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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Senate questions conflict of interest on SUFAC</text>
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              <text>&#13;
•&#13;
November5,  1987&#13;
Unlvers~  OfWlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol.&#13;
1.,&#13;
No. 10&#13;
senate&#13;
questions  conflict&#13;
of&#13;
interest&#13;
on&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
by&#13;
AmYH. Ritter&#13;
News EdItor&#13;
p:oposalby PSGA&#13;
sena-&#13;
Masterson to restrict&#13;
.  p on the Segregat-&#13;
verslty Fee Allocation&#13;
ttee&#13;
(SUFACI   trig.&#13;
fierY debate  Friday&#13;
the Parkslde  Student&#13;
ent&#13;
Association&#13;
JIpIe;...n&#13;
presented a res-&#13;
thatsaid since SUF AC&#13;
bers&#13;
allocate   student&#13;
y.&#13;
which Includes&#13;
sala-&#13;
_  of&#13;
students&#13;
In  some&#13;
pus&#13;
organizations.  that&#13;
tents&#13;
of these  salaries&#13;
sitonthe committee.&#13;
1lle&#13;
resolutionwlJl be voted&#13;
In&#13;
two&#13;
Iveeks.&#13;
.&#13;
!I\e&#13;
sourceof the conflict Is&#13;
funding,'~&#13;
the account&#13;
providessaIar1es.for sev-&#13;
student  organization,&#13;
jlalillons.&#13;
"Ibis&#13;
Is&#13;
to&#13;
prevent a can-&#13;
lilt&#13;
of&#13;
interest," Masterson&#13;
W&#13;
the Senate. "It's  not  a&#13;
attack against Jenny&#13;
Carr,&#13;
just re-elected to her&#13;
~C&#13;
seat&#13;
In the Oct. 21.22&#13;
, Is the' committee's&#13;
dseniormember. She Is&#13;
edltorof the Ranger, and&#13;
paid&#13;
with&#13;
128&#13;
funds.&#13;
"My&#13;
constituents   were&#13;
d,"  Masterson   said,&#13;
theylearned that&#13;
rectpt.&#13;
ofthese salaries  sat  on&#13;
committeethat  decided&#13;
Ia1arles.&#13;
ever, Scott&#13;
Peterson,&#13;
~C&#13;
chairand PSGA vice-&#13;
dent·elect,   disagreed&#13;
1&#13;
Masterson'sarguments.&#13;
am adamantiy opposed&#13;
J.J.&#13;
Masterson&#13;
i&#13;
to&#13;
this resolution."  Peterson&#13;
firmly  told the Senate;  "You&#13;
have  to stop and  think  about&#13;
the consequences  of this."&#13;
Six  of  the  eight  SUF AC&#13;
seats,   Peterson    explained,&#13;
are  held by PSGA members.&#13;
Four  PSGA  members:   presi-&#13;
dent,  vice  president,   presi-&#13;
dent  pro-tempore   and  assist.&#13;
ant   president    pro-tempore,&#13;
are  paid  with  128 funds.  So&#13;
those  four would be excluded&#13;
from the committee.&#13;
Senators   who  hold   paid&#13;
positions  In other  clubs,  such&#13;
as Parkslde   Activities  Board&#13;
(PAB) Dr Parkslde  Adult&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent  Alliance  (P ASAI would&#13;
also be refused  SUF AC seats ..&#13;
"You  would  be cutting  the&#13;
Senate's  throat,"   said  Peter-&#13;
son.&#13;
photo by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
~prOblenl8?&#13;
Dawn  Malland  didn't  have  to&#13;
hei&#13;
Iolln9 her parking space  on a recent rainy day&#13;
'tlot-fQr&#13;
:r:::.&#13;
~~a Marie ,MoriShita, ~as  W~!lingto hold&#13;
He added  that  the  resolu,&#13;
tion Is clearly  discriminatory&#13;
"AlSo, checks and balance~&#13;
against  What Masterson  calls&#13;
·a conflict of Interest  are butit&#13;
Into the system,"  he said.&#13;
SUF AC Is  constrained   by&#13;
the  Senate,  by  the  (PSGA)&#13;
coneututron,«  Peterson said.&#13;
He&#13;
.began&#13;
clUng examples&#13;
of SUF AC members  Who held&#13;
other  positions  funded by&#13;
128&#13;
money  whose  performances&#13;
were  not affected  by a con-&#13;
flict of Interest.&#13;
"Andy  Buchanan  was  the&#13;
best chair  SUF AC ever had,"&#13;
said    Peterson.&#13;
"If&#13;
this&#13;
amendment   had  been  In&#13;
ef-&#13;
'fect,  he  wouldn't  have  been&#13;
able to-serve."&#13;
Buchanan   served  as&#13;
SUF AC chair&#13;
durtng&#13;
the 1986.&#13;
87 school year  while stmulta-&#13;
neously  holding  the  position&#13;
of Ranger  Business  Manager.&#13;
He held the latter  position for&#13;
six years.  Buchanan  had also&#13;
served   on  SUFAC&#13;
durtng&#13;
1983·84 and  1985·86 while  a&#13;
PSGA senator.&#13;
Peterson   pointed  out  that&#13;
the   Ranger&#13;
budget&#13;
was&#13;
$19,500&#13;
durtng&#13;
1986-87,and reo&#13;
mains  at $19,500. during  1987-&#13;
88.&#13;
fJ-1&#13;
library doors are reopened&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Friday'S&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
meeting featured  discussion&#13;
on the' 0·1  library  doors,  a&#13;
sister  relationship   with&#13;
uw-&#13;
Milwaukee,   new  guidelines&#13;
tor  appointing   sllidents   to&#13;
committees,  and opposition to&#13;
the annexation  of Parkside  by&#13;
the city of Kenosha.&#13;
f&gt;.&#13;
sit-In was held Oct. 19-20&#13;
to protest  the  closing  of the&#13;
D-l doors which allow access&#13;
to the IIbrllry from the coffee&#13;
shop. After that, the Academ-&#13;
ic Resource  Center&#13;
offered&#13;
to&#13;
contribute  services,  and Mon·&#13;
day  the  doors  were  open  8&#13;
am.  to2p.m.&#13;
."It's  a good deal,"  Alex&#13;
Pettit,  PSGA  president,   told&#13;
the   Senate.   "I'm   pleased&#13;
about&#13;
It.&#13;
You  should   be&#13;
pleased about&#13;
It&#13;
too."&#13;
Whether the PSGA·led sit-in&#13;
or  the  Academic  Resource&#13;
·Center were the cause of the&#13;
·action  Is of no concern,  said&#13;
Pettit.&#13;
"It&#13;
doesn't  matter  who gets&#13;
credlt--just  that the doors are&#13;
'"&#13;
open.&#13;
_&#13;
Pettit's   request  for  ~ mo-&#13;
lion  to form  a  sisler-school&#13;
relationship  with UW-MiIwau·&#13;
kee  was  postponed.  Senator&#13;
Dan&#13;
Vogl  said  he  had&#13;
jUS~&#13;
come  acros,$ some  inf~rma&#13;
SCott Peterson&#13;
"So where's  the conflict  of&#13;
Interest?"   Peterson&#13;
demand.&#13;
ed.&#13;
.&#13;
"Andy    abstained&#13;
when&#13;
Ranger  votes  come  up,"  he&#13;
explatned.  "They  (committee&#13;
members)   should  abstain  on&#13;
their own budgets.&#13;
"But&#13;
If&#13;
you're  keeping&#13;
peo-&#13;
tion that he Intends to investi-&#13;
gate  before   discussing   the&#13;
issue.  He would not  reveal&#13;
what that information  Is.&#13;
A  resolution   was  passed&#13;
outlining appointments  of stu-&#13;
dents  to university  and  fac-&#13;
ulty 'commlttees  by the presi-&#13;
dent. Students&#13;
wlJl&#13;
now be&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed on the basis of&#13;
expert-&#13;
ence&#13;
in&#13;
a tiered  system  of&#13;
representation.&#13;
The tiered  system  consists&#13;
of three levels. The first level&#13;
appolnfmenjs&#13;
wlll  be  fresh-&#13;
men or some new senators.&#13;
Level 1 faculty committees&#13;
are  Academic  Actions, Aca-&#13;
demic Planning  and Program&#13;
Review,  Academic   policies,&#13;
Admission,  Records   "  Stu-&#13;
dent   Information,    Campus&#13;
Environment  and COurse and&#13;
Curriculum.   L.evel 1 untver-&#13;
pIe off the committee  for this&#13;
reason,&#13;
you  might&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
have eight&#13;
at-large&#13;
seats."&#13;
Members  of the U.S. 'Con.&#13;
gress  determine   their  own&#13;
salaries  and  determine   how&#13;
much  money  each  of  their&#13;
own districts  receive,  Peter-&#13;
son reminded   his audience.&#13;
Senator   Kevin  ZIrkelbach&#13;
agreed with Peterson.&#13;
"We  have   a  system   of&#13;
check and balances," he said.&#13;
"If&#13;
there's  a&#13;
hint&#13;
of some-&#13;
thing  questionable,   we don't&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
pass It.&#13;
"There  lire&#13;
SO&#13;
few people&#13;
Involved  (In campus  organi-&#13;
zations).  You would be limit-&#13;
Ing those few people so much&#13;
more  (by passing  this&#13;
resolu-&#13;
tion).&#13;
to&#13;
"we're&#13;
U11hking&#13;
about our.&#13;
selves,"  Masterson  objected.&#13;
"We should be thinking about&#13;
the student body."&#13;
PSGA president&#13;
Alex&#13;
Pettit&#13;
threatened  to veto the&#13;
reeolu-&#13;
tlon&#13;
if&#13;
passed  by the Senate,&#13;
and  suggested   the  vote  be&#13;
postponed  for two weeks.  A&#13;
veto  override  would  require&#13;
two-thtrds of the Senate vote.&#13;
The Senate foliowed Pettit's&#13;
advice  and&#13;
will&#13;
vote on the&#13;
matter  In two weeks.&#13;
slty committees  are  Teacher&#13;
Excellence,  University&#13;
Budg-&#13;
et  and  Student  Disciplinary&#13;
Panel.&#13;
Second  level  appointments&#13;
are considered&#13;
to&#13;
be more ex-&#13;
perienced   than  level  1 ap-&#13;
pointees,  but  not&#13;
as&#13;
experi-&#13;
enced  as  those  at  level  3.&#13;
Level  2 faculty  committees&#13;
are  Athletic  Board,  Awards&#13;
and   Ceremonies,   Teaching&#13;
and  Faculty  Senate.  Univer-&#13;
sity committees  are Academ-&#13;
Ic  Calendar,    All  Campus&#13;
Events,  MInority Affairs, Sex-&#13;
ual&#13;
Harassment.  and  Park-&#13;
side Union Advisory Board.&#13;
"Students   would  be  ap-&#13;
pointed  to level three  on the&#13;
basis  of  previous  record  of&#13;
serving  on committees  with&#13;
a&#13;
PSGA see page 2&#13;
21llun1dey,  NlNM.1bel 5, '987 R8ngef&#13;
our view&#13;
Cooperation solves problem,&#13;
creates good communication&#13;
J...t _&#13;
you had&#13;
yauT&#13;
route to the library&#13;
llgured&#13;
out&#13;
to&#13;
avoid&#13;
the&#13;
locked doors of the 0·1 level. they were re-&#13;
_ned&#13;
ne  -..&#13;
_roe  opened&#13;
OIl&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
26&#13;
and&#13;
..uJ&#13;
lUly _&#13;
Monday&#13;
tIu'ouch&#13;
Frtd&amp;y&#13;
from&#13;
8&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
pm,  thanka to th  Academic Reaouree center&#13;
(ARCl&#13;
and&#13;
Ita a~t&#13;
employ ....&#13;
ne&#13;
doo....&#13;
re&#13;
cIoeed&#13;
In the&#13;
fIret&#13;
place _   to a&#13;
etafftng&#13;
ahon&amp;ae.IM  reault of bUdget cuta. Now.&#13;
Sandy&#13;
Bunnelll-&#13;
Ier&#13;
and&#13;
r&#13;
atUdent emplo~a   at&#13;
ARC&#13;
are&#13;
accepting&#13;
more&#13;
reepollalbillU   to allow&#13;
lheae&#13;
doo..&#13;
to&#13;
remain  ~.&#13;
Aa&#13;
_Ie,&#13;
w  thank them for puttln&amp;&#13;
torlh&#13;
the extra effort&#13;
to&#13;
TV....&#13;
_~&#13;
'The&#13;
Urn ..&#13;
at   tlIch the&#13;
doo"  are ~    _re&#13;
ln1Iuen~&#13;
by  hetpful ob  rvallon by&#13;
lhOee&#13;
_Ie&#13;
who parUclpat·&#13;
ed In&#13;
the&#13;
all·1na two weeka ago. According to Parkslde&#13;
tudent&#13;
mment  A'_IIUOII   PresIdent  Alex PetUt,&#13;
who&#13;
patUclpant  In the all·w.&#13;
the&#13;
doors&#13;
were&#13;
used&#13;
m   frequenUy&#13;
between&#13;
8&#13;
a.m&#13;
and&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. It's&#13;
good&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
that&#13;
tile&#13;
Ubrary&#13;
tool&lt;&#13;
thJa&#13;
obaervallon  Into account when&#13;
they&#13;
tabllahe&lt;l&#13;
the&#13;
new&#13;
hOUrs&#13;
for the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doors.&#13;
b~ thank.you&#13;
aI80 ..-&#13;
to the&#13;
Jrtudenltt&#13;
who parUcI·&#13;
pated In&#13;
tile&#13;
a1t·w&#13;
and&#13;
kept the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doo&#13;
rs&#13;
open&#13;
two&#13;
ka&#13;
aao '"'"&#13;
"campua  leade.....&#13;
as&#13;
Chancellor SheUa&#13;
JtapIan&#13;
called them. obvloualy helped make a dlfterence&#13;
.... ~&#13;
atudenta,&#13;
10&#13;
enjoy your next stroU through the&#13;
0·1&#13;
level doors •&#13;
.-.I ..&#13;
mem&#13;
r&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
was the efforts of students. faculty&#13;
_   admlnlotrallon.&#13;
worltJng&#13;
together  and communlcat·&#13;
....  that&#13;
~ned&#13;
IMm for you.&#13;
lQ&#13;
AND If&#13;
1l£&#13;
SENATE REFUSES&#13;
"10&#13;
CONfiRM  JUDGE  CINSBURU.&#13;
I'Ll.JUST NOMINATElVEMfJ~1:&#13;
AACH'CONSERVAT&#13;
,&#13;
TWEN71ES&#13;
L::..-__&#13;
Wl&#13;
1&#13;
Reference librarian angered by letter from alum&#13;
TO&#13;
no:&#13;
1I:DrIO&amp;:&#13;
In&#13;
reepect to the Ietier Wl'It.&#13;
len&#13;
by&#13;
PIIII&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
I&#13;
feel com.&#13;
peUed to reply to ..&#13;
vera!&#13;
of&#13;
bla&#13;
atatementa.  He ltated that&#13;
be&#13;
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aw&#13;
two&#13;
reference&#13;
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and&#13;
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people&#13;
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don't&#13;
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accom~&#13;
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librarian.  Ubrarlana&#13;
do&#13;
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or&#13;
about&#13;
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during&#13;
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we&#13;
gtve,&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
which&#13;
are&#13;
de.&#13;
aIped&#13;
to&#13;
gtve&#13;
you  better&#13;
.. rvlee.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
And durtna&#13;
Julio&#13;
In&#13;
the ac.&#13;
llon at the ref......,.   _.&#13;
we&#13;
work  on collection  develop-&#13;
ment.  Books do not just  ap-&#13;
pear on the shelves  -  some·&#13;
one&#13;
has&#13;
to decide  to order&#13;
them.  which  means  reading&#13;
hundreds of book reviews and&#13;
publishers'  nOUcesand decid.&#13;
Ing  which  books&#13;
can&#13;
best&#13;
meet  Parkside's  needs.  We&#13;
also  read  professional  jour.&#13;
nals  willie  at  the  deal&lt;, or&#13;
Wl'Ite lectures  for the many&#13;
classes  we&#13;
are&#13;
requested  to&#13;
leach.&#13;
Yes.&#13;
the&#13;
card&#13;
catalogs were&#13;
moved&#13;
to&#13;
make room for the&#13;
new online  catalog  terminals.&#13;
And since they had&#13;
to&#13;
be fit&#13;
into&#13;
a much smaller  space,&#13;
we had  to rearrange   them.&#13;
The indexes were also moved&#13;
for the same reason. Current&#13;
periodicals  were  moved  up-&#13;
stairs&#13;
10&#13;
make&#13;
1t&#13;
eaaier for&#13;
patrons  who uoed to have to&#13;
look&#13;
on&#13;
both&#13;
levels for period.&#13;
lcals.&#13;
We.&#13;
too.&#13;
hope we don·t&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
move anything&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
future&#13;
again.&#13;
but&#13;
all&#13;
of the&#13;
moves&#13;
th1a&#13;
year  were logical&#13;
and necessary.&#13;
As for the&#13;
0·1&#13;
door.&#13;
I&#13;
have&#13;
never  worked&#13;
In&#13;
or  vlstted&#13;
any  other  Ubrary  that  had&#13;
more  than  one  entrance.&#13;
ThInk&#13;
about&#13;
fl.&#13;
does Kenosha&#13;
or Racine or MIlwaukee Pub-&#13;
lic.   UW·Mllwaukee.&#13;
UW.&#13;
MadJson or any other Ubrary&#13;
that  you  know  have  more&#13;
than&#13;
one entrance?  Parkside&#13;
was definitely unusual&#13;
In&#13;
hav.&#13;
Ing two entrances  for so long.&#13;
The  L/LC  staff  has  also&#13;
been hurt  by bUdget cuts  _&#13;
we  have  lost  3~  poSitions,&#13;
which is 140 hours per week&#13;
of work  that  the  remaining&#13;
staff&#13;
has&#13;
had to absorb,  and&#13;
all&#13;
of us have taken on more&#13;
work,  from  the  staff  who&#13;
order  the books and&#13;
serials,&#13;
catalog,  process.  shelve  and&#13;
circulate  them. to the library&#13;
administrators  -  we are all&#13;
working very hard  to conlin.&#13;
ue to provide qUality service.&#13;
BI&#13;
Nletaen&#13;
Coordtoator    of   Reference&#13;
Servl"""  (L/LCl&#13;
Tiered system&#13;
proposed&#13;
PSGA from paga I&#13;
good   record   of  altelldlll&#13;
meetings  and&#13;
observed  _&#13;
science of forethought&#13;
tOWIIlII&#13;
voting:  In other wordll....&#13;
erans."  said a sheet&#13;
IWIdIII&#13;
out during discussion.&#13;
Level&#13;
3&#13;
faculty com.......&#13;
are  Graduate  Studies, ..&#13;
mation  Resources,  :;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FIne&#13;
Arts&#13;
and&#13;
F&#13;
Seminar.  Level&#13;
3 un!&#13;
committees   are&#13;
F~&#13;
Seminar.   Parking   A......&#13;
and Affirmative Action.&#13;
A re80luUon In oppoaltlollil&#13;
the  annexaUon  of&#13;
P""-&#13;
was   also   passed&#13;
dUrIII&#13;
Frlday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Jan&#13;
Kratochvil,  who ..&#13;
duced the resolution.&#13;
said"&#13;
negaUves  Involved&#13;
w1~.~&#13;
nexaUon  would be a ~&#13;
tuition  Increase  an&#13;
lUlJlOClI'&#13;
sary shift In services.&#13;
30lIIIII&#13;
provides   adequate  .. ~&#13;
now.  he  said.  and&#13;
K_&#13;
would need new dump ~&#13;
sewer tines. and ano~~&#13;
station   to  serve  ~&#13;
should  It be annexed&#13;
tAl ..&#13;
city.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by&#13;
students&#13;
of&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely&#13;
responsible&#13;
for&#13;
,ts&#13;
ed1l()(lli&#13;
I:&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
cootent.&#13;
n ~&#13;
PtJbIisIled&#13;
every&#13;
Thursday&#13;
during&#13;
the&#13;
academic&#13;
year&#13;
except _&#13;
breaks&#13;
and&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
Len ....&#13;
to the&#13;
editor&#13;
witI&#13;
be&#13;
accepted&#13;
only ~&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double-spaced&#13;
and&#13;
350&#13;
words or ......&#13;
letters  must&#13;
be&#13;
signed.&#13;
with&#13;
a t8tephone  number&#13;
inctuded&#13;
for verification&#13;
purposes.&#13;
Names WlM&#13;
be&#13;
held&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Ranoer reserves the right to&#13;
edille1ter.;&#13;
and refuse those&#13;
whicf1&#13;
are false and/or de· .,.--,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
=&#13;
lor&#13;
a1lleder,.  and _&#13;
ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m.&#13;
lor&#13;
publication&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
aOdressed to: Ranger. UW-Parl&lt;side. Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
nosha&#13;
W153141.  Telephone 414/553.2287  (Editorial) or 414/553-2295&#13;
(AdvertiS-&#13;
L,,_--::&#13;
lng).&#13;
-&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 10, November 5, 1987</text>
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                <text>1987-11-05</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78988">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Hargrove contract not renewed</text>
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              <text>&#13;
UniverSity of WisconSin-Parks Ide&#13;
photo  by Dave McEvoy&#13;
FlIIhmanDickieCoshun is assisted  by Doug Wlelgat, as-&#13;
!.!!:!nt&#13;
director&#13;
01&#13;
campus police  Iroman  elevator shalt.&#13;
-.un  and twelve other stude~ts  were trapped  in the&#13;
.~    Inthe library between floors lor&#13;
a&#13;
hall hour Tues-&#13;
-JlVening.&#13;
.&#13;
NewSUFAC chair&#13;
elected&#13;
by&#13;
Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~te&#13;
controversy  sur-&#13;
..    g&#13;
her Involvement In&#13;
'110&#13;
committee,Jenny  Carr,&#13;
~  also&#13;
holdsthe position of&#13;
lbair&#13;
r Editor, was elected&#13;
ltIattyO/&#13;
the Segregated Uni-&#13;
IlIItee&#13;
Fees Allocation Com.&#13;
lIIilI'.11(SUF&#13;
AC) Wednesday.&#13;
Carr'&#13;
~   reluted accusations of&#13;
lraani&#13;
Ofinterest with four&#13;
llId.&#13;
:ts.&#13;
First of all, she&#13;
IllIlIe ~&#13;
bUdget decisions&#13;
llIIjo&#13;
next&#13;
year will affect&#13;
IlIIiIl&#13;
Sh&#13;
year's&#13;
budgets,&#13;
til.&#13;
SoC:&#13;
n&#13;
:"  have graduat.&#13;
.... 7.&#13;
y, she said  she&#13;
~elds&#13;
the chair when&#13;
II,&#13;
llIdag tta&#13;
he&#13;
Ranger&#13;
budg-&#13;
!II&#13;
R•• :&#13;
s&#13;
Ins from voting&#13;
";;;"'l!er  iSsues. Thirdly,&#13;
to&#13;
:tte&#13;
e&#13;
meetings  are&#13;
lrtlcon\&#13;
public and anyone&#13;
~A ~to attend. Finally,&#13;
enate aPProves all&#13;
I!lSde&#13;
by SUFAC.&#13;
~ely   that anything&#13;
done&#13;
to&#13;
undermine&#13;
Hargrove contract not renewed&#13;
by Steven R. Picazo&#13;
.Jesse  Hargrove  was&#13;
in.&#13;
formed by mall (Oct&#13;
30)&#13;
that&#13;
his contact was not going&#13;
to&#13;
be renewed after this year.&#13;
This news came as a surprise&#13;
to&#13;
him especially since he had&#13;
just&#13;
reentry&#13;
been reassigned&#13;
from Parkside's Educational&#13;
OPPOrtunity  Center  (EOC) ,&#13;
where  he  was  director,&#13;
to&#13;
what he believed was a high-&#13;
er position In administration,&#13;
as a special assistant to the&#13;
Vice Chancellor and&#13;
a&#13;
Span-&#13;
ish instructor.&#13;
Under Parkside's  academic&#13;
staff rules, all its employees&#13;
are given one year's notice-of&#13;
termination.  His position on&#13;
campus&#13;
will&#13;
end October,&#13;
1988.&#13;
Hargrove   was  originally&#13;
hired as the director of the&#13;
EOC&#13;
1n·1985.&#13;
It&#13;
is a federally&#13;
funded  program,   which  Is&#13;
currently&#13;
in&#13;
the process  of&#13;
being rewritten  and&#13;
submit-&#13;
ted  for&#13;
its&#13;
next  three-year&#13;
funded  cycle. Hargrove  has&#13;
been active in recruiting low-&#13;
income&#13;
and&#13;
minority&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
When the new position was&#13;
outlined for him In&#13;
Septem-&#13;
ber,&#13;
he saw it as a move in a&#13;
positive direction and&#13;
a&#13;
way&#13;
for him to better  serve  the&#13;
campus&#13;
in&#13;
a wider capacity.&#13;
G. Gary  Grace,  assistant&#13;
chancellor for student affairs,&#13;
described the new position as&#13;
being a vehicle which could&#13;
break Hargrove out of the rut&#13;
of only working with minority&#13;
programs.&#13;
"The new position was de-&#13;
signed to be a combination of&#13;
teaching  duties&#13;
and&#13;
some&#13;
general  staff&#13;
duties."&#13;
Grace&#13;
said.&#13;
"It&#13;
was not a&#13;
promo-&#13;
tion; it was a lateral move of&#13;
ances.&#13;
"The committee  is so mis-&#13;
understood  by the campus,"&#13;
Carr said. "Peopie&#13;
think&#13;
the&#13;
committee  makes  decisions,&#13;
when In fact, all Its decisions&#13;
are approved by the Senate."&#13;
Carr said she pursued  the&#13;
SUFAC chair to repay a per-&#13;
sonal debt&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I&#13;
feel that the University&#13;
has&#13;
done&#13;
a&#13;
lot for me,"  she&#13;
said. "I'm  taking on&#13;
thl&#13;
it&#13;
,s rei&#13;
sponsiblllty,  although   s no&#13;
.a&#13;
pleasant  one,  because}&#13;
hope it wlll benefit students.&#13;
Carr said the job is difficult&#13;
when "people&#13;
1&#13;
know and reo&#13;
spect"&#13;
request  funds  that&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
cannot be approved.&#13;
"You  have  to say  no&#13;
to&#13;
the Integrity  of the budgeilng    everyone&#13;
In&#13;
one way or an-&#13;
process,"  said Carr, "least of   other,"  she  explained,  ~e-&#13;
all by me."&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
cause the committee  is. quite&#13;
She said Senate approva  0   limited on the f?oney It can&#13;
all SUFAC actions provides a  'dole out to.or,gamzations.&#13;
system  of checks  and, bal- , . , , , .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
,"&#13;
,&#13;
...&#13;
Jesse Hargrove&#13;
a&#13;
reassignment nature ...&#13;
Hargrove  felt he was&#13;
mis-&#13;
lead about the permanance  of&#13;
his new position.&#13;
"They&#13;
had&#13;
me&#13;
sold on the&#13;
move,&#13;
so&#13;
I&#13;
saw no&#13;
reason&#13;
not&#13;
to take it. But they got me&#13;
over there and a month later,&#13;
they  dropped&#13;
this&#13;
bomb on&#13;
me,&#13;
PI&#13;
Hargrove  told the Ke-&#13;
nosh News.&#13;
The  letter  of termination&#13;
came from Grace and&#13;
it&#13;
gave&#13;
it no reasons for Hargrove's&#13;
dismissal. Hargrove has&#13;
since&#13;
submitted  a formal  request&#13;
for the reasons of&#13;
his&#13;
termi-&#13;
nation.&#13;
Hargrove  went on&#13;
to corn-&#13;
ment that he saw&#13;
his&#13;
firing as&#13;
being&#13;
in&#13;
direct conflict with&#13;
OW&#13;
System  President  Ken-&#13;
neth Shaw's commitment&#13;
to&#13;
10creasing&#13;
mtnortty&#13;
faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
In&#13;
a Racine Journal Times&#13;
article  on Saturday,  Novem-&#13;
ber&#13;
7,&#13;
Shaw was asked&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
recent  dismissal  of&#13;
Park.&#13;
side's&#13;
only&#13;
black In the upper&#13;
admlnistration  ran 10 confllct&#13;
to&#13;
UW&#13;
commitment&#13;
to&#13;
retain-&#13;
Ing minorities.  He said  he&#13;
was not In a poslUon to tully&#13;
access the situation .&#13;
Shaw dld defend the chan-&#13;
cellor's right&#13;
to&#13;
"rigorously"&#13;
evaluate employees.&#13;
I'We&#13;
rigorously recruit.&#13;
we&#13;
evaluate people," Shaw said.&#13;
"The one&#13;
thing&#13;
we won't&#13;
do&#13;
Is&#13;
patronize&#13;
one group."&#13;
Grace feit that the issue of&#13;
Harirove's   termination  and&#13;
UW's  commitment&#13;
to&#13;
In.&#13;
crease  minority  faculty&#13;
are&#13;
two different topics.&#13;
"This  Institution  has  not&#13;
backed off on Its commitment&#13;
of  actively   searching   for&#13;
qUallfted minority faculty and&#13;
staff. We&#13;
are&#13;
stlll deeply In.&#13;
volved&#13;
In&#13;
this  effort  even&#13;
though we&#13;
felt&#13;
it&#13;
was neces-&#13;
sary&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
this particular&#13;
personnel change."&#13;
In&#13;
an interview with Racine&#13;
Journal    Times,   Corinne&#13;
Owens, Racine  president  of&#13;
the National  Associalon&#13;
tor&#13;
the Advancement  of Colored&#13;
People (NAACP) saw the ac-&#13;
tion&#13;
as "an&#13;
earthquake&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
minority community.  We had&#13;
so&#13;
much  confidence&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
work&#13;
he's&#13;
doing."&#13;
Thomas  Loftus,  State  As-&#13;
sembly  Speaker  and an ac-&#13;
quaintance   of  Hargrove's&#13;
through the Wisconsin&#13;
ASSOCi_&#13;
ation  of Equal  Opportuntty&#13;
Program  Personnel,  Bald it&#13;
Hargrove was let go because&#13;
of a lack  ot&#13;
runds,&#13;
it sWI&#13;
doesn't show very much&#13;
unt-&#13;
verslty commitment.&#13;
Loftus&#13;
has&#13;
offered his serv-&#13;
ices to lOOk&#13;
into&#13;
the&#13;
matter&#13;
11&#13;
asked. He said that Hargrove,&#13;
as of yet,&#13;
has&#13;
not asked him&#13;
to do so.&#13;
Hargrove  said  he will be&#13;
asking&#13;
for&#13;
a&#13;
reconsideration&#13;
on the decision  and.  or at&#13;
least, a&#13;
full&#13;
explanation&#13;
into&#13;
the rationale behind&#13;
his&#13;
being&#13;
let&#13;
go.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Jarvis road block&#13;
page 3&#13;
..&#13;
Campus radio station&#13;
page 5&#13;
Twins, twins, twins&#13;
pages 6,7&#13;
Basketball preview&#13;
page 12&#13;
_,....-L;.!   -------&#13;
2 Thursday, November&#13;
12,1987&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Newly elected V.P. and&#13;
Senate take office&#13;
by Kelly McKlsll1ck&#13;
....d&#13;
Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
Ne_EdIlors&#13;
In&#13;
ceremonial  fashion. vice&#13;
prell1denl Scott Peterson  and&#13;
nine&#13;
senators&#13;
took the oath of&#13;
office Friday at the Parkside&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Assocta-&#13;
lion (PSGA) meellng.&#13;
senators  Steve Picazo, Dan&#13;
Vogi, Stephanle Tatem,  Debl&#13;
FrItchow, Julie Wunrow, Jim&#13;
Cole,  Susan  Walborn,  Dan&#13;
Perrault  and Gary Heggeland&#13;
were  sworn  In.  (Heggeland&#13;
replaced  Tyson  Wilda  who&#13;
won the election but resigned&#13;
before entering offlce.)&#13;
Addressing the new Senate,&#13;
PSGA president  Alex Pettit&#13;
reported  that  to  meet  last&#13;
year"  deficit of&#13;
$2,1311,&#13;
budg·&#13;
eted  eecretary  wages  were&#13;
eut&#13;
by&#13;
1801.87&#13;
and the&#13;
prest-&#13;
dent'.&#13;
8&amp;lary&#13;
was reduced&#13;
by&#13;
n,lIII.1I&#13;
PelUI&#13;
abo&#13;
expressed hopes&#13;
of forming&#13;
a&#13;
sister&#13;
relation-&#13;
sIIIp with UW·MIIwaukee. He&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
earnJng&#13;
money&#13;
there as a&#13;
computer  consult-&#13;
ant.&#13;
The  8egreated  Unlverstty&#13;
Fees  Allocallon  Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) report&#13;
abo&#13;
brought&#13;
news of a solution to deficit&#13;
problems .&#13;
..After a number of months&#13;
of debate and discussion,  we&#13;
have  finally   resolved   the&#13;
$63,000&#13;
budget shortfall  from&#13;
1986-87."   said    Peterson,&#13;
SUFAC chair&#13;
througt;&#13;
Novem-&#13;
ber •.&#13;
In&#13;
a later interview,  Peter-&#13;
son said the money was taken&#13;
from   uncommitted&#13;
equity&#13;
funds and audited  from nor-&#13;
mal operations reserves.&#13;
SUFAC had considered tak-&#13;
ing&#13;
15 percent  from each or-&#13;
ganlzatlon's  operating  budg-&#13;
et  he said, but decided that&#13;
w~u1dbe too damaging.&#13;
"We  felt  this  way  would&#13;
hurt  people the least&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
current year,"  said Peterson.&#13;
The  uncommitted   equity&#13;
funds dipped into&#13;
will&#13;
not be&#13;
repaid. "There shouldn't be a&#13;
big build-up In that fund any-&#13;
way,"  he  said,  explaining&#13;
that  the slate  can and  does&#13;
often  take  those  types  of&#13;
funds away from the univer-&#13;
sity.&#13;
The reserve  funds will be&#13;
repaid next year,  Peterson.&#13;
ThIrty-six percent of each or-&#13;
ganIzaton's   reserves   were&#13;
taken.  8eg fees&#13;
will&#13;
have to&#13;
be raised to replenish&#13;
thlB.&#13;
Ghostbuster slated for&#13;
campus presentation&#13;
Have  you  ever  wondered&#13;
Jusl what really goes on when&#13;
someone sees a ghost? Have&#13;
you been curtous&#13;
to&#13;
learn the&#13;
eonnection  ESP  and  other&#13;
peychlc  abilities  have  w1th&#13;
slghllngs  of apparitions.  or&#13;
when someone&#13;
ls&#13;
involved&#13;
In&#13;
a  poltergeist   disturbance?&#13;
Are&#13;
you ever questioning the&#13;
way the movles portrsy  the&#13;
experiences  people have with&#13;
ghosts and ESP  or how the&#13;
researchers  and lnvestiators&#13;
are seen?  Ever. wonder  "who&#13;
ya gonna&#13;
caD"&#13;
If&#13;
thlB&#13;
happens&#13;
to you?&#13;
Parkslde  Actlvltles  Board&#13;
presents  "ESP. HAUNTINGS&#13;
AND&#13;
POLTERGEISTS,"&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
present  you w1th&#13;
answers  to  the  above  and&#13;
other   questions.   Real-life&#13;
"ghost-buster"&#13;
Lloyd   Auer-,&#13;
back&#13;
wtll&#13;
cover the way para-&#13;
psychology,   the   scientific&#13;
study of psychic phenomena,&#13;
looks at these and other expe-&#13;
riences. He&#13;
will&#13;
discuss what&#13;
parspsychologists&#13;
have&#13;
learned about the way we all&#13;
seem to be psychic, and&#13;
will&#13;
center&#13;
in&#13;
on encounters&#13;
peo-&#13;
ple have w1th happenings that&#13;
moat  people  associate  with&#13;
horror films: apparitions,  pol-&#13;
tergeists, and hauntlngs.&#13;
He&#13;
will&#13;
closely  examine&#13;
some of the theories parapsy-&#13;
chologists have put forward.&#13;
But moat of all, learn how a&#13;
parapsychologist  really inves-&#13;
tigates   such   cases   of&#13;
"ghostly"  occurrences,   and&#13;
how they help people not only&#13;
stop the exprlence  (In effect,&#13;
"bust the ghost"),&#13;
If&#13;
that  Is&#13;
what  Is asked  of them,  but&#13;
also  how  people  Can learn&#13;
from such experiences.&#13;
Auerbach  will speak  Tues-&#13;
day, November  17, at 8 p.m,&#13;
In  the  Union  CInema.  the&#13;
event&#13;
Is&#13;
FREE  and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
As  a  special  promotion,&#13;
PAB&#13;
will&#13;
present  the movle&#13;
"Ghostbusters"  on Monday.&#13;
November 16, at 7 p.m. and&#13;
9:30 p.m. In the CInema.&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kelty&#13;
Mct&lt;i&#13;
ct&lt;..&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur .. FealUfeSlEntertalnment   Editor&#13;
Terri&#13;
DeRosier&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Bernie  Doll&#13;
Asst.&#13;
EntOl18inment  Ed"or&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Student responds&#13;
to&#13;
Alum's views&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I  am  responding&#13;
to&#13;
Phil&#13;
Tohl's editorial in the October&#13;
29 issue.  I am&#13;
a-&#13;
sophomore&#13;
transfer student who uses the&#13;
