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              <text>Communitcation Senior Seminar Hunger Strike 2000</text>
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              <text>.... = ..,~&#13;
Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
November 30,2000 ~~ IrFr..:::~~~~~-..Iss.u.e ,11;;V;o1;.3~0 ;;;;,.--.;,;,;;;,,;,.&#13;
Communication Senior Seminar Hunger Strike 2000&#13;
and Sleep Out Under the Stars a thrilling success&#13;
lllllJlJ BflJlJIIJ&#13;
debuts Fridav&#13;
Five more performances&#13;
in Wegner Studio&#13;
Theatre through Dec. 9&#13;
The Plays at Parkside series presents&#13;
six performances of John Guare's&#13;
"Lydie Breeze," starting Friday, Dec. 1,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Five more performances&#13;
will follow, each in the Augie Wegner&#13;
Studio Theatre of the Commllllication&#13;
Arts building.&#13;
'''Lydie Breeze' is a hope-filled&#13;
drama sprink1ed with light and dark&#13;
humor and shadowed by romance,"&#13;
said director Patrick Tangredi, visiting&#13;
professor of Dramatic Arts.&#13;
Tangredi, who is visiting UW-Parkside&#13;
or'one zear from the University of&#13;
Massachusetts-Arnaerst brings his&#13;
intimate knowledge of the northeast&#13;
coastal islands to the direction this play&#13;
which is set in Nantucket in 1895.&#13;
Guare, the author of "The House of&#13;
Blue Leaves" and "Six Degrees of Separation,"&#13;
spins a tale of human deception&#13;
featuring seven characters caught&#13;
in a web resulting from the actions of&#13;
one woman, Lydie Breeze. The story of&#13;
a family and community broken apart&#13;
and struggling to come together by&#13;
exorcising the past, is one in. which&#13;
most people can find analogies to their&#13;
own lives.&#13;
The performers include UW-Parkside&#13;
students Amanda Albrecht,&#13;
Megan Shehorn, Robert Allen, Jenny&#13;
Toutant, Brad Kostreva, Dan&#13;
Grzeskowiak, and Joe Piirto. UW-Parkside's&#13;
Lana Lincoln is assistant director&#13;
and Mathew Schnaare is stage manager.&#13;
Lighting and sceruc design are by&#13;
Professor Skelly Warren, costume&#13;
design is by Professor Judith Snider-&#13;
Tucker.&#13;
Performances of "Lydee Breeze" are&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Dec. 1 and 2, at&#13;
7:30 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 7, at 10 a.m,&#13;
and 7:30 p.m., and Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 8 and 9 at 7:30 p.m. Student&#13;
and senior tickets are $7, general&#13;
admission tickets are $10, and can be&#13;
purchased at the door or by calling&#13;
(262)595-2564.&#13;
The Commllllication Department's&#13;
Senior Seminar class hosted its Hunger&#13;
Strike 2000 and Sleep Out Under the&#13;
Stars event on campus on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 15. The event, which coincided&#13;
with National Homelessness Awareness&#13;
Month, collected food and raised&#13;
money for the secular, non-profit organization&#13;
known as the Shalom Center&#13;
in Kenosha.&#13;
By all accounts, the event was a&#13;
thrilling success. Communication&#13;
Department Chair and Senior Seminar&#13;
instructor, Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, was&#13;
delighted with the planning and execution&#13;
of the project.&#13;
"There were concerns about the&#13;
severity of the weather as the date of&#13;
the event was pushed deeper into&#13;
November, and some students were&#13;
unsure that we should even follow&#13;
through. Yet, the day came and every-&#13;
1.qdy showed up, even people from&#13;
outside the class. The students really&#13;
did a grearjob."&#13;
Senior Seminar stuaems cickec oft .&#13;
the event by hosting and participating&#13;
in the Hunger Strike 2000bowl-a-then&#13;
in the Union Recreation Center. The&#13;
university Staff Bowling League&#13;
showed their support by opening their&#13;
league night to pledges, and by raising&#13;
additional money. Several members of&#13;
the UWP bowling team also contributed&#13;
to the event.&#13;
The activities moved outside at 9:30&#13;
p.m. as Senior Seminar students and&#13;
their supporters prepared to brave the&#13;
near-freezing temperatures, cutting&#13;
wind, and early morning rain. Participants&#13;
had little more protection than&#13;
sleeping bags, cardboard boxes, and a&#13;
The Communication Senior Seminar crew gathers prior to venturing outdoors to&#13;
dramatize homeless ness during Hunger Strike 2000. .&#13;
counie of taros loaned bv a local company.&#13;
"Here we are, doing this for one&#13;
night," said senior Tatjana Bicanin,&#13;
"and there's thousands of people who&#13;
have no choice but to sleep outside&#13;
every night. All I can say is that I'm&#13;
grateful that we're so lucky."&#13;
Aside from raising money, Hunger&#13;
Strike 2000 was also meant to raise&#13;
awareness. Utilizinl;l public relations&#13;
skills acquired in their Media Message&#13;
Design course, Senior Seminar students&#13;
were able to grab the attention of&#13;
major newspapers in Milwaukee;&#13;
Racine, and Kenosha. Senior Michaela&#13;
B.Gaines was granted an interview on&#13;
a major market radio station. Senior&#13;
Seminar students also generated&#13;
poster, flyers, and delivered presentations.'&#13;
Communication major, and popular&#13;
campus radio personality, Jamie&#13;
"Scream'n" Freeman, couldn't resist&#13;
getting behind such a good cause.&#13;
Freeman helped keep the participants&#13;
warm and the message hot wifh live&#13;
relays broadcast over Parkside's very&#13;
ownWIPZ.&#13;
Anyone interested in contributing&#13;
food or money, or anyone interested in&#13;
future Communication Department&#13;
projects and courses should call Wendy&#13;
Leeds-Hurwitz at ext. 2252.&#13;
Major Changes: A look top majors at UW-Parkside&#13;
By Craig Braun and Zach Robertson&#13;
Part 1 of a three part series&#13;
Many thoughts rumble through the&#13;
minds of UW-Parkside students in any&#13;
given day. Students may think about&#13;
their plans for the weekend, the lunch&#13;
menu in the cafeteria, they might even&#13;
be thinking about their potential&#13;
major.&#13;
This could be one of the biggest&#13;
decisions students will ever make,&#13;
because it will directly affect their&#13;
future. Some students pick a major&#13;
based on what interests them, others&#13;
take suggestions from faculty members,&#13;
some may even decide by doing a&#13;
little research.&#13;
There are also many other factors that&#13;
go into deciding what is the right field&#13;
of study for you. The availability of&#13;
jobs, money, and the flexibility of a&#13;
major are also important factors to&#13;
examine.&#13;
Cont'd On page 9&#13;
age 2&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside November 30/ 2000&#13;
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The Japanese American Experience: A Chapter in U.S. Historv By Christine Agaiby&#13;
Like many students, Allen Hida&#13;
was born a citizen 'ofthe United States.&#13;
Hida has been a teacher in Wisconsin&#13;
for the last thirty years. Although he is&#13;
a citizen, he was not given the same&#13;
rights citizens are guaranteed through&#13;
the constitution. In the seventh grade,&#13;
Hida and his family were incarcerated.&#13;
What was their crime? They were&#13;
japanese American.&#13;
During World War II, Hitler imprisoned&#13;
millions of jews. Their only crime&#13;
was that they were jewish. What the&#13;
Nazis did in Germany is considered to&#13;
be one of the most inhumane acts in&#13;
history. The United States military&#13;
quickly got involved in a war to fight&#13;
for the rights of those being tortured.&#13;
How ironic, then, that the U.S.&#13;
incarcerated their own citizens at the&#13;
same time they helped free the citizens&#13;
of another country.&#13;
Allen Hida came to UW-Parkside on&#13;
October 30 to inform listeners of the&#13;
Japanese American experience in concentration&#13;
camps during WWII. Many&#13;
Americans are unaware of this event&#13;
because it's either a small paragraph in&#13;
our U'S. history books or not there at&#13;
all. It's an event that teachers do not&#13;
cover in their lectures.&#13;
On February 19, 1942,approximately&#13;
two months after the bombing of Pearl&#13;
Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt&#13;
signed Executive Order 9066 that.&#13;
alIowed for the forced removal and&#13;
incarceration of japanese Americans.&#13;
More than 120,000japanese Americans&#13;
were sent to these "relocation" camps&#13;
and more than half of those incarcerated,&#13;
were children.&#13;
The children of the camps, even&#13;
today, continually experience psychological&#13;
warfare. The feelings of abandonment&#13;
and shame are still with them.&#13;
It's difficult to understand how an&#13;
event like this could happen. How&#13;
could children be a threat to a country?&#13;
The Japartese were labeled as unassimalable.&#13;
They were told that they&#13;
were not desirable material for citizenship&#13;
because of their racial characteristics&#13;
of heredity and religion.&#13;
'''We were constantly told that the&#13;
jaJ?anese race is an enemy race," Hida&#13;
said, with pain evident in his voice.&#13;
There were ten camps located on&#13;
bad government land, mostly desert.&#13;
The camps were enclosed with barbed&#13;
wire fences surrounded by soldiers&#13;
with rifles, machine guns, tanks, etc.&#13;
The only way out of these camps was&#13;
to serve in the U.S. army. Many men&#13;
did so to prove their loyalty to a country&#13;
that betrayed them. The 442nd Regimental&#13;
Combat Team, which consisted&#13;
mostly of japanese Americans, came&#13;
back to America from war as the most&#13;
decorated in their unit.&#13;
The camp experience forced assimilation.&#13;
japanese Americans had to shed&#13;
their own culture by thrusting themselves&#13;
in American culture.&#13;
Still haunted by the experiences of&#13;
the camps generations later, japanese&#13;
Americans hold the belief that they&#13;
must be the best they can be to help .&#13;
avoid racism.&#13;
Americans were horrified by the&#13;
injustice jews faced in Germany, yet&#13;
our own citizens weren't protected&#13;
from this unjust imprisonment. The&#13;
lack of education on this historical&#13;
event will not prevent it from happening&#13;
again. Perhaps, your ethnic group&#13;
will be next to be forced to go to camps.&#13;
For more information on this topic,&#13;
visit www.jann.org This is the website&#13;
for the japanese American National&#13;
Museum. You can also e-mail Allen&#13;
Hida with any questioris you may have&#13;
at ah@execpc.com _&#13;
November 30, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
police' Beat&#13;
011/8 Incident #00-860, Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger Lot, 2:04 p.m., a resident of Ranger Hall&#13;
reported his car entered and stereo equipment&#13;
stolen. No suspects or witnesses.&#13;
on /9 Incident #00-861 Lost Property, Tallent Hall,&#13;
3:10 p.m., former University Police Officer reported&#13;
her badge lost.&#13;
011/10 Incident #00-862 Fire Alarm, Communication&#13;
Arts Building, 12:20 a.m., Heating and Chilling&#13;
reported a fire alarm here. Alarm panel indicated&#13;
the theatre dock, DIn, heat sensor. No problem&#13;
found; alarm reset.&#13;
011/10 Incident #00-863 Battery/Disorderly Conduct,&#13;
University Apartments, 1:53 a.m., officers&#13;
responded to a reported fight outside of the apartments.&#13;
One subject, a visitor, refused rescue and&#13;
was transported to jail. Two others, a student and&#13;
a visitor, were taken by rescue to an area hospital,&#13;
treated and released to our Officer. They were also&#13;
turned over to jail staff.&#13;
011/10 Incident #00-864 Agency Assist, University&#13;
Apartments, 3:17 a.m., a visitor, who was interfering&#13;
with Officers investigation on above incident,&#13;
was identified, Records Check revealed active warrants&#13;
and he was transported Kenosha Co. Jail.&#13;
011/11 Incident #00-865 Traffic Violation, STH 31&amp;&#13;
CTH JR, 6:16 a.m., Radar confirmed vehicle's&#13;
speed of 63 mph in a posted 45 mph limit. Vehicle&#13;
was stopped and driver cited for speeding.&#13;
11/11 Incident #00-866 Fire Alarm{)JTK~rtsActivity&#13;
Center, 3:07.p.m., Heating and C . . g reported&#13;
fire alarm at SAC. Officers responded and found&#13;
the smoke detector in the kitchen area was activated&#13;
by burnt popcorn. Alarm reset and SAC building&#13;
supervisor was warned about people not evacuating&#13;
area.&#13;
011/12 Incident #00-867 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Molinaro D127, 12:53 p.m., a PASA member&#13;
reported an empty lock box and a coffee can containing&#13;
$5 were missing from this office. No signs&#13;
of forced entry were found.&#13;
011/12 Incident #00-868 Traffic Violation, CTH G &amp;&#13;
Outerloop Road, 9:38 p.m., driver was cited for&#13;
speeding, 58 mph in a posted 35 mph limit.&#13;
011/13 Incident #00-869 Attempted Theft, Ranger&#13;
Lot, 2:01 a.m., resident of Ranger Hall reported&#13;
someone entered his vehicle again. He believes&#13;
they took a spare key on the last entry from his&#13;
glove box and are using it. He requested extra&#13;
patrol of this lot and feels the lot is very poorly lit&#13;
at rught.&#13;
011/13 Incident #00-870 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger Lot, 7:48 p.m., a resident reported his car&#13;
entered and stereo equipment stolen. No sign of&#13;
forced entry and no suspects or witnesses.&#13;
011/13 Incident #00-871 UWS 18/Vandalism, University&#13;
Apartments Lot, 11:47 p.m., a resident of&#13;
the apartments reported his vehicle was egged.&#13;
No suspects or witnesses.&#13;
011/14 Incident #00-872 Harassment/ Threats, University&#13;
Apartments SF, 00:01 a.m., a visitor reportedly&#13;
threatened a resident re: a prior incident in&#13;
which he was arrested. Officers responded to an&#13;
apartment he was visiting and informed him he&#13;
would have to leave campus. He was also&#13;
warned about intimidating a witness.&#13;
011/14 Incident #00-873 Lost and Found, Ranger&#13;
Hall, Exterior, 9:58 a.m., Staff member reported&#13;
finding a Motorola Timeport, communication&#13;
device in the weeds. Arrangements will be made&#13;
to return it to MCL&#13;
011/14 Incident #00-874 Fraud, Educator's Credit&#13;
Union, Tallent Hall, 12:22 p.m., a student reported&#13;
fraudulent use of his account. Investigation continuing.&#13;
011/14 Incident #00-875 Motor Vehicle Theft, University&#13;
Apartment's lot, 6:46 p.m., student reported&#13;
her vehicle stolen from the University Apartment&#13;
lot. Student later called and said vehicle&#13;
was found in the Comm, Arts lot. Case&#13;
cleared/ unfounded.&#13;
011/14 Incident #00-876 Alarm-Building, Comm.&#13;
Arts Media Services,9:43 p.m., student reported a&#13;
problem with the alarm system. Alarm was malfunctioning&#13;
and officer was unable to clear it.&#13;
011/15 Incident #00-877 Traffic Accident, Union Lot,&#13;
5:04 p.m. Student struck another student's vehicle.&#13;
State accident report completed.&#13;
011/16 Incident #00-878 Disorderly Conduct, University&#13;
Apartments, 5:12 a.m., student reported&#13;
two other students had a water fight in his apartment.&#13;
Disorderly Conduct and Theft citations were&#13;
issued to two students.&#13;
011/16 Incident #00-879 Fire Alarm, Union Bldg.,&#13;
9:41 a.m., staff member reported an alarm. UPPS&#13;
officers found it to have q,een caused by an&#13;
exhaust fan turned off above the Pizza Hut kitchen&#13;
grill. Fan had been turned off due to maintenance.&#13;
Officers reset the alarm.&#13;
011/16 Incident #00-880 Worthiess Check, Tallent&#13;
Hall, 12:40 p.m., a Notice &amp; Demand for Payment&#13;
was sent to a student whose check written in payment&#13;
of a parking ticket was returned for Insufficient&#13;
Funds. .&#13;
011/ 16 Incident #00-881 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger Hall Lot, 2:40 p.m., a student reported his&#13;
parking permit stolen from his vehicle which had&#13;
been parked with a window left open as the power&#13;
window had broken. Nothing else was reported&#13;
missing.&#13;
011/16 Incident #00-882 Agency Assist, STH 31 and&#13;
CTH E, 8:51 p.m., UPPS officers assisted Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff Dept. with traffic control at an auto accident&#13;
scene.&#13;
011/ 17 Incident #00-883 Recover Stolen Property,&#13;
University Apartment, Midnight, UPPS officers&#13;
responded to a call regarding an underage drinking&#13;
party in progress. A student was issued a citation&#13;
for giving alcoholic beverages to an underage&#13;
person. Charges will also be issued to the individuals&#13;
who were responsible for having stolen property&#13;
belonging to Petrifying Springs Park.&#13;
011/17 Incident #00-884 Agency Assist, University&#13;
Apartments, 3:11 a.m., stolen property recovered&#13;
from a previous incident in the University Apartments,&#13;
was returned to the Kenosha Public Safety&#13;
Building. .&#13;
011/17 Incident #00-885 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC, 2:03J'.m., a student reported his ID was&#13;
being use by another person. Investigation continuing.&#13;
UW·Parkside now offering Winterim classes&#13;
UW-Parkside is giving students and&#13;
community members the opportunity&#13;
to earn coflege credits during what has&#13;
traditionally been vacation time. The&#13;
Universit;r. is offerinl7 five winter interim,&#13;
or 'Winterim, classes from late&#13;
December through mid-January,&#13;
Courses include a geology/biological&#13;
sciences class involving a field trip to&#13;
Costa Rica. Also offered are a polymer&#13;
chemistry course, an English course, a&#13;
geology class on lead contamination in&#13;
urban areas, and an MBA course&#13;
offered through the Internet.&#13;
UW-Parkside administrators said&#13;
Winterim courses are being offered to&#13;
meet students demand.&#13;
"Whenever we ask them, students&#13;
always say they want more opportunities&#13;
to take classes," said Ron Singer,&#13;
association vice chancellor for Planning,&#13;
Budget, and Resource Allocation.&#13;
"That is particularly true of non-traditional&#13;
students who don't think of the&#13;
weeks between semesters as 'time off:"&#13;
Singer called the winter classes a&#13;
pilot project to gauge student and community&#13;
interest. He says Winterim,&#13;
which runs Dec. 28 to Jan. 13, could&#13;
become as popular as the courses UWParkside&#13;
now offers between spring&#13;
semester and summer session.&#13;
Al Crist, the University's assistant&#13;
vice chancellor for Enrollment Management&#13;
said UW-Parkside is furposely&#13;
starting Winterim smal to&#13;
work the administrative bugs out of&#13;
the system with an eye toward future&#13;
expansion. And while current UWParkside&#13;
students are likely to have&#13;
the greatest interest in these classes,&#13;
Crist expects people from surrounding&#13;
communities to have an interest in&#13;
specific subjects.&#13;
"There are classes that will appeal&#13;
to the Poublic," said Crist. "The course&#13;
titled The Book: Past, Present, and&#13;
Future: and 'Lead Astray' about urban&#13;
lead contamination should be of interest&#13;
to a number of community members.&#13;
_ The polymer chemistry course will be&#13;
of interest to people in certain local&#13;
businesses and industry."&#13;
Registration for Winterim continues&#13;
through Dec. 22, and all registration&#13;
forms must be in the Registrar's Office&#13;
before classes begin. Toreceive a copy of&#13;
the schedule, can the Registrar at ext.&#13;
2284. Copies also are available at the&#13;
Advising Center and at Admissions.&#13;
Page4&#13;
November 30, 2000-&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Enrollment UP for Latino students&#13;
By Lynn Garcia&#13;
Did you know that the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has the highest&#13;
increasing rate for Hispanics enrolling&#13;
in college? They come from all over the&#13;
area including Beloit, Burlington, Delevan,&#13;
Lake Geneva, Libertyville, and&#13;
Waukegan. However, UW-Parkside has&#13;
one of the lowest rates of Latinos pur·&#13;
suing education.&#13;
When Carmen Ireland, started at UVVParkside&#13;
8 years ago, Latinos Unidos&#13;
consisted of only a handful of people.&#13;
There was a ten-year plan.jcn percent&#13;
more every year. The first open house&#13;
had 64 people there; whereas the latest&#13;
one recently included 480.&#13;
The number of Latinos enrolled at&#13;
UW- Parkside has been increasing over&#13;
the last three years. In the fall of 1999,&#13;
262 Latinos enrolled; in fall 1999, there&#13;
were 293 Latino students; and in the&#13;
most recent semester the number has&#13;
jumped to 305 Latinos enrolled. Out of&#13;
that 305, 64 of then were incoming&#13;
freshman.&#13;
Ireland shared the excitmg news&#13;
that she has reached her goal of 300&#13;
Latinos before she moves into the&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs.&#13;
Every student starts out with the&#13;
same goal: to graduate from college.&#13;
There are a large number of dropouts&#13;
due mainly to one thing: money. If you&#13;
come from a middle-income family&#13;
there is no financial aid available to&#13;
you. If you are having difficulty earning&#13;
money, you may eventually be&#13;
forced to drop out of school and give&#13;
up your dream.&#13;
There are two sororities and two&#13;
fraternities for Latinos. Sigma Lamda&#13;
Beta, already in its fifth year, was the&#13;
first cultural fraternity in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin. Alpha Sigma Omega was&#13;
the first Latina sorority in Wisconsin.&#13;
There is also Omega Delta Phi and&#13;
Gamma Alpha Omega.&#13;
There is a new Latina Mother-&#13;
Daughter Program. This is a program&#13;
for Latina girls, grades six through 12,&#13;
in partnership with their mothers, to&#13;
foster educational aspirations and&#13;
career exploration. It is designed to&#13;
acquaint the girls and mothers with&#13;
careers requiring. higher education, to&#13;
introduce community role models, and&#13;
to develop self-esteem and confidence&#13;
in both mothers and daughters.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
presents ...&#13;
Saturday, December 2, 2000&#13;
10 am - 4 pm&#13;
-Shuttle Service -Over 205 Exhibitors&#13;
-Coat and Package Check&#13;
-Food -Free Admission&#13;
-No Baby Strollers&#13;
Please bring non-perishable food items on behalf&#13;
of the Racine/Kenoshaarea food pantries.&#13;
Exit Hwy. E(East)off 1-94,Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
For more information call (262) 595.2278&#13;
Sponsored by the University Attivities Office and me Pa rksidp. Activities Board&#13;
Pictured from standing, from left, Arturo Garcia, Alfrooo Sandoval, Fermin Mercado,&#13;
Anthony Flores, and Marin Rocha Jr. Bottom row, from left, Jorge Figueroa,&#13;
. Randy Krause, and Roberto Chacon.&#13;
The celebration of Hispanic Heritage&#13;
Month takes place September 15&#13;
through October 15th. There is a large&#13;
party in Main Place to introduce&#13;
everyone to the pride Latinos share in&#13;
their heritage. 'Flags are displayed&#13;
which represent at least one student&#13;
from that country. This celebration&#13;
brings in the community and helps educate&#13;
the people of UW-Parkside and the&#13;
rest of the public. Be sure to stop by the&#13;
party next year.&#13;
LOOKING FOR A&#13;
REWARDING CAREER?&#13;
The Froedtert Schoolof RadiologicTechnologyofferstralnin9 in real-world&#13;
skillsyou can use to embark on a satisfyingand rewarding healthcare career.&#13;
Located in Milwaukee, the program involves two years of study and awards&#13;
graduates a certificatein RadiologicTechnology.Degreecompletion programs&#13;
are availablewith other schoolsIn the Milwaukeearea.&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for next semester and individuals with&#13;
one or more years of collegeexperienceare invitedto apply.The application&#13;
deadline for next semesterisJanuary31st. Forapplicationinformation,call&#13;
(414)805-4998or visitwww.froedtert.com.&#13;
-,--- --&#13;
November 30, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Carrev Steals Christmas as Grinch By Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
Ron Howard's version of Dr. Suess'&#13;
classic tale "How The Grinch Stole&#13;
Christmas" takes place inside of a&#13;
snowflake, high atop of Mount&#13;
Crumpit, just north of Whoville. This is&#13;
where everyone's favorite Dr. Suess&#13;
character has come to live out his life as&#13;
the mean and nasty grinch. Jim Carrey&#13;
has masterfully morphed into a believable&#13;
live action character on the big&#13;
screen once a9am.&#13;
The movie s 11 sets were true to Dr.&#13;
Suess' artistic style from the original&#13;
book, and painstakingly intricate with&#13;
Christmas details, including over 9&#13;
football fields of 'snow,' 8,000 orna-&#13;
-nents, and almost 2,000 candy canes.&#13;
The story was surprisingly close to the&#13;
original with a few new twists to make&#13;
the story more contemporary for&#13;
roday's world.&#13;
For example, "hen the story opens&#13;
up, the Who's in Whoville really only&#13;
love the Christmas season because of&#13;
the materialistic qualities that it has to&#13;
offer. They have forgotten the true&#13;
meaning of Christmas and believe that&#13;
the holiday is only about having more&#13;
presents, lights, and decorations than&#13;
their neighbor. And everyone in&#13;
Whoville-the tall and the small-is&#13;
Foreign Film&#13;
review: The Eel By Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
Pro-rated season tickets are still&#13;
available for UW-Parkside's annual&#13;
Foreign Film series, and next week's&#13;
movie is another great reason to join&#13;
now. "The Eel" is a Japanese movie&#13;
about one person's awareness in life,&#13;
and a hard lesson about what is truly&#13;
important, The movie is scheduled to&#13;
run Dec. 7 and 8 at 7:30 p.m., Dec. 9 at&#13;
8 p.m., and Dec.lO at 2 p.m.&#13;
Takuro Yamashita, a white-collar&#13;
worker, receives a poison-pen letter&#13;
one day informing him that his wife is&#13;
having adulteress relationships when&#13;
he is not home. In a fit of rage, Takuro&#13;
kills his wife and is sent to prison for&#13;
eight years. After he is released he tries,&#13;
With much difficulty, to avoid further&#13;
trouble in his life.&#13;
The film, a Cannes festival winner,&#13;
makes a strange emotional progression&#13;
from rage to the celebration of life. It is&#13;
an action-packed film with murder and&#13;
mayhem, but it also has underlying&#13;
comical and surrealistic tones that&#13;
touch on a spectrum of emotions,&#13;
which will keep the .audience on the&#13;
edge of its seats.&#13;
Tickets for the series can be purchased&#13;
at anytime through the Ranger-&#13;
Card Office at 595-2655. Further film&#13;
. reviews can be found at uwp.edu web&#13;
sight under "Fun Stuff, Events and Calendars.&#13;
impatient because they want faster service&#13;
and instantaneous gratitude for&#13;
staged holiday spirit.&#13;
Everyone, that is, except little&#13;
Cindy Lou Who, played by newcomer&#13;
Taylor Momsen, who wonders what&#13;
has happened to the real meaning of&#13;
Christmas, has it changed, or has she?&#13;
This is also the premise for Faith Hill's&#13;
catchy new Christmas carol, which&#13;
was created for the movie. Cindy Lou&#13;
Who makes it her mission to befriend&#13;
the green grinch and include him in&#13;
this year's holiday festivities.&#13;
The Grinch refuses her kindness&#13;
vehemently at first, but then uses her&#13;
invitation to get even with the villagers,&#13;
his once childhood classmates,&#13;
for being cruel to him when he was a&#13;
kid. Wen, as the story goes he steals&#13;
their Christmas, but in this version he&#13;
does it after his childhood sweetheart&#13;
breaks his heart again.&#13;
The Grinch makes his dog Max&#13;
drag &lt;the sleigh up the mountain, and&#13;
feels triumphant after his night of pillaging&#13;
until he has an attack of compunction&#13;
when he sees that Christmas&#13;
still comes, even without the presents.&#13;
His heart grows three sizes bigger&#13;
when he discovers the true meaning of&#13;
low-cost ski trip&#13;
now available&#13;
So, what ARE you doing for semester&#13;
break? If your answer is: "Nothing,"&#13;
maybe a cheap Colorado ski trip&#13;
is what you need. The UW-Parkside&#13;
Student Center is offering what&#13;
promises to be a great a great start to&#13;
the new year ..&#13;
From Jan. 1 to Jan. 7, 2001,the package&#13;
includes six nights lodging and a 4-day&#13;
lift ticket. Got kids? They ski for free&#13;
with a parent who purchases a 5-day&#13;
lift ticket. Steamboat has more than 65&#13;
miles (65 miles!) of diverse trails for all&#13;
levels of skiing abili'X.&#13;
When you aren t on the slopes,&#13;
you'll enjoy The Lodge condominium,&#13;
features hot tubs, a heated pool, private&#13;
guest shuttle, private balconies,&#13;
and fireplaces.&#13;
For more information on this great&#13;
start the new year, call ext. 2345.&#13;
UW-Parkside 3rd&#13;
in trophy race&#13;
Thanks, in part, to conference titles&#13;
in men's soccer and women's cross&#13;
country, UW-Parkside is third in the&#13;
race for the Great Lakes ValleyConference&#13;
All-Sports Trophy; Ranger athletic&#13;
teams totaled 44 points during the fall,&#13;
trailing only Northern Kentucky (55&#13;
points) and number two Southern&#13;
Indiana (47 points).&#13;
The Grinch (Jim Carrey) conspires with his dog Max to steal the Who's favorite&#13;
holiday in "Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas."&#13;
Christmas, and with the help of little&#13;
Cindy Lou Who, he returns the Who's&#13;
Christmas to Whoville.&#13;
"T'hefilm shines with Ron Howard&#13;
quality, and Carrey delivers another&#13;
masterful performance as a caricature&#13;
brought to life. Overall; the movie is&#13;
pretty good, but the humor is a little&#13;
offbeat at times, a true Jim Carrey trademark&#13;
"How The Grinch Stole Christmas"&#13;
is sure to become a seasonal classic like&#13;
Bill Murray's offbeat comedy&#13;
"Scrooged."&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater brings IIA&#13;
Christmas Carol" to life through December 24&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory fheater&#13;
welcomes "A Christmas Carol," the&#13;
Charles Dickens classic, to the stage at&#13;
the Pabst Theater for the 25th consecu-'&#13;
tive year. This timeless classic opened&#13;
Nov, 25 and closes Dec. 24.&#13;
The Milwaukee Rer,ertory Theater's&#13;
adaptation of 'A Christmas&#13;
Carol" has received rave reviews for&#13;
its magnificent costumes and sets, traditional&#13;
Christmas carols, and unforgettable&#13;
characters. The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal Sentinel called the adaptation&#13;
"a glorious blend of morality tale and&#13;
Christmas musical. 'A Christmas&#13;
Carol' of which Charles Dickens&#13;
would be proud."&#13;
The theater is offering family performances&#13;
of the play Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings at 6 p.m. The&#13;
performances run on Nov. 28 &amp; 29 and&#13;
on Dec. 5, 6,12,13,19 &amp; 20.&#13;
In addition, the Milwaukee Journal&#13;
Sentinel will once again present the&#13;
"Milwaukee Holiday Lights Festival"&#13;
prior to the performance. Three&#13;
downtown parks-Pere Marquette&#13;
Park, Zeidler Union Square, and&#13;
'Cathedral Square Park-will be decorated&#13;
with fun and friendly animated&#13;
characters to celebrate the Christmas&#13;
season. The Festival is free and open&#13;
to the public. It runs through to Jan. 7,&#13;
200l.&#13;
Tickets to "A Christmas Carol"&#13;
range in price from $10 to $40.&#13;
Reduced rates and specials are available&#13;
to students, seniors, and children.&#13;
For more information, or to&#13;
order tickets by credit card, call (414)&#13;
258-5140.&#13;
Performance&#13;
Schedule&#13;
Saturday, 11/25, 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday,11/26, 2:00/7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, 11/28,6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, 11/29, 6 p.m.&#13;
Thursday,11/30, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 12/1, 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, 1212, 4/8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday,1213, 217:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, 12/5, 6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, 1216,6 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, 1217,7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 1218, 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, 1219, 4/8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, 12/10, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, 12/12, 6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, 12/13, 1:30/6 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, 12114, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 12/15, 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, 12116, 4/8:30 p.rn.&#13;
Sunday, 12117,2/7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, 12119, 6 p.rn.&#13;
Wednesday, 12120,6 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, 12121, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 12122, 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, 12123, 4/8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, 12/24, noon&#13;
d&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ins d e •1&#13;
3 "Winterim" classes offered&#13;
Wondering what to do over holiday break?&#13;
How about taking a credit or two?&#13;
4 Latino enrollment rises&#13;
Hispanic students' are coming to UW-Parkside in&#13;
greater numbers.&#13;
5 Entertainment&#13;
Who let the Gooch out? Lisa Whitcomb reviews&#13;
the Christmas blockbuster.&#13;
1 Sports&#13;
New major at UW-Parkside incorporates sports&#13;
and fitness management.&#13;
10 Sports Cont'd&#13;
Women's and men's basketball results, cross&#13;
country team 15th at Nationals.&#13;
Co Editors&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Photography Director&#13;
Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Designers&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place&#13;
Business ManagerlBusiness Team&#13;
Dan White&#13;
Christine Agaiby&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Reporters: Dave Buchanan&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Lynn Garcia&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax 262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout the semester by students of the University of WISCOnSin-Parkside, who are&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger o~ce (WYLL D-139C) . Letters must be ~ and include the author's name and phone number. Letters must&#13;
be free from misleading or libelous content. Letters that faif to comply will not be published. For publication purposes, author's&#13;
name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to edit allletters.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center&#13;
hours:&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Fnday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Wednesday:&#13;
7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
SAC Phone: (262) 595-2506&#13;
UW-Parkside pool hours:&#13;
Thursday: 11a.m. to 3 p.m. &amp; 4 to 8p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 to 9a.m. &amp; lla.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6p.m.&#13;
Monday: 7 to 9a.m., 11a.m. to&#13;
12:30p.m., 2 to 3p.m. and 4 to 8p.m.&#13;
Tuesday:11a.m. to 3p.m.&amp; 4 - 6:30p.m.&#13;
Wednesday: 7 to 9a.m., 11a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m., 2 to 3p.m. and 4 to 8p.m.&#13;
Pool Line: (262) 595-2780.&#13;
November 30, 2000&#13;
at t o Things 2 Do @ The U/Nov. 30, 2000&#13;
Continuing Events . . .. . ,&#13;
• Diverse Visual VOices art exhibition and sale, benefits UW-Parkslde art&#13;
scholarships, through Dec. 14, Communication Arts Building, gallery hours:&#13;
Mon.fThur. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Tue.i Wed. 11 a.m.-8 p.m.&#13;
Daily Events&#13;
November 30 ,. . '"&#13;
• Talks in Philosophy/Student DISCUSSion:"What's Wrong With EVil? 4 p.m.,&#13;
Union 104-1 06, free.&#13;
• Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: "Making the Medieval Illuminated&#13;
Manuscript," with Lawrence University Professor Michael Orr, Overlook Lounge,&#13;
second floor of the UW-Parkside library, 7 p.m., free, sponsored by the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council, .&#13;
• Film: "Philadelphia," Denzel Washington, Tom Hanks (Oscar winning performance),&#13;
7 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, free w/free popcorn, presented by Peer&#13;
Health Educators.&#13;
December 1&#13;
• InfoBreaks: CustomiZing Your Desktop, Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie&#13;
01500, 10 a.m., free.&#13;
• Race, Class, and Gender Study Group: "Waiting" by Jin Ha, Molinaro 111,3:30&#13;
to 5 p.m. For more information, call Linda Madsen at (262) 595-2162.&#13;
December 1 &amp; 2&#13;
• Plays at Parks ide "Lydee Breeze" by John Guare, 7:30 p.m., Wegner Studio&#13;
Theatre, Communication Arts Building, tickets: $10 adults; $7 students/ seniors.&#13;
December 2&#13;
• UW-Parkside Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair, 2, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., main concourse&#13;
and Main Place.&#13;
• Cosmic Bowling, The Den, UW-Parkside Student Union, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
December 3&#13;
• University of Wisconsin-Parkside Choirs, 3:30 p.m., Communication Arts Theatre;&#13;
tickets: $5 adults, $3 students. .&#13;
December 4&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious Issues: "Being a Roman Catholic in the 21st Century,"&#13;
with UW-Parkside Professor Laura Gellott and Vince Kostos of SI. Catherine's&#13;
High School, Union 104, noon, and with Father David Coffey, Marquette&#13;
University, Greenquist 101 at 7 p.m. Both programs are free.&#13;
December 4 to 8&#13;
• Winter Carnival, various campus locations.&#13;
December 5'&#13;
• InfoBreaks: Introduction to Front Page, Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie&#13;
01500, 2:15 p.m., free.&#13;
• Men's basketball vs. Winona State, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., ., SAC, UW-Parkside&#13;
students free, adults $5; high school students/kids 14 &amp; under $1.&#13;
December 6&#13;
Peer Health Educators' Depression Screening, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., alcove by the&#13;
Womyn's Center, free.&#13;
• Noon Concert: UW-Parkside Percussion Ensemble, directed by Michael&#13;
Lorenz, noon, Communication Arts-D118, free&#13;
• Soup &amp; Substance: "So Why Shouidn't I Have The Blues?" w/Dr. Ed Conrad,&#13;
Professor of Psychology, noon, Union 104-106, free, with free soup and bread,&#13;
sponsor: Student Health &amp; Counseling.&#13;
December 7&#13;
• Plays at Parkside "Lydee Breeze," 10 a.m., Wegner Studio Theatre, Communication&#13;
Arts Building, tickets: $10 adults: $7 students/seniors.&#13;
• Comic Buzz Sutherland, 8 p.m., Union Square, free., sponsored by the PAB.&#13;
December 7 to 9&#13;
• Plays at Parkside "Lydee Breeze," 7:30 p.m., Wegner Studio Theatre, Communication&#13;
Arts BUilding, tickets: $10 adults; $7 students/seniors.&#13;
December 7 to 10&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Eel," Japan, subtitled, Dec. 7-10, shown Thursday/Friday at&#13;
7:30 p.m., Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m., Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Wellness Center Fall Hours:&#13;
Monday and Wednesday: 7 to&#13;
8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to ~ p.m.&#13;
Tuesday andThursday: 8 to 9:30 a.m.&#13;
and 11 a.m, to 8 p.m. ,&#13;
Friday: 7 to 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to&#13;
5:00p.m. .&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Weight Room Hours:&#13;
Monday and Wednesday: 7 a.m. to&#13;
1 p.m., 2:40 to 3:30 p.m., 6 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday: 7 a.m. to&#13;
3:30 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m .:&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m, to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
-Novernber30,2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parks ide Page 7&#13;
COULD THIS BE YOU OR SOMEONE&#13;
YOU KNOWiI&#13;
By:Valerie Mendralla, Peer Health Educator&#13;
Question 1: What has 75 percent&#13;
of women and 54 percent of men&#13;
unhappy?&#13;
Question 2: What disease do 15&#13;
million Americans suffer from every&#13;
year?&#13;
Need a hint?&#13;
Question 1is a growing preoccupation&#13;
of today's society that is&#13;
heavily influenced by Hollywood&#13;
and the media. Question 2 is something&#13;
most people don't classify as a&#13;
disease, rather a temporary state of&#13;
mind.&#13;
Give up?&#13;
The answer to question 1 is body&#13;
image. Our society today is constantly&#13;
being bombarded with&#13;
images of a very thin body typeespecially&#13;
women. Unfortunately,&#13;
not only is it a growin(l obsession&#13;
for women, it's also starting to affect&#13;
men and children as well.&#13;
The answer to Question 2 is&#13;
depression. Often misinterpreted as&#13;
a phase, or state of mind, clinical&#13;
depression is more than a temporary&#13;
"blue" mood or period of grief&#13;
after a loss. It is a medical illness&#13;
characterized by a combination of&#13;
symptoms and signs.&#13;
Although depression can strike at any&#13;
age, it is most common among persons 25-&#13;
44 years old. However, the incidence of&#13;
depression in teens and young adults&#13;
has been increasing in recent years.&#13;
The Peer Health Educators will&#13;
have an information table about&#13;
Depression Awareness Monday, Dec. 4&#13;
through Wednesday, Dec. 6, at the&#13;
alcove next to the Womyn's Center.&#13;
The Student Health and Counseling&#13;
Center will sponsor another sessions&#13;
Dec. 6. This includes a Soup &amp; Substance&#13;
program at noon in Union 104-106,&#13;
with Dr. Edward Conrad, professor of&#13;
fsychology, titled: "So Why Shouldn't&#13;
Have the Blues?"&#13;
Counselors from the Student&#13;
Health &amp; Counseling Center will be on&#13;
hand throughout the day to provi~e&#13;
Depression Screerung. Counselors will&#13;
assess the patient and give a referral, if&#13;
needed. The screening will be confidential&#13;
and private. The location of&#13;
the screenings is still to be decided.&#13;
Call the Student Health and Counseling&#13;
Center at ext. 2366, or stop by&#13;
the Peer Health Educator Table, for&#13;
more information about the location or&#13;
other questions about the Depression&#13;
Screening.&#13;
Havward leads Russia, Poland tour&#13;
UW-Parkside History Professor&#13;
Oliver Hayward invites students to&#13;
get the ultimate experience of Russia&#13;
and Poland. Hayward, a veteran&#13;
traveler to eastern Europe, will&#13;
teach a course on the two countries&#13;
during spring semester and then&#13;
lead a tour there in early 2001.&#13;
The class meets Thursdays from&#13;
5:30 to 8:15 p.m., and can be taken&#13;
as either a history or international&#13;
studies course. The tour runs from&#13;
March 11to 25, 2001 (spring break is&#13;
March 12 to 16).&#13;
Included in the tour is a visit to&#13;
St Petersburg featuring trips to&#13;
Peter and Paul Fortress, St. Isaac's&#13;
Cathedral, the Russian Museum,&#13;
and a stop to admire the architecture&#13;
and art of The Hermitage.&#13;
Participants will take an&#13;
overnight train trip to Moscow,&#13;
which Hayward calls a very sfecial&#13;
experience in itself. The tour wil then&#13;
cover Moscow. From the Kremlin to&#13;
the spectacular Cathedral of the Resurrection,&#13;
to the 20th Century art collection&#13;
at the Tretiakov, tour members will&#13;
experience Russia's ca)'ital first-hand.&#13;
In Poland, Warsaw s Old Town and&#13;
Royal Castle are among the highlights&#13;
as is a trip to the Warsaw Ghetto.&#13;
While in Krakow, participants will&#13;
experience Old Market Square, St.&#13;
Mary's Tower, and the magnificent&#13;
castle on Wawell Hill. The tour concludes&#13;
with a powerfully moving&#13;
excursion to the former Auschwitz-&#13;
Birkenau concentration camp.&#13;
For more information, call Professor&#13;
Hayward at ext. 2467, stop by his office&#13;
at Molinaro 123, or e-mail&#13;
hayward@Uwp.edu for details and an&#13;
application form.&#13;
Soltware at a salt price&#13;
Office 2001 &amp; FrontPage for&#13;
Macintosh Bundle is now available&#13;
to UW-Parkside students for just&#13;
$25through the WISCOnsinIntegrated&#13;
Software Catalog (WISC). Shipping&#13;
is included'in the price.&#13;
Office 2001 for Mac includes new&#13;
versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint,&#13;
and a new e-mail and information&#13;
manager called Entourage.&#13;
Each application features an elegant&#13;
new interface with a modern&#13;
Mac look, and seamless compatibility.&#13;
For complete product information&#13;
see http://www.wisc.edu/wisc&#13;
Office 2001 is the latest arrival among&#13;
ten heavily discounted products&#13;
available to students at UW System&#13;
and Wisconsin Technical College&#13;
campuses.&#13;
New major: spon &amp; Fitness Mgml. By Zach Robertson&#13;
Have you ever thought of working&#13;
for a professional sports organization&#13;
or owning your own fitness center? If&#13;
your answer is "yes," then UW-Parkside&#13;
has the major you need. This fall&#13;
marks the beginning of the new Sport&#13;
and Fitness Management major at&#13;
UW-Parkside. After four years of planning&#13;
and working out the necessary&#13;
detalls through the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System, students can now&#13;
declare Sport and Fitness Management&#13;
as their major.&#13;
Students in this program will be&#13;
able to choose between two different&#13;
options within the major: the sports&#13;
option and the fitness option.&#13;
The sports option is designed for&#13;
students who are interested in careers&#13;
such as sports marketing, sports information,&#13;
and sports law. The fitness&#13;
option is science-based but also has an&#13;
application background. This option&#13;
would be for someone interested in&#13;
careers such as fitness assessment or&#13;
fitness management programs.&#13;
"One of the big pluses of this major&#13;
is that it takes a multidisciplinary&#13;
approach" says department chairperson&#13;
Dr. Penny Lyter. "Students will take&#13;
courses in business, accounting,&#13;
human resources, management, as&#13;
well as sport and fitness classes."&#13;
Sport and Fitness Management is&#13;
becoming a popular field across the&#13;
country. Sport management is a newer&#13;
major, while fitness management has&#13;
been around for a while. However,&#13;
UW-Parkside handles the fitness&#13;
option differently than other schools.&#13;
"We attach the management side to&#13;
the fitness option so that the student&#13;
will get a business background. That&#13;
way he or she won't be coming out just&#13;
as a exercise physiologist, but someone&#13;
who can manage and operate their&#13;
own business" said Dr. Lyter.&#13;
'With the growing process that is&#13;
currently underway in the physical&#13;
education department it is hoping to&#13;
hire a new faculty member to help&#13;
with the program. The department IS&#13;
still offering certificates in wellness,&#13;
coaching, and sports management.&#13;
"We want to make sure we are covering&#13;
everything the students need in&#13;
order to come out of here with an adequate&#13;
experience," said Dr. Lyter.&#13;
With the new Student Activities&#13;
Center and the new major, the Physical&#13;
Education Department is looking forward&#13;
to its future. "We are very excited&#13;
about the new major, especially&#13;
with the new facility. This is a real&#13;
growing time for our whole department"&#13;
said Dr. Lyter.&#13;
sta Rican Naturalllistory- 2 credits - Jan. 3-15&#13;
Explore the biologic and geologic diversity of Costa Rica during a 12-day trip.&#13;
Designed for geology, biology and geography students, participants of this hands-on&#13;
class will study volcanic activity, advances in alternative geothermal energy, observe&#13;
wildlife and tropical rainforests and overnight at biologic stations. Prerequisites: BIOS&#13;
101 6- 102 fir biology studmts; GEOL 102 fir geology stutknts.&#13;
Polymer Chemistry - 1 credit - Dee. 28 - Jan. 12, 6 - 8:30 pm -&#13;
GRNQ0119&#13;
This class will explore some of the contemporary topics on polymer chemistry&#13;
foundation and different apnlicariens, including industrial applications. Prerequisites:&#13;
Chemistry 0321 6- 0322.&#13;
Book: Past, Present &amp;: Future - 1 credit - Jan. 8 -12, 9 am - 3 pm -&#13;
CART 0141&#13;
Students will explore the history of the book by examining rare book collections and&#13;
visiting bookstores and book-related industries in the Chicago-Milwaukee-Radne-&#13;
Kenosha areas. Prerequisites: None.&#13;
Urban Environmental Contamination - 2 credits - Jan. 2-11,&#13;
12 - 4030 pm - GRNQ 0119&#13;
In this "real world" skills class, instructors will provide background science on&#13;
mobility and fine ofPb in terrestrial systems. Students will learn sampling methods.&#13;
appropriate rechniques and instrumentation used for analysis ofPb in soils and&#13;
plants, and gain experience in data analysis and interpretation, report preparation and&#13;
presentation. Prerequisites: Chemistry 101.&#13;
Reengincering Financial PerformanceMeas~menl-l crediec-&#13;
Jan. 2-19&#13;
Traditional accounting practices may not actually reflect the true value of&#13;
organizations undergoing reengineenng. This Internet class, offered from UW-Eau&#13;
Claire, investigates corporate performance using the balanced scorecard approach.&#13;
MBA admission or tkpamnent commt. (Registration deadline is December 8.)&#13;
tlr University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Ignorance and intolerance present at UW-Parkside By Sarah Olsen '&#13;
UW-Parkside has become the site of&#13;
an overt hate crime against a minority&#13;
group. This minority group consists of&#13;
your friends, classmates, family members,&#13;
and loved ones-they are people&#13;
who are gay, lesbian, and bisexual.&#13;
Carole Vopat, professor of English&#13;
and Women's Studies, will be offering&#13;
a course in the spring semester titled&#13;
"Gay and Lesbian Literature." To&#13;
increase enrollment and awareness for&#13;
the course, Vopat posted signs in the&#13;
hallway announcmg the class, the&#13;
dates, and the time. The posters were&#13;
defaced and tom down from the walls.&#13;
Why? The posters contained pictures,&#13;
obtained from a Benetton ad, that show&#13;
a man and woman kissing, a man kissing&#13;
another man, and a woman kissing&#13;
another woman.&#13;
"It was painful to see the posters&#13;
defaced" says Vopat "[The posters] are&#13;
very threatening [to people]. Which&#13;
makes the need for this course even&#13;
stronger. "&#13;
When the posters were Originally&#13;
defaced, Vopat circled a quote on the&#13;
poster that said "intolerance, ignorance"&#13;
and drew an arrow to the&#13;
defaced area. Someone then tore down&#13;
the posters and threw them on the floor.&#13;
Vopat found the posters and now has&#13;
them proudly on display for all students&#13;
and faculty to see the extent these&#13;
people have gone to in displaying their&#13;
intolerance,&#13;
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information 18a"tall aoo 233-3357.&#13;
Chancellor Keating addressed the&#13;
defacement of the posters at the Faculty&#13;
Senate meeting saying, he, "Will not&#13;
tolerate infringement of free expression&#13;
on this campus and will invoke the&#13;
strongest possible sanctions against&#13;
any perpetrator that can be identified."&#13;
He asked that anyone possessing information&#13;
as to the identity of the perpetrators&#13;
contact him immediately.&#13;
"Another problem is that diversity&#13;
on this campus doesn't include sexual&#13;
orientation, so, people aren't required&#13;
to familiarize tliernselves with people&#13;
who are different in terms of sexual orientation"&#13;
says Vopat.&#13;
"Gay and Lesbian Literature: English&#13;
269/464," fulfills the Breadth of&#13;
Knowled~e requirement and has no&#13;
prerequisite, The course is organized&#13;
chronologically, beginning with the late&#13;
nineteenth century, "When homosexuality&#13;
became a noun instead of an&#13;
adjective" says Vopat. "Always before&#13;
[homosexuality] referred to acts, certain&#13;
acts were homosexual acts, rather&#13;
than people."&#13;
The literature that will be read and&#13;
discussed ranges from such authors as&#13;
Oscar Wilde and E.M. Forster to James&#13;
Baldwin and' Paul Monette.&#13;
"It's a course in literature" says Vopat.&#13;
"It's a course in how people write and&#13;
think about homosexuality and lesbianism&#13;
- the ideas that are there and&#13;
the attitudes of the writers."&#13;
Vopat, who has won several awards&#13;
for her teaching, has a deep interest in&#13;
minority literature, and gay and lesbian&#13;
literature. "The whole idea of gender&#13;
is fascinating. It's very taboo" she&#13;
said.&#13;
Gay and Lesbian Literature will be&#13;
offered in spring semester 2001 and&#13;
takes place Mondays and Wednesdays&#13;
from 2 - 3:15 p.m. Students who are&#13;
interested in this course, and those who&#13;
have thought to take it another semester,&#13;
are encouraged to apply for the&#13;
spring semester. lf the enrollment is&#13;
not high enough, the course will be&#13;
cancelled, possibly never to be revived&#13;
again.&#13;
Vopat sees this 'course as an opportunity&#13;
to address the issue of the lack of&#13;
attention to sexual orientation.&#13;
. "It's difficult unless everyone gets&#13;
mvolved and sees it as a moral issue, an&#13;
education issue" she says.&#13;
In response to. the people who&#13;
defaced the posters, Vopat has copied a&#13;
whole new batch of posters and should&#13;
.be considered armed and dangerous.&#13;
For the benefit of those people, she simply&#13;
says, "Take my class."-&#13;
November 30, 2000&#13;
Baha'i faith form;&#13;
UWPc1ub&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
Did you know tha t there are onlysir&#13;
Baha'i temples in the world, one on&#13;
each continent, and lllinois is homelD&#13;
the only temple on the North American&#13;
continent? The Baha'i Club, OW-Park.&#13;
side's branch of the Baha'i faith, Was&#13;
formed by two UW-Parkside studen~,&#13;
Darwin Stetzer and Kelly Molini.&#13;
Stetzer and Molini founded the club&#13;
"For the promotion of the principl~&#13;
and the teaching of the Baha'i faith"&#13;
said Stetzer, a sophomore at UWP. The&#13;
Baha'i Club was formed during the&#13;
spring 2000 semester.&#13;
The Baha'i faith consists of people&#13;
who formerly had different and conflicting&#13;
religious backgrounds-Bud.&#13;
dhists, Jews, Muslims, Protestants,&#13;
Catholics, etc. The Baha'i faith provrded&#13;
these people with a basis of unity&#13;
that makes the competition of sects and&#13;
denominations seem unimportant to&#13;
them.&#13;
The Baha'i faith consists of seven&#13;
basic principles , emphasized by&#13;
Baha'u'llah (a prophet), to help bind&#13;
people together in a united world:&#13;
-Men must seek for truth in spite of custom,&#13;
prejudice, and tradition.&#13;
-Men and women must have equal&#13;
opportunities, rights, and privileges.&#13;
-The nations must choose an international&#13;
language to be used along with&#13;
the mother tongue.&#13;
-All children must receive a basic education.&#13;
-Men must make a systematic effort to&#13;
wipe out all those orejudices ...nicb&#13;
divide people.&#13;
-Men must recognize that religion&#13;
should go hand-in-hand with science.&#13;
-Men must work to abolish extreme&#13;
wealth and extreme poverty. .&#13;
The Baha'i faith originated in Persia,&#13;
.now Iran, in the year 1844. The word&#13;
"Baha'i" comes from the name of the&#13;
founder of the faith-"Baha'u'llah"-&#13;
meaning the Glory of God. Baha'i simply&#13;
means" a follower of Baha'u'llah."&#13;
The year the Baha'i faith was&#13;
formed, a young man who called ~-&#13;
self "the Bab," meaning "the Gate ill&#13;
Arabic, began to teach that God would&#13;
soon "make manifest" a world teacher&#13;
to unite men and women and usher in&#13;
an age of peace. The Bab was martyred&#13;
for ills cause by the Persian govemment&#13;
and the Islamic clergy. IiI 1863,&#13;
Baha'u'llah announced to the remaining&#13;
followers of the Bab that he was the&#13;
chosen "Manifestation of God" for this&#13;
age; He called upon people to unite,&#13;
saymg that only in one common faith&#13;
and one order could the world find an&#13;
enduring peace.&#13;
The Baha'i club meets every&#13;
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Molinaro 142.&#13;
The club invites all persons interested&#13;
in learning more about the Babah'i faith&#13;
to join them.&#13;
"Baha'is know from increasing experience&#13;
that this faith can save men and&#13;
women from the hatreds, the pe~-&#13;
simism, the corruption, and the matenalism&#13;
of our age" (taken from the&#13;
"Baha'i Publishing Trust").&#13;
SQ e&#13;
November 30, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wiseonsin-Parkside Page 9&#13;
And still get to class on time.&#13;
Take classes online.&#13;
We"e talkingfully-transferable UW&#13;
freshman/sophomore credits taught totally&#13;
over the Internet by UW professors. So you&#13;
can study when you want, where you want.&#13;
Fulfill requirements. Earn some extra credits.&#13;
Make up a class. Graduate on time ..&#13;
For more information or to register. visit&#13;
www.uwcolleges.com&#13;
or give us a call tollfree at 1·888-INFO-UWC&#13;
'Fulfills ethnic studies reqllirement.&#13;
Spring 2001 Online Courses&#13;
ART 181: Ancient &amp; Medieval Art (3 cr.)&#13;
COM 203:News &amp; lrrtormational Writir1g (3 cr.)&#13;
ENG 101: Composition I (3 cr.)&#13;
ENG 102: Compootionll (3 cr.)&#13;
ENG 210: Business Communication (3 cr.)&#13;
ENG 278: Multicultural Literature in America (3 cr)'&#13;
HIS 256: History &amp; Culture of the Sciences (3 cr.)&#13;
MAT 110: College Algebra (3 cr.)&#13;
MAT 271: Ordinary Differ. Equatioos (3 cr.)&#13;
MLG 100:lntm to Meteorology (4 cr.)&#13;
MUS 273:Jazz History &amp; Appreciation (3 CI".)"&#13;
POL 275: International Politics (3 cr.)&#13;
PSY 210: Statistical Methods in Psychology {3 cr.)&#13;
SOC 250: People. Organizations. Society (3 cr.)&#13;
UN I VE RS ITY 1mwIse ON SIN&#13;
COLLEGES&#13;
Sports Briel&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Wrestlers pin 5&#13;
Concordia titles&#13;
The University of WlSConsin-Parkside&#13;
wrestling team traveled to Concordia&#13;
College in mid-November to&#13;
open the season at the appropriately&#13;
named Concordia Open. Competing&#13;
against 17 other colleges,&#13;
coach Jim Koch's 11 wrestlers took&#13;
home five individual championships.&#13;
The title wirmers were:&#13;
• Craig Klawitter, 141 pounds;&#13;
• Ken Schmidt, 149 pounds;&#13;
• Andy Mueller, 165 pounds;&#13;
• Rory Herring, 197 pounds; and&#13;
• Ryan Deprey, 285 pounds.&#13;
Ranger wrestlers were a combined&#13;
36-11for the tournament.&#13;
Want to get a first-hand look at&#13;
the 2000-2001 UW-Parkside&#13;
wrestling team? You can get a serious&#13;
eyeful this weekend.&#13;
The Rangers host UW-LaCrosse&#13;
at the Sports and Activity Center&#13;
Friday night at 6 p.m. 'then the&#13;
annual Wisconsin Open will be held&#13;
at the SAC all day Saturday, Dec. 2.&#13;
Major" cont'd from page 1 ,&#13;
Over the last five years, a trend has&#13;
been established as to which majors&#13;
are the most popular at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Business is the number one major over&#13;
the last five years, followedby Sociology,&#13;
Biology, English, Communications,&#13;
and Psychology. There are also greater&#13;
numbers of women in these majors&#13;
than men.&#13;
According to the Chronicle of Higher&#13;
Education, a trend following national&#13;
numbers shows that women accounted&#13;
for 82 percent of the increase in&#13;
emollment from 1991 to 1992. In the&#13;
fall of 1992, they represented 55 percent&#13;
of all students.&#13;
The numbers can also be broken&#13;
down over the last five years by race.&#13;
Among African American students at&#13;
UW-Parkside, the Business major is&#13;
first followed by Sociology,Communications,&#13;
Criminal Justice, and English.&#13;
For Asian students, Business is also&#13;
first, followed by Biology, Computer&#13;
Science, Sociology, and English.&#13;
Among Hispanic students, Business&#13;
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Ensuring the future&#13;
for those who shape it.w&#13;
was first, followed by Spanish, Biology,&#13;
Criminal Justice, and History. Business&#13;
was also first among Native&#13;
American students, followedby Biology,&#13;
Computer Science, Sociology, and&#13;
English. Among students at UW-Parkside,&#13;
Business, English, Biology,Communication,&#13;
and Sociology were the&#13;
top five majors.&#13;
What makes a student decide on&#13;
these majors? According to the different&#13;
departments, there are many reasons&#13;
for this. Some departments find&#13;
that students major in a particular area&#13;
because it interests them.&#13;
"It's the curriculum that attracts&#13;
them, I think", said English Department&#13;
Chair Walter Graffin. "They&#13;
understand it, and are good at it, so&#13;
the~ become an English major."&#13;
'Most of the time we get our majors&#13;
because they find the material really&#13;
interesting':, said Sociology/ Anthropology&#13;
department Chair -Mary Kay&#13;
Schleiter.&#13;
"We really have two different&#13;
www.tiaa-creLorg&#13;
groups," said Psychology departinent&#13;
Chair Donald Walter. "The first group&#13;
is the 'helpers,' and the second group IS&#13;
the more scientific. The helpers want to&#13;
help people, while the scientific group&#13;
has a more academic interest in the&#13;
brain,"&#13;
Some students even pick their major&#13;
for more objective reasons.&#13;
"I think for most students, they&#13;
view it as being very practical," ~aid&#13;
Communication department Chair&#13;
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz. "Their going to&#13;
need communication skills no matter&#13;
what kind of job they are going to end&#13;
up in."&#13;
liThe biology major is very strong",&#13;
said Biology department Chair&#13;
Edward Wallen. "We know this&#13;
because of the success in placement in&#13;
terms of medical school, graduate&#13;
school, and the work force."&#13;
Part 2 of this series will appear in&#13;
next week's issue of The Ranger.&#13;
Sheree Homer contributed to this article.&#13;
·&#13;
Page 10 'TheRanger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Men 1-1 to start basketball season&#13;
Conference pia, begins in Indianapolis&#13;
Riddle: What does the "0" in&#13;
Oshkosh stand for?&#13;
Answer: Ouch!&#13;
That was the painfully unfunny joke&#13;
gomg around the Sports and Activity&#13;
Center following a painfully unfunny&#13;
78 to 57 season opening loss to UWOshkosh&#13;
on Nov. 17. The wound&#13;
healed somewhere four days laterwhen&#13;
the Rangerbeat BeloitCollege 71 to 64 in&#13;
the home opener.&#13;
Against UW-0shkosh, the Rangers&#13;
came out ice cold missing their first 10&#13;
shots. en route to frosty 31 percent&#13;
shooting night. The team's inability to&#13;
find the hoop and foul trouble-lots of&#13;
foul trouble-were the team's demise&#13;
on that awful Friday night.&#13;
Back home the following Tuesday&#13;
evening, the Rangers combined an&#13;
aggressive defense (25 Beloit College&#13;
turnovers) with flashes of offensive&#13;
brilliance in beating the Buccaneers.&#13;
Quincey Moman led the attack with 18&#13;
points and 10 rebounds while Brian&#13;
Coffman chipped in 15 points.&#13;
Shooting 39 percent from the floor,&#13;
UW-Parkside carried a five-point into&#13;
halftime thanks to a buzzer beating basket&#13;
by Moman who grabbed an offensive&#13;
rebound, switched hands in midair&#13;
and gently laid the ball into the&#13;
cylinder. The lead swelled to 16 points&#13;
(56-40) midway through the second&#13;
half. However, Beloit wouldn't go&#13;
away.&#13;
The Buccaneers pulled to within six&#13;
points at 66-60late in the second period&#13;
but couldn't get the ball inside during&#13;
the last three minutes of the game. The&#13;
Rangers then converted their free&#13;
throws and took home their first "W" of&#13;
the year.&#13;
Beloit was led by seemingly fearless&#13;
(and tiny) guard Jonathan Allen who&#13;
had 18, many of them from charging&#13;
into the paint. Henry Grant, who lit the&#13;
Rangers up at Beloit last year, was held&#13;
to 11points.&#13;
UW-Parkside opened Great Lake&#13;
Valley Conference play against Indianapolis&#13;
Thursday and- Saturday&#13;
against Northern Kentucky. All games&#13;
can be heard live on WLIP 1050AM.&#13;
Coffee Cart&#13;
Hours: 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
5 p.m. - 7:15 p.m.&#13;
&lt;;... New Items:&#13;
-Real Coffee&#13;
-Cold Sandwiches&#13;
-Salads&#13;
-Bottled Beverages&#13;
Old Favorites:&#13;
-Flavored-Coffee&#13;
-Muffins, Cookies&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Student Center&#13;
Women gO to splitsville twice&#13;
Women split lournamenlS&#13;
If the rest of the UW-Parkside&#13;
women's 2000-2001 basketball season&#13;
is like the first four games, Joy Rodefer&#13;
will be very happy. The senior forward&#13;
was named to two all-tournament&#13;
teams in as many weeks, helping the&#13;
Lady Rangers to win two of their first&#13;
four games.&#13;
On Friday and Saturday, Nov. 17&#13;
and 18, the women earned a split at the&#13;
Jefferson Classic hosted by Winona&#13;
State University in _Minnesota. The&#13;
Rangers fell to Winona, 75-56, in the&#13;
opener, then came back to defeat Hamline&#13;
University 76-48in the consolation&#13;
game.&#13;
Frid~y night, the Warriors built a 39-&#13;
21-halftime lead to key the wm. Deruta&#13;
Sublett led the Rangers with 17 points,&#13;
Rodefer had 14. UW-Parkside was out&#13;
rebounded 52 to 31. Winona State got&#13;
18 points from starting forward Nicole&#13;
Reisner and 18 from Jenny Johnson off&#13;
the bench. -&#13;
The Lady Rangers turned the tables&#13;
Saturday, out-scoring Hamline 43 to 18&#13;
in the second half for a 28 point victory.&#13;
Rodefer had 19 points, Sublett 14 with&#13;
Jamie Nebel and Tiesha Campbell&#13;
pouring in 11and 10 each. Rodefer was&#13;
named to the all-tournament team.&#13;
History repeated itself last Friday&#13;
and Saturday: the Rangers split two&#13;
games and Rodefer was all tournament.&#13;
This time, however, UW-Parkside&#13;
won Friday night and played for&#13;
the tournament title on Saturday.&#13;
The Lady Rangers beat WebberCollege&#13;
in the opener in St. Petersburg, Fla., 62-&#13;
58, Friday afternoon. Rodefer's 19 led&#13;
the attack with Sublett adding 11&#13;
points, and Campbell chipping in 10.&#13;
In the championship game, host&#13;
Eckerd College Knocked off UWP, 68-&#13;
57. Rodefer contributed a double-double,&#13;
scoring 13 points and grabbing 11&#13;
boards. Erin Crank came off the bench&#13;
to score 12 points.&#13;
The Lady Rangers opened conference&#13;
play at Inclianapolis.&#13;
U~der the watchful eye of station manager Adam Miller, standing, Nick Honeck,&#13;
Mike Hosandich, and Jennifer Bonnett broadcast the UW-Parkside women's&#13;
basketball game on WIPZ, 101.7 FM .&#13;
AI NCAANalionals_&#13;
UWPwomen in top 20&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team ended another outstanding&#13;
season .with a go~d showing at the&#13;
NCAA DIVISIOnII national meet in California,&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers had 375&#13;
team points, good enough for 15th&#13;
place. Western State of Colorado took&#13;
the title with 35, followed by North&#13;
Dakota, 131.&#13;
. As she has all season, Amber Anto-&#13;
~ap~ced ~oach Mike DeWitt's team by&#13;
finishing in 12th place with _a time of&#13;
22:14. Other Ranger runners, their&#13;
places and times were: Erin Enright,&#13;
83rd, 23:56;Linda Muffler, 100th, 24:14;&#13;
[anna Weeden, 105th, 24:20; Roxann&#13;
Ziano, BOth, 25:07; Kristen Ziarek,&#13;
139th, 25:28;and Kristy Reineck, 142nd,&#13;
25:30.A total of 180 participated.&#13;
While coach DeWitt was leading his&#13;
team on the left coast, he was being&#13;
inducted into National Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame&#13;
during a ceremony here at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Congratulations to Mike and his&#13;
runners for another great year!&#13;
p&#13;
Novernber30,2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 11&#13;
EGU:The credit union on campus&#13;
ByGina Ciardo&#13;
Did you know UW-Parkside has a&#13;
credit union right here on campus? It's&#13;
located on the second floor in Tallent&#13;
Hall in Room 280. Known as Educators&#13;
Credit Union (ECU), it serves all public&#13;
and private educational employees,&#13;
government workers (local, state, and&#13;
federal), students of post-secondary&#13;
schools and colleges in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, and their families.&#13;
"Stop by. We'd love to open an&#13;
account for you," encourages Barb&#13;
Drew, branch manager. She adds that&#13;
students need to bring only $5 to open&#13;
a savings account and just their student&#13;
J.D. and a drivers license to open a&#13;
checking account. "We're very handy&#13;
because we are right here on campus,"&#13;
says Drew, "We offer a lot of things&#13;
especially for students."-&#13;
Others you may see while banking&#13;
at the ECD are Jodie Fraga, Member&#13;
Service, and Polly Allen, Head Teller.&#13;
The ECU advertises various checking&#13;
accounts including totally free&#13;
checking with no minimum balance&#13;
and no monthly service charge. They&#13;
also offer savings accounts and money&#13;
markets. In addition, the ECU has&#13;
numerous loans including student&#13;
loans with low rates. This is because&#13;
ECU is a non-profit organization. The&#13;
money it makes is returned to their&#13;
shareholders in the form of low rates,&#13;
no minimum balances, and no service&#13;
charges.&#13;
Among their loans is the ECU Education&#13;
Loan which has a term of 24-72&#13;
months and can be up to $10,000. It is&#13;
dIstributed directly to the university&#13;
. and payments are interest only during&#13;
school. This loan is helpful for students&#13;
who don't qualify for other loans that&#13;
are based on need/ status.&#13;
It also offers a student credit card&#13;
whkh enables students to begin buildmg&#13;
a solid credit history.&#13;
The ECU began in 1937 in Racine as&#13;
the Racine Teachers' Credit Union. It&#13;
now has nine branches dotting the corner&#13;
of the state. According to the history&#13;
on the ECU website, it has "assets&#13;
exceeding $360 million [and] ... is one&#13;
of the largest and most successful credit&#13;
unions in southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
The location in Tallent Hall is open&#13;
Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
and Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
Other locations are at 6040 39th Ave.&#13;
in Kenosha and 1400 N. Newman Rd.&#13;
in Racine. There also is a location in&#13;
Burlington and Waukesha and numerous&#13;
others in Milwaukee, Greenfield,&#13;
and Glendale.&#13;
Additional information can be&#13;
found on the Educators Credit Union&#13;
website, www.ecu.com or by calling&#13;
the location in Tallent Hall at Ext. 2150.&#13;
Best Rates This&#13;
SfASON!&#13;
Serving Educational &amp; Govemmental Employees,&#13;
College Students and their families aEducators Credit Union G--:t LENDER&#13;
'APY is annual percemeqe yield. ~e valid through December 31.2000, MorleY Markel Accoonfs are subject to $10&#13;
fee and 2% APY if bal..,ce drops beklw minimum balance. CertifICates have up to a. 90 day ir\lerest:penalty fOl' early&#13;
wrthdrawaJ.&#13;
-)&#13;
www.ecu.com&#13;
Multicultural Student Affairs. He&#13;
plans to double major in English and&#13;
History, as well as enter the education&#13;
program because he would like to be a&#13;
high school teacher, preferably tenth&#13;
grade, and eventually become a college&#13;
professor.&#13;
Although it was a long, time-consuming&#13;
process, Venegas proved that&#13;
he was dedicated in pursuing this&#13;
endeavor. David E. Glaub, lecturer in&#13;
the English Department, Carmen Ireland&#13;
from Admissions, and Susan&#13;
Gehrig, dinector of Religious Education&#13;
at St. Joseph's Parish in Racine&#13;
nominated Venegas for the scholarship.&#13;
In addition, Venegas had to write&#13;
an essay and provide college transcripts&#13;
proving that he had obtained a&#13;
minimum of a 3.3 G.PA. Finally, after&#13;
the paper work was completed, he put&#13;
everything in the mail and waited.&#13;
Sometime this past June, Venegas&#13;
received notice that out of 150,000&#13;
applicants, he had made it to the&#13;
remaining 40,000. Then, in July the&#13;
competition was narrowed even further&#13;
until, at last, in August he was&#13;
chosen as the first recipient of the&#13;
scholarship. His reaction to being cho-&#13;
UW-Parkside student Venegas Earns Gates Scholarship&#13;
By Julie Thompson&#13;
sen as the first recipient was, not surprisingly,&#13;
humble.&#13;
"1 guess 1just got lucky," he said, "1&#13;
wish that more people could have&#13;
received this scholarship. I personally&#13;
know of people who are hungry for a&#13;
college education but also lack the&#13;
funds to go to college. 1am very grateful&#13;
and awestruck that 1was fortunate&#13;
enough to receive the Bill Gates Scholarship."&#13;
'&#13;
Venegas added, "This scholarship is&#13;
for all of my fellow Latinos who have&#13;
fallen through the cracks either&#13;
through poverty or a system that shuffles&#13;
them through to get rid of them, or&#13;
just can't afford school. 1hope that by&#13;
becoming a teacher, 1 can truly help&#13;
others to get ahead in life and be a pos- .&#13;
ilive role model for those who have&#13;
none,&#13;
"1 would like to thank God, for&#13;
whom 1would never have made it this&#13;
far in life! 1 thank my mother, grandmother&#13;
and all of those who have supported&#13;
me in good times and bad,&#13;
especially Carmen Ineland who helped&#13;
me get back into school and Raquel&#13;
Palacios from Student Support Services&#13;
who encourages me to see the positive&#13;
side of things.&#13;
•&#13;
This past August, Raymond Venegas'&#13;
goal of being a teacher became more&#13;
attainable. Last spring, Venegas, a&#13;
UW-Parkside sophomore, picked up a&#13;
brochure on campus that instructed&#13;
him to send for information regarding&#13;
the Bill Gates Scholarship. Shortly&#13;
after sending in the form, Venegas&#13;
received a packet containing a long list&#13;
of instructions that he needed to complete&#13;
before being entered into the&#13;
competition.&#13;
To meet eligibility requinements for&#13;
the scholarship students must be Hispanic,&#13;
have full-time status, have a 3.3&#13;
G.P.A. or higher, and be-able to demonstrate&#13;
leadership abilities. Venegas met&#13;
all the requirements and found that&#13;
demonstrating leadership abilities&#13;
wasn't a problem, either.&#13;
When he's not studying, Venegas is&#13;
either helping troubled youth or teaching&#13;
religion to 10th grade students at&#13;
his local parish, St. Joseph's in Racine.&#13;
He also served as vice president on the&#13;
Board of Directors for the Spanish&#13;
Center in Racine, Kenosha, and Walworth&#13;
counties. In addition to his list&#13;
of impressive credentials, Venegas is&#13;
also active in Latinos Unidos, Student&#13;
Support Services, and the Office of&#13;
Page 12&#13;
November 30, 2000- The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Guess What Club This Is and&#13;
Win a Prize!!!!&#13;
Collection of prize can be obtained by coming to one&#13;
of the club's meetings! .&#13;
Prize may not be awarded to anyone working on The Ranger&#13;
newspaper, in Union 209, or anyone belonging to the club.&#13;
- Classifieds&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
For a limited time only! The Rangerwill print your student classified ads free of&#13;
charge. Forms are available by the newsstand In front of the library, and the.&#13;
newsstand between Wyllie and Greenquist halls.Call ext. 2287 for more mforrnaton.·&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
NEW! Dual Celeron 450'S, EPOX motherboard,&#13;
upgrades, 128mb RAM,&#13;
Sound Card, AGP BMB Video, 36X&#13;
CD Rom, KDS 17" FlatScreen monitor&#13;
(.22DP), mouse and keyboard. Your&#13;
choice: Windows ME or L1NUX ON&#13;
HD. $800 or make an offer Call Kathy&#13;
at (262) 859-9441.&#13;
1992 Katana 600 GSX, custom paintjob,&#13;
piped and jetted, $2500 OBO.&#13;
Call 878-9307 after 6 p.rn, or page at&#13;
(262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-1 0 ZR2, 4x4, extended&#13;
cab, third door, loaded, metallic blue.&#13;
Take over lease payments or buyout&#13;
Call 878-9307 after 6 p.m. or page&#13;
(262)487-0785.&#13;
Honda 250 Four wheeler TRX Excellent&#13;
condition, nery low miles, 4 stroke wi&#13;
reverse, $2000. Call (262) 554-&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Aquatic World&#13;
2359 N5470 Brown si. (Hwy. P)&#13;
Oconomowoc, WI&#13;
(262) 567-7339&#13;
- flexible hours&#13;
- weekdays and weekends available&#13;
- good pay&#13;
- looking for:&#13;
sales cashier&#13;
merchandising&#13;
office duties&#13;
shift managers&#13;
Stop in for application!&#13;
Winter Formal 2000&#13;
December 8, 2000&#13;
Union Square&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Tickets are $1 0 per person and&#13;
available at the Ranger Card Office.&#13;
Sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Organization, Residence Life,&#13;
All Campus Events, Parkside Activities Board, Residence Hall Association,&#13;
and Council of Independent Organizations&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
• Professional DJ&#13;
• Refreshments&#13;
• Professional photos available from .&#13;
@noeu;,ment in OHIO "A Unique Photo" by Charles Corrie&#13;
5~ ii," The Um\-l'rs1t'r of Wisconsin-Parksidc provides servrc es for patron .. with ..p. et iel needs. Please contac t the Park..ide Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-23~5_&#13;
Semiformal attire is required.&#13;
SPeCial gift to the first 100 people!</text>
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              <text>Lydie Breeze continues today</text>
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              <text>Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
December 7, 2000 ~ lY/_ Issue 12 Vol.30&#13;
-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~rr =---------------&#13;
,,,;e Breezecontinues todav&#13;
The final four performances of "Lydie Breeze"&#13;
begin with this morning's matinee presentation&#13;
starting at 10 a.m. The play continues Thursday,&#13;
F~day, and Saturday at 7:30 e,,m. Described by&#13;
director Patrick Tangredi as a 'hope-filled drama&#13;
sprinkled with ligh t and dark humor and shadowed&#13;
by romance," this is a story of human deception&#13;
with seven characters caught in a web resulting&#13;
from the actions of one woman, Lydie Breeze. It is&#13;
about a family and community tom apart and struggling&#13;
to come together by breaking with the past.&#13;
Tickets are $7 for student, faculty, staff, and seniors,&#13;
$10 for the public. They can be purchased at the door&#13;
or by calling ext. 2564.&#13;
Best OW-Parkside students, organizations&#13;
honored at Universitv House program&#13;
UW-Parkside's best were honored Wednesday&#13;
afternoon. During the Student Organization and&#13;
Advisor Holiday Reception at the University&#13;
House, the University's top student organizations&#13;
and best students received praise for their efforts&#13;
on behalf of themselves and UW-Parkside.&#13;
~rlier this year, top student leaders and organizations&#13;
were named by Dean of Students Steve&#13;
McLaughlin and University Activities.&#13;
They include:&#13;
• Community Service Program Award::&#13;
Parkside Community Outreach Club .&#13;
• Outstanding Organization Member for Highest&#13;
GPA:&#13;
Tarik Hamdan, Parkside International Club&#13;
Robyn Rippl, Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club&#13;
• Emerging Student Leaders:&#13;
Azeza Hammad Parkside International Club &amp;&#13;
PSGA I&#13;
Melissa Schmitz, Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club&#13;
Rita Steckling, Sacred Circle&#13;
Charlie Zellner, Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club&#13;
• Distinguished Student Leaders:&#13;
Milissa Ehlert, Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club&#13;
Tarik Hamdan, Parkside International Club&#13;
Mike Kamphuis, Student Organizations Council&#13;
• Most Distinguished Student Leader of the Year:&#13;
Jamie Freeman&#13;
• Outstanding Student Organization of the Year:&#13;
Parkside Community Outreach Club&#13;
• Student Organization ~dvisor of th~ Year:&#13;
Michelle Wegner, Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club&#13;
The Ranger congratulates eac~ student and organization&#13;
for their excellence dunng the 1999-2000&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Honoring best UWP&#13;
racultv, staff&#13;
The problem with awards is that often there aren't&#13;
enough of them to go around. Selecting UW-Parkside's&#13;
top educator, its best researcher, or top classified&#13;
staff person is difficult because there are so many&#13;
worthy candidates. Some deserving people are going&#13;
to be left out. This year was no exception.&#13;
Despite the inherent unfairness in the system, it's&#13;
hard to argue with the list of UW-Parkside people&#13;
who received honors this year. From Stella Gray&#13;
Teaching Award winners Annette Weisner and Norm&#13;
Cloutier and the diversity award-winning Biological&#13;
Sciences Department to research and creative activity&#13;
recipient Jay Sounderpandian, John Buenker and Art&#13;
Dudycha who received distinguished service honors,&#13;
and classified staff award winner Jim Hastings, each&#13;
recipient was well qualified to take home their&#13;
awards.&#13;
The Stella Gray Award is emblematic of teaching&#13;
excellence at UW-Parkside. Annette Weisner and&#13;
See Faculty, Page 3&#13;
Need help? Trv PARC&#13;
The Parkside Academic Resource Center (PARC)&#13;
is ready to help you excel with term papers and during&#13;
final exams this semester. PARC, located in Wyllie&#13;
Hall D180 Gust around the comer from the Campus&#13;
Book Store entrance), is open weekdays for your&#13;
convenience.&#13;
PARC provides writing and math tutors on a&#13;
drop-in basis. Need help with chemical, biology, or&#13;
another specialized subject? Stop into the office and&#13;
PARC will set up an appointment for you.&#13;
Clip the schedule shown below and keep it close&#13;
to where you study. If you have any questions about&#13;
PARC's services, call ext. 2044 for answers.&#13;
I\' - - -..- - - "" - - - -,.- - -..,.,_ - _,,,_.&#13;
( PARC Free tutoring offered: :&#13;
( Monday 9 a.m.. to 6 p.m. :&#13;
1&#13;
Tuesday 9 a.m. to 6 p,.m.&#13;
Wednesday 9 a.m.. to 9 p.m.. 1&#13;
~ Thursday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. I&#13;
, Friday 9 a.m. to noon 1 i _________________ ~&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ins d e •1&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
Political corruption surveyed in local elections.&#13;
Economic club visits Chicago Board Options&#13;
Exchange; Cartoon by Jamie Freeman.&#13;
Hostel opens in Chicago; Mid-East conflict on&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
Potter's Field in Kenosha County cemetery;&#13;
Professor were once like us&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
1&#13;
8&#13;
Are we paying too much for textbooks?&#13;
Upcoming Events&#13;
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7 a.m, to 9 p.m.&#13;
SAC Phone:'(262) 595-2506&#13;
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Fnday: 11a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
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Pool dosed Dec. 14,2000 -March 8&#13;
20001 for renovation. '&#13;
Pool Line: (262) 595-2780.&#13;
December 7,2000 -&#13;
at t o Dec.7 to 30&#13;
December 7 .&#13;
• Plays at Parkside "Lydee Breeze," 10 a.m., Wegner Studio Theatre,&#13;
. Communication Arts Building, tickets:. $10 adults; $7 students/seruors.&#13;
• Comic Buzz Sutherland, 8 p.m., Uruon Square, free., sponsored by the&#13;
PAB.&#13;
December 7, 8 &amp; 9 .&#13;
• Plays at Parkside "Lydee Breeze," 7:30 p.m., Wegner Studio Theatre,&#13;
Communication Arts Building, tickets: $10 adults; $7 students/seniors.&#13;
December 7, 8, 9 &amp; 10&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Eel," Japan, subtitled, Dec. 7-10, shown Th,,!"- .&#13;
day /Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m., Union Cinema&#13;
Theater.&#13;
December 8&#13;
• Noon Concert: UW-Parkside Orchestra, directed by David Schripsema,&#13;
Union Cinema Theater, free.&#13;
• Winter Formal, Union Square, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., sponsored by PAB.&#13;
December 9&#13;
• UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble, 3:30 p.m., Communication Arts-DIIS&#13;
December 11, 12, 13 &amp; 14&#13;
• Peer Health Educators "Jingle Bell Pledge Drive," various times &amp;.&#13;
campus locations&#13;
December 11&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! Series: "The Nutcracker," 7:30 p.m., Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre; sold out&#13;
December 13&#13;
• Noon Conlert: UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble, directed by George&#13;
Lindquist, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
December 14&#13;
• UW-Parkside Wind Ensemble and Community Band, 7:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre, tickets: $5 adults, $3 students.&#13;
• Men's basketball vs. St. Francis, Thursday, Dec. 14, 7 p.m., SAC, UWParkside&#13;
students free, adults $5, high school students/kids 14 &amp; under&#13;
$1.&#13;
December 15&#13;
., Women's basketball vs. Saginaw Valley, Fri., 7 p.m., SAC, UW-Parkslde&#13;
students free, adults $5, high school students/kids 14 &amp; under $1.&#13;
December 16&#13;
• UW-Parkside Winter Commencement, 2 p.m., Sports and Activities&#13;
Center.&#13;
December 17&#13;
• InfoB~eaks: Explorer File Management Using Windows Explorer,&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie 01500, 9:45 a.m., free.&#13;
• Senior Student Exhibition for Dec. Graduates, Dec. 17 to 21, Gallery&#13;
Hours: Monday &amp; Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 11&#13;
a.m. to 8y.m., closed Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.&#13;
December 30&#13;
• Women's basketball vs. Ashland College, Sat., 7 p.m., ., SAC, UW-&#13;
~f~kslde students free, adults $5, high school students/kids 14 &amp; under&#13;
Wellness Center Fall Hours:&#13;
Monday and Wednesday: 7 to&#13;
8:30 a.m. and 11 a.rn, to 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday: 8 to 9:30 a m&#13;
and 11 a.m, to 8 p.m. . .&#13;
Friday: 7 to 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to&#13;
5:00p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2:30 p.m,&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6:30 p.m,&#13;
Weight Room Hours:&#13;
Monday and Wednesday: 7 a.m. to&#13;
1 p.m., 2:40 to 3:30 p.m., 6 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday: 7 a.m. to&#13;
3:30 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Fnday: 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
I • ! • Parkside 7, iio&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
I n s • 1 e&#13;
in loeal J&#13;
in in Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Sam English&#13;
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Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Jennie-Leigh Morris&#13;
Kory Holm&#13;
Business/ Advertising Management&#13;
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Christine Adailby&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
fax 262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger published throughout semesler students of University of Wisronsin-Parkside, are&#13;
its policy and l!ditor poUcy, 'The encourages the l!ditor. and deUvered&#13;
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Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
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Monday through Wednesday:&#13;
a.m. to p.m.&#13;
SAC Phone: (262) 595-2506&#13;
~ursday: lla.m. to 3p.m. &amp; 4 - 8p .m.&#13;
Fnday: lla.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6p.m.&#13;
Monday: 7 to 8:45a.m., lla.m. to&#13;
12:30p.m., 2 to 3p.m. and 4 to 8p.m.&#13;
Tuesday:lla.m. to 3p.m.&amp; 4 - 6:30p.m.&#13;
Wednesday: 7 to 8:45a.m., 11:lOa.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m., 2 to 3p.m. and 4 to 8p.m.&#13;
Pool d osed 14,2000 -March 8,&#13;
20001 for renovation.&#13;
Pool Line: (262) 595-2780.&#13;
.&#13;
• Plays at P~kside "Ly~ee. Bree~e," 1? a.m., Wc~er Srudio Thea~,&#13;
tickets._ adults, s rudents/seruors.&#13;
PAB.&#13;
• Plays at Parkside "Ly~ee_ Bree~e," 7:30 W~gt!er Sh.td10 The~tre,&#13;
Communication Arts Building, tickets: $10 adults, $7 srud_ents/seruors.&#13;
• Foreign "The Eel," Japan, subtitled, Dec. 7-10, shown Th~ day /Friday at 7:30 Saturday at Sunday at 2 p.m., Uruon Cinema&#13;
Decembers&#13;
spon ored December9&#13;
• D118&#13;
• "Jingle Pledge Drive," various times~&#13;
campus locations&#13;
11&#13;
• Arts: "The Nutcracker," 7:30 p.m., Communication Theatre; sold out&#13;
• Noon Con ert: UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble, directed by George&#13;
Lindquist, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
December14&#13;
Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre, tickets: $5 adults, $3 tudent .&#13;
Thur day, D c. UW·&#13;
Parkside kids $1.&#13;
December15&#13;
•. Women's basketball Saginaw Valley, Fri., 7 p.m., SAC, Parks1de&#13;
students free, adults high school sh.tdents/kids 14 &amp; under December16&#13;
December17&#13;
• InfoB~eaks: Explorer File Management Using Windows Explorer,&#13;
Instru~tional Tech Center, Wyllie DlS0D, 9:45 a.m., • Senior Student Exhibition for Dec. Graduates, Dec. 17 to 21, Gallery&#13;
Hours: Monday &amp; Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Wednesday a.m. to 8 p.m., closed Friday, Saturday, ana Sunday.&#13;
• Wo~en's basketball Sat., 7 p .m., ., SAC, UW[&#13;
f ks1de kids Monday and Wednesday: to&#13;
8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 8 p m&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday: 8 t~ 9;30 a.m.&#13;
an~ 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 to 8:30 a.m. 11 a.m. to&#13;
5:00p.m. .&#13;
Saturday: noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 4 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Monaay and Wednesday: to&#13;
1 p.m., 2:40 to 3:30 p.m., 6 to 9 Tuesday and Thursday: 3:30 p.m. and 6 to 9 Friday: a.m. to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
December7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Political.corruption opinions in Kenosha surveved during fall elections&#13;
ByDan Frake select every fifth voter for the survey, that the collect- of your friends means hurting everybody else-Usual-&#13;
On Election Day, November 7, 2000, as national exit ed research would be a viable representation of the Iy or Sometimes." Also included were questions&#13;
polls were announcing such erroneous results as the cross-section of voters, thereby providing relatively geared toward indicating the voters' age, race, educa-&#13;
Presidential election, a lesser known though appropri- "safe" data. Safe, meaning an accurate, though not tion, sex, and income.&#13;
ate research project was taking place in nine cities necessarily true, account of how the voters feel. I was able to visit four of the polling places at&#13;
acrossthe United States, including the Kenosha area.. The completely confidential survey was intend- which the research was being conducted and found&#13;
Its objective, appropnate in light of recent events ed to be the vehicle for the research. As the voters the researchers and the voters very willing to talk&#13;
affectingthe outcome of the presidential race, was to left the polling places, the UWP students stopped about the research and their views on corruption.&#13;
study the population's views on political corruption. every fifth voter and asked them to take five minutes Maggie Brunnelson, Jessica Tucker, George Drury,&#13;
UW-Parkside Professor Fred Monardi is one of to fill out the survey. Most voters were more than Stephanie Mayer and Jared Pelski, five of the UWP&#13;
onlynine research heads participating in the exit polls willing to participate. In fact, some of the UWP stu- student researchers that I was able to talk with, were&#13;
acrossthe country in cities including New York City, _dents even had to tum away people who came and enthusiastic about the attitudes of the voters and their&#13;
LosAngeles, Miami, Jacksonville, and Florida. The asked if they could take the survey as well. It was apparent interest in helping out. While some of the&#13;
objective,according to Professor Monardi, was "to get very important for the results of the survey to be polling places experienced low tum-out, others made&#13;
a clearerpicture of what citizens believe to be political strictly based on a turn-out of every fifth voter.&#13;
corruption, what the causes ansi consequences of such While the surveys were confidential, the ques-- up for it with extremely hi&#13;
ch&#13;
ghvoter counts, thus making&#13;
corruption are believed to be and where political cor- tions were intended to find out as much about the it possible for the resear ers to reach many voters.&#13;
ruption fits into popular understandings of politics." particular voter as possible, barring anything that For instance, at the Washington Road Fire Station,&#13;
In the Kenosha area, .25 polling precincts were might indicate the identity of the voter. In this way, turn-out was very low, but at the Stocker Elementary&#13;
selectedbased on the diversity of the area in terms of researchers would be able to coincide data with cer- School, lines were out the door for most of the day&#13;
race,ethnicity, income and partisanship. Utilizing his tain income-based, ethnic or age groups. Some (according to Tucker and Pelski).&#13;
American Politics class and Public Opinion class, Pro- examples of what type of questions were on the sur- Overall, the project seemed to be a success. For&#13;
fessorMonardi sent fifty students out to the selected vey are, "In government, corrupt means are needed more information regarding the polling, contact Professor&#13;
locationsto conduct the polling. The thought was that to achieve important goals-Usually or Rarely;" Monardi, Hopefully, the results of the exit polls will&#13;
if each researcher, present at their respective locations "Which level of government seems most corrupt- be more accurate (and less controversial) than the exit&#13;
for periods of four hours each, were to randomly Local, State or National;" and "In politics, taking care polls the major news networks used on election night.&#13;
this year to present his research in the Distinguished Service Award. He who nominated him for this award&#13;
field of neural computing. His was instrumental in getting UW- described him as helpful, loyal, faithresearch&#13;
also has helped a number of Parkside's new Student Information ful, patient, polite, determined,&#13;
local companies solve problems and System operational. Described by one dependable, and pleasant, and comimprove&#13;
business. person as a long and difficult process plimented 'him for his sense of&#13;
The first UW-Parkside Diversity with hardware, software, and people- humor.&#13;
Award was given to the Biological ware issues to deal with, Jim handled Congratulations to all UW-Parkside&#13;
Sciences Department. In addition to each with skill and finesse. People award recipients for 20001&#13;
hiring three minority faculty members&#13;
in a 12-month period, Biological&#13;
Sciences was active in Doctors of&#13;
Color and other minority-focused&#13;
programs. These summer programs&#13;
draw students- from under-represented&#13;
ethnic groups into the sciences,&#13;
and show them available career&#13;
opportunities. Ed Wallen accepted&#13;
the award.&#13;
Distinguished Service Awards went&#13;
to History's John Buenker and Art&#13;
Dud ycha of Business.&#13;
Buenker has been practicing UWParkside's&#13;
"Engaged University" policy&#13;
for three decades. Since arriving&#13;
here in 1970, John has been deeply&#13;
involved in organizations like&#13;
Racine's Historic Preservation Committee&#13;
and the Kenosha County Historical&#13;
Society. He is a popular lecturer&#13;
off-campus and has served on nearly&#13;
every major committee on campus.&#13;
Art Dudycha has served on nearly&#13;
every major committee at the university&#13;
in his 23 years here. He ha~ charred&#13;
everything from the University Committee&#13;
to the Personnel Review Committee.&#13;
He co-chaired the initiative to&#13;
revise our general education curriculum.&#13;
He has served in the Faculty Senate&#13;
the Committee on Research and&#13;
Cr~ative Activity, the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee, and the list goes on&#13;
and on. And as one of Art's colleagues&#13;
said: "He is in all ways and all things&#13;
truly a gentleman.". .&#13;
Jim Hastings, who IS a sen~or computer&#13;
specialist in Inform.atlOn Services,&#13;
received the Classified Staff&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
Norm Cloutier were selected to&#13;
receivethe honor this year.&#13;
Senior Developmental Skills SpecialistAnnette&#13;
Weisner impressed students&#13;
and the awards committee with&#13;
her philosophy of education. She says,&#13;
"I believe in my students, meet them&#13;
at their ability level, and do whatever&#13;
it takes to elevate that level of skill."&#13;
Student stressed how much they&#13;
enjoyed her classes and how, to their&#13;
own surprise, they came to understand&#13;
math.&#13;
Professor of Economics Norm&#13;
Cloutiercontinued to develop exciting&#13;
new courses like "The Economics of&#13;
Sports"while also experimenting with&#13;
new instructional methods. He is a&#13;
proponent of community engagement&#13;
and community-based learning, saying,&#13;
"Projects that focus on local issues&#13;
orproblems have an inherent capacity&#13;
to capture and maintain student interest."&#13;
An example of this approach is&#13;
his Urban Economics' class, which&#13;
charted differences between unemployment&#13;
levels in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The University's Excellence in&#13;
Researchand Creative Activity Award&#13;
went to Business Department chair&#13;
JaySounderpandian for the high qual-&#13;
Ity of his work and his record of publication.&#13;
Jay's main research focus is Decision&#13;
Analysis, which covers decision&#13;
making inbusiness, economics, medicine,&#13;
public administration, and personalchoices.&#13;
His work has been cited&#13;
by doctors at Northwestern Medical&#13;
School,during TV interviews, in articles&#13;
in the Journal of the American&#13;
Medical Association, and many others.&#13;
Jay was invited to Paris earlier&#13;
sta Rican Natural History - 2 credits - Jan. 3-15&#13;
Explore the biologic and geologic diversity of Costa Rica during a 12-day trip.&#13;
Designed for geology, biology and geography students, participants of this hands-on&#13;
class will study volcanic activity, advances in alternative geothermal energy, observe&#13;
wildlife and tropical rainforests and overnight at biologic stations. Prerequisites: BIOS&#13;
101 &amp; 102 for biology students; GEDI 102 for geology ,tudents.&#13;
Polymer p,emistry - 1 credit - Dec. 28 - Jan. 12,6 - 8:30 pm-&#13;
GRNQ0119&#13;
This class will explore some of the contemporary topics on polymer chemistry&#13;
foundation and different applications, including industrial applications. Prerequisites:&#13;
Chemistry 0321 &amp;0322. .&#13;
Book: Past, Present Be. Future - I credit - Jan. 8 -12, 9 am - 3 pm _&#13;
CART 0141&#13;
Students will explore the history of the book by examining rare book collections and&#13;
visiting bookstores and book-related industries in the Chicago-Milwaukee-Racine-&#13;
Kenosha areas. Prerequisites: None.&#13;
Urban Environmental Contamination - 2 credits - Jan. 2-11,&#13;
12 - 4030 pm - GRNQ 0119&#13;
In this "real world" skills class, instructors will provide background science on&#13;
mobility and fare of Pb in terrestrial sysrems. Students will learn sampling methods,&#13;
appropriate techniques and instrumentation used for analysis ofPb in soils and&#13;
plany, and gain experience in data analysis and interpretation, report preparation and&#13;
presentation. Prerequisites: Chemirtry 101.&#13;
Reengineering Financial Performance Measurement -1 credit-&#13;
Jan. 2-19&#13;
Traditional accounting practices may not actually reflect the true value of&#13;
organizations undergoing reengineering. This Internet class, offered from UW-Eau&#13;
Claire, investigates corporate performance using the balanced scorecard approach.&#13;
MBA admission or department consent. (Registration deadline is December 8.)&#13;
tlr University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
December 7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Political corruption opinions in Kenosha surveved during tall elections&#13;
By Dan Frake&#13;
On Election Day, November 7, 2000, as national exit&#13;
oils were announcing such erroneous results as the&#13;
~residential election, a lesser kno wn though app ropriate&#13;
research project was takin~ place in nine cities&#13;
across the United Stat~, in~u~g the Kenosha area.&#13;
Its objective, appropnate m lignt of recent events&#13;
affecting the outcome of the presid e n tial race, was to&#13;
study ~e population's views on political corruption.&#13;
select every fifth voter for the survey, that the collected&#13;
resear~h would be a viable representation of the&#13;
cross-section of voters, thereby providing relatively&#13;
"safe" data. Safe, meaning an accurate, though not&#13;
necessarily true, account of how the voters feel.&#13;
of your friends means hurting everybody else-Usually&#13;
or Sometimes." Also included were questions&#13;
geared toward indicating the voters' age, race, education,&#13;
sex, and income.&#13;
UW-Parkside Professor Fred Monardi is one of&#13;
only nine research heads p artici pating in the exit polls&#13;
across the country in cities including New York City,&#13;
Los Angeles, Mi_ami, Jacksonville, and ~orid~. The&#13;
objective, according to Professo r Monardi, was 'to get&#13;
a dearer picture of what citizens believe to be political&#13;
corruption, what ~e causes and consequenc1:s. of such&#13;
corruption are believed to be and where political corruption&#13;
fits into popular under standings of politics."&#13;
In the Kenosha area, .25 p olling precincts were&#13;
selected based on the diversity of the area in terms of&#13;
race, ethnicity, income and partisanship. Utilizing his&#13;
American Politics class and Public Opinion class, Professor&#13;
Monardi sent fifty students out to the selected&#13;
locations to conduct the p olling. The thought was that&#13;
if each researcher, present at their respective locations&#13;
for periods of four hours each, were to randomly&#13;
The completely confidential survey was intended&#13;
to be the vehicle for the research. As the voters&#13;
left the polling places, the UWP students stopped&#13;
every fifth voter and asked them to take five minutes&#13;
to fill out the survey. Most voters were more than&#13;
willing to participate. In fact, some of the UWP students&#13;
even had to turn away people who came and&#13;
asked if they could take the survey as well. It was&#13;
very important for the results of the survey to be&#13;
strictly oased on a turn-out of every fifth voter.&#13;
While the surveys were confidential, the questions&#13;
were intended to find out as much about the&#13;
particular voter as possible, barring anything that&#13;
might indicate the identity of the voter. In this way,&#13;
researchers would be able to coincide data with certain&#13;
income-based, ethnic or age groups. Some&#13;
examples of what type of questions were on the survey&#13;
are, "In ~overnment, corrupt means are needed&#13;
to achieve unportant goals-Usually or Rarely;"&#13;
"Which level of ~ovemment seems most corruptLocal,&#13;
State or National;" and "In politics, taking care&#13;
I was able to visit four of the polling places at&#13;
which the research was being conducted and found&#13;
the researchers and the voters very willing to talk&#13;
about the research and their views on corruption.&#13;
Maggie Bnmnelson, Jessica Tucker, George Drury,&#13;
Stephanie Mayer and Jared Pelski, five of the UWP&#13;
student researchers that I was able to talk with, were&#13;
enthusiastic about the attitudes of the voters and their&#13;
apparent interest in helping out. While some of the&#13;
polling places experienced low tum-out, others made&#13;
up for it with extremely high voter counts, thus making&#13;
it possible for the researchers to reach many voters.&#13;
For instance, at the Washington Road Fire Station,&#13;
turn-out was very low, but at the Stocker Elementary&#13;
School, lines were out the door for most of the day&#13;
(according to Tucker and Pelski).&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
Norm Cloutier w ere selected to&#13;
receive the honor this year.&#13;
Senior Developmental Skills Specialist&#13;
Annette Weisner impressed students&#13;
and the awards committee with&#13;
her philosophy of educati on. She says,&#13;
"I believe in my students, meet them&#13;
at their ability level, and do whatever&#13;
it takes to elevate that level of skill."&#13;
Student stressed h ow much they&#13;
enjoyed her classes and how, to their&#13;
own surprise, they came to understand&#13;
math.&#13;
Professor of Economics Norm&#13;
Cloutier continued to develop exciting&#13;
new courses like "The Economics of&#13;
Sports" while also experimenting with&#13;
new instructional m ethods. He is a&#13;
proponent of community engagement&#13;
and community-base d learning, saying,&#13;
"Projects that fo cus on local issues&#13;
or problems have an inherent capacity&#13;
to capture and maintain stud ent interest."&#13;
An example o f this approach is&#13;
his Urban Economics' class, which&#13;
charted differences between unemployment&#13;
levels in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The University's Exc ellence in&#13;
Research and Creative Ac tivity Award&#13;
went to Business Department chair&#13;
!ay Sounderpandian for the high quality&#13;
of his work and his record of publication.&#13;
Jay's main research focu s is Decision&#13;
Analysis, which covers d ecision&#13;
n:taking in business, economics, mediClne,&#13;
public administration, and personal&#13;
choices. His work has b een cited&#13;
by doctors at Northwestern Med ical&#13;
Scho?l, during TV interviews, in articles&#13;
m the Journal of the American&#13;
Medical Association, and many o thers.&#13;
Jay was invited to Paris earlier&#13;
this year to present his research in the&#13;
field of neural computing. His&#13;
research also has helped a number of&#13;
local companies solve problems and&#13;
improve business.&#13;
The firs t UW-Parkside Diversity&#13;
Award was given to the Biological&#13;
Sciences Department. In addition to&#13;
hiring three minority faculty members&#13;
in a 12-month period, Biological&#13;
Sciences was active in Doctors of&#13;
Color and other minority-focused&#13;
programs. These summer programs&#13;
draw students from under-represented&#13;
ethnic groups into the sciences,&#13;
and show them available career&#13;
opportunities. Ed Wallen accepted&#13;
the award .&#13;
Distinguished Service Awards went&#13;
to History's John Buenker and Art&#13;
Dudycha of Business.&#13;
Buenker has been practicing UWParkside'&#13;
s " Engaged University" policy&#13;
for three decades. Since arriving&#13;
here in 1970, John has been deeply&#13;
involved in organizations like&#13;
Racine's Historic Preservation Committee&#13;
and the Kenosha County Historical&#13;
Society. He is a popular lecturer&#13;
off-campus and has served on nearly&#13;
every major committee on campus.&#13;
Art Dudycha has served on nearly&#13;
every major committee at the univ~rsity&#13;
in his 23 years here. ~e h~ chaired&#13;
everything fr om the Uruvers1ty Committee&#13;
to the Personnel Review Committee.&#13;
He co-chaired the initiative to&#13;
revise our general education curriculum.&#13;
He has served in the Faculty Senate&#13;
the Committee on Research and&#13;
Cr~ative Activity, the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee, and the list goes on&#13;
and on. And as one of Art's colleagues&#13;
said : "He is in all ways and all things&#13;
tl II truly a gen eman. . .&#13;
Jim Hastings, who 1s a se~or computer&#13;
specialist in Inform_a~on Services,&#13;
received the Classified Staff&#13;
Overall, the project seemed to be a success. For&#13;
more information regarding the polling, contact Professor&#13;
Monardi. Hopefully, the results of the exit polls will&#13;
be more accurate (and less controversial) than the exit&#13;
polls the major news networks used on election night.&#13;
Distinguished Service Award. He&#13;
was instrumental in getting UWParkside's&#13;
new Student Information&#13;
System operational. Described by one&#13;
person as a long and difficult process&#13;
with hardware, software, and peopleware&#13;
issues to deal with, Jim handled&#13;
each with skill and finesse. People&#13;
who nominated him for this award&#13;
described him as helpful, loyal, faithful,&#13;
patient, polite, determined,&#13;
dependable, and pleasant, and complimented&#13;
him for his sense of&#13;
humor.&#13;
Congratulations to all UW-Parkside&#13;
award recipients for 2000!&#13;
sta Rican Natural History- 2 aedi.ts - Jan. 3-15&#13;
Explore the biologic and geologic diversity of Costa Rica during a 12-day trip.&#13;
Designed for geology, biology and geography student,;, participant:S of this hands-on&#13;
dass will sNdy volcanic activity, advances in alternative geothermal energy, observe&#13;
wildlife and tropical rainforcsr.i and overnight at biologic stations. Pmequisitn: BIOS&#13;
101 &amp; 102 for biolog, studnm; GEOL 102 for g,ology students.&#13;
Polymer Chemistry- 1 credit - Dec. 28 - Jan. 12, 6 - 8:30 pm -&#13;
GRNQ0119&#13;
This clas.s will explore some of the comemporaty topics on polymer chemistry&#13;
foundation and different applica,ions, including industrial applications. Pr=quisim:&#13;
Chnnistry 0321 &amp;0322.&#13;
Book: Past, Present &amp; Futun: - 1 aedi.t- Jan. 8 -12, 9 am• 3 pm -&#13;
CART0141&#13;
S,udenr.i will explore the history of che book by CJ&lt;amining rare book coUcctions and&#13;
visiting bookstores and book-related industries in rhc Chicago-Milwaukce-RacineKenosha&#13;
areas. Prtrtquisiu,: None.&#13;
Ul'ban Environmental Contamination - 2 credits - Jan. 2-11,&#13;
12 - 4:30 pm - GRNQ 0119&#13;
In th.is "real world" skills class, instructon will provide background science on&#13;
mobility and fate of Pb in terrestrial systems. Studenr.i will learn sampling methods,&#13;
appropri ate techniques and instrumcmation used for analysis of Pb in soils and&#13;
plan~. and gain experience in data analysis and intcrprcmioo, report preparation and&#13;
presentation. Pmequisirtr: Chnnistry 10 J.&#13;
Reengineuing Financial Perfonnanu Measurement -1 credit -&#13;
Jan. 2 -19&#13;
Tradi ti onal accounting practices may not actually reffecc the true value of&#13;
organwitions undergoing rcenginccring. This lnccraet class , offered from UW-Eau&#13;
Claire, inves1igates corporate performance using rhe balanced scorecard approach.&#13;
MBA admission or departmmr consmt. (Registration deadline is December 8.)&#13;
ilf' University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
!Jagiei~4~ -!T~he~R~an~g~er~,U~ni2ve:r~si~ty~of~W·i~scPon~sm:k- :a:r:·SI:d~e=:-===--;::;:::D~e:.C:_0e0-=0mb..:UW-Parkside eConomic club visits Chicago Board Options Exchange&#13;
they were seeing. Kaufman Predicts&#13;
"Given student reactions, we'll deij:&#13;
nitely try to get onto the CBOTand&#13;
CBOE trading floors again."&#13;
At the Fed, students were given&#13;
presentation by Dr. William Straus:&#13;
senior econonust and economic advi:&#13;
sor. This was his third time speakingto&#13;
Parkside students. He explamed SOme&#13;
of the Fed functions and macroeconom.&#13;
ic policy-making. Afterwards he took&#13;
questions from students. Kaufman&#13;
regrets, "Because of a SChedulingglitch&#13;
we were not able to have the usualpre:&#13;
sentation on the various functionsof&#13;
the Fed and visit the cash counting&#13;
