I&#13;
: visit;not good withany 652-3130:&#13;
~~e~f!:~: ~U£';&gt;'2:.' -... ..J&#13;
Tuition cont. from page I&#13;
cover the deficit this year,&#13;
said Gary Grace, Assistant&#13;
Chancelor of Student&#13;
Affairs.&#13;
The university&#13;
rently taking steps&#13;
with the projected&#13;
Early corrective&#13;
include:&#13;
• Leaving some staffvacancies&#13;
unfilled.&#13;
•' Using part-time professors&#13;
to teach classes where&#13;
faculty members have left.&#13;
• Eliminating or cutting&#13;
spending for some supplies&#13;
and equipment.&#13;
Studies have shown that&#13;
there is a trend in the UW&#13;
System regarding campuses&#13;
not exceeding projected&#13;
enrollment targets. Grace&#13;
is CUfto&#13;
deal&#13;
deficit.&#13;
steps&#13;
said that at UW-Pa~kside,&#13;
the predominant cause of the&#13;
enrollment slide is the&#13;
robust economy in the area.&#13;
"Most of the shortfall in&#13;
student enrollment is from&#13;
OUT adult students in the&#13;
Racine area- the economy&#13;
is so good right now that people&#13;
are more likely to pursue&#13;
~ job than an education."&#13;
According to university&#13;
officials, other possible factors&#13;
contributing to low&#13;
enrollment at Parkside may&#13;
include:&#13;
• An apparent "shift" from&#13;
college federal grants to student&#13;
loans.&#13;
• Women and racial minorities&#13;
who make up a large&#13;
percentage of Parkside students&#13;
tend to take fewer&#13;
credits.&#13;
"The main thing the university&#13;
is doing is going&#13;
through a strategic planning&#13;
exercise to review all of our&#13;
programs and services and&#13;
make sure they are relevent&#13;
to what contemporary students&#13;
want to take," said&#13;
Grace .&#13;
Currently, construction on&#13;
a new dormitory is underway&#13;
at the University.&#13;
Officials hope it will help to&#13;
expand recruiting efforts to&#13;
areas outside the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha area.&#13;
c ~&#13;
I&#13;
1996·page2i&#13;
#cc" _c, J&#13;
Campus News&#13;
~tA Glance&#13;
• UW-Parkside 1997-98 Scholarship Applications Now&#13;
Available Applications for the 1997-98 UW-Parkside&#13;
Scholarship Program are now available. Applications can be&#13;
obtained by calling the UW-Parkside Scholarship Office at (414)&#13;
595-2600.&#13;
High school seniors, first time or returning college students,&#13;
adults, and transfer students are encouraged to apply. The competitive&#13;
scholarships recognize outstanding academic achievement,&#13;
leadership, and school and community service. Partial and&#13;
full tuition awards are available and several awards are renewable&#13;
for up to four years.&#13;
Applicants are required to submit two letters of recommendation&#13;
and a 250-word personal statement outlining academic and&#13;
career goals. The application deadline is Jan. 1, 1997.&#13;
Last year, the university awarded more than $125,000 in academic&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
For more information or to request an application, call the&#13;
UW-Parkside Scholarship Office at (414) 595-2600 or write;&#13;
Linda Madsen, Scholarship coordinator, P.O. Box 2000, Kenosha,&#13;
WI. 53141-2000.&#13;
11 • Free UW-Parkside Lecture Explores Issue of Life on&#13;
Mars Three university professors will discuss the evidence of&#13;
life on Mars during a free noon lecture at UW-Parkside, Friday,&#13;
Sept. 20.&#13;
The lecture, "Life on Mars: The Cylinder Unscrews," will be&#13;
held in Room 103 of Greenquist Hall. The lecture is part of the&#13;
University's 1996 Space Science Lecture Series, sponsored by&#13;
the University's Chemistry Department. -&#13;
Uw-Parkside's presenters will be: Vera Kolb, professor of&#13;
chemistry, who has studied the origins of life; Gregory Mayer,·&#13;
assistant professor of biological sciences and evolutionary biologist,&#13;
and Richard Judge, associate professor of chemistry and&#13;
spectroscopist (studies molecules with special instruments).&#13;
From 1992-94, Kolb and five other scientists working on a $5&#13;
million NASA grant in San Diego, studied the origins of life, trying&#13;
to isolate self-replicating molecules.&#13;
The issue of life on Mars received national attention in early&#13;
August after scientists from NASA and Stanford University&#13;
found evidence inside a Martian meteorite that tentatively identified&#13;
signs of life.&#13;
For more information, call the UW-Parkside Chemistry&#13;
Department at (414) 595-2326.&#13;
• Free Lecture To Outline Political, Social Changes in&#13;
Russia "Russia: Elections and Other Disturbances" will be discussed&#13;
by a UW-Parkside Russian historian and analyst during&#13;
a free public lecture at UW-Parkside, Wednesday, Sept. 25.&#13;
The lecture, part of the University's Soup and Substance&#13;
Lecture Series. will be held at noon in Room 104 of the Student&#13;
Union, located at the far north end of the main campus complex.&#13;
Free bread and soup will be served. Free parking will be available&#13;
in all university lots.&#13;
Oliver Hayward, assistant professor of history at UWParks&#13;
ide, will be the speaker. He will discuss the social, economic&#13;
and political challenges facing Russia after the breakup of the&#13;
Soviet Union. Hayward will be joined by Sandra Knorr of Racine&#13;
and Richard Karwatka of Kenosha, who both participated in the&#13;
March UW-Parkside Study 'Ibur of Russia and Hungary.&#13;
Haywood teaches a variety of classes on Russia, Soviet and&#13;
post-Soviet studies and has coordinated 13 trips to Russia and&#13;
Eastern Europe over the past 16 years.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
the Lectures and Fine Arts Committee. FQr more information,&#13;
call the Information Center at (414) 595-2345.&#13;
Possible Reasons for&#13;
Shortfall Cited&#13;
• Ranger News Staff&#13;
Report&#13;
Fewer returning students and&#13;
better job opportunities may&#13;
account for the current enrollment&#13;
shortfall at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks ide, .&#13;
According to exit interviews&#13;
conducted by the University,&#13;
about 47 percent of those students&#13;
eligible to return are&#13;
'stopouts" who say they intend&#13;
to enroll again in a semester or&#13;
two; about 33 percent plan to&#13;
transfer and 17 percent are&#13;
uncertain of their future education&#13;
plans.&#13;
The proportion of those students&#13;
not returning due to&#13;
transfer (33 percent) closely correlates&#13;
with the proportion of&#13;
new students (37 percent) who,&#13;
at the time of enrollment,&#13;
reported on the UCLA Survey of&#13;
Freshman Cooperative&#13;
Institutional Research Program&#13;
(CIRP) that they never intended&#13;
to complete a degree at UWParkside&#13;
but to transfer.&#13;
Of those students "stopping&#13;
out" or who are uncertain of&#13;
their future education plans, 30&#13;
percent say their reasons for&#13;
doing so are personal. Roughly&#13;
40 percent cited financial or&#13;
employment reasons for not&#13;
returning at the present time.&#13;
Studies have shown that in&#13;
recent years, that UWParkside's&#13;
enrollment has fallen&#13;
around the same time when the&#13;
economy is strong and unemployment&#13;
low.&#13;
In addition, the number of students&#13;
receiving federal financial&#13;
aid at UW-Parkside since 1992-&#13;
93 has increased nearly 25 percent&#13;
and loans as a financial aid&#13;
source have increased greatly.&#13;
Sources also indicated that&#13;
many students may not have&#13;
the resources or may be "leery"&#13;
of taking on an even greater&#13;
debt to pay for college.&#13;
Studies have shown that&#13;
UW-Parkside is currently&#13;
enrolling more women and students&#13;
of color than in previous&#13;
years. In 1995-96, women made&#13;
up 59 percent of student enrollment&#13;
compared to 49 percent in&#13;
1986-87. In 1995-96, students&#13;
of color made up 12.7' percent of&#13;
student enrollment compared to&#13;
6.7 percent in 1986-86.&#13;
ersity of Wiscons&#13;
Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-&#13;
2000&#13;
14) 595-2287&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
Ass!. News Editor&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Scoll Malik&#13;
Freshmen Are People, Too:&#13;
OMSA Mentorship Program&#13;
matters concerning self esteem,&#13;
social skills, conflicts with professors&#13;
or roommates and job&#13;
searches.&#13;
With the guidance of the&#13;
OMSA office and director&#13;
Anthony Brown, the mentoring&#13;
program is designed to provide a&#13;
supportive experience for the&#13;
personal and intellectual development&#13;
of the underrepresented&#13;
racial/ethnic first year student.&#13;
The specific objectives are to&#13;
provide a continuing orientation&#13;
to the University and community&#13;
life, to help students develop&#13;
a sense of belonging, to help students&#13;
identify positively with&#13;
• Derek Bishop&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
According to The American&#13;
Heritage Dictionary, a 'mentor is&#13;
" a wise and trusted counselor or&#13;
teacher."&#13;
In Greek mythology, a mentor&#13;
was a trusted counselor into&#13;
whose care Odysseus placed his&#13;
son Telemachus. In this role,&#13;
mentor was a surrogate parent,&#13;
teacher and protector.&#13;
The Office of Multicultural&#13;
Affairs (OMSA) has initiated a&#13;
mentor program for the 1996&#13;
fall semester for students with&#13;
the University by demonstrating&#13;
a genuine concern for them,&#13;
and to inspire students through&#13;
moral support.&#13;
The long term objectives of&#13;
the mentoring program are to&#13;
increase student retention and&#13;
provide an ongoing orientation&#13;
to all aspects of the University.&#13;
Faculty and staff mentors have&#13;
set numerous individual goals&#13;
and objectives,. and have&#13;
planned many activities for the&#13;
students. For more information&#13;
contact the OMSA office, in&#13;
WYLL182.&#13;
Health&#13;
office&#13;
move&#13;
continued&#13;
from page I&#13;
Barbara Larson (left) and Marcy Cayo of the Student Counseling&#13;
Office in Molinaro 0124.&#13;
They are concerned about whether or not&#13;
students will be able to find the new facility and&#13;
if they will utilize the counseling services as&#13;
they have in the past.&#13;
Barbara wondered if enough students will&#13;
learn about their new location: ''Will we be able&#13;
to communicate to enough people to utilize the&#13;
service to let them know that we're down&#13;
here? Because there are students who don't&#13;
even know we're here on the main campus."&#13;
"Our concern is making sure people utilize&#13;
the service; that we're able to keep people&#13;
aware that we exist, where we are , and that&#13;
we're a valuable service," explained Marcy.&#13;
Barbara and Marcy emphasized that the&#13;
counseling services are very valuable to students&#13;
and they hope students will continue to&#13;
utilize and take advantage of their free services,&#13;
which are paid for through segregated&#13;
fees. They also mentioned that to see someone&#13;
in the community would cost between $85-$95&#13;
an hour. Therefore, ten sessions with one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's counselors would save a student&#13;
almost $900.&#13;
An additional advantage to Parkside's&#13;
counseling services is the short waiting period&#13;
to meet with a counselor.&#13;
"You may come in and have to wait only&#13;
two or three days."&#13;
Marcy then addressed the fact that in the&#13;
In Mem''''J of John C. Sandstrom&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Amber Nichols&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Julia Ingram&#13;
Copy Editors Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Columnists C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
Smith, Corey Mandley, Morgan&#13;
Harcey&#13;
Reporters Kerri Bachler, Becky&#13;
Schlevensky&#13;
Advisor Roseann Mason&#13;
Ranger News is published&#13;
every Thursday throughout&#13;
the semester by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide, who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial&#13;
policy and content.&#13;
Subscriptions are available&#13;
at of $10 for 28 issues.&#13;
Member of the Associated&#13;
Collegiate Press.&#13;
community you usually cannot get in to see a&#13;
counselor immediately, and generally you're&#13;
put on a waiting list before you can even get&#13;
into meet with a counselor.&#13;
How do students know whether or not they&#13;
need these services?&#13;
Barbara Larson answered, "I think if people&#13;
have issues which are interfering with their&#13;
lives, then they know they need help of some&#13;
sort. There's something going on that Interferes&#13;
with attaining their goals in life."&#13;
Marcy explained that the services cover&#13;
many issues.&#13;
"Academically, personally, socially, in your&#13;
relationship Or if things aren't going the way&#13;
you want them to. We see everything from, IMy&#13;
roommate is driving me crazy,' to depression, to&#13;
some severe mental illness, to sexual assault."&#13;
'1b those students who may be reluctant to&#13;
seek counseling services, Marcy emphasized&#13;
the confidentiality aspect, "Not only is it confidential,&#13;
but it. is not tied to your academic&#13;
record in any way, shape, or form."&#13;
Once the Student Counceling Office moves&#13;
to its new location Marcy believes it may be&#13;
somewhat of a challenge for students to see&#13;
them, particularly if students need to see one of&#13;
the counselors between classes, and Barbara&#13;
stated that "more of a commitment will be necessary&#13;
for students to stay with counseling."&#13;
Resident Hall Advisors&#13;
Beef Up Staff&#13;
• Becky Schlevensky&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
The beginning of another&#13;
school year introduced two new&#13;
residence hall coordinators and&#13;
nine new residence hall advisors.&#13;
Seniors Arlette Kambwa&#13;
and Jeff Rhein were appointed&#13;
Resident Advisors (RA) coordinators.&#13;
Sergio Correa, Jennifer&#13;
Crum, Stephanie Goth,&#13;
Stephanie Hess, Jamilaisha&#13;
Nicholson, Charles Paksi,&#13;
Steven Proesel, Randy&#13;
Bunders and LaShawn&#13;
Stanton were assigned to each&#13;
housing unit as RAs.&#13;
The RA training week&#13;
which was led by Steve WaIner,&#13;
Arlette Kambwa and Jeff&#13;
Rhein, took place from Aug. 25-&#13;
30. The training concentrated&#13;
on programming (holding&#13;
activities for residents.) Each&#13;
RA will be responsible for&#13;
putting on one activity for each&#13;
.. six issues which make up the&#13;
"Wellness Wheel"--education,&#13;
occupation, intelligence, physical,&#13;
spiritual and social.&#13;
Because the campus community&#13;
includes individuals of&#13;
all races and sexual preferences,&#13;
diversity will be dealt&#13;
with daily. The RAs will try to&#13;
establish an atmosphere of&#13;
acceptance and respect.&#13;
"You don't earn respect by&#13;
being a certain race, gender, or&#13;
sexual preference, but by the&#13;
way you present yourself." said&#13;
Stephanie Hess.&#13;
With the RAs working&#13;
along with the RA coordinators,&#13;
they hope to have a safe,&#13;
healthy, problem-free year.&#13;
However, if conflicts between&#13;
roommates do arise, HAs will&#13;
be available for mediation. The&#13;
main goal will be to "provide a&#13;
healthy living environment for&#13;
students by enforcing policies&#13;
of housing and the university,"&#13;
said Jamilaishia Nicholson.&#13;
Women's Softball Fleld&#13;
under Construction&#13;
•Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Construction for the new UW-Parkside's women softball field is underway.&#13;
Ground breaking on the new $170,000 complex started in late August with completion&#13;
scheduled for spring of 1997.&#13;
Dr. Lenny Laver explained the need for a new field.&#13;
"The other field located in Petrified Springs Park, there was not fence, and it was not ft for&#13;
a top ranked team's varsity field; when the field is finished it will be the best women's fast pich&#13;
softball field in the state," stated Klaver.&#13;
The new filed will ,be located just eaxt of the Pbysical Education Building. The softball facility&#13;
will have two fields that will be fenced in, batting cages, concession stands, picnic area, press&#13;
bos, seating sections, and luxury boxes.&#13;
A dead&#13;
Wood alci:&gt;hO&#13;
destru .- '.&#13;
distilling&#13;
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Methyls&#13;
Prope~y);&#13;
methyl alc ..&#13;
methanol;,&#13;
alcohol has&#13;
and is cOIRtl~~'~\~:;,i!;l\&#13;
How it is made:;', &lt;;P,&#13;
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at a temperature ocr 1&#13;
148°F. Distillingm1.l$t}&#13;
be at least 158°F kL d&#13;
make drinkable .:.:\'&#13;
alcohol. " ;&#13;
How much Is deadly?;&#13;
1 ounce: Dangerous&#13;
3 ounces: Lethal&#13;
SOURCE: UmeA University Hospital&#13;
~*&#13;
1996 • page 41&#13;
~. .., = :J&#13;
Tuition Up Five Percent&#13;
• Kerri Bachler&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside students will be paying&#13;
a five percent tuition increase for the 1996-97 academic year.&#13;
Tuition and fees for full-time resident undergraduates are now&#13;
$2,522.90, including $3.78 for segregated fees and $1.90 for the&#13;
United Council student government fee.&#13;
Full time nonresident undergraduates' tuition and fees total&#13;
$7,986.90.&#13;
The increase was approved by the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System Board of Regents during its June meeting.&#13;
~~~- M-E&#13;
-~~;t;iqnoews media&#13;
;~il~ppeal more tq,men1&gt;qm&#13;
',iliA PllW survey shows that*i91nen relY \"&#13;
'dt-_,Ii9$~thanmen, on a vari :&lt; of&gt; ·f ews v,' "" .~i;"._ ';:::~,:,'~J&#13;
,ij~~mq~ig~ibews sources&#13;
'ilillililli:l.i~~ii~ll!;f!~,Newspapers . 16% 19%&#13;
A;1:;t.!9j;jl1Jj1~§,M'B.R*~fjL¥jlltflmf1Jlliifw§I[%11&#13;
./Y·'&#13;
i:i;j';;;;i!l!:iiiiI#?l&#13;
AND MEDIA&#13;
SOURCE: Roper poll for lhe Media Studies Forum of&#13;
2,007 registered voters, Jan 19-Feb. 10, 1996. margin&#13;
of error 2%&#13;
Faculty and Students&#13;
Featured in Art Walk&#13;
A University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
member and several graduates are featured in the&#13;
Sixth Street Art Walk on Sept. 21, in downtown&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Participating businesses, each within a short&#13;
walk of each other and identified by balloons outside&#13;
their storefronts, hold a day-long open house&#13;
starting at 10 a.m., with receptions for the artists&#13;
or book signings in each business starting at 6&#13;
p.m. until closing.&#13;
Parkside talent is featured at The Old Book&#13;
Corner, 312 6th St. which celebrates Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with a collection of 19th Century harbor&#13;
survey maps and engravings of the cities and the&#13;
work of Parkside professor Dennis Bayuzick and&#13;
Parkside graduate Gabriela Pettit. They form the&#13;
Kenosha-based Purple Parable Press. Several&#13;
other Parks ide graduates are participating&#13;
including Michael Schumacher, who is now a freelance&#13;
writer, and will autograph his books on Eric&#13;
Clapton and Phil Ochs.&#13;
Racine poet and UW-Parkside English and&#13;
History major Elizabeth Katch will autograph her&#13;
latest book appearance. Susan McIntyre, an&#13;
actress who majored in Dramatic Arts at UWParkside&#13;
will sing folk songs in the evening.&#13;
Other stops on the Art Walk include: Brandt's&#13;
Jewelers, 207 6th St. featuring the unique pottery&#13;
of Julie Schwartz whose work includes handcoiled,&#13;
raku, and Native American.&#13;
Ace &amp; Bubba's Treasure Hunters, 2186th St.&#13;
features Joyce Ottum's watercolors. Vintage&#13;
Jewelers Ltd. 403 6th St. showcases the work of&#13;
six local artists: watercolors by Alice Grudzinski,&#13;
Carla Burks, Lyle Peters, Ed and Don Donowski&#13;
and space art and oils by 'Ibm Hunt. Centre City,&#13;
418 6th St. offers a combined show of drawings,&#13;
paintings and photography by Vincent E.&#13;
Gonzales and Denise Zingg. The Cobblestone Ltd.&#13;
415 6th St. has gathered the work of nine artists&#13;
for a special showing. Floral watercolors by Mary&#13;
Burant, blown glass by Dave Drewek, 3-dimensional&#13;
