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              <text>THE AI=INGeR&#13;
October 18, 2001&#13;
INSIOE&#13;
Page 3&#13;
The Penny&#13;
Page 4&#13;
,&#13;
Affordable medical services&#13;
atParkside&#13;
PageS&#13;
~ of Halloween&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Disc Golf&#13;
OpInion on negotiation&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Mens and womens soccer&#13;
Page 8&#13;
!-egends of the Silver&#13;
Screen: Lauren Bacall&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Aline Frank&#13;
SOFA Show&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside Aequitas Issue 7 Vol. 32&#13;
September 11: America moves on&#13;
By Tiffany Grant&#13;
A &amp; E Page Editor&#13;
Last Thursday, October 11,&#13;
marked the one-month&#13;
anniversary of the worst terrorist&#13;
attacks America has ever&#13;
seen. Since that catastrophic&#13;
day America has united, stood&#13;
together and questioned our&#13;
security.&#13;
"We have ruined terrorist&#13;
training camps,&#13;
disrupted their communications,&#13;
weakened&#13;
the Taliban military&#13;
and destroyed&#13;
most of their air&#13;
defense" President Bush assures the nation that we will not fail.&#13;
terronst suspects. It also will&#13;
spend $100 million on improving&#13;
the technology and equipment&#13;
at the United States and&#13;
Canadian boarder. "These&#13;
essential, additional tools to&#13;
combat terrorism and safeguard&#13;
America against future&#13;
terroristattacks," Bush said.&#13;
The United States has begun&#13;
retaliation on the Al Qaeda netbeen&#13;
told to remain calm, but&#13;
be observant and to report anything&#13;
that may seem suspicious.&#13;
The Senate passed a bill, 96-&#13;
1 allowing the expansion of the&#13;
law enforcements ability to "go&#13;
after terrorists." Tlie bill&#13;
includes law enforcement officials&#13;
to have greater subpoena&#13;
power over e-mail records of&#13;
What is The Ranger Review?&#13;
The FBI earlier last week&#13;
'larned Americans that there&#13;
might be more terrorist attacks&#13;
to come in the next "several&#13;
days." Large cities like Chicago&#13;
were pu t on the highest level of&#13;
security. Barricades surround&#13;
the Jolin Hancock Building and&#13;
the nations largest building, the&#13;
Sears Tower. Citizens have&#13;
By Elizabeth Medina&#13;
A&#13;
re you planning to&#13;
attend graduate school&#13;
and thus looking for&#13;
an outlet to get publisned?&#13;
The Ranger Review, the UWP&#13;
student,· ournal. can offer you&#13;
that out et you seek. Students&#13;
in Action and the UWP English&#13;
Department sponsor tlie&#13;
Ranger ReVIew.&#13;
The Ranger Review is published&#13;
twice a year, once at&#13;
the end of the fall semester&#13;
and again at the end of the&#13;
spring semester. Each Journal&#13;
is themed. This fall semester&#13;
our theme is The Envtronmental&#13;
Front.&#13;
All research papers and&#13;
essays related to this t';'PIC.ar~&#13;
welcome for pubhcatIOn.&#13;
Paper and essay tOpICS&#13;
should fall into one of the following&#13;
areas: Environmental&#13;
Biology, Environmental&#13;
Chemistry, Environmental&#13;
Geology, Natural Resource&#13;
Conservation, Environmental&#13;
Economics, Environmental&#13;
History, Environmental Policy&#13;
&amp; Politics! Society and the&#13;
Environment, Art and the&#13;
Environment, Environmental&#13;
Law, Technology and the&#13;
Environment, Literature and&#13;
the Environment, Music and&#13;
the Environment, Health and&#13;
the Environment, Environmental&#13;
Ethics, and Environmental&#13;
Education.&#13;
The students' work will be&#13;
submitted to their instructors&#13;
on 3.5-inch floppy disks after&#13;
they have thoroughly proofread&#13;
their paper, made final&#13;
corrections! changes, and&#13;
inserted graplis / graphics&#13;
where appropriate. Papers&#13;
and essays will be carefully&#13;
reviewed and be chosen for&#13;
publication based on the following&#13;
criteria: content presentation&#13;
and layout. Papers&#13;
and essays should 'speak to&#13;
us'. In other words, does your&#13;
paper or essay captivate me?&#13;
The more the paper or essay&#13;
captivates me the more likely&#13;
the journal readers will be&#13;
captivated as well. Also, anything&#13;
submitted not following&#13;
MLA/ APA guidelines would&#13;
not be considered for publication.&#13;
.&#13;
The journal theme for the&#13;
spring semester will be&#13;
Women in Leadership. Please&#13;
keep your eyes peeled for the&#13;
flyers shortly after the start of&#13;
the spring semester. Also,&#13;
department chairs and&#13;
instructors will receive notification&#13;
before the end of the&#13;
3rd week of the spring semester.&#13;
For more information on&#13;
The Ranger Review please&#13;
contact tlie Editor, Elizabeth&#13;
Medina, at kayzhond@&#13;
lycqs.com where a prompt&#13;
response will follow.&#13;
work and Taliban regime. As&#13;
the President said in a press&#13;
conference the night of the onemonth&#13;
anniversary, "We have&#13;
ruined terrorist training camps,&#13;
disrupted their communications,&#13;
weakened the Taliban&#13;
military and destroyed most of&#13;
there air defense."&#13;
America, along with mariy&#13;
"On September 11th,&#13;
great sorrow came to&#13;
our country ... and from&#13;
that sorrow has come&#13;
great resolve"&#13;
other countries around the&#13;
world, have frozen assets to the&#13;
terrorists. Bush said Thursday&#13;
night, "Working with countries&#13;
around the world, we have&#13;
frozen more than $24 million in&#13;
AI Qaeda or Taliban assets."&#13;
In the last four weeks President&#13;
Bush created a new cabinet&#13;
position, "This week, we&#13;
established America's new&#13;
Office of Homeland Security,&#13;
directed by former Governor&#13;
Tom Ridge." This cabinet position&#13;
will focus primarily on&#13;
making sure the American people&#13;
are safe.&#13;
Marking the one-month&#13;
anniversary were memorial services&#13;
held at the Pentagon and&#13;
at "ground zero" in New York&#13;
City. The President of the United&#13;
States attended the memorial&#13;
service in Washington, D.C.&#13;
and said to the families that lost&#13;
loved one's, "On September 11,&#13;
great sorrow came to our country...and&#13;
from that sorrow has&#13;
come great resolve."&#13;
Mayor Rudy Guilani along&#13;
with firefighters held a memorial&#13;
service by where the World&#13;
Trade Center's once stood lead&#13;
a moment of silence at 8:48AM,&#13;
the moment the first plane&#13;
crashed into one of the World&#13;
Trade Towers. The Mayor said,&#13;
"In the name of all of those that&#13;
we lost-- our heroes, the firefighters,&#13;
the police officers, the&#13;
emergency workers, the citizens&#13;
going about their lives trying&#13;
to pursue in their way the&#13;
American dream, all of whom&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
"&#13;
-, -&#13;
THINGS H=:'&#13;
October 18 - 21 October 22 - 24&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Best In Show," Union Cinema Theater, showings&#13;
Thursday &amp; Friday @ 7:30 p.m., Saturda~ @ 8 p.m., Sunday @ 2 p.m,&#13;
October 19&#13;
• Movie: "28 Days," w /Sandra Bullock, Union Cinema Theater,&#13;
Oct. 22. 7 p.m., Oct. 23, 4 p.m., Oct. 24, 7 p.m., free, open to campus &amp; publie&#13;
October 23&#13;
• Women's Soccer@ Lewis University, 12:30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's Soccer @ Lewis University, 3 p.m.&#13;
• Race, Class and Gender Book Group: "Stolen Lives" by Malika&#13;
Oufir, Union 202, 3:30 p.m., open to anyone who has read the book.&#13;
• Volleyball @ Missouri-St. Louis, 7 p.m.&#13;
• Midnight Madness, Sports &amp; Activity Center, 9 p.m. to midnight,&#13;
free to students w / Ranger Card 10, campus only program&#13;
October 20&#13;
• Volleyball @ Quincy University, 2 p.m.&#13;
• Women's Cross Country: GLVC meet (Louisville), 11 a.rn.&#13;
.• "Home Away from Home" Family Day, featuring breakfast&#13;
w / the Chancellor, caricaturist Kevin Berg, ventriloquist Phil&#13;
Hughes, Mission IMPROVable, balloon artist, Megaflix (make&#13;
your own video), Freaky Potos, tailgate party at UWP Rugby&#13;
match, Caribbean carnival &amp; luau; events free, meals at a&#13;
reduced rate, campus only program&#13;
October 21&#13;
• InfoBreak-a fast way to get up-to-date on new technology:&#13;
"which records need to be saved, for how long and which can be&#13;
safely recycled?" 9:45 to 10:30 a.m., Instructional Tech Center,&#13;
Wyllie 01500, free; also held Oct. 24 at 3 p.m&#13;
October 24&#13;
• Noon Concert: Dave Bayles Trio, Communication Arts 0-118, noon, free&#13;
• Johnny Tuite!'s "I'd Rather Be Dancing," Union 104, noon, free,&#13;
open to public&#13;
• Volleyball @ St. Xavier, 7 p.m.&#13;
October 25&#13;
• Womyn's Center presents: "Take Back the Night" Speakout &amp;&#13;
Rally, 5 p.m., Upper Main Place, free, open to campus &amp; public&#13;
• Parkside Experience Day / preview &amp; open house, 7 to 9 p.m.,&#13;
location TBA&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: Gamaliel Chair recipient Dora&#13;
Arce, Overlook Lounge, 7 p.m., free&#13;
• Internship Mania &amp; M~re! Molinaro Concourse, 10 a.m, to 2 p.m.,&#13;
receive on-the-spot information about selecting a major,&#13;
internships, resume writing, cover letters, and interviewing skills.&#13;
• Women's Soccer @ SIU-Edwardsville, 12:30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's Soccer @SIU-Edwardsville, 3 p.m.&#13;
'!\&lt;,&#13;
CO~"Edi:tors-in-ehief&#13;
"&#13;
DamelPrake -&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
1&#13;
Assistant Co-Editors&#13;
Melissa Stephenson&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
'~~ 8&#13;
Crlpy Editor&#13;
Keeley, pJmble&#13;
A&#13;
Design. and LaYout Managers&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Aaron Kleutsch&#13;
:&amp;0&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Shanon r."lU'ke&#13;
Arts and.J;nteriainment Editoj:&#13;
Tiffany Grant ..../'&#13;
~f&#13;
.&gt;&#13;
Sports Page EditQr&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters f&#13;
Alexis Martfrt. ?&#13;
Becky Olson .. i&#13;
Ruyayeem Rashid f&#13;
Kristi Vollmer %&#13;
Myron UbI J&#13;
Rosleyeziridisf&#13;
Brenda Dunham'&#13;
Adebesf Agor",'&#13;
Donnetta Davis&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
PhologJ;aphy Diredors&#13;
Jeffrey Alley&#13;
KoryBohn&#13;
Amber Nichols&#13;
.~&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Katey Thoennes&#13;
Advertis"ing Assistant&#13;
Danny Nguyen&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
NOWlllRING&#13;
Opinion Page Editor&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Columnists&#13;
Reporters&#13;
if ,&#13;
INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE'&#13;
E;etp&lt;'iiq and complete an inte~.&#13;
shipat e lime.&#13;
...r&#13;
THE AI=INGEA&#13;
Meeting~~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D·139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595·2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595·2295&#13;
Confactthe editors at 595-2287&#13;
for more information.&#13;
�18,2001&#13;
Dancing&#13;
4 Pool Table&#13;
3 Darts Machin&#13;
Golden Tee&#13;
10TVs&#13;
Saturday - October 27th. .•. HaHoween party!&#13;
Cash Prizes for Best Costumes&#13;
Free Gifts From Budweiser&#13;
TlIurst!ar'il- College I\file&#13;
Dd Dtm&lt;:tl)flx .&#13;
$5C6rer -F"T~.8tW'&#13;
Spm.lll&#13;
Sunday's- Packer Party&#13;
During !he Gamt&gt; - $3 Pitchers&#13;
!?he Food- $1.75 Domestic Bottles&#13;
- $1.50 Rollin Rocks&#13;
!JIondar'il- Shortie Mondays&#13;
IlIollday illite Shortie Bottles&#13;
Football Party 2 for S 1.25&#13;
Friday and Saturday's&#13;
DJ Dance MiJ(;&#13;
OJ BadAndy and&#13;
CloverX '::--------_.&#13;
iIU!sdaY'sI&#13;
i&#13;
Karaoke &amp;&#13;
DJ Dance MiX PowtJr Hour fJ.1Opm&#13;
53 Pitchers Nt Bonte", ami Rails&#13;
$.50 Taps Drinks 8IV!.~~~_lfL_. -i&#13;
i It'edtM.cdg,,,§- Country Nite Happy Hour 3-6&#13;
I Country Dd 'Every Day!!&#13;
I $1.50 bontes &amp; Ralls I $1.75 fJoIIIe!Jtic Bottles &amp; Rails&#13;
I1---.. Free Hot Do{/S .-_._...&#13;
I Ro~;;:·-M.F3pm - 2am Sat/Sun Ham- 2am&#13;
i 1146Sheridan Road - Kenosha WI 552-0830&#13;
Page 3&#13;
The Penny&#13;
Note: this poem was written by the&#13;
26 students of Professor Carol Lee Saffiat-Hughes&#13;
Poetry Writing class on&#13;
September 13, 2001. Each of us, includmg&#13;
the professor, wrote two lines, one&#13;
on the left, and one on the right. We&#13;
dedicate it to the victims, the families,&#13;
and to all those who love freedom.&#13;
I feel the smoothness of the newborn&#13;
penny.&#13;
With the smoothness of the penny&#13;
unscarred from Time it makes me&#13;
think of innocence&#13;
The front side is brighter than the&#13;
back side of the penny&#13;
A thumbtack comes to mind and&#13;
how the part where you place your&#13;
thumb is smooth but the sharp end is&#13;
rough.&#13;
Lincoln on the back, standing in his&#13;
monument&#13;
Makes me think of the freedom we&#13;
have here in the United States&#13;
Little and shiny and saying, "In&#13;
God We Trust"&#13;
Lincoln looks right, in opposition to&#13;
other coins .&#13;
Coppery sun in the palm of my&#13;
hand&#13;
A coppery sun's afternoon ray of&#13;
light in the palm of my hand&#13;
Sophisticated profile, shiny copper&#13;
Such effort put into. the making yet&#13;
worthless when left alone&#13;
Shiny, small, new, two -sided&#13;
The little value given now as copper&#13;
but once saved as aluminum&#13;
Shiny, smooth, year 2000&#13;
A shiny, brand new car&#13;
New, year 2000&#13;
3 million of these could buy a&#13;
house!&#13;
A small and thin silent penny&#13;
Such power the President has&#13;
towards the United States of America&#13;
Lincoln's shiny forehead&#13;
Refuse to some, treasure to others&#13;
Lincoln looks toward the edge&#13;
What Abraham Lincoln did for our&#13;
country, and why is he on the penny;&#13;
and not a dime or a quarter?&#13;
Warm to touch&#13;
A trip to Springfield, Illinois. They&#13;
had a statue of Lincoln and his nose&#13;
was shiny because everyone had&#13;
touched it, for luck.&#13;
. Smooth top, ridged edges&#13;
In God We Trust. One cent-you&#13;
can't serve both God and money.&#13;
Powerful words&#13;
Memorial to the cost of war and&#13;
freedom&#13;
"D" --smooth surface with a face&#13;
that shines&#13;
I'll see where it is minted from now&#13;
on Liberty and Justice for alL&#13;
Shiny, smooth, but rough edges&#13;
Peaceful, but fierce.&#13;
Marks on Lincoln's chest A man, a&#13;
president&#13;
One cent, dropped and left&#13;
untouched&#13;
Smooth edge, no imperfections&#13;
Alone, insignificant, but combined&#13;
with others seemingly important&#13;
Jaded copper soon won't sparkle so&#13;
bright&#13;
A plump ceramic pig with a slit on&#13;
its back&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Slavery. Lincoln stood against it so&#13;
his punishment was to be placed on a&#13;
copper penny, facing the right, instead&#13;
of the silver coins facing left.&#13;
A raised ridge along the outside&#13;
edge&#13;
Will be soon worn smooth by the&#13;
exchange from person to person, and&#13;
anything else that happens along the&#13;
way&#13;
One of our greatest presidents&#13;
The small words and how important&#13;
those words are to our country&#13;
right now&#13;
In God We Trust.&#13;
All the signs that say that now.&#13;
In God We Trust.&#13;
In God we do not an; always trust&#13;
not all&#13;
"Liberty"&#13;
We are still not all free.&#13;
The light that shines through the&#13;
window, Making the words look new&#13;
A round coin that appears so small, ,&#13;
yet symbolizes Americans&#13;
A small figure standing on the&#13;
steps.&#13;
What would Lincoln say, on September&#13;
11, 2001?&#13;
i&#13;
}&#13;
Are you a creative writer?&#13;
Are you lacking an outlet for your work?&#13;
The Ranger News is now accepting submissions&#13;
for a creative writing special feature.&#13;
Please drop your submissions off at the&#13;
Ranger News office: wyllie D-139C or call to&#13;
make arrangements with the editors at X2287.&#13;
»&#13;
- ------&#13;
Page 4&#13;
--------&#13;
-- --,&#13;
October 18, 2001&#13;
v&#13;
ti&#13;
ti&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
5&#13;
b&#13;
Ward off winter danger with a car&#13;
emergency pack&#13;
By Will Brinkman&#13;
small puncture or the fuel tank runs&#13;
dry. A small investment now can prevent&#13;
time lost and frustration later.&#13;
When the problem is too much to be&#13;
handled simply, do not leave your car&#13;
exposed. Pack flares that can illuminate&#13;
your car to other automobiles in lowvision&#13;
conditions. Cellular phones are a&#13;
great way to contact help and lessen&#13;
your distress time, Both of these can&#13;
lessen the odds of you being stranded&#13;
and helpless.&#13;
If you do end up stranded and waiting&#13;
for help to arrive, there are things&#13;
you can do to prevent any dangerous&#13;
health complications onset by the cold&#13;
weather. Pack a blanket, candle, and&#13;
matches or lighter with the rest of your&#13;
winter stock. While waiting in your&#13;
automobile, cover yourself with the&#13;
blanket from your back wrapping&#13;
around to your front. Light the candle&#13;
and hold it between your knees. Place&#13;
the insides of your wrist to the sides of&#13;
the candle, strafing it from both sides,&#13;
This will keep your blood temperature&#13;
up and prevent such harmful conditions&#13;
as hypothermia.&#13;
UW-Parkside to be honored for diverse&#13;
hiring practices October 25&#13;
Reporter&#13;
W&#13;
ith the coming winter months&#13;
ahead, icy conditions and&#13;
visual problems can take your&#13;
automobile for a tailspin. To combat&#13;
this, some people pack the trunk of&#13;
their automobile with the necessary&#13;
winter provisions to help them recover&#13;
from a mishap along the road.&#13;
One of the many items that go into&#13;
the winter car survival kit is a change of&#13;
warm clothing, It should contain a&#13;
stocking cap, socks, gloves, boots, and a&#13;
polar fleece top or sweater. If your&#13;
clothing becomes wet, you will be able&#13;
to change into dry clothing and ward&#13;
off such threats as chills and frostbite&#13;
while keeping your body temperature&#13;
stable.&#13;
It is important to prepare for minor&#13;
car emergencies that can be remedied&#13;
with many products that can be purchased&#13;
at auto care stores. Both Fix A&#13;
Flat and fuel substitute can offer a temporary&#13;
solution when either a tire has a&#13;
By Dave Buchanan during an Oct. 25 ceremony at the Pyle&#13;
Center in Madison.&#13;
In a letter announcing the award,&#13;
DER Secretary Peter Fox congratulated F&#13;
or the second consecutive year, the UW-Parkside Chancellor Jack Keating&#13;
Council on Affirmative Action and on his campus' efforts to hire and retain&#13;
the Wisconsin Department of eml2loyees of color.&#13;
Employment Relations (DER) will The Council recognized your&#13;
honor the University of Wisconsin- achievement in increasing the workParkside&#13;
for hiring practices that pro- force participation and retention of&#13;
mote diversity, The University will minorities and women," Fox told Keatr&#13;
r_ec_e_i_v-:e:-=a::-::sP"e"c:;:i=a:-1 _a_ch_ie_v_e_m_e_n_t_a_w_a_rd_-..:in::g:c... . ..:H..:..:e...;added,"The council and I&#13;
applaud you and your&#13;
[campus) for the accomplishment."&#13;
Herbert Pitts, Chancellor&#13;
Keating's assistant for&#13;
equity and diversity, said a&#13;
nearly 225 percent increase&#13;
in faculty and staff of color&#13;
led to the award.&#13;
"It's very important&#13;
that as we increase the&#13;
diversity of UW-Parkside's&#13;
student population, we also&#13;
increase the number of faculty&#13;
and staff of color to give,&#13;
students role models and&#13;
mentors," Pitts said, "This&#13;
campus has made a strong&#13;
comrrutment to diversity at&#13;
every level-students, faculty,&#13;
and staff. An award&#13;
like this reinforces the wisdom&#13;
of our commitment."&#13;
~";:::;;=:I of InfSi~~~~~n~~~~~~~~&#13;
L :[1tiCJ=:::.:;;-:":"::::·,-:'~:'-=·~ J received the first-ever DER&#13;
Diversity Award.&#13;
Director, UW-P Public relations&#13;
LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Presents:&#13;
It's mid way through the&#13;
Motivation&#13;
Friday, November 2&#13;
Union I06, Noon-a pm&#13;
semester and time for some&#13;
rejuvenation. At this point&#13;
you could probably use a little help getring rernotivared for school,&#13;
work, or just in general. If you're part of an organization, there are&#13;
probably members who also need a boost. Attendthis FUN program&#13;
and GET MOTIVATED!&#13;
t&#13;
Affordable medical services&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
By Becky Olsen&#13;
Reporter&#13;
M&#13;
any Parkside students may be&#13;
unaware of the medical services&#13;
available to them. Even I had to&#13;
get directions to find this allusive Student&#13;
Health and Counseling Center. I&#13;
admit that I otherwise would have&#13;
remained clueless had not the services&#13;
been brought up by an upperclassman in&#13;
conversation.&#13;
Making sure the Center known has&#13;
been a problem. "The issue we have is&#13;
educating people each time," says&#13;
Michaelina A. Young, MSN, RN, the&#13;
director of Student Health and Services&#13;
Center. "We've had some seniors come&#13;
in who have not known that we exist. It&#13;
is a continuous public relations issue.&#13;
No matter how much you think everybody&#13;
knows, they don't know." So, for all&#13;
you other unwitting students at Parkside,&#13;
here is a place to go to have a variety&#13;
of medical services performed for&#13;
more affordable prices. "The doctor's visits&#13;
are free except for certain procedures.&#13;
The student does have to pay for them,&#13;
but it is much less than in the doctor's&#13;
office," says Young, Although the center&#13;
does provide many services, they are not&#13;
able to perform x-rays, and they also do&#13;
not have a full laboratory. Following is a&#13;
list of the services and prices provided&#13;
by the center:&#13;
PROCEDURES&#13;
Medical and Counselor Appointments&#13;
No Charge&#13;
Gynecologic Exam 10.00&#13;
Pap Smear 10,00&#13;
Physical Exam 20,00&#13;
Sports Physical Exam 20.00&#13;
LABORATORY TEST (perfonned at&#13;
SHCC)&#13;
Blood Glucose (finger stick) No&#13;
Charge&#13;
Chlamydia DNA probe 21.85&#13;
Pap Smear 10,00&#13;
Pregnancy Test No Charge&#13;
Strep A Screen No Charge&#13;
TB Skin Test (must be read in 48 hrs)&#13;
No Charge&#13;
Urinalysis (dip stick) No Charge&#13;
Other lab tests analyzed at AlI Saints&#13;
Laboratories will be discussed at the&#13;
time of need,&#13;
IMMUNIZATIONS&#13;
Hepatitis B Vaccine (series of three&#13;
shots) 35.00 per injection&#13;
Influenza Vaccine (FLU shot) 8.00&#13;
MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) No&#13;
Charge&#13;
Meningococcal Vaccine 65.00&#13;
Tetanus/Diptheria Vaccine No&#13;
Charge&#13;
MEDICATIONS&#13;
Over the counter medicines/supplies&#13;
No Charge Sample medicines (when&#13;
available) No Charge&#13;
Arnoxicillin 250 mg. 5.00&#13;
Bactrim(Sulfametlioxazole / Trimetho&#13;
prim) 5,00&#13;
Depo Provera 38.00&#13;
Erythromycin 333 mg. 7,00&#13;
Oral Contraceptives 5.00&#13;
Penicillin VI&lt; 250 mg, 5,00&#13;
Pyridium (Phenazopyridine HeL)&#13;
5.00&#13;
OTHER SERVICES&#13;
Allergy Injections 25,00 per semester&#13;
Condoms (8 pack) 1,00&#13;
~.&#13;
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continued on page 10&#13;
UW-Parkside .".---..:c'&#13;
Campus&#13;
..&#13;
F 0&#13;
0&#13;
[Page 5&#13;
;...&#13;
History of Halloween&#13;
Witches and goblins, candy&#13;
and play; but what is behind&#13;
this frightening holiday?&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
By Shanan Lehrke&#13;
Costume and candy racks are emptying&#13;
as Halloween approaches, but&#13;
many people do not even know what&#13;
Halloween is or what it represents. " I&#13;
just celebrate it because We did in&#13;
school. I don't know what the history&#13;
is. It has some religious meaning, I&#13;
know that;' said junior Cori Luedke.&#13;
Senior Eric Gasmen also commented&#13;
that, "Ijust thought it was cool puttin&amp;&#13;
on costumes and getting free candy.'&#13;
Freecandy and dressing up is all that is&#13;
known to many Halloween celebrators&#13;
today.&#13;
Halloween is one of the oldest festivals&#13;
known and can be traced back to&#13;
the Celts and their Samhain celebration,&#13;
over 2,000 years ago. November&#13;
Ist marked the New Year for the Celtic&#13;
people and October 31 was their New&#13;
Year's Eve celebration, named the&#13;
Samhain festival. November 1 was the&#13;
beginning of winter and the end of the&#13;
iarvest season.&#13;
Celtic beliefs helped create the&#13;
ghoul, goblin, and ghost holiday that&#13;
many are now familiar with. It was&#13;
their belief that on October 31 that&#13;
ghosts from the dead roamed around&#13;
on earth. The Celtic people believed&#13;
that the ghosts may cause damage to&#13;
their crops and were afraid to leave&#13;
their homes because of ghostly encounters.&#13;
They wore masks hoping the&#13;
ghosts would think that they were fellow&#13;
spirits. They would also place&#13;
bowls of food outside to satisfy the&#13;
dead and keep them from entering the&#13;
houses. That is where trick-or-treating&#13;
and costumes originated.&#13;
As Christianity began to spread so&#13;
did their influence on Halloween. The&#13;
All Soul's Day parade in England also&#13;
had an impact on present day trick-ortreating.&#13;
Christians would hand out&#13;
"soul-cakes",or pastries to the beggars&#13;
in return for prayer. They used this to&#13;
try to replace the Samhain practices.&#13;
The Christian based holiday, AIl Hallowmas,&#13;
or All Saints Day is November&#13;
1, so October 31 would be the eve of All&#13;
Hallowmas, hence the name Halloween.&#13;
Other ties come around the world&#13;
and have been meshed together to create&#13;
this holiday. People of different cultures&#13;
immigrated to America so did&#13;
their beliefs. And the current day Halloween&#13;
has resulted from it. Now it is&#13;
more of a commercial holiday that&#13;
brings in a cool 2.5 billion dollars.&#13;
Happy Halloween.&#13;
For more information regarding&#13;
Halloween History visit the website&#13;
www.historychannel.com/exhibits/ha&#13;
lloweenI hallowmas.html.&#13;
October 18, 2001&#13;
IIreaIII DoI DialV.&#13;
DiInty s coming to QIl11JlUl. _&#13;
Do"l""'l"r~",o"im' crhl111whidtXIiI;l;tl:wyHMi'&#13;
Ccli;:r Pnpdl\id int&lt;ro!bipo wilt tilil""hi·iiJ__ se awlJilk&#13;
",an ,,~ ." ;Idgi:hciI.&#13;
Vmr wttm:oIlegeprogrnm,(ot:n anddYn ~lrmj [j;p:ewnoolJ (l)fiOO oa&#13;
,,1llt l.lm&lt;j {;111ooiwyoJiL'IllltlllmJll\'!rli!&gt;:e' "'I"'''" "'-&#13;
Thuliday, Ot:lober 18, 2001&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
Union 104·106&#13;
WHAT WAS THE BEST&#13;
HALLOWEEN COSTUME YOU&#13;
EVER WORE?&#13;
A scarecrow- Tim Knight&#13;
I went to a party as a pair of dice with my sisterPam&#13;
Shuman&#13;
When I was five my Mom dressed me up a girl- Ben&#13;
Douglas&#13;
Maybe a mime-Jenny Gatzke&#13;
Anop~nlon.ont~e ." Disc golf club could be on its&#13;
....ature of negotiationi&#13;
8ygan~'Frake; way to Parkside&#13;
;P7;P7;P7;P7;P7+++¥e8;P7ili+i**,;P7+i2P+~ By Dena Coady tournaments,"&#13;
Co-EdilOJ'.m.chlilf " Going around the whole course will&#13;
instill a sense of fitness for people, As&#13;
fOctober 18, 2001&#13;
address to Congress and the:&#13;
following the SeptemberlT&#13;
resident Oeorge Bush called for&#13;
the rn1ing government of&#13;
to turn over the suspected&#13;
of the attacks, Osama bin&#13;
. Since the demand, the talib"tt&#13;
attempted many times to negotiate&#13;
this issue with the U.S.in an effort to end&#13;
the attacks by the U.s. on Afghanistan.:&#13;
More than once, they have offered to&#13;
tUrn over bin Laden if the U.S, I'rovided&#13;
concrete evid!IDcethat he was bemnd the&#13;
attacks, a&#13;
, When the p.s. presented its argo..]&#13;
ment to the Onited Nations, the consen~&#13;
sus was that there was overwhelmin&#13;
proof that bin Laden waS resp ,&#13;
Therefore,President Bush has refused t&#13;
take part in any negotiations with th&#13;
Taliban. The demand is simplef turn .&#13;
the mastermind of the attackS, and ce&#13;
the terrorist training camps within&#13;
Afghanistan, s&#13;
All this leads me to .' J:le,rplexing&#13;
,question; Why is it that we, as humatl$i&#13;
'£eelwe need to negotiate for every issue&#13;
and decision we face? It is almost as if&#13;
istence of anything con-,&#13;
fits us personally.,&#13;
ople sed this with'&#13;
that this 15 a Middle-Eastern attidicative&#13;
only of how things are:&#13;
where in the world, However,&#13;
that this is a problem We all&#13;
and if we were to take a closer look'&#13;
ther cultures, such that of&#13;
Pakis ight see&#13;
1are the same that we&#13;
or ourselves before anything&#13;
is a problem The i that peomo""&#13;
concerned wi . hat&#13;
IS. t fur themselv.es '&#13;
what's tight period is ex&#13;
.ous, It's a fundamental tlhi'nk'ing&#13;
~ s: ~c:,a::~~oisch&#13;
And when one looks at the issue in e&#13;
context of current events, one call see'&#13;
clearly why terrorists do what they do.&#13;
They are more concerned with achieving&#13;
their own goals than for the welfare of,&#13;
people in general, ,&#13;
, Itis yet difficult to say what is going&#13;
to happen in the world:now that the'war&#13;
against terrorism has begun. The future:&#13;
of the Taliban is uncertain, Howevev'&#13;
there is one thing We can change sl:illj&#13;
and that is the attitude we have towardS:&#13;
:sc~~~:r~:~b~t':di~~C:~&#13;
.personally. 1think that if we all took the'&#13;
time to consider others' points of vieW:&#13;
and feelings, the world would be a much:&#13;
safer, better place in which to live. oj&#13;
1&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Shaub stated 'The dub educates people&#13;
on an adequate wellness and healthy&#13;
living." Disc golf courses range from 9 to&#13;
18 holes, some of the courses do have 57&#13;
holes, Parkside has 9 to 18 holes,&#13;
According to Schaub, "Parkside has a&#13;
difficult course, its very challenging,&#13;
and the courses here are in wooded&#13;
areas which provide obsta des,"&#13;
There are many disc golf courses&#13;
in the United States and the&#13;
world, "There are numerous parks&#13;
all around this state;' said Shaub.&#13;
"There are two in Milwaukee,&#13;
three in Madison, one at UW-Plateville."&#13;
If interested in the Disc Golf&#13;
Club, "Meetings are held Friday at&#13;
noon, at the outside classroom, in&#13;
case of rain meetings are held at&#13;
the main place south of the&#13;
library," said Shaub. "We need&#13;
more input from the 40 individuals&#13;
we already have." Parkside&#13;
also has a class in disc golf. Additional&#13;
information is available on&#13;
the class, e-mail Professor Paul Kuffel&#13;
at paul.kuffeleemed.gre.com.&#13;
W&#13;
ile walking&#13;
on the campus,&#13;
have you&#13;
ever noticed all of the&#13;
nets and wondered&#13;
what they are for? Well&#13;
they are for disc golf.&#13;
Disc golf is becoming a&#13;
popular sport here on&#13;
campus. Now it seems&#13;
that a Disc Golf Club&#13;
could be making its&#13;
way to Parkside.&#13;
Disc golf is a game&#13;
like regular gol£; the&#13;
difference is it is played&#13;
with a disc. The object&#13;
. t th th di . t A Disc golf faithful attempts a short putt to the basket. IS 0 rowe isc mro&#13;
the nets. The number of .throws made&#13;
until the disc comes to rest in the basket&#13;
must be counted. The length goes by&#13;
feet as opposed to regular golf where&#13;
'Yards are used, The way par is determined&#13;
is, with beginners the disc must&#13;
rest in the basket with the fourth throw,&#13;
for advanced players every hole no matOne&#13;
of the many baskets at the UW-P&#13;
course.&#13;
ter what the length is, it is par three. "We&#13;
are looking for individuals who have&#13;
some kind of knowledge of the game to&#13;
become part of the club to make it an '&#13;
Official Club'" said Craig, Shaub, "The&#13;
dub is sponsored by the student activity,"&#13;
The main objective of the Disc Golf&#13;
Club, according to Shaub, "is to meet&#13;
others and play disc golf, The program&#13;
is to incorporate all levels of players,&#13;
starting with recreation play, beginners,&#13;
and i.e. advance players, leagues, and&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
3rd Annual Martin Luther King .Ir. Celebration&#13;
Community Service Award&#13;
Criteria&#13;
for UW-Parkside Students&#13;
Purpose: The UW-Parkside Dr. Martin&#13;
Luther King Jr. Community Service&#13;
Award is designed to pay homage to&#13;
UW-Parkside student leaders. The&#13;
award is given to recipients who have&#13;
demonstrated the vision and mission of&#13;
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. through&#13;
their endeavors within the UW-Parkside&#13;
community and/or broader communities.&#13;
More importantly, this award&#13;
recognizes the efforts of student visionaries&#13;
who are laying the foundation to&#13;
realize Dr. King's dream.&#13;
Nominations:&#13;
To nominate a&#13;
UW-Parkside student&#13;
for this&#13;
award, please&#13;
complete the nomination&#13;
form,&#13;
attach a copy of&#13;
the nominee's&#13;
resume and submit&#13;
an additional letter&#13;
of recommendation&#13;
(from someone&#13;
else).&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 3, 2001 to;&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Road/ Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
262-595-2371&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the VW-Parkside MLK Celebration&#13;
on January 25, 2002 at 7:00 p.m .&#13;
Shape the Future of Health Care&#13;
Oct~ber 18, 2001&#13;
Ranger women come back&#13;
with win after loss&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
EXAMS&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
LENSES&#13;
EYEGLASSES&#13;
In&#13;
~.&#13;
~&#13;
t:.no.h. - aero •• from tho tlolldai Inn ~&#13;
[&#13;
~&#13;
cool people will clip Ibis cool people will clip this&#13;
Answers to Your Job Search!&#13;
LEARN WHILE YOU EARN!&#13;
ADECCO HAS SEVERAL LAB OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
DEGREED/&#13;
NON-DEGREED&#13;
FULL AND PART-TIME&#13;
• Assist lab tests&#13;
• Formulating Experiments&#13;
• Chemical/Biological experience required&#13;
• Must have at least 1year Laboratory&#13;
experience&#13;
FAX: 262-260-3564 OR SEND YOUR RESUME:&#13;
Michelle.kotes@adeccona.com&#13;
Adecca&#13;
THE EMPLOYMENT PEOPLE&#13;
Parkside intramurals&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
I&#13;
ntramurals has something for&#13;
everyone, if you would like to participate&#13;
here is a list of events coming:&#13;
1. Men's and Women's Basketball&#13;
leagues will be played on Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday niglits beginning October&#13;
30. 2. Co-ed Volleyball league will be&#13;
on Monday and Wednesday nights&#13;
beginning on October 29. 3. Ping-Pong&#13;
matches will be played on Monday&#13;
and Wednesday afternoons beginning&#13;
on October 29. Semester long activities&#13;
are as follows: 1. Water Aerobics:&#13;
Tuesday 5:15-6:15 pm and Thursday 7-&#13;
8 p.m. at the Sports and Activity Center&#13;
pool. 2. Cardio-Kick Boxing: Tuesday&#13;
7-8:30 pm and Wednesday 6:30-8&#13;
pm Classes are held in the SAC Dance&#13;
Studio 3. Noon Hoops: Monday-Friday&#13;
1 pm No teams are needed. Showup&#13;
and join the other players in a&#13;
game of basketball. At tne SAC Field&#13;
house. Special Events are:&#13;
1. Euchre Tournament: Registration&#13;
deadline is November 12. The tournament&#13;
will be held in conjunction with&#13;
were called for 22 fouls and four&#13;
players received a yellow card.&#13;
Next up for the Rangers is a 12:30&#13;
pm game at Lewis on Friday, October19&#13;
and a 12:30 pm game at SIDEdwardsville&#13;
on Sunday, October W 21.&#13;
omen's soccer team came back&#13;
with a 3-2 win against Indianapolis&#13;
on Sunday, October 7&#13;
after enduring their first loss of r-----------------....,&#13;
the season that came on Friday &lt;If 6 ..r&#13;
against top ranked Northern .rtar. orstae fEye Care&#13;
Kentucky. The win agamst&#13;
Indianapolis put the Rangers 6-&#13;
1 in tlie Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference and 11-1 overall.&#13;
Leading up to half time&#13;
Parkside was ahead 2-1. The&#13;
first goal was scored by&#13;
Senior Bryanna ]urvis on&#13;
assists froT Sophomore Lorrie&#13;
Jones and Sophomore&#13;
Julia Starr The second goal&#13;
was scored by Jones on a&#13;
assist from Alison Wild.&#13;
Each of these goals were&#13;
scored over seven minutes.&#13;
. With 23:15 Indianapolis&#13;
tied the game up with a&#13;
penalty kick. Then with four&#13;
minutes and 19 seconds left&#13;
Wild made a corner kick to&#13;
Sophomore Sara Beebe for&#13;
the game winning shot.&#13;
The Rangers however,&#13;
MIDNIGHT MADNESS sponsored by&#13;
the Student Activities office and Residence&#13;
Life on Nov. 16 beginning at 9&#13;
pm. You must sign up in teams of two.&#13;
First place team will receive an AIAW&#13;
CD Boombox. Second place team will&#13;
receive a UW-Parkside recreation tee&#13;
shirt.&#13;
2. Men's and Women's 3pt.&#13;
shootout: Registration deadline is Nov.&#13;
28. Contestants will have 30 seconds,&#13;
from three spots, to make as many&#13;
three's as possible. Varsity basketball&#13;
players on the men's and women's&#13;
team are not eligible. Preliminary&#13;
rounds will take place on Dec. 2 beginning&#13;
at 6 p.m., in the SAC Field house.&#13;
Top two men and women will advance&#13;
to the finals, which will be held at half&#13;
time of men's basketball game on Dec.&#13;
6. First prize for each man and woman&#13;
will be a $50 gift certificate from Dick's&#13;
Sporting Goods in Racine. Second&#13;
place winners will receive a UW-Parkside&#13;
recreation tee shirt. For any questions&#13;
or concerns about any of these&#13;
events contact Tamie Falk-Day at 595-&#13;
2656.&#13;
Men's soccer kicks its way to victory&#13;
" win," said Senior Andrew Nijoka. "We&#13;
came away with two great wins." The&#13;
Rangers had also won against Northern&#13;
Kentucky on Friday, October 5.&#13;
With 60:05 on the clock, Seruor Matt&#13;
Hundt handed an assist to Senior Jeff&#13;
Hines who made a tremendous move&#13;
on Indianapolis's goalkeeper, wrap-.&#13;