department. We'll include that in our&#13;
spring visit."&#13;
He adds, "My impression is thatthe&#13;
favorite part for students was the visit&#13;
to the pits but I liked Strauss's presentation&#13;
the best. His presentations have&#13;
been excellent. Next semester we'lltry&#13;
to schedule a presentation by Strauss&#13;
on monetary policy, which will be great&#13;
for the students enrolled in the economics&#13;
course 'Money and Banking,'&#13;
which will be taught next spring."&#13;
The final stop of the day was the&#13;
Mercantile Exchange where the group&#13;
received a brief presentation on the&#13;
mechanics of trading and a description&#13;
of hand si~als. According to Kaufman,&#13;
the Visit was more exciting than&#13;
usual because the market was near&#13;
closing for the day. Next time, theClub&#13;
would like to have a formal presentation&#13;
at the Mere.&#13;
Officers of the Econ Club include:&#13;
Tiana Williamson, President; Jackie&#13;
Gallagher, Vice President; Katie&#13;
Kennedy, Secretary; and Tim Graff,&#13;
Webmaster.&#13;
Any student interested in next&#13;
semesters trip should look for information&#13;
posted on the Econ Club Hornepage,&#13;
www.uwp.edu/academics/economics/&#13;
EconClub/hompag2.htm or&#13;
contact one of the officers listed above..&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
On November 10, UW-Parkside&#13;
students were invited to stand on the&#13;
floor of the Chicago Board Options&#13;
Exchange (CBOE) and view the buying&#13;
and selling of bonds first-hand.&#13;
These students were participating&#13;
in a biannual trip to Chicago sponsored&#13;
by the Econ Club here on campus.&#13;
Every spring and fall, all interested&#13;
students (economics majors or not)&#13;
are invited to attend a trip that&#13;
includes visits to the Federal Reserve&#13;
Bank of Chicago (the Fed), the Mercantile&#13;
Exchange (the Mere), and the&#13;
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT).&#13;
In past years, students were only&#13;
able to view the trading floors from&#13;
observation windows high above in&#13;
the visitors gallery. However, this&#13;
semester a local trader, Tom Trantor,&#13;
gave students a tour. With clearance&#13;
from the Visitor's Center, he was able&#13;
to take the group down to the floor.&#13;
Trantor was contacted by Jared Pelski,&#13;
and Economic 120 students about giving&#13;
the tour, and Trantor gladly agreed.&#13;
Dennis Kaufman is an economics&#13;
professor who has participated in the&#13;
Econ Club trip more than a half dozen&#13;
times. He explains, "Students are&#13;
UW·Parkside Economics club visited the Chicago Board Options Exchange&#13;
on November 10. Students viewed the buying and selling of bonds, first&#13;
hand&#13;
Cartoon courtesy a Jamie Freeman&#13;
/I&#13;
o&#13;
D ,,&#13;
/&#13;
a&#13;
,/I&#13;
11&#13;
it pl."'"&#13;
\0\·11'1''1&#13;
"\"\&gt;l1l1,$ pll-&lt; 10",D,,,,, -&#13;
l).~-.l11'lM&#13;
~\'7-&#13;
exposed to real world markets at the&#13;
CBOT, CBOE, and the Mere, They see&#13;
that economics really affects people -&#13;
both individuals, like a trader who&#13;
loses $50,000 in the soybean pit, and&#13;
society in general through Fed monetary&#13;
policy and changes in the interest&#13;
rates. Students observe first-hand economics&#13;
in action by watching the interaction&#13;
of demand and supply and&#13;
changes in price on the trading floor."&#13;
This was the first time in the history&#13;
of the Econ Club Chicago trip that&#13;
students had the opportunity to see the&#13;
trading pits up closs and to have an&#13;
actual trader on hand to explain what&#13;
WhAT hAS PARksidE ACTiviTiES&#13;
BOARd dONE fOR you LATEly?&#13;
If you can name three events .P.A.B. has put&#13;
on this year and attend two'meetings?&#13;
You can Win A Prize!!!!!!!!!&#13;
come to one of our meetings held Fridays,&#13;
noon, Union 207&#13;
Just&#13;
December 7, iooo Page 4 The Ranger, University of Wiscon sin-Parkside ---&#13;
ow-Parkside economic club visils Chicago Board Opti ons Exchange&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
On November 10, UW-Parkside&#13;
students were invited to stand on the&#13;
floor of the Chicago Board Options&#13;
Exchange (CBOE) and view the buying&#13;
and selling of bonds first-hand .&#13;
These students were participating&#13;
in a biannual trip to Chicago sponsored&#13;
by the Econ Club here on campus.&#13;
Every spring and fall, all interested&#13;
students (economics majors or not)&#13;
are invited to attend a trip that&#13;
includes visits to the Federal Reserve&#13;
Bank of Chicago (the Fed), the Mercantile&#13;
Exchange (the Mere), and the&#13;
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT).&#13;
In past years, students were only&#13;
able to view the trading floors from&#13;
observation windows high above in&#13;
the visitors gallery. However, this&#13;
semester a local trader, Tom Trantor,&#13;
gave students a tour. With clearance&#13;
from the Visitor's Center, he was able&#13;
to take the group down to the floor.&#13;
Trantor was contacted by Jared Pelski,&#13;
and Economic 120 students about giving&#13;
the tour, and Trantor gladly agreed.&#13;
Dennis Kaufman is an economics&#13;
professor who has participated in the&#13;
Econ Club trip more than a half dozen&#13;
times. He explains, "Students are&#13;
I&#13;
they were seeing. Kaufman Predicts&#13;
"Given student r actions, we'll defi:&#13;
nitely try to ge t onto the CBOT and&#13;
CBOE trading floors again."&#13;
At th Fed, students were given a&#13;
pr ntation by Dr. William StrallSS&#13;
senior econorru t and economic advi:&#13;
sor. This wa hi third time s,peaking to&#13;
Parkside stud nts. He expla1ned some&#13;
of the Fed function and macroeconomic&#13;
p licy-making. Afterwards he took&#13;
questions from s tudents. Kaufman&#13;
regr ts, "Becau ofa scheduling glitch&#13;
we w r not able to have the usual pre'.&#13;
sentation on th various functions of&#13;
the Fed and vi~i t _the cash counting&#13;
department. We 11 include that in our&#13;
spring vi it."&#13;
He add , "My impression is that the&#13;
favorite part f r tudents was the visit&#13;
to the pits but I liked Strauss's presentation&#13;
the b t. Hi presentations have&#13;
been e cellent. t · mester we'll try&#13;
to schedul a pr sentation by Strauss&#13;
on monetary policy, which will be gteal&#13;
for the tud nt nrolled in the economics&#13;
cours 'Money and Banking,'&#13;
which will be tau ht next spring."&#13;
UW~Parkside Economics club visited the Chicago Board Options Exchange&#13;
on November 10. Students viewed the buying and selling of bonds, first&#13;
hand&#13;
The final stop f the day was the&#13;
Mercantile E chan g where the group&#13;
receiv d a bri f p r ntation on the&#13;
mechani of trading and a description&#13;
of hand i~al . Acc ording to Kaufman,&#13;
the visit wa more exciting than&#13;
usual b cau th market was near&#13;
do ing for th day. e t time, theOub&#13;
would lik to hav a formal presentation&#13;
at th M re.&#13;
Cartoon courte o Jamie Freeman&#13;
exposed to real world markets at the&#13;
CBOT, CBOE, and the Mere. They see&#13;
that economics really affects people -&#13;
both individuals, like a trader who&#13;
loses $50,000 in the soybean pit, and&#13;
society in general through Fed monetary&#13;
policy and changes in the inter st&#13;
rates. Students observe first-hand economics&#13;
in action by watching the interaction&#13;
of demand and supply and&#13;
changes in price on the trading floor."&#13;
This was the first time in the history&#13;
of the Econ Club Chicago trip that&#13;
students had the opportunity to see the&#13;
trading pits up close and to have an&#13;
actual trader on hand to explain what&#13;
Officer of th Ec on Club include:&#13;
Tiana William ·on, Pr sident; Jackie&#13;
Gallagher, Vice Pr ident; Katie&#13;
Kenn dy, er tary; and nm Graff,&#13;
Webma tr.&#13;
Any tud n t interested in next&#13;
seme t r trip hould look for information&#13;
post d on the Econ Club Homepage,&#13;
www.uwp. d u / academics/economic&#13;
/EconClub/h ompag2.htm or&#13;
contact one of th offk rs listed above ..&#13;
WltA T ltAs PA RksidE AcTiviriEs&#13;
BoARd doNE foR you lATEly?&#13;
If you can name three event s P.A.B. has put&#13;
on this year and attend two meetings?&#13;
You can Win A Prize!!!!!!!!!&#13;
Just come to one of our meetings held Fri·&#13;
days, noon, Union 207&#13;
D_ ecember 7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
HostelHospitalitv in Chicago&#13;
By TyroneA Payton .&#13;
Hostelling International-American&#13;
Youth Hostels (HI-AYH) opened a&#13;
world-class, state-of-the-ar~, 500-bed&#13;
hostel indowntown. Chicago In October.&#13;
The j. Ira &amp; NIeld Hams Family&#13;
Hostel will cater to approximately&#13;
75,000 international student travelers&#13;
this year.The hostel was sponsored by&#13;
generouspatronage from the J. Ira &amp;&#13;
NickiHarris Foundation.&#13;
The hostel features inexpensive&#13;
dormitory-styleaccommodations with&#13;
separate female/male quarters and&#13;
pnvate family rooms that are within&#13;
walking distance to Chicago attractions,&#13;
such as, Grant park, the Art&#13;
Institute, the Field Museum, Shedd&#13;
Aquarium,and the Magnificent Mile.&#13;
For only $22 (plus tax) a night,&#13;
membershave 24-hour access, a selfservekitchen,&#13;
a dinin~ room, on-site&#13;
cafes, laundry facilities, Internet&#13;
access,and info. on tickets for certain&#13;
Chicago attractions, as well as a&#13;
reducedfee program for guests of limitedincome.&#13;
The hostel will also feature a Student-&#13;
Center for information services, travel&#13;
wor~shops, student exhibitions, a&#13;
multI-purpose room, meeting and conference&#13;
!o~rns, lounge areas, and a&#13;
commurucation room with Internet access.&#13;
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley&#13;
has given the Chicago Hostel Project&#13;
1.I!'precedented ~upport saying, "The&#13;
CIty of Chicago IS proud to be a supporter&#13;
of the Chicago Hostel, which&#13;
WIll encourage. thousands of young&#13;
mternational VISItorsto enjoy our institutions&#13;
and natural resources, get to&#13;
know us as the welcoming people we&#13;
are, and learn why Chicago is one of&#13;
the great cities of the world."&#13;
The HI-AYH is a non-profit organization&#13;
that promotes international&#13;
understanding appreciation of other&#13;
cultures and the environment through&#13;
ItS networks of hostels and educational&#13;
travel programs. HI-AYH hopes that its&#13;
Chicago addition will bring together&#13;
students from all across the world to a&#13;
place that they can calI horne.&#13;
Wafla and Snvder clash in Mid-East&#13;
conflict during special PIC program&#13;
ByDaniel Frake&#13;
The Middle-East conflict came to&#13;
UW-ParksideThursday, November 16&#13;
as Dr. Marwan Waffa and Professor&#13;
AaronSnyder came together to debate&#13;
the conflict, its causes, and possible&#13;
solutio~. Sronsored by the Parkside&#13;
lnternationa Club (pIC) and mediated&#13;
by Professor Roby Rajan, the&#13;
debatewas to be an open forum for&#13;
people to express their views and&#13;
share ideas on what can be done to&#13;
resolvethe problems in the Mid-East.&#13;
. From the very beginning, though,&#13;
it seemed like it would be anything&#13;
but solution-driven. Dr. Waffa, Dean&#13;
ofthe School of Business and Technology,.&#13;
began his remarks by giving an&#13;
outline of the history of the conflict.&#13;
Whileacknowledging that both parties&#13;
In the conflict had been in the&#13;
wrong at different times, Dr. Waffa's&#13;
outlirieseemed oppressively skewed&#13;
tow~rds painting Palestinians as the&#13;
outright victims. Later, as Professor&#13;
Snyderof the philosophy department&#13;
gavehis ~perung remarks, for a brief&#13;
moment It appeared that the talk&#13;
Wouldchange its direction into one of&#13;
seekin&amp;a solution, Professor Snyder&#13;
reo discussed the issue that, for too blng, people had been assigning&#13;
b amerather than working together to&#13;
~J.eace to the land.&#13;
s ortunately, neither man, nor the&#13;
~tors, seemed willing to proceed&#13;
own this road of thought.&#13;
e While both men are obviously&#13;
~tremely intelligent, neither really&#13;
owed the capacity to discuss the&#13;
issue at length without blaming one&#13;
side or the other for various events&#13;
which have taken place throughout&#13;
history. At one point, for example,&#13;
Professor Snyder, visibly upset, mentioned&#13;
the fact that he has seen Palestinian&#13;
cartoons 'depicting jewish people&#13;
horribly and like monsters, a statement&#13;
which threw the entire room of&#13;
spectators, largely Palestinian, into a&#13;
frenzy,&#13;
The issues surrounding the Middle-&#13;
Eastern conflict are confusing and&#13;
often difficult to discuss strictly historically,&#13;
let alone with the added burden&#13;
of finding a solution. Both Dr. Waffa&#13;
and Professor Snyder agreed that there&#13;
are many causes of the conflict, including&#13;
ethnicity, territoriality, political&#13;
autonomy and religious differences.&#13;
However, agreeing on possible solutions&#13;
is difficult when one or both of&#13;
the two sides refuse to compromise&#13;
and essentially banter back and forth&#13;
about who is worse. One would expect&#13;
more from two highly educated men.&#13;
In fairness to Dr. Waffa and Professor&#13;
Snyder, however, it should be&#13;
noted that this talk is a good example.&#13;
of how difficult it is to solve problems&#13;
when emotions run so high, as they do&#13;
in the complicated web of the Mid-East&#13;
conflict. Perhaps, peace would be&#13;
achieved at a greater level in. this&#13;
world if men and women were willing&#13;
to put their interests aside for the time&#13;
being until compromises can be&#13;
worked out that would be for the better&#13;
of the people as a whole, and the&#13;
world in general.&#13;
Page 5&#13;
LOOKING FOR A&#13;
REWARDING CAREER?&#13;
The Froedtert School of Radiologic Technology offers training in real-world&#13;
skills you can use to embark on a satisfying and rewarding healthcare career.&#13;
Located in Milwaukee, the program involves two years of study and awards&#13;
graduates a certificate in Radiologic Technology. Degree completion programs&#13;
are available with other schools in the Milwaukee area,&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for next semester and individuals with&#13;
one or more years of college experience are invited to apply. The application&#13;
deadline for next semester is January 31st. For application information, call&#13;
(414) 805-4998 or visitwww.froedteruom.&#13;
Your best entertainment value&#13;
Looking for a great entertainment&#13;
value--something inexpensive, something&#13;
packed with action and fun?&#13;
Oh, and do you want it to be close by&#13;
with ample parking? All of those are&#13;
available at the Sports and Activity&#13;
Center (SAC) every time the UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball teams take the floor.&#13;
The games are free to UW-Parkside&#13;
students. All you do is show up, show&#13;
your ill, and you're in. It's that just that&#13;
Simple. Really!&#13;
So, check the schedule of remaining&#13;
horne games listed below, get a group&#13;
of friends together-or just bring youand&#13;
enjoy Ranger basketball!&#13;
UWP Women's Basketball Home Games:&#13;
12/15 Saginaw Valley 7 p.m.&#13;
12/30 Ashland 2 p.m.&#13;
1/ 6 Missouri-St. Louis 1 p.m.&#13;
1/ 11 Kentucky Wesleyan 5:30 p.m.&#13;
1/ 13 Bellarrnine 1 p.m.&#13;
1/ 25 St. Joseph's 5:30 p.m.&#13;
1/27 IUPU-Fort Wayne 1 p.m.&#13;
2/1 Northern Kentucky 5:30 p.m.&#13;
2/ 3 Indianapolis 1 p.m.&#13;
2/ 13 Lewis 5:30 p.m.&#13;
2/ 15 Southern Indiana 5:30 p.m.&#13;
2/ 17 Sill-Edwardsville 1 p.m.&#13;
UWP Men's Basketball Home Games:&#13;
12/14 St. Francis 7 p.m.&#13;
1/6 Missouri-St ..Louis 3:15 p.m.&#13;
1/11 Kntky. Wesleyan 7:45 p.m.&#13;
1/13 Bellarinine 3:15 p.m.&#13;
1/25 St. joseph's 7:45 p.m.&#13;
1/27 IUPU-Fort Wayne 3:15 p.m.&#13;
2/1 N. Kentucky 7:45 p.m.&#13;
2/3 Indianapolis 3:15 p.m.&#13;
2/13 Lewis 7:45 p.m.&#13;
2/15 Southern Indiana 7:45 p.m.&#13;
2/17 Edwardsville 3:15 p.m.&#13;
oecember 7, 2000 Th R - e anger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Hostel HOSPi talilV in Chi cago&#13;
Pages&#13;
8 ryrone_A Payton .&#13;
Y I-{ostelling International-American&#13;
Youth Hostels (HI-AYH) opened a&#13;
world-class, state-of-the-art, 500-bed&#13;
hostel in downtown_ ~cago ~ October.&#13;
The J. Ira &amp; NICki Harns Family&#13;
Hostel will cater to approximately&#13;
75,000 international student travelers&#13;
this year. The hostel was sponsored by&#13;
generous patronage from the J. Ira &amp;&#13;
Nicki Harris Foundation.&#13;
The hostel fea tures inexpensive&#13;
dormitory-style accommodations with&#13;
separate female / male quarters and&#13;
pnvate family rooms that are within&#13;
walking distance to Chicago attractions,&#13;
such as, Grant park, the Art&#13;
Institute, the Field Museum, Shedd&#13;
Aquarium, and the Magnificent Mile.&#13;
For only $22 (p lus tax) a night,&#13;
members have 24-hour access, a sellserve&#13;
kitchen, a dining room, on-site&#13;
cafes, laundry fa cilities, Internet&#13;
access, and info. o n tickets for certain&#13;
Chicago attraction , as well a a&#13;
reduced fee program for gue ts of limited&#13;
income.&#13;
The host~l will also feature a Student&#13;
Center for information services, travel&#13;
wor~shops, s tudent exhibitions, a&#13;
multi-purpose room, meeting and conference&#13;
_ro~ms , lounge areas, and a&#13;
comm?111cation room with Internet acres.5.&#13;
C~cago M ayo~ Richard M. Daley&#13;
has given the Chicago Hostel Project&#13;
lJ!lprecedented support saying, "The&#13;
city of Chicago is proud to be a supp~&#13;
rter of the Chicago Hostel, which&#13;
~ill en~ourag~ . thousands of young&#13;
international v1s1tors to enjoy our institutions&#13;
and n atural resources, get to&#13;
know us as the welcoming people we&#13;
are, and learn why Chicago is one of&#13;
the great cities of the world."&#13;
_The HI-AYH is a non-profit organization&#13;
that promotes international&#13;
understanding appreciation of other&#13;
~ultures and the environment through&#13;
its networks of hostels and educational&#13;
tra-yel programs. HI-AYH hopes that its&#13;
Chicago addition will bring together&#13;
students from all across the world to a&#13;
place that they can call home.&#13;
Walla and snvder clash ·n Mid-East&#13;
conflict du ring special PI G program&#13;
By Daniel Frake&#13;
The Middle-Ea t conflict came to&#13;
UW-Parkside Thursday, November 16&#13;
as Dr. Marwan Waffa and Professor&#13;
Aaron Snyder came together to debate&#13;
the conflict, its causes, and pos ible&#13;
solutio~. Sfonsored by the Parkside&#13;
Intemationa Club (PIC) and mediated&#13;
by Professor Roby Rajan, the&#13;
debate was to be an open forum for&#13;
people to express their views and&#13;
share ideas on what can be done to&#13;
resolve the problems in the Mid-East.&#13;
. From the very beginning, though,&#13;
1t seemed lik e it would be anything&#13;
but solution-driven. Dr. Waffa, Dean&#13;
of the School of Business and Technology,_&#13;
began his remarks by giving an&#13;
ou~e of the history of the corulict.&#13;
~~ acknowledging that both parties&#13;
m the co nflict had been in the&#13;
~g at different times, Dr. Waffa's&#13;
outline seemed oppressively skewed&#13;
tow~ painting Palestinians as the&#13;
oumght victims. Later, as Professor&#13;
Snyder_ of the philosophy department&#13;
gave his operung remarks for a brief&#13;
moment it app eared th~t the talk&#13;
wo~~d change its direction into one of :e a solution. Professor Snyder&#13;
1 en ussed the issue that, for too&#13;
b~ people h ad been assigning&#13;
b . e rather than working together to&#13;
~J:ace to the land.&#13;
S!)ecta ortunately, n either man, nor the&#13;
d"oWn tors, seemed willing to proceed&#13;
own ~s road of thought.&#13;
ex While ~oth m en are obviously&#13;
sh trem.ely mtelligent, neither really&#13;
OWed the capaci ty to discuss the&#13;
issue at length without blaming one&#13;
side or the other for various events&#13;
which have taken elace throughout&#13;
history. At one point, for example,&#13;
Professor Snyder, visibly upset, mentioned&#13;
the fact that he has seen Palestinian&#13;
cartoons depicting Jewish people&#13;
horribly and like monsters, a statement&#13;
which threw the entire room of&#13;
spectators, largely Palestinian, into a&#13;
frenzy.&#13;
The issues s urrounding the MiddleEastern&#13;
conflict are confusing and&#13;
often difficult to discuss strictly hlstorically,&#13;
let alone with the added burden&#13;
of finding a solution. Both Dr. Waffa&#13;
and Professor Snyder agreed that there&#13;
are many causes of the conflict, including&#13;
ethnicity, territoriality, political&#13;
autonomy and religious differences.&#13;
However, agreeing on possible solutions&#13;
is difficult wnen one or both of&#13;
the two sides refuse to compr01nise&#13;
and essentially banter back and forth&#13;
about who is worse. One would expect&#13;
more from two highly educated men.&#13;
In fairness to Dr. Waff a and Professor&#13;
Snyder, however, it should be&#13;
noted that this talk is a good example&#13;
of how diffic ult it is to solve problems&#13;
when emotions run so high, as they do&#13;
in the complicated web of the Mid-East&#13;
conflict. Perhaps, peace would be&#13;
achieved at a greater level in_ 1:hls&#13;
world if men and women were willing&#13;
to put their interests asi~e for the time&#13;
being until compronuses can be&#13;
worl&lt;ed out that would be for the better&#13;
of the people as a whole, and the&#13;
world in general.&#13;
LOOKING FOR A&#13;
REWARDING CAREER?&#13;
The Froedtert School of Radiologic Technology offers training in rea l-world&#13;
skills you can use to embark on a satisfying and reward ing healthcare career.&#13;
Located in Milwaukee, the program involves two years of study and awards&#13;
graduates a cert ificate in Radiologic Technology. Degree completion programs&#13;
are ava ilable with other khools in the Milwaukee area.&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for next semester and individuals with&#13;
one or more years of college experience are invited to apply. The applicat ion&#13;
deadline for next semester is January 31st. For application information, call&#13;
(414) 805-4998 or visit www.froedtert.com.&#13;
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Your best entertainment value&#13;
Looking for a great entertainment&#13;
value--something inexpensive, something&#13;
packed witn action and fun?&#13;
Oh, and do you want it to be close by&#13;
with ample parking? All of those are&#13;
available at the Sports and Activity&#13;
Center (SAC) everytime the OW-Parkside&#13;
basketball teams take the floor.&#13;
The games are free to UW-Parkside&#13;
students. All you do is show up, show&#13;
your ID, and you're in. It's that Just that&#13;
simple. Really!&#13;
So, check the schedule of remaining&#13;
home games listed below, get a group&#13;
of friends together-or just oring youand&#13;
enjoy Ranger basketball!&#13;
UWP Women's Basketball Home Games:&#13;
12/15 Saginaw Valley&#13;
12/ 30 Ashland&#13;
1/ 6 Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
1/ 11 Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
1/ 13 Bellarmine&#13;
1/ 25 St. Joseph's&#13;
1/27 IUPU-Fort Wayne&#13;
2/1 Northern Kentucky&#13;
2/ 3 Indianapolis&#13;
2/ 13 Lewis&#13;
2/ 15 Southern Indiana&#13;
2/ 17 SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
7p.m.&#13;
2p.m.&#13;
lp.m.&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
lp.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
lp.m.&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
lp.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
lp.m.&#13;
UWP Men's Basketball Home Games:&#13;
12/14 St. Francis&#13;
1/6 Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
1/11 Kntky. Wesleyan&#13;
1/13 Bellarmine&#13;
1/25 St. Joseph's&#13;
1/27 IUPU-Fort Wayne&#13;
2/1 N. Kentucky&#13;
2/3 Indianapolis&#13;
2/13 Lewis&#13;
2/15 Southern Indiana&#13;
2/17 Edwardsville&#13;
7p.m.&#13;
3:lSp.m.&#13;
7:45p.m.&#13;
3:lSp.m.&#13;
7:45p.m.&#13;
3:lSp.m.&#13;
7:4Sp.m.&#13;
3:15 p.m.&#13;
7:45p.m.&#13;
7:45 p.m.&#13;
3:15 p.m.&#13;
Page 6&#13;
December 7, 2000&#13;
Potter's Field&#13;
By Melissa Ziemba&#13;
For most people, cemeteries are&#13;
eerie and' frightening places. This&#13;
cemetery is much worse than anything&#13;
that can be imagined. This is the fina1&#13;
resting place for the neglected, and the&#13;
forgotten. The Kenosha County Cemetery&#13;
has many members each with their&#13;
own story. It is a shame that most of&#13;
their stones will never be told.&#13;
A rusty gate surrounds the cemetery&#13;
from the rest of the land around it. The&#13;
padlock that once kept the gates closed&#13;
tightly rusted away long ago. Three&#13;
large elm trees stand guard in the middle&#13;
of the cemetery; their branches are&#13;
gnarled and seem to be reaching down&#13;
as a last remembrance to those who&#13;
have . passed on. These gigantic&#13;
guardians appear to be the only visitors&#13;
to this lonely place.&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
The newly trimmed grass is the only&#13;
sign ofan outside world. Along the fence&#13;
is a thick forest. The com fields beyond&#13;
the remain unseen from this place.&#13;
The only sounds are the rustling of the&#13;
elms' leaves and the peaceful sound of&#13;
insects in the distance.&#13;
There are no flashy headstones, no&#13;
Mausoleums, and no flowers, just concrete&#13;
slabs. The headstones are in neat&#13;
rows but they are no where near perfect.&#13;
Most have extreme signs of decay.&#13;
Some markers have been swallowed up&#13;
by the earth. The top portion of the concrete&#13;
is the only thing that can be seen.&#13;
Some headstones have a plaque&#13;
attached to them, yet the engraved&#13;
words are hard to make out. Almost&#13;
every grave has been vandalized. Some&#13;
headstones are kicked over, while others&#13;
are scratched beyond recognition.&#13;
Traces of white paint can be seen on all&#13;
of the headstones. The ground is&#13;
uneven in places, since it is trying to&#13;
UWP. Professors were once like us&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Contributing: Sheree Homer&#13;
The second article in a 3-part series&#13;
For those students who have not&#13;
yet picked a major, there's still time.&#13;
Many students do not pick their&#13;
majors until their sophomore or junior&#13;
year. Like many students, a number of&#13;
professors at UW-Parkside have made&#13;
changes in their college career during&#13;
their undergraduate studies.&#13;
New programs are often created at&#13;
universities which can give students&#13;
different opportunities, or, some just&#13;
switch simply because their interests&#13;
change. There are also those that&#13;
know what they want to do right from&#13;
the start.&#13;
Many professors at UW-Parkside&#13;
have taken a very smooth path which&#13;
took them to where they are today.&#13;
History professor Laura Gellott knew&#13;
that history was what she wanted to&#13;
major in and stayed with it.&#13;
"I knew from the time I was in&#13;
grade school that I wanted to major in&#13;
history when I went to college," said&#13;
Gellott. "I was influenced by my&#13;
mother, who was a high school history&#13;
teacher, and my uncle, who was&#13;
getting his Ph.D. in history at the&#13;
time."&#13;
Psychology professor Sylvia Beyer&#13;
never changed her major during college&#13;
simply because, "nothing could&#13;
be more interesting." .&#13;
Susan Takata, criminal justice professor,&#13;
was originally a journalism&#13;
major because of an interest in writing&#13;
during her high school years. "I&#13;
switched to sociology because so&#13;
much of journalistic reporting&#13;
required knowledge of society," said&#13;
Takata.&#13;
Professor Fay Akindes from the&#13;
communication department also had&#13;
an interest in writing and got her&#13;
bachelor's degree in journalism. She&#13;
was introduced to public relations&#13;
during her time at the University of&#13;
Hawaii- Manoa, and had the opportunity&#13;
to work with photographers,&#13;
graphic designers, and TV producers.&#13;
Keep in mind that not all professors&#13;
know exactly what they want at&#13;
the start of their quest for their bachelor's&#13;
degree. Evelyn Zepp, a professor&#13;
with the modern languages department,&#13;
originally started out her college&#13;
career by studying math. "I was&#13;
doing integrals and seeing vectors in&#13;
my sleep," said professor Zepp.&#13;
English professor Frances Kavenik&#13;
said that English was actually her&#13;
third major after math and sociology.&#13;
"I had several great teachers who&#13;
influenced me along the way," said&#13;
Kavenik. "The fact that I love to read&#13;
and found differential equations less&#13;
delightful than I had thought they&#13;
would be, and quantifying people's&#13;
behavior likewise and less enjoyable&#13;
than literature."&#13;
Rozanne Leppington from the&#13;
Communication department was&#13;
transformed by taking art and the history&#13;
of art by her art master when she&#13;
was 14. She received her B.A. in fine&#13;
art and cinematography from Leeds&#13;
University in England.&#13;
"I did lots of various jobs, selfemployed&#13;
art work, then worked as a&#13;
medical artist in a teaching hospital,&#13;
then m~re self employed illustrating,&#13;
secretanal work, and then I discovered&#13;
communication when I went&#13;
b~ck to school much later," said Leppmgton.&#13;
Any student with doubts about&#13;
their education now has proof that it&#13;
is acceptable to change you mind a&#13;
few times and still be successful. It&#13;
has worked for many professors here'&#13;
at UW-Parkside.&#13;
settle what was buried beneath it.&#13;
The headstones themselves hold a&#13;
feeling of sadness. There are 109 grave&#13;
markers that have something inscribed&#13;
or chiseled on them. One hundred and&#13;
fifty four have no writing at all. To this&#13;
day no one knows who lies down below.&#13;
There are graves with names of people&#13;
and the dates of when they died. In&#13;
some cases, it tells how they died, such&#13;
as "drowned." Most of the graves are&#13;
inscribed with names of mystery:&#13;
"Unknown Male," "Unknown Want,"&#13;
"Unknown Skeleton."&#13;
In the front row of the cemetery are&#13;
the oldest graves. In 1924, an&#13;
"Unknown White" was buried next to&#13;
an "Unknown Colored." This is considered&#13;
ironic by the standards of the time&#13;
period. Now, they lay side-by-side in&#13;
harmony for an endless time.&#13;
The burial ground is known as Potter's&#13;
Field, the poor cemetery. Many of&#13;
these people were murdered. A considerable&#13;
number were drunks Wh;&#13;
many can be classified as h~melesse&#13;
They had no familie.s or money,and&#13;
that IS why they remam m this placefor&#13;
eterruty.&#13;
Many graves hold the remainsof&#13;
those found after tragic train wrecks&#13;
Some hold the bodies, and in man'&#13;
cases, the body parts that washed upo~&#13;
the shores of Lake Michigan. Theywere&#13;
all buried in their own cheap Wooden&#13;
county-provided caskets with a chuck&#13;
of stone on the earth above their heads&#13;
It is an urban legend in Kenoshathai&#13;
if one walks in the cemetery at night he&#13;
or she will fall right into a coffin.' Of&#13;
course, this has never happened&#13;
because no one dares to visit at night:&#13;
Not many people even know this place&#13;
exists, and so all the unfortunate people&#13;
are unknown even through death.&#13;
These people will always remain the&#13;
forgotten, but some of us can chooseto&#13;
remember them. •&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Monday, December 11&#13;
12 noon - 1:00 p.m.&#13;
The Ranger News office is located in lower Wyllie Hall across&#13;
from the Career Center.&#13;
soc NIGHT&#13;
FRI&amp;AY NIGHT, &amp;ECEMBER 15, Amll 6:00 PM, yOU CAN&#13;
CASH IN ON THE FOLLOWINC 51X SPECIAlS: 12 OZ. MillER&#13;
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Page6 Wisconsin•Parkside 2000&#13;
and cemetery ~mc~ worse ~~ anything&#13;
rmagmed. 1s final&#13;
Cemetery&#13;
middle&#13;
gisantic&#13;
lonefy of an trees this concrete&#13;
perfect.&#13;
concrete&#13;
others&#13;
groWld is DWP New programs are often created at&#13;
different opportunities, or, some just&#13;
switch simply because their interests&#13;
g~ade school that I wanted to major in&#13;
history&#13;
Psychology professor Sylvia Beyer&#13;
never changed her major during college&#13;
be more interesting."&#13;
professor,&#13;
during her high school years. "I&#13;
switched to sociology because so&#13;
much of journalistic reporting&#13;
Takata.&#13;
Professor Fay Akindes from the&#13;
communication department also had&#13;
opportunity&#13;
professors&#13;
bachelor's&#13;
department,&#13;
college&#13;
Kavenfr&#13;
actuafly behavior likewise and less enjoyable&#13;
Rozanne Leppington from the&#13;
Communication department was&#13;
history&#13;
University in England.&#13;
selfemployed&#13;
secretarial discovered&#13;
b?Leppmgton.&#13;
few times and still be successful . It&#13;
has worked for many professors here&#13;
at UW-Parkside.&#13;
an~&#13;
day, people&#13;
ther Infant,"&#13;
1924, considered&#13;
Potter's&#13;
whil&#13;
many can be cla . μied as h~meles:&#13;
families money; i~ remain in pla~ for&#13;
eternity.&#13;
grave remains of&#13;
tr~gic train wrecks.&#13;
th bod1 , many&#13;
up on&#13;
They were&#13;
wooden&#13;
provided l gend Kenosha that&#13;
cem tery he&#13;
night&#13;
p ople ev n pface&#13;
o aU ven The choose to&#13;
PEN 1 :FRIDAY"_N1·G'HT, DECEMBER 15&#13;
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1 lion *&lt;:&lt;Ill 800 233-3357.&#13;
"'jJe;elllber 7, 2000.&#13;
Many other campuses across the&#13;
~ation ,~lready participate in a textbook&#13;
swap or exchange service. Used-&#13;
BookBroker provides a virtual marketplace&#13;
to students who do not have&#13;
access to t~ese book exchanges.&#13;
One major advantage of this service&#13;
is the 65%return of the retail price customers&#13;
receive when they sell their&#13;
textbooks back through the service.&#13;
Ano~er advantage is the low profit the&#13;
service makes off each sale. A $3&#13;
charge per book is applied to cover the&#13;
cost of an advanced credit processing&#13;
system that allows payments to be&#13;
transferred from the buyer's credit&#13;
card into the seller's checking account.&#13;
To sell a textbook, a student enters&#13;
the ISBNof the book they would like to&#13;
sell and answers some questions&#13;
regarding the condition of the book.&#13;
The book is then "posted" and is available&#13;
for sale to buyers across the country.&#13;
When someone wishes to buy the&#13;
book, they request it from the seller,&#13;
who then has a limited period to put&#13;
the book ill the mail. The book is&#13;
tra::ked as it is mailed, and after it&#13;
arnves at the buyer's location, the&#13;
buyer's credit card is charged and the&#13;
--------------~-------.&#13;
Page 7&#13;
seller gets that money deposited into&#13;
his or her account.&#13;
UsedBookBroker is the first organization&#13;
of its kind seeking to revolutionize&#13;
the textbook marketplace. To take&#13;
advantage of this opportunity, visit the&#13;
website at www.usedbookbroker.com.&#13;
----------------------. I I Bowl 2 Games: FIE ERegular Soda:&#13;
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Coupon must be presented at time of&#13;
service. Not valid with any other&#13;
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I All offers subject to lane availability. ~----------------------&#13;
Coupon must be presented at time of&#13;
service. Not valid with any other&#13;
discounts or offers. Prices may vary.&#13;
All offers subject 10 lane availability.&#13;
~FaU2000 •f.&#13;
Jeff Alley&#13;
Nicole Barnett&#13;
Martha Bell&#13;
Jim Berry&#13;
Kelly Coulter&#13;
Melissa Dingfelder&#13;
Antonia Doneva&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Stacy Ericson&#13;
Pete Forchette&#13;
Chris Garrett&#13;
Terrell Harris&#13;
Kelly Hay&#13;
Liza Herbst&#13;
Shaloan Hodges&#13;
Richard Hoyt&#13;
Theresa johnson&#13;
Nicholas Kempen&#13;
Tim Kemps&#13;
Martha King&#13;
john Knuteson&#13;
Mark Lalumondier&#13;
Steven Lenart&#13;
Ernie Luczkowski&#13;
David Lutzke&#13;
Alexis Martin&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Corey Nicks&#13;
Colin Opper&#13;
jonathan Oster&#13;
Sandhu Poonamdeep&#13;
Nick Ravnikar&#13;
jason Rexine&#13;
Mark Senske&#13;
Gina Sicuro&#13;
Angie Siemers&#13;
laSae Simpson&#13;
Ryan Strash&#13;
Chris Taylor&#13;
Christina Toon&#13;
Kirsten Watkins&#13;
Macy Yuen&#13;
....&#13;
oecerober 7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside -- - Page 7&#13;
Are we paving too much tor textbooks., able for sale to buyers ~cross the coun-&#13;
■ try. When someone wishes to buy the&#13;
seller gets that money deposited into&#13;
his or ner account.&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
By How many times have you sold&#13;
ba k a book you spent $70 to $80 for d received only 10 to 30% of the ini~&#13;
cost? A new o~e _textbook ser-&#13;
·ce is available which will allows students&#13;
to sell a book for more money&#13;
than they would normally receive at&#13;
either online retailers or campus bookstores.&#13;
k h . liz d usedBookBro er as capita e on&#13;
dotcom sensations such as Napster&#13;
and Ebay to produce a safe, reliable,&#13;
and fast used textbook exchange&#13;
between students. Students are able to&#13;
buy and sell directly from each other&#13;
w!iile ensuring the safety, reliability&#13;
and speed of each book sold. Students&#13;
need no longer battle the long lines at&#13;
the register and the disappointment of&#13;
the pocket pittance paid to them by the&#13;
school bookstore.&#13;
~any other campuses across the book, they request it from the seller,&#13;
~tion ,~lready partiCipate in a textbook who then !'as a limit_ed period to put&#13;
UsedBookBroker is the first organization&#13;
of its kind seeking to revolutionize&#13;
the textbook marketplace. To take&#13;
advantage of this opportunity, visit the&#13;
website at www.usedbookbroker.com.&#13;
swap or exchange service. Used- the book m the mail. The book is&#13;
BookBroker provides a virtual market- tracked as it is mailed, and after it&#13;
place to students who do not have arrives at the buyer's location, the&#13;
access to ~ese book exchanges. buyer's credit card is charged and the&#13;
. One ma1or advantage of this service " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -&#13;
IS the 65% return of the retail price cus- 1&#13;
tomers receive when they sell their Bowl 2 Ga . FI EE ~~~~~~d~~~a~~':g~lo~\~ru~t~ mes: Regular Soda&#13;
service makes off each sale. A $3 G&#13;
charge per book is applied to cover the et 1 FREE cost of an advanced credit processing&#13;
system that allows payments to be&#13;
transferred from the ouyer's credit&#13;
card into the seller's checking account.&#13;
w/Food Purchase&#13;
To sell a textbook, a student enters&#13;
the ISBN of the book they would like to .. Coupon must be presented at time of .. c.oupon must be presented at tine. ot&#13;
11 service. Not valid with any other service . Not valid with any other&#13;
se and answers some questions discounts or otters . Prices may vary. discounts or offers . Prices may vary.&#13;
regarding the condition of the book. 1 All offers subject to Jane availabi 'ity. 1 Al offers si.bject 10 lane availabdrty.&#13;
The book: is then "posted" and is avail- • - - ...... - - - ...... - - - - - - - - - - - - •- - - - - - - - - - - - ... - - - - - - - - -&#13;
~fail2000 ,&#13;
•&#13;
Jeff Alley&#13;
Nicole Barnett&#13;
Martha Bell&#13;
Jim Berry&#13;
Kelly Coulter&#13;
Melissa Dingfelder&#13;
Antonia Doneva&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Stacy Ericson&#13;
Pete Forchette&#13;
Chris Garrett&#13;
Terrell Harris&#13;
Kelly Hay&#13;
Liza Herbst&#13;
Shaloan Hodges&#13;
Richard Hoyt&#13;
Theresa Johnson&#13;
Nicholas Kempen&#13;
Tim Kemps&#13;
Martha King&#13;
John Knuteson&#13;
Mark Lal umondier&#13;
Steven Lenart&#13;
Ernie Luczkowski&#13;
David lutzke&#13;
Alexis Martin&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Corey Nicks&#13;
-·. ; ...&#13;
Colin Opper&#13;
Jonathan Oster&#13;
Sandhu Poonamdeep&#13;
Nick Ravnikar&#13;
Jason Rexine&#13;
Mark Senske&#13;
Gina Sicuro&#13;
Angie Siemers&#13;
LaSae Simpson&#13;
Ryan $trash&#13;
Chris Taylor&#13;
Christina Toon&#13;
Kirsten Watkins&#13;
Macy Yuen&#13;
:"~. ,;&#13;
; ~&#13;
·: · .. · .. · ~-&#13;
Page 8 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ethnic diversity internship available&#13;
for spring semester 2001&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
After graduation, will you be working&#13;
in a public setting where you deal&#13;
with a wide spectrum of people on a&#13;
day to day basis? Most students&#13;
should answer "yes" to this question&#13;
considering most careers involve&#13;
working with people. Business majors,&#13;
pre-health majors, communication&#13;
majors, pre-certified teaching majors,&#13;
etc. will all be expected to work in the&#13;
public. This internship aids in developing&#13;
skills students need in order to&#13;
be successful in diverse settings.&#13;
The first half of the semester, students&#13;
meet in class once a week for dis-&#13;
-cussion and activities led by Professor&#13;
Christie. The in-class work helps prepare&#13;
the students for the real-life expe-&#13;
L riences they will have in the second&#13;
half of the semester. During the second&#13;
half, students take part in a supervised&#13;
internship in the community participating&#13;
in various events such as tutoring, setting&#13;
up after-school programs, and even&#13;
playing basketball with pre-college&#13;
youth. "The idea is to try to match students&#13;
with a person of an ethnic background&#13;
different from their own," say&#13;
Christie. "To gain a better understanding&#13;
of some one outside their race."&#13;
Although this is an excellent opportunity&#13;
for all students, Professor&#13;
Christie highly recommends this class&#13;
to business majors. "Anybody in business&#13;
_ [would find this internship&#13;
important) because corporations are&#13;
always looking for people who have a&#13;
multiethnic framework in order to get&#13;
along with other [diverse) peop1e.&#13;
Those who have this kind of experience&#13;
will be the first to get hired&#13;
because we are in a globalized economy."&#13;
Spaces in class are limited. Call&#13;
Christine Christie at 595-2019 or e-mail&#13;
christine.christie@uwp.edu&#13;
l&#13;
Career Opportunities -&#13;
for the Engineering and Business Professional&#13;
Consider a career with a well-established, stable&#13;
and growing global company. We offer a number&#13;
of professional development paths for the graduate&#13;
that present opportunities to learn and work within&#13;
different markets, industries and applications.&#13;
Find out about the career paths that are available&#13;
to you by contacting:&#13;
,&#13;
Spark Jour spirit with UWP music&#13;
By Julie Thompson&#13;
As if to welcome the Jolly One himself,&#13;
The UW-Parkside Music Department&#13;
will be holding several concerts&#13;
during the month of December featuring&#13;
UWP students and facility. So, grab&#13;
a cup of hot cocoa and welcome the&#13;
holidays with a melody. . .&#13;
On Friday, Dec. 8, director DaVId&#13;
Schripsema conducts the UW-Parkslde&#13;
Orchestra. Held in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, the concert will feature "Quiet&#13;
City for Trumpet and English Horn an~&#13;
Strings" by Aaron Copland, WIth Heidi&#13;
Brann on English Horn, and Mark Eichner&#13;
on trumpet; Handel's "Concerto&#13;
Grosso Op. 6, No.1," "Battalia for&#13;
Strings" by H.I.F. Biber; and Peter Warlock's&#13;
"Capriol Suite for String Orchestra."&#13;
The concert is free.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
performs Saturday, Dec. 9. Director&#13;
George Lindquist will be joined by&#13;
Jamey Buencamino, Scott Nelson, Eric&#13;
Thompson, and Nicholas Zeleski on&#13;
"The Entertainer" by Scott Joplin,&#13;
"Introduction and Variations on a&#13;
Theme of Mozart, Op. 9," and "Minuet&#13;
in C, Op. 25" by Fernando Sor, as well&#13;
as compositions by John Dowland, G.P.&#13;
Telemann, Leo Brouwer, Luis Milan,&#13;
and Christian Gottlieb Scheidler. This&#13;
program is free and starts at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in Communication Arts Room D-118.&#13;
The following afternoon, Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 1~, ~~ UW-Parkside Choirs partietpate&#13;
m Holidax MusIC for Choirs,&#13;
Organ, and Brass' in Racine. The program&#13;
features "Antiphon" by David&#13;
Conte and "Gaudearnus" by Richard&#13;
Proux, both performed with backing&#13;
from the Parkside Holiday Brass' the&#13;
Ralph Vaughan Williams compositions&#13;
"0 Clap Your Hands" and "Fantasiaon&#13;
Christmas Ca~ls" ~e. latter fealurin~&#13;
Ken Lenz, ban tone; Ding, Dong Memlyon&#13;
High" by David Willcocks;"Good&#13;
King Wenceslas" by, Leo Sowerl&gt;y; "Gloria&#13;
in Excelsis Deo ' by Dania! Pinkham·&#13;
and works by Edgar Bainton, Willia~&#13;
Mathias, Johann Hermann Schein&#13;
George Dyson, and Harold Darke. '&#13;
This vocal and musical gift will be&#13;
unwrapped at St. Luke's Episcopal&#13;
Church, 614 Main St. in Racine at 3:30&#13;
p.m. Donations will be accepted.&#13;
The final Noon Concert of 2000is&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 13. Director George&#13;
Lindquist leads the UW-Parkside Guitar&#13;
Ensemble at the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The concert schedule concludes&#13;
when the UW-Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
and Community Band presents its second&#13;
concert of the fall semester Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 14. Conducted by Mark Eichner,&#13;
the groups will perform Arthur&#13;
Butterworth's IIWinter Music," the&#13;
"Cuban Overture" by George Gershwin,&#13;
and Clifton Williams' "Symphonic&#13;
Suite." In keeping with the season, the&#13;
concert will include holiday music for&#13;
band. The program starts at 7:30p.m.in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre. TIckets&#13;
are $5 for adults and $3 for students.&#13;
For more information, call the Music&#13;
Department at ext. 2457.&#13;
Arts: ALIVE!presents The Nutcrack"&#13;
Is ther~ a sto?, more enchanting&#13;
than Tchaikovsky s classic "The Nutcracker?"&#13;
This tale of a little girl and&#13;
her marvelous Christmas gift will be&#13;
presented Monday, Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Part of UW-Parkside's Arts: ALIVE!&#13;
series, the program features the International&#13;
Ballet Theater, a talented&#13;
ensemble of award-winning dancers&#13;
from RUSSIaand the United States. The&#13;
performance is sold out.&#13;
The production is under the artistic&#13;
direction of internationally acclaimed&#13;
Vladimir Shumeikin. You know the&#13;
story: young Clara receives from the&#13;
mys!erious Herr Drosselmeyer a toy&#13;
soldier nutcracker. In her dreams, the&#13;
nutcracker comes to life to save her&#13;
from th~ evil Mouse King. When the&#13;
rodent. IS vanquished, the toy transforms&#13;
mto a handsome prince. Together&#13;
Clara and her prince dance through&#13;
the Kingdom of the Sweets before she&#13;
IS escorted safely home by Herr&#13;
Drosselmeyer.&#13;
The performance will showcase the&#13;
talents of the husband and wife team of&#13;
Irena and Alexander Boitsov, and performers&#13;
from the Academy of Dance.&#13;
This is the second consecutive sold out&#13;
performance in the Arts: ALIVE!series.&#13;
The concert by Celtic violinist Natalie&#13;
MacMaster also was a sell out.&#13;
Meet Wayne&#13;
Youngquist Dec. 13&#13;
By: Lynn Garcia .&#13;
Wayne Youngquist is a Commurucation&#13;
professor here at UW_Parkslde&#13;
and a political analyst for Channel 12&#13;
News. He is scheduled to discuss his&#13;
career with Professor Saffioti-Hughes'&#13;
Writing Internship class on December&#13;
13th at 3:00pm. Anyone who would&#13;
like to attend is more than welcome.&#13;
He will be talking about he closest&#13;
election in years, his job at Channel 12,&#13;
and career possibilities for Enghsh&#13;
majors. Please stop by CommunicatIOn&#13;
Arts 139 and hear what Professor&#13;
Youngquist has to say.&#13;
Hope to see you all there.&#13;
Page8 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ethnic diversitv internship available&#13;
for spring semester 2001&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
After graduation, will you be workin~&#13;
in a public setting where you deal&#13;
with a wide spectrum of people on a&#13;
day to day basis? Most students&#13;
should answer "yes" to this question&#13;
considering most careers involve&#13;
working with people. Business majors,&#13;
pre-health majors, communication&#13;
majors, pre-certified teaching majors,&#13;
etc. will all be expected to work in the&#13;
public. This internship aids in developing&#13;
skills shtdents need in order to&#13;
be successful in diverse settings.&#13;
The first half of the semester, students&#13;
meet in class once a week for discussion&#13;
and activities led by Professor&#13;
Christie. The in-class work helps prepare&#13;
the students for the real-life experiences&#13;
they will have in the second&#13;
half of the semester. During the second&#13;
half, students take part in a supervised&#13;
internship in the community participating&#13;
in various events such as tutoring, setting&#13;
up after-school programs, and even&#13;
playinq, basketball with pre-college&#13;
youth. 'The idea is to try to match students&#13;
with a person of an ethnic background&#13;
different from their own," say&#13;
Christie. "To gain a better understanding&#13;
of some one outside their race."&#13;
Although this is an excellent opportunity&#13;
for all students, Professor&#13;
Christie highly recommends this class&#13;
to business majors. "Anybody in business&#13;
[would firtd this internship&#13;
important] because corporations are&#13;
always looking for people who have a&#13;
multiethnic framework in order to ge t&#13;
along with other [diverse] people.&#13;
Those who have this kind of experience&#13;
will be the first to get fiire d&#13;
because we are in a globalized economy."&#13;
Spaces in class are limited. Call&#13;
Christine Christie at 595-2019 or e-mail&#13;
christine.christie@uwp.edu&#13;
Career Opportunities -&#13;
for the Engineering and Business Professional&#13;
Consider a career with a well-established, stable&#13;
and growing global company. We offer a number&#13;
of professional development paths for the graduate&#13;
that present opportunities to learn and work within&#13;
different markets, industries and applications.&#13;
Find out about the career paths that are available&#13;
to you by contacting:&#13;
. .. . ·- . , . !i i&#13;
·-•• ~ .&#13;
'la :: ,.;ff.••' I l,&#13;
"-• 1'11; • •lllf • •- • • • • ' .. .. 1• •• '*• ••• .. ·····"' , .... i .. . . ..... . .. . .. ·::. ~ ·-~ .. . . .&#13;
:;1 ~ ~ ..... .. 'i' ' ' . . '&#13;
Spark vour spirit wit h DWP music&#13;
By Julie Thompson .&#13;
As if to wefcome the Jolly One himself,&#13;
The UW-Parkside Music Department&#13;
will be holding several concerts&#13;
during the month of December featuring&#13;
UWP students and faculty. So, grab&#13;
a cup of hot cocoa and welcome the&#13;
holidays with a melody. . .&#13;
On Friday, Dec. 8, director Da~d&#13;
Schripsema conducts the UW-Parks1de&#13;
Orchestra. Held in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, the concert will feature "Quiet&#13;
City for Trumpet and English Hom and&#13;
Strings" by Aaron Copland, with Heidi&#13;
Brann on English Hom, and Mark Eichner&#13;
on trumpet; Handel's "Concerto&#13;
Grosso Op. 6, No. l," "Battalia for&#13;
Strings" by H.I.F. Biber; and Peter Warlock's&#13;
"Caprio! Suite for String Orchestra."&#13;
The concert is free.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
performs Saturday, Dec. 9. Director&#13;
George Lindquist will be joined by&#13;
Jamey Buencamino, Scott Nelson, Eric&#13;
Thompson, and Nicholas Zeleski on&#13;
"The Entertainer" by Scott Joplin,&#13;
"Introduction and Variations on a&#13;
Theme of Mozart, Op. 9," and "Minuet&#13;
in C, Op. 25" by Fernando Sor, as well&#13;
as compositions by John Dowland, G.P.&#13;
Telemann, Leo Brouwer, Luis Milan,&#13;
and Christian Gottlieb Scheidler. This&#13;
program is free and starts at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
m Communication Arts Room D-118.&#13;
The following afternoon, Sunday,&#13;
!Jee. 19, ~~ CTvy-Parksid~ Choirs participate&#13;
m Holidar, Music for Choirs,&#13;
Organ, and Brass ' in Racine. The program&#13;
feature "Antiphon" by DaVid&#13;
Conte and " Ga u deamus" by Richard&#13;
Proux, both p erformed with backin&#13;
from the Parksid e Holiday Brass· ~&#13;
Ralph Vaughan Williams compositions&#13;
"O Clap Your Hands" and "Fantasia&#13;
Christmas Carols" the latter featurin~&#13;
Ken Lenz, baritone; " Ding, Dong Merrily&#13;
on High" by David Willcocks; "Good&#13;
King Wene las" hr, Leo Sowerby; "Qo.&#13;
ria in Excelsis Deo ' by Danial Pinkham;&#13;
and w rks by Edgar Bainton, William&#13;
Mathias, Johann Hermann Schein,&#13;
George Dyson, and Harold Darke.&#13;
This vocal and musical gift will be&#13;
unwrapped at St. Luke's Episcopal&#13;
Churcn, 614 Main St . in Racine at 3:30&#13;
p.m. Donations w ill be accepted.&#13;
The final Noon Concert of 200) is&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 13 . Director George&#13;
Lindquist lead the UW-Parkside Guitar&#13;
Ensemble at the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The cone rt chedule concludes&#13;
when the UW-Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
and Communit)' Band presents its second&#13;
cone rt of the fa ll semester Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 14. Conducted by Mark Eichner,&#13;
th groups wiU perform Arthur&#13;
Butterworth's ''Winter Music/ the&#13;
"Cuban Overture" by George Gershwin,&#13;
and Clifton Willia ms' "Symphonic&#13;
Suite." In k ping with the season, the&#13;
concert will include holiday music for&#13;
band. The program tarts at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Art Theatre. Tickets&#13;
are $5 for adult · and $3 for students.&#13;
For mor informa tion, call the Music&#13;
Department at ext. 2457.&#13;
Arts: ALIVE! presents Th e Nutcra,:t1r&#13;
Is there a story more enchanting&#13;
than Tchaikovsky's classic "The Nutcracker?"&#13;
This tale of a little girl and&#13;
her marvelous Christmas gift will be&#13;
presented Monday, Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
m the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Part of UW-Parkside's Arts: ALIVE!&#13;
series, the program features the International&#13;
Ballet Theater, a talented&#13;
ensemble _of award-winning dancers&#13;
from Russia and the United States. The&#13;
performance is sol d out.&#13;
. Th~ production is under the artistic&#13;
direc~o:1 of internationally acclaimed&#13;
Vladmu r Shumeikin. You know the&#13;
st0ry: young Clara receives from the&#13;
mys!erious Herr Drosselmeyer a toy&#13;
soldier nutcrack er. In her dreams, the&#13;
nutcracker comes to life to save her&#13;
from th~ evil Mouse King. When the&#13;
rodent_ 1s vanquished, the toy transforms&#13;
mto a handsome prince. Together&#13;
Cl~ a and her prince dance through&#13;
~ e Kingdom of the Sweets before she&#13;
is escorted safely home b y Herr&#13;
Drosselmeyer.&#13;
The performance w ill show case the&#13;
talents of the h usband and wife team of&#13;
Irena and Alexander Boitsov, and performers&#13;
from the Academy of [)anc:e.&#13;
This is the second consecutive sold out&#13;
performance in the Arts: ALIVE! seriesThe&#13;
concert by Celtic violinist Natalie&#13;
MacMaster also was a sell out.&#13;
Mee t wavne&#13;
Youn gquist Dec. 13&#13;
By: Lynn Garcia .&#13;
Wayne Youngquist is a Commuru_cation&#13;
professor here at UW-Parks1de&#13;
and a political analyst for Channel 1_2&#13;
News. He is scheduled to disc\lSS ~&#13;
career with Professor Saffioti-Hu~es&#13;
Writing Internship class on December&#13;
1_3th at 3:00pm . Anyone who would&#13;
like to attend is more than welcome.&#13;
He will be talking about he closest&#13;
election in years, his job at Channel J2,&#13;
and career possibilities for Eng~h&#13;
majors. Please stop by Communication&#13;
Arts 139 and hear what Professor&#13;
Youngquis t has to say.&#13;
Hope to see you all there.&#13;
December7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside • Page 9&#13;
TWO paws UP for the spot-actular dalmatians -&#13;
JulieThompson&#13;
Don'tbe fooled by Cruella De Vil's&#13;
amped saccharine behavior, the&#13;
M:'stress of Mean is back and more&#13;
nnivingand stylish than ever in Walt&#13;
~sney Pictures }lve action c,?medy&#13;
"102Dalmatians. The film IS directed&#13;
by Kevin Lima, and based on the&#13;
novel,The One Hundred And One&#13;
Dalmatiansby Dodie Smith.&#13;
In thesequel to the 1996 blockbuster&#13;
film "101 Dalmatians," Cruella is&#13;
newlyreleased from prison on "good&#13;
hebavior"after her miraculous transformationfrom&#13;
a heartless rogue, passionatefor&#13;
polka-dotted puppy pelts&#13;
to compassionate canine crusader,&#13;
after receiving "therapy" from Dr.&#13;
Pavlov.Upon her release, Cruella&#13;
insists on being called 'Ella' in&#13;
responseto her newly acquired disdainforfur&#13;
and love for carunes.&#13;
Sheis assigned to devoted Dalmatian&#13;
owner and parole officer, Chloe&#13;
Simon (Alice Evans), who doesn't fall&#13;
for "Ella's" remarkable change of&#13;
heart, but instead falls for the bighearted&#13;
and handsome dog shelter&#13;
manager, Kevin Shepherd (loan&#13;
Gruffudd). Adding to the amusement&#13;
is Kevin's somewhat confused parrot,&#13;
Waddlesworth, who thinks he's a rottweiler,&#13;
along with a throng of faithful&#13;
pups who follow Kevin everywhere&#13;
he goes.&#13;
In an effort to charm her new furry&#13;
four-legged friends and her parole&#13;
agent, Cruella buys the local dog-shelter,&#13;
convincing Kevin and the townspeople,&#13;
although briefly, that she real-&#13;
BruceWillis is Unllreakallie&#13;
SamuelL. Jackson, left and Bruce Willis star in the thriller "Unbreakable."&#13;
By TyroneA Payton&#13;
" In the follow up to his smash hit&#13;
TheSixth Sense," director M. Night&#13;
Shyamalangoes forward with another&#13;
SUSpensethriller starring Bruce&#13;
WIllIS as David Dunn, the sole sur-&#13;
VIVorf a horrific train wreck.&#13;
Co-staring the film is Samuel L.&#13;
Jacksonw, ho plays Elijah Price, a man&#13;
Whocomes to offer an outrageous&#13;
explanationfor his survival. EliJ'ah, a&#13;
cb0e!'l\ic book art enthusiast, adamantly&#13;
Itevesthat David is an invulnerable&#13;
Illan, and that they are soul mates.&#13;
'aliDaVidis the perfect contrast to Eli-&#13;
) ,a man who ever since birth has&#13;
been known to suffer from illness and&#13;
having his bones break like glass. Eliiah&#13;
believes they were destined ~o&#13;
~eet and now he must help David&#13;
reali~e his full potential - to be a&#13;
genetic super hero. .&#13;
Will David decide to be an ordinary&#13;
man and sever his destiny from that of&#13;
Elijah's beliefs? With anoth~r !wl.st&#13;
di g this cinematic production will&#13;
~~e; ~udiences mystified in their&#13;
seats until the end .&#13;
A rox. Run Time: 147 MInutes&#13;
RfFed PG-l3: mature themes; som~&#13;
disturbing or violent content; a sexua&#13;
reference.&#13;
ly is a changed woman. In the&#13;
classic Cruella style, De Vii arranges&#13;
for Kevin to be arrested for the dognapping&#13;
of several Dalmatianruppies,&#13;
landing him in jail and out 0 Chloe's&#13;
good graces. Now more than ever,&#13;
Chloe is convinced that Cruella is a&#13;
changed woman. So she accepts an&#13;
invitation to a dog dinner for herself&#13;
and proud, new father, Dipstick, to&#13;
Cruella's mansion, leaving her beloved&#13;
Dalmatians, Little Dipper, Domino,&#13;
Oddball and their mother alone for the ...&#13;
evening.&#13;
But Cruella can't pull off her amoral&#13;
act alone. She calls in the help of her&#13;
faithful manservant, Alonso and her&#13;
newly acquired accomplice and French&#13;
fashion furrier aptly named, Jean&#13;
Pierre Le Pelt. Will the threesome pull&#13;
off their dastardly deed or will the&#13;
adorable dotted do~s dodge danger?&#13;
"102 Dahnatians ' bore distinct similarities&#13;
to the 1996 version, which&#13;
made it predictable and a bit uninteresting.&#13;
Glen Close's performance as&#13;
"De Vii" again made the movie a probable&#13;
hit, as did the addition of Gerard&#13;
DePardieu, who played "Le Pelt."&#13;
Aside from the predictabillty, children&#13;
and Dahnatian owners will definitely&#13;
love this movie, for its spot-acular dog&#13;
performances.&#13;
Deferring taxes with&#13;
TIAA-CREF can be so&#13;
rewarding, you'll wonder&#13;
why you didn't do it sooner.&#13;
One of the fastest waY'&gt;to build a retirement nest egg&#13;
is through tax-deferred Supplemental Retirement&#13;
Annuities (SRAsl from TIAA-CREE&#13;
IT'S EASY TO SAVE MORE THROUGH&#13;
THE POWER OFTAX DEFERRAL&#13;
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you can easily build income to supplement your pension&#13;
and SOCial Security.&#13;
~; T.Lll.kf&lt;tmJ"""- ... ,;IIa"",,,&#13;
• AI\......... ""·"',.&#13;
"&#13;
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TIAA-CREF'ssolid histOfy of investment performance,&#13;
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INVESTA'j LlTILE AS ment today with tax-deferred&#13;
S25 a month SRAs. We think you will find It&#13;
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payroll plan 1&#13;
10)'EARS 2O)'EARS ": 1OYF.AR.&lt;;&#13;
In u,i. hyflUlb.-tical eumpl~ . ....u;Ilj, M,,;&lt;l~SIOO;l. monln;n;l.&#13;
uu-&lt;lclctT...J i"'''5mlCl\t wi,h an H&lt;;;.,eturn in a 21\~ lll~&#13;
brackcl sllOWItxxtcr ~Ih mall U" slIllle:IlCI"' .......n..\ pul&#13;
llI1(&gt;a .a~JIlP ,""COO"!. ToW TCtllrlls:\lId j&gt;(Ill"'p"l "MllIl: Ilf&#13;
ill'''lOtlllCDI!will fl\ll:l1.Ultc. &amp;lid yrckl may Y,lf)', Thcdla.rt&#13;
ablwc is praemed klf iU\I~tr4ti\'e pIIfllO'C! \'I11)·.&gt;nd docs DQI&#13;
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..-~-----~-------&#13;
Ensuring the futura i.800.842.2776&#13;
for those who shape it." www. ti aa-c ref'.o rg&#13;
For more complete information on our seontes p-coocts, please call ~800 842.2733, ext. 5509, to reqcest crcscectcses. RNd them carejul1~&#13;
eetoe jou invest. 1. You may be &lt;lble to In...estup to thE.&gt;IRSm;jJ(nTlumof' 10.500 per year,Toren~t1I'I! a PfflOnalrzedcalculationof your&#13;
maldmum corl1l'ibution. cal TlAA-CRH all 800 842.-2776 .• TIAA·CREF IndiVidual and InstillltlonalSm1ces, !nc. drmibu~ the CR.EF&lt;fld T1M&#13;
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C 2000 TIAA.(REf 08t'O]&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT REVIEW&#13;
December 7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page9&#13;
110 paws up tor the spot-actular dalmatians&#13;
Julie Thompson&#13;
Don't be fooled by Cruella De Vil's&#13;
vamped saccharine behavior, the&#13;
MistreSS of Mean is back and more&#13;
conniving and styli~h than_ ever in Walt&#13;
Disney Pictures live action comedy&#13;
"102 Dalmatians." The film is directed&#13;
by :Kevin Lima, and based on the&#13;
novel The One Hundred And One&#13;
oaJm'.itians by Dodie Smith.&#13;
In the sequel to the 1996 blockbuster&#13;
film "101 Dalmatians," Cruella is&#13;
newly released from prison on "good&#13;
behavior" after her miraculous transformation&#13;
from a heartless rogue, passionate&#13;
for polka-dotted puppy pelts&#13;
to compassionate canine crusader,&#13;
after receiving "therapy" from Dr.&#13;
Pavlov. Upon her release, Cruella&#13;
insists on being called 'Ella' in&#13;
response to her newly acquired disdain&#13;
for fur and love for canines.&#13;
She is assigned to devoted Dalmatian&#13;
owner and parole officer, Chloe&#13;
Simon (Alice Evans), who doesn't fall&#13;
for "Ella's" remarkable change of&#13;
heart, but instead falls for the bighearted&#13;
and handsome dog shelter&#13;
manager, Kevin Shepherd (loan&#13;
Gruffudd). Adding to the amusement&#13;
is Kevin's somewfiat confused parrot,&#13;
Waddlesworth, who thinks he's a rottweiler,&#13;
along with a throng of faithful&#13;
pups who follow Kevin everywhere&#13;
he goes.&#13;
In an effort to charm her new furry&#13;
four-legged friends and her parole&#13;
agent, Cruella buys the local dog-shelter,&#13;
convincing Kevin and the townspeople,&#13;
although briefly, that she real-&#13;
Bruce Willis is Unllreallallle&#13;
Samuel L. Jackson, left and Br~ce Willis star in the thriller "Unbreakable."&#13;
By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
,, In the follow up to his smash hit&#13;
The Sixth Sense," director M. Night&#13;
Shyarnaian goes forward with anoth~&#13;
s~pense thriller starring Bruce&#13;
.illis as David Dunn, the sole survivor&#13;
of a horrific train wreck.&#13;
Co-staring the film is Samuel L. thkson, who plays Elijah Price, a man&#13;
0 comes to offer an outrageous&#13;
eXplanation for his survival. EliJ"ah, a co . beic book art enthusiast, adamantly&#13;
eves that David is an invulnerable&#13;
lllan, and that they are soul mates.&#13;
.ah David is the perfect contrast to Eli]&#13;
1 a man who ever since birth has&#13;
been known to suffer from illness an~&#13;
having his bones break like gl~ss. Elijah&#13;
believes they were destined ~o&#13;
meet and now he must help David&#13;
reali~e his full potential - to be a&#13;
genetic super hero. .&#13;
Will David decide to be an ordinary&#13;
man and sever his destiny from that _of&#13;
Elijah's beliefs? ~th anoth~r tw1_st&#13;
d . g this cinematic production will&#13;
en m , •f· d · th ·r keep audiences mysh ie m e1&#13;
seats until the end .&#13;
A rox. Run Tune: 147 Minutes&#13;
Jt~d PG-13: mature themes; some&#13;
disturbing or violent content; a sexual&#13;
reference.&#13;
ly is a changed woman. In the&#13;
classic Cruella style, De Vtl arranges&#13;
for Kevin to be arrested for the dognapping&#13;
of several Dalmatianruppies,&#13;
landing him in jail and out o Chloe's&#13;
good &amp;races. Now more than ever,&#13;
Chloe 1s convinced that Cruella is a&#13;
changed woman. So she accepts an&#13;
invitation to a dog dinner for herself&#13;
and proud, new father, Dipstick, to&#13;
Cruella's mansion, leaving her beloved&#13;
Dalmatians, Little Dipper, Domino,&#13;
Oddball and their mother alone for the&#13;
evening.&#13;
But Cruella can't pull off her amoral&#13;
act alone. She calls in the help of her&#13;
faithful manservant, Alonso and her&#13;
newly acquired accomplice and French&#13;
fashion furrier aptly named, Jean&#13;
Pierre Le Pelt. Will the threesome pull&#13;
off their dastardly deed or will the&#13;
adorable dotted doi;;,s dodge danger?&#13;
"102 Dalmatians ' bore distinct similarities&#13;
to the 1996 version, which&#13;
made it predictable and a bit uninteresting.&#13;
Glen Close's performance as&#13;
"De Vil" again made the movie a probable&#13;
hit, as did the addition of Gerard&#13;
DePardieu, who played "Le Pelt."&#13;
Aside from the predictability, children&#13;
and Dalmatian owners will definitely&#13;
love this movie, for its spot-acular dog&#13;
performances.&#13;
Def erring taxes with&#13;
TIAA-CREF can be so&#13;
rewarding, you'll wonder&#13;
why you didn't do it sooner.&#13;
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And your contr 1bu11ons to SAAs grow undim,n,shed&#13;
by taxes until you w11hdraw t e funds.• Add to that&#13;
TIAA-CREF"s 50!,d history of investment perfOfmance,&#13;
boMered by our comm1tmen1 to keep,ng expe&lt;ises low.&#13;
and you have more money working for you.&#13;
So why wa,t? Let us nelp you bu Id a comfortable retire-&#13;
INVEST AS LITTLE AS ment today with ,ax-deferred&#13;
S25 a montn 5RAs. We th,nk you will find 1t&#13;
through an automatic rewarding 1n the years to come.&#13;
p.ayroll plan I&#13;
•~te under federal t.nbw. witho'aw i,na,to.&gt;ge SlM~be&#13;
5UIJte('I to restrictlOIIS. and to a \0% addit!Ollal till&lt;&#13;
IT'S IASV TD SAVE MORE THROUGH&#13;
THE POWER OF TAX DEFERRAL&#13;
$102.068&#13;
$67.514&#13;
$41.232&#13;
$31,933&#13;
Sl3,0~2 __ _ Sl 1.609&#13;
IU't'F.ARS&#13;
lnthl•h)pu'lht-t ialcurnrlc ....t.llD a1-•Jrl-lOO.:amon1h1 ■;&#13;
tli.r.-ddaftd U'l"I, ·S,U ·r.1-.1lh ah w;.. t'd:Wll '" ol ~tt'l bs.&#13;
i,h,,,,., bL'11tt tt.,_\b lh.LD l1I(' W't • ~ ~ pl&amp;t&#13;
1111ua sa", s~.:°'-• r"-,w n.."tllrllltalid pnaup.J, •or&#13;
tu\of,,"SUnmu .,.,-.,U fl ll&amp;tC. aDd ytcld mer Y.W"\. the 1..hlM1&#13;
lib(,-vc I pra,cnud kif ilh.rWllh"t" ~ ~1~ .»Id di..-..c1 DOIi&#13;
~, k't\111 ptrfonn.ll'MX, Of pteJic\ fulu1c rnuta'h (.If iJQ.V&#13;
TlA."·CRF.F a.xw~ ur rd'l«t ~•~,&#13;
------------------&#13;
Ensuring the future&#13;
for those who shape it.'"&#13;
1.800.842.2776&#13;
www.tiaa-cref.org&#13;
fOf mo1eco•r~iktc ,nlormat,on on cu, se&lt;u111,es producu, pleaseta~ 1800841.1733, e,n 5509, 10,eQUeSt prospectiMS. MNd h.n, c.;,etully&#13;
before )'OU invest 1. You m;,y be ableto ,owst up to !he IRS r=imurnof S 10.'SOOpe,year TorectM! ~ personnhcd c.,k:ul.Jt,onol JO.II&#13;
maximumC(ln!fOOIIOfl. call TIAA·C REF al I 800 842-2776 • TIAA-CREF lnd,,w;!wl and lnstJtunooa! S.....Ce,,, Inc. d~troJle,tho CREf and 11AA&#13;
Ri&gt;al Esiate vaoable annui1&gt;es. • Teacrers Persooal .,...too Se&lt;w:es, w,c cistloutei 1he Pe&lt;sonal Annul~ ..,,able arn.11) cornponen~ n-,tuaJ&#13;
fund&lt; and 1UIIJOl'I ""'11'9'&gt;J9'"""""'11 • TlAAandllAA.CREF L,fclmotar,a, Co.~ ~Yer m_ ~we ~anc,,and.inn.,~,s • llAA.CREF TMI&#13;
c~. fSB p,.,..,,di!s uus1 servoces. • investment produces •re not FOIC in&lt;u~d. ay lose value ar&gt;d are no1 ban~ gv.rantN&lt;!.&#13;
C 2000 TlAA-C REF 08,03&#13;
Page 10&#13;
c:&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
After fall sports, UW-Parkside 3rd in Men drop first conference games&#13;
conference trophy race&#13;
. , Okay, it's not the Heisman Trophy;&#13;
it s not the Lombardy Trophy; it's not&#13;
even the Stanley Cup, but UW-Parkside&#13;
is in solid contention for the All-Sports&#13;
Trophy. That's the hardware given to&#13;
&lt;the university with the top overall&#13;
sports program in the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference (GLVC). And after the fall&#13;
sports season UWP is in third place.&#13;
Thanks, in part, to conference championships&#13;
in men's soccer and&#13;
women's cross country, the Ranger&#13;
athletics teams, which totaled 44&#13;
points, are within striking distance of&#13;
fir~t place Northern Kentucky (55&#13;
pomts) and number two Southern Indiana&#13;
(47 points). At the end of the academic&#13;
year, the university with the best&#13;
combined record in the conference&#13;
standings will earn the traveling (and&#13;
coveted) All-Sports Trophy.&#13;
The standings heading into the winter&#13;
sports season are:&#13;
1. Northern Kentucky .55&#13;
2. Southern Indiana .47&#13;
3. UW-Parkside 44&#13;
4. Indianapolis 42&#13;
5. Lewis .40.5&#13;
6. Quincy 36.5&#13;
7. Sill-Edwardsville 34&#13;
8. Missouri-St. Louis 29&#13;
9. !UPU-Fort Wayne 21&#13;
10. Bellarmine 20&#13;
11. St. Joseph's 19&#13;
12. Kentucky Wesleyan. . . . . . .. 8&#13;
,Wrestlers grab tilles at Wis. Open&#13;
U you measure wrestling meets by&#13;
championship performers-and, really,&#13;
what other way is there?-this was a&#13;
successful weekend for UW-Parkside.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's team placed five athletes&#13;
in the finals of the Wisconsin&#13;
Open on Saturday and six during a&#13;
meet with UW-La Crosse on Friday.&#13;
After coming away with five championships&#13;
against UW-LaCrosse on Friday,&#13;
a meet in whichno team scores&#13;
were kept, UW-Parkside went for six&#13;
titles and captured two at the Open on&#13;
{&#13;
Saturday. Winning titles were Andy&#13;
Mueller at 165 pounds and Luke Goral&#13;
at 197 pounds.&#13;
Mueller and Goral were perfect on&#13;
the day. Mueller winning all five of his&#13;
matches, while Goral won all four of&#13;
his. Three Ranger wrestlers finished&#13;
second including Rory Herring (197),&#13;
Don Dempsey (157)and Rob Jankowski&#13;
(133).&#13;
The UW-Parkside wrestling team&#13;
competes in the Marquette Open on&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 9, at 9 a.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team knew it was in for a tough test in&#13;
the first Great Lake V.alley Conference&#13;
road trip of the year. Stops included&#13;
Indianapolis and Northern Kentucky&#13;
both of which are expected to be powers&#13;
in the conference. Despite playing&#13;
hard against these strong opponents,&#13;
the Rangers came home with nothing&#13;
to show for their trip.&#13;
Last Thursday evening, UWP&#13;
trailed Indianapolis by 10 points WIth&#13;
3:31 to go in regulation play at Indianapolis.&#13;
A furious comeback-including&#13;
a 9-2 run-forced overtime. The first&#13;
overtime also ended a tie, and it&#13;
appeared that a third OT would be necessary&#13;
when Nick Knuth's shot went&#13;
in. However, game officials ruled his&#13;
shot came after the buzzer sounded&#13;
and UW-Parkside was forced to accept&#13;
a 90-88 defeat.&#13;
Four Rangers scored in double figures&#13;
including Brian Coffman with 26&#13;
Quincy Moman with 20, Knuth wh~&#13;
finished with 14, and Brian Maastricht&#13;
with 12. Moman led the team with a&#13;
dozen rebounds. Marlon Grice COntributed&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
On Saturday, the Ranger led for&#13;
much of the first half and trailed just&#13;
40-39 at intermission. However, Northern&#13;
Kentucky was about the wear the&#13;
Rangers down in the second half and&#13;
came away with an 83-71 win. NKU&#13;
cam into the game as the No.4 rated&#13;
NCAA division II team in the country.&#13;
Brain Coffman again led UW-Parkside&#13;
with 15 points.&#13;
The Ranger are now 1-3 on the year&#13;
0-2 in the GLVC. They played a non~&#13;
conference game Tuesday evening&#13;
against Winona State. A summary of&#13;
that game will appear in the Dec. 14&#13;
issue of The Ranger.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Monday, December 11&#13;
12 noon - 1:00 p.m.&#13;
The Ranger News office is located in lower Wyllie Hall&#13;
across from the Career Center.&#13;
Winter Formal 2000&#13;
December 8, 2000&#13;
Union Square&#13;
9 p.m, - 1 a.m.&#13;
TIcketsare $1 0 per person and&#13;
available at the Ranger Card Office.&#13;
Sponsored by Gay and Lesbkln Organization, Residence Llfe~&#13;
All Campus Events. Parks Ide Activities Board, Residence HaUAssoclaUon&#13;
and Council of Independent Oroanlzatlon$ ,&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
• Professional DJ&#13;
• Refreshments&#13;
• Professional photos available from .&#13;
I_ne oJv(;,ment in 1Jime "A Unique Photo"byChartesConie&#13;
The Univer ...I~of Wls(onslll-Park".d{' provides services lor patrons with 'PNIdI needs.&#13;
Please (0111&lt;1(1the P.uk'lrle Student Center for a....tstance, (l61) ';95-2345_&#13;
Semiformal attire isrequired.&#13;
Special gift to the first 100 people!&#13;
Women 0-2 in&#13;
Great lalles Vallev&#13;
When it comes to basketball, Indiana&#13;
and Kentucky are tough places to play.&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's basketball&#13;
team found that out twice last weekend.&#13;
On Thursday night, The Lady&#13;
Rangers stayed with Indianapolis for&#13;
the entire game but went down to&#13;
defeat 64-59. Denita Sublett led uwP&#13;
with 21 points while Joy Rodefer&#13;
chipped in 16 and added eight&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
At Northern Kentucky on Saturday&#13;
coach Paulette Stein's team came out&#13;
cold and never recovered in a 63-33&#13;
loss. The Lady Rangers shot just 25percent,&#13;
a fatally frosty average on just&#13;
about any afternoon but especially&#13;
against the defending national champIon&#13;
and the team ranked number one the&#13;
nation among NCAA Division ITprograms.&#13;
Michele Pickering was the top scorer&#13;
for UW-Parkside with eight points. The&#13;
.losses dropped the team to 2-4, 0-2 U1&#13;
the conference. They get a chance to&#13;
break into the win column in the conference&#13;
at Lewis University Friday&#13;
night. The nest home game in Dec. 15&#13;
Page 10 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Alter fall spons, ow-Parkside 3rd in&#13;
conference trophv race&#13;
Me n drop lirst con terence aames&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team knew it was in for a tough test in&#13;
the first Great Lake Valley Conference&#13;
road trip of the year. Stops included&#13;
Indianapolis and Northern Kentucky&#13;
both of which are expected to be powers&#13;
in the conference. Despite playing&#13;
hard against these strong opponents,&#13;
the Rangers came home with nothing&#13;
to show for their trip.&#13;
ures including Bri an Coffman with 26&#13;
Quincy Moman wi th 20, Knuth wh~&#13;
finished with 14, and Brian Maasbicht&#13;
with 12. Moman led the team with a&#13;
dozen rebound s . Marlon Grice contributed&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
Okay, it's not the Heisman Trophy;&#13;
it's not the Lombardy Trophy; it's not&#13;
even the Stanley Cup, but OW-Parkside&#13;
is in solid contention for the All-Sports&#13;
Trophy. That's the hardware given to&#13;
the university with the top overall&#13;
sports program in the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference (GLVC) . And after the fall&#13;
sports season UWP is in third place .&#13;
Thanks, in part, to conference championships&#13;
in men's soccer and&#13;
women's cross country, the Ranger&#13;
athletics teams, which totaled 44&#13;
points, are within striking distance of&#13;
fu~t place Northern Kentucky (55&#13;
pomts) and number two Southern Indiana&#13;
(47 points). At the end of the academic&#13;
year, the university with the best&#13;
combined record in the conference&#13;
standings will earn the traveling (and&#13;
coveted) All-Sports Trophy.&#13;
The standings heading into the winter&#13;
sports season are:&#13;
1. Northern Kentucky ........ 55&#13;
2. Southern Indiana ........ .47&#13;
3 . UW-Parkside ............ . 44&#13;
4. Indianapolis .. . .......... .42&#13;
5 . Lewis . . ..... . ...... . .. .40.5&#13;
6. Quincy . . . . .... .. ....... 36.5&#13;
7. Sill-Edwardsville .. . ... . .. 34&#13;
8. Missouri-St. Louis . ....... 29&#13;
9 . IUPU-Fort Wayne ..... . . .. 21&#13;
10. Bellarmine .............. . 20&#13;
11. St. Joseph's ..... . ........ 19&#13;
12 . Kentucky Wesleyan . . . . . . . . 8&#13;
On Saturday, the Ranger led for&#13;
much of the firs t half and trailed just&#13;
40-39 at intermi ion. However, Northern&#13;
Kentucky was about the wear the&#13;
Rangers down in the second half and&#13;
came away wi th an 83-71 win. NKU&#13;
cam into the game as the No. 4 rated&#13;
NCAA divi ion II team in the country&#13;
Brain Coffman again led UW-Parksid~&#13;
with 15 points.&#13;
wrestlers grab titles at Wis. Open&#13;
Last Thursday evening, UWP&#13;
trailed Indianapolis by 10 points with&#13;
3:31 to go in regulation play at Indianapolis.&#13;
A furious comeback-including&#13;
a 9-2 run-forced overtime. The first&#13;
overtime also ended a tie, and it&#13;
appeared that a third OT would be necessary&#13;
when Nick Knuth's shot went&#13;
in. However, game officials ruled his&#13;
shot came after the buzzer sounded&#13;
and UW-Parkside was forced to accept&#13;
a 90-88 defeat.&#13;
Four Rangers scored in double fig-&#13;
The Rang rare now 1-3 on the year&#13;
0-2 in the GLVC. They played a non~&#13;
conference game Tuesday evening&#13;
against Winona State. A summary of&#13;
that game will a ppear in the Dec. 14&#13;
issue of The Ranger.&#13;
If you measure wrestling meets by&#13;
championship performers-and, really,&#13;
what other way is there?-this was a&#13;
successful weekend for UW-Parkside.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's team placed five athletes&#13;
in the finals of the Wisconsin&#13;
Open on Saturday and six during a&#13;
meet with UW-La Crosse on Friday.&#13;
After coming away with five championships&#13;
against UW-LaCrosse on Friaay,&#13;
a meet in which no team scores&#13;
were kept, UW-Parkside went for six&#13;
titles and captured two at the Open on&#13;
0 • 0&#13;
Saturday. Wmning titles were Andy&#13;
Mueller at 165 pounds and Luke Goral&#13;
at 197 pounds.&#13;
Mueller and Goral were perfect on&#13;
the day. Mueller winning all five of his&#13;
matches, while Goral won all four of&#13;
his. Three Ranger wrestlers finished&#13;
second including Rory Herring (197),&#13;
Don Dempsey (157) and Rob Jankowski&#13;
(133) .&#13;
OPEN HO USE&#13;
The UW-Pa r kside wrestling team&#13;
competes in the Marquette Open on&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 9, at 9 a.m.&#13;
The Ranger N ews&#13;
Monday, December 11&#13;
12 noon - 1 :00 p .m .&#13;
The Ranger News office is located in lower Wyllie Hall&#13;
across from the Career Cen ter.&#13;
0 • (D&#13;
Winter Fo rmal 2000&#13;
Decembe r 8, 2000&#13;
Union Square&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
TICkets are $10 per person and&#13;
awllable at the Ra nger Card Office.&#13;
Sponsored by Gay and lesbian Organization Residence Life&#13;
Alt Campus Events, Partcslde Activities Board, Residence Ho ll Assodotlon&#13;
and Council ol lndependentOroan lzatlons '&#13;
Fegtu r ing:&#13;
• Prof essiona l DJ&#13;
• Refreshmen t s&#13;
• Professional photos OVQilablefrom&#13;
"A Unique Photo'' bvChariesConie&#13;
Semiformat attire is required.&#13;
Soecial gift to the first 1 oo people!&#13;
Wo men 0-211&#13;
Great Lakes va11e1&#13;
When it comes to basketball, Indiana&#13;
and Kentucky are tough places to play.&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's basketball&#13;
team found that out twice last weekend.&#13;
On Thursday night, The Lady&#13;
Rangers stayed with Indianapolis for&#13;
the entire game but went down to&#13;
defeat 64--59. Denita Sublett led uwP&#13;
with 21 points while Joy Rodefer&#13;
chipped in 16 and added eight&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
At Northern Kentucky on Saturday&#13;
coach Paulette Stein's team came out&#13;
cold and never r ecovered in a 63-33&#13;
loss. The La d y Rangers shot just 25 percent,&#13;
a fatally frosty average on just&#13;
about any afternoon but especially&#13;
against the defending national champ 1•&#13;
on and the team ranked number one the&#13;
nation among NCAA Division II programs.&#13;
Mi chele Pickering was the top scorer&#13;
for UW- Parkside with eight points. ~e&#13;
losses d ropped the team to 2-4, 0-2 Ill&#13;
the confer ence. They get a chance to&#13;
break into the win column in the con·&#13;
fe r ence at Lewis University Friday&#13;
nigh t. The nest home game in Dec. 15&#13;
December 7, 2000&#13;
Page 11&#13;
.11/20Incident#OO-892Unauthorized Use of Telehone&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 2:16 p.m., staff member reported a&#13;
~eparimentphone had been use for unauthorized calls.&#13;
Investigationcontmwng.&#13;
•11/20Incident#OO-893Medical Assist, Ranger Hall,&#13;
8:44 p.m., officer responded to a call from Kenosha&#13;
JointServices regardmg an ill student. Kenosha Med 5&#13;
lOOk subjectto Aurora Hospital for treatment.&#13;
.11/21 Incident#OO-894 Traffic Accident, Propert)'&#13;
Damage Comm. Arts lot, 1:08 p.m., a staff member s&#13;
vehicle~as struck by a visitor's vehicle resulting in&#13;
minordamage.&#13;
.11/21Incident#OO-895Harassment, Ranger Hall, 4:34&#13;
p.m.,s student reported receiving a harassin~ phone&#13;
call with a threatening message. Student was instructed&#13;
to contact UPPS if calls continue.&#13;
.11/22Incident#OO-896 Security Alarm, Wyllie 0150,&#13;
7:46 a.m.,a staff member accidentally set off the security&#13;
alarm. UPPS officers found everything to be in order.&#13;
.11/23Incident#OO-897State Property Damage/Criminal,&#13;
University Apts. 10:32 a.m., staff member reported&#13;
a windowbroken from a large rock. A picnic table was&#13;
also broken in several places. No suspects or witnesses.&#13;
--~~-_..."-...'- ........~,'--&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
'11 /24 Incident#OO-898Fire Alarm, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, 2:23.a.m., staff member reported a fire alarm.&#13;
UPPS officers checked but found no activated&#13;
alarms. Alarm had reset.&#13;
'11 /25 Incident#00-899 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Cross Country Track, 11:13 a.m., an individual&#13;
turned over a vial containing an unknown substance.&#13;
Tests were done on the subject with negative results.&#13;
'11/26 Incident#OO-900Theft from Building,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 10:43p.m., student reported a bass guitar&#13;
stolen from his room while he was gone on vacation .&#13;
'11 /27 Incident#OO-901Parking Enforcement/Tow,&#13;
Visitor Metered lot, 11:08 a.m., an illegally parked&#13;
student who had a prior tow warning, was cited and&#13;
towed.&#13;
'11/27 Incident#OO-902Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 11:25 a.m., staff member reported her&#13;
computer had been turned on after it had been shut&#13;
off for the power outage. Computer staff advised&#13;
that computers could tum themselves back on after&#13;
power was restored.&#13;
'11/27 Incident#OO-903Attempted Suicide, University&#13;
Apartments, 3:43 p.m., UPPS officers responded&#13;
to a report of a student who had consumed large&#13;
quantities of a medication. Kenosha Rescue Med 7&#13;
transported subject to Kenosha Hospital for treatment&#13;
and after being seen by a crisis intervention&#13;
member, subject agreed to be transferred to St.&#13;
Luke's Hospital BehavioralServices Unit for evaluation.&#13;
'11/27 Incident#OO-904 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
• Road, 5:30 p.m., Kenosha Sheriff Dept. deputy&#13;
requested UPPS officer assist in serving a warrant.&#13;
Officers unable to contact the suspect. Officers cleared.&#13;
'11 /28 Incident#00-905 Security Alarm, Wyllie&#13;
D115, 7:25 a.m., officers responding to an alarm&#13;
found no one in the area. Alarm was reset.&#13;
'11 /28 Incident#00-906 Medical Assist, Molinaro&#13;
Hall, 7:23 p.m., staff member reported feeling ill but&#13;
declined medical assistance and advised a family&#13;
member would come to pick him up.&#13;
'11 /28 Incidel)t#OO-907Medical Assist, SAC Fieldhouse,&#13;
7:50p.m., UPPS officers responded to a report&#13;
of a student who had been injured while playing&#13;
basketball. Kenosha Med Unit 5 responded but student&#13;
refused medical transport. All units cleared.&#13;
'11 /28 Incident#OO-908 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
Road, 9:23 p.m., Kenosha Sheriff Dept. requested&#13;
UPPS officer assists with a reported male subject trying&#13;
to gain entry to some Orchard Court Apartments.&#13;
Officers were unable to locate the suspect.&#13;
'11 /29 Incident#OO-909 Agency Assist, CTH A at&#13;
22nd Ave., 5:50 p.m., Kenosha Dispatch requested&#13;
assistance with traffic control at an injury accident.&#13;
'11 /30 Incident#00-910 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
Road, 12:05 a.m., while on routine patrol, UPPS officer&#13;
saw an individual known to be wanted on an outstanding&#13;
warrant through another agency. UPPS&#13;
officers assisted Kenosha Sheriff Deputy in talcing&#13;
the suspect into custody.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
9lnnua/ Cfribufe fo Cfllar/inj]uther 9Ong, 8r.&#13;
"Walking with Martin"&#13;
Student - Community Service Award&#13;
Purpose:&#13;
TheUW-Parkside Student-Community Service Award is designed to pay homage&#13;
to UW-Parkside student leaders. The award is given to recipients who have&#13;
demonstrated the vision and mission of Martin Luther King, Jr. through ..&#13;
theirendeavors with either the campus or Southeastern Wisconsi.n comrnunrtres.&#13;
Moreimportantly, the Student-Community Service Award recognizes the efforts of&#13;
community visionaries who are laying the foundation to realize&#13;
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream in the year 2001 and beyond.&#13;
Nominations: .&#13;
Tonominate a UW-Parkside student for this award, please.submlt ~ letter of&#13;
recommendation to Office of Multicultural Students Affalfs, WyllIe D182.&#13;
The letter should include nominee's name, address, and phone number.&#13;
Nominations will be accepted until December 15, 2000. .&#13;
Acampus committee will review the nominations and select the wonner.&#13;
Sponsored by the Martin Lurher King Jr. Celebration Committee&#13;
oeceJDber 7, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 11 -~::::--;.._-----:;;;.~~----=.:=-:.:=:.:2::~=~~~~~~~~~~----------~~:::_&#13;
pallCI Beal&#13;
•ll/20 Jncident#00-892 Unauthorized Use of Telehone&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 2:16 p.m., staff member reported a&#13;
a~ent phon~ ha~ been use for unauthorized calls.&#13;
Investigation continwng.&#13;
•11/20 Jncident#00-893 Medical Assist, Ranger Hall,&#13;
B:44 p.m., officer re~ponde~ to a call from Kenosha&#13;
Joint Services regarding an ill student. Kenosha Med 5&#13;
took subject to Aurora Hospital for treatment.&#13;
•11/21 Incident#00-894 Traffic Accident, Propert,Y&#13;
Damage, Comm. Arts lot, 1:08 p.m., a staff member s&#13;
vehicle was struck by a visitor's vehicle resulting in&#13;
minor damage.&#13;
•11/21 Jncident#00-895 Harassment, Ranger Hall, 4:34&#13;
p.m., s student reported receiving a haras in~ phone&#13;
call with a threatening me age. Student was instructed&#13;
to contact UPPS if calls continue.&#13;
•11/22 Incident#00-896 Security Alarm, Wyllie D150,&#13;
7:46 a.m., a staff member accid ntally set off the security&#13;
alarm. UPPS officers fourtd everything to be in order.&#13;
•11/23 Incident#00-897 Stat Property Damag /Criminal,&#13;
University Apts. 10:32 a.m., staff member reported&#13;
a window broken from a large rock. A picnic table was&#13;
also broken in several places. o suspects or witnesses.&#13;
•11/24 lncident#00-898 Fire Alarm, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, 2:23 _a.m., staff member reported a fire alarm.&#13;
UPPS officers checked but found no activated&#13;
alartI1$ . Alarm had reset.&#13;
• 11/25 lncident#00-899 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Cross Country Track, 11:13 a.m., an individual&#13;
turned over a vial containing an unknown substance.&#13;
Tests were done on the subject with negative results.&#13;
• 11 /26 Incident#00-900 Theft from Building,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 10:43 p.m., student reported a bass guitar&#13;
stolen from his room while he was gone on vacation.&#13;
•p/27 Incident#00-901 Parking Enforcement/Tow,&#13;
VIS1tor Metered lot, 11:08 a.m., an illegally parked&#13;
student who had a prior tow warning, was cited and&#13;
towed.&#13;
•11/27 Incident#00-902 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 11:25 a.m., staff member reported her&#13;
computer had been turned on after it had been shut&#13;
off for the power outage. Computer staff advised&#13;
that computers could tum themselves back on after&#13;
power was restored.&#13;
•11/27 lncident#00-903 Attempted Suicide, University&#13;
Apartments, 3:43 p.m., UPPS officers responded&#13;
to a report of a student who had consumed large&#13;
quantities of a medication. Kenosha Rescue Med 7&#13;
transported subject to Kenosha Hospital for treatment&#13;
and after being seen by a crisis intervention&#13;
member, subject agreed to be transferred to St.&#13;
Luke's Hospital Behavioral Services Unit for evaluation.&#13;
•11/27 Incident#00-904 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
. Road, 5:30 p.m., Kenosha Sheriff Dept. deputy&#13;
requested UPPS officer assist in serving a warrant.&#13;
Officers unable to contact the suspect. Officers cleared.&#13;
•11/28 Incident#00-905 Security Alarm, Wyllie&#13;
D115, 7:25 a.m., officers responding to an alarm&#13;
found no one in the area. Alarm was reset.&#13;
•11/28 Incident#00-906 Medical Assist, Molinaro&#13;
Hall, 7:23 p.m., staff member reported feeling ill but&#13;
declined medical assistance and advised a family&#13;
member would come to pick him up.&#13;
•11/28 Incident#00-907 Medical Assist, SAC Fieldhouse,&#13;
7:50 p.m., UPPS officers responded to a report&#13;
of a student who had been injured while playing&#13;
basketball. Kenosha Med Unit 5 responded but student&#13;
refused medical transport. All units cleared.&#13;
• 11 /28 Incident#00-908 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
Road, 9:23 p.m., Kenosha Sheriff Dept. requested&#13;
UPPS officer assists with a reported male subject trying&#13;
to gain entry to some Orchard Court Apartments.&#13;
Officers were unable to locate the suspect.&#13;
•11/29 Incident#00-909 Agency Assist, CTI-I A at&#13;
22nd Ave., 5:50 p.m., Kenosha Dispatch requested&#13;
assistance with traffic control at an injury accrdent.&#13;
•11/30 Incident#00-910 Agency Assist, 969 Wood&#13;
Road, 12:05 a.m., while on routine patrol, UPPS officer&#13;
saw an individual known to be wanted on an outstanding&#13;
warrant through another agency. UPPS&#13;
officers assisted Kenosha Sheriff Deputy in taking&#13;
the suspect into custody.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
9/nnual crribule lo CJ'tlarlin i]uther 9Cing, 8r.&#13;
''Walking with Martin"&#13;
Stud ent - Community Service Award&#13;
Purpose:&#13;
The UW-Parkside Student-Community Service Award is desi~n~ to pay homage&#13;
to UW-Parkside student leaders. The award is given to rec1p1ents who have&#13;
demonstrated the vision and mission of Martin Luther King, Jr. through ..&#13;
their endeavors with either the campus or Southeastern Wisconsi_n communit,es.&#13;
More importantly, the Student-Community Service Award r~cogmzes ~he efforts of&#13;
community visionaries who are laying the foundation to realize&#13;
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream in the year 2001 and beyond.&#13;
Nominations: .&#13;
To nominate a UW-Parkside student for this award, please.submit~ letter of&#13;
recommendation to Office of Multicultural Students Affa,rs, Wyllie D 182 -&#13;
The letter should include nominee's name, addres s, and phone number.&#13;
Nominations will be accepted until December 15, 2000. .&#13;
A campus committee will review the nominations and select the wmner.&#13;
Sponsored by rhe Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Committee&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
December 7, 2000&#13;
Page 12 -&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FREECLASSIFIEDSI For a limited&#13;
time only! The Ranger News will&#13;
print your student classified ads free&#13;
of charge. Forms are available at all&#13;
newsstands. Call 595-2287for more&#13;
information.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
-1992 Katana 600 GSX, custom paintjob,&#13;
piped and jelled. $2500 OBO.&#13;
Call1l78-9307after 6 p.m. or page at&#13;
(262)487-0785.&#13;
-2000 Chevy 5-10 ZRZ, 4x4, extended&#13;
C cab, third door, loaded, metallic blue.&#13;
Take over lease payments or buyout.&#13;
Call 878-9307 after 6 p.m. or page&#13;
(262)487-0785.&#13;
-1987 Honda 250XFour wheeler TRX.&#13;
Excellent condition, Very low miles.&#13;
$ Stroke Wreverse. $2000. CallJ262)&#13;
554-4777.&#13;
- Winter Beater '87 Chevy Cavalier,&#13;
$250 OBO Starts every time! Call&#13;
Steve' at 893-4752&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
.. -Avon Reps. Needed&#13;
Work own hours&#13;
Call Lynn (414)570-9037&#13;
. . . lab manager@uwp.edu .&#13;
- Reputable lortra,t . studio seeking (PI e book your appoIntment&#13;
experience. journalistic phodtogrtuaph; 24 ~';,'urs in advance.) . er to cover vanous sports an s den&#13;
activities at localhigh schoolson an as&#13;
needed basis. Apply in person at&#13;
Camera Masters 1122S.Airline Rd.&#13;
Racine&#13;
-Auditions for the classic comedy&#13;
"Harvey" by Mary Chase will be&#13;
Held Dec. 11 and 12 at 7p.m. In&#13;
the Rhode Opera House 514 56th&#13;
street, downtown Kenosha.&#13;
There are roles for 6 woman and&#13;
6 men of varying ages. Performance&#13;
dates are Feb. 2 through&#13;
Feb 17, 2001.&#13;
-Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
-FREE TUTORING .&#13;
Free tutoring is being offered by&#13;
the students from Student Technology&#13;
Corp. Tutoring in the following&#13;
areas of ~omputer related&#13;
software is available: MIcrosoft&#13;
Office, Using the Intern~t Effectively,&#13;
E-mail and Creating Web&#13;
Pages. Tutoring will be by&#13;
appointment. To schedule your&#13;
appointment, call Bob or Chris at&#13;
595-2790 or bye-mailing us at&#13;
-SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
Hiring On-Campus Reps&#13;
SELLTRIPS,EARN CASH,&#13;
GO FREE!!!&#13;
Student Travel Services&#13;
America's #1 Student Tour Operator&#13;
Jamaica, Mexico, Bahamas, Europe,&#13;
Florida 1-800-648-4849&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
-Wanted! Spring Break,:,rs! Cancun,&#13;
Bahamas, Florida, [amaica &amp; Mazat-&#13;
Ian. fr&#13;
Call Sun Coast Vacations for a ee&#13;
brochure and ask how you can&#13;
Organize a small group &amp; Eat, Drink,&#13;
Travel Free &amp; Earn Cash!&#13;
Call 1-888-777-4642 or e-mail&#13;
sales@suncoastvacations.com&#13;
The Ranger News is now&#13;
hiring for various positions&#13;
for the Spring 2001 semester.&#13;
* Reporters&#13;
* Sports Writers&#13;
* Entertainment Editor&#13;
* Layout/Design Editor&#13;
* Columnists&#13;
* Cartoonists&#13;
-Spring Break! Del~xe Hotels, Reliable Applications are available in&#13;
Air, Free Food, Drinks and Parties! The Ranger News office located&#13;
Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan in the lower level of Wyllie Hall&#13;
&amp; Florida. Travel Free and Earn across from the Career Center.&#13;
Cash! For further information, contact&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCi- Sarah or Brenda at 595-2287.&#13;
ty.com or call 800-293-1443for inf,.o.=~;;;;;;;;;=======;;;;;;;;m'&#13;
Bill Pay bonus&#13;
- Try Bill Pay free for three months&#13;
- Pay anyone, anywhere, anytime&#13;
- Saves postage, checks and time&#13;
You surf. You shop. You e-mail.&#13;
Why aren't you banking online?&#13;
Why stand in line at your bank when you can bank online with a Completely Free Checking&#13;
account from North Shore Bank? Get the safety and convenience of online banking plus personal&#13;
service when you need it.&#13;
Completely Free Checking saves you money&#13;
- No minimum balance required&#13;
- No monthly fees or per check charges&#13;
• Free TYME8 access at all North Shore ATMs&#13;
- Free MasterCard Debit Card, accepted worldwide&#13;
Online Banking saves you time&#13;
- Free account access anywhere, anytime&#13;
- Transfer money, check balances&#13;
- See check! ATMldebit card activity&#13;
- Take the tour at www.northshorebank.com&#13;
~ NORTH SHORE BANK&#13;
www.northshorebank.com&#13;
For a nearby office call 262-785-1600 or toll-free 1-800-236-4672&#13;
Just bring in $100 or more to get your account started. Online Banking services are free, of course. Bill Pay is optional and gets you&#13;
15 monthly payments for just $4.95/nwnth after the 3-nwnth trial period. Ask for details. (HEY, that's not bad for fine print!)&#13;
Bank when you want ... the way you want ... for free. Stop by your neighborhood North Shore Bank&#13;
and open your Completely Free Checking account. It's easier than downloading an MP3 file.&#13;
©2000 North Shore Bank Member FDIC&#13;
._---- -'- .&#13;
Page 12&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS! For a limited&#13;
time only! The Ranger News will&#13;
print your student classified ads free&#13;
of charge. Forms are available at all&#13;
newsstands. Call 595-2287 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
• 1992 Katana 600 GSX, custom paintjob,&#13;
piped and jetted. $2500 OBO.&#13;
Call 878-9307 after 6 p.m. or page at&#13;
(262) 487-0785.&#13;
•2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4, extended&#13;
' cab, third door, loaded, metallic blue.&#13;
Take over lease i:,ayments or buy out.&#13;
Call 878-9307 after 6 p.m. or page&#13;
(262)487-0785.&#13;
•1987 Honda 250X Four wheeler TRX.&#13;
Excellent condition, Very low miles.&#13;
$ Stroke W reverse. $2000. Call (262)&#13;
554-4777.&#13;
• Winter Beater '87 Chevy Cavalier,&#13;
$250 OBO Starts every time! Call&#13;
Steve at 893-4752&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
"'- • Avon Reps. Needed&#13;
Work own hours&#13;
Call Lynn (414) 570-9037&#13;
U . rs1·ty of Wisconsin-Parkside The Ranger, mve&#13;
• Reputable P?rtrait . s~dio seekin~&#13;
experienced Journalistic photograph&#13;
er to cover vario~ sports and student&#13;
activities at local higi:,. schools on an as&#13;
needed basis. Apply in I?e!Son at&#13;
Camera Masters 11225. Airline Rd.&#13;
Racine&#13;
•Auditions for the classic comedy&#13;
"Harvey" by Mary Chase will ~e&#13;
Held Dec. 11 and 12 at 7p.m. m&#13;
the Rhode Opera House 514 56th&#13;
street, downtown Kenosha.&#13;
There are roles for 6 woman and&#13;
6 men of varying ages. Performance&#13;
dates are Feb. 2 through&#13;
Feb 17, 2001.&#13;
•Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
•FREE TUTORING&#13;
Free tutoring is being offered by&#13;
the students from Student Technology&#13;
Corp. Tutoring in the fol lowing&#13;
areas of computer related&#13;
software is available: Microsoft&#13;
Office, Using the Intern~t Effectively,&#13;
E-mail and Creating Web&#13;
Pages. Tutoring will be by&#13;
appointment. To schedule your&#13;
appointment, call Bob or Chns at&#13;
595-2790 or by e-mailing us at&#13;
lab manager@uwp.edu .&#13;
(Plea se book your appointment&#13;
24 h ours in advance.)&#13;
•SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
Hirin g On-Campus Reps&#13;
SEL L TRIPS, EARN CASH,&#13;
GO FREE!!!&#13;
Student Travel Services&#13;
America's #1 Student Tour Operator&#13;
Jama ica, Mexico, Bahamas, Europe,&#13;
Flo rida 1-800-648-4849&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
• Wanted! Spring Break~rs! Cancun,&#13;
Bahamas, Florida, Jamaica &amp; Mazatlan.&#13;
free&#13;
Call Sun Coast Vacations for a&#13;
brochure and ask how you can&#13;
Organize a small group &amp; Eat, Drink,&#13;
Tra vel Free &amp; Earn Cash!&#13;
Ca ll 1-888-777-4642 or e-mail&#13;
sales@suncoastvacations.com&#13;
•Spring Break! Deluxe Hotels, Reliable&#13;
Air, Free Food, Drinks and Parties!&#13;
Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan&#13;
&amp; Florida. Travel Free and Eam&#13;
Cash!&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.&#13;
com or call 800-293-1443 for info.&#13;
~~~, .~ .. ~ ... ~ . ~~~&#13;
December 7, _---&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
O PPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
The Ranger News is now&#13;
hiring for various positions&#13;
for the Spring 2001 semester.&#13;
* Repor te rs&#13;
* Sports Writers&#13;
* Enterta inment Editor&#13;
* Layout /Design Editor&#13;
* Columnists&#13;
* Cartoonists&#13;
Applications are available in&#13;
The Ranger ews office located&#13;
in the lower level of W}'llie Hall&#13;
across from the Career Center.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Sarah or Brenda at 595-2287.&#13;
You surf. You sho p. You e-mail .&#13;
Why aren' t you banking online?&#13;
Why stand in line at your bank when you can bank online with a Completely Free C hecking&#13;
account from North Shore Bank? Get the safety and convenience of online banking plus personal&#13;
service when you need it.&#13;
Completely Free Checking saves you money&#13;
• No minimum balance required&#13;
• No monthly fees or per check charges&#13;
• Free TYME~ access at all North Shore ATMs&#13;
• Free MasterCard Debit Card, accepted worldwide&#13;
Online Banking saves you time&#13;
• Free account access anywhere, anytime&#13;
• Transfer money, chec k balance s&#13;
• See check/ ATM/deb it card activi ty&#13;
• Take the tour at www.nort hshore bank.com&#13;
Bill Pay bo nus&#13;
• Try Bill Pay free for three months&#13;
• Pay anyone, a nywhere, anytime&#13;
• Saves pos tage, checks and time&#13;
Bank when you want ... the way you want ... for free. Stop by your neighborhood North Shore Banlc&#13;
and open your Completely Free Checking account. It's easier than downloading an MP3 fi le.&#13;
~ NORTI-1 SHORE IWJK&#13;
www.northshorebank.com&#13;
For a nearby office call 262-785-1600 or toU -fr ee 1-8 00-236 -4672&#13;
Jusl bring in $100 or more to get your account started. Online Banking services are free, of course. Bill Pay is optio nal and gets you&#13;
15 monthly payments for just $4.95/month after the 3-month trial period. Ask for details. (HEY, that's not bad for fine print !)&#13;
©2000 North Shore Bank Member FDIC</text>
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              <text>Student Newspape f th U' . roe ruversitv of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
December 14, 2000 ~w.. Issue 13 Vo1.30 ~rr =~~~~~-==~....:.:;:::.::...-&#13;
Threatening weather keeps&#13;
students at home Monday&#13;
By Brenda Dunham&#13;
Snow fell all Monday morning and&#13;
the wind blew. Then shortly after 11 a.m.&#13;
the announcement was made to cancel&#13;
classes. What'a relief to those students&#13;
still at home peering out the windows&#13;
at their cold cars. thinking about the&#13;
snow swrrlmg through the air that was&#13;
sure to keep visibility low.&#13;
Residents were also glad to stay&#13;
warm indoors as huge drifts formed&#13;
around their dorm entrances and their&#13;
parked cars. Eventually they had to&#13;
venture outdoors to get dinner and&#13;
even move their cars to the Tallent lot&#13;
so the resident lots could be plowed.&#13;
Disregarding the crazy cold night&#13;
air, some residents ventured out and&#13;
had some winter fun. Robert Coombs&#13;
and Duane Dacres were heading for&#13;
dinner when a small snow ball fight&#13;
broke out. Then according to Coombs&#13;
a, "Snow ball grew into a snow man."&#13;
The fun however didn't stop there.&#13;
They proceeded to make a "recliner&#13;
out front" and currently have plans to&#13;
make a love seat. Coombs also lets us&#13;
in on a little secret: "It is a yearly tra-&#13;
., . .,.&#13;
•&#13;
• {",,, •. j. ',. .~&#13;
•. W~i~ri. . . • j&#13;
The weather outside was frightful enough to cancel afternoon and evening classes&#13;
at UWPon Monday. Except for the brave soul pictured here, few students were&#13;
seenon campus during the height of the blizzard. Photo by Sam English&#13;
Dry Thursdav as&#13;
main break cuts&#13;
water in 3 bldgs.&#13;
A broken lO-inch water main west&#13;
bfYV~llieHall left three UW-Parkside&#13;
uildings high and dry on Thursday, :i:.8. Service was restored la ter in&#13;
~ay, and classes and activitiesith&#13;
no~ requiring water-eontinued&#13;
WI o'!t. rnterruption.&#13;
th tacilities Management discovered&#13;
he reak during the late morning Ha'll' Servlcs was disrupted to Wyllie&#13;
. ' Greenquist Hall, and Communi-&#13;
~ti~ Arts. Service was not affected to&#13;
o~ro Hall or the Student Union.&#13;
Fa . ~!d weather was the culprit.&#13;
of~ties Management said contraction&#13;
it to e ground around the pipe caused&#13;
am:ack. Repairs were completed at&#13;
U. d 9:30 the same evening, and&#13;
olfu'ersity employees spent the rest&#13;
afi e evenm&amp; running water in the ruse;ted bUIlding to remove dirt and&#13;
om the piping system.&#13;
Winter graduation&#13;
held this Sund.av&#13;
at DeSimone Gvm&#13;
UW.Parkside celebrates the Class&#13;
of 2000 during Winter Commencement&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 17. The ceremony takes&#13;
place in the De Simone Gym of the&#13;
Sports &amp; Activity Center starting at 2 pm.&#13;
The program will include remarks&#13;
by from Chancellor Jack Keating and&#13;
the keynote address by Economics Pr0-&#13;
fessor Norman Cloutier. Cloutier and&#13;
Annette Wiesner, senior developmental&#13;
skills specialist, received of the&#13;
University's Stella Gray Award for&#13;
Teachin~ "Excellence for the 1999-2000&#13;
acadeffilc year.&#13;
More than 200 graduates will take&#13;
part in this important ceremony. They&#13;
indudmg residents of Kenosha, Racine,&#13;
and surrounding communIties. See&#13;
pages 4 and 5 for a list of graduates.&#13;
The Ranger congratulates all graduates,&#13;
especially staffers Sam English, Eric&#13;
Place and Lisa Whitcomb. , .&#13;
dition to plow in a car. Last year it&#13;
was Chris Leipski's car, and this year&#13;
it was Lachlan Mc Donald's car."&#13;
When Lachlan found out about the&#13;
cal- he said, with a smile, 'Til get you&#13;
back later, mate".&#13;
"Crazy Coombs" finds a friend&#13;
Prints in desperate need of framing&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
Every year, the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside purchases prints from&#13;
its annual small print exhibition, which&#13;
has been held every January for the&#13;
past 13 years in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery. So far, UWP owns over&#13;
$20,000 worth of prints that are placed&#13;
throughout the campus. Inprevious&#13;
years, these prints have been framed&#13;
using discretionary funds supplied by&#13;
the chancellor. Over the past several&#13;
years, the funding for framing has&#13;
ceased due to a change in financial&#13;
priorities. Now more than 35 prints sit&#13;
awaiting frames, which will now total&#13;
several thousand dollars.&#13;
Art professor, Doug De Vinny, who&#13;
organizes the Parkside National Small&#13;
Print Exhibition, says he's mentioned&#13;
the framing dilemma to Chancellor&#13;
John Keating and explains, "[Chancellor&#13;
Keating] did tell me that he would&#13;
try to get some money allocated for&#13;
framing when 1 asked him [this fall]."&#13;
For now, funds are being used on&#13;
other things.&#13;
In another attempt to accumulate&#13;
financial support for the framing,&#13;
DeVinny wrote up a grant proposal&#13;
for the Lectures in Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
The committee, headed by Michael.&#13;
Gurllnan, chair, not only granted&#13;
money to differ the cost of the juror&#13;
who gives a public lecture at the&#13;
annual exhibition, but gladly split the&#13;
cost of framing six pieces. He states&#13;
"1 II r&#13;
t was rea y amazing. I've never&#13;
written a grant or asked for money&#13;
from anybody who didn't cut the&#13;
amount or ... refuse it. 1 got a call&#13;
from Michael Gurtman who said ...&#13;
the committee was talking and would&#13;
like to help you frame some of the&#13;
work." DeVinny compliments that the&#13;
Continued on page 8&#13;
December 14,2000- U' ity of Wisconsin-Parkside The Ranger, mverst&#13;
InsIde&#13;
3 Is blue the color of your Christmas?&#13;
Congratulations to all the graduates from the&#13;
Ranger staff.&#13;
Sports&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
Co Editors .&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Photography Director&#13;
KoryHolm&#13;
Business/Advertising Management&#13;
Dan White&#13;
Christine Adailby&#13;
Designers'&#13;
Sam English&#13;
Eric Place&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Reporters: Dave Buchanan&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Craig Braun&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Lynn Garcia&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
ph. 262.595.2287&#13;
fax 262.595.2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday throughout the semester by students of the University of WISCOflSin-Parkside,who are&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. .&#13;
Letters to the Editor licy. The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. Letters should not exceed 2S) words and should be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C) . Letters must be typed and incll.lde the author's name and pJ:om: number. Letters m~t&#13;
be free from misleading- or libelous content. Letters that fatl 10 comply will not be published. For publication purposes, author s&#13;
name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the rtght to edit all letters. .&#13;
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-&#13;
at t&#13;
o&#13;
Dec. 14 to 30&#13;
?~Ce~bgr 1~tball vs. St. Francis, Thursday, Dec. 14, 7 p.m., SAC, UW-Par1lSid:~t~d;~ts&#13;
free, adults $5, high school stooentsscos 14 &amp; under $1. .&#13;
• UW-Parkside Wind Ensemble and Community Band, 7.30 p.m., Communrca·&#13;
tion Arts Theatre, tickets: $5 adults, $3 students.&#13;
December 15 . . 7 SAC UW-Parks'de t&#13;
• Women's basketball vs. Saginaw Valley, Fri., p.rn., I sudents&#13;
free, adults $5, high school students/kids 14 &amp; under $1.&#13;
Decemoer 17 d A ti 't' C t • UW-Parkside Winter Commencement, 2 p.m., Sports an CIViles en er.&#13;
December 18 18 21 G II H . • Senior Student Exhibition for Dec. Graduates, Dec. to , a ery ours.&#13;
Monday &amp; Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8&#13;
p.m., closed Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.&#13;