library  a  lot.  I  have  often&#13;
used the services of the refer-&#13;
ence staff and the librarians&#13;
there have been great at help-&#13;
Ing me. Tohl's remark  about&#13;
them being there  doing noth-&#13;
ing hit me as extremely  inac-&#13;
curate.&#13;
The  librarians   there  have&#13;
taken  time  to  help  me  in&#13;
doing research  for my papers&#13;
as well as help me find infor-&#13;
mation  on  companies   with&#13;
which I have had interviews.&#13;
In either instance,  they spent&#13;
a LOT of time in helping me.&#13;
I  feel  their  assistance   has&#13;
been very valuable  and I feel&#13;
Tohl's derogatory  statements&#13;
against  them  are  unwar-&#13;
ranted.&#13;
I just&#13;
think&#13;
It's time ......&#13;
one  said  something GOOD&#13;
about the library. I'm&#13;
Ured,"&#13;
rel\dIng all these cynicalll1l-&#13;
cies in the paper. Rather&#13;
!bID&#13;
argue about somethlng!lupld&#13;
like   library   doors,&#13;
wIIJ&#13;
doesn't  anyone attack REAL&#13;
problems  that  really&#13;
aIIocI&#13;
us.  like  DECREASING...&#13;
dent  financial  aid and&#13;
IN·&#13;
CREASING TUITION?&#13;
carol&#13;
JIlIlIiI&#13;
Trani said in letters&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
flip&#13;
administrators   of 34&#13;
inde-&#13;
pendent  colleges and unlver·&#13;
sities, 16 vocational, technic!l&#13;
and adult educatlon &lt;listric..&#13;
and the UW System's&#13;
13&#13;
unl-&#13;
versities.&#13;
System V.P. to head trade committee&#13;
MADISON--Eugene&#13;
P.&#13;
Trani,&#13;
the  academic  affairs&#13;
vlce president  of the Univer-&#13;
sity of "wIsconsin System, has&#13;
been  appointed  to head  the&#13;
Education  Committee  of the&#13;
Wisconsin World Trade  Cen-&#13;
ter.&#13;
The center  was established&#13;
In June through the efforts of&#13;
a state task force and Charles&#13;
Mulcahy, a MIlwaukee attor-&#13;
ney who now serves  as the&#13;
center's president.&#13;
It&#13;
is head-&#13;
quartered&#13;
in&#13;
Milwaukee  and&#13;
operates  to  help  Wisconsin&#13;
businesses  succeed&#13;
in&#13;
interna-&#13;
tional trade.&#13;
In&#13;
his capacity  as chair  of&#13;
the center's education&#13;
com-&#13;
mittee,  Trani  has  called  on&#13;
all  of  the   state's   higher&#13;
education  institutions  for in-&#13;
formation  on services  they&#13;
provide or are able&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
to the business  community  in&#13;
the  area  of international   af-&#13;
fairs.&#13;
"We have  an  opportunity,&#13;
by&#13;
organizing  ourselves  and&#13;
working with this (trade  cen-&#13;
ter)  group,  to make  a state-&#13;
wide  academic  contribution&#13;
to&#13;
the  international   business&#13;
community   in  Wisconsin,"&#13;
RANGER&#13;
.&#13;
The   trade   center ...&#13;
planned  and established;::&#13;
funds  from  the city of ~&#13;
waukee,  Milwaukee&#13;
eoun&#13;
I&#13;
and the slate. Mulcahy&#13;
sald.,d&#13;
will&#13;
operate   on  fees,&#13;
"thus  ensure  that the ~&#13;
'ees ~&#13;
center,  provides  servi&#13;
uonaJ&#13;
value&#13;
to&#13;
interna&#13;
traders,"&#13;
Ra_ngeris written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by students of UW-Parkside.  who are solely responsible for its&#13;
e:~~&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content. It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday duling the academic year except over orea&#13;
days.&#13;
.'&#13;
~1eSS'~&#13;
~  letters  to the e~itor&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they are typed. double-spaced and&#13;
350&#13;
words&#13;
will&#13;
be'"&#13;
letters must be sIgned. with a telephone number included for verification purposes. Names&#13;
tletd upon fequest.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse those which are false and/or de- •...&#13;
:.,....,,0/,.,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
..&#13;
Oead~ne for all letters. and classified ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
d'sbc~&#13;
ThurSday.&#13;
-&#13;
~~.&#13;
All correspondence  should be addressed 10: Ranger. UW.Parl&lt;side.&#13;
Sox&#13;
2000.&#13;
K..&#13;
••  nos~a.y!i&#13;
.53~4l·.&#13;
T.el~J!hone&#13;
4141553,2287&#13;
(Editonal)  or&#13;
414/553.2295&#13;
(Advertis·&#13;
.hgl.&#13;
• .••   , •••  ' ••  ~.  . • • • • ••    . •••••.••&#13;
Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ..··&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray&#13;
Ass!. Photo Editor&#13;
~   Hearron ··..··   ·•·&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manager&#13;
MtChaei&#13;
J.&#13;
RohI&#13;
Oistribution  Manager&#13;
Robb  L"""r&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
------&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF    .&#13;
Jason&#13;
Caspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiipeua.  John&#13;
l&lt;etIOe.&#13;
George&#13;
I&lt;oenig&#13;
Ooc&#13;
Jeff&#13;
lel1)lT'llll'~.  fUny.l~.&#13;
Rick&#13;
lllehL&#13;
DaWn&#13;
Mailall(i&#13;
MaIkl&lt;v.&#13;
_McE",.&#13;
lie""&#13;
Midma.P  ""'&#13;
'"&#13;
Pacione.&#13;
Steven&#13;
l'icuo.&#13;
Maria&#13;
RiAtz.&#13;
Mark Shilhavy.  Wendy&#13;
Sorenson.  Jeff StaAictl.  Tyson WiIIla.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 11, November 12, 1987</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1987-11-12</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78997">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79000">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="51">
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <element elementId="97">
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              <text>Roaches, rodents infest Union building</text>
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              <text>':InlverSIIy   of WlsconSln-Perkslde&#13;
e&#13;
Vol.   16,  No.  12&#13;
Ro~~hes,&#13;
rodents  infest&#13;
·Union&#13;
building&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News·Edltor&#13;
TheParkslde Union Advlso-&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB),  meeting&#13;
~daY&#13;
for the first time since&#13;
FebMlary,elected a chairper-&#13;
BOI1set a regular  meeting&#13;
1lIII~,dlScllssedthe food serv-&#13;
Ice&#13;
contract, and contemplat-&#13;
ed&#13;
remodeling  the   Union&#13;
building.&#13;
Sue Bostetter was  elected&#13;
cbaIr&#13;
by a vote of 4-3. Bostet-&#13;
ter,&#13;
whoIs also Parkside  Ac-&#13;
UvlUesBoard  (PAB)  presi-&#13;
dent,&#13;
has served on several&#13;
Unioncommittees· and  has&#13;
been&#13;
employedby the Union.&#13;
Allvoting members  of the&#13;
Board&#13;
were present  except&#13;
representativesfrom Student&#13;
OrgaoIzatlonsCouncil  (SOC)&#13;
and&#13;
the Ranger,  who  could&#13;
IlOlattend due  to  schedule&#13;
eonfllcts.Evaluating the turn-&#13;
out, the Board  agreed   to&#13;
malnlain&#13;
the meeting time at&#13;
I p,m.Friday once a month.&#13;
~.  nextmeeting will be held&#13;
"",11.&#13;
Fueling lengthy  discussion&#13;
wu&#13;
theIssue of the food ser-v-&#13;
Ice&#13;
contract.&#13;
TIm&#13;
Grygera,  a&#13;
Iludentrepresentative,  vocal-&#13;
bed&#13;
student  complaints   of&#13;
food service.  There Is little or&#13;
no food service  on weekends&#13;
he said,  and Identified  majo~&#13;
student  complaints  as carete-&#13;
ria hours, quality  of food, and&#13;
prices.&#13;
"U&#13;
we want&#13;
to&#13;
bring  stu-&#13;
dents  In from  out  of state,  .&#13;
we've  provided  them&#13;
with&#13;
housing.  we have&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
them with food." he said.   .&#13;
In  addition,  Grygera   said&#13;
Items  In the  mini-mart   are .&#13;
priced  almost  twice  that  of&#13;
those available  In Racine and&#13;
Kenosha  shopping centers,&#13;
"There's&#13;
a    substantial&#13;
problem   here,"   he  empha-&#13;
sized,  "and  something  needs&#13;
to be done."&#13;
Hostetter  noted that the res-&#13;
idence  halls  include kitchens,&#13;
allowmg' residents  to cook on&#13;
weekends  when food service&#13;
Is not available ..&#13;
Steve  McLaughlin,  director&#13;
of student  life, said that hous-&#13;
jpg officials.  are. planning  to&#13;
conduct  a  survey  to  deter-&#13;
mine&#13;
student&#13;
residents'&#13;
needs.&#13;
"That  might  give .dlrection&#13;
to  this  board  on how to go&#13;
Sue Bostetier&#13;
about taking action,"  he said.&#13;
•'This has been a problem&#13;
since  the  beginning  of  the&#13;
semester,"&#13;
said   Grygera,&#13;
-  asking   how  much   more   time&#13;
would be needed  to conduct&#13;
the survey.&#13;
McLaughlin  and  Bostetter&#13;
agreed  that It would be feasl·&#13;
ble that the surveys  could be&#13;
completed  before  the  next&#13;
PUAB  meetings.  The  Board&#13;
will  delay  action  unW  that&#13;
time.&#13;
Union Director Bill Nelbuhr&#13;
said the Union&#13;
has&#13;
a $100,000&#13;
contract&#13;
with&#13;
Professional&#13;
Food  Service.  Management&#13;
(PFM).&#13;
The  contract&#13;
was&#13;
made before the housing&#13;
was&#13;
compleled,   inclUding  kitch-&#13;
ens. He said PFM had an op-&#13;
tion of not coming back,  but&#13;
agreed&#13;
to&#13;
maintain  the  con-&#13;
tract&#13;
If&#13;
It could operate  the&#13;
mini-mart.&#13;
Nelbuhr  added   that  last&#13;
year when food service was&#13;
provided on weekends on a&#13;
trial&#13;
basis,&#13;
it&#13;
was not success-&#13;
ful.&#13;
Moving on&#13;
to&#13;
the  Issue of&#13;
remodeling  the  Union,  Nel-&#13;
buhr  distributed  -remodeling&#13;
plans submitted  by the Union&#13;
Remodeling  Task Force.&#13;
"The bottom line is that the&#13;
cost is beyond our means,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Questions  that  need  to be&#13;
addressed,  he said, are: What&#13;
do we want&#13;
to&#13;
do? How&#13;
will&#13;
It&#13;
be paid for? Will seg fees be&#13;
raised?   Whal  can  be  done&#13;
right away?&#13;
Much money&#13;
has&#13;
been lost&#13;
In' the dramatic  drop In sales&#13;
of alcoholic beverages  in the&#13;
Union, he noted.&#13;
Another  Union  problem&#13;
Ia&#13;
pesla.&#13;
Nelbuhr   said   there   are&#13;
cockroaches  present&#13;
in&#13;
tne&#13;
Union.&#13;
"They're   showing  up  In&#13;
places they've never been&#13;
be-&#13;
fore,&#13;
I.&#13;
he said. However,&#13;
an&#13;
exterminator&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
con-&#13;
tracted  to deal wlIb the prob-&#13;
lem.&#13;
There Is also a rodent prob-&#13;
lem that occurs at&#13;
this&#13;
time&#13;
every year.&#13;
Ants are also present  In the&#13;
walls.&#13;
"All I&#13;
can say&#13;
is we're&#13;
ad-&#13;
dressing   the  problem   and&#13;
we'll  continue  to."  Nelbuhr&#13;
promised.&#13;
In&#13;
closing,  McLaughlin  reo&#13;
Iated to Ibe Board discussion&#13;
of Its lack of activity  during&#13;
an&#13;
earlier  student&#13;
govern-&#13;
ment meeting.&#13;
"PSGA  (Parkalde   Student&#13;
Government  Association)&#13;
dis-&#13;
cussed the Importance  of&#13;
thIe&#13;
committee  to be up and run-&#13;
ning," he exptalned.&#13;
The&#13;
Board&#13;
agreed  to oet up&#13;
a subcommittee  to change the&#13;
group's  bylaWS to  define  a&#13;
regular  meeting time.&#13;
Non-traditional students remain a priority&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst,Feature Editor&#13;
The Assistant  Chancellor&#13;
forStUdentAffairs,  G. Gary&#13;
Grace, spoke to a group  of&#13;
lIOn·tradltionalstudents  last&#13;
WedneSday on  . Parkslde's&#13;
Viewsof the future of the non-&#13;
traditional student   on  this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Theaccepted definition of a&#13;
non·traditiOnal  student    Is&#13;
someone Who&#13;
is&#13;
23&#13;
years  of&#13;
age&#13;
or older and/or  someone&#13;
~ho&#13;
has&#13;
been out of school for&#13;
ve years or&#13;
more.&#13;
Grace  emphasized    that&#13;
communication betWeen  the&#13;
1lOn-lradillonalstudents   and&#13;
:muSlration   needs&#13;
to&#13;
can.&#13;
I ue so that  no one  group&#13;
~s left out or In the dark.&#13;
au;&#13;
l&#13;
sald&#13;
that since he Is rel-&#13;
ande Y new&#13;
to&#13;
this  campus&#13;
8tI1u~tthe same time this In.&#13;
I10cI&#13;
on Is also In a hlgh pe.&#13;
OfChange&#13;
~~e&#13;
a:&#13;
new  admlnls.&#13;
llkelihn comes In there  Is the&#13;
Il1ll OOdthat many changes&#13;
"&amp;nd&#13;
take&#13;
place," Grace said,&#13;
alp that Is partiCUlarly true&#13;
" arkslde,&#13;
Uon~~&#13;
acrestl11a baby Inslltu ..&#13;
"1Vhe&#13;
race  polnled   out.&#13;
0/&#13;
n YOUconsider  the  age&#13;
llea&#13;
llloslCOllegesand universl.&#13;
I&#13;
We'reaWl very much&#13;
in&#13;
......&#13;
our&#13;
adolescent 'period; and as&#13;
such, just  like an adolescent,&#13;
(we're)   still  trying  to  work.&#13;
out what  our personality  will&#13;
be, what exactly  is It we'll be&#13;
as  an  institution   when  we&#13;
grow&#13;
up."&#13;
-&#13;
Grace feels that thls Instltu-&#13;
tlon Is a risk-taker  as far as&#13;
Instllutlons  go. Parkslde  does&#13;
not hold on too tightly  to the&#13;
past and as a whole Is willing&#13;
to&#13;
try&#13;
new things,&#13;
"I feel that's  a good attrib-&#13;
ute&#13;
to  have,"  Grace  said,&#13;
"but&#13;
It&#13;
does  aggravate   the&#13;
communication   problem.  II's&#13;
hard    to   Reep   everyone&#13;
abreast  'of all  the  changes,&#13;
which  can  cause  confusion&#13;
and frustration.&#13;
,&#13;
. "One  of the  Issues  that  I&#13;
feel strongly  about ts that this&#13;
institution  has  backed  off of&#13;
their   commlttment   to  non-&#13;
traditional   students,"   Grace&#13;
stated,  "I have  been  told by&#13;
staff,   faculty   and  ·students&#13;
that   Parkslde   did  have  a&#13;
strong and vita! commlttment&#13;
to non-traditional   students  In&#13;
the past,  and In the last two&#13;
to&#13;
three  years  that  co~mlt.&#13;
ment has been dropped,&#13;
Grace  feels  that  the  ques-&#13;
tion of whether  or not the uni-&#13;
versity   Is  discontinuing   Its&#13;
supporl  of non-traditional  stu·&#13;
dents  was brought  Into ques·&#13;
G.  Gary  Grace&#13;
recollecl  saying anything that&#13;
could even be construed that&#13;
way. What she&#13;
does&#13;
recollect&#13;
In the meeting  where  It sup-&#13;
posedly  took  place,&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
statement  that this Institution&#13;
with the limited dollars that It&#13;
has,  ought  to be gearing  In&#13;
the direction  of trying&#13;
to&#13;
reo&#13;
crult  full-time  students,  and&#13;
to&#13;
not  devote  precious&#13;
re-&#13;
sources&#13;
to&#13;
going out and re-&#13;
cruiting  a student  who oniy&#13;
takes&#13;
a&#13;
course&#13;
at a&#13;
time.&#13;
"'That   statement   alone,&#13;
whether  valid or Invalld had&#13;
started  the rumor that this in-&#13;
stitution  longer  cared  about&#13;
the non-traditional  student."&#13;
Grace said that he does not&#13;
lhInk&#13;
that  Parkside  had ever&#13;
a non-traditional  student  ad-&#13;
Inside&#13;
visor, or&#13;
an&#13;
office for&#13;
non-&#13;
traditional   student   services&#13;
per&#13;
se,&#13;
although there  have&#13;
been staff who have worked&#13;
with&#13;
non-traditional students,&#13;
and  have  also  had  special&#13;
programs  just  for non-trsdl-&#13;
tional students.&#13;
He also feels  that  another&#13;
factor that has contributed  to&#13;
the misconception of the way&#13;
the  universlly   feels  about&#13;
non-tradtttonat  students&#13;
Ia&#13;
the&#13;
way the campus&#13;
has&#13;
become&#13;
more visibly Involved with reo&#13;
cnJ1tment. New offices have&#13;
been established  for trsdltion·&#13;
al-age   recruitment,    but&#13;
It&#13;
seems  as  though&#13;
nothing&#13;
Is&#13;
being done tor the non·tradi·&#13;
tional student.&#13;
Grace  _&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
tion  when  Vice-Chancellor&#13;
- Betty Shutler was In the posl.&#13;
pa-&#13;
3&#13;
lion of Acting Chancellor  be-.&#13;
Core&#13;
leadership&#13;
program&#13;
_&#13;
f    Sheila Kaptan look over.&#13;
o~Betty made a verbal state· .&#13;
.,.,..&#13;
5&#13;
ment  that was Interpreted&#13;
to&#13;
Pettit    vetos&#13;
resolution&#13;
....._&#13;
mean that non-traditional  stu·&#13;
dents  were  not  the  target&#13;
6&#13;
audience,  and  that  Parkslde&#13;
As  Doc  sees  It&#13;
page&#13;
should oniy be working  with&#13;
the&#13;
traditionally   aged  stu·&#13;
g8&#13;
11&#13;
dents (18-22) year aids.&#13;
'L'.;;M;;.a;;.rt;.;;;;.e...r-.;.R_o;..h1.....&#13;
8.._..&#13;
w_ln_n_er..._........;;&#13;
' '_"'.._   ..&#13;
pa&#13;
....&#13;
"Certainly   Betty   doesn t .&#13;
,&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
November&#13;
19, 1987&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Minority student wai".er~&#13;
honorable but imreelistic&#13;
t  roposal of&#13;
UW&#13;
System President  Kenneth&#13;
'nle&#13;
~~~w&#13;
fo&#13;
offer tuition  waivers  to low·income  mi-&#13;
~=)&#13;
studenla whO meet bastc academic  requirements&#13;
haa&#13;
caused&#13;
quite&#13;
a flurry of controversy.&#13;
11&#13;
Whlle Shaw's intent Is honorable--to  increase  the enro  -&#13;
ment  of minority  students  in the  System  schools--the&#13;
method of implementation  of such a plan can only serve&#13;
to hurl those&#13;
students&#13;
who are In the majority  and could&#13;
lead to additional flare-ups of racism.&#13;
In&#13;
order to otter the low-Income minority&#13;
students&#13;
tut-&#13;
tion&#13;
waivers,&#13;
existing tuition and&#13;
student&#13;
fees would have&#13;
to be Increased.  there would also have to be additional&#13;
.tate fundlng which would translate  into higher taxes.&#13;
It&#13;
la beco~ing  more and more dlftlcult for students to&#13;
y tuiUon. Every year 1t increases.  Students who must&#13;
~te&#13;
their pursuit of a degree because tuition has&#13;
be-&#13;
come out of reach&#13;
will&#13;
become angry not at the legisla-&#13;
ture&#13;
but at the minority students  who&#13;
will&#13;
avall them-&#13;
""Ivel  of&#13;
lhla&#13;
educational  opportunity.  ThIs misguided&#13;
anger&#13;
can&#13;
only lead to trouble.&#13;
Another troubling aspect of&#13;
thI.&#13;
proposal I. the&#13;
require-&#13;
ment of only a&#13;
2.5&#13;
grade  point average  to receive  thil&#13;
benefit. Studenla who graduate  with a&#13;
2.5&#13;
may not be&#13;
ready&#13;
for the rigors of university  learning. What support&#13;
8)18teme can the&#13;
UW&#13;
schools offer these students  once&#13;
they are here?&#13;
Is&#13;
It fair to bring&#13;
students&#13;
In and not be&#13;
prepared to keep them here?&#13;
Low.lncome whlla&#13;
students&#13;
will&#13;
not have an equal op-&#13;
portunity to recetve a post secondary  education because&#13;
they&#13;
will&#13;
not be Included In&#13;
lhla&#13;
program.  Basing these&#13;
acl&gt;o1arlhtpa on&#13;
race la not a sound&#13;
notion.&#13;
The System of·&#13;
ticillB and legtalators who develop this program&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
bear&#13;
the brunt of the&#13;
Ire&#13;
of the excluded white students.&#13;
but the minority students&#13;
will.&#13;
The results could be tragic.&#13;
A&#13;
better remedy and a more equltable one would be for&#13;
the System oft1clals and the legislature  to work together&#13;
to create better  student financial ald packages.&#13;
In&#13;
addl-&#13;
tlon,&#13;
the Sy.tem could work harder  to recruit and retaln&#13;
minority faculty, admlntstrators  and staff to create&#13;
peal-&#13;
tive role models for existing minority&#13;
students.&#13;
FInally, there could be a greater emphasis on recruiting&#13;
minority&#13;
students.&#13;
Unfortunately,  the most recruited  mi·&#13;
nority students continue to be athletes,  and they do not&#13;
graduate In great numbers, which demonstrates  that they&#13;
are not ready for the academic demands of the unIversity.&#13;
Recruiting academicaJly talented minority&#13;
students&#13;
would&#13;
provide lllem with an opportunIty to come to the&#13;
unrver,&#13;
sity and to stay here.&#13;
AIDS testing&#13;
available locally&#13;
Studenla&#13;
are&#13;
to be Wormed&#13;
that   the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Health   Department   Is  a&#13;
Human    Immunodeficiency&#13;
Virus&#13;
(1UV)&#13;
antibody&#13;
coun-&#13;
""Ilng&#13;
and testing site.&#13;
Testing  Is confidential  and&#13;
anonymous.  Name,  address&#13;
and  other  Identifying  totor.&#13;
mation Is not required.&#13;
All&#13;
reo&#13;
sulla of te.ting  are confiden-&#13;
tial&#13;
as&#13;
well.&#13;
Persons who consider them-&#13;
""Ivee at&#13;
risk&#13;
for&#13;
1UV&#13;
may&#13;
phone  the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Health  Department   at  __&#13;
MS4&#13;
for  an  appointment.&#13;
There Is no charge  for te.t-&#13;
ing.&#13;
Challenges&#13;
tor athe/etes&#13;
Rlwley&#13;
ffom&#13;
page&#13;
11  •&#13;
new being built, and as long&#13;
as Jerry Tapp&#13;
is&#13;
around. new&#13;
programs starting as well.&#13;
Some of the possibilities&#13;
are&#13;
having the Parkslde  women'.&#13;
fastpitch  team  play&#13;
all&#13;
their&#13;
home games  at Shane Raw-&#13;
ley's,  and  Indeed  they&#13;
wllI&#13;
play a four-team  tournament&#13;
on May&#13;
13-15,&#13;
having  world&#13;
softball   tournaments   for&#13;
teams from&#13;
all&#13;
around the&#13;
country,&#13;
tun&#13;
runs&#13;
endlng  at&#13;
Shane Rawley's,  and the list&#13;
goes&#13;
on.&#13;
(your views&#13;
Senator&#13;
continues library debate&#13;
to reopen the D-l doors&#13;
than&#13;
anything  else&#13;
I&#13;
have  done ~&#13;
my&#13;
three&#13;
years&#13;
In&#13;
student&#13;
government.&#13;
I&#13;
am  also  inviting  you  to&#13;
join  the  Legislative   Affairs&#13;
Committee  of P.S.G.A.  that&#13;
I&#13;
chair.  Our primary  goals are&#13;
holdlng the line on tuition and&#13;
increasing  Federal   financial&#13;
aid. These Items&#13;
are&#13;
hard  to&#13;
do, since only&#13;
5%&#13;
of the stu-&#13;
dent body will put any pres-&#13;
sure on their  legislators.  We&#13;
have had rallies,  letter  writ-&#13;
ing campaigns  and  at  ieast&#13;
once a semester a visit&#13;
to&#13;
our&#13;
legislators&#13;
In&#13;
Madison_&#13;
Our  representatives.    both&#13;
state  and  national,  ask  me&#13;
why&#13;
I&#13;
bother  them since stu-&#13;
dents  don't&#13;
vote.&#13;
After  all&#13;
anything  they do won't affect&#13;
us anyway.&#13;
It&#13;
doesn't  really&#13;
matter&#13;
to&#13;
them what&#13;
happeJll&#13;
In&#13;
Madison  or&#13;
Washington. I&#13;
mean they&#13;
can&#13;
only&#13;
ruin&#13;
your&#13;
future  by pricing college&#13;
"'I&#13;
of your  range  and deny!llg&#13;
you any  ald to get&#13;
through&#13;
college.&#13;
So,&#13;
Ms.&#13;
Rlnelll,&#13;
If&#13;
you&#13;
are&#13;
so  concerned  aboul&#13;
luIUon&#13;
and financial aid,&#13;
I&#13;
invite&#13;
Y'"'&#13;
to join the Legislative&#13;
AttalI'8&#13;
Committee   of  P.S.G.A.&#13;
J&#13;
won't  be  surprised  If&#13;
Y'"'&#13;
don't  because  like most&#13;
stu·&#13;
dents you complain aboul&#13;
tuI·&#13;
tion  and  financial  aid&#13;
but&#13;
don't  do  anything  aboutIt&#13;
Ms. Rlnelll, talk Is cheap:&#13;
It&#13;
takes time to try to do&#13;
som~&#13;
thing about an&#13;
Issue&#13;
thai&#13;
aJ·&#13;
fects you.&#13;
senator&#13;
Jan&#13;
KratocllYU&#13;
CbaJr.&#13;
P.S.G.A,&#13;
Legl.1sIh'O&#13;
Affairs&#13;
COmmlllSO&#13;
'~'otile&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
am respondlng  to the let-&#13;
ter of a&#13;
Ms.&#13;
Carol Rlnelll that&#13;
appeared  In the November&#13;
12&#13;
Issue  of the  Ranger.  As a&#13;
Parkslde   Student   Govern·&#13;
ment  Senator,  the most irri-&#13;
tating thing that my constitu-&#13;
ents  find&#13;
Is&#13;
the  decllnJng&#13;
amount  of services  provided&#13;
by the&#13;
campus.&#13;
An&#13;
example&#13;
Is the closing of the library&#13;
D-&#13;
1&#13;
doors and the cut back&#13;
In&#13;
li-&#13;
brary  hours.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
happened&#13;
with  the  addition  of a  new&#13;
$40,000&#13;
a year  computerized&#13;
card&#13;
catalog. The reason that&#13;
they  cut back  services  was&#13;
due to the lack of&#13;
tunds.T&#13;
find&#13;
this  to be  contradictory,   to&#13;
say the least.&#13;
I&#13;
have  gotten&#13;
more&#13;
positlve&#13;
feedback  from&#13;
the students  for my part  in&#13;
the demonstration  that helped&#13;
-&#13;
No Ranger next week.&#13;
Happy Thanksgiving!&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by&#13;
students of UW-Parl&lt;slde. who are solely responsible IlK ~&#13;
~&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content.&#13;
it&#13;
Is&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic&#13;
year&#13;
except ovtr ~-&#13;
clays.&#13;
..&#13;
00\. ~&#13;
leners&#13;
to&#13;
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it&#13;
they are typed. double-spaced and&#13;
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letters must&#13;
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Stgned,&#13;
With&#13;
a telephone number Included for vertfication purposes. Names&#13;
w&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
.&#13;
_&#13;
Ranger reselVes&#13;
the&#13;
right to edit leners and refuse those which are false and/or&#13;
de-,..&#13;
_'..&#13;
'amatory.&#13;
~.,&#13;
Deadline for aIIleners.  and&#13;
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ads,&#13;
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publicafiOfl    ~&#13;
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be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parl&lt;side. Box&#13;
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lng).&#13;
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EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny&#13;
carr&#13;
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LeCount&#13;
:..&#13;
Sport.&#13;
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Editor   Oa..&#13;
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_ur&#13;
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DeRosier&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Features Editor   Robb Luehr&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Bernie&#13;
Doll&#13;
Asst. Entertainment  Editor   Steven&#13;
fl.&#13;
Picazo&#13;
Offica&#13;
Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
.-.~.&#13;
Dan _.&#13;
Jim&#13;
Cole,&#13;
John&#13;
Kolloe.&#13;
_go&#13;
~&#13;
~,&#13;
-&#13;
J ...........   "'"&#13;
'''''"9.&#13;
_&#13;
Patti..,&#13;
~~!"""'YSt ,""'"&#13;
"""'1, .. ""&#13;
'.&#13;
. ........ ,_,&#13;
even&#13;
Picazo,&#13;
Mana&#13;
Rintz.&#13;
Mane&#13;
ShiIhavy,&#13;
'WenOv&#13;
Sorenson,&#13;
Jeff.&#13;
Stanich.&#13;
Tyson WIlda.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don ~&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
~earron  ...&#13;
~·.:::~:~:.~~~~~~:~a:;&#13;
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>State rep addresses student Senate to encourage annexation endorsement</text>
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              <text>&#13;
December 3, 1987&#13;
University of WisconSln-Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
Vol.&#13;
18.&#13;
No.&#13;
13&#13;
State rep addresses  student&#13;
encourage  annexation&#13;
to&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Slate Representative  Peter&#13;
W&#13;
Barca spoke before&#13;
25&#13;
stu.&#13;
deBts&#13;
Nov.&#13;
20&#13;
at the&#13;
Parkside-&#13;
StudentGovernment Associa-&#13;
llon(pSGA) meeting,  In an&#13;
attempt&#13;
to&#13;
persuade    the&#13;
PSGASenate to reverse  the&#13;
standit has taken against  the&#13;
annexationof Parkside  by the&#13;
city&#13;
ofKenosha.&#13;
Barca was not aware  until&#13;
Ills&#13;
arrival that  the students&#13;
bad&#13;
actually passed a&#13;
resolu-&#13;
llonstating their opposition.&#13;
"I&#13;
think it's  very  impor-&#13;
tant,not only for the univer-&#13;
sity,but for the city of Keno-&#13;
sha,&#13;
that they  are  able  to&#13;
annexthis land, " Barca  said.&#13;
Barca  refuted  suspicions&#13;
tbat annexation would cause&#13;
a rise&#13;
in&#13;
tuition  costs,&#13;
and&#13;
Pl'lmised&#13;
to&#13;
send the students&#13;
formal&#13;
correspondence  from&#13;
Madtsonverifying this.&#13;
He explained that  the pro.&#13;
ceduresby which  munIcipal&#13;
rvices are&#13;
paid&#13;
in&#13;
wtscon,&#13;
havechanged. In the past,&#13;
said, cities  charged&#13;
urn-&#13;
verslties  directly  for services&#13;
rendered.   Now,  a  separate&#13;
line-term   provision   In  the&#13;
state   budget   covers   these&#13;
costs.&#13;
The  city  will benefit  from&#13;
annexation,  Barca  explained,&#13;
because services are  relm.&#13;
bur-sed&#13;
based   on   quallty.&#13;
While the Town of&#13;
Somers&#13;
Is&#13;
reimbursed&#13;
$30,000&#13;
to&#13;
$40,000&#13;
per year for the services&#13;
it&#13;
provides,&#13;
which  includes  its&#13;
volunteer   fire   department,&#13;
the  city  of  Kenosha  would&#13;
gain  ten times  that  amount.&#13;
Barca  said Kenosha.  because&#13;
it has a full-time  fire depart-&#13;
ment and its own police de.&#13;
partment,   would  be  reim-&#13;
bursed  up to&#13;
$400,000&#13;
by the&#13;
state.&#13;
.&#13;
.'4you can  see  that  the&#13;
amount  of  revenue  coming&#13;
back  to  our  community,  .to&#13;
this area,  would increase  ten.&#13;
fold,"  Barca   told  the  stu.&#13;
dents.   .&#13;
Barca  said that the quality&#13;
of services will also improve&#13;
in&#13;
other   areas,   but   he&#13;
stressed   the  importance   of&#13;
uition waivers not the&#13;
nly&#13;
recruitment method&#13;
by ,fenny&#13;
Carr&#13;
EdItor.&#13;
Explainingthat his campus&#13;
t had a two·fold purpose,&#13;
he&#13;
responsive  to&#13;
faculty,&#13;
and stUdents arid to try&#13;
Interpret for the citizens of&#13;
area what the Board  of&#13;
ents&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
doing, the&#13;
dent&#13;
of&#13;
the UW Board of&#13;
nts,&#13;
Lawrence   Wein*&#13;
, met With the  campus&#13;
COlllmunityon Nov. 17.&#13;
Wi~e most  pressing   issue&#13;
the&#13;
the media  concerning&#13;
Board of Regents was the&#13;
::rtt&#13;
y&#13;
student tuition waiv-&#13;
S   l1alive proposed by UW&#13;
s:te&#13;
m&#13;
president   Kenneth&#13;
den&#13;
w.&#13;
Weinstein  does  not&#13;
~ y&#13;
that  the UW minority&#13;
bl.~mg  effort is abomlna-&#13;
Ie&#13;
on  fact, that the System&#13;
Ie.&#13;
I the level of the national&#13;
tba~&#13;
:oes not reduce the fact&#13;
cardin&#13;
e national average,  ac-&#13;
dIsas&#13;
g&#13;
to&#13;
Weinstein  is  "a&#13;
to&#13;
doter." The Regenta  want&#13;
a.eragbetterthan the national&#13;
IV&#13;
e.&#13;
Ill.:,&#13;
ste&#13;
in&#13;
blames&#13;
the&#13;
~&#13;
for&#13;
latching&#13;
on to  a&#13;
4loc&#13;
POrtion of a  35 page&#13;
"he~ent presented  by Shaw&#13;
Ide8$ ~&#13;
he outlined  several&#13;
Or recruiting  minority&#13;
11IIoo...-&#13;
students.&#13;
In&#13;
a brief  summary  of the&#13;
document  proposed  by Shaw,&#13;
adequate  funding  for recruit-&#13;
ment of minorities  and for reo&#13;
tatnlng the students  once they&#13;
are  In -the  university   were&#13;
also addressed.&#13;
_&#13;
In&#13;
addition,    Shaw   has&#13;
called for the federal  govern-&#13;
ment  programs  which have&#13;
demonstrated   that  they w~rk&#13;
like the TRIO program,  Peli&#13;
grants,  Head  Start,  Upward&#13;
Bound to continue.&#13;
Weinstein  placed  a  great&#13;
deal  of emphasis  on retent-&#13;
nlon.&#13;
"It&#13;
is a -tragedy  to come&#13;
Into the system  and not sur-&#13;
vive.&#13;
It&#13;
Is wrong  to recruit&#13;
students  for  numbers  only.&#13;
We must  think  of who these&#13;
students  are  and  what  they&#13;
will  need  to  be  successful&#13;
here."&#13;
Weinstein  emphasized  th~cl&#13;
the  entire  Shaw  proposal  IS&#13;
still  to  discussed   at  open&#13;
hearings   . In  ,January..   He&#13;
noted that one of the heanngs&#13;
coUld be held  near  Parkside&#13;
and he encouraged  people&#13;
to&#13;
participate&#13;
in&#13;
those hearm~s.&#13;
"It&#13;
is important  to exa~lne&#13;
the entire issue and&#13;
not&#13;
Just&#13;
focus  on a small  portion  of&#13;
it."&#13;
he concluded.&#13;
Peter Barca&#13;