ping up the win for the Rangers.&#13;
During the game, It 'seemed the&#13;
seniors really took control of the game&#13;
and played a big part for the win.&#13;
According to Nijoka, "Seniors on the&#13;
field stepped up, they played all four&#13;
);,ears and they all give everything."&#13;
'They realize positions that we are at:.&#13;
and they want us to just keep wmnm~.&#13;
Senior Thorn Peer left the game WIth&#13;
six saves, three of which came in the&#13;
second half. Rangers next games&#13;
are Friday, October 19 at 3 pm at LeWIS&#13;
and at Southern Indiana Sunday, October&#13;
21 at 3 pm&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
W&#13;
ith the victory on Sunday,&#13;
October 7 at home, it put. tlie&#13;
Rangers 6-0-1 in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference and 10-0"1&#13;
overall. With the victory the Rangers&#13;
are on the right track for making the&#13;
playoffs. The 2-0 win came against&#13;
Indianapolis. ..&#13;
Parkside came away WIth the VIctory,&#13;
while also missing two of their&#13;
starters. Coming off the bench [unior&#13;
Mark Swierzy probably didn't expect&#13;
to score the winning goal on Sunday,&#13;
but he did anyway. Swierzy:s game&#13;
winning goal carne on a free kick at 21&#13;
minutes and 49 seconds.&#13;
"We played well, came with a game&#13;
plan and did what we had to do to&#13;
[Legends of the silver&#13;
'screen: Lauren Bacall&#13;
s&#13;
By Benjamlh Schmidt&#13;
Co-Eclltor-ln Chief&#13;
O~i:~as~~1::::5&#13;
Have Or Have (1944),Ji:er feature&#13;
film debut, the took notice of the&#13;
a ho went on making films to&#13;
The elegance and class associaca1l,&#13;
whose nickname is&#13;
nti~':~r:ai:tcl: a~h:~~f!s"rl.~&#13;
tion of her co-star Humphrey Bogom&#13;
Bacall ended up marrying.&#13;
contained the memorable line&#13;
your lips together and blow,"&#13;
teaches Bogart how to whistle,&#13;
e of nearly unprecedented $eXfor&#13;
American audiences of the&#13;
e Big Sleep (1946), Dark Passage&#13;
), and Key Largo (1948),all dramas,&#13;
ued to pair Bacall with Bogart.&#13;
the rune these films came out the&#13;
couple had married and become Hollywood's&#13;
best true-life love story.&#13;
Bacall tried her hand at comedy In&#13;
How To Marry A Millionaire (1953). The&#13;
film continued Bacall's success an~&#13;
teamed her with movie legends Manlyn&#13;
Monroe and Betty Grable. Despite&#13;
lier opularity, Bacall spent most of the&#13;
19 . g for Bogart whose health&#13;
a steady decline until his death&#13;
BetWeen 1966 and 1974 Bacall did&#13;
not make any films and returned only&#13;
occasionallythereafter. She did however&#13;
:return to the stage and won praise&#13;
and her first TonyAward for her role in&#13;
the musical Applause. Her second Tony&#13;
Award carne for her perfonnance in&#13;
Woman of the Year.&#13;
In the past few years Bacall has lent&#13;
her voice to a number of TV commercials&#13;
and has involved herself in promoting&#13;
the movie industry. The American&#13;
Film Institute recently voted Bacall&#13;
#20 of the top actresses in film history.&#13;
The Crowes' remedy&#13;
By Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Co-Editor-In-Chief&#13;
T&#13;
he perfect antidote to cure the&#13;
. stress that has been plaguing so&#13;
many people since September&#13;
Llth's attacks came courtesy of the loud&#13;
sweaty music belled out by The Black&#13;
Crowes, Saturday, October 13th at Milwaukee's&#13;
Eagles Ballroom.&#13;
Those who choose to attend the concert&#13;
were treated to a blistering set of&#13;
paint chipping Rock 'N' Roll which&#13;
included standout songs such as "Midnight&#13;
From the Inside Out" and the current&#13;
single "Soul Singing," from the&#13;
Crowes' latest album Lions. Fan&#13;
favorites "Hard ToHandle" and "Reme-&#13;
, dy" also made it into the set-list.&#13;
The small-scale venue provided an&#13;
intimate atmosphere filled with a symphony&#13;
of scents induding the smoke of&#13;
cigarettes, incense, the band's smokemachine,&#13;
and a certain less legal type of&#13;
smoke often found swirling around the&#13;
atmosphere of Rock 'N' Roll concerts&#13;
since the 1960s. Sweat and stale beer&#13;
also lent their scents to the concoction,&#13;
which seemed as alive as the audience&#13;
which swayed with the bending of Rich&#13;
Robinson and Audley Freed's guitar&#13;
strings and the beat of Steve Gorman's&#13;
drums.&#13;
Arguably America's premier Rock&#13;
'N' Rollband and a powerful answer to&#13;
England's Oasis and Ireland's U2, the&#13;
The Black Crowes (Photo courtesy of Rolling·&#13;
Stone,com)&#13;
Crowes feature vintage fuzz guitars,&#13;
wha-wha pedals, psychedelic organ&#13;
sounds, lots of denim clothes, and the&#13;
passionate, raspy voiced, waif-thin&#13;
lead singer Chris Robinson whose distinct&#13;
vocals hold their own against&#13;
those of The Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger,&#13;
The Who's Roger Dallrey, and Rod&#13;
Stewart.&#13;
Fans who spent an hour in Milwaukee's&#13;
midnight mist after the show had&#13;
the opportunity to meet, speak with,&#13;
and get signatures from Rieli Robinson,&#13;
Audley Freed, Steve Gorman, and&#13;
bassist Andy Hess.&#13;
October 18, 2001&#13;
Lauren "The Loot&lt;" Bac.1I who heated up the screen In the 1940's &amp; 1950's.&#13;
Art club!&#13;
By Deborah Hahm&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, staff and&#13;
the general public. They intend to&#13;
participate with local community art&#13;
programs and events.&#13;
Events with them are numerous.&#13;
They will be having a bake sale October&#13;
25th from 7:30am-1:00pm, a&#13;
haunted house at Lemon Street Art&#13;
Gallery October 27th, a raffle for student&#13;
and teacher's artwork on December&#13;
6th and their annualStudent Art&#13;
Show in the Spring. The raffle will be&#13;
for the many different works of art&#13;
that are sold for a considerable&#13;
amount in the community, but can be&#13;
yours for the price of a ticket.&#13;
. Special events that they organize.&#13;
range from viewing local pieces to&#13;
visiting the Chicago SOFA at the Navy&#13;
Pier, to traveling to Minnesota for&#13;
other outside exhibitions. Their Meetings&#13;
are every other Thursday at&#13;
1:45pm. The next meeting will be held&#13;
October 18th.&#13;
If you would like any information&#13;
contact Amy Sorensen at 605-9532,&#13;
Vice President, Josh Brennan, at 694-&#13;
4294 or Secretary / Treasurer, Michelle&#13;
Constant at 605-1287. Email: misur002@uwp.edu&#13;
Assistant Co-Editor&#13;
A&#13;
rt is sometimes described as a&#13;
manifestation of emotion.&#13;
Often we broaden our horizons&#13;
with art forms. There is music appreciation,&#13;
literary appreciation, dance&#13;
appreciation, film appreciation and, of&#13;
course, two- or three-dimensional art&#13;
appreciation.&#13;
Appreciation is an attempt to gain&#13;
knowledge. The diverse ideas of the&#13;
liberal arts can be yours easily. All you&#13;
have to do is enjoy art and be a part or&#13;
full-time Parkside student. That is all&#13;
you need to join the excitement of the&#13;
Art Club.&#13;
The Art Club's President, Amy&#13;
Sorenson, was ecstatic when discussing&#13;
the dub. "We were asked to&#13;
join two art fairs this past summer.&#13;
And we got the booths for free." The&#13;
money from the fundraisers they do,&#13;
and those they are asked to join, all go&#13;
to art scholarships and special events&#13;
that they host.&#13;
The dub's main foci are techniques,&#13;
understanding an aesthetic appreciation&#13;
of the visual arts among UW-&#13;
Page 9&#13;
October 18, 2apl&#13;
"Anne Frank" opens October 26&#13;
Yearly art exhibit a unique&#13;
•&#13;
experience&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
Director, UW·P Public Relations&#13;
M&#13;
ost people know something&#13;
about the story of Anne Frank:&#13;
a young Jewish girl hiding&#13;
from the Nazis in a sed uded Amsterdam&#13;
apartment during World War II.&#13;
To escape. her cramped quarters and&#13;
the constant threat of arrest, she&#13;
records her thoughts and hopes in a&#13;
diary.&#13;
Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett&#13;
brought a portion of her lengthy&#13;
memoir to the stage as "The Diary of&#13;
Anne Frank." Written with the help of&#13;
Anne's survivor father Otto Frank, the&#13;
original play 'centered on the family's&#13;
fear of capture and the hardships of its&#13;
confinement with another family, the&#13;
Van Daans and a dentist, Mr. Dussel, in&#13;
their tiny living space.&#13;
A new adaptation, written by&#13;
Wendy Kesselman, takes the&#13;
By Brenda Dunham&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Goodrich/ Hackett story and adds an&#13;
Imrortant element left out of the origina&#13;
script but present in the diary: a&#13;
love story. This critically acclaimed version,&#13;
hailed by the New York Post as,&#13;
"An extraordinary theatrical adventure,"&#13;
graces the Com Arts Theatre&#13;
stage for nine performances Oct. 26&#13;
through Nov. 3.&#13;
"What the new script does is bring&#13;
information into the dialog that Otto&#13;
had previously kept out and that information&#13;
is the puppy love affair that&#13;
began between Peter [Van Daan] and&#13;
Anne," said director Tom Sunstrom.&#13;
"The second script makes [the story] far&#13;
more human in the sense that it deals&#13;
with the problems this family is having&#13;
growing up in this terrible situation.&#13;
You've got this young girl who is going&#13;
through the most crucial time of her life&#13;
from the ages of 13 to 16. She's becoming&#13;
a woman, she's starting to fall for&#13;
boys for the first time."&#13;
Even with the addition of the love&#13;
make discoveries and be surprised.&#13;
As you travel up and down the rows&#13;
of art you can actually talk to the dealers&#13;
and sometimes even the artists. You&#13;
can ream first and second hand how&#13;
the pieces are made and what thoughts&#13;
were behind making them. It is the perfect&#13;
opportunity for amateur artists to&#13;
learn about unfamiliar mediums.&#13;
For many&#13;
people SOFA is&#13;
a shopping&#13;
experience. In&#13;
fact they sell on&#13;
average, 20 million&#13;
dollars&#13;
worth every&#13;
year. People go&#13;
around picking&#13;
out pieces for&#13;
their homes&#13;
and offices.&#13;
SOFA is in&#13;
some ways similar&#13;
to the kind&#13;
of art show you&#13;
find in a park&#13;
during the&#13;
summertime.&#13;
At both you&#13;
have the opportunity&#13;
of talking&#13;
to the&#13;
artists, and you&#13;
might be shopping&#13;
for art.&#13;
Yet, the art&#13;
itself is very different. It seems like the&#13;
park is filled with safe art, art that sells&#13;
to a typical household. Much of SOFA&#13;
art is bold and outlandish; its courageous&#13;
pieces would be out of place in&#13;
the tvpical.horne or business.&#13;
SOFA contains no paintings; everything&#13;
is somehow three-dimensional.&#13;
The artwork consists of textiles, glass,&#13;
wood, ceramics, and metal among a&#13;
O&#13;
n Sunday Oct. 7 Ihad the opportunity&#13;
to attend the art exhibit&#13;
SOFA Chicago&#13;
2001; SOFA stands for&#13;
Sculptural Objects,&#13;
Functional Art. Many&#13;
people who have only&#13;
heard of this exhibit are&#13;
unsure of what SOFA&#13;
Chicago is and what the&#13;
experience is like.&#13;
SOFA has been running&#13;
for the past 8 years,&#13;
and I myself have had&#13;
the chance to attend&#13;
three of these events. It&#13;
is unique from everything&#13;
else that I have&#13;
experienced.&#13;
First of all it is different&#13;
from your ordinary&#13;
art museum tour. The&#13;
difference is that in a&#13;
public art museum you&#13;
see a lot of work done by&#13;
people who are, well,&#13;
dead. Their works often&#13;
comment on our past. Above: Jane Sau~r, OneSpacelTwoVisions&#13;
SOFA art is from current Below: Gregg Fjetshman.New Wave Case&#13;
ti t· Study ar IS s setting new art&#13;
trends and commenting on our present&#13;
even our future.&#13;
,For people most familiar with, art,&#13;
the museum experience can terid to&#13;
hold little surprise do to all the well-&#13;
.known works.&#13;
SOFA works are works you have not&#13;
seen or heard of. You can step closer&#13;
and realize that a sculpture is really just&#13;
rolled and twisted newspaper; you can&#13;
story, Sunstrom says the audience, like Sunstrom praised set designer Keith&#13;
the characters, is never allowed to for- Harris' plans for the stage. The Frank's&#13;
get there's a war raging. apartment will be surrounded by what&#13;
"This playwright has a wonderful looks like a concentration camp. The&#13;
ability-which only good playwrights director said the set reinforces his feelhave-to&#13;
draw you in. And when you ing that these families were already in&#13;
get to a happy moment or a loving prison when they locked themselves&#13;
moment in this play, suddenly Hitler away in their secluded hiding place.&#13;
comes in the radio or an air raid siren Five matinee performances of "Anne&#13;
goes off. So every time you get so close Frank" are nearly sold out, indicating&#13;
[to happiness], it's pulled out from the strong interest shown in the play by&#13;
under you." local schools. Tickets remain for the&#13;
The cast includes UW-Parkside stu- evening performances, and Sunstrom&#13;
dents Catherine Apilado as Anne and urged parents to experience what their&#13;
Racine's Brad Kostreva as Peter, the children are going to see.&#13;
young girl's love interest. Otto and "[ definitely feel all age groups will&#13;
Edith Frank are strongly played by empathize and get much more out of&#13;
UW-Parkside student Tim Bohn and' this specific script based on the fact that&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild veteran Emily this is the story of a family," he said.&#13;
Mueller. Jenny Toutant plays Anne's For ticket information, call Diane&#13;
sister Margot. The Van Daans are Smith at (262) 595-2564 or access&#13;
played by Joe Piirto and r ~d~i;.a~n~e:::.s::;m~i~th:.:::@~u;,:w:;.t::::.e::d~u:...:v.::ia::...=e~-m:.::::a.::i1",._~&#13;
Melisa Mathews, and Ben 51- of&#13;
Komistra plays Mr. Dus- Ice&#13;
sel. LAS'dA_h;-&#13;
_ .........V •..;;t .....&#13;
series.&#13;
College and Life can be a challengelet&#13;
us prepare you for both.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24th&#13;
Union 104/106&#13;
4pm-6pm&#13;
'Publicity and promotion' presented&#13;
by Carmen Scalzo, Vice President of&#13;
Public Relations at Johnson Bank&#13;
few other things.&#13;
The skill and time that&#13;
went into the works&#13;
impressed me. Dedication&#13;
is a word these artists are&#13;
familiar with. One of the&#13;
works that most&#13;
impressed this idea on me&#13;
was one space / two&#13;
visions, made entirely of&#13;
waxed linen. (Shown left)&#13;
I can only imagine that it&#13;
must have taken many&#13;
months of working little&#13;
by little to complete it.&#13;
Iwas also impressed by&#13;
anything especially func- Sponwred by Student ActiviUes&#13;
tional. In many cases the CV{) ::...~':::;--~'"':~~~~.'r,"~ )&#13;
pure decoration of a piece took away from the practi- ;:::&#13;
~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~&#13;
cality of it. For example Test Drive a&#13;
some square banded rings&#13;
were uncomfortable, glass Cheesebu rge". sculptures had to be lit • I&#13;
from behind, cone shaped It's wortn a&#13;
vases needed stands to be .... ' •&#13;
functional, and large egg drive from-===-&#13;
shaped objects offered&#13;
only one small drawer. wherever you&#13;
One functional work&#13;
was a set of chairs that are to put us to ;.i&#13;
had people raving about the .est!&#13;
how comfortable they r.1&#13;
were. In a way they were •&#13;
just folding chairs, but&#13;
with a very different look,&#13;
feel, and way of folding.&#13;
They actually came apart&#13;
to hang in a frame on the&#13;
wall. (shown left) R' Place If you would like to see on s&#13;
some of the art for your- IQ..~~ (262)657-5907 ~~ ... self, you can go to ')-, ~...... '),&#13;
www.sofaexpo.com and \.. ~ I&#13;
see a few works posted for \. "'-"'.r~; ,.~&#13;
each gallery, or you could '" &lt;P"&#13;
order a catelog. L__..JI3Q;LJ52lrniIJitt •..JK~e!Hln~o~s!Jh!!ca!L_-,...J&#13;
Wednesday, Nov, 28th&#13;
Union 104/106&#13;
4pm-6pm&#13;
"How to set and live your priorities"&#13;
presented by Catherine Jameson,&#13;
UWP Controller&#13;
For all clubs, organizations, group members.&#13;
leaders, and anyone who is interested!&#13;
Pjzza and beverages served.&#13;
Attendance is limited, so sign up now! Stop by&#13;
_ Union 209. call 595-2278. or send an e-mail&#13;
to: enge/@uwp.edu&#13;
Try our1emDulj"5XS"" Wine &amp; see- 5&lt; llquOf&#13;
Curl)' rrtes Fun klds ffiCN&#13;
H~ut anIon rings Everything is fresh&#13;
Root Beer on Tap Cverythingis coceec to order&#13;
Golfed Crud&lt;.fHl loaded aurgerfrom $3.95&#13;
St&amp; Sa/3ds &amp; sandwiches • Pub Atmosphern&#13;
Call For Luncheon Reservation&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Affordable medical&#13;
services at Parkside,&#13;
&lt; Continued _&#13;
Dental Dames (2 pack) 1.00&#13;
Another important service that is&#13;
provided by the center is counseling,&#13;
which is also free of charge. "Students&#13;
can call and make an appointment.&#13;
Everything is confidential, any issues&#13;
you might have in mind. It is like having&#13;
your own psychologist and no&#13;
charge for an hour visit," says Young.&#13;
Also, it is not absolutely necessary to&#13;
have an appointment to be seen,&#13;
although service is first-corne, firstserve.&#13;
"Students do not really have to&#13;
make appointments to come in to see us,&#13;
except for the doctors and counselors.&#13;
We recommend that they make appointment&#13;
for those visits;' Young explains.&#13;
So, now that we are no longer oblivious&#13;
of the Student Health and Counseling&#13;
Center's existence, next time a health&#13;
issue arises, just travel down past Tallent&#13;
Hall. The Center is open Monday thru&#13;
Friday 8:00-4:30,and is open late Monday&#13;
and Thursday until 6:00. This short&#13;
trip will save you money in the long run.&#13;
Itsaves out-of-town students the pain of&#13;
searching for a new doctor amid the com&#13;
rows of the Parkside area. For more&#13;
information, contact the Student Health&#13;
and Counseling Services at 262-595-&#13;
2366.&#13;
September 11:&#13;
America moves on,&#13;
Continued&#13;
are heroes - we remember them, we will&#13;
always remember them, and to them we&#13;
dedicate the rebuilding of New York&#13;
making certain that we do not allow the&#13;
terrorists in any way to break our spirits.&#13;
Instead they have emboldened it."&#13;
As of Saturday, October 13, Mayor&#13;
Guilani reported that the missing persons&#13;
count is now 4,688, 445 bodies nave&#13;
been recovered, 388, identified and 57&#13;
unidentified.&#13;
In President Bush's concluding&#13;
remarks on October 11, he said, "We are&#13;
asking every child in America to earn or&#13;
give a dollar that will be used to provide&#13;
food and medical help for the children&#13;
of Afghanistan." This fund is called&#13;
America's Fund for Afghan Children.&#13;
. The money should be sent to the White&#13;
House in Washington D.C.&#13;
In a time that children feel so helpless,&#13;
they are finally given the chance to&#13;
do something by the President of the&#13;
United States of America. In the month&#13;
since the tragedies houses fly their flags&#13;
like it was tile Fourth of July, they have&#13;
show up on cars, businesses and clothing.&#13;
The terrorists failed when they&#13;
thought they could bring down one of&#13;
the most powerful countries in the&#13;
world; they only brought it closer&#13;
together.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
3rd Annual Martin Luther King Jr. 'Celebration&#13;
College Student Essay Contest&#13;
TOPIC: "How I WiD Keep it Real:&#13;
My Dream for My Community"&#13;
Judging Criteria:&#13;
1. Entrants must address the&#13;
topic in a 400-word typewritten&#13;
essay.&#13;
2. Essays should relate the student'&#13;
5 own personal ideas&#13;
or experience to the topic&#13;
and show an understanding&#13;
of Dr. King's ideals.&#13;
3. Essays cannot be a biographical&#13;
sketch of Dr. King.&#13;
4. Essays will be judged on the&#13;
basis of sentence structure,&#13;
clarity of thought,spelling,&#13;
content, develop ment of&#13;
thought, and grammar.&#13;
~ons: 1st&#13;
P1ilC€T€CciVeS$ bond and a&#13;
plaque&#13;
For judging purposes, please&#13;
write your name, address, and&#13;
phone number on the back of&#13;
your essay&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop o~ yo~J.rentry by December 3, 2001 to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Road/ Box 2000&#13;
, Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
262-595-2371&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration&#13;
on January 25, 2002 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
, ..~~ ~~f ' ..,1$ ''&amp;is&#13;
THe Sl:3NGeA October 18, 2001&#13;
Odober 24, 2001&#13;
Union lOB at noon&#13;
FREE! FREE! FREE!&#13;
7!a,Jce Ba,cJc&#13;
the Night&#13;
All are cordially invited to join us on:&#13;
Thurs., October 25,2001&#13;
at 5:00 pm in Main Place.&#13;
Wewill have speakers from KASA/Pathways to&#13;
courage and Women's Horizons, rally on and&#13;
around campus, then return for coffee cookies , ,&#13;
poetry, stories, and more.&#13;
PLease heLpus create awareness oj domestic and&#13;
sexuaL uioience!&#13;
For more information, please call (262) 595-2170,&#13;
leave a message.&#13;
OCtober18, 2001 Page 11·&#13;
POllel - ----- Xc: RIAT ~ ----&#13;
10/05/01 cited for speeding 42 mph in a&#13;
25 mph zone.&#13;
10/06/01&#13;
Inc #01-717 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH E, .West of CTH JR,&#13;
6:06 p.m. Driver was cited for&#13;
speeding 63 mph in a 45 mph&#13;
zone.&#13;
Inc #01-721 Criminal Damage&#13;
to State Property, Ranger Hall&#13;
Atriwn, 1:27 a.m. Student&#13;
reported a computer box had&#13;
been dropped on the corner of&#13;
the glass in the atrium, causing&#13;
a crack. Officer secured&#13;
the glass with duct tape. No&#13;
wi tnesses or suspects to the&#13;
incident.&#13;
Inc £01-718 Traffic Violation,&#13;
CTH E, West of CTH JR,&#13;
6:35 p.m. Driver was cited for&#13;
speeding 60 mph in a 45 mph&#13;
zone.&#13;
Inc £01-719 Agency Assist,&#13;
CTH E, 5200 Block, 7:14 p.m.&#13;
While on routine patrol, UPPS&#13;
of ficer was flagged down by a&#13;
driver whose van had hit a&#13;
deer. Officers controlled&#13;
traffic until a Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
deputy arrived to dispatch&#13;
and dispose of the animal.&#13;
Inc #01-720 Traffic Violation,&#13;
OUter Loop Road &amp; CTH&#13;
JR, 11: 33 p.m. Driver was&#13;
Inc #01-722 Medical Assistance,&#13;
Ranger Hall Entry, 9:27&#13;
p.m. Officers responded to a&#13;
call of a student suffering&#13;
chest pains. Kenosha ambulance&#13;
too the subject to Aurora Medical'&#13;
Facility.&#13;
10/07/01&#13;
No Incident Reports&#13;
iversity of Wisconsi -Parkside&#13;
hermal Mugs&#13;
Purchase at all&#13;
Dining Service&#13;
locations, Ranger&#13;
Card Office, and&#13;
The Den!&#13;
\,-...&#13;
sponsored by Student&#13;
life &amp; Dining Service&#13;
10/08701&#13;
Inc #01-723 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Greenquist, 7:47&#13;
a.m. Staff member reported&#13;
someonewrote obscene comments&#13;
on subject matter which had&#13;
been posted on a door. No suspects&#13;
or witnesses.&#13;
Inc #01-724 Security Alarm,&#13;
Media Services, 7:50 a.m. UPPS&#13;
officers responding to an&#13;
alarm found it had been activated&#13;
by a staff member. Area&#13;
was checked and found to be in&#13;
order. .&#13;
Inc #01-725 Fire Drill, Child&#13;
Care Center, 10:20 a.m. Drill&#13;
was conducted at the center&#13;
with 57 children and 14 adults&#13;
safely evacuated in 54 seconds.&#13;
Inc #01-726 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, Computer Center,&#13;
Wyllie Hall, 1:54 p.m. Student&#13;
reported leaving his book bag&#13;
by a computer for a few minutes&#13;
and when he returned from&#13;
getting a print job, found it&#13;
missing. No suspects or witnesses&#13;
to the theft.&#13;
Inc #01-727 Security Alarm, University&#13;
House, 2:52 p.m. Officers&#13;
responding to an alarm&#13;
found it had been set off by&#13;
the alarm company servicing&#13;
the system.&#13;
Inc #01-728 Medical Assist,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 10:33 p.rn. Student&#13;
who had hit her head, was&#13;
transported to Aurora Medica.l&#13;
Center by friends.&#13;
10/09/01&#13;
Inc #01-729 Security Alarm,&#13;
Computer Support, Wyllie Hall,&#13;
7:43 a.m. Officers responding&#13;
to an alarm found it had been&#13;
set off by a custodian who did&#13;
not realize the alarm was&#13;
turned on. Area checked ok.&#13;
Inc #01-730 Agency Assist,&#13;
STH 31 and CTH E, 2:07 p.m.&#13;
UPPSofficer assisted Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff Department with traffic&#13;
control at a construction&#13;
site until heavy equipment&#13;
trucks cleared the area.&#13;
Inc #01-731 Soliciting IUW-S&#13;
Chapter 18 Violation), Union&#13;
parking lot, 3:27 p.m. Officer&#13;
on patrol noticed flyers on&#13;
vehicle windshields, advertising&#13;
An upcomingdance party at&#13;
a local establishment. Employee&#13;
of the club was called and&#13;
informed of the restrictions&#13;
regarding soliciting on state&#13;
property and she carne out to&#13;
remove the flyers.&#13;
Graduation&#13;
Reminders&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
Director, UW-P Public Relations&#13;
P&#13;
lanning to Graduate In December&#13;
2001?&#13;
Then you must apply in Student&#13;
Records (WYLL0187) for your degree&#13;
summary / graduation application by&#13;
OCTOBER 19. Information on commencement&#13;
will be sent out soon to&#13;
students who've applied. This year,&#13;
commencement is Dec. 16 at 2 p.m. in&#13;
the Sports and Activities Center. Don't&#13;
delay-apply today in Student&#13;
Records!&#13;
Planning to Graduate In May 2002&#13;
Or December 2002?&#13;
It's not too early to apply now. Any&#13;
student who has 84+ credits can apply&#13;
to graduate for a future graduation&#13;
term. Your degree summary / graduation&#13;
application entitles you to an official&#13;
DARS report, which reflects all&#13;
outstanding degree requirements,&#13;
including courses still needed to complete&#13;
general education and major. So,&#13;
plan ahead and make certain you're&#13;
meeting your degree requirements in&#13;
time for your intended graduation&#13;
date. Apply today if you have 84 or&#13;
more credits.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
2001 Family Schedule of Events Dgy .&#13;
\&#13;
1&#13;
.1&#13;
FRIDAY, oeToBER 10,2001&#13;
Recreation Specials in The 'Den i-11 p.m. The 'Den&#13;
SATURDAY, OeTOBER 20, 2001&#13;
8:30-9a.m.&#13;
9-10a.m.&#13;
IOa.m.-2p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
Parltside eafe&#13;
Parltside eafe&#13;
Union Square&#13;
eheclt In&#13;
Brealtfast with the ehancellor*&#13;
Beehstere Special Hours&#13;
Art Gallery Special Hours&#13;
eampus earniyal of ActiYities&#13;
Tailgate Party/Lunch&#13;
UW-P Rugby Match*&#13;
eampus Tours&#13;
Frealty Photos 8 Make Own Video&#13;
Mission IMPROVable&#13;
eommunieation Arts&#13;
IOa.m.-Noon&#13;
Noon-Ip.m.&#13;
I-2:30p.m.&#13;
1-2:30p.in.&#13;
3-6p.m.&#13;
4:30-5:30p.m.&#13;
6p.m.&#13;
i-8:30p.m.&#13;
8-11p.m.&#13;
9-11p.m.&#13;
0-Midnight&#13;
Union Square&#13;
SAe Field 8&#13;
SAe Field 8&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Bazaar&#13;
The 'Den&#13;
Luau 'Dinner*&#13;
Ventriloquist Phil Hughes&#13;
Frealty Photos 8 Malte Own Video&#13;
eosmic Bowl 8 Recreation Specials&#13;
Midnight Madness Sports ~ Activities eenter&#13;
·,Mealtiekets are available at the Rangel' eard Office. 8reakfast and Lunch are $2 each, 'Dinner is $5.&#13;
Sponsored bs&gt;Famils&gt;'Das&gt;2001 eontaet Student Activities at (262) 505-2278 for more information.&#13;
(~/lJ#" 'The University of Wisconsin_ Parkside provides services fot' patrons with special needs_')&#13;
'"./ Please contac;t the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345. ./</text>
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              <text>THE Ar::lNGe.A&#13;
Veritas )etober 25, 2001&#13;
INSloe&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Guide to $tudy eports&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Mammothmania a reality&#13;
PageS&#13;
Takeback the night&#13;
Goldsmith delivers&#13;
two for one&#13;
Page 6&#13;
keepiog fit this winter&#13;
Mensbasketball on a rise&#13;
Mens soccer receives&#13;
first loss&#13;
Page 8&#13;
Quickand inexpensive&#13;
college cuisines&#13;
Travisconcert review&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Onceagain, singer Bob&#13;
Dylan lets us believe&#13;
Legends of the Silver&#13;
Screen:Audrey hepburn&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
America's Fear:&#13;
Anthrax&#13;
I&#13;
nthe month that has past&#13;
America has had to come to&#13;
the realization that the&#13;
threat of a biochemical war is&#13;
a possibility. In the time that&#13;
has past at least nine people&#13;
have been infected with&#13;
Anthrax and about thirty-two&#13;
have been exposed. Employees&#13;
from both the NBC and&#13;
CBS news have been infected&#13;
"There are no&#13;
specific symptoms&#13;
only general non-specific&#13;
symptoms."&#13;
with the non-fatal type of&#13;
Anthrax, called cutaneous or&#13;
skin Anthrax. An ABC news&#13;
employee's baby also developed&#13;
that form of Anthrax. A&#13;
Florida man died when he&#13;
contracted the inhaled form of&#13;
Anthrax at the American&#13;
Media office. Another Florida&#13;
man is in serious condition&#13;
with same form of Anthrax.&#13;
On Monday two postal workers&#13;
died of what was suspected&#13;
as the inhaled form of&#13;
Anthrax in Washington D.C.&#13;
Others have been exposed&#13;
to Anthrax, which does not&#13;
mean that they will .pe.velop&#13;
the disease. The majonty of&#13;
the people exposed are&#13;
employees in the Hart Senate&#13;
Office in Washington, D.C.&#13;
where a letter containing&#13;
Anthrax was sent to Senator&#13;
Daschle. Many people don't&#13;
know a lot or anything about&#13;
Anthrax, but two doctors m&#13;
Grayslake, Illinois has&#13;
answered many questions that&#13;
concern us all.&#13;
When questioning doctor's,&#13;
Paul Tack, M.D. and&#13;
Paru Sharma, M.D. some baSIC&#13;
questions· about Anthrax were&#13;
answered. They said that this&#13;
disease could be transmItted&#13;
by "inhaling, coming in conBy&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Face to face with the Anthrax bacteria that has terrorized Am~rica&#13;
tact with, or mgestmg it."&#13;
Some of the symptoms of&#13;
Anthrax are similar to the flu.&#13;
Chills, fevers and joint pains&#13;
are a couple of the examples.&#13;
Jr. Tack said II "T'hereare no&#13;
specific symptoms, only general&#13;
non-specific symptoms."&#13;
Dr. Sharma said, "A person&#13;
needs to be treated before they&#13;
show signs of Sepsis." Sepsis&#13;
is an infection in the bloodstream&#13;
that could lead to&#13;
shock. These symptoms may&#13;
include a weak pulse, a fever,&#13;
flushing of the skin, rapid&#13;
heartbeat, or a change in mental&#13;
status.&#13;
Anthrax does not have to&#13;
be fatal disease. All the reported&#13;
cases of Anthrax have been&#13;
traced to letters sent through&#13;
the mail and all have contained&#13;
a white substance. By&#13;
opening an envelope with a&#13;
"A person needs to be&#13;
treated before they&#13;
show signs of&#13;
, sepsis."&#13;
white substance in it, they&#13;
would go on a course of antibiotics.&#13;
When these employees&#13;
opened their letters they most&#13;
likely touched it and that's&#13;
how they developed the "skin&#13;
Anthrax." However, in the one&#13;
man that died in Florida's, he&#13;
read the letter too close to his&#13;
face and he inhaled the&#13;
Anthrax and developed the&#13;
continued, page 11&#13;
What is CATI all about?&#13;
By Anastasia Ryzhicova&#13;
Reporter&#13;
W&#13;
hat is CATIall about?&#13;
CAT! stands for Center&#13;
for Advanced&#13;
Technology. and Innovation&#13;
and is a new initiative recently&#13;
launched in Racine County to&#13;
benefit now existing companies,&#13;
students and the area's&#13;
work force.The main objective&#13;
of CATIis to promote technological&#13;
innovation of businesses&#13;
by implementing new-edge&#13;
technologies "fresh from the&#13;
school" or from the existing&#13;
companies. Yes,it does imply&#13;
that the students will be closely&#13;
involved working with the CATI of Racine promotes technologentrepreneurs&#13;
in a technology ical innovation.&#13;
based "INCUBATOR". Incubators&#13;
are designed to take&#13;
new businesses through their&#13;
first steps towards success by&#13;
reducing overhead costs, sharing&#13;
expertise and resources,&#13;
and accessing a wide range of&#13;
skills essential for business&#13;
success. CAT!'s concentration&#13;
will be innovation and new&#13;
processes through the transfer&#13;
of new or existing technolo-.&#13;
gies. '&#13;
So how can the students&#13;
benefit from this type of incubator?&#13;
As Matthew Wagner,&#13;
CATI Director, mentioned: "&#13;
There is no better way for students&#13;
to learn the ins-and-outs&#13;
of business than to have&#13;
hands-on experience." CAT!&#13;
plans to engage students rangcontinued,&#13;
page 10&#13;
-.-.---&#13;
Page 2&#13;
THING=&#13;
October 30 October 25&#13;
oVolleyball @ Lewis University, 7 p.rnoInfoBreak-a&#13;
fast way to get up-to-date on new technology: "Basic Power&#13;
Point - Power-up your presentations with Microsoft Power Point 9:45 to&#13;
10:30 a.m., Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie 01500, free, also held Oct. 31,&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
oInternship Mania &amp; More! Molinaro Concourse, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., receive.onthe-spot&#13;
information about selecting a major, internships, resume wntmg.&#13;
cover letters, interviewing skills and more.&#13;
o Womyn's Center presents: "Take Back the Night" Speakout &amp; Rally, 5 p.m.,&#13;
Upper Main Place, free, open to campus &amp; public&#13;
oParkside Experience Day / preview &amp; open house, 7 to 9 p.m.Jocation TBA October 31&#13;
oFriends 'of the Library presents: Gamaliel Chair recipient Dora Arce, Overlook&#13;
Lounge, 7 p.m., free .&#13;
-Play: "Diary of Anne Frank," Com. Arts Theatre, 10 a.m., tickets: adults $10,&#13;
faculty, staff,students $7&#13;
October oNoon Concert: Lisa White, soprano, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free 26 - 27&#13;
oEi Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead, Upper Main Place, noon to 2 p.m. oPlay: "Diary of Anne Frank," Communication Arts Theatre, Oct. 26, 10 a.m.&#13;
&amp; 7:30 p.m., October 27, 7:30 p.m., tickets: adults $10, faculty, staff, students&#13;
$7 oMedia Training 101, Learn from the Pros, Student Union room 104-106,2&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
October 26 Harborside P,ye Care&#13;
oVolleyball vs, Northern Kentucky, SAC, 7 p.m.&#13;
October 27&#13;
oWomen's Soccer @ Northwood, 1p.m.&#13;
oVolleyball vs. Indianapolis, SAC, 1p.m.&#13;
oVolunteer Program's Make a Difference Day contact the Volunteer Center&#13;
for details. • '&#13;
CONTACT LENSES&#13;
October 28.&#13;
!,tno,h&gt; - &gt;&lt;roo' from tht HO\ida~Inn&#13;
oMen's Soccer@Northwood, 11 a.m.&#13;
Sports Page Editor if&#13;
Dena Coady f&#13;
Reporters f&#13;
Alexis Martin 2&#13;
Becky Olson I&#13;
Ruyayeem Rashid e&#13;
Kristi Vollmer ii&#13;
Myron UbI.,1&#13;
Rosie vezindts ~&#13;
Brenda Dunham i&#13;
AdebesLAgorQ. t&#13;
Donnetta pavisff&#13;
Will JlrinkmanS&#13;
s&#13;
Photography Direclorj;&#13;
Jeffrey Alley&#13;
KoryHolni&#13;
Amber Nichols&#13;
b,&#13;
Co-Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Daniel Frake -&#13;
Benjan1;in Schmidt ,&#13;
,&#13;
--.&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Katey Thoennes&#13;
Advertising Assistant&#13;
Danny Nguyen if&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Dave B\lchan;;p&#13;
NOW HIR.ING&#13;
Opinion Page Editor&#13;
Certooiusrs&#13;
Columnists&#13;
Reporters&#13;
/&#13;
THE Ar:::aNGEA ] ~. Assistant CJ.Editors&#13;
Melissa Stephenson&#13;
Deborah Hahm ~ ··i&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Keeley Pemble&#13;
't&#13;
Design and LaY6ut Managers&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Aaron Kleutsch&#13;
c&#13;
'.,,~&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Shanon Lehrke&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parks ide.&#13;
if&#13;
INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE!&#13;
GetR~ end.complete a,n'lntern-&#13;
~hlPatJ:l1esame time ~v .&#13;
40/&#13;
Contact theeqitors at 595-2287&#13;
fOf information.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295 Arts and Bnteetaiameat ·E~itor&#13;
TlfIany Gtant&#13;
\I-·--,·_~~-------"""&#13;
OCtOber 25.2001 THe ~QNGe~&#13;
,--------.--- I MOISl EMBARRAS$ING MOME,Nl&#13;
1St Peace 2ni Peace I Party for you Dinner for 2&#13;
II&#13;
and including 2&#13;
20 friends Hosted by beverages&#13;
The Barn&#13;
I&#13;
Name: Phone: IMy embarrassing moment is..... --------&#13;
ITo participate in the contest please fill out the following&#13;
form completely and turn it in to The Ranger News @D139C&#13;
I&#13;
in Wyllie Hall. Two winners will be chosen and notified by&#13;
The Ranger News. All entries must be turned in by noon on&#13;
the Wednesday following the previous weeks issues.&#13;
__ *Some restrictions do apply"_~ee Ranger News for details.&#13;
-----&#13;
------&#13;
Guide to study spots&#13;
By Evan Carrison&#13;
Reporter&#13;
D&#13;
espite studying is inherently unfun&#13;
'nature, it is an important&#13;
. part. of college life. This guide&#13;
will he1p students come to terms with&#13;
this realization. It will also help students&#13;
locate and use the many studying&#13;
areas around campus.&#13;
The most obvious choice to study&#13;
would be the library. The ground, second&#13;
and third floors all offer a different&#13;
studying experience suited to individual&#13;
tastes. Bathrooms and clocks are&#13;
located throughout the surrounding&#13;
area. The mall room in the northwest&#13;
corner of the ground floor offers the&#13;