December 30 UW P rk 'd • Women's basketball vs. Ashland College, Sat., 7 p.m., ., SAC, - a Sl e&#13;
students free, adults $5, high school students/kids 14 &amp; under $1.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is closed beginning today, Thursday, December 14,&#13;
2000, and continuing through March 2001, for renovation.&#13;
Letter To the Editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I read Tyrone Payton's very interesting commentary in the November 9th&#13;
issue of "The Ranger," on the GLO discussion on homosexuality and reliqion. As&#13;
the speaker that evening, my intention was to give a talk about the Bible and&#13;
homosexuality, followed by a question-and-answer discussion. I was not able to&#13;
get very far into my talk before I was interrupted with arguments and 9uesllons.&#13;
However, unlike Mr. Payton, I did not think this was such a bad thing. t IStrue&#13;
that the discussion got heated at times, but at no time did I feel I was being diSrespected&#13;
as a person. Those who argued vociferously for their point of viewon&#13;
either side-were never hateful. .&#13;
Also, although Mr. Payton is probably right that no one's mind was cha~ged,&#13;
I think s.ome clarity may have been gained about why people held the opmions&#13;
they did. And let's face it, on a subject as controversial as this one-with one&#13;
group defending homosexuality and one group arguing against it-it would be&#13;
surprising if much consensus were reached!&#13;
Mr. Payton remarks that it "wasn't a gang war, but if we were all less civilized,&#13;
I do believe I'd hear some threats and see some punches tossed before the&#13;
night concluded." Well, there were no threats, there were no punches, we were&#13;
and are civilized. And although, like Mr. Payton, I would like to have had a&#13;
longer, more in-depth discussion of the issues, I do think the evening was an&#13;
interesting one. I even think we all left with something to think about.&#13;
One slight correction to Mr. Payton's comments on my talk, however. I did not&#13;
say the Bible forbids eating meat. I said it forbids eating red meat (i.e., "meat.&#13;
with blood in it" [Lev. 19:26J-as well as wearing clothes that are made of a mixture&#13;
of cotton and wool [Deut. 22:11), planting fields with two kinds of seeds&#13;
[Deut. 22:9), or painting a picture, sculpting a statue, or getting tattooed [Ex.&#13;
20:4). If you're a man, you ,carfttrim the edges of your beard [Lev. 19:27], .,&#13;
change your grandaughter s diapers [Lev. 18:10), or play football (since LeVitiCUS&#13;
11:7-8 bars touching the skin or carcass of a pig). If you rape a girl, you should&#13;
pay her father 50 shekels of silver and marry her [Deut. 22:28-29). And if your&#13;
Wife or husband commits adultery, he or she should be put to death [Lev. 20:1OJ.&#13;
My point was that there are many things the Bible forbids that we no longer&#13;
follow today. So If we are going to condemn homosexuality because "the Bible&#13;
tells me so" then perhaps we should be consistent and condemn all these other biblical "sins" as well. .&#13;
Rev. Dr. Tony Larsen, Pastor&#13;
-December 14, 2000 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Areyour holidav colors blue &amp; blue P&#13;
ByJulie Thompson&#13;
While some of you may be singing&#13;
•Jingle Bells" and wishing each other&#13;
a happy holiday season, the fact is&#13;
severalof the people you're wishing&#13;
gladtiding to may be suffenng from&#13;
depression.Although in some cases,&#13;
feelingblue may be temporary or due&#13;
to the demands of a hectic school and&#13;
worklife, being depressed can affect&#13;
morethan just your holiday spirit.&#13;
The Student Health and Counseling&#13;
Centerrecently sponsored a depressionscreening&#13;
in an attempt to help&#13;
studentsand faculty determine if what&#13;
theyare feeling is a mild case of the&#13;
blahsor a serious illness. After filling&#13;
out a screening form, students were&#13;
thenencouraged to talk privately with&#13;
a counselor. Students could also pick&#13;
up pamphlets with further information&#13;
onavariety of men1aI illnesses.&#13;
As with many mental illnesses,&#13;
depression carries with it the misconceptionthat&#13;
depressed people are&#13;
emotionally weak. However, these&#13;
untruths keep many people from&#13;
seekingtreatment by a person trained&#13;
to treat depression .&#13;
In addition to the screening, the&#13;
Student Health and Counseling Center,&#13;
sponsored a forum titled "Why&#13;
Shouldn't I Have the Blues,"' with&#13;
speaker Professor Edward Conrad&#13;
from the UW-Parkside Psychology&#13;
department. During the forum, Dr.&#13;
Conrad made clear that having&#13;
depression is, "At least as real as&#13;
breaking a bone." During Dr. Conrad's&#13;
25 years as a clinical psychologist, he&#13;
saw countless patients with depression&#13;
and from his experience, many&#13;
people are, "Told to just get over it,&#13;
but you can't just get over it, it's real."&#13;
Dr. Conrad also said when deciding&#13;
if you should seek treatment, ask&#13;
yourself the following questions: What&#13;
harm is it going to do if I don't&#13;
talk about it, and what good will it do if&#13;
I do talk about it?"&#13;
If you or someone you know suspects&#13;
they me be suffering from&#13;
depression, seek professional help. In&#13;
Dr. Conrad's words, "There is treatment&#13;
out there and it helps."&#13;
Band, Wind&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
concert tonight&#13;
A busy but melodious week of&#13;
Music Department concerts come to a&#13;
close tonight with a performance by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wind Ensemble and Community&#13;
Band. The program will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre beginning&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Conducted by Mark Eichner, the&#13;
groups will perform Arthur Butterworth's&#13;
"Winter Music ....the "Cuban&#13;
Overture" by George Gershwin, and&#13;
Clifton Williams' "Symphonic Suite." In&#13;
keeping with the season, the concert&#13;
will include holiday music for band.&#13;
Tickets are $5 for adults and $3&#13;
for students. For more information,&#13;
call the UW-Parkside Music Department&#13;
at ext. 2457.&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
The Diversity Committee of the PSGA is sponsoring a food drive through the end of the semester. Please donate any canned foods that ARE NOT EXPIRED, and&#13;
any other non-perishable food items. Collection bins are in the Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, and the PSGA Office, Wyllie 0139 A.&#13;
ta Rican Natural History- 2 credits - Jan. 3·15&#13;
Explore the biologic and geologic diversity of Costa Rica during a 12-day trip.&#13;
Designed for geology, biology and geography students, participants of this hands-on&#13;
class will study volcanic activity, advances in alternative geothermal energy, observe&#13;
wildlife and tropical rainforests and overnight at biologic stations. Prerequisitts: BIOS&#13;
10/ &amp;102 fir biology studmts; GEOL 102 ft~geo!bgy rtudmlS.&#13;
Polymer Cbenllstry - I credit - Dec. 28 - Jan, 12, 6 - 8dO pm -&#13;
GRNQ01l9&#13;
This class will explore some of the contemporary topics on poly~~ chemistry ..&#13;
foundation and different applications, including industrial applications. PrerequISItes:&#13;
Ch&lt;mimy0321 &amp;0322. •&#13;
Book: Past. Present &amp;: Future - 1 credit - Jan. 8 -12, 9 am - 3 pmCARIOl41&#13;
-&#13;
Students will explore the history of the book by examini~g rare b~k colleCl:io~s and&#13;
visiting bookstores and book-related industries in the Chlargo-Milwaukee-RacmeKenosha&#13;
areas. Pmrquisius: None.&#13;
Urban Environmental Contamination - 2 credits - Jan. 2-11,&#13;
12 - 4,30 pm - GRNQ 0119 .. .&#13;
In this "real world" skills class, instructors WIll provide background sCI~nce on&#13;
mobility and fate of Pb in terrestrial systems. Students will learn. sampling methods,&#13;
. . d i '--' for analvsis ofPb in soils and appropriate techniques an instrumentanon uscu }.- . d&#13;
plants, and gain experience in data analysis and [nrerpretannn, repcn preparauon an&#13;
presentation. Prmquisius: Chemistry 101.&#13;
Reengineering Financial performance Measurement -1 creditJan.&#13;
2-19 val f&#13;
Traditional accounting practices may not actually reflect the rrue&#13;
red&#13;
~e 0 UW Ea&#13;
organizations undergoing reengineering. This Internet class, offe r~m - h U&#13;
Claire investieates corporate perfonnance using the balanced .scorecar La~P8w)" .&#13;
, t&gt;- • • deadlin December MBA admission or departmmt consent: (Registratlon e IS •&#13;
~If'University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
Pool closed til March lor renovation&#13;
The Student Activity Center (SAC)&#13;
announces that starting December 14&#13;
the pool will be closed for renovation,&#13;
The construction marks the final phase&#13;
in the remodeling of the SAC. The&#13;
University apologizes for any inconvenience&#13;
this may cause. The pool is&#13;
scheduled to reopen in March 2001.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
renovation, call 595-2780.&#13;
Forum on Catholicism enlighten!ng&#13;
By Julie Thompson&#13;
The topic of the most recent religious&#13;
forum: "Being ~atholic in the 21st&#13;
Century," highlighted guest speakers&#13;
Professor Laura Gellott of UWP's History&#13;
department and Vince Kostos,&#13;
campus minister from Racine's St.&#13;
Catherine's High School. The duo&#13;
enlightened a modest crowd of&#13;
Catholics as well as non-Catholics as&#13;
to how being a member of that faith&#13;
has changed over the course of the&#13;
last few decades.&#13;
Professor Gellott went into detail&#13;
of how her Catholic upbringing&#13;
evolved over the course of her lifetime,&#13;
To the surprise of many, she&#13;
explained how the Catholic church&#13;
has changed historically. For example,&#13;
it wasn't until after the 11th century,&#13;
when priests were prohibited to&#13;
marry, but had to take a vow of celibacy,&#13;
illustrating how church laws may&#13;
differ from biblical scripture,&#13;
Contrastingly, Kostos covered areas&#13;
specific to young adults. He said&#13;
many of his.students have a "spiritual&#13;
hunger" and grapple with questions&#13;
like, "How should 1 practice my&#13;
faith?" and "Can I 'do' faith the way I&#13;
want to do it?" However, many&#13;
Catholics feel the church needs to&#13;
change to accommodale a changing&#13;
society. They say social issues such as&#13;
sexual orientation, abortion, and&#13;
divorce need to be reevaluated to&#13;
meet theneeds of our evol~ society.&#13;
One problem discussed IS getting&#13;
parents to become involved in their&#13;
Child's spiritual upbringing. Kostos&#13;
suggested the following: invite children&#13;
to service by encouraging them&#13;
to help others, get them involved, and&#13;
encourage children to think of the .&#13;
needs of others beyond themselves.&#13;
Lastly, Kostos listed four reasons&#13;
one being Catholic in the 21st century.&#13;
First, he said, by being Catholic arerson&#13;
has a connection to the role 0&#13;
church. Second, Catholic social teaching&#13;
responds to human needs. Third,&#13;
bemg Catholic places emphasis on&#13;
community and the churches, 'body&#13;
of people', and fourth, by being a&#13;
member of the Catholic community a&#13;
person can take pari in the ritual and&#13;
liturgy of the church.&#13;
The program was held earlier this&#13;
month, and was sponsored by UWParkside's&#13;
Perspectives on Religious&#13;
Issues.&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
December 14, 2000-&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The Class ] of 2000: December Graduates&#13;
Student Degree Major(s) City Student Degree Major(s) City&#13;
Tracy Girardi BS Psychology Burlington&#13;
Sohayla Aazami BS Computer Science Kenosha Kenneth Golden BS Psychology Palatine&#13;
James Abbott BS Business Sturtevant Susan Gono BS Business Kenosha&#13;
Dawn Abron BA English Zion Steve Greening BS Biology Racine&#13;
Lisa Adamowicz BA English, History Kenosha Anne Gustafson BA Criminal Justice Waukesha&#13;
Elizabeth Ade BS Psychology Kenosha Christopher Hafeman BS Computer Science Racine&#13;
Waleed Ahmad BA Sociology Racine BA Political Science Union Grove&#13;
Craig Alvarez BS Business Burlington Nassar Hamdan&#13;
BA History Kenosha&#13;
Juan Avila BA History Racine Amanda Hawley&#13;
BS Psychology Racine Courtney Heide Daniel Andersen MBA Racine Michael Held BA Spanish Sturtevant&#13;
Jason Anderson BS Biology Pleasant Prairie Wade Helding BA Political Science Racine&#13;
Josephine Anderson BA Music Kenosha BS Biology Sturtevant&#13;
Roshena Andrews BA Sociology Racine Tracy Hess&#13;
BA Criminal Justice Kenosha&#13;
Julie Bach BS Business Kenosha .Claire Hickey&#13;
BA Crim Just, Sociology Racine&#13;
Tasneem Bader BS Business Mt Pleasant Darishawn Hodges&#13;
BA English Racine&#13;
Christine Bandauskas BS Business Bristol Jill Hoffman&#13;
Charles Banks BS Biology Kenosha Laura Hoffman BA Crim. Just, Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Katie Barker BS Biology Racine Alfonzio Hunter 2nd major Economics Beach Park&#13;
Angela Baumann BS Business Oak Creek Judy Hutchins BA English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Erinn Hylton BS Business Racine&#13;
Katie Beaumier BS Psychology Sturtevant BS Molecular Biology Twin Lakes&#13;
Laura Benson BA Soci0109~ Kenosha Joseph Ivan&#13;
David Beranis BA Geograp y Racine Iize Jaunkalnietis 2nd concenMIS Racine&#13;
Tatjan a Bicanin BA Communication Kenosha Jaceena Jegen BS Business Franklin&#13;
David Blaim BS Business Bristol Sharon Jenewein BS Business Lindenhurst&#13;
Daniel Blaski BS Business Pleasant Prairie Patricia Jenkins, MBA Racine&#13;
Kim Bohm BA English Racine Casey Johnson BA Communication Kenosha&#13;
Haider Bokhari BS Biology Kenosha Mark Johnson BS Business Racine&#13;
Faith Bose BS Business Sturtevant James Jotka BS Mathematics Trevor&#13;
Jill Boughton BA Sociology Racine Flavia Juergensen BA History Gurnee&#13;
Tom Brouillard MBA Racine Hasmig Kaisserlian BS Psychology Racine&#13;
Adrian Brusky BA Political Science Franksville Michelle Kelley BS Biology Milwaukee&#13;
Tobey Budd BA History Pleasant Prairie Katie Kennedy BA Economics Bristol&#13;
Dennis Burns BS Computer Science Kenosha Pauline King BA Interdisciplinary St. Beach Park&#13;
Candace Cable BS Business Kenosha Brad Kitt BS Business Port Washington&#13;
Joni Calhoun BS Psychology Waterford Laura Koch BS Psychology Trevor&#13;
Michelle Callan BA English Kenosha Hollie Kreger BA Sociology Bristol&#13;
Cari Campagna B,6 Socioloqy Kenosha Amy Lynn Krenzke BS Business, CRMJ Racine&#13;
Dale Campbell MBA Racine Jami Lajoy BA Economics Schaumburg&#13;
Eric Campbell BA Criminal Justice Lindenhurst Rebecca Landmark BA English Kenosha&#13;
John Carroll MBA Kenosha Abby Lange MBA Racine&#13;
Christopher Carter BA Communication Kenosha Kevin Lazarski BS Business Racine&#13;
Jean Charles BA Geography Racne Stephanie Lee BA Sociology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Michele Chovan BA Music Kenosha Ryan Lockhart BS Business Racine&#13;
Elise Cochran. BA English Milwaukee Keith Lodahl BA Interdisciplinary St Mayville&#13;
Christine .Cukla BS Business Round Lake Beach Jeffrey Lohman BS Business Racine&#13;
Susan Czarra BS Molecular Biology Kenosha Blake Luedtke BA Crim. Just, Sociology Racine&#13;
Shelly Dam BS Business Kenosha Nicolet Maheras BS Business Racine&#13;
Tamara Darland BS Computer Science Lindenhurst Kevin Major BS Business Mukwonago&#13;
Lesli Defaut BS Business Racine Heather Maki BA English Kenosha&#13;
Shari Demeritt BA Spanish Antioch Yvonne Mancusi BA Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Joseph Doksus BS Business Pleasant Prairie Lori Ann Mansur BS BiOIOJiY Burlington&#13;
Timothy Driscoll MBA Kenosha Susan Marcich BA Inter isciplinary St. Kenosha&#13;
Rebecca Duba . BA English Gurnee Timot~ Marciniak BA English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Annette Dugenske BS Business Green Bay Mary asik BS Business Oak Creek&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek BS Biology Racine Eric Masshardt BS Business Union Grove&#13;
Natasha Duttweiler BS Bio., Molecular Bio. Bristol David Mathias BS Business Winthrop Harbor&#13;
Kellie Eccles BA Sociology Kenosha Rachael Mayne BS Business Kenosha&#13;
Lindsay Ellis BA Sociology Kenosha James McPhaul BA Interdisciplinary St Kenosha&#13;
Cheryl English BS Computer Science Racine Marco Mejia BS Business Zion,IL&#13;
Samuel English BA Art Racine Jason Metallo BS Business Kenosha&#13;
Maria Espino BA Spanish Sheboygan Jennifer Meyers BA Political Science Grayslake&#13;
Lance Evans BS Business Racine Rebecca Milaeger BS&#13;
David Fagerberg MBA Kenosha Robert Miner BS&#13;
Psychology Milwaukee&#13;
Psychology Racine Jorge Figueroa BS Business, Spanish Racine Nenad Mirkovic BS Business Vacaville, CA Danielle Fink BS Business Union Grove Angela Mirretti BA History, Psychology Wadsworth Eileen Fischer BS Business Kenosha Peter Nelson BA&#13;
Erin Flannery BS Molecular Biology Racine Jerilynn Nettesheim BA&#13;
Political Science Racine&#13;
David Fogarty BA Communication Racine Jill Newlin BA&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
William Francis BA Criminal Justice Greenfield John Newport BS&#13;
History Pembine&#13;
Tamara Franklin BS Business Great Lakes Thomas Nikolai MBA&#13;
Business . Kenosha&#13;
Billy Franks BS Business Kenosha Robert Noah Kenosha&#13;
BS Business Milwaukee Valerie Funk BA Communication Milwaukee Christeen Oberdas BS&#13;
. Michaela Gaines BA Communication Racine Jolene Oettinger BS Psychology Milwaukee&#13;
Jacquelyn Gallagher BA Economics Greenfield Colleen O'Grady-ShearmanBA Psychology Racine&#13;
Amanda Galster BA Sociology Kenosha Willie Ortiz BS Criminal Justice Burlington&#13;
Jamie Gebhard BA Spanish South Milwaukee Sheila Osborn BA Business Racine&#13;
Sharon Geertsen BS Business Racine Kelly Ostergaard BA Interdisciplinary St. Winthrop Harbor&#13;
Jeremy Gemig BA Political Science Kenosha Larry Pannell BS Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Gregory Gierl BA Music Kenosha Business Lindenhurst&#13;
Continued on page 5&#13;
December14, 2000&#13;
DavidParker BS Business&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 5&#13;
Student Degree&#13;
caseyPawlak BS&#13;
PaulPedrosa BS&#13;
RebeccaPeters ~1MB&#13;
JohnPham&#13;
MichellePhHlips BS&#13;
CatherinePlppm BA&#13;
JasonPisani BS&#13;
EricPlace BA&#13;
Markpodskarbi BS&#13;
NinaPorcaro MBA&#13;
StevenPremeau BS&#13;
DianaPrichard BA&#13;
TanyaProstko BS&#13;
JamesPuhr BS&#13;
JenniferQuail BS&#13;
ShaundraRandolph BA&#13;
ColleenRadke BS&#13;
KarisaReichard BA&#13;
ErinReimer BA&#13;
MirjanaRistic-Petrovic BS&#13;
RomanRodichev BS&#13;
TanyaRogondino BS&#13;
RobertRollins BA&#13;
MarianneRuff BA&#13;
AutumnMarieRuge BA&#13;
CarneliusRussell BA&#13;
CindySalcedo BS&#13;
CharlesSchepker BS&#13;
ChristopherSchiefer BA&#13;
AndreaSchiesser BS&#13;
NicoleSchlitz BA&#13;
RyanSchroeder BS&#13;
ChristinaSchutz BS&#13;
DanielSchutz .sA&#13;
KateSchwarm BA&#13;
KyleScuglik BA&#13;
MarkSenske BS&#13;
GeneShannon BS&#13;
KristyShepherd BA&#13;
JenniferSheppard BS&#13;
MatthewSickles BS&#13;
MatthewSiver BS&#13;
NicoleSkroch BA&#13;
MichaelSlye BS&#13;
RyanSmith BA&#13;
I JohnSorensen BA&#13;
MildredSpann BA&#13;
MichaelaStefani BS&#13;
TiffanyStopa BA&#13;
RebeccaStratman BA&#13;
ToddStreeter BS&#13;
JacquelineStrelow BS&#13;
JosephSturino BA&#13;
Pat~iciaThompson BS&#13;
JanlneTillotson-KowalkeBA&#13;
KarenTuinstra BS&#13;
SawoulaVassilopoulos BS&#13;
SusanneVentura BA&#13;
JohnVerbeten BS&#13;
CameronVetter BS&#13;
ShawnVollmer BA&#13;
I&#13;
AlexanderVoskuil BA&#13;
MichaelWalczak BS&#13;
JoelWallen BS&#13;
BenWalthers BA&#13;
MarkWard BS&#13;
RachelWatkins BA&#13;
JackWebers BS&#13;
~ebeccaWegner BA&#13;
.ebbleWells BS&#13;
LlsaWhitcomb BA&#13;
DanielaWienke BA&#13;
MMIChelleWilde BS&#13;
arthaWing BA&#13;
BrigitYach BA&#13;
LoreenYates BA&#13;
AShrafZahra BS&#13;
~IChOlasZeleski BS&#13;
MamelaZemia BS&#13;
MIchaelZiegelbauer BA&#13;
andlZUllo BA&#13;
Pleasant Prairie&#13;
City&#13;
Schaumburg&#13;
Sturtevant&#13;
Zion&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Twin Lakes&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
ComputerScience Kenosha&#13;
Art FranksvHle&#13;
Psychology Kenosha&#13;
Business Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Psychology Gurnee&#13;
Criminal Justice Glendale&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
English . Lake VHla&#13;
Communication Kenosha&#13;
Molecular Biology Kenosha&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Business Waukegan&#13;
Art Racine&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Bolingbrook&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Political Science Neenah&#13;
Sport, Fitness Mgmt. Kenosha&#13;
Art Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
Sociology FranksvHle&#13;
Art Kenosha&#13;
Business Big Bend&#13;
Biology Burlington&#13;
English Shullsburg&#13;
Psychology Naperville&#13;
Business Lake Villa&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Socioloqy Kenosha&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes&#13;
Music Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Psychology Waterford&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Antioch&#13;
English Beach Park&#13;
Computer Science Kansasville&#13;
Psychology Kenosha&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Computer Science Waterford&#13;
Criminal Justice Franklin&#13;
Communication Delavan&#13;
Corpputer Science Kenosha&#13;
Biology Kenosha&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
. Sociology Caledonia&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
English Spring Grove&#13;
Crim. Just., Pol. Sci.. Kenosha&#13;
Business Palmyra&#13;
Crim. Just., SociologyKenosha&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Business Ken?sha&#13;
Mathematics RaCine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Criminal Justice R,acme.&#13;
Art Libertyville&#13;
Major(s)&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Interdisciplinary St.&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Business&#13;
LOOKING FOR A&#13;
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Page'6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside December 14,2000-&#13;
Moman buzzer beater downs lewis -&#13;
WItAT ItAS PARksidE Acriviries&#13;
BOARd dONE fOR you lATELy?&#13;
It happens anytime anybody gets a&#13;
group of people on a court With a basketbaIl:&#13;
somebody takes the ball, puts&#13;
on the announcer voice, and says,&#13;
"Michael grabs the rock. He's down by&#13;
two. Tune is 11111Itingout! 5 ...4 ...3...2. He&#13;
shoot the three ...HE SCORES!"&#13;
Friday night in Romeoville. .Ill.,&#13;
Quincey Moman faced that situation.&#13;
Grabbing the ball to the right of the&#13;
Lewis University basket, his team&#13;
down by two and time running out, Q&#13;
stepped back behind the three-point&#13;
arch, and coolly drained a three to&#13;
forge a 66-65 lead with two seconds to&#13;
play. The Ranger defended the ~-&#13;
bounds pass and came away With their&#13;
first Great Lake Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC) victory of the season.&#13;
The hard-fought victory was even&#13;
sweeter considering the Rangers trailed&#13;
If you can name three events :PeA.B.has put&#13;
on this year and attend two meetings?&#13;
You can Win A Prize!!!!!!!!!&#13;
Just come to one of our meetings held Fridays,&#13;
noon, Union 207&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
9lnnutll errlbufe fa War/In j]ufher CXtng,8r.&#13;
An Evening Extravaganza Featuring Music, Dramatic arts, Commu-&#13;
. nity Awards, Essay Readings, and a Jazz Reception&#13;
January 19, 2001&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
the Flyers 40-25 at the half.&#13;
"The shot was great, but I was equally&#13;
proud of our team for the seconcfhalf&#13;
we had, "coach Jeff Rutter told the&#13;
Racine Journal Times. "We had a poor&#13;
streak towards the end of the first half&#13;
and dug ourselves a hole."&#13;
Rutter admitted he did the least&#13;
amount of coaching in his five years at&#13;
UW -Parksided uring his team's furious&#13;
second half comeback. "It was in the&#13;
hands of our players."&#13;
His clutch three-pointer gave Q 12&#13;
points for the game to go along with 11&#13;
boards. Marlon Grice led the team with&#13;
16, Brian Coffman had 14.&#13;
The win evened the Rangers' record&#13;
at 3-3 while they are 1-2 in the GLVC.&#13;
UWP hosts St. Francis tonight starting&#13;
at 7 p.m. in the SAC. UW-Parkside students&#13;
are admitted free.&#13;
Cold loul shooting&#13;
beats lady Rangers&#13;
There was a time in the second half&#13;
of last Friday's game when the uwParkside&#13;
Lady Rangers were a single&#13;
point behind "Lewis University. Denita&#13;
Sublett had just hit a free throw to make&#13;
the score 44-43.&#13;
That's when Hurricane Joy took over&#13;
the game. Joy Rauch scored the next&#13;
four points as part of a 7-D run to lead&#13;
the Flyers to a 64-57 Great Lake Valley&#13;
Conference win. Rauch scored 21&#13;
points and pulled down 14 rebounds.&#13;
Coach Paulette Stein's team was&#13;
plagued with poor free throw shooting.&#13;
UWP missed 14 Frs going 11of 25.&#13;
Erin Crank, making her first start of&#13;
the season, led UWP with 16 points.&#13;
Michele Pickering added 11and Sublett&#13;
added 10. UWP fell to 2 and 50veralf&#13;
and 0-3 in the conference.&#13;
The Lady Ranger will get their first&#13;
taste of home cooking Friday night.&#13;
They host Saginaw Valley at the SAC&#13;
starting at 5:30. UW-Parkside students&#13;
are admitted free of charge.&#13;
Wrestlers take 3 titles&#13;
The UWP wrestling team took three&#13;
first-place titles Saturday at the Marquette&#13;
Open in Milwaukee. Luke Goraf was&#13;
the meet's Outstanding Wrestler.&#13;
Goral won in the 197-pound weight&#13;
class. He went 2-D, beating [areck Horton&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin 3-1 III&#13;
the championship match.&#13;
Also winning their weight classes&#13;
were Victor Juarez at 125 pounds and&#13;
Ken Schmidt at 149. Juarez went 3-oat&#13;
the tournament and beat Lester Barnes&#13;
of Minnesota-Mankato in the final by&#13;
d&#13;
a&#13;
score of 11-2. Schmidt also went 3-D an&#13;
beat Jared Zimmet of Marquette 11-2m&#13;
the final. The Rangers enter~d 11&#13;
wrestlers and had 10 top-five finishes'&#13;
d&#13;
Three Rangers placed second: Bra&#13;
Russell (141 pounds), Matt Jacobs (133),ro;d&#13;
Andy Mueller (165). All three went 2- .&#13;
Craig Klawitter (141 pounds), TY&#13;
s&#13;
le7jr&#13;
Freeman (285), and Dan Dempsey (1!&#13;
all placed third for Coach [im ~~,&#13;
while Steve Winter (141) finished ruu'&#13;
Page7 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Rangers score&#13;
explosive victorv&#13;
by Dena Coady&#13;
Comingoff two hard fought road&#13;
losses the UW-Parkside men bounced&#13;
back ~th a 93-82 win at home against&#13;
WInonaState. The Rangers put on a&#13;
entertainingshow for the fans.&#13;
Theywere once again led by Brian&#13;
Coffmanwho terroriZed the Warriors&#13;
atthe three-point line, making six of&#13;
his 11 three-point attempts. Coffman&#13;
finished with 21 points.&#13;
QuinceyMoman had his third consecutivedouble-double.&#13;
Moman added&#13;
191."?inls and had 11 rebounds, nine of&#13;
which were on the defensive side of the&#13;
court.Moman dished a bullet pass to&#13;
Dean Pogodzinski, who connected for&#13;
afirst-halfthree pointer that turned the&#13;
tideofthe game in favor of UWP.&#13;
TheRangers went up at the half 40-&#13;
29.Atthe start of the second half, the&#13;
Warriorsmade a run with the help of&#13;
KyleSchlaak.Schlaak finished with 27&#13;
points for the Warriors.&#13;
ButUWP was not to be denied and&#13;
turned out to be too much for the Warriorsto&#13;
handle.&#13;
Highlights: With 4:10 left of the&#13;
game,Moman gave the crowd an early&#13;
Christmaspresent with his monstrous&#13;
slamdunk. And with time winding&#13;
down,Brian Maastricht had the crowd&#13;
in an uproar with his slam dunk.&#13;
NicI&lt; Knuth added 14 points, going&#13;
four for five at the free throw lane.&#13;
MarlonGrice finished with 16 points&#13;
andsixassists.&#13;
The School of&#13;
Champions&#13;
Two Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC) titles, two NCAA post-season&#13;
berths, and four teams in conference&#13;
tournaments made fall 2tXXla great&#13;
semester for UW-Parkside. Both men's&#13;
soccer and women's cross country&#13;
were GLVC champions and gained&#13;
post season invitations, while women's&#13;
socce~, volleyball, men's cross country;&#13;
and golf made their respective conference&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
Men's soccer: GLVC champions!&#13;
The UWP men's soccer team finished&#13;
as the top defensive team in the&#13;
nation and boasted the top 'goalkeeper&#13;
in compiling a 17-5 record. That record&#13;
included three consecutive shutouts in&#13;
the conference finals leading to the&#13;
Rangers' the first-ever GLVC championship.&#13;
The team earned an NCAA bid.&#13;
Junior goalkeeper Thorn Peer had a&#13;
goals agamst average of just 0.24 in&#13;
posting 17 solo shutouts, a new NCAA&#13;
record. Peer was the conference coplayer&#13;
of the year.&#13;
Head coach Rick Kilps won his 300th&#13;
game in the season opener.&#13;
Women's cross oounby. GLVCchampions!&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team also captures a GLVC&#13;
title. Coach Mike DeWitt's team was led&#13;
by Amber Antonia, the individual winner&#13;
at the conference meet at Evansville,&#13;
Ind., completing the 5K course in&#13;
21 minutes 52 seconds-20 seconds&#13;
ahead of the second-place finisher.&#13;
k His h Ev&#13;
Mark your calendar for these fantastic events&#13;
coming next semester!&#13;
Thursday, February 1, 11:45am-1:00 pm&#13;
Black History Month Program&#13;
Free&#13;
Saturday, February 3, 6:00 pm&#13;
Gospel Explosion -&#13;
Free&#13;
Wednesday, February 7, 9:00 pm&#13;
Apollo Show&#13;
$3/ per person&#13;
Wednesday, February 14 7:30 pm&#13;
Film: Love and Basketball&#13;
$2/person&#13;
Friday, February 16 9:00 pm-1:00 am&#13;
Sweetheart Ball&#13;
$10/person or $18 couple&#13;
Friday, February 25, 8:00 pm&#13;
Fashion Show .&#13;
$3/person or $2 with non-perishable food donatton&#13;
The UW-Parkside volleyball team competes at the GLVC tournament In Indians.&#13;
Antonia's dominance continued at UWP volleyball head coach Melissa&#13;
the regional meet in Ashland, Ohio. She Wolter saw her team qualify for the&#13;
won the race in 21:54, leading the GLVC tournament in her first year. The&#13;
Rangers to fourth place and a berth in Rangers were 6-10 in the Great Lake&#13;
theNCAADiyisionnmeetinPomona,Cal. Valley Conference and 9 and 21 overall.&#13;
At nationals, .UWP was 15th with The men's cross country team finAntonia&#13;
placing 12th individually. ished fourth at the GLVC meet. Coach&#13;
Four teams make tournaments DeWitt's men were led Joe Donnerbauer&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's soccer who finished eighth individually.&#13;
upset top seeded Sill-Edwardsville 2-0 The men's go1i team took third place&#13;
reach the GLVC Final Four. Coach Troy at theGLVC meet and set several records.&#13;
Fabiano's team finished 11-6-2,and 5-5- Coached by Dave Williams, the team&#13;
1 in the GLVC. was led by senior Brian Coffman.&#13;
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And your contributions to SRAs grow undiminished&#13;
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TlM-CREF's solid history of investment certormence.&#13;
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So why wajf' Let us help you build a comfortable renreINVEST&#13;
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payroll plan I ,~'&#13;
1(}'tT,""RS 20Vr:AR.S .'lOYF.AR.'\.&#13;
I~ this h~pIIlh&lt;'icaleJWll(ll •. lIelling ~,idrSIOO~ ftl(J!l,hin ~&#13;
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into n lIIvinp.ocOUlll. Total tctur'" and prilld ... ~ val"" of&#13;
inveslll'oolS ",ilt fl""IUII",1IIIl ~jcld may I-IUY, 11l1:::""&lt;111&#13;
above i.pruentO'd f&lt;&gt;riIJ""""i"e l"''POl"5 only :wd does no.&#13;
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December 14,2000&#13;
-&#13;
PageS The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Framing&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Lectures in Fine Arts Committee "has&#13;
been the most responsive to the framing&#13;
needs." .&#13;
Once it was suggested that vano~s&#13;
departments should pay for the framing&#13;
of prints hanging in their area but that&#13;
would only defeat the purpose of a .&#13;
university collection. DeVmny explains,&#13;
"In a sense it would then become 'partially&#13;
their art [belonging to a particular&#13;
department but,] .. .it would still be&#13;
part ot the University collection."&#13;
When asked about plans for fundraisers,&#13;
DeVinny explains, "!'vereally&#13;
got a pretty full plate with teaching and&#13;
trying to do my own creative stuff. I .&#13;
really don't have time and nor do I .&#13;
think it's my responsibility. Ifthe University&#13;
really wants to partner With&#13;
this whole thing ... they should step up&#13;
to the plate. Somewhere along the line,&#13;
they're the ones who benefit by it."&#13;
Until funds become available, there&#13;
remain many prints in desperate n"ed&#13;
of being properly framed. They Walt&#13;
on a shelf in DeVinny's Comm Arts&#13;
office. He regrets that he is the only&#13;
one who can enjoy them.&#13;
The 14th Parkside National Small&#13;
Print Exhibition starts January 14, 2001. ~~~~~~~~~~~~===========:::~~. ~Th~e~juroris Mark Pascale, associate&#13;
Let's Glow&#13;
Bowling!&#13;
-&#13;
Moonlite Bowling&#13;
-- @ Plaza Bowling&#13;
Center&#13;
-&#13;
Friday 10:30p.m. -1:30 a.m,&#13;
Allyou can bowl $8 .&#13;
Bingo Bowling!&#13;
Coca Cola Rollotl&#13;
Win a Glow BowlingBall&#13;
&amp; T-shirts too!&#13;
Wednesday 3:30 -5:30 p.m.&#13;
Allyou can bowl: $5&#13;
Try Bingo Bowling!&#13;
Win a Glow Bowling Ball&#13;
&amp; T-shirts too!&#13;
Wednesday 10 p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
all you can bowl $8&#13;
Live DJ/Casino Bowling!&#13;
Coca Cola Rollotl&#13;
Saturday 11:30 p.m. - 1:30 a.m.&#13;
all you can bowl: $6&#13;
Casino Bowling&#13;
Lots of prizes &amp; fin!&#13;
Check us out!&#13;
Plaza Bowling Center&#13;
3701 Durand Ave. Racine&#13;
Call 554-7175&#13;
BREAJ( &amp; RC\&#13;
BILLIARDSI&#13;
OPENING SOON&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
• WORLD CLASS, COMPETITION&#13;
STYLE BRUNSWICK GOLD&#13;
CROWN IV TABLES.&#13;
• SIMONIS 860 CLOTH. THE&#13;
WORLD'S FINEST PREMIUM&#13;
BILLIARD CLOTH.&#13;
• CUES, CASES, AND ACCESSORIES.&#13;
2037 LATHROP AVE.&#13;
RACINE, WI (JUST 2 Y. MILES NCR.TH OF KENQSI{A)&#13;
PHONE: (262) 636-3000&#13;
Bring in this ad for Y1pnee table time.&#13;
Our prrsoB per roupoB. Ofrrr npirn 11129101&#13;
curator, Prints and Drawings at theArt&#13;
Institute of Chicago. Pascale juried&#13;
several major national shows this year.&#13;
DiVinny said, "This show ... is one&#13;
of the most hillhly regarded in the&#13;
United States. '&#13;
Any questions concerning framing&#13;
or the exhibition itself should be&#13;
directed to DeVinny at ext. 2025.&#13;
Just bring in $100 or more 10 gel your account started, Online Banking services are free, of course. Bill Pay is optional and gets you&#13;
15 monthly payments for just $4.95/month after the 3-monlh trial period. Ask for details, (HEY. th:u's 001 bad for fine print!)&#13;
©2000 North Shore Bank Member FDIC&#13;
You surf. You shop. You e-mail.&#13;
Why aren't you banking online?&#13;
Why stand in line at your bank when you can bank online with a Completely Free Checking&#13;
account from North Shore Bank? Get the safety and convenience of online banking plus personal&#13;
service when you need it.&#13;
Completely Free Checking saves you money&#13;
• No minimum balance required&#13;
• No monthly fees or per check charges&#13;
• Free TYMEe access at all North Shore ATMs&#13;
• Free MasterCard Debit Card, accepted worldwide&#13;
Online Banking saves you time&#13;
• Free account access anywhere, anytime&#13;
• Transfer money, check balances&#13;
• See check!ATMldebit card activity&#13;
• Take the tour at www.northshorebank.com&#13;
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• Try Bill Pay free for three months&#13;
• Pay anyone, anywhere, anytime&#13;
• Saves postage, checks and time&#13;
Bank when you want ... the way you want ... forjree. Stop by your neighborhood North Shore Bank&#13;
and open your Completely Free Checking account. It's easier than downloading an MP3 file.&#13;
~ NORTH SHORE BANK&#13;
www.northshorebank.com&#13;
For a nearby office call 262-785-1600 or toll~free 1-800-236-4672</text>
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              <text>ewspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-Ja-nua-ry- 25-, -------------~~ r.Jrr /.=. ----------Is-su-e 1-5 -Vo-l. 3-1&#13;
OW-Parkside celebrates the life of Martin luther. King Jr&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
celebrated the life of Dr.&#13;
Martin Luther King, Jr. Friday, Jan. 19&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
The program commemorated the&#13;
accomplishments of Martin Luther&#13;
Kin~ and his living legacy using&#13;
music, song, dance, video, and the&#13;
spoken word.&#13;
As part of the festivities, students&#13;
and community members were recognized&#13;
with awards. The winning&#13;
entries in an essay contest were&#13;
selected from more than 200 essays&#13;
written by local elementary, junior&#13;
high, and high school students on Dr.&#13;
King's life and legacy.&#13;
The recipients of the elementary&#13;
school essay contest were third place&#13;
winners Taylor Price, Brianna Chu,&#13;
and Michael DeGroot, second place&#13;
winners Mallory Whitefoot, and first&#13;
place winner Carmen Daniels. The&#13;
middle school&#13;
essay award winners&#13;
were: second&#13;
place winner&#13;
Michelle Lui, and&#13;
first place winner&#13;
Jessica Schultz.&#13;
The high school&#13;
essay award winners&#13;
were second&#13;
place, Tasia Collier,&#13;
and first place,&#13;
Nina Cassandra&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The recipient of the Community&#13;
Service Award for the city of Racine&#13;
was Norma Carter. The recipient of&#13;
the Community Service Award for&#13;
the city of Kenosha was Yolanda&#13;
Adams.&#13;
Steve McLaughlin, UW-Parkside's&#13;
Associate Vice Chancellor&#13;
for Student&#13;
Services presented&#13;
UW-Parkside student&#13;
Melissa Schmitz with&#13;
the prestigious UWParkside&#13;
Community&#13;
Outreach Award.&#13;
The celebration,&#13;
nosted by UW-Parkside&#13;
students Kara&#13;
Norton and Jamie&#13;
Freeman, featured an&#13;
appearance by the&#13;
UW-Parkside Gospel Choir and&#13;
Kenosha's Heritage Choir, a performance&#13;
by violinist Jonathan&#13;
The Irish are coming&#13;
Irish Actors co. here Feb. 5-10&#13;
UW-Parkside will be the home&#13;
away from home for The Irish Actors&#13;
The~~ Company from Feb. 5 to 10. In&#13;
add1~on to presenting a program on&#13;
the life and ti,rnes of William Shakespeare&#13;
at area schools, the four-P.erson&#13;
rupe from Dublin, Ireland, will perorm&#13;
a pair of public programs on&#13;
campus as well as a workshop for area&#13;
educators.&#13;
Founded in 1984, The Irish Actors&#13;
~atre Co. presents theater through&#13;
~ _medium of story-telling. Using&#13;
Dlinimal sets and props-a chair, a&#13;
table, a sword when needed-the audience&#13;
is allowed to focus almost entirely&#13;
on the actors and their ability to o/.ture attention through the power&#13;
0 the spoken word. Here the actor is&#13;
Patamqunt and, ultimately, the audientogce&#13;
an~ performers are bound&#13;
eth~r man act of imagination. .&#13;
A During their residency, the Irish&#13;
.ctors Theatre Co. will stage two spega1&#13;
performances at the UW-Parks1de&#13;
Olntnunication Arts Theatre. On&#13;
Monday, Feb. 5, the Company presents&#13;
"Ireland: Its Genius and Its&#13;
Tragedy."&#13;
One of the Company's 11).0St&#13;
popular programs, t~e play_ is&#13;
billed as an introduction to Insh&#13;
culture. It includes a brief rap&#13;
history of the i&amp;lend ~nd&#13;
vignettes on the Great Famine,&#13;
the Abbey Theatre, Beckett,&#13;
George Bernard Shaw, the prob- The Irish Actors Theatre Co. is here Feb. 5-10.&#13;
!ems of Northern Ireland, and Their performances should not be missed.&#13;
plenty of music.&#13;
On Tuesday, Feb. 6, the Cc?meany&#13;
stages "Love, Passi~~, ~nd&#13;
Sorry, I've Got a Headache. U~ing&#13;
the words and music of Charles ~1c~ens&#13;
and Oscar Wilde, Agatha Chnstie&#13;
and Maya Angelou, Mick Ja15ger and&#13;
the Beatles among others, this perf?rmance&#13;
attempts to define a~~ ?escnbe&#13;
something tnat defies deftn1ti~n and&#13;
description: lov~ .. ~e Wa~hmgton&#13;
Post called it an hilanous mixture ?f&#13;
music and drama about the fever m&#13;
the blood." . b .&#13;
Performances both evenings egm&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $5 for students&#13;
and seniors and $10 for adults. For&#13;
tickets and more information, call ext.&#13;
2345 or visit the RangerCard office.&#13;
In addition, plans are being finalized&#13;
for a "Pub Night" performance.&#13;
That will be held in the Student Union&#13;
and will be free to students and the&#13;
public.&#13;
This promises to be a unique weeklong&#13;
theatrical experience. English&#13;
Professor Andy McLean who is organizing&#13;
the Theatre Company's residency&#13;
says students will enjoy every&#13;
one of the troupe's performances.&#13;
Livingston, and poetry readings by&#13;
Christina Toon and Alexandria -Pitts.&#13;
The Bradford High School dance&#13;
troupe rendered an interpretive&#13;
dance to Dr. King's "I've Been to the&#13;
Mountaintop" speech and video clips&#13;
of Dr. King were also shown&#13;
throughout the evening.&#13;
wanna plavP&#13;
Sign UP bV Fridav, Jan.&#13;
26 tor OW-Parkside&#13;
intramurals at SAC&#13;
If you're a UW-Parkside student,&#13;
here's your chance to play. Intramural&#13;
basketball and volleyball registration&#13;
sheets for are now availaole on&#13;
the intramural bulletin boards at the&#13;
SAC and outside the Union Dining&#13;
Room.&#13;
Basketball will be played Tuesdays&#13;
and Thursdays, 6 to 9 p.m. for&#13;
10 weeks starting Jan. 30. The men's&#13;
teams will play up to two games a&#13;
week. Four women's teams are&#13;
expected to compete. They will play&#13;
once a week.&#13;
Volleyball teams must have at&#13;
least .two men and two women on the&#13;
floor at the same time. Six to eight&#13;
teams are expected and will play&#13;
once or twice each week.&#13;
The intramural staff is testing&#13;
some new activities this semester&#13;
including men's and women's indoor&#13;
soccer, co-ed floor hockey, and a&#13;
walk/run club. Soccer will have&#13;
teams of 4 with the women playing&#13;
Mondays and the men playing&#13;
Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. Floor&#13;
hockey will be played Tuesdays from&#13;
7 to 9 p.m. with seven players per&#13;
team.&#13;
But hurry. The deadline to register&#13;
is Friday, Jan. 26-that's tomorrow!&#13;
Get your registration sheets now. The&#13;
walk/ run dub begins Feb. 6, meeting&#13;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, noon to&#13;
lp.m. in the fieldhouse.&#13;
Check The Ranger each week for&#13;
intramural league standings.&#13;
.. : . The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside January 25 -&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
1&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
Inside&#13;
Student Voices&#13;
The cinema problem and PSGA member speaks out.&#13;
uw-P professor receives NEH grant&#13;
Black History Month celebrations at UW-P.&#13;
Professor Cloutier speaks to&#13;
Fall class 2001&#13;
ow-Parkside Fall Class or 2001&#13;
Fall Class 2001 Continued&#13;
Spans&#13;
Men's basketball split GLVC pair; Host St. Joe's tonight.&#13;
Spans Continued&#13;
Women's basketball, winter break basketball, and&#13;
UW-P.wrestling.&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
#&#13;
Editor of the week: Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co Editors: Photography Directors&#13;
Brenda Dunham Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Sarah Olsen Kory Holm&#13;
Designer:&#13;
Pete Forchette&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
GinaCiardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Lynn Garcia&#13;
Dan Frake&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Dan White&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Christine Agaioy&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is p~b~ ~very Thursday throughout the sernesler by studmts of the University of W1SCOnSin-Parkside, who are solely&#13;
responsi61e for its ed,tonal policy and content&#13;
letters to the Editor p&lt;&gt;licy: The Ranger encourages letter., to the Editor. letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C). c:etters mustl&gt;e typed and include the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
misleading or libelous content Letters that fail to conrply will not be published. For publication purposes, author's name can be withheld,&#13;
but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the nght IQ ed_it all letters.&#13;
Thin&#13;
at t&#13;
0&#13;
h~~U . . .&#13;
• INROADS Presentation: Internships, 3 p.m., Office of Multicultural Student&#13;
Affairs, Wyllie Hall D-182.&#13;
• Men's &amp; Women's Basketball vs. St. J?seph's Colleg~, women@S:30 p.m.,&#13;
men@ 7:30 p.m., De Simone Gymnasmm, UW-Parks1~e students admitted&#13;
free; $5 for adults, $1 for high school students and children 14 years of age&#13;
and W1der.&#13;
• Casino Night and Psychic Readings, 7 to 11 p.m., Union Square, sponsored&#13;
by Parkside Activities Board, open to ca~pus only&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! series presents: Arlo Guthrie &amp; Fanuly, 7:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
Janua~ 25-28&#13;
• Foreign Film Series presents: The Celebration, Denm~rk, s~b-titled; films&#13;
shown Thur./Fri. 7:30 p.m., Sat. 8 p.m., SW1. 2 p.m., Uruon Cinema Theater.&#13;
January 26&#13;
• FW1 Friday, noon, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, Wyllie Hall D-&#13;
182, free food &amp; fun&#13;
• Race, Class and Gender Study Group: "Mansfield Park" by Jane Austen,&#13;
Molinaro 111, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
January 27&#13;
• Men's &amp; Women's Basketball vs. TTJPU-Fort WaP.te, women@ 1 p.m., men&#13;
@ 3:15 p.m. De Simone Gymnasium, UW-Parks1de students admitted free;&#13;
$5 for adults, $1 for high school students and children 14 years of age and&#13;
W1der.&#13;
January 31&#13;
• Student Organization Recruitment Fair, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Upper Main&#13;
Place sponsored by Student Activities, open to cam_pus only&#13;
• Noon Concert: Prometheus Trio w /Stefanie Jacob, piano, free, noon, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater&#13;
Coming in February ...&#13;
• UyV-Parkside Pow-Wow: "Honoring the Children," Feb. 3, all day&#13;
• Insh Actors Theatre Co. in residence at UW-Pa.rkside, Feb. 5 to 1&#13;
Ireland: Its Genius and Its Tragedy, Feb. 5&#13;
"Love, Passion, and "Sorry, I've Got a Headache," Feb. 6&#13;
Pub Night Show, Feb. 7&#13;
• Black History Month&#13;
Kickoff, Feb. 1, 11:45 a.m.&#13;
Gospel Explosion, Feb. 3, 6 p.m.&#13;
Third Annual Apollo Show, Feb. 7, 8 p.m.&#13;
Film: Love and Basketball, Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sweetheart Ball, Feb. 16, 9 p.m.,&#13;
Fashion Show, Feb. 23, 8 p.m.&#13;
• Dan_Banda Lecture Series: One-hour presentations on documentary filmmaking:&#13;
_Isabe; ~reske: Introduction To Editing System, Feb. 6&#13;
• Women m Politics: Empowering Women in the Political Process, Feb. 10&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE!&#13;
Ailey II modem dance, Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
Loston Harris, jazz piano/vocals, Feb. 21, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Plays at Parkside&#13;
• "Talk Radio" by Eric Bogosian, Feb. 23, 24, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside po&lt;?l is_ closed beginning today, Thursday, December 14, 2000,&#13;
and continuing through March 9, 2001, for renovation.&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Thecinema problem&#13;
By Radtke, Mike Rosandich,&#13;
Jeffl&lt;azmierski, and jimmy Letting&#13;
Almostevery student who attends&#13;
UW.Parksideis aware that the campushas&#13;
a cinema. However, few stuaents&#13;
frequent the cinema or know&#13;
whatmovies are offered. It also seems&#13;
thatevery movie played by the cinemais&#13;
old, foreign, or Just unimportant&#13;
to thestudents of UW-Parkside.&#13;
For example, the only movies&#13;
played during the fall semester that&#13;
werenot free, were a series of foreign&#13;
films that are only available to those&#13;
whobuy a pass for the entire series.&#13;
Thereseems to be a problem with&#13;
thecinema.&#13;
an attempt to find out what peopleknow&#13;
about the cinema, a survey&#13;
waspassed out to students and professorsin&#13;
the hallways. The results of&#13;
thesurvey were then analyzed.&#13;
Ojne hundred percent of people&#13;
surveyedsaid the movies the cinema&#13;
offers, and the times those movies run,&#13;
stink. Every person surveyed said&#13;
that they would like to see current&#13;
American films played more than&#13;
onceevery couple weeks. Let's face it&#13;
- "Happy Gilmore" gets boring the&#13;
100th time you've seen it and most of&#13;
us don't care about foreign films.&#13;
Worst of all, even when these movies&#13;
are played, almost no one knows&#13;
about them. Why? They are poorly&#13;
advertised.&#13;
Only 88% of people we surveyed&#13;
actually know where the cinema is&#13;
located. Of that 88%, most learned of&#13;
the cinema from recruiters and campus&#13;
visits. Even a professor surveyed&#13;
did not know where the cinema was&#13;
located.&#13;
There are very few cinema advertisements&#13;
around campus. After a&#13;
brief walk through of the campus,&#13;
only 4 noticeable ads were found.&#13;
One of these ads was an old poster&#13;
promoting a movie that played earlier&#13;
the fall semester.&#13;
.One student says, "I only know&#13;
about it [the cinema] on the way to&#13;
class." lf the cinema is not promoted,&#13;
it can not bring in enough revenue to&#13;
support itself. It is simple business&#13;
economics - if you don't take in&#13;
The views expressed in. these articles are those of the authors only. They do&#13;
not reflect the views or beliefs of The Ranger nor anyone on the staff&#13;
money to offset expenses, you are&#13;
operating at a loss. As a result, money&#13;
from other sources is dumped into the&#13;
cinema. And what a dump.&#13;
the most recent budget, $27,144&#13;
was allotted to the cinema. The season&#13;
passes, which no one seems to&#13;
buy, cost a little over $20 a piece. For&#13;
ease of computations, we'll round up&#13;
to $25. Forthe cinema to break even,&#13;
1,086 people need to buy the season&#13;
pass. This is unlikely to happen&#13;
because the Unlversity has approximately&#13;
300 beds on campus, and why&#13;
would commuter students go to the&#13;
cinema?&#13;
what does all this mean? It&#13;
means that right now, due to our own&#13;
beliefs and our research, that the cinema&#13;
is a waste. The cinema needs better&#13;
movies played more often and they&#13;
need to be advertised. It seems so&#13;
sim~le. Why doesn't anyone else see&#13;
this.&#13;
Although we were never able to&#13;
contact the cinema director, we&#13;
formed a solution. The studio needs&#13;
Joinstudent senate and voice vour opinion&#13;
ByAdela Lazano&#13;
Ihave heard many students complainabout&#13;
Student Senate. I've read&#13;
the e-mails abou t the sena tors not&#13;
doing anything for this school. I&#13;
deeded to write this article to challengeall&#13;
students out there who sit&#13;
and do nothing and still complain&#13;
about Student Senate to come learn&#13;
what the Senate does. Every General&#13;
Assembly meeting is on Fridays at&#13;
~oonin Molinaro room 0137. I both&#13;
IIlViteyou and challenge you to come&#13;
toany of the meetings next semester.&#13;
Forthose of you who think that the&#13;
Senate doesn't do anything, you're&#13;
wrong. For those of you who think&#13;
that the Senate is perfect, you're&#13;
~ng. Everyone makes mistakes, and&#13;
IS, III fact, entitled to make mistakes.&#13;
Nthobodiys perfect or can be perfect all&#13;
e time. it makes sense that the&#13;
Parkside Student Government is not&#13;
Eerfect.They know they're not pereel,&#13;
but they're trying hard to not&#13;
so many mistakes.&#13;
r Im a new Spring Senator and a ew student here at Parkside. I transerred&#13;
here from the College of Lake&#13;
Countyin Grayslake, IL. Iwas never&#13;
mvolved in anything the whole two&#13;
.y~ Iwas there. Iregret that Ididn't&#13;
~ an effort to be a part of someg&#13;
there, But now, I am pa:t of&#13;
something, many things. One thmg I&#13;
ama part of is the PSGA.&#13;
Even though I've been in the PSGA&#13;
for awhile now, I still feel new to it. I&#13;
know some things and continue to&#13;
learn much more. The Senators who&#13;
are not new to this, to me, are amazing.&#13;
They put in a lot of time and effort.&#13;
into their work. They're cornmg up •&#13;
with new ideas to improve student life&#13;
at Parkside, and,' to improve the&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
How exactly is the PSGA working&#13;
to improve things around here? PSGA&#13;
was working on getting Marriott out&#13;
of Perkside students can have better&#13;
food in the cafeteria. What happened?&#13;
Not enough students cared to&#13;
help. PSGA cannot do everything on&#13;
their own - they need YOUR help.&#13;
Without student help, nothing will get&#13;
done. You should not only blame our&#13;
Student Senate for things. that go&#13;
wrong, but yourselves as well. If you&#13;
won't put-in the effort to make some&#13;
changes, then who will?&#13;
Being a part of the,PSGA does take&#13;
a lot of time. In fact, It s like a full-time&#13;
job, only you're not getting. paid. S?&#13;
why are people a part of this orgaruzation?&#13;
What's in .it for them? Many&#13;
students are Senators because they&#13;
want to make a difference at Parkside&#13;
and they want their voices to be heard .&#13;
lf they see something going on that&#13;
they feel is wrong, they want to&#13;
change it. What do they get out of&#13;
this? The satisfaction of knowmg that&#13;
they helped to make Parkside the best&#13;
college around.&#13;
After I joined PSGA, I thought&#13;
"what have I got myself into?" I started&#13;
feel that maybe Iwas in way over&#13;
my head. However, the other Senators&#13;
made me feel comfortable and continued&#13;
to encourage me. I know that if I&#13;
don't understand something, they&#13;
won't ridicule me about it. They are&#13;
there to help me and other new Senators.&#13;
But why did I join the PSGA? I&#13;
joined because Iwant a say in things.&#13;
I'm tired of people passing rules that I&#13;
didn't know about, much less get to&#13;
state my opinion about. If there is&#13;
something at Parkside that I don't&#13;
like, Iwant to be able to voice my concern.&#13;
I don't want to be kept in the&#13;
dark, like so many of us already are. I&#13;
also am tired of being afraid to speak&#13;
out for something I believe is truly&#13;
wrong. How many of you: have not&#13;
spoken up for yourselves or for something&#13;
you believed to be bad? Think&#13;
about what happens when you sit&#13;
there wanting to scream to 'people that&#13;
something is wrong, but instead, you&#13;
just keep your mouth shut, because&#13;
maybe someone else will say what&#13;
you're dying to say. Only no one says&#13;
what you're thinking, and it's too late&#13;
for you to finally speak up. Think&#13;
about that for a minute,&#13;
You waste more time complaining&#13;
about things than doing something&#13;
about them. This semester, Ichallenge&#13;
to be commercialized. needs to offer&#13;
movies the students want to see,&#13;
advertise them, and make its own&#13;
money. If this happens, the $27,000&#13;
put in the cinema can be used elsewhere.&#13;
In addition, any profit brought&#13;
into ihe cinema can be used to expand&#13;
the cinema or be given back to the&#13;
University. Either way, the Unlversity&#13;
would have more money.&#13;
WHAT'S ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
you are an English&#13;
major or aspiring journalist,&#13;
and have not yet written&#13;
for a newspaper, what&#13;
are you waiting for? .&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so&#13;
much more.&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
all positions for the&#13;
spring 2001 semester.&#13;
.&#13;
Stop by the office, located&#13;
across from the Career&#13;
Center in lower Wyllie&#13;
hall. .&#13;
Meetings are Mondays&#13;
from noon to 1p.m. and&#13;
are open to all interested&#13;
persons.&#13;
YO\J what will you have&#13;
to offer?&#13;
•&#13;
you to be a part of the Student Senate.&#13;
to see what we do, or at least, educate&#13;
yourselves by going to the meetings&#13;
on Fridays. Ialso challenge those students&#13;
like me, to speak up for yourselves&#13;
and for others. And for those of&#13;
you who don't care one way or the&#13;
other what happens at school, maybe&#13;
you better start caring, because you&#13;
pay for what you get.&#13;
Page3&#13;
The cinema Matt Ra~tke, ~ike Ros~~dich,&#13;
Jeff l&lt;Jmuny Le1ting&#13;
Almost every OW-Parkside is campus&#13;
has stuaents&#13;
what movies that every cinema&#13;
is JUSt the students movi~&#13;
were not who buy There seems the cinema.&#13;
In people&#13;
know was passed professors&#13;
in the survey O)ne surveyed said that they would like to see current&#13;
once every couple weeks. Let's face it&#13;
~em. actualfy campus&#13;
advertisements&#13;
in One student says, "I only know&#13;
If support itself. It is simple business&#13;
economics - if you don't take in&#13;
in Th~ In season&#13;
Fodhe Tftis University approximately&#13;
So, cinema&#13;
better&#13;
simple. this~&#13;
contact the cinema director, we&#13;
It elsewhere.&#13;
the University&#13;
If journalist,&#13;
written&#13;
_&#13;
Join student looking&#13;
interviewing,&#13;
By Adela Lazano I have complain&#13;
about about senators do~g deoded challenge&#13;
all and do nothing and still complain&#13;
noon in invite you lo any For those Senate doesn't do anything, you're&#13;
wrong. For those of you wno think&#13;
ng. IS, 1n Ntheo~y is perfect So ~-They know they're not perect,&#13;
but they're trying hard to not&#13;
~ I m rew transerred&#13;
~ounty in Grayslake, IL. I was never&#13;
=involved I was there. I regret that I didn't&#13;
thin fart someg&#13;
there. part thing ain a learn much more. The Senators who&#13;
amazing.&#13;
an~ effort .&#13;
coming ·&#13;
and, PSGA.&#13;
to improve things aro~d here? PSGA&#13;
Parkside so better&#13;
happened?&#13;
help. PSGA cannot do everything on&#13;
things · put in Being a part of the P~A does t.ake&#13;
it's getting_ 5?&#13;
why are people a part of this orgaruzation?&#13;
it t~ey&#13;
heard.&#13;
If they' get_ started&#13;
I was m:ade me feel comfortable and continued&#13;
to encourage me. know that won't ridicule me about it. They are&#13;
Senators.&#13;
But why did join the PSGA? joined because I want a say in things.&#13;
· muc.fi I want concern.&#13;
m huly&#13;
you· for_yourselves so~ething&#13;
to.just. You waste more time complaining&#13;
about things than doing something&#13;
about them. semester, I challenge&#13;
oy lp.When you graduate,&#13;
to see what we do, or at least, educate&#13;
I also students&#13;
like me, to speak up for yourselves&#13;
Page 4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside - January 25,&#13;
UW';'Parkside profesSOr .receives HEH grant&#13;
It isn't unusual-for professors at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside to&#13;
have the likeness of people they&#13;
admire prominently displayed in&#13;
their offices. Albert Einstein, Walt&#13;
Whitman, Maya Angelou, and&#13;
Thomas Edison are popular. Counterculture&#13;
heroes like Che Guevara and&#13;
jack Kerouac may also be seen.&#13;
Walk into History Professor John&#13;
Buenker's office and a large photo of&#13;
Robert LaFollette, the image used for&#13;
the cover of the book he wrote on&#13;
Wisconsin' legendary former governor,&#13;
graces a wall. Taped to&#13;
Buenker's desk is the photo of another&#13;
key figure that shaped the state's&#13;
progressive era. The face - and&#13;
accomplishments of Charles&#13;
McCarthy aren't as well known as&#13;
LaFollette and Buenker is hoping to&#13;
change that. .&#13;
Using a prestigious National&#13;
Endowment for the Humanities&#13;
grant, Buenker plans to spend the&#13;
next two summers and the 2001-2001&#13;
academic year researching&#13;
McCarthy's work and personal life&#13;
for a book. As the first director of&#13;
what is now the Legislative Reference&#13;
Bureau; McCarthy was instrumenta'&#13;
in turning good ideas into good public&#13;
policy. .&#13;
"He. took office about the time&#13;
Robert LaFollette became governor in&#13;
1901, and drafted pretty much all of&#13;
the/rogressive era legislation associate&#13;
with LaFollette and his successors.&#13;
That [legislation] gave Wisconsin&#13;
the reputation as perhaps the most&#13;
progressive state in the union prior to&#13;
the-first World War," Buenker stated.&#13;
"McCarthy had an enormous amount&#13;
to do with that but doesn't get the&#13;
kind of publicity _that people like&#13;
LaFollette got because he wasn't in&#13;
the public eye. He was workmg m his&#13;
office."&#13;
Buenker said McCarthy's expertise&#13;
at turning ideas into laws extended&#13;
his influence far beyond Wisconsin's&#13;
borders.&#13;
"Nationally, and even internationally,&#13;
he was very well known. People&#13;
in other states and other countries -&#13;
places like Japan, New Zealand, Australia,&#13;
and various countries in&#13;
Europe - consulted him about drafting&#13;
legislation," said Buenker.&#13;
McCarthy corresponded on a regular&#13;
basis with p resident Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson and&#13;
many other policy makers. He also&#13;
helped train the next generation of&#13;
progressives. Buenker pointed out&#13;
that Edwin Witty, the architect of the&#13;
original Social Security legislation for&#13;
Franklin- Roosevelt's administration,&#13;
is a good example of McCarthy's&#13;
training. Witty succeeded McCarthy&#13;
at the Legislative Reference Bureau&#13;
and was one of his proteges.&#13;
Buenker said he plans to take what&#13;
he called a "warts and all" approach to&#13;
covering Charles McCarthy - the person.&#13;
McCarthy apparently was a&#13;
workaholic, laboring 12 to 14 hours a&#13;
day and often taking work home with&#13;
him. Buenker said his work habits&#13;
made him a tough boss because he&#13;
expected the same effort from everyone&#13;
else. The job may also have 'contributed&#13;
to McCarthy's early death.&#13;
Buenker sees McCarthy's personality&#13;
as an important part of his story.&#13;
"I think it's relevant to what kind&#13;
of person he was, what kind of a person&#13;
it took to do this," he said. ''I'll&#13;
probably go into [it] a great deal."&#13;
Another facet of the story Buenker&#13;
Black Historv Month&#13;
Celebrate at UW-Parkside&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will celebrate Black History&#13;
Month in February with a series of&#13;
special events. Each event will highlight&#13;
the contributions made by&#13;
African Americans through the talents&#13;
of UW-Parkside students and community&#13;
members. The events include:&#13;
l=ebruary 1&#13;
Black History Month Kickoff with&#13;
the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, an&#13;
African storyteller and an African arts&#13;
vendor, .11:45 a.m. to 1 p.rn., Main&#13;
. Place, free, sponsored by Black Student&#13;
Union&#13;
February 3&#13;
Gospel Explosion showcasing a&#13;
variety of excellent choirs from southeast&#13;
Wisconsin, 6 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre, free,. sponsored by&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
February 7&#13;
Apollo Show, third annual showcase&#13;
of UW-Parkside and local talent,&#13;
8 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admission-&#13;
S'l, sponsored by Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and Black Student Union.&#13;
February 14&#13;
Film: Love and Basketball, 7:30&#13;
p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admission&#13;
$2, sponsored by All Campus&#13;
Events and Student Activities ..&#13;
February 16 .&#13;
Sweetheart Ball with OJ Doc B, 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m., Union Square, admission&#13;
$10 per person, $18 per couple,&#13;
advance ticket purchase at Ranger-&#13;
Card office, dress to impress, refreshments&#13;
provided, professional photography&#13;
available, sponsored by Black&#13;
Student Union and All Campus&#13;
Events/Student Activities.&#13;
February 23&#13;
Fashion Show, 8 p.m., Union&#13;
Square, Admission $3, $2 with nonperishable&#13;
food donation.&#13;
plans to explore is McCarthy's Irish&#13;
heritage. Born of immigrant parents,&#13;
Buenker said this humble background&#13;
and his education allowed McCarthy&#13;
to deal with what he called the "snobbish"&#13;
attitudes of turn-of-the-century&#13;
academics and politicians with relative&#13;
ease.&#13;
After spending a good part of his&#13;
time in Madison going through&#13;
McCarthy's papers and talking with&#13;
people knowledgeable about tlie.Legislative&#13;
Reference Bureau, he expects&#13;
to start writing his book in January&#13;
2002. Buenker, who has written four&#13;
books and co-authored eight more&#13;
estimates it will take two years t~&#13;
complete a draft manuscript, with&#13;
most of his writing getting done during&#13;
the summer months.&#13;
Editing and rewriting will require&#13;
still more time, but when he's done&#13;
Buenker expects people to have ~&#13;
greater respect for the work and contributions&#13;
made by Charles&#13;
McCarthy.&#13;
Riekey Lashley&#13;
Celtic Music from Scotland &amp; Ireland&#13;
Traditional Scottish and Irish Ballads!&#13;
Double-Fisted drinking songs! Audience sing-a-longs!&#13;
Only·at Captain Mike's Mondays at 8 p.rn.&#13;
Lighthouse Pub on Sixth Avenue, '51186th Ave. Across from&#13;
Holiday Inn, Kenosha&#13;
(262) 658-CAPT&#13;
(See our ad in Happenings for more events) ,&#13;
4£f4n.IJ&#13;
OPEN TUESDAY - FRIDAY: 4 P.M. - CLOSE&#13;
OPEN SATURDAY: 7 P.M. - CLOSE&#13;
t&#13;
~ TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY IS&#13;
IDWEEK M{\DNESS!&#13;
'h TUESDAY\&#13;
MILLER BOTTLES, RAILS, AND TAP $1&#13;
No COVER&#13;
WEDNESDAY:&#13;
LADIES NI.GHT IS BACK! 9 P.Mp- 12:30 A.M.&#13;
RAILS, TAPS,. AND SELECTED SHOTS ARE ALL YOU CAN DRINK!&#13;
1ST LADY+$5, EACHADD!TJONAL GIRL !S $3, PROFESSI,O. NAL D.J.!&#13;
THURSDAY:&#13;
ALI YOU;CAl'lPR!N.K TAl'S AND RAILS $5, PROFESSIONAL D.J.!&#13;
FRIDAY/SATURDAY: ,"'&#13;
DANCECLUB, 80S, 90s, TODAY&#13;
No COVER WITH PARKSIDE I.D. ON SATURDAYS! .·•.•3••1',01 [)LJRAND AVE:\&#13;
CELMHOS/D PLAZA), RAd&#13;
554-9449&#13;
Page 4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside January 25,&#13;
OW-Parkside professor receives NEH grant&#13;
It isn't unusual for professors at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside to&#13;
have the likeness of people they&#13;
admire prominently displayed in&#13;
their offices. Albert Einstein, Walt&#13;
Whitman, Maya Angelou, and&#13;
Thomas Edison are popufar. Counterculture&#13;
heroes like Che Guevara and&#13;
Jack Kerouac may also be seen.&#13;
Walk into History Professor John&#13;
Buenker's office and a large photo of&#13;
Robert LaFollette, the image used for&#13;
the cover of the book he wrote on&#13;
Wisconsin' legendary former governor,&#13;
graces a wall. Taped to&#13;
Buenker's desk is the photo of another&#13;
key figure that shaped the state's&#13;
progressive era. The face - and&#13;
accomplishments - of Charles&#13;
McCarthy aren't as well known as&#13;
LaFollctte and Buenker is hoping to&#13;
change that.&#13;
Using a prestigious National&#13;
Endowment for the Humanities&#13;
grant, Buenker plans to spend the&#13;
next two summers and the 2001-2001&#13;
academic year researching&#13;
McCarthy's work and personal life&#13;
for a book. As the first director of&#13;
what is now the Legislative Reference&#13;
Bureau, McCarthy was instrumenta'&#13;
in turning good ideas into good public&#13;
r,olicy.&#13;
'He. took office about the time&#13;
Robert LaFollette became governor in&#13;
1901, and drafted pretty much all of&#13;
the/ro8!essive era legislation associate&#13;
with Lafollette and his successors.&#13;
That [le~islation] _gave Wisconsin&#13;
the reputation as pernaps the most&#13;
progressive state in the union prior to&#13;
the·first World War," Buenker stated.&#13;
"McCarthy had an enormous amount&#13;
to do with that but doesn't get the&#13;
kind of publicity- that people like&#13;
LaFollette got because he wasn't in&#13;
the public eye. He was working in his&#13;
office."&#13;
Buenker said McCarthy's expertise&#13;
at turning ideas into laws extended&#13;
his influence far beyond Wisconsin's&#13;
borders.&#13;
"Nationally, and even internationally,&#13;
he was very well known. People&#13;
in other states and other countries -&#13;
places like Japan, New Zealaad, Australia,&#13;
and various countries in&#13;
Europe - consulted him about drafting&#13;
legislation," said Buenker.&#13;
McCarthy corresponded on a regular&#13;
basis with p resident Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson and&#13;
many other policy makers. He also&#13;
helped train the next generation of&#13;
erogressives. Buenker pointed out&#13;
that Edwin Witty, the architect of thp&#13;
original Social Security legislation for&#13;
Franklin Roosevelt's administration,&#13;
is a good example of McCarthy's&#13;
training. Witty succeeded McCarthy&#13;
at the Legislative Reference Bureau&#13;
and was one of his proteges.&#13;
Buenker said he plans to take what&#13;
he called a 'warts and all" approach to&#13;
covering Charles McCarthy - the person.&#13;
McCarthy apparently was a&#13;
workaholic, laboring 12 to 14 hours a&#13;
day and often taking work home with&#13;
him. Buenker said his work habits&#13;
made him a tough boss because he&#13;
expected the same effort from everyone&#13;
else. The job may also have contributed&#13;
to McCarthy's early death.&#13;
Buenker sees McCarthy's personality&#13;
as an important part of his story.&#13;
"I think it's relevant to what kmd&#13;
of person he was, what kind of a person&#13;
it took to do this," he said. "I'll&#13;
probably go into [it] a great deal."&#13;
Another facet of the story Buenker&#13;
Black Historv Month&#13;
Celebrate at OW-Parkside&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will celebrate Black History&#13;
Month in February with a series of&#13;
special events. Each event will highlight&#13;
the contributions made by&#13;
Afocan Americans through the talents&#13;
of UW-Parkside students and community&#13;
members.The events include:&#13;
l=ebruary 1&#13;
Black History Month Kickoff with&#13;
the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, an&#13;
African storyteller and an African arts&#13;
vendor, .11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m., Main&#13;
Place, free, sponsored by Black Student&#13;
Union&#13;
February 3&#13;
Gospel Explosion showcasing a&#13;
variety of excellent choirs from southeast&#13;
Wisconsin, 6 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre, free, sponsored by&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
February 7&#13;
Apollo Show, third aMual showcase&#13;
of UW-Parkside and local talent,&#13;
8 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admission&#13;
$3, sponsored by Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and Black Student Union.&#13;
February 14&#13;
Film: Love and Basketball, 7:30&#13;
p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admission&#13;
$2, sponsored by All Campus&#13;
Events and Student Activities.&#13;
February 16&#13;
Sweetheart Ball with DJ Doc B, 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m., Union Square, admission&#13;
$10 per person, $lg per couple,&#13;
advance ticket purchase at RangerCard&#13;
office, dress to impress, refreshments&#13;
provided, professional photography&#13;
available, sponsored by Black&#13;
Student Union and All Campus&#13;
Events/Student Activities.&#13;
February 23&#13;
Fashion Show, 8 p.m., Union&#13;
Square, Admission $3, $2 with nonperishable&#13;
food donation.&#13;
plans to explore is McCarthy's Irish&#13;
heritage. Born of immigrant parents,&#13;
Buenker said this humble background&#13;
and his educatio n allo wed McCarthy&#13;
to deal with w hat he called th e "sn obbish"&#13;
attitudes of tum-of-the-century&#13;
academics and politicians w ith relative&#13;
ease.&#13;
to s tart writing his book in January&#13;
2002. Buenker, who has written four&#13;
books and co-authored eight more&#13;
estima tes it will take two years t~&#13;
complete a draft manuscript, with&#13;
most of his writing getting done during&#13;
the summer months.&#13;
Editing and rewriting will require&#13;
still more time, but when he's cfone&#13;
Buenke r e xpects people to have ~&#13;
gr e ater respect for the work and contributio&#13;
n s made by Charles&#13;
McCa rthy.&#13;
Aft~r sp end~ng a g o~d part of his&#13;
time m Madison gomg th roug h&#13;
McCarthy's papers and t a lking with&#13;
people knowled geable about the Leg-&#13;
1Sla ti ve Referen ce Bureau, h e exp ects&#13;
Rickey Lashley&#13;
Celtic Music from Scotland &amp; Ireland&#13;
Traditional Scottish and Irish Ballads!&#13;
Double-Fi ste d drinking songs! Audience sing-a-longs!&#13;
Only at Captain Mike's Mondays at 8 p.m.&#13;
Lighthouse Pub on Sixth Avenue, 5118 6th Ave. Across from&#13;
H oliday Inn, Kenosha&#13;
(262) 658-CAPT&#13;
(See our ad in Happenings for more events)&#13;
OPEN TUESDAY - FRIDAY: 4 P.M. - CLOSE&#13;
OPEN SATURDAY: 7 P.M. - CLOSE&#13;
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY IS&#13;
MIDWEEK MADNESS!&#13;
TUESDAY:&#13;
MILLER BOTTLES, RAILS, AND TAP $1&#13;
NO COVER&#13;
,&#13;
WEDNESDAY:&#13;
LADIES NIGHT IS BACK! 9 P.M. - 12:30 A.M.&#13;
RAILS, TAPS, AND SELECTED SHOTS ARE ALL YOU CAN DRINK!&#13;
1 ST LADY $5, EACH ADDITIONAL GIRL IS $3, PROFESSIONAL 0.J.!&#13;
THURSDAY:&#13;
ALI YOU CAN DRINK TAPS AND RAILS $5, PROFESSIONAL 0.J.!&#13;
FRIDAY/SATURDAY:&#13;
DANCE CLUB, 80S, 90S, TODAY&#13;
No COVER WITH PARKSIDE I.D. ON SATURDAYS!&#13;
3701 DURAND AVE.&#13;
(ELMHOOD PLAZA), RACINE&#13;
554-9449&#13;
~UarY 25, The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 5&#13;
Cloutierto grads: Earn the good&#13;
opinionof vour neighbors&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
professor of Economics Norman&#13;
Cloutierurged members of the fall&#13;
duating class to consider the eco- romiC needs of their neighbors as they&#13;
ursue their own dreams. Cloutier&#13;
~rved as keynote speaker during&#13;
commencementceremonies Dec. 17.&#13;
Cloutier told graduates their&#13;
emplo)'l;l'entprospects are very bright&#13;
in a Job market that features the&#13;
strongestdemand for talent in over 30&#13;
years.He also predicted they would&#13;
earna comfortable income while §.uffering&#13;
fewer artificial roadbJocks to&#13;
success.&#13;
"Youwill experience less racial and&#13;
gender-basedjob discrimination than&#13;
aoytimein the past. A tight labor market&#13;
can be a wonderful anti-discriminationtool,"&#13;
Cloutier said. "Your substantial&#13;
investment of time, money,&#13;
aod effort will payoff. Your college&#13;
degreedoes not guarantee you much,&#13;
butitcertainly increases the likelihood&#13;
thatyou will have a higher income, a&#13;
morepleasant and flexible work environment,&#13;
a deeper appreciation of the&#13;
worldaround you, and even a longer&#13;
life expectancy."&#13;
He warned the graduates of the&#13;
growingwage disparity between high&#13;
Schooland college educated workers&#13;
with degree holders being paid 75 percent&#13;
more than people with high&#13;
school diplomas. Cloutier said the&#13;
economic plight of their neighbors&#13;
shouldbe a major concern.&#13;
''In the next 20 years and beyond,&#13;
you will have ample opportunity to&#13;
makeprivate and public choices that&#13;
directly or indirectly impact your&#13;
neighbors, whether those Choices are&#13;
maaewithin your family, your school,&#13;
your.place of employment, your commuruty,&#13;
or in the voting booth. Think&#13;
of.your neighbors, and particularly&#13;
~ of your neighbors-your fellow&#13;
Citizens-that did not have same&#13;
advantages of luck and the support of&#13;
otherpeople as you have," he said.&#13;
Do you want earn&#13;
money while&#13;
having fun?&#13;
Doyou love to plan&#13;
panks,specialevents,&#13;
etc...?&#13;
Doyou want to hang&#13;
out with STARS?&#13;
JoinParkside Activities Board and&#13;
help us bring stars to UWP.&#13;
Meetingsare held Fridays, noon, in&#13;
Union 207.&#13;
Questions / Comments call #2650.&#13;
Cloutier then reminded graduates&#13;
~f Mark T~ain's answer to-the questi~&#13;
n of life s meanmg. Responding to&#13;
thIs. ultimate riddle, Cloutier said&#13;
Twain replied that we live for the&#13;
good opinion of our neighbors.&#13;
. "Perhaps this is incomplete, and too&#13;
SlIDp~~tiC~ answer, but I like it, he&#13;
Sal"!" .. In this era of venerating the&#13;
individual and the maverick spirit we&#13;
must not lose sight of the impact we&#13;
have on others and the world we are&#13;
creating for ourselves and for our&#13;
neighbors. "&#13;
He then wished graduates continued&#13;
success. And urged them to&#13;
"Work hard, have fun, and earn th~&#13;
good opinion of your neighbors."&#13;
11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Main place&#13;
Black History Month Events&#13;
Mark your calendars for these fantastic events coming this semester!&#13;
Thursday February 1&#13;
Black history Month Program&#13;
free&#13;
Black History Month will get under way with this opening event featuring speakers, the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, African Storyteller&#13;
Teju and an African arts vendor.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
GOSPELEXPIOSION&#13;
FREEThis&#13;
exciting event will feature a variety of excellent choirs from Southeastern Wisconsin. Including UW-Parksides' own Gospel Choir,&#13;
Holy Recovery, Greater Grace Temple, Voices of Faith, Carthage College, wrsconsinatate Youth Choir, UW- Milwaukee Gospel&#13;
Choir, and Holy Redeemer&#13;
Come experience uplifting sounds of gospel music!&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
Wednesday February 7 7-:00 P.m. student center cinema&#13;
apollo Show&#13;
$31person&#13;
The 3rd annual showcase of tjw-parkelce and local talent. See these performers compete for a cash prize.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Board and Black Student Union.&#13;
Saturday February 10 7:30p.m, Comm Art Theatre&#13;
Ailey II&#13;
$1 5/ticket available ORangercard offiCe&#13;
Merging the spirit and energy of the country's best young dancers with the passion and creative vision of today's most outstanding&#13;
choreographers, Ailey II presents an evening of dance that is a feast for the eyes and the senses. It&#13;
Sponsored by Arts: Alive&#13;
Saturday February .3&#13;
•&#13;
6:00 p.m, Student center&#13;
•&#13;
7:30 p.m. student center cinema&#13;
Wednesday February 14&#13;
Film: Love and. basketball&#13;
$2/person ... ..&#13;
Spend Valentine's Day with Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan, childhood adversaries and talented athletes who have love for&#13;
the game of basketball and each othet; You'll see that all's fair in love and basketball.&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities -&#13;
9:00 p.m.-1 :00 a.rn. Student Center Square&#13;
friday February 16&#13;
Sweetheart Ball&#13;
$10/person or $1 a/couple&#13;
Come dressed to impress for an elegant evening with your friends and UW-Parkside's favorite OJ Doc B. Refreshments&#13;
provided and professional photography available. . ..&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union and Student Acnvrnes&#13;
Wednesday February 21&#13;
Loston Harris&#13;
$121ticket availaDla @RangerCard OffIce.' . '. . , ..&#13;
Jazz fans, here's your chance to catch a rislO~ star; Loston Hams, ~lIed "t~,e .n~ sex symbol of J~zz' .for tus Silky smooth vocals&#13;
and exciting piano arrangements. Harris' music rec~lIs the legends uke Nat King Cole ~nd Franklin Slnetra ...and then he goes&#13;
beyond them; taking the music and vocal to new heights.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
friday February 23&#13;
Fashion Show&#13;
Ji~'£~~:~ottest trends from great local retailers and your ~vorit~ designers. In celebration of Black History Month, BSU presents Its&#13;
second Annual Fashion Show. Featuring the latest trends In resnron by Boston Store, Champs, Deb, Lerner New York, The Buckle,&#13;
and Gingiss Formal Wear. . .&#13;
Special Dance performance by the Milwuakee Htgh School of the Arts Dnll Team.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
7:30p.m. Comm Art Theatre&#13;
8:00p.m. Student ,Center Square&#13;
January 25, The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside iioutier to grads: Earn the good&#13;
Page 5&#13;
opinion of vour neighbors&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Professor of Economics orman&#13;
aoutier urged member~ of the fall&#13;
duating cla s to consider the ecofo3Inic&#13;
neeas of their neighbors as they&#13;
ursue their own d.r ams. Cloutier irved as keynote spe~ker during&#13;
commencem nt ceremorue Dec. 17.&#13;
Cloutier told graduates their&#13;
emplor':11ent prospects are very bright&#13;
in a JOb market that features the&#13;
strongest demand for talent in over 30&#13;
years. He also predicted they would&#13;
earn a comfortable inc me while uffering&#13;
fewer artificial roadblocks to&#13;
success-&#13;
"You will experience le s racial and&#13;
gender-based job discrimination than&#13;
anytime in the pa t. A tight labor market&#13;
can be a wonderful anti-discrimination&#13;
tool," Cloutier aid. "Your substantial&#13;
investment of time, money,&#13;
and effort will payoff. Your college&#13;
degree does not guarantee you much,&#13;
butitcertainly incr a the likelihood&#13;
that you will have a higher income, a&#13;
more pleasant and flexible work environment,&#13;
a deeper appreciation of the&#13;
world around you, and e en a longer&#13;
. ~ancy."&#13;
He warned the graduat s of the&#13;
~wing wage d · parity between high&#13;
school and college educated workers&#13;
with degree hold r being paid 75 percent&#13;
more than p ople with high&#13;
ool diplomas. Cloutier said the&#13;
nomic plight of their neighbors&#13;
d be a major cone m.&#13;
1n the next 20 y ars and beyond,&#13;
ou will have ample opportunity to&#13;
e private and public choices that&#13;
~try or indir ctly impact your&#13;
neighbors, whether those choices are&#13;
maae within your family, your school,&#13;
your_place of employment, your commuruty,&#13;
or in the voting booth. Think&#13;
of_ your neighbors, and particularly&#13;
~ of your neighbors-your fellow&#13;
tizens-that did not have same&#13;
dvantages of luck and the support of&#13;
people as you have," he said.&#13;
Do you want earn&#13;
money while&#13;
having fun?&#13;
Do you love to plan&#13;
parties, special events,&#13;
etc ... ?&#13;
Do you want to hang&#13;
out with STARS?&#13;
Join Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
help us bring stars to UWP.&#13;
Meetings are held Fridays, noon, in&#13;
Union 207.&#13;
Questions/Comments call #2650.&#13;
Cloutier then reminded graduates&#13;
~f Mark_T'Yain's ~wer to·the questi~&#13;
n of Iμe s me~g. Responding to&#13;
this. ultimate nddle, Cloutier said&#13;
Twarn replied that we live for the&#13;
good opinion of our neighbors.&#13;
. "Pe_rh~ps this is incomplete, and too&#13;
s~p~~tic ~ answer, but I like it, he&#13;
~a1~ .• In this era of veneratin$ the&#13;
individual and 1?e maverick spint, we&#13;
must not lose sight of the impact we&#13;
have on others and the world we are&#13;
creating for ourselves and for our&#13;
neighbors."&#13;
He then wished graduates continued&#13;
success. And urged them to&#13;
"Work hard, have fun, and earn th~&#13;
good opinion of your neighbors."&#13;
Black History Month Events&#13;
Mark your calendars for these fantastic events coming this semester!&#13;
11 :30 a.m. -1 :30 p.m. Main place&#13;
histo ry Month Program&#13;
free&#13;
Black History Month wlll get under way with this opening event featuring speakers. the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, African Storyteller&#13;
Teju and an African arts vendor .&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
6:00 p.m. Student center&#13;
Cinema&#13;
GOSPELEXPLDSION&#13;
FREE&#13;
apollo&#13;
Ailey II&#13;
This exciting event will feature a variety of excellent choirs from Southeastern Wisconsin. Including UW-Parksides' own Gospel Choir,&#13;
Holy Recovery, Greater Grace Temple, Voices of Faith, Carthage College, Wisconsin State Youth Choir, UW- Milwaukee Gospel&#13;
Choir. and Holy Redeemer&#13;
Come experience uplifting sounds of gospel music!&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
7:00 P.m. student&#13;
Show&#13;
$3/person&#13;
The 3rd annual showcase of UW-Parkside and local talent. See these performers compete for a cash prize.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Board and Black Student Union.&#13;
center cinema&#13;
7:30p.m. Comm Art Theatre&#13;
$1 5/ticket avallable ORangercatd offlce&#13;
Merging the spirit and energy of the country's best young dancers with the passion and creative vision of today's most outstanding&#13;
choreographers, Ailey II presents an evening of dance that is a feast for the eyes and the senses.&#13;
Sponsored by Arts: Alive&#13;
Wednesday. February 14&#13;
Film: Love and basketball&#13;
7:30 p.m. student center cinema&#13;
$2/person .&#13;
Spend Valentine's Day with Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan , childhood adversaries and talented athletes who have love for ..,&#13;
the game of basketball and each other. You'll see that all's fair in love and basketball. ,..,&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
friday. February 16 9:00 p.m.-1 :00 a.m. Student Center Square&#13;
Sweetheart Ball&#13;
$1 0/person or $1 8/couple&#13;
Come dressed to impress for an elegant evening with your friends and UW-Parkside's favorite DJ Doc B. Refreshments ~&amp; ~ provided and professional photography available.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union and Student Activities&#13;
Wednesday. February 21 7:30p.m. Comm Art Theatre&#13;
Loston Harris&#13;
$1 2/tlcket ...,.,Jiable ORangarCat&lt;I Office&#13;
Jazz fans here's your chance to catch a rising star; Loston Harris, called "the new sex symbol of jazz" for his silky smooth vocals&#13;
and exciti~g piano arrangements, Harris' music recalls the legends like Nat "King" Cole and Franklin Sinatra ... and then he goes&#13;
beyond them; taking the music and vocal to new heights.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
frjday. February 23&#13;
Fashion Show&#13;
8:00p.m. Student Center Square&#13;
~~~~;:i~ottest trends from great local retailers and your favorite designers. In celebration of Black History Month, BSU presents its&#13;
second Annual Fashion Show. Featuring the latest trends in fashion by Boston Store, Champs, Deb, Lerner New York, The Buckle,&#13;
and Glngiss Formal Wear.&#13;
Special Dance performance by the Milwuakee High School of the Arts Drill Team.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
January 25, - Page 6 • Tile UW·Parllslde Class 01 fall 1&#13;
.tudent&#13;
sohayla Aazami&#13;
ames Abbott&#13;
lawri Abron&#13;
Jsa Adamowicz&#13;
:Iizabeth Ade&#13;
Valeed Ahmad&#13;
:rai(j Alvarez&#13;
uanAvila&#13;
laniel Andersen&#13;
ason Anderson&#13;
osephine Anderson&#13;
(oshena Andrews&#13;
ulie Bach&#13;
asnesm Bader&#13;
:hristine Bandauskas&#13;
:harles Banks&#13;
.atle Barker&#13;
Ingela Baumann&#13;
;atie Beaumier&#13;
.aura Benson&#13;
iavld Beranis&#13;
'atjana Bicanin&#13;
lavid Blaim&#13;
laniel Blaski&#13;
;im Bohm&#13;
{aider Bokhari&#13;
'aith Bose&#13;
liII Boughton&#13;
'om Brouillard&#13;
\drian Brusky&#13;
'obey Budd&#13;
lennis Burns&#13;
loni Calhoun&#13;
Jlichelle Callan&#13;
~ari Campagna&#13;
lale Campbell&#13;
:ric Campbell&#13;
lohn Carroll&#13;
~hristopher Carter&#13;
Jean Charles&#13;
v1ichele Chovan&#13;
:lise Cochran&#13;
~hristine Cukla&#13;
3usan Czarra&#13;
3helly Dam&#13;
tamara Darland&#13;
.esli Defaut&#13;
3hari Demeritt&#13;
Joseph Doksus •&#13;
nmothy Driscoll&#13;
~ebecca Duba&#13;
'1nnette Dugenske&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek&#13;
'latasha Duttweiler&#13;
&lt;ellie Eccles&#13;
.Jndsay Ellis&#13;
::heryl English&#13;
Samuel English&#13;
Iilaria Espino&#13;
.ance Evans&#13;
David Fagerberg&#13;
Jorge Figueroa&#13;
Danielle Fink&#13;
Eileen Fischer&#13;
Erin Flannery&#13;
David Fogarty&#13;
William Francis&#13;
Tamara Franklin&#13;
Billy Franks&#13;
Valerie Funk&#13;
Michaela Gaines&#13;
Jacquelyn Gallagher&#13;
Amanda Galster&#13;
Jamie Gebhard&#13;
Sharon Geertsen&#13;
Jeremy Gemig&#13;
Gregory Gierl&#13;
•&#13;
Degree&#13;
BS&#13;
BS&#13;
BA&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BS&#13;
BS&#13;
BA&#13;
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BA&#13;
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BS&#13;
BS&#13;
BA&#13;
SA&#13;
MBA&#13;
BA&#13;
MBA&#13;
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BA&#13;
BA&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BS&#13;
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BA&#13;
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BS&#13;
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, Major(s) City&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Sturtevant&#13;
Zion&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
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Racine&#13;
Burlington&#13;
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Pleasant Prairie'&#13;
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Racine&#13;
Political Scienc Franksville&#13;
History Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Waterford&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Lindenhurst&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Communication Kenosha '&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
Music Kenosha&#13;
.English Milwaukee&#13;
Business Round Lake Beach&#13;
Molecular Biology Kenosha&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Computer Science Lindenhurst&#13;
Business Racine'&#13;
Spanish Antioch&#13;
Business Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Gurnee&#13;
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So. Milwaukee&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Business.&#13;
English&#13;
English, History&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Business&#13;
History&#13;
Biology&#13;
Music&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Business&#13;
Business&#13;
Business&#13;
Biology&#13;
Biology&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Sociology&#13;
. Geography&#13;
Communication&#13;
Business&#13;
Business&#13;
English&#13;
Biology&#13;
Business&#13;
Socioloqy&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
English&#13;
Business&#13;
Biology&#13;
Molecular Biology&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Spanish&#13;
Business&#13;
Business, Spanish&#13;
Business&#13;
Business&#13;
Molecular Biology&#13;
Communication&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
Business&#13;
Business&#13;
Communication&#13;
Communication&#13;
Economics&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Spanish&#13;
Business&#13;
Political Science&#13;
Music&#13;
Student Degree&#13;
Tracy Girardi BS&#13;
Kenneth Golden BS&#13;
Susan Gono BS&#13;
Steve Greening BS&#13;
Anne Gustafson BA&#13;
Christopher Hafeman BS&#13;
Nassar Hamdan BA&#13;
Amanda Hawley BA&#13;
Courtney Heide BS&#13;
Michael Held BA&#13;
Wade Helding BA&#13;
Tracy Hess BS&#13;
Claire Hickey BA&#13;
Darishawn Hodges BA&#13;
Jill Hoffman BA&#13;
Laura Hoffman BA&#13;
Judy Hutchins BA&#13;
Erinn Hylton BS .&#13;
Joseph Ivan BS&#13;
lize Jaunkalnietis 2nd concenl.&#13;
Jaceena Jegen BS&#13;
Sharon Jenewein BS&#13;
Patricia Jenkins, MBA&#13;
Casey Johnson' BA&#13;
Mark Johnson BS&#13;
James Jotka BS&#13;
Flavia Juergensen BA&#13;
Hasmig Kaisserlian BS&#13;
Michelle Kelley BS&#13;
Katie Kennedy BA&#13;
Pauline King BA&#13;
Brad Kitt BS&#13;
LauraKoch BS&#13;
Hollie Kreger BA&#13;
Amy Lynn Krenzke BS&#13;
Jami Lajoy BA&#13;
Rebecca Landmark BA&#13;
Abby Lange MBA&#13;
Kevin Lazarski BS&#13;
Stephanie Lee BA&#13;
Ryan Lockhart BS&#13;
Keith Lodahl BA&#13;
Jeffrey Lohman BS&#13;
Blake Luedtke BA&#13;
Nicolet Maheras BS&#13;
Kevin Major BS&#13;
Heather Maki BA&#13;
Yvonne Mancusi BA&#13;
Lori Ann Mansur BS&#13;
Susan Marcich BA&#13;
Timothy Marciniak BA&#13;
Mary Masik BS&#13;
Eric Masshardt BS&#13;
David Mathias BS&#13;
Rachael-Mayne BS&#13;
James McPhaul BA&#13;
Marco Mejia BS&#13;
Jason Metallo BS&#13;
Jennifer Meyers BA&#13;
Rebecca Milaeger BS&#13;
Robert Miner BS&#13;
Nenad Mirkovic BS&#13;
Angela Mirretti BA&#13;
Peter Nelson BA&#13;
Jerilynn Nettesheim BA&#13;
Jill Newlin BA&#13;
John Newport BS&#13;
Thomas Nikolai MBA&#13;
Robert Noah BS&#13;
Ch'nsteen Oberdas BS&#13;
Jolene Oettinger BS&#13;
CoUeen O'Grady-Shearman BA&#13;
Willie Ortiz BS&#13;
Sheila Osborn BA&#13;
Kelly Ostergaard BA&#13;
Larry Pannell BS&#13;
David Parker BS&#13;
Major(s) City&#13;
Psychology BUrlington&#13;
Psychology Palatine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Biology Racine&#13;
Criminal Justice Waukesha&#13;
Computer Science Racine&#13;
Political Science Union Grove&#13;
History Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
Spanish Sturtevant&#13;
Political Science Racine&#13;
Biology Sturtevant&#13;
Criminal Justice Beach Park&#13;
Crim Jnstice, Sociology Racine&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Crirn. Justice,Sociology Kenosha&#13;
English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Molecular Biology Twin Lakes&#13;
MIS Racine&#13;
Business Franklin&#13;
Business Lindenhurst&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Trevor&#13;
Gurnee&#13;
Racine&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Bristol&#13;
Beach Park&#13;
Port Washington&#13;
Trevor&#13;
Bristol&#13;
Racine&#13;
Schaumburg&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Communication&#13;
Business&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
History&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Biology&#13;
Economics&#13;
Interdisciplinary SI.&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Sociology&#13;
Business, CRMJ&#13;
Economics&#13;
English&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Sociology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Interdisciplinary SI. Mayville&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Crim. Justice, Sociology Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Business Mukwonago&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Biology Burlington&#13;
Interdisciplinary Studies Kenosha&#13;
English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Oak Creek&#13;
Business Union Grove&#13;
Business Winthrop Harbor&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Interdisciplinary SI. Kenosha&#13;
Business Zion, IL&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Political Science Grayslake&#13;
Psychology Milwaukee&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
Business Vacaville, CA&#13;
History, Psychology Wadsworth&#13;
Political Science Racine&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
History Pembine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Racine&#13;
Burlington&#13;
Racine&#13;
Winthrop Harbor&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Lindenhurst&#13;
Pleasant Prairie&#13;
.Business&#13;
, Psychology&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
Business&#13;
Interdisciplinary SI.&#13;
Communication&#13;
Business,&#13;
Business&#13;
January 25, - .age6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside - • arllsidl Ila&#13;
Degree Major(s) City Student Degree Major(s) City&#13;
;tudent&#13;
iohayla Aazami BS Computer Science Kenosha Tracy Girardi BS Psychology Burlington&#13;
BS Psychology Palatine&#13;
amesAbbott BS Business Sturtevant Kenneth Golden&#13;
BS Business Kenosha&#13;
&gt;awri Abron BA English Zion Susan Gono Biology Racine&#13;
.isa Adamowicz BA English, History Kenosha Steve Greening BS&#13;
Waukesha Anne Gustafson BA Criminal Justice&#13;
:lizabeth Ade BS Psychology Kenosha Computer Science Racine&#13;
Valeed Ahmad BA Sociology Racine Christopher Hafeman BS&#13;
BA Political Science Union Grove&#13;
;raig Alvarez BS Business Burlington Nassar Hamdan&#13;
BA History Kenosha&#13;
uanAvila BA History Racine Amanda Hawley&#13;
BS Psychology Racine&#13;
&gt;aniel Andersen MBA Racine Courtney Heide&#13;
ason Anderson BS Biology Pleasant Prairie Michael Held BA Spanish Sturtevant&#13;
osephine Anderson BA Music Kenosha Wade Helding BA Political Science Racine&#13;
{oshena Andrews BA Sociology Racine Tracy Hess BS Biology Sturtevant&#13;
ulie Bach BS Business Kenosha Claire Hickey BA Criminal Justice Beach Park&#13;
asneem Bader BS Business Mt. Pleasant Darishawn Hodges BA Crim Justice, Sociology Racine&#13;
;hristine Bandauskas BS Business Bristol Jill Hoffman BA English Racine&#13;
;harles Banks BS Biology Kenosha Laura Hoffman BA Crim. Justice,Sociology Kenosha&#13;
~atie Barker BS Biology Racine Judy Hutchins BA English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
,ngela Baumann BS Business Oak Creek Erinn Hylton BS Business Racine&#13;
~atie Beaumier BS Psychology Sturtevant Joseph Ivan BS Molecular Biology Twin Lakes&#13;
.aura Benson BA Sociology Kenosha lize Jaunkalnietis 2nd concent. MIS Racine&#13;
&gt;avid Beranis BA Geography Racine Jaceena Jegen BS Business Frankjin&#13;
·atjana Bicanin BA Communication Kenosha Sharon Jenewein BS Business Lindenhurst&#13;
&gt;avid Blaim BS Business Bristol Patricia Jenkins, MBA Racine&#13;
&gt;aniel Blaski BS Business Pleasant Prairie Casey Johnson BA Communication Kenosha&#13;
(im Bohm BA English Racine Mark Johnson BS Business Racine&#13;
faider Bokhari BS Biology Kenosha James Jotka BS Mathematics Trevor&#13;
:aith Bose BS Business Sturtevant Flavia Juergensen BA History Gurnee&#13;
Jill Boughton BA Sociology Racine Hasmig Kaisserlian BS Psychology Racine&#13;
·om Brouillard MBA Racine Michelle Kelley BS Biology Milwaukee&#13;
\drian Brusky .BA Political Scienc Franksville Katie Kennedy BA Economics Bristol&#13;
obey Budd BA History Pleasant Prairie Pauline King BA Interdisciplinary St. Beach Park&#13;
&gt;ennis Burns BS Computer Science Kenosha Brad Kitt BS Business Port Washington&#13;
Joni Calhoun BS Psychologl Waterford Laura Koch BS Psychology Trevor&#13;
v1ichelle Callan BA English Kenosha Hollie Kreger BA Sociology Bristol&#13;
::ari Campagna BA Sociology Kenosha Amy Lynn Krenzke BS Business, CRMJ Racine&#13;
)ale Campbell MBA Racine Jami Lajoy BA Economics Schaumburg&#13;
:ric Campbell BA Criminal Justice Lindenhurst Rebecca Landmark BA English Kenosha&#13;
lohn Carroll MBA Kenosha Abby Lange MBA&#13;
::hristopher Carter BA Communication Kenosha Kevin Lazarski BS Business Racine&#13;
lean Charles BA Geography Racine Stephanie Lee BA Sociology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
v1ichele Chovan BA Music Kenosha Ryan Lockhart BS Business Racine&#13;
:lise Cochran BA .English Milwaukee Keith Lodahl BA Interdisciplinary St. Mayville&#13;
::;hristine Cukla BS Business Round Lake Beach Jeffrey Lohman BS Business Racine&#13;
,usan Czarra BS Molecular Biology Kenosha Blake Luedtke BA Crim. Justice, Sociology Racine&#13;
,helly Dam BS Business Kenosha Nicolet Maheras BS Business Racine&#13;
ramara Darland BS Computer Science Lindenhurst Kevin Major BS Business Mukwonago&#13;
_esli Defaut BS Business Racine Heather Maki BA English Kenosha&#13;
3hari Demeritt BA Spanish Antioch Yvonne Mancusi BA Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Joseph Doksus • BS Business Pleasant Prairie Lori Ann Mansur BS Biology Burlington&#13;
nmothy Driscoll MBA Kenosha Susan Marcich BA Interdisciplinary Studies Kenosha&#13;
~ebecca Duba BA English Gurnee Timothy Marciniak BA English Pleasant Prairie&#13;
~nnette Dugenske BS Business Green Bay Mary Masik BS Business Oak Creek&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek BS Biology Racine Eric Masshardt BS Business Union Grove&#13;
\latasha Duttweiler BS Molecular Biology Bristol David Mathias BS Business Winthrop Harbor&#13;
&lt;ellie Eccles BA Sociology Kenosha Rachael Mayne BS Business Kenosha _indsay Ellis BA Sociology Kenosha James McPhaul BA Interdisciplinary St. Kenosha :::heryl English BS Computer Science Racine Marco Mejia BS Business Zion, IL Samuel English BA Art Racine Jason Metallo BS Business Kenosha v1aria Espino BA Spanish Sheboygan Jennifer Meyers BA Political Science Grayslake _ance Evans BS Business Racine Rebecca Milaeger BS&#13;
David Fagerberg MBA Kenosha Robert Miner BS&#13;
Psychology Milwaukee&#13;
Jorge Figueroa BS Business, Spanish Racine Nenad Mirkovic BS&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
Danielle Fink BS Business Union Grove Angela Mirretti&#13;
Business Vacaville, CA&#13;
Eileen Fischer BS Business Kenosha BA History, Psychology Wadsworth&#13;
Erin Flannery BS Molecular Biology Racine&#13;
Peter Nelson BA Political Science Racine&#13;
David Fogarty BA Communication Racine&#13;
Jerilynn Nettesheim BA Geography Racine Jill Newlin BA William Francis BA Criminal Justice Greenfield John Newport BS&#13;
History Pembine&#13;
Tamara Franklin BS Business Great Lakes Business Kenosha&#13;
Billy Franks BS Business Kenosha&#13;
Thomas Nikolai MBA Kenosha Robert Noah BS&#13;
Valerie Funk BA Communication Milwaukee Christeen Oberdas&#13;
Business Milwaukee&#13;
Michaela Gaines BA Communication Racine BS ~Psychology Milwaukee Jolene Gettinger BS&#13;
Jacquelyn Gallagher BA Economics Greenfield Colleen O'Grady-Shearman BA&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
Amanda Galster BA Sociology Kenosha Willie Ortiz BS Criminal Justice Burlington&#13;
Jamie Gebhard BA Spanish So. Milwaukee Sheila Osborn BA Busi.ness Racine&#13;
Sharon Geertsen BS Business Racine Kelly Ostergaard BA Interdisciplinary St. Winthrop Harbor&#13;
Jeremy Gemig BA Political Science Kenosha Larry Pannell BS Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Gregory Gierl BA Music Kenosha David Parker BS Business Lindenhurst&#13;
Business Pleasant Prairie&#13;
January 25, Page 7&#13;
Student Degree&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parksid!;!&#13;
Major(s) City •&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Business&#13;
CaseyPawlak BS&#13;
PaulPedrosa BS&#13;
RebeccaPeters BS&#13;
JohnPham MAMB&#13;
MichellePhillips BS&#13;
CatherinePippin BA&#13;
JasonPisani BS&#13;
EricPlace BA&#13;
MarkPodskaribi BS&#13;
NinaPorcaro MBA&#13;
StevenPremeau BS&#13;
DianaPrichard BA&#13;
TanyaProstko BS&#13;
JamesPuhr BS&#13;
JenniferQuail BS&#13;
ShaundraRandolph BA&#13;
ColleenRadke BS&#13;
KarisaReichard BA&#13;
ErinReimer BA&#13;
Mi~anaRistic-Petrovic BS&#13;
RomanRodichev BS&#13;
TanyaRogondino BS&#13;
RobertRollins BA&#13;
MarianneRuff BA&#13;
AutumnMarie Ruge BA&#13;
Camelius Russell BA&#13;
CindySalcedo BS&#13;
CharlesSchepker BS&#13;
ChristopherSchiefer BA&#13;
AndreaSchiesser BS&#13;
NicoleSchlitz BA&#13;
RyanSchroeder BS&#13;
ChristinaSchutz BS&#13;
DanielSchutz BA&#13;
KateSchwarm BA&#13;
Kyle Scuglik BA&#13;
MarkSenske BS&#13;
GeneShannon BS&#13;
KristyShepherd BA&#13;
JenniferSheppard BS&#13;
MatthewSickles BS&#13;
MatthewSiver BS&#13;
NicoleSkroch BA&#13;
MichaelSlye BS&#13;
Ryan Smith BA&#13;
John Sorensen BA&#13;
MildredSpann BA&#13;
Michaela Stefani BS&#13;
Tiffany Stopa BA&#13;
Rebecca Stratman BA&#13;
ToddStreeter BS&#13;
Jacqueline Strelow BS&#13;
Joseph Sturino BA&#13;
PatriciaThompson BS,&#13;
Janine Tillotson-Kowalke BA&#13;
Karen Tuinstra BS&#13;
Sawoula Vassiiopoulos.BS&#13;
SusanneVentura BA&#13;
John Verbeten BS&#13;
CameronVetter BS&#13;
ShawnVollmer BA&#13;
Alexander Voskuil BA&#13;
MichaelWalczak BS&#13;
Joel Wallen BS&#13;
Ben Walthers BA&#13;
Mark Ward BS&#13;
RachelWatkins BA&#13;
Jack Webers BS '&#13;
RebeccaWegner BA&#13;
DebbieWells ' BS&#13;
lisa Whitcomb- BA&#13;
DanielaWienke BA&#13;
MichelleWilde BS&#13;
MarthaWing BA&#13;
BrigitYach BA&#13;
LoreenYates BA&#13;
Ashraf Zahra BS&#13;
Nicholas Zeleski BS&#13;
PamelaZernia BS&#13;
Michael Ziegelbauer BA&#13;
MandiZullo BA&#13;
, Psychology&#13;
Interdisciplinary SI.&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Business&#13;
Schaumburg&#13;
Sturtevant&#13;
Zion&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Kenosh&#13;
Racine&#13;
Twin Lakes&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Franksville&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Gurnee&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
English Lake Villa&#13;
,Communication Kenosha&#13;
Molecular Biology Kenosha&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Business Waukegan&#13;
Art Racine&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Bolingbrook&#13;
Business I Kenosha&#13;
Political Science Neenah&#13;
Sport &amp; Fitness Mgml. 'Kenosha&#13;
Art Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
Sociology Franksville&#13;
Art Kenosha.&#13;
Business Big Bend&#13;
Biology Burlington&#13;
English Shullsburg&#13;
Psychology Naperville&#13;
Business Lake Villa&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes&#13;
Music Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes'&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Psychology Waterford&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Antioch&#13;
English Beach Park&#13;
Computer Science Kansasville&#13;
Psychology Kenosha&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Computer Science Waterford&#13;
Criminal Justice Franklin&#13;
Communication Delavan&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Biology Kenosha&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Sociology Caledonia&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
English Spring Grove&#13;
Crim Jus, Pol Sci Kenosha&#13;
Business Palmyra '&#13;
Crim Justice, Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Mathematics Racine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Criminal Justice Racine&#13;
Art libertyville&#13;
UWP Events&#13;
_Hotline&#13;
Where to find' info&#13;
about events and&#13;
whos coming to&#13;
campus!&#13;
x2408&#13;
(595-2408)&#13;
Updated&#13;
Weekly! ..: .'&#13;
/ Tuesday&#13;
Line Dance Lessons&#13;
7:30 pm&#13;
"- Karaoke at 9 p.m.&#13;
/' Thursday&#13;
......&#13;
College Night&#13;
Open Bar 9 - Midnight&#13;
"- Free Pool! - /&#13;
/ Saturday "&#13;
Get Buck Wild&#13;
$1 Drinks from&#13;
"- 9 p.m. - 1, a.m.&#13;
•&#13;
New and, Improved Ughts!&#13;
New Sound!&#13;
New PromosEvery Night!&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Rave Party&#13;
$3.50 Pitchers&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Ladies Drink Free&#13;
9 p.m. - Midnight&#13;
Freaky Friday&#13;
$2 Pitchers&#13;
8 p.m. - Midnight&#13;
6100 Washington Ave, Racine&#13;
886·4272&#13;
eOC01'ltA-t'1flOVe&#13;
January 25,&#13;
student Degree&#13;
Casey Pawlak BS&#13;
Paul Pedrosa BS&#13;
Rebecca Peters BS&#13;
John Pham MAMB&#13;
Michelle Phillips BS&#13;
Catherine Pippin BA&#13;
Jason Pisani BS&#13;
Eric Place BA&#13;
Mark Podskarbi BS&#13;
Nina Porcaro MBA&#13;
Steven Premeau BS&#13;
Diana Prichard BA&#13;
Tanya Prostko BS&#13;
James Puhr BS&#13;
Jennifer Quall BS&#13;
Shaundra Randolph BA&#13;
Colleen Radke BS&#13;
Karisa Reichard BA&#13;
Erin Reimer BA&#13;
Mirjana Ristic-Petrovic BS&#13;
Roman Rodichev BS&#13;
Tanya Rogondino BS&#13;
Robert Rollins BA&#13;
Marianne Ruff BA&#13;
Autumn Marie Ruge BA&#13;
Camelius Russell BA&#13;
Cindy Salcedo BS&#13;
Charles Schepker BS&#13;
Christopher Schiefer BA&#13;
Andrea Schiesser BS&#13;
Nicole Schlitz BA&#13;
Ryan Schroeder BS&#13;
Christina Schutz BS&#13;
Daniel Schutz BA&#13;
Kate Schwarm BA&#13;
Kyle Scuglik BA&#13;
Mark Senske BS&#13;
Gene Shannon BS&#13;
Kristy Shepherd BA&#13;
Jennifer Sheppard BS&#13;
Matthew Sickles BS&#13;
Matthew Siver BS&#13;
Nicole Skroch BA&#13;
Michael Slye BS&#13;
Ryan Smith BA&#13;
John Sorensen BA&#13;
Mildred Spann BA&#13;
Michaela Stefani BS&#13;
Tiffany Stopa BA&#13;
Rebecca Stratman BA&#13;
Todd Streeter BS&#13;
Jacqueline Strelow BS&#13;
Joseph Sturino BA&#13;
Patricia Thompson BS&#13;
Janine TIiiotson-Kowaike BA&#13;
Karen Tuinstra BS&#13;
Sawoula Vassilopoulos BS&#13;
Susanne Ventura BA&#13;
John Verbeten BS&#13;
Cameron Vetter BS&#13;
Shawn Vollmer BA&#13;
Alexander Voskuil BA&#13;
Michael Walczak BS&#13;
Joel Wallen BS&#13;
Ben Walthers BA&#13;
Mark Ward BS&#13;
Rachel Watkins BA&#13;
Jack Webers BS&#13;
Rebecca Wegner BA&#13;
Debbie Wells BS&#13;
Lisa Whitcomb BA&#13;
Daniela Wienke BA&#13;
Michelle Wilde BS&#13;
Martha Wing BA&#13;
Brigit Yach BA&#13;
Loreen Yates BA&#13;
Ashraf Zahra BS&#13;
Nicholas Zeleski BS&#13;
Pamela Zernia BS&#13;
Michael Ziegelbauer BA&#13;
Mandi Zullo BA&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 7&#13;
Major(s) City&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Interdisciplinary St.&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Business&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
Art&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Business&#13;
Psychology&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
Schaumburg&#13;
Sturtevant&#13;
Zion&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Kenosh&#13;
Racine&#13;
Twin Lakes&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Franksville&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Gurnee&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
English Lake Villa&#13;
Communication Kenosha&#13;
Molecular Biology Kenosha&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Business Waukegan&#13;
Art Racine&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Bolingbrook&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Political Science Neenah&#13;
Sport &amp; Fitness Mgmt. Kenosha&#13;
Art Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Pleasant Prairie&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Geography Racine&#13;
Sociology Franksville&#13;
Art Kenosha&#13;
Business Big Bend&#13;
Biology Burlington&#13;
English Shullsburg&#13;
Psychology Naperville&#13;
Business Lake Villa&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes&#13;
Music Kenosha&#13;
Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Communication Twin Lakes&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Psychology Waterford&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Psychology Antioch&#13;
English Beach Park&#13;
Computer Science Kansasville&#13;
Psychology Kenosha&#13;
English Kenosha&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Computer Science Waterford&#13;
Criminal Justice Franklin&#13;
Communication Delavan&#13;
Computer Science Kenosha&#13;
Biology Kenosha&#13;
Communication Racine&#13;
Bus mess Kenosha&#13;
English Racine&#13;
Business Racine&#13;
Sociology Caledonia&#13;
Psychology Racine&#13;
English Spring Grove&#13;
Crim Jus, Pol Sci Kenosha&#13;
Business Palmyra&#13;
Crim Justice, Sociology Kenosha&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Communication Milwaukee&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Mathematics Racine&#13;
Business Kenosha&#13;
Criminal Justice Racine&#13;
Art Libertyville&#13;
UWP Events&#13;
_ Hotline&#13;
Where to find info&#13;
about events and&#13;
whos coming to&#13;
campus!&#13;
x2408&#13;
(595-2408)&#13;
Updated&#13;
Weekly!&#13;
Ill •~"~ ®dJ @Wlll@&gt;3&gt;3&#13;
New and Improved Lights!&#13;
New Sound!&#13;
New Promos Every Night!&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Rave Party&#13;
$3.50 Pitchers&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Ladies Drink Free&#13;
9 p.m. - Midnight&#13;
Freaky Friday&#13;
$2 Pitchers&#13;
8 p.m. - Midnight&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Line Dance Lessons&#13;
7:30 pm&#13;
Karaoke at 9 p.m.&#13;
Thursday&#13;
College Night&#13;
Open Bar 9 - Midnight&#13;
Free Pool!&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Get Buck Wild&#13;
$ I Drinks from&#13;
9 p.m. - I a.m.&#13;
6100 Washington Ave, Racine&#13;
886-4272&#13;
eoconut qiovt&#13;
Page 8 The Ranger, University of Wlsconsm-Parkslde&#13;
UW-Parkside Men's basketball&#13;
Men split GlVe pair, Host SI. JoseJJh'stonig~t&#13;
The UW-Parkside Rangers probably&#13;
