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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Student fired from on-campus job over failure to sign papers</text>
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              <text>17f'&#13;
J&#13;
ni&#13;
versi&#13;
ty&#13;
ofWiscons&#13;
ir&#13;
Freshman 35 0/0&#13;
Sophomore  19 0/0&#13;
Junior  14 0/0&#13;
Senior  190/0&#13;
Special  13 0/0&#13;
o&#13;
Pa kside&#13;
Student fired&#13;
from on-campus&#13;
job&#13;
over&#13;
failure to&#13;
sign&#13;
papers&#13;
woJic&#13;
early.  .&#13;
staling, "As a first year student,&#13;
"I didn't agree with the paper.    this summer's experience was&#13;
un-&#13;
7hey were asking me to sign about    fortunate. I'dilkooto work with you&#13;
specific&#13;
dates,&#13;
and&#13;
I could not&#13;
re-&#13;
to re-establish  your employment&#13;
call them and they could&#13;
notbe-&#13;
and assist as needed with your re-&#13;
lieve that," said Grube. "I was told    turn to classes this fall."&#13;
thatI  would be&#13;
fired&#13;
if! wouldn't&#13;
Grube has contacted a lawyer&#13;
sign it&#13;
If&#13;
I were&#13;
to&#13;
sign it, my job    and will not discuss the issue any-&#13;
prospect would look good."&#13;
more at this time.&#13;
Grube  explained  that in an&#13;
ClSoetz,   Charest,&#13;
and&#13;
earlier meeting with&#13;
Goldesberw&#13;
tIloldesberry  were contacted  but&#13;
he was told that&#13;
if&#13;
he didn't sign the   were not at liberty to speak on the&#13;
paper he would be fired.&#13;
"He&#13;
did    issue.  Myers also choose not to&#13;
fire me, but then he rehired me,"    speak.&#13;
said Grube.&#13;
According  to Grube, he&#13;
was&#13;
being  badgered  for a couple  of&#13;
weeks concerning  the signing Gf&#13;
the paper.&#13;
"I was then&#13;
fired,&#13;
They said&#13;
I&#13;
couldn't  be trusted," said Grube.&#13;
On August&#13;
28.  1990&#13;
Goetz&#13;
wrote&#13;
a letter  to Grube  stating,&#13;
"Realizing  that your recent  em-&#13;
ployment  experience  in the Com-&#13;
puter Center was not a very&#13;
posi-&#13;
tive or constructive  experience,&#13;
I&#13;
am offering  to work with you to&#13;
establish  a fresh start by locating&#13;
employment  in a different campus&#13;
operation."&#13;
Goetz concluded the letter by&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
Ne_Editor&#13;
Clary&#13;
Goetz, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
forAdministration and Fiscal&#13;
M·&#13;
fairs.&#13;
PhilipCharest, Director of Com-&#13;
puterServices.&#13;
Lee Goldesberry,   Operations&#13;
Managerfor Computer Services.&#13;
Richard Cummings,  Director  of&#13;
Personneland Payroll.&#13;
These individuals were all in-&#13;
volvedin the termination  of John&#13;
Grube,&#13;
a&#13;
OW -Parkside&#13;
student,&#13;
fromhis two positions  at&#13;
OW·&#13;
Parkside's Computer  Center.   In&#13;
August,Grube was dismissed as a&#13;
ComputerOperator  and RJE&#13;
At·&#13;
lendanl.&#13;
He was&#13;
"fired"&#13;
because he&#13;
didn'tcomply with&#13;
theadministra-&#13;
tors'&#13;
commands.&#13;
According to Grube, during a&#13;
meeting with  Goetz,  Charest,&#13;
Cummings·and Goldesberry,  he&#13;
was&#13;
asked&#13;
to&#13;
sign a paper that stated&#13;
that&#13;
Rick Myers, an employee  of&#13;
!be&#13;
Computer Center  and Presi-&#13;
dentof the Wisconsin  State Em-&#13;
ployeesUnion  Local&#13;
2180,&#13;
left&#13;
John Grube&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News&#13;
Editor   .&#13;
Amos&#13;
Young  is&#13;
8&#13;
Special&#13;
Project Security Officer.  Young&#13;
who is from Milwaukee, joined&#13;
OW&#13;
-Parkside's CampusPoliceon&#13;
March&#13;
26. 1990.&#13;
''The environ·&#13;
ment&#13;
is very nice," said Young.&#13;
"Great atmosphere,"&#13;
Since Youngistheonly  black&#13;
ontheCampusPolicestaff,   Young&#13;
thought his color might have been&#13;
an issue. ''They haven'tseencolor,&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
haven't either."&#13;
Young enjoys working with&#13;
the staff.  "I get along great with&#13;
my  co-workers.&#13;
He  (Dave&#13;
Ostrowski,  Director of Campus&#13;
Police and Public Safety) does a&#13;
great job running the department.&#13;
He's strict&#13;
on certain&#13;
tbingt,in&#13;
which he should&#13;
be,".&#13;
''This&#13;
is&#13;
8&#13;
friendly&#13;
atm0-&#13;
sphere,"&#13;
said&#13;
Young.&#13;
When&#13;
it comes&#13;
to&#13;
breaking&#13;
the  law.  Young  won't  be&#13;
so&#13;
friendly.   So bere's&#13;
8&#13;
wanting&#13;
from Young and Campus Pulice&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
different&#13;
kinds&#13;
of&#13;
parldng&#13;
regulations and how much&#13;
park-&#13;
ing&#13;
fines are.&#13;
.&#13;
Without Permit $S.OO&#13;
.Handicapped/ResetYed&#13;
$IS.00&#13;
Parking&#13;
on&#13;
Stripes&#13;
or&#13;
Grass&#13;
$10.00&#13;
Walkway&#13;
$10.00&#13;
Firezone $IS.00&#13;
No Parking Sign Regulation&#13;
$S.OO&#13;
Invalid Permit $S.OO&#13;
Who&#13;
are the students that attend UW-Parkside?  Where are they from?&#13;
Residency&#13;
Class Level&#13;
"'"&#13;
•&#13;
Kenosha Counly  35&#13;
0/. ----,&#13;
Milwaukee County  8 0/0&#13;
Olher Wisconsin Counties  6 0/0&#13;
Oul 01Slale 6&#13;
%&#13;
Foreign  2 0/0&#13;
Racine Counly  43&#13;
% ----&#13;
Source:UW-Parl&lt;side Office  of the Registrar.   Undergraduate  enrollment  statistics  es of September  6. 1990.&#13;
Ranger Graphic&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Editorial.:&#13;
Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report,&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate  Page&#13;
3&#13;
Voice ofUW·P    Page&#13;
4&#13;
Gabe'sGab&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Life after UWP   Page 16&#13;
International&#13;
Page20&#13;
This Week&#13;
.Page21&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Page 24&#13;
------1_---&#13;
E~:::.ito=-=n:-·&#13;
a_I '_-&#13;
---:-::t&#13;
p.......'&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
'.&#13;
r&#13;
I MANAGED  10   AVOiD&#13;
5AYlNr.&#13;
ANYTHING  OFFENSIVE&#13;
-   10&#13;
ANYONE&#13;
CONCERNED&#13;
ABoUT ~&#13;
BELIEFS •••&#13;
Editorial&#13;
For  the  past  two  weeks,  I have  been  harsh  on the&#13;
administration    because  of the fact  that  certain  situations   are&#13;
not handled  efficiently   on  this campus.   :Well, this  week  I&#13;
thought  I would  let them  breathe  and pick  on a new  group&#13;
of people:  the  students  of&#13;
UW -P.&#13;
I believe  most  of the&#13;
time  when  something   occurs  on campus  that  it is not the&#13;
students'   fault.   But  this past  week  several  situations   were&#13;
brought  to my  attention   and I&#13;
can&#13;
honestly   say I have  been&#13;
proven  wrong  in&#13;
J.&#13;
few  instances.&#13;
Some  students  who  come  to&#13;
UW-P&#13;
have  this  thing  in their  mind  that  their  mother&#13;
is&#13;
still  trailing  behind  them  to pick  up anything  they  leave  laying  around.&#13;
If&#13;
you  have&#13;
visited&#13;
the&#13;
cafeteria,   Coffee&#13;
Shoppe, or&#13;
the Union  Square  lately,  you  will  know  exactly&#13;
were  I am coming&#13;
from.&#13;
When  you  get done  eating  a meal  or drinking   a beverage   a little&#13;
food  fairy  doesn't   come  around  and clean  up after  you.   Why  the hell  do you  think&#13;
food&#13;
service  prices  are  so high?  First,  students  don't  know  how&#13;
to&#13;
pick  up after  themselves,   and&#13;
they  also&#13;
think&#13;
that it is ethical  to&#13;
borrow&#13;
silverware   from  the eateries  on campus   and&#13;
never  bring  them  back.&#13;
If&#13;
you  want  lunchroom   monitors   like  we had in grade  school  to&#13;
watch  you so everything   gets  picked  up, I'm  sure  food  service  could  arrange  for  this&#13;
service.  Your  mother  doesn't   go here,  so learn  to pick  up after  yourselves.&#13;
.&#13;
Admittedly,   the parking  situation  at&#13;
UW-P&#13;
isn't  the  greatest,  but  some&#13;
students-&#13;
decided  to take  it into  their  own  hands&#13;
to&#13;
make  it worse  this past  week.   This  past  week&#13;
some  students  decided  to flood  the visitors  parking  lot behind  the Union  building.    Can&#13;
you people&#13;
read&#13;
the sign?  It says  "Visitors  Only."   What  makes  you  so special  from  any&#13;
other  student?   Students  also illegally  parked  in the  reserved&#13;
parking&#13;
spots  and worse  yet&#13;
the spots  for the disabled.   Why  can't  you  be tough  and  handle  this parking   problem   like&#13;
everyone  else  does?&#13;
Learn&#13;
how  to walk  a half  mile  to class.   I hope  campus  police  tows&#13;
everyone  who  illegally  parks.&#13;
Last  but  not least,  I can't  stand  the  students  who  complain   because   there  is nothing&#13;
to&#13;
do on this campus.   I&#13;
can&#13;
tell you  several  things  to do if you  get&#13;
bored,&#13;
but  you  probably&#13;
won't  show  up anyway.   There  have  already  been  several  events  on campus   since  school&#13;
started&#13;
and&#13;
the turnout  was  terrible.   P AB  sponsored   a dance  two  weeks  ago;  they  were&#13;
lucky&#13;
if&#13;
fifty&#13;
people  showed  up.  Where  can you  see a good  quality  band  for  two  dollars&#13;
these&#13;
days?  The  next  dance&#13;
is&#13;
September   21 and  I expect  to see a lot more  students&#13;
attending&#13;
this&#13;
function.&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
See&#13;
Editor,&#13;
page 6&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
Quest&#13;
Editorial&#13;
•&#13;
Attention  student  reservists&#13;
by&#13;
Don Prange&#13;
CpL,USAR&#13;
.&#13;
.,&#13;
Unless you just came out.of a t~O month hibemaUon.yo~~ave&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
f&#13;
th&#13;
e&#13;
situation in Saudi Arabia.&#13;
If&#13;
you are a&#13;
reservist&#13;
it&#13;
ispoSSi"·&#13;
aware&#13;
0&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
th  f&#13;
t&#13;
Ifthisl&#13;
""&#13;
'tmaybeactivatedatsomeumem&#13;
e u&#13;
ure.&#13;
IS IS&#13;
thee  .&#13;
thatyour urn&#13;
eased'&#13;
c'&#13;
......&#13;
Presid&#13;
tShawoftheUWSystemhasrel&#13;
m,ormauOnOnwithdraWing&#13;
~m&#13;
.'&#13;
ted  I'&#13;
from the universi\tin  the event your UOlt.gets acuva&#13;
.&#13;
t&#13;
is im\lOltalll&#13;
that each student that is an acUv~reservISt go&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Office&#13;
of&#13;
Sludenl&#13;
Affairs and fill out a form that WIllexpedIte theprocess of WIthdraWing&#13;
from the university.&#13;
If&#13;
anyone&#13;
IS.&#13;
forced ~  wlthdra.w due to mililary&#13;
service.&#13;
all&#13;
tuition and fees, including housmg fees Will&#13;
be&#13;
refunded&#13;
and&#13;
there wiIIbe no academic penalty.&#13;
'.&#13;
"Student reservists will be assured readmlltance to the uniVelS;ty&#13;
upon their return from active duty," said Shaw.&#13;
Students called up near the end of the semester would&#13;
be&#13;
given&#13;
incomplete grades and would be allowed&#13;
to&#13;
complete their&#13;
COUISewotk&#13;
upon returning from active duty.  Students called up less than&#13;
three.&#13;
fourths into the semester would&#13;
beforced&#13;
to re-take the coursesupon&#13;
their&#13;
return.  Students with independent study courses could complete&#13;
the&#13;
courses while on active duty.&#13;
It's nice&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
the "System" providing some informationregarding&#13;
active reservists and the-universitypolicy,&#13;
100&#13;
bad&#13;
it IOOka&#13;
"W AR"to40&#13;
just that&#13;
UniVerSi~'&amp;~~~~'~;~~kside&#13;
~Memb.rof the Associated C~ll~~t~  Press&#13;
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SUbscripti~n,rate:ior on~&#13;
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____&#13;
rtf&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 19, issue 3, September 20, 1990</text>
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              </elementText>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>UW-Parkside reservists face real chance of being in war</text>
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              <text>&#13;
.~If'&#13;
'University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks    ide&#13;
UW-Parkside reservists face real chance of being in war&#13;
Dan   Chiappetta&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
With   American&#13;
troops&#13;
con-&#13;
tinuing&#13;
to&#13;
increase    in   the   Persian&#13;
Gulf,&#13;
the  UW-System&#13;
bas&#13;
made   a&#13;
policy concerning&#13;
the   possibility&#13;
of students,  faculty,   and   staff   who&#13;
may&#13;
be&#13;
called   to  active   duty.&#13;
There&#13;
lire&#13;
at    least&#13;
37&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parlcsidestudents   known    to  be  re-&#13;
servists,&#13;
according&#13;
to&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parlcside's Registrar    Office.&#13;
The UW-System    policy   states&#13;
that in the event  that  any  student    is&#13;
called&#13;
to active  military   duty,   he  or&#13;
she shall  be   issued    a&#13;
100&#13;
percent&#13;
refund of  all   fees   paid   except&#13;
for&#13;
room&#13;
and   board.&#13;
This&#13;
includes&#13;
admission&#13;
deposits,&#13;
advanced    reg-&#13;
islration fees,   academic&#13;
fees,   seg-&#13;
regated  fees,    special&#13;
course&#13;
fees&#13;
and   any  other   fee  of  this  nature.&#13;
The  policy   emphasizes&#13;
that   if&#13;
a   student&#13;
is   called&#13;
to   active    duty&#13;
before&#13;
the   beginning&#13;
of   the   aca-&#13;
demic    term,&#13;
100&#13;
percent&#13;
of  room&#13;
andboardsbould&#13;
berefunded.&#13;
Mter&#13;
thebeginningofthe&#13;
academic   term,&#13;
the   refund&#13;
should&#13;
be   based&#13;
upon&#13;
the  unused   portion    of  the  fee.   This&#13;
policy   only  applies   to students   who&#13;
are  reservists&#13;
!bat&#13;
are&#13;
called   to&#13;
ac-&#13;
live   duty,   not  students   who   volun-&#13;
tarily   enlist.&#13;
DonPran~,aUW-~bille&#13;
junior&#13;
and    an   Army    reservist,&#13;
is&#13;
hoping&#13;
the    crisis&#13;
in   the&#13;
Persian&#13;
Gulf&#13;
will&#13;
come&#13;
to   a   "peaceful"&#13;
solution.&#13;
"For   the  numbers    of  troops   in&#13;
the   Middle    East,   and   the   hostility&#13;
between   theUnited&#13;
States  and  Iraq,&#13;
it's    just    a   matter&#13;
of   time   before&#13;
armed   conflict,"    said  Prange.&#13;
Gabe    Kluka,   a  UW·~bide&#13;
senior,&#13;
spent   two   years    in   active&#13;
dutyandhasbeenanArmyreservist&#13;
for    the   past    three    years.&#13;
Kluka&#13;
belongs    to  the  822nd   Military   Po-&#13;
lice   Company&#13;
in   Rosemont,&#13;
illi-&#13;
nois.    Kluka  believes   his  chance   of&#13;
going   to  the  Persian   Gulf   is  fair.&#13;
"There&#13;
has   been    no   defmite&#13;
contact,&#13;
but&#13;
therebave    beenrumors&#13;
around   the  company,"    said  Kluka.&#13;
Prange,   24,  has  been   in  Army&#13;
Reserves&#13;
for    almost&#13;
four&#13;
years,&#13;
spending   two  years  on  active   duty.&#13;
He    belongs&#13;
to    the    2-338,&#13;
85th&#13;
Division(Tm)&#13;
in   Waukegan,&#13;
Illi-&#13;
nois.   Prange  believes   his chance  of&#13;
going   to  the  Middle   East&#13;
is&#13;
low.&#13;
"With   my  unit,  the  possibility&#13;
is  slim.&#13;
My  unit   is  a  training   unit&#13;
and  its mission   is to train  soldiers,"&#13;
stated Prange.&#13;
The  thoughtofgoing&#13;
to thehot&#13;
desert&#13;
of    Saudi&#13;
Arabia&#13;
worries&#13;
Kluka.&#13;
"It   scares   me,  and   tbe  idea  of&#13;
-  being   put   in   an   environment&#13;
like&#13;
that  makes   me  nervous.&#13;
Cbemical&#13;
weapons&#13;
scare&#13;
me&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
nuclear   weapons.&#13;
Youdon'tknow&#13;
tbey're   tbere,"   stated   Kluka.&#13;
Prange,&#13;
with&#13;
the    help    of    a&#13;
couple&#13;
of   UW -Parksidestudents&#13;
who&#13;
have&#13;
relatives&#13;
stationed&#13;
in&#13;
Saudi   Arabia,&#13;
is&#13;
trying   to  put   to-&#13;
gether&#13;
a   letter-writing&#13;
campaign&#13;
for  the   197th  Infantry   Brigade.&#13;
"We   want  to place  drop  boxes&#13;
all    over    campus&#13;
where&#13;
students&#13;
can&#13;
write   letters   to  soldiers    in   the&#13;
I97th&#13;
Infantry&#13;
Brigade,"&#13;
said&#13;
Prange.&#13;
"It  doesn't&#13;
need  a  stamp,&#13;
just   place   tbem   in  the&#13;
drop&#13;
boxes:&#13;
We'll&#13;
collect&#13;
them&#13;
and   and   send&#13;
tbem   to  Saudi   Arabia.&#13;
Prange&#13;
explains&#13;
the    impor-&#13;
tance   of  writing    letters   to  tbe&#13;
sol-&#13;
diers.&#13;
"I  know   how  important   it is  to  .&#13;
get  aletter.&#13;
Even   if  it's  just   to  say&#13;
'hi.&#13;
what's up'," said Prange. '-It's&#13;
your   lifeline   back   to  the  states."&#13;
Prange   is  a  molecular   biology&#13;
major    and&#13;
Kluka    is   a   math   and&#13;
drama   major.&#13;
"I'm&#13;
not   afraid   to   go   if  they&#13;
call  me.&#13;
It's   what's&#13;
going   to  hap-&#13;
pen  to my  life iftbey   do&#13;
call&#13;
me  that&#13;
worries&#13;
me,"&#13;
said&#13;
Kluka.&#13;
"If&#13;
shooting&#13;
docs&#13;
start,&#13;
I'd&#13;
be   gone&#13;
within   24  hours."&#13;
Offcampus housing provides analternative to Residence&#13;
Halls'&#13;
I&#13;
By&#13;
J.&#13;
A.  Bromstad&#13;
Staff   Writer&#13;
The&#13;
problem&#13;
with&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parlcside'shousing&#13;
is&#13;
notatall&#13;
what&#13;
you may  think   it  is.&#13;
The   original&#13;
thoughtwas  that  students    were   be-  .&#13;
ingterribly inconvenienced.&#13;
It was&#13;
Iaterlearned that  the inconvenience&#13;
lay&#13;
in  the  lap  of  the   bureaucracy-&#13;
the&#13;
means by  which   this  episode   of&#13;
inadequate  housing&#13;
will   not   soon&#13;
end.&#13;
While   speaking&#13;
with    sopho-&#13;
moreScollMurphy,&#13;
who  presently&#13;
resides&#13;
at   the   YMCA&#13;
in   Racine,&#13;
one  got   the   feeling&#13;
that&#13;
he    was&#13;
I&#13;
'&#13;
content and   unfretted&#13;
by   the   "in-&#13;
convenience"   of   living&#13;
off    earn-&#13;
pug.&#13;
Scott,  along   with  40-50   other&#13;
Parkside students,    is  on  a  waiting&#13;
list&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
placed  in Parkside's&#13;
hous-&#13;
ing.&#13;
He admits   it  is  somewhat&#13;
of  a&#13;
disadvantage  to   be   at   the   YMCA&#13;
because&#13;
be&#13;
feels   he  is  missing    out&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
multitude    of  nighttime&#13;
en-&#13;
ergytlu\tis~teristicpfyoung,&#13;
, 'enthusiastic.&#13;
fun-seeking&#13;
indi-&#13;
viduals    his  own   age.    On  the  other&#13;
decent   circumstances.&#13;
in&#13;
things&#13;
such    as    lower&#13;
interest&#13;
hand,&#13;
he&#13;
appreciates&#13;
the&#13;
finer&#13;
~So well   that   Kevin   Williams,&#13;
rates   on  bonds,&#13;
a  lesser   mortgage&#13;
things--like&#13;
having   his  own  room,&#13;
who&#13;
was    first    on&#13;
the    list    to   be&#13;
and&#13;
higher&#13;
construction&#13;
codes&#13;
use    of    the    Y's&#13;
well-conditioned&#13;
placed    in  campus   housing,    turned&#13;
which   mean   a  more   durable    com-&#13;
facilities    and   a  private   bathroom.&#13;
down   residency&#13;
here   to  remain   at&#13;
plex,   etc.  )&#13;
Sophomore    Rashid   Laurencin&#13;
the"    quieter,  less-abused   looking"&#13;
Ifheapproves&#13;
the proposal,   he&#13;
holds&#13;
a    similar&#13;
view.&#13;
However,&#13;
YMCA.&#13;
would    submit    it   to   the   Board    of&#13;
unlike&#13;
SCOll,  he    feels&#13;
he    is   not&#13;
So  what's&#13;
the  problem?&#13;
Too&#13;
Regents.&#13;
This  entity   is  comprised&#13;
missing&#13;
out   on   anything.&#13;
Rashid&#13;
many  people?    The  obvious   lack  of&#13;
of&#13;
local&#13;
citizens&#13;
who&#13;
decide&#13;
pointsoutonediscomfortingpeeve.&#13;
rooftopsoncampus?&#13;
Thefarflung,&#13;
whether   the  proposal   is  in  the  best&#13;
There&#13;
are&#13;
no   single&#13;
baths&#13;
in   the&#13;
long-   winded,    much&#13;
too&#13;
complex&#13;
interest   of  all  involved:taxpayers,&#13;
wing   where   he  is  located   and  he's&#13;
system   in  which   we  live?&#13;
Let   me&#13;
tbe   state's    budget   and   the   univer-&#13;
sharing&#13;
a   bath    with   more   people&#13;
sliare  with  you  some  findings   con-&#13;
sity  at  large.&#13;
,&#13;
th&#13;
b&#13;
ratic    process&#13;
From    there,    we   move    to   tbe&#13;
than&#13;
if he   were   in  tbe  dorms.&#13;
De-&#13;
cemmg&#13;
e&#13;
ureauc&#13;
d&#13;
ith&#13;
h  si&#13;
that   would   eventually&#13;
bring   forth&#13;
Building&#13;
Commission&#13;
where   key&#13;
spite   this,   he   sai&#13;
WI&#13;
muc&#13;
SID-&#13;
h&#13;
.   g&#13;
le&#13;
m&#13;
·lators&#13;
talk   and   talk   and   talk&#13;
eerity,   "I&#13;
like&#13;
it  here."&#13;
more&#13;
OUSID.&#13;
..-&#13;
When&#13;
asked&#13;
if    they    could&#13;
At&#13;
the   present&#13;
moment&#13;
the&#13;
and   talk,   and   then   more   talking   is&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
ale&#13;
behal&#13;
f   of  the  others&#13;
they&#13;
president    of  the  UW   system   is  re-&#13;
required&#13;
to   sell    to   the   Governor&#13;
PSGA Report.&#13;
Page 3&#13;
spe&#13;
on,&#13;
.&#13;
b&#13;
tbe&#13;
(who   I'Sa   controlling&#13;
member&#13;
of&#13;
.,&#13;
of  their&#13;
viewing&#13;
a   proposal&#13;
sent,&#13;
y&#13;
Devil's&#13;
Advocate ...Page 3,&#13;
said  thatthemaJOnty&#13;
were&#13;
thiscommission&#13;
and  ultimately&#13;
bas&#13;
ChaneellorofUW-P.&#13;
V·&#13;
fUW&#13;
P.P&#13;
,A&#13;
sentiment&#13;
all&#13;
tbe&#13;
final&#13;
';;y    in   the  ·matter)&#13;
the&#13;
oice&#13;
0    - ....&#13;
age'..&#13;
A  sbuttle   is in service  for  those&#13;
If   he   nays    the   proposal,&#13;
budget    plans   'or   addt'lt'onal  hous-&#13;
ith&#13;
t&#13;
obiles&#13;
proceedings&#13;
halt&#13;
and&#13;
Parkside&#13;
.'&#13;
Gabe's  Gab&#13;
.Page  11&#13;
students    who&#13;
arewi&#13;
ou    m&#13;
.&#13;
,mg'&#13;
at   Parkside.&#13;
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ote:&#13;
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can   be   se-&#13;
temall&#13;
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sible   for  driving'   the  shuttle   to san&#13;
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lec!ed;andfmallyconstruetion&#13;
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buseS&#13;
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that&#13;
adds  up  to&#13;
approxi·&#13;
mately&#13;
3-4    years    of    debate&#13;
and&#13;
negotiations    which   would  account&#13;
formore   time&#13;
than&#13;
would  be neces-&#13;
sary   to  actually   construct&#13;
the  new&#13;
housing.&#13;
Whenever&#13;
legislation&#13;
is&#13;
part&#13;
oftbe    solution   there   is  delay.&#13;
This&#13;
is   just    one    more    instance&#13;
where&#13;
progress&#13;
and    better&#13;
arrangement&#13;
are  slaves   to  time  and  paper.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
:    f    •&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,.&#13;
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'.&#13;
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·:..=.-~_i"_·' ._'-_'-&#13;
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-----s~epte::::mber~~:-.,l~&#13;
Rager.&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
.&#13;
" •.• AND WHICH OF ME HAVE YOU COME TO SEE lODAY?"&#13;
Editorial ...&#13;
On&#13;
February&#13;
13, 1990,&#13;
the&#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
passed&#13;
a new drop policy&#13;
stating that a smdent who drops a course during or after the&#13;
fifth&#13;
week of&#13;
the&#13;
semester will receive a iranscripmotation  of "W" for that course. The&#13;
"WOOstands for withdrawal.&#13;
The&#13;
new policy takes effect in the Fall of&#13;
1991, so if you're a senior, you den't have anything&#13;
ID&#13;
worry about. but&#13;
if you're&#13;
not,&#13;
you&#13;
will&#13;
have some heavy decision-making  IDdo when next&#13;
fall&#13;
arrives.&#13;
The&#13;
PIrbide&#13;
Student Government  Association&#13;
did&#13;
everything in ilS power&#13;
ID&#13;
block this policy from heing&#13;
implemenred.&#13;
Members&#13;
ofPSGA collected over700 signatureS&#13;
and&#13;
presented them ataFaculty  Senate meeting.&#13;
Former PSGA President&#13;
Om&#13;
Prange&#13;
said&#13;
thal&#13;
the&#13;
Senate virtually ignored&#13;
the&#13;
signamres,&#13;
He&#13;
also stated that they&#13;
didn't seem&#13;
ID&#13;
care what&#13;
the&#13;
students&#13;
had&#13;
ID&#13;
say.&#13;
If&#13;
anything,&#13;
this&#13;
will&#13;
definitely&#13;
put&#13;
pressure&#13;
on the studenlS.&#13;
The&#13;
faculty responded that&#13;
swdents&#13;
sbouId&#13;
know&#13;
their&#13;
progress&#13;
in a class by the&#13;
end&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
fourth week. Yeah,&#13;
right!&#13;
I can't&#13;
remember&#13;
having aclass where I&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
t.est&#13;
or quiz heforethe  sixth week.This new policy that takes&#13;
place&#13;
will&#13;
still&#13;
allow students&#13;
ID&#13;
drop until the eighth week.&#13;
In&#13;
the case of a module or summer class the "WOO&#13;
_lion&#13;
will&#13;
appear&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
class&#13;
is&#13;
dropped&#13;
after&#13;
the one-third&#13;
mark.&#13;
The&#13;
new&#13;
add&#13;
policy&#13;
will&#13;
go&#13;
inlDeffect in the spring of 1991. Itstat.es thatstudenlS may addany course which&#13;
they are qna'if...J for during&#13;
the&#13;
first&#13;
week.&#13;
During&#13;
the second week&#13;
of classes a course may be&#13;
added&#13;
with the&#13;
iDsuuctor's&#13;
consent&#13;
Beginning with the third&#13;
week&#13;
of classes, a course may be added only in extraordinary&#13;
c:jmmImnces,lIId&#13;
only with the support of the course instructor and the&#13;
approval&#13;
of the department  chair.&#13;
The&#13;
Facu1ty&#13;
Senate&#13;
is&#13;
trying&#13;
ID&#13;
eocourage smdeats&#13;
ID&#13;
make a decision on whether they are going&#13;
ID'&#13;
stay&#13;
enroIledinaclas.&#13;
At&#13;
the same&#13;
time,&#13;
they are trying tocutdown  thenumberof  classes&#13;
dropped&#13;
by students, You'&#13;
have&#13;
foar&#13;
weeb&#13;
ID&#13;
decide&#13;
if you like a class or&#13;
not,&#13;
so&#13;
this&#13;
"W" notation should increase your commitment  to&#13;
acbooI&#13;
so you doo't have 10&#13;
drop&#13;
a class. This''W''  could have a negative impact&#13;
011&#13;
your transcript if you get&#13;
inIo&#13;
die&#13;
habit&#13;
of&#13;
ckqJping&#13;
lOO!D8IIyclasses.  A potential employer might&#13;
not&#13;
look favorably on&#13;
!DO&#13;
many "WOOs&#13;
IIj¥S&#13;
iDg&#13;
00&#13;
yow&#13;
transeipt.&#13;
This&#13;
four-week&#13;
drop&#13;
policy&#13;
is-basically unfair. I don't think the students were given&#13;
equal&#13;
time to express&#13;
bow&#13;
they&#13;
felton&#13;
this&#13;
issue. Butif you know anyone thatatt.ends UW -Whitewater. they&#13;
think&#13;
that we have it made&#13;
because&#13;
they&#13;
have a two-week&#13;
drop&#13;
policy before they are hit with the big "W".&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
Letter to the Editor:&#13;
Whensomethingcon~ia1&#13;
arises&#13;
and it's dealing&#13;
WI!'!&#13;
black&#13;
and&#13;
white   I always  seem to ob-&#13;
serve the ~egro complaining  about&#13;
unfairness.  The reason why I know&#13;
is&#13;
becauserm   one of those uppity&#13;
negroes. Forexample,  when&#13;
I&#13;
came&#13;
to register for my college courses.&#13;
I&#13;
wanted to study a history course.&#13;
The course  I had in mind  was a&#13;
subject in Black History.&#13;
So&#13;
I&#13;
tell the counselor  I would&#13;
like a Black History course and he&#13;
tells me it doesn't  exist in the&#13;
UW&#13;
system.&#13;
I&#13;
say&#13;
to&#13;
myself. well why&#13;
is that?   Anyway.  he offers  me&#13;
American  History,  and being  the&#13;
versitile brother that I&#13;
am.I&#13;
take the&#13;
course.  But tell me something,  we&#13;
pay our dividends&#13;
for&#13;
school just&#13;
like&#13;
the majority&#13;
students.&#13;
No matter&#13;
if&#13;
it's scholarships,&#13;
grants.&#13;
loans. or Mama and Daddy.&#13;
So why can't we learn someihUig&#13;
about our heritage&#13;
as&#13;
wel1.I'm&#13;
IliiI&#13;
blaming&#13;
the&#13;
Professorsor slUdems,&#13;
but maybe the&#13;
Dean&#13;
of the&#13;
SChcoi&#13;
could&#13;
do&#13;
something or tell the&#13;
llli&#13;
nority&#13;
students&#13;
something.&#13;
.&#13;
A&#13;
lot of black students&#13;
ha&#13;
discussed  this matter among~&#13;
selves, but I just decided to&#13;
bring&#13;
'I&#13;
in the open.  When you&#13;
read ~&#13;
don'tbebiased:keepanopenmilll.&#13;
I&#13;
know some people will sayI'ma&#13;
racist but that's  far from realily,&#13;
Oh yeah,&#13;
if&#13;
I'm not asking&#13;
for&#13;
too much, how&#13;
about&#13;
a little&#13;
sou!&#13;
food in the cafeteria once in&#13;
a&#13;
while&#13;
&lt;at least  during  Black History&#13;
Month).&#13;
I&#13;
.conclude&#13;
by&#13;
saying&#13;
Peace. because we're all in&#13;
the&#13;
same&#13;
game.&#13;
Chris Tolivtr&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
'!   •&#13;
</text>
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              <text>MF- University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Volume 1% Number 5&#13;
J. iir iiiwuaiiwin oriflEK rarcrssass,'•&amp;&amp;»- CftWHWIlfait- UW-Parkside mourns loss of dedicated student&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Joel Klepel, a UW-Parkside&#13;
junior, passed away on September&#13;
27, 1990. Klepel, from Racine,&#13;
committed suicide when he inhaled&#13;
carbon monoxide by locking himself&#13;
in his home garage and levaing&#13;
his car motor running. Klepel, who&#13;
once before tried to commit suicide,&#13;
was 20. v&#13;
"He was always so intense, so&#13;
up. There was no room for failure,"&#13;
said Tom Neubauer, a UWParkside&#13;
student, about Klepel. "He&#13;
always had time for others."&#13;
"It's strange. He was there,&#13;
and now he's not there anymore,"&#13;
said Chris Daniel, a UW-Parkside&#13;
junior who worked with Klepel.&#13;
Klepel, a Chemistry major,&#13;
was very involved in his community&#13;
and at UW-Parkside.&#13;
"He was a veryn ice guy," said&#13;
Chris Frey, a UW-Parkside junior.&#13;
At UW-Parkside, Klepel&#13;
worked in the Academic Research&#13;
Center as a math tutor and he was&#13;
also a volunteer reader for the blind.&#13;
In the Racine area he was a vacation&#13;
bible teacher, baseball coach,&#13;
member of the Experimental Aircraft&#13;
Association, and belonged to,&#13;
the bell choir of Trinity Lutheran&#13;
Church.&#13;
According to Cherie Helt, a&#13;
UW-Parkside junior who worked&#13;
• wi th Klepel in the Center, Klepel&#13;
was very interested in "fires" and&#13;
"aviation."&#13;
"He loved to go to fires. He'd&#13;
listen to the scanner and when he&#13;
heard a fire, he would go take pictures,"&#13;
stated Helt. "He also loved&#13;
airplanes."&#13;
Helt explained that Klepel&#13;
never mentioned a word about&#13;
committing suicide.&#13;
"I was extremely surprised,"&#13;
said Helt.&#13;
Latesha Jude, who worics in&#13;
the Academic Research Center, was&#13;
also surprised. "I was shocked,"&#13;
stated Jude, a UW-Parkside&#13;
sophmore. "He always seemed&#13;
happy."&#13;
It's too late toc hange Klepel's&#13;
decision, but it's not too late to let&#13;
others know that if they're going&#13;
through a bad time in their lives,&#13;
there are professionals on campus&#13;
and off campus that can help. These&#13;
people are willing to listen and&#13;
offer advice.&#13;
UW-Parkside's Learning Assistance&#13;
and Counseling offers&#13;
personal counseling. The professional&#13;
staff provides short-term&#13;
counseling related to stress, depression,&#13;
alcohol and drug abuse,&#13;
Joel Klepel&#13;
family disharmony, relationship vicesalsoprovidesprofessionaland&#13;
problems and difficulty adjusting&#13;
to college.&#13;
UW-Parkside's Health Ser-&#13;
Free caffeine pills cause concern for student health&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The widespread distribution of&#13;
Vivarin, a caffeine stimulant, in&#13;
Follett bookstore promotional&#13;
sample packages has raised health&#13;
concerns with Student Health Services&#13;
and administration.&#13;
Vivarin's caffeine content,&#13;
according to package information,&#13;
is equal to two cups of coffee. The&#13;
potential danger with this product&#13;
lies in abuse or use in combination&#13;
with other caffeine products, such&#13;
as coffee or soda.&#13;
According to Sandra Riese,&#13;
director of StudentHealth Services,&#13;
use of Vivarin and other caffeine&#13;
stimulants can increase the heart&#13;
rate and sensitivity of the nervous&#13;
system and decrease the ability to&#13;
concentrate. Riese's concern with&#13;
the presence of Vivarin in the&#13;
sample packages is thatshe doesn't&#13;
want use of these products promoted&#13;
on campus through mass&#13;
distribution.&#13;
Although the campus bookstore&#13;
currently sells a similar product,&#13;
No-Doz, it is not a product that&#13;
is being handed out to students, as&#13;
in the promotional packages. "I&#13;
understand that people will do what&#13;
Sandra Riese&#13;
they want, but I don't recommend&#13;
widespread distribution. I don't&#13;
feel that students realize the danger&#13;
of using [stimulants and other caffeine&#13;
products] together. Yourbody&#13;
gets so wired that you lose your&#13;
ability to concentrate," she said.&#13;
Steve McLaughlin, director of&#13;
Student Life, stated that the packages&#13;
were part ofa national promotion&#13;
by the Follett company. It was&#13;
up to each campus to decide if they&#13;
wished to have the packages distributed.&#13;
Although he admitted&#13;
that the contents of the packages&#13;
were not closely examined, he said,&#13;
"If the company plans on using this&#13;
type of promotion again, we would&#13;
want to see what will be in the&#13;
packages first, and consider&#13;
whether or not we wish to participate,&#13;
especially ift he contents could&#13;
be considered offensive to anyone."&#13;
"Our concern was that there&#13;
was something of value in them for&#13;
students in the form of coupons&#13;
and other types of samples,"&#13;
McLaughlin stated. "However, I&#13;
don't think that we should be promoting&#13;
the use of [caffeine stimulants]&#13;
and it is something that we&#13;
need to re-evaluate."&#13;
Riese said an effort was made&#13;
to have the, Vi varin samples removed&#13;
from packages that were&#13;
not yet distributed, but the Follett&#13;
company stated that it did not have&#13;
the manpower to change the contents.&#13;
Lorraine Meyer, a Student&#13;
Health nurse, explained that there&#13;
were a few students on campus last&#13;
semester who ended up having serious&#13;
health problems because they&#13;
abused caffeine stimulants in addition&#13;
to consuming other types of&#13;
caffeine. Meyer feels that because&#13;
of widespread distribution, many&#13;
more students may take the product&#13;
"They may not have necessarily&#13;
thought of using Vivarin before,&#13;
but it has been made avaiblale&#13;
to them. It would be best if stuconfidential&#13;
counseling related to&#13;
drugs and alcohol.&#13;
See Student, page 13&#13;
dents just disposed of the samples,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
"If we're promoting a drugfree&#13;
campus, we should not be mass&#13;
distributing these types of things,"&#13;
Riese commented. Meyer added,&#13;
"We want students to make good&#13;
choices, and we don't advocate the&#13;
use of Vivarin or any excessive&#13;
amounts of caffeine."&#13;
Editorial .Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate....Page 3&#13;
Gabe's Gab ..Page 4&#13;
Sports Page 7&#13;
Counselor's Corner.Page 8&#13;
International Page 14&#13;
Volunteer. Page 15&#13;
This Week Pagel7&#13;
Classifieds Page20&#13;
Ranger, Page 2 Editorial October 4,1990&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
OK NOW—YOU RING&#13;
THE DOORBELL, AND&#13;
LET'S GET THE HELL&#13;
OUT OF HERE!&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Why call your black sister a&#13;
female dog or your black brother a&#13;
mother f;.... If you open your eyes&#13;
and observe, that's all you have at&#13;
UW-Parkside. What I'm saying is&#13;
let's be there for one another and&#13;
quit being ignorant. All we do is&#13;
make ourselves look bad and the&#13;
other people just have a big laugh.&#13;
No one likes to be embarassed or&#13;
made a fool of, so if we straighten&#13;
up now, they'll have nothing to&#13;
say. Let's get on with our lives and&#13;
be positive role models for the upcoming&#13;
generation of blacks. Let's&#13;
also be competitive and challenge&#13;
our classmates. We already have&#13;
our foot in the door, so don' t let the&#13;
door hit ya where the good lord&#13;
split ya. Now wouldn't that be&#13;
better than fighting one another&#13;
and cursing each other.&#13;
I end this by saying pe ace, and&#13;
be down for your crown no matter&#13;
what anyone has to say.&#13;
by Chris Toliver&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
There's a different kind of racism&#13;
pervading the campus nowadays.&#13;
It's not racism against Afro-&#13;
Americans (although that still is&#13;
very predominant), but racism&#13;
against the smaller cultures that&#13;
make up the student population,&#13;
like Kenyans and people of Middle&#13;
- Eastern cultures.&#13;
So far I havn't seen any literature&#13;
circulating dealing with&#13;
this like the pamphlets that have&#13;
popped up on campus in the past&#13;
proclaiming "Save America for the&#13;
White Race." This kind of racism&#13;
is a little more subtle than that, like&#13;
snubbing someone because they&#13;
look Palestinian. Ever notice how&#13;
there's always a table in the coffee&#13;
shop or cafeteria occupied by minority&#13;
students only, whether they&#13;
are Indian, Nairobian, or Afro-&#13;
Ajnerican, and all Anglo-Saxons&#13;
seem to stay clear of that table?&#13;
After the International Club&#13;
See Letters, page 4&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
Many students have been questioning student fees lately, so I am&#13;
going to attempt to answer some of those inquiries. Every semester you&#13;
by pay student fees which are part of your tuition payment. This year,&#13;
Craig students will pay $126 for student fees and $764.50 for tuition.&#13;
Simpkms The next most asked question is who distributes student fees. It is&#13;
called the Segregated University Fees Allocation Committee. This&#13;
committee consists of eight members: six senators and two student-at-large seats. This is a very important&#13;
committee because they are responsible for over one mil lion dollars in funding. SUFAC distributes student fees&#13;
according to projected needs to the five largest organizations and to many other services available on campus.&#13;
If we didn't have segregated fees we wouldn't have student organizations to serve our needs. The Parkside&#13;
Student Gov erme n t is here tod efend your student rights; without PSGA, there woudl be no organization standing&#13;
up for the students. The Ranger newspaper informs the students of campus issues and events; without them you&#13;
would be uninformed on many issues. The Parkside Activities Board is here to bring you campus events on&#13;
campus; without them you would be more bored than you awrei th the present number ofa vailable activities. The&#13;
Student Organizations Council is the umbrella organization for over 40 clubs on campus; without SOC there&#13;
wouldn't be any funding available for clubs on campus. The Parkside Adult Student Alliance is on campus as&#13;
a peer support group for non-traditional students; without them there wouldn't be a meetingplace for adult&#13;
students. There are also many services offered on campus; many other resources are covered in this weeks&#13;
Counselor's Corner.&#13;
Students have also questioned whether segregated fees should be optional. This option would mean that&#13;
about one hundred students would pay segregated fees, because no matter how much effort organizations at this&#13;
institution expend cm programming, students still don't attend many events. There isn'tany way to avoid students&#13;
fees. You are supporting services on campus with student fees, so you should use offered services as much as&#13;
possible, attend sponsored events, and use the entire university experience to its greatest advantage. More&#13;
importantly than the amount of student fees that we pay is the benefit derived from what we do pay. What we&#13;
have said, and will continue to say, is get involved and make the most of UW-Parkside and what it has to offer.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
General Staff:&#13;
Donald Andrewski, Gabe Kluka, Jim Newcomb, RufusThorne, David&#13;
Doherty, Mona Shannon, Lisa Vopal, John Taylor, David Wick, Bill&#13;
Hawkins, Jeff Bromstad, Latesha Jude, Kelly McKissick, Sara Kahl,&#13;
Mike McKowen, Kimberly Tenerelli, Chris Deguire, Susan Luedkes I&#13;
Subscription rate for one year is $5.00. Please address all correspondence to&#13;
Ranger&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Wood Road Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha. Wl 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial Office (414)553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414) 553-2295&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
International Editor&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Katie Knight&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editors i&#13;
Jeff Reddick&#13;
Ted Mclntyre&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tod McCarthy&#13;
Asst. Copy Editor&#13;
Franca Savaglio&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Craig A. Simpkins&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Terri Fortney&#13;
Advertising Representative&#13;
Heather McGee&#13;
Public Relations&#13;
Greg Lebrick&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Don Prange&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Sunni Beeck&#13;
Todd Goers&#13;
Henry Cornett&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
Chris Ingram&#13;
Glen Kelly&#13;
Advisors&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
Jan Nowak&#13;
• October 4,1990 Opinion Ranger, Page 3&#13;
The Devil's Advocate&#13;
A day in the life of a college student&#13;
by&#13;
Donald R.&#13;
Andrewski&#13;
Last Wednesday I arose at&#13;
sunrise and looked out of my bedroom&#13;
window. Remembering the&#13;
old adage about healthy, wealthy&#13;
and wise, I indeed feltas if I had the&#13;
world by the throat. Stretching, I&#13;
inhaled a deep breath of clean air&#13;
(as clean as it is going to get) and&#13;
began my day.&#13;
After conducting all of my&#13;
business, I arrived on campus after&#13;
10:00 am and began the ritual of&#13;
orbiting the parking lots searching&#13;
for a parking place. With the skill&#13;
and dexterity of a demo-derby&#13;
driver, I out-maneuvered several&#13;
people and secured a place. There&#13;
is a definite advantage to driving a&#13;
rolling wreck. People with new cars&#13;
won't mess with someone who&#13;
drives a car that looks like a modem&#13;
art masterpiece.&#13;
As I mused to myself, I began&#13;
to think that there has to be a better&#13;
way. As I surveyed the landscape,&#13;
I wondered why UW-Parkside&#13;
couldn't build tri-level parking&#13;
ramps, like they have in downtown&#13;
Racine. Even one such facility in&#13;
the Union parking lot would increase&#13;
the number of available&#13;
parking spaces by approximately&#13;
150% (my estimate), and could be&#13;
done without endangering the prairie&#13;
or woodland areas.&#13;
Once I arrived on campus, I&#13;
discovered that the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
does not make french fries before&#13;
11:00 am. Now let's get real here.&#13;
We are college students, that peculiar&#13;
breed of individuals who never&#13;
sleep and eat cold pizza and french&#13;
fries for breakfast. Are the food&#13;
services trying to rob us of our&#13;
identity as college students or&#13;
merely preparing us for the real&#13;
world where corporate power&#13;
breakfasts do not include cold pizza&#13;
and french fries? In any event, I&#13;
believe that fries should be available&#13;
way before 11:00.&#13;
Sensing that this day was going&#13;
nowhere fast, I stopped to get a&#13;
drink of water. As I approached&#13;
the bubbler (water fountain for you&#13;
folks from Minnesota), the unit began&#13;
squirting waterbefore I touched&#13;
it As I stood there in mild bewilderment&#13;
trying to figure out this&#13;
mechanism, I noticed that the new&#13;
bubblers now have sensing devices&#13;
that detect something two feet in&#13;
front of it and automatically activate.&#13;
Are the students that stupid&#13;
that they can no longer operate the&#13;
bubblers? Why did the school waste&#13;
the money on these new units?&#13;
Why don't they save their money&#13;
and spend it on something more&#13;
worthwhile, suchaspaikingramps?&#13;
Other unanswered questions:&#13;
Park without a permit and it&#13;
costs five bucks; park with an expired&#13;
permit and it costs ten bu cks.&#13;
Why? It seems to me that both are&#13;
equivalent in that the driver does&#13;
not have a valid permit&#13;
Why do women get menopause?&#13;
Shouldn't they get&#13;
"womenopause"?&#13;
An American can join the&#13;
French Foreign Legion but a&#13;
Frenchman cannot join the American&#13;
Legion. I wonder why?&#13;
With all of the paperwork college&#13;
students have to fill out for&#13;
class registration and financial aid,&#13;
shouldn't we get college credit for&#13;
it?&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Suggestion box or garbage can?&#13;
by Jill Jensen&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association is your voice. PSGA&#13;
watches and listens to what is happening&#13;
on campus. Every week&#13;
PSGA writes an article for the&#13;
Ranger to keep you, the students,&#13;
informed about your campus.&#13;
You may have concerns or&#13;
suggestions about the campus and&#13;
this is where PSGA can help. PSGA&#13;
has two suggestion boxes: one in&#13;
Molinaro and the other in Comm.&#13;
Arts. They are green with black&#13;
lettering. You can not miss them!&#13;
These boxes are for the students to&#13;
use for questions and suggestions,&#13;
and PSGA will answer them as&#13;
quickly and as accurately as possible.&#13;
Now that you know where and&#13;
what the PSGA suggestion boxes&#13;
look like, please use them wisely.&#13;
PSGA provides the students these&#13;
boxes in order to help resolve student&#13;
problems. But all we have&#13;
found is garbage thrown into them.&#13;
I mentioned to all of you that you&#13;
can not miss them so do not use&#13;
them as garbage cans. I do believe&#13;
college students can distinguish&#13;
between PSGA boxes and garbage&#13;
cans, so let's put the garbage where&#13;
it belongs and use the suggestion&#13;
boxes for the benefit of all students.&#13;
You get out of education what&#13;
you put into it. If you feel your&#13;
campus is garbage, then that is all it&#13;
will ever amount to.&#13;
The suggestion box iso ne way&#13;
to voice a concern and another way&#13;
is to attend committee meetings on&#13;
campus. Committee meetings:&#13;
Admissions, Records and Student&#13;
Information Committee, Friday,&#13;
October 5th, 9 am, Moln D131;&#13;
and Student Services Committee,&#13;
Wednesday, 12 pm, Comm. Arts&#13;
142.&#13;
We also need a student on the&#13;
Committee on Teaching and one&#13;
student on Course and Curriculum&#13;
Cftmmiugg.&#13;
All students should also be&#13;
concerned about MRF. MRF is the&#13;
Mandatory Refundable Fee which&#13;
is the required amount taken out of&#13;
every student's tuition. This fee is&#13;
currently 50 cents and this fee is for&#13;
United Council's spending money.&#13;
It is called Ref undable because each&#13;
student, upon request, can be reimbursed&#13;
if you write to UC.&#13;
It has now been decided by&#13;
United Council General Assembly&#13;
that the MRF be raised to 75 cents&#13;
per student. Once this resolution&#13;
was passed, it went to each campus's&#13;
student government to be&#13;
passed. Parkside's student government&#13;
chose not to pass the fee&#13;
increase! However, it went back to&#13;
United Council as a consensus and&#13;
the 25 cents increase was passed.&#13;
Parkside abstained. Now this resolution&#13;
has to go to the Regents, and&#13;
if approved, it goes to Governor&#13;
Thompson. If he passes this 25&#13;
cents increase then this raise will&#13;
be tacked on to everyone's tuition.&#13;
This once again shows what little&#13;
input the students have when it&#13;
comes to tuition,&#13;
Get involved! Get involved!&#13;
This is being heard and seen everywhere.&#13;
Getting involved with&#13;
campus events can be very rewarding.&#13;
An activity that is coming up&#13;
shortly is EXCEL. This is a leadership&#13;
adventure being held October&#13;
13 - 14. EXCEL will improve&#13;
your communications skills, interpersonal&#13;
skills, organizational&#13;
skills, and leadership skills. This&#13;
can apply to everyone since our&#13;
college days are suppose to get us&#13;
ready for our future careers. The&#13;
cost of EXCEL is only $10. The&#13;
deadline for EXCEL is October&#13;
5th. Pick up your registration form&#13;
in the Student Activities Office,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
Senate meeting minutes&#13;
Called to order at 12:09 pm.&#13;
Roll call&#13;
Senators: E. Jensen, J. Jensen, T.&#13;
Jensen, Jude(E), Olson, Riccio,&#13;
Rosier, Sikora, Yee, Nephew&#13;
Guests: Don -Mathes, Michael&#13;
Johnson, Gene Desotell, Craig&#13;
Simpkins Eric Bovee, Tobin&#13;
Lindblom, Steve McLaughlin&#13;
Executive Branch: Bill Horner,&#13;
Maggie Frymire&#13;
Motion Sikora/Olson 9/28/90 :1&#13;
To approve the minutes of the&#13;
previous meeting.&#13;
Passes 9-0-0&#13;
Report of the President (Horner)&#13;
Motion Sikora/Yee 9/28/90:2 To&#13;
approve the delegation of Mario&#13;
Riccio to PUAB at- large seat and&#13;
Craig Simpkins PUAB as PSGA&#13;
representative.&#13;
Passes 9-0-0&#13;
-We need to purchase a new&#13;
tape recorder that picks up&#13;
everyone's voice clearly.&#13;
-Because the copy machine has&#13;
been overused, we will ask everyone&#13;
to do all of their copying on the&#13;
ditto machine because the cost is&#13;
minimal.&#13;
-Oct. 2nd at 3:30 pm, there will be&#13;
a Faculty/Senate meeting and we&#13;
need support from the student body&#13;
to attend and to ask questions.&#13;
Report of the Vice-President&#13;
(Gary Nephew, Pro-Tempore sitting&#13;
in for Chris Daniel)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Motion Olson/Sikora 9/28/90 :3&#13;
To approve the allocation of $30.95&#13;
for refreshments being served for&#13;
Political Awareness Week.&#13;
Passes 9-0-0&#13;
Report of Pro-Tempore (Nephew)&#13;
-Tobin I *- idblom gives final report&#13;
on his inicm project&#13;
Motion J Jensen/Yee9/28/90:4 To&#13;
approve the intern project by Tobin&#13;
Lindblom.&#13;
Passes 8-0-1&#13;
-Lindblom sworn in officially as a&#13;
senator.&#13;
-Political Awareness Week is next&#13;
week so we need people to help&#13;
register others to vote.&#13;
Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
(Olson)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Report of U.C. Presidents&#13;
(TJensen)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Report of U.C. Women's Affairs&#13;
(Jude)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Unfinished business&#13;
-Motion Riccio/T Jensen9/28/90:5&#13;
Toallocate$25.00forGregLebrick&#13;
for his work on the PSGA brochures.&#13;
Passes 9-0-0&#13;
Meetings for the following week:&#13;
-Election Committee every&#13;
Wednesday 12:30 pm in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
-Student Service Wednesday, Oct.&#13;
10, at noon in C.A.142&#13;
-Faculty/Senate Oct. 2,3:30 pm in&#13;
Moln. D137&#13;
October 4,1990&#13;
Parkside's monster - a battle plan&#13;
by&#13;
Gabe&#13;
\ 's ' Kluka&#13;
Every once in awhile, you must&#13;
sit and ponder the mysteries of the&#13;
universe. Recently, as I sat pondering&#13;
over the Sunday paper, I&#13;
came across a shocking headline,&#13;
"Loch Ness monster may have&#13;
relative in Lake Erie" (pardon me&#13;
if I misquoted). I started to think on&#13;
this a little bit, and suddenly I was&#13;
hit with a terrifying revelation:&#13;
Parkside probably has a monster.&#13;
For those of you foolish&#13;
enough to scoff at me, don't say I&#13;
didn't warn you. For the rest of my&#13;
faithful readers, I challenge you to&#13;
test my evidence. If you find it&#13;
convincing, report to Student&#13;
Health Services immediately for a&#13;
psychological evaluation.&#13;
The monster I speak of lives&#13;
underneath the various soda machines&#13;
around campus. I'm almost&#13;
positive that it spends most of its&#13;
time in Molinaro. The reason I suspect&#13;
this is because of the secretions&#13;
it leaves by the soda machines.&#13;
I know that most of you&#13;
won't believe me, but you've got&#13;
to listen!&#13;
The secretions are little brown&#13;
sticky circles that look like spilled&#13;
soda. You're probably screaming&#13;
at the top of your lungs, "That's&#13;
because it is soda, Gabe! You&#13;
bonehead!" Believe me, please, I&#13;
know what I'm talking about.&#13;
The fine students of Parkside&#13;
are smart enough to dump their&#13;
overfilled sodas into the grate on&#13;
the bottom of the machine. Besides&#13;
that, if they did happen to spill,&#13;
there aren apkins only ten feeta way&#13;
from any machine on campus, and&#13;
I'm sure they would clean their&#13;
messes up, so this eliminates them&#13;
entirely from the picture.&#13;
Now thatl've proved this thing&#13;
exists, we have to get rid of it,&#13;
because I am certain it is responsible&#13;
for the disappearance of the freshmen&#13;
who never are seen again after&#13;
their first semester. The fact that&#13;
they spend way too much time in&#13;
the Rec Center has nothing to do&#13;
w'h it.&#13;
I guess the best way to rid&#13;
ourselves of this thing would be to&#13;
lure it out and poison it with a&#13;
MOM: [A'tappers&#13;
$ZH5 mhers&#13;
y1u£Sj&#13;
ir/EQS: Tkwce \o t-'rvz&#13;
VOS ISOS G-R£($ "IERIA/ALL&#13;
Tree M drink w'ljb T&amp;rksde. i.t&gt;,&#13;
-Ihurs -Jam again with&#13;
Thrks'd&amp;'s tfefP LerrweiwaM&#13;
•frti.tSfi-T: LUUZS'SHULKERM&#13;
^ ^foo\I3AIL MiVrf!:-.&#13;
VM crcoa&#13;
StcLclne,&#13;
Coffee Shoppe hot dog, or, maybe,&#13;
we can videotape it, and find out&#13;
what time at night it comes out.&#13;
Then, Security could blow up the&#13;
soda machine with about 100&#13;
pounds of dynamite at the precise&#13;
moment it is supposed to appear,&#13;
killing the beast in the process.&#13;
While these solutions seem simple,&#13;
they are actually hazardous.&#13;
The first alternative would require&#13;
bait, probably human, to lure&#13;
the monster out. If you wanted to&#13;
be careful about the whole thing,&#13;
you could trick the monster with a&#13;
tape recording. I'm sure that it listens&#13;
to find out when it is safe to&#13;
come out. The distinctive snapping&#13;
sound your shoes make after you've&#13;
stepped in the secretions, and are&#13;
attempting to unstick them from&#13;
the floor, is probably what the&#13;
monster listens for.&#13;
So, what we could do irse cord&#13;
someone in the labors of walking&#13;
away from the soda machine. We&#13;
could then play the tape recorder,&#13;
and hope that the thing emerges&#13;
from its lair, where it would find a&#13;
strategically placed Coffee Shoppe&#13;
hot dog, preferably one that ! ,s&#13;
been on that little cooker all day. if&#13;
we are lucky, and he is either hungry&#13;
or stupid, he will eat it, and&#13;
Editorial Policy&#13;
Published every Thursday during&#13;
the academic year, the Ranger&#13;
does not publish during breaks or&#13;
holidays. TheRangerispublished&#13;
solely by the students of UW-Parkside,&#13;
who are responsible for its&#13;
editorial policy and content&#13;
Letters to the editor will only be&#13;
accepted if they are typed, doubled&#13;
spaced, and 350 words or less. All&#13;
letters must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification&#13;
purposes. Names will be&#13;
withheld upon request&#13;
The Ranger reserves the right&#13;
toe ditletters and refuset hose which&#13;
are false and/or defamatory.&#13;
Deadline for all letters and classified&#13;
ads is Monday at 10 am for&#13;
publication on Thursday.&#13;
promptly expire, like so many students&#13;
have in the past. The hazardous&#13;
part would be handling the hot&#13;
dog. The second alternative, if this&#13;
one should fail, has two problems&#13;
and is far more destructive.&#13;
The second alternative, as I've&#13;
said, would require a video camera&#13;
to tape the monster. The first problem&#13;
with this is finding a safe place&#13;
to keep the recording equipment.&#13;
I'm sure that with a little goading,&#13;
the chancellor would donate her&#13;
office to this noble cause. I'm sure&#13;
that she isc oncerned with the wellbeing&#13;
of the students, and would&#13;
grant this request. Of course, she&#13;
would have to explain to people&#13;
who came into her office what the&#13;
equipment was for. Seeing as it&#13;
might be a little difficult to explain&#13;
this to someone like Les Aspin, for&#13;
instance, I would be more than&#13;
happy to help out&#13;
The second problem would&#13;
be with finding the dynamite to&#13;
blow up the machine and the monster.&#13;
I guess that this would have to&#13;
be left up to Security since they&#13;
would be handling this alternative.&#13;
If they were really convinced that&#13;
there is a monster under the soda&#13;
machine, I'm sure they could use a&#13;
little muscleon the Chemistry Dept.&#13;
to get them to make some dynamite.&#13;
If that fails, I'm sure there is&#13;
a natural gasJine and a Zippo lighter&#13;
to be had somewhere around campus.&#13;
Well, that's all for this week,&#13;
because I'm plumb out of stupid.&#13;
Remember, if you see the monster&#13;
under the soda machine, take a&#13;
picture! If you get this picture, call&#13;
me. I know a guy on the fourth&#13;
floor of Saint Catherine's Hospital&#13;
who can help you.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
meeting last Friday a few of the&#13;
minority student members were&#13;
talking about the exclusion they&#13;
felt here on campus by other nonminority&#13;
students, both in and&#13;
out of class, and it bothers them.&#13;
It makes a lot of the students feel&#13;
like they aren't truly a part of&#13;
campus, only casual observers.&#13;
Now, this is something I'd&#13;
expect to happen a few generations&#13;
ago, when there weren't&#13;
many minority students on college&#13;
campuses. This should not&#13;
beaprobleminthe 1990's, where&#13;
students are taught to accept&#13;
different cultures, and different&#13;
viewpoints other than their own.&#13;
Many minority students have&#13;
moved here from their o wn&#13;
countries and are now choosing&#13;
to make America their permanent&#13;
home. Many students are also&#13;
here in America just to get a&#13;
degree, leam about our culture&#13;
and our government, and take all&#13;
this information back to their&#13;
country to make their country a&#13;
better place to live. We, as bom&#13;
andraised Americans, should feel&#13;
flattered that people from other&#13;
countries should want to come to&#13;
America to study, and emulate&#13;
our way of life in their own countries.&#13;
Our international students&#13;
have so much to offer those of us&#13;
who have lived here all of our&#13;
lives. Instead ofjustreading about&#13;
China or Pakistan we have the&#13;
opportunity to talk to a student&#13;
from these countries, and get&#13;
firsthand information on their&#13;
country and their viewpoint on&#13;
world affairs, such as the Middle&#13;
East crisis.&#13;
I, along with many Middle&#13;
Eastern students, are afraid that&#13;
this time next year the campus&#13;
atmosphere is going to resemble&#13;
that of the Vietnam era, where&#13;
students are going to transfer their&#13;
hatred for the situation in the&#13;
Middle East to some of those&#13;
students here. The idea of that&#13;
happening is both terrifying and&#13;
realistic. Instead of being narrowminded&#13;
and letting something like&#13;
that happen, we, the non-minority&#13;
students, should start listening to&#13;
and accepting viewpoints other&#13;
than our own, and make a conscious&#13;
effort to make minority&#13;
students feel like they are apart&#13;
of this campus, not just casual&#13;
outside observers of the American&#13;
way of life.&#13;
Tracie A. Nelson&#13;
October 4,1990 Spotlight Ranger, Page 5 i&#13;
PAB President Michelle Deede works on programming&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Although everyone knows&#13;
about theacademic life atParkside,&#13;
some students have not yet learned&#13;
about the social environment&#13;
Parkside also offers. One of the&#13;
strongest supporters of social life&#13;
is the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB). PAB is the student programming&#13;
organization for the&#13;
Parkside community and provides&#13;
the campus with a wide variety of&#13;
educational, cultural and social&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
"It's something we do for the&#13;
students (programming). We are&#13;
not just a social club," commented&#13;
Marie Boris, chairperson of the Live&#13;
Entertainment committee. PAB&#13;
gives the students the opportunity&#13;
to develop leadership qualities, gain&#13;
advertising, communication and&#13;
marketing experience while also&#13;
having fun, working behind the&#13;
scenes and meeting the performers,&#13;
improving their resumes, attaining&#13;
cooperative teamwork skills and&#13;
having loads of fun!!!&#13;
The members of PAB attend&#13;
conferences, talk to the agents,&#13;
negotiate prices, sharpen their&#13;
communication skills, book the&#13;
entertainment and work with a&#13;
$100,000budget Michelle Deede,&#13;
president of PAB, added that the&#13;
students "get a choice in what&#13;
comes to Parkside. They get to use&#13;
what they learn in the classroom."&#13;
PAB links education and the infamous&#13;
"real world" in an exciting&#13;
manner.&#13;
There are eight different&#13;
committees that make up PAB.&#13;
Concepts and Controversies deals&#13;
with topics of interest to today's&#13;
students and presents local, regional&#13;
and nationally known speakers.&#13;
This committee has brought in&#13;
speakers to talk about apartheid,&#13;
abortion, stress, rain forests and&#13;
zombies.&#13;
The Film &amp; Video Committee&#13;
brings in a variety of films, including&#13;
popular favorites, classics and&#13;
non-traditional films to Parkside.&#13;
Currently, this committee is offering&#13;
"Glory," 'Total Recall" and "I&#13;
Love You to Death."&#13;
The Live Entertainment&#13;
Committee holds dances and concerts&#13;
featuring all types of music.&#13;
Local bands, as well as the hottest&#13;
groups from the Midwest and the&#13;
nation are booked by this committee.&#13;
For each dance, members of&#13;
PAB are involved with the band&#13;
from around 4 pm to 2 am, whethre&#13;
it is loading in the equipment,&#13;
helpir ^ with the sound check,&#13;
working the door during the dance&#13;
or loading the truck after the dance&#13;
has ended. Events coming up for&#13;
this semester are "Children," "Juke&#13;
Box Heroes" and the spectacular&#13;
"Mirage."&#13;
The Nightlife Committee is&#13;
responsible for bringing in some of&#13;
the best musical nightclub entertainment&#13;
as well as putting together&#13;
popular gameshows such as: the&#13;
Boob Tube (PAB's version of&#13;
Remote Control), Family Feud, the&#13;
Dating Game and others. So far&#13;
this semester, the Nightlife committee&#13;
has booked the Billy&#13;
McLaughlin Band and ACME vocals,&#13;
and on Oct. 11, "Aurora" will&#13;
be making their appearance at&#13;
Parkside as well.&#13;
The Performing Arts Committee&#13;
is responsible for bringing&#13;
contemporary, cultural programs&#13;
such as world renowned dancers,&#13;
mimes, ballets, musicals, instrumental&#13;
ensembles and more. The&#13;
line-up for this semester includes&#13;
Ballet Francais de Nancy, the&#13;
Koslov Youth Dance Ensemble,&#13;
Armenta Hummings and the Big&#13;
Band Jamboree.&#13;
Tom DeLuca is just one of the&#13;
many performers that the Special&#13;
Events committee books for&#13;
Parkside's entertainment. Comedians,&#13;
ventriloquists, magicians, the&#13;
annual Arts &amp; Crafts Fair and other&#13;
events are also this committee's&#13;
specialty.&#13;
The Travel &amp; Recreation&#13;
committee has been known for its&#13;
popular annual ski trips and&#13;
Brewers game tailgate parties, as&#13;
well as Jello-wrestling, scavenger&#13;
hunts and even parachuting.&#13;
Finally, the Marketing Committee&#13;
is the serious business&#13;
student's dream. This committee&#13;
is responsible for overseeing publicity&#13;
and advertising of PAB&#13;
events, working together to think&#13;
up new and exciting ways to promote&#13;
events. Most recently, this&#13;
committee has undergone window&#13;
painting as a way tod raw attention&#13;