most comfort. It is full of comfy chairs&#13;
and couches. This may be a drawback&#13;
because the extreme comfort level&#13;
tends to promote sleeping, not studymg.&#13;
Also, there is no .food allowed in&#13;
the. Library. Those of you who enjoy&#13;
enriching your mind while enriching&#13;
your stomachs will have to look elsewhere.&#13;
The second and third floors&#13;
offer slightly less comfort .. The chairs&#13;
are not as faney, but there is much&#13;
potential for learning to be had. The&#13;
third floor is designated as a "Quiet&#13;
Study Area," making it very quiet and&#13;
low on traffic throughout the day. It is&#13;
recommended for hard core studynerds&#13;
and those looking to grab a quick&#13;
nap between classes. Those orange&#13;
twinkie things are comfortable.&#13;
Other good places to study are&#13;
the sitting areas located throughout&#13;
Parkside hallways. These areas offer&#13;
comfortable chairs which are easily&#13;
accessible. Clocks, bathrooms and&#13;
vending machines are plentiful. One of&#13;
the major drawbacks is the high traffic/noise&#13;
level during lunch. These&#13;
areas are recommended for those who&#13;
want to grab a few minutes of studying&#13;
between classes, or those who want to&#13;
sit with friends and pretend to study.&#13;
The chairs and tables outside the&#13;
Union Theater offer a cold unrelenting&#13;
place to study. The chairs are cold plastic,&#13;
and the tables are cold tables. The&#13;
only good thing this area has going for&#13;
it is that the food places are close. So eat&#13;
up, dudes. Trying to ignore the loud&#13;
eating noises coming from the cafeteria&#13;
is difficult though. This area is recommended&#13;
for those who don't want to&#13;
walk to a more suitable location.&#13;
The area directly outside the campus&#13;
bookstore is a place to study. The&#13;
chairs and tables are very similar to&#13;
those by the Union Theater. There is a&#13;
"Home Of The Penn, Pitchersl"&#13;
Ope';S~r.&amp; Man 11a.m.· 2a.m. Tu~s.'~, :1 a.rt· UOH\,&#13;
orrEN DlITATED· NMII DUPUCATED&#13;
W!loI•• 111... , .. BIi 10tl1lllW't Ittt 01 FIlII:&#13;
CHECK OUT WHATS NEW AT THE SARNI&#13;
~ II ~"r-- == -'~r.'. ~ \l~&#13;
111 &amp;GetReady ForTheWildest .~£ r COll\i~~on.;.~.&#13;
'1IrHAllOW~~N~A~T'liND DAT~..&#13;
In Town! CONTES' ,&#13;
eds., Fri.a Sal, oct. 31st 26 a 27 HOT Male&#13;
.J'ARTY Au· WEEKEND!&#13;
JPriIes Fri•• Sat. For 5carie, .&#13;
~ i 5UieSt, MosUltrapous • MOt ~'~IBarlIisb COStumes!&#13;
.d\~ ~ ..-_"""",~j~&#13;
14 .,&#13;
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Iotllll iRails&#13;
Now Booklnd&#13;
For Holiday&#13;
Partlesl taIl&#13;
653·1283&#13;
For Detailsll;&#13;
October 25, 2001"&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Mammoth Mania a reality University of Wisconsi~-Parkside .&#13;
3rd Annual Martin luther Kmg Jr. Celebration&#13;
College Student Essay Contest&#13;
TOPIC:"How I will Keep it Real: My Dream for My Community"&#13;
5:00pm and admission is free. Travelogues,&#13;
Family workshops, Artists studios&#13;
and "Bustrips" begins on October&#13;
1st,200l.&#13;
"What makes this museum better&#13;
than the old museum?" The new&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum is located in&#13;
downtown Kenosha on the lakefront.&#13;
The building is bigger and better than&#13;
before, it was designed by Engberg&#13;
Anderson Design Partnership, Architects&#13;
from Milwaukee, WI. The building&#13;
tells a story about Wisconsin's past as a&#13;
metaphor of a glacier that is cutting&#13;
through our landscape. The glacier&#13;
stands 60fthigh and the theme is spread&#13;
throughout the museum. The exhibits&#13;
are also brand new, with a historical time&#13;
line running through out the museum.&#13;
Exhibits that are available for view are&#13;
"Under the Sea", From "Sea to Snow",.&#13;
"Ice Age" and the "Mammoth Comer".&#13;
Takesome time with friends and family&#13;
to visit the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
and experience "Mammoth Mania" for&#13;
yourself.&#13;
By Jen Cain&#13;
Reporter&#13;
A&#13;
fter nearly 67 years in an historic&#13;
post office, the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum reopened its doors to&#13;
Harbor Park (5500First Ave) and the citizens&#13;
from Kenosha and Racine starnpeded&#13;
to see the Ribbon Cutting and&#13;
Grand Opening Ceremonies that were&#13;
held on Saturday, September 15th, 200l.&#13;
The ribbon cutting was also the kick off&#13;
to a nine-day "Mammoth Mania" event&#13;
created for the family with free admission&#13;
to the museum and free activities&#13;
for all. A few of the planned activities&#13;
had included a laser light show, "Rock&#13;
Talk"with the Racine Geology Club, performances&#13;
by the Kenosha Pops Band&#13;
and multi-cultural dancing.&#13;
Didn't get a chance to experience the&#13;
new building and the scenicview during&#13;
the nine day event? Don't worry museum&#13;
hours are: Sunday thru Monday&#13;
12:00-5:00,Tuesday thru Saturilay 9:00-&#13;
Judging Criteria:&#13;
1. Entrants must address the topic in&#13;
a 400-word type-written essay.&#13;
2. Essays should relotelhe student's&#13;
own personal ideas or experience&#13;
to the topic and show an understanding&#13;
of Dr. King's ideals.&#13;
3. Essays cannot be a biographical&#13;
sketch of Dr. King.&#13;
4. Essays will be judged on the basis&#13;
of sentence structure, clarity of&#13;
thought, spelling, content, development&#13;
of thought, and grammar.&#13;
!:!..!~W,!~~n.!!it!.!;io~n!.!!s~:1st place&#13;
ond and a plaque&#13;
For judging purposes, please write your&#13;
name, address, and phone number on the&#13;
back of your essay&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 3, 2001 to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of MulticulturalStudent Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Rood/ Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
262·595·2371&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration on&#13;
January 25. 2002 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Attention Arts Students:&#13;
Milwaukee Arts Board needs your help!&#13;
The City of Milwaukee is looking for a new design for its flag, and all Wisconsin&#13;
residents are being asked to help. Anyone in the state is eligible to send design ideas. The&#13;
successful flag designer will receive $3,000. Four runners~up will each get $500.&#13;
The Milwaukee Arts Board has all the rules for entry. Or you can access www.onmilwaukee.com&#13;
for the details. For answers to questions about the contest, call at&#13;
GaryPetersen at 414-286-5794.&#13;
Dancing&#13;
4 Pool Table&#13;
3 Darts Machine&#13;
Golden Tee&#13;
10TVs&#13;
'l'a,'ke Ba,c'k&#13;
the Night&#13;
Saturday - October 21th.... Halloween Party!&#13;
Cash Prizesfor Best Costumes&#13;
Free Gifts From Budweiser All are cordially invited to join us on:&#13;
Thurs., October 25,2001&#13;
at 5:00 pm inMain Place. Sunday's- Packer Party&#13;
During lite Game - $3 Pitchers&#13;
Free fi'ooo- $1.75 Domestic Bottles&#13;
- $1.50 Rollin Rocks&#13;
Thursdar's- College Nile&#13;
OJ Dance Mill&#13;
55 COver-Free Tap Beer&#13;
We will have speakers from KASAjPathways to 8pmto 12&#13;
courage and Women's Horizons, rally on and&#13;
around campus, then return for coffee cookies , ,&#13;
poetry, stories, and more.&#13;
Mondar's- Shortie Mondays&#13;
Monday Nite Shortie Bottles&#13;
Football PllI1.y 2 for 81.25&#13;
Friday and Saturday's&#13;
DJDanceMix&#13;
DJ 8adl\.ndy and&#13;
Tuesday's- Karaoke&amp; CloverX&#13;
DJ Dance Mix&#13;
$3 Pitchers&#13;
$.SOTaps&#13;
Hease heLp us create awareness Of domestic and&#13;
sexuaL vioLence!&#13;
.Power Hour 9- tOpm&#13;
All Homes and RBils&#13;
Orin"'S are 2 lor t!!&#13;
Wednesday's- Country Nite&#13;
Country OJ&#13;
S1.50 bottles &amp; Rails&#13;
- For more information, please call (262) 595-2170,&#13;
leave a message.&#13;
Happy Hour 3-6&#13;
E\ltJryDay!!&#13;
$1.75 Domestic Doilies &amp; Ral/§&#13;
Free Hot IJogs.__ -l&#13;
Hours: M-F 3pm - 2am SatlSun llam-2a~&#13;
J I 46 Sheridan Road - Kenosha WI 552-0830&#13;
,October 25, 2001 THE Fle::lNGeFl Page 5&#13;
Goldsmith delivers two for one&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
UWP Public Relations Director&#13;
H&#13;
ave you heard that two is better&#13;
than one? In this case it's&#13;
true. Alan Goldsmith, assistant&#13;
l'rofessor of &amp;raphic design, webaesign,&#13;
flash animation and computer&#13;
illustration here at UW-Parkside created&#13;
prints combining famous paintings,&#13;
and images of our campus. They&#13;
were originaHy produced for a show&#13;
that was held last fall at UW-Parkside&#13;
called Voices of Diversity. Alan sold&#13;
12 pieces .to help raise a substantial&#13;
amount of money for art scholarships.&#13;
His inspiration was, "To use a familiar&#13;
enougli work of art so at first glance it&#13;
would appear normal, then surprise&#13;
you, and make you smile."&#13;
The most easily recognizable painting&#13;
Goldsmith uses is bXGeorges Seurat&#13;
(1859-1891)called' Sunday Afternoon&#13;
on the Island of La Grande&#13;
[atte." Seurat's method of painting in&#13;
small dots that stand in relation to&#13;
each other is called divisionism. The&#13;
dots of color are arranged in a strict&#13;
pattern, creating a surface with perspective&#13;
and depth. His work in "La&#13;
Grande [atte" is said to have been the&#13;
forerunner of modern techniques of&#13;
photoengraving and color reproduction.&#13;
.&#13;
Goldsmith took a modern&#13;
approach as well creating his "Sunday&#13;
Afternoon at Parkside with Georges."&#13;
Using his digital camera he took several&#13;
photographs of UW-Parkside,&#13;
which he said was very tricky to get&#13;
the lighting just right in order to make&#13;
the two images view as one work of&#13;
art." He then scanned Seurat's image&#13;
into the computer, and it took six photographs&#13;
to span the landscape or the&#13;
painting. Then Alan really went to&#13;
work. I can imagine him, like Seurat&#13;
at his canvas, painstakingly laboring&#13;
over his work. Using PhotoShop, filter&#13;
after filter, and layer after layer to&#13;
create the same texture and feel of&#13;
Seurat's work, and beautifully meshing&#13;
the two to become one.&#13;
Like Seurat, Goldsmith's work is&#13;
also being celebrated. Three of his&#13;
prints have been chosen to be part of&#13;
the first Brittingham Art Invitational,&#13;
featuring UW System art faculty and&#13;
instructors. "Sunday Afternoon at&#13;
Parkside with Georges" has also&#13;
received a purchase award. Purchase&#13;
Awards are typical for art invitationals&#13;
and carry a high level of prestige&#13;
for the chosen artist.&#13;
Goldsmith joined UW- Parkside in&#13;
1996 to start the graphic design program,&#13;
which he calls" a growing success."&#13;
He earned his B.F.A.from UWMilwaukee,&#13;
an M.A. and M.F.A. from&#13;
UW-Madison. To view his works go to&#13;
www.wisconsin.edu/ art. If you have&#13;
a Flash plug-in on your computer you&#13;
can see "Sunday Afternoon at Parkside&#13;
with Georges" change from Seurat's&#13;
image to Goldsmith's new and&#13;
improved versien at&#13;
www.uwp.edu/-goldsmit.&#13;
Pieter Throws a Party in Main Place&#13;
Edvard after His First Final&#13;
Sunday afternoon at Parkside with Georges&#13;
Take back the night&#13;
By Womyn's center&#13;
Reporter,&#13;
T&#13;
ake back the night, October 25th&#13;
5:00 PM Main Place University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
The history of "Take Back the&#13;
Night" dates to 1978 in a respons~ to&#13;
rising awareness of VIOlence against&#13;
womyn. The words were used as a&#13;
theme for a national protest march&#13;
down San Francisco's pornography&#13;
strip. The march took p1ace at mght&#13;
and was a profound symbolic statement&#13;
of a commitment to stopping the&#13;
tide of violence against womyn in all&#13;
arenas, and a demand that all perpetrators&#13;
of such violence be held&#13;
responsible for their actions. .&#13;
This march IS an outcry agamst the&#13;
social problem of violence. This march&#13;
is in protest of fear, the fear a womyn&#13;
feels when walking alone at night.&#13;
This march is organized to give the&#13;
freedom back to womyn . The freedom&#13;
to live without fear, to walk at&#13;
night freely without turning our&#13;
shoulder with every step we take, this&#13;
is our innate right as human beings.&#13;
Come join us on this night. To fight&#13;
injustice, to fight violence, to fight&#13;
abuse, to fight rape let your voices be&#13;
heard, do this for your mother, grandmother&#13;
.brother, sister, father, aunt&#13;
and uncle. Do this for yourself.&#13;
1 in 3 womyn will be raped in her&#13;
lifetime most of them before they&#13;
graduate from college. Eighty-five&#13;
percent of these rapes are committed&#13;
by friends or dates. Every 12 seconds&#13;
a woman is beaten in America; these&#13;
are sisters, mothers and daughters.&#13;
Rape and Violence ass~u1t the&#13;
mind, body, and soul of the victtrn. Do&#13;
not accept this in your society. Take a&#13;
stand. Take Back The Night.&#13;
Join us.&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Mens basketball on a rise&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
D&#13;
eep and Complete is the&#13;
Rangers new team theme for&#13;
this year. The rangers are hoping&#13;
to make the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Tournament this season.&#13;
With six new players and seven of the&#13;
top eight players returning this year,&#13;
don't be surprised to see the Rangers&#13;
playing in the GLVC Tournament .&#13;
. 'We are hopeful and optimistic&#13;
that we have the right mix of players,"&#13;
said Coach Jeff Rutter, "We are all&#13;
hopeful and optimistic in the efforts of&#13;
applying experience and talent&#13;
towards achieving the next level of.&#13;
success." Returning players will be&#13;
able to help out the new players and&#13;
show them what the Ranger team.&#13;
stands for. Junior guard! forward&#13;
Quincey Moman last year ti~d for 4th&#13;
place in reboundmg standings (150&#13;
total), tied for 15th place with block&#13;
shots (10), tied for 14th place with&#13;
offensive rebounds (39 off. boards)&#13;
and 4th flace with defensive&#13;
rebounds (1 1 def. boards). Moman&#13;
also finished 29th on the scoring list&#13;
last year.&#13;
Senior forward Nick Knuth last&#13;
year tied for 14th place with offensive&#13;
rebounds (39 off. boards) with teammate&#13;
Moman. Senior guard Marlon&#13;
Grice last year finished in 6th place for&#13;
assist/turnover ratio (average ratio&#13;
was 1.66) and tied for 12th place with&#13;
assist (73 assist). Other returning players&#13;
are Senior guard Kevin Carp,&#13;
Sophomore guard Dean Pogodzinski,&#13;
Sophomore guard! forward Brian&#13;
Maastricht and Junior center Kurt&#13;
Flowers.&#13;
The new arrivals for the Rangers&#13;
"Winning will take care of. itself."&#13;
Senior Tyrone Moore, a Parkside student&#13;
who attends the Ranger games&#13;
said, "I predicate that the man power&#13;
that came in this year Will be above&#13;
500. Plus the team may even make the&#13;
GLVC Tournament."&#13;
. For a team to be successful and&#13;
accomplish their goal of winning they&#13;
need some type of leadership, According&#13;
to Coach Rutter the Ran!';ers 'have&#13;
that in their three Semors (Grice, Carp&#13;
and Knuth). Those three Seniors are&#13;
also the team captains. "We have&#13;
quality depth and versatility which&#13;
will allow us to have all five players&#13;
on the floor to be a threat to score,"&#13;
said Rutter. A team also needs some&#13;
key points to be made to succeed.&#13;
Coach Rutters key pomts are:&#13;
1.playing hard togethe.r . .&#13;
2.commitment to a Wlnn.1ng mentality&#13;
3.ability to show ourselves as the&#13;
best defensive team in the GLVC&#13;
Coach Rutter also said offensively&#13;
the team needs more tempo, exciting&#13;
and quicker style of play.&#13;
Returning for his second year as&#13;
assistant coach is Luke Reigel. The&#13;
Rangers also have three other assistant&#13;
coaches, Mark Olsen, Doug&#13;
Burns, and Rick Collum, who is new&#13;
to the Rangers assistant coaching&#13;
squad. He lead back to back state&#13;
championships (1995-1996) while&#13;
playing at Racine Lutheran. The team&#13;
also has two student managers Dome&#13;
Kaysait and Chris Skukas.&#13;
The Rangers do play in a division&#13;
that is tough all around. "Every night&#13;
will be a huge challenge," Baid Rutter.&#13;
The Rangers will play a Division I&#13;
school this year by playing UW-Milcontinued&#13;
on page 10&#13;
Mens soccer receives first&#13;
loss against St. Francis&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
P&#13;
arksides undefeated season ended&#13;
on Sunday, October 14 at home.&#13;
The first loss of the season came&#13;
against a non-conference team who are&#13;
also in the NAIA. St. Francis came out&#13;
with the 2-1 victory against the&#13;
Rangers. The Rangers record fell 11-1-1 .&#13;
after the loss.&#13;
In the beginning of the game it&#13;
seemed like everything was going the&#13;
Rangers way. Junior Mark Swierzy put&#13;
the Rangers up 1-0, in the first 57 seconds&#13;
into the match. Junior Seth Pearson&#13;
pushed the ball up to Freshman&#13;
Ethan Richter, who gave the assist to&#13;
Swierzy, who was 25 yards away in&#13;
front of the goal. "They came ready to&#13;
play for 57 seconds," said Coach Rick&#13;
Kilps "They just came out looking past&#13;
them."&#13;
St. Francis tied the game up at one a&#13;
piece at the 12:26 mark. The goal was&#13;
made while goalkeeper Senior Thorn&#13;
Peer was 12 yards out. The game winner&#13;
came from St. Francis Hector Corona&#13;
at the 44:26 mark of the first half.&#13;
Corona beat Peer to his right side.&#13;
There was a 35-minute lightning delay&#13;
that came about in the second half at&#13;
the 32:39 mark.&#13;
The Rangers will try and pick up the&#13;
right pieces this weekend. The Rangers&#13;
will travel to play Northwood on October&#13;
2S at 11 a.m. "Lightning strikes&#13;
twice," said Kill'S "but they will be&#13;
inspired to play.'&#13;
Keeping fit in the winter&#13;
Sports. Intramural consists of many&#13;
sports. To name a few: basketball men s&#13;
and women's teams, 3 pt. shoot out&#13;
men's and women's, coed volleyball&#13;
and Euchre Tournament.&#13;
The SAC also provides a weight&#13;
room, racquetball courts, field house,&#13;
gym and issue room. The days and&#13;
times may also change here but as of&#13;
now they are:&#13;
1.Monday-Thursday 7 a.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
2.Friday 7 a.m&gt; 7 p.m.&#13;
3.5aturday noon-S p.m.&#13;
4.Sunday 3 p.m.- 9 p.m.&#13;
If you want to play some of the&#13;
sports in the field house and need&#13;
equipment you must show y~ur&#13;
Ranger Card to have access to eqUIpment&#13;
and court reservation times. In&#13;
the field house there is a running track,&#13;
to either run or speed walk. Which is a&#13;
lot better than trying to run in the snow&#13;
and being bundled up from the cold.&#13;
Plus you don't have to worry about&#13;
slipping on that ice.&#13;
So come on out to the SAC during&#13;
winter to keep fit. You see exercising&#13;
doesn't have to stop just because outside&#13;
the weather is nasty, because at the&#13;
SAC exercise continues no matter what&#13;
the weather is outside.&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
W&#13;
inter is known to drag on.&#13;
With the snow falling it especially&#13;
makes it harder to keep&#13;
a fit body. Well, here at Parkside there is&#13;
plenty to do to keep fit and healthy&#13;
during those long winter days. The&#13;
Sports and Activity Center is where&#13;
you can find it all happening. Something&#13;
that is hard to do during winter is&#13;
swimming, but here at Parkside there is&#13;
a pool at the SAC. Although the hours&#13;
are subjected to change due to weather,&#13;
or special events, the pool hours as of&#13;
now are:&#13;
1.Monday 11 a.m.-3 p.m., 4 p.m.-8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
2.Tuesday 11 a.m.-3 p.m., 4 p.m.-&#13;
6:30p.m.&#13;
3.Wednesday 11 a.m.- 3 p.m., 4 p.m.-&#13;
Sp.m.&#13;
4.Thursday 11 a.m.- 3 p.m., 4 p.m.-S&#13;
p.m. .&#13;
5.Friday 11 a.m.- 3 p.m.&#13;
6.5aturday noon- 2 p.m.&#13;
7.5unday 4 p.m.- 6 p.m.&#13;
Another way to get fit at Parkside&#13;
when winter arrives is Intramural&#13;
Page 7&#13;
• October 25. 20011&#13;
&gt;ari~iideIntramurals and&#13;
tectreation Standil;-gs&#13;
ag Football&#13;
l,NC Chaps 5·0&#13;
2.Grapplers n 4-1&#13;
3. 'l\!am #1 1·4&#13;
4, The Panthers 0-5&#13;
Men's Tennis&#13;
1. Lee Riopell&#13;
1. Keith Gagnon&#13;
2. Christian Cantir&#13;
3. Jacob Grunnell&#13;
3. Stephen Latham&#13;
4. Nicholas Kremper&#13;
4. Blake Sutton&#13;
2-0&#13;
2-0&#13;
1-0&#13;
1-1&#13;
1-1&#13;
0-1&#13;
0-1&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
1. Stephanie Cerniglia 2-0&#13;
1. Liz Perry 2·0&#13;
2. Ruchell Weisflog 1-0&#13;
3. Tammara Tillman 1-1&#13;
3.Melissa Mastos 1-1&#13;
4. Jamie Hrdina 0-1&#13;
5. Fabiak Diaz 0-0&#13;
5. Priscilla Jackson 0-0&#13;
16" Co-ed Softball&#13;
Soupcans Defeat Three's Company&#13;
15-2&#13;
Basketball preview&#13;
By Daniel Frake&#13;
Co~Editor·in-Chief&#13;
"Tough players win" is the theme&#13;
of the Parkside womens basketball&#13;
team this year. The phrase came from&#13;
an interview conducted with the&#13;
coach of the Michigan State mens Basketball&#13;
Coach Tom Izzo during the&#13;
NCAA mens basketball tournament&#13;
last year, and because our team has&#13;
adopted that motto. After a 6-20 season&#13;
last year coach Stein and the team&#13;
are tired of "Coming up short." The&#13;
lady rangers lost eiglit games last year&#13;
by eight points or less and two in&#13;
overtime. So what has happened&#13;
between last season and this season?&#13;
. When asked the question of "how&#13;
well the team will do this year" the&#13;
answer coach Stein gave was "We're&#13;
gonna surprise a lot of people", and&#13;
given some new circumstances she&#13;
has every right to say that. Stein also&#13;
said "We have seven very hungry&#13;
upperclassmen who made strong&#13;
statements in pre-season and who are&#13;
providing lot of inner strength." In&#13;
her words our team has "reloaded"&#13;
with the best recruiting class of coach&#13;
Stein's time at Parkside. We have. six&#13;
new additions to our team and they&#13;
come from good teams and with the&#13;
desire to win. Of the six the oldest is&#13;
Becky Nugent who came from Sauk&#13;
Valley community college who "likes&#13;
to dish and can take a hit" when it&#13;
comes to punishment and has a good&#13;
inside game with a 15 foot jumper to&#13;
compliment. The 5 other recruits are&#13;
all freshmen who come with very&#13;
impressive resumes first off is Amy&#13;
Siech who comes from Oshkosh, WI&#13;
and lead her team in scoring on her&#13;
way to the Wisconsin Basketball&#13;
Coaches Association All-Star game.&#13;
She has a "great shot off screens and&#13;
can penetrate" says Stein. Amy Scott&#13;
is a freshmen from Amherst Junction,&#13;
WI according to Stein she "comes&#13;
from a small school, but plays big"&#13;
she's not physical yet but gets the job&#13;
done. Carrie Weir from West Allis, WI&#13;
in one word "QUICK" she has great&#13;
speed and uses it well to get to the&#13;
basket and finish, is also very competitive&#13;
and has a solid pull up jumper.&#13;
Jen Braier also played in the WBCA&#13;
all-star game and comes to us from&#13;
Wauwatosa, WI and brings our team&#13;
some variety, she is a "very smart&#13;
player" says Stein and can play guard&#13;
or forward. The last of our new&#13;
recruits is Sammy Kromm from West&#13;
Brooklyn, IL. Sammy played in the&#13;
Illinois state All-Star game, she is very&#13;
strong and aggressive on the board&#13;
and Stein likes her "Great work&#13;
ethics." And those are the new&#13;
recruits.&#13;
When asked who the leader of the&#13;
team this year would be, coach Stein&#13;
said that the role wasn't filled by one&#13;
person, instead she said that the leaders&#13;
were going to be all the returning&#13;
players because "they've been with&#13;
me through it all" meaning that the&#13;
older players have been through all&#13;
the tough loses and have experienced&#13;
the same feelings as well as share the&#13;
same goals which this year is to "At&#13;
least get to the conference tournament"&#13;
says Stein. Of the returning&#13;
leaders of our team the most vocal is&#13;
Stacie Jury who is always talking and&#13;
keeping the team "focused" and Stein&#13;
also added that Stacie's supporting&#13;
cast of returning players will give the&#13;
team "Stability" and keep them&#13;
"Strong headed." So what else would&#13;
the team need?&#13;
Coach Stein had only one request&#13;
to be put in this article, which was for&#13;
some support from our student body.&#13;
Stein understands that the 5:30 start&#13;
times are pretty demanding, but we&#13;
also play in a pretty demanding conference.&#13;
The conference in ,which our&#13;
women's basketball team plays is the&#13;
#1 ranked conference for division 2&#13;
Better Ingredients.&#13;
Better Pizza.&#13;
2304 18th Street&#13;
(262) 551-7573&#13;
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Delivery&#13;
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00"'"&#13;
i'-age 8 October 25, 2001&#13;
Travis concert review Quick and Stir Fry Ramen noodles&#13;
-Pam or oil&#13;
•&#13;
-nexpe ns lve :~~h~:~a~~1 ~~;;ies (which come very InexpenSIve when&#13;
in a damaged can)&#13;
-ham in a can&#13;
college sa~~~:cl.e from a leftover Subway&#13;
Italian Ramen noodles&#13;
_ _ -heated noodles&#13;
CU. S •nes ::a'L~:~ ~~~~a~~~~~~fnoodles&#13;
. and fine Itahan cuisine&#13;
Hamburger Helpless&#13;
-Easy Mac&#13;
-leftover meat from a burned&#13;
burger at lunch&#13;
-for seasoning, salt packets you&#13;
stole from the McDonalds free condiments&#13;
section&#13;
-pepper from the cafeteria&#13;
South of the Border Ramen noodles&#13;
-tomato chunks from pasta at lunch&#13;
-shredded cheese (or as a substitute&#13;
use dry coltage cheese from cafeteria)&#13;
-hamburger or meat substitute&#13;
from the lunch lady's surprise.&#13;
-if you can't afford a taco shell,&#13;
Wonder bread works just as well.&#13;
Healy dedicated as a response to the&#13;
recent tragedy, and the angry "Blue&#13;
Flashing Light," which featured guitarist&#13;
Andy Dunlop rubbing his guitar&#13;
neck across a microphone standi creat.&#13;
ing some of the most Unique sounds to&#13;
come out of a guitar since jimi Hendrix.&#13;
The band also threw in an impressive&#13;
cover of Molt the Hoople's "All the&#13;
Young Dudes," which was sung by&#13;
ladies man bassist Dougie Payne.&#13;
One of the most interesting things to&#13;
see in Travis is their enjoyment of being&#13;
on stage. Never has a band looked&#13;
happy enough to be jumping around,&#13;
Iaughing, spinning and joking around&#13;
with each other on stage during the&#13;
performance of a rocker called&#13;
"Happy" from their 1997 debut Good&#13;
Feeling. Never has a British band&#13;
seemed so thankful to be playing for&#13;
their American fans when the singer&#13;
says to the crowd, "It's good to be&#13;
back." Even though the band has had&#13;
hardly any radio play or exposure of&#13;
any kind, it did not stop the vibrant&#13;
crowd from singing every line to beautiful&#13;
songs like "Why Does It Always&#13;
Rain On Me?" "Driftwood," and "Slide&#13;
Michael Pawlowicz&#13;
Reporter&#13;
10/10 / 2001Chicago Riviera Theatre&#13;
The latest Travis CD is entitled, The&#13;
Invisible Band. Some might say that the&#13;
title refers to the way Travis is seen in&#13;
the United States, unlike the mammoth&#13;
standing they hold in the United Kingdom.&#13;
But Travis proved they should be&#13;
anything but invisible with the breathtaking&#13;
sold-out performance they&#13;
delivered on Wednesday, October 10th&#13;
at Chicago's Riviera Theatre.&#13;
As soon as the band broke into the&#13;
first note of the opening song called&#13;
"Sing," the entire crowd could be seen&#13;
with a smile on their face, knowing that&#13;
they were in store for a great concert by&#13;
one of today's greatest bands. With&#13;
smiles across their own faces, the band&#13;
rock and rolled their way through&#13;
material coming from this year's The&#13;
Invisible Band and last year's masterpiece&#13;
The Man Who. Standout moments&#13;
included electrified performances of&#13;
"Tum," a song which lead-singer Fran&#13;
By Becky Olsen&#13;
Reporter&#13;
W&#13;
e all know that manr college&#13;
- students are short a cash on&#13;
a regular basis. When living&#13;
on campus, your pantry looks more&#13;
like a barren desert in between cash&#13;
advances from your parents. If you&#13;
are looking for inexpensive food&#13;
recipes, look no further. Here are some&#13;
tips for dressing up the all time classic&#13;
college food.Ramen noodles.,&#13;
c&#13;
October 25, 2001 THe Fl~NGeFl&#13;
absorb as he makes the promise that "I&#13;
can write poems, make the strong man&#13;
lose his mind ...I I hope you treat me&#13;
well, things are breaking up out there."&#13;
Returning to the blues journey,&#13;
Dylan kicks it into high gear beginning&#13;
with "Summer Days," and then moves&#13;
once again has refused to let us down. on to a inore Dylanesque blues style in&#13;
"Love and Theft" marks a dramatic "Lonesome Day Blues." Seemingly in&#13;
change of pace for Dylan. In his an effort to prove his versatility,he then&#13;
younger days, his songs were more slows things down a bit and adds a&#13;
fragmented and his singing style unof- very distinctive element of jazz in&#13;
ficiallyearned him the accolade of "the "Floater (Too Much to Ask)," "Moonfather&#13;
of rap." However, in this most light." and "Po' Boy."&#13;
recent album, Dylan incorporates more ' In "Honest with Me," Dylan brings&#13;
blues, a touch of jazz and &gt; the listener full circle and back to the&#13;
twelve undeniably beauti- blues with electric guitar riffs reminisful&#13;
melodies. cent of a smoke-filled, late-night joint&#13;
Dylan begins the show on the dark side of a city. In "Cry A&#13;
, with the fast-paced "Twee- While," Dylan reveals a bit of the lindie&#13;
Dee &amp; Tweedle Dum." gering young man within as he switchExcept&#13;
for his now raspy es back and forth between a saunter of&#13;
voice, this one sounds most a rhythm and a mad dash.&#13;
like the Dylan of the 60's. All of these vivid songs are able to&#13;
Wasting no time exposing stand on their own, and yet become all&#13;
how much he has changed the more important as they culminate&#13;
over the years, the next in the finaltrack, "Sugar Baby."An intitrack,&#13;
"Mississippi," delves mate' look into the mind of Bob Dylan,&#13;
into a more traditional wisdom is to be found in his words. It is&#13;
country sound. It's in this a matured Dylan we hear singing,&#13;
song that we see the "Sugar baby get on down the roadl&#13;
unapologetic Dylan at his You ain't got no brains no how. You&#13;
best as he challenges the lis- went years without me I Might as well&#13;
tener to "Say anything you keep going down;" and a more reflecI&#13;
' I want tal I've heard it all." tive Dylan we hear say, "Some of these&#13;
From there, Dylan memories you can learn to live with/&#13;
embarks on an exploratory And some of them you can't."&#13;
Bob Dylan in his younger days, ca. 1960's (Photo cour- journey among the many Over the years, Dylan has driven&#13;
tesy ofAltocelebs.com) faces of the blues with the away many listeners who felt betrayed&#13;
exception of two songs, the when his music began to change. And&#13;
waltz-style "Bye and Bye."and the pas- yet, he continued to change and to&#13;
sionate bluegrass track, "High Water." evolve as all great artists do. Perhaps it&#13;
In this song, dedicated to Charley Pat- is Dylan's ability to accept those&#13;
ton, Dylan outdoes himself. From the changes within himself, without apolovery&#13;
beginning, the listener knows it is gies and without regrets, that makes&#13;
going to be an incredibly powerful and him so phenomenal and.inspiring. Ifso,&#13;
emotional ride. And then, when he "Love and Theft" is definite proof. Buy&#13;
starts singing, one can only sit back and this album.&#13;
Once again, singer&#13;
Bob Dylan&#13;
lets us bel.ieve&#13;
By Daniel Frake&#13;
Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
I&#13;
na time when pop rock has become&#13;
a generalized term for anyone with&#13;
minimal talent and a good body, it is&#13;
refreshing to be reminded that there is&#13;
still music worth breathing and artists&#13;
still worth believing in.&#13;
September marked the release of&#13;
Bob Dylan's "Love and Theft," the&#13;
forty-third album of the artist who has,&#13;
since 1962, wowed listeners with rich&#13;
lyrics, subtle wisdom, and a musical&#13;
grace matched by only a few. Throughout&#13;
the past four decades, albums such&#13;
as 1963's "The Freewheelin' Bob&#13;
Dylan," 1965's "Highway 61 Revisited."&#13;
and 1975's "Blood on the Tracks,"&#13;
among others, have captivated those&#13;
listeners brave enough to truly listen.&#13;
Even though he is 60 years old, Dylan&#13;
Legends of the&#13;
Silver Screen:&#13;
Audrey Hepburn&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Co·Editor·lnoChlef&#13;
A&#13;
fter a brief career modeling and&#13;
couple of smaller roles in films,&#13;
Audrey Hepburn won the lead&#13;
role in Roman Holiday (1953), which&#13;
also won her an Academy Award and&#13;
international stardom. In following 40&#13;
years until her death in 1993 Hepburn&#13;
would remain a star and Hollywood&#13;
icon.&#13;
Hepburn's career became solidified&#13;
with her next Oscar nominated film&#13;
Sabrina (1954),which she starred along&#13;
with box-office champions Humphrey&#13;
Bogart and William Holden. Hepburn's&#13;
role in Sabrina, just as her role in&#13;
Roman Holiday, was a glamorous one&#13;
aided by the contributions of designer&#13;
Givencl1y.Audrey Hepburn now had a&#13;
'look.'&#13;
Shortly after Sabrina, Hepburn met&#13;
and married actorIproducer Mel Ferrer&#13;
and slowed down her film career,&#13;
Of her next five films War and :reace&#13;
(1956), Funny Face (1957),and The Nun's&#13;
Story (1959),Green Mailsions(1959), and&#13;
The Unforgiven (1960), only The Nun's&#13;
Story, won an AcademyAward Nomination.&#13;
Breakfast at Tiffany'S (1961) brought&#13;
back Hepburn's box-office clout and&#13;
Academy recognition. Though she, did&#13;
not win {or Best Actress, Hepburn did&#13;
add her best-known performancetoher&#13;
filmography. The role yet again features&#13;
Hepburn as a fashion chic woman of&#13;
expensive taste. If an,',yone, ever asked&#13;
who Audrey Hepbunt was, .this is the&#13;
film that would best explain.&#13;
Success continued in the 196(}'Swith&#13;
the popular film Charade (1963)j which&#13;
co-starred the lege'Adalj' Cary Grant,&#13;
the multi-Oscar winner}1y Fatr Lady&#13;
(1964), ,and. Waif I1r:zW Dark (1967),&#13;
which Hepburn was also nominated&#13;
for an Oscar in. After this run of quality&#13;
films, Hepburn stepped away from film&#13;
AudreyHepburnas HollyGolightlyInBreakfastAtTiffany's.&#13;
again. this time to spend&#13;
more time with her two&#13;
sons.&#13;
Hepburn returned to&#13;
the screen only occasionally&#13;
after her semi-retirement.&#13;
Her final ftlm I&#13;
appearance came m&#13;
Always (1989). While her&#13;
work in. film diminished,&#13;
her work for humans&#13;
thrived. Hepburn became&#13;
the Goodwill Ambassador&#13;
for UNICEF in 1987,Duri)lg&#13;
the 1980's and 1990's&#13;
she focused on humanitarian&#13;
work as .much as&#13;
she could. In1993she was&#13;
posthumously awarded&#13;
the Jean Hersholt HumanitarianAward&#13;
by the&#13;
Academy of Motion Picture&#13;
Arts and Sciences.&#13;
Another sort of award&#13;
came in 1990 when the&#13;
actress noted for her delicate&#13;
beauty and class had&#13;
a breed of tulip named&#13;
after her.&#13;
f&#13;
,Page 10&#13;
Travis concert review&#13;
continued&#13;
Show."&#13;
For any true Travis fans that have&#13;
been to previous shows, they know the&#13;
show doesn't end when the concert is&#13;
over, the best is to come afterwards.&#13;
·What is CATI&#13;
all about?&#13;
continued&#13;
ing from high school to graduate&#13;
school. CAT! has already teamed with&#13;
the Racine Unified School District,&#13;
Burlington Area School District, UWParkside,&#13;
Gateway Technical College&#13;
and Carthage College to integrate students&#13;
into the incubator, and in a new&#13;
project-based curriculum.&#13;
Project-based learning is one of the&#13;
key principles to bring new knowledge&#13;
and capabilities to students. From&#13;
Matthew Wagner's point of view the&#13;
best way to accomplish high results is&#13;
to form student teams. The teams are&#13;
meant to be composed of students from&#13;
- several educational levels; however&#13;
prior training and knowledge will be&#13;
required for every participant. Bybeing&#13;
part of the program, students will find&#13;
themselves in "real world business"&#13;
environment engaging in all business&#13;
activities they studied in class. Each&#13;
Quite possibly the friendliest band out&#13;
there today, fans were given many&#13;
chances to get autographs, have conversations,&#13;
and get individual pictujes&#13;
with the entire band outside of their&#13;
tour bus after the show.&#13;
team will include students from&#13;
different partner schools.&#13;
UW-Parkside participants will&#13;
be enrolled in MBA or EM (Engineering&#13;
Management) programs.&#13;
Since they will have advanced&#13;
knowledge of organization, management&#13;
and financing, one student&#13;
will be able to support several&#13;
student teams.&#13;
Chancellor John Keating and&#13;
Dean of School of Business &amp; Technology&#13;
Marwan Wafa represent University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside at the CAT!'s&#13;
Board of Directors. UW- Parkside is&#13;
also a member of TECHSTAR.It is a&#13;
joint effort of UW-Milwaukee, UWParkside,&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering,&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin,&#13;
Marquette University, and RCEDC&#13;
(Racine County Economic Development&#13;
Center). Techstar makes it possible&#13;
for CAT!'s clients to reach technical&#13;
expertise and facilities,which would be&#13;
otli.erwise unavailable to a fledgling&#13;
