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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>20 down, 20 more to come</text>
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              <text>&#13;
e.&#13;
18••.&#13;
~~~·lUJ ~&#13;
~\7~lR1~~uW&#13;
(Q)~&#13;
W~~~(Q)~~~&#13;
~co~&#13;
~~[K~CI&#13;
~[Q)=~===y=o.=. X=y=•••=N=O:::J.II&#13;
down,&#13;
20&#13;
more&#13;
to&#13;
came&#13;
Parkside attains Center&#13;
of Excellence&#13;
20years look very&#13;
Parkslde,  although&#13;
20&#13;
years   haven't&#13;
at all, according  to&#13;
r Sheila Kaplan.&#13;
'1IOth&#13;
anniversary  cele-&#13;
for  this  University&#13;
pian a chance to pro-&#13;
• thoughts on what&#13;
feels Parkslde  has&#13;
ac-&#13;
d so far and what&#13;
It&#13;
store&#13;
for the future.&#13;
said the goals  of the&#13;
years for the&#13;
lnstitu-&#13;
e  froJl1.. Chancellor&#13;
e. "He had to con-&#13;
and   build   this&#13;
He did&#13;
so&#13;
with  style,&#13;
_and   beauty.&#13;
"·"ft&#13;
you&#13;
go&#13;
to other Unlver-&#13;
usually  you  go  to&#13;
in&#13;
a box, so&#13;
1&#13;
think&#13;
It&#13;
.rmous&#13;
accomplish.&#13;
get the land and have&#13;
pe&#13;
fit&#13;
Into the de-&#13;
the&#13;
building."  Wyllie&#13;
the task of hiring&#13;
ty and getting  the&#13;
for' Parkslde  devel-&#13;
ellor Al&#13;
Guskln&#13;
took&#13;
1975&#13;
after Wyllie died.&#13;
said his  challenges&#13;
·fold. "By then,  the&#13;
rns had merged,  and&#13;
elear&#13;
that  Parkslde&#13;
not grow to have&#13;
25,000&#13;
t&#13;
which' was a plan&#13;
Wylliewas working  on.&#13;
Chancellor Kaplan&#13;
He had to orientate the insti-&#13;
. tution&#13;
in&#13;
a  more   realistic&#13;
way.&#13;
in&#13;
that  we would have&#13;
5500-6000&#13;
students,"   Kaplan&#13;
explained.&#13;
Guskin also continued to&#13;
build up the University's  fac-&#13;
ulty.&#13;
"I&#13;
think one of the more&#13;
impressive  accomplishments&#13;
of Par-kstde. when you com-&#13;
pare  us to like institutions,  is&#13;
that  we  really  have  a  flrst-&#13;
class  faculty  for a non-doc-&#13;
toral institution,"  she said.&#13;
Kaplan  feels that  her  chal-&#13;
lenges are outlined&#13;
in&#13;
the con-&#13;
vocation speech she gave at&#13;
the  beginning  of the  school&#13;
year.  She said  that  Parkslde&#13;
has the potential to have re-&#13;
gional  excellence&#13;
in&#13;
most  of&#13;
our  programs.   "My commit-&#13;
ment is to build the programs&#13;
we've  got in that  direction,"&#13;
she commented.&#13;
In&#13;
Kaplan'S   convocation&#13;
speech, she mentioned a num-&#13;
ber  of  those  programs   at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
Including&#13;
the  Bio-&#13;
logical  Sciences Department,&#13;
the  Division  of  Education's&#13;
Schooling and Human  Diver-&#13;
sity program;  ChIld Care Cen-&#13;
ter,  Regional  Staff  Develop-&#13;
ment&#13;
Center,&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Seminar  Program,   pre-med&#13;
program,  Intercollegiate  Ath-&#13;
letic  Program,  Learning  As-&#13;
sIstance  Center  and  the&#13;
LI-&#13;
brary/Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Kaplan  also  said  in  her&#13;
speech that the University  Is&#13;
seeking  accreditation  for the&#13;
engineering  program  through&#13;
the  Accreditation  Board  for&#13;
Engineering  and  Technology&#13;
and for the business program&#13;
through the American Assem-&#13;
bly  of Collegiate  Schools of&#13;
Business.&#13;
She  hopes  that  Parkside&#13;
can make the term  "regional&#13;
institution"&#13;
a&#13;
reality   for&#13;
Parkside.  "The vast majority&#13;
of&#13;
our&#13;
students  come  from&#13;
this  region,   and  with  the&#13;
demographic   changes  we're&#13;
going to be seeing In Kenosha&#13;
and&#13;
Racine,  it's  imperative&#13;
that  we become  better  adept&#13;
at   serving   a&#13;
multt-etnntc&#13;
'clientele."&#13;
She explained  in her convo-&#13;
cation  speech  that  "a  more&#13;
See Years, page&#13;
6&#13;
archfor new director continues&#13;
by&#13;
KeUyMcKissick&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
.J!&amp;rch 'i0ntlnues  for a&#13;
~ctor   of Campus  Po-&#13;
,.......t started  out  as  a&#13;
to&#13;
tl&#13;
applicants has nar-&#13;
three candidates  for&#13;
lion&#13;
vacated last year&#13;
retirement  ·of Ron&#13;
.  HIs  retirement&#13;
ttve July&#13;
1.&#13;
h and&#13;
screen  com.&#13;
to&#13;
Wsa&#13;
established   last&#13;
screen  and  inter-&#13;
licants  from  are-&#13;
ch. The committee&#13;
of Mary Tremell,  a&#13;
admln!stratlon special-&#13;
• McLaughlin, Direc-&#13;
Student  LIfe;   John&#13;
~tudent;&#13;
Jim  Funk,&#13;
~&#13;
c  for  Facilities&#13;
f&#13;
rn&#13;
ent&#13;
,  Linda  Andrey,&#13;
Dnel and A!flrmative&#13;
Officer and   Dennis&#13;
'ttl.'co&#13;
a&#13;
campus  policeman.&#13;
!Ide'&#13;
-0&#13;
mrnlttee was  to  pro'&#13;
~e?&#13;
Goetz,  Assistant·&#13;
J'til&#13;
Or of Administration&#13;
Cal&#13;
Affalre~with three&#13;
tes&#13;
for  the  position.&#13;
ifc:ll&#13;
make  a  reccom-&#13;
n to Chancellor  Ka-&#13;
Asst. Chancellor&#13;
plan,&#13;
who&#13;
will&#13;
hire  the  new&#13;
Direc"tor.&#13;
doetz  explained  that  when&#13;
the  committee   .was  set  up,&#13;
each  of  the  members   were&#13;
told what  the job of IJirecto~&#13;
of Campus&#13;
ponce&#13;
would  en-&#13;
tal! and  "to get a good, soIld&#13;
base  In  terms  ot  what  the&#13;
campus'  needs  were,  and we&#13;
brought  them  from  various&#13;
areas   of   the   campus&#13;
to&#13;
present  their  own insights  In&#13;
terms of campus needs.&#13;
"We also had to make sure&#13;
the   committee   was&#13;
well-&#13;
versed  before  they  got  into&#13;
the process,"  he said.&#13;
.  TremeIl,  the  Chairman  of&#13;
. the  committee,   said,&#13;
"The&#13;
Idea was to select a commit-&#13;
tee  representing   every  area&#13;
of Parkslde."  The committee&#13;
selected  six candidates&#13;
to&#13;
in-&#13;
terview  for the posItion. One&#13;
candidate   was  offered  an-&#13;
other  job,  so The committee&#13;
interviewed   the   rematntng&#13;
five candidates  over the past&#13;
few weeks and chose the final&#13;
three  candidates   for  Goetz.&#13;
Goetz conducted  his own in-&#13;
terviews  of the candidates  on&#13;
the same days that they were&#13;
up before the committee.&#13;
Goetz then  had  a meeting&#13;
with the committee  after  all&#13;
the   interviews   were   com-&#13;
pleted to get the committee's&#13;
feelings  on  the  candidates.&#13;
"We had a really good discus-&#13;
sion on all the positives  and&#13;
negatives  of the  interviews.&#13;
After  that,  we had  a pretty&#13;
See Police,&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Our campus&#13;
has&#13;
the distinc-&#13;
tion of being named a .'Center&#13;
of Excellence"  for our biolog-&#13;
ical sciences department,  one&#13;
of&#13;
49&#13;
such distinctions&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
enttre  UW·system.  The Cen-&#13;
ters  of Excellence  were&#13;
ap-&#13;
proved at the Sept.&#13;
9&#13;
meeting&#13;
of the Board of Regents.&#13;
According to the Center  of&#13;
Excellence   proposal  format&#13;
and&#13;
criteria   for   selection&#13;
released  Oct.&#13;
12. 1987,&#13;
pro-&#13;
posals   "must   demonstrate&#13;
that   the  proposed   centers&#13;
have national or regional rec-&#13;
ognition for excellence or the&#13;
potential  for such recognition&#13;
and tht they must detail plans&#13;
for   demonstrable&#13;
impact&#13;
upon  the  quality  of  under-&#13;
graduate&#13;
or&#13;
graduate&#13;
educa-&#13;
tion.' ,&#13;
Parkside   nominated   two&#13;
programs  for  the  Center  of&#13;
Excellence  title,  the  biologi-&#13;
cal sciences  program  and an&#13;
education   division  program&#13;
on  multi-cultural   education.&#13;
.The&#13;
education  program  was&#13;
not selected.&#13;
Becoming  a Center  of Ex-&#13;
cellence is no easy task. Ben&#13;
Greenebaum.  Associate Dean&#13;
and Division Head of Science.&#13;
explained that Parkslde  went&#13;
through  a  thorough  evalua-&#13;
tion of the biological sciences&#13;
program  before  it was  SUb-&#13;
mitted to the UW-System. Dr.&#13;
J.&#13;
Lawrence  Fox, a scientist&#13;
at   Abbott  Labs   In  North&#13;
ChIcago,  and   Dr.  Charles&#13;
McCormack,&#13;
a&#13;
professor  of&#13;
Physiology and Biophysics at&#13;
the  ChIcago  Medical  school,&#13;
reviewed  the program.  Their&#13;
reports  were  Included In the&#13;
proposal package  to the UW-&#13;
System.&#13;
Sp.eclflc objectives  of  the&#13;
program   Included  activities&#13;
to&#13;
strengthen  the research  ex-&#13;
perience  for undergraduates,&#13;
increase  the number  of aca-&#13;
demic achievers&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
biolo-&#13;
gy  program   and   broaden&#13;
their geographic  distribution,&#13;
maintain  and expand the cur-&#13;
rent   strength   of  the  pre-&#13;
health  professions   program&#13;
and maintain and expand cur-&#13;
rent outreach  activities  of the&#13;
department.&#13;
The proposal was submitted&#13;
to&#13;
the  UW-System  and  was&#13;
. evaluated  by consultants  out-&#13;
side of the UW-System. Park-&#13;
side's  proposal  was  pooled&#13;
with  other  science  program&#13;
proposals   for   review   by&#13;
science-orientated   panelists.&#13;
Those   reports   were   then&#13;
given to mixed paneltsts,  and&#13;
recommendations&#13;
were&#13;
made.&#13;
"System  pretty  much  ac-&#13;
cepted what the paneltsts pro- '&#13;
posed,"&#13;
Greenebaum said. He&#13;
explained  that  the Center  of&#13;
Excellence  has one real  and&#13;
one  potential   meaning   for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"It's  a  formal  recognition&#13;
by the people at System and&#13;
these&#13;
external  reviewers  of&#13;
something  that  we've  been&#13;
bUilding for a long time. It's&#13;
a&#13;
ratification&#13;
of&#13;
some&#13;
real&#13;
strength   that   we  already&#13;
have.  You couple  that  with&#13;
the (Molecular Biology) Mas·&#13;
ters  program  and  Dr.  Chen&#13;
getting the Distinguished Pro-&#13;
fessor&#13;
award,&#13;
and we've&#13;
real-&#13;
ly got the gold stars  here."&#13;
Greenebaunf  said.&#13;
He explained that potentlal-&#13;
See&#13;
Excel/ence,&#13;
pIJfIfJ&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 6, 1988&#13;
Ranger&#13;
lour  view&#13;
Through&#13;
it&#13;
all ...&#13;
To&#13;
new and old-timers:  congratulations  on belng privi-&#13;
leged members  of the Parkslde  community&#13;
In&#13;
this, the&#13;
20th&#13;
anniversary  year.&#13;
Through the years this parttcular  lristltutlon&#13;
has&#13;
seen a&#13;
great  many trials,  tribulations  and periods of transition.&#13;
This&#13;
time through the academic  calendar  is no exception.&#13;
The WLBR controversy&#13;
is&#13;
representative  of several&#13;
dift1-&#13;
cult Issues that  the Student  Government&#13;
Is&#13;
facing.  The&#13;
Parkslde  Unlon Advisory Board&#13;
has&#13;
experienced  many&#13;
d1U1culties&#13;
In&#13;
establishing  a standardized  Unlon alcohol&#13;
policy.&#13;
In&#13;
regards  to&#13;
this&#13;
being a year of transition,  there&#13;
Is&#13;
a plethora  of new faces including members  of the fac-&#13;
ulty, staff and administration.&#13;
.&#13;
Nonetheless,  Parkstde&#13;
has&#13;
continuously  maintained  a&#13;
standard at excellence&#13;
In&#13;
all&#13;
areas of higher education&#13;
paralleled  by few other institutions  of Its genre.&#13;
case&#13;
In&#13;
point. we now have a center  of Excellence&#13;
in&#13;
our Blo1ogi·&#13;
cal&#13;
Sciences Division.&#13;
Similar  to Presldentlal  candidate.  Governor&#13;
Dukakls'&#13;
statement  that the "best"  America&#13;
Is&#13;
yet to come, we be-&#13;
Ueve the best Parkslde&#13;
Is&#13;
yet to come. Let's&#13;
come&#13;
togeth-&#13;
er, and together strive to make the "best"  Parkslde.&#13;
Parkslde,  happy anniversary!  By the way, did anybody&#13;
bUy&#13;
a&#13;
cake?&#13;
by Jon HeaTTOfl&#13;
I,our  views&#13;
I&#13;
~   cO~R~&#13;
i:NCERNTO~&#13;
~  THE CHURCH. HOWEVER, IS  THE&#13;
DISCOVERY THAT THE  FACE ON&#13;
TIlE&#13;
SHROUD IS ACTUALLY&#13;
THAT OF&#13;
ELVIS PRESLEY...&#13;
.&#13;
~&#13;
,:::.&#13;
~&#13;
by CbrIatopber&#13;
Balerl&#13;
hard&#13;
work by my colleagues&#13;
and myself would have been&#13;
tripled&#13;
if&#13;
It were not for the&#13;
existence of Unlted Council.&#13;
The best option we can take&#13;
as students&#13;
Is&#13;
not based on a&#13;
cowardly   apathetic   "with-&#13;
draw,&#13;
whither. and die" attt-&#13;
tude.  LIke any  undertaking,&#13;
what&#13;
we receive as an end re-&#13;
sult&#13;
Is&#13;
based  prtmarlly   on&#13;
what effort we pa~e    as a&#13;
whole.&#13;
Unlted Council&#13;
Is&#13;
similar  to&#13;
our local, state and federal&#13;
legislatures&#13;
In&#13;
that  only our&#13;
representatives  can actualize&#13;
the potential  effectiveness  of&#13;
a governing  body. cecesslon&#13;
from a vital union&#13;
Is&#13;
rarely&#13;
the  best  action  of recourse&#13;
when  such  potentlal&#13;
Is&#13;
not&#13;
realized.&#13;
I suggest  we each pay the&#13;
annual&#13;
dollar,  and  request&#13;
that&#13;
our&#13;
appointed  represent-&#13;
atives  to Unlted  Council ac-&#13;
tively parttclpate&#13;
In&#13;
the effort&#13;
to make Parkslde  and the&#13;
UW&#13;
System a better  environment&#13;
for&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
us&#13;
as students.&#13;
Commendations    to&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Kehoe and&#13;
l\Ir.&#13;
Hearron  on&#13;
publlcl&amp;lng   the   elemental&#13;
facts regarding  Unlted Coun-&#13;
cU.&#13;
However, they regretably&#13;
neglected  to present  the&#13;
un-&#13;
derlylng Issue only hinted at&#13;
In&#13;
the  second  to last  para-&#13;
graph of thetr editorial.&#13;
. You state  that  there&#13;
Is&#13;
a&#13;
need for an organization. such&#13;
as&#13;
U.C. to exercise  and pro-&#13;
tect students  rights,  but sug-&#13;
gest that since Unlted Council&#13;
Is&#13;
not quite cost effective&#13;
In&#13;
your opinion, the only viable&#13;
alternative&#13;
Is&#13;
to collectively&#13;
withdraw from the state-wide&#13;
organization.&#13;
I&#13;
assume&#13;
then&#13;
that&#13;
you&#13;
know&#13;
of an alterna-&#13;
tive,    more    cost-effective&#13;
means&#13;
of protecting  student&#13;
rights? I, for one,&#13;
do&#13;
not.&#13;
Speaking from my two year&#13;
experience  with the Parkside&#13;
Student   Government    and&#13;
Unlted Council, I can safely&#13;
say that U.C. information and&#13;
inspiration&#13;
were Instrumental&#13;
In&#13;
many&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA Senate's&#13;
lobbv efforts.&#13;
campus&#13;
presen-&#13;
tations, and dealings with&#13;
fac-&#13;
ulty and&#13;
administration.&#13;
The&#13;
-Happy&#13;
20th&#13;
Editor's&#13;
Note:&#13;
Mr. Baterl  b""gs&#13;
top&#13;
some&#13;
iftterestmg&#13;
points.&#13;
An option that is open to the&#13;
Parkslde student GQt)ernment&#13;
Assc. (PSGA)  is&#13;
to&#13;
become&#13;
associate  members  of United&#13;
CounciL  This&#13;
W01I.Id&#13;
cost&#13;
a&#13;
mere&#13;
$500.&#13;
The major  differ-&#13;
ence  between&#13;
OUT&#13;
present&#13;
status and that of&#13;
aesocitate&#13;
member8~ excluding price ..&#13;
is&#13;
the elimination  of votes at the&#13;
committee  level, reduction&#13;
In&#13;
the number  of delegates for&#13;
general assembly.&#13;
.&#13;
As&#13;
Chris&#13;
put It, "the Infor-&#13;
mation&#13;
and    Inspiration&#13;
In...PSGA Senate's lobby  ef-&#13;
forts,  campus presentations..&#13;
and dealings with faculty  and&#13;
administration"&#13;
W01I.Id&#13;
stUI be&#13;
there.  We would still receive&#13;
United Council bl'weekly  up'&#13;
dates as well as&#13;
maintaining&#13;
the direct  access to U.C. as&#13;
an Information  source.&#13;
Arguably,  we  should  not&#13;
(&lt;withdraw .. whither,  and die&#13;
JJ&#13;
from  U.C. when&#13;
U&#13;
needs par-&#13;
ticipation..&#13;
and we could con·&#13;
tribute to&#13;
its&#13;
success,&#13;
but&#13;
au:;&#13;
participation&#13;
In&#13;
the past has&#13;
been considered Insignificant&#13;
and Ignored.&#13;
Let&#13;
me&#13;
delve Into the&#13;
past.&#13;
Last  year   United  CouncU&#13;
wasted ten meetings&#13;
on re-&#13;
structuring  the organization.&#13;
Two changes were made:&#13;
1)&#13;
a&#13;
new&#13;
committee  was created&#13;
(Shared GQt)emance). and&#13;
11)&#13;
representation&#13;
based&#13;
on&#13;
campus population.  These are&#13;
corrections  that&#13;
do not&#13;
repair&#13;
the  actual  problems,  which&#13;
are inherent to its admints·&#13;
tratlve  helrachy:   too  many&#13;
people&#13;
doing&#13;
the   wrong&#13;
things.&#13;
Due&#13;
to the concentration  of&#13;
time&#13;
and&#13;
resources  on&#13;
re-&#13;
structuring  last year,  lobby-&#13;
Ing efforts  failed.  This year&#13;
the names have changed.. but&#13;
the&#13;
plot&#13;
remome the same.&#13;
Granted,  United  Council is&#13;
an excellent  source  of infor·&#13;
mation  and support  for  our&#13;
student  government   to  tap&#13;
into.. but, again,&#13;
is&#13;
it&#13;
worth&#13;
the  approximately&#13;
$2500&#13;
In&#13;
annual  travel  expenses..  the&#13;
$5369&#13;
that  United  Council  is&#13;
. budgeted  to  receive   from&#13;
Parkslde  this year when the&#13;
same basic services  can be&#13;
tlbotight"&#13;
for&#13;
'500'&#13;
This is the question put be-&#13;
[ore&#13;
the students of Parkslde.&#13;
October&#13;
19&#13;
and 20 you&#13;
will&#13;
have the chance to answer,&#13;
Anniversary&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
Here  we  go  again.&#13;
I'm&#13;
sorry  to bother  you,&#13;
but&#13;
last&#13;
- week's  letter  to  the editor&#13;
contained  a great deal of&#13;
mis-&#13;
information&#13;
In&#13;
regard  to&#13;
WLBR.&#13;
I find thlsrldleulous&#13;
as well as unfortunate.&#13;
To begin  with,  the author&#13;
obviously was not a Parkslde&#13;
student&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
'86·'87&#13;
spring&#13;
semester.&#13;
If&#13;
they&#13;
had&#13;
been&#13;
they would know that one&#13;
of&#13;
the platforms  which Alex&#13;
Pet-&#13;
tit ran for the office of PresI·&#13;
dent  on  was&#13;
to.&#13;
estsbl1sh a&#13;
campus  radio station&#13;
in&#13;
addl·&#13;
tlon to increasing  student&#13;
In·&#13;
volvement.&#13;
In&#13;
that&#13;
same  semester the&#13;
radio  project   was&#13;
initiated&#13;
and later fell through.&#13;
;\II&#13;
this&#13;
occurred  while&#13;
Dan&#13;
Perrault&#13;
was stllf&#13;
In&#13;
high school&#13;
At this time I would liketo&#13;
say that not once have&#13;
I&#13;
ques-&#13;
tloned  Perrault's   dedication&#13;
to the radio project. In fsct,&#13;
I&#13;
know  of  several  occasiont,&#13;
that Perrault  put himself and&#13;
his own money on the line&#13;
to&#13;
further  the cause of the radio&#13;
project.&#13;
It&#13;
should  be&#13;
noted&#13;
that he was never asked&#13;
to&#13;
do&#13;
this.&#13;
The  author  of last week's&#13;
letter to the editor referred to&#13;
the summer  PSGA meetIngS,&#13;
Parkside!--&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jon&#13;
Hesrron&#13;
K.&#13;
Edito&lt;~n-Chiel&#13;
Kelly&#13;
McKissick&#13;
News&#13;
Ed~or&#13;
Laura&#13;
Pestka&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff&#13;
Lemmermann&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
John Kehoe&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Christine  Dejno .•..•.......•..•&#13;
Assl.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Stu&#13;
Rubner&#13;
A.dvisor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
~&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John&#13;
Marter&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Curt&#13;
Shircel&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
David&#13;
Boyd.&#13;
Sheila Bugaleeki,  Ruben Carbajal.  Dan&#13;
Chlapetta,&#13;
Tim&#13;
Cook,&#13;
David&#13;
Debish. Tricia Ebner&#13;
Michelte&#13;
Gaal,&#13;
Lyndsay. Knoell,&#13;
G~rge  Koenig, Mark&#13;
Halt.&#13;
Abu&#13;
Hassem, Oavtd Heller,&#13;
Jill&#13;
Janovicz,  Sharon&#13;
Krause, Heather Malzahn, Karen&#13;
McKissick&#13;
Geraldine&#13;
Murawski,&#13;
Cartise&#13;
Newman,  George Olson  'Mike&#13;
Picazo,&#13;
Scott&#13;
Singer, Rob Twardy, Daniel Vallin&#13;
Michelle&#13;
Van&#13;
Koningsveld&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger is wri"~n and edit~d by students of UW-Parkside. who are solely responsible for its editorial&#13;
ooIi-&#13;
d&#13;
ey&#13;
and content.&#13;
n&#13;
is&#13;
published every Thursday dUring the academic year except over breaksand&#13;
hoi-&#13;
ays.&#13;
,..&#13;
-&#13;
Letters to the editor W1l1beaccepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they&#13;
are typed. double-spaced  and 350 words or less-.&#13;
AI&#13;
Ie&#13;
hel&#13;
tt&#13;
d&#13;
ersmust be Signed,&#13;
WIth&#13;
a&#13;
telephone number Included for verification purposes Names&#13;
will&#13;
be.&#13;
upon request.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
Rangerreservesthe.&#13;
right&#13;
to edit letters and refuse those whict! are false and/or de-&#13;
amatory.&#13;
•&#13;
Th~~~:.&#13;
for&#13;
all letters. and classified ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed fo: Ranger, UW-Parkside, Box&#13;
2000.&#13;
Ke-&#13;
rn,;;)ha&#13;
WI 53141.&#13;
Telephone&#13;
414/553-2287&#13;
(Editorial) or&#13;
414/553-2295&#13;
(Advert;s.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 17, issue 5, October 6, 1988</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="79330">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Finer points of Parkside presented to UW Board of Regents</text>
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              <text>Thursday. Oct.&#13;
13. 1988&#13;
~~~   tUJ~~~~~~~uW&#13;
(Q)[F&#13;
w~~~(Q)~~~[N]o[plffi\[g1~~~[Q)~&#13;
Finer&#13;
points&#13;
of&#13;
Parkside presented .&#13;
PSGA elections to&#13;
to&#13;
UW Board&#13;
of&#13;
Regents&#13;
,&#13;
be held next week&#13;
By Scott Singer&#13;
On&#13;
Friday, October&#13;
7,.&#13;
the&#13;
JlO&amp;i:d&#13;
of&#13;
Regents of the&#13;
Unf-&#13;
nrslIY&#13;
of Wisconsin System&#13;
mel&#13;
at Parkside.  Two com-&#13;
IIIlUees,the Education&#13;
corn-&#13;
IIIlUeeand the Business  and&#13;
FlDaIlceCommittee, first met&#13;
jolntlyand  then  dispersed&#13;
Into&#13;
separate groups.  In the&#13;
education&#13;
group, many, topics.&#13;
were discussed,   Including&#13;
Parkside'sspecific programs.&#13;
Whilemuch of the discus-&#13;
centered on five-year  re-&#13;
from other universities&#13;
Various programs,   Dr.&#13;
Bchucard and Dr.&#13;
Wal-&#13;
Feldt presented  many  of&#13;
liner&#13;
points of Parkslde.&#13;
card&#13;
pointed  out  that&#13;
l'Irkslde&#13;
has&#13;
given  many&#13;
"eonlrlbutlonsto the  region&#13;
al.onsln"&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
serves.&#13;
_of&#13;
the&#13;
many ways that&#13;
PuQlde&#13;
helps this area,&#13;
Shu-&#13;
.. _ted&#13;
out, is the&#13;
rela-&#13;
IIIilIIit,&#13;
between our&#13;
unlver-&#13;
_.  lIIId&#13;
area&#13;
schools.  He&#13;
...  -examples of giving&#13;
in-&#13;
......  tralning to area&#13;
btolo-&#13;
o&#13;
lfachers and helping with&#13;
lb&amp;&#13;
J(athematlcal  Olympiads&#13;
Illllaeineand Kenosha.&#13;
III&#13;
additionto area projects,&#13;
'beard&#13;
cited  many  exam.&#13;
...  of&#13;
staff achievements.&#13;
J'rom&#13;
the Soclology.Anthro.&#13;
PIIogy&#13;
department's  27 books&#13;
photo. yon   e oe&#13;
A&#13;
cocktail hour and dinner'were  scheduled  to allow administra-&#13;
tors, facully, staff, and campus leaders to meet the Board of&#13;
Re-&#13;
gents.&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
50&#13;
articles  the Science&#13;
Division  published   in&#13;
1987,&#13;
Shucard   said  Parkslde   Is&#13;
"doing what we believe the&#13;
faculty  should be doing."&#13;
AI·&#13;
though  much  publishing  Is&#13;
going on, Shucard  was&#13;
quick&#13;
to note  that  "the  quality  of&#13;
teaching   has  never&#13;
dtmtn-&#13;
ished because of research."&#13;
Also a proposal  to&#13;
Imple-&#13;
ment a Master of Science de-&#13;
gree&#13;
in&#13;
Applied  Molecular&#13;
Biology   at   Parkslde&#13;
was .&#13;
presented.  The degree, with a&#13;
strong emphasis  on&#13;
biotech.&#13;
-nology, is designed  for stu.&#13;
dents with a background&#13;
in&#13;
biology   and/or   chemistry.&#13;
using the existing factuties,  a&#13;
two-year course for students&#13;
already   having  a  B.S.&#13;
In&#13;
chemistry  or biology and a&#13;
five-year  combined B.S./M.S.&#13;
degree  wtu be offered.  The&#13;
first graduating class for the&#13;
program  slated for&#13;
1991,&#13;
with&#13;
seven students  expected an-&#13;
See Regents, page 4&#13;
Perrault&#13;
KO'd by&#13;
Senate·&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
$eQ.torDan Perrault'  was&#13;
~d   to lake a "mandatory&#13;
7"VIl&#13;
Of&#13;
absence"  for  one&#13;
• effective .tmmedtately,&#13;
resUltof a 6-0-1 vote by&#13;
te at the  Parkside&#13;
.&lt;'h&#13;
Government Assocta-&#13;
&lt;rBGA) meeting Friday,&#13;
auIt, Who was under&#13;
in.&#13;
~&#13;
on by the Senate  for&#13;
roPriation  of  funds&#13;
dereUCtionof duty,  had&#13;
!lies&#13;
eensured by the Senate&#13;
It'&#13;
r1:&#13;
g&#13;
.&#13;
SOfor the purpose&#13;
1;";"--&#13;
investigation.   Jay&#13;
ii;j""d0WSkl, PSGA  presl.&#13;
1l'en'&#13;
said that  the  Senate&#13;
tit&lt;,&#13;
~to  caucus to review all&#13;
1he&#13;
onnatlon  gathered  by&#13;
~estlgatlng&#13;
committee.&#13;
lbat  t Was not present  at&#13;
to&#13;
".!lOlntof the meeting  due&#13;
~ue constratnts.&#13;
hIt&#13;
~   Was an  open  caucus,&#13;
Plese&#13;
Was allowed&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
\'ere ~&#13;
but  only  Senators&#13;
Wed to speak.  They&#13;
Dan Perrault&#13;
h&#13;
i&#13;
t    actions&#13;
discussed&#13;
w a&#13;
Th .&#13;
needed   to  be&#13;
j&#13;
tltakn&#13;
en&#13;
.take~&#13;
hl&#13;
sofacO&#13;
c 0 ce&#13;
impeachment&#13;
ranged  from&#13;
j&#13;
ou're&#13;
down&#13;
to&#13;
a simple  say Y.   t&#13;
- , The  Senate  felt  tha&#13;
~::;:~chment   was t~  h~~~i&#13;
and that  a slap on   e._&#13;
was not enough,"  Lewandow-&#13;
ski said.&#13;
He explained  that prior  to&#13;
the caucus, quorum was lost,&#13;
but  the  meeting  was  never&#13;
adjorned.  Quorum  was  t~en&#13;
regained   and  the  meeting&#13;
proceeded.  The vote&#13;
will&#13;
be-&#13;
come official with the approv-&#13;
al of last week's minutes at&#13;
this week's meeting. Perrault&#13;
would not be able to run for&#13;
Senate until Fall&#13;
1989.&#13;
.&#13;
«pm&#13;
glad the Senate came&#13;
to a de9lson. I'm glad som~.&#13;
thing has been done. I don t&#13;
think&#13;
that  the  decision  was&#13;
hasty.  He (Dan)  was given&#13;
every opportunity  to respond&#13;
to  the  Senate,  and  when&#13;
asked&#13;
if&#13;
he felt  remorseful&#13;
about  what  he did, he said&#13;
'No'."    Lewandowski   ex·&#13;
plalned.&#13;
He said that since Perrault&#13;
was not present  at the PSGA&#13;
meeting at the time of the de·&#13;