ceramics by Manne Haug, hand-turned&#13;
wood vessels by Larry Jameson, pottery by Kevin&#13;
Pearson, handmade paper by Georgia Kroll and&#13;
Helen Rusk, fiber art by Nancy Justus, and transparent&#13;
watercolors by Jean Thielen.&#13;
Flowers by Walter, 503 6th St. offers a variety&#13;
oflocal artists, including works by Jonie Hostings,&#13;
Barbara Salman, Michael Nitsch, Jean Rognlie,&#13;
Arth Grebetz, M.J. Lorentzen, Rubon Pulda, Marj&#13;
Lacock and M.P. Marion.&#13;
VOLUNTEER&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES:&#13;
RACINE POLICE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
BE AN OUTREACH&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE AT THE&#13;
COMMUNITY INFORMATION&#13;
CENTER AT REGENCY MALL.&#13;
FRI. 10-2, 2-5 OR5-8 OR SAT.1-&#13;
5 OR5-8. GREET PUBLIC,HAND&#13;
OUT INFO. AND OTHER OFFICE&#13;
DUTIES. SEE CAROL IN&#13;
VOLUNTEEROFFICE - WYLLD175.&#13;
EMERGENCY! ESL ADULT&#13;
CLASSROOM HELPER NEEDED AT&#13;
THE SPANISH CENTER IN&#13;
KENOSHA. BEGIN OCT. 7TH.&#13;
MUST KNOW HOW TO SPEAK&#13;
SPANISH. MOTIVATED STUDENTs.&#13;
FuN TOWORKWITH.SEE&#13;
CAROLINTHECAREERCENTER.&#13;
ACTMTY AIDE FOR DAY·&#13;
BREAK PROGRAM AT&#13;
WESTOSHA COMMUNITY&#13;
CENTER NEAR BRISTOL. HELP&#13;
PEOPLE WITH ALZHEIMER'S OR&#13;
RELATED DEMENTIA ON&#13;
TUESDAYS OR FRIDAYS&#13;
BETWEEN10 A.M. AND 2 P.M.&#13;
MUST BE CARING AND SENSITIVE.&#13;
SIGN UP IN VOLUNTEER&#13;
OFFICE.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Museum Seeks&#13;
KYF ACTIVITY COUN- Volunteers&#13;
SELOR FOR AFTER SCHOOL&#13;
PROGRAM AT ONE OF SEVEN&#13;
SCHOOLS IN THE KENOSHA&#13;
AREA. VOLUNTEER WITH ELEMENTARY&#13;
AGE CHILDREN TWO&#13;
HOURS A WEEK. HAVE DESIRE TO&#13;
HELP AND HAVE STRONG COMMUNICATION&#13;
SKILLS. POLICE&#13;
CHECKS. SIGN UP TODAY.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS:&#13;
TEEN ROCK CONCERT&#13;
SUPERVISORS:SAT., SEPT. 21ST&#13;
BETWEEN6:00·10:30 P.M.ATTHE&#13;
YMCA IN RACINE. INVITE A&#13;
FIUEND AND HAVE FUN.&#13;
WINSLOW SCHOOL OPEN&#13;
HOUSE IN RACINE. TuESDAY,&#13;
SEPT. 24TH FROM5:30-8:00 P.M.&#13;
HELP MAKE AND SELL POPCORN,&#13;
NACHOS, AND BU'ITONS.&#13;
SEE CAROL ENGBERG IN THE&#13;
VOLUNTEER OFFICE OR CALL&#13;
595·2011 FOR MORE INFORMA·&#13;
TION.&#13;
If you like working with people&#13;
of all ages and are interested in&#13;
providing a valuable service to&#13;
the community, then you have&#13;
the right ingredients for being a&#13;
volunteer at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum. Give some of your&#13;
time, talents and enthusiasm&#13;
while meeting new people,&#13;
acquiring new knowledge and&#13;
giving back to the community.&#13;
Several volunteer positions have&#13;
openings including the "Host"&#13;
program, special events volunteers,&#13;
and program presenters.&#13;
Training for the volunteers who&#13;
work with schools and other&#13;
groups at the Museum will be&#13;
held on Tuesday mornings for 8&#13;
weeks beginning September 24.&#13;
Anyone interested in volunteering&#13;
at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum should call Nancy&#13;
Mathews at 653-4140 Monday-&#13;
Friday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. to&#13;
schedule an interview.&#13;
Calendar of&#13;
events&#13;
National Hispanic Heritage Month&#13;
Currently -Thursday 26 - Diverse Image&#13;
Distinct Form: Crafts from the&#13;
Collection of the Wustum Museum of&#13;
Art on display in the CART ge;tllery&#13;
open&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 11-5 &amp; Tue.-Wed. 11-8.&#13;
Thursday 19 - Ranger meeting at 12:15,&#13;
all staff &amp; interested writers p1ease&#13;
attend! .&#13;
.Friday 20 - Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) meeting&#13;
at noon in CART 129.&#13;
Friday 20 - "Poetry in Music" Tribute to&#13;
the life of Chris Sandstrom at Carthage&#13;
College in the Food for Thought Cafe.&#13;
Friday 20 - Accent on Enrichment Series&#13;
"Swingle Singers" in CART Theatre at 7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Friday 20 - Homecoming sign-up in&#13;
Union 209, Deadline tocfay!&#13;
Saturday 21 - Autumn Begins!&#13;
Tuesday 24 - Music Club meeting at&#13;
3:15 p.m. in CART 105.&#13;
Wednesday 25 - Noon Concert Series&#13;
Recital in CART D-118;Brassworks&#13;
Brass Quintet.&#13;
Wednesday 25 - S.O.c. Recruitment Fair&#13;
9 a.m. - 3 p.rn. Mainplace&#13;
Wednesday 25 - Film "Cable Guy" at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema&#13;
Former UW-Parkside student and' author Michael Schumacher&#13;
promoted his recently published biography on the internationally&#13;
acclaimed folksinger-activist Phil Ochs, entitled There But for&#13;
Fortune: The Life of Phil Ochs. A book signing took place at The&#13;
Little Professor Book Center, 7310 Green Bay Rd. Kenosha, on&#13;
b The 1996-97 series is as follows:&#13;
Saturday afternoon, Sept. 14th. Other biographies written y Persuasion (England, 1995) Sept, 19-22&#13;
Schumacher include Dharma Lion: A Biography of Allen The APU Trilogy (India)&#13;
Ginsberg and Crossroads: The Life and Music of Eric Pather Panchali, (1955) Oct. 10-13;&#13;
Clapton. The Kenoshan is presently writing a biography on Aparajito,(1956); Oct. 17-20; and&#13;
Francis Ford Coppola. The World of APU, (1959) Oct. 24-27&#13;
L ...J The Secret of Roan Inish (Ireland, 1994) Nov. 7-10&#13;
Adam's Rib (Russia, 1992) Nov. 21-24&#13;
Lamerica (Italy, 1995) Dec, 5-8&#13;
Antonia's Line (Netherlands, 1995) Jan.-Feb. 2&#13;
Belle de Jour (France, 1967) Feb. 13-16&#13;
The Flower of My Secret (Spain, 1995) Feb.27-March2&#13;
Vanya on 42nd Street (USA, 1994) March 13-16&#13;
Two Friends (New Zealand, 1986) April 3-6&#13;
The White Balloon (Iran, 1955) April 17-20&#13;
I Don't Want to Talk About It (Argentina, i994) May 1-4&#13;
Frankie Starlight (Ireland, 1995) May 15-18&#13;
IL Postino (Italy, 1995) May 22-25&#13;
Entertainment Book Sales&#13;
Saving money seems to be harder than ever these days. But not if you've purchased&#13;
your 1997 "Entertainment Book" through Big BrothersIBig Sisters of Greater Racine.&#13;
This coupon book is full 0£2-£or-1 discount coupons that you can really use! The coupons&#13;
are good on everything from sporting events and movies to fine dining and theater tickets.&#13;
There are also national discounts on travel, hotels, airline tickets and more! The&#13;
book makes a great Christman gift, too!&#13;
The cost of the book is $35.00. And you can recoup this in no time. For example, the&#13;
$24,00in free gas at Clark and Kwik Trip and the $12,00off at the Spinning Wheel&#13;
restaurant alone will pay for the cost of the book. Plus, your purchase through Big&#13;
Brothers/Big Sisters helps the agencyraise funds needed to match kids with adult volunteer&#13;
Big Brothers and Big Sisters.&#13;
Purchase your Entertainment Coupon Book today by calling Big BrotherslBig&#13;
Sisters at 637-7625. Big BrotherslBig Sisters is a non-profit, youth-serving organization,&#13;
and a member of Big BrotherslBig Sisters of America and Racine United Way and&#13;
the Burlington United Fund, ,&#13;
Free Blood Pressure Screenings&#13;
The American Red Cross Lakeshores Chapter offers monthly free blood pressure&#13;
screenings. Times and dates remaining in 1996 are: noon to 2:00 p.m. on the fourth&#13;
Mondayof the month, September 23, October28, and November25.&#13;
Screenings take place in the lower level classroom of the Lakeshores Chapter 4521&#13;
Taylor Ave., in Racine. No appointments are necessary. '&#13;
Definition: INTE::RNET\in-ter-net\ n [ME web fro]&#13;
~:_Away to communicate with other students while&#13;
giving the appearance of doing something productive.&#13;
. R~d Light Distnct (Se~): LINT (Music)&#13;
CHA~- (Meaningless ConversatIon) SChOlarships: (Money)&#13;
www.takeme.com&#13;
an ONLINE student cOlTlmunily&#13;
moer 19, 1996.&#13;
Foreign Fam Festival&#13;
Si.xteen err'toica Ily-acclaimed for,eigRn'b""ThfilmsS inclUding . -Th White Balloon" "Adam s I, e ecret ofRaon "PersuasIOn e 'M S t" d"Tw F'&#13;
I . h ""Be IIe' de Jour " "The Flower of y ecre an a nends'&#13;
W~IiSll,be shown as part' of the 15, th annual Foreign Film Series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkslde.&#13;
Season ticket holders have the option of viewing the films during&#13;
one 0f r' our screenings' . Thursdays and AlFlrifdialys 'aItI b7:30 p,m"&#13;
Satur days at 8 P .m' and Sundays at 2 p.m, ms.Wk1 e shownin&#13;
h UW-P kside Union Cinema Theatre. Season tic et holders will&#13;
tbeearallowed to bring a guest to three showi.ngs at no additi onaI charge.&#13;
The series includes films from England, Russia, Italy~ India,&#13;
Spain, United States and New Zealand. Films not ill Enghsh will&#13;
have subtitles,&#13;
Featured in this year's schedule is the APU Trilogy, a work by&#13;
Ravi Shankar and restored through the efforts of the Merchant and&#13;
Ivory Foundations, The works trace the hero's life from birth to manhood.&#13;
Together the films have been hailed as one of the richest viewing&#13;
experiences in the history of cinema,&#13;
THE ILLUSTRATED BIBLE&#13;
Does God 'Tempt' Us?&#13;
....:Every perfect gift comes from above, from the Father of&#13;
the ll.glusof heaven. With him there is no variation, no piny of&#13;
passing shadows. ,.&#13;
-James 1:17&#13;
What's wron~ with thinking that occasionally God "tempts-&#13;
~ ~olest c::faith? ~~. says St. James: it is dangerous to feel&#13;
a W8Y~ . ause we risk seemg ourselves as innocent victims&#13;
of a sadistic and tormenting God. Worse yet. it gives us a&#13;
chance to show responsibility for our actions onto God's&#13;
~~o~lders. 8 sort of reverse twist on the old "Devil made me do&#13;
It Idea ', True faith involves accepting responsibility for our&#13;
own actions. Only then can we understand God's forgiveness.&#13;
Cl996 by King Fealurcs Synd.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
.... ....,.~~~"""'(,. a gay mannus&#13;
iV 5E.A5OI.l and gay men suffer.&#13;
mosr R£AUVSTlNK!&#13;
Faculty and Students&#13;
featured in Art Walk&#13;
A University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty member and several graduates are featured in the&#13;
Sixth Street Art Walk on Saturday, September 21, in downtown Racine.&#13;
Participating businesses, each within a short walk of each other and identified by balloons outside&#13;
their storefronts, hold a day-long open house starting at 10 a.m. with receptions for the artists or&#13;
book signings in each business starting at 6 p.m. until closing.&#13;
Parkside talent is featured at The Old Book Corner, 312 6th St. which. celebrates Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with a collection of 19th Century harbor survey maps and engravings of the cities' and&#13;
the work of Parkside professor Dennis Bayuzick and Parkside graduate Gabriela Pettit. They form&#13;
the Kenosha-based Purple Parable Press. Several other Parkside graduates are participating&#13;
including Michael Schumacher, who is now a free-lance writer, and will autograph his books on llIo&#13;
Eric Clapton and Phil Ochs.&#13;
Racine poet and Parkside English and History major, Elizabeth Katch; will autograph her latest&#13;
book appearance. Susan McIntyre, an actress who majored in Dramatic Arts at Parkside will sing&#13;
folk songs in the evening.&#13;
Other stops on the Art Walk include: Brandt's Jewelers, 207 6th St. featuring unique pottery of&#13;
Julie Schwartz whose work includes hand coiled, raku, and Native American.&#13;
Ace &amp; Bubba's Treasure Hunters, 218 6th St. features ,Joyce ottum's watercolors. Vintage&#13;
Jewelers Ltd. 403 6th St. showcases the work of six local artists: watercolors by Alice Grudzinski,&#13;
Carla Burks, Lyle Peters, Ed and Don Donowski and space art and oils by 'Ibm Hunt. Centre City,&#13;
418 6th St. offers a combined show of drawings, paintings and photography by Vincent E.&#13;
Gonzales and Denise Zingg. The Cobblestone Ltd. 415 6th St. has gathered the work of nine&#13;
artists for a special showing. Floral watercolors by Mary Bur-ant, blown glass by Dave Drewek, 3-&#13;
dimensional ceramics by Monne Haug, hand-turned wood vessels by Larry Jameson, pottery by&#13;
Kevin Pearson, handmade paper by Georgia Kroll and Helen Rusk, fiber art by Nancy Justus, and&#13;
transparent watercolors by Jean Thielen. Flowers by Walter, 503 6th St. offers a variety oflocal&#13;
artists including works by Janie Hostings, Barbara Salman, Michael Nitsch, Jean Rognlie, Arth&#13;
Grebetz, M.J. Lorentzen, Rubon Pulda, Marj Lacock and M.P. Marion.&#13;
l1omEWORK?_ SiLlD'lING? ..&#13;
liJEtL 1: Am VERY PROUD&#13;
OF~ 601\l! ".....n--,&#13;
I Walk Because ...&#13;
lam&#13;
a woman of the suburbs,&#13;
securely nestled in a row of fine&#13;
houses,&#13;
a faithful one-man woman&#13;
happily married&#13;
to an adoring one-woman man,&#13;
lovingly nurturing&#13;
two beautiful children&#13;
dressed in the latest styles&#13;
and educated in quality schools,&#13;
merrily following the current&#13;
trends&#13;
and surrounding myself&#13;
with many fine friends&#13;
who are just like me...&#13;
lam&#13;
a woman of the suburbs,&#13;
and I am&#13;
walking for AIDS.&#13;
People look at me askance&#13;
and ask me&#13;
"why?".&#13;
I tell them ...&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because Ihave known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a womanand&#13;
women suffer.&#13;
I walk Tor AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a gay manand&#13;
gay men suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a straight manand&#13;
straigh] men suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a teen-agerand&#13;
teen-agers suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have know and loved&#13;
a childand&#13;
children suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS'&#13;
because Ihave known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a babyand&#13;
babies suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and .&#13;
loved&#13;
a God of Love, Acceptance, and&#13;
Mercy&#13;
falsely accused of being a&#13;
god of wrath, exclusion, and&#13;
retributionand&#13;
God suffers.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because&#13;
Death is my enemy&#13;
and the ease of suffering&#13;
is my calling-because&#13;
in reality,&#13;
lAM MORE&#13;
than just a sheltered&#13;
woman of the suburbs-&#13;
I AM AWOMAN - GAY MAN -&#13;
STRAIGHT MAN - TEENAGERCHILD&#13;
AND BABY&#13;
OF GOD&#13;
ALL ...&#13;
AND I SUFFER.&#13;
by Mary Ann Logic&#13;
Logic is co-chairing an AIDS&#13;
WALK WISCONSIN team from&#13;
St. Edward's Parish in Racine.&#13;
She is also a student at UW·&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
TODAV'S iiJ~ C&#13;
Aurora&#13;
HealthCare&#13;
M , __ ',11 ~ ~ ~ E E&#13;
JOURNAL SENTINEl&#13;
~WKTI Favorite Music. Most Fun.&#13;
UB UNITED AIRLINES&#13;
-&#13;
"'l7Jber 19, 1996·page~&#13;
Voting&#13;
Day Is&#13;
Near:·Are&#13;
You&#13;
Ready?&#13;
Observations: What We Are Missing&#13;
arrangement I defraud you, so what. Aftekrall, tl n:e';:yd ::~:&#13;
money to make a ns y.ven ur. '&#13;
iustified my means. This attitude ends&#13;
with either a surivial of the fittest mentality&#13;
or anarchy (as in the Bible "every&#13;
man did that which seem right unto&#13;
him"). Either one is socially and morally&#13;
repugnant.&#13;
One thing that worries me about society rightC{fK.~&#13;
now is its lack of a spiritual foundation. I find that"J;&#13;
as I get older I gain ever greater solace ~om ID!!';:1t,'-&#13;
faith. Yet, if you have faith in a higher being, or 1ft,::::?:'&#13;
you belive that maybe, just maybe your existance&#13;
on earth is due to more than random chance, a&#13;
large society considers you a religious kook. Why?&#13;
Is that what we have been called on as&#13;
If you look closely, you can find some people who human beings to be? I think and hope&#13;
sense than all is not well. In the past six months I not. I would rather live a life that counts&#13;
.have noted that Georgie Ann Gyer, Ellen for something more. I would like to see&#13;
Goodman, George WIn and a handful of othe~s one of our politicians sink the money,&#13;
have bemoaned the lack of spiritual guideposts In time and resources into making the&#13;
society. New York Times columnist Maureen u~ban hellholes of this nation's cities liv-&#13;
Dowd has written several pieces recently wonder- . able. My God, if we can go to the moon&#13;
mg about where this nation is heading and if some- C.J. Nelson, Columnist we can sure as hell find where to fix this&#13;
thing is missing. open and oozing wound. Nuts to a 15 percent tax cut. or how&#13;
wonderful Bill Clinton is.&#13;
Aperson's existence is about more than just how much power&#13;
he can amass. Bill Clinton says he feels our pain, yet to quote&#13;
the Bible yet again "a double-minded man is unstable in all&#13;
things, who can trust him?" The Bible also talks about a&#13;
nation's shame in how it treats its downtrodden. It exaults a&#13;
leader of quality and integrity. This is more than just rel~gious&#13;
zealotry. Maybe if we as a nation had not gone on a sel~-lndulgent&#13;
binge for the last thirty years, we .would not b~ reaping the&#13;
seeds that we have sown to the whirlwind. There IS a good and&#13;
necessary place for spirtuality in the nation. It is a salt that s~asones&#13;
society. Without it we lose our flavor and our way. Think&#13;
about it. Talk to you next week.&#13;
Arecent poll shows that most members of the baby boom generation&#13;
seem to have what best can be described as a blase attitude&#13;
concerning drugs and their childrens' use thereof. Actually&#13;
I'm not surprised the Boomer generation is one of the most self&#13;
-centered generation in this nation's history. Instant gr~tifi~ation&#13;
and situational ethics are all that seems to count. Fidelity&#13;
__to a mate, honesty and integrity in ones' business dealings, or&#13;
keeping ones words are all relative. Lie and cheat all you want&#13;
as long as you mean welL&#13;
This nation cannot help but suffer in an era of rampant relativism.&#13;
If all things are only relative, then the following logic&#13;
applies. You give me money to invest for you. If during this&#13;
Maria's Melange: It's Nice To Be&#13;
VVoman&#13;
When does a woman 'become&#13;
woman?&#13;
Is it when her young body shows the&#13;
first signs of reproductive growth? Has&#13;
she become a woman then? Or what&#13;
about when she has her first menstrual&#13;
cycle? Does she qualify at THAT point?&#13;
Is she a woman when her hips decide to&#13;
curve and her breasts make their presence&#13;
known? How about when she turns&#13;
eighteen? Isn't that supposed to signify&#13;
adulthood? Maybe when she's had her&#13;
first love or her first sexual encounter?&#13;
. Is that when it happens? Surely she is&#13;
woman when she weds. Or is she? Of&#13;
course, only a woman can give birth to&#13;
children, but is that true? WIlen does a&#13;
woman reach a place that is called&#13;
"woman?" When does she know, when&#13;
does she feel it?&#13;
When I was sixteen, I had a body&#13;
that told me and the world, I was&#13;
woman. I was reckless, careless and had&#13;
no clue ...but I thought I did. When I was&#13;
eighteen, I was very proud to say, "I'm&#13;
eighteen," because then, everyone would&#13;
know I was woman. I was anxious, inexperienced&#13;
and had no clue ...but .{&#13;
thought I did. When I was twenty-one&#13;
and had perfected the art of saying "yes"&#13;
to men and "no" to myself, I thought I&#13;
was in charge, I thought I was woman.&#13;
When I was twenty-three and I took&#13;
someone else's name and lost my own, I&#13;
felt certain that that rite of passage&#13;
made me woman. But again, I was&#13;
wrong. When I was twenty-four, I would&#13;
trip over myself trying to please my husband,&#13;
my neighbors, my family and&#13;
friends. Wben I was twenty-five and my&#13;
husband took me from my childhood&#13;
roots in Florida and brought me to&#13;
Wisconsin, I thought, "Only a woman&#13;
would support her husband's decision to&#13;
move, putting up no fuss and lending me&#13;
no opinion," but that wasn't true. When I&#13;
was twenty-seven and knew how to cook&#13;
a gourmet meal for a dinner party of&#13;
twelve, sew a button on a shirt in two&#13;
minutes flat, do one month's worth of&#13;