organization. Techstar gives CAT! an&#13;
opportunity as 'Yell;CATIcan serve as&#13;
an incubator for technology transfer&#13;
opportunities from Techstar member&#13;
schools, Chancellor Keating sees Parkside&#13;
students collaborating with CAT!&#13;
in field learning and directed research&#13;
projects.&#13;
•&#13;
rejuvenation. At this point&#13;
Very Involved ot Porkside&#13;
LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Presents:&#13;
u's mid "Way through the&#13;
sernest.er and time for some&#13;
Motivation&#13;
Friday, November 2&#13;
Union Io6, Noon-I pm&#13;
October 25, 2001&#13;
Mens basketball continued&#13;
are Freshman guard Brian Jordan who&#13;
attended Marshall High School in&#13;
Milwaukee, Sophomore forward 6'8"&#13;
Glen Barlow from Victoria, Australia,&#13;
Junior guard Rashad Al Uqdah who&#13;
attended a community college in&#13;
Kansas called Coffeyville c.c., Freshman&#13;
forward Jeremy Purvis who&#13;
came from Northern Illinois, Freshman&#13;
forward Jerome King who&#13;
attended Case High School in Racine&#13;
and Freshman center 6'9" Kevin&#13;
Boutelle.&#13;
The Rangers as a team finished 3rd&#13;
in scoring defense and finished 4th in&#13;
free throw percentage last year. "We&#13;
have the potential to be a good team&#13;
this year, said Rutter, "There are still&#13;
somethings that need to be worked&#13;
on." Rutter also acknowledge that&#13;
they need a team first mentality / winning&#13;
mentality, communication, trust&#13;
and respect for each other. "Best we&#13;
can be each night out," said Rutter,&#13;
waukee at Milwaukee on Saturday,&#13;
December 22 at 7 p.m. If you would&#13;
like to come out and see the Rangers&#13;
play they have according to Coach&#13;
Rutter have game promotions and&#13;
operations to make for an exciting&#13;
game environm~nt. "w"emade a CO~-&#13;
mitment to domg things that will&#13;
increase attendance and provide for a&#13;
quality game environment," said Rutter.&#13;
Plus, it is free for students to get&#13;
in, just show your Ranger Card and&#13;
your in.&#13;
The Rangers first game is Thursday,&#13;
November 1 at 7 p.m. at home.&#13;
II's an exhibition game against Coach&#13;
Rudy's Racine All-Stars. If you would&#13;
like to know more about it or keep in&#13;
touch with how the Rangers are doing&#13;
through out the season just go to their&#13;
web site&#13;
www.uwp.edu/ athletics / men's-basketball&#13;
or listen to Ranger games on&#13;
the radio at WLIP 1050 AM.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
3rd Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration&#13;
Community Service Award Criteria&#13;
for UW-Porkside Students&#13;
Purpose: The UW-Parkside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Community Service&#13;
Award is designed to pay homage to UW-Parkside student leaders. The&#13;
award is given to recipients who have demonstrated the vision and mission of&#13;
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. through their endeavors within the UW-Parkside&#13;
community and/or broader communities. More importantly, this award recognizes&#13;
the efforts of student visionaries who are laying the foundation to realize&#13;
Dr. King's dream.&#13;
Nominations: To nominate a UW~Parkside student for this award, please&#13;
complete the nomination form, attach a copy of the nominee's resume and&#13;
submit an additional letter of recommendation (from someone else).&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 3,2001 to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Pcrksida&#13;
Office of 'Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Rood/ Box 2000&#13;
Kenosho, WI 53141-2000&#13;
262-595- 2371&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration on January 25,&#13;
2002 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
(~/JIi' ITh&lt;! U"Wilrslly of Wlsconsi,,· Parkslda prov1d&amp;.l seNices 10&lt;patrons with special&#13;
\." /"eeds. Please co"iacl the Ps,ks'de Slude"t Ce"le, 10, assISlsn""" (262) 595.2345.&#13;
Dean of School of Business &amp; Technology&#13;
Marwan Wafa called the CAT!&#13;
program as a "bridge" between theoretical&#13;
knowledge, which Parkside students&#13;
receive in the classes and the real&#13;
world business applications / problems.&#13;
For example, when working on&#13;
creating / supporting databases in MIS&#13;
(Management of Information Systems)&#13;
classes, students will be offered to&#13;
work on the real life examples (data&#13;
bases of small existing or beginning&#13;
businesses). Win-win situation for businesses,&#13;
students and community is a&#13;
result of this collaboration. Businessowners&#13;
will benefit by cutting their&#13;
operating expenses, students will gain&#13;
valuable experience and knowledge,&#13;
and the community will acquire both&#13;
skilled labor resources and a bigger&#13;
you could probably U5e a little help getting remortvaeed for school,&#13;
. 'Work. or [use in general. If you're part of an organization. there are&#13;
probably membe-rs who also need a boost. Attend rhis FUN program&#13;
and GET MOTIVATED!&#13;
number of strong and competitive businesses.&#13;
Dr. Wafa is a strong believer that the&#13;
learning process never stops: for both&#13;
students and faculty. Being a part of&#13;
CAT! program, Parkside professors /&#13;
instructors and students will keep up&#13;
with the constant changes in the&#13;
today's world of innovation and technOlOgy.&#13;
As the Technoman on CAT!'s Logo&#13;
states: " We are definitely not your&#13;
Daddy's Technology Source..."CATI is&#13;
ready for a change. Are you?&#13;
Prepared by&#13;
Anastasia Ryzhicova&#13;
For Additional Information, Please&#13;
Contact Matthew Wagner, Director&#13;
(262) 635-2433&#13;
OCtober 25. 2001 THE A~NGEA Page 111&#13;
America's Fear: Anthrax&#13;
Continued&#13;
most likely fatal form of Anthrax.&#13;
The best antibiotic for Anthrax is&#13;
Cipro. Cipro is a very powerful antibiotic&#13;
used frequently by Dr. Tack.&#13;
Another antibiotic that could be used is&#13;
the very common Penicillin. CNN&#13;
reported that on Monday, President&#13;
Bush signed an executive order allowing&#13;
the Health and Human Service&#13;
Department to "assume legal and&#13;
financial risk for contractors who are&#13;
taking steps to increase the supply of&#13;
drugs and vaccines described by federal&#13;
government to protect America from&#13;
bio-terrorism." It is reported that a vaccine&#13;
does exist, however, it is only&#13;
given to the military and people that at&#13;
high risk of being contaminated with&#13;
Anthrax.&#13;
If a person inhales Anthrax, they&#13;
need to seek immediate medical assistance,&#13;
because this is the most deadly&#13;
form. Inhaling Anthrax affects the&#13;
lungs and will most likely lead to respiratory&#13;
failure. These antibiotics can&#13;
treat that form of Anthrax as long as&#13;
the patient seeks immediate treatment.&#13;
Anthrax is not a contagious disease.&#13;
If treated soon after exposure chances&#13;
for survival is high. People should not&#13;
panic, but be informed about Anthrax.&#13;
Dr. Tack and Dr. Sharma both agree&#13;
that people are not well educated on&#13;
Anthrax, so here are some precautions&#13;
)Iou can take. If you receive a letter in&#13;
the mail that does nof have a return&#13;
address, you do not recognize the&#13;
handwriting, or you feel there might&#13;
be something other than a piece of&#13;
paper init; do not open it. Take it tothe&#13;
local police department even if it turns&#13;
out to' be nothing it is better to be safe&#13;
than sorry.&#13;
On Monday, a CNN /USA Today&#13;
Gallup poll reported that two-thirds of&#13;
Americans are not worried about the&#13;
threat of Anthrax, and seventy-seven&#13;
percent of Americans are "confident&#13;
the United States could effectively handle&#13;
the Anthrax threat." For more&#13;
. information regarding Anthrax visit&#13;
www.cnn.com _&#13;
Guide to study spots, continued&#13;
clock, but it is hard to see from some&#13;
tables. The bookstore offers the finest&#13;
candy bars for your consumption and&#13;
there are some vending machines located&#13;
nearby as well. Trafficand noise are&#13;
high during lunch. If all the other spots&#13;
are taken, then grab a seat here.&#13;
Perhaps the most neglected study&#13;
spot of all, a bathroom stall offers&#13;
unending amounts of privacy and&#13;
uncleanliness. -,&#13;
Bathrooms are located all over the&#13;
place. There are no clocksin bathrooms.&#13;
The noise level can vary from eerily&#13;
quiet to disgustingly loud. Many students&#13;
find that the pleasant flush of the&#13;
toilet and comforting whine of the&#13;
hand dryer help them remain relaxed&#13;
and focused on their studies. Eating in&#13;
the bathroom is gross. The bathroom is&#13;
recommended for weirdos.&#13;
. Anotner place to study that many&#13;
people fail to use is the great outdoors.&#13;
Grab those books and plop down on&#13;
Basketball preview continued,&#13;
schools. All Stein is looking for is&#13;
some support for her players who are&#13;
working their "butts' off. The first&#13;
home conference game is On Nov, 24&#13;
against Indianapolis at 5:30 in the&#13;
gym. We have been challenged by&#13;
Stein to show some spirit, now the&#13;
only question is are we willing to give&#13;
.them a chance to show that they ale&#13;
"tough enough.&#13;
one of the many muddy hills that pop-&#13;
-ulate our great school. Breathe in that&#13;
fresh mountain air. Well, not quite&#13;
mountain air, but it's fresh. You better&#13;
have brought your sundial, because&#13;
there aren't any clocks outside. Another&#13;
problem is the lack of bathrooms. It&#13;
may be necessary to walk all the way&#13;
back inside to use a toilet. The lazy and&#13;
imaginative students can easily pretend&#13;
a bush or a tree is a toilet. This&#13;
may result in a ticket. If it's windy, be&#13;
wary of loose papers. There is nothing&#13;
more ridiculous than a person chasing&#13;
a piece of paper. Studying outside is&#13;
recommended for hippies.&#13;
With the help of this guide, students&#13;
will be now be able to push themselves '"&#13;
to the extreme maximum of learning!&#13;
, That Doesn't really mean anything, but&#13;
it's alright. Find a place that you like,&#13;
and study there. Or don't study. If you&#13;
want to do well in school, you'll find a&#13;
way. Good luck.&#13;
/&#13;
MA KET&#13;
*******************************&#13;
Grill; Salad Bar, &amp;Made-to-order Subs Available&#13;
Mon-Thurs.&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
8-2pm,4-7pm&#13;
8-2pm&#13;
5-7pm&#13;
Convenience Store Items and&#13;
Premade Sandwiches available&#13;
at all times.&#13;
Sponsored by Dining Services&#13;
�~&#13;
'THe AFlNGe~ October 25. 200t&#13;
1&#13;
parking&#13;
•&#13;
POllel - ~- __ :"~I.-&#13;
~RIIT--- •&#13;
.c 10/09/01&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Inc #01-733 Agency&#13;
Assist, SAC, 8:42 p~m~&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept.&#13;
called regarding a 911&#13;
hang-up call. Officer&#13;
checked the pay phone&#13;
at SAC but there was no&#13;
one there and no problems&#13;
noted.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
'10/10/01&#13;
•&#13;
Inc #01-734 Driving Complaint,&#13;
Tallent Hall,&#13;
8:38 a~m~ Employee&#13;
reported a vehicle&#13;
rapidly approaching&#13;
her as she walked&#13;
across a roadway. Driver&#13;
of the vehicle was&#13;
warned about excessive&#13;
speed.&#13;
Inc #01-735 Fire Drill,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 2: 01&#13;
p.m. Armual drill was&#13;
conducted and all levels&#13;
of the building&#13;
were successfully&#13;
evacuated.&#13;
•&#13;
Inc #01-736 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
Molinaro Hall,&#13;
11:51 p i m. Employee&#13;
reported a brass nozzle&#13;
was missing from a&#13;
stand pipe/pole on the&#13;
D-2 stairwell.&#13;
10/11/01&#13;
"&#13;
Inc #01-737 Fire Alarm,&#13;
Union 0116, 7:28 a.m.&#13;
UPPS officer responding&#13;
to an alarm found&#13;
it had been acti vated&#13;
by steam from a dryer&#13;
ventilating into the&#13;
room. Alarm was reset.&#13;
.~&#13;
.'&#13;
Inc #01-738 Vandalism,&#13;
UWSChapter 18, Union&#13;
Lot, 9:08 p.m~ Student&#13;
reported &amp;orneone had&#13;
made deep scratches on&#13;
a window of her vehicle.&#13;
No suspects or&#13;
witnesses.&#13;
Inc #01-739 Traffic&#13;
Violation, HWYE, 4500&#13;
Block, 11:59 p.m~ Driver&#13;
was cited for&#13;
speeding 61 mph in a&#13;
45 mph zone.&#13;
10/12101&#13;
Inc #01-740 Underage&#13;
Alcohol, Ranger Hall,&#13;
2: 08 a .m. While on&#13;
routine patrol, UPPS&#13;
officer noticed an&#13;
individual having difficulty&#13;
standing up.&#13;
Tests indicated subject&#13;
was intoxicated&#13;
and a citation was&#13;
issued for underage&#13;
alcohol, 1st offense.&#13;
Inc #01-741 TraIfic&#13;
Accident, University&#13;
Apartments lot, 10:02&#13;
a.m. Student backing&#13;
out of a stall struck&#13;
another student's&#13;
vehicle. State accident&#13;
report completed.&#13;
10/13/01&#13;
Inc #01-742 Traffic&#13;
Violation/Weapons,&#13;
Union Circle Drive,&#13;
12:04 a.m~ While on&#13;
patrol, UPPS officer&#13;
viewed a vehicle being&#13;
driven in a reckless&#13;
manner , Officer activated&#13;
emergency lights&#13;
and siren but driver&#13;
did not stop. Officer&#13;
eventually managed to&#13;
pin the vehicle&#13;
between a pole and the&#13;
squad. Investigation&#13;
revealed vehicle was&#13;
listed as stolen and a&#13;
search uncovered a&#13;
loaded pistol in the&#13;
glove box and ammunition&#13;
in the trunk. DOT&#13;
indicated driver's&#13;
license was revoked.&#13;
Subject was transported&#13;
to Kenosha County&#13;
jail and vehicle&#13;
towed. State charges&#13;
issued for knowingly&#13;
fleeing an officer,&#13;
carrying a concealedweapon,&#13;
operating&#13;
vehicle ' without&#13;
owner's consent,endangering&#13;
safety/reckless&#13;
driving and operating&#13;
~ehicle while revoked.&#13;
Inc #01-743 Medical&#13;
Assist, Union Square,&#13;
1:51 a.m. Student complaining&#13;
of chest&#13;
pains was transported&#13;
to Kenosha Memorial&#13;
Hospital.&#13;
Inc #01-744 Robbery,&#13;
Union Loading Dock,&#13;
1:51 a.m. Student was&#13;
hit in the chest and a&#13;
necklace forcibly&#13;
taken from him. Case&#13;
pending further investigation.&#13;
Inc #01-745 Weapons,&#13;
Union Square, 2:54&#13;
a.m. While investigating&#13;
a fight, UPPS&#13;
officer recovered a&#13;
loaded gun ~off the&#13;
floor. yisto1 had 1&#13;
empty and 4 loaded&#13;
rounds in the cylinder.&#13;
Owner is unknown&#13;
and did not come forward&#13;
to claim the pistol&#13;
which was placed&#13;
into evidence at UPPS.&#13;
Inc #01-746 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
Union Square,&#13;
2:07 a.m. During the&#13;
Parks ide International&#13;
Club dance, the glass&#13;
on the right west exit&#13;
door was shattered.&#13;
Due to large number of&#13;
disorderly subjects in&#13;
the square, no witnesses&#13;
or suspects&#13;
could be identified.&#13;
Inc #01-747 Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances, University&#13;
Apartments, 7:46&#13;
p.m~ UPPS officer&#13;
responded to a report&#13;
of a room being broken&#13;
into and there,&#13;
appeared to be some&#13;
tampering of the locking&#13;
mechanism. A screw&#13;
was secured to allow&#13;
the door to be locked.&#13;
No other damage was&#13;
noted and nothing&#13;
missing from the room.&#13;
10/14/01&#13;
Inc #01-748 Agency&#13;
Assist, 1200 Block of&#13;
Sheridan Rd., 1: 16&#13;
.a.m. Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dept. requested UPPS&#13;
officer assist in&#13;
looking for a suspect&#13;
who had fled the scene&#13;
of a fight. Subject&#13;
was not located.&#13;
Inc #01-749 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Wood Road &amp;&#13;
Outer Loop, 11:48 p.m~&#13;
Driver was cited for&#13;
non-registration of&#13;
his vehicle which had&#13;
expired in March.&#13;
10/15/01&#13;
Inc #01-750 Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Ranger&#13;
Hall, 12:45 a.m.: Student&#13;
reported the&#13;
theft of his cell&#13;
phone. No suspects or&#13;
witnesses to the&#13;
theft .&#13;
Inc #01-751 Traffic&#13;
Violation, 4100 Block&#13;
of OUter Loop Road,&#13;
12:10 p.m. Driver was&#13;
cited for speeding 45&#13;
mph in a 25 mph zone.&#13;
Inc #01-752 Harassment&#13;
(Phone), University&#13;
grounds, L p.m~ Student&#13;
reported receiving&#13;
harassing calls on&#13;
her cell phone,&#13;
Inc #01-753 Medical&#13;
Assist Cornm. Arts,&#13;
7:07 p~m~UPPS officer&#13;
responded to report of&#13;
a student who had&#13;
passed out. Kenosha&#13;
Med 5 arrived and&#13;
treated the individual&#13;
who was later picked&#13;
up by his parents.&#13;
10/16/01&#13;
Inc #01-754 Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Universi&#13;
ty Apartments,&#13;
4:49 p~m~ Student&#13;
reported a personal&#13;
item missing. Officer&#13;
spoke to the par.ties&#13;
involved and advised&#13;
them to seek mediation&#13;
with Residence Life&#13;
staff .&#13;
10/17/01&#13;
Inc #01-755 Worthless&#13;
Checks, Tallent Hall,&#13;
9: 31 a.m. UPPS mailed&#13;
Notice &amp; Demand for&#13;
Payment letters to two&#13;
individuals who had&#13;
given NSF checks in&#13;
payment of&#13;
citations.&#13;
Inc #01-756 Theft, University&#13;
Apartments,&#13;
11:09 p.m~ Student&#13;
reported money and&#13;
prescription pills&#13;
missing from her&#13;
room.Case pending further&#13;
investigation.&#13;
Inc #01-757 UWSChapter&#13;
18 Violation, Ranger&#13;
Hall L1 Entrance,&#13;
11:20 p.m~ Individual&#13;
found urinating outside&#13;
of Ranger Hall&#13;
was issued a citatien&#13;
for Deposi t of Human&#13;
Waste on University&#13;
Lands.&#13;
Inc #01-758 Agency&#13;
Assist - Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dep't. , 11: 53 p .m.&#13;
Off Campus, 22nd Ave.&#13;
North of CTH E UPPS&#13;
officer assisted with&#13;
traffic control at a&#13;
personal injury accident&#13;
J&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
ClAsstflEDS&#13;
/&#13;
Announcements&#13;
• Questions about aborhun?&#13;
Make (1 n&#13;
informed choice. Call&#13;
Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
Spring Break&#13;
• Spring Break with STS,</text>
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              <text>, November 1, 2001&#13;
INSIOE&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do at the U&#13;
Page 3&#13;
TheNYYankees: a dilemma&#13;
Collegemore than just a&#13;
grade&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Salt Lake City games on&#13;
highest security alert&#13;
Men's soccer falters in&#13;
overtime&#13;
PageS&#13;
Women's soccer overcomes&#13;
GLVC finale&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Legends of the Silver&#13;
Screen: Alec Guinness&#13;
PageS&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Newstudent club organized&#13;
for the marketing field&#13;
Oassifieds&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside Aequitas&#13;
Take back the night rally&#13;
makes voices heard the library, in memory of a&#13;
girl raped there by a male&#13;
friend she closely worked&#13;
with. This happened a mere&#13;
four years ago. Holding up&#13;
By Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Reporter&#13;
T&#13;
he Womyn's Center held&#13;
an annual rally and a&#13;
march against sexual&#13;
abuse and violence against&#13;
women, allowing voices to be&#13;
heard, and it was held on&#13;
October 25 in Upper Main&#13;
Place at 5 P.M.&#13;
It began with three speakers:&#13;
Marianne Zirkel from&#13;
Woman's and Children's Horizons,&#13;
Ginger Helgeson from&#13;
KASA(Kenosha Against Sexual&#13;
Assault)/Pathways of&#13;
Courage, and Christina Folsam&#13;
from the Women's&#13;
Resource Center. They spoke&#13;
of true stories, and offered&#13;
advice about what to do when&#13;
a friend faces them about&#13;
being assaulted, and ways to&#13;
prevent an attack.&#13;
An open question and&#13;
answer session was allowed;&#13;
followed by a silent march in&#13;
From left to right: Ginger Helgeson, Megan Feifer, and Marianne Zirkel&#13;
signs and candles, chants&#13;
were heard loud and clear in&#13;
the lower level computer lab&#13;
and throughout Molinaro and&#13;
Wyllie Hall. It was a powerful&#13;
and emotional rally,&#13;
where stories were told of victims&#13;
of sexual assault, as well&#13;
as the survivors. One of the&#13;
three speakers, Ginger Helgeson,&#13;
spoke of many true stories;&#13;
yet, one sticks in memory.&#13;
She spoke of a boy who was&#13;
raped by his Dad, and every&#13;
day when his Morn took a&#13;
shower, he would have anal&#13;
sex with his son. And what&#13;
was sad about the story, is that&#13;
she never knew. Even though&#13;
it was going on when she was&#13;
in the house. The mother was&#13;
shocked when she found it&#13;
went on and couldn't believe&#13;
it.&#13;
Students interviewed gave&#13;
wide, different opinions.&#13;
Chris Sernenas, freshman,&#13;
stated, "I wanted to corne here&#13;
to show support for my&#13;
female friends, my sister, my&#13;
cousins and family. My sister's&#13;
22," He said.&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
Daughters, Mothers, &amp; Grandmothers Speak&#13;
By Armida Markarova&#13;
Student&#13;
O&#13;
n Monday, Oct 22, 2001&#13;
in Upper Main Place,&#13;
UW-Parkside's&#13;
Women's Studies Program,&#13;
with support from the Center&#13;
for Ethnic Studies, the Center&#13;
for International Studies, and&#13;
the Student Organizational&#13;
Council, organized a "PostAttack"&#13;
dialogue WIthMuslim&#13;
and Non-Muslim women,&#13;
entitled Daughters, Mothers&#13;
and Grandmothers Speak.&#13;
Muslim and Non-Muslim&#13;
women from the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Milwaukee areas&#13;
carne to share their experiences&#13;
after the tragic events of Sept.&#13;
11.The dialogue was moderated&#13;
by Prof. Fay Yokomizo&#13;
Akindes, Ph.D., Co-Director of&#13;
the Women's Studies Program.&#13;
Among the panelists were: Dr.&#13;
Amy Ahmad, Kenosha pediatrician,&#13;
Kelly Bokhan, Parkside&#13;
student who converted to&#13;
Islam a year ago, Sh~hada&#13;
Fredericks, Racine resident,&#13;
Prof. Farida Khan, Ph.D., UWParkside,&#13;
Prof. Carol-Lee Saffioti-Hughes,&#13;
Ph.D., UW-Parkside,&#13;
Sarah Saad, UW-Parkside&#13;
student, and Sahar Wafa,&#13;
Racine resident.&#13;
"We organized this event&#13;
mainly in response to the&#13;
absence of women's voices in&#13;
public discourse," said Prof.&#13;
Akindes. "We thought it was&#13;
important to present women's&#13;
concerns about the current&#13;
events. It was a dialogue&#13;
among and between women&#13;
corning from different backgrounds&#13;
and perspectives,&#13;
though the conversation did&#13;
not exclude men, The event&#13;
reflected both Muslim and&#13;
Non Muslim women's ways of&#13;
knowing 'and communicating."&#13;
The women started the dialogue&#13;
by sharing their experiences&#13;
and observations since&#13;
the Sept. 11 event. Almost&#13;
every participant on thepanel&#13;
mentioned the presence of&#13;
constant fear in their lives after&#13;
the attack. The fear, as they&#13;
said, is partially due to the&#13;
confusion, igrtorance and misconception&#13;
about Muslim faith&#13;
and culture, Shahada Fredericks,&#13;
Racine resident, in&#13;
response to· the question of&#13;
how she felt after the attack&#13;
said, "My personal reaction&#13;
was shock and despair and&#13;
then responsibility. Responsibility&#13;
because of the concept of&#13;
brotherhood in Muslim religion.&#13;
So when I heard of what&#13;
had happened, I felt guilty&#13;
because those people claimed&#13;
to be Muslims."&#13;
After panel participants&#13;
shared their ideas and experiences,&#13;
the audience continued&#13;
the dialogue in small group&#13;
discussions in Mid Main Place.&#13;
The discussion groups were&#13;
facilitated by professors and&#13;
four students from the Communication&#13;
Department's&#13;
Conflict Analysis and Resolution&#13;
Program. Each group&#13;
included a facilitator, audience&#13;
members and a panelist. In&#13;
comparison with all other&#13;
events of that kind organized&#13;
at Parkside, this one stood out&#13;
for its inclusion of small discussion&#13;
groups. Breaking the&#13;
audience in small groups&#13;
allowed everybody to participate,&#13;
vote their concerns, offer&#13;
suggestions, ask questions and&#13;
get answers. The small group&#13;
discussion facilitator, Tanya&#13;
Islic said, "I think this form of&#13;
dialogue proved to be very&#13;
effective as it allowed every&#13;
participant to comment on&#13;
their observations, as well ask&#13;
questions of the panelists."&#13;
During the discussion,&#13;
every group was asked to&#13;
come up with ideas of constructive&#13;
ways of supporting&#13;
Muslim women, which they&#13;
shared after the groups reconvened&#13;
in Upper Main Place.&#13;
The ideas generated during the&#13;
small group discussions were&#13;
written down on a flip chart. A.&#13;
sign-up sheet was then circulated&#13;
for people who wanted to&#13;
receive emails with ideas&#13;
shared by the small groups.&#13;
Among the many ideas were:&#13;
encouraging education&#13;
through conversation, organizing&#13;
media subcommittees for&#13;
promoting equal rights, and&#13;
starting intercultural education&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
---- 1&#13;
November 1, 2001&#13;
Page 2&#13;
November 7 November 1&#13;
• Education Issues for School Administrators: Teacher &amp; Administrator&#13;
Shortage: Effects and Consequences w / Joe Kiemen and&#13;
Karen Thorne, 7:30 a.m., $12&#13;
• Art Exhibition: "The Figure as Still-Life" painting &amp; prints by&#13;
Steve Jones, Communication Arts Gallery, final day, hours: 11a.m,&#13;
to 5 p.m., free.&#13;
November 1- 3 • Noon Concert: Lisa White, mezzo-soprano; James McKeever,&#13;
piano; George Lindquist, guitar, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free&#13;
• Play: "Diary of Anne Frank," Com. Arts Theatre, Nov. 1 &amp; 2, 10&#13;
a.m.; Nov. 2 &amp; 3, 7:30 p.m.; tickets: adults $10, faculty, staff, students&#13;
$7&#13;
November 1 - 4&#13;
Retractions for October 25 issue:&#13;
The article on Page 7 entitled "Basketball preview" was written by&#13;
Danny Nguyen.mot Daniel Prake.&#13;
The Editors wish to express their regret and apologize for any inconveniances&#13;
caused by this oversight.&#13;
Daniel Frake, Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt, Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Sunshine," Union Cinema Theater; showings&#13;
Thursday &amp; Friday @ 7:30 p.m., Saturday @ 8 p.m., Sunday @ 2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
NovemberS&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious Issues: "What is a Unitarian-Universalist?"&#13;
w /Dr. Virginia Burlingame; and the Rev. Dr. Tony Larsen,&#13;
pastor, Olympia Brown Unitarian-Universalist Church noon&#13;
Union 104-106,free' ' ,&#13;
November 6&#13;
.'J{aroorsiae r£ye Care Test Drive a&#13;
Cheeseburger.&#13;
It's worth a -&#13;
drive from&#13;
wherever you&#13;
are to put us to&#13;
the test!&#13;
EXAMl&#13;
• .A;sh&amp; Reuben Fast Horse Native American Storytellers, Union&#13;
Cinema, 3 to 4:30 p.m., free, open to campus &amp; public&#13;
• Dale K, comedy &amp; hypnosis, Union Square, 8 p.m., free, open to&#13;
campus &amp; public&#13;
• Inforbreaks: a fast way to get up-to-date on new technology:&#13;
Informacion de la biblioteca en espanol -Explore the Library's&#13;
Spanish language resources; 9:45 a.m., Instructional Tech Center&#13;
Wyllie D150D, also held Wednesday, Nov. 7, at 3 p.m.&#13;
November 7 - 9&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
LEHIES&#13;
• n¥W' r.........'·!&gt;;1:~·&#13;
• Cllty1n.;&#13;
• ......-.x;.&gt;&lt;l&lt;»/ .... ,,"',&#13;
• ~e..&lt;cnr'lP&#13;
• G.. trd C'&gt;i&lt;\m&#13;
• a'l; »,~."S._k.f.~&#13;
• W'~'""",'l.:r.oc&lt;&#13;
• '''''k''''' ......... • t....r\'fl."(', hl'\J1&#13;
• e_)IIo&lt;\g_""""""l~""VO&#13;
• ~lil.ot·~,,"'I_'~&#13;
• I'o.tl1olm&lt;lf,j .....&#13;
Cail Fo( Luncheon Reservation&#13;
Ron's Place&#13;
~ ••".;'~ (262)657-5907 ~,., J&gt;~&lt;;. ,ei) ,dilt&#13;
,.~/ \J}/&#13;
• Friends of the Library Book Sale, Upper Main Place 3301 52nd SI. Kenosha&#13;
"&#13;
CO:-Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Daniel Frake -&#13;
Ben;arpin Schmidt&#13;
%&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
q&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
KeefeyPemble&#13;
j&#13;
Ranger Public Relations&#13;
Melissaptephenson&#13;
~&#13;
Design and Layout Managers&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Aaron Kleutsch&#13;
J&#13;
Arts and Entertainment Editor&#13;
Tiffany Grant 't&#13;
i&#13;
Sports Page Edito~·&#13;
DenaCoady ¥&#13;
Reporters· .. .1&#13;
Ale)f;lsMartinJ&#13;
Becl&lt;y()lsorif&#13;
RosieVezjridj~&#13;
Adebesi Agora&#13;
Donnetta Davis&#13;
WilLBrinkman&#13;
dI&#13;
Photography Director&#13;
Jeffrey Alley&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Katey Thoennes&#13;
Ranger Advisor ITHE Ar=lNGEA J Dave Buchanan&#13;
if&#13;
NOW HmING&#13;
Opinion&gt;Page~ditqr&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
~Colun:irtiSt$&#13;
w! Rep(nte~&#13;
~r!if!&#13;
i '&#13;
INTERNSHIPS AVA ABLE!&#13;
Getl1~i~andCOlTlpJete an internSIlJP&#13;
me time.&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Shanon Lehrke&#13;
November 1, 2001 Page 3&#13;
The NY Yankees:&#13;
A dilemma&#13;
By Daniel Frake&#13;
Co~Editor·in-Chief&#13;
On September 21 of this year, in the&#13;
first major league baseball game in&#13;
New York City after the September 11&#13;
attacks, the New York Mets defeated&#13;
the Atlanta Braves, 3-2, off a game-winning&#13;
homerun by Mike Piazza. It was a&#13;
beautiful moment. It was one of those&#13;
moments that one will remember years&#13;
later as a testament to the strength of&#13;
America. That day, the Mets showed to&#13;
the rest of the world that our lives will&#13;
go on and that baseball will forever&#13;
remain the past-time of our great country.&#13;
It was the first-and very last-time I&#13;
have rooted for the Mets.&#13;
In1969,the New York Mets had one&#13;
of the most unbelievable last months in&#13;
modem day baseball. Unfortunately, it&#13;
was the Chicago Cubs whose lead they&#13;
overcame, and they went on to win the&#13;
World Series. I was not around then,&#13;
but I feel the pain of my father and&#13;
grandfathers, and watching the Mets&#13;
win' on the 21st, while uplifting as an&#13;
American, hurt as a baseball fan.&#13;
lt is the same story looking at the&#13;
New York Yankees and watcliing the&#13;
post-season unfold this year. The Yankees&#13;
are indisputably the greatest organization,&#13;
historically, in baseball. In the&#13;
20thcentury, they won the World Series&#13;
25times, an average of once every four&#13;
years. Since 1996, they have won four&#13;
out of five, and three straight (1998,'99,&#13;
.and '00).&#13;
As a Cubs fan, and a baseball fan in&#13;
general, it is almost impossible for me&#13;
to look at the Yankees with any kind of&#13;
affection. The Cubs have won' the&#13;
World Series twice, the last time, 93&#13;
years ago. Seeing the Yankees win year&#13;
after year will cause bitterness in a&#13;
Cubs fan's heart. One's eyes mist over&#13;
and the ears ring with a haunting&#13;
adage all too familiar: wait 'till next&#13;
year. Yankees fans, on the other hand,&#13;
are able to pass on the love of a winning&#13;
team from one generation to the&#13;
next.&#13;
My dilemma is simple. If the iankees&#13;
win the World Series this year, it&#13;
will instill in the hearts of Americans&#13;
pride and the feeling that we overcame&#13;
fear and pain. A New York victory&#13;
would bring together the nation, and&#13;
New York would be the focal point.&#13;
Given the events of September 11, this&#13;
would be a wonderful thing to happen&#13;
to New York City. It would not ease the&#13;
pain of what happened or bring back&#13;
those we lost, but it might bring a little&#13;
joy to a city in need of joy and relief.&#13;
On the other hand, as a baseball fan&#13;
in general, I just cannot bare to See the&#13;
Yankees win yet again. Perhaps&#13;
instead of forcing the Yankees to either&#13;
win or lose, major league baseball&#13;
should give the World Series title to the&#13;
Chicago Cubs just for kicks.&#13;
College more than just a grade&#13;
By Bhanon Lehrke&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
A&#13;
s a student, one of my major&#13;
concerns involves my fellow&#13;
peers and why they are here.&#13;
Please do not take this the wrong way,&#13;
but I have noticed that many students&#13;
are not here to learn. They are here to&#13;
take tests, get grades and graduate, but&#13;
by doing this they are missing the&#13;
whole objective. I have often heard students&#13;
complain because teachers give&#13;
them information that is not going to be&#13;
on the test and it is just a waste of time.&#13;
I know as well as an)fone that it is&#13;
often difficult sifting through class&#13;
material trying to decide what to really&#13;
focus on when preparing for a test.&#13;
Sometimes teachers use instruction&#13;
methods that relate to their experiences.&#13;
Their personal moments may&#13;
not pertain to the class, but it helps create&#13;
a mental picture of what they are&#13;
trying to explain. Most knowledge is&#13;
gained with experience and teachers&#13;
use that as a tool that can help clarify&#13;
concepts.&#13;
Most, if not all, classes are very&#13;
structured and set up with specific&#13;
objectives, so a teaclier might have&#13;
information that does not fit into that&#13;
category, but might be beneficial outside&#13;
the walls of the classroom and that&#13;
is the whole purpose of getting an education.&#13;
We are very lucky to have a&#13;
variety of teachers with different experiences&#13;
and teaching styles. It helps&#13;
achieve a weil-rounded education and&#13;
we should want to hear what they have&#13;
to stay.&#13;
Once college is over, that is it; we are&#13;
on our own. lt wil\ not matter if we can&#13;
memorize information for a test if we&#13;
do not know how to use that information.&#13;
Try to think of the whole picture&#13;
and do not bind yourself to books,&#13;
tests, grades and classrooms because&#13;
that is not education. ,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
3rd Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration&#13;
College Student Essay Contest&#13;
TOPIC: "How I Will Keep it Real:&#13;
My Dreom for My Community"&#13;
Judging Criteria:&#13;
I , Entrants must address the&#13;
topic in a 400-word typewritten&#13;
essay_ .&#13;
2. Essays should relate the student's&#13;
own personal ideas&#13;
or experience to the topic&#13;
and show an understanding&#13;
of Dr. King's ideals.&#13;
3. Essays cannot be a&#13;
biographical sketch of&#13;
Dr. King.&#13;
4. Essays will be judged on&#13;
the basis of sentence&#13;
structure, clarity of&#13;
thought,spelling, content,&#13;
development of thought,&#13;
and grammer.&#13;
Prizes/Recaanitions: 1st place&#13;
receives $200 bond and a plaque&#13;
Forjudging purposes, pleose write your&#13;
nome, address, and phone number on&#13;
the bock of your essay,&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 3,2001 to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Road/ Box 2000&#13;
Kenoshc. WI 53141-2000&#13;
262-595-2371&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration on Janu-.&#13;
ary 25, 2002 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
3rd Annual Martin Luther KinB Jr. Celebration&#13;
Community Service Awar&#13;
Criteria .&#13;
for UW-Parkside Students&#13;
Purpose: The UW-Parkside Dr. Mortin&#13;
Luther King Jr.' Community Service Award&#13;
is designed to pay homage to UW-Parkside&#13;
student leaders. The award is given&#13;
to recipients who have demonstrated the&#13;
vision and mission of Dr. Martin Luther&#13;
King Jr. through their endeavors within the&#13;
UW-Parkside community and/or broader&#13;
communities. More importantly, this&#13;
award recognizes the efforts of student&#13;
visionaries who are laying the foundation&#13;
to realize Dr. King's dream.&#13;
Nominations: To&#13;
nominate a UWParkside&#13;
student for&#13;
this award, please&#13;
complete the nomination&#13;
form, attach a&#13;
copy of the nominee's&#13;
resume and&#13;
submit an additional&#13;
letter of recommendation&#13;
(from someone&#13;
else).&#13;
Contact for specific information&#13;
Mail or drop off your entry by December 3,2001 to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Office of Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
900 Wood Road/ Box 2000&#13;
Kenosho, WI 5314 \-2000&#13;
262-595-2731&#13;
Each winner will receive their award at the UW-Parkside MLK Celebration on January 25,&#13;
2002 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
THe F=I~NGeF=l&#13;
P8ge4&#13;
November 1, 2001&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
W&#13;
en it was announced&#13;
that the 2002 Wmter&#13;
Olympic Games&#13;
would be coming to the United&#13;
States nobody figured that it&#13;
would bring a change to the&#13;
world and the Games itself. In&#13;
light of September 11, 2001 the&#13;
winter games will be put on the&#13;
highest security alert to ensure&#13;
the safety of the athletes, staff,&#13;
coaches, fans and the people of&#13;
Salt Lake City.&#13;
Some feared that maybe the&#13;
Games shouldn't go on in the&#13;
United States because of the terrorist&#13;
attacks and the bombing&#13;
going on in Afghanistan. A&#13;
senior Olympic official from&#13;
Norway questioned whether&#13;
the Games should go on.&#13;
Although, after September 11th&#13;
the International Olympic Committee&#13;
said, "That the games&#13;
the safest place in the US. outside&#13;
of Washin?;ton DC" .&#13;
People in.cFiarge of keeping&#13;
the Games safe will be the 'US.&#13;
Secret Service, the FBI, Federal&#13;
Emergency Management&#13;
Agency and Utah Olympic&#13;
Public Safety Command. The&#13;
Utah officials have already&#13;
asked the U'S, government to&#13;
have the National Guard present&#13;
at the games, there might&#13;
be a chance of 2,000 National&#13;
Guard called up for the games.&#13;
The military personal will be&#13;
supporting public safety agencies.&#13;
The National Guard will&#13;
be at the traffic management&#13;
areas and certain other perimeter&#13;
posts. There will be 950&#13;
Metal Detectors.&#13;