clslon, Perrault  wtu be sent a&#13;
letter  informing  him  of the&#13;
Senate's decision.&#13;
The  Parkslde  Student&#13;
As-&#13;
soclatlon (PSGA)&#13;
will&#13;
hold Its&#13;
Fall elections  on Wednesday.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
19&#13;
and Thursday,  Oct.&#13;
20,&#13;
9&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m. voting booths&#13;
will&#13;
be set up in the Molinaro&#13;
concourse.   Students   must&#13;
bring an&#13;
ill&#13;
In&#13;
order to vote.&#13;
There&#13;
will&#13;
be nine Senate&#13;
seats, one Parkslde Union&#13;
Ad-&#13;
visory  Board  (PUAB)&#13;
at-&#13;
large seat and one Student&#13;
University  Fees  Allocation&#13;
Committee  (SUFAC) at-large&#13;
seat up for election.&#13;
Students  running  for  the&#13;
Senate seats  are:  Norman&#13;
Delaney, Terl DeRosier, Debl&#13;
Fritschow.   Mark  "Sunny"&#13;
Hall,&#13;
WlIllam  Horner,  Kelly&#13;
Vol. XVI_I.No.&#13;
e&#13;
McKissick,   Karen   Pltsoul-&#13;
akls,&#13;
Mark  Thompson&#13;
arld&#13;
Jenny mtsch.&#13;
Carol  Curl  Is running  for&#13;
the PUAB seat and Debl Frlt·&#13;
schow&#13;
Is&#13;
running  for  the&#13;
SUFAC seat.  A referendum&#13;
will&#13;
also  be&#13;
run&#13;
on&#13;
United&#13;
Council,   asking    students&#13;
whether  or  not  they  want&#13;
PSGA to remain  members  of&#13;
United Council.&#13;
The&#13;
ballot  count&#13;
will&#13;
take&#13;
place on Thursday. Oct. 20 at&#13;
8:15&#13;
p.m.  Approval  of  the&#13;
elections  results&#13;
"Will&#13;
take&#13;
place  at  the  Nov.&#13;
4&#13;
PSGA&#13;
meeting and the new SenateJ&#13;
will&#13;
take office on that date.&#13;
The&#13;
Parkslde  Union Adviso-&#13;
ry  Board's  (PUAB)  opinion&#13;
poll last week on the alcohol&#13;
policy  for  dances  resulted&#13;
with&#13;
138&#13;
opposed  to a&#13;
sepa-&#13;
rate area,&#13;
97&#13;
in&#13;
favor of' a&#13;
separate area and four stu-&#13;
dents with no opinion on the&#13;
situation.&#13;
"I'm  disappointed  by  the&#13;
low turnout&#13;
(239&#13;
voters),  but&#13;
In&#13;
any  event,  these  results&#13;
are inconclusive," Ross Pet-&#13;
tit, Parkslde  Student Govern-&#13;
ment   Association   (PSGA)&#13;
Vice  President,   said.  Pettit&#13;
holds  the  PSGA  seat  on&#13;
PUAB.&#13;
"I&#13;
suppose it's&#13;
back&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
drawing  board  for the  com-&#13;
mlttee,"  he satd. The opinion&#13;
poll&#13;
was run as a&#13;
result of the&#13;
.IIt&#13;
would have  taken  a&#13;
landslide&#13;
In&#13;
one direction  for&#13;
the  opinion  poll  to  slgnlfl.&#13;
cantly  alter  the committee's&#13;
decisions at this point," Pettit&#13;
commented. The current al-&#13;
cohol polley for dances, which&#13;
slates  that  there  wtu be no&#13;
separate  area  but  guests&#13;
under the legal drinking  age&#13;
will&#13;
not be allowed to attend,&#13;
will&#13;
remain&#13;
in&#13;
effect unless a&#13;
decision  Is made  to change&#13;
that polley.&#13;
Inside•••&#13;
page 2&#13;
PAB responds to cage Issue&#13;
page 4&#13;
Responsible drinking&#13;
stressed&#13;
page 7&#13;
The Homecoming lowdown&#13;
page 8&#13;
Boys Next Door&#13;
page 9&#13;
Classified&#13;
page 12&#13;
Cat and mouse games&#13;
,&#13;
(  ,. ..  I&#13;
2 Thursday,   OCl. 13, 1988  Ranger.&#13;
)your views&#13;
United Council defended&#13;
,.&#13;
~-----------&#13;
A&#13;
QtJAYLE?&#13;
IT  LOOJ{5  MORE   LIKE&#13;
.   AN&#13;
ALBATROSS&#13;
TO ME!&#13;
To the  Editor:&#13;
lars&#13;
for    each&#13;
Parkside&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent?   Who  was&#13;
it&#13;
that   lobbied&#13;
and  won  the  largest   Wiscon-&#13;
sin   financial&#13;
aId   increase&#13;
in&#13;
five  years,    Including    an  addi·&#13;
tlonal   1.45 millIon   doilars    thIs&#13;
year?    Who  made  ' sure   that&#13;
there   was&#13;
a&#13;
mandate&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
state&#13;
budget&#13;
that&#13;
required&#13;
child  care  costs  be  taken  into&#13;
account   for   student   parents'&#13;
financial  aid award?  And who&#13;
lobbIed   the   Board   of  Regents&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
sure&#13;
that&#13;
ALL&#13;
aca-&#13;
demic   misconduct&#13;
allegations&#13;
are&#13;
appealable?&#13;
It&#13;
was    not&#13;
"luck".&#13;
IT&#13;
WAS&#13;
UNITED&#13;
COUNCIL!!&#13;
United   Council   is  more&#13;
than&#13;
just  a  one  weekend&#13;
a&#13;
month&#13;
deal.&#13;
Mthough&#13;
they&#13;
were&#13;
busy&#13;
with  reorganization   last&#13;
year,   United   Council  was  able&#13;
to  achieve&#13;
many    of  Its   goals&#13;
that   benefit   Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
immensely.&#13;
Now&#13;
If&#13;
you   would    Ilke   to&#13;
delve  back   into  the  present,&#13;
you&#13;
would&#13;
see&#13;
that&#13;
United&#13;
Council&#13;
is&#13;
not  only  reorgan-&#13;
Ized   but   more   united&#13;
than&#13;
It&#13;
has  been  in  the  past   several&#13;
years.&#13;
Every&#13;
four&#13;
year&#13;
campus  in  the  Wisconsin&#13;
sys-&#13;
tern&#13;
are&#13;
FULL&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
OF   UNITED    COUNCIL.   This&#13;
unprecedented&#13;
unity&#13;
should&#13;
mean  even  more  victories  for&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
In   the   fu-&#13;
ture.&#13;
Vote    YES&#13;
on    October&#13;
19&#13;
and  20.&#13;
I  would   lIke  to  make   a  few&#13;
comments   concerning  the  re-&#13;
sponse&#13;
this&#13;
newspaper   made&#13;
immediately&#13;
after&#13;
ChrIsto-&#13;
pher&#13;
Balerl's&#13;
Letter&#13;
to   the&#13;
Editor&#13;
In  the   October&#13;
6&#13;
edt-&#13;
tion.&#13;
First,&#13;
this&#13;
newspaper&#13;
(or&#13;
any  newspaper)   has  no  bust.&#13;
ness   making&#13;
an   editorial&#13;
reo&#13;
sponse&#13;
immediately&#13;
after&#13;
a&#13;
Letter&#13;
to   the    Editor&#13;
as    the&#13;
one&#13;
this&#13;
newspaper&#13;
made   last&#13;
week.&#13;
If&#13;
the    editorial&#13;
staff&#13;
wtshed&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
those&#13;
reo&#13;
marks   then  they  should  have&#13;
made    them    In   their    origlnal.&#13;
editorial&#13;
concerning&#13;
United&#13;
Council on September&#13;
29.&#13;
You&#13;
had   your   opportunity&#13;
to  voice&#13;
your&#13;
opinion.&#13;
Now,&#13;
unless&#13;
there  is  a  serious  error,   stu.&#13;
dents   should   be  able   to  freely&#13;
respond&#13;
to&#13;
the   editortsl&#13;
con.&#13;
tent   of  this   paper&#13;
without    a&#13;
further&#13;
editorial&#13;
immediately&#13;
after   a  Letter   to  the  Editor.&#13;
Second, in  your  response  to&#13;
Christopher&#13;
Balerl's&#13;
you&#13;
made  part   of  your  argument&#13;
by   using    the    "let&#13;
me   delve&#13;
Into  the  past"    method,   Maybe&#13;
you   should   "delve&#13;
into&#13;
the~&#13;
past"&#13;
once   more    and    see&#13;
what   else  Uitlted  Council   did.&#13;
While  you&#13;
are&#13;
accurate&#13;
that&#13;
United   Council   spent   a  great&#13;
deal    of   time&#13;
debating&#13;
reor-&#13;
ganlzation,&#13;
who   was&#13;
It&#13;
that&#13;
lobbied   a  proposed&#13;
tuition   in-&#13;
crease  of&#13;
14.3o/d&#13;
1&#13;
down&#13;
to&#13;
9.9%&#13;
-a   savlngs&#13;
of   sixty-nlne&#13;
dol.&#13;
Nobod¥ asked&#13;
me.,&#13;
but&#13;
PAS' members&#13;
not neo-Nazis&#13;
In&#13;
the  September&#13;
29th  issue&#13;
· of   the    Ranger.&#13;
an    editorial&#13;
· written    by  Jay   A.&#13;
Lewandow-&#13;
ski,   President&#13;
of  PSGA,    was&#13;
published.&#13;
In It,&#13;
he  expressed&#13;
· his views  on the  current  guest&#13;
polley&#13;
at    university&#13;
dances.&#13;
What  he  provided&#13;
was  a&#13;
one.&#13;
sided   view  of  the  issue,   and   a&#13;
pretty   unclear    picture    of  what&#13;
the  real   problem    is.&#13;
First    of  all,   I'd   Ilke   to  con-&#13;
gratulata&#13;
Jay    on   his   timing.&#13;
As  most   of  you&#13;
know,  hope-&#13;
fully.   the   Parkside&#13;
Union  Ad-&#13;
visory&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB)&#13;
con.&#13;
. ducied&#13;
an    opinion&#13;
poll    last&#13;
Monday&#13;
through&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
.asking&#13;
the   students&#13;
oi&#13;
Park.&#13;
side&#13;
to&#13;
express  their  views  on&#13;
the  current    guest   policy.   As  a&#13;
member&#13;
of  PUAB,    Jay   knew&#13;
that  the&#13;
poll&#13;
was&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
as&#13;
un-&#13;
biased&#13;
as    possible.&#13;
But&#13;
by&#13;
getting&#13;
his&#13;
edItorial&#13;
In    the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
published   two  school&#13;
days   before   the  poll  was   to  be&#13;
run,   he   might   have   swayed&#13;
some   people    to   vote   to   keep&#13;
the&#13;
beer&#13;
garden&gt;&#13;
down,   be-&#13;
cause   they  weren't   informed&#13;
of&#13;
all&#13;
the  issues   at  hand.&#13;
Whether    his   timing-  was   In-&#13;
tentfonat   or  not,   and   Jay   is&#13;
free&#13;
to&#13;
express    his   opinion&#13;
anytime&#13;
he  'wants,&#13;
I   feel&#13;
it&#13;
was,  ,bad&#13;
judgement&#13;
on    his&#13;
part&#13;
ior&#13;
not&#13;
expressing&#13;
all&#13;
viewpoints,&#13;
and&#13;
bad&#13;
judge-&#13;
ment&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
for   printing&#13;
oniy   one&#13;
side&#13;
of    this&#13;
hotly&#13;
debated&#13;
issue.&#13;
The  real  issue  isn't  whether&#13;
or&#13;
not&#13;
alcoholic'&#13;
beverages&#13;
will   be   served&#13;
at    University&#13;
dances,&#13;
but&#13;
whether&#13;
or    not&#13;
guests    will  be  allowed    in   that&#13;
are   under&#13;
the  legal&#13;
drinking&#13;
age.&#13;
In&#13;
the  first   semester&#13;
oi&#13;
last&#13;
year,&#13;
the&#13;
'beer    garden'&#13;
(or&#13;
'cage")  was&#13;
set&#13;
up  at  dances&#13;
sponsored&#13;
-by&#13;
the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board&#13;
to&#13;
comply&#13;
with   the   university&#13;
policy&#13;
at&#13;
that   time.   Since   the&#13;
avallabtl,&#13;
Ity   of  alcoholIc&#13;
beverages&#13;
to&#13;
minors   was  very   limited,&#13;
the&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board&#13;
was  told  It  would   be  alright&#13;
to&#13;
allow    guests&#13;
Into   the   dances&#13;
who&#13;
were&#13;
under&#13;
the&#13;
legal&#13;
dringking&#13;
age    (18,   19,  and   20&#13;
years&#13;
old),&#13;
as    long    as    they&#13;
were   accompanied&#13;
by  a.Park-&#13;
side   student,&#13;
The   number&#13;
of&#13;
guests&#13;
per    student&#13;
was    two.&#13;
During&#13;
that&#13;
time&#13;
attendance&#13;
at  the  dances  increased.&#13;
Well,&#13;
If&#13;
attendance&#13;
In.&#13;
creased&#13;
over    that   time,&#13;
how&#13;
can   Jay   state   that,  "If we&#13;
are&#13;
going   to  choose  to revert&#13;
back&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
unacceptable&#13;
plan.&#13;
namely   the  'cage', ..."&#13;
or&#13;
"I'd&#13;
llke&#13;
to&#13;
say   that   we shouldnot&#13;
be    considering&#13;
any   sltualion&#13;
that&#13;
negatively&#13;
affects&#13;
our&#13;
students.&#13;
The   'cage'&#13;
has&#13;
del·&#13;
rimental&#13;
effects   on&#13;
all&#13;
partlct.&#13;
pants    attehding&#13;
the  dance.&#13;
"1&#13;
Are   you   trying   to  teU us&#13;
thaI&#13;
people&#13;
loved&#13;
the&#13;
negstive,t·&#13;
iects&#13;
of  the   'cage'   and liked&#13;
to&#13;
be   adversly&#13;
affected?   I&#13;
t1lInk&#13;
the   attendance&#13;
increase was&#13;
due&#13;
to    smart&#13;
programming&#13;
and   publicity&#13;
of  the  events&#13;
as&#13;
well   as   having    a  guest  policy&#13;
that&#13;
was&#13;
acceptable&#13;
to  the&#13;
students.&#13;
Last   semester,&#13;
when    PAa&#13;
learned   that   the  beer&#13;
garden&#13;
could  be  eliminated,&#13;
we  were&#13;
pleased   because&#13;
dt  would   open&#13;
the&#13;
entire    facility&#13;
to  every'&#13;
one.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
only   after   the&#13;
beer&#13;
garden&#13;
was   down  thai&#13;
we&#13;
learned&#13;
that&#13;
our&#13;
guest&#13;
policy    would   have   to  change.&#13;
And   here   Is  where   the  debate&#13;
starts.&#13;
Most   of  the  students  whoat-&#13;
See&#13;
Nobody. page 5&#13;
Fred   Monard!&#13;
WLBRreorganization&#13;
delayed progress&#13;
To the  Editor:&#13;
OHHHHHH&#13;
BY&#13;
GO-&#13;
SHHHHH,    Its   another&#13;
letter&#13;
about   the  radio   station    HELP&#13;
HELP&#13;
HELP.&#13;
I    can't&#13;
read&#13;
anymore.&#13;
Well,   I  get   sick   of&#13;
telling&#13;
this&#13;
story&#13;
to   people&#13;
and   that   ts  Why I  am   writing&#13;
It  down.   I  would  lIke  to  clear&#13;
up&#13;
some&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
misinforma-&#13;
tion   of  the   PSGA   President's&#13;
letter   last   week&#13;
and&#13;
inform&#13;
you   of   the   PSGA   actions&#13;
In&#13;
the past  few weeks.&#13;
Alex   Petlit&#13;
may    have    had&#13;
the   Idea   of   a   campus&#13;
radio    '&#13;
station,   along   with  1,000 other&#13;
campus&#13;
students.&#13;
Talk&#13;
and&#13;
campaign&#13;
promises&#13;
are&#13;
cheap,   but   good  work   ts  hard&#13;
to  flnd.   Two  senators&#13;
did   at.&#13;
tempt   to  form   a  radio   station&#13;
Jast  year.   They  failed&#13;
along&#13;
with    other&#13;
atiempts&#13;
for    the&#13;
past&#13;
10&#13;
years.   Those  senators'&#13;
did&#13;
not&#13;
pass  on  any  informa-&#13;
tion  to  me,   nor   did  Alex  have&#13;
any  research   on the radio  sta-&#13;
tion.&#13;
~.&#13;
The  PSGA   President&#13;
stated&#13;
last  week  that  other  commit-&#13;
tee  chairs  wrote  reports   over&#13;
the  summer.&#13;
I&#13;
also  sit  on stu-&#13;
dent  services   committee ~&#13;
and&#13;
SUF AC,  both   standlng&#13;
senate&#13;
committees.&#13;
Those   commit-&#13;
tees  did  not  have  a  chair  for&#13;
the   last   4  months.    They   have&#13;
not  had   a  meeting&#13;
In  the   last&#13;
4&#13;
months   and  ha ve  not&#13;
SUb4&#13;
mltted&#13;
any&#13;
reports&#13;
for    the&#13;
last   4  months    yet,   nobody   at&#13;
the  PSGA  cares   about   that.&#13;
See&#13;
Lefter, page 3&#13;
BUSINESS  STAFF&#13;
CraigSimpkins&#13;
CirculationManager&#13;
John-Maner&#13;
DistributionManager&#13;
Curt Shircel&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
GENERAL   STAFF&#13;
DavidBoyd,Sheila Bugalecki,Ruben Carbajal,Dan&#13;
C~iapetta,TimCook,DavidDebish,TrlctaEbner,&#13;
MichelleGaal, lyndsay Knoell,George Koenig,Mark&#13;
Hall,AbuHassein, DavidHeller,JillJanovicz, Sharon&#13;
Krause,HeatherMalzahn,KarenMcKissickGeraldine&#13;
~urawski, Carli.~Newman,George Olson,'Mike&#13;
PICazO,&#13;
Scott&#13;
Smger,Rob Twardy,DanielVallin&#13;
MichelleVanKoningsveld&#13;
•&#13;
L...-----------.;;;~----~~-&#13;
::...l..&#13;
Rangeriswrittena~dedjt~dbystudentsofUW·Parkside,whoaresolelyresponsibleforitseditorial&#13;
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cy andcontent-aIS·publlshedeveryThursdayduringthe academicyearexceptoverbreaksand&#13;
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TR~~~~:,&#13;
forallletters,andclassifiedads, is Mondayat 10 a.m. forpublication&#13;
All.correspondenceshouldb:eaddressedto: Ranger,UW-Parkside.Box2000,Ke-&#13;
~~)ha&#13;
WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Telephone&#13;
4141553·2287&#13;
(EditOrial)or&#13;
4141553.2295&#13;
(Advert!s-&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
EditOf.in-Chief&#13;
KellyMcKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
laura  Pestka&#13;
,&#13;
EntertainmentEditor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
KevinZirkelbach&#13;
COpy&#13;
Editor&#13;
John Kehoe&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Annexation issue boils down to municipal services</text>
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              <text>&#13;
Oct. 20, 1988&#13;
...&#13;
Annexationissue boils down to municipal services&#13;
by&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
_&#13;
to   ~ke&#13;
over    the    task    of&#13;
mented that  "there  is no rela-&#13;
change services.&#13;
If&#13;
a  decision&#13;
II'Ith&#13;
the  taste   of   the   re-&#13;
provtdlng&#13;
fire&#13;
service,&#13;
it&#13;
tionship"&#13;
with&#13;
how&#13;
much&#13;
is  made  then  Parkside&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
eeRII¥proposedannexation   of&#13;
;~~id&#13;
receive&#13;
$150,000   to&#13;
money    comes    to   this    area&#13;
consuited   to  determine    what&#13;
Pal!fJIde&#13;
by the  city  of  Keno-&#13;
~  "  ,000a  year  from  PMS.&#13;
from  PMS and  tuttton.&#13;
course  of action  is best.  Chan-&#13;
"'lIllgerlngin our  mouths,   a&#13;
W,:  will   not   change   until&#13;
Although&#13;
the&#13;
issue&#13;
of&#13;
cellor&#13;
Shella&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
has&#13;
...&#13;
tssue&#13;
has&#13;
developed.&#13;
the    CIty  and   the   town   are&#13;
changing   fIre   service   is.  not&#13;
slated    that&#13;
it&#13;
will&#13;
be   made&#13;
I&#13;
WhOshould   provide&#13;
pleas.ed   ,,:nd  ready    to   agree&#13;
ac~vely  . bemg   debated •. It  is&#13;
sure   that   "Parkside    gets  ap-&#13;
services   and   what&#13;
that   It  is  m  the  ~est  int~rests&#13;
bemg   discussed.&#13;
A   deciston&#13;
propriate&#13;
fire    service,&#13;
and&#13;
cia! consequences&#13;
if&#13;
of&#13;
everybody,&#13;
.&#13;
~SSlstant&#13;
would   have    to    come    from&#13;
you  can  be  sure  that  we'll  do&#13;
would&#13;
be&#13;
is&#13;
th&#13;
•&#13;
Chancellor   of  Admtrustratton&#13;
Somers&#13;
and&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
to&#13;
that  ..&#13;
BIfi,&#13;
'.&#13;
e concern&#13;
and    Fiscal    Affairs,   Gary'&#13;
.&#13;
tftll&amp;admlnlstrabonand  stu-&#13;
Goetz,  said.  Some  people  feei&#13;
Grece named&#13;
tirst&#13;
winner&#13;
-&#13;
aUke.&#13;
that&#13;
Somers&#13;
should&#13;
keep&#13;
I '&#13;
II&#13;
I '&#13;
Although annexation&#13;
~f&#13;
providing   the  service   because&#13;
PaIlIldewas   proposed,&#13;
It&#13;
of better   equipment   for  fight-&#13;
of Schilling Cup award&#13;
_&#13;
occurred   for    several&#13;
ing   brush    and    forest    fires.&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
reuons·&#13;
One of these  was  the&#13;
Aiso  some  feei  that  the  reac-&#13;
~  that the Town of  Somers&#13;
tion&#13;
time&#13;
from&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
...  not willing to  reiinquish&#13;
would  not  be  fast  enough.  The&#13;
Parkslds&#13;
to  Kenosha.    In    a&#13;
facts  show,  thOliC'h,that  these&#13;
lIIIIJIUIIonpassed&#13;
opposing&#13;
are  not  so.&#13;
!iIt&#13;
annexatton,    the&#13;
town&#13;
IiGiilI&#13;
slated that  "annexation&#13;
lIliJld&#13;
effectiveiy   split&#13;
the&#13;
im&#13;
of  Somers&#13;
in&#13;
half. "&#13;
.I!Itt;&#13;
the&#13;
town  felt   that    "an&#13;
6lion&#13;
of   Parkside&#13;
to&#13;
wcuid   destroy&#13;
the&#13;
identification&#13;
of&#13;
as   an   educaitonal&#13;
G. Goetz&#13;
dependent&#13;
contractor.&#13;
Changes    in   police   protection&#13;
and   solid  waste   removai    are&#13;
not    presently&#13;
being&#13;
constd-&#13;
ered,    leaving    oniy   the   ques-&#13;
tion   of  changing    fire   protec-&#13;
tion.&#13;
For    . the&#13;
protectlon&#13;
that&#13;
Somers provides,  the  town re-&#13;
ceives&#13;
$4000&#13;
each  year   from  a&#13;
state&#13;
fund    called&#13;
Payments&#13;
for  Municipal   Servies   (PMS).&#13;
The  PMS  fund  is  a  reciprocal&#13;
fund  to  provide   municipalities&#13;
with&#13;
reimbursement&#13;
for   the&#13;
expenses&#13;
that&#13;
occur&#13;
when&#13;
providing&#13;
services&#13;
to    state&#13;
universities.&#13;
If&#13;
Kenosha    was&#13;
Although    one   fire    depar-t-&#13;
ment  may  have  certain   equip-&#13;
ment   for  one  type   of  fire,&#13;
in&#13;
the  event   of  a  major   fire.  all&#13;
fire    companies&#13;
in&#13;
the   area&#13;
would   respond    to   help   out.&#13;
Also,  a  north-aide  fire  depart-&#13;
ment&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha   is  presently&#13;
Wlder  construction   that  would&#13;
reduce   reaction   time  greatly.&#13;
One  fear   of students   Is  that&#13;
if  Kenosha  was&#13;
to&#13;
assume   re-&#13;
s  onsiQJ.lities  of   fire - protec-&#13;
tion,    the    additional&#13;
cost   to&#13;
reimburse    the  city  for  the&#13;
in-&#13;
crease&#13;
would    come    in   the&#13;
form  of an  increase&#13;
in&#13;
tuition.&#13;
Since  PMS  is  not  directly   re-&#13;
lated  to tuition  costs,  this  fear&#13;
is&#13;
unfounded.&#13;
Goetz&#13;
corn-&#13;
pus police director selected&#13;
(Campus   police)   department&#13;
as   being   more   than   just   en-&#13;
forcement.&#13;
He    sees&#13;
it&#13;
as&#13;
being   education   too,  working&#13;
with  the  students,   faculty  and&#13;
staff  to really  best  provide  for&#13;
the   security    and   crime   pre-&#13;
ventron  on the  campus."&#13;
~4&#13;
Neal  Ostrowski    has&#13;
""'4&#13;
formally   offered&#13;
the&#13;
~&#13;
and has  verbally    ac-&#13;
~&#13;
the offer.  Gary   Goetz,&#13;
~t&#13;
Chancelior    of   Ad-&#13;
~   .....tIon  and   Fiscal&#13;
Af.&#13;
~&#13;
Baldpaperwork   will  be&#13;
~n..;...Ostrowski thIs  week.&#13;
ill&#13;
""t'vwsklformally   accepts&#13;
~  _tion,&#13;
he   will    begin&#13;
~ug&#13;
Wielgat,   Assist·&#13;
!Ie.&#13;
tor  of  Campus    Po-&#13;
Ioii..~&#13;
continue  to  serve   as&#13;
,'ll&#13;
Director&#13;
until&#13;
that&#13;
~ald&#13;
the  final  recom.&#13;
~&#13;
n&#13;
to&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Illern.~Plan&#13;
was&#13;
made,&#13;
IIieI&#13;
-.tz&#13;
and  Mary   Trem·&#13;
lire.&#13;
Interviewed    the&#13;
final&#13;
I!i!lt&#13;
CRndidal!as a&#13;
second&#13;
~~&#13;
&amp;carch  and    screen&#13;
\Vas  responsible&#13;
&lt;for interviewing&#13;
the   original&#13;
candidates&#13;
and   selecting    the&#13;
final  three.&#13;
Goetz  said  that  he,  the  com-&#13;
mittee   and  Tremmell   were  all&#13;
pleased&#13;
with&#13;
the    .dectslon.&#13;
"We&#13;
we-re   very&#13;
impressed&#13;
with   his  background&#13;
and   list&#13;
of  priorities,&#13;
which   were   .an&#13;
excellent&#13;
balance&#13;
of   service&#13;
and&#13;
enforcement,&#13;
t,&#13;
Goetz&#13;
said.&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
worked&#13;
for    six&#13;
years   as  a  sheriff's   Deputy   in&#13;
Washington    County   and   dU;-&#13;
Ing  that   tiJlle  he  received   his&#13;
Bachelor's&#13;
degree    from   UW-&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
in   Law   Enforce·&#13;
ment.&#13;
Goetz&#13;
sald&#13;
he&#13;
then&#13;
served&#13;
with   JC   Penney&#13;
de·&#13;
partment&#13;
stores    as   the   head&#13;
investigating&#13;
officer.   Ostrow-&#13;
skl~ is&#13;
presently&#13;
serving&#13;
at&#13;
Marquette&#13;
UnIversity&#13;
as&#13;
a&#13;
Lieutenant&#13;
speciallzing&#13;
as   a&#13;
Crime&#13;
Prevention   &lt;Investlga-&#13;
tion  administrator.&#13;
"I  think  he'll  be  excellent   in&#13;
building   bridges,'(&#13;
Goetz&#13;
com·&#13;
mented.&#13;
"He&#13;
sees&#13;
the&#13;
He  said  a  lot  of credit  must&#13;
go  to  Doug  Wielget  "for  h?ld.&#13;
ing    together&#13;
the    operation.&#13;
We've   had  a  couple  of  medi-&#13;
cal   leaves    that    have   really&#13;
brought&#13;
some    intense    pres-&#13;
sure&#13;
to'   the    department&#13;
to&#13;
cover   the  rounds   and  get  ~e&#13;
job   done.   He's   done   well   m&#13;
terms&#13;
of   providing&#13;
for   the&#13;
parking   for  the  Regent   meet-&#13;
ing  (Oct.  6·7) which  was  real-&#13;
ly  a  stressful   time."&#13;
Goetz  said  the  ,miversity   is&#13;
looking&#13;
forward&#13;
to    having.&#13;
Wielgat   continue  as  Assis~t&#13;
Director.&#13;
"Tbe&#13;
partnership&#13;
between    Mr.   ostro~skl&#13;
and&#13;
Doug  is  ideal:  Tbere  s  a&#13;
good&#13;
balance    in  the   leadership    of&#13;
the  oepratlon,"   he  said.&#13;
. Ostrowski  ,was not  avallable&#13;
for&#13;
comment.&#13;
by  Kelly McKissick&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
The   first    recipient&#13;
of   the&#13;
coveted  Paul  R.  Schilling  Cup&#13;
was   announced   at   the   Park-&#13;
sIde  Student   Government   As-&#13;
sociation&#13;
(PSGA)&#13;
Senate&#13;
meeting  last  Friday  .&#13;
The  award   is  "dedicated    to&#13;
the   honor   and   memory"&#13;
of&#13;
the  address   UW Board  of Re-&#13;
gents&#13;
President&#13;
Paul&#13;
R.&#13;
Schllling  gave  at  the  Parkstde&#13;
20th    Anniversary&#13;
reception&#13;
for  the  Regents   on  Thursday,&#13;
Oct.  6.&#13;
PSGA  Vice-President&#13;
Ro3S&#13;
Pettlt,    creator   of' the  award,&#13;
said,  "Paul   dellvered   this  me-&#13;
morial    and   riveting    address&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
approximately&#13;
315&#13;
guests  while  under   the  exten-&#13;
uating   circumstance&#13;
of   sub-&#13;
stantial&#13;
consumption    of   fer-&#13;
mented  spirits."&#13;
Pettit&#13;
stresses&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
award   is  a  legitimate    honor,&#13;
"given&#13;
to&#13;
individuals&#13;
or&#13;
groups   for  outstanding    vocal&#13;
representation&#13;
of    the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents    at   Parkside.&#13;
It&#13;
is   a&#13;
demonstration    of the  appreci-&#13;
ation   and   recognition   by  the&#13;
students&#13;
for   those   who   put&#13;
time,   effort   and   energy   into&#13;
representation    of students.&#13;
,t&#13;
The   first    recipient&#13;
of   the&#13;
awarded&#13;
was&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
&lt;named'&#13;
G.  Gary  Grace,   As-&#13;
ststant    Chancelor    of  Student&#13;
Affalrs.   Grace   was  given  the&#13;
award   for  the   "excellent    job&#13;
he  did  in  trying   to  give   the&#13;
Board  of  Regents   a  Parkside&#13;
student&#13;
profile&#13;
in&#13;
four&#13;
minutes,"    Pettit   said.  He  ex-&#13;
plained   that   Grace   was   hon-&#13;
ored  to  learn   he  was  the  first&#13;
to be given  the  Schililng  Cup.&#13;
Tbe   award    will   remain    in&#13;
the  PSGA  office  along  with  a&#13;
llst    of   those&#13;
receiving&#13;
the&#13;
award.   Pettit   said  the  senm.&#13;
ing  Cup&#13;
will&#13;
be  awarded   "as&#13;
the  Senate  deems  appropriate&#13;
for   representation&#13;
worthy   of&#13;
recognition.  _&#13;
It&#13;
is  also  award-&#13;
ed  annually   to  the  best  repre-&#13;
sentative    of  students   over   a&#13;
period  of one year. '.'..&#13;
Inside•••&#13;
page 2&#13;
.&#13;
Another side of Urllted Council&#13;
.Non-trads have it made&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
Radio station ready to.rock&#13;
pageS&#13;
Counselor's Comer&#13;
"page&#13;
6&#13;
,: ,.  Assassin ,,-rmlnat .. friends&#13;
"page?!&#13;
2 Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 20,&#13;
1988 Ranger&#13;
f"&#13;
Il.::-YO_U_P&#13;