full-time professtonal  fire pro-&#13;
tection.&#13;
Somers'  volunteer  fire de-&#13;
partment  is adequate  for&#13;
a&#13;
residential  area, he said, but&#13;
not for dorm  residents  and&#13;
the daily concentration of stu-&#13;
dents on campus.&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
event&#13;
of  a   chemical   fire,   the&#13;
Senate&#13;
endorsement&#13;
Somers    fire    department&#13;
would be called, and the city&#13;
woUld  provide&#13;
back-up&#13;
if&#13;
needed.&#13;
If&#13;
annexed,  Parkside&#13;
would  call  the .city fire  de-&#13;
partment  directly.&#13;
As&#13;
a&#13;
member of the Envi-&#13;
ronmental Resource Commit.&#13;
tee, Barca  said he was&#13;
re-&#13;
cently  presented  With a bill&#13;
that   would   require   fire-&#13;
fighters  to be famillar  With&#13;
chemicals  used  In their  dis-&#13;
trict  llkely  to  cause  fires.&#13;
This was&#13;
in&#13;
response&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
in.&#13;
cident  in Madison  in which&#13;
.several&#13;
persons were killed&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
fire because firefighters ar-&#13;
rived on the scene and&#13;
did&#13;
not&#13;
know how&#13;
to&#13;
treat a particu-&#13;
. lar chemical.&#13;
.&#13;
"Universities were included&#13;
In this bill, at no small cost to&#13;
the state,"  he said, "because&#13;
we believe so strongly  In the&#13;
need to protect students."&#13;
Other  benefits  to Parkslde&#13;
would include ambulance and&#13;
police  services,  as  well as&#13;
garbage&#13;
pfek-up.&#13;
"I  believe  very  strongly&#13;
that (annexation) would be a&#13;
very  positive  beneflt  to stu-&#13;
dents, as well&#13;
as&#13;
to&#13;
this&#13;
insti-&#13;
tution that I care very&#13;
much&#13;
about, " said Barca,  who re-&#13;
sides&#13;
1'h&#13;
miles from campus.&#13;
"So  I would  hope  that  you&#13;
would in fact reconsider this&#13;
resolution  (opposing annexa-&#13;
tion) and reverse  your posi-&#13;
tion."&#13;
The resolution  also stated&#13;
that PSGA was joining&#13;
Chan-&#13;
cellor Sheila Kaplan In&#13;
oppos-&#13;
ing annexation.  Barca  said&#13;
that  his  conversations   with&#13;
Kaplan  have  indicated  that&#13;
although she has some can.&#13;
cems, she does not oppose the&#13;
venture, but supports it.&#13;
In&#13;
a later  telephone inter-&#13;
view,  Kaplan  said  that  she&#13;
never took a stand in opposi-&#13;
tion to annexaton,  and that, In&#13;
fact,  PSGA never  asked  her&#13;
what her position was.&#13;
"We want&#13;
to&#13;
look more&#13;
ex.&#13;
tenslvely Into the impllcations&#13;
of annexation,"  she said. •&#13;
'U&#13;
It would be good for the&#13;
unI-&#13;
versity,  and&#13;
if&#13;
the Town of&#13;
Somers and other parties in-&#13;
volved are not negatively im-&#13;
pacted,&#13;
then&#13;
we should seri-&#13;
ously consider&#13;
it.&#13;
IJ&#13;
Somers F.D. offended by Barca&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The  Somers  Fire  Depart-&#13;
ment apparently  took offense&#13;
to comments  made  by State&#13;
Rep.  Peter  W. Barca  here&#13;
Nov.&#13;
20.&#13;
Barca,   In  delivering   a&#13;
speech  to the  Parkslde&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent Government Association&#13;
(PSGA)  supporting   the  an-&#13;
nexation  of Parkside  by the&#13;
City of Kenosha, said that the&#13;
university   could  better   be&#13;
served by Kenosha's  full-time&#13;
fire department than Somers'&#13;
volunteer fire department.&#13;
PSGA President  Alex Pettit&#13;
said he was contacted  by off!·&#13;
Congrats&#13;
College&#13;
Bowl&#13;
Winning&#13;
Wargamers!&#13;
cials with the Somers squad&#13;
who Invited him to tour their&#13;
facilities&#13;
to&#13;
illustrate  their&#13;
competence.&#13;
Pettit  said  he  and/or  Jan&#13;
Kratochvil,  a PSGA senator,&#13;
wllI&#13;
tour the facility  Wednes.&#13;
day,  Dec.&#13;
2,&#13;
and  Invited  a&#13;
Ranger reporter  to attend.&#13;
According to a Nov.&#13;
25&#13;
artl-&#13;
cle  in  the  Kenosha  News,&#13;
members of Somers Fire and&#13;
Rescue squads appeared at a&#13;
Nov.  24  meeting   of  the&#13;
Somers  Town Board  to pro-&#13;
test the annexation.&#13;
David Holtze, Somers Town&#13;
Chairman,  said  the board  is&#13;
evaluating  the issue.&#13;
"We still don't know the full&#13;
lmpact," he said.&#13;
Town   attorney&#13;
Robert&#13;
Kendall   was   directed   by&#13;
board members&#13;
to&#13;
research&#13;
annexation  laws and report to&#13;
the board In early December.&#13;
A meeting  between  City of&#13;
Kenosha and Town of Somers&#13;
representatives&#13;
to&#13;
discuss&#13;
the&#13;
possibility  of annexing  Park.&#13;
side will be held Dec.&#13;
8&#13;
at&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
In&#13;
a Nov. 29 article,  Holtze&#13;
told the News the suggestion&#13;
that Kenosha  With tts 24.hour&#13;
fire  department   could  do a&#13;
better  job&#13;
than&#13;
Somers'  voi-&#13;
unteers&#13;
is&#13;
"a  slap  in  the&#13;
face."&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
December&#13;
3. 1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Roaches, rodents require&#13;
responsible action&#13;
-'It&#13;
18&#13;
not easy&#13;
to&#13;
put&#13;
in&#13;
stories&#13;
in&#13;
the paper&#13;
each week&#13;
and lIBten to the wrath of students, faculty, staff and ad-&#13;
ministration when&#13;
the&#13;
stories are not popular. The impor-&#13;
tant lhtng for the reader to remember&#13;
Is&#13;
that the Ranger&#13;
does not make the news.&#13;
It&#13;
just reports&#13;
It.&#13;
In&#13;
our last issue, there was a story concernIng  the cock-&#13;
roaches and rodents In the Union butldlng. Many thought-&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
was sensationalist to&#13;
run&#13;
It&#13;
on the front page and to&#13;
headline&#13;
It&#13;
as It was.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
Is&#13;
shortsighted thinking.&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
clear that readers are not Interested In when com-&#13;
mlttees meet and what they&#13;
diseuse.&#13;
U&#13;
the readers were&#13;
concerned about the meetings. they would attend them.&#13;
U&#13;
that particular  story had been&#13;
run&#13;
on page&#13;
6&#13;
referring to&#13;
the mundane business of the committee. very few readers&#13;
would&#13;
know about the seriousness of the&#13;
cockroach prcb-&#13;
lem and very UtUe extra  would have been done to correct&#13;
the&#13;
problem. That approach was taken and we were told&#13;
that we were added to a lIBt of people who had&#13;
com-&#13;
plalned.&#13;
With almost&#13;
IlO&#13;
percent of the Segregated  Fee money&#13;
lIOing&#13;
to the mortgage.  upkeep of the Union buUdlng and&#13;
salartes&#13;
of some of Its employees. It&#13;
la&#13;
imperative  that&#13;
8tUdenta&#13;
are aware of&#13;
what&#13;
their money&#13;
is&#13;
providing for&#13;
them.&#13;
U&#13;
thla&#13;
story&#13;
had&#13;
been burled,  who would have&#13;
known?&#13;
Some of the nay-sayers clalmed that the cockroach&#13;
sttu-&#13;
atlon was well In control after reading the paper. yet the&#13;
day before the paper hit the stands. roaches were sUll&#13;
evt-&#13;
dent In the Union. Since the story hit. the roach&#13;
control-&#13;
lers have&#13;
hit&#13;
the Union&#13;
hard&#13;
because  no one wants&#13;
to&#13;
stay&#13;
away. No one wants to lose business In these already&#13;
hard&#13;
Urnes.&#13;
The roaches are now under control.&#13;
It&#13;
meant increasing&#13;
the.vlalts of the pest control man.&#13;
It&#13;
meant spending some&#13;
money. but the Union butldlng&#13;
Is&#13;
being taken&#13;
care&#13;
of now&#13;
and&#13;
presents&#13;
a&#13;
more&#13;
appeaUng&#13;
picture to Its patrons who.&#13;
tor&#13;
a&#13;
IILrge&#13;
part.&#13;
are&#13;
also&#13;
Its benefactors.&#13;
Student money&#13;
la&#13;
well spent when&#13;
It&#13;
provtdes all stu·&#13;
dents&#13;
with a place we&#13;
can&#13;
be proud of. and even when It&#13;
means&#13;
that  an unpopular.  unpleasant  topic Uke&#13;
cock·&#13;
roaches&#13;
has&#13;
to be&#13;
discussed,&#13;
It&#13;
will&#13;
be worih the wrath to&#13;
see&#13;
that there&#13;
la&#13;
follow·through by the responsible parties.&#13;
-----Lefters------&#13;
Student leaders&#13;
should lead&#13;
Tuition waivers&#13;
draw support&#13;
To&#13;
tile&#13;
EdItor:&#13;
Your&#13;
November&#13;
19th&#13;
edi-&#13;
torial entitled. "MInority&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent  walvers  honorable  but&#13;
unreal1Btlc," mlased the&#13;
real&#13;
problem of&#13;
UW&#13;
System&#13;
presl·&#13;
dent  Kenneth  Shaw's  pro-&#13;
posal.&#13;
Your    basic    argument&#13;
against his proposal was that&#13;
It&#13;
would hurt "those students&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
In the majority  and&#13;
could lead to additional&#13;
flare.&#13;
ups of racism."&#13;
Three&#13;
times&#13;
In your editorial  you stated&#13;
that students  of color would&#13;
be vtctlms of white students'&#13;
anger&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
plan  were&#13;
adopted.&#13;
Thla&#13;
kind of shallow&#13;
thinking&#13;
makes  me wonder&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
are&#13;
cynical or misguIded&#13;
see&#13;
Waivers&#13;
P"lI8&#13;
11&#13;
To&#13;
tile&#13;
Edllor:&#13;
What   '"&#13;
J.J.&#13;
Masterson&#13;
thinIllng&#13;
about?&#13;
RIa&#13;
vlews&#13;
on&#13;
student&#13;
tn-&#13;
volvement&#13;
in&#13;
Parks1de's ac-&#13;
tlvlty program  reek of short·&#13;
oIghtedneas and&#13;
naivete.&#13;
lead-&#13;
Ing&#13;
me to belleve he ham't&#13;
learned lesson one about the&#13;
campus or the constltuency&#13;
he's been elected to serve.&#13;
HIs&#13;
rationale Is that such a&#13;
sUpulation  would  eUmlnate&#13;
potential  confUct&#13;
of&#13;
Interest&#13;
during&#13;
fee allocation for stu-&#13;
dent organizations.&#13;
He and those who&#13;
think&#13;
like&#13;
him&#13;
argue  that&#13;
If&#13;
cerlafn&#13;
regulations&#13;
are&#13;
l\Ood&#13;
enough&#13;
see,.,d ...&#13;
pegs 11&#13;
~'JW'~&#13;
HEY!&#13;
CAN'TVouS~&#13;
THAT I'M ON&#13;
THE ~,&#13;
•&#13;
.\your views.&#13;
~&#13;
Annexation, tuition&#13;
waivers bring lots of letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It&#13;
seems to me a few facts&#13;
should  be  brought&#13;
to&#13;
light&#13;
ahoutthe   annexing  of&#13;
Park-&#13;
side. The city and other&#13;
elect-&#13;
ed officials falled to&#13;
do&#13;
their&#13;
homework before they did&#13;
their  studies  and  speeches.&#13;
Let me llst them:&#13;
1.&#13;
Security&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
campus  Pollce  and  backup&#13;
by Kenosha County Sheriff.&#13;
2.&#13;
Fire   Protection&#13;
Somers&#13;
has&#13;
equipment  rang.&#13;
Ing&#13;
from grass rigs, tankers.&#13;
pumpers and an aerial.  Fire-&#13;
men  are  thoroughly  trained&#13;
by certified Instructors  of the&#13;
State plus regular  scheduled&#13;
training.&#13;
All&#13;
this&#13;
la&#13;
done on&#13;
their&#13;
own&#13;
time  (no  pay).&#13;
Somers  also  has  two&#13;
(2)&#13;
"Jaws of Life" complete&#13;
with&#13;
all the attachments.  CIty&#13;
of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
has&#13;
one.&#13;
3.&#13;
Ambulance  Servtce  _&#13;
Somers  has  three&#13;
(3)&#13;
vehi-&#13;
cles,  City  of  Kenosha&#13;
has&#13;
three&#13;
(3)&#13;
and&#13;
one&#13;
(1)&#13;
reserve&#13;
Most of Somers'  EMTs&#13;
ar~&#13;
certlfled   EMT-Ds  meaning&#13;
they can deflbrllate&#13;
In&#13;
cases&#13;
of  cardiac   arrest.   CIty  of&#13;
Kenosha  -  EMT  only.  The&#13;
Paramedic   program   talked&#13;
about&#13;
will&#13;
be avatlable&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
county units. not just the city.&#13;
Besides   regular   scheduled&#13;
training,  our EMTs attend  a&#13;
refresher   class  every   two&#13;
years  and  are  certified&#13;
In&#13;
CPR&#13;
every year.&#13;
Somers  belongs&#13;
to&#13;
Mutuaf&#13;
Aid   Box   Aiann    System&#13;
(MABAS) which enables us to&#13;
draw  any type of equipment&#13;
and  manpower   from  com-&#13;
munities  In Racine  County&#13;
to&#13;
northern illinois&#13;
In&#13;
the case of&#13;
an emergency.  Somers&#13;
also&#13;
has&#13;
signed mutual  afd agree.&#13;
ments  with  our  neighboring&#13;
communities.   The  CIty  of&#13;
Kenosha refUsed&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
MABAS and  refused  signing&#13;
mutual  afd  agreement   w1th&#13;
Somers or PI~t&#13;
Pratrte,&#13;
Even with Kenosha's  north&#13;
side station,  ambulance  serv-&#13;
Ice  Would come  from  22nd&#13;
Avenue    and    Washington&#13;
Road.&#13;
If&#13;
they  are  avatlable,&#13;
or another part of the city. No&#13;
response time gained.&#13;
II"&#13;
case  of&#13;
fire&#13;
proteolillll,'-&#13;
major equlpment&#13;
WOII1d_&#13;
from other&#13;
stations&#13;
also.&#13;
III&#13;
response time gslned.&#13;
4.&#13;
Garbage&#13;
Colleclkln-&#13;
belleve&#13;
thla&#13;
Is&#13;
contract.1l1&#13;
thla&#13;
time.&#13;
5.&#13;
Money -&#13;
Somers-&#13;
celved&#13;
$4000&#13;
and ~&#13;
hopes to receive&#13;
$400.-&#13;
which no one&#13;
else&#13;
In&#13;
K&#13;
County   would&#13;
receltt&#13;
I&#13;
penny.&#13;
6.&#13;
Prestige -&#13;
To&#13;
1bI&#13;
thla&#13;
la&#13;
a&#13;
big&#13;
uem&#13;
sIOIlI&#13;
money.&#13;
Should the&#13;
ChalIceD«··&#13;
group from Psrkslde.&#13;
lbIat&#13;
fathers,  or  Kenos~&#13;
wish&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
our&#13;
eq&#13;
rI*&#13;
give us&#13;
a&#13;
call, we""';..&#13;
Ing to&#13;
be&#13;
aahamed&#13;
of,&#13;
next time get thefa:,.,&#13;
your&#13;
speeches  and P,&#13;
articles.&#13;
_h  ..&#13;
0010_  M•• -   •&#13;
·EMT·D&#13;
80mers&#13;
Be&amp;&lt;O"&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
~.£aKi~;;:.:..···············..·· · ···&#13;
Edito&lt;  Randy&#13;
LsCounl&#13;
Sparts Editor&#13;
on.v"",  -..    ._&#13;
-•. _-&#13;
News&#13;
Editor   Dave&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
Poot  E .&#13;
~   H Riner&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ken ~&#13;
····················A..s..·t..·P·hot&#13;
O&#13;
Ed~tor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur.. FeatureslEntertainmentEditor  M--~-.I&#13;
J&#13;
:. .&#13;
S..  0 dltar&#13;
T&#13;
0.0_'..&#13;
A._&#13;
F&#13;
t&#13;
Ed'&#13;
ncn:n  •&#13;
OhI&#13;
Oistnbutlon Manager&#13;
.....  ~&#13;
~.   eaures  itor  Robbluehr&#13;
C·&#13;
Bernie&#13;
DoII.••..•...•&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Entertainment Editor  Steven R ~""""""""""""&#13;
opy EdItor&#13;
.&#13;
...••............ Office Manager&#13;
BUSINESSST&#13;
-AF-F------&#13;
GENERALSTAFF&#13;
.-   "'-'.   "'" _.&#13;
'm&#13;
Cole,  _&#13;
Kehoe&#13;
G.",,,&#13;
Don&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
Business  Manager   ~&#13;
~,&#13;
~Clon&#13;
J.&#13;
liebret/ll. AmYltKl 9&#13;
Kathy&#13;
CIapp4iarmeyer   .•-&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Busmess  Manager&#13;
WIctlna&#13;
Paaa&#13;
Hill&#13;
latn&#13;
Ptsaca&#13;
Mallory,&#13;
Doug McEvoy.&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Mark&#13;
shiIhavy&#13;
w'-.....&#13;
t'~_A":&#13;
Sleven&#13;
PIcazo.&#13;
Mana&#13;
Rmtz.&#13;
.  ,,,...., ......"'''''''""  Jeff.Stanlch.  Tyson Wilda&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 13, December 3, 1987</text>
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                <text>1987-12-03</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>United council president questioned by senate</text>
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              <text>&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wlsconsin-Parkslde&#13;
nited&#13;
Council president questioned&#13;
by&#13;
Senate&#13;
by Jenny earr&#13;
Editor&#13;
er  Parkslde    Student&#13;
emment Assocation  presl-&#13;
t  and  current   United&#13;
ell&#13;
president,   Adrian&#13;
o answered some chal-&#13;
g  questions   at   last&#13;
k'sPSGAmeeting.&#13;
Serrano,near the end of&#13;
1&#13;
campus lour, brought  In-&#13;
ational&#13;
handouts  to  the&#13;
torsabout United Council&#13;
its&#13;
function. Describing&#13;
UnitedCouncil as a&#13;
"non-&#13;
t&#13;
service and advocacy&#13;
ration, 'owned and oper-&#13;
by students,"  the hand-&#13;
included information  on&#13;
organization's   platorm&#13;
what&#13;
it&#13;
has&#13;
accomplished&#13;
studenls.&#13;
At&#13;
the meeting,&#13;
Serrano&#13;
questioned .by  PSGA&#13;
sidentalex&#13;
Pettit-concern-&#13;
the operation  of United&#13;
ell.&#13;
Peilltraised the issue  of a&#13;
lble  Increase   In   the&#13;
dalory&#13;
refundable    fee&#13;
l,&#13;
the fifty cents  each&#13;
t&#13;
pays&#13;
per semester  to&#13;
be   represented&#13;
by   united&#13;
Counefl.&#13;
The  MRF  In  total&#13;
constitutes   the  entire  United&#13;
Council budget,  Rumors  have&#13;
been&#13;
ctrculattng&#13;
throughout&#13;
the  system  schools  ·that this&#13;
amount   Is  scheduled   to  In.&#13;
crease.&#13;
"I&#13;
don't  see United  Council&#13;
. as ever  raising  Its fee,"  Ser-'&#13;
rano stated.  "Because of the&#13;
process    that's   built-in,   it&#13;
would take so long, and be-&#13;
cause of the political arena&#13;
that  we are  In,&#13;
1&#13;
don't  see us&#13;
raising  the fee."&#13;
Before    Serrano    became-&#13;
president,   a  complaint   was&#13;
filed  by  three  former  mem-&#13;
bers  of United  Council's  staff&#13;
with  the  Equal  Opportunity&#13;
Commission   alleging   sexual&#13;
harrasment&#13;
in&#13;
the  form  of&#13;
.dtscrtmtnatton&#13;
and  differen·&#13;
tial&#13;
treatment  based on sex.&#13;
Serrano  stated  that he has an&#13;
appointment   with an attorney&#13;
to  review   the  matter.   The&#13;
complaint  will be discussed  at&#13;
the January  UC meeting.&#13;
A   third   concern   Pettit&#13;
raised   revolves   around   the&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
United  Council's  lack  of of&#13;
Implementation   of  the  Stu-&#13;
dents  Taking  Action  AgaInst&#13;
Rape   (STAAR)  project   for&#13;
which they received  a&#13;
$20,000&#13;
federal   grant.   The  under-&#13;
standing  the  federal  govern-&#13;
ment  had  with  UC was  that&#13;
United  Council  would  match&#13;
the  federal   funds,   thereby&#13;
creating  a total of&#13;
$40,000.&#13;
,The  grant   was  given&#13;
to&#13;
have  13 campus  volunteer&#13;
coordinators   and  one  state-&#13;
wide coordinator  to organize,&#13;
traIn  and  implement   a  pro-&#13;
gram  to asstst victims  of sex-&#13;
ual   assault.   the   program&#13;
never  got off the ground&#13;
an6&#13;
the money was spent. Serrano&#13;
told the senate  that&#13;
a&#13;
repay.&#13;
ment   program&#13;
!las&#13;
been&#13;
worked out&#13;
with&#13;
the federal&#13;
government.&#13;
"The  administration   of the&#13;
Victims   of  Crime   (VOCA)&#13;
was very  much  mislead,  as&#13;
much as the general  assem-&#13;
bly was,  as what  was  going&#13;
on  with  ST&#13;
AAR&#13;
financially.&#13;
Because  of that,  he doesn't&#13;
want a big issue made of this,&#13;
so he was worked out a very&#13;
reasonable   payback&#13;
sched-&#13;
ule,"  Serrano  sald.  "I  can't&#13;
remember  what the numbers&#13;
are,&#13;
but It is scheduled  to be&#13;
paId back  by the end of the&#13;
year.  As far  as I know, we&#13;
haven't   had   any   problem&#13;
making the payments."&#13;
Serrano  went  on&#13;
to&#13;
allay&#13;
concerns  about United Coun-&#13;
cil's  operating&#13;
budget&#13;
prob-&#13;
lems.&#13;
"I&#13;
know  there  have  been&#13;
some rumors  floating  around&#13;
that we have not been able&#13;
to&#13;
make  payroll  and that&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
spending  all  the  money  on&#13;
travel  visiting  the  campuses&#13;
and  going  all  around   the&#13;
country. We have never pay.&#13;
roll.  J anua;y,   the  beginning&#13;
of Fedruary   and  September&#13;
are the tough months because&#13;
the payroll  is paId out of the&#13;
MRF,&#13;
and we get  all of our&#13;
money  right  at the beginning&#13;
of October  and the mlddie  of&#13;
February.  Before we receive&#13;
the  money,   the  fund  gets&#13;
pretty  low, but we have made&#13;
payroll  every  time  and  we&#13;
are  on target  with&#13;
all&#13;
our&#13;
debts."&#13;
Information&#13;
concerning&#13;
United  Council's  operation  Is&#13;
available  through  the  PSGA&#13;
. office located&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
of the  Wyllie&#13;
Llbrary·Learn·&#13;
Ing&#13;
Center,  near  the  Coffee&#13;
Shoppe.&#13;
ourof Somers FD affirms Senate's position&#13;
Doug&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
e of the most&#13;
controver-&#13;
Issues at Parkslde  lately&#13;
been&#13;
the&#13;
possible annexa.&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
campus&#13;
to Keno.&#13;
. Peler Barca,  the  State&#13;
resentatlve for this  area&#13;
a&#13;
strong supporter  of th~&#13;
exaUon.&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
It's  very&#13;
Impor-&#13;
lant,not only for the bniver.&#13;
, but for the city of Keno.&#13;
, that they  are'  able  to&#13;
ex&#13;
this&#13;
land,"   Barca&#13;
ed In&#13;
an&#13;
earlier  Inter.&#13;
;:;"With the f!.anger.  After&#13;
g the Somers  fire  de.&#13;
t&#13;
ment&#13;
, the Parkslde   Stu-&#13;
IPSG~)vernment Association&#13;
felt that the annexa.&#13;
Is definitely not just  for&#13;
lbgoodof the campus,  but&#13;
er SOlelyfor the good of&#13;
nosha.&#13;
"I&#13;
don't see Kenosha  offer.&#13;
i"y more&#13;
than&#13;
Somers&#13;
ex-&#13;
to~~&#13;
higher  costs,"   Jan&#13;
vil,&#13;
a  senator   for&#13;
yeA&#13;
explained.&#13;
-r&#13;
feel we&#13;
d~lflOOddeal with Somers&#13;
ea be~~sKenosha can show&#13;
supportert~?eI'm not going&#13;
PSGA   .&#13;
!lppos"dpassed  a  resolution&#13;
1IIlbe to the change. A tour&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
an~omers  fire  depart·&#13;
ven ~&#13;
talk&#13;
given by&#13;
Lt.&#13;
t&#13;
use of the depart.&#13;
....Ogthseemed    only    to&#13;
Io~&#13;
enththelr commitment&#13;
~ _8 ~exation.&#13;
...&#13;
"Officially  we can't  take  a&#13;
stand  on  the  Issue&#13;
as&#13;
a&#13;
de-&#13;
partment   except  to say  that&#13;
we feel  we  can  serve  Park-&#13;
side's  needs  more  than&#13;
ade-&#13;
quately,"   Krause   comment-&#13;
ed.&#13;
'&#13;
.Barca   insisted   that   the&#13;
quality   of  service   Parkslde&#13;
should  receive  from Kenosha&#13;
Is better  than that of Somers.&#13;
He felt  that  the' Somers  fire&#13;
department   Is Inadequate   to&#13;
serve  a complex  as large  as&#13;
Parkslde   and  the  annexation&#13;
would   bring   an  additional&#13;
$400,000&#13;
to&#13;
$700,000&#13;
In  state&#13;
revenue  Into the city of Keno·&#13;
sha.&#13;
One of the maIn Issues&#13;
dts-&#13;
cussed   between   PSGA  and&#13;
the  Somers  departinent   was&#13;
. that  of response  time.  Once&#13;
an alarm  has been sounded at&#13;
Parkslde    for   a   fire,   the&#13;
Somers  response  time Is only&#13;
5-7 minutes  to Kenosha's  re-&#13;
sponse  time  of  up  to&#13;
15-20&#13;
minutes.  This  difference  can&#13;
be crucial,  especially  if a fire&#13;
were  to start  In the  dorms.&#13;
Their  wood  construction   and&#13;
thin  walls  leave  them  espe-&#13;
cially   susceptible   to  rapid&#13;
spread  of fire.  Kenosha'S  re-&#13;
sponse   times   may   change&#13;
upon  completion  of Its north·&#13;
side station.&#13;
Barca  claimed  that the fact&#13;
that  the Kenosha  department&#13;
Is  a   full·time   department  .&#13;
means   that   It   Is  better&#13;
equipped  to serve  the  needs&#13;
of Parkslde.  The Somers  de-&#13;
partment   claimed  that  quite&#13;
the,opposlte  Is true.&#13;
liThe tanker at Somers can&#13;
carry  up  to&#13;
1000&#13;
gallons  of&#13;
water  and  Is capable  of&#13;
un-&#13;
loading  the entire  amount&#13;
In&#13;
only  one  minute.&#13;
If&#13;
neces-&#13;
sary,"    Krause   explained.&#13;
Kenosha has no such tankers,&#13;
and relies  entirely  on the hy-&#13;
'drant   system.   Somers  also&#13;
has&#13;
two&#13;
off-road  four-wheel&#13;
drive vehicles for combatting&#13;
grass  fires. The Kenosha de-&#13;
partment   has  no such  vehi-&#13;
cles.&#13;
The paramedics&#13;
In&#13;
Somers&#13;
are  of a higher  classification&#13;
than&#13;
those  In Kenosha.  They&#13;
are required  to be re-certlfied&#13;
every  two  years,  which&#13;
en-&#13;
tails  being  up to date  on all&#13;
new procedures.&#13;
The mutual  aid box alarm&#13;
system   allows  Somers&#13;
to&#13;
draw  upon other  fire depart-  .&#13;
ments  for ald.&#13;
If&#13;
the Somers&#13;
department   found themselves&#13;
In a situation  that they could&#13;
not handie  alone,  they would&#13;
initiate'  the first  alarm,  then&#13;
the  second,  then  the  third,&#13;
and  so on.  Each  time  they&#13;
would contact a group of local&#13;
departments,   drawing  oh the&#13;
nearest  stations  first,  until In&#13;
theory   they   would   ,,"ve.&#13;
enough equipment  to manage&#13;
the  worst  Imaginable&#13;
sttua-&#13;
tlon.&#13;
The system  does not draw&#13;
too much  support  from  any&#13;
one station  so as not to disa-&#13;
ble them  from  responding  to&#13;
other  calls.  Kenosha  has  not&#13;
yet   officially   joined   with&#13;
Somers&#13;
In&#13;
this&#13;
system.&#13;
Currently,  the  Somers  fire&#13;
department  has a direct&#13;
com-&#13;
municatlon&#13;
system&#13;
with&#13;
Parkslde   security.  They  are&#13;
able  to be  told  exact  sltua-&#13;
tlons&#13;
In&#13;
the case of an&#13;
emer-&#13;
gency and are escorted  by the&#13;
campus  pollee dtrectly  to the&#13;
scene. -When a call comes&#13;
in&#13;
from  the dispatcher,  beepers&#13;
go off on the belts of the vol-&#13;
unteers. Those&#13;
in&#13;
the immedi-&#13;
ate area&#13;
go&#13;
to the station  and&#13;
bring  the  equipment&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
scene, .where those who wer~&#13;
not&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
area&#13;
at  the  time&#13;
will&#13;
meet  them  or&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
waiting for them.&#13;
On the Iowa "lerage, Somers&#13;
would respond  to a call with&#13;
12&#13;
men  to  Kenosha's   six.&#13;
Somer's  high  average&#13;
is&#13;
25&#13;
men.  Somers  would respond&#13;
to a  Parkslde&#13;
call&#13;
with. one&#13;
aerial,  one pumper,  two&#13;
tank-&#13;
ers and a rescue  unit. Should&#13;
more&#13;
be&#13;
requtred   they  can&#13;
bring  In two more&#13;
pumpers&#13;
from  their  second  station.&#13;
IJ&#13;
the  incident  were  to inVOlVE&#13;
hazardous    matertaIs,&#13;
they&#13;
carry  a book on how&#13;
to&#13;
treat&#13;
various  emergencies   involv-&#13;
Ing hazardous  materIals  at&#13;
all&#13;
times. They also have accees&#13;
to a  company  called  Chem·&#13;
track   for  additional   asslst-&#13;
ance .&#13;
'See&#13;
Som~ra&#13;
pege 3&#13;
-,,*,'-   :-,&#13;
.Inside&lt;"\&#13;
~/"'~\.:,_.",&#13;
~:~&#13;
-&#13;
",.,&#13;
,Nuclt)arvlews\OfRuS$ia'&#13;
page&#13;
4 '&#13;
_~~,cr:"&#13;
~5&#13;
;;Wargati'ier$'al'ei~wlhners,&#13;
P89!&#13;
6,&#13;
!iliiit!~lil~J'li;i.~;~~~":"'.~&#13;
J'&#13;
r&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
December&#13;
10, 1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Imperative  PUAB be&#13;
involved  in budgeting&#13;
A. the segregated University Fee Allocation Committee&#13;
approaches the budgetary process,&#13;
It&#13;
becomes quite evt-&#13;
dent that&#13;
hard&#13;
decisions&#13;
wlll&#13;
have to be made&#13;
this&#13;
budget&#13;
year  We have just been through an enrollment shortfall&#13;
and U.e pot of money from which students their funding&#13;
has&#13;
grown considerably smaller.&#13;
.&#13;
Each of the student areas&#13;
has&#13;
been prepanng  their&#13;
budgets to present them to the committee. Each area&#13;
wlll&#13;
no&#13;
doubt offer Its members  the opportunity to evaluate&#13;
the budget before&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
presented to SUFAC.&#13;
The Union building bears the burden of being the area&#13;
with the largest  financial support of the students.  Last&#13;
year,&#13;
$284,941&#13;
of the&#13;
$763,101&#13;
Segregated Fee budget went&#13;
to&#13;
support the Union.&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
vtlal that as much student input&#13;
Is&#13;
given to the budgets of the Union as possible.&#13;
ThIs Is the time to have the Parkslde  Union Advisory&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB) exhibit Its unique ability to evaluate the&#13;
Union&#13;
budgets&#13;
and make  pertinent  suggestions  before&#13;
SUF&#13;
AC sees them in order to afford students as much&#13;
representation as possible in the declslon-m&amp;!&lt;lngprocess.&#13;
Havtng a prtmary  student  group examine  the Union&#13;
budget before&#13;
It&#13;
goes to SUFAC&#13;
Is&#13;
not only our responsl ..&#13;
bUty, It&#13;
Is&#13;
our&#13;
right.&#13;
To'lbe&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
read&#13;
with great&#13;
Interest&#13;
the opinion stated in the Dec.&#13;
8rd Issue of the Ranger.&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
referring&#13;
to&#13;
the article on&#13;
an-&#13;
nexatlon. WhUe&#13;
I&#13;
do not know&#13;
enough about the politics of&#13;
annexation  or  the  financial&#13;
benefits received,&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
know&#13;
somethlng about the&#13;
benents-&#13;
/drawhacks  of an increase in&#13;
fire&#13;
and rescue protection.&#13;
Having spent six years with&#13;
a professional&#13;
fire&#13;
and rescue&#13;
department  as a FIrefighter&#13;
FIrst Class/Paramedic&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
that some of the etatements&#13;
make  by  the  EMT-D from&#13;
Somers  Volunteer  FIre  De.&#13;
partment  were not quite cor.&#13;
rect; furthermore,&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
my responalbility to point out&#13;
these discrepancies.&#13;
I&#13;
want to begin with the&#13;
statement  "Most of Somers'&#13;
EMTs are  certified EMT-Ds&#13;
meaning they&#13;
can&#13;
deflbrltate&#13;
in&#13;
cases&#13;
of cardiac  arrest."&#13;
ThIs&#13;
statement&#13;
Is&#13;
very&#13;
mts-&#13;
leading&#13;
to&#13;
the general public.&#13;
Most people are  unfamiliar&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
terms of&#13;
cardiac ar-&#13;
rest or deflbr1Uation.  .&#13;
C&amp;rd1ac arrest&#13;
is&#13;
a cessa-&#13;
tion of the heart  muscle to&#13;
pump  the  blood throughout&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
issue&#13;
the body.&#13;
It&#13;
also means that&#13;
the lungs are not exchanging&#13;
the gases (oxygen and carbon&#13;
dioxide) as they would&#13;
nor-&#13;
mally do.&#13;
In&#13;
the case of&#13;
ven-&#13;
trlcular  flbr1liatlon (a symp-&#13;
tom of cardiac  arrest)  the&#13;
heart's  electrical  system&#13;
Is&#13;
not flJIlctlonlng properly.  By&#13;
deflbr1liatlng, the rescuer&#13;
Is&#13;
provtdlng an outside source of&#13;
electricity  to&#13;
try&#13;
and "jump&#13;
start"  the heart back into Its&#13;
normal rhythm.&#13;
If&#13;
this&#13;
Is&#13;
sue-&#13;
essM,  the next step&#13;
Is&#13;
the&#13;
administration   of   cardisc&#13;
drugs,  such as lidocaine  or&#13;
bretylium.  When these drugs&#13;
are  not  administered   the&#13;
chance. of the patient&#13;
re-de-&#13;
veloplng  the  ventricular  fl-&#13;
br1Uation rhythm&#13;
Is&#13;
extreme-&#13;
ly&#13;
high.&#13;
An&#13;
EMT&#13;
-0&#13;
cannot admlnls.&#13;
ter these&#13;
cardiac&#13;
drugs' and,&#13;
therefore,&#13;
Is&#13;
only provtdlng&#13;
a&#13;
fraction of the treatment  that&#13;
Is&#13;
called for.&#13;
If&#13;
the rescuer&#13;
Is&#13;
not successful&#13;
in&#13;
converting&#13;
the patient into a life sustaln-&#13;
gin&#13;
heart  rhythm,  they&#13;
wlll&#13;
simply deflbr1Uate again and&#13;
again. Each time the heart&#13;
Is&#13;
deflbr1liated there&#13;
Is&#13;
a certain&#13;
amount of scar tissue formed&#13;
and severe  damage  done to&#13;
and&#13;
Ranger&#13;
:Ir------:~---------------------------~----------~:i&#13;
your views&#13;
J.&#13;
Annexation&#13;