to events.&#13;
Joining PAB does not mean&#13;
giving up all of your free time.&#13;
Students are always needed for&#13;
ushering at events (for which you&#13;
will receive free admission),&#13;
decorating before events, making&#13;
or hanging up posters or passing&#13;
out flyers on table tops. "There's a&#13;
certain satisfaction in driving out&#13;
to school every day for more than&#13;
just attending classes," remarked&#13;
Deede.&#13;
One new feature Live Entertainment&#13;
will be attempting is to&#13;
have local bands play at Parkside&#13;
more often. Any local band may&#13;
send a demo tape and promotional&#13;
materials to: UW-Parkside,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, Wood&#13;
Road - Box 2000, Kenosha, WI&#13;
53141-2000.&#13;
The students who comprise the&#13;
executive board of PAB are:&#13;
Michelle Deede, President; Judy&#13;
Bostetter, Vice President; Jon&#13;
Hearron, Art Director; Rika&#13;
Morishita, Secretary; and the&#13;
chairpersons - Ya'Coub Ayyoub,&#13;
Marketing; Marie Boris, Live Entertainment;&#13;
Jared Brieske, Travel&#13;
&amp; Recreation; Erica Wernecke,&#13;
Film &amp; Video; Renee Pughsley,&#13;
Performing Arts; Edris Saldana,&#13;
Concepts &amp; Controversies; and the&#13;
Nightlife and Special Events committees&#13;
which currently have no&#13;
chairpersons.&#13;
Students interested in joining&#13;
PAB may stop in the office, located&#13;
on theDI level of the Union, behind&#13;
the Information Center or call&#13;
Michelle Deede at 553-2650. The&#13;
next general meeting is Wednesday,&#13;
October 10 at noon. Meet in&#13;
the PAB office.&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
Next Week's Spotlight: The Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Ranger, Page 6 Opinion&#13;
RgCQrfl Review&#13;
Heart stopping guitars rejuvenate Priest&#13;
by Chris DeGuire&#13;
Judas Priest Painkiller&#13;
Columbia 1990&#13;
Strap yourself in tight for what&#13;
is definitely the comeback of the&#13;
year and is bound to make Judas&#13;
Priest a household nameo nce more.&#13;
This is what heavy met al is all&#13;
about: lightning fast guitar solos,&#13;
crunching rhythms, scorching vocals&#13;
and the drive of the double&#13;
bass drums. This is Painkiller.&#13;
Every track is powerful in its&#13;
own right, from anthems like&#13;
"Leather Rebel" and "One Shot at&#13;
Glory" to the pure mayhem of&#13;
"Painkiller" and "Metal Meltdown."&#13;
Propelling each track isf ormer&#13;
Racer X drummer, Scott Travis, a&#13;
welcome addition to an old band&#13;
reborn. Vocalist Rob Halford is&#13;
also at his personal best, especially&#13;
on tracks such as "Painkiller" and&#13;
"Hell Patrol."&#13;
But it's the guitars that bring&#13;
the songs to life. K.K. Downing&#13;
and Glenn Tipton share the lead&#13;
breaks and are at their bestin "Metal&#13;
Meltdown", where they alternate&#13;
twice.&#13;
There's no denying that the&#13;
rhythm of "Painkiller" is&#13;
heartstopping. This has to be the&#13;
best song Priest has ever recorded:&#13;
"Faster than a Bullet/Terrifying&#13;
Scream/Enraged andFullof Anger/&#13;
He's Half Man and Half Machine."&#13;
And Glenn's solo in the middle&#13;
will just blow you away.&#13;
Painkiller breaks new ground&#13;
for a band that desperately needed&#13;
a shot in the arm to avoid disappearing&#13;
from themusic world. Even&#13;
if you're not a big Priest fan but&#13;
enjoy metal, pick this one up. It&#13;
can't get much better.&#13;
Move Up To 386SX Performance&#13;
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And topping off the Z-286 LP Plus is Zenith Data&#13;
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contact&#13;
Ken Schuh, Campus Representative&#13;
at 553-2295 or 553-2838&#13;
Or call 1-800-553-0559 for your entry form.&#13;
Hurry! Contest Ends November 15,1990!&#13;
ZENITH&#13;
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No purchase necessary Void where prohibited by law. See contest rules on entry form for complete details. Estimated retail value: Discman with Speakers, $35000; Walkman, $75.00.&#13;
Sony Discman and Walkman are registered trademarks of Sony Corporation of America. Intel386SX is a trademark of Intel Corporation. Z-286 LP Plus is a trademark of Zenith Data&#13;
Systems Corporation. Microsoft Wbrd For Windows and Microsoft Excel For Windows are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Craphics simulate Microsoft* Windows* version 30.&#13;
a product and trademark of Microsoft Corporation.® 1990 Zenith Data Systems Corporation&#13;
October 4,1990&#13;
by Rufus Thorne&#13;
When I went to visit my cousin, Sara, this last summer in Los&#13;
Angeles I found that she had little concern for the environment and its&#13;
limited resources. I told her that she should think about saving recyclable&#13;
items instead of throwing them away. She replied that she was too busy&#13;
to do that and it became obvious to me that she didn't want such thoughts&#13;
to be roaming around her tiny, materialistic mind.&#13;
The next week I was there, Sara's sister Nancy flew out after&#13;
finishing summer school to stay in L.A. with us. Nancy is much diffe rent&#13;
than Sara. Nancy is a member of Greenpeace and dresses like a hippie.&#13;
She was aghast that we were not reyccling items. She went on to give her&#13;
sister a speech that made mine sound like a careless comment. While&#13;
Nancy continued to reprimand her older sister, I ducked out to watch&#13;
some television. Nancy noticed this and was prepared to give me a dose&#13;
of her fury. She asked me if I recycled items. I replied confidently I did.&#13;
She saw that her wrath was diminishing to a soft breeze so she asked me&#13;
what I recycled, assuming that I would say one or two items at the most.&#13;
I told her that I recycled aluminum, glass, paper, plastic and motor oil&#13;
"Oil?", she restated, "I didn't know you could recycle oil."&#13;
"Yes, oil." I replied. "What item on the list that I just mentioned do&#13;
you suppose causes the most damage to the environment?"&#13;
She looked back atm e with blank eyes. I hadb unted a ball to her and&#13;
it was clearly too far out of her reach to catch.&#13;
I stated, "Oil. Oil is the most harmful."&#13;
And with that she left the room and didn't bother me until two days&#13;
later. But during those days, we saved plastic, glass and aluminum.&#13;
My hostess, Sara, kept her sister and me busy seeing the sights in&#13;
California. She had an itinerary that kept us on the move constantly.&#13;
While we were driving around from place to place in my cousin's car,&#13;
I would drink my favorite soft drink wi th it's high caffeine content. After&#13;
finishing my can of soda, I would crinkle the can and lay it on the floor.&#13;
When we returned back to my cousin's apartment I would place my can&#13;
on the kitchen counter; because of the lack of space, the countertop was&#13;
the decided place for aluminum storage.&#13;
All of the cans Nancy drank were perfect in appearance. The only&#13;
way one could tell that its contents had been consumed was to either&#13;
notice that the top had been opened or to feel the loss of weight All of&#13;
my cans laid on their sides because of creases I impressed in them.&#13;
So one night, after an exhausting day, Nancy watched me place my&#13;
cans among the rest on the kitchen counter. She looked at me, clearly&#13;
aggravated.&#13;
"Why do you crease your cans like that?", she demanded.&#13;
"I do that so the can doesn't roll around on the floor of the car&#13;
dribbling a sticky mess," I replied. Sara nodded to me with approval,&#13;
noticing that her car was being taken into consideration. (The relationship&#13;
between a Californian and their car is dangerously intimate.)&#13;
Nancy exploded, "You're just making it harder on everybody!"&#13;
I was angry now. "What do you mean?", I asked as pleasantly as I&#13;
could. Sara was also confused by her sister's anger.&#13;
Nancy replied slowly, asi f I were too stupid to undesrtand anything,&#13;
Why don't you take into consideration the person who recycles your&#13;
aluminum? Remember, you are trying to recycle your cans, not ruin&#13;
them!"&#13;
Suddenly I felt infuriated and extremely fatigued all at once. I still&#13;
did not understand what her problem was, and her sister was still&#13;
confused as well.&#13;
I questioned, "And how is it that you feel I am ruining my cans?&#13;
How is it that I am making it harder on everyone?"&#13;
She replied, "How would you like to be the one who has to&#13;
straighten out your cans and make them look like new?"&#13;
1 couldn't believe my ears. "Staighten them out!" I almost cackled.&#13;
"Your think they straighten out every can that is crinkled? Are you&#13;
serious?"&#13;
Nancy looked back at me with the same blank eyes I had seen&#13;
&gt;efore. I was about to hit another ball that she had pitched to me, in her&#13;
ballpark, and I was going to hit it out of her league once again.&#13;
I calmed down. "They don't straighten my cans," I said pointing to&#13;
all my lazy pop containers lying on the counter. "They crush your cans&#13;
and then thy melt them with all the others."&#13;
If you're going to jump on the recycling bandwagon, know the fact s.&#13;
ts oil should be recycled too. -&#13;
Excel '90 promises to enlighten campus leaders&#13;
by Susan Luedkes&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The Student Activities Office&#13;
of UW-Parkside will be hosting&#13;
Excel '90 "The 1990 Leadership&#13;
Adventure" Oct.1 3 and 14a t Camp&#13;
Sidney Cohen in Delafield, Wisconsin.&#13;
The Excel'90 participants&#13;
will be departing Parkside's Union&#13;
at 9 am by bus Oct. 13. They will&#13;
return from the retreat about 5 pm&#13;
Oct. 14.&#13;
This year's Excel consists of a&#13;
new selection of indoor and outdoor&#13;
sessions. These include various&#13;
lectures that will install certain&#13;
leadership qualities as well as enhance&#13;
the student's originality,&#13;
critical thinking, and communication&#13;
skills.&#13;
Several speakers have been&#13;
invited to share their knowledge&#13;
and insight at Excel '90. These&#13;
guests are from Parkside, Carroll&#13;
College, Marquette University and&#13;
other various universities.&#13;
This retreat is not all lectures,&#13;
but will include several recreational&#13;
activities. This includes such items&#13;
as stress breakers, risk-taking discussions,&#13;
and team exercises.&#13;
English Club&#13;
meeting&#13;
Si; ma Tau Delta, the English&#13;
honors society, has a chapter at&#13;
UW-Parkside called Tau Psi. Students&#13;
interested in joining are invited&#13;
to an informational meeting&#13;
on Wednesday, October 17 at noon&#13;
inCA 135.&#13;
Andrew McLean, Professor of&#13;
English and Humanities, is the&#13;
Faculty advisor for Tau Psi. He'll&#13;
talk about the benefits of joining&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta.&#13;
Requirements for active&#13;
membership include: (1) at least a&#13;
3.0 grade point in English courses,&#13;
(2) a declared English major or&#13;
minor, (3) at least two English&#13;
courses beyond English 101. Requirements&#13;
for associate members&#13;
are the same except you need not&#13;
be an English major or minor and&#13;
can not hold an office in Tau Psi.&#13;
There is a S20 lifetime membership&#13;
fee.&#13;
Benefits of membership include&#13;
receiving a certificate of&#13;
membership, membership card,&#13;
pin, two copies of the Rectangle&#13;
and society newsletter. In addition,&#13;
members are eligible for scholarships&#13;
and can attend national&#13;
meetings.&#13;
UW-P faculty members who&#13;
have joined Sigma Tau Delta include&#13;
Donald Kummings, Rosemary&#13;
Hunkeler, Walter Graffin and&#13;
Carol Lee Saffioti-Hughes.&#13;
Diane Welsh, the coordinator&#13;
of Excel '90, states, "Students geta&#13;
lot out of it They examine their&#13;
own skills, their own skill levels,&#13;
and how those skills levels pertain&#13;
to them. Then they do not have just&#13;
a degree, they also have skills to go&#13;
along with it. It's a chance for&#13;
students to do their best and be the&#13;
best they can be."&#13;
Other benefits to this program&#13;
are the opportunity to meet other&#13;
students, share experiences, and&#13;
develop friendships.&#13;
The planning committee of&#13;
Excel '90 is a dedicated staff of the&#13;
Student Life Organization. This&#13;
year's staff includes Daphne Cook,&#13;
Deann Possehl, Steve Wallner,&#13;
Diane Welsh, and Mary Ellen&#13;
Wesley. They have been working&#13;
long and hard booking speakers,&#13;
planning details and drawing up&#13;
the retreat's events. The schedule&#13;
is based on student questionnaires&#13;
and evaluations of past years.&#13;
The staff welcomes eveiyone&#13;
to attend Excel '90. There is no age&#13;
limit or previous involvement&#13;
necessary. The only criteria is to&#13;
be eager to learn. "It is open to&#13;
everyone," emphasizes Welsh.&#13;
If you arei nterested and would&#13;
like to attend, then obtain a registration&#13;
form in either Union 209,&#13;
the Union Information Center or&#13;
any student organization office.&#13;
There is a $10 coverage fee. It&#13;
will provide the essentials for the&#13;
workshops such as materials,&#13;
housing, meals and transportation.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
Friday Oct 5(space is limited).&#13;
Students are encouraged to get their&#13;
registration forms in as soon as&#13;
possible. If you'd like more information&#13;
on Excel '90, drop by&#13;
Union 209 or call 553-2279.&#13;
HERE'S WHY&#13;
THE SMART MONEY AT&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
IS GOING WIffl TIAA-CREF&#13;
AS IF THE FUTURE DEPENDED ON IT.&#13;
Because it does. Smart investors&#13;
know that your future depends on&#13;
how well your retirement system&#13;
performs. TIAA-CREF has been the&#13;
premier retirement system for people&#13;
in education and research for over 70&#13;
years. We have enabled over 200,000&#13;
people like you to enjoy a comfortable&#13;
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are now planning for the future with&#13;
TIAA-CREF.&#13;
SMART MONEY LOOKS FOR SECURITY,&#13;
GROWTH AND DIVERSITY FOR&#13;
RETIREMENT SAVINGS.&#13;
Security—so the resources are there&#13;
when it is time to retire. Growth—so&#13;
you'll have enough income for the&#13;
kind of retirement you want. And&#13;
diversity—to help protect you against&#13;
market volatility and to let you benefit&#13;
from several types of investments.&#13;
THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT YOU GET&#13;
WITH TIAA-CREF.&#13;
TIAA offers you the safety of a&#13;
traditional annuity that guarantees&#13;
your principal plus a specified rate of&#13;
interest, and provides for additional&#13;
growth through dividends. CREF's&#13;
variable annuity offers opportunities&#13;
for growth through four different&#13;
investment accounts, each managed&#13;
with the long-term perspective essential&#13;
to sound retirement planning:&#13;
The CREF Stock Account&#13;
The CREF Money Market Account&#13;
v The CREF Bond Market Account*&#13;
The CREF Social Choice Account*&#13;
CALL 1-800-842-2775&#13;
TO FIND OUT MORE&#13;
Our experienced retirement counselors&#13;
will be happy to answer your questions&#13;
and tell you more about retirement&#13;
annuities from TIAA-CREF.&#13;
-v&#13;
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Your future is protected by the laigest&#13;
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We have done so well, for so many, for&#13;
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m93P Ensuring the future&#13;
for those who shape it.s&#13;
* The CREF Bond Market and Social Choice Accounts may not be available under all institutional retirement plans, but are&#13;
available for all Supplemental Retirement Annuity plans.&#13;
For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call 1 800 842-2733, ext 5509 for a&#13;
prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money.&#13;
Ranger. Page 8 Counseling October 4,1990&#13;
The Counselor's Corner , . You shouldn't have to be coerced, cajoled, threatened, forced, or, in the&#13;
state of Wisconsin, badgered into using our services.&#13;
The Part*"1* Student&#13;
i by&#13;
Stuart&#13;
Rubner&#13;
i&#13;
; '• • ' :&#13;
S&#13;
This university is nothing&#13;
withoutits students, and its students&#13;
are nothing without theu niversity's&#13;
resources. Now that's not a terribly&#13;
profound statement by any&#13;
means, and I'm not making any&#13;
claim that no onee lse hase ver said&#13;
it before. But it's true that it's what&#13;
the university provides thatenables&#13;
students who want to be academically&#13;
and personally successful to&#13;
do just that&#13;
I have said before in this&#13;
column that any student who has&#13;
what it takes to learn and who wants&#13;
to earn a degree here, can. But&#13;
most can't do it without taking&#13;
advantage at one time oar nother of&#13;
at least several of the enormous&#13;
number of resources the campus&#13;
provides as part of its educational&#13;
mission.&#13;
For example, math is a&#13;
subjectthatthrowsa lotof students.&#13;
So the Academic Resource Center&#13;
in WLLC D-150 provides hours&#13;
and hours of math tutoring each&#13;
week at no charge to students.&#13;
Writing is such an important&#13;
part of being successful in&#13;
college that we established the&#13;
Writing Center as a part of the&#13;
ARC to help students write more&#13;
effectively. And not only will the&#13;
Writing Center show you how to&#13;
improve your writing, the staff will&#13;
also show you how to put wht ayou&#13;
are writing onto a computer so that&#13;
making corrections and changes&#13;
are a snap and your fin al product is&#13;
legible.&#13;
You cannot be successful&#13;
if you are unable to think clearly&#13;
and concentrate on your studies.&#13;
So the university has two counselors&#13;
in WLLC D-175 who provide&#13;
Personal Counseling and help&#13;
students overcome roadblocks&#13;
which could interfere with studies.&#13;
Contemporary acoustic pop rock&#13;
bring 3 friends, get in free!!&#13;
Fri. Oct 5th 8:30 doors open&#13;
Union Square $2 students $3 guests&#13;
18 and up&#13;
Depression, stress, family problems,&#13;
low self-esteem are among&#13;
the issues students bring to these&#13;
counselors and want help resolving.&#13;
For those thinking of going&#13;
to graduate school, the Counseling&#13;
and Testing Office in&#13;
WLLC D-175 administers a number&#13;
of grad uate sc hool exam s. They&#13;
also offer CLEP exams for those&#13;
wishing to earn college credit in a&#13;
variety of academic subjects&#13;
through testing. This is nota quick&#13;
and dirty way of earning credits;&#13;
it's assumed that you know a fair&#13;
amount about a subject before you&#13;
sign up to take the test.&#13;
If you don't know what&#13;
you want tod o with the resto f your&#13;
life, but are faced with having to&#13;
choose a major at some point in&#13;
time, then a visit to The Career&#13;
Center (also in WLLC D-175) is&#13;
imperative. The Center staff will&#13;
get you started on the process of&#13;
discovering your career interests.&#13;
And as you get into your junior and&#13;
senior year, you'll appreciate how&#13;
the Center can help you with your&#13;
job search.&#13;
There's a lot of emphasis&#13;
today on volunteerism, and the&#13;
Student Community Services&#13;
office in WLLC D-175 will place&#13;
those who wish to help others in&#13;
volunteer positions in the community.&#13;
While some might not&#13;
think of the library as a resource in&#13;
the same light as these other services,&#13;
the Library/Learning&#13;
Center staff is always eager to&#13;
help students find what they need&#13;
and make the most effective use of&#13;
the print and non-print materials&#13;
the library has in its collection.&#13;
If all else fails, go to the&#13;
Advising Center in lower Main&#13;
Place — it's kind of the quintessential&#13;
resource when it comes to&#13;
finding out who's who and what's&#13;
where at UW-Parkside.&#13;
While most of the preceding&#13;
resources can help students&#13;
perform better academically, there&#13;
are umpteen other campus resources&#13;
designed to complement&#13;
the academic side of going to college.&#13;
You can't function well&#13;
academically if you aren't feeling&#13;
well or are in otherwise poor shape&#13;
physically, so Student Health&#13;
Services is the place to go for health/&#13;
wellness information and assistance.&#13;
And don't forget that the&#13;
Physical Education Building has&#13;
most of the resources most anyone&#13;
needs to keep in shape.&#13;
finve rnmpnt Association (PSGA)&#13;
is always looking for students who&#13;
want to get involved in student&#13;
government activities; PSGA is&#13;
truly a voice for UW-Parkside&#13;
students. They are located in the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe area of lower Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
A student who just takes&#13;
classes and does nothing else is&#13;
losing out on the enjoyment,&#13;
learning, and opportunity to develop&#13;
personally that a student club&#13;
or organization can offer. While&#13;
homework, a part-time job, and&#13;
family or other commitments limit&#13;
the free time many students have&#13;
available, making time to participate&#13;
in a group activity will pay big&#13;
dividends later on. Stop by the&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
office by the Coffee Shoppe in&#13;
lower Main Place for info.&#13;
And speaking of part-time&#13;
jobs, a Wisconsin .lob Service&#13;
representative (Mike Plate) resides&#13;
in Tallent Hall; his mission is to&#13;
help students find part-time employment&#13;
in the community.&#13;
Also, dozens of free or&#13;
low cost dances, entertainment&#13;
programs, informational programs&#13;
or interesting lectures are sponsored&#13;
by various groups on campus each&#13;
semester. Watch for announcements&#13;
of thesei n the RANG ER and&#13;
on bulletin boards and walls around&#13;
campus.&#13;
The Center for Educational&#13;
and Cultural Advancement&#13;
in WLLC D-182 sponsors&#13;
numerous programs that enrich the&#13;
cultural diversity of the campus&#13;
and make it a better place for all&#13;
individuals; African American,&#13;
Hispanic American, Native&#13;
American, and Asian American&#13;
students enjoy meeting and talking&#13;
with the CECA staff about a broad&#13;
range of academic, social, and&#13;
cultural interests.&#13;
The Women's Center&#13;
located on the main concourse&#13;
across from the Library/Learning&#13;
Center provides information and&#13;
assistance on issues of interest and&#13;
concern to women. The Center&#13;
also sponsors programs during the&#13;
year that are of interest to everyone&#13;
on campus.&#13;
Adult students soon become&#13;
familiar with the PASA office&#13;
near the Coffee Shoppe. The&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Allianrf&#13;
is an advocate for the many adult&#13;
students on campus and can help&#13;
adult students get involved at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Any student attending&#13;
Parkside and using the Child Car?&#13;
Center appreciates that important&#13;
campus resource. And the Housing&#13;
staff are important people to&#13;
talk with if you have problems or&#13;
concerns related to on or offcampus&#13;
housing or want to see&#13;
certain programs sponsored for&#13;
residents.&#13;
S tudents having concerns&#13;
about safety and security related&#13;
matters should contact one of the&#13;
officers in the Campus Police and&#13;
Public Safety office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
They deal with a whole lot more&#13;
than just parking.&#13;
You should alsok now that&#13;
the campus has both a Sexual&#13;
Harassment Committee and a&#13;
Racist and Discriminatory Conist&#13;
to help those who experience&#13;
harassment or discrimination of any&#13;
type and to educate the campus&#13;
with an eye toward eliminating this&#13;
kind of behavior from the campus&#13;
environment.&#13;
And the staff of the&#13;
Registrar's office will help you&#13;
with, among other things, questions&#13;
about your transcript and, as you&#13;
head toward graduation, will tell&#13;
you whether you have met i II the&#13;
graduation requirements. The •»&#13;
Registrar's office is also the place&#13;
to go for information and assistance&#13;
on Veterans' Benefits. And if you&#13;
have any questions at all about&#13;
financial aid (to me that most&#13;
complicated of subjects), don't&#13;
hesitate to see the Financial Aid&#13;
Office staff in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The Parks»de Union is&#13;
probably most recognized for its&#13;
food service, Cinema Theatre, and&#13;
Union Square. Lot's goes on there.&#13;
And don'tforget the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
operation in lower Main Place.&#13;
And who doesn't admire&#13;
how well the Physical Plant staff&#13;
maintains the university's beautiful&#13;
grounds and how they manage&#13;
to keep our buildings looking nice&#13;
on the inside despite the heavy&#13;
volume of student traffic.&#13;
Have I left anyone out?&#13;
Oh, yes, the Bursar. The Bursar&#13;
admits that every service offered&#13;
by her office costs students money,&#13;
but was quick to point out that they&#13;
will give lollipops to little kids&#13;
accompanying their parents when&#13;
standing in line top ay tuition. What&#13;
else can I say?&#13;
SECTION B THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4,1990 SECTION B&#13;
SPOKISWRAP&#13;
A WRAP-OP ON WHATSINSIDSE&#13;
Road struggles&#13;
introduced to&#13;
BEAR FACTS ON PACK. Jim&#13;
Ne wcomb and DavidDoherty take a look at&#13;
this weekend's Packer/Bear game* 2B. •&#13;
PLAYING AN ACE. parkside's&#13;
Volleyball team tipped out 15 aces in a&#13;
three-game sweep of Blmhurst College*&#13;
propelling them to a win over U W-Milwaukee&#13;
the next 2B,&#13;
SCORE.; 1 j|l&#13;
scoreboard for both Football and Basketball;j&#13;
standings from intramural action. Game&#13;
summaries and future schedules all appear&#13;
MORE VOLLEYBALL. Coii^n&#13;
Ryan nets Athlete of the Week honors as&#13;
netters roll in past week* Results and story/&#13;
INTR AMUR ALS. Parkside's&#13;
Superstar's competition is moved back one&#13;
week to Oct* 12th. Other changes and&#13;
updates* 4B. - ' ;&#13;
OPEN WEEKENDS. Parkside's gyrn&#13;
will be open for use on Saturdays from 11-&#13;
4 and S undays from 4-9 until 12/16.'&#13;
Ranger soccer&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Winning on the roadi s as imporat nt as anything to&#13;
a quality club. It is also the hardest thing to come by,&#13;
as the Ranger soccer team has learned on its first road&#13;
trip of the year.&#13;
"We're definately finding breaks that don't normally&#13;
occur at home," said coach, Rick Kilps.&#13;
After losing by a 1-0 tally in their last match on a&#13;
bicycle kick, the Rangers were befallen this time by a&#13;
penalty kick as they dropped their second consecutive&#13;
game by a 1-0 score to a ranked opponent, Missouri-&#13;
St. Louis. The Rivermen, who started the year ranked&#13;
tenth nationally, have made the NCAA tournament 16&#13;
of their past 18 years.&#13;
"I hope our luck changes ," said Kilps. "We played&#13;
some good soccer with the exception of a twenty&#13;
minute spot in the second half."&#13;
That spot proved to be all the Rivermen would&#13;
need to brake away from the evenly contested match.&#13;
Darrenn Starzyk, a two-time All-American at Lewis &amp;&#13;
Clark J.C., Scored the match's only goal after a tripping&#13;
penalty in the Ranger box.&#13;
Ranger goal tender, Joel Meadow was able to get&#13;
a piece of Starzyk's shot, but not a big enough piece as&#13;
the ball carried into the net at the 65:40 mark in the&#13;
match.&#13;
Parkside applied heavy pressure in the final ten&#13;
minutes of the match, but good scoring opportunities&#13;
were few and far between.&#13;
"We showed courage and made good decisions&#13;
see Road, 2B&#13;
Heads Up! Defender, Mike Riley,&#13;
defense for the Rangers. Netters serve up a second&#13;
place finish at MIT Invite&#13;
1990&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst Sports Editor&#13;
Playing its best volleyball of&#13;
the 90 season, the UW-Parkside&#13;
Volleyball team finished second in&#13;
the Michigan Tech Invitational&#13;
Tournament Friday and Saturday&#13;
in Houghton, Michigan.&#13;
"We played very well in the&#13;
tournament," said headc oach Tenry&#13;
Paulson of his club's second place&#13;
finish this past weekend.&#13;
Parkside entered the four team&#13;
tournament with a record of 12-6,&#13;
playing inconsistent volleyball thus&#13;
far, never playing real poorly but&#13;
never playing up to potential. The&#13;
Lady Rangers are still trying to&#13;
find an identity as they have been&#13;
shuffleing line-ups attempting to&#13;
come up with the best combination.&#13;
Paulson has arealitively young&#13;
line-up to woik with. He uses&#13;
tournaments during the season to&#13;
try and get his younger women&#13;
playing time, this will help when it&#13;
is time to enter the district 14&#13;
playoffs.&#13;
Although Parkside did not win&#13;
the tournament outright second&#13;
place was a strong finish as the&#13;
Host school Michigan Tech proved&#13;
to be just a bit too much for the&#13;
Lady Rangers.&#13;
Friday, the first night of the&#13;
see Volleyball, 4B&#13;
knocks a pass away&#13;
Golfers preped&#13;
for district after&#13;
strong finish&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Ranger golf team finished&#13;
their regular season in style, finishing&#13;
in second place at the UWEau&#13;
Claire Invitational in the team's&#13;
last meet before District playoffs.&#13;
Finishing strong as they have&#13;
in all their tournaments this year,&#13;
Parkside cut 11 strokes off of its&#13;
first day total to over come first day&#13;
leader, Eau Claire, after the&#13;
Blugolds had built upa eight stroke&#13;
advantage.&#13;
What kept the Rangers from&#13;
taking the tournament was an even&#13;
YEAR: 1988 1989 see Golf, 4B&#13;
Winning the battle?&#13;
The NCAA's off-season anabolic steroid testing&#13;
program has seen a decrease in positive tests from&#13;
1989 to 1990. Majority of athletes were football&#13;
players.&#13;
1057&#13;
-Number of student-athletes tested&#13;
£jj -Number of positive tests&#13;
Ranger, Page B2 October 4,&#13;
Bears over Packers&#13;
Sunday in Chicago&#13;
By&#13;
JIM&#13;
NEWXMB&#13;
Columnist&#13;
Rangers chalk up third D-I&#13;
opponent with shut out&#13;
The second Bear - Packer game is already here. And, this one will&#13;
probably be a lot more interesting.&#13;
Chicago is currently tied for first place with Tampa Bay, they both&#13;
have a 3-1 record. Green Bay is in sole possession of second place with&#13;
a 2-2 record, a win will tie them with the Bears.&#13;
In the first game of the season the Bears beat the Packers. Or, should&#13;
I say the Packers beat the Packers. The Packers allowed 4 sacks, 5 turnovers&#13;
and 31 points. The Bears allowed two sacks, 1 turn-over, and only&#13;
13 points. This game was in Green Bay.&#13;
Last weekend the Bears got beaten by 14 points when they played the&#13;
undefeated L.A. Raiders. They were sacked left and right, gave up 24&#13;
points, and lost possession a number of times. The Packers, led by Don&#13;
Majkowski, won a 3 point nerve-wracker against the Detroit Lions. But,&#13;
remember the Bears were playing the Raiders, the#l ranked defensive&#13;
team in the league, and the Packers were playing the Lions, who are not&#13;
ranked nearly as high.&#13;
What to look for. The Bears defense won't be facing Anthony Ear-wig&#13;
this time. They will be up against Don Majkowski, the man who led the&#13;
Pack's sweep of the Bears last year. This isn't last year, but Green Bay&#13;
is a whole different team with "Majic" leading them. There will be a ton&#13;
of pressure on the Bears secondary.&#13;
Defense- Mvantage Bears. The front four lo oks great and the&#13;
secondary is playing very well. If the line can put pressure on Majkowski&#13;
you can expect some interceptions.&#13;
Qffgnss- Tied. The Packers have a better air attack, the Bears have a&#13;
superior ground attack. If Anderson is playing at 100% the Bears will have&#13;
the over all advantage.&#13;
Bottom Line- The Bears have "home field advantage" and the better&#13;
defense. This time it will be a much closer game, but I predict the Bears&#13;
will win by 3 points or more.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
By JEFFLEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
NCAA D-I opponents are&#13;
seemingly becoming the forte of&#13;
this year's Ranger soccer team. For&#13;
the third time in four attempts,&#13;
Parkside beat up on a member of&#13;
collegiate soccer's highest level&#13;
with a 2-0 blanking of Missouri-&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
Playing on the road for the&#13;
second time in two days, the Rangers&#13;
put together ninety minutes of&#13;
solid soccer, dominating Kansas&#13;
City in nearly every aspect of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Road&#13;
Rivermen hand&#13;
Rangers second&#13;
straight blanking&#13;
continued from front page&#13;
going forward late in the game, no&#13;
one -gave up or tried to keep the&#13;
score close," remarked Kilps about&#13;
the final ten minutes. "I'm not&#13;
overly concerned about having not&#13;
scored again. Our last two opponents&#13;
W JIO nationally ranked teams.&#13;
When you step up your sc hedule&#13;
like we have, you will not see highscoring&#13;
games.&#13;
The Rangers were out shot by&#13;
the Rivermen 14-5, as Meadow&#13;
was called upon to make eight&#13;
saves, compared to only one for the&#13;
Rivermen.&#13;
The second straight loss&#13;
dropped Paikside's record to 5-3&#13;
"After a tough physical game&#13;
last night, we responded with a&#13;
good performance."&#13;
That performance was aided&#13;
much in part by Parkside's bench,&#13;
as 18 Rangers sa w action in the&#13;
contest&#13;
"It was nice to have our bench&#13;
pitch-it today," said coach Rick&#13;
Kilps.&#13;
Parkside substitutes had a hand&#13;
in both of the Ranger goals.&#13;
Mike Huber and Hung Ly&#13;
hooked up on the first score of the&#13;
game at the 41:00 mark, and Tom&#13;
Kowalski set up Chris Ryan for&#13;
their second goal, late in theg ame.&#13;
"Bryan O'Malley had his best&#13;
game of the year, it was great to see&#13;
him in form. Chris Ryan did a nice&#13;
job controlling the center midfield."&#13;
For the third time in as many&#13;
games, Parkside's leading scorer,&#13;
Jens Hansen, was absent from the&#13;
scoring column. Hansen still leads&#13;
the team in assists with six, and is&#13;
tied for the lead in goals with Ryan&#13;
at six.&#13;
The Ranger seasonrecord now&#13;
stands at 6-3, and Parkside's national&#13;
ranking has dipped to number&#13;
nine with Tiffen University replacing&#13;
them at the number seven&#13;
spot.&#13;
Just a football game&#13;
Packers Bears collide&#13;
By&#13;
DAVID&#13;
DOHERIY&#13;
Columnist&#13;
Netters ace opponents, go 2-0 for week&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Following the traditional&#13;
scratch and claw battles between&#13;
UW-Parkside and UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
the Lady Rangers dug in to pull out&#13;
a four game victory 15-11, 5-15,&#13;
15-12,15-6.&#13;
Parkside took to the road last&#13;
Wednesday and faced a very good&#13;
UW-Milwaukee team which always&#13;
plays Parkside strong to the&#13;
last point.&#13;
Former Parkside All-&#13;
Amercian Nancy Hoch is the&#13;
Panters Assistant coach and is trying&#13;
to install a better work ethnic&#13;
15 aces spark victory&#13;
Parkside aced its way to victory&#13;
last Tucsdsay at home beating&#13;
Llmhursi College 15-6r 15-12,15-'&#13;
The Lady Rangers scored an&#13;
incredible 15 aces in only three&#13;
: . : ' :• •' . • '• :&#13;
one shy of the school record, 'That&#13;
was a very food win for us," said&#13;
head coach Terry Paulson, •&#13;
for her team.&#13;
Parkside took advantage of&#13;
Milwaukee's lacadasical effort, and&#13;
although the Lady Rangers did not&#13;
play up to par themselves, they&#13;
were able to pull off the victory in&#13;
four games.&#13;
"We played off tempo but&#13;
were able to win," said head coach&#13;
Terry Paulson, "we seemed to get&#13;
stronger as the matched progressed."&#13;
Senior co-captain Colleen&#13;
Ryan led the Parkside effort with&#13;
16 digs and five blocks. Lara&#13;
Nieckula continued to play the attacking&#13;
offense she has all season,&#13;
she had 13 kills and three service&#13;
aces. Ciridy Maier had 22 assists&#13;
for Parksideand continued to solidify&#13;
her position as setter.&#13;
The Lady Rnagers will face&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's Panthers once&#13;
more at home Wednesday, October&#13;
17.&#13;
It's that time of year again. The time of year that pits friend against&#13;
friend, roommate against roommate, boyfriend against girlfriend. Yes,&#13;
it's already the second game of the year between the Bears and the&#13;
Packers.&#13;
With Parkside's geographical location in the southern part of Wisconsin,&#13;
just some 25 miles from the Illin ois border, the majority of the&#13;
students at Parkside are either Chicago Bears or Green Bay Packers&#13;
football fans. Be careful what you say around school the next few days&#13;
because as game day approaches tempers tend to flare.&#13;
Until last year the Bears fans around school always seemed to have&#13;
the last laugh on Monday morning. That all changed when the Packers&#13;
swept the season series last year.&#13;
So with a Bear victory in the first game of the 1990 series Sunday's&#13;
game in Chicago could get ugly. Ugly both on the playing field and in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha as well.&#13;
You have the new and revitalized Bears 3-1 Bears against the 2-2&#13;
Packers with Majik on their side. The Bears dominated the first game of&#13;
the series, but that means nothing to hard-core Packer fans.&#13;
You can be sure that there will be the traditional Sunday afternoon&#13;
parties around Parkside. If you are in school on Sunday (don't ask me&#13;
why, but I m sure some people are) you can always tell how the game is&#13;
going by the noise coming from the dorms. You could probably ask&#13;
somebody on the third floor o f the library what the score was and they&#13;
would be able to tell you.&#13;
It doesn t matter who wins the game, Monday morning is always the&#13;
best That s when you get to sit backin class and listen to all thee xcuses&#13;
the losing team s fans make about the game. Oh, we lost because Majik&#13;
wasn't in, or we lost because the instant replay official is blind, etc.&#13;
The important thing to remember about the game is that it will&#13;
probably be die last game of the year between the Bears and theP ackers&#13;
this year. This is going to be theg ame everyone will rememberu ntil next&#13;
year s war. Try and remember it's only a football game. It's not worth&#13;
killing your roommate over.&#13;
October 4, 1990&#13;
Ranger, Page B3&#13;
INTRAMURAL FLAG FOOTBALL GOLF PARKSIDE BASKETBALL LEAGUE&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
L £CX&#13;
0 1.000&#13;
Blugold Invitational&#13;
Eau Claire C.C.&#13;
(9-team)&#13;
TEAM RESULTS&#13;
TEAM RD1 RD2 HI&#13;
UW-Whitewater 397 381 778&#13;
UW-Parkside 396 385 781&#13;
UW-Eau Claire 388 398 786&#13;
UW-Stevens Point 403 389 792&#13;
UW-La Crosse 410 395 805&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 407 402 809&#13;
UW-Platteville 422 416 838&#13;
UW-River Falls 435 424 859&#13;
UW-Stout 428 440 868&#13;
RANGER INDIVIDUAL SCORES&#13;
Name RD1 RD2 Ttl&#13;
Steve Gerber 77 75 152&#13;
Robb Schulze 77 79 156&#13;
Mark Schneider 82 75 157&#13;
Paul Connell 82 75 157&#13;
Joe Dahlstrom 78 81 159&#13;
Matt Koehler 84 86 170&#13;
MEDALIST&#13;
Tony Rohlik(EC) 67 76 143&#13;
TEAM STANDINGS&#13;
Grapplers I&#13;
Grapplers II&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse&#13;
The Warriors&#13;
Killer Avacados&#13;
The Gauchos&#13;
EAST DIVISION&#13;
TEAM A&#13;
LA Dream Team 1&#13;
Black Watch 1&#13;
Girde &amp; His Posse 0&#13;
Old Spice 0&#13;
WEST DIVISION&#13;
TEAM&#13;
Bad Apples 1&#13;
Prime Time 1&#13;
Warm Black Labels 0&#13;
Charging Armadillos 0&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S SCHEDULE&#13;
Monday, Oct. 8&#13;
The Gauchos vs. The Warriors--4:00&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse vs. Killer Avocados--5:00&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. The Warriors--4:00&#13;
Grapplers II vs. Grapplers I--5.00&#13;
TONIGHT'S GAMES&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 4&#13;
Black Watch vs.-Prime Time~6:00&#13;
Bad Apples vs. Girde &amp; His Posse-7:00&#13;
Charging Armidillos vs. Old Spice--7:00&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. Warm Black Labels--8:00&#13;
GAME SUMMARIES&#13;
Grapplers 147,&#13;
The Warriors 7&#13;
Grapplers I&#13;
45 yd pass-Mahre from Price&#13;
35.yd int retum-Mahre&#13;
15 yd run-Price&#13;
25 yd pass-Wessley from Price&#13;
60 yd int return-Price&#13;
19 yd pass-Wessley from Price&#13;
79 yd pass-Mahre from Price&#13;
The Warriors&#13;
3 yd pass-Allen from Johnson&#13;
Grapplers 120,&#13;
LA Dream Team 13&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
15 yd pass-McKowen from Lewis&#13;
50 yd pass-Lewis from Anhold&#13;
Grapplers I&#13;
2 yd pass-Mahre from Wessley&#13;
50 yd pass-Yde from Wessley&#13;
20 yd pass Mahre from Wessley&#13;
The Warriors 32,&#13;
Killer Avocados 24&#13;
The Warriors&#13;
60 yd pass-Brielmaier from Johnson&#13;
35 yd pass-Evans from Johnson&#13;
60 yd pass-Breilmaier from Johnson&#13;
40 yd run-Breilmaier&#13;
18 yd pass-Breilmaier from Johnson&#13;
Killer Avocados&#13;
65 yd KO ret-Lindsay&#13;
40 yd pass-Lindsay from Caspers&#13;
50 yd int ret-LaFeau&#13;
35 y4 pass-Willette from Caspers&#13;
TUESDAY'S RESULTS&#13;
Bad Apples 42-32 74&#13;
Old Spice 18-16 34&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Bad Apples&#13;
Schmidtmann-20, Whittier-14, Whiting-8,&#13;
Nowicki-8, Kawczynski-6, Somenske-6,&#13;
Neilson-6, Topp-4.&#13;
Old Spice&#13;
Breilmaier-12, Harvey-8, Skanske-6, Porter-&#13;
4, Williams-4.&#13;
Black Watch 44-42 86&#13;
Warm Black Label 34-20 54&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Black Watch&#13;
Brown-26, Jackson-20, Mitchell-12,&#13;
Tolliver-10, Rouge-10, Owens-4, Farmer-&#13;
4.&#13;
Warm Black Label&#13;
Gruel-14, Ohm-12, Tetslaff-10, VanCuick-&#13;
8, Boschek-4, Lazarski-2, Waldal-2.&#13;
Prime Time 40-42 82&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse 38-32 70&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Prime Time&#13;
Parker-26, Owens-20, Emer-20, Glenedci-&#13;
12, Pehringer-4.&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse&#13;
Fennrick-26, Beiger-20, TW-12, Girdaukas-&#13;
8, Voipal-4.&#13;
Men's Cross Country at UW- Oshkosh&#13;
Team Totals&#13;
1. UW-Oshkosh 27&#13;
2. UW-Stevens Point 55&#13;
3. Michigan Tech 95&#13;
4. RET Club 112&#13;
5. Northern Michigan 115&#13;
6. UW-Parkside 135&#13;
7. UW-Green Bay 193&#13;
UW-Parkside Runners&#13;
PLACE NAME TIME&#13;
18 PatKochanski 25:59&#13;
27 Steve Rocha 26:27&#13;
30 Kirt Miller 26:37&#13;
40 Tim Reeves 26:48&#13;
42 Kevin Collins 26:52&#13;
46 Chris Henkes 26:56&#13;
51 PatKuhlman 27:06&#13;
58 Dave Doherty 27:23&#13;
Grapplers II43,&#13;
The Gauchos 0&#13;
Grapplers II&#13;
3yd run-Casper&#13;
18 yd run-Dutton&#13;
10 yd pass-Becker from Dutton&#13;
60 yd Int return-Brockman&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse-&#13;
No Scoring.&#13;
Charging Armadillos 16-30 46&#13;
LA Dream Team 50-46 96&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Charging Armidillos&#13;
Smerz-30, Rueth-4, Solomon-4, Posig-4,&#13;
Sieler-4.&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
McKowen-38, Lewis-16, Lemmermann-14,&#13;
Mclntyre-14, Anhold-10, Pluskota-4.&#13;
Do you Enjoy:&#13;
Bowling?&#13;
Meeting New People?&#13;
Join the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Women's&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Team&#13;
For more Information&#13;
contact: MpiSE^&#13;
Mike Menzhuber 1 - .&#13;
Union Room 209 |&#13;
553-2408 I&#13;
^ NIGHTCLUB&#13;
Wednesday Night&#13;
Ladies Night - No Cover&#13;
Ladies Drink 500 Tappers and $1 Rail Drinks&#13;
8:00 -12:00&#13;
Thursday Night&#13;
College Night - No Cover&#13;
Free Jello Shot with College ID&#13;
$1.00 Barber Chair Shots&#13;
Friday Night&#13;
Live Classic Rock by Reflections&#13;
$2.00 Cover&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
Live Classic Rock by Reflections&#13;
$2.00 Cover&#13;
Take Hwy E east to Sheridan Road&#13;
1146 Sheridan Road, Kenosha WI - 553-9181&#13;
Ranger, Page B4 .&#13;
Golf&#13;
October 4,&#13;
Golfers prepare for&#13;
District run with 2nd&#13;
continued from front page&#13;
hotter day by tournament winner,&#13;
UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The Warhawks cut 16 strokes&#13;
from their opening 397 total to&#13;
jump over both the Rangers and&#13;
first day leader Eau Gaire.&#13;
"We really played well, especially&#13;
the second day," said coach&#13;
Steve Stevens. "We've been playing&#13;
better each day of our tournaments&#13;
this year, and I hope that&#13;
continues next week at Districts."&#13;
Steve Gerber, Mark Schneider,&#13;
and Paul Connel all led that charge&#13;
with second round 75s. Connell&#13;
and Schneider both cut seven&#13;
strokes from their first day totals to&#13;
lead the charge.&#13;
Third place Eau Claire was led&#13;
by the tournament medalist, Tony&#13;
Rohlik, who shot a four-under-par&#13;
67 in theo pening round, thenf ell to&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
76 in his second round effort&#13;
"Eau Claire will probably be&#13;
our toughest competition at Districts,"&#13;
said Stevens. "It should&#13;
come down to a matchup between&#13;
their three stars and our depth.&#13;
Rohlik shot an impressive first&#13;
round on his home course."&#13;
Districts, which happen this&#13;
weekend, consist of 54-holes and&#13;
will be played at The Springs, in&#13;
Spring Green.&#13;
"Our starting line-up for Districts&#13;
won't be set until probably&#13;
Friday," added Stevens. "We have&#13;
a head-to-head, 54 hole playoff for&#13;
the final spot between Tom Agazzi&#13;
and Matt Kahler."&#13;
Parkside's depth will be the&#13;
key at the Robert Trent Jones&#13;
course, a course which will prove&#13;
to be what Stevens termed a "true&#13;
test to give us a true champion."&#13;
Year's best outing serves&#13;
up second place finish&#13;
continued from front page&#13;
tournament, Parkside played&#13;
Saginaw Valley College, winning&#13;
• in a marathon five game match 17-&#13;
15,13-1-5,15-10,8-15,15-11. "We&#13;
did a very good job against Saginaw&#13;
Valley, we hung in and stayed tough&#13;
right through the last game," said&#13;
Paulson.&#13;
Having only one game friday&#13;
the Lady Rangers continued the&#13;
tournament's round robin play&#13;
Saturday versus host Michigan&#13;
Tech. Parkside lostinfour9-15,8-&#13;
15,16-14, 6-15.&#13;
Finishing up the tournament,&#13;
Parkside took on Hillsdale College&#13;
winning in straight games 15-10,&#13;
15-11,15-8. In beating Hillsdale,&#13;
Parkside got its first real bounce&#13;
back victory of the season.&#13;
The Lady Ranger co-captains&#13;
Colleen Ryan and Janice Word&#13;
were the keys to victory for Parkside&#13;
as Colleen Ryan led Parkside during&#13;
the tournament with 33 kills&#13;
and 20 blocks. Word had an excellent&#13;
tournament definsively&#13;
making 38 digs. Cindy Maier had&#13;
75 tourney assists for the Lady&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Lara Nieckula continued her&#13;
consistent play scoring 8 aces&#13;
during the three matches.&#13;
As a team, the Lady Rangers&#13;
combined for 129 assists, 156kills,&#13;
and 214 assists.&#13;
Parkside is 14-7 now on the&#13;
season, the Lady Rangers will next&#13;
compete in the Missouri West&#13;
Tournament Friday, October fifth&#13;
and sixth.&#13;
Ranger Volleyball Results&#13;
09/25 through 09/29&#13;
Oooonent Result Score&#13;
Elmhurst W 15-6, 15-12, 15-4&#13;
UW-Milwaukee W 15-11,5-15, 15-12,&#13;
15-6&#13;
Saginaw V. w 17-15, 13-15, 15-10,&#13;
8-15,15-11&#13;
Mich. Tech. L 9-15, 8-15, 16-14,&#13;
6-15&#13;
Hillsdale W 15-10, 15-11, 15-8&#13;
Early season&#13;
woes continue&#13;
for runners&#13;
By MIKEMcKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
An excellent field on a flat&#13;
course this past weekend gave the&#13;
Ranger Men's Cross Country team&#13;
a day in Oshkosh they don't want&#13;
to remember. Without Derek&#13;
Brown and Tracy Norstrom the&#13;
short-handed Rangers placed sixth&#13;
in the seven team meet. UWOshkosh&#13;
has won both meets this&#13;
year that UW-Parkside has competed&#13;
in with the Titans.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa isn't&#13;
pleased with the performance of&#13;
the upperclassmen."Without the&#13;
freshman we should have had a&#13;
nice team coming back. Now we've&#13;
had to rely on the freshman," Rosa&#13;
stated.&#13;
With the season nearing the&#13;
midpoint, the Rangers still have&#13;
time to get everything worked out&#13;
for the Districts. Rosa isn't worrying&#13;
yet, but would like to put a&#13;
healthy team in a meet&#13;
"The freshman are running on&#13;
schedule this point in the season&#13;
the upperclassmen hopefully are&#13;
feeling the push from them," said&#13;
Rosa. Three freshman (Steve&#13;
Rocha, Kirt Miller, and Kevin&#13;
Collins) were in the top five Parkside&#13;
finishers.&#13;
INTRAMURAL OUTLOOK&#13;
GIRL'S SOCCER-GIrl's soccer is in need&#13;
of more teems, If you/ore Interested in playing&#13;
the gym at 4:00 Thursday, October 4. t - • .&#13;
|l CO-ED VOLEEYBALD First games are&#13;
I tonight at 8:00. Those people interested in still&#13;
playing come to the gym.&#13;
GOLF- Enter the 4 person team best ball&#13;
scramble. Play Petrifying Springs Golf Course at j&#13;
your convenience between Thursday, October&#13;
11 and Tuesday, October 16. Pick up and turn&#13;
jin entry form's at the Physical Education Office&#13;
BpoillSIIH i^S||J;S!!l|^(!ii!!lSBi!ll8HBIiSBil^HBII&#13;
SUPERSTARS -The date has been&#13;
changed from Or; &lt; be ' 5 to October 12. Entry&#13;
forms will be taken until the beginning of the&#13;
first event. Hck up the entry forms in the P.E,&#13;
Office.&#13;
Rangers control Wildcats, 1-0&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside topped their fourth&#13;
NCAA D-I opponent of the season&#13;
and upped their season mark to 7-&#13;
3 with a 1-0 licking of the Northwestern&#13;
Wildcats in Illinois on&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Jens Hansen broke out of his&#13;
own personal scoring slump,&#13;
knocking home a Bryan O'Malley&#13;
corner kick to talley the only mark&#13;
of the game at 78:00 of the conetst.&#13;
Parksidecontrolled the match,&#13;
outshooting the Wildcats by a 12- 3&#13;
margin, as goal keeper Joel&#13;
Meadow had to make only a pair of&#13;
saves in the shut out.&#13;
Mike Riley, Ron Knestrict, B ill&#13;
Kennedy, and Derrick Wilkinsen&#13;
all turned in solid efforts in the&#13;
Ranger win, their fourth in five&#13;
tries against D-I opponents.&#13;
Next up: St. Joseph in&#13;
Rensselar, Indiana, Parkside's&#13;
fourth straight road game.&#13;
IBM/Parkside's ftthCete of the Week:&#13;
Ryan provides leadership&#13;
IBM andthe RANGER Sports Department send out&#13;
congradulations this week to Volleyball's senior co-captain Colleen&#13;
Ryan for her outstanding play at the Michigan Tech Tournament.&#13;
Ryan, a Psychology major with an emphasis in early childhood,&#13;
has been a leader not only this season but throughout her career with&#13;
the Lady Rangers.&#13;
This past week at the Michigan Tech. tourney, Ryan sparked&#13;
Parkside with 33 kills, 24 digs and two service aces.&#13;
Ryan's consistent play as a middle hitter has solidified her position&#13;
on the Ranger team. Coach Paulson often uses Colleen with various&#13;
line-ups as her play gives the otherwise young team leadership.&#13;
For her leadership in the Michigan Tech Tournament and for her&#13;
great play all year, congradulations to Colleen Ryan as the IBM/&#13;
RANGER Athlete of the Week.&#13;
October 4,1990 News Ranger, Page 13&#13;
Curriculum to include women of color&#13;
by J.A. Bromstad&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The Womens Studies Research&#13;
Center in Madison received&#13;
a grant from the Ford Foundation&#13;
allowing two faculty members from&#13;
each university to participate in six&#13;
different two-day workshops.&#13;
These workshops aimed at elucidating&#13;
professors of existing materials&#13;
of women of color.&#13;
Materials in history, literature&#13;
and drama ( among other disciplines&#13;
), revise and expand the&#13;
scopes of courses throughout&#13;
acadamia. The enlightened professors&#13;
return to their campus's&#13;
and then share, with other participating&#13;
faculty members , the information&#13;
they learned. Leading&#13;
the efforts are communication professor,&#13;
Lana Rakow, and modem&#13;
language professor, Cynthia&#13;
Tompkins. Other Parkside faculty&#13;
members who attended the work-&#13;
Professor Profile&#13;
shops include Dennis Bayuzick (&#13;
Art), Judy Pugh (Communication&#13;
), Skelly Warren (Dramatic Arts ),&#13;
Norman Clentier ( Economics ),&#13;
Don Kummings (English), Richard&#13;
Walasek (Economics), John&#13;
Buenker (History ), Carol Tebben&#13;
(Political Science), Jeanne Thomas&#13;
(Psychology ), and Mary Ann&#13;
Cambell ( Sociology). On behalf&#13;
of WOCC, much thanks and appreciation&#13;
is extended to these professors&#13;
for participating in what is&#13;
likely to become a rewarding and&#13;
overall beneficial learning experience&#13;
for students and faculty alike.&#13;
The WOCC project is geared&#13;
to bring into the classroom what&#13;
has long been ignored by traditional&#13;
textbooks: universal knowledge.&#13;
History books and literature&#13;
books are king candidates for scrutiny&#13;
of syllabus' and course objectives.&#13;
Because American history&#13;
is a predominately ethnocentric&#13;
(White-Anglo-Saxon-Protestant),&#13;
male view of the world, it&#13;
holds biases that strangle the truth.&#13;
"Our textbooks are filled with traditional&#13;
world views permeated by&#13;
a dominant culture ( W.A.S.P. )&#13;
that have fostered their own beliefs&#13;
and disregarded the beliefs, views&#13;
and interpretations of other&#13;
peoples", says professor Lana&#13;
Rakow. This coercion of "facts"&#13;
has sprung cultural ignorance to&#13;
the forefront of racial, gender and&#13;
economic conflict So it is wise for&#13;
the student to beu nbiased when the&#13;
new information is introduced—&#13;
when this other view of the same&#13;
world is at hand.&#13;
Communication major Terry&#13;
Jones recalls her experiences in&#13;
and before&#13;
college where,441 was involved in&#13;
a learning experience I couldn't&#13;
relate to. I felt that there was no&#13;
connection between me and the&#13;
material I was learning. It didn't&#13;
seem to fit with what was (and is)&#13;
going on in the black community...&#13;
I was shocked by the difference&#13;
Professor enhances communication department&#13;
by Mona Shamon&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Thomas Lopez-Pumarejo,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Communication,&#13;
came to UW-Parkside because&#13;
of the quality of the faculty in&#13;
the Communication Department&#13;
and because "it is one of the few&#13;
Communication Departments in the&#13;
U.S. that emphasizes the humanities,&#13;
and (it) emphasizes communication&#13;
as a skill for living rather&#13;
than merely to produce material&#13;
for the industry."&#13;
"Another reason that I chose&#13;
to come'to UW-Parkside is because&#13;
I like the idea of having a big nontraditional&#13;
studentpopulation. That&#13;
was very attractive to me. I've&#13;
fought to always have extension&#13;
classes. I seem to do quite good&#13;
with th at type of student I don't&#13;
like the idea of having all traditional&#13;
or all non-traditional students, but&#13;
I love the idea of having them&#13;
mixed. I think it is healthy for&#13;
everybody, particularly in a society&#13;
like this where it seems to be more&#13;
compartmentalized; teenagers do&#13;
this, senior citizens go to Florida,&#13;
and the yuppies live in cities. It&#13;
compensates a little for that."&#13;
Because he has lived most of&#13;
the last ten years in the midwest in&#13;
Minneapolis, Professor Lopez-&#13;
Pumarejo feels very much at home&#13;
here. "People are very sweet and&#13;
family-oriented, and they're not&#13;
pretentious. It is a beautiful area.&#13;
You couldn't ask for a beter location."&#13;
ProfessorLopez-Pumarejo has&#13;
traveled a great deal which contributed&#13;
to his ability to speak five&#13;
languages: English, Spanish,&#13;
Portugese, Italian, and French. His&#13;
education has been international&#13;
also. He received his Bachelor's&#13;
degree in Humanities and a&#13;
Master's degree in Journalism and&#13;
Public Communication in his native&#13;
Puerto Rico at the University of&#13;
Puerto Rico. He received a second&#13;
master's degree in Hispanic Literatures&#13;
and Sociology at Cornell&#13;
University in New Yo ik. He earned&#13;
a Ph.D. in Institute of Film and&#13;
Television at the University of&#13;
Valencia, Spain. He also earned a&#13;
Ph.D. in Mass Communication/&#13;
Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian&#13;
studies at the University of Minnesota.&#13;
As an undergraduate he also&#13;
studied at the Universita Italiana&#13;
per Stranieriin Perugia, Italy. Asa&#13;
graduate student he received a&#13;
Fulbright Grant that allowed him&#13;
to live in Rio de Janiero, Brazil, so&#13;
that he could do field reaserch for&#13;
his doctoral dissertation.&#13;
Professor Lopez-Pumarejo&#13;
was originally interested in advertising.&#13;
He gained some experience&#13;
in this field working as an illustrator&#13;
and copy writer in public relations&#13;
in Puerto Rico. When asked why&#13;
he did not continue in the field of&#13;
advertising he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a rather ethical person, and&#13;
I consider that it is more ethical to&#13;
be teaching people about advertising&#13;
than to be producing advertising."&#13;
His interest now is communication&#13;
theory, literature, and&#13;
television. In 1987, he published a&#13;
book on general theory of why&#13;
television tends to be similiar in&#13;
many countries, and therefore&#13;
comprehensible to people of different&#13;
cultures and ethnic backgrounds.&#13;
His favorite area of study&#13;
in communications is television&#13;
studies. He would like to study&#13;
communication policies. "How do&#13;
you create laws to regulate new&#13;
technology? How do you, like in&#13;
Europe where countries are close&#13;
together, prevent cross broadcasting,&#13;
and how do you bill the people&#13;
that are stealing your beam with a&#13;
satellite with a satellite dish."&#13;
between the more institutionalized&#13;
knowledge' of high school and&#13;
information used in college written&#13;
by black people forblack people&#13;
as well as anyone&#13;
who is interested." Terry was&#13;
pleased to hear that women of color&#13;
are gaining recognition- " For&#13;
women of color, sexism is compounded&#13;
by racism and with the aid&#13;
of programs like WOCC, we can&#13;
work to abolish bias, prejudice and&#13;
fear by learning about one another&#13;
and meeting each other on like&#13;
terms."&#13;
Professor D. Kummings has&#13;
revised his Introduction to Literatureclass&#13;
by highlighting thecourse&#13;
with a novel by Zora Hurstin caldle&#13;
Their Eyes Are Watching God.&#13;
Professor L. Rakow has plucked&#13;
the theme, the role of communication&#13;
technology in a changing sense&#13;
of community, from the new perspective&#13;
she gained at the workshops.&#13;
Professor of history, John&#13;
Buenker, admits, "I was already&#13;
Donald Kummings&#13;
moving in the direction of implementing&#13;
the works of women of&#13;
color into my lectures... and what I&#13;
hope to see is more discussion&#13;
among students and faculty and&#13;
bring the issueo ut into theo pen, so&#13;
as not to defeat the purpose of the&#13;
university.44&#13;
SEGUNDO SONIDO&#13;
Milwaukee's finest Latin American dance band&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Union Dining Room&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12&#13;
7 p.m. DINNER&#13;
(Advance ticket sales only&#13;
prior to Oct 5 for $7.)&#13;
9 p.m. DANCE&#13;
(1$ Parkside and&#13;
Carthage students&#13;
2$ others at the door)&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL (414)553-2345.&#13;
Student tragedy continued from Page 1&#13;
In Kenosha, Kenosha's Youth&#13;
Development Services provides a&#13;
24-hour Crisis Intervention phone&#13;
line. Crisis counselors are trained&#13;
to help with any situations. According&#13;
to Crisis Intervention, the&#13;
most typical problems are family&#13;
disputes, depression, loneliness,&#13;
physical/emotional abuse, suicidal&#13;
thoughts, and school problems. If&#13;
you have a problem and need help&#13;
call 1-800-338-7188.&#13;
Klepel offered so much to&#13;
others, they all wished they could&#13;
have returned the favor.&#13;
"Klepel was very interesting,"&#13;
said HelL "Very intellectual."&#13;
"He was outgoing, a hard&#13;
worker, and very confident," said&#13;
Jude.&#13;
"He had a lot going for himself,"&#13;
said Daniel.&#13;
"He cared more about the&#13;
people he tutored than his own&#13;
work," said Gina Allen, a friend&#13;
who worked with Klepel at the&#13;
Center.&#13;
According to Neubauer, a&#13;
student who Klepel tutored said&#13;
Klepel not only helped her in her&#13;
homework but also helped her&#13;
believe in herself.&#13;
"He touched many people's&#13;
lives, whether he knew it or not,"&#13;
said Neubauer.&#13;
Ranger, Page 14 International&#13;
Holocaust: a grim reality&#13;
by&#13;
Gwen&#13;
Heller&#13;
"Those who cannot remember the&#13;
past are condemned to repeat it."&#13;
-Santayana&#13;
The sprawling German countryside&#13;
paints a dazzling portrait of&#13;
autumn. Sinewy strands of clouds&#13;
dot the radiant sky, and from the&#13;
bus window I detect the leaves, in&#13;
altered hues, preparing for their&#13;
perennial descents.&#13;
Yet an ominous cloud hangs&#13;
over our destination. Dachau&#13;
beckons with a foreboding wind-&#13;
-a story of its grisly past and a&#13;
message for not only present generations,&#13;
but more importantly,&#13;
future ones.&#13;
In 1933, the first Nazi concentration&#13;
camp was erected on the&#13;
site of a deserted ammunitions&#13;
factory in the quaint Bavarian town&#13;
of Dachau. From March 23,1933&#13;
to April 29,1945,20,000prisoners&#13;
were stationed here and at the&#13;
neighboring branch camps, at the&#13;
mercy of the Third Reich.&#13;
The atrocities committed&#13;
against political opponents, Jews,&#13;
clergymen and "undesirable elements"&#13;
(a catch-all category which&#13;
included homosexuals), were numerous.&#13;
Over 32,000 deaths re-&#13;
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID&#13;
PAGE ONE&#13;
Will provide virtually any student with&#13;
6-25 sources of financial aid for higher&#13;
education, for which vou qualify, or the&#13;
service fee ($49.00) will be refunded.&#13;
Results are Guaranteed&#13;
All sources will be matched to the needs, interests&#13;
and requirements of the individual student&#13;
Use the U.W. Parkside coupon below before&#13;
11-1-90 and recieve a discount of 18%&#13;
For free and complete information:&#13;
Page One&#13;
Student Financial Aid Services&#13;
10332 Kraut Rd.&#13;
Franksville, WI53126&#13;
Name&#13;
Address.&#13;
City.&#13;
School now attending.&#13;
State. -Zip.&#13;
Year in school: Fresh Soph Jun Sen&#13;
U.W.-P ^&#13;
suited from torture, epidemics,&#13;
hunger and executions.&#13;
The following passage is taken&#13;
from a journal entry I wrote shortly&#13;
after my visit to the concentration&#13;
camp and the adjacent museum.&#13;
Thursday, 13 September 1990&#13;
We spent the afternnon at the&#13;
Dachau concentration camp near&#13;
Munich. Undoubtedly, it was the&#13;
most startling experience of the&#13;
trip. Yet it is ironic how the prisoners&#13;
barracks and creamatorium&#13;
created a church-like atmosphere.&#13;
In fact, the solemn, peaceful quiet&#13;
was more powerful than any cathedral&#13;
in Europe.&#13;
I didn't take any pictures. It&#13;
didn't seem appropriate. The images&#13;
of Dachau will be etched in&#13;
my mind forever. And although&#13;
the ghosts of the prisoners were not&#13;
visible, their presence was overwhelming&#13;
as I felt them looming&#13;
over their graves.&#13;
I cannot understand how propaganda—&#13;
mere words—could&#13;
conjure up a population of human&#13;
beings into killing millions of innocent&#13;
people. It makes me pity&#13;
mankind. It's a cruel world. It's&#13;
still happening today...&#13;
A memorial that adorned the&#13;
granite facade of the museum&#13;
simply read "Never Again." Such&#13;
a prophesy cannot be fulfilled so&#13;
easily when one considers the unjust&#13;
regimes of South Africa,&#13;
Cambodia, and Mozambique where&#13;
human rights are violated in&#13;