didn't need to be reminded how&#13;
tough the Great Lake Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC) is in men's basketball. If&#13;
they needed a reminder, they got two&#13;
.&#13;
in a recent nine day span. Coach Jeff&#13;
Rutter's team twice faced teams&#13;
ranked number one in the nation in&#13;
NCAA Division II-Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
Jan. 11 and Southern Indiana&#13;
last Saturday, Jan. 20. Neither experience&#13;
was pleasant.&#13;
Things started out well against the&#13;
then-top ranked Panthers of Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan who came into the game&#13;
undefeated. The Rangers jumf'ed to a&#13;
33-24halftime lead, and KWCs coach,&#13;
Ray Harper,. was ejected from the&#13;
game for arguing a foul call. But Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan used the size of 6-9&#13;
center Chris Thomas on the boards&#13;
, and the inside play of bull-in-a-chinashop&#13;
forward Marshall Sanders to&#13;
scratch out a 64-56win.&#13;
Brian Coffman led the Rangers&#13;
with 13 points, Nick Knuth added 12,&#13;
and Quincey Moman added 10 while&#13;
pulling down a game-high 16&#13;
rebounds. .&#13;
After being softened up by UWParkside,&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan then&#13;
lost to Lewis University the followmg&#13;
Saturday, setting up last Saturday's&#13;
game with top ranked Southern Indiana&#13;
(15-0 overall, 9-0 GLVC). Again,&#13;
things looked promising with. the&#13;
Rangers posting a five-point lead late&#13;
in the first half. However, the Screaming&#13;
Eagles used a 20-2 run in the second&#13;
half to ice an 87-71victory.&#13;
The lost left UW-Parkside at 6-9&#13;
overall and 3-6 ,in the GLVC. The&#13;
Rangers' conference mark is the same'&#13;
as St. Joseph's and IUPU-Fort Wayne.&#13;
The Ranger host St. Joseph's tonight&#13;
starting at 7:30 p.m. in the Simone&#13;
Gymnasium. They host Fort Wayne&#13;
Saturday starting at 3:15 p.m. U,WParkside&#13;
student are admitted to all&#13;
games free. Ticket are $5 for adults&#13;
and $1 for high school students and&#13;
children 14 and under.&#13;
While vou were awav:&#13;
Men's Basketball Summary&#13;
While most UW-Parkside students&#13;
.were away from campus for winter&#13;
break, the men's basketball team was&#13;
busy studying the hardwood.&#13;
Between Dec. 14, 2000 and Jan. 20,&#13;
2001, Coach Jeff Rutter's team played&#13;
eight games. Here is a quick summary&#13;
of those games:&#13;
• Dec. 14, 2000: UWP 68, St. Francis&#13;
62; leading scorers for UW-Parkside:&#13;
Brian Coffman 29, Quincey&#13;
Moman 16; St. Francis got 13&#13;
points from its high scorer Mike&#13;
- Shannon;&#13;
• Dec. 22, 2000: Ferris State 76, UWP&#13;
64; leading scorers for UW-Parkside:&#13;
Brian Coffman 16, Nick&#13;
Knuth 12, Marlon Grice 10; Ferris&#13;
· State got 21 from its high scorer&#13;
Adam Anderson, three others&#13;
were in double figures;&#13;
• Jan. 3, 2001: Quincy 79, UWP 70:&#13;
leading scorers for UW-Parkside:&#13;
Brian Coffman 19, Quincey&#13;
Moman 14, Marlon Grice 12; Quin-&#13;
·cy·got 16 points from Brian McNeil&#13;
and Kareen Jabbar Cain, 14 from&#13;
Joel Peterson;&#13;
• Jan 6, 2001: UWP 72, Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis 61: leading scorers for UWParkside:&#13;
Brian Coffman 21, Nick&#13;
Knuth 14; St. Louis got 15 points&#13;
from its high scorer Greg Ross;&#13;
• Jan. 11, 2001: Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
·&#13;
64, UWP 56: leading scorers for&#13;
UW-Parkside: Brian Coffman 13,&#13;
Nick Knuth 12 Quincey Moman 10&#13;
and 16 rebounds; KWC got 18&#13;
points from Lorico Duncan and 14&#13;
from Marshall Sanders, .&#13;
• Jan. 13, 2001: Bellarmine 69, UWP&#13;
62: leading scorer for UW-Parkside:&#13;
Quincey Moman with 18&#13;
points, 7 rebounds&#13;
• Jan. 18, 2001: UWP 76, SIDEdwardsville&#13;
63; leading scorers&#13;
for UW-Parkside: Brian Coffman&#13;
20; Quincey Moman with 11&#13;
points, 12 rebounds;&#13;
.• Jan. 20, 2001: Southern Indiana 87,&#13;
UWP 71; leading scorers for UWParkside:&#13;
Brian Coffman 31&#13;
SI. Rodefer selected&#13;
to tournev teams twice&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Being selected to a toumey team is&#13;
an honor. For Joy Rodefer, it was a&#13;
"Great honor."&#13;
.&#13;
Rodefer is a 6-1 senior power forward&#13;
for the UW-Parkside women basketball&#13;
team who is malcing a name for&#13;
her team.&#13;
According to Coach Paulette Stein&#13;
'Joy is a very physical player, she can&#13;
post up strong and take the ball to the&#13;
basket.!!&#13;
Rodefer received the first all-tourney&#13;
team award at the Winona State&#13;
Tournament. The second tourney team&#13;
honor was received at Eckerd College&#13;
Four rangers receive regi~nalhonors&#13;
After an outstanding season in&#13;
which the UW-Parkside men's soccer&#13;
team won a league championship&#13;
and a bid to the NCAA&#13;
Division II tournament, individual&#13;
honors were given to several members&#13;
of the 2000 squad. Three were&#13;
selected to the D1 Central Region&#13;
first team, and another was picked&#13;
for the second team.&#13;
Goalkeeper Thorn Peer, from&#13;
Stillwater, Minn., Andy Nil'oka, a&#13;
midfielder from Rockford, 11., and&#13;
Justin Trevorrow, a defender from&#13;
New Brighton, Minn., made the&#13;
first team. Matt Hundt, a defender&#13;
from Brookfield, earned second&#13;
team honors. The all-region team&#13;
was selected by opposition coaches.&#13;
.&#13;
The Rangers led the nation in&#13;
defense, With a miniscule goals&#13;
agamst average of 0.24. Peer led all&#13;
goalkeepers in goals against at 1.24&#13;
and recorded 17 shutouts.&#13;
The Rangers finished with a 17-5&#13;
record. The first of those wins gave&#13;
coach Rick Kilps his 300th victory&#13;
on openmg day. The 17th win gave&#13;
UW-Parkslde its first-ever Great&#13;
Lakes Valley. Conference championship.&#13;
The Rangers were edged in&#13;
openmg round of the 16-team&#13;
NCAA Division II tournament a&#13;
hard-fought 1-0 loss to Lewis University.&#13;
Tournament a week later in SI.Peters·&#13;
burg, FL. Rodefer received trophiesfor&#13;
her selections.&#13;
Rodefer made similar tourneyteams&#13;
during her high school days at Dixon&#13;
Hi&amp;hschool in Dixon, IL.&#13;
'With this being my last I&#13;
would like to finish with a winning season;'&#13;
she said.&#13;
Last season, which was her firstwith&#13;
UW-Parkside, Rodefer averaged ~.6&#13;
points per game to go with 4.1board~,&#13;
Coach Stein sees her scoring morethis&#13;
year and stepping up as a team leader.&#13;
Rodefer is one of the four captains'he!&#13;
'1 try to calm people down and p&#13;
them out;' said Rodier about herroll~&#13;
a captain. "Her best quality is her soli&#13;
low post game and she has the rangeto&#13;
shoot the three;' Stein said. "Joy'sstrong&#13;
point on defense is her excellent&#13;
rebounding. "&#13;
At Winona State, Rodefer scored14&#13;
points in the game against Win~na&#13;
State and 19 points in the consolation&#13;
VictOry against Hamline. At Ecl&lt;erd&#13;
College, she scored 19 points a~ed t&#13;
Webber College, and then notdied"&#13;
double-double in the chamPlOl1shW&#13;
loss to Eckard with 13 points rebounds.&#13;
. With Rodefer off to a great startand&#13;
helping her teammates out with her&#13;
positive strong altitude, expectRod~r&#13;
to do everything she can to make .er&#13;
last year at UW-Parkside a wiJUUIlg&#13;
one.&#13;
Pages W1sconsm•Parks1de&#13;
OW-GLVC St. JoseJh's tonig"t&#13;
probably&#13;
Conference&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
experience&#13;
24 halftime KWC s Harper, Kentucky&#13;
chinashop&#13;
56 win.&#13;
high rebounds.&#13;
UWParkside,&#13;
following&#13;
Indiana&#13;
15--promisin~ with . pomt Screaming&#13;
second&#13;
71 victory.&#13;
same&#13;
De UWParkside&#13;
free. $5 summarv&#13;
summary&#13;
Parkside:&#13;
Sand'ers;&#13;
Parkside:&#13;
Momiln SIUEdwardsville&#13;
20, • UWP 71; UWParkside:&#13;
Marlon Grice prepared to drain a free throw during UW-Parkside's game against&#13;
Bellarmine University. The Ranger host St. Joseph's College tonight at the De&#13;
Simone Gymnasium. UWP students are admitted free to all home games.&#13;
Beirtg tourney it for:&#13;
ward basketball&#13;
making ''is UI?, basket. '&#13;
tourney&#13;
Wmona ToWTiament St. Petersburg,&#13;
trophies for&#13;
tourney teams&#13;
higll Hi~ school year, l&#13;
season,"&#13;
first with&#13;
~-6&#13;
4.1 ~&#13;
more this&#13;
as captains-&#13;
64; Parkside:&#13;
regional honors&#13;
"! help&#13;
out," Rodfer her roll ~d&#13;
sfie range to&#13;
three," 'Joy's strong&#13;
rebounding."&#13;
Quincy&#13;
got 72, UWParkside:&#13;
soccer&#13;
championship&#13;
members&#13;
D2 Thom Minn., I I., coaches.&#13;
def~nse, with against shu tou ts.&#13;
Range_rs ~e f1~st of ~hose ~ck K1lps operun~ Parks1de ever Lake~ Valley championsh1p.&#13;
TJ:te the opem!1&amp; ~ound of the 16-team&#13;
D1v1s1on hard_-fought University.&#13;
scored 14&#13;
Winona&#13;
State and 19 points in the consolati&lt;:J&#13;
victory Eck~&#13;
points~&#13;
no~. a&#13;
double champ10~&#13;
Eckard points and&#13;
start and&#13;
helping her teammates out :&#13;
stron$ attitude, expect Rod her&#13;
to do everything she can to ~ .&#13;
wiJlnill8&#13;
- 25, The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Park~ide&#13;
Uw-parkside Women's basketball&#13;
SO close and vet so far&#13;
Weall know that close only counts&#13;
in horseshoes, but the UW-Parkside&#13;
LadyRangers have been so close to&#13;
winning so many tunes this year they&#13;
shouldat least get style points. Unfortunately,&#13;
style points don't count and&#13;
asaresUltCoach Paulette Stein's team&#13;
finditselfin a must-win mode if it is to&#13;
makethe Great Lake Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVCtournament.&#13;
Last Thursday's heartbreaking 62-&#13;
6Q loss to STU-Edwardsville was a&#13;
microcosmof the season. The Lady&#13;
Rangertrailed by 18 points with 9:50&#13;
toplay:Just seven minutes later, UWParksldetook&#13;
the lead by three points&#13;
butthe team was not able to hold that&#13;
advantageand lost its tenth game of&#13;
theyear.Joy Rodefer led the Rangers •&#13;
with 14 points and 9 rebounds.&#13;
Last Saturday's game with 18th&#13;
ranked Southern Indiana was less and tuck. STU left no doubt that it&#13;
deserves its na tional ranking with a&#13;
90-58 win. Denita Sublett scored 18&#13;
points for UW-Parkside, which fell to&#13;
4-11 overall and 1-8 in the conference.&#13;
The Lady Rangers are part of a&#13;
three-way tie for 10th place in the conference,&#13;
with tonight s opponent St.&#13;
Joseph's in that group. The game starts&#13;
at 5:30 p.m. Saturday's opponent,&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne currently has a 4-5 .&#13;
GLVC record. That game starts at 1&#13;
p.m. UW-Parkside student are admitted&#13;
to all games free. Ticket are $5 for&#13;
adults and $1 for high school students&#13;
and children 14 ana under .&#13;
UWPwrestlers pin 4 of 1 foes&#13;
If you didn't make it to last night's&#13;
match between UW-Parkside and&#13;
UW-Clshkosh,you missed your only&#13;
chance to see the University s&#13;
wrestlingteam at horne this semester.&#13;
Theresults of the meet were available&#13;
toolate to be printed in this edition of&#13;
The Ranger, but Coach Jim Koch's&#13;
traveling'men had a good break.&#13;
The Ranger wrestlers were 2-2 at&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh-Johnstown&#13;
duals the weekend of Jan. 13.&#13;
UW-Parkside beat Shippensburg 34-&#13;
13 and Anderson 19-16. The Rangers&#13;
were defeated by host Pittsburgh-&#13;
Winter break basketball:&#13;
lady Rangers gO 2-6&#13;
When the UW-Parkside women's&#13;
basketballteam was good over winter&#13;
break,they were very, very good. But&#13;
whenthey were bad, they were usuallyjust&#13;
bad enough to lose.&#13;
The Lady Rangers' inability to&#13;
mamtam their intensity for a full 40&#13;
mmutes caused them to lose four&#13;
sames by eight points or less includ- 11, a two point killer at SlUE&#13;
wardsville. Here's a look at the&#13;
gameplayed during the winter break:&#13;
The break started with two nonconference&#13;
games. On Dec. 15, the&#13;
LadyRanger were rude hosts as they&#13;
~asted Saginaw. Valley State 78-62.&#13;
nfortunately, they were much more&#13;
hospitable to Ashland University of fShlO'dropping a very wirmable game&#13;
·54 on Dec. 30.&#13;
i . The margin of victory was&#13;
tdenQulicwahlen UW-Parkside traveled&#13;
bO mcy on Jan. 3. The Lady Hawks&#13;
rokea 35-35halftime tie and went on&#13;
~ defeat4he Lady Rangers 69-65. Joy&#13;
odefer led UW-Parkside with,12&#13;
~OInts,.and Tiesha Campbell pulled&#13;
ownnme rebounds.&#13;
d Three days later, UW-Parkside&#13;
ornmated tlie first half against Mis-&#13;
Johnstown 34-13, and were edged by&#13;
West Liberty State 23-15. Luke Goral,&#13;
wrestling at 197 pounds, won all four&#13;
of his matches.&#13;
Last weekend, UW-Parkside traveled&#13;
to Truman State University for a&#13;
four team meet. The Rangers were&#13;
rude to the host team, whipping TSU&#13;
35-15. They beat Southern IIIinois-&#13;
Edwardsville like a rented mule 48-3.&#13;
UW-Parkside returned to earth with a&#13;
40-3 loss to Mirmesota State.&#13;
Check next week's edition of the&#13;
Ranger for details on Wednesday&#13;
night's match with UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
souri-St. Louis building separate leads&#13;
of 11 and 10 points and leading at the&#13;
half. The Lady Rangers then went&#13;
strangely quiet, their lead and their&#13;
intensity vanish allowing UMSL to&#13;
escape the De Simone Gymnasium&#13;
with a 78-70 win.&#13;
There was no lack of intensity, no&#13;
let down and no let up in UW-Parkside's&#13;
85-66 crushing of Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan on Jan. 11.After trailing bya&#13;
single point at halftime, the Lady'&#13;
Rangers lit up the scoreboard WIth 5.1&#13;
second half points to wm easily, Denita&#13;
Sublett led the team with 22 points,&#13;
Erin Crank had 16 and nine rebounds,&#13;
Nicole Brunk 14, and Tiesha Campbell&#13;
10.&#13;
After being thoroughly dominated&#13;
in a 76-63 loss to Bellarmine (Denita&#13;
Sublett 17 pts.), the Lady Rangers let&#13;
one slip away last Thursday, losing to&#13;
STUEdwardsville 62-60. Saturday, Jan.&#13;
20 saw 18th ranked Southern Indiana&#13;
hand UW-Parkside a 90-58 defeat.&#13;
UW-Parkside is 1·8 in Great Lake&#13;
Valley Conference garnes, 4-11 overall.&#13;
They play 1-8 St. Joseph's tonight, the&#13;
first of four straight nome games for&#13;
Coach Paulette Stein's team.&#13;
Page 9&#13;
C· II o e g. eiI Boo....., 00 th.1 tax l"",..b tlut GIll btlp ,W fOOl the bills far . - IbI!,""'r &lt;'dll.Cllll&lt;&gt;n. t ere .S The HOPE Cte(UI om (Ill - f .your f...:lerAl IAxlll' 10 $1,&gt;00 o r per u~",lu.uc rtIuknl per I year: AppUcx ooly l&lt;i th.1 Ani ta XP·aY'er s -,' • 1p\1&lt;0»yte·m_b&lt;riyr alrlfocg~c. 'If .Othcr.&#13;
Up to $I'50 0 I ~ADn:\~r;:e~~::rU:.~:&#13;
1.1&#13;
)1!iU' in t.xcs fur gT",I".t",&#13;
. i prol"MiouAlor underg''''''''I''&#13;
I ..ooy. You ~""OOI "I"im blllb Imdiu (&lt;ir .\ - I"'non in&#13;
. th.1_y ••&#13;
EtlllCiltioll IRA. Conlribute&#13;
to 5500 .. )'Nr per &lt;hiM \Il1ll1&#13;
th.1 &lt;hiM IUflll 18.&#13;
For d$ils. &gt;¢C )1lu( 1000 tax&#13;
Dooldet. Or coo:lt oor Well $I1C:&#13;
www.i"'lfOV&#13;
GLVC Men's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC Overall&#13;
TEAM W-L Pct. W-L Pet.&#13;
Southern Indiana 9-0&#13;
Northern Kentucky 7-2&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 7-2&#13;
Bellarmine 6-3&#13;
Lewis 5-4&#13;
Indianapolis 4-5&#13;
Wis.-Parks ide 3-6&#13;
Saint Joseph's 3-6&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 3-6&#13;
Quincy 3-6&#13;
*TUPU-Ft.Wayne 3-6&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 1-8&#13;
*Ineligible for GLVC Tournament&#13;
1.000&#13;
.778&#13;
.778&#13;
.667&#13;
.556&#13;
.444&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.111&#13;
15-0&#13;
16-2&#13;
13-2&#13;
9-6&#13;
7-8&#13;
9-6&#13;
6-9&#13;
9-9&#13;
7-8&#13;
6-8&#13;
6-13&#13;
4-11&#13;
1.000&#13;
.889&#13;
867&#13;
.600&#13;
467&#13;
600&#13;
400&#13;
.50b&#13;
.467&#13;
.429&#13;
316&#13;
.267&#13;
GLVC Women's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM W-L&#13;
OVERALL&#13;
Pct. W-L Pet.&#13;
14-1&#13;
13-2&#13;
13-2&#13;
11-4&#13;
10-5&#13;
9-6&#13;
9-6&#13;
11-5&#13;
5-10&#13;
4-11&#13;
4-11&#13;
1:14&#13;
.933&#13;
.867&#13;
.867&#13;
.733&#13;
.667&#13;
.600&#13;
.600&#13;
.688&#13;
.333&#13;
.267&#13;
.267&#13;
.067&#13;
Northern Kentucky 8-1&#13;
Bellarmine 8-1&#13;
Southern Indiana 7-2&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 6-3&#13;
Indianapolis 6-3&#13;
Quincy 5-4&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 5-4&#13;
*IUPU-Ft. Wayne 4-5&#13;
Lewis 2-7&#13;
Wis.-Parkside 1-8&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 1-8&#13;
Saint Joseph's 1-8.&#13;
*Not eligible for GLVCTournament&#13;
.889&#13;
.889&#13;
.778&#13;
.667&#13;
.667&#13;
.556&#13;
.556&#13;
.444&#13;
.222&#13;
.111&#13;
.111&#13;
.111&#13;
;;;-ary 25, --- ide Page9&#13;
uW•P•r•slde so tar&#13;
We all know that close only counts&#13;
horseshoes, but the UW-Parkside&#13;
Lady Rangers have been so dos to&#13;
winf1in8 tim s y ar th y&#13;
should at least get tyl points. Unfortunately,&#13;
as a result Coach Paulette Stein's team&#13;
find itself in a must-win mode if it is to&#13;
make the Conference&#13;
GL toumam nt.&#13;
Thursday's heartbr aking 62-&#13;
60 Joss to SIU-Edwardsville was a&#13;
microcosm of the s ason. The Lady&#13;
Ranger trailed p int to pray. minut s UWParkside&#13;
took the lead by thr e points&#13;
but the wa n t hofd advantage and lo t it t nth game of&#13;
the year. Joy Rodefer led the Rangers&#13;
Last Saturday's $ame with 18th&#13;
nip&#13;
SIU 1t&#13;
deserves its national ranking with a&#13;
90~58 win. Denita Sublett scored 18&#13;
pomts 4-11 overall and 1-8 in the conference.&#13;
Lad_y are three-way he for 10th f'lace in the conference,&#13;
tonights Joseph's in that group. The game starts&#13;
at 5:30 p.m. Saturday's opponent,&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne currently has a 4-5&#13;
admitted&#13;
to all games free. Ticket are $5 for&#13;
adults and $1 for high school students&#13;
and children 14 ancf under.&#13;
DWP wrestlers 011 roes&#13;
you didn't make it to last night'&#13;
match between UW-Parksid and&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, you mi sed your onl,}'&#13;
chance to see the University s&#13;
wrestling team at home this mester.&#13;
The results of th meet w re availabl&#13;
too late to be printed in this edition of&#13;
The Ranger, but Coach Jim Koch's&#13;
traveling' men had a good br ak.&#13;
The Ranger wr tler were 2-2 at&#13;
the Univer ity of Pitt burgh-Johnstown&#13;
duals the we k nd of Jan. 13.&#13;
UW-Parkside beat Shipp nsburg 34-&#13;
and Ander on 19-16. The Rangers&#13;
were defeated by host Pittsburgh-&#13;
Johnstown 34-13, and were edged by&#13;
West Liberty State 23-15. Luke Goral,&#13;
wrestling at 197 pounds, won all four&#13;
of his matches.&#13;
Last weekend, UW-Parkside traveled&#13;
to Truman State University for a&#13;
four team meet. The Rangers were&#13;
rμde to the host team, whipping TSU&#13;
35-15. They beat Southern IlfinoisEdwardsville&#13;
like a rented mule 48-3.&#13;
UW-Parkside returned to earth with a&#13;
40-3 loss to Minnesota State.&#13;
Check next week's edition of the&#13;
Ranger for details on Wednesday&#13;
night's match with UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
ladv go When the UW-Parkside women's&#13;
basketball team was good over winter&#13;
break, they were very, very good. But&#13;
w~en they were bad, they were usually&#13;
Just bad enough to lose. !he_ Lady Rangers' inability to&#13;
m~tntam their inten ity for a full 40&#13;
minutes caused them to lose four&#13;
sames by eight points or Jess includ-&#13;
111, a two point killer SIUE&#13;
Wardsville. H re's a look at the&#13;
game played during the winter break:&#13;
The break started with two nonconference&#13;
games. On Dec. 15, the&#13;
Lady Ranger were rude hosts as they&#13;
ft5ted Saginaw Valley State 78-62.&#13;
nfo:mnately, they were much more&#13;
~~p1table to Ashland University of&#13;
58-54 °, dropping a very winnable game&#13;
on Dec. 30.&#13;
. The margin of victory was&#13;
identical when io Quincy on Jan. 3. The Lady Hawks&#13;
1 roke a 35-35 halftime tie and went on R ~efeat-the Lady Rangers 69-65. Joy&#13;
0. efer led UW-Parkside with 12&#13;
rmts, _and Tiesha Campbell pulled&#13;
own mne rebounds.&#13;
do ~ee days later, UW-Parkside&#13;
rntnated the first half against Missouri-&#13;
St. Louis building separate leads&#13;
of 11 and 10 points and leading at the&#13;
strangely quiet, their lead and their&#13;
intensity vanish allowing UMSL to&#13;
escape the De Simone Gymnasium&#13;
with a 78-70 win.&#13;
There was no lack of intensity, no&#13;
let down and no let up in UW-Parkside's&#13;
85-66 crushing of Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan ~m Jan. 11. A~ter trailing by a&#13;
single pomt at halftime, the _Lady&#13;
Rangers lit up the scoreboard with 51&#13;
second half points to win easily. Denita&#13;
Sublett lea the team with 22 points,&#13;
Erin Crank had 16 and nine rebounds,&#13;
Nicole Brunk 14, and Tiesha Campbell&#13;
After being thoroughly dominated&#13;
in a 76-63 loss to Belf armine (Denita&#13;
Sublett 17 pts.), the Lady Rang~rs let&#13;
one slip away last Thursday, losmg to&#13;
SIU Ecfwardsville 62-60. Saturday, 20 saw 18th ranked Southern Indiana&#13;
hand UW-Parkside a 90-58 defeat.&#13;
UW-Parkside is 1-8 in Great Lake&#13;
Valley Conference games, 4-11 overall.&#13;
They play 1-8 St. Joseph's tonight, the&#13;
first of four straight home games for&#13;
Coach Paulette Stein's team.&#13;
C 11 up on~u.xhn-mtfw&#13;
0 e g e ;; "'~= r:'." "' hil (o,&#13;
C r e d t I The HOV Cn-clit , tVl I fedt-nl t 1,1p to I, SOO f pt-r l'l(k-rgr.a« c U&lt;ft·nt pc-r&#13;
0 J ·ar. 1,pli ,nly to t~, ,m taxpayers. ·;,.~Sf.':'~ 'r,d;:&#13;
to ISO O ~ lloa\(": JfflJ ,i to 1.000 •&#13;
year Ill for gra.duah\&#13;
· profmional or undcrgradl.llte&#13;
!iudy. Yoo c.JlOOt 4im both&#13;
m:dil.$ for tht· lloltnt' pentm in&#13;
the lQffK' ) .u-.&#13;
Edu .itlon tit.A. Contribute&#13;
up to SSOO a y '.'.tr p&lt;-r duhl untit&#13;
w dnlcl turn ts.&#13;
fur deuik, u 2000 I booklet. Or m«:o( r Web ' •&#13;
WW"W.in.gc&gt;V&#13;
.&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM W-L Pct.&#13;
Southern Indiana 9-0&#13;
Northern Kentucky 7-2&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 7-2&#13;
Bellarmine 6-3&#13;
Lewis 5-4&#13;
Indianapolis 4-5&#13;
Parkside Saint Joseph's 3-6&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 3-6&#13;
Quincy 3-6&#13;
*fUPU-Ft. Wayne 3-6&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 1-8&#13;
*Ineligible for GLVC Tournament&#13;
1.000&#13;
.778&#13;
.778&#13;
.667&#13;
.556&#13;
.444&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.111&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM W-L&#13;
Northern Kentucky 8-1&#13;
Bellarmine 8-1&#13;
Southern Indiana 7-2&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 6-3&#13;
Indianapolis 6-3&#13;
Quincy 5-4&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 5-4&#13;
*IUPU-Ft. Wayne 4-5&#13;
Lewis 2-7&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 1-8&#13;
Saint Joseph's 1-8&#13;
*Not eligible for GLVC Tournament&#13;
Pct.&#13;
.889&#13;
.889&#13;
.778&#13;
.667&#13;
.667&#13;
.556&#13;
.556&#13;
.444&#13;
.222&#13;
.111&#13;
.111&#13;
Overall&#13;
W-L Pct.&#13;
15-0&#13;
16-2&#13;
13-2&#13;
9-6&#13;
7-8&#13;
9-6&#13;
6-9&#13;
9-9&#13;
7-8&#13;
6-8&#13;
6-13&#13;
4-11&#13;
W-L&#13;
13-2&#13;
13-2&#13;
11-4&#13;
9-6&#13;
9-6&#13;
11-5&#13;
4-11&#13;
1-1.000&#13;
.889&#13;
867&#13;
.600&#13;
467&#13;
600&#13;
.sob&#13;
.467&#13;
.429&#13;
316&#13;
.267&#13;
OVERALL&#13;
Pct.&#13;
.933&#13;
.867&#13;
.867&#13;
.733&#13;
.667&#13;
.600&#13;
.600&#13;
.688&#13;
.333&#13;
.267&#13;
.267&#13;
.067&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
January 25, -&#13;
Page 10&#13;
P- ~O--.l..l..e-..t-&#13;
R~IT ----&#13;
12/19/00&#13;
Inc 00-972 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 2:48 p.m.: student&#13;
reported several items stolen. from&#13;
his dorm room.&#13;
12120/00&#13;
Inc 00-973 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
University Apartments, 12:08 a.m.:&#13;
student reported a roommate had&#13;
taken a printer and book over the&#13;
weekend and had not returned&#13;
them. Case pending contact with the&#13;
suspect. .'&#13;
. Inc 00-974 Vagrancy, Union Levell,&#13;
12:24 a.m.: while on routine patrol,&#13;
UPPS officer noticed a male subject&#13;
sleeping on the floor of the 1V viewing&#13;
area. Subject advised he was&#13;
homeless and had no place to stay.&#13;
Subject had been banned from&#13;
Kenosha shelters so was taken to a&#13;
Racine shelter and turned over to&#13;
shelter staff.&#13;
Inc 00-975 Harassment/Suspicious&#13;
Person, Wyllie library, 12:53 a.m.:&#13;
student reported an unidentified&#13;
male subject had acted strangely&#13;
and then followed her. Upon officer's&#13;
arrival, the suspect was gone&#13;
from the area. Student was advised&#13;
to immediately contact UPPS if the&#13;
individual bothers her again.&#13;
r Inc 00-976 Medical Assist, University&#13;
Apartments; 1:50 a.m.: student&#13;
called regarding a roommate who&#13;
needed medical attention, Kenosha&#13;
Med Unit 5 transported student to&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital.&#13;
Inc 00-977 Driving on Sidewalk, Inner&#13;
. Loop, 1:54 a.m.: driver of a vehicle&#13;
which went' over the sidewalk by&#13;
the bus shelter and onto Inner Loop&#13;
Road was stopped and a citation&#13;
issued for Driving on a Sidewalk.&#13;
12/22100&#13;
Inc 00-979 Vagrancy, Molinaro Hall,&#13;
3:29 a.m.: custodial staff reported&#13;
being unsuccessful in asking a visitor&#13;
to leave as the buildings were&#13;
closed. Officer located the subject&#13;
and determined he was homeless:&#13;
Subject was transported to the&#13;
Kenosha Salvation Army shelter&#13;
facility.&#13;
Inc 00-980 Theft, Union, 2:25p.m.: student&#13;
reported the theft of money&#13;
from his wallet which had been left&#13;
unattended on a counter for a short&#13;
time, No suspects or witnesses at&#13;
this time.&#13;
Inc 00-981 Traffic Violation, Wood&#13;
Road at Inner Loop Road, 9.:57p.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer stopped a driver who&#13;
had made an illegal U-turn in front&#13;
of another vehicle. Investigation ~&#13;
revealed the driver had no validdriver's&#13;
license. A citation was issued&#13;
for Operating While Suspended-2nd&#13;
offense.&#13;
12/30/00&#13;
Inc 00-989 Traffic Accident, Hit and&#13;
Run, Outer Loop Road by University&#13;
Apartments, 2:07 p.m.: student&#13;
reported his vehicle's back passen-&#13;
. ger door had been struck but was&#13;
uncertain if the damage had&#13;
occurred on or off campus. No witnesses&#13;
to the incident. A self-reporting&#13;
accident form was provided to&#13;
the student. .&#13;
12/31/00 .&#13;
Inc 00-991 Criminal Damage to Property&#13;
/State, Ranger Hall 2:20 p.m.:&#13;
student reported graffiti on the&#13;
walls of the first floor south wing.&#13;
No suspects or witnesses. Residence&#13;
Life will be notified for clean-up of&#13;
the area. .&#13;
01/01/01&#13;
Inc 01-01 Fire Alarm, SAC, 9:10 a.m.:&#13;
officers responded to an alarm but&#13;
could find no smoke or fire in the&#13;
area. System was reset.&#13;
Inc 01-02 Animals, 5000 Block of 7th&#13;
St., 6:10 p.m.: UPPS officer was&#13;
flagged down by an individual who&#13;
had found a dog standing in the&#13;
. middle of the road. Local humane&#13;
officer was contacted and he took&#13;
custody of the animal.&#13;
01/02/01&#13;
Inc 01-03 Fire Alarm, SAC, 10:36 a.m.:&#13;
officers responded to an alarm indicating&#13;
smoke detectors. investigation&#13;
revealed people were .&#13;
showering in amen's locker room and&#13;
possibly the alarm was set off by the&#13;
steam and heat ill that room. Facilities-&#13;
Management electrician was&#13;
notified of the incident.&#13;
01/03/01&#13;
Inc 01-04 Suspicious Circumst~ces,&#13;
Tallent Hall, 12:46 p.m.: staff mem-&#13;
, ber received a letter, suspicious in&#13;
nature and written in such a manner&#13;
. that it was difficult to understand.&#13;
Continuing investigation.&#13;
Inc 01-05State Property Damage, Wyllie&#13;
Hall, 1:02 p.m.: staff member&#13;
reported a lamp shade had been&#13;
broken by students playing around.&#13;
01/04/01&#13;
Inc 01-06 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC, 8:33 a.m.: staff member reported&#13;
a contractor had his coat stolen&#13;
from the swimming pool area. .&#13;
01/05/01 . .&#13;
Inc 01-08 Security Alarm. Wyllie Hall,&#13;
7:06 a.m.: UPPS officer mvestigatin~&#13;
an alarm found the door unlocke&#13;
but no-one in the area. Everything&#13;
seemed in order so alarm was reset&#13;
and area secured.&#13;
01/06/01&#13;
Inc 01-09 Traffic Violation, HWY E at&#13;
Wood Road, 2:13 a.m.: driver was&#13;
issueli a citation for mandatory seat&#13;
belt violation. •&#13;
Inc 01-10 Traffic Violation, HWY E, .4&#13;
mile west of Wood Rd., 2:24 a.m.:&#13;
driver was issued a citation for&#13;
mandatory seat belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-11 Traffic Violation-OWl, CTH&#13;
E &amp; HWY 31, 11:56p.m.: driver was&#13;
stopped after being. observed driving&#13;
through a stop light. Investigation&#13;
revealed dnver to be intoxicated.&#13;
Citations were issued for Operating&#13;
While Intoxicated, 1st offense,&#13;
Failure to Obey Signal, and Prohibitive&#13;
Alcohol Concentration.&#13;
01/08/01&#13;
. Inc 01-12 Fire Alarm, SAC, 5:44 a.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer responded to an alarm&#13;
and found a heat detector had been&#13;
activated in a boiler room. No&#13;
smoke or fire was found, however, a&#13;
steam repress valve had released&#13;
causing hot steam to activate the&#13;
detector. Alarm was silenced but&#13;
could not be reset until valve is&#13;
fixed. Facilities Management notified.&#13;
01/09/01&#13;
Inc 01-13 Traffic Violation, Outer Loop&#13;
Road, 2:04 p.m.: driver of a vehicle&#13;
exceeding the speed limit was&#13;
stopped. A citation was issued for&#13;
Mandatory Seat belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-14 Agency Assist, Visitor Parking&#13;
Lot, 3:42 p.m.: individual who&#13;
called for a motorist assist was&#13;
found to have three outstanding&#13;
warrants from a local police agency&#13;
for conte,!,pt of court-failure to pay&#13;
fines. Subject was taken into custody&#13;
faild transported to Kenosha County&#13;
01/10/01&#13;
Inc 01-16 Traffic Violation, HWY E, .3&#13;
miles east of HWY 31., 5:34 a.m.: driver&#13;
was stopped and cited for&#13;
speedmg 64 mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-17 Traffic Violation, HWY 31 at&#13;
HWYE, 5:54 a.m.: driver exceeding&#13;
the speed limit was stopped and a&#13;
citation Issued for Mandatory Seat&#13;
belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-18 Security Alarm, Comm. Arts,&#13;
8:02 a.m.: UPPS officer responding'&#13;
to an alarm found a staff member&#13;
had neglected to turn off the alarm&#13;
Officer cleared after checking the&#13;
area.&#13;
01/11/01&#13;
Inc 01-19 Traffic Violation, Inner Loo&#13;
Road; .2 miles west of Wood Road'.&#13;
2:45 a.m.: driver cited for failure to&#13;
obey SIgn. Driver was going the&#13;
wrong way on a one-way road.&#13;
In~aii1-:0 Worthless Check, T~llent&#13;
,9.15 a.m.: UPPS sent a Notice &amp;&#13;
- Demand for Payment to a stud&#13;
who paid for a parking cltation:&#13;
a "Non-sufficient Funds" check.&#13;
Inc 01-21 Traffic Violation, Outer loop&#13;
Road, 12:37 p.m.: driver issUed&#13;
citation for speeding 44 mph ind mph zone.&#13;
01/12101&#13;
Inc 01-22 Personal Property Theft&#13;
Comm. Arts parking lot, 10:05a.m.:&#13;
student reported his parking pennit&#13;
had been stolen from his parked&#13;
vehicle. No damage to the vehicle&#13;
and nothing else missing.&#13;
Inc 01-23 Personal Property Theft, Off&#13;
campus, 10:57 a.m.: staff member&#13;
reported her parking permit taken&#13;
from her unlocked vehicle while&#13;
parked off-campus.&#13;
Inc 01-24 Disorderly Conduct, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, 9:23 p.m.: visitor filed a&#13;
complaint against a student who&#13;
was reported to be loud and rude&#13;
during a Dung&amp;m &amp; Dragonsgame.&#13;
Verbal warning was given to fhe&#13;
individual.&#13;
01/13/01&#13;
Inc 01-25 Traffic Violation, Wood&#13;
Road, .1 mile north of HWY E,6:14&#13;
a.m.: driver was issued a citationfor&#13;
mandatory seat belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-26 Fire Alarm, SAC, 9:06a.m.:&#13;
UPPS officers responded to a report&#13;
ed alarm and found the popcorn&#13;
machine had set off the smoke&#13;
detector. Alarm was reset.&#13;
Inc 01-27 State Property Theft, Green'&#13;
quist Hall, 3:49 p.m.: individual&#13;
reported the theft of a state test&#13;
booklet. The inclividual who had&#13;
signed ou t for the booklet couldnot&#13;
be located and appeared to have&#13;
given a false name and address.&#13;
Inc 01-28 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC Hallway, 3:54 p.m.: staffmember&#13;
reported a visitor's leathercoat&#13;
had been taken from the hallwayby&#13;
the Petretti Fieldhouse. No witnesses&#13;
to the theft.&#13;
Inc 01-29 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC, 5:17 p.m.: visitor reportedhis&#13;
unattended leather coat was stolen&#13;
from the Petretti Fieldhouse. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses to the theft.&#13;
01/15/01&#13;
Inc 01-30 Controlled Substances,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 3:23 p.m.: UPPS ~fficer&#13;
responded to a report of manjuaJUl&#13;
being smoked in a donn room.One&#13;
occupant was contacted and stated&#13;
he believes the smoking IS bemg&#13;
done by his roommate. Studentwas&#13;
advised to contact UPI'S if thearbv'&#13;
ity occurs again.&#13;
Inc 01-31 Fire Alarm, Union, 6:54p.~: UPPS officer responded to a repoke&#13;
ed alarm and found the smo&#13;
detector had been activated due t~&#13;
the dining room exhaust fans n~&#13;
being turned on when the grill wen&#13;
in use. Exhaust fans were th&#13;
turned on and alarm reset-&#13;
01/16/01 2&#13;
Inc 01-32 Traffic Violation, HWY :-dri.&#13;
miles East of HWY 31, 5:45am- 57&#13;
ver issued a citation for spee&amp;ng&#13;
mph in a 35 mph zone.&#13;
Page 10&#13;
12/19/00&#13;
Inc 00-972 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 2:48 p.m.: student&#13;
reported several items stolen from&#13;
his dorm room.&#13;
12/20/00&#13;
Inc 00-973 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
University Apartments, 12:08 a.m.:&#13;
student reported a roommate had&#13;
taken a printer and book over the&#13;
weekend and had not returned&#13;
them. Case pending contact with the&#13;
suspect.&#13;
Inc 00-97 4 Vagrancy, Union Level 1,&#13;
12:24 a .m.: while on routine patrol,&#13;
UPPS officer noticed a male subject&#13;
sleeping on the floor of the TV viewing&#13;
area. Subject advised he was&#13;
homeless and had no place to stay.&#13;
Subject had been banned from&#13;
Kenosha shelters so was taken to a&#13;
Racine shelter and turned over to&#13;
shelter staff.&#13;
Inc 00-975 H~as~ment/Suspicious&#13;
Person, Wyllie library, 12:53 a.m.:&#13;
student reported an unidentified&#13;
male subject had acted strangely&#13;
and then followed her. Upon officer's&#13;
arrival, the suspect was gone&#13;
from the area. Student was ad vised&#13;
to immediately contact UPPS if the&#13;
individual bothers her again.&#13;
· Inc 00-976 Medical Assist, University&#13;
Apartments, 1:50 a .m.: student&#13;
called regarding a roommate who&#13;
needed medicaf attention.- Kenosha&#13;
Med Unit 5 transported srudent to&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital.&#13;
Inc 00-977 Driving on Sidewalk, Inner&#13;
Loop, 1:54 a.m.: driver of a vehicle&#13;
which went over the sidewalk by&#13;
the bus shelter and onto Inner Loop&#13;
Road was stopped and a citation&#13;
issued for Driving on a Sidewalk.&#13;
12/22/00&#13;
Inc 00-979 Vagrancy, Molinaro Hall,&#13;
3:29 a.m.: custodial staff reported&#13;
being unsuccessful in asking a visitor&#13;
to leave as the buildings were&#13;
closed. Officer located the subject&#13;
and determined he was homeless.&#13;
Subject was transported to the&#13;
Kenosha Salvation Army shelter&#13;
facility.&#13;
Inc 00-980 Theft, Union, 2:25 p.m.: student&#13;
reported the theft of money&#13;
from his wallet which had been left&#13;
unattended on a counter for a short&#13;
time. No suspects or witnesses at&#13;
this time.&#13;
Inc 00-981 Traffic Violation, Wood&#13;
Road at Inner Loop Road, 9:57 p.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer stopped a driver who&#13;
had made an illegal U-turn in front&#13;
of another vehicle. Investigation&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
revealed the driver had no valid 'driver's&#13;
license. A citation was issued&#13;
for Operating While Suspended-2nd&#13;
offense.&#13;
12/30/00&#13;
Inc 00-989 Traffic Accident, Hit and&#13;
Run, Outer Loop Road by University&#13;
Apartments, 2:07 p.m.: student&#13;
reported his vehicle's back passenger&#13;
door had been struck out was&#13;
uncertain if the damage had&#13;
occurred on or off campus. No witnesses&#13;
to the incident. A self-reporting&#13;
accident form was provided to&#13;
the student.&#13;
12/31/00&#13;
Inc 00-991 Criminal Damage to Property&#13;
/State, Ranger Hall 2:20 p.m.:&#13;
student reported graffiti on the&#13;
walls of the first floor south wing.&#13;
No suspects or witnesses. Residence&#13;
Life will be notified for clean-up of&#13;
the area.&#13;
01/01/01&#13;
Inc 01-01 Fire Alarm, SAC, 9:10 a.m.:&#13;
officers -responded to an alarm but&#13;
could find no smoke or fire in the&#13;
area. System was reset.&#13;
Inc 01-02 Animals, 5000 Block of 7th&#13;
St., 6:10 p.m.: UPPS officer was&#13;
flagged down by an individual who&#13;
haa - found a dog standing in the&#13;
middle of the road. Local humane&#13;
officer was contacted and he took&#13;
custody of the animal.&#13;
01/02/01&#13;
Inc 01-Q3 Fire Alarm, SAC, 10:36 a.m.:&#13;
officers responded to an alarm indicating&#13;
smoke detectors. investigation&#13;
revealed peoi;&gt;le were&#13;
showering in a men s locker room and&#13;
possibly the alarm was set off by the&#13;
steam and heat in that room. Facilities&#13;
Management electrician was&#13;
notified of the incident.&#13;
01/03/01&#13;
Inc 01-04 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Tallent Hall, 12:46 p .m.: staff member&#13;
received a letter, suspicious in&#13;
nature and written in sum a manner&#13;
that it was difficult to understand.&#13;
Continuing investigation.&#13;
In~ 01-05 State Property Damage, Wyllie&#13;
Hall, 1:02 p.m.: staff member&#13;
reported a lamp shade had been&#13;
broken by students playing around.&#13;
01/04/01&#13;
Inc 01-06 Personal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC, 8:33 a.m.: staff member reported&#13;
a contractor had his coat stolen&#13;
from the swimming pool area.&#13;
01/05/01 .&#13;
Inc 01-08 Security Alarm, Wyll~e H~,&#13;
7:06 a.m.: UPPS officer investigating&#13;
an alann found the door unfoc½ed&#13;
b ut no-one in the area . Everything&#13;
seemed in order so alarm was reset&#13;
and area secured.&#13;
01/06/01&#13;
Inc 01-09 Traffic Violation, HWY E at&#13;
Wood Road, 2:13 a.m.: driver was&#13;
issued a citation for mandatory seat&#13;
belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-10 Traffic Violation, HWY E, .4&#13;
mile west of Wood Rd., 2:24 a.m.:&#13;
driver was issued a citation for&#13;
mandatory seat belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01 -11 Traffic Violation-OW!, CI1i&#13;
E &amp; HWY 31, 11:56 p.m.: driver was&#13;
stopped after being_ observed ~riving&#13;
through a s~op light. f?ves~gation&#13;
revealed dnver to be 111toxicated.&#13;
Citations were issued for Op rating&#13;
While Intoxicated, 1st offense,&#13;
Failure to Obey Signal, and Prohibitive&#13;
Alcohol Concentration.&#13;
01/08/01&#13;
Inc 01 -12 Fire Alarm, SAC, 5:44 a.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer respond d to an alarm&#13;
and found a heat detector had been&#13;
activated in a boiler room. No&#13;
smoke or fire was found, however, a&#13;
steam repress valve had released&#13;
causing hot steam to activate th&#13;
detector. Alarm was silenced but&#13;
could not be reset until valve is&#13;
fixed. Facilities Management notified.&#13;
01/09/01&#13;
Inc 01-13 Traffic Viola~on, Outer U?OP&#13;
Road, 2:04 p.m.: driver of a vehicle&#13;
exceeding the speed limit was&#13;
stopped. A citation was issued for&#13;
Mandatory Seat belt violation.&#13;
In~ 01-14 Agency Assi~t, Y~itor Parkmg&#13;
Lot, 3:42 p.m.: mdiv1dual who&#13;
called for a motorist assist was&#13;
found to have three outstanding&#13;
warrants from a local police agency&#13;
f?r conte1!1-pt of court-failure to pay&#13;
fines. Subiect was taken into custody&#13;
and transported to Kenosha County&#13;
jail.&#13;
01/10/0 1&#13;
Inc ~l-16 Traffic Violation, HWY E, .3&#13;
miles east of HWY 31., 5:34 a.m.: driv&#13;
er ~as stopped and cited for&#13;
sp eeding 64 mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01 -1 7 Traffic Violation, HWY 31 at&#13;
HWY E, 5:54 a .m.: driver exceeding&#13;
the speed limit was stopped and a&#13;
ci t ation issued fo r Manoatory Seat&#13;
belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01 -18 Se curity Alarm, Comm. Arts,&#13;
8:02 a .m.: UPPS officer responding&#13;
to an ala rm fo und a staff member&#13;
ha~ neglected to tum off the alarm.&#13;
Officer cleared after checking the&#13;
area.&#13;
01/11/01&#13;
Inc 01-19 Tr~c Violation, Inner Loop&#13;
~oad; ·2 mil~ west o f Woo d Road,&#13;
2.45 a .~.: driver cited for failure to&#13;
obey sign. Driver was going the&#13;
wrong way on a one-wa y road ~&#13;
In~ Ol-~O Worthless Check, Tctllent&#13;
all, 9·15 a.m.: UPPS sent a Notice &amp;&#13;
January 25,&#13;
Demand for Payment to a student&#13;
who paid fo r a parking citation '11h11.&#13;
a " on- uffici nt Funds" check."""&#13;
Inc 01-21 Traffic Violatio!', Outer~&#13;
Road, 12:37 p.m. : dnver ~&#13;
citation f r speeding 44 mph ind&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
01/12/01&#13;
Inc 01-22 Personal Pi:operty '.Theft.&#13;
Comm. Arts p arking lot, 10:05 a.111_.&#13;
student r ported his par~ pernui&#13;
had been tot n from his parked&#13;
vehicle. o damage to the vehicle&#13;
and nothing el missing.&#13;
Inc 01-23 P r~ nal Property Theft.Off&#13;
campus, 10:57 a.m.: staff member&#13;
report d h r parking permit taken&#13;
from h er unlocked vehicle while&#13;
parked off-campus.&#13;
Inc 01-24 Di ord erly Conduct, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, 9:23 p .m.: visitor filed a&#13;
complaint against a student who&#13;
was r port d to be loud and rude&#13;
during a Dungoo n &amp; Dragons game.&#13;
Verba[ w arning was given to the&#13;
indi idual.&#13;
01/13/01&#13;
Inc 01-25 Traffic Violation, Wood&#13;
Road, . l mil no rth of HWY E, 6:14&#13;
a.m.: driver wa. ~ ued a citatioofor&#13;
mandatory a t belt violation.&#13;
Inc 01-26 ir Alarm, SAC, 9:06 a.m.:&#13;
UPPS ffic r re ponded to a report·&#13;
d alarm and found the popcorn&#13;
machin had t off the smoke&#13;
d t t r. Alarm was reset.&#13;
Inc 01-27 tat ' Property Theft, Greenqui&#13;
t Hall, 3: 49 p .m.: individual&#13;
report d th th ff of a state test&#13;
book.I t. The individual who had&#13;
ign d out ~ r the booklet could not&#13;
be l at d and a ppeared to have&#13;
giv n a false nam e and addres.5.&#13;
Inc 01-28 P r nal Property Theft,&#13;
SAC Hallway, 3: 54 p.m.: staff mem·&#13;
b r r p r t d a visitor's leather coat&#13;
had b n tak n from the hallway by&#13;
th P tretti Fi ldhouse. o witnes.Y&#13;
es to th th ft.&#13;
Inc 01-29 Per o nal Property Th~,&#13;
SAC, 5:17 p.m.: visitor reported his&#13;
unatt nd d leather coat was stolen&#13;
from the Petretti Fieldhouse. No&#13;
suspects o r w itn to the theft.&#13;
01/ 15/01&#13;
Inc 01-30 Controlled Sub tances,&#13;
Rang r H all, 3:23 p .m.: UPP5 ~fficer&#13;
r ponded to a report of ~&#13;
being smoked in a dorm room. ~&#13;
occupant w as contact~ ~ sta _&#13;
he believes the moking IS being&#13;
done by his roommate. Student w_as&#13;
advised to contact UPPS if the acfiV·&#13;
i ty occurs again. .&#13;
Inc 01-31 Fire Alarm, Union, 6:54 P~·&#13;
UPPS officer responded to a rep\;&#13;
ed alarm and found the srno&#13;
d et c tor had been activated due :&#13;
the dining room exhaust falls n&#13;
being turned on when the grill w;&#13;
in u se. Exhaust fans were th&#13;
turned on and alarm reset-&#13;
01 /16/01 J.&#13;
Inc 01-32 Traffic Violation, HWY~mile&#13;
s Ea st of HWY 31, 5:~~ 57&#13;
ver issued a citation for :,~v&#13;
mph in a 35 mph zone.&#13;
ra;;;ary 25,&#13;
C..LASSIFIEDS FREE CLASSIFIEDSI&#13;
For a limited time only! The&#13;
RangerNews will print your student&#13;
classifiedads free of charge. Forms&#13;
areavailableat the newsstand in front&#13;
ofthelibrary and between Wyllie and&#13;
GreenquistHall. csu 595-2287 for&#13;
moreiilformation.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an inlormed choice.&#13;
CallAlpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
TripleHOrganic Boarding and&#13;
Horseback Private Lessons.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature. Come ride&#13;
with us. 7417. - 7 Mile Road,&#13;
Racine,WI. (262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?1&#13;
• For the novice to expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a&#13;
clubthis semester. -&#13;
FREETUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by&#13;
thestudents from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the&#13;
following areas of computer related&#13;
software is available: Microsoft&#13;
Office,Using the Internet Effectively,&#13;
E-mail and Creating Web Pages.&#13;
Tutoring will be by appointment.&#13;
Toschedule your appointment, call&#13;
Bobor Chris at 595-2790.&#13;
WantedI&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun,&#13;
Bahamas, Florida, Jamaica and&#13;
Mazatlan. Call Sun Coast Vacations&#13;
for a free brochure and ask how&#13;
you can organize a small group&#13;
and eat, drink, travel free and earn&#13;
cash!Call 1-888-777-4642 or e-mail&#13;
sales@suncoastvacations.com.&#13;
Spring Breakl&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Free&#13;
Food,Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn&#13;
Cash!Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.&#13;
com or call 800-293-1443&#13;
for info.&#13;
SPRINGBREAK 2001!&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL&#13;
TRIPS,EARN CASH, GO FREE!,&#13;
Student Travel Services America's&#13;
# 1 Student Tour' Operator.&#13;
Jamaica,Mexico Bahamas Europe&#13;
Florida. 1-800-648-4849. , ,&#13;
. www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992KATANA600 GSX&#13;
• C$2SOsptoamint-job, piped and jetted. o 01l0. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.rn, or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
~OOOChevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallicblue. Take over lease pay-&#13;
~ts or'buv out. Call (262)878-D769&#13;
SPRIN6Gp.mo.r page (262)487-0785.&#13;
BREAK 20011&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barba- tant to Probation!&#13;
dos, Bahamas, Padre.Free Meals Parole Agent&#13;
FreeDrinks and Up to $100 roo~ • Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
credit Call for special weeks or go and to court.&#13;
to: www.sunsplashtours.com1- • Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
800-426-7710 statements, conducting assessments&#13;
and intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate!Liaison for the&#13;
District Attorney in Racine (paid)&#13;
• -Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals,&#13;
personal advocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Notify victims of their rights,&#13;
explain the criminal justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each&#13;
month wjth one of the law enforcement&#13;
agencies in Racine County&#13;
and provide services to clients off&#13;
site at the various Community&#13;
Policing sites.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Roseann Mason at 595-2606, or. stop&#13;
by the Career Center, Wyllie Dl73:&#13;
Case Management Assistant at&#13;
Vets Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless&#13;
vets with program policies and&#13;
procedures.&#13;
• Schedule residents for group and&#13;
individual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for&#13;
case plan changes, suspensions or&#13;
discharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place -&#13;
Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program&#13;
brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regard·&#13;
ing veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other concerns, and assist resident&#13;
to improve writing skills. •&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the&#13;
homeless populations in Racine&#13;
County. Assist the Homeless&#13;
Assistance Coalition in arranging&#13;
meetings, mail notices, record&#13;
notes of meetings and decisions&#13;
and develop a (ieneric brochure to&#13;
advance the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiter!&#13;
Retention Specialist .&#13;
• Distribute material to public&#13;
through employers, public service&#13;
groups, community grOUPS, etc:&#13;
• Present to pubic servlce orgamzarions,&#13;
and community (iroups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e, newspaper&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight&#13;
the need of foster pa!ents.&#13;
• Organize foster farmly achvlties for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assis-&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills Program:&#13;
teach 14 core living skills to 17-23&#13;
year aids.&#13;
• Street Outreach: Hand out hygiene&#13;
products to leens who are out on&#13;
the streets; develop a rapport with&#13;
them and encourage them to seek&#13;
counseling services.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid: answer the&#13;
hotline; assist with group facilitation&#13;
work; work 1:1 with teens.&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Force: teach&#13;
teens about alternatives to gangs&#13;
and crime; teach material on STDs,&#13;
teen pregnancy prevention, how to&#13;
fill out job applications, etc.&#13;
Walker's Point Center fo'r the Arts&#13;
in Milwaukee is looking for&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work directly&#13;
with elementary-aged children in&#13;
their art classes, which are taught&#13;
by professional artists.&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations Intern&#13;
_ Design and distribute publicity;&#13;
market surveys, advertise programs;&#13;
and fund raise.&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows,&#13;
contract artists, handle artwork and&#13;
prepare written catalogs and labels.&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence,&#13;
research and planning. .&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
Racine literarY Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will&#13;
be held on the following Saturdays:&#13;
January 27 and February 3 from&#13;
8:45a.m. -4:15p.m. and February 10&#13;
from 8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit organization that provides&#13;
a 24-hour crisis line and&#13;
response team for victims of sexual&#13;
assault will conduct a 15-hour&#13;
training workshop in the following&#13;
dates from 6p.m. - 9p.m.: Feb. 15,&#13;
Feb. 22, March 1, 8 and 15. Each&#13;
advocate is asked to volunteer for&#13;
Page 11 A&#13;
one shift per month .&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking&#13;
for a volunteer who will work in a'&#13;
team of two people to present personal&#13;
safety puppet shows to&#13;
_ Racine kindergarten children in&#13;
their schools. No experience is necessary.&#13;
1-5 hours per month. The&#13;
volunteer will gain experience communicating&#13;
with children, will&#13;
familiarize her/himself with classroom&#13;
dynamics, and will know&#13;
s/he is educating children about&#13;
important topics such as "stranger&#13;
danger" and "good touch/bad&#13;
touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoring!&#13;
• Almost every school and community&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
would like college tutors to help&#13;
their youth in elementary school&#13;
through high school with their&#13;
studies. Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District's ESLprogram is in particular&#13;
need for a tutor to work with a&#13;
'student .who speaks Chinese. '&#13;
Opportunities exist both during the&#13;
school day as well as during the&#13;
late afternoon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
for various positions for&#13;
the spring 2001 semester.&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
Applications and information&#13;
are available in&#13;
The Ranger office located&#13;
in the lower level of Wyllie&#13;
Hall across from the&#13;
Career Center and Cam-&#13;
, pus Bookstore.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Sarah or Brenda&#13;
at 595 2287. Meetings are&#13;
Mondays from&#13;
Noon-lp.m.&#13;
January 25,&#13;
CLASSIFIED S&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
for a limited time only! The&#13;
Ranger ews wilJ print your student&#13;
classified ads free of charge. Forms&#13;
are available at the newsstand in front&#13;
of the library and b tw en Wyllie and&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Call 595-2287 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Cent r. 637-8323.&#13;
Triple H Organic Boarding and&#13;
Horseback Private Lessons.&#13;
• Be inspired b y nature. Come ride&#13;
with us. 74 17 - 7 Mile Road,&#13;
Racine, WI. (262) 6 1-2964.&#13;
Chess?I&#13;
• For the novice to expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-70-16 to start a&#13;
club this sem ster.&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring i being ffered by&#13;
the student fr om Student 1i chnology&#13;
Corpo ration. Tutoring n the&#13;
following area of computer related&#13;
software i available: Microsoft&#13;
Office, Using the Intern t Effectively,&#13;
E-mail and Creating Wi b Pages.&#13;
Tutoring will b by appointment.&#13;
To scheaule your appointment, call&#13;
Bob or Chri at 595-2790.&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
• Sp.ring Br ak r ! Cancun,&#13;
Bahamas, Flo rida, Jamaica and&#13;
Mazatlan. Call Sun Coast Vacations&#13;
for a free brochure and a k how&#13;
you can organize a small group&#13;
and eat, drink, travel free and earn&#13;
cash! Call 1-8 -777-4642 or e-mail&#13;
sales@sunco astvacation .com.&#13;
Spring Break!&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Free&#13;
Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Tr avel Free and Earn&#13;
Cash! Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.&#13;
com o r call 800-293-1443&#13;
for info.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 20011&#13;
'TRIPSHiring On-Campus Rees, SELL&#13;
, EARN CASH, GO FREE!,&#13;
Student Travel Services, America's&#13;
# 1 Student Tour Operator.&#13;
JFI~ica, Mexico, Bahamas, nurope,&#13;
onda. 1-800-648-4849.&#13;
www.gospringbr eak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• C$250oustom paint-job, p ie ed and jetted.&#13;
0130. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
!OO0 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buy out. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
s;fterRIN6Gp.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
BREAK 20011&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados,&#13;
Ba~amas, Padre.Free Meals,&#13;
Free. Drinks and Up to $100 room&#13;
credit Call for special weeks or go&#13;
to: www.sunsplashtours.com 1-&#13;
800-426-7710&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Roseann Mason at 595-2606, or stop&#13;
by the Career Center, Wyllie Dl73.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at&#13;
Vets Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist _new (formerly) homeless&#13;
vets with program policies and&#13;
procedures.&#13;
• _Sc~e1ule residents for group and&#13;
md1v1dual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be. a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for&#13;
case plan changes, suspensions or&#13;
discharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place -&#13;
Southern Center&#13;
• As ist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals·&#13;
with the compila tion, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program&#13;
brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other concerns, and assist resident&#13;
to improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the&#13;
homeless populations in Racine&#13;
County. Assist the Homeless&#13;
Assistance Coalition in arranging&#13;
meetings, mail notices, record&#13;
notes of meetings and decisions&#13;
and develop a generic brochure to&#13;
advance the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiter/&#13;
Reten tion Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public&#13;
through employers, public service&#13;
groups, community groups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service organizations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create new materiaf (1.e. newspaper&#13;
advertisel!).ents) to best highlight&#13;
the need of fos_ter pa~~~-&#13;
• Organize fo ster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probation/&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
and to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
statements, conducting assessments&#13;
and intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate/Liaison for the&#13;
District Attorney In Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals,&#13;
personal advocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Noti_fy vic~m~ of_ their rights,&#13;
explam the cmrunal Justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each&#13;
month with one of the law enforcement&#13;
agencies in Racine County&#13;
and provide services to clients off&#13;
site at the various Community&#13;
Policing sites.&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills Program:&#13;
teach 14 core living skills to 17-23&#13;
year olds.&#13;
• Street Outreach: Hand out hygiene&#13;
products to teens who are out on&#13;
the streets; develop a rapport with&#13;
them and encourage them to seek&#13;
counseling services.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid: answer the&#13;
hotline; assist with group facilitation&#13;
work; work 1:1 with teens.&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Force: teach&#13;
teens about alternatives to gangs&#13;
and crime; teach material on STDs,&#13;
teen pregnancy prevention, how to&#13;
fill out joo applications, etc.&#13;
Walker's Point Center for the Arts&#13;
in Milwaukee is looking for&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work directly&#13;
with elementary-aged children in&#13;
their art classes, which are taught&#13;
by professional artists.&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations Intern&#13;
- Design and distribute publicity;&#13;
market surveys, advertise programs;&#13;
and fund raise.&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows,&#13;
contract artists, handle artwork and&#13;
prepare written catalogs and labels.&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence,&#13;
research and planning.&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
Racine Literary Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will ·&#13;
be held on the following Saturdays:&#13;
January 27 and February 3 from&#13;
8:45a.m. - 4:15p.m. and February 10&#13;
from 8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit organization that provides&#13;
a 24-hour crisis line and&#13;
response team for victims of sexual&#13;
assault will conduct a 15-hour&#13;
training workshop in the following&#13;
dates from 6p.m. - 9p.m.: Feb. 15,&#13;
Feb . 22, March 1, 8 and 15. Each&#13;
advocate is asked to volunteer for&#13;
Page 11&#13;
one shift per month.&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking&#13;
for a volunteer who will work in a&#13;
team of two people to present personal&#13;
safety puppet shows to&#13;
Racine kindergarten children in&#13;
their schools. No experience is necessary.&#13;
1-5 hours per month. The&#13;
volnnteer will gain experience communicating&#13;
with children, will&#13;
familiarize her/himself with classroom&#13;
dynamics, and will know&#13;
s/he is educating children about&#13;
important topics such as "stranger&#13;
danger" ana "good touch/bad&#13;
touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoring!&#13;
• Almost every school and community&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
would like college tutors to help&#13;
their youth in elementary school&#13;
through high school with their&#13;
studies. Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District's ESL program is in particular&#13;
need for a tutor to work with a&#13;
student who speaks Chinese.&#13;
· Opportunities exist both during the&#13;
school day as well as during the&#13;
late afternoon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
for various positions for&#13;
the spring 2001 semester.&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
Applications and information&#13;
are available in&#13;
The Ranger office located&#13;
in the lower level of Wyllie&#13;
Hall across from the&#13;
Career Center and Cam.&#13;
pus Bookstore.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Sarah or Brenda&#13;
at 595 2287. Meetings are&#13;
Mondays from&#13;
Noon-lp.m.&#13;
App I i cat i o n s&#13;
Admission Office of Residence Life,&#13;
Student Health and Counseling, Ranger Hall&#13;
Reception ·Desk, University Apartments ·&#13;
Reception Desk, Student Activities.&#13;
Deadline: February 16, 2001.&#13;
Student&#13;
Leadership&#13;
. Recruitment&#13;
Exploring New Worlds:&#13;
Leadership in the&#13;
New Millennium&#13;
Peer Health Educators&#13;
/&#13;
Orientation Leaders</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>;:&#13;
Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
February 1, 2001&#13;
UW-Parkside librarv Computer lab Gets a Facelilt·&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
For those of you who think nothing&#13;
is done around the University over&#13;
• break, think again. The library computer&#13;
lab has a new look, including&#13;
carpet, paint, and a new Macintosh&#13;
computer lab. The new Macintosh lab&#13;
features state-of-the-art G4 computers,&#13;
that will be used by students as well as&#13;
by several classes that are taught here&#13;
at UW-Parkside. "The new Macintosh&#13;
computers will be used for a lot of&#13;
Teacher Education courses, as well as&#13;
some desktop publishing and art classes;'&#13;
loan Default&#13;
Rate Graduallv&#13;
Decreasing&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
When students borrow money, they&#13;
are obligated to repay it. There is a&#13;
default rate at UW-Parkside, but it is&#13;
'ower now than in previous years. The&#13;
main reason for this is that students,&#13;
once they graduate, are able to get good&#13;
jobs, keep them, and then repay the&#13;
money tliey borrowed. A good economy&#13;
is key in keeping the default rate&#13;
low.&#13;
According to Al Crist, spokesman&#13;
for the Department of Financial Aid,&#13;
"They remind the students to borrow&#13;
only what they need, so they have no&#13;
problem of repaying the loans."&#13;
If the university has too high of a&#13;
default rate, Crist said, the government&#13;
will refuse it the right to lend money to&#13;
students. The University loses the ability&#13;
to provide federal subsidized loans,&#13;
which will decrease enrollment, since&#13;
many students need to borrow in order&#13;
to afford to attend college. It is important&#13;
for students to repay their loans, so&#13;
they do not end up with a lot of debt&#13;
and bad credit. Bad credit can prevent&#13;
a student from buying a home or even&#13;
renting an apartment. Students should&#13;
keep this in mind when borrowing, in&#13;
case they borrow more than they can&#13;
payback.&#13;
said Instructional Program Manager&#13;
Chris Robaidek. The lab also received&#13;
new network wiring, which will help&#13;
the computers to run faster.&#13;
But most new computers are being&#13;
shipped without an important feature&#13;
that most of us use daily: a floppy disc&#13;
drive. Believe it or not, the floppy disc&#13;
is becoming obsolete due to tlie popularity&#13;
and efficiency of the. Zip 100 disc&#13;
(holds over 90 floppies).&#13;
According to Robaidek, the technology&#13;
fee each student" pays every&#13;
semester paid for the new computers.&#13;
The carpet and paint was paid for out&#13;
of a general fund, which Robaidek&#13;
hopes will go to make even more&#13;
improvements in the computer lab&#13;
this summer.&#13;
Students should enjoy the new&#13;
computers, and what they will be able&#13;
to do on them. The new upgrades&#13;
should be a benefit for the students,&#13;
and help UW-Parkside keep up with"&#13;
the always improving technology that&#13;
is available.&#13;
The sights and sounds of an authentic&#13;
Pow Wow can be seen and heard at&#13;
UW·Parkside this Saturday.&#13;
The all new computer lab and (inset) a&#13;
closeup of the Apple G4 computer&#13;
UWP Hosts Pow WowSaturdav, Feb.3&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
UW-Parkside will hold its first inter-'&#13;
tribal pow wow event on Saturday&#13;
February 3. The theme of this year's&#13;
pow wow is "Honoring the Children,"&#13;
where the children of war veterans can&#13;
gather together to join in on honoring&#13;
all those who fought in any wars anywhere.&#13;
The respect shown to veterans is an&#13;
integral part of the Native American&#13;
culture. Veterans are honored because&#13;
those warriors were willing to give&#13;
their lives so that others may live.&#13;
The pow wow aims to bring together&#13;
Native Americans in the school as well&#13;
as in the community to celebrate their&#13;
Indian heritage. Professor Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti-Hughes said, "A pow wow is&#13;
special because it has certain ceremonies&#13;
attached to it. It is a formal&#13;
gathering that brings a message to the&#13;
community of welcome. Once people&#13;
know there is a pow wow, whether&#13;
they are Indian or not, they'll want to&#13;
come to learn and to share."&#13;
Wayne Swiftbird, a Host Drum and&#13;
Host Elder of the Lakota tribe located&#13;
in South Dakota, will be leading the&#13;
ceremonial prayers. The Grand Entry,&#13;
an honor guard for all veterans, will&#13;
follow these prayers. A storyteller of&#13;
the Ojibwe trib.e will also be present.&#13;
There will also be an intertribal dance&#13;
where everyone is encouraged to participate.&#13;
Many Native American drummers&#13;
will be present wearing their&#13;
traditional regalia. The festivities also&#13;
include a large feast.&#13;
Informational booths will be set up&#13;
that may answer questions people&#13;
have concerning treaty rights, coalition&#13;
to fight mining in Wlsconsin, and the&#13;
National Coalition for Native American&#13;
Foster Parents.&#13;
The event will be located in upper,&#13;
middle, and lower Main Place and will&#13;
take place from noon to 9 p.m. The two&#13;
grand entries are at Ipm and 7pm.&#13;
Admission is $3 for general public, $1&#13;
for students, elders, and children. The&#13;
cost of the feast is $3 for general public,&#13;
$1 for students, seniors, and children.&#13;
For more information contact Carol&#13;
Lee Saffioti-Hughes at ext. 2380.&#13;
Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
February 1, 2001 ~ lY/_ Issue 16 Vol. 31&#13;
-------------------~rr =----------------&#13;
OW-Parkside librarv Computer Lab Gets a Facelift·&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
For those of you who think nothing&#13;
is done around the University over&#13;
break, think again. The library computer&#13;
lab has a new look, including&#13;
carpet, paint, and a new Macintosh&#13;
computer lab. The new Macintosh lab&#13;
features state-of-the-art G4 computers,&#13;
·that will be used by students as well as&#13;
by several classes that are taught here&#13;
at UW-Parkside. "The new Macintosh&#13;
computers will be used for a lot of&#13;
Teacher Education courses, as well as&#13;
some desktop publishing and art classes,"&#13;
loan Delault&#13;
Rate Gradua11v&#13;
Decreasing&#13;
By: Sheree Homer&#13;
When students borrow money, they&#13;
are obligated to repay it. There is a&#13;
default rate at ~Parkside, but it is&#13;
1ower now than in previous years. The&#13;
main reason for tfus is that students,&#13;
once they graduate, are able to get good&#13;
jobs, keep them, and then repay the&#13;
money tliey borrowed. A good economy&#13;
is key in keeping the default rate&#13;
low.&#13;
According to Al Crist, spokesman&#13;
for the Department of Financial Aid,&#13;
"They remind the students to borrow&#13;
only what they need, so they have no&#13;
problem of repaying the loans."&#13;
If the university has too high of a&#13;
default rate, Crist said, the government&#13;
will refuse it the right to lend money to&#13;
students. The University loses the ability&#13;
to provide federal subsidized loans,&#13;
which will decrease emollment, since&#13;
many students need to borrow in order&#13;
to afford to attend college. It is important&#13;
for students to repay their loans, so&#13;
they do not end up with a lot of debt&#13;
and bad credit. Bad credit can prevent&#13;
a student from buying a home or even&#13;
renting an apartment. Students should&#13;
keep this in mind when borrowing, in&#13;
case they borrow more than they can&#13;
payback.&#13;
said Instructional Program Manager&#13;
Chris Robaidek. The lab also received&#13;
new network wiring, which will help&#13;
the computers to run faster.&#13;
But most new computers are being&#13;
shipped without an important feature&#13;
that most of us use daily: a floppy disc&#13;
drive. Believe it or not, the floppy disc&#13;
is becoming obsolete due to toe popularity&#13;
and efficiency of the Zip 100 disc&#13;
(holds over 90 floppies).&#13;
According to Robaidek, the technology&#13;
fee each student · pays every&#13;
semester paid for the new computers.&#13;
The carpet and paint was paid for out&#13;
of a general fund, which Robaidek&#13;
hopes will go to make even more&#13;
improvements in the computer lab&#13;
this summer.&#13;
Students should enjoy the new&#13;
computers, and what they will be able&#13;
to do on them. The new upgrades&#13;
should be a benefit for the s~dents,&#13;
and help UW-Parkside keep up with&#13;
the always improving technology that&#13;
is available.&#13;
The sights and sounds of an authentic&#13;
Pow Wow can be seen and heard at&#13;
UW-Parkside this Saturday.&#13;
The all new computer lab and (inset) a&#13;
closeup of the Apple G4 computer&#13;
DWP Hosts Pow Wow Saturdav, Feb. 3&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
UW-Parkside will hold its first inter-· tribal pow wow event on Saturday,, February 3. The theme of this year's&#13;
pow wow is "Honoring the Children,"&#13;
where the children of war veterans can&#13;
gather together to join in on honoring&#13;
all those who fought in any wars anywhere.&#13;
&#13;
The respect shown to veterans is an&#13;
integral part of the Native American&#13;
culture. Veterans are honored because&#13;
those warriors were willing to give&#13;
their lives so that others may live.&#13;
The pow wow aims to bring together&#13;
Native Americans in the school as well&#13;
as in the community to celebrate their&#13;
Indian heritage. Professor Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti-Hughes said, "A pow wow is&#13;
special because it has certain ceremonies&#13;
attached to it. It is a formal&#13;
gathering that brings a message to the&#13;
community of welcome. Once people&#13;
know there is a pow wow, wbether&#13;
they are Indian or not, they'll want to&#13;
come to learn and to share."&#13;
Wayne Swiftbird, a Host Drum and&#13;
Host Elder of the Laj&lt;.ota tribe located&#13;
in South Dakota, will be leading the&#13;
ceremonial prayers. The Grand Entry,&#13;
an honor .guard for all veterans, will&#13;
follow these prayers. A storyteller of&#13;
the Ojibwe tribe will also be present.&#13;
There will also be an intertribal dance&#13;
where everyone is encouraged to participate.&#13;
Many Native American drummers&#13;
will be present wearing their&#13;
traditional regalia. The festivities also&#13;
include a large feast.&#13;
Informational booths will be set up&#13;
that may answer questions peopfe&#13;
have concerning treaty rights, coalition&#13;
to fight mining in Wisconsin, and the&#13;
National Coalition for Native American&#13;
Foster Parents.&#13;
The event will be located in upper,&#13;
middle, and lower Main Place and will&#13;
take place from noon to 9 p.m. The two&#13;
grand entries are at 1 pm and 7pm.&#13;
Admission is $3 for general public, $1&#13;
for students, elders, and children. The&#13;
cost of the feast is $3 for general public,&#13;
$1 for students, seniors, and children.&#13;
For more information contact Carol&#13;
Lee Saffioti-Hughes at ext. 2380. &#13;
--&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 1, 2001&#13;
I n s i d e&#13;
3 letter to the Editor&#13;
UW-P hosts Women inPolitics seminar featuring U.S.&#13;
Rep. Tammy Baldwin, State Sen. Mary Panzer, and others&#13;
4 UW-P Mini Courses&#13;
5 Entenainment&#13;
Arts: ALIVE presents the physical artistry of Ailey IT&#13;
6 Dean's list •&#13;
8 Sports&#13;
Profile: Brian Coffman, men's basketball game tonight!&#13;
9 China Tour&#13;
Earn credit this summer while touring China&#13;
10 Police Beat&#13;
11 Classilieds&#13;
Editor of the week: Brenda Dunham&#13;
•&#13;
rOffice&#13;
'eD-139C&#13;
ne: (262) 595-2287&#13;
: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursday the se dents of the University of WlSOOllSifr-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for Its editorial POli§i •&#13;
Letters to the Editor Ii :The r .....••...••......~ tters .. rs should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
th~Ranger office ~Lb-139C) . tte~typed and .... the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
~\eading or libelous content. Letters that fail to ooffiJ;lly Will published. For publication purposes, author's name can be withheld,&#13;
but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the nght to edit all letters.&#13;
at t&#13;
o&#13;
Thin&#13;
Continuing Events:&#13;
• Parkside National Small Print Exhibition, through Feb. 22; free, gallery&#13;
hours: Mon./Thur. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tue./Wed. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
February 1&#13;
• Black History Month Kickoff, 11:45 a.m. to 1p.m., Main Place, free.&#13;
• Women's &amp; men's basketball vs. Northern Kentucky, women's game: 5:30&#13;
p.m., men's game 7:45 p.m., DeSimone Gymnasium; UWP students free,&#13;
tickets: adults $5, high school students &amp; kids 14 and under $1.&#13;
• Infant Blanket Drive for Kenosha Hospital, through April 30, drop off small&#13;
knit or flannel blanketsin box near Greenquist 216, Sponsor:&#13;
Students in Action&#13;
February 3&#13;
• UW-Parkside Pow-Wow: "Honoring the Children," noon to 9 p.m. traditional&#13;
and educational Pow Wow w / dancers, singers, cultural exhibits,&#13;
native vendors, artists, and storytellers, grand entries at 1 and 7 p.m., $3 for&#13;
adults, $1 for students, children, and seniors, call ext. 2380_&#13;
• Women's &amp; men's basketball vs. Indianapolis, women's game: 1p.m., men's&#13;
game: 3:15 p.m., De Simone Gymnasium; UWP students free, tickets: adults&#13;
$5, high school students &amp; kids 14 and under $1.&#13;
• Black History Month: Gospel Explosion, 6 p.m., Com. Arts Theatre, free.&#13;
February 5&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious ~~sues: "Do the Forces of Modernity Produce a&#13;
Decline in ReligIOUSBelief? w /Prof. Wayne Thompson, Carthage College,&#13;
noon, Union 104-106, free and open to the public.&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: Ireland: Its Genius &amp; Its Tragedy, 7:30 p.m., Com.&#13;
Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $10, students &amp; seniors $5, available in RangerCard&#13;
office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
February 6&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: "Love, Passion, &amp; "Sorry, I've Got a Headache," 7:30&#13;
p.m., Com. Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $10, students &amp; seniors $5, available&#13;
m RangerCard office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
• Dan Banda Lecture Series: one-hour presentations on documentary filmmaking,&#13;
w /Isabel Preske: Introduction To Editing System, 6 p.m., Greenquist&#13;
119. -&#13;
February 7&#13;
• Noon Concert: Mark Eichner, trumpet, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free.&#13;
• Soup and Substance: "Diets Don't Work," noon, Student Union rooms 104-&#13;
106, free, w /free soup, bread, and crackers served.&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: Pub Night Show, 8 p.m., Union Square, free&#13;
• ~lack History Month: Apollo Show, 8 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admisSIOn$3.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. '&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is dosed for renovation.&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 1, 2001&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
I n s e&#13;
letter to the Editor&#13;
UW-P hosts Women in Politics seminar featuring U.S.&#13;
Rep. Tammy Baldwin, State Sen. Mary Panzer, and others&#13;
UW-P Mini courses&#13;
Entenainment&#13;
Arts: ALIVE presents the physical artistry of Ailey II&#13;
Dean's list •&#13;
Sports&#13;
Profile: Brian Coffman, men's basketball game tonight!&#13;
China Tour&#13;
Earn credit this summer while touring China&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Editor of the week: Brenda Dunham&#13;
R~po .&#13;
T :on~ Payton&#13;
DeriaCoady&#13;
Gina Ciard,o ·&#13;
Sheree Homer Rang r Office&#13;
Zach Robertson Wyllie D-139C&#13;
Lynn Garcia phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
Dan Frake fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
j f . . c,. f .. f The Ranger IS published every Thursday ~ the ~ by students of the University of W1SCOnsin-Parkside who are solely responsible for its editonal policy and confl!nt. l . f • Letters to the Edit'?r p&lt;Jlicy: The Ran er rs to thell&lt;!ittn'. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C). . typed and indtme the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from nusleadmg or libelous oontent. Letters to coml'IY Will not be published. For publication purposes, author's name can be with• held, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the nght to edit all letters.&#13;
Thin at t&#13;
0&#13;
Continuing Events:&#13;
• Parkside National Small Print Exhibition, through Feb. 22; free, gallery&#13;
hours: Mon./Thur. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tue./Wed. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
February 1&#13;
• Black History Month Kickoff, 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m., Main Place, free.&#13;
• Women's &amp; men's basketball vs. Northern Kentucky, women's game: 5:30&#13;
p.m., men's game 7:45 p.m., De.Simone Gymnasium; UWP students free,&#13;
tickets: adults $5, high school students &amp; kids 14 and under $1.&#13;
• Infant Blanket Drive for Kenosha Hospital, through April 30, drop off small&#13;
knit or flannel blankets in box near Greenquist 216, Sponsor:&#13;
Students in Action&#13;
February 3&#13;
• UW-Parkside Pow-Wow: "Honoring the Children," noon to 9 p.m. traditional&#13;
and educational Pow Wow w / dancers, singers, cultural exhibits,&#13;
native vendors, artists, and storytellers, grand entries at 1 and 7 p.m., $3 for&#13;
adults, $1 for students, children, and seniors, call ext. 2380.&#13;
• Women's &amp; men's basketball vs. Indianapolis, women's game: 1 p.m., men's&#13;
game: 3:15 p .m., De Simone Gymnasium; UWP students free, tickets: adults&#13;
$5, high scliool students &amp; kids 14 and under $1.&#13;
• Black History Month: Gospel Explosion, 6 p.m., Com. Arts Theatre, free.&#13;
February 5&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious Issues: "Do the Forces of Modernity Produce a&#13;
Decline in Religious Belief?" w /Prof. Wayne Thompson, Carthage College,&#13;
noon, Union 104-106, free and open to the public.&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: Ireland: Its Genius &amp; Its Tragedy, 7:30 p.m., Com.&#13;
Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $10, students &amp; seniors $5, available in RangerCard&#13;
office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
February 6&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: "Love, Passion, &amp; "Sorry, I've Got a Headache," 7:30&#13;
p.m., Com. Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $10, students &amp; seniors $5, available&#13;
m RangerCard office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
• Dan Banda Lecture Series: one-hour presentations on documentary filmmaking,&#13;
w /Isabel Preske: Introduction To Editing System, 6 p.m., Greenquist&#13;
119.&#13;
February 7&#13;
• Noon Concert: Mark Eichner, trumpet, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free.&#13;
• Soup and Substance: "Diets Don't Work," noon, Student Union rooms 104-&#13;
106, free, w/free soup, bread, and crackers served.&#13;
• Irish Actors Theatre Co.: Pub Night Show, 8 p.m., Union Square, free&#13;
• ~lack History Month: Apollo Show, 8 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, admission&#13;
$3.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thll!sday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Fnday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is closed for renovation. &#13;
PE &gt;&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-rarkside Page 3&#13;
Llnlr 10 1111Edllor&#13;
Dear Editors,&#13;
, This is to request two items benefiting&#13;
the student body: from The Ranger:&#13;
First, a small legend on the front page&#13;
of The Ranger referring to the&#13;
topics!subj"cts &amp; page # 's where mentioned&#13;
WIthin The Ranger. Second, a&#13;
stable small area for a paragraph referring&#13;
to one recent breakthrough in our&#13;
world mentioned weekly.&#13;
Isuggest The Ranger is widely read&#13;
by our student body. With this in mind,&#13;
the information in it is important. It is&#13;
important for informing, educating,&#13;
and yes, advertising. Advertising the&#13;
best of the necessary services and&#13;
goods for the students of Parkside.&#13;
The Ranger is informing our college&#13;
student for the today and for the&#13;
tomorrow.&#13;
That said the next step is change. We&#13;
use Parkside as a tool for change. College&#13;
is the embodiment of change and&#13;
always for the good. It is for survival,&#13;
ease of living, and comfort. There will&#13;
be proper change with control and&#13;
directed order.&#13;
Order is what Iam petitioning you&#13;
to do. Inform the student body in an&#13;
up-to-date, ordered format, one lead&#13;
connecting to another.&#13;
Students at Parkside are busy at&#13;
their classes, studies, and just plain&#13;
being a part of this ever-growing institution.&#13;
Well I say to you, 'help us, organize&#13;
your informative works so the students&#13;
more efficiently and to their betterment&#13;
connect directly to the recent&#13;
events, club announcements, special&#13;
gatherings, charity events. etc.&#13;
Inform us as you have been and utilize&#13;
a legend to reach us. Include a&#13;
breakthrough each week found in the&#13;
different facets of our world to keep us&#13;
in wonder. Thank you for your attention&#13;
and time.&#13;
Student and reader of The Ranger&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Pedro Rodarte&#13;
Women .In Politics&#13;
Seminar Here Feb. 10&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the conference&#13;
"Women in Politics: Empowering&#13;
Women in the Political Process," Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 10. Featuring U.S. Rep. Tammy&#13;
Baldwin, State Sen. Mary Panzer and&#13;
other politically successful women, the&#13;
program will allow participants to&#13;
explore political office with women who&#13;
have won elections, learn the basics of&#13;
running a successful campaign, and&#13;
help develop their advocacy and organizmg&#13;
skills.&#13;
Hosted by Conference Chair Pamela&#13;
Keating, participants will hear Rep.&#13;
Baldwin answer the question "Wliy&#13;
Should Women Get Involved in Politics."Baldwin,&#13;
a Democrat from Wisconsin's&#13;
Second Congressional District, was&#13;
the first woman elected to represent the&#13;
state in the U.S. House. Following lunch,&#13;
State Sen. Panzer, Republican floor&#13;
leader in the Senate will address "How&#13;
Women Can Influence the Political&#13;
Process."&#13;
Separate training sessions will examine&#13;
how woman and activists can make&#13;
a difference in politics. Others will&#13;
explore issue advocacy and grass roots&#13;
organizing and ways to get women&#13;
elected to public office.&#13;
Training sessions will be led by Susan&#13;
Mudd, state director of Citizens for a&#13;
Better Environment; and M. Jeanne&#13;
DeRose and Kathleen Falk, state representatives&#13;
in the National Women's&#13;
Political Caucus. Other panelists and&#13;
presenters include State Sen. Kim&#13;
Plache, State Representatives Bonnie&#13;
LadWig and 'Samantha Starzyk,&#13;
Kenosha City Council President Katherine&#13;
Marks, and UW-Parkside Political&#13;
Science Professor Anne Gurnack.&#13;
Cost of the day-long conference is $25&#13;
per person and $10 for full-time students.&#13;
This includes materials, continental&#13;
breakfast and lunch. Scholarships are&#13;
available. The program will be held at&#13;
the Student Union. A reception hosted&#13;
by UW-Parkside Chancellor Jack Keating&#13;
will follow the seminar.&#13;
For a registration form and more&#13;
information, call Mark Marlaire, UWParkside&#13;
Continuing Education, at ext,&#13;
2312 or e-mail marlaire®uwp.edu.&#13;
U.S. Representative Tammy Baldwin&#13;
.1Lovell Dal at'the PI RC&#13;
By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
How does a student plan for a day&#13;
at the PARC? Well, just ask Jacquelyn&#13;
Haley-Renaud, Parkside Academics&#13;
Resource Center (PARe) Coordinator.&#13;
On recent inquiries of the PARC facility,&#13;
Ms. Haley-Renaud informed that&#13;
the PARC would be currently under&#13;
renovation until the end of January.&#13;
There will now be new IBM Pentium&#13;
III Processors to replace the old computers,&#13;
as well as new furniture and&#13;
tables for a more comfortable climate&#13;
for students. -&#13;
Although they have a fresher environment,&#13;
the PARC always welcomes&#13;
new academic tutors. The majority of&#13;
tutors now are of writing and mathematics&#13;
instruction, but PARC has been&#13;
in search for business, computer science&#13;
and foreign language tutors,&#13;
especially Spanish tutors. Every year&#13;
PARC loses consultants to graduation&#13;
and is always in need of filling positions&#13;
so as to help the student populace&#13;
that might be in need of assistance&#13;
in a certain subject.&#13;
Some are so moved by their experience&#13;
in helping students that they&#13;
progress on to becoming full-fledged&#13;
teachers themselves. Most recently,&#13;
two former tutors, one majoring in&#13;
mathematics and the other in physics&#13;
and chemistry, have chosen the path&#13;
of becoming a professor. It was their&#13;
decision from tutoring that led them&#13;
into the education field.&#13;
Another proud announcement that&#13;
PARC coordinator, Ms. HaleyRenaud,&#13;
mentions is that they take&#13;
pride in employing a very diverse&#13;
staff of tutors from many nations. Our&#13;
international students are a very positive&#13;
addition to PARC as it shows its&#13;
highly sociable side. The PARC staff .&#13;
includes approximately 60-75 parttime&#13;
employees from countries such&#13;
as Ethiopia, Sri Lanka, India, South&#13;
America, Armenia, Russia, Korea and&#13;
many more. To quote Ms. HaleyRenaud,&#13;
"We are a very diverse student&#13;
tutoring population serving a&#13;
much wider range of student body&#13;
population."&#13;
For those students who plan on a&#13;
day at the PARC, they are open Monday&#13;
through Friday. Their hours are&#13;
Mon. and Tues. from 9-6pm, Wed. and&#13;
Thurs. from 9-9pm, and Friday 9-12&#13;
noon. If students wish to contact the&#13;
PARC office, call 595-2044. Stop by&#13;
and Visit the PARC at Wyllie Hall&#13;
0180.&#13;
SOC N"HT&#13;
FRIPAY NIGHT, FE8RUARY 2, AFTER 6:00 PII, YOU CAN&#13;
CASH IN ON Tilt FOUJ)WING 50~ SPECIttI.S: t2 Ot. 1I1l1ER&#13;
im 1JtW1 8EER, 12 01.. SOFT PRINKS, CENE1W. PARKING,&#13;
6RANDSTIINP IIPllfSSION, liVE RACE PR06/(/111, I/(/T 1J06$&#13;
I ASSORTEfJ 8116$ 01 CHin&#13;
(. OOORS OPEN ff:OO AM&#13;
.,. SIMULCASTING BEGINS AT ":30 AM&#13;
.:. LIVE RACING ACTION AT 7:#5 PM&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-J_&gt;arkside Page3&#13;
LIDlr II 1111 Ellllar&#13;
Dear Editors,&#13;
This is to request two items benefiting&#13;
the student body from The Ranger:&#13;
First, a small legend on the front page&#13;
of The Ranger referring to the&#13;
topics/subjects &amp; page# 's where mentioned&#13;
within The Ranger. Second, a&#13;
stable small area for a paragraph referring&#13;
to one recent breakthrougb in our&#13;
world mentioned weekly.&#13;
I suggest The Ranger is widely read&#13;
by our student body. With this in mind,&#13;
the information in it is important. It is&#13;
important for informing, educating,&#13;
and yes, advertising. Advertising th.e&#13;
best of the necessary services and&#13;
goods for the students of Parkside. · The Ranger is informing our college&#13;
student for the today and for tne&#13;
tomorrow.&#13;
That said the next step is change. We&#13;
use Parkside as a tool for change. College&#13;
is the embodiment of change and&#13;
always for the good. It is for survival,&#13;
ease of living, and comfort. There will&#13;
be proper change with control and&#13;
directed order.&#13;
Order is what I am petitioning you&#13;
to do. Inform the student body in an&#13;
up-to-date, ordered format, one lead&#13;
connecting to another.&#13;
Students at Parkside are busy at&#13;
their classes, studies, and just plain&#13;
being a part of this ever-growing Institution.&#13;
Well I say to you, help us, organize&#13;
your informative works so the students&#13;
more efficiently and to their betterment&#13;
connect directly to the recent&#13;
events, club announcements, special&#13;
gatherings, charity events. etc.&#13;
Inform us as you have been and utilize&#13;
a legend to reach us. Include a&#13;
breakthrough each week found in the&#13;
different facets of our world to keep us&#13;
in wonder. Thank you for your attention&#13;
and time.&#13;
Student and reader of The Ranger&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Pedro Rodarte&#13;
women .In Politics&#13;
Seminar Here Feb. 10&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the conference&#13;
"Women in Politics: Empowering&#13;
Women in the Political Process," Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 10. Featuring U.S. Rep. Tammy&#13;
Baldwin, State Sen. Mary Panzer and&#13;
other politically successful women, the&#13;
program will allow participants to&#13;
explore political office with women who&#13;
have won elections, learn the basics of&#13;
running a successful campaign, and&#13;
help develop their advocacy and organizmg&#13;
skills.&#13;
Hosted by Conference Chair Pamela&#13;
Keating, participants will hear Rep.&#13;
Baldwin answer the question "Why&#13;
Should Women Get Involved in Politics."&#13;
Baldwin, a Democrat from Wisconsin's&#13;
Second Congressional District, was&#13;
the first woman elected to represent the&#13;
state in the U.S. House. Following lunch,&#13;
State Sen. Panzer, Republican floor&#13;
leader in the Senate will address "How&#13;
Women Can Influence the Political&#13;
Process."&#13;
Separate training sessions will examine&#13;
how woman and activists can make&#13;
a difference in politics. Others will&#13;
explore issue advocacy and grass roots&#13;
organizing and ways to get women&#13;
elected to public office.&#13;
Training sessions will be led by Susan&#13;
Mudd, state director of Citizens for a&#13;
Better Environment; and M. Jeanne&#13;
DeRose and Kathleen Falk, state representatives&#13;
in the National Women's&#13;
Political Caucus. Other panelists and&#13;
presenters include State Sen. Kim&#13;
Plache, State Representatives Bonnie&#13;
Ladwig and Samantha Starzyk,&#13;
Kenosha City Council President Katherine&#13;
Marks, and UW-Parkside Political&#13;
Science Professor Anne Gurnack.&#13;
Cost of the day-long conference is $25&#13;
per person and $10 for full-time students.&#13;
This includes materials, continental&#13;
breakfast and lunch. Scholarships are&#13;
available. The program will be held at&#13;
the Student Union. A reception hosted&#13;
by UW-Parkside Chancellor Jack Keating&#13;
will follow the seminar.&#13;
For a registration form and more&#13;
information, call Mark Marlaire, UWParkside&#13;
Continuing Education, at ext,&#13;
2312 or e-mail marlaire@uwp.edu.&#13;
U.S. Representative Tammy Baldwin&#13;
A lovely Dav al" the PARC&#13;
By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
How does a student plan for a day&#13;
at the PARC? Well, just ask Jacquelyn&#13;
Haley-Renaud, Parkside Academics&#13;
Resource Center (PARC) Coordinator.&#13;
On recent inquiries of the PARC facility,&#13;
Ms. Haley-Renaud informed that&#13;
the PARC would be currently under&#13;
renovation until the end of January.&#13;
There will now be new IBM Pentium&#13;
III Processors to replace the old computers,&#13;
as well as new furniture and&#13;
tables for a more comfortable climate&#13;
for students.&#13;
Although they have a fresher environment,&#13;
the PARC always welcomes&#13;
new academic tutors. The majority of&#13;
tutors now are of writing and mathematics&#13;
instruction, but PARC has been&#13;
in search for business, computer science&#13;
and foreign language tutors,&#13;
especially Spanish tutors. Every year&#13;
PARC loses consultants to graduation&#13;
and is always in need of filling positions&#13;
so as to help the student populace&#13;
that might be in need of assistance&#13;
in a certain subject.&#13;
Some are so moved by their experience&#13;
in helping students that they&#13;
progress on to becoming full-fledged&#13;
teachers themselves. Most recently,&#13;
two former tutors, one majoring in&#13;
mathematics and the other in physics&#13;
and chemistry, have chosen the path&#13;
of becoming a professor. It was their&#13;
decision from tutoring that led them&#13;
into the education field.&#13;
Another proud ann0uncement that&#13;
PARC coordinator, Ms. HaleyRenaud,&#13;
mentions is that they take&#13;
pride in employing a very diverse&#13;
staff of tutors from many nations. Our&#13;
international students are a very positive&#13;
addition to PARC as it shows its&#13;
highly sociable side. The PARC staff&#13;
includes approximately 60-75 parttime&#13;
employees from countries such&#13;
as Ethiopia, Sri Lanka, India, South&#13;
America, Armenia, Russia, Korea and&#13;
many more. To quote Ms. HaleyRenaud,&#13;
"We are a very diverse student&#13;
tutoring population serving a&#13;
much wider range of student body&#13;
population."&#13;
For those students who plan on a&#13;
day at the PARC, they are open Monday&#13;
through Friday. Their hours are&#13;
Mon. and Tues. from 9-6pm, Wed. and&#13;
Thurs. from 9-9pm, and Friday 9-12&#13;
noon. If students wish to contact the&#13;
PARC office, call 595-2044. Stop by&#13;
and Visit the PARC at Wyllie Hall&#13;
D180.&#13;
FRIDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 2&#13;
BRING A ROLL OF ·&#13;
QUARTERS &amp; A PACK OF&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
TO DAIRYLAND GREYHOUND PARK&#13;
❖ l)()ORS OPEN ff:OD AM&#13;
SO~NIGHT&#13;
FRIDAY NtellT, FEIRUAR'I 2, AFTER 6:00 PM, YOU CAN&#13;
CA$11 IN ON THE FOUOWINI 50t SPECIAi.$: 12 01. M/1.J.ER&#13;
UTE DRAFT BEER, 12 Ol. $()ff DRINK$, gfNrl/Al PARKING,&#13;
IRAN1JGTAN1J AtJMl$SION, UVE RACE PROIRAM, HOT DOI$&#13;
I ASSORTED BAGS 01 CHIP$&#13;
❖ SIMULCASTING BEGINS AT ff:30 AM&#13;
❖ LIVE RAC/NS ACTION AT 7:15 PM&#13;
DAIRYLAND OFFERS SOC SPECIALS ON THE&#13;
FIRST &amp; THIRD FRlfMY NIGHTS&#13;
OF THE MONTH&#13;
/FWRU11RV 2 S fEB.RN:ZY 16, 2001)&#13;
.... · ·• &#13;
4Q&#13;
Page4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UW-Parkside's· Casino and PsychiC Night Cashes In&#13;
By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
UW-Parkside students who had been&#13;
bitten by the gambling bug got to&#13;
scratch their itch last Thursday night.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board sponsored&#13;
a night of showbiz intrigue and&#13;
Vegas style with a special Casino &amp; Psychic&#13;
Night in the Union Square. Those&#13;
students who took a break from their&#13;
late night studying on January 25, were&#13;
able to enjoy tile likes of a floor of blackjack&#13;
tables, two craps tables, and a&#13;
roulette wheel, as wen as the entertaining&#13;
predictions of a local psychic.&#13;
Those in attendance were given play&#13;
money of 300 gambling dollars for play&#13;
source. The guests then had their&#13;
choice of pleasures on which game they&#13;
would try to make or break their phony&#13;
fortunes. The object for the entire night&#13;
was to educate students on the more&#13;
proper ways to gamble. The employed&#13;
guest dealers were there to playas well&#13;
as educate, as they took their own time&#13;
to inform students on how to operate at&#13;
the table without losing their shirts.&#13;
The event's coordinator/ sponsor,&#13;
Sabrina Morgan, was thankfuf to the&#13;
casino specialist, Michael Lease, who&#13;
assisted the development of the night's&#13;
festivities by bringing in actual casino&#13;
employees.&#13;
The object for acquiring raffle tickets&#13;
was to cash in $200 worth in chips for&#13;
each additional raffle ticket that a student&#13;
wanted besides the free ticket that&#13;
was given to each student as they&#13;
entered the Union Square house.&#13;
As students lost their money, they&#13;
would have to do an embarrassing jig&#13;
for the PABvolunteers just to get another&#13;
voucher of gambling money, which I&#13;
unfortunately had the chance to get&#13;
jiggy with the house volunteers just to&#13;
get a chance to lose at the roulette&#13;
wheel. If students-like me-lost their&#13;
cash at either of the games, they always&#13;
had the psychic to sit down with to pre-'&#13;
dict their real days of good luck. That is&#13;
if you had the chance to see her.&#13;
The waiting line was so long that it&#13;
was nearly impossible to get some&#13;
advice on lucky numbers. Other benefits&#13;
of the night were the free prizes&#13;
ranging from $10 at Wal-Mart or Blockbuster&#13;
to gifts from the school bookstore&#13;
to a lava lamp, and a CD/ DVD&#13;
player. Those who didn't come away&#13;
with anything, at least got to enjoy&#13;
spending some time with their friends,&#13;
as the Casino &amp; Psychic Night was a big&#13;
success. Now all students have to&#13;
worry about is joining a Gamblers'&#13;
Anonymous program.&#13;
Mark your calendars for these fantastic events coming this semester!&#13;
TnlJIlSD4Y r~BRU4IlY 1 11:30 A.P&gt;1. - 1:30 P.I'l"I. M41NPLAC~&#13;
BLACK NIl&gt; TORY 1'10NTN PROCiR,,"1'1&#13;
rR1:1:&#13;
Black History Month will get under way with this opening event featuring speakers, the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, African Storyteller&#13;
Teju and an African arts vendor.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
8ATlJRDAl' rrBRIJ4RY:l&#13;
CiOl&gt;PI:L I:XPLOl&gt;ION&#13;
rR1:1:&#13;
This eXciting event wilt feature a variety of excellent choirs from Southeastern wrsconsm. Including UW-Parksides' own&#13;
Gospel Choir, Holy Recovery. Greater G~aceTemple, Voices of Faith, Carthage College, Wisconsin State Youth Choir,&#13;
UW- Milwaukee Gospel Choir, and Holy Redeemer ~ "&#13;
Come experience uplifting sounds of gospel musicl \&#13;
Sponsored by Black etocent Union ~ . •. ~&#13;
, . ~ ,&#13;
It'rDNrSDAY r~BRUAR'" 7 s: ffi 7:00 P.!'1. . ~1STUDI:NT C~NTI'"R CINI:!'1A&#13;
,,"POLLO I&gt;NOW Xi ill "'" . i&#13;
$3/PI:RSON . . • J 1'" ,I ,I&#13;
The 3rd annual showcase of UW-Pa~id$ and local talent. See these performers comPete for B¢ash prize.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkstde Acttotnee Boaut~nd Black Stud~nt Union. .J r: '1&#13;
SATIJRDA", rI:BRUAR)' Ut~, \., l7:3ti~.1.. if IlCO!'1!'1 ART T"~TRI:&#13;
AIL"" "ft ,i ,t I Ie&#13;
$ 15/TICk~T .... VAlI..AIU.I:'.'"-O!CYHJ ~ ,,''1 ¥ &lt;%.&#13;
Merging the spirit and energyQ) the colmtry's, best yourig"dancers with creative vision of t¢gay's most outstanding&#13;
choreographers, Ailey II pre~~ts an evening Qldance tha!, is a feast the senses. .,1&#13;
Sponsored by Arts: Alive °hi" \"0'''' ,;&#13;
tN V·.,·!h&#13;
WI:DNI'"SDA'" rrBRUAR'"&#13;
.&#13;
14&#13;
.,&#13;
j~' ~&#13;
rlLI'1, LOVI: ,,"NO B,,"I&gt;KI:T~&#13;
$2/P~RSON jj.~\&#13;
Spend Valentine's Day with Gmar&#13;
the game of basketball a 0&#13;
Sponsored by StUdent A&#13;
8:00 P.!'1~ 5TUDI"NT CII:NTI:R CINI:!'1A&#13;
athletes wh6hiilve love for&#13;
:;&#13;
I&#13;
g&#13;
rRIDA'" rl"BRI JARY18&#13;
SW~r:Tnl.'A.RTBA.LL&#13;
$IO/PI:RI&gt;ON OR $l&#13;
Come dressed to impress fGl,(&#13;
provided and professional p&#13;
Sponsored by Black Stude&#13;
NTI:R 5QUARI:&#13;
~&#13;
="&#13;
..... V&#13;
reehments "h- ,-&#13;
MDNrSDAY rl:BRIJARY 21&#13;
LOSTON n.4RRIS&#13;
$12/TICK~T 4.v ..... l..AIM..I:.&#13;
Jazz fans. here's your chance t&#13;
and exciting piano arrangements,&#13;
beyond them; taking the music an&#13;
Sponsored by Black Stu \ 'on&#13;
rRIDAY rrBRU4R)' 23&#13;
rA,SnIOJi'tllSnOW&#13;
$2/PI:RSON&#13;
View the hottest trends from&#13;
second Annual Fashion Show.&#13;
and Gingiss Formal Wear.&#13;
Special Dance performance by the&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
istory Month, BSU presents its&#13;
, Lerner New York, The BUCkle,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parbide provides services for patrons with special needs.&#13;
Please contacllhe Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595.2345.&#13;
Febru~ry t. 2001&#13;
RELAX!&#13;
With a UW-P&#13;
Mini-Course&#13;
, Okay, its early in the semester,&#13;
you're just starting to feel comfortable&#13;
with your classes, and you don't want&#13;
to hear the word "stress" or any variation&#13;
of it. You don't feel stressed right&#13;
now and you don't want to be reminded&#13;
that such a state of mind exists.&#13;
UW-Parkside mini-courses may&#13;
help you maintain that stress free state&#13;
of being even as the semester&#13;
approaches critic mass. These are fun,&#13;
low cost courses-in fact, downright&#13;
cheap for UW-Parkside studentsranging&#13;
in length from a single class&#13;
to six weekly sessions. And you can&#13;
take something outside your major to&#13;
take you mind off studying. Take an&#13;
art or craft courses, or photography, or&#13;
music, or dance, or exercise. You get&#13;
the picture.&#13;
What's offered? Well, arts and&#13;
crafts courses include "Pastel Drawing"&#13;
for six Mondays starting February&#13;
5, "Watercolors' for six Tuesdays&#13;
starting February 6, "Drawing" beginning&#13;
February 7 for six weeks, and&#13;
"Introduction to Calligraphy," for six&#13;
Wednesday starting February 7. A single&#13;
class on origami is offered February&#13;
8.&#13;
"Beginning Crochet" begins three&#13;
weekly sessions February 13, and the&#13;
"Art of Rubber Stamping" can be&#13;
learned on four Tuesdays starting February&#13;
13.&#13;
Feeling relaxed yet? Good, there's&#13;
more.&#13;
Aspiring musicians can study "fiddle&#13;
I" or "Fiddle II" on six Wednesdays&#13;
starting February 7. For musical&#13;
novices, "Harmonica for Beginners"&#13;
and "Beginning Guitar" both will&#13;
cover six Thursdays begin February 8.&#13;
Dancers can do "Swing I" and&#13;
"Swing II" step out for six Wednesday&#13;
starting Feb. 7, and "Tap Dancing"&#13;
debuts for six Mondays starting February&#13;
12.&#13;
For the mind and body, "Yoga" is&#13;
offered for six Mondays beginning&#13;
Feb. 5, "Exercise on a Fit Ball" begins a&#13;
six Tuesday run February 7, and "The&#13;
Art of Personal Writing" is offered for&#13;
four Tuesdays beginning February 13.&#13;
A one session class "MenopauseThe&#13;
Natural Way" is February 5.&#13;
Two special interest mini-courses&#13;
begin this month: "Conversational&#13;
Spanish" for six Monday starting Feb.&#13;
5, and "I Brought This Camcorder,&#13;
Now What Do I Do" is offered on two&#13;
Tuesdays starting February 13.&#13;
. All classes are held on campus durmg&#13;
the evemng and special low student&#13;
fees are available for each class.&#13;
A brochure with more complete&#13;
information about each class is available&#13;
by calling [o.Anne Yantis at ext.&#13;
2277.&#13;
Start practicing stress relief now.&#13;
Take a UW-Parkside mini-course&#13;
today!&#13;
Page4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
uw-Parkside's casino and Psvchic Night Cashes In&#13;
By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
UW-Parkside students who had been&#13;
bitten by the gambling bug got to&#13;
scratch their itch last Tnursday night.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board sponsored&#13;
a night of showbiz intrigue and&#13;
Vegas style with a special Casino &amp; Psychic&#13;
Night in the Union Square. Those&#13;
students who took a break from their&#13;
late night studying on January 25, were&#13;
able to enjoy ilie likes of a floor of blackjack&#13;
tables, two craps tables, and a&#13;
roulette wheel, as well as the entertaining&#13;
predictions of a local psychic.&#13;
Those in attendance were given play&#13;
money of 300 gambling dollars for play&#13;
source. The guests then had their&#13;
choice of pleasures on which game they&#13;
would try to make or break ilieir phony&#13;
fortunes. The object for the entire night&#13;
was to educate students on the more&#13;
proper ways to gamble. The employed&#13;
guest dealers were there to play as well&#13;
as educate, as they took their own time&#13;
to inform students on how to operate at&#13;
the table without losing their snirts.&#13;
The event's coordinator/ sponsor,&#13;
Sabrina Morgan, was thankful to the&#13;
casino SJJecialist, Michael Lease, who&#13;
assisted the development of the night's&#13;
festivities by bringing in actual casino&#13;
employees.&#13;
The object for acquiring raffle tickets&#13;
was to cash in $200 worth in chips for&#13;
each additional raffle ticket that a student&#13;
wanted besides the free ticket that&#13;
was given to each student as they&#13;
entered the Union Square house.&#13;
As students lost their money, they&#13;
would have to do an embarrassing jig&#13;
for the PAB volunteers just to get another&#13;
voucher of gambling money, which I&#13;
unfortunately had the chance to get&#13;
jiggy with the house volunteers just to&#13;
get a chance to lose at the roulette&#13;
wheel. If students-like me-lost their&#13;
cash at either of the games, they always&#13;
had the psychic to sit down with to predict&#13;
their real days of good luck. That is&#13;
if you had the chance to see her.&#13;
The waiting line was so long that it&#13;
was nearly impossible to get some&#13;
advice on lucky numbers. Other benefits&#13;
of the night were the free prizes&#13;
ranging from $10 at Wal-Mart or Blockbuster&#13;
to gifts from the school bookstore&#13;
to a lava lamp, and a CD/ DVD&#13;
player. Those who didn't come away&#13;
with anything, at least got to enjoy&#13;
spending some time with their friends,&#13;
as the Casino &amp; Psychic Night was a big&#13;
success. Now all students have to&#13;
worry about is joining a Gamblers'&#13;
Anonymous program.&#13;
BLACK nlSTORY ~ONTl1 ~V~NTS&#13;
Mark your calendars for these fantastic events coming this semester!&#13;
TUURSDAl', rr:BRUARl' 1&#13;
BIA.CK nlSTOIH' ~ONTn PRO6RAM&#13;
rRl:I:&#13;
11 :30 A."'1. - 1 :30 P."'1. "'1AIN PLACI:&#13;
Black History Month will get under way with this opening event featuring speakers, the UW-Parkside Gospel Choir, African Storyteller&#13;
Teju and an African arts vendor.&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union&#13;
5ATURDAl', l"l:BRUARl' 3&#13;
fiOSPl:L l:XPLOSION&#13;
rRl:I:&#13;
6:00P."'1, STUDl:NT Cl:NTl:R CINl:"'1A&#13;
This exciting event will feature a variety of excellent choirs from Southeastern Wisconsin. Including UW-Parksides' own&#13;
Gospel Choir, Holy Recovery, Greater Grace Temple, Voices of Faith, Carthage CoUege, Wisconsin State Youth Choir,&#13;
UW- Milwaukee Gospel Choir, and Holy Redeemer i \ Come experience uplifting sounds of gospel music! \ \&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union l \ M.&#13;
\ l I&#13;
' 7i_OO P."'1. j STUD&amp;:NT C&amp;:NT&amp;:R CINl:1'1A&#13;
'&#13;
Wl:DNl:SQAl'., fl:BRUARY 7&#13;
A.POLLO SNOW b&#13;
$3/Plt"RSON . f ! The 3rd annual showcase of UW-Parksfde and loc lent. See these performers compete for;;, ash prize.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Boa.td.and Black nt Union. :1 p ~\. i • .· -~ 1-~ !' ::'o::&#13;
sATuRoAr. rr:eRuARJ: 10 sa I 7:30P.~. f · . co,..,.. ART Tna:ATRa:&#13;
A.ILll:Y II ;i:Al • i \. to\&#13;
$1S/TICKl:T .....,.,LUIU):.,~~ \ . I \&#13;
Merging the sprnt and energy Qf the country s best young dancers with the p~sion and crea , vision of tgqay's most outstanding&#13;
choreographers, Arley If pr an evening of dance that is a feast for the eyes ar,d the senses. · '.f&#13;
Sponsored by Arts: Alive \ ·~ • ... A&#13;
Wl:DNl:SDAY, M:BRUARl' 14&#13;
rl~: LOVI: A.ND BA.SKl:TB~&#13;
~ ,,&#13;
7a~p."'1. ' &amp;:NTl:R CINl:"'1A&#13;
$2/Pl:RSON \&#13;
Spend Valentine's Day with Omar&#13;
the game of basketball and each o&#13;
Sponsored by Student Actht'&#13;
rRID41', rr;BRUARl' 18&#13;
SWl:1:TNl:A.RT BA.LL&#13;
$ 1O/Pl:RSON OR $ 1&#13;
WCDNCSDA)'., rl:BRUARJ' 21&#13;
LOSTON NA.RRIS&#13;
$ 12 /TICKl:T AV,ULUIU) •&#13;
rRIDAJ' rr:BRUAR)'. 23&#13;
rA.sn1ON snow&#13;
$2/Pl:RSON 1&#13;
View the hottest trends from gr$:l,fl(\cal mtailei's second Annual Fashion Show. Featuring the tatest&#13;
and Gingiss Formal Wear. :.&#13;
Special Dance performance by the Mliwuakee Hlg&#13;
Sponsored by Black Student Union ,.&#13;
velovefor -&#13;
1:NTl:R SQUAil&amp;:&#13;
L """''J-,m•-&#13;
;y&#13;
~ !~RT TNl:A TRI:&#13;
for his silky smooth vocals&#13;
inatra ... and then he goes&#13;
l:NT Cl:NTl:R SQUAil&amp;:&#13;
istory Month, BSU presents its&#13;
, Lerner New York, The Buckle,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside provides services for patrons with special needs.&#13;
Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595•2345.&#13;
Febru~ry 1, 2001&#13;
RELAX!&#13;
With a UW-P&#13;
Mini-Course&#13;
.,. .&#13;
Okay, its early in the semester,&#13;
you're just starting to feel comfortable&#13;
with your classes, and you don't want&#13;
to hear the word "stress" or any variation&#13;
of it. You don't feel stressed right&#13;
now and you don't want to be reminded&#13;
that such a state of mind exists.&#13;
OW-Parkside mini-courses may&#13;
help you maintain that stress free state&#13;
of being even as the semester&#13;
approacnes critic mass. These are fun,&#13;
low cost courses-in fact, downright&#13;
cheap for OW-Parkside studentsranging&#13;
in length from a single class&#13;
to six weekly sessions. And you can&#13;
take something outside your major to&#13;
take you mind off studying. Take an&#13;
art or craft courses, or photography, or&#13;
music, or dance, or exercise. You get&#13;
the picture.&#13;
What's offered? Well, arts and&#13;
crafts courses include "Pastel Drawing"&#13;
for six Mondays starting February&#13;
5, "Watercolors" for six Tuesdays&#13;
starting February 6, "Drawing" beginning&#13;
February 7 for six weeks, and&#13;
"Introduction to Calligraphy," for six&#13;
Wednesday starting February 7. A single&#13;
class on origami is offered February&#13;
8.&#13;
"Beginning Crochet" begins three&#13;
weekly sessions February 13, and the&#13;
"Art of Rubber Stamping" can be&#13;
learned on four Tuesdays starting February&#13;
13.&#13;
Feeling relaxed yet? Good, there's&#13;
more.&#13;
Aspiring musicians can study "Fiddle&#13;
I" or "Fiddle II" on six Wednesdays&#13;
starting February 7. For musical&#13;
novices, "Harmonica for Beginners"&#13;
and "Beginning Guitar" both will&#13;
cover six Thursdays begin February 8.&#13;
Dancers can do "Swing I" and&#13;