grocery shopping in under one hour and&#13;
with only one hundred dollars then proceed&#13;
to the bedroom for another of life's&#13;
rituals with my husband, I thought I&#13;
was woman, but I was wrong. When I&#13;
was twenty-eight and learned how to&#13;
perfect a fake smile, sexual gratification&#13;
and interest in what others were saying,&#13;
it hit me. I knew something was off; I&#13;
knew my supposed "womaness" had&#13;
NEVER been in place. I turned inward.&#13;
All of a sudden, I started realizing that&#13;
my fantasy of what was woman had been&#13;
imposed on me by family, friends,&#13;
strangers and society's view of my gender&#13;
roles. That's when my true self&#13;
began emerging. I began listening to my&#13;
own voice instead of everyone else's. I&#13;
started asking myself, "What do YOU&#13;
think, Maria?" I began looking at my&#13;
relationships, all my relationships, differently.&#13;
As a result, I lost many friends,&#13;
family members and parts of my marriage.&#13;
It turns out, they didn't want to&#13;
know someone who had a mind of her&#13;
own, who didn't care to ask permission&#13;
anymore. I had surrounded myself with&#13;
people who loved me as long as I was&#13;
tending to them and not myself. I guess&#13;
that's what I was taught: a woman takes&#13;
care of the home, the husband. the&#13;
housework. ..but not herself. What a terrible&#13;
lesson.&#13;
In a few weeks I'll be thirty. And,&#13;
although I see perky, young "girls" walking&#13;
to and fro about the campus, I must&#13;
smile ...because I see that they think they&#13;
have all the answers ...but they don't.&#13;
Students who are interested&#13;
in voting in the Nov. 5 election&#13;
can register at the polls on&#13;
Election Day. Students who live&#13;
in the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide residence halls can&#13;
vote at the Somer's Fire Station&#13;
Number 2, 818 12th St. Ynu&#13;
must provide appropriate identification&#13;
(e.g. driver's license)&#13;
and proof of residency (e.g. a&#13;
utility bill with current&#13;
address). Qualified student voters&#13;
can cast their votes in the&#13;
Nov. 5 election for both national&#13;
(President and&#13;
Congress persons) and state candidates&#13;
(state senators, state&#13;
representatives, etc.), Any student&#13;
who is a U.S. citizen and at&#13;
least eighteen years of age but&#13;
who won't have ten days of residency&#13;
by Nov. 5 can still vote in&#13;
the presidential election, but&#13;
must sign an oath that he/she&#13;
hasn't voted in another voting&#13;
district in this election and can&#13;
only vote for President.&#13;
I smile because I finally know&#13;
how to give myself what I need&#13;
and know how to say. "to hell&#13;
with everyone else." I'm no&#13;
longer caught up in what society&#13;
thinks I should be doing.&#13;
Society hands out poor lessons&#13;
all the time. I don't take orders&#13;
from people anymore and even&#13;
find myself giving them from&#13;
time to time. I've given all of&#13;
my loved ones ultimatums, not&#13;
because I'm a bitch, but&#13;
because I'm done being a doormat.&#13;
They've all receded. I've&#13;
learned how to truly laugh hard&#13;
and feel it throughout my body&#13;
and into my soul, I've come to&#13;
appreciate the notion of a tender&#13;
kiss as opposed to a night of&#13;
sex with someone named&#13;
"Louie." I enjoy waking up and&#13;
doing exactly the opposite of&#13;
what it was I'd planned to do&#13;
that day. I don't cry over everything&#13;
anymore; I just move on.&#13;
Instead of trying to convince&#13;
people to see my views, I simply&#13;
voice my opinion and walk&#13;
... Maria's Melange,&#13;
cont. on page 11&#13;
--&#13;
.Scott Malik&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
I was at a party with my&#13;
ex (she wasn't my ex at the&#13;
time, but it was shortly after&#13;
this most wonderful incident&#13;
that she became my ex), and&#13;
we both had a little too much&#13;
to drink. It wasn't long before&#13;
I got accused of everything&#13;
under the sun from wanting&#13;
to sleep with a girl at the&#13;
party to being a big asshole to&#13;
being the one on the grassy&#13;
knoll in Dallas. The thing&#13;
about this particular fight,&#13;
however, is that it wasn't&#13;
between my girlfriend and I.&#13;
We had a crowd of many.&#13;
Someof whom could be heard&#13;
scalping front row seats and&#13;
selling binoculars to those&#13;
unfortunate enough to have&#13;
arrived late.&#13;
Many of you female readers&#13;
will probably say I&#13;
deserved it because I flirted or&#13;
something. (I didn't.) Many of&#13;
my faithful, football-watch-&#13;
He Said, She Said:&#13;
Fighting in Public&#13;
ing, beer-drinking-and-fartin&#13;
g- 0 n -the -c 0 lie h-e n - a-&#13;
Sunday-afternoon manly&#13;
Army supporters will say I&#13;
should have left her there.&#13;
Well, that's what I did. But&#13;
then as I crawled into bed&#13;
something hit me: I was going&#13;
to remember this and she,&#13;
most likely, wouldn't. And it&#13;
was to be my ass if she woke&#13;
up in someone's backyard. So&#13;
I went back and got her and&#13;
she was only more smashed.&#13;
Kids, that was myexperience&#13;
with public hostility and&#13;
it was not good. I can't say it&#13;
is the most comfortable thing&#13;
on Earth. It is difficult to&#13;
watch people scream at each&#13;
other and reveal secrets about&#13;
how the other shaves his (or&#13;
her) back. She throws anything&#13;
within reach at you and&#13;
you have to act like a goalie&#13;
for a hockey team and dodge&#13;
for your life! Keep your cool,&#13;
guys. After all, there are only&#13;
so many things she can whip&#13;
at you at light speed that you&#13;
can't see coming as long as&#13;
you keep a safe distance.&#13;
And then again, from the&#13;
other side, when you are so&#13;
angry with your loved one&#13;
that you just want to deal&#13;
with it NOW you don't really&#13;
care if your mother was there.&#13;
And if anyone cares to contradict&#13;
that, well then you have&#13;
never been that angry.&#13;
Seriously, with great&#13;
anger comes great love. Only&#13;
those closest to us have the&#13;
ability to get-to us that strongly.&#13;
That's the thought to hold&#13;
on to when you can't look her&#13;
in the eyes. Remember how&#13;
much she means to you and&#13;
think of the first time you&#13;
ever saw her. Just love her.&#13;
• Morgan Harcey&#13;
Ranger Columnist&#13;
Here's the scenario. You're out&#13;
with a bunch of your friends when&#13;
two of them, who happen to be dating,&#13;
start to fight. I don't mean to&#13;
have an "argument" or to "quarrel."&#13;
I mean knock 'em down, ring&#13;
the bell for the next round type of&#13;
fight. As a friend, there is nothing&#13;
more uncomfortable than having&#13;
to listen to it. Especially if one or&#13;
both of them start looking to you&#13;
for answers, approvals, or anything&#13;
else. The worst is when to&#13;
step in; or if you should step in at&#13;
aiL&#13;
What I want to know is, why is&#13;
it a necessity for the couple to start&#13;
fighting right there in public? I&#13;
know, some of you might say, "If I&#13;
have something to say, I am going&#13;
to say it and I don't care who's&#13;
around!" First off, nobody likes to&#13;
hear two friends fight. No, I take&#13;
that back. Nobody likes to hear&#13;
anyone fight. Ninety-nine percent&#13;
of tbe people I know feel on edge&#13;
when they hear someone arguing&#13;
and feel even worse when it happens&#13;
between two friends. Unless&#13;
the fighting becomes a weekly ceremony;&#13;
in that case, I would have&#13;
to suggest blowtorch the chain&#13;
because after awhile it gets a little&#13;
dull. Plus, it must get a little&#13;
embarassing when you hear your&#13;
friends tell people, "They always&#13;
fight like that." Second, you could&#13;
risk friendships by trying to get&#13;
other friends involved. Example, a&#13;
situation where you normally hear&#13;
something like this: "Rick said ......"&#13;
or "Tiffany says ....". Who really&#13;
appreciates that?&#13;
Lastly, I don't know one couple&#13;
whom have quietly gone off to be in&#13;
private to fight. Not one couple has&#13;
ever .stepped away to go yell in&#13;
their. car. It's almost like a fight&#13;
would not be the same without&#13;
your friends around. Has anyone&#13;
wondered if fights are less dramatic&#13;
when there is no one around to&#13;
witness it? It is like watching some&#13;
sick contest that no one wants to&#13;
lose. He cuts her down to make&#13;
himself look macho. She does the&#13;
same. She loses her emotional control.&#13;
He manipulates her without&#13;
remorse. "(This does not mean&#13;
there are no women out there who&#13;
manipulate. I've seen some true&#13;
goddesses.)&#13;
In closing, I'd like to suggest&#13;
that if you and your beau tend to&#13;
have a lot of boxing matches that&#13;
you consider your friends. Maybe&#13;
wait until later to fight or if you&#13;
can't hold it in, vacate the preraises.&#13;
Don't ruin everyone else's good&#13;
time. For friends, I would say next&#13;
time a couple, whom just happen&#13;
to be your friends, get into a kick&#13;
boxing match, just tum around,&#13;
and walk away. They should have&#13;
the courtesy not to make everyone&#13;
else uncomfortable.&#13;
Maria's Melange cont.&#13;
from page I 0 _&#13;
away. I examine people more closely&#13;
now and am not afraid to tell&#13;
someone what I think about them&#13;
or anything else. I can still cook,&#13;
but now I don't feel like my acceptance&#13;
into the world of 'womaness"&#13;
requires me to do so. I enjoy conversation&#13;
more now than ever before.&#13;
When I was twenty-one, I didn't&#13;
know how to listen or how to be&#13;
heard. I'm much more sensual now&#13;
and allow myself to feel sexy and&#13;
see that it is not naughty, just&#13;
woman. I know what I like, what I&#13;
don't like and won't accept anything&#13;
less. I'm selfish now, but still&#13;
enjoy giving. I wear what I want,&#13;
do what I want, go where I' want&#13;
and' although I tell some where I'm&#13;
headed, I don't feel as though I'm&#13;
seeking approval from anyone to go&#13;
there. I like getting in the faces of&#13;
people who challenge me; they&#13;
never expect it from a "woman." I&#13;
enjoy showing them that I have, in&#13;
addition to breasts, a mind of my&#13;
own. I am happy to go places by&#13;
myself now, I don't need a man. I&#13;
just happen to choose to be with&#13;
one. All of a sudden, I have choices.&#13;
I feel like I've been liberated from&#13;
my enslaved gender- roles. I choose&#13;
to be what I want, I don't just&#13;
blindly do it because of society. It's&#13;
nice to finally inderstanf myself.&#13;
It's nice to HAVEand MAKE choices.&#13;
It's nice to be woman.&#13;
Get Your Butt Out&#13;
There and Vote!&#13;
-Corey Mandley&#13;
Ranger Columnist&#13;
. Well it's about that time&#13;
for all Americans over the age&#13;
of eighteen to use a powerful&#13;
tool that shapes our society.&#13;
That's right: it's time to vote.&#13;
Now I know what you're&#13;
thinking ."1 don't need to vote,&#13;
what can one stupid vote do?"&#13;
Now, imagine if over 20 million&#13;
Americans took that same attitude&#13;
of "my vote doesn't matter".&#13;
Well, it does happen and&#13;
usually. future generations&#13;
usually end up paying the&#13;
price for such carelessness.&#13;
t Let's look to the past and&#13;
see how much voting meant to&#13;
people. Being of African&#13;
descent, I take voting very&#13;
seriously. My people fought&#13;
since the times of slavery to&#13;
have the right to vote. African&#13;
Americans were beaten and&#13;
even killed in order to be&#13;
d'enied the privilege of voting.&#13;
Ask yourself this question.t'Ia&#13;
the right to vote really worth&#13;
dying over?" It amazes me that&#13;
even after the 1965 Voting&#13;
Rights Act which stated that&#13;
"sex nor race will not have the&#13;
effect of denying or abridging&#13;
the right to vote," I find it very&#13;
hard to believe that even after&#13;
all the hard work and devotion&#13;
that people of all colors put&#13;
into the struggle for the right&#13;
to vote, many today just don't&#13;
care.&#13;
In the present ,voting is a&#13;
very powerful instrument from&#13;
which people can be heard.&#13;
More than ever people need to&#13;
'wake up and look at what our&#13;
nation is facing. There are&#13;
many issues of concerns that&#13;
everyone must face. Welfare&#13;
reform is a hot button issue.&#13;
Many believe that everyone&#13;
should' work in order to survive.&#13;
But others feel that in&#13;
order to dismantle welfare&#13;
there has to be real job opportunities&#13;
after welfare is gone&#13;
or else thousands of children&#13;
will go even deeper into poverty.&#13;
Education cutbacks is a definite&#13;
major in today's politics.&#13;
If more federal cutback laws&#13;
on education are passed, will -&#13;
that be denying a college education&#13;
to teens who cannot&#13;
afford it? Or will such cutbacks&#13;
help reduce Americas already&#13;
tremendous deficit. If you&#13;
don't use your vote on key&#13;
issues such as these .then you&#13;
don't really give a damn what&#13;
happens to the children of the&#13;
future.&#13;
We, as young people, need&#13;
to wake up and smell the coffee.&#13;
If we don't speak our&#13;
minds by using our votes then&#13;
our future looks very gloomy.&#13;
Think about it . Twenty years&#13;
from now our generation will,&#13;
be running this country. If we&#13;
don't intervene with the times&#13;
now at hand then .we are giving&#13;
up on our future. We desperately&#13;
need to stand as one&#13;
as say "We shall control our&#13;
own destinies." In order to&#13;
make this country better we&#13;
have to use our right to vote.&#13;
But in order to use our vote we&#13;
must first register to vote. If&#13;
you don't know how, go to a&#13;
post office and find out how.&#13;
Also, in order to vote you&#13;
should familiarize yourself&#13;
with the issues at hand today,&#13;
If we can get the vote out then&#13;
our voice will be heard. We&#13;
must remember that the&#13;
power in this country is in the&#13;
hands of those who learn how&#13;
to use the system.&#13;
I&#13;
Alternativ•e&#13;
or Individual?&#13;
Amy L. Stindt&#13;
P. ,~nr (',.,1 .&#13;
What is "alternative?" Is it something that defies all "normalcy"&#13;
and enters a style that attracts the, dare I say it&#13;
Freaks? Or is it teenyboppers trying to be so different and&#13;
individ~alistic that, well, they're all the same? I don't know,&#13;
though I wish I did. I always cringed an,d still do whe? someone&#13;
labels me alternative by saying "Youd like him, he s alternative!"&#13;
So? What are the qualifications of this soul? Am I&#13;
alternative because I have my nose pierced and only shop at&#13;
used clothing stores with vintage clothing? Or am I ju~t economically&#13;
smart (minus the $35 I spent for the hole m my&#13;
nose?) ,&#13;
Now that basically every single person has, or doesn t&#13;
have a tatoo branded on them, I guess everyone has made an&#13;
attempt to enter the freakish world of alternativism.&#13;
If alternative has become so mainstream please, I beg of you,&#13;
refrain from titleing me that. However, I'll still keep buying&#13;
the nose rings and shopping for outfits under $10 that's just&#13;
me. It isn't a label I want to be categorized under. It's a personal&#13;
statement.&#13;
Sick of those endless one-liners and mind games? ADVEKTUROUS FEIIALB KEW TO AREA&#13;
Q: Tired of playing "bored"games every Friday nite? SWF, 21, 5'7", athletic, SSM, 22, 6'1", hope-&#13;
Want to find your dream date or just a friend? social drinker. seeking M less romantic, hand-&#13;
A: CU!7EJI rDJletp;I;! 20-25 who loves to some, seeking lady 20-&#13;
dance, qUality time, and 30 mature, outgoing,&#13;
sense of humor a plus! and friendship first.&#13;
There are an estimated 5,000 students who attend UW-Parkside every semester. Now is your chance to&#13;
finally meet some of them. This opportunity is only offered to current Parkside students and will operate&#13;
totally in private! How? If you have an e-mail account, your already half way in finding your ideal date&#13;
or a friend. All you have to do is fill out an application and pay a small processing fee for the entire semesterl&#13;
This service will continue as long as there are students at Parkside. Ranger Ne",. will not be responsible&#13;
for any actions, nor personal issues that may arise among CREATE A DATEI subscribers.&#13;
TO APPLY, TAKE A WALK OVER TO THE RANGER NEWS OFFICE (D-139C&#13;
WYLLIE HALL) AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION TODAY SO YOU COULD&#13;
POSSIBILY TAKE A ROMANTIC MIDNIGHT STROLL THIS EVENINGI&#13;
-&#13;
"Let US find that w.et:itll someone for YOU!"&#13;
one's interests.&#13;
- Check out one of the many social events around campus, such as dances and&#13;
movies in the campus theater.&#13;
- Take a stroll through many of the trails at neighboring "Pet's Park" and check&#13;
out your favorite tree. ' .&#13;
- Join the Ranger Newspaper Staff ...we are always looking for help.&#13;
- Head down to main place and catch up with your friends while joining the&#13;
famous spectator sport of people watching.&#13;
- Check out one of the outstanding Noon Concerts at CART D-IBB. There are&#13;
guest performances as well as those from people right here at UWP. The concerts&#13;
last one hour so you can always make it to your one o'clock class. Please&#13;
no food or drinks allowed.&#13;
- Join one of the many intramural sports teams here at parkside. For more&#13;
info check out the bulletin board just as you come up the steps from the&#13;
union parking lot. -&#13;
- Go out to your car between classes and pretend to leave. Then go back in to&#13;
class. You are sure to be entertained!&#13;
- Support your classmates and your school by attending a sporting .event on&#13;
campus. Parkside has some exciting Men's and Woman's teams this year!&#13;
Whatever you do this semester, be sure to take just a little time to&#13;
get involved on campus and have a little fun, just make sure you get a little&#13;
studying done on the side.&#13;
Geology Students Explore&#13;
the Grand Canyon&#13;
-Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Students in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's GEOL 0370/0570 course (Field Studies in&#13;
Regional Geology) took a trip to the Grand Canyon this summer. Led by Dr. Gerald Fowler, professor&#13;
of Geology, the trip's aim was to extend beyond the classroom learning experience.&#13;
Before the trip began, students were required to write a paper that was turned into a booklet&#13;
and followed throughout the trip. There was also a workbook to be completed in order to receive&#13;
the three credits.&#13;
The group left on June 15 and headed out on the highway for two weeks of geological education.&#13;
Along the way to the Grand Canyon the explorers made educational stops at museums and&#13;
campgrounds to enhance their learning. After four days of travel the group arrived at the Grand&#13;
Canyon.&#13;
Allison Barta, a geology major, was in awe of the size and age of the canyon upon first sight.&#13;
"1 was completely awestruck," Barta said with excitement, "The fishnu schist was my favorite&#13;
part; it. was all shinney. I got to walk on a lava flow. we saw rocks with images carved into them,&#13;
and it was so huge and old!"&#13;
Jack Miles enjoyed being away from civilization.&#13;
"We spent days in the canyon without being bothered by phones and other people," Miles stated.&#13;
"The climb out was the hardest part," claimed Barta, "But then when you got back up to the&#13;
top, you just looked down and thought 'I can't believe that I was down there."&#13;
What Liz Bienemann took out of the experience was that she could succeed at anything she set&#13;
her mind to.&#13;
"Yourealize that you can get by on your own," Bienemann said. "You drive yourself to do things&#13;
that you didn't think were possible. It&#13;
After their exploration of the Grand Canyon the group headed back home, making more educational&#13;
stops while discussing geology along the way.&#13;
Bienemann added, "Dr. Fowler did a terrific job; he took the time to lead the students, and for&#13;
that I thank him."&#13;
School Daze&#13;