_Vi_8W_S&#13;
I&#13;
Another side of DC&#13;
To The&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I read with Interest the let-&#13;
ter to the editor from Fred&#13;
Monardl   concerning   the&#13;
UnIted COuncil issue. As a&#13;
two-term former delegate to&#13;
United&#13;
COuncil,&#13;
I&#13;
can&#13;
attest to&#13;
the fact that the participation&#13;
of ParksJde&#13;
in&#13;
UC&#13;
is&#13;
a corn-&#13;
plete waste of time  and&#13;
money.&#13;
It&#13;
Is not merely the cost per&#13;
student  per semester&#13;
(50")&#13;
but the mulU-thousand dollar&#13;
expense  that  PSGA  must&#13;
budget each year to send the&#13;
delegation  to the meetings.&#13;
The travel money, food and&#13;
lodging allowance would be&#13;
better  used to lobby local&#13;
legislators.&#13;
In&#13;
my two year experience&#13;
In UnIted COuncil, I found&#13;
that the issues discussed at&#13;
the end of the second year&#13;
were the very  same  ones&#13;
which were discussed at the&#13;
beglnnlng of my first year. I&#13;
hardly call&#13;
that&#13;
progress!&#13;
In&#13;
addition, Parkside's campus,&#13;
because&#13;
It&#13;
Is part of the&#13;
UW&#13;
System campus,&#13;
will&#13;
beneflt&#13;
from any financial aid&#13;
legts-&#13;
latlon or tuItion caps that&#13;
UnIted COuncil could possibly&#13;
successfully attain.&#13;
As&#13;
a former&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
chair.&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
imperative  that&#13;
Parkside students continue&#13;
to&#13;
be prudent In their spending&#13;
and that they keep the money&#13;
on campus where&#13;
it&#13;
can do&#13;
the most&#13;
good.&#13;
There were&#13;
many long faces after the&#13;
budgeting   process   last&#13;
spring; perhaps there would&#13;
be more money&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
around&#13;
lf UnIted COuncildid not take&#13;
such a bite.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
NO. GET OUT OF&#13;
UNITED COUNCIL!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jenny&#13;
carr&#13;
Fonner Editor,&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Cba1r,&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Senator&#13;
ALL RIGlrr-&#13;
IT&#13;
WAS PRE.11Y&#13;
FUNN'!' WHEN&#13;
GE.ORGE&#13;
BUSH&#13;
SAIO ON&#13;
SEPTf,MBER&#13;
SEVENn~  THAT&#13;
IT WAS pEARL&#13;
Hi\RBOR DAY.&#13;
Are students coming first?&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
In&#13;
the October&#13;
IS&#13;
issue of&#13;
the RaDger&#13;
I&#13;
read a "Nobody&#13;
asked me, but..;" column by&#13;
Mark ntompson of the Park·&#13;
olde&#13;
AcUvltlee&#13;
Board.&#13;
I&#13;
must&#13;
oay that&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
cl1Rappolnted&#13;
by&#13;
lhls&#13;
peroonal attack  on&#13;
me. Mark was supposedly re-&#13;
sponding&#13;
to&#13;
a column&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
September&#13;
29&#13;
issue of the&#13;
Baager.  but  somehow  It&#13;
turned&#13;
Into a personal attack&#13;
on&#13;
Jay Lewandowski.&#13;
U&#13;
Mark&#13;
Thompson, or anyone else for&#13;
that metter,&#13;
has&#13;
a question&#13;
for me they are welcome&#13;
to&#13;
come and&#13;
ask&#13;
me FACE&#13;
TO&#13;
FACE. The opInIon&#13;
I&#13;
stated In&#13;
my article was the same one&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
have been expressing&#13;
at the Parkslde UnIon Adviso-&#13;
ry&#13;
Board&#13;
meetings all year.&#13;
As Mark  so  apUy  ex-&#13;
plained:  The poll that&#13;
ran&#13;
about the cage was an OPIN·&#13;
ION poll. ThIs is Amerca,&#13;
Mark. Everyone is entlUed&#13;
to&#13;
their opln.lon.&#13;
I&#13;
merely chose&#13;
to&#13;
express my oplnion on an&#13;
Issue that  I felt strongly&#13;
about.&#13;
If&#13;
you remember my article&#13;
1&#13;
had onIy praise for P&#13;
AB&#13;
and&#13;
all the work that they have&#13;
done. Yet, In&#13;
his&#13;
arllc1e,&#13;
Mark  accuses  both  the&#13;
RaDger and myself of "bad&#13;
judgement" for not express-&#13;
Ing both sides of the Issue.&#13;
I&#13;
would Uke&#13;
to&#13;
refer to my&#13;
arti-&#13;
cle;&#13;
I&#13;
did state why P&#13;
AB&#13;
wants to put the cage back&#13;
up. Furthermore,&#13;
I&#13;
was stat-&#13;
Ing&#13;
my OPINION,&#13;
It&#13;
is nei-&#13;
ther the Ranger's responsibil-&#13;
ity.&#13;
nor&#13;
1151t&#13;
my own&#13;
to&#13;
state&#13;
both&#13;
sides of an issue when&#13;
an OPINION is being ex-&#13;
pressed.&#13;
Mark goes on&#13;
to&#13;
state that,&#13;
·'the reallssue&#13;
is...&#13;
whether or&#13;
not guests&#13;
will&#13;
be allowed In&#13;
that  are  under  the  legal&#13;
drinking age."&#13;
I&#13;
have to disagree. The&#13;
real&#13;
issue Is:&#13;
will&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents be allowed&#13;
to&#13;
have non-&#13;
student. under age guests ac-&#13;
company them&#13;
to&#13;
dances.&#13;
Perhaps  Mark  does  not&#13;
realize that the money to put&#13;
on&#13;
all&#13;
dances comes d.1recUy&#13;
out of the tuition that each&#13;
STUDENT  pays.  Perhaps&#13;
Mark does not realize that the&#13;
primary&#13;
responsibility   of&#13;
P&#13;
AB&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
provlde activities&#13;
for Parkside  students.  Per-&#13;
haps Mark does not&#13;
think&#13;
that&#13;
the students should receive&#13;
TOP prtortty when an event&#13;
is being&#13;
planned.&#13;
I&#13;
agree that some students&#13;
may  choose not to attent&#13;
events on campus&#13;
Ii&#13;
they can-&#13;
not bring a friend. But, In his&#13;
letter Mark talks about allow-&#13;
Ing&#13;
20&#13;
NON-STUDENTS Into&#13;
an event&#13;
that&#13;
was planned&#13;
and paid for by the&#13;
sru-&#13;
DENTS. C,mon Mark.  get&#13;
real!&#13;
If&#13;
we can allow the stu-&#13;
dents to bring a guest so they&#13;
have someone&#13;
to&#13;
talk&#13;
to.&#13;
let's&#13;
do&#13;
It.&#13;
but don't spend the&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
JIlOlje.)L.Oll,&#13;
NON·&#13;
STUDENTS_&#13;
THE&#13;
STU-&#13;
DENTS   MUST   COME&#13;
FIRST!&#13;
In&#13;
one of Mark's  closing&#13;
statements he uses the word,&#13;
"crazy"&#13;
in&#13;
reference&#13;
to&#13;
me.&#13;
I&#13;
would Uke to remind Mark of&#13;
the strong 1Il0vemenl' to get&#13;
the cage removed last year.&#13;
The current 'pollcy Is the re-&#13;
sult of months of work&#13;
by&#13;
many students, including my-&#13;
self and past P&#13;
AB&#13;
officers.&#13;
If&#13;
you ,re&#13;
calling&#13;
me crazy&#13;
Mark then at least&#13;
I&#13;
am not&#13;
alone.&#13;
I could go on&#13;
to&#13;
answer&#13;
each  misconception,  para-&#13;
graph  by  paragraph,   In&#13;
Mark's letter, but by now&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
you all realize  that&#13;
Mark Is trying&#13;
to&#13;
make this a&#13;
personal vendetta. I&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
stoop that low. Mark&#13;
is&#13;
the&#13;
only person I know that has&#13;
ever compared P&#13;
AB&#13;
to a&#13;
Nee-&#13;
Nazi organization!&#13;
PAB members recognized&#13;
See&#13;
Leiter,&#13;
p.&#13;
3&#13;
IT WAS FAIRLY&#13;
AMUSING  WHEl'l&#13;
HE JOKED ON&#13;
SEPTEMBER.&#13;
1WENTY'FIFTH&#13;
1HAT IT WM&#13;
C.HRISTMAS,&#13;
Non-trads have it made&#13;
Non.tradltlonal  students. We have&#13;
tt&#13;
made. We've&#13;
been&#13;
out In the world for awhile. In some Instances&#13;
a&#13;
long&#13;
while. so we know what we want out of&#13;
life.&#13;
We've had varying degrees of expertence dealing&#13;
With&#13;
people In counUess ways so we can easily handle different&#13;
teaching styles and class sttuatlons.  Our social ltves&#13;
are&#13;
well established so we don't look' to our time on&#13;
campus&#13;
as a time for Interactldn and growth.&#13;
We've done all these things and can now concenlrsts&#13;
fully and exclusively on our studies. Right?&#13;
Wrong! To many people - other students, faculty,&#13;
sci.&#13;
mlnlstators, family and friends - these truths seem&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
self-evldent. However,&#13;
if&#13;
you could climb Into the mind&#13;
of&#13;
one of us "non-trads" you would see how far from&#13;
the&#13;
troth those assumpttons can be.&#13;
We come to school&#13;
with&#13;
just as much baggage as every·&#13;
one else. Most of us are back In the academic&#13;
realm&#13;
be-&#13;
cause we are at a' turnlng point In our lives. Weoften&#13;
come&#13;
in&#13;
search of new direction or&#13;
with&#13;
a direction&#13;
in&#13;
mind that changes as SWiftly as that of the traditional&#13;
freshman.&#13;
WhIle we do have social lives and support systems,&#13;
many times they are not able to absorb the unique&#13;
experi-&#13;
ence of being back&#13;
in&#13;
school. Yet. because of lifeexperl-&#13;
ences,&#13;
we know how important it Is to take full advantsge&#13;
of an oppportunlty like education.&#13;
We want more than reading and writing, We've come&#13;
to&#13;
a place In our lives that enables us to celebrate the d1/fer·.&#13;
ences In people and we want&#13;
to&#13;
be a part of the&#13;
eelebra-&#13;
tion. We are trying to tie all the pieces together somehow,&#13;
to&#13;
add a new facet while maintaining the old ones,&#13;
Being a&#13;
non-trad&#13;
has its benefits. We do have&#13;
a&#13;
long&#13;
hls·&#13;
tory&#13;
to&#13;
draw on when In new&#13;
situattons,&#13;
professors seem&#13;
fairly approachable  and we usually have a support&#13;
sys·&#13;
tem willing&#13;
to&#13;
help us even though they rarely understsnd&#13;
us.&#13;
But being an older student, by virtue of itself, doesn't&#13;
ma~e our time in school easier. We want as&#13;
much&#13;
as&#13;
the&#13;
tadltional&#13;
student,&#13;
maybe more. We want it&#13;
all,&#13;
Wehaves&#13;
lot&#13;
to&#13;
offer but we also want to listen. So the next time&#13;
you&#13;
see an "old person" sitting&#13;
in&#13;
the coffee shop&#13;
come&#13;
over&#13;
and say&#13;
"Hi".&#13;
Let's&#13;
talk.&#13;
Ask me what&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
to&#13;
bs&#13;
when&#13;
I&#13;
grow&#13;
up,&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron ......•..••....•.......•...  Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kelly&#13;
McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Laura Pestka ••.•..•........ Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kevin  Zirkelbsch   ...........•.........•..&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
John  Kehoe  .•.....•..•.••..•..•.••.•.....   Photo  Editor&#13;
Christine  Dejno&#13;
Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
"&#13;
AdviSOf&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Cratg Simpkins&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John M~uter&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Curt Shlrcel&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Dayid&#13;
Boyd, Sheila&#13;
Bugal~ki,  Ruben Carbajal,  Dan&#13;
C~lapetta, Tim&#13;
Cook,&#13;
DaVId Debish, Tricia Ebner.&#13;
MIChelle  Gasl.  Lyndssy.  Knosll,  George  Koenig,  Mark&#13;
Hall, Abu Hasse,".  DaVid Heller, Jill Janovicz,  Sharon&#13;
Krause, t:teather Malzahn, Karen McKissick,  Geraldine&#13;
M.urawski, carl~   Newman, George&#13;
Otson,&#13;
Mike&#13;
PIC8ZO,&#13;
Scott Si"i!"f,&#13;
Rob Twardy, Daniel Vsllin&#13;
Mtchelle Van KOnlngsve!d&#13;
,&#13;
~:nagn~~o~:~~~nl:~~pe~~tl~dhb&#13;
Y&#13;
d&#13;
students of UW·Par~ide. who are solely responsiblefor&#13;
its ~&#13;
=:&#13;
days.&#13;
.&#13;
IS&#13;
e  every Thursday durmg the academic year except over br~&#13;
liN&#13;
le~~~~~~t~:   :~itor&#13;
Will.&#13;
be accepted only if they are typed, double-_spacedand&#13;
350&#13;
wordS ~r 1eSS',AI&#13;
held upon reques~~ned,With a telephone number Included for verification purposes. Nameswill&#13;
be&#13;
with'&#13;
f=~e~~eserves&#13;
the&#13;
right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
Deadline for all letters  and  I&#13;
sil'&#13;
.&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
•&#13;
c&#13;
as&#13;
led ads, IS Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
All correspondence shOUld&#13;
be&#13;
dd&#13;
nosha WI 53141. Telephone 4f4lt53-eSS2ed2st70:ERanger,UW-Parkside,  Box 2000,&#13;
Ke-&#13;
Ing).&#13;
( dltonal)&#13;
Of&#13;
414/553-2295  (Adver1JS-&#13;
</text>
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              <text>No losers in this PSGA election</text>
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              <text>&#13;
.";'&#13;
102&#13;
98&#13;
80&#13;
78&#13;
72·&#13;
72-&#13;
70&#13;
70&#13;
57&#13;
;,&#13;
118&#13;
United  Council  turnout  was  as&#13;
lopsided  as&#13;
it&#13;
was  with  all  the&#13;
bad  press,   The  students   have&#13;
spoken  and  we  will  reamin   in&#13;
United   Council,"   PSGA  Vice-&#13;
President&#13;
Ross    Pettit&#13;
com-&#13;
mented.&#13;
Pettit&#13;
explained&#13;
that&#13;
ap-&#13;
proximately&#13;
100&#13;
ballots  had  to&#13;
be   discounted&#13;
because    they&#13;
were    not   authorized&#13;
at   the&#13;
polls   with   the   initials   of  the&#13;
person   working   the  polls.  He&#13;
said   that   the   discounted   bal-&#13;
lots   were   checked,   but,  their&#13;
validity   did  not  affect  the  out-&#13;
come&#13;
of    any&#13;
races.&#13;
They&#13;
would   have    only   made    the&#13;
United&#13;
Council    referendum&#13;
numbers&#13;
a little  closer.&#13;
"It&#13;
was  a  pretty   good  turn-&#13;
out  for  a  Fall   election  where&#13;
the    only    competitive&#13;
issue&#13;
was   United   Council,"    Pettit&#13;
said.&#13;
Lewandowski  said  he  would&#13;
like   to   say   "Thank-you"&#13;
to&#13;
everyone   who  helped   out&#13;
at&#13;
the    voting    polls,    The   new&#13;
Senators,&#13;
SUFAC   seat&#13;
and&#13;
PUAB  seat   will  be   formally&#13;
accepted   at  the  Nov.&#13;
4&#13;
PSGA&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Spring   elections   for  PSGA&#13;
will   be   held   in   the   eighth&#13;
week  of the  Spring  semester.&#13;
Donovan new chair of SUFAC&#13;
,&#13;
probably  be  used  for  a&#13;
$25,000&#13;
disallowance    that   was   spent&#13;
last   year   because   of  low  en-&#13;
rollment.   "We have  two years&#13;
to  pay   back   those   funds,   so&#13;
we&#13;
will&#13;
probably   use   a   per-&#13;
centage   of  the  excess   money&#13;
to    repay&#13;
the    UW-System,"&#13;
Donovan  said.&#13;
SUFAC  also   discussed   the&#13;
$17,170&#13;
Administrative&#13;
As-&#13;
sessment   Fee  that   was&#13;
hand-&#13;
ed   over    to   the    committee.&#13;
Donovan    said    the    Chancel-&#13;
lor's   office   paid   that   fee   in&#13;
previous   years.    •&#13;
'It&#13;
does  not&#13;
seem  very  fair  that&#13;
if&#13;
~ere   is&#13;
a   surplUS  of  _mone~&#13;
10&#13;
the&#13;
sUF AC budget   at  the  end  of&#13;
the   fiscal   year,   It  Is  lost   to&#13;
Administration.    We discussed&#13;
the  injustice  of having  to pl~k&#13;
up    this    assessment&#13;
fee&#13;
m&#13;
addition   to   losing   our   extra&#13;
money&#13;
to&#13;
Administration&#13;
if&#13;
it&#13;
isn't  spent  within  the  budget.&#13;
"Our   argument    is  that   the&#13;
extra    money&#13;
in&#13;
the   SUFAC&#13;
budget&#13;
Is    still&#13;
segregated&#13;
fees    so  it  should  still  be  our&#13;
mon'ey_&#13;
It&#13;
seems   like  we  ar~&#13;
getting&#13;
taken&#13;
two&#13;
ways,&#13;
See&#13;
SUFAC,&#13;
page&#13;
2&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
steve&#13;
"Rocky"   Donovan   is&#13;
!OOktng&#13;
forward  to  an  "easier&#13;
~dent process"&#13;
this&#13;
year   as&#13;
catIOn&#13;
t University  Fees   Allo-&#13;
""••_Committee&#13;
(SUCAFO&#13;
- ....man&#13;
because&#13;
of&#13;
in-&#13;
~d&#13;
etudent&#13;
enrollment.&#13;
_"wan&#13;
was  elected   chair-&#13;
last  ~&#13;
the  SUFAC  meeting&#13;
Is&#13;
rsday,&#13;
3-0-1.&#13;
SUF AC&#13;
tho&#13;
re&amp;IJonsiblefor  dealing  with&#13;
bUdgets  of    all&#13;
major&#13;
:)'tua&#13;
organizations,&#13;
the&#13;
~on&#13;
bUilding&#13;
and&#13;
all  facili-&#13;
'N1&#13;
on&#13;
campus  that    operate&#13;
~tudent    segregated   fees.&#13;
lot&#13;
ovan&#13;
is&#13;
a  fifth  year   sen-&#13;
lIIe&#13;
on&#13;
campus   and    was    a&#13;
lie&#13;
IIlberof SUFAC last   year.&#13;
caue&#13;
was&#13;
elected  chairman    be-&#13;
ence&#13;
e he has  the  most  expert-&#13;
bere.&#13;
Of&#13;
all&#13;
the  SUF AC&#13;
mern-&#13;
8:1&#13;
ftrst   task   in   front   of&#13;
aulltts&#13;
C&#13;
Is&#13;
to&#13;
look  at  October&#13;
e~e&#13;
"to&#13;
find    out    where&#13;
etelyone Is  with  their   budg-&#13;
!rack&#13;
and&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
if&#13;
they're&#13;
on&#13;
.. ,__   With&#13;
all   the   program-&#13;
';;.:~that they  said  they  were&#13;
--'I:&#13;
to&#13;
use  their   money   for&#13;
Steve  "Rocky"   Donovan&#13;
in  the  previous&#13;
~UF&#13;
AC budg-&#13;
et  •• Donovan  satd.&#13;
:'At   the   first    meeting    we&#13;
talked    about    the   enrollment&#13;
figures&#13;
and&#13;
the   increase&#13;
m&#13;
se&#13;
egated&#13;
fees&#13;
money&#13;
gr&#13;
000)&#13;
we  have   right&#13;
now.&#13;
~'brieflY&#13;
discussed&#13;
some&#13;
tentative    plans   as  to  ho~   ~:&#13;
ld   use   that    money.&#13;
~~~la~ed   that   the  money  will&#13;
Thursday. October 27. 19BB&#13;
PUAB finaUy reaches&#13;
alcohol policy decision&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
No&#13;
losers in this&#13;
PSGA&#13;
election&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
""'"&#13;
,.",..  .'., .,.' .'.&#13;
.&#13;
'"&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
Ii&#13;
'~&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
"&#13;
seaI8&#13;
Iumed  out  as   follows:&#13;
1latk&#13;
"Swmy"&#13;
Hall,&#13;
102;&#13;
IIark&#13;
Thompson,&#13;
98;&#13;
Kelly&#13;
I&#13;
IlcKlsslck,&#13;
80;&#13;
Jenny   UUsch,&#13;
18;&#13;
Norman   Delaney,&#13;
72;&#13;
Debt&#13;
Jl'rttschow,&#13;
72;&#13;
Terri&#13;
I&#13;
DeItosIer,&#13;
70:&#13;
Karen   Pitsoul-&#13;
IId8,&#13;
70&#13;
and  William  Horner,&#13;
51.&#13;
Tlte   Student&#13;
University&#13;
Fees&#13;
Allocation   Committee&#13;
(SUFAC)&#13;
open seat  was  filled&#13;
by&#13;
Debl Fritschow    with&#13;
117&#13;
votes.&#13;
carol&#13;
Curl&#13;
took    the&#13;
Partslde   Union    _AdVisory&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB) open  seat  with&#13;
Il8'voles.&#13;
Although&#13;
there   was   propa-&#13;
glIIIda&#13;
floating&#13;
around&#13;
eaDI\IUB&#13;
for    the&#13;
past&#13;
two&#13;
...&#13;
about   the    pros&#13;
and&#13;
-&#13;
of&#13;
United   Council,    the&#13;
IIulIeIita&#13;
decided  It  would   be&#13;
worthwhileto  stay   in  United&#13;
Qluncil,&#13;
for  two  more   years&#13;
wlth&#13;
118&#13;
In&#13;
favor  of  the  refer-&#13;
endumand&#13;
43&#13;
opposed.&#13;
"Personally,&#13;
I&#13;
was  pleased&#13;
IIlat&#13;
we're   stili    in&#13;
United&#13;
CouncU,". PSGA&#13;
President&#13;
Jay&#13;
Lewandowskisaid.&#13;
. "I'm   surprised&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
At last,  after  months  of sug-&#13;
gestions,   arguments&#13;
and   an&#13;
opinion&#13;
poll,&#13;
the&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
Union&#13;
Advisory&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB)&#13;
has  made&#13;
a&#13;
decision&#13;
on    the&#13;
alcohol&#13;
polley&#13;
for&#13;
dances.&#13;
Through  a  8-0-0 vote  at  the&#13;
meeting  held  Friday,   Oct.&#13;
21,&#13;
PUAB&#13;
decided  to  pass  a  new&#13;
policy   allowing   the   sponsor-&#13;
ing&#13;
organization&#13;
to&#13;
decide  the&#13;
alcohol  policy  for  their  dance.&#13;
Organizations   have   three   op-&#13;
tions to  choose  from:&#13;
(1)&#13;
hav-&#13;
ing the beer  garden  up,  allow-&#13;
ing guests&#13;
18&#13;
and&#13;
up&#13;
to attend&#13;
the&#13;
dance   but   allowing   only&#13;
those  of legal  drinking  age  to&#13;
. enter-&#13;
the   beer    garden,&#13;
(2)&#13;
keeping'&#13;
the&#13;
beer&#13;
garden&#13;
down, allowing  guests  only  of&#13;
legal   drinking   age&#13;
to&#13;
attend&#13;
the&#13;
dance  by  allowing  beer  to&#13;
be  consumed  anywhere&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Union  Square  or&#13;
(3)&#13;
having&#13;
a&#13;
dry&#13;
dance,  opening  the  event&#13;
up to the  general  public.&#13;
The  polley  was  amended   to&#13;
state'  that   the  sponsoring   or-&#13;
ganization&#13;
must&#13;
report&#13;
to&#13;
PUAB&#13;
several    weeks   before&#13;
their  dance  Is&#13;
to&#13;
be  held  with&#13;
the   rationale    for   their&#13;
dect-&#13;
sion  on  the  alcohol  polley  for&#13;
that   event.   The   amendment&#13;
passed&#13;
8-0-0.&#13;
The  new  policy  was  imple-&#13;
mented&#13;
in&#13;
the   hopes   of  ap-&#13;
pealing  to  all  student&#13;
organi-&#13;
zatlons.  Diane  Welsh,  Coordi-&#13;
nator    of   Student    Activities,&#13;
felt  the  new polley would  be a&#13;
good Idea  because   sponsoring&#13;
organizations   know what  kind&#13;
of audiences   they  will  attract&#13;
with   the   entertainment&#13;
they&#13;
choose.&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board   (PAB)  Live  Entertain-&#13;
ment  Chairman   Franca   Sava-&#13;
gUo stated  that  P AB will&#13;
pro-&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
J&#13;
ompson&#13;
gram&#13;
dances    that&#13;
will&#13;
fall&#13;
under  all  three  alcohol  polley&#13;
options  next  semester.&#13;
Mark&#13;
Thompson,&#13;
PUAB&#13;
Chairman,&#13;
said,    "I'm&#13;
very&#13;
glad  it's  over.  We're  satisfied&#13;
with   the  outcome.&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
It&#13;
will&#13;
help  out  a  lot  with  dance&#13;
programming.&#13;
'0&#13;
PUAB also  discussed  the al-&#13;
cohol policy  options  for  other&#13;
campus  special  events  (come-&#13;
dians,  P AB Night  LIfe events,&#13;
etc.)   because   they  have  been&#13;
growing    in   popularity&#13;
over&#13;
the   past   few   years.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
agreed   that   the  beer   garden&#13;
would  not  be  put  up  for  these&#13;
events,   so&#13;
PUAB&#13;
focused  its&#13;
attention   on  security  officers.&#13;
Welsh  felt   that   at   least   one&#13;
officer   should   be   present   at&#13;
the   event.    She   said    others&#13;
could  be   hired&#13;
If&#13;
the   event&#13;
seems&#13;
to&#13;
be  generating&#13;
a&#13;
lot&#13;
of student  interest.&#13;
The  Issue  was  tabled   until&#13;
the   next   PUAB   meeting&#13;
so&#13;
more    information&#13;
could   be&#13;
obtained  on costs  for addition-&#13;
al  officers.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Page  2...·&#13;
-&#13;
Halloween  hoaXed&#13;
for&#13;
Madison·&#13;
:'&#13;
Page&#13;
3...&#13;
Contradictions    surface   over&#13;
second  shift   safety  on  campus&#13;
Page&#13;
5...&#13;
New  Briefs,   Wingspread   Conference,&#13;
Book  Sales  and  morel&#13;
Page&#13;
6..•&#13;
Counselor's   ~orner,.  ~Ia~s.&#13;
Page&#13;
9...&#13;
","&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
Cartoons,   Comics  arid&#13;
Laughs,.,.&#13;
Page-11&#13;
,&amp;&gt; ...~,..&#13;
.'..&#13;
.&#13;
SpoJ:l:S   .. '&#13;
2 Thursday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
27,1988 Ranger&#13;
..&#13;
SUFAC's chair looking ahead&#13;
SUFAC,&#13;
trom&#13;
PIIfI8&#13;
1&#13;
Idea for their organization&#13;
Donovan said.&#13;
and&#13;
can&#13;
explain how they will&#13;
The budgeting process for  use more money, then they&#13;
the 1989-90 flscal year will&#13;
will&#13;
probably get an increase&#13;
begin&#13;
during&#13;
Chrislmas&#13;
In&#13;
their budgel. However,&#13;
If&#13;
break. Donovan sald he would  they  cannot justify  lhings&#13;
like presentations of tentative  they have done in the pasl&#13;
budgets&#13;
to be made during  and&#13;
It&#13;
'seems like money has&#13;
the Christmas  break, have  been wasted, budgets. will still&#13;
SUF AC&#13;
go over those&#13;
budgets   be cut,&#13;
I.&#13;
Donovan said.&#13;
and make suggestions and   He explained&#13;
that&#13;
campus&#13;
then have the approval of the  operating costs and salaries&#13;
finalized budgets early&#13;
in&#13;
the  also increase every year, so&#13;
Spring semester.&#13;
SUFAC does not really have a&#13;
Although there is an&#13;
In-&#13;
large  excess  of  money.&#13;
crease in segregated fees lhis&#13;
"$50,000&#13;
looks like a lot of&#13;
year,&#13;
"It&#13;
does not mean that  money, but&#13;
If&#13;
you look at the&#13;
we are  going&#13;
to&#13;
increase  percentage of that sum that&#13;
everybody's  budget.  You  we will have to pay in in-&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
look at how&#13;
organiza-&#13;
creased prices, thai Is not&#13;
tiona used their money this  really $50,000 of new reve-&#13;
year.&#13;
If&#13;
someone has a good&#13;
Due,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
.~&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Halloween hoaxed for Madison&#13;
The Madison Police&#13;
Depart-&#13;
Street  event -due&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
ment would like your cooper-  change in the legal drinking&#13;
atlon in alerling your&#13;
reader-&#13;
age and increased  liability&#13;
s/listeners&#13;
to&#13;
the fact that  costs. As a&#13;
result,&#13;
there will&#13;
there&#13;
will&#13;
be no Halloween  be no provision&#13;
to&#13;
close&#13;
party on State Slreet&#13;
Ihis&#13;
Oc-  streets  and all City ordi-&#13;
tober-  31&#13;
in Madison. The  nances, such as open&#13;
tntoxr.&#13;
event's past sponsor, the Wls-  cants and public consumption&#13;
consin Student Association,  of alcohol,&#13;
will&#13;
be strictly en.&#13;
will&#13;
no longer fund the State  forced.&#13;
Alcohol Awareness&#13;
by&#13;
Scott&#13;
Singer&#13;
An&#13;
open debate  on the&#13;
state's drinking age was held&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 19, as&#13;
part  of Parkslde's  Alcohol&#13;
Awareness  Week. Keith Rob-&#13;
erts,  a drug and alcohol&#13;
counsetor,&#13;
and&#13;
GU&#13;
Meisgeler.&#13;
President  of  the  Tavern&#13;
League of Wisconsin, debated&#13;
as to what the legal age for&#13;
consumption of alcoholic bev-&#13;
erages in Wisconsin should&#13;
be: 19or 21.&#13;
Alcohol Awareness  Week.&#13;
which was sponsored by Resi-&#13;
dence Life. Campus Police.&#13;
Student. Activities, and the&#13;
Rec Center. presented&#13;
this.&#13;
and other activities, to ralse&#13;
the knowledge and awareness&#13;
of the students. Attracting&#13;
25-&#13;
30 people, the debate was&#13;
held in&#13;
MaIn&#13;
Place.&#13;
Roberts, a recovertng ad.&#13;
dict himself, supported the 21&#13;
year-old drinking age. Stress.&#13;
ing&#13;
education .as&#13;
his&#13;
key&#13;
point, Roberts sald he pro.&#13;
motes "decisions based on&#13;
factual Information." Contra.&#13;
dieting the very essence of&#13;
the debate, Roberts claimed&#13;
to be neither pro nor con on&#13;
the drinking age of 21. He&#13;
cited interaction with "vic.&#13;
tims of substance  abuse."&#13;
and proceeded&#13;
to&#13;
preach the&#13;
evils of alcohol.&#13;