the  heart  muscle.  At  the&#13;
same time the lactic acid&#13;
Is&#13;
building  up to lethal  levels&#13;
and other cardlsc drugs must&#13;
be  administered  to prevent&#13;
this.&#13;
What&#13;
I&#13;
am trying to point&#13;
out Is that the EMT·D Is only&#13;
provtdlng  care  one minimal&#13;
step above the EMT-A, lind in&#13;
certain cases can actually do&#13;
more  damage  to  the  heart&#13;
muscle  than  good.  When&#13;
I&#13;
was trained  as a paramedic&#13;
one  fundamental   point  of&#13;
treatment was&#13;
f'if&#13;
you can't&#13;
do any&#13;
good,&#13;
don't  do any&#13;
harm".&#13;
All EMTs have to undergo&#13;
refresher   training   periodi-&#13;
cally,  so the statement  that&#13;
"our EMTa attend a refresh-&#13;
er class every two years and&#13;
are  certified&#13;
In&#13;
CPR&#13;
every&#13;
year."&#13;
is&#13;
again very mislead.&#13;
Ing.&#13;
She&#13;
Is&#13;
Implying that the&#13;
Kenosha   Ftreflghter /EMTs&#13;
do not undergo thls same&#13;
type&#13;
of training when It Is in fact&#13;
state mandated.&#13;
The issue ·of&#13;
response  time&#13;
mentioned  by  the  EMT-D&#13;
from Somer's  also has very&#13;
amblgiJous  undertones.  The&#13;
response from Somers'  sta-&#13;
tion  has  two  major  draw.&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny&#13;
Car:r ..;&#13;
,&#13;
Ed~tor   Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kelly MC~ISSlCk&#13;
News Ed!tor   Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
A!"Y&#13;
H., Ritter&#13;
: News Edl.tor   K~n McCray&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur .. FeaturesIEntertsmment   EdItor   M.chael&#13;
J.&#13;
Rohl&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
.Terrl.DeRosier&#13;
Ass!.&#13;
F~atures Ed!tor   Aobb Luehr .••.........•......•...•.. ,&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
BemI8 Doll&#13;
Assl.&#13;
Entertslnment  Editor   Steven R. Picazo&#13;
Offics Msnsger&#13;
cartoon  draw&#13;
fir&#13;
backs:&#13;
1.&#13;
The presence  of&#13;
a&#13;
rail·&#13;
road crossing.&#13;
2.&#13;
Tfie added time needed&#13;
to&#13;
respond from home to the&#13;
sta-&#13;
tlon to&#13;
pick-up&#13;
the emergency&#13;
equipment   may   delay   reo&#13;
sponse,&#13;
just  as there  Is the&#13;
posslbUty of the first&#13;
respond-&#13;
ing  Kenosha  fire  unit  be&#13;
avaUable.  Therefore  the  reo&#13;
sponse time should not be an&#13;
Issue because It Is such an&#13;
un-&#13;
guaranteed  factor.&#13;
Finally,&#13;
I&#13;
would like&#13;
to&#13;
say&#13;
that there&#13;
Is&#13;
a need for more&#13;
research&#13;
In&#13;
the area of bene.&#13;
fits/drawbacks  to this annex.&#13;
atlon. However,&#13;
I&#13;
would like&#13;
to say that  a volunteer  fire&#13;
department&#13;
system Is good&#13;
If&#13;
no other system  Is avaUable.&#13;
But, in thls case, there&#13;
Is&#13;
an.&#13;
other&#13;
system&#13;
available.&#13;
Whether&#13;
It&#13;
Is better  than the&#13;
one presently  in place  Is as&#13;
yet to be decided.&#13;
J&#13;
.A. Ruckau  ,&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor&#13;
Your December  3rd&#13;
potttt-&#13;
cal  cartoon  which  showed&#13;
Gary  Grace   Whisking  Dr.&#13;
Jesse  Hargrove  out  of  the&#13;
Educational  Opportunity Cen•&#13;
ter  office&#13;
was&#13;
inssnslU..&#13;
the serious nature of&#13;
lila&#13;
ing from UW·Parkslde.&#13;
Dr.  Hargrove's  ~&#13;
from  his position&#13;
was&#13;
celved by the black&#13;
co&#13;
nlty as&#13;
a&#13;
slap&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
lace,&#13;
Is&#13;
respected&#13;
and&#13;
admired&#13;
the  community.  Dr,&#13;
1!Ii_&#13;
grove's,  unselfish&#13;
gtvlng_~&#13;
such organizatlOll8&#13;
as theM'&#13;
cine Youth AChievem~t&#13;
gram   (Teen  Newe),&#13;
NAACP&#13;
Educational&#13;
I&#13;
tee,  Hand·In-Hand&#13;
(an&#13;
vocacy  program for&#13;
with  dlfferently-abled&#13;
d1111i&#13;
dren)  the Love and&#13;
:MIssion (Racine's&#13;
only&#13;
·ter for the homeless)&#13;
and&#13;
active  involvement&#13;
In&#13;
"ear  election of&#13;
Wls&#13;
first  black mayor,&#13;
respect.&#13;
I&#13;
echo the&#13;
feellng&#13;
01~&#13;
cine's&#13;
NAACP&#13;
Branch&#13;
~~I&#13;
dent,&#13;
:Ms.&#13;
Corrine&#13;
OWens.&#13;
noted that wltenever&#13;
10&#13;
faculty or&#13;
adminlStra&#13;
tors&#13;
It&#13;
come&#13;
too&#13;
active&#13;
In   ~&#13;
minority community,&#13;
the&#13;
ture  at Parkslde&#13;
Is&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Glenn  Dotson,&#13;
Dr.&#13;
see Cartoon&#13;
page&#13;
3-&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written and edhed by students 01UW-Parkside. who are solely responsible&#13;
tor::~&#13;
cy and content. It&#13;
tS&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic year except over&#13;
days.&#13;
"&#13;
wotds or&#13;
leSS-&#13;
Letters to the ednor Wlllbe accepted only&#13;
ff&#13;
Ihey are typed. double·spaced&#13;
and&#13;
350    ~II"&#13;
letters&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
Signed,&#13;
WIth&#13;
a telephone number Included&#13;
for&#13;
verification purposes.&#13;
Names&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false a!1dlor&#13;
de- • '_,_&#13;
famatory.&#13;
.~&#13;
Deadline lor alilettelS.  and classified ads, is Monday al fO a.m. for publicaliOll  ""~&#13;
ThurSday.&#13;
""'.&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parkside. Box 2000.&#13;
Ke-&#13;
nosha WI 53141. Telephone 4141553·2287 (Editorial) or&#13;
414/553.2295&#13;
(Advertis-&#13;
Ing).&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
,&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Kathy Clapp-Hsrmeyer&#13;
Assl.&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manager&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Caspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiapetta.  Jim&#13;
Cole.&#13;
John&#13;
Kehoe,&#13;
George&#13;
.&#13;
• Jeff&#13;
lenvnermaon.&#13;
8ran(l0il&#13;
J.&#13;
Liebrecht,&#13;
Amy&#13;
lud:-Mg  .&#13;
Ric!':&#13;
uehr. ~&#13;
MaiIand.&#13;
Doc&#13;
Mallory.&#13;
Doug&#13;
McEvtly&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna.&#13;
!'ani&#13;
Mitt.&#13;
laura Pestka. Steven&#13;
Picazo,&#13;
Mana&#13;
Rintz&#13;
Mark&#13;
ShiII'l!'iy.&#13;
Wendy&#13;
Sor1nson,  Jeff.&#13;
Stametl.&#13;
Tyson  Wilda.'&#13;
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              <text>JIIIlI8r"1&#13;
2S. 1BSS&#13;
University of&#13;
WI&#13;
sconSln-Parkslde&#13;
. Irall&#13;
en~ollme'!t figure  report&#13;
: confusing, misleading&#13;
by&#13;
AmY&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
. tratlon.  The figures  were  four&#13;
figures)  and I see that our e _&#13;
N....&#13;
Editor&#13;
months  ,?Id  and  were  "mts-&#13;
rollment  was up by about ~&#13;
I~admg,  . he  said.  The  5,213    students,  and  my question  to&#13;
figure   did  not   account   for&#13;
that  is how can we be so far&#13;
drops,  senior  citizens  (who    off-how  can we have a&#13;
deft-&#13;
may  audit  classes  at no cost).&#13;
cit  of  $63,767 if  our  enroll.&#13;
a~d. nursing  students.  whose    ment's up by 3.4 percent?"&#13;
tuttton&#13;
goes  to  UW.Milw\jcu,&#13;
Pettit   said  that  the  enroll.&#13;
kee.&#13;
ment  projection  process  on&#13;
~race- said Roman  Gawko-    which  the  student  bUdg~t is&#13;
Ski,  the   Regis~rar   at   Mar.&#13;
based,  should be questioned&#13;
If&#13;
quette   University,    who&#13;
col-&#13;
the  data  It yields  is  this  far&#13;
lected&#13;
the   figures   and   re-&#13;
off.&#13;
ported  them  to the press,  has&#13;
Pettit    has   asked   Jenny&#13;
been  asked  not to report  these&#13;
Carr,  SUFAC chair  to set up&#13;
figures   in  the  future,  but  to&#13;
a program  enhance~ent   fund&#13;
wait  for  the  official  UW.Sys.&#13;
(PEF).  "We are going to take&#13;
tern figures.&#13;
whatever  number  they  give&#13;
"It&#13;
makes us look stupid,"&#13;
us  for  projected  enrollment&#13;
Grace said.&#13;
and take anywhere from 2&#13;
Parkside   Registrar   Susan    percent to 10percent off, and&#13;
Johnson  agreed  that  the  Sen-&#13;
that's   what  we're   going  to&#13;
tinel   report   was   confusing&#13;
project  enrollment   to  be  at,&#13;
and   misleading.&#13;
She'   said&#13;
and then we'll  use that  as the&#13;
Gawkoskl  is secretary   of the&#13;
total  pool  of  money  that  we&#13;
registrars   association   and   can pull from, the total num-&#13;
collected  the  figures  the  first&#13;
ber of students  we're  going to&#13;
day  registration   before  six    get, and then set Segregated&#13;
weeks   of  adjUstme:nts   were&#13;
Fees against that number."&#13;
If&#13;
made  that  resulted  in&#13;
an  ac-&#13;
there  are  more  students&#13;
en-&#13;
tual&#13;
enrollment  of&#13;
4,910.&#13;
rolled,  the  extra  money&#13;
will&#13;
be put  in PEF.  Money  could&#13;
Johnson  said Gawkoski has    be  used  for  an  extra&#13;
PAB&#13;
been  collecting   these  figures&#13;
dance,   new   club   start-up,&#13;
each   semester    for   many&#13;
trips,  leadership  conferences,&#13;
years,  but  only recently  has    for example,"  he said.&#13;
u.w&#13;
enrollment&#13;
gained    so&#13;
"That  way  we  won't  have&#13;
much  attention.   At  a  recent&#13;
to  go through  and  budget  to&#13;
state  meeting,  he agreed  not    the hilt  as we've been doing&#13;
to realise  the figures until the    now.&#13;
If&#13;
we  didn't   budget&#13;
official&#13;
UW&#13;
report&#13;
is    everything    we   thought   we&#13;
released.&#13;
were going to get in&#13;
Segregat-&#13;
Pettit  explained  the  impor-&#13;
ed  Fees,   we  lost  it.  That's&#13;
tance  of accurate  enrollment&#13;
foolish  because   then  what&#13;
figures.&#13;
you're  doing is you're  betting&#13;
"We  understood   we  had  a&#13;
that  enrollment's   going to be&#13;
shortfall   in  Segregated   Fees&#13;
at least  the number  that  they&#13;
caused  by the  shortfall  in en-&#13;
give  you,  and&#13;
If&#13;
It's  not,  you&#13;
rollment,"    said  Pettit,   "and&#13;
have  to take  cuts.  And that's&#13;
we bUdgeted against that, and    what  we've  done  this  ye~r,&#13;
then&#13;
I&#13;
look at  this  (Sentinel    and that's  a problem."&#13;
1be&#13;
publlcationof early&#13;
en-&#13;
lIiIDlenl&#13;
figures for  the  fall&#13;
fIlln&#13;
the&#13;
Milwaukee Senti-&#13;
JiDee.&#13;
29&#13;
caused a brief rift&#13;
Ill"'"&#13;
Parkside   Student&#13;
QIfe/IIIIlOIIt Association&#13;
PSGA)&#13;
President Alex Pettit&#13;
I&#13;
lid&#13;
campus&#13;
administration.&#13;
!lie&#13;
Sentinelreported  that&#13;
I&#13;
l'Ilb1de'senrollment&#13;
in-&#13;
aased&#13;
by&#13;
3.4&#13;
percent&#13;
be-&#13;
IIlen&#13;
IaII&#13;
1988&#13;
and fall  1987.&#13;
tlficIal&#13;
records&#13;
here reported&#13;
enrollment  declined,&#13;
a shortfall of $63,000&#13;
Segregated&#13;
Fees  used  for&#13;
I&#13;
aclivitleson campus.&#13;
ted&#13;
fees   comprise&#13;
1100&#13;
of each  student's&#13;
leea,&#13;
and these  funds&#13;
IIIPOll&#13;
campus&#13;
organtza-&#13;
IIIIS.&#13;
u,..&#13;
reading&#13;
the report  in&#13;
lie&#13;
3enUne1,&#13;
Pettit  sent  let.&#13;
lin&#13;
to&#13;
Aasislant Chancellor&#13;
IlIrr&#13;
Grace and  Controller&#13;
~&#13;
Bolle&#13;
asking  them  to&#13;
...,  lIle&#13;
published figures,&#13;
.. ''If&#13;
10,&#13;
Why don't  they&#13;
WItIl&#13;
wllat I've been  told&#13;
....  lIeptember 1987,  and&#13;
~~&#13;
we&#13;
get&#13;
a&#13;
$63,000&#13;
---.u&#13;
out&#13;
of&#13;
this?"&#13;
:   Sentinelreported Park.&#13;
enronmentat  5,213 for&#13;
:  /aI1&#13;
lo1d&#13;
11l87&#13;
semester.  Pettit&#13;
that enrollment was&#13;
~.~&#13;
time  equivalents,&#13;
J;;"'..&#13;
theshortfall.&#13;
0",&#13;
an&#13;
Interview  Jan.   15,&#13;
"  e~rifled' the letter'  fig-&#13;
~ I&#13;
explaining that  the&#13;
iliac&#13;
e figure was&#13;
In&#13;
error&#13;
..,.e said that  the  figure~&#13;
COllectedby the Wiscon-&#13;
~latlon&#13;
of Gollegiate&#13;
~&#13;
and  Admissions&#13;
the first day of-regls-&#13;
Library&#13;
hOurs expanded&#13;
to&#13;
meet non-trad needs&#13;
bJ'IlAJny  H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
..... Edltor&#13;
~Y&#13;
library    closing&#13;
""" ,. lOve been  extended&#13;
II&#13;
iii .&#13;
P.m.&#13;
to&#13;
7:30 p.m.,&#13;
.... lradt&#13;
effort&#13;
to&#13;
accomodate&#13;
llg&#13;
\'ork&#13;
tlonal&#13;
stUdents.  CIt-&#13;
Iloilo&#13;
d....&#13;
~d   family  obliga-&#13;
';;"'ll'&#13;
the week,  these&#13;
~&#13;
COn&#13;
named weekends  the&#13;
IleUb ...&#13;
:.enient  time  to  use&#13;
~,.&#13;
:s&#13;
8llld Director    Linda&#13;
~   .1l'ere&#13;
that&#13;
the  extended&#13;
i:C"III&#13;
made   possible&#13;
~&#13;
money  saved   last&#13;
lea&#13;
from  the  first&#13;
semester  saved  us  a  bit  on&#13;
'money," Piele explained.&#13;
Needs   of   non-traditional&#13;
students  were addressed  dur-&#13;
.ing  meetings  of a  special&#13;
li-&#13;
brary   subcommittee   during&#13;
the summer  of 1987.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Nielsen,  a member  of&#13;
the  Labor  Relations  Commit·&#13;
tee,  said  he  was  acquainted&#13;
with  the  complaints  of non-&#13;
traditional    students   during&#13;
these meetings.&#13;
"Linda Piele's  actions illus-&#13;
trate  that  she is sensitive  to&#13;
student concerns,"  he said.&#13;
Piele  said  the  non·trad  stu·&#13;
dents  had  requested  extended&#13;
hours&#13;
in&#13;
the  evenings  on&#13;
Fridays   and  Saturdays.   She&#13;
added  that  a  survey  will  be&#13;
taken&#13;
in&#13;
mid-semester   to&#13;
determine&#13;
if&#13;
library  use  is&#13;
meeting expectations.&#13;
Fridays   and  Saturdays  are&#13;
good  study  times  for  people&#13;
with families  and/or  full-time&#13;
jobs,   Piele   explained,   w~o&#13;
have  sacrificed  their  SOCIal&#13;
times to attain an education.&#13;
Current  library  hours  are&#13;
Monday   through   Thursday,&#13;
7:45 a.m.  to  10:30 p.m.  (D-1&#13;
level&#13;
to&#13;
11:45 p.m.);   Friday,&#13;
7:45 a.m.  to 4:30 p.m.;  Satur-&#13;
day, 11 a.m.  to&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m.;  and&#13;
Sunday,  1 p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
Vol. 18. No.&#13;
t•&#13;
_byDovoMcE_&#13;
Dr Howard F~lIer addresses  a group at the Martin&#13;
Lut....&#13;
KIng&#13;
Jr.&#13;
CommemoratIve celebration In the Union Bazaar Jan.&#13;
20.&#13;
Speaker  slated&#13;
to&#13;
open&#13;
Black  History  Month&#13;
Black History Month begins&#13;
its Parkside  celebration Wed.&#13;
nesday,  Feb.&#13;
3&#13;
wIth keynote&#13;
speaker&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Maulana Karen-&#13;
ga at&#13;
4:30&#13;
p.m,&#13;
In&#13;
the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Karenga,  the Executive  DI·&#13;
rector  of the Institute  of&#13;
Pan-&#13;
African  Studies,  Los Angeles,&#13;
has  taught  Black Studies and&#13;
social change&#13;
in&#13;
various&#13;
col-&#13;
leges and universities  across&#13;
the country.&#13;
An&#13;
active  community  or-&#13;
ganizer,  Karenga  is founder&#13;
and&#13;
former  national  chair-&#13;
man&#13;
of&#13;
Us,&#13;
and chairman and&#13;
theoretician   of  the  Kawaida&#13;
Groundwork  Committee,  both&#13;
social  change  organizations&#13;
which  pose  cultural  struggle&#13;
as fundamental&#13;
to&#13;
meaningful&#13;
change in society.&#13;
He was co-convenor&#13;
and&#13;
co-&#13;
planner  of all three  national&#13;
Black   Power   Conferences&#13;
from  1966-68, developed  pro·&#13;
grams  for and  trained  Black&#13;
and&#13;
Brown&#13;
community organ·&#13;
izers   and   activists   at   the&#13;
Social Action Training  Center&#13;
in Watts  and  the  Center  for&#13;
Social  Action  at  USC,&#13;
and&#13;
was&#13;
a founding  _&#13;
memo&#13;
ber  of the  Brotherllood  Cru·&#13;
sade, the Blaek&#13;
COnBreu&#13;
and&#13;
Mafundl Inotltute.&#13;
all&#13;
key or-&#13;
ganizations&#13;
In&#13;
Black develop.&#13;
ment and struggle  during  the&#13;
1960s.&#13;
Karenga's  most widely&#13;
rec-&#13;
ognized contribuUons&#13;
are per-&#13;
haps   his   creation   of   the&#13;
"Nguzo  sabalt  (the  seven&#13;
principles),&#13;
a&#13;
fundamental&#13;
value&#13;
system&#13;
for&#13;
Black&#13;
com-&#13;
munity    development.&#13;
and&#13;
Kwanzaa,   a  Black   holiday&#13;
celebrated&#13;
throughout    the&#13;
U.S. by millions.&#13;
Karenga&#13;
has&#13;
long&#13;
been&#13;
a&#13;
kindred spirit  to the la8uee of&#13;
freedom,  liberation,  atnJggle&#13;
and  human  rlghll.  At a Ulne&#13;
when the  crucial&#13;
matter  of&#13;
the crisis of Black&#13;
leadenhlp&#13;
meets  headlong  with  a  moet&#13;
critical  Issue  of  our  Ulne  .&#13;
human  rights  •&#13;
his&#13;
anaIyaI.It&#13;
and  position&#13;
are&#13;
both  timely&#13;
and pertlnerlt.&#13;
Inside&#13;
Ice pond here&#13;
Condom machines&#13;
Winter Carnival&#13;
Athletes ineligible&#13;
page 3&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
page 9&#13;
page 12&#13;
21hurSdaY. Janll8lY 28. 1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Eligibility is studf!n.t~'&#13;
primary responsibility&#13;
An&#13;
unfortunate  situation  concerning  eligibllity  of ath-&#13;
letes&#13;
has&#13;
presented itself at Parkside this semester. ~e&#13;
really  unfortunate&#13;
part&#13;
of the situation&#13;
is&#13;
that&#13;
the entire&#13;
problem is completely  avoidable.&#13;
When students  enter  Parkside.  they are given catalogs&#13;
which  oulline  the  rules  and  regulations  concerning  Col-&#13;
legiate  Skllls and academic  standing.  As adults.  students&#13;
are expected&#13;
to&#13;
know how to read any..&#13;
if&#13;
there are ques-&#13;
tions concerning the rules.&#13;
to&#13;
ask for assistance.&#13;
While It&#13;
Is&#13;
easy&#13;
to&#13;
blame poor advising or poor&#13;
follow-up&#13;
on the&#13;
part&#13;
of the athletic  coaches, the person who ulti-&#13;
mately pays the penalty for lack of Information is the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent. Over the years, many students have had&#13;
to&#13;
sit out a&#13;
semester  or even a year due&#13;
to&#13;
lack of completion of Col-&#13;
legiate Skills or poor academic standing.&#13;
It seems&#13;
that&#13;
the missing&#13;
1Ink'&#13;
In&#13;
this&#13;
chain could be the&#13;
lack of adequate  follow up on the&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
the students.&#13;
If&#13;
you have not received your transcript from the&#13;
fall&#13;
semester,  or,&#13;
It&#13;
you&#13;
did not look at It closely, you should.&#13;
Collegiate Skills Information and academic  standing reo&#13;
qutrements are&#13;
specifically ouUlned In the catalog.&#13;
All&#13;
the&#13;
advisers&#13;
know&#13;
them. or should.&#13;
If&#13;
you, the student, do not&#13;
take the time to check on your&#13;
status.&#13;
why should anyone&#13;
else?&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
Editor:&#13;
Some time back there were&#13;
several articles In the Ranger&#13;
regarding  the roach, ant and&#13;
rodent populations&#13;
on our pic-&#13;
turesque  campus.  Although&#13;
I&#13;
have&#13;
not&#13;
been&#13;
approached&#13;
personally   by  any  of  the&#13;
aforementioned&#13;
wildlife.&#13;
I&#13;
have walked down the invio-&#13;
lable  halls  of this  realm  of&#13;
higher education  and I could&#13;
readily see the reason they&#13;
selected&#13;
UW-P&#13;
for   their&#13;
home.&#13;
When&#13;
I&#13;
visited my sons at&#13;
UW·Whltewater   and   UW-&#13;
Madison  I  though  I  knew&#13;
where  all  the  pigs  resided,&#13;
but  little  old  UW-Parkslde&#13;
definitely ranks  very high In&#13;
the  "Pigpen   Book  of  Re-&#13;
cords".&#13;
Amy  Ritter  was  right  on&#13;
target  when she wrote&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
December&#13;
3&#13;
issue  of  the&#13;
Ranger "one of the&#13;
first&#13;
signs&#13;
of maturity  Is personal  reo&#13;
sponsibllity ....and    personal&#13;
responsibility   Includes   the&#13;
ability to clean up after one-&#13;
sell."   There&#13;
are&#13;
nursery&#13;
schools&#13;
in the area where&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents maintain  cleaner sur-&#13;
roundings  that  those&#13;
majn-&#13;
taIned&#13;
by&#13;
the students here.&#13;
As  a&#13;
non-traditional   stu-&#13;
replace&#13;
dent,  I am  seldom  able&#13;
to&#13;
share&#13;
in&#13;
the daytime  activi-&#13;
tles which lake place at Park-&#13;
side;  I  only  see  the  mess&#13;
which is left behind.&#13;
The cus-&#13;
todians  who are  responsible&#13;
for the  cleanliness  of these&#13;
beautiful   buIldings   cannot&#13;
possibly  keep  up  with  the&#13;
hordes   of   slobs   working&#13;
against them.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
is&#13;
an Ideal situation for&#13;
the future leaders of our soet-&#13;
ety&#13;
to&#13;
show&#13;
that&#13;
they  are&#13;
strong enough&#13;
to&#13;
resolve one&#13;
of  the  problems  they&#13;
will •&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
deal with throughout&#13;
their  lIves...cleaning  up  the&#13;
environment.&#13;
Ii&#13;
each student  who Is not&#13;
contributing&#13;
to&#13;
the problems&#13;
would pick up just one piece&#13;
of litter,  or work with other&#13;
people  who  care&#13;
to&#13;
exert&#13;
"peer  pressure"  on the pigs,&#13;
the&#13;
ants, rodents and&#13;
cock-&#13;
roaches  would  have&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
elsewhere   for&#13;
tneir-&#13;
free&#13;
lunches.&#13;
Dennis&#13;
F.&#13;
Bell&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It's that time of year again,&#13;
time&#13;
to&#13;
stsrt  planning  new&#13;
year's resolutions. How about&#13;
putting a clean university  at&#13;
the&#13;
top&#13;
of your list?&#13;
WHAT WAS YOUR ROLE IN THE PLAN TO&#13;
SELL  ARMS  TO IRAN&#13;
IN EXCHANGE&#13;
FOR&#13;
HOSTAGES&#13;
IN&#13;
BEIRUT&#13;
AND TO DIVER.T&#13;
THE  PROFITS  TO THE NICARAGUAN CONTRAS?&#13;
roaches&#13;
Recently there was an&#13;
arti-&#13;
cle&#13;
in&#13;
the Ranger&#13;
by&#13;
Joe. the&#13;
Janitor.&#13;
pleading&#13;
his&#13;
cause.&#13;
He had&#13;
to&#13;
be very upset with .&#13;
halls and classrooms&#13;
to&#13;
take&#13;
time out of his busy schedule&#13;
to address  the student  body&#13;
by way of the Ranger.&#13;
I could understand  what he&#13;
was  saying  about  the  hall-&#13;
ways because It&#13;
has&#13;
been get.&#13;
ting&#13;
progressively  worse&#13;
all&#13;
semester.   The  comfortable&#13;
seating&#13;
areas&#13;
are&#13;
starting&#13;
to&#13;
look&#13;
like outdoor picnic areas.&#13;
Even&#13;
the&#13;
ants&#13;
are happy&#13;
for&#13;
the energy they get from the&#13;
soda glasses left"&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
car-&#13;
pet.  Come  on,  Kids  -- we&#13;
don't have to give them nour-&#13;
ishment&#13;
to&#13;
survive.  Th.ey&#13;
don't belong&#13;
In&#13;
the building.&#13;
The waste containers&#13;
are&#13;
only&#13;
a&#13;
few feet  away,&#13;
use&#13;
them&#13;
and&#13;
your feet.&#13;
I&#13;
was appalled  at arriving&#13;
at a class&#13;
in&#13;
Molinaro to see&#13;
spilled  soda,  glass  and  all,&#13;
left on the floor. Why wasn't&#13;
that cleaned up by the person&#13;
who  accidentally   or  care-&#13;
lessly spilled it? Didn't  your&#13;
mother teach you to clean up&#13;
at  home?  Is  this  the  way&#13;
you'd want your kids&#13;
to&#13;
treat&#13;
their school?&#13;
Next time you or a friend&#13;
...&#13;
IL-.YO_U_P_Vi_8W_S__&#13;
--:..&#13;
-_---_J&#13;
Litter  bugs&#13;
.  NO!&#13;
I WAS  INVOLVED'&#13;
EVER.VSTEP OF WE WAY!&#13;
I WAS&#13;
WITH&#13;
HIM.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
halls&#13;
drop your Items on the floor.&#13;
whether  soda  glasses,  paper&#13;
of  any&#13;
kind&#13;
or  cigarette&#13;
items, imagine  you are being&#13;
kicked&#13;
In&#13;
the heels by a litter&#13;
bug and being pushed  all the&#13;
way&#13;
to the&#13;
waste&#13;
container.&#13;
It&#13;
won't be&#13;
so&#13;
easy to drop these&#13;
items on the floor for anyone&#13;
to&#13;
clean up. Let's give Joe the&#13;
Janitor  a break!&#13;
While  on  the  subject   of&#13;
cleaning  up the  Messy  Act,&#13;
one  more   comment.&#13;
How&#13;
about  everyone  cleaning&#13;
011&#13;
their  own lable&#13;
In&#13;
the co!he&#13;
shop and dining room?&#13;
There&#13;
are no waitresses&#13;
on&#13;
duty&#13;
to&#13;
clean tables. If everylllle&#13;
""*&#13;
,  care  of their&#13;
own&#13;
things&#13;
It&#13;
would  not  only  make&#13;
Ibe&#13;
whole place look cleaner&#13;
bit&#13;
save the next person a&#13;
head-&#13;
ache!&#13;
Natural science credit&#13;
offered in San Jose&#13;
You&#13;
can  earn.'&#13;
university&#13;
credit&#13;
in&#13;
natural  science with&#13;
San Jose  Slate University&#13;
In&#13;
19S5&#13;
while  participating&#13;
In&#13;
Field  Studies&#13;
In&#13;
Natural  His-&#13;
tory&#13;
trips.&#13;
Destinations   in-&#13;
clude:  Death  Valley,  March  -&#13;
?:l -&#13;
April&#13;
2:&#13;
Grand  Canyon,&#13;
June&#13;
28 •&#13;
JUly&#13;
4&#13;
and/or  July&#13;
4&#13;
- 12;&#13;
the  Islands  of Ha&#13;
wail,&#13;
Naturally,  July&#13;
6· 24;&#13;
Trinity&#13;
Alps, August&#13;
7 - 13.    .&#13;
Each  program   offers&#13;
In-&#13;
depth exploration  of the plant&#13;
. and   animal   life.   geology, .&#13;
ecology. and  more.  Prafes-&#13;
so.rs guide you on daily field&#13;
trtps,&#13;
with&#13;
discussion and spe-&#13;
•&#13;
clal activities,&#13;
too.&#13;
Some&#13;
trIpi&#13;
allow famUy members&#13;
10&#13;
JlII"&#13;
tlcipate  In the family&#13;
partld·&#13;
patlon&#13;
plan-allowing&#13;
yOil&#13;
to&#13;
earn' university  credit&#13;
whlle&#13;
the family  enjoys&#13;
a summer&#13;
vacation.&#13;
For   further&#13;
Infonnatlol\,&#13;
costs, and registration ~\&#13;
ance,&#13;
call&#13;
(408) 924-~:  ......&#13;
Studies&#13;
In&#13;
Natural "..-"&#13;
San Jose State University.&#13;
The programs&#13;
are&#13;
open&#13;
to&#13;
all adults  (or famUies&#13;
whe~&#13;
specified). You donolha~sv&#13;
be already  enrolled&#13;
at&#13;
to attend .&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger is written &amp;:1dedit~d by students of UW-Parkside, who are solely responsible&#13;
tor&#13;
itsedit~=&#13;
cy and content. It IS published every Thursday during the academic year except DVM&#13;
tJeakS&#13;
-&#13;
..'&#13;
.&#13;
»&#13;
letters to the e~itor Will.&#13;
be&#13;
accepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they&#13;
are typed, double-spaced and 350&#13;
wordS~-....&#13;
h&#13;
lettldersmust be&#13;
signed,  With&#13;
a telephone number inclUded for verification purposes. Names&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
e  upon request.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false andlor&#13;
de-&#13;
amatory.&#13;
~~~J~n:.&#13;
for a" letters. and classified ads, is Monday at 10 a.rn, for pU~icatio!1&#13;
All correspondence  should be addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside.  Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
~ha   WI 53141. Telephone 414/553·2287 (Editorial) or 414/553.2295 (Advertis·&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
~ny   Car.r ..;&#13;
Editor    Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
elly&#13;
McKissick&#13;
News Ed~or&#13;
Dave&#13;
McE-&#13;
Photo&#13;
Edit&#13;
AmyH   R'tt&#13;
No&#13;
E'&#13;
,............................&#13;
tor&#13;
.  .  I ~&#13;
WS d~lor   John Kehoe&#13;
Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Tern DeROSI8f ...................•....  Feature Edttor   Robb Luehr .........................•..•..   Copy Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
~   Hearron&#13;
:. Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
S-n&#13;
R.&#13;
Picazo&#13;
OperalionsManager&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF&#13;
Jason&#13;
CIspefs.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chlapetta.  Jim&#13;
Cole.&#13;
Mark&#13;
francen.&#13;
Fred&#13;
JobsI.&#13;
George&#13;
KoenIg.&#13;
Jeff&#13;
lemmermam   Amy ludwig  Rick&#13;
luelll.&#13;
Jim&#13;
Maastrict.&#13;
Dawn&#13;
Mailand.&#13;
Doc&#13;
Mallory&#13;
JOhn&#13;
Maner.&#13;
Dou~&#13;
McEYOy.&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna. Patti ruz&#13;
laura&#13;
Pestka&#13;
Maria&#13;
Aintz.&#13;
80bbi&#13;
Jo&#13;
Slater. Wendy Sorenson&#13;
.&#13;
</text>
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        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="79113">
              <text>Volume 16, issue 17</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="79114">
              <text>Activity hour issue goes to committee for study</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="79124">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90179">
              <text>&#13;
I&#13;
/et/?ru6ir&#13;
y&#13;
25.&#13;
Activity hour issue&#13;
goes to&#13;
committee for study&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
did  not  take  advantage    of the&#13;
",'&#13;
_&#13;
News Editor&#13;
time  to get  Involved  In activi-&#13;
ties.&#13;
"I&#13;
proposed    this&#13;
.to&#13;
better&#13;
se~e  student needs,"  he sald,&#13;
emphasizing  that  he  did  not&#13;
wish to eliminate  extracurric-&#13;
ular  activities,   just  make  bet-&#13;
ter  use  of time  that  students&#13;
could  be&#13;
in&#13;
classes.&#13;
Also,  being   forced  to  chose&#13;
between   classes   and  activi-&#13;
ties,  or  between  different  ac-&#13;
tivities.   would  better   prepare&#13;
students    for   time   manage-&#13;
ment&#13;
challenges&#13;
they&#13;
will&#13;
face&#13;
after&#13;
graduation,&#13;
he&#13;
said.&#13;
Duetsch   referred    to  a  sur-&#13;
vey   conducted    by   the   Com-&#13;
mittee    on   Campus    Environ-&#13;
ment  dated  Feb.  16, 1987.&#13;
The  committee,   in  the  sur-&#13;
vey findings,  made  the follow-&#13;
ing   recommendation:&#13;
"The&#13;
logic&#13;
behind-&#13;
the  activity   hour&#13;
is  still  legitimate.   However,&#13;
we  believe   that&#13;
an  tnvesttga-&#13;
tlon  needs  to be  done,  In&#13;
coor-&#13;
dlnatlon  with  the  student&#13;
gov-&#13;
.emment,&#13;
to   determine&#13;
the&#13;
use  of  the  activity    hour   and&#13;
the  possiblllty   of retaining   the&#13;
logic  of  setting   aside  an  hour&#13;
for  student   activity   but&#13;
mov-&#13;
Ing  It to a  time  that  will  meet&#13;
the  variety   of needs  of the&#13;
dl-&#13;
verse   student   body,  both  aca-&#13;
demic and extra-curricular."&#13;
Duetsch&#13;
argued&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Senate    should   pass&#13;
hls   proposal,    making   a   rec-&#13;
ommenda tion  to  administra-&#13;
.,. battle  was   won   In   the&#13;
t  against   elimination&#13;
of&#13;
activity hour,  but  the  war&#13;
lIyet&#13;
to&#13;
be fought.&#13;
Fifteen'stu&lt;lents attended   a&#13;
FacullySenate  meeting   Tues-&#13;
aay(Feb. 16) to oppose  a  pro-&#13;
posal&#13;
to&#13;
eliminate  the  activity&#13;
zour,&#13;
which  is  the  period   on&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
and&#13;
Frtday&#13;
from&#13;
1&#13;
p.m.  to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
whenclasses  are&#13;
not   sched-&#13;
uled.&#13;
Thestudents  hung  a  banner&#13;
outside'themeeting  room  that&#13;
read&#13;
"Remember&#13;
Shared&#13;
Goverance:    36.09(5)"&#13;
and&#13;
sported&#13;
buttons&#13;
with&#13;
that&#13;
jIU1l1ber.36.09(5) refers   to  the&#13;
aaergerlaw which  allows  stu-&#13;
E&#13;
participation   in  admlnis-&#13;
ve&#13;
decision-making.&#13;
eial&#13;
Science&#13;
Division&#13;
Larry&#13;
L.  Duetsch,   who&#13;
uced the  proposal,   said,&#13;
1\IIIjdlsmayed)  by the  Idea&#13;
this&#13;
may    bypass&#13;
stu-&#13;
rights  to  participate&#13;
In&#13;
d&#13;
governance.&#13;
This&#13;
not&#13;
be  further   from  the&#13;
th."&#13;
iluetsch  said   that   the   ac-&#13;
Iy&#13;
hour prevented&#13;
schedul-&#13;
IIlg&#13;
of&#13;
more  classes,   and  as  a&#13;
result, there  are  many  sched-&#13;
ule  COnfllcts  with&#13;
depart-&#13;
menls and   between    depart.&#13;
ments. He referred   to  the  ac-&#13;
tivity  hour    as&#13;
the&#13;
"dead&#13;