countless ways. Sadly enough,&#13;
history goes right on repeating itself.&#13;
The museum was laden with&#13;
both shocking and poignant photographs&#13;
of the prisoners, the SS&#13;
troops, and the man who orchestrated&#13;
the whole nightmare, Adolf&#13;
Hitler. Mangled, contorted corpses&#13;
piled high in mass graves...&#13;
Frightened children clutching the&#13;
hands of their mothers and fathers&#13;
as they were led towards their&#13;
deaths in the gas chambers... One&#13;
photograph displayed the exposed&#13;
brains of one prisoner who was the&#13;
You said you wanted&#13;
to turn in papers&#13;
that turn heads.&#13;
See how we listened.&#13;
Look what you can do on die IBM Rrrsonal System/2*&#13;
And with the easy-to-use preloaded software,&#13;
including Microsoft* Windows'* 10, writing papers&#13;
is only the beginning Just point and click the mouse&#13;
to move text. Create graphics, charts, even spreadsheets,&#13;
or do other projects like resumes and flyers.&#13;
Phis, the PS/2s* and select printers are available&#13;
at special student prices.* ftint impressive output&#13;
with the IBM Proprinter."* IBM Laser Printer E or&#13;
the Hewlett-ftckard fhimjet" color graphics printer.&#13;
And if you buy before December 31,1990, you'll&#13;
receive a 71461* Certificate entitling you to a roundtrip&#13;
ticket for $149"/$2 t9" Plus a free TWA&#13;
Getaway* Student Discount Card application. Youll&#13;
also get a great low price on the&#13;
PRODIGY* service.&#13;
If you want to start turning&#13;
heads with your work, there's really&#13;
onlv one place to turn... the&#13;
IBM PS/2.&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
UW-Parkside Collegiate Rep.&#13;
Craig Simpkins at 1-800-866-4772 or&#13;
1-414-553-2287.&#13;
VISIT US IN MOLINARO HALL, NEXT TUES.&#13;
FROM 9 AM TO 4PM.&#13;
• •U4Wof3t t*o i » wMaeuwm&gt;t PvtMt»b •* $«eeDaeu &gt; krtt &lt;aeeurte* tut* wr«r&lt;mhojtin*m ine &lt; *omrw o mOlvSfMtWCWae artcpmiTpKica S abatsn rf ^ ^co io» Str-re-r* 16 r990 tntougnCeceww '9 iW • &gt;•» *&gt;m iro '*** fl«9 00 &lt;•*&gt; »&#13;
to iW irvnuqriOec«frev »9. W 12*90C0ooWrt WromWxr-mW tSi. 199* r^ ouqn SeownMr 'S i9 9i SWMievafnii&#13;
j* a * IDemwi of HBWWI Plowi • orfr«*»#*yi0A«vm «cTVmG«&#13;
«MCorgOT«OTi?W&#13;
subject of an experimentconducted&#13;
by a "mad" scientist at the camp.&#13;
A uniform was on display. A&#13;
torn, grey and white striped jacket,&#13;
baggy trousers, chunky wooden&#13;
shoes, anda thin cap were stli ldirty&#13;
and bloodied. I saw a letter that a&#13;
mother at one camp had written to&#13;
her son in another camp. The letter&#13;
itself touched my heart, and I had&#13;
to be content with that, since I do&#13;
not understand German.&#13;
The majority of the barracks&#13;
were destroyed in the 1960's, but&#13;
two of them were recreated to depict&#13;
the way it really was. It was&#13;
commonplace for 400 prisoners to&#13;
crowd into a crudely modest room&#13;
designed to hold sixty.&#13;
The notorious gas chambers at&#13;
Dachau were never actually used.&#13;
Disguised as showers, they were&#13;
housed in the same building as the&#13;
ovens. Made of metal and wood,&#13;
the stout ovens were the most overwhelming&#13;
image... Hell on earth.&#13;
How different the world&#13;
seemed—only fifty years ago...&#13;
Addictive Relationships&#13;
Support&#13;
Group&#13;
The Counseling and Testing&#13;
Office and the Women's Center&#13;
are co-sponsoring an Addictive&#13;
Relationships Support Group&#13;
which will meet weekly beginning&#13;
Wednesday, October 17 at 1 pm.&#13;
If you have a pattern of being&#13;
drawn into unhealthy relationships&#13;
with people who need fixing, if&#13;
you tend to focus more time and&#13;
energy on improving and maintaining&#13;
your relationship than you&#13;
do on improving or maintaining&#13;
yourself, or if you usea relationship&#13;
to bolster your self-esteem to feel&#13;
complete, then this support group&#13;
is designed for you.&#13;
To join the support group or&#13;
get more infprmation, call Barbara&#13;
Larson, Counselor, at 553-2370 or&#13;
stop by WLLC D175 to make an&#13;
appointment.&#13;
October 4,1990 Feature Ranger, Page 15&#13;
The Children to perform in Union&#13;
The Children will be performing&#13;
in the Union Square on&#13;
Friday, October 5 at9 pm. Admission&#13;
will be $2 for students and $3&#13;
for guests.&#13;
According to Julie Kahl of&#13;
South Dakota, "their music is a&#13;
tme expression of their positive&#13;
and firmly grounded beliefs, combined&#13;
with their love for music."&#13;
Other people mentioned that "After&#13;
h earing Children, you'll take&#13;
another look at the world through&#13;
different eyes," and "the concert&#13;
provided a marvelous evening of&#13;
compelling, thought provoking&#13;
music."&#13;
Children, a progressive rock&#13;
band, conveys a message of love,&#13;
hate, war and life in general. The&#13;
success of the group's unique sound&#13;
is due to the contribution of each of&#13;
the members.&#13;
The five member band, Children,&#13;
presents a high energy show&#13;
that is both original and thoughtful.&#13;
"While our music has been described&#13;
as both spiritual and&#13;
meaningful, our primary goal is to&#13;
entertain, and we are extremely&#13;
pleased with the enthusiastic response&#13;
our audiences have given&#13;
us wherever we have appeared."&#13;
Last year, the Ranger did a&#13;
record review of Children's latest&#13;
album. The album received high&#13;
New teachers honored&#13;
by Sharon Gill&#13;
Historian&#13;
Amidst the hustle and bustle,&#13;
anxiety and anticipation of another&#13;
school year beginning, several recently&#13;
certified Parkside graduates&#13;
were honored at a luncheon sponsored&#13;
by Kappa Delta Pi, honor&#13;
society for women and men in&#13;
education. In addition to the&#13;
Parkside graduates, also honored&#13;
were two new Parkside faculty&#13;
members, Dr. Kunhiko Imai, professor&#13;
of economics, and Dr. Joseph&#13;
DiPietro, professor of geology.&#13;
On Saturday, August 25 at the&#13;
Casino Town House in Kenosha,&#13;
G. Gary Grace, Assistant Vice&#13;
Chancellor at Parkside, welcomed&#13;
the new professionals to "the best&#13;
profession" and congratulated them&#13;
on their new positions. Following&#13;
Grace's welcome, Patricia&#13;
Hoffman, AssistantSuperintendent&#13;
of the Burlington School systems,&#13;
also welcomed the new teachers to&#13;
a community of learners and leaders.&#13;
She explained that entering&#13;
the profession today has changed&#13;
since she first began as a teacher 20&#13;
years ago. Then, teachers were&#13;
given a classroom, some books,&#13;
desks, and, hopefully, students and&#13;
told to "go for it". Today's new&#13;
professionals face a system more&#13;
complicated but reinforced with&#13;
much more guidance and support.&#13;
marks.&#13;
Here's your chance tos ee why&#13;
so many people seem to love&#13;
Children. You won't get another&#13;
chance like this!&#13;
Most attendee* at the luncheon had&#13;
spent the previous week in meetings&#13;
with their prospective school&#13;
districts learning the myriad of&#13;
rules, regulations, formats, and&#13;
procedures to follow in conducting&#13;
their student and teaching related&#13;
activities to hopefully ease their&#13;
first day anxiety.&#13;
New certifed teachers honored&#13;
included: Rachel Braatz-&#13;
Gavunder, Brenda Buchanan,&#13;
Catherine Caruso, Linda Diaz,&#13;
Shari Fairbum-Gerou, Diane&#13;
Haack. Mary Sue Langendorf,&#13;
Deborah Maszka, Craig Matheus,&#13;
Carol Ramaska, Susan Siel, and&#13;
Ann Wojceichowicz.&#13;
Community Service&#13;
BECOME A CRISIS LINE VOLUNTEER...Answer adult and juvenile crisis phone lines for K.Y.D.S. one&#13;
evening per week..from 5-10 pm. Training begins soon. Excellent opportunity for Sociology majors needing&#13;
experience.&#13;
TREMPER HIGH SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION REQUEST HELP. Help tabulate and analyze parent/&#13;
teacher survey. Mathematical skills helpful; This is a short-term volunteer request. See Carol in the Career&#13;
Center. • ; - * f&#13;
PROJECT EMERGENCY ASSISTS THE HUNGRY. Be on-call to assist the Project Emergency staff with&#13;
food distribution and various other projects. This Racine program needs students interested in helping people&#13;
less fortunate. Varied times.&#13;
KENOSHAHOSPICEALLIANCEISINNEEDOFDIRECTSERVICEVOLUNTEERS.Trainingbegins&#13;
October 16th and ends November 8th...from 7-9 pm every Tuesday and Thursday. Must be 18 years old. One&#13;
year commitment required. Excellent experience for those in the health field. Call 553-2011 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
For more details, contact Carol Engberg in the Career Center-WLLC-D175 or call 553-2011.&#13;
Volunteer of the week&#13;
PHYLLIS METALLO, a senior majoring in Sociology and Women's&#13;
Studies, was selected as Volunteer of the Week because of her&#13;
commitment to helping others and her positive attitude toward&#13;
volunteerism. Phyllis has been a Student Community Service member&#13;
since March of 1989. Since then she has completed traing as a crisis&#13;
line volunteer for K.Y.D.S (Kenosha Youth Development Service&#13;
Inc.) and isn ow helping one evening a weekf rom 5 pm1- 0pm. Sandor&#13;
Marianyi, the Adult Crisis Counselor and V OCA Coordinator reported,&#13;
"I have received compliments about Phyllis from all the K.Y.D.S.&#13;
staff. Her enthusiasm and concern for the clients lend a lot to the&#13;
service we provide." Phyllis is also helping the Aging Center for Long&#13;
Term Care by assisting caseworkers as a translator for an elderly&#13;
Italian client. Their most recent volunteer assignment is being an&#13;
escort for Scott Edwards, a UW-Parkside freshm an with some physical&#13;
limitations. Phyllis can be seen in the Union Dining Hall every&#13;
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and enroute to Scott's 1:00 class in&#13;
Molinaro. Carol Engberg, SCS Director commented, "Phyllis works&#13;
well with people in a human services environment She has a friendly&#13;
personality that can make people feel comfortable. I hope her&#13;
©&#13;
BIG BROTHER/BIG SISTER&#13;
(a) WA&amp; A ROCK BAND.&#13;
(b) WAS THE- STATE IN ORWELL'S''1984".&#13;
Cc) 15 A GROUP OF VOLUNTEERS&#13;
WHO BELIEVES EVERY KID&#13;
NEED5 A FRIEND.&#13;
FOR ANSWER,&#13;
CALL YOUR LOCAL BIG BROTHERS/&#13;
BIG SISTERS AGENCY&#13;
3IGSROTHERS/3IG SISTERS OFcAMERICA&#13;
Call: 637-7625&#13;
XCEL&#13;
The 1990 Leadership Adventure&#13;
October 13-14, 1990&#13;
Camp Sidney Cohen in Deiafield, Wl&#13;
The Student Activities Office will b e sponsoring Excel *90, a leadership&#13;
workshop for ail UW-Parkside students, on October 13-14, 1990. The&#13;
workshop will be help at the scenic Camp Sidney Cohen in Delafieid, Wl.&#13;
Excel '90 will teach you the skills you need to be an effective leader. This is&#13;
an ideal opportunity to improve your communications, interpersonal and&#13;
organizational skills. Sessions on risk-taking, creativity and many other&#13;
topics will also be presented.&#13;
The weekend workshop also provides you with the chance to meet other&#13;
UW-Parksrde students. You're sure to have a good time. All for only $1 o.&#13;
Registration forms will b e available in the Student Activities Office. Union&#13;
209.&#13;
sign up by tomorrow!&#13;
Ranger, Page 16 Entertainment October 4,1990&#13;
Music department offering more diverse programming&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The Parkside Music Department&#13;
has outdone itself this year&#13;
with the qu ality programming of&#13;
the concerts set aside for this semester.&#13;
Professor James Kinchen,&#13;
who joined the department last fall,&#13;
had many plans for the vocal program&#13;
that he wanted to implement&#13;
One change included having a&#13;
wider, more culturally diverse&#13;
repertoire of music than what was&#13;
performed in previous years.&#13;
Kinchen also planned on offering a&#13;
larger chorus, Master Singers, in&#13;
addition to Chorale and Voices of&#13;
Parkside. Both of these improvements&#13;
were achieved by the spring&#13;
semester.&#13;
After each concert last year,&#13;
numerous members of the audience&#13;
commented on how excellent the&#13;
sounds of the choirs were. Adding&#13;
more ethnic music increased the&#13;
campus-wide and community-wide&#13;
interest in choral singing.&#13;
The three vocal groups all have&#13;
their own distictions and goals. The&#13;
Chorale is described as the "elective"&#13;
choral group of the institution.&#13;
It is intended to be an "all.&#13;
university" chorus open to all&#13;
comers. "This year's works provides&#13;
an excellent opportunity to&#13;
bridge between the purely folk aspect&#13;
of gospel performance, which&#13;
can be found in the community,&#13;
and the more academic aspect of&#13;
choral singing," Kinchen said.&#13;
Major works for this semester include&#13;
"The Mass of Saint Augustine"&#13;
by Leon C. Roberts, "For the&#13;
Beautyof theEarth"by JohnRutter&#13;
and "Ezekiel Saw de Wheel" by&#13;
William L. Dawson.&#13;
Voices is the unversity's select,&#13;
chamber choral group. Only persons&#13;
who have passed an audition/&#13;
interview which is designed to assess&#13;
their musicianship, vocal skills&#13;
and tonal memory as well as thenattitude&#13;
and commitment toward&#13;
the high and challenging goals and&#13;
objectives of a group are admitted&#13;
to membership.&#13;
The music Voices will be&#13;
singing through December include&#13;
the Te Deum by George Frederic&#13;
Handel, the plainsong melody of&#13;
the Te Deum and My Lord, What a&#13;
Mourning by Dawson. The quality&#13;
of the Te Deum ranks very high in&#13;
terms of Handel's accomplishments&#13;
in musical excellence.&#13;
Kinchen is very satisfied with&#13;
the enrollment of Voices. Last&#13;
year, there were around 13 people,&#13;
and the enrollment this year is about&#13;
23. "Based on what I've seen of&#13;
chamber groups around the country,&#13;
most chamber groups are in the&#13;
low to mid 20's. So, I'm really&#13;
excited about that," remarked&#13;
Kinchen.&#13;
Parkside Master Singers is the&#13;
newest addition to choral activities&#13;
and was added to the curriculum in&#13;
an effort to make choral singing&#13;
moreaccessible to community adult&#13;
singers who have day jobs, "nontraditional"&#13;
university students, day&#13;
students with class conflicts which&#13;
prevent participation in Chorale or&#13;
Voices of Parkside, and faculty/&#13;
staff/administrators.&#13;
This program was a success&#13;
from the beginning. "It was our&#13;
attempt to try and open up the choral&#13;
experience to the community as&#13;
well as the university students.&#13;
Music performed by this group will&#13;
be the Requiem. This light, melodic&#13;
and optimistic music was once&#13;
the lyrics of a church service. Over&#13;
the years, people began to see the&#13;
Professor Profile: Farida Kahn&#13;
Assistant Proffessor of Economics,&#13;
Farida Khan, is a native of&#13;
Bangladesh. Growing up there, she&#13;
saw hungry young children begging&#13;
in the streets for food while she was&#13;
sitting safely in her car knowing&#13;
that she had enough to eat She&#13;
realized that this was wrong and&#13;
that it was worth finding out why it&#13;
happened. These early experiences&#13;
had some influence on her eventual&#13;
decision to study economics.&#13;
However, her initial caree r&#13;
choice was medicine. In&#13;
Bangladesh, students are required&#13;
in ninth grade to decide their career&#13;
track, choosing between commerce,&#13;
the humanities and the sciences.&#13;
Ms. Khan chose science&#13;
because of an interest in medicine.&#13;
She feels that this was agood choice&#13;
for economics because she says&#13;
economics has become more&#13;
quantitative and scientific.&#13;
Kahn started her college education&#13;
in Bangladesh, but transferred&#13;
to college in the United States because&#13;
of the political disturbances&#13;
in her nativecountry. "Degrees that&#13;
could have been done in three years&#13;
took up to five years because the&#13;
university was closed half the year&#13;
because people were shooting down&#13;
the halls with machine guns. There&#13;
is quite a lot of student unrest historically&#13;
since Bangladesh became&#13;
James Kinchen&#13;
work more artistically, because the&#13;
words "were a great vehicle for&#13;
expressing certain emotions."&#13;
Another new occurrence this&#13;
year is the offer from the Racine&#13;
Symphony to have the Master&#13;
Singers and the Voices of Parkside&#13;
perform with the symphony.&#13;
Kinchen had two main goals in&#13;
preparing for this year's schedule.&#13;
The first goal was to make the&#13;
general readership aware of the&#13;
existence of our choral program.&#13;
independent in 1971."&#13;
She received her bachelor's&#13;
degree in B usiness Economics from&#13;
Georgia, which she describes as a&#13;
small college similar to Parkside.&#13;
She then earned her master's in&#13;
Economic Policy and Planning at&#13;
Northeastern University in Boston&#13;
where she also taughta s a teaching&#13;
assistant. She earned her Ph.D. in&#13;
International Economics and Economic&#13;
Development at the Univer-&#13;
Pitch In&#13;
The Parkside Food Service requests that all&#13;
customers please remove trays, china,&#13;
glassware and any paper products from&#13;
your table and return them to the proper receiving&#13;
areas. Please be considerate of the&#13;
next person in need of a table.&#13;
No China, Glassware, or Silverware is'permitted to leave the Dining Room&#13;
Thank you for your Cooperation.&#13;
As Kinchen put it, "We could sing&#13;
everyday out in Main Place and&#13;
there would still be students who&#13;
did not know of our existence."&#13;
The second goal was to give people&#13;
who have an interest in music but&#13;
who have not considered (singing)&#13;
before, one last, little push.&#13;
As it says on one of Kinchen's&#13;
handouts, singing is the oldest and&#13;
noblest form of music making.&#13;
Through choral singing, we can&#13;
share with each other and with our&#13;
audiences the rich musical expressions&#13;
of masters of bygone ages as&#13;
well as our own time; we can share&#13;
the products of cultures near and&#13;
far; we can share inth e celebration&#13;
of the human spirit and together&#13;
experience power, beauty and&#13;
spirituality which is far greater than&#13;
and has deeper meaning than mere&#13;
mortal existence.&#13;
Singing with a choral group&#13;
will give you pride, spirit, discipline,&#13;
perserverence, dedication&#13;
and empathy, so become involved&#13;
with something that is truly inspiring.&#13;
Aldous Huxley once said,&#13;
"After silence that which comes&#13;
nearest to expressing the inexpressible&#13;
is music."&#13;
sity of Maryland in College Park,&#13;
Maryland.&#13;
Professor Khan is most interested&#13;
in the area of Economic Development:&#13;
why some countries are&#13;
poorer, and what policies are&#13;
leading to the poverty and inequality&#13;
of income. She is interested&#13;
in the plight of women in&#13;
developing countries. She also&#13;
works with trade policies of developing&#13;
countries. She is teaching&#13;
International Economics at the&#13;
undergraduate and MBA levels&#13;
here at Parkside.&#13;
Professor Khan wanted a change&#13;
from the large campus of38,000 at&#13;
the University of Maryland, so she&#13;
enjoys the smaller campus of&#13;
Parkside. "You see the same people&#13;
over and over, you get to know&#13;
them, their faces and names." She&#13;
also likes not having to deal with&#13;
congestion, noise, and long lines as&#13;
she did \yhile she lived in Washington,&#13;
D.C, and yet still having&#13;
the benefits of larger cities because&#13;
of Parkside's location near Chicago,&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison. She&#13;
finds the pace here a little slower,&#13;
"People take their time to be nice to&#13;
you, which is very pleasant" There&#13;
is one thing that she does not like&#13;
about parkside; the parking situation.&#13;
October 4,1990 Entertainment Ranger, Page IT&#13;
Funny About Love&#13;
by David Wick&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The biggest complaint that I hear&#13;
about film critics is that they seem&#13;
to hate almost every film that they&#13;
see. If you have ever watched any&#13;
of the critics on television this&#13;
would seem like a fair assessment.&#13;
When I became a film critic I&#13;
vowed to be different I love the&#13;
movies that I see and reviewing&#13;
them is a real treat, but the inevitable&#13;
has happened and I must now&#13;
write my first bad review.&#13;
Funny About Love stars Gene&#13;
Wilder and Christine Lahti. They&#13;
play a married couple trying to&#13;
have a baby. The film tries to cover&#13;
a lot of material and is unsuccessful&#13;
on many levels.&#13;
Wilder and Lahti are two very&#13;
talented actors, but unfortunately,&#13;
their talent is completely wasted in&#13;
this uninspired comedy.&#13;
Gene Wilder has built a good&#13;
reputation in comedy. He has been&#13;
very effective in the films in which&#13;
he has worked with Richard Pryor&#13;
and Mel Brooks.&#13;
In this film Wilder stars as a&#13;
cartoonist of political satire. His&#13;
character's name is Duffy and his&#13;
cartoon is modestly named Duffy's&#13;
World. Shockingly, there are actually&#13;
a couple of scenes in which&#13;
Wilder is surrounded hv his alladoring&#13;
fans and he makes some&#13;
cute one liner. All of the fans laugh&#13;
hysterically.&#13;
However, in the theatre that I&#13;
attended there were no laughs at&#13;
all. A film with its own laugh track&#13;
is not a good sign.&#13;
Lahti is best known for her dramatic&#13;
ability, such as her role in&#13;
Running On Empty. The fact that&#13;
this was to be a comedy was probably&#13;
what drew Lahti to thep roject&#13;
Her talent shows through in a&#13;
couple of scenes, but the script&#13;
revolves around Wilder so much&#13;
that she looks more like a supporting&#13;
character. The script also&#13;
gives her sentimental lines, then&#13;
turns her intoa bitch and thism akes&#13;
her character incredibly confusing&#13;
to watch.&#13;
The only person to turn in a&#13;
solid performance is Mary Stuart&#13;
Masterson. She plays a young&#13;
television director who has a fling&#13;
with Wilder. She is the only one&#13;
who gives a true comic performance&#13;
to this supposed comedy. She&#13;
doesn' t show up until the endo f the&#13;
film, and her performance doesn't&#13;
save the film.&#13;
If you want to watch a good&#13;
comedy go watch Postcarcs From&#13;
The Edge and avoid Funny About&#13;
Love. I give this film halfa star out&#13;
of four.&#13;
The Week at Parkside&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5&#13;
CONCERT: "Children," Union Square, 9 pm. $2&#13;
students, $3 guests.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6&#13;
SOCCER: Away game against St. Joseph's (Indiana),&#13;
3:30 pm.&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8&#13;
HISPANIC BAZAAR: National Hispanic Heritage&#13;
Month, 10 am - 2 pm, Main Place. /&#13;
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9&#13;
FILM: "Blood of the Condor," Union Cinema, 7:30&#13;
pm, free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10&#13;
LUNCHEON: Hispanic Food of Costa Rica, 10:30 am&#13;
to 2 pm, Union Dining Room.&#13;
SOCCER: Game against UW-Milwaukee, Racine field,&#13;
7 pm.&#13;
GUEST ENSEMBLE: Klarus Girl's Choir, Klarus&#13;
Denmark, noon, CA D-l 18.&#13;
Riverport Chorus to perform&#13;
The Riverport Chorus, featuring&#13;
Riverport Chorus &amp;&#13;
Quartets and die Festival City&#13;
Men's Chorus, will be performing&#13;
on Saturday, October 6, at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The 1990 Regional champions&#13;
will be performing "Barbershop&#13;
Music ... and You."&#13;
The chorus will present&#13;
shows at 4 and 8 pm. All seats&#13;
will be $8, For ticket information,&#13;
call 658-2192.&#13;
Small Scale by Chris Ingram&#13;
© Chris Ingram 1990 "En garde ! "&#13;
Make a Difference&#13;
in a Child's Life&#13;
Be a Big Brother&#13;
or Big Sister&#13;
• It doesn't take any time,&#13;
include a child in what&#13;
your doing anyway.&#13;
• Children are not&#13;
delinquent, they're nice kids&#13;
from single parent homes.&#13;
• No experience necessary.&#13;
Just be a friend.&#13;
Call: 637-7625&#13;
23IG 3ROTHERS/SIG SISTERS'&#13;
Because you have so much. CD shore'&#13;
Dueli n g Swor d f i s h&#13;
GIVE LIFE.&#13;
GIVE PLASMA.&#13;
Give us 2 hours, twice a week,&#13;
and we'll use your plasma donation&#13;
to help save the lives of burn&#13;
and shock victims, heart surgery&#13;
patients, and hemophiliacs. And&#13;
you could earn up to $100 per&#13;
month. Take the time today.&#13;
Physician Supervised •&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
6212 22nd Avenue&#13;
Mon., Wed., Fri. 8:30-3:30&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 10-5:30&#13;
Call for Information or an appointment:&#13;
654-1366&#13;
People Helping People For Life&#13;
Tim Moses&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Vanderbilt University&#13;
"Macintosh practically eliminates the need to&#13;
keep manuals next to my computer, because—&#13;
regardless of which program I'm using—I can&#13;
°Pen' c^ose'save'anc^ Print ^es in exactly&#13;
' ? If VVY the same way And you can't say that about&#13;
any other computer.&#13;
"Today lots of other computers are&#13;
attempting to look and work like a&#13;
Macintosh, but it's just not possible.&#13;
They're too fundamentally different&#13;
to begin with.This may sound&#13;
a little strange, but comparing&#13;
a Macintosh to other computers&#13;
is like comparing apples to&#13;
oranges.You can squash the orange&#13;
into shape and paint it to look like an apple,&#13;
but underneath the makeup, it's still&#13;
an orange.&#13;
"It's funny—I work at die Vanderbilt&#13;
computer store and IVe seen lots of people&#13;
switch from other computers to Macintosh,&#13;
but I've never seen anybody with a&#13;
Macintosh switch to another computer."&#13;
For more computer information,&#13;
contact the Computing Support Center, WLLC, D115&#13;
Why do people love Macintosh?&#13;
Ask them.&#13;
11990 Apple Computet, 'nc Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks o' Apple Computet. Inc&#13;
October 4,1990 Feature Ranger, Page 19»&#13;
Life after Parkside by Katie Knight&#13;
Dr. Mario Maritato graduated&#13;
from Parkside in 1982, with a degree&#13;
in life science. After graduating&#13;
from Parkside, Maritato went&#13;
on to Marquette University School&#13;
of Dentistry. Maritato graduated in&#13;
1986, and has been practicing for&#13;
about four years now.&#13;
As a general dentist, Maritato&#13;
does everything from cleaning teeth&#13;
to cosmetic dentistry, such as&#13;
bonding and bleaching teeth.&#13;
Maritato feels his Parkside education&#13;
was very valuable. He feels&#13;
that the ten to twelve people who&#13;
went on to Marquette with him&#13;
after a Parkside education were&#13;
probably the best prepared for dental&#13;
school.&#13;
He feels that Parkside has a&#13;
very good pre-professional pro-&#13;
"Parkside really&#13;
prepared me. I enjoyed&#13;
it, it's a beautiful&#13;
school"&#13;
Dr. Mario Maritato&#13;
Parkside Graduate&#13;
gram and commented that,&#13;
"Parkside really prepared me. I&#13;
enjoyed Parkside, it's a beautiful&#13;
school."&#13;
Advice that Maritato would give&#13;
to students interested in becoming&#13;
dentists would be to spend some&#13;
time in an office, and speak to&#13;
different dentists about dentistry.&#13;
Also, one should visit different&#13;
dental schools.&#13;
The average yearly salary foe&#13;
this profession is approximately&#13;
$52,000 - $54,000 a year, that is,&#13;
after a dentist has been in the profession&#13;
for a few years. It also can&#13;
vary from area to area. Maritato&#13;
feels the major rewards of being a&#13;
dentist are being able to work for&#13;
yourself and the satisfaction of&#13;
helping people. &gt;&#13;
April in Paris...Or is it the Soviet Union in March&#13;
Kimberly A. Tenerelli&#13;
News Writer&#13;
There is something really exciting&#13;
that is going to happen in&#13;
March, March 14-29 to be exact.&#13;
What is it, you ask? It's a trip to the&#13;
Soviet Union.&#13;
Dr. Hayward has taken students&#13;
from Parkside, among other&#13;
UWcampuses, and the community,&#13;
to the Soviet Union since 1980.&#13;
The idea was came to UW-Parkside&#13;
by a University program called&#13;
Outreach.&#13;
In order for a person to accompany&#13;
Dr. Hayward he/she has&#13;
to take his class, "Contemporary&#13;
Russia in Historical Perspective,"&#13;
formerly "Soviet Seminar." The&#13;
reason for the class is to create an&#13;
understanding of the culture and&#13;
the history before going to the Soviet&#13;
Union. This is a three credit&#13;
class. It is composed of concentrated&#13;
lectures, the trip, and then a&#13;
final paper. Guest lectures are&#13;
commonplace in the class, including&#13;
specialists on Russian Art and&#13;
those very knowledgeable of Russian&#13;
culture.&#13;
Approximately 15-30 people&#13;
go on this trip each year. One-third&#13;
to one-half of the people are&#13;
Parkside students. The others are&#13;
from other UW campuses, and the&#13;
surrounding community. Spouses,&#13;
parents, and families of students&#13;
can also join the group. A variety&#13;
of ages go; senior citizens have&#13;
been said to have the best of times&#13;
there.&#13;
Although the cost of the trip&#13;
seems high — approximately&#13;
$2500.00, financial aid is available.&#13;
FA is available due to the fact&#13;
that the trip is considered tuition,&#13;
like lab in chemistry. Not all of the&#13;
Free Pregnancy Tests&#13;
and Counseling&#13;
ALPHA CENTER&#13;
637-8232&#13;
Call for appointment&#13;
money needed is received from FA&#13;
but over half is given, says Dr.&#13;
Hayward. Many students don't&#13;
know that they are going to take&#13;
this class until all FA is given out.&#13;
Dr. Hayward states, however, that&#13;
the Financial Aid staff really works&#13;
with the students and gets them all&#13;
the money they can. Thecostofthe&#13;
trip includes housing, travel and&#13;
food. The hotels that the students&#13;
stay at are considered very respectable.&#13;
The trip is usually two weeks,&#13;
however this year the stay will be&#13;
15 days. March is the time of the&#13;
year the group goes because spring&#13;
break is at this time. Christmas&#13;
break is not an option due to the&#13;
bitter cold in the Soviet Union.&#13;
The weather ir March is getting&#13;
better and the airfares have not&#13;
risen yet. April through the summer&#13;
the airfare escalates because&#13;
this is their peak season, vacation&#13;
time — just like ours!&#13;
What do they do when they are&#13;
there? Well, they have busy days,&#13;
that's for sure! An itinerary is&#13;
planned between the travel agents,&#13;
Dr. Hayward, and the director of&#13;
the UW program from River Falls.&#13;
The group visits various places,&#13;
such as museums, schools,&#13;
churches, and historical cities, and&#13;
even the Russian circus. A theater&#13;
event may be scheduled in, or you&#13;
may choose to go on your free&#13;
time. There is plenty of shopping&#13;
to do as well. One feature of this&#13;
trip is that one can do something&#13;
other than what the planned attraction&#13;
was as long as Dr. Hayward&#13;
knows where he/she is. Dr.&#13;
Hayward has stated that he was&#13;
once worried about people getting&#13;
lost but doesn't any longer. Once&#13;
in a hotel, all the visitors give the&#13;
hotel their passports in return for a&#13;
Semester Break in&#13;
CANCUN&#13;
January 5-12, 1990&#13;
From $445&#13;
Includes:&#13;
•Round Trip Charter Air&#13;
•Seven Nights Lodging-Choice of Two Properties,&#13;
Both on the Beach&#13;
*Ground Transfers in Mexico&#13;
•Group Escort Throughout&#13;
•Tips, Taxis and Service Charges&#13;
Complete Information Union 209 -or- Call: 553-&#13;
2294&#13;
card stating the hotel's name and&#13;
address. If anybody gets lost, they&#13;
can ask just about anyone for assistance.&#13;
Dr. Hayward has said&#13;
that the Russians are very friendly&#13;
people, and might even take a lost&#13;
person back to their hotel. Cabs&#13;
and subways are also available.&#13;
Moscow and Leningrad are&#13;
always on the trip itinerary and&#13;
then two or three additional cities&#13;
are visited. These additional cities&#13;
are usually toured if something&#13;
historical is happening, or a special&#13;
event is coming up.&#13;
You may be worried about not&#13;
knowing the language but Dr.&#13;
Hayward says guides speak fluent&#13;
English, so it really isn 't necessary&#13;
for the students to be able to speak&#13;
Russia .. Dr. Hayward, however,&#13;
does know the language. American&#13;
money is used in the Soviet&#13;
Union and the exchange rate is&#13;
very constant Because of this,&#13;
exchanging money is not a hassle,&#13;
either.&#13;
I asked Dr. Hayward what the&#13;
students got out of this trip and&#13;
immediately three things came to&#13;
mind. He said that first-hand&#13;
knowledge is received and not all&#13;
things can be taught. Also, one&#13;
gets to experience another culture,&#13;
one that is quite different from what&#13;
we are used to. And lastly, maturity&#13;
for some is gained. Challenges&#13;
arise in theUSSR and are conquered&#13;
with this new maturity. An experience&#13;
like this is bound to enrich&#13;
one's life.&#13;
Additional information can be&#13;
acquired by contacting Dr.&#13;
Hayward at (414) 553-2467. There&#13;
are many changes happening in&#13;
Soviet Union. Wouldn't it be&#13;
wonderful to experience them first&#13;
hand? :«:H h The College Consortium for International&#13;
Studies is composed of 170 American Colleges&#13;
and Universities. About 1400 students participated&#13;
in CCIS programs in 1989-1990.&#13;
STUDY IN IRELAND&#13;
Spring 1991&#13;
St'. Patrick's College&#13;
Maynooth, Ireland&#13;
• Liberal Arts Program&#13;
• 30 Student Maximum&#13;
• 3.0 G.P.A. Required .&#13;
University of Limerick&#13;
Limerick, Ireland&#13;
• Business Program Option&#13;
• International Student Village&#13;
• 3.0 G.P.A. Required&#13;
SPONSORING COLLEGES&#13;
Keene'State College, NH&#13;
Mohegan Community College&#13;
Prof. William Spofford&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Platteville&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
Platteville. Wl 538818&#13;
(608) 342-1726&#13;
Other CCIS Programs: Italy. England, Scotland, Sweden,&#13;
Germany, Portugal, Greece, Israel, Spain, France, Mexico,&#13;
Ecuador, Colombia, China, Switzerland.&#13;
October 4,1990 Classified Ranger, Page 20&#13;
To place classified advertising in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger Newspaper, stop in the Ranger office focated in room D139C in the Wyflie Library/Learning Center, next to&#13;
vhe Coffee Shoppe. Deadline for classified advertising is 3:00pm Monday prior to publication. All classified ads placed by full or part time UW-Parkside students are 250 per week run. All&#13;
classified ads placed by anyone other than UW-Parkside students are $5.00 per week run. Payment must accompany order, ft an error occurs, the ad will be run free of charge the following&#13;
Week. No refunds. The University of Wisconsin-Parkside Ranger and its employees, staff and members are not responible for the content of advertisng placed by its customers. The UWParkside&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertising at its descretion. Please direct all inquiries to the UW-Parkside Ranger Business Manager at (414) 553-2295.&#13;
CLUB EVENTS CLUB EVENTS CLUB EVENTS LOST AND FOUND PERSONALS&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Alliance&#13;
will be having their&#13;
regular monthly meeting on&#13;
Wednesday, October 10 at&#13;
12:00 noon in Comm. Arts&#13;
129. They will be discussing&#13;
general business, a treat or&#13;
program for the Child Care&#13;
Center, a possible brochure&#13;
about PASA and any other&#13;
business the membership&#13;
may find necessary. Everyone&#13;
is welcome and new adult&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend and get involved.&#13;
\&#13;
Have you ever considered an&#13;
internship in the field of&#13;
writing? On Wednesday,&#13;
October 10, at noon in Comm.&#13;
Arts 135, Prof. Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioitti-Hughes will discuss&#13;
the variety of internships&#13;
available in the field of writing/&#13;
English, as well as the&#13;
importance of such hands-on&#13;
experience. All students, regardless&#13;
of major, can benefit&#13;
and are invited to attend.&#13;
Brought to you by the English&#13;
Club.&#13;
The Cathloic Student Club&#13;
would like to invitee veryone&#13;
to join them for masSs unday&#13;
evenings at 8:30pm in Union&#13;
207. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Saturday, October 6, join the&#13;
UW-Parkside Geoscience&#13;
Club in the Annual Ice Age&#13;
Trail Hike; for more information&#13;
come to Greenquist&#13;
118, anytime.&#13;
Inter Varsity-Christian Fellowship&#13;
presents a continual&#13;
series of the Sermon on the&#13;
Mount. SpeakerDave Dryer,&#13;
Wednesday, October 10,&#13;
1990, Molinaro 107, 12:00.&#13;
Prayer meeting every Friday&#13;
at 12:00 in Molnaro 126.&#13;
Wanted: Any students interested&#13;
in joining an L.D.S.&#13;
Student Association at UWParkside.&#13;
Please contact&#13;
Carol Tebben in Molinaro&#13;
364 Ext 2101 between 8am -&#13;
11am or call Elder Burbank&#13;
and Elder Knudson at 658-&#13;
3051 anytime.&#13;
Join the Geoscience Club&#13;
Friday Oct. 5, in Greenquist&#13;
113 at 12:00 noon with Dr.&#13;
Howard Hobbs discussing&#13;
"The Iowan Erosional Surface&#13;
and the Origin of Loess&#13;
in Southeastern Minnesota—&#13;
What the rentifacts tell us."&#13;
Join a club! Contact Student&#13;
Organizations Council.&#13;
You can't beat our credit cards!&#13;
MasterCard and Visa&#13;
14.8% Annual Percentage Rate&#13;
S $15.00 Annual Fee&#13;
• 25 day grace period&#13;
Serving all UW-Parkside&#13;
employees and students&#13;
.OUCATo.&#13;
Tailent Ball - Room 286 ja !&#13;
553-2150 9:30-4:00&#13;
The Math Club is presenting&#13;
Alexander Lichtman, who&#13;
will be giving a talk on Mathematical&#13;
Methods in Linguistics,&#13;
Wednesday, October&#13;
10 at 12:00 - 1:00 in&#13;
Molinaro D107.&#13;
FUND RAISING&#13;
Best fund raiser on campus&#13;
looking for fraternity/sorority&#13;
or student organization&#13;
that would like to earn $500-&#13;
$1000 for one wk on campus&#13;
mkg project. Must be organized&#13;
and hard working. Call&#13;
Beverly or Jeanine at 800-&#13;
592-2121.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Help wanted. Full/part time;&#13;
AM, PM. Dining, banquet&#13;
and cocktail servers. Sheraton&#13;
Hotel and Conference Center.&#13;
Call 886-6100.&#13;
Waitresses, hostesses,&#13;
busperson, pizza makers,&#13;
kitchen help, drivers(with or&#13;
without car) needed. Call&#13;
Luigi's Pizza at 694-6565 in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Largest Library of information in U.S. -&#13;
all subjects&#13;
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD&#13;
EBb. 800-351-0222&#13;
-n Calif. (213) 477-8226&#13;
Or, rush S2.00 to: Research Information&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. 1206-A. Los Angeles, CA 90025&#13;
"THERE'S HOPE - WE CARE"&#13;
24 HOUR HOTLINE&#13;
414-658-2222&#13;
FREE PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
FREE COUNSELING ON OPTIONS&#13;
COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY&#13;
BABY &amp; MATERNITY CLOTHES&#13;
CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER&#13;
2222 ROOSEVELT RD. KENOSHA&#13;
Lost: 1988 class ring. Name&#13;
engraved on inside. If found,&#13;
please call 553-2806, and ask&#13;
for Geraldine.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
Travel Free! Quality vacations&#13;
to exotic destinations!&#13;
The most affordable spring&#13;
break packages to Jamaica&#13;
and Cancun. Fastest way to&#13;
free travel and $$$. Call Sun&#13;
Splash Tours. 1-800-426-&#13;
7710.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
246 in Green Bay may have&#13;
been noisy but at least I wasn't&#13;
being chased by the cops!&#13;
Vote Maggie Fry mire for&#13;
Homecoming Queen.&#13;
Barb S. at Green Bay - Hey&#13;
baby, what's up? Get a man&#13;
yet? See ya soon. Scott.&#13;
Go with the crowd - voteTerri&#13;
Fortney for Homecoming&#13;
Queen.&#13;
Bananna - What a pleasant&#13;
ending for Mozart, eh? That&#13;
it is. No bloodshed or anything,&#13;
because I'm against&#13;
that! Secret Shopper #2.&#13;
Faculty member needs a ride&#13;
from Milwaukee to UWParkside.&#13;
Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays. Must leave Milwaukee&#13;
between 9:30 and&#13;
10:00am. Home phone No.&#13;
1-475-5219. Political Science&#13;
Office, 553-2316.&#13;
Mrs. Chops! How do you&#13;
like your new name? I'm&#13;
really looking foward to the&#13;
19,20 and 21st. Love Dan.&#13;
Place your Personal Ad in the&#13;
Ranger Office, Only 250 for&#13;
students, staff &amp; faculty.&#13;
Deadline is Monday, 3:00pm.&#13;
SKI EXPO '90&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 14th&#13;
Noon to 5 p.m.&#13;
21'&#13;
Ski Company Reps.&#13;
Ski Travel&#13;
Ski Clubs Displays&#13;
Style Show 2 P.M.&#13;
$2,000 in Door Prizes&#13;
HUGE SKI&#13;
Lots of Deals&#13;
OP KENOSHA&#13;
30% to&#13;
60% OFF&#13;
Top&#13;
Name&#13;
Brands!&#13;
ski&amp;&#13;
sports chalet&#13;
5039 6th Ave,&#13;
Harborside Kenosha</text>
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              <text>•&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin --Parks ide&#13;
Shawproposes systemwide&#13;
enrollment cuts&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
On October 5,1990, the&#13;
UW-&#13;
Board of Regents approved and&#13;
passedUW-SystemPresidentKen-&#13;
nethShaw'senrollment cut ofmore&#13;
than&#13;
7,000 students the next four&#13;
years. The plan will be&#13;
in&#13;
effect&#13;
until1994-95.&#13;
University of Wisconsin S&#13;
ys-&#13;
tem&#13;
President Kenneth Shaw has&#13;
proposed enrollment cuts of more&#13;
than&#13;
7,000 full-time students&#13;
dur-&#13;
ingthe&#13;
next four years. Both the 13&#13;
four-year universities and the 13&#13;
two-year&#13;
centers are included in&#13;
!heCDt.&#13;
Shaw&#13;
's&#13;
CUl&#13;
proposal wouldre-&#13;
duce the present UW-Syslem stu-&#13;
dentpopulation of 133,146 students&#13;
to&#13;
126,025 students and will reduce&#13;
the&#13;
UW-System's&#13;
student body by&#13;
five percent.&#13;
If&#13;
Shaw's proposal&#13;
passes,&#13;
this would mean a cut of&#13;
more than 12,000 students from&#13;
1987&#13;
to&#13;
1994.&#13;
The United Council, the old-&#13;
est&#13;
and&#13;
one of the largest state&#13;
student associations in the nation,&#13;
responded to Shaw's proposed en-&#13;
rollment cut.&#13;
"This cut of 7,000 students&#13;
would be a devastating blow&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
people of Wisconsin." said Brenda&#13;
Leahy, United Council President.&#13;
Bill Homer, PresidentofUW-&#13;
Parkside's  Student Government&#13;
Association,  and Chris Daniel.&#13;
PSGA Vice-President.  also reo&#13;
sponded.&#13;
"I'm&#13;
against it," said Homer.&#13;
"You're restricting education only&#13;
to&#13;
those who&#13;
can&#13;
afford it. Is that&#13;
what public education isall about?"&#13;
"It's  good and bad," said&#13;
Daniel. "It's good because more&#13;
money would be available  for&#13;
higher level education.  It's bad&#13;
because it's notallowing those who&#13;
have the potential, but not the&#13;
motivation."&#13;
According to Shaw, the UW-&#13;
System lacks the money and re-&#13;
sources to educate limitless num-&#13;
bers of students. Healso stated that&#13;
the&#13;
cuts&#13;
are&#13;
in response&#13;
to&#13;
a de-&#13;
clining amount of high school&#13;
graduates.&#13;
"A state system should allow&#13;
anyone the chance to gain a broad-&#13;
based education tostrengthen their&#13;
skills for a bright future," said&#13;
Kenneth Shaw&#13;
Leahy. "A college education should&#13;
not be just for an elite few."&#13;
"Byresbicting enrollment you&#13;
are&#13;
going to increase tuition. Tu-&#13;
ition has increased 105percent the&#13;
past eight years," said Homer. "By&#13;
cutting enrollment it will continue&#13;
to&#13;
increase.&#13;
n&#13;
. The&#13;
UW&#13;
Board ofRegents will&#13;
be considering Shaw's proposed&#13;
cuts this week.&#13;
Mc~rtiff visitsParkside's&#13;
~hHdCareCenter&#13;
.&#13;
Ranger Photo&#13;
by&#13;
3unni Beeck&#13;
McGruff plays&#13;
with&#13;
children&#13;
The campus police&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
children of the Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center co-hosted an&#13;
anni-&#13;
versary&#13;
party&#13;
for McGruffOct.3.&#13;
Some of McGruff s friends from&#13;
the Somers Fire Department and&#13;
Rescue  Squad and Kenosha&#13;
County's Deputy Friendly, Wil-&#13;
liam&#13;
Metiillo. anended the&#13;
party.&#13;
.The children received Jr. Crime&#13;
Fighter badges from McGruff and&#13;
UW-Parkside  Police  Officer&#13;
Schlecht  and  learned  how&#13;
. McGruff's  friends help them&#13;
when they need help;&#13;
Domestic violence law causes problems for Residence Hall students&#13;
.--------..,&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Under the one-year-old  do-&#13;
mestic violence/abuse  law, UW-&#13;
Parksidestudents rooming together&#13;
at housing could go straight tojail&#13;
if they were involved in a fight.&#13;
Domestic violence/abuse  in-&#13;
volves the following:&#13;
1.&#13;
Intential  infliction  of&#13;
physical pain, physical injury or&#13;
illness.&#13;
2. Intentional impairment of&#13;
physical condition.&#13;
3. Sexual assault.&#13;
4. A physical act, or threat in&#13;
-&#13;
conjunction with a physical act&#13;
which may cause the other person&#13;
to reasonably fear   imminent&#13;
engagement  in the conduct de-&#13;
scribed above.&#13;
Persons who can engage in&#13;
domestic violence/abuse. include&#13;
the following:&#13;
I.&#13;
An adtilt person against&#13;
his/her spouse, former spouse or&#13;
adult relative(parent, grandparent,&#13;
stepparent, brother,  sister, first&#13;
cousin, nephew, niece, uncle, aunt,&#13;
stepbrother, stepsister, child, step-&#13;
child,father-in·law,mother-in-Iaw.&#13;
daughter-in·Jaw or son-in-law).&#13;
2. An adult person against an&#13;
adult with whom theperson resides&#13;
or formerly resided.&#13;
According to DeAnn Possehl,&#13;
Directorcf&#13;
Residence&#13;
Hall,&#13;
the law&#13;
was basically enacted for married&#13;
couples or couples living together,&#13;
but it also applies  to college&#13;
roommates. Possehl recalled seven&#13;
incidents the first of couple months&#13;
the law was in force and only t~o&#13;
incidents since then.&#13;
In UW-Parkside's Residence&#13;
Hall&#13;
Handbook 1990-91, it&#13;
states&#13;
that the university will not tolerate&#13;
verbal or physical&#13;
abuse&#13;
behavior.&#13;
A physical act or a threat in con-&#13;
Junction with aphysical actbetween&#13;
roommates or former roommates&#13;
. See Violence,  Page 18&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Editorial   "   Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Devil's Advocate; Page:3&#13;
'Counselor's Comer,Page4&#13;
Sports   ",&#13;
Page9t&#13;
AlcoholPt\llout. .•;.Page 11&#13;
VolunJeeJ:,:,.,~;;:...&#13;
.Paie'1,S&#13;
Intetrtati~,;., ..•.&#13;
.Page&#13;
Pi!:&#13;
')\-&#13;
-&#13;
,".-&#13;
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OcIO~&#13;
t&#13;
the Editor&#13;
Letters&#13;
0&#13;
Also, when you're&#13;
at&#13;
an&#13;
a1I.w~&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
n  (ju-&#13;
party&#13;
and they ask&#13;
YOU&#13;
dance ~&#13;
Why is it when a you  g few&#13;
say no. Then  they say&#13;
YOU   :&#13;
venile)  brother  p~Il\~~t   :mgS?&#13;
soul, all blacks have soul,and&#13;
YOI&#13;
hundreddollaIshe   s~ rm&#13;
g&#13;
driving&#13;
justmightbeoneoflheunfonunatt&#13;
And,&#13;
oh,&#13;
how come&#13;
I&#13;
r   harassed&#13;
blacks  without  soul.&#13;
These&#13;
ill&#13;
a 1990Men:edeSBenzlO~  of black&#13;
stereotypes  we face everyday.&#13;
In&#13;
by the police? If a car u h the sub-&#13;
concluding,  don't prejudge&#13;
SOIne.&#13;
men were to nde&#13;
thro&#13;
~d become&#13;
one unless you find out&#13;
aboUI&#13;
the&#13;
urbs ~e neighbors  w~~ck wom,""&#13;
person  who's  liVing inside&#13;
that&#13;
hystencal.  Also, ifa&#13;
h&#13;
.    man  the&#13;
particular  body.&#13;
See&#13;
Yal&#13;
were  to  date  a w.&#13;
ue&#13;
And&#13;
Chris TOli,&#13;
brothers would be&#13;
like darn.&#13;
tt&#13;
what about when a black wants a&#13;
new car; the dealer always offers a&#13;
Cadillac.  And who's  to say Viet-&#13;
namese, Japanese, and Chinese all&#13;
like alike?  And what about when&#13;
they say blacks  have the biggest&#13;
lips; takealookatMcJagger.    What&#13;
about when a brother orders a beer&#13;
at a tavern, and the&#13;
bartenders&#13;
says&#13;
no more Malt Liquor?  Then you&#13;
have your b-ball coaches  who re-&#13;
cruit you because  you can  dunk&#13;
and dribble that ball. He offers you&#13;
a car and money just so you play b-&#13;
ball for him.  He doesn't  give a&#13;
damn if  ou&#13;
ass&#13;
colle  e&#13;
or&#13;
not.&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I&#13;
enjoy reading Gabe'sGab,&#13;
I&#13;
find Gabe Kluka warm and&#13;
wiUy&#13;
sometimes  a bit off-beatbutqun;&#13;
entertaining;  irreverent but&#13;
a1wa~&#13;
with a point to make. Hemakes&#13;
hij&#13;
points  well, a&#13;
credu&#13;
in no&#13;
smau&#13;
measure&#13;
to&#13;
his&#13;
excellem&#13;
writing&#13;
ability.   My admiration has&#13;
beeu&#13;
nudged up a few nOlches,howevtt,&#13;
since  reading   his most&#13;
retenl&#13;
opionion,  "No Humor in&#13;
Blalant&#13;
Bigotry."&#13;
Kluka&#13;
was&#13;
hard.hilling&#13;
See&#13;
Letters,&#13;
P3gl4&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
When&#13;
a&#13;
world&#13;
leader,&#13;
a person of significance in our country, or a&#13;
local community leader&#13;
passes&#13;
away, they usually get more than just an&#13;
obituary in&#13;
the&#13;
local newspapers. This&#13;
poli.iv&#13;
should hold true for students&#13;
at&#13;
UW -Parkside,&#13;
whether they are involved or dedicated  or neither.&#13;
Questions have been&#13;
raised&#13;
about the recent publication  of a student's&#13;
death on the frontpage of the Ranger.  Well, the Ranger  staff reads many&#13;
c:olJege&#13;
DeWSplpers&#13;
from&#13;
acros.s&#13;
the&#13;
country on a weekly&#13;
basis,&#13;
and many of our fellow newspapers&#13;
also&#13;
follow&#13;
tIlis&#13;
formaL&#13;
It&#13;
has&#13;
been againsI&#13;
the policy of the Ranger in the&#13;
past to&#13;
put death notices on page one. But just .&#13;
l.ike.. ydung&#13;
else,&#13;
policies&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
changed. Therefore, the Ranger&#13;
will&#13;
continue this practice uniU the 1990-91&#13;
publulung&#13;
year&#13;
expires,&#13;
And&#13;
mC8SC&#13;
you&#13;
dido&#13;
'tsee it, there&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
poster&#13;
hanging in theGreenquistconcourse  this past week that said,&#13;
"M&#13;
you&#13;
bend&#13;
from&#13;
reading the Ranger?&#13;
Confused&#13;
and frustrated, and everything else too? Well if you are,&#13;
join&#13;
the&#13;
Humor Club."&#13;
When&#13;
the Director of Student Activities was questioned about this sign, she stated that&#13;
if&#13;
they ~n    'I&#13;
allowed to&#13;
hang&#13;
tIlis&#13;
sign their freedom of speech would have been violated. We have one response&#13;
to&#13;
that.&#13;
and&#13;
you&#13;
can&#13;
think&#13;
of what il is!&#13;
The&#13;
Direclorof Student Activities is supposed to promote unity among&#13;
the&#13;
sllldent clubs&#13;
and&#13;
organizations; do&#13;
you&#13;
call&#13;
demeaning a fellow organization unity?&#13;
We&#13;
have&#13;
ooe&#13;
questioll&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
so-called Hwnor Cub.  When was the last time the Ranger  published a 20&#13;
pllge&#13;
poper&#13;
on.  weekly&#13;
ba1is&#13;
like&#13;
we&#13;
are doing now?&#13;
Or&#13;
pUIout a 36 page swnmer issue spectacular? These are&#13;
bodl&#13;
accompIisIImenu&#13;
we&#13;
an:&#13;
proud&#13;
of.&#13;
The&#13;
reason why the Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
a better paper is because we have a&#13;
business&#13;
Sl8ff&#13;
\bat&#13;
warts&#13;
ni&amp;ht&#13;
and&#13;
day selling advertisements&#13;
and&#13;
a well·trained editorial staff.  Our business&#13;
III8lllIIlCt&#13;
bas&#13;
also&#13;
spent hlllldreds of&#13;
hours&#13;
revamping the bookkeeping system so that it is set for the 1990's. Our&#13;
spans&#13;
depanmem&#13;
bas&#13;
improved&#13;
their&#13;
new pullout section by 300% over last year.  The Phy. Ed staff has&#13;
commented&#13;
that&#13;
it&#13;
is&#13;
the&#13;
best&#13;
sportS&#13;
section&#13;
that&#13;
they have seen in years.&#13;
Besides&#13;
that,&#13;
we&#13;
spent many hoon&#13;
here&#13;
this summer trying to prepare for&#13;
the&#13;
upcoming school year. We&#13;
8lleDdedanationai  cooference 10&#13;
gain&#13;
tips on how to improve our newspaper. We know some of our hard worlc&#13;
has&#13;
paid&#13;
oft&#13;
because&#13;
we have received several memos&#13;
from&#13;
the administration complimenting  how much the&#13;
paper&#13;
has&#13;
improved.  But&#13;
you&#13;
WOO'tknow&#13;
this&#13;
about us&#13;
because&#13;
you don't&#13;
read&#13;
the Ranger  anyway.&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
. '...  Ranger .&#13;
Member  of the Associated  Collegiate  Press&#13;
Subscription    rate. for&#13;
.&lt;?I"I~&#13;
year  is&#13;
~.o.O, Please address all&#13;
correspondence&#13;
to:&#13;
.&#13;
". R.nger.&#13;
UW-P~rkside&#13;
Wood Road.&#13;
Box .2000&#13;
..&#13;
.Kenostia,  WI&#13;
.53141-2000&#13;
~ Editorial Office&#13;
(414)  553-2287&#13;
Business  Office&#13;
(41~)  553·2295&#13;
Editor-in-Chief    . .&#13;
Craig&#13;
A.&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
.&#13;
"',:.:,'::.:::;;:..&#13;
'::::'/.,.&gt;:,:'&#13;
-Buelness  Manager&#13;
Dim Chiappeita  .&#13;
.  .. .. .&#13;
Kennelh&#13;
J.&#13;
Schuh&#13;
International    Editor'&#13;
,..&#13;
,Asst. 'Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Heather&#13;
Me!"&#13;
Gwen Heller  .'&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
.  Advertising&#13;
M'''Ser&#13;
Katie Knight&#13;
. . .&#13;
TerriFortney&#13;
Entertainment    Editor,"&#13;
:Ol?&gt;&#13;
;'·yA.dvertising&#13;
Representativf&#13;
Dawn Mailand  •&#13;
.   .'&#13;
. ChristineRada~&#13;
Sports Editor'&#13;
.   ,.    ...  Ciiculation Man.g.&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann   .~&#13;
.&#13;
. .    TracieNelson&#13;
~~~~ ~~':v~~I9~&#13;
.&#13;
P~bI:C Relati~:sO:;;&#13;
.&#13;
.'&#13;
. . '.  PhotoEditor&#13;
Ted Mcintyre&#13;
'.  ..&#13;
I&#13;
T&#13;
c&#13;
oPy&#13;
Editor   .'..'.&#13;
,.. ......'. ,..&#13;
.  '. 'Ph'sounlO::''De«ph••&#13;
od&#13;
McCarthy.  .'&#13;
.&#13;
.._&#13;
Asst. Copy Editor&#13;
'. '.&#13;
He~~~:;&#13;
::a&#13;
ranca&#13;
~;.agli().   '.&#13;
. .... ' .,&#13;
.   Cartoonis~&#13;
&amp;:!:~:ng::o.r    ; '.&#13;
.   ..'    Paulliel!'&#13;
SecretaI)'    '.   .   ~&#13;
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Ch~:r;:~&#13;
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'.:;:i::'·.'·...&#13;
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Ad·   ""..";:,),:,::.,:::::;:,:::::&#13;
';:&lt;, ...:'&#13;
.&#13;
·:::::,''.':/::)/:'I:}&#13;
e~~lt!tJl:~~;•..&#13;
Donald Andrewski;&#13;
Gabe&#13;
K!.uka;&#13;
Juri Newcomb, Rufus 'fho"'":ek,&#13;
BW&#13;
Dohe~,   Mona Shannon,  Lisa ,Yopal, John Taylor,. DaVId~1,JeIf&#13;
Haw~s,Jo;ffBromstad,.LateshaJude,&#13;
Kelly McKisslck,Sara&#13;
ReddIck, .Kimberly TenereJli, Chris Deguire, Susan LuedkeS&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
'.&#13;
'.  .&#13;
.    ..c..c:...._--= .....&#13;
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              <text>UW-Parkside-Soviet exchange Plan</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin,., Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
~~.:llllilil~I~II~~I,:~.I.:.·.t.:~.:'.•:·:·.P.•·.•··.·:·.l.i.••~.·.·'..•.·.•·.·'.m.··.'·.·.··.'·.··.··.•'.••.•.•'.e.·&lt;.··.•·.•·.•·.·'.•·•.•·.•'.t.•·•·.·.•·..·.•·.f}.•·•'..·.•·~.··.·.•• ··.·.l.··.··.lN.•'.·.•·.•·.·•.•·.•·.•.••.•·~.".·.··."•.···.·.•.tn.'·.• ·.'·."· .• '· .• ·.·.·.'·.b.·.·.·· ·.··." .• ·••••.•..•e.'.'.·.··.·.'..'..t.·.·.·.··..•·.•••·..•7..··.·.·.·.·' iii,}i II.'.·.•.•.·•.•..•.'.'.'.'.·.'.·.'.'.·l.,:.:·.: •... rI .·.·.·····,,·..······,,·············..·····.·····v··· &lt;................... .&#13;
........ . ·..t! ...........{, iIi.: :1:1~:.i!~III•.llill.1111111IJIIlI.IIlI·IIl·IlI.m~~I~:~~t~~~i~;1~d··1&#13;
UW -Parkside-Soviet exchange plan&#13;
by Muhammad R. Yusuf&#13;
An academic exchange program&#13;
agreement, signed in August&#13;
by John Stockwell, UW·Parkside&#13;
vice-chancellor, will soon be effective&#13;
with the Georgian Teehni- .&#13;
cal Institute (GTI) in Thlisi.&#13;
According to the agreement,&#13;
both universities will exchange a&#13;
few selected faculty members, one&#13;
instructor and five students once a&#13;
year. The faculty members will&#13;
engage in teaching, science reo&#13;
search, and exchange information&#13;
on curriculum in the United States&#13;
and Soviet Union for a three-week&#13;
period. Parkside students will be&#13;
able to spend ahouU5· days at the&#13;
Georgian university. Local transportation,&#13;
interpreters and tap pay&#13;
will be furnished by the host institutions.&#13;
It is an honor for Parkside to&#13;
be involved with GTI because it is&#13;
oneofthe largest universities in the&#13;
Soviet Union; it's not one of the&#13;
best, though. According to Sheila&#13;
Kaplan, Parkside chancellor, "It is&#13;
a channel of international understanding,"&#13;
asquotedin the Kenosha&#13;
News. The Soviets believe that&#13;
they can learn from us-not only&#13;
science and technology but the feel&#13;
Homeward Bound shelter to close&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Executive Director, Kathy Rippon,&#13;
The decision to close the facility&#13;
was a very dificult one."&#13;
Unless financial commitrnents&#13;
are received to enable ilSoperation&#13;
through the remainder of the heating&#13;
season, the shelter will close,&#13;
and will not reopen.&#13;
UW-Parkside student Eric&#13;
Hall, who 'is the President of UWParkside's&#13;
communication Club&#13;
is contributing his service as well&#13;
as others frOm the club by raising&#13;
publil( awareness concerning this&#13;
issue.&#13;
"This is a valuable service,"&#13;
DUeiDlack of funds, Racine's&#13;
Homeward Bound Shelter for&#13;
homelesswomen and chiidren will&#13;
closeon October 22, 1990 ... This&#13;
wili leave thirty women and children&#13;
homeless.&#13;
"We are extremely concerned&#13;
aboutthe fate of the many families&#13;
Cillrentlyresiding at Homeward&#13;
BOUnd, as well as the dozens of&#13;
homelessfamilies turned away each&#13;
month in our community," said&#13;
said Hall about the Shelter. We&#13;
need local and political support in&#13;
putting pressure on people. More&#13;
can be done.&#13;
You can voice your support by&#13;
calling the following numbers:&#13;
Legislative Hotline&#13;
1-800-362-9696&#13;
Alderman 4th district Jim&#13;
Rooney 632-33.54&#13;
Racine Mayor&#13;
636-9111&#13;
County Executive&#13;
636-3118&#13;
Head of Racine Counly Human&#13;
Services, Bill Adams 636-367i&#13;
,&#13;
Left to right: Chancellor SheilaKaplan, Nodar V. Rostomashvili,Zaira&#13;
Chkheidze,Teimoraz N.Japaridze,and Yice-ChancellorJohn Stockwell&#13;
of democracy and American art&#13;
and literature. Parkside'srelationship&#13;
with GTI started wben the&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild Performed&#13;
in the Georgian Republic last year.&#13;
As a result, Robert Canary, associatevice-chancellor,&#13;
wbo is also a&#13;
member of the Racine Theatre&#13;
Guild, quickly made connections&#13;
with GTI.&#13;
Soon new faces on campus&#13;
will be seeking friendship and venture&#13;
into the world of democracy&#13;
and capitalism. But that won't be&#13;
all; university officials are eager to&#13;
enlist other international universiKim&#13;
Plache oUhe State Assem·&#13;
bly 634-3948&#13;
Homeward Bound Homeless&#13;
Shelter&#13;
633·3235&#13;
The shelter opened DIne&#13;
months and bas served over 268&#13;
women.and children. The sbelter&#13;
provides food, school supplies and&#13;
clothes. Anyone who is interested&#13;
in belping the shelter can call at&#13;
633·3235.&#13;
Today at 12:30theCommunication&#13;
Club will be meeting at&#13;
Comm. Ant. 137 to address this&#13;
issue. Anyone is welcomedtojoin.&#13;
ties in the program. In two years&#13;
time more programs will bestaned&#13;
with universities in Nigeria.&#13;
Southem Italy,SoudI America, and&#13;
theCaribbean. StoekweIl feels that&#13;
it will "Broaden our vision and&#13;
internationalize our curriculum."&#13;
However,someoftltestudenlS&#13;
at Parkside are not al1that positive&#13;
aboottheexchange. A 15-dayslay&#13;
is simply notenough time to understand&#13;
a totally different society.&#13;
Besides, three weeks out of a year&#13;
for research and information to be&#13;
exchanged isjustas weak an intitale&#13;
as one pending.&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
EditoriaL .Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report, Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate ...Page 3&#13;
Voice ofUW-P .•...Page 4&#13;
Gabe's Gab .Page 6&#13;
Coun. Comer Page 8&#13;
Sports. .Page 9&#13;
International .Page 13&#13;
EntertainmenL .Page 14&#13;
Oassifieds. .Page 20&#13;
~&#13;
•••• ;0 .....&#13;
...- , .&#13;
.. ~. , . -&#13;
October IQ§ -RaDaer-.Page-2-----.----~~E~d~it~o~ri~al.--}&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
Afterhavingreadabooktil1edTheCOnlenw!OwCharacter:ANew&#13;
Vision of Race in America, which was a collection of ten essays by Dr.&#13;
Shelby Steele, and a recent story in The Chronicle Of Higher Education,&#13;
by a few thoughts ran through my mind. First of all, Dr. Steele made some&#13;
Craig excellent points in his book. He stated that black students in college today&#13;
• • are more likely to blame their problems on racism than he was as a black&#13;
Slmpkms youth attending a segregated Chicago grade school in the 1950's. He goes&#13;
on to say that by exaggerating theexrentto which they are actually victims&#13;
of racism, black students grow up mistakenly viewing opportunity as&#13;
something owed to them rather than something to be seized.&#13;
Mr. Steele extols the virtues of self-help and personal responsibility&#13;
as the best ways for blacks to succeed in the American mainstream. While racism and discrimination continue&#13;
to exist, the prevailing black identity is often a greater obstacle to black progress. The identity is so tied to white&#13;
racism and black victimization that itoftens inhibits blacks from taking advantage of opportunities America is&#13;
now offering.&#13;
The Ranger has recently been put between a rock and a hard place several times. Every week, staff members&#13;
submit several stories, and students submit severalleuers to the editor for that week's newspaper, hoping that&#13;
their stories or letters will be published. The Ranger has encouraged the submission of both, only to find itself&#13;
in a situation were there's more copy than space. Most editors would love to be in this position. Well, a problem&#13;
may arise wben astudent of color doesn't have their copy published. Usually, before asking, "why?", they assume&#13;
that it is because they are a student of color that their story or letter wasn't published.&#13;
We base placement of copy in the paper on two measures. First of all, a timely story will go in beforean&#13;
untimely one. SeCond1y, students who write shon leuers to the editor or submit one for the first time will have&#13;
priority over students who tum them in on a regular basis.&#13;
I was approached by a student of color last week who requested to have his own column in the Ranger. I&#13;
W85101dby !lOIDefaculty members a few weeks ago that ifwe have ooemore columnist in the paper, it will stan&#13;
looking lite a literary guide. 1berefore, I had 10turn down this student' s request, who, by the way has been the&#13;
fourth person I have turned down wbo wanted to write their own column. Does turning downa student of color&#13;
mean I'm racist? Idon't think so. . .'&#13;
Along the same lines, inquiries have been made recently about why their was more security at a function&#13;
in which students of color were in the majority than at an event where non-minority students were in the majority.&#13;
The campus police responded that they simply scheduled enough security for the number of people expected to&#13;
attend each event,&#13;
The 1990-91 editorial slllff of the Ranger is committed to fair representation of people of color on its staff&#13;
and in the stories it prints. We believe we're living up to thatcornmitment and hope this editorial helps put things&#13;
in perspective. Steele ends the foreward of his book with o~e statement; I will end this editorial with the same&#13;
one and would like to see some dialog on campus about Steele's views: "Black people worry too much about&#13;