"Swing II" step out for six Wednesday&#13;
starting Feb. 7, and "Tap Dancing"&#13;
debuts for six Mondays starting February&#13;
12.&#13;
For the mind and body, "Yoga" is&#13;
offered for six Mondays beginning&#13;
Feb. 5, "Exercise on a Fit Ball" begins a&#13;
six Tuesday run February 7, and "The&#13;
Art of Personal Writing" is offered for&#13;
four Tuesdays beginning February 13.&#13;
A one session class "MenopauseThe&#13;
Natural Way" is February 5.&#13;
Two special interest mini-courses&#13;
begin this month: "Conversational&#13;
Spanish" for six Monday starting Feb.&#13;
5, and "I Brought This Camcorder,&#13;
Now What Do I Do" is offered on two&#13;
Tuesdays starting February 13.&#13;
All classes are-held on campus during&#13;
the evening and special low student&#13;
fees are available for each class.&#13;
A brochure with more complete&#13;
information about each class is available&#13;
by calling JoAnne Yantis at ext.&#13;
2277.&#13;
Start practicing stress relief now.&#13;
Take a UW-Parkside mini-course&#13;
today! &#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside PageS&#13;
Ailev II Dancers. at UW·Paltlside Feb. 10&#13;
UW-Parkside is proud to present&#13;
the physical artistry of the Ailey II&#13;
modem dance troupe. Part of the University's&#13;
highly successful Arts:&#13;
ALIVE! series; Ailey II will perform&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 10, at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Com.Arts Theatre.&#13;
Merging the spirit and energy of the&#13;
America'sbest young dancers with the&#13;
passion and creative vision of today's&#13;
outstanding choreographers, Ailey II&#13;
f.resents an evening of dance that is a&#13;
east for the eyes and the senses.&#13;
Drawing on the talents of dance masters&#13;
Alvin Ailey, Judith Jamison, and&#13;
other stylists, Ailey II has been called&#13;
"Breathtaking in its invention" by the&#13;
New York Times. The New York Post&#13;
described Ailey II's performance as&#13;
"Powerful and elegant dancing."&#13;
Experience this physical artistry for&#13;
yourself when the Arts: ALIVE! series&#13;
presents Ailey II. A limited number of&#13;
seats remain for the performance. For&#13;
more information and tickets, stop by&#13;
the RangerCard Office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
If bodies in motion-amazing motion-is your kind of entertainment, get your tickets&#13;
now for Ailey U.The dance troupe from New York City is here for an Arts:&#13;
ALIVE! performance Saturday Feb. 10 at 7:30 p.m. Don't miss ill&#13;
Another Hit For Bullock&#13;
By:Lynn Garcia&#13;
"Miss Congeniality" is the story of&#13;
a tomboy FBI agent, Gracie Hart(Sandra&#13;
Bullock), who is asked to go&#13;
undercover in the Miss United States&#13;
Pageant to catch a bomber. At first she&#13;
wants nothing to do with the case, but&#13;
. is quickly persuaded by fellow agent&#13;
Eric Matthews (Benjamin Bratt). The&#13;
transformation from agent to beauty&#13;
contestant is a new twist on the classic&#13;
George Bernard Shaw play, Pygmalion.&#13;
Michael Caine is brilliantly cast as,&#13;
Victor Melling, the Henry Higgins of&#13;
the film. He agrees to take Gracie&#13;
under his wings and turn her into a&#13;
well-mannered and well-groomed&#13;
contestant. He brings in a whole&#13;
entourage to help with her make-up,&#13;
hair, and personality. Upon their.first&#13;
meeting, Victor thinks there is no possible&#13;
way that anyone would befieve&#13;
Gracie was a real contestant.&#13;
When it comes time to participate&#13;
in the Miss United States Pageant Gracie&#13;
makes friends with the other contestants&#13;
and finally begins to enjoy&#13;
herself. She asks Victor to help her&#13;
become more ot a lady and actually&#13;
. wants to do well in the competition,&#13;
something she had never intended ..&#13;
I don't want to give too much away&#13;
so I'll wrap it up. I recommend. this&#13;
enjoyable comedy for anyone who is&#13;
looking for a movie that is full of tal- .&#13;
ent and lots of laughs. •&#13;
Sandra Bullock as the lovely and talented&#13;
"Miss Congeniality." The film is a&#13;
modem telling of Shaw's "Pygmalion."&#13;
ASO Week&#13;
By Tanya Kozlowski, Delta Chapter&#13;
Vice President, National Historian&#13;
The hermanas of Alpha Sigma Omega&#13;
Latina Sorority, Inc. invite all UW-Parkside&#13;
students, faculty, staff, community,&#13;
and friends to come celebrate ASO Week&#13;
held January 29 through February 2. We&#13;
want to wish everyone good luck with&#13;
their classes, jobs, organizations, and&#13;
any other responsibilities one might&#13;
have this semester!&#13;
We hope to see some new and old&#13;
faces this week and participate in our&#13;
events. If you missed our movie night,&#13;
poetry reading, and study skills workshop&#13;
held earlier this week you may still&#13;
attend today's informational at 6 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207 and afterwards go to our&#13;
open Rec. Center in the Den starting at&#13;
7:30.On Friday 0IIT Service Table will be&#13;
nmning from 11 a.m. to Ij.m. We will&#13;
be collecting clothing an food dona-·&#13;
tions for the crisis that is going on in El&#13;
Salvador. Wewill also have some general&#13;
information about ASO. We encourage&#13;
everyone to spread the word&#13;
through your various organizations,&#13;
friends, teachers, staff, and professors.&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities, Dramatic Arts. and English Department&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page5&#13;
Ailev 11 Dancers. at UW-Paltlside Feb. 10 ISO Week&#13;
UW-Parkside is proud to present&#13;
the physical artistry of the Ailey II&#13;
modem dance troupe. Part of the University's&#13;
highly successful Arts:&#13;
ALIVE! series, Ailey II will perform&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 10, at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Com. Arts Theatre.&#13;
Merging the spirit and energy of the&#13;
America's best young dancers with the&#13;
passion and creative vision of today's&#13;
outstanding choreographers, Ailey II&#13;
presents an evening of dance that is a&#13;
feast for the eyes and the senses.&#13;
Drawing on the talents of dance masters&#13;
Alvin Ailey, Judith Jamison, and&#13;
other stylists, Ailey II has been called&#13;
"Breathtaking in its invention" by the&#13;
New York Times. The New York Post&#13;
described Ailey II' s performance as&#13;
"Powerful and elegant dancing."&#13;
Experience this physical artistry for&#13;
yourself when the Arts: ALIVE! series&#13;
presents Ailey II. A limited number of&#13;
seats remain for the performance. For&#13;
more information and tickets, stop by&#13;
the RangerCard Office or call ext. 2345.&#13;
If bodies in motion-amazing motion-is your kind of entertainment, get your tickets&#13;
now for Ailey !I. The dance troupe from New York City is here for an Arts:&#13;
ALIVE! performance Saturday Feb. 10 at 7:30 p.m. Don't miss it!&#13;
By Tanya Kozlowski, Delta Chapter&#13;
Vice President, National Historian&#13;
The hermanas of Alpha Sigma Omega&#13;
Latina Sorority, Inc. invite all UW-Parkside&#13;
stq.dents, faculty, staff, community,&#13;
and friends to come celebrate ASO Week&#13;
held January 29 through February 2. We&#13;
want to wish everyone good luck with&#13;
their classes, jobs, organizations, and&#13;
any other responsibilities one might&#13;
have this semester!&#13;
We hope to see some new and old&#13;
faces this week and participate in our&#13;
events. If you missed our movie night,&#13;
2oetry readins, and study skills workshop&#13;
held earlier this week you may still&#13;
attend today's informational at 6 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207 and afterwards go to our&#13;
open Rec. Center in the Den starting at&#13;
7:30. On Friday our Service Table will be&#13;
running from 11 a.m. to 1/.m. We will&#13;
be collecting clothing an food dona-· tions for the crisis that is going on in El&#13;
Salvador. We will also have some general&#13;
information about ASO. We encourage&#13;
everyone to spread thr word&#13;
tfuough your various organizations,&#13;
friends, teachers, staff, and professors.&#13;
Another Hit For Bullock&#13;
By: Lynn Garcia&#13;
"Miss Congeniality" is the story of&#13;
a tomboy FBI agent, Gracie Hart(Sandra&#13;
Bullock), who is asked to go&#13;
undercover in the Miss United States&#13;
Pageant to catch a bomber. At first she&#13;
wants nothing to do with the case, but&#13;
is quickly persuaded by fellow agent&#13;
Eric Matthews (Benjamin Bratt). The&#13;
transformation from agent to beauty&#13;
contestant is a new twist on the classic&#13;
George Bernard Shaw play, Pygmalion.&#13;
&#13;
Michael Caine is brilliantly cast as,&#13;
Victor Melling, the Henry Higgins of&#13;
the film. He agrees to take Gracie&#13;
under his wings and tum her into a&#13;
well-mannered and well-groomed&#13;
contestant. He brings in a whole&#13;
entourage to help witn her make-up,&#13;
hair, and personality. Upon their .first&#13;
meeting, Victor thinks tfiere is no possible&#13;
way that anyone would believe&#13;
Gracie was a real contestant.&#13;
When it comes time to participate&#13;
in the Miss United States Pageant Gracie&#13;
makes friends with the other contestants&#13;
and finally begins to enjoy&#13;
herself. She asks Victor to help her&#13;
become more ot a lady and actually&#13;
.vants to do well in tlie competition,&#13;
something she had never intended ..&#13;
I don't want to give too much away&#13;
so I'll wrap it up. I recommend this&#13;
enjoyable comedy for anyone who is&#13;
looking for a movie that is full of talent&#13;
and lots of laughs.&#13;
Sandra Bullock as the lovely and talented&#13;
"Miss Congeniality." The film is a&#13;
modem telling of Shaw's "Pygmalion."&#13;
Wednesday, February 7, 2001 ... :.&#13;
8 p.m. Union Square ~ &lt;~ ,;;&#13;
Free! ··&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities. Dnunatic Arts, and English Department • &#13;
Page6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 1, 2001&#13;
'lIeUII-Pllrllslde Dea IS llsl lall'&#13;
3.50 to 3.69&#13;
Elizabeth JAde&#13;
Thomas N Andelin&#13;
Andrea J Angelici&#13;
Rachel R Arebalo&#13;
David L Augustine&#13;
Banipal B Ayvaz&#13;
Julie A Bach&#13;
Ephram J Bailey •&#13;
Adam L Barsamian&#13;
Daniel A Bixler&#13;
Kurt M Blackwell&#13;
Sarah E Boland&#13;
Leonard Booth&#13;
David R Carlberg&#13;
Jessica M Carlson&#13;
Donna R Covelli&#13;
Lasilha Cumaranatunge&#13;
Shelly A Dam&#13;
Daniel F Derler&#13;
Matthew J DeWlll&#13;
Eric A Easthon&#13;
Leah A Ecklor&#13;
Stacy A Ericson&#13;
Stacy M Esme'&#13;
Phaedra A Everist&#13;
Elissa C Fitzgerald&#13;
Amanda K Galster&#13;
Robyn M Gardner&#13;
Julia L Gemig&#13;
Renae K Glatt&#13;
Cindi L Goyelle&#13;
Bonny J Grabowski&#13;
Gina M Gray&#13;
Michael Greenman&#13;
Sarah L Guzdek&#13;
Jodee J Hale&#13;
Gwen E Hansen&#13;
Jacob M Hansen&#13;
Craig WHarff&#13;
Donna M Hassan&#13;
Amanda A Hawley&#13;
Kelly C Hay&#13;
Lisa M Helgesen&#13;
Liza J Herbst&#13;
FrancesL Hill&#13;
Nicole D Hill&#13;
Harold Hinds&#13;
BrellA Holly&#13;
Sheree M Homer&#13;
Nathaniel D Hunter&#13;
Rebekah Ide&#13;
John Divan&#13;
Edward E Janes&#13;
Amy M Johnson&#13;
Robert J Johnson&#13;
Christine M Juliani&#13;
Katie Kennedy&#13;
Robert D Kiesner Jr,&#13;
Kristen L Knutsen&#13;
Rebecca S Landmark&#13;
Andrew R Ledanski&#13;
Joseph H Lendabarker III&#13;
Silvana K Leone&#13;
Sarah E Lesniewski&#13;
Joshua M Lingg&#13;
Jesus 0 Lopez&#13;
Jessica C Mallell&#13;
Susan L Marcich&#13;
Nicole M Markin&#13;
Svetlana Matic&#13;
Christine M Mayew&#13;
Jennifer M Mccumber&#13;
Catherine A Mckinnon&#13;
Ryan P Mcmullin&#13;
David K Mcpherson&#13;
Melissa Meland&#13;
Donna L Minkley&#13;
Jeffrey J Milka&#13;
Kelly R Molini&#13;
Pamela A Morlsse&#13;
Melissa M Mueller&#13;
Laurie A Murphy&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie; WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha. WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie. WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
• Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
•&#13;
Scoll A Nicholson&#13;
Pabio Ortiz&#13;
Angela ROwen&#13;
Marcie E Peura&#13;
Peter J Pfarr&#13;
Rachelle Pifer&#13;
Mindy M Pirkovic&#13;
Jason G Pisani&#13;
Tracy A Popp&#13;
John M Prina&#13;
Traci L Rabelhofer&#13;
Danni L Reich&#13;
Elena T Ross&#13;
Jean F Rossell&#13;
Kimberly J Rossi&#13;
Casey L Ruffalo&#13;
Candace L Ruffolo&#13;
Cara J Russo&#13;
Magdalena B Rzeszutek&#13;
Kimberly J Salmons&#13;
Raymond M Sanchez&#13;
Ryan C Schmidt&#13;
Timothy D Schmidt&#13;
Kristine V Schoen&#13;
Ryan W Schroeder&#13;
Jill C Seitz&#13;
Bethany L Shaw&#13;
Jolanta Smith&#13;
Kathryn L Smith&#13;
Julia J Starr&#13;
Rita M Steckling&#13;
Tracy L Thomas&#13;
Cass EVan Daalwyk&#13;
Jennifer A Warren&#13;
Julie M Weidner&#13;
Corey B Welk&#13;
Dama KWelis&#13;
Shaun P Whatley&#13;
Jehnifer J Williams&#13;
Jaime L Wincek&#13;
Daniel I Wojciechowicz&#13;
Amber J Wolfe&#13;
Kimberly A Wright&#13;
Julie A Yurchak&#13;
Susan L Zawieja&#13;
Shawn M Adrian&#13;
David J Batesole&#13;
David Beranis&#13;
Paul J Billips&#13;
Marcelle M Billis&#13;
James D Bonnar&#13;
,Jill M Boughton&#13;
Brell W Brillen&#13;
Melissa E Brown&#13;
Darcy K Bugni&#13;
Robert A Chacon&#13;
Jean M Compton&#13;
Joyce J Contreras&#13;
Lalita F Contreras&#13;
Patrick D Cranley&#13;
Jennifer R Cuccia&#13;
Theresa M Dailey&#13;
Katie P Daly&#13;
Jennifer L Danoski&#13;
Jennifer A Determan&#13;
Nidia G Diaz&#13;
Roberta L Dyer&#13;
Luke N Eckblad&#13;
Laura A Engel&#13;
Sara L Espinoza&#13;
Lance L Evans&#13;
Erinn L Finlan&#13;
Adam R Fornal&#13;
Corinna L French&#13;
Robert D Fritchen&#13;
Amber E Gannon&#13;
Joshua R Glodowski&#13;
Nicholas 0 Graham&#13;
Mark W Guttenberg&#13;
Kayln J Hagen&#13;
Paul M Hagert&#13;
Sharon A Henry&#13;
Pamela D Hicks&#13;
Ryan J Holmbeck&#13;
Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
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Kenosha, WI&#13;
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Bristol, WI&#13;
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Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kansasville, Wj&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
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Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine,WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
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Racine, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
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Racine, WI&#13;
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Racine,WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Kara A Huber&#13;
Kelly L Ishihara&#13;
Karin R Jonsson&#13;
Dehnel M Kluzak&#13;
Sarah J Kowalsky&#13;
Heidi J Kraiss&#13;
Aleksandra H Kulig&#13;
Angela R Kyles&#13;
Elizabeth A LadWig&#13;
Carl F Laehr&#13;
Michael T Leiber&#13;
Lisa M Lipari&#13;
Kari -D Loppnow&#13;
Juanita G Mejia&#13;
Jason D Nehmer&#13;
Troy L Nielsen&#13;
Daniel L Noe Jr,&#13;
Kara B'Norton&#13;
Heather MOlson&#13;
Marci J Olson&#13;
Dawn R Parrish&#13;
Archana V Patel&#13;
Christina L Paul&#13;
Neil A Paulhus&#13;
Melinda J Peterson&#13;
Dylan T Pogorzelski&#13;
Diana M Prichard&#13;
Jennifer L Pulfrey&#13;
Sarah E Randall&#13;
Jennifer L Ranker&#13;
Ariel D Roberts&#13;
Melissa A Rompesky&#13;
Jeremy J Schmidt&#13;
Linda L Schumaker&#13;
Madelyn B Seis&#13;
Gina L Sinner&#13;
Brillon V Sliwinski&#13;
Michael J Smith&#13;
Chad J Sobotka&#13;
Sandra L Struebing&#13;
April J Symoens&#13;
Kathleen E Thoennes&#13;
Erika A Vaszily&#13;
Susan M Verwey&#13;
Lorena E Veto&#13;
Jason N Wierek&#13;
April R Wiggins&#13;
Candi S Wozniak&#13;
Michael R Ziegelbauer&#13;
Melanie L Zimmerman&#13;
Angela R Zeiss&#13;
3.70 to 3.89&#13;
Edith A Ambrose&#13;
Heather V Aslell&#13;
Nancy Ayvaz&#13;
Stephanie C Baldwin&#13;
Julia K Beaver&#13;
Mary J Becker&#13;
Joshua J Brennan&#13;
Nicole E Brunk&#13;
Gail M Bump&#13;
Soren R Carpenter&#13;
Tien H Chau&#13;
Michele L Chovan&#13;
Susan M Czarra&#13;
Jody L Davison&#13;
Sean M Epping&#13;
Lisa M Fabiano&#13;
Kelley A Fitzpatrick&#13;
Gerita A Floyd&#13;
Adam P Fonk&#13;
Peter J Forchette&#13;
Andrea M Franco&#13;
Billy W Franks Jr,&#13;
Susan Gono .&#13;
Diana L Gonzales&#13;
Christina A Graf&#13;
Heather J Hackbarth&#13;
Karen L Hartwig-Sens&#13;
Jennifer A Hayward&#13;
Valerie M Hohenstein&#13;
Elizabeth S Horwitz&#13;
o&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Caledonia, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
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Racine, WI&#13;
Caledonia, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
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Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Franksville,WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kansasville, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Caledonia, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
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Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
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Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
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Page6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 1, 200i&#13;
tba u•-Parllslda Dean's 1· t fall 2000&#13;
3.50 to 3.69 Scott A Nicholson Silver Lake, WI Kara A Huber Racine, WI&#13;
Kelly L Ishihara Union Grove, WI Elizabeth J Ade Kenosha, WI Pablo Ortiz Kenosha, WI&#13;
Angela R Owen Kenosha, WI Karin R Jonsson Racine, WI Thomas N Andelin Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI Dehnel M Kluzak Racine, WI Andrea J Angelici Kenosha, WI Marcie E Peura&#13;
Sarah J Kowalsky Racine, WI Rachel R Arebalo Kenosha, WI Peter J Pfarr Kenosha, WI&#13;
Rachelle Pifer Kenosha, WI Heidi J Kraiss Racine, WI David L Augustine Kenosha, WI&#13;
Mindy M Pirkovic Kenosha, WI Aleksandra H Kulig Caledonia, WI Banipal B Ayvaz Kenosha, WI&#13;
Twin Lakes, WI Angela R Kyles Racine, WI Julie A Bach Kenosha, WI Jason G Pisani&#13;
Ephram J Bailey • Kenosha, WI Tracy A Popp Salem, WI Elizabeth A LadWlg Racine, WI&#13;
Adam L Barsamian Pleasant Prairie, WI John M Prina Kenosha, WI Carl F Laehr Racine, WI&#13;
Daniel A Bixler Pleasant Prairie, WI Traci L Rabelhofer Silver Lake, WI Michael T Leiber Racine, WI&#13;
Kurt M Blackwell Kenosha, WI Danni L Reich Kenosha, WI Lisa M Lipari Racine, WI&#13;
Sarah E Boland Kenosha, WI Elena T Ross Kenosha, WI Kari D Loppnow Caledonia, WI&#13;
Leonard Booth Kenosha, WI Jean F Rossett Kenosha, WI Juanita G Mejia Racine, WI&#13;
David R Carlberg Bristol, WI Kimberly J Rossi Kenosha, WI Jason D Nehmer Racine, WI&#13;
Jessica M Carlson Kenosha, WI Casey L Ruffalo Kenosha, WI Troy L Nielsen Racine, WI&#13;
Donna R Covelli Kenosha, WI Candace L Ruffolo Kenosha, WI Daniel L Noe Jr. Racine, WI&#13;
Lasitha Cumaranatunge Kenosha, WI . Cara J Russo Kenosha, WI Kara B Norton Racine, WI&#13;
Shelly A Dam Kenosha, WI Magdalena B Rzeszutek Bristol, WI Heather M Olson Racine, WI&#13;
Daniel F Derler Trevor, WI Kimberly J Salmons Kenosha, WI Marci J Olson Franksville, WI&#13;
Matthew J DeWitt Kenosha, WI Raymond M Sanchez Kenosha, WI Dawn R Parrish Racine, WI&#13;
Eric A Easthon Bristol, WI Ryan C Schmidt Kenosha, WI Archana V Patel Racine, WI&#13;
Leah A Ecklor Trevor, WI Timothy D Schmidt Kenosha, WI Christina L Paul Racine, WI&#13;
Stacy A Ericson Kenosha, WI Kristine V Schoen Pleasant Prairie, WI Neil A Paulhus Racine, WI&#13;
Stacy M Esme' Kenosha, WI Ryan W Schroeder Pleasant Prairie, WI Melinda J Peterson Racine, WI&#13;
Phaedra A Everist Kenosha, WI Jill C Seitz Kenosha, WI Dylan T Pogorzelski Racine, WI&#13;
Elissa C Fitzgerald Kenosha, WI Bethany L Shaw Pleasant Prairie, WI Diana M Prichard Franksville,WI&#13;
Amanda K Galster Kenosha, WI Jolanta Smith Kenosha, WI Jennifer L Pulfrey Racine, WI&#13;
Robyn M Gardner Kenosha, WI Kathryn L Smith Kenosha, WI Sarah E Randall Racine, WI&#13;
Julia L Gemig Kenosha, WI Julia J Starr Kenosha, WI Jennifer L Ranker Burlington, WI&#13;
Renae K Glatt Pleasant Prairie, WI Rita M Steckling Kansasville, WJ Ariel D Roberts Racine, WI&#13;
Cindi L Goyette Kenosha, WI Tracy L Thomas Kenosha, WI Melissa A Rompesky Kansasville, WI&#13;
Bonny J Grabowski Kenosha, WI Cass E Van Daalwyk Kenosha, WI Jeremy J Schmidt Racine, WI&#13;
Gina M Gray Kenosha, WI Jennifer A Warren Kenosha, WI Linda L Schumaker Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Michael Greenman Pleasant Prairie, WI Julie M Weidner Kenosha, WI Madelyn B Seis Racine, WI&#13;
Sarah L Guzdek Kenosha, WI Corey B Welk Kenosha, WI Gina L Sinner Racine, WI&#13;
Jodee J Hale Bristol, WI Dama K Wells Kenosha, WI Britton V Sliwinski Racine, WI&#13;
Gwen E Hansen Kenosha, WI Shaun P Whatley Kenosha, WI Michael J Smith Racine, WI Jacob M Hansen Salem, WI Jennifer J Williams Kenosha, WI Chad J Sobotka Racine, WI Craig W Harff Kenosha, WI Jaime L Wincek Kenosha, WI Sandra L Struebing Caledonia, WI Donna M Hassan Kenosha, WI Daniel I Wojciechowicz Kenosha, WI April J Symoens Union Grove, WI Amanda A Hawley Kenosha, WI Amber J Wolfe Twin Lakes, WI Kathleen E Thoennes Racine, WI Kelly C Hay Trevor, WI Kimberly A Wright Pleasant Prairie, WI Erika A Vaszily Racine, WI Lisa M Helgesen Pleasant Prairie, WI Julie A Yurchak Kenosha, WI Susan M Verwey Racine, WI Liza J Herbst Kenosha, WI Susan L Zawieja Kenosha, WI Lorena E Veto Racine, WI Frances'L Hill Kenosha, WI Shawn M Adrian Racine, WI Jason N Wierek Racine, WI Nicole D Hill Kenosha, WI David J Batesole Racine.WI April R Wiggins Racine, WI Harold Hinds Kenosha, WI David Beranis Racine, WI Candi S Wozniak Racine, WI Brett A Holly Kenosha, WI Paul J Billips Racine, WI Michael R Ziegelbauer Racine, WI Sheree M Homer Kenosha, WI Marcelle M Bittis Racine, WI Melanie L Zimmerman Racine, WI Nathaniel D Hunter Pleasant Prairie, WI James D Bonnar Racine, WI Angela R Zoiss Racine, WI Rebekah Ide Kenosha, WI Jill M Boughton Racine, WI&#13;
John D Ivan Twin Lakes, WI Brett W Britten Franksville, WI&#13;
Edward E Janes Kenosha, WI Melissa E Brown Racine, WI 3.70 to 3.89 Amy M Johnson Kenosha, WI Darcy K Bugni Racine, WI Edith A Ambrose Kenosha, WI Robert J Johnson Kenosha, WI Robert A Chacon Racine, WI Heather V Aslett Kenosha, WI Christine M Juliani Kenosha, WI Jean M Compton Racine, WI Nancy Ayvaz Kenosha, WI Katie Kennedy Bristol, WI Joyce J Contreras Sturtevant, WI Stephanie C Baldwin Pleasant Prairie, WI Robert D Kiesner Jr. Kenosha, WI Lalita F Contreras Racine, WI Julia K Beaver Salem, WI Kristen L Knutsen Bristol, WI Patrick D Cranley Racine, WI Mary J Becker Kenosha, WI Rebecca S Landmark Kenosha, WI Jennifer R Cuccia Racine, WI Joshua J Brennan Kenosha, WI Andrew R Ledanski Pleasant Prairie, WI Theresa M Dailey Racine, WI Nicole E Brunk Kenosha, WI Joseph H Lendabarker Ill Kenosha, WI Katie P Daly Racine, WI Gail M Bump Kenosha, WI Silvana K Leone Pleasant Prairie, WI Jennifer L Danoski Racine, WI Soren R Carpenter Pleasant Prairie, WI Sarah E Lesniewski Pleasant Prairie, WI Jennifer A Determan Racine, WI Tien H Chau Kenosha, WI Joshua M Lingg Kenosha, WI Nidia G Diaz Racine, WI Michele L Chovan Kenosha, WI Jesus O Lopez Pleasant Prairie, WI Roberta L Dyer Racine.WI Susan M Czarra Kenosha, WI Jessica C Mallett Salem, WI Luke N Eckblad Racine, WI Jody L Davison Kenosha, WI Susan&#13;
Nicole M&#13;
L Marcich&#13;
Markin&#13;
Kenosha, WI Laura A Engel Burlington, WI Sean M Epping Kenosha, WI Kenosha, WI Sara L Espinoza Racine, WI Lisa M Fabiano Kenosha, WI&#13;
Christine&#13;
Svetlana Matic&#13;
M Mayew&#13;
Kenosha, WI Lance L Evans Racine, WI Kelley A Fitzpatrick Kenosha, WI Pleasant Prairie, WI Erinn L Finlan Racine, WI Gerita A Floyd Kenosha, WI&#13;
Catherine&#13;
Jennifer M Mccumber Kenosha, WI Adam R Fornal Racine WI Adam P Fonk Kenosha, WI&#13;
Ryan&#13;
A Mckinnon Salem, WI Corinna L French Racine, WI Peter J Forchette Kenosha, WI&#13;
David&#13;
P&#13;
K&#13;
Mcmullin&#13;
Mcpherson&#13;
Kenosha, WI Robert D Fritchen Racine, WI Andrea M Franco Kenosha, WI&#13;
Melissa Meland&#13;
Kenosha, WI Amber E Gannon Racine, WI Billy W Franks Jr. Kenosha, WI&#13;
Donna&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI Joshua R Glodowski Union Grove, WI Susan Gono Kenosha, WI L Minkley Salem, WI Nicholas O Graham Racine, WI Diana L Gonzales Kenosha, WI Jeffrey&#13;
Kelly R&#13;
J&#13;
Molini&#13;
Mitka Kenosha, WI Mark W Guttenberg Racine, WI Christina A Graf Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pamela A Morisse Kenosha, WI Kayln J Hagen Racine, WI Heather J Hackbarth Kenosha, WI&#13;
Melissa M Mueller Kenosha, WI Paul M Hagert Racine, WI Karen L Hartwig-Sens Kenosha, WI&#13;
Laurie A Murphy Kenosha, WI Sharon A Henry Racine, WI Jennifer A Hayward Kenosha, WI Kenosha, WI Pamela D Hicks Racine, WI Valerie M Hohenstein Pleasant Prairie WI Ryan J Holmbeck Burlington, WI Elizabeth S Horwitz Kenosha, WI &#13;
r- ~ -&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 7&#13;
Amanda L Hoselton Pleasant PJairie, WI David P McDonald Racine, WI Jamie L O'Connell Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bruce Dives Kenosha, WI Tracy L McFee Racine, WI Sarah M Olsen Salem, WI&#13;
Sharon R Jensen-Rugaber Kenosha, WI Lavegas K Miller Racine, WI Derek J Petersen Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dennis A Johnson Pleasant Prairie, WI Eyad M Museteif Racine, WI Ramona K Pettry Kenosha, WI&#13;
Andrea N Juliani Kenosha, WI . Veronica A Nelsen&#13;
Manpreet S Kang Kenosha, WI Colleen M O'grady-Shearman&#13;
Racine, WI Joseph M Ricciardi Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dieter A Kehrhahn Kenosha, WI Christina M Palm&#13;
Burlington, WI Benjamin L Schmidt Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI Jennifer C Schultz Salem, WI&#13;
Kholoud M Khalaf Kenosha, WI Richard R Plachter Racine, WI Christopher L Schumache Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Hyun C Kim Kenosha, WI Heidi A Rashleger Racine, WI Mona Sin Kenosha, WI&#13;
Sean A King Bristol, WI Daniel R Reinders Racine, WI Michael P Slye Kenosha, WI&#13;
Emily KLauer Kenosha, WI Christopher A Roland Racine, WI Danielle L Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
Terri L Leslie Kenosha, WI Brian J Schalk Racine, WI Stacy L Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
Richard P t.lndquist Kenosha, WI Lora M Schultz Sturtevant, WI Michael J Sokolski Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Christine L Martin Kenosha, WI Christina M Schutz Racine, WI Amanda Suchy Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dennis D Meek Bristol, WI Jennifer A Schwartz Racine, WI Cassondra J Taylor-Connelly Salem, WI&#13;
Alison M Merritt Kenosha, WI Randolph E Sherwood Racine, WI Michelle Vaccaro Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jason Metallo Kenosha, WI Rachel L Sonnentag , Racine, WI Sonia A Wade Kenosha, WI&#13;
Valerie A Miller Kenosha, WI Stephen T Sorenson Racine, WI Jennifer D Weis Salem, WI&#13;
Joseph V Morrone Kenosha, WI Robyn R Spink Burlington, WI Michelle R Widmar Kenosha, WI&#13;
Gary W Mousourakis Silver Lake, WI Josh J Stacy Racine, WI Martha A WI ng . Kenosha, WI&#13;
Krisly L Mueller Kenosha, WI Meghan L Strasburg Racine, WI Elaine M Yanzito&#13;
....&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Samuel W Naegele Kenosha, WI Courtenay H Teska Racine, WI Pamela J Zernia Kenosha, WI&#13;
Shawn T Nielson Kenosha, WI Jennifer K Toutant Racine, WI Amanda L Albrecht Racine, WI&#13;
Tanya A Prostko Kenosha, WI Julie A Truesdell Burlington, WI Brenda E Baumeister Racine, WI&#13;
James C Puhr Pleasant Prairie, WI Benjamin M Turk Racine, WI Timothy A Beck Caledonia, WI&#13;
Amber L Ridolfi Kenosha, WI Timothy D Tuttle Racine, WI Eric J Bergemann Racine, WI&#13;
Steven R Ripper Kenosha, WI Patricia L Urban Racine, WI Katherine J Braun Racine, WI&#13;
Daniel J Roethe Kenosha, WI Rebecca A Van Swol Union Grove, WI Robin L Braun Racine, WI&#13;
Starlet D Rondeau Kenosha, WI Katherine M Vick Racine, WI Jennifer L Bremberger Burlington, WI&#13;
Kelly K Sakalowski Bristol, WI Christina E Wend Racine, WI Chad L Chapin ,&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Michelle L Santelli Kenosha, WI Michael J Wltkofski Racine, WI Stephanie L Clausen Racine, WI&#13;
Kyle S Scuglik Kenosha, WI Chris P Condon Racine, WI&#13;
Vrunda D Shah Kenosha, WI Rebecca M Cruz Union Grove, WI&#13;
Nicole R Smith Kenosha, WI 3.90 to 4.00 Susan M Dana Racine, WI&#13;
Ryan D Smith Twin Lakes, WI Sarah A Aguilar Kenosha, WI Richard L Ditter Racine, WI&#13;
Jacob W Tatay Kenosha, WI Christine MAider Kenosha, WI Eze B Elechi Racine, WI&#13;
Bryan J Tomczak Kenosha, WI Robert MAllen Kenosha, WI Tamara J Fabian Racine, WI&#13;
Tracy L Vanderford Kenosha, WI Bridget J Allen-Laehn Kenosha, WI Natalie E Funderburg Racine, WI&#13;
Michael E Walczak Kenosha, WI Ryan S Ashton Kenosha, WI Sarah N Funk Union Grove, WI&#13;
Matthew J WaWiorka Kenosha, WI Heidi A Baehr Kenosha, WI Rogelio X Garcia Kansasville, WI&#13;
Adrienne F Wiegert Kenosha, WI Georgette M Ball Kenosha, WI Stephanie M Green Racine, WI&#13;
Jean M Wilhelm Kenosha, WI Mary A Berger Salem, WI David J Higgens Racine, WI&#13;
Kyle P Wolf Kenosha, WI Natalie K Bonaretti Pleasant Prairie, WI Nathaniel T Jeanson Racine, Wi&#13;
Lori S Wood Kenosha, WI Daniel J Bosdech Kenosha, WI Lee R Johnson Union Grove, WI&#13;
Pamela K Zielsdorf Kenosha, WI Dilpreet Brar Bristol, WI Carol L Jones Racine, WI&#13;
Melissa A Ziemba Pleasant Prairie, WI Manpreet Brar Bristol, WI Paul J.Kawa Racine, WI&#13;
Debra L Andrekus Burlington, WI Joseph A Brooks Kenosha, WI James M Klitzke Racine, WI&#13;
Brenda Ashmore Racine, WI Jamie L Brown Kenosha, WI Kristi M Lacanne Racine, WI&#13;
Holly D Bahr Wind Lake, WI Melissa A Busse •&#13;
Kenosha, WI Joshua S Langer Racine, WI&#13;
Katie M Beaumier Sturtevant, WI Chistopher J Bytnar Kenosha, WI Steven J Lenart Racine, WI&#13;
Joseph V Biondi Racine, WI Chad C Cantwell _Twin Lakes, WI Blake C Luedtke Racine, WI&#13;
Michael E Bose Union Grove, WI Mary F Cenni Pleasant Prairie, WI Shaun T Lukas Franksville, WI&#13;
Carla A Castellano Racine, WI Michelle L Coan Kenosha, WI Eric J Masshardt Union Grove, WI&#13;
Angelina M Cruz Racine, WI Christina M Conforti Pleasant Prairie, WI Terry A Mccarthy Burlington, WI&#13;
Maria V Dimitrova Racine, WI Kristan A Constant Kenosha, WI Andrew M Mendez Racine, WI&#13;
Ryan M Dunsworth Kenosha, WI Diana M Covelli Kenosha, WI Dana L Mueller Burlington, WI&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek Racine, WI Mary C Debish Kenosha, WI Debra J Mueller Union Grove, WI&#13;
Aaron A Embury Racine, WI Brigette A Dei Salem, WI Katie L Mutter Union Grove, WI&#13;
Jamie N Fierke Racine, WI Paul M Francetic Kenosha, WI Kevin P Nelson Racine, WI&#13;
Amanda M Flannery Racine, WI Angela R Gallagher Kenosha, WI Bennett COlson Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Erin M Flannery Racine, WI Jeremy R Gemig Kenosha, WI Alan A Paal Franksville, WI&#13;
Kristi L Forbes Franksville, WI Leeann Grandsard Kenosha, WI Paul A Pedrosa Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Maggie R Gillespie Racine, WI Tajdeep K Grewal Kenosha, WI Joseph A Piirto Racine, WI&#13;
Joan L Gouff Sturtevant, WI John A Groschopf Bristol, WI Samantha R Pucely Racine, WI&#13;
Timothy J Graff Burlington, WI Maryalice. Guttormsen Kenosha, WI Shani M Ritt Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Dena M Gunderson Union Grove, WI Tarik N Hamdan Kenosha, WI Derek R Rivers Racine, WI&#13;
Rachael E Herda Burlington, WI Rolly A Hibbeln Trevor, WI Hilton A Roland Racine, WI&#13;
Rosalinda Hernandez Racine, WI Benjamin C Hofmann Kenosha, WI Robert C Rollins Racine, WI&#13;
Jill W Hoffman Racine, WI Gale E Horton Kenosha, WI Crystal D Routon Racine, WI&#13;
Darren A Holland Union Grove, WI Reml Johnson Kenosha, WI Amanda M Schneider Racine, WI&#13;
Ramon A Jaimez Racine, WI Bryanna J Jurvis Kenosha, WI Dawn M Sheffield Racine, WI&#13;
Susan J Jensen Sturtevant, WI Ahlam M Khalaf Kenosha, WI Crystal A Smith Racine, WI&#13;
Mary S Kaprelian Racine, WI Carol J Klees-Starks Kenosha, WI Matt L Spang Racine, WI&#13;
Nathalie A Kelsey Racine, WI Garrett L Kornman Kenosha, WI Karen E Sprague Racine, WI&#13;
Ginger L Kinyon Racine, WI Peter J Kos Kenosha, WI Rebecca A Stratman Racine, WI&#13;
Rebecca L Klinzing Racine, WI Stephanie S Krehbiel Kenosha, WI Kristine A Strauss Racine, WI&#13;
LeslieAKlug Racine, WI Natalie L Kring Kenosha, WI Jacqueline J Strelow Waterford, WI&#13;
Bradley Kostreva Racine, WI Donna M Kubicki .salem, WI Julie Thompson Racine, WI&#13;
Kimberly A Kragh Racine, WI Marc A Laudonlo Kenosha, WI Jennifer Tremelling Racine, WI&#13;
Juliet H Lena Kansasville, WI Kathryn L Lemke Kenosha, WI Kellie A Tuttle Racine, WI&#13;
Lisa A Lequia Racine, WI Joline M Levanetz Trevor, WI Jaimie D Utley Racine, WI'&#13;
Ellen K Leslie Racine, WI Jennifer M Little Kenosha, WI Brian D Van Schyndel Racine, WI&#13;
Amy L Maack Racine, WI Kimberly J Little Kenosha, WI Sheryl L Villalpando Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Ronald J Macdonald Racine, WI JoA Medley Kenosha, WI Stephen J Von Dissen Racine, WI&#13;
Jennifer M Maller Racine, WI Karyn M Meyer Kenosha, WI Eileen B Welch Franksville, WI&#13;
Joseph A Marsch Racine, WI Kathleen M Meyer Pleasant Prairie, WI Craig J Wilking Burlington, WI&#13;
Tonya M Matelski Racine, WI Celia M Miller Pleasant Prairie, WI John A Wilson Racine, WI&#13;
Kevin W Matson Racine, WI Andrew J Modory Kenosha, WI Nicole M Wilson Franksville, WI&#13;
Zahra I McCray Racine, WI Patricia J Novsam Kenosha, WI Nicholas J Zeleski Racine, WI&#13;
r ---- -&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page7&#13;
Amanda L Hoselton Pleasant PJairie, WI David P McDonald Racine, WI Jamie L O'Connell Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bruce D Ives Kenosha, WI Tracy L McFee Racine, WI Sarah M Olsen Salem, WI&#13;
Sharon R Jensen-Rugaber Kenosha, WI Lavegas K Miller Racine, WI Derek J Petersen Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dennis A Johnson Pleasant Prairie, WI Eyad M Museteif&#13;
Andrea N Juliani Kenosha, WI . Veronica A Nelsen&#13;
Racine, WI Ramona K Pettry Kenosha, WI&#13;
Manpreet S Kang Kenosha, WI Colleen M O'grady-Shearman&#13;
Racine, WI Joseph M Ricciardi Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dieter A Kehrhahn Kenosha, WI Christina M Palm&#13;
Bl!lrlington, WI Benjamin L Schmidt Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kholoud M Khalaf Kenosha, WI Richard R Plachter&#13;
Racine, WI Jennifer C Schultz Salem, WI&#13;
Racine, WI Christopher L Schumache Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Hyun C Kim Kenosha, WI Heidi A Rashleger Racine, WI Mona Sin Kenosha, WI&#13;
Sean A King Bristol, WI Daniel R Reinders Racine, WI Michael P Slye Kenosha, WI&#13;
Emily K Lauer Kenosha, WI Christopher A Roland Racine, WI Danielle L Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
Terri L Leslie Kenosha, WI Brian J Schalk Racine, WI Stacy L Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
Richard P Lindquist Kenosha, WI Lora M Schultz Sturtevant, WI Michael J Sokolski Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Christine L Martin Kenosha, WI Christina M Schutz Racine, WI Amanda Suchy Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dennis D Meek Bristol, WI Jennifer A Schwartz Racine, WI Cassondra J Taylor-Connelly Salem, WI&#13;
Alison M Merritt Kenosha, WI Randolph E Sherwood Racine.WI Michelle Vaccaro Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jason Metallo Kenosha, WI Rachel L Sonnentag ' Racine, WI Sonia A Wade Kenosha, WI&#13;
Valerie A Miller Kenosha, WI Stephen T Sorenson Racine, WI Jennifer D Weis Salem, WI&#13;
Joseph V Morrone Kenosha, WI Robyn R Spink Burlington, WI Michelle R Widmar Kenosha, WI&#13;
Gary W Mousourakis Silver Lake, WI Josh J Stacy Racine, WI Martha A Wing Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kristy L Mueller Kenosha, WI Meghan L Strasburg Raclne, WI Elaine M Yanzito Trevor, WI&#13;
Samuel W Naegele Kenosha, WI Courtenay H Teska Racine, WI Pamela J Zernia Kenosha, WI&#13;
Shawn T Nielson Kenosha, WI Jennifer K Toutant Racine, WI Amanda L Albrecht Racine, WI&#13;
Tanya A Prostko Kenosha, WI Julie A Truesdell Burlington, WI Brenda E Baumeister Racine, WI&#13;
James C Puhr Pleasant Prairie, WI Benjamin M Turk Racine, WI Timothy A Beck Caledonia, WI&#13;
Amber L Ridolfi Kenosha, WI Timothy D Tuttle Racine, WI Eric J Bergemann Racine, WI&#13;
Steven R Ripper Kenosha, WI Patricia L Urban Racine, WI Katherine J Braun Racine, WI&#13;
Daniel J Roethe Kenosha, WI Rebecca A Van Swol Union Grove, WI Robin L Braun Racine, WI&#13;
Starlet D Rondeau Kenosha, WI Katherine M Vick Racine, WI Jennifer L Bremberger Burlington, WI&#13;
Kelly K Sakalowski Bristol, WI Christina E Wend Racine, WI Chad L Chapin I Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Michelle L Santelli Kenosha, WI Michael J Wltkofski Racine, WI Stephanie L Clausen Racine, WI&#13;
Kyle S Scuglik Kenosha, WI Chris P Condon Racine, WI&#13;
Vrunda D Shah Kenosha, WI Rebecca M Cruz Union Grove, WI&#13;
Nicole R Smith Kenosha, WI 3.90 to 4.00 Susan M Dana Racine, WI&#13;
Ryan D Smith Twin Lakes, WI Sarah A Aguilar Kenosha, WI Richard L Ditter Racine, WI&#13;
Jacob W Tatay Kenosha, WI Christine M Alder Kenosha, WI Eze B Elechi Racine, WI&#13;
Bryan J Tomczak Kenosha, WI Robert M Allen Kenosha, WI Tamara J Fabian Racine, WI&#13;
Tracy L Vanderford Kenosha, WI Bridget J Allen-Laehn Kenosha, WI Natalie E Funderburg Racine, WI&#13;
Michael E Walczak Kenosha, WI Ryan S Ashton Kenosha, WI Sarah N Funk Union Grove, WI&#13;
Matthew J WaWiorka Kenosha, WI Heidi A Baehr Kenosha, WI Rogelio X Garcia Kansasville, WI&#13;
Adrienne F Wiegert Kenosha, WI Georgette M Ball Kenosha, WI Stephanie M Green Racine, WI&#13;
Jean M WIiheim Kenosha, WI Mary A Berger Salem, WI David J Higgens Racine, WI&#13;
Kyle P Wolf Kenosha, WI Natalie K Bonaretti Pleasant Prairie, WI Nathaniel T Jeanson Racine, Wi&#13;
Lori S Wood Kenosha, WI Daniel J Bosdech Kenosha, WI Lee R Johnson Union Grove, WI&#13;
Pamela K Zielsdorf Kenosha, WI Dilpreet Brar Bristol, WI Carol L Jones Racine, WI&#13;
Melissa A Ziemba Pleasant Prairie, WI Manpreet Brar Bristol, WI Paul J Kawa Racine, WI&#13;
Debra L Andrekus Burlington, WI Joseph A Brooks Kenosha, WI James M Klitzke Racine, WI&#13;
Brenda Ashmore Racine, WI Jamie L Brown Kenosha, WI Kristi M Lacanne Racine, WI&#13;
Holly D Bahr Wind Lake, WI Melissa A Busse • Kenosha, WI Joshua S Langer Racine, WI&#13;
Katie M Beaumier Sturtevant, WI Chistopher J Bytnar Kenosha, WI Steven J Lenart Racine, WI&#13;
Joseph V Biondi Racine, WI Chad C Cantwell -Twin Lakes, WI Blake C Luedtke Racine, WI&#13;
Michael E Bose Union Grove, WI Mary F Cenni Pleasant Prairie, WI Shaun T Lukas Franksville, WI&#13;
Carla A Castellano Racine, WI Michelle L Coan Kenosha, WI Eric J Masshardt Union Grove, WI&#13;
Angelina M Cruz Racine, WI Christina M Conforti Pleasant Prairie, WI Terry A Mccarthy Burlington, WI&#13;
Maria V Dimitrova Racine, WI Kristan A Constant Kenosha, WI Andrew M Mendez Racine, WI&#13;
Ryan M Dunsworth Kenosha, WI Diana M Covelli Kenosha, WI Dana L Mueller Burlington, WI&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek Racine, WI Mary C Debish Kenosha, WI Debra J Mueller Union Grove, WI&#13;
Aaron A Embury Racine, WI Brigette A Dei Salem, WI Katie L Mutter Union Grove, WI&#13;
Jamie N Fierke Racine, WI Paul M Francetic Kenosha, WI Kevin P Nelson Racine, WI&#13;
Amanda M Flannery Racine, WI Angela R Gallagher Kenosha, WI Bennett C Olson Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Erin M Flannery Racine, WI Jeremy R Gemig Kenosha, WI AlanAPaal Franksville, WI&#13;
Kristi L Forbes Franksville, WI Leeann Grandsard Kenosha, WI Paul A Pedrosa Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Maggie R Gillespie Racine, WI Tajdeep K Grewal Kenosha, WI Joseph A Piirto Racine, WI&#13;
Joan L Gouff Sturtevant, WI John A Groschopf Bristol, WI Samantha R Pucely Racine, WI&#13;
Timothy J Graff Burlington, WI Maryalice. Guttormsen Kenosha, WI Shani M Ritt Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Dena M Gunderson Union Grove, WI Tarik N Hamdan Kenosha, WI Derek R Rivers Racine, WI&#13;
Rachael E Herda Burlington, WI Holly A Hibbeln Trevor, WI Hilton A Roland Racine, WI&#13;
Rosalinda Hernandez Racine, WI Benjamin C Hofmann Kenosha, WI Robert C Rollins Racine, WI&#13;
Jill W Hoffman Racine, WI Gale E Horton Kenosha, WI Crystal D Routon Racine, WI&#13;
Darren A Holland Union Grove, WI Remi Johnson Kenosha, WI Amanda M Schneider Racine, WI&#13;
Ramon A Jaimez Racine, WI Bryanna J Jurvis Kenosha, WI Dawn M Sheffield Racine, WI&#13;
Susan J Jensen Sturtevant, WI Ahlam M Khalaf Kenosha, WI Crystal A Smith Racine, WI&#13;
Mary S Kaprelian Racine, WI Carol J Klees-Starks Kenosha, WI Matt L Spang Racine, WI&#13;
N?thalie A Kelsey Racine, WI Garrett L Kornman Kenosha, WI Karen E Sprague Racine, WI&#13;
Ginger L Kinyon Racine, WI Peter J Kos Kenosha, WI Rebecca A Stratman Racine, WI&#13;
Rebecca L Klinzing Racine, WI Stephanie S Krehbiel Kenosha, WI Kristine A Strauss Racine, WI&#13;
Leslie A Klug Racine, WI Natalie L Kring Kenosha, WI Jacqueline J Strelow Waterford, WI&#13;
Bradley Kostreva Racine, WI . 0onna M Kubicki .Salem, WI Julie Thompson Racine, WI&#13;
Kimberly A Kragh Racine, WI Marc A Laudonio Kenosha, WI Jennifer Tremelling Racine, WI&#13;
Juliet H Lena Kansasville, WI Kathryn L Lemke Kenosha, WI Kellie A Tuttle Racine, WI&#13;
Lisa A Lequia Racine, WI Joline M Levanetz Trevor, WI Jaimie D Utley Racine, w1·&#13;
Ellen K Leslie Racine, WI Jennifer M Little Kenosha, WI Brian D Van Schyndel Racine, WI&#13;
Amy L Maack Racine, WI Kimberly J Little Kenosha, WI Sheryl L Villalpando Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Ronald J Macdonald Racine, WI Jo A Medley Kenosha, WI Stephen J Von Dissen Racine, WI&#13;
Jennifer M Maller Racine, WI Karyn M Meyer Kenosha, WI Eileen B Welch Franksville, WI&#13;
Joseph A Marsch Racine, WI Kathleen M Meyer Pleasant Prairie, WI Craig J Wilking Burlington, WI&#13;
Tonya M Matelski Racine, WI Celia M Miller Pleasant Prairie, WI John A Wilson Racine, WI&#13;
Kevin W Matson Racine, WI Andrew J Modory Kenosha, WI Nicole M Wilson Franksville, WI&#13;
Zahra I McCray Racine, WI Patricia J Novsam Kenosha, WI Nicholas J Zeleski Racine, WI&#13;
; &#13;
PageS&#13;
-&#13;
Profile: UW-Parkside Ranger Sniper Brian Coffman is ultimate survivor&#13;
By Steve Kratochvil&#13;
A 17-year-old Brian Coffman lay in&#13;
a hospital bed at St. Joseph Methodist&#13;
Hospital, not focusing on the future. In&#13;
his mind, he had no future. "I thought&#13;
I was going to die," said Coffman, who&#13;
suffered through a severe case of&#13;
mononucleosis.&#13;
The basketball star who was a thirdteam&#13;
all-state selection at Penn High&#13;
School looked to be permanently&#13;
benched. He had lost 26 pounds and&#13;
was reduced to a shell of what he once&#13;
was.&#13;
"I laid there thinking I need to&#13;
chan~e the way I act if I ever get out of&#13;
here, said Coffman. "That was horrible.&#13;
I don't wish that on anyone. My&#13;
mom told me everything happens for&#13;
a reason. Maybe I was getting too big&#13;
for my britches and tfiat was God's&#13;
way of bringing me back to earth."&#13;
After weeks of hospitalization&#13;
which seemed like a lifetime, Coffman&#13;
was released. He was a prized recruit&#13;
prior to his illness with Division I&#13;
school such as Stetson, Youngstown&#13;
State, Valpariso and Bowling Green&#13;
among others courting him. All lost&#13;
interest after the illness. "Ironically, I&#13;
wanted to sign a letter of intent before&#13;
my senior season so I didn't have to&#13;
worry about that during&#13;
the season,"&#13;
recalled Coffman.&#13;
Despite a weakened&#13;
condition and&#13;
playing in back-tobackgames&#13;
on Friday&#13;
and Saturday nights,&#13;
Coffman led Penn to a&#13;
19-4 record. He garnered&#13;
second team&#13;
all-state honors and&#13;
was selected to the&#13;
Indiana All-Star&#13;
Team. Certainly, there&#13;
was room at a college&#13;
for a player of his caliber.&#13;
But where?&#13;
Coffman had one&#13;
connection to the&#13;
schools which recruited&#13;
him, and that was&#13;
Jeff Rutter, an assistant&#13;
coach at Stetson who had taken&#13;
the head job at Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
"My decision to come to Parkside&#13;
was based on three factors. The first&#13;
was Coach Rutter, the second was the&#13;
high level of competition,&#13;
and the third&#13;
was I would be able&#13;
to play two sports."&#13;
Coffman would play&#13;
in the .Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference,&#13;
widely regarded as&#13;
the toughest Division&#13;
II league in the country.&#13;
Plus, Coffman&#13;
would be able to compete&#13;
on the school's&#13;
golf team. And he&#13;
excelled.&#13;
He is the team's&#13;
leading basketball&#13;
scorer this year, and&#13;
he has earned all-conference&#13;
honors in golf&#13;
twice. "He has always&#13;
told me he would do&#13;
whatever it takes to&#13;
win and he proves that every game,"&#13;
said Ranger head basketball coach Jeff&#13;
Rutter. "He's a successful, yet humble&#13;
youngman."&#13;
Athletic success is only temporary&#13;
and Coffman is well aware of that fact.&#13;
He is paving the way to attend Notre&#13;
•&#13;
Guard Brian Coffman overcame&#13;
serious illness to resurrect his&#13;
basketball career.&#13;
Men's Basketball:&#13;
Weekend Split Keeps Tournev Hopes Alive&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's basketbail&#13;
team would have preferred to win both&#13;
of their Great Lake Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC)games last week. But after landing&#13;
with a thud last Thursday night&#13;
against St. Joseph's, the Rangers scored&#13;
a critical victory over IUPU-FortWayne&#13;
on Saturday to stay in the conference&#13;
tournament race.&#13;
On Thursday, Jan. 25, The Rangers&#13;
looked like a man running in loose&#13;
sand, losing 85-71 to St. Joseph's. The&#13;
Pumas built a 42-30 halftime lead and&#13;
never let UWP closer than nine points in&#13;
, the second half to seal the victory.&#13;
UWP Wrestlers:&#13;
Win On Home Mal&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's wrestlers made the&#13;
most of their only home match of the&#13;
semester, defeating UW-Oshkosh 31-13&#13;
on Wednesday, Jan. 24.The win was the&#13;
14thin the last 15meetings between,the&#13;
two schools, pulling The Rangers over&#13;
the .500mark for the year at 5-4.&#13;
UW-Parkside wrestlers Tyler Freeman,&#13;
Luke Goral, Matt Jacobs, Fred&#13;
Joseph, Victor Juarez, Craig Klawitter,&#13;
and Andy Mueller all picked up wins&#13;
during the meet. UWlYnow leads the&#13;
all-time series against UW-Oshkosh 21-&#13;
4. The team traveled to UW-Stevens&#13;
Point for a dual meet last night.&#13;
Coach Jeff Rutter was dissatisfied&#13;
with every phase of his team's game&#13;
against St. Joe's.&#13;
"Wedug ourselves a hole in the first&#13;
half with poor defense, too much fouling,&#13;
and ineffective offensive play," he&#13;
said. Rutter credited St. Joe's for aggressiveness&#13;
and hunger in gaining an&#13;
important conference victory.&#13;
The Pumas were led by 22 points&#13;
from Hodges Smith and 15 points and&#13;
10 rebounds by Brandon Yates. Nick&#13;
Knuth scored 17 points to pace UWP&#13;
while Qunicey Moman and Brian Coffman&#13;
had 10 each.&#13;
Last Saturday's 63-55 win against&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne was a complete turn&#13;
around and may have saved the season.&#13;
The Rangers' 14-0first half run and 11-0&#13;
second naif skein led to the Mastodons'&#13;
extinction (sorry, couldn't resist).&#13;
The Rangers led by 18 points at the&#13;
half, fell behind briefly in the second&#13;
half, then re-gained the momentum in&#13;
what Coach Rutter called, "As good a&#13;
team victory as we have had since I&#13;
have been here." Brian Coffman&#13;
notched 15 points and Marlon Grice&#13;
added 14. UW-Parkside is now 7-10&#13;
overall and 4-7 in the GLVC.&#13;
Antonio Scores Personal Best,&#13;
leads UWP Runners in Indianapolis meel'&#13;
UW-Parkside's Amber Antonio continues&#13;
to impress whether she's competing&#13;
in cross-country or track. Antonia,&#13;
who was the Great Lake Valley&#13;
Conference cross country runner of the&#13;
year, scored a persona! best 17:45.18,&#13;
placing fifth in the 5,000-meter run at&#13;
the Butler University Smith-Barney&#13;
Open in Indianapolis.&#13;
In a race that included many Division&#13;
I runners, Amber Antonio was the&#13;
fourth collegiate finisher in the 22-person&#13;
field.&#13;
. Other standout performances for&#13;
UW-Parkside included Raquel Walls 12&#13;
place finish in the 60 hurdles; [ana Weeden's&#13;
indoor personal best time of&#13;
5:15.40 in the mile run, good for 15th&#13;
place.&#13;
UW-Parkside's Mike Merckx placed&#13;
third in the high jump at Butler, soaring&#13;
6 feet, 6 3/4 inches. Mike was the top&#13;
collegiate finisher among the dozen&#13;
high jumpers.&#13;
Dame where he hopes to go to law&#13;
school. He will graduate fr?m UWPin&#13;
May WIth a B.s. m Criminal Justice&#13;
and a B.S. in Sociology.&#13;
At UWp, Coffman is president of&#13;
the Student Athlete Advisory Commit.&#13;
tee. Through this organization, stu.&#13;
dent athletes take their concerns to&#13;
Coffman, who is the student repressn.&#13;
tative for the UWP Athletic Board.&#13;
He recently coordinated a fundrais,&#13;
ing carnival for the athletic department&#13;
and is planning community ser.&#13;
vice for Habitat For Humanity, an&#13;
organization which refurbishes houses&#13;
for those who do not have the means&#13;
to do so themselves.&#13;
Coffman has made an impact onthe&#13;
national level. He is the Division IT&#13;
representative on the NCAA Sportsmanship&#13;
and Ethical Conduct Committee.&#13;
This is made up of one studentathlete&#13;
from each division.&#13;
Thanks in part to a strong support&#13;
system back nome, Brian Coffman has&#13;
excelled on the court and on the&#13;
course, but more importantly in the&#13;
classroom and on varrous committees.&#13;
His playing career comes to a close&#13;
this academic year, but his career&#13;
course has only begun. And to think,&#13;
the seed may have sprouted in a hospital&#13;
room.&#13;
The men host Northern Kentucky&#13;
tonight at 7:45 p.m. in the De Simone&#13;
Gym. They play Indianapolis Saturday&#13;
at 3:15 p.m. UWP students are admitted&#13;
free to ali home game. TIckets are $5 for&#13;
adults, $3 for high school students, and&#13;
$1 for kids 14 years of age and under.&#13;
Tonight's game will be televised by&#13;
TIme-Warner on a tape-delay basisFriday&#13;
night beginning at 6 p.m. on Charmel96&#13;
Kenosha, Charmel 14BRacine.&#13;
UWP Racewalkers Run&#13;
Awav From Field al&#13;
Alllel Invilalional&#13;
UW-Parkside made a clean sweep of&#13;
the top five spots during the Alltel Invitational&#13;
3,000 race walk last Friday at&#13;
the University of Findlay (Ohio). Jim&#13;
Heys won the event with a time of&#13;
12:34.65. He was followed by Lachlan&#13;
McDonald (12:36.38), Matt DeWitt&#13;
(12:59.72),Steven Quirke (13:40.42),and&#13;
Mike Stanton (13:45.68).UW-Parkside's&#13;
Tim Nickel placed sixth in the race with&#13;
a time of 16:17.13.All six qualified for&#13;
the NAlA national indoor meet at Johnson&#13;
City, Tenn., March2 and 3.&#13;
Inthe women's 3,000 race walk, Sam&#13;
Cohen (£4:08.95), Deb Huberty&#13;
(14:21.95), and Ali Bahr (14:45.04)&#13;
placed three-four-five. They qualified&#13;
for the USATFIndoor meet to be held in&#13;
Atlanta's Georgia Dome March 3.&#13;
Page 8 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Profile:• ow-Parkside Ranger Sniper Brian Collman is ultimate survivor&#13;
By Steve Kratochvil&#13;
A 17-year-old Brian Coffman lay in&#13;
a hospital bed at St. Joseph Methodist&#13;
Hospital, not focusing on the future. In&#13;
his mind, he had no future. "I thought I was going to die," said Coffman, wbo&#13;
suffered through a severe case of&#13;
mononucleosis.&#13;
The basketball star who was a thirdteam&#13;
all-state seleotion at Penn High School looked to be permanently benched. He had lost 26 pounds and&#13;
was reduced to a shell of what he once&#13;
was.&#13;
"I laid there thinking I need to&#13;
chan~e the way I act if I ever get out of&#13;
here, said Coffman. "That was horrible.&#13;
I don't wish that on anyone. My&#13;
mom told me everything happens for&#13;
a reason. Maybe I was getting too big for my britches and tnat was God's&#13;
way of bringing me back to earth."&#13;
After weeks of hospitalization which seemed like a lifetime, Coffman&#13;
was released. He was a prized recruit&#13;
prior to his illness with Division I&#13;
school such as Stetson, Youngstown State, Valpariso and Bowling Green&#13;
among others courting him. All lost&#13;
Men's Basketball:&#13;
interest after the illness. "Ironically, I&#13;
wanted to sign a letter of intent before&#13;
my senior season so I didn't have to&#13;
worry about that during&#13;
the season,"&#13;
recalled Coffman.&#13;
Despite a weakened&#13;
condition and&#13;
playing in back-toback.games&#13;
on Friday and Saturday nights, Coffman led Penn to a&#13;
19-4 record. He gar- nered second team&#13;
all-state honors and&#13;
was selected to the&#13;
Indiana All-Star&#13;
Team. Certainly, there&#13;
was room at a college for a player of his caliber.&#13;
But where?&#13;
"My decision to come to Parkside&#13;
was based on three factors. The first&#13;
was Coach Rutter, the second was the&#13;
high level of competi- tion, and the third&#13;
was I would be able&#13;
to play two sports." Coffman would play in the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference,&#13;
widely regarded as&#13;
the toughest Division&#13;
II league in the country.&#13;
Plus, Coffman&#13;
would be able to compete&#13;
on the school's&#13;
golf team. And he&#13;
excelled.&#13;
Coffman had one&#13;
connection to the&#13;
schools which recruited&#13;
him, and that was&#13;
Jeff Rutter, an assisGuard&#13;
Brian Coffman overcame&#13;
serious illness to resurrect his&#13;
basketball career .&#13;
He is the team's&#13;
leading basketball&#13;
scorer this year, and&#13;
he has earned all-conference&#13;
honors in golf twice. "He has always told me he would do&#13;
tant coach at Stetson who had taken&#13;
the head job at Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
whatever it takes to&#13;
win and he proves that every game," said Ranger head basketball coach Jeff&#13;
Rutter. "He's a successful, yet humble&#13;
young man."&#13;
weekend Split Keeps Tournev Hopes Alive&#13;
Athletic success is only temporary and Coffman is well aware of that fact.&#13;
He is paving the way to attend Notre&#13;
The OW-Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team would have preferred to win both&#13;
of their Great Lal&lt;e Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC) games last week. But after landing&#13;
witn a thud last Thursday night against St. Joseph's, the Rangers scored&#13;
a critical victory over IUPU-Fort Wayne&#13;
on Saturday to stay in 1:he conference&#13;
tournament race.&#13;
On Thursday, Jan. 25, The Rangers looked like a man running in loose&#13;
sand, losing 85-71 to St. Joseph's. The&#13;
Pumas built a 42-30 halftime 1ead and&#13;
never let UWP closer than nine points in&#13;
the second half to seal the victory.&#13;
DWP wrestlers:&#13;
Win on Home Mat&#13;
Coach Jim Koch's wrestlers made the&#13;
most of their only home match of the&#13;
semester, defeating OW-Oshkosh 31-13&#13;
on Wednesday, Jan. 24. The win was the&#13;
14th in the last 15 meetings between the&#13;
two schools, pulling The Rangers over&#13;
the .500 mark for the year at 5-4.&#13;
OW-Parkside wrestlers Tyler Freeman,&#13;
Luke Goral, Matt Jacobs, Fred&#13;
Joseph, Victor Juarez, Craig Klawitter, and Andy Mueller all picked up wins&#13;
during the meet. UWP now leads the&#13;
all-time series against OW-Oshkosh 21-&#13;
4. The team traveled to OW-Stevens&#13;
Point for a dual meet last night.&#13;
Coach Jeff Rutter was dissatisfied&#13;
with every phase of his team's game against St. Joe's.&#13;
"We dug ourselves a hole in the first&#13;
half with poor defense, too much fouling,&#13;
and ineffective offensive play," he&#13;
said. Rutter credited St. Joe's for aggres- siveness and hunger in gaining an&#13;
important conference victory. The Pumas were led by 22 points from Hodges Smith and 15 points and&#13;
10 rebounds by Brandon Yates. Nick&#13;
Knuth scored 17 points to pace UWP&#13;
while Qunicey Moman and Brian Coffman&#13;
had 10 each.&#13;
Last Saturday's 63-55 win against IUPU-Fort Wayne was a complete turn&#13;
around and may have saved the season.&#13;
The Rangers' 14-0 first half run and 11-0&#13;
second nalf skein led to the Mastodons'&#13;
extinction (sorry, couldn't resist). The Rangers led by 18 points at the&#13;
half, fell behind briefly in the second&#13;
half, then re-gained the momentum in&#13;
what Coach Rutter called, "As good a&#13;
team victory as we have had since I&#13;
have been here." Brian Coffman&#13;
notched 15 points and Marlon Grice&#13;
added 14. OW-Parkside is now 7-10&#13;
overall and 4-7 in the GLVC.&#13;
Antonio Scores Personal Best, Leads DWP Runners in Indianapolis meet&#13;
OW-Parkside's Amber Antonio continues&#13;
to impress whether she's competing&#13;
in cross-country or track. Antonia,&#13;
who was the Great Lake Valley Conference cross country runner of the&#13;
year, scored a personal best 17:45.18, 2lacing fifth in the 5,000-meter run at&#13;
the Butler University Smith-Barney Open in Indianapolis.&#13;
In a race that included many Division&#13;
1 runners, Amber Antonio was the&#13;
fourth collegiate finisher in the 22-person&#13;
field.&#13;
Other standout performances for&#13;
OW-Parkside included Raquel Walls 12&#13;
place finish in the 60 hurdles; Jana Weeden's&#13;
indoor personal best time of&#13;
5:15.40 in the mile run, good for 15th&#13;
place.&#13;
OW-Parkside's Mike Merckx placed third in the high jump at Butler, soaring 6 feet, 6 3 / 4 inches. Mike was the top collegiate finisher among the dozen&#13;
high jumpers.&#13;
Dame where he hopes to go to law&#13;
school. ~e will gra~uate_ fr?m DWP in&#13;
May with a B.S. m Cnnunal Justice&#13;
and a B.S. in Sociology. At UWP, Coffman is president of&#13;
the Student Athlete Advisory Commit•&#13;
tee. Through this organization, student&#13;
athletes take their concerns to&#13;
Coffman, who is the student represen• tative for the UWP Athletic Board.&#13;
He recently coordinated a fundraising&#13;
carnival for the athletic depart• ment and is planning community ser•&#13;
vice for Habitat For Humanity, an&#13;
organization which refurbishes houses&#13;
for those who do not have the means&#13;
to do so themselves.&#13;
Coffman has made an impact on the&#13;
national level. He is the Division II&#13;
representative on the NCAA Sports- manship and Ethical Conduct Committee.&#13;
This is made up of one studentathlete&#13;
from each division.&#13;
Thanks in part to a strong supeort system back nome, Brian Coffman has&#13;
excelled on the court and on the&#13;
course, but more importantly in the&#13;
classroom and on various committees.&#13;
His playing career comes to a close&#13;
this academic year, but his career&#13;
course has only begun. And to think, the seed may have sprouted in a hospital&#13;
room.&#13;
The men host Northern Kentucky tonight at 7:45 p.m. in the De Simone&#13;
Gym. They play Indianapolis Saturday at 3:15 p.m. UWP students are admitted&#13;
free to all home game. Tickets are $5 for&#13;
adults, $3 for high school students, and&#13;
$1 for kids 14 years of age and under.&#13;
Tonight's game will be televised by Time-Warner on a tape-delay basis Friday night begin!ling at 6 p.m. on Channel 96&#13;
Kenosha, Channel 14B Racine.&#13;
DWP Racewalkers Run&#13;
Awav From Field at&#13;
Alltel Invitational&#13;
UW-Parkside made a clean sweep of&#13;
the top five spots during the Alltel Invitational&#13;
3,000 race walk last Friday at&#13;
the Universiry of Findlay (Ohio). Jim&#13;
Heys won the event with a time of&#13;
12:34.65. He was followed by Lachlan&#13;
McDonald (12:36.38), Matt DeWitt&#13;
(12:59.72), Steven Quirke (13:40.42), and&#13;
Mike Stanton (13:45.68). OW-Parkside's&#13;
Tim Nickel placed sixth in the race with&#13;
a time of 16:17.13. All six qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national indoor meet at Johnson&#13;
City, Tenn., March 2 and 3.&#13;
In the women's 3,000 race walk, Sam&#13;
Cohen (M:08.95), Deb Huberty (14:21.95), and Ali Bahr (14:45.04) placed three-four-five. They qualified for the USATF Indoor meet to be held in&#13;
Atlanta's Georgia Dome March 3. &#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 9&#13;
WOOlen's basketball:&#13;
LadYRangers split GLVe games&#13;
It happens so often in sports, it's&#13;
almosta cliche: a team blows out an&#13;
opponentby a huge margin one game&#13;
and the next game they can't scrape&#13;
togetherenough points, goals, runs or&#13;
wnateverto win a close game. The UWParkside&#13;
Lady Rangers experienced&#13;
that ultimate sports frustration last&#13;
week pounding St. Joseph's by 31&#13;
points(311)Thursday night but losing&#13;
to IUPU-Fort Wayne 79-67 two days&#13;
later.&#13;
Everything went right against St.&#13;
Joe's.The home team's basket looked&#13;
as bip as the ocean as Coach Paulette&#13;
Steins team built a 15-3 lead after five&#13;
I minutes of play and led 52-28 at the&#13;
half.StacieJury led the onslaught with&#13;
16points but she had plenty of doublefigure&#13;
help. Tiesha Campbell (12&#13;
points), Nicole Brunk (11), and Erin&#13;
Crank and Joy Rodefer (10 each) conlributed&#13;
to the lop-sided win.&#13;
The Lady Rangers could have used&#13;
some of those excess points against the&#13;
Lady Dons of IUPU-Fort Wayne on Saturday.&#13;
UWP's shooters fell silent with&#13;
the score tied at 21 and IUPU-Fort&#13;
Wayne went on a 16-2 run to put the&#13;
game away. IUPU-Fort Wayne piled up&#13;
30 of its points from three-points baskets.&#13;
Denita Sublett led the Lady Rangers&#13;
with 19 points. Joy Rodefer had 18&#13;
points and 10 rebounds. UWP is now 5-&#13;
12 overall and 2-9 in the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference.&#13;
UW-Parkside hosts Northern Kentucky&#13;
tonight at 5:30 p.m. They play&#13;
Indianapolis Saturday at 1 p.m. UWParkside&#13;
students are admitted free to&#13;
all home game. Tickets are $5 for adults&#13;
$3 for high school students, and $1 for&#13;
children 14 years of age and under.&#13;
China Tour&#13;
Information Session Februarv &amp;&#13;
UW-Parkside students who want a&#13;
"different" kind of summer vacation&#13;
this year may want to stop by Tallent&#13;
Hall room 182 next Tuesday at 6 p.m.&#13;
That evening, Professor George Wang&#13;
willpreview his summer learning tour&#13;
ofthe People's Republic of China. The&#13;
two-hour session is free.&#13;
The tour is June 25 to July 8, 2001,&#13;
and includes stops in Beijing, Xian,&#13;
Cullin, Shanghai, Suzhou, and&#13;
Hangzhou. An excursion to Hong&#13;
Kong can be arranged. A native of&#13;
China, Professor Wang has traveled&#13;
extensively throughout the country.&#13;
He and English speaking guides will&#13;
accompany tour participants. No prior&#13;
knowledge of the Chinese language is&#13;
needed.&#13;
For students, the trip is offered as a&#13;
three-credit course in international&#13;
studies, or sociology / anthropology.&#13;
Community members cam come along&#13;
for no credit. In preparation for the&#13;
trip, series of orientation lectures will&#13;
be held Tuesdays and Thursdays from&#13;
6 to 8:30 p.m. from May 8 to 24, 2001.&#13;
These will include guest speakers and&#13;
films on Chinese culture, history, and&#13;
major social institutions. Participants&#13;
are expected to attend the lectures.&#13;
For more information, call Professor&#13;
Wang at ext. 2520, or Laurie Odegaard&#13;
at ext. 2701.&#13;
This summer you could be enjoying the modern life in Shaghai: dining, shopping,&#13;
dressing in traditional fashion or watching performances.&#13;
www.loveandbasketball.com&#13;
IpG - 131&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series&#13;
Marketing Yourself:&#13;
How to 'Sell' your 'Campus Involvement Experiences to Potential Employers&#13;
EtiqueUe&#13;
Serving on a Search and Screen or other University Committee&#13;
Putting the FUN back iu Fundraisiug&#13;
Recruitment, Recognition, and Retention-3 Critical Components&#13;
to a Strong Membership&#13;
Running a Meeting&#13;
Thriving in Chaos&#13;
Successful Transitioning for Student Organizations&#13;
, ~ .&#13;
Get more information about how you can become a V.I.P. at the following locations:&#13;
Student Activities Office, Student Center, Room 209;~Residence Life Office, Ranger Hall.&#13;
and the Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, Wyllie D182&#13;
sponsored by Student Activilies&#13;
r:!!~ , .. ' ," . ,&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page9&#13;
women's basketball:&#13;
LldV Rangers SPiit GLVC games&#13;
It happens so often in sports, it's&#13;
almost a cliche: a team blows out an&#13;
opponent by a huge margin one game&#13;
ana the next game they can't scrape&#13;
together enough points, goals, runs or&#13;
whatever to win a close game. The UWParkside&#13;
Lady Rangers experienced&#13;
that ultimate sports frustration last&#13;
week pounding St. Joseph's by 31&#13;
points (31!) Thursday nignt but losing&#13;
to IUPU-Fort Wayne 79-67 two days&#13;
later.&#13;
Everything went right against St.&#13;
Joe's. The home team's basket looked&#13;
as bi~ as the ocean as Coach Paulette&#13;
Stein s team built a 15-3 lead after five&#13;
minutes of play and led 52-28 at the&#13;
half. Stacie Jury led the onslaught with&#13;
16 points but she had plenty of doublefigure&#13;
help. Tiesha Campbell (12&#13;
points), Nicole Brunk (11), and Erin&#13;
Crank and Joy Rodefer (10 each) conChina&#13;
Tour&#13;
tributed to the lop-sided win.&#13;
The Lady Rangers could have used&#13;
some of those excess points against the&#13;
Lady Dons of IUPU-Fort Wayne on Saturday.&#13;
UWP' s shooters fell silent with&#13;
the score tied at 21 and IUPU-Fort&#13;
Wayne went on a 16-2 run to put the&#13;
game ~way. _IUPU-Fort Wayne piled up&#13;
30 of its pomts from three-points baskets.&#13;
&#13;
Denita Sublett led the Lady Rangers&#13;
with 19 points. Joy Rodefer had 18&#13;
points and 10 rebounds. UWP is now 5-&#13;
12 overall and 2-9 in the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference.&#13;
UW-Parkside hosts Northern Kentucky&#13;
tonight at 5:30 p.m. They play&#13;
Indianapolis Saturday at 1 p.m. UWParkside&#13;
students are admitted free to&#13;
all home game. Tickets are $5 for adults&#13;
$3 for high school students, and $1 for&#13;
children 14 years of age and under.&#13;
Information Session February &amp;&#13;
UW-Parkside students who want a&#13;
"different" kind of summer vacation&#13;
this year may want to stop by Tallent&#13;
Hall room 182 next Tuesday at 6 p.m.&#13;
That evening, Professor George Wang&#13;
will preview his summer learning tour&#13;
of the People's Republic of China. The&#13;
two-hour session is free.&#13;
The tour is June 25 to July 8, 2001,&#13;
and includes stops in Beijing, Xian,&#13;
Guilin, Shanghai, Suzhou, and&#13;
Hangzhou. An excursion to Hong&#13;
Kong can be arranged. A native of&#13;
China, Professor Wang has traveled&#13;
extensively throughout the country.&#13;
He and English speaking guides will&#13;
accompany tour participants. No prior&#13;
knowledge of the Chinese language is&#13;
needed.&#13;
For students, the trip is offered as a&#13;
three-credit course in international&#13;
studies, or sociology/ anthropology.&#13;
Community members cam come along&#13;
for no credit. In preparation for the&#13;
trip, series of orientation lectures will&#13;
be neld Tuesdays and Thursdays from&#13;
6 to 8:30 p.m. from May 8 to 24, 2001.&#13;
These will include guest speakers and&#13;
films on Chinese culture, history, and&#13;
major social institutions. Participants&#13;
are expected to attend the lectures.&#13;
For more information, call Professor&#13;
Wang at ext. 2520, or Laurie Odegaard&#13;
at ext. 2701.&#13;
This summer you could be enjoying the modern life in Shaghai: dining, shopping,&#13;
dressing in traditional fashion or watching performances.&#13;
Wednesday, February 14, 2001&#13;
7:30 p.m. Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets price: $2.00&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
www.loveandbasketball.com&#13;
IPG-131&#13;
The University of Wiscoosin-Parlcside provides services for patrons with spec~ needs.&#13;
Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345.&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V .I.P. Leadership Series&#13;
Marketing Yourself:&#13;
How to 'Sell' your ·campus Involvement Experiences to Potential Employers&#13;
Etiquett;e&#13;
Serving on a Search and Screen or other University Committee&#13;
Putting the FUN back in Fundraising&#13;
Recruitment, Recognition, and Retention-3 Critical Components&#13;
to a Strong Membership&#13;
Running a Meeting&#13;
Thriving in Chaos&#13;
Successful Transitioning for Student Organizations&#13;
Get more information about how yo~ can become a V.I.P. at the following locations:&#13;
Student Activities Office, Student Center, Room 209;'Residence Life Office, Ranger Hall,&#13;
and the Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, Wyllie D182&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
I~ ',' , ',''.",,'(,'','•• "• •' &#13;
Page 10&#13;
February 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
POllel - -.-..--~-&#13;
BllT ----&#13;
1/16/01&#13;
Inc 01-33 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Cormn. Arts lot, 6: 09&#13;
p.m.: student reported her&#13;
parking pennit was taken out&#13;
of her parked vehicle. No witnesses&#13;
or suspects at this&#13;
time.&#13;
Inc 01-34 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
JR and Outer Loop Road, 7: 23&#13;
p.m.: driver who failed to&#13;
stop at a stop sign, was subsequently&#13;
cited for non-registration&#13;
of vehicle.&#13;
1/17/01&#13;
Inc 01-35 Traffic Violation, HWY&#13;
31, North of HWY A, 2:19 a.m.:&#13;
driver displaying expired&#13;
license plates was stopped and&#13;
cited for operating a vehicle&#13;
after 'suspension.&#13;
Inc 01-36 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
G at CTHA, 8:05 a.m.: cita-&#13;
•ti.on was issued to a driver&#13;
for failure to obey a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 01-37 Traffic . Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road, .2 miles west&#13;
of CTHG, 10:41 a.m.: driver&#13;
was issued a citation for&#13;
speeding 43 mph in a 25 mph&#13;
zone:&#13;
Inc 01-38 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
E, - .2 miles east of STH 31,&#13;
10: 59 p.m.: driver was issued&#13;
a citation for speeding 66 mph&#13;
in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-39 Criminal Property Damage,&#13;
Union parking lot, 11: 13&#13;
a.m.: student reported the&#13;
passenger side rearview mirror&#13;
had been broken off his parked&#13;
car. Incident occurred sometime&#13;
on 01/16/01.&#13;
Inc 01-40 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Ranger Hall, 1:50 p.m.:&#13;
student reported personal&#13;
checks stolen from his dorm&#13;
room. Investigation is continuing.&#13;
Inc 01-41 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road at Union lot,&#13;
3:09 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for an improper stop at a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 01-42 Agency -Asai.st , 2800&#13;
Block of CTH A, 3:32 p.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer assisted K'enosha&#13;
Sheriff Dept. with traffic&#13;
control at a traffic accident&#13;
scene.&#13;
Inc 01-43 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, University Apartment&#13;
parking lot, 8:29 p.m.: Student&#13;
reported her housing&#13;
parking permit stolen. No suspects.&#13;
Inc 01-44 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop and WoodRoad, 9: 42&#13;
p.m.: vehicle was observed&#13;
going through a stop sign.&#13;
Investigation revealed driver&#13;
I s license was suspended. A&#13;
citation was issued for that&#13;
offense and verbal warning&#13;
given for failure to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
1/18/01&#13;
Inc 01-45 Fire Alarm, Facilities&#13;
Management, 12:28 a.m.: officers&#13;
responding to a reported&#13;
alarm checked the building but&#13;
found no smoke or fire.&#13;
Inc 01-46 Traffic Accident, Hit&#13;
&amp; Run, Union parking lot, 3 :29&#13;
p.m. : student reported her&#13;
car's right rear passenger&#13;
door was damaged.while parked&#13;
in the lot. No witnesses to&#13;
the incident.&#13;
Inc 01-47 Chapter 51, Mental&#13;
Health Act, University Apts.,&#13;
5:12 p.m.: UPPS officers&#13;
responded to a complaint of an&#13;
individual who was incoherent&#13;
and making unintelligible comments.&#13;
Kenosha Med. 5 was contacted&#13;
and transported subject&#13;
to Kenosha Memorial Hospital.&#13;
An attending physician contacted&#13;
UPPSand requested sub~&#13;
ject be taken into custody due&#13;
to his behavior and potential&#13;
for violence. Officer transported&#13;
subj ect to St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital in Racine for evaluation&#13;
and treatment.&#13;
Inc 01-48 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Rd., .2 miles north&#13;
of CTHJR, 8:04 p.m.: driver&#13;
was ci ted for speeding 43 mph&#13;
in a 25 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-49 Traffic violation,&#13;
Outer Loop.Rd., .2 miles north&#13;
of CTH JR,' 10: 22 p.m.: UPPS&#13;
officer stopped a.....driver traveling&#13;
at high rate of speed. A&#13;
citation was issued for failure&#13;
to fasten seatbelt-driver&#13;
and verbal warning for speeding.&#13;
1/19/01&#13;
Inc 01-50 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Off Campus, 12:12 p.m.:&#13;
student reported his car&#13;
stolen from his Milwaukee res&#13;
idence. His UW-Parkside permit&#13;
was inside the vehicle.&#13;
Inc 01-51 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH G at CTH A, 3:12 p.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for failure&#13;
to obey stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-52 Agency Assist, Petrifying&#13;
springs, 9:14 p.m.:&#13;
while on routine patrol, offiCer&#13;
observed six snowmobiles&#13;
and was asked by Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dept. to clear them from&#13;
the area.&#13;
1/20/01&#13;
No incident reports&#13;
1/21/01&#13;
Inc 01-53 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, University Apartments,&#13;
7:21 p.m.: student reported&#13;
the theft of personal checks.&#13;
Investigation continuing.&#13;
Inc 01-54 Traffic Violation,&#13;
4100 Block of OUter Loop Road,&#13;
9:01 a.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 45 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
1/22101&#13;
Inc 01-55 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH G and CTH A, 9:39 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for failure&#13;
to stop for sign.&#13;
Inc 01-56 Traffic Violation,&#13;
4100 Block of Outer Loop Road,&#13;
2:07 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 47 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-57 Traffic Violation,&#13;
4100 Block of OUter Loop Road,&#13;
3:44 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 50 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
inc 01-58 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road at CTH G, 8:15&#13;
p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure to stop/improper stop&#13;
at stop sign.&#13;
1/23/01&#13;
Inc 01-59 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY 31 at HWY JR, 1:38 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for speeding&#13;
64 mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-60 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWYE at HWY 31, 5:43 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for non-registration&#13;
of vehicle.&#13;
Inc 01-61 Security Alarm, Cormn.&#13;
Arts, 7:46 a.m.: officer&#13;
responding to an alarm found&#13;
it had been set off accidentally&#13;
by an employee.&#13;
Inc 01-62 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Union Parking Lot., 8:26 a.In.:&#13;
Two students were involved in&#13;
an accident. Report taken and&#13;
State accident form completed.&#13;
Inc 01-63 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop at CTH JR, 11: 52&#13;
a.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure to stop at a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 01-64 Traffic ViOlation,&#13;
-&#13;
OUter Loop at CTH G, 8:50&#13;
p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure/improper stop at st~&#13;
Slgn.&#13;
1/24/01&#13;
Inc 01-65 Welfare Check, Ranger&#13;
Hall. 12:05 a.m.: officer I&#13;
investigated a report of a&#13;
possible drunk or depreSSed&#13;
student. Student was contacted,&#13;
spoken to and determined&#13;
to be in good heal th.&#13;
Inc 01-66 Fire Drill, Child CITe&#13;
Center, 8:16 a.rn.': fire drill&#13;
was conducted at the center&#13;
with 66 children and 19 adults&#13;
safely evacuated in 70 seconds.&#13;
Inc 01-67 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Ccmn. Arts lot, 12:56 p.m.:&#13;
student struck another student's&#13;
parked vehicle causing&#13;
a small scuff mark.&#13;
Inc 01-68 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Inner Loop Rd., .3 miles west&#13;
of WoodRoad, 5:52 p.m.: driver&#13;
was ci ted for failure to&#13;
stop at stop sign.&#13;
1/25/01&#13;
Inc 01-69 Traffic Violation, HWY&#13;
E at WoodRd . , 1:40 a.m.: driver&#13;
was cited for a mandatory&#13;
seatbelt violation.&#13;
WHAT IS ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring all&#13;
positions for the Spring 2001&#13;
semester. Stop by the office,&#13;
located across from the&#13;
Career Center in lower Wyllie&#13;
hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to 1 p.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have&#13;
to offer?&#13;
Page 10&#13;
1/16/01&#13;
Inc 01-33 Personal Property Theft, Conm. Arts lot, 6:09&#13;
p.m.: student reported her&#13;
parking permit was taken out&#13;
of her parked vehicle. No witnesses&#13;
or suspects at this&#13;
time.&#13;
Inc 01-34 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
JR and Outer Loop Road, 7 :23&#13;
p.m.: driver who failed to&#13;
stop at a stop sign, was subsequently&#13;
cited for non-registration&#13;
of vehicle.&#13;
1/17/01&#13;
Inc 01-35 Traffic Violation, HWY&#13;
31, North of HWY A, 2:19 a.m.:&#13;
driver displaying expired license plates was stopped and&#13;
cited for operating a vehicle&#13;
after suspension.&#13;
Inc 01-36 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
G at CTH A, 8:05 a.m.: cita-&#13;
• tion was issued to a driver&#13;
for failure to obey a stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-37 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road, .2 miles west&#13;
of CTH G, 10 :41 a.m.: driver&#13;
was issued a citation for&#13;
speeding 43 rrph in a 25 rrph&#13;
zone.&#13;
Inc 01-38 Traffic Violation, CTH&#13;
E, .2 miles east of STH 31,&#13;
10:59 p.m.: driver was issued&#13;
a citation for speeding 66 mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-39 Criminal Property Damage,&#13;
Union parking lot, 11:13&#13;
a.m.: student reported the&#13;
passenger side rearview mirror&#13;
had been broken off his parked&#13;
car. Incident occurred sometime&#13;
on 01/16/01.&#13;
Inc 01-40 Personal Property Theft, Ranger Hall, 1:50 p.m.: student reported personal checks stolen from his dorm&#13;
room. Investigation is continuing.&#13;
&#13;
Inc 01-41 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road at Union lot,&#13;
3:09 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for an improper stop at a stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-42 Agency -Assist, 2800&#13;
Block of CTH A, 3:32 p.m.: UPPS officer assisted Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff Dept. with traffic&#13;
control at a traffic accident&#13;
scene.&#13;
Inc 01-43 Personal Property Theft, University Apartment&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
parking lot, 8:29 p.m.: Student&#13;
reported her housing parking permit stolen. No suspects.&#13;
&#13;
Inc 01-44 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop and Wood Road, 9:42&#13;
p.m.: vehicle was observed&#13;
going through a stop sign. . Investigation revealed driver's&#13;
license was suspended. A&#13;
citation was issued for that&#13;
offense and verbal warning given for failure to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
1/18/01&#13;
Inc 01-45 Fire Alarm, Facilities&#13;
Management, 12:28 a.m.: officers&#13;
responding to a reported alarm checked the building but&#13;
found no smoke or fire.&#13;
Inc 01-46 Traffic Accident, Hit&#13;
&amp; Run, Union parking lot, 3:29&#13;
p.m.: student reported her&#13;
car's right rear passenger door was damaged while parked in the lot. No witnesses to&#13;
the incident.&#13;
Inc 01-47 Chapter 51, Mental&#13;
Health Act, University Apts.,&#13;
5:12 p.m.: UPPS officers&#13;
responded to a complaint of an&#13;
individual who was incoherent&#13;
and making unintelligible comments.&#13;
Kenosha Med. 5 was contacted&#13;
and transported subject&#13;
to Kenosha Memorial Hospital.&#13;
An attending physician contacted&#13;
UPPS and requested sub~&#13;
ject be taken into custody due&#13;
to his behavior and potential for violence. Officer transported&#13;
subject to St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital in Racine for evaluation&#13;
and treatment.&#13;
Inc 01-48 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Rd., .2 miles north&#13;
of CTH JR, 8:04 p.m.: driver&#13;
wa:s cited for speeding 43 mph in a 25 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-49 Traffic violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Rd., .2 miles north&#13;
of CTH JR, · 10:22 p.m.: UPPS&#13;
officer stopped a- driver traveling&#13;
at high rate of speed. A&#13;
citation was issued for failure&#13;
to fasten seatbelt-driver&#13;
and verbal warning for speed- ing.&#13;
1/19/01&#13;
Inc 01-50 Personal Property Theft, Off Campus, 12:12 p.m.: student reported his car&#13;
stolen from his Milwaukee residence&#13;
. His UW-Parkside permit&#13;
was inside the vehicle.&#13;
Inc 01-51 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH G at CTH A, 3:12 p.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for failure&#13;
to obey stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-52 Agency Assist, Petrifying&#13;
Springs, 9:14 p.m.: while on routine patrol, officer&#13;
observed six snowmobiles&#13;
and was asked by Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dept. to clear them from&#13;
the area.&#13;
1/20/01&#13;
No incident reports&#13;
1/21/01&#13;
Inc 01-53 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, University Apartments,&#13;
7:21 p.m.: student reported the theft of personal checks.&#13;
Investigation continuing .&#13;
Inc 01-54 Traffic Violation,&#13;
4100 Block of Outer Loop Road,&#13;
9:01 a.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 45 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
1/22/01&#13;
Inc 01-55 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH G and CTH A, 9:39 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for failure&#13;
to stop for sign.&#13;
Inc 01-56 Traffic Violation,&#13;
4100 Block of Outer Loop Road,&#13;
2:07 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 4 7 mph in a 2 5&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-57 Traffic Violation, 4100 Block of Outer Loop Road,&#13;
3:44 p.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for speeding 50 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
inc 01-58 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop Road at CTH G, 8:15&#13;
p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure to stop/improper stop&#13;
at stop sign.&#13;
1/23/01&#13;
Inc 01-59 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY 31 at HWY JR, 1:38 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for speeding&#13;
64 mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-60 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY E at HWY 31, 5 :43 a.m.:&#13;
driver was cited for non-reg- istration of vehicle.&#13;
Inc 01-61 Security Alarm, Cormn.&#13;
Arts, 7:46 a.m.: officer&#13;
responding to an alarm found&#13;
it had been set off accidentally&#13;
by an employee.&#13;
Inc 01-62 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Union Parking Lot, 8:26 a.m.:&#13;
Two students were involved in&#13;
an accident. Report taken and&#13;
State accident form completed.&#13;
Inc 01-63 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop at CTH JR, 11: 52&#13;
a.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure to stop at a stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-64 Traffic Violation,&#13;
February 1, 2001&#13;
Outer Loop at CTH G, 8:50 - p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure/irrproper stop at stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
1/24/01&#13;
Inc 01-65 Welfare Check, Ranger&#13;
Hall, 12:05 a.m.: officer&#13;
investigated a report of a&#13;
possible drunk or depressed student. Student was contacted,&#13;
spoken to and determined&#13;
to be in good health.&#13;
Inc 01-66 Fire Drill, Child Care&#13;
Center, 8:16 a .m.: fire drill&#13;
was conducted at the center&#13;
with 66 children and 19 adults&#13;
safely evacuated in 70 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Inc 01-67 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Cormn . Arts lot, 12: 56 p.m.:&#13;
student struck another student'&#13;
s parked vehicle causing&#13;
a small scuff mark .&#13;
Inc 01-68 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Inner Loop Rd., . 3 miles west&#13;
of Wood Road, 5: 52 p.m.: driver&#13;
was cited for failure to&#13;
stop at stop sign .&#13;
1/25/01&#13;
Inc 01-69 Traffic Violation, HWY&#13;
E at Wood Rd., 1:40 a.m.: driver&#13;
was cited for a mandatory&#13;
seatbelt violation.&#13;
WHAT IS ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring all&#13;
positions for the Spring 2001&#13;
semester. Stop by the office,&#13;
located across from the&#13;
Career Center in lower Wyllie&#13;
hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to 1 p.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have&#13;
to offer? &#13;
February1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 11&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDSl&#13;
For a limited time only! The Ranger&#13;
News will print your student classified·&#13;
ads free of charge. Forms are available&#13;
at the newsstand in front of the library&#13;
and between Wyllie and Greenquist&#13;
Hall. Call 595-2287 for more information.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
Triple H Organic Boarding and&#13;
. Horseback Private Lessons.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature. Come ride&#13;
with us. 7417 - 7 Mile Road, Racine,&#13;
WI. (262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?1&#13;
• For the novice to expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a&#13;
club this semester.&#13;
FREETUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software&#13;
is available: Microsoft Office,&#13;
Using the Internet Effectively, Email&#13;
and Creating Web Pages.&#13;
Tutoring will be by appointment. To&#13;
schedule your appointment, call&#13;
Bob or Chris at 595-2790.&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun, Bahamas,&#13;
Florida, Jamaica and Mazatlan. Call&#13;
Sun Coast Vacations for a free&#13;
brochure and ask how you can organize&#13;
a small group and eat, drink,&#13;
travel free and earn cash! Call 1-888-&#13;
777-4642 or e-mail sales@suncoastvacations.com.&#13;
Spring Breakl&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air;. Free&#13;
Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn Cash!&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.com&#13;
or call 800-293-1443 for info.&#13;
SPRINGBREAK 20011&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL&#13;
TRlPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE!,&#13;
Student Travel Services, America's #&#13;
1 Student Tour Operator. Jamaica,&#13;
Mexico, Bahamas, Europe, Florida.&#13;
1-800-648-4849.&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted.&#13;
$25000BO. Call (262) 878-0769 after&#13;
6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
meta1lic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buyout. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
SPRINGBREAK 20011&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados,&#13;
Bahamas, Padre.Free Meals, Free&#13;
Drinks and Up to $100 room credit&#13;
Call for special weeks or go to:&#13;
www.sunsplashtours.coml-800-&#13;
426-7710&#13;
• Do you enjQY working with children?&#13;
Would you like to earn extra&#13;
money? Apply now for a child care&#13;
position at NTC GreatLakes. Call&#13;
847-688-2110, Ext. 103 or apply&#13;
online at www.ntcmwr.com&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Roseann Mason at 595-2606, or stop by&#13;
the Career Center, Wyllie D173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
with program policies and procedures.&#13;
• Schedule residents for group and&#13;
individual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for&#13;
case plan changes, suspensions or&#13;
discharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place -&#13;
Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other ·concerns, and assist resident&#13;
to improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the&#13;
homeless populations in Racine&#13;
County. Assist the Homeless Assistance&#13;
Coalition in arranging meetings,&#13;
mail notices, record notes of&#13;
meetings and decisions and develop&#13;
a generic brochure to advance the&#13;
mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiterl&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public&#13;
through employers, public service&#13;
groups, community g",lUpS, etc ..&#13;
• Present to pubic service orgaruzations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e, newsp~per&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight&#13;
the need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probationl&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
and to court. .&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
statements, conducting assessments&#13;
and intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate/Liaison for the District&#13;
Attorney in Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals,&#13;
personal advocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Notify victims of their rights,&#13;
explain the criminal justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each month&#13;
with one of the law enforcement&#13;
agencies in Racine County and provide&#13;
services to clients off site at the&#13;
various Community Policing sites.&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills Program:&#13;
team 14 core living skills to 17-23&#13;
year olds.&#13;
• Street Outreach: Hand out hygiene&#13;
products to teens who are out on the&#13;
streets; develop a rapport with them&#13;
and encourage them to seek counseling&#13;
services.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid: answer the&#13;
hotline: assist with group facilitation&#13;
work; work 1:1 with teens.&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Force: teach&#13;
teens about alternatives to gangs&#13;
and crime; teach material on STDs,&#13;
teen pregnancy prevention, how to&#13;
fill out job applications, etc.&#13;
Walker's Point Center for the Arts in&#13;
Milwaukee is looking for&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work directly&#13;
with elementary-aged children in&#13;
their art classes, which are taught by&#13;
professional artists.&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations Intern -&#13;
Design and distribute publicity;&#13;
market surveys, advertise programs;&#13;
and fundraise.&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows,&#13;
contract artists, handle artwork and&#13;
prepare written catalogs and labels.&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence,&#13;
research and planning.&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
. Racine Literary Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will be&#13;
held on the following Saturdays:&#13;
January 27 and February 3 from&#13;
8:45a.m. - 4:15p.m. and February 10&#13;
from 8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit orgarlization that provides&#13;
a 24-hour CriSIS Ime and&#13;
response team for victims of sexual&#13;
assault will conduct a IS-hour training&#13;
workshop in the following dates&#13;
from 6p.m. - 9p.m.: Feb. 15, Feb. 22,&#13;
March 1, 8 and 15. Each advocate is&#13;
asked to volunteer for one shift per&#13;
month.&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking&#13;
for a volunteer who will work in a&#13;
team of two people to present personal&#13;
safety puppet shows to Racine&#13;
kindergarten children in their&#13;
schools. No experience is necessary.&#13;
1-5 hours per month. The volunteer&#13;
will gain experience communicating&#13;
with children, will familiarize&#13;
her /hirnself with classroom dynamics,&#13;
and will know s/he is educating&#13;
children about important topics such&#13;
as "stranger danger" ana "good&#13;
touch/bad touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoringl&#13;
• Almost every school and community&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha would&#13;
like college tutors to help their youth&#13;
in elementary school through high&#13;
school with their studies. Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District's ESL program&#13;
is in rarticuJar need for a tutor&#13;
to work With a student who speaks&#13;
Chinese. Opportunities exist. both&#13;
during the school day as well as during&#13;
the late afternoon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
for various positions for&#13;
the spring&#13;
2001 semester.&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers .&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists .&#13;
Applications and information&#13;
are available in The&#13;
Ranger office located in .&#13;
the lower level of Wyllie&#13;
Hall across from the&#13;
Career Center and&#13;
Campus Bookstore.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Sarah or Brenda at&#13;
5952287. Meetings are&#13;
Mondays from&#13;
Noon-s Ip.m.&#13;
February 1, 2001&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
For a limited time only! The Ranger&#13;
News will print your student classified&#13;
ads free of charge. Forms are available&#13;
at the newsstand in front of the library&#13;
and between Wyllie and Greenquist Hall. Call 595-2287 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
Triple H Organic Boarding and&#13;
Horseback Private Lessons.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature. Come ride&#13;
with us. 7417 - 7 Mile Road, Racine,&#13;
WI. (262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?!&#13;
• For the novice to expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a&#13;
club this semester.&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software&#13;
is available: Microsoft Office,&#13;
Using the Internet Effectively, Email&#13;
and Creating Web Pages.&#13;
Tutoring will be by appointment. To&#13;
schedufe your appointment, call&#13;
Bob or Chris at 595-2790.&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun, Bahamas,&#13;
Floricfa, Jamaica and Mazatlan. Call&#13;
Sun Coast Vacations for a free&#13;
brochure and ask how you can organize&#13;
a small group and eat, drink,&#13;
travel free and earn cash! Call 1-888-&#13;
777-4642 or e-mail sales@suncoastvacations.com.&#13;
&#13;
Spring Break!&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air,· Free&#13;
Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn Cash!&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.com&#13;
or call 800-293-1443 for info.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 20011&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL&#13;
TRIPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE!,&#13;
Student Travel Services, America's#&#13;
1 Student Tour Operator. Jamaica,&#13;
Mexico, Bahamas, Europe, Florida.&#13;
1-800-648-4849.&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted.&#13;
$2500 OBO. Call (262) 878-0769 after&#13;
6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buy out. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 20011&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados,&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Bahamas, Padre.Free Meals, Free&#13;
Drinks and Up to $100 room credit&#13;
Call for special weeks or go to:&#13;
www.sunsplashtours.com 1-800-&#13;
426-7710&#13;
• Do you enjqy working with children?&#13;
Would you like to earn extra&#13;
money? Apply now for a childcare&#13;
position at NTC GreatLakes. Call&#13;
847-688-2110, Ext. 103 or apply&#13;
online at www.ntcmwr.com&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Roseann Mason at 595-2606, or stop by&#13;
the Career Center, Wyllie D173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
with program policies and procedures.&#13;
• Schedule residents for group and&#13;
individual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for&#13;
case plan changes, suspensions or&#13;
discharges. • Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place -&#13;
Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other concerns, and assist resident&#13;
to improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the&#13;
homeless populations in Racine&#13;
County. Assist the Homeless Assistance&#13;
Coalition in arranging meetings,&#13;
mail notices, record notes of&#13;
meetings and decisions and develop ·a generic brochure to advance the&#13;
mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
&#13;
• Write case ·notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiter/&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public&#13;
through employers, public service&#13;
groups, community groups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service organizations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e. ne~sp~per&#13;
advertisements) to best h1gnhght&#13;
the need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probation/&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
and to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
statements, conducting assessments&#13;
and intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate/Liaison for the District&#13;
Attorney in Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals,&#13;
personal advocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Notify victims of their rights,&#13;
explain the criminal justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each month&#13;
with one of the law enforcement&#13;
agencies in Racine County and provide&#13;
services to clients off site at the&#13;
various Community Policing sites.&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills Program:&#13;
teach 14 core living skills to 17-23&#13;
year olds.&#13;
• Street Outreach: Hand out hygiene&#13;
products to teens who are out on the&#13;
streets; develop a rapport with them&#13;
and encourage them to seek counseling&#13;
services.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid: answer the&#13;
hotline; assist with group facilitation&#13;
work; work 1:1 with teens.&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Force: teach&#13;
teens about alternatives to gangs&#13;
and crime; teach material on STDs,&#13;
teen pregnancy prevention, how to&#13;
fill out job applications, etc.&#13;
Walker's Point Center for the Arts in&#13;
Milwaukee is looking for&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work directly&#13;
with elementary-a$ed children in&#13;
their art classes, which are taught by&#13;
professional artists.&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations Intern - Design and distribute publicity;&#13;
market surveys, advertise programs;&#13;
and fundraise.&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows,&#13;
contract artists, handle artwork and&#13;
prepare written catalogs and labels.&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence,&#13;
research and planning.&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
· Racine Literary Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will be&#13;
held on the following Saturdays:&#13;
January 27 and February 3 from&#13;
8:45a.m. - 4:15p.m. and February 10&#13;
from 8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit organiz~~on ~at pro- vides a 24-hour cns1s hne and&#13;
response team for victims of sex~al&#13;
assault will conduct a 15-hour tramPage&#13;
11&#13;
ing workshop in the following dates&#13;
from 6p.m. - 9p.m.: Feb. 15, Feb. 22,&#13;
March 1, 8 ancf 15. Each advocate is&#13;
asked to volunteer for one shift per&#13;
month.&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and .&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking&#13;
for a volunteer who will work in a&#13;
team of two people to present personal&#13;
safety puppet shows to Racine&#13;
kindergarten cruldren in their&#13;
schools. No experience is necessary.&#13;
1-5 hours per month. The volunteer&#13;
will gain experience communicating&#13;
with children, will familiarize&#13;
her /himself with classroom dynamics,&#13;
and will knows/he is educating&#13;
children about important topics such&#13;
as "stranger danger" and "good&#13;
touch/bad touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoring!&#13;
• Almost every school and community&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha would&#13;
like college tutors to help their youth&#13;
in elementary school through high&#13;
school with their studies. Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District's ESL program&#13;
is in particular need for a tutor&#13;
to work with a student who speaks&#13;
Chinese. Opportunities exist both&#13;
during the school day as well as during&#13;
the late afternoon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WITH&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
for various positions for&#13;
the spring&#13;
2001 semester.&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
Applications and information&#13;
are available in The&#13;
Ranger office located in ·&#13;
the lower level of Wyllie&#13;
Hall across from the&#13;
Career Center and ·&#13;
Campus Bookstore.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Sarah or Brenda at&#13;
595 2287. Meetings are&#13;
Mondays from&#13;
Noon-lp.m. &#13;
E&#13;
Applications available at: Admission&#13;
• Office of Residence Life, Stu dent&#13;
Health and Counseling, Ranger Hall&#13;
Reception Desk, University Ap artments&#13;
Reception Desk, Student Acti vities.&#13;
The Umversity of W1scons,n-.Parks1&#13;
Please contact the Parllside St&#13;
Deadline: February 16, 2001 -&#13;
Orientation&#13;
Student&#13;
Leadership&#13;
Recruitment&#13;
Exploring New Worlds:&#13;
Leadership in the&#13;
New Millennium </text>
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              <text>Student Newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
February 8, 2001 ~ /,T/'_ Issue 17 Vol. 31 -------------------~rr =---------------&#13;
OW-Parkside lntertribal Powwow a "Stellar, Spectacular Event!'&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
was host to its first-ever intertribal&#13;
powwow Saturday, Feb. 3, from noon to&#13;
Indian Nation.&#13;
The purpose of powwows held hundreds&#13;
of years ago was to celebrate the&#13;
9 fl·m· The event,&#13;
which was titled "Honoring&#13;
the Children",&#13;
was a traditional and&#13;
educational powwow&#13;
complete with dances,&#13;
songs, food, clothing,&#13;
customs, exhibits,&#13;
native vendors, artists,&#13;
and story tellers. Professor&#13;
Saffiotti-Hughes,&#13;
English professor and&#13;
event director, said the&#13;
powwow was a "stellar,&#13;
spectacular event."&#13;
seasonal renewal of&#13;
life in the spring. In&#13;
addition, part of the&#13;
reason for the gatherings&#13;
was to see who&#13;
had survived the long,&#13;
harsh winters and to&#13;
dance, sing, and pray.&#13;
TJ-ie tradition&#13;
of the [owwow has&#13;
survive the ages and&#13;
A vendor displays his wares at the is practiced neady&#13;
intertribal powwow, Saturday, Feb. 3 every weekend&#13;
All 12 of Wisconsin's American Indian&#13;
nations, tribes, and bands were represented&#13;
at the event. Students and community&#13;
members of other ethnic backgrounds&#13;
mingled with members of the&#13;
Ho-Chunk Nation, Potawatomi and&#13;
Menominee tribes, Ojibwe bands, the&#13;
Oneida Nation and the Brothertown&#13;
througnout tne state of&#13;
Wisconsin. Powwows like the one held&#13;
Saturday display American Indian culture&#13;
and explain its rituals and belief to&#13;
others.&#13;
"A powwow is about community,&#13;
family, and sharing," said Professor Saffioti-&#13;
Hughes. "Our purposes [was] to&#13;
bring an accurate, relevant cultural&#13;
opportunity to the area with an emphasis&#13;
on the traditions of the woodland&#13;
tribes and nations."&#13;
Mark Denning, an Oneida Nation&#13;
member and director of the Southeastern&#13;
Oneida Tribal Services, acted as&#13;
master of ceremonies. He explained&#13;
what was going on at different times&#13;
during the powwow and encouraged&#13;
audience members to participate in the&#13;
intertribal dances. The circle of dancing&#13;
is a tq1ditional symbol in American&#13;
Indian culture of the circle of life.&#13;
"Each dance is different," said ceremonial&#13;
elder Wayne Swiftbird. "There's&#13;
a story behind each one of them." As&#13;
drummers from the Ho-Chunk of Winnebago,&#13;
the Ojibwe, the Lakota, the&#13;
Oneida and a more contemporary&#13;
group of international drummers from&#13;
Milwaukee beat the drums and sang&#13;
the songs, tribal members and audience&#13;
participants danced and circled the&#13;
drummers.&#13;
"Every drum has its own type of&#13;
song, the nation's song," said Swiftbird·.&#13;
"Only men sing at the drum."&#13;
The event was sponsored by the&#13;
UW-Parkside Office of Equity and&#13;
Diversity, the Sacred Circle student&#13;
organization, and Parkside Student&#13;
Activities, as well as many volunteers.&#13;
UW-Parkside and the Arts: ALIVE! series&#13;
welcome Ailey II to campus this Saturday.&#13;
The modern dance troupe merges&#13;
the energy of New York City's b.est&#13;
young dancers with the vision of&#13;
today's best choreographers. The performance&#13;
begins at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. Stop by&#13;
the Ranger Card Office for more information&#13;
or call ext. .. 2345.&#13;
live Theater Experience at DWP celebrating Black Historv Month&#13;
When the four-person Irish&#13;
Actors Theatre Company took&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
stage for "Ireland: Its Genius&#13;
and Its Tragedy" Monday night,&#13;
the audience may have been&#13;
shocked by the spartan set. That&#13;
may also have been true for&#13;
Tuesday's program ''Love, Passion,&#13;
and 'Sorry, I Have a Headache."'&#13;
By design, the actors-not props&#13;
and SJ)ecial effects-were meant&#13;
to be the center of attention.&#13;
"They' re focus is on the spoken&#13;
word and on the natural&#13;
illusion theater creates," said&#13;
UW-Parkside En~lish Professor&#13;
Andy McLean. 'This is good&#13;
modem theater. Their requireThe&#13;
Irish Actors Theater Company takes the&#13;
stage tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
ments for the theater are minimal-&#13;
maybe a chair, a table to indicate&#13;
a room. There's minimal costuming&#13;
and an absolute focus on the spoken&#13;
word and the gesture. What makes&#13;
[their performance] so interesting is&#13;
you've really got to listen."&#13;
McLean described Monday's program&#13;
"Ireland: Its Genius and Its&#13;
Tragedy," as an introduction to Irish&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
By Alex Voskull&#13;
In 1926, one black male began a&#13;
week-long tribute to celebrating&#13;
African-American achievements. In&#13;
1976, that week-long tradition grew to&#13;
run throughout an entire month. As&#13;
February continues, UW-Parkside is&#13;
staging a number of activities for students&#13;
and the communit)' around&#13;
campus to participate in honoring&#13;
Black History Month.&#13;
The Black Student Union (BSU),&#13;
with help from Parkside's Activities&#13;
Board (PAB), has prepared a number&#13;
of events to celebrate America's past.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Gospel Choir&#13;
kicked off Black History Month last&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 1 in Main P~ace. An&#13;
African storyteller and an Afncan arts&#13;
vendor also appeared.&#13;
On Saturday, Feb. 3, the "Gospel&#13;
Explosion," showcasing a variety of&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
Loston Harris, jazz vocalist and pianist,&#13;
appears at 7:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater, Wednesday, February 21st.&#13;
.. : . The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 8, 2001&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&amp;&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
I n s •&#13;
I d e&#13;
letters to the Editor&#13;
NCPTP sinks to new low; Professor Cloutier defends foreign&#13;
film series; foreign films not a problem.&#13;
President Bush's inagural address; Survivor II: The Outback;&#13;
Alumni Association needs nominees.&#13;
REVISED Dean's list tor Fall 2000&#13;
Spons&#13;
Mens and women's basketball, UW-P track and&#13;
wrestling teams.&#13;
Dr. Lenny Klaver named assistant vice-chancellor for&#13;
University Relations.&#13;
10 ASHA sponsors National Condom Day, February 14.&#13;
Editor of the week: Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co Editors: Photograph} Directors&#13;
Brenda Dunham Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Sarah Olsen Kory Holm ·.&#13;
Designer:&#13;
Pete Forchette&#13;
Reporters:&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
· Gina Ciardo&#13;
Sheree Homer&#13;
Zach Robertson&#13;
Lynn Garcia&#13;
Dan Frake&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Dan White&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Christine Agaiby&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Th., "'-1,i,,&lt;r is published every Thursday throughou,f the semester by students of the University of Wl5CO!lSin-Parkside. who are solely&#13;
n,sponsi&amp;le for its editorial policy and content. ·&#13;
l..etier,; to the f.dil&lt;lr policy: The Ranger enoourages letters to the EditQt. letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
~ ~er offi,;,, (WYLL D-139C). t:etters muslbe typed and include the ~uthor's name and phone number. Letter,; must be free from&#13;
mtSleading or hbelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not be published. For publication plJJ'J'O"'S, author's name can be withheld,&#13;
but only upon request The Ranger reserves the ngt,t to edit all letters.&#13;
Thin&#13;
February 8 - 11&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Dinner Grune," France, sub-titled; film shown Thll!sday&#13;
and Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturda): at 8 P·1!1·,. and Sunday at 2 p.m. m the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater. For more information, call ext.. 2345&#13;
February 10&#13;
• Women in Politics: Empowering Women in the Political ~rocess, 9 a.m. to 5&#13;
p.m., Student Union, registr~tion: $2? / person, $10 / full-~e students; for,&#13;
registration form and more information, call Mark Marlarre at ext... 2312.&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! presents Ailey II modem dance, 7:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre; tickets: $15, available in Ranger Card office or call ext ... 2345.&#13;
February 13&#13;
• Women's &amp; men s oasketball vs. Lewis University, women 5:30 p.m., men&#13;
7:45 p.m., De Simone Gym; UW-Parkside students admitted free, tickets:&#13;
adults $5, high school students and children 14 years of age and under $1.&#13;
February 14&#13;
• Noon Concert: D~vid Bayles Jazz Trio, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free.&#13;
• Black History Month film: Love and Basketball, 7:30 p.m., Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, admission $2.&#13;
February 15&#13;
• Conflict Mediation Workshop w /Jonathan Shailor, teaching metI:iods _for&#13;
dealing with conflict, 9 to 11 a.m., Tallent Hall Orchard Room, registration&#13;
$10, sponsored by Volunteer Coordinato:r:s' l\Jetwork of Kenosha.&#13;
Black History Month Events&#13;
• Film: Love and Basketball, Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m., Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
admission $2, sponsored by All Campus Events and Student Activities.&#13;