-Aaron Kapellusch&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
By now you have been rudely awakened by the reality that you can't sleep&#13;
until 1 o'clock in the afternoon, but instead you must get up at the crack of&#13;
dawn to make it to your 8 o'clock class. Yes, those lazy, hazy summer days of&#13;
fun and sun are just about as long gone as your savings account is after paying&#13;
tuition and buying books.&#13;
Now it's time to buckle down and hit the books for another semester.&#13;
Whether you are an incoming freshman just starting your college career or ~n&#13;
old pro who has been here for a while. getting back into the groove of school IS&#13;
never easy. But there is hope. With those long hours of studying and reading,&#13;
you deserve to have some fun.&#13;
There are many things on campus to do to take your mind off o~homework.&#13;
Some are blatantly obvious, like the Rec Center under the Umon Square.&#13;
There are countless other things to do on campus to help maintain a healthy&#13;
balance of school and recreation. Here is just a small list of things you can do&#13;
around campus to make your Parkside experience a gr~at one! . . .&#13;
- Keep in touch with your' friends around the world with E-maIl.ItI~ quick,&#13;
easy, and costs about 32 cents less than a stamp. (Just beware ...usmg the&#13;
internet can become very addictiye!) .&#13;
• Join one of the various clubs on campus, there is just about one to meet every&#13;
Top Video Rentals Top 10 Singles&#13;
I.12 Monkeys starring Bruce Wil- I.Los Del Rio "Macarena" (RCA)&#13;
lis (Fox Video - Rated: R) Last Last Week: No. I&#13;
Week: No.2 2. New Edition "Hit Me Off"&#13;
2. Broken Arrow John Travolta (MCA) New Entry&#13;
(FoxVideo - R) No. I 3. Donna Lewis "I Love You AI-&#13;
3. City Hall Al Pacino (Columbia ways Forever" (Atlantic) No.2&#13;
- R) No.5 4. Celine Dion "It's All Coming&#13;
4. Executive Decision Kurt Rus- Back To Me Now" (550 Music) No.&#13;
sell (Warner - R) 14 5&#13;
5. Heat Robert DeNiro (Warner - 5. LL Cool J "Loungin' " (Def&#13;
R) No.4 Jam/Mercury) No.3&#13;
6. Mr, Holland's Opus Richard 6. No Mercy "Where Do You 00"&#13;
Dreyfuss (Buena Vista - PO) No.6 (Arista) No.7&#13;
7. Dead Man Walking Susan 7. Quad City OJ's "C'mon N'&#13;
Sarandon (PolyGram - R) No.7 Ride It (The Train)" (Atlantic) No.4&#13;
8. The Juror Demi Moore 8. Pearl Jam "Who You Are"&#13;
(Columbia TriStar - R) No.9 (Epic) No.8'&#13;
9. Rumble In The Bronx Jackie 9. SWV "Use Your Heart" (RCA)&#13;
Chan (Turner - R) No.7 No.9&#13;
10. Happy Gilmore Adam 10. 'G1oria Estefan "Reach"&#13;
Sandler (MCA/Universal - PO-B) (Epic) No. 10&#13;
No.8&#13;
I I. Get Shorty John Travolta&#13;
(MGM/UA - R) No. II&#13;
12. Diabolique Sharon Stone&#13;
(Warner - R) No. 10&#13;
13. Leaving Las Vegas Nicolas&#13;
Cage (MGM/UA - R) No. 12&#13;
14. Casino Robert De Niro&#13;
(MCA/Universal - R) No. 13&#13;
15. Black Sheep Chris Farley&#13;
(paramount - PO-B) New Entry&#13;
16. Down Periscope Kelsey&#13;
Grammer (Fox Video - PG-13)&#13;
New Entry&#13;
17. Eye For An Eye Sally Field&#13;
(Paramount - R) No. 16&#13;
18. Mighty Aphrodite Woody&#13;
Allen (Buena Vista - R) No. 17&#13;
19. Sense And Sensibility Emma&#13;
Thompson (Columbia TriStar -&#13;
PO) No. 21&#13;
20. Sabrina Harrison Ford&#13;
(Paramount- PO) No. 18&#13;
Top 10 Movies&#13;
I.The Island of Dr. Moreau starring&#13;
Val Kilmer&#13;
2. Tin Cup Kevin Costner&#13;
3. A Very Brady Sequel Shelley&#13;
Long&#13;
4. A Time To KiD Matthew Mc-&#13;
Conaughey&#13;
5. Jack Robin Williams&#13;
6. The Fan Robert DeNiro&#13;
7. Independence Day Bill&#13;
Pullman&#13;
8. Solo Mario Van Peebles&#13;
9. Emma Gwyneth Paltrow&#13;
10. She's The One Jennifer&#13;
o\nison&#13;
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Volleyball splits on&#13;
the road&#13;
-Tim Gaiser&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parks ide volleyball team completed its third week of competition&#13;
with two Great Lakes Conference matches on the road versus Quincy University Friday&#13;
September 13 and University of Missouri-St. Louis on Saturday. Quincy opened up against&#13;
the visiting Rangers by playing stingy defense and committing few errors, taking the lead in&#13;
game one 8-13, but the host squad wasn't able to sustain the offensive onslaught by the&#13;
Parkside squad and succumbed to V.W.P. 15-13. The Eagles never regained their composure&#13;
and Parkside routed the brown and gold in the next two games by scores of 15-9 and 15-8,&#13;
Junior outside hitter Leigh Eckert led the way for the Rangers tallying 16 kills. Saturday saw&#13;
UW-Parkside take on regionally ranked (#4) University of Missouri-St. Louis. The home team&#13;
was keyed up for the match and in game one disposed of the Rangers easily by a score of 6-&#13;
15. Game two saw a much more relaxed and confident Parkside team take the floor. The&#13;
Rangers held their own in game two siding out easily with U.M.S.L. until at 10-10, St. Louis&#13;
pulled away and took game 2 by a score of 10-15. Game three was more of the same, intense&#13;
volleyball by both teams. Parkside again had a chance to take the game and reestablish themselves,&#13;
but the home team came away with a hard fought win 14-16. Parkside is now 5-5 on&#13;
the season and 1-1 in Great Lakes Conference play. The Rangers next two matches are home&#13;
versus Southern Illinois-Edwardsville on Friday September 20 at 7 pm and Saturday&#13;
September 21 at 1 pm versus University of Indianapolis.&#13;
The Time is NOW for&#13;
Men's C.C.&#13;
-Brian Borkowski&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
•&#13;
It's time for recognition. The men's team is looking stronger than ever this year. This past&#13;
Saturday, the Running rangers took its young squad to the North Central Invitational. The&#13;
men placed 4th out of 15 teams. Redshirt Freshman Marshall Donnerbauer was the top finisher&#13;
for the Rangers with an 8km time of 25:40 and an 8th place finish (four of the finishers&#13;
ahead of Donnerbauer were non-collegians). Sophomore Bernie Radobicky ran a personal best&#13;
26:10 and finished 15th.&#13;
"It was a strong showing by our team, but we were a little spread out. Hopefully next we&#13;
can group it together and work off each other," said co-captain Andy Sarnow.&#13;
The Rangers will be at home on Saturday for the 18th annual Midwest Collegiate Open.&#13;
Rangers Top Seven:&#13;
8. Marshall Donnerbauer&#13;
15. Bernie Radobic&#13;
21. Andy Sarnow&#13;
28. Dave Sheriff&#13;
35. Nate Vseling&#13;
37. Brian Borkowski&#13;
41. Chris Hill&#13;
42. Shawn Burwell&#13;
25:40&#13;
26:10&#13;
26:40&#13;
26:54&#13;
27:16&#13;
27:20&#13;
27:35&#13;
27:37&#13;
Golf takes 2nd&#13;
at St. Joe Invite&#13;
oBrent Heit&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside golf team&#13;
got their season underway&#13;
Sept. 7 at the St. Joseph&#13;
Invitational with a secondplace&#13;
finish in the nine-team&#13;
meet in Indianapolis. The&#13;
only team to better the&#13;
Rangers was Indianapolis&#13;
University, who placed 10th&#13;
in the NCAA National tournament&#13;
last year, with a oneunder&#13;
par score of 287.&#13;
Indianapolis player Kensey&#13;
Snyder was medalist with a&#13;
two-under par round of 70.&#13;
Brent Heit, of River&#13;
Falls, led the Rangers with a&#13;
73, which put him fourth&#13;
overall. Rob Warmouth, of&#13;
Kenosha, followed with a 74.&#13;
Jason Vanacker, of Crystal&#13;
Lake (Ill.), fired 75. Tom&#13;
Gentz, of Beaver Dam,&#13;
rounded out the play sixcount&#13;
four scores format with&#13;
a 79, for a team total score of&#13;
301. Junior Brad Evans, of&#13;
Kenosha, has seen better&#13;
days and finished with an 81,&#13;
and Scott Anthes, of Portage,&#13;
was off his game and limped&#13;
in with an 84.&#13;
The Rangers beat Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
rivals Southern Indiana&#13;
(303), Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
(303), St. Joseph's (305), and&#13;
Lewis (313), as well as&#13;
Division I schools Butler&#13;
(311), Bethel (310), and St.&#13;
Francis (320).&#13;
The Ranger's "Bcteam"&#13;
tied St. Francis at 320. They&#13;
were led by freshman Steve&#13;
Anthes, of Portage, who&#13;
blazed a 75. Dan Baron, of&#13;
Aurora, finidhed with 78.&#13;
On Sept. 8 and 9, the&#13;
Rangers played at the&#13;
Winona Country Club, the&#13;
seventh most difficult course&#13;
in Minnesota, in the Winona&#13;
State Invitational. The&#13;
Ranger golf team tied for first&#13;
with Eau Claire with a 36-&#13;
hole team total of 633.&#13;
Rob Warmouth continued&#13;
his good play with 77-76&#13;
(153), which put him thrid&#13;
overall.&#13;
In fourth place overall was&#13;
Brent Heit with 77-77 (154).&#13;
Jason Vanacker was twelth&#13;
overall with 80-81 (161).&#13;
Scott Anthes shot 79-88 (167)&#13;
and his brother Steve shot&#13;
78-89 (167).&#13;
Jason Phillips of Winona&#13;
State was medalist with 72-&#13;
78 (150).&#13;
Other team scores were:&#13;
Winona State-639,&#13;
Concordia-658, Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering&#13;
(MSOE)-662, St. Mary's&#13;
(Minn.)-663, and Edgewood&#13;
(Wis.)-761.&#13;
The UW-Parkside team&#13;
has a strong ll-man roster&#13;
that includes, other than&#13;
those already mentioned:&#13;
John McCabe, Sheboyagen&#13;
Falls; Tim Dickison, Oak&#13;
Creek; and Brian Spindler,&#13;
Bartlett (Ill.).&#13;
The team aiso has a&#13;
group of redshirts, including:&#13;
Mike Meizen, Franklin;&#13;
Jason Skiera, Milwaukee;&#13;
Eric Scheible, Plymouth; Carl&#13;
Laehr, Racine; Derek&#13;
Anzalone, Racine; and Bob&#13;
Woodward, Racine.&#13;
The team is looking to&#13;
improve its 54-43-1 record of&#13;
last year which put them in&#13;
seventh overall in the Great&#13;
Lake Valley Conference, and&#13;
twelfth overall in District IV.&#13;
The road won't be easy, but&#13;
under the direction of secondyear&#13;
coach Walt Shirer, the&#13;
team is very optimistic.&#13;
On Sept. 16 the team will&#13;
travel to the DuPage Classic.&#13;
On Sept. 21-23, the team will&#13;
be at the Fall District IV&#13;
Tournament in Grand Valley,&#13;
Mich. In October, the golfers&#13;
will take part in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
Championship at Purdue&#13;
University.&#13;
•&#13;
Cross Country at Their&#13;
Best&#13;
eMargaret Ditchbum&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
The University of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
women's cross-country team ran solid at their&#13;
first race of the season Saturday. The flat&#13;
courseat UW-Oshkosh allowed many of the&#13;
girls to run their best time ever. which is a&#13;
great way to start off the season. Parkside&#13;
placed second out of the three schools that ran&#13;
with 51 points. UW-Oshkosh won the meet&#13;
with 17 points. UW-Oshkosh is ranked the&#13;
number one team in Division III and ran well.&#13;
HopeCollege trailed with 74 points.&#13;
5. Pam Tucker" 18:46&#13;
Major league baseball .&#13;
Playerswho have stolen 65"or more&#13;
bases and hit over 20 home runs in one&#13;
season:&#13;
Year SB HR&#13;
R. Henderson, Yankees '86 87 28&#13;
E. Davis, Reds '86 . SO 2"1hil&#13;
R. Henderson, Yankees '85 80 24':&#13;
J. Morgan, Heds 7:3,"67\26)\&#13;
R. Henderson, Athfetic,,«:1o 65 128iit;&#13;
~a~~hE~i~tr~KN~~~AS f~lf&#13;
11. Missy Shumway* 19:10&#13;
13. Jill Branner* 19:17&#13;
15. Amy Haines 19:25&#13;
17. Lisa Schaich* 19:30&#13;
19. Lisa Lewis 19:31&#13;
33. Jodi Wiersbicki* 20:21&#13;
*Best time ever&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt said that the flat course&#13;
had 27 turns and allowed for good times and a&#13;
strong effort by the entire team. "It was a good&#13;
early season meet." Jamie Roberts (266) was 36th at&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
VVomen's Soccer bows to&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
ranked University of Southern Illinois, who&#13;
topped Parkside 1-0. Goalkeeper Shelley Davis&#13;
had an outstanding performance, saving many&#13;
hard-driven shots by the Illinois attackers.&#13;
"SlUE is an excellent team and they knQlV&#13;
how to score," said UW-Parkside head coach&#13;
Oscar Suman, "Weheld them defensively, but we&#13;
just didn't keep their defensebusy enough."&#13;
Prior to the two losses, the team had better&#13;
luck earlier in the week against Rebert Morris&#13;
College, with a 7-0 victory. Goals were scored by&#13;
Melissa Lieb, Jennifer Ross, Nana Torres, Tracy&#13;
Rosiak, Natalie Weber, and Jeanette Claude.&#13;
The Rangers are looking forward to two tough&#13;
conference games this weekend, both at noon at&#13;
the Wood Road SoccerField.&#13;
Tracy Rosiak&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
It was an appropriate weekend for bad luck,&#13;
and the Parkside Women's Soccer Team experienced&#13;
it. On Saturday, the University of&#13;
Southern Indiana handed them a 2-0 loss.&#13;
Parkside was outplayed in the first half, but&#13;
came back strong in the second half.&#13;
Unfortunately, they came up empty-handed.&#13;
With key defensive players Angie Moulton, Erin&#13;
Miller, and Jeanette Claude fighting-injuries, the.&#13;
newest members of the team were expected to fill&#13;
the veterans' roles.&#13;
Sunday's -game was against nationally-&#13;
Men's Soccer trounce Trin ity; Trip against Truman&#13;
the second half. Parkside outshot the Bullgdogs 10-7 in the second half and knotted&#13;
the game at one on a goal by Jason Zitzke at 54:55. Parkside was clearing the ball&#13;
down the left side, off the flank, some 28 yards out from the goal. Zitzke battled for&#13;
the ball and caught the Truman State goal keeper off his line. The keeper could only&#13;
watch as the ball was placed beautifully in the back of the net. However, Parkside's&#13;
celebration was short-lived as four minutes later the Bulldogs capitalized on a Ranger&#13;
defensive lapse and increased their lead 2-1. With about twenty minutes left in the&#13;
game, UWP turned up the offensive pressure but-couldn't find the net. The final&#13;
score was Truman State Bulldogs 2 and your Parkside Rangers 1.&#13;
A special thanks goes out to all the fans and their support that were at the&#13;
game. Hopefully you will continue your support. Come and see the team bounce&#13;
back as they take on conference rivals Lewis University on Friday,September 20, at&#13;
4:30 p.m. and St. Joeseph's College on Sunday,September 22, at 2:00 p.m. at the&#13;
Wood Road Soccer Field.&#13;
by Craig Posselt&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
Last Saturday, the men's soccer team defeated Trinity University by a score&#13;
of 9-0. The score had resembled the scores of the team's other two matches as well,&#13;
5-1 against the University of Missouri-R~lIa and 12-0 against Lakeland University.&#13;
The Rangers have pretty much had their way with their opponents in the past three&#13;
9amesbut would soon discover why Truman State University is a formidable Division&#13;
II opponent. The Bulldogs and Rangers began at a blistering pace. Parkside&#13;
seemedto have the edge by dominating the shots on goal and corner kicks, as well&#13;
as fan support. Then, about ten minutes before halftime the Bulldogs went ahead&#13;
1-0.&#13;
While Parkside was planning their second half attack, fans were enjoying&#13;
fresh roasted pig, courtesy of Latinos Unidos, which helped bring more fans to the.&#13;
game. Down a goal, the Rangers regrouped during halftime and came out sharp ,n&#13;
Hepp's Hype Picks&#13;
-AI Heppner&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Detroit over Chicago&#13;
Kansas City over Denver&#13;
Sanders keeps the Bears reeling.&#13;
Broncos barely got by Bucs, while&#13;
Chiefs are looking strong early.&#13;
Can anyone stop the Packers?&#13;
The good news is that one team from&#13;
New York will get a win this year.&#13;
'Skins could even make the playoffs, off'&#13;
their soft schedule. A win here is huge for the organization.&#13;
Cards are simply worse.&#13;
Too many offensive weapons on the 4ger side.&#13;
The resurgence of RB Reggie Brooks lifts Bues to first victory.&#13;
Bledsoe back on track and so are the Pats.&#13;
A make or break game for the Cowboys. The 'boys make it!&#13;
Raiders need to generate more offense to pull this one out.&#13;
Eagles flying high again after taming the Lions.&#13;
Another big showdown, but Dolphins are still the team to beat&#13;
in theAFC.&#13;
Green Bay over Minnesota&#13;
N.Y. Jets over N.Y. Giants&#13;
Washington over St. Louis&#13;
New Orleans over Arizona&#13;
San Francisco over Carolina&#13;
Tampa Bay over Seattle&#13;
New England over Jacksonville&#13;
Dallas over Buffalo&#13;
Oakland over San Diego&#13;
Philadelphia over Atlanta&#13;
Miami over Indianapolis&#13;
Last Week: 9-4 (.692)&#13;
Season Thtal: 24-4 (.857)&#13;
Last Week's winner: Andy Boedecker 10-3 (.769) [You still owe me $10 though]&#13;
Outpick the Hepp&#13;
Are you ready for some foo.tball? Well, you&#13;
know the Hepp is. Now, you can test your football&#13;
knowledge against Ranger Columnist Al&#13;
Heppner and if you can beat him, then lunch is&#13;
on us.&#13;
All you have to do is turn in your NFL picks&#13;
by noon on Fridays to a folder hanging outside&#13;
the Ranger office (located next to the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe in MainPlace). Ifyou end up with a better&#13;
record then Hepp.. you will be put into a&#13;
drawing for a free lunch. The winner will&#13;
receive a coupon for a free regular sub and a&#13;
medium drink. Good luck and get pickin'.&#13;
Weather and&#13;
Winning&#13;
-AI Heppner&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Fact: The men's soccer team lost 2-1 to Truman State.&#13;
Opinion: They are super team with the worst luck.&#13;
Fact: Marriott offers brunch just like PFM.&#13;
Opinion: What happened to the Omlettes? (They were the only&#13;
good part.)&#13;
Fact: The weather in Wisconsin is not warm.&#13;
Opinion: While watching the women's soccer game on Sunday, I&#13;
went from .&#13;
sweating to freezing in a period of less than ten seconds.&#13;
Fact: The Packers won again.&#13;
Opinion: Ok, ok, ok, I admit it. Green Bay is the team to beat.&#13;
Fact: The Bears lost again.&#13;
Opinion: They're the team that's beaten.&#13;
Fact: The Union Square was supposed to open on Monday.&#13;
Opinion: Yeah, whatever!&#13;
Fact: The men's c.c. team placed 4th out of 15 teams at North&#13;
Central.&#13;
Opinion: This could be their hest team since the mid 80's.&#13;
Sports Quiz&#13;
by Larry Duncan&#13;
I. Who was International Olympic&#13;
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Summer Games?&#13;
2. What Triple Crown-winning&#13;
horse took the 1973 Belmont Stakes&#13;
by 31 lengths?&#13;
3. Who predicted he would, but&#13;
didn't, win six gold medals at the&#13;
1968 Summer Olympics?&#13;
4. What two skills make up the&#13;
winter biathlon?&#13;
5. What sport features sculls,&#13;
strokes and slides?&#13;
6. What is the nickname of the&#13;
Iowa State football team?&#13;
7. How many laps make up the&#13;
Indianapolis SOO?&#13;
.8. What sport features the fastestmoving&#13;
ball?&#13;
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•&#13;
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'25&#13;
r&#13;
A student worker at last week's Poster&#13;
Sale on the Union Bridge offered students&#13;
new designs for their dorm rooms,&#13;
Top R&amp;B/Soul&#13;
1. New Edition "Hit Me orr-&#13;
(MCA) New Entry&#13;
2. Keith Sweat "Twisted"&#13;
(Elektra) Last Week: No.2&#13;
3. Aaliyah "If Your Girl Only&#13;
Knew" (Blackground/Atlantic) New&#13;
Entry&#13;
4. SWV "Use Your Heart" (RCA)&#13;
No.3&#13;
S. LL Cool J "Loungin' " (Def&#13;
Jarn/Mercury) No.1&#13;
6. Maxwell "Ascension (Don't&#13;
Ever Wonder)" (Columbia) No. 11&#13;
7. Whitney Houston "Why Does&#13;
It Hurt So Bad" (Arista) No.6&#13;
8. D'Angelo "Me And Those&#13;
Dreamin' Eyes Of Mine" (EMI) No.&#13;
IS&#13;
9. Dru Hill "Tell Me" (Island) No.&#13;
9&#13;
10. Az Vet "Last Night"&#13;
(Laface/Arista) No.4&#13;
" --&#13;
"You built this with your&#13;
Legos?!"&#13;
,... .., 0_ ..... ... _&#13;
"Are you sure a live remote&#13;
is in good taste?"</text>
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              <text>-Foreign Film Festival/page   6&#13;
-Memorial  service  for Sandstrom!&#13;