hour,"  saying   that    students&#13;
Bid&#13;
for&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A proposal  to place  a  refer-&#13;
endum-on  the   spring    ballot&#13;
SOlieitlngstudent   opinion   on&#13;
Whether   or&#13;
not&#13;
Parkside&#13;
shOUld pull    out    of   United&#13;
Council  mC)    was    defeated&#13;
Friday  at   the   Parkside&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent Government   Association&#13;
(PSGA)meeting.&#13;
Eight votes  were  needed&#13;
to&#13;
pass the  measure,&#13;
and   only&#13;
six. of   the   eleven    senators&#13;
Ptesent voted  for  It.&#13;
"I am disappointed,"    PSGA&#13;
PreSident Alex  Pettit   said&#13;
in&#13;
a   later&#13;
Interview.&#13;
"Right&#13;
~w,&#13;
1 feel, would  be  the  time&#13;
run&#13;
it&#13;
in&#13;
a  referendum,&#13;
be-&#13;
cause more  people  vote  in the&#13;
'pring election  than  In the  fall&#13;
election.  Students    are    more&#13;
~ware of&#13;
the&#13;
issue  now,  also,&#13;
eeause  news   about    United&#13;
;ouncn   has   lately   appeared&#13;
requently In the  Ranger."&#13;
.&#13;
Pettit  hopes  to  convince  the&#13;
'utudent body   to   puil   out   of&#13;
C.  He&#13;
believes   the   money&#13;
~an  be&#13;
better&#13;
spent&#13;
here.&#13;
arkside   will   pay   $8,000  to&#13;
'University&#13;
of  WlscOnslna-Parkslde&#13;
photo   by  Amy  H,  Altter&#13;
FaCUltysenate  ponders  the  Importance  of the  activity hour  at leat&#13;
week's   meeting.&#13;
tion,  who  he  said&#13;
he  is&#13;
sure&#13;
would  enlist   faculty   and&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent   opinion   betore    making&#13;
decision.&#13;
"I&#13;
would  assume  the&#13;
admfntstratfon&#13;
would   solicit&#13;
the- advice   of  student   groups&#13;
before   making&#13;
a.&#13;
decislon,&#13;
as&#13;
well as  the  advice  of the  Fac-&#13;
ulty&#13;
Senate"&#13;
determined&#13;
here.    "Having&#13;
said    that,&#13;
I&#13;
really   like  this  proposal,"    he&#13;
satd,  provoking  laughter.&#13;
Alex   Pettit,    Parkside&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent  Government   Association&#13;
(PSGA)   president,    disagreed&#13;
with  Duetsch.&#13;
"What   I'm   arguing   here  Is&#13;
that   this   resolution   is  not  a&#13;
result  of discussion  from  that&#13;
committee,"&#13;
Pettit&#13;
said.&#13;
"Had&#13;
the&#13;
committee&#13;
dis-&#13;
cussed&#13;
It,&#13;
and  had  a  student&#13;
representative&#13;
discussed&#13;
It,&#13;
and&#13;
determined&#13;
either&#13;
a&#13;
change,  or  a  modification,   or&#13;
even  tmnrlnation&#13;
of the  activi-&#13;
ty&#13;
hour&#13;
was&#13;
in&#13;
order&#13;
f&#13;
then&#13;
thai&#13;
would  be  much  more&#13;
ap-&#13;
proprlate&#13;
than&#13;
a&#13;
resolution&#13;
before  the Faculty  Senate."&#13;
The  student   8er.ate,   he&#13;
ex-&#13;
plained,&#13;
recently&#13;
passed&#13;
a&#13;
resolution   In  support   of  the&#13;
activity  hour.  "We're  not ada-&#13;
mently   oppoaed   to  changing&#13;
the  activity   hour,  but .we are&#13;
Vol.&#13;
18.&#13;
No.&#13;
17&#13;
opposed  to  making&#13;
thla&#13;
type&#13;
of  change   on  the  floor  of  a&#13;
faculty  Senate  like&#13;
this."  Pet-&#13;
tit  argued   that   student   opin-&#13;
ion  should&#13;
be&#13;
considered&#13;
be-&#13;
fore  the  Faculty   Senate  takes&#13;
a&#13;
stand.&#13;
Pettit&#13;
rebutted&#13;
Duetsch's&#13;
allegation   that  not  many&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents   use   the   activity   hour,&#13;
saytng  that   for  example,   the&#13;
student   Senate   meets   during&#13;
that&#13;
time.&#13;
Also,&#13;
smaller&#13;
groups&#13;
who  do&#13;
not&#13;
have  their&#13;
meeting    times    posted   meet&#13;
during  the  hour.&#13;
He  said  the  Academic   Poli-&#13;
cies   Committee    (APC)   was&#13;
discussing&#13;
taking&#13;
a&#13;
survey&#13;
via  postcards    to  reveal   stu-&#13;
dent  sentiment   regarding   the&#13;
activity&#13;
hour.   He&#13;
suggested&#13;
that  the  Senate  allow  the&#13;
de-&#13;
cision    to&#13;
take&#13;
its&#13;
normal&#13;
course,   through   the  commit-&#13;
tee,  before   being  decided   on&#13;
the 8enate  floor.&#13;
James  H. Shea.  Science&#13;
De-&#13;
partment&#13;
ChaIr&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
memo&#13;
ber   of  the&#13;
APe,&#13;
said,&#13;
"We&#13;
were   unaware   of&#13;
this&#13;
re80lu~&#13;
tlon, so the&#13;
APC&#13;
proceeded  as&#13;
If&#13;
we  were  going  to  be  devel-&#13;
oping&#13;
the&#13;
Issue.&#13;
One&#13;
Of&#13;
the&#13;
thInga&#13;
we&#13;
talked&#13;
about,&#13;
as&#13;
Alex mentioned,  waa&#13;
the&#13;
poe-&#13;
a1bWty&#13;
of&#13;
aurveying&#13;
atuclent.&#13;
via&#13;
some&#13;
klnd&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
postcard&#13;
arrangement.   The feeling  was&#13;
that  we ahould get  as  broad  II&#13;
response   as  we  could  among&#13;
See&#13;
Faculty&#13;
sene&#13;
I.&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
United&#13;
Council&#13;
referendum narrowly fails&#13;
UC  over&#13;
the&#13;
course&#13;
of&#13;
next&#13;
year  if it remains   a  full mem-&#13;
ber  of the  organization.&#13;
Senators   Tim  Grygera,   Jan&#13;
,Kratochvil,&#13;
Jay&#13;
Lewandow-&#13;
ski,   Steven   R.   Picazo,.   Dan&#13;
Vogt&#13;
and&#13;
.Julie&#13;
Wunrow&#13;
Friday   voted  to run  the  refer-&#13;
endum  on the  ballot.&#13;
Senators    Gary    Heggeland,&#13;
Dan   Perrault&#13;
and   Stephanie&#13;
Tatem  'voted  against.&#13;
Senators   Debl  Fritchow   and&#13;
J.J.   Masterson   abstained.   Sue&#13;
Walborn&#13;
and    Kevin    Zirkel-&#13;
bach  were  not present.&#13;
"I&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
conversation&#13;
with&#13;
(UC President)    Adrian  Serra-   .&#13;
no."&#13;
said   Heggeland&#13;
in&#13;
ex-&#13;
plaining&#13;
his&#13;
"no"&#13;
vote.&#13;
"He&#13;
had&#13;
given  us&#13;
a  list&#13;
of  legisla-&#13;
tors&#13;
from  this  area   who  said&#13;
that   United  Council  is  a  good&#13;
organization    and  an  effective&#13;
lobby.&#13;
It&#13;
seemed   like  the  or·&#13;
ganization&#13;
deserves&#13;
strong&#13;
consideration&#13;
before&#13;
going&#13;
against&#13;
it,"&#13;
Perrault&#13;
said:&#13;
"I&#13;
didn't&#13;
have   enough   information&#13;
at&#13;
the  time.&#13;
I&#13;
was  uninformed&#13;
in&#13;
my&#13;
no&#13;
vote. "&#13;
"In   my   own&#13;
jUdgment,   I&#13;
was  uncertain    on&#13;
a'&#13;
point  or&#13;
two,"  said&#13;
Tatem.&#13;
"I&#13;
wanted&#13;
to get  more  information."&#13;
Serrano,&#13;
a   former&#13;
PSGA&#13;
president,    sent&#13;
all&#13;
the   sena-&#13;
tors   a   letter   outlining   UC's&#13;
accomplishments.&#13;
Among&#13;
these   claims   are&#13;
a&#13;
$69&#13;
sav-&#13;
ings&#13;
in&#13;
tuition,  initiation  of an&#13;
amendment    that   provides&#13;
fi-&#13;
nancial   aid  for  students   with&#13;
young  children,  and  the  Intent&#13;
to  lobby  for  the  Tuition  Cap&#13;
Bill  (which  would limit  tultlon&#13;
to  33  percent   of  educational&#13;
cost).&#13;
The letter  also  said:&#13;
"Next    year    the   UC   Plat-&#13;
form  will  be  viewed 'by  (law-&#13;
makers)&#13;
as   the   platform&#13;
of&#13;
the   OW  System   students.&#13;
If&#13;
Parkside&#13;
is   not   a   member&#13;
they  will  have  had'  no  say  In&#13;
this  platform  ...&#13;
"Next   year   if  UC  does  not&#13;
officially   represent    Parkside,&#13;
UC  will   still   talk   to   policy&#13;
makers   and  odds  are  not  one&#13;
will&#13;
say,  'but  you don't  repre~&#13;
sent  Parkside,'&#13;
"Look   at   the   accomplish-&#13;
ments  and  what  your  elected&#13;
state&#13;
officials&#13;
say&#13;
about&#13;
United   Council.  Look  at   the&#13;
substance,   not  the  personali-&#13;
ties,"&#13;
If&#13;
Parkslde    does  withdraw&#13;
from   the   state   lobbying   or-&#13;
ganization,&#13;
however.&#13;
it&#13;
can&#13;
still  enjoy  the  benefits  of any&#13;
victories  won on behalf&#13;
of  ~&#13;
System  students.&#13;
Pettit  hopes  the  propoaaJ&#13;
to&#13;
run   the   referendum&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
brought  up again,  and  passed,&#13;
at  next  Friday'S  Senate  meet-&#13;
ing.&#13;
It&#13;
can  only  be  introduced&#13;
by&#13;
a&#13;
senator&#13;
who&#13;
voted&#13;
against&#13;
It.&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday, February 25, 1988&#13;
Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Student&#13;
etections offer&#13;
educaffonalopporluni~&#13;
ThIs&#13;
is&#13;
the coffee generation  of Parkside  student  ad-&#13;
vocacy.&#13;
This&#13;
year's Parkslde  Student Government ASSOOl·&#13;
ation (PSGA)&#13;
has&#13;
been moving and shaking&#13;
to&#13;
get things&#13;
accomplished  for students. The student attendance  at the&#13;
faculty senate meeting last week would not have hap-&#13;
pene.., In the past. There&#13;
is&#13;
Ilfe on this campus.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
has&#13;
extended  the deadline  for the return  of&#13;
peti-&#13;
tions for students who are interested&#13;
in&#13;
joining&#13;
in&#13;
on the&#13;
moving and shaking going on at Parkslde.  The hope here&#13;
Is that more students will have the opportunity to consider&#13;
holding an office and representing  the concerns of the&#13;
dt-&#13;
verse population of Parkside.&#13;
It's always easy to sit back and complain about those&#13;
who are wl1l1ngto take the risk and step forward to make&#13;
a difference.&#13;
It&#13;
Is a whole new ball game&#13;
to&#13;
take&#13;
that&#13;
risk&#13;
yourself.&#13;
This&#13;
university has always taken pride In Its fine&#13;
educe-&#13;
tional programs.&#13;
It&#13;
Is important&#13;
to&#13;
remember&#13;
that&#13;
every&#13;
opportunity that a student takes to learn about the&#13;
unrver-&#13;
slty system. the law and the budgetary  process&#13;
w1II&#13;
have&#13;
far-reaching&#13;
benefits beyond the classroom.&#13;
.&#13;
PSGA's office&#13;
is&#13;
In the D·1 level of the&#13;
WLLC&#13;
building.&#13;
The door&#13;
is&#13;
always open. There are people there who are&#13;
wl1l1ngto take a chance on students.  Take a chance and&#13;
make a difference.&#13;
Possible discrepancies&#13;
deserve a closer look&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Rltler&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The  Investigation  of&#13;
ques-&#13;
tionable partisan  activities  of&#13;
United   Council   President&#13;
Adrian Serrano Is over. but&#13;
his acquittal,  per  se, should&#13;
be questioned.&#13;
""UW&#13;
lobbying group did not&#13;
violate law,&#13;
tJ&#13;
read  the head-&#13;
Une of a Feb.  16 Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel  article,   explaining&#13;
that United Council (UC). the&#13;
Uw-Syetem&#13;
lobbying  group,&#13;
was cleared of wrongdoing by&#13;
the secretary of state's office&#13;
&amp;fier an Ivestigation  lnltiated&#13;
by a partisan  letter  sent by&#13;
Serrano and former UC Exec.&#13;
utlve Director Morty Hansen.&#13;
The letter,  sent to&#13;
all&#13;
state&#13;
assembly Democrats,  aaJd:&#13;
"Dear   As4-embly  Demo.&#13;
crat:&#13;
"We both enjoyed the&#13;
Dem-&#13;
ocratic  Assembly  Campaign&#13;
klck-off fundraiser  held  last&#13;
Tuesday at the Concourse.&#13;
Now it's our tum&#13;
to&#13;
offer an&#13;
invitation to&#13;
you.&#13;
"As&#13;
advocates  for student&#13;
concerns  for United Council,&#13;
we both  hope to work  with&#13;
you&#13;
during&#13;
the upcoming&#13;
ses-&#13;
slon.&#13;
"As members  of the Young&#13;
~mocrats   of Wisconsin, we&#13;
look forward to working with&#13;
you    to    maintain&#13;
and&#13;
strengthen  the  Democratic&#13;
majority&#13;
In&#13;
the  Assembly.&#13;
Young Democrats  played  an&#13;
important  role&#13;
in&#13;
several  im-&#13;
portant&#13;
assembly races&#13;
in&#13;
1986.Mter a successful can-&#13;
vention&#13;
in&#13;
Platteville  this past&#13;
weekend.  the YDW Is ready&#13;
to gear up for a successful&#13;
'88&#13;
campaign.&#13;
"We hope you will stop over&#13;
to&#13;
the United Council&#13;
recep-&#13;
tion on Wednesday, January&#13;
27.&#13;
"Sincerely,&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
President&#13;
Morty Hansen&#13;
Executive  Director"&#13;
This reporter  was  present&#13;
when Serrano informed sev-&#13;
eral&#13;
UW&#13;
presidents  of the sec.&#13;
retary  of state's  imminent&#13;
in-&#13;
vestigation  Feb.&#13;
2.&#13;
At  that&#13;
time, he described&#13;
what&#13;
was&#13;
aaJd In the letter.  Upon later&#13;
reading of the letter.&#13;
dtecre.&#13;
pencies were found.&#13;
PSGA President  Alex Pettit&#13;
proposed  that  a lower  scale&#13;
investigation  of Serrano's  ac-&#13;
tivities   be  conducted.   He&#13;
hoped to look for misalloca-&#13;
tions of telephone, postal. and&#13;
Ira&#13;
vel expenditures.  This Idea&#13;
see&#13;
U.C.&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
iQ&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Ranger ethics compared&#13;
to&#13;
Pravda&#13;
To the Editor: .&#13;
In&#13;
the past year&#13;
I&#13;
have seen&#13;
a few articles&#13;
in&#13;
this news-&#13;
paper that state the necessity&#13;
for freedom  of the  press.  I&#13;
agree one hundred percent&#13;
that a free press is&#13;
(if&#13;
I may&#13;
use part of a September,  1987&#13;
headline)  "Vital&#13;
In&#13;
unveiling&#13;
the  truth."   However,  there&#13;
are a few&#13;
ttifngs&#13;
that lead me&#13;
to&#13;
wonder whether this news-&#13;
paper has the freedom&#13;
to&#13;
"unveil the truth ...&#13;
To mustrate  this point. out&#13;
of the six members of the&#13;
Segregated  University  Fees&#13;
Allocations&#13;
Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), three  of them are&#13;
staff members  of this news-&#13;
paper;  and one of these news.&#13;
paper  staff  persons  Is  not&#13;
only   the   chairperson    of&#13;
SUFAC but Is also the Ediior&#13;
of this newspaper.&#13;
Since this newspaper has&#13;
to&#13;
compete&#13;
with&#13;
other  student&#13;
organizations  for&#13;
its&#13;
share  of&#13;
students'  monies,  Can&#13;
It&#13;
also&#13;
report  the decisions of this&#13;
Important   committee   fairly&#13;
and accurately?&#13;
To make  an analogy,&#13;
if&#13;
a&#13;
journalist  such as Dan Rather&#13;
or  William  F.  Buckley  Jr.&#13;
were members of the United&#13;
States  Congress.  could  they&#13;
fairly and accurately  report&#13;
Congressional  news?  (Some&#13;
argue that these two cannot&#13;
report  or  comment  on the&#13;
news fairly anyway. )&#13;
The  only other  newspaper&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
can think of that is so&#13;
closely associated  with gov-&#13;
ernment   is  Pravda&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
Soviet Union. Such a&#13;
l1nk&#13;
be-&#13;
tween the press and govern.&#13;
ment is an anathema  to our&#13;
American heritage.  -&#13;
Has there been an incident&#13;
that would be a reason for&#13;
concern about this close as-&#13;
sociation  of  the  press  and&#13;
government  on this campus?&#13;
Yes. Last November,  SUFAC&#13;
elected  the  Editor   of  the&#13;
newspaper  to be the&#13;
chalrper-&#13;
son of the committee.  How-&#13;
ever, the election was protest-&#13;
ed and then ruled  invalid  by&#13;
the judicial branch of Student&#13;
Government  because the indi-&#13;
vidual  did  not  receive  the&#13;
proper  amount  of  votes  as&#13;
stated&#13;
In&#13;
the PSGA Constitu-&#13;
tion. Why was this important&#13;
news  story  ignored  by  this&#13;
newspaper?  Does&#13;
it&#13;
have any.&#13;
thing  to do with  the  Editor&#13;
avoiding  possible  conflict  of&#13;
Interest charges  for being the&#13;
chair of SUFAC also?&#13;
That I~ why&#13;
r&#13;
question&#13;
the&#13;
ability  of this  newspaper&#13;
to&#13;
"unveil  the truth"  on issues&#13;
not only involving SUFACbut&#13;
also issues  involving student&#13;
government  and United.&#13;
Coun-&#13;
cil.&#13;
As American  citizens we&#13;
must  remember.  that  along&#13;
with  freedom  come  certain&#13;
responsibilities.  I question the&#13;
ethics of this newspaper;  but&#13;
it&#13;
also seems  that this news-&#13;
paper is not free. but&#13;
it&#13;
is en-&#13;
slaved.&#13;
Fred&#13;
Manard!&#13;
Editor's  ,note:&#13;
1&#13;
refer  Mr.&#13;
Monardi  to the Nov.&#13;
12, 1987&#13;
issue&#13;
0/&#13;
the  Ranger  which&#13;
Covers  the  controversy  su'&#13;
rounding  the  SUFAO  chai»&#13;
position.  This story received&#13;
fronf page coverage.  In addi·&#13;
tion,&#13;
1&#13;
w,w/d&#13;
like&#13;
to list the&#13;
members'&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
year's&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
committee:   Jenny&#13;
Oarr.. Rocky  Don0V4..n, Jay&#13;
Lewandowski,  Steven Picazo,&#13;
Susan' Walborn and Kevin Zir'&#13;
kelbach.  The members  of the&#13;
.Ranger staff are listed&#13;
on&#13;
our&#13;
masthead  below.&#13;
1 will&#13;
allow&#13;
the facts  to speak for them'&#13;
selves.&#13;
See&#13;
Leiter page&#13;
5  •&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor   Rsndy Lecounl&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kelly Mc~issick&#13;
News Editor   Dave McEvoy&#13;
~  Photo Editor&#13;
Am~ H. Rltt~r ·.·........•...•............  News Editor   John Kehoe&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Tern DeRos.er&#13;
Feature Editor   Robb Luehr&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Ranger is written a~d edit~d by students of UW·Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editorial poli.&#13;
cy and content  II,s publIShed every ThurSday dunng the academic year except over breaks and hoi&gt;&#13;
days&#13;
Letters to the editor willbe  accepted only if they are tYped. double-spaced and 350 words or less-.All&#13;
letters must be Signed, WItha telephone number included for verification purposes Names will&#13;
be&#13;
With·&#13;
held upon request&#13;
.&#13;
f Ranger reserves the right to&#13;
edit&#13;
letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
r-:---,&#13;
amatory.&#13;
'''~of'''~&#13;
T~~~:'   for all letters. and classmed ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication   ~li1reo&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parkside, Box 2000, Ke-&#13;
~1P....&#13;
e&#13;
~ta   WI 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287  (Ednorial) or 414/553-2295  (Advertis-&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
sr&#13;
AFF&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
,&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Steven&#13;
R.&#13;
Picszo&#13;
Operalions  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jason&#13;
(;aspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chlapena. Jim&#13;
Cole.&#13;
Mark&#13;
rrarcen.&#13;
Fred&#13;
Jobst,&#13;
George&#13;
Koerug.&#13;
Jeff&#13;
Lemmermann,  Amy lUdWig,&#13;
RicK&#13;
luehr.&#13;
Jim&#13;
Maastrlct.&#13;
Da.'MJ&#13;
Maifand.&#13;
Doc&#13;
MaIIofY.&#13;
JOhn&#13;
Marter.&#13;
Doug&#13;
Mchay,&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna. Patti&#13;
Nitz.&#13;
laura&#13;
Pestka.&#13;
Malia&#13;
Ainu.&#13;
Bobbi&#13;
Jo&#13;
$ate"&#13;
Wendy&#13;
Sorenson_&#13;
</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Vol. 16, No. 18&#13;
e&#13;
Slip&#13;
of tongue&#13;
dampensvisit&#13;
In&#13;
an apparent  slip  of the&#13;
tongUe,Kenosha  Mayor   Eu·&#13;
geneDorff referred   to  Rev.&#13;
JesseJackson as  a  "spear-&#13;
cbucker" in&#13;
introducing&#13;
him&#13;
ata rally hetd Tuesday  (Feb.&#13;
nat the Chrysler plant.&#13;
Addressing  a&#13;
crowd&#13;
of&#13;
over&#13;
2,000workers and  concerned&#13;
citizens,Dorff  said,&#13;
"We're&#13;
goingto have  to go  to  every&#13;
village, every   town,   every&#13;
city&#13;
in&#13;
the  United  States--&#13;
every&#13;
governor..&#13;
and&#13;
impress&#13;
upon them&#13;
what's  going on&#13;
th&#13;
the corporate   rape  in&#13;
s country.&#13;
"But this country needs a&#13;
archucker.   And   I   think&#13;
'vegot him up here on this&#13;
podium.. a man that  cares&#13;
aboutour  cities,  towns,&#13;
and&#13;
villagesand farmers.  "&#13;
Dorffis white and  Jackson&#13;
is&#13;
black. The  term   "spear-&#13;
chucker" is&#13;
usually perceived&#13;
asa racial&#13;
slur.&#13;
However. Dorff.   in  later&#13;
media reports.   said  he&#13;
mis-&#13;
Spoke,and meant   to  use  the&#13;
term"spearheader  .':&#13;
"I was  likening   that   to&#13;
Jacksonspearheading  our ef-&#13;
forts."Dorff said.&#13;
Dorffinsisted that  Jackson&#13;
hadtaken no offense  to  the&#13;
comment. as the&#13;
Democratic&#13;
presidential&#13;
candidate   took&#13;
the&#13;
mayor along with&#13;
him&#13;
to&#13;
eampaign&#13;
in Iowa  following&#13;
therally.&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
.•....•.&#13;
'&#13;
:.~.~&#13;
...•&#13;
~&#13;
••&#13;
'&#13;
..•...&#13;
'.:&#13;
•••&#13;
'&#13;
•.....•&#13;
'&#13;
....•&#13;
'&#13;
.•.&#13;
,&#13;
.••&#13;
;&#13;
••&#13;
~.,'-".,&#13;
','.'&#13;
..&#13;
'&#13;
.'&#13;
..&#13;
;&#13;
..&#13;
:&#13;
...•&#13;
"&#13;
:'&#13;
•..&#13;
,....&#13;
,:,',.,.,.,.,.;.,:&#13;
,&lt;.&#13;
::},{:,M&#13;
....&#13;
"&#13;
..&#13;
e»&#13;
A::&#13;
~@it&#13;
"""""":~~~'&#13;
Jesse Jackson visits _Chrysler plant;&#13;
calls for workers&#13;
to&#13;
fight back&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
and&#13;
Steven&#13;
R.&#13;
Picazo&#13;
Rev. Jesse  Jackson  ignited&#13;
a crowd  of over&#13;
2,000&#13;
angry&#13;
workers  and  concerned&#13;
citt-&#13;
zens&#13;
Tuesday  (Feb. 2) during&#13;
a  noon  rally   held  at   the&#13;
Chrysler  plant.&#13;
Jackson  was on the scene to&#13;
show his support  and feelings&#13;
on   the   announcement    by&#13;
Chrysler  to close its&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
plant,  phasing  out&#13;
5,500.&#13;
jobs&#13;
by September.&#13;
Citizens  anxiously  awaited&#13;
Jackson's    appearance,&#13;
al-&#13;
though  cheering  responsively&#13;
to several  introductory&#13;
speak-&#13;
ers, including Kenosha Mayor&#13;
Eugene   Dorff   and   United&#13;
Auto Workers  Local 72 Chair-&#13;
man Rudy Kuzel.&#13;
Jackson's  message  was one&#13;
of incitement.&#13;
..Don't  you surrender,"   he&#13;
said.  "Don't  you bow.&#13;
If&#13;
they&#13;
say  cut  back,  you  say  fight&#13;
back."&#13;
Jackson,&#13;
a&#13;
Democratic&#13;
presidential  candidate,  made&#13;
reference  to the financial  as-&#13;
sistance&#13;
the    government&#13;
granted  Lee Iacocca  to save&#13;
Chrysler  when  the  company&#13;
went bankrupt.&#13;
"We bailed  out Chrysler,"&#13;
Jackson&#13;
asserted,&#13;
"Now&#13;
Chrysler  is  gonna  bail  out&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Bail&#13;
out these work-&#13;
ers! Bail out these workers!"&#13;
Among the many signs and&#13;
banners   floating  above  the&#13;
cheering  crowd was one that&#13;
read,   .,Ayatollah   Iacocca-·&#13;
What's the difference?"&#13;
.'We keep hearing about the&#13;
millions of dollars that will be&#13;
lost"   if  Chrysler   stays   in&#13;
Kenosha, Jackson said.&#13;
"But  what  about  the  5.500&#13;
traumatized  households?  The&#13;
children?  The senior  citizens&#13;
and their security?&#13;
"Stop  putting  profits  over&#13;
people,"   he   demanded   of&#13;
Chrysler.  "Put America back&#13;
to work.&#13;
- "Workers,  don't  you  give&#13;
up.  A  people   divided   wlll&#13;
never. survive." .&#13;
Presidential candidate Jesse Jackson spoke wilh • group of&#13;
workers at the Chryslerplant last week.&#13;
Channel&#13;
12'&#13;
gets students' reaction&#13;
by·Amy.H.  Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Three  Parkslde  students  hit&#13;
the airwaves  Thursday  (Feb.&#13;
4) as part  of a special  televi-&#13;
sion  broadcast  titled  .&#13;
'Keno-&#13;
sha Fights  Back"  at&#13;
6'30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
on Milwaukee's  Channel 12.&#13;
Reporter  Dennis  Dean&#13;
In-&#13;
terviewed  the  students&#13;
wed-&#13;
nesday  (Feb.&#13;
3)&#13;
to gain&#13;
in-&#13;
sight  on  the  perspective   of&#13;
Kenosha's  youth  in  reaction&#13;
to the closing  of the Chrysler&#13;
plant.  This  move  will elimi-&#13;
nate 5.500 jobs in Kenosha  by&#13;
September.&#13;
"It's&#13;
a&#13;
mood piece,"  Dean&#13;
explained.  "We wanted to&#13;
as-&#13;
certain  the mood of Kenosha.&#13;
We wanted  to talk  to young&#13;
people  who may  be around,&#13;
or may not be around  in the&#13;
future.  College  students  are&#13;
looking  more  toward  the  fu-&#13;
ture   than   are,   say,   high&#13;
school students. "&#13;
The  1'"  minute  pteee  fea-&#13;
hued  shots of students&#13;
aggre-&#13;
gated&#13;
in&#13;
Lower&#13;
Main&#13;
Place,&#13;
walking down the hall on L-1&#13;
outside the library,  and&#13;
parts&#13;
of three  interviews  with stu-&#13;
dents on Main Place, of seven&#13;
interviews  that were filmed.&#13;
One freshman,  when he dis-&#13;
covered  he  was  among  the&#13;
students   filmed   travelling&#13;
though  the  hallway.  became&#13;
greatly  animated  and told his&#13;
friends,&#13;
l&lt;I'm&#13;
on&#13;
TV!"&#13;
The  interviews   aired   re-&#13;
flected hope for Kenosha's  fu-&#13;
ture   despite   the  economic&#13;
strain of the Chrysler pullout.&#13;
"For  the  first  couple  of&#13;
years  it  will  be  bad,"  said&#13;
Becky   Matoska,   a   junior&#13;
majoring   in  history,   "and&#13;
then it might start picking up,&#13;
especially  if they keep bring-&#13;
ing  in  other   corporations.&#13;
Then  it  wlll  pick  up  after&#13;
awhile. "&#13;
"At  first   it's&#13;
gonna be&#13;
tough,"   said   junior   Mike&#13;
Oldni,   "but'   you'll   notice&#13;
there's  a lot of optimism&#13;
in&#13;
the  community--if  you  read&#13;
the papers--that  Kenosha can&#13;
pull  through.  And I think  it&#13;
can too."&#13;
"1 think in the long run, it's&#13;
gonna have a good effect on&#13;
Kenosha's   economy,"   said&#13;
sophomore    Mike   Bishop.&#13;
When  Dean   asked   Bishop&#13;
why, he explained,&#13;
"It&#13;
seems&#13;
like Kenosha's. been preoccu-&#13;
pied with AMC and Chrysler.&#13;
and  they've  forgotten  about&#13;
the  small  businesses.   They&#13;
provide  a lot of employment&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
"1  think   this   wtll  force&#13;
photo&#13;
by&#13;
John&#13;
KIftOe&#13;
Holly&#13;
Shamshoin, a ;unior communication student, wes Inler·&#13;
viewe~&#13;
by&#13;
Channel12s DennisDean.&#13;
Kenosha's  leaders  to remem-&#13;
ber  the small  businesses.&#13;
It&#13;
will&#13;
force them to try and at-&#13;
tract  new business  to Keno-&#13;
sha."&#13;
"Kenosha.   1 think.  should&#13;
survive,"  Matoska concluded.&#13;
Her  father  and  brother  are&#13;
among the workers  who&#13;
will.&#13;
be laid off.&#13;
Other students whose&#13;
Inter-&#13;
views were  not aired  were:&#13;
Bobbi  Jo  Slater,  freshman;&#13;
Kevin  Johnson,   freshman:&#13;
Thad  Jensen,  freshman;  and&#13;
Holly Shamsholan,  senior.&#13;
---------------~&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
February 11, 1988 Ranger&#13;
I&#13;
our views&#13;
Activity hour vital to&#13;
student life on campus&#13;
Thls&#13;
week the entire campus is involved&#13;
in&#13;
an annual&#13;
event Wlnt~r Carnival. The event was kicked off&#13;
with&#13;
a&#13;
parade&#13;
down the&#13;
concourse at one&#13;
o'clock&#13;
on&#13;
Monday.  All&#13;
along the parade route were crowds of students. faculty.&#13;
adminlstrators  and staff cheering as the spectacle passed.&#13;
Throughout the week there have been many events.&#13;
most of which have been taking place during the one&#13;
o'clock activity hour.&#13;
It&#13;
is refreshing and el&lt;h1laratlng to&#13;
see the enthusiasm of those students involved.&#13;
It&#13;
would be&#13;
a ahame to throw a wet blanket over this kind of team&#13;
play.&#13;
It&#13;
could happen soon.&#13;
The faculty senate will take the Issue of eliminating the&#13;
one o'clock activity hour at its meeting next week. The&#13;
hope of these faculty members is than an additional class.&#13;
hour&#13;
can be added to the day by making this change. The&#13;
apparent feeUng of the faculty members who are propos-&#13;
Ing&#13;
the change&#13;
18&#13;
the low number of students who&#13;
par-tiel-&#13;
pate In the opportunity to be Involved In clubs on campus&#13;
does not warrant&#13;
lhI8&#13;
time to be used for activity, but&#13;
should be&#13;
used&#13;
as a class hour Instead.&#13;
Monday'S&#13;
parade&#13;
proves&#13;
lhI8&#13;
theory wrong. The&#13;
volley-&#13;
ball&#13;
round-robin proves&#13;
lhI8&#13;
theory wrong. The&#13;
parttctpa-&#13;
tIon&#13;
In the belching contest and tricycle race&#13;
all&#13;
prove this&#13;
theory to be a&#13;
gross&#13;
Inaccuracy.&#13;
JIany&#13;
students who must leave campus by three o'clock&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
to&#13;
work&#13;
have no alternative&#13;
than&#13;
the one o'clock ac-&#13;
tivity&#13;
hour&#13;
to participate In extracurricular  activities.&#13;
Faeulty anlcker at past lack of Involvement of students&#13;
OIl lhI8&#13;
campus. They have students slotted as apathetic.&#13;
Our&#13;
on·campus houalng&#13;
has&#13;
changed that complexion&#13;
quite a bit. To&#13;
do&#13;
away with the activity hour now Is a&#13;
real&#13;
slap&#13;
In&#13;
the face to&#13;
all&#13;
who have tried so hard to&#13;
en-&#13;
courage&#13;
participation on&#13;
lhI8&#13;
campus.&#13;
Don't let the activity hour&#13;
go&#13;
by the wayside.&#13;
Teaching· excellence&#13;
nominees sought&#13;
Nominations  for  the&#13;
1987-88&#13;
Teaching  Excellence&#13;
Awards are now being accepted by the Teaching Excel-&#13;
lence Awards Committee.&#13;
The Awards are presented annually to up to two faculty&#13;
members who have demonstrated  outstanding  classroom&#13;
ability over the last year.&#13;
Students may nominate one faculty member.  citing&#13;
their rationale  for the nomination  on the nomination&#13;
forms. which&#13;
are&#13;
available In the PSGA Office&#13;
(WLLC D·&#13;
137).&#13;
The Ranger Office&#13;
(WLLC  D-I39l.&#13;
the Library.&#13;
/Learnlng&#13;
Center, the Union Information Center and all&#13;
divisional offices.&#13;
Forma&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted  between February&#13;
22&#13;
and&#13;
Karch •.&#13;
In&#13;
addition&#13;
to&#13;
student nominations. other recommenda-&#13;
tiona&#13;
will&#13;
be soltcited from&#13;
all&#13;
divisional heads. who will&#13;
be asked to nominate the top ten percent of their faculty.&#13;
Nominations from both sources will be considered by&#13;
the&#13;
Awards&#13;
Committee, which&#13;
will&#13;
discuss many elements&#13;
of a nominee's teaching experience. Including divisional&#13;
evaluation forms. The committee&#13;
18&#13;
comprised of four&#13;
fac-&#13;
ulty members and four students.&#13;
All&#13;
fuIl·lIme faculty members are eligible for the Teach·&#13;
Ing&#13;
Exeellence Award, with the exception of those who&#13;
have received&#13;
It&#13;
In the last seven years. Those ineligible&#13;
are:&#13;
Wayne Johnson. Douglas DeVlnny. Kenneth Hoover,&#13;
Norman Cloutier, Laura  Gellott. Esther  Wilson, Tom&#13;
Foumelle, and Pamela Pierce.&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Letters bring praise, clte concerns&#13;
tee with any student&#13;
Input.&#13;
U&#13;
such an action&#13;
Is&#13;
laken,&#13;
I&#13;
must remind you that&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
violation  of the shared&#13;
gover-&#13;
nance merger law.&#13;
n&#13;
Is my belief that !he&#13;
ac-&#13;
tivity hour Is essential&#13;
to&#13;
our&#13;
commuter  campus. This&#13;
is&#13;
~the time the clubs use&#13;
for&#13;
their  meetings.  and several&#13;
divisions  use  this time&#13;
ID&#13;
present  extra&#13;
programs:  for&#13;
example. the WednesdayOne&#13;
O'Clock .Series  would&#13;
be&#13;
eliminated   and other presen-&#13;
tatlons  In political science&#13;
and international studies&#13;
will&#13;
be curtailed.&#13;
I am asking that&#13;
ibis&#13;
ma~&#13;
ter be referred to a&#13;
commit·&#13;