Venues at the games will&#13;
have fencing systems, electronic&#13;
surveillance, x-ray equipment,&#13;
detection systems, searching&#13;
purses and big and small bags&#13;
and law enforcement agents.&#13;
There will also be vehicle&#13;
screening and searches of the&#13;
car.&#13;
Security officials have also&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
Men's soccer falters in&#13;
overtime&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
A&#13;
fter a 1-0 lost in&#13;
Romeoville, IL. against&#13;
Lewis on Friday, October&#13;
19 the Rangers showed&#13;
some improvements in the&#13;
gam!" against Southern indiana&#13;
on Sunday, October 21.&#13;
Although, the Rangers lost in&#13;
overtime, the team seemed&#13;
very confident in the way the&#13;
game was approached.&#13;
The Ranger men were&#13;
undefeated in their first eight&#13;
GLVC matches. This was their&#13;
second conference loss in three&#13;
days. The Rangers were&#13;
ranked 17th in tlie National&#13;
Soccer Coaches Association of&#13;
America after the game on&#13;
Sunday. They finished 7-2-1 in&#13;
the GLVC standings and 11-3-1&#13;
overall. "Fridays game we&#13;
deserved it, there was no&#13;
intensity, we were scared and&#13;
we didn't deserve to win," said&#13;
Senior Andrew Nijoka, "Saturdays&#13;
game we played well, did&#13;
everything we wanted to do&#13;
we were just a little unlucky."'&#13;
With 62 minutes into the&#13;
game, Junior Seth Pearson&#13;
gave the Rangers a 1-0 lead.&#13;
Pearson took a pass from&#13;
Junior Mark Swierzy, and&#13;
scored the goal on a breakaway,&#13;
by beating Southern&#13;
Indiana's defense. The&#13;
Cougars came back to tie the&#13;
game at the 83-minute mark.&#13;
During, a 10-minute overtime&#13;
both teams played scoreless&#13;
until Southern Indiana's&#13;
Justin McMillian scored the&#13;
game winning goal at the 106-&#13;
minute mark. From a long&#13;
crossing pass from a teammate&#13;
McMillian discovered the back&#13;
of the net to score the winning&#13;
goal. Southern Indiana out&#13;
scored the Rangers 19-7. In a&#13;
non-conference match the&#13;
Rangers will play at Northwood&#13;
Sunday, October 28 at I1&#13;
A.M.&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
Sat. 11110&#13;
Fri. 11116&#13;
Sat. 11/17&#13;
Sat. 11/24&#13;
Mon. 11/24&#13;
Thurs. 11/29&#13;
xb.) 7:00p.m.&#13;
b.) 7:00p.m.&#13;
Mankato tour1:45&#13;
p.m.&#13;
7:45p.m. DECEMBER&#13;
Thurs. 12/1&#13;
Thurs. 1216&#13;
Sat. 1218&#13;
Fri. 12/14&#13;
5at.I2/29&#13;
Salt Lake City games on&#13;
highest security alert&#13;
will go on as planned, and that&#13;
the only thing that would stop&#13;
it from going on is if there IS a&#13;
World War ill and that could&#13;
lead to a possible change."&#13;
(oaklandtribune.com)&#13;
Here at Parkside Women's&#13;
Cross Country and Track Coach&#13;
Michael DeWitt, who has been&#13;
to some of the- summer&#13;
Olympics including the 1996&#13;
Atlanta Games said, "I do think&#13;
the Games should be held."&#13;
One of DeWitt's athlete missed&#13;
the 1980 games, because the&#13;
U'S, did not attend Moscow,&#13;
because the US. was helping&#13;
the Afghans against the Soviets.&#13;
DeWitt said, "Now 20 years&#13;
later it's the opposite story."&#13;
DeWitt believes these are games&#13;
and have nothing to do with&#13;
politics. He believes that safety&#13;
is extremely important, and if&#13;
an athlete doesn't feel safe, that&#13;
is okay, they can stay home.&#13;
DeWitt said, "I would think the&#13;
Salt Lake City Games will be&#13;
Odyssey (ex.)&#13;
Saginawvalley&#13;
Northwood&#13;
indianapolis&#13;
No. Kentucky&#13;
@Ktky.Wesleyan&#13;
@Soufh Indiana&#13;
Quincy&#13;
SID-Edwardsville&#13;
WmonaState&#13;
Ashland&#13;
3:00p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
1:00 p.rn.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
5:15p.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
4:30 p.m,&#13;
noon&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
1:00p.rn.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
l:00l'.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
noon&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
l:00p.rn.&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
November 1, 2001&#13;
Women's Soccer overcome GLVC finale&#13;
"By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
T&#13;
he Ranger women took their final&#13;
league scheduled game by defeating&#13;
SIU-Edwardsville on Sunday,&#13;
October21.The Rangers finished 9-1 in&#13;
the GLVCstandings and are currently&#13;
14-1 overall. With a 2-1 victory, the&#13;
Rangerswill take the No.2 seed in the&#13;
GLVCTournament, which means the&#13;
Rangerswill host the No.7 seeded team&#13;
October 31 in a tournament quarterfinal.&#13;
In Sunday's game, Sophomore Lorrie&#13;
Jones broke the 1-1 tie with a second-half&#13;
goal. Senior Nicole Wenzel&#13;
and Senior Bryanna Jurvis helped Jones&#13;
scorethe goal by making the assist to&#13;
!"LAG FOOTBALL&#13;
1.NC Chaps 5-{)&#13;
2. Grapplers II 4-1&#13;
3. Team #1 1-4&#13;
4. The Panthers lJ-,S&#13;
MEN'S TENNIS&#13;
l.Lee&#13;
Riopell2-o&#13;
1. Keith Gagnon 2-0&#13;
2. Christian Cantir 1-0&#13;
her. Jones took the assist from jurvis,&#13;
and beat the SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
defender and scored the goal.&#13;
Sophomore Sara Beebe gave the&#13;
Rangers a 1-0 lead in the first seven&#13;
minutes ofthe game, after coming off&#13;
a corner kick that was an unassisted&#13;
goal. SIU-Edwardsville tied the game&#13;
1-1 off of a misdirected header by&#13;
UWP Lmdsey Griffitts. The Rangers&#13;
out shot SIU-Edwardsville 12-9.&#13;
The Rangers were ranked third in&#13;
the latest NSCAA Great Lakes region&#13;
poll pnor to Sunday's win. The next&#13;
game for the Rangers will be their&#13;
final game of the regular season in a&#13;
non-conference match at Northwood&#13;
on Saturday, October 27 at 1 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS&#13;
1. Stephanie&#13;
Cemiglia 2-0&#13;
2. Liz Perry 1-0&#13;
3. Ruchell Weisflog 1-1&#13;
..r--':'"""~':'"""~~~"''' ••t: J;fJC.Q)J:J;O)ffi':::'lMADNESS&#13;
:: $1.00 Rails 9-12 • Drinkin~ Teams $:i.50 Pilkhen&#13;
~: Monday Ni!fl1t FootbaD On Bij saHn&#13;
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~: Buy One Pizza Get second FREE ..~---""",;;,,"""="""''''''''' ~:\~9G!;.DIJ.:Jj]~L0l:.1W&#13;
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Ip----------- BEST JgKE&#13;
I .asr Peace 2nd Peace&#13;
Party for you Dinner for 2&#13;
I 20 :r~:nds Hosted by, Including 2&#13;
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IName: Phone: IThe best joke I fjlver heard is............. -------&#13;
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I&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
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To participate in the contest please fill out the following&#13;
!orm c~mpletely and turn it in to The Ranger News @D139C&#13;
In Wyllie Hall. Two winner~ will be chosen and notified by&#13;
The Ranger News. All entries must be turned in by noon on&#13;
the Wednesday following the previo.us weeks issues.&#13;
"Some restrictions do apply. See Ranger News for details.&#13;
.. _----------&#13;
~?\t\lrTil\·.;-)(:"'\\ii\r t 01'1. yes LADIES NIGHT- lJ L.rd\.!0U\J.'i:::.~,.JC::.Ji.,S1 j1;",S •• ., ,', ' •&#13;
ladies - Complimentary Drinks From 9-11&#13;
For The Fenas.,Beer Bucket Special Price&#13;
Ash &amp; Rueben&#13;
Fasthorse legends of the&#13;
.Silver Screen:&#13;
Sir.Alec&#13;
'GlIinness&#13;
Traditional Lakota performances, featuring:&#13;
-Singing&#13;
-Dancing&#13;
-Drumming &amp;&#13;
-Storytelling&#13;
8Y Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
I&#13;
ronicallyenough Sir Alec Gutnness ...~:tft;'cl~e f::~l~~~/~:~&#13;
Obi-Wan Kenobi, in the original Star&#13;
Wars tril&lt;&gt;g)'. Many younger people&#13;
ilnly know the acclaimed Bntisli actor&#13;
for that singular role; however, the&#13;
quality and scope of characters played&#13;
, oy Guinness through his SIX decade&#13;
career is remarkable.&#13;
Guinness' career began on the stage&#13;
alon~ with theatre legends Lawrence&#13;
Olivier; Ralph Richardson, and John&#13;
Gielgud. By surrounding himself with&#13;
• talented actors and appeanng ill ! demanding productions such as Ham- I~ --------------------_ .. :1 let, Macbeth, and Great Expectations to&#13;
. name a few, Guinness was forced to&#13;
swim or sink. He swam.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
3-4:30~ FREE&#13;
50~NIGHT&#13;
FRIDAY NIGHT, NOVEMBER 2, AFTER 6,00 PM, YOII CAN CASH IN ON&#13;
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liVE T&lt;ACEPROGT&lt;AM, HOT lJOGS &amp;ASSORTElJ BAGS OF CHIPS&#13;
Guinn_In Bridge on the RIver K'wal (1951)&#13;
Movie roles were inevitable. His&#13;
first memorable role came in David&#13;
Lean's Oliver Twist (1948). The part was&#13;
ant because it not onl,y placed&#13;
ess in a lead role, but It paired&#13;
for the first time with director&#13;
with which he would col-&#13;
.th on other important films&#13;
g out his career.&#13;
A number of successful comedies&#13;
would' soon f w such as the&#13;
ts and Coronets,&#13;
'11 Mob (1951), and&#13;
). Queen ~lizabeth&#13;
ubbed uinness Commander of the&#13;
tish Empire in 1955 for his esteemed&#13;
rk inthe arts:&#13;
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.:. 50C SPECIALS BEGIN AFTER 6:00 PM&#13;
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Children ..",der 18 mu,t be accompcniad by pm"nl Of l&amp;gal Q&lt;Klrdian. Admiuioo to lhe Sports lcur&gt;ge re3irK:led lO 1a ~&lt;:&gt;"of nge or elder.&#13;
2001 Sch&amp;dule - u.....grtI¥hound "",line", pe.rormot',(;el; 01 1,00 pm Sundoy. Wednesday &amp; Sutunkiy. live Gnryho ..."d eVM;"9 0'rlorm':lflc",~&#13;
Qj 7: 13 pm T~$dQY, Thursda1, Friday &amp; Sotvrcktr. Sin-.u!coMW&lt;l\!wing 7 days &lt;&gt; "'&lt;lei. Dairyllmd Greyho""d !'ark is lo&lt;:oted crff 1.94 (!~;t&#13;
~1W'{ 158 in Kenosha, FOf fln.ral information IQUslIcall 262 '''7-8200.&#13;
November 1, 2001&#13;
Guinness' success continued with&#13;
his role as Col. Nichol~on in another&#13;
David Lean film, The Bndge on the RIver&#13;
Kioai, (1957). The film won seven Academy&#13;
Awards including Best Picture and&#13;
Cuinness took in his first and only Best&#13;
Actor Oscar. Guinness' role as a&#13;
staunchly by the book British officer is&#13;
one of Guinness' finest performances, If&#13;
someone could only take in one performance&#13;
by Guinness, this is the one that&#13;
would probably best show the actor's&#13;
talents because the role required Guinness&#13;
to be restrained, bold, reflective,&#13;
and confused. From the confusion that&#13;
the character experiences comes the&#13;
Guinness dressed as Jodi Obi-Wan Konobl&#13;
conflict of the film, which established&#13;
the dramatic conclusion.&#13;
The 1960's brought more successful&#13;
work for Guinness. His personal&#13;
favorite role came in Tunes of Glory&#13;
(1960) another role as an officer. Two&#13;
more David Lean epics followed,&#13;
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) and Dr. Zhioago&#13;
(1965). Both films were box office&#13;
success' and with time became movie&#13;
classics.&#13;
A downturn of popularity occurred&#13;
for Guinness in the 1970's until he reluctantly&#13;
accepted a destiny-altering role&#13;
enthusiastically offered by a young&#13;
director named George Lucas. The rest&#13;
is movie history. Star Wars (1977), The&#13;
Empire Strikes Back (1980), and Return of&#13;
the [edi (1983), catapulted the aged&#13;
Guinness into a movie icon. His character&#13;
Obi-Wan Kenobi's phrase "May the&#13;
force be With you," blasted into pop ~-&#13;
ture oblivion. Though he did not win,&#13;
Cuinness did win a Best Actor nominanon&#13;
for his part inthe first film.&#13;
Two years later the Academy gav:e&#13;
GJJinness with an honorary award. Hjs&#13;
forth and final nomination came for his&#13;
)&lt;tor.!&lt; irl,Little Doni! (1988). Gninness&#13;
also wrote two memoirs which he left&#13;
behind along with his beloved body of&#13;
film work. Guinness died on August 5,&#13;
2OO(Jat..age 86. ",;;," ,'.,n. .&#13;
--&#13;
November 1. 2001&#13;
Daughters, Mothers,&#13;
&amp; Grandmothers&#13;
Speak Continued&#13;
from K-12. "These issues will be&#13;
addressed at the Women's Studies Prowarn&#13;
meetings," said Prof. Akindes,&#13;
'so that we can find ways of implementing&#13;
those suggestions in life."&#13;
The dialogue ended with panel participants&#13;
sharing their feelings and&#13;
commenting on the event. Prof. Farida&#13;
Khansaid, "It was a good time for us to&#13;
find out about each other's differences&#13;
Take back the Night&#13;
rally makes voices&#13;
heard Continued&#13;
and commonalities. And I think we&#13;
managed to do it in these two short&#13;
hours." ~&#13;
Indeed, the two hours were not&#13;
enough to find out answers to all of the&#13;
questions, but it was enough for people&#13;
to understand that instead of accusing&#13;
each other, it is more effective to talk&#13;
through the differences and find ways&#13;
of carrying on the dialogue after the&#13;
event. As one of the audience members&#13;
Eric Carlberg said, "There was a sense&#13;
of healing after the dISCUSSIOn,"which&#13;
left hope that it is not that difficult to&#13;
resolve misunderstandings.&#13;
-Be informed.&#13;
-Check out statistics, read books.&#13;
-Speak out.&#13;
-Educate.&#13;
-Discuss myths about rape.&#13;
-Volunteer at a center, such as Pathways&#13;
of Courage, who are always&#13;
looking for volunteers, and join organizations&#13;
to promote equality.&#13;
As a male reading this article, there&#13;
are ways to help in addition to the&#13;
ones listed above:&#13;
-Listen sincerely.&#13;
-Talk to someone.&#13;
-Do not be ashamed to speak out.&#13;
-Be positive male role models for&#13;
children, and model after strong males&#13;
that display manly behavior.&#13;
To get more information, a wide&#13;
variety of options are _open to students.&#13;
The Women's Resource Center&#13;
provides shelter and counseling as&#13;
well as advocacy for victims, and a 24-&#13;
hour hotline is available at (262) 633-&#13;
3233. Women's and Children's Horizons&#13;
for support and shelter also has a&#13;
24-hour crisis line at (262) 652-9900.&#13;
Pathways of Courage / KASA, provide&#13;
free and confidential individual support,&#13;
legal, medical advocacy and support&#13;
groups among other services, and&#13;
can be reached at their 24-hour crisis&#13;
line (262) 657-5272. RAINN, The&#13;
National Sexual Assault Hotline is 1-&#13;
800-656-HOPE, and, as the others. is&#13;
totally free, confidential, and is available&#13;
24 hours. For support on campus,&#13;
contact the Womyn's Center at (262)&#13;
595-2170.&#13;
Another participant Rachel Larson,&#13;
sophomore, commented, "I had a lot&#13;
of friends that were sexually assaulted&#13;
and I was myself. I just wanted to&#13;
show support for women and men&#13;
and tell people what they can do&#13;
against it and how to help them."&#13;
Poonam Sandhu, a sophomore who&#13;
works at the Womyn's Center, said&#13;
things in India are very different from&#13;
. how they are in the United States,&#13;
"One of my Moms' friends' daughter&#13;
was raped and she didn't complain.&#13;
She was to be married within a year so&#13;
she didn't say anything. Because if she&#13;
would have raised her voice, they [his&#13;
parents] would come to know she was&#13;
raped and she wouldn't be able to&#13;
marry." She went on to say, "She W?S&#13;
going to be blamed, not society."&#13;
Tips given were very informative&#13;
and useful, and ones everybody&#13;
should be aware of:&#13;
-Be a person that listens and&#13;
believes when a victim of sexual&#13;
assault comes to you, and be there for&#13;
them.&#13;
-Assess your safety.&#13;
-Do what you think is effective in&#13;
protecting yourself.&#13;
-Confront stereotypical conversations,&#13;
or inappropriate behavior.&#13;
-Stay safe, and watch what's going&#13;
on around you and your environment.&#13;
Salt Lake City games&#13;
on highest security&#13;
alert Continued&#13;
decided to shut down Salt Lake City's&#13;
International Airport for several hours&#13;
during the opening ceremonies (February&#13;
8 ) and the closing ceremonies ( February&#13;
24 ). This means no planes will be&#13;
allowed into or out of Salt Lake City&#13;
Intemational Airport. Robert Flowers,&#13;
head of the Utah Public Safety Command,&#13;
said: "If you fly in the restricted&#13;
airspace, we're going to shoot you&#13;
down." (ESPN.com) Flowers said that&#13;
the halted air traffic was a must to&#13;
ensure the safety of everyone including&#13;
President Bush.&#13;
ScottBlackmun, executive director of&#13;
the u.s. Olympic Committee, said, "The&#13;
world is a different place than it was&#13;
before" (ESPN.com). Organizers admit&#13;
that the games will be different from&#13;
what they were originally expected to be&#13;
like. Bands playing on the street comers&#13;
and the resort town of Park City celebrating&#13;
at night have been dropped.&#13;
Although, there is a lot of concern of&#13;
other possible terrorist attacks, and with&#13;
the Anthrax scare, Utah officialssay that&#13;
it is well prepared to make the Games&#13;
safe. Utah Governor Mike Leavitt said,&#13;
"this is an event that was a good thing to&#13;
have and now it's an event we have to&#13;
have" ( ESPN.com ). Leavitt went on to&#13;
say that the best reassurance for a worried&#13;
Olympic movement might have&#13;
come from President Bush who told&#13;
him, 'Til be there and so will America" (&#13;
ESPN. com ). So let the Games go on&#13;
here in the United States and let's show&#13;
the world the best of America. As Leavitt&#13;
said, "We'll be ready and this will be a&#13;
secure place" ( ESPN. com ).&#13;
Grill, Salad Bar, &amp;.Made-to-order Subs Available&#13;
8-2pm,4-7pm&#13;
8-2pm&#13;
5-7pm&#13;
~Mon- Thurs.&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
Convenience Store Items and&#13;
Premade Sandwiches available&#13;
at all times.&#13;
Sponsored by Dining Services&#13;
POLICE&#13;
RIIT ----&#13;
10/21/01&#13;
Inc #01-764 'Iraffic Vio1atim,&#13;
4200 Block of ern A,&#13;
7 :46 a.m. Driver w.:lS citEd&#13;
• foe spElin;j 52 rrph in a 35&#13;
nph =E.&#13;
Inc #01-765 cmrrcl.Iec Substance,&#13;
university Apartments,&#13;
2:52 p.m. UPFS officer&#13;
resp:rr1Ed to a =r:t of&#13;
rrarijuara usage. Investigatim&#13;
resultEd in an .irrfividual&#13;
b?irg ci ted foe possessdcc&#13;
of rrar-i Juana am&#13;
drug~ia.&#13;
Inc #01-766 'Iraffic Accicent,&#13;
ern E at ern JR, 6:40&#13;
p.m. Student's vehicle&#13;
struck a deer causing&#13;
extEnsive cErrBge to the&#13;
vehicle rut m persmal&#13;
injury. state accidEnt form&#13;
anpletEd.&#13;
10/22/01&#13;
Inc #01-767' M3::lical Assist,&#13;
~ Hall, 9:11 p.m.-Parent,&#13;
reo.ested an check en&#13;
his cEughter v.ro vas ill.&#13;
KaxBlB M3:l. 5 resp::nJEd&#13;
am t-ransported her to&#13;
Aurora M3::lical CEnter.&#13;
10/23/01&#13;
Inc #01-768 Ur&gt;::Erage Drinking&#13;
Violatim, Ranter Hall&#13;
Patio, 2:20 a.m. Offioer&#13;
vie-eo am thEn awrehen:E:l&#13;
subjects rroving a a:ncrete&#13;
be-en. Investigatim Ied to&#13;
t:w:J irrlividuals reoeivirg&#13;
citations for underage&#13;
drinking violatims.&#13;
Inc #01-770 Fire Alarm,&#13;
Wyllie 02, 6:43 p.m. Offioer&#13;
resp::n:Jing to an alarm&#13;
fcurrl Witer leakirg from&#13;
ab:Jve a snoke detectoc.&#13;
\\Eiter nay have gottEn into&#13;
bJxes storEd there. facilities&#13;
M3rBgarent W3S rotifiEd&#13;
of the alarm am Witer&#13;
cErrBge.&#13;
10/24/01&#13;
Inc #01-772 Disorderly&#13;
cerrJuct/N:lise, university&#13;
Aj::art:rTffits volley1:Bll arm,&#13;
1:17 a.m. Officers resp::ndEd&#13;
to a mise cxrrplaint&#13;
after RA's got m o:q:;eratim&#13;
fran the srudent.s ,&#13;
SUbjects, v.ro cx:ntinuEd to&#13;
l:e Iced am disruptive,&#13;
;,..ere VBrI1Ed alxut their&#13;
bebavicr l::y UPFS officer.&#13;
Inc #01-774 82rsmal Preperty&#13;
'Ih2ft, Off Gmpls-Mil-&#13;
\&gt;B1.lkee, 1:54 p.m. StL&gt;::H1t&#13;
reported her UtH'arkside&#13;
parkin;) IEJ11i t vas stolen&#13;
during a break-in to her&#13;
car. A rEj:llacEITBl.t IEJ11it&#13;
vas j:X1rCh3sEd.&#13;
10/25/01&#13;
Inc #01-775 Parkin;)&#13;
Enforcerent, -'Itw, Ranger&#13;
Hall lot, 12:12 a.m. vehicle&#13;
illegally parkEd with&#13;
five 1JI1P3.id citaticnS lM3.S&#13;
ticketEd am t&lt;:&gt;ffi.&#13;
Inc #01-777 'Iraffic Vialatim,&#13;
SIH 31 at ern JR,&#13;
1:17 a.m. Driver vas citro&#13;
for inprudEnt am unreasmable&#13;
sree:l for dri virg 65-&#13;
70 m::h t:hrrugh a omstructim&#13;
site.&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Tlte,mati&lt;etingdub is comingJ9:parkside,&#13;
This dub is&#13;
&lt;Wected '.towards students of&#13;
themarketing field, while all&#13;
$tudetlts . are . welcome to&#13;
attel}d;meetings. "The marketip,gclub&#13;
.~s ppmarily for students,&#13;
. and. it. ~s to promote&#13;
f!;teit 1&lt;1'lowledge about the&#13;
field of )'tIarketing and to provide,&#13;
hopefully, some very&#13;
useful activities that would&#13;
further thcit careers," says Dr.&#13;
Jan Owens, assistant professor&#13;
01 the marketing department,&#13;
and advisor for the dub.&#13;
This: dub may be very beneficial&#13;
for students in their&#13;
career areas, as a supplement&#13;
to intemships in the sChool of&#13;
busip,ess. "Our plan is to have&#13;
sOme guest speakers in the&#13;
marketing field fo give them&#13;
better ideas of the areas they&#13;
would like to get into within&#13;
marketing, also to plan some&#13;
activities that would be professionally&#13;
advantageous to have&#13;
on their resumes," says&#13;
Owens.&#13;
These activities may&#13;
include such projects as draw-&#13;
-----._""---&#13;
ing attention to Parkside's&#13;
"&#13;
sports programs to promote&#13;
students interest, amon~ other&#13;
things. "We came up WIth five&#13;
good solid ideas as far as what&#13;
we would like to do with some&#13;
of the projects that interest us.&#13;
However, our first official&#13;
meeting is going to be a time&#13;
when we can brainstorm and&#13;
COme up with some projects&#13;
that the people who are interested&#13;
in the club can participate&#13;
in," says student Jean&#13;
Goers.&#13;
The participants of the club&#13;
have beneficial goals in mind&#13;
for Parkside. "One of our top&#13;
priorities is to focus on our&#13;
campus here at Parkside, and&#13;
to make ourselves available to&#13;
anyone who is interested in&#13;
getting involved in a project,"&#13;
says Goers.&#13;
Currently all offices for the&#13;
club are open, and anyone who&#13;
is interested in being a member&#13;
of the club or who would like&#13;
to run for office should e-mail&#13;
Jean Goers at jeangoers@yahoo.com&#13;
by November 5. The&#13;
marketing club's first official&#13;
meeting will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, November 7 at&#13;
noon in a room TBA. For more&#13;
information, contact Dr. Jan&#13;
Owens at 595-2105.&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside&#13;
LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Presents:&#13;
Motivation&#13;
Friday, November 2&#13;
Union ro6, Noon-r pm&#13;
,rejuvenation. At this point&#13;
you could probably use a little help getting remotivated for school&#13;
. '&#13;
work, or just in general. Ifyou're part of an organization, there are&#13;
probably members who also need ~ boost. Attend this FUN program&#13;
and GET MOTIVATED!&#13;
Presented by: Sue KAlinka. Student Activities Coordinator at UW-Waukesha&#13;
Th~ Umve-rslly of W"cnm," Pa.ks,de proVides 'e,vlces for p"trons With &lt;;pe-u.ll&#13;
need, Please contact the Parkllde Student Cenler lor assI5Ian~e. (2(,2) 5'l5-2H5&#13;
It's mid way through the&#13;
semester and time for some</text>
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              <text>Anthrax Affects Parkside</text>
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              <text>THe·AI=INGEFI&#13;
November 8, 2001&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things tu do at the U&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Show us the money&#13;
Money rules&#13;
Page 4&#13;
t 'IV Land's'Kenna Kay from&#13;
New Yorkvisits Parkside&#13;
Alumni Back Home&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Thinking Critically tonight&#13;
Page 5&#13;
Center for In!'1 Studies Finds&#13;
Home&#13;
SpecialAssistant tu NY Gov.&#13;
Speaks at UWP&#13;
Parkside in!'1 club presents&#13;
journalist Alison Weir&#13;
Nov.13&#13;
Leadership Series Motivates&#13;
Students&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Bears vs. Packers: Gash of&#13;
the Titans&#13;
M!m's Soccer Wms final regular&#13;
Season Game&#13;
lVomen'sSoccer Defeab&#13;
Northwood .&#13;
Page B&#13;
'Legends of the sliver&#13;
saeen: James Dean&#13;
Page 9 •&#13;
StilIT~:gt';:at Books&#13;
PageU&#13;
Police beat&#13;
CIassifieds #'&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside Aequitas&#13;
Anthrax affects Parkside&#13;
By Tiffany Grant&#13;
Arts and Entertainment Editor&#13;
S&#13;
ince September 11, reports&#13;
of government offices and&#13;
. major corporations receivmg&#13;
anthrax in the mail have&#13;
raised questions about the&#13;
safety here at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Are the&#13;
students, staff and faculty&#13;
safe? Is the mail safe?&#13;
Two mailroom employees&#13;
answered questions that have&#13;
been on everyone's mind.&#13;
Mary Hayward, a shipping&#13;
and mailing clerk, said that&#13;
she is "more watchful" 0 n&#13;
her job. "We watch for anything&#13;
lumpy or stained. If we&#13;
do find anything like that we&#13;
then notify our supervisor."&#13;
She noted that nothing of any&#13;
suspicion has come through&#13;
the Parkside mailroom.&#13;
Barb Mayer, another shipring&#13;
and mailing clerk, noted&#13;
that indeed lier job has sent to the addressee. the University of Wisconsinchanged&#13;
since the tragedies of One question that many Parkside is at a major risk of&#13;
September 11. "We wear rub- people have is, is this a perma- receiving an anthrax tainted&#13;
'Jer gloves and anything that nent thing? Mayer said, "I letter, but they will not take&#13;
doesn't have a return address don't know. Maybe it will be." any chances.&#13;
gets sent back," to the Kenosha For now it is a day-by-day Dr. Carmel Ruffolo, a&#13;
Post Office. process of being more careful microbiologist and professor&#13;
Packages over one pound, with handling the mail and of biological science here said&#13;
international or United States, being more aware that the that the students, staff and facgo&#13;
to the Kenosha Post Office threat of anthrax IS a reality. ulty should "be concer~ed, but&#13;
to get a special stamp c~rtify- However, both Mayer and not frantic about It. .What&#13;
ing that it is okay. Then It gets Hayward do not beheve that needs to be reiterated IS that&#13;
Writers for Literacy features&#13;
former UW-P Student&#13;
, t'&#13;
'1;. toJlV. TillS AIf'rA-'MlC.&#13;
Y"II OlE NOW. '.'&#13;
AilS Y"II ""II AI 0 ? '&#13;
Dsn N TO!M'llt~ ...&#13;
1)'4TH TQJ4(t...,t.:.&#13;
AUAH 1$ ltlt"/t",&#13;
The letter containing the anthrax virus sent to the office of Senate Majority&#13;
Leader Tom Daschle. (US DOJ via Reuters)&#13;
By Dave Buchanan biographies include Francis&#13;
Ford Coppola: A Filmmaker's&#13;
Life. Tlie recent release of&#13;
Apocalypse Now Redux, the&#13;
original-length version of&#13;
Coppola's Vietnam War epic,&#13;
has stirred new interest in both&#13;
films.&#13;
Based loosely on Joseph&#13;
Conrad's novel The Heart of&#13;
Darkness, Apocalypse Now is&#13;
considered one of the best war&#13;
films of all time. The film also&#13;
made headlines for its extravagant&#13;
cost overruns and the&#13;
physical and mental breakdowns&#13;
of those involved during&#13;
filming. Schumacher will&#13;
talk about the shorter theatrical&#13;
release and the "restored"&#13;
version.&#13;
Schumacher says he looks&#13;
forward to meeting UW-Parkside&#13;
students at Saturday's&#13;
program.&#13;
"lowe a lot to UW-Parkside:'&#13;
said Schumacher, who&#13;
has also written books on beat&#13;
poet Allen Ginsberg, rocker&#13;
Eric Clarton, and folkie Phil&#13;
Ochs. " remember reading&#13;
modern literature with Waft&#13;
Graflin many years ago. And&#13;
Andy McLean has often invited&#13;
me to talk to students about&#13;
writing non-fiction."&#13;
Saturday's program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
UWP Public Relations&#13;
Director&#13;
Former UW-Parkside student,&#13;
Michael Schumacher,&#13;
will present Francis Ford Coppola,&#13;
Apocalypse Now and&#13;
Apocalypse Now Redux on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 10, at 7 p.m., at&#13;
First Presbyterian Church,&#13;
located on 7th St. and College&#13;
Ave. in Racine. Part of the&#13;
Writers for Literacy series, the&#13;
program is sponsored by the&#13;
Racine Literacy CounCIl and&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore.&#13;
Schumacher is a Kenoshabased&#13;
free-lance writer whose&#13;
anthrax is "definitely not contagious."&#13;
It is not an airborne disease&#13;
and can only be transmitted&#13;
by coming in contact with&#13;
the bacterial spores.&#13;
She said there are specific&#13;
symptoms of the inhaled form&#13;
of anthrax. "It starts off flu like&#13;
with the typical muscle pain&#13;
and fever. However you don't&#13;
get phlegm. You have a 'nonproductive'&#13;
cough and finally&#13;
an acute shortness of breath.&#13;
The shortness of breath is really&#13;
key." The time it takes for&#13;
symptoms to occur "varies on&#13;
when the spores germinate."&#13;
This could be six to thirty days.&#13;
Dr. Ruffolo said that "ali these&#13;
factors have to corne together:'&#13;
in order to diagnose a person&#13;
has inhaled Anthrax.&#13;
There have been reports of&#13;
citizens buying Cipro, an&#13;
antibiotic now used to treat&#13;
anthrax, over the internet.&#13;
"Cipro can do more harm than&#13;
good if administered wi thout&#13;
the proper medical supervision:'&#13;
said Dr. Ruffolo. If Cipro&#13;
is not taken froperly, it can be&#13;
very harmfu . People who buy&#13;
Cipro over the internet do not&#13;
know how to take the antibiotic&#13;
properly and they could&#13;
have an adverse reaction to it.&#13;
Dr. Ruffolo noted that the&#13;
anthrax sent through the mail&#13;
to the "government and media&#13;
was a clear threat." She also&#13;
stated, "I don't think any university&#13;
is a target for an anthrax&#13;
scare." For now, students, staff&#13;
and faculty here at Parkside&#13;
need to "be very careful with&#13;
the mail." Anyone that sees&#13;
mail that may look suspicious&#13;
should report it to the campus&#13;
police immediately.&#13;
For now the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is a safe&#13;
place to attend school or work.&#13;
The university is taking proper&#13;
precautions with the mail and&#13;
if there are any further questions&#13;
about anthrax the experts&#13;
here at Parkside, our professors,&#13;
will gladly answer any&#13;
questions.&#13;
Page 2&#13;
'iii'""&#13;
THe Al=lNGEA November 8. 2001&#13;
....&#13;
THINGS H&#13;
November 8 p.m., free; though Dec. 13.&#13;
• Friends of the Library Book Sale, Upper Main Place, 9 a.m, to 5 p.m.&#13;
• Model Organization of American States simulation. locations throughout&#13;
UW-Parkside campus.&#13;
• "Interacting, Not Reacting: Thinking Critically About Sept. 11," a dialog on&#13;
terrorism, panel; discussion led by Political Science Professor Peggy James,&#13;
Greenquist 103, 7 p.m., noon, free&#13;
• Campus Safety Walk: meet at 6pm in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
November 9&#13;
• Friends of the Library Book Sale, Upper Main Place, 9 a.m. to noon&#13;
• Model Organization of American States simulation. locatio~ throughout&#13;
UW-Parkside campus.&#13;
November 10&#13;
• High School Science &amp; Technology Competition, Greenquist &amp; Molinaro&#13;
Halls, 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
• Parkside Experience Day /preview &amp; open house 10 a.m. to noon location&#13;
TBA "&#13;
• Alumni Open House, Sports &amp; Activity Center, 1 to 7 p.m.&#13;
• Women's basketball, UW-Parkside exhibition game, SAC, 3 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball, UW-Parkside exhibition game, SAC, 7 p.m.&#13;
November 12&#13;
• Art Exhibition: Amy Norgaard &amp; Greg Porcaro, alumni exhibition, hours:&#13;
Monday /Thursday: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesday/Wednesday: 11 a.m. to 8&#13;
C~Editors-in-Chief&#13;
, . Daniel Frake -&#13;
Benj~in Schmidt&#13;
l&#13;
Assistabt Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
4&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
1&lt;:('eleyP('mble&#13;
"\.0&#13;
Raitger~l1bJic Relations&#13;
Melissl.l,?tephenson&#13;
'\&#13;
,"&#13;
Arts and Entertainment.Bdffor&#13;
Tiffany Gtant J&#13;
J&#13;
SportsPage~ditor j&#13;
Dena coady&#13;
Report.rs&#13;
Alexis Martin&#13;
R~~f~&#13;
AdebeSi&#13;
Donn&#13;
WillB'&#13;
November 13&#13;
• lnforbreaks: Digital Images for the Web-Learn the basics of scanning, savmg&#13;
and Sizing images; 9:45 a.m., Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie 01500, also&#13;
held Wednesday, Nov. 14, at 3 p.m.&#13;
• "Palestine, Afghanistan, and the Current World Crisis," w / journalist Alison&#13;
Weir, Molinaro Hall room 0137, 6 p.m., sponsored by Parkside International&#13;
Club&#13;
November 14&#13;
• Noon Concert: [eani Foster, flute; Stefanie Jacob, piano, Communication&#13;
Arts 0-118, noon, free&#13;
November 15-18&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Himalaya," Union Cinema Theater; showings Thursday &amp;&#13;
Friday @ 7:30 p.m., Saturday @ 8 p.m., Sunday @ 2 p.m.&#13;
November 15&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! presents: pianist George Winston, Com. Arts Theatre, 7:30&#13;
p.m., tickets: $18&#13;
November16&#13;
• "A Breed Apart," fall mini conference on teaching &amp; learning, Union 104-&#13;
106, 2:30 p.m., free&#13;
• Women's b'ball/UW-Parkside Classic: UWP vs. Saginaw, DeSimone Gymnasmm/Sports&#13;
and Activity Center, 8 p.m.&#13;
• Midnight Madness, Sports &amp; Activity Center, 9 p.m. to midnight, free to students&#13;
w /Ranger Card 10, campus only program.&#13;
°;r7&#13;
:Advertising Manager&#13;
J&lt;at~ Thoennes&#13;
'OesiglLmd Layout Managers&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Aaron Kleufsch&#13;
The Ranger is ~blished. every Thursdaythwughout the semester by l.e:tters t.othe E?itor"pohcy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Edi:&#13;
rnieleeding or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply wil.1not bepu&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595.2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Id n~~:s~~~~~n-:~~ h ,who are.solely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
. ., ...•. "'"v~",s~~ s ould be delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D.139Cj Let b .&#13;
PLtbltcationplIrpose,tiutf\6r's name can be withheld, but only upon request The Rang·,r ~~:rs m,""ht&#13;
~ typed, I ~d.d Iflll'llude the author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
.., . ,~",-rv S e fl.ghi: to e It a etters.&#13;
l&#13;
~ovember 8, 2001&#13;
Show us the money&#13;
By Adebisi Agoro&#13;
Reporter&#13;
E&#13;
ight weeks into the semester, and&#13;
already I am starting to hear about&#13;
hungry students walking around&#13;
our V.W Parkside campus. Nofbecause&#13;
of the lack of food, or even the quality&#13;
of food; that is hardly the problem. This&#13;
time it is because of the lack of funds on&#13;
most of our student meal plans. I am&#13;
now down to about fifty bucks, an&#13;
amount that might not e last up to next&#13;
week. I had the seven hundred and&#13;
fifty-dollar meal plan that only came&#13;
out to four hundred and fifty dollars. If&#13;
you are wondering how that happened&#13;
then I guess it is time for me to tell you.&#13;
You see UW-Parkside, and our new&#13;
food service company worked out a&#13;
contract that aIJowed three hundred&#13;
dollars to be taken out of "our" student&#13;
meal plans. It seems they thought there&#13;
was no need to complain, because the&#13;
money was taken out of our meal plans&#13;
(meaning our food money) for administrative&#13;
costs and fixed salaries. To me,&#13;
this is not a good enough reason to take&#13;
money out of my pocket, and food out&#13;
of my stomach.&#13;
In a recent conversation I had with&#13;
Steve McLaughlin, Dean of Students at&#13;
V.WParkside I was able to gather some&#13;
numbers to help show how much&#13;
money will be taken out of student&#13;
meal plans over the course of the years.&#13;
Did you know that there are about&#13;
seven hundred and sixty five students&#13;
living on campus? Now if you multiply&#13;
that number by three hundred what do&#13;
Money rules&#13;
By Tiffany Grant&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
T&#13;
he new book called Money Rules -&#13;
Personal Finance Strategies for&#13;
Your 20' s and 30' s by Juliette Fairley&#13;
is the perfect book for reople who&#13;
are in college or just out 0 college. It&#13;
gives ten easy steps for younger adults&#13;
to establish good credit and ways to&#13;
increase their "financial power." Fairley&#13;
says, "Three out of five college&#13;
grads return to live with mom and dad&#13;
and stay there for as much as five years.&#13;
BaSically,these people are leaving the&#13;
home at almost 30 years of age with&#13;
zero financial yower of freedom."&#13;
. The sters that Fairely offers for stayfig&#13;
out 0 debt are to get a job, save&#13;
money and try to pay cash for trips, do&#13;
n?t mix money with roommates or significant&#13;
others, monitor the money you&#13;
spend, establish good credit, do not&#13;
rely on your parents, open a bank&#13;
account, go to the ATM machine once a&#13;
week, budget your spending money&#13;
you come up with? Yes sir about&#13;
229,500 dollars. To get the end result&#13;
you have to multiply that number by&#13;
two to account for both semesters of&#13;
school; which amounts to about&#13;
459,000 dollars a year. Now if you are&#13;
anything like me you are probably&#13;
thinking, "damn that's a lot of money,&#13;
and where is it all going?" Well your&#13;
guess is as good as mine because I&#13;
don't know either. Another fact is that&#13;
this is a seven year contract renewable&#13;