page 4&#13;
-Get a "Load"  of Metallica's  new&#13;
CD/page  10&#13;
-Macarena,  the new dance craze&#13;
-The all-new Player'sBar&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Grill/page 10&#13;
-Hepp's  Hype Picks goes 14-0&#13;
VOLUME25  - ISSUE 2 • SEPTEMBER 12, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
Housing Update&#13;
Dorm Construction&#13;
Underway&#13;
The  new  dormitory  building&#13;
will&#13;
accomodate  twenty-four   students   per&#13;
floor&#13;
with&#13;
a  shared   bathroom   and&#13;
lounge,  with  two  students   per  room&#13;
and  one staff  member  on every  floor.&#13;
The  91,000  sq.&#13;
ft.&#13;
residence  hall  will&#13;
also  feature  traditional  dormitory-&#13;
style  buildings  rather  than  apart-&#13;
ment-style&#13;
buildings&#13;
which    UW-&#13;
Parkside  currently  offers.&#13;
•   According to DeAnn  Stone,  direc-&#13;
tor of residence  life, the donn is essen-&#13;
tial&#13;
to&#13;
UW-Parkside's  growth  and will&#13;
allow   students&#13;
from   outside    the&#13;
Racine  and  Kenosha   area  to  attend&#13;
the university.&#13;
Stone also gave an update  orr the&#13;
construction  project.&#13;
"Parkside's  new dorms are within&#13;
one  week  of  the   scheduled   August&#13;
1997&#13;
turnover  date,"  explained  Stone.&#13;
"With  continuing   good  weather,   the&#13;
construction  will be completely caught&#13;
up."&#13;
-Amanda   Bulgrin&#13;
Staff  Writer&#13;
The  ball  is  roIling  on  dormitory&#13;
construction&#13;
at   the   University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
In  order  to accomodate  students&#13;
from outside  the  region,  an  $8.8 mil-&#13;
lion-dollar   dormitory   is  being   con-&#13;
structed   west  of Molinaro  Hall.  The.&#13;
new dorms will reduce an annual  wait-&#13;
ing  list   of  about   100  students   and&#13;
improve  the  conditions   for  students&#13;
residing  in the current  dorms.&#13;
Presently,  seven  to  eight  students&#13;
share   one  apartment.&#13;
Ideally,  each&#13;
apartment   should  house  six students.&#13;
The  new dorms  will double  the  hous-&#13;
ing capacity  at  UW-Parkside,  provid-&#13;
ing housing  for an additional  400 stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
CONSTRUCTION  OF THE NEW DORMS is slated for completion&#13;
by&#13;
Fall of 1997, planning to accomodate 400 more students.&#13;
Photo by Amber Nichols.&#13;
Late-risers Annoyed with&#13;
Morning Construction Crews&#13;
Resident Hall Coordinators,&#13;
Advisors Beef Up Staff&#13;
• Kristine  Hansen&#13;
Edjtor_in_Chie&#13;
f&#13;
Being awakened  at 6 a.m. by noisy construction  and having  a thin  layer of dust on&#13;
your vehicle are just  a few of the  inconveniences  to students  living in Building  One in&#13;
housing.&#13;
These inconveniences  are caused by construction  on the new dorms slated  for com-&#13;
pletion  in Fall of 1997.&#13;
"They (the construction   workers)  start  so early," explained  Angela Schaub,  a stu-&#13;
dent  living  in  housing.  The  construction   crews  work  Monday  through  Friday  from&#13;
about 6 a.m. to around  5 p.m. And according  to Schaub,  the  noise doesn't  get any bet-&#13;
ter as the day progresses.  'We never sit out.on our balcony-   we have to keep our doors&#13;
and windows  closed."&#13;
Despite  the  noise  from  the  heavy  machinery,  the  donn  project  plans  t?  attract&#13;
more out-of-state  students   to the  University  of Wisconsin-Parks  ide. "I think  it's one of&#13;
the greatest  things  the  university  could have done," commented  AI Heppner, who hails&#13;
from Maryland  and has lived in housing  for four years.  "The univer~ity'~ m~ki~g ~eat&#13;
strides  to eliminate  the 'commuter  school' label it has attained.  Overall, It will Improve&#13;
the campus  life and  the  overall  atmosphere  of the  college."&#13;
Nicholson, Charles  Paksi,  Steven&#13;
Proesel,  Randy Bunders  and&#13;
LaShawn  Stanton  were, assigned&#13;
to&#13;
each housing  unit  as&#13;
RAs.&#13;
The RA training  week which&#13;
was led by Steve WaIner, Arlette&#13;
Kambwa  and Jeff Rhein, took place&#13;
from Aug. 25-30. The training  concen-&#13;
trated  on programming,  (holding&#13;
activities  for residents.)  Each RA&#13;
- Becky  Schlevensky&#13;
Staff  Writer&#13;
The beginning  of another&#13;
school year  introduced  two new resi-&#13;
dence hall coordinators  and nine new&#13;
residence  hall  advisors.&#13;
Seniors'Arlette   Kambwa  and&#13;
Jeff Rhein were appointed  Resident&#13;
Advisors (RA) coordinators.  Sergio&#13;
Correa, Jennifer  Crum, Stephanie&#13;
Goth, Stephanie  Hess, Jaimlaisha&#13;
A&#13;
RESIDENT HALL, page 4&#13;
LATE-RISERS, page 4&#13;
University  Police  Offering&#13;
Rewards  for  Information&#13;
Leading to Arrests&#13;
occurred&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Communication   Arts  parking&#13;
lot at  10:23 a.m.  on Sept.  6.&#13;
Two parking  meters,  valued at&#13;
$230 each,  were  discovered&#13;
missing  from the  lot.  This&#13;
state  property  theft is a felony&#13;
offense.&#13;
The UW-Parkside  Police are&#13;
offering  a reward  of $100 for&#13;
any information  leading  to an&#13;
arrest.&#13;
discovered  on Aug. 27 at 7:58&#13;
a.m.  Many items were report-&#13;
ed  missing,  including:  a  CD&#13;
player, three  football helmets,&#13;
a rain  suit, shoulder pads,&#13;
weights,  and a weight bench.&#13;
A motor vehicle theft  was&#13;
reported  on Sept.5. A gray/sil-&#13;
ver  Buick  Regal  with  the&#13;
license  plate  KVB-924  was&#13;
stolen   from   the   Physical&#13;
Education parking lot between&#13;
9:20 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.&#13;
The&#13;
third&#13;
incident&#13;
·April Proska&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Three recent burglaries  at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside   have   prompted&#13;
Campus   Police   to   offer&#13;
rewards  for helpful informa-&#13;
tion  which  could  resolve  the&#13;
crimes.&#13;
A burglary  at the Physical&#13;
Education  storage  room  was&#13;
3806 52nd Street&#13;
·652-3130&#13;
BETTER  BREAD,  BETTER  SUBS,TM&#13;
*Subs    *Soups    *Salads    *Party Subs&#13;
Free medium  soda with purchase  of any half sub with valid Parkside  ID&#13;
r~~-------FR-EE-SUB!!---l&#13;
I~&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
I Valid thru 9/18/96&#13;
Buyany2 subs&#13;
&amp;&#13;
get the&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Good for 1 free sub per person&#13;
3rd&#13;
sub&#13;
FREE!  (of equal or lesser value)&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Yourchoice of mini.halfor&#13;
Goodonlyat:3806 52nd 81.&#13;
I&#13;
:  whole  subs.   One  coupon  per&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
visit;not good withany   .&#13;
652-3130&#13;
I&#13;
L9ther offer or coupons.&#13;
I&#13;
------------------------------~&#13;
$353,000  Computer Donated To&#13;
Business Department&#13;
Publishing,   helped  to  obtain  the  computer&#13;
donation  from IBM by explaining  to IBM offi-&#13;
cials that the shortage of experience with the&#13;
ASl400&#13;
in the work force has led businesses  to&#13;
lower standards  for prospective  employees  and&#13;
has made companies  bid against  each other for&#13;
skilled employees.&#13;
"I see a lot of pluses  for it. It will help MIS&#13;
graduates  get jobs," said Stephen  Hawk, associ-&#13;
ate professor  of management   information  sys-&#13;
tems.&#13;
"It&#13;
will&#13;
serve  the  needs  of regional&#13;
employers.&#13;
It&#13;
may  help  us attract  more  stu-&#13;
dents."&#13;
Other 'large  Wisconsin  firms  that  use' the&#13;
ASl400&#13;
business  computing  system  are Golden&#13;
Books, Jockey Institutional,  S.C.Johnson&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Son&#13;
Inc.,  Gander   Mountain,   Case  Corporation,&#13;
Lelslanc, and Harley-Davidson.&#13;
• Kerri Bachler&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The University  of Wisconsin-Parksida   depart-&#13;
ment  of business  received  a $353,000 AS/400&#13;
computer  donated  by  International   Business&#13;
Machines  (IBM).&#13;
The donation of the computer  with software is&#13;
part of the IBM Business  Partner  Cooperative&#13;
Education   Pilot  Program,   which  will  help&#13;
increase  the number  of employees  experienced&#13;
with the system.&#13;
The department  of business  will use the com-&#13;
puter in the management  information  system's&#13;
curriculum,  and a course for the AS/400 will be&#13;
developed by the spring of 1997.&#13;
John&#13;
L.&#13;
Vanderheyden,  a 1989 UW-Parkside&#13;
MBA graduate  and  vice president  of manage-&#13;
ment  information   systems  at  Golden  Books&#13;
12,&#13;
1996·&#13;
page ~&#13;
*&#13;
mJ&#13;
Campus News&#13;
AtA Glance&#13;
• Science  Fiction,   Fantasy   Focus  of UW-Parkside    Workshop&#13;
The creator  of the game "Dungeons&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Dragons"  will be among the&#13;
presenters  during  this day-long workshop  on science fiction and&#13;
fantasy  at the university  Oct. 5..&#13;
The workshop  entitled,  "A Day's Journey  Through  Space and&#13;
Time" will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. There is a lab fee of&#13;
$5&#13;
for internet  sessions.  The event is sponsered  by the Friends  of&#13;
. the UW-Parkside  Library.&#13;
Topics covered will include  science fiction/fantasy   films, televi- ..&#13;
sion and literature,   game design, internet  applications  and creat-&#13;
ing.a web page, science fiction and its relationship   to scientific&#13;
facts, and how to write  and publish  science fiction. The films, "War&#13;
of The Worlds," "Cocoon" and "Star Trek: The Undiscovered&#13;
Country" .will also be shown.&#13;
An opening  lecture  will be presented  at&#13;
9&#13;
a.m. by Peggy James,&#13;
professor  of political  science at UW·Parkside.  She will discuss  the&#13;
impact  of science fiction on society.&#13;
Other speakers  will include representatives   from Lake Geneva-&#13;
based TSR, creator  of "Dungeons&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Dragons";  Bryan  Palaszewski,&#13;
an engineer  in the Space Propulsion  Technology  Division  of the&#13;
NASA Lewis Research  Center;  Richard  Dreiscr,  public information&#13;
officer at Yerkes Observatory,  an outreach  project of the University&#13;
of Chicago, and Janet  Pack, author  of several  science fiction and&#13;
fantasy  books.&#13;
To register,  contact  Teri Weil at the UW-Parkside   Library  at&#13;
(414) 595-2730 or e-mail&#13;
wei@Cs.uwp.edu.&#13;
·UW-Parkside    Reading   Group  Open  To Community&#13;
Members&#13;
Issues  of race, class and gender  will be the subject  of a&#13;
reading/discussion   group meeting  this fall at the university.  The&#13;
Race, Class and Gender  Study Group is open to faculty, staff,&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents, 'and the general  public. The Schedule  of books and meetings&#13;
is:&#13;
Sept. 27· "Ceremony,"&#13;
by&#13;
Leslie Sitko.&#13;
It&#13;
is the story of a young&#13;
American  Indian,  a priosoner  of the Japanese  during  World War&#13;
II, who returns  to the Laguna  Pueblo reservation  only to expert-&#13;
ence great  feelings of estrangement   and alienation.&#13;
Oct. 25· "Rain of Gold," by Victor Villasenor.  It is a generational&#13;
story of a Mexican American  family.&#13;
Nov. 22- "Reviving Ophelia,"  by Mary Bray Piper. This book&#13;
explores the pressures  adolescent  girls are under  today to conform&#13;
to stereotypes  of femininity  and how they must  often repress  their&#13;
individuality.&#13;
Jan. 24- "Oranges  are not the Only Fruit,"  by Jeann  Winterson.&#13;
It is a "coming out" story about a young lesbian  from a working&#13;
class family in a fundamentalist   Christian  community.&#13;
All meetings  will be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the UW-&#13;
Parkside  faculty/student   lounge, located in Room 111 of Molinaro&#13;
Hall. Free parking  is available.  Books for the discussion  group can&#13;
be purchased  at the UW-Parkside  bookstore.&#13;
The program  is sponsored  by the UW-Parkside  Women's Study&#13;
Group. For more information,  contact  Mary Kay Schleiter,  associ-&#13;
ate professor  of sociology and director  of the Women's  Study&#13;
Center  at (414) 595-2636.&#13;
[&#13;
• Students   Cited  For  participation&#13;
in DOC Program&#13;
Eight area students  were recently  recognized  for their  participa-&#13;
tion in the Uw-Parksida   summer  Doctor's of Color Program.&#13;
Students  honored  were Cloryetta  Dirden,  Tiffany Taylo and,&#13;
Monique Wilson of Milwaukee,  and Jasmine  Woodruff, Anthony&#13;
Martinez,  Lattcia  Quiroz and Hannue  Williams  all of Racine&#13;
The program,  directed  by Alma Renish,  health  professions  ~dvi-&#13;
sor at UW-Parkside,  is open to high school junior  and senior stu-&#13;
dents of color who maintain  a minimum  2.75 grade  point average&#13;
in a college-preparatory   sequence.  The two-and-a-half   week pro-&#13;
gram consisted  of lectures,  laboratory  sessions  CPR  and field&#13;
trips to professional  schools and clinical observations   with local&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Sandstrom Remembered For His Music</text>
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              <text>•Observations:&#13;
Bill Clinton's friendsi&#13;
page 7&#13;
• "He  Said, She  Said"/&#13;
page8&#13;
'Summer Bridge Program! page6&#13;
'Student Crowned at Kenosha County&#13;
Fair/ pageS&#13;
• Olympic Trials/ page 10&#13;
• Women's Soccer First Game of the&#13;
Season/ page 10&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 1 • SEPTEMBER 5, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
OLYMPIC TRIALS  University  of Wisconsin-Parkside   students&#13;
Danielle Kirk and AI Heppner got a brief taste of Olympic victory at&#13;
the Olympic Trials in Atlanta. See story on page&#13;
10.PhotosbyAmberNichols.&#13;
Marriott Awarded Food Contract:&#13;
Pizza Hut first&#13;
of&#13;
several brand name&#13;
vendors&#13;
to come&#13;
within the next year&#13;
ground  concerning&#13;
why&#13;
the&#13;
change in food service contracts&#13;
was made.&#13;
, "State law requires&#13;
that&#13;
you&#13;
must rebid for food contracts&#13;
every five years," explained&#13;
Niebuhr.  "Professional  Food&#13;
Management's  (PFM) contract&#13;
lasted  for six years -because&#13;
instead of going out for a low&#13;
bid contract, we used a different&#13;
type of format,"&#13;
In the past, UW-Parkside&#13;
would tell the food contractors&#13;
exactly what was wanted in t~e •&#13;
food contract. But this year, the&#13;
university went out&#13;
-Mark Hahn&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
September.&#13;
Later in the semester,&#13;
Marriott  will open a Sub&#13;
Connection  in Union Square&#13;
that  will sell New York-style&#13;
deli food. Until Sub Connection&#13;
opens, GR Deli's will remain&#13;
open.&#13;
"They are both signature&#13;
brands, and will run very much&#13;
like a national franchise would&#13;
run a Pizza Hut or a Sub con-&#13;
nection,"    explained    Bill&#13;
Niebuhr,  UW-Parkside  Union&#13;
Director. "Currently  the con-&#13;
struction   project  in  Union&#13;
Square  is running  a little&#13;
behind schedule, but should be&#13;
open by the second week of&#13;
school by the latest."&#13;
Niebhur offered some back-&#13;
... FOOD COURT, page 3&#13;
Anew food service contract at&#13;
the University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside promises to bring big&#13;
changes this fall.&#13;
Over the summer, a new&#13;
seven-year food service contract&#13;
Was&#13;
awarded&#13;
to&#13;
the Marriott&#13;
Corporation.&#13;
This fall, Marriott will open&#13;
the Firehouse Grill in Union&#13;
Square. Pizza Hut will also&#13;
openand sell personal pan piz-&#13;
~as. UW-Parkside is negotiat-&#13;
mgto have Pizza Hut sell medi-&#13;
um pizzas and provide delivery&#13;
to&#13;
the residence  halls. Pizza&#13;
Hut should open by the end of&#13;
Sandstrom&#13;
Remembered&#13;
For His Music&#13;
'Kristine Hansen&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
A fatal asthma  attack  that&#13;
claimed the life of John (Chris)&#13;
Sandstrom   has   left   the&#13;
University    of   Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside in shock as prepara-&#13;
tions  for the  new semester&#13;
begin.&#13;
Sandstrom  was pronounced&#13;
dead on Aug. 25 at 2:30 a.m. at&#13;
Memorial   Hospital   (Athol,&#13;
Mass.), near his hometown of&#13;
Wilbraham,  Mass.. Several of&#13;
Sandstrom's   friends   from&#13;
Wisconsin attended the Aug. 30&#13;
funeral in Massachusettes.&#13;
Sandstrom  was expected&#13;
to&#13;
graduate with a Bachelor ofArts&#13;
in Music in May&#13;
&lt;i1997.&#13;
He par- '&#13;
ticipated in a classical guitar&#13;
ensemble at UW-Parkside with&#13;
several other  music students&#13;
under the direction of George&#13;
Lindquist.&#13;
A hardworker, he was on the&#13;
Dean's List for the Fall 1995 and&#13;
Spring 1996 semesters.&#13;
Aug. 24, the day prior to his&#13;
death, Sandstrom  was skydiv-&#13;
ing with  friends  at Orange&#13;
Municipal Airport (Mass.). He&#13;
was   a  Federal   Aviation&#13;
Administration  (FAA) certified&#13;
Senior Parachute  Rigger and&#13;
active with the Massachusettes&#13;
Sport Parachute  Club, Inc. at&#13;
the airport.&#13;
It&#13;
was his habit to&#13;
spend the e:ntire weekend at the&#13;
airport.&#13;
"The weekend  was special&#13;
because that was going to be the&#13;
CHRIS SANDSTROM  in&#13;
a photo taken the day&#13;
before his death.&#13;
last weekend before he came&#13;
back to school," said Nick Zahn,&#13;
Sandstrom's best friend. It was&#13;
the  first  time  that  Ann&#13;
Sandstrom, his mother, watched&#13;
him perform.&#13;
Sandstrom was at the "drop&#13;
zone" and had successfully com-&#13;
pleted three jumps  when an&#13;
uncontrollable  asthma  attack&#13;
occurred. He managed&#13;
to&#13;
tell his&#13;
companions to call 911, and they&#13;
comforted him until the ambu-&#13;
lance arrived. After some time&#13;
in  the  hospital's  emergency&#13;
room, he was pronounced dead.&#13;
... SANDSTROM  ,&#13;
page 3&#13;
Alarm:&#13;
Alarmwas set offin&#13;
the cashier's office due to a&#13;
power outage. Cashier's office&#13;
was checked and alarm reset.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
POLICE&#13;
BEAT&#13;
Aug. 26.Traffic viola-&#13;
tion:&#13;
Visitor was cited for&#13;
nonregistration of a vehicle.&#13;
Aug. 27. Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances:&#13;
Parkside  Union manager&#13;
reported the disappeare-&#13;
ance of some university&#13;
keys. Investigation pending.&#13;
Aug. 27.Burglary:&#13;
The Northwestern  football&#13;
team equipment room was&#13;
burglarized  and  several&#13;
items  reported  stolen.&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
Aug.  28. Security&#13;
Sep.t. 2. Liquor Law&#13;
Violation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed a stu-&#13;
dent standing outside of the&#13;
housing area with an open&#13;
container   of  alcohol.&#13;
Citation issued.&#13;
Aug.  31.  Medical&#13;
ASSISt:&#13;
A visitor playing&#13;
soccer on the soccer field&#13;
injured his right leg. Taken&#13;
to St. Catherine's Hospital&#13;
for treatment.&#13;
Sept.  2. Property&#13;
Damage:&#13;
Three bicycle&#13;
racks were knocked loose&#13;
from the sidewalk on Inner&#13;
loop  Rd.  by  the  P.E.&#13;
Building. Possible knocked&#13;
over&#13;
by&#13;
the street sweeper.&#13;
Phy. Ed. notified.&#13;
Sept.  9.  Medical&#13;
Assist:&#13;
Astudent fell down&#13;
the stairs at the housing&#13;
area.  Medical  attention&#13;
refused. Subject taken to St.&#13;
Catherine's   by  private&#13;
means.&#13;
Aug.  31.  Traffic&#13;
Vio1ation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 62 mph in&#13;
a 45 mph zone on the 4200&#13;
block ofHighway&#13;
A.&#13;
Citation&#13;
issued.&#13;
Sep.t.  1.  Traffic&#13;
Violation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 70 mph in&#13;
a 45 mph zone on Highway&#13;
31, South of County Rd.&#13;
Citation issued.&#13;
Compiled&#13;
by&#13;
Mark Hahn.&#13;
Campus.&#13;
News&#13;
at a&#13;