tee therefore insuring student&#13;
Input and allowing the&#13;
!aCuity&#13;
senate  enough time&#13;
to&#13;
re-&#13;
search this issue more&#13;
care-&#13;
fully:&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
"When you get stuck In the&#13;
middle go to the center ......&#13;
My,&#13;
how&#13;
many times I read&#13;
this as&#13;
1&#13;
walked by The wrtt-&#13;
ing&#13;
Center  never&#13;
knowing&#13;
what it meant. After&#13;
all,&#13;
who&#13;
ever has a problem writing?&#13;
.J&#13;
found out the hard way that I&#13;
had a problem.&#13;
1&#13;
was In a beginning Eng-&#13;
lish course and found myself&#13;
"faUlng."  But how could it&#13;
be? I consider myself a fairly&#13;
intelligent  human  being.&#13;
SO&#13;
how could I be falling?&#13;
1&#13;
found myself completely lost.&#13;
I had nowhere to go and no&#13;
one to turn  to.  But  then,&#13;
BINGO, I remembered  The&#13;
Writing Center! They made&#13;
It&#13;
clear from the start  that It&#13;
was not my IQ In question.&#13;
but my writing  techniques.&#13;
My god, I was saved!!!  The&#13;
Writing Center was like a Itfe&#13;
preserver  saving  me  from&#13;
drowning:&#13;
So the story  continues ....&#13;
The writing assistants  were&#13;
the best!  They went above&#13;
and beyond the call of duty.&#13;
As The Beatles once said,&#13;
"With a Liltie Help From My&#13;
Friends"  (actually with a lot&#13;
of help from my friends),  I&#13;
raised my grade from and&#13;
&lt;OF"&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
"B".  What more&#13;
RANGER&#13;
c&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jenny Oarr ..;&#13;
Ed~tor   Randy Lecount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kelly MC~ISSlck&#13;
News Ed~tor   Dave McEvoy&#13;
,&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Am;: H. Rln~r&#13;
"  News Ed~tor  John Kehoe&#13;
Asst&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Tem&#13;
OeAosl6r&#13;
Feature EdItor   Aobb Luehr&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
proof could anyone need to&#13;
see that The Writing Center&#13;
does make a difference I am&#13;
Itvlng  proof!!  Cutting  any&#13;
part of this program. even a&#13;
"llltle,"  would be of drastic&#13;
consequences  to the student&#13;
body!&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
now very confident in&#13;
my own writing abilities be-&#13;
cause of The Writing Center.&#13;
It&#13;
is reassuring  to know that&#13;
If&#13;
I "get stuck in the middle,"&#13;
The  Writing  Center   will&#13;
always be there&#13;
to&#13;
bail me&#13;
out of whatever situation (or&#13;
mess I I get into.&#13;
To The Writing' Center  a&#13;
BIG Thank You for having&#13;
saved my college career. and&#13;
for literally saving my life! !!&#13;
Scott&#13;
J.&#13;
Fernandez&#13;
P.S.  Thanks   a  WHOLE&#13;
BUNCH to: RACHEL&#13;
&amp;&#13;
RO--&#13;
SEANN&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It&#13;
Is my understanding  that&#13;
the Faculty  Senate  is plan.&#13;
ning to move a resolution re-&#13;
garding elimination of the&#13;
ac-&#13;
t1vlty hour currently on Mon.&#13;
days.    Wednesdays    and&#13;
Fridays at&#13;
1&#13;
p.m,&#13;
The student senate is in op- .&#13;
position to such an action be-&#13;
cause  this  matter  had  not&#13;
come directly from a commit-&#13;
Alex&#13;
PeItlI&#13;
PSGA&#13;
President&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I ask that you&#13;
alloW&#13;
me&#13;
tbIS&#13;
opportunity  to&#13;
addreSS&#13;
lhe&#13;
campus.  In the last -.&#13;
some  of you have noticed&#13;
copies of a&#13;
4x5~,&#13;
yellOW&#13;
and&#13;
baby-aspirm&#13;
orange&#13;
,"an~&#13;
script spread&#13;
thrOughoUt&#13;
u:&#13;
campus. The manuscripten.&#13;
-  See&#13;
Letter ~&#13;
4&#13;
I!&#13;
Ranger is written a~d edit~d by students of UW·Parkside.&#13;
who&#13;
are solely responsible for&#13;
its&#13;
editoria1l:&#13;
I&#13;
cy and content. It IS publlshed every Thursday dUring the academic year except ovet' breat&lt;sand&#13;
I&#13;
days.&#13;
-&#13;
"&#13;
.&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
Letters to the ~Itor  Will.&#13;
be&#13;
accepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they are typed. uocbte-spaced and 350-words~&#13;
1eSS~&#13;
letters must be signed, With a telephone number Included for verification purposes. Names&#13;
WlM&#13;
be&#13;
I&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or&#13;
de-- :_--.,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
.-.u~"'"&#13;
Dead~ne fnr alileners,  and classified ads  is Mnnday at 10 a m for PUb~catinn'  ~-&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
•.&#13;
.&#13;
cou~.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside. Box 2000, Ke-&#13;
",*,1&#13;
rn~ta  WI 53141. Telephone 414/553-2267 (Editoriai) or 414/553-2295  (Advertis·&#13;
:...&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron    ,&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Steven&#13;
A.&#13;
Picazo&#13;
Operations Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jason Caspers. Oan Chiapetla. Jfm Cole.&#13;
Mark&#13;
Francen  Fred&#13;
Jobst, Geo~ge&#13;
KoeniQ.&#13;
Jeff&#13;
lemmermann.&#13;
Amy&#13;
ludwig:&#13;
Rick&#13;
luehr.&#13;
Jim Maastncl.&#13;
DaWl1&#13;
Mailand.&#13;
~MaIIory,&#13;
John&#13;
Marter, Ooup&#13;
McEvoy,&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna: Patti ~   laura Pestka:&#13;
Mana RinlZ,&#13;
80bbi&#13;
Jo&#13;
Slater. Wendy Sorenson.&#13;
'&#13;
-&#13;
</text>
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              <text>February 1a,&#13;
•&#13;
University 01Wisconsin-Parkslde&#13;
/'&#13;
Vol. 1., No.1 •&#13;
United·Council trip leaves delegates frustrated&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
'1lIe troubled love affair be-&#13;
\feeD the"'Parkslde Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
(PSGA)and United Councll&#13;
(UC) maysoon be over.&#13;
Parksldedelegates to last&#13;
weekend's(Feb. 12-13) UC&#13;
eIIIlVentlon·in Green Bay reo&#13;
lIlmedlor the most part rruslIated&#13;
and disappointed, even&#13;
InsUlted.&#13;
PSGAPrestdent Alex Pet·&#13;
tit, with senate approval,&#13;
plans to pull out of the organilatton.&#13;
Petllt's worst disappoint.&#13;
I\OIItof the weekend was the&#13;
8elest01 his proposal to audit&#13;
tJC'sbooks in search of mrsappropriationsof&#13;
funds that&#13;
mayhavebeen used for partt8BIl&#13;
actlvltles.&#13;
UC PresIdent Adrtan Serra· '&#13;
I) recently ran into trouble&#13;
.wi \be Secretary of State,&#13;
WIlen he and Morty Hansen,&#13;
lInner UC executive dtreclor,&#13;
sent letters promising&#13;
!"JllPIllln aupport to several&#13;
Denioei&amp;tlcstate representaUvea,on&#13;
United Council sta-&#13;
-ttonary.&#13;
Friday Pettit made are·&#13;
quest of the joint meeting of&#13;
Presidents and Directors to&#13;
audit UC's books. He said he&#13;
hoped to determine if any&#13;
money, through telephone,&#13;
mail or travel expenditures.&#13;
was used for partisan politics.&#13;
"The body stated that they&#13;
felt that with the State's Attorney&#13;
just having gone over&#13;
much of the books, that that&#13;
was sufficient for them not to&#13;
require any type of internal&#13;
audit," Pettit reported. They&#13;
feit it had gone on long&#13;
enough. "They would just as&#13;
soon pass a 'slap in the hand'&#13;
referendum (directed at) Mr..&#13;
Serrano.&#13;
"As far as the audit is concerned,'&#13;
Pettit explained,&#13;
"The reason I wanted to do&#13;
one ..inspite of the fact that&#13;
they'd been investigated already&#13;
..was simply because'&#13;
they're not going to be tooking&#13;
for the same types of&#13;
things that I would be looking&#13;
for. I would be looking for&#13;
much smaller amount of&#13;
money than what they would&#13;
be looking for.&#13;
Alex Pettit&#13;
"Misappropriation of $II to&#13;
make a telephone call, for the&#13;
purposes of helping a campaign,&#13;
or an individual, would&#13;
not show up on a standard Investigation.&#13;
But for my purposes,&#13;
It's just as bad, It not&#13;
worse, . than anything else.&#13;
It's something we should find&#13;
out about."&#13;
The Secretary of State's otfice&#13;
has issued no formal&#13;
audit report.&#13;
Although It Is within his&#13;
legal rights to conduct an investigation&#13;
personally t Pettit&#13;
said, "It would look petty.&#13;
They really don't want to deal&#13;
with an issue like that right&#13;
now."&#13;
Serrano reportedly contacted&#13;
seven or eight campus&#13;
presidents the Tuesday prior&#13;
to the UC meeting, urging&#13;
them to vote against Pettit's&#13;
proposal.&#13;
"He was quite successful in&#13;
convincing them that this was&#13;
unnecessary and a waste of&#13;
time," Pettit said. "That Irrftated&#13;
me a great deal."&#13;
DC action over the weekend&#13;
eslablished SUFAC (The Begregated&#13;
University Fee Allo·&#13;
cation Committee) as a&#13;
shared governance commntee,&#13;
a measure UW-Madtson&#13;
bad been pushing .&#13;
Pettit feels UC has become&#13;
a branch of MadiSOn's student&#13;
government assocatton.&#13;
"We're not focusing on&#13;
isSues anymore, we're only&#13;
deallng with the restructuring&#13;
problems," he compla1ned.&#13;
The voting structure of the&#13;
organization was changed erlowing&#13;
governing documents&#13;
to be changed by a majority&#13;
vote, where previously a twothirds&#13;
vote was reqUired.&#13;
Parkside's votes were&#13;
needed to pass this measure,&#13;
Pettit explained, but the&#13;
Parkslde delegates were&#13;
treated shabblly in several&#13;
respects. One delegate was&#13;
verbally abused by the student&#13;
government president of&#13;
UW·Whltewater.&#13;
"The treatment of our&#13;
school has been less than the&#13;
treatment of other schools,"&#13;
Pettit said, exptalning the&#13;
motives behind ParkBlde's declslon&#13;
to pull out of UC.&#13;
"We've ,received nothing for&#13;
our troubles. "&#13;
In addition, Ps,rkslde's&#13;
Legislative Affairs committee&#13;
can function independently.&#13;
"We've remained a mernber&#13;
of this body in the hopes&#13;
that our participation can&#13;
chaJl«e what.. wrona. but&#13;
we've fa1led.&#13;
"I'm aakIn&amp; the Senate to&#13;
support a posItton to with·&#13;
draw from United Oouncll."&#13;
Radio station could&#13;
soon be a reality Activity hour in jeopardy&#13;
by Laora Pestka&#13;
~mbers of Parkslde's&#13;
11\ ty Senate have proposed&#13;
aeuelimlnationof the student&#13;
llonVity hour, raising objec.&#13;
cam among student leaders on&#13;
PUS.&#13;
lIJn'1'hO actiVity hour· Is tile&#13;
~~r1ocI blocked off on&#13;
'rids y, Wednesday, and&#13;
even~ at 1 p.m. for club&#13;
acUViU meetings, and other&#13;
lChedu\ea.No ctasses are&#13;
ed at this time.&#13;
.:~': CarniVal, held last&#13;
lIlatlim' an example of hoW&#13;
ties e Is used for activl·&#13;
utuize~eactivity hour is also&#13;
\lartm by the Fine Arts de·&#13;
certs ent to schedule con·&#13;
!low • Senat ever, certain Facuity&#13;
Iits inelhmembers see no bene·&#13;
e hour.&#13;
"Th hourb ~ne "O'clOCk, activity&#13;
lIorw Sly, said Eugene L.&#13;
ltead~ Ilumanlties division&#13;
lIJn&#13;
ea&#13;
ubs should meet at·&#13;
Ittmethabt.are convenient to&#13;
•• III ers."&#13;
That statement.is rldicu.&#13;
lous," countered Alex Pettit,&#13;
PVkside Student rjovemment&#13;
Association (PSGA)&#13;
president. •'There are no&#13;
classes scheduled at that time&#13;
to make that hour convenient&#13;
for students."&#13;
Norwood said that a recom·&#13;
mendation to pass a resolution&#13;
to eliminate the activity&#13;
hour would be offered at the&#13;
Faculty Senate meeting Tues·&#13;
day (Feb. 16).&#13;
Norwood said that neither&#13;
students nor faculty had had&#13;
a say in implementing the ac·&#13;
tlvlty hour. The administra·&#13;
tion had initiated If and reo&#13;
served the right to end it It&#13;
they choose. he said.&#13;
Students hope to have a ~y.&#13;
in the final decision. Pro·&#13;
posals of this type usually&#13;
proceed through the Campus&#13;
Environment committee, al·&#13;
though this proposal (to&#13;
eliminate the activity hour)&#13;
did not. PSGA was alerted of&#13;
the Senate's actions by As·&#13;
sistant Chancellor Qary&#13;
Grace.&#13;
Opponents of the activity&#13;
hour argue that It has vtrtualIy&#13;
wiped out afternoon classes&#13;
on Monday, Wednesday, and&#13;
Friday. One o'clock Is consld·&#13;
ered prime time for classes.&#13;
Because of the activity hour,&#13;
they assert, ciasses must be&#13;
--i!&lt;fueezed in between 8 a.m.&#13;
and 1 p.m .. causing problems&#13;
with confllcting classes and&#13;
parking.&#13;
proponents of the hour&#13;
argue that Parkslde Is a com·&#13;
muter campus and many stu·&#13;
dents work in the afternoons&#13;
and evenings. Elimination of&#13;
the activity hour could inhibtt&#13;
many students from getting&#13;
J!lvolved on campus.&#13;
"Without the activity hour,&#13;
we are more like a high&#13;
school than a college," said&#13;
Pettit. "Students go to class&#13;
and go home. There Is no op·&#13;
portunlty to participate in ac·&#13;
tivities. "&#13;
This is not a new issue. For&#13;
flve years, attempts to elimi·&#13;
nate the hour have been&#13;
launched and shot down.&#13;
. '.&#13;
in amplification systems. The&#13;
station will broadcaat Mon·&#13;
day.Frlday, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.&#13;
Moet of the equipment&#13;
WLLC Radio Free Parkside needed has been donated, Inwill&#13;
be bopping and blasting cluding two turntables and a&#13;
throughout the !tec center cassette player. Perrault said&#13;
and Union Square within the that he would ll1Ie to acquire&#13;
next two months It pJans for better turntables because the&#13;
the Radio Committee are suc· equipment that will be used&#13;
cessfu!. noW may daznaI8 the reo&#13;
Dan Perrault, Parkslde Stu· cords.&#13;
dent Government AllsOClation Perrault said the station&#13;
(PSGA) Senator and chair· needs a rnJxlng board "real&#13;
man of the Radio Committee bad. We might have to buy It&#13;
said that the radio program or find eome money in the&#13;
for ParkBlde has three stages private account (of PSOA).&#13;
that It hopes to accomplisll We bave a group of people&#13;
within the next two years. worlting on getting the proPSGA&#13;
has aJ1eady Imple· duction together right now. Of&#13;
mented $"JIlO into Its annual course, anyone who wants to&#13;
budget for the program, get Into It Is welcome."&#13;
which Is presently a standing He said that right now the&#13;
committee of PSGA. Segre· committee Is looIdn&amp; for dee·&#13;
gated University Fees Alloca· jay. to work one or two hoUr&#13;
tion Committee (SUFAC) shifts. No experience or U·&#13;
Chairperson Jenoy carr said cense Is needed, but they will&#13;
that the committee has a1. bave to bring their own reo&#13;
ready looked at PSGA's budg· cords unW a record library&#13;
et and sees no problem with can be bullt up fOr the sta·&#13;
the radio program allocation. J.. tiO~~xt fall the committee&#13;
Within the next two months, h.... to· 't a carrier cur·&#13;
Perrault hopes to bave the o.....s ge tern that runs&#13;
station set up in a Rec cen~r ~~g: th?~lectricaJ system&#13;
. room behind the bar which s of the school It Is a form of&#13;
now used for storage because .&#13;
the Union building has bullt· see Radio PIJ!Ift 3&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
and Steven R. Picazo&#13;
2 Thursday. February 18.1988 Ranger.&#13;
our view&#13;
'United Council is&#13;
useless to Parkside&#13;
Last weekend's trip to' Green Bay to attend the United&#13;
Council meeting proved iess than fruitful for the Parkside&#13;
delegatiolf.&#13;
After leaving the Parkside Student Government Assoclation&#13;
(PSGA) with a greater than $2,000 deficit in its&#13;
bUdget, Adrian Serrano, former PSGA president and current&#13;
United Council president, has once again escaped&#13;
prosecution by the skin of his teeth.&#13;
The Councll should be addressing the concerns of students&#13;
like tuition increases and other pertinent problems&#13;
on the campuses. Instead. the Councll battles questions of&#13;
structure. which should have been settled long ago.&#13;
For Parkside students and other cluster campuses. having&#13;
a president of the Council come from our school&#13;
ahould have proven to be a benefit. This has not been the&#13;
caae.&#13;
Serrano has sold Parkslde and all the other students at&#13;
cluster campuses down the proverbial river. There has&#13;
not been a single Issue to come out of United Council this&#13;
year that has helped Parkside.&#13;
For the My cents per student, per semester that we&#13;
have spent on United Council, or "Useless Council" as we&#13;
have begun to call it, we could have had our radio station&#13;
project on Its feet and running by now.&#13;
United Councll·-a good Idea--a sad fallure.&#13;
PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION&#13;
SPRING ELleYION '88&#13;
March 9th &amp; 1Dth&#13;
Positions Available:&#13;
I&#13;
* President&#13;
* Vice-President&#13;
* 9 Senate Seats&#13;
* 1 SUFACat-large seat&#13;
Petitions Available Now&#13;
in the&#13;
PSGA OFFICE&#13;
/ \&#13;
~~~\~~&#13;
"BOY. AM I SlUFFED! HELP YOURSELVES TO WHATEVER IS lEFT!-&#13;
IL...-Yo_u_r _vi_ew_s ' _~ ]&#13;
Letters bring thanks, claim racism&#13;
Editor's note: Due to an&#13;
editing erTOTJ the following&#13;
letter was cut in an inappropriate&#13;
place. The Ranger&#13;
apologizes to Mr. Masterson&#13;
and reprints the tetter in its&#13;
entirety.&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
I ask that you allow me this&#13;
opportunity to address the&#13;
campus. In the last week&#13;
some of you may have noticed&#13;
copies of a 4 X 5% inch,&#13;
yellow and baby-asptrtn&#13;
orange manuscript spread&#13;
through the campus. The&#13;
manuscript entitled "Soinewhere&#13;
in the Room" Is a pilot&#13;
edition of a project funded by&#13;
the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. It is this committee's&#13;
duty to support the cultural&#13;
enhancement of our&#13;
community.&#13;
"Somewhere in the Room"&#13;
Is an Informal and casualout,&#13;
let that will hopefully appeal&#13;
to a wide range of the student&#13;
body. The format Is relatively&#13;
inexpensive and Intended to&#13;
capture the Imagination of Its&#13;
- readers.&#13;
The first edition, for instance.&#13;
was designed to convey&#13;
a particular concept in a&#13;
five to len minute sitting.&#13;
Hopefully Its "hidden&#13;
theme," an Ellotesque&#13;
glimpse of American today,&#13;
moved and inspired the readers&#13;
to create art themselves.&#13;
At least we hope the issue left&#13;
the readers pondering.&#13;
I encourage anyone of the&#13;
creative persuasion to check&#13;
out this publication and submit&#13;
something to It. "Some.&#13;
where" is looking for all&#13;
kinds of original, creative student&#13;
works. Poetry, essay,&#13;
fiction or deslgn--anythlng Is&#13;
possible. "Somewhere" is&#13;
especially looking for illustrations&#13;
to accompany the written&#13;
word.&#13;
On this note, I wouid like to&#13;
thank Ted Injasullan for the&#13;
illustration of the first issue.&#13;
.submissions can be made&#13;
through the f&gt;SGAoffice adjacent&#13;
to the Coffee Shoppe In&#13;
the lower level of the WLLC&#13;
building. Please send the sub-&#13;
-missions in care of Senator&#13;
Masterson. Contributors are&#13;
encouraged to leave their&#13;
names and phone numbers on&#13;
their submissions so that they&#13;
can be contacted.&#13;
Thank you on behalf of&#13;
"Somewhere in a Room."&#13;
JJ Masterson&#13;
To the Edttor:&#13;
ThIs letter comes to applaud&#13;
the efforts of the&#13;
Ranger." in promoting the&#13;
Studs on the staff. It also&#13;
comes to note that Brian Mal·&#13;
lory, the only Black StUd,Is&#13;
stereotyplcally placed last In&#13;
the calendar, in the monthof&#13;
December.&#13;
During a time wben slereotypes&#13;
are trying to be dis·&#13;
pelled, and America is eelebrating&#13;
Black H1stol'YMonth&#13;
in tribute to the contributions&#13;
of African Americans 10 the&#13;
development of the United&#13;
States, It Is a- sad eommeatary&#13;
for a supposedly progressive&#13;
student newspaper&#13;
to. perpetuate racism, hOW,&#13;
ever subtle .&#13;
n seems to me that a more&#13;
approprtate month lor displaying&#13;
Brian's pose would&#13;
have been June, tne sixth&#13;
month which divides the cal·&#13;
endar Into two equal parts.&#13;
Another alternative to pJa~&#13;
ing him iast would have beeII&#13;
to place him in FebruarY'&#13;
Black History Month. which&#13;
Is certainly a more positive&#13;
stereotype.&#13;
- •&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jenny Can' ..: Editor Randy L8Count.. Sports Editor&#13;
~Iy Mc~ssick News Editor Dave McEvoy , Photo Editor&#13;
Am~H. Rm~ News Ed!tor John Kehoe, Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Tern DeRosier Feature Editor Robb Luehr Copy Editor&#13;
Ranger is writte~ a!)d edit~d by students of UW.Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editOfiaI po~&#13;
c&#13;
d&#13;
Yand cnntent. It IS published every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks and hoiays.&#13;
reletters to the ~itor Will.be accepted only if they are typed, double-spaced and 350 words ~ 1eSS -.A11&#13;
heu,dersmust be sagned. With a telephone number inclUded for verification purposes Names WI"be vmtt upon request. .&#13;
. faRanger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or da- matory. .&#13;
Th~~~: for all letters. and classified ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
All corres~ndence should be addressed to: Ranger, UW.Part&lt;side. Box 2000. K..&#13;
~a WI 141. Tekiphone 4141553-2287 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Aovertis-&#13;
,&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron Business Manager&#13;
Steven R. Picszo Operations Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jason Clspers, Dan Chiapetta, Jim Cole. Malk kancen. Fred&#13;
Jobst, George KoeniO, Jeff l8mmermafln. Amv lodwiQ. Rick&#13;
Lve/Ir. Jim MoaslIict. Dawn MaiOn'.1l&lt;x: Malkxy. John&#13;
Marter. ~ McEvoy, 0ebbIe Michna, Patti Nitr, laura. _.&#13;
Maria RiRtz. 80bbi Jo Slater. Wendy Sorenson&#13;
,&#13;
as&#13;
Moody annou/?ces candidacy&#13;
by ChrIstina Lojesld&#13;
U.S. Representative Jim&#13;
llOOdy(D_Wlsconsin) visited&#13;
ParksldeTuesday (Feb. 2) to&#13;
lUIJIOUIIce his candidacy for&#13;
lb8 senale seat being vacated&#13;
IlY WlJIJamProxmlre, whom&#13;
IIoodY cl!IIed "one of the&#13;
ablest and most fiscally&#13;
courageous senators In the&#13;
JJ&amp;t1On."&#13;
Moody's stop at Parkslde&#13;
.... one of 12 stops during a&#13;
two-d8Y tour of Wisconsin.&#13;
Moody,who holds a Ph. D.&#13;
fi;eeonomlcs, stated that he&#13;
jfered the race •'because&#13;
IlIlr country and our state are&#13;
III serious economic dlfflcul·&#13;
fr·"He stressed the need for&#13;
l\roIIger foreign trade pollele8,&#13;
the 'need to create and&#13;
IIIllintain jobs in Wisconsin,&#13;
and the need for better management&#13;
of the economy ~&#13;
Moodyknows that heIs entering&#13;
this race as the underdog,as&#13;
the two other candldatesbave&#13;
greater name recognition,&#13;
but he explained&#13;
thathe has been in this sttuatIon&#13;
three times before, and&#13;
prevailed each time as the&#13;
winner.&#13;
"In this race, what really&#13;
countsIs the economy, and&#13;
who has :the qualifications,&#13;
the background, and the experlenceto&#13;
work on the econamyand&#13;
make the tough economicchoices&#13;
that have to be&#13;
made," he said.&#13;
Moodydescribed the years&#13;
Reaganhas been in office as&#13;
Us period of wrecktess and Irresponsibleeconomic&#13;
polley,"&#13;
markedby the "piling up (of)&#13;
huge debts, mainly to ior-,&#13;
elgners,while cutting InvestmentIn&#13;
productivity, In peopIe."&#13;
. ,&#13;
He went on to say that&#13;
whileit Is somewhat satisfy·&#13;
Ing for a Democrat to run&#13;
against Ronald Reagan this&#13;
~paign must gob~yond&#13;
Reagan-bashing, old politi·&#13;
Ca! platltutes,and tired politi·&#13;
cal rhetoric.&#13;
"It takes both training and&#13;
common sense in the real&#13;
world to understand and deal&#13;
with the problems r think&#13;
we're facing; to know that&#13;
when government borrows&#13;
from foreigners to finance Its&#13;
spending, It directly jeopardizes&#13;
your job ..' all jobs; to&#13;
know that when government&#13;
budgets too much on ships&#13;
and radar It Invests too little&#13;
In technology and producttvi-&#13;
·ty; to know that massive borrowing&#13;
by the federal governme.nt&#13;
drives interest rates up, .&#13;
which reduces our standard&#13;
of living," Moody said.&#13;
Moody believes that he&#13;
knows how to, and has In the&#13;
P.~t, applied sound principles&#13;
to government, and conrronted&#13;
the system when he found&#13;
it necessary.&#13;
Asked about the Chrysler&#13;
situation in Kenosha, Moody&#13;
described it as a "betrayal:'&#13;
and stated that Wisconsin&#13;
should concentrate on attractIng&#13;
small to medium size&#13;
companies that would be willIng&#13;
to set up their headquarters&#13;
here and have their decision-makers&#13;
reside here.&#13;
The problem, he added, is&#13;
one of over-capacity caused&#13;
by foreign trade eornpetdtfon,&#13;
"Wisconsin and the other&#13;
states of the Great Lakes reo&#13;
gion have an even larger&#13;
stake In reducing the deficit&#13;
and returning to sound economic&#13;
polley," .Moody said.&#13;
"Wisconsin is competing for&#13;
high-tech, start-up companies&#13;
tn the hope that we can become&#13;
the center for growing&#13;
new -industries ...That's our&#13;
hope, that's what we're trying&#13;
to do all over the state. At the&#13;
same time, we're locked In a&#13;
struggle to keep our large,&#13;
additional manufaclurlng&#13;
companies. t,&#13;
Moody believes that Wis·&#13;
consln Is In a difficult position&#13;
today due to mismanagement&#13;
of the economy and foreign&#13;
competition, "made much&#13;
worse by the federal budget,&#13;
trade deficits, and by our outdated&#13;
tolerance for patently&#13;
unfair and unequal trading&#13;
practtcesrrom abroad."&#13;
People today, Moody&#13;
stated, are wondering If their&#13;
children will be able to do as&#13;
weil as they did, If a two-income&#13;
family will be able to&#13;
afford what a' one-Income&#13;
family formerly could, and If&#13;
the middle-class Ilfestxle Is&#13;
going to become more and&#13;
more difficult to attain.&#13;
".our nation's economic pri.&#13;
orltles have become dtstorted.&#13;
I believe our federal&#13;
budget should not send dol·&#13;
lars for war in Central&#13;
America, but to distress In&#13;
Middle America.&#13;
"We should not be spending&#13;
fortunes on B·1 Bombers, but&#13;
putting money Into A-I&#13;
schools. Spending bll1ions In&#13;
star Wars crowds out investment&#13;
In Industrial technology.&#13;
Our best minds should not be&#13;
engaged In corporate&#13;
mergers and leverage bUYouts,&#13;
acquisitions of paper&#13;
assets, but In invention and In&#13;
production," Moody said.&#13;
When asked, Moody, who&#13;
has a strong environmental&#13;
roll-call record. stated that he&#13;
believes business and the environment&#13;
can exist together.&#13;
On welfare and team-tare&#13;
issues, Moody said that he&#13;
does believe it is reasonable&#13;
to ask people, as part of reo&#13;
ceivlng welfare checks to&#13;
"engage In training, In Investment&#13;
In themselves, Investment&#13;
In education. Welfare&#13;
needs an educational component."&#13;
~&#13;
In addition to supporting&#13;
job tratnlng, Moody explained&#13;
that he would like to see&#13;
Medicaid recipients' insurance&#13;
continue for six months&#13;
after leaving the program. .&#13;
ThIs would benefit the reo&#13;
clplents, according to Moody,&#13;
because If they were to reo&#13;
celve training and acquire a&#13;
job, It would be very ,difficult&#13;
to leave behind full Insurance.&#13;
See Moody page 4&#13;
FALDUTO'S STUDIOS&#13;
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LESSONS * REPAIR r •&#13;
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picks&#13;
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.pedals&#13;
$3&#13;
$4.50&#13;
$35&#13;
$45 &amp; up&#13;
$5.00 Y2hr.&#13;
656-0355&#13;
Ranger Thursday, F~bruary 18, 1988 3&#13;
LESSONS - traditional or metal&#13;
the lowest prices around on:&#13;
MARTIN_EPIPHONE-GUILD&#13;
5813 6th AVE.&#13;
DOWNTOWN. KENOSHA&#13;
Parkside radio p.la'ns&#13;
are underway&#13;
Radio trom page 1&#13;
cabling. Perrault said, "A lot&#13;
of college radio stations use&#13;
the carrler current to broad·&#13;
cast to different parts of the&#13;
school without paying a lot of&#13;
money."&#13;
Eventually, Perrault hopes&#13;
to hook up the station with&#13;
Racine Telecable and Jones&#13;
Intercable of Kenosha to&#13;
reach a large listening audl·&#13;
ence.&#13;
He explained that the Radio&#13;
Committee will be having a&#13;
meeting Friday, Feb. 19 In&#13;
Union 109 from 11 a.m.-1 p.m,&#13;
for those wanting to become&#13;
Involved In the production&#13;
set-up or to sign-up as deeDan&#13;
Perrault jays.&#13;
Financial&#13;
Aid aps&#13;
available&#13;
The 1988-89 Financial Aid&#13;
Applications are now available&#13;
In the Financial Aid orflee,&#13;
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before April 15, 1988.&#13;
Special DOUce to Summ\&gt;r'&#13;
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Roles of women-II'&#13;
topic of lecture&#13;
,&#13;
4 Thursday, Febtvary 18, 1988 Ranger&#13;
NewVP has fresh ideas for PAB&#13;
\now the first thing about&#13;
motivation," he said.&#13;
Of Stratman, Voss said, "I&#13;
think he'll do a pretty good&#13;
job." •&#13;
P AB President Sue Bostettel'&#13;
held the responsibility of&#13;
initially nominating Stratman,&#13;
when the vacancy was&#13;
created.&#13;
•'It was my decision," she&#13;
said, "and I nominated Chris,&#13;
and' It .was voted on unant-.&#13;
mously by Executive Council.&#13;
"Why'd 1 pick Chris? 1&#13;
thought he'd be good in the&#13;
job. It's more administrative&#13;
duties, and programming&#13;
duties," Bostetter continued,&#13;
Stratman had had experience&#13;
as a committee chair.&#13;
and had attended a P AB Ieadership&#13;
conference with the&#13;
group, she added.&#13;
Bostetter explained that&#13;
Stratman's responsibilities include&#13;
settling disputes between&#13;
PAB members. "Chris&#13;
is good with the people," she&#13;
said. "He has good communication&#13;
skills."&#13;
vertlslg techniques, more,&#13;
communication, hopefully we&#13;
can get more students from&#13;
the other end of the building&#13;
to come down and see what's&#13;
going on."&#13;
Stratman also intends to&#13;
focus on serving members of&#13;
the residence halls. "Ther',S a&#13;
whole group of people over&#13;
there; and they have to be entertained.&#13;
too."&#13;
Stratman replaces former&#13;
P AB vice president Dan Oalbralth,&#13;
who left Parkslde to&#13;
work full-time as a computer&#13;
analyst at a major hospital.&#13;
Galbraith, a former reclplent&#13;
of a Distinguished Student&#13;
Award, now attends classes&#13;
at Gateway Technical College,&#13;
"He told me he got a really&#13;
good job offer and his grades&#13;
weren't so hot from the&#13;
semester past," said Jim&#13;
Voss, Live Entertainment&#13;
ChaIr.&#13;
Voss, the most visible&#13;
member of PAB, criticized&#13;
Galbraith's performance as&#13;
vice president, "Dan didn't&#13;
by Amy H. Rluer&#13;
News Editor Noted Feminlst ·Jean Be&#13;
thke ElshtaIn wlJJ present tw'&#13;
lectures on the roles 00&#13;
women Monday (Feb. 22) t&#13;
Parkside. a&#13;
Elshtain, a political science&#13;
professor at the University of&#13;
Massachusetts-Amherst, W11I&#13;
speak, on "'Power and power.&#13;
lessness of Women" at 3.30&#13;
p.m. in Main. 111 (Facuit&#13;
Lounge), and on "Reflection;&#13;
on Women and War" at 7:&#13;
p.m. in Main. 105.&#13;
She Is the author of severaJ&#13;
widely noted' works on&#13;
aspects of feminism and POUt&#13;
Ical theory, among Ibe';&#13;
Women and War; and PUblic&#13;
Man, Private Woman'&#13;
Women in Social alld Politic&lt;d&#13;
Thought. '&#13;
Feminist, professor, Wife.&#13;
mother, author, lecturer '"&#13;