.,Alcohol opens the door for&#13;
a&#13;
Officer Brian Ketterhagen end RA Jackie Connors hend out alco-&#13;
hol awareness pamphleta before the debate.&#13;
.&#13;
rant/tavern.  He stoood for the&#13;
drinking age of 19.Calling his&#13;
opponent and those who sup.&#13;
port the present age of 21&#13;
"prohibitionists",   Melsgeier&#13;
said that they were imposing&#13;
prohibition on a class of citi-&#13;
zens: those under the age qf&#13;
21. He feels that legislators&#13;
passed the law to please a&#13;
certain  type of voter.  He&#13;
claimed that they do not think&#13;
that 18, 19, and&#13;
20&#13;
year olds&#13;
vote, and that the meetings&#13;
. and debates were dominated&#13;
by "senior citizens that have&#13;
nothing better to do."&#13;
-When the drinking age was&#13;
raised&#13;
to&#13;
21 in Michigan in&#13;
1930,the consumption of alco-&#13;
hoi did not change. Melsgeier&#13;
said this was because  the&#13;
same poeple were drinking&#13;
even&#13;
if&#13;
they. were under age.&#13;
they  just  found  different&#13;
ways.  With a  bill  being&#13;
worked on for a lower&#13;
drink-&#13;
ing&#13;
age, he said the Tavern&#13;
League and himself want to&#13;
pro"'de younger adults with a&#13;
better drinking environment.&#13;
Stating that the higher 'age&#13;
has forced 19and&#13;
20&#13;
year-olds&#13;
"out of the bars and into the&#13;
cars."&#13;
he wants to see these&#13;
people drinking in an estab-&#13;
lishment rather than&#13;
in&#13;
an un-&#13;
controlled  environment.  He&#13;
argued that&#13;
If&#13;
these drinkers&#13;
drink in a legal environment&#13;
they have presures not only&#13;
-&#13;
other substances,"  Roberts&#13;
claimed.  "You  are  more&#13;
likely to&#13;
try&#13;
other substances&#13;
when under the influence of&#13;
alcohol." He made an analo-&#13;
gy&#13;
of what alcohol does&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
body, and compared alcohol&#13;
eating away paint off of a&#13;
piece of wood&#13;
to&#13;
alcohol eat-&#13;
ing away at the mind and.&#13;
morals of&#13;
a&#13;
person.&#13;
Although he did not present&#13;
any actual statistics or infor-&#13;
mation, Roberts did take a&#13;
strong stance on making good&#13;
judgment calls.&#13;
"If&#13;
you need&#13;
alcohol  to  socialize,  then&#13;
you've got&#13;
a&#13;
problem."  he&#13;
said. Because of what alcohol&#13;
does&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
person under its&#13;
in-&#13;
fluence, he urged that when&#13;
"people choose&#13;
to&#13;
drink, they&#13;
be responsible  about their&#13;
drinking." He also said' that&#13;
people should go beyond what&#13;
they hear from people SUch&#13;
as himself and research for&#13;
themselves  effectively  to&#13;
make an intelligent decision.&#13;
Meisgeier,&#13;
in&#13;
addition&#13;
to&#13;
his&#13;
role as President of the Tav-&#13;
ern League. owns a restau-&#13;
from their peers, but from&#13;
older adults and owners who&#13;
may ask them to leave&#13;
If&#13;
they&#13;
get out of hand.&#13;
The floor was opened up&#13;
to&#13;
questions  after  the debate.&#13;
Jay Lewandowski, President&#13;
of the Student Government&#13;
Assoclalton,  presented  the&#13;
fact that in the first year&#13;
after- the drinking age was&#13;
raised,  deaths  related&#13;
to&#13;
drunk driving decreased. he&#13;
also stated  that after that&#13;
year. that number increased&#13;
until&#13;
It&#13;
surpassed the ortginal&#13;
level.  Melsgeier  attributed&#13;
this to uncontrolled underage&#13;
drinking&#13;
In.&#13;
which groups of&#13;
drinkers, who may have only&#13;
wanted&#13;
to&#13;
drink  a smail&#13;
amount, pooled their money&#13;
to buy liquor in bulk and pro.&#13;
ceeded&#13;
to&#13;
drink&#13;
It&#13;
all.&#13;
StreSSing that the present&#13;
drinking age was passed by&#13;
only two votes.  Meisgeier&#13;
presented many solutions.&#13;
be-&#13;
yond lowering the drinking&#13;
age,&#13;
to&#13;
control the deaths and&#13;
other problems related&#13;
to&#13;
ex-&#13;
cesslve drinking. He proposed&#13;
educallon at the junior high&#13;
level&#13;
to&#13;
prepare for drinking&#13;
In&#13;
later life.&#13;
In&#13;
addition&#13;
to&#13;
et-&#13;
forts SUch as the Designated&#13;
Driver Program. he proposed&#13;
systems to make drinking be-&#13;
fore the age of 21 a privilege&#13;
that could be taken away&#13;
if&#13;
abused.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins  ,&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John Marter&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Curt Shiresl&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
David Boyd, Sheila Buqatecki,  Ruben Carbajal,  Dan&#13;
Chiapetta,  Tim Cook, David Debish, Tricia Ebner.&#13;
Michelle  Galli, Lyndsay Knoell, George Koenig,  Mark&#13;
Hall, Abu Hassein,  David Helfer, Jill Janovlcz,  Sharon&#13;
Krause, Jeff Lewis. Heather  Malzahn,  Karen&#13;
McKissick.  Geraldine  Murawski.  Carlise  Newman.&#13;
George Olson. Mike Picazo, Scott Singer, Bill Topper,&#13;
Rob Twardy,  Daniel Vallin, Michelle  Van Koningsveld&#13;
Ranger is written and edit~d by studems of UW-Parkside, Who are solely responsible for its editorial pol~.&#13;
cy and content. It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday durmg the academic year except over breaks&#13;
and holl.&#13;
days.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
letters  to the ednor will. be accepted only if they are typed, double-spaced  and 350 words or less'.NI&#13;
letters must be SIgned, WIth&#13;
a&#13;
telephone number included. for verification  purposes  Names will be&#13;
WIth-&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
famatory.&#13;
Deadline for all letters, and classified ads,-is Monday at 10 a m  for publication&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
'  .&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside, Box 2000, Ke-&#13;
nosha WI 53141, Telephone 414/553-2287  (Editonal) Or 414/553-2295  (AdvertiS-&#13;
Ing).&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
Editcr-ln-Chtet&#13;
Kelly&#13;
McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Laura Pestka&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
John Kehoe&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Christine  Dejno&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
Advisor&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 17, issue 8, October 27, 1988</text>
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              <text>Constitutional debate held at Parkside</text>
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              <text>Constitutional debate held at Parkside&#13;
PSGA takes 'initiative'&#13;
by Kevin Zlrkeillach&#13;
with minority concerns&#13;
Parkslde's Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Theatrewas the site of a live-&#13;
ly debate Wednesday   Oct.&#13;
24th,titled "political  Action&#13;
Committeesand the Constitu-&#13;
tion:Are They Compatible?"&#13;
Thiswas fourth in a series  of&#13;
programs at  Parkside   cele-&#13;
brating the&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
of&#13;
the United States  Constitu-&#13;
tion.&#13;
The discussion featured  a&#13;
number of&#13;
prominent and&#13;
knowledgeable participants.&#13;
Opening the  program   was&#13;
ProfessorKenneth R. Hoover,&#13;
formerprofessor of Parkside,&#13;
now&#13;
at the center  for  20th&#13;
CenturyStudies, UW-Milwau-&#13;
kee.&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Assembly-&#13;
man. Jeff Neubauer.&#13;
made&#13;
a&#13;
short presentation   outlining&#13;
hiS&#13;
personal experience  with&#13;
politicalaction committees  or&#13;
PAC's. Four  panelists,   two&#13;
pro and two con,  included:&#13;
senator WUliam  Proxrrrire ;&#13;
prominentWisconsin lobbyist&#13;
Peter Chrlstlanson;  Common&#13;
Cause&#13;
in&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
Execu~&#13;
UTeDirector Willtam Hauda;&#13;
and&#13;
Wisconsin Education  As-&#13;
sociationCouncil's Executive&#13;
SecrelaO' Morris  Andrews.&#13;
AUwere there  to deal  with&#13;
the question of the  constitu-&#13;
llonality of PAC's  and  their&#13;
lnfiuenceon the political elec-&#13;
lionprocess.&#13;
Political action committeeS&#13;
ARE&#13;
non-party organizations&#13;
or political interest  groups&#13;
that contribute money to can-&#13;
didates  for  publtc   office.&#13;
PAC's  have  always   been&#13;
around&#13;
in&#13;
one  form  or&#13;
an-:&#13;
other, but  the  number  and&#13;
kinds of PAC's  have  grown&#13;
sharply since the passage  of&#13;
the  1971 Federal   Election&#13;
Campaign Fund Act. Amend-&#13;
ments added in 1974 limited&#13;
PAC contributions  to  $5000&#13;
per election for each&#13;
candi-&#13;
dste for federal office. At the&#13;
state level, much more gener-&#13;
ous gifts  are  ailowed  and&#13;
many states have no limits at&#13;
au.&#13;
Controversy arose  as  the&#13;
.,::umber of PAC's  grew  and&#13;
~oto&#13;
by John Kehoe&#13;
~llIiam&#13;
Hauda,. Executive  Director of Common Cause in Wiscon-&#13;
Sin, exp.lalns-hIS stance on public financing and why candidates&#13;
for public office should take advantage of it.&#13;
contributions   to  candidates&#13;
multiplied.  In 1974, PAC con-&#13;
tributions  totalled  $12.5 mil-&#13;
lion.  By  1984, this  grew  to&#13;
over $105 million. As of 1987,&#13;
PAC's  supplied  more  than&#13;
one-third of funds for House&#13;
candidates and close to one-&#13;
fifth of Congressional monies.&#13;
Senator Proxmire said that&#13;
PAC's  donations  unbalance&#13;
the  opportunity  that  candi-&#13;
dates have for running for of-&#13;
fice. He said that with PAC's,&#13;
elections become .'not a mat-&#13;
ter of free speech, but of dol-&#13;
lars." Proxmire argued that&#13;
many interest  groups. make&#13;
contributions to sway a legis-&#13;
lator's stand on key issues.&#13;
This,  he  states,  equates  to&#13;
"iegal bribery"  that has been&#13;
"perfumed  to kill the odor of&#13;
corruption. ,.&#13;
Morris  Andrews  made  the&#13;
rebuttal   that   some  PAC's&#13;
allow. people without individ-&#13;
ual political  clout to make&#13;
their  views  and  attitudes&#13;
heard. Historically,  he said,&#13;
teachers  have been one of&#13;
these&#13;
under-represented&#13;
groups.  Andrews  said educa-&#13;
tion PAC's have a positive,&#13;
balancing  influence  by unit-&#13;
ing people  with common  in-&#13;
terests  and  providing  them&#13;
with a means to vocalize their&#13;
concerns,  Andrews did not&#13;
support  all PAC's, just ones&#13;
that did not center on single&#13;
issues.&#13;
In&#13;
regard to the legiti-&#13;
macy of PAC's, Andrews felt&#13;
that&#13;
If&#13;
pOlitical  candidates&#13;
make total and complete dis-&#13;
closures  of their campaign&#13;
expenditures, it would then be&#13;
up  to  the  general  common&#13;
sense of the voters to decide&#13;
whether  or  not the  funding&#13;
methods were acceptable.&#13;
William Hauda agreed that&#13;
there was the need for full&#13;
disclosure. but did not feel&#13;
that  that  would solve  the&#13;
whole  problem  of  alleged&#13;
PAC abuses. He went on to&#13;
cite the problems of donations&#13;
from other sources. These in-&#13;
cluded  the  several  thousand&#13;
dollar   honorariums   for&#13;
speeches  and  appearances,&#13;
$100 per plate luncheons and&#13;
breakfasts, as well as other&#13;
campaign  fundraisers.  He&#13;
emphasized   the  point  that&#13;
PAC's only represent a small&#13;
minority of the populace who&#13;
are  trying  to advance  their&#13;
economic agenda.&#13;
Hauda  suggested  that peo-&#13;
ple should take advantage  of&#13;
the "public financing" option.&#13;
See Debafe,&#13;
page&#13;
3 .&#13;
Thursday. Nov.&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Although Parkside  has not&#13;
experienced any major mi-&#13;
nority  student  problems,  a&#13;
student government organiza-&#13;
tion effort has arisen to cover&#13;
this   and.  other   minority&#13;
topics. The Minority Actions&#13;
Committee  (MAC)  was  de-&#13;
signed  to handle  any  prob-&#13;
lems that might occur con-&#13;
cerning minority students,  in&#13;
addition  to promoting  "posi-&#13;
tive ethnic relations,"  said&#13;
Ross Pettit.&#13;
In&#13;
the fall of 1987,under the&#13;
direction  of G. Gary  Grace,&#13;
Wayne Williams,  Director  of&#13;
the Center  for Cultural  Ad-&#13;
vancement, had been directed&#13;
to form a committee such as&#13;
MAC. Since&#13;
It&#13;
did not occur&#13;
as planned, "Student Govern-&#13;
ment  was  frustrated   by  a&#13;
lack  of significant  progress&#13;
by  the  administration   on&#13;
creating  such  a  committee.&#13;
So&#13;
we took the initiative,&#13;
H&#13;
said J. Mark&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Establshed  in April of 1988,&#13;
MAC Is headed by Hail,&#13;
Mi-&#13;
nority&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Director,  and&#13;
Pettit.&#13;
'vtce-Prestdent&#13;
of&#13;
3. 1988&#13;
PSGA. The committee  "was&#13;
created  with the intention of&#13;
increasing the studentj;  voice&#13;
in  minority   student   con-&#13;
cerns," Pettit said.&#13;
Pettit said that MAC "has a&#13;
mission  that  is two-fold:  to&#13;
monitor the effectiveness  of&#13;
policies Initiated"  by the va-&#13;
rious campus groups, and "to&#13;
promote  racial  harmony."&#13;
Pettit  also  stated  that  they&#13;
"want to make sure more&#13;
than lip service is paid to stu-&#13;
dent concerns. ,.&#13;
Pettit  feels  that  MAC is&#13;
unique&#13;
in&#13;
the sense that since&#13;
j&#13;
'Parkside  has  not&#13;
expert-&#13;
enced blatant&#13;
and&#13;
public sian.&#13;
der against  minorities."  Pet-&#13;
tit also said that the effort is&#13;
one of being "pro-active"&#13;
to-&#13;
ward minority student&#13;
con-&#13;
cerns, rather than waiting for&#13;
a  problem  to  occur  before&#13;
acting.&#13;
Pettit  was quick to stress&#13;
that the "watchdog  orgaruza-&#13;
tton"&#13;
represents more than&#13;
minorities. He satd that MAC&#13;
was  for the&#13;
j&#13;
'economically&#13;
disadvantaged&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
as&#13;
for&#13;
ethnic groups."&#13;
You've got something other peop e&#13;
are dying to have.&#13;
~.'.1&#13;
Those who give shall receive&#13;
by Geraldine Murawski&#13;
eo&#13;
The Student   Organization&#13;
uncil's  (SOC)  Food  for&#13;
Families   committee    is&#13;
Collecting donations of non-&#13;
parishable food items. Money&#13;
donations will  also  be  ac-&#13;
cepted.&#13;
Foodboxes will be placed in&#13;
ali faculty offices and at va-&#13;
rious other  sites  throughout&#13;
the University.  Linda  John-&#13;
son, Chairperson  for the Food&#13;
for Families  committee,  en-&#13;
cOUrages the  faculty,  staff,&#13;
students  and clubs to donate&#13;
generously.&#13;
Friday,  Nov. 11, PAB, in col-&#13;
laboration with SOC, is spon-&#13;
soring a dance that will fea-&#13;
ture   the  band   "Rhythmn&#13;
City."&#13;
Anyone donating two&#13;
non_parishable food items. at&#13;
the door will receive  a f,fty&#13;
percent  discount  off the cost&#13;
of admission.&#13;
In&#13;
'addition  to&#13;
half off admission,  Parkside's&#13;
Food Service  will be giving&#13;
away free drink coupons to&#13;
contributors.&#13;
Tuesday, nov. 22, the Ranger&#13;
men's  basketball  squad  will&#13;
be playing st. Xavier College&#13;
at the Phy. Ed. building. With&#13;
a donation of two&#13;
non-parish-&#13;
able food items, admission to&#13;
the game will be $1.&#13;
The saying,  "Those who&#13;
give shall receive,&#13;
,i&#13;
has&#13;
a great  deai  of merit  after&#13;
all.&#13;
.,&#13;
th,r",)H~1&#13;
'?tud~..&#13;
~:t _&#13;
"'rtaJ&#13;
tl:&#13;
to&#13;
Voter Reglstratlon&#13;
A,""",,"'  __&#13;
~""_~!l"IftQol .........-----_&#13;
......... --&#13;
_&#13;
_'I'I'I __&#13;
.. -.-.  •.•.&#13;
-.c.--   .&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Page 2&#13;
The Journeyof success&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The Counselor's Corner&#13;
Page 6&#13;
NAIA headline news and&#13;
,&#13;
Classifleds&#13;
Page 7 and 8&#13;
More sports!!!!&#13;
2 Thursday, Nov. 3, 1988 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
The journey&#13;
of success&#13;
DUKAKIS&#13;
This&#13;
product&#13;
may vary&#13;
in&#13;
passion and&#13;
liberalism&#13;
but&#13;
is&#13;
gen~ally acceptable&#13;
for&#13;
White&#13;
Household&#13;
usc.&#13;
by so«&#13;
Bearron&#13;
For many, going to college represents  a stepping stone,&#13;
a means to an end, that end being a degree wltich&#13;
will&#13;
open up the door&#13;
to&#13;
a more fulfilling career.  For others,&#13;
the university  experience  is one of self-improvement.&#13;
It&#13;
may be said of all students, you are on a path of success.&#13;
All&#13;
too&#13;
frequently, success is mistaken for a&#13;
destination,&#13;
when in reallty, it&#13;
is&#13;
a journey.&#13;
Occasionally.  when you perceive  this journey  to be a&#13;
destination. you lose sight of your purpose. When the&#13;
work. the exams,  the studies become  overbearing,  frus-&#13;
tration and apathy set in. It&#13;
is&#13;
at preciseiy this point that&#13;
you&#13;
must&#13;
remember  your mission:  this work no matter&#13;
how trivial it may seem,&#13;
is&#13;
another opportunity along the&#13;
journey.&#13;
.&#13;
Furthermore,  it is noi enough to just get the work com-&#13;
pleted. It must be the best you are capable of doing.&#13;
In&#13;
the 1950's and 60's, Sears came up with a promotional&#13;
idea&#13;
to&#13;
motivate their sales personnel&#13;
to&#13;
sell more expen-&#13;
sive products&#13;
with&#13;
longer warranties.  The Sears saying&#13;
may be one&#13;
to&#13;
which we, as students can subscribe.&#13;
"Good,&#13;
better,  best ...never let&#13;
it&#13;
rest ..&#13;
:tU&#13;
the good gets&#13;
better and the better gets best."&#13;
We are  midway&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
1988 Fall&#13;
semester.  The&#13;
going may be getting  tough, so just  remember,  that's&#13;
when the tough get going.&#13;
During this season of mid-terms,  keep your head above&#13;
water.  Hang  in there  and  continue  your  journey  of&#13;
success.&#13;
Where are American priorities?&#13;
have&#13;
mvtstoned&#13;
the American    when&#13;
it&#13;
comes&#13;
to&#13;
giving&#13;
of&#13;
dream  as they  entered  New   ourselves.   Selfishness&#13;
here&#13;
York. but who is more&#13;
impor-&#13;
demonstrates   the&#13;
degenera-&#13;
tant&#13;
human beings or a&#13;
sym-&#13;
tion of the inward person and&#13;
boli~ stone. Thousands  of&#13;
ho-&#13;
the lack of sensitivity for the&#13;
meless  cltildren,  teens,  and   welfare   of  fellow  human&#13;
adults  are  still  out  on  the   beings.&#13;
streets  of  New  York  ·City,    We're good at giving money&#13;
long after  the statue  festivi·   for&#13;
a&#13;
stone face&#13;
lift&#13;
or giving&#13;
ties were finished.&#13;
out&#13;
40'&#13;
dollars  for&#13;
the&#13;
newest&#13;
The trag-edy is we, the peo-   in sweaters  or pants. Yet,&#13;
we,&#13;
pie, put more priority  on the   the people, are terrible&#13;
at gtv.&#13;
outward appearance  of things   ing&#13;
40&#13;
hours of our time&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
than the&#13;
Inward&#13;
person which   organization  helping people.&#13;
is falling into decay. You see,&#13;
Chances are, we wouldmake&#13;
we people  are  really  selfish   it&#13;
to&#13;
our  favorite  activity,&#13;
Somewhere in the room&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
UW-Parkslde  com-&#13;
munity:&#13;
Several  times last year,  a&#13;
publication   entitled   Some-&#13;
where in the Room was dis-&#13;
tributed&#13;
throughout&#13;
the&#13;
campus.  This booklet, which&#13;
was  a  collection  of poetry,&#13;
short  stories,  artwork,  and&#13;
photography  offered students&#13;
both the chance to share their&#13;
work with others and the&#13;
op-&#13;
portunlty to be published.&#13;
This year, a new drive has&#13;
begun&#13;
to&#13;
keep  Parkside's&#13;
literary  magazine  alive  and&#13;
submissions  are  now  being&#13;
sought. Those who are willing&#13;
to contribute to Somewhere in&#13;
the  Room  can  place  their&#13;
work  in the  English  Club's&#13;
mailbox&#13;
in the PSGA office.&#13;
Somewhere&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Room&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
necessary  literary  voice here&#13;
at Parkside  and&#13;
I&#13;
encourage&#13;
.all&#13;
students  to submit  some-&#13;
thing of theirs to this publica-&#13;
tion.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Luke Klink&#13;
We the People .••&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Not&#13;
too&#13;
long ago  America&#13;
celebrated  the refurb"lshlng of&#13;
the Statue of LIberty. Millions&#13;
of dollars were spent&#13;
in&#13;
an at-&#13;
tempt&#13;
to&#13;
try  to patch  up a&#13;
symbolic stone and an Ameri-&#13;
can&#13;
conscience.&#13;
People&#13;
throughout the centuries have&#13;
tried to patch up the aesthet-&#13;
ics of society while the inside -&#13;
slowly rotted away.&#13;
It's  not wrong  to&#13;
fix&#13;
up a&#13;
statue   that   brings   back&#13;
memories  to thousands  who&#13;
No12odv.asked&#13;
me,&#13;
but. .•&#13;
Some&#13;
children received&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
treats on&#13;
Halloween&#13;
Halloween  is over,  but  It&#13;
hasn't   been  forgotten.   At&#13;
least not in my eyes and the&#13;
children who received  a spe-&#13;
cial  "treat"   in  their  bags.&#13;
Many found an&#13;
anti-Hallow-&#13;
een carton and brochure.&#13;
The cartoon  entitled  "The&#13;
Trick" is a story about "little&#13;
Johnny"  who&#13;
is&#13;
killed in the&#13;
name of satan whIle trtck-or-&#13;
treating.  It  depicts  several&#13;
scenes  of  satanic  worship.&#13;
The basic idea of the cartoon&#13;
is to convince children  that&#13;
Halloween&#13;
is&#13;
nothing but evil&#13;
and shouldn't  be celebrated.&#13;
Do&#13;
they actually  want us&#13;
to&#13;
believe that little kids dressed&#13;
up as angels and clowns are&#13;
evil because they go trick-or-&#13;
treating?  That's  what  hap-&#13;
pened to the kids in the car-&#13;
toon.&#13;
The  back  of  the  carloon&#13;
booklet says "compliments  of&#13;
Lighthouse  Baptist  Church.&#13;
Racine,  WI."  What  do they&#13;
think&#13;
this is going to accom-&#13;
plish? Sure. it may scare the&#13;
hell  out  of  little  kids  and&#13;
anger  parents.  but will any-&#13;
thing  constructive  come out&#13;
of it? Some of the older kids&#13;
may   get   their   curiosity&#13;
peaked  by this  and become&#13;
interested   in  the  topic  of&#13;
satanism.&#13;
The cartoon  was  also  ac-&#13;
companied  with  a  brochure&#13;
entitled  "The  Dark  Side  of&#13;
Halloween,"   by  David&#13;
L.&#13;
Brown. He states  that,  "Hal-&#13;
loween  has  always  been  a&#13;
celebration'  of  death,"   and&#13;
goes on to explain all of the&#13;
harmful effect. The last page&#13;
of the brochure  offers alter-&#13;
natives   to  Halloween.&#13;
In-&#13;
stead,  people  should  have&#13;
"Glory   Gatherings"   where&#13;
Christian  videos  are  played&#13;
and Christian songs are sung,&#13;
excluding  all  reference   to&#13;
Halloweeen.  Finally,  at  the&#13;
end there  are several  quotes&#13;
from the bible.&#13;
I&#13;
am  not, by far,  a devil&#13;
worshiper  or  an  athiest.&#13;
I&#13;
found this material  to be ma-&#13;
nipulative  of the bible and a&#13;
detrimental  way to go about&#13;
convincing people not to cele-&#13;
brate   Halloween.   I  don't&#13;
doubt that the history of Hal-&#13;
loween had  something  to do&#13;
with  the  occult.  But  today&#13;
Halloween is supposed to be a&#13;
fun time when both kids and&#13;
adults  can dress up and pre-&#13;
tend to be something or some-&#13;
one else. That tartnest  thing&#13;
from  their  minds  is&#13;
satanic&#13;
worship.  Many churches give&#13;
Halloween  parties  for their&#13;
parish  and perhaps even have&#13;
haunted  houses. It's harmless&#13;
fun.    -&#13;
I don't object to the cartoon&#13;
and  brochure  being printed,&#13;
after  all,  this  is America.&#13;
Everyone  is entitled to&#13;
think&#13;
what  they  want.  But, I feel&#13;
that  the  distribution  of the&#13;
material   could  have  been&#13;
done in a more discrete&#13;
man-&#13;
nero Give  It to the parents,&#13;
not the kids.&#13;
by Laura&#13;
Pestka&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron ........................•..  Editor-in·Chief&#13;
Kelly McKissick ..•......................  News Editor&#13;
Laura Pestka&#13;
,. Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann .............•...... Sports Editor&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
John Kehoe&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Christine Oejno&#13;
Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
Advisor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John Marter&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Curt Shircel&#13;
BUSiness Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Dayid Boyd,.Sheila Bugal~ki,  Ruben Carbajal. Dan&#13;
C~lapetta, Tim Cook, DaVid Debish, Tricia Ebner,&#13;
MIchelle Gaal, Lyndsay. Knoell, G~orge Koenig, Mark&#13;
Hall, Abu Hassein, David HeUer, Jill .Janovicz, Sharon&#13;
Krause, Jeff LeWIS, Heather Malzahn, Karen&#13;
McKissick, Geraldine Murawski, Carlise Newman&#13;
George Olson, Mi.ke Pic~zO, ~cott Singer, Bill Topper,&#13;
Rob Twardy, Daniel&#13;
vamn,&#13;
Michelle Van Koningsveld&#13;
Rangeris written a~dedit~dby studentsof UW·Parkside.who aresolely responsiblefor ltseditorialpol~&#13;
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and  hOl~&#13;
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~~~r~p~~~~~~e~~~ned.WItha telephonenumber ~ncludedfor verification purposes.Nameswill&#13;
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fa~~~Oe~~eservesthe right to edit lettersandrefusethose which are false&#13;
andlor&#13;
de-&#13;
T~~~sdJ~:.for all!etters, and classified ads, is Monday at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m.&#13;
for publication&#13;
n~~h~tl~S~~~i~\~~~~~eb~fg/~~is~8170:(ERdantg~r,')uw-parkside,Box 2000, ~e·&#13;
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,I&#13;
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              <text>j,Jfur!J~ \!JJ~~~~~~~uW&#13;
(Q)[FW~~~(Q)~~~~o~~~~~~[Q)~&#13;
_&#13;
-&#13;
Tuesday,September&#13;
5,   ,&#13;
ese&#13;
'111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIA&#13;
Lewandowski  resigns&#13;
PSGA presidency&#13;
"Effective August&#13;
12,  1989&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Jay   Lewandowski&#13;
reo&#13;
81g1ledfrom   the   office    of&#13;
Presidentof the Parkslde   Stu-&#13;
dentGovernment Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Lewandowski   cited&#13;
personal reasons    and    time&#13;
constraintsas his reasons  for&#13;
resignation.&#13;
PSGAwould like  to  thank&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Lewandowski    for&#13;
the&#13;
workhe has  done&#13;
In&#13;
the  or-&#13;