• Sweetheart Ball, Feb. 16, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Union Square, admission $10 per&#13;
person, $18 per couple, advance tickets at Ranger C:ard office, refreshments&#13;
provided, professional photography available, sponsored by Black Student&#13;
Union and All Campus Events/Student Activities.&#13;
• Fashion Show, Feb. 23, 8 p.m., Union Square, admission $3, $2 with non-perishable&#13;
food donation.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is closed for renovations,&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
c,ear Ranger Staff,&#13;
1he National Ca~aign to Prevent&#13;
Teen Pregnancy (NC P) has stepped to&#13;
a new low, and so has The Ranger staff.&#13;
On Page 5 of the January 25th eaition, it&#13;
shows two ads, each snowing a young&#13;
woman with the words "Reject" or&#13;
"Nobody" in bold letters written across&#13;
them. Granted, the large words are playing&#13;
with smaller words, such as, '1 had&#13;
sex so my boyfriend would n't reject&#13;
me .. ." and " ... nobody calls me anymore."&#13;
But the ads are saying girls wfio&#13;
have sex and become pregnant, and&#13;
choose motherhood are rejects and&#13;
nobody, and that having sex is punishable&#13;
by motherhood. Young pregnant&#13;
women are not sexual criminals. If people&#13;
would treat pregnant women with&#13;
respect, then ,1oung 'A;omen will make&#13;
better choices regarding prenatal care,&#13;
adoption, abortion, and motherhood.&#13;
When people accept the fact that&#13;
teenagers have sex, they then will finally&#13;
get decent sex education and access to&#13;
&amp;irth control, and that will lower the teen&#13;
pregnancy rate, , ...· hich is the goal of the&#13;
NCPIP Devaluing women just because&#13;
of their sex, because they have had sex,&#13;
and because they're mothers, will not.&#13;
Signed,&#13;
Lisa Fanning, teenage-welfare mother,&#13;
Ja~lyne Buz~ell, Womyn's Center&#13;
Coord inator, Melissa Ziemba, concerned&#13;
woman, Megan Peifer, birthmother&#13;
Andi Michaels, single mom, Tracy Kantol~&#13;
From the Desk of the Editor&#13;
Dear Lisa, Jaclyne, Melissa, Megan&#13;
Andi, and Tracy, '&#13;
Thank you for your response to the&#13;
ad that ran in the Jan. 25 edition.&#13;
~esponses from the community are,&#13;
indeed, valuable to this newspaper and&#13;
are strongly encouraged.&#13;
Your letter indicates&#13;
that the s taff&#13;
of The Ranger has&#13;
sunk to a new low&#13;
by running the ad&#13;
from the National&#13;
Campaign to Prevent&#13;
Teen Pregnancy.&#13;
First and&#13;
foremost, this&#13;
newspaper has to&#13;
support itself with&#13;
revenue. The only&#13;
revenue that is&#13;
made is through ads placed by business-&#13;
TIie Cinema Problem? A Response&#13;
I applaud Messieurs Radke,&#13;
Rosandich, Kazmierski, and Leiting&#13;
(RR.KL) for caring enough about the&#13;
student life on campus to write a&#13;
~anger article about the film offerings&#13;
in tlie Union Cinema. It's refreshing to&#13;
see students getting involved. However,&#13;
1 must correct them on a number of&#13;
factual errors.&#13;
I began the UW-Parkside Foreign&#13;
Film Series (FFS) in 1982 with the help&#13;
of two colleagues, Donald Kurrunings&#13;
(Eng~sh) and Richard Rosenberg (Economics).&#13;
The series has consistently&#13;
featured award-winning films from&#13;
around the world, made by some of the&#13;
most creative and influential directors&#13;
of our time. From its inception it has&#13;
~ n enormously popular and finanoally&#13;
solvent. RRKL claim tha t no one&#13;
purchases season subscriptions to the&#13;
FFS. This would come as news to the&#13;
more than 800 season ticket holders we&#13;
have this year and have had for most of&#13;
the past 19 seasons.&#13;
. _It is true, however, that student partiopation&#13;
in the FFS is far from overwhelming.&#13;
From the beginning the&#13;
FFS attempted to market the program&#13;
to students, with only modest success.&#13;
Nev_ertheless, student appreciation of&#13;
foreign films is important to the program&#13;
and so we have attempted to&#13;
reach students in other ways. The program&#13;
is open to all faculty who believe&#13;
that any film is relevant to their course&#13;
material, and so we have had hundreds&#13;
of students in modern&#13;
languages, communica tion, history,&#13;
political science, and University Seminar&#13;
attend our films free-of-charge. In&#13;
addition, students in the Honors Program&#13;
and in International Studies are&#13;
given special discounts. Progress is&#13;
slow but I believe we have made some&#13;
student converts to the enjoyment of&#13;
filmmaking from other countries and&#13;
cultures.&#13;
RRKL refer to $27,144 budgeted to&#13;
the Union Cinema and imply that it is,&#13;
at least in part, devoted to foreign&#13;
films. While I am not familiar with all&#13;
the intricacies of the Union budget, I&#13;
can say that the amount devoted to the&#13;
FFS is zero. The FFS is a self-sufficient&#13;
program and is entirely separate from&#13;
any Union funding or programming.&#13;
The FFS rents the Cinema from tne&#13;
Union and pays for the projectionist.&#13;
In fact, in 1998 our patrons financed&#13;
the vast majority of the $14,000&#13;
expense to upgrade the Cinema projection&#13;
booth with 35mm equipment.&#13;
RRKL raise concerns about what&#13;
they consider to be the under-utilization&#13;
of the Union Cinema. I am sure&#13;
that if they had contacted the Union&#13;
staff they would have discovered that&#13;
the facihty is indeed used, not only for&#13;
the FFS but other university and community&#13;
organizations that sponsor&#13;
films, performances, seminars, and&#13;
conferences. •&#13;
All that said, we are still left with&#13;
the basic point that RRKL raise about&#13;
the lack of a successful programming&#13;
es. If there were no ads for the newspape!,&#13;
!t would not be able to support&#13;
pnnting costs.&#13;
Secondly, The Ranger and its staff do&#13;
not support the viewpoints or opinions&#13;
of any of the ads we place. We do not&#13;
advocate the opinions of the NCI'PT nor&#13;
any other business.&#13;
The ad asks that readers log on to the&#13;
website (www.teenpregnancy.org) to&#13;
learn more. Contrary to what you indicated&#13;
in your letter ("When people&#13;
accept the fact that teenagers have sex,&#13;
they then will finally get decent sex education&#13;
and access to birth control"), the&#13;
NCTPT advocates contraceptive use. In&#13;
fact, there are many&#13;
links which will&#13;
inform a person&#13;
about various contraceptives&#13;
such as&#13;
"Encouraging Contraceptive&#13;
Use&#13;
Among Sexually&#13;
Active Teens" and&#13;
"Depo-Provera: 'The&#13;
Shot'". I ask anyone&#13;
who was offended&#13;
by the ad to log on&#13;
to the website and&#13;
learn more about the NCTPT. The webwith&#13;
more traditional student oriented&#13;
films. This has been a concern for all of&#13;
my 20 years at UW-P, but it hasn't been&#13;
for the lack of trying. There have been&#13;
a number of hard-working Union staff&#13;
members (present Union staff included)&#13;
and enthusiastic students who&#13;
have tried to create a vital student film&#13;
program.&#13;
Showing films of more recent vintage,&#13;
as RRKL su$gest, is not likely to&#13;
be a viable option. Even if were&#13;
allowed by major d istribution companies,&#13;
the economics of film distribution&#13;
is such that first run film rentals are&#13;
extremely costly and the percentage of&#13;
the gate captured by the distributors is&#13;
draconian. Thus, campuses are usually&#13;
left with the option of trying to program&#13;
creatively with second run and&#13;
older vintage films.&#13;
Should RRKL, or any other students,&#13;
want to discuss ilieir film programming&#13;
ideas any further, my door&#13;
is always open. In the meantime, I&#13;
encourage any students looking for a&#13;
unique film experience to check out&#13;
the Foreign Film Series. There are still&#13;
six films left in this year's program,&#13;
and tickets prices are prorated. Stop&#13;
by the RangerCard office and pick up a&#13;
brochure&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Norm Cloutier&#13;
Professor of Economics, and&#13;
Director, UW-P Foreign Film Series&#13;
Page3&#13;
site also offers an area where people can&#13;
respond to the organization. I strongly&#13;
encourage you to direct your statements&#13;
to the organiz.ation They are the ones who&#13;
advocate this viewpoint, not The Ranger.&#13;
The beautiful tlung about this newspaper&#13;
is that we are open to all viewpoints&#13;
and opinions. If you or an organization&#13;
that you are affiliated with would&#13;
like to run an ad opposing the viewpoint&#13;
in the NCTPT ad, you are welcome to.&#13;
This is a democratic newspaper and we&#13;
vi&amp; respond accordingly.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co-Editor&#13;
Foreign Films&#13;
Not a Problem&#13;
There are many things I learned&#13;
while I was a student at tfi.e University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside. My entire&#13;
exploration of the world of communication&#13;
through my studies as a Communication&#13;
major, discovering politics,&#13;
leami~ about history, and revelations&#13;
throu some dabbling in sciences. It&#13;
was a so at UW-P where I realized I&#13;
could tum a passion for reporting and&#13;
writing into a career.&#13;
As I look back on my four (or so)&#13;
years at UW-P, I have always been&#13;
grateful for the many opportunities I&#13;
had to expand my understanding and&#13;
appreciation for the arts. The student&#13;
plays were fabulous; the art featured in&#13;
the 6allery by students, professors and&#13;
outside artists was always fascinating.&#13;
One of my greatest discoveries was tne&#13;
foreign film series. I was skeptical at&#13;
first: You mean I have to read during a&#13;
movie? But, I loved it. I learned about&#13;
different countries and different ways&#13;
of looking at the world through those&#13;
movies.&#13;
As a former editor of the Parkside&#13;
Ranger-oh, about 100 years ago-I&#13;
still enjoy reading the campus newspaper&#13;
to find out what is going on. I was&#13;
disappointed to read in "The Cinema&#13;
Problem" column of Jan. 25 that "most&#13;
of us don't care about foreiS!l films."&#13;
I guess if you really have seen&#13;
"Happy Gilmore" 100 times, there really&#13;
is no hope in changing your mind.&#13;
But, as students, I urge you to try it.&#13;
Now is the time for you to learn and to&#13;
explore. There are dozens of places in&#13;
the Milwaukee-Chicago area where&#13;
you can catch Adam Sandler's latest,&#13;
dare I say, art? There are very few&#13;
where you can find foreign films. You&#13;
are very lucky to have them in your&#13;
veiy own cinema.&#13;
I have no opinion about whether the&#13;
UW-Parkside cinema needs a greater&#13;
variety of movies, but you already nave a&#13;
great series of films that you snouldn't&#13;
miss.&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
BA Communication, 1987&#13;
Page4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Addressing a nation: President George w. Bush Takes Oath&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
President George W. Bush took his&#13;
Presidential Oath in Washington on a&#13;
cold, rainy Saturday morning January&#13;
20. Following being&#13;
sworn in at 11am, he&#13;
~ke to the nation in&#13;
his Inaugural Address.&#13;
The focus of his address&#13;
was on what he called&#13;
"civility, courage, compassion&#13;
and character."&#13;
Several times he&#13;
emphasized his pledge&#13;
"to build a single nation&#13;
of justice and opportunity."&#13;
He called for Americans to continue&#13;
to uphold the princieles of Democracy&#13;
as well as educate the youth of the&#13;
country. Suggestions for reaching his&#13;
goal included "confronting· problems&#13;
instead of passing them on to future generations"&#13;
as well as, treating Americans&#13;
not as strangers and problems&#13;
but as citizens and priorities.&#13;
He also asserted that' everyone&#13;
deserves a chance" and that "no&#13;
insignificant eerson was ever&#13;
born." Bush made clear,&#13;
throughout his s~ch, his purpose&#13;
of unifying the country.&#13;
Bush also suggested that we&#13;
"reclaim America's schools,&#13;
before ignorance and arathy&#13;
claim more young lives. He&#13;
also mentioned his desire to reform&#13;
Social Security as well as Medicare. In&#13;
addition, Bush remarked that he will&#13;
"reduce taxes to ... reward the effort ...&#13;
Positions available immediately!&#13;
of working Americans."&#13;
ThroughOut the Address, Bush made&#13;
many promises about various political,&#13;
environmental, and social issues concerning&#13;
the nation. He spoke about the&#13;
nations history of being ' a rock in a raging&#13;
sea." He mentioned "confront[ing]&#13;
weapons of mass destruction" as well as&#13;
finding "an honored place" for religion&#13;
"in our plans and in our laws," yet no&#13;
problem seems more looming than the&#13;
one which unfolded in the past several&#13;
months. Bush made no mention of winning&#13;
the most controversial election in&#13;
our nation's history. Maybe it's a nightmare&#13;
he would rather forget. One tning&#13;
is for certain, he has he work cut out for&#13;
him. He begins his presidency with just&#13;
over half a nation supporting him.&#13;
paRksfne&#13;
scaoeae; ceat;eR.&#13;
Student Employment Opportunities Available&#13;
for Building Manager:&#13;
Duties Include:&#13;
• Supervision of overall operation&#13;
of Student Center during&#13;
evenings and .weekends.&#13;
• Manage and supervise employees&#13;
and implement poilicies.&#13;
Applications and position descriptions&#13;
are available in Union 209 ,&#13;
RangerCard/lnformation Services or at the&#13;
Career Services Offices.&#13;
Apply Today! Union 209&#13;
The University of Wi,l.on,in-P&lt;lrk!-.idc..~ provide, servi&lt;:t.•, for J&gt;. .l trons V\!ith special needs.&#13;
Ple."l,e c·ont. ". 1&lt;.'t thP Parksid~ Student CenfC'r for assist..1n("t."", (262) 595-2:i4.5.&#13;
February 8, 2001&#13;
survivor II: The Outback&#13;
By Lynn Garcia&#13;
On Sunday, January 28th, the most&#13;
anticipated reality television show&#13;
Survivor II, debuted. This time th~&#13;
sixteen contestants are stranded in the&#13;
deadly bush of Queensland, Australia.&#13;
These strangers will be stuck in&#13;
the outback for 42 days, eliminating&#13;
one person every three days. In order&#13;
to survive they will need to build&#13;
shelter and catch their own food. The&#13;
contestants are divided into two&#13;
tribes, Ogakor and Kucha.&#13;
The Ogakor tribe consists of&#13;
Amber, Colby! Jerri, Keith, Ke!, Maralyn,&#13;
and Mitchell. They won the first&#13;
challenge, the prize bemg a container&#13;
of waterproof matches and, of course,&#13;
the immunity· idle. This keeps them&#13;
from having to vote one of tneir own&#13;
off the island.&#13;
The Kucha team includes Alicia,&#13;
Elisabeth, Jeff, Kimmi, Michael, Nick,&#13;
Rodger, and Debb. This team was not&#13;
so lucky and had to go to tribal council&#13;
to get rid of one of their own. As&#13;
hard as it was to vote someone off&#13;
(after all the}' had only been there for&#13;
two days) there were seven votes&#13;
against the first survivor to get booted&#13;
off, Debb.&#13;
The season of Survivor looks like it&#13;
is going to be a good one. The Australian&#13;
Outback is a pretty scary place&#13;
for anyone to be stranded in. There&#13;
are all kinds of wild animals including&#13;
dingoes, wild pig, kangaroo, alligators,&#13;
and snakes. Not to mention&#13;
the climate, which can be unbearable&#13;
at times. The sun is incredibly strong&#13;
and a yerson can burn within ten minutes&#13;
o exposure to it.&#13;
Don't take my word for it, experience&#13;
Survivor II: The Australian Outbac~&#13;
for yourself. The show goes up&#13;
agamst NBC and its hit "Friends" on&#13;
T~ursd~ys at 7:00 ~m. Who do you&#13;
thmk will be the ultimate survivor?&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
Wants Award Nominees&#13;
The UW-Parkside Alumni Association&#13;
is seeking nominations for awards&#13;
it sponsors each year. The honors recognize&#13;
outstanding professional and&#13;
volunteer service by the University's&#13;
graduates.&#13;
The Association's Distinguished&#13;
Alumni Achievement Award is given to&#13;
a person who has excelled in his or her&#13;
career. . The Distinguished Service&#13;
Award 1s presented to an individual&#13;
"demonstrating outstanding contributions&#13;
to his or her local community&#13;
and/ or the University." Nominees&#13;
must have a baccalaureate and master's&#13;
degree from UW-Parkside.&#13;
If you know someone-a parent, a&#13;
colleague, a friend-who deserves to be&#13;
nominated for these honors, call the&#13;
Alumni office at ext... 2443. The nomination&#13;
deadline in March 15, 2001. The&#13;
aw~rds will be presented during the&#13;
~prmg semester graduation ceremony&#13;
mMay 2001.&#13;
February 8, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 5&#13;
celebrate Black&#13;
Historv Month&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
excellent choirs from southeast Wisconsin,&#13;
appeared in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. UW-Parkside's own&#13;
gospel choir was on hand, along with&#13;
Hofy Recovery, Greater Grace Temple,&#13;
Voices of Faith, Carthage College,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Choir, State Youth&#13;
Choir, and Holy Redeemer.&#13;
UW-Parkside' s very own Apollo Show&#13;
will once again be held this February&#13;
(the show was held Feb. 7). This event&#13;
allows students, faculty, and staff as&#13;
well as individuals out in the communi~&#13;
to come show off their talents.&#13;
These talents can be in the form of&#13;
music, dance, comedy, etc. Individuals&#13;
as well as groups are welcomed. There&#13;
will be an application charge for&#13;
. soloists of $5. Groups of three or more&#13;
persons will pay a charge of $10. Cash&#13;
prizes will be awarded. Auditions will&#13;
be held on Wednesday, January 29,&#13;
from 9 to 11 p.m. in the Union Cinema,&#13;
and again on Saturday, February 3,&#13;
from 3 to 5 p.m. Anyone is welcome to&#13;
attend and participate.&#13;
"Love and Basketball" vill be&#13;
showing on Valentine's Day m the&#13;
Union Cinema. Showtime is slated for&#13;
7:30p.m. This movie tells the tale of&#13;
two individuals who both have the&#13;
love for basketball and each other.&#13;
Cost is only $2 per person.&#13;
There will be a Sweetheart Ball featurin~&#13;
Parkside's favorite DJ Doc B,&#13;
on Fnday, February 16, from 9 p.m. to&#13;
1 a.m. Tli.is dance will be located in the&#13;
Student Center Square. Admission is&#13;
$~0 per person and $18 per couple&#13;
Tickets may be purchased in advance&#13;
at the Ranger card Office. Come&#13;
dressed to impress.&#13;
Jazz fans, here's your chance to&#13;
catch a rising star. Loston Harris, is&#13;
performing on Wednesday, February&#13;
2~ at 7:30 p.m. Come and hear ms&#13;
silky smooth vocals and exciting&#13;
piano arrangements. Harris' music&#13;
recalls the musical styles of legends&#13;
such as Nat "King" Cole and Frank&#13;
Sinatra. And then ne takes his music&#13;
to new heights. Tickets are $12 and&#13;
available in the Ranger card office.&#13;
This event will be held in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater and is open to&#13;
everyone.&#13;
On Friday, February 23, at 8 p.m.,&#13;
the second annual Fashion Show will&#13;
be held. Admission is $3 per person,&#13;
or $2 with a non-perishable food item.&#13;
View the hottest trends in African&#13;
wear from great local retailers and&#13;
your favorite designers. Clothing will&#13;
be displayed from such companies as&#13;
Boston Store, Deb, Lerner New York,&#13;
and Gin&amp;iss Formal Wear, to name a&#13;
few. There will also be a dance performance&#13;
by the Milwaukee High School&#13;
of the Arts Drill Team. This event is&#13;
sponsored by BSU.&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V .I.P. Leadership Series presents . ..&#13;
Recruitment, Recognition, and Retention-&#13;
3 Critical Components&#13;
to a Strong Membership&#13;
by Michelle Wegner, Volunteer Program&#13;
Wednesday, February 14, 2001&#13;
3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Union 106 ·&#13;
'&#13;
Sponsored by Student Ac,ivities&#13;
As you can see, there will be&#13;
numerous events commemorating&#13;
Black History Month. This is a time to&#13;
honor, reflect, and -to focus on the present&#13;
social conditions of black America.&#13;
Come out during the month of&#13;
February and show your support&#13;
live Theater&#13;
Experience&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
history and culture. Through the words&#13;
of Ireland's greatest writers and&#13;
through depictions of events like the&#13;
Great Famine, the Irish Actors Theatre&#13;
Company will brou~ht to life the&#13;
events that shaped their nation.&#13;
Tuesday's /erformance of "Love,&#13;
Passion, an 'Sorry, I Have a&#13;
Headache'" was a lignthearted look at&#13;
relationships. Using wisdom drawn&#13;
from George Bemara Shaw and Maya&#13;
Angelou, the Beatles and Rolling&#13;
Stones and others, "Sorry" was just as&#13;
the "Washington Post" described it: an&#13;
"hilarious mixture of music and drama&#13;
about the fever m the blood."&#13;
Last night, Theatre members staged&#13;
a free "Pub Night" show in the Stucfent&#13;
Union.&#13;
When the}' weren't on a UW-Parkside&#13;
stage, the Irish Actors Theatre Company&#13;
has been busy at area schools. They&#13;
performed a program of Irish songs&#13;
and poetry at Racine's Fine Arts School&#13;
on Monday, and stopped at Kenosha's&#13;
Bullen Middle School Tuesday. They&#13;
were back in Racine at Park High&#13;
School on Wednesday, and this morning ·&#13;
they performed "Ireland: Its Genius&#13;
and Its Tragedy" at Walden III High&#13;
School.&#13;
Area educators will experience the&#13;
Theatre Company's "Celebration of&#13;
Irish Literature, Music and Song" at the&#13;
Sixth Street Theatre this afternoon. And&#13;
they finish their tour Friday at Tremper&#13;
Hig~ School.&#13;
The company also met with UWParkside&#13;
dramatic arts students during&#13;
the week&#13;
McLean had several reasons for&#13;
bringing the Irish Actors Theatre Company&#13;
to UW-Parkside. He was hoping&#13;
to instill in his students his love oflive&#13;
theater, and he wanted to serve the&#13;
community by celebrating the cultural&#13;
heritage the Theatre Company represents.&#13;
And he was hoping to revive the&#13;
spark that artists in residency bring to&#13;
the campus.&#13;
'We nad a tradition m the ~arly years&#13;
at UW-Parkside of having a writer or&#13;
an artist in residence," McLean stated.&#13;
"I think a resident artist infuses the university&#13;
with life that it otherwise lacks.&#13;
And to have these folks here for a&#13;
week, I think, will be a very exciting&#13;
experience because faculty and students&#13;
will be interacting with them&#13;
professionally, intellectually, aesthetically,&#13;
and hopefully, socially."&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V .I.P. Leadership Series presents ...&#13;
Running a&#13;
Meeting&#13;
by Steve Wallner, Student Life&#13;
SpooSOffll by Srodenl Activities&#13;
Page 6&#13;
3.90-4.00&#13;
Sarah Aguilar&#13;
Lisa Albergo&#13;
Amanda Albrecht&#13;
Christine Alder&#13;
Robert Allen&#13;
Bridget Allen-Laehn&#13;
Ryan Ashton&#13;
Heidi Baehr&#13;
Georgette Ball&#13;
Brenda Baumeister&#13;
Timothy Beck&#13;
Eric Bergemann&#13;
Mary Berger&#13;
Natalie Bonaretti&#13;
Daniel Bosdect&#13;
Dilpreet Brar&#13;
Manpreet Brar&#13;
Katherine Braun&#13;
Robin Braun&#13;
Jennifer Bremberger&#13;
Joseph Brooks&#13;
Jamie Brown&#13;
Melissa Busse&#13;
Chistopher Bytnar&#13;
Chad Cantwell&#13;
Mary Genni&#13;
Chad Chapin&#13;
Gina Ciardo&#13;
Stephanie Clausen&#13;
Michelle Coan&#13;
Chris Condon&#13;
Christina Conforti&#13;
Kristan Constant&#13;
Julie Cools&#13;
Karina Corradi&#13;
Diana Covelli&#13;
Rebecca Cruz&#13;
Christine Cukla&#13;
Susan Dana&#13;
Richard Davis&#13;
Mary Debish&#13;
Brigette Dei&#13;
Richard Ditter&#13;
Timothy Dombroski&#13;
Eze Elechi&#13;
Tamara Fabian&#13;
Paul Francelic&#13;
Tamara Franklin&#13;
Natalie Funderburg&#13;
Sarah Funk&#13;
Michelle Galinis&#13;
Angela Galla9her&#13;
Rogelio Garcia&#13;
Jeremy Gemig&#13;
Stephanie Glass&#13;
Leeann Grandsard&#13;
Stephanie Green&#13;
Tajdeep Grewal&#13;
John Groschopf&#13;
Melissa Gutierrez&#13;
Maryalice Guttormsen&#13;
Tarik Hamdan ·&#13;
Cornelia Haugk&#13;
Holly Hibbeln&#13;
David Higgens&#13;
Shirron Hill&#13;
Deborah Hite&#13;
Benjamin Hofmann&#13;
Gale Horton&#13;
Lacey Hughes&#13;
Meggan Hyland&#13;
Dimitar Ivanov&#13;
Colin Jacobs&#13;
Nathaniel Jeanson&#13;
Jaime Johnson&#13;
Lee Johnson&#13;
Remi Johnson&#13;
Carol Jones&#13;
Bryanna Jurvis&#13;
Peter Kautzer&#13;
Paul Kawa&#13;
Ahlam Khalaf&#13;
Carol Klees-Starks&#13;
Robyn Klemp&#13;
James Klitzke&#13;
Garrett Kornman&#13;
Peter Kos&#13;
Stephanie Krehbiel&#13;
Natalie Kring&#13;
Donna Kubicki&#13;
Cindy Kuechle&#13;
Kristi Lacanne&#13;
Joshua Langer&#13;
Marc Laudonio&#13;
Kathryn Lemke&#13;
Steven Lenart&#13;
Joline Levanetz&#13;
Jennifer Little&#13;
Kimberly Little&#13;
Blake Luedtke&#13;
Shaun Lukas&#13;
Eric Masshardt&#13;
Terry McCarthy&#13;
Jo Medley&#13;
Andrew Mendez&#13;
Karyn Meyer&#13;
Kathleen Meyer&#13;
Celia Miller&#13;
Andrew Modory&#13;
Dana Mueller&#13;
Debra Mueller&#13;
Me9han Mumford&#13;
Katie Mutter&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 8, 200} -&#13;
lhe· UW-Parlside Dean's liSI Fall 2000&#13;
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Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Fontana, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Wayzata, MN&#13;
Zion, IL&#13;
Mount Prosrect, IL&#13;
Franklin, W&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Waukegan, IL&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Sheboygan, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Vernon Hills, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Antioch, IL&#13;
Raci~e. WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Genoa City, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Kevin Nelson&#13;
Marci Novak&#13;
Patricia Novsam&#13;
Jamie O'Connell&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Bennett Olson&#13;
Alan Paal&#13;
Paul Pedrosa&#13;
Rebecca Peters&#13;
Derek Petersen&#13;
Kimberly Petersen&#13;
Frankie Peterson&#13;
Ramona Pettry&#13;
Joseph Piirto&#13;
Stacey Polischuk&#13;
Samantha Pucely&#13;
Chad Retzlaff&#13;
Joseph Ricciardi&#13;
Shani Ritt&#13;
Derek Rivers&#13;
Omayra Rodriguez&#13;
Hilton Roland&#13;
Robert Rollins&#13;
Crystal Routon&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Amanda Schneider&#13;
Joel Schroeder&#13;
Jennifer Schultz&#13;
Christopher Schumacher&#13;
Brad Schweiger&#13;
Corey Shefchik&#13;
Dawn Sheffield&#13;
Mona Sin&#13;
Michael Slye&#13;
Crystal Smith&#13;
Danielle Smith&#13;
Stacy Smith&#13;
Michael Sokolski&#13;
Matt Spang&#13;
Karen Sprague&#13;
Rebecca Stratman&#13;
Kristine Strauss&#13;
Jacqueline Strelow&#13;
Amanda Suchy&#13;
Cassondra J Taylor-Connelly&#13;
Julie Thompson&#13;
Jennifer Tremelling&#13;
Nicole Turnquist&#13;
Kellie Tuttle&#13;
Jaimie Utley&#13;
Michelle Vaccaro&#13;
Brian VanSchyndel&#13;
Sheryl Villalpando&#13;
Maria Vitale&#13;
Stephen VonDissen&#13;
Sonia Wade&#13;
Lisa Wall&#13;
Jennifer Weis&#13;
Eileen Welch&#13;
Lisa Whitcomb&#13;
Michelle Widmar&#13;
Craig Wilking&#13;
Brandon Wilfiams&#13;
Kristin Williams&#13;
John Wilson&#13;
Nicole Wilson&#13;
Martha Win9&#13;
Elaine Yanz1to&#13;
Nicholas Zeleski&#13;
Pamela Zernia&#13;
3.70-3.89&#13;
David Althoff&#13;
Edith Ambrose&#13;
Debra Andrekus&#13;
Tiffany Arnold&#13;
Brenda Ashmore&#13;
Heather Aslett&#13;
Nancy Ayvaz.&#13;
Holly Bahr&#13;
Stephanie Baldwin&#13;
Mark Baumgartner&#13;
Katie Beaumier&#13;
Julia Beaver&#13;
Mary Becker&#13;
Joseph Biondi&#13;
Heather Blanchard&#13;
Jennifer Boonstra&#13;
Michael Bose&#13;
Joshua Brennan&#13;
Nicole Brunk&#13;
Gail Bump&#13;
Amy Burmeister&#13;
Soren Carpenter&#13;
Caria Castellano&#13;
Andres Cerritos Jr.&#13;
1ien Chau&#13;
Michele Chovan&#13;
Nicolas Coates&#13;
Angelina Cruz&#13;
Susan Czarra&#13;
Jody Davison&#13;
Stacey Denoyer&#13;
Caroline Dent&#13;
Maria Dimitrova&#13;
Diana Doherty&#13;
Jeremy Dority&#13;
Ryan Dunsworth&#13;
Jeanette Dutton-Boilek&#13;
Aaron Embury&#13;
Sean Epping&#13;
Lisa Fabiano&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Lake Geneva, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Zion, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pell Lake, WI&#13;
Stillwater, MN&#13;
Kenosha. WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Lake In The Hills, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Sturgeon Bay, WI&#13;
Kenosha, wr&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Waukegan, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Franklin, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Janesville, WI&#13;
Green Bay, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Waterford, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
New Ber1in, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Spring Grove, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Zion, ll&#13;
South Milwaukee WI&#13;
Racine, WI '&#13;
Franksville, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Trevor, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Wisonsin Rapids, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Buriington, WI&#13;
Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Wind Lake, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Winthrop Harbor, IL&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Salem, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Greenfield, WI&#13;
North Barrington, IL&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Wadsworth, IL&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Round Lake, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Appleton, WI&#13;
Rhinelander, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Janesville, WI&#13;
Kirklin, IN&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jamie Fierke&#13;
Kelley Fitzpatrick&#13;
Amanda Flannery&#13;
Erin Flannery&#13;
Gerita Floyd&#13;
Adam Fonk&#13;
Kristi Forbes&#13;
Peter Forchette&#13;
Andrea Franco&#13;
Billy Franks Jr.&#13;
Lon Gamalski&#13;
Andrea Gendreau&#13;
Maggie Gillespie&#13;
Kenneth Golden&#13;
Susan Gono&#13;
Diana Gonzales&#13;
Joan Gouff&#13;
Christina Graf&#13;
Timothy Graff&#13;
Dena Gunderson&#13;
Heather Hackbarth&#13;
Joseph Hanna&#13;
Karen Hartwig-Sens&#13;
Jennifer Hayward&#13;
Rachael Herda&#13;
Rosalinda Hernandez&#13;
James Heys&#13;
Jill Hoffman&#13;
Valerie Hohenstein&#13;
Darren Holland&#13;
Elizabeth Horwitz&#13;
Amanda Hoselton&#13;
Richard Hoyt&#13;
Bruce Ives&#13;
Ramon Jaimez&#13;
Teresa Jenders&#13;
Susan Jensen&#13;
Sharon Jensen-Rugaber&#13;
Dennis Johnson&#13;
Erika Johnson&#13;
Flavia Juergensen&#13;
Nicholas Juleen&#13;
Andrea Julian!&#13;
Manpreet Kang&#13;
Mary Kaprelian&#13;
Lorie Karls&#13;
Dieter Kehrhahn&#13;
Nathalie Kelsey&#13;
Kholoud Khalaf&#13;
Hyun Kim&#13;
Sean King&#13;
Ginger Kinyon&#13;
Rebecca Klinzing&#13;
Leslie Klug&#13;
William Knaack&#13;
Jean Kohler&#13;
Victoria Kolman&#13;
Bradley Kostreva&#13;
Kimberly Kragh&#13;
Emily Lauer&#13;
Amy Lechuga&#13;
Juliet Lena&#13;
Lisa Lequia&#13;
Ellen Leslie&#13;
Terri Leslie&#13;
Xiaotong Li&#13;
Richard Lindquist&#13;
Ryan Loberger&#13;
Juan Lopez&#13;
Kerin Lorence&#13;
Adela Lozano&#13;
Amy Maack&#13;
Ronald MacDonald&#13;
Carrie Mach&#13;
Jennifer Maller&#13;
Joseph Marsch&#13;
Christine Martin&#13;
Tonya Matelski&#13;
Kevin Matson&#13;
Zahra McCray&#13;
David McDonald&#13;
Tracy McFee&#13;
Dennis Meek&#13;
Michelle Merlock&#13;
Alison Merritt&#13;
Jason Metallo&#13;
Riley Mewes&#13;
Jennifer Meyers&#13;
LaVlljjas Miller&#13;
Valene Miller&#13;
Joseph Morrone&#13;
Gary Mousourakis&#13;
Kristy Mueller&#13;
Eyad Museteif&#13;
Samuel Naegele&#13;
Moiz Naz.erali&#13;
Veronica Nelsen&#13;
Danica Nelson&#13;
Shawn Nielson&#13;
Colleen M O'Grady-Shearman&#13;
Christina Palm&#13;
Richard Plachter&#13;
Michael Pochowski&#13;
Tanya Prostko&#13;
James Puhr&#13;
Heidi Rashleger&#13;
Daniel Reinders&#13;
Kristy Reineck&#13;
Adam Reinwald&#13;
Jason Rexine&#13;
Christopher Richardt&#13;
Becky Richter&#13;
Amber Ridolfi&#13;
Steven Ripper&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Franksvllle, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Palatine, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Abingdon, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Lan9ley, BC&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, wt&#13;
Union Grove, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Greenfield, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Gurnee, IL&#13;
Gurnee, IL&#13;
Franklin, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
GIiiett.Wi&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Plymouth, MN&#13;
Oak Creek. WI&#13;
Cudahy, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Waukegan, IL&#13;
Kansasville, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Grayslake, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
New Franken, WI&#13;
Madison, WI&#13;
Round Lake Beach, IL&#13;
Winthrop Harbor, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Waukesha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Bristol, WI&#13;
Beach Park, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Grayslake, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Chicago, IL&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Mundelein, IL&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Burlington, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Greenfield, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
Hales Comers, WI&#13;
Gurnee, IL&#13;
Apple Valley, MN&#13;
Winthrop Harbor, IL&#13;
Franklin, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
....&#13;
February 8, 2001 The Ranger~ University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 7&#13;
Eric Roche lake Geneva, WI Nidia Diaz Daniel Roethe Kenosha, WI Racine. WI Dallas Diener&#13;
David Mikel Beloit.WI&#13;
Christ~r Roland Racine, WI Deborah Dreyer&#13;
Fond Du Lac, WI Rebecca Milaeger Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Starlet ondeau Kenosha, WI Rebe&lt;:ca Duba&#13;
Franklin, WI Jessica Miller Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Kelly Sakalowski Bristol, WI Roberta Dyer&#13;
Gurnee, IL Donna Minkley Salem, WI&#13;
Gustavo Salazar Milwaukee WI Eric Easthon&#13;
Racine, WI JeffreM Mitka Kenosha, WI&#13;
Michelle Santelli Kenosha, WI Luke Eckblad&#13;
Bristol, WI Kelly olini Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jennifer Schaefer Weukesha, WI Leah Ecklor&#13;
Racine, WI Leslie Molitor Lake Villa, IL&#13;
Brian Schalk Racine, WI Erin Ellefson&#13;
Trevor, WI Pamela Morisse Kenosha, WI&#13;
Amy Schmit South Richfield, WI Amr Elliott&#13;
Verona, WI Jessica Muchow Greenfield, WI&#13;
Lora Schultz Sturtevant, WI Chnstine Engel&#13;
Vernon Hills, IL Andrew Mueller Manitowoc, WI&#13;
Christina Schutz Racine, WI Laura Engel&#13;
Wadsworth, IL Melissa Mueller Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jennifer Schwartz Racine, WI Erin Enright&#13;
Burlington, WI Laurie Murphy Kenosha, Wt&#13;
Daniel~gin Zion, IL&#13;
Arlington Heights, IL Bridget Murray Grayslake, IL&#13;
Kile Scugli Kenosha, WI&#13;
Stacy Ericson Kenosha, WI Jason Nehmer Racme, WI&#13;
Stacy Esme'&#13;
C ristine Seager Milwaukee, WI Sara Espinoza&#13;
Kenosha, WI Scott Nicholson Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Mark Senske Big Bend, WI&#13;
Racine, WI Troy Nielsen Racine, WI&#13;
Vrunda Shah&#13;
Lance Evans Racine, WI Angela Nieth Mukwon~Jl°' WI Kenosha, WI Phaedra Everist&#13;
Randolph Sherwood Racine, WI Jacqueline Ferroli&#13;
Kenosha, WI Daniel Noe Jr. Racine, I&#13;
Matthew Sickles lake Villa, IL&#13;
Gurnee, IL Kara Norton Racine, WI&#13;
Elizabeth Smith&#13;
Erinn Finlan Racine, Wt Heather Olson Racine, WI&#13;
Milwaukee, WI Elissa Fitzgerald&#13;
G~Smith Brookfield, WI Adam Fomal&#13;
Kenosha, WI Marci Olson Franksville, WI&#13;
Nicole mith Kenosha, WI Travis Fraser&#13;
Racine, WI Pablo Ortiz Kenosha, WI&#13;
Ryan Smith Twin Lakes, WI Corinna French&#13;
Elkhorn, WI Angela Owen Kenosha, WI&#13;
Dustin Smothers Libertyville, IL Robert Fritchen&#13;
Racine, WI Eugenia Papadopoulos Waukegan, IL&#13;
Rachel Sonnentag Racine, WI Valerie Funk&#13;
Racine, WI Dawn Parrish Racine, WI&#13;
Stephen Sorenson Racine, WI Amanda Galster&#13;
Milwaukee, WI Archana Patel Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI Christina Paul Racine, WI&#13;
Robyn Spink Burlington, WI Amber Gannon Racine, WI Neil Paulhus Racine, WI&#13;
JoshS~ Racine, WI Robyn Gardner Kenosha, WI Danielle Perinlch Franklin, WI&#13;
Kenneth tockero Oak Creek, WI Alissa Gei!Jer Hales Comers, WI Tanya Perkins Janesville, W1&#13;
Meghan Strasburg Racine, WI&#13;
Joann Tarnowski Lake Villa, IL&#13;
Julia Gem,g Kenosha, WI Kristin Perry Lockport, IL&#13;
Jacob Tata~&#13;
Kristine Gertig Woodstock, IL Melinda Peterson Racine, WI&#13;
Kenosha, WI Renae Glatt Pleasant Prairie, WI Marcie Peura Kenosha. WI&#13;
Courtenay eska Racine, WI Joshua Glodowski Union Grove, WI Michelle Phillips Racine, WI&#13;
Doria Thompson Wildwood, IL Nicole Goodwin Lake Villa, IL Peter Pfarr Kenosha, WI&#13;
David Tomasello Antioch, IL Cindi Goyette Kenosha, WI Rachelle P'lfer Kenosha, WI&#13;
Bryan Tomczak Kenosha, WI Bonny Grabowski Kenosha, WI Mindy Pirkovic Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jennifer Toutant Racine, WI Nicholas Graham Racine, WI Jason Pisani Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Julie Truesdell Burlington, WI Gina Gr~ Kenosha, WI Dylan Pogorzelski Racine, WI&#13;
Benjamin Turk Racine, WI Michael reenman Pleasant Prairie, WI Tracy Po~ Salem, WI&#13;
Timothy Tuttle Racine, WI Mark Guttenberg Racine, WI Diana Pn ard Franksville, WI&#13;
Patricia Urban Racine, WI Sarah Guzdek Kenosha, WI John Prins Kenosha, WI&#13;
Rebecca VanSwol Union Grove, WI Kayln Hagen Racine, WI Katie Pruessing Walworth, WI&#13;
Tracy Vanderford Kenosha, WI Paul Hagert Racine, WI Jennifer Pulfre(e Racine, WI&#13;
Amcanderkooy Antioch, IL Jodee Hale Bristol, Wt Traci Rabelho er Silver Lake, WI&#13;
Ka rine Vick Racine, Wl Gwen Hansen Kenosha, WI Sarah Randall Racine, WI&#13;
Michael Walczak Kenosha, WI Jacob Hansen Salem, WI Jennifer Ranker Burlin~on, WI&#13;
Matthew Wawiorka Kenosha, WI Craig Harff Kenosha, WI Danni Reich Kenos a, WI&#13;
~ristinaWend Racine, WI Michelle Hartlerode Oak Creek, WI Kathin Reinhardt Waukegan, IL&#13;
rienne Wiegert Kenosha, WI Donna Hassan Kenosha, WI Ariel oberts Racine, WI&#13;
Jean Wilhelm Kenosha, WI Amanda Hawley Kenosha, WI Tanya Rogondino Waukegan, IL&#13;
Michael Witkofskl Racine, WI Kelly Hay Trevor, WI Melissa Rompesky Kansasville, WI&#13;
Kyle Wolf Kenosha, WI Lisa Helgesen Pleasant Prairie, WI Elena Ross Kenosha, WI&#13;
Lori Wood Kenosha, WI Sharon Henry Racine, WI Jean Rossett Kenosha, WI&#13;
Penny Zens Oak Creek, WI Liza Herbst Kenosha, WI Kimberl~ Rossi Kenosha, WI&#13;
Pamela Zielsdorf Kenosha, WI Pamela Hicks Racine, WI Casey uffalo Kenosha, WI&#13;
Meliss.a Ziemba Pleasant Prairie, WI Frances Hill Kenosha, WI Candace Ruffolo Kenosha, WI Nicole Hill Kenosha, WI Cara Russo Kenosha, WI&#13;
Harold Hinds Kenosha, WI Magdalena Rzeszutek Bristol, WI&#13;
3.50 to 3.69&#13;
Brett Holly Kenosha, WI Kimberly Salmons Kenosha, WI&#13;
R~an Holmbeck Bur1in~on, WI Raymond Sanchez Kenosha, WI&#13;
Anisha Addison Milwaukee, WI S eree Homer Kenos a, WI Summer Schaal Genoa City, WI&#13;
Elizabeth Ade Kenosha, WI Sharon Hoselton Beach Park, IL Janda Schaefer Rock Falls. IL&#13;
Shawn Adrian Racine, WI Kara Huber Racine, WI Jerem~ Schmidt Racine, WI&#13;
Thomas Andelin Pleasant Prairie, WI Nathaniel Hunter Pleasant Prairie, WI • Ryan chmidt Kenosha, WI&#13;
Andrea Angelici Kenosha, WI Rebekah Ide Kenosha, WI Timothy Schmidt Kenosha, WI&#13;
Amber Antonia Cudahfi, WI Kelly Ishihara Union Grove, WI Kristine Schoen Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Rachel Arebalo Kenos a, WI John Ivan Twin Lakes, WI R}'an Schroeder Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
David Augustine Kenosha, WI Thad Jacobson Beloit, WI Hillary Schultz Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Banipal Ayvaz Kenosha, WI Edward Janes Kenosha, WI Linda Schumaker Sturtevant, WI&#13;
Julie Bach Kenosha, WI Amy Johnson Kenosha, WI MadelY.n Seis Racine, WI&#13;
Catherine Baerwald Cudahfi, WI Robert Johnson Kenosha, WI Jill Seitz Kenosha, WI&#13;
Ephrem Bailey Kenos a, WI Karin Jonsson Racine, WI Bethany Shaw Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Christopher Bakk Wadsworth, IL Christine Juliani Kenosha, WI Vikrampal Sidhu Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Ted Barrett Greendale, WI Breeana Kanagy Rolli~ Meadows, IL Gina Sinner Racine, WI&#13;
Adam Barsamian Pleasant Prairie, WI Edward Kauffman Oak reek, WI Britton Sliwinski Racine, WI&#13;
David Batesole Racine, WI Andrew Kautzer She~gan, WI Kimberly Small Antioch, IL&#13;
AnJiela Baumann Oak Creek, WI ~dia Keehn Anf , IL Jolanta Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
R' ard Baumann Depere, WI atie Kennedy Bristol, WI Kathryn Smith Kenosha, WI&#13;
Amanda Beitzel Gurnee, IL Robert Kiesner Jr. Kenosha, WI Michael Smith Racine, WI&#13;
David Beranis Racine, WI Dehne! Kluzak Racine, WI Chad Sobotka Racine, WI&#13;
Krista Bertram Cudahy, WI Kristen Knutsen Bristol, WI Julia Starr Kenosha, WI&#13;
Paul Billips Racine, Wl Lee Kouski Grayslake, IL Rita Steckling Kansasville, WI&#13;
John Bindas s Milwaukee, WI Sarah Kowalskk Racine, WI Sandra Struebing Caledonia, WI&#13;
Marcelle Bittis Racine, WI Tanya Kozlows i Oak Creek, WI America Sumba Niles, IL&#13;
Daniel Bixler Pleasant Prairie, WI Heidi Kraiss Racine, WI Valerie Sylvester Oak Creek, WI&#13;
Kurt Blackwell Kenosha, WI Aleksandra Kulig Caledonia, WI April Stmoens Union Grove, WI&#13;
Sarah Boland Kenosha, WI Lela Kwiatkowski Greenfield, WI Aaron aylor Elmhurst, IL&#13;
Michelle Boldon Waukesha, WI Angela ~yles Racine. WI Kathleen Thoennes Racine, WI&#13;
James Bonnar Racine, WI Elizabeth Ladwig Racine, WI Julian Thomas Beloit,WI&#13;
Leonard Booth Kenosha, WI Carl laehr Racine, WI Tracy Thomas · Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jill Boughton Racine, WI Rebecca Landmark Kenosha, WI Mary Thorstad Racine, WI&#13;
~nn Braband Wauconda, IL Andrew Ledanski Pleasant Prairie, WI Myron Ubl Oconomowoc, WI&#13;
ellie Brezden Ingleside, IL Michael Leiber Racine, WI Cass VanDaalwyk Kenosha, WI&#13;
Brett Britten Franksville, WI Joseph lendabarker 111 Kenosha, WI David VanDaele Wildwood, IL&#13;
Dustin Brown Winthrop Harbor, IL Silvana Leone Pleasant Prairie. WI Leah Vandenlangenberg Green Bay, WI&#13;
Melissa Brown Racine, WI Sarah Lesniewski Pleasant Prairie, WI Erika Vaszily Racine, WI&#13;
Melanie Bublitz Juneau, WI Paul Ley West Bend, WI Susan Verwey Racine, WI&#13;
Darc~u~ni Racine, WI Mandy Liles Robbinsdale, MN Lorena Veto Racine, WI&#13;
Heat r uresh Cudahy, WI Joshua Lingg Kenosha, WI Jennifer Warren Kenosha, WI&#13;
David Carlberg Bristol, WI Lisa Lipari Racine, WI Julie Weidner Kenosha, WI&#13;
Jessica Carlson Kenosha, WI Bennett logterrnan Delavan, WI Corey Welk Kenosha, WI&#13;
Alvin Casper Cudahy, WI Jesus Lopez Pleasant Prairie, WI Dama Wells Kenosha, WI&#13;
Robert Chacon Racine, WI Richard Lopez Milwaukee, WI Shaun Whatley Kenosha, WI&#13;
Thomas Ciardo Oak Creek, WI Kari Loppnow Caledonia, WI Jason Wierek Racine, WI&#13;
Maxwell Colney Madison, WI David Lyon Oak Creek, WI ~rilWiggins Racine, WI&#13;
Jean Compton Racine, WI Jessica Mallett Salem, WI chelleWilde Palmyra, WI&#13;
Jolice Contreras Sturtevant, WI Harsirat Mangat Milwaukee, WI Jennifer Williams Kenosha, WI&#13;
la ita Contreras Racine, WI Susan Marcich Kenosha, WI SchrieWillis Milwaukee, WI&#13;
James Couch Appleton, WI Nicole Markin Kenosha, WI Jaime Wincek Kenosha, WI&#13;
Donna Covelli Kenosha, WI Nicholas Markwardt Oak Creek, WI Daniel Wojciechowicz Kenosha, WI&#13;
Erin Crank Cadott, WI ~ril Martin South Milwaukee, WI Amber Wolfe Twin Lakes, WI&#13;
Patrick Cranley Racine, WI ary Masik Oak Creek, WI Candi Wozniak Racine, WI&#13;
Jennifer Cuccia Racine, WI Svetlana Matic Kenosha, WI Kimberly Wright Pleasant Prairie, WI&#13;
Lasitha Cumaranatunge Kenosha, WI Christine M~ew Pleasant Prairie, WI Julie Yurchak Kenosha, WI&#13;
Theresa Dailey Racine, WI Jennifer M umber Kenosha, WI RossZahour Cedarbu'.9w WI&#13;
Katie Daly Racine, WI Catherine McKinnon Salem. WI Susan Zawieja Kenosha, I&#13;
ShellY. Dam Kenosha, WI Ryan McMullin Kenosha, WI Roxann Ziano Hennepin, IL&#13;
Jennifer Danoski Racine, WI Peg~ McNulty Slinger, WI Michael Ziegelbauer Racine, WI&#13;
Daniel Derter Trevor, WI Davi McPherson Kenosha, WI Melanie Zimmerman Racine, WI&#13;
Jennifer Determan Racine, WI Juanita Mejia Racine, WI Michelle Zimmerman South Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Matthew DeWitt Kenosha, WI Melissa Meland Pleasant Prairie, WI Angela Zolss Racine, WI&#13;
Page8 The Ranger, University of W1sconsm-Parks1de February 8, 2001&#13;
Me n's basketball:&#13;
Two Giants Steps Forward&#13;
UW-Parkside men's basketball coach&#13;
Jeff Rutter talked before last week's&#13;
contests against Northern Kentucky&#13;
and Indianapolis about getting "a couple&#13;
of games back." He Ielt two earlyseason&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
(GLVC) losses against these teams were&#13;
games the Ran~ers should have won.&#13;
Playing their best and most complete&#13;
games of the year, UW-Parkside&#13;
did, indeed, get "a couple of games&#13;
back" with Thursday's 8f-60 whipping&#13;
of Northern Kentucky and Saturday's&#13;
thrilling 81-78 overtime win over&#13;
Indianapolis.&#13;
Northern Kentucky came into last&#13;
Thursday's game ranked third in&#13;
NCAA Division II with an 18-2 overall&#13;
record and a 9-2 conference mark.&#13;
However, it was the Rangers who dominated&#13;
the game breaking a 21-21 first&#13;
half tie and never trailing after that.&#13;
Coach Rutter's team ran up a 37-27&#13;
halftime lead and led by as many as 23&#13;
in the second half to win for just the&#13;
second time in 11 tries at home against&#13;
NKU.&#13;
Brian Coffman led the way with 24&#13;
points on 9 of 9 free throw shooting and&#13;
7 of 14 from the floor. Marlon Grice&#13;
added 16, Nick Knuth 14, and Quincey&#13;
Moman 12.&#13;
The win avenged an 83-71 loss on&#13;
Dec. 2 at Northern Kentucky in which&#13;
NKU was awarded 39 free throws to&#13;
UW-Parkside's 16.&#13;
Saturday afternoon, the Rangers&#13;
expected to see "The Andy Foster&#13;
Show" and that's just what they got.&#13;
The Greyhounds' guard, who came&#13;
into the game as tne GLVC's leading&#13;
scorer, accounted for the first 12 points&#13;
by Indianapolis on the way . to a ~&#13;
point performance. But that still wasn t&#13;
enough as UW-Parkside pulled out an&#13;
81-78 overtime victory at the DeSimone&#13;
Gymnasium.&#13;
The Rangers trailed by five to seven&#13;
points throughout much of the second&#13;
half. But Marlon Grice kept UW-Parkside&#13;
in the game with several fr_eight&#13;
train drives to the hoop and Quincey&#13;
Moman scored six straight points to&#13;
pull the Rangers to within a point at 66-&#13;
65. Nick Knuth put UWP ahead 67-65&#13;
with a basket at 17:24 of the second half&#13;
but Indianapolis tied the game at 69-69&#13;
and the teams went to OT.&#13;
That's when Knuth took over. The&#13;
Rangers' center scored eight of his 21&#13;
points in the extra five minutes, includmg&#13;
several clutch free throws, to ice the&#13;
victory and send the Rangers to their&#13;
ninth win of the year-one more than&#13;
they had all of last year with seven&#13;
games remaining in the season. Brian&#13;
Coffman led al.L UWP scorers with 22&#13;
points.&#13;
The win avenged a 90-88 double&#13;
overtime loss to Indy on Nov. 30 and&#13;
gave UW-Parkside a 6-7 record in the&#13;
GLVC and 9-10 overall.&#13;
The men play at Bellarmine University&#13;
tonight. The game can be heard on&#13;
WLIP (1050 AM) starting at 6:55. The&#13;
road trip continues at Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan on Saturday. Airtime for that&#13;
game is 3:10 p.m.&#13;
Women's Basketball:&#13;
ladv Rangers lose One, Win One&#13;
The Northern Kentucky women's&#13;
basketball team brought depth, experience,&#13;
and a national ranking in the&#13;
NCAA Division II into last Thursday's&#13;
game at the De Simone Gymnasium.&#13;
And they played like one of the top&#13;
team's in the nation in a 71-48 win&#13;
against UW-Parkside. The Lady&#13;
Ranger's then picked themselves up&#13;
and played a dominant second half to&#13;
beat Indianapolis 59-52 on Saturday.&#13;
On Thursday, the Lady Norse, the&#13;
defending NCAA Division II champions&#13;
who returned all five of their&#13;
starters from that title-winning squad,&#13;
had four players in double figures.&#13;
Arny Mobley led the way for NKU&#13;
with 13 points and 12 rebounds while&#13;
Bridge Flanagan also had 13 for the&#13;
visitors. NKU's depth showed during a&#13;
14-2 second half run that pushed their&#13;
lead to 20 points and put the game out&#13;
of reach.&#13;
UW-Parkside was led by Tiesha&#13;
Campbell who poured in 16 points and&#13;
had 8 rebounds. Joy Rodefer had 11&#13;
points and Erin Crank had 10 for&#13;
Coach Paulette Stein's team.&#13;
Saturday's result was much better.&#13;
UW-Parkside roared back from a 24-20&#13;
deficit shortly after halftime to beat&#13;
Indianapolis 59-52. Four Lady Rangers&#13;
reached double figures led by Denita&#13;
Sublett with 16 points. Rodefer and&#13;
Jamie Nebel had 13 apiece, and Campbell&#13;
scored 11 points and contributed&#13;
nine rebounds.&#13;
The win improved UW-Parkside's&#13;
GLVC record to 3-10. The Lady&#13;
Rangers are 6-13 overall. They play at&#13;
Bellermine University tonignt and&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan, a team they beat&#13;
easily earlier this year, on Saturday.&#13;
Both games will be broadcast on a&#13;
tape-delayed basis on the campus&#13;
radio station WLIP (101.7 FM).&#13;
Enright, Antonia lead UW-P Track Team at UWD&#13;
The UWP track team traveled north&#13;
for the UW-Oshkosh Invitational on&#13;
Saturday. And while the overall result&#13;
wasn't golden, there were some i":dividual&#13;
performances worth shouting&#13;
about.&#13;
Erin Enright captured the 3,000-&#13;
meter run in a time of 10:28.39. Amber&#13;
Antonia also broke the tape first in_ the&#13;
mile run with a time of 5:09.77. Enright&#13;
and Antonia also combined with Linda&#13;
Muffler and Pam Kurkowski to win the&#13;
women's distance medley relay.&#13;
Overall, UW-Oshkosri won the meet&#13;
with 154 points, North Central scored&#13;
110, and UW-Parkside had 48 points.&#13;
Other high finishes for UWP included&#13;
Kristy Reineck's second place and&#13;
Linsay OeWitt's fourth place finish in&#13;
the 5,000 meters, and Laura Bosley and&#13;
Kristen Ziarek finished third and&#13;
fourth, respectively, in the 800.&#13;
Mat Men Drop Dual at uw-s P,·&#13;
Place High al Wheaton Invitational&#13;
UW-Stevens Point posted a 25-24&#13;
victory over the Ranger wrestlers&#13;
last Wednesday, Jan. 31, at Stevens&#13;
Point. They bounced back on Saturday&#13;
to place near the top at an invitational&#13;
meet at Wheaton College.&#13;
Last Wednesday, UW-Parkside winners&#13;
were Craig Klawitter, Ken&#13;
Schmidt, Fred Joseph, Luke Goral and&#13;
Victor Juarez. Both Klawitter and&#13;
Schmidt scored pins during the meet.&#13;
UW-Stevens Point came into the&#13;
dual meet ranked number 13 in NCAA&#13;
Division III, while the Rangers were&#13;
number 19 in Division II. The Rangers&#13;
slipped to 5~5 in dual meets.&#13;
Meanwhile, in Wheaton, UWP finished&#13;
fourth in a 26-team field. The&#13;
Ranger's Ken Schmidt won the 149-&#13;
pound title with a 5-0 record. Luke&#13;
Goral took second place at 197.&#13;
The team wrestled in a dual meet at&#13;
Marquette University last night. Prior&#13;
to tuning up for regional meet.&#13;
GLVC Men's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC TEAM Overall W-L Pct. W-L Pct.&#13;
Southern Indiana 12·1 .923 18-1 .947 Northern Kentucky 10-3 .769 19-3 .864 Kentucky Wesleyan 10-3 .769 16-3 .842 Bellarmine 7-6 .538 10-9 .526 UW-Parkside 6-7 .462 9-10 .474 Saint Jose~h's 6-7 .462 12-10 .545 Missouri- t. Louis 6-7 .462 10-9 .526 Lewis 6-7 .462 8-11 .421 Indianapolis 5-8 .385 10-9 .526 Qu" 5-8 .385 9-10 .429 *IUPd-Ft. Wayne 4-9 .308 7-16 .304 SIU Edwardsville 1-12 .077 4-15 .211 *Ineligible for GLVC Tournament&#13;
GLVC Women's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC OVERALL TEAM W-L Pct. W-L Pct.&#13;
Northern Kentucky 11-2 .846 17-2 .895 Southern Indiana 10-3 .769 16-3 .842 Bellarmine 10-3 .769 15-4 .789 SIU Edwardsville 9-4 .692 14-5 .737 Missouri-St. Louis 8-5 .615 12-7 .632 Quing_ 7-6 .538 11-8 .579 *JUP -Ft. Wayne 6-7 .462 13-7 .650 Indianapolis 6-7 .462 10-9 .526 Lewis 5-8 .385 8-11 .421 UW-Parkside 3-10 .231 6-13 .316 Kentucky Wesleyan 2-11 .154 5-14 .263 Saint Josehh's 1-12 .077 1-18 .053 *Not eligi le for GLVC Tournament&#13;
February 8, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page9&#13;
Klaver Named Assistant Vice&#13;
Chancellor tor University Relations&#13;
UW-Parkside has named Dr. Lenny&#13;
Klaver its assistant vice chancellor for&#13;
University Relations. He reports to UWParkside&#13;
Chancellor Jack Keatin~.&#13;
In his new vosition, Klaver will direct&#13;
the University s marketing, publications,&#13;
and public relations activities. He is&#13;
responsible for strategic f lannin~ and&#13;
continuing development o the Uruversity's&#13;
site on tne worldwide web&#13;
(www.u~.edu), and he will serve as&#13;
UW-Parks1de's liaison with area legislators&#13;
and government agencies.&#13;
Klaver joined the University as athletic&#13;
director in June 1996. In addition to&#13;
fund-raising for the recently completed&#13;
addition to the Sports and Activity Center,&#13;
he established the Ranger Athletic&#13;
Club and the UW-Parkside Corporate&#13;
and Business Partners program leading&#13;
to increased financial support for athletics.&#13;
He also served on the Great Lake Valley&#13;
Conference executive committee and&#13;
established the Sports Medicine Consortium&#13;
with area physicians and physical&#13;
therapists. He will continue as a faculty&#13;
member in the Department of Healtn,&#13;
Physical Education, and Athletics with&#13;
teaching and advising duties in the&#13;
recently established Sports Management&#13;
major.&#13;
David Williams, who served as assistant&#13;
athletic director, has been named&#13;
actingathleticdirecto~&#13;
'1 am pleased to have the opportunity&#13;
to take on a larger role in University&#13;
Relations," Klaver said. "I believe these&#13;
new duties are key to the overall mission&#13;
set for the University, and I'm looking&#13;
forward to contributing to the success of&#13;
uW-Parkside in this new position."&#13;
Dr. Lenny Klaver, new assistant vicechancellor&#13;
for University Relations.&#13;
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Page 10 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 8, 2001&#13;
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The American Social Health Association&#13;
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year on Valentine's Day, February&#13;
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Valentine's Day is&#13;
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February 8, 2001&#13;
1/25/01&#13;
me. # 01-70 Theft, Union lot,&#13;
12:10 p.m.: student reported&#13;
her parking permit stolen from&#13;
her parked vehicle. Nothing&#13;
else reported missing.&#13;
Inc . # 01-71 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Wood Road &amp; Outer Loop, 9 : 3 7&#13;
p .m. : citation was issued to a&#13;
driver who failed to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
Inc.# 01~72 Alarm, Wyllie Hall,&#13;
11:23 p.m.: officers responded&#13;
to an alarm and checked the&#13;
area which appeared to be&#13;
secure. Alarm was reset.&#13;
1/26/01&#13;
Inc . # 01-73 Disorderly Conduct/&#13;
Noise, University Apartments,&#13;
1:22 a.m.: while on&#13;
foot patrol, officer heard&#13;
loud music/noise so an RA was&#13;
contacted. The RA advised two&#13;
previous warnings had already&#13;
been given to the apartment&#13;
residents. Disorderly subjects&#13;
started shouting obscenities&#13;
at the officers from the&#13;
apartment door and began&#13;
spilling out onto the sidewalks&#13;
and into the parking&#13;
lots. All individuals not living&#13;
at the apartment were&#13;
asked to leave and residents&#13;
were warned of the consequences&#13;
of any repeated incidents.&#13;
Inc . # 01-74 Theft from Building,&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 10:20 a.m.:&#13;
student reported the theft and&#13;
unauthorized use of his Ranger&#13;
Card. Student will arrange for&#13;
a replacement card.&#13;
1/27/01&#13;
Inc . # 01-75 Fire Alarm, SAC,&#13;
8:05 a.m.: officer responding&#13;
to an alarm found it had been&#13;
set off by workers popping&#13;
corn.&#13;
Inc. # 01-76 Fire Alarm, SAC,&#13;
8 : 53 a.m.: staff member&#13;
reported workers popping corn&#13;
in the concessiorr area had set&#13;
off the alarm. Workers will&#13;
discontinue use of the popping&#13;
machine the rest of the day.&#13;
Inc . # 01-77 Fire Alarm, SAC,&#13;
4:23 p .m. : another fire alarm&#13;
was caused by students naking&#13;
popcorn. Building was not&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
evacuated. Alarm reset.&#13;
Inc. # 01-78 Medical Assist,&#13;
Parkside Union, 9:03 p .m.:&#13;
visitor attending a local high&#13;
school dance, was re,POrted to&#13;
be ill . Kenosha Med Unit 5&#13;
took the subject to Kenosha&#13;
Memorial HoSPi tal for treatment.&#13;
Underage alcohol citation&#13;
was issued.&#13;
1/28/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-79 Underage Drinking,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 2: 59 a.m.: while&#13;
on foot patrol, officer heard&#13;
a fire door alarm sounding. A&#13;
subject was found by the door,&#13;
questioned and admitted opening&#13;
the fire door in an&#13;
attempt to avoid the officer.&#13;
Investigation revealed subject&#13;
was underage and drinking. An&#13;
underage alcohol citation was&#13;
issued.&#13;
1/29/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-80 Warrant Pickup,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 5:19 a.m.:&#13;
UPPS officer assisted the&#13;
Racine Police Dept. who had a&#13;
search warrant on a wanted&#13;
individual. The subject was&#13;
located and turned over to&#13;
Racine PD.&#13;
Inc. # 01-81 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop at Wood Road, 6:06&#13;
p.m.: UPPS officer stopped a&#13;
dr:iver who failed to stop at a&#13;
stop sign. Investigation&#13;
revealed driver's vehicle registration&#13;
was suspended. Citation&#13;
issued for non-registration&#13;
of vehicle.&#13;
1/30/01&#13;
Inc.# 01-82 Disorderly Conduct,&#13;
University Apartments, 2 :23&#13;
a.m.: housing R.A. requested&#13;
UPPS officers respond to an&#13;
argument that might become&#13;
physical. Upon officer's&#13;
arrival, the two subjects were&#13;
arguing in the parking lot&#13;
over the return of i terns and&#13;
damage to a phone . A citation&#13;
was issued to one subject for&#13;
disorderly conduct. Investigation&#13;
revealed the subject was&#13;
wanted by the Milwaukee Police&#13;
Dept. for felony bail jumping.&#13;
An arrest was made and subject&#13;
transported to Kenosha County&#13;
jail.&#13;
Inc. # 01-83 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Inner Loop Road and 1.1 miles&#13;
west of CTH G, 3: 59 p .m.: driver&#13;
was cited for failure to&#13;
stop at a stop sign.&#13;
Inc . # 01-84 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Comm. Arts parking lot, 9: 05&#13;
p .m.: student's vehicle rolled&#13;
out of gear, coming to rest&#13;
against the passenger side of&#13;
another vehicle resulting in&#13;
minimal damage .&#13;
Inc . # 01-85 Alarm-Building,&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 4:07 a .m.: officer&#13;
responding to an alarm&#13;
found it to have been set off&#13;
accidentally by custodians&#13;
working in the area.&#13;
Inc. # 01- 86 Worthless Check,&#13;
SAC, 7 :24 a .m. : Athletics is&#13;
requesting UPPS follow-up on a&#13;
worthless check written by a&#13;
visitor for SAC fees . Investigation&#13;
pending.&#13;
Inc. # 01-87 Security Alarm,&#13;
C/Arts Media, 8:02 a.m. : officers&#13;
responding to an alarm&#13;
found it to have been activated&#13;
in error by a staff member.&#13;
Inc. # 01-88 Parking Enforcement&#13;
Tow, Ranger Hall parking&#13;
lot, 8 :03 a.m.: student illegally&#13;
parked and with· four&#13;
prior unpaid tickets was cited&#13;
and towed.&#13;
Inc . # 01-89 Parking Enforcement&#13;
Tow, Comm. Arts lot,&#13;
10:39 a .m. : student illegally&#13;
parked at a visitor meter had&#13;
received prior tickets and a&#13;
tow warning. Vehicle was cited&#13;
and towed.&#13;
Inc . # 01-90 Drug Paraphernalia,&#13;
University Apartment,s,&#13;
11 :36 a .m.: brass pipe used&#13;
for smoking man.Juana was&#13;
turned over to UPPS by residence&#13;
life staff. No information&#13;
available on ownership of&#13;
the item which was placed in&#13;
an evidence file at UPPS.&#13;
Inc. # 01-91 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, SAC Baseball Locker&#13;
Room, 11: 57 a .m.: student&#13;
reported the theft of his wallet&#13;
from an unlocked locker.&#13;
No suspects or witnesses to&#13;
the theft.&#13;
Inc. # 01-92 Traffic AccidentNon&#13;
Reportable, Union parking&#13;
lot, 4 :56 p .m.: student&#13;
reported her vehicle had been&#13;
struck by another vehicle . A&#13;
self-reporting accident form&#13;
was provided.&#13;
Inc.# 01-93 State Property Damage,&#13;
outer Loop &amp; Wood Road,&#13;
5:20 p .m. : while on routine&#13;
patrol, UPPS officer noticed a&#13;
damaged stop sign. A temporary&#13;
sign was put in place until a&#13;
new sign can be installed.&#13;
Inc . # 01- 94 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, SAC, women's Softball/&#13;
Soccer Locker Room, 6:39&#13;
p.m.: student reported the&#13;
Page 11&#13;
theft of a Louisville softball&#13;
bag Containing sports equipment&#13;
. Student later reported&#13;
that the bag had been found.&#13;
Case unfounded.&#13;
Inc . # 01- 95 Obstructing an&#13;
Officer, Molinaro Hall, D2&#13;
level , 11 :44 p .m.: UPPS officer&#13;
received a call reporting&#13;
two subjects on scooters in&#13;
Main Place who had gone aown&#13;
to the D2 level . SUbjects fled&#13;
when the officer ordered them&#13;
to stop but were located and&#13;
apprehended. Citations were&#13;
issued for Resisting/Obstructing&#13;
a Police Officer and UWS ·&#13;
Chapter 18-Conduct on University&#13;
Lands-Roller Blading or&#13;
Similar Wheeled vehicle.&#13;
2/01/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-96 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY E, .3 miles east of HWY 31,&#13;
5 :38 a .m.: UPPS officer&#13;
stopped a vehicle observed&#13;
without valid license plates .&#13;
Investigation revealed driver&#13;
was wanted by a looal agency&#13;
on two warrants for civil&#13;
process-local ordinance. Citations&#13;
were issued for operating&#13;
without a valid driver's&#13;
license, 2nd offense and nonregistration&#13;
of vehicle. Driver&#13;
was transported to Kenosha&#13;
County jail on the outstanding&#13;
warrants .&#13;
WHAT'S ON&#13;
YO.U R&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring all&#13;
positions for the Spring 2001&#13;
semester. Stop by the office,&#13;
located across from the&#13;
Career Center in lower Wyllie&#13;
hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to 1 p.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have&#13;
to offer?&#13;
Page 12&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
• For a limited time only! The Ranger&#13;
News will print your student classified&#13;
ads free of chare;e. Forms are available at&#13;
the newsstand rn front of the library and&#13;
between Wyllie and Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Call 595-2287 for more information.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
Triple H Grange, LLC .&#13;
Organic Boarding, Horseback&#13;
Private Lessons&#13;
~ • Boarding Sale! $175 per month.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature. Come ride&#13;
with us.&#13;
7417 - 7 Mile Road&#13;
(262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?!&#13;
• For the novice to the expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a club&#13;
next semester.&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software&#13;
is available: Microsoft Office&#13;
Using the Internet Effectively, E-mail&#13;
and Creating Web Pages. Tutoring&#13;
will be by appointment. To schedule&#13;
your appointment, call Bob or Chris at&#13;
595-2790.&#13;
• Do you enjoy working with children?&#13;
Would you like to earn extra money?&#13;
Apply now for a childcare position at&#13;
NTC GreatLakes. Call 847-688-2110,&#13;
Ext... 103 or apply on]ine at&#13;
www.ntcrnwr.com&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun, Bahamas&#13;
Fforida, Jamaica and Mazatlan. Call&#13;
Sun Coast Vacations for a free&#13;
b!ochure and ask how you can orgaruze&#13;
a small group and eat, drink,&#13;
travel free ancf earn cash! Call 1-888-&#13;
777-4642 or e-mail sales@suncoastvacations.&#13;
com.&#13;
Spring Break!&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Free&#13;
Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn Cash!&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.&#13;
com or call 800-293-1443 for info.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados&#13;
B~amas, Padre.Free Meals, Fre~&#13;
Drinks and Up to $100 room credit&#13;
The Ranger1 University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Call 1-800-426-7710 for special weeks&#13;
or go to: www.sunsplashtours.com&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, rELL&#13;
TRIPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE., Student&#13;
Travel Services, America's # 1&#13;
Student Tour Operator. Jamaica, Mexico,&#13;
Bahamas, -gurope, Florida. 1-800-&#13;
648-4849.&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted .&#13;
$2500 OBO. Call (262) 878-0769 after&#13;
6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buy out. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
1987 Mazda 626&#13;
• V 4 2.0 engine, Runs great! New&#13;
brakes. Asking $950 OBO. Call Ashi at&#13;
(home) 551-7431 or (work) 595-2705.&#13;
1991 Ford F-150&#13;
• Must Sell! $4,000 or best offer. Call&#13;
884-6812 and ask for Jeremy.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or Roseann&#13;
Mason at 595-2606, or stop by the Career&#13;
Center, Wyllie 0173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
with program policies and procedures.&#13;
• . ScI:ie~ule residents for group and&#13;
mdiVIdual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be. a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for case&#13;
rlan changes, suspensions or discharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place - Southern _&#13;
Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
in~luding contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or other&#13;
concerns, and assist resident to&#13;
improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the homeless&#13;
f&gt;Optilations in Racine County. Assist&#13;
the Homeless Assistance Coalition in&#13;
arranging meetings, mail notices,&#13;
record notes of meetings and decisions&#13;
and develop a seneric brochure&#13;
to advance the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiter/&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public through&#13;
employers, public service groups,&#13;
community groups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service orgaruzations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e. newspaper&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight the&#13;
need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
.retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probation/&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
and to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking statements,&#13;
conducting assessments and&#13;
intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate/Liaison for the Dis•&#13;
trict Attorney in Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals, pers~&#13;
mal a~vocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Notify victims of their rights, explain&#13;
the criminal justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each month&#13;
with one of the law enforcement&#13;
ae;encies in Racine County and proVIde&#13;
services to clients off site at the&#13;
various Community Policing sites.&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills Program:&#13;
teach l4 core living skills to 17-23 year&#13;
olds.&#13;
• Street Outreach: Hand out hygiene&#13;
products to teens who are out on the&#13;
streets; develop a rapport with them&#13;
and encourage them to seek counseling&#13;
services.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid: answer the&#13;
hotline; assist with group facilitation&#13;
work; work 1:1 with teens.&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Force: teach&#13;
teens about alternatives to gangs and&#13;
crime; teach material on STDs, teen&#13;
pregnancy prevention, how to fill out&#13;
job applications, etc.&#13;
Walker's Point Center for the Arts in&#13;
Milwaukee is looking for&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work directly with&#13;
elementary-aged children in their art&#13;
~asses, ":7hich are taught by profess10naJ&#13;
artists.&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations Intern -&#13;
Design and distribute publicity; market&#13;
surveys, advertise programs· and&#13;
fundraise. '&#13;
February 8, 2001&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows, contract&#13;
artists, handle artwork and prepare&#13;
written catalogs and labels.&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence&#13;
research and planning. '&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
Racine Literary Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will be&#13;
held on the following Saturdays: January&#13;
27 and February 3 from 8:45a.m.&#13;
- 4:15p.m. and February 10 from&#13;
8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit organization that provides&#13;
a 24-hour crisis line and&#13;
response team for victims of sexual&#13;
assault will conduct a 15-hour training&#13;
workshop in th_e following dates&#13;
from 6p.m. - 9p.m .. Feb. 15, Feb. 22,&#13;
March 1, 8 and 15. Each advocate is&#13;
asked to volunteer for one shift per&#13;
month.&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking for&#13;
a volunteer who will work in a team&#13;
of two people to present personal&#13;
safety puppet shows to Racine&#13;
kindergarten children in their schools.&#13;
No experience is necessary. 1-5 hours&#13;
per month. The volunteer will gain&#13;
experience communicating with children,&#13;
will familiarize ner / himself&#13;
with classroom dynamics, and will&#13;
know s/he is educating children&#13;
about important topics such as&#13;
"stranger danger" and "good&#13;
touch/bad touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoring!&#13;
• Almost every school and community&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha would&#13;
like college tutors to help their youth&#13;
in elementary school through high&#13;
school with i:heir studies. Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District's ESL program&#13;
is in particular need for a tutor to&#13;
work with a student who s~aks Chinese.&#13;
Opportunities exist both during&#13;
the school day as well as during the&#13;
late afternoon.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES WITH&#13;
TIie Ranger&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Fntertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Sarah or Brenda at 595 2287. Meetings&#13;
are Mondays from&#13;
Noon-lp.m.</text>
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              <text>2001: A Space Odyssey exploration into involvement</text>
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              <text>February15, 2001&#13;
2001:A Space Odvssev Exploration Into Involvement&#13;
ByRuyayeemRashid&#13;
On Wednesday Jan. 31, UW-Parksidehad&#13;
its annual student organizationalfair&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Upper MainPlace. The purpose of this&#13;
fair was to show incoming, transfer&#13;
andreturning students the organizationsUW-Parkside&#13;
has to offer. The&#13;
themeof the fair was 2001: A Space&#13;
Odyssey Exploratioll Into Involvement.&#13;
Existing clubs use this opportunity to&#13;
recruitmoremembers. Wlien recruiting,&#13;
theclubs highlighted past events and&#13;
promotedfUture ones. Also at all the&#13;
tables,there were sign-up sheets for&#13;
tht.e interested in joining a club, or&#13;
wantingmore information.&#13;
Avanel of "secret" judges toured&#13;
the fauto see which or(;anization was&#13;
.mostcreativein promoting itself to the&#13;
studentbody using the space theme.&#13;
PCO&lt;:was awardee first place for its&#13;
towenngrocket. According to Charles&#13;
Zellner,president of the club, the rock-&#13;
~ wasZOfeet tall. Twelve members&#13;
~ the clubtook a total of 15 hours to&#13;
uild the craft. They started building it&#13;
during their regular&#13;
meeting&#13;
time. After the&#13;
meeting, some&#13;
members went&#13;
down to the&#13;
Poster Room in&#13;
The Den to finish&#13;
the rocket.&#13;
The rocket was&#13;
made from cardboard&#13;
boxes&#13;
stacked on top&#13;
of each other.&#13;
Other materials,&#13;
included tin foil,&#13;
and duct -tape.&#13;
After the rocket&#13;
was built it was&#13;
20 feet tall, so&#13;
• tall it nearly reached the ceiling in&#13;
Upper Main Place, which is 24 feet tall.&#13;
The Art Club was awarded second&#13;
place for. its clever planet disl'lay, and&#13;
for providing students With information&#13;
about famous artists and what&#13;
While waiting for the planets to align, Arts&#13;
Club members scan the universe for potential&#13;
new celestial bodies at the Org. Fair.&#13;
SPace . . ommon but both were ltlra~PloratJon and minnow races normally have little III c t I,Jan. 31.&#13;
lISat "2001:A Space Odyssey Exploration into Involvemen ,&#13;
astrological sign&#13;
they were born&#13;
under.&#13;
Other clubs&#13;
that stood out&#13;
were UW-Parkside's&#13;
radio station,&#13;
WIPZ,&#13;
which had a live&#13;
band playing&#13;
during the fair.&#13;
Two of the band&#13;
members are volun&#13;
teers at the&#13;
station.&#13;
At the Circle K&#13;
booth, the club&#13;
was racing minnows.&#13;
In addition&#13;
to this fishy&#13;
activity, there were highlights of past&#13;
events like Winter Weekend for the&#13;
Northern Wisconsin/Upper Michigan&#13;
District, and up-coming events like the&#13;
club's district convention (you'll have&#13;
to join the club to find out what that's&#13;
all about). In addition, there was a&#13;
newsletter that interested students&#13;
were able to look at to see what other&#13;
Circle K Clubs are doing within the&#13;
district. Also at the booth, the club was&#13;
giving away Smarties with a message&#13;
that read, "Be a Smartie, join Circle&#13;
K." At the organizational fair in September,&#13;
the message was "How many&#13;
people does it take to change the&#13;
world? One.You!" Almost all the clubs&#13;
had candy and some literature about"&#13;
the clubs that students could take.&#13;
Approximately 37 organizations&#13;
signed up for the fair while 34 had&#13;
tables at the event. If you would like to&#13;
learn more information about any campus&#13;
organization, stop by the Student·&#13;
Activities office located in the Student&#13;
Union room 209.&#13;
Higher Utilitv Prices Affecting&#13;
Evervone.. .Including UW-Parliside&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
The recent rise in utility prices has&#13;
affected ~veryone, in one way or another.&#13;
Students living off campus have seen&#13;
a rise in their monthly gas and electric&#13;
bills, while other students have probably&#13;
heard about it on the news. UWParkside&#13;
has also felt the sting of&#13;
increased utility. prices, especially in&#13;
heating the buildings on campus.&#13;
According to Sharon Stoltz, financial&#13;
specialist at the Facilities Management&#13;
plant, "Eighty percent of the yearly budget&#13;
has already been spent, and We are&#13;
only 60% through the year."&#13;
The increased cost of natural gas is to&#13;
blame for the high heating costs the University&#13;
MS encountered. The price of&#13;
natural gas has guadrupled in a very&#13;
short time, leavmg UW-Parkslde no&#13;
choice but to switch to fuel oil. Fuel oil&#13;
is a cheaper alternative to natural gas,&#13;
but it has doubled in price from a year&#13;
ago. Add to this the four percent&#13;
increase in electricity, and it's easy to see&#13;
the effect the prices are having on UWParkside.&#13;
According to Don Kolbe director of&#13;
Facilities Management, UW-Parkside&#13;
has gone to great lengths in fighting&#13;
higher utility costs, with energy efficient&#13;
features in the buildings on campus.&#13;
"We've installed an energy management&#13;
system, energy saving lights, and&#13;
motion sensors in the classrooms", said&#13;
Kolbe. "We also have in the works, a&#13;
water saving plan, which will also help&#13;
to cut back utility costs." ,&#13;
Even with these energy saving ideas,&#13;
you can bet UW-Parkside will be keer.-&#13;
ing it's fingers crossed, hoping that utility&#13;
prices return to normal. The same&#13;
can almostcertainlybe said for the students.&#13;
Page 2&#13;
February 15,2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
I n d&#13;
•&#13;
S 1 e&#13;
3 The French club, a new group on campus&#13;
looking for members&#13;
4&#13;
Upcoming Events:&#13;
The OMSA sponsors trips and movies in honor of Black&#13;
History Month .&#13;
5 Enlenainmenl:&#13;
A serious look alconcens&#13;
6 Sporls find oul how 10 gel free luition by&#13;
going 10 Ihe games&#13;
1 spons COnlinued&#13;
Are professional Athletes good role models?&#13;
9&#13;
Art teachers noticed and honored for outstanding&#13;
workmanship&#13;
10 Talk Radio has something to say about American Society&#13;
Editor of the week: Brenda Dunham&#13;
The ~ is ~lis~ed '!Very !hursday. . . .... ents of the University of WlSCOnsin-Parkside, who are solely&#13;
responsiEilefor Its editorial policy and co. .. .. . _•.-__• ._...• %&#13;
Letters to the Edi~r P'?lky: The Ranger ~.eI:l 'eS. ; rs tq:the~of. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
the Ran$er office (WYLL D-139C). Lettemmust)'e typed andfrtduci¢ the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
misleading or libelous content. Letters thilt fail 16 &amp;mi:l'ly Will nor-be°pubtished. For publication purposes, author's name can be withheld,&#13;
but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the ngnt to edit all letters.&#13;
at t&#13;
o&#13;
Thin&#13;
Black History Month Events&#13;
• Sweetheart Ball, Feb. 16, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Union Square, admission $10 per&#13;
person, $18 per couple, advance tickets at RangerCard office, refreshments&#13;
provided, professional photography available~ sponsored by Black Student&#13;
. Union and All Campus Events/Student Activities.&#13;
• Fashion Show, Feb. 23, 8 p.m., Union Square, admission $3, $2 with nonperishable&#13;
food donation.&#13;
Continuing Events:&#13;
• Parkside National Small Print Exhibition, through Feb. 22; free, gallery hours&#13;
Mon./Thur. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tue./Wed. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m, February 15&#13;
• Conflict Mediation Workshop /Jonathan Shailor, teaching methods for dealing&#13;
with conflict, 9 to 11 a.m., Tallent Hall Orchard Room, registration $10,&#13;
sponsored by Volunteer Coordinators' Network of Kenosha. February 16&#13;
• Black History Month: Sweetheart Ball, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Union Square,&#13;
admission $lO/person, $18/ couple, advance tickets at RangerCard office.&#13;
February 17&#13;
• Women's &amp; men's basketball vs, SIU-Edwardsville, women 1 p.m., men3:l5&#13;
p.m.; De Simone Gym; UW-Parkside students admitted free, tickets: adults&#13;
$5, high school students and children 14 years of age and under $1.&#13;
.• Latinos Unidos Dance-A-Thon, time &amp; location to be announced. February 21&#13;
• Noon Concert: Elaine Skorodin String Quintet, Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
noon, free&#13;
• So~p and Substance: "Organize to Maximize" w /Joan Larson noon, Student&#13;
Union rooms 104-106, free, w /free soup, bread, and crackers served.&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! presents Loston Harris, jazz piano/vocals, 7:30 p.m., Commu·&#13;
mcation Arts Theatre; tickets: $12, available in RangerCard office or call ext.&#13;
2345. February 22-25&#13;
• Foreign Pilm: "Black Cat, white Cat," Yugoslavia, sub-titled; film shown ThursdaJ.:&#13;
and Fnday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. Inthe&#13;
Union Cmema Theater. For more information, call ext. 2345. February 22&#13;
• Mu!ticultural Career Day, at UWM, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., UW-Parkside sponsor.&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs.&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m, to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m, to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m,&#13;
Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m, to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is closed for renovation.&#13;
February 15, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Open Forum on TV Violence&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
Are you a parent? Do you have&#13;
concerns about the programming that&#13;
children are exposed to? Ifthe answer&#13;
to either of these questions is "yes,"&#13;
then you get the chance to voice your&#13;
opinion at an open forum discussion&#13;
to be held at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Today, children are exposed to more&#13;
violence and improper material than&#13;
ever before. If you have an opinion on&#13;
TV being too violent, or if you think&#13;
TV is fine, and there's nothing wrong&#13;
with it, this forum will give you a&#13;
chance to have your opinion heard.&#13;
The forum will be used to help the&#13;
project groups in Professor Megan&#13;
Mullen's Broadcasting and Society&#13;
class. Anyone who would be interested&#13;
in coming in, and helping to facilitate&#13;
discussion would be greatly&#13;
appreciated.&#13;
The date and time for this forum is&#13;
not yet scheduled, but anyone interested&#13;
should call Professor Mullen at&#13;
ext. 2664. She can also be reached by&#13;
e-mail at Mullenfsuwp.edu.&#13;
Bonjour II Bienvenu Au Club&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
The UW-Parkside French Club had&#13;
its first meeting Monday, Feb. 5 to discuss&#13;
plans for this semester. Club&#13;
members hope to go to the Chicago Art&#13;
Institute to view various French artists&#13;
and masterpieces, have a pastry bake&#13;
sale selling Eclairs and cream puffs,&#13;
and watch French films. The French&#13;
Club will also be involved in the International&#13;
Food Fair and attend meetings&#13;
at other Illliversities in the Milwaukee&#13;
area to meet with their French clubs to&#13;
see what they will be doing. It sounds&#13;
like a lot of fun and a great way to&#13;
experience a bit of French culture.&#13;
Officers have not been elected yet,&#13;
that will happen on Monday, Feb. 19, so&#13;
any students who are interested in joining&#13;
still have the opportunity. Meetings&#13;
are held every Monday at noon in&#13;
CART 136. Students should contact&#13;
Madame Zepp ifthey have any further&#13;
questions or would like to obtain more&#13;
information.&#13;
"Portraits of Parks ide"&#13;
Black &amp; White Photo Contest&#13;
The AdmissiOll$ Ofllce is holding a Blac:k&amp; White photo CIlIltm&#13;
All UW·Patkside $lUdenls are Clleouragcd to p$1kipate.&#13;
Create a dleme for)'O\ll' entries or take eandld anaps of&#13;
the University _nity.&#13;
Priza will be nWtrdad for selected photO$,&#13;
Walth the Rangtr News for more detalll.&#13;
Thi$ is yOIll' ~ to creete yOIll' own "Portraits orI'arksll!e."&#13;
REMEMBER :Photot need 10be illblaek It. white; color photO$IlOI accepled.&#13;
For. more information and details CIlIlIadSercIt Correa in the&#13;
.&lt; Admlsslm Olltce (Mom Dill Or atIl59W300.&#13;
Ilone up 00 the !dX br e».. lim&#13;
(~ bell')"OO foot the bill. for&#13;
bigher ..Joouicm,&#13;
TI&gt;e HOI'Ii emUt can rot&#13;
your federal tAXup to $1,500&#13;
per ulKkrgr~u;l(e studmt per&#13;
''COl'. API'lics only to the lint&#13;
two ye.m of college or utI&gt;er&#13;
!""t.sa'Ulld.aryoour_.&#13;
TI&gt;e Ufcttme Uwning Credit&#13;
eat! sa,.., )'00 up to $1.000 a&#13;
i yeAr in tAXe, for gra,lu.tc,&#13;
professional or undergraduate&#13;
&gt;ludy. You kanoot claim 00th&#13;
; ,,,,,,Iiu for tbe ssme fJ&lt;;T:l&lt;lI1 in&#13;
, the!lillll" yraf.&#13;
Edoc.ation IRA. Col1ll'ibutc&#13;
I&#13;
I up 10SSOOa }~·jrper chiltluntil&#13;
the child Illms 18,&#13;
fur details, see }'Our 2000!dX&#13;
bookIct. Or ch&lt;..:k oor Web site:&#13;
College&#13;
c r e d its&#13;
for&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
Upto$Iso0&#13;
Ryan, you don't know what&#13;
you do to me. I long for you.&#13;
Love, Bill.&#13;
Ladies of 5D: You all mean the&#13;
world to me, I don't know what&#13;
-Pd do without you! Love, Dre.&#13;
To my Resident Advisors,&#13;
Thank You for having such big&#13;
hearts. From one proud Hall&#13;
Director, Esther.&#13;
KC, You'll always be my #1&#13;
friend and I love ya! Happy VDay!&#13;
Love, K2.&#13;
Jeremy, will you be my&#13;
Valentine? Love you, Shan. Juice, Have a Happy&#13;
Valentine's Day! Luv Always,&#13;
. Chevy. Uuiversity Apartment Resident&#13;
Advisors, you are the BEST!&#13;
Tony, I want to get to know Love, OJ.&#13;
your Statsl Let's get together&#13;
and discuss them. TN Happy Valentine's Day you&#13;
Dirty Rat, I love you. Love,&#13;
Dear Candra, We all love you Eric.&#13;
so much! You are sweet and&#13;
awesome. Always stay that way.&#13;
Love 5F and Roman.&#13;
. Haider, you are my heaven on&#13;
earth. I Love You! Love, Kelly.&#13;
., SpO~SO/Le.d b~ Pe.e./LePle.o~i~ 2duWioILS .,&#13;
Page 4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UW-Parkside Joins 180 Other Universities&#13;
Across the Country in Organizing Hunger Cleanup&#13;
The United States is one of the richest&#13;
nations in the world, but three million&#13;
people are forced to sleep in cars,&#13;
under bridges, in shelters, and on the&#13;
streets.&#13;
In urban and rural areas alike, community&#13;
kitchens and meal programs are&#13;
unable to meet food requests. Hunger is&#13;
a way of life for 27 million Americans.&#13;
Many of the hungry are also homeless'&#13;
or on the verge of homelessness. Families&#13;
with children make up 39 percent of&#13;
the homeless population.&#13;
There is enough food produced to&#13;
feed everyone in the world. Yet, one&#13;
person dies from hunger-related causes&#13;
every forty seconds. '&#13;
The Parkside Volunteer Program and&#13;
the Parkside Community Outreach&#13;
Club are co-sponsoring the university's&#13;
third annual Hunger Cleanup, a three&#13;
hour community service work-a-thon&#13;
in which students raise money while&#13;
volunteering in programs for the hungry&#13;
and homeless. Similar to a walk-athon,&#13;
the Cleanup mobilizes thousands&#13;
of students acrossthe country to gather&#13;
pledges from family and friends for&#13;
their volunteer work.&#13;
Volunteer projects include painting&#13;
local shelters, planting community gardens,&#13;
and refurbishing low-income&#13;
housing units. Money raised through&#13;
this unique work-a-then benefits local,&#13;
national, and international hunger and&#13;
homeless programs. Fifty percent of the&#13;
money raised will be donated to one&#13;
Racine and one Kenosha agency; thirtyfive&#13;
percent of the funds earned will go&#13;
to the National Student Campaign&#13;
Against Hunger and Homelessness to&#13;
educate and train students to be more&#13;
effective in their efforts to end hunger&#13;
and homelessness; and the remaining&#13;
fifteen percent will be given to the&#13;
International Development Exchange&#13;
(IDEX)which sponsors grassroots community&#13;
needs to fuel further change.&#13;
Since the first Hunger Cleanup in&#13;
1984, the National Student Campaign&#13;
Against Hunger and Homelessness&#13;
(NSCABH) has worked with schools&#13;
across the country to make it one of the&#13;
most successful student and community&#13;
events. More than 100,000 students&#13;
have completed thousands of work&#13;
projects, raising more than $1 million&#13;
dollars in its 15-year history.&#13;
This will be the third year that UWParkside&#13;
participates in the national&#13;
Bunger Cleanup, which is now in its&#13;
seventeenth year of existence. Our&#13;
Cleanup will be from 8:00a.m. -&#13;
2:00p.m. on Saturday, April 7. Volunteers&#13;
will meet at Parkside at 8:00a.m.&#13;
for registration and kickoff. At 9:30&#13;
a.m., teams of 8-10 volunteers each will&#13;
travel to local worksites in Kenosha&#13;
and Racine. At 1:00 p.m., volunteers&#13;
will return to Parkside for lunch and&#13;
reflection.&#13;
Our UW-Parkside goal is to mobilize&#13;
100 student volunteers and raise $3,000.&#13;
In order to achieve this goal, we are&#13;
encouraging volunteers to raise $30&#13;
each. In addition to asking friends and&#13;
families here in Wisconsin, we have a&#13;
direct mail letter that students can send&#13;
to relatives and others living out-ofstate&#13;
to request their sponsorship.&#13;
This service project would be a great&#13;
opportunity for residence hall wings&#13;
and apartments to develop unity and&#13;
cohesion among residents. 1t also lends&#13;
itself well to clubs/organizations who&#13;
want to get to know one another better&#13;
while helping in the community. FurOffice&#13;
01 Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
2001 Black Historv Month Event Des~riptions&#13;
OMSA, Wyllie 0182 Monday, 2/19&#13;
at 11:30 Speaker- Dennis "Bose" Biddle,&#13;
the Negro Baseball League&#13;
Mr. Bidddle is the youngest living&#13;
player from the Negro Baseball League,&#13;
which was&gt; formed ir 1920 when&#13;
African-Americans were not permitted&#13;
to Play in the major leagues. Biddle&#13;
played with the chicago American&#13;
Giants and in 1955 signed with the&#13;
Chicago Cubs. After his career was cut&#13;
short by a broken leg, Biddle became a&#13;
student at UW-Milwaukee where he&#13;
graduated with degrees in Education&#13;
and Counseling. Biddle is currently the&#13;
pres,ident of the Yesterday's Negro&#13;
League Baseball Player LLC Foundation.&#13;
Presentation and reception. Related&#13;
event: Library Lobby 2/12-3/9,&#13;
Negro Baseball League Memorabilia&#13;
Display&#13;
Tour of America's Black Holocaust&#13;
Museum and Dinner, Tuesday, February&#13;
27 Featured exhibit: Creativity and&#13;
Resistance: Maroon Cultures in the&#13;
Americas&#13;
This 'exhibit tells the story of thousands&#13;
of enslaved Africans who&#13;
escaped from Southern Plantations and&#13;
found freedom in the North and Central&#13;
wilderness. Known as Maroons&#13;
these fugitives challenged colonial&#13;
powers and successfully resisted&#13;
enslavement. Dinner at the African Hut&#13;
restaurant will conclude this cultural&#13;
experience. Transportation is FREE.&#13;
Museum tour is FREE for students,&#13;
$5:00 for staff and faculty. Dinner is on&#13;
your own. Meet in OMSA at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
We will depart promptly at 2:30 p.m.&#13;
For reservations call 595-2731 no later&#13;
than Friday, February 23.&#13;
OMSA, Wyllie 0182, Wednesda~&#13;
2A/2~ at 3p.m.Movie: Black Is...Black&#13;
mt&#13;
thermore, fraternities and sororitiesare&#13;
prime candidates for this day of service&#13;
smce so many share a common philosophy&#13;
of contributing to the community&#13;
We welcome individuals who are noi&#13;
part of a group, too, as we will form&#13;
tearns of 8-10 volunteers to go to each&#13;
worksite. So, whether you're with an&#13;
established group or want to sign up&#13;
yourself, join the Hunger Cleanupand&#13;
meet new people; deepen existingrelationship;&#13;
ream about local resources&#13;
that serve those who are hungry and&#13;
homeless; and overall improve thecommunity!&#13;
If you would like to volunteer on&#13;
April 7, or if you are interested in helping&#13;
to organize this work-a-then Dy&#13;
serving on one of the recruitment, publicity,&#13;
worksites, or fundraising committees&#13;
please contact MichelleWegner&#13;
in the Volunteer Program, Wyllie0173,&#13;
at 595-2011.&#13;
It is through service, education,&#13;
fundraising, and advocacy that wewill&#13;
be able to bring about lasting change.&#13;
Sign up today and make a differencein&#13;
the lives of people in our local areaand&#13;
abroad!&#13;
This film goes to the heart of heated&#13;
debates about Black identity by revealing&#13;
how African-Americans ofte~&#13;
impose rigid definitions of "blackness&#13;
on themselves with devastating conoequences.&#13;
Free popcorn. .&#13;
All events sponsored by theOfficeof&#13;
Multicultural Student Affairs. Formore&#13;
information call 595-2731&#13;
Rock.in' at the ~pollo ...actually UW-Parkside students W - , .&#13;
evenmg, The Irish Actors Theatre Company, right, gave :~~J~~~~ at Apollo Ni9.ht (I!'ft) at the Union Cinema Theatre.Thesarn&#13;
e&#13;
taste of DUblin WIth their show at Union Square.&#13;
February 15, The Ranger, Umversity of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 5&#13;
-&#13;
ArtS: Alive Is a Huue Success&#13;
ByLynn Garcia&#13;
TheArts: Alive series this year has&#13;
beenvery popular. Inthe past, one or&#13;
twO ofthe shows have been extremely&#13;
well liked, but this year four of the&#13;
sevenperformances have been completelysold&#13;
out. The series this :t,ear&#13;
consistedof: Natalie MacMaster, The&#13;
Nutcracker,"Arlo Guthrie, Ailey II,&#13;
LustonHarris, "Annie," and The&#13;
RiversideSymphony.&#13;
Irecently spoke to Joanne Yantis,&#13;
thedirector of Special Projects, about&#13;
this wonderful series. She informed&#13;
me that when she is picking out&#13;
woups she looks for acts that people&#13;
do notnecessarily know but the audience&#13;
will remember them long after&#13;
theperformance. She also books more&#13;
traditionalacts such as "The Nutcracker"&#13;
and "Annie".&#13;
Yantis wants to get the students&#13;
involved with this spectacular series&#13;
At the beginning of the year, student~&#13;
are able to get the pack~ge for a thirty&#13;
l'ercent discount. That IS seven fantastic&#13;
shows .for jUs~ $79. If you wanted&#13;
t? go see Annie in Chicago just one&#13;
ticket would cost you around $80. If a&#13;
person chooses to buy season tickets&#13;
they will occupy the same seats for&#13;
every performance and if someone&#13;
should lose their tickets they can be&#13;
replaced.&#13;
The director Of Special Projects is&#13;
currently gettmg next year's series&#13;
together. As soon as the schedule is&#13;
available, Iwill be putting it right here&#13;
in The Ranger so that the students are&#13;
aware of the performances ahead of&#13;
time. In the meantime don't miss&#13;
Loston Harris on Wednesday, Feb. 21,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Concert Tragedies&#13;
Who's to BlameP&#13;
byjennie Morris and Sarah Moses&#13;
(spedalAustralian correspondent)&#13;
. January 27, 2001-an 18-year-old&#13;
girlfromSydney, Australia, suffers a&#13;
ma)o~heart attack after being trambled&#13;
m.a mosh pit surge during a set&#13;
ymUSicalgroup Limp Bizkit, as their&#13;
partin the annual Big Day Out festival.She&#13;
was pronounced clinically&#13;
deadwhen finally pulled from the Pit&#13;
bysecurity and attended to by I'araQ,~iCS.They&#13;
were able to redorm&#13;
. and revive the gir, who&#13;
~mamedin a comatose state. She was&#13;
Whento St. [ohn's Hospital in Sydney,&#13;
figh~she spent the next four days&#13;
ary ~g for her life. She died on januInaddition&#13;
to this tragedy, 30 other&#13;
concert-goers were injured In an&#13;
~ to help control the cro';"d, Fred&#13;
~ead singer for Limp Bizkit,&#13;
eranull the band's performance seves&#13;
asking the crowd to "chill&#13;
:- and for securi ty to "get in there&#13;
safe~e sure that the people were&#13;
ll\in' After stopping the show for 20&#13;
Durst utes, and wanting to end the set,&#13;
the Was told by security that ending&#13;
Il1a Performance would only make&#13;
the~dworse within the crowd, so&#13;
!\o~. finished their set.&#13;
Iy d;h{ at.the Big Day Out, especialwasan&#13;
.g Limp Bizkit's performances,&#13;
!eg,' ISSuenght after the tour's first&#13;
ba'iidlllAuckIarld, New Zealand. The&#13;
WasthOUghtthat the security set up&#13;
Day~t~factory, and asked the Big&#13;
ef orgaruzer, Ken West, to&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
up the security ante. They were met&#13;
with West's response to "leave him&#13;
alone." He told the band that he'd been&#13;
doing the event for over 10 years and&#13;
he knew what he was doing.&#13;
After the Sydney melee, Limp Bizkit&#13;
went to the Big Day Out .I'romoters&#13;
again and asked for a T-style barricade&#13;
and extra security if they were to continue&#13;
on the tour. They were concerned&#13;
that more people would get&#13;
hurt if extra measures weren't taken to&#13;
prevent it. Ken West, and Vivian Le,:s&#13;
refused their 'request, and Limp Bizkit&#13;
responded saying that they would n'?t&#13;
perform unless they knew that their&#13;
fans would be safe. Denied further,&#13;
one hour later Limp Bizkit was on a&#13;
plane bound for the United States,&#13;
officially taking themselves off the bill&#13;
for the Big Day Out, issuing a statement&#13;
saying that they prayed for the&#13;
life of the girl. . .&#13;
The morning after the mCident,.Ken&#13;
West also issued a statement, pralsmg&#13;
Limp Bizkit for their efforts to keep&#13;
the crowd safe, but in respon~e to the&#13;
international headliner suddenly&#13;
"drop ing" off the tour, Ken West&#13;
issue1' a far cry from his ear.her statement&#13;
to the Australian media. s';l;mg&#13;
that he was "relieved" that Limp 12kit&#13;
had decided to drop off the tour'.:md&#13;
that their performance was too&#13;
intense." ..&#13;
Ticketholders for the. remammg&#13;
dates were left without an mtemationSugar&#13;
anti Soice&#13;
By Lynn Garcia .&#13;
This is the story of the A squad&#13;
cheerleaders, Diane (Marley Shelton),&#13;
Lucy, Hannah(Rachael Blanchard),&#13;
Kansas( Mena Suvari), and Cleo at&#13;
Lincoln High School. The quarterback&#13;
of the football team, jack, asks Diane&#13;
out at the beginning of the school year&#13;
and before Homecoming she is pregnant&#13;
and they are planning&#13;
to be married. Their parents&#13;
are not pleased. jack and&#13;
Diane then go out and find a&#13;
quaint place to live, but they&#13;
have to get jobs in order to&#13;
afford the living expenses.&#13;
jack gets a job at a video&#13;
store and Diane is hired at a&#13;
.rank branch of a grocery&#13;
store.&#13;
As time progresses, Diane&#13;
soon discovers that without&#13;
money her baby is' never&#13;
going to have the kind of life&#13;
she's accustomed to. After&#13;
talking it over with the rest&#13;
of the squad they decide to&#13;
. rob the bank branch because&#13;
Diane can open the safe in&#13;
her sleep. They watch "Point&#13;
Break" and "Reservoir Dogs" to see&#13;
how it's done and plan to disguise&#13;
themselves as Betty Dolls.&#13;
If you're not looking for a movie&#13;
that is going to change your life this&#13;
one's for you. Sugar &amp; Spice is an&#13;
entertaining and amusing movie. Go&#13;
check it out.&#13;
No they're not Devo, they are the cherrleadersturned-robbers&#13;
of the new film l'Sugar and Spice"&#13;
now playing at area theaters&#13;
al headliner that they had paid to see,&#13;
as it was Limp Bizkit's first visit to&#13;
Australia. They were not compensated&#13;
in any way, and Australian group&#13;
Powderfinger, who were already on&#13;
the tour, were elevated to "headliner"&#13;
status.&#13;
Planning for 2001's Big Day Out&#13;
had been a struggle to begin with. Ken&#13;
West had rock group Pearl jam confirmed&#13;
as the international headliner,&#13;
but as the band was dropped from the&#13;
bill because of the nine tragedies that&#13;
had occurred during Pearl- jam's performance&#13;
at the Rokslide Festiva1 in&#13;
Europe earlier in 2000. While acknowledging&#13;
that the incident was not Pearl&#13;
jam's fault, Limp Bizkit was chosen&#13;
because the Big Day Out had an&#13;
"impeccable saftey record" and that&#13;
was not to be jeopardized.&#13;
Limp Bizkit have been known to&#13;
have intense mosh pits during their&#13;
performances. During their set at&#13;
Woodstock, fires were set and a riot&#13;
occurred. Despite their track record,&#13;
they were chosen to headline the&#13;
·event. Promoters could not have&#13;
"overlooked" the fact that the band has&#13;
had some violence associated with its&#13;
performances, but because there were&#13;
no official "tragedies," they were&#13;
selected.&#13;
So where does the blame lie when&#13;
tragedies, such as the death of an 18&#13;
year old girl, occur?&#13;
People are quick to blame the performers&#13;
themselves for such incidents.&#13;
They also place blame with security&#13;
personnel. But the real blame should&#13;
lie with the'promoters and organizers.&#13;
Althougfi. crowd surges and riots&#13;
are not planned occurrences, promoters&#13;
of such events as the Big Day Out,&#13;
the Rokslide Festival, and Woodstock,&#13;
are responsible to take the proper precautions&#13;
in case one should, Things&#13;
such as extra security and barriers for&#13;
crowd control would help to prevent&#13;
tragedies such as death and severe&#13;
injuries from happening. These things&#13;
should be met With no objections, as&#13;
the lives of the people who pay to see&#13;
the acts are at stake.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES WITH&#13;
The Ranger Hews&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Sarah or Brenda at 595 2287.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
Noon-l p.m.&#13;
Page 6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Halward, Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
to Enter Educators' Hall on April 6&#13;
Inductees into the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Educators' Hall of Fame for&#13;
2001 have been announced, and two&#13;
names familiar to UW-Parkside students&#13;
past and present are among&#13;
those being honored, Associate Professor&#13;
of History Oliver Hayward and&#13;
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences&#13;
Eugene Casiorkiewicz will join&#13;
four others for induction Friday, April&#13;
6,&#13;
Professor Hayward has taught at&#13;
UWP since the University opened its&#13;
doors in 1968. In addition to serving&#13;
as an expert on Eastern Europe for&#13;
area media, he has addressed audiences&#13;
throughout southeast Wisconsin&#13;
on a variety of historical and curo&#13;
rent events topics from the fall of the&#13;
Soviet Union to the environmental&#13;
impact of nuclear power to gun control.&#13;
For more than a quarter century,&#13;
Prof. Hayward has been an active&#13;
member of the Racine Committee on&#13;
the United Nations. He also was a driving&#13;
force in the campus' Center for&#13;
Multicultural Studies. Inaddition, he&#13;
has organized 11 trips to Russia and Gasiorkiewicz for his warmth and&#13;
Eastern Europe and has translated excellence as a teacher. One commentRussian&#13;
language materials for local ed on, "the camaraderie among forinstitutions&#13;
and organizations. mer students," attributing that to, "the&#13;
Students praise Prof. Hayward for dedication, talent, and enthusiasm of&#13;
making history, "more than just a list our teacher." A local surgeon said&#13;
of names and dates printed on a Prof. Gasiorkiewicz "went well past&#13;
page." Another said she, "gained that the extra mile in dealin&amp; with stumost&#13;
precious of commodities: self- dents" working "tirelessly with them&#13;
confidence" thanks to Hayward. and taking, "a genuine interest in our&#13;
Joining Prof. Hayward in the Hall is individual successes."&#13;
another of UWP s original faculty Professors Hayward and&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz. "Dr. G" is Gasiorkiewicz were selected from a&#13;
known for his service to the communi- field of 15 candidates. Educators&#13;
ty, especially for his years on the Wind Dwaine Anderegg, Rosemary&#13;
Point Board of Trustees and his con- Fritchen, and Paul Kafer, and "Friend&#13;
tinuing service on the Waste Manage- of Education" Larry L. Anderson, will&#13;
ment Board and management of the also be inducted. During the April 6&#13;
Urban Forest Project. o~ induction program at Carthage ColAcademically,&#13;
Prof. Gasiorkiewicz lege, newly certified teachers from&#13;
is know for his expertise on wetland UW-Parkside and Carthage will be&#13;
and beach ecology, and mushrooms. welcomed to the profession by WisHe&#13;
was a professor of Life Sciences at consin Superintendent of Public&#13;
UW-Parkslde for 20 years and he also Instruction John Benson.&#13;
served as a professor of Industrial&#13;
Hygiene and Environmental Health&#13;
during a portion of the same period.&#13;
Students praised Prof.&#13;
Price Paid For Being&#13;
a Professional Athlete&#13;
By Dena Coady •&#13;
Ex-NBA player Charles Barkley&#13;
once said, "I am not a role model."&#13;
What Charles forgot is that no matter&#13;
what children will always look up to&#13;
professional athletes as their "heroes."&#13;
Lately, however, a number of professional&#13;
athletes have been in the news&#13;
with their off-court actions. Such as&#13;
Jason Kidd, who plays for the Phoenix&#13;
Suns, being arrested for allegedly hittmg&#13;
his WIfe.&#13;
Ray Lewis, who not only helped his&#13;
team win Super Bowl XXXV,but also&#13;
the game's most valuable player, was&#13;
in tro~ble after last year:s Super Bowl&#13;
for bemg present at a fight in which&#13;
two people were killed. Murder&#13;
charges against Lewis were dropped&#13;
once he pleaded gul1ty to obstruction&#13;
of justice.&#13;
o Locally, the professio~al athlete who&#13;
was in the media for his off-the-field&#13;
problems was Mark Chmura, formerly'&#13;
of the Green Bay Packers. Chmura Was&#13;
accused of sexual assault and-:child&#13;
enticement against his 17-year-old&#13;
babysitter. According to the testimony,&#13;
Chmura and the teenage girl were&#13;
drinking together in a hot tub, and he&#13;
later had sex with the girl.&#13;
Two things are wrong with this.&#13;
First of all, what was Chmura doing at&#13;
a post prom party with teenagers? Secondly,&#13;
Why was a 17-year old drinking?&#13;
Chmura claims he was going on a&#13;
!,oIftnp WIth the father of the girl havmg&#13;
the party. So he deci~ed to sleep&#13;
o over smce they were gomg to leave&#13;
early.&#13;
Chmura was found not guilty of all&#13;
charges. Now there is speculation that&#13;
the girl might have lying about the&#13;
whole thing. No matter if Chmura was&#13;
really not guilty, he shouldn't have&#13;
been in that situation. Only two people&#13;
know what really happened that night:&#13;
Mark Chmura and the 17-year old girl.&#13;
o Are these the types of people you&#13;
want your children to grow up saying&#13;
"I want to be just like him?" As profes~&#13;
sional athletes, they should know if&#13;
they'r~ getting into a potentially illegal&#13;
situation. Chmura did say in a news&#13;
conference with the media, "As a professional&#13;
athlete and a Green 13ay&#13;
Packer, I put myself in a situation that&#13;
I shouldn't have and for that I am&#13;
sorry," .&#13;
Well, at least Chmura knew he was&#13;
wrong. The NFL says no teams can&#13;
talk to Chmura until he meets with&#13;
commissioner Paul Tagliabue. Until&#13;
then, Chmura will have to wait to find&#13;
out his fate. .&#13;
Tickets for the pro&amp;ram, which&#13;
includes dinner, are available by calling&#13;
ext. 2753.&#13;
Help Wanted:&#13;
The athletics Department is looking&#13;
for a aerobic kickboxing instructor&#13;
The UW-Parkside Athletics Department&#13;
wants to start an intramural aerobic&#13;
kickboxing class for the second&#13;
eight weeks of the semester. Now all&#13;
the class needs is an instructor.&#13;
Students who are interested in the&#13;
position and have experience that&#13;
would qualify them to fill this role are&#13;
asked to call Melissa Wolter at ext. 2127.&#13;
Sublett's&#13;
Sensational&#13;
Weekend&#13;
Not Enough&#13;
UW-Parkside guard Denita Sublett&#13;
was nothing short of sensationalWhen&#13;
the Lady Rangers played Bellarmine&#13;
University last Thursday and Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan on Saturday. Her&#13;
teammate Joy Rodefer was merely&#13;
wonderful on both occasions but It&#13;
wasn't enough to keep the team from&#13;
dropping both games, puttin~ then&#13;
conference tournament liopes in serious&#13;
doubt&#13;
Sublett poured in 26 points andhad&#13;
four steals against Bellannine while&#13;
Rodefer had 14 and collected eight&#13;
rebounds in an 86-73 loss. The Lady&#13;
Rangers' inability to hit from threepoint&#13;
land was a problem. Coach&#13;
Paulette Stein's team shot just 1-101'-13&#13;
from ou tside the arc.&#13;
Amazingly, both Sublett and Rodefer&#13;
were even better on Saturdayafternoon&#13;
against Kentucky Wesleyan.&#13;
Denita shot better than 50 percentfrom&#13;
the floor to score 28 points whileJoy&#13;
had 17 points and eight rebounds,but&#13;
the Panthers still won 86-83.KWCwas&#13;
led by Leslie Warren with 22points&#13;
With the losses, the Lady Rangel&gt;&#13;
were just 3-12 in the Great Lakevanl!}&#13;
Conference (6-15 overall) going into&#13;
Tuesday'S game with Lewis Univel5ity.&#13;
They close out the home schedulethis&#13;
evening and Saturday with Southern&#13;
Indiana and SIU-Edwardsville, respectively.&#13;
Both games are at the De Simone&#13;
Gym, and UW-Parkside students are&#13;
admitted free.&#13;
Intramural Volleyball Standings&#13;
TEAM Wins&#13;
Avengers&#13;
Strikers&#13;
Monkeys&#13;
Shaken Not Stirred&#13;
FiTaBis&#13;
Odd Style&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
Results:&#13;
February 1&#13;
Monkeys defeat FiTaBis&#13;
Strikers defeat Shaken Not Stirr d&#13;
Odd Style forfeit to Avengers e&#13;
February 8&#13;
Odd Style forfeit to Shaken Not stir d&#13;
Avergers defeat Monke s re&#13;
Strikers defeat FiTaBis y&#13;
s&#13;
Loses Pet.&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1.000&#13;
1.000&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.000&#13;
.000&#13;
15-11, 15-10&#13;
15-12,16-14&#13;
8_15,15-8,15-13&#13;
15-6, 15-3, 16-14&#13;
February 15, 2001 Page 7 The Ranger,_University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
has helped to bring more students to&#13;
tny-Parkside athletic events.&#13;
We appreciate all the students who&#13;
have come out to show their support&#13;
for UW-Parkside athletic teams" said&#13;
Williams. "Wehope that everyon~ who&#13;
has registered will show up to the&#13;
game on Saturday, so we can get a reac-&#13;
- non from the winner."&#13;
Students who have not. yet registered&#13;
for the contest, still have two&#13;
more opportunities. Students will be&#13;
able to register at the men's basketball&#13;
game tonight against Southern Indiana,&#13;
and before halftime of Saturday's&#13;
game. Saturday will be the final home&#13;
game of the season for Ranger basketball,&#13;
so come on out to cheer on the&#13;
team, and get a shot at winning free&#13;
tuition.&#13;
UW·Parksiderunner Amber Antonia is shown surrounded by her competitors&#13;
in the 3,000 meter run (of course, there weren't any) during .Saturday&#13;
firstoeverRanger Track Classic at the Petretti Fieldhouse. AntOnia led the&#13;
eventfrom start to finish.&#13;
.938&#13;
.813&#13;
.750&#13;
.563&#13;
.500&#13;
.438&#13;
.438&#13;
.433&#13;
.375&#13;
.313&#13;
.250&#13;
.188&#13;
GLVCMen's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC Overall&#13;
W,L Pct.&#13;
21-1 .955&#13;
19-3 .364&#13;
21-4 .340&#13;
12-10 .545&#13;
14-11 .560&#13;
12-10 .545&#13;
11-11 .500&#13;
9-13 .409&#13;
9-13 .409&#13;
9-13 .409&#13;
7-19 .269&#13;
6-16 .273&#13;
TEAM W-L Pct.&#13;
Southern Indiana 15-1&#13;
KentuckyWesleyan 13-3&#13;
Northern Kentucky 12-4&#13;
Bellannine '9-7&#13;
Saintjoseph's 8-3&#13;
Indianapolis 7-9&#13;
MissLeouri-5t.Louis 7-9&#13;
IvIS 7-9&#13;
lJW-Parkslde 6-10&#13;
~cy 5-11&#13;
JUpu-Ft. Wayne . 4-12&#13;
~lUEdwardsville 3-13&#13;
Ineligiblefor GLVCTournament:.-_---_...&#13;