This Is just the beglnnjng Of a&#13;
very long list of Elsbtaln"&#13;
credentials, experiences, and&#13;
interests.&#13;
She presents an intriguing&#13;
historical account of how&#13;
women and men arrived in&#13;
the roles they occupy today,&#13;
and offers her own fascinat.&#13;
ing thoughts on these roles.&#13;
Elshtain poses such provoc.&#13;
atlve questions as: If&#13;
women's gual ts to be equal&#13;
men, which men Is It that&#13;
they want to be equal to? If&#13;
women and men are to be&#13;
"equal," what implications&#13;
does that have for relatlenships?&#13;
Further, does that&#13;
mean that women have to 19·&#13;
nore--even degrade ..the very&#13;
attributes that inherently define&#13;
them as female?&#13;
Parkslde Activities Bosrd&#13;
(PAB) greeted the new&#13;
semester with a new vice&#13;
president, ChrIs Stratman,&#13;
who !II offering a ne\., set of&#13;
Ideas.&#13;
"Looking back over last&#13;
semester, I saw a lot of suecesses&#13;
on the Board and a&#13;
few shortcomings," Stratman,&#13;
a 2~ year veteran of&#13;
PAB, saId.&#13;
One shortcoming, he saId,&#13;
was the less-than-warm reception&#13;
the campus gave a&#13;
program Galled Performer&#13;
Rhnwcase, which featured&#13;
dfeehouse" entertainnient&#13;
'h as acoustic guItar and&#13;
rmonica players.&#13;
HOn a campus like ours, we&#13;
have a lot of younger peopie,"&#13;
Stralman explained.&#13;
"We're trying to evolve that&#13;
to entertain the younger people."&#13;
Another task Stratman Is&#13;
tackling Is promotion of the&#13;
Union as a campus hangout.&#13;
Chris Stratman&#13;
"'We'd like to see more people&#13;
in the Union," he said, "rnaking&#13;
that more of a center of&#13;
the school. That's my way of&#13;
thinking ..it's supposed to be.&#13;
And 1 figure with better adTrade,&#13;
JobS, economy issues for&#13;
Moody from page '3&#13;
Moody&#13;
have in 1988 Is a Senator&#13;
equipped to challenge the&#13;
business-as-usual attitude&#13;
that has put us in this mess&#13;
and produce tough, serious,&#13;
thoughtful solutions.&#13;
"Our goal must be to build&#13;
for the future, to invest and&#13;
reinvest in education, knowl·&#13;
edge, in children, in community,&#13;
in jobs, in training,&#13;
health care, the environment,&#13;
Congress in 1982 and was appointed&#13;
to the House Ways&#13;
and Means Committee in&#13;
1987. He previously served six&#13;
years in the Wisconsin State&#13;
Senate and Assembly.&#13;
Before entering politics, at&#13;
the age of 41, Moody taught&#13;
at the Universities of Wisconsin&#13;
in MIlwaukee and Madi.&#13;
son, and served in the peace&#13;
corps in Bangladesh.&#13;
and the Infrastructure of the&#13;
state and the nation, to invest&#13;
in ourselves.&#13;
"What made our country&#13;
strong in the past was responsible&#13;
government and responsible&#13;
leaders who cared more&#13;
about the future and less&#13;
about the next election. We&#13;
must do that again," Moody&#13;
concluded.&#13;
Moody was first elected to&#13;
coverage to earn five dollars&#13;
per hour and try to support a&#13;
family,&#13;
"This campaign, contrary,&#13;
perhaps, to some of the other&#13;
campaIgns today, running in&#13;
state, Is about restoring jobs,&#13;
restoring your economic future,&#13;
securing our economic&#13;
future.&#13;
"What Wisconsin must ,&#13;
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-----------...:.:=------ J&#13;
uc prez&#13;
}!ADlSoN...An invitation to&#13;
vemoeratlclawmakers that&#13;
iPCludeda partisan political&#13;
lIIessagefrom two offices of&#13;
the UnitedCouncil of Student&#13;
GoVernments is ., damaging&#13;
to the Council's credibility&#13;
and at best, of borderline&#13;
Jeg8ilty,"State Representauve&#13;
Robert Welch (R·Red·1&#13;
J!8nite)said Thursday.&#13;
The invitation to a January&#13;
11 United Council reception&#13;
was addressed to Assembly&#13;
Democrats and sent out on&#13;
(J)wlelllellerhead signed by&#13;
UC president Adrian Serrano&#13;
and .Executlve Director&#13;
)Iorly Hansen. Besides lnvttIng&#13;
Democratic legislators to&#13;
IIle UC event. the text of the&#13;
JetterIdentified Serrano and&#13;
Hansenas "members of the&#13;
YoungDemocrats of Wisconsin"&#13;
and offered their servHum8.l\&#13;
rights violations are&#13;
a fact of life in El Salvador,&#13;
and Ameticans need to get invalvedto&#13;
fight these vtotalion,.&#13;
This was the message&#13;
broughtto Parkslde wednesday&#13;
(Feb. 10) by Pat Chaffee,&#13;
a Dominican Sister who reo&#13;
conny spent three months 'in&#13;
Ei SalVador.&#13;
Chaffee's lecture on the&#13;
currentsituation in El saivadorwas&#13;
sponsored by the InternationalStudies&#13;
Club.&#13;
Homein Racine. Chaffee is&#13;
a sleter" with the Sienna Center.&#13;
She was in EI' Salvador&#13;
betweenAugust and Novem··&#13;
ber of 1987, on a trip sponlUredby&#13;
SHARE. an ecumenlealChurch&#13;
group on Sal-vado·&#13;
ran human rights research&#13;
.andeducation.&#13;
InChatfeewent to El Salvador&#13;
hopesof accompanying refugeeswho&#13;
had been in Hondurasfor&#13;
seven years. .&#13;
Whiletheir petitions to re-&#13;
~rn had been repeatedly&#13;
emodand then granted for&#13;
Only 1,000 people to return to :yone location (a war zone&#13;
rna~emountains), with some&#13;
• erial help, the refugees&#13;
e~lUlized and It became&#13;
a~ar to the government that&#13;
ft 4,000 were retumlng-to&#13;
\'e locations&#13;
.i'Even thoogh their ptaces&#13;
lh origin were stw war zones,&#13;
t.,ey Wanted to go to their&#13;
Ianme1sJld and work the&#13;
d," and raise their cbU·&#13;
~n, many of whom had&#13;
.:~er known life outside of&#13;
Pla~ee camps, Chaffee exed.&#13;
f.;:;'e ':Ofugees, despite ef·&#13;
'u by the government right&#13;
P until the tast minute to&#13;
APARTMENTHOTELROOMS&#13;
~V8lIabl•. Full maid senilce,&#13;
1~lePhon.furnished, Weekly&#13;
lates from SUO; Monthly I&#13;
es from $400. APPLE X~~~rl ~ODGE,Racine.&#13;
sends questionable invitation uw-P to host&#13;
choral festival&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
ices in 1988 legislative campaigns.&#13;
P~t Chaffee&#13;
keep them out, did return to&#13;
four locations~ The fifth was&#13;
inaccessible. -"&#13;
Dwarte's govemm",nt ortgtnally&#13;
said that no internationalists&#13;
would be allowed to&#13;
IHE FAR·SIDE&#13;
"We look forward to work.&#13;
ing with you to maintain the&#13;
Democratic majority in the&#13;
Assembly,': Serrano and Hansen&#13;
said.&#13;
Welch, the GOP Caucus&#13;
Chairman in the Assembly&#13;
questioned the legality of th~&#13;
invitations, since the Council&#13;
Is a registered lobbying organization&#13;
and the invitation&#13;
"would seem to involve the&#13;
group in partisan political activities.&#13;
or at the very least to&#13;
use -its facilities and materials&#13;
for those purposes ..&#13;
"If the Council's leadership&#13;
willingly offers Itself for use&#13;
as a tool of the Democratic&#13;
Party, It will unavoidably&#13;
taint its position when it tries&#13;
to lobby the Legislature on&#13;
issues of concern to stuBy&#13;
GARY LARSON&#13;
-&#13;
Sister speaks about strife in EI Salvador&#13;
. . foreign governments had have this stamp, he may not&#13;
by Cbr!stina LoJeskl help the refugees on their reached them as of that time. get the handout he needs.&#13;
journey back, "but due to a At a rally on Oct. 10, 1987, The war in El Salvador Is&#13;
'matter of response network' Chaffee reported people car- evident in the slgne posted&#13;
•.a barage of letters and tete- rylng slgne with ststements along the countryside warnphone&#13;
calls to an appropriate such as "where ts $50.000,000 ing of the mines, and In euch&#13;
person, in this case, Dwar'te, earthquake relief from the graffiti as "Monsignor Rometo&#13;
put pressure on him to re- United States?" ro Lives:'&#13;
verse his decision, which was The people have also been This graffiti, Chaffee exobviously&#13;
against human unsuccessful in getllnl: the plalned, was seen at the Inderights&#13;
or civil rights, Dwarte government to help them reo pendence Day celebration,&#13;
changed his mind," stated buUd the houses that were de- celebratIDg El Salvador's tnChaffee.&#13;
slroyed. dependence from Spain.&#13;
While Chaffee was not one WhIle Chaffee was there. "Though they may be inde·&#13;
of the internationalists who there was food distribution. pendent tram Spain, they are&#13;
was allowed to help, she did She explained that she saw not Independent tram the&#13;
spend three months in El Sal- the Red Cross once and the United States, and treedom&#13;
vador. city government twice. does not come with indepenChaffee&#13;
spoke of the two AU-adults must carry sedu- dence," Chaffee streued.&#13;
relnltles of El Salvador --the las--voter regtalratlon cards. One piece of graffiti Chaf·&#13;
earthquake and the war. These cards are stamped fee saw said, "There will be&#13;
The earthquake in EI galva- when they vote in the "free" no peace in the region as long&#13;
dor occurred on oct. 10, 1986, elections. If a person does not as there Is Intervention."&#13;
As of Oct. 10, 1987, none of the •&#13;
il.Id that had come from the&#13;
United States had reached the&#13;
victims. Chaffee reporled .&#13;
"Aid that was given&#13;
through privatized organizations&#13;
got directly to the peopie,"&#13;
but nothing from any'&#13;
''Well, Ifs cold again:'&#13;
dents," Welch' said. "We're&#13;
going to have to ask ourselves,&#13;
'are these people really&#13;
Irylng to repri!sent students&#13;
in the UW System, or&#13;
are they just carrying water&#13;
for the Democratic Party&#13;
again?'&#13;
Ranger Thursday, February 18, 1988 5&#13;
"1 seriously doubt that stu-&#13;
-dent interests are getting&#13;
their best representation&#13;
when the leaders of the&#13;
United Council appear to be&#13;
using the organization as&#13;
base for their own partisan.&#13;
maneuvering," he added.&#13;
The United council ts funded&#13;
through mandatory contributions&#13;
of 50 cents per student,&#13;
per semester. Students&#13;
who object to the assessment&#13;
may receive refunds by filing&#13;
a request with the Council.&#13;
Parkslde wtlI host Its annual&#13;
Choral Festival on Friday,&#13;
March 4, In Main Place. The&#13;
Festival wtlI feature the Racine&#13;
high schools. J. I. Case.&#13;
Willtam Horlick, and Washington&#13;
Park.&#13;
Students wtlI attend clinics&#13;
and workshops throughout the&#13;
afternoon and wtlI combine&#13;
for a grand finale conducted&#13;
by Dr. Robert CampbeU, assistant&#13;
professor of music. at&#13;
8 p.m. The combined choirs&#13;
will perform Felix Mendelssohn's&#13;
Hellg.&#13;
The concerl Is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkslde Music Depariment&#13;
and Is open to the general&#13;
public. Admission Is $2&#13;
for general public, and $1 for&#13;
students and seruor citizens.&#13;
ON THEAVE&#13;
5701 22ND AVE.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
658-3824&#13;
THIS THURSDAY N&#13;
8:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.&#13;
Bring Your Own Mug&#13;
UNLIMITED REFILLS of:&#13;
lite Old Style&#13;
a. ,&#13;
Miller&#13;
.".• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• i • • • •&#13;
Tired of Parkslde Food?&#13;
Try Gerolmo's for lun~h!_&#13;
Gerolmo's on the Ave. - A Whole New Concept&#13;
Proper 1.0. Required Open Daily 10:00&#13;
6 Thursday, February 18, 1988 Ranger&#13;
_n (Alex PeiUt) Pederson Robb Luehr&#13;
by. n Kehoe&#13;
LlImar, eat your heart out. Bill serpe thrills the crowd with his&#13;
.... then spectacular toss otthe javelin on a snowy day.&#13;
Winter Car&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The words "Olympic Games" were on everybody's mind as Parkside students vied&#13;
for the coveted gold, sliver and bronze medals that were given away dUring Winter&#13;
carnival last week.&#13;
Mother Nature' was not stingy this year. She provided the students with enough ofthe&#13;
cold, white stuff to make all the outside events a real ch:&lt;lIenge, ~cluding the Volley.&#13;
ball games, which in some cases were played in bhzzard-hke conditions.&#13;
Appropriately named "Snolymplcs '88," this year's carnival proved to be a week&#13;
filled with unusual athletic events, a night of students "Puttin' on the hits," and a night&#13;
when students played 'Draw or Die' to the death. .&#13;
The week started off with the largest parade in Parkside's Winter Carnival history.&#13;
Students from various organizations were represented, all having various themes for&#13;
their floats. "&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega, the drama fraternity, took first place honors in the parade With&#13;
their float depicting a chariot being pulled by the spirits of the other organlzatlons&#13;
being whipped into submission by the taskmaster, portrayed by Bill Serpe, '&#13;
Second place in the parade went to the Southeastern Wisconsin Educators AsoclaUon&#13;
(SWEA) and the Chjld-Care Center. The four and five-year.olds walked down the con.&#13;
course singing the ABC song and holding masks in front of their races, They hUshedthe&#13;
noisy, crowded concourse while they stopped in front of the judges' stand for an encore&#13;
performance.&#13;
Third place went to the Parkside Activities Board (P AB) who had decorated a main.&#13;
tenance cart to look like a small ship ready to cross a big ocean.&#13;
After the parade, athletes representing different organtzatrons maneuvered a tricycle&#13;
down the concourse through various obstacles, whiie in some cases having' to be blind.&#13;
folded, or holding a spoon in their mouths andbalancing a ping pong ball.&#13;
Ranger came away with the gold in that event, with Alpha Psi Omega coming up&#13;
with the silver, and SWEA with the bronze.&#13;
Monday also saw the start of the volleyball double-elimlnation tournament, with 14&#13;
teams all looking to be the best of the Carnival. Volleyball games were played every.&#13;
day, with Pi Sigma Epsilon grabbing the first place spot on Friday, afler defeating&#13;
Athletes in Action in two consecutive games. House three came away with the third&#13;
place spot.&#13;
Monday night, the annual Winter Carnival Lip Sync was held. This year's eventwas&#13;
hosted by comedian A.J. Jamal. who had just flown in from Canada that morning,&#13;
The contestants were judged on lip sync, originallty, and appearance. ThIs year's&#13;
judges were G. Gary Grace, Assistant Chancellor for Student Affairs, Cindy Wirtz,&#13;
Auxiliary Services Business Manager. and Steve McLaughlin, Director of Student Life,&#13;
After a mistake in the addition of the scores was brought to the attention of Tim lAr·&#13;
man, Student Actlvttles/Rec Center manager, the scores were readded, and the real&#13;
winners were announced. ".&#13;
Taking home the goid was Parkside Student Government Association (PSGA) with&#13;
their rendition of the Beatles' classic "Twist and Shout!' The PSGA team rockedthe&#13;
_crowd, and Scott Peterson showed everyone how to 'shake it up!'&#13;
Taking the. sliver was Alpha Psi Omega. doing "Devll With the Blue Dress On" by&#13;
Mitch Ryder. Thi", skit had everyone on their feet as it mcluded, as the 'devO', Rich&#13;
Cleven doing his impersonation of the "church lady,"&#13;
There was a tie. for the bronze medal between PAB's'team led by Frank Porcaro&#13;
doing "Ugly" by the Violent Femmes, and House 6 &amp; 7, led by Brian Mallory, doinga&#13;
medley of songs by Prince and the Revolution, .&#13;
Tuesday brought Parkside its first-ever belching contest. Athletes were given one&#13;
minute to 'come up with' as many gas sounds as possible.&#13;
The gold was taken home by Ranger's own Randy LeCount, with Rich Cleven from&#13;
Aipha Psi Omega taking the sliver, and Charles Kariampozha representing the International&#13;
Students Organization taking home the bronze. •&#13;
Another first for Parkside was the frozen banana eating contest." In this event, a&#13;
feeder had to put on a pair of rubber gloves, dip them in chocolate, then grope In a tub&#13;
of whipped cream for a frozen banana. The next task was for the eater to dlgesllWOof&#13;
Baby,.ii's cold oulslde. Ice block sitters enjoyed Ihe sun and the&#13;
ice Fnday aftemoon.&#13;
photo by Jim ,. .. 1ItriCfd&#13;
~:~:~fe~~:~Jlrhl~~eb:I[Wllh Ihe grealesl of,ea~. Brian (Rosch)&#13;
al Wrap,-Up&#13;
l\Ie&amp;efroZen concoctions in the fastest time.&#13;
FirSt place went to. the SWEA team .ot Greg P~nza and Dawn 0' Acquisto. Second&#13;
""t to the Rang~r team of Rob Topps and Marla Rintz, and third went to Wend&#13;
l&gt;f'IlSO!l and Kevm Kollman of Alpha Psi Omega, , . y&#13;
Tuesdaynight brought the three-legged scavenger hunt sponsored by Alpha Psi&#13;
(lnega to the hallowed ha~l~ of this institution. Co-ed teams raced the clock to be the&#13;
IIIlto bring back ~ix specifted It,\ms on their lists.&#13;
Using only 13 minutes. the Ranger. learn of Steve Picazo and Kelly McKissick ran&#13;
lraywith the gold. tied for second with 14 minutes were Jim Maastricht and Michelle&#13;
ljlIIley,representing House 3' and Brenda Buchanan and Sean Fair representing&#13;
~ , .&#13;
'l1Ie~was a three-way tie for the bronze medal, between Tracey Conners and John&#13;
IilItersrepresenting House 4, and two PAB teams consisting of Jeri Vaculik and Don&#13;
Prange, and Amy Rasmussen and Tom Johnson. These three teams each finished in 15&#13;
_Ies.&#13;
Wednesdaynot only brought in a full day's worth of events, but it also was the begin.&#13;
ligof what turned out to be a two-day snowstorm which ended up dumping 10 inches&#13;
~rreshsnowon the campus.&#13;
\llC human dog sled race turned out toa hard-tougnt race with the Ranger team pull-&#13;
_ sheadto take the gold away from the SWEA team . .Alpha Psi Omega came in and&#13;
lIok homethe bronze.&#13;
Wednesdayevening 'saw the Rec Center filled with nopenns-ptn tap teams, all tookfig&#13;
to slrlke out for the gold. House 3 proved to be unstoppable with its team of Larry&#13;
DeRosIer and Pam Workman. Coming in second was the team of Darin Furtney and&#13;
NaneyDeBartolo, and third place went to John Brooks and Bridget Krahllng.&#13;
Thursday began with a Lamar Javelin Thr,'w turned pool.cue·throw after the origiIIIjavelln&#13;
came apart in a practice throw by LeCount. The Ranger representative&#13;
Ilok homethe gold, with SWEA coming away with the silver, and Alpha Psi Omega&#13;
cameawaywith the bronze.&#13;
A broomball tournament followed with teams trying to sweep a volleyball'through&#13;
IIIe goal. House 3 came away with the gold, with the Ranger bringing home the silver.&#13;
1Dtmla1ionaiStudents Organization brought home the bronze.&#13;
'1lla1evening, game snow night got off to a great start with the Dating Game. Two&#13;
llIUp1es came away with the opportunity to get to know each other a little b~tter over&#13;
!leak dinners provided by the Union Cafeteria. After that, the Draw or Ole contest&#13;
legsn, with 20teams entered overall. In between rounds, the Alex Pettit look·alike conlist&#13;
was held. Taking the gOld after hours of competition In Draw or Die was the team from SWEA.&#13;
'laking jIIe silver was Ranger II and the bronze went to Ranger I. .&#13;
BWEAhad the winning entry for the Alex Pettit look·alike contest with BrIan PederIlIlgeltlng&#13;
the gold. Rick Luehr from the Ranger took the silver and Tim Grygera,&#13;
"PresentingRanger, took the bronze.&#13;
Theclosing day of Snolympics '88 brought the Obstacle Course From Hell, Musical&#13;
keBlockSitting and an Awards Dance featuring Pat McCurdy and the Confidentials.&#13;
Randy LeCoun~, representing the Ranger, ran. away with the gold in the obstacle&#13;
COUrse,with Mike Rohl of the Ranger taking the silver, and John Marter from the&#13;
Rsngerclaiming the bronze.&#13;
L11ll8lcallceblock sitting was another new event held at this year's carnival, and Dan&#13;
""'" from House 3 was able to hold out the longest on the ice. Chuck Wiggms from&#13;
A1p~ Psi Omega finished second with Brenda Buchanan from SWEA 'bringing up the&#13;
"r. '&#13;
Thebig event was at the Award Ceremony at the dance on Friday night.&#13;
PsITheblood drive award went to Alpha Psi Omega for the second year in a row. Alpha&#13;
lie also won the $250 spirit award gtven out for the organization having the most parlpatlondUring&#13;
Winter Carnival . Winningthe $250 for the Grand 'Medal Award was the. Ranger. with alpha,Psl Omega&#13;
COtn1ng Insecond, getting $100, and in thirdJplace, SWEA receIving $50.&#13;
AUin au, this year's Winter Carnival seemed to have something for everyone, with&#13;
~t1ons pulling together to go for the gold. '&#13;
Swept off his feet, an Alpha Psi Omega broomball player tries to&#13;
keep the ball from a House III player.&#13;
Ranger Thursday. February 18, 1988 7&#13;
On Donner! On Blitzen! On Dasher! the cry goes out from the&#13;
human dog sled.&#13;
Pulll was the cry as Pi Slgme Epsilon tugged the rope In the tUll"&#13;
o-war.&#13;
......~n..,..,.&#13;
And to the victors go theFspoIiS. ig&lt;t,~':::winning Reng8f&#13;
team aceepts the award et 'rldey n '&#13;
,&#13;
8 Thursday, February 18,1988 Ranger&#13;
)&#13;
Bad Guys move&#13;
straight ahead. ,&#13;
new EP can be heard Friday,&#13;
February 26 at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
when The Bad GUys appear&#13;
live In the Union Square.&#13;
The musical influences of&#13;
the band are so numerous&#13;
-that The Bad Guys' sound can&#13;
only be described as ,their&#13;
own, says Xeno. His singing&#13;
style Is Influenced by everyone&#13;
from Ray Charles to·&#13;
Hank Williams, Jr. to Robert&#13;
Plant. ,&#13;
Xeno defines the Bad GUys&#13;
as "a rock band, but we try&#13;
to do something a little bit&#13;
different." They take oldies&#13;
like, •.I Love You Today More&#13;
Than Yesterday" by Spiral&#13;
Staircase, and The Ahimals'&#13;
"Don't Let Me Be Mlsunder·&#13;
stood" and redo -them in their&#13;
own style. They also try -to&#13;
add a little humor to their&#13;
stage show.&#13;
The members of the Bad&#13;
Guys have a long and varied&#13;
past with other groups. Most'&#13;
notably. Xeno was once the&#13;
lead singer for Cheap Trick,&#13;
and new addition .Lamar I&#13;
played with Gerard, which,&#13;
has made frequent appearances&#13;
at Parkside. I&#13;
But even with such past experiences,&#13;
straight ahead Is&#13;
the only direction this band&#13;
knows. Xeno claims that&#13;
today's Bad Guys are "the&#13;
best thing any of us have ever&#13;
done."&#13;
by Peter Hansen&#13;
With their new guitarist&#13;
and their new name, the&#13;
hard- rocking Bad Guys are&#13;
only looking forward these&#13;
day •.&#13;
Although Bad Boy achieved&#13;
substantial SUCceB8 with four&#13;
albums and one single, lead&#13;
singer, Xeno, Is unwilling to&#13;
discuss the past In detail.&#13;
"Yeah, we did that, (played&#13;
as Bad Boy); but we want to&#13;
move on to something new:'&#13;
The band's present lineup&#13;
consists of lead singer and&#13;
guitarist. Xeno; bassist,' John&#13;
Marcelli; drummer. Billy&#13;
Friday; and their new lead&#13;
guitarist, Mark Lamar. Al·&#13;
though the only personnel&#13;
change from Bad Boy to The&#13;
Bad Guys Is from Steve&#13;
Grimm to Lamar, Xeno says&#13;
it has made all the difference.&#13;
We're an infinitely better&#13;
band . . . infinitely more&#13;
musical, U he said.&#13;
MoVIng on to something&#13;
new hasn't taken them long.&#13;
The Bad GUys are anttctpating&#13;
the release of a four-song ~&#13;
EP In the spring, tentatively&#13;
tiUed llWanted."&#13;
Xeno describes the music&#13;
as "straight ahead rock" and&#13;
Is especially high on a&#13;
"power ballad" called "Stay&#13;
In Love With Me." A sneak&#13;
preview of the songs on the&#13;
Group wants to&#13;
clear wolves"name&#13;
Ir\ rT\ rl\&#13;
§W(p'sm.tQ.&#13;
UNIVERSITY "TOWN HALL"&#13;
MEETING ..~&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Wolf. The very word con-&#13;
. jures up visions of vicious.&#13;
evil creatures, Indiscrfrnlnately&#13;
kliilng both people and&#13;
livestock. This is one of the&#13;
great misconceptions about&#13;
wolves that Friends of Wolves&#13;
Ltd., a non-profit organlzatlon,&#13;
Is attempting to clear&#13;
up.&#13;
The group began In November&#13;
1986, states the group's&#13;
vice president and cofounder,&#13;
Associate Professor&#13;
of geology Gerald Fowler.&#13;
The organization, which currenlly&#13;
has about 100 members,&#13;
was started, says Fowler,&#13;
"primarily to provide balanced&#13;
information to the general&#13;
public about the wolf.&#13;
Our interest is in general conservation.&#13;
but we focus on the&#13;
wolf for a number of reasons,&#13;
but primarily because It's an&#13;
animal badly in need of a&#13;
friend."&#13;
The wolf has had a bad-reputation,&#13;
said Fowler, which Is&#13;
ingrained early In' children&#13;
through fairy tales involving&#13;
the "Big, Bad Wolf." "Virtually&#13;
anything you pick up-that&#13;
deals with the wolf," Fowler&#13;
said, "paints the wolf In a&#13;
negative way. When the wolf&#13;
is used in an advertising&#13;
scheme, it's presented as a&#13;
growling, frothmg-at-themouth&#13;
creature, if you see the&#13;
animal at all. Or all you hear&#13;
Is a wolf howl - it's the threat&#13;
of some Impending doom.&#13;
"Traditionally, the wolf has&#13;
been given a bad reputation.&#13;
and none of it is deserved,"&#13;
Fowler continued .• ,As far as&#13;
w~ know. there' is no verifiable&#13;
record, in this country, of&#13;
a healthy wolf purposely attacking&#13;
a human. Humans&#13;
have nothing to fear of the&#13;
wolf In the wild, any more&#13;
than they have to fear any&#13;
animal.&#13;
"The bear that receives so&#13;
much more attention as "being&#13;
a cuddly creature, is much&#13;
more dangerous animals to&#13;
humans. \Volves basically&#13;
prefer to be left alone."&#13;
Fowler also stated that the&#13;
danger to livestock from&#13;
wolves has been grossly overstated.&#13;
"We've ...learned that&#13;
wherever there's plenty of&#13;
normal food for the wolves,&#13;
even though the wolf comes&#13;
Into close contact with farms&#13;
and ranches, there's very Itttie&#13;
depredation of livestock.&#13;
In :Mirinesota, for Instance.'&#13;
the average loss of livestock&#13;
per year is about six. out of&#13;
10,000."&#13;
In addition to being vice&#13;
president, Fowler is also in&#13;
charge of the group's educatlonal&#13;
programs. He offers a&#13;
lecture service to schools, nature&#13;
and sporting groups. In&#13;
addition, the group sets up&#13;
exhibits at major dog shows.&#13;
They also sponsored a wildlife&#13;
art show at Parkslde this&#13;
past November.&#13;
On Feb. 19, 20 and 21,&#13;
Friends of Wolves Is sponsorIng&#13;
a trip to Ely, MInnesota&#13;
for field experience to learn&#13;
about the woif In Its natural&#13;
environment. The weekend&#13;
wlii Include lectures, hikes&#13;
ani! the opportunity to take a&#13;
flight In a small plane to see&#13;
wolves in the wild.&#13;
• Startshould work out orronoement$ tor 0"1f'lding the meeting&#13;
with thelr supervisors so thol worX areas con remain open.&#13;
FREE&#13;
TANNING&#13;
TAN BEFORE&#13;
YOU TRAVEL •••&#13;
Get ready for Spring Break&#13;
Is/Session is FREE&#13;
4 HiROPI \:\ \\01 II [""'''I'\G III I)S&#13;
."For UW·Parlcslde stude"ts, staff' and faculty&#13;
•••To discuss the Impact of the closing of the Chrysler&#13;
Kenosha Assembly Plant onlhe UW·Parkslde com·&#13;
munlty and to leorn how the University plans to&#13;
asslsl students, staff and community members&#13;
attecled by Ihe closing.&#13;
Monday, February 22, 1988&#13;
Noon to 1p.m.&#13;
Molinaro Hall-Room 109&#13;
Chancellor Sheila Kaplan Presiding&#13;
SPEAKERS:&#13;
• STEVEMEYER,Assoclote Professor of labor Studies&#13;
"The Hislory of PIont Closings in the U.S.&#13;
• KENNETHHOOVER, Professor of Political SCIence&#13;
"Unemployment-Reemployment Adjustment Cycle"&#13;
• TERESAPECK-McGqVERN, Associate Professor of&#13;
Education&#13;
''The Impact of Unemployment on the Family&#13;
• JAN OCKER, Director of Financial Aid&#13;
"The Availability of Additional Student Financial Aid"&#13;
• SHEILAKAPlAN, Chancelior&#13;
"The Chrysler Kenosha Plant Closing and Parkside"&#13;
3519-52nd St.&#13;
654-6154&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
a&#13;
Week at&#13;
the Park&#13;
Thursday, Feb, 18&#13;
"What Have I Done to ne.&#13;
serve This?" will be shownat&#13;
7:30 p.m. In the Union Cine.&#13;
mao Ti~kets for the Thursday&#13;
Foreign Film Series win be&#13;
available at the door,&#13;
"Beginning Sign Language"&#13;
starts at 7:30 p.m, In Union&#13;
202. Call ext. 2312 for reserva.&#13;
tlons:&#13;
Friday, Feb, 19&#13;
Trivial Pursuit starts at 10&#13;
a.m. in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Area. Sponsored by the Park.&#13;
side History Club.&#13;
Saturday. Feb. 20&#13;
•'Expressive Calligraphy"&#13;
and "Improving a Negative&#13;
Self Image" both begin tOday,&#13;
Sponsored by the Continumg&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
"What Have I Done to ne.&#13;
serve This?" will be repeated&#13;
at 8 p.m. In the Union CIne.&#13;
rna. AU seats are sold for the&#13;
Saturday Foreign Ftim So.&#13;
. ries.&#13;
A semi formal ball will begin&#13;
at 9 p.m. In the Union Square&#13;
featuring the band "Love Ex.&#13;
presslons." Admission at Ibe&#13;
door Is $2. Sponsored by Ibe&#13;
Black History Month Plan.&#13;
ning Committee.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 21&#13;
"What Have I' Done to De.&#13;
serve This?" will be repeated&#13;
at 2 p.m, In the Unlon CIne.&#13;
mao Tickets for the SundBy&#13;
Foreign Film Series will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 22&#13;
•'Power and Powerlessness of&#13;
Women" by Jean Elshlaln of&#13;
the University of Massachu·&#13;
setts begins at 12:15 p.m. In&#13;
Union -106. The event IB free&#13;
and open to the publlc.&#13;
Seminar on internships and&#13;
summer employment begins&#13;
at 1 p.m, In Union 207. Call&#13;
ext. 2452 for reservations.&#13;
Tuesday. Feb. 23&#13;
"Stress Reduction" starts at&#13;
9 a.m. In Union. Call extenslon&#13;
2312 for more Inform.·&#13;
tlon.&#13;
The music of William Granl&#13;
Stili will be: featured along&#13;
with a Mass Black Choir and&#13;
the Parkslde Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Com·&#13;
municatlon Arts Theatre. Ad·&#13;
mission at the door IB $1 for&#13;
students and $2 for others.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb, 24&#13;
"Wliilam Grant Still" by Ms.&#13;
Judith Stili at 1 p.m. in CA&#13;
118. The event Is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
"The Basics of Performance&#13;
Appraisal" begins at 6:30&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. sponsored&#13;
by the Small Business Devel·&#13;
opment Center.&#13;
"High Noon" (PG) will be&#13;
shown at 7 p.rn. In the Union&#13;
CInema. Admission at the&#13;
door Is $1 -for Parkslde s'::i&#13;
dents, faculty, staff alu';'..,&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponso&#13;
byPAB.&#13;
Spring Break&#13;
is only 3&#13;
weeks away&#13;
t . Ranger Thursday, February 18, 1988 9&#13;
speaker brings&#13;
awareness to campus&#13;
by Doc Mallory&#13;
Thewholething was kind of&#13;
freSIl: theopening celebration&#13;
01Black History Month at&#13;
Parl&lt;Side.&#13;
Iarriveda little late for the&#13;
speaker,but I definitely&#13;
iIBiJ'd an earful of knowledge&#13;
rromDr.Maulana Karenga. I&#13;
goloseattowards the back of&#13;
the UnionCInema and just&#13;
observedthe whole' scene.&#13;
J(areIIglI, who was entertainas&#13;
well as informative.&#13;
I've an address entitled,&#13;
"BIaek Culture and the Chaliellge&#13;
ofHistory."&#13;
!lie crowd, a mixture of Dr. Maulana Karenga&#13;
Is from Carthage and attention. Grover's art Is food&#13;
Parkside,seemed to be enjoy- for the eyea-not an acquired&#13;
iDg the lecture. The mood In- taste but a taste to acquire.&#13;
was really comfortable Then I checked out the&#13;
IIIli peaceful. crowd. There was a line gathAs&#13;
I looked through the ered for refresllments, sevcrowd,I&#13;
saw a couple of peo- eral small groups around&#13;
Jie whomI knew. Seated be- each picture 'and Grover.&#13;
Idnd me was former Coordi- Other people enjoying the exof&#13;