white people. I think they make them too omnipotent in their mind."&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
In a previous Ranger, an article&#13;
discussed a project oncampus&#13;
to include material on women of&#13;
color in the curriculum. As a&#13;
woman of color, I can't stress&#13;
enough the imponance of changmg&#13;
the curriculum to include women&#13;
of color. This imponant step towards&#13;
a better education will enlighten&#13;
all races to a fuller understanding&#13;
of today's society. I~eel&#13;
it is very imponant for the women&#13;
.of color, and also the men of color,&#13;
10understand where they bavebeen&#13;
in the past in order to know where&#13;
they areheadedin the future. People&#13;
of color have been. blinded&#13;
throughout their younger school&#13;
days to what it meant to be aperson&#13;
of color in today's society. They&#13;
were taught they should get an&#13;
education and a good job, but that&#13;
isn 'talways the real story if you are&#13;
a person of color. Our education&#13;
was based on a traditional&#13;
belief,:tIu!t was thewhite maieview&#13;
. of the world. This view shielded&#13;
mine and man Ie of color's&#13;
knowledgeofwhattheirracernean&#13;
to them and it still kept them I&#13;
slaved, but this time mentallyenthe&#13;
white world's way O[thou;&#13;
11 IS about ume for the universitiea&#13;
throughout the north to get it fO,&#13;
gether and add this pan of !he&#13;
curriculum toOUfeducationai8lllll,&#13;
Some umversities intheSoutb&#13;
have always included malerial&#13;
about women of color inthe~bas'&#13;
educational knowledge. It ~~&#13;
shame that this knowledge washeid&#13;
back from us for SO long, andI1O'lI&#13;
it's just being offered in universi.&#13;
ties. How about our ehil~&#13;
Hopefully ~lIIe day the studies01&#13;
people of color will also be l1lidressed&#13;
to the indiyidualatanetlly&#13;
stage ofleaming anddeveloPl1lell,&#13;
and therefore, when they reachdie&#13;
college level of learning theirbeliefs&#13;
and knowledge will be less&#13;
racist&#13;
Yes, this is another slep Illwards&#13;
freedom for the races 01&#13;
color. Maybe DOW the "Dream'&#13;
continued on 4&#13;
·i~~i~~r§itYC.~fWi§¢~)~siI\-parkside&#13;
)i.·c•..;\,)·,·.·.··c ••"&lt;~~gger&#13;
.c···.·'.&lt;•• ;.c'·« c.M~;"I&gt;e;:~flhe.A.SlioCii1lecl Collegiate Press&#13;
StibsCiiP!ion r8te fcir one year ;s$5:oo. Please address all CClI1llSpondonce til:&#13;
'Ranger&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
. Wood Road Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI C53141·2000&#13;
; ..&gt; Ed"&lt;iriaIOlfi~(414 )553-2287&#13;
••.Busine~ 9f'i&lt;;~(414) 553'2295&#13;
~a~ 0&#13;
The Devil's Advocate pinion&#13;
~&#13;
Any question has a logi:cal answer&#13;
by&#13;
Donald R.&#13;
Andrewski&#13;
Sincethe beginning of the semesterIhave&#13;
asked a lot of questions.Some&#13;
were-asked in all seriousness;others&#13;
were rhetorical,&#13;
intended forcomedic effect. Other&#13;
people have also asked a lot of&#13;
questionsor made statements that&#13;
fall intoboth of these categories.&#13;
Inihisissue,lwish to address these&#13;
questionsfrom the perspective of&#13;
tbeDevil'sAdvocate.&#13;
Questionl: "Why is it when a&#13;
younguuvenile) brother pulls out&#13;
a fewhundred dollars he's selling .&#13;
drugs?"&#13;
Answer: When someone is&#13;
holdinga wad of money,'] don't&#13;
think of drug money because its&#13;
none of my business 'how that&#13;
pUsangot that money. So I don't&#13;
care. Realistically speaking, I'm&#13;
havinga hard time remembering a&#13;
limewhen I had a few hundred&#13;
dollars cash in my hand at anyone&#13;
moment. So if a young juvenile&#13;
flashes·aroll of dough big enough&#13;
to choke a horse, I am keenly interested&#13;
in taking over his paper&#13;
route or job at McDonald's! But&#13;
drugs? Naaaah!&#13;
Question 2: "If a carload of&#13;
black men were to ride through the&#13;
suburbs the neighbors would become&#13;
hysterical,"&#13;
Answer: Neighborsareprone&#13;
to watch out for each other., and&#13;
that includes being suspicious about&#13;
anyone that thpy do not know. I&#13;
have driven through the "burbs"&#13;
with a carload of my buddies and&#13;
were also 'viewed with suspicion&#13;
by the neighbors. A phone call&#13;
later, and the police are there to&#13;
escort us to the burb limits. So it's&#13;
not just a "black" thing.&#13;
Question 3: "And what about&#13;
when a black wants a new car; the&#13;
dealer 'always offers a Cadillac."&#13;
Here's a hint. First of all,&#13;
when a person wants a new car and&#13;
waltzes into a Cadillac dealership,&#13;
the salesperson would be hard&#13;
pressed to sell that person a Yugo!&#13;
Secondly, a salesperson makes his!&#13;
her wages by selling cars. The&#13;
more expensive the car, the larger&#13;
their commission check. Simpleas&#13;
that! Now which car would the&#13;
salesperson be wise to offer?&#13;
The next set of questions stems&#13;
from-au article printed in.tne UWMPost&#13;
Ianswerthemherebecause&#13;
I believe these questions are&#13;
relevant to students of UW-P ..&#13;
Question 4: "How can the&#13;
Post claim to support free speech&#13;
and you can't say #@*&amp;%"?(The&#13;
writer made several references to&#13;
maternally incestuous people and&#13;
the actions in which they engage.)&#13;
I hear this question a lot. Really&#13;
now, we are college students,&#13;
not some sophomoric pottymouthed&#13;
punks hiding behind the&#13;
schoolhouse. Most of us outgrew&#13;
this stage decades ago, and it's&#13;
unfortunate that people still consider&#13;
this as a viable means of communication.&#13;
'Nuff said!&#13;
Question 5: "Why does the&#13;
Post accept advertising for the&#13;
terrorist organization, the U.S.&#13;
Army, whose only function is to&#13;
prop up Arab Dictatorships?"&#13;
Paradoxical, is it not? This&#13;
person has the freedom to say this,&#13;
courtesy of the U.S. Army that lost&#13;
a lot of personnel defending the&#13;
nation and the constitution that&#13;
ensures that right. I saw a sign that&#13;
said it all: "To those who fought&#13;
for it, freedom has a taste the protected&#13;
will never know".&#13;
Question 6: "Why do they&#13;
(U.S. Army) support the fascist&#13;
Range.:, P.a2e 3&#13;
South African government in its&#13;
aggression against the anti-apartheid&#13;
forces in Angola?"&#13;
I doubt that this individual&#13;
really knows the whole story·about&#13;
Angola. His question soundslike a&#13;
verbatim parrotting of Marxist literature.&#13;
Here's a historical review.&#13;
In 1979 (how old were you&#13;
then?) the Portugese government&#13;
granted independence to Angola, a&#13;
former colony. Jonas Savimbi, the&#13;
black leader of a rebel group&#13;
fighting for independence, was&#13;
elected as president in the only free&#13;
election in Angolan history.&#13;
True to form, the Soviets and&#13;
their puppet terrorist stormtroops&#13;
from Cuba joined up with the&#13;
Marxist MPLA, still tasting sour&#13;
grapes from having lost theelection.&#13;
These gangsters seized power,&#13;
driving Savimbiand his people into&#13;
the jungle. For the past decade,&#13;
Savimbi has fought to regain the&#13;
leadership of Angola thatrighlfully&#13;
belongs to him by the mandate of&#13;
the people. To date, his forces now&#13;
control over a third of the country.&#13;
Angola has been a gold mine&#13;
for Fidel. Cuba makes several million&#13;
dollars per year renting out its&#13;
troops to prop up the morally and&#13;
fmancial1y bankrupt puppetregime&#13;
in Angola. In response to criticism&#13;
of his capitalistic mercenary behavior&#13;
,comrade Fidel has histroopS&#13;
take Angolan citizenship so that he&#13;
can sleep with a clear conscience&#13;
by saying therearenoCuban troopS&#13;
there. The fact that these troopS are&#13;
still born,raised, trained, equipped,&#13;
and shipped front CUbameans little&#13;
to him and those that support him.&#13;
Sadly enough, a lot of people&#13;
are turning on Savimbi and his&#13;
legally elected government simply&#13;
because Nelson Mandela went on&#13;
record in favor of his buddy Fidel.&#13;
So answer my questions; Arab&#13;
dictatorships? U.S. Army terrorists?&#13;
Is the writer opposed 10 terrorists&#13;
and dictatorships, or only&#13;
those that do not agree with him?&#13;
When is a dictatorship not a&#13;
dictatorship? When is terraism&#13;
not terrorism? Do you really believe&#13;
in freedom of speech? Where&#13;
was your defense for racists and&#13;
sexists?&#13;
Whether you like it or not, the&#13;
system either works for all, or it&#13;
doesn't workatal\! Ifyou disagree,&#13;
gotaiktocomradeFidel. You'llbe&#13;
on a boat to Angola faster than you&#13;
can shake an AK-47. Funny thing&#13;
is, you won't have a choice or&#13;
anything to say about it&#13;
Now let's talk about freedom!&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Why weren't you there?&#13;
by George Yee&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
Political Awareness Week,&#13;
October1-5 went very well, consideringthat&#13;
there was a major lack&#13;
of student participation and supJlOrt,&#13;
The two candidates running&#13;
inthegovernor'sraceeven attended.&#13;
State Representative Tom Loftus&#13;
washere and gave a speech on his&#13;
platform. Governor Tommy&#13;
Thompson was here but on a differentmatter,&#13;
however he did walk&#13;
the halls and said "hi" to some of&#13;
thestudents. It 'stoo bad that only&#13;
a handful of studen\S actually attended&#13;
the events. This just shows'&#13;
how unimportant our public officials&#13;
are to the public. It'S only&#13;
whenthey do something illegal or&#13;
PBssmore taxes that we care.&#13;
ThePoliticai Awareness Week&#13;
attracted many local and state poIitical&#13;
leaders: Mayor Patrick&#13;
Moran from .Kenosha, Mayor N.&#13;
Owen Davis from Racine, Senator&#13;
Joseph Strohl and his opponent&#13;
George Petak, Representative&#13;
James Ladwig and his opponent&#13;
Robert Beezat, just to name a few.&#13;
Oneof our own teachers from OWParkside,&#13;
Barbara AspinwallGittings,&#13;
spoke'l?n the tWO-party&#13;
system and the differences between&#13;
them. .&#13;
There are two reason why the&#13;
Political Awareness Week was a&#13;
success: I. Chris Daniel, VicePresident&#13;
of PSGA. 2. Brenda&#13;
Wilson, Vice-President of SOC.&#13;
They dida great job in getting allof&#13;
these politicians together and organizing&#13;
the events. It'S quite an&#13;
accomplishment..and I congratulate&#13;
them forall theirtire-sOme work&#13;
and efforts. James Caspers a~d&#13;
Darnell Jones were also a major&#13;
help to the committee, and a thanks&#13;
to all the volunteers that helped&#13;
sign people up for voter registration.&#13;
The lack of attendance by the&#13;
student body did not create a good&#13;
image for UW -parkside, and I feel&#13;
embarraSsed when only five people&#13;
show up to an event. Events like&#13;
this are for the benefit of the students;&#13;
achieving knowledge ismore&#13;
than just read~ng books; you must&#13;
be involved to gain experience and&#13;
knowledge. There are a few more&#13;
things to do in college than reading,&#13;
studying and partying.&#13;
The Political Awareness Week&#13;
overall was a success, but the low&#13;
point was the lack of student involvement.&#13;
It'S too bad, becaUse&#13;
events like this don't happeD every&#13;
week, and you have no right to&#13;
complain that you were not given&#13;
the opportUnity to participate.&#13;
Senate meeting minutes&#13;
OCTOBER 12, 1990&#13;
Roll call&#13;
Senators: EJensen, JJensen,&#13;
T.Jensen, Jude(L), Olson,&#13;
Riccio(U), Rosier, Sikora, Yee,&#13;
Nephew, Lindblom&#13;
Executive Branch: Bill Homer,&#13;
Chris Daniel, Maggie Frymire&#13;
Motion Sikora/Lindblom 10112/90&#13;
: I To approve the minutes of the&#13;
previous meeting.&#13;
Passes S.(}.()&#13;
Report of the President (Homer)&#13;
-President dissatisfied with the&#13;
progress of the Election Committee.&#13;
Report of the Vicc.-President&#13;
(Daniel)&#13;
MotionJudeJ()lson 10/12/90:2 To&#13;
approve the allocation of $346.55&#13;
for the U.C. trip in Madison.&#13;
-$155.75 for food&#13;
-$16.00 for car rental&#13;
-$52.80 for mileage&#13;
-$122.00 for two hote1 rooms&#13;
PassesS-G-1&#13;
Report of the President of ProTempore&#13;
(Nephew)&#13;
-Informed the senate that he is not&#13;
running for this position next term.&#13;
Report of United Council&#13;
-Minority Actions Council (Written&#13;
report)&#13;
Committee meetings for the following&#13;
week:&#13;
-SUFAC:Fri. 3:00 pm in Union&#13;
209&#13;
-Committee 011 Teaching: 101181&#13;
90 at 9:30 am in Moln 0131&#13;
-Committee on Campus Envir: 101&#13;
19/90 at 9:00 am in Moln D 131&#13;
New Business:&#13;
-Motion JJensen/Sikora 10112,190&#13;
:3 To make a lost and found box&#13;
located in the PSGA office.&#13;
&lt;Division Called&gt;&#13;
Fails 4-3-3&#13;
-Motion T Jensen/Sikora 10/12,190&#13;
:4 To Suspend the Rules.&#13;
&lt;Division Called&gt;&#13;
Fails 5-5-1&#13;
Motion EJensenlRosier 10112,190&#13;
:5 To adjourn the meeting.&#13;
Passes I().O'O&#13;
Adjourned ':&#13;
"---Op=---=-lDlO --:-0o-n-:----} ()Clllber1a.1~&#13;
ii;i;. ~, .. C4 =======1 l&#13;
"Do you think you can ~v?~,in oice of the condition youare l~.. .&#13;
Week students participated In an experi• .d (During BACCHUS Alcohol Awareness used t~ check their alcoh~llevel) Parksi e ment in which a breathalyzer was&#13;
Greg Liegel&#13;
5 beers in less than 30 minu&#13;
, . Blood alcohol at m&#13;
Ted McIntyre&#13;
5 beers in less than 30 minutes&#13;
Blood alcohol at .07%&#13;
"No, I never drink and&#13;
drive.&#13;
"&#13;
.1&#13;
"Yes, I could makeu"&#13;
Debra DeVoyst&#13;
Less than 2 beers in 30 minutes&#13;
Blood alcohol at ,05&#13;
"I consider myself unable to&#13;
drive. I don't consider driving&#13;
in these conditions."&#13;
Diane Jensen&#13;
2 beers in less than 30 minutes.&#13;
Blood alcohol at .01&#13;
"No, I've had enough to the&#13;
point where I wouldn't trust&#13;
myself to drive.&#13;
"&#13;
Editorial Policy spaced, and 350 words or less. All Letters to the editor&#13;
1eUers must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification&#13;
purposes. Names will be&#13;
withbeld upon request&#13;
The Ranger reserves the right&#13;
lOeditlettasandtefusethosewhich&#13;
ate false and/or defamatory.&#13;
Deadline for a111eUers and classified&#13;
ads is Monday 8110an for&#13;
publication on ThUrsday.&#13;
zalion Council sponsoredtided&#13;
"Political Awareness Week 19911,"&#13;
There were events ranging !loD&#13;
listening 10 political figures,such&#13;
as Senator Joseph Strohl, Rep!l"&#13;
sentative Peter Barca, MayOll&#13;
Owen Davies (Racine) and Pl&#13;
, Moran (Kenosha) and odlers. ~l&#13;
voterregisl1ationdrive.11l~d&#13;
have been an excellentoJl!lOlUlitY&#13;
to express oneself to dtose wIo&#13;
make the rules and reguWiOBS ~&#13;
which we as citizens mustabideTo&#13;
alleviate any doubl,llIllll&#13;
add that my complaint is notllliY&#13;
.directed toward SludelllS,buI W&#13;
facultyandstaffperSOllsonca::&#13;
yet, Irecall the auendallCe 0&#13;
one staffperson 10the ev~~ .&#13;
Does this lack ofparue~&#13;
signify diat the facultY~~I&#13;
students of UW~P8fkside '1icS.&#13;
negative percepuon of poIi _&#13;
this great democratIC couOIlY&#13;
which we live? W~lweas:::&#13;
as people li~1Dg In dll;feetilli1&#13;
society,be able to ~~&#13;
change or improve the ~&#13;
ills of society by no ",,&#13;
,see LetW-s, .&#13;
Continued from page 2&#13;
will continue 10 move toward becoming&#13;
a reality. Maybe now the&#13;
real meaning of "Free at last, free at&#13;
last, thank God almighty, I'm free&#13;
at last" will become a goal for aU&#13;
races to achieve. A curriculum to&#13;
includewomenofcolpr ... huh,weU,&#13;
maybe thete is hope for the future&#13;
women and men of color.&#13;
Terri Lambert·Jones&#13;
roofing tar. Speaking of roofing&#13;
tar, have you tried working out at&#13;
the gym this week? If you can&#13;
,make it longer than.thirty minutes&#13;
without becoming nauseated and&#13;
dizzy, congratulations! With all&#13;
this, we get defensive when other&#13;
institutions say that we're assbackwards&#13;
around here. Ifthe shoe&#13;
fits ...&#13;
Published every Thursday duriD&amp;&#13;
dle ........... ic year, the Ranger&#13;
does IlOI pubIisb duriDg breaks or&#13;
holidays. TheRupr ispublisbM&#13;
solely by the studenl! ofUW -Parkside,&#13;
who ate respoosibIe for its&#13;
edilOria1 policy and COIItenL&#13;
Leoen 10theediblr wiD ooIy be&#13;
accepted ifthey ate typed, doubled&#13;
Curt M. Shircel&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
WhydOpeopleattendeoUege?&#13;
Besides the obvious reason forattendingcollege&#13;
such as 10learn and&#13;
to mature educationally, there is to&#13;
socialize, to experience that which&#13;
we all will experience once we're&#13;
out: of college. One way of experiencing&#13;
thesocialization that might&#13;
take place in the real world while'·&#13;
here in college is by getting&#13;
invovlved or being vocal, be it as a&#13;
student leader, member, or spectator.&#13;
This past week there was a&#13;
week of events that the UW-&#13;
'Parkside Student Govennent As-&#13;
, sociation and the Student Orl';aniBuying&#13;
a car? To the Editor:, '&#13;
Last week's column written by&#13;
David Doherty isan absolute and&#13;
complete lie. Ican't believe what&#13;
he wrote about the excessive chlorine&#13;
being added to the pootwhich&#13;
is going to cost this instibJbJODa lot&#13;
of money. 1mean nobody could be&#13;
that stupid as to add that much&#13;
chlorine, could they? Especially&#13;
here! We're better than that. This&#13;
is a fine institution where the&#13;
professor's lectures have to compete&#13;
with manar drills, where the&#13;
most common place to sbJdy has a.&#13;
wonderful8imosphete thatincludes&#13;
a temperature warm enough to melt&#13;
Use our FREE Credit Union&#13;
Car Facts reference library and&#13;
pricing service!&#13;
s...u.rll1l UW-l'IUIaiik ...,,10_ and mMh_&#13;
(ii)&#13;
Tallent Hall- Room 286 ~&#13;
553-2150 9:30-4:00 ~&#13;
� .• , •• " " ..... ' 1Ii".·.j .-'J :i , ., If .... - ........ f .. • .. • .. •.• '0" .-,;. ...... - ...&#13;
~1~1~ ' '''r ··..~p~t~igQt I&#13;
Sandra Riese, Director of SlUdem Health Services, examines a student&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Health Services&#13;
by Toe! McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
StudentHealth Services meets&#13;
a varietyof needs for students at&#13;
UniversityofWisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Theyare directly involved in bOth&#13;
activeand promotional campaigns&#13;
IofOSleroptimumperl"ormanceand&#13;
maximumhealth for all students.&#13;
1'heyare ahealth clinic, and as&#13;
SUCh,they administer to the needs&#13;
oflbe injured, provide strep throat&#13;
screenings,check blood pressure,&#13;
remove stitches; and practice other&#13;
firstaid techniques. Though they&#13;
~ aseparate entity supported by&#13;
UFAC funding, yOOy can also&#13;
~ students to Southeastern •&#13;
'I' IlyPractice Center ,located at&#13;
allentHall. Southeastern is paid&#13;
a yearly fee to provide services to&#13;
students,so much of the time, the'&#13;
referred service may be free, if&#13;
~Channels are used. Though&#13;
tUdentHealth Services can also&#13;
ref~r to other hospitals, the services&#13;
rendered by those organizations&#13;
are usually billed to the recipient&#13;
of the service.&#13;
AcCording to Sandra Riese,&#13;
Director of Student Health Services,&#13;
they can dispense over-thecounter&#13;
medication. offer birth&#13;
control and family planning information,&#13;
and will provide contraceptivesforanominalcharge.&#13;
Birth&#13;
control pills must be prescribed by&#13;
a physician. They also offer pregnlll1cy&#13;
testing. and a treatment and&#13;
referral service for students suffering&#13;
from, or suspecting that they&#13;
have cOntracted, a sexually transmitted&#13;
disease.&#13;
CoordiDation of health insurance&#13;
planS is also conducted by&#13;
Student Health Services. Special&#13;
planSareavailabieforinternational&#13;
students. as well as the more standard&#13;
format offered to the general&#13;
studentbody. FormsneeessaJYfor&#13;
application are available in their&#13;
office, located in Molinaro D1I5.&#13;
It is advised that all students have&#13;
some form of insurance coverage,&#13;
Whether through parents or family,&#13;
or by purchaseofan individual&#13;
policy.&#13;
. UW-Parkside is attempting to&#13;
accommodate a growing population&#13;
of disabled students. This year,&#13;
we have approximately six students&#13;
with severe mobility difficulties,&#13;
as weIl as many slUdentswith other&#13;
types of disabilities, such as arthritis&#13;
or dyslexia. SlUdent Health&#13;
Services helps to provide for transportation&#13;
arrangements within the&#13;
school when neeessaJY, and continually&#13;
tries to assist disabled students&#13;
hoping to enter the mainstream&#13;
of campus activitY.&#13;
Student Health Services also&#13;
coordinates its activities and services&#13;
with the counseling staff,&#13;
Director of Residence Life. and&#13;
Director of Student.Life to meet&#13;
psychological needs. as weIl as&#13;
those of a physical nature. They&#13;
'have also nsofed blood drives,&#13;
Wellness Week, and educational&#13;
activities, such as National CollegiateAIcoholAwarenessWeek,of&#13;
which they are a co-sponsor&#13;
throughout this week. Last year.&#13;
they initiated a weight loss pr0-&#13;
gram, and this year, working with&#13;
Phy. Ed., have assisted in establishinganaerobicsclass.&#13;
The class&#13;
is held three days a week from&#13;
4:30-5:30 in the Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
Student Health Services isaIso&#13;
trying to develop a Peer Educator&#13;
Program to meet needs of students&#13;
afflicted with alcohol, drug, and&#13;
AIDS-related problems. The staff&#13;
is envisioned to he comprised of&#13;
students whose other responsibilities&#13;
will be to help deal with crises&#13;
of sexuality, rape, and obsessive&#13;
relationships. Student Health Services&#13;
also hopes to see the formation&#13;
of a student advisory group to&#13;
help them set priorities to more&#13;
efficiently utilize the services1hey&#13;
provide and make them more visible&#13;
to the student lation.&#13;
Ranier Pboro by Todd Goers&#13;
Though they had 3,572 contacts&#13;
wilh students this past year.&#13;
and dealt with approximately&#13;
twenty-five percent of the students&#13;
on campus, Student Health Services&#13;
is trying to reach even more&#13;
students in need of help. They&#13;
presently have two Registered&#13;
Nursesanda secretary on staff, and&#13;
are in the process of interviewing&#13;
prospeclS for the position of Substance&#13;
Abuse Coordinator. Localed&#13;
in Molinaro D115. they are&#13;
open from 8 am-4 :30 pm Monday&#13;
through Friday, in addition to exIended&#13;
hours to 6:30 pm on MondayandThwsday.&#13;
Their telephone&#13;
number is 553-2366.&#13;
If you have a heallh-related&#13;
problem. or if you suspect a problem&#13;
may exist, don't hesitate to&#13;
contact SlIIdent Health Services.&#13;
They're ready and willing to I!elp&#13;
you to have the most healthful.&#13;
positive experience possible at.&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
~~:: r Opinion&#13;
Procrastination and the one-eyed monster in my living room . &lt;' made Iwas outside that has a permanent plac .&#13;
51Udeat? WeD. Mr. I'D-do-it-!O- procraslinate with a Capital "P". blue roam It ~ . Hi . e m my&#13;
monow,lDmOC'JOW'sbere!(ietyouf andanexclamationpoinLIsUppose· scientifically studymg the.aerod~- heart, d soodcour~~e.ren~uy,andaIl&#13;
tuekus in mocion before a grade they wake up andsay,''Today,l'm namicpropertiesofthenelghbo~ s aroun. g cluzenshipmadellle&#13;
bootchcws itom" WeU.lhaven't goingtoProcrastinare! Honey,caD garage shingles. It had to be pam- w?rshIPtJ.te~undthatheWaiked.&#13;
been Iislening 10 my belIer jodg_ the chauffeur and have him fire up fully obvious to my paren~ that HIS true idenuty ,;as millionaire&#13;
ment,and IlOWmy life resembles a the jet boat," Unfortunarely. the they.needed to do somethl?g 10 B.ruceWayne,butlllaiwaysknow&#13;
bid movie version of "Sampson rest of us cannot afford to pro- waste my time less destrucuvely. hlmasBaun~n.Man,dldllovelhat&#13;
and Delilah". The coliseum is crastinare with class, and we are So, they plunked me down in front show.Whenltwas40'c1ock,th~&#13;
currently aashing about my head. forced to indulge in Ielevision. ofthebrainsuckingboxin the front was only one place you couldfind&#13;
Most people understand that Television. Yuck. Just the thought room. Big mistake. I marvelled at me, glued!O the boob-tuhe. Batman&#13;
Tick-Tocl&lt;, Mr. KInta! Tick- t/lereisanantowastingtime.How of the wordconjl!fe8 up images of the life of Mike and carol B~dy, was the King of the UHF airwaves&#13;
Tock! Tunes-a-wastin. and your developed your an is, is dependent Gopher on the "Love Boat". - and their six very groovy kids. I from 4 until 5:30. I still lovelhat&#13;
walChin' football! Tsltl TsIt! Tsk! on how much money you have. I'll be the first to admit ~t I expounded on the phllOso~hy of show to~hls day.1understand Why.&#13;
Procrastination is like a snake, People like Sam Johnson, of S.C. am a child of the T.V. My parental the Three Stooges. and the Wisdom I like this show so much. It's be·&#13;
If you're not careful, it will bite Johnson Wax, are probably the units used it very effectively to ofSpanky. Darla and Alfalfa. I was cause Ba.unan was the Leonardo&#13;
you. Yes folks, it's that timeof year Picassos of procrastination. They calm the young beast that was into awed by the wit of th~ Monkees. Da Vmc~ of Procrastination. He&#13;
again! It's the time when time canaff~dthingslikeboats,planes, everything in the house. I can't say and every other contrivance t~t had all this co.o&#13;
l&#13;
stuffthatheOOUld&#13;
catches up. 'The time when old and their own golf course. Obvi- that Iblame them. When I wasn't the screen writers came up With. run around With, but, since he was&#13;
Father Tune walks up and bonks ously, this doesn't mean that they throwing entire cans of Sani-F!ush While I might forget the rest in millionaire Bruce Wayne,hedidn't&#13;
you on the bean with a large ham- wasre their time; it just means that into the lOilettocheck out the neat time, there is one boyhood hero See Gabe's Gab a&#13;
mer, and says, "Hey, Stupid. Yes, they have some nice tools for ,p ge7&#13;
~i':::~=~=I",~",:=I:.;~:.:m~::;:=on:::~=:.:.::::::,~::he='::l~~::.--,~!::o~;.::~i~:~~g~r~~i:~f~~::::::r~t~~:~~hi~d~~::..~~ge~ly!.~~·~:~:~ Daymare .., ········c. "'ii·C;.·~·Aii&#13;
BUY -5 ELL -TRA D E For~/~u:;is~:'~; w~~ere,asSiglledt6i~~~;'S~li-~ei~~~e;;~~~~i~~~~ld~;~~~II.I hadput&#13;
?ff reading the essay until very late one night, Beforelbegan, I Pllg;~dthrtlugh the !Daterial to get an ideaof&#13;
NEW &amp; USED SPORTS EQUIPMENT Its length and how sore my back and neck were going to be afterabsorbingthetext. .. Afrerpaging through th~ essay, I determined thatl would mosllikelyfall asleep to awake with backwards&#13;
black pnnt tr3?sferred to myfaceand forehead. However, I began toc(ll1ce~lnlte on the multitude of tinylellers&#13;
that were stanng back at m~~ ... ..... ... ......\ ...&#13;
.....Well, throughthe~ssaY,Ueu.nd that I was stillinterestedin the'ti,iith~thad ~n written over a century&#13;
ago. I was completely Immersed 10 what Emersonhad wntten. He.was telling me 10 ignore society and be&#13;
a complete mdlVldual".He S31dthat what other people think dqesn'lmatter andJhat I should do what I want&#13;
Ana II people nusun&lt;lerstand me,that's oleay. . . . . ... . ...... .... ..&#13;
.. The next [];J'yIwent II&gt;Eng;lish claSs and found my professor's lectUre Intensely interesting as he delved&#13;
1OtoEmerso? s essay. At that time Iexamined my life and foundthat Iwasn'.t happy or satisfied. I decided&#13;
10 take drasuc measures 10 remedy my situation. .&#13;
I rush~ inin the Studenl RecordsOffice and quickly filled out anad\l!drop form. Ihanded the slipto the&#13;
woman be~md the coun~rands~~T~gy~ ~l:&gt;f !Dyclas~fronnnYS&lt;ihedule. A sense of freedom swept&#13;
i through ~e.;IexP'7~}tlRJlellc9Tfl:&gt;rt1pg;R!i~@J~ling,\V!tenirl· U1ith .it.waSactuaIly frightening&#13;
. to'~ ~~t'a~ehaIj~ay;~~?g;~!.~clclrfl!a;~&amp;!iVfltlliBa~I~?mg·~~%r?'*?t~~PI~'!lYOffreetime&#13;
i •....,....••.•...... ted, di~ntI.,I'o'fasJ~ 'o'fliJitlj~~gp;orOf~~Jl\i!!lZatlon; lwguldhil"eto get a 'ob!&#13;
~T~._.l_I(\if I started calling around looki·· ~ .··k/· ~eWJ!taaIready reallZed,I had.to getaJob.&#13;
an ad in the pa.·.per.····fro...· m·.a·..···...•. .nn.··.··.···.· •..·-.· ..·.··.·.·.' .. ·.•· .•.8g;..'ood'.&#13;
O&#13;
. ..e ..,,,.~ng g .f.s'!;o.r.. store . J".•...•.. l)e;lI' u.Jl..di..m)lhouseld .·d·d &gt;... ·.dri...•.;t~~y~.an.••·...Yl~c~:;j;he ;;~~.iii.iY.l.~aS.d.e;;p;,l'ate.1 ,. ,saw&#13;
The few moments thatl·····.···· .t!.tfu\ ......••. ,...................•........ ;.&gt;.~!,~.tqrun m.and.grabanappbcanon.&#13;
own ageimd·old~r wortd~~~~~Sil~k&amp;~I;~'WR6I;~t~~e?~~B1i,ryJjii ••W~T09'i)ISli'" pe,oplemy&#13;
freedom, no sense of bliss' what lsa·...."tilfit' ..•••.......~PWtR~~hPfth~lf facesil saw no uace of&#13;
.we are ts refleded fremont ..,i~ffl:)T~~~!WII~~.":or~!!~!Ichailgedlmmensel)l&gt;Hesatd&#13;
::'$:!~£~~~it1ta~~.: thaIwho&#13;
to~dft!~6,~~~oujd ~~~i\~~K'¥ihi'ii~kbr~~i!i!r~tP~~fl1'¥·'i?§§~~.l:&gt;Tlh~~P!~*e~;;d;untel. He&#13;
Afrer saymg gOpd,bye; [bungihiili;tI~!1 mad~iji¢nght!leclSlon, .. ..'....&#13;
?~~~#.A~:&#13;
by&#13;
Gabe&#13;
Kluka&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
GOLF&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
FISHING&#13;
SKATING&#13;
CAMPING&#13;
SKIING&#13;
BIKES&#13;
}&#13;
October 18,I~&#13;
8020 Durand Ave.&#13;
(Comer ofHWY.ll &amp; Willow Rd.)&#13;
Phone: 886-4949&#13;
..&#13;
� 18,1990 • OpinIon''': H -.~ - ] -=RaD=ger=,Page~7&#13;
co~munity members nutritionally insecure&#13;
!low many. nmes ~ave. ~ou yourpangsofhunger. ~oundseasy people find themselves just barely simple enough. Next lime you run in each of Parkside's buildings.&#13;
iived !hisscenano? You re sunng enough, but for a gr.ow~n~number able to cover shelter and utility toyour local storetoeureamunchie They are for FOOD ONLY please&#13;
~claSSlIIldyouhearalo~rumble o!ourlocalpopulauontllSnolthat expenses. The result of this is auack, pick up a non-perishable usethemassuch,thankyou.~get&#13;
COU!iPgfrom yourabdommal area. slmt&gt;le.. ". . usually foregoing a meal or two a item to donare or forego a soda off your cans and bring them in!&#13;
YllJIfaceturnS red and you find . While the cost of.Iiving has day in order to try to feed their occasionally and buy a can good Sara J:.emmon:I' Walley&#13;
yourse!flookingat the clock to see Increased, wages have ·not risen children decently. Local foodpan- fora familyinneed. Thismightnot WargoIet, Maggie Frymue.&#13;
bOWllIuchmoretime.islefto~c1ass proponionally. ~eresultofthisis tries can only do so much because sound like much, but if half of FOOD FOR FAMlLIES COMtillyoucansilencethlsbeasllnSlde&#13;
the new.wo.rkl~g poor. These this s.ituation is growing at an Parkside's popu~tion did this we MlTrEE&#13;
of you. hardworking individuals make too alarming rare. could help all~vlare a shameful&#13;
When class is over you muchtobeeligibleforfoodstamps Right about this time, hope- situationinourlocalcommunities.&#13;
speedily approachthe nearest cof- and not enough to be able to afford fully you are asking what you can Containers for donated food items&#13;
lee shop or cafeteria to remedy three square meals daily. These' do to help. The solution seems will be the shopping carts located&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
CoI\linued from page 6&#13;
bave 1O)VOrk. Hell, he didn't even&#13;
bare ~ wash his underwear, be-&#13;
, cause Alfred would do it for him.&#13;
WeIl,eooughreminiscingforayear&#13;
h&amp;'i just been put oul, so I'll get&#13;
back to the point.&#13;
Nowthat Iam a college studen~I&#13;
havelearned that T.V. can&#13;
either be a great teacher, or it can&#13;
serve as a nice place to put your&#13;
brain forawhileif you don't want&#13;
IOtliink.Usua11yI choose the latter&#13;
option:Ialways wind up kicking&#13;
myselfinthebutt for sitting around&#13;
doingnothing except watching&#13;
television.Usually I stan kicking&#13;
alaround3am of the day that I am&#13;
supposedto takea test that is going&#13;
10eountas 75% of my grade. It&#13;
seemsthatIam always doing this&#13;
on Sundayor Monday night for&#13;
someodd reason. Could it be&#13;
football?I doubt it. Pick N' Save&#13;
jllSthada big sale on Sani-Flush,&#13;
andI'vejustrediscovered the nifty&#13;
bluefoam.&#13;
Letters&#13;
Continuedfrom page 4&#13;
, .&#13;
HERE'S WHY&#13;
THE SMART MONEY AT&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
. IS GOING WITH TIAA-CREF&#13;
AS IF THE FUTURE DEPENDED ON IT.&#13;
B&#13;
ecause it does. Smart investors&#13;
know that your future depends on&#13;
how wen your retirement system&#13;
performs. TIAA-CREF has been the&#13;
premier retirement system for people&#13;
in education and research for over 70&#13;
years. We have enabled over 200,000&#13;
people like you to enjoy a comfortable&#13;
retirement. And over 1,000,000 m?re&#13;
are now planning for the future With&#13;
TIAA-CREF.&#13;
SMART MONEY LOOKS FOR SECURITY,&#13;
GROWTH AND DIVERSITY FOR&#13;
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Security-so the res~urces are there&#13;
when it is time to retire. Growth-so&#13;
you'll have enough income for the&#13;
kind of retirement you want. And.&#13;
diversity-to help protect you against&#13;
market volatility and to let you benefit&#13;
from several types of investments.&#13;
THAT'S EXACItY WHAT YOU GET&#13;
WITH TIAA-CREF.&#13;
TIAA offers you the safety of a&#13;
traditional annuity that gu~teeS f&#13;
our rincipal plus a speclfia;t ~te 0&#13;
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growth through dividends. CREF:s&#13;
variable annuity offers opporturutles&#13;
for growth through four different&#13;
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with the long-term perspective essential&#13;
to sound retirement planning:&#13;
The CREF Stock Account&#13;
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CALL 1-800-842·2776&#13;
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Our experienced retirement counse.lors&#13;
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and ten you more about retirement&#13;
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Experience. Performance. Strength.&#13;
Your future is protected by the largest&#13;
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We have done so wen, for so many, for&#13;
so long, that we currently manage&#13;
some $85 billion in assets.&#13;
Ensuring the future&#13;
for those who shape it.Oft&#13;
tion? Will precedent determine&#13;
studentsfutureinvolvement, orlack&#13;
orinvolvementpolitically? Will&#13;
this generationbe the generation&#13;
demandingabeuerplace to live for&#13;
usall?·Mustit take another WAR&#13;
10 encouragethe American Youth&#13;
10 becomepolitically involved?&#13;
It's timethat people wake up.&#13;
If one doesn't appreciate what&#13;
politicsor politicians are supposed&#13;
10 doforone, the.answer isn't noninvolvement&#13;
If government is so&#13;
bad, thenone should fmd the time&#13;
10 get directly involved, consequentlyeliminating&#13;
the negatives&#13;
lhatareassociated with politics.&#13;
Hopefully, the non-particiPants&#13;
will not just attend college&#13;
butbeginto experience college at&#13;
its fullest. When an opportunity&#13;
arisessuchas"Political AwarenesS&#13;
WeeK 1990" in the future, as If&#13;
service to your country and to&#13;
Yllurself,attendandexpressyourself.&#13;
..l~~~~-'":-=~~~~~====:==~~~~;~~;;~~;;;~~~~;S2~ .' ' .• '.. . ., •..••• ~._ •• _._ .••.. •••.• , _'-"_~ __&#13;
." , 1- \ .~. ..... "" ~&#13;
~"- _"",~_.~hr~~.eE)J:~!'!!!-'2~,~:"~,,~ ...- ~--~&#13;
........... ---------&#13;
not be pailab\e under all institutional retirement plans., but are&#13;
• TheCREF BondMarket an~S;tii%~;c.:.==:&#13;
available-forall Supplemen and call 1 800 842-2733 ext 5509 for a . . luding-chargeS expenses, •&#13;
For more complete infonnatton'thelnc 1V'rh1l1.carefully before you invest or send money.&#13;
prospectus. Read pros ......·-&#13;
•&#13;
.•••••••• , ..... l .•&#13;
Last week in the Ranger, there&#13;
was an article that surprised me. It&#13;
was written by a student advocating&#13;
censorship; advocating the&#13;
abolishment of an individuals right&#13;
to be ignorant.&#13;
For those of you who don't&#13;
know, or just don't care, there has&#13;
beenagreatdea!ofdamagedoneto&#13;
the Constitution lately under the&#13;
guise of protection. In Florida,&#13;
they are banning records because&#13;
they are "obscene". InWisconsin&#13;
theyarebanning"racial,ethnicand&#13;
. sexual slurs".&#13;
Don't get me wrong; I believe&#13;
------------&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
sign up now in Coreer Center ,"&#13;
~&#13;
by&#13;
Stuart&#13;
RubBer&#13;
JUSlin AJetpv!er IIIlIl,as we'D&#13;
_timeS do, beaded 10 rile perk&#13;
__ boule tile ocber day; just&#13;
tile !WOolUS, him inhissaoUer, me&#13;
pushiDI, him Ii_ina asl COOlIDeIlIed&#13;
on what was going on&#13;
II'llUIld us- "Loot.aIl tile leaves&#13;
011 rile IlRCl; pretty soon rIle_&#13;
sweeper will comeandswceptllem&#13;
upl" at which point Justin&#13;
AJexJnder moves his hand in a&#13;
circular motion and mates a&#13;
'whooShing' sound like rile -&#13;
sweeper does. "What happened 10&#13;
those uees that used to be tbcIe7"&#13;
I'd say" wepasssome IrCCsturnps&#13;
that.-aiD after rile Village came&#13;
and cut down some dead IreCS on&#13;
our street - and Justin Alexander&#13;
raises his hand and drops it saying&#13;
'ka-boom' which is his pretty accurate&#13;
interpretation of what happened&#13;
as he watched the trees fallinI&#13;
rile day rile Village came.&#13;
•&#13;
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Inle.vlews:&#13;
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800-328-8282&#13;
by&#13;
Jim&#13;
Newcomb&#13;
that bigotry in any form is disgusting,&#13;
and that anyone who engages&#13;
in bigotry should be prepared to&#13;
suffer the consequences (like a&#13;
punch in the nose). I also believe&#13;
that individuals who engage in&#13;
prejudicial practices are wholly and&#13;
completely ignorant, and that those&#13;
individuals should be treated like&#13;
the idiots they are.&#13;
Ifurther believe that the state&#13;
cannot and should not legislate&#13;
~orality or our freedom of speech&#13;
tn any way. This includes banning&#13;
slurs, because they are also protected&#13;
under tho. Constitution.&#13;
Freedom is not all sweetness and&#13;
light Even freedom has a nasty&#13;
side to it .&#13;
Prejudices are destroyed&#13;
through education and interaction&#13;
not by making them illegal. '&#13;
The strangest part about this&#13;
whole mess is that itcomesou1of&#13;
the uw system- traditionalylibel1l&#13;
with a long record of proteeu..&#13;
Individual rights. Now, it seems&#13;
that they would do awaywith OIl&#13;
rights altogether.&#13;
Iunderstand why theyimplemented&#13;
the rule, but itiss badruJt.&#13;
If someone is ignorant ofs0mething,&#13;
you should educatedJelI,&#13;
not punish them. I do nothOld I&#13;
soft spot for bigots; aclually',l~&#13;
them but I do love my nglt&#13;
exp~ssion. Iamjust,.,en::&#13;
be ignorant as Iam to be&#13;
ened, aJlJI'&#13;
Remember, if yOU •&#13;
someonelOtamperwithyour~&#13;
you are allowing theffi~ "&#13;
. those rights. our, dIIII&#13;
fragile enough, don t weake'lf#-&#13;
any further. Or,asihesayt~,&#13;
"ifit ain't broke, doIl't fIXtl.&#13;
r ._.--- 1&#13;
. ;-~ I&#13;
SPORTS •&#13;
SECTlONB THURSDAY, OCfOBER 18, 1990 SECfIONB&#13;
Rangers keep Judson&#13;
#10 UW,.Parkside proves&#13;
rankings by beating # 11&#13;
ByJEFFLEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The UW -Parkside Rangers, the NAJA's tenth&#13;
ranked team, made a point for the ballot casters in their&#13;
2-1 victory over eleventh- ranked Judson College.&#13;
Playing on turf which went from yielding to&#13;
sloppy over the course of the match, the teams played&#13;
to a scoreless first half.&#13;
. Senior goalkeeper. Armando Carlo, made the&#13;
biggest play of the half, stopping aJudson penalty kick&#13;
at the 44:30 mark to preserve the deadlock.&#13;
Neitherteam wasable to break the scoring drought&#13;
until the 35:00 mark in the second half. Nick Herner&#13;
and Dennis Nerada hooked up to free Jens Hansen for&#13;
the first goal of the game in what turned into a mud bath&#13;
by that time.&#13;
With 29:45 left, UW-Parkside extended its lead,&#13;
as Chris Ryan converted a penalty kick after Bob&#13;
Rogers was tripped in the box.&#13;
That goal proved to be an important one, as&#13;
Judson went to the offensive. With just under 20&#13;
minutes remaining, Carlo's shutout was gone as Sakie&#13;
Brown converted from the up corner for the Eagles.&#13;
The Eagle's continued their assault, but Carlo and&#13;
the Ranger defense was up to the task, holding off&#13;
Judson and retaining a 2-1 victory .&#13;
•Armando was sensational in goal today: said&#13;
coach Rick Kilps. 'We started strong as a team today,&#13;
but asthe field degenerated, sodid we. Judson isa very&#13;
good team. Our bigger game experience was a factor&#13;
today. ",.,,,,,,.,, Carlo's record moved to 7-0, and his six saves .T"''''''''OANGU&#13;
gave him his second shutout of the year. Mike Ryan helped the Rangers break-up a pass.&#13;
Paulson ste~~the~~~dis~~~~er!~~nt&#13;
By TED- MciNTYRE cussed his alternatives," Slated to Whitewater and won its match&#13;
Asst Sports Editor Dannehl. Paulson stressed that against the Lady Hawks.&#13;
• Dannehl was very helpful in his Over the weekend, Paulson&#13;
decision and made clear that his sent a leuer to senior C~Captiain&#13;
Unexpectedly and in the leave was not a result of interde- Colleen Ryan. Monday, Ryan read&#13;
middleofthesea8Oll, Terry Paulson partn!ental conflict. the Ieuerto therestofthesquad.lin&#13;
took a leave of absence from They decided that a leave of it Paulson encouraged the te8JD to&#13;
Volleyball's head coaching posi- absence was the best possible play hard and recalled some of his&#13;
uon leavmg his team Witha ilnrd of choice. The next day, Wednesday, more fond memories of the season.&#13;
its matches yet to playas they.pre- Dannehl met with Assistant Ath· "We were all surprised he&#13;
pare for post season compeUuon. letic Director and Softball Coach (Paulson) did not give us any indiIn&#13;
the thick of his eighth year Linda Draft Dannehl asked Draft cation ofit (Ihe leave): said junior&#13;
as head coach, Paulson cfecided to ifshe wouldtakeoverthecoaching Karen Strobl.&#13;
give up the restof the season re- spot for Paulson. Draft agreed to Responding to whether or not&#13;
guesting irnmedlll\r dismissal for coach the team for the remamderof he was surprised by Paulson's ac-&#13;
, personal reasons. the 90 season on an interim basis. lions, Dannehl answered, "Yes and&#13;
"I took the leave of absence PriortoWednesday'spractice no. Terry has been doing so much&#13;
for personal reasons," stated session, Paulson gathered liis tearn lately that 1thought he mIght have&#13;
Paulson in a phone conversauon. and told them, in private, that he to slow down."&#13;
"Right now I think the irnponant would no longer be their head "Terry II.robably will not be&#13;
thing is that. everyone (Paulson, coach. He wished them luck on coming back, said Dannehl. "We&#13;
athletic admlDlstraUOn, and the their season and told them to work would "like nothing beuer than to&#13;
team) moves on." hard for the remainder of it "None hire a new full-time coach."&#13;
TuesdaY October 9, Paulson of us knew why or what happened. New coach Linda Draft will&#13;
met with Athletic Director V&gt;fayne he just toldJlS he.w~ no! coaching need to quickly learn ber team and&#13;
Dannehl. He wanted ~. ~scuss anymore, said junior Lara what their strengths and weakwith&#13;
Dannehl the P9SslblliUes of Nlecku1aofbercoachesunexpected nesses are. Draft was Parkside's&#13;
his either resigning from the POSI- del'l1!!Ufe. first Volleyball coach in 1977 and&#13;
tion or laking a leave of absence. Thursday, after one day of left in 82 whenPauJson was hired.&#13;
defense has&#13;
ess in Rick&#13;
Year &amp;~=, 1989 ~;':':.""'~-h...~~&#13;
1988&#13;
1987&#13;
1986&#13;
1985&#13;
1984&#13;
Win %&#13;
.783&#13;
.571&#13;
.708&#13;
.619&#13;
.667&#13;
.636&#13;
-------~_.__ .--------------~&#13;
--------------------- .669&#13;
Totals 156 .692&#13;
1990 12&#13;
•&#13;
In place&#13;
with 20 charity tosses a piece.&#13;
In the bowling competition,&#13;
Lemmermann -eased his way to&#13;
victory with a 180, well below his'&#13;
average. Lance Schmidt t~ok&#13;
second with'a 160 and Tremelbng&#13;
rolled a 159 for third place. .&#13;
The badminton competition&#13;
featured a 18 man single elimination&#13;
tournament with Joel Dutton&#13;
defeating Ron Bills in the championship&#13;
match. "This event offered&#13;
the most intense head.to-head&#13;
competition of the day," stated&#13;
Lemmermann, who losn5·13 in&#13;
the semi-fmals to Dutton. .'&#13;
, Wessley pl1nWd, passed and&#13;
ki&lt;:ked his way to first place in the&#13;
football competition. Wessley&#13;
punted 64 yards, passed 63 yards&#13;
and kicked 43 yards for a total for&#13;
a total ofl70 yards. Lemmermann&#13;
finished second with 157 yardsand&#13;
Jim Bezotte placed third with 145.&#13;
Slippery conditions made this event&#13;
very interesting, several participants&#13;
took "diggers" during the&#13;
evenL&#13;
The swimming competition&#13;
saw Wessley capture his second&#13;
event of the day.· Wessley swam&#13;
the 50 meter course in 34.91 seconds,betteringMikeRohiandTom&#13;
Keefer by 2 seconds.&#13;
Mike Rohl sped around Inner&#13;
Loop Road in 2:17.33 to easily&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
By Sports Writer&#13;
DAVID&#13;
IXH1UY&#13;
Col_1st&#13;
A few weeks.., I wrote about the lack 01 swdeat support at uwPukside&#13;
athletic events. Well this is Homecoming week at UW -Parl&lt;side&#13;
IIId this is your cbInce 10prove 10 the athle1eS at school that you really do&#13;
care. Did lDyolIe IllCIId the voIIey1lll1 game last night against Milwaukee?&#13;
All ri&amp;Jtt. Even I'U admit that the Homecoming feslivities at UWPukside&#13;
Ire not the most exciting thing in the world. In fact, try as I did&#13;
last re-,I have 10admit that I had a hard time geuing inlOthe Homecoming&#13;
spirit. It would have been a lot easier if more SlUdents seemed&#13;
inlaesttd.&#13;
There really are a lot of events going on around school this week. If&#13;
you are not in the Hoomeoomingspirit ii's your own faulL Hey, it's not too&#13;
!lie 10 get invo1vedl There is a dIDce Friday night and a soccer game&#13;
apinIt SL Norben on SatunIay.&#13;
That's ri&amp;Jtt. Fer tboIe of you that didn'tlalow it,Partside does not&#13;
have a footNU _. Here, at UW -Partside,the Homecoming game is a&#13;
_gameplaye8at 1:30 this Saturday. So insteadofsitling around on&#13;
your bull 011 Saturday, go out 10 the soccer bowl and enjoy a good game.&#13;
Fer those of you who really want 10 get crazy you can even attend the&#13;
Fiflb Annual Partside Invitaliona1 at the cross country course before the&#13;
game. Beth the men's and women's teams will be competing against&#13;
some of the finest IUIlIlefS in the Midwest and they could really use your&#13;
support. TIle meet will begin at 12:00 and will end in lime for you toattend&#13;
die_game.&#13;
Ulll'oilli~y, the women's voUeybe1I team will be compeling in&#13;
MiIIIIeI'U this weetend. so if you're a voUey1lll1fan, it looks like you're&#13;
going IIIhave to make a road trip. If you are not in the mood for that, the&#13;
least you could do is attend their next lIome game on October 31, at 7:00&#13;
illthe Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
Hom r cmUng at Partside bas the potential to be a lot of fun, but it is&#13;
only as IIlIICb fun as you make it.I'm sure, withjusta littieeffort you could&#13;
have a great lime for the rest of this week. If you make the effort, but do&#13;
not hive a good lime, youca write. letter to the editor next week and rip&#13;
D1e!!8l= .&#13;
By MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The women's cross COWltry&#13;
team may be rIDding out how good&#13;
they can become. UW -Parl&lt;side&#13;
took their 114 ranking in the NAJA&#13;
poUs 10 UW-LaCrosse this past&#13;
weekend to face 25 other teams&#13;
from the Dakota~s, Iowa, Minnesota&#13;
and Wisconsin. Jenny Clark&#13;
and Trieia Breu ran personal bests&#13;
inthe rU1tand second spots and the&#13;
third tbru 1eIIthrunnen were aU at&#13;
their best limes, under their season&#13;
best, or within 10 seconds of their&#13;
besL The second place fmisb ran&#13;
their season record to 74-8.&#13;
Jenny Clark ended Tricia&#13;
Breu's stronbold on the III team&#13;
spot by running her best lime ever.&#13;
Coach DeWitt knows be bas a lot&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann dominated&#13;
the focldof26 and scored 50 out of&#13;
a possible 60 points to capture the&#13;
Iitleatthe Istannual UW-Parl&lt;side&#13;
SuperstarS Competilion.&#13;
Mike Robl and Scott Wessley&#13;
paced the rest of the field with 23&#13;
and 22 points respectively. Rohl&#13;
took firsrin one event and Wessley&#13;
grabbed 1st in two events.&#13;
Jim Koch, Parl&lt;side's Iatramural&#13;
direclor and creator of the&#13;
Superstars contest, was very&#13;
pleased with the competilion in&#13;
this the innagural year.&#13;
"We had 26 participants,&#13;
which is probaly the most ever that&#13;
have participated in a one day intramural&#13;
event at Parkside."&#13;
Friday's four hour affair saw&#13;
athletes competing in six of nine&#13;
events, with the top six finishers in&#13;
each event receiving points. Ten&#13;
for the winner, eight for the runnerup,&#13;
six for third, four for fourth,&#13;
and two for sixth. The points were&#13;
then totaled todetermineParkside' s&#13;
best athletes. Complete results ill&#13;
Scoreboard Page 3B&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann began his&#13;
assault on the field by recording a&#13;
first place finish in the golfing&#13;
competition. Three shots were&#13;
made from 50 yards, with the 6&#13;
closest shots by each participam&#13;
taking home points. Lemmermann&#13;
placed his Titleist 2 '7" from thepin&#13;
(he missed the birdie putt) for a 1st&#13;
place finish, Eric Jorczak dropped&#13;
his 4' froin the pin for second and&#13;
Joe Munoz took third, 4'5" away.&#13;
Lemmermann continued his&#13;
dominance by nailing 21 out of 25&#13;
free throws in the basketball competition.&#13;
Robert Brielmaier and&#13;
Keith Casper tied for second place.&#13;
DeWitt felt his team ran a consistent&#13;
and even race. The team kept&#13;
moving up little by little at each of&#13;
themilemarks. UW·Parksidewent&#13;
from 124 points at the mile to 106&#13;
at the two mile and passed 10 more&#13;
runners to finish with 96 points.&#13;
Coach DeWitt is still looking for&#13;
someone took take a hold on the&#13;
teams 5th spot and close the gap on&#13;
the lop 4 which was at :30 seconds .&#13;
on Saturday.&#13;
With this big confidence&#13;
builder behind them they are right&#13;
on schedule for Natiollals, which"&#13;
are only 5 weeks away.&#13;
Potential All-Stars bring&#13;
deptA, title hopes to Bulls&#13;
By&#13;
JIM&#13;
N'..WfMJ&#13;
Columnist&#13;
The Chicago Bulls have begun their pre· season, and they looklitt&#13;
they j~st might win the NJilA Championship this year.&#13;
. Wltlt the addition of Cliff Levingston and Dennis Hopson the Bulls&#13;
have gamed something they have needed for theJast few years,depth,&#13;
Last year, Bulls starters had to scrape and claw through longer·thall·&#13;
average p~aying minutes to stay in contenlion. This year, theycan resL&#13;
Last year, the bench was average atbesL This year, with 2 newporential&#13;
AlI·Stars on the bench, even Superstar Michael Jordan will get a mo:&#13;
h&#13;
deserved rest.&#13;
What to look for this season: The Bulls new personnel promiserresh&#13;
legged starters and a "deeper" bench. With the addilion ofLevingslOnWll&#13;
H~psonalSO comes rebounding, an area the Bulls needed improvementm,&#13;
Michael Jordan, the Bulls resident super.athelete may be evenm(lC&#13;
dangerous this year now that he can come off-CO~ for longerstin~,A&#13;
~ell rested Jordan could make the difference against the DetrOitpjslOOS&#13;
m the play-offs. . I&#13;
, ,~cij,"!: Ifitisn'tobvidus aire3:dy,1 believe theBu1ISwinwin~&#13;
diVISIon, thel1'conference, and then the NBA Championship. GoBuiJll&#13;
STANDINGS'&#13;
-&#13;
~ L Ecr fE&#13;
UOPP'" I&#13;
5 0 1.000 181&#13;
I.'D1"'" Team 3 I .750 122&#13;
(iiIO)''' Hi. Posse 3 2 .600 125&#13;
UOPP"'n 2 2 .500 95&#13;
1b&lt;W ......&#13;
2 2 .500 76&#13;
KiIo'A~ I&#13;
4 .200 84&#13;
1b&lt;(lolIdIOI&#13;
0 5 .000 20&#13;
SCOREBOARD '.'-----'&#13;
EAST DIVISION&#13;
~ ~&#13;
LA Dream Team 4&#13;
Black Walch 4&#13;
OWe &amp;:. His Posse 2&#13;
OldSpi.. 0&#13;
fa&#13;
40&#13;
40&#13;
90&#13;
103&#13;
104&#13;
166&#13;
126-&#13;
1112&#13;
2&#13;
2112&#13;
2112&#13;
3112&#13;
5&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S SCHEDULE&#13;
Monday, Oct. 22&#13;
The Gauchos YS. Grapplers I·~4:00&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse vs. LA Dream Team-·S;OO&#13;
LA Dr .... Team 28,&#13;
Tbe Gauchos 0&#13;
IAQApTeun&#13;
s yet nm·Lemmennann&#13;
15yd pIS._McKowen from Lem&#13;
2 ydpass-McKowen from Lem&#13;
15yd run-Hall&#13;
Ther.....&#13;
NoSoorinI·&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24&#13;
Grapplers n vs. The Warriors--4:00&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
at Carroll College&#13;
T .... Overallllesults:&#13;
~ E2inI!&#13;
UW-5tevens Point 32&#13;
Moomoulh Coll. 50&#13;
UW.Parkslde 72&#13;
Carroll Coil 101&#13;
U. of Chicago 152&#13;
UW-Whitewater 201&#13;
SI. Nomens 218&#13;
MilwaukeeTech. 222&#13;
Ripon Coil 264&#13;
MadisonTech 271&#13;
UW.Parkstde R.unners&#13;
l!!IIl! Time&#13;
Pat Kochanski&#13;
Tim Reeves&#13;
Kilt Miller&#13;
Steve Rocha&#13;
Tracy Norstrom&#13;
Todd Weber&#13;
Pat Kuhlman&#13;
Chris Henkes&#13;
Kevin Collins&#13;
KenByom&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
UW-LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
~&#13;
l.&#13;
Z.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
Top 10T .. m Ilesults:&#13;
~ fQiDl!&#13;
South Dakota State 52&#13;
UW.Parkslde 96&#13;
Nonh Dakota State 118&#13;
SI. Thomas Coll. 157&#13;
. Simpson College 226&#13;
.1J.Minnesota 235&#13;
GAME SUMMARIES&#13;
Grapplen I 47,&#13;
Grapple", 116&#13;
~ pass-Hm .. er from Price&#13;
. '5 ydpass·Ydcfrom Pri ce&#13;
35 yd pass-Mahre from Pri ce&#13;
SOydint .... m-Mahre&#13;
20yd pass-Hemauer from Price&#13;
40yd pass-Mahre from Pri ce&#13;
lOyd int .... m-WessleyiHufnu,&#13;
liIJIlJim.II&#13;
5ydlllJl'Dunon&#13;
rJs&#13;
l.&#13;
2-&#13;
3,&#13;
4,&#13;
5.&#13;
6-&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
9.&#13;
10.&#13;
Elm&#13;
5&#13;
8&#13;
20&#13;
22&#13;
24&#13;
30&#13;
33&#13;
46&#13;
51&#13;
52&#13;
..,&#13;
. Glrdy &amp; His Posse2~&#13;
The Warriors 6&#13;
"Girdy &amp;: Hi! Posse&#13;
- 50 yd pass; Telzlafffrom Vorphal&#13;
25 yd pass-Tet2lafUrom V~rphal&#13;
20 yd pass-Enter from Vorphal&#13;
50 yd pass.Tetzlaff from Vorphal&#13;
TheWaqiou&#13;
60 yd run-Breilmaier&#13;
Women's Cross Country (continued)&#13;
7. OW-Eau Claire 256&#13;
8. UW -laCrosse 263&#13;
...9. UW-Wh~water 266&#13;
10. SI. poud li.·· 267-&#13;
&amp;£&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
18&#13;
22&#13;
46&#13;
52&#13;
59&#13;
60&#13;
66&#13;
~&#13;
\.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
UW.Parttside's Overall Record:&#13;
(alter 4 meets) 74-8&#13;
UW.Parkslde Rudners&#13;
lS!!M ]'im§&#13;
Jenny Cark 18, II&#13;
Tricia Breu 18:19&#13;
Pau\a SIOkmllll 18,46&#13;
Lorri oOBlieck 18,50&#13;
Dee Collier 19,20&#13;
Wendy Orlowski 19,25&#13;
Ann SlOkmllll 19,31&#13;
Tara Roy 19,34&#13;
Veronica Chamlee 19,41&#13;
NAIA NATIONAL IlANKINGS&#13;
woMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Iwn&#13;
Adams Stale&#13;
Northern Florida&#13;
Hillsdale, MI&#13;
UW·PAIlKSIDE&#13;
Pacific Lutheran&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
UW.~atkside Men's Bowling Results&#13;
Midwest Collegiate Invite&#13;
at Red Carpet Lanes Bowlero&#13;
Mllwauk~ Wisconsin&#13;
October 13-14 (partial tesuhs)&#13;
. Place&#13;
I: .&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
~.&#13;
5:&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
9.&#13;
10:&#13;
17,&#13;
25.&#13;
36.&#13;
Team Event&#13;
Th!m. Total Pins&#13;
UW ·Milwaukee 2700&#13;
.W. "lliinois *1 2680&#13;
.Ohio St. A 2664&#13;
Saginaw Valley St. 2627&#13;
-Northem lllinois U. 2599&#13;
Minnesota . 2556&#13;
UW-Whitewater*l 2543&#13;
Ohio State B 2515&#13;
SVSU 2495&#13;
NDSUMI 2475&#13;
UW.Parkskie "A" 240'7&#13;
UW.Parkslde ''C'' Z33S&#13;
VW·Parkside "B" USI&#13;
. All-Events tJW·Parkside Bowlers&#13;
(12 games)&#13;
§oom&#13;
2743&#13;
2565&#13;
2444&#13;
2440&#13;
2376&#13;
2327&#13;
2312&#13;
2303.&#13;
2301&#13;
2281&#13;
2276&#13;
2144&#13;
.lS!!M&#13;
Mark Taylor.&#13;
Jeff Lemmerrnann&#13;
-Mike Schwam&#13;
JOhn Brook.&#13;
Jobn Scot.&#13;
Jeff Reddick&#13;
Soon Brandt&#13;
Andy Beger&#13;
Chris Roggemann&#13;
Rob Bohnlein&#13;
Mario Riccio&#13;
. Steve Me11iris&#13;
1m.&#13;
228.6&#13;
213.8&#13;
203.7&#13;
203.3&#13;
198&#13;
193.9&#13;
192.7&#13;
191.9&#13;
191.8&#13;
190.1&#13;
189.7&#13;
178.7&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
KI:&#13;
.800&#13;
.800&#13;
.400&#13;
.000&#13;
EE&#13;
352&#13;
420&#13;
294&#13;
242&#13;
fa&#13;
272&#13;
276&#13;
328&#13;
164&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
.WEST DIVISION&#13;
~ ~ L KI: EE fa !ill&#13;
Bad Apples 5 0 1.000 358 234&#13;
Prime Time 3 2 .600 322 342 2&#13;
Warm Black labels I 4 .200 242 360 4&#13;
aaafJing Annadillos I 4 .200 272 164 4&#13;
TONIGHT'S GAMES&#13;
nunday, Oct. 11&#13;
OwIing Asmidillos VI. Wann Black Labels~,oo&#13;
B..LAppks VI. Prime Tune ..7,oo&#13;
LA Dream Team VI. Old Spi.... 7'OO&#13;
Black WOld&gt; VI. Gird)' ok !lis Posse-l,oo&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 2J&#13;
Prime Tune vs. Wann Black Labe1s--6:00&#13;
Bad Apples VI. OIarsms Annad_--7,oo&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse vs. Old Spice--7:OO&#13;
Black Walch VI. LA Dream Team .. 8,OO&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT 11 RESULTS&#13;
24-30 54 PrIme Time&#13;
32-34 66 Old Spke&#13;
SCORING&#13;
LA Dream Tum&#13;
Bad AJlIIIes&#13;
SCORING&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
Lemmermann-14. Anhold-6.McKowen4,Lewis-6,Neesc-6,Pluskota·S.&#13;
Bad Apples&#13;
Whiuicr-12.Sclunidunann _12,Hemeauer10,&#13;
T opp-4 ,Som en skc -6 ,N ow ick i2O,Kawczynski--2.&#13;
Supcrst"rs&#13;
Overall Results&#13;
1.leffLemmennann 50 pt.&#13;
2. Mike Rohl 23 pts&#13;
3. ScoU Wessley 22pts&#13;
4. Kevin Tremc\linl 21 pts&#13;
5. Jim Be-. 19 pt •.&#13;
6. Roben Briclmaier 17 plS&#13;
7. Ron Bills 15 pt.&#13;
7. Tom Keefer 15 pt.&#13;
9. Keilh Casper 14 pt.&#13;
10. Ericlorczak 12.5 pt.&#13;
Badminton - Toumey Results&#13;
1. Joel Dutton&#13;
2. Ron Bills&#13;
:3. Jeff LemmennalUl&#13;
4. Kevin Tremelling&#13;
S. Scott Wessley&#13;
Baskctbal1-·FfM· PTA&#13;
1. Jeff Lemmermann 21-25&#13;
2. Roben Brielmaier 2Q...25&#13;
2. Keith Casper 2Q...25&#13;
4. Ron Bills 19-25&#13;
4. Eric Jorczak 19-15&#13;
Bicycling - 1.1miles&#13;
I. Mike Robl z,17.33&#13;
2. Robert Brielmaier 2:3212&#13;
3. Jeff ~mennann B9.33&#13;
4. Lan" Schmitt 2,40.18&#13;
5. 'Don Malhes 2,40.61&#13;
Bowling - I Game Score&#13;
1. Jeff J..,emmennann&#13;
2. Lance Schmiu&#13;
3. Kevin Tremclling&#13;
4. Keith Casper&#13;
FootbaIl- YardaBe Tola1s&#13;
1. ScoU Wcssley 170 yds&#13;
2. Jeff Lemmennann 157 yd.&#13;
3. Jim Be-'&gt; 145 yd.&#13;
4. Ron Bill' 129 yd. '&#13;
5. Rick HofDU' 128 ycls&#13;
GoU • J)istlIIlee From The Pin&#13;
I. Jeff Lemme_ 2'7-&#13;
2. Eric J..... 4'0"&#13;
3. J«MunoZ. 4'S"&#13;
4. Jim Be-'&gt; 7'4"&#13;
~. JocI [)UltOt1 7'9"&#13;
~&#13;
156&#13;
152 .&#13;
143&#13;
133&#13;
128&#13;
uw.Parkside Volleyball Results&#13;
QWOnent ~sult !£Qm.&#13;
UW_Whitewater W 15_2.10-15.&#13;
15-11,15-12&#13;
27,00&#13;
27,21&#13;
. 28m&#13;
2UI&#13;
28,17&#13;
28m&#13;
28,33&#13;
29,11&#13;
29,29&#13;
29m&#13;
Parkslde Intramural Volleyball League&#13;
League Standings&#13;
'jL&#13;
2&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
o&#13;
ThA!!1&#13;
PumP It lip&#13;
The UntoUChables&#13;
The Invaders&#13;
YMCA posse&#13;
L&#13;
o&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
2&#13;
League Re$ults:&#13;
PumP It Up d. The UntoUChables,&#13;
. 4-15; 15-11; 11·1~&#13;
Thelnvaders II. YMCA Posse,&#13;
15-8; 17-15&#13;
Tonight's Game .&#13;
YMCA posse vs. The UntoUcbables.&#13;
. TuesdaY's Camt:&#13;
PumP It Up VI. 'Ibe Invad~rs&#13;
184&#13;
160&#13;
159&#13;
156&#13;
511-44&#13;
26-34 BlackWatth&#13;
Charging AnnadU~&#13;
SmilING&#13;
Black Walch&#13;
RoeGGc_8.MiteheU-8,Toliver-20.Owens18.SliIIs·2.!lrown-2I)adtsonIO.&#13;
C1t ..... g Annadlltas&#13;
Siclen_22,Rueth-6,Solomon·4.Smerz14.&#13;
Ydc_8.!lrockmllll-6,Posil-2.&#13;
Bad AJlIIIes 42-42&#13;
Wann Black Label 211-20&#13;
sCORING Bad AJlIIles&#13;
Schmidtm.nn-~6.Whittier.20.Topp.&#13;
2,Somenske-6,Hemauer-Io,Kawczynski8,p.Schmidlmann-12.&#13;
Warm Black Label&#13;
K. Lazarski -S,Waldal-8,Tctzlaff -4,Bolshek·&#13;
2.Groell-6,A. Lazanki-12.&#13;
PrIme Time&#13;
Charging AnnadilloS&#13;
SCORING&#13;
40-32&#13;
26-38&#13;
( ro;,;s Countn&#13;
PrIme Time&#13;
Was hington-12,Owcns -20,Emer·&#13;
10,G1enecki.S,Schneidu-22.&#13;
Charging AnnadUlOS&#13;
Sielen-14 ,Solomon-S,Rueth -10, Yde2,P05ig-6,5merz-24.&#13;
6. Troy Broc\cmarI 12T&#13;
Running - 880 yard Dash&#13;
1. Keith. Casper 2:16&#13;
2: [)on Mathes 2:17&#13;
3. Mike Rohl 2,19.9&#13;
4. Joe Munol. 2:22.'3&#13;
~. Roben Bric\nlaier 2.22.9&#13;
6. EricJ~uk 2~2&#13;
S......... I- so yards&#13;
I. Scoa. Wesslc)' 34.91&#13;
2. Tom Keefer 37.0&#13;
2. Mike Rohl 37.0&#13;
4. Chris Buckley 42.0&#13;
5. Darin Tiedt 50.0&#13;
6. l&lt;cvin TremcIlinl 53.0&#13;
Weighl1iftinl' Ovcrbead Press&#13;
I. Kevin T.... eIling 2551ba&#13;
32·30&#13;
34-26&#13;
62&#13;
60&#13;
Prime Time&#13;
Meadows-2. Owens-22, &amp;ner-16. GlenedU14,&#13;
Marl&lt; S-2._ W-2,Kcvin M-4 .&#13;
OldSpke&#13;
Porter-6.BrielnWcr-16,sranske-24,Harvey8,Kie1·2,Newman-4.&#13;
94&#13;
60&#13;
58&#13;
46 Glrdy ... His Posse 34-24&#13;
Warm 1lIa&lt;k LaJ&gt;eIs 22·24&#13;
SCORING&#13;
GlrdJ ... His Posse&#13;
Girdlikas.l0.Fcnnrick.IS,KoehlerII,VorpahI-6,Beler-4,1lcaslY-2.&#13;
W_ Black Lab*&#13;
K. Lazarski- J O.Tetzlaff -t 4.0hm·&#13;
8,A.Lazarski-8,WaIdal.().GrueU-6.&#13;
14&#13;
40&#13;
Black Walds J6.S2&#13;
Old Spice 34-24&#13;
SCORING&#13;
18&#13;
58&#13;
_Waldt&#13;
MilcheU.18,Owens-14.Slills-2,Brown26)&#13;
ackson-6,Tolivcr-18,ROClle-6.&#13;
Old Spice&#13;
Srmske_8,Harvey-2.BrielmauetI&#13;
O,Newman -12,R&lt;dlin -IO,KoIeno-16&#13;
72&#13;
64&#13;
52&#13;
60&#13;
Glrdy "His _ 24-28&#13;
LA Dream Tum 40-20&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Glrd1 " His Posse&#13;
Girdaikas_14,Fenneick-14,Koehler4,Vorpahl-6.Beger-S)lasty-6.&#13;
LA Drum Tum&#13;
Lemmermann- 8.HaU- t O,N cue2.Mclnty&#13;
re - 4 tA n hold -I 0 ,Pluskou·&#13;
14.McKowen-l2.&#13;
Lea - Minim 4 pmo' played&#13;
~wn §i ~&#13;
2. Sclunidunann S 20.0&#13;
3. Smen 5 20.0&#13;
4. Fcruuick ~ 19.2&#13;
5. Lewis 4 18.5&#13;
6. Owens 5 18.4&#13;
7. Whiui&lt;r ~ 17.6&#13;
8. Toliver S 16.0&#13;
9. McKowen 5 15.6&#13;
IQ.Emer 5 15.6&#13;
250lba&#13;
ZIOlba&#13;
20S lba&#13;
1851ba&#13;
1851ba&#13;
2. Tom Kiefer&#13;
3.JimBewue&#13;
4. Darin TIedt&#13;
~. Dan Pinncrud&#13;
5. Tim Whitin8&#13;
•&#13;
When people talk about the&#13;
UniversityofWisconsin·Parlcsides&#13;
Bowling program the talk usually&#13;
centers around John Brooks but&#13;
!hal may all be about 10 change.&#13;
Participating in lIIe Midwest ColIegiate&#13;
Bowling Championship's&#13;
at Milwaukee's Red Carpel&#13;
Bowlero laneson October 13111and&#13;
14111.UW·P Freshman Mark Taylor&#13;
stole the show as he rolled 10a&#13;
second place finish in 250 man&#13;
fJeld.&#13;
Taylor bowling on Parkside's&#13;
number "A" learn started out the&#13;
tournament in tbe doubles event&#13;
with a four game 101a1of 943.&#13;
Combined with partner Brooks'&#13;
&amp;42for an 1885101a1was good for&#13;
a fulll place finish.&#13;
In !he three game team event&#13;
Taylor's 653 series led !he way 10&#13;
a sevemeemh place finish willi a&#13;
team IOIa1of2407, Other members&#13;
of the learn were Jeff Reddick 583,&#13;
Mike Schwanz's 562 and Brooks'&#13;
609.&#13;
Butsunday was Taylor's day&#13;
as he shined in the singles event,&#13;
Firing off a much needed 1147&#13;
series for five games solidifing his&#13;
place in ihe muchcovetedtopeight&#13;
individuals.&#13;
While Taylor was the story of&#13;
!heweekendOlherParicside bowlers&#13;
shined as three teamsmade the trip&#13;
north. Team "C" consisted of Jeff&#13;
Lemmermann, Chris Roggemann,&#13;
Andy Beger and Rob Boehnlein&#13;
who placed 25111in the learn event&#13;
with a 2335 101a1.&#13;
Team"B" was SleveMenins, SCOlI&#13;
Brandt, Mario Riccio and John&#13;
SCOlIwho placed 361h in the 65&#13;
learn field.&#13;
Some impressive scores came&#13;
oUlofllledoubleseventasScwanz&#13;
and Reddick combined for a 1665,&#13;
Lemmermann and Roggemann hit&#13;
a 1578 and Beger -Boehnlein rolled&#13;
mM/Parkside's Jttlifete qftlie 'Week: "..,...",..,,..,.,,,,,,,&#13;
Taylor-edJor Success&#13;