Men's Basketball:&#13;
Rangers Drop Two in Kentuckv&#13;
UW-Parkside men's basketball&#13;
coach jeff Rutter seldom complains to&#13;
the media about referees. So when he&#13;
does question the stripes within&#13;
earshot of a microphone or notepad&#13;
you know he's upset.&#13;
Following UW-Parkside's 66-60 loss&#13;
to Bellarmine University in Louisville&#13;
last Thursday, Rutter took exception&#13;
to a poorly timed taunting call against&#13;
center NIck Knuth. The call limited&#13;
Knuth's playing time in the second&#13;
half and did not allow him to go to the&#13;
basket as aggressively as he would&#13;
have without foul trouble.&#13;
The problem came with 16:51left in&#13;
the second half. Knuth banged down a&#13;
jumper to give the Rangers a 33-37&#13;
lead, but he was called for taunting&#13;
after the basket. Moments later he was&#13;
called for an illegal screen and his&#13;
evening was effectively over. Fouls&#13;
limited him to 24 minutes and seven&#13;
points.&#13;
"It was a very, very questionable&#13;
call," Rutter said. "It was nothing&#13;
more than a competitive expression.&#13;
Not having [Knuth] was a big factor."&#13;
Not being able to stop Bellarmine&#13;
forwards jared McCurry and Adam&#13;
Etienne also was a big factor. Both&#13;
scored 14 points each. Marlon Grice&#13;
led the Rangers with 16, Quincey&#13;
Moman poured in 13 points and&#13;
cleared seven rebounds, Brian Maastricht&#13;
contributed 1l.&#13;
Saturday's game at Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
got ugly early and never got&#13;
much better. The Panthers, ranked&#13;
number 10 in the nation for NCAA&#13;
Division II schools, took a 14 point&#13;
lead into the locker room at the half.&#13;
The Rangers cut it to eight but never&#13;
got closer in an 34-59 loss.&#13;
Knuth became a fan favorite among&#13;
KWC partisans with his physical play&#13;
under the basket in leading the&#13;
Rangers with 13 points. Brian Coffman&#13;
had 15, and Q had a game high&#13;
eight rebounds. Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
got 19 from Ronald Evans and 17 from&#13;
Lorico Duncan.&#13;
The losses left the Rangers 9-12&#13;
overall and 6-9 in the Great Lake&#13;
Valley Conference going into Tuesday's&#13;
game with Lewis University,&#13;
They close out the horne schedule&#13;
tonight against Southern Indiana and&#13;
Saturday against SIU-Edwardsville at&#13;
the De Simone Gym. UW-Parkside&#13;
students are admitted free to all home&#13;
games.&#13;
posters&#13;
Student 0&#13;
Organizations!!&#13;
""ee~i'o&#13;
.YOq~ '11~~k; Special event c/qo;&gt; ei'&#13;
to promote?&#13;
We Can Now Print Large&#13;
One Color Posters For You!&#13;
The Pro Image Plus printer will create&#13;
large 23" x 31" newsprint posters in a&#13;
variety of colors including red,&#13;
green, blue, black, neons&#13;
(or we can order a special color)&#13;
from your 81/2 X 11 original!&#13;
Cost to you? Only 75¢ per poster!&#13;
Drop your copy off to Student Activities&#13;
and we will print posters for you within&#13;
4 hours (usually sooner!)&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
PageS The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 15,2001&#13;
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p~opleknow&#13;
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DRINKI • MUIIC • DANCING&#13;
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February15, 2001&#13;
-&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
WIPZAPOlOOZA 2001:&#13;
AVerI Good Show with&#13;
a Very Unoriginal Name&#13;
Last_Friday.night! a small crowd&#13;
athere&lt;!,in sf,te of ICy roads, to supg&#13;
rt lour loca bands and also to sup-&#13;
~rt WIPZ,the campus radio station.&#13;
At 8lfr~" Mariner got things started.&#13;
MJ&lt;S (pronounced makeshift) is&#13;
thethunderous rock band from northemDlinoisthat&#13;
followed. They consist&#13;
ofdrumS, bass, vocals, and guitar, howevertheir&#13;
performance was unfortunatelycut&#13;
short due to the repair of a&#13;
brokenguitar string. You can see them&#13;
al the Metro in Chicago at 3730 N.&#13;
(lark St. Then Kabal, a Racine group&#13;
withactual ParksidetWIPZ members,&#13;
rocked the stage. This was technically&#13;
this group's first live performance&#13;
becausetheir bass player is new to the&#13;
group.The final performance was by&#13;
an energetic band from Whitewater.&#13;
ThePipe Circus impressed us with&#13;
theircrazy funk. The saxophone and&#13;
trumpethat we heard from this group&#13;
was a new twist to the evening. Everyone&#13;
but UW-Parkside law enforcement&#13;
was ~p and dancing to "Funky Sexy".&#13;
They re sure to Impress the Jenny Jones&#13;
audience ill their upcoming gig this&#13;
March.&#13;
To learn more about WIPZ stop by&#13;
the station at Dl~l MoJn, call ~xt. 2527,&#13;
or VISit www.wlpz.uwp.edu. You can&#13;
also learn more about MKSHFT&#13;
through their website which i~&#13;
rnkshft.tripod.com. or, learn about The&#13;
Pipe Circus at Pipecircus.com.&#13;
UW-Parkside Presents&#13;
Ar. TeacherInvitational March 4 - 26&#13;
Thebest art by some of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha'sbest art teachers will be on&#13;
displayat the University of WisconsinParksidebeginning&#13;
March 4. The University'sArt&#13;
Department will host the&#13;
eombmedKenosha Racine Unified&#13;
School Districts Art Teachers InvitationalExhibit&#13;
at its Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery.The exhibition will run&#13;
throughMarch 26, 2001.&#13;
Exliibition Coordinator and UWParksideAssociate&#13;
Art Professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzicksaid the exhibit showcasesthediversetalents&#13;
of local K-12 pubheschoolart&#13;
teachers. Approximately&#13;
50leachersare expected to participate&#13;
with recent examples of their work,&#13;
ranging from traditional drawings and&#13;
paintings to more contemporary and&#13;
unusual techniques.&#13;
The Kenosha Racine Unified School&#13;
districts Art Teachers Jnvitational Exhibition&#13;
begins with a reception in the&#13;
gallery Sunday, March4, from 1 to 4&#13;
p.m. the reception is free and open to&#13;
the public, and refreshments Will be&#13;
served. Regular gallery hours are Monday&#13;
and Thursday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.,&#13;
and Tuesday and Wednesday from 11&#13;
a.m. to 8 p.m. For more information,&#13;
call the UW-Parkside Art Department&#13;
at (262) 595-2581.&#13;
.-------------------------- .. Exp. March 9, 2001 I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
GOOd lor 10% :&#13;
I&#13;
OffPurchase j&#13;
'--------------- -----------&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Ben Detwiler hoped to make the world a better place.&#13;
That hope died when he was killed by a drunk driver.&#13;
What should you do to stop a friend from driVing drunk?&#13;
Whatever you have to.&#13;
Friends don't let friends drive drunk.&#13;
....&#13;
~)~~,1t1r~~T&#13;
Tracy Knofla of High Impact Training&#13;
presenting ••.&#13;
Leadership Ski .... Inspir.-tlon &amp; Humor&#13;
Divide and conquer them among your Stud"'t Or9anl28110nl&#13;
Your InYlted to attend any or an of the following '-dershlp .... Ion.:&#13;
Team Building&#13;
wednesday, March 7. 3:30 - 5:30 p.m. Rang.... Halt 47&#13;
This will be a very InteractIve s••• lon on discussing beneflb of teamwork,&#13;
when and why to conduct ' •• mbulldlng actlvltl.s and actual actIvItIee will ...&#13;
demonstrated.&#13;
Organization Management&#13;
Wednesday, Marett 7. 7:30 - 9-.30 p.m. Library Overlook Lounge&#13;
Come learn about different leadership style., how you can beItt motlvalte arad&#13;
communicate within your organization. and how to help your oraantzatlon ...&#13;
goals.&#13;
Promotion and PUblicity Tips&#13;
Thursday, March 8, 11 a.m. -12:30 p..nt.y Union 101J&#13;
Diseus. difference. between promotion and publicity.. See lots of -.: ..............&#13;
look at commercial advertising for new Ideas. Learn new tips to get yo. organization's&#13;
publicity noticed.&#13;
This Is your opportunity to gain new skills, prepare for community and c.......&#13;
Involvement, Improve your or9.n~tlon, and renew your splrltl&#13;
'~p~a~g~e~l~o ~Th~e~R~an~g~e~r,~u~n~l~'v~e~rs~i~ty~o~£~W~i::S~CO~n~s::in~-:.:p..:a::r::k:::Si::d::e:....- F_e_b_ru_ary---"-_1..:.5,:.:' 2::o:.::.o1~&#13;
Drama Dept. Presents niall Radion&#13;
Feb. 23 Mar. 2&#13;
,&#13;
The Plays at Parkside series presents&#13;
six performances of the taut drama&#13;
'TalK Radio," Feb. 23 through Mar. 2.&#13;
Performances are in the Augie Wegner&#13;
Studio Theatre.&#13;
Playwright Eric Bogasian brings to&#13;
the theater a one-act play that gves a&#13;
new definition to the word bold."&#13;
Main character Barry Champlain is an&#13;
obnoxious radio personality whose ratings&#13;
climb with each show. Champlain&#13;
t'has built a following on the sensational&#13;
and sarcastic comments he has for his&#13;
callers. Instead of warm, fuzzy solutions&#13;
to their problems, he taunts them&#13;
then disconnects them. "Talk Radio"&#13;
examines what happens when Cham-&#13;
. plain takes his "shtick" too far.&#13;
"'Talk Radio' is an interesting exploration&#13;
of what people in our society are&#13;
drawn to, and what our society feeds&#13;
off of," said Director and UW-Parkside&#13;
Professor of Dramatic Arts Tom Sunstrom.&#13;
"Talk Radio" deals frankly with&#13;
American society, the media, and the&#13;
, direct impact it can have on individuals.&#13;
Performers include Rick Ditter,&#13;
Kevin Sustachek, Brad Kostreva, Jenny&#13;
Toutant, Joe Piirto, Tim Bohn, Paul Ley,&#13;
Amanda Albrecht, Dan Grzeskowiak,&#13;
Melissa Laurence, and Stephanie Holguin.&#13;
The play's technical crew includes&#13;
scenic designer Joe Piirto, stage manager&#13;
Lana Lincoln,· costume designer&#13;
Judith Tucker-Snider, and lighting&#13;
designer Steve Sorensen.&#13;
Performances of "Talk Radio" are&#13;
Very Involved at Parkslde&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Serving on a Search and Screen&#13;
or other University Committee&#13;
by Claudia Mosley, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
Tuesday, March 6, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Feb. 23 and 24, at&#13;
7:30 p.m., a matinee Thursday, Mar. 1,&#13;
at 10 a.m., Friday, Mar. 2, at 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
and Saturday, Mar. 3, at 4 and 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student and senior tickets are $7, genTalk&#13;
Radio poster graphic art work done&#13;
by Alan Goldsmith&#13;
eral admission is $10, and can be purchased&#13;
by calling ext. 2564.&#13;
I&#13;
Very Involved at Parkslde&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents ...&#13;
Running a&#13;
Meeting&#13;
by Steve Wallner, Student Life&#13;
"VilieS sponsored by SrudeUl ACD&#13;
February15, 2001 Page 11 .. The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
POLICE BEAT ~&#13;
2101/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-97 Parking Enf?rcement&#13;
TOW, Ranger Hall parking lot,&#13;
reserved area, 8:09 a.m.:&#13;
illegally parked car which had&#13;
previouSly been given a tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
InC. # 01-98 Agency Assist, 400&#13;
Block of STH 31, 2 :48 p.m.:&#13;
officers assisted with traffic&#13;
control at f an accident site&#13;
involving injuries.&#13;
Inc. # 01-99 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Unionparking lot, 4:39 p.m.:&#13;
student reported finding a&#13;
dent and paint marks on her&#13;
vehicle 'S. rear bumper which&#13;
occurredwhile she was parked&#13;
in the lot. No suspects or&#13;
witnesses to the incident.&#13;
2102101&#13;
Inc. # 01-100 Vandalism, Ranger&#13;
Hall, 1:31 a.m.: housing R.A.&#13;
reported vandalism to the main&#13;
west exterior doors of Ranger&#13;
Hall. There were pools of&#13;
bloodon the floor and carpet&#13;
trailing to the men's bathroom.Subjects&#13;
believed to be&#13;
involved were contacted and&#13;
one found to be bleeding from&#13;
a headwound. The injured subject&#13;
was taken by Kenosha Med.&#13;
Unit to Kenosha Hospital for&#13;
treatment. 'Iwo students were&#13;
issued citations for underage&#13;
~icldng - 1st offense. ResidenceLife&#13;
staff will be contacted&#13;
to determine cost to&#13;
repair the damaged doors.&#13;
Inc. # 01-101 Harassing Phone&#13;
Calls, Ranger Hall, 3: 16 a.m.:&#13;
student reported receiving atleast&#13;
100 calls from someone&#13;
Whocalls but says nothing.&#13;
Student was given a log to&#13;
record any further calls.&#13;
Inc. # 01~102Traffic Accident,&#13;
Unionparking lot, 9:51 a.rn..:&#13;
student struck another student's&#13;
vehicle in the parking&#13;
lot. No injuries occurred. A&#13;
state accident report will be&#13;
su!:mit ted.&#13;
2103/01&#13;
No incident reports.&#13;
2/04/01&#13;
Inc. # 01~103 Disorderly Conduct,&#13;
University Apartments,&#13;
1: 55 a.m. : UPPS officers&#13;
responded to a reported fight&#13;
in progress. Contact was made&#13;
with the suspects who stated&#13;
there was no physical fight&#13;
but two roormnates had been in&#13;
an argument. One subject was&#13;
found with cut and bloody&#13;
Jmuckles and a bruised forehead.&#13;
Investigation revealed&#13;
subj ect had become angry and&#13;
punched a wall with his fists.&#13;
Officer talked to the subject&#13;
and gave him information on&#13;
the counael inq services provided&#13;
by the campus. Citations&#13;
for underage drinking - 1st&#13;
offense and disorderly conduct&#13;
were issued.&#13;
Inc. # 01-104 Recovered Stolen&#13;
Property, University Apartments,&#13;
10:36 a.m.: while on&#13;
another assignment, officer&#13;
noticed a large Foot Locker&#13;
.oanner hanging on an apartment&#13;
wall which had previously been&#13;
reported as stolen from a&#13;
cross-country course in December.&#13;
Apartment residents were&#13;
questioned and the investigation&#13;
resulted in one subjeet&#13;
being cited for theft, value&#13;
under $100.&#13;
2/5/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-105 Attempted Theft,&#13;
Molinaro Concourse, Level L&#13;
8:48 a.m.: food Service staff&#13;
reported that sometime over&#13;
the weekend, someone us~&#13;
force in an attempt to gam&#13;
access to a beverage cooler.&#13;
Attempt was unsuccessful but&#13;
the lock mechanism was darnaqed&#13;
. No suspects at t.hi.s&#13;
time.&#13;
Inc. # 01-106 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Outer Loop at WoodRoad, 9:59&#13;
a.m.: citation was issued to a&#13;
driver who failed to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
Inc.# 01-107 Agency Assist, 969&#13;
WoodRoad, 10:02 p.m.: Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff DePt. requested UPPS&#13;
officer respond to a 911 hang11&#13;
Apartment resldent&#13;
uP&#13;
d&#13;
.cad 'he had attempted to&#13;
a v.ise . 911 in&#13;
dial 411 and ru t&#13;
N Problems were error. 0 . 1 d observed and offlcers c eare .&#13;
2/06/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-108 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY31 at HWYJR, 5: 23&#13;
a.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
non-registration of vehicle&#13;
and verbal warning for failure&#13;
to fasten seatbelt.&#13;
Inc. # 01-109 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Cornm.Arts lot, 7:45&#13;
a.m. : student reported her&#13;
parking permit taken from her&#13;
vehicle sometime during the&#13;
pas t two days. No damage to&#13;
vehicle and nothing else missing.&#13;
.&#13;
Inc. # 01-110 Parking Enforcement-Tow,&#13;
Greenquist Dock,&#13;
8:08 a.m.: vehicle illegally&#13;
parked and whose owner had&#13;
previously been issued a tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
Inc. # 01-111 Parking Enforce-&#13;
.ment-Tow, Visitor Metered lot,&#13;
10:05 a.m.: vehicle illegally&#13;
parked and whose owner had&#13;
previously been issued a tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
Inc. # 01-112 Parking Enforcement-Tow,&#13;
Visitor Metered lot,&#13;
10:31 a.m.: vehicle illegally&#13;
parked and whose owner had&#13;
been issued a previous tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
Inc. # 01-113 Parking Enforcement-Tow,&#13;
Greenquist Dock,&#13;
11: 02 a.m.: vehicle illegally&#13;
parked and whose owner had&#13;
previously been issued a tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
Inc.# 01-114 Parking Enforcement-Tow,&#13;
Cormn. Arts meters,&#13;
1: 10 p.m.: vehicle illegally&#13;
parked and whose owner had&#13;
previously been issued a tow&#13;
warning, was cited and towed.&#13;
Inc. # 01-115 Theft from Motor&#13;
Vehicle, Off campus, 4:25&#13;
p:-rn.: staff member reported&#13;
the theft of her UW-Parkside&#13;
parking permit from her vehicle&#13;
while parked off-campus.&#13;
No suspects or witnesses.&#13;
Inc. # 01-116 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Wood Rd &amp; Outer Loop&#13;
Rd., 11:55 p.m.: driver was&#13;
cited for failure to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
2/07/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-117 Agency Assist,&#13;
Hwy. 31 at CTH JR, 12:42 a.m.:&#13;
while conducting a traffic&#13;
stop, investigation revealed&#13;
driver was wanted through a&#13;
local police agency for contempt&#13;
of court and operating&#13;
after revocation. UPPSofficer&#13;
issued a citation for operating&#13;
after suspension and&#13;
transported the subject to&#13;
Kenosha County jail on the&#13;
outstanding warrants.&#13;
Inc. # 01-118 worthiess Check,&#13;
Tallent Hall, 1:58 p.m.:&#13;
notice of returned check and&#13;
demand payment letter sent to&#13;
an individual who suhni tted a&#13;
non-sufficient funds check in&#13;
payment of two parking citations.&#13;
Inc. # 01-119 Traffic Accident,&#13;
CTH G, south of CTH A, 7: 18&#13;
p.m.: officer responded to a&#13;
report of a driver striking a&#13;
deer. The deer appeared uninjured&#13;
and ran from the scene.&#13;
Driver corrplained of neck pain&#13;
but other nine occupants were&#13;
ok. Vehicle had minor darriage.&#13;
State accident report sutrnitted.&#13;
2/08/01&#13;
Inc. # 01-120 Agency Assist,&#13;
Hwy. 313 at CTH E, 5:33 a.m.:&#13;
while stopped at a red light,&#13;
officer observed a traffic&#13;
accident. Kenosha Sheriff dispatch&#13;
was notified. Drivers&#13;
had no injuries and vehicles&#13;
were cleared from the intersection.&#13;
Incident was turned&#13;
over to the Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Inc. # 01-121 Security Alarm, ~&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 6:45 a.m.: officer&#13;
responding to an alarm&#13;
found it to have been set off&#13;
by an employee whose code was&#13;
not working.&#13;
WHAT'S ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger News is now&#13;
hiring all positions for the&#13;
Spring 2001 semester. Stop&#13;
by the office, located across&#13;
from the Career Center in&#13;
lower Wyllie hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to 1p.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have&#13;
to offer?&#13;
"Page 12&#13;
~ellS 'fIEDS&#13;
_ ....&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDSI&#13;
For a !ffiUt~dtime only! The Ranger&#13;
News will pnnt your student classified&#13;
ads free of charge, Forms are available&#13;
at the newsstand in front of the library&#13;
and between Wyllie and Greenquist&#13;
Hall. Call 595-2287 for more information.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
Triple H Grange, LLC&#13;
Organic Boarding, Horseback&#13;
Private Lessons&#13;
~ • Boarding Sale! $175 per month.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature.&#13;
Come ride with us.&#13;
7417 - 7 Mile Road&#13;
(262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?!&#13;
• For the novice to the expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a&#13;
club next semester.&#13;
1&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software&#13;
is available: Microsoft Office&#13;
Using the Internet Effectively, E-mail&#13;
and Creating Web Pages. Tutoring&#13;
will be by appointment. To schedule&#13;
your appointment, call Bob or Chris&#13;
at 595-2790.&#13;
• Do you enjoy working with children?&#13;
Would Y':)Ulike to earn extra money?&#13;
Apply now for a childcare position&#13;
at NTC GreatLakes. Call 847-688-&#13;
2110, Ext... 103 or apply online at&#13;
www.ntcmwr.com&#13;
ApartmentRenting.com&#13;
• Free online college apartment search.&#13;
Ranked #lapartment sight for college&#13;
students. EARN CASH be an&#13;
ApartmentRenting.com representative.&#13;
Wanted!&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun, Bahamas&#13;
Florida, Jamaica and Mazatlan. Call&#13;
Sun Coast Vacations for a free&#13;
b:ochure and ask how you can orgarnze&#13;
a small group and eat, drink,&#13;
travel free and earn cash! Call 1-888-&#13;
777-4642 or e-mail sales@suncoastvacations.com.&#13;
Spring Break!&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Free&#13;
&lt; Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun,&#13;
Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn Cash!&#13;
Do it on the Web! Go to StudentCity.com&#13;
or call80Q-293-1443 for info.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados,&#13;
Bahamas, Padre.Free Meals, Free&#13;
Drinks and Up to $100 room credit&#13;
Call 1-800-426-7710for special weeks&#13;
or go to: www.sunsplashtours.com&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL&#13;
TRlPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE!,&#13;
Student Travel Services, America's #&#13;
1 Student Tour Operator. Jamaica,&#13;
Mexico, Bahamas, Europe. Florida. 1-&#13;
800-648-4849.&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted.&#13;
$2500 OBO. Call (262) 878-0769 after&#13;
6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buyout. Call (262) 878-&#13;
0769 after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-&#13;
0785.&#13;
1987 Mazda 626&#13;
• V4 2.0 engine, Runs great! New&#13;
brakes. Asking $950 aBO. Call Ashi&#13;
at (Rome) 551-7431 Or (work) 595-&#13;
2705.&#13;
1991 Ford F-150&#13;
• Must Sell! $4,000 or best offer. Call&#13;
884-6812 and ask for Jeremy.&#13;
1988 Pontiac 6000&#13;
• Maroon four door, four cylinder,&#13;
103,000 rru, mtenor / exterior in good&#13;
condition, runs great, new tires,&#13;
exhaust, and alternator. Complete&#13;
mamtenance record Asking $1,500&#13;
OBO. Call 595-2974 and leave a message.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Rosearm Mason at 595-2606, or stop by&#13;
the Career Center, Wyllie D173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
With program policies and procedures.&#13;
• Schedule residents for group and&#13;
individual counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be. a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews,&#13;
•• Assist in structured staffings for case&#13;
plan changes, suspensions or disCharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committeePublic&#13;
Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place - Southern&#13;
Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, .pnnting,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program brochures.&#13;
• Collect.and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other concerns, and assist resident to&#13;
improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the homeless&#13;
populations in Racine County. Assist&#13;
the Homeless Assistance Coalition in&#13;
arranging meetings, mail notices,&#13;
record notes of meetings and decisions&#13;
and develop a generic brochure&#13;
to advance the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiter/&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public tluough&#13;
employers, public service groups,&#13;
commumty groups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service organizations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create. new material (i.e, newspaper&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight the&#13;
need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probation/ .&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
and to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
state!",ents, conducting assessments&#13;
and mtake work.&#13;
~ Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
V~ctimAdvocate/Liaison for the District&#13;
Attorney in' Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listemng,&#13;
mformation and referrals&#13;
personal advocacy and crime com~&#13;
pensanon assistance.&#13;
• Noill); victims of their rights, explain&#13;
• the crunmal Justice process.&#13;
Complete one ride along each month&#13;
With ~me of the law enforcement&#13;
a~encles in Racine County and&#13;
Vide services to clients off site ar;::-&#13;
vanous Community Policing sites. e&#13;
S.A.F.E. Haven Teen&#13;
Runaway Shelter&#13;
• Independent Living Skills P .&#13;
teach 14 core living skills t~If;"~~&#13;
year olds.&#13;
• Street Outreach' Hand hvzi products to teen~ wh out ygiene tr 0 are out on the&#13;
s eels; develop a rapport with them&#13;
~gd s~~urage them to seek counselces.&#13;
• Adult Residential Aid' • . answer the&#13;
February 15,2001&#13;
hotline; assist with group facilitatiwork;&#13;
work 1:1 with teens. on&#13;
• Gang Diversion Task Foree' Ie ch&#13;
teens about alternatives to g~gs a d&#13;
crime; teach material on STDStan&#13;
pregnancy prevention, how to fin een&#13;
Job applications, etc. ou,&#13;
Walker's Point Center for the Artsi&#13;
Milwaukee is looking for n&#13;
multiple interns:&#13;
• Education Intern - Work dire tl&#13;
with elementary-a~ed childrenc'y&#13;
their art classes, which are taughtb&#13;
m&#13;
professional artists. Y&#13;
• Marketing/Public Relations InternDesign&#13;
and distribute publicity;mar.&#13;
ket surveys, advertise programs;and&#13;
fundraising.&#13;
• Curatorial Intern - Hang shows,con.&#13;
tract artists, handle artwork and repare&#13;
written catalogs and labels.p&#13;
• Arts Administration Intern - Assist&#13;
with membership, correspondence&#13;
research and planning. '&#13;
Upcoming Trainings&#13;
Racine Literary Council&#13;
• Be trained on how to teach adults&#13;
basic literacy skills. Training will be&#13;
held on the following Saturdays:January&#13;
27 and February 3 from 8:45a.m.&#13;
- 4:15p.m. and February 10 from&#13;
8:45a.m. - noon.&#13;
Sexual Assault Services&#13;
• A non-profit organization that provides&#13;
a 24-hour crisis line and&#13;
response team for victims of sexual&#13;
assault will conduct a 15-hourtrain·&#13;
ing workshop in the following dates&#13;
from 6p.m. - 9p.m.: Feb. 15,Feb.22,&#13;
March 1, 8 and 15. Each advocateis&#13;
asked to volunteer for one shiftper&#13;
month.&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
Lutheran Social Services -&#13;
Stop Child Abuse and&#13;
Neglect Program&#13;
• Lutheran Social Services is looking&#13;
for a volunteer who will work in a&#13;
team of two people to present per·&#13;
sonal safety puppet shows to Racine&#13;
kindergarten children in therr&#13;
schools. No experience is necessary·&#13;
1-5 ho~s per month. The vol.un~r&#13;
w!ll gam experience commurocating&#13;
With children, will fanulianze&#13;
her /hirnself with classroom dynam'&#13;
ics, and will know s/he is educa~&#13;
children about important topicssu d&#13;
as "stranger danger" ana "goo&#13;
touch/bad touch."&#13;
Tutoring, tutoring, tutoringl .&#13;
• Almost every school and conunUIUt)'&#13;
center in Racine and Kenosha would&#13;
like college tutors to help their you~&#13;
in elementary school through rolla&#13;
school with their studies. Renos&#13;
Unified School District's ESL program&#13;
is in particular need for a tut~&#13;
to work with a student who s~a th&#13;
Chinese. Opportunities eXISt 0&#13;
during the school day as well as durmg&#13;
the late afternoon.</text>
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              <text>The Ranger News staff gets a "golden" opportunity</text>
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              <text>Student Newspaper of th U 0 it f W' . . e ruversi yo isconsin-Parkside&#13;
February 22, 2001 ~ w.. Issue 19 Vol. 31 ';';;';'~---~~~~~~rr=~~~~~~-------&#13;
r,,'1 Bange, News stall gets a "golden" opportunity&#13;
BySarah Olsen&#13;
The staff of The Ranger News is currentlyat&#13;
the 17th Annual National College&#13;
Newspaper Convention in the&#13;
golden state, California. Departing&#13;
from Mitchell International in Milwaukee,&#13;
the staff arrived in San Francisco&#13;
latelast night and will be staying until&#13;
Sunday,February 25th.&#13;
The convention, sponsored by the&#13;
Associated College Press, offers com-&#13;
. prehensive, idea-packed, professional&#13;
and productive workshops, keynotes,&#13;
writing/design critiques, newspaper of&#13;
theyear contest, networking and social&#13;
interaction.&#13;
The convention is open to students&#13;
and advisers from four-year and twoyearcolleges&#13;
and universities and technicaland&#13;
professional schools, public&#13;
and private. Participants will include&#13;
collegeeditors, reporters, columnists,&#13;
photographers, designers, ad sales&#13;
J~~~ Radio opens Friday, February 23 at&#13;
Theaf·m.in the Augie Wegner Studio&#13;
Ma her. The play runs Feb. 24 and&#13;
a re 2,3 at 7:30 p.m., March 1 at 10&#13;
,.m.,and March 3 at 4 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
ti10 Or$7 for students and seniors. For&#13;
DCketsand or more information, call the&#13;
ramaticArts Department at 595-2564.&#13;
The Ranger management staff from left to right: Pete&#13;
Forchette, Brenda Dunham, Sarah Olsen, Christine&#13;
Agalby, and Dan White.&#13;
staff, web masters, adviser/directors&#13;
and all others who work with student&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
The members of The Ranger staff&#13;
who are attending the conference are:&#13;
Sarah Olsen and Brenda Dunham, coeditors,&#13;
Pete Forchette, layout and&#13;
design, Dan White, business manager,&#13;
and Christine Agaiby, advertising&#13;
manager.&#13;
Olsen and Dunham will be attending&#13;
a special workshop titled "Newsroom&#13;
Management Training for Top&#13;
Editors" today from 1:30- 5 p.m. This&#13;
workshop is for all editors-in-chief,&#13;
managing editors and those aspiring&#13;
to become one. This 'crash course' in&#13;
student newsroom management and&#13;
leadership is designed to present&#13;
practical solutions for many of the&#13;
important problems and procedures&#13;
that are part of the job. "We hope to&#13;
take the information we have learned&#13;
and pass it on to the next year's staff"&#13;
said Dunham.&#13;
Agaiby and White will also be&#13;
attending a workshop today, titled&#13;
"Effective Ad Sales: Increasing Ad Revenue"&#13;
which will accomplish two goals:&#13;
learning how to bring in more money&#13;
through increased ad sales and how to&#13;
service accounts efficiently and professionally.&#13;
With this knowledge, the business&#13;
and advertising team will be able&#13;
to increase the ad sales and revenue of&#13;
The Ranger News. "1 hope to bring back&#13;
the information 1learn at the workshop&#13;
'and apply it to the advertising techniques&#13;
used currently at The Ranger ,"&#13;
Agaiby said&#13;
Forchette will be in participatin~ in a&#13;
workshop titled "Newspaper Design -&#13;
Print." 'This class, in addition to the&#13;
newly acquired computer equipment,&#13;
promises to help transform The Ranger&#13;
into a more attractive newspaper, and,&#13;
concurrently, increase the readership&#13;
among students and faculty.&#13;
continued on page 9&#13;
Man vs. machine: Rang"welcomes new designer and equipment&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
The Ranger has made so~e important&#13;
additions to the office this semester&#13;
_ new equipment and a new design and&#13;
layout editor, Due to the efforts of the&#13;
business team, the editors, and the new&#13;
designer, Pete Forchette, the newspaper&#13;
was able to secure $9,700 from thele~hnology&#13;
Fees Committee for new equipment.&#13;
id th The funding was able to proVI e e&#13;
newspaper with a dual processor&#13;
Power Macintosh G4, the top-of-theline&#13;
supercomputer necessary for highs&#13;
eed, high-resolution desktop publshing.&#13;
Combined WIth the latest version&#13;
of QuarkXpress, the page layout&#13;
rogram standard in the newspaper&#13;
htdustry, Forchette now has the capability&#13;
to produce issues that ~re more&#13;
aesthetically pleasing and lime-efficient.&#13;
II . "One of the big factors a. owm~e&#13;
to make my final declS;on m W~)f • n~&#13;
for the newspaper was Its comffi1tme d&#13;
to urchasing new computers an&#13;
eqJpment" says Forchette. "And, as&#13;
any graphic designer knows, in order&#13;
to produce quality graphic artwork,&#13;
you need superior equipment and software.&#13;
The Apple G4 along with Adobe&#13;
software makes this possible."&#13;
In addition to the Power Macintosh&#13;
G4, a new G3 IMac computer was purchased&#13;
to give reporters and staff an&#13;
available workstation for writing articles.&#13;
"We no longer have to wait for&#13;
someone to get off the computer or&#13;
walk to the library computer lab whenever&#13;
we need to write or edit articles in&#13;
a hurry," said Sarah Olsen, co-editor.&#13;
The business and advertising office&#13;
received the G3 Macintosh that was&#13;
previously bein9, used for publishing&#13;
the newspaper. 'It's a relief to be able&#13;
to have our own computer for printing&#13;
invoices, writing advertising letters to&#13;
business prospects, and designing ads"&#13;
says Christine Agaiby, advertising&#13;
manager.· .&#13;
~A DMAX Astra 6450 Firewire scancontinued&#13;
on page 9&#13;
The Ranger's new layout manager, Pete&#13;
Forchette, sees design in a new light.&#13;
--~&#13;
February 22, 2001&#13;
Page 2 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ins •&#13;
1 d e&#13;
3 . The First Big Step&#13;
Bush administration takes action against Iraq.&#13;
4 Entenainment&#13;
Hannibal's Back, poised for attack; Guilty Pleasures:&#13;
Reality Television and Student Voices.&#13;
5&#13;
Financial aid available for study abroad.&#13;
6 spons&#13;
Five losses hurt men's basketball; Tourney ends hope .&#13;
for Lady Rangers; Dave Williams, new athletic director.&#13;
1 spons Continued&#13;
Baseball team starts season; Wrestlers edged by Marquette;&#13;
Seven inducted to Sports Hall of Fame. ..&#13;
8&#13;
So...What are you?; Academy Award Nominations.&#13;
9 Front page continued.&#13;
Editor of the week: Sarah Olsen&#13;
ice&#13;
-139C&#13;
e: (262) 595-2287&#13;
(262) 595-2295&#13;
ents of the University of wisconsm-Parkside, who are solely&#13;
rs should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
e author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
published. For publication purposes, author's name can be withr&#13;
to edit all letters&#13;
at t&#13;
o&#13;
Thin&#13;
Black History Month Event&#13;
• Fashion Show, Feb. 23, 8 p.m., Union Square, admission $3, $2 with non-perishable&#13;
food donation.&#13;
Continuing Events:&#13;
• Parkside National Small Print Exhibition, through Feb. 22; free, gallery&#13;
hours: Mon./Thur. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tue./Wed. 11 a.m, to 8 p.m.&#13;
February 22-25&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Black Cat, White Cat," Yugoslavia, sub-titled; film shown&#13;
Thursday and Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 81'.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema Theater. For more information, call ext. 2345.&#13;
February 22&#13;
• Multicultural Career Day, at UWM, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., UW-Parkside sponsor:&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs.&#13;
February 23&#13;
• Fun Friday, noon, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, Wyllie Hall 0-182,&#13;
free, refreshments served.&#13;
• Race, Class and Gender Study Group: "Bird by Bird" by Anne Lamott, Molinaro&#13;
Hall room 111,3:30 p.m.; call Linda Madsen at ext. 2162 or e-mail madsenl@Uwp.edu&#13;
• Plays at Parkside presents "Talk Radio" by Eric Bogosian, 7:30 p.m., Augie&#13;
Wegner Studio Theatre; tickets: $10 adults; $7&#13;
students/ faculty/staff/seniors; $5 each for groups of 20·or more; call Diane&#13;
Smith at (262) 595-2564.&#13;
• Fashion Show, 8 p.m., Union Square, admission $3/$2 w /non-perishable&#13;
food donation. .&#13;
February 24&#13;
• Plays at Parkside presents "Talk Radio" by Eric Bogosian, 7:30 p.m., Augie&#13;
Wegner Studio . Theatre; tickets: $10 adults; $7&#13;
students/faculty /staff/seniors;&#13;
February 28&#13;
• Noon Concert: Cathy Schubilske, violin, Mary Drews, piano, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, noon/ free.&#13;
• Well Day Health Fair, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Upper Main Place, free.&#13;
March 1&#13;
• Talking Color series presents "Breaking Out of the Box," 2 to 4 p.m., Union&#13;
Bazaar, free, open to the campus &amp; community sponsored by UW-Parkslde&#13;
Center for Ethnic Studies. r&#13;
• UW-Parkside Community Band, Mark Eichner, conductor, 7:30 p.m., Com.&#13;
Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $5, students/seniors $3..&#13;
Sports and Activity Center Hours&#13;
Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 7 a.m, to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: noon to 6 p.m.&#13;
. Sunday: 3 to 9 p.m,&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
The UW-Parkside pool is closed for renovation.&#13;
February 22, 2001&#13;
Page 3&#13;
-&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
'~~!~~~n Big Step: Bush administration takes action against Iraq&#13;
wt Friday, Feb. 16, was a memobleday&#13;
for our 43rd president, George&#13;
W Bush.He visited San Cristobal, Gua-&#13;
~·uato Mexico to discuss the United&#13;
5~tes ~valuation policy on Mexico's&#13;
fighton drug traffiCking with the newly&#13;
eiected Mexican President, Vicente Fox.&#13;
His press meeting with President Fox&#13;
wasScheduled for the early part of the&#13;
evening, but President Bush would&#13;
shock the nation with a decision he&#13;
madeprior to his VISit.&#13;
Earlierthat day, around 11:30a.m., 24&#13;
U.s. and British fighter planes attacked&#13;
and destroyed five radar sites in Iraqi&#13;
territoryinthe vicinitY.of Baghdad. This&#13;
wasthe first major military action of the&#13;
Bushadministration. These five radar&#13;
siteswere operating along the northern&#13;
borderof the southern no fly" zone&#13;
whichruns along the 33rd parallel. The&#13;
"noflv" zone, wfuch is south of the 33rd&#13;
paralleland north of the 36th parallel,&#13;
strictlyprohibits any Iraqi aircraft to&#13;
occupyIts space.&#13;
The apparent cause of this controversial&#13;
and covert operation was an&#13;
increase in Iraqi anti-aircraft fire that&#13;
was attempting to shoot down&#13;
patrolling allied- fighter planes. The&#13;
mcrease inthe surface-to-air missile fire&#13;
wasconsidered a drastic threat to the&#13;
allied forces.By knocking out the radar&#13;
sites, Iraqi forces' surveillance was&#13;
depleted and allied forces' security was&#13;
recovered.&#13;
By .the end of this weekend, the&#13;
Associated Press had given word that&#13;
there had been 2 fatalities and 20 individuals&#13;
wounded from the raid. The&#13;
first fatality was a woman, Ghadya&#13;
Atshaan Abdullah, who died hours&#13;
after the raid, and the second was a&#13;
man, Khalil Hameed Alwash, who died&#13;
early Sa~day. Although, on Friday,&#13;
our nation s leader kept himself composed&#13;
during this whole endeavor, as&#13;
he continued his conversations with&#13;
President Fox.&#13;
As the raid began and ended and&#13;
fatalities were beginning to be released,&#13;
President Bush was mainly concerned&#13;
With strengthening his bond with the&#13;
nation of Mexico. The President was&#13;
attempting to amend a 14-year-old law&#13;
that required the U.S. to annually certify&#13;
that Mexico, as well as 29 other countries,&#13;
was cooperating in the fight&#13;
against drug trafficking. The annual&#13;
certification of these 30 countries has&#13;
infuriated governments over the years,&#13;
for these nations find it hypocritical and&#13;
demeaning that the nation that consumes&#13;
the largest supply of drugs is the&#13;
world is in Charge of overseeing this&#13;
process. These talks were the first stepping-stone&#13;
to amending this law for&#13;
Mexico, which has never failed to be&#13;
-¥-&#13;
HIGH I PACT&#13;
Ii-RAINING&#13;
Tracy Knofla of High Impact Training&#13;
presenting •..&#13;
lMadershlp Sklll_. Inspiration &amp; Humor&#13;
Divide and conquer them among your Student Organlzatlonl&#13;
Your Invited to lIttend -any tW _II.of. ..... following I_dershlp .... 10&#13;
" "ty TipS d publiCI ,.6&#13;
Promotion an _12:30 p."'.' un:o.';y. see tot.&#13;
h B 11 a."'· and pUblc Idea'"&#13;
TlNr.day, Marcb8~ .. n pro",otIO;verti.ing tor nev::lcad.&#13;
difference. at co."rnerclal ;II 's publicitY no&#13;
..-mpl •• and look t your organization&#13;
~rn new tips to ge&#13;
V.Thl. I. your opportunity to gain new skill., prepare ~&#13;
c ..... r Involvement, Improve your organlz8tlon. and r&#13;
Lo...__ • .. cll Re_ldeltC_ LIhI, ~" of Studllflts&#13;
~ by Stud.,.. ActtvttJea, PAB, SOC, Academic staff ...cHI" ,&#13;
certified as&#13;
cooperative.&#13;
As this day&#13;
came to a conclusion&#13;
for Pres.&#13;
Bush, the U.S.&#13;
and other allied&#13;
forces received&#13;
a response from&#13;
President Saddam&#13;
Hussein of&#13;
Iraq saying that&#13;
the attacks will&#13;
not go unanswered.&#13;
Pres.&#13;
Hussein and his&#13;
top officials&#13;
perceive that&#13;
the attacks Were&#13;
made to distract&#13;
Iraq from its&#13;
pursuit in aiding&#13;
the Palestinian&#13;
forces in&#13;
their continuous&#13;
battles with&#13;
the allied force of Israel. For the&#13;
moment, the nation of Iraq is in an&#13;
upheaval of anger over what most of&#13;
the population sees as a crime against&#13;
their country. With Iraq stating that it is&#13;
ready to pounce, who knows what the&#13;
allied forces are making for strategy. On&#13;
this Friday, February 16, 2001, Pres.&#13;
Source: Department of Defense&#13;
Bush ordered an attack on one nation,&#13;
strengthened bonds with another&#13;
nation, and received a warning of retaliation&#13;
from the previous attacked&#13;
nation. Not one month inoffice, and the&#13;
tides of international waters have&#13;
already started to churn for the United&#13;
States.&#13;
IF YOU THINK A NIGHT&#13;
IN A FOXHOLE IS TOUGH,&#13;
TRY A LIFETIME IN A CUBICLE.&#13;
The U.S. Army offers 212 different career opportunities&#13;
in fields ranging from medicine. construction and law&#13;
enforcement to accounting, engineering and intelligence.&#13;
You'll be trained. Then you'll use those skills from the&#13;
first day on the job. It's a great way to start moving in&#13;
the direction you want to go.&#13;
Find One of 212 Ways to Be A Soldier&#13;
at GOARMY.COM&#13;
or call 1-'80o-USA-ARMY.&#13;
Contact your local recruiter.&#13;
And we'lI IIe1p you find wliafs best for you.&#13;
Page4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Hannibal's Back, Poised for Attack&#13;
By Gina Ciardo&#13;
Dr. Hannibal Leeter is still at large.&#13;
For the past seven years, he has taken&#13;
up residence in Florence, Italy where&#13;
he has been relaxing and waiting&#13;
patiently to come out of "retirement" -&#13;
- as he calls it. Mason Verger, Hannibal's&#13;
only surviving victim, is dying&#13;
for revenge and concocts a small plot&#13;
of his own. Meanwhile, Hannibal is&#13;
propelled to the FBI's Top Ten Most&#13;
Wanted list, and Clarice Starling is put&#13;
back on the case. Can she get to Dr.&#13;
Lecter before Verger does?&#13;
Now for the big question. Is this&#13;
flick worth all the hype? Hard to say&#13;
really. It all depends what you expect&#13;
out of a sequel. The original "Silence&#13;
of the Lambs" won all five major&#13;
Academy Awards including: Best Picture,&#13;
Best Actor, Best Actress, Best&#13;
Director, and Best Screenplay. The&#13;
only other movies to accomplish this&#13;
feat were 1934's "It Happened One&#13;
Night" and 1975's "One Flew Over the&#13;
Cuckoos Nest." If you enjoyed the&#13;
original for it's outstanding insight&#13;
into the mind of a serial killer, or if&#13;
you appreciated 'Foster and Hopkins's&#13;
odd yet luring chemistry, maybe you&#13;
should take Hannibal with a grain of&#13;
salt. On the other hand, if brains and&#13;
bowels are what peak your interest&#13;
most, then you definitely don't want&#13;
to miss this one.&#13;
In the new film "Hannibal," Clarice&#13;
Starling, formerly played by Jodi Foster,&#13;
is replaced&#13;
by actress&#13;
Julianne&#13;
Moore (Boogie&#13;
Nights, Magnolia).&#13;
The&#13;
trouble with&#13;
the recast is&#13;
that the role of&#13;
Starling isn't&#13;
reprised: it's&#13;
revised.&#13;
Moore fails to&#13;
pin down the f&#13;
innocence and&#13;
the proud&#13;
determination&#13;
that Foster&#13;
nailed as the original FBI agent. Starling&#13;
is a different woman in the&#13;
sequel. Moore seems angry and feminist&#13;
in comparison to Foster's complicated&#13;
and clever take on Agent Starling.&#13;
Due to the recast, it was clear that&#13;
certain key scenes between Starling&#13;
and Dr. Leeter lack the sparks that the&#13;
original pieture had. For example,&#13;
near the end of "Hannibal" there IS a&#13;
scene where Starling handcuffs herself&#13;
to Leeter in an attempt to keep&#13;
him from getting&#13;
away.&#13;
(Don't worry, I&#13;
won't gIve&#13;
anything&#13;
away.) Leeter&#13;
is faced with&#13;
an important&#13;
decision. Had&#13;
Foster's Starling&#13;
been&#13;
standing face&#13;
to face with&#13;
Hannibal, his&#13;
actions would&#13;
have seemed&#13;
more like an&#13;
act of love --&#13;
almost strangely parental. In actuality,&#13;
it was an odd exchange. The chemistry&#13;
was muddled. Instead, the extraordinary&#13;
act of love by a psychopath,&#13;
serial killer fizzled into a scripted plot&#13;
twist.&#13;
That's not to say that the movie was&#13;
completely hopeless. There are a&#13;
Guiltv Pleasures: Realitv Television&#13;
By Lynn Garcia&#13;
Here we are smack dab in the'middle&#13;
of February sweeps with at least three&#13;
reality television series to be engrossed&#13;
with - The Mole, Temptation Island, and&#13;
Survivor. Every major network has&#13;
jumped on the bandwagon this time&#13;
around; the only one that hasn't is NBC.&#13;
FOX has brought the viewers Temp-.&#13;
tation Island, a show that took four committed&#13;
but unmarried couples, split&#13;
them up, and put them together with&#13;
thirty singles who were looking for love.&#13;
The couples were matched up with&#13;
three of the singles that best fit their&#13;
description of the perfect mate. After&#13;
two weeks of playing in the single world&#13;
again, the couples will have to choose&#13;
between their new flames and their old&#13;
mates.&#13;
Many students and facuIty on Parkside's&#13;
campus think that the show was&#13;
staged and the contestants were possibly&#13;
aetors and actresses. Professor Walter&#13;
.Graffin commented, "If the couples&#13;
were truly committed, they wouldn t go&#13;
on the show." I completely agree, why&#13;
risk a meaningful relationship just to be&#13;
on television?&#13;
ABC has introduced The Mole on&#13;
Tuesday evenings. Ten contestants have&#13;
been chosen to take part in an exciting&#13;
adventure and a chance to win&#13;
$1,000,000. One of these ten is "the&#13;
mole;" he/she will try to throw the challenges&#13;
the other contestants participate&#13;
in.&#13;
CBS debuted Survivor II: The Australian&#13;
Outback just in time for Sweeps.&#13;
This is the show a majority of Parkside&#13;
students are most familiar with. Jose&#13;
Vargas made a very interesting point&#13;
about the difference between the first&#13;
Survivor and this one: "All these shows&#13;
are pretty disgusting. The original Survivor&#13;
was original - this one is exploited."&#13;
It appears that most the Women are&#13;
much more glamorous-looking and they&#13;
almost appear to be wearing make-up.&#13;
A couple students expressed the realization&#13;
that the show is nothing more than&#13;
a popularity contest. Elizabeth Horwitz&#13;
handful of nauseating scenes guaran.&#13;
teed to be undeniably grotesque.&#13;
"Hat's off" to Direetor Ridley Scottfor&#13;
that. It is only unfortunate that those&#13;
scenes come to us slightly out of can.&#13;
text. Mostly, it seems as though they&#13;
are thrown-in to ensure we as audi-&#13;
·ence members receive the level of&#13;
repulsion tha t we paid for. In that&#13;
respect, you'll get your money's&#13;
worth. However, no amount of blood&#13;
and guts in this sequel can add up to&#13;
the sensation of peril that the bloodless&#13;
night-vision scene from the original&#13;
conjured.&#13;
This time around, the plot was fairly&#13;
shallow and most of its characters&#13;
rather flat -- particularly Ray Liotta's&#13;
Paul Krendler, a Justice Department&#13;
official. However, I promise Hannibal&#13;
does not disappoint when it comesto&#13;
violently creative gross-out scenes.&#13;
Unfortunately, the film obviously&#13;
wasn't made to be an Oscar contender.&#13;
This is evident in Lecter's light-hearted&#13;
banter and one liners throughout&#13;
the movie as well as in Moore's questionable&#13;
West Virginian accent. Best&#13;
advice: See the movie and enjoy it for&#13;
what it's worth, but don't go home&#13;
and rack your brains over it.&#13;
said," It's all a fad that is just goingtogo&#13;
away. What happened to the ~oOd sitcom&#13;
television we used to have.&#13;
NBC has fought back against Survivor&#13;
II by making Friends an extraten&#13;
minutes longer and followed by a special&#13;
twenty-minute LIVE Saturday&#13;
Night Live. This has never been done&#13;
before. Unfortunately for NBC,Survivor&#13;
has been the big winner so far onThursday&#13;
nights.&#13;
Many of the students and facultysay&#13;
they haven't watched the new shows.&#13;
Some just do not have the time; others&#13;
say they have no interest. ProfessorJ~e&#13;
King said, "I'd like to watch just onetu;'e&#13;
so that I could see what it is all about.&#13;
Elizabeth Horwitz&#13;
"It's all a fad that is just going to go&#13;
away. What happened to the good&#13;
sitcom television we used to have?".&#13;
Professor Walt Graffin&#13;
"A~l these sh?~s a~e pretty disgustmg.&#13;
The ongmal Survivor' was&#13;
original, This one is exploited." .&#13;
George-Anna Wilson&#13;
"TIe show [Temptation Islandl. is so&#13;
fake. I think the people are Just&#13;
paid actors."&#13;
'FebrUary 22, 2001&#13;
Page 5&#13;
-&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
financial aid available lor study abroad&#13;
By MiJanka Sulejic&#13;
peggy james, associ~te professor of&#13;
PolitiOil Science, and Michele Gee, asso-&#13;
. Ie rofessor of Marketing, are the co- :J:,rsfor the Study Abroad program.&#13;
JanteS and Gee are the two individuals&#13;
ho are more than willing to help any&#13;
~dent who is interested in studying&#13;
abroad. th . f&#13;
james stresses e importance 0 students&#13;
taking advantage of this wonderful&#13;
opportunity to be able to study in a&#13;
. country&#13;
~ cannot ignore other countries,"&#13;
says jllJllfS.In order to be a well-rounded&#13;
student, one should familiarize themselveS&#13;
with international issues and&#13;
glOOal matters.&#13;
Whatmany students might not know&#13;
aboUlParkside is that our lJniversity has&#13;
much international expertise. The University&#13;
has hopes of publishing an internatimial&#13;
directory listing the languages&#13;
spo1cen here and the countries that are&#13;
represented. The directory will also list&#13;
the international activities that the University&#13;
puts on and participates in as&#13;
well as the research students and faculty&#13;
have engaJ(ed in.&#13;
UW-Par"ksidecurrently has a student&#13;
exchange program with a University in&#13;
Mexico for those students who are Spanish&#13;
majors. Students do not pay extra&#13;
tultion for this student exchange program&#13;
and only pay as much as if they&#13;
were attending a semester here at UWPark&#13;
side. The same is true for those students&#13;
from the Mexican campus who are&#13;
studymg here at Park side.&#13;
d Currently, UW-Parkside has four stu-&#13;
. ents fro~ the Mexican campus attendmg.&#13;
This IS a continuing exchange program&#13;
and one the University would like&#13;
to extend to other countries. Efforts are&#13;
bemg made to establish student&#13;
exchange programs with colleges in Germany&#13;
ana in Brazil similar to the one we&#13;
now have with Mexico.&#13;
Interested students who would like to&#13;
spend either their spring or summer&#13;
semester studyinp; abroad in a foreign&#13;
country are eligible to receive grants&#13;
from the University of WISConsin-Park&#13;
side for up to $2,()(j().Students who are&#13;
planning to apply for a grant must have&#13;
their financial aid eligibility certified by&#13;
the Financial Aid Office and must apply&#13;
to participate in a study abroad&#13;
program.&#13;
The financial aid application deadline&#13;
set for spring/ summer 2001 is approaching.&#13;
Completed applications are due in&#13;
the Center for International Studies&#13;
office by Friday, March 23, 2001. Applications&#13;
must include certification of&#13;
financial aid eligibility; confirmation of&#13;
participation in, or application to, a&#13;
study abroad program, and two letters&#13;
of recommendation from faculty and/or&#13;
academic staff. Applications will be&#13;
reviewed by the Center for International&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Serving on a Search 'and Screen&#13;
or other University Committee&#13;
by Claudia Mosley, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
Tuesday, March 6, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
Studies and awards will be announced&#13;
for the first round on Friday, February&#13;
23,2001.&#13;
"11 is vital to anybody's education to&#13;
do anything international." There is so&#13;
much to learn about the rest of the world&#13;
and this is the chance to experience how&#13;
other students around the world live&#13;
and how their culture influences who&#13;
they are.&#13;
If a student cannot commit to the full&#13;
semester required to study abroad, there&#13;
are study tours that are also opportunities&#13;
to visit a foreign country, but only for&#13;
a couple of weeks rather than an entire&#13;
semester. The study tours are popular&#13;
and professors from UW-P run the study&#13;
tours. Recently students from UW-Parkside&#13;
had the opportunity to go on a study&#13;
tour to Ghana. Another study tour went&#13;
to Costa Rica. Greg Mayer, assistant professor&#13;
of Biology and Gerald Fowler,&#13;
professor of Geology, led the group that&#13;
went to study geological formation and&#13;
biological studies. The Center for international&#13;
Studies helped fund two stu-&#13;
. dents who participated in this study&#13;
tour.&#13;
There are also plans for a study tour&#13;
to Russia over Sprmg Break. There is still&#13;
time to apply for this study tour that is&#13;
led by Oliver Hayward, associate professor&#13;
of History. Professor Hayward has&#13;
been going on study tours to Russia and&#13;
other eastern European countries for the&#13;
past ten years. Also, a study tour to&#13;
China is scheduled over the summer.&#13;
Xun Wang, associate professor of SociololD"&#13;
is leading this study tour and this is&#13;
his third study tour to China.&#13;
This is an exceptional opportunity to&#13;
take part in a unique learning experience,&#13;
particularly since academic credit&#13;
earned can be transferred to UW-Park side.&#13;
For further information about study&#13;
abroad programs and financial aid for&#13;
study abroad, students are encouraged&#13;
to contact the Center for International&#13;
Studies Mom. 367 or phone (262) 595-&#13;
2701 as soon as possible. .&#13;
EMPL.OYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES WITH&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Sarah or Brenda at 595 2287.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
Noon-1 p.m.&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Successful Transitioning&#13;
for Student Organizations&#13;
by Stephanie Sirovatka-Marshall, Student ActivitieS Office&#13;
Tuesday, March 20, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106&#13;
sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
The Ranger, Univeraity of Wisconsm-Parkside Page 6&#13;
.&#13;
Five straight losses hurt tourney hoPOS&#13;
Let's face it, there's no such thing as&#13;
a good time to go on a five-game losing&#13;
streak. But the UW-Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team probably couldn't have&#13;
picked a worse time to go into a fivegame&#13;
skid-three of them at home last&#13;
week and all of them in the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley Conference (GLVC). The losses&#13;
left the Rangers dangerously close to&#13;
elimination from the conference tournament&#13;
with two games remaining to&#13;
be played.&#13;
On Tuesday, Feb. 13, the Rangers&#13;
inability to control Lewis University&#13;
guard Josh Virostko and a dreadful&#13;
non-call led to a 60-58 loss. Virostko&#13;
had 21 points and Flyers' center Austin&#13;
Real had 10 to pace Lewis.&#13;
Brian Coffman, who has led the&#13;
Rangers in scoring all season, had just&#13;
10 points on 4 of 13 shooting. However,&#13;
he appeared to be headed for the tying&#13;
basket as he knifed down the lane and&#13;
went for a lay-up in the closing seconds.&#13;
There appeared to be contactlots&#13;
of contact-under the basket that&#13;
would have' sent Coffman to the line&#13;
for two free throws to tie the game, but&#13;
no call was made and Lewis came&#13;
away with the win. Brain Masstricht&#13;
led UW-Parkside with 13 points.&#13;
Last Thursday, Feb. 15, Southern&#13;
Indiana came in as the number two&#13;
team in the NCAA Division II. And&#13;
although USI left with a IS-point 87-72&#13;
victory, the game was much closer than&#13;
the score would indicate.&#13;
UW-Parkside played tough defense&#13;
for 35 minutes and trailed by only four&#13;
points at the half. However, a big second&#13;
half for Southern Indiana's Marlow&#13;
Currie (19 points) and-clutch baskets&#13;
by Gregg Lyons (14 points)&#13;
allowed USI to pull away at the close.&#13;
Neither Currie or Lyons, however,&#13;
scored any style points with their&#13;
showboating as the clock wound&#13;
down.&#13;
Brian Coffman scored 26 for the&#13;
Rangers (he had 31 points against USI&#13;
earlier in the season). Nick Knuth was&#13;
a force inside with 19 hard-won points&#13;
before he fouled out. '&#13;
Saturday was hard to watch. Playing&#13;
against an SUI-Edwardsville team&#13;
that had just seven players due to academic&#13;
problems, the Rangers lost 67-&#13;
66. The Cougars were content to shoot&#13;
Taurnev hopes end for ladv RangerS&#13;
This hasn't been an easy season for&#13;
the UW-Parkside Lady Ranl';ers. There&#13;
have been a seemingly inordinate number&#13;
of close and frustrating losses, some&#13;
discouraging blow-outs, and offensive&#13;
,droughts-periods when five, six, eight&#13;
minutes would pass without a pointthat&#13;
made both the close games and the&#13;
blow-outs all the more annoying.&#13;
On Tuesday, Feb. 13, the frustratingly&#13;
close loss scenario played itself out in&#13;
a 75-72 defeat to Lewis University. The&#13;
game was tied 33-33 at the half and 65-&#13;
65 at the end of regulation, but UWParkside&#13;
could do nothing to stop Jennifer&#13;
Simon (28 points) or Andrea Gunnell&#13;
(19 points) throughout the game&#13;
and into the extra period. Nicole Brunk&#13;
led the Lady Rangers with 19 points&#13;
and Joy Rodefer had 13 before fouling&#13;
out. The loss ended UW-Parkside's&#13;
hopes for post-season play. It was the&#13;
second straight three-point loss for the&#13;
Lady Rangers who were beaten 86-83 at&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan the previous Saturday.&#13;
The blow-out scenario appeared to&#13;
be occurring in the first half against&#13;
Southern Indiana. The Lady Rangers&#13;
fell behind early and trailed by as many&#13;
as 20 points and by 13 a! the half. The&#13;
team revived toward the end of the first&#13;
half and made a game of it in the second&#13;
half before faIling 80-69. UW-Parkside&#13;
played without Tiesha Campbell&#13;
who was given an indefinite suspension&#13;
before the game. '&#13;
The less said about Saturday's game&#13;
with SIU-Edwardsville the better. SIUE&#13;
shot 60 percent from floor in the first&#13;
half to build a 38-17 lead en route to an&#13;
85-44 win. Misi Clark had 20 points for&#13;
the Cougars, and Rodefer led UWParkside&#13;
with 16.&#13;
The Lady Rangers are now 3.15 in&#13;
the Great Lakes Valley Conference (6-&#13;
18 overall). They close out theseason at&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne tonight and at St.&#13;
Joseph's Saturday.&#13;
uw-p Lady Rangers battle on the home&#13;
against Lewis University, Tuesday, Feb. 13.&#13;
three-pointers in the first half with&#13;
Marty Perry (21 points) and Garret&#13;
Thomas launching from waaaay&#13;
downtown. When the Rangers adjusted&#13;
to cover the three-pointers, the&#13;
Cougars passed inside to Nick J:I~rtwig&#13;
(13 points) for lay-ups ..Hartwig ~ last&#13;
lay-up gave SIU-E its final margm of&#13;
victory. .'&#13;
Brian Coffman, playing hIS last&#13;
home game as a Ranger, leaUW-Parkside&#13;
with 15 points, and Marlon Grice&#13;
added 13, but his last-second jump&#13;
shot fell short and the losing streak&#13;
reached five.&#13;
The losses left UW-Parkside 6-1~ in&#13;
the GLVC (9-15 overall) and ninth in&#13;
the conference. The top eight teams&#13;
make the tournament. They play at&#13;
IUPU-Fort Wayne tonight and at St.&#13;
Joseph's Saturday. They must win both&#13;
and get help from the teams playing&#13;
against Indianapolis to make the postseason&#13;
trip to Evanston, IN, which will&#13;
host the GLVC tourney.&#13;
Five straight losses left UW-P 6-121" the&#13;
GLVC and ninth In the conference.&#13;
Photo by Jeff Alley&#13;
Parkside welcomes a familiar&#13;
face as new athletic director&#13;
New Athletic Director Dave&#13;
~illiamsIs getting comfortable In&#13;
hle new office In th,e SAC&#13;
By Zach Robertson&#13;
Dave Williams, a familiar face around&#13;
the athletic department, has taken over&#13;
as acting athletic director this semester at&#13;
UW-Par1&lt;side.Williams, who has spent&#13;
the last 3 years at UW-Parkside, assumes&#13;
the position left by Lenny Klaver, who&#13;
has accepted a full-time position as vice&#13;
chancellor of University Relations.&#13;
In the past 3 years at&#13;
UW-Parkside, Williams&#13;
has worn many hats. He&#13;
has spent all 3 years as&#13;
head coach of the men's&#13;
golf team. Prior to this&#13;
year he had spent 2 years&#13;
as assistant coach of the&#13;
men's basketball team,&#13;
while splitting time last&#13;
year as the assistant athletic&#13;
director. "When 1&#13;
first came to UW-Parkside,&#13;
1 had set my career&#13;
path on being a basketball&#13;
coach," said&#13;
Williams. "However&#13;
after spending some tim~&#13;
in administration, 1&#13;
began to see this as my&#13;
future."&#13;
Prior to his time here at UW-Parkside,&#13;
,Williams was the assistant basketball&#13;
coach at. Augustana (.:ollege in Rock&#13;
,1sI,,:,d, IIlinOIS, and North Dakota State&#13;
U,:,,~erslty 'ill Fargo, North Dakota&#13;
Williamsre~~dhisbach~ors~~&#13;
from Augustana, and his masters degree&#13;
fromNDSU.&#13;
As acting athletic director Willi&#13;
wants to help student-athletes'to learn~&#13;
,&#13;
much from athletics as possible, both on&#13;
and off the field. "One of the roles ofathletics&#13;
is to provide positive, lifelong&#13;
learning experiences said Williams.&#13;
"There is much to be learned in athletics,&#13;
and it's my responsibility to make sure&#13;
that students have those opportunities."&#13;
UW-Parkside has always believed&#13;
that academic and athletic&#13;
excellence go hand in hand,&#13;
something that Williams&#13;
hopes will continue. 'The&#13;
level that our teams compete&#13;
at will rise and fall&#13;
every year, but what we&#13;
hope to do, is make sure&#13;
that our academic successIS&#13;
always a constant" said&#13;
Williams. "I think that the&#13;
athletic department's success&#13;
is not only on the I'laying&#13;
field, but in the Classroom&#13;
as well."&#13;
Williams is also quickto&#13;
point out how appreciative&#13;
he is of the support that he&#13;
has been given. "I apfreaate&#13;
the tutoring that was&#13;
able to get from Lenny Klaver, who&#13;
helped me throughout this whole&#13;
process" said Williams. "The sUPI'°rt&#13;
that I have received from Chancellor&#13;
Keating and the entire athletic department&#13;
has been tremendous."&#13;
With the support of his colleagues,&#13;
and the continuing success of RaJ:tger&#13;
athletics, expect Williams to remalll a&#13;
familiar face around campus for a long&#13;
time.&#13;
February 22, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 7&#13;
Plavball! Baseball team stans season&#13;
Majorleague baseball's sEring train- home run and Brian Rehm went 3 for 3&#13;
ing mayjust be getting un erway, but to give pitcher ~aron Taylor the win.&#13;
theUW-Parksidenine is already play- Taylor worked five innings, giving up&#13;
in~gamesthat count. Coach Sal Bando four earned runs.&#13;
Jr.s team traveled to Alabama to start In the second game, Frank Gagliardi&#13;
theseason...and was promptly rained and Jason Morgan homered for UWout.Theteam&#13;
spent 16 hours in a bus - Parkside but Matt Sattersten was&#13;
only to have their doubleheader at unable to hold the lead in relief of Riley&#13;
Alabama-Huntsvillecancelled due to a Gostisha. The Rangers left Alabama&#13;
wet field. There will be no make-up with a 1-1 record.&#13;
games. The baseball team will playa little&#13;
TheRangers finally got their season closer to home on Tuesday, Feb. 27,&#13;
startedSunday, Feb. 18 with a double- when they play Morningside College&#13;
header split at Montevallo. The of Soiux City, Iowa, at the Metrodome&#13;
Rangerswon the opener, 11-9, but lost in Minneapolis. Their first home game&#13;
game2 by a score of 7-6. . is March 31 at noon against MissouriIn&#13;
the opener, David Devey hit a St. Louis. Dress warmly.&#13;
I Wrestlers edged bv Marquette&#13;
I&#13;
TheMarquette Golden Eagles posteda&#13;
narrow 23-20victory over thellWParksidewrestling&#13;
team in Milwaukee&#13;
lastWednesday night. It was only the&#13;
sixthtime Marquette has beaten UWParksidein&#13;
29 meetings between the&#13;
two schools. The all-time series now&#13;
standsat 22-6-1in favor of the Rangers.&#13;
UW-Parksidewinners included Joey&#13;
Charles,at the 125-pound class, who&#13;
won a 17-2 decision; Ken Schmidt,&#13;
wrestling at 149 pounds, who took a 6-&#13;
1 victory; and Andy Mueller, 165&#13;
pounds, with a tight 5-3 win.&#13;
Four of the 10 weight divisions saw&#13;
either a forfeit or a double forfeit.&#13;
The Rangers, who posted a 5-6 dual&#13;
meet record, are now preparing for&#13;
regional competition.&#13;
GLVC Men's Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM W-L Pet.&#13;
GLVC Women"s Basketball Standings&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM W-L Pet.&#13;
Southern Indiana 17-1&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 15-3&#13;
Northern Kentucky 13-5&#13;
Bellarrrune 10-8&#13;
Missouri-St.Louis 9-9&#13;
Saintjoseph's 9,9&#13;
Lewis 8-10&#13;
Indianapolis 7-11&#13;
UW-Parkside 6-12&#13;
Quin 6-12&#13;
SIUEdwardsville 4-14&#13;
*IUPU-Pt.Wayne 4-14&#13;
*Ineligiblefor GLVCTournament&#13;
Southern Indiana 15-3&#13;
Northern Kentucky 15-'3&#13;
Bellarmine 14-4&#13;
SIUEdwardsville 12-6&#13;
!UPU-Pt.Wayne 10-8&#13;
Mtssourt-St. Louis 10-8&#13;
Quincy 8-10&#13;
Indianapolis 8"10&#13;
Lewis 7-11&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 5~13&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;side 3.;15 Cj&#13;
Salnt Ioseph's 1-17&#13;
*Not eligible for GLVC Tournament&#13;
.944&#13;
.833&#13;
.722&#13;
.556&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.444&#13;
.389&#13;
.333&#13;
.333&#13;
.222&#13;
.222&#13;
Overall&#13;
W-L Pet.&#13;
23-1 .958&#13;
21-3 .875&#13;
22-5 .815&#13;
13-11 .542&#13;
13-11 .542&#13;
15-12 .556&#13;
10-14 .417&#13;
12-12 .500&#13;
9-15 .375'&#13;
10-14 .417&#13;
7-17 .292&#13;
7-21' .250&#13;
.833&#13;
.833&#13;
.778&#13;
.667&#13;
.556&#13;
.556&#13;
.444&#13;
.jl44&#13;
.389&#13;
.278&#13;
.167&#13;
.056&#13;
OVERALL&#13;
W-L Pet.&#13;
21-3 .875&#13;
21-3 .875&#13;
19-5 .792&#13;
17-7 .708&#13;
17-8 .680&#13;
14-10 .583&#13;
12-12 .500&#13;
12-12 .500&#13;
10-14 .416&#13;
8-16 .333&#13;
6-18 .250&#13;
1-23 .043&#13;
Seven inducted to Sports Hall 01 Fame&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-ParkSIdeAthletic&#13;
Hall of Fame added ten&#13;
new members during a ceremony at&#13;
theUnion Dining Room Sunday, Feb.&#13;
lB.Thenew inductees-Susie Brugioni&#13;
ofwomen's basketball, Tracy Burbach&#13;
ofsoftball,wrestlers Dennis DuChene&#13;
andMarkHemauer, golfer Rick Elsen,&#13;
JIm Hogan of men's basketball, Carl&#13;
OlIver.of men's track, Christopher&#13;
AntoruoSager, and Patrick White of&#13;
men'ssoccer, and honorary inductee&#13;
ScottNelson-were on-hand to receive&#13;
theirplaques. A similar plaque will be&#13;
~lacedin the main hallway of the&#13;
portsand Activity Center.&#13;
, Inductee Susan Brugioni (Class of&#13;
89)was a four-year starter at point&#13;
Eauardand a two-year captain for the&#13;
~y Rangers. She scored 1,049 points&#13;
an had 355 assists. As a senior, she&#13;
~as the NAIA District 14 Player of the&#13;
tiear,an NAJA District 14 team selecon,and&#13;
an NAIA All-American. BruF,0ni.earned&#13;
a double major at UWParli~lde:BA&#13;
degrees in Sociology and °&#13;
ticalScience.&#13;
f T~eyBurbach ('90) played outfield&#13;
hO~e UW-Parkside softball team. She fu: d Single-seasonrecords for top batg&#13;
average (.409) and slugging per-&#13;
;:tage (.r08). She ~et the career home&#13;
record with 12 and boasted a&#13;
~b~tting average of .353. She was&#13;
!riet -tirne NAIA District 14 All-Distim&#13;
team member and was a threee&#13;
NAIA All-American left fielder.&#13;
In her junior season, she was selected&#13;
to the NAIA National Championship&#13;
All-Tournament Team. Burbach&#13;
earned degrees in Sociology and Political&#13;
Science.&#13;
Dennis DuChene ('91) holds the&#13;
record for the most wins ever by a&#13;
UW-Parkside freshman at 33. His 146&#13;
career victories are the most wins in&#13;
school history. DuChene was an&#13;
NCAA All-American wrestler as a&#13;
freshman and junior, and was an&#13;
NAIA All-American as a senior. He&#13;
'was the NCAA national runner-up in&#13;
his junior season: J::Ieearned a degree&#13;
in Business Administration from UWParkside.&#13;
Rick Elsen ('86) led the Ranger golf&#13;
squad. His sophomore year, he was a&#13;
second team NAIA All-District 14&#13;
selection. In his junior year, he was an&#13;
NAIA All-District 14 selection. He&#13;
capped his college career by winning&#13;
the District Tournament as a senior. He&#13;
also was named to the first-team&#13;
NAiA All-District 14 Team. Elsen won&#13;
six tournaments in his junior and&#13;
senior seasons. He earned a degree in&#13;
Business Administration.&#13;
Mark Hemauer ('91) holds single&#13;
season UW-Parkside records With 52&#13;
wins and 224 takedowns. He also&#13;
holds the career takedown record With&#13;
535. His 145 career wins.is second on&#13;
the all-time list. Hemauer was both an&#13;
NAIA and NCAA Division II All-&#13;
'American. As a senior, he ranked secand&#13;
in the nation, and represented the&#13;
USA on an NAIA All-Star team that&#13;
toured Australia. He earned a degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
Jim Hogan ('72) was named NAIA&#13;
District 14 most valuable player during&#13;
his first year at UW-Parkside as a&#13;
junior college transfer. In both his&#13;
.junior and senior seasons, he was&#13;
named to the NAIA All-District team.&#13;
Hogan is third in all-time single season&#13;
scoring average with 23.3 points per&#13;
game and had 907 career points. He&#13;
earned a degree in History at UWParkside.&#13;
Scott Nelson ('75) was an-honorary&#13;
Hall of Fame inductee. He was a fouryear&#13;
member of the University baseballteam&#13;
and a student athletic trainer.&#13;
As an alumnus, Nelson has helped the&#13;
athleticjrogram thrive by giving his&#13;
time an talents. His was instrumental&#13;
in getting electronic scoreboards at the&#13;
baseball and soccer fields. He is president&#13;
of the Parkside 200 and is a member&#13;
of the UW-Parkside Athletic Executive&#13;
Board. Nelson earned a BA&#13;
degree in History.&#13;
Carl Oliver ('94) was an All-American&#13;
in all three of his years at UWParkside.&#13;
He set a school record for the&#13;
indoor 200 meters, the indoor 400&#13;
meters, and as a senior, was the NAIA&#13;
National Indoor Champion in the 600&#13;
meters. Oliver represented his native&#13;
Bahamas in both the 1996and the 2000&#13;
Olympics. He earned a degree in Economics&#13;
from UW-Parkside.&#13;
Christopher Sager ('94) was a junior&#13;
college transfer who made an immediate&#13;
impact. He was selected to the AllMidwest&#13;
team as a junior while holding&#13;
the lowest national goals against&#13;
average at 0.29. In his senior year,&#13;
Sagar led the team to the NCAA&#13;
National Tournament quarterfinals.&#13;
He holds school records for fewest&#13;
goals allowed in a season at 0.29 and&#13;
fewest goals allowed in a career at 0.32,&#13;
and the NCAA record for career goals&#13;
allowed average at 0.32. He won the&#13;
prestigious Arthur Ashe Award for&#13;
academics and athletics in 1994, and&#13;
earned a BS degree with honors in&#13;
Business and Marketing from UWParkside,&#13;
graduating Magna Cum&#13;
Laude.&#13;
Patrick White ('95) he was a fouryear&#13;
mainstay in soccer. He owns 10&#13;
school records and is co-owner of four&#13;
others. As a sophomore, he was selected&#13;
to the NCAA All-Midwest team, the&#13;
first of three selections. As a junior, he&#13;
was named an NCAA All-American&#13;
and was invited to the 1996 Olympic&#13;
Trials. In his senior year, he was second&#13;
in the nation in total points (59), and&#13;
second in total goals (26). White was&#13;
the GLVCPlayer of the Year,an NCAA&#13;
All-American, and was selected to the&#13;
Umbro Select College All-Star Soccer&#13;
Classic Senior Bowl. He earned a&#13;
degree in Sociology from UW-ParkSIde.&#13;
discussion on March 1st in the Dnio&#13;
Square at 2-4pm. "This is a very inte~&#13;
active event. We'd like to hear every.&#13;
one's view on this very sensitive&#13;
issue," says English Professor Chris.&#13;
tine Christie, Talking Color event&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
The Talking color event is sponsored&#13;
by the Cen ter for Ethnic Studies&#13;
Department. For more information&#13;
about Talking Color, contact the Center&#13;
at 595-2701. For more information&#13;
regarding multiracial identity and&#13;
related Issues, check out&#13;
www.mavin.net/about_mavin.html.&#13;
Page 8 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside February 22,2001 ~::.-_--_----.:.~~~~~~~:.::=:=...-----:----~~-&#13;
se,.. What are vou?&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
You are given five choices on appli- .&#13;
cations ana asked to place a check&#13;
next to the "racial category that best&#13;
suits you." How do you determine&#13;
which box to check, especially if you&#13;
are multiracial?&#13;
Over 10.5 million Americans are&#13;
encountered with the question of&#13;
"what are you" every day of their&#13;
lives because they are not recognizably&#13;
black or white. They are ethnically&#13;
ambiguous, arousing an uncomfortable&#13;
feeling in others who cannot&#13;
place them in a certain category. This&#13;
question can lead to an internal struggle&#13;
in the multiracial individual,&#13;
being forced into the decision of having&#13;
to "pick sides" in the dichotomous&#13;
society we live in ..&#13;
For the first time in U.5. history, the&#13;
government has recognized the growing&#13;
population of this multiracial&#13;
group in the 2000 census. The census&#13;
allowed respondents the choice to&#13;
"check all that apply" under the questions&#13;
regarding race. Was it the&#13;
increasing popularity of multiracial&#13;
athletes, singers, and actors such as&#13;
Tiger Woods, Mariah Carey, and&#13;
Tatyana Ali who influences the recogAcademv&#13;
Award Nominations&#13;
By Lynn Garcia&#13;
On Feb. 13, 2001, Kathy Bates&#13;
announced the nominations for this&#13;
year's Academy Awards at a live cere-&#13;
• many. Chosen for Best Supportir':g Actor&#13;
are Benicia Del Taro for Trajftc, Jeff&#13;
Bridges for The Contender, Willem Dafoe&#13;
for Shadow of the Vampire, Albert Finney&#13;
for Erin Brockavich, and Joaquin Phoenix&#13;
for Gladiator.&#13;
The Best Supporting Actress nominees&#13;
are Judi Dench for Chocolat, Marcia&#13;
WHAT'S ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring all&#13;
positions for the Spring 2001&#13;
semester. Stop by the office,&#13;
located across from the&#13;
Career Center in lower Wyllie&#13;
hall. .&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to Ip.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have&#13;
to offer?&#13;
Gay Harden for Pollack, Kate Hudson for&#13;
Almost Famous, Frances McDormand&#13;
also for Almost Famous, and Julie Walters&#13;
for Billy Elliot.&#13;
For Best Leading Actor Javier Bardem&#13;
in Before Night Falls, Russell Crowe in&#13;
Gladiator, Tom Hanks for Cast Away, Ed&#13;
Harris in Pollack, and Geoffrey Rush for&#13;
Quills.&#13;
Nominees for Best Leading Actress&#13;
are Joan Allen for The Contender, Juliette&#13;
nition of multiracial groups?&#13;
UW-Parkside has also noticed the&#13;
growing influence mi~ed-r~ce individuals&#13;
have on today s society, The&#13;
Center for Ethnic Studies will be presenting,&#13;
"Breaking out of the Box," a&#13;
forum that discusses issues that deal&#13;
with multiracial identity, interracia\&#13;
marriage, transracial adoptions, etc.&#13;
. Students who have had experience&#13;
with these realities will be encouraged&#13;
to participate in this friendly&#13;
forum.&#13;
There will be a live performance by&#13;
UW-Parkside students followed by a&#13;
Binoche for Chocolai, Ellen Burstyn for&#13;
Requiem For A Dream, Laura Linney for&#13;
You Can Count. On Me, and Julia Roberts&#13;
for Erin Brockooich.&#13;
Up for Best Picture: Crouching Tig~,&#13;
Hidden Dragon, Gladiator, Chocolat, Trajftc,&#13;
and Erin Brockovich.&#13;
An important part of every movie is&#13;
the screenplay. For Writing (adapted) the&#13;
nominees are Chocolat, Crouchzng Tiger,&#13;
Hidden Dragon, 0 Brother, Where Art&#13;
Thou], Traffic, and Wonder Boys.&#13;
Chosen for Writing (original) are&#13;
Almost Famous, Billy Elliot, f.rin Brock·&#13;
ovich, Gladiator, and You Can Count On&#13;
Me.&#13;
The 73rd Annual Academy Award&#13;
will be televised on March 25th.In the&#13;
coming weeks Iwill be including movie&#13;
reviews of the nominated films. Lookfor&#13;
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon in next&#13;
weeks issue of The Ranger.&#13;
Shape Your Future in Health Care&#13;
•&#13;
as a Doctor of Chiropractic&#13;
Ifyou want to help people get well and stay well•.&#13;
Ifyou want to work independently as a self-employed&#13;
chiropractic physician&#13;
Ifyou want to achieve the financial success&#13;
commensurate with your professional standing as a&#13;
primary care physician&#13;
Ifyou want to establish your position in the community&#13;
as a well-respected Doctor of Chiropractic&#13;
If any of these criteria match your professional&#13;
aspirations, please contact Logan College of&#13;
Chiropractic, today!&#13;
1-800-533-9210&#13;
WW",'.Ifn;luudg lopoadm@Jotaaoou&#13;
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An Equal Oppmtunity institution of Higher Education&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
February 22, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 9&#13;
-Til' Bangel News stall&#13;
gelS a golden opportunity&#13;
continued&#13;
"This is an excellent opportunity for&#13;
ustonetwork with profes~ionals,!" the&#13;
Ii Ids we will be practicmg in, said&#13;
olsen Forchette, a recent addition this&#13;
seme;terto the staff, said "It's a oncem.a.lifetime&#13;
apporl1ml tf to learn&#13;
whilevisiting a place that have never&#13;
beento before."&#13;
The Holiday Inn Golden Gateway&#13;
hotel,located on the top of one San&#13;
The AdmIssions Office Is holding a&#13;
Black&amp; Whit. Plloto Contest. Francisco's fabled hills, is the starting&#13;
~mt for all the convention sessions.&#13;
e Hard Rock Cafe is across the street&#13;
and up a block, and the California&#13;
Street cable car stops just outside the&#13;
hotel's front door.'&#13;
Be sure to check next week's edition&#13;
of The Ranger to see if the staff survived&#13;
the conference and if it was a&#13;
success.&#13;
Create • theme for your enlfies or take&#13;
candid snaps of !lie University&#13;
eomOilmity.&#13;
Caah Prlzas willbe awarded&#13;
Man VS. machine&#13;
Continued&#13;
ner,possessing the fastest technology&#13;
available,was also purchased for the&#13;
G4. Two Nikon CoolPix 990 digital&#13;
camerasand a FlashCard reader, in&#13;
additionto the scanner, create a digital&#13;
photo processing shop right in the&#13;
office.&#13;
Fivehand-held Sony recorders were&#13;
alsopurchased for the convenience of&#13;
the reporters in recording interviews.&#13;
"It is absolutely essential for a reporter&#13;
tohaveaccess to a recorder for accuracy&#13;
purposes" says Olsen.&#13;
Porchette, a 21-year old senior from&#13;
Somers,is a graphic design major with&#13;
an arts management minor and a web&#13;
designcertificate. Forchette is also the&#13;
graphic designer for the Parkside Student&#13;
Center, Union 209, and has been&#13;
for the last year and a half. "Upon&#13;
graduation, I want to be a well-rounded&#13;
individual having many different&#13;
experiences in graphic design and&#13;
desktop publishing. I believe The&#13;
Ranger IS a great opportunity to&#13;
achieve this" says Forchette.&#13;
The entire staff of The Ranger would&#13;
like to say "thank you" to Michael&#13;
Meyers, Information Service Controller,&#13;
Alan Goldsmith, assistant professor&#13;
Graphic Design - Art, Corey&#13;
Mandley, vice-president PSGA, and the&#13;
Technology Fees Committee for their&#13;
help and support.&#13;
Thisis your chance to&#13;
10 create your own&#13;
"Portraits of Parkside"&#13;
Caplurethe&#13;
.changing seosons or&#13;
catch those&#13;
"priceless" momenls.&#13;
Watch !lie Rangtr News for I110ftl&#13;
detaus.&#13;
For more information aOOother details&#13;
oontaet Sergio C&lt;ma In the&#13;
Admissioos Office (Mcin 0111) or call&#13;
595-2300.&#13;
ENTRY DEADLINE: APRIL 6TH&#13;
DRINKS • MUSIC • DANCING UNDIRGROUND IPORTI ~&#13;
SE Wisconsin' sNewest &amp; Hottest Nightclub &amp; Sports Bar&#13;
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term 1: May 21-June 29. Term 2: July 2-August 10&#13;
WWW.summer.hawaii.edu • toll-free 1 (800) 862-6628&#13;
University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Summer Sessions 1146 Sheridan Read&gt; Kenosha, WI· 552-0830&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Plllel - ~--~-&#13;
BllT -------&#13;
2/08/01&#13;
Inc. #01-122 Criminal/State&#13;
Property Damage, Ranger&#13;
HalL·8:06 a.m.: Residence&#13;
Life staff member reported&#13;
two glass plates above the&#13;
atrium desk were broken.&#13;
Investigation resulted in&#13;
oDe student being cited for&#13;
obstruction' and another&#13;
student was .referred to&#13;
Residence Life to arrange&#13;
for making restitution for&#13;
the damage.&#13;
Inc. #01-123 Unauthorized&#13;
Presence, Ranger Hall,&#13;
11:38 a.m.: two students&#13;
reported several individuals&#13;
had entered their&#13;
unlocked room and videotaped&#13;
them. Investigation&#13;
resulted in ODe student&#13;
charged with harassment and&#13;
two students charged with&#13;
unauthorized presence.&#13;
Inc. #01-124 Criminal State&#13;
Property Damage, University&#13;
Apartments, 2:02 p.m.:&#13;
while investigating a·broken&#13;
window complaint, a&#13;
student was found to be in&#13;
possession of a stolen&#13;
"Exit" sign. Stuqent was&#13;
cited for theft under $100.&#13;
2/09/01Inc. #01-125 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop, .4&#13;
miles west of Wood Rd.,&#13;
8:58 a.m.: a driver traveling&#13;
at a high rate of spee?&#13;
was cited for speeding 45&#13;
mph in a 25 mph zone.&#13;
Inc. #01-126 Medical Assist,&#13;
Union, 11:46 a.m.: student&#13;
suffering seizures was&#13;
assessed by Kenosha Med&#13;
Unit 5 but refused transportation&#13;
to a hospital&#13;
stating she would see her&#13;
own physician.&#13;
Inc. #01-127 Motor Vehicle&#13;
Theft, Ranger Hall lot,&#13;
2:18 p.m.: student reported&#13;
her car missing from the&#13;
Ranger Hall parking lot.&#13;
Officer checked all the&#13;
parking lots and located&#13;
the vehicle in the Corom.&#13;
Arts lot. Student was taken&#13;
to her vehicle case&#13;
unfounded.&#13;
•&#13;
2/10/01&#13;
Inc. #01-128&#13;
tion , Inner&#13;
miles west&#13;
Traffic ViolaLoop&#13;
Road, .2&#13;
of Wood Road,&#13;
12: 09 a.m.: -driver traveling&#13;
the wrong way on a ~neway&#13;
road was cited for&#13;
failure to obey sign.&#13;
Inc. #01-129 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, University&#13;
Apartments 4:00 p.m.: visitor&#13;
reported his cellular&#13;
phone taken from the apartment's&#13;
computer lab. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses to&#13;
the theft.'&#13;
2/11/01&#13;
Inc. #01-130 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH E at Wood Road,&#13;
1:58 a.m.: driver was cited&#13;
for failure to stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
Inc. #01-131 Age n c y&#13;
Assist, CTH E and HWY31,&#13;
8:16 p.m.: while on patrol,.&#13;
UPPS officer observed two&#13;
vehicles that had been in&#13;
an accident. There were no&#13;
injuries and officer&#13;
cleared when Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
squad arrived.&#13;
02112/01&#13;
Inc. #01-132 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Union D2, 12:03&#13;
p.m., Union staff member&#13;
reported a change machine&#13;
located in the Den had been&#13;
damaged over the weekend&#13;
and $125 in currency missing.&#13;
No suspects at this&#13;
time.&#13;
Inc .. #01-133 Lost Property,&#13;
Comm.Arts, 2:55 p.m.: student&#13;
reported losing her&#13;
Nokia cell phone on the&#13;
first floor of Comm.Arts.&#13;
Inc. #01-134 Traffic Violation.&#13;
Outer Loop at Wood&#13;
Road, 8:56 p.m.; driver was&#13;
cited for failure to stop&#13;
at a stop sign.&#13;
2/13/01&#13;
Inc. #01-135 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY 31 at HWY E,&#13;
12:19 a.m.: driver was&#13;
ci ted for failure to obey&#13;
stop sign/signal, 2nd&#13;
offense.&#13;
Inc _ #01-136 Traffic Violation,&#13;
HWY 31 at HWY E,&#13;
12: 35 a.m. : driver was&#13;
ci ted for failure to obey&#13;
traffic signal in a construction&#13;
zone .&#13;
.rnc . #01-137 Securi t v&#13;
Alarm, Comm. Arts D153,&#13;
7:59 a.m.: UPPS offlcer&#13;
responding to an- alarm&#13;
found it had been set ,?ff&#13;
by an employee. Everythlng&#13;
was in order.&#13;
2/14/01&#13;
Inc. #01-138 Agency Assist -&#13;
911 hang-up call, UW-Parkside&#13;
union, 2:38 a.m.:&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff dispatch&#13;
requested UPPS officer·do a&#13;
welfare check for a 911&#13;
hang-up call. Officer&#13;
checked the pay phone and&#13;
all floors of the Union but&#13;
was unable to locate anyone.&#13;
Inc. # 01-139 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Hit &amp; Run, Inner Loop&#13;
Road, 6:55 a.m.: staff member&#13;
walking in a cross-walk&#13;
was struck by a vehicle&#13;
whose driver failed to stop&#13;
at a stop sign. Staff member&#13;
was not hurt.&#13;
Inc. #01-140 Property Damage-personal,&#13;
Unknownlocation,&#13;
9:37 a.m.: staff member&#13;
reported damage done&#13;
under the hood of her vehicle&#13;
which may have occurred&#13;
sometime on Feb. 6. Complainant&#13;
requested this&#13;
information be on file.&#13;
Inc. #01-141 suspicious cirFebruary&#13;
22, 2001&#13;
cumstances, North Entrance&#13;
of SAC, 5:49 p.m.: student&#13;
reported a suspicious male&#13;
watching her. The area was&#13;
checked but the suspect was&#13;
not located.&#13;
2/15/01&#13;
Inc. #01-142 State Property&#13;
Theft, Parks ide Union, 9:11&#13;
a. rn, : employee reported a&#13;
uni vers i ty credi t card&#13;
missing and evidence that&#13;
it had been fraudUlently&#13;
used. Investigation continuing.&#13;
Inc. #01-143 Theft, WYLL&#13;
Bookstore, 12:15 p.m.:&#13;
books tore manager reported&#13;
an individual sold back a&#13;
book which had never been&#13;
sold by the Bookstore.&#13;
Investigation continuing.&#13;
Inc. #01-144 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH G at CTHA,6:09&#13;
p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
failure to stop at a stop&#13;
sign and displaying unauthorized&#13;
registration.&#13;
Inc. #01-145 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Union lot, 7:20 p.m.:&#13;
two students were involved&#13;
in an accident in the parking&#13;
lot. There were no&#13;
injuries but one vehicle&#13;
had to be towed from the&#13;
scene. A state accident&#13;
report was completed.&#13;
February 22, 2001&#13;
-&#13;
elAS iflEDS&#13;
FREECLASSIFIEDSI&#13;
for a limited time only! The Ranger&#13;
Newswill print your student classified&#13;
ads free of charge. Forms are&#13;
availableat the newsstand in front of&#13;
the library and between Wyllie and&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Call 595-2287 for&#13;
moreiiUormation.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
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• BoardingSale! $175 per month.&#13;
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Chess?1&#13;
• Forthe novice to the expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a&#13;
club next semester.&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Freetutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software&#13;
is available: Microsoft Office,&#13;
Usingthe Internet Effectively, E-mail&#13;
and Creating Web Pages. Tutoring&#13;
will be by appointment. To schedule&#13;
your appointment, call Bob or Cluis&#13;
at595-2790.&#13;
• Do ru enjoy working with children.&#13;
Would you like to earn extra&#13;
money? Apply now for a childcare&#13;
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Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan and&#13;
Florida. Travel Free and Earn Cash!&#13;
Do It on the Web! Go to StudentCity.com&#13;
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SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados&#13;
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Drinks and Up to $100 room' credit&#13;
Call 1-800-426-7710 for special&#13;
weeks or go to: www.sunsplashtours.com&#13;
.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL&#13;
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1 Student Tour Operator. Jamaica,&#13;
Mexico, Bahamas, Europe, Florida.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted.&#13;
$2500 aBO. Call (262) 878-0769 after&#13;
6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door, loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over lease payments&#13;
or buyout. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
1987 Mazda 626&#13;
• V4 2.0 en!line, Runs great! New&#13;
brakes. Asking $950 OBO. Call Ashi&#13;
at (home) 551-7431 or (work) 595-&#13;
2705.&#13;
1991 Ford F-150&#13;
• Must Sell! $4,000 or best offer. Call&#13;
884-6812 and ask for Jeremy.&#13;
1988 Pontiac 6000&#13;
• Maroon four door, fou~ cylinder,&#13;
103 000 mi interior Iextenor in good&#13;
con'dition,' runs great, new tires,&#13;
exhaust, and alternator .. Complete&#13;
maintenance record Asking $1,500&#13;
OBO. Call 595-2974 and leave a message.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegner at 595-2011 or&#13;
Rosearm Mason at 595-2606, or stop&#13;
by the Career Center, Wyllie D173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - southern Center . .&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager With&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
with program policies and procedures.&#13;
d&#13;
• Schedule residents for gmup an&#13;
individual counselmg sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case plan&#13;
Page 11&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for case&#13;
plan changes, suspensions or discharges.&#13;
• Act as pmgram staff liaison to&#13;
newsletter publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place -&#13;
Southern Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff&#13;
including contracted professionals&#13;
with the compilation, layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or&#13;
other concerns, and assist resident to&#13;
improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the&#13;
homeless populations in Racine&#13;
County. Assist the Homeless Assistance&#13;
Coalition in arranging meetings,&#13;
mail notices, record notes of&#13;
meetings and decisions and develop&#13;
a generic brochure to advance the&#13;
mission of the coalition.&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public through&#13;
employers, public service gmups,&#13;
community gmups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service organizations,&#13;
and community groups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e. newspaper&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight the&#13;
need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
~ • Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Department of Correctior1s - Assistant&#13;
to Probationl&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits&#13;
. and to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking&#13;
statements, conducting assessments&#13;
and intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Victim Advocate/Liaison for the District&#13;
Attorney in Racine (paid)&#13;
• Contact victims by phone within 72&#13;
hours of their victimization to offer&#13;
emotional support, empathetic listening,&#13;
information and referrals,&#13;
personal advocacy and crime compensation&#13;
assistance.&#13;
• Notify victims of their rights, explain&#13;
the criminal justice process.&#13;
• Complete one ride along each month&#13;
with one of the law enforcement&#13;
agencies in Racine County and provide&#13;
services to clients off site at the&#13;
various Community Policing sites.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiterl&#13;
THIS YEAR A LOT OF COLLEGE&#13;
SENIORS WILL BE GRADUATING&#13;
INTO DEBt.&#13;
Under the Army's&#13;
loon Repayment&#13;
program, you could get&#13;
out from under with a&#13;
three-year enlistment&#13;
Each year you serve&#13;
on active duty reduces&#13;
your indebtedness by onethird&#13;
or $1,500, whichever&#13;
amount is greater,&#13;
up to a$65,000 limit&#13;
The offer applies to Perkins Loans, Stafford Loans,&#13;
and certain other federally insured loans, which are not&#13;
in default&#13;
And debt reliefis just one of the many benefits&#13;
you'll earn from the Army. Ask your Army Recruiter.&#13;
651..1071&#13;
ARM~BE ALL YOU CAN BE:&#13;
www.goarmy.com&#13;
OverCI.IDI os.</text>
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              <text>March 1, 2001 to Jr .&#13;
_--------~~~~~~~~ ~ Issue 20 Vol. 31 . ~ ~~~~~~.....,;,;"~;,;,.,,,;.~-&#13;
uw-p displayS mission statement posters on campus&#13;
ByMilanka Sulejic&#13;
What is a mission statement and&#13;
whyis it important that each University&#13;
have one? Larry Deutisch, who&#13;
has much to say about the mission&#13;
statement for UW-Parkside, has an&#13;
answer to this question and many&#13;
more.&#13;
Thereis an overall mission for all of&#13;
the schools in the UW-system, but&#13;
each individual university has their&#13;
own mission statement. The original&#13;
mission statement of the University&#13;
when it first opened its doors in 1968&#13;
endured 30 years before the Board of&#13;
Regionsapproved the changes to the&#13;
mission statement in 1998. The idea&#13;
firstcame about in 1996, when it was&#13;
suggested that the mission statement&#13;
should be one that is less wordy and&#13;
moreeasily understood by everyone.&#13;
The original mission statement of&#13;
the University was quite lengthy and&#13;
difficult to comprehend. Between&#13;
1996 . and 1998 the changing of the&#13;
mISSIon statement was a campus&#13;
process that involved students, staff,&#13;
and faculty adding their input about&#13;
what the University stands for and&#13;
what it should stand for in the future.&#13;
What should the University provide&#13;
for its current students and offer&#13;
to potential students who may choose&#13;
to attend UW-Parkside? Why is the&#13;
mission statement important? The&#13;
Board of Regions wants the University&#13;
to live up to a certain standard. Il&#13;
serves as a guide not only to those&#13;
who work for the University, but to&#13;
those attending the University as&#13;
well. "The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is committed to high quality&#13;
educational pr0l&gt;rams, creative and&#13;
scholarly activities, and services&#13;
responsive to its diverse student pop-&#13;
'SS'ON&#13;
The UW-P mission statement poster, designed by Kelly Vida, is a recent addition to the halls&#13;
and classrooms of the University.&#13;
class was asked to come up with a&#13;
design that would accompany the&#13;
mission statement. Of the class of&#13;
twenty-five, approximately six students&#13;
designs were chosen as finalists,&#13;
and of those six students, Kelly Vida's&#13;
design was chosen. Once the posters&#13;
were made, they were placed all over&#13;
the university for everyone to see.&#13;
"They wanted a design to catch&#13;
your eye from a distance and hold&#13;
your attention until you were right up&#13;
to the poster, studying and reading it&#13;
with great interest, and that is what&#13;
Kelly Vida had accomplished with her&#13;
winning design." They were placed&#13;
next to every Xerox.machine, coffeepot,&#13;
and classroom throughout the&#13;
University.&#13;
ulation, and its local, national, and&#13;
global communities."&#13;
The University won an award for&#13;
its diverse student population and&#13;
strives to achieve what they have stated&#13;
in the mission statement. The&#13;
Board of Regions is looking for input&#13;
from students about their experiences&#13;
at the University. Il is the individual&#13;
student's responsibility to take advantage&#13;
of what is being offered to them.&#13;
If they feel for whatever reason the&#13;
University has not fulfilled what they&#13;
have promised, they can bring that to&#13;
the attention of the Board of Regions.&#13;
Kelly Vida was the graphic arts student&#13;
whose design for the mission&#13;
statement poster was chosen. Professor&#13;
Goldsmith's Graphics Design&#13;
Earnhardt death&#13;
huue loss lor NASCAR ,&#13;
ByMelissa Stephenson&#13;
DaleEarnhardt, 49, passed away Sunday,February&#13;
18th,on the final lap of the&#13;
Daytona 500. With 1/2 a lap to go,&#13;
tragedy struck as the seven-time Win-&#13;
~on Cup competitor careened towards&#13;
e wall of the 4th turn at 180mph. With&#13;
no rollover or spinout to absorb the hit&#13;
°ohanr help slow hirn down, there was slim&#13;
ce for survival.&#13;
Rescue workers immediately&#13;
responded and began administering&#13;
~xygen and CPR to Earnhardt, who&#13;
ccording to Dr. Bohannon, director of&#13;
~eney medical services at the track,&#13;
at ardt never showed any sign of life&#13;
f "Wc time. He was transported to Hali- th ospital, little more than a mile from&#13;
20etrack at 4:54 and pronounced dead&#13;
'dnunutes later, his wife Teresa at his&#13;
81 e.&#13;
right side after the famous black No.3&#13;
shot up the race track to spear the outside&#13;
wall. Earnhardt started his 23rd&#13;
Daytona 500 from the seventh position&#13;
and was racing for third when the accident&#13;
occurred.'NASCAR has lost its&#13;
greatest driver; remarked NASCAR&#13;
chairman of the board Bill France.&#13;
Included among Earnhardt's survivors&#13;
are wife Teresa, daughters Kelley&#13;
King and Taylor, sons Kerry and Dale [r.,&#13;
his mother and other siblings.&#13;
The Earnhardt Family asks that you&#13;
please, instead of flowers, send donations&#13;
to: Carolina Foundation, Attn:&#13;
Honor of Dale Earnhardt, PO Box 34769,&#13;
Charlotte, N.C. 28234-4769.You can also&#13;
send condolences to: Dale Earnhardt,&#13;
Inc., 1675 Coddle Creek Drive,&#13;
Mooresville, NC 28115.&#13;
from the finish. With Darrel Waltrip and&#13;
his son, Dale Earnhardt [r., running in&#13;
the lead, Earnhardt had been blocking&#13;
for them over the final laps, frustrating&#13;
the efforts of Sterling Marlin. Earnhardt&#13;
obviously wanted to protect his own&#13;
position, but he also had a vested interest&#13;
in Waltrip and Dale Jr. - both driving&#13;
Chevrolets for&#13;
his North Carolina-based&#13;
company, Dale&#13;
Earnhardt&#13;
Incorporated.&#13;
In the accident,&#13;
Ken&#13;
Schrader's No.&#13;
36 Pontiac&#13;
struck Earnhardt's&#13;
car in the&#13;
'This is understandably one of the&#13;
toughest announcements we've ever&#13;
had to make .... We've lost Dale Earnhardt&#13;
'NASCAR president Mike Helton&#13;
said. 'Dale Earnllardt will always be&#13;
known for his relentless passion for racing&#13;
and his immense skill. Nicknamed&#13;
'The Intimidator' for his style and charisrna&#13;
on the track, '&#13;
Earnhardt&#13;
earned' the&#13;
respect of fans&#13;
world-wide.&#13;
Il was that&#13;
same competitive&#13;
racing spirit&#13;
that put the&#13;
number 3 Monte&#13;
Carlo in the spin&#13;
just seconds&#13;
NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt made his final lap&#13;
at the Daytona 500 Sunday, February 18th.&#13;
March 1,200l The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 2&#13;
d&#13;
•&#13;
Ins 1 e&#13;
3 letters 10 Ihe Edilor&#13;
find out what students have to say about the Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
4 Enlenainment&#13;
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon gets reviewed&#13;
5 Vote YES for United Council&#13;
6 Student Voices&#13;
One student asks if you forgot your manners in the car.&#13;
1 Student Voices Continued&#13;
8&#13;
Find out about a new club called Students in Action and&#13;
about an upcoming tour in China.&#13;
9&#13;
Dr. Lenny Klaver speaks about his duties as the soon to&#13;
be Assistant Vice Chanceller.&#13;
Editor of the week: Brenda Dunham&#13;
b !fice&#13;
D·139C&#13;
e: (262) 595-2287&#13;
. (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is p'ublis~ed. every. Thursday ISof the University orWlSOOnsin-Parkside, who are solely&#13;
responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
Letters to the Editor ~licy: The Ranger E Lette, rs should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to&#13;
the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C) . Iette author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
misleading or libelous content letters rnrl)' lished. For publication purposes, author's name can be withheld,&#13;
but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the rtgnt to edit all letters.&#13;
'Thin&#13;
March 1&#13;
o Plays at Parkside: "Talk Radio" by Eric Bogosian, 10 a.m., Augie WegnerStudio&#13;
Theatre; this performance IS sold out.&#13;
o "Talking Color: Breaking Out of the B?x," short theatrical performance by&#13;
students followed by discussion of racial and ethnic identities led by ChriS&#13;
Christie and Simon Akindes. 2 p.m., Union Bazaar, free, open to the campus&#13;
and community.&#13;
o UW-Parkside Community Band, Mark Eichner, conductor, 7:30 p.m., Com.&#13;
Arts Theatre; tickets: adults $5, students/seruors $3.&#13;
o Hypnotist Frederick Winters, Union Square, 8 p.m., free for students with&#13;
an ID, $2 for community members 13 and older.&#13;
March 1-4&#13;
o Foreign Film: "Phorpa" (The Cup), March 1-4, Bhutan, subtitled, show&#13;
times: Thur./Fri 7:30 p.m., Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Union Cmema Theater.&#13;
March 2&#13;
o Plays at Parkside: "Talk Radio" by Eric Bogosian, 10 a.m, and 7:30p.m.;&#13;
Augie Wegner Studio Theatre; Tickets: $10 adults; $7&#13;
students/faculty /staff/ seniors; group discounts available. Call Diane&#13;
Smith at (262) 595-2564.&#13;
o Pre-Spring Break Jam 2001, UW-Parkside Union, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m., admission&#13;
$5 w/UW-Parkside ID, $7 for all others, sponsored by the OW-Park·&#13;
side International Club&#13;
March 3&#13;
o 13th Annual Focus on Women Conference "Diversity 2001: Where Do WeGo&#13;
From Here?" 8:30 a.m. to 3:45 p.m., Student Union, register with Continuing&#13;
Education at 595-2312&#13;
o Plays at Parkside: "Till Radio" by Eric Bogosian, 4 and 7:30 p.m.; Augie&#13;
Wegner Studio Theatre; Tickets: $10 adults; $7&#13;
students/faculty /staff/seniors; group discounts available. Call Diane&#13;
Smith at (262) 595-2564.&#13;
March 4&#13;
o Kenosha-Racine Unified Teacher Invitational Exhibition 2001, through&#13;
March 26, opening reception: March 4, 1-4 p.m., free and open to the public;&#13;
hours: Monday &amp; Thursday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Wednesaay 11&#13;
a.m, to 8 p.m., closed Friday, Saturday, Sunday.&#13;
March 5-9&#13;
o Peer Health Educators Safe Spring Break - March 5-9, 2001&#13;
March 5&#13;
o Perspectives on Religious Issues: Altruism: Is it Rational? Is it Possible?&#13;
w /Prof. Dennis Kaufman, UW-Parkside Economics Dept. and comments by&#13;
Wayne Johnson, UW-Parkside Prof. Emeritus of Philosophy, Union 104-106,&#13;
noon, free and open to the public.&#13;
March 6&#13;
o Dan Banda lecture series on documentary filmmaking: Everett Soetenga on&#13;
Videographg 6 p.m., Greenquist 119, free&#13;
March 7&#13;
oUW-Parkside Orchestra, David Schripsema director free and open to the&#13;
public, noon, Union Cinema Theater ' r&#13;
o SbouPand Substance series: Program to be announced free w /free soup and&#13;
read, Union 104-106 r&#13;
March 12-16&#13;
Spring Break. ..enjoy!&#13;
MarchI, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 3&#13;
Dear Editors,&#13;
-&#13;
Icant be everywhere at once. Or&#13;
canI?Wecan't change how things are.&#13;
Orcan we?&#13;
LU,BSU,SIA.Asian-A~erican,Earth&#13;
ClubChristian Fellowship; are examples&#13;
~f the available organizations in&#13;
the whole of Parkside that are now&#13;
availableto use. An example of a new&#13;
clubjust starting is SIA (Students in&#13;
Action).Look for them and others on&#13;
your bulletin boards for available&#13;
timesand meetings.&#13;
What difference do these have on&#13;
ourlives and the community? (All the&#13;
difference in the world it appears).&#13;
The clubs facilitate and strengthen&#13;
speaking out for your interests and&#13;
theinterests of the choices available to&#13;
thosewhose words are not heard. One&#13;
person can start a movement in&#13;
thought and amplify it by using an&#13;
existing club or creating a group of&#13;
same minded persons. Your interests&#13;
and concerns are felt by others, put&#13;
them together and create action from&#13;
thepotential of the surn.&#13;
Clubs are also a great influence in&#13;
that their members' set standards they&#13;
are examl?les for others to follow. Our&#13;
campus, Its cleanliness and effectivenessineducating&#13;
are a product of this.&#13;
Hseems Parkside is our responsibility&#13;
asit is responsible for our education.&#13;
Quotes from people in ours:&#13;
"Adela Lazano: I joined because I&#13;
want a say in things ...!want to be able&#13;
tovoice my concern. I don't want to be&#13;
kept in the dark. ..! also am tired of&#13;
bemg afraid to speak out for something&#13;
I believe is truly wrong."&#13;
The Ranger, Pg3, Jan 25,2001 "Join&#13;
student senate and voice your opinion"&#13;
"Talk Radio deals frankly with&#13;
Amencan society, the Media, and the&#13;
directimpact it can have on individuals."&#13;
The Ranger, Pg.10, Feb.1S, 2001&#13;
"Drama Dept. Presents Talk Radio&#13;
Feb.23-Mar.2"&#13;
"Mitch Sneed: Its' easy for everybody-me&#13;
included to do our jobs and&#13;
go home but our goal is to make a difference.&#13;
We want to continue to&#13;
add~ess issues ...and give people an&#13;
outlme of something that will help&#13;
them in any way." _&#13;
" ,Kenosha News, Pg.AS, Feb.19, 2001&#13;
City editor wants news to "make a&#13;
difference" by Craig Swanson&#13;
The Ranger is a voice of our comm&#13;
f&#13;
umty. We are listening. Thank you&#13;
or your attention and time.&#13;
Student and reader of The Ranger&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Pedro Rodarte&#13;
Dear Editors,&#13;
.A recent issue of The Ranger contamed&#13;
what I believe to be an unfair&#13;
review of th~ recently released movie&#13;
Hanrubal. FITst, Jodie Foster's name&#13;
was spelled incorrectly in the review.&#13;
Second, not all sequels should be&#13;
Judged agamst their predecessors.&#13;
If one was to fairly judge Hannibal&#13;
against the award-winning The Silence&#13;
of the Lambs, Hannibal would have&#13;
had to contain the following:&#13;
1 ) Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling.&#13;
Early news reports claimed that Foster&#13;
turned down twenty million dollars to&#13;
star because she didn't agree with the&#13;
scripted ending or Harris' novel (which&#13;
contained Starling partaking in Lecter's&#13;
dinner after being drugged to the point&#13;
of insanity) while Hannibal producer&#13;
Dina De Laurentis now reports that&#13;
Foster refused to do the film for anything&#13;
less than a 20 million salary plus&#13;
half the film's profits. (It has made&#13;
more than three million dollars worldwide&#13;
in three weeks.) 2) Jonathan&#13;
Demme as the director. Every director&#13;
has their own style, and obviously the&#13;
style in TSOTL differs from what Ridley&#13;
Scott did in Hannibal. 3) A screenplay&#13;
by Ted Tally, rather than the&#13;
WHAT'S ON&#13;
YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English major&#13;
or aspiring journalist, and&#13;
have not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are you&#13;
waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your resume&#13;
that employers are looking&#13;
for - writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much more.&#13;
The Ranger News is now&#13;
hiring all positions for the&#13;
Spring 2001 semester. Stop&#13;
by the office, located across&#13;
from the Career Center in&#13;
lower Wyllie hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays from&#13;
noon to Ip.m. and are open&#13;
to all interested person~.&#13;
When you graduate,&#13;
what will you have .&#13;
to offer?&#13;
Mamet-Zailian screenplay that was&#13;
used. 4) A score by Howard Shore,&#13;
rather than the score by Hans Zimmer.&#13;
I personally believe the Zimmer score&#13;
to be vastly superior to Shore's. Only if&#13;
the entire cast and crew from TSOTL&#13;
had been assembled to shoot Hannibal&#13;
could the two movies be fairly compared.&#13;
and Leeter free to roam are vastly different.&#13;
A lot of what he does in his first&#13;
scene with Starling in the asylum ("...all&#13;
those tedious sticky fumblings in the&#13;
back seats of cars while all you could&#13;
think about was getting out, getting&#13;
anywhere, getting all the way to the FB-I.")&#13;
is meant to scare her, to freak her&#13;
out. People remember that scene, and&#13;
don't remember as much the ending&#13;
phone call, where he acts much more&#13;
like he does in Hannibal.&#13;
My advice: If you don't mind a little&#13;
gore, see the movie, and keep in mind&#13;
that a lot of it is more black comedy&#13;
than it is psychological thriller.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Molly Beecher&#13;
For the most part, Hannibal follows&#13;
Harris' novel directly (with the exception&#13;
of the ending). A few charactersare&#13;
missing, as well asp few trips down&#13;
Dr. Lecter's memory lane, but these are&#13;
details that make literature literature&#13;
and not a movie script. It would do a&#13;
viewer well to remember that TSOTL&#13;
was about Clarice Starling -Hannibal is&#13;
about Hannibal Lecter.&#13;
The author of The Ranger's&#13;
review also mentions that Julianne&#13;
Moore doesn't capture the innocent&#13;
and proud determination of Foster's&#13;
portrayal - she's not supposed&#13;
to. Starling in Hannibal is ten years&#13;
older and ten years wiser. Her&#13;
career with the Bureau hasn't been&#13;
what we'd like to believe it would&#13;
be after the events of TSOTL.&#13;
We also must remember that we&#13;
are seeing Lecter in a different light&#13;
than TSOTL. Lecter behind bars&#13;
HYPNOTIST FREDRICK \lINTERS&#13;
THURSDAY, MARCH 1 2001&#13;
8 PM UNION SQUARE&#13;
TICKETS CAN BE PURCHASED AT TIlE DOOR&#13;
FREE TO UV-PABKSIDESrubENIS V/ ID ANDCHILDREN UNDER12&#13;