Special Programs hiblt were the Director of the&#13;
usIe Hargrove, and on, my Center for Educational and&#13;
left a couple of rows down, Cultural Affairs, Dr. Wayne&#13;
was Parkslde basketball Williams; Director of Special&#13;
GregNash. Services, Pamela Smith; and&#13;
Welookedback at our pain- C.H.A.M.P. Director, DeboluI&#13;
past, and decided that now rab Hendricks.&#13;
IIthe time to pave our way to The most beautiful part of&#13;
I brighter future. We also the evening, (and maybe the&#13;
Ibared a few laughs about the most filtIng) was when Dr.&#13;
times. and even those Karenga and Grover I were&#13;
good times. standing at the picture "ChalWhenIt&#13;
was over, we went lenge of the Future." The&#13;
out to the Union Bazaar to beauty Is a man like Dr. Ka-&#13;
'heck out an art exhibit. The renga motivallng blacks to&#13;
artIat featured was Park- embrace their past culture&#13;
Jlde'sown Jerrill Grover. It and history, and a man like&#13;
was great to see Grover col- Jerrilj Grover, the artist of&#13;
leelhlsdue because he's such the future, inspiring blacks&#13;
I &amp;ODd person. I had seen him with his gifted insight of our&#13;
!&amp;rUerIn that day getting culture as well as the world:&#13;
:rythtnl g ready. We -spoke, I just watched them, 'and&#13;
wished him luck and caught a nice piece of truth.&#13;
:rlhaanleted my attendance, Dr. Karenga shared with&#13;
Wasearlier. Grover and it went a little c:en It was showtime, something like this: "hope&#13;
er slood proud and and struggle together equal&#13;
1lOIsed.Around me Bazaar, humanity."&#13;
::e commented In apprecl- Like' I said, the whole thing&#13;
, over Grover's art. Some was kind of fresh. :nt belleve such a great,.. -'&#13;
~I COuldcome from Parkthe&#13;
'{- can sWI hear some of&#13;
rolhers ask In a very&#13;
~rlsed manner, "Dude's&#13;
q,vDl here?"&#13;
~er's art is a must-see.&#13;
Pletuyou look at some of his&#13;
form rei~ In their finished&#13;
thai' Is amazing to think&#13;
....re ~ese beautiful Images&#13;
},{ rn from a thought. "Chin faVOrite Is one called&#13;
'llte enge of the Future."&#13;
Dr:;'e went perfectly with&#13;
Pleiure ngs's theme, and if a&#13;
""fda Is worth a thousand&#13;
Ofth I Grover's .~·Challenge&#13;
G":;Future" Is a novel. '&#13;
"'al Vertakes us back to the&#13;
furth and shows us how much&#13;
!hareerWeneed to go. Grover&#13;
Worldswith us his vision of&#13;
Illan peace ~ a teary-eyed&#13;
I Wo~rdlllbOliZIngtears of joy,&#13;
llance Without racial domiII's&#13;
and true brotherhood.&#13;
look a~e kind of picture you&#13;
and ea Over and over again,&#13;
~Ch time you stare. I 101ll.uJ: that you wW find&#13;
g that captures your&#13;
I Milwaukee museum&#13;
to display black art&#13;
Conference&#13;
to be held&#13;
•'Teaching Shakespeare:&#13;
Text and Performance;' a&#13;
two-day conference on February&#13;
26 and 27. was announced&#13;
by Andrew McLean. ChaIr of&#13;
the Humanities Division and&#13;
conference coordinator.&#13;
Teachers, students, Shakespearean&#13;
professionals and&#13;
scholars wlil join In creating&#13;
a unique new approach to&#13;
Shakespearean atudJes&#13;
through textural study. textural&#13;
Interpretation and performance.&#13;
Seminars, workshops,&#13;
group dIscuaslon. and&#13;
videos Integrate Ideologies&#13;
with live performances by&#13;
students and professionals.&#13;
Some of the events wU1 be&#13;
open 10the public.&#13;
BLACK ARTISTS AND&#13;
!:MAGES, an exhibition celebraling&#13;
black culture and&#13;
pride, commemorates Black&#13;
History Month at the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Museum. A special&#13;
preview opening will take&#13;
place from 6 to 8 p.m., Thursday,&#13;
February,25. In the Faye&#13;
McBeath Learning Center.&#13;
More than 30 outstanding&#13;
works by black artists, as&#13;
well as powerful works depicting&#13;
the black experience&#13;
in.Amertca, have been select,&#13;
ed from the Art Museum's&#13;
permanent collection. PaintIngs,&#13;
drawings, prints, sculpture,&#13;
handmade paper, photographs,&#13;
and wood-relief&#13;
works demonstrate the scope&#13;
of black artists' contributions&#13;
.......to the visual arts. revealing a&#13;
wide variety of styles and&#13;
emotions.&#13;
011 painllngs by Henry O.&#13;
Tanner and Thomas Bandy,&#13;
works by Haitian arilsts Hector&#13;
Hyppollte and Louverture&#13;
Poisson, stained paper by abstact&#13;
expesslonlsts Sam Gilliam.&#13;
bronze and steel seulpture&#13;
by Richard Hunt, cast&#13;
polyester resin SCUlpture by&#13;
Fred Eversley, an assemblage&#13;
by Simon Sparrow of&#13;
Wisconsin, wood carved reliefs&#13;
by the Reverend Josephus&#13;
Farmer, a Gullab basket&#13;
designed In the AfroAmerican&#13;
tradition, and photographs&#13;
by internationally&#13;
known photographers recording&#13;
contemporary black&#13;
American society, are all on&#13;
view.&#13;
Black History Month originated&#13;
72 years ago as Negro&#13;
History Week, conceived by&#13;
carter Woodson, the second&#13;
black to earn a doctorate degree&#13;
from Harvard. Woodson,&#13;
who conceptualized Negro&#13;
History Week from a scholarly&#13;
atandjsotnt, Identified the&#13;
need to change negative mes·&#13;
sages that American students&#13;
were re~elvlng about blacks,&#13;
their culture and historical&#13;
role In society.&#13;
Black History Month .. observed&#13;
nationwide during&#13;
February -- is dedicated to&#13;
heightening public awareness&#13;
of the significant historical&#13;
artistic and social contribu:&#13;
tions of blacks in America.&#13;
Films related to the exhibition&#13;
and Black History Month&#13;
will be presented iii the museum's&#13;
Multi-media Theater&#13;
as part of the February "Reel&#13;
Art Film" series.&#13;
Saturday and Sunday. February&#13;
6 and 7, 2 p.m., "Ethnic&#13;
Notions," 1987, a powerful&#13;
video examining the long hislory&#13;
of anti-black prejudice in&#13;
America; 3 p.m., "The Em.&#13;
peror Jones.' 1933, starring&#13;
Paul Robeson, In the film&#13;
adaptation of Eugene&#13;
O'Neill's controversial play&#13;
about a domineering porter&#13;
who becomes the king of&#13;
HaIti during the 19208.&#13;
SaturdaY and Sunday. February&#13;
20 and 21. 2 p.m.,&#13;
"Richard Hunt .• Sculptor,"&#13;
1970, artist Richard Hunt discusses&#13;
his work and its retetionshlp&#13;
to the work of his&#13;
contemporaries; 3 p.m.,&#13;
"Amazing Grace," 1977, a&#13;
film of rarely seen live performances&#13;
by Lena Home,&#13;
Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith&#13;
.and many others.&#13;
Students and teachers trom&#13;
elementary through college&#13;
levels wlil be In attendance&#13;
from eight states. Among the&#13;
guest lecturers are Maurice&#13;
Charney, President of the&#13;
Shakespeare Association of&#13;
America, and KrtstIn LInklater,&#13;
Shakespeare Library.&#13;
The conference Is sponsored&#13;
by the Division of Humanities,&#13;
Fine Arts and&#13;
Education; the Regional Staff&#13;
Development Center; the UW&#13;
Urban Consortium; the UW&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement&#13;
Council; the Wis·&#13;
consln Humanities Committee;&#13;
and the Parkslde ContIn·&#13;
uIng Education Oftlce.&#13;
r.....~. . - ~.&#13;
~::~q4iJ - .... - --' __&#13;
. "..... .' .. ---'-&#13;
' ... _ .' .- .......~ "'t .~_ .,. , •••&#13;
............. ~.: ... -.:=;:;' ;;::.~~&#13;
CONTINUING STUDENT&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
Available for 1988-1989&#13;
W·HO IS ELIGIBLE TO&#13;
APPLY?&#13;
* Full-time students with 30 credits or&#13;
more, '&#13;
* Students with minimum GPA of 3.25 ..&#13;
* Students that will be enrolled as full-time&#13;
students at UW-Parkside for .1988-89&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Applications are available at:&#13;
0.1 ~5 WLLC and&#13;
Rm. 284 Tallent Hall (Financial Aid Office)&#13;
Applications must be submitted by&#13;
, March 31st. -&#13;
The first rouCKl r.YOritcfOlfO"Cf IOO~&#13;
• Enjoytbcpme·&#13;
-i"uOn Tap in the Union Square"&#13;
tf:J98J. G. ~ Inwinl Co.•lA Oosa'. WI&#13;
• 4&#13;
-&#13;
'" 10 Thursday, February 18,1988 Ranger ..···················.1 . PAUL DRAKE-..:.You,...... ,&#13;
on VEAH. Baby. I can't wait! .. Love. U8! """'. U8!'.&#13;
OVERHEARD VOU·know.where: I&#13;
think my underwear's in there w1th ANDY WEBER-you are the&#13;
KeUy!" physical fitness stud--Bitches' b\Je&#13;
USA F.--I think you are a wonder- MAMAN, n. ya des ganta dans ia&#13;
lui person.??? viette de pierre. aer.&#13;
BARB: YOU'RE doing a great job! BOBBY: YOU'RE a BDPHJB i..ov@&#13;
STG Mom' ,&#13;
sUBTERRRANEAN BIRTHDAY PSYCHO KD...LER: I am YOUrfl'lendl.&#13;
Blues!! J.T. Typesetter. I get the PriVilegeY&#13;
P.A.&amp;. NEXT urn'e you have a dance, typing all these classified ada fo Of&#13;
find a D.J. who doesn't play "Foot- -ureeeed Ranger." The Talktn' r the&#13;
loose'" strike my fancy too! That's rn~HeadI_&#13;
TZ the literate. .&#13;
THE CAT does not have "te...tctee":&#13;
she me.rely heeds the can Of'''&#13;
ture. Voila' et vtve 1&amp; dltference '-~ Mom ._~&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger 0!fI&#13;
"Get me drunk first!" ct:&#13;
~:n~~:-~.thing Rickcanjump to II&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger 0fIee&#13;
"Hey. I got another 'Overheard in"':&#13;
RangerOfficel'" . -&#13;
HOBBS: THANK you for limiting 10b&#13;
philosophy .in our recent con.. r&#13;
ttons. B1tch 1 f'8I,.&#13;
PROFESSOR dAMES; P1eaee&#13;
more explosive classes Uke thai .:&#13;
o~e. Debbie does Dallas, Love ......&#13;
Kisses. -&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• t Classifieds&#13;
CC!~~fl[lePlanningoffice offers internship workshop&#13;
Feature EdUor Goodyear explained that effectively~to employers. and Assembly. "I bought raw ads. and slide shows.&#13;
students would be able to Alex Pettit, a senior major. materials, did Inventories, "Basically. Isold the paper&#13;
learn about local summer Ing In applied computer anI! production runs.' to the people who buy tht&#13;
jobs through Wisconsin Job science, management Infor· "I felt that the Internship ads," Schneeberger ex·&#13;
Service Coordinator MIke mation systems, and account· was worthwhile," Pettit said, plalned.&#13;
Plate. Ing had an Internship with the "and I would recommend It "Yeah, It was worth It," he&#13;
Also available will be Infor. Johnson Wax Company last to other students." continued. "It !lot only 100IlB&#13;
mation on completing job ap- summer. . Kelly McKissick. a sopho. good on your resume but«&#13;
pll.cations,. finding Intern· Pettit said his -job title was more majoring In English also looks good that You can&#13;
ships, and presenting yourself Master Planner In Molding with a writing concentration, work for such a 1arge organ!·&#13;
had an Internship at the zation."&#13;
*&#13;
Shoreline Leader In Racine. Schneeberger, whois /lOW a&#13;
*&#13;
r-=====.:Il..:I:..:I:..:I:..:I:.iLlIi.-lE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.olE.oiIWilWilWilWilWif!..i':l;' *&#13;
McKissick, who Is also a reporter for the RacineJour·&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
News Editor for the Ranger, nal Times, said that he&#13;
*&#13;
X.COUNTRY SKI RENTALS *&#13;
said her job title was that of learned a lot about Iayou~ reporter and photographer. which helped him In hJa pool.&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
"I learned a lot," McKls· tion as editor at the Ranger,&#13;
*• J *. sick said." All the skills that but It really doesn'trelale to&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
I've learned· down at the the job he's doing now.&#13;
*&#13;
Shoreline Leader help me do "1 would recommend In·&#13;
*&#13;
a better job for the Ranger. ' ternshlps to students,"&#13;
*&#13;
In Th&#13;
' .* "I've met the mayor," Schneeberger said, "TheY .* e *&#13;
McKissick pointed out, "and offer the potentia! for hands-&#13;
~ Park ••&#13;
-de **' ~ I've met other city officials. on experience, which is wbat&#13;
I've made contacts that will most. employers are IooJ&lt;IDg&#13;
*&#13;
help me later in my career." for." ** Rec Center '*, Gary Schneeberger, a 1986 Goodyear said that allin' graduate of Parkslde and for. terested students shouldalgn' * ~_='==.,;).J *&#13;
mer editor ·ofthe Ranger ..did up In the Career plan/lllli&#13;
'" *&#13;
his internship In the summer and Placement Officelocated&#13;
*&#13;
....:::!C~...;:.:..J!!!:;;t;:=.I::--:-r .....-I- -&#13;
*&#13;
.011986. Schneeberger worked at WLLC 0173; and If stu· *&#13;
.-, at the Milwaukee Journal dents have any questions.&#13;
* *&#13;
doing promotion, designing they may call ~~3-2452,&#13;
~ SKI PAC KA GES ~ .... Mi'::on:"'••;::F'::'ri."";a:"':.1:':::O"":.s~a':"'t.~&amp;-:s:-u-n."'8""".5---"'B"'ri""git""ta-:Ba~iiieIich::::71:::1::10 *&#13;
Student Non.Student ** •&#13;
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DURING WEEK STOP AT REC CENTER DESK- SKI RENTAL HOURS&#13;
** jji; ~ 1"s&#13;
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FDA APPROYED SAFERTHAN1IlI"'&#13;
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. 1I103-75th St. I(enOIIII. WI.. '&#13;
LOST&#13;
t.... HOaLlCK class ring with oe.&#13;
tober blrthatone .• lJ reward 68l-1882.&#13;
HELP WANTED:&#13;
NEED£D-UGHT uaembly and&#13;
clerical people. All shin. ava11able&#13;
p.IO-O/hOUr. InqU1re In penon, een&#13;
112.1M8 01' write to TEMPORE ITEM·&#13;
PORARIES INC., .. MaIn se., SUite&#13;
107. Racine, WI.&#13;
TUTOa _~venth g1tI. cau&#13;
IG'r.1T72. Pay .. 1M je.&#13;
BAPPD.Y couple wanta to&#13;
adoPt aecond eh1Id. Call ..... 1.&#13;
1IO_au:U WANTEDI_&#13;
pay! C.I. 121:HUt AYe., N.W. SuIte m&#13;
Norman, OK. 7J88I.&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED:&#13;
TYPING, FAST and protea1ona1. Student&#13;
rat ... caD Debbie at 881-3U2.&#13;
FOR SALE:&#13;
MOBILE HOME 12XD6. Two bedrooms.&#13;
two .tledtI, two park1n&amp; pl&amp;eU,&#13;
IMlW tumate. air cond1t1oner, kitchen&#13;
appllanCes. no children or dop. Net8M&#13;
Hillen •• Mobile Home Park 27th&#13;
and 89th Ave. $6,700. Call Ml-707l.&#13;
W"TEBBED-KlNO Slse bookcase&#13;
mlrrOred headboard. Seat reaaonable&#13;
offer. can ",_1.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
GOOBIE ",OOBlE, Thanx for a&#13;
wonderful V-day weekend--mumble&#13;
umble.&#13;
Kt:L-YOU anl the queen and there Is&#13;
no disputing that. Bone.&#13;
MI88 MICHELE Lynn Sandberg, I'm&#13;
....eakeningl&#13;
DENNIS, IF you do Cl"OSllthe bridge,&#13;
be sure to come back and get me to&#13;
Crosll It!&#13;
Career Planning and Place·&#13;
ment Director. JoAnn Good·&#13;
year. announced that I}er of.&#13;
flee would be holding an In·&#13;
formation session on Internships&#13;
and Summer Employment&#13;
this Monday, February&#13;
22, at 1 p.m. In Union 207.&#13;
TAL. LET'S keep soaking the secretaries!&#13;
'&#13;
SHELL AND Gee, thanks for the ptetures!&#13;
D. LOVE, Word up with you and&#13;
StepJl?&#13;
LA DREAM Team: 23 in a row and&#13;
counting.&#13;
STEPH B. parade line-up is here?&#13;
STEVE PICAZO, next time you sign&#13;
up for committee. at teeet help out on&#13;
the event y'ou're chair of.&#13;
dIM VOSS. un1eu you went bllnd you&#13;
would have noticed the poetera I&#13;
helped make for Winter Carnival, but&#13;
then you were nowhere to be found to&#13;
help out on any of the events during&#13;
the wboJe week 80 how eouJd you have&#13;
seen them?&#13;
PAM D. If it ain't your phone, don't&#13;
answer It. If it ain't your life--butt&#13;
out!! The bad 1ntluence.&#13;
OVEJUIEARD IN the basement: "1&#13;
can't do 1tin the dark." neeeee.&#13;
lIIU YOU know ... that you can go blind&#13;
from punching your pook?&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger Office:&#13;
"Just ShOveone of those up there."&#13;
A.VY. WHAT Is keeping your tonsUa&#13;
warm?!? .&#13;
I CAN'T belleye that the Million Dollar&#13;
Man has the title.&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the PSGA Office:&#13;
"can I do anything to you?"&#13;
SKANKABLE. JAB lives. So let's&#13;
akank. Odd Rock. JAH&#13;
I AND [ skank to be alive and rastltali&#13;
will crush Babylon kings. JAH&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger Office:&#13;
"Cram it! Cram it!..&#13;
WHAT DO we have now, a thousand&#13;
hundred points or a pint of a quart?&#13;
PROFESSOR JAMES. I would llke&#13;
you to stop guessing my weight!! '&#13;
EVERYONE, THERE is a party UlIs&#13;
Friday!! Be there! 7C!! The 70 For·&#13;
etgn Cocks&#13;
BOB A" You are still an ass. Dom,&#13;
you are acting lUte one too.&#13;
OLEN UM and Pete, you are so cute.&#13;
Hecter '&#13;
KYUNG.YEEot YOU are the most understanding&#13;
person and I love you for&#13;
It?????&#13;
,J~ET .. YOU never did reply as to if&#13;
you were beauUful. Luke&#13;
CAN GUYS join the Valentine's Day&#13;
Haters Club too?&#13;
YUU BETl _Valentine's Day Haters&#13;
Club Member.&#13;
JENNY, THERE'S more crackers&#13;
where that one came from?&#13;
YOU BET, Baby .. Walt til saturday&#13;
night. Unless Sandy isn't a cracker&#13;
fan! ..&#13;
ALL nus. and Cheez·Whiz too!!&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger Office:&#13;
"I take her serioUsly when she eats&#13;
oyster crackers off my crotch."&#13;
ALEX: YOU are the king! Thanks for&#13;
reminding me to celebrate. not the&#13;
brief rush of infatuation, but the en·&#13;
during love of tnle friends. A former&#13;
Valentine's Day Hater.&#13;
THE SUN is not yellow, it's chicken.&#13;
RUSS: YOU are too sweet!!&#13;
SUBTERRANEAN VALENTINE'S&#13;
Day Blues!!!&#13;
K.V.··Sp4:&#13;
OVERHEARD IN SC--"l was hot&#13;
between my legs tonight!!"&#13;
HEY, JIM Voss--Was that a PAB&#13;
dance?&#13;
BAHEBEK: I just love your bush.&#13;
JOE G--Do my words keep coming&#13;
back to me or am I imagining things?&#13;
BRIAN B, John B. Beth C, Mark C,&#13;
:PtIikekS. Russ S, Mark T,--Skippy&#13;
says "HI"&#13;
USA AND Rina, We're all watching! !&#13;
Love us&#13;
,JENNY. THIS is the week I get you&#13;
on skisU&#13;
c&#13;
T.Z. The literate: Yes the Talking&#13;
Heads strike my fancy ...very observant!&#13;
And yes, some of these ctaaetfieds&#13;
are pretty trashy!&#13;
SO WHAT'S your point with T.Z. the&#13;
literate? Psycho Killer&#13;
DAPHNE. DID you get the beer off&#13;
your cashmere? Lars&#13;
PAS: THANKS' for the weekend. You&#13;
made more noise In the shower than I&#13;
did in the sack! I didn't really think&#13;
that was poestbte.&#13;
PLEASE "MR, Classified" check&#13;
your spelling, It's GenitaJ Hospital; I&#13;
want to make a sequel.&#13;
IF YOUR writing was a little clearer,&#13;
those things wouldn't happen!!&#13;
JOHN WVELL: Are your prices still&#13;
negotiable or do we have to work for&#13;
it?&#13;
ORIGINAL JAP: I don't claim to be&#13;
[he only real JAP, just a real JAP.&#13;
And I grew up in JAP-land, the north&#13;
Shore (of Chicago) What are your cre·&#13;
den1tals? real JAP&#13;
TO EVERYONE submitting these&#13;
long personals: From now on. if you&#13;
don't pay for the extra words. the per·&#13;
sonar will not be printed! Please read&#13;
the policy statement on the personal&#13;
form!!&#13;
SNYD &amp;: Lan, We couldn't leave you&#13;
guys out!! Love, the Bitches&#13;
MARK VINCENT--you are the true&#13;
Psycho Bitch from hell!!&#13;
UAVE-AGREES: The only 'tV&#13;
enjoy Valentine's Day is to hate:r 10&#13;
OU, DAVE, Baby, You are the..:... ..&#13;
nal Valentine God. Give me a ebin-&amp;"&#13;
to show you what. you can do! y.....&#13;
ed. -&#13;
THE RANGER Would like to&#13;
its heartfelt thanks to the Wln~&#13;
nlval Committee and especlally k)&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega for making tut&#13;
week a fun-filled. exciting week It&#13;
just goes to show you that there'. a lot&#13;
of spirit here and good feeUnp u&#13;
well. Thanks again. .&#13;
ALEX: YOU are king. We love )'GG&#13;
still. Thanks for the candy. You an&#13;
my sweetheart. The Ed.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, February 18, 1988 11&#13;
omen's basketball team remains&#13;
strong; pounds Concordiay 100·55&#13;
LA Dream&#13;
Team 4-0&#13;
•&#13;
by Wendy SoreDSOD&#13;
her field goal attempts and&#13;
shooting nine for nine from&#13;
the free throw line, She also&#13;
grabbed five rebounds,&#13;
Gall Rewolinski added 10&#13;
points, seven steals, and five&#13;
assists from her point guar&lt;\&#13;
position.&#13;
~o other players deserve&#13;
mention, . not necessarily for&#13;
their scoring. but for their defensive&#13;
play.&#13;
Traci Northrup was a&#13;
demon on the boards" grabbing&#13;
12 rebounds over the&#13;
over- matched Concordia&#13;
team: She also contributed&#13;
five steals and two assists.&#13;
Angie Curtes also had a&#13;
fine game, pullmg :down six&#13;
rebounds, stealing the baIl six&#13;
times, giving out two assists.&#13;
and hitting a three-point shot,&#13;
"We're starting to look a lot&#13;
better." said coach Wendy&#13;
MI11er. "Our defense did a&#13;
great- job. Our fuIl·court press&#13;
created a lot of steals."&#13;
The Rangers played a&#13;
. tough UW·MIlwaukee team&#13;
this past Tuesday at MIlwau·&#13;
kee. MIller looked ahead to&#13;
the game: "We'll se~ how ~ar&#13;
we've come when we play&#13;
Milwaukee."&#13;
byRobb Luehr&#13;
\be Parksidewomen's basIib&amp;U&#13;
team had a break pf&#13;
lIIfli last week. One game&#13;
III cancelled, and in the&#13;
tit, theyhit triple digits in&#13;
.1ISl' win, as they raised&#13;
record to,10·7.&#13;
WI Thursday, the Lady&#13;
\IIII01'S were scheduled to&#13;
iff St. Joseph's CoIlege' of'&#13;
1IdI8D8, but St. Joseph's canIIiIId&#13;
the game due to&#13;
1fiIIChedUI1ng· •&#13;
III the game that was&#13;
;qed. the Rangers waIloped&#13;
lOUt-classedConcordia Col-&#13;
• team at Mequ!,n by a&#13;
1111of 1_. Four Rangers&#13;
Mldouble figures In scoring.&#13;
!Ille II10rlerConcordia team&#13;
... no match for the&#13;
iIIlprs. KIrsten Huedepohi&#13;
JeIIIhe way, coming off the&#13;
lench to II&lt;Ore18 points (In-&#13;
_ a three-polnter), grab&#13;
lie rebouncle and block a&#13;
IIIDI III just 17 minutes of&#13;
iIIYInr Urne. Holly Proeber&#13;
liar-14 points.&#13;
.. Maass continued her&#13;
IIIId, steady pliy for Park·&#13;
ill. Sbe had a perfect night&#13;
tllwively, hitting both of&#13;
The men's f1ve-on-five Intramural&#13;
basketball league&#13;
entered its fourth week of action&#13;
putting two undefeated&#13;
teams against one another.&#13;
In the end. the LA Dream&#13;
Team prevailed over the&#13;
Church Mice, 69-52, to raise&#13;
Its record to 4-0. The Church&#13;
Mice dropped to 3-1.&#13;
The Church Mice seemed&#13;
cold from the field In thts&#13;
game. unlike recent weeks,&#13;
as only two players scored in&#13;
double figures. Brian Chike&#13;
with lll, and Jeff FlBcher with&#13;
13.&#13;
In another game, Shake 'N&#13;
Bake took apart Hoops by an&#13;
83-50 score. with Darryl Gar·&#13;
land and Doc Mallory leading&#13;
the way to victory with 'J!I and&#13;
16 points, respectively. Rusty&#13;
Ahles led the losers with 14&#13;
points.&#13;
The Dream Team. led by&#13;
John Spieker'S 18 polnts.defeated&#13;
Scalzo, 157-48. The&#13;
Dream Team win evened lte&#13;
record at 2-2, whIle SeaIzo&#13;
dropped to 1-3.&#13;
In the closest game of the&#13;
day, SalIturo beat the cave&#13;
by a _ score, Don Har·&#13;
meyer led hte team to the victory&#13;
by pouring In 26 pointe.&#13;
Julie Slaats (r) awalta the tip from a te.mmata In a recant pone.&#13;
Bodybuilding set&#13;
forEau Clai re&#13;
Ranger bowlers set national mark&#13;
had a 723 and Fernho1Jl had&#13;
706. For the day. the Ranger&#13;
bowlers averaged 2311.6 In tak·&#13;
Ing 88 of a posalble Ii2 polnta.&#13;
In the second shift. Parkside&#13;
faced conference leading&#13;
UW.Madison. Fernholz electrifled&#13;
the crowd with his first&#13;
career 300 game as the&#13;
Rangers put together scores&#13;
of 300·247·225·221-160 for an&#13;
11153 total.&#13;
The final two games reo&#13;
eulted In an 1122 team effort&#13;
for a total 3397 score, tJrat&#13;
among collegate scores this&#13;
year.&#13;
Three Rangers bowled over&#13;
700, with Furtney leading the&#13;
way at 750. Johnny Brooks&#13;
The Parkside men's bowllng&#13;
squad set a national team&#13;
mark on Saturday In Green&#13;
Bay. as they competed in a&#13;
wsctr conference meet.&#13;
To open the day, the&#13;
Range.rs bowled the host&#13;
team, Green Bay. Parkslde.&#13;
which came Into the day In&#13;
third place, took 20 out of 26&#13;
points as Darren Furtney led&#13;
the way with a 738 series. Jeff&#13;
Fernholz and Jeff Lemrnermann&#13;
roIled 650 and 640. respectlvely,&#13;
as Parkslde com·&#13;
•blned for a 3221 team total.&#13;
son will not- be allowed to&#13;
compete for six months and&#13;
must relinquish any, titles&#13;
won at the meet, she said.&#13;
Competitors must provide&#13;
valid UW Identification and&#13;
hold a current NPC sanction&#13;
card, which wIll be available&#13;
during registration at 7: 30&#13;
a.m. the day of the event. The&#13;
registration fee Is $20. and&#13;
deadilne for entry Is Febru·&#13;
ary 22.&#13;
IAU CLAiRE --State body.&#13;
building competitors wlIl reo&#13;
lint to the University of Wis.&#13;
:m.Eau ClaIre on Saturverit&#13;
Karch 5, when the unlty'&#13;
again hosts the Wis·&#13;
~~tate CoIlegiate Body·&#13;
i;';ft'l;ld Championship In&#13;
e AUditorium.&#13;
~red by the UW,Eau PIlneIs Recreation Nautilus&#13;
QaIrO Center and UW·Eau&#13;
!be Secondary Outreach,&#13;
IIld contest Will feature men lJW:omen students from&#13;
lpeq YBtem' schools In an&#13;
IllIn diVIsIon. Women will&#13;
~te In IIght.welght and&#13;
lrII1 8-weight classes; men&#13;
IIlIdtncompete In IIght·welght,&#13;
~-welght. Iight.heavy&#13;
""';:'.: and heavy.welght n;:s.&#13;
!lee eVent Will be a drug· lIlU::t&#13;
, canctloned by the&#13;
INPc) PhYSiqueCommittee lleeci ' according to Vlcld&#13;
Comrecreation coordinator,&#13;
drug Petltors wlII undergo&#13;
.... 1te:,tIng on the day of the&#13;
Ilrellglh detect the use 'of&#13;
Itee;j ·lnduClng drugs.&#13;
"a1ua:d aamples will' be&#13;
'aI Labo by the Blo Analyti· -&#13;
Glugs ratory. Chicago. If&#13;
~ are detected in an Indl·&#13;
.competltor, that perIllStPUII&#13;
II MUSIC MOVIES MORE I&#13;
alternatives&#13;
ALTERNATIVE MUSIC•&#13;
ALTERNATIVE PRIC~S.&#13;
Midnight Oil·"Diesel &amp; Dust:',&#13;
Robyn Hitchcock &amp; the Egyptians&#13;
and "&#13;
Sinead O'Connor ·"The Lion &amp; the Cobra&#13;
ExpIrH 3-3,-118&#13;
IIAINSTREAM-RACINE&#13;
422 1I.ln Street&#13;
632-8052&#13;
THEFD ilDE By GARY LARSON&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
Ranger win streak is snapped at six gam'es&#13;
by "ett Lemmenn&amp;DD game at 58. It was a hard fought vtctory&#13;
. The Rangers looked Itke as the Rangers threatened to&#13;
Alter getting two tough vlc- the~ would pUll away again break things open several&#13;
torles which stretched Its wIn- wheh a Michael Henderson times, but Oshkosh stayed&#13;
nlng string to six games, the free throw made It 66-60 at within striking dtstance with&#13;
Parkslde basketball team lost the four minute mark. On the a 24-point performance ~y&#13;
for only the second time at nlght, Henderson had 17 sophomore guard Mark Ziehome&#13;
thls year to the Pan- points and 9 asslsts. bell.&#13;
thers of UW-Mllwaukee, 72-70. MIlwaukee's Clarence ,8chmidtmann, however, hit&#13;
Ranger free throw shooting, Wright would get the last four charity tosses In the final&#13;
which has been suspect all word, however. as he nailed 15seconds to seal it for Parkseason,&#13;
once again kept the two 3-polnt bombs to tie the stde. Darryl Thomas, In his&#13;
opponent in the game as the game at 66. Wright ended up first appearance since returnRangers&#13;
connected on only 10 with 25 points on 10 for 18 Ing to the team, scored 11&#13;
of 19attempts. shooting. He scored 12 of Mil· points Including a big 18 foot.&#13;
Parkslde controlled much' waukee's final 14 points, gtv- er with five seconds left on&#13;
of the first half, jumping out Ing him 21 for the half. the shot clock to make It 72.&#13;
to Its biggest lead of the nlght His most destructive basket 66.Wade, Michael Henderson,&#13;
at 27-13 with 8:07 left In the --"arneon a 15 foot Jean-In shot Schmidtmann, and Detk all&#13;
first period. Milwaukee with five seconds remaining scored In double figures In&#13;
stayed In It. though, and cut to make it 72-70.Henderson's ·the Ranger assault.&#13;
the lead to six on a basket by SO-footerat the buzzer came&#13;
6'8" center Erik Schten. up short as the Rangers fell Finally, on Friday night,&#13;
scnten finished with 10 points to 16-10. Parkside struggled but beat a&#13;
and seven rebounds on the . Delk paced the Rangers decent Indiana/Purdue&#13;
nlght. At the half, Parkslde's with 18 points, whUe Rodezlck squad, 67-66, Free throw&#13;
lead was still six at 39-33. Wade had 12 and Andy shooting was atrocious again,&#13;
The Panthers came out at Schmldtmann had 10 In the however, as the Rangers hit&#13;
half and immediately cut Into losing effort. Milwaukee only two of 11. Mtke Henderthe&#13;
Ranger lead, making It a evened Its record at 12-12on son, Detk, and Everette Henthree&#13;
point game, 41-38.Rich. the, year. Parkslde and Mil. derson each has 15 points In&#13;
ard Detk answered with . waukee will lock horns again the contest as the Rangers&#13;
Parkslde's next six points to up In MIlwaukee on February held on for the victory ..&#13;
make It a nine point game, 23. Two games remain on the&#13;
47-38with 16:25 left. Earlier In the - week, the Rangers schedule: February&#13;
The teams traded baskets Rangers won their fourth. 23 In Milwaukee and Februfrom&#13;
there until the 13-mlnute slralght road game, defeating ary 27 In Spring Arbor, Michi·&#13;
mark when the Panthers the Titans of UW-Oshkosh In gan, as they tune up for play.&#13;
went on a 10-2 run to tie the Oshkosh, 77-72. off ttme.&#13;
Support Ranger&#13;
Athletics I&#13;
Undermanned wrestlers take third&#13;
by Ted Price&#13;
The Ranger wrestting&#13;
team, besieged by injuries,&#13;
entered the 25-team Wheaton&#13;
Invitational with only five&#13;
wrestlers.&#13;
However, the team fit the'&#13;
cliche of "quality over quanti.&#13;
ty" as Parkslde managed to&#13;
finish In third place, producing&#13;
two champions, one ron.&#13;
ner-up,and a fourth place In&#13;
the two-day tournament.&#13;
Dennis DuChene won the&#13;
first championship at 126 lbs.&#13;
by defeating all four opponents&#13;
he faced, inclUding a 9-3.&#13;
win In the finals. DuChene's&#13;
season record is now 34.7.&#13;
Mark Hemauer won the&#13;
second championship by de.&#13;
WJJdLu'e&#13;
THE BLACK STUDENT&#13;
ORGANIZATION (BSO)&#13;
Celebrates&#13;
BLACK HISTORY MONTH&#13;
with a -&#13;
Semi-Formal Ball&#13;
featuring&#13;
the Love Expressions Band&#13;
Saturday, February 20th&#13;
1988&#13;
9:00 p.m.-1 :00 a.m.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
-All UW-P&#13;
Students &amp;&#13;
Guests are&#13;
Welcome&#13;
$2.00 General Admission&#13;
Collision under the basket at a recent Ranger game.&#13;
............-&#13;
record to 30-8.&#13;
Mark Dubey finished Inseeond&#13;
place at 160 Ibs. Dubey&#13;
downed his first three foes,&#13;
but dropped a 5-2 decisionIn&#13;
the championship. Dubey'S&#13;
record is now 22-7-1.&#13;
At 142 lbs., John Karl won&#13;
three out of five matches to&#13;
finish In fourth -place, Karl's&#13;
two defeats were both by tire&#13;
scare of 6-5, one to the eventual&#13;
champion, and the other&#13;
In his third place .bout.Karl's&#13;
record Is now 20-11.&#13;
The Ranger matmen will&#13;
close out their regular season&#13;
competition against two DivI,&#13;
slon I opponents when they&#13;
take on .Northern Illinois snd&#13;
. Marquette Feb. 17. The meet&#13;
Is scheduled to star! at 6p.m,&#13;
Coach Jim Koch&#13;
featlng all four of his opPonents&#13;
In the 167 lb. weight&#13;
class, inclUding a 14-4 Victory&#13;
In his title bout to raise his&#13;
IT'S DE'SI"'''''D· 1'0&#13;
BE' BeTH t.J~lTtOU.s&#13;
At.JD D€'L..Ic'IOUS It-,;&#13;
HeLPI"''' You I-DSe&#13;
WEI&amp;I1T. YOLl &amp;IT1i-1£"&#13;
ecce, 11A.SIC. FOOD ~&#13;
6-l2.0UPS&#13;
YouR 1'11'1,'" ~oUll.se&#13;
IS F\ &gt;I'\LflD C.o"&#13;
Or 1"HE'" 13E'"t&lt;,JftFIrs&#13;
CF1\+IS PLA"" IS&#13;
\T&amp; VARIF'T'T"</text>
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