Glance&#13;
-Don Piele, Professor  of Mathematics,  was director of&#13;
the U.S. team for the 1996 International Computing&#13;
Olympiad which was held in Hungary July 25- August&#13;
1.&#13;
He conducted two preliminary rounds with high schools&#13;
from throughout the country. From these rounds, finalists&#13;
were named and brought to the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside for a week-long training program and competition.&#13;
Students programmed for five hours on two different days.&#13;
Using logic, mathematics, and computer programming&#13;
skills they attempted to create original computer programs&#13;
that solved six difficult problems. Piele organized the first&#13;
U.s. team to participate in the International Olympiad in&#13;
1992.&#13;
New Staff At Parkside&#13;
• Ranger&#13;
Staff&#13;
Report&#13;
Several administrative staff changes have been&#13;
made at the University ofWisconsin-Parks ide in&#13;
anticipation of the new academic year.&#13;
Ron Singer, associate professor ofAccounting,&#13;
has been named associate ViceChancellor for&#13;
Planning, Budget and Resource Allocation and&#13;
Graduate Dean. He will be responsible for the&#13;
overall planning and review ofthe university's&#13;
curriculum and for coordinating resource alloca-&#13;
tion.&#13;
Singer has been a member of Parkside's busi-&#13;
ness facility since 1973 and has been active in&#13;
administration and university governance, servo&#13;
ing on the University Comm-ittee, Faculty Rights&#13;
and Responsibilities Committee and Budget&#13;
Advising Committee. He also has served as&#13;
Interim Dean and Chair of the Accounting&#13;
department in the School of Business and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
Charlotte Westerhaus has been named&#13;
Assistanttothe ChancellorforEquityand&#13;
Diversity. She will be responsible for the overall&#13;
developement of Parks ide's affirmative action&#13;
lequal employment opportunity program.&#13;
Westerhaus, a Milwaukee attorney, has exten-&#13;
sive background in legal issues involving higher&#13;
education. She specializes in analyzing and&#13;
resolving issues presented by EEOC/AAlaws and&#13;
regulations. She has been an attorney at&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company&#13;
in Milwaukee since 1994. Prior to that, she was&#13;
an associate at the law firm ofFoley&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Lardner&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Westerhaus holds a bachelor's degree in jour-&#13;
nalism from Ohio University, Athens,&#13;
a&#13;
master's&#13;
degree in higher education from Ohio University&#13;
and a law degree from Indiana university.&#13;
Dennis Irwin has been named Auditor at&#13;
Parkside. He&#13;
will&#13;
be responsible for the planning&#13;
and performing of-operational and financial&#13;
audits for the entire university. Irwin has been&#13;
an account clerk at the Milwaukee County Clerk&#13;
ofCircuit Courts, Family Support Division.&#13;
Esther Wilson has been named Interim&#13;
Assistant Dean ofthe College ofArts and&#13;
Sciences. She&#13;
will&#13;
be responsible for budget, stu-&#13;
dent affairs and informational technology. Wilson&#13;
is a senior lecturer in tbe Biologoical Sciences&#13;
Department, and has been a member ofthe&#13;
Parkside teaching staff since 1982.&#13;
Rebecca Banks has been named Director of&#13;
Annual Giving and Alumni Relations. She will&#13;
serve as the university's liasion to the Parkside&#13;
Alumni Associations, directing alumni program-&#13;
ming and the university's alumni fund-raising&#13;
efforts. She will also be involved in major univer-&#13;
sity fund-raising initiatives.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Banks served as&#13;
the Senior Marketing Director at St. Catherine's&#13;
HospitalinKenoshafrom1993-95.Priortothat,&#13;
she was director ofthe Woman's Health Center&#13;
at St. Catherine'sHospitalfrom1990-93.She&#13;
holds a diploma in nursing from St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital School ofNursing and undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees in business from Parkside.&#13;
Michaelina Young has been named director of&#13;
Student HealthandCounselingServices.She&#13;
will be responsible for overall leadership and&#13;
development efforts in the area of health and&#13;
wellness, counseling, budget developement,&#13;
physicial contract and implementing outreach&#13;
services programs,&#13;
Since1994,Youngservedas the Site&#13;
Coordinator for the Milwaukee Breast Center&#13;
Awareness Program, and from 1990-94, She was&#13;
the Chief Administrator for the Milwaukee&#13;
CentralCityCatholicSchoolSystem.Young&#13;
holds a bachelor ofscience degree in nursing&#13;
from.Alverno College, and a master's degree in&#13;
nursmg from Marquette University.&#13;
_Individuals  interested  in  taking  the  Graduate&#13;
Management  Administration  Test (GMAT), to be admin-&#13;
istered at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside in October&#13;
must complete the registration  process by Sept. 13.&#13;
Applications must be mailed to the national testing service&#13;
and postmarked no later than this date. The GMAT is&#13;
required for all individuals interested in enrolling in any&#13;
master's  of business  administration  (MBA) program.&#13;
Applications for the GMAT can be obtained from the UW-&#13;
Parkside Counseling and Testing Office, Room D175&#13;
0&#13;
Wyllie Hall. The GMAT examination will be given at UW-&#13;
Parkside on Oct. 19. For more information on the GMATor&#13;
enrolling in UW-Parkside's MBAprogram, call 595-2046.&#13;
-New World Wide Web Site Launched  Current informa-&#13;
tion on programs, events, athletics and academic programs&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is now available on&#13;
the university's new World Wide Web site.&#13;
The   UW-Parkside   .home   page   address&#13;
http://www.uwp.edul&#13;
- is accessible to anyone with Internet&#13;
access and a Web browser, such as Netscape Navigator or&#13;
Microsoft's Internet Explorer.&#13;
Browsers can access a general introduction that gives&#13;
the history and general overview of the university. Detailed&#13;
information on academic offerings or enrolling at UW-&#13;
Parkside is available on the admissions page. The events&#13;
page includes a current calendar and information on fine&#13;
arts series such as Accent on Enrichment and Plays at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Other features of the Web site include current and back&#13;
issues of Perspective, the university magazine, the annual&#13;
report and campus map. These documents are available in&#13;
AdobeAcrobat format, allowing them to retain their original&#13;
design. They require the free Acrobat Reader, which is avail-&#13;
able online in Windows, Macintosh, Sun, Silicon Graphics&#13;
and IBM formats.&#13;
Other site offerings include a news headline page, with&#13;
news stones  and short features,  athletic  updates,  an&#13;
overview of various academic departments and a searchable&#13;
music lyrics archive. The site also has a photo gallery with&#13;
more than 15? photographs of students, events, sports and&#13;
the university s buildings and nature areas.&#13;
The Website is viewable with any browser but looks best&#13;
when viewed with Netscape Navigator 2.0 or higher.&#13;
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 -Interview  with the formerViolent  Femmes  drummerpage 3page 5S{M!zt4-Not one, but two heartfeltgoodbye columns- Rangers at Olympic Trials- New Athletic Directorpage 6-7The Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-ParksideVOLUME 24 • ISSUE 28 • SUMMER 1996ESTABLISHED 1972HansenNamed Editor- Jim  HendricksonEditor-in-ChiefItrRecruitment   from throughout   thecampus  is a priority  issue  for KristineHansen,  the  student  designated  as1996-97 Editor-in-Chief  of theUniversity  of Wisconsin-ParksideRanger News."I'd like to make  some contacts  inthe other  majors,'  said Hansen.  "Thepaper is for everyone."In selecting  section editors,  Hansenis looking for: "People with  writingexperience,  especially  news writing,  aninterest  in journalism,   and an eager-ness to learn."Hansen  was elected on April  19 bythe executive  board of the newspaper.Her qualifications   include  previousexperience  as a staff writer  and  newseditor  with  theRanger News,aninternship   with  the  RacineJournal-Times,and  a newscaster   on WONCFM 89 radio  in Naperville,  Illinois.Hansen,  a senior  with  an Englishmajor and a minor in environmentalstudies,  transferred   in the  fall of 1995from North  Central  College inNaperville.Hansen's  goal is a career  in printjournalism.   With theRanger News,Hansen  covered  such topics as thereorganization   of the  teacher  educa-tion department,   the  relocation  ofStudent  Health  Services,  the  ultimate-&gt;Kristine Hansen,New Editor-in-ChiefJim Hendrickson,Outgoing Editor-in-ChiefNeither  Hendrickson  nor Diehl will beon"theRanger Newsstaff because theyare pursuing  other goals after gradua-tion. Hendrickson  will attend  graduateschool at the University  ofMassachusetts  in the fall, and Diehlhas obtained employment  as a techni-cal writer  and computer  supportstaffer.Ranger Newsis accepting applica-tions for news editor, entertainmenteditor, business  manager  and assistantbusiness manger. Call Hansen orHendrickson at 595-2287.ly unsuccessful  attempt  to organize  asecond newspaper  at Parkside,  andpublic service internship  opportunitiesavailable  through  the university.Chris  Sandstrom,  UW-Parksidemusic major  andRanger Newslayouteditor, also applied to become Editor-in-Chief. Hansen  has since chosenSandstrom  as Managing  Editor, theposition with the second highest  levelofresponsibility  on the newspaperstaff.Jim  Hendrickson  and Karen Diehlwere the  1995-96 Editor-in-Chief  andManaging  Editor of theRanger News.School of Business Receives National AccreditationGood FairWeather?- April SchoenbergFeature  EditorThe University ofWisconsin-Parkside  is host-ing the "Arts and CraftsFair" on June  22.  The fairwill be held outside onParkside's  lawn and side-walk area near the CARTbuilding.The fair will include 200booths with a wide variety  ofitems from quilts to hand-made wooden objects.  Someof the proceeds from the fairwill be used to provide stu-dents with  scholarships.Many music students  havevolunteered  to work for thefair including Eric Pelkywho said,"Itis a lot of fun towork at the fair, but theywork us pretty  hard!"Students  set up booths andprepare  the grounds themorning ofthe  fair. .Departmental  SecretaryRoberta Odegaard said, "Alot of work goes into thepreparation  of this event."With the weather's  cooper-ation the fair is scheduled tobegin at 10 a.m. and end at4 p.m.   Odegaard said,  "Weanticipate  a large turnoutand hope that it will be assuccessful as it has been inthe past."Members of the BusinessAdvisory Board who havebeen active in positioningthe UW-Parkside School ofBusiness for accreditationare:- Richard Caskey, vicepresident  and general  man-ager, power tools, Snap-OnTools, Incorporated,Kenosha;_ Jerry  Schwallier, chair-man, Business Advisory .Board; president,  BankOne, Wisconsin, NA;• Deni Naumann,  commer-cial director, NorthAmerica Professional, S.C.Johnson Wax, Racine.&#13;
Dean'sList forSpringI9963.9-4.0Butts, MelissaFranke, JenniferJumisko,   Meridith         Mangelsdorf,   Lisa         Patel,  PriteshCalkins,  KyleGast,  TedKanthack,   MaryMargoni,  MarilynPaul,  WendyAcker,  KimberlyCapasso,  JamesGaudio, LindaKarwatka,   RichMartin,  KathryoPfeiffer,  ScottAnaya,  ElsaCarter, CassiusGiese,  MatthewKasalajtis,  Brian      Martinez,  SharonPopp,JulieAndersen,  LeslieChesick,  ShaneGirman, StephenKelley, MattMatyas,  GailPost Lovejoy, CyothiaAndersen,  SarahChike,  DebGold, FrancisKelly, BonnieMcCullogh,  JamesPraeger,  JerryApostoli,  JodieChristman,CherylGomski,  JuliaKhalaf,  TagreedMerrill,  SheriRallo, LeoArehart, JamesCoppola,  StephanGraham,  AngelaKimpel,  DonnaMerten,  PatriciaReyoolds,  AnitaAwua, StellaCrager, ChristineGuran, GenevieveKlaus, SarahMeyer, LisaRice, CatherineBarta, AllisonCramlet,  BradleyHackbarth,   PatriciaKorda,Jean~AlannaMiller, ArleneRomani,  FrankBehringer,  RobertaCrum,AmyHagarty,  PatrickKorth,  JenniferMiller, KarenRoskos,  JillBey, PatriciaCruthers, AaronHanley, JosieKosa, MargaretMiller,  KurtSantiago,  GloriaBienemann,  LizDavidson,  DeanHanson,AmyKraft, SoniaMilos, SteveBigalke,  LisaDavidson,  LauraHaske,  KimberlyKraiss, PamelaMoclory, JasonScopel, JustinBillings,  CarolDelebreau,  DennisHauke, TheresaKrenzke,  ChadMoerner, MaryScott,  DebraSebranek,   JudithBlackwell,  KurtDickerson,  ReginaHendrickson,  JimKsobiech,  PaulMorris, BenjaminBlasi, AndreaDonahue,  MatthewHenriksen,  LisaKuhagen,  ShannonMorrison,  JoleanShea,  PatrickBlazich,  MicheleDougherty,  DavidHergott, DeniseKunzman,  JosephNehring,  Carolyn          Sheriff,  ScottBoles, HelenaEckholm,  CarolHerman, ChrisLaird, BenjaminNielsen,  MarySmith,  ScottBooker, BunnyEdwards,  CamishaHernandez,  ManuelLamar, KimNighbert,   BethSnopko, JaniceBoyle,KrysteneEichhorn,  MichaelHoover, RandyLaxalt, RichardNikolai, DianaSpencer,  HeatherBradley,  DeborahEngels, SusanHorswill,  MarkLean,  ElisabethNikova,AlexandrinaStahl,  JamesEpperson,  ChristineHubmann,  BarbaraLee, NatsukoNoakes,  BriannaStephenson,  LauraBroesch, TammiBrouillard,   RobertEvans, LanceIngram, MossLogan, TeresaNunemaker,Stock,  StacyBrunsch,  LauraFaust,  DebbieJacobs; TeresaLogic, MaryKimberlyStoffel, BarbaraBruton, KristinaFerguson-Nelson,Jankovic,  GoranLowery, NickOrth,  StephanieStollenwerk,   GregoryBuchholz,  JenniferCarolJansen, WilliamLudlow, ValerieOsborn, KonnieStrash,  PatriciaBuck, MargaretFischer, KimJensen,  JillMaczka, AgnieszkaOwen, AmyBuschmann,  DanFischer, RandallJohnson,  BenjaminMaloney,  MichaelParrett,  MonicaStrecker,  DeborahFlox, SheilaJones, RyanMandernack,SheilaParske,  PaulStuckert,  AmandaSummers,  LisaSykes,  RossTheilen,  BelindaTreiber,  JuliaTrieber, MonicaTuinstra,   RobbynVegetabile,  ShannonVelvikis,  RebeccaVolbrecht,  PaulWallace,  MaryWallner, HeidiWarner, ScottWasion, JamieWatson, DianeWegner,  KimberlyWendel, NicoleWernke, DianeWhite,  Jr.,  MelvinWilhelmi,  TaniaWilliams,  MaryWinter, MelindaWojciechowicz,  LeoWolff, WendyYanca,JacquelineZarovy, DebraZiesemer,  KristineZuberbuehler,   KarlCont. onp.8Wisegraduates joinEducators Credit Unionbeforeleaving campus!Whoocares about your financial needsby offering High Returns on Savings,and Low rates on Student, Car, andHome Loan Rates.Whoaoffers TotallyFree Checking and MasterCardNISA?Wedo. You're part of the credit unionfamily. Joining iseasy, and you are amember for life!http://www.ecu.comTallent HallHm.286595-21509:30-4:00__1&#13;
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1&#13;
 THEVOLUME 24 • ISSUE 27 • APRIL 25, 1996ESTABLISHED 1972Whatcba,UW-GBFourthEstateColumnist Draws Fireindividuals."Unfortunately, this wasblown way out of.proportion.by certain individuals oncampus,"said Kaisler. "OUfstudent government hasbeen out to get it (the col-umn) since day one.""They got on their soap-box and blasted the admin-istration and blasted us."The Associated Press,USAToday,the MilwaukeeJournal-Sentinel,and tele-vision stations  inMilwaukee and Madisonpicked up the story. InUSATodaylast week, Krol madean apology for his column.Kaisler apologized for poorthe recent videotaped policebeating of illegal immi-grants who had crossed theUnited States border andbegan throwing objects atpolicemen."Krol started offthe col-umn with 'hit 'em harder.'He just said 'those immi-grants.' He didn't say allimmigrants. For all weknow, they could have beenCanadian immigrants,"  saidCory Kaisler, editor-in-chiefof theFourth Estate.Krolalso wrote that taxpayers'will have to buy morebatons for law enforcement.On the same date, his state-ment on the Unabomber asbeing a Bonnie-and-Clyde-type hero has upset some• Kristine HansenNews EditorEven college newspapercolumnists have to keepwithin certain limits.This is what Matt Krollearned after students atthe University of Wisconsin-Green Bay became outragedat his April11column,which was meant to besatirical.Krol, managing editor oftheFourth Estate,UW-Green Bay's student news-paper, started a columntitled"Kate'sColumn" lastspring. In his April11col-umn, Krol commented onPolice ForumFrank Johnson, a Racinepolice officer, the event washeld in Union 207. ChiefRobert Deane of the Univer-sity Police, University OfficerMarlene Schlecht, TeriJacobson (PSGA President),and several other membersof the campus communitywere on hand."Wejust decided to gettogether because there were• Jim HendricksonEditor-in-ChiefThe Parkside StudentGovernment  Association(PSGA) held a forum onApril 25 for students  toexpress their concerns aboutcampus police.Moderated by JeanneSanchez, President  ProTempore of PSGA, andCant on p.2IUnited Council elects New PresidentCant on p.2be actively recruited andretained in the UW Systemto ensure diverse represen-tation on campusesthroughout the state," saidDavid C. Stacy, this year'sUnited Council president.  'Students also discussed atlength the complicated issueof needs assessment for dis-tance technology, and how itwill affect the quality ofeducation provided-partic-ularly at many of the small-er UW System campuses. Inthe past, when the United. Council called for a needsassessment for a recentlyimposed technology fee, theBoard ofRegents turnedstudents away.The General Assemblyof UW-Green Bay,where heserved as vice president ofthe student body andDirector ofTraining andDevelopment ofthe pro-gramming board.Among the many items onthe agenda was the factthat the well-publicized 21stCentury study neglected toreaffirm the Regents' long-time commitment to diversi-ty: Traditionally, the Boardof Regents has been sup-portive of recruitment andretention of underrepresent-ed students through suchsuccessful programs asDesign for Diversity."It is the key to the cre-ation of a well-rounded uni-versity community that tra-ditionally underrepresentedstudents, faculty and staffNearly 100 student lead-ers from across the stateconverged on the campus ofthe University ofWisconsin-Madison on April 16 for afive and a half hour annualmeeting of the UnitedCouncil of UW System stu-dents.Students in attendancedebated and discussed theirconcerns regarding the UWSystem Board of Regents'21st Century study, andelected current LegislativeAffairs Director Timothy L:Casper as the UnitedCouncil president for 1996-97.Casper defeated AcademicAffairs Director KristiWinters, with 53 votes incomparison to her 32 votes.Casper is a 1995 graduatejerryCovelli;Unsung Heroand retired from the UnitedAuto Workers Local 72 inKenosha, Covelli stopped inat TheRanger Newsofficeto express his concerns forParkside in general, andstudents today in particu-lar."When I worked so hardto put together Bill 38S (thebill that called for the for-mation of a college in theRacine-Kenosha area(which became Parkside), I• Barb ChurchillRanger Staff"The Republicans  don'twant you to think, theydon't Want an informed pop-ulace, because thinking peo-ple won't vote for them."These are the words ofJerry Covelli, one of themen who was instrumentalin the formation of theUniversity of Wisconsin-Parkside. Now 82 years oldCant on p.8Cant on p.3&#13;