ffiMan d The RANGER Sports Departmenr would like 10congratulate&#13;
bowler Mark Taylor, a freshman business major on his second place&#13;
finish at this past weekends Mid-Wesl Collegiate Invitational tournament,&#13;
Taylor started out the two day competition with a 943 four game&#13;
series in !hedoublesevenlcombining with partner John Brooks fora 1885&#13;
rulll place fmish overall. Taylor then led the way in the team event with&#13;
a 653 series. But Taylor was notquite done with Milwaukee's Red Carpet&#13;
Lanes Bowleroas Sunday he look control of his own destiny in !he singles&#13;
event, firing an 1147 five game total. For ihe twelve game tournament&#13;
averaged 228.6 (2743 total).&#13;
In the championship roll-offs Taylordefeated two lefthanders before&#13;
bowing 10MATC's Hal Petermann in the finals 222-206.&#13;
CongralUlalions MarIe on being !he ffiM/RANGER Athlete of the&#13;
Week. Mark TayJor&#13;
Men's CCX Impress&#13;
The Parkside men's cross .been a big question made, Derek&#13;
country ha~ their best showing of Brown the early season teaII11eader&#13;
the year this Saturday at Carroll is still oUI. Hopefully, he can soli&#13;
College. Pal Kochanski again was come back and join Tim Reeves&#13;
the ~ger l~der and placed 5th who was injured earlier, bot cot&#13;
overall In leOOmgParlcside to a 3rd I :08 from his last race and IS&#13;
place finish. Coach Lucian Rosa showing signs of being back. Their&#13;
was much happier with the effon besl shOWing of the year shouldbe&#13;
of his team. a confidence builder heading into&#13;
. The health of the tearn has !he Pmkside Invitational lIiisSat-&#13;
-- urday.&#13;
•&#13;
L18.199O&#13;
,~ .&#13;
~pectatlOns; . .&#13;
The Underground world of bombs and body odor&#13;
rage of el~erl~ women sporting in the middleofriJsh hour, glued in man and a parcel had been appre- (IRA), have succeeded in murdertheir&#13;
plastic ram hats and large, a stifled mass of human bodies. hendedattheOxfordCiIcusSlation. ing innocent bystanders over the&#13;
e~~ty J~ Penney ~hopping bags Arms grasp the handrail overhead What this wornan was trying to say years. .&#13;
SIt 10 parrs,. discussing the ~Ie of forbalance,andbeingofsuchshon I3thereuphemisticallywas thaUhey Althoughthetubeisexpens',ve&#13;
canned fruit at Sentry, Finally, stature, I see an army of exposed, thought this turkey had a bomb! ($14 for a week's pass), and.1 m&#13;
there are the school kids who storm reeking armpits surrounding me. The locals all groaned as if to forever waiting for the next tram to&#13;
the b~s and migrate to the rear as Atthis point, I close my eyes, suck say, "I don't have time for this arrive, there is a fascinatingaspect&#13;
they msult each other and park in my breath and concentrate on nonsense. I have an appoinunent to life underground. MUSICiansof&#13;
used bubble gum on the windows. the sweet smell of honeysuckle 'downtown at noon." My brain, all ages, abilities and instruments&#13;
It is a regular three-ring circus in wafting across an open field of however, was catapulted into hor- serenade in the stations. Hearing. a&#13;
the wonderful world of small town wildflowers, ' rible thoughts of explosives, spies violin play the Pachelbel Canon I,n&#13;
mass transportation. But even this Another observation worth andthe ideaofneverseeing daylight one of the long echoing halls IS&#13;
could not prepare me for the mentioning is passenger behavior again! Fortunately, we arrived spine-tingling,&#13;
transport system that enables a city aboard the tube, People try to lis- safely at the station, where I tip- I have the suspicion that ~hen&#13;
of ten million inhabitants to reach ten toother conversations and stare toed up the escalator to the fresh air I return home, the three-nng cucus&#13;
their destinations with an amazing at their fellow travellers, especially above. on the city bus will seem preuy&#13;
amount of success. Americans, without being too ob- The scary part is that bomb tame compared to the ~i1d world&#13;
The London underground vious, The British detect my threats are a common occurence in of mass transponauon m London.&#13;
subway, or the Tube as it is more American accent, which I never London. We have been wamed to&#13;
commonly referred to by the na- knew Ihad,rightaway. Theyrarely be aware of unauended briefcases&#13;
lives, will undoubtedly overwhelm just start up a conversation, which and packages. Terrorist organizathe&#13;
new kid on the block. Twelve is the same way it is athome. Ifyou tion like the Irish Republican Army&#13;
seperate lines intricately intertwine want to socialize on the bus from~&#13;
to create a complex network of Parkside!OtheFirs~Nationalb~, .:/) _•. r" ..&#13;
routes. Each line is color-coded the unwritten-rule IS that yu Sll m -. ~I ~ .. Q&#13;
for handy reference in choosing the front by "the talker." I haven' ,I '- Q&#13;
the most effective one to reach seen many of those in London. -U1.....~"'-.A..--3&#13;
Harrod's department store, Royal Lastweekanincidentoccurred BIG 5ROTHER/B1G ~\ST£R...&#13;
Alben Hall or Big Ben. while I rode the tube from&#13;
In theory, the tube sounds like Bayswater Station to Oxford Cir- (a) WACo ~ ROCK BA~D.&#13;
an ingenious creation. Speedy, cus that reminded me lam living in ~ (b' 1.IAC.1iilft.H·JfIH I\DUrll'C. \'1~B4".&#13;
accurate and efficient. However. a metropolitan z~, The train was z II WI'"J nto ~It\ t. N Vl\Wt.~~\)&#13;
there are unforeseen surprises delayed in the middle of the tunnel 1&gt; (C) IS A GROOP(f VQl\lNll£R5&#13;
lurking beneath the largest capital for about fifteen minutes befOre! \ ,IHO Il.'LI'·V' Co t&lt;YRV KID&#13;
in Europe. Though I try to avoid it, . the attendant walked through the w VI:. to toJ r;. I:.&#13;
I always find myselfridingthe tube car to announce that a SUspiCIOUS NEtD5 A FRI£t-JD,&#13;
fOR At.l"W~R,&#13;
CALL YOUR LOCAL BIG BROTHERS/&#13;
BIG SISTERS AGENCY&#13;
(ji)•&#13;
'llIG'llROTHERS/'llIG6ISTERS OF.:o.MERICA&#13;
by&#13;
.Gwen&#13;
Heller&#13;
Ican vividly recall those days&#13;
of myyouth whenI would whine&#13;
aboUtridingthe city bus home from&#13;
MarY D, Bradford High School. "I&#13;
bale k!" I would lament to my&#13;
1IIOlber" "Besides being packed to&#13;
Ibc gillswith sweaty adolescents.&#13;
it'S filthy and a social&#13;
embaraSSJDent!"&#13;
In college it has also been&#13;
necessary to catch the bus when a&#13;
ride was unavailable. The cast of&#13;
dJaJ1W;ters is an exotic blend, including&#13;
"the talker" who feels it is&#13;
his obligation to befriend each&#13;
pa!8elIgerby asking questions like&#13;
"Are you married?" and "Did you&#13;
walth'The Simpsons' last night?"&#13;
These personalities are easy to&#13;
detectupon boarding the craft because&#13;
they usually sit up close to&#13;
the front by the driver who they&#13;
know by name and how many&#13;
graodchiIdrenlie has. The entour'&#13;
..Inteniational&#13;
UW-Parkside's foreign students profiled&#13;
"more than happy to share experiences&#13;
(of their counrry) with other&#13;
students," says EdiIma, But, she&#13;
says, the main purpose of the club&#13;
is for everyone to "have a better&#13;
understanding of people around the&#13;
world, and to promote a better s0-&#13;
ciety." In addition to the International&#13;
Club, Abraham belong to the&#13;
Black Student Organization. But&#13;
his most irnponantactivity is being&#13;
a "member of the Parkside corn·&#13;
munitY, and relating to other stu·&#13;
dents as a communitY."&#13;
Oftentimes foreign students&#13;
are able to look on American societY&#13;
from a different perspecti~e&#13;
than one wbo has grown up In&#13;
America. But the several things&#13;
that Edilma and Abraham would&#13;
like to see changed in America are,&#13;
nodoubt,opinionsofmanypeople.&#13;
EdiIma wishes society would "stop&#13;
categorizing people" according to&#13;
their race. People should '100k a1&#13;
everybody the same· a1 the same&#13;
level. Look a1 individual back·&#13;
grounds,butdon'ternphasizethern.&#13;
and don't divide people because of&#13;
See Foreign Students page 18&#13;
Abraham says,"How I'm going to&#13;
by Tracie A. Nelson&#13;
achieve that end is uncertain." Edilma Rodriguez and&#13;
Abraham Makina are two of the IfEdilma and Abraham were&#13;
back home their lives wouldn '(be&#13;
manyforeign students here at UWParks'de&#13;
h aki Am 'ca drastica\lydifferent,forthey'dboth IW oarem ng en be involved in activities to help the their home forafew years~ Edilma, .&#13;
community. Back in Panama CItY,&#13;
fromPanama City, has lived in the Edilma belonged to the School of&#13;
UnitedStatessince-1986. She'sa • Public Relations, representing her&#13;
lransfer student from the Univer· I&#13;
,school at various city functions. t siii' of Wisconsin Wausau. major- ,&#13;
also comes as no surprise, gIven&#13;
ing in communications. Abraham, the location of Panama, thatEdilma&#13;
majoring in' political science, is swam a lot, when not teaching&#13;
fromMamelodi, an African town· folklore dancing to the commu'&#13;
shipsegregatedforNativeAfriC3ll!l, nity. Abraham didn't ,fi~~ much&#13;
located in South Africa. time forrecreational actlvlbesback&#13;
Like most foreign students. in Marnelodi,a1though this wasn't&#13;
Edilma and Abraham plan on reo because of the lack of game and&#13;
turning to their country after h II Says " recreation a s.&#13;
graduatlon. Edilma knows. she Abrah m "I'd consider myself a&#13;
wants to work in public relatlons. Ii ,~ ~ctivist back home. I'd&#13;
helping the people of her commu- POrathtl&#13;
toapoliticalmeetingthan&#13;
, h be 'II be ergo "&#13;
DIly. Exactly w at s WI , la soccer or go dancing.&#13;
doingisuncertain,becauseE~lma_ .p y BothEdilmaand Abraham are&#13;
says, "I don't know what the SIma' bersofthe International Club,&#13;
" , . h .. But mem 'd t, re lion (m Panama) ISng t now. 'd nt and vice-presl en -&#13;
. h' "0 presle at ~hatever Edilma does, s e s g • lively. They want evet?'0ne&#13;
tog to do it for the g~ of the :Ckside to knOw the club. IS open&#13;
country These sentlments are ryone not J' ust foreign stu-&#13;
. h to eve, b&#13;
shared by Abraham. Eve~~ualIY e dents. The students of the clu are&#13;
wants to get into pohtlcs. but&#13;
1~ ~Ra=qert:::.!-, Page=:..:.:;13&#13;
Call: 637-7625&#13;
Geek, Goblin or Goddesss&#13;
Be the life of the party&#13;
t\dressed in your costume&#13;
, bought for less at the II;&#13;
'. GOODWILL ' .&#13;
During our Ii ~\&#13;
MOONLIGHT MADNESS&#13;
Thursday, October 25th&#13;
5:00 pm to 9:00 pm&#13;
Special Sales· Door Prizes· Fun for All&#13;
~&#13;
TH~__ ~&#13;
GaJDWlll 5109 52nd Street&#13;
.... STORE Kenosha&#13;
Entertainment I .. ~1Ober18,~&#13;
Homecoming '90 at UW-Pa~kSlde&#13;
they will be here to rock untillhe&#13;
morning hours. Their music was&#13;
described by a band member&#13;
"young, youthful pop SOund.B~&#13;
it's not shallow!" For !he m~&#13;
p~, they play top 40 music and&#13;
mix their ongmal songs into ....&#13;
U' A· ·,"1 smg ~n pple MaeinlOsh&#13;
Computer gives them a more s0-&#13;
phisticated sound than alotof OI!let&#13;
bands.&#13;
. It allows them to have more&#13;
mstrumental possibilities than&#13;
regular five-piece baod wouldha;&#13;
Their look has changed Bgain&#13;
from the many times theY'veplaYed&#13;
at Parkside in the past, SOif you've&#13;
seen them before, be Plepared 10&#13;
take a second look. Ifyou haven't&#13;
had the opportunity yet, come 10&#13;
the dance and find OUL&#13;
GERARD will behere foryour&#13;
enjoyment, so take advantage of&#13;
this.&#13;
If you saw them at a bar or&#13;
dance club, you would have topay&#13;
$5. At Parkside, students can see •&#13;
GERARD for $2 and guests only&#13;
have to pay $3. So what's SlOpping&#13;
you?&#13;
=IlaJII«:=II~' PaBcc:a:c.:.14::....- --=- 1&#13;
Ballet comes to UW -Parkside&#13;
by 0.....Malland&#13;
Enterlaimnent Editor&#13;
Noted for its imaginative and&#13;
versatile presenllllioos, the internationally&#13;
renowned Ballet&#13;
Francais de Nancy breaks through&#13;
the boundaries between classical&#13;
and conremporary dance. Parkside&#13;
will get tOOopportunity 10 see why&#13;
the company's rcchnicaJ and sty.&#13;
listic transformllion hasaslOUnded&#13;
critics and audiences around the&#13;
world. Full houses, cheering and&#13;
standing ovations are everyday&#13;
occurrences for Ballet Francais de&#13;
Nancy.&#13;
Energy pulsates through their&#13;
repertoire, leaving you breathless&#13;
as you waich !heir soaring jumps&#13;
and expressive movements. One&#13;
critic mentioned ..... a disconcerting&#13;
energy, an explosive enthusiasm,&#13;
a craft that is amazing and,&#13;
above all, a lhirSl for dance that is&#13;
unquenchable ..." .&#13;
The ballet has assumed the&#13;
role of promoting dance, not only&#13;
throughout France, but also abroad&#13;
by staging approximately 120 performances&#13;
each year and making&#13;
several inrernationaJ lOUrS.&#13;
Under the artistic leadership&#13;
of Patriek Dupond, the company&#13;
has been able to use his remarkable&#13;
technique, sense of beauty and radiance&#13;
on stage 10 their advantage.&#13;
DupondhasbeenawardedtheGold&#13;
Medal at the Inrernational Competition&#13;
in Varna, Bulgaria Only two&#13;
dancers have ever been honored&#13;
with such a distinction before:&#13;
Vladimir Vassiliev and Mikhail&#13;
Baryshnikov.&#13;
Ifyou' d like to keep company&#13;
with the Ballet Francais de Nancy,&#13;
they will be perfonning in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre on&#13;
Sunday, October 21. The show&#13;
will Slart at 8 pm, and tickets are&#13;
only $4 for Parkside students and&#13;
$12for guests. If you'd like more&#13;
infonnation, visit orcallthe Union&#13;
Information Desk at 553-2345.&#13;
by Dawn Malland&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Right about now. most students"&#13;
are taking their exams and&#13;
wondering how soon it is until&#13;
Christmas and the end of the semester,&#13;
If you're among the group who&#13;
needs a break, you're in luck. A&#13;
remedy is in sight!&#13;
Homecoming '90 is THE cure&#13;
for those exam blues. Homecoming,&#13;
an annual tradition at Parkside,&#13;
is being held October 17 through&#13;
October 20 this year. The theme&#13;
for this year is "Together in the&#13;
·90's."&#13;
Events are as follows:&#13;
Thursday. OcL 18:&#13;
7:30 pm - Coronation of King&#13;
and Queen&#13;
8 pm • Comedian Craig&#13;
Higgins&#13;
. 9 pm - Bonfire&#13;
9:30 pm- Lip Synch Contest in&#13;
the Union Square&#13;
Friday, Oct. 19&#13;
7 pm - Dinner (Pasta Extravaganza)&#13;
in Union 104 and ~06&#13;
8 pm • Casino in the Union&#13;
Bazaar .&#13;
9 pm.- D~nce with GERARD&#13;
in Union Square&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 20&#13;
noon &gt; JV soccer vs. Faculty&#13;
staff team _&#13;
I :30 pm - UWP vs, St. Norbert&#13;
College at home. (Food for families&#13;
will allow you to get into the&#13;
game FREE if you bring a nonperishible&#13;
food item with you!)&#13;
AIl of the events are sponsored&#13;
and/or promoted by tho::&#13;
Homecoming Committee.National&#13;
Collegiate Alcohol Awareness&#13;
Week Committee, Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
and the Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center Archives Department.&#13;
This year, comedian Craig&#13;
Higgins will be entertaining US with&#13;
his chann and wit. He'll be performing&#13;
at 8 pm in the Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
GERARD will be performing&#13;
in the Union Square at 9 pm on&#13;
Friday, October 19. AMilwaukeebased&#13;
band well known in thisarea,&#13;
Three new ways to survive college.&#13;
With Apple's introduction of three new&#13;
Madntaih' computers, meeting the chalJenges of college&#13;
ire just got a whole lot ~ Because now, evel)'body&#13;
can afford a MadntOlh.&#13;
The isourntOSl&#13;
affordable model, yet itcanes with everything}QU needincluding&#13;
a hard disk drive. The , 6,W&#13;
combines color capabilities with affordability. And the · _Is perfea for 5lUdentswho need a&#13;
C\JllIPI*r with eura ~ and expandaliility. .&#13;
No matter which Macinta;h )QU chooie, )00'1&#13;
have a C\JllIPI*r that lightens your v.ak load without&#13;
giving}Uu anothertough subject to learn. EveryMacintOlh,&#13;
computer is easy to set up and even easier to master. And&#13;
when }Uu've Ieamed one program, )OO're ~n on your&#13;
way to learning them aD.That's because thousands of avail-&#13;
" able programs all v.urk inthe same, consistent rnannet&#13;
)bu can even share informalion with someone who uses a&#13;
different type of computer-thanks to AppIe's versatile&#13;
SuperDrive;' which reads from and writes to Macintosh,&#13;
MS-DOO, OS/2, and AppIe'UI1oppy disks.&#13;
See the new MadnlO5h computeJs foryourself&#13;
and find out how SlIIViving college just got a whole lot •&#13;
~&#13;
For all of your computer needs visit the&#13;
Computing Support Center&#13;
Lower Level of the Library&#13;
ti.&#13;
.~-- ............ -&#13;
�18,1990 r Feature Raqer, Page IS&#13;
CommunityAnnouncements&#13;
Community Service&#13;
DATA·ENTRY ASSISTANCE FOR FAMILY SE~VICES eeded Some knowledge of Lotus 1-&#13;
per week on Friday or Monday and Wednesday ~v=g arerncente;&#13;
2·3 helpful. Please respond quickly. See Carol in Y S:~ TER •••Saturday of Sunday for a miniRESIDENTIAL&#13;
VOLUNTEER FOR RUNA WA 'd pporu've listening, and positive role '. "'d nts provi e su mum of four hours per week. Supervise resi e , 1 f rking with youth in crisis. Could be&#13;
mOdeling. Mature, caring students w~~ are cap~ble 0 wo Psychology students. Ask for more&#13;
developed into 2nd semester internship for SOCIOogy or&#13;
information in Career Center. ' . ests students to assist with 1990 Jail and&#13;
AMERICAJIl CANCER SOCIETY IN KENOSH~ ~~ the bailiff judge of guard. Clerical work&#13;
Bailfundraiser. Nov. 13_15_anyfourhoursbetween -. e '&#13;
is also needed. This is a fun volunteer activity. UM De elop map display with literature and&#13;
MARKETING PROJECT FOR KENOSHA MUSE d i.A~d this to your experience file before&#13;
membership information. Flexible times to fit your sche u e.&#13;
graduation. • ntact Carol Engberg in the Career Center.&#13;
For more informabon,'CO&#13;
1bePrairie SchooL Perform- vidual tickets are avaih.bleat HeriDiAilSeenrer&#13;
has announced the .tage Banks and Schmitt music&#13;
liJelII'ofconcerts for the 1990-91 stores prior to shows or at the door&#13;
'seI!O" of fme music" featuring, the night of the show. Prices are $8&#13;
dII fiIIeSl in folk, jazz and light . for adults and $6 for students and&#13;
cJaSSicS- . senior citizens.&#13;
1be~9Iseriesoffiveshows&#13;
will includethe followingperformaaees.&#13;
all on Fridays:&#13;
OCL 19-HotJazz Vocal QuarIllpresenlS&#13;
"Radio Days"&#13;
Nov.16 - Trapezoid·&#13;
Feb. 22 - Greg Brown&#13;
April 19 - Lou and Peter&#13;
Ba!YJD3Il&#13;
May17 - The Chicago Saxophooe&#13;
Quartet&#13;
All perfonnances are ;1t the&#13;
Prairie Perfonning Arts Center's&#13;
Miu:beI1TheaIre atPrairie School,&#13;
4OSOUghthouseDr., Racine. The&#13;
phone numberis 631·3845.&#13;
Season or individual tickets&#13;
are available. Contact Prairie&#13;
School for senson tickets. IndiThe&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild, as&#13;
part of its continuing exchange&#13;
program with the Polytechnical&#13;
Institute of Georgia, U.S.S.R., will&#13;
present a limited run of the Georgian&#13;
play "I See the Sun" by Nodar&#13;
Dumbadze on October 20 and 21.&#13;
The play, performed in English by&#13;
local actors, will be directed by&#13;
.Societ director Nugzar&#13;
Butskhrikidze, Two UW-Parkside&#13;
students, Joseph DeLorenzo and&#13;
Suneeta Akkinapalli, contain roles&#13;
in the play.&#13;
The play will be performed on&#13;
Sat., Oct. 20 lit 8:15 pm, and on&#13;
Sun, Oct. 21 at 1:30 and 7:30 pm.&#13;
Tickets are $8, with discounts for&#13;
The American Medical AssociatillDlFamily&#13;
Medical Guide&#13;
leCOl'ds the definition of autism as,&#13;
"Aloss of the ability to develop&#13;
normal human relationships with&#13;
anybody.In JDaIiyof its symptoms&#13;
autismissimilartoschizophrenia.",&#13;
Whenayoung,autisticmanneeded&#13;
IObeescortedtoaweeklycomputer&#13;
class and assisted through the&#13;
leamingprocess, wbo would take&#13;
lhetime? Carol Engberg, the Student&#13;
Community Service Director, .&#13;
chose only one person to ask. His&#13;
namewas Brian Dechant, a senior&#13;
majoringin Psychology. Bria~s&#13;
response was positive. Sarah&#13;
Pederson, caseworker from the&#13;
DevelopmentalDisabilitiesService&#13;
Center, commented, "Ifit weren't&#13;
forvolunteerslikeBrian,ouraduits&#13;
with disabilities would not have&#13;
the opportunity to participate in&#13;
outside activities the community&#13;
has to offer. 1 really appreciate&#13;
Brian's assistanCe with one of our&#13;
clients." One year ago. Brian vol ..&#13;
unteered at the Mitchell Middle&#13;
School MASH Program where he&#13;
tutored children after school. Brian&#13;
Dechant is recognized as the Volunteer&#13;
of the Week because of his&#13;
willingness to improve the quality&#13;
of life of another human being.&#13;
-&#13;
students, senior citizens and Guild&#13;
season ticket holders. For reservations,.calI633-4218&#13;
or come to the&#13;
box office between 9 am and 5 pm,&#13;
Mon. - Fri. The Racine Theatre&#13;
Guild is located at 2519 Northwestern&#13;
Avenue in Racine.&#13;
The Milwaukee County Zoo&#13;
will hostan all-new collegiate snow&#13;
sculpting competition in 1191 -&#13;
MilwaukeeCountyZooSnowbowl&#13;
I. The competition is slated for&#13;
January 10 - 12. .&#13;
. Each three-person team will&#13;
sculpt a 6 foot by 6 foot by 10 foot&#13;
block of snow. The competition&#13;
will begin at lOam Thurs., Jan. 10&#13;
and end at II am, Sat., Jan. 12. A&#13;
formal judging and awards ceremony&#13;
will follow.&#13;
For additional information,&#13;
contact the Zoo Public Relations&#13;
Departtnent at (414) 256-5412.&#13;
Brian Dechant&#13;
Political .....------.&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Week 1990&#13;
Make a Difference&#13;
in a Child's Life&#13;
Be a Big Brother&#13;
or Big Sister&#13;
by Cbristopber J. Daniel&#13;
"Political Awareness Week&#13;
1990" was an event sponsored by&#13;
the Student Organizations Council&#13;
and the Parl&lt;side Student Government&#13;
Association held October I&#13;
through the 5. One of the services&#13;
to students as a result of this week&#13;
of political awareness was a voter&#13;
registration drive. This turned out&#13;
to be a success. Approximately,&#13;
one-hundred fifty students from the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha/Somers area registered&#13;
in the Union Skywalk during&#13;
the week.&#13;
The "Political Awareness&#13;
Week" committee would like to&#13;
express its appreciation to the&#13;
volunteerSwhowereoftremendous&#13;
assistance in this effort. The&#13;
committee would like to thank&#13;
Donald Prange, Salimah AI&#13;
Qawiyy, Larry Dagnon, Rodney&#13;
Ivy, Brian Petak, Joel Boyle, Mike&#13;
Johnson, Henry Owens, Latesha&#13;
Jude, George Olsen, George Yee,&#13;
Steve Itzenhuiser, Bruce Ralston,&#13;
Thad Jensen, Anthony Selmon,&#13;
Todd Lackie, Debbie Kreuser,&#13;
DaveOrlowsky,BillHorner, Tobin&#13;
Lindblom, Chuck Haun, Terri&#13;
Friedrich, Wally Wargalot,Damell&#13;
Jones,JamesCasper.andanyothers&#13;
that we may have missed.&#13;
Thecomrniuee would also like&#13;
to thank all of the students who&#13;
registered during the week. It was&#13;
each one of you thai made the time&#13;
it took to prepare and organize for&#13;
"Political Awareness Week 1990" L. ..I&#13;
worthwhile. Don't forget to vote&#13;
on November 6.&#13;
\&#13;
1.1J"&#13;
a It doesn't lake any time,&#13;
Include a child In what&#13;
your doing anyway.&#13;
a Children are not&#13;
delinquent, they're nice kids&#13;
from single parent homes.&#13;
a No experience necessary.&#13;
Just be a friend.&#13;
Call: 637-7625&#13;
~~~~~~*****~&#13;
SunBreaks! SkiBreakS!\\&#13;
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7 DAYS FROM S460 10 DAYS FROM •&#13;
per person 1---$669&#13;
Above rate Is ~ per person&#13;
based on quads '/ •&#13;
from Chicago. Departure:&#13;
Double &amp; Triple Jan 3-12 1991&#13;
rooms and Milwaukee UMITtD&#13;
departures available. INCLUDES: PACE!&#13;
Departure: .Rd Trip Air&#13;
Jan 5-12 1991 • 8 Nites Accommodation&#13;
INCLUDES: • Continental Bldst&#13;
• AdTrip Air (S16 Departure Tax Addt)&#13;
etr.nsters end Gr.tu";es UIlITED AlA TRANSPORTATIONBY&#13;
e 7 Nfl •• Beochl"",1 SPACE! II/III r", r&#13;
Accomt'r'll:HMtton 1II1II"""'"&#13;
($18 De~rture Tu Addl)&#13;
CaU PARKLAND TRAVEL Call PARKLAND TRAVEL&#13;
1-800-366-1985 1-800-366-1985&#13;
----&#13;
L e 1. 1~................... .. 4.~..• " •• " " __ 0" 0""".'--' &gt;r ..............•. ~ "' ".J-,."" ~.~.•,..:-..-_-.o~.. _."- .&#13;
~.~.~~ I FeatUre, I:....--.--;.~_-----~,'7iOc:;;tober:i:~~I8,i-:,,I~~&#13;
Wingspread conference examines alternatives&#13;
wouIdbeencouragedlOincorpOraie approved by thC Wisconsin legis.&#13;
crealiveleaChingmelhodsinlOtheir Iature as a pilot program on the&#13;
own curriculums. issueof school choice. Heexp~&#13;
. lnadditionlOMr.Nathan,1htee some of the .diffi~u1ties they've&#13;
speakerseommentedonalternative encountered m Irymg 10 \lIesenl&#13;
schooling and school choice this~rogram in such ~ large SChOOl&#13;
through their own experience. The district, bUI he also mdicated hi&#13;
flfSlspeakerwasZakiyah Courtney, en~usiasm and beliefin the schoo~&#13;
theExecutive Direclorofthe Urban choice program.&#13;
Day School in Milwaukee. She As the speakers concluded&#13;
explained that the parental in- their presentations. the audiel\te&#13;
volvemenl at the school was very wasmvltedlOaskquestions. When&#13;
evident, In Iact, parents actually asked about how children WOuld&#13;
act as administrators; involved in be chosen to attend the alternative&#13;
hiring, school operations and schools;Mr. Nathan stressed that&#13;
committee work. schools should not be allOWed10&#13;
A student at an alternative choose on the basis of grades be-&#13;
. school was on hand to provide her havior, or race. He felt a IO;tery&#13;
perspective. Her name is Larisa system would be the most reason.&#13;
Hutchinson, a junior at Walden III able method for selection.&#13;
AlternativeHigh School in Racine. In response to other questions&#13;
She spoke enthusiastically of the posed, Nathan encouraged school&#13;
experience she has gained from districlStosetupfundsforresearch&#13;
such an educational environment. and' development. Corporations&#13;
She told how students were actually recognize the value of improVing&#13;
involved in the decision-making theirresouresand prodUCts,sowhy&#13;
process in the school's operation. should society do less for its chilo&#13;
The final speaker was Robert dren? He stressed the need for&#13;
S. Peterkin, Superintendent of the Parent Information Centers, to&#13;
Milwaukee Public School System, provide an outlet for accurate in.&#13;
a man dedicated to alternative formation in areas that are estsbschool&#13;
choice. 'The Milwaukee lishingaltemativescljoolprograms.&#13;
Public School System has been&#13;
School c1KJice is 8pltrase that&#13;
'las been used 8 great deal in Wis-&#13;
..onsin in the pasl few yean, par-&#13;
:il:ularly in Milwaukee. What exlCtlydoesilmean?&#13;
ApproximaIeIy&#13;
lllehundredpeople,primarilyfrom&#13;
Jo,ubeastem Wisconsino a«ended&#13;
I briefing 81Wingspread on Sept.&#13;
!S seeking an answer 10 \bat&#13;
JlIC$lion.&#13;
The primary speaker, Joe&#13;
Nathan, is an edueator from Minnesota.&#13;
Through his work aI the&#13;
Hubert H. Humphrey Institute for&#13;
Public Affairs, he has researched&#13;
the idea of alternative schooling.&#13;
Along with a group of other dedicated&#13;
educators. concerned and&#13;
ictive parents, and innovative&#13;
egtstaiors, 1le has seen the Minoesota&#13;
educational system advance&#13;
IOtO areas of diverse teaching&#13;
methods that can meet the needs of'&#13;
all students.&#13;
Mr. Nathan began his presentation&#13;
by citing three rationales for&#13;
an alternative school system: first,&#13;
wemusraccept the fact that there is&#13;
no one way of teaching all kids by&#13;
all teachers; secondly, there must&#13;
be an opportunity for all children to&#13;
\earn-children from wealthy&#13;
negative impact on desegregation&#13;
plans.&#13;
EnrollmentOplionsPrograms&#13;
allow parents of children ages S-18&#13;
to transfer their children to public&#13;
schools outside their resident districlasiongasbothdistrictsapprove&#13;
and movement does not have a&#13;
negative impact on desegregation&#13;
plans.&#13;
AccordingtoMr.Nathan,there&#13;
is proof of the value of school&#13;
choice. Students do better in alternative&#13;
schools and graduation&#13;
rates increase. Parents tend to become&#13;
enthusiastically involved in&#13;
alternative schools. Teachers feel&#13;
more like professionals, respected&#13;
and free 10 use their creative energies&#13;
10 invent curriculum that will&#13;
excite children to learn.&#13;
In discussing Wisconsin's&#13;
legislative attempts to improve&#13;
educational opportunities for its&#13;
school children, Nathan says that&#13;
Wisconsin's laws do allow for&#13;
school choice, but mandate curriculum.&#13;
He feels that mandated&#13;
curriculum should bereplaced with&#13;
state guidelines and goals, and a&#13;
list of skillsthe students must master&#13;
prior 10 graduation .. In this way,&#13;
educators. viewedas professionals,&#13;
_kgrounds already have school&#13;
choice; third, we need 10 control&#13;
competition 10 encouraae quality&#13;
in all schools.&#13;
1.5 Mr. Nathan continued, he&#13;
briefly summarized the progress&#13;
Minnesola has made in improving&#13;
\he state' s educational system&#13;
through school choiceand outlined&#13;
the legislation passed 10 achieve&#13;
this. From 1983-1988, the Minnesota&#13;
Legislature passed several&#13;
laws expanding educator and parental&#13;
choice among the public&#13;
schools:&#13;
Programs of Excellence allow&#13;
up 10100 secondary school students&#13;
10 attend public schools outside&#13;
their resident district, which offer&#13;
outstanding academic programs in&#13;
particular areas.&#13;
PosI-SecondaryOptionsailow&#13;
public school 11-12 graders to attend&#13;
colleges. universities and vocational&#13;
schools.&#13;
Area Learning Centers and&#13;
High Schoool Graduation Incentives&#13;
allow students 12-21, who&#13;
have 1101 succeeded in one public&#13;
school, to attend another public&#13;
school outside their district as long&#13;
as the other district has room and&#13;
the movement does not have a&#13;
•&#13;
COLOCRS&#13;
hI&#13;
('LEXANJ)FI~ JUl.IAN&#13;
A.) B.)&#13;
HENRY GRETHEl&#13;
I Calvin Klein C.)&#13;
I&#13;
E.) All of the above&#13;
Answer:Morrone's~ Clothes for men&#13;
. closer than any mall! ! ;. ·&#13;
Sunnyside Park Plaza, 2211 80th Street Keno h ~ , S a.&#13;
.~&#13;
Phone: 654-3233&#13;
"&#13;
1990&#13;
~ .-- ",_,~ __ F...;.-.e...,..a_tu-=-re'::""'_----Jl========~~E!!&#13;
Will~~rthu~ri~gsunique approach to UW-Parkside&#13;
.,.Mona qu~ and IS ~ fact well-known areactivelyengagedinlheirfields "' ....... differentlcindsofwayswc&#13;
SlaffWrltet' for being arelabvely small school doi , " 0-"-'&#13;
........". Miehael Willmorth Ihad heard f' d' . ~,~g research, whICh IS very sur- can communicale wi1lleach OIher, "'":--. .,? uan was IRlpressed pnsmg 10 find 1IIaikind of work 11IIinkdlllllhate&gt;tperience with the&#13;
,ping this year at ~ide ~ythequahtyofthepeoplewhoare going on in a school that doesn't diversityofideaofcommunication&#13;
_hitS the commumcatlons 10 the department, and feel it is have that much in, the way of rather Ihan just focusing on human&#13;
.ld1CS'of Professor Leeds- really an honor 10be here." graduate programs" I' st language .- , WUIm rth . W· . 8llguageorevenJu one&#13;
~. ~lessor 0 IS illmorth fin~s ,that the, level Professor Willmonh earned or music or computer languages&#13;
fJIPiIiar With Pro.fessor Leeds- o~ quality at Parkside seems 10 be his Bachelor's degree in a double individually."&#13;
iIJlWiIz'sperspective on com~u- high. People here.are good at what major of Linguistics and German Professor Willmonh sees&#13;
~beCausetheybothstudlfd they.do. "My first impression is at Washingtop University in St. communication as a discipline, a&#13;
.dIeAMel1bergSchool of Com- ~t ~t IS a high-quality school for Louis. He received his Master's field of inquiry as a human social&#13;
~ at the Universityof 'Its Size, and also high-quality in- degree and Ph.D. in Communica- science. He is interested in the&#13;
J'ellIllYlvania.The Annenberg stitution for what I perceive as its tions from the University of interrelationshipofaJl the facets 01&#13;
SdiJO\ haS a somewhat unique ap- place in the Wisconsin system. The Pennsylvania. communication; production,theor}&#13;
poaehtolhestudyofcommumca- stereotype is that smaller sch~ls Having lived in Philadelphia' mass communication,or interper·&#13;
_ "The Annenberg School that have a more local population for the past several years, being at sonalcommumcauon. ForhisdocdUnks&#13;
of things more in terms of generally don't have the same Parkside means living closer to his "'" toral dissertation on linguistic be-&#13;
~ distinctions of areas of caliber of instructors as you would brother is Chicago and to his fam- havior, he was able to integralf&#13;
~ of inquiry one might fmd in larger schools that have ily in Southwestern Idaho. Professor Willmorth theories .about interpersonal ~-&#13;
•• The curriculum at Parkside large student bodies drawn from Professor Willmonh entered ence. In the process of studying in ~umcauon and mass commumcaliIsiDaaealivewaytohispreferred&#13;
all over the country. To me, college with an interest in lan- these areas he discovered .....That uon, He ~ like to do roore&#13;
wayofteaChingand studying com- Parkside stands out that way in that guages, but he also had a variety of there are ways that people talk about ~ork m thIS area of communlC8-&#13;
muoications. "[TheCommunica- it has very high quality people other interests. He took some them in which they refer to them as uons.&#13;
tiom department at Parksidel is teaching the courses, people who courses in music and computer sci- languages, different kinds of lanFernandez&#13;
conducting research at UW-Parkside&#13;
S&#13;
' She is a native of Racine. will help it heal faster or slowdown&#13;
by Mona hannon Ms. Fernandez says she likes the healing process. A possible&#13;
. doing research because she learns application of the research is to aid&#13;
Many students at Parkslde are 'dd ' h d lop&#13;
whl'!e she works_ bed-n en pauents w 0 eve&#13;
probablyunaware that there is researthbeingdoneon&#13;
thethirdfloor ','It's like being in school bedsores.&#13;
without the tests. It's a never- Ms. Fernandez likes working&#13;
of GRenquisl Bebra Fernandez ending learning process. When at Parkside. "I like it, it's real&#13;
works !here is an Associate Re- 'nabl and D G-_A&#13;
_"" is something goes the way you want com.o e r. vvuu~.&#13;
sean:bSpecialistforDr.Goodman it 10, you push 10 see whal will great. That's the only word to&#13;
doingbiD-medical research with happen next, and when it goes desaibe him. He knows his stuff&#13;
eIectIo-magneticfields and wound wrong you push 10see why it went and is willing to share it with other&#13;
JqIIir. wrong." people so that they can learn more&#13;
Ms. Fernandez received her Her current research involves about what he's doing."&#13;
B.S.degreeinBiologyfromEckero growing cells that are take,n from r:------:==------::~~~::==::::::=-l CoUege in SL Petersburg, Fl. She human umbilical cells. She grows&#13;
badClriginaUyintended to go on 10 , and isolates the cells in various&#13;
medical school, but lack of money conlainers, sub-cultures them into&#13;
(IreVented thaL J petrie dishes, and then she does a&#13;
Even if she is able to go to wounding with a micro-electrode.&#13;
Maoll-. Prof. Fet'nandez _schoo1someday,shewould , She then monitors them under a&#13;
lite III~y inthe field of re~h. her interest. She worked in ~ microscope.&#13;
, She altributes her inte~~ In re- ,testing department of Joh~ s Different growth factors are&#13;
searthtohernaturalcunoslty,and Wax before coming to Parkslde. added to determine if somethmg&#13;
to a college professor who peaked bi&#13;
Vaug'hnbrothers - family sty~e. ues&#13;
th' album tremely mfecUous.&#13;
the feeling of country, IS SR V leaves the album with&#13;
covers a number of genres. " the soulful blues that he was always&#13;
The song "Long Way ..tom I the song" Brothers "an ff me of tIlat best at. n '&#13;
Home" shows 0 so . inslrUJ\lCnral, the Vaughn brothers&#13;
lightning rock guirar that SRVVIS::' kid around the leads from the&#13;
fatnOUSfor And when a aug n . Ra lasSic" Ain'tGone 'n' " Stevte yc&#13;
strikeS, watch out. " boom! Give up on love" from his album&#13;
In the funky song ~ Soul to Soul. Rockin' SydrlCy&#13;
Mama Said" the Vaughn videS backup on accordian.&#13;
provethattheseboysgotsoul'l~ou pro As a long time Stevie Ray&#13;
just got to hear this one to be leve Vaugbjl fan, I found this to be a&#13;
it. . fitting collection for h.s, unfortuThe&#13;
best song on the album IS I I last album. With an album&#13;
S "a song naIe y. ,&#13;
"The Telephone ong, The such as this. the memory ~f SteVie&#13;
about a long dlSllIJ\ce love: Ra Ray Vaughn is sure to bve on a&#13;
.• - ....ble guirar of SteVie y , unmlS""", th I through long ume.&#13;
VaughnburftS,apa. ~~isexthis&#13;
one. The rockin&#13;
by BiD Hawkins&#13;
Stayaware, music fans! Ifyou&#13;
don'lalready know it, the Vaughn&#13;
broIhers new album, Famity Style&#13;
is at large! The late Stevie Ray&#13;
Vaugbn and his older brother,&#13;
Jimmie, teamed up 10 form this&#13;
toIIector's dream. The album was&#13;
just released by Epic Records.&#13;
Excellent guitar work is the&#13;
fone of the album. Stevie Ray and&#13;
Jimmie Vaughn set a blistering&#13;
example of what rhythm and blues&#13;
is all about. The versatility and&#13;
skill of these guys is simply&#13;
amazing. From the intensity of&#13;
1O\:k,Io the soulfulnesS ofblues,lO&#13;
Attention Seniors&#13;
Information sessions on&#13;
careers with Federal Government.&#13;
Monday 10/22 NoonUnion&#13;
104.&#13;
All those graduating&#13;
within the next nifIC months&#13;
are encouraged to anend this&#13;
program sPonsored by the&#13;
Career Center,&#13;
TbanIcs.&#13;
LT.D,&#13;
0Jij'0JJ1i7Wl.A&#13;
~: .5~~pers&#13;
$Z,151't+th&amp;rs&#13;
1U'ea: $2.76~e"3&#13;
WEDS: 1)4l1Ce -tz:, +he&#13;
'1o.s~80~with aR£l¥f 1'ERw'ALL...&#13;
-F""ree ~ I dril!kwH111arks&amp; Lb,&#13;
1"~ -.:fumlj'fin with&#13;
'Thrks:des OeW Lef'(ll"Y'ermarltl&#13;
nIASA-.:r: lJJDZex's Rut... KERN&#13;
S~ -1Oo1GALL ALL '[Wi!::&#13;
Feature I&#13;
OclOber 18, 1'1!&#13;
Life after Parkside&#13;
L- ~ _&#13;
by KimHrly A. Tenuelli&#13;
Newswriter&#13;
John Zehren is an artist who&#13;
majored in Anand graduated from&#13;
UW-Parkside in 1987. He is currently&#13;
working al an angalJery and&#13;
frame shop in Kennelworth, a.&#13;
John fell that UW-Parkside&#13;
taugtu him lOlhinIc for himself, and&#13;
to gel what he wanted by ambition.&#13;
John also liked the direcmess of the&#13;
instructors, He stated that the instmctorsa;&#13;
UW-Parkside gave help&#13;
whenever he needed it,&#13;
Tbere is no set salary for an&#13;
independenl artisl. John lOld me&#13;
thaI unless you can gel the right&#13;
contacts after school, you have lO&#13;
gel a supplemental job and pursue&#13;
your ancareer on theside. YOIlcan&#13;
nOI jusr be an artist and support&#13;
yourself, He suggested that when&#13;
you graduate you should gel a job&#13;
thaI pertains lO an, one thaI will&#13;
help you make the righl contacts,&#13;
such as he did.&#13;
Asked what someone who is&#13;
going 10be graduating soon can do&#13;
lOgel staned, John suggested thaI&#13;
they should stan subscribing to any&#13;
an publications in the city they are&#13;
interested in working in, and thaI&#13;
they have infonnation on shows.&#13;
Keep photographs of your work so&#13;
they can be sent to the possible&#13;
shows. Mterlhis,juslkeepentering&#13;
work in shows. John's advice is,&#13;
"to be persistent, foDow through,&#13;
and to keep active."&#13;
His goal is to be able 10&#13;
maintain a living with his an as his&#13;
only income. His sculptures are on&#13;
display at UW -Parkside.&#13;
Ifyou would like more information&#13;
on his career, he and his&#13;
roommate will be on Channel IIat&#13;
10:30 pm on a coming Friday. The&#13;
program is called "Wild Chicago,"&#13;
to be aired in the near future,&#13;
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID&#13;
PAGEONE&#13;
Use the U.W. Parkside coupon below before&#13;
11-1-90 and recieve a discount of 18%&#13;
UW. Parkside takes action tosave theEarth&#13;
sored by the Union of Concerned&#13;
Scientists. From October 22 Ihru&#13;
the 26 a nationwide attempl willbe&#13;
made lo educate the public of Ihe&#13;
'hazards of co2. Bruce Ralslon ex.&#13;
plains, "We want people lopledge&#13;
a reduction in their co2 produc.&#13;
tions. Co2 (carbon dioxide) is Ihe&#13;
acid in acid rain. Co2 Is a major&#13;
contributor 10 the greenhouse ef.&#13;
feet, Co2 is also found 10be ex.&#13;
pelled from many ~ousehold appliances.&#13;
The automobile emits approximately&#13;
116 lbs, or' co2 per&#13;
mile despite emission standards&#13;
and the hole in the Ozone is no;&#13;
getting smaller," Save the Eanh is&#13;
presently organizing a Rideshare&#13;
program which will offer rides for&#13;
, those who want or need them and&#13;
access 10 those who are offering&#13;
them.&#13;
IC you are interesled in&#13;
Rideshare or gelling involved in&#13;
another capacily, feel free 10stop&#13;
in and see Bruce or Steve whocan&#13;
be found in Molinaro 116 every&#13;
Wednesday al noon.&#13;
oUI of our way lo get people to go&#13;
OUIof their way, so th~1 lOge~er, '&#13;
we can do whatever can be done 10&#13;
The SEAC (Student Environ- urge corporate and civic America&#13;
mental Action Coalition) is hold- 10 respond-to the ever-pressing ising&#13;
a rally in Champaigne, Ill. 10 sue of environmental protection."&#13;
unify student environmental orga- Save the Earth is a student&#13;
nizations nationwide. This union founded organization whose aim is&#13;
will allow all organizations to Io- alsolopromoteparticipation. Steve&#13;
cuson one environmental issueata Itzenhuiser observes, "I've found'&#13;
time, intensifying the results of all that the majority of people are conefforts,&#13;
cerned, bUI aren't willing 10 parThe&#13;
Union of Concerned Sci- ticipate.&#13;
enlists is a major force behind the There are so many issues and&#13;
movement and is responsible for so many sides 10each issue that, for&#13;
such things as, "laying ,OUI the someone who may be interested,&#13;
programs and procedures, sending there may be a fear of commitment.&#13;
, each involveduniversitybrochures BUI it is only necessary 10&#13;
and pamphlets on target issues etc.; address one particular aspect of the&#13;
and ourjob is to execute their plans whole problem. No malter whal&#13;
andeducalethesludentbody,"says ihe capacily, greal or small, any&#13;
Chairperson Bruce Ralston. degree of contribulion is in one&#13;
V ice-Chairperson Steve way or another helping the cause."&#13;
Itzenhuiser states, "our baSic goal The firsl campaign of UWis&#13;
awareness ... 10 show where and Parkside' s Save the Earth program&#13;
how people can help. We're going is '''I1Je Billion Pound Diel," soon- r-----------------------, G:IVE LIFE.&#13;
GIVE PLASMA.&#13;
J.A. Bromstad&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Will provide virtually any student with&#13;
6-25 sources of fmancial aid for higher&#13;
education, for which you qualify, or th&#13;
service fee ($49.00) will be refunded.&#13;
Results are Guaranteed&#13;
All sources will be matched to the needs, interests&#13;
and requirements of the individual student&#13;
For free and complete information:&#13;
Page One&#13;
Student Financial Aid Services&#13;
10332 Kraut Rd.&#13;
Franksville, WI 53126 r------------------~, INa= I&#13;
I I&#13;
I A~ I&#13;
I I&#13;
I City State Zip I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I School now anending I&#13;
I I&#13;
: Year in school: Fresh_ Soph_ Jun_ Sen_ I&#13;
L&#13;
U.W.-P I&#13;
-------------------~&#13;
I&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Give us 2 hours, twice a&#13;
week, and we,'ll use your&#13;
plasma donation to help save&#13;
the lives of burn and shock&#13;
victims, heart surgery patients,&#13;
and hemophiliacs. And you&#13;
could earn up to $100 per&#13;
month.. Take the time today.&#13;
- NEW DONORS -&#13;
Brial '" thlud ad receiveS15.00&#13;
ror Joar lint doaalIoa.&#13;
Plasma -Donor Center&#13;
or Kenosha, Inc.&#13;
11212-22nd Av..&#13;
'Kenoehe, Wt&#13;
MoW-F- 8:30-3:30&#13;
T-T 10:00-5:30&#13;
- (414) 654-1366&#13;
,People Helping .People For Life ~~---------------------~~&#13;
Help Wanted· Temporary Christmas Sales&#13;
ExPerience Necessary&#13;
Excellent Salary with Incentives&#13;
Selling High Quality Sweaters&#13;
Located at Dale of Norway&#13;
in the Factory Outlet Centre&#13;
If interested, contact Mike Plate at UW-Parkside Job,Service&#13;
553-2656 in Tallent Hall Rm 254 .&#13;
from 9:00-1 :00 &amp;2:00-4:00, through No~ember 5&#13;
Foreign students&#13;
Continued from page 13&#13;
them." Abraham would like ,&#13;
to see&#13;
more programs 10 socially uplift '&#13;
people, and "help Ihe lower class&#13;
. gel out of their (poor) situation."&#13;
"Race relations iIithis country can&#13;
be improved,"says Abraham.&#13;
Edilma and Abraham are&#13;
'looking forward to. finIshing their&#13;
education, when they can both relurn&#13;
to their countries and pUIto&#13;
work all they've learned here at&#13;
UW-Parkside, and in America.&#13;
DON"T&#13;
Drink&#13;
and&#13;
Drive.&#13;
Enteri~~~~tq II-' -------Ra-n-ger-.Pa-g-e 19&#13;
Smgll $cale Humor by Chris Ingram&#13;
- •••••••. 0, *'&#13;
~i8,l990&#13;
The Week at Parkside&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5&#13;
C@NCERT:"Children,"Union Square, 9 pm. $2 students . ..• _ t&#13;
$3 guests.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6&#13;
SOCCER: Away game against SI. Joseph's (Indiana),&#13;
3:30pm.&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8 .&#13;
IUSPANIC BAZAAR: National Hispanic Heritage&#13;
Month, 10 am - 2 pm, Main Place.&#13;
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9&#13;
FILM: "Blood of the Condor," Union Cinema, 7:30 pm,&#13;
free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10.&#13;
LUNCHEON: Hispanic Food of Cost Rica, 10:30 am to&#13;
2 pm, Union Dining Room.&#13;
SOCCER: Game against UW-Milwaukee, Racine field, .&#13;
7pm.&#13;
GUESTENSEMBLE: Klarup Girl's Choir, Klarus Denmark,&#13;
noon, CA D-1l8.&#13;
Parkside CAprale toperfonn&#13;
. 1bePatkside'(;llot&lt;l1e~Ulbeperfonning at St. Paul's Baptist&#13;
ChlllCh,1120 GiandAVeDueAn Racine on.Sunday,October21.&#13;
.The concert will sla!1 ai3:.30 pmlllldwillfeature The Mass of&#13;
SLAugustine, as )Vellaso~tsongs.···· .' .&#13;
'\ /&#13;
- -&#13;
~.&#13;
~&#13;
~)&#13;
.c:-;&#13;
-...... -: r&gt;.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
o Chril tnlrlm 1.990&#13;
~~&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
announces...&#13;
.)If' University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-;&#13;
~ .&#13;
CANCUN&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 5 - 12, 1990&#13;
INCLUDES: . _ Round trip chartered jet air via American Trans Air 757service&#13;
Chlcago/Cancun/Chlcago _ Seven nights lodging in first class or deluxe hotels. Casa Maya Carube&#13;
or Radisson Paraiso Cancun, both located directly on the beach&#13;
_ Round trip ground transfers while in Mexico&#13;
-Group escort throughout-tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
• Familiarization/fnformation get-together&#13;
including complimentary snacks &amp;&#13;
beverages&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATIONand/or APPLICATIONFORM PLEASE CONTACT&#13;
THE pARKSlDE UNION-ROOM 209 (553-2294J&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
=-Ocrobcr""':""'"":":-:8.t~990:--------I===C~la-s-s-;i-;;fi:;-e-d~--Il-------~Ran~ge~&#13;
. d . om D139C in the Wyllie libraryllearning Center"-;;;:&#13;
HELP WANTED I I HELP WANTED I I MISCELLANEOUS I I PERSONALS]&#13;
. close because city Won'tgive&#13;
.$. Contact your legislatureCf&#13;
U.W.P. 's women's centertor&#13;
more info. (553-2170).&#13;
,--_C_L_U_B_EV_E_NT_S__ I I&#13;
vidual or student organization&#13;
needed to promote Spring&#13;
Break trip . Eam money; free&#13;
trips &amp; valuable work experience.&#13;
Call now!! !&#13;
Intercampus program 1-800-&#13;
327-6013.&#13;
WednesdayOctober24,I990&#13;
at 12:00 noon in Molinaro&#13;
107. Speaker: Tim Webster,&#13;
Topi : A Continual Study of&#13;
th S rmon on the Mount.&#13;
Prayer meeting every Friday&#13;
in Molinaro 126.&#13;
Earn $$ for Christmas by&#13;
putting your clerical skills to&#13;
work for you. Part-time/temporary&#13;
work available. Call&#13;
Lakeshore Employment&#13;
Specialists at 654-5544.&#13;
for 8 year old boy and 10 year&#13;
old girl. Must be dependable&#13;
and have own transportation.&#13;
Preference will be given to&#13;
applicant seeking elementary/middle&#13;
school certification.&#13;
Only non-smokers need&#13;
apply. Location-Racine, in&#13;
the St. Mary's Hospital vicin- Free Spring Break trips to&#13;
ity. 15hours a week. Monday students or student organizathrough&#13;
Friday, 2:30 pm to . tions promoting our Spring&#13;
5:30 pm. $5.00 per hour. Break Packages. Good pay&#13;
Contact Pam Garlow at 632- &amp; fun. Call CIM. 1-800-423-&#13;
0042. 5264.&#13;
I FUND RAISING . I II...__ P_E_R_S_O_N_A_L_S__&#13;
No nukes is good' nukes!!&#13;
Since when do they letdoga&#13;
in the dog track? Trayc8.1&#13;
want the "walking beerkeg.&#13;
HowaboutthoseclasSrings?r&#13;
Lovingly-MPH&amp;CS.&#13;
Help wanted. Full/part-time;&#13;
am, pm. Dining, banquet and&#13;
cocktail servers. Sheraton&#13;
Hotel and Conference Center.&#13;
Call 886-6100.&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
L- FOR SALE _&#13;
Amiga lOOOcompuler,color&#13;
monitor, extra disk drive,&#13;
u e, novation modern.Iots&#13;
of. ftware. $650 negotiable.&#13;
Call Bill 639-4751.&#13;
Part-time 15-20 hours per&#13;
week. Late afternoon/early&#13;
evening hours weekdays&#13;
only. Applicant must be able&#13;
to type and have basic computer&#13;
knowledge. Apply in&#13;
person at A.C.A. Family Recovery&#13;
Center, 611 56th&#13;
Street, Kenosha, Wi, or call&#13;
Diane Mielke, Business Office&#13;
Manager at 652-0323.&#13;
ABBA fan club meeting&#13;
Moln 1221, Friday.&#13;
I&#13;
L-.HELP WANTED , _&#13;
Bam Bam, It has beentwo&#13;
great years. Wouldn't it be&#13;
nice... Thank you for allmy&#13;
happiness:. Love Pebbles.&#13;
Best fund raiser on campus&#13;
looking for fraternity/sorority&#13;
or student organization that&#13;
would like to earn $500-&#13;
$1000 for one wk on campus&#13;
mkg project. Must be organized&#13;
and hard working. Call&#13;
Beverly or Jeanine at 800-&#13;
592-2121.&#13;
To Steve and Dawn- You&#13;
have our solemn vow. No&#13;
more two-timing.&#13;
Sing! Small church seeking&#13;
Christians who have musical&#13;
experience in singing and/or&#13;
mu ical instruments. Must&#13;
have transportation. We will&#13;
provide uaveJ expenses and&#13;
cash gift. Contact Pastor&#13;
Henricks at 878- J590, 8am2pm&#13;
M-F.&#13;
Andy Warhol is an excellent&#13;
idea.-Hawk.&#13;
IF Girls and Jackie, Justa&#13;
little note to say thanks for&#13;
putting up with us. Love&#13;
Pebbles and Bam Bam&#13;
ISERVICES OFFERED I&#13;
Hey Excell '90-Camp Sydney&#13;
Coen, lose or find any shoes&#13;
lately? Or, how about canoeing&#13;
for lost shoes? The dark&#13;
Help wanted. Tutoring in&#13;
reading and general childcare I LOST AND FOUND I&#13;
hair smile-The Union God- TOGETHER IN THE 90'S Typing: done in my home. Six (Czechoslovakia) bas- .&#13;
dess! UW .PARKSIDE Fast and professional service. ketball tickets, Nov.9. Con- HOMECOMING '90 Student rates. Call Debbie tact Chris Toliver 634-9604. Get off your can and bring U)dayat681-3522before7~ WEPNESDAY, OCTOBER 17 .,&#13;
. two non-perishable items to pm . 12 Noon- Bed Race Missing - Calvin &amp; Hobbes&#13;
A r.m '*rlW::8 MlU1cI the Homecoming soccer&#13;
Homecoming Poster. Please game &amp; get in free!!! ATTENTION '''' -,-- Return to the Ranger Office. Immediate openings for THURSDAY. QCTOBER 18&#13;
I&#13;
7:30p.m. - Coronation of King &amp; Queen Herbicides cause cancer' COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
' .&#13;
8:00p.m .• Comedian CRAIG HIGGINS • PART.TIME WORK&#13;
9:00p.m. - Bon Rre Very Flexible schedule Racine shelter for homeless' 9:30p.m. - lip Sync Contest Spring Break 1991. Indi- U_Square women and children about to International Mktg. firm&#13;
FRIDAY,OCTOBER 19 has 23 openings. Work WE NEED EARN 3-5 hours on evenings. 7:00p.m. - Dinner U_'04&amp;106&#13;
SELF-MonvATED Weekends optional. 8:00p.m. - Casino UnionBazaar&#13;
9:00p.m. - Dance with GERARDu_Square STUDENTS. EXTRACA$H $7.65 to start. Full SATURDAY,OCT08ER20 EARN UP TO $1OJHR. -r 12 noon - JV vs Faculty (soccer) training provided, $25for WITH THE PUSH OF" PIN. Ibooks. 1:30p.m. - UWP vs SI. Norbert College MarItllt credit canis on campus Put up_IS With applieationlorms lor Scholarships awarded """"""F_ Rexible hours. ' Get into the game FREE&#13;
~, MaslerCard and olher national if you bong a non--persah.able&#13;
Only 10 positions available. and some paid intern- food lIeml&#13;
credR cards on campus. And eam up to&#13;
~ by PI $gma Epsilon. Wy-. LIltary lMnwIv Cetnr An:flhon~. Call Now $2 lor each 11SpOnSe.ll's that easy. ships.&#13;
The Nabonal CcJIe,pl:. A.IcohoI A~ w..... Commrtt .. , and the fb.:ac:omwJg&#13;
Call Call 11 am • 5pm. c:on-.no1-811J.95H472&#13;
Ext. 20 1_950-11137 Ext. 75 259-8118, Main office. .ot&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
University ofWisconsin .....Parkside&#13;
Woman assaulted atHousing&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
An&#13;
18year-old female.anon-&#13;
UW -Parkside&#13;
student, who was&#13;
conducting a sales presentation by&#13;
going  door to door  at UW-&#13;
Parkside's Residence Hall&#13;
com-&#13;
plex, reported to U\\'·Parkside&#13;
Campus Police that she was sexu-&#13;
ally assaulted on October 19,1990.&#13;
According to Campus Police,&#13;
the female. who is from Michigan,&#13;
was invited toenter an&#13;
apartmentat&#13;
housing 10conduct her presenta· .&#13;
tion. After her presentation, she&#13;
joined two male students, playing&#13;
cards and&#13;
drinking&#13;
beer.&#13;
According 10Campus Police,&#13;
after playing cards and drinking&#13;
beer the female was tired and one&#13;
of the students told her she could&#13;
lie down on his bed. A couple of&#13;
hours later she awoke to fmd a&#13;
male kissing her face. She told him&#13;
10 quit, but he continued.  The&#13;
female was heing restrained by the&#13;
male who was holding&#13;
onto&#13;
her&#13;
wrists. The male reached under her&#13;
shirt, fondling her breast and then&#13;
reached under her&#13;
skirt&#13;
and began&#13;
strokingherinnerthighs,indecenlly&#13;
touching her. During all this, the&#13;
UW-Parkside Residence Halls&#13;
victim&#13;
told&#13;
the male 10&#13;
stop,&#13;
but he&#13;
continued unabashedly. This oc-&#13;
curred for about ten minutes, and&#13;
then the male walked out of the&#13;
bedroom and thevictim wasable 10&#13;
leave the apartment&#13;
The victim reponed the&#13;
inci-&#13;
dent to Campus Police at about&#13;
6:00&#13;
pm after two of the victim's&#13;
co-workers completed their search&#13;
for her. Campus Police then began&#13;
their investigation.&#13;
See&#13;
Assault, Page&#13;
8&#13;
Walteron tour to stimulate voter turnout&#13;
said Walter.&#13;
for the last 30 years."&#13;
Walter graduated from&#13;
UW·&#13;
Walter\has his own ways get-&#13;
W;;:~~J::::;s.::::;;;_&#13;
Eau&#13;
Claire in May 1989 with&#13;
a&#13;
ting from campustocampus.&#13;
"I&#13;
gel&#13;
ELECTION&#13;
.&#13;
degree in Marketing. He&#13;
IS&#13;
pres-&#13;
rides from students to other cam-&#13;
enlly living and working in Madi-&#13;
pusesorldoalilllehitehikingfrom&#13;
I.&#13;
'90•.&#13;
sonasalobbYistforswdents. When&#13;
campus 10campus. Backpacking&#13;
Walter's lOurcomes to&#13;
an&#13;
end he&#13;
is the best way to draw attention."&#13;
wiIlbeworkingon thetuition&#13;
freeze&#13;
Walter's backpack states the goal _~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
campaign.&#13;
he is&#13;
trying&#13;
10&#13;
accomplish: "V~&#13;
"If&#13;
students&#13;
don't vote, they&#13;
November&#13;
6."&#13;
aregoing10 letsomebodyelsemake&#13;
"Historically,  students have&#13;
"If&#13;
students don't vote,&#13;
the decisions that affect them that&#13;
the lowest voter bloc turnout as&#13;
they are going to let&#13;
are probably not going 10be what&#13;
compared  to other voting bloc&#13;
somebodyelsemakethe&#13;
they want," said Walter. "The 80's&#13;
groups.&#13;
although when we do vote,&#13;
decisions that affect&#13;
weren't good for&#13;
smdems,&#13;
the 90's&#13;
r&#13;
we have the highest and most con-&#13;
them,"&#13;
Lance Walter   could be worse or better, depends&#13;
sistentturno&#13;
utof&#13;
all voting groups,"&#13;
on students, if they vote."&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Lance&#13;
Walter, Legislative Af-&#13;
fairs&#13;
Director&#13;
for United Council,&#13;
IXlnIinUed&#13;
his 14 college&#13;
campus&#13;
1Ilur&#13;
by visiting UW-Parkside on&#13;
October&#13;
18. Walter is conducting&#13;
a&#13;
two-week"Get Out The Vote"&#13;
Illur&#13;
around the&#13;
UW -System&#13;
to&#13;
entouragestudents to register and&#13;
'?&#13;
VOle&#13;
in&#13;
all the upcoming&#13;
elec-&#13;
lions.&#13;
"We are trying&#13;
10&#13;
increase&#13;
BIlIdentturnout,we've been trying&#13;
\&#13;
Unreported&#13;
Rapes&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
During this week, there have&#13;
been rumors circulating at&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside concerning two&#13;
rape&#13;
incidents that had occurred this&#13;
past weekend. Through Ranger&#13;
See Rapes, Page&#13;
8&#13;
Insisle•••&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Report&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Devil's  Advocate   Page&#13;
3&#13;
Coun.&#13;
Comer&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
Gabe's  Gab&#13;
.Page&#13;
7&#13;
Intemational&#13;
Page&#13;
8&#13;
Sports   ..&#13;
Page&#13;
9&#13;
Prof. Profile&#13;
Page&#13;
15&#13;
Vol. ofWeek.&#13;
Page&#13;
16&#13;
CJassifieds&#13;
Page&#13;
20&#13;
</text>
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              <text>&#13;
�,-  u .&#13;
. -&#13;
.nlversity&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks  ide&#13;
Thursday, Nove~ber&#13;
1,&#13;
1990&#13;
Student  arrested  for assault&#13;
.by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A 21-year-old UW-Parkside&#13;
male student. who is a resident of&#13;
UW-Parkside's   Residence  Hall&#13;
complex. was arrested on October&#13;
26 for Second Degree Sexual&#13;
As.&#13;
sault.  He was arrested after he&#13;
admitted his guilt&#13;
10&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Campus Police.&#13;
The individual. who is from&#13;
Silver Lake. was held without bail&#13;
in the Kenosha Couoty Jail this&#13;
pastweekend. He was then released&#13;
Monday afternoon on a signature&#13;
bond. He had another court hear-&#13;
ing yesterday.&#13;
On&#13;
October&#13;
19. an 18-year-&#13;
old female. not a UW -Parkside&#13;
student. who&#13;
wasconducting&#13;
a door&#13;
to   door   sales    presentation&#13;
at&#13;
Housing. reponed&#13;
10&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Campus Police that she was sexu-&#13;
ally assaulted at Housing.&#13;
The victim was invited&#13;
10&#13;
en-&#13;
ter an apartment at Housing to&#13;
conduct her presentation.   After&#13;
completing her presentation. she&#13;
joined two of the five male indi-&#13;
viduals  in playing  cards  and&#13;
drinking beer. She then felt tired&#13;
and went&#13;
10&#13;
lie down on one of the&#13;
male students bed.&#13;
She later awoke&#13;
to finding&#13;
a&#13;
hnger  Pboo.&#13;
by&#13;
Kun Gcilfun&#13;
UW -Parkslde  Residence  Halls&#13;
male kissing her face. restraining&#13;
her. and sexually fondling her. She&#13;
then reponed this&#13;
10&#13;
Campus&#13;
Po-&#13;
lice.&#13;
After a&#13;
week-&#13;
long investiga-&#13;
tion by Campus Police. who&#13;
con-&#13;
ducted interviews with six male&#13;
students.  the Silver  Lake  man&#13;
confessed his guilt by signing a&#13;
wriuen admission to&#13;
the&#13;
Class C&#13;
felony.&#13;
"The individual was arrested&#13;
on Friday at 3:00&#13;
prn,"&#13;
stated Dave&#13;
Ostrowski.  Director of Campus&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan  returns from&#13;
China&#13;
by&#13;
Latesha N. Jude&#13;
News Writer&#13;
&lt;fflOelober3.1990 eight col-&#13;
~\lIlIVersitychancellors went to&#13;
loa&#13;
as&#13;
exchange  delegation&#13;
IeJleseOlativesof the American&#13;
~iation  of State Colleges and&#13;
verslbes. The seminar  they&#13;
~CIP~ted in was called  the&#13;
.,:enlIC Development Seminar.&#13;
fourmain objectives of the&#13;
~    were:tocontinue a process&#13;
~ whichAmerican and Chinese&#13;
~~ors wouldunderstand issues&#13;
~gher  education,  to explore&#13;
~lities   between faculty and&#13;
.... ,~texchange.&#13;
to&#13;
explore and&#13;
""""'P&#13;
additional  avenues  be-&#13;
tween th~ United States and China,&#13;
and&#13;
to&#13;
participate  in&#13;
symposium&#13;
with Chinese educators."  as was&#13;
stated by the University of&#13;
WIS-  .&#13;
.. parksl·deChancellor.SheJla&#13;
consin-&#13;
Kaplan.&#13;
. . all&#13;
The delegation was ongm&#13;
Y&#13;
scheduled&#13;
to&#13;
meet at the end of&#13;
Ma  1989.  However.  after the&#13;
bru~l massacre of the students&#13;
10&#13;
Tiananmen Square inJune of 1989.&#13;
The governments of United States&#13;
and China suggested that it wasnot&#13;
.   to travel&#13;
to&#13;
Chma.&#13;
a proper&#13;
ume&#13;
k&#13;
Consequently,  the delegation tOO&#13;
I&#13;
in&#13;
October&#13;
1990.&#13;
pace&#13;
1&#13;
also dis-&#13;
Chancellor  Kap an&#13;
ith&#13;
the delegation  the&#13;
cussed  WI&#13;
Shelia Kaplan&#13;
amount of people interested in a&#13;
country exchange program. Some&#13;
delegates were concerned about the&#13;
number of exchange students who&#13;
have come to American colleges&#13;
fora year or more and have decided&#13;
nOI&#13;
10&#13;
return to their&#13;
country,&#13;
but&#13;
rather decided&#13;
10&#13;
stay in America.&#13;
The delegation also discussed the&#13;
increase in the number of&#13;
short-&#13;
term&#13;
periods of time of student&#13;
visits&#13;
and&#13;
were interested in&#13;
rees-&#13;
tablishing the&#13;
momentum&#13;
of ex-&#13;
changes between the United States&#13;
and China.&#13;
There are&#13;
45. 000&#13;
exchange&#13;
students from China who&#13;
are&#13;
pres-&#13;
See&#13;
China.&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
Police and Public Safety.&#13;
According&#13;
to    SIeve&#13;
Mclaughlin. Dean&#13;
of&#13;
Student&#13;
Life.&#13;
the&#13;
Silver Lake&#13;
man&#13;
has returned&#13;
to the University. but has been&#13;
suspended&#13;
from&#13;
theResidence&#13;
Hall&#13;
complex.&#13;
HAt&#13;
this&#13;
poiat&#13;
we are&#13;
con-&#13;
dueling a separate investigation&#13;
involving University discipline. He&#13;
call&#13;
face up&#13;
10&#13;
suspension orexput-&#13;
sion from the University,"  said&#13;
Mclaughlin.&#13;
See&#13;
Assault,&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Page 2&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Report&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Devil's Advocate&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Voice of UW-P   Page&#13;
4&#13;
Vol. of Week&#13;
Page&#13;
5&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page&#13;
7&#13;
Gabe'sGeb&#13;
Page&#13;
13&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Page 14'&#13;
This&#13;
Week&#13;
Page 15&#13;
C1assifieds&#13;
Page 16&#13;
-&#13;
Editorial&#13;
...................&#13;
".&#13;
..&#13;
..,&#13;
..&#13;
,&#13;
~-------;:;'::::;:~&#13;
Ranger. Page 2&#13;
Small Scale Humor&#13;
by  Chris  Ingram&#13;
e&#13;
Chris  Ingram  1990&#13;
The untold  stOfY of whit .¥.ntu~111  happened  to Tarzln&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
Vote. Vote. VOle. Voting is an&#13;
important&#13;
right that you as a U.S.&#13;
citizen have and you should exercise that right LOits fullest extent. So the&#13;
first&#13;
thing that should be on your mind on Tuesday November 6. when you&#13;
wake up after a hectic night of studying. is to go out and&#13;
vote,&#13;
Voting actually does have an interesting history behind it. At&#13;
first,&#13;
in&#13;
the United States. the growth of having the right to vote was slow, though&#13;
it was more rapid&#13;
than&#13;
in any other major democracies.  The promises of&#13;
equality contained in the Declaration ofIndependence and the Constitution&#13;
did not materialize at once. Religious qualifications, often required in&#13;
colonial times, disappeared shortly after the American Revolution, but&#13;
property and literacy qualifications continued for a long time.&#13;
The&#13;
flfSl&#13;
breakthrough in America suffrage came in the 1830's, the period of Andrew Jackson's radical&#13;
democracy&#13;
based&#13;
on the equalitarian outlook of the Western frontiersmen, who increasingly asserted themselves&#13;