ganlzallonover  the  past   two&#13;
and a  half  years.   We  would&#13;
also&#13;
Uke&#13;
to&#13;
wish hlme  luck&#13;
In&#13;
all&#13;
his&#13;
future endeavors.  ,.&#13;
In&#13;
the   absence&#13;
of&#13;
Mr,&#13;
Lewandowski,Vice  President&#13;
Don,Prangewill be  pre."'."t&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
remainder&#13;
Of&#13;
_&#13;
_•• -&#13;
dowskI's&#13;
term,&#13;
He   .•    ,  _"rYe&#13;
u&#13;
president&#13;
unlli&#13;
the   next&#13;
Jay  Lewandowski&#13;
PSGAelections&#13;
In&#13;
March.&#13;
two&#13;
candidates&#13;
currently&#13;
A new vice  president    will&#13;
being  considered   are  P.S.G.A.&#13;
be voted Into  office   at   the    Senators   Don&#13;
Andrewskt&#13;
and&#13;
Sept.&#13;
8&#13;
P.S.G.A. meeting.   The&#13;
J.&#13;
A.&#13;
Buckau,&#13;
Prange&#13;
looks&#13;
forward&#13;
to&#13;
new year&#13;
by Don Prange&#13;
P.S.G.A.  President&#13;
The beginning  of a new&#13;
aca-&#13;
demlc   year   Is  upon  us,  that&#13;
means    long   hours   of&#13;
study,&#13;
not  enough  sleep,  and  a  lot  of&#13;
Snickers&#13;
bar&#13;
dinners,&#13;
We&#13;
here   In  theParkslde&#13;
Student&#13;
Government  Association  un-&#13;
derstand what it's like. so we&#13;
plan on doing our best to&#13;
make&#13;
It&#13;
as   easy   as  possible&#13;
for the  students  this  year.&#13;
For  those  of  you  who  don't&#13;
know  what   P.S.G.A.   Is,&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
the  sole  representative&#13;
of the&#13;
students    of  Parkslde&#13;
to   the&#13;
administration&#13;
here&#13;
on&#13;
campus   and  the&#13;
UW&#13;
System&#13;
in&#13;
shared  governance  mat-&#13;
ters.   Basically   what   all   that&#13;
means is that we are respon-&#13;
sible   for   safe   guarding    stu-&#13;
dents'  rights.&#13;
The   organization&#13;
plans   on&#13;
hitting&#13;
the    ground    running&#13;
this   semester.&#13;
A  few  of  the&#13;
projects    we   will   be   looking&#13;
into&#13;
this semester are  the&#13;
campus  book exchange,   a stu-&#13;
dent safety  patrol,  corporate&#13;
sponsorship,&#13;
and   staffing    of&#13;
University   and  Faculty&#13;
com-&#13;
mlttees.&#13;
Right    now   we   have    five&#13;
committees   that  need  student&#13;
representation,&#13;
and   Affirma·&#13;
tlve   Action   needs    two&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents,   This   committee    deals&#13;
with   the   Implementation&#13;
of&#13;
affirmative&#13;
action&#13;
policies.&#13;
Parking    Appeals   also   needs&#13;
two students. This committee&#13;
primarily reviews appeals on&#13;
parking    fines.   Computer&#13;
in-&#13;
formation&#13;
and&#13;
Technology&#13;
Committee  needs  one student,&#13;
The basic  role  of this&#13;
commit-&#13;
tee&#13;
Is&#13;
to advise  the Chancellor&#13;
on  computer  needs  of  the&#13;
campus.   Minority  Affairs  Ad-&#13;
visory   Committee   needs   two&#13;
stuaents.&#13;
The  committee&#13;
ad-&#13;
vises  the  Chancellor  on the&#13;
needs  of minority   students&#13;
In&#13;
higher   education.   The  Sexual&#13;
Harassment  Committee needs&#13;
one  student.   This   committee&#13;
Is an  investigative   committee&#13;
for  people  who  feel  they  may&#13;
be experiencing   some  form  of&#13;
sexual harassment.&#13;
Well, I've  been  long wlnde&lt;l&#13;
enough  for  the  first  edition  of&#13;
the  Ranger.&#13;
I&#13;
hope  all  of you&#13;
Welcome back from  Chancellor&#13;
GREETINGS:&#13;
Whetheryou  are  a new  or  returning   student,   I welcome    you  to&#13;
theUniversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and  wish  you  the  best  for&#13;
the 1989-90 academic   year,  We  hope  this  is a challenging&#13;
and&#13;
excitingyear for  you  as you  pursue   and  progress    toward   your&#13;
academic and  personal   goals.&#13;
Yourcollege  experience   can  be  successful    and  beneficial   in a&#13;
yariety&#13;
of ways  both  in and  outside   the  classroom.&#13;
Involvement&#13;
In  activities   or    clubs&#13;
in   your&#13;
major,&#13;
joining&#13;
a   student&#13;
organization or  participation&#13;
in  the   host   of  student&#13;
cultural,&#13;
recreational and  social   events   held   throughout&#13;
the  year   can&#13;
enhanceyour  sense  of belonging   to  this  University   community&#13;
as well as broaden   your   education.    I strongly    encourage&#13;
you&#13;
to&#13;
read the  Ranger   as  a   means   of  staying    in  touch    and  to&#13;
become actively  involved   in  the  diverse   opportunities&#13;
at  UW-&#13;
ParkS/de.&#13;
BestWiShesfor  an  enjoyable   and  exciting   year.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
~4--&#13;
Sheila Kaplan&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Don Prange&#13;
have&#13;
a&#13;
good   semester,&#13;
and&#13;
feel  free  to  stop&#13;
In&#13;
the  PSGA&#13;
office,   We  need   fresh   Ideas.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
meetings&#13;
are&#13;
held&#13;
- Fridays&#13;
at   noon&#13;
In&#13;
Oomm-&#13;
Arts&#13;
129.&#13;
The   meetings    are&#13;
open  to  all   students,   faculty&#13;
and&#13;
staff.&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
Page 2...&#13;
A&#13;
guide to&#13;
student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Page 4•••&#13;
Welcome&#13;
week&#13;
schedule.&#13;
...&#13;
Student Organizations Cl&#13;
trom   tne   unl ve rstty   who  are&#13;
, ea ,  ,,,~&#13;
w&lt;lli&#13;
t&#13;
.snirts,   _.&#13;
be&#13;
tn&#13;
_llio,·'lli&#13;
"m""";&#13;
re"'~'&#13;
amonx   ~"-&#13;
''':&#13;
Interested   In  being   Involved&#13;
ners,&#13;
and lots of fun.&#13;
and   civic   organiZations    lind&#13;
studies   students.&#13;
Elf,P&#13;
I&#13;
with   the   production   of   live&#13;
programs&#13;
which    serve&#13;
the&#13;
-To&#13;
provIde  information  fOI&#13;
GIl&#13;
lli~m  • __&#13;
a  co m-&#13;
_~,&#13;
"""&#13;
--&#13;
""'"&#13;
Mlli  ""'""&#13;
."",,,,,,,ti&#13;
es&#13;
o,&#13;
s tu&#13;
dy abroae '"&#13;
mOO&#13;
On'-&#13;
On&#13;
_""w __&#13;
se  ot  the  "'""&#13;
and   .....&#13;
,.&#13;
·To&#13;
"..."re&#13;
the&#13;
Intema&#13;
...&#13;
"..,",._.&#13;
To'   _~,&#13;
club  gives&#13;
..Pro"'"&#13;
C,,,""..    and&#13;
."'""    ,,""' es  program  .,   ""&#13;
Events  and Activities:&#13;
Parkside   students   the  oppor-&#13;
other  Christian   information   to.&#13;
connectmg&#13;
student&#13;
Interest&#13;
Presentation    of  nve   plays&#13;
tunity  to learn  more  about  the&#13;
the  university   community.&#13;
with  faculty   expertise   and bl&#13;
during  the  school year  In con-&#13;
sport   of  bowling  in  both  the&#13;
bringing    to   the   attention&#13;
Of&#13;
~&#13;
junction   with   the   Dramatic&#13;
competitive  and friendly  envi.&#13;
Circle&#13;
K&#13;
Intemational&#13;
the  student  body  areas  of&#13;
spe,&#13;
sv&#13;
Arts&#13;
department.&#13;
The   club&#13;
ronmenta,&#13;
such&#13;
as&#13;
school&#13;
V.W.&#13;
Parkslde   Chapter&#13;
clalization&#13;
within&#13;
the    pro   uteri&#13;
.also&#13;
sponsors  student&#13;
produc-&#13;
leagues   as   well  as   intercol-&#13;
purpose  of the Club:&#13;
gram.&#13;
to ~&#13;
tlons, field trips  to MIlwaukee&#13;
legiate  competition.&#13;
Circle&#13;
K&#13;
develops    tomor·&#13;
.To provide   career   possibn.&#13;
fO&#13;
rrt&#13;
and   Chicago   to   see   profes.&#13;
Events  and  Activites:&#13;
row's   leaders    today   through&#13;
ities   within   the   international   scb&#13;
O&#13;
sional    theatre.&#13;
and    active&#13;
The  Club  participates&#13;
In  a&#13;
Involvement   In   campus    and&#13;
field  through  use  of speakers.&#13;
ues&#13;
participation   In  co_curricular&#13;
conference  In which  the  mens&#13;
community   services.   We  are&#13;
Events   and  Activities:&#13;
to&#13;
J&#13;
university  activities.&#13;
and   womens   bowling   team&#13;
organized    to   encourage&#13;
col·&#13;
Members   of the  club heip&#13;
b&#13;
stud&#13;
bowls   competitively&#13;
against&#13;
lege   students   to  become   in·&#13;
the   pianning   and   running&#13;
Of&#13;
ElI1l&#13;
flve  other   state   schoois.  The&#13;
valved   In  the  real   world  be·&#13;
the  Model  organiZation   of&#13;
tbE&#13;
Elfl&#13;
team  also  particlpates    in  nu-&#13;
cause   college   ts   more   than&#13;
American    States.   and  attend&#13;
N&#13;
merous   to\lmaments&#13;
around&#13;
books,  classes.   and  a  walk  to&#13;
a  simulation   of  their   own.&#13;
b&#13;
pre'&#13;
the nation.&#13;
the parking  lot.&#13;
the  Spring   of&#13;
1989.&#13;
memben&#13;
peJ&#13;
Events  and  Activities:&#13;
attended    the  National   Model&#13;
spe&#13;
We  participate&#13;
In  the  Spe·&#13;
United   Nations   in  New  Yor;&#13;
Uel&#13;
cial  OlympicS,  MDA. Cohora·&#13;
.City.   Club  members    sponsOI&#13;
ma,  and  a whole lot more.  We&#13;
bake  sales  to fund  club actlv!.&#13;
bave    two'  conventions&#13;
each&#13;
ties.&#13;
year   _   a  dlstrict   and  an  in·&#13;
tematlonal   one. We also  spon-&#13;
sor a clown called  Coko at  va·&#13;
rlous  events.   We have  lots  of&#13;
fun interacting   with other&#13;
Cir·&#13;
cle&#13;
K&#13;
clubs  around  the  nation.&#13;
2&#13;
Tuesday,  September  5, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Accountlng{FInaDce Club&#13;
purpose  of the Club:&#13;
The  primary   purpose  is  to&#13;
enhance  the education  of&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside    club   members    by&#13;
providing   various&#13;
services&#13;
and  activities  both  on and  off&#13;
campuS.&#13;
Events  and Activities:&#13;
The&#13;
Accounting/FinanCe&#13;
Club  Is  actively   Involved  In&#13;
campus  events.  Activities&#13;
tn-&#13;
clude&#13;
bl-weeklY    meetings.&#13;
guest   speakers.    fleld   trips,&#13;
fund  raisers.   volunteer   tutor&#13;
assistance,    and   annual&#13;
din·.&#13;
ners.  The club&#13;
Is&#13;
also actively&#13;
Involved  in  planning  and  co·&#13;
ordinating   "Managers   Day."&#13;
a   major    annual    event   for&#13;
business&#13;
students&#13;
at&#13;
UW·&#13;
parkslde.&#13;
In&#13;
addition,  several&#13;
committees   are  formed  each&#13;
school  year.   These   commit-&#13;
tees  Include  publicity.  consti·&#13;
tutlon.  scholarship,  and  social&#13;
events.  Joining  this  club Is an&#13;
exceuent   way&#13;
to&#13;
meet   and&#13;
In-&#13;
teract&#13;
with&#13;
other   business&#13;
students   and   faculty.   Mem·&#13;
bers&#13;
aJso&#13;
have   the   opportu-&#13;
nlty  to  make  Invaluable  con-&#13;
tacts   with   business    leaders&#13;
from the community.&#13;
.&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega&#13;
Dramatic&#13;
Arts&#13;
Fraternlty&#13;
purpose  of the Club:&#13;
To   bring   together    people&#13;
Art&#13;
Addicts&#13;
Purpose  of the Club:&#13;
To  help   individual   artists&#13;
join together  in order  to learn&#13;
and  grow  as  weli  share   and&#13;
support  one  another.   Another&#13;
Catholic  Campus  MinIstry&#13;
Important   goal  is  to  become&#13;
Catholic  Student  Club&#13;
Involved In campus  activities&#13;
purpose  of the Club:&#13;
as  well  as  activities   outside&#13;
Catholic   Campus   MInistry&#13;
the University.&#13;
and  the Catholic  Student  Club&#13;
Events  and Activities:&#13;
exist  to:&#13;
Art&#13;
Addicts  sponsor  speak-&#13;
1.&#13;
Be  an  opportunity   for  all&#13;
ers.   organIZe  and   hold  fund&#13;
students,   faculty   adminlstra·&#13;
raisers.&#13;
set   up   a   Fall    art&#13;
tors   and   staff   members&#13;
to&#13;
shoW  as   well   as   a   student&#13;
gather  in friendship.&#13;
(jured)   show  In  the   Spring.&#13;
2.&#13;
provide&#13;
actlvltes&#13;
and&#13;
Art&#13;
Addicts  gets  Involved  in&#13;
events    which   will   enlIance&#13;
fleld  trips   to  museums,   gal.&#13;
human  life and values.&#13;
lerles.    and    show   openings.&#13;
3.  Serve  as  a  resource   for&#13;
There   Is  also  an  end  !If the&#13;
the  university   community   to&#13;
Comedian to&#13;
perform tonight&#13;
by suzanne  Mantuano&#13;
Union   Square    on   Tuesday&#13;
,:c-----=::-:c-:c-:c-~-~~&#13;
Feature   Editor&#13;
September&#13;
fifth&#13;
at&#13;
n1n~&#13;
o'clock  p.m.  Hodgson  claimS&#13;
that   his  act   Is  for  the  most&#13;
part  mellow,  but  bas  a  lot  of&#13;
action.  A large  part  of the ac·&#13;
tion&#13;
in&#13;
Hodgson'S   act   comes&#13;
from   the  props   that   he  bas&#13;
made  and  designed  himself.&#13;
Hodgson boasts,   "I   have&#13;
the&#13;
world's&#13;
only&#13;
Braille&#13;
bumper   sticker,   electric  bag·&#13;
pipes.  and  a  prop  that  cranks&#13;
my  head   around   in  360 de·&#13;
grees."&#13;
With  his  head   on  straight:&#13;
Hodgson was  able  to come up&#13;
with   a   story   line   that   bas&#13;
landed   him  the  lead   role  in&#13;
his  new  HBO Comedy  Chan·&#13;
nel program.   HBO purchased&#13;
from    Hodgson   his   comedy&#13;
shoW idea  that  wlll  be  going&#13;
on the&#13;
air&#13;
this  fall.  The name&#13;
of  the  program   is  "Mystery&#13;
Science  Theater   3000''.&#13;
Joel Hodgson comes  from  a&#13;
small&#13;
town&#13;
In    Wisconsin&#13;
called  Fort  Alklnson  which&#13;
Is&#13;
near  Madison.  He was  raised&#13;
in Green Bay and went  to col·&#13;
lege  in Minnesota.  Minnesota&#13;
Is&#13;
where   'Hodgson   got   his&#13;
start&#13;
in&#13;
comedy.&#13;
He  landed  his  first  comedy&#13;
job  whlle  he  was  a  junior  In&#13;
college at  the  age  of 21 at  the&#13;
Comedy  cabaret   in Minneap·&#13;
olis.  Through  Hodgson's  first&#13;
dip   Into   the   limelight   only&#13;
lasted&#13;
five&#13;
minutes.&#13;
the&#13;
owner  liked  him  and  suggest.&#13;
ed  that   he  return.&#13;
This&#13;
was&#13;
the  beginnlng   to  bigger   and&#13;
better   things.   Since  his  first&#13;
five  minute  glimpse  at  star-&#13;
dom.  Hodgson has  performed&#13;
at  such  clubs  as  The  Improv&#13;
in  Los  Angeles.   The   Magic&#13;
casUe  In Hollywood, and  The&#13;
Comedy Store which Is also in&#13;
Los Angeles,&#13;
"Joel  is  multi·faceted&#13;
indi-&#13;
vidual. He's a writer, inven·&#13;
tor,  and  he  helps  other  per-&#13;
formers,"&#13;
said&#13;
Hodgson'S&#13;
agent  Steve  Benz.&#13;
Hodgson  does  not  directly&#13;
credit&#13;
anyone&#13;
performer&#13;
with  giving  him  the   Itch  to&#13;
join  In,  however   he   did  in-&#13;
clude&#13;
Jonathon&#13;
Winters&#13;
George    Carlin.&#13;
and&#13;
Andy&#13;
Kaufman   in  the  list  of  stars&#13;
that mostly affected&#13;
him&#13;
when  he  was  younger._&#13;
"1&#13;
always&#13;
performed,"    said&#13;
Hodgson.  "I  did  magic  tricks&#13;
and    juggling&#13;
acts.&#13;
1   had&#13;
always  been  Interested   In  It&#13;
(comedy)."&#13;
Parkside&#13;
stu·&#13;
dents  and  faculty  wlll be able&#13;
to  see  Hodgson  shine  in  the&#13;
"It&#13;
("Mystery&#13;
Science&#13;
Theatre&#13;
3000")   is   about   a&#13;
janitor   who   accidently    gets&#13;
shot&#13;
into&#13;
outer  space  by  two&#13;
evil scientists.  He  (janltor)   Is&#13;
then    forced    to   watch    bad&#13;
science   fiction  movies&#13;
with&#13;
his  robots  that  he  bUut  from&#13;
his  space   ship,"   said  Hodg-&#13;
son.&#13;
The  production   and   shoot·&#13;
ing&#13;
of&#13;
"Mystery&#13;
Science&#13;
Theatre  3000" will be done by&#13;
Hodgson  and  one  of  his  col~&#13;
leagues.&#13;
Production&#13;
will&#13;
begin    right    after&#13;
Hodgson&#13;
finishes  his  week·long tour  of&#13;
several    other    college   cam-&#13;
puses.  production   of Mystery&#13;
Science  Theatre   SOOOwill  be&#13;
based&#13;
out    of    Minneapolis&#13;
where  the  show  had  already&#13;
been  aired  a  year  ago:  Hodg·&#13;
Joel Hod9son&#13;
son   has   also   invented   toys&#13;
such  as  the  Grab  Bag,  but  as&#13;
of  yet  he  has  seen  no  profit&#13;
from  the endeavors.&#13;
Whether    It   be   profits   or&#13;
laughs&#13;
that&#13;
a&#13;
comedian&#13;
yeams   for,  Hodgson  advises&#13;
that  time  Is  the  most  impor·&#13;
~t&#13;
factor  to getting  there.&#13;
If&#13;
people&#13;
think&#13;
you're&#13;
funny,  and  your  friend's   tell&#13;
you   you're&#13;
fuIUly&#13;
that's&#13;
a&#13;
good sign.  Spend a lot of time&#13;
?on  stage."&#13;
Hodgson&#13;
said.&#13;
Most people  think  there  is a&#13;
quick  method,  but  the  best  Is&#13;
to  spend  as  much  time  up  on&#13;
stage  as  possible and  get used&#13;
to&#13;
it."&#13;
Club for&#13;
Intemational&#13;
Affairs&#13;
(CIA)&#13;
purpose   of the Club:&#13;
.To provide  an  arena  for  in·&#13;
Data  procl'ssing&#13;
Management   Association&#13;
de&#13;
purpose   of the  Club:&#13;
G&lt;&#13;
The  purpose   of  DPMA Is&#13;
11&#13;
III&#13;
expose   students   interested.&#13;
Ie&#13;
data  processing   to the varlou&#13;
81&#13;
career    flelda   and   opportunl&#13;
ties   available    in  the  area&#13;
a&#13;
Ii&#13;
data   processing   and  inform,&#13;
G&#13;
tlon  system  management.&#13;
£&#13;
Organlzalions,&#13;
cO/1I.&#13;
on page 3  ~&#13;
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How're you&#13;
going&#13;
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before the&#13;
semester&#13;
closes&#13;
in on you.&#13;
~  Be~    ~~~Crself&#13;
in deep water&#13;
this&#13;
semester.&#13;
get&#13;
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rsona&#13;
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hoose&#13;
{rom five different&#13;
packages&#13;
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hard·&#13;
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and sorl~-all&#13;
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speeiallow   student&#13;
pricell.&#13;
Eoch&#13;
sys~&#13;
comes&#13;
WIth&#13;
easy-lo,use  softv.'3reloaded and ready&#13;
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to&#13;
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you buy&#13;
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can&#13;
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P_RO~GY~~the s~ping,&#13;
infonnation  and "enter.&#13;
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tal,omenl compul~  ~nr~e.  at&#13;
less&#13;
than  half the&#13;
retail  _&#13;
.:::"":~~I~f{~fI~fI~l~lJ~~»-~~r~!~~~·&#13;
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Don:&#13;
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today.&#13;
.&#13;
See us In Molinaro Hall&#13;
...Sept. 5th&#13;
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6th'&#13;
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a.m •••&#13;
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              <text>New arrest policy for campus police</text>
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              <text>by Dan Chiapetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dave Ostrowski, director of&#13;
Campus Police and Public&#13;
Safety, and the Parkside&#13;
Campus Police have just recently&#13;
been given primary jurisdiction&#13;
of the residence&#13;
hall building.&#13;
Because the residence hall&#13;
building was built by the&#13;
Parkside Foundation and&#13;
then deeded to the university,&#13;
the building was not technically&#13;
part of the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
"No one understood how&#13;
the law read as far as police&#13;
power and how we could not&#13;
arrest someone standing on&#13;
housing property because it&#13;
was not university land," explained&#13;
Ostrowski.&#13;
Parkside explored the possibility&#13;
of having its office&#13;
deputized, but that would be&#13;
too difficult for the sheriff's&#13;
department and for the&#13;
campus police.&#13;
"It was also not the best&#13;
way to handle the situation on&#13;
who should have primary jurisdiction&#13;
of the housing," Ostrowski&#13;
said.&#13;
Parkside asked the Legislature&#13;
to introduce a section in&#13;
the budget which stated that&#13;
university police officers&#13;
would have the authority on&#13;
university land and on lands&#13;
immediately adjacent to the&#13;
university were owned by a&#13;
private foundation for the&#13;
benefit of the Board of Regents.&#13;
The bill was signed by&#13;
Governor Tommy Thompson.&#13;
Previously, the Kenosha&#13;
Sheriff's Department had primary&#13;
jurisdiction and the&#13;
campus police had secondary&#13;
jurisdiction. The Parkside&#13;
foundation had contracted&#13;
with campus police to provide&#13;
security and be alert to criminal&#13;
activities, but the sheriff's&#13;
department made the actual&#13;
arrests.&#13;
"Now campus police has&#13;
primary jurisdiction. We will&#13;
be the first to respond to&#13;
criminal activities, we will do&#13;
the actual arresting, we will&#13;
take care of the paper work,&#13;
and we will bring the criminal&#13;
to jail," explained Ostrowski.&#13;
&#13;
When criminal activities occured,&#13;
the sheriff's department&#13;
had two alternatives:&#13;
verbal warning or arrest. The&#13;
campus police have three options:&#13;
verbal warning, arrest&#13;
or referral to the dean of students&#13;
for non-academic disciplinary&#13;
procedures.&#13;
"Not everything that people&#13;
do that disturbs others is&#13;
criminally wrong, but it&#13;
needs to be addressed in&#13;
some fashion. That is why the&#13;
university has established the&#13;
third option," explained Ostrowski.&#13;
&#13;
Campus police vary in&#13;
authority and function&#13;
by Dan Chiapetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside police officers&#13;
have always had the right to&#13;
carry a weapon.&#13;
"Everyone thinks that just&#13;
because they don't carry a&#13;
gun in their holster, that they&#13;
are not armed. Parkside police&#13;
officers are armed," emphasized&#13;
Dave Ostrowski, Director&#13;
of Campus Police and&#13;
Safety.&#13;
"The campus police have&#13;
just recently been utilizing&#13;
new mechanics to go with the&#13;
changes of the world," explained&#13;
Ostrowski.&#13;
The campus police have&#13;
purchased the nine-millimeter&#13;
semi-automatic pistols,&#13;
which have replaced the&#13;
thirty-eight caliber revolvers.&#13;
If you look closely at the&#13;
patches on the police officer's&#13;
uniform, you would see three&#13;
different types, denoting&#13;
three levels of officers:&#13;
Campus Police Officers Hendrickson and Ketterhagen.&#13;
Shakespeare to be done at Parkside&#13;
1. Community Service Officers.&#13;
Another name for them&#13;
would be "security guaras.'&#13;
They are not armed and have&#13;
no arrest authority. They are&#13;
usually responsible for security&#13;
at games, dances and&#13;
special occasions. Students&#13;
are hired and trained for&#13;
these jobs.&#13;
2. Reserved police officers.&#13;
They are people moving into&#13;
the field of criminal justice&#13;
who are receiving on-the-job&#13;
training from full-time police&#13;
3. Full time police offers.&#13;
They are certified by the&#13;
State of Wisconsin and go&#13;
through annual training. They&#13;
have the right to carry a&#13;
weapon and have full arrest&#13;
authority.&#13;
Parkside has eight sworn&#13;
law officers who have the&#13;
right to carry a weapon, five&#13;
reserved police officers and&#13;
12 community service officers.&#13;
&#13;
by Lyna Paukstelis&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Auditions for the fall production&#13;
of William Shakespeare's&#13;
"As You Like It"&#13;
will be held next week. This&#13;
is the first Shakespeare production&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
"As You Like It" is a romantic&#13;
comedy, written in&#13;
1599 or 1600. According to Albert&#13;
Gilman of Boston University,&#13;
"The play is chiefly&#13;
concerned with two enduring&#13;
human illusions ... the dream&#13;
of a simple life and the ideal&#13;
of romantic love."&#13;
The play takes place mainly&#13;
in or around the Forest of&#13;
Arden. There are handsome&#13;
heroes, beautiful heroines and&#13;
an atmosphere of fun. The&#13;
plot centers around the love&#13;
story of Rosalind and Orlando.&#13;
&#13;
The dramatic arts faculty&#13;
chose "As You Like It" because&#13;
they felt that it was&#13;
time to do another classic&#13;
play that was written in&#13;
verse.&#13;
"We feel that every drama&#13;
major should be involved in&#13;
at least one Shakespearean&#13;
classic, a musical, a children's&#13;
show and a contemporary&#13;
play," said Lisa Kornetsky,&#13;
dramatic arts professor&#13;
and director of the show.&#13;
" 'As You Like It* is really&#13;
different from anything we've&#13;
done before. We felt that we&#13;
were not quite ready to do a&#13;
tragedy or an historical play,&#13;
so we chose a romantic comedy&#13;
because the majority of&#13;
characters are the same age&#13;
range as our students. We&#13;
also decided not to use the&#13;
standard British dialect because&#13;
it sounds very artificial&#13;
and will only add another&#13;
problem we do not need. I&#13;
really feel that this play is exciting,&#13;
romantic and fun,"&#13;
stated Kornetsky.&#13;
All students are welcome to&#13;
audition for the cast of four to&#13;
six women and 12-16 men.&#13;
One character is required to&#13;
sing and play the guitar.&#13;
According to Kornetsky, it&#13;
is important to read the play&#13;
before auditioning. Another&#13;
good idea is to read the play&#13;
aloud. "Shakespeare was&#13;
meant to be seen and heard,&#13;
not read," emphasized Kornetsky.&#13;
Scripts are available&#13;
in Comm Arts 221. An information&#13;
notice is also posted&#13;
backstage at the theater.&#13;
Auditions will be held on&#13;
Monday, Sept. 11 and Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. 12 from 3:30-5:30&#13;
and 7 : 30-9:30 p.m. If required,&#13;
callbacks will be held&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 13 at 7&#13;
p.m. All auditions are held in&#13;
Studio B, Comm Arts D155.&#13;
"Many people come to the&#13;
conclusion that Shakespeare&#13;
is boring and hard to understand.&#13;
My goal is to show our&#13;
audiences that he was a brilliant&#13;
playwright, and he was&#13;
fun and full of depth. I want&#13;
to prove that his plays are accessible&#13;
to everyone," said&#13;
Kornetsky.&#13;
Inside.. Page 7&#13;
Page 6 Soccer&#13;
Gerard Preview&#13;
Thursday v September 7, 19S9&#13;
THE UMOVEFSdTY ©F WBSCOMSI1KI-PAR1SCSI1DE vol. xvm. NO.&#13;
New arrest policy for campus police &#13;
2 Thursday, September 7,1989 Ranger&#13;
THBRB1S NO SUCH THING &gt;&#13;
AS A BAD DOG. &lt;&#13;
k7H£K£lS NO SUCH THING d&#13;
4 A40 ZXK?.&#13;
NO SUCH.^^&#13;
/ffiAHJV&#13;
Guest Editorial -&#13;
Grab the Parkside&#13;
bull by the horns!&#13;
To tha Students:&#13;
That overwhelming feeling of anticipation! I&#13;
don't think there wee a single one of ue who&#13;
didn't feel at leaet a little bit of it as our summers&#13;
drew to a oloae and the fall semester at&#13;
UW-Parkeide began.&#13;
Whether you are a freshman learning for the&#13;
first time that Molinaro and Qreenquist are&#13;
aome pretty important names to get to know, a&#13;
aophomore still trying not to confuse the two,&#13;