by year if there are complications. So let&#13;
us see 229,500 x 2 = 459,000 x 7 =&#13;
3,213,000 over the course of seven&#13;
years, now where is all this money&#13;
going? The numbers are even bigger&#13;
than that. There still was money taken&#13;
out of commuter meal plans also, so we&#13;
still do not know the real figures.&#13;
To balance it all out though, stu--&#13;
dents were given a generous fifty- percent&#13;
off of items in the Parkside cafeteria.&#13;
Which, in all senses, is no deal at&#13;
all. You see if you take half of a man's&#13;
money, then marge them half off on&#13;
goods it is true the price balances out,&#13;
but in the end you still beat him out of&#13;
half of his money. So really someone&#13;
just up and took our money, and tried&#13;
to hide it. If you ask me it seems to be&#13;
some dishonesty going around, and&#13;
something should be done about it.&#13;
Personally, I will not stand for it anymore,&#13;
and neither should anyone else.&#13;
On top of what I am trying so hard&#13;
to get across, the food here is way too&#13;
expensive for what we are getting. For&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
and learn how to cook. These tips can&#13;
assure a good start in the world after&#13;
college.&#13;
Fairley says, "Take the average 19&#13;
year-old and tell them they can marge&#13;
a spring break trip to Cancun, Mexico&#13;
and pay it off little by little and they'll&#13;
ask you where they can sign up. In the&#13;
mid 80's credit card companies began&#13;
to tap into the college market. Since&#13;
then, credit card debt for those ages 20-&#13;
30 has drastically increased." She also&#13;
said, "Establishing good credit IS&#13;
important. What you do with your&#13;
credit in college will haunt you for&#13;
seven years after graduation, more if&#13;
your debt is excessive." ". .&#13;
Fairley explores ways to deal With&#13;
parents and money, finding a roommate&#13;
who isn't a financial flake, career&#13;
reality checks, tips on auto insurance&#13;
/ general insurance. investing tips,&#13;
40lk, IRA, money market accounts,&#13;
mutual funds, debt, credit damage control,&#13;
prenuptial agreements and the&#13;
purchase of your first home." . .&#13;
This book is already available in&#13;
stores and on-line. It is $16.00 and is a&#13;
great book for the college student that&#13;
needs financial help and guidance.&#13;
I:::):&gt; ~ LIKE. ~lC.?&#13;
DO 'bJ WAN. "TV ~&#13;
YOVR. MV6.C or« -rr\Ei&#13;
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9.l:\ilC5 •oS's W::'Pl.VOw'"&#13;
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Ui'!"'65QS ~,.U &lt;3ttI1'3&#13;
wt o»:&#13;
• 1111111' II Attentlon Student Orgs!&#13;
Looking for members'&#13;
Promoting a special event?&#13;
Need to market your club'&#13;
We Can Print&#13;
LARQE One Color&#13;
Posters For You!&#13;
You're probably&#13;
thinking: these&#13;
Pro Image Post·&#13;
ers must cost 90&#13;
cents or a whole&#13;
dollar. Wrong.&#13;
Student ActiviA&#13;
ties will print&#13;
these amazing&#13;
posters for you&#13;
for only 85 cents.&#13;
Outstanding!&#13;
The Pro Image Plus printer&#13;
allows us to create large 23" x&#13;
3 J " newsprint posters in a variety&#13;
of colors; including red,&#13;
green, blue, black. neons (or&#13;
we can order a special c%r)&#13;
from your 8.5" x II originals!&#13;
Drop your copy off to&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
(Union 209) and we ~&#13;
will print posters for&#13;
you wiltlin .. !loUIS&#13;
(usually sooner!)&#13;
Impressiue. Thanks&#13;
to your poster.&#13;
I loue life again.&#13;
IillLlIf~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
November 8, 2001&#13;
Page4 TV Land's Kenna Kay from New York&#13;
visits Parks ide&#13;
By Rosie Veziridis in General Liberal Arts stud-&#13;
-----------c.-- ies. I'd always studied art,&#13;
Reporter and I always had a gift in art,&#13;
but I didn't know if I ever&#13;
wanted a career out of it." She&#13;
stated, going on to explain, "It&#13;
was around the time I graduated&#13;
that I decided what I&#13;
wanted to pursue, what I&#13;
loved which was art. So I&#13;
went' back to art school in&#13;
New York City."&#13;
Slice of&#13;
LASIdAWtehl ... -_...."·~···r series&#13;
"So I got a job at a small&#13;
design firm, where we&#13;
designed album covers, promotional&#13;
packaging materials.&#13;
And from there I recently&#13;
worked for Nickelodeon and&#13;
ended up getting a job with&#13;
them. I've been with Nickelodeon&#13;
(TV Land is a division&#13;
of Nickelodeon) now for ten&#13;
years. I started with them as a&#13;
junior designer, and I worked&#13;
my way up to a senior&#13;
designer, art director,&#13;
and creative director."&#13;
When asked&#13;
what her likes and dislikes&#13;
were, she&#13;
explains, "It's a really&#13;
fun job. I have to manage&#13;
people so that's&#13;
not fun when you&#13;
have somebody who&#13;
works for you, and&#13;
)'ou have to tell them&#13;
they're not doing a&#13;
great job. It's really&#13;
awkward and uncomfortable."&#13;
She also&#13;
explained her likes,&#13;
"Feeling a real sense of&#13;
accomplishment and&#13;
those that have worked&#13;
continued on page 9&#13;
M&#13;
iss Kenna Kay, Creative&#13;
Director of TV&#13;
Land Art &amp; Design in&#13;
. New York City visited UWParkside&#13;
Monday, October 29,&#13;
and spoke in Communication&#13;
Arts 129 at 5:00. The event&#13;
was sponsored by UW-Parkside's&#13;
Arts Management Program.&#13;
TV Land is in 60&#13;
million homes, and&#13;
has been in existence&#13;
for five years. And it's&#13;
got "rewatchability" as&#13;
used in one their slogans.&#13;
The average&#13;
viewer is aged 18-54,&#13;
and the average aged&#13;
viewer is 40. The station&#13;
has a retro 60s&#13;
look and the music is&#13;
reminiscent of The&#13;
Beatles.&#13;
In a personal interview&#13;
with Miss Kay,&#13;
she explained her position,&#13;
how she got started,&#13;
and what it's like. "T Kenna Kayanswers questions after the presentation.&#13;
was an undergraduate&#13;
College and Life can be a challengelet&#13;
us prepare you tor Doth.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28th&#13;
Union 104/106&#13;
4pm-6pm&#13;
"How to set and live your&#13;
priorities ~by Catherine&#13;
Jameson, UWP Controller&#13;
For all clubs, organizations, group members, ~~&#13;
leaders, and anyone who is interested! ~&#13;
Pizza and beverages served. Attendance is limited,&#13;
so sign up now! Stop by Union 209, calf 595-2278.&#13;
or send an e-mail to: enge/@uwp.edu&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
Alumni back home Saturday&#13;
p.m. and the men's alumni game is at 5&#13;
p.m. The University's current varsity&#13;
basketball teams also are in action during&#13;
the open house with the women&#13;
playmg an exhibition games at 3 p.m.&#13;
and the men's team taking the floor at 7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Receptions are scheduled for 2:30&#13;
and 6:30 p.m. An alumni drawing also&#13;
will be held during the day, and everyone&#13;
is invited to take home an official&#13;
UW-Parkside Alumni Association water&#13;
bottle as a lasting souvenir of the day.&#13;
For more information, call Sheila&#13;
Egerson at ext. 2443 or access university.advancement@uwp.edu&#13;
on the internet.&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
UWP Public Relations&#13;
Director&#13;
T&#13;
he University is inviting alumni&#13;
back to campus for a day of fun&#13;
and fitness this Saturday. The&#13;
Alumni Open House is at the Sports&#13;
and Activity Center (SAC) from 1 to 7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
During the day, graduates and their&#13;
families are invited to swim, workout,&#13;
play racquetball, and tour the SAC. For&#13;
basketball fans, the UW-Parkside&#13;
women's alumni game is played at 1&#13;
Thinking Critically tonight&#13;
• Are u.s. actions responsible for&#13;
By Dave Buchanan how others in the world see us? and&#13;
. • How do we frame the problem-Military?&#13;
Economic? Religious? Or somethirig&#13;
else?&#13;
Panelist include UW-Parkside faculty&#13;
members Simon Adetona Akindes of&#13;
Teacher Education, Seif Da'Na of Sociology;&#13;
and Farida Khan of Economics. Former&#13;
foreign service officer Dr. Frederick&#13;
Gerlach will join the discussion. Questions&#13;
and comments will be fielded by&#13;
UW-Parkside Anthropology Professor&#13;
Lilhan Trager and Assistant Professor of&#13;
Communication Elenie Opffer.&#13;
The program is are free and attendees&#13;
are encouraged to join the discussion.&#13;
For more information, call Laurie Odegaard&#13;
at ext. 2701.&#13;
UWP Public Relations&#13;
Director&#13;
-rn-parkside's Center for international&#13;
Studies wra s u two days&#13;
of discussions on lhe ;kpt. 11 terrorist&#13;
attacks with a program in Greenquist&#13;
Hall room 103 this evening. Titled&#13;
"Interacting, Not Reacting: Thinking&#13;
Critically about Sept. 11," the program&#13;
offers a dialog on terrorism. It takes&#13;
place tonight at 7 p.m.&#13;
Moderated by PoliSci's Peggy James&#13;
the panel discussion will focus on thr"';&#13;
questions:&#13;
, • What is terrorism?&#13;
November 8,2001 THe AI:lNGeA PageS&#13;
~enter for International Studies I&#13;
finds home&#13;
, By Alexis Martin&#13;
Reporter&#13;
F&#13;
or years, the University's Center&#13;
for International Studies has had&#13;
to meet in a classroom in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. But on Wednesday October&#13;
24, faculty and students involved in&#13;
the Center celebrated the grand opening&#13;
of their new office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Chancellor Jack Keating and Associate&#13;
Vice Chancellor for Extended&#13;
Services, Esther Letven, joined the celebrants.&#13;
Chancellor Keating said, "It&#13;
was easy to say yes" while speaking&#13;
of the new office. He said UW-Parkside&#13;
is the most diverse campus in the&#13;
UW System, even more than Milwaukee,&#13;
and that the new office would&#13;
increase the University's international&#13;
student population by one third.&#13;
The office is not just for international&#13;
students. It also offers a lot to&#13;
local students . The Center offers a&#13;
inaja! and minor in International&#13;
Studies and has a student club that&#13;
offers opportunities for fun and travel.&#13;
Starting next semester, the Center&#13;
is offering a Certificate in Global&#13;
Skills, which anyone in any major can&#13;
obtain by fulfilling the course requirements&#13;
(11 credits). This certificate&#13;
is an opportunity for current students&#13;
and those already in the&#13;
business world.&#13;
The Center offers grants for students&#13;
to study abroad, which center&#13;
co-director Peggy James says&#13;
helps many students who may.otherwise&#13;
not have this opportunity.&#13;
"This year we already have&#13;
$40,000 available," James said&#13;
Students interested in applying&#13;
for International Studies Financial&#13;
Aid, can pick up an application at&#13;
the new office located in Tallent&#13;
Hall room 180. Some of the threecredit&#13;
study tours that students&#13;
may be interested in include India,&#13;
Costa Rica, Ghana, Russia and&#13;
South Africa.&#13;
The Center also offers a lecture&#13;
series. The "Evening In..." which&#13;
highlights a particular nation and&#13;
holds an on-campus celebration of&#13;
its culture. The Center also sponsors&#13;
the Thinking Critically series,&#13;
which examines global events with&#13;
a critical eye.&#13;
For more information, check out&#13;
the new office in Tallent Hall or&#13;
call Peggy James (ext. 2101), or&#13;
Michele Gee (ext. 2304.)&#13;
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Special Assistant to NY Governor&#13;
Speaks at UWP&#13;
By Alexis Martin&#13;
Reporter&#13;
U&#13;
w-parkside graduate Robert&#13;
Cole along with seven panelists,&#13;
recently spoke to students about&#13;
careers in criminaljustice. Cole is a special&#13;
assistant to New York's Governor&#13;
George Pataki. He came to UW-Parkside&#13;
on a track and field scholarship&#13;
and graduated in 1993. Of his career,&#13;
Cole said he had done an internship&#13;
with the then-State Senator Pataki and&#13;
"the rest was history".&#13;
When talking about the events of&#13;
September 11, Cole told us that his&#13;
office used to be in Tower One of the&#13;
World Trade Center. He has since&#13;
moved to 3rd Avenue in midtown'&#13;
Manhattan. Cole was on his way to a&#13;
meeting when he heard of the attacks&#13;
and said his first thought was: "Where&#13;
is the Governor?"&#13;
He was asked if he had known anyone&#13;
who was in the Towers that morning.&#13;
His response was, "Yes, I had one&#13;
very, very good friend who was eating&#13;
at the Windows to the World restaurant,"&#13;
the eatery at the top of one of the&#13;
towers. Cole went on to say his friend&#13;
had called his wife and told her that he&#13;
would be okay. His friend was the head&#13;
of New York Port Authority.&#13;
Cole was still very shaken by the&#13;
events of September 11, and said that&#13;
because of his job he really had not had&#13;
time to relate to the attacks on a personallevel.&#13;
He showed pain in his eyes&#13;
as he spoke of his lost friend and heard&#13;
the strain in his voice as he answered&#13;
questions about what it was like to be&#13;
in New Yorkthat devastating morning.&#13;
Parkside International Club presents journalist&#13;
Alison Weir Nov. 13&#13;
described as "a bullet-riddled refugee&#13;
camp in southern Caza." Weir will&#13;
describe her experiences and show&#13;
images of the area.&#13;
T&#13;
he Parkside International Club, a Weir has had articles published in a&#13;
student-run organization at the number of major publications. She also&#13;
University ofWisconsin-Parkside, has spoken before Congressional compresents&#13;
journalist Alison Weir Tues- mittees, at the Center for Policy Analyday,&#13;
Nov. 13.Her program on the Mid- sis in Palestine, Stanford University,&#13;
die East conflict, titled "Palestine, and UC-Berkley.&#13;
Afghanistan, and the Current World In addition to her travels in the&#13;
Crisis," begins at 6 p.m. in the Union occupied territories, Weir has firstCinema&#13;
Theater. hand knowledge about Afghanistan.&#13;
Weir is an American writer who She spent more than a year there as a&#13;
spent a month earlier this year on an Peace Corps volunteer and she will&#13;
investigative trip to the Israeli occupied offer her insights into the region.&#13;
West Bank and Gaza Strip. During that The program is free and open to the&#13;
time, she lived among the Palestinians public. For .more information, call&#13;
in places like Khan Yonis, which she Eyad Museteif at (262)880-3923.&#13;
Leadership Series motivates students&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
UWP Pubic Relations&#13;
mreetcr&#13;
By Beth Reed&#13;
Reporter&#13;
E&#13;
ach semester for the past ten years&#13;
Parkside has been offering sessions&#13;
in leadership through the&#13;
Very Involved at Parkside Leadership&#13;
Series and the Slice of Leadership&#13;
Series. Alumni and staff members&#13;
speak to students giving insight on&#13;
now to be strong leaders in life.&#13;
The remaining topic in the VIPLeadership&#13;
series of this semester is motivation.&#13;
This will give students a boost so&#13;
they can stay focused.through the rest&#13;
of the semester. Held November 2nd, it&#13;
is a chance for students to rejuvenate.&#13;
Most students work a job and go to&#13;
school. Midway into the semester,&#13;
some tend to "burn out" from trying to&#13;
manage so many things at once. This&#13;
leadership series is way to help those&#13;
students who need that extra push to&#13;
keep going.&#13;
The final topic in the Sliceof Leadership&#13;
Series, named because pizza is&#13;
served at the presentation, is "How to&#13;
, set and live your priorities:' Most of&#13;
the students have set goals tor ourselves;&#13;
be it when we want to graduate,&#13;
wedding dates, having children, or getting&#13;
good jobs. This session will snow&#13;
students not only how to set realistic&#13;
goals, but also logical steps that can be&#13;
taken to accomplish them. It will be&#13;
held November 28th in Union 104/106&#13;
from 4p.m. to 6p.m.&#13;
Amber Engel, student activities&#13;
coordinator, said the two series have&#13;
been a success. They are hoping to get&#13;
more presentations for each series in&#13;
the spring semester. Previous topiCS&#13;
included teamwork, orgaruzatton&#13;
skills, and promotion.&#13;
For more information, to sign up for&#13;
a session, or to give ideas about topics&#13;
to be discussed in the future go to&#13;
Union 209, or caIlAmber Engel at 595-&#13;
2278.&#13;
THE! ~~NGE!~ November 8, 2001 Page 6&#13;
Men's Soccer Bears vs. Packers: Clash of the Titans&#13;
Wins final regular&#13;
Season Game'&#13;
ton wore blue and orange. However the&#13;
defensive secondary is suspect. '&#13;
The Packers "D" has given up just 10&#13;
more points than Chicago. And the Packers&#13;
have a bu::'ding star in Kabeer GbajaBiamila&#13;
who s whacked opposing QBs&#13;
10 times this year. The rest of the Packer&#13;
front seven is solid if not spectacular and&#13;
the secondary is not suspect. It' s g~.&#13;
On offense, pick one: Brett Favre or&#13;
Shane Matthews? If you picked&#13;
Matthews, please check with the Student&#13;
Health and Counseling Center for psy_&#13;
chiatric help. Favre still has a cannon,&#13;
Matthews has an air gun. The Packers&#13;
also have Ahman Green who ran for 169&#13;
yards against Tampa Sunday. The Bears&#13;
have slightly better receivers than GB&#13;
(unless Bill Schroeder returns in game&#13;
shape this week) and Anthony Thomas'll&#13;
be a star running back someday, but the&#13;
Packers have Favre. End of story.&#13;
Special teams are the Packers'&#13;
Achilles heel. Until Sunday's m punt&#13;
return by Alan Rossum, the return game&#13;
was flaccid. The coverage teams are&#13;
worse. And the once automatic Ryan&#13;
Longwell couldn't kicking the ball into&#13;
the ocean right now. If t1ie game come&#13;
down to a field goal or a punt return, the&#13;
Bears win.&#13;
Oh, and if the Bears are behind by a&#13;
couple of IDs late in the game, here's&#13;
some good advice: don't turn off your TV&#13;
or leave Soldier Field until the clock runs&#13;
out. Another miracle finish is unlikely,&#13;
but you never know. Enjoy the game.&#13;
the standings. Probably before most UWParkside&#13;
students were born.&#13;
Okay, so let's look at this game. Who's&#13;
going to win? Damned if I know,&#13;
The Bears would appear to have an&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
UW-P Public Relations&#13;
Director By Dena Coady ~&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
E&#13;
ven the most diehard Packer fan,&#13;
that guy who, if you cut him, bleeds&#13;
green and gold; the guy who named&#13;
all his kids after Green Bay legends-&#13;
"Yeah, this is my son Vince, this is my son&#13;
Bart, his is my son Brett, and this is my&#13;
daughter Chester;" the guy who proudly&#13;
wears a wedge-shaped piece of foam&#13;
rubber on his head-in publici-and has a&#13;
capital lip" or JI A" or some other letter of&#13;
the Packer name printed on his naked&#13;
beer belly in the dead of winter. Even&#13;
THAT guy would have to admit the last&#13;
two Bears games have been interesting.&#13;
. On consecutive Sunday, the Bears&#13;
have erased deficits of at least two touchdowns,&#13;
forced overtime in games they&#13;
had no business even being in, and won&#13;
in OT on interceptions that were returned&#13;
for touchdowns by the same defensive&#13;
back. Both against tearns with solid winning&#13;
records. It's enough to make even a&#13;
cheesehead snurk witli admiration.&#13;
The great thing is Chicago's six&#13;
straight wins set up what should be an&#13;
epIc battle between two old NFL rivals&#13;
this Sunday. The improbable Bears (6-1)&#13;
are atop the NFC Central, a game up on&#13;
the Pack (5-2). And while every time&#13;
Chicago and Green Bay meet, the game&#13;
means something, this reporter is heard&#13;
pressed to remember t1ie last time a&#13;
Bears Packers ame meant somethin in&#13;
W&#13;
ith their last game of the season,&#13;
the Rangers went out on&#13;
top with a 7-0 win against&#13;
Northwood, on Sunday, October 28.&#13;
The Rangers were ranked 19th while&#13;
holding a 12-3-1 record. The Rangers,&#13;
after Sunday's game went on to take on&#13;
Indianapolis in the Great lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Tournament on Wednesday,&#13;
October 31 at home. That game&#13;
was a quarterfinal game.&#13;
Freshman Sher Yang took charge of&#13;
the .game by scoring five goals and&#13;
adding an aSSISt. Yang went on to tie&#13;
the school records for goals and points&#13;
in a game. Yang gave the Rangers a 1-0&#13;
lead at the two minute, 26 second mark.&#13;
Freshman Ethan Richter seized the ball&#13;
from a defender and assist the ball to&#13;
Yang, who was standing in front of the&#13;
net.&#13;
During the second half, Yang scored&#13;
at the 49:19 and 54:29 mark. Yang's second&#13;
goal came on a penalty kick after&#13;
Senior Bill Wiedel was fouled on a&#13;
breakaway. Senior Jeff Hines and&#13;
Richter fed the ball to Yang for his third&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
Bears QB Shane Matthews runs for a first&#13;
down after a 4th~and·5 situation, as he's&#13;
chased by Green Bay Packers defensive end&#13;
Vonnie Holliday during the first quarter last&#13;
year. (Associated Press)&#13;
edge in defense, although not a big edge.&#13;
This isn't Iron Mike's Superbowl defense&#13;
from '86 ...but they are good. Brian&#13;
Urlacher, Rosevelt Colvin, Ted Washington,&#13;
and Keith Traylor are the best since Women's Soccer Singletary, Dent, McMichael, and HampDefeats&#13;
Northwood&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
T&#13;
he Rangers are on their way to&#13;
stardom after pulling out a 2-0&#13;
wm agamst Northwood, Saturday,&#13;
October 27. The 19th ranked&#13;
Rangers finished with a 15-1 record.&#13;
The Rangers after Saturdays game,&#13;
were getting ready for their quarterfinal&#13;
game in the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Tournament against Quincy,&#13;
on Wednesday, October 31.&#13;
Seruor Bryarma [urvis scored one&#13;
goal and assisted the other goal that&#13;
was scored. Lmdsey Griffitts helped the&#13;
Rangers lead 1-0 at the 13 minute mark&#13;
after the goal was assisted by Jurvis&#13;
and junior Sara Hooser. [urvis made a&#13;
perfect pass to Griffitts, who was right&#13;
m front of the net.&#13;
. JUf':is not only helped the Rangers&#13;
wm WIth an assist but also gave the&#13;
Rangers the 2-0 lead at half time, that&#13;
goal was also the game winner. The&#13;
go~1 was scored at the 37:29 mark off an&#13;
assist by Junior Samantha Sosnay. The&#13;
defense was remarkable, by shutting&#13;
out Northwood on making a goal.&#13;
Leadmg the defense was Hooser, Stefarue&#13;
Strauss, Sophomore Leah VanDenLangenburg&#13;
and Sophomore Julia&#13;
Starr.&#13;
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~G&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
~t 11/10&#13;
sat. 11/17&#13;
Wed.U/28&#13;
OJ!C!MBER&#13;
'I'hua. 1211&#13;
Sat. 12/8&#13;
JANUARY&#13;
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CONTACT LENSES&#13;
Test Drive a&#13;
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It's worth a -&#13;
drive from-===-&#13;
wherever you&#13;
are to put us to h&#13;
the test! '&#13;
• Try our famous"5X5" • Wine &amp; Beer &amp; liquor&#13;
• Curly fries • Fun kids menu&#13;
• Hand-cut onion rings • Everything is fresh&#13;
• Root Beer on Tap • Everything is cooked to order&#13;
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November 8, 2Il81&#13;
Legends of~the~s~ilver Screen: James Dean&#13;
art Dean would take on&#13;
Jett Rink, a struggling&#13;
strikes it rich in the oil&#13;
Giant, follows Rink's life&#13;
humble beginnings to his&#13;
~,""""" .. __~.. .. ..... _, _mo._ ... ~~&#13;
James Dean In Rebel WlthoutA Cause (1956).&#13;
small success and from his accumulation&#13;
of riches to his overly indulged&#13;
downfall. The performance, again top&#13;
notch, brought Dean his second and&#13;
last Best Picture nomination. Dean&#13;
would have no idea.&#13;
Eight days after filming wrapped&#13;
on Giant, on September 30th 1955.&#13;
James Dean and mechanic Rolf&#13;
Wutherwick, went for a ride in Dean's&#13;
'Little Bastard' Porsche.' At 5:45 that&#13;
evening Dean would be dead and his&#13;
promising career over. Idol status and&#13;
images of eternal youth would shroud&#13;
the memory of James Dean as it does&#13;
with many stars that die too young.&#13;
Though Dean's status as a sex symbol&#13;
still stands to this day, his popularity&#13;
is too great to be based exClusively&#13;
on looks. The films he left behind,&#13;
which number onl'! three, serve to&#13;
remind watchers 0 the high quality&#13;
work that Dean put out at such an&#13;
early stage of what would no doubt&#13;
have been a highiy successful career if&#13;
he had lived Which begs the question,&#13;
what if? What if he had lived just one&#13;
more year? He shot three films in 1955&#13;
alone, what could he have left behind&#13;
with an extra year of filming, or two,&#13;
or three? What if he had lived? Would&#13;
he be like Paul Newman and Marlon&#13;
Brando, a distinguished actor still&#13;
appearing in films from time to lime&#13;
with a lengthy filmography, Academy&#13;
Awards, and a life to talk about?&#13;
By IIepjemin Schmidt&#13;
November 8, 2001&#13;
TV Land's Kenna Kay&#13;
from New York visits&#13;
Parkside continued&#13;
for you have done a great job, and&#13;
feelingreally proud about a project&#13;
you've done."&#13;
She works in the Times Square&#13;
bUlldmg on the 11th floor. It is also&#13;
where MTV broadcasts TRL in the&#13;
concourse of the building. She&#13;
explained this interesting fact. "There&#13;
are stars who come in and out. Recently&#13;
Nsync was on our floor. 1 also saw&#13;
Matt Damon, and 1 rode up in the elevator&#13;
with the artist formerly known&#13;
as Prince, and that was fun. We do a&#13;
lot of benefits and fundraising. Things&#13;
for the network that Mary Tyler Moore&#13;
has been a part of. Mr. Tactually&#13;
come~In and does some inspirational&#13;
speakmg to our channel sometimes."&#13;
She initially grew up in North Carolina&#13;
and moved to Montreal. She&#13;
ended up in New York when she&#13;
decided on a career. She commented&#13;
"I just love it, I've met some of the .&#13;
nicest people in mx life there. And for&#13;
people that haven t been to New York&#13;
should visit. It's just a really great&#13;
place to live and work."&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
Arts Management Program, which is&#13;
the program that draws on business,&#13;
communication, and arts management,&#13;
contact Debra Karp at 595-2249&#13;
in Communication Arts 286. r&#13;
Still Time to get&#13;
Great Books&#13;
for Cheap&#13;
By Dave Buchanan&#13;
UWP Public Relations&#13;
Director&#13;
T&#13;
he UW-Parkside's Friends of the&#13;
Library book sale continues today&#13;
. and tomorrow in front of the&#13;
library. Even if you missed Wednesday's&#13;
opening day, there is still plenty&#13;
of good reading to be had.&#13;
. Books ranging from mystery and&#13;
history to psychology and zoology are&#13;
on sale. There is also a large supply of&#13;
sheet music offered, and you never&#13;
know when sheet music will come in&#13;
handy, right?&#13;
Prices range from $1.50for hardback&#13;
books, $1 for soft back editions, and 50&#13;
cents for- paperbacks. Friday, Nov. 9,&#13;
begins the bag sale when book shoppers&#13;
can gather a sack of 'backs for just&#13;
three smacks.&#13;
Hours of sale are today, Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 8, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. On Friday,&#13;
Nov. 9, the sale runs. from 9 a.m. to&#13;
noon.&#13;
For more information, call Dina Kay&#13;
at ext. 2215.&#13;
Pagel(&#13;
sponsored by art &amp; philosophy depts. fl.mded by lecture &amp; fine arts committee&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside, Kenosha'&#13;
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l.page 10&#13;
Show us the money&#13;
continued&#13;
..&#13;
example, we pay $3.00 for a 32-ounce&#13;
cup of juice, $2.99 for a turkey sandwich,&#13;
and $2.25 for a 2 liter bottle of&#13;
soda in Wylie market! These prices are&#13;
down right outrageous. We are college&#13;
students and should not be charged&#13;
this much for food on a college campus.&#13;
Is anyone out here looking out for&#13;
the best interest of the students? Or is&#13;
it all about trying to gain profit? At&#13;
times this seems more like a business&#13;
fronting itself as a school, rather than a&#13;
school environment.&#13;
In conclusion please do not prejudge&#13;
me for my opinions. I feel what is happening&#13;
is wrong, and if possible should&#13;
be changed. We students pay a nice&#13;
amount of money to attend this school&#13;
so we should be treated fairly, and&#13;
always told the uncovered truth. Again&#13;
this is. strictly "my" opinion so please&#13;
do not take it the wrong way. All the&#13;
numbers of the students residing on&#13;
campus, and the amount of money&#13;
taken from each meal plan used in this&#13;
article were facts as given to me by&#13;
"Steve McLaughlin, Dean of Students.'&#13;
The rest of the numbers were computed&#13;
by myself off of the two original facts.&#13;
How about someone gives us the facts,&#13;
and please show us where our money&#13;
has actually gone...all of it.&#13;
November 8, 2001&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
Wins final regular&#13;
Season Game&#13;
continued&#13;
UWP soccer players.&#13;
goal.&#13;
With Yang scoring four second half&#13;
goals, it also opened the door for his&#13;
teammates to get involve. Wiedel and&#13;
Freshman Dustin Wagner also scored.&#13;
Junior Mark Swierzy had two assist.&#13;
Junior Seth Pearson, Freshman Matt·&#13;
Peterson and Sophomore Alfredo Mercado&#13;
had one assist. On top of that&#13;
goalkeeper Senior Thorn Peer set a&#13;
new school record with 52 career wins,&#13;
breaking the old mark set by Dan&#13;
Opferman in 1980-1983.&#13;
ITo participate in the contest please fill out the following&#13;
form completely and turn it in to The Ranger News @D139C&#13;
I&#13;
in Wyllie Hall. Two winners will be chosen and notified by&#13;
The Ranger News. All entries must be turned in by noon on&#13;
the Wednesday following the previous weeks issues.&#13;
•&#13;
... some restrictions do app~ee Ranger News for details.&#13;
---- ------&#13;
:a:a14 - S:a_d Str_t .:&#13;
~e __ sha • .5310-1:&amp;83 :.&#13;
Convenient parking located across 52nd Street .:&#13;
OFTEN IMITATED· NEVER. DUPUCATED :: '"""'"' elM __ ,.OII __ equare _ oIlFUNl ••&#13;
••&#13;
I&#13;
::&#13;
November 8, 2001 %&#13;
Page 111'"&#13;
10/25/01 ual receiving citations for.&#13;
possession of marlJuana and&#13;
possession of drug paraphernalia&#13;
and ODe individual was&#13;
ci ted for possession of drug&#13;
paraphernalia, possession of&#13;
marijuana and lli1deragepossession&#13;
of alcohol.&#13;
Inc #01-778 Harassment-Threats,&#13;
Ranger Hall Atrium, 6: 06 p.m.&#13;
Student r eport.ed a visitor&#13;
making threats. Investigation&#13;
revealed suspect was listed as&#13;
missing/endangered out of&#13;
Illinois. The Illinois police&#13;
agency reques ted subj ect be&#13;
held until family members&#13;
arrived. The subject, an&#13;
adult, was released in the custody&#13;
of a sister.&#13;
Inc #01-779 Controlled Substance,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 9:19 p.m.&#13;
Officers responded to a complaint&#13;
of a heavy marijuana&#13;
smell from a room. Investigation&#13;
resulted in ODe indi vid10126/01&#13;
Inc #01-780 Suspicious Circumstances,&#13;
Conm. Arts parking&#13;
lot, 1:00 p.m. While conducting&#13;
parking enforcement, officer&#13;
noticed a vehicle displaying&#13;
a disabled parking permit&#13;
which had previously been&#13;
reported to have been stolen&#13;
from a Parkside professor.&#13;
Driver was contacted and gave&#13;
Looking for a Job?&#13;
false information regarding&#13;
ownership of the disabled permit.&#13;
Citation was issued to the&#13;
driver for unlawful use of&#13;
identification card ~d&#13;
obstructing police officer.&#13;
10/27/01&#13;
Inc #01-782 Agency Assist,&#13;
STH 31 and CTH E, 2: 07 a.m.&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept. requested&#13;
UPPS officer assist a&#13;
motorist with a vehicle lockout.&#13;
Officer was able to gain&#13;
entry.&#13;
Inc #01-786 UWSChapter 18,&#13;
Throwing Hard Objects, Ranger&#13;
Hall lot, 5:43 p.m. UPPSofficer&#13;
responded to a report of&#13;
someone throwing beer bottles&#13;
into the Ranger Hall lot/loading&#13;
area from a second story&#13;
window. Officer was able to&#13;
identify the room the bottles&#13;
were being thrown from but noone&#13;
answered the· door. The&#13;
occupant later called UPPSand&#13;
admitted to throwing the bottles.&#13;
A citation was issued for&#13;
the offense of UWS18.06 (27)&#13;
throwing hard obj ects . Individual&#13;
will be referred to residence&#13;
life staff.&#13;
10128/01&#13;
Inc #01-787 Criminal Damage&#13;
to Property-Personal, Ranger&#13;
Hall lot, 4:17 p.m. Visitor's&#13;
tires were slashed by a Ranger&#13;
Hall resident. Victim did not&#13;
wish to prosecute at that time&#13;
but later said he would like to&#13;
press charges.&#13;
10/29/01&#13;
Inc #01-789 UWSChapter 18,&#13;
Solicitation, Wyllie all,&#13;
12: 16 p.m. E!1lJloyee reported&#13;
an individual selling paintings&#13;
in a university office.&#13;
Subject was advised further&#13;
solicitation would result in a&#13;
citation and told to leave the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Inc #01-790 Medical Assist,&#13;
Molinaro Hall, 1:05 p.m. Subject&#13;
suffering a seizure was&#13;
transported to a local hospital&#13;
by Kenosha Unit 5.&#13;
Inc #01-791 State Property&#13;
Theft, University Apartments,&#13;
1:09 p.m. E!1lJloyee reported&#13;
the theft of a hard drive and&#13;
RAMfrom two computers. No suspects&#13;
or witnesses at this&#13;
time.&#13;
10/30/01&#13;
Inc #01-793 Medical Assist,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 2:06 a.m. Kenosha&#13;
Med Unit 5 transported an ill&#13;
student to Aurora Medical&#13;
Facility.&#13;
Inc #01-797 Medical Assist,&#13;
Molinaro Hall, 1: 32 p.m. III&#13;
student was transported to&#13;
KenoshaHospital by MedUnit 5.&#13;
Inc #01-798 Receiving Stolen&#13;
Property, Univers i ty Apartments'&#13;
2:51 p.m. While lnvestigating&#13;
a case, UPPSofficers&#13;
observed a 4'x4' road construction&#13;
sign hanging frDffi&#13;
the bedroom wall of a housing ..51&#13;
resident. Resident was issued&#13;
a citation for theft - under&#13;
$100. Sign was returned, to the&#13;
construction company_&#13;
10/31/01&#13;
Inc #01-803 Traffic Accident,&#13;
Ranger Hall parking lot, 11: 12&#13;
a.m. Student conducting a&#13;
parking maneuver struck a&#13;
metal spike sticking out of a&#13;
concrete parking stop, causing&#13;
damage to the vehicle of under&#13;
$1000. Residence life staff&#13;
pounded the spike back into the&#13;
concrete stop_&#13;
Inc #01-804 Personal Property&#13;
Theft, University Apartments,&#13;
12:12 p.m. Student&#13;
reported the theft of his laptop&#13;
computer. Investigation&#13;
continuing.&#13;
Inc #01-805 Medical Assist,&#13;
Corom.Arts, 3:03 p.m. Staff&#13;
member having a seizure was&#13;
transported to Kenosha Memorial&#13;
Hospital by Kenosha MedUnit&#13;
5.&#13;
11/01/01&#13;
Inc #01-806 Agency Assist-911&#13;
Hang-up Call. Univer-s ity&#13;
Apartments, 12:07 a.m. Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff Dept. requested UPPS&#13;
check on a 911 hang-up call.&#13;
Investigation revealed a foreign&#13;
student had been making an&#13;
international call with 911 in&#13;
the prefix which may have mistakenly&#13;
been dialed first. No&#13;
problem or emergency noted.&#13;
KSD was notified.&#13;
Inc #01-808 Medical Assist,&#13;
Health Services, 4: 59 p.m.&#13;
Officer responding to § student&#13;
suffering chest pains,&#13;
called KenoshaMed5 for transport&#13;
to the Kenosha Hospital.&#13;
Inc #01-809 Harassment-Stalking,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 5:51 p.m.&#13;
Student reported a male subj&#13;
ect following her and making&#13;
harassing phone calls. Suspect&#13;
was contacted and ordered to&#13;
cease calling and stalking the&#13;
complainant. Suspect agreed to ,&#13;
do so. ..:&gt;J&#13;
11/02/01&#13;
Inc #01-810 Disorderly Conduct-Noise,&#13;
University Apartments,&#13;
12:26 a.m. UPPS officers&#13;
were asked to respond to&#13;
an apartment for .individuals&#13;
who would not listen to the&#13;
RA's regarding excessive&#13;
noise. Records check indicated&#13;
apartment had three previous&#13;
verbal warnings regarding disorderly&#13;
conduct and noise. one&#13;
individual was cited for Disorderly&#13;
Conduct.&#13;
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              <text>RRNGeR&#13;
November15, 2001&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks   ide&#13;
INSIOE&#13;
Chancellor Keating speaks:&#13;
Human reaction to disaster&#13;
Page 3&#13;
paving the road&#13;
to&#13;
change at&#13;
UW-p&#13;
By&#13;
Shanan Lehrke&#13;
what happened,  but this did not&#13;
occur alter the Vietnam  War.&#13;
Soldiers    were   immediately&#13;
flown  home  and  did  not  have&#13;
the chance  to discuss  what  they&#13;
witnessed.&#13;
When  on the battlefield,   the&#13;
soldiers were able to separate&#13;
their  emotions  from  their  job,&#13;
but  afterwards   it was  hard  to&#13;
cope.  Keating  believes   that  is&#13;
wily&#13;
some Vietnam  veterans&#13;
suffer with PTSD that has some-&#13;
times taken over their lives.&#13;
Another  downside   to PTSD,&#13;
or even the regular  stress  from&#13;
these types of professions  is that&#13;
it&#13;
can&#13;
have&#13;
a tremendous  nega-&#13;
tive  affect  on  their  personal&#13;
lives.  "Not  getting  along  with&#13;
people  you may have had  Ions;&#13;
relationships' with can occurs,&#13;
J&#13;
said Keating.&#13;
continued  on page 11&#13;
after  an  incident.   He  also&#13;
believes  that the people  who&#13;
talk about  the trauma  have&#13;