in national politics. By 1860, universal suffrage for white males had become an accomplished fact. The 14th&#13;
and 15th Amendments sought to ensure suffrage for African-American's,  but these constitutional provisions&#13;
were not fully enforced in some states. where poll taxes and literacy tests kept most African-American's  from&#13;
the&#13;
polls. The 19th Amendment granted voting rights to women, though some states had given women voting&#13;
rights long before. The 24th Amendment barred the use of a poll tax in federal elections. The Voting Rights Act&#13;
of 1965 strengthened the hand of African-Americans seeking to register in the South. The 26th Amendment and&#13;
subsequent legislation granted voting rights to persons 18 years old or older.&#13;
During the week of October 1-5, The Parkside Student Goverment Association and Student Organization&#13;
Council sponsored "Political Awareness Week". Committee chairs Chris Daniel, vice-president of PSGA, and&#13;
Brenda Wilson, vice-president of SOC did a great job organizing this event and&#13;
both&#13;
feel it was a total success.&#13;
But. just like almost any event on the campus, there was minimum participation by the student body. The&#13;
committee brought in inany political leaders who&#13;
are&#13;
vying for office in the November 6 election. They included&#13;
GovemorTommy  Thompson, a Republican, and State Representative Tom Loftus, a Democrat. A new service&#13;
that was offered to the students, staff, and faculty of OW-Parkside was Voter Registration. They could register&#13;
to&#13;
vote in&#13;
Kenosha,&#13;
Racine, or Somers. The committee registered 157 people. This was a great idea and the&#13;
number of panicipants&#13;
will&#13;
increase each time it is offenred.&#13;
On&#13;
October 17th and 18th, The Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Governement Association held their Fall elections. Out&#13;
of approximately 5,500&#13;
students&#13;
only 114 students voted. You would think that since these student candidates&#13;
were running for positions that represent students at OW -Parkside that more&#13;
than&#13;
that would have voted.&#13;
On&#13;
the&#13;
.other hand,&#13;
you&#13;
would think that more&#13;
than&#13;
three students would run for the nine seats that were open. The thing&#13;
about this is students&#13;
are&#13;
always ready togripe but never want to&#13;
do&#13;
anything about it. There&#13;
are&#13;
still open senate&#13;
seats.&#13;
If&#13;
you&#13;
are&#13;
interested in sticking up for your student rights you can always complete a senate intern project&#13;
and&#13;
becomea senator-theback-ctoorapproach.&#13;
If&#13;
you wanttosee what their organization&#13;
is&#13;
all about, they meet&#13;
in&#13;
Communication Arts room 129 on Fridays at 12:00. They&#13;
are&#13;
always happy to see new faces.&#13;
If&#13;
you care about what&#13;
is&#13;
going on in your commurtity and state, get out and vote on November 6. Polls are&#13;
open&#13;
from 7am to 8&#13;
pm.&#13;
Rem~bcr,  your vote counts just as much as anyone else's.&#13;
If&#13;
someone took away your&#13;
ri~htto vote, you'd be screammg for&#13;
It&#13;
back.&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
SiIq&gt;kiffi&#13;
league offenders in crimes against&#13;
humanity. Business (which issup.&#13;
posed to help our country) is a&#13;
democratic trademark. Incontras~&#13;
a book about corporate irresponsi.&#13;
bility wouldread&#13;
like ahorrorstory&#13;
worse than any Hollywood fright&#13;
film.&#13;
Worse, because it's real.&#13;
As&#13;
far as legality is concerned,&#13;
corpo.&#13;
rate lawyers should be considered&#13;
felonous scum of the&#13;
earth,&#13;
for&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
responsible  for keeping legal&#13;
the&#13;
daily raping of our planet.&#13;
Another subject whichcannOI&#13;
be overlooked,  are the individuals&#13;
who make up this motley crewwe&#13;
call society.  Each person playsa&#13;
part of this sickness production&#13;
some more than others. Individu:&#13;
als remain&#13;
self&#13;
absorbed in&#13;
their&#13;
everyday lives until ugliness takes&#13;
hold with&#13;
an&#13;
inescapable grip.Then&#13;
he cries for help, of course&#13;
no&#13;
one&#13;
will&#13;
botherto  assist. Sad, buttrue&#13;
it's the way we are.&#13;
Incomparison&#13;
See&#13;
The Dream,&#13;
page&#13;
6&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiappetta&#13;
IntemationalEdito"&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Dawn&#13;
Mailand&#13;
Sport. Editor&#13;
Jeff&#13;
Lemmermarm.&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editors&#13;
Mike McKowen    '&#13;
Ted Mcintyre&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
TO&lt;!&#13;
McCarthy&gt;&#13;
Layout Edito .. ::&#13;
S&lt;:otl&#13;
Binger&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Sara&#13;
Kahl ,  ••••..•..&#13;
J\~~isors:::'.'.'.'/.:-:-,&#13;
StuartRub~~r  ..,&#13;
Jan&#13;
Nowal&lt; ..&#13;
..............•...&gt; •.....&#13;
.&#13;
....&#13;
;.;&#13;
..&#13;
,,',:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
. Member of the Associated Collegiate  Press&#13;
Subscription&#13;
rate  for  one  year  is $5.00.   Please   address   all  correspondence   to:&#13;
Ranger'&#13;
•&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Wood Road  Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial Office (414)553-2287&#13;
'. Business Office (414)5S3,2295&#13;
Editor,i~-CI1i.f&#13;
CraigA.&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
....••...••&#13;
:&#13;
.•.••...•....&#13;
,.:,.;:&#13;
.&#13;
General Sta'ff, . .&#13;
.' . .....&#13;
. .....",:&gt;'&#13;
&gt;.   •...   .&#13;
Donald Andrewski, Gabe Kluka; Jim N~wcb~b,Rufus  Thome, David&#13;
Doherty,&#13;
Mona Shannon, Lisa Vopal, John Taylor, David Wick,Bill&#13;
.Hawkins, JeffBro,:"stad, LateshaJude,  Kelly McKissick, JeffReddICk,&#13;
KImberly Tenerelh, Chris Deguire, Susan Lueqkes, Muhammad yusuf&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Nursing program successful</text>
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              <text>&#13;
•&#13;
Univ~rsity ofWisconsin--Parkside&#13;
r:~:::;~.!IIII~~I;lillf,~III:11111111~11~lill:[i[;II:il1111ili~i:llil~l:liwlllllilliilili;~~:i1~!iil.•i.i:.;.if:;.i.;.i.i...•&#13;
'&gt;·  ..'..&#13;
.  '-'-'-..".-.-&gt;:':.&#13;
Lakota&#13;
artistcomin&#13;
....Thursday, November 8, 1990&#13;
Nursing program successful&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Last year. 100% of a1l UW-&#13;
Parkside students who graduated&#13;
with an undergraduate  nursing&#13;
degree from UW-Parkside'sIlJW-&#13;
Milwaukee's  Consortial Nursing&#13;
Program passed the state board&#13;
exam, according toJoan Wilk.R.N .•&#13;
Ph.D .• Coordinator   of UW-&#13;
Parksi  de/UW·  Mil waukee&#13;
Consortial Nursing Program.&#13;
"We have an excellent pro-&#13;
gram," said Wilk.'  "It's a unique&#13;
program."&#13;
In 1979. UW-Parkside ven-&#13;
tured with UW-Milwaukee  in&#13;
forming the Consortial Nursing&#13;
Program.  UW-Parkside&#13;
first&#13;
of-&#13;
fered the nursing major in 1981.&#13;
Since then.&#13;
170&#13;
UW-Parkside stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
have graduated  from the&#13;
program.  At this time. 127 UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
are enrolled in&#13;
the program.&#13;
According  to Wilko people&#13;
misunderstand the way&#13;
the&#13;
pro-&#13;
gram operates because people be-&#13;
lieve that since it's a venture with&#13;
UW-Milwaukee it's necessary to&#13;
take classes at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
That's not true.&#13;
"Students  can take all the&#13;
classes necessary at UW-Parkside&#13;
to earn the degree. including all&#13;
clinical work&#13;
can&#13;
be done in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area," said Wilko&#13;
"Everything isoffered here, but the&#13;
degree is actually confinned by&#13;
UW-Milwaukee,"&#13;
According to Ann M. Boyle.&#13;
R.N., M.S., Academic Advisor of&#13;
UW -Parkside/UW  -Mil waukee&#13;
Consortial Nursing Program. UW-&#13;
Parkside nursing students are very&#13;
successful in the program.&#13;
"Students are very successful&#13;
infinding meaningful employment&#13;
career in Health Service," said&#13;
Boyle. "There are more jobs in the&#13;
field than qualified people to fill&#13;
them."&#13;
According  to Wilk, UW-&#13;
Joan Wilk&#13;
Parkside began this program to&#13;
meet the community's needs.&#13;
"There is a shortage of nurses&#13;
in Wisconsin. The primary reason&#13;
for forming a nursing major was to&#13;
benefit&#13;
this area," said Wilk.&#13;
"This is an excellent time to&#13;
See Nursing,  page&#13;
7&#13;
New&#13;
satellite dish-placed in use at UW-Parkside&#13;
said Mark Marlaire, director of  "foster campus and business con-&#13;
Continuing Education.&#13;
nections.&#13;
The satellite dish was funded   "provide greater diversity of coo-&#13;
by UW-Parkside's  Continuing   tinuing education programs.&#13;
Education Extended Services and  "bring various community groups&#13;
the state extension&#13;
office&#13;
in Madi-   to the campus.&#13;
son.&#13;
"provide staff development op-&#13;
UW-Parkside's   Extended&#13;
portunities&#13;
for UW·Parkside fae-&#13;
Services holds memberships with  ulty and staff.&#13;
the National University Telecon-   "developwaystoenrichcurriculum&#13;
ferencing Network and the Public   for graduate and undergraduate    Editorial    ,&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
Broadcasting    Service/Adult    students.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
R&#13;
P&#13;
3&#13;
"&#13;
bli&#13;
eport,.......&#13;
age&#13;
Learning Satellite Service.&#13;
support pu ICservice program-&#13;
UW-Parkside hasdisplayed its  ming for the UW-Parkside service   Devil's  Advocate   Page&#13;
3&#13;
committed dedication indelivering&#13;
area&#13;
Voice ofUW-P&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
quality educational programs that&#13;
G&#13;
be'&#13;
G&#13;
b&#13;
P&#13;
7&#13;
will benefit the community and the&#13;
The following are the five&#13;
a  sa&#13;
age&#13;
university by purchasing the&#13;
sat-&#13;
major areas&#13;
that&#13;
will be focused on&#13;
Sports&#13;
.Page&#13;
9&#13;
ellite&#13;
dish.&#13;
concerning conferencing.&#13;
Prof. Proftle&#13;
Page&#13;
13&#13;
band sateilite  dish located on&#13;
f&#13;
the  tellite&#13;
·Continuing  Education  confer-   VoLofWeek  •..,&#13;
.Page&#13;
14&#13;
Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
The purpose&#13;
0&#13;
sa&#13;
I&#13;
ences which are&#13;
purchased&#13;
and&#13;
"The satellite dish picks up  dish is to:&#13;
marketed to the public.&#13;
This Week.&#13;
, .Page&#13;
16&#13;
mostsatellitescarryingeducauon~&#13;
"suppon  the mission of UW-   "Staff  development  programs&#13;
Classifieds.    ,..Page20&#13;
programsthroU$f1Qyt.tIJl\Co.::tIJl~\fY..:.:\_.:.;.Par.ks.i.de.·   iiiiiiiii===Wh=t·C=h ..are_ed_u.ca.u.·o.n.Or_iss_u_e_on_·_._====:::&#13;
----..J&#13;
anger photo&#13;
by&#13;
Kurt&#13;
oenruss&#13;
UW.Parkslde Extended Services satellite dish&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~~lier   this semester,  UW-&#13;
'~iIIe,l',e\:~iy~&#13;
a&#13;
,12&#13;
foot CIKu&#13;
ented.&#13;
"Curriculum enrichment programs&#13;
which are designed  to augment&#13;
credit course instruction.&#13;
·Public service seminars which are&#13;
See&#13;
Satellite, page&#13;
7&#13;
Inside.••&#13;
-Ran-&#13;
g&#13;
er,-Pag-e2-----L-_:::&#13;
E&#13;
:..=d=...:..ito.:.-n-"&#13;
a_l  __&#13;
J&#13;
....&#13;
.&#13;
'.'&#13;
.&#13;
NOvemberjJ§&#13;
From the desk of another  Editor&#13;
Thefollowing columnoppeared  in the October&#13;
17&#13;
editionofthe&#13;
_________&#13;
""'!!!'!!!!!!"'  __&#13;
student newspaper&#13;
at&#13;
South Dakota State University, the Collegian.&#13;
SDSU is located in the great town&#13;
0/&#13;
Brookings, South Dakota and&#13;
has an enrollment&#13;
0/&#13;
over 7.000 students. The column, which was&#13;
wriuen by Collegian Editor Denise Ross, is titled "Editorial criti-&#13;
cism defined,"  Ross's column hits the nail perfectly on the head&#13;
when she decribes certain problems her paper has been/acing and&#13;
explains perfect solutions to the many criticisms she has beenfaced&#13;
with.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
good&#13;
10&#13;
know that the Ranger is not the only newspaper&#13;
that pUISin many hours each week, and still receives cruicismfrom&#13;
students, staff. and faculty.  Good job, Denise!&#13;
SomtOne  once said,&#13;
''Do&#13;
not judge  a man  until  you have  walked  a mile  in his shoes."&#13;
Thequotation    could&#13;
be&#13;
adapted  by any Collegian  section  editor  to: "Do not judge  the Collegian  until&#13;
you have spent  a Monday  nigbt  in our  olrlce."&#13;
When  I say Monday  night,  I mean  from  mid-Monday   arternoon   up to press  time  2 p.m. Tuesday.&#13;
That  is right,  SDSU.  While  most of&#13;
you&#13;
are  snuggled  between  the sheets  dreaming   dreamy  thoughts,&#13;
six se&lt;:tion editors,  an  advertising   manager,   a managing   editor,  an  editor  and  usually  a few ad  staff&#13;
members  are  working  in our  basement  corner  of the Student  Union  to bring  you the next  Collegian.&#13;
Mondays  are  not a time  for sleep.  Our  motto:  "Sleep  is for wimps."&#13;
I&#13;
share  this with  you nol to gain sympathy,   but&#13;
10&#13;
explain  why it would  be unwise  to pop in the olrlce&#13;
on a radom  Tuesday  morning.   People  will not get a warm  reception.&#13;
It&#13;
is nothing  personal;  butallshould&#13;
be forewarned   that  the mere  presence  of anyone  nol of Collegian&#13;
origin  will either  cause  our  stair  to glare  savagely,  grunt  and  ignore  the unforlunate    intruder,   or worse&#13;
yet, to laugh  sharply  at any suggestions  of what  should  be in our  next  issue.&#13;
Our stalfrealius&#13;
the Collegian  is not perfect.  Perfection  is not its purpose,  nor our  intent.  Therefore,&#13;
any  criticism   offered   will  not  bruise   our  egos,  which  is,&#13;
I&#13;
suspect,   what  some  people  have  tried   to&#13;
llCCOIIIplish.Believe me, you cannot  be any  harder   on us than  we are  on ourselves.&#13;
One need only to&#13;
stop&#13;
by the olrl"" (preferably   not on Tuesday)  to see the tacked  up version  of the last&#13;
lssue&#13;
hardy   standing   because  our  red  marker   always  leaves  every  page  bleeding  profusely.&#13;
OIcourse,   the CoIkgiaD  always we kames  constructive   comments;   I have talked  with several  students&#13;
ahant  covering  campus  events  we have  neglected  in  the  past.   However,   do  not  confuse  constructive&#13;
commeats  with general  random  Collegian-bashing.&#13;
Reel free to call our publication   anyting  you like· we&#13;
wonId&#13;
do&#13;
it to rou-ithout&#13;
hesitation.&#13;
Just&#13;
remember   to keep your  cruel  evaluation   private.   You n~ver&#13;
know who might  sit&#13;
behbtd&#13;
you  in&#13;
sociology&#13;
class.&#13;
Denise&#13;
Ross&#13;
Continued&#13;
above&#13;
Continued&#13;
from below&#13;
From the desk of another editor&#13;
On the otber  band,  if someone   is truly  furious  ab~ut informa~&#13;
or opinions  printed  on&#13;
these&#13;
pages,  the best  recourse   ISa letter&#13;
l0llle&#13;
editor.&#13;
.&#13;
Storming   down  to&#13;
the&#13;
office  and  y.elhng at our  business mana&#13;
will get you  nowbere   (except  pOSSibly into  Collegian  conversatio:&#13;
downtown   establishments).&#13;
A reader   may  not  agree  witb  a c~lu,:,n,  cart~n    or an ediloria!.&#13;
Tbatis   anyone.'s  rigllt.&#13;
But&#13;
the Collegtan   s&#13;
content&#13;
is&#13;
nOllhereadell'&#13;
d&#13;
.,   n   And  a reader   cannot   cbange&#13;
tbe&#13;
column  once it&#13;
is&#13;
in&#13;
p  .&#13;
ecrsro   '.&#13;
.,.&#13;
nD~&#13;
nor is it likely a reader  will cbange  a&#13;
eelumnist&#13;
s mmdor  poinlof,ieo",&#13;
If&#13;
the&#13;
writer   took  tim!   to&#13;
research&#13;
a  topic,&#13;
the&#13;
writer  has likel)&#13;
considered   bis tbougbts   carefully.&#13;
It&#13;
is important   to understand&#13;
the purpose   of editorial  writing,b&#13;
is intended   to promote   an  excbange   of ideas,  to express  a PartiCUlar&#13;
viewpoint&#13;
and/or&#13;
to persuade   tbe  audience.    So do not get bent outll&#13;
. shape&#13;
if&#13;
you  do  not  agree   witb  a  columnist.&#13;
You  are nol alwall&#13;
supposed   to.&#13;
To express  your  outrage   and  disgust,  a letter  is best. Weprintan&#13;
letters  written  according   to our  policy,  no mailer   how mean and&#13;
nast)&#13;
the  tone.&#13;
If&#13;
someone  out  there  knows  in their  heart  the Collegian isInl)&#13;
evil  and  of no wortb-if&#13;
someone   knows  a better   way to do&#13;
till!-&#13;
applications   are  in tbe  office.&#13;
University-of   Wisc;onsin-Parkside&#13;
.".Ranger&#13;
Member of the A5sociatedCol1egiate~res~&#13;
Subscripuon   rate  for'&#13;
one:&#13;
Yf;lar&#13;
Is&#13;
$5.00.   Please   address   aU corresporoenceto:&#13;
.'&#13;
Ranger&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
. Wood  Road  Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI  53141·2000&#13;
Ed~orial Office. (414) 553-2287&#13;
"'Susines;;   Office (41~)  553·2295&#13;
Editor-hi-Chief&#13;
Craig&#13;
A.&#13;
5impl&lt;;in~&#13;
..&#13;
'''''''&#13;
News&#13;
Edit~.r,'.'  :,&#13;
x'&#13;
-Business Managfl'&#13;
Dan Chiappetta   •.•.   .&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
j:&#13;
Schuh&#13;
International   Edit"r··&#13;
Asst. Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
Gwen  Hellet&#13;
.    .&#13;
......&#13;
Heather&#13;
McGee&#13;
Entertainment   Editor  .'&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
Dawn&#13;
Mailand    ..}&#13;
.•... 'fern&#13;
Lyn&#13;
FortneY&#13;
SportsEditor..&gt;&#13;
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Manager&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann   .&#13;
Ron&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Asst. Sports  Edi!o",   •&#13;
(:;irolation&#13;
Manager&#13;
Mike McKowen&#13;
··i&#13;
.'&#13;
Tracie&#13;
Nelson&#13;
Ted McIntyre..&#13;
p';l&gt;lic&#13;
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Lebrick&#13;
!2oPYEditor'  .&#13;
.•••.&#13;
Greg&#13;
Tod&#13;
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Sunni&#13;
Beeck&#13;
Scali Singer   ..&#13;
Photog13ph"&#13;
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Todd&#13;
(;oerS&#13;
Sara&#13;
KOhl   .&#13;
HenryCornett&#13;
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.&#13;
CarlOO&#13;
nilll&#13;
StuartR"bnei"&#13;
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Paul&#13;
Ber8'&#13;
Jan&#13;
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ChrisInS"'"&#13;
•..&#13;
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Glen&#13;
\(elly&#13;
General  Staff:  ..  \\&#13;
\   "&#13;
.'  .&#13;
Da~d:&#13;
Donald  Andrewskj.,  9~.be K1uka, JlI1)Newcomb;  Rufus Thorn&#13;
e&#13;
:&#13;
c&#13;
Bill'&#13;
Dohe,:y,  Mona  Sh~nlll.m, Lisa  Vopal,  JohnT~ylor,   ~avld&#13;
WI&#13;
~icl\'&#13;
H~W.ki...n..SiJeff.B.r'!m....~.t...a.p,Latesh~  JUde,.K.. e.ll&#13;
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IYI.CKiSS1Ck:Jef~JRed&#13;
KImberly Tenerelli,  Chris  Deguire,  SllsanLiJedkes;  Chns Tohver&#13;
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              <text>by Tad McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
The Seventh Annual Model&#13;
Organizationof American States&#13;
confenmce was held at University&#13;
ofWisconsin-ParlcsideonThursday&#13;
and Friday,November Sand&#13;
9. Sponsoredand organized by&#13;
University of Wisconsin- Parks ide&#13;
Ra"nger photo by V1cki~Carraverta&#13;
the UW-P Center for International&#13;
Studies, it was attended by 290&#13;
high school students from Kenosha,&#13;
Racine, and Milwaukee counties.&#13;
. According to Prof. Gerald&#13;
Gteenfield of UW -Parkside, who&#13;
is the Director of the Center for&#13;
Continued on Page7&#13;
6.3%Tuition hike approved&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta in state tax dollars and $5.9 million&#13;
News Editor less from students.&#13;
The UW-System's Board of "Students should no longer be&#13;
Regents, on November 9, approved required to pay continual increases&#13;
a proposed systemwide 6.3 tuition in tuition and other added fees' to&#13;
hike and a '8.4 percent faculty sal- supplantdecreasedgeneraJ purpose&#13;
ary increase. The approved pro- revenues tax funding," said Bill&#13;
posal means That all 26 UW- Sys- Homer, president of Parkside's&#13;
tern campuses will have an annual Student Government Association.&#13;
tuition increase average of 6.3 for "Using student cutbacks as a&#13;
the next two years. mechanism for funding forthe UWUnder&#13;
the approved budget System is outrageous. The idea of&#13;
plan of $4.4 billion for 1991-93. usingenrollmentcutbaclcsasabarmostUW-Parlcsidestudentstuition&#13;
gaining chip at the legislature is&#13;
would increase 552.00. blackmail. This is supposed to be&#13;
"We're upset Tuition has re- a public education system," said&#13;
ally gone up in recent years. It's Lance Walter, U.c. Legislative&#13;
hurting students," said United Director.&#13;
Council president Brenda Leahy. UW·ParI&lt;sidestudents,aswell&#13;
"Students arc having to lake se- as other universities urged regents&#13;
mesters off because of tuition in- to impose a tuition freeze.&#13;
creases." "The regents heard personal&#13;
UW-System President Ken- stories concerning a tuition inneth&#13;
Shaw's original plan asking crease---they didn't listen," said&#13;
for a 7.9 percent tuition increase Leahy. "This budget illustrates the&#13;
was cut by the Board of Regents. Board of Regent's unwillingness&#13;
The Board of Regents cut $25.9 to fight to make education a priormillion&#13;
from Shaw's original pro- ity in this state."&#13;
posal by eliminating $20 million President Shaw's proposal is&#13;
related to the 5.3 percent inflation&#13;
rate and in trying to match tuition&#13;
with other public universities.&#13;
"We do need to look at a reasonable&#13;
tuition increase that will at&#13;
Men stopping rape lecture held&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
On October 12, 1990, Joseph&#13;
Weinberg,the organizer and presidentof&#13;
the nation's largest community-based&#13;
group of men workingtllendviolence&#13;
against women&#13;
andmen,spokeon"Men Stopping&#13;
Rape" in a public lecture held at&#13;
UW:Parkside.&#13;
Weinbergdiscussed issues of&#13;
IlIen,Womenand sex, recognizing&#13;
IIld Sloppingsexual assault, taking&#13;
"Do" for an answer; confronting&#13;
lIiOntan-hatingattitudes and comIllunicatingwith&#13;
women and with&#13;
Illen. .&#13;
Weinbergis president of Men&#13;
SloppingRape, Inc. which is an&#13;
Olganizalionof men in Madison,&#13;
. ,..'.. ','.'&#13;
Wiseonsin that takes action on issues&#13;
of sexuality, masculinity,&#13;
friendships b.etween men and&#13;
women and between men, sexual&#13;
assault/violence awareness, and&#13;
homophobia. Weinberg travels to&#13;
high schools and colleges around&#13;
the, state talking to men raising&#13;
their consciousness through discussion&#13;
groups, a rape myth poster&#13;
series, and by networking with other&#13;
anti- rape groups, and have organized&#13;
conferences and rallies.&#13;
M~n Stopping Rape discusses&#13;
18 steps of action that men can&#13;
take in making this a rape- free culture.&#13;
The following are a few of&#13;
Weinberg'sl8 steps.&#13;
Talk about sex. Many people&#13;
grow up with unrealistiC beliefs&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
about sex, such as talking about sex&#13;
is unmasculine, these beliefs keeps&#13;
individuals from knowing about&#13;
sexuality and enjoying a sexual&#13;
Continued on Page 17&#13;
Happy&#13;
Thanksgiving!&#13;
The Ranger will not be&#13;
published on Thursday,&#13;
November 22, which is&#13;
Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
Kenneth Shaw&#13;
least keep us even with the rate of&#13;
inflation," said UW -Parkside&#13;
Chancellor Shiela Kaplan in an article&#13;
in the Kenosha News. "YetI&#13;
believe that given the quality of&#13;
education we provide, it's still a&#13;
good value."&#13;
The legislature is expected to&#13;
approve a final UW-System budget&#13;
next June. United Council vows&#13;
to fight for the students they represent&#13;
during legislature budget debates.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Editorial Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate Page 3&#13;
Voice ofUW-P Page 4&#13;
Spotlight. Page 5&#13;
Sports Page 9&#13;
IntemationaI... Page 17&#13;
Prof. Profile Page 19&#13;
Vol. of Week .Page 21&#13;
This Week., Page 23&#13;
Classifieds Page 24&#13;
Sports PulIout Sec. C&#13;
~Ran!J5!!.ger~,PageIl!:..:2 -.-:E=.:d=i~to=-n-·a_l_---~&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
. . are Within our nghts.&#13;
To the echtor, . F . T r&#13;
We take great offense to Chris "or every 0 Ivenan "inno.&#13;
. ',' fwomen and rape. cent manlOpnson,therearelll Toltver s view 0 . lki Ore tl . tedin DA Darkside rapistswa mgon the streetsIII&#13;
asrecen YfPthnnRanger We take who have slipped through :••any -column 0 e '. . . .'" jllreater&#13;
affront with the. Ranger dicial system. Our courts oflaw&#13;
g . th columnandsupporung· bendover~ckwardslopm'_,&#13;
creaung e . di id al' . h -an . as a columnists. We In IV. U S ng ts. The q""'"-&#13;
thiS person . ' d f ... .... -"""IVIII&#13;
question the Ranger policy .an 0 Innocent men Inpnson isdeo&#13;
judgement. If Toliver's opuuons batable..&#13;
had been stated in a "Letter to the . Rape I.Sthe most undelTeJlortr4&#13;
Editor", we would have to respect cnme agamst women. A wOl1lan&#13;
his right to free speech guaranteed would notdraw attenuon tOlhefil:t&#13;
by the Constitution. To give hIS tI18t she had sex With a Illanby&#13;
opinions a highlighted area on the gomg through the humiliating&#13;
"Opinion" page ntises other ques- process of filing a rape charge.&#13;
tions. Rape and sexual assaUlt are&#13;
According to Toliver, if a the. two, most heinous Cnllles&#13;
women is unconscious she has against women. These crimes&#13;
implied consent to sex. On that should not be dealt with in any&#13;
bizarre premise, can .we turn the manner other than senously. The&#13;
tables and infer that a sleeping! brazen humor presemed to US by&#13;
unconscious man, too, has given Toliver was totally mappml'riate&#13;
his consent for us to do what we and unacceoptable. The Illylils&#13;
wish to his body? Suppose we regarding women and rapeshould&#13;
decide to remove his genitalia? In be dispelled and not allowedto be&#13;
ihegospelaccordingto.Toliver, we Continued on Page'&#13;
November 1$&#13;
I FIGURE WE'RE SAFE&#13;
UNTIL HIS POPUU\RITY&#13;
RATINGHI1S 45%&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
Over the past decade tuition at the University of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide has risen over 100%. Well,as oflast week you can tack a few&#13;
more percentage points to that figure. On Friday, the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents approved of a tuition hike. For a full-time under- .&#13;
graduate residing in Wisconsin, tuition will increase from $764 to&#13;
5816 a semester, or 6.8%. The. figures do nOIinclude segregated fees&#13;
• charged to students each semester.&#13;
UW President Kenneth Shaw no longer wants tuition to be tied to the formula that has both state and&#13;
student sharing the cost of instruction, 65% from taxes, 35% from tuition. Under Shaw's proposal, the UW·&#13;
System would be free to exceed the 35% tuition cap. Therefore, the UW System could raise in tuition the&#13;
dollars lawmakers refuse to yield in taxes. Shaw's new formula is also tied to the 5.3% inflation rate and&#13;
matching the tutions charged by other public universities in the Big Ten Athletic Conference.&#13;
This new tuition hike has its pros and cons with students. Some students who have to work all summer&#13;
and even during the school year are going to have to dig deeper in their pocketbooks when next fall arrives.&#13;
'Then there are students who have their education paid for by some otherresource and it doesn't really bother&#13;
them. There is also an elite group of students who figure that the education they are getting is well worth the'&#13;
tuition hike and don't have an opinion on the issue either.&#13;
You will not find too many members of the sWf and faculty complaining to Madison about this one&#13;
because the S 143 million increase includes a round offaculty and sWf calch-up pay raises: 38.2 million for&#13;
raises, 2.4% each year. Shaw also plans on proposing general salary increases of 6% each year for faculty&#13;
and staff, which means a combined pay ntise of 8.4% each year.&#13;
Would supporting the tuition hike for inflation adjustments be justifiable? Or does the tuition rate have&#13;
W keep rising year after year by percentage puints over the inflation rate? You can voice your opinions on&#13;
litis issue to the UW System Board of Regents by obtaining a list of Regents from the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Office located in WLLC next w the Ranger Office. Or, better yet, you can write a letter to the&#13;
edilOr, then the UW-Parksidecommunity and the Board of Regents can read your opinion at the same time,&#13;
since the Board of Regents does receive theRanger.&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
~&#13;
" , J &lt; ~.&#13;
",' . "".&#13;
.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
Subscription rate for one year is $5.00.&#13;
Please address all correspondence to:&#13;
Universay of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Post Offiqe Box 2000.&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
EditorialOffice (414) 553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414) 5.53-2295 .&#13;
Editor,in.chief&#13;
Craig A.·Simpkins 'Business Managll&#13;
Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Asst, Business Manager&#13;
Heather McGee&#13;
Advertising ManaS"&#13;
.Tern Fortney&#13;
'Distribution Manas"&#13;
RonHa"""&#13;
Circulation Managll&#13;
- ElizabethSpalla&#13;
Public Relations DiredOl&#13;
Greg Lebricl&#13;
PhotoEdito'&#13;
SunniBe&lt;cl&#13;
Photograph'"&#13;
ToddGoe!'&#13;
HenryCornell&#13;
Cartoonisb&#13;
PaulBerge&#13;
ChrisIngB"&#13;
Glen Kclly&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
Intemation'!.! Editor&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Ent~rtainment Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Sports Editor .&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editors&#13;
Mike McKowen&#13;
Ted Mcintyre&#13;
Copy Edilor&#13;
Tod McCarthy&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Sara Kahl&#13;
Advisors&#13;
-Stuart Rubner&#13;
Jan Nowak&#13;
General Staff:&#13;
Donald Andrewski, Gabe K1uka, Jim Newcomb, Rufus Thorne~~&#13;
Doherty, Mona Shannon, Lisa Vopal, John Taylor, DaVIdW~d&lt;, i&#13;
Hawkm~,Jef~ Bromstad, latesha Jude. Kelly McKissick, Kimber:&#13;
TenereUi,.Chns [)eguire, Susan Luedkes, Len Anhod, DebraHalv"'"&#13;
. .&#13;
L •• ". j \. '" ,J J,.,l ,,1,\&#13;
November15, 1990&#13;
Ranger, Page 3&#13;
.,&#13;
-&#13;
by&#13;
Donald R.&#13;
Andrewski&#13;
On 12 November I attended&#13;
theMen'sOoly Workshop on Rape.&#13;
Joe Weinberg, president of the&#13;
Madison·based "Men Stopping&#13;
Rape,"gaveapresentation directed&#13;
lOwardmen concerning the issue&#13;
ofrape.&#13;
The purpose of this meeting&#13;
wasnot sexist, but rather that men&#13;
wouldbe more open in the cornpany&#13;
of other men than in a mixed&#13;
group.&#13;
Iwas extremely disappointed&#13;
thatonly seven men showed up for&#13;
the workshop. While Irealize that&#13;
peoplehave other commitments, I&#13;
fmdit difficult to believe that the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Opinion&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
TheDevil's Advocate&#13;
Workshop att~~dancea disappointment&#13;
vast maJOn~y of ~a1e students had five percent of incidents that oc- trayed as Jewish. entire United States there are only&#13;
- ' . more pressing things to do. cur there. The truth is that most This atrocious attitude is a reo ten groups of men opposing rape.&#13;
As Iexpressed my disappoint. rapes are initiated by people that f1ectionofauniversalracistattitude When I asked Mr. Weinberg if he&#13;
ment at ~e rather dismal turnout, the victim Knew and trusted. toward members of minority and meant base groups with smaller&#13;
~. Wem~rg reassured me that Rapists are more likely to be economically-depressed groups. chapters, he replied that there were&#13;
things of this nature take time to fathers, brothers, friends, dates and To make matters worse, thecrimi- only ten in total.&#13;
develop, and seemed genuinely other acquaintances. Socio-eco.· nal justice system acts as an en. Mr. Weinbelg expressed oppleased&#13;
that anyone showed up at nomic factors do not play into this; forcer of this myth. Mr. Weinberg timism that there are several CIIIJ\.&#13;
all. rapists are doctors, lawyers, clergy. stated that over fifty percent of all puses in the UW system that are in&#13;
Mr. Weinberg presented things and police officers in addition to blacks in prison are doing time for the embryonic stages and trying to&#13;
ina manner that Icould relate. We blue collar workers and the unem- rape, while in all rape cases, over get organized. Wecantakeourcue&#13;
both had things in common. For ployed. ninety percent of those males ac- from this. Since Uwstudentsseem&#13;
example, we have both experienced It seems to me that the real cused are white. 10 be on the cutting edge of rape&#13;
divorce and the frustrations that problem is that society in general In reality, the possibility of a refonn,weshouldbecomeinvolved&#13;
men feel when a relationship turns doesn't really know what a rape is. white female being the victim of in the process. Weareeitherpartof&#13;
sour. From that point he proceeded . So as rapists commit their acts of rape by a non-white is about three the problem or pan of the solution.&#13;
to debunk the myth of rape. violence, they do not necessarily percent. A white female has more Those who disagree should&#13;
The first myth is that rape is perceive it as such. They don't to fear from a white man, more remember that one in three women&#13;
perpetuated by the stranger in the think that they need help. specifically, someone that she and one in five men are the victims&#13;
bushes. Demographically speak. Another [actor is the fear fac- knows well. of rape. Ifthis trend is notreversed,&#13;
ing, the "strangerrape" constitutes tor. While the emotion of fear Another myth is that men who it will come home toroost for all of&#13;
a comparatively small percentage itself is very real, the focus of that are sensitive about the issue of rape us. No one is immune. Remember&#13;
compared to all rapes. On a na- fearis misdirecteddependant upon are gay. While there are gay men that these are acts of violence not&#13;
tional average, approximately fifo geographic location. Forexample, that support the campaign 10 stop against statistics, but people. This&#13;
teen percent of the rapes are per- in northern Wisconsin, the the violence toward women, there places mothers, sisters, wives,&#13;
petrated by strangers. "strangers"towatehforareIndians. are a lot of heterosexual males that girlfriends, daughters, sons,&#13;
However, in smaller corn- In the Pacific Southwest, the bo- realize the negative effects that all brothers, and cousins at risk.&#13;
.munities such as small towns and geyman is Hispanic. In the rest of males feel as a result of rape and Now what do you propose to&#13;
college campuses, the "stranger" America, the potential bad guy is violence toward women. do about it?&#13;
factor only accounts [or three to black. In Europe, the rapist is por- Sadly enough, throughout the OJ&#13;
Iraq; why?&#13;
By Bill Horner&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
Senate meeting minutes&#13;
national debt (with more on the&#13;
way). We have homeless and out&#13;
of work people allover this country.&#13;
We have massive crime and&#13;
drug problems throughout this land.&#13;
Shouldn't we begin to address our&#13;
own citizens concerns before we&#13;
address some other country's&#13;
problems who could care lessabout&#13;
ours? History has clearly shown&#13;
the mistakes of the past. Are we&#13;
again going to repeat the same errors&#13;
in judgement? The current&#13;
situation is an extremely explosive&#13;
one, one that could affect the entire&#13;
population of this planet. I do not&#13;
want President George Bush, or&#13;
- any single individual, to decide my&#13;
fate or yours. unfortunately, there&#13;
is not enough space for me to&#13;
present all o[ the domplex issues&#13;
involved is this situation; however.&#13;
I do hope [ have at the very least,&#13;
struck a nerve in your conSCIOUSness.&#13;
WE as students, can possibly&#13;
affect a change in the governments&#13;
position in this matter. Do you&#13;
care?&#13;
Announcements:&#13;
Joseph Karls has been elected to&#13;
the student at-large seat on the&#13;
.Parks ide Advisory Board.&#13;
NOVEMBER 8, 1990 States being directly threatened by&#13;
hostile forces. WhogavelheUnited&#13;
States government and our offen- .&#13;
I have wanted to express my sive military forces the authority to&#13;
opinionconcerning this grave is- betheworld'spoliceagency? My&#13;
sue for the past three' months. I own opinion is that this current&#13;
have been leery of voicing my crisis is directly related to_oilinterpersonal&#13;
opinion on this subject ests and the state of Israel, Saddam&#13;
becauseof my current position in Hussein is the key figure being&#13;
PSGA, and PSGA has madeevery blamed for this crisis. Theprimary&#13;
elfon to keep partisan politics out cause of the current situation did&#13;
ofits everyday business. Our pri- not begin with Saddam Hussein. II&#13;
maryeffort has been to represent began 2,000 years ago with a group&#13;
the students at UW -Parkside in' a of religious fanatics whose only&#13;
fairandequitable manner and keep concern was their own selfish mpersonal&#13;
political ideologies at a terests, and it still continues today.&#13;
distance. [now feel, if it is not too I do not want to see one Amencan&#13;
latealready, thaI I must take a stand killed for a gallon of gas, or to&#13;
onthis deadly serious matter. prote,t some other ~ountry's per·&#13;
I am not going to stand by and sonal interests. If the Soviet Um~n&#13;
see myOwnrelatives, and my close can make a 180 degree switch III&#13;
friends here at UW-Parkside, sent governmentalmoslOvemight, why&#13;
tothe middle east alive and well to can't the U.S. government work&#13;
returnback home to their families toward a peaceful solution to.lhlS&#13;
andfriends in black neoprene body crisis in order to avoid a mllttary&#13;
bags. [do not want to see my confrontation? Itseems evident to&#13;
fellow students and friends return me by the events that have taken&#13;
to UW-Parkside with maimed, pla~e thaI a peaceful solution was&#13;
mutilatedbodies. I view the curren I never an alternative. I hav~ seen&#13;
crisisin the middle east as a purely mediar~ports that this scenariO ~as&#13;
POlitical, economic, and mili~ been planned since 1980. Why.&#13;
. 'W h e' a 3 trillion dollar, Situation. I do not see the UntIed e av ,&#13;
br ; .. ~~~'. "':-:.:-':":-:--~.. ~:'.:-'.":":":--:-:"~.:~~:~.:-:-: . :..:-:-:-::-:-::~:':!:-::-;:=:~..:__-:.::.:... ::..::::::.::. -=-_&#13;
Called to order at 12:08pm.&#13;
Roll Call&#13;
Senalors: Lindblom.TmJensen.J.Jensen.&#13;
ScI1uh.Nephew. Jude(l), OIson(E). Vee.&#13;
Prange, Simpkins, Sikora, E.Jensen,&#13;
Rosier. RiccioJustices:Jodi Robison.Frank&#13;
Martinelli&#13;
Executive Branch: BillHomer. Chris Daniel,&#13;
Maggie Frymire&#13;
Guests: Steve McLaughlin. Lika&#13;
MorisMa&#13;
Motion E.JensenJSiko'ra 1118i9O:1 To&#13;
approve the minutes 01November2. 1990.&#13;
Passes 12-lHl&#13;
Report 01the President (Homer) .&#13;
Board 01regents meeting was yesterday"&#13;
Madison regarding the budget of 1990·91.&#13;
There will probably be an increaseollu~ion&#13;
due partly to inflation and lack 01 GPR&#13;
lunding and a drop of enrollment, Parkside&#13;
will see an increase in tuitionol 15.2% over&#13;
the nexl 2 years.&#13;
Report of the Vice-President (Danieij&#13;
There will be a U.C. meeting in Plaleville&#13;
next week". II anyone wishes 10be a de~&#13;
egate for United Council,leI us know.&#13;
Motion Prange/Jude 11/8190:2 To allocate&#13;
$179.75 ($155.75 lor food. $24.00 for iodg'&#13;
ing) for the U.C. trip. &lt;Question Called,&#13;
&lt;Division Called,&#13;
Passes 7·3-3&#13;
Motion T.JenseniSchuh 11/8190:3 Toac·&#13;
cept SteveMclaughlin asa co-advisoralong&#13;
with PeggyJomes lor Ihe Parkside Student&#13;
Government.&#13;
Passes 12·!-ll&#13;
Report 01 the President Pro- Tempere&#13;
(Schuh) .&#13;
Ranger article due on November 28th WIn&#13;
be written by Schuh.&#13;
'Swearing in 01 the senator-elecls&#13;
Kadolph and Bovee·&#13;
Report 01Legislative AIia;-s (LincI&gt;Iom)&#13;
Wanted to thank everyone 101 \/Cling&#13;
on November 6thl&#13;
Report 01SUFAC&#13;
Approved budge! review forms al the&#13;
lasI meeling.&#13;
Report 01StudentSeIvices (E.Jenson)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Report 01Minority Adions Council (Jude)&#13;
Meeting Monday, November 11. al&#13;
noon inCA. 129&#13;
Meelings 101 the !olawing week:&#13;
• Legislative Affairs' Tues, Nov.&#13;
13,12:3Opm.in PSGA oIfice&#13;
- Women's Affairs· Thursday. Nov. 15,&#13;
12:15pm. in CA 142&#13;
- SUFAC • Friday. Nov 30, 3:00 in PSGA&#13;
olfice&#13;
- Student Services - Wednesday. Nov 21,&#13;
12:00. in CA 142&#13;
• Commnteeon Smoking' Wed. Nov. 21,al&#13;
11:ooin CA 233&#13;
Motion Ricciol8ovee 1118i9O:4 To adjourn&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
Passes 15-lHl&#13;
Adjourned at 12:55pm.&#13;
_"'.' "!&lt;""' :...·.·-:c-_ ..··t...,....·,........._·t·"'_±'f~,_· --. ---'---;~.~- r.~~ ...&#13;
.::=:..:.:..::::::...---.::..::::....----r~~~±~~'..:..... -:--!=--------:-~~~&#13;
~Ra~nl!~.rJ..!.!Pa~ge'-.:!.4 1 Opinion· ).~ovem~&#13;
oice Of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Dawn Tower /&#13;
"Most of my grades were&#13;
given. I'm sure all if&#13;
Ihad asked.&#13;
"&#13;
Christine&#13;
Kordecki&#13;
Tim Eager&#13;
"No! Can't estimate how&#13;
your doing without a test&#13;
u. .&#13;
- or find out how the&#13;
. . It Instructor IS.&#13;
"Did you receive a grade in every&#13;
one of your courses before the end of&#13;
the eight week drop period?"&#13;
Mike Prelewkz&#13;
" .&#13;
Yes, but in one of my&#13;
classes they had to move&#13;
up the.first exam to give&#13;
. "&#13;
you some Idea.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE &amp; THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
INVITE YOU TO CELEBRATE A...&#13;
THANKSGIVING LUNCIiEON SPECIAL&#13;
Wed., Nov. 21st 11 am-2pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
TURKEY 'N ALL THE TRIMMINGS&#13;
-ROAST TURKEY-WHIPPED POTATOES-SAGE DRESSING-GREEN&#13;
EAS OR KERNEL q&gt;RN-CRANBERRY SAUCE-PUMPKIN SQUARE&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $ 3.19&#13;
PLUS: ALARM CLOCK SPECIAL - IF THE ALARM SOUNDS WHILE YOU ARE&#13;
PAVING, TAKE HOME A FREE FROZEN TURKEV AND SIX PACKS OF SODA.&#13;
" . All of my grades&#13;
were available on&#13;
request.&#13;
"&#13;
Cliffs Notes give you a greater&#13;
. understanding of the classics.&#13;
More than 2ffl titles. Learn&#13;
more and earn better grades&#13;
as you study&#13;
tile&#13;
1Jooli21acli&#13;
[ji' Westgate Mall&#13;
4901 Washington Ave&#13;
Racine, Wi 53406&#13;
633-9380&#13;
�:.::....--_-~[ Spotlight Ranger, Page 5&#13;
. Ranger photo by Too McCarthy&#13;
Front Row from left to right: Anthony Brown (Faculty Advisor), Tina Gosey (Secretary), Melloney Wilson (President), Henry Owens(Vice-President), Stefanie Davis (Treasurer)&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
by Tod McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
One of the most active and&#13;
fastestgrowing student organizationsonthe&#13;
University ofWisc0I1-&#13;
sin-Parksidecampus is the Black&#13;
Student Organization (BSO).&#13;
Started in the mid-1980's, 'its&#13;
membership has grown to 55-6S&#13;
members.&#13;
The Ranger has stressed involvement.&#13;
BSO is involvement:&#13;
involvement in community food&#13;
drives,participation and sponsorship&#13;
of Black History Month activities,and&#13;
as a support system for&#13;
humanrights issues. According to&#13;
BSOmemberTatiaJackson, "Even&#13;
though we're the minority, we're&#13;
domgthe majority," Whether the&#13;
event is a Homecoming activity,&#13;
athletic event, or any other UWParkside&#13;
activity, BSO is generally&#13;
well·represented.&#13;
The current Executive Committee&#13;
ofBSO is composed of four&#13;
officers elected from its membership.&#13;
This year, Melloney Wilson&#13;
is serving as President, and Henry&#13;
Owens is the Vice-President. The&#13;
other executive officers of BSO&#13;
are Tina Gosey as Secretary, and&#13;
Stefanie Davis in the position of&#13;
Treasurer. All other committees&#13;
are comprised strictly of volunteers,&#13;
which is feasible because of&#13;
jhe high level of involvement of its&#13;
membership. "We wouldn't want&#13;
to appoint someone who's not&#13;
dedicated io it" said Pres, Wilson.&#13;
Theadvisors for BSO are Dean&#13;
Barbara 'Shade and Anthony&#13;
Brown. WhenaskedofBSOmembership&#13;
requirements, Mr. Brown&#13;
stated, "The membership is wide&#13;
open." Students of all races and&#13;
cultures are welcome to join BSO.&#13;
Though primarily designed to offer&#13;
a sense of unity and cultural&#13;
awareness to African-American&#13;
students, it also offers a unique&#13;
opportunity for others to understand&#13;
the concerns of AfricanAmericans,andalso,ofthemselves.&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
provides information to its members&#13;
about heritage and how to&#13;
create a positive image without&#13;
sacrificing individualism. It also&#13;
serves as a bonding influence and&#13;
provides a second home of sorts.&#13;
BSO meetings are somewhat&#13;
unique for UW-P; the highly&#13;
democratic nature of them allows&#13;
for a multitude of ideas and options&#13;
to tackle any given issue. The&#13;
agenda may offer limitless possibilities.&#13;
Not only are events and&#13;
human rights issues often discussed,&#13;
but cultural presentations,&#13;
. such as an examination of the na-&#13;
, tion of Islam, which was presented&#13;
by Salimah Al-Qawiyy, may be&#13;
offered. BSO meetings are held bimonthly&#13;
in Moln. D-105. Held at&#13;
noon on Wednesdays, the meetings&#13;
are w~lI-attended. Stop by;&#13;
I'm sure you'll consider it an hour&#13;
well-spent.&#13;
BSO is planning a number of&#13;
upcoming events, including a Dr.&#13;
Martin Luther King Commemoration&#13;
in January, and Black History&#13;
Month activities in February. An&#13;
April field trip is also being planned&#13;
to the De Sable Museum in Chicago.&#13;
Check the Ranger for details&#13;
on events or contact BSO&#13;
mernbers ifyou 'd like information.&#13;
The membership of BSO has&#13;
nearly doubled in the past year,&#13;
according to Pres. Wilson. Though&#13;
specific issues can tend to swell the&#13;
attendance figures at some meetings,&#13;
Vice-Pres. Owens also noted,&#13;
"There are more African-American&#13;
students here, too." Ifprojected&#13;
minority student population goals&#13;
at UW -Parkside are met, BSO&#13;
promises to become an even more&#13;
necessary and effective force in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
offers the African-American student&#13;
the support needed to succeed&#13;
in the university environment&#13;
without sacrificing, and often expanding,&#13;
one's sense of self. It can&#13;
also become a calalyst for development&#13;
of a positive self-image along&#13;
with a healthy amount of self-respect,&#13;
not only for minority students,&#13;
but anyone else on campus&#13;
who needs a sense of individuality&#13;
combined with one of belonging.&#13;
Itoffers unity, buralso supports the&#13;
unique situation of each of its&#13;
members.&#13;
If you'd like to attend a BSO&#13;
meeting aod see what they have to&#13;
offer, come to Main. D-105 on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21 at noon. It's&#13;
a fine way to become involved at&#13;
UW -Parkside, and most of all, get&#13;
an opportunity to meet some ot the&#13;
students who help to make your&#13;
years at this university more than&#13;
an apathetic experience. We'll see&#13;
you there.&#13;
...&#13;
.1" ,., ,&#13;
11." .~. ~, J. J,: I ~&#13;
..r&amp;.~~.~..~~~.~~.. "" ..... ' ~ .... }It ....&#13;
"=R!ger~,Page~6------1 News } / 0&#13;
P k id A ° 0 ° B d h nges its leaderShIp - ar SI e ctrvmes oar ca· studentswanlfromus." Th'&#13;
cause of her extensive experience - will be continued as plan IS&#13;
withPAB in the past. She'sheena ; . ThemajoritYOftheexeclled&#13;
:&#13;
'nee • aU'e chait for more lhan one comrm council of PAB feels that the&#13;
and was the organization's secre- sitionwentover very smooth.~.&#13;
tary at the begmnmg of this semes- few other things will be han Cry _ c g~&#13;
ter. including the sUUggle to ree .&#13;
Aspresident Bostetrerwillrun d . 'be fUlt&#13;
.. an retain mem rs. ThisPlOblCl!l&#13;
both the general and executive faced PAB before and continues&#13;
council meetings, prepare a budge,t f th '''E one i IQ ace em. very ne IS welc......&#13;
for the Student Organizations . • .&#13;
Council (SOC) and attend SOC and everyone IS needed. They iIIl&#13;
important to PAB," Thygeson~&#13;
meetings on a regular basis. C'~ marked. . . urrentl.y, the markel;~&#13;
Changes she's planned for PAB -', I and nightlife chairs areavailab~il&#13;
are small yet st!.l1significant. n anyone IS interested.&#13;
past years, the meetings got too -&#13;
relaxed and things didn't get done Although the leadershiphas&#13;
as quickly as they should have. By Diane Thygeson changed hands, things willStiIi/ll&#13;
having more organized meetings, Pi Sigma Epsilon, the marketing as they have all semester. The&#13;
Bostetter hopes to accomplish fraternity, was' given the opportu- quality of the comedians, coffeenity&#13;
to conduct a survey of UW - houses, films, speakers anddaneea more. .&#13;
" h will remain, Also, under Deede's reign, Parkside students to see w at&#13;
by DaW1lMailaDd&#13;
Eat ..... Inm ... t Editor&#13;
Within the last few weeks, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has undergone&#13;
some changes in leadership.&#13;
MichelleDeederesignedfrom&#13;
her position as president due to&#13;
personal conflicts with school and&#13;
work.&#13;
As wriuen in PAB's constitution,&#13;
the vice-president then takes&#13;
over the president's seat, appoints&#13;
someone to take the open vicepresident's&#13;
seat, and have it approved&#13;
by a 2{3 majority of the&#13;
executive council. Judy Bosteuer&#13;
was the vice-president and is now&#13;
Judy Bosteller&#13;
the new PAB president She's appointed&#13;
Diane Thygeson as vicepresident&#13;
for the remainder of lhe&#13;
year, Thygeson was chosen beSCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
Applications for UW-Parkside's 1991-1992&#13;
Continuing Student SCholarship Program are&#13;
now available, These scholarships range in&#13;
amount from $500 to $1000 for full-time students&#13;
($250 part-time), and are intended for&#13;
students who demonstrate outstanding academic&#13;
and.or aesthetic achievement and&#13;
leadership.&#13;
WHO SHOULD APPLY&#13;
+Current, full·time (12-18 credits) and parttime&#13;
(6-11 credits) matriculating students whowill&#13;
have completed a minimum of 30 credits&#13;
by semeste(s end.&#13;
+Students who have demonstrated academic&#13;
excellence (3.25 gpa and above),&#13;
+Students who can demonstrate extracurricular&#13;
involvement in school and/or community.&#13;
+Previous applicants/recipients ,also eligible to&#13;
apply if they meet the above criteria.&#13;
APPLICATION DEADLINE:&#13;
February 8, 1991&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE&#13;
LOCATIONS&#13;
Admissions Molinaro 0-111&#13;
Advising Center WLLC&#13;
Information Oesk Union&#13;
Learning Assistance Office WLLC 0-175&#13;
Women's Center .WLLC Concourse&#13;
Financial Aid Office Tallent Hall&#13;
Intercultural Commons WLLC 0-182&#13;
Any Faculty Advisor&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
Admissions Office&#13;
Molinaro 0-111&#13;
(414) 553-2355&#13;
NOvember~&#13;
Suspension policy updated for 1991-92&#13;
by Dan Chiappella Ifa student is not on probation during a term of less than2.0,1he&#13;
News Editor and: 'student is suspended for at least&#13;
Last Spring semester, UW· ·-earns a grade point average one year. -&#13;
Parkside's Academic Policies thattenn of less than 2.0 butl.O or Any student on probationor&#13;
Committee examined UW, above, the student is placed on strict probation will be automaJi.&#13;
Parkside's suspension policy probation. cally cleared of probation at1lie&#13;
comparing itto othcrpolicies in the --earns a grade point average end of any term when: the term's&#13;
UW-SYSlem and proposed an up- thatlerm of less than l.O, the stu- grade point average is 2.0 or beurr&#13;
daled suspension policy. dent is placed on strict probation. on any number of credits, thee.&#13;
OnOctober2,l990theFaculty If a student is on probation mulativegrailepointaverageis2.0&#13;
Senate approved the _proposed and: or betler, and the acadcmicreconI&#13;
Suspension Policy in which every --earns a grade pOint average contains no grades of Ineomplelt.&#13;
student is expecled to maintain at that term of less than 2.0 bUII.5 or Students who feelexcepliolll&#13;
least a 2.0 grade point average on above, the student is placed on strict circumstances beyond the~eon1nJl&#13;
all work carried in every t~, in- probation. justify a waiverofsuspensionIMy&#13;
dudingsummersessions. Students --earns a grade point average make a writtenrequestforawaivtl&#13;
who fail to maintain this minimun that term of less than l.5, the Slu- to the Academic Actions Com·&#13;
grade point average will face pro- dent is suspended for at least one mitlee. - Students who havebeen&#13;
bation, strict probation, or suspen- year. suspended for alleast a year may&#13;
sion. If a student is on strict proba- apply for readmission throughtit&#13;
The following is the new sus- tion and: -Academic AClions Commiuee.&#13;
pension policy going into effect. --earns a grllde point average Readmission is not automatic.&#13;
Fall ofl991.&#13;
News Releases&#13;
Sexual Harassment&#13;
Students will have an opportuni&#13;
ty to discuss sexual harassment&#13;
during an open forum at noon&#13;
Monday, Nov. 19, in Mid Main&#13;
Place. The f~rum _will be conducted&#13;
by Dr. Karen K. KirstAshman,&#13;
a cenified sex educator&#13;
and sexual harassment consu·ltant.&#13;
At the forum students will be&#13;
able to interact with the consultant&#13;
in discussing whatconstilUles&#13;
sexual harassment, what can be&#13;
done to prevent it, and how to cope&#13;
with it if it occurs.&#13;
During her day-long visit Dr.&#13;
Kirst-Ashman, wiil also conduct&#13;
workshops for university empioyees&#13;
and administrators. She is an&#13;
associate professor at UWWhitewater.&#13;
Hervisitis sponSOred&#13;
by Chancellor S!Jeila Kaplan and&#13;
the Sexual Harassrn~nt Commit-&#13;
-lee. " ' ,&#13;
.-, ~ • v&#13;
n, ~.hiu, ·j~Dt,..", ~~(, "!,}t. '~r.ii&#13;
Philosophical Society&#13;
presents discussion&#13;
, Parkside PhilosophicalSO'&#13;
ciety presents "Sexual Moral'&#13;
ity."&#13;
A discussion led by Pr0-&#13;
fessor Aaron Snyder, P1ti!(l\O" . 2&#13;
phy on Tuesday, Nov. 20 al&#13;
pm. in CART 129. ,&#13;
" Free and o~n to thepobl1c&#13;
,&#13;
'students, faculty, and stall&#13;
~';..-1.....'J. 'I' ;'(:.;':4 .... ~;!I H " i'·&#13;
~itU:)IM~tl1o::l'IJ)i"~~I\"'t'i/IfI&#13;
Ranger. Page 7&#13;
~ber IS, 1990&#13;
Letters&#13;
continued fro!,Dpage 2&#13;
perPCtuated.&#13;
The Ranger has made lm-&#13;
~~ in the last semesters&#13;
Ibal canbe encouraged. The conlinued&#13;
oppression or women, '&#13;
iJUOUgh a column like Toliver's&#13;
cannotbe tolerated by the students&#13;
01 this university. Perhaps the&#13;
Ranger, with the risk of losing their&#13;
credibilityat hand, need to suggest&#13;
!he weekly, grocery store tabloids&#13;
IOToliverif he still experiences the&#13;
deSire to continue "writing".&#13;
Amy Capobianca, Pat&#13;
Obenburger, Lisa R. Maritato,&#13;
Theresa M. Bowers,Diane L.&#13;
Jensen,Susan Peters,Kimberely&#13;
K. Amason, Connie Desotell,&#13;
SuzanneLarson, R. Ditter '&#13;
'Got an Attitude&#13;
Please print a clearer picture&#13;
ofChris "DA Darkside" Toliver,&#13;
so that women can recognize him.&#13;
Wewantto avoid this pig with his&#13;
attitudes.&#13;
I also want to address his argument&#13;
about how women should&#13;
know when they are asleep that&#13;
they have a penis in their vagina.&#13;
WhatToliver can't sem to understand&#13;
in his warped mind, is that&#13;
whena woman awakes with a man&#13;
ontopofher, AN ASSAULT HAS&#13;
ALREADYOCCURRED!&#13;
Don'! get me wrong, Chris&#13;
Toliver,there are some nasty men&#13;
ouuhere,and it seems you're on of&#13;
lhem!&#13;
Julie Boehme&#13;
ToJeff Lemmermannr&#13;
Anger. .Disappointrnent. Resennnem,&#13;
All of these I feel towards&#13;
youand your entire staff. Did you&#13;
know that the NAIA district 14&#13;
crosscountry championship meet&#13;
washeld here at Parkside on Sat- '&#13;
urdaythe 3rd? Then I realized yes,&#13;
youor someone on your staff knew&#13;
~ hecause a few results appeared&#13;
nicely in the scoreboard. Mr.&#13;
Lemmenmann, doesn't a district&#13;
championshiptake precedence over&#13;
everything except a national&#13;
championship? A Parksideintramuralnag&#13;
football game received&#13;
an article of almost half a page! If&#13;
youfound someone to write about&#13;
aOagfOOlbailgame, I feel confident&#13;
a writer could have been Cound to&#13;
cover the district meet. Mr.&#13;
Lemmcnmann, does an 'event requirethat&#13;
a member of your sports&#13;
staff need to participate in order to&#13;
bereeognized wilba simpleanicle?&#13;
IIIopc IlOl.&#13;
For a moment. think of each&#13;
llIeRIberllflhe~s_women's&#13;
..&#13;
Opinion&#13;
team that worked so hard and so&#13;
long to display the excellence&#13;
shown on th~ 3rd. The least they&#13;
deserve ISa SImple article in order&#13;
to feel their efforts were appreciated.&#13;
The cross country teams have&#13;
becomeaccilstomed to neglect from&#13;
the Ranger. but this last episode&#13;
was a slap in the face. In one meet&#13;
Parkside produced 13 all-district&#13;
champion teams, and one district&#13;
champion runner. The women's&#13;
team took all but on of the top ten&#13;
spots available at the meet! Mr.&#13;
Lemmermann did you not know or&#13;
not care. Some of us here at&#13;
Parkside did.&#13;
Jared Brieske&#13;
DA Darkside&#13;
This is in response to Chris&#13;
Toliver's "DA Darkside" coiumn.'&#13;
Is this supposed to justify rape or&#13;
are you trying to blame women for&#13;
getting raped? Your definition of&#13;
rape left out the fact that it is a&#13;
violent CRIME against a person,&#13;
not just sex with a person without&#13;
their consent.&#13;
There are many cases of un-&#13;
,reponed rapes because women are&#13;
afraid of the publicity for exactly&#13;
what you imply ... that society will&#13;
blame the woman. There are also&#13;
incidences of rape where the&#13;
women wants to prosecute, but they&#13;
are advised not to because their&#13;
case would not stand up in court&#13;
and is not worth the expense to the&#13;
state or themselves.&#13;
As for your generalization&#13;
"Are all women being raped?" Ido&#13;
not thinks so. I do not hear about&#13;
rapes everyday and there are too&#13;
many unreported cases. -Another&#13;
point to this is that in our society&#13;
there is a double standard among&#13;
men and women involving sex. One&#13;
of the reasons a women will not&#13;
prosecute or admit they were raped&#13;
is because they are afraid they will&#13;
be blamed. You make it sound so&#13;
easy to cry rape, but it is not easy.&#13;
Society will examine the woman .&#13;
. . Did she entice him ... was she&#13;
asking for it. .. or whatever, society&#13;
, will usually think the woman is to&#13;
blame. The woman is the victim&#13;
and then society makes her suffer&#13;
further for the incident, And your&#13;
other generalization. "Arethey just&#13;
. punishing guys purposely,"\yell if&#13;
they commit rape they should be&#13;
punished Many males get away ,&#13;
with rape because the woman never&#13;
prosecutes ofr they get off the&#13;
charge for ,various reasons.&#13;
You say you wrote this to&#13;
present other aspects of rape but to hO=;::A=S-=-::-o n-;-,-c-a-m-..:p=--u-S------&#13;
me it sounded very biased against Continllfll from page 1&#13;
women. International Studies, the students&#13;
Were organized into mock delegations&#13;
representing 33 member and&#13;
two observer nations. Each delegation&#13;
had approximately ten participants,&#13;
all pupils of the sixteen&#13;
different high schools engaged in&#13;
the simulation.&#13;
The bulk of the two-day session&#13;
was spent examining current&#13;
issues affecting the actual member&#13;
nations of OAS and the finale was&#13;
a meeting held according to all&#13;
rules of order which would be used&#13;
in a typical, authentic OAS session,&#13;
Christopher Kenth, a UWParkside&#13;
senior, presided over the&#13;
meeting, which was conducted in a&#13;
strict and orderly fashion.&#13;
A number of UW -Parkside&#13;
students assisted as mentors and&#13;
committee chairpersons. David&#13;
Towle, a junior who acted as a&#13;
chairperson, said, "You really get&#13;
into the model, study, and research&#13;
very well." Perhaps the best way,&#13;
and perhaps the only way to fully&#13;
understand international interaction&#13;
, Deirdre Collier&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Throughout this semester, I&#13;
have been following the letters&#13;
written by Chris Toliver to the&#13;
Ranger. While I have not always&#13;
agreed with his rhetoric, I do think&#13;
that he has brought up valid points&#13;
concerning the widening gap of&#13;
misunderstanding between races.&#13;
I also agree that it is difficult for the&#13;
Ranger to represent the entire student&#13;
body when its staff is largely&#13;
made up of white males.&#13;
Itis to the Ranger's credit that&#13;
they have printed these highly&#13;
critical letters and have further tried&#13;
to improve the situation by giving&#13;
Mr. Toliver a byline in the paper.&#13;
Unfortunately, he has not used this&#13;
opportunity to try to bring about&#13;
better race relations. Instead, he&#13;
has chosen to use his new-found&#13;
pulpit to spew out staedy stream of&#13;
misinformation and personal&#13;
opinion on the subject of rape. His&#13;
article-reveals a lack of enlightenment&#13;
as to the issue of consent and&#13;
a high degree of sexism which is,&#13;
quite frankly, surprising coming&#13;
from a person so concerned with&#13;
bigotry. What subject will Chris&#13;
Toliver taclke next? Maybe he will&#13;
tell us how some women respect a ,&#13;
man more after they have been&#13;
roughed-up a little.&#13;
Does the Ranger need a&#13;
, broader range of voices to better&#13;
represent the student poplace?&#13;
Definitely. Do Chris Toliver's&#13;
bellicose ramblings and sexist&#13;
opinionsqualify him to be one of&#13;
these voices? Definitely Not!&#13;
, Donald Hill&#13;
is to participate in a similar experience.&#13;
Latesha Jode, a sophomore&#13;
who participated as an assistant&#13;
mentor in last year's conference,&#13;
stated. "I learned a great deal in&#13;
regards to Third World countries,&#13;
working with high school students,&#13;
and most importantly, understanding&#13;
the OAS organization."&#13;
Victoria Bennett, a UW-&#13;
, Parkside sophomore, also chaired&#13;
one of the committees. Though&#13;
she did say, "They're at an awkward&#13;
age," she found the time spent&#13;
quite satisfying. "They seemed&#13;
genuinely interesting in solving&#13;
problems of participating nations.&#13;
I also had some excellent speakers&#13;
who were well-oriented in debating&#13;
techniques."&#13;
The mock meeting is the oldest&#13;
collegiate simulation of its kind&#13;
in the United States, and if the&#13;
enthusiasm exhibited by this year's&#13;
participants is an accurate indicalor,&#13;
one of the best offered.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
K9!~!V'&#13;
ENSEMBLE OF MOSCOW&#13;
What is rape?&#13;
What is rape? Rapeisanactof&#13;
violence toward women. It does&#13;
not only include the act of penetration,&#13;
but it also includes the act of&#13;
force. This may include such things&#13;
as hitting, punching, verbal abuse,&#13;
holding the victim down, the use of&#13;
weapons such as knives, guns, or&#13;
baseball bats, Why does this happen?&#13;
Because of something called&#13;
male dominance.&#13;
I am outraged, embarrassed.&#13;
and scared to think that there are&#13;
actually people at Parkside that&#13;
. _ , L- ~ --.--.-..- continueto"blamethevictim"and Fir. lEy. r U S To u r __'&#13;
-Continuetlon Page 8.&#13;
"ENORMOUSLY ENTERTAINING/"&#13;
"A kaleidoscope of color, energy, and excitementl"&#13;
TONIGHT 8PM COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
$4 UW-P Students I $12 Others. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Center or at the door .&#13;