52 GENERAL PUBUc. .&#13;
FREE PARKING IN TIlE UNION LOT.&#13;
sroNSJRED BY PARKSIDE ACIlVTIlES BOARD&#13;
Page 4 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside March 1, 2001&#13;
.,&#13;
Crouchin"i,llr, HiddllnDra,on:&#13;
ISit as good as the, sa, P&#13;
By Lyrm Garcia&#13;
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon has&#13;
been nominated for ten academy&#13;
awards, including Best Picture. At first I&#13;
was not really excited about seeing this&#13;
film, even though everyone Ispoke with&#13;
raved about it. As Ibegan watching the&#13;
film I was totally mesmerized by it. It&#13;
was absolutely fabulous! The movie has&#13;
English subtitles, but as the story progresses&#13;
Iforgot they were even there.&#13;
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon is the&#13;
story of two warriors (Yun-Fat Chow&#13;
and Michelle Yeoh) whose quest is to&#13;
recover a stolen special sword, the Green&#13;
Destiny. The hunt' to recover the sword&#13;
takes the viewer on a spellbinding journey&#13;
on rooftops and though tree branches.&#13;
Woo-ping Yuen, who also worked on&#13;
The Matrix, choreographed the fantastic&#13;
fight scenes.&#13;
I highly recommend seeing this&#13;
movie. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon is&#13;
the perfect date movie. It has magnificent&#13;
action for the men and breathtaking&#13;
romance for the ladies. Ihore that this&#13;
film takes home a lot 0 Academy&#13;
Awards because it definitely deserves&#13;
them.&#13;
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon has been nominated for ten academy awards&#13;
including Best Picture. '&#13;
TrJllhis for fun&#13;
By Sheree Homer&#13;
Ranger Fest is to be held on April&#13;
21st, from 12-4 pm in the student&#13;
union. It is a festival and open house&#13;
designed to reach out to the community.&#13;
School Spirit has been lower in the&#13;
last couple of years according to Chancellor&#13;
Keating. He thought a festival&#13;
would be a great way for students,&#13;
staff, and community to join together&#13;
and have some fun. This is the first&#13;
year that it has been ,called Ran(\er&#13;
Fest. In April of 1998 UW-Parkslde&#13;
held a sprmg Open House Festival.&#13;
This is also the first time it has been&#13;
funded. Ranger Fest hopes to have&#13;
much success, so it can return every&#13;
year.&#13;
John Rae Stevenson and Nicole&#13;
Sicuro ' are the chair people and have&#13;
worked hard on getting everything&#13;
ready. Student organizations and some&#13;
of the majors have already decided to&#13;
share in the fun by opening exhibits.&#13;
Some of the exhibits include an inflatable&#13;
sky dome similar to the planetarium,&#13;
an ocean bubble where people can&#13;
view the marine life of an ocean, a&#13;
water quality test, so the community&#13;
can test their water for lead and other&#13;
harmful ingredients, free blood pressure&#13;
screening, mocktail.&#13;
I' Pi Campus Entertainment Notes&#13;
. '. Hypno. tist Frederick Winters is back! Tonight, the .UW-Parkside&#13;
Activities Board presents the campus entertainer of the&#13;
year in an all new program. Come and watch or be part of&#13;
the show.It's free to students with a college 10 and just $2 for&#13;
community members 13 and older. Th.e sh&lt;?w takes place in&#13;
Union Square starting at 8 p.m. This IS gomg to be a great&#13;
show, one you won't want to miss!&#13;
• The UW-Parkside International Club presents the Pre-Spring&#13;
Break Jam 2001 tomorrow night, Friday, March 2. The doors&#13;
to the UW-Parkside Student Union open at 10 p.m. and the&#13;
party continues until 2 a.m. with OJ Doc B. Dress to impress!&#13;
Admission is $5 with a UW-Parkside 10, $7 for all others.&#13;
• A second matinee has been added for the Plays at Parkside&#13;
presentation of Eric Bogosian's "Talk Radio." This morning's&#13;
matinee is already sold- out and now a Friday 10 a.m, matinee&#13;
performance has been added. The play also will be held&#13;
Saturday at 4 p.m. and Friday and Saturday evenings at 7:30&#13;
p.m., in the Augie Wegner Studio Theatre. Tickets are $7 for&#13;
students, faculty, staff, and seniors; $10 for adults. Keep in&#13;
mind that seating is very limited, so you'll want to call DIane&#13;
Smith at ext. 2564 to reserve your seat!&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
v.I.P. Leadership Series presents ...&#13;
Serving on a Search and Screen&#13;
or other University Committee&#13;
by Claudia Mosley, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
Tuesday, March 6, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
~ 1,2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
VOt8 i-YES" lor United Council&#13;
Ilj'Jama E. Taylor, United Council of&#13;
UW StudentsPresident&#13;
Inthe upcoming student government&#13;
lecti()llS UW-Par1&lt;side students have&#13;
~eop~ty to continue support for&#13;
the nations oldest, largest,. and most&#13;
effectivestate student association. The&#13;
U ·ted Council of UW Students, found- tin1960, is Wisconsin's only statewid.e&#13;
studentadvocacy and ~arch orgaruzation.United&#13;
Council IS funded by a&#13;
studentreferendum with a mandatory&#13;
refundablefee of $1.35 per student per&#13;
semester,&#13;
So what does your $1.35 actually get&#13;
you?United Council employs eight fulltimestaff&#13;
members who advocate for&#13;
studentsat the UW System, state, and&#13;
Weral level. Through membership in&#13;
United Council, UW-Parkside students&#13;
are linked to other student leaders&#13;
statewide, and receive information,&#13;
guidance, research, and service on studentissues.All&#13;
United Council policy is&#13;
determinedby student delegates from&#13;
member campuses who meet regularly&#13;
totake positions on issues and clirect the&#13;
work of the staff.&#13;
UnitedCouncil is a national leader for&#13;
its work on federal financial aid and&#13;
vcter registration. Working with student&#13;
government associations from across&#13;
WISCOI1Sin and the nation, United Council&#13;
used grassroots support from students.&#13;
and parents-in addition to direct&#13;
lobbymg-to help increase federal financial&#13;
aid awards last year. And, because&#13;
student participation in the electoral&#13;
process is critical, United Council coordinated&#13;
a successful statewide, non-partisan&#13;
Students Vote 2000 campaign to&#13;
mvolve students through registration&#13;
education, and get-out-the-vote efforts. '&#13;
United Council regularly lobbies the&#13;
state legislature, the Governor's office&#13;
and the Board of Re~ents in a consistent&#13;
effort to control tuition increases and&#13;
increase financial aid programs. In the&#13;
1999-2001 Biennial Budget, United&#13;
Council successfully won a tuition&#13;
freeze for resident undergraduate students&#13;
in the 2000-2001 academic year,&#13;
with an additional $28 million in state&#13;
support to offset the tuition freeze and&#13;
ensure- the quality of a UW education.&#13;
United Council also successfully fought&#13;
for state funding for UW System's Plan&#13;
2008: Quality Through Diversity, academic&#13;
and career advising, libraries, and&#13;
increased state grant aid. With your help&#13;
United Council will have another successful&#13;
year securing funds from the legislature&#13;
for the UW System. With students&#13;
graduating tens of thousands of&#13;
dollars in debt, working to secure funding&#13;
for lower tuition and increased grant&#13;
Vote&#13;
UNITED COUNCIL&#13;
The nations Oldest, Largest, and Strongest State Student Organizations&#13;
"Yes"&#13;
March 7, 2001&#13;
Jc b s. Ma8larchin 'fiell8urer&#13;
Authorized and Paid for by United COUDeil of UW Studen18 Iee., sep&#13;
aid has never been more important.&#13;
United Council has always stressed&#13;
the importance of student voices in the&#13;
shared governance process of the UW&#13;
System. United Council has worked to&#13;
maintain and strengthen student control&#13;
of student fees, and has been a clearinghouse&#13;
of information and research on&#13;
student safety issues, including e-mail&#13;
privacy and the use of social security&#13;
numbers as student identification numbers.&#13;
Credit transfers, a headache for&#13;
many students in Wisconsin, have been&#13;
made easier through United Council's&#13;
work with UW System and the state Mgislature.&#13;
United Council continually opposes&#13;
legislation, which would discriminate&#13;
against student renters. Additionally,&#13;
United Council played an instrumental&#13;
role in defeating the Extra Credit Tax,&#13;
which would have increased tuition for&#13;
many students at UW-Parkside and&#13;
across the UW System.&#13;
United Council has spent 40 years of&#13;
its existence ensuring that students&#13;
enjoy the maximum benefit from their&#13;
educations. On March 7, remember to&#13;
support students and VOTE YESon the&#13;
United Council referendum. What more&#13;
could you want from a $1.35 investment?&#13;
Page 5&#13;
shortest&#13;
distance between&#13;
you and your&#13;
refund&#13;
Use IRS e-flle, specify Direct&#13;
Deposit to your OCCGuntand you&#13;
could get your tox refund bock in&#13;
as little as ten days. Ask ¥Gvr tox&#13;
preporer ror full detolls or visit&#13;
us at wwwJrs.gov&#13;
Page 6 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside March 1, 2001&#13;
Did YOU lorgel somelhing;J&#13;
By Amber Leigh Smith&#13;
We as Americans love to go out to&#13;
eat. The first date, before a movie,&#13;
after the game, mother's birthday, just&#13;
.a few of the occasions that cause us to&#13;
decide on a restaurant. We think very&#13;
carefully about the place, the time,&#13;
what we are going to wear, but rarely&#13;
do we think about the server who is&#13;
bringing our drinks and our dinners.&#13;
Let us take a few minutes to think&#13;
about what a server's job is like. Then&#13;
we may have more respect and more&#13;
patience for the people who are at the&#13;
heart of our meal, Then some of us&#13;
might think that it is not such an easy&#13;
job to have.&#13;
While it can be said that the general&#13;
public on the whole knows how to&#13;
act in a restaurant, it can also be said&#13;
that quite a few people leave their&#13;
manners in the car. Scenario one:&#13;
when a server approaches a table that&#13;
has just sat down she is required to&#13;
give them some basic information,&#13;
such as her name, the soup of the day,&#13;
and the special of the evening. While&#13;
most people politely listen, there are&#13;
others who are blurting out what they&#13;
want to drink before the server gets&#13;
half her name out. The guests have&#13;
just set the tone for the next hour and&#13;
a half. Beforethe customers have their&#13;
drinks in front of them they are considered&#13;
rude. Usually if someone is&#13;
rude, he or she will not tip well.&#13;
Servers live on tips and if they feel&#13;
that the tip they are going to receive is&#13;
most likely going to be inadequate&#13;
they will give minimum service. So&#13;
you're saying that everyone should&#13;
get good service regardless, right?&#13;
How would your job performance be&#13;
if your boss came to you and said that&#13;
he was going to take two dollars off&#13;
your hourly pay? Would you do the&#13;
best job you could do? This is exactly&#13;
how a server feels when they receive&#13;
less than the standard gratuity of fifteen&#13;
percent. Sure the server will take&#13;
your order and bring your food out to&#13;
you, but remember that soda you&#13;
were fO eager to get? You might want&#13;
to ration it because chances of getting&#13;
another. one are slim. Oh need&#13;
ketchup? Didn't you hear about the&#13;
shortage on that?&#13;
People like to feel that they are the&#13;
most important guests in the restaurant.&#13;
Servers enjoy doing their best to&#13;
make the guests feel this way. While&#13;
most guests understand that they are&#13;
not the server's only responsibility,&#13;
there are the exceptions. Let us imagine&#13;
a Friday night, all the tables are&#13;
full and there is a two hour waiting&#13;
list. A family of four has just been&#13;
seated at a table in the back of the dining&#13;
room. The waitress goes up to the&#13;
table and gives them her spiel, Then&#13;
she asks the question of the night:&#13;
"Can I get you folks something to&#13;
drink right away?" The parents&#13;
answer no problem, then the mother&#13;
asks the question that every server&#13;
dreads hearing; "Sally,honey, tell the&#13;
nice woman what you want to drink."&#13;
Why does the server cringe you ask?&#13;
Because she knows what is coming&#13;
next. The child's eyes go down and&#13;
the face becomes pressed against the&#13;
mother's side. Of course Sally is shy.&#13;
By this time the server is thinking of&#13;
about ten things that she needs to get&#13;
done. The man at table ten needs his&#13;
check, table four is ready to order,&#13;
tables six and eight are waiting on&#13;
food that should be ready at any time,&#13;
oh right, Sally still needs a soda, or&#13;
was it milk? Her mother is still trying&#13;
to get shy Sally to order. Now having&#13;
a child order for themselves is fine,&#13;
when the restaurant is slow. When the&#13;
restaurant is full the parents should&#13;
order. Would you want to be kept&#13;
waiting for someone's child?&#13;
Let me point out another situation&#13;
that happens all the time. A large&#13;
group of people, let us say fourteen,&#13;
has enjoyed dinner, drinks, dessert,&#13;
and coffee. When the check arrives&#13;
the party realizes that they forgot to&#13;
tell the man waiting on them that they&#13;
needed separate checks, Okay, you are&#13;
probably thinking no problem right?&#13;
Think about it. The waiter has to go&#13;
back and figure out what every single&#13;
person at the table had. What man&#13;
had how many drinks, what couple&#13;
had the steaks, and whose wife had&#13;
two desserts. Often the people that ate&#13;
the dinner can't remember what they&#13;
had to eat, but expect their server to&#13;
know. Would you be able to remember?&#13;
While the server may be able to&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES WITH&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
• Sports Writers&#13;
• Entertainment Editor&#13;
• Columnists&#13;
• Cartoonists&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Sarah or Brenda&#13;
at 595 2287. Meetings are&#13;
Mondays from&#13;
Noon-l p.m.&#13;
figure it out ins takin!,';away from the&#13;
time he should be usmg to check on&#13;
his other tables. If his other tables do&#13;
not receive good service they will not&#13;
tip well. To fix the mistake you made&#13;
the server is losing money. So please&#13;
remember to ask for separa te checks&#13;
ahead of time. If you should forget&#13;
realize that it was your mistake and&#13;
have everyone throw in what they&#13;
think they owe. Next time you will be&#13;
sure to remember.&#13;
Anyone who has ever worked in&#13;
the food service industry will be the&#13;
first to tell you that not every night&#13;
runs smoothly. The kitchen falls&#13;
behind, causing the food to take a&#13;
long time getting to the table. Servers&#13;
have bad days and may even drop&#13;
things. Of course on days like this the&#13;
customers will get angry. Most behave&#13;
in a calm rational manner, but once&#13;
again there is the extreme exception.&#13;
We have all seen it, the angry man&#13;
banging his fist on the table, yelling at&#13;
the person attempting to wait on him,&#13;
basically making a scene. When people&#13;
act in this manner their complaints&#13;
fall on deaf ears. Sure management&#13;
will do what they can to calm&#13;
this person down, but later in the&#13;
evening the staff will have a good&#13;
laugh 'at the offender's performance.&#13;
Oh, and the people sitting around the&#13;
gentleman trying to eat their dinners,&#13;
they will feel bad for the waitress,and&#13;
think of the man yelling as a foolwith&#13;
a lack of control in handling his anger.&#13;
The examples shown here arejusta&#13;
few. While they may seem a bit&#13;
extreme they happen at some level&#13;
every day. We generally do not think&#13;
of how we are coming across to the&#13;
employees of the establishment, but&#13;
we need to. The people who work in&#13;
the food service industry have high&#13;
paced, high stress jobs. We as consumers&#13;
need to respect them and the&#13;
service that they are providing. While&#13;
not all servers are good at their jobs&#13;
we need to remember that they are&#13;
still people and people deserve&#13;
respect and common courtesy. Still&#13;
need ketchup? You might want to run&#13;
to your car and make sure you didn't&#13;
forget your manners.&#13;
-¥-&#13;
~)~~ ,1t1r~5T&#13;
Tracy Knofla of High Impact Training&#13;
resenting...&#13;
-:tsPiration &amp; Humor&#13;
Divide and conqu ~on~your Student Organlzatlonl&#13;
Your Invited to atten .aJlcof;LttUtJoliowing leadership sessions:&#13;
w·;F "t ,sui\din, er ..a" 47&#13;
,&gt; R1ll\g be""&#13;
_ 5~30p.lII. d\5C\l5S\I\g \ld~&#13;
s\on on tean\b\l&#13;
seve 5es&#13;
to cond\lct nstt'ated•&#13;
and whY \\\ be del'l\O&#13;
.,:;act\V\t\e§ w&#13;
"~ ... -&#13;
"';,~-.:::~:;:2::~~~:"fl~" "'anage__ ~&#13;
best lIIot. rn about dlffe - 9i30~~", I..'*-oo._~.---.&amp;"&#13;
Yate and rent lead'~-~ ~ I.outaae&#13;
how to :'~;:-:'~icate W.thiW';::"''''''' yO(f. CftIt ..&#13;
organization 8et~~.""&#13;
-otion an :PublicityTips06&#13;
0... 12:30IiIII.,Union 1&#13;
sday, March 8, 11 a.m. - tion a~dpublicity. See lot.&#13;
differenCes betw'een p1'omol&#13;
advet'tlsln9 tot' new \deas.&#13;
pies and look at cornme1'cl~zation'S publicity noticed.&#13;
n neW tips to get your organ&#13;
This is your opportunity to gain new skills, prepare&#13;
career InYOlvelllent, improve your organization. and r&#13;
Spo_red"by Student Actlvltl_, PAR, soc, Acad ..... lc St." Council, Residence Life, De.n of .t...~&#13;
;;..&#13;
March 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Page 7&#13;
uw·p From A 10 Z: A Campus in Rhyme&#13;
. A is for the Architects who built this&#13;
school'sfoundation.&#13;
B is for the Bachelors Degree, which&#13;
leads to graduation.&#13;
C is for our Chancellor; his name is&#13;
Jack Keating.&#13;
D is for our Dean of Students; don't&#13;
you~ caught cheating!&#13;
. E 15 for Education, which is the main&#13;
reasonwe come here.&#13;
F is for the Friendships made, and&#13;
To Mv Parents&#13;
ByPoonamdeep Sandhu&#13;
In verse in rhyme these lines sublime;&#13;
May reach my parents at home in good&#13;
time;&#13;
Oh my parents; Ur touch makes me&#13;
feel so warm; I always want u close to&#13;
me;U can help me to reach my destiny;&#13;
I am lucky to have parents like u; U are&#13;
lovingand so much caring too; I pray to&#13;
God that u may live long; And I keep listening&#13;
to u like a sweet song; My life&#13;
without u is meaningless; Like without a&#13;
kept from year to year. .&#13;
G is for Growth through. programs&#13;
and classes.&#13;
H is for Homework of which some&#13;
instructors give masses.&#13;
I is for Inner Loop Road where students&#13;
walk, bike, and run.&#13;
J is for JR, the street leading back to&#13;
Highway 31.&#13;
K is for Karaoke, in the Rec Center&#13;
every Friday night.&#13;
L is for Lectures; take good notes and&#13;
you'll be all right.&#13;
M is for Major, something you can't&#13;
graduate without.&#13;
N is for Newspaper, come check The&#13;
king we can't play chess; U are the ones&#13;
whom I love the most; The status of parents&#13;
is like a dignified post; I am proud&#13;
to be ur daughter dear; It's u who understand&#13;
me without reserve and fear; To&#13;
have u as my parents; I feel so glad; All&#13;
strength in me is given by u; U guide&#13;
and teach me what to do; I am thankful&#13;
to u for being so kind; So while doing&#13;
my work I keep u in mind; The trust u&#13;
have in me; I'll never let that trust to&#13;
Ranger out.&#13;
o is for Outer Loop Road, which&#13;
encircles. the campus just the same.&#13;
P is for Petrifying Springs Park; from&#13;
her is where we got our name.&#13;
Q is for pop Quizzes; get ready for the&#13;
test!&#13;
R is for the Rangers-the team that is&#13;
the best. Woo Hoof&#13;
S is for Success in college, earning a&#13;
degree.&#13;
T is for-Tuition, for college is not free.&#13;
U is for Undergraduate, the first four&#13;
years, or for some, five.&#13;
V is for Visitors; schedule an appointment&#13;
at x2355.&#13;
W is for WISconsin-the state where&#13;
Parkside is alive.&#13;
X is for the phone extensions on campus-preceded&#13;
by 595.&#13;
Y is for Yippee! I graduated! All right!&#13;
break; I can do anything; Oh my parents&#13;
for ur sake; U do so much for us right&#13;
now; There will be time when we will&#13;
repay u; I promise that we will do our&#13;
best; And you'll say "WE ARE PROUD&#13;
OFU"&#13;
Z is for Zzzz (I'm sleeping)-that's&#13;
enough studying for tonight!&#13;
By Karen Leann Malonee&#13;
Remembering&#13;
the Homeland&#13;
By Poonamdeep Sandhu&#13;
The nostalgic memories take my&#13;
breath away; Remembering the great&#13;
time spent back home; Gone are those&#13;
days with the flashing of time; Never to&#13;
come back again; I wish, they leave the&#13;
footprints behind; Thus' refreshing my&#13;
thoughts and mind; The love, care and&#13;
affection of friends; Enriched the life&#13;
with memorable events; Still, they are&#13;
lively and fresh in mind; And appear as&#13;
new as an ocean tide; Often, they make&#13;
me struggle with my thoughts; Flattering&#13;
and making their own huge place; I&#13;
really long for those days to come back;&#13;
Sure I am they will; When I'll go back to&#13;
my homeland.&#13;
Dress To Irnpressl&#13;
WeReserve the Right:&#13;
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Securit:!d In Full EFFectl&#13;
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March 1, 2001&#13;
PageS The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
China Tour&#13;
a summer trip; a revelation Students in action&#13;
By Kelly Ishihara, President of&#13;
S.LA. By Tyrone A Payton&#13;
The 5th Annual Summer China Tour&#13;
has been set and planned for [une 25th&#13;
to July 8th. As usual, Sociology Professor&#13;
George Wang, a native of China, has&#13;
promptly sponsored the tour. The trip&#13;
includes stops to Beijing, Xian, Guilin,&#13;
Shanghai, Suzhou, and Hangzhou, with&#13;
. plenty of accompanying English speaking&#13;
guides for translation. Also, there&#13;
can be arrangements set for those students&#13;
who wish to visit Hong Kong.&#13;
The trip is offered as a three-credit&#13;
course for either international studies or&#13;
sociology and anthropology. Plus, the&#13;
trip is available to community members&#13;
as a learning eXJ?erience. There are a&#13;
series of orientation lectures that precede&#13;
the tour, which will be held Tuesdays&#13;
and Thursdays from 6 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
on May 8 to the 24th. Professor Wang&#13;
hopes that these lectures teach background&#13;
information on Chinese politics,&#13;
changing economy, the evolving education&#13;
system, family institution and tradition,&#13;
and population control. He also&#13;
hopes to team students some basic Chinese&#13;
for communication, traveling etiquette,&#13;
and a simple knowledge of Chinese&#13;
customs.&#13;
From the six stops, Professor Wang's&#13;
children at the Women and Children's&#13;
Shelter. We are also asking for volunteers&#13;
to do some babysitting.&#13;
In major Universities award ceremonies&#13;
are held to recognize academic&#13;
work on campus. Since U.W.t'arkside&#13;
is so small we feel we can reach&#13;
this goal through the production of a&#13;
journal.&#13;
Our first journal is going to be&#13;
copied and should be available for a&#13;
low price some time after Spring&#13;
Break. It is our first attempt at taking&#13;
the best of student's academic work in&#13;
the classroom and getting them recognized&#13;
for their work. Our first journal&#13;
is entitled "Through Others Eyes."&#13;
However we are going to change the&#13;
name. We will also ask the professor&#13;
to provide a summary about the subject&#13;
matter and his/her intentions on&#13;
the assignment.&#13;
We will give full credit to each&#13;
writer who chooses to be recognized.&#13;
Not every class, or every student will&#13;
get an opportunity to be published,&#13;
but it may be likely that you will. If&#13;
you are interested in participating or&#13;
want to learn more about S.r.A. you&#13;
can contact me at:&#13;
ishihara@yahoo.com.&#13;
Have you heard about the new dub&#13;
on campus? Our main goal since we&#13;
began this spring is to get some recognition&#13;
for our journal and to recruit&#13;
members. The Ideas and motivations&#13;
for putting together s.LA. came from&#13;
. a modest Eng1ish professor on campus.&#13;
Last semester she had students&#13;
participate in community service&#13;
work, but we were having problems&#13;
advertising since we had no sponsor. I&#13;
didn't know what I was getting into at&#13;
first, but since I had an interest in the&#13;
importance of community, and a&#13;
desire to be a leader on campus I was&#13;
happy to get the club going.&#13;
We differ from the Outreach club&#13;
because of our intentions of putting&#13;
together a journal to recognize student's&#13;
academic achievement. However,&#13;
we would like to work with&#13;
them in the future. Throughout the&#13;
semester we will be collecting children's&#13;
books for the Community&#13;
Action Agency and The Cops and&#13;
Kids Reading Program.&#13;
We are also collecting blankets for&#13;
newborn babies at Kenosha Hospital.&#13;
This one you may be familiar with&#13;
from last semesfer. We also need volunteers&#13;
to work as tutors for yOilllg&#13;
tour will start off in Beijing, the capital&#13;
of China, so students can leam first&#13;
hand about the process of Chinese politics.&#13;
From there, the city of Xian, an&#13;
ancient caJ?ital of China, will emphasize&#13;
Chinese history and integrated culture&#13;
and religion. The next stop is the scenic&#13;
Guilin, which is a center of tourism in&#13;
China, and then on to the most modem&#13;
city of China, Shanghai, where students&#13;
will learn about economic development.&#13;
At the last two stops will be Suzhou and&#13;
Hangzhou, relatively small in China&#13;
but DOth are considered heavily popu:&#13;
lated by global standards. These two&#13;
cities will emphasize the importance of&#13;
Chinese tradition and family institution.&#13;
These six tour stops offer a wide variety&#13;
of Chinese development, which is the&#13;
main focus of Professor Wang's trip, and&#13;
it is what he hopes students will take&#13;
back home with them.&#13;
To all students who seem interested&#13;
in an excursion to China, either attend&#13;
the orientation series or call Professor&#13;
Wang for more information. His office&#13;
number is (262) 595-2520. Also, Laurie&#13;
Odegaard in the UW-Parkside Center&#13;
for International Studies can provide&#13;
information at (262) 595-2701.&#13;
Deferring taxes with&#13;
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March 1, 2001 Page 9&#13;
Helping Oul&#13;
at hOlDe&#13;
ByTyrone A Payton&#13;
It's been two weeks since the ParksideRanger&#13;
published an article about&#13;
Dr.Lenny Klaver's transfer from Athletic&#13;
Director to Assistant Vice Chancellorof&#13;
University relations. It's been&#13;
almost five years since he began at&#13;
Parkside, and now, with his new position,&#13;
he hopes to make the school&#13;
grow stronger.&#13;
One of his first endeavors was to&#13;
establish a new academic program in&#13;
athletics with the addition of a Sports&#13;
Management Certificate and a Wellness&#13;
Certificate. Also, this past fall,&#13;
they started the Sports Management&#13;
major.Another focus of Dr. Klaver's is&#13;
his involvement in the Great Lakes&#13;
ValleyConference, which he has supported&#13;
in financing from his first days&#13;
here.&#13;
His personal inclusion in the&#13;
fundraising of the GLVC has helped&#13;
keep it here at Parkside, which has in&#13;
tum, given our athletic department a&#13;
boost in competition, as the GLVC is&#13;
division II of the NCAA. Although he&#13;
admits the program still needs&#13;
progress, Dr. Klaver is pleased with its&#13;
effortand future direction for the University.&#13;
Other pursuits of Dr. Klaver are the&#13;
fact that with his new position, he is&#13;
now the acting liaison between University&#13;
Relations and government&#13;
officials. At this command, he hopes&#13;
that he'll be able to bring funding to&#13;
the University in its endeavor to sponsor&#13;
the b&lt;;nefits of higher education.&#13;
This position also entails that he must&#13;
manage and maintain Parkside's&#13;
home page. The most important&#13;
emphasis that Dr. Klaver wants to&#13;
focus on is the ability for students to&#13;
navigate on the home page. He also&#13;
plans on manufacturing a new design&#13;
and belter procedures and programs&#13;
so the home page can operate more&#13;
cleanly.&#13;
One interesting planned addition is&#13;
the addendum of portals for the Parkside&#13;
registered student. These portals&#13;
will act as the students' personal page&#13;
reference for all of their school activities&#13;
and business at Parkside. Hopefully,&#13;
all of these changes will be operational&#13;
by fall, for it is significant to&#13;
the school that the integrated marketmg&#13;
of the school's communication is&#13;
as efficient as it can be for the beginning&#13;
of each semester. To quote Dr.&#13;
Klaver, "Our main poal is to recruit&#13;
and retain students.'&#13;
With these future plans, Dr. Klaver&#13;
hopes that the school will be able to&#13;
expand in its academic and athletic&#13;
departments. With this new position&#13;
as Assistant Vice Chancellor of University&#13;
Relations, Dr. Klaver expects&#13;
that students on campus should anticipate&#13;
an easier way to communicate&#13;
and integrate with all operations here&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The. Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
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Page 10&#13;
March 1, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside -&#13;
Parkside students travel to Costa Rica&#13;
By Ruyayeem Rashid&#13;
Normally the academic calendar&#13;
follows the in the sequence of fall,&#13;
sprin(\, and summer. But this year&#13;
Parkside has offered Winterim classes&#13;
for the 2000-2001school year. Winterim&#13;
Classes ranged from various disciplines&#13;
like biology, chemistry, geology&#13;
and english. Most of these classes are&#13;
from one to two credits only. One particular&#13;
class took a field trip to Costa&#13;
Rica.&#13;
One student, Tom Overacker, registered&#13;
for the class and summarized the&#13;
whole experience as wonderful. So&#13;
wonderful that he said, "1 will at some&#13;
time definitely travel back to Costa&#13;
Rica again!"&#13;
When asked why he signed up for&#13;
the class, he said, "1 've always enjoyed&#13;
traveling and have never had the&#13;
opportunity to do international traveling.&#13;
What better time to go some place&#13;
warm than right in the middle of winter.&#13;
I've never really seen volcanoes or&#13;
the rain forest, plus 1 wanted to start&#13;
t gaining a wider view of different cultures.&#13;
All that is ip addition to wanting&#13;
to study first hand the geology and&#13;
natural history of the region."&#13;
There was a structured outline that&#13;
Overacker and the rest of the class had&#13;
to follow. The purpose was to cover a&#13;
large portion of the country in a relatively&#13;
short period of 13 days.&#13;
Before going to Costa Rica, Overacker&#13;
spent 16 hours of classroom preparation&#13;
learning a general overview of&#13;
the geology and biology of the region.&#13;
In addition to the 16 hours of classroom&#13;
preparation, he had to select a&#13;
topic and do independent research. He&#13;
choose to study the volcano "Rincon&#13;
de la Vieja". Other preparations for the&#13;
trip included a visit to the International&#13;
Clinic to obtain vaccinations for&#13;
Hepitus A, Typhoid Fever and Milaria.&#13;
He also had to obtain a US passport.&#13;
A typical day in Costa Rica included&#13;
the students waking up early in the&#13;
morning to a warm day and a breakfast&#13;
of rice and beans. After breakfast, the&#13;
class would travel to a new and ·exciting&#13;
place, have lunch, explore another&#13;
part of the region and return to dinner.&#13;
In addition to traveling various parts&#13;
. of Costa Rica, Overacker spent two&#13;
weeks seeing and taking pictures of&#13;
things you would normally see in an&#13;
explorer's magazine like Natural Geographic.&#13;
.&#13;
Some of the most memorable parts&#13;
of the trip for Overacker included a&#13;
day at the beach, the trip to Monta&#13;
Verde, sunset horseback riding, and&#13;
several walks thraugh the topical rain&#13;
forest.&#13;
Very Involved at Pqrkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents ...&#13;
Successful Transitioning&#13;
for Student Organizations&#13;
by Stephanie Sirovatka-!VarshaU, Student Activities Office&#13;
Tuesday, March 20, 2001&#13;
3:00 P.illo Union 106&#13;
Sponsored by Studem Activities ""&#13;
Tom Overocker (pictured back row, left) shown with his Winterlm class In Costa Rica.&#13;
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(2621 657-8200&#13;
Page 11&#13;
March I, 2001 The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside .&#13;
-&#13;
POLICE BEAT' ~f~&#13;
02/16101&#13;
InC. #01-146 Vandalism/Disorderly&#13;
Conduct/Fire Equipment&#13;
rarrpering, Ranger HalL 3&#13;
a.m.:investigation resulted in&#13;
a student cited for vandalism&#13;
to a door and disorderly conduct.&#13;
A fire detector had been&#13;
disconnected from the ceiling&#13;
wires and a citation was also&#13;
issued for fire safety-fire&#13;
detection/equipment tampering.&#13;
Inc #01-147 Disorderly Conduct/Obstructing,&#13;
Ranger Hall&#13;
entrance, 3:03 a.m. :officer&#13;
answering a complaint. from a&#13;
housing RA, cited a student&#13;
for underage drinking.&#13;
Inc #01-048 Fire Alarm, COIlUll.&#13;
Arts building, 8: 12 a. m,:&#13;
officers answering a reported&#13;
alarm checked the building but&#13;
could find no signs of smoke&#13;
or fire.&#13;
Inc #01-149 Parking EnforcementTow,&#13;
Greenquist Dock, 9: 29&#13;
a.m.. vehicle illegally parked&#13;
which had received prior tow&#13;
warnings was ci ted and towed.&#13;
A records check revealed driver&#13;
was wanted on an outstanding&#13;
warrant. Driver posted&#13;
bond and was released.&#13;
Inc #01-150 Medical Assist,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1:20 p.m.:&#13;
subject having a seizure was&#13;
transported to Kenosha Memorial&#13;
Hospital by Kenosha Med 5.&#13;
Inc #01-151 Graffiti, university&#13;
Apartments, 4:32 p.m.:&#13;
graffiti, vulgar in nature,&#13;
was found on a bulletin board.&#13;
02117/01&#13;
Inc #01-152 Security Alarm, Wyllie&#13;
Hall, 8:43 a.m.: officer&#13;
~esponding to an alarm found&#13;
1t had been set off accidentally&#13;
by a student worker.&#13;
Inc #01-153 Harassment/Telephone,&#13;
University Apartments,&#13;
11:40 a.m. :student reported&#13;
receiving threatening calls&#13;
from another student. Case&#13;
Pending.&#13;
02/18/01&#13;
Inc #01-154 Traffic Violation,&#13;
:'Y1lill,IIJI _&#13;
CTHE, East of STH 31, 4:19&#13;
p.m.: driver was issued a&#13;
&lt;;:itation for speeding 98 mph&#13;
ln a 45 mph zone.&#13;
02/19/01&#13;
Inc #01-155 State Property&#13;
Theft, Ranger Hall, 9:18 a.m.:&#13;
student reported university&#13;
keys had been stolen. Case&#13;
pending further investigation.&#13;
Inc #01-156 Traffic Violation,&#13;
8TH 31, South of CTHJR, 4:11&#13;
p.m.: driver was cited for&#13;
passing in a no passing zone.&#13;
Inc #01-157 Traffic Violation,&#13;
923 CTHG, 4:30 p.m.: driver&#13;
going at a high rate of speed&#13;
was stopped by a UPPSofficer.&#13;
Investigation revealed the&#13;
driver's license had been suspended.&#13;
Citations were issued&#13;
for operating after suspension&#13;
and' failure to fasten seatbelt-driver.&#13;
2/20/01&#13;
Inc #01-158 Traffic Violation,&#13;
Hwy. 31 at Hwy. E, 2:01 a.m.:&#13;
UPPSofficer stopped a driver&#13;
who had continued through a&#13;
red stop light. Investigation&#13;
revealed driver had no valid&#13;
driver's license. A citation&#13;
was issued for that offense&#13;
and also for failure to obey&#13;
traffic signal in a construction&#13;
zone.&#13;
Inc #01-159 Traffic Violation, '&#13;
5200 Block of CTH E, 3:24&#13;
p.m.: driver traveling at high&#13;
rate of speed was stopped.&#13;
Investigation revealed driver&#13;
had no current driver's&#13;
license. A citation was issued&#13;
for operating with an expired&#13;
driver's license and a yerbal&#13;
warning given for speeding.&#13;
Inc #01-160 Unauthorized Presence,&#13;
Wyllie 3320, 8:29 a.m.:&#13;
employee· reported evidence&#13;
that someone had entered her&#13;
office without consent. No&#13;
suspects at this time.&#13;
,02/22/01&#13;
Inc #01-161 Actual Fire, Greenquist&#13;
108, 1:30 p.m.: officers&#13;
responding to a reported fire&#13;
found it had been caused by a&#13;
flask which exploded when it&#13;
was washed with acetone. The&#13;
Risk Management Officer was&#13;
also called to the scene.&#13;
Investigation pending contact&#13;
with lah workers.&#13;
Inc #01-162 Controlled Substances,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 4:37&#13;
p.m.. officer responded to a&#13;
reported marijuana odor coming&#13;
from a room. Resident gave&#13;
consent for the officer to&#13;
enter and turned over a small&#13;
quanti ty of marijuana with a&#13;
larger bag found in the subj&#13;
ect 's side pocket. Citation&#13;
was issued for possession of&#13;
marijuana and underage possession&#13;
of alcohoL&#13;
Inc #01-163 Traffic&#13;
Violation/Warrant Pickup, CTH&#13;
G at OUter Loop Road, 7: 35&#13;
p.m.: driver who went through&#13;
a stop sign was st.opped by&#13;
UPPS officer. Citation for&#13;
failure/improper stop at stop&#13;
sign was issued along with a&#13;
citation for operating while&#13;
suspended (1st offense) .&#13;
Investigation revealed there&#13;
wa&amp; an active warrant on the&#13;
subject through a local police&#13;
agency for contempt of court.&#13;
Subject was turned over to the&#13;
Sturtevant Police Department.&#13;
Inc #01-164 Disorderly Conduct,&#13;
Sports &amp; Activity Center, 8:05&#13;
p.m.: officer responded to a&#13;
report of a subject who had&#13;
punched and broken an electronic&#13;
scoreboard. Subject who&#13;
had broken the scoreboard was&#13;
bleeding from cuts on his hand&#13;
and he was transported to&#13;
Aurora Medical Center for&#13;
treatment by Kenosha Med Unit&#13;
5. A ci tation was issued for&#13;
disorderly conduct and will be&#13;
referred to the dean of students.&#13;
Subject stated he was&#13;
willing to make restitution&#13;
for the damage.&#13;
Inc #01-165 Criminal Damage to&#13;
propertY-S~te, University&#13;
Apartments, 10: 11 p.m.: student&#13;
filed a complaint against&#13;
another student who threw a&#13;
beer bottle and broke a bedroom&#13;
window. Incident pending&#13;
further investigation.&#13;
02/23/01&#13;
Inc #01-166 Disorderly Conduct/Underage&#13;
Drinking Violation,&#13;
Ranger HalL 2: 42 a .m, :&#13;
two students were issued citations&#13;
for undcraqe drinking&#13;
(1st offense) and another student&#13;
given a citation for disorderly&#13;
conduct after 'creating&#13;
a scene.&#13;
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'''Page 12 March 1, 2001&#13;
ellS (fIEDS&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
For a limited time only! The Ranger&#13;
News will print your student classified&#13;
ads free of charge. Forms are available&#13;
at the newsstand in front of the library&#13;
and between Wyllie and Greenquist&#13;
Hall. Call 595-2287 for more information.&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
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Come ride with us.&#13;
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(262) 681-2964.&#13;
Chess?!&#13;
• For the novice to the expert. Inquire&#13;
with Dennis at 605-7046 to start a club&#13;
next semester.&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being offered by the&#13;
students. from Student Technology&#13;
Corporation. Tutonng n the following&#13;
areas of computer related software is&#13;
available: Microsoft Office, Using the&#13;
Internet Effectively; E-mail and Creatmg&#13;
Web Pages. Tutoring will be by&#13;
appomtment. To schedule your&#13;
appointment, call Bob or Chris at 595-&#13;
2790.&#13;
• Enjoy working with kids? Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District's 21st Century&#13;
Community Learning Centers are&#13;
looking for Activity leaders, Instructors,&#13;
&amp; Tutors for paid after school&#13;
hours. If interested, please call Gail&#13;
Netzer 262-654-6200 or 262-&lt;;53-5923&#13;
• Do you enjoy working with children?&#13;
, Would you like to earn extra money?&#13;
Apply now for a childcare position at&#13;
NTC GreatLakes. Call 847-688-2110&#13;
Ext... 103 or apply online af'&#13;
www.ntcmwr.com&#13;
• Summer Camp Counselors Wan~.&#13;
Friendly Pines Camp, in the cool&#13;
mountains of Prescott, AZ, is hiring&#13;
staff for the 2001 season. May 27-July&#13;
29. Prograrn offers horseback riding,&#13;
water-skiing, rock climbing, fishing,&#13;
crafts, sports, and more. Competitive&#13;
salary. For app/info call 520/445-2128&#13;
or email us at info@friendlypines.com.&#13;
Download an application at our website!&#13;
www.friendlypines.com.&#13;
The Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
ApartmentRenting.com&#13;
• FREE online college apartment search.&#13;
Ranked #1 apartment site for college&#13;
students. EARN CASH, be an ApartmentRenting.com&#13;
campus representative.&#13;
Wantedl&#13;
• Spring Breakers! Cancun, Bahamas,&#13;
florida, Jamaica and Mazatlan. Call&#13;
Sun Coast Vacations for a free&#13;
brochure and ask how you can organize&#13;
a small group and eat, drink, travel&#13;
free and earn cash! Call 1-888-777-&#13;
4642 or e-mail sales®Suncoastvacations.com.&#13;
Spring Break!&#13;
• Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Free Food,&#13;
Drinks and Parties! Cancun, Jamaica,&#13;
Bahamas, Mazatlan and Florida. Travel&#13;
Free and Earn Cash! Do it on the&#13;
Web! Go to StudentCity.com or call&#13;
800-293-1443'£or info.&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Jamaica, Cancun, Florida, Barbados,&#13;
Bahamas, Padre.Free Meals Free&#13;
Drinks and Up to $100 room' credit&#13;
Call 1-800-426-1710 for special weeks&#13;
or go to: www.sunsplashtours.com&#13;
SPRING BREAK 2001&#13;
• Hiring On-Campus Reps, SELL TRIPS,&#13;
EARN CASH, GO FREE!, Student&#13;
Travel Services, America's # 1 Student&#13;
Tour Operator. Jamaica, Mexico,&#13;
Bahamas, Europe, Florida. 1-800-648-&#13;
4849.&#13;
www.gospringbreak.com&#13;
www.rbcisfree.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped and jetted.&#13;
$2500 aBO. Call (262) 878-0769 after 6&#13;
p.m. or page (262) 487"()785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door loaded&#13;
metallic blue. Take over le'ase payments&#13;
or buyout. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262) 487"()785.&#13;
1987 Mazda 626&#13;
• V42:0 engine, Runs great! New brakes.&#13;
Asking $950 aBO. Call Ashi at (home)&#13;
551-7431 or (work) 595-2705.&#13;
1991 Ford F-150&#13;
• Must Sell! $4,000 or best offer. Call 884-&#13;
6812 and ask for Jeremy&#13;
1988 Pontiac 6000&#13;
• Maroon four door, four cylinder,&#13;
103'000 rru, mtenor / exterior ill good&#13;
condition, runs great, new tires,&#13;
exhaust, and alternator. Complete&#13;
maintenance record Asking $1,500&#13;
aBO. Call 595-2974 and leave a message.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact Michelle&#13;
Wegner at 595-2011 or Rosearm Mason&#13;
at 595-2606, or stop by the Career Center,&#13;
Wyllie 0173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant at Vets&#13;
Place - Southern Center •&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager with&#13;
intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly) homeless vets&#13;
with program policies and procedures.&#13;
• Schedule residents for group and individual&#13;
counseling sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case plan&#13;
reviews.&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings for case&#13;
plan changes, suspensions or disCharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison to newsletter&#13;
publishing committee.&#13;
Public Information and Coordination&#13;
Assistant at Vets Place - Southern&#13;
Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical staff including&#13;
contracted professionals with the&#13;
compilation, layout, printing, and distribution&#13;
of quarterly newsletters and&#13;
program brochures.&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles regarding&#13;
veterans and homelessness or other&#13;
concerns, and assist resident to&#13;
improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assist in the coordination of agencies&#13;
and programs serving the homeless&#13;
populations in Racine County. 'Assist&#13;
the Homeless Assistance Coalition in&#13;
arrangmg meetings, mail notices&#13;
record notes of meetings and decisi~&#13;
and develop a generic brochure to&#13;
advance the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• Interview prospective foster parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into licensed&#13;
homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiterl&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public through&#13;
employe~s, public service groups,&#13;
commuruty groups, etc.&#13;
• Present to pubic service organizations&#13;
and community groups. '&#13;
• Create new material (i.e, new!faper&#13;
advertisements) to best highlight the&#13;
need of foster parents.&#13;
• Organize foster family activities for&#13;
retention of homes.&#13;
Department of Corrections - Assistant&#13;
to Probationl&#13;
Parole Agent&#13;
• Accompany agents on home visits and&#13;
to court.&#13;
• Assist with interviewing, taking statements,&#13;
conducting assessments and&#13;
intake work.&#13;
• Help with preparation of reports.&#13;
Career BOYS&amp;.GIRLSCLUB&#13;
in Caring&#13;
. The Boys &amp; Girls Club of Kenosha has the&#13;
following open employment positions:&#13;
Program Director- Immediate, full time opening for person to develop progr~ms&#13;
for yo~th ages 6 -17 in an educational and recreational setting. Supervisory&#13;
Skills, educational background d .&#13;
d&#13;
. an experience working with youth of diverse bac k·&#13;
groun s are desired Hou bast . rs are asicany Man -Fri, 1-9 and every third Sat., 9:30-4:30.&#13;
Program Coordinator- 1m or t I II . .&#13;
h I&#13;
. me ra e, u tim e opening for person to oversee after&#13;
sc 00 educational and roc tl I&#13;
y rea lana program. Hours are basically Mon -Fri 11-7.&#13;
Volunteer Coordinator-10 1"5h unteers. Flexible hours. - ours a week to recruit, screen and monitor vc 1-&#13;
Physical Education Sp 1 I' t P . . . .' . ec a IS· art time position to develop physical and recreational&#13;
activities for youth 6&#13;
day) 2 8 d S&#13;
ages -17. Hours are basically Mon -Fri (ott one week-&#13;
, - an at, 9:30-4.&#13;
Technology Specialist P rt tt . - a nne position to develop and implement techno logy&#13;
programs for youth ag 6 17 8 and Sat, 9:30-4 es - . Hours are basically Mon-Fri (off one weekday), 2-&#13;
Arts Specialist- Part tim T&#13;
(fine arts music d . . e POSIIon to develop and implement arts programs&#13;
, ,ance, writing etc) lor th .&#13;
(off one weekd ) 2 ,. you ages 6 -17. Hours are basic ally Mon-fn&#13;
ay, -8 and Sat, 9:30-4.&#13;
Program Assistants. N .. ment educational d . umerous POSitions open for a mature person to lmpl ean&#13;
recreational pr f .&#13;
lingual position . ograms or youth at after school program. One b lopen.&#13;
Hours are basically Man -Fri, 1-6: 15.&#13;
Ap I . P Y an person or mail resume to 1607 65th Street&#13;
or fax to 262-654-0323, attention, Aletra.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90435">
              <text>E&#13;
March 8, 2001&#13;
-&#13;
;:1~ ,~&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Go ahead and spoil&#13;
yoanrelf with Choco/at&#13;
Page 5&#13;
TIre Rallger Uncovered&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Student Voices&#13;
WhyI'm Fat&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Student Voices Cont'd&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Information Technology&#13;
PracticeCenter Revisited&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
',0 • ~r of the Week: -ilhOlsen&#13;
,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UW-P joggers rescue ladies from Pike Creek \&#13;
Tyrone A Payton&#13;
Staff Reporters&#13;
-&#13;
TIo UW-Parkside students&#13;
carneto the aid of&#13;
two senior citizens&#13;
trapped inside a vehicle on a&#13;
flooded bridge of Petrifying&#13;
Springs Park Sunday, February&#13;
25th. Inside the marooned vehicle&#13;
were Glorianna Daggy, 79,&#13;
and Rose Bruno, 88.&#13;
The students, Joseph Donnerbauer&#13;
and David Place, both&#13;
Parkside j0l;igers, waded&#13;
through the chilly water to pull&#13;
the women out of the car. "I&#13;
didn't have a choice" said Place.&#13;
After three trips to get the&#13;
women, their walkers, and a&#13;
blanket from the back of the&#13;
vehicle, the two students&#13;
wrapped the ladies in the blanket&#13;
and offered the shirts off&#13;
their backs to keep the women's&#13;
feetwarm.&#13;
The women had been&#13;
stranded on the flooded bridge&#13;
for approximately an hour, and&#13;
claimed they saw three other&#13;
cars come down to the bridge&#13;
and turn back.&#13;
-"I figured any decent person&#13;
would have came out and&#13;
helped:' remarked Donnerbauer.&#13;
"You'd think a person&#13;
would have some feelings&#13;
inside."&#13;
As Donnerbauer comforted&#13;
the ailing victims, Place ran to&#13;
dial 911. Fortunately Joseph&#13;
KickIer and his family were&#13;
approximately 100 yards away.&#13;
Fickler was completely&#13;
unaware of the ladies' distress&#13;
call,but when Placepleaded for&#13;
help, Fickler and his wife, Julie,&#13;
and his daughter and son,&#13;
Stephanie and Christopher,&#13;
Peek under the covers&#13;
The Ranger News exposed&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co-Editor~in-Chief&#13;
All work and no play&#13;
makes for a boring newspaper.&#13;
As you can see from the&#13;
r.hoto, the staff found time to&#13;
'play" after conferences and&#13;
seminars while in San FranCISco.&#13;
"I think my favorite part of&#13;
the trip was getting to ~ee our&#13;
staff in an 'out of office SItuation"&#13;
says Design Manager&#13;
Pete Forchette. "And who&#13;
could forget Aunt Charlie's,&#13;
the drag queen show?" That's&#13;
right, a drag queen show. I&#13;
had the rare op,Bortunity to&#13;
compete in the 'Queen for a&#13;
Night" contest and managed&#13;
to come in a close second.&#13;
"I learned- never to' mix&#13;
drag S1ueenswith Raspberry&#13;
Stoley said Christine Agaiby,&#13;
advertising manager. "All&#13;
you get is a severe hangover&#13;
and some interesting photos"&#13;
(look inside for photos from&#13;
the show). The conference&#13;
was a unique experience for&#13;
the staff not only because they&#13;
were able to&#13;
learn a great&#13;
deal of informationabout&#13;
the newspaper&#13;
business,&#13;
but because&#13;
they had the&#13;
opportuni ty&#13;
to learn more&#13;
about each&#13;
other. Turn&#13;
to the inside&#13;
page to get to&#13;
know your&#13;
newspaper&#13;
staff a httle&#13;
Between the sheets from left to right: ~renda ~unham, better.&#13;
Pete Forchette, Sarah Olsen, and Christine Agalby.&#13;
gladly gave up their&#13;
jackets and outer winter&#13;
clothing. As Place&#13;
took the garments back&#13;
to the women to help&#13;
keep them warm, Fickler&#13;
and his familyraced&#13;
their vehicle over to a&#13;
nearby gas station to&#13;
dial 911.&#13;
After Somers rescue&#13;
squad members&#13;
arrived on the scene to&#13;
escort the two ladies to&#13;
Aurora Healthcare center,&#13;
the Pickler family&#13;
offeredthe two heroes a&#13;
seatin their car to try to&#13;
warm them up.&#13;
The two women are&#13;
home safe today and&#13;
say they hold the highest&#13;
respect for the two&#13;
student heroes that&#13;
carne to their aid.&#13;
"Parkside joggers Joseph Donnerbauer&#13;
(left) and Davey Place (right) stand on the&#13;
bridge where the rescue took place.&#13;
Newspaper staff creates&#13;
legacy for journalists&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
The staff of The Ranger&#13;
News returned from the&#13;
National College Newspaper&#13;
Convention Sunday, March&#13;
25th prepared to toss tradition&#13;
and custom out the window.&#13;
Armed with enthusiasm&#13;
and newly acquired&#13;
knowledge, the staff is working&#13;
to transform The Ranger&#13;
into the true voice of the student&#13;
body by ushering in a&#13;
new legacy of journahsm at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The first order of business&#13;
to be performed upon returning&#13;
to Parkside was to shock&#13;
the reporters at the regular&#13;
Monday meeting. "1 told the&#13;
reporters that the newspaper&#13;
sucks, but we now have the&#13;
ability to change 'that" says&#13;
Sarah Olsen, co-editor-inchief.&#13;
"We did not know how&#13;
to properly run a newspaper·&#13;
before, but that is not the case&#13;
anymore."&#13;
Staff members are busy&#13;
sharing the knowledge they&#13;
learned at the conference and&#13;
training a team to take over&#13;
the newspaper next year.&#13;
Attendants of the regular&#13;
Monday meetings are taking&#13;
part in seminars designed to&#13;
help writers become better&#13;
journalists. The reporters are&#13;
learning basic journalism&#13;
skills such as how to write a&#13;
better headline and how to&#13;
get a good interview, with&#13;
more information on the way.&#13;
In addition to implementing&#13;
new training techniques,&#13;
the staff has been restructured&#13;
and new positions have been&#13;
created. The staff is recruiting&#13;
journalists, investigative&#13;
reporters, cartoonists, political&#13;
analysts, design and layout&#13;
managers, and opinion&#13;
essayists who are willing to&#13;
be innovative and take risks.&#13;
The most obvious change&#13;
to the newspaper is apparent&#13;
in the new layout designed by&#13;
Forchette. "In order to be able&#13;
to compete with other newspapers,&#13;
the design needed to&#13;
become more innovative, daring,&#13;
original, and fun" says&#13;
Porchette, who attended several&#13;
seminars where he was&#13;
Continued on page 5&#13;
.~-~- ..........&#13;
THe AI:lNc::eA March 8, 2001&#13;
March 12-16&#13;
Spring Break. ..enjoy!&#13;
March 12&#13;
· • Arts: ALIVE! presents "Annie," 7:30p.m., Communication Arts Theatre, sold&#13;
out&#13;
March 16 -; 18&#13;
• Second Annual Parkside Regional Science Fair, various campus locations&#13;
March 20&#13;
• Softball vs. Lakeland College, 2 p.m., doubleheader&#13;
March 21&#13;
• George Lindquist, classical guitar, free and open to the public, noon, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater&#13;
• Soup and Substance: "NOT the Sound of Music: Austria in the New Europe"&#13;
w /Laura Gellott, free w / free soup and bread, Union 104-106&#13;
• Arts: ALIVEI presents The Riverside Symphony, 7:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre, tickets $16. For ticket information, call (262) 595-2345.&#13;
March 22- 25&#13;
• Foreign Film: Topsy-Turvy, England, show times: Thur./Fri 7:30 p.m., Sat. 8&#13;
p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Union Cinema Theater&#13;
March 22- 25&#13;
• NCAA National Fencing Championships, Petretti Fieldhouse/Sports and&#13;
Activity Center&#13;
March 23&#13;
• Fun Friday, noon, Office of Multicultural Student Affairs, Wyllie Hall 0-182,&#13;
free, refreshments served&#13;
• Race, Class and Gender Study Groul," "Palace Walk" by Naguib Mahfouz,&#13;
Molinaro 111, 3:30 p.m.; for information, call Linda Madsen (262) 595-2162&#13;
or e-mail madsenl@Uwp.edu&#13;
March 23- 27&#13;
• Latino Film Festival, Union Cinema Theater, films and show times to be&#13;
announced&#13;
March 24&#13;
• Evening In: Pakistan, Union Dining Room, sponsored by UW-Parkside Center&#13;
for International Studies.&#13;
March 27&#13;
• Lecrn"re:Magdalen Hsu-Li, part of Distinguished Lecture Series, two programs:&#13;
noon and 7p.m., Union Cinema Theater, sponsored by Campus Cul.&#13;
tural Program Committee, open to campus and commuruty&#13;
• Dan Banda lecture series on documentary filmmaking: Peter Baime on&#13;
musical composition, 6 p.m., Greenquist 119, free&#13;
March 28&#13;
.• University Chorale and Voices, Melanie Jacobson, director, free and opento&#13;
the public, noon, Union Cinema Theater&#13;
• Latinos Unidos discussion: Puerto Rico: Three Points of View- Commonwealth,&#13;
State, or independent country, time and location to be announced&#13;
• Softball vs. Concordia College, 2 p.m., doubleheader&#13;
March 29 - April 1&#13;
Foreign Film: Autumn Tale, France, subtitled, show times: Thur./Fri. 7:30&#13;
p.m., Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Union Cinema Theater&#13;
March 29&#13;
• Multicultural Quiz Bowl, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Union Cinema Theater, free, sponsored&#13;
by the UW-Parkside Precollege Program.&#13;
• Softball vs. Lewis University, 2 p.m., doubleheader&#13;
March 30&#13;
• Speaker: Walter Kimbrough, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity member speaks on&#13;
history of fraternities and sororities; with a discussion pledging, hazing,&#13;
and initiations, sponsored by UW-Parkside CIO&#13;
March 31&#13;
• Baseball vs. Missouri-St. Louis, noon, doubleheader&#13;
• Softball vs. Kentucky Wesleyan College, 1 p.m., doubleheader&#13;
I"Co-Editors-in-ehief&#13;
Brenda Dunham&#13;
. ah Olsen&#13;
The Ranger is now hiring&#13;
cartoonists. Call 595-2287 for&#13;
more infol o are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content&#13;
dbe delivered to the RaJw:er office (WYlllJ..139C) . letters must be typed di cl d' be free from&#13;
lcation,;~~,.a:~thPr;fl'name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Ranger reserves the right to :-it .illl~~~author s name and phone number. Letters must&#13;
'~~d1~~"l.:200:::..:.1--=TH~.:.:e::....:.F=l.:.:l:H':...::....'J:.::G:::EF=l=""::"-' 7 0 _" &gt;_~"_&gt; ~...::.... ~ ---.:.._~~ ;.... Page 3&#13;
The Ranger News' uncovered&#13;
"I'm from&#13;
Wes-KON-sin!"&#13;
ByBrenda Dunham&#13;
One night Christine, Sarah,&#13;
and I went for dessert at Mel's&#13;
Diner. Our waiter asked&#13;
where we were from, and&#13;
when I responded with "We're&#13;
from Wisconsin" he laughed&#13;
and repeated "Wes-KONsin?!"&#13;
Apparently, we all have&#13;
accents - ken ya imagen that,&#13;
eh? Westarted taking notice of&#13;
our Canadian accents and&#13;
quickly became the butts of&#13;
our own jokes.&#13;
I, however, won the award&#13;
for "Most Predominant WesKON-sin&#13;
Accent." Don't ya&#13;
know that San Francisco doesn't&#13;
have cows, unless it is a&#13;
statue in front of Hard Rock&#13;
Cafe?&#13;
Just to warn you if you go to&#13;
San Francisco don't be asking&#13;
for a Tyme machine. People&#13;
will think ya're literally nuts.&#13;
San Franciscans don't have&#13;
bubblers, they drink from&#13;
water fountains. They also&#13;
don't have soda, they drink&#13;
pop. If'n ya ken remember the&#13;
lingo you'll be better off than&#13;
us, and maybe you won't even&#13;
be laughed at.&#13;
As ya can imagen its good&#13;
to be horne were the way I talk&#13;
doesn't stand out so much.&#13;
However I'll have to be&#13;
putting my cote (coat) and&#13;
boo-uts (boots) back on.&#13;
The Walking Germ&#13;
By Dan White&#13;
b Unfortunately, I ended ul?,&#13;
emg "the walking germ'&#13;
because I caught a cold due to&#13;
the change ill the climate.&#13;
Although 1was sick for a good&#13;
portion of the trip I did manage&#13;
to attend the seminars.&#13;
I also managed to give a&#13;
cold to another member of the&#13;
group and who knows how&#13;
many other people!&#13;
I learned many keys to&#13;
maintaining the funds of the&#13;
newspaper, successful advertising&#13;
strategies, and to not&#13;
blow your nose with hotel&#13;
Kleenex (it really hurts after&#13;
too many blows!)&#13;
Hopefully, the techniques I&#13;
learned will keep the newspaper&#13;
healthy - unlike myself!&#13;
"When in Rome, do&#13;
as the Romans"&#13;
By Pete Forchette&#13;
During the normal school&#13;
day, it is not uncommon for&#13;
people to hear me quote a&#13;
song, poem, or movie. But&#13;
while in San Francisco, I found&#13;
myself saying a quote in particular&#13;
more than any other -&#13;
"While in Rome, do as the&#13;
Romans."&#13;
Now, don't get carried&#13;
away, as I certainly didn't, I&#13;
assure you. But one can't help&#13;
but notice how different things&#13;
are away from Keno-where&#13;
(Kenosha).&#13;
One of the very first things&#13;
that struck me as odd was the&#13;
ride from the airport in San&#13;
Francisco to our hotel downtown.&#13;
We were graciously&#13;
escorted by our taxi cab driver,&#13;
first tluough a red and blue&#13;
gang war zone, and then past a&#13;
popular transsexual prostitution&#13;
comer. Now, you Just&#13;
can't find those kind of things&#13;
in your backyard around here .:&#13;
The next morning I awoke&#13;
to the hustle and bustle of the&#13;
city life below me. Hills made&#13;
of buildings and houses dictated&#13;
the movements of all the&#13;
sports cars, buses, and trolleys&#13;
that crawled along its alleys.&#13;
The wildlife we encountered&#13;
along the- way later that&#13;
week also made me stop and&#13;
think. The waiter at the Hard&#13;
Rock Cafe got us all "rowdy,"&#13;
a metallic robot man was passing&#13;
out candy to strangers for&#13;
spare change. And who could&#13;
forget about Aunt Charlie, the&#13;
eccentric, cross-dressing drag&#13;
queen? --&#13;
So, as you can see I had&#13;
plenty of reasons for blurting&#13;
out my quote of quotes during&#13;
my adventure ill Rome, I mean&#13;
San Francisco. And in case&#13;
you were wondering, no, I&#13;
didn't leave my heart there.&#13;
The Bitch&#13;
By Sarah Olsen&#13;
Sometimes in life we are&#13;
forced to assume a role that is&#13;
not our usual disposition.&#13;
While in San Francisco, I&#13;
became "The Bitch" of the&#13;
group - not to my group, just&#13;
to those who got in my way.&#13;
The first time my temper&#13;
was tested was when we&#13;
arrived in St. Louis for a layover.&#13;
After a quick bite to eat,&#13;
we headed to the ticket&#13;
counter ready to embark on&#13;
our connecting flight to the&#13;
golden city. Imagine our surprise&#13;
when the snippy flight&#13;
attendant announced, "Your&#13;
plane already left."&#13;
Immediately my hand flew&#13;
to my hip and my inner bitch&#13;
was unleashed. "What do you&#13;
mean our plane left? We still&#13;
have at least one minute before&#13;
the .plane is supposed to&#13;
depart!"&#13;
Needless to say, we are not&#13;
seasoned travelers and this&#13;
experience has laught us a&#13;
valuable lesson regarding time&#13;
management.&#13;
After an extended layover,&#13;
and an impossibly long flight,&#13;
we finally arrived at the hotel,&#13;
6 a.m, Wisconsin time, 4 a.m.&#13;
San Francisco time. We&#13;
trudged to the counter, ready&#13;
to welcome some Holiday Inn&#13;
hospitality. The gentleman at&#13;
the counter punched our&#13;
names into the counter and&#13;
promptly announced, "We do&#13;
not have your rooms anymore."&#13;
Now, I am not normally a&#13;
horrible person, but our little&#13;
friend at the counter would&#13;
swear otherwise. "What do&#13;
you mean we don't have a&#13;
room?" I asked, as a deadly&#13;
caIm settled over the lobby.&#13;
I'm not sure what happened&#13;
next, but according to&#13;
first-hand accounts, my eyes&#13;
glowed red, my head spun in&#13;
circles on my neck, and the&#13;
man at the counter suddenly&#13;
found two available rooms.&#13;
Tour Guide Barbie&#13;
By Christine Agaiby&#13;
"Rise and shine everybody,&#13;
we have a busy day ahead of&#13;
us and we can t just waste the&#13;
day in bed now, can we?" You&#13;
may think it's easy_ always&#13;
being the peppy, energetic one,&#13;
but maybe you should try&#13;
waking up four crab-asses&#13;
used to sleeping in until afternoon&#13;
class.&#13;
On the agenda for the first&#13;
day, we started with breakfast&#13;
at Ghiradelli Square where I&#13;
forced scalding posh coffee&#13;
down their tluoats. I wanted&#13;
lively group members at the&#13;
meetings, not sleep)' ones.&#13;
After the morning conferences&#13;
we had lunch in Chinatown&#13;
where I forced them to eat crab&#13;
rangoons. No one was going to&#13;
be Jicky about trying new&#13;
foo on this trip; I didn't care&#13;
if ther were allergic to shellfish.&#13;
then quickly ushered&#13;
them into the trolley headed&#13;
towards Fisherman's Wharf&#13;
where we utilized brief photo&#13;
opportunities. I had something&#13;
truly special planned for&#13;
the evening. We sang and&#13;
danced, mingling with the best&#13;
of the locals at Aunt Charlie's,&#13;
a drag queen hot spot.&#13;
All this and more, packed&#13;
into one exhausting day.&#13;
Besides planning every detail&#13;
of the trip, I was also responsible&#13;
for translating for the WesKon-sinite,&#13;
soothing the germ,&#13;
taming the Roman, and calming&#13;
the bitch._&#13;
As you can see, we truly did&#13;
succeed in doing it all on this&#13;
trip and still made it to all our&#13;
meetings without a problem. I&#13;
hope you've all enjoyed reading&#13;
about our wonderful experience&#13;
and have found the trip&#13;
'to be as fascinating as we did.&#13;
It was great having you along&#13;
as you ventured through our&#13;
grand voyage to San Francisco.&#13;
B'bye now. B'bye, B'bye. B'bye,&#13;
now. B'bye. Are they lone&#13;
yet. ..are thJ::Jlkne? Goo ,my&#13;
cheeks are . . g me. I really&#13;
can't smile this much anymore.&#13;
Can I take a break now? Just a&#13;
little break? Great.&#13;
WHAT'S&#13;
ON YOUR&#13;
RESUME?&#13;
If you are an English&#13;
major or aspiring&#13;
journalist, and have&#13;
not yet written for a&#13;
newspaper, what are&#13;
you waiting for?&#13;
Add skills to your&#13;
resume that employers&#13;
are looking for -&#13;
writing, interviewing,&#13;
editing and so much&#13;
more.&#13;
The Ranger News is&#13;
now hiring all positions&#13;
for the Spring&#13;
2001 semester. Stop&#13;
by the office, located&#13;
across from the .&#13;
Career Center in&#13;
lower Wyllie hall.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays&#13;
from noon to&#13;
Ip.m. and are open to&#13;
all interested persons.&#13;
When you&#13;
graduate,&#13;
what will you&#13;
have to offer?&#13;
March 8, 2001&#13;
Go ahead and spoil yourself with Chaco/at&#13;
Lynn Garcia&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
C&#13;
hoco/at, nominated for&#13;
Best Picture, takes&#13;
place in a small&#13;
French village. Almost everyone&#13;
in the community is religious&#13;
and does not allow&#13;
themselves to enjoy the pleasures&#13;
of life. The mayor,&#13;
Comte de Reynaud (Alfred&#13;
Molina), literally runs the village.&#13;
The young priest has to&#13;
have his sermon looked at and&#13;
approved before he preaches&#13;
it to the village people. It's&#13;
almost as if the mayor is God.&#13;
Vianne Rocher (Juliette&#13;
Binoche) and her daughter,&#13;
Anouk arrive in the village&#13;
and open a chocolate shop&#13;
just in time for Lent. They are&#13;
immediately looked down&#13;
upon since they do not attend&#13;
church and are tempting people&#13;
during such a sacred time.&#13;
Vianne keeps her chin up and&#13;
befriends her landlady,&#13;
Armande Voizen (Judi&#13;
Dench), who feels as if she is&#13;
all alone in the world.&#13;
Armande's daughter will not&#13;
speak to her or allow her to&#13;
see her grandson. Vianne tries&#13;
her best to keep her business&#13;
afloat. She gives out free sampies&#13;
and soon the customers&#13;
return for more.&#13;
In the meantime some river&#13;
rats arrive and the mayor tries&#13;
to run them out of town.&#13;
Vianne hires Roux to do some&#13;
handy work around the shop.&#13;
This doesn't sit well with the&#13;
Mayor and he comes up with&#13;
a plan to get rid of Vianne.&#13;
Comte de Reynaud gets&#13;
sick of everyone spoiling&#13;
themselves with chocolate so&#13;
he writes a sermon telling the&#13;
village people that Vianne is&#13;
Satan and that her sweet treat&#13;
is like the forbidden fruit.&#13;
Will the community listen&#13;
and not return to Vianne's&#13;
shop or will the people continue&#13;
to indulge in the chocolate?&#13;
I strongly suggest seeing&#13;
this film. Itis absolutely fantastic.&#13;
The performances are&#13;
superb and the story is thoroughly&#13;
enjoyable. I hope that&#13;
the film is recognized and&#13;
takes at least one Oscar home.&#13;
Kenosha native, Mark Ruffalo,&#13;
stars in award-nominated&#13;
You Can Count on Me&#13;
Tyrone A. Payton&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
Kenosha native, Mark Ruffalo,&#13;
got his first Significant movie&#13;
recognition in this winter's You&#13;
Can Count on Me.&#13;
Viewers might recognize&#13;
Ruffalo from UPN's "The Beat."&#13;
He has currently been preoccupied&#13;
with his recent&#13;
fame from his portrayal of&#13;
Terry, a easy come-easy go&#13;
charmer who visits his&#13;
older sister to reflect upon&#13;
his current dead-end life.&#13;
His sister, Sammy,&#13;
played by Laura Linney, IS&#13;
a divorced mother with a&#13;
son of 8 who is involved&#13;
with a man who doesn't&#13;
excite her, Bob, and a new&#13;
boss she can't stand to&#13;
work with on any level.&#13;
Linney; was honored for&#13;
her portrayal of Sammy&#13;
this year, as she was norrunated&#13;
for Best Actress by the&#13;
Academy of Motion Pictures.&#13;
The story opens up with the&#13;
audience being introduced to&#13;
Sammy and Terry's parents, as&#13;
they are heading home in the&#13;
middle of a rainstorm. Then the&#13;
audience is immediately introduced&#13;
to Sammy and Terry, as&#13;
we see them at their parents'&#13;
funeral from the crash they&#13;
encountered with a semi that&#13;
night.&#13;
The beginning is a little flat&#13;
to start with, but then the movie&#13;
fast forwards to the children&#13;
when they are older and on&#13;
their own. Terry has been leading&#13;
a reckless life and decides to&#13;
rekindle his relationship with&#13;
his sister, Sammy, and her son,&#13;
lems with her new boss, played&#13;
by Matthew Broderick, though.&#13;
Broderick is in constant disturbance&#13;
over he authority that&#13;
Sammy has over him with the&#13;
workers on her side. It seems&#13;
as ifthese tow can't agree upon&#13;
anything, but out of their pent&#13;
up range must have ignited a&#13;
spark between them.&#13;
Soon Sammy is having&#13;
an affair with her boss, and&#13;
both her and Terry are back&#13;
to reliving their old lives&#13;
when they were wild teens.&#13;
The rekindling of these siblings&#13;
brings back their&#13;
rowdy behavior, but also&#13;
awakens them to their&#13;
respective dependence on&#13;
each other.&#13;
They fill the void in each&#13;
other's lives where there is&#13;
no happiness. In the end,&#13;
Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo, In a scene from You each comes to this concluCan&#13;
Count on Me.&#13;
Photo courtesy of The Kenosha News sian as the movie finishes.&#13;
. Although, the beginning&#13;
Rudy [r., played by Rory is flat and the ending is slightly&#13;
Culkin. subjective, it is the middle conApparently,&#13;
he has outra- tent that is the "meat" of the&#13;
geous timing, for Sammy has story. The plot contains some&#13;
been worried sick over her rather emotional and family triwandering&#13;
brother's where- fles that are representative of&#13;
abouts. When he comes to many reoples' lives, though.&#13;
Scottsville, Terry decides to be a Overal , this movie was a true&#13;
better uncle to Rudy. He does spectacle of Ruffalo's career&#13;
so by playing caretaker to Rudy and future and will hopefully&#13;
while Sammy is off at work. be a trophy performance for&#13;
Sammy has her own prob- Linney.&#13;
Choco/at is nominated for Best Picture and tells the story of a young woman&#13;
whose enchanted sweets awaken passion In a staid French village.&#13;
Rush is a triumph and&#13;
another Oscar nominee&#13;
Tyrone A. Payton&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
Quills is the latest feature&#13;
starring Geoffrey Rush, in&#13;
which he pulled off another&#13;
stellar performance to his prior&#13;
award-winning act in Shine. As&#13;
you may recall, Rush was&#13;
awarded best actor back in 1998&#13;
when the controversial subtraction&#13;
of Leonardo DiCaprio was&#13;
left off the voting roster. This&#13;
year he is nominated again -for&#13;
his portrayal of the Marquis de&#13;
Sade, the late 18th century,&#13;
French, pornographic author.&#13;
The movie features other&#13;
phenomenal displays of acting&#13;
by Joaquin Phoenix as the&#13;
Abbey Cloutier, Kate WirISlet as&#13;
the laundry wench, Madeline,&#13;
and Michael Caine as the officer&#13;
of corrections, Corrder. Caine,&#13;
who was last year's winner of&#13;
Best Supporting Actor for Cider&#13;
House Rules, Wmslet, who was&#13;
nominated for her 1998 performance&#13;
ill Titanic, and Phoenix,&#13;
who IS up for Best Supporting&#13;
Actor this year for Gladiator,&#13;
assure the movie of an excellence&#13;
in quality of acting.&#13;
The story takes place in late&#13;
18th century France under the&#13;
rule of dictator, Napolean&#13;
Bonaparte. When his advisors&#13;
inform him of the peddling of&#13;
pornograp~y that is goin~ on&#13;
his country s streets, he is infuriated&#13;
and determined to&#13;
silence the author of these&#13;
crude works, the Marquis de&#13;
Sade.&#13;
The Marquis, on the other&#13;
hand, has been confined to an&#13;
asylum already for a few years&#13;
before N apolean discovered his&#13;
ways of corruption. He has&#13;
secretly distributed his work&#13;
through the chambermaid,&#13;
Madefine; played by WInslet,&#13;
by hiding his documents with&#13;
his pick up of his daily linens.&#13;
Now, the Abbey Cloutier of&#13;
the asylum, portrayed by&#13;
Phoenix, has hospitably&#13;
catered to the Marquis for the&#13;
entirety of his stay. He has&#13;
always been aware of the Marquis'&#13;
past hobby of writing his&#13;
filth, but he has been ignorant&#13;
of the Marquis' latest covert&#13;
productions of his pornography.&#13;
When Napoleon sends the&#13;
renowned Corrder, a supreme&#13;
corrections officer, played by&#13;
Caine, to intercept the coalillOn&#13;
of the Marquis and Madeline,&#13;
Cloutier is distraught over "!"&#13;
friends' betrayal. The MarqUIS&#13;
went behind Cloutier's back SO&#13;
he could distribute his work.&#13;
This leaves the abbey with the&#13;
regretful job of stril'ping. the&#13;
Marquis of all of his writing&#13;
utensils.&#13;
Unknowingly to the residents&#13;
of the asylum, when the&#13;
Marq~lf:ts stripped of his ink&#13;
and qui ,the asylum truly&#13;
becomes a madhouse. Will the&#13;
entire asylum start to snowb!",&#13;
into destruction? Will saruty&#13;
ever be restored again?&#13;
,&#13;
~,,2001 THE R~GER PageS&#13;
.....&#13;
History professor makes transition from Parkside to Princeton&#13;
Ruyayeem Rashid . Parkside" says Rodriguez.&#13;
Rodriguez was hired as a visiting&#13;
assistant professor and&#13;
was offered a tenure-track&#13;
position, which he declined.&#13;
Rodriguez chose Princeton&#13;
because, . "it was a great&#13;
opporturuty to work with&#13;
some of the leading academics&#13;
in [his] field and teach in the&#13;
broad area of southwestern&#13;
United States history." In&#13;
addition to teaching classes,&#13;
he plans to do research in the&#13;
area of social movements and&#13;
civil rights in both the southwest&#13;
and among Mexican&#13;
Americans on the Midwestern&#13;
frontier.&#13;
Jerry Greenfield, chair of&#13;
the History department, said&#13;
"I was happy for him - Princeton&#13;
is one of the finest universities&#13;
in the nation, so it was a&#13;
great opportunity for Professor&#13;
Rodriguez."&#13;
Parkside interviewed&#13;
Rodriguez in September 2000,&#13;
and he joined the University&#13;
in January 2001. He was hired&#13;
to focus on the United States&#13;
civil rights history and on the&#13;
Mexican American history&#13;
component in particular.&#13;
The history department is&#13;
currently looking for a&#13;
replacement to fill the position&#13;
left vacant by Rodriguez. "We&#13;
returned to the search after&#13;
Professor Rodriguez let us&#13;
know that he had the Princeton&#13;
offer. The search committee&#13;
already has had candidates&#13;
[and] ... We hope to have a&#13;
positive response within a few&#13;
weeks"said Greenfield.&#13;
Rodriguez is a Mexican&#13;
American who was born in&#13;
Wisconsin, and settled in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. He&#13;
graduated from the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee&#13;
with a bachelor's degree in&#13;
History. He received both his&#13;
Master and Ph.D. degrees&#13;
from Northwestern University.&#13;
Rodriguez is presently&#13;
attending law school at the&#13;
University of WisconsinMadison,&#13;
where he plans to&#13;
graduate in 2001 with a Juris&#13;
Doctorate.&#13;
- Staff Reporter&#13;
A&#13;
t the end of the 2000-&#13;
01 school year, Marc&#13;
Rodriguez , visiting&#13;
assistantprofessor of History&#13;
will be leaving Parkside and&#13;
;tar\ing his new job as ~&#13;
assistantprofessor In the History&#13;
del'artment at Princeton&#13;
Umverstty.&#13;
"Everyone here at UWParksidehas&#13;
been so helpful&#13;
and supportive of me, and 1&#13;
willllllSS the entire staff and&#13;
student population here at&#13;
Do,you expect to&#13;
graduate in May?&#13;
Newspaper staff creates legacy for journalists continued&#13;
stop by the office located in&#13;
the lower level of Wyllie&#13;
across from the Career Center.&#13;
Meetings are informal and&#13;
open to everyone. Bring food&#13;
and a friend and stop by the&#13;
office next Monday at noon.&#13;
For more information, call the&#13;
office at 595-2287 and ask for&#13;
either Brenda Dunham or&#13;
Sarah Olsen.&#13;
from trained managers.&#13;
"Parkside should be proud&#13;
of their paper" says Graphic&#13;
Designer Pete Forchette.&#13;
"The conference has given&#13;
The Ranger staff the ability to&#13;
make this happen."&#13;
Next year, qualified members&#13;
of the staff will be able to&#13;
travel to New Orleans for the&#13;
National College Media Convention&#13;
taking place October&#13;
25 - 28. "I think it is important&#13;
for everyone to attend&#13;
these conferences. They give&#13;
invaluable experience and are&#13;
a great opportunity to network&#13;
with professionals in&#13;
the field" says Olsen.&#13;
Anyone interested in taking&#13;
a part in shaping the&#13;
future of the newspaper,&#13;
either by writing or giving an&#13;
opinion, is encouraged to&#13;
ableto network with leading&#13;
professionals in newspaper&#13;
design.&#13;
This conference has given&#13;
the students of Parkside the&#13;
opportunity to take part in&#13;
some exciting changes. Not&#13;
only will the readers benefit&#13;
from improved writing and&#13;
more interesting articles,&#13;
future staff members will now&#13;
haveleadership and guidance&#13;
IF YOU THINK A NIGHT&#13;
IN A FOXHOLE IS TOUGH,&#13;
TRY A LIFETIME IN A CUBICLE.&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
The U.S. Army offers 212 different career opportunities&#13;
in fields ranging from medicine, construction and law&#13;
enforcement to accounting, engineering and intelligence.&#13;
You'll be trained. Then you'll use those skills from the&#13;
first day on the job. It's a great way to start moving in&#13;
the direction you want to go.&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Successful Transitioning&#13;
for Student Organizations&#13;
by Stephanie Sirovatka-Marshall, Student Activities Office&#13;
Tuesday, March 20, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106 find One of 212 Ways to Be A Soldier&#13;
at GOARMY.COM&#13;
or call 1-80lJ-.USA-ARMY.&#13;
contact your local recruiter. .&#13;
AmI we'lIllelp you find wlIat's best for you.&#13;
Sponsored by Stud611 Activities&#13;
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Why I'm Fat&#13;
Sarah Olsen&#13;
Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
M&#13;
y boyfriend watches&#13;
me as Iturn one&#13;
way, smooth the&#13;
spread of my hips in the mirror,&#13;
twist around, examine the&#13;
expanse of my hindself, then&#13;
whirl to the front and let out an&#13;
exasperated sigh. firm so fat!"&#13;
Well, not fat, not really. That&#13;
is to say, I'm not obese.&#13;
"You're not fat!" he asserts,&#13;
with a tone warning that he&#13;
does not want to hear me run&#13;
down the usual list of fatty&#13;
assets. His anger is the typical&#13;
response to my whining; it is&#13;
typical of all men who hear a&#13;
woman make this famous&#13;
assertion. The answer is formulaic&#13;
and expected. So, why&#13;
do women say it if we know&#13;
they are going to answer with&#13;
the prescribed reply?&#13;
Iam not attempting to make&#13;
myself the center of attention,&#13;
and Iam definitely not fishing&#13;
for compliments. I am well&#13;
aware that anyone skilled in&#13;
basic manners is not going to&#13;
tell me I'm fat to my face, even&#13;
if they think I really am. It is&#13;
not to fulfill my ego. I do not&#13;
want you to tell me that I am&#13;
skinny, nor do.I want you to&#13;
tell me that I am perfect,&#13;
because I'm not. Ibelieve that&#13;
many men think a compliment&#13;
is the motive behind our claim,&#13;
that our egos are so pitiful they&#13;
need to be stroked at least once&#13;
an hour. I can not defend all&#13;
women, but I can assure you&#13;
that my ego is not as needy&#13;
and pathetic as to actually&#13;
announce to any person that I&#13;
am grossly fat, in hopes of a&#13;
reflexive compliment in return.&#13;
Perhaps, as you read this,&#13;
you are rolling your eyes, wondering&#13;
at the audacity of someone&#13;
who would complain&#13;
about something so seerrungly&#13;
trivial in comparison to a larger&#13;
social issue such as world&#13;
hunger. Let me assure you that&#13;
this is not trivial to me or to&#13;
most other typical women. I&#13;
am constantly submerged in&#13;
thin ima~es, slogans are sublimated&#13;
With attacks on my selfesteem,&#13;
and the forced competition&#13;
to look better than the&#13;
next woman is fierce. A large&#13;
part of my life has been consumed&#13;
with this incessant&#13;
worry; in fact, a large portion&#13;
of my day is devoted to mentally&#13;
berating myself for my&#13;
numerous bodily flaws.&#13;
The path to finding the&#13;
truth about why Ibelieve Iam&#13;
fat is a difficult and treacherous&#13;
one. It is wrought by&#13;
media representations, distorted&#13;
by self-perception, and&#13;
clouded with painful memories.&#13;
It seems an insurmountable&#13;
task to explicate the pain&#13;
that is invisible to society, the&#13;
double-standard&#13;
that is acceptable in&#13;
everyday media,&#13;
and the shame that&#13;
is a constant source&#13;
of confusion to me.&#13;
You may not&#13;
understand the pressure&#13;
that a woman&#13;
feels continuously&#13;
harassing her&#13;
throughout a typical&#13;
day. As a woman, I&#13;
am taught to be&#13;
uneasy about my&#13;
appearance.&#13;
On any given_&#13;
morning, I wake up&#13;
to hear an announcer&#13;
on the radio touting&#13;
the newest product&#13;
on the diet market&#13;
a miracle&#13;
weight· loss pill. He&#13;
explains the logic for&#13;
using the miracle&#13;
diet (thinner thighs,&#13;
a flat, firm, stomach,&#13;
a shapelier butt) and&#13;
finishes with an acute observation&#13;
- "If your diet hasn't&#13;
worked for you yet, what&#13;
makes you think it ever will?"&#13;
The television is on as my&#13;
usual morning routine is&#13;
rehearsed. Cover Girl reminds&#13;
me, the target audience, to use&#13;
their concealer if Iwant to be&#13;
an "ea.sy,,, h,reezy, beautiful&#13;
cover girl, L oreal encourages&#13;
me to beautify "Because I'm&#13;
worth .it," and Maybelline&#13;
whispers if Iwasn't born with&#13;
it, at least they can help&#13;
. ("Maybe she's born with it.&#13;
Maybe it's Maybelline").&#13;
My breakfast is a healthy&#13;
and nutritional shake, courtesy&#13;
of Slim-Fast. While I thumb&#13;
through a woman's magazine,&#13;
an article leaps out of the page&#13;
encouraging me to accept my&#13;
body the way it is. Opposite&#13;
the article is an ad picturing an&#13;
impossibly skinny woman and&#13;
a gorgeous man staring lovingly&#13;
down at her. All this is&#13;
bother me. Why indeed? Inthe&#13;
grand scheme of the universe,&#13;
my body weight is not important.&#13;
It will not land me a good&#13;
job, provide me with lots of&#13;
money, or secure my personal&#13;
_happiness - or will it? In my&#13;
experience, beauty and figure&#13;
are many times the inducement&#13;
for all these things. Are&#13;
women valuable to the Sports&#13;
Illustrated swimsuit edition&#13;
because they have a charming&#13;
personality and a sharp sense&#13;
of wit? Does the "fat&#13;
girl" you personally&#13;
know have dates&#13;
every weekend and&#13;
men who value her&#13;
intellect over her&#13;
appearance? How&#13;
many times have&#13;
you overheard a&#13;
male telling his&#13;
friends he would&#13;
never go out with a&#13;
certain girl because&#13;
IIshe exceeds his&#13;
maximum weight&#13;
limit?"&#13;
For women, the&#13;
relationship between&#13;
money ana appearance&#13;
is undeniable.&#13;
On weekends, I&#13;
work as a cocktail&#13;
waitress at a trendy&#13;
nightclub. Jessica,&#13;
my conservativelyclad&#13;
co-worker, has&#13;
been told if she&#13;
Cartoonby TyroneA. Payton wants a bigger tip,&#13;
she should show&#13;
barely able to fit into Calvin more cleavage. Iwear uncomKlein's&#13;
definition of an accept- fortably tight leather clothing,&#13;
able size for the female body. and not much of it, and I get&#13;
My fixation with fatness the tip she was denied.&#13;
begins, but doesn't end here. It A new bartender started&#13;
is cemented whenever Ilook in working at the bar. She has&#13;
the mirror and see a woman blonde hair, blue eyes, and&#13;
with thighs that don't have wears a size 5. "She's so hot"&#13;
three inches of space between "She's my dream girl," "He'v,&#13;
them, a stomach that lacks a what's that hot blonde chick's&#13;
defined six-pack, and an ass name?" "I'm waiting for that&#13;
that equals two of Kate Moss'. one - she can have my tip any&#13;
The "ideal woman" is the one day!"&#13;
pictured irr'Bowflex commer- Damn, why did she have to&#13;
cials, the one cast for the start working here? She's getromantic&#13;
lead in a movie, the ting all my tips .&#13;
one who smiles from the All these reasons have ferglossy&#13;
pages of a magazine. mented and infected my mind&#13;
This IS the reason Iwork out - - the fear of being passed over&#13;
not for health, not to increase by a love interest, of being&#13;
the longevity of my life, and undervalued because Iam not&#13;
not for personal enjoyment. It attractive physically, and of&#13;
is to lose weight and look "bet- not being able to wear cute&#13;
ter" in society's eyes. The loss clotJ:tes. because full-figure&#13;
or gam of a few pounds is the fashion IS far from fashionable.&#13;
impetus for elation or despair. Ihave been terrified into a rigAt&#13;
-this point, you may be orous workout schedule, have&#13;
wondering why Ilet all this learned to hate every sweetslurped&#13;
down with my morning&#13;
cup of coffee.&#13;
Shopping in a department&#13;
store is possibly the most grueling&#13;
attack on my sense of&#13;
well being. I am always&#13;
ashamed to find that Iwear the&#13;
largest size in the junior's&#13;
department, and, that a size&#13;
13714 borders on being fullfigured.&#13;
Calvin Klein does not&#13;
make sizes beyond mine, a&#13;
message that is not missed or&#13;
misunderstood. Clearly, I am&#13;
March 8, 2001&#13;
tasting morsel Ieat, and have&#13;
adapted to fear the opinion of&#13;
others. This is not a selfinduced&#13;
fear. Ido not imagine&#13;
these things; they are very real&#13;
pervasive, and harmful. 1 feel&#13;
as if Ihave no choice but to be&#13;
obsessed with my body&#13;
weight. If Iam not careful, all&#13;
the terrible things that "fat&#13;
girls" go through will Soon&#13;
become my fate. I may seem&#13;
vain in the sense that Iseem&#13;
preoccupied with my physical&#13;
appearance. Vanity, however,&#13;
suggests a certain satisfaction&#13;
with one's appearance, the&#13;
belief that perfection has been&#13;
achieved. r could not be any&#13;
farther away from this in my&#13;
mind. It is the rare occasion&#13;
when Ihave looked in the mirror&#13;
and have not had a ready&#13;
insult na~ging at the edge of&#13;
my conscience.&#13;
If my claim is not for vanity,&#13;
for a compliment, or for an&#13;
expected answer, then it is for&#13;
two entirely different purposes.&#13;
On the most basic level, itis&#13;
a weak plea for understanding,&#13;
for empathy in its simplest&#13;
form. Iwant someone to relate&#13;
to my self-loathing, a person&#13;
who knows what it is like to be&#13;
unhappy with the reflection in&#13;
the mirror. If you simply&#13;
answer with "You're not fat,"&#13;
then Iknow you don't understand.&#13;
Ask me to explain&#13;
myself, let me sniffle on your&#13;
shoulder as I explain my deficiencies,&#13;
or tell me that you&#13;
understand what it is like not&#13;
to live up to a certain image.&#13;
Explain to me that you know&#13;
why I think I'm fat but that you&#13;
don't agree.&#13;
Secondly, I am pleading&#13;
with you to stop buying into&#13;
the mediated images of feminine&#13;
perfection. I need you to&#13;
realize that although the skinniest&#13;
model may be attractive,&#13;
so is the healthiest of "real"&#13;
women. Allow yourself to&#13;
appreciate the feminine body&#13;
in it.s various forms, not just&#13;
the Image that is repeated in&#13;
every commercial, ad, and&#13;
music video. Tell the woman in&#13;
your life that you think she is&#13;
beautiful to you, not because&#13;
she has the thinnest, longest&#13;
legs, not because her butt can&#13;
fit in the palm of your hand,&#13;
and not because her six-pack&#13;
rivals that of your own. Tell&#13;
her that she is perfect because&#13;
she was made just they way&#13;
you warited.&#13;
M8ldl 8. 2001 THe Fl~&#13;
Remembering&#13;
the Homeland&#13;
The nostal/?ic memories take my breath away;&#13;
Remembermg the great time spent back home'&#13;
Gone are those days with the flashing of time;'&#13;
Never to come back again;&#13;
I wish, they leave the footprints behind;&#13;
Thus refreshing my thoughts and mind;&#13;
The love, care and affection of friends;&#13;
Enriched the life with memorable events;&#13;
Still, they are lively and fresh in mind;&#13;
And appear as new as an ocean tide;&#13;
Often, they make me struggle with my thoughts;&#13;
Flattering and making their own huge place;&#13;
I really long for those days to come back;&#13;
Sure I am they will;&#13;
When I'll go back to my homeland;&#13;
By Poonamdeep Sandhu&#13;
To My Parents&#13;
In verse in rhyme these lines sublime;&#13;
May reach my parents at home in good time;&#13;
Oh my parents;&#13;
Ur touch makes me feel so warm;&#13;
I always want u close to me;&#13;
U can help me to reach my destiny;&#13;
I am lucky to have parents like u;&#13;
U are loving and so much caring too;&#13;
I pray to God that u may live long;&#13;
And I keep listening to u like a sweet song;&#13;
My life without u is meaningless;&#13;
Like without a king we can't play chess;&#13;
U are the ones whom I love the most;&#13;
The status of parents is like a dignified post;&#13;
I am proud to be ur daughter dear;&#13;
It's u who understand me without reserve and fear;&#13;
To have u as my parents;&#13;
I feel so glad;&#13;
All strength in me is given by u;&#13;
U guide and teach me what to do;&#13;
I am thankful to u for being so kind;&#13;
So while doing my work I keep u in mind;&#13;
The trust u have in me;&#13;
I'll never let that trust to break;&#13;
I can do anything;&#13;
Oh my parents for ur sake;&#13;
U do so much for us right now;&#13;
There will be time when we will repay u;&#13;
I promise that we will do our best;&#13;
And you'll say "WE ARE PROUD OF U"&#13;
By Poonamdeep Sandhu&#13;
Save BIG on software from the·W'isCOI.u.zt.l.lll&#13;
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Career BOYS&amp;GIRLSCWB&#13;
in Caring&#13;
The Boys &amp; Girls Club of Kenosha has the&#13;
following open employment positions:&#13;
Program Dlreetor- Immediate. full time opening for person to develop programs&#13;
for youth ages 6-17 in an educational and recreational setting. Supervisory&#13;
skills, educational background and experience working with youth of diverse bac kgrounds&#13;
are desired. Hours are basically Mon -Fri, 1-9 and every third Sat .• 9:30-4:30.&#13;
Program Coordinator- Immediate. full time opening far person to oversee after&#13;
school educational and recreatio,nal program. Hours are basically Mon -Fri 11-7.&#13;
Volunteer Coordinator-10-15 hours a week to recruit, screen and monitor vo 1-&#13;
unteers. Flexible hours.&#13;
Physical Education Specialist- Part time position to develop physical and recreational&#13;
activities for youth ages 6 -17. Hours are basically Mon -Fri (off one weekday).&#13;
2-8 and Sat. 9:30-4.&#13;
Technology Speciallst- Part time position to develop and implement techno logy&#13;
programs for youth ages 6-17. Hours are basically Mon-Fri (off one weekday). 2-&#13;
8 and Sat, 9:30-4.&#13;
Arts Specialist- Part time position to develop and implement arts programs&#13;
(fine arts. music, dance, writing, etc.) for youth ages 6 -17. Hours are basically Mon-Fri&#13;
(off one weekday), 2-8 and Sat. 9:30-4.&#13;
Program Assistants- Numerous positions open for a mature person to impl ement&#13;
educational and recreational programs for youth at after school program. One b ilingual&#13;
position open. Hours are basically Mon-Frt, 1-6:15.&#13;
Apply In person or mail resume to 1607 65th Street&#13;
or fax to 262-654'()323, attention, Aletra.&#13;
DRINKS • MUSIC • DANCING UNDEUROUND SPORn BAR&#13;
SE Wisconsin s Newest &amp; Hottest Nightclub &amp; Sports Bar&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
S~BEER BUSTER&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
LIVE DJ&#13;
IIPITHCHERS&#13;
1146 Sheridan Road • Kenosha, WI' 552-0830&#13;
March 8, 2801&#13;
"Portraits of Parks ide"&#13;
Black &amp; White Photo Contest&#13;
The Admissions Office is holding a Black &amp; White photo contest&#13;
All UW·Parkside studenis are encouraged to participate,&#13;
Create a theme for your entries or take candid snaps of&#13;
the University community.&#13;
Prizes ~illbe awarded for selected photos.&#13;
Watch the Ranger News for more details.&#13;
This is your chance to create your own "Portrall5 of P.rkslde:&#13;
REMEMBER; Photos need to be in black &amp; white; color photos nol accepted.&#13;
For more information and details contact Sergio Corr .. in the&#13;
Admi"io .. omee (Moln Oil) or call 595-2300.&#13;
MaUda~ (&#13;
Catch the ~Evolu~wn·. pi()neeringAJil.an-America.n bi-femini$t music .eeaet as she challenges&#13;
stereotypes,ln~es your senses and fills your soul "With her fire!!!BUildingbri~&#13;
between cceamumuee or all reeee, genders, backgrounds, and colors. Come burn witb her&#13;
as ebe blazes III path straight into YOUT heart. :sP.lrlt.and soull&#13;
Tuesday, March 27, 2001&#13;
Noon &amp; 7:00 p.rn.&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Sponsored by .Pctkl$ide Amart O~tion, Gay &amp;. Lesbian OrganiMtion. Womytl's Center,&#13;
Ofl'ke of Equity &amp;.DM:rsH;y, and Student Activities.&#13;
fIWCh 8, 2001 THe RI:NGeA&#13;
-&#13;
Intramural Volleyball Standings&#13;
TEAM Wms&#13;
StrikeIS&#13;
The Avengers&#13;
Monkeys&#13;
FiTaBis&#13;
Odd Style&#13;
Shaken Not Stirred&#13;
Results:&#13;
February22&#13;
Monkeys defeat Strikers 15-10, 15-6, 15-13&#13;
Odd Style forfeited to FiTaBis&#13;
Shaken Not Stirred forfeited to The Avengers&#13;
Loses Pet.&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
.800&#13;
.800&#13;
.600&#13;
.600&#13;
.200&#13;
.200&#13;
March 1&#13;
The Avengers defeated FiTaBis&#13;
Strikers defeated Odd Style&#13;
Strikers defeated Shaken Not Stirred&#13;
15-6, 3-15, 15-4&#13;
15-6,4-15,17-15&#13;
16-14,15-5,15-6&#13;
158&#13;
151.5&#13;
115&#13;
NAIA National Wrestling Championships&#13;
4. Lindenwood University 114.5 7. Embry Riddle University (Az)&#13;
5. Montana St.-Northern 106.5 8. UW-Parkside&#13;
6. Cumberland College (Ky) 97.5 9.Mount St. Clare (Iowa)&#13;
10. Simon Frasier University&#13;
86.5&#13;
56&#13;
46.5&#13;
44.5&#13;
1.Southern Oregon&#13;
2.Missouri Valley College&#13;
3.Mary University (ND)&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Thriving in Chaos&#13;
by Marcy Hufendick, Student Health and Counseling&#13;
Monday, March 26, 2001&#13;
3:00 p.m. Union 106&#13;
{]&#13;
sponsored by Srudent Activities&#13;
WE'LL ERASE YOUR&#13;
COLLEGE LOAN.&#13;
Ifyou're stuck with a (federally insured)&#13;
student loan that's not in default. the&#13;
Army might pay it off.&#13;
Ifyou qualify, we1l reduce your debtup&#13;
to $65,000. Payment is either 1'3 of.&#13;
the debt or $1.500 for each year of&#13;
service, whichever is greater.&#13;
You1l also have training in a&#13;
choice of skills and enough&#13;
self-assurance to last you the&#13;
rest of your life.&#13;
Get all the details from&#13;
your Army Recruiter.&#13;
65t-1071&#13;
ARMY: BE ALL YOU CAN BE:&#13;
www.goarm~com&#13;
Ruyayeem Rashid&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
W&#13;
hen the Information&#13;
Technology&#13;
Practice Center&#13;
(ITPC) opened, the main purpose&#13;
was to give computer science&#13;
and MIS students handson&#13;
experience with current&#13;
technology. The second purpose&#13;
was to give undergraduates&#13;
students the opportunity&#13;
to work on projects with the&#13;
ITPC business partners. This&#13;
lab was a joint project between&#13;
the University and Snap-On&#13;
Tools, SC Johnson Wax and&#13;
Harley Davidson. The idea&#13;
originated from Cory Mason,&#13;
an alumni of Parkside, who is&#13;
director of Information Services&#13;
at Harley Division.&#13;
Dirk Baldwin, Associate&#13;
Professor of Information Systems,&#13;
says, "I think the ITPC&#13;
Jab is an important symbol of a&#13;
strong partnership between&#13;
Harley Division, Johnson Wax,&#13;
Snap-on, and UW-Parkside.&#13;
The relationship allows students&#13;
to work with professors&#13;
and IS professionals to develop&#13;
problem solving, leadership,&#13;
teamwork and design&#13;
skills." He also went on to say,&#13;
"The relationship also allows&#13;
the students to use some of the&#13;
latest equipment used in&#13;
industry. I think it is an exciting&#13;
opportunity for UW-Parkside&#13;
that distinguishes us&#13;
from many other universities.&#13;
"&#13;
When asked about the success&#13;
of the lab, Professor Baldwin&#13;
said, "I think this lab is&#13;
very successful, but we are&#13;
just starting." He also indicated&#13;
that the long-term overall&#13;
success of the lab is based on&#13;
short-term goals, such as each&#13;
individual project and semester,&#13;
and long-term goals.&#13;
"However, we have project&#13;
goals each year and sub-goals&#13;
each semester. At least along&#13;
some dimensions we canmeasure&#13;
our success by comparing&#13;
progress to our project goals.&#13;
On a longer-term basis, we&#13;
will measure success through&#13;
our relationships with the&#13;
partners, the number of MIS&#13;
and computer science students&#13;
using the lab, the number&#13;
of new MIS and computer&#13;
science students in the program,&#13;
and the placement of&#13;
March 8, 2001&#13;
our students in full time jobs."&#13;
This lab is different from a&#13;
standard lab due to the fact it&#13;
is only used, for special projects&#13;
and contains software&#13;
that is not available in other&#13;
labs, such as Visual Studio,&#13;
Oracle and Business Objects.&#13;
Secondly, it is set up in more&#13;
of a conference format&#13;
so that students&#13;
can work on&#13;
projects ill teams.&#13;
The main emphasis&#13;
is partnership.&#13;
For example, students&#13;
enrolled in&#13;
the Database Management&#13;
Systems&#13;
class can use the&#13;
lab for extra credit&#13;
projects. .&#13;
Currently,&#13;
mostly MIS students&#13;
use this lab&#13;
and an occasional&#13;
computer science&#13;
student who is&#13;
working on a project&#13;
with Professor&#13;
Baldwin. One of&#13;
the plans to&#13;
improve the lab&#13;
includes more The Information Technology Practice Center, sponsored by Harley Davidson, Snap.()n&#13;
com put e r s , Tools, and Johnson Professionals, gives MIS and IS students hands-on experience.&#13;
Information Technology Practice Center revi~i~ed&#13;
installing a wireless local area Baldwu:, Students who have&#13;
network (LAN), and installing used this lab have done wellin&#13;
new IBM AS/400 midrange the Job market. Not only do&#13;
~omputer Also the business they possess some techilical&#13;
departme;'t plans to create a skills that are difficult to&#13;
larger lab by tearing down the obtain, they g.am valuable&#13;
wall between MOLN 216 and teamwork, project mana~e218.&#13;
m~nt,,, and communication&#13;
According to Professor skills.&#13;
Deferring taxes with&#13;
TIAA-CREF can be so&#13;
rewarding, you'll wonder&#13;
why you didn't do it sooner;&#13;
OI1eofthe fastest_ to build. __ egg is ltlroughtax_Supplemental&#13;
Retirement Annuities (SRAs) from1lAA-Cll£f.&#13;
Your funds ... au1DmatkaIly _from your paychedt, So It's .. sy 10 build _ 10 supplement&#13;
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help you build. comlMable _ we thini; you will find it&#13;
""'arding in the ""'" 10 come.&#13;
11"5 EASY TIl SAVf MORf TIlROUliH&#13;
THf POWEROf TAl OEfERRAl&#13;
H9?~.&#13;
$67,514&#13;
S41,232&#13;
---------,&#13;
$31,933&#13;
!:3Pg.&#13;
$11.609 ....&#13;
WYEAR$ ~rn::u~ ;IOY&amp;JtS&#13;
Ensuring dill future&#13;
far dmsi! wIm shape it... 1.800.842.2776 www.tiaa-crer.org&#13;
p.m. A driver ,was&#13;
ci ted for failure to&#13;
stop at a stop sign.&#13;
Inc 01-179 HarassmentThreats,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments, 3:47&#13;
p.m. A student&#13;
reported two other&#13;
students are threatening&#13;
and harassing&#13;
her. Residence Life&#13;
staff will handle any&#13;
discipline issues.&#13;
Student does not want&#13;
any further action&#13;
taken at this time.&#13;
02127/01&#13;
mph in a 45 mph zone.&#13;
Inc 01-182 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Wood Road&#13;
&amp; Outer Loop Road,&#13;
11:41 p.m. A driver&#13;
was cited for failure&#13;
to stop at a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
03/01/01&#13;
Inc 01-183 Personal&#13;
Property Theft,&#13;
Ranger HalL 10:19&#13;
a.m. A student&#13;
reported the theft of&#13;
a watch which. had&#13;
been left in a shower&#13;
room.&#13;
02/25101 Inc, 01-174 Emergency&#13;
Crlsls Intervention&#13;
Ranger Hall, 7:20&#13;
p.m. Officer&#13;
responded to a&#13;
reported student who&#13;
had been drinking and .&#13;
mlght become suicidal.&#13;
A UW-P counselor&#13;
was contacted and&#13;
officer along with a&#13;
housing director,&#13;
spoke at length with&#13;
the student until the&#13;
situation was no&#13;
longer serious.&#13;
Inc 01-176 Possession&#13;
of Marijuana, Universi&#13;
ty Apartments,&#13;
11:23 p.m. Officers&#13;
checking on a marijuana&#13;
complaint&#13;
found the room. full&#13;
of a smoke smell consistent&#13;
with marijuana.&#13;
One individual&#13;
was issued a&#13;
citation for possession&#13;
of marijuana.&#13;
02/26/01&#13;
Inc 01-172 Security&#13;
Alarm, Tallent Hall,&#13;
Educator's Credi t&#13;
Union, 10:59 a.m.&#13;
Officer answering a&#13;
motionalarm, checked&#13;
the of f ice area but&#13;
no-one was inside.&#13;
Alarm was canceled&#13;
and reset.&#13;
Inc 01-180 'Traffic&#13;
Violation, CTH E at&#13;
CTH JR, 12:17 a.m.&#13;
While on routine&#13;
patrol, officer&#13;
observed a vehicle in&#13;
front of him which&#13;
was displaying&#13;
expired plates. Driver&#13;
was cited for&#13;
non-registration of&#13;
vehicle. Plates had&#13;
been expired for&#13;
almost five months.&#13;
Inc 01-184 Traffic&#13;
Accident, Union parking&#13;
lot, 4:46 p.m.&#13;
One student's vehicle&#13;
struck another student's&#13;
vehicle. There&#13;
were no injuries to&#13;
the drivers. State&#13;
accident report completed.&#13;
Inc 01-185 Fire Alarm,&#13;
Molinaro Hall, 4:59&#13;
p.m~ Officer responding&#13;
to an alarm&#13;
checked the area and&#13;
found no smoke or&#13;
fire. .&#13;
Inc 01-1.77 Security&#13;
Alarm, Wyllie Computer&#13;
Support, 6:50&#13;
a.m. Officer&#13;
responding to an&#13;
alarm found it had&#13;
been set off accidentally&#13;
by an employee.&#13;
Area was found to be&#13;
clear.&#13;
Inc 01-173 Animals,&#13;
900 Wood Road, .1&#13;
mile South of CTH A,&#13;
1:20 p.m. Officer&#13;
found a dog behind&#13;
the power plant with&#13;
no ID tags. Humane&#13;
officer was called&#13;
and he took custody&#13;
of the animal.&#13;
Inc 01-181 Traffic&#13;
Violation, CTH E,&#13;
west of CTH JR, 6:25&#13;
p.m. A driver was&#13;
cited for speeding 64&#13;
Inc 01-178&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Loop at CTH&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Outer&#13;
JR, 3:06&#13;
Saturday, March 10th&#13;
103.7 KISS FM Presents Milwaukee's Newest&#13;
80's and 90's Party Band!&#13;
--Speedy Rhino--&#13;
Saturday, March 17th&#13;
St. Patty's Day Party&#13;
--E-l livin··&#13;
Saturday, March 24th&#13;
·-Total Chao,··&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
V.I.P. Leadership Series presents...&#13;
Etiquette&#13;
by Steve McLaughlin, Associate Vice ChanceUor for Student Affairs&#13;
Saturday, March 31 st&#13;
Milwaukee's #1 80s and 90s Party Band&#13;
--Toy,··&#13;
Wednesday, March 28,2001&#13;
4 p.m. Union 207&#13;
Every Friday Night is the Area's Hottest Under 21 Dance Party!&#13;
Doors Open at 7 p.m.&#13;
.(lUI. ¥ 6501 Washington Ave. (Hwy. 20) Racine&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities .IIIDI 886-5 151&#13;
March 8, 2001&#13;
,&#13;
eus flEDS&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDSI&#13;
,&#13;
For a limited time only! The&#13;
Ranger News will print&#13;
your student classified ads&#13;
free of charge. Forms are&#13;
available at the newsstand&#13;
in front of the library and&#13;
between Wyllie and Greenquist&#13;
Hall. Call 595-2287 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Announcements&#13;
Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
Call Alpha Center. 637-8323.&#13;
• Chess Club meets on Tuesdays&#13;
from 7pm-close in&#13;
Library Lounge 2nd floor.&#13;
Triple H Grange, LLC&#13;
Organic Boarding, Horseback&#13;
Private Lessons&#13;
'Boarding Sale! $175 per&#13;
month.&#13;
• Be inspired by nature.&#13;
Come fide with us.&#13;
7417 - 7 Mile Road&#13;
(262) 681-2964.&#13;
www.rbcisfree.com&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
Paper Due? Ican help you!&#13;
Ican: .&#13;
*Type your paper&#13;
"Proofread&#13;
"Edit&#13;
~ "Organize your ides&#13;
"Get it started&#13;
"Get a better grade&#13;
"Learn to write better&#13;
Call 262-9664 and ask for&#13;
Diane&#13;
FREE TUTORING&#13;
• Free tutoring is being&#13;
offered by the sfudents from&#13;
Student Technology Corporation.&#13;
Tutoring n the following&#13;
areas of computer&#13;
related software is available:&#13;
Microsoft Office, Using the&#13;
Internet Effectively, E=mail&#13;
and Creating Web Pages.&#13;
Tutoring will be by appomtment.&#13;
To schedule your&#13;
appointment, call Bob or&#13;
Cfuis at 595-2790.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
ApartmentRenting.com&#13;
• Free online college apartment&#13;
search. Ranked #1&#13;
apartment site for college&#13;
students. EARN CASH, De&#13;
an ApartmentRenting.com&#13;
campus representative.&#13;
• Enjoy working with kids?&#13;
Kenosha Unilied School·&#13;
District's 21st Century&#13;
Community Learning Centers&#13;
are looking for Activity&#13;
leaders, Instructors, &amp;&#13;
Tutors for paid after school&#13;
hours. If interested, please&#13;
call Gail Netzer 262-654-&#13;
6200 or 262-653-5923&#13;
• Do you enjoy working with&#13;
children? Would you like to&#13;
earn extra money? Apply&#13;
now for a childcare position&#13;
at NTC GreatLakes. Call&#13;
847-688-2110, Ext... 103 or&#13;
apply online at&#13;
www.ntcmwr.com&#13;
• Looking for 'caregiver for 5-&#13;
year old boy weekends, late&#13;
afternoons, or early&#13;
evenings. Flexible hours.&#13;
Near Parkside. If you enjoy&#13;
kids, please call. us. Judy&#13;
and Tom Milner 925-9976.&#13;
Summer Camp Counselors&#13;
Wanted.&#13;
• Friendly Pines Camp, in the&#13;
coo] mountains of Prescott,&#13;
AZ, is hiring staff for the&#13;
2001 season. May 27-July&#13;
29. Program offers horseback&#13;
riding, water-skiing,&#13;
rock climbing, fishing,&#13;
crafts, sports, and more.&#13;
Competitive salary. For&#13;
app/info call 520/ 4'15-2128&#13;
or email us at info@friendlypines.com.&#13;
Download an&#13;
application at our website!&#13;
www.friendlypines.com&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1992 KATANA 600 GSX&#13;
• Custom paint-job, piped&#13;
and jetted. $2500 aBO. Call&#13;
(262) 878-0769 after 6 p.m.&#13;
or page (262) 487-0785.&#13;
2000 Chevy S-10 ZR2, 4x4&#13;
• Extended cab, third door,&#13;
loaded metallic blue. Take&#13;
over lease payments or buy&#13;
out. Call (262) 878-0769&#13;
after 6 p.m. or page (262)&#13;
487-0785.&#13;
1987 Mazda 626&#13;
• V4 2.0 engine, Runs grt'at!&#13;
New brakes. Asking $950&#13;
aBO. Call Ashi at (home)&#13;
551-7431 or (work) 595-&#13;
2705.&#13;
1991 Ford F-150&#13;
• Must Sell! $4,000 or best&#13;
offer. Call 884-6812 and ask&#13;
for Jeremy.&#13;
1988 Pontiac 6000&#13;
• Maroon four door, four&#13;
cylinder, 103,000 mi, interior&#13;
/ exterior in good condition,&#13;
runs greaf, new tires,&#13;
exhaust, and alternator.&#13;
Complete maintenance&#13;
record Asking $1,500 aBO.&#13;
Call 595-2974 and leave a&#13;
message.&#13;
VOLUNTEER AND&#13;
INTERNSHIP&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
At the Career Center&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Michelle Wegt!er at 595-&#13;
2011 or Roseann Mason at&#13;
595-2606 or stop by the&#13;
Career .C~nter, Wyllie 0173.&#13;
Case Management Assistant&#13;
at Vets Place - Southern&#13;
Center&#13;
• Assist Senior Case manager&#13;
with intake interviews.&#13;
• Assist new (formerly)&#13;
homeless vets with program&#13;
policies and procedures,&#13;
• Schedule residents for&#13;
group and individual counseling&#13;
sessions.&#13;
• Be a team member for case&#13;
plan reviews. .&#13;
• Assist in structured staffings&#13;
for case plan changes,&#13;
suspensions or discharges.&#13;
• Act as program staff liaison&#13;
to newsletter publishing&#13;
committee.&#13;
Public Information and&#13;
Coordination Assistant at&#13;
Vets Place - Southern&#13;
Center&#13;
• Assist Director and clinical&#13;
staff including contracted&#13;
professionals with the compilation,&#13;
layout, printing,&#13;
and distribution of quarterly&#13;
newsletters and program&#13;
brochures,&#13;
• Collect and prepare articles&#13;
regarding veterans and&#13;
homelessness or other concerns,&#13;
and assist resident to&#13;
improve writing skills.&#13;
• Assistin the coordination of&#13;
agenCIes and .programs&#13;
servmg the homefess populations&#13;
in Racine County&#13;
Assist the Homeless Ass~&#13;
tance. Coalition in arranging&#13;
meetings, mali notices&#13;
record notes of meelin~&#13;
and decisions and developa&#13;
generic brochure to advance&#13;
the mission of the coalition.&#13;
Foster Family Licensing&#13;
Studies&#13;
• Conduct safety checks of&#13;
homes.&#13;
• Run records.&#13;
• In terview prospective foster&#13;
parents.&#13;
• Write case notes.&#13;
• Place foster children into&#13;
licensed homes.&#13;
Foster Parent Recruiterl&#13;
Retention Specialist&#13;
• Distribute material to public&#13;
through employers, public&#13;
service groups, community&#13;
groups, etc. .&#13;
• Present to pubic service&#13;
organizations, and commuruty&#13;
groups.&#13;
• Create new material (i.e.&#13;
newspaper advertisements)&#13;
to best fiighlight the need of&#13;
foster parents. .&#13;
• Orgaruze foster familyactivities&#13;
for retention of homes,&#13;
Northwestern College of Chiropractic&#13;
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pr'l&lt;..litionu&gt;, and In nucrdr-uphnarv "l:t\,ng" Thcv bow lkit fl,I!' HKUSON&#13;
EXCELLENCE he, earned ,1\ ,UI !:Ht:rr\)~iHn.:d n'!~uUtll)n &lt;1~a pi(11Ktr rn (\n1tpf,1{t!l&#13;
cducct«.» p&lt;I:iun LF!' 1nd ;,&lt;:, wnHil.. ?"("'t'Mlh l\onhwt'\tefn l\ .1 hrmu-d \'llfoilrnrlll&#13;
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lJNPARAU.ElJ-D CI.INICAI. f'OlINIJATION&#13;
."tid O,ifC,ln:t:t ~n\'IU'~ Ct:nt&lt;:r. Wht'H: we ;J\\hl Oli~&#13;
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