an  easier   time  getting&#13;
through  it, but  it is hard  to&#13;
tell someone  about  a horrific&#13;
event. Often times those pro-&#13;
fessionals  are interviewed&#13;
about  what  happened,   but&#13;
never asked how the event&#13;
has  affected   them.  "Once&#13;
they begin to talk about their&#13;
experiences   they  get it back&#13;
together,"  said Keating.&#13;
The I-ost-traumatic    stress&#13;
suffere   by  Vietnam  veter-&#13;
ans  was  the  example   that&#13;
Keating  used to illustrate  the&#13;
affects  of PTSD.  He  talked&#13;
about  the  fact  that  during&#13;
previous wars the soldiers&#13;
returned  home  via ship five&#13;
to  seven  days  later  which&#13;
allowed  them  to talk about&#13;
Assistant  Editor&#13;
E&#13;
mergency    responders,&#13;
firefighters,   police  offi-&#13;
cers,  doctors;   the  list&#13;
continues   and  so does  the&#13;
trauma.&#13;
On   Wednesday,&#13;
November   7, John  Keating,&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Chancellor,&#13;
spoke   on  behalf   of  the&#13;
Psychology  department.   The&#13;
topic, "Human reaction to&#13;
disaster:&#13;
what's&#13;
next?"&#13;
worked   into   the  current&#13;
tragedy  of September  II.&#13;
Kea ting,   an  expert   in&#13;
human   reaction  to disaster,&#13;
has   traveled    the  United&#13;
States   for   research    and&#13;
brought  a variety  of informa-&#13;
tion  to the forum.  A signifi-&#13;
cant  portion   of  the  event&#13;
revolved  around  the idea that&#13;
cognitive    thinking   allows&#13;
Page 4&#13;
CelebratingNative American&#13;
Heritage&#13;
FormerUW-P professor&#13;
writes book on searching for&#13;
family history&#13;
Chancellor  John Keating, social&#13;
psychologist  and expert in&#13;
human reactions  to disaster.&#13;
people do their jobs perfectly.&#13;
However  their  emotions  are&#13;
pushed   aside,   and   there&#13;
comes a point when the trau-&#13;
ma is too great and begins  to&#13;
destroy  the person.&#13;
Keating's  studies  show&#13;
that  at  least  30 percent  of&#13;
emergency  responders  suffer&#13;
from&#13;
fost-traumatic&#13;
stress&#13;
(PTSD  five  to  seven  days&#13;
Page 5&#13;
Stay healthy, get aflu shot&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
Two professors honored for excel-&#13;
lence&#13;
in teaching&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
Men's soccer&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Women's Soccer&#13;
in physics, his masters&#13;
in&#13;
English,  and  completed   his&#13;
Ph.D.  at  the  University   of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison   in  1970.&#13;
He has been teaching full time&#13;
at Parkside  since 1969.&#13;
~&#13;
To have been teaching  and&#13;
influencing  others  for such a&#13;
long period  of time, it is con-&#13;
ceivable&#13;
that·   Professor&#13;
Lindner  had  geat  influences&#13;
of his own.  'One  summer's&#13;
night  I was  sitting  with  m)'&#13;
best  friend  in  his  father  s&#13;
car...and he asked  me why  I&#13;
never  considered&#13;
g~ing&#13;
u:to&#13;
English, and I told&#13;
him&#13;
I did-&#13;
n't  want  to be just  teaching&#13;
composition  for the rest of my&#13;
life. He said that wasn't  what&#13;
teaching  English  was  about.&#13;
He  said  mostly  it is about&#13;
teaching  Literature  and since&#13;
you love literature,  and  you&#13;
love to read, and you write so&#13;
well, I would&#13;
think&#13;
it would&#13;
be a very good field for you.&#13;
Then I suddenly  realized ... at&#13;
thai point I knew  what  I was&#13;
By Becky Olsen&#13;
nature, of their own nature, and&#13;
somethin&#13;
9&#13;
about  American  cul-&#13;
ture, too.'&#13;
Having  won  the Stella  Gray&#13;
Teaching  Excellence Award  once&#13;
before,  Professor  Lindner   feels&#13;
honored  to receive this&#13;
gift&#13;
from&#13;
his students  once more.&#13;
"It&#13;
is a&#13;
great honor because you are cho-&#13;
sen by your students.  You are not&#13;
soliciting  letters of reconunenda-&#13;
tion,  but  rather  this&#13;
is&#13;
on  the&#13;
basis of what  you have  done  in&#13;
the classroom  according  to your&#13;
students,  who are the ones on he&#13;
receiving  end of it. I feel that the&#13;
students are responsive and&#13;
appreciative  of what I am trying&#13;
to do, and that they also feel that&#13;
they  have  learned   or  grown&#13;
somewhat  from the  semester&#13;
and this&#13;
is&#13;
their way of telling me&#13;
thank  you."  Other  awards  pro-&#13;
fessor  Lindner  has  won  in the&#13;
past,  along  with  this  award,&#13;
going to do," said Lindner.&#13;
Although&#13;
Professor&#13;
Lindner  majored  in physics,&#13;
he knew  English  was  right&#13;
for&#13;
him.&#13;
"Teaching  became&#13;
my passion almost as soon as&#13;
I set foot in the classroom.&#13;
So&#13;
even  though  I expected  to&#13;
enjoy  it, it turned  out to be&#13;
the joy of my life. To be able&#13;
to do what you love and to be&#13;
paid  for  it really  is to be&#13;
blessed.&#13;
If&#13;
When    students&#13;
leave&#13;
Professor  Lindner's  classes&#13;
each  semester,  he has  high&#13;
but  seemingly   appropriate&#13;
expectations   for  what  each&#13;
student  gains from his cours-&#13;
es. "I hope  that  among  the&#13;
things  that they take away is&#13;
a passion for the literature,&#13;
that I hope  they have caught&#13;
from me, a curiosity  about lit-&#13;
erature  that pushes  them  to&#13;
do more  reading,  a fierce&#13;
desire  to  think  for  them-&#13;
selves,  and  somewhat  better&#13;
understanding&#13;
of  human&#13;
Women's&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Bears/Packers recap&#13;
Reporter&#13;
T&#13;
wo  professors.   at  the&#13;
University  of Wisconsm&#13;
" Parkside  were  recently&#13;
awarded  with the Stella Gray&#13;
Teaching  Excellence  Award,&#13;
Carl  Lindner,  professor   of&#13;
English,  and  Professor  Carol&#13;
Vopat,   also   professor   of&#13;
English.  This award&#13;
IS&#13;
partic-&#13;
ularly  special  to the teachers&#13;
because  the  students  norru-&#13;
nate  their  teachers  for  the&#13;
award.&#13;
Professor  Lindner, original-&#13;
ly from  New  York City, was&#13;
born  in Brooklyn  and  raised&#13;
in the Bronx where  he lived&#13;
until he was twenty-five  years&#13;
old.  He  has two children,  a&#13;
daughter  and a son who both&#13;
attended  UW-Madison.&#13;
In  New  York,  Professor&#13;
Lindner&#13;
attended&#13;
CIty&#13;
College  of New  York where&#13;
he earned  his bachelor  degree&#13;
Page 8&#13;
Dale&#13;
K.&#13;
comes to&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Legendsof the Silver Screen:&#13;
Humphrey Bogart&#13;
Thanksgiving moments&#13;
continued  on page 10&#13;
_,,_   .J.,..&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
November&#13;
15-18&#13;
November&#13;
26&#13;
[&#13;
THINGC:::&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Himalaya,"  Union Cinema&#13;
Theater; showings Thursday&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Friday&#13;
@&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., Saturday&#13;
@&#13;
8&#13;
p.m., Sunday&#13;
@&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
November&#13;
15&#13;
•  Arts:  ALIVE!&#13;
presents:&#13;
pianist  George&#13;
Winston, Com. Arts Theatre,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., tick-&#13;
ets:&#13;
$18&#13;
November&#13;
16-17&#13;
• Men's b'ball&#13;
@&#13;
Minnesota-Mankato tourna-&#13;
ment&#13;
November&#13;
16&#13;
•&#13;
Fun  Friday,   free  food/free   games,&#13;
Multicultural  Student Affairs Office; Wyllie&#13;
Hall&#13;
0182,&#13;
Noon&#13;
•  Fall  Mini-Conference  on  Teaching  and&#13;
Learning:&#13;
II&#13;
A Breed Apart," an examination&#13;
of UW-Parkside  students,  Union&#13;
104-106,&#13;
2:30&#13;
p.m.,  slightly  sophisticated  refresh-&#13;
ments served, free&#13;
• Women's basketball/UW-Parkside  Classic:&#13;
UWP&#13;
vs.&#13;
Saginaw&#13;
DeSimone&#13;
Gymnasium/Sports  and Activity Center, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Midnight Madness, Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activity Center,&#13;
9  p.m.  to  midnight,   free  to  students&#13;
w/Ranger Card&#13;
10,&#13;
campus only program&#13;
November&#13;
17&#13;
• Women's basketball/UW-Parkside   Classic:&#13;
UWP    vs.&#13;
Northwood,&#13;
.DeSimone&#13;
Gymnasium/Sports   and Activity  Center, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
November&#13;
18&#13;
•   Snjezana    Kojovic,   piano    recital,&#13;
Communication Arts Building, Room&#13;
0-118,&#13;
2&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
November&#13;
19&#13;
"Zapata/Villa:   Indigenous   Heroes   of&#13;
Mexican Revolution"  w/Dr.&#13;
[esus&#13;
Negrete,&#13;
director,  Mexican  Cultural   Institute   of&#13;
Chicago, Union Square, noon, free&#13;
•&#13;
November&#13;
21&#13;
•  Noon  Concert:  Student  Recital,  Union&#13;
Cinema Theater, noon free&#13;
November&#13;
24&#13;
• Women s&#13;
b'ball&#13;
vs. Indianapolis,  SAC,&#13;
1&#13;
p.m., students admitted free&#13;
• Men's b'ball&#13;
vs.&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
3:15&#13;
p.m. , stu-&#13;
dents admitted free&#13;
• Women's&#13;
b'ball&#13;
vs. Northern  Kentucky&#13;
5:30&#13;
p.m., studentsAdmitted  free&#13;
• Men's&#13;
bball&#13;
vs. Northern  Kentucky&#13;
7:45&#13;
p.m., , students admitted  free&#13;
November&#13;
27&#13;
•  Inforbreaks:  Email  Comparisons-Outlook,&#13;
Netscape  and&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Web-Based;&#13;
9:45&#13;
a.m.,  Instructional   Tech  Center,  Wyllie&#13;
01500,&#13;
also held Wednesday, Nov.&#13;
28,&#13;
at 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Sports  and&#13;
Activity&#13;
Center  hours:&#13;
Thursday:&#13;
7&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Fnday:&#13;
7&#13;
a.m.&#13;
to&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Saturday:&#13;
noon to&#13;
6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
3&#13;
to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday to Wednesday:&#13;
7&#13;
a.m.&#13;
to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
(SAC closed Thursday, Nov.&#13;
22&#13;
for Thanksgiving)&#13;
Pool  hours:&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. and&#13;
Thursday:&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
-Friday:&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
Monday:&#13;
2&#13;
to&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tuesday:&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
6:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Wednesday:&#13;
2&#13;
to&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
noon to&#13;
4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
3&#13;
to&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
11&#13;
a.rn.&#13;
to&#13;
12:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. am'&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
to&#13;
12:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Hours subject to'change; call ext.&#13;
2780&#13;
for current&#13;
schedule information&#13;
(Pool closed Thursday, Nov.&#13;
22&#13;
for Thanksgiving)&#13;
f&#13;
Arts and Entertainment   Editor&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
Sports  Page Editor&#13;
r"&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
J&#13;
h.&#13;
. eo:~Editorswin-Chief&#13;
Daniel Frake   -&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Schmidt&#13;
b&#13;
AS$istabt  Editor&#13;
1"&#13;
Deborah  Hahm&#13;
~""~ Copy&#13;
E~itor&#13;
~&#13;
, Keeley-Pemble&#13;
,&#13;
""!&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Public&#13;
Relations&#13;
Melissa Stephenson&#13;
%&#13;
~'\&#13;
Reporters&#13;
J&#13;
A1exis:Mill:titi   ,~&#13;
Becky Olson  ,::;&#13;
Rosi¢Vez4"idis!&#13;
Adebesi Agoro'&#13;
Donnerta Davis&#13;
Will Brinkmah&#13;
-4'&#13;
Design  and Layout  Managers&#13;
,«&#13;
'Lachlan MtD.onald&#13;
Aaron Kleutsch&#13;
Photography   Director&#13;
. J&#13;
effre.y&#13;
Alley&#13;
f&#13;
Features  Editor&#13;
Shanon Lehrke&#13;
Business Mapage;t&#13;
Contaqt~&#13;
editors  at 595-2287&#13;
,Mike  'p¢IUdniaJ&lt;'  ,&#13;
Tt}J;:rhore information  .&#13;
.,7&#13;
yPi&#13;
ol"&#13;
"&#13;
Come check  out The ':!anger Online  at&#13;
www.uwp.edu/clubs/ranger.news&#13;
,&#13;
}'&#13;
Advertising   Manager&#13;
Katey Thoennes&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Adv:isor&#13;
F&#13;
Dave Buchafian"&#13;
NOWRIRtNG&#13;
Opinion  Page  Editor&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
ColumniSts&#13;
Repofwr&#13;
s&#13;
0/&#13;
tqK&#13;
lNTERNSHIPS&#13;
AVAIl-ABLE!&#13;
G€t&#13;
l'Clidandco  J~t¢an&#13;
intern-&#13;
°:s.hipatthe&#13;
e&#13;
time.&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parks ide.&#13;
/&#13;
Wyllie   D-139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
(262) 595-2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
(262) 595-2295&#13;
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              <text>Senior Seminar gives back to the community</text>
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              <text>November 29, 2001&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Actsof racism on&#13;
college campuses&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
PageS&#13;
Harry Potter&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Legends&#13;
of the Silver Screen:&#13;
Marilyn Monroe&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Women'sCross Country&#13;
achieves national goal&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
This one s outta here:&#13;
MarkMcGwire retires&#13;
Page 8&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Veritas&#13;
University  of Wisconsin  - Parks ide&#13;
Aequitas&#13;
Senior Seminar gives back to the community&#13;
By Linda Muffler and&#13;
Jaime Jenjak&#13;
Guest Writers&#13;
T&#13;
he graduating  commu-&#13;
nication senior seminar&#13;
class was given a semes-&#13;
ter long assignment to try to&#13;
make a difference in society.&#13;
The class came to the solution&#13;
that they would do a number&#13;
of events  that would  ulti-&#13;
mately  help  the  Shalom&#13;
Homeless  Shelter.   They&#13;
broke  off  into  multiple&#13;
groups  and went to work&#13;
organizing and planning for&#13;
the big events.  The goals of&#13;
Senior Seminar  class were&#13;
focused around a food and&#13;
clothing drive, a marketing&#13;
group,  a volunteer  group,&#13;
and an end of the year bash&#13;
group.&#13;
Tlie food  and  clothing&#13;
drive was held on campus for&#13;
one week and delivered all of&#13;
the proceeds to the Shalom&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
It&#13;
was the&#13;
responsibility  of&#13;
this group to get&#13;
the  word   out&#13;
about the Senior&#13;
Seminar  Classes&#13;
accomplishments.&#13;
The volunteer&#13;
group held a day&#13;
to recruit possible&#13;
students&#13;
that&#13;
were interested&#13;
in&#13;
vo&#13;
l&#13;
u n&#13;
t&#13;
e e&#13;
ri&#13;
n g .&#13;
They also gave a&#13;
presentation  to a&#13;
freshman univer-&#13;
sity&#13;
seminar&#13;
class on the ben-&#13;
efits of partaking in the vol-&#13;
unteer process. Anyone  that&#13;
committed  to volunteer  at&#13;
least once&#13;
within&#13;
this semes-&#13;
ter will gain free access to&#13;
our end of the year bash.&#13;
The end of the year bash&#13;
group organized all of the&#13;
necessary  plans to celebrate&#13;
and collectdonations of food&#13;
or money for the Shalom&#13;
Helping out at the Inns Program for the homeless  shelter are&#13;
(left to right):  Kirsten Ziarek, Linda Muffler, Kenny Merrit,&#13;
Jamie Jenjak  and Beth Aiello&#13;
Center. Many of the students&#13;
took their turn at the table to&#13;
encourage others to donate&#13;
for the needy.  The group&#13;
exceeded their goals with the&#13;
number of boxes of food and&#13;
clothing that they had intend-&#13;
ed on collecting.&#13;
The marketing group was&#13;
in charge of contactinghome-&#13;
town newspapers,&#13;
Racine&#13;
and&#13;
Kenosha  Journals,&#13;
and&#13;
The&#13;
We all love Lucy&#13;
By Deborah  G. Hahm&#13;
Co-Assistant  Editor&#13;
E&#13;
quipped  with a charis-&#13;
matic smile, blazing red&#13;
hair and a comedic per-&#13;
sonality, Lucille Ball entered&#13;
into stardom. Most know her&#13;
from the "I Love Lucy" show&#13;
also starring  her husband.&#13;
Marking its 50th-anruversary,&#13;
the "I Love Lucy" show aired&#13;
for  a  two  hour  special&#13;
November II,&#13;
zooi.&#13;
"I Love Lucy" went on the&#13;
air at 9/m  on October 15,&#13;
1951,an  has never been off&#13;
since. The show was base~ on&#13;
the CBS radio  sh~~   My&#13;
Favorite  Husband    With&#13;
Lucille Ball as the wife. CBS&#13;
decided to make the show into&#13;
a&#13;
television series starrIng&#13;
Ball. She agreed  but onll:&#13;
under the conditions that Desi&#13;
Arnaz her real life husband,&#13;
would&#13;
play her husband in&#13;
the series. CBS did not ~&#13;
the viewers would find  e&#13;
couple believable. Ball add&#13;
Arnaz went on tour forvall&#13;
e-&#13;
viIlesto prove to them that the&#13;
couple· would  work  well&#13;
together and be believed. The&#13;
public loved&#13;
the   show&#13;
and    CBS&#13;
loved   the&#13;
pilot the two&#13;
produced.&#13;
Many of the&#13;
&lt;\rnaz's&#13;
vaudeville&#13;
acts   were&#13;
incorporated&#13;
into&#13;
the&#13;
show.&#13;
Vivian&#13;
Vance  and&#13;
William&#13;
Frawley,&#13;
Ethel   and&#13;
Fred  Mertz&#13;
joined    to&#13;
make   the&#13;
series&#13;
a&#13;
four-&#13;
some.  Very&#13;
fewepisodes&#13;
do not show one or both of&#13;
these characters.   Ethel is&#13;
Lucy's best friend as well as&#13;
her co-conspirator,while Fred&#13;
and Ricky often discuss the&#13;
peculiarities of women and&#13;
their wives. Fred and Ethel&#13;
play the roles of fictional,TV-&#13;
type, neighborly friends with&#13;
a twist of a realisticmarriage.&#13;
Desi's  character,  Ricky&#13;
Ricardo, is a bongo-beating,&#13;
singing bandleader  with a&#13;
thick Cuban&#13;
accent.&#13;
Many of the&#13;
mishaps on&#13;
the show are&#13;
owed to his&#13;
inaudible&#13;
dialect.  In&#13;
fact,  Lucy&#13;
was   con-&#13;
fused when&#13;
Ricky  pro-&#13;
posed toher,&#13;
wondering&#13;
if&#13;
it&#13;
was a&#13;
proposal for&#13;
marriage or&#13;
a night  at&#13;
the movies.&#13;
His   most&#13;
used   line&#13;
was "What's&#13;
amatter&#13;
which you?&#13;
You crazy sum-fing?" Fights&#13;
with Lucy after finding out&#13;
what mischief she's been up&#13;
to often led&#13;
him&#13;
to yell in his&#13;
native tongue, which prompt-&#13;
ed Lucy's, "Stop jabbering at&#13;
me!!"&#13;
The cast of the "I Love Lucy"  show:  Lucllle_Ball,&#13;
Vivian Vance, William  Frawley  and&#13;
Cui&#13;
Amaz.&#13;
Center. This included the plan-&#13;
ning of where and when the&#13;
basil would take place.  They&#13;
also had to book a DJ to enter-&#13;
tain at the bash.  Finally, they&#13;
designed t-shirts that the Senior&#13;
Seminar Class will be wearing&#13;
the day of and at the bash.&#13;
For all who would like to&#13;
show support and have a good&#13;
time feel free to stop by Spades&#13;
on November  29tll after 7:00&#13;
P.M. The cost for this fun-filled&#13;
night is $4.00 at the door or&#13;
$2.00with a canned food item.&#13;
All students that agreed to vol-&#13;
unteer are granted free entry.&#13;
You must be 21 years old to&#13;
enter.&#13;
As a result of being involved&#13;
with the homeless, the class has&#13;
made some noticeable progress&#13;
in the community. Giving their&#13;
time has resulted in homeless&#13;
individuals&#13;
with-&#13;
new winter&#13;
clothes, food for the holidays,&#13;
and a new outlook on lifeitself.&#13;
•&#13;
LucilleBallseemed to many of&#13;
her friends to be playing the role&#13;
ofherself. Shewas a sillywoman&#13;
that often talked "Donald Duck"&#13;
and made funny faces.Shestud-&#13;
ied drama with Bette Davis as a&#13;
classmate. But after a year her&#13;
acting coach told her she was not&#13;
talented enough to make it in act-&#13;
ing. She started in commercials&#13;
but soon starred&#13;
in&#13;
movies and&#13;
radio leading her into the "I Love&#13;
Lucy" show.&#13;
The show aired&#13;
for six&#13;
seasons&#13;
totaling  179 episodes.   Each&#13;
episode started with a plausible&#13;
situation which would be thrown&#13;
awry with exaggerated absurdi-&#13;
ty. Lucy was starched, frozen,&#13;
stuffed with chocolate,locked in&#13;
a trunk and pummeled  with&#13;
grapes. The show took off with&#13;
the public and soon 44 million&#13;
viewers tuned in to watch and&#13;
arguing odd couple and their&#13;
two best friends, a crazy Cuban&#13;
and his funny-faced wife.&#13;
Theshow stillairs on TVLand&#13;
and a listing of episodes can be&#13;
found on the Internet. No matter&#13;
what age or interests, "I Love&#13;
Lucy" can be loved by all.&#13;
So&#13;
tape all of them and sit down&#13;
with a bag of potato chips, a box&#13;
of chocolate and enjoy a night&#13;
free&#13;
of homework and&#13;
full&#13;
of&#13;
laughs.&#13;
I&#13;
THINGS&#13;
December 5&#13;
•  Women's  basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Southern Indiana,&#13;
3:15&#13;
p.m.&#13;
November&#13;
29&#13;
Issues   for&#13;
Pros&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Cons&#13;
School&#13;
of High&#13;
•  Education&#13;
Administrators:&#13;
Stakes&#13;
•  Women's  basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
5:15&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
7:45&#13;
p.m.&#13;
.&#13;
Testing&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Assessment&#13;
wi&#13;
Dr. Cindy&#13;
Walker&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Dr. Ward Ghory,&#13;
7:30&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
$12&#13;
• Play: The Cripple  of Inishmaan.&#13;
Wegner Theatre,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., tickets: stu-&#13;
dents, faculty&#13;
$7,&#13;
adults&#13;
$10&#13;
November&#13;
29 -&#13;
December&#13;
2&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student Recital, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater, noon, free&#13;
December&#13;
2&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Discreet Charm of&#13;
the  Bourgeoise,"   Union  Cinema&#13;
Theater, showings Thursday&#13;
&amp;.&#13;
Friday&#13;
@&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., Saturday&#13;
@&#13;
8&#13;
p.m., Sunday&#13;
@2p.m.&#13;
• UW-Parkside Choirs, James Kinchen,&#13;
conductor,&#13;
wi&#13;
Stephen Bull Fine Arts&#13;
Elementary  School Chorale, Carolyn&#13;
Gibson, director, Com. Arts Theatre,&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m., tickets:&#13;
$5/3&#13;
December&#13;
6 - 9&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Five Senses," Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Theater,&#13;
shows:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
1&#13;
Friday,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m.; Saturday,&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.; Sunday,&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
November&#13;
29&#13;
December&#13;
3&#13;
• Constitution Bowl&#13;
X,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theater&#13;
December&#13;
6&#13;
• Perspectives  on Religious  Issues:&#13;
"Ethics and the Internet,"&#13;
w ]&#13;
Morris&#13;
Firebaugh,  UWP Emeritus  Prof. of&#13;
Computer Science, noon, Union&#13;
104-&#13;
106,&#13;
free,&#13;
November&#13;
30&#13;
• Play: The Cripple of&#13;
Inishmaan,&#13;
Augie&#13;
Wegner Studio Theatre,&#13;
10&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
tickets:&#13;
students, faculty&#13;
$7,&#13;
adults&#13;
$10&#13;
• Womyn's Center Poetry Reading,&#13;
6&#13;
p.m., Overlook Lounge on second floor&#13;
of the library, free, refreshments served&#13;
December 4&#13;
• Flamenco Music in America w/Prof.&#13;
William Washabaugh,  UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
6 p.m., Overlook Lounge  on second&#13;
floor of the library, free&#13;
• Play: The Cripple of Inishmaan, Augie&#13;
Wegner Studio Theatre,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m., tick-&#13;
ets: adults&#13;
$10,&#13;
faculty, staff, students&#13;
$7&#13;
• InfoBreak: Westlaw Campus, learn to&#13;
access legal resources, quickly and eas-&#13;
ily,&#13;
9:45&#13;
a.m., Instructional Tech Center,&#13;
WyllIe&#13;
01500,&#13;
also Wed., Dec.&#13;
5, 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• UW-Parkside Orchestra, Alvaro Garcia,&#13;
conductor,  Com. Arts Theatre, 7:30&#13;
p.m., tickets&#13;
$5/3&#13;
December 1&#13;
• UW-Parkside Jazz Ensemble, Tim Bell&#13;
director, Com. Arts Theatre,&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m.:&#13;
tickets:&#13;
$6/3&#13;
• UW-Parkside Holiday Arts and Crafts&#13;
Fair, Main Concourse&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Main Place,&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m., free&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Quincy&#13;
5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Quincy&#13;
7:45&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Craig Karges, mentalist, Union Square,&#13;
8 p.m., free, open to campus&#13;
&amp;&#13;
public&#13;
Arts and&#13;
Entertainmt1!ntlEdUor&#13;
Tiffany  Gram'&#13;
W&#13;
,&#13;
Sports Page Editor  J&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
J&#13;
~.&#13;
CO"'Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Daniel Frake  -&#13;
6enja"-t Schmidt&#13;
Asaistaht&#13;
Editor&#13;
D:eboral\ Hahm&#13;
Shanon Lehrke&#13;
.&#13;
\&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Keeley p¢mble&#13;
\,&#13;
J&#13;
Ranger-Public  Relations&#13;
Melissa Stephenson&#13;
Designand LayoutManagers&#13;
Lachlan&#13;
McDonald&#13;
, Aaron Kleiitsch&#13;
!&#13;
Range&lt; Advisor&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
NOW HlRING&#13;
OpinionPage;EditOI'&#13;
Q~o9nists :'&#13;
Cclumrusrs&#13;
R~portel'&amp;&#13;
i&#13;
7&#13;
,THE A~NGEA&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Alexis Ma:rti11&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie&#13;
V;&#13;
Ade&#13;
Don&#13;
Will B .&#13;
Meeting~  ~re  Mondays   at  noon.  Please  stop&#13;
by&#13;
and  participats   as the  meetings   are  open  to all&#13;
those  at  Parks ide.&#13;
INTERNSHIPS AVAILA&#13;
EI&#13;
Get~aid.~d&#13;
cmnpletea;n intern.&#13;
).~iliP&lt;itth¢&#13;
nine.&#13;
Photography  Director&#13;
,Jeffrey Alley&#13;
*&#13;
ffi&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
(262) 595-2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
(262) 595-2295&#13;
Busine$S·Manager&#13;
Mike Poludniak&#13;
"'-E,&#13;
&lt;.:prt~th~editors   at&#13;
595-2287&#13;
re information.&#13;
Come Check out the  Flanger Online  at www.uwp  edu/club&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
..&#13;
s ranger. news&#13;
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              <text>December&#13;
6,&#13;
2001&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do at the&#13;
U&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
A&#13;
letter from the Editor:&#13;
Goodbye and Godspeed&#13;
Scroogemay really exist&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
Racism&#13;
in&#13;
reverse&#13;
UW-PDiversity&#13;
Circles&#13;
receive&#13;
state award&#13;
PageS&#13;
Mini-conference: UW-P stu-&#13;
dents are no different&#13;
Jobjitters for graduating stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
Men's Basketball drops first&#13;
game of season&#13;
Women's Basketball get&#13;
in&#13;
win&#13;
column&#13;
Page&#13;
'1&#13;
Freshman Overview&#13;
Legends of the Silver Screen:&#13;
Gary&#13;
Cooper&#13;
My First semester at Parkside&#13;
PageS&#13;
"Can't&#13;
Miss" performances&#13;
November Sweeps: Swept&#13;
with 'specials'&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Preparing for "winterim"&#13;
Scholarships go on-line&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Remy Zero&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
disappoint&#13;
of  Wisconsin-Parks&#13;
ide&#13;
•&#13;
Peer   Health   Group&#13;
education  on depression&#13;
Deborah    G.  Hahm&#13;
Co-Assistant&#13;
Editor&#13;
L&#13;
ast   week   the   Peer&#13;
Health   Group  volun-&#13;
teered  to  screen  stu-&#13;
dents  for  depression.   The&#13;
National  Screening Day was&#13;
on October 11, but the group&#13;
felt that this time of the year&#13;
would be better for students&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
The   screening   process&#13;
starts out with a simple ques-&#13;
tionnaire  that then gets ana-&#13;
lyzed  by  a counselor.  The&#13;
purpose  of having a table set&#13;
up is to outreach a variety of&#13;
different   students.&#13;
There&#13;
were   not  as  many   that&#13;
requested   an  analysis   or&#13;
information   this  year,  but&#13;
Marcy  Hufendick  allocated&#13;
this to the placement  of the&#13;
table.&#13;
The  Peer  Health  Group&#13;
helps  students   understand&#13;
their reactions to an unfortu-&#13;
nate  event  or possibly  find&#13;
out  what  event  could  have&#13;
led to depression.  The coun-&#13;
selors are experienced to help&#13;
Depression&#13;
is  the  common    cold   of  Psychology&#13;
label the problem correctly and&#13;
then give the person the proper&#13;
course  of action  to treat the dis-&#13;
ease.  While the counselors can&#13;
not give out medication or diag-&#13;
nosis, they can send a referral&#13;
for treatment FROM A LARGER&#13;
ASSOCIATION.&#13;
Since  the  September   11&#13;
attack,  more  students   have&#13;
sought   out  help  from  the&#13;
Counseling  Center.   Students&#13;
seem  to be more  willing  to&#13;
explain their feeling of fear and&#13;
vulnerability.   The Counseling&#13;
Center is staffed with seven stu-&#13;
dents with a range of age and&#13;
two   staff   members,   Vicki&#13;
Wahler and Marcy Hufendick.&#13;
Marcy  is  also  the  Program&#13;
Manager and Senior Counselor&#13;
Coordinator.&#13;
For  more   information    on&#13;
depression, visit the Counseling&#13;
Center  located  behind  Talent&#13;
Hall. They have pamphlets  for&#13;
those that want to learn more or&#13;
counselors  available  to  talk.&#13;
Make appointments  by visiting&#13;
or calling&#13;
595-2366.&#13;
Please note&#13;
that  all sessions are free and&#13;
confidential.&#13;
Gender  stereotypes   presentation   brings  awareness&#13;
By  Rosie   Veziridis&#13;
Reporter&#13;
U&#13;
w-parkside's&#13;
Psychology    depart-&#13;
ment&#13;
presented&#13;
"Gender  Stereotypes:  Alive&#13;
and   Unwell."    Professor&#13;
Sylvia Beyer spoke to a group&#13;
of willing  students  to help&#13;
make them aware of gender&#13;
stereotypes.&#13;
It&#13;
was held  on&#13;
November  28, 2001, at noon&#13;
in Molinaro 0137.&#13;
The  professor  discussed&#13;
two studies: one of them was&#13;
Gender Stereotypes in majors&#13;
(which  was  done  here  at&#13;
Parkside)  and  the  other  in&#13;
Occupations.   Stereotype,  as&#13;
defined&#13;
in&#13;
Webster's&#13;
Dictionary, is "a conventional&#13;
opinion or belief."&#13;
It&#13;
exists in&#13;
our society today and espe-&#13;
cially in the workforce.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
also present on a college cam-&#13;
pus.&#13;
As far as majors, the ones&#13;
deemed as "female" occupa-&#13;
tions were Psychology,  Art,&#13;
English,    Communication,&#13;
Biology, Business,  and Music.&#13;
Mainly  "male"  dominating&#13;
occupations  are  'Political&#13;
Science, History,  Chemistry,&#13;
Math, and Computer Science.&#13;
A startling  statistic  was&#13;
that   fifty-six   percent   of&#13;
women received a Bachelor's&#13;
Degree, whereas  only forty-&#13;
four percent of men receive&#13;
theirs.  "We're not aware  of&#13;
women's    needs,"    stated&#13;
Professor  Beyer during  the&#13;
presentation,  and  recalled  a&#13;
story, which took place eight&#13;
years ago. In Molinaro hall, a&#13;
woman's   restroom   never&#13;
existed;   only   a  male's&#13;
restroom was available. This&#13;
was due to the fact that most&#13;
business,  psychology,  and&#13;
computer   science  classes&#13;
were  given  here,  and  that&#13;
they  were  typically  male&#13;
dominated.  So the men saw&#13;
no need to add a women's&#13;
restroom.&#13;
It&#13;
was eventually&#13;
changed as we see it today.&#13;
Professor Beyer was born&#13;
in Austria,  but  was  raised&#13;
and  attended   college  in&#13;
southwest   Germany.  She&#13;
attended  the University  of&#13;
Trubingen&#13;
where&#13;
she&#13;
attained    her   Bachelor's&#13;
Degree. After her Bachelor's&#13;
Degree, she relocated to the&#13;
states   and  attended   the&#13;
University of Oregon where&#13;
it took her another six years&#13;
to get her Ph.D. With a total&#13;
of ten years in school, she&#13;
finally  settled into a job with&#13;
UW-Parkside,   and  has  been&#13;
with the university  for  eleven&#13;
years.&#13;
In a personal  interview  with&#13;
the professor,  she commented&#13;
on  her  recent  development.&#13;
"What I really enjoy now is that&#13;
I have this large grant,  which&#13;
allows me to do more research. I&#13;
can teach  and  research."  The&#13;
grant she received is from the&#13;
National Science Foundation.&#13;
A&#13;
freshman,&#13;
Jackie&#13;
Schroeder, commented  on why&#13;
she attended  the presentation.&#13;
"I  came  because  I'm  taking&#13;
Women's Studies 110 and we're&#13;
doing a group project. And I'm&#13;
interested   in 1earning  about&#13;
stereotypes."&#13;
Professor  Beyer concluded&#13;
her  presentation  aby  stating,&#13;
"Gender  stereotypes  are  alive&#13;
and unwell."&#13;
�-----.:....-_-------=--=-----=-------=~=---&#13;
H&#13;
THING=&#13;
Arts Theatre,  7:30 p.m., tickets:  $5/3&#13;
for Chocolate,"by  Laura Esquivel,  Union  202, 3&#13;
p.m., free, open To anyone who has read the&#13;
book,&#13;
Continuing  Events Through December 13&#13;
December  14&#13;
• Art Exhibition: Amy Norgaard&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Greg Porcaro,&#13;
alumni  exhibition,&#13;
nOUIS:&#13;
Monday&#13;
I&#13;
Thursday:  11&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesday /WednJ'sday:  11 a.m. to 8&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
• Men's  basketball  vs. Winona  State, SAC,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m&#13;
December  8&#13;
• Women's  basketball   vs.  SlU-Edwardsville&#13;
1&#13;
p.m., SAC&#13;
• Concert:  Kerri  ~her.wood,  adult  contemporary&#13;
piano, Comrnurucatiun  Arts Theatre, 7:30&#13;
p.m,&#13;
tickets:  $12&#13;
Daily events:&#13;
• Men's basketball  vs. SlU-Edwardsville   3:15 p.m.,&#13;
SAC&#13;
December 6&#13;
December&#13;
15&#13;
• Play: The Cripple  of&#13;
Inishmaan.&#13;
Augie Wegner&#13;
Studio Theatre, 10 a.m., tickets: students, faculty&#13;
$7, adults  $10&#13;
• Women's  basketball  vs. Winona  State 3 p.m.&#13;
December&#13;
6-9&#13;
• Foreign Film: "The Five Senses,"  Union  Cinema&#13;
Theater,  shows:  Thursday  /Friday,   7:30  p.m.;&#13;
Saturday,  8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m.&#13;
December&#13;
16&#13;
• PIC Lecture: War on Terrorism:  Causes ~nd&#13;
Consequences w jProf. Lewis Gordon of Brown&#13;
University,  Greenquist  103, 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
.&#13;
• Fall  2001  Commencement,    2 p.m.,  DeSimone&#13;
Gymnasium,   Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activity  Center.&#13;
December  8&#13;
• Friends  of the UW-Parkside  Library:  Flamenco&#13;
Music  in  America   w /William   Washabaugh,&#13;
Overlook  Lounge, second floor of library, Dec.&#13;
6,&#13;
7 p.m., free&#13;
Sports and Activity Center hours:&#13;
• UW-Parkside&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Ensemble,&#13;
George&#13;
Lindquist,  director,  Communication   Arts, Room&#13;
D-1l8, 3:30 p.m., free&#13;
7 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
7&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Noon  to&#13;
6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
3&#13;
to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
7&#13;
a.rn. to&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Thursday:&#13;
Friday:&#13;
Saturday:&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
Monday  to Wednesday:&#13;
• UW-Parkside  Orchestra,  Alvaro  Garcia, conduc-&#13;
tor, Com. Arts Theatre,  7:30 p.m., tickets $5/3&#13;
December&#13;
11&#13;
• InfoBreak:  Travel  Resources:  Handling   travel&#13;
details  on-line,&#13;
9:45&#13;
a.m.,  Instructional   Tech&#13;
Center,  Wyllie  D150D,  also  held  Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 12,&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• Women's  basketball  vs. Quincy, SAC, 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool hours:&#13;
• Men's  basketball  vs. Quincy,  SAC, 7:45 p.m.,&#13;
Uw-Parkside&#13;
students  are admitted  free. Tickets&#13;
are $5 for adults, and $1 for high school students&#13;
and childre!l14  years of age and under.&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Thursday:&#13;
4 to 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday:&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday:&#13;
Monday:&#13;
2 to 3 p.m.,&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tuesday:&#13;
4 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday:&#13;
2 to 3 p.m.,&#13;
4&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Hours  subject  to change;  call (262) 595-2780 for&#13;
current  schedule  information.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Lakeland  7:30 p.m.&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
Noon  to&#13;
4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
3&#13;
to&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to 12:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
December&#13;
12&#13;
December&#13;
7-8&#13;
• Noon  Concert:  UW-Parkside  Guitar  Ensemble,&#13;
George   Lindquist,   director,   Union   Cinema&#13;
Theater, noon, free&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. and&#13;
• Play: The Cripple of Inishmaan,  Wegner Theatre,&#13;
Dec. 7, 7:30 p.m., Dec. 8, 4&#13;
&amp;&#13;
7:30 p.m.; tickets:&#13;
students,  faculty $7, adults  $10 .&#13;
11&#13;
a.m. to 12:30p.m.,&#13;
December&#13;
13&#13;
December&#13;
7&#13;
• UW-Parkside.    Wind   Ensemble/Community&#13;
Band, Mark Eichner, conductor,  Communication&#13;