There will be a reception with the dancers following the&#13;
performance for the UW-Parkside community. Please&#13;
join us!&#13;
-Ra-nl!ft'-,Page-S ------L-_-=O:lpc.:i=n=-io-n---~&#13;
Letters&#13;
COIItlnucd trom page 7&#13;
voice ill I am outraged at their&#13;
closed mindedness, I am embarrassed&#13;
for them because they publicly&#13;
display it. and I am scared thaI&#13;
there are people al Parlcside thai&#13;
have the minds of rapists.&#13;
U il isn'l obvious to you thai&#13;
nol only is rape an acl of intercourse&#13;
wilhoul consent by the&#13;
woman, bul and most imponantly,&#13;
an act of force used by a man 10&#13;
eslabllsh and reinforce his maleness,&#13;
then you have a problem.&#13;
And thai problem directly relates&#13;
10 my sarely, or as far as you're&#13;
concerned-my reputation!&#13;
Women are nOI defenseless or&#13;
weaI&lt;, buI il is only logical that a&#13;
man is usually stronger lItal a&#13;
woman and therefore, il is violence.&#13;
II is obvious Ihat the purpose&#13;
of Mr. Toliver's article was 110I10&#13;
open us up 10the other side of rape&#13;
(of which there is none), but to also&#13;
address his stand on the waragainsl&#13;
racism. Please, Chris, don 'I embanass&#13;
me or yourself again by&#13;
writing such trash 10 gel your point&#13;
across. Save yourself-apologize&#13;
10 the women al Parlcside and write&#13;
something worth reading next&#13;
week.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Over lite last few months,&#13;
pieces of my mail have been misplaced,&#13;
due to lItemail service here&#13;
at UW-Parkside. So tell me, can it&#13;
be lItat my mail is being put into&#13;
oiher mail boxes by mistake? And&#13;
if !his is so, where does !hat leave&#13;
me? I, myself have been finding&#13;
mail other then my own in my&#13;
mailbox. So who has the responsibility&#13;
for the mail being placed in&#13;
lite right boxes? Can they have&#13;
such a lack of knowledge for thei&#13;
job? NOl to be putting that person&#13;
down, but I would like 10 get mail&#13;
that belongs to me.&#13;
Laura Kruppstadt&#13;
John Taylor&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Consider for a moment an air- ,&#13;
borne substance lItat contains lite&#13;
following: carbon monoxide, benzene,&#13;
toluene, formaldehyde, ammonia,&#13;
cadium, phenol, and polonium-210&#13;
(a radioactive elemen!).&#13;
It is a substance !hat most of us&#13;
brea!he in every day, yet its componenlS&#13;
include dozens of toxic&#13;
chemicals, some of which (48) have&#13;
been shown to be carcinogenic.&#13;
If nicotine is added to lite list,&#13;
you will guess lItat the subslance I&#13;
speak of is cigareue smoke.&#13;
The dangers of cigarette&#13;
smoking for lite smoker are well&#13;
publicized and widely accepted,&#13;
and include emphysema, hean disease,&#13;
lung and o!her cancers, and&#13;
chronic bronchitis. None of lItese&#13;
diseases can be laken lightly once&#13;
contraeled, but have unfonunately&#13;
little effecl on smokers until Ihal&#13;
time.&#13;
Becoming more widely known&#13;
currently are lite dangers, just as&#13;
real, for !he non-smoker exposed&#13;
to cigarette smoke.&#13;
The non-smoker is exposed to&#13;
!he full effects (96%) of cigarelte&#13;
components" because !here is no&#13;
filtration when smoke isjust blown&#13;
into lite air. Besides lite usual&#13;
headaches, eye irrations, and nausea&#13;
Ihat often accompany the&#13;
brea!hing in of cigarette smoke,&#13;
non-smokers are wgets for more&#13;
insidious problems.&#13;
Recentstudies haveshoWtlthat&#13;
non-smokers chronically exposed&#13;
to side'stream smoke are at inSCHOLALS&#13;
HIPS,&#13;
GRANTS AVAILABLE&#13;
There exists, literally, BILLIONS of dollars in&#13;
scholarships, grants and other forms of financial aid for&#13;
your higher education.&#13;
MUCH OF IT GOES UNUSED EACH YEAR!&#13;
WHY? i&#13;
Because most people don't know how or where to begin&#13;
the search for these funds.&#13;
AT PAGE ONE IT'S OUR JOB TO DO THAT FOR&#13;
YOU.&#13;
We're good at what we do, we GUARANTEE&#13;
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apd the fee is suprisingly low!&#13;
For free and complete infonnation:,&#13;
~-------------------,&#13;
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Student Financial Aid Services&#13;
I 10332 Kraut Rd, Franksville, Wi 53126&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
IName&#13;
-Address&#13;
ICity State Zip&#13;
- School now attending I&#13;
:Year: FRO SOO JRO SRO Other()&#13;
_Explain other:&#13;
-L (U.W.-~ -------------------&#13;
creased risk for cervical and other&#13;
cancers.&#13;
Many of us are allergic to: In response to DUH Parkside!&#13;
smoke, myself among' litem, ~nd You ~d. your whole i~&#13;
cannot be around it for any penod way of thinking really dis&amp;usts&#13;
of time without becoming ill. It is _and I'm sure I'm not the only:&#13;
, also a real riskfor those with aslltma Ispeak for myself when I say ilia&#13;
and other lung conditions. sad to think Ihat, YOurnarro.,&#13;
All of us have a right to clean minded views wereactuailYPriIlled&#13;
air. Please consider what you ca~ in lite newspaper, although ~&#13;
do to eeuer lite situ,ation at UW - particular arucle along withlie&#13;
Parkside, where smoking is per- .' restof'em fitperfecllyundenteali&#13;
mitted almost everywhere. Our my cats litter box! It seemslie&#13;
lungs and health demand it. paperhadnochoiceinthemattcr~&#13;
Amy Jo Cagney printing it. You wouldeitherdonq.&#13;
nate the "Letter to lite Edim(.~&#13;
Snow and Parking· tionorcomplain!hepaperisl~&#13;
Potential Hassles for becoming predjudice ,inibal&#13;
One of lite advantages all of us theywon'tprintit.ltisreallysc.y&#13;
allending UW-Parkside enjoy is _to -actually know lhat someooelll&#13;
lite beautiful campus setting. The, Ihis campus can actually thinkillt&#13;
ftrst snowfall will soon transform rape is used as an excuse. Maybe&#13;
lite surrounding landscape into a' youshouldcontacttheCemralPlt&#13;
winter wonderland. jogger and ask her aboulherEX.&#13;
Fallen snow can also present a CUSE. You never remaillld&#13;
challenge to communters. Even consistantinyour!houghtsand)'Qr&#13;
though the campus Grounds crew interprelation of facts matchesZa&#13;
will be making evcry effort to clear Zsa Gaborsacting abilitics(lbieri&#13;
sidewalks, parking lots and roads none)&#13;
in lite fastest and mosl efficient Looking back on all YOUlJll!l&#13;
, means possible, you can help by leltersandcutelilliesceneriosl'l&#13;
cooperating with a fwew simple seem to display a very largechf&#13;
requests. ' on -your shoulder. Why can'tl'I&#13;
Snow does- not always fall 'useallyour-negetive"eilergy")lII&#13;
when it is_conenient for plowing. 'have against lIteworldaadpuli.&#13;
The 'lots are cleared of snow as :some good use. -Icanon!ylinellJ&#13;
soon as possible, but you may not - eat's box ~illt yourarticiesallllt&#13;
be able to park in your usual spot. at a tim~. To be honestr.&#13;
Parking in lite unplowedpanofllte stocked till Christmas'lbaIIl&#13;
lot only makes it more difftcult fot Please don't speak for theI$Ii&#13;
snow removal operations to be lite campus or claim yourIlliW&#13;
completed. You may find snow anollter side., There are_&#13;
plOWed all around your car! : obstales this campus has IDIllf'&#13;
Park your car only in lite areas come willt out blatant iglIOlIDl&#13;
that have been plowed. Ifyour lot ~nd small mindedness thelyou'.&#13;
is not available, you may have to added.&#13;
temporarily park in anollter. Never By me way you weresayill&#13;
park on !heOuler Loop Road. Also, litis rape crisis "puzzels"you.W~&#13;
stay clear of snow plows in action their happened to be a sealsawl&#13;
-llteyarebiggerlltanyouandcan't for you atlhe workshopfOlJllll&#13;
maneuver as easily. In ;"'inter,il is against rape. But obviouslylJjill&#13;
essentialthataisles in parking lotS to educate yourself moreonill&#13;
remain open for snow plows. Don't disturbing subjectjustiSn'lOII)lIl&#13;
try to add an extra space at lite end high priority list. You obyjoUSlY&#13;
of a row. had more important thingsw~&#13;
Willt a little forethought and like buy a new pair of slJade5~&#13;
c~nsideration you will be doing practice your jump shots.&#13;
your part to help keep this campus Edito?s Note: ._&#13;
open and operating smoothly. Some letters were nolprilill&#13;
, Karl Schroeder because they did nol ntlIl&#13;
Grouhos -Supervisor ," . Eilitlltilll poucyrequireJB!llS&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
.. SPORTS&#13;
iCI10NB THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1990&#13;
~&#13;
~z&#13;
~.&#13;
j&#13;
~c·=========~,-,-__ -c -.J&#13;
Blockedf Lisa Venegas's spike auempt was blocked, as were the Lady&#13;
Ranger hopes in their Bi-Disuictlinal match against Morehead Slate.&#13;
RangerS debut&#13;
season with&#13;
two-sided play&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Two Faces of the Runnin' Rangers made its&#13;
stage debut Friday night in their season opener against&#13;
the Czechoslovakian National Team.&#13;
Act One: Determination and Success&#13;
Skaters take lumps in&#13;
'franchise' ice-breaker&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The UW-Parkside Hockey&#13;
Team opened it's 1990-91 season&#13;
this past weekend in Dubuque,lowa&#13;
by dropping 2 games to host Loras&#13;
College.&#13;
Saturday, the Rangers played&#13;
in their first ever conference game.&#13;
Things looked good early for the&#13;
Rangers as John Hisdahl scored&#13;
the games first goal at the 4:44&#13;
mark. Loras quickly countered&#13;
however, with a goal :50 seconds&#13;
later and tallied two more goals&#13;
before the first period buzzer&#13;
sounded. Ranger goalie Mike&#13;
- , . '. ( j' '~I e- J" I 5 ........ ~... ....&#13;
Rivera had a buzy first period,&#13;
withstanding an 18 shot Loras assauh,&#13;
while saving IS.&#13;
The second period saw the&#13;
Rangers score first again, Doug&#13;
Alton neued a goal at the 3:32 mark&#13;
to bring the Rangers within a goal.&#13;
Loras then rauled off three unanswered&#13;
goals to secure a 6-2 lead at&#13;
the end of the second period.&#13;
In the final period. the Rangers,&#13;
fatigued from skating only two&#13;
lines the entire game, managed ani y&#13;
one more goal. Alton netted his&#13;
second goal of the game at 14:44.&#13;
Rivera had 28 saves while allowing&#13;
8 goals, a 78% save persee&#13;
Skaters, p B8&#13;
•• ,,-,. -1", .. _ .. .,.. _ _ _ _._ _.~_."" ~&#13;
*-* ~ '" ...&#13;
--&#13;
By&#13;
DAVID&#13;
OOHERIY&#13;
Columntst&#13;
It's once again lime for UW-Parkside 10 host the NAJA National&#13;
Cross Counlry Meet. For the tenth straigln year runners from across the&#13;
Nauon will be packing their bags and heading 10Kenosha 10run on UWParkside's&#13;
grueling cross country course.&#13;
What, you thoughl cross country was a winter sport in which the&#13;
participanlS used skis? Well if you show lip for the meet Saturday you are&#13;
going 10be surprised. The majority of the athletes in this meet have never&#13;
been on a pair of skis in their life.&#13;
That's nOlIO say thai these athletes aren't used to competing with&#13;
snow on the ground. Well maybe the runners from North Florida aren't,&#13;
bUImost of these runners are used 10competing in all types of weather.&#13;
They better be prepared 10 race in any weather, because November&#13;
weather in Wisconsin is impossible 10predict,&#13;
So, if the athletes don't ski what exactly do they do? Weill hope by&#13;
now you have figured ouuhis sport has something to do with running. No,&#13;
the meet isn'l going to be held down al the track, A cross country meet&#13;
is usually held on a grass course with a few hills and other obstacles 10&#13;
make things a liule more interesting.&#13;
Races at UW -Parkside tend ioalways be interesting. The majority of&#13;
the runners Saturday will just be worried about finishing the race without&#13;
falling, or just making it up those hills which never seem 10end. Sure there&#13;
will be a few people who are actually thinking about winning the race, bUI&#13;
for the rest of the runners the race Saturday will be a mauer of survival.&#13;
So will their be anyone from UW-Parkside in this race Saturday?&#13;
Yes,boIh themen'sand women's teams from UW-Parksidequalifiedfor&#13;
the National Meet. The women's team is very strong and could surprise&#13;
a 101of people when the team trophies are handed out, The men's team&#13;
is starting topulltogether and also could surprise some people. Ifyou have&#13;
nothing better to do this weekend, and even if you do have something'&#13;
better 10do, go watch some of the best runners in the nation compete this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
solid transition team. The Rangers&#13;
game plan backfired horribly&#13;
however as latvIa did all the runWhat&#13;
do you do when your&#13;
opponenl plays the best defense&#13;
your team has ever seen? What do&#13;
you do when your opponent shoots&#13;
70 percent from the field and 56&#13;
percent from three-point land?&#13;
What do you do when they run&#13;
every play 10 precise perfection?&#13;
What else, you loose.&#13;
This was the sad story for the&#13;
Ranger Women's Baskelballteam&#13;
in its first game of the season as&#13;
they were trounced 130 10 50 and&#13;
from buzzer to buzzer by the&#13;
Latvain National Women's team at&#13;
the first International Night at&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
"Without a doubt they are the&#13;
best womens team I have ever&#13;
seen," said head coach Wendy&#13;
Miller.&#13;
Latvia came into the contest&#13;
Friday nightasanincrcdibly highly&#13;
touted squad. Coached by Juris&#13;
Garkalns, the Soviet originated&#13;
team had won 77 games in a row in&#13;
Europe, an incredible streak at any&#13;
level but especially in international&#13;
competition. This team was mil&#13;
fast and smart, the lineup had 12&#13;
women over six feel mil, the remaining&#13;
four were no smaller than&#13;
5'7",&#13;
Miller figured her only chance&#13;
was to run the Latvains into defeat&#13;
with All-American guard Brenda&#13;
Van Cuick, Terry Ingalls, and a&#13;
90' Netters turned troubles around&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst. Sporls Editor&#13;
If you didn't get a chance 10&#13;
see the 1990 version of Parkside&#13;
Volleyball, you missed something'&#13;
special.&#13;
The Rangers were a hard&#13;
working, tough team whose greatest&#13;
asset was their ability 10 stick 10-&#13;
gether. Through a roller coster&#13;
season of wins and losses and a&#13;
merry-go-round of coaches, the&#13;
team endured to produce the most&#13;
suecessfuU club Parkside has had&#13;
10 date.&#13;
This mixture of experienced&#13;
and inexperienced players combined&#13;
to lake themselves all the&#13;
way to the Bi-District Championship&#13;
malCh, and just a few poinlS&#13;
shy of going 10 Hawaii for the&#13;
NAJA National Volleyball Tournament.&#13;
Parkside began the season not&#13;
knowing what to expect. They had the team was left shocked and baa&#13;
good neucleas of players back sically without direction as Linda&#13;
from the previous year. Team Draftfheadsoltballcoachjassurned&#13;
Captain Colleen Ryan, outside the interim position as coach.&#13;
hillers Lara Nieckula and Vicky Most teams would have&#13;
Pundsack and co-captain Janice cracked underthis kind of pressure&#13;
Word and middle hitter Charee' of having a new coach and not&#13;
Wendorf were sure to be tough but knowing what to expect. BUI the'&#13;
an unsolidified seller position and 90' Rangers were a very special&#13;
three freshmen were cause for groupofwomen.lnsteadoflelting&#13;
concern. uncertainty dictate their season,&#13;
Parkside soon found the an- these courageous teamates stuck&#13;
swer and although they lost six of together and grew stronger and&#13;
their first II games, Cindy Maier . more talented as a team.&#13;
and Nicole Gross were stepping up Parkside won its tournament&#13;
nicely for the Rangers at seiter and here, and had good success in&#13;
Karen Dillo and Vicky Kozich were several other tournies.&#13;
familiarizing themselves nicely at As the post season came near,&#13;
setter. oUlSide hillers Karen Strobl and&#13;
Just when it looked as if the Chris Maher added great bench&#13;
team was set to play tough volley- depth as did middle hiller Lisa&#13;
ball, the coaching breakdo'wn Venegas.&#13;
occured. Long time head coach Parkside then, behind the&#13;
Terry Paulson sudenly retired be- . leadership of assislam coach Lynn&#13;
cause of "personal" reasons and' see Adversity,.B4&#13;
"Without a doubt&#13;
they are the best&#13;
womens team I&#13;
have ever seen,"&#13;
ning and everything else. "&#13;
By the end of the first half,&#13;
Latvia had racked up enough Slats&#13;
to not even score the rest of the&#13;
contest. They shot 62 % from the&#13;
field, 50 % from the floor and 80%&#13;
from the charity stripe making four&#13;
of five. Latvia had racked up 62&#13;
Bears to steam roll&#13;
slumping Broncos&#13;
By&#13;
JIM&#13;
NMaMJ&#13;
Columnist&#13;
The Chicago Bears are still in first place this week after defeatinglbe&#13;
Atlanta Falcons at Soldiers Field: Next, they are offto Mile HighS_&#13;
in Colorado to baule the Denver Broncos. The Bears should wineasily.&#13;
As you may know, the Bears are 8-1 so far this season. Theygotibell&#13;
with solid defensive play, a revamped offense, and a relativelyfZj&#13;
schedule. They have dominatedthe NFC central division.&#13;
The Broncos are, at best. a major disappointment this year. Theoo:e&#13;
mighty Bronco defense has crumbled inlo an ineffective shambles,SJIi&#13;
the superstar led offense has completely lost lt's touch. Renownasdle&#13;
doormat of the NFC (three Superbowl losses), Denver can onlyOOpef~&#13;
a miracle.&#13;
What to look for;&#13;
Offense.&#13;
The Bears Q.B., Jim Harbaugh, has an injured shoulder,buldie&#13;
Chicago running game can win games on it'S own. The Bearshaved1e&#13;
advantage as long as Tomczack doesn't play.&#13;
John Elway isa premier passer with some real goodreceivers,butlhe1&#13;
haven't been able to win any games. Unless coach pan RecvescanbnDI&#13;
the Bron~os out of the slump, the Chicago defense will havea hugedaj&#13;
In mterceptiens.&#13;
Defense. . .&#13;
, .. w&#13;
" The,~ears are great in the first. half, but weak when theyshpill~&#13;
prevem later on. The secondary is playing well despite thelo~&#13;
cornerback Donnell Woolford. Defensive end Richard DenthaS ~&#13;
playing awesomely, as has the line. Could be a big day for sacks.tLI1&#13;
The Broncos are performing below par on defense. TheyaJlo~&#13;
many yards ljIld fail to get many turn-overs. They used to be greatth&#13;
so you never know. ' '&#13;
The Bears should win this one by at least 7 points.&#13;
'.. ,' SCOREBOARD~=~~~ ----l&#13;
Bi-District Championship at UW -Parkside&#13;
Morehead 51. overUW-Parkside 14-16, 15-3, 15-10, 15-5&#13;
NaftIC games kills ast, aces digs block&#13;
Suobl 2 0 0 0 5 0&#13;
NieCkula 4 13 0 0 14 )&#13;
Word 3 8 0 0 11 3&#13;
wencJo!f 4 10 0 2 5 2&#13;
GJOSS 3 0 8 0 5 )&#13;
MJher 4 0 0 0 0 0&#13;
PuJJdsack 2 6 0 0 6 0&#13;
Ryan 4 5 0 0 11 4&#13;
Maier 4 2 34 0 11 I&#13;
Venegas 4 7 0 ) 11 2&#13;
DiUoo I 0 0 0 0 0&#13;
J(ozich 2 2 1 0 2 2&#13;
-&#13;
Mark prrq:ntage;&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Ni&lt;dcula 122&#13;
Wendolf 122&#13;
Koziclt 44&#13;
Venegas 121&#13;
Volleyball Onal1990 results:&#13;
Top five players in each category are listed&#13;
ScrYkt Ares 9ft gamp;&#13;
Name Games Aces&#13;
NieckuIa 122 S4&#13;
Word 96 38&#13;
Wendorf 122 46&#13;
Maie' 102 33&#13;
Pundsack 77 22&#13;
Aces/g&#13;
0.44&#13;
0.40&#13;
0.38&#13;
0.32&#13;
0.29&#13;
TOl.AIk.&#13;
774&#13;
980&#13;
67&#13;
178&#13;
673&#13;
Atck. %&#13;
23.6&#13;
22.0&#13;
20.2&#13;
17.4&#13;
1M&#13;
'i'k pu game'&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Nieckula 122&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Word 96&#13;
Wendorf 122&#13;
Dilloo 39&#13;
Digs pfr game'&#13;
Name Games Digs&#13;
Nieckula 122 309&#13;
Word. % 22&#13;
Maicr 102 233&#13;
Pundsack 77 171&#13;
Gross 73 148&#13;
Kills Klg&#13;
341 2.8&#13;
287 2.19&#13;
208 2.17&#13;
244 2.0&#13;
66 1.69&#13;
Assists A/g&#13;
788 7.73&#13;
373 5.11&#13;
38 0.31&#13;
31 0.25&#13;
27 0.22&#13;
Digslg&#13;
2.53&#13;
2.29&#13;
2.28&#13;
2.22&#13;
2.03&#13;
Assists per gamS" BlockS prc gam£"&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Wendorf 122&#13;
Dil!oo 39&#13;
KOlich 44&#13;
Venegas 121&#13;
Name&#13;
Maier&#13;
Grot,&#13;
Venegas&#13;
Wendorf&#13;
Nieckula&#13;
Blocks&#13;
178&#13;
146&#13;
31&#13;
34&#13;
91&#13;
Blks/g&#13;
1.36&#13;
1.20&#13;
0.79&#13;
0.77&#13;
0.75&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Cudaosto .. kla (79)&#13;
f8. f. rb&#13;
min m-a - m-a 0-1 a pf 1p&#13;
Vyonl 22 3:3 3-4 2·3 4 0 12&#13;
Kow' 37 .8-8 3-6 1-4 O' I 19&#13;
Novak 16 3·6 2-2 3·4 0 I 8&#13;
Miehalko 19 2.4 0-0 0-0 1 2 5&#13;
Michalik 18 1·4 0-0 0·5 10 I 2&#13;
Beck. 17 5-6 0-1 1-3 2 I 10&#13;
Koc'l" 7· .0-0 0-0 0-1 I 2 0&#13;
Svoroda 20 I_I 0-1 1-4 1 0 2&#13;
KameniIc 24 5·10 2-2 1·5 0 2 14&#13;
Jelinek 20 2.8 2·2 0-2 0 2 7&#13;
Totals: 200 3().SO 12.181().34 19 12 79&#13;
Percentages: FG-.600, FT-.666. 3-pointgoals: 7_14 •. 500(VyoraI3-3.Miehalko I3,Kamenik&#13;
2-5. Jclinek 1-3). Team Rebounds: 3. Blocked Shots: 5 (Michalik 3. Novak.&#13;
Kamenik).Turnovers: 17 (Vyoral 5, Kamenik 4, Kovar 2, Michalik 2. Novak, Miehalko,&#13;
'Xcka, Kocvara). Steals: 6 (Jelinek 2, Kovar, Michalko. Michalik, Kamenik).&#13;
VW.Park'id. (47)&#13;
f8 fl rb&#13;
min m·a m·a 0-1 a pC tp&#13;
June 37 5-10 1.2 7-12 0 I It&#13;
Petti, 4 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 I 0&#13;
Popel.a 18 - 1.2 0.0 0.1 I I 2&#13;
AU", 17 1-3 0.2 0.2 I I 2&#13;
Park" 6 0-2 0-0 0·0 0 2 0&#13;
t::,on ;; ~:~4 g~~:~ ~ ~ :&#13;
c:.~, 31 3.5 0-0 0-1 5 2 9&#13;
Lau", 19 3.4 0-0 0·2 0 1 8&#13;
lubkeman 3 0.0 0'0 0-0 0 I 0&#13;
Bum, 10 0-4 0-0 1-2 0 2 0&#13;
Totab: 200 19.54 1.2 12.29 12 16' 47&#13;
P"...,lages: FG-.35I, FT-.500. 3-poinl goals: 8-22,.364 (Pepelea 1·2, Allen ()'2.&#13;
Parker 0-1. EVjl1s 2-7, Cates, 34, Laurer 2-3, Bums 0-3). Team Rebounds: 3. Blocked&#13;
Shots: 2 (luric 2), Turnovers: 20 (Evans 5,Cales 5, Laurer3, Jurie 3, AUen 2, Pepelea I,&#13;
RoIlers... I). Slcals: 5 (CalCS 4. AUen~&#13;
C&gt;&lt;choslovakia 26 53 - 79&#13;
VW·Parkside 27 20 47&#13;
~ 1 }.; • , , I'&#13;
w R~:S-I I.I'IIG&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
6&#13;
•&#13;
P.\RKSIIlE II \SKE III \1.1. 1 ~.\(Oll&#13;
Tombstone Open&#13;
at Steven's Point&#13;
GOLD DIVISION&#13;
CLASS CHAMPION SCHOOL&#13;
1181bs. Ram,ey uw-sp&#13;
,126 Bird UW-Parkside&#13;
134 DuOicne UW -Parkside&#13;
142 Bradley Loras&#13;
150 Yount Chico Slate&#13;
158 Dantzler N1U&#13;
167 CosteUo Loras&#13;
177 Hemauer UW-Parkside&#13;
190 KuehJ xru&#13;
HWf Hufnus UW-Parkside&#13;
Silver Division&#13;
Dohse unattached&#13;
Dineen Marquette&#13;
Persike UW -SP&#13;
Grimm luther&#13;
Misna unauached&#13;
Broclcman UW-Parkside&#13;
Green UW-SP&#13;
Heckman NJU&#13;
Bezcne UW -Parkside&#13;
118&#13;
126&#13;
134&#13;
142&#13;
150&#13;
158&#13;
177&#13;
190&#13;
HWT&#13;
P."rkside Intramural Volleyball League&#13;
league Standings&#13;
Yi.&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
o&#13;
fum&#13;
The Untouchables&#13;
The Invaders&#13;
Pump It Up&#13;
YMCA Posse&#13;
League Results:&#13;
The Invaders d. Pump h Up&#13;
15-12; 9·15;15-2&#13;
The Untouchables d. Y~C/\ Posse&#13;
15-2;15-7&#13;
Tonight's Game&#13;
lllc Untouchables \IS. YMCA Posse&#13;
Tuesday's Game&#13;
Pump It Up \IS. The Invaders&#13;
CROSS COl'NTRY&#13;
D1STRICf 14 CHAMPIONSHIPS&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS COUl\"RY&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
I.UW·PARKSIDE 17&#13;
2. UW -Eau Claire 46&#13;
3. UW-River Falls 92&#13;
4.' UW·Stout 111&#13;
5. Edgewood 123&#13;
UW -Par1cside RUMen:&#13;
PLACE !'!Ar!lli&#13;
1. Jenny Cark&#13;
2. Paula Stokman&#13;
3. Lorri BeBlieck&#13;
S. Ann Stokman&#13;
6. Tricia Breu&#13;
7. Tara Roy&#13;
8. Wendy Orlowski&#13;
.9. Veronica Chamlee&#13;
10. Dee Collier&#13;
14. Erin McDennotl&#13;
24. Oris Scherbarili&#13;
I!M!l&#13;
18:40&#13;
18:46&#13;
18:48&#13;
19:13&#13;
19:18&#13;
19&lt;19&#13;
19,23&#13;
19:18&#13;
19:46&#13;
2M3&#13;
21:15&#13;
MEN'S.CROSS COUN,RY&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
I. UW-Parkside 31&#13;
2. UW-Eau Claire 31&#13;
3. UW-River falls 53&#13;
4. MSOE 117&#13;
UW -Parkside Rurmers&#13;
~!'!Ar!lli I!M!l&#13;
3. Pat Kochanski 26:43&#13;
6. Derek Brown 27:'18&#13;
7. Kin Miller 27:25&#13;
8. Tun Reeves 27:29&#13;
13. Olris Henkes 21:58&#13;
14. Steve Rocha 28:15&#13;
15. Dave Doherty 28:17&#13;
17. Pat Kuhlman 28:51&#13;
21. Todd We'ber 29:lJ7&#13;
23. Kevin Collins 29:2S&#13;
24. K~n By",",. 29:30&#13;
STANDtNGS&#13;
EAST DIVISION&#13;
lUM ll: 1- fC: ff U !ill&#13;
L\ Dream Team II 2 .846 908 710&#13;
Black Wllcb 10 3 .769 1032 774 t&#13;
GUde &amp;. His PO!Ise 5 8 .385 912 986 6&#13;
Old Spice 2 11 .182 747 940 9&#13;
WEST DIVISION&#13;
lUM ll: 1- fC: ff U !ill&#13;
Bad Apples 13 0 1.000 1024 740&#13;
Prime Time 7 6 .538 862 878 6&#13;
Charging Armadillos 3 10 .231 758 938 10&#13;
Wann Black Labels I 12 sn 670 9n 12&#13;
TONIGHT'S GAMES&#13;
ThUrsday, Nov. IS&#13;
o,arging Annadillos vs. Girdie &amp;. His Posse··6:OO&#13;
Black Wata. vs. Prime Tune-·7:00&#13;
Old Spice VS. Warm Blaek Labels--7:00&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. Bad Apples-8OO&#13;
Tuesday, No". 20&#13;
Prime Time vs. Wann Black labeis-.t;:OO&#13;
Bad Apples vs. Charging Annadillos--7:00&#13;
Old Spice V$, Girdie &amp; His Posse··7:OO&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. Black Wateh·-8:00&#13;
THURSDA Y'S RESULTS&#13;
Charging Annadillos 28·32 60 Prime Time 28-36 64&#13;
LA Dream Team 4048 88 Old Spice 32-30 62&#13;
SCOIilliG SCORING •&#13;
Charging Armadillos Prime Time&#13;
Sielen-6,Sme rz -14 ,Rueth -12 .Solomon- 8, Emer -16,Schneidcr-6, Glenecki·16 ParkerBrockman·1O.Yde~6.Posig-4.&#13;
6, Kaczanowski-14,WeKhett-6.&#13;
LA Dream Team Old Spice&#13;
McKowen-26,Lcwis-20.Anhold-14, Sransk e- 10, B ri elm aier-l D.N ewman -8,&#13;
Keese- 10 ,Lemmennan, 8.Hall-6. Kid-Q, Harvey ·12,Poner-4 .Redlin-8,Fuh~·&#13;
Pluskota-4. • 10.&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse JH4&#13;
Bad Apples 50-56&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Black Walch Girdy &amp; His Posse&#13;
Brown-34. MileheU-18. Tolliver-24.Stills- Oi rdaukas -22.Fenrick ·20 .Koc:hJcr-26,&#13;
4, H. Owens-8,Jackson-4,R. ~ns-6. Beg.t:r-6,VorpahI-2.&#13;
Warm Black Labels Bad App6es&#13;
K. Luarski-12,Ohm -12 .Tetzlaff ·10. Hemauer-2.Sehmidtmann-4.Whiuier-30,&#13;
BoIshek-o,Waldal-4.Barowski-8,Gruel1-18. Now icki -30. T opp· 4 .Ka wCl.ynsk.i -14,&#13;
- Le,J&lt;e.12. Tremmeling·IO.&#13;
TUESDA Y'S RESULTS&#13;
32·48 80 Black Walch 22·34&#13;
34·26 60 Bad Apples J().:l4&#13;
SaJRlNG&#13;
Black Walch 48·SO&#13;
Warm Black Labels 26-38&#13;
SCORING&#13;
98&#13;
6-l&#13;
76&#13;
106&#13;
56&#13;
64&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
PrlmeTlme&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Black Watch&#13;
Toliver-4)acksoo-4.Brown-26,MitcheU-4,&#13;
Roegge-14,R.Owens·Z.H,Owens-Z.&#13;
Bad Apples&#13;
Whitticr-20.Schmidtmann-12.uske·20&#13;
• Kawczynski-4,Nowicki-S.&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
McKowen-28. Lcmmennann-14, Lewis-S,&#13;
Lond0-6, Hall-14,Anhold-14.&#13;
PrlmeTJme&#13;
Emer·14,Parlcer-6.Glenecki-16.Tates-6.&#13;
Beger-18.&#13;
Old Spice 26-24 SO Gkdy &amp; His Posse 50.48 98&#13;
Charging Annadillos 3().18 48 Warm Blick Labefs J&lt;S.:l4 70&#13;
SCORING scoRING&#13;
Old Spice Gird)' " His Posse&#13;
Briclmaier-6,Neumann -12.Sranske· Girdaukas-28 .Koehler-30,Fen rick ·22,&#13;
26.Harvey·6. Beger·4.Vorpahl-8,Huty-6.&#13;
Charging Annidillos W.nII Black Labels&#13;
Sielen-8,Rueth-12,Brockman-6.Smen.-14, K. Laurslci-28,Ohm-6.GrvdI-14.Teu.laff·&#13;
Solomon-4,Yde..4. 16.Waldal-6.&#13;
LEAGUE LEADERS·SCORING&#13;
LAST WEEK'S LEADERS l!!IIIlf DaGm 81 .ue -SCOIilllG· Brown.) BW 13 340 26.2&#13;
Fa'lnrick, J G&amp;P 13 266 20.5&#13;
JlUQ Koehler G&amp;PI2 218 18.2&#13;
Brown BW 34 Gird.uku$ G&amp;PI3 234 18.0&#13;
Whittier BA 30 Whittier BA II 198 18.0&#13;
Nowicki BA 30 McKowen LA 12 214 17.8&#13;
McKowen LA 26 Sc:hmidtmann BA 12 214 17.8&#13;
Koehler G&amp;P 26 Sm= CA 13 224 17.2&#13;
Toliver BW 24 Toliver BW 13 218 16.7&#13;
Nowick.i, E BA 8 130 16.3&#13;
Girdaukus G&amp;P 22 lewis LA 12 180 15.0&#13;
Erner, 0 PT 11 158 14.3&#13;
lliW Clenedi PT 12 158 13.1&#13;
'Koehler G&amp;P 30 Kawetynski BA 13 158 12.2&#13;
Girdaukus G&amp;P 28 Sielen CA 13 156 12.0&#13;
McKowen LA 28 Lemmennarm LA 13 154 11.9&#13;
Brown BW 26 Mitchel! BW 13 154 11.9&#13;
Sranske OS 26 K. Lazarslti BL 12 142 11.8&#13;
K.1..al.arski BL 26&#13;
Rueth,J CA 13 148 11.4&#13;
ByJEFFLE~ERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The UW-Parkside wrestling&#13;
team opened up their 1990-91&#13;
season in style at the Tombstone&#13;
Open in Stevens Point this past&#13;
weekend, getting four first place&#13;
finishes in the Gold Division, and&#13;
two more in the Silver Division of&#13;
Morehead&#13;
Date Opponent&#13;
--regular season--&#13;
11/24 Northern Open&#13;
12/01 Warhawk Invite&#13;
12/07 uw-t.acrosee&#13;
12/08 Wis. Collegiate Open&#13;
12/28 Midlands Champinoships&#13;
01/05 Drakellowa Open *&#13;
01/05 Carthage College Invite&#13;
01/10 U.ofIndianapolis-Double&#13;
01/11 Midwest Classic&#13;
01/23 Chicago State University&#13;
01/25 Central Oklahoma State&#13;
02/01· Grand Valley State Duals&#13;
02/02 UW-Eau Claire Invite"&#13;
02/02 UW-Whitewater&#13;
02/08 Wheaton College Invite&#13;
02/13 Marquette University 7:00&#13;
--post season02/15&#13;
NCAA II Midwest Regional&#13;
02/28 NAIA Nationals&#13;
03/01 NCAA II Nationals&#13;
03/14 NCAA I Nationals&#13;
*JV Meet&#13;
the two-tiered tournament.&#13;
The Silver Division, open to&#13;
freshman only, saw five Rangers&#13;
competing in four divisions, three&#13;
of which made at to the finals. The&#13;
only thing which kept the three&#13;
finalists from all capturing titles&#13;
was that at 158 Ibs, both finalists&#13;
were from UW·Parkside.&#13;
Kevin Schmitz and Troy&#13;
Brockman faced off in an allRanger&#13;
final, with Brockman coming&#13;
out on top with a 9-3 decision.&#13;
Schmitz made it to the finals with a&#13;
6-1 quarter-final victory, followed&#13;
by a semi-final pin. Similarly,&#13;
Brockman recorded a pin in the&#13;
semis, after a 13-4 win moved him&#13;
from the quarter-finals.&#13;
see Wrestlers, B8&#13;
Fast start not enough for netters to advance&#13;
cued from front page&#13;
lIld ran off six points. The turning&#13;
point of the whole match came&#13;
with the teams noued at nine in the&#13;
secondgarne. An incredible minute&#13;
and a half long point, which had&#13;
shots and blocks of all kinds and&#13;
from every angle, went to&#13;
Morehead SI. and seemed to take&#13;
the air out of the Lady Rangers&#13;
game.&#13;
The Dragons Middle hitter&#13;
Ann Swanson pounded the Rangers&#13;
with kill after kill in game three&#13;
en route to a 15-10 win.&#13;
Parks ide had trouble with kill&#13;
shots because of Morehead's large&#13;
frontline. Concequently the RangLatvia&#13;
Season can only get&#13;
easier after Latvia&#13;
continued from 82&#13;
vere never allowed any rhythm by&#13;
Latvia,&#13;
Latvia was fuled by an a11-&#13;
around great performance as eight&#13;
players seored in double figures.&#13;
Guard Zvetlana Zitane headed the&#13;
onslaught with 18 points and eight&#13;
steals. Foreward Diana Skrastina,&#13;
.he Milwaukee World Basketball&#13;
Festival MVP, had 17 points, and&#13;
lWO blocks. Parkside was led in&#13;
seoreing by Brenda Van Cuick and&#13;
Terry Ingalls with II each. Latvia&#13;
out rebounded Parkside 4 I to 20&#13;
and shot 70% to Parksides 35%&#13;
from the field.&#13;
"It was hard to play againtst&#13;
thier outstanding no dribble fast&#13;
break," said Miller.&#13;
The Rangers look fore ward to&#13;
the rest of the season and are glad&#13;
they got the oportunity to play&#13;
Latvia. "It was a fun game, you&#13;
really can't evaluate who will start&#13;
the rest of the season after a game&#13;
like this," said Miller.&#13;
When the game was over, the&#13;
Rangers had one comforting&#13;
thought, from here the season is all&#13;
downhill, at least as far as competition&#13;
goes.&#13;
ers tried to hit dinkers to confuse&#13;
Morehead but poor placement allowed&#13;
the Dragons easy seoring&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
The last three games were like&#13;
a bullfight for the Rangers, everywhere&#13;
they turned they saw red of&#13;
the Dragon's jerseys as nothing&#13;
worked for Parkside,&#13;
Just six minutes into the final&#13;
game, Parkside was down 9-0 and&#13;
the team was discouraged by&#13;
Morehead's superiority on the&#13;
court. Parkside managed five token&#13;
points to prolong the defeat of&#13;
15-5 ending their season.&#13;
Leading the match statistically&#13;
for the Rangers were Cindy Maier&#13;
with 34 assists and Lara Neickula&#13;
with 13 kills and 14 digs. Parkside&#13;
once again used a familiar balanced&#13;
attack wi th everyone playing&#13;
in spots.&#13;
"We only made a few mistakes,"&#13;
said Coach Draft, "but they&#13;
did not make any."&#13;
Parkside's biggest problem&#13;
may have been the let down after&#13;
winning an emotionally and physicallydraininggamcone.&#13;
Morehead&#13;
just out played them in the match.&#13;
"We played well, they just&#13;
played better," said Draft.&#13;
IBMlParkside's Jltfilete oftlie 'Week:&#13;
"&#13;
Leading by example&#13;
9:00 Madison,WI&#13;
9:00 WhiteWater, WI&#13;
3:00 HOME&#13;
9:00 ·HOME&#13;
TBA Evanston,IL&#13;
9:00 Des Moines, fA&#13;
9:00 Kenosha,WI&#13;
6:00 Indianapolis,1N&#13;
2:30 Indianapolis,1N&#13;
6:30 Chicago, n.&#13;
7:00 Edmond,OI(&#13;
TBA Allendale,MI&#13;
9:00 Eau Claire,WI&#13;
7 :00 Whitewater, WI&#13;
4:00 Wheaton,lL&#13;
HOME&#13;
11:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
Edwardsville, IL&#13;
Butte, MT&#13;
Fargo,ND&#13;
Ames,IA&#13;
Adversity.&#13;
Group grew stronger&#13;
from coaching turmoil&#13;
continued from 82&#13;
Thiese, was ready for the post season.&#13;
The Lady Rangers won the&#13;
District 14 Championship by&#13;
beating host Viterbo twice. Then&#13;
they fell one match shy of going to&#13;
Nationals in Hawaii when they lost&#13;
Saturday to Morerhead St.&#13;
"This is an exccptionallydcse&#13;
group," said head coach Linda&#13;
Draft. "They showed greatcharater&#13;
to play even stronger undersuch&#13;
adversity as they have endured:&#13;
So if you missed the 9O'Ranger&#13;
Volleyball tearn you did not only&#13;
miss top notch volleyball but you&#13;
missed a great team at work.&#13;
~~~~~~~* * ** * ~~&#13;
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Prime time congrats to this weeks RANGER IBM Athlete of the&#13;
Week, Lara Nieckula for her hard working hard hitting style of volleyball&#13;
all season long.&#13;
A redshirt her first season, Lara returned her sophomore year as a&#13;
fiery and consistent starter. Justcompleting her junior season, Lara led the&#13;
netters inattacks with 980, in kills with 122 (2.8 per game) and in aces with&#13;
54 on the year.&#13;
A business major, Nieckula was named to the All District 14 teamfor&#13;
her exceptional play in helping Parkside capture its first ever Districk 14&#13;
Championship title.&#13;
Parks ide moved Onto the Bi-Districts, also a first for the Rangers and&#13;
Nieckula again was up for the challenge as she had 13 kills, 14 digs and&#13;
a block in the loss to Moorhead St.&#13;
The Rangers have had great support from everyone all season long,&#13;
but Nieckula's play has not only been consistent, but also exceptional .... ====&#13;
throughout the 1990 campaign.&#13;
Congratulations to Lara Nieckuia as our Athlete of the Week. Lara Nieckula&#13;
c.nLT.D. '&#13;
~OIJ: .5·o¢ --rappers&#13;
$Z,7511'fchll.rs'&#13;
~ $2,76Rte),ers&#13;
,-WEDS: J)ance +0 +he&#13;
'1o,H80s with a-R£Gf; 1ER0ALL&#13;
free RiA; I dri"k Wifj, 1a.rkS,de. I,t&gt;.&#13;
1HU~-jQm a~in with .&#13;
'Thrks:des Oeff' LemlYli2rrYlarln&#13;
fF,I,4-g/f!: l.VDZQ'S BUl- kERN&#13;
Sj!!;!:'1Oo16ALl ALL '[WI!!:&#13;
5100 %eaehe;n g;poa~&#13;
cJ2aclne 55J.r -ge9:5&#13;
host, thus receiving an automatic&#13;
bid 10 the tournament. Had they&#13;
won their Area,their automatic bid By MIKE McKOWEN Claire's next runner took 5th one&#13;
would not have been needed, and a Sports Writer spotahead ofDerek Brown 10move&#13;
Boca Raton_loss---lea- es, -=:;::~-is~ec~o~n~d~att-l~ar~c;,JJb:i!idLlowalULlllJJaYe-+=::;;;:;;~~;;;rr;;~:;;;;~~;--:~;'::'~~~~~.'.~P:ItItS~~ld~e.&#13;
n available. t e gmmng of the season Close behind Derek were teamThe&#13;
second bid went to IOlh Coach Lucian Rosa wanted the males Kin Miller and Tim Reeves at large Rangers at h ranked,Catawba,NC. They lost in District 14 title. At points in the in 7th and 8th while Eau Claire's&#13;
- ome their Area final to the nations top- seasonitdidn'tlooklikethiswould Joe Turk and Mark Albrecht were&#13;
ranked team, West Virginia- ever happen. With injuries 3 seconds behind Reeves. With&#13;
Wesleyan. by a 1-0 score. throughout the season his runners each team having 4 runnersacross&#13;
In the Area 5 final, Viterbo came back just in time. Led by Pat the line the Rangers held a two&#13;
College, who knocked UW _ Kochanski's third place finish and point lead but the fifth runner for&#13;
Parkside from competition, de- the return of freshman Derek Eau Claire finished I Ith two spots&#13;
feated Judson College, II by a 3- I Brown, UW -Parksidcand UW-Eau ahead of Chris Henkes.&#13;
margin. Claire tied with 37 points. With the main goal of the&#13;
Everyone knew the battle was season accomplished Parksid&#13;
going to be between the Rangers would like to beat UW-Eau Claire&#13;
and the BJugolds, and by the mile at the Nationals here in two weeks.&#13;
markeveryonewascountinglOsee With an off weekend before the&#13;
who was ahead at points in the race meet the Rangers will use the time&#13;
each team held the lead. EauClaire to get healthy and tune up for anhad&#13;
their first runner cross in 2nd other match-up with the Blugolds.&#13;
place one spot ahead of Pat Coach Rosa would like to leave no&#13;
Kochanski, the Rangers first run- doubt whose the best District 14&#13;
ner to cross the finish line. Eau team.&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The at-large hopes of UW·&#13;
Parkside'ssoccerteam fell quietly&#13;
by the wayside this weekend, as&#13;
the selection committee bypassed&#13;
on the 9th ranked Rangers.&#13;
One of the main factors was&#13;
the loss by Boca Raton, FL in their&#13;
Area finals, Boca Raton, ranked&#13;
2nd in the nation, is the tournament&#13;
Road' to NAIANational-hoops&#13;
Tourney a tough one&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
Domination.lt'slheonlyword&#13;
IOdescribewhattheUW-Eau Claire&#13;
BlugoldBasketball team has done&#13;
10 District 14 opponents in the&#13;
NAIARegional Tournament.&#13;
The Blugolds have captured&#13;
theDisbict 14Championship for 5&#13;
years running, and have won the&#13;
thetitlean amazing 9 outofthe last \&#13;
12Years. In two of the three years&#13;
theBlugolds did not win the title,&#13;
they were defeated by the Terry&#13;
POller/Dick Bennett teams of&#13;
StevensPoint in the championship&#13;
game, r:&#13;
This year, the Blugolds are&#13;
ranked number 1 in the NAJA&#13;
National Poll after coming off a&#13;
30-4season which was highlighted&#13;
by a second place finish in the&#13;
NAIA National Tournament in&#13;
Kansas City, In 1981and 1989,the&#13;
Blugolds captured thirds in Kansas&#13;
City, and a fourth in 1980.&#13;
UW -Parkside has drawn berths&#13;
in the District 14 Tourney for 14&#13;
plus straight years, but hasn't gone&#13;
to ihe big dance since 1978. The&#13;
Ranger's main road block: the&#13;
Blugolds. In the past 12 years, the&#13;
Blugolds have eliminated the&#13;
Rangers from lOurnamentplay nine&#13;
times.&#13;
The last time the Rangers won&#13;
a district championship, was 1978,&#13;
when they finished off Oshkosh to&#13;
complete a four year run of championships,&#13;
dating back 10 1975. The&#13;
, four year stretch of championships&#13;
included two victories over, Eau&#13;
Claire, one over Stout and one over&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
The Rangers highest seed in&#13;
the National Tourney was 8th in&#13;
1976, and they have never won&#13;
, .. '.'&#13;
more than one game in K.C.&#13;
Last year, the sixth seeded&#13;
Rangers were ousted in the first&#13;
round by third ranked Stevens&#13;
Point, and in 1989thefounhseeded&#13;
Rangers were blanked by number&#13;
five Oshkosh.&#13;
The teams are selected for the&#13;
Tournament based on their Dunkel&#13;
Rating. The top six Dunkel Ratings&#13;
from the district along with two&#13;
automatic bids are seeded according&#13;
10their Dunkel Rating, with the&#13;
winner going to the National&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
This year the Rangers hope to&#13;
make it 15 straight invitations to&#13;
the District 14Championships, but&#13;
it will be an uphill climb, with&#13;
strong state teams such as u.w.&#13;
Platteville, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, Viterbo,RiverFalIs,&#13;
and UW-Stout also vying for&#13;
tourney spots.&#13;
.........&#13;
The Rangers jumped out and&#13;
never looked back. The battle for&#13;
the individual title was between&#13;
Jenny Clark, Paula Stokrnan.Lorri&#13;
DeBlieck and the only non-Parkside&#13;
runner 10 finish in the top 10&#13;
Jeni Wickham of UW -Eau Claire.&#13;
At the half-way point in therace&#13;
Jenny, Palua, and Lorri were running&#13;
together until Jenny pulled&#13;
away to beat Paula by 6 seconds.O&#13;
Coach DeWitt feels the keys&#13;
to doing well at Nationals is the&#13;
team getting adequate rest, having&#13;
a proper mindser and controlling&#13;
their emotions. He doesn't want&#13;
the runners to be to up before thl&#13;
race and have them channel their&#13;
energy during their meet.&#13;
If the season ended now it&#13;
would have been a successful year.&#13;
But. that doesn't mean the team&#13;
isn't hungry for more. The biggest&#13;
goal is still ahead. The Lady&#13;
Rangers hope to finish in the top 5&#13;
at Nationals in two weeks, but a&#13;
National Championship is a real:&#13;
istic goal. Coach DeWitt needs&#13;
each of his runners 10 be at their&#13;
best and it is possible 10 be the first&#13;
team to win three NAJA Championships.&#13;
Ranger men take&#13;
first in district 14&#13;
Nation's Top 800&#13;
to compete hereBy&#13;
MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
proximately I I:45 a.m.&#13;
Admission is S2.00. Parking&#13;
will be available in the UW-Parkside&#13;
Physical Education, Communication&#13;
Arts and Union Lots.&#13;
In the men's race the seventime&#13;
defending champions Adams&#13;
State will be favored along with&#13;
Lubbock Christian College, Texas:&#13;
and Malone College, Ohio.&#13;
In the women's racedefendinll&#13;
champion Adam's State, Colorado&#13;
will be the favorueonceagain along&#13;
withPacificLutheran, Washington;&#13;
North florida University and the&#13;
host UW -Parkside,&#13;
The NAIA National Championships&#13;
are back at the UW-Parkside&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
Course. Nearly 800 runners&#13;
throughout the country will compete&#13;
in the 1990 Men's and&#13;
Women's Championships on Saturday,&#13;
November 17_&#13;
The runners are representing&#13;
115 colleges and universities. The&#13;
women's 5000 meter race will begin&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. and the men's&#13;
8000 meter race will begin at ap-&#13;
I&#13;
The NAIA-'W'oD1en's Na't10n .&#13;
;qjrff;I;;j\!Jt;;"t&lt;i' Keys to success for women&#13;
;j'::1&#13;
. DeBlieck points to pace, and controlled running&#13;
For women running&#13;
Parkside's NAJA National&#13;
Cross Country course for the-&#13;
'first time, UW-Parkside senior.&#13;
Lorri DeBlieck offers sound&#13;
advice,&#13;
"The first mile go out at a&#13;
good pace and try to break away&#13;
from the pack. But don't go too&#13;
fast or you'll bum out. Then&#13;
. pace yourselffonhe next stretch&#13;
and at the two mile mark, give it&#13;
everything you have, whatever&#13;
is left." warns DeBlieck.&#13;
Sound advice from a&#13;
knowledgable source as Lorri&#13;
Placed 13th at Nationals last&#13;
year and has as much experience&#13;
as possible on&#13;
the treacherous 5000 meter&#13;
course.&#13;
With hundreds of runnners&#13;
set to converge for the Nationals&#13;
this Saturday, the course,&#13;
habitually the sight of Nationals&#13;
formenand women, is the center&#13;
of attention.&#13;
. ".., ..&#13;
race which you should nmyour&#13;
best because you have been&#13;
training for it all season," said&#13;
Lom.&#13;
By ternpature contrast,Lolli&#13;
advises runners to take varied&#13;
apporoaches to different&#13;
weather conditions. "If the&#13;
tempatures are in the 60's you&#13;
should drink a lotoffluids. lfits&#13;
cold, J think it would be a plus&#13;
for the teams from up north&#13;
simply because southern&#13;
schools are not used to the cold,"&#13;
added Lorri.&#13;
The course itself is nationally&#13;
renouned for its toughneSs&#13;
on competetors.&#13;
Lorri herself recalls the first&#13;
time she ran the course. "The&#13;
first time J ran itljust remember&#13;
it was so tough. Part of thaiwas&#13;
because J was just out of hIgh&#13;
school and not used 10 the&#13;
mileage.&#13;
''The best advice is to remember&#13;
to run under conuol.~ ~"'"..."~"~iii(1 ~n~ct~..";.",-~,,·~~~,~,,,,·&#13;
What makes the course so&#13;
interesting iswhat also makes it&#13;
so difficult. The huge hill at the&#13;
start of the race, the killer 1/4&#13;
mile, stretch of grass and sod&#13;
which has killed so many talented&#13;
runners hopes will again&#13;
be center stage.&#13;
"Nationals is 'a time and a&#13;
Lori DeBlieck&#13;
Q&#13;
.&gt;.&#13;
/&#13;
.\&#13;
Roo&#13;
Keys to success for men&#13;
Doherty says to watch out on hills, avoid burn-out&#13;
"The hill at the fourmile mark,&#13;
is the real killer," explains UWParkside&#13;
sophomore Men's Cross&#13;
country runner David Doherty, "the&#13;
hill teases you and makes you think&#13;
it is not 100 big, it looks small, but&#13;
then it gets bigger and bigger right&#13;
as you begin to run it. That hill&#13;
seems like it will never end."&#13;
Welcome to the NAIA Cross&#13;
Counlry.Nationais and the worlds&#13;
most treacherous course.&#13;
The hill Doheny describes is&#13;
not even the biggest hill on the&#13;
UW -Parkside Cross Country&#13;
Course. Dave an experienced runner&#13;
of the course explained his&#13;
feelings of what the course is like&#13;
and what first time runners should&#13;
. expect.&#13;
"If you go out too hard, the&#13;
course will beat you, you will not&#13;
beat the course. 50 runners must&#13;
be able to start off more cautiously&#13;
in order to run a good race."&#13;
The familiar sight of NAJA&#13;
Nationals is most famous for its&#13;
huge and ominous hill at the beginning&#13;
and three mile mark of the&#13;
"The guys on our&#13;
team have nicknamed&#13;
that hill&#13;
'heartbreak hill',"&#13;
-runner Dave Doheny&#13;
race for men. Since the men run an&#13;
8000 meter race they are forced to&#13;
climb this monster twice. This hill&#13;
is where a racer will help or condemn&#13;
himself as Dave did his very&#13;
frrst time at Parkside. "My worst&#13;
experience here was my freshman&#13;
year in my first meet. I took off too&#13;
fast because of inexperience and&#13;
dropped out after the two mile&#13;
mark," explained Dohrety,&#13;
For Dave and other Parkside&#13;
runners, the big hill is overcome&#13;
with experience but that hill at the&#13;
fourmile mark is the real nail inthe&#13;
coffin, ''The guys on our team have&#13;
nicknamed that hill 'heartbreak&#13;
hill'," he explaines.&#13;
Dave, running in his second&#13;
Nationals meet, has advice for other&#13;
first time runners:&#13;
Be cautious at the beginning&#13;
of the race because the race does&#13;
not even begin until after the 3 and&#13;
1/2 mile mark.&#13;
The cold weather ( providing&#13;
it will be cold) will have to affect&#13;
the performance of'Southcrn teams&#13;
while most of the midwcst tcan1S&#13;
arc used to the cold.&#13;
"In SOdegree or over weather,&#13;
the honer it is, the more conservative&#13;
you have to be because of the&#13;
heat. Fatigue is then a factor.&#13;
In weatherof25 to 50 degrees,&#13;
the course gets faster while the&#13;
ground hardens and that's what I&#13;
prefer to run in, 45 degrees would&#13;
be ideal for me.&#13;
The cooler the weather, the&#13;
faster the race. as long as there is no&#13;
snow on the ground," Dave e -&#13;
plained.&#13;
But when asked aboutrunning&#13;
in sub zero weather as he did at last&#13;
ycarsNationalseompetition, ''Then&#13;
I run pretty damn fast so I can get it&#13;
over with:'&#13;
z --&#13;
I.&#13;
, Skaters&#13;
Defenseless Ranger&#13;
skaters sheUed by Loras&#13;
continued froD1 rroot page .CJU:istian Hans~~neued a fllSl&#13;
. ~. period goal, asslSledby Doug&#13;
centag~. ~".. t"' •• "'~ hi Inthe second game onSunday,' Alton. m...e~,",&gt;,pvc JPPedin&#13;
Loras took a commanding 4-1 tst with 2 assists., '&#13;
- iod lead and never looked back, The Ranger s are not looking&#13;
::'ting the Rangers by a final of at this weekend's d-:featS:asa step&#13;
10-4. . in the wrong direction '. "Loms is&#13;
The games only highlight, if one of the better-teams m thecen.&#13;
you call it one, was an amazing 49 ference, and Idon't think we plaYed&#13;
saves by Rivera while allowing too badly for our fICStever game."&#13;
only 10 goals. an 83% save per- stateddefensemenCasslOppo. "We&#13;
centage.Rivera was pelted by 16 gota little u~ed towards the end of&#13;
shots in the Ist, saving 12,21 in the the games since we are only skat.&#13;
2nd, saving 19, and 22 shots in the ing two lines"&#13;
3rd, saving 18. , . TheRangerswilllookfonheir&#13;
The Ranger team offense im- first ever victory when they host&#13;
proved in the 2nd game, with John Cornell College on December lst&#13;
Hisdahl netting 2 goals and assist- and 2nd auhe Kenosha County Ice&#13;
ing on a Steve Silvasi score. Arena.&#13;
Czech second half is show&#13;
stopper for Ranger debut&#13;
... points of the contest from the&#13;
continued fl'Glllrro.t page freethrow line with just under a&#13;
minute left. Kovar finishes with a&#13;
team-high 19, and the Czechs hold&#13;
their biggest leadof the night at 79-&#13;
47.&#13;
UW -Parksidc 1 0 3 4&#13;
Lcras College 4 2 4. 10&#13;
FIRST PERIOD· Scoring: 1, Lens,&#13;
Keenan (Westol, Mignon), 4:37.2, Loras,&#13;
Mignon (Westol, Courtney), 8:00. 3,&#13;
Parkside, Hanstcdt (Alton). 12: 12. 4,Loras,&#13;
Guzaldo(Weslol), 12:48. 5,Loras,Mignon&#13;
(J&lt;jylahan), 14:02 Penalties: Burke,&#13;
Parkside (Too Many men on ice), 10:01;&#13;
O'Connell, Loras (Inlerferen&lt;:e) .. 6:11;&#13;
Filippelli, Parkside (Misconduct&gt;, 4:12;&#13;
Rivera, Parkside (Interference), 3:17;&#13;
Caccioppo, Parkside (Charging);0:04.&#13;
SECOND PERIOD· Se..-Ing:6. Lora.,&#13;
Uoy,l(Counney,Allhau.),IU3,7.Lon ••&#13;
Mignon(Westol, U9yd),16:04,Penallles:&#13;
Silvasi, Parkside (Too Many Men On Ice),&#13;
15:29;Ryan,Lora. (HighStickmg),13:ll8;&#13;
Counney, Lora.(Roughing),12:44.&#13;
THIRD PERIOD· Seoring: 8. Lon'.&#13;
Coonney (Mignon),t:05.. "9. Parksid.,&#13;
. Hisdahl(Cacciopo), 2:24,to,Lor", Uoyd&#13;
(Counney), 5m. 11, Loras, Guzaldo&#13;
(MuI.en),1:09. 12,Lora•. Guzaldo, 7:32&#13;
t3, Parl&lt;.ide.Hi.dah1(Ca.sioppo), 8:35.&#13;
t4, Parkside, Silva~i (Hisdahl), 13:25.&#13;
PenaIUes: Kivlahan,Lora. (Roughing).&#13;
9:55;Hisdahl,Parl&lt;.ide(Roughing~9:55;&#13;
Flickinger, Loras' (Charging), 5:21;&#13;
Kivtahan, Lo... (High Stickinj),2:27;&#13;
managed a takedown in.the final 4 title viclQry over Greg ~wis. . Hisdahi;Parl&lt;.ide(HighSticking).2:27.&#13;
seconds of that mall:h to wrestle Scott Wessley came up one Mon, ""rl"ide (fripping)0:29,&#13;
the title from Skarda, who was 32- match short in his attempts for the Shoes on Goal:&#13;
, I 2 3 T 7-'1 last year. 1901b title, losing:in the finals to ;:UW:::-:-Pa::-:-rl&lt;-:.i"'de~-:-6-9~~1~5-c3;;;;O&#13;
, Tim Whiting bounced back. Mark Kuehl of Non hem IHinois by Lora.College 16 21 22 59&#13;
from his quarter-fmalloss to cap- an 8-2 score. ll.eforethat, Wessiey Goalies: Parl&lt;.ide.Rivera,(59Shol•. 49&#13;
tho d I ·th··, th . Saves). Loras·, Aaheny(.6Shots,·5Saves), ture If p ace WI ,a pm m e hadwtm three matches, including a Miessler(24.hou, 21save.)&#13;
fmals ofthe consolation division at 52 second pin in his opening match. consolation finals.&#13;
1581bs. Whiting's loss came the Fortitrcnumberfour,thesqUad 0.. • "1 was pleased with havi,og&#13;
the eventual winner in the division,' had to rely on hea . ht R' k vywelg IC two champs in the Gold and WI,th T.C. Dantzler, After beating Hufnus Hu&lt;nus had tr bl&#13;
Whiting 11-2, Dantzler, from wI'th the f'eld 'th " ." no ou e two in the Silver," said coachJim .&#13;
1 , sconng ree V1CtO- Koch. "We were close to having Northern Illinois University~ .cap- ri's highl,'ghted b 100"&#13;
- , y a - wm m five with Skarda's loss in the last tured the title with an 8·6 win over ti]e finals over Scott Deitz of Lor as&#13;
Chris Walker (Unattached.) seconds."&#13;
College. Kevin Tremelling, who Missing from action for the.&#13;
At 177 Ibs, Mark Hemauer lost to Deitz in the opening found, f . ' ry were&#13;
marched through his four matches came back to finish fourth in the .Rangers becau~eo In)U ance&#13;
enroute to the lItle, He outscored division for the Rangers H Joel Dutton (ankle) and L&#13;
, . . e won S hm'd (k ) .hiSO~QlSI15-,l~.ip~llllliNla;7f .. W~ maJChe$JJc{QreI ' . til . CIt nee. •..&#13;
I~·"·~';.7i~.,~!~':'l~:1~~~~~'~"\~:'-;~:~~\~~.:~~",~~L!1~,(~i.,~ilt~i-4 .••r:t~:'4ii:?g..,.L.'li. ~el~I~:~,:;';-;~L~!t-tl~~A,~;,,-,·f-~4M~&#13;
• '- - - l- t·t 1 ! , J Plot lfi.i .1~j~Col~~Lh-'l't1t=-'''~~f-f'i'"J'',t~i~c''','''~~_- --;;...-------------------~~.&#13;
Czechs&#13;
trifectas in the first ten minutes,&#13;
and fICStyear guard, John Evans,&#13;
looks impressive in his debut with&#13;
w.. first-half points.&#13;
Czechoslovakia, on the other&#13;
side of the court, Joots sloppy.&#13;
Their poor passing and poor shot&#13;
selection keeps the balJ in ranger&#13;
hands for much of the fICStten&#13;
minutes.&#13;
Act Two: Prelude to Destruction&#13;
The Ranges fail to score for a&#13;
five minute stretch, allowing the&#13;
Czechs to find their game. New&#13;
defensive intensity by the Czechs&#13;
eads to a pair of lay-ups by Pavel&#13;
Becka to make it 20-19. Vladimir&#13;
vyorar S itu ec-poira baeket caps&#13;
off a 10-0 run, giving them a 22-20&#13;
lead with 4:49 remaining.&#13;
UW-Parkside regroups after&#13;
that, regaining the lead on a Cates&#13;
long-ranger with just one second&#13;
remaining, The Rangers enjoy a&#13;
27-26 halftime advantage, committing&#13;
only five turnovers in me&#13;
process,&#13;
Act Three: The Good, the&#13;
Bad, the Shooting&#13;
~ After scoring the first basket&#13;
of the half, the Rangers fail to score&#13;
again until the 14:30 mark,&#13;
Meanwhile, Czechoslovakia runs&#13;
off thirteen-straight points, most&#13;
on easy shots and freethrows.&#13;
UW -Parkside regroups again&#13;
momentarily, rediscovering the&#13;
three· pointer which was their main&#13;
weapon in the ftrSt,half. Artie&#13;
NG t&#13;
Jurie led the Rangers In sconng&#13;
&amp; rebounding against the Czechs.&#13;
Pepelea hits one, followcd by a&#13;
basket by Evans, A Cates steal&#13;
leads to a Tim' Roberson basket,&#13;
and the Rangers find themselves&#13;
down by just five with 11:40 remaining.&#13;
The Czechs quickly put an end&#13;
to that run with a three-pointer by&#13;
Josef Jelinck, followed by a landslide&#13;
of scoring. Pressure defense&#13;
unravels UW'-Parkside' s offensive'&#13;
attack:as theCzeehs score at will.&#13;
The g3IfIC' s fmal ten minules sees'&#13;
the Rangers outscored.31-9.&#13;
Jaroslllri Kovar scores the' fin3I&#13;
"&#13;
Epilogue:&#13;
Poor shooting proved to be a&#13;
large pan,butonly halfofthe whole&#13;
problem for the Rangers. Iii the&#13;
second half, while the Czechs were&#13;
shooting at a blistering 71 %, the&#13;
Rangers hit at less than 30%. For&#13;
the game, Czechoslovakia hit an.&#13;
even 60% of their shots, compared&#13;
to 35% for UW-Parkside.&#13;
Rebounding accounted for&#13;
another large pari of the ugly second-half&#13;
story. After holding the&#13;
Czechs off the glass for much of&#13;
, the fICSthalf, UW·Parkside was&#13;
out-boarded by a 20-15 margin,&#13;
And whocan forgetturnovers?&#13;
As the Rangers unraveled on offense,&#13;
their 15 second half giveaways&#13;
led to a number of Czech&#13;
lay-ups. The combination of a flat&#13;
offense, no rebounding, a worndowJl&#13;
defcnse, turnovers, and poor&#13;
shooIi~g were simple ingredients&#13;
for a 32 point loss.&#13;
For the game, four Czechs&#13;
scored in double-figures, and the&#13;
team out-scored the Rangers from&#13;
thefreethrow line by a 12-1 margin.&#13;
Only Juric finished in twin-figures,&#13;
for the Rangers: He scored eleven,&#13;
while getting twelve rebuunds.&#13;
. UW -Parkside starts for real&#13;
,November 16th when they !(avel&#13;
to Lewis University for the Lewis&#13;
lilvitational Tournament.&#13;
UW-Parkside Hockey Boxes&#13;
Uw-Parkslde at Loras College&#13;
• Game#l&#13;
I 2 3 T&#13;
I 2 3 I&#13;
UW· Parkside at Loras College&#13;
• Game #2&#13;
I 2 3 T&#13;
UW -Parkside . L 1 J 3&#13;
Loras Colleg""e 3 3 2 8.-'&#13;
FIRST PERIOD· Scoring: 1, Parkside,&#13;
Hisdahl, 4:44. 2, Lcras, Westul (Mignon),&#13;
5:33.3, Loras. O'Connell (Molsen), 9:32.&#13;
4, Weslul.14:40. Penalties: Sheehan, Loras&#13;
(Roughing), 5:50; Caccioppo, Parkside&#13;
. (Minor!Misoonduct.},3:24.&#13;
SECOND PERIOD ·Scoring: 5, Parkside~&#13;
Allan, 3:32. 6, Loras. Weslul (Migon),&#13;
10:04. 1,Loras, Weslul (Migon), 10:56. 8,&#13;
Loms, O'Connell (Brimeyer) II :35. PenaltieS:&#13;
Allon, Parkside {Minor Hi-Sticking).5:59,&#13;
.&#13;
THIRD PERIOD· Scoring: 9. Lor .. ,&#13;
Coortney(Althau'),3:t4,Ip.Lora'"Molsen&#13;
(Brimeyer)6: 12. ,t I, Parkside;·AJton,l,4:41.&#13;
PenalUes: Westul. Lo... (Hoiding);8:41;&#13;
Keenan. loru (Interference), 5:11;&#13;
Guzaldo, Loras(HooIting),2:19;C",cioppo,&#13;
Parkside (Checking from BehindJMiscOO.&#13;
duet),1:20;Counney,Lor.. (1looking):24,&#13;
Shots on Goat:&#13;
Wrestlers&#13;
Wrestlers take four titles in season 'opener&#13;
continued from B4&#13;
The other Ranger title in the&#13;
Silver Division, came in the&#13;
Heavyweight division, where Jim&#13;
Bezoue captured his title with a&#13;
pair of triumphs, one via the pin in&#13;
the semi·finals, and the second via&#13;
a 3-0 decision.&#13;
In the Gold Division, UWParkside&#13;
collected four fICSt-place&#13;
fmishes, two seconds, and a third&#13;
with competitors in eight of the ten&#13;
divisions.&#13;
One of the most impressive&#13;
victories came in the 126 Ib division,&#13;
where Kevin Bird, a senior&#13;
who finished with a 27-10 record&#13;
last year, met a highly touted&#13;
freshman, Mat Hanutke, who had&#13;
not lost a malch in his high school&#13;
career. Birilwas carrying a 2·1&#13;
lead when Hanutke was forced:to&#13;
retire because of injury.&#13;
At 134 Ibs, Dennis DuChene&#13;
opened his 1990-91 quest with a&#13;
pair of pins before lJlOning into&#13;
Rocky Majkowski. Majkowski,&#13;
wrestling for Maiquette University,&#13;
iook DuChene to overtime before&#13;
last year's NCAA 11runner-up was&#13;
~ble to capture the victory. From&#13;
there, DuChene went on to a 6·2&#13;
win in the final!&gt;for the Rangers&#13;
second title of the tournament.&#13;
Steve Skarda won three consecutive&#13;
decisions to make it to the&#13;
finals at 150 Ibs, but his title hopes&#13;
ended with a 5-4 loss to Roben&#13;
Young of Chicago Slate. ,Y.O.uJ1g&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;·.ide9 10 II 30&#13;
Lora.CoUege t8 12 6 36&#13;
Goalies&gt; Parl&lt;.ide,Rivera,(36' Shot •• 28&#13;
Save.~Loras,Flaheny(24Shots,22Saves),&#13;
Miessler (6 sh~. 5 saves)&#13;
BASKETBALL 90&#13;
~erION C . THURSDAY,NOVEMBER IS, 1990 SECTION C&#13;
Youngteam starts 'fresh ,for the nineties&#13;
LOSS of four starters, tough&#13;
schedule, to challenge Rangers&#13;
- JEFF LEMMERMANN Lyons. .&#13;
By Sports Editor Whatd~scoachAIScheisser&#13;
. have 10 the wings to replace 68.6%&#13;
It could be a rocky beginning of last year's offense? Five memforihisyear'seditionoftheRunnin'&#13;
bers from the 89-90 roster return.&#13;
Rangers.Any team which replaces The top-scoring returnee is&#13;
nineof their wins from last year 6'4" forward, Doug Burns. Burns,&#13;
with teams which are likely to be a deadly shooter from outside, avtener&#13;
already has their work cut eraged 7.1 points a game last year,&#13;
outfor them. Add to that the fact playing in all 28 games with an&#13;
thatfour of ihe starters from last average of 17.3 minutes.&#13;
year's 14·14squad are gone, and - Tim Cates returns in the&#13;
youhave a potentially disasterous Ranger backcourt, looking to fill&#13;
siwation. the shoes of two of the best colleGone&#13;
from the schedule are giate guards in the state. Last year,&#13;
the likes of Grace College, IN; SL he shot 48.8% from the field in&#13;
Norberts,Lake Superior State, and averaging 4.5 points on just 10.9&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.Replacing them: minutes a game. He also averaged&#13;
KentuckyWesleyan, last year's 1.5 rebounds from a guard spot.&#13;
NCAAII champs with four re- One of the most important&#13;
turningstarters; Wayne State, MI; players returning iscenterTihomir&#13;
BemidjiSlate; and St. Xavier. Juric. The Rangers, who were exGone&#13;
from the roster: last trernely soft in the middle last year,&#13;
year's top three scorers in Andy will be further stressed in the front&#13;
Schmidunann (14.2 points per court with the loss of Lyons. Juric&#13;
game),Sieve Jerrick (13.3), and averaged 4.9 rebounds a game last&#13;
RodWhittier (12.5). Gone also is year, but will need to improve on&#13;
!he teams leading rebounder, Dan those numbers in 90-91.&#13;
FALLING TO EARTH&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;side'sswitch to a 3-pt offense has affected many of the&#13;
teamsother Slats. Total field goals per game have declined, along&#13;
with rebounds. Listed are the final stats from the past three years.&#13;
1987-88was the teams final year before the 3-pt blitz.&#13;
~ - Ylc:lori_&#13;
..&#13;
~"&#13;
~ -3p1sJDam.&#13;
.. - - - - 'O'o-m-&#13;
.. , ' ': ::' Ao_mo&#13;
ee&#13;
, .&#13;
.. "- .... .. '- - - -- ..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
,.&#13;
,.&#13;
..&#13;
,. ..' -- '" J"&#13;
v&#13;
-- • .• ..&#13;
.. .&#13;
• ~-~&#13;
• rr.· .&#13;
•&#13;
1887-_ ._.... 1ee.eo&#13;
-&#13;
ToddGofn.UNGDl&#13;
Artie Pepelea and a host of young guards will taJ:e over control of the Ranger offense this year.&#13;
:n (Juric) will be an All- In thatgame,Juricpulleddown overall talen than in the past few&#13;
American before he leaves here," twelve rebounds while scoring years. How quickly that talent will&#13;
stated Schiesser. He's greatly irn- elevenpoints,numbershewillhave come together is anybodys guess.&#13;
proved over last year, and his per- to continue producing if the "I expect us to struggle early.&#13;
fonnance against Czechoslovakia Rangersexpecuobaveany success It is a waiting process for our&#13;
showed what he can do against D- this year. younger players to pick up the ofI&#13;
caliber players." Thetearn,asawhole,hasmore see Outlook, C4&#13;
Women looking for up-tempo&#13;
style from talent filled bench&#13;
niors on the team' and will serve as tween thecollege level and playing&#13;
this year's co-caplains. Their lead- in high school.&#13;
ershipwillbe sorely needed to show Wi!h the regular season openthe&#13;
freshman the difference be ing Saturday, 11/17 at Lewis University,&#13;
Coach Miller is still undecided&#13;
about her other starters. She&#13;
feels she can use a lot of players,&#13;
keep the team fresh and run an up&#13;
tempo game. "The starters will&#13;
change at times depending on who&#13;
we play, and the jury is still out on&#13;
a few of our girls as to who is going&#13;
to step forward and lake control,"&#13;
said Miller.&#13;
A tough Ranger schedule will&#13;
be highlighted by opponents like&#13;
top 10 rated St. Joseph's. tho U.S.&#13;
Naval Acadamy is in the top 20,&#13;
Bi-District champion, MinnesotaDuluth&#13;
and National runner-up 51.&#13;
Ambrose, paving a tough road to&#13;
the post-season.&#13;
By MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The 1990 version of the OWParks&#13;
ide women's basketball will&#13;
see six freshman, four sophomores,&#13;
two juniors and two seniors lake&#13;
the court. At point guard, the&#13;
Rangers will have sophomore&#13;
Jenny Neubert and a trio a freshman&#13;
leading the transition game&#13;
the Rangers would like to have. At&#13;
the post position. the loss to graduation&#13;
of Sue Mass and Tracy&#13;
Northrop will push some very inexperienced&#13;
post players into immediate&#13;
action to help control the&#13;
boards. But, the tearn isn't completely&#13;
without experience. At&#13;
shooting guard and at small forward&#13;
the Rangers do have theluxury&#13;
of two seniors. Brenda Van Cuick&#13;
'and Diana Wetzel are the only se- Coach Wendy Miller&#13;
# 12 Ed Pettis&#13;
HT: 5'9" WT: 160&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Red Shined last season, played at&#13;
Oobebi&lt;: Conununity College in '88-&#13;