of a junior or senior realizing just what kind of&#13;
an impact these buildings have had on your lives,&#13;
it's all the same! We are excited to be given the&#13;
opportunity to rise to our fulleat potential and&#13;
to be given the ohance to make the absolute&#13;
beet of our Uvea!&#13;
Well, the anaticlpatfon la over. Let's do it!&#13;
Choice completely surrounds ua! Forage&#13;
through the incredible selection of Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge elaeaea and discover what you like,&#13;
and what you don't like. Bet involved in the multitude&#13;
of extracurricular activities offered In&#13;
order to have some fun, and earn invaluable&#13;
practical experience. Constantly meet new people&#13;
and make new friende, for they will ultimately&#13;
help you to uncover and learn more&#13;
about "Numero Uno:" Yourself!&#13;
Constantly eearoh for what It le that makes&#13;
you unique. Discover what It la that you do beat&#13;
while always maintaining a eenee of diversity!&#13;
No, it la not going to be easy. Yes, if you are&#13;
making the moat of your college experience, you&#13;
will encounter obstaclee along the way. All too&#13;
often It will be very convenient for you to blame&#13;
your teachera, your boas, your family, your&#13;
friende, or even "Rover." Placing blame just&#13;
waatea times time that could be spent studying&#13;
harder, getting more involved, or establishing&#13;
even more meaningful relationshipe.&#13;
Grab the UW-Parkelde bull by the home! The&#13;
ride can get bumpy at times, but you will get&#13;
paid baok many timee over for the courage,&#13;
strength, self-discipline, and openness to new&#13;
ideas and viewpoints that you will be investing In&#13;
your college years. For more information on&#13;
how to "grab the UW-P bull by the horns," contacts&#13;
The Student Activities Office [Union SOS],&#13;
The Career Center [WLLC D-175), or rap with&#13;
your advieor.&#13;
Jim Voae&#13;
PAB plans entertainment&#13;
by Brad Janowitz&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Are you looking for some&#13;
fun entertainment or just&#13;
something to do? Look no further&#13;
- this year Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) has top&#13;
entertainment on the board.&#13;
PAB is the organization primarily&#13;
responsible for supplying&#13;
entertainment on campus.&#13;
They do this by using their&#13;
share of the segregated fees&#13;
to purchase entertainment&#13;
through agents.&#13;
"Students work directly,&#13;
one to one, with agents or&#13;
acts. We also work with other&#13;
schools and use research&#13;
from the National Association&#13;
for Campus Activities&#13;
(NACA) conferences to find&#13;
the best variety of entertainment,"&#13;
said Diane Welsh,&#13;
Coordinator of Student Activities.&#13;
&#13;
PAB, over its long history,&#13;
has evolved from a few select&#13;
people to a large group of&#13;
over fifty people. It has become&#13;
an organization of&#13;
suborganizations, working&#13;
more and more with other&#13;
campus clubs to bring forth a&#13;
variety of quality entertainment.&#13;
&#13;
"PAB has grown, and I'm&#13;
optimistic about our work&#13;
with other clubs and groups,"&#13;
said Jenni Dreher, president&#13;
of PAB.&#13;
Dreher said the Concepts&#13;
and Controversies chair is&#13;
still vacant, elections will be&#13;
held, and interested people&#13;
should contact PAB.&#13;
Chairs for the other committees&#13;
are: Erica Wernecke,&#13;
film and video; Diane Thygeson,&#13;
live entertainment; A.J.&#13;
Przlomski, marketing; Marie&#13;
Boris, night life; Lori Flynn,&#13;
performing arts; Judy Bostetter,&#13;
special events; and&#13;
Chuck Petrach, sports and&#13;
recreation. Franca Savaglio&#13;
is vice-president, and Mary&#13;
Ellen Wesley is the advisor.&#13;
"I'm very happy with the&#13;
work; they've done an excellent&#13;
job," said Wesley.&#13;
Many events are scheduled&#13;
for September. Today at 2&#13;
p.m. in the Rec Center is a 9-&#13;
ball pool tournament, featuring&#13;
the PAB Executive&#13;
Branch vs. anyone. Then at&#13;
7:30 p.m., the film "Color of&#13;
Money" will play for free on&#13;
the Union Pad outside. On&#13;
Friday, Sept. 9, "Gerard"&#13;
plays in the Union.&#13;
This semester, Sports and&#13;
Jenni Dreher&#13;
Recreation, along with Food&#13;
Services and Parkside will be&#13;
doing Monday Night Football.&#13;
Prizes and giveaways will be&#13;
the events weekly. Also, for&#13;
winter break, PAB is sponsoring&#13;
a see-and-ski trip to Austria&#13;
for $689. Check PAB for&#13;
details concerning the trip.&#13;
As you can see, PAB has&#13;
pushed the accelerator to the&#13;
floor to bring you a wild ride&#13;
through the fall semester.&#13;
And with help from friends,&#13;
it's going to be a show you&#13;
can't miss.&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Steve DeAngelis&#13;
Dan Chiapetta&#13;
Dan Pacetti&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Stu Rubner...............&#13;
cy and con tenufis pubhshed Srsd av durin a the^0 H"&#13;
8 so lely resP°nsible for its editorial;&#13;
days. ' nursaaV dunn9 the academic year exce pt over br eaks and t&#13;
letters mus/be sfgned^itlfa^eleph^ ' dou?&#13;
le&#13;
"&#13;
spaced and 350 words or ,ess&#13;
held upon request ia|epnone number included for verification purposes. Names will be u&#13;
,amSe&#13;
r&#13;
erVeS&#13;
*&#13;
he&#13;
**&#13;
10 edit «'efuse those which are false and/or deThursday.*'&#13;
3nd cl a s&#13;
*&#13;
d * M onda y at 10 a .m. f or pu bl i cat io n &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 7,1989 3&#13;
Classifieds... Parkside engineering program evaluatedPERSONALS&#13;
&#13;
PIGEON LAKE people, and you know&#13;
who you are, Prof. Wlasek has copies&#13;
of all the pictures I took while in the&#13;
great white north. They are available&#13;
to look at or have copies made.&#13;
Thanks for the fun time.s hope to see&#13;
you all in the fall. MADDOG.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
DISC JOCKEYS, weekends. Male or&#13;
Female. Will train qualified people.&#13;
639-7480.&#13;
WANTED. SPRING Break sales representatives.&#13;
Earn free vacations to&#13;
Cancun, Nassau, Bermuda, and other&#13;
exciting resorts. Plus, you can earn&#13;
an average of $3,500 in commissions&#13;
working part-time. Call Vacation&#13;
Planners at 1-800-47PARTY.&#13;
COLLEGE CAMPUS representative.&#13;
Earn $. Flexible hours. Fun. Enjoyable.&#13;
Rewarding. Gross up to $20,000&#13;
per year by helping friends receive&#13;
grants or scholarships. For infomation,&#13;
please call: (213)967-2115.&#13;
LOOKING FOR a fraternity, sorority&#13;
or student organization that would like&#13;
to make $500-$1000 fo r a one week on&#13;
campus marketing project. Must be&#13;
organized and hardworking. Call&#13;
Mark or Myra at (800)592-2121.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
KENMORE DORM-SIZE 2.5 cu. ft. refrigerator.&#13;
Mint condition. 654-5791.&#13;
MOTORCYCLE •1988 Kawasaki Spectre&#13;
500cc. 6-speed, shaft-drive, in-line&#13;
4-cylinder. Sport faring, cassette deck.&#13;
$650 or best offer. 554-8984, ask for&#13;
Rudy.&#13;
When you party,&#13;
remember to...&#13;
BEER DRINKERS&#13;
OF AMERICA&#13;
P A R T Y *SM ART&#13;
150 Paularino Ave., Suite 190,&#13;
Costa Mesa, CA 92626&#13;
1-800-441-2337&#13;
Beer Drinkers of America is a non-profit&#13;
consumer membership organization&#13;
open only to persons over the age of 21.&#13;
C j&#13;
Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
In an effort to become more&#13;
responsive to the needs of&#13;
both students and area industry,&#13;
Parkside has proposed a&#13;
change in its Engineering&#13;
Technology and Applied&#13;
Science programs.&#13;
The proposed change would&#13;
result in a program in Engineering&#13;
with concentrations&#13;
in Mechanical and Electrical&#13;
Engineering. A team of three&#13;
consultants will be on campus&#13;
today to look into the proposal,&#13;
as well as talk to faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
The proposal was submitted&#13;
last spring after many years&#13;
of preparation, beginning in&#13;
the mid-70's. The proposal is&#13;
designed to help graduates&#13;
find jobs more easily, by way&#13;
of a more descriptive degree&#13;
title and an improved curriculum&#13;
content.&#13;
"Some companies are looking&#13;
at people who come from&#13;
an accredited engineering&#13;
program. A wider variety of&#13;
jobs are available without&#13;
having to explain the label on&#13;
the degree," Been Greenebaum,&#13;
Dean of the School of&#13;
Science and Technology, said.&#13;
The proposal states that&#13;
such a single program,&#13;
versus the dual program,&#13;
would be accreditable with&#13;
manageable changes on the&#13;
part of the university. It&#13;
would also meet the needs of&#13;
students and local industry&#13;
that are not fully met by the&#13;
current program.&#13;
Targeted for full implementation&#13;
in fall, 1990, the program&#13;
will allow a relatively&#13;
small faculty to offer a complete&#13;
but basic program that&#13;
would be available to Engineering&#13;
students in their firstand&#13;
second years. Also, with&#13;
a few additional classes,&#13;
more advanced students&#13;
would also be able to complete&#13;
the new program,&#13;
Greenebaum said.&#13;
At BANK ONE, we know&#13;
what ifs like to be a student.&#13;
Wfe also know what students like.&#13;
So now when you open any balance Economy Checking&#13;
checking account, youll get a account, perfect for today's&#13;
free Pizza Hut pizza. student.&#13;
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you to our Student Banking pro- —with approval in 24 hours&#13;
gram. It features money-saving or less,&#13;
services like our no-minimum- Plus a Jubilee/TYME®&#13;
Card for easy access to your&#13;
money. Or; a student VISA&#13;
for those unexpected expenses.&#13;
Take advantage of Student&#13;
Banking by cutting out the&#13;
coupon below Then tear into&#13;
a Pizza Hut pizza at our expense.&#13;
BANKSONE&#13;
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free FREE SURVIVAL KIT Yes, I'd like to make the most of my money while I'm at college' Please send&#13;
I • VV • | me my FREE "CoUege Financial Survival" Kit. uege. neasesend&#13;
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Mail to: "College Financial Survival" Kit, BANK ONE, RACINE, NA, 500 Wisconsin Avenue, R0. Box 221, Racine, W153403 • Or call 633-8201&#13;
Member FDIC ©1989 BANC ONE WISCONSIN CORPORATION VISA card subject to credit approval. &#13;
4 Thursday, September 7,1989 Ranger&#13;
Student Plays kick-off Parkside's theatre&#13;
by Lyna Paukstelis&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Plays at Parkside's season&#13;
opens tonight with "A Good&#13;
Time" and "Twinkle, Twinkle,"&#13;
two one-act comedies by&#13;
Earnest Thompson.&#13;
The plays have been student&#13;
directed, designed and&#13;
performed. Everything from&#13;
the audition process in May&#13;
to the final product has been&#13;
done entirely by students.&#13;
"I chose these plays because&#13;
I like comedfes and&#13;
they are really fun to watch,"&#13;
said Mary K. Holton, student&#13;
director of one-act plays.&#13;
"The best part of this learning&#13;
experience is working&#13;
with my peers, which is really&#13;
important because I'm&#13;
trying to get teacher certified&#13;
in dramatic arts. I made my&#13;
designer choices from faculty&#13;
and student suggestions, and&#13;
I'm glad I made the choices I&#13;
did."&#13;
The scenic designer of this&#13;
student project is Richard M.&#13;
Cleven.&#13;
"I'm really happy that I got&#13;
a chance to try my hand at&#13;
designing. I always wanted to&#13;
try, but I didn't feel ready for&#13;
a big project. I'd like to do it&#13;
again now that I feel more&#13;
prepared. I really think that&#13;
one of the most difficult parts&#13;
for me was the actual technical&#13;
drawings. Since all of the&#13;
blueprints had to be done to&#13;
scale, and since I have never&#13;
worked in scale before, I had&#13;
to learn very quickly. But all&#13;
in all, it was a really great&#13;
way to learn," said Cloeven.&#13;
Costume designer Tina&#13;
Paukstelis thinks that working&#13;
with such a small budget&#13;
was a drawback.&#13;
"When your budget is&#13;
small, sometimes you have to&#13;
sacrifice your original designs&#13;
and use substitutions.&#13;
It's really hard. Looking&#13;
back, I don't think that I was&#13;
ready to do this project. I&#13;
have only been around the&#13;
theater for a year, and I really&#13;
need more training to find&#13;
out how things work in the&#13;
theater. I am glad I chose to&#13;
do the show because I am&#13;
planning on costume design&#13;
as a career and this was a&#13;
nice way to get a preview of&#13;
my field," said Paukstelis.&#13;
Barb Bartel, the lighting&#13;
designer, feels that this show&#13;
is just the right size for her&#13;
ability.&#13;
"I'm not quite sure if I was&#13;
ready, but with a little guidance&#13;
from Skelly Warren&#13;
(dramatic arts professor), I&#13;
made it through with few&#13;
problems. I didn't need to&#13;
come up with anything really&#13;
exciting, just your basic living&#13;
room lighting, but it was&#13;
fun. I really enjoyed working&#13;
with the director and the designers.&#13;
I'd do it again, even&#13;
though I was really nervous,"&#13;
said Bartel.&#13;
"A Good Time" is about a&#13;
woman who lives in New&#13;
York City and is bored with&#13;
her social life. A good-looking&#13;
California highway patrolman,&#13;
who had stopped her&#13;
two years ago for speeding,&#13;
shows up on her doorstep. He&#13;
has come in search of "the&#13;
good time" she promised him&#13;
when he tore up her ticket.&#13;
The woman now has to figure&#13;
out what to do with the patrolman&#13;
and how to get him&#13;
out of her already-crazy life.&#13;
Lisa Fermin stars as the&#13;
frustrated Mandy Morgan,&#13;
and Richard M. Cleven stars&#13;
as the naive highway patrolman.&#13;
&#13;
By contrast, "Twinkle,&#13;
Twinkle" is about a tired&#13;
housewife, her husband and a&#13;
soap opera star who comes&#13;
for a visit. The soap opera&#13;
star offers the wife what only&#13;
happens in the movies. She&#13;
must decide between her&#13;
morals and the "housewife's&#13;
dream."&#13;
This play stars Paula King&#13;
as Andrea, the housewife;&#13;
Gabe Kluka as her beerdrinking,&#13;
bowling champ husband;&#13;
and Rob Hrycay, as&#13;
the rather old-looking soap&#13;
opera star and Casanova, Ted/Rob.&#13;
&#13;
The plays open tonight at 8&#13;
p.m. They will also be performed&#13;
next Friday, Sept. 8&#13;
at 8 p.m., with a matinee perNew&#13;
year for Ranger sports&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A trip to the golf course on&#13;
Labor Day pointed out a couple&#13;
of somewhat disappointing&#13;
things for me (besides my&#13;
drive slicing off into the forest&#13;
somewhere for the fifth&#13;
time in eight holes). Not&#13;
many, but a few leaves are&#13;
starting to drop from trees.&#13;
And a flock of geese headed&#13;
south - two distinct signs that&#13;
summer is on the way out.&#13;
That's pretty much the end&#13;
of baseball fever and tailgate&#13;
parties, days of sun and volleyball&#13;
at the beach, sweating&#13;
bullets all day at work (OK, "I&#13;
guess that one's not so disappointing).&#13;
&#13;
What does help is the kickoff&#13;
of the football season and&#13;
the beginning of a host of&#13;
sports here at school. So, as&#13;
the Brewers continue to fade&#13;
from the pennant race (Cubs&#13;
fans have earned an extra&#13;
month of enjoyment), and it's&#13;
time to give the golf clubs one&#13;
last cleaning, we turn our attention&#13;
to the likes of football&#13;
and soccer.&#13;
From the adventures of our&#13;
Green and Gold of the gridiron,&#13;
to the coverage of our&#13;
own Green and White on the&#13;
soccer field, we'll do our best&#13;
to keep you in touch with the&#13;
weekly sports news.&#13;
As always, the sports staff&#13;
of the Ranger is looking for&#13;
writers and ideas (especially&#13;
writers with ideas). Also keep&#13;
our phone number in mind in&#13;
case you come across anything&#13;
newsworthy in the&#13;
Ranger athletic world (553-&#13;
2287).&#13;
So on behalf of Jeff Reddick&#13;
and the entire sports staff -&#13;
welcome back and welcome&#13;
to another semester of&#13;
Ranger news.&#13;
tySS!&#13;
Check your choice(s) Sepcial student price&#13;
• Weekday Milwaukee Journal $12.00&#13;
• Sunday Milwaukee Journal $7.50&#13;
• Weekday and Sunday Journal $19.50&#13;
• Start the Weekday Milwaukee Sentinel, too $12.00&#13;
Name.&#13;
College/UniversityHousing&#13;
AddressCity&#13;
-State.&#13;
-Room or apt. number.&#13;
-Zip. -PhoneMake&#13;
checks payable and mail to: Journal/Sentinel Inc.,&#13;
P.O. Box 661, Milwaukee WI 53201-0661.&#13;
• My check or money order for $ is enclosed.&#13;
Bill my: • Visa • MasterCard&#13;
Signature (if charging).&#13;
Card number .Expiration date.&#13;
For office use only.&#13;
FALL&#13;
formance on Saturday, Sept.&#13;
9 at 3 p.m. All performances&#13;
will be in the Studio Theatre,&#13;
Comm Arts D155.&#13;
Everyone is welcome to attend.&#13;
Ticket prices are $3,&#13;
with all proceeds going to the&#13;
Dramatic Arts Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
"The shows are a lot of fun.&#13;
I know everyone is going to&#13;
have a great time watching&#13;
these people dealing with the&#13;
most interesting parts of their&#13;
lives," said Cleven.&#13;
WELCOME BACK&#13;
STUDENTS!&#13;
Register to Win&#13;
a 2-person Rubber Raft&#13;
with Motor.&#13;
Entry Blanks Available At:&#13;
Union Dining Room&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Mini-Mart&#13;
PURCHASE&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF:&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
DRAWING: 9-20-89 &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 7,1989 5&#13;
James Kinchen joins Parkside Music Department&#13;
James Kinchen&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
As people may soon notice,&#13;
the music department at&#13;
Parkside is going through&#13;
some changes. One professor&#13;
left Parkside last spring, and&#13;
his position has been filled by&#13;
Professor James Kinchen.&#13;
Kinchen has been around&#13;
music for a long time. His&#13;
first musical interest began&#13;
at age eight when he started&#13;
banging on the piano.&#13;
One experience that had a&#13;
profound effect on Kinchen&#13;
was during registration in&#13;
junior high school. His family&#13;
was talking to the choral director,&#13;
who asked if he would&#13;
like to sing. Kinchen opened&#13;
his mouth to answer, and his&#13;
father said, "Yeah, he'll&#13;
sing." That marked his official&#13;
initiation into music.&#13;
During the next few years,&#13;
he joined a church choir, was&#13;
appointed to an all-state choir&#13;
and took part in vocal competition.&#13;
&#13;
During high school, he&#13;
originally planned on a&#13;
career in law and politics.&#13;
However, his past experiences&#13;
led him to choose&#13;
music.&#13;
Kinchen knew he'd be involved&#13;
in music no matter&#13;
what job he had and thought,&#13;
"Why shouldn't I earn a living&#13;
doing something that I&#13;
really love?"&#13;
Kinchen is definitely making&#13;
his mark at Parkside.&#13;
He's restructured the vocal&#13;
programs, dropping swing&#13;
choir from the catalog. He&#13;
plans to add a new and larger&#13;
chorus, possibly in the spring.&#13;
Also, the musical selections&#13;
will be more culturally diverse.&#13;
Kinchen intends to include&#13;
more ethnic music, as&#13;
well as recent, popular&#13;
music. It is hoped these&#13;
changes will result in a quality&#13;
program that will be challenging^&#13;
the student.&#13;
By including in the programs&#13;
solos, duets and other&#13;
combinations that students&#13;
may chose to do, Kinchen&#13;
hopes to "emphasize people's&#13;
individuality as well as their&#13;
ability to contribute to the&#13;
group."&#13;
He hopes that people will&#13;
join if they have any interest&#13;
at all in music. Previous singing&#13;
experience is not necessary.&#13;
&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
FOOD SERVICE SEEKING PART-TIME&#13;
HELP FOR VARIOUS POSITIONS.&#13;
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES DESIRED.&#13;
CONTACT CINDY AT 2601&#13;
\eb'.£&#13;
e&#13;
Us!&#13;
Monday, Sept. 11&#13;
Tuesday, Sept 12&#13;
Wednesday Sept 13&#13;
Sept 13-15&#13;
Thursday, Sept 14&#13;
Friday, Sept. 15&#13;
The Ximali Aztec Dancers,&#13;
12 noon to 1:00pm. — Main Place - FREE&#13;
Rare Historical Hispanic Museum Artifacts&#13;
on display in Library, L-1 level - FREE&#13;
(items graciously provided by Kenosha Public Museum)&#13;
Hispanic Luncheon with Musical Trio&#13;
11:00am. to 2:00pm. Union Dining Room&#13;
(featuring chuletos, puerto riqueftos, Spanish rice, refried&#13;
beans, black bean soup and more)&#13;
Hispanic Bazaar&#13;
10&#13;
ispan&#13;
:00am. to 2:00pm.- Union Bridge&#13;
1&#13;
'I! i { V&#13;
i !&#13;
if !l \ L&#13;
V i&#13;
l! I&#13;
Contributions of Hispanics in America:&#13;
Past, Present and Future; a panel discussion&#13;
12 noon to 1:00pm. - Mainplace - Panelists include: John&#13;
Buenker, Gloria Ramirez, Mary Jane Hernandez, Jerry&#13;
. Greenfield, Scott Fernandez and Anthony Brown, moderator&#13;
Dance with "Ambiente Tejano"&#13;
8:00pm. - Union Square - FREE&#13;
NATIONAL HISPANIC&#13;
HERITAGE WEEK&#13;
September 11 -15,1989&#13;
In a . alien with:&#13;
All Cwnput Evttib, Center for Educational and Cultural Advancement, Chancellor Kaplan and her office,&#13;
Ktnoeha Public Muteum. La Preforida, Partoide ActWlier Board, Parbide Women'i Center,&#13;
Parioide library/learning Center. ProfeteiorvaJ Food Service Management,&#13;
Student Activitiei Office&#13;
Heritage Bank has the School Supplies&#13;
You'll Need for College&#13;
• Student Checking&#13;
Free Checking&#13;
Free Checks&#13;
TYMECard&#13;
• Young Adult MasterCard&#13;
• Student Loan Assistance&#13;
Students must be between the ages of 16 &amp; 23 and maintain a minimum of&#13;
6 credits per semester. Parent(s) must also have a depository relationship&#13;
with Heritage Bank. Heritage Bank believes in education and would like to&#13;
help you with yours.&#13;
'Heritage Bank&#13;
A Good Neighbor to Have&#13;
Heritage Bank and Trust Offices: Wind Point Oftics, 4001 N. Main Street, 639-6010; Douglas Avenue&#13;
Office, 4959 Douglas Avenue, 681-4609; Mt. Pleasant Office, 5901 Durand Avenue, 554-6500; Racine&#13;
Office, 5220 Washington Avenue, 637-9101; Regency Mall Office, 5610 Durand Avenue, 554-5144; West&#13;
Washington Avenue Office, 6700 Washington Avenue, 637-7900; Washington Avenue Motor Bank,&#13;
5417 Washington Avenue, 637-9220; Northwestern Office, 6520 Northwestern Avenue, 886-5077; Main&#13;
Place, 245 Main Street, 632-5111&#13;
Heritage Bank of Kenoeha Offices: Main Office - 3928 60th Street, 658-2582; South Office - 8046 39th&#13;
Avenue, 697-0680; Bristol Office - 7700120th Avenue, in the Factory Outlet Centre, 857-7927&#13;
Members FDIC &#13;
College Students&#13;
"EARN EXTRA MONEY"&#13;
AND&#13;
HELP OTHERS&#13;
WHILE YOU STUDY&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
6212 22nd Ave. 654-1366&#13;
M-W-F 8:30-3:30 T-TH 10-5:30&#13;
There's Hope - We Care&#13;
24 Hour Hotline&#13;
414-658-222&#13;
FREE Pregnancy Test&#13;
FREE Counseling on Options&#13;
Complete Confidentiality&#13;
Baby &amp; Maternity Cloths&#13;
Crisis Pregnancy Center&#13;
2222 Roosevelt Rd. Kenosha&#13;
IN THE BLEACHERS&#13;
"Sack him, you Idiots! It's Just a trick!!"&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
in the Parkside Union&#13;
WIN!&#13;
over $100&#13;
in prizes each game&#13;
• Pro Jerseys &amp; Caps&#13;
• Team Pennants&#13;
• Food (Pizza, Burgers, Etc.)&#13;
• Rec. Cir. Activity Coupons&#13;
• Packer Game Ticket Drawing&#13;
FREE&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
But you must sign in,&#13;
get a door ticket&#13;
and be in attendance&#13;
to be eligible to win.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
8:00 p.m. - Parkside Union&#13;
Monday, September 11&#13;
???vs???&#13;
year in Union Square&#13;
6 Thursday, September 7,1989 Ranger&#13;
' I ' I - SSSSSSSSS^SSSSSSSS =====&#13;
Gerard to perform at first dance of&#13;
fore, this time will be a little&#13;
different. The band has had a&#13;
few changes in personnel&#13;
lately. In fact, their look&#13;
seems to change depending&#13;
on what week it is. However,&#13;
these changes have made the&#13;
band better than ever.&#13;
So, if you've seen them before,&#13;
be prepared to take a&#13;
second look. If you haven't&#13;
had the opportunity yet, come&#13;
to the dance. It'll be major&#13;
league excitement. Their&#13;
looks are hot, their sound is&#13;
hot.&#13;
Doors open in the Union&#13;
Square at 8:30 p.m. There&#13;
will be a beer garden. Guests&#13;
18 and over can enter the&#13;
dance at a cost of $3. Admission&#13;
for Parkside students is&#13;
$2.&#13;
Welcome Week '89 ends&#13;
with "Gerard." If you haven't&#13;
yet become involved with the&#13;
many events that were put on&#13;
this week, now's your opportunity.&#13;
Don't miss the chance&#13;
to sweat a little.&#13;
Who knows, you might even&#13;
enjoy it.&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Feeling tired? Need a&#13;
break? Has the first week of&#13;
school gotten you down? Well,&#13;
the band that PAB booked for&#13;
Friday night is destined to&#13;
pick you up.&#13;
"Gerard," a Milwaukeebased&#13;
band well known in this&#13;
area will be here rockin' 'til&#13;
the morning hours. They have&#13;
a large following in the immediate&#13;
midwest, mainly&#13;
Minnesota, North Dakota,&#13;
Iowa and Wisconsin.&#13;
Mike Heidemon, a member&#13;
of the band, described their&#13;
music best when he said,&#13;
"It's a young, youthful pop&#13;
sound. But it's not shallow!"&#13;
They play top 40 dance music&#13;
with one set of original songs.&#13;
It's bound to keep you dancing&#13;
until the very end.&#13;
Their sound is so unique&#13;
that it is automatically identified&#13;
with "Gerard." Along&#13;
with the seven band members&#13;
and their instruments, "Gerard"&#13;
includes an Apple&#13;
Macintosh Computer, giving&#13;
them the sound of 13 keyboards.&#13;
The band knows this&#13;
gives them a more sophisticated&#13;
sound.&#13;
Although "Gerard" has&#13;
played here several times beSquiare'&#13;
&#13;
GBed &amp;3reaA/a&amp;6&#13;
Host &amp; Hostess -&#13;
GERRY &amp; MARIANNE&#13;
IRONSIDE&#13;
6003 7th Avenue • Kenosha, Wl 53150 • (414) 656-0207 &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 7,1989 7 f&#13;
gaaggsggasggggBsa===B^Bgg=aB,------» gMB-gBM-g-i—-egg&#13;
Tough schedule awaits for '89 soccer campaign ——————&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sport Editor&#13;
Completing what head&#13;
coach Rick Kilps called "the&#13;
toughest selection of a squad&#13;
in 13 years," the Ranger soccer&#13;
team rolled into the 1989&#13;
campaign looking to improve&#13;