• Race, Class,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Gender  book study:&#13;
"Like&#13;
Water&#13;
"f-w&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Ediior&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
,&#13;
f&#13;
Sports  PageEditor}!&#13;
Dena&#13;
Coady&#13;
-1&#13;
!&#13;
Reporters&#13;
1&#13;
AleXIS&#13;
Martin&#13;
*&#13;
R~~~gci£s'&#13;
Adebesi Agord&#13;
Dormetta Davis&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
,&#13;
w&#13;
Advertising   Manager_~&#13;
Karey Thoennes&#13;
.&#13;
0'&#13;
,&#13;
dri:Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Daniel Frake  -&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
h&#13;
Assistartt&#13;
Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
\&#13;
~,_ Copy Editor&#13;
-Keeley.Pfmble&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Public&#13;
Relations&#13;
Me1issa:~,tephenson&#13;
'A&#13;
Design&#13;
and&#13;
Layout  Managers&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Aaron Kleutsch&#13;
THe&#13;
A~NGeA&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
?&#13;
Dave&#13;
Buchanan-"&#13;
.1&#13;
NOW HIRING&#13;
f&gt;pinimrPage&#13;
Editor&#13;
Cartoontsts&#13;
Columnists&#13;
#'&#13;
Repo1'te&#13;
rs&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parks ide.&#13;
INTERNSHIPS  AVAIL BLE!&#13;
&lt;:iE!tPaAan&#13;
intern-&#13;
e time.&#13;
1&#13;
Photography Director&#13;
Jeffrey&#13;
AlIey&#13;
Wyllie  D-139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
(262) 595-2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
(262) 595-2295&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Mike Poludniak .&#13;
Features  Bditor&#13;
Shanon&#13;
Lehrke&#13;
/'"&#13;
f&#13;
.  ...'/&#13;
Come check out The Rj'lnger Online at www.uwp edu/club&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
.&#13;
It'.&#13;
.&#13;
S&#13;
ranger.news&#13;
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              <text>-~------'"'"C"----"""--"-=-"""""'""Cit,.","~;"::::-";;&#13;
THE  AI::INGeF=l&#13;
February14 - 21,2002&#13;
SlOE&#13;
Page 2&#13;
'ltdngs&#13;
to do at the U&#13;
Page 4&#13;
PageS&#13;
happens when&#13;
Art&#13;
and&#13;
Sciencecollide&#13;
Classifleds&#13;
Page 6&#13;
ClassicAlbum Review&#13;
The&#13;
RollingStones: Between&#13;
the Buttons&#13;
CurrentAlbum Review&#13;
Starsailer:Love&#13;
Is&#13;
Here&#13;
Veritas&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Aequitas&#13;
times&#13;
I&#13;
was stopped for an&#13;
autograph in the hall this past&#13;
semester while&#13;
I&#13;
desperately&#13;
attempted to make it to class&#13;
on time. Luckily our teachers&#13;
are a very tolerant and agree-&#13;
able collection of people and&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
wants you to join&#13;
By: Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Co~Editor~in~Chief&#13;
T&#13;
he Ranger News is a stu-&#13;
dent  newspaper   con-&#13;
cerned   with  student&#13;
issues. Every year staff mem-&#13;
bers graduate leaving valuable&#13;
positions open for new stu-&#13;
dents to fill.Are you one of the&#13;
lucky students who will join&#13;
the staff this semester?&#13;
All students are welcome to&#13;
join  whether  or  not  they&#13;
intend  to  pursue  a  career in&#13;
journalism.  No prior experi-&#13;
ence is necessary. Experienced&#13;
staff .nembers  will provide&#13;
training.&#13;
Were you  involved  with&#13;
yearbook in high school?&#13;
If&#13;
so,&#13;
put your skills to use at- the&#13;
paper and make some money&#13;
in the process. OhJes, you will&#13;
make money, an  if you are&#13;
anything like the rest of us on&#13;
campus you are in dire need of&#13;
as much green gold as you can&#13;
get. Now are you a little more&#13;
interested?   There   is   more,&#13;
much much more.&#13;
Becoming a member of The&#13;
Ranger News staff makes you&#13;
an instantly popular member&#13;
of the campus community.&#13;
I&#13;
simply cannot recollect all the&#13;
never once showed  any  spite&#13;
toward  me  on  the  occasions&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
stepped into class a few&#13;
moments late. Are you salivat-&#13;
ing right now? Do you want to&#13;
skip the rest of the summer so&#13;
you can join the staff right&#13;
now?&#13;
If&#13;
so that is good, very&#13;
good. That is a sign that you&#13;
are well aware of the opportu-&#13;
nity just waiting for you to&#13;
take it.&#13;
Besides the money and the&#13;
fame there are other lesser&#13;
1&#13;
l'&#13;
J&#13;
\&#13;
&lt;&#13;
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,&#13;
"-&#13;
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Deborah Hahm, Lachlan McDonald, and Benjamin Schmidt working together as a team to create The Ranger&#13;
What Women Want:&#13;
V-Day Tips for Guys •&#13;
.q'.&#13;
'.&#13;
them upset when their guy  you  put&#13;
1&#13;
By:   Becky    Olsen&#13;
does not meet their expecta-  thought&#13;
,f&#13;
_..,----l.-&#13;
Reporter&#13;
tions. Because of this,&#13;
I&#13;
feel a  and feel-&#13;
sense of compassion for men,&#13;
Ing&#13;
l~to&#13;
~&#13;
so&#13;
I&#13;
am giving those of you  your gIft.&#13;
"&#13;
JI&#13;
men in need some simple tips  For&#13;
~9&#13;
to help smooth things over in  example,&#13;
your relationships this Valen-  by simply&#13;
: h&#13;
tine's Da .&#13;
presentmg   her  WIt   ~n&#13;
On&#13;
~g   for all men to  arrangement  of her favonte&#13;
reme~ber is that women want   flowers, you will be showing&#13;
men to show them affection  her that you care&#13;
10&#13;
one easy&#13;
and  adoration,  so if they   step.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
receive a box of chocolates as   .ftMany mlscothnctepllonshof&#13;
their&#13;
ift,&#13;
do not be surprised&#13;
g:t&#13;
-gIVmgare.  a men  ave&#13;
if soJe of that hostility comes  to buy women Je~elry to make&#13;
ay  Do not get me  her happy, but It ISnot the cost&#13;
~~~  ~ca~dy is a nice gesture,  or luster of the gift th~t counts.&#13;
but !omen  want to see that  For example, surpnsmg  her&#13;
Valentine's Day is known&#13;
for romance and gifts of love.&#13;
Yet somehow, it seems that&#13;
some  women  never  seem  to&#13;
get what they want out of the&#13;
holiday.&#13;
I&#13;
have to give credit to men.&#13;
They&#13;
try&#13;
to plan somethmg&#13;
special for their mates, but a&#13;
difference&#13;
in&#13;
views of romance&#13;
seems to stir up hostility rather&#13;
than passion.&#13;
I&#13;
can admit that&#13;
women  may  sometimes have&#13;
too high of hopes set on the&#13;
holiday, which is what makes&#13;
with a&#13;
picnic&#13;
in&#13;
a park is a low-&#13;
cost but caring&#13;
symbol   that&#13;
you care. How-&#13;
ever,&#13;
since&#13;
Valentine's Day&#13;
falls during one&#13;
of the coldest&#13;
months of the&#13;
year, by spread-&#13;
ing out a picnic&#13;
on  the  living&#13;
room floor, you&#13;
can  still  give&#13;
her  a  romantic&#13;
dinner&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
warmth of a fireplace and can-&#13;
dlelight. Just be sure not to go&#13;
overboard with the low-cost&#13;
idea and give her a cheesy gift&#13;
along the lines of a mix-tape of&#13;
love songs, unless you enjoy&#13;
the silent treatment.&#13;
For the guys who enjoy&#13;
being extra sweet on this holi-&#13;
day, remember the single girls&#13;
\&#13;
N&#13;
\m¥&#13;
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ill&#13;
Page::~2__   ,,---__&#13;
--=---_---,-,,------,-_...:::....&#13;
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THINGC::&#13;
February. 14&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Effigy Mounds: More Than Just&#13;
Mounds!" w/ Herman Bender, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge. 2nd floor&#13;
of Library&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Missouri-SI. Louis 5:30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
Missouri-SI. Louis 7:45 p.m.&#13;
• Black History Month film: "Training Day," starring Denzel&#13;
Washington, Union Cinema Theater, 8 p.m., free&#13;
Feb. 15&#13;
• Black History Month: Fun Friday, Multicultural Office, Wyllie&#13;
D-182, noon, free&#13;
• Black History Month: Sweetheart Ball, Union Square,&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
$10/ couple, $7/ person, dress to impress&#13;
Feb. 16&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
QUincy 1 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball&#13;
@&#13;
QUincy 3:15 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 19&#13;
• Black History Month Trip: Black Holocaust Museum, departs&#13;
2 p.m., $3, sign up at the OMSA office&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! presents: Trio Voronezh, Com. Arts Theatre,&#13;
7:30 p.m., tickets: $12&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
• Noon Concert:  McKeever  Duo: Susan&#13;
McKeever,  piano; James McKeever,  piano; Feb. 20,&#13;
noon, Communication Arts Theatre, free&#13;
• Black History Month: Apollo Night w/comedienne  Rella,&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema, 8 p.m., free, open to campus &amp; public&#13;
Feb. 21&#13;
• "The Fusion of Art &amp; Science: Adventures&#13;
in Creating Living&#13;
Artworks" w/Joe Davis of MIT, 7 p.m., Mol. 105, free&#13;
• Women's basketball vs. Lewis 5 30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball vs. Lewis 7 45 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 22&#13;
• Youth Program: Gang Awareness Work-&#13;
shop,&#13;
9&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
Talent 182' $30&#13;
• Race. Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "Disgrace," by J. M.&#13;
Coetzee,&#13;
Molinaro Hall room 111, 3:30 p.m., free&#13;
• "Throwing  Out the Textbook: Uncovering  History for&#13;
Beginning&#13;
H--.&#13;
1&#13;
Students" w/ Dr. Lendol Calder, History Dept., Auqustana&#13;
College, 1 p.m., Galbraith Room, reception to follow&#13;
2/21-24&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Everybody Famous!" show times:&#13;
Thursdays/Fridays:  7 30 p.m., Saturdays: 8 p.m., Sundays:&#13;
2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
• Noon Concert: Elaine Skorodin, violin; Carol Wallace, piano;&#13;
noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
Feb. 28&#13;
• Biack History Month: 3rd annual Fashion Show, Union Square,&#13;
7 p.m., $3 ($2 w/ canned good)&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: "Cosmic Orphans: Finding Our&#13;
Place in the Universe" w/ David Eicher 7 p.m., 7 p.m., Overlook&#13;
Lounge, 2nd floor of Library&#13;
Feb. 28 to   • Foreign Film: "The House of Mirth," show times: Thursday/&#13;
March&#13;
3&#13;
Friday:  7 30  p.m.,  Saturday:  8 p.m.,  Sunday:  2 p.m.;&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
itors-in-Chief&#13;
,  . Schmidt-&#13;
,er&#13;
Smith&#13;
,1&#13;
Assis~nt&#13;
Editor&#13;
Deporah  Hahm&#13;
"-ifu&#13;
o'&#13;
.y&#13;
Editor&#13;
K&#13;
.Pemble&#13;
d Layout&#13;
cDonald&#13;
':".~&#13;
*&#13;
Arts&#13;
aJildEntertairunent&#13;
Edi&#13;
Tiffany   .&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page&#13;
Editor'&#13;
Dena&#13;
Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Beck&#13;
Rosi&#13;
Ade&#13;
Will&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
published  every  Thurs  _&#13;
t&#13;
the semester  by&#13;
Letters t.o the ~itor&#13;
policy:&#13;
The ~enoourages&#13;
letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Edit&#13;
ITUBleadmgor libelous  content.  Letters that  fail&#13;
to&#13;
comply  will not&#13;
bep&#13;
~&#13;
.-1&#13;
WELCOME BACK  ........&#13;
..r-&#13;
UW"PARKSIDE STUDENTS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
STAFF!&#13;
LIN'S  BUFFET&#13;
i&#13;
105&#13;
2.2.NDAVE.&#13;
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KENOSHA. WI&#13;
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652.·3737&#13;
"'"'\...&#13;
.-1&#13;
~&#13;
",--__&#13;
....r_&#13;
--&#13;
......&#13;
DINNER&#13;
F'.E:A'fURSS&#13;
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Be&#13;
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"ASK ABOUT PARK!lIDE DSCOUNTS"&#13;
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AVAILABLE&#13;
-if&#13;
U'hsiness&#13;
Mik,e  Poludniak&#13;
s&#13;
f&#13;
Advertisin&#13;
DeborahH&#13;
Michelle&#13;
~tr:&#13;
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, and participate  as the meetings  are open to all&#13;
those at Parks ide.&#13;
Wyllie D·139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
(262)  595-2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
(262)  595-2295&#13;
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              <text>February 21 - March 7, 2002&#13;
Veritas&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
INSloe&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do&#13;
@&#13;
the U&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Wrestlersdefend dual meet&#13;
record&#13;
UW-Pmen's baseball ready.&#13;
to go into&#13;
full&#13;
swing&#13;
PageS&#13;
Meet Professor&#13;
Li&#13;
English Society celebrates&#13;
13th year&#13;
Crowning Miss Kenosha&#13;
Parkside hosts high school&#13;
art&#13;
invitational&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Bar review&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
Page 7&#13;
I&#13;
Prof&#13;
M&#13;
Shahrani speaks on&#13;
ill&#13;
terrorism&#13;
~&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
---&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
Funding cutin&#13;
planned&#13;
budget&#13;
Guest Column,  Ranger News&#13;
By&#13;
Representative  Jim Kreuser&#13;
O&#13;
n January  22, interim&#13;
Governor Scott McCal-&#13;
lum.  introduced   his&#13;
budget  repair plan before a&#13;
joint session of the State Legis-&#13;
lature.&#13;
In&#13;
his remarks, the gov-&#13;
ernor laid out his plan to cut&#13;
fundrng for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System budget by&#13;
4.5%.  While 4.5% may not&#13;
sound substantial, it is a cut of&#13;
approximately $50 million to a&#13;
system that has already seen&#13;
over $50million in budget cuts&#13;
over the past decade.&#13;
The governor's budget plan&#13;
allows  lor  mcreases&#13;
in&#13;
tuition&#13;
of up to 10%for the 2002-2003&#13;
academic  year and includes&#13;
virtually   no  increases   in finan-&#13;
cial aid programs for current&#13;
and future students.   More-&#13;
over,   it  is  questionable&#13;
whether a 10%tuition increase&#13;
would even make up for this&#13;
governor's proposed cuts.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
also important  to note that&#13;
tuition has increased approxi-&#13;
mately $1,000 more than the&#13;
rate of inflation since 1992.&#13;
It&#13;
is my belief that  the  state&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Governor  McCallum's  budget cuts funding for the University of Wisconsin  Schools&#13;
needs  to  tie  any  tuition&#13;
increases  with financial  aid&#13;
increases as a matter of policy.&#13;
Budget cuts not oniy hurt&#13;
the pocketbooks of students,&#13;
but also in addition have an&#13;
adverse effect on the quality of&#13;
the education offered.  Past&#13;
budget cuts have resulted in&#13;
reduced funding for technolo-&#13;
gy,&#13;
building  projects, course&#13;
offerings,  fibrary  resources,&#13;
faculty,  academic  advising,&#13;
and academic staff hiring, as&#13;
well as safety programs.   I&#13;
Conversation With the Chancellor&#13;
Benjamin  Schmidt&#13;
Co-Edltor-In-ehief&#13;
C&#13;
onvocations are a gath-&#13;
ering  for  the  faculty,&#13;
staff, and student lead-&#13;
ers allowing Chancellor John&#13;
'Jack'  Keating  to  address&#13;
everyone, passing along infor-&#13;
mation and inspiration.  Most&#13;
students  never  get to hear&#13;
what Chancellor Keating has&#13;
to say due to the nature of his&#13;
job and the demanding sched-&#13;
ule he keeps, so I offered&#13;
him&#13;
the opportunity  to reach the&#13;
students  through  the inter-&#13;
view he was kind enough to&#13;
accept.&#13;
•&#13;
On&#13;
the rarely visited third&#13;
level Chancellor Keating wel-&#13;
comed and ushered me into'&#13;
his cozy office overlooking the&#13;
Chancellor  John' Jack' Keating&#13;
campus' south side.  Empha-&#13;
sized  were  the concepts' Tak-&#13;
ing .the Next Step' and 'Pride&#13;
in Parkside.'  With state bud-&#13;
get cuts affecting institutions&#13;
such  as  Parkside,  contribu-&#13;
tions from everyone in their&#13;
own  niches  need  to  take&#13;
responsibility said Chancellor&#13;
. Keating.  He added that the&#13;
-  campus' new Provost, Rebecca&#13;
Martin, was  a candidate with&#13;
an   "enormous   background&#13;
and  experience"  who   flgives&#13;
us a shot right away to move&#13;
out  to  a new  step  on  a new&#13;
horizon."&#13;
IlLife&#13;
is&#13;
too&#13;
ShOrt"&#13;
Chancellor  Keating  also&#13;
stated that collaboration with&#13;
other universities "to facilitate&#13;
exchanging  of ideas"  along&#13;
with the enhancement of Park-&#13;
side's relationship with techni-&#13;
cal colleges to reach further&#13;
into the region to take advan-&#13;
tage of current resources with-&#13;
out the benefit of additional&#13;
dollars _is  "pretty  positive&#13;
given the economic climate."&#13;
When asked about the cur-&#13;
rent state of the campus Chan-&#13;
cellor Keating said he was&#13;
"very pleased."   Growth in&#13;
diversity among faculty, staff,&#13;
and students  is "personally&#13;
gratifying" to Chancellor Keat-&#13;
ing.  He also expressed plea-&#13;
sure with the school's strong&#13;
liberal arts base, which gives&#13;
students "the ability to learn&#13;
and  critically  think"  when&#13;
placed in real world situations.&#13;
As a parting statement of&#13;
encouragement,  the Chancel-&#13;
lor opined, "Life is too short."&#13;
How people play  the cards&#13;
they are dealt' is what makes a&#13;
positive person." Constructive&#13;
thinking and finding the "rem-&#13;
edy of a problem" keep people&#13;
upbeat.&#13;
February 21 March 7,&#13;
2002&#13;
THING_&#13;
He&#13;
7 p.m., $3 ($2&#13;
wI&#13;
canned good)&#13;
Feb. 21   • "The Fusion of Art &amp; Science: Adventures in Creating living&#13;
Artworks"&#13;
w/Joe&#13;
Davis of MIT,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Mol. 105, free&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
vs.&#13;
Lewis 5 30 p.m.&#13;
• Men's basketball vs. Lewis&#13;
7&#13;
45 p.m.&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents: "Cosmic Orphans:  Finding Our&#13;
Place in the Universe"&#13;
wi&#13;
David Eicher&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
7&#13;
p.m., Overlook&#13;
Lounge, 2nJ floor of Library&#13;
Feb. 22   • Youth Program: Gang Awareness Workshop,&#13;
9&#13;
a.m., Tallent 182'&#13;
$30&#13;
Feb. 28 to • Foreign Film: "The House of Mirth," show times:&#13;
Thursdayl&#13;
March 3   Friday:&#13;
7&#13;
30 p.m., Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cine-&#13;
ma&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "Disgrace," by J. M. Coetzee,&#13;
·;J:~~~:~~&#13;
Out the Textbook: Uncovering  History for&#13;
r:~~:=::"-::--_·J-~W~;E:=L~C:::'O::::M':E:=~B;;~A:-:C::K~-·"-·--·F'::::=_:::'1&#13;
UW"PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
STAFF!&#13;
LINTS&#13;
BUFFET&#13;
Molinaro Hall room 111, 3 30 p.m., free&#13;
Students"&#13;
wi&#13;
Dr. Lendol Calder, History Dept., Augus-&#13;
tana&#13;
/&#13;
College, 1 p.m., Galbraith Room, reception to follow&#13;
2/21-24    • Foreign Film: "Everybody Famous!" show&#13;
times:&#13;
Thursdays/Fridays:  7 30 p.m., Saturdays: 8 p.m., Sun-&#13;
days:&#13;
2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Feb. 27   • Noon  Concert:  Elaine  Skorodin,  violin;&#13;
Carol Wallace, piano;&#13;
noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
Feb. 28   • Black History Month: 3r- annual Fashion&#13;
Show, Union Square,&#13;
Theater&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
$5.29&#13;
DINNEUi&#13;
$6.79&#13;
2.&#13;
t&#13;
OS&#13;
2.2.ND AVE.&#13;
(NORTH BIDE)&#13;
KENOSHA,&#13;
WI&#13;
TEL. 652·3737&#13;
",,---_../~&#13;
-.-I "----__&#13;
...f&#13;
DINNJa:R  F'&amp;:ATUR.E:s&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SNOW CRAB L&amp;:GS&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
(INCLUDES  FREE&#13;
SOFT&#13;
DRINK&gt;&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
CARRY-OUT&#13;
8:&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
FISH AND S&amp;:AFOOD&#13;
""AsK ABOUT PARKS IDE DBCOUN"fiI,""&#13;
Sports Page&#13;
Edit";:&#13;
I&#13;
Dena Cpady&#13;
I&#13;
Reporters&#13;
,,§&#13;
Alexis MartirJ ..&#13;
it&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
f&#13;
Ruyayeem&#13;
Krisli Vol&#13;
Myron&#13;
Rosje&#13;
\!&#13;
Brenda&#13;
Adebest&#13;
D&#13;
Adverti$ing Matcl.ger'~&#13;
Katey&#13;
Thoennes&#13;
Advertising   Assls&#13;
tant.&#13;
Danny Nguyen&#13;
Ranger Advjsor  .&#13;
Pave  Buchanan&#13;
-f"&#13;
y'&#13;
NOW HIRING&#13;
Opinipil Page Editor&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
CoiWlinists&#13;
cReport&lt;!rs&#13;
NSHIPS AVA  ABLE!&#13;
~C!?mRlefe an intern-&#13;
,&#13;
e time.&#13;
Meeting•• re Mond.y•• t noon. Pl••••&#13;
atop by .nd p.rtlclp.te  •• the m•• tlnga&#13;
.r.  op.n to .11tho••• t P.rk.ld ••&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
D-139C&#13;
phone:&#13;
{262}595.2287&#13;
fax:&#13;
{262}595-2295&#13;
•&#13;
who are .solely responsible for&#13;
its&#13;
editorial policy and content,&#13;
.&#13;
should be delivered to the Ranger office (WYLLD-139C)  Letters must be&#13;
typed&#13;
d l  I d&#13;
the'&#13;
•&#13;
r's name can be withheld,  but&#13;
only&#13;
upon request. The Rang~r reserves the right to:&amp;.t  .ill'l~tt:rs.   author s name and phone number.&#13;
Letters.&#13;
must be free from&#13;
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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              <text>Volume 32, issue 16</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>SUFAC violates Open Meeting Laws</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>&#13;
-THE&#13;
March8 • 29, 2002&#13;
..&#13;
2&#13;
ShJdlsIIlQIIIlizationbudget&#13;
lI'llI\dlI&#13;
for&#13;
2001 - 2002&#13;
1'9&#13;
3&#13;
uw:.P&#13;
faculty&#13;
named in&#13;
hal&#13;
I&#13;
~fame.&#13;
Page 6&#13;
AIIIBl&#13;
Parkside success&#13;
Actlvib!s&#13;
and getaways for&#13;
spring&#13;
break&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Respondmg&#13;
to&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ranser&#13;
notified&#13;
of budget&#13;
freeze&#13;
Pagen&#13;
~~ueators&#13;
educate&#13;
""'uv&#13;
and AIDS&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
SUFAC violates Open Meeting Laws&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Co-Editor-in-Chief&#13;
T&#13;
he  Segregated  Universi-&#13;
ty Fees Allocation  Com-&#13;
mittee  (SUFAC), a com-&#13;
mittee  that  must  follow  the&#13;
rules  of  the  State  of Wiscon-&#13;
sin's  Open  Meeting Laws that&#13;
are also referred  to as the Sun-&#13;
shine Laws, failed to do so on&#13;
a  number   of  different  occa-&#13;
sions. The committee  failed to&#13;
work under  the laws that gov-&#13;
ern  them.  Due  to this  failure&#13;
at least one student  club, and&#13;
the  public's   rights  were  vio-&#13;
lated.&#13;
On  the  afternoon  of  Sun-&#13;
day   February   10,  2002  The&#13;
Ranger   Newspaper's    Execu-&#13;
tive Committee  had a meeting&#13;
to discuss  The Ranger's  bud-&#13;
get with SUFAC. At this meet-&#13;
mg  PSGA President  and  vot-&#13;
ing  member   of  SUFAC  Joe&#13;
Rucker   stated;    "This   is  a&#13;
closed  meeting.&#13;
It&#13;
is my con-&#13;
stitutional&#13;
right   not   to  be&#13;
recorded  [audio] and I choose&#13;
to  use  it."  Joe  Rucker  was&#13;
wrong.  The Ranger's  and  the&#13;
public's  right had been VIOlat-&#13;
ed.&#13;
According  to  the  State  of&#13;
Wisconsin's   Open   Meeting&#13;
Laws  19.82-3 an  '''Open  ses-&#13;
sion' means a meeting which&#13;
is held  in a place reasonably&#13;
accessible to members  of the&#13;
public and open to all citizens&#13;
at all times.'  Some of the rea-&#13;
sons a meeting may be closed&#13;
are  "(a)  Deliberating  a  case&#13;
which  is  the  subject  of  any&#13;
judicial  or  quasijudicial  trial&#13;
or hearing before that govern-&#13;
mental  body.&#13;
(b)&#13;
Considering&#13;
dismissal,  demotion,   licens-&#13;
ing or discipline of any public&#13;
employe  or  person  licensed  .&#13;
by  the  board  or  commission&#13;
or the investigation of charges&#13;
against  such person,  or  con-&#13;
sidering the grant or denial of&#13;
tenure  to a university  faculty&#13;
member,  and  the  taking  of&#13;
formal  action  on  any  such&#13;
matter;&#13;
(f)&#13;
Considering  finan-&#13;
cial, medical,  social or person-&#13;
al   histories   or   data,   or&#13;
involved  in such problems or&#13;
investigations.&#13;
II&#13;
According  to&#13;
the Sunshine  Laws the meet-&#13;
ing   was   considered   open.&#13;
Therefore   SUFAC  had   an&#13;
,obligation  to follow the laws&#13;
concerning  an open  meeting.&#13;
They did not.&#13;
The  Ranger  not  only  had&#13;
the right to record the session&#13;
they   had   the   right   to  be&#13;
accommodated&#13;
to   in   this&#13;
request.   According   to   the&#13;
State  of  Wisconsin's   Open&#13;
Meeting  Laws  section  19.90&#13;
"Whenever   a  governmental&#13;
body holds a meeting in open&#13;
session, the body shall make a&#13;
reasonable effort to accommo-&#13;
date  any  person  desiring  to&#13;
record,  film  or  photograph&#13;
the meeting."  The only stipu-&#13;
lation   to   this   is  that   the&#13;
recordin\\  may  not  be  con-&#13;
ducted    'in  a  manner   that&#13;
interferes with the conduct of&#13;
the  meeting  or  the  rights  of&#13;
the  participants."   Instead  of&#13;
accommodating  The Ranger's&#13;
request  to record  the session&#13;
the   committee    unlawfully&#13;
prevented&#13;
the   newspaper&#13;
from making  a taped  record-&#13;
ing of the meeting.&#13;
SUFAC also  violated  sec-&#13;
tion  19.88-3    of  the  Open&#13;
Meetin~    Laws.   This   law&#13;
states,  'The  motions  and  roll&#13;
call votes of each meeting of a&#13;
governmental   body  shall  be&#13;
recorded, preserved  and open&#13;
to  public   inspection".   The&#13;
repeated   attempts   made  by&#13;
The Ranger to obtain the&#13;
min-&#13;
utes  from  the  December  9,&#13;
2002  and  February   10, 2002&#13;
budget  meetings  have contin-&#13;
ually  been  ignored.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
necessary  for The  Ranger  to&#13;
contact Steve McLaughlin, the&#13;
advisor for SUFAC in order to&#13;
obtain   a  copy  of  his  hand&#13;
written  notes  from  one  of the&#13;
meetings.  The Ranger has yet&#13;
to receive its requested  copies&#13;
of  the  written  minutes  from&#13;
the budget  meetings of the fall&#13;
semester  that it began  asking&#13;
for on  February  20,2002. The&#13;
inaccessibility  of  these  meet-&#13;
ings  shows  the SUFAC com-&#13;
mittee  disregarding   the  Sun-&#13;
shine  Laws's  statement   that&#13;
the minutes  be "open  to pub-&#13;
lic inspection."&#13;
If&#13;
the minutes&#13;
are unavailable  upon  a direct&#13;
request  they are surely  unob-&#13;
tainable for public inspection.&#13;
The   Ranger   did   receive&#13;
copies of what SUFAC consid-&#13;
ered  minutes  from two  sepa-&#13;
rate  meetings   from  SUFAC&#13;
Chair  Azeza&#13;
Hammad.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger  was  required  to wait&#13;
while  Harnmad  "typed  them&#13;
up."  SUFAC's By-Laws state;&#13;
"The  Vice Chair  shall  main-&#13;
tain  accurate  minutes  for  all&#13;
SUFAC meetings."  These  are&#13;
the  minutes  that  The  Ranger&#13;
received.&#13;
continued page 8&#13;
Ranger budget frozen by SUFAC&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
Co-Editor-In-ehief&#13;
O&#13;
n Friday  March Ist, the&#13;
day  that student  work-&#13;
ers  receive  paychecks,&#13;
The Ranger  received  nOhf1c~-&#13;
tion   that   the   newspaper   s&#13;
budget  was frozen by the Seg-&#13;
regated  University  Fees Allo-&#13;
cation   Committee   (SUFAC).&#13;
The document  dated  Wednes-&#13;
day&#13;
February&#13;
27th,    was&#13;
placed   anonymously   in  The&#13;
Ranger's  'Out'  box.&#13;
The   Ranger's    staff  feels&#13;
that  the notification  of a bud-&#13;
get freeze came just in time to&#13;
prevent  this very  issue of the&#13;
paper   from   being   released&#13;
because of the articles dealing&#13;
with  SUFAC committee  bud-&#13;
getary decisions. for 2002-2003&#13;
campus&#13;
organizattons&#13;
a~d&#13;
articles&#13;
about&#13;
errors&#13;
In&#13;
SUFAC's conduct.    Notifica-&#13;
tion also came just in time to&#13;
block The Ranger's   employ-&#13;
ees from receiving  their pay-&#13;
checks for work already done.&#13;
The  letter  including   gram-&#13;
matical   and   typographical&#13;
errors follows ...&#13;
SUFAC  has  frozen   your&#13;
budget   for  the   year   2002.&#13;
Since the school semester has&#13;
begun  you have only written&#13;
two news paper  (sic) articles&#13;
and  many  they  are  of  poor&#13;
quality  (sic).   You have  not&#13;
kept  students   informed   on&#13;
(sic) important  issues such as&#13;
Student   Government    Elec-&#13;
tions.  You have not generat-&#13;
ed interest&#13;
in&#13;
campus  events&#13;
and  programs  besides  a BSU&#13;
Calender   (sic).    The  paper&#13;
does not give a good example&#13;
of what  the  university  is all&#13;
about.   There are other  cam-&#13;
puses with similar size (sic) to&#13;
our  campus  and  their  paper&#13;
(sic) is more professional  that&#13;
(sic) The Ranger.  Your consti-&#13;
tution  needs  to be revamped&#13;
as soon as possible in order to&#13;
give a fair chance  for all the&#13;
students  that (sic) want  to be&#13;
active  with~   your  org~niz~-&#13;
tion.  There&#13;
IS&#13;
lack of diversi-&#13;
ty within  your  organization,&#13;
and  we recommend  that you&#13;
work   on  your   recruitment&#13;
and retention  (sic). Many stu-&#13;
dents   have   complaint   (sic)&#13;
about  the lack of quality  and&#13;
information."&#13;
The  document   only  gives&#13;
SUFAC  as   its   author    but&#13;
neglects  to list the committee&#13;
member   names   and   signa--&#13;
tures.&#13;
Which   committee&#13;
members  agreed  to the freeze&#13;
of The Ranger's  funding,  doc-&#13;
umentation   giving  proof  of&#13;
authority  to make  such  deci-&#13;
sions,    and   documentation&#13;
supporting    any  precedence&#13;
for such actions were all lack-&#13;
ing.&#13;
PSGA  Advisor   Steve&#13;
McLaughlin&#13;
acknowledged&#13;
that he was aware  of a docu-&#13;
ment being sent to freeze The&#13;
Ranger's   funding,   but   said&#13;
that  he  did  know  about  the&#13;
memo's  content.&#13;
==&#13;
'-.',,","!V·C,,"'&#13;
K"-'&#13;
,"&lt;0,0"''''=&#13;
THE!! Fi~NGE!!R March8·29,_&#13;
SUFAC Completes the Budgets for 2002·2003&#13;
It&#13;
is interesting to note that&#13;
each  member   of  SUFAC&#13;
belongs  to another  club as&#13;
well. Each member is also a&#13;
member  of  PSGA. SUFAC&#13;
Chair Azeza Hammad is also&#13;
a member of Latinos Unidos&#13;
and the International  Club:&#13;
Along with being the PSGA&#13;
President,  and a member of&#13;
SUFAC  Joe  Rucker  also&#13;
belongs to the Black Student&#13;
Union. There is no law forcing&#13;
the members  of SUFAC to&#13;
excuse themselves when the&#13;
budgets of the other clubs that&#13;
they belong to are being voted&#13;
upon. When asked&#13;
if&#13;
anyone&#13;
was going to excuse them self&#13;
from the PSGA budget voting&#13;
Joe Rucker explained that the&#13;
Senate had already passed the&#13;
new proposed budget and all&#13;
the voting members of SUFAC&#13;
are also members  of PSGA&#13;
and&#13;
"If&#13;
we didn't vote how&#13;
would it get passed?"&#13;
ley's  budget  making  the&#13;
amount  of student  dollars&#13;
requested by PSGA $49,500.&#13;
With  the  reductions  made&#13;
from   Mandley's    budget&#13;
PSGA's budget  is reduced&#13;
from $84,300 in the 2002-2003&#13;
year to $49,500for the upcom-&#13;
ing year.&#13;
Rucker  felt that  PSGA&#13;
"...had  reached  a comfort&#13;
level and to request the same&#13;
amount as last year would be&#13;
unjustified and inconsiderate&#13;
to the students of Parkside."&#13;
SUFAC voted to allocate the&#13;
full  amount  of $49,500 to&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
The reductions in the bud-&#13;
gets of WIPZ, and The Ranger&#13;
were decisions made by the&#13;
members of SUFAC. WIPZ's&#13;
proposed budget was $52,000&#13;
and they received  $33,000.&#13;
The Ranger proposed $62,139&#13;
and received $20,000. These&#13;
are the totals after the com-&#13;
pleted appeal process.&#13;
of SUFAC vote and majority&#13;
wins.&#13;
If&#13;
the club thinks that&#13;
the  budget  it  receives  is&#13;
unworkable  SUFAC will lis-&#13;
ten to an appeal.&#13;
Generally a club's budget&#13;
will increase from year to year&#13;
as the club grows. There are&#13;
instances where a club's bud-&#13;
get will decrease, though it is&#13;
Infrequent.&#13;
In&#13;
the past eight&#13;
years  eighty-nine  budgets&#13;
have been approved, and only&#13;
nineteen of the budgets were&#13;
decreased from the previous&#13;
year. For the 2002-2003school&#13;
year the only budgets  that&#13;
were  decreased  are PSGA,&#13;
WIPZ, and The Ranger.&#13;
After receiving  a budget&#13;
increase  of $46,300 for the&#13;
2001-2002 year, Corey Mand-&#13;
ley  proposed   that  PSGA&#13;
receive an additional increase&#13;
of $9,100 for the 2002-2003&#13;
year. Joe Rucker, PSGA Presi-&#13;
dent deleted $43,900from the&#13;
$93,400 requested  in Mand-&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
'McLaughlin,   the committee&#13;
----~---------'&#13;
consists of seven members.&#13;
Azeza Hammad is the Chair&#13;
while Steve McLaughlin Dean&#13;
of  Students   and  Dexter&#13;
Yarbrough Director of Univer-&#13;
sity Police and Safety are the&#13;
advisors, Tarajee&#13;
Arnin,&#13;
Joe&#13;
Rucker, Danni  Moore  and&#13;
Adam Deford are all current&#13;
members.  Corey  Mandley&#13;
was a member of SUFAC last&#13;
semester, but is no longer a&#13;
student at UW-Parkside. This&#13;
semester the committee is&#13;
running with only five mem-&#13;
bers, as two lost members&#13;
have not been replaced.&#13;
The members  of SUFAC&#13;
meet with each club to hear&#13;
the club's proposed budget.&#13;
Generally the clubs are enter-&#13;
ing  a  maximum  budget.&#13;
SUFACdecides the amount of&#13;
money the club needs to run&#13;
smoothly and have a success-&#13;
ful year. After proposing  a&#13;
budget number the members&#13;
Co-EdRor~n-Chief&#13;
U&#13;
w-parkside's  Segregat-&#13;
ed  University   Fees&#13;
Allocations  Commit-&#13;
tee(SUFAC) has finished the&#13;
budgets for the student clubs&#13;
around the university. Every&#13;
student enrolled at UW-Park-&#13;
side pays a segregated fee as a&#13;
part of tuition.&#13;
It&#13;
is SUFAC's&#13;
job to distribute the money&#13;
collected from the students to&#13;
the  clubs  and  committees&#13;
around UW-Parkside. The fee&#13;
that each student pays goes&#13;
towards  such things as the&#13;
printing of The Ranger news-&#13;
paper, or the hiring of guest&#13;
speakers for fund-raisers. The&#13;
University of Wisconsin Park-&#13;
side's radio station is also run&#13;
on the money generated from&#13;
the segregated fees.&#13;
According    to    Steve&#13;
Student organization budget trends from 1996 - 2003&#13;
1.P1C&#13;
540,000&#13;
535.000&#13;
35,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$25.000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
19116&#13;
$15.000&#13;
$10,000&#13;
$5,000&#13;
i&#13;
4,000&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
so&#13;
, 996&#13;
1997&#13;
1996    1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
S90,OOOr&#13;
,&#13;
590,000.--&#13;
---,&#13;
580,0001----------_------1&#13;
sao.coo&#13;
1------------------1&#13;
$70,000&#13;
t---~-------------I&#13;
$70,000&#13;
560,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
$50.000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
30,000   30,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
26,562&#13;
24,500&#13;
20,000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
\999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
..&#13;
""&#13;
$90,000&#13;
580,000&#13;
570,000&#13;
560,000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$.40,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
19,495&#13;
14,316&#13;
$10000&#13;
~o"&#13;
.~;.:it&#13;
61&#13;
0&#13;
1,2'39&#13;
~&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
• Queers&#13;
&amp;&#13;
iWes&#13;
$90,000&#13;
580,000&#13;
$70,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
$50,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
$30,000&#13;
520,000&#13;
$10,000&#13;
~&#13;
5~&#13;
E;&#13;
7&#13;
m&#13;
7[i&#13;
4,000&#13;
0&#13;
mm&#13;
2~&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
lS97&#13;
1998&#13;
1995&#13;
2000&#13;
ZOOl&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
a Womyn's Center&#13;
$90,000&#13;
r----------------.&#13;
$80,000&#13;
570,000&#13;
$60,000&#13;
550,000&#13;
$40,000&#13;
J----~~-----~-----~&#13;
530,000&#13;
t------~--~---------I&#13;
$20,000&#13;
1-----&#13;
9,200   10,831    10,800   11,286   11,286&#13;
9,550&#13;
9,250&#13;
9,350&#13;
$10,000&#13;
so&#13;
1996&#13;
1997&#13;
1998&#13;
1999&#13;
2000&#13;
2001&#13;
2002&#13;
2003&#13;
</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="84738">
                <text>The Ranger , Volume 32, issue 16, March 8, 2002</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="84739">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="84740">
                <text>3/8/2002</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="84743">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="84744">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="84745">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Text</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>programming</name>
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        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
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        <name>spring break</name>
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