'89. Averaged 14 PP8 8 apg, Honorable&#13;
Mention All-Region, Helped Ieed&#13;
Whi01a1 toWlAA Slate Championship&#13;
in 1988. Honors include: All State. All&#13;
Slate Tourney Team, All-Area, &amp; 41b&#13;
Team All Slate.&#13;
# 44 Donovan Stephens&#13;
HT: 6'0" WT: 160&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: G&#13;
Home: Racine, WI&#13;
Originally from Chicago, moved&#13;
to Racine before High School. Helped&#13;
leed Racine Horlick to a WIAA State&#13;
Toumamentbirth. Averaged 12.5 ppg,&#13;
5.2 spg, 6.3 apg &amp; 2.3 rpg. Currently&#13;
rna' rin in En ineerin .&#13;
# 25 Tom Parker&#13;
HT: 6'3" WT: 185&#13;
Yr: So Pos: F&#13;
Home: Williams Bay, WI&#13;
All Conference in Basketball as&#13;
well as Football. Redshirted last season.&#13;
Majoring and English and minoring&#13;
in Coaching. Plans on teaching&#13;
secondary education.&#13;
# 13Artie Pepelea&#13;
HT: 5'10" WT: 165&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Anderson, IN&#13;
Holds 9 individual records al&#13;
Anderson High School. Averaged 16&#13;
ppg and 9.5 apg. 2nd Team AI Slate,&#13;
151Team All Conference. Ranked 3rd&#13;
in the Slate in Assists. Majoring in&#13;
Political Science and Business.&#13;
# 32 John Evans&#13;
HT: 6'3" WT: 185&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: G/F&#13;
Home: laCrosse, WI&#13;
Averaged 23ppg, 8rpg, and 2 apg&#13;
at laCrosse Logan High School. AlIConference.&#13;
All Coulee Region Player&#13;
of the Year and 3rd·Team All-Slate.&#13;
# 00 Tihomir Juric&#13;
HT: 6'9" WT: 195&#13;
YR: SO Pos: C&#13;
Home: Zagreb, Yugoslavia&#13;
Played with Maksimir Club team&#13;
in Yugolavia. Won 1990 Summer&#13;
Tourney in Kelm, Gennany and captured&#13;
Slam Dunk Championship. Came&#13;
to America in American Academic&#13;
Youth Exchange. All Area at&#13;
Graettinger H.S .. IA. Currently majoring&#13;
in Applied Computer Science.&#13;
,.,.&lt;;;:·,l~"""""'\1i&#13;
J... . ." 4. . F'" C:l~90.199,j&#13;
~~"i·l ilib ~ !~ge~-&#13;
B&#13;
\!,rti~.;~.ft~!rill ~Sl\e .'a&#13;
'f'I-""" . ~&#13;
! !&#13;
! !&#13;
# 24 Todd Allen&#13;
HT: 6'2" WT: 170&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Palos Park, IL&#13;
Red Shined last year because of&#13;
knee injury. Played 1st 13 games as a&#13;
Frosh. I,102 career points at Carl&#13;
Sandbug HS. All-Conference &amp; AllArea.&#13;
3 years. Senior year averaged&#13;
19.2 ppg, Honorable Mention AIISlate.&#13;
Majoring in Pre-Med.&#13;
# 40 Mark Lauer&#13;
HT: 6'6" WT: 190&#13;
YR: Jr Pos: F&#13;
Home: KOUIS, IN&#13;
Transferred from Northeastern Jr.&#13;
College in Sterling, CO before last&#13;
season. Set several records in 1988 at&#13;
Kouts HS inBasketball, Cross-Counny&#13;
and Track. Majoring in communications.&#13;
Carrer Aspiration: Sales Representative&#13;
for a major corporation.&#13;
# 41 Todd Lubkeman&#13;
HT: 6'6" WT: 210&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: FIC&#13;
Home: Bristol, WI&#13;
Redshirted last season. Will&#13;
back up Juric at the center position.-&#13;
r'..:&#13;
# 34 Tim Cates&#13;
HT: 6'2" WT: 190&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: New Munster, WI&#13;
.Averaged 21.3 ppg at SaI'lII&#13;
Central HS in Senior year. lstTeam&#13;
All-Conference. IstTeam Burlington&#13;
Area &amp; All-Kenosha County, 3 Years.&#13;
Honorable Mention All-Slate, 2)'eln.&#13;
Team MVP, 3years and team captain&#13;
as a senior. Also excelled inBaseball&#13;
_Majoring in Business.&#13;
#42 Doug Burns&#13;
HT: 6'5" WT: 185&#13;
YR: So Pos: F&#13;
Home: Wolcott, IN&#13;
Two-Time All-Conference&#13;
player at Tri-Couruy HS. The 411t&#13;
leading scorer in Indiana averaging&#13;
-28.4 ppg, highlighted by a 51 point&#13;
game. Majoring in Education.&#13;
# 33 Tim Roberson&#13;
HT: 6'5" WT: 190&#13;
YR: Ir Pos: F&#13;
Home: Brinkley, AR&#13;
Graduated from Brinkley HS in&#13;
Arkansas A&#13;
ttended Oakland Jr.Col·&#13;
.' his~" lege inMichigan where he led fill"&#13;
to the Distict ChampionshIPS' :....&#13;
fertedto UWP Ibis season. M.",-&#13;
in Communicatiops .., 1&#13;
~ 't;&lt; "&#13;
#14Cynthy Freund-G&#13;
.#33 Joy Wallner-C #40 Jenny Raniewicz-C&#13;
#23 Diana Weitzel&#13;
Pos: F Year: Sr&#13;
Ht: 5'S&#13;
Home: Waunakee, WI&#13;
Diana is a versatile athlete who will&#13;
be needed to play inside and outside.&#13;
Being able to post up and shoot the ;;;;:;=::&#13;
three-pointer makes her a valuable&#13;
asset to the Rangers. Diana is a cocaptain&#13;
and considered the most&#13;
steady and solid player on liIe team.&#13;
#22 BrendaVan Cuick&#13;
Pos:G Year: Sr&#13;
Ht: S'S&#13;
Home: Hortonville, WI&#13;
Brenda will once again return 3$ the&#13;
teem leader. Honorable Mention&#13;
All-American honors. Brenda is a&#13;
CO-captainfor the Rangers this&#13;
season and is a vital part of the&#13;
offensive attack for Ranger success.&#13;
The catalyst for the fast-break she.&#13;
will need to push the tempo to lead&#13;
the transition game. An improved&#13;
defensive player this year. Blenda&#13;
will be the all around player the&#13;
l\ansers need.&#13;
,~ I l-~" . , ~ :c ~"I;&#13;
'. •&#13;
, . .&#13;
It...• IJr.&#13;
#31 Gina Benn-G ...&#13;
#50 Becky Lulloff- F&#13;
#34 Alicia Haag&#13;
Pos: G Year: Jr&#13;
Height: 5'9&#13;
Home: Waunakee, WI&#13;
Alicia is a transfer from Madison&#13;
AIea Technical College and will&#13;
bring some experience to the point&#13;
position on this young team. She is a&#13;
heads up pcint guard and an&#13;
excellent shooter. She brings size&#13;
and strong defense to the point&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
#32 Ann Schmid-G&#13;
•&#13;
....&#13;
#54 Terri Ingalls&#13;
Pos: F Year: Jr&#13;
Height: 5'9&#13;
Home: Wildwood, IL&#13;
Terri is the best outside shooter on&#13;
the team. If she gets bet, the Ranserl&#13;
want the ball in her hands. She is •&#13;
good smart player with a lot of&#13;
offensive talent and her defense -&#13;
keeps improving. If the Rangers&#13;
need to score look for Terri to have&#13;
the ball.&#13;
NAJA Men's Basketball Preseason Poll&#13;
1st Place Total&#13;
RIIlIt Team&#13;
1 Wisc:onsin-Eau Claire&#13;
2 Minntsota·Dululh&#13;
3 Oral Roberts OK&#13;
4 Georgia Southwestern&#13;
S David Lipscomb&#13;
6 Cenlra1 Arkansas&#13;
7 Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
8 Pfeiffer NC&#13;
9 Georgetown KY&#13;
10 Auburn·Mon'gomery AL&#13;
11 Columbia MO&#13;
12 Aldenon·Broaddus WV&#13;
13 MaloneOH&#13;
14 Western Washington&#13;
IS Belmon. TN&#13;
IS wesencm CA&#13;
11 Emporia State KS&#13;
18 Bumingham-Southem AL&#13;
19 William Carey MS&#13;
20 Central Washington&#13;
21 Hawaii Pacific&#13;
22 Grand Canyon AZ&#13;
23 Oklahoma City OK&#13;
24 DruryMO&#13;
2S Limestone SC&#13;
Vote Points&#13;
27 787&#13;
695&#13;
656&#13;
643&#13;
3 607&#13;
466&#13;
447&#13;
41g&#13;
406&#13;
393&#13;
349&#13;
334&#13;
332&#13;
307&#13;
297&#13;
297&#13;
279&#13;
2 2S5&#13;
199&#13;
183&#13;
173&#13;
159&#13;
152&#13;
143&#13;
136&#13;
l \\-Eau Claire Blugolds (30-3)&#13;
WCATION: Eau Claire, Wisconsin&#13;
COACH: Ken Anderson (529-117 23rd year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: WSUC&#13;
tllll9-9O HIGHUGHTS: Defealed Platteville to capture&#13;
1be District 14 Championship. Advanced lhrough the 32&#13;
Ieam f\tld to the finals of !he NAIA National Tournament,&#13;
but weredefealedby Birmingham South. Their 14-2conferonce&#13;
reconl was load for 2nd in the WSUC. Senior Tim&#13;
Blair was named to the WSUC All Conference Team, !he All&#13;
District 14 Team and Third Team NAlA AU-American.&#13;
Junior Mike Johnson was also named All-Conference and&#13;
All District along with Honorable Mention All- American.&#13;
~ETURNING PLAYERS: Johnson(13.4 PPI, 8.9 rpg),&#13;
Mike Pusher (14.0 ppg, 3.7 rpg, 2.1 apI), Mau Benedict&#13;
(11.0 PPI, 13 apg), Duane Bushman (113 PPI, 5.1 rpg),&#13;
Todd Oehrlein (6.4 ppg, 5.2 rpg), Lanse Carter (4.4 ppg, 3.0&#13;
rpg~ Thane Anderson (2.0 PPl, 2.7 rpg), Chris CarroU(l.l&#13;
pp&amp;&gt;&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Information Not Available&#13;
t.w -Plattev ille Pioneers (26·3)&#13;
LOCATION: Platteville, Wisconsin&#13;
COACH: Bo Ryan (113-52 7lh Year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: WSUC&#13;
Il1l19-9OIDGHUGHTS: Captured WSUC title wilh a15-&#13;
1 conference record. Lost to NAIA Finalist UW-Eau Claire&#13;
in District 14 championship. Guards Shawn Frison and&#13;
Robby Jeter were named to !he WSUC All-Conference and&#13;
&gt;All District 14 Teams. Frison was also named Honorable&#13;
Mention NAIA All-American.&#13;
RETURNING PLAYERS: Frison-G,Sr,6-4(1 5.9ppg, 5.2&#13;
1]&gt;8. 2.1 apg), Jeter-GJr, 6-2(12.2 ppg, 35 rpg, 1.8 ap&amp;&gt;.&#13;
OelanoBrazil-F,SR,6-4(10PPl, 3.1 rpg), Sean Poole-C.Sr,6-&#13;
7(~ 1ppg:S5 rpg),Michael Jones-G,Sr,6-4(6.7ppg, 2.9rpg).&#13;
Bnan Gilmore-FJr,6-5(6.0 PPl. 4.1 rpg), TJ Van Wie- Ilm,l!Blfl!@&#13;
\1,So,6.0(5.1 ppg. 1.7 rpg), Tim Decorab-G,Sr,6-0(13 ppg)&#13;
--&#13;
continued from Cl&#13;
fense and defense. By the end of next year, I expect&#13;
this team will hav,gone a long ways from what we are&#13;
now."&#13;
With no conference to worry about, the Rangers&#13;
will gear their progress to the two tournaments on I/teir&#13;
schedule, and the big tournament at the .end of the year.&#13;
The team opens With the Lewis UmversitYlourna.&#13;
ment this weekend, then willplay in the UW -laCrosse&#13;
toumamentover Thanksgiving. In the Lewis tourney&#13;
the Rangers will be up against three impressive ta1len~&#13;
in North Dakota, Grand Valley State, and the host&#13;
Lewis. /: I&#13;
"It will be interesting to see how our young team&#13;
handles the full-COurt press and half-court trap of&#13;
Lewis. That tournament will be a good early test for&#13;
us ...&#13;
The main goal overall is the D- I 4 toumamen~&#13;
which will bea tough climb as always. UW-EauClaire&#13;
retums four starters from a team which was runner-up&#13;
in the NAIA National tournament last year, and is&#13;
ranked numberone in the nation in the NAIA preseason&#13;
poll; UW-Stevens Point, who beat the Rangers three&#13;
times last year, has much of their team intact; and an&#13;
always tough, UW-Plalleville is currently ranked&#13;
seventh in the nation.&#13;
"It's a rough trip [when you're an independant&#13;
vurses being in a conference. There isn't the luxury of&#13;
shooting for conference goals during the season, everything&#13;
must be aimed at the district playoffs. The&#13;
Wisconsin District (District 14) is especially lough,&#13;
and we really need tocome togetherasa team. Whoever&#13;
can win the District 14toumament, should go a long&#13;
way.&#13;
Kentucky Weslyan Panthers (31-2)&#13;
LOCATION: Owensboro, Kentucky&#13;
COACH: Wayne Boultinghouse (31-2 2nd year)&#13;
CONF: Grear Lakes Valley&#13;
1989-90 IDGHUGHTS: Captured NCAA DivisionD&#13;
National Championships in their 9lh straight 2lH-win lea'&#13;
son. Also the champions of the GLVC, the Panthers were&#13;
ranked 4lh on the final NCAA Div. II Poll. Guard Corey&#13;
Crowder was named 1st Team All American by Kodak!&#13;
NABC and the Basketball Gazette, 2nd Team All-American&#13;
by the BasketbaU Times and was the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Player of the Year. Crowder and Forwmd&#13;
Vincent Mitchell were named to the NCAA Division nAllTournament&#13;
Team.&#13;
RETURNING PLAYERS: Crowder-G. Sr, 6-5(lg.6Wg,&#13;
7.3 rpg), MitcheU-F, SR, 6-3 (12.1 ppg, 3.2 rpg), Tim&#13;
Griffln-G,Sr,6-2 (10.1 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 2.1 apg), JunebugRak,,·&#13;
G,Sr,6-4 (9.2 ppg, 2.5 rpg, 5.2 apg), Kenneth Martin-F,Jr,6-&#13;
4 (8.4 ppg, 2.5 rpg), Greg Baughn-G,Sr,5-1O(6.0 ppg, 1.4&#13;
rpg), SteveDivine-G,So,6-2(5.3 ppg, 1.4rpg),HerbAmarson·&#13;
G,So,6-4 (3.7 ppg, 1.2 rpg)&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Jon Moore-C,So,7-0, Corey Parr'&#13;
F,So,6-7, Will Perdue-C,Fr.6-7, Mike Stacey-F.Fr,6.1&#13;
Ferris State Bulldogs (18·11)&#13;
LOCATION: Big Rapids, Michigan&#13;
COACH: Tom Ludwig (173-82 IOlh year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
1989·90 HIGHI.,IGHTS: 14-2 Conference markgoodfor&#13;
1st place finish in lhe GLIAC. Led by' 2nd team All·&#13;
Conference" forward Leon Larthridge.&#13;
, RETURNING PLAYERS: Larlhridge-F,Sr(16.8 ppg,&#13;
4.9 rpg), Byron Jolmson-G,So (6.9 ppg, 3.4 rpg), Mik.&#13;
Jolmson-G,Jr,(6.9 ppg, 1.9 rpg), Marcus Tumblin-C,So(S.8&#13;
ppg,' 4.8 !Pg), Chris Smilh.F,Sr(4.5 ppg, 3.8 rpg~ Jamd&#13;
Hudson:F,So (3.6 ppg, 3.5 rpg), Mike Allen-F,Sr(3.2pPIo&#13;
2.5 rpg), Hans Gappy&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Keith Lobsinger-F, Ty Miller-G&#13;
•&#13;
International Rangu. Page I'll&#13;
FiIS,I990&#13;
GreatExpectations&#13;
Parental visit a smashing success&#13;
Anmtensefeelingofjub"1 ti d&#13;
- . " I a ronan Rock Cafe we scoured the town by bread and specialties like lamb relIefengulfedmeaslgreetedth b bv f '&#13;
'th th " " em us, y .00t, and by underground. curry. The pubs are popular hang- WI en USIaSUC bear hugs The Th "I be" f .&#13;
hiliratine e, • e u ascmated my father outs wilb the Yuppie lunch crowd&#13;
ex. I ~tmg adventure I had been. who is a geography teacher and as well as the tourists and neighenjoying&#13;
for the past twomonlbs mapenlbusiast.lnfacl,heknewall borhood locals.&#13;
was about ~o »e~ome richer and of the majortube stations and lines Westminster Abbey, the&#13;
more fulfilling WIth the amvalof by the end of the first day. By the Tower of London, Dicken's home,&#13;
my parents. end of the week he could have Covent Garden, and Harrod's deAlthough&#13;
my parents had drivenadoubledeckerbuslhrough panment store are a sampling of&#13;
traveled thousands of miles to See rush hour traffic! My mother, on the sights we saw, but for me our&#13;
Mysweaty palms gripped the the sights of London with me, I the other hand, agreed with me that day in Greenwich was the ultimate.&#13;
railingthatseparatedthe expectant woul~ have been content to sit on a the tube is a necessary evil if you At the Old Royal Observatory we&#13;
rrieDds andrelatives from the clec- parkbench in Hyde Park all week want a somewhal efficient, if not stood on the Prime Meridian and&#13;
1I\llIiC doors. My heart pounded. catching upon the news from home. expedient mode of transportation. then posed with one ann and leg in&#13;
like a bongodrum and a light film Instead we wasted IiIUe time in Herforte was choosing pubs both the eastern and western hemioIperSpirationformed&#13;
on my tip-. condensing an action-packed with cozy Victorian furnishing for spheres. After esploring theCuuy&#13;
per lip. The moment I had been agenda for Oct. 21-27. Having' lunch, or ones with crackling fire- Sark,lbelastexistingteaclipperof&#13;
anxiOUSlyawaiting since my ar- raided the local library in Kenosha, places and mugs of ale in the eve- the English trade, we cruised the&#13;
rival inLondonwas about to hap- 'myparentsknewexacUy what they nings. The King's Head, The Thames in an old-fashioned&#13;
pen. Theflightboardindicated that wanted to see and do before they Chepstour" Courage, and Prince riverboat, the Viscount.&#13;
!he planehatllanded ten minutes. arrived. Edward's are older than the crown Touring London wilb m arearly.&#13;
Throughthe endless stream. Thus we managed to s ueez equivoca ighlight&#13;
ofpassengersand the-sea sf sui~O . 10 one week than I have the British Museum. Pub grub ?f my study abr~ad tnp, We encases.lsp&lt;llledmy&#13;
mom and dad in a month on my own! From varies from shepard's pie, sausage Joyed each other s company and&#13;
brisklymovingthrough the crowds. Buckingham Palace to the Hard and chips, cottage pic, granary even managed to find humor in the&#13;
by&#13;
Gwen&#13;
Heller&#13;
trialscfpublic transportation. Unfonunately,&#13;
the time evaporated&#13;
much too quickly and before we&#13;
realized it. we were saying&#13;
goodbye.&#13;
I find myself missing them&#13;
even more now than Idid befo,,"&#13;
they came to London. Fortunately,&#13;
Iwill be home in plenty of time to'&#13;
get into the holiday spirit for&#13;
Christmas and catch up on all the&#13;
local news from my sisters, Emily&#13;
and Abigail.&#13;
Today Ireceived pbotosofmy&#13;
parents' visit in lbemail.As I&#13;
looked them over, it made me realize&#13;
how fortunate I am to have&#13;
shared such unique memories with&#13;
them in a city that has so much to&#13;
offer. As my dad wrote, "it is a trip&#13;
is one vacation even National&#13;
Lampoon's Clark W. Grizwald&#13;
couldn't top!&#13;
Men stopping rape&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
relationship. When relationships&#13;
discuss what makes them comfonable&#13;
and uncomfonable, it reo&#13;
duces the risk of sexual assualt.&#13;
Take"no" for an answer.&#13;
Unless we are willing to a&lt;X:ep1&#13;
uno" from our partner. "yes" has&#13;
no meaning. Even after a person&#13;
has given consent, he or she still&#13;
has the right to change his or her&#13;
mind.&#13;
SlOpusingpornography. Pornography&#13;
and advertising use im·&#13;
ages of violence and subjugation 10&#13;
tum individuals on. They show&#13;
individuals enjoying rape and&#13;
abuse. Consider how this has&#13;
shaped our altitudes aboul women&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Pretending. Men often assume&#13;
lbat if a woman doesn't&#13;
say"no"shemean"ycs". Individuals&#13;
must SLOPpretending submission&#13;
is consent. Consenl requires&#13;
understanding, respect and agreemenl&#13;
between equal partners.&#13;
Fantasizing. SlOPfantasizing&#13;
aboul rape. Snch fantasiesJl{l: danSmsll&#13;
Scale Humor by Chris lilgram&#13;
,&#13;
e Chris Ingram1990 «I want the tail"&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
gerous because they encourage individuals&#13;
to become excited by a&#13;
woman's suuggling against them.&#13;
Ask. Ask women what makes&#13;
them feel unsafe. Over 80 percent&#13;
of rapes are commiued by some·&#13;
one the victim knows. Find out&#13;
how your behavior affects lbe&#13;
women in your life. Once you&#13;
know, il will be easier to act in&#13;
ways tlw help your woman feel..&#13;
more secure.&#13;
Discuss. Discuss yourexpee·&#13;
lations. Acting on expeclations&#13;
wilboUI suffICient inforrnauon can&#13;
cause serious misund~tandlOgs&#13;
andleadlO~. Discu Illgsexual&#13;
expeclations is the best way of confrrming&#13;
mutual agreement. Share&#13;
),our hopes, feelings, fears, and&#13;
fantasies with friends, datcs, and&#13;
lovers.&#13;
Weinberg's visil was spon·&#13;
soredbyUW-Parksidc'sWomen's&#13;
Center, the Residence Hall Association&#13;
and Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
o .' r ., r ~ a a 0 a 0 •• - • ~ •• - .. e- •• - 0: "", 6': .-••,l .&#13;
. ""&#13;
1~Ran~S!5!!r.!!:,Pa~ge~I~8 L O~p_i_n_i_o_n __"""":""--t---------:..:.:No:..:..:vem:::::ber=-.:..:::15:..:.,I990~~&#13;
.- ~ _ ...... 01&#13;
Discount applicable.on oonsale item";.only. Offer expires&#13;
t&#13;
~. I • • • • • • • • • •• • '"' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . .! ~ '" _ ~ "&#13;
~ ~~~&#13;
•&#13;
Daymare&#13;
by Rufus Thome&#13;
''1.can't do this!", a girl exclaimed as&#13;
sae walked out of the room leary eyed. She&#13;
was trying to give a speech and got cold feet&#13;
in a big way.&#13;
What was she nervous about? Did she&#13;
think one of us was going to kill her if her&#13;
speech wasn't good? Did she think we were&#13;
going to tease her and ridicule her no matter&#13;
how good the speech was? Just what was she&#13;
nervous about?&#13;
. People become nervous all the time&#13;
especially over little things. They work&#13;
themselves up so far that the only way for&#13;
them to get down is to fall, and that spells&#13;
breakdown. I have talked to people that still&#13;
get nervous about the first day of school.&#13;
. Why? They've been going to school all their&#13;
lives and they're still nervous about it.&#13;
. I've even seen professors nervous about&#13;
the first day. They constantly straighten and&#13;
rearrange their papers while talking about&#13;
their syllabuses.T!1ey wipe their sweaty,&#13;
shaky hands on their pants whileltheir voices&#13;
crack through the room. What is going&#13;
tough their minds?C Do they think that we&#13;
wiiI tie them up and give them papercuts on&#13;
their retinas if we don't. like the way they&#13;
teach? _.&#13;
Children have no problem giving&#13;
speeches or speaking their minds in front of&#13;
groups .. What is it that we lost from our&#13;
childhood that now makes so many ofus reel&#13;
like jibber-jabbing idiots anytime we're put&#13;
on the spot?&#13;
It doesn't make sense. I'd embellish&#13;
more on the subject but I have a speech to&#13;
give tommorrow andl'm really nervous about&#13;
it&#13;
Letters to the&#13;
Editor policy&#13;
The Ranger encourages letters to the&#13;
editor and will print all letters that follow&#13;
Ranger editorial guidelines.&#13;
. Letters must be signed by the writer&#13;
or representative of the group submitting&#13;
the letter and must contain writers name,&#13;
social security number, and phone number&#13;
'for verification purposes. Names of&#13;
writers will be withheld on requests.&#13;
Deadline for leners is 12:00noonan&#13;
Monday before publication. Letters can·&#13;
taining offensive, libelous material or&#13;
mlsleadingfnformation will be given back&#13;
to the writer to correct.&#13;
The Ranger will not edit letters to&#13;
the editor unless requested. Opi~iOns&#13;
expresses on the editorial and -oplPJon&#13;
pages are IIOt netcessarliy lllllSe ofd1e&#13;
.Ranger staff.&#13;
�15,1990&#13;
Political Science&#13;
FaU openings&#13;
1lIe-1'QIiticalService Internllipslnlgmm&#13;
(PSW) at the Uni~&#13;
llnilyofWisconsin-Parkside has&#13;
FaI1aIesleropeningsforstudents&#13;
"toeamPoliticai Science&#13;
lRdiaas interns in local, state or&#13;
IIIlioDaI governmental agencies&#13;
.]IIbIic service 'private o;ganiIlIIilas.&#13;
. PSIP students receive practicalelperiencein&#13;
working in politilIIcampaigns,helping&#13;
with legal&#13;
IIIYices for the poor, solving conllilueatproblems&#13;
for legislawrs,&#13;
lliisting local administrators in&#13;
Internship&#13;
available&#13;
providing community services,&#13;
working with planning agencies,&#13;
and assisting local court agencies.&#13;
Students can earn from 3 to 6 credits&#13;
as interns.&#13;
In the past few years, PSIP&#13;
interns have worked for Congressman&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman&#13;
Gerald Kleczka, the City of&#13;
Kenosha, Racine Jail A1Jernatives&#13;
., .&#13;
Program, Kenosha Police Department,&#13;
Racine Police Department,&#13;
Racine County Public Defender's&#13;
Office, Kenosha Dis!rictAuomey's&#13;
Office, Kenosha Area DevelopProgram&#13;
has&#13;
to students&#13;
ment Corporation, Wisconsin Department&#13;
of-Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Court, Racine Clerk of Courts,&#13;
Kenosha Coumy Juvenile Court,&#13;
Walworth County Court, and oIher&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Persons intereSled in enrolling&#13;
in PSIP can pick up application&#13;
forms in the Political Science Department,&#13;
Room 367, Molinaro&#13;
Hall, UW-Parkside or phone Professor&#13;
Samuel Pemacciaro a1553-&#13;
2399.&#13;
Community Service Announcement&#13;
~or Profile Fea ture Ranger, Page 19&#13;
, yoo visiting professo=r~o=-::f~C~h'~' ~.~-r=1==========~.&#13;
byMonaSbannon· '. emlstry Administration is Cosson's specialty&#13;
. Starr Writer tween leacher d .&#13;
lab "S' an students 10 the By Mona Sbannon M of th IUd .. eelOg the professor in an any e s ents are people&#13;
ARgnes You is a visiting pro- office is different than seeing the changingcareenand needing new&#13;
fc$SIICofchemi~tryeaching Ana- professor in the research lab. It's Cyndy Cusson works in the skill or to upgrade skills. Cosson&#13;
IjliIIIChemistryand Pre-College much more relaxed." continuing education office as an has noticed that many local com-&#13;
(beIIIistlY. She received a B.S. in . Y00 is in the process of apply- A~minislrative Specialist. She panies are sending their employ-&#13;
(beIIIistlY from the College of St. 109 for a research grant for her describes her job as that of a paper eestooootinuingeducalion classes&#13;
(laIl:is in Joliet, Ill., and she also research in organic reagentsynthe_ pusher, but thepaperworkshedoes to learn a foreign language. There&#13;
baS&#13;
aPh&#13;
.&#13;
D&#13;
. in Chemistry. SIS.The compound she makes will keeps the classes going. She deals are always students who are just&#13;
She says she just fell into -be sentto a group of scientists who with students and professors in- taking classes for fun. Whatever&#13;
CheIDistlY. "I knew I wasn't good do research in membrane elec- . volved in non-credit classes. She they are looking for, Cyndy will&#13;
• soCialscience, so it had to be trodes, Membrane electrodes are also does a little advising, helping help them find the right class.&#13;
_lhing [in] natural science ". I ~sed in the study of ion movement students find the classes they need. Classes are various lengths from&#13;
bSl a choice between math and 10 the human body system, Although she does not make the whole semester to semmars thaI&#13;
chemistrY;that's what was being She finds Parkside's science final decision, she does have a lot last just a few hours.&#13;
offereda!lSL Francis]." Because Angnes Voo department well-equipped for an of input into what classes are of- Thecontinuing education ofIIIIIhbecOmesmore&#13;
abstract at the undergraduate school. She says fered. There is a governing body, ficeisintheprocessofestablishing&#13;
dr everyone has bee . JACCE,thatoverseeswhatclasses 1-'&#13;
bigherlevels,he felt she would be' en were born, she worked at' . n very ruce to her. ate ecu",=ncecenterinTallenl&#13;
awre comfortable in something Abbott as a research chemist. Af- She finds the difference in ages and are offered at UW -Parkside, Gate- 281. COSSOl\'S responsibililies in&#13;
_concrete like chemistry. ter three children, she returned to backgrounds gives the professors a way and through the Extension in that area invohefood service, and&#13;
Yoois interested in the syn- graduate school with the goal of real challenge, especially in the order to avoid overlap of services. making sure everything in the oft&#13;
chi S entry level cours Most of the students in con- fi . ---, ble E Ibetic part of chemistry, mixing ea mg. he prefers teaching to' es. ICe IS .. " .... ona . vennaally,&#13;
lbingltoget!lertomakesomething. the isolated atmosphere of labora- . In her free lime, she enjoys tinuing education are non-tradi- she'llbeleamingtoruntheequi~&#13;
She also wanted to he able to use tory research. She is still able to do playing tennis and golf. She also tional age students frorn theRacine- ment, She also handles registramalh,&#13;
so she chose;~t~he~fl~·e~ld~O~f_~researeQ!!!!liDh~as~a~teac:.::h:er~,;so:;s:he~ca~n:-~en~jo~y~s~a~tte~n~d~in~g~C~o~nc~e~rts~w~i7.th~h:e~rt;.K~e:no~s~ha~ar~ea~a~nd:no:rthe;;,:m:I~lli:'n:o:is~, husb _:tio:n:-,:for=Ca~PS~ule~Col~~le~g~e~, wh~ich~I__ AnalyticalChemistry dealin comb' . 0 - _ oeLnts.Before her chil- _ f a rel children, it is often difficult to aI- returrurrg to the work force want- lege for Kids and Elderbotel,&#13;
~ _.-.," more 0 a relaxed atmosphere be- tend many of the campus activities. 'ing 10 gain compuler knowledge. which Ulkeplace in the summer.&#13;
~PSTOPILLITERACY. The RacineLileracy Council will train you to teach an I1hteratead~lttoreadand&#13;
flrite-I hour per week. The training is from 9:00 - 12:00 in the morning on November 27,29 December 4 and&#13;
6.Afee of $8.00 is charged for materials. Please contaet Carol in the Career Center.&#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL NEEDS READERS ON NOVEMBER 21 FOR one HOUR. Read to small&#13;
8Dlupofkindergarten children from 8:30 _9:30 am al Bain Elementary School. School is competing withschoo\&#13;
Dear Green Bay; WI: Have fun at this one-time volunteer experience. Ask about transportation. Deadline:&#13;
Monday,November 19th in Career Celtler. , .&#13;
USED WINTER JACKETS REQUESTED BY COMMUN1TY IMPACT PROGRAM STAFF, Do you&#13;
have a medium or large child's J'acket in your closet? Can you give it to someone who doesn't have one? Drop&#13;
It ff' .&#13;
o Inthe Career Center Oy November.21ST. .'&#13;
TUtORS FOR "A T,RIS1&lt;" CHILDREN' PLEASE RESPOND. Help JUSIone child one hour per week.&#13;
~ving of your tim~ and inteie~l-Io someone else is the best gift you can give. Day and ume flexlble ...See Carol&#13;
IDtheCareer Center today. ,'." . '. ,'" .&#13;
~~r more inrormationcontact Carol Engberg in the Career WLLC-D175 or call 553-2011.&#13;
,~ '.~." .- ••• ':-,.','. ~...'. ::.'. i: •• ~ '0'&#13;
Blood Drive&#13;
Student Health Services will he sponsoring a Blood Drive&#13;
on Wednesday November21 from 9:00AM 103:30PM in Union&#13;
104-106. 1belast Blood Drive was very successful due 10your&#13;
efforts and willingness to panici pate.&#13;
We hope lhatyou will considerdonating-again andencourage&#13;
your students and friends to donate also. 1beonly source of&#13;
replenishing our blood supply is people like you. 1be Blood&#13;
Center relies on volwueer donors who want to give blood. To&#13;
give one pint of blood requires a healthy and wining donor al&#13;
least 17 years of age, weighing at least I IO powxls and volunteering&#13;
45 minutes of time. Blood may be donated every eight&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Please complete a Dohor Pledge Card indicating the time&#13;
you prefer between 9:00 AM - 3:00PM. Cards are available in&#13;
Student Health Services, Molinaro 0115 or contact Student&#13;
Health Services at 553-2366.&#13;
Parks ide Food Service&#13;
Hours&#13;
Wednesday Nov. 21st&#13;
Union Dining room 7:30 am-2:00 pm&#13;
Coffee Shoppe 7:30 am-6:00pm&#13;
Union Square Grill Closed&#13;
Union Deli 11:00 am-6:00pm&#13;
Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
Closed Friday Nov. 23rd&#13;
Contest Rules:&#13;
Drop 3ping pong&#13;
balls from the L 1&#13;
leveloftheUnion&#13;
to the D 1 level&#13;
into aZenith Data&#13;
Systems insu:&#13;
lated cup holder&#13;
and win the cup.&#13;
If the cup has one&#13;
of the 25 CD tokens&#13;
win a compact&#13;
disk.&#13;
University of Wisconsin- Parkside's&#13;
PI SIGMA EpSI LON&#13;
gamma 'Beta Cliapter'&#13;
Presents&#13;
The Great Ping Pong Drop Contest&#13;
Monday, November 19th&#13;
Round I lO:OOam-2:00pm&#13;
Tuesday, November 20th ,&#13;
Round II 12:15pm&#13;
-In the Union BazzarZENITH&#13;
data systems&#13;
All compact&#13;
disk winners&#13;
qualify for&#13;
round, II to try&#13;
for a Sony&#13;
Discman Disk&#13;
. Player. Stop at&#13;
the contest for&#13;
.: more details.&#13;
Prizes supplied by Zenith Data Systems All proceeds benefit Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
~&#13;
. ;,,;,-..-- ..-- ..- ..- ..... - _--iii--_·~-·~-iii--_-__ iiIIIioo~"~' ~"~' ~,.~~'~' - ~-'".;.''~~~~~~~~~~..,;. ......... ~~&#13;
• .. ... "'~.'.l,«..o .......~"r dol" .• • ~ i ' .'(,&#13;
Luellen Breed, President of the SE&#13;
WI Literacy Alliance, reported how&#13;
satisfied she was with Laura's work.&#13;
In.September, Laura volunteered&#13;
at a fund raiser for Kenosha&#13;
Homecare Services where the proceeds&#13;
benefited the poor elderly&#13;
who are receiving home delivered&#13;
meals. The children in the learning&#13;
disabled class at Jeffery Elementary&#13;
School in Kenosha were also&#13;
benefactors of Laura's community&#13;
r---GIVELIFE:---!&#13;
Laura Burnett, a senior in 'GIVE PLASMA. I,&#13;
C&lt;immunication,recentlyaccepted I t&#13;
a volunteer project for the South- I I&#13;
eastern Wisconsin Literacy A1ti- I I&#13;
'ance. Her interest in illiteracy I I&#13;
awareness and her writing ability 'I I&#13;
matched up with acommunity need. I I&#13;
l----============"""""l~_:-.-.......:.-;~~-t-IKoslovYouthDanceEnsemblecomingto&#13;
UW- I&#13;
Parkside to perform in Comm. Arts Theatre I Briaa;:.':'~=S15.00&#13;
byDawn Mailand' the Soviet Union. the audience. The ensemble will I' for yoarllnt doadOL&#13;
Entertainment Editor The Koslov Youth Dance En- keep you entenaineafrom stan to Plasma Donor Center&#13;
semble, founded in 1960, concen- finish. I '&#13;
trated from the beginning on de- Broughuoyou by theParl&lt;side I Of Kenosha, Ine.&#13;
veloping discipline, diligence and Activities Board's Performing . Arts II 8212·22nc1 1to__ .W1 Avo.&#13;
an amazing sense of responsibility Committee, students will beableto I M-W-F-8:30-3:30&#13;
in its young members. Dancers seethisphenomenalgroupofyoung I T·T 10:00-5:30&#13;
who were in the Ensemble as dancers from Moscow for only $4, 1 (414)654-1366&#13;
youngsters now star in companies insteadofthercgularticketpriceof IPeople Helping People For Life,&#13;
of international repute such as the $12. ~-~---------------------~ -&#13;
Pyatnitsky State Academic Russian This deep discount is possible&#13;
Folk Choir, the Moiseyev and the because pan of each UW-Parkside&#13;
Alexandrov Song and Dance En- student's tuition goes toward&#13;
semble of the Soviet Army. bringing these performers on&#13;
The ensemble currently has campus. I guarantee you'll have a&#13;
around 50 performers and performs great time watching the ensemble's&#13;
regulary at Moscow's famed exhilirating performance in the&#13;
Tchaikosvsky Concert Hall, as well Communication Arts Theatre at 8&#13;
'as becoming al}indispensable pan pm on Thursday, November 15.&#13;
of many events coordinated by the Don't pass this unique opportunity&#13;
Soviet Ministry of Culture. The up, or you'll regret it!&#13;
energy, enthusiasm and excitement&#13;
radiates from these children into&#13;
service. She volunteered 75 houq&#13;
last year, helping children on a&#13;
one-to-one basis. Maryette&#13;
McKiltip, the supervising teacher&#13;
Staled, "Perfect! Laura had been&#13;
such a great help~ She was good&#13;
with the kids and they just loved&#13;
her!" Laura's friendly, caring personality&#13;
has enriched the people&#13;
she has met and the community in&#13;
which she lives.&#13;
Ranger photo by Sunnl Beeck&#13;
Carole Montgomery performed at UW -Parkside Union 0&#13;
edDesday,November 7.&#13;
I&#13;
Itis DOloften when we, as&#13;
SIlIdcnls"getthe opportunity to&#13;
experienceother cultures firstIIaad.&#13;
However,our chance is here&#13;
hecause the Koslov Youth Dance&#13;
Ensemble of Moscow will be perbalingiDtheCommunicationArts&#13;
Thealreal8pm on Thursday, Novembet&#13;
15.&#13;
The Youth Ensemble ranges&#13;
, in Ige from six to sixteen, and is&#13;
renowned throughout the ~Soviet&#13;
Unionand many countries of&#13;
Eastern Europe. This is the&#13;
ensemble'sfU"StWestern tour ever ,&#13;
andtbey'vechosen favorites from&#13;
a repertoireof over 100 dances,&#13;
JIleSentingakaleidoscopeofaction&#13;
11~color in a program of works&#13;
typicaJ of the various republics of&#13;
We would like to thank everyone&#13;
that has already contributed&#13;
to the Food for&#13;
Families, and to remind everyone&#13;
else to please bring&#13;
your non-perishable food&#13;
items by Nov. 21st, so the&#13;
food can get to the families&#13;
in need by the holidays.&#13;
Thank You,&#13;
Food for Families Committee&#13;
soc cautious of radio station's progress&#13;
by Jeff Bromstad WKLH in Milwaukee, is basically partiCipation is what's&#13;
an&#13;
advisor/overseer who is rarely unwarranting," said Brenda WilStaff&#13;
Writer son, Vice-President of SOC.&#13;
The history of p~t etforts to seen. , th Former radio station paniciorganizeand&#13;
stabilize a permanent ' "Theresa left a message 1D e&#13;
radiostation here at UW-Parkside SOC office staung that she was pant BiU Hawkins, one of the sevbas&#13;
' THE statl'on manager. However, eral fowJding members of WZRX&#13;
members of the Student Orga- I ~&#13;
nizationsCouncil (S.O.c.) leary forthe pasllhree weeks she hasn't ~~~t~d~;u~;: ~om:~~~~e:.~&#13;
aboutits current progress, prima- visitedtheSOCOfficeandwe:;~ maybe two or three other people&#13;
mybecause of irresponsible lead- getareply when weleav~ ~~s Her were doing all the work while&#13;
C1Sbip. on her answenng mac I . Theresa received all thecredit, She&#13;
~J) MilPi\¥'I' Theresa knowledge and eX~~~~~'ur31r' I. , , ' . , ·C' , -" d P 22&#13;
ltairis, a f~ll:tim'; e~';]riJ~iil"T~l"1jt1ihifY her'f'oh'hb b!&gt;silion;lJ h onlmue on age -==------------&#13;
.&#13;
Ranger, Paze 22&#13;
November 15, 1990 Entertainment&#13;
Radio station's progress closely monitored&#13;
fiontinued from page 21&#13;
never said what needed 10 be done we had workedup10by contacting waiting10go 10work forthem, bUI&#13;
or how10goabout doinganylhing. people whose influencecould fur- unless we see more active particiHer&#13;
communication lacked in re- ther or detour its progress. Then I pation like submilting agendas or&#13;
"turning messages and she was al- realized WI what she was doing keepinga weekly recordof what's&#13;
waysconcemedwith her'tille' and was not in tbe best interest of !he going on up there, wewillexercise'&#13;
DOl!he responsibilities mandated university, but her own ego; she's. ourrighllOimposeabudgelfreeze."&#13;
by ilSfunction. Plus !he fact lhal not a team player, so Iwithdrew." Wilson added "Yes, we want&#13;
when I confronted her about !he Judy Robison, President of them 10 give us a steady flow of&#13;
possibility of the other members SOCstated/'We aretotally willing communication with us in SOC.&#13;
8Ild I taking over !he station, she 10 help them. They've had an ap- They need active interest if they&#13;
threatened 10 desuoy every!hing provedbudget sinceApril of 1989 are 10 establish themselves,'&#13;
Chris Biemeck, Special&#13;
Projects Manager of WZRX, and&#13;
MichouRoss,MusicDirector. both&#13;
understand that their station manager'sabsenceand&#13;
the lack of communication&#13;
are major minuses in&#13;
SOC's book. BUI!hey both think&#13;
that Theresa has helped them a&#13;
great deal along the way and they&#13;
expressed their confidence in her.&#13;
They are also well aware of !he&#13;
Because it does. Smart investors growth throtIgR dividends. CREP's&#13;
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. _. .,. ~ ..... , ...... lOve: or send money .&#13;
.&#13;
stations responsibility to gain&#13;
SOC's support," and we fully in.&#13;
lend to do just thar; we know we&#13;
need 10 voice ourselves more at&#13;
meetings."&#13;
"The stationdid haveproblems&#13;
inthebeginning,bUIilhasstabilize&lt;j&#13;
after months of watching people&#13;
flow in and out of positionsuntilit&#13;
became obvious who would be&#13;
dedicated. Now we just needDis.&#13;
Other thanthat, we're readyto go "&#13;
explained Biemeck.· ,&#13;
"The radio station is only&#13;
broadcasting a couple.of hoursa&#13;
day because of our DJ shOrtage.&#13;
Our door is open 10 anyoneinter.&#13;
ested in being a OJ. experienced&#13;
and non-experienced welcome'&#13;
There are fourpeople beingtrained&#13;
at this time, bUI we need more&#13;
people to fill slots so. we' can&#13;
broadcast longer," addedRoss.&#13;
Joe Rodrigues, who has participated&#13;
in the station's&#13;
developement on a touch and go&#13;
basis, had tiule 10 say about the&#13;
stations present status. "Things&#13;
were going well in thebeginning,'&#13;
However, he hasn't fullycommu,&#13;
ted to it because, "How mimy&#13;
meetings can you go 10 before&#13;
things start 10 happen?"&#13;
Rodrigues declined '10 comContinued&#13;
on naze 23&#13;
IllEARClr ....&#13;
urgest LlbralY of InlotlMllon In U.S••&#13;
IIIsub/tCIs .&#13;
Order Catalog Today with Visa/Me or coo&#13;
~ lI!;i~P,~.•&#13;
. Or. rush $2.00 10: R.... rclIlntormIIon&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A. Los Angeles, CAeom&#13;
;.... I&#13;
"Hawk's ~&#13;
2319 63rd St.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 652-8988 *"&#13;
where music matters"&#13;
*&#13;
Nov. 16 Carry Nation&#13;
Nov. 17 Last Rites&#13;
Nov. ,&#13;
20 America's .&#13;
Ultimate Five&#13;
(Male Dance Troupe&#13;
Women Only&#13;
Call 551-8805 for more info)&#13;
Nov. 21 DeCameron&#13;
(Pre·thanksgiving party)&#13;
Nov. 22 Warp Drive&#13;
(Wisconsin's bestrock&#13;
band)&#13;
Nov. 23 DeCameron&#13;
Nov. 24 Angel Landing&#13;
"Don't sit by the TV&#13;
and eat turkey-get out&#13;
/ and party!"&#13;
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20&#13;
IAIl ENSEMBLE: Comm. Arts Theatre, 8 pm, Tim Bell _ director. _&#13;
ARTSlLENTAUCTION SHOW: will be held through December 6. Gallery hours are Mon-ThUT. 1-6 p&#13;
TueJWed.7-10 pm.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21&#13;
STUDENT.RECITAL: Comm. Arts 0118, noon, free. ART SILENT AUCTION SHOW: will be hel&#13;
ibrougb December 6. Gallery hours are Mon- ThUT. 1-6 pm, Tue/Wed. 7.10 pm.&#13;
SENIORDROP IN HOURS: Career Center, WLLC 0175, 2-4 pm,&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28&#13;
PARKSIDECHAMBER ORCHESTRA: David Schripsema, director. Noon in Comm. Arts Dl18.&#13;
ARrsn:ENT AUCTION S : WI :. _ ._&#13;
TuelWed. 7-10 pm. ,&#13;
SENlORDROPIN HOURS: Career Center, WLLC 0175, 2-4 pm.&#13;
RadioStation&#13;
Contlnued from page 22&#13;
.. Harris' performanq;,&#13;
1llere are mixed sentiments&#13;
m:aningthe station's progress&#13;
mIIIlbepersons involved with&#13;
~"SIalioo, as well as members&#13;
of~. Some hold the view&#13;
1i*~lIIing is unfolding as it&#13;
!boIId, wilh the exception of the&#13;
I!Ip l1Iat occur in the process of&#13;
forming anyorganization. Others&#13;
lind to. think that it hasn't proI\lIIedrapidlyenough,especially&#13;
IlIIISidering one year has elapsed&#13;
liatelbeprojectwas taken up.&#13;
Accordiog to Robison, "If&#13;
there was blatant progress, we&#13;
would at least try to fund their&#13;
hookup into the dorms. We would&#13;
definitely consider utilizing. their&#13;
budget for mat purpose, if th~t wa;:&#13;
the direction they were heading,&#13;
Itis not as if the radio station&#13;
h~s accomplished nothing, but&#13;
accomplishments seems to have&#13;
occurred in the beginning stages,&#13;
. The radio station does have an .&#13;
identity. WZRX stands for "ZROX"&#13;
and its identity is,rooted 10&#13;
me 80's to today's most alive aliernative.&#13;
There will be hour&#13;
spotlights on- various styles like&#13;
Blues, Jazz, 60s and 70s, Rap, etc.&#13;
"We willalsospotlightanyone who&#13;
has recorded their own stuff," explained&#13;
Biemeck.&#13;
"This is my first time DJing,&#13;
butI'm familiar with this equipment&#13;
and feel excited about being here,"&#13;
said Chris. "Michou and I are up&#13;
here every day straightening things&#13;
out, brainstorming for ideas. improving&#13;
old ones ... there's basically&#13;
no reason why we shouldn't&#13;
be successful. We definitely aim to&#13;
improve communications with&#13;
SOC so that we can continue what&#13;
S b -;,;,., "'I.&#13;
IOhh WHAT It} . 'n ' ?; n , ft£,lINfi .. -&#13;
~\VC' =-j-T-N-E-V-E-R-Fj-i\-j L"':S:-.&#13;
p;):~ EVERYTIME WE PLAY&#13;
~&#13;
,~Ill\;~11 TI-\IS LIONEL R lTCHIE&#13;
, \V.'! _ 'l~, SONG!&#13;
"., ,\ )7&#13;
. " you'R£ DANel"" J .&#13;
,~ WH£NON -me CfJUI!G!&#13;
~.~__ rl ~, . ,'" .', "',~ :/., ,&#13;
.,&#13;
((&#13;
\, );..,~ ',.'. 1... :.-.'.: ••••••• : ••••&#13;
~\ ••• P., ...... _. ".'. ~'~'.&#13;
~ II---- -.:Ra=n:l!g~er"-,:.:Pa::!!B&lt;:.e=23&#13;
Movie Review&#13;
Child's Play 2&#13;
By David Wick&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
This is a beautiful love story&#13;
about a boy and a mean, nasty,&#13;
sadistic, Psychopathic, potty.&#13;
mouthed, ugly, killer, cabbage&#13;
patch kid from heU with a major&#13;
attitude problem. Oh goody. The&#13;
wait is over, because Chucky is&#13;
back. Child's Play 2 is playing at&#13;
the Cinema's 5 theatre in Kenosha.&#13;
At the end of part one, Chucky&#13;
had been shot, ripped apart, and&#13;
burned toa crisp, so it' sonly natural&#13;
that he come back for part two.&#13;
The young boy (played by&#13;
Alex Vincent) lhat was terrorized&#13;
in pan one is also back. He is now&#13;
living in an orphanage, because his&#13;
mother was placed in a mental facility.&#13;
Chucky is put back together&#13;
by the people at the Good Guy Doll&#13;
Factory.&#13;
Ihave no ideal why they did it.&#13;
rest of the movie trying to get to'&#13;
V incent,andkillsacoupleof people&#13;
who get in the way.&#13;
There are no noteworthy per.&#13;
formances. The fact that unknowns&#13;
were hired for alllbe other roles is&#13;
Ron's . 1'\&#13;
~C~on .•sun. ~ 1,&#13;
IIa.m.&#13;
7 Days A Week&#13;
Luncheon Reservation&#13;
651-5907&#13;
Famous for 50's (1/2&#13;
lb. Hamburger &amp; fries&#13;
for $3.50) Souvenir&#13;
Long Island Mugs&#13;
Now On Sale&#13;
3301 S2nd Street, Kenosha I \lISA i 657-4455&#13;
Ron's&#13;
Carryout&#13;
Open Sun-Thurs.&#13;
Il:un-Midnight&#13;
Fri-Sai, 1Jam-201m&#13;
657-4455&#13;
(c:uryout and delivery only&#13;
We Now Deliver&#13;
Breasted Chicken and&#13;
our complete menu&#13;
estgate&#13;
all&#13;
Washington Ave. (Hwy 20) &amp;. OhIo 51.,Racine&#13;
23 GREAT STORES TO SHOPTOTALLY&#13;
ENCLOSED MALL.&#13;
...- -- ....-..&#13;
VNovcmbcr 15. 1990 Classified&#13;
Ran.er, Pa...'i4&#13;
CLUB EVENTS "'--C-L-U-B-EV-E-N-T-S--I I FOR SALE [ LOST AND FOUND I I PERSONALS]&#13;
IL. I I . U· Cinema on Oct Mark Lauer, congratulations&#13;
valued at $1400. Asking Losttn rnon .&#13;
IVCF invites you for a time ing to join need only to be a 2 .Grey nylon jacket _with on your engagement! I guess&#13;
f thanksgiving and praise. registered student at UW - $700. Call 763-9681 before: . $30 reward. that means no more fun. Hal&#13;
P&#13;
arkside in the area of bio- 6 00 pm sliver smpe. L ". I . 7E" . Wednesday, ov. 21, 1990. :. 553-2843. ove gir s m&#13;
Moln. 107, 12:00. Prayer logical sciences. Bring your&#13;
meeting every Friday. Moln lunch; the soda and desert&#13;
126,12:00. will be furnished.&#13;
Musician , poetS, assorted&#13;
talent wanted for Coffeehou&#13;
. Wednesday, Dec. 5.&#13;
7:00-11:00. Union Square.&#13;
Free. Registration forms&#13;
vailable in union 209.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
ov. 30, 1990.&#13;
The Hispanic Organization&#13;
meetingisFriday,Nov.16in&#13;
the Writing Center at noon.&#13;
HOP's recruitment party is&#13;
Monday, Nov. 19, noon, at&#13;
the SEC office.&#13;
. Molecular Biology Club will&#13;
hold their meeting of the '90-&#13;
91 school year on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 20 in Moln. room #161&#13;
at noon. All present members&#13;
are encouraged to attend&#13;
and a warm welcome is exterrded&#13;
to any prospective&#13;
new members. Those wish&#13;
Up coming book raffle. First&#13;
prize $100.00 gift certificate&#13;
towards books for next semester,&#13;
2nd prize is a $50.00&#13;
gift certificate, 3rd prize- (2)&#13;
$25.00 gift certificate. Tickets&#13;
sell for $1.00. Look for&#13;
the raffle. Sponsored by&#13;
f&gt;.S.E. December 3,4 &amp; 5.&#13;
"Club Members Only" Precious&#13;
moments figurines for&#13;
sale. Please call Becky at&#13;
654-1292.&#13;
Computer System Amiga 500 .&#13;
A500 CPU, color monitor,&#13;
Panasonic 1080, printer, 2nd&#13;
drive, 1 meg RAM, desk and&#13;
lots of software. $800 OBO.&#13;
654-9587.&#13;
Women's wedding and engagement&#13;
rings. Brand new,&#13;
Retail- Seasonal Sales Associates&#13;
Full and Part-time&#13;
Liz Claiborne,Inc.is seekingindividualsto worllbothfuiland part-time,&#13;
duringthe holidays,inourOutletStorelocatedinKenosha,Wisconsin.&#13;
This is an outstanding opportunityto become parr of the holiday&#13;
excitemenland earn extracash forthis specialtimeofthe year. These&#13;
posnons mayalso leadintoemploymentopportunitiesafterthe end of&#13;
the holiday season.&#13;
We offer competttivesalaries, flexibleschedules and generous emplOyee&#13;
discounts.&#13;
To learn about these exctting opportunities, apply in person&#13;
between10am-Gpm,Monday-Saturdayor cailfor an appointment:&#13;
liz Claiborne Outlet store- Lakeside Market Place&#13;
112111201h Avenue Kenosha, WI 53142&#13;
(414) 857·9333&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer ,,....,:J====='-="'''=~~i===--!I&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
FUND RAISING I&#13;
_~...:...------ Don't miss Tremper's MadBest&#13;
fund raiser on campus rigal Feast. A Christmas Tralooking&#13;
for fr;ll~rnity/soror- dition.Advancedticketsonly.&#13;
iry or student organization Dec 13,14,15 at 6:30 pm.&#13;
that would like to eam $500- Matinee Dec. 16, 2:30 pm.&#13;
$1000 for one week on cam- Contact Kurt Chalgren. 697-&#13;
pus rnarxenng project, Must 2230. $2'.00 conation.&#13;
be organized and hard working.&#13;
Call Beverly or Jeanine&#13;
at 800-592-2121.&#13;
Travel free! Sun Splash tours&#13;
offers the most exciting and&#13;
affordable spring break'&#13;
packagestoJamaica,Cancun, I PERSONALS I&#13;
Margarita Island! The easi- "-_---------J&#13;
est and fastest way to earn&#13;
free travel and extra $$$.&#13;
Become a representative.&#13;
Call 1-800-426-7710.&#13;
Black leather women's jacket&#13;
with fringe. Size M. Excellent&#13;
condition. Asking $150.&#13;
Call 889-4819 before 5:30&#13;
pm.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Help wanted. Full/part-time,&#13;
am.pm. Dining, banquet and&#13;
cocktail servers. Sheraton&#13;
Hotel and Conference Center.&#13;
Call 886-6100.&#13;
Make quick Christmas $$!&#13;
Earn $6.00-$10.00 per hour.&#13;
Delivery positions available.&#13;
Apply at any Kenosha or&#13;
Racine Domino's Pizza store.&#13;
Student Snow Shoveler.&#13;
$5.25/hour. Must be available&#13;
for early morning work,&#13;
physically fit and hold a valid&#13;
drivers license. Contact UW _ .&#13;
Parkside Grounds Dept. at&#13;
553-2228 for appointment.&#13;
Lost, Black wool women's&#13;
coat. Small size. Please call&#13;
553-2295.&#13;
- Raphael and Lisa Wanltogo&#13;
back to bed. The mouseis&#13;
mine and we're friends. Let's&#13;
talk. GWTM&#13;
To the S&amp;B Queens,youhave&#13;
to suck harder so it doesn't&#13;
drop on the floor! KAA&#13;
Terri Beck - You're gorgeous.&#13;
I would like to meet &amp; getkl&#13;
know you. - Very Intrigued&#13;
. on TIR 9:30.&#13;
W~e N' Bak~! Quality va-' I SERVICES OFFER~&#13;
cations to exotic destinations&#13;
for spring break in Jamaica/&gt; Word processing: TYJllllI&#13;
Cancun. Starting at$429.00! - done on computer. $l.~&#13;
Organize group travel, free! page. Resumes, term Jl'IIIl&#13;
Book early and save $30.00. and dissertations acceplei&#13;
Call 1-800-462-7710. Pick-up and delivery&#13;
able. Call 551-7431.&#13;
To the Progressive Rock&#13;
Band looking for a singer,&#13;
~ontact Tim Whiting 551-&#13;
0220. Excellent singer, great&#13;
Bruce Springsteen impersonator.&#13;
He's an incredible&#13;
vocal talent waiting to be discovered&#13;
but too modest to&#13;
come forward personally.&#13;
Term papers, resumes, mit&#13;
cellaneous typing done(II&#13;
Word Perfect. Choose fonu,&#13;
page formats. $1.00perpagc&#13;
for term papers: roughdraf~&#13;
editing footnotes and bibli·&#13;
ographyincluded. Don'twail&#13;
until the last minute! ContaCI&#13;
Nancy at 637 -8507 after4:OO&#13;
M-F or any time on weekend&gt;&#13;
Check our Checking!&#13;
,/ No minimum balance&#13;
,/ High interest with $250.00+&#13;
,/ 24 Hour telephone banking&#13;
and bill paying&#13;
Serving all UW·ParksiJI,&#13;
employees and studentS&#13;
\!.D\lCAl'OJfS&#13;
·(ti)&#13;
~~l)~'!l\# ~&#13;
Tallent Hall - Room 286 i"~&#13;
553,2150 9:30-4:00 ~&#13;
• ~ A • ..,</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 19, issue 11, November 15, 1990</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="80251">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1990-11-15</text>
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              <text>University ofWisconsin .....Parkside&#13;
Kenosha,Wisconsin  Volume 19, Number 12&#13;
Groovin'&#13;
Harf{&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
1Iht1Iteidman, on  lead saxophone,  pertorms  with the . UW·&#13;
~Jazz&#13;
Ensemble on November20  to a packed house&#13;
ID&#13;
the&#13;
OallIumlcation Arts Theatre.&#13;
Professor Chen conducting&#13;
intensiveresearch on campus&#13;
by Susan Luedkes&#13;
Chong-mawChen.arespected&#13;
IilOfessorof biological sciences at&#13;
IheUniversity of Wisconsin  •&#13;
Parkside,is conducting an inten-&#13;
ijveresean:h of three dominant&#13;
~nts    inGreenquists lab277.&#13;
Along with Professor Chen,&#13;
tbereare five students aiding this&#13;
resean:h.The group includes three&#13;
8I1Iduatestudents, a full-time re-&#13;
searchassistant and an under-&#13;
8I1Iduatestudent&#13;
The&#13;
first&#13;
experiement is the&#13;
IIlOstJllOminentofChen'sresearch.&#13;
Continued  on Paae 6&#13;
Chong-maw Cben&#13;
Thursday, November 29,1990&#13;
UW-Parkside's  Buenker  named&#13;
1990 Professor of the Year for state&#13;
Latesba N. Jude&#13;
News Writer&#13;
For the first time, the Council&#13;
for Advancement and Support of&#13;
Education  (CASE) chose state&#13;
winners in all 50 states in 1990.&#13;
Since 1981, CASE has been bon-&#13;
oring professors for contributions&#13;
to undergraduates, instirutions of&#13;
higberleaming,andsocietythrough&#13;
theprestigiousProfessorofthe Year&#13;
Award. CASE&#13;
also&#13;
recognizes an&#13;
outstanding Canadian professor,&#13;
and holds competitions in aliSO&#13;
states and the DistrictofColumbia.&#13;
Two expert panels composed&#13;
of deans of nonentrant schools,&#13;
education writers, students, gov-&#13;
ernment corporate, foundation, and&#13;
association representatives assess&#13;
the nominees according to the fol-&#13;
lowing criteria:&#13;
, extraordinary commitment&#13;
to teaching&#13;
, service to the institution and&#13;
the professor&#13;
, balance of achievement in&#13;
leaching, scholarship and service&#13;
to the institution&#13;
, evidence of impact on and&#13;
involvement with students&#13;
, evidence of achievement by&#13;
former students and&#13;
'quality of support materials&#13;
from current and former  s I u -&#13;
dents.&#13;
JohnD. Buenker, Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
and&#13;
chair of the History&#13;
department at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside  was nomi-&#13;
nated by former students, current&#13;
students and faculty for the award.&#13;
Later, Professor  Buenker was&#13;
named&#13;
the&#13;
1990 Wisconsin Pro-&#13;
fessor of the Yearby the Council&#13;
for the Advancement and Support&#13;
of Education.&#13;
Buenker  received his&#13;
bachelor's degree in U.S. History&#13;
from Loras College,  and his&#13;
master's and doctorate degrees in&#13;
U.S.  History from Georgetown&#13;
University. Furthermore. Profes-&#13;
sor Buenker hasbeen a professorat&#13;
UW-Parkside for 25 years and is&#13;
still currently teaching and writing&#13;
books. One of his books include&#13;
lmmigrtuion    and  Elhniciry:&#13;
A&#13;
Guide&#13;
10&#13;
In/o,malion&#13;
Sources,&#13;
wriuen with Nicholas C. Burcke!.&#13;
Jobn D. Ruenker&#13;
Another book&#13;
IS&#13;
titled&#13;
Urban His-&#13;
tory:&#13;
A  Guide&#13;
10&#13;
Information&#13;
Sources,&#13;
co-authored with Gerald&#13;
Michael Greenfield and WilliamJ.&#13;
Murin.&#13;
Professor Buenker received a&#13;
plaque in recognition of his award.&#13;
The plaque states, "For&#13;
exesordi-&#13;
nary contributions to&#13;
the&#13;
lives&#13;
and&#13;
Continued  on Page 6&#13;
New smoking policy shaped&#13;
Smoking Policy Advisory Committee's first meeting&#13;
"t&#13;
by Susan Luepkes&#13;
The newly appointed Smok-&#13;
ing Policy Advisory Committee&#13;
met for the&#13;
first&#13;
time on Wednes-&#13;
day Oct 24 todiscuss&#13;
the&#13;
provisions&#13;
of a new smoking policy for UW-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The commillee was appointed&#13;
by Chancellor Sheila Kaplan after&#13;
the  Campus   Environment&#13;
Committee's  recommendations&#13;
and concerns last ~pring were di-&#13;
rected at the violations of&#13;
the&#13;
cur-&#13;
rent smoking policy. These viola-&#13;
tions were described as "smoking&#13;
in private corridors and multi-pe~-&#13;
sonomces." Thus,tbecom&#13;
mJltee&#13;
s&#13;
purpose is&#13;
to&#13;
review the factors and&#13;
present a detailed report to the&#13;
Chancellor by Jan. 15.1991.&#13;
The&#13;
Chancellor will then make thefinal&#13;
decision.&#13;
The committee consists of&#13;
twelve members.  They include&#13;
Wayne Johnson, Professor of Phi-&#13;
losophy and the Chair and Secre-&#13;
tary&#13;
oftheCommittee; Gary GOelZ,&#13;
Assistant   Chancellor    for&#13;
Adminstration and Fiscal Affairs;&#13;
VeraKolb,ProfessorofChemislIy;&#13;
Andrew McLean, Professor of&#13;
English; William Niebuhr, Direc-&#13;
tor of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union; Ron Singer.&#13;
AssociateProfessorof Accounting;&#13;
L. Meyer, Don Prange and Don&#13;
Continued  on page 4&#13;
Inside    ~&#13;
this week's&#13;
Ranger .••&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report.   Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate Page 3&#13;
Counselor's&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page 7&#13;
An&#13;
Page 12&#13;
This&#13;
Week&#13;
.Page 13&#13;
International...  .Page 14&#13;
Oassifieds.&#13;
.Pagc&#13;
16&#13;
~Ra!!!.lDR~"'.L!..'&#13;
Pa!!.ll!Re::..=.2&#13;
L__....:&#13;
E&#13;
=.::d=l:.:·&#13;
t:...:O:...:n::....·_a_l_---}--------'-N=ov=em~be~r22!..9.I~9~&#13;
L~tte~~&#13;
!h~!&#13;
th~re~~!!200~edoor&#13;
Here s your br a&#13;
ddr    yet   of my house and seeing the police&#13;
TIus letter IS to ath ~~hriS    ear in front, and watehing myfalher&#13;
other aspects of rapeD  ak .de"    scream at the officer, "you caleh&#13;
Toliver   and  "DA    ar  sbo&#13;
l&#13;
ut    that Son-of-a-bitch  or I will!" and&#13;
Id • be bothered to care a    .&#13;
,&#13;
cou  n t..&#13;
.  d   his view-    being fearful that it was me hewas&#13;
Yes. Chns ISentItl~ua:  the view-    angry with. You&#13;
see.&#13;
Chris,three&#13;
pomts, but to&#13;
perpe&#13;
bee&#13;
years olds don't understand a&#13;
I&#13;
point that women who have morne   about your perspective on life anOd&#13;
t&#13;
..&#13;
ed by rape are no&#13;
'&#13;
vicurmz&#13;
you didn't  include  them in&#13;
y&#13;
than  gold-digging,   comatose.&#13;
.'&#13;
our&#13;
uh&#13;
tfeeling&#13;
survey. Neither does a I3yearold&#13;
embarrased prudes WI&#13;
OU&#13;
.&#13;
fi&#13;
d&#13;
'&#13;
.    '&#13;
h If'  both uncaring    gal  who&#13;
10&#13;
s&#13;
herself&#13;
10&#13;
an&#13;
Illthelflower   a ,IS&#13;
undefensiblesituationwithah&#13;
r.&#13;
and dangerous.&#13;
al&#13;
bo'&#13;
ype&#13;
You said&#13;
"Gimrne&#13;
a break"    norfm  teenage  "Yhwho s basic&#13;
,&#13;
"b  ak" Chris&#13;
per ormance ISto   old herhands&#13;
well here s your   re·&#13;
"&#13;
~y   flfSt~reak"   was when I   and do what you want.  The&#13;
boy&#13;
wastheIastofl4persons.assaulted-&#13;
who  was never  taught that No&#13;
by a young man II years older than   means' NO_C1\l'enences like&#13;
this&#13;
If I&#13;
t&#13;
OU&#13;
to&#13;
know Chris.    leave scars Chns, ones that often&#13;
myse  .  wan y&#13;
•&#13;
k   led&#13;
ha&#13;
I&#13;
cutely aware  of the'   aren&#13;
t&#13;
seen, ac now&#13;
ged&#13;
Ot&#13;
at·&#13;
t  t   was add&#13;
'I&#13;
h  •&#13;
sensationsbeinginflicteduponme,&#13;
ten e  to&#13;
unu&#13;
t ey ve created&#13;
I&#13;
harassed  but by the fact   dysfunction&#13;
III&#13;
the Victim, They&#13;
wasem.&#13;
ak  ' h  d&#13;
Chri&#13;
hat&#13;
I&#13;
O&#13;
utside my home naked    melt&#13;
ar  to trust    s, harder&#13;
twas&#13;
•&#13;
f&#13;
I'&#13;
hips&#13;
bee&#13;
and feeling that it was me who had   to  orm&#13;
re auons&#13;
IpS&#13;
ause&#13;
lhe&#13;
done something  wrong. The gag   fear lingers.andblockstheposinw&#13;
left cuts at the sides of my mouth    elements of the rel~tlOnshIP.&#13;
and the cloth he tied to my hands&#13;
DId I cry rape.  The&#13;
boy&#13;
who&#13;
with left bruises.&#13;
Continued  on Page&#13;
II&#13;
1HE  ENEMY OF&#13;
MY ENEMY IS&#13;
A CHUMP.&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
With the arrival of the holiday season and the preparations for fatal&#13;
finals coming very quickly around the corner. the thought of consuming&#13;
a few spirits has probably crossed your mind. This brings up an interesting&#13;
point: What ever happened to "Push I9?"  Is it the fact that we finally&#13;
decided to dedicate our time to something more worthwhile?&#13;
Or&#13;
doesn't&#13;
it bother people. beeause if they want to drink, they will.  Aren't the&#13;
increased fines and strict enforcement  stiff enough?&#13;
If&#13;
people can get&#13;
drafted and vote wben they're&#13;
18.&#13;
why can't they legally&#13;
drink&#13;
when they're 19? The voting issue is a weak point&#13;
because&#13;
statistics show only&#13;
one&#13;
in nine college students registered to vote in 1990, It is just something to fall&#13;
back on. Should we&#13;
sacrifice our&#13;
federal highway fund so 19 year olds can legally drink? Also. would we be&#13;
on the wrong end of lawsuits from parents in Minnesota. Michigan, and lllinois when their son or daughter is&#13;
killed in our state from underage drinking?&#13;
Since we are not really&#13;
located&#13;
in a college town, more students are apt to get away with possessing a falsified&#13;
ill. Maybe the&#13;
bars&#13;
don't mind students carrying fake ill's, because it means an increase in business, and if the&#13;
cops&#13;
raid the place. the bar owner can simply say. "Hey they had an ill."&#13;
Our&#13;
area&#13;
taverns are not as high-tech as taverns in Oshkosh. Whitewater. or Madison.  It takes several&#13;
minutes&#13;
to&#13;
get into most of&#13;
those&#13;
taverns and they can catch the "best of the best" when it comes&#13;
to&#13;
fake ill·s.&#13;
So&#13;
is&#13;
it alright for taverns&#13;
10&#13;
let underaged drinkers loiter on their premises? Maybe.&#13;
It&#13;
would be alright if&#13;
the&#13;
W1deraged&#13;
drinlrers&#13;
and inexperienced&#13;
drinkers&#13;
knew how&#13;
to&#13;
handle themselves after a night of&#13;
consumption.&#13;
When you're&#13;
half&#13;
in&#13;
the bag it&#13;
doesn't&#13;
matter if it takes ~&#13;
fifteen&#13;
minutes or a half-hour&#13;
to&#13;
get home. These&#13;
aren't the Guiness&#13;
Book&#13;
of World&#13;
Records&#13;
days, so&#13;
if&#13;
you're going to&#13;
drink&#13;
and drive. don 't prove 00your buddies&#13;
that you can drive&#13;
90&#13;
miles&#13;
an&#13;
hour&#13;
around&#13;
a curve. but prove&#13;
to&#13;
Ibem that the you can handle your alcohol and&#13;
not drive&#13;
like&#13;
a bat-out-()f·hell.&#13;
The BACCHUS (Boost Alcobol Consciousness Concerning Heallb University Students) Committee on&#13;
campus&#13;
will be sponsoring several evenlS before both Chrisunas and Spring Break.&#13;
The&#13;
committee is trying to&#13;
infonn students of Ibe consequences of drinking&#13;
and&#13;
driving and responsible drinking.  You can still&#13;
pany&#13;
and&#13;
have a good&#13;
time.&#13;
just don't&#13;
drink&#13;
and&#13;
drive.&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
SiJqlkim&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the AssociatedCollegiatePress&#13;
Subscription  rate for one year is $5.00.&#13;
Please address all correspondence   to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Post Office BoX2000&#13;
900 Wooq Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Office, (414) 553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414)'553-2295&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Craig&#13;
A.&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
International Editor&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editors&#13;
Mike McKowen&#13;
Ted McIntyre&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tad MCCarthy&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
&amp;:OttSinger&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Sara-Kahi&#13;
Pub.lic Relations  Director&#13;
•GregLebrick&#13;
.Advisors&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
J~nNowak  '&#13;
'Business  Manager&#13;
Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Asst. Business  Manager&#13;
Heather McGee&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Terri Fortney&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Ron&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
ElizabethSpail&#13;
a&#13;
Photo&#13;
Editor&#13;
SunniBee&lt;k&#13;
Photographer'&#13;
Todd&#13;
Goers&#13;
Henry&#13;
Corn&#13;
ctl&#13;
Kurt GeilfuS!&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Paul&#13;
Berge&#13;
Chris  Ingram&#13;
Glen&#13;
Keily&#13;
CenerillStaff:&#13;
I)(&gt;nald&#13;
Andrewski,&#13;
Gab&lt;!&#13;
Kliikll;jlinN"wcomb,&#13;
Rufus Thome:&#13;
[)a~~&#13;
.D&lt;1he"!Y,Mona Shannon,  LisaV9pal,JohnTayIor,    David WId&lt;.I&#13;
~a)'lkm~i Jea:&#13;
I!rornS!ad,&#13;
Latesh",ju&lt;:I,e"K"lly  McKissick.&#13;
Kimbel&#13;
Y&#13;
fr~~"'\l~'Ghl;1sOegJJl"',§uS;I!ll,\~k~..LenAnhold,p,~f1Il:1a!~&#13;
..&#13;
,&#13;
-.-&#13;
".'&#13;
.,:,'.'&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
'.',.",.":&#13;
",&#13;
".&#13;
"'''''.:-&#13;
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            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="80275">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="80276">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="80277">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="80278">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="521">
        <name>biology</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2941">
        <name>silent auction</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2845">
        <name>smoking policy</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="184">
        <name>Student Activities</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2772">
        <name>thanksgiving</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