on last year's 13-4-5 record.&#13;
To accomplish that, the&#13;
Rangers will be challenged&#13;
by one of their toughest-ever&#13;
schedules, which includes&#13;
seven NCAA Division I&#13;
teams. Couple that with the&#13;
loss of f our starters from last&#13;
year, including two-time&#13;
NAIA Ail-American Mike&#13;
Baldwin and the NAIA's AilAmerican&#13;
Goalkeeper Mark&#13;
Litton, and it would seem an&#13;
improvement on 13 wins&#13;
would be difficult.&#13;
Coach Kilps, who comes&#13;
into the '89 season with a&#13;
career coaching record of 71-&#13;
28-12 i n five years here, has&#13;
added a pair of transfers to&#13;
complement four returning&#13;
lettermen in '89.&#13;
Mike Lee, a 1988 All-Area&#13;
selection, is one of four seniors&#13;
on this year's team. A&#13;
three-year starting midfielder,&#13;
Lee boasts an impressive&#13;
string of 66 consecutive&#13;
matches in which he has&#13;
started, and has tallied 74&#13;
points in 67 games, putting&#13;
him fourth on Parkside's&#13;
career points list.&#13;
Jim Chomko, a senior and&#13;
one of the team's tri-captains,&#13;
has started along with Lee in&#13;
the Ranger midfield for the&#13;
past three years. Chomko returns&#13;
from his second&#13;
straight selection to the NAIA&#13;
All-District team, and is the&#13;
Ranger's all-time leading setup&#13;
man with 32 career assists.&#13;
&#13;
Junior Jens Hansen, also a&#13;
tri-captain, returns at forward&#13;
after a 1988 campaign&#13;
in which he was selected as a&#13;
2nd team All-American in the&#13;
NAIA. In addition, Hansen is&#13;
already a two-time All-District&#13;
selection, and is first on&#13;
the Parkside all-time list in&#13;
goals scored (32), points per&#13;
game (1.74), and goals per&#13;
game (.69).&#13;
Stan Anderson, the third of&#13;
the captain trio, anchors the&#13;
Rangers in goal starting his&#13;
senior season. A red-shirt in&#13;
1988, Anderson boasts a 21-8-2&#13;
record and has allowed 1.23&#13;
goals per contest throughout&#13;
his career.&#13;
Transfers Alike Dallner&#13;
(UW-Green Bay) and Armando&#13;
Carlo (Triton Junior College)&#13;
will add to the Parkside&#13;
attack with Carlo assisting&#13;
Anderson in the net and Dallner&#13;
at forward.&#13;
When asked about the year&#13;
ahead, Kilps added, "With a&#13;
talented and versatile freshman&#13;
class and returning&#13;
players coming back, this has&#13;
been really exciting.&#13;
"We are the 'all-potential&#13;
team,' and much success&#13;
could come from this group."&#13;
Conie join HA Jot out at Hie H&#13;
Utuow Dining Room. Wed13&#13;
11:00 OMt- 2:00 |Wt&#13;
UotiouA HbpauicJoodo &amp; ed&amp;daimed&#13;
DootPtijoo&#13;
Welcome Back, UW-Parkside Students! &#13;
8 Thursday, September 7, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Rangers kick-off year with tournament sweep&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
opened its 1989 season by&#13;
marching through their first&#13;
two games in winning the&#13;
four-team Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
In the tourney opener, the&#13;
Rangers upended Northland&#13;
4;1, scoring two times in each&#13;
half in coasting to the win.&#13;
Morten Akesgaede and Jim&#13;
Chomko each netted goals in&#13;
the first half to give the&#13;
Rangers a 2-0 lead. After a&#13;
Northland goal before the intermission&#13;
cut the lead in&#13;
half, Chomko tallied his second&#13;
goal of the afternoon to&#13;
make it 3-1. Mike Riley added&#13;
the final goal at the 67:00&#13;
mark to account for the final&#13;
margin. The Rangers outshot&#13;
N.C. 27-4 in the contest in getting&#13;
their first victory with&#13;
Stan Anderson going the distance&#13;
in goal.&#13;
In the championship game,&#13;
the Rangers put on a sound&#13;
performance in blanking&#13;
Grand Rapids, Michigan 3-0.&#13;
Jens Hansen, Bob Rogers and&#13;
Mike Lee each added goals as&#13;
the Rangers outshot Grand&#13;
Rapids 18-5, raising their re­&#13;
!~20% DISCOUNT-1&#13;
Clip &amp; Save This Ad&#13;
I[To all Parkside students and faculty&#13;
I&#13;
" members only, on all merchandise in&#13;
our store. This ad is valid for as long&#13;
| as you attend Parkside. ID required.&#13;
^ Wisconsin's Largest Jeweler&#13;
y^luJicU'A&gt;&#13;
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cord to 2-0. Anderson and Armando&#13;
Carlo combined for&#13;
the shut-out.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps was&#13;
pleased with the second outing&#13;
of the tourney. "We kept&#13;
our intensity up for 90&#13;
minutes, showed good rhythm&#13;
and had no major flaws. Obviously&#13;
we have some things&#13;
to work out but nothing&#13;
major."&#13;
The victory was a costly&#13;
one, though, as Hansen suffered&#13;
a sprained ankle in the&#13;
game and will be out of action&#13;
indefinitely.&#13;
Up next for the Rangers is&#13;
the Rockhurst Tournament in&#13;
Kansas City, Missouri. Parkside&#13;
will open against the host&#13;
squad, ranked tenth in the&#13;
NA-IA. Also in the tournament&#13;
are Mid Western State. Texas&#13;
and McKendree College&#13;
(ranked #3).&#13;
Experience the benefits of subscribing&#13;
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information on global and&#13;
national events.&#13;
Order now to have the Midwest's best&#13;
newspaper delivered to your dorm or&#13;
apartment at 40% off the r egular newsstand&#13;
price!&#13;
Feel the action with Sports. Follow your&#13;
favorites with the Midwest's most colorful&#13;
coverage of college, prep and p ro sports! Get&#13;
award-winning action photography, plus&#13;
expert commentary from Bob Verdi, Bernie&#13;
Lincicome and Jon Margolis.&#13;
Enjoy Tempo. Every day, enjoy articles about&#13;
science, arts, literature, current events and&#13;
interesting people, plus comics, puzzles and&#13;
the Chicago Tribune crossword puzzle.&#13;
Compare opinions with award-winning&#13;
columnists.&#13;
When it comes to forming an opinion, these&#13;
Chicago Tribune columnists have very&#13;
definite ideas: Mike Royko, Bob Greene, Ann&#13;
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Stay on top of the world with national&#13;
news. Chicago Tribune journalists cover the&#13;
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financial tables and the Midwest's largest&#13;
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Call now to receive the Chicago Tribune at 40% off:&#13;
552-8211 or1-800-TRIBUNE.&#13;
Ask for Operator 36.&#13;
(Chicago (Tribune &#13;
8 Thursday, September 7, 1989 Ranger&#13;
ssss&#13;
Rangers kick-off year with tournament sweep&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
opened its 1989 season by&#13;
marching through their first&#13;
two games in winning the&#13;
four-team Parkside Invitational&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
In the tourney opener, the&#13;
Rangers upended Northland&#13;
4^1, scoring two times in each&#13;
half in coasting to the win.&#13;
Morten Akesgaede and Jim&#13;
Chomko each netted goals in&#13;
the first half to give the&#13;
Rangers a 2-0 lead. After a&#13;
Northland goal before the intermission&#13;
cut the lead in&#13;
half, Chomko tallied his second&#13;
goal of the afternoon to&#13;
make it 3-1. Mike Riley added&#13;
the final goal at the 67:00&#13;
mark to account for the final&#13;
margin. The Rangers outshot&#13;
N.C. 27-4 in the contest in getting&#13;
their first victory with&#13;
Stan Anderson going the distance&#13;
in goal.&#13;
In the championship game,&#13;
the Rangers put on a sound&#13;
performance in blanking&#13;
Grand Rapids, Michigan 3-0.&#13;
Jens Hansen, Bob Rogers and&#13;
Mike Lee each added goals as&#13;
the Rangers outshot Grand&#13;
Rapids 18-5, raising their record&#13;
to 2-0. A nderson and Armando&#13;
Carlo combined for&#13;
the shut-out.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps was&#13;
pleased with the second outing&#13;
of the tourney. "We kept&#13;
our intensity up for 90&#13;
minutes, showed good rhythm&#13;
and had no major flaws. Obviously&#13;
we have some things&#13;
to work out but nothing&#13;
major."&#13;
The victory was a costly&#13;
one, though, as Hansen suffered&#13;
a sprained ankle in the&#13;
game and will be out of action&#13;
indefinitely.&#13;
Up next for the Rangers is&#13;
the Rockhurst Tournament in&#13;
Kansas City, Missouri. Parkside&#13;
will open against the host&#13;
squad, ranked tenth in the&#13;
NAIA. Also in the tournament&#13;
are Mid Western State. Texas&#13;
and McKendree College&#13;
(ranked #3).&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Experience the benefits of subscribing&#13;
to the Chicago Tribune for&#13;
mm UAP3&#13;
Newsstand Price&#13;
Every day the Chicago Tribune puts the world&#13;
at your fingertips...with the Midwest's best&#13;
news writing, sports coverage and business&#13;
reporting. It's transmitted via satellite to a&#13;
printing site near you so that you get up-tothe-minute&#13;
information on global and&#13;
national events.&#13;
Order now to have the Midwest's best&#13;
newspaper delivered to your dorm or&#13;
apartment at 40% off the regular newsstand&#13;
price!&#13;
Feel the action with Sports. Follow your&#13;
favorites with the Midwest's most colorful&#13;
coverage of college, prep and pro sports! Get&#13;
award-winning action photography, plus&#13;
expert commentary from Bob Verdi, Bernie&#13;
Lincicome and Jon Margolis.&#13;
Enjoy Tempo. Every day, enjoy articles about&#13;
science, arts, literature, current events and&#13;
interesting people, plus comics, puzzles and&#13;
the Chicago Tribune crossword p uzzle.&#13;
Compare opinions with award-winning&#13;
columnists.&#13;
When it comes to forming an opinion, these&#13;
Chicago Tribune columnists have very&#13;
definite ideas: Mike Royko, Bob Greene, Ann&#13;
Landers and Dear Abby.&#13;
Stay on top of the world with national&#13;
news. Chicago Tribune journalists cover the&#13;
world with the kind of depth and analysis you&#13;
just can't get from radio or television.&#13;
"tack your future in Business. Complete&#13;
financial tables and the Midwest's largest&#13;
business writing staff enable you to make&#13;
sound decisions on your future - from the&#13;
career path you follow to the stocks you want&#13;
to buy.&#13;
Call now to receive the Chicago Tribune at 40% off:&#13;
552-8211 or1-800-TRIBUNE.&#13;
Ask for Operator 36.&#13;
Chicago (Tribune&#13;
r20% DISCOUNT&#13;
Clip &amp; Save This Ad&#13;
^ To all Parkside students and faculty&#13;
•" members only, on all merchandise in&#13;
• our store. This ad is valid for as long&#13;
| as you attend Parkside. ID required.&#13;
Wisconsin's Largest Jeweler&#13;
Mission Village (across from Pershing Plaza on Hwy. 50)&#13;
PROFESSIONAL JEWELERS SINCE 1949&#13;
I 40,17 - 75th St. Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.&#13;
. 697-0884 Sundays 12:00-4:30 p.m.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
CAREER&#13;
CENTER&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
COMMUNITY SERVICE&#13;
Friday - September 8th&#13;
9:00 AM - Noon&#13;
On Your Mark!&#13;
Get Set!&#13;
&amp; GO! </text>
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Volume 18, issue 10</text>
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              <text>Judicial Branch hearing held on election</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>&#13;
Thursday, November 9, 1989-&#13;
Uol. HUIII. No. 10&#13;
udicial&#13;
Branch&#13;
hearing held on election&#13;
.,   DaD&#13;
Chiappetta&#13;
NewsEdiIor&#13;
lot  on  November&#13;
I  and   2.    The&#13;
correct  spelling  of Simpkins  name&#13;
was  corrected   quickly   during   the&#13;
, election.&#13;
The Election  Committee&#13;
at&#13;
first&#13;
decided   to  rerun  the  election   be-&#13;
cause  of  many  complaints  stating&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
errors&#13;
violated&#13;
the&#13;
As of  November&#13;
3rd's Senate meet-&#13;
ing,  the  election&#13;
results stand as is.&#13;
constitution,&#13;
hut   the   committee&#13;
'received  more  complaints  that  the&#13;
results   should  stand  and  that  the&#13;
senate should spend the time doing&#13;
more productive  things.&#13;
Senator  BiD Homer  was&#13;
at&#13;
first&#13;
against   the  Election   Committee,&#13;
stating  that the election  should  not&#13;
be  rerun,  but  when  the  Election&#13;
Committee   decided   not&#13;
10&#13;
rerun&#13;
the election  during  the emergency&#13;
Stabbin'gincident on campus&#13;
by&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
00&#13;
November&#13;
I,&#13;
1989&#13;
at&#13;
2:45&#13;
IlI.,UW-ParksideCatnPusPolice&#13;
~aphonecallfrom&#13;
an&#13;
apart-&#13;
1IeIIl81lhe&#13;
Residence&#13;
Hall&#13;
build-&#13;
"~~astabbing&#13;
incident.&#13;
III&#13;
~Patkside&#13;
Catnpus   Police&#13;
ItIt&#13;
KenOSha&#13;
Sheriff  Depart-&#13;
~edatthellpartrlientat&#13;
the&#13;
Han&#13;
huilding  and  dis-&#13;
~&#13;
a  UW-Parkside  female&#13;
lIidenl&#13;
had&#13;
numerous  cuts   and&#13;
~&#13;
on&#13;
her&#13;
arm.&#13;
"She  was&#13;
~~&#13;
upse~ and   was   wit-&#13;
IIIf&#13;
10haveheen stabbing  her-&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
with her  scissor,"&#13;
It&#13;
Of&#13;
DaVIdOstrowski, Direc-&#13;
!lfety,CampusPolice and  Public&#13;
A UW&#13;
'&#13;
~   SUfi&#13;
-1'arkside&#13;
male  student&#13;
eted&#13;
stah wounds  on  his&#13;
right&#13;
arm.&#13;
"After  sorting  the  situation  out&#13;
the&#13;
male  and  female  student  knew&#13;
each  other  socially  and  had  some&#13;
type  of  a  falling&#13;
out,&#13;
He  locked&#13;
himself  in the  bedroom.    She  then&#13;
asked  him for a scissor,  stating  that&#13;
she needed&#13;
10&#13;
repair some clothing,&#13;
which  he slid under  the door.   The&#13;
female   student    then   opened   the&#13;
bedroom   door  with  her  key ..  The&#13;
male  student  was holding  the door&#13;
with  his  right&#13;
arm&#13;
trying&#13;
10&#13;
keep&#13;
.  herfromenteringthebedroom.&#13;
She&#13;
apparently   used   the  scissor   stab-&#13;
bing  the  male  student  on  the&#13;
arm&#13;
trying   to  get   him&#13;
10&#13;
release   the&#13;
door,"  explained   Ostrowski.&#13;
Wiblesses   notified  the  officers&#13;
, that  she  then  used&#13;
the&#13;
scissor   on&#13;
herself.&#13;
"It   was   evident   that   she  pre-&#13;
sented&#13;
dangerto&#13;
others so we trans-&#13;
ferred  her to SI. Catherines  Hospi-&#13;
tal&#13;
in Kenosha  for observation  and&#13;
evaluation,"   added  Ostrowski.&#13;
"Looking  at  the  seriousness  of&#13;
.the situation  we asked  the Kenosha&#13;
District   Attorney's    office   to  me&#13;
charges  of  battery  against  the  fe-&#13;
male  student&#13;
The&#13;
D.A.'s  office is&#13;
reviewing&#13;
the   charges,"&#13;
stated&#13;
Ostrowski.&#13;
.An&#13;
investigation&#13;
is&#13;
being&#13;
pr0-&#13;
vided  by&#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside'  s Dean  of&#13;
Student's&#13;
office&#13;
and&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Director  of  Residence&#13;
Life.&#13;
Campus   Police   provided   first&#13;
aid until Somers Rescue arrived  on&#13;
the  scene.&#13;
meeting,  he changed  his stand.  He&#13;
then stated that the election  should&#13;
be&#13;
rerun&#13;
because   the  errors  were&#13;
violations  of the election  policies,&#13;
rules,&#13;
regulations  by  the  Parkside&#13;
Student  Government   Association,&#13;
Inc,&#13;
the Executive  Branch,  and the&#13;
duly  appointed  Election  Commit-&#13;
tee.&#13;
Horner submitted complaints  to&#13;
the Judicial  Branch concerning  the&#13;
violations  of the Election  Policies&#13;
by  the  Election  Committee.&#13;
The&#13;
Judicial  Brancn  held  a hearing  on&#13;
November&#13;
I,  1989.&#13;
Homer's  complaints  against the&#13;
Election   Committee    include   the&#13;
following   alleged   election   viola-&#13;
tions:&#13;
1.&#13;
That  the student  body  was&#13;
not provided  a means to participate&#13;
in&#13;
a secret&#13;
ballot&#13;
2.&#13;
That proper procedures  and&#13;
contiuned&#13;
lID&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
Marquette uprising&#13;
by&#13;
Sco«  Singer&#13;
Asst.&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
This past weekend  brought near&#13;
riot  conditions&#13;
10&#13;
the  Marquette&#13;
University   campus   in  two&#13;
unre-&#13;
lated uprisings .&#13;
The   first  of  the  incidents   oc-&#13;
cured duringa  crowded&#13;
party&#13;
in the&#13;
student union.  The incident&#13;
Slatted&#13;
when  non-students    who  were   in&#13;
attendance  were asked  to leave the&#13;
premisis.&#13;
Apparently,   when&#13;
the&#13;
non-stu-&#13;
dents  refused&#13;
to&#13;
leave  the patty,  a&#13;
public-safety   officer   was  struck,&#13;
setting  off  the  uprising.   In all six&#13;
public-safetyofficerswere.injured,&#13;
the  worst  of  the  injuries  being  a&#13;
broken  nose.&#13;
In  addition&#13;
10&#13;
the  injuries,  two&#13;
of the non-students  were  arrested,&#13;
eight  windows   were  broken,&#13;
and&#13;
an   outdoor    bulletin&#13;
board&#13;
was&#13;
overturned.&#13;
In&#13;
an  unrelated   incident  early&#13;
Sunday morning, severaiMarquette&#13;
students wereanested   on relatively&#13;
minor   charges   at&#13;
a&#13;
har&#13;
Iocated&#13;
within  a few blocks of&#13;
the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Although   both  incidents  drew&#13;
largecrowds,campus   officials were&#13;
quick  to stress  that  the weekend's&#13;
events   were   very  different   from&#13;
recent  happenings   at  the  Univer-&#13;
sity of Oshkosh.&#13;
ForthreeconsecutiveThursdays&#13;
at Oshkoskh  students&#13;
protested&#13;
the&#13;
state's  drinking  age in events&#13;
that&#13;
turned to violence.  Marquette  om-&#13;
cials  stressed  that conditions  there&#13;
were  not  the  same.   "This  is not a&#13;
student  or  alcohol  problem,"   one&#13;
official  stated.&#13;
.¢&#13;
Great  Amerjcan&#13;
Smoke Out...&#13;
PageS&#13;
~ Rocky Honor Pic-&#13;
tureShow ...&#13;
~ News&#13;
Briefs...&#13;
Page 4&#13;
~2~"'~unda::~y.-:N~ov=.m=be:r;':9,~t:98~9:':RaD~g~.:r__   "'&#13;
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members that studenlS are&#13;
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than&#13;
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be:&#13;
on matters of&#13;
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seemed&#13;
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within&#13;
the commillee.&#13;
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be&#13;
allowed&#13;
~  speak&#13;
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those&#13;
on&#13;
1hI&#13;
committee&#13;
shOOd&#13;
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Now,&#13;
becuase&#13;
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in&#13;
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allendence being&#13;
reqUred&#13;
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ask&#13;
for&#13;
permission&#13;
to&#13;
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know&#13;
what that&#13;
wi!&#13;
get you • you'l be&#13;
decined:&#13;
commented one member ot&#13;
the&#13;
campus&#13;
commtrity&#13;
who&#13;
asked&#13;
not&#13;
to be&#13;
identified.&#13;
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actions&#13;
lead ~&#13;
only&#13;
one resounding&#13;
conclusion&#13;
·lIis, as well as other,&#13;
committees&#13;
need  ~&#13;
become more&#13;
responsi ... ~&#13;
the S1Udents. This&#13;
can&#13;
only&#13;
happen&#13;
tI"Iotql&#13;
studenI   al1endence&#13;
of&#13;
thesa&#13;
meetings.&#13;
The&#13;
sche&lt;Ue  ~&#13;
1hI  M'C&#13;
is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Oct.&#13;
10, 24,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
7, 28,&#13;
Dec.&#13;
12&#13;
• AI&#13;
on&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
from&#13;
9:30&#13;
to&#13;
llam&#13;
in&#13;
MOlN&#13;
0131.&#13;
AUPtrd3nce&#13;
of these meetings, as well as&#13;
participation,&#13;
can only result in&#13;
the&#13;
voice of ...  students being heard •&#13;
and&#13;
cannot&#13;
help&#13;
but&#13;
to&#13;
get it listened to.&#13;
Because&#13;
without&#13;
a voice&#13;
the&#13;
students are helpless; and that voice must not&#13;
be&#13;
a&#13;
foobIe&#13;
one -&#13;
lot&#13;
a feeble voice&#13;
is&#13;
one&#13;
that may be heard in&#13;
the&#13;
background, but is&#13;
one&#13;
that is ignored&#13;
and&#13;
not listened to.&#13;
OnIyastrong representativevoice of&#13;
the&#13;
studentmassescan Ietadministralion&#13;
know&#13;
that the students&#13;
DO&#13;
care.&#13;
Let&#13;
your&#13;
thoughts and ideas&#13;
be&#13;
known·&#13;
attend&#13;
these&#13;
and other committee meeting,&#13;
and&#13;
help&#13;
shape&#13;
the&#13;
policies  which&#13;
are&#13;
being&#13;
made&#13;
on your campus.&#13;
,&#13;
WWo!,~~°lf..lI~·.un.!£:.&amp;,.&#13;
.&#13;
••&#13;
y.&#13;
orror Show ~crutInlzed&#13;
There is a party taking place&#13;
at&#13;
Well then.  You've .just experi-&#13;
and h's "Let's&#13;
do&#13;
the Tl1lI&#13;
aeastle.  The appetizers consist of   enced  something  that thousands&#13;
again!II'Sincethein&#13;
two&#13;
virgins and the main course is   have  and  will experience   ••• the    included here, there&#13;
is&#13;
III&#13;
Meatloaf.   The festiv~ies  include&#13;
phenomenon  of "Rocky's" audience&#13;
for not participating in&#13;
!his&#13;
folk dancing with dances  like the    participation.&#13;
.&#13;
You will also learn.&#13;
"Time Warp" and the host is wear;&#13;
In techn~1   terms  you are a   added dialogue&#13;
such  as:&#13;
'\il&#13;
ing black fishnet stockings  and a   "Virgin' or a first-timer.   Soon, you    "Missed&#13;
~I&#13;
Missed hll&#13;
HoI&#13;
teddy and starts the evening  off&#13;
too&#13;
shall be flinging  rice, throwing&#13;
gotta kiss&#13;
~II',&#13;
'What&#13;
whh a rousing chorusot "I'm asweet&#13;
toast and be dancing in the aisles to    you use?', "Future slut!!'.&#13;
transvest~e.'&#13;
the familiar  "Time Warp."&#13;
"&#13;
ever popular, "Hey Fran~&#13;
,  Sound familiar?&#13;
You'll see that around you people&#13;
the orgy?I'&#13;
II&#13;
seemed like a fairly ordinary&#13;
are dressed up as characters  inthe&#13;
The more and&#13;
morejllll&#13;
night when Janet Weiss (slutl) and    movie .and watching  your friends&#13;
the more involved&#13;
you'll&#13;
gil,&#13;
Brad Majors (a--el!)    S9toutfrom&#13;
act ridiculous  in clothes  they nor-    the  more fun you" have.&#13;
the quiet town of Denton.&#13;
II&#13;
was a   mally wouldn1 be caught,dead  in.&#13;
though  the movie&#13;
is&#13;
DVtI&#13;
night that they would never forget,&#13;
"Virgins" should be prepared  w~h    years  old, ~ is still drawirv&#13;
"not for a very long time."&#13;
the  "Rocky  Horror'  Survival&#13;
K~,&#13;
crowds all overtheccuntJy.&#13;
Tomorrow  in the Union Cinema&#13;
which consists&#13;
of:&#13;
1)&#13;
~ice to throw&#13;
is a satire of the old&#13;
'B'.&#13;
at midnight will be the annual show-    during the wedding scene;&#13;
2)&#13;
Squirt&#13;
is qu~e humorous,&#13;
W&#13;
not&#13;
ing of "The Rocky Horror Picture.   ·guns and newspaper  to simulate&#13;
funny.&#13;
Show."&#13;
the rainstorm  scene;&#13;
3)&#13;
Toast and&#13;
So, get on your&#13;
wackiell&#13;
Has anyone ever approached&#13;
4)&#13;
deck of cards.  These are just a   grab your Survival&#13;
Knllld&#13;
you late Friday or early Saturday&#13;
sampleofthenecess~iesthatevery&#13;
the party Friday,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
10_&#13;
saying,&#13;
"00&#13;
you wanltogosee   'The    "Rocky'  enthusiast  brings along.&#13;
night in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Rocky  Horror  Picture  Show'  to·&#13;
Then, you should be prepared&#13;
sion is only&#13;
$1.50&#13;
forstudd&#13;
night?", arriving only to see on the    to learn hQwtodothe  "Time Warp,"&#13;
$2.50&#13;
for non-students.&#13;
silver screen people in their under-    which is really qu~e simple.  First,&#13;
And remember, you&#13;
\00&#13;
~ear: strangetransvestiteswear-   it'slu'sta jumpto&#13;
the left, and then    a"sweettransvesme,trorn&#13;
109&#13;
pook rubber gloves and every-    a step to the right.  Put your hands&#13;
ual, Transylvaniall'&#13;
one around you shouting "Say&#13;
1111'&#13;
on your hips and bring your knees&#13;
.&#13;
at the screen, and thinking to your-    in tight. And then apelvicthrust   (re-&#13;
se~, ~h  ~y&#13;
God:&#13;
mY,best friend is   peated five times will nearly drive&#13;
a lunatIC In disgUise!!&#13;
you insane)  and then a hip swivel&#13;
BUSINESS  STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Teri Fortney&#13;
Ad Rep.&#13;
carol Curl&#13;
Ad Rep.&#13;
Ranger is written a~d edit~d by students of UW.Parkside, who are solely responsiblefor&#13;
itS&#13;
cy andcontent.It&#13;
IS&#13;
publIShedeveryThursdayduringthe academicyearexcept""&#13;
pllliO&#13;
days.&#13;
I&#13;
Lenersto theednorwillbe acceptedonly if they aretyped.double-spacedand&#13;
35O-~&#13;
h&#13;
enld&#13;
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must be Signed, With a telephone  number  Included  for verification  purposes. Names&#13;
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f~ntger&#13;
reserves&#13;
the.rightto&#13;
edit&#13;
lettersandrefuse&#13;
those&#13;
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and/or&#13;
de-&#13;
a cry.&#13;
T~~~~i~_lor allieners, andclassifiedads, is Mondayat&#13;
10&#13;
a.~. for publicatiOO&#13;
EDITORIAL   STAFF&#13;
SIeve DeAngelis&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Pacetti&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment  Editor  .&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
John Kehoe ._&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
Asst.News  Editor&#13;
Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
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              <text>...&#13;
oon&#13;
1&#13;
getleft.behind and&#13;
'pUll&#13;
out, the special basketball sec-&#13;
IiOO&#13;
inthe centerfold  of todovs  Ranger. Pages&#13;
1&#13;
B-4B.&#13;
UW-Parkside'ssoccer team has shutout string ended in NAIA&#13;
Area 5 Rnalloss. Page&#13;
16.&#13;
ThursdlllY, No!,!m~er 16, 1989&#13;
---~-&#13;
VoIce for&#13;
Choice&#13;
Rally&#13;
Pro-choicerally on&#13;
Change  in smoking&#13;
:campusdraws  attention,&#13;
'policy recommended&#13;
"Rocky" results in neor-rlot condlnons&#13;
by  Kimberly    K.  Amason&#13;
could   have&#13;
been&#13;
a&#13;
disaster&#13;
were&#13;
ODS&#13;
condiuons,&#13;
Anned   with   squirt   guns,   rice&#13;
scattered   all  over  the&#13;
floor&#13;
of  the&#13;
"The&#13;
crowd   seemed&#13;
good-na-&#13;
and   other   props,   "Rocky   Horror&#13;
Union  Cinema.  lobby&#13;
and&#13;
theater.&#13;
lured&#13;
enough   while   waiting   for&#13;
Picture  Show"   fans  showed  up  at&#13;
ThestellChofbeer,rotteneggs~&#13;
~ket&#13;
sales   to open&#13;
up   for   the&#13;
the  U'&#13;
Cinema   in overwhelm-&#13;
stale   hotdogs   penneated&#13;
the&#13;
lt1f.&#13;
mldmght   showmg   of   the  fifteen&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