GreenBayfrom ICommunicationsStudents to Edit Book• Jason PruittGuest WriterStudents in theCommunication  andSocialization  course are helpingto prepare a new book for theclass. Professor Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz is allowing the studentsto recommend which articlesthey find appropriate  for thebook.Leeds-Hurwitz, instructor  ofthe course, would like to revisethe textbook she is currentlyusing,ChildhoodSocialization,by Gerald Handel, because it isbecoming outdated.  Leeds-Hurwitz has been in contactwith Handel.about  revising thebook and will most likely be ajoint author of the revised ver-sion.Students are required to reada wide variety of articles dealingwith children and the factorsForum from 1Imultiple student complaints," said Jacobson.The complaints centered on the treatmenttowards students  of different ethnic groups atfunctions in the Union, according to Sanchez,who also chairs the PSGA Social IssuesCommittee."Students would be at dances, and they would-n't be treated in the right way," said Sanchez.Jacobson, too, wishes to avoid that"adversan.al attitude" sometimes present in the interactionbetween a student  and an officer. Tothat end,both Sanchez and Jacobson with the results ofthe forum."Everyone had very productive comments,"said Jacobson. "No one was purposefully deroga-tory."    ."Itwent really well," said Sanchez. "I was kindof worried at first."Students voiced their concerns about policepersonal skills and questioned current policiesabout organization  events.''We asked questions  about policies," saidJacobson. "Chief Deane was very helpful andvery receptive. He had no idea that these thingshad happened, and he said theyshouldn't be happening."There was a general agreement  that in orderto improve the relationships  between officersand students,  each must compromise."The badge sometimes gets in the way of com-munity policing," said Sanchez. "They should getto know each other and build rapport."that influence socialization,  suchas family, school, and friends.Pupils will write up a critique ofeach article they read to deter-mine its appropriateness  for theclass and for undergraduatestudy in communication."Itreally is fun and it makesyou feel like you are influencingother students down the road bypicking the best articles for themto read in the book," a studentfrom the class said. "I think itmakes students feel importantwhen they are asked their opin-ion by someone who has a greatdeal of education."This is not the first time Leeds-Hurwitz has asked students forinput into a text book. Lastsemester, in the InterculturalCommunication course, Leeds-Hurwitz compiled a required text-book for the class that consisted ofcase studies ofinterculturalencounters written up byher students.Whoocares about your financial needsby offering High Returns on Savings,and Low rates on Student, Car, andHome Loan Rates.Whoooffers TotallyFree Checking and MasterCardNISA?Wedo. You're part of the credit unionfamily. Joining iseasy, and you are amember for life!Wise graduates joinEducators Credit Unionbeforeleaving campus!Tallent HoB Hm. 2R6595-2150judgment in approving the col-umn."Kato's Column" ended April 18with Krol's published apology.But, "we're getting letters frompeople who are upset we'repulling the column," said Kaisler."More people are on our side thanagainst us. My father calls it 'thesilent majority."  Ten of the 12letters to the Editor are in sup-port of Krol's column. One ofthem is from the editor of a localSpanish-speaking  newspaper.Some minority students  hadplanned to boycott theFourthEstate,but there will still beissues on April 25 and May 2."When I took this job (editor-in-chief), I planned to print untilMay 2 and we're going to dothat," said Kaisler. About stop-ping the newspaper  from print-ing, Kaisler said, "I don't thinkso, unless they try to find a wayto pull our funding.""There are some people who areactually thinking  on this campus,and some who aren't. Needless tosay, it's been a fun week."~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.   ----.-I:_~-http://www.ecu.com9:30-4:00d&#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>Faculty Seeks Input</text>
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 THE-VOLUME 24 • ISSUE 26 • APRIL 18, 1996ESTABLISHED 1972FacultyseeksinputFaculty committee  needsstudents  to nominate  out-standing teachers.Every year theUniversity  of Wisconsin-Parkside honors two out-standing teachers  from itsacademic  staff and facultywith the University  ofWisconsin-  ------------Parks ideTeachingExcellenceAwards."For stu-dents, thisis theirchance to recognize goodteachers," said OliverHayward, associate  profes-sor of history at UW-Parkside. Hayward  is athree-time award-winnerand a member of the facul-ty committee  making thisyear's decision.Any student  may nomi-nate faculty for this year'sTeaching Excellenceo Jim HendricksonEditor-in-ChiefAward. Forms may bepicked up at the AdvisingCenter (WYLL 107).Deadline for receipt ofnominations  is April 30,1996.Any continuiqg  full timemember of the faculty orteaching academic staffwho has taught  a mini-mum of five years at UW-Parkside  is eligible toreceive anaward. Therecipients ofthe awardsfor the lastseven yearswill not beconsideredeligible this year: i.e.,C.M. Chen, RossGunderson,  OliverHayward, Mark James,Lisa Kornetsky, DonKurnmings,Maria  Leavitt,Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz,Carl Lindner, PatrickMcGuire, Paul Mohazzabi,Jane Pinnow, and CaroleVopat.Nominations  may"be"Thisis their chancetorecoqnizetjoodteachers"Oliver Haywarddropped off at theRangerOffice (WYLL D139C),Union Information Center,Advising Center (WYLL107), the OMSA Office(WYLL D182), or theSecretary  of the Faculty(MOLN D135).Ozone,AirMahagemen~To Be Focus ,oGEarthQ"Ozone and theAirManagemt!il~'Program in Southeastern  Wi:seon.sm"will be discussedbystate officillI~",'lOlChicago representative  from.Environmental  ProteetioIlAgand a sciencereseareherdur!discussion atilhe Urtiver-sit0Wisconsin-Parkside4j.1rilPanelistswillhsection chief;WisNaturalResourceManagement,  Mad,assistant  prl1fessorParkside;.rohnc~o()Owls, Eagles and VulturesSeen Flying Around In Communication  Arts TheatreoJess AndersenGuest WriterAn owl,falcon, and hawkmade flight presentations aver the heads of 350 peo-ple on March 30 in the Communication Arts Theatre.Roger Holloway present-ed "Flight For Survival," aprogram focusing on birdsofprey existing in today's warid and the steps necessaryto save these birds andother endangered species from extinction.Abarn owl named"Lou-al"and a red-tailed hawk named "Sierra" were just two ofthe ten birds displayed. Oneofthe most impressive birdswas a twenty-eight-year-old Golden Eagle named "Kuma,"who mesmerized theaudience with his beauti-.ful golden feathers and his7-1/2foot wing span.Birds of prey playa veryimportant role in our natur-al environment not onlybecausethey-reduce rodentpopulations, but becausethey serve as indicators ofthe condition of our natur-al environment. The WorldBird Sanctuary primarilyfocuses on educating the worid about the importance oftheir preservation. Birds ofprey are coming closer to extinct everyday. The "FlightFor Survival" presentationtalked about how these majestic creatures  can besaved.AsHolloway described eachbird ofprey; the audience was fascinated by the way each predator calmly perchedon his arm. These birds cauldfly back and forth over the audience from Roger toLibby Wheary, a Parkside student, who wore a long protective glovewhile each birdperched on herarmaswell.Many ofthe children in theaudience were amazed at the way these birds tookflight. Holloway also tookaCont onpage 2&#13;
Parkside OffersFilm InternshipThe University ofWisconsin-Parkside EnglishDepartment will offer stu-dents the chance to experi-ence the production of a the-atrical film beginning inmid-July.Julie King, English SeniorLecturer, will head the  .course which will allow 20Parkside students theopportunity to work asinterns on RANDUM Filmand Entertainment's  politi-cal comedyNeighbor King.The three credit course,which begins its six weekrun on July 15, will offerstudents positionsinpro-duction, camera, make-up,lighting, and wardrobe.These positions involve cam-era set-up and operation,lighting set-up, set construe-tion,preparationof actors'make-up and clothing, foodservice, acting as "extras,"etc.The class is open to allstudents on a first come,first served basis. No experi-ence isrequired. ProducerMick Wynhoff(America'sDeadliest Home Video )andDirector Mike Jittlov(TheWizard of Speed and Time)will give students a two-day,in-depth lecture on everyaspect offilmmaking andtheir roles in the production,prior to filming.Interested students mustmeet with King, officeComm Arts 254, Ext. 2507,immediately for approvaland summer registrationinformation..Representatives to SpeakonCampusState Representative Robert Wirch,Democrat (Kenosha) and StateRepresentative Bonnie Ladwig, Republican(Racine County) will be speaking to thePolitical Parties and Interest Group class atParkside.Representative Wirch will be speaking onApril 18 and Representative Ladwig onApril 23 at 9:30 a.m. in Molinaro 116.Each representative  will be talking abouthislher respective party and how it func-tions in the legislature. They will also betalking about current issues before thestate legislature.Any student who is interested in hearingthe presentations .iswelcome to attend.Birds at ParksideCont  frompageIlot of time educating the youngchildren about the impor-tance of how to preserve andprotect these birds.The show was sponsored bythe Racine Zoological Society, the VonSchrader Company and Lambda Pi Eta (the UW-Parkside chapter of the Nation~lCommunication Hanor Society). The purpose ofthe show was to benefit the Racine Zoological Gardens. For more information about these majestic creatures ofnature, write to The World BirdSanctuary, PO. Box 270270,St. Louis, Missouri, 63127,or call (314) 938-6193.Wise graduates joinEducators Credit Unionbeforeleaving campus!Whoacares about yourfinancial needsby offering High Returns on Savings,and Low rates on Student, Car, andHome Loan Rates.Whoaoffers TotallyFree Checking and MasterCardNISA?Wedo. You're part ofthe credit unionfamily. Joining iseasy, and you are amember for life!Tallent Hall Rm. 286595-2150http://www.ecu.com9:30-4:00&#13;
Volunteerof the WeekStudents  are selected  asVolunteer  of the Week bytheir  altruistic  attitudes,the amount  of time sharedwithin  the community  andthe positive  impact  theirservice  has made in thelives of others.  This week'svolunteer  is GinaSchueneman.Gina is a sophomoremajoring  biology with inten-tions of going on to medi-cine. Gina has been activein the volunteer  programsince her freshman  yearwith the Shalom  Center  andbecame  a weekly volunteerat St. Catherine's  Hospital.This year she has becomean active volunteer  with theKenosha  County  MedicalExaminer  and VolunteerConnection  recruiter.Gina says she loves volun-teering  in a medical setting.It gives her  the opportunityto learn  about what goes onin a hospital  and allows herto connect  with doctors.Volunteering  in the MedicalExaminer's  Officehas allowed her toobserve autopsies,and she is excitedthat soon she will beable to help performthem. These experi-ences have taughther many valuablethings  that she willbe able to take tomedical school andkeep for life.To Gina volunteer-ing isn't just  a learn-ing experience.  Shejust likes being withpeople. She said,"1really enjoy helping  people."Her Volunteer  ConnectionSupervisor,  Carol Engberg,supports  this by saying,"Gina is a responsible,friendly, conscientious  per-son who is easy to workwith."Itis clear that  Gina reallywants  to help others.  Withthe Volunteer  Connection,Gina recruits  new volun-teers.Gina SchuenemanGina, in addition to thevaluable  medical informa-tion she has received, haslearned  that smiles andthank  yous are enough toknow that people appreciateher help. Gina, here is onemore smile and thank youfor all the help you havegiven to the people aroundyou.Volunteer  OpportunitiesRecreational  Aide. Instruct inmates at theRacine  Correctional  Institution how to knit,crochet  and sew. Learn how to work in acorrectional  institute setting and how towork with a diverse population. Bilingual aplus. See Carol in the Volunteer Office orcall Carmen  Kerkman at 886-3214,  ext. 593.charts, and various other clerical tasks.Contact Carol in the Volunteer Center orMary Collins at 654-0491.Special Events:Museum Assistant. Sat. April'27, 10:30-noon. Help the Kenosha Museum with theEarth Day Birthday Celebration. Serve cakeor help preschool children with arts andcrafts. Contact Heather at the VolunteerOffice.Beach Cleanup. Sat. April 27, 8:30-noon.Help at Racine beaches.  Meet at Lakeview.Contact Heather in the Volunteer Office orWendy at 633-9372.Wilson Elementary Sports Day.Tues. May28, 7:45-11 am. Help with a variety of sportsand activities. Need lots of help.Victim Witness  Specialist  Intern. Juniors orseniors  in criminal justice, sociology, or psy-chology can help at Racine County VictimWitness  Program. Volunteers willassist thevictims and witnesses  through their involve-ment with the criminal justice system andthrough close contact with the districtAttorney. Contact Carol in the VolunteerOffice.Clerical Assistant. Work with PlannedParenthood  in Kenosha filing patient'sreports,  answering the telephone  and takingmessages,  typing, making and inactivatingSee Heather or Carol in the  VolunteerOffice, WYLL0-175, inside the CareerCenter, or call 595-2011 .Garth BrooksRocks Milwaukee•Karen DiehlManaging EditorHerndon," Garth drawled,"But I think I can hold myown." He then proceeded toThe concert which took       strum the first few notes ofplace on April 13 atthe song, sending the crowdMilwaukee's Bradley Center    into a frenzy.  After thepresented  a fascinating  corn-   album-version  of the songbination of traditionalwas complete, the music grewCountry-Western music and    quiet, and Garth told the21st century special effects.     crowd that he was in theGarth Brooks, in his third of    process of recording a live3 Milwaukee performances,     album, and that he betproved himself to be one of     Milwaukee would like tothe most energetic perform-     have a chance to be onit.ers alive today by holding the   The crowd was then prompt-attention of over 30,000 peo-    ed to sing the third verse ofpie for more than 2 and a       the song, released  as a singlehalf hours.from Garth's huge DallasThe show began with two     show a few years ago.cowboys strumming guitars       Other high points includedbeside an electric campfire.      a very emotionalDigital crickets chirped in the   "Unanswered  Prayers"  and abackground and a spotlight     heartfelt "We Shall Be Free."full-moon lit the scene.  The     For just a few minutes,  eachpair entertained  the crowd by   ofthe 30,000 people in thesinging silly country songs      auditorium really believed inabout boots and chewing       world peace and harmony.  Ittobacco.was a feeling I won't soon for-After a half-hour break, the   get."Garth-Man" himself took the     Garth's encores included anstage.  Rising out of a grand-    acoustic rendition of Bobpiano, he opened with  'When   Seger's "Night Moves," astheOld Stuff was New," the    well as his own "She's Everyfirst song off of his most        Woman." A foot-stompingrecent album,Fresh Horses."Ain't Going Down" inspiredThe rest of the concert con-     Garth to climb one of thesisted almost entirely of       rope ladders used by thesongs offThe Hits,a compila-   technical crew and jump ontionof Garth's biggest and      top of the drummer's  cage.best.The concert ended with aOne of the evening's high     cover of Don McLean'spoints was a crowd-pleasing     "American Pie" which hadrendition of "Friends in Low    everyone under the roofPlaces." Garth cleverlyintro-singing along.     .duced the song by mentioning     The evening proved thathis former acoustic guitar       Mr. Brooks is a performerplayer,TyHerndon.  He        who crosses the boundaries  ofexplained that sinceTy'sage, geography and musicaldeparture, he'd taken over     genres. He spoke to themost of the acoustic parts       hearts of his fans in a wayhimself. "Now I'm noTythat few artists can.~--------------~---c;()&amp;I~ft------------------,,,,-I!$2 OFF PerTireI!On Any Used Tires: Irsthebigmove ... Edhasmoved4: blocks westto3300 • 60th St.... Ed's,: home01the$12tire; mountedandIbalanced FREE. Stop In and say hi:.to Ed.'.. ,irl~$NoLimn. Evnires 5/2196Ij.......::Selling And RepairingI:Tires For Over31YearsI,I:3300-6Olh St. • Kenoshai:.652·5353     :-----------------------------------------------~&#13;
He said, She Said...That time ofthe month• Scott MalikSingle SapGee, Karen.Thanks  a bunch. Justthe topic I have been looking forwardto writing about. Can I ever show myface in public again? Will I be amarked man?My feelings about PMS are likemost of the male populace, and yet Ican be sympathetic  to it because Ihave seen different  intensities  of it.PMS, IRS, KGB, SWF: these  arethe kisses of death.  They all useacronyms for personal  gain.Q.Why does the IRS audit?A.Because they are the IRS.Q.Why does a woman get crankyevery 28 days?A.Because they have PMS.I have seen some women use PMSto get anything  they want. Usuallythe man just goes along because hedoesn't want to confront Satan.  "Allright, dear. We'll watch Bridges ofMadison County again-instead  of thisnew Schwarzenegger  flick." And evenif the flow of emotions isn't heavy,she's happy because she got her wayand she used PMS as an excuse.Now, I'm not saying women do.thisall the time, but I don't believe everywoman is innocent of it.Andwomenknow this because it works!!! Jeez, if Ihad a credit for every time I made amidnight  run to Taco Bell or BaskinRobbins for my ex, I'd be... well, I'dbe a math major at Parkside.(Granted, pregnancy  is far off fromPMS but the same rules applybecause the mood swings are juSt asunpredictable.)  And I went, halfasleep with my hair all ratted,  halfmy face sliding off-my skull, wearingmy ~weaters and fuzzy slippers. Ibasically looked like your friendly,neighborhood "can I bum a quarter"guy.But is was either  that  or I wouldn'teven  be allowed to drive past a TacoBell without some subtle remarkabout how "SELFISH I WAS!!!"Soladies, if you want things  from thebeau, PMS is a great  way to gobecause we are all basically suckersand fall for that  every time. "What??You have PMS? I am at your serviceyour majesty. Please ... JUST DON'TKILL ME!!!"And, to all the guys who are stillwith me, PMS is a great time to earnsome brownie points! This would be agreat time to have a unique bunch offlowers sent to her at home or work(don't send roses ...anyone one can dothat.  They like it when you get cre-ative). Better yet, take her out for aromantic evening of dinner and a car-riage ride, or a cozy evening by thefire, movie and some wine.But this is a really bad time to tellher that  you would rather   work onyour car than  spend time with her. Orworst of all (and if anyone does thisyou are without  my sympathies): tellher you've been feeling constrictedand need more space. Ifthat  is thecase ...move! Trust me. I know fromexperience. Hide out in Montana orsomething and learn to live likeGrizzly Adams. Youwill never be safefrom her wrath.So once again kids, we come to theend of another  "grrrreat!!" column.Any guys who want to tell me howPMS has ruined their lives can e-mailme atmaliks@it.uwp.edu.Any womenwho wanna kill me or tell where I cango with my opinions can e-mail myfriend Paul at thuriot@it.uwp.edu.• Karen  DiehlManaging  EditorA woman with PMS is muchlike ... well, like ... Hmm.  I guessshe's not much like anything·else on Earth.   She's generallyunpredictable,  but not always.She's sometimes crabby, but notalways.  And she usually  getsoverly emotional,  but notalways.  It has been my experi-ence that  men are very irritatedby this lack of consistency infemale behavior.  All I have tosay on THAT subject is, if youthink  it suckswatchingsomeonewith PMS, just try to imaginebeingsomeone with it.Men will whine about our"abuse" of the aggravatingmonthly condition, claiming weuse it as an excuse, or that wemanipulate  poor, ovary-deficientcreatures  by bullying them withit.  Aw. Poor babies.  I feel forthem, really.The truth  of the matter  isthat  men areafraidof PMS.No, really.  Everything  about thecondition bothers  them.  Everwalk up to a guy and say, "men-struation?"   He'll cringe, I guar-antee it.  Men don't like thethought  of going through  exces-sive amounts of emotionalstress,  bloating like a water  bal-loon and then windin(;' up inexcruciating pain while bleedingprofusely.  It sounds far to ickyto be a natural  process.  So,rather  than  admit  that  womenhave good reason to be crabby,they pretend  the whole conditionis in our minds.I once had a male friend ofmine tell me, "Youdon't havePMS.  Youjustthinkyou havePMS."  Boy, was that  a mistake.I proceeded to call him nameswhich would get me arrested  insome countries  and then  burstinto tears.   The thing which irri-tated  me most was knowing thathe's probably not alone in feelingthat  way.  How many other menthink  women are faking PMS toget their  own way, but remain. silent  to avoid the wrath  ofWoman?  The answer  to thatquestion scares me.What most men don't under-stand  is that  having PMS isn'tlike having  an ordinary  bout ofcrabbiness.   It's like having youremotional  sensors  set toOVERKILL.  If the person infront of you snaps their  gum onan ordinary  day, you'd think  toyourself,  "Man, that's  rude.  Iwish he'd stop it."  However,should he make the mistake  ofdoing so on a PMS day, you'dfind yourself picturing  your footmeeting  the back of his greasylittle head with a loud, satisfy-ing THWACK! as his limp, life-less body fell to the floor. Andthey say PMS isn't an illness ....In closing, I'd like to ask all ofthe penis-endowed  members ofthe human  race to have pity onthe rest of us.  We don't mean tobe irrational  crabs every month,we just  can't help it.  As soon asmen realize  that  the only thingworse than  having PMS is hav-ing PMS with an insensitiveman around,  the world will be abetter  place.ObservationsEconomic Insecurity?·C. J. Nelsonmarket  since it is a truism  that  "theAmerican electorate  votes with its wal-let".   Polling data  show that  the majori-ty of workers are concerned about theirfutures.   Cliche or not, the rich do seemto be getting richer and the poor, poorer.A recent  Wisconsin survey showed that  theaverage hourly wage is $6.00.  Articles in theKenosha Newsbemoan the lack of workers insouthern  Wisconsin.  What the paper  does notsay is that  the wage in this area  is only $4.50 to$6.00 per hour.  That wage is simply not enoughto sustain  afamily,A large portion  of theunemployed in this area have dependents   andthis wage is a joke.  In Illinois the averagehourly pay (at least from what  I have seen) is$6.00 - $9.00.  Local business  types wonder whypeople would rather  work at Motorola, than  atthe Factory  Outlet Mall,  or the 'dog track.Ocean Spray Cranberries  advertised  for work-ers recently.   They received in excess of 2,000Capitalism  is the best economic system  everdevised by man.  The facts are clear: no othersystem has  ever been able to produce the wide-spread prosperity  that  capitalism  has.  This   .does not mean that  a market-  based economy isthe incarnation  of heaven on earth;  far from it.Today in this  and other nations  we have thereality  of widespread  economic insecurity  (seePat Buchanan)  in what economists call a goodeconomy (see Bill Clinton).Almost daily, radio and television shows talkabout the job market.   It being an election yearthe politicians  are also talking  about the jobresumes,  tested  close to 400, and interviewed200, all to fill ten job vacancies.   If my math  iscorrect, your odds of getting  a job are one intwenty.  Commonly jobs have five to seven, ormore, applicants  per opening.Downsizing (using  a current  buzz word) is notnew.  The only difference  between the IBM,Xerox, and AT&amp;T managers,  and manufacturingworkers  is that  the latter  lost their jobs in thelate  1970's through  mid 1980's.   Small wonderthat  opinion surveys  indicate  that  these  work-ers have little sympathy  for their  white  collarbrethren  now out of work.The rich are walling  themselves  off from therest of society like the French  noblemen  of the17th century.  While I do not think  a corre-sponding reaction  by others  is likely,  I do feelthat  this tangible  economic insecurity  is notgood for out nation  and that  the possibility  ofstrife  grows in proportion  to it.&#13;
Don'tbe&lt;:t,,,baby.ReadtheRangerNews.ObservationsThe Lowest on theMoral Food Chain-c.J. NelsonQ:What do you call a thousandlawyers  at the bottom of LakeMichigan?A: A good start.Q:What is the difference  betweena defense lawyer and a convict?A: You might let your daughtermarry a convict."First we kill all the lawyers."  -William Shakespeare.As you can tell from the aboveparagraph  I hold the legal profes-sion in minimal  regard.  Ireserve  special contempt  for triallawyers who I see as being thelowest thing on the moral foodchain.  "Gee C. J., that  seems  atad bit strident,"  you say.   "Notat all," I answer. In fact I intendto validate  my position.Consider  Leslie Abramson,  oneof the lead lawyers  for theMenendez brothers.   In the broth-ers' first trial she argued  that  thebrothers  had shot their  parents,reloaded  and shot them  somemore because they had beenabused.   She got a hung jury.  Asmarter  judge did not allow thistripe in the second trial.  So Ms.Abramson  had her defense shrinkchange his notes.  The only prob-lem was that  those same noteshad been turned  over to the pros-ecution in the first trial.  The dis-crepancy was found and the doc-tor admitted  that  he had beenurged to change his notes.  Whenquestioned,  Ms. Abramson  tookthe Fifth.  And if this is notenough, the other  Menendezlawyers  argued that  the convic-tion should be thrown  out becausethe brothers  had not receivedproper legal counsel.  That, ladiesand gentlemen,  is chutzpah.Alan Dershowicz argues that  atrial is not a search for the truth,that  guilt or innocence is immate-rial.  If that  is the case, what is atrial for?  Dershowicz states  thathe has defended and won anacquittal  for "my murder."  Inother words, he got a man heknew was guilty off. This is aman who merits  respect?   If youlisten to him you see a supremelyarrogant  man who belittles any-one who would dare to disagreewith him.  After all he is a lawyerand therefore  smarter  than usmere mortals.Defense lawyers rejoice intelling us how bad the justice  sys-tem is.  I sometimes wonder if,according to them, anyone is everguilty of committing  any crime.This morning  it was reported  thatthe shyster  that  represents  thealleged Unabomber  will argue incourt that  his client can not get afair trial  anywhere  in the nationand therefore  any charges shouldbe dropped and no othersbrought.  That's  serving the causeofjustice,  is it not?Just  once I would like to see ajudge lock up a trial lawyer whobrings a frivolous lawsuit into hiscourt.  The problem is that judgesare lawyers  themselves.  If youneed anymore  convincing thatlawyers are an overall waste,then consider that  Hillary Clintonand her husband  are bothlawyers.  Now you know whyReagan was a better President.How toWhine- Jim HendricksonEditor-in-ChiefNot sure how to whine?As a public service, theRangerNewswill help you out.Whining is one of the greatest plea-sures life has to offer. Shakespearesaid, "Aloaf of bread, a jug andwhine, whine, whine."Seriously, whining is the only waysome people express their displeasureto others. Clearly, it is important thatwe know how to deal with whiners intheir own·habitat.Whining as an art form was devel-oped in the late Hellenistic Age.AsRome gobbled up territories  in theBalkans, the overrun Greeks said"Did they have to track mud all o~erthe  place? At least Alexander theGreat wiped his feet on the matbefore destroying our land's wealthand 'marrying' our best-lookingwomen. Those Romans are justbarbaric!"Since then, soldiers have whinedabout generals, generals have whinedabout politicians, politicians havewhined about other politicians, etc.ad nauseam. Intuitively, whining haschanged the course of human events.Mostly, it has had a deleterious effecton the diplomatic relations of nations.World War II might not have hap-pened if the German people hadwhined just a little less about theVersailles Treaty. Just  a thought.Now for the question-and-answer  section:Q.What does all this whining gener-ate, other than hot air?A. Whining can be very beneficial ifyou whine about the right things tothe right people.Ifyou pick yourwhines as carefully as you pick yourfriends, you realize that  some whinesare appropriate  in a finite number ofsituations.Q.Can you give me an example?A. Yes.Q.Today? ..A. Yes.Itis never appropriate  towhine to me about something I'mdoing wrong.Q.How are you supposed to learnwhat offends other people?A.Ifit offendsme, it must offendoth-ers.Q.And if it offends others?A.So?Q.Is it appropriate  to whine aboutMadonna being pregnant  by a manwho was not, is not and will not beher husband?A. Yes. If Madonna's behavior sur-prises you and specifically harms you,you have every right to whine. Justdon't do it to me.Q.Is it all right to whine that BillClinton takes credit for the goodthings done by the RepublicanCongress?A.Ifyou are Newt Gingrich or one ofthe pod people, yes.Q.Can I whine that  my communica-tion teacher just doesn't understandme?A.No.Q.I was totally put out by last week'sRanger Newssaying the story contin-ued on page two when it was reallyon page four. Can I whine about that?A. Did you find the story eventually?Q.Yes.A.No, you cannot whine about that.Whine about something big.Something meaningful.Q.But Jim, you say you hate whiningabout little stuff. Aren't-you justwhining about other people's whin-ing?A.Yes,but I have only two issues leftas Editor-in-Chief. This had to be said.Shakespeare 'ToBe' CelebratedDuring Parkside DinnerA Shakespeare  Birthday Dinner,commemorating the 432nd birth-day of William Shakespeare,  will .be held at the University ofWisconsin-Parkside  on April 2l.The buffet dinner is sponsoredby the Teaching ShakespeareResource Center and the RegionalStaff Development Center. Tomake reservations  for the dinner,call 595-2002 or 595-2498.The featured  speaker will beMary Roland, a formerWashington Park High SchoolEnglish teacher. According toAndrew McLean, director of theTeaching Shakespeare  ResourceCenter, Roland has excited manyarea students  about the works ofShakespeare."Mary is one ofthe  area's bestShakespeare  teachers and she hasinspired hundreds of students  toenjoy Shakespeare's  works duringher years at Park High School,"said McLean.Other entertainment  during theprogram will include readings andperformances of Shakespeare'sworks.&#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>THE&#13;
.    N&#13;
AN&#13;
VOLUME 24 • ISSUE 24 • APRIL 4, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
Dittrich Gives Talk:&#13;
"Women iilEastern Europe"&#13;
the  entire   health   care  system.&#13;
The  issue  of birth  control  and  abor-&#13;
tion  is quite  controversial  in these&#13;
countries.  There  are  many  unwanted&#13;
pregnancies,   yet the  government   fails&#13;
to educate  young people  about  contra-&#13;
'ceptives,&#13;
As' a result,  abortion  is often&#13;
used&#13;
as&#13;
birth  control. For every  100&#13;
live births  there  are&#13;
67&#13;
abortions.   On&#13;
the  average,  a woman  will have  12&#13;
abortions  in her  lifetime.&#13;
It&#13;
is believed  that  education  is the&#13;
key  for the  future  generation.   The&#13;
children  must  learn  how to get  along&#13;
with  others  and  how to treat   every-&#13;
one with  equality.&#13;
Dittrich   explaioed  that  her  visit  to&#13;
Eastern   Europe  was  both  exhilarat-&#13;
ing and  disheartening.   It was  excit-&#13;
ing to learn  about  a different  way  of&#13;
life, but  it was  difficult to watch  peo-&#13;
ple living  a very  rural  lifestyle .&#13;
Education   is definitely  the  key  to&#13;
success  and  an  improved  standard   of&#13;
living.&#13;
It&#13;
will be a difficult transfor-&#13;
mation,  but  a necessary  one.&#13;
• Laura   Van  Strien&#13;
Guest  Writer&#13;
The  status    of women  in  Eastern&#13;
Europe  was  the  topic  of a lecture&#13;
given  on  March   27  as  part   of  the&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
Soup  and  Substance    lecture&#13;
series.  Carol  Dittrich,    associate   pro-&#13;
fessor  of history   at  UW-Milwaukee&#13;
presented   the  lecture.   Dittrich   also&#13;
teaches   at  Mount   Mary  College.&#13;
Dittrich   discussed    the  transforma-&#13;
tion  to  post-communism&#13;
and  the&#13;
eff~cts of that   transformation&#13;
on the&#13;
women&#13;
livinz&#13;
in  Hungary,   Poland,&#13;
the  Slovak   Republic,   and  the  former&#13;
Yugoslavia,   all  of which  are  regions&#13;
that  Dittrich   has  traveled    extensive-&#13;
ly.&#13;
The  first   section   of the  lecture&#13;
concerned   the  women   in  Hungary.&#13;
There,  as  in  the  rest   of Eastern&#13;
Europe,  women's   issues   are  largely&#13;
viewed  as  unimportant.&#13;
Because&#13;
Eastern   European    society  is, for the&#13;
most  part,   rural   and  traditional,    the&#13;
domestic   sphere   of life  still  remains&#13;
the  responsibility&#13;
of the  women.&#13;
Everyday   chores  that   are  made  rela-&#13;
tively  easy  for  U.S.  women  by mod-&#13;
ern  technology,   are  performed   the&#13;
old-fashioned   way  in  Eastern&#13;
Europe.   For  instance,    washing&#13;
clothes  requires   extensive   hand&#13;
washing   or the  use  of a very  old&#13;
model  washing   machine.   Dryers   are&#13;
virtually   unavailable.&#13;
The  women  of&#13;
Eastern    Europe   make  trips  to the&#13;
store  every  day  because   of the  space&#13;
limitations    in  homes   and  stores.&#13;
Dittrich   explained   that  women&#13;
have  very  poor  representation&#13;
in&#13;
politics  and  must   fight  for every-&#13;
thing.   Their  lives  are  stressful   and&#13;
offer  little  or no  free  time.  Dittrich&#13;
also  explained   that   while  marriage&#13;
is often  thought   of as  a means  of&#13;
escape, for many women&#13;
it&#13;
turns out&#13;
to be  a trap  in  and  of itself.  Several&#13;
generations   live together   in the&#13;
same  home  and  the  level  of frustra-&#13;
tion  and  anger  that   builds  often  dri-L&#13;
ves  young  women  out.  Many  men&#13;
are abusive, and violence in a&#13;
household   is expected.  Affairs  are&#13;
considered   acceptable   for  men  but&#13;
not  for women.   The  divorce  rate&#13;
continually   rises  and  the  living  con-&#13;
ditions worsen.&#13;
Dittrich   also  discussed   the  lack  of&#13;
modern  medical  technology   in  most&#13;
post-communist    countries.   Most  hos-&#13;
pitals   are  technologically   outdated.&#13;
The  physicians   are  paid  very  poorly&#13;
for their  services  and,  in  turn,   do&#13;
not  perform  at  their  highest   level.&#13;
Health   care,  in general,   requires&#13;
extreme   overhauling.   There  seems&#13;
to  be a gross  inefficiency  throughout&#13;
Stopping Rape&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
Spring Banquet&#13;
rape,  society  tends  to put  unwar-&#13;
ranted   blame  on the  victim.&#13;
Another   factor  which  they  feel&#13;
may  contribute   to rape  is the  dan-&#13;
gerous  mix  of too much  alcohol  and&#13;
not  enough  communication.&#13;
Three&#13;
out  of five women  and  two  out  of&#13;
three   men  confessed  to getting&#13;
involved  in "coercive  sexual  behav-&#13;
ior" while  drinking   alcohol,  accord-&#13;
ing  to Public  Health  Reports.&#13;
One  explanation   for this  is that&#13;
many  people  view alcohol  as  an&#13;
excuse  to act  inappropriately.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
important   to realize  that  sexual&#13;
coercion   whether   intentional    or not,&#13;
is justifi~ation   for rape.   This  means&#13;
that   having   sex with  someone  who&#13;
•  Daniel  Buschmann&#13;
Guest  Writer&#13;
• Kristine   Hansen&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
One  of the  growing  concerns  on&#13;
college  campuses   is the  occurrence&#13;
of rape.&#13;
According  to the  National&#13;
Coalition  Against   Sexual  Assault,&#13;
"One  in  four  college women  have&#13;
either   been  raped  or  suffered&#13;
attempted    rape."   Also  a  surprising&#13;
84% of these  women  knew  who their&#13;
assailants were.&#13;
However,  health   experts   for the&#13;
Federal   Bureau   of Investigation&#13;
state   that   they  can't  accurately&#13;
determine   the  level  of sexual&#13;
assault   because  more  than   a third  of&#13;
all  cases  go unreported.&#13;
They  feel&#13;
the  reason   for this  is  that   in  cases  of&#13;
•  Parkside's    chapter    of Sigma  Tau&#13;
,Delta,  the  international&#13;
honor  soci-&#13;
iety for English    majors,  will  have  its&#13;
,Spring  Banquet    on Apri]l9;&#13;
~  New  members    w~ll be  inducted&#13;
'and  graduating&#13;
seniors&#13;
willJle&#13;
dis-&#13;
fmissed  with   a hearty   far!&gt;wiill,.l"on-&#13;
!members  are  encouraged&#13;
til&#13;
.!lttend&#13;
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~~~~"""'===~~:::::::::::===&#13;
I&#13;
Rape cont. on p. 3&#13;
::-.=-.::---&#13;
F&#13;
Dispute Resolution Center Planned&#13;
for&#13;
Parks ide&#13;
-Jonathan  Shailor&#13;
Guest Writer&#13;
Have you ever found yourself in&#13;
any of the following situations? You&#13;
and your roommate have a continu-&#13;
ing disagreement about how to keep&#13;
your living space clean. Your&#13;
employer habitually makes racist&#13;
remarks. Someone talks to you in&#13;
ways that make you feel uncomfort-&#13;
able. Youhave a disagreement with&#13;
someone about money, possession,&#13;
privacy or responsibility. Of course,&#13;
we all find ourselves in situations&#13;
like these from time to time. Most of&#13;
the time, we fmd ways to handle&#13;
them. Unfortunately, when the con-&#13;
flict is difficult to resolve, we may&#13;
avoid confrontation, or feel that our&#13;
only alternative is to go on the&#13;
attack.&#13;
Soon, the campus will present&#13;
another alternative: the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Dispute&#13;
Resolution Center. The Center will&#13;
offer a service in which trained&#13;
mediators will assist disputing par-&#13;
ties in the resolution of their con-&#13;
flicts. Mediators will be members of&#13;
our own campus: students, faculty,&#13;
staff and administrators.  As media-&#13;
tors, they will not evaluate the&#13;
"rightness"  or "wrongness"  of indi-&#13;
vidual claims, nor will they render&#13;
decisions. Instead, they will facili-&#13;
tate a highly structured process that&#13;
enables parties to be heard and&#13;
understood. They will also help dis-&#13;
putants to clarify issues, to discuss&#13;
a range of alternatives,  and to craft&#13;
agreements that satisfy everyone&#13;
involved.&#13;
.&#13;
The inspiration for our Dispute&#13;
Resolution Center came from&#13;
Parkside student and social activist&#13;
Mateo Mackbee, who began conver-&#13;
sations last year with university&#13;
police officer Marlene Schlecht and&#13;
communications professor Jonathan&#13;
Shailor, two people with prior inter-&#13;
est and expertise in the field of&#13;
mediation. Schlecht is an experi-&#13;
enced crime prevention specialist.&#13;
Shailor's experience includes ten&#13;
years of work in mediation as a&#13;
mediator, trainer and researcher.&#13;
In the spring of 1995, Mackbee,&#13;
Schlecht and Shailor began discus-&#13;
sions with Dean of Students Steve&#13;
McLaughlin and Director of&#13;
Residence Life DeAnn Stone. Both&#13;
McLaughlin and Stone have consid-&#13;
erable experience in mediating cam-&#13;
pus issues and in training students&#13;
as mediators. The evolving group&#13;
began meeting formally in academic&#13;
year 1995-96 as "The Mediation&#13;
Committee," while adding the fol-&#13;
lowing members: Liz Haas (resident&#13;
assistant), Shauna Hodges (resident&#13;
assistant), Jeffrey Leuenberger (uni-&#13;
versity police), Gloria Secor (student&#13;
affairs) and Gerhard Schutte (sociol-&#13;
ogy).&#13;
-Currently the committee is plan-&#13;
ning the initial mediation training,&#13;
scheduled for Fall 1996. In the fall,&#13;
approximately 30 students, faculty,&#13;
staff and administrators  will partici-&#13;
pate in a 30-hour training program&#13;
in order to become certified as medi-&#13;
ators. Members of the campus com-&#13;
munity who are interested in being&#13;
trained as mediators should contact&#13;
Steve McLaughlin (595-2419) or&#13;
Jonathan  Shailor (595-2252).&#13;
Wise graduates join&#13;
Educators Credit Union&#13;
before&#13;
leaving&#13;
campus:&#13;
Tallent Hall Rm. 286&#13;
Whoo&#13;
cares about your financial needs&#13;
by offering High Returns on Savings,&#13;
and Low rates on Student, Car, and&#13;
Home Loan Rates. Whoo offers Totally&#13;
Free Checking and MasterCardNISA?&#13;
We&#13;
do. You're part of the credit union&#13;
family. Joining is easy, and you are a&#13;
member for life!&#13;
@&#13;
(lUi.  III18C&#13;
LENDER&#13;
9:30-4:00&#13;
I-~~-I&#13;
595-2150&#13;
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