m:&#13;
x&#13;
ted&#13;
numbers,&#13;
last&#13;
"The&#13;
Rocky  Honor  Picture  Show"&#13;
year   old  feature   film.&#13;
By  12:05&#13;
mgday&#13;
pee&#13;
star!ed&#13;
offas  good-natured   horSing&#13;
a.m.,  however,  when  no  advance-&#13;
Fn&#13;
y.&#13;
undandwmed'&#13;
I'&#13;
B   3&#13;
'3Oa&#13;
therernainsofwhat&#13;
aro&#13;
mto near  y&#13;
not-&#13;
y.&#13;
.m.,&#13;
.yllall&#13;
Chiappetta&#13;
News&#13;
EdItor&#13;
Ahorlion&#13;
Rights&#13;
Supporters&#13;
.11I&#13;
over&#13;
the&#13;
counuy&#13;
this&#13;
past'&#13;
iIIbad,&#13;
from&#13;
Texas   to   Nonh&#13;
......&#13;
'The&#13;
University&#13;
of  Wis·&#13;
--Plrts1deonNovember&#13;
12,&#13;
IIIIJ&#13;
in&#13;
!be&#13;
Communication&#13;
Ans&#13;
-,~&#13;
a&#13;
Voice For  Choice&#13;
were  aboutiOO  Pro-Life   picketers&#13;
expressing&#13;
their   feelings   against&#13;
Voice   For   Choice   by  displaying&#13;
such  signs   as.  "Abortion    is&#13;
Mur-&#13;
der,"   "A&#13;
Pre&#13;
Born  baby  is  a&#13;
Per-&#13;
,  son"&#13;
and    "Give&#13;
the    Babies&#13;
a&#13;
Choice."&#13;
The&#13;
Pro-Cboice&#13;
rally&#13;
included   speakers   such  as:&#13;
Mary&#13;
Kay   Wagner-Malloy.&#13;
Mary   Jane&#13;
by  Gwen  HeUer&#13;
Staff  Writer&#13;
Last   spring,  the  University   of&#13;
Wisconsin  - Stevens  Pointadopted&#13;
a  policy   which  prevents   smoking&#13;
on  campus.&#13;
The  Committee   for&#13;
campus&#13;
Environment&#13;
may   con-&#13;
sider  such a policy  for recommen-&#13;
dation  to the administration   in the&#13;
coming  months.&#13;
Professor&#13;
Michael&#13;
Gunman&#13;
recently   submitted   a  letter  to  the&#13;
committee    which   introduced   the&#13;
idea  of banning   smoking  in virtu-&#13;
ally all&#13;
areas&#13;
of the campus.&#13;
Gurt-&#13;
man's   letter  provided   some  "food&#13;
for   thought"    for   the   committee&#13;
members  representing   the  faculty,&#13;
staff, student  body and&#13;
administra-&#13;
tion  on the  Parkside  campus.&#13;
The  campus  policy  at this  time&#13;
sWes  that smoking  is allowed  only&#13;
in the  areas  that  are  designated   as&#13;
smoking   areas.&#13;
However,    there&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
a great  deal  of confusion&#13;
in  enforcing   the  policy.    In  some&#13;
cases,  an ashtray  is sitting&#13;
beneath&#13;
a ''no  smoking"   sign.&#13;
"What   kind   of  message&#13;
does&#13;
that  send?"  asked  Steven  Leavitt,&#13;
committee  chairperson.&#13;
"The&#13;
pol-&#13;
icy&#13;
is&#13;
ridiculous.&#13;
It&#13;
is  not   well&#13;
advertised,    nor  are  there  enough&#13;
signs  posted.&#13;
Ask  anyone   where&#13;
Pro-choice   rally  at UWP· Theatre&#13;
,~ofoverl00Pm-Choice&#13;
Landry.RabbiDenaFeingold,Rev.&#13;
_ilIIlil&#13;
all&#13;
over  the  U.S.   this&#13;
James   Miller.   Gene   Boyer,   Sen.&#13;
. 'IIeekend.&#13;
The   Voice   For&#13;
Joseph   Strohl,   Rep.   Kim   Plache.&#13;
Rally&#13;
was&#13;
"Sponsored  by&#13;
Rep.&#13;
Scon&#13;
Fergus   and  Rev.  Ton~&#13;
"'Oioice&#13;
.~isconsin   Voice&#13;
Larsen&#13;
The   Mukwonago&#13;
Femt-&#13;
'l1Ie&#13;
CcalitiOn.&#13;
nist&#13;
Singers&#13;
and&#13;
Eaters   were  also&#13;
\te&#13;
SOUth~&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
present&#13;
and&#13;
did  perform.&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
. For&#13;
ChOICeCoalition   was   .&#13;
"Effortstodenyawoman&#13;
snght&#13;
~foUowingtheSupreme&#13;
of   choice   in  Wisconsin&#13;
will   not&#13;
~&#13;
decision July   3.   1989,&#13;
succeed   in the  state  Senate  as long&#13;
...  ~We~terv.Reproduc-&#13;
as&#13;
I  am  majority   leader,"empha-&#13;
IlllIbat&#13;
Se1'Vlces,&#13;
the&#13;
Missouri&#13;
sized&#13;
Sen:    Joseph&#13;
Strohl&#13;
(0-&#13;
lIdein&#13;
ga~e.states greater  lati-&#13;
Racine).   Strohl~thatvot~&#13;
IIIIlfe,&#13;
restriCbng,the  availability.&#13;
will  not tolerate  ~liuuans&#13;
making&#13;
II&#13;
lie&#13;
!ega]&#13;
abortton.  In response&#13;
their  personal&#13;
choice&#13;
for  th~m.&#13;
~&#13;
0UIcty&#13;
over  the  Webster&#13;
Thespeakersshowedthelfcon-&#13;
~Rac~veral&#13;
people   iii   Ke-&#13;
cert.  and  supJX!fl for  the  value  of&#13;
'-Icrined&#13;
1IleandW~~orthCoun_&#13;
choice   for  w~men.&#13;
Each   ~er&#13;
~&#13;
the&#13;
coaliuon  to  unite&#13;
lOOk a  stand&#13;
tn&#13;
suppon   of  chOI~e.&#13;
Ill", ~&#13;
choice&#13;
in&#13;
Southeast-.&#13;
The   crowd    was   very   suppolttve&#13;
Ovtr&#13;
I8Consm.&#13;
,and&#13;
showed   their  concern   for  the&#13;
~&#13;
2SO&#13;
people attended   and&#13;
controversial    topic.   There   were  a&#13;
the&#13;
raDy,  while   there&#13;
cont.   on  page  5&#13;
one  can&#13;
and&#13;
cannot  smoke  and the&#13;
chances  are&#13;
he&#13;
will  not know."&#13;
Parkside   student  John&#13;
Acklarn&#13;
disagreed.&#13;
"I've&#13;
seen&#13;
the  signs&#13;
around  campus.&#13;
Areas are&#13;
marIced,&#13;
but  the  ashb'ays&#13;
shouId&#13;
definitely&#13;
not  be  in no-smoking&#13;
sections."&#13;
Should   Parkside&#13;
han&#13;
smoking&#13;
all&#13;
together?&#13;
"Technically,   by law,&#13;
smokers    would   still&#13;
ll('&#13;
able   to&#13;
smoke  in the Union.   Personally.   I&#13;
would  like to&#13;
see Parkside&#13;
adopt  a&#13;
no-smoking   policy   similar   to  the&#13;
one   at  UW   -  Stevens   PoinL&#13;
It&#13;
would show foresight&#13;
and&#13;
an under-&#13;
standing   of  health   reasons,"    de-&#13;
clared&#13;
Leavitt,&#13;
"It  would  be totally  ridiculuous&#13;
to adopt  such  a policy,"&#13;
remarked&#13;
Acldam.    "Large  numbers&#13;
of&#13;
sui-&#13;
dents&#13;
smoke,  including  myself.   A&#13;
non-smoking   policy  would  be&#13;
just&#13;
like  high  school.   We  would  have&#13;
to go outside  in twenty-below&#13;
zero&#13;
weather  for a smoke."&#13;
If&#13;
it chooses  to do so,  the Com-&#13;
mittee   on   campus&#13;
Environment&#13;
could  make  a  recommendation    to&#13;
the&#13;
adminisb'ation   to ban  smoking&#13;
in the majority  ofareas  on campus.&#13;
From&#13;
there,&#13;
a   survey   might   be&#13;
employed  to&#13;
gain&#13;
studentandstaff&#13;
opinions.&#13;
Further    investigation&#13;
may  be  pursued  by an&#13;
administra-&#13;
Uol. HUIII, No.&#13;
t&#13;
1&#13;
If it chooses to do&#13;
so, the Committee&#13;
on Campus Envi-&#13;
ronment   could&#13;
make  a  recom-&#13;
mendation to the&#13;
'administration  to&#13;
ban  smoki~g  in&#13;
the majority of ar-&#13;
eas on campus.&#13;
•&#13;
tive  subcommittee.&#13;
If&#13;
the  current   smoking   policy&#13;
wasarnended.Leaviuestimatesthe&#13;
campuscouIdenforcethenewrules&#13;
towards&#13;
the&#13;
end&#13;
of  the  spring&#13;
se-&#13;
mester   of  the   1989-1990   school&#13;
year.&#13;
Acklam&#13;
said&#13;
he&#13;
would prefer&#13;
to  see  the current  policy  in opera-&#13;
tion  in  the  future.&#13;
"If&#13;
a&#13;
persoe&#13;
is&#13;
smoking   in  a no-smoking&#13;
area&#13;
of&#13;
the campus,  others have the right to&#13;
ask   him/her&#13;
to&#13;
slOp.&#13;
Counesy&#13;
should  be the  key  consideration."&#13;
conL on&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
2 Thunday,   November   \6,  1989  Ranger&#13;
How to change the Ranger&#13;
lbe&#13;
Raqer _&#13;
gone&#13;
Ihroogh a&#13;
great&#13;
deal&#13;
of cbaDge this&#13;
year.&#13;
The&#13;
entire&#13;
prockJl:lion&#13;
procedure  has&#13;
cbanged&#13;
wilb&#13;
the implimentaUo&#13;
n&#13;
of&#13;
desbop&#13;
publishing.&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
tumover&#13;
of Ranger&#13;
staff&#13;
members from&#13;
last&#13;
year&#13;
was&#13;
emen&#13;
se&#13;
We&#13;
began&#13;
the&#13;
yetII&#13;
with a new&#13;
staff&#13;
who for&#13;
the&#13;
most part ~.no&#13;
joumaiism  ...&#13;
perience.&#13;
As&#13;
you may&#13;
or&#13;
may not&#13;
know&#13;
journ8lisUC&#13;
wnbDg&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
big&#13;
cUBge&#13;
from&#13;
otber&#13;
forms&#13;
of&#13;
writing.&#13;
We also&#13;
had ~&#13;
reach&#13;
ourselveshowtousetheneWcompulersyslellllOperformtypesetbng~&#13;
Iayoul functions. This&#13;
is&#13;
a big&#13;
da ...    from&#13;
the way things have been&#13;
I;"&#13;
the pasL 1bc&#13;
employees&#13;
of the&#13;
Racine&#13;
JouuI&#13;
Times&#13;
have done all&#13;
Ibis&#13;
wort&#13;
in the&#13;
pasl.&#13;
and&#13;
have&#13;
gone&#13;
10 scbool  10&#13;
do&#13;
so.&#13;
.   1bc active members of the Ranger&#13;
staff&#13;
who number approximately&#13;
\2,&#13;
solely&#13;
prodllCO&#13;
the newspaper \hal you see&#13;
011&#13;
a weeldy basis. We&#13;
do&#13;
everything ...&#13;
copt&#13;
lUll&#13;
the printing ~&#13;
Deem,se&#13;
of&#13;
the shortage of&#13;
staff&#13;
members, the&#13;
wort&lt;&#13;
load&#13;
is&#13;
heavy&#13;
on the&#13;
mdividual&#13;
members. lblsresults&#13;
in some mislaltes \hal wouIdn~&#13;
ordinarily&#13;
be made.  II also causes us&#13;
10&#13;
sometimes&#13;
overiook&#13;
some&#13;
events&#13;
\hal should be covered and&#13;
are&#13;
DOL&#13;
For&#13;
this&#13;
reason we&#13;
would like&#13;
to&#13;
change&#13;
our&#13;
practices somewhat 10&#13;
allow us 10change  the currenl system and thusly change  the&#13;
quality&#13;
of&#13;
the newspaper.  II&#13;
has&#13;
come 10the auention of the Ranger&#13;
editorial&#13;
staff&#13;
that the qualily&#13;
and&#13;
COOleDtof the Ranger&#13;
has&#13;
been the topic of discussion&#13;
81&#13;
several meetings&#13;
and&#13;
lectures over the past week.&#13;
In&#13;
an effort&#13;
10&#13;
change&#13;
our&#13;
newspaper&#13;
and hear&#13;
the&#13;
commems&#13;
that&#13;
have&#13;
beer&gt;made&#13;
we&#13;
would&#13;
like 10invitethepeople&#13;
that made&#13;
them, and&#13;
thegenemipubticlOtheCbaDgetheRangerMeetingonNovember2!,&#13;
81&#13;
noon&#13;
in the Ranger  office.&#13;
If&#13;
you would like 10&#13;
see&#13;
some cbanges&#13;
m&#13;
your Stbdenl newspaper,  show up and give us your inpuL&#13;
Gabe'sGab&#13;
Oshkosh demonstrators:&#13;
You need to grow up!&#13;
by Gabe Kluka&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
011.&#13;
you silly&#13;
kids.&#13;
Remember way bal;k wht:n you&#13;
weIe&#13;
a kid.&#13;
and&#13;
you wanted&#13;
that&#13;
great&#13;
BB&#13;
gun,&#13;
or the Barbie with a&#13;
'&lt;:orveue?WeU,younevergotthose&#13;
things  by&#13;
throwing&#13;
temper&#13;
lan-&#13;
trums, did&#13;
you?&#13;
If&#13;
you did, you're&#13;
probably   spoiled   rouen,   and&#13;
shou1dn'tread this beeauseit&#13;
won&#13;
'I&#13;
make&#13;
sense.&#13;
On the other&#13;
hand,-if&#13;
you agree, read on.&#13;
Apparently, someofthe  Stbdenl&#13;
body&#13;
at&#13;
UW&#13;
-Oshkosh&#13;
thinks \hal&#13;
they can get their way through&#13;
violentdemonstrations.  Well&#13;
,if&#13;
you&#13;
look at things the way I&#13;
do,&#13;
you'd&#13;
be&#13;
prone&#13;
10say, "Hey, those&#13;
idiots&#13;
are&#13;
just&#13;
having a big temper&#13;
lan-&#13;
tIum",&#13;
and&#13;
yes, I&#13;
do&#13;
mean&#13;
idiots.&#13;
1bcy&#13;
are&#13;
old  enough  10 vote,&#13;
andthey apparently arenOlIOOkeen&#13;
on how 10change things that they&#13;
don'l  like. You can't  expect the&#13;
legislators 10&#13;
take&#13;
them&#13;
seriously.&#13;
For&#13;
those of you not IUned in,&#13;
over the past month, some of the&#13;
SludenlS auending  Oshkosh&#13;
weIe&#13;
upset about the 21 drinking age,&#13;
and they decided to goona demon-&#13;
stration&#13;
march, which wound  up&#13;
being nothing bul a riaL Now, I&#13;
wasn 'Ithere,andl  don'llcnowwbat&#13;
really happened,&#13;
but&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
read&#13;
the&#13;
papersquilethoroughly,and   I have&#13;
gathered&#13;
that the people wbo&#13;
were&#13;
demonstrating&#13;
had&#13;
no semblance&#13;
of any sanity. Unfonunately,  they&#13;
have probably greatly reduced the&#13;
chances of the drinking age being&#13;
lowered&#13;
10&#13;
19.&#13;
The&#13;
people in Oshkosh that did&#13;
this&#13;
strike&#13;
me as being&#13;
100&#13;
selfish 10&#13;
see&#13;
\hal&#13;
their&#13;
actions will get them&#13;
nothing,  except  for a bunch  of&#13;
trouble with the law. In order 10&#13;
have the law changed, the people&#13;
under2\  have&#13;
10&#13;
demonstrate some&#13;
responsibility,    and  what  the&#13;
Oshkosh rioters&#13;
did&#13;
gives the law-&#13;
makers&#13;
all&#13;
the morereason 10laugh&#13;
in the face&#13;
of&#13;
the nexl person who&#13;
tries 10&#13;
change&#13;
it _&#13;
I usually write&#13;
this&#13;
column in&#13;
orderlObringasmile&#13;
to&#13;
the faces&#13;
of&#13;
the people who enjoy a bit of sar-&#13;
casm. This time, however,  I&#13;
de-&#13;
cidedlOget  alill1e serious. Every-&#13;
one&#13;
that&#13;
is under the age of 25&#13;
probably disagrees with the&#13;
drink-&#13;
ing age being 21. A1mosteveryone&#13;
over2\&#13;
has friends&#13;
who either have&#13;
IOriskbeingbusted,orstayathome,&#13;
because&#13;
you'd&#13;
like&#13;
to&#13;
go out and&#13;
have a few&#13;
drinks.&#13;
1bc people&#13;
be-&#13;
tween 18&#13;
and&#13;
21&#13;
also&#13;
have reason-&#13;
able&#13;
gripes.&#13;
They can&#13;
vote,&#13;
get&#13;
married,&#13;
have&#13;
kids,&#13;
serve in&#13;
the&#13;
Armed&#13;
Fon:es, be prosecuted. buy&#13;
and&#13;
sell&#13;
houses,&#13;
boats,&#13;
cars,&#13;
or&#13;
whatever,  and not have 10 worry&#13;
aboul being  old enough,&#13;
but&#13;
yet&#13;
they can'ldrink.  I think \hal&#13;
the&#13;
age&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
should be 19,&#13;
just&#13;
because&#13;
most&#13;
people&#13;
are outofhigh  school&#13;
at thai&#13;
age, and&#13;
are&#13;
becoming a 101more&#13;
independent.   .&#13;
Our school&#13;
bas&#13;
a tough alcohol&#13;
policy,  and  with  good  reason;&#13;
someone&#13;
was&#13;
killed  because  he&#13;
didn'lknowhislimil.II'sailgoing&#13;
10conie back in&#13;
our&#13;
faces until&#13;
the&#13;
people who Ibis law affeclS dem-&#13;
onstrate  some restrainl  and com-&#13;
mon&#13;
senSe. A lot of the people who&#13;
make&#13;
the&#13;
laws prohably  have no&#13;
inkling of bow much&#13;
the&#13;
2\&#13;
drink-&#13;
ing age separates  our age group.&#13;
They're probably far&#13;
100&#13;
removed&#13;
10care, or they have IoSIsomeone&#13;
thai they love, and&#13;
are&#13;
Irying 10&#13;
save lives, whicb is a far nobler&#13;
cause  than tipping  over  cars  in&#13;
downtown Oshkosh.&#13;
Find  Out Your&#13;
STRESS - ADDRESS.&#13;
Dec. 4 - 7.&#13;
Watchfor morein-&#13;
formation in the&#13;
Nov. 30th&#13;
/langer&#13;
-&#13;
-~.-&#13;
Survey:&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
question  thai bas been&#13;
aroundil&#13;
I&#13;
many,  many  years, !be&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
decided 10&#13;
answer&#13;
it,&#13;
once&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
all.&#13;
Write  down any&#13;
and&#13;
all .&#13;
you have for ilSmeaningooa&#13;
_ of&#13;
paper&#13;
and drop&#13;
it&#13;
off&#13;
ill&#13;
III&#13;
Rangerpersona!'sbox.&#13;
Wewill&#13;
collecting&#13;
these&#13;
responses&#13;
II&#13;
printing&#13;
them&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
nexl&#13;
Ranger issue.&#13;
Remember.&#13;
(semi-) clean&#13;
or&#13;
it won'lOO&#13;
Also, we'll printlbe&#13;
real&#13;
senlation of the sculpture&#13;
so&#13;
one willknow thecooecl&#13;
Good  luck,  be advenwrous&#13;
don'l  think&#13;
100&#13;
hard&#13;
about&#13;
iL&#13;
~eally,what isthat&#13;
thing?&#13;
by DaWll Mailand&#13;
Entertainment    Editor&#13;
Here's one survey question that&#13;
most  everyone   should  want  10&#13;
answer.&#13;
Has&#13;
anyone  ever  Won-&#13;
dered&#13;
exactly  what&#13;
the&#13;
white,&#13;
ce-&#13;
ramic-type  sculpture  that's  bang-&#13;
ing on the wall next&#13;
10&#13;
the library&#13;
is?&#13;
We know it's a circle with the&#13;
boltom&#13;
oJlC!! and  something&#13;
is&#13;
coming  out of it  But, what is it&#13;
supposed&#13;
10&#13;
represenl?&#13;
lbere'smanysuggeslions,good&#13;
and&#13;
!lad,&#13;
aboUI what it is. What we&#13;
wanl 10 know&#13;
is&#13;
wbat&#13;
do&#13;
the stu-&#13;
denlS think il&#13;
is.&#13;
Since  this is a&#13;
Special Thanks&#13;
A special thanks 10&#13;
th~&#13;
following  student clubs and organizationl"&#13;
helped make last Saturday's  "Open House on Campus" so sueeessful:&#13;
Anthropology  Oub&#13;
Black SlUdenl Organization&#13;
UW&#13;
--Parkside Cheerleaders&#13;
Geology  Club&#13;
Inter- Varsily ,Christian Fellowship&#13;
Pi&#13;
Upsilon&#13;
Beta&#13;
Residence  Hall&#13;
Assoc.&#13;
Student Nurse's&#13;
Assoc.&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
Sheryl Peterson/Scholarships&#13;
Cynthia Jensen,  SlUdenl Enrollmenl&#13;
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              <text>1989&#13;
udent RegentR,obin Vos makes visit to Parkside&#13;
by Dan Cbiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Iheir champion. I want to&#13;
exactlY what tbey tbink. I&#13;
Ihe swdentsto feel free to&#13;
lheir opiJiions. Call me,&#13;
me a letter, contact y~ur&#13;
governmentsotbey can get&#13;
t wilb me." emphasized&#13;
RegentRobin Vos, a UWjunior,&#13;
referring to all&#13;
System students.&#13;
Ves was appointed by&#13;
Tommy Thompson on&#13;
7,1989. TheSenateconfmned&#13;
. DIlenton OCtober 12,&#13;
VtlIIwill serve a two year&#13;
will end in May 1991.&#13;
"Duringlbecourseofmy term&#13;
PiIXJllSi·bilitiesareto work with&#13;
students and the taxpayers, trying&#13;
to fmd a balance between the two,&#13;
which is not always easy,"&#13;
explainedVos. 'Tmgoingtowork&#13;
hard to make sure the student voices&#13;
are heard and to make sure tbeir&#13;
views are represented on tbe board,&#13;
along with once again balancing&#13;
thoseoffwitb using the taxpapers,"&#13;
Vos explained the three major&#13;
issues he is currently working on'&#13;
that are facing the universities&#13;
today. The following are:&#13;
1. Design for Diversity.&#13;
"Making sure more minority&#13;
students are involved in higher&#13;
education."&#13;
2. Making sure students have&#13;
low tuition rates. "Obviously, once&#13;
again making sure people get&#13;
involved, by doing that it is&#13;
Robin Vos&#13;
important to have modem tuition&#13;
rates. Ikeep hearing people saying&#13;
Wisconsin is a bargain, it's too low&#13;
already. I disagree with that. I&#13;
thinkit' s nice to have low education&#13;
cost. while we still maintain high&#13;
quality education. It's balanced by&#13;
having the state being very&#13;
dedicated to education. Governor&#13;
Thompson is doing a very goodjob&#13;
working with higher education."&#13;
3. Making sure quality is&#13;
maintained. "I want to make sure&#13;
high quality education is being&#13;
maintained by university&#13;
management,"&#13;
"One of my goals is to try to&#13;
stop the chargebacks that are being&#13;
imposed by some of tbe different&#13;
legislative mandates."&#13;
Chargebacks are municipal&#13;
fees dealing with police, rescue&#13;
squads, water, and sewer. fees that&#13;
will increase tuition. "It's one of&#13;
my topprioritiesto stop tbat." added&#13;
Vos.&#13;
Vos expresses the importance&#13;
and will make sure sludents are&#13;
being heard by the shared&#13;
govemmentsystem in universities.&#13;
"I wanl to make sure tbe shared&#13;
government system really listen to&#13;
whal students have to say and&#13;
involve them in the process.&#13;
Students shouldn't have veto&#13;
power, because their job isn't to&#13;
run the university, bUIthey should&#13;
definitely have a say as to what's&#13;
going on and to really try to work&#13;
hard and make sure their voices are&#13;
heard during the course of the&#13;
decision making process."&#13;
Vos also points out !hal&#13;
coot. on page 6&#13;
C ordered to repay $163,587 to government&#13;
by Gwen Heller&#13;
siarrWriter&#13;
IIISeptember, the United States&#13;
Depanment of Education&#13;
demanded that the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside repay&#13;
1163,587 tolb~government by the&#13;
lIId of October. According to an&#13;
Ildit COIIducted by tbe DOE, the&#13;
IIiversity misused the funds&#13;
dlougb the defunct Education&#13;
Opponw,ityCenter.&#13;
Chancellor Sheila Kaplan said.&#13;
ilia the Educational Opportunity&#13;
Cair« was an outreach program&#13;
~ minorities living in a lowIIlomebmcketoronwelfare.'The&#13;
~'s purpose was to counsel&#13;
VijuaIsback into education,&#13;
Chancellor Kaplan&#13;
whether it be college or high&#13;
school."&#13;
Problems arose when tbe audit&#13;
showed that tbecenter did not meet&#13;
itsquotaofindividuallycounseling&#13;
1,000 students each year on an inperson&#13;
basis. The audit showed&#13;
thatonly258 peoplewerecontaeted&#13;
during tbe 1986 fiscal year, and&#13;
286 in tbe 1987 fiscal year.&#13;
Kaplan said the disagreement&#13;
arose in how to count the number&#13;
of recipients. If 'group meetings&#13;
and mailings were included as&#13;
criteria for counseling, the center&#13;
then met the quota. The DOE did&#13;
not fmd this acceptable.&#13;
"It was inappropriate that we&#13;
even had the center in tbe first&#13;
place:' stated Kaplan. "We are not&#13;
a social service agency and had no&#13;
experienceoperatingsuchafacility.&#13;
I believe that we were the only&#13;
university in the United States that&#13;
"It was inappropriate that&#13;
we even had the center.!n the&#13;
first place...we are not a social&#13;
service agency...!believe that&#13;
we were the only university In&#13;
the U.S. that had such 8&#13;
program on campus."&#13;
-Chancellor Kaplan&#13;
had such a program on campus.·&#13;
Parkside also had its share of&#13;
troubles with Jesse Hargrove, the&#13;
director of the EOC from 1985-&#13;
1987. It was discovered that&#13;
Hargrove had compiled a total of&#13;
$1,241 in long-distance telephone&#13;
calls and travel expenses that did&#13;
apply to the center. He was&#13;
eventually dismissed from the&#13;
university due to these&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
Justbeforethedeadline,Parkside&#13;
sent a check for S139,048 to lhe&#13;
DOE as a partial payment, There&#13;
was speculation that the&#13;
government would demand the&#13;
entire repayment, but according to&#13;
Kaplan, the DOE accepted 85&#13;
percent of the total.&#13;
When asked if there was a chance&#13;
that the center would reopen us&#13;
doors, Kaplan replied, "We do not&#13;
have any problems to reapply for&#13;
the grant."&#13;
page 6'&#13;
Controversy at Marquette&#13;
Sports...&#13;
page 10&#13;
Bowling&#13;
nationals&#13;
inSt.Louis&#13;
••••••••••••••••••&#13;
_------------------.., t:1t~V!~~s.I~'!~.?pl~!9n::) letters to the Editor... .. ~,...-;rir:-te--.-ale-;-t-;-te-r-;-to---:-;;th..--e....... E=-d".....it-or&#13;
2 Tho.ndaY, November 30. 1989 Ran98r&#13;
ngtnloD". MU paper needs to fight bOc:k&#13;
Two weeks ..,. • Ma!qu.ue UniversitYin Milwlllkce. an odmiJUS&#13;
trotor&#13;
and&#13;
cwo SlofJ membcn of Ihc Marq.... te SIUdcnIncW1JlOllCf.1hcMarquett. Trlbun ••&#13;
waefircdand .... ' .... n:spectivcly,forprintinganodvcrtiscmCDllbatpromoud&#13;
Ihc Voice for Cboicc Rally 011Nov. 12, 1989.&#13;
MlI1qUCDCofficial&gt;said printing Ihc adv_1 violaud universitYpolicy.&#13;
and promily 1001&lt; oction aglinsllhc Marquette Tribune. The administration al&#13;
MarquClIC .... stappedIhcbands of1hosCresponsible as if1hcywere chi1drcn;Ibcy&#13;
hay. sent .- responsible 10 Ihci&lt; rooms and put sham. on them.&#13;
sHAME ON YOU. MARQuETTE omOALSll&#13;
Marqucue. while being' private, Ca1holic universitYwhich takes a pro-life&#13;
a.-eo .... cllstegudcdIhc cstablislunCDtof Ihc firs' amendmCDtby taking action&#13;
apinS,lhc Marquette Tribune. Officials hay. giVCDa mcssagolO future staff&#13;
membc:n and editorS of the newspaper that such action inthe furore will warrmt&#13;
Ihc aarneacl&gt;ODlor worse. The fundingfor lb. MarquctlCncW1JlOllCfcomes from&#13;
lbc university. but in this cue it is a mute point. Let the studcnlS nm a s~t&#13;
...... paper Ihc beStway possible; don't mokelborn .econd gucs~ what 1hcyare&#13;
cIoinl- The Marquette Tribune did not libel anyone. bulonly printed an ad which&#13;
• pr&lt;Kbcice group paid for wilb its own funds. The paper did not support nor&#13;
.upprus 1hcposibon of 1hcgroup which paid for 1hcadvcrtiscm&#13;
CDL&#13;
This is not In issue of pro-life or po-Ghoice. but m issue of the rights of the&#13;
press reporung news which is honest and objective. The free press is a right. and&#13;
the lid wu a paid adve:niJement which was not an opinion of the nc::wspaper· All&#13;
tboKSU5J""ded and fued shouldbercinswed. Ifnorrcinstaud lb. Ranger giVes&#13;
1hiJ advice IOIhc.taIT: lig/ltforyourrighlSl Oris fighting foryourrighlS against&#13;
Marquene policy, also1&#13;
Correction&#13;
.In the October 26 issueof1lc&#13;
Ranger. a quote Ihat appearldl\&#13;
the story was a misrepresenllliil&#13;
OfWhatThecareerCentera:~1&#13;
does.for Parkside studems.&#13;
The quote that caused&#13;
Career Center to be looked II iI&#13;
false light stated. ''Last yeal ,&#13;
Career Cenier helpedpJace~&#13;
one thousand studenlSinjobs.;'&#13;
In a letter received from!&#13;
Goodyear; direclOf of The&#13;
Centersbesuued,"(TheqUOlC&#13;
Career Center helpedpJace~&#13;
one thousand S1udenlSinjobill&#13;
not corrccL Bev (Burell) IDlI&#13;
counseled wilh almosta&#13;
studentslastyear.lhadhnpCd&#13;
Sincerely. could SillY awayfroml!le&#13;
idea&#13;
Russell and Eleanor Nicholson the center "places" anyone&#13;
,&#13;
~:~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!P!arien!ts~o~r~L!inid!aiL~an!c:as~teir!;ljOibjS)i·n!!~~I!I! at._ ~~~.~ .~.~Kditor-1n-Chi.f The Ra er st-::"&#13;
~:t~':'~~: •........•••....•.•... Layout Kditor Faculty Advisor Stuart Rub Tb n__ . n ~.. DOD Chi •••••.•••••••••••••••.•• Copy Editor . B ner . .~g.rlSwri ... andcdilCdbySlUdcntsofUW.Pad&lt;side,""".. -&#13;
Soott S::ta •......•.•.. :: Editor Crain S'-kin. usiness Staff ItsponSlblcforilScd.itorialpulicyandcal1cnL Itispublishod""'''''''&#13;
................... a.". ••••Kditor lIII...... dunng lbc cad Jeff 1 -'en !'err1 rortGe" •••••.•••••.••••• Bualne •• Manaqer I.e a enuc year except over breaks and holidaYs. --M._&#13;
OZ.ff ....... ck ..•.•....•.•....•.•. spert. &amp;d1tor CPrc1 CUri .........••••.••...•••••.. 104. n_p . 1l.nlOth.cdiIOrwillaUybe·~·dif· ..... arc--' doUbI''I'''"7~&#13;
................... at. Sport. Bcl1tor • .. • • - • 350 ord -.- .~, " ...... .... _ ..... t_ Qe.....................•... 104. Rep w sortes •. AlIlcllcnmuslbesigncd wi1h.ldcphOOC.......,&#13;
D 1la11_ ture &amp;d1tor neral Staff . forvcrifu:ationpul)lOsc,. NlI1leswillbe~"···'d""'-&#13;
OZ ..•....•.•..•... lInt.rt t Editor GwP Tb Ran _u_ ..,....-""""'-rJ'&#13;
.~ 1teboe Photo -"tor n BeU.r. OZ.ok1. I'unk Ted' • gcrrcscrvcsth.righllOeditlettcnondrefusc.-&#13;
fIbidI&#13;
",&#13;
...o~ x.tol- AU.I. Paultatl1a, Gabe n ......- Mich' McIntrye, Lyna and/or defamatory .&#13;
...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .a.. t. I'bcto &amp;d1tor _ C a ~. .U. D.genai DcadIin .....,;JI • arr C11c1dm&gt;.Kathi. 1'. •• Marry .fora1lleucraanclclas.ificdadsisMondayall&#13;
h&#13;
"''''--&#13;
ope, kar1.n Colvin,., 1lwnday. .. ,... , .. ,&#13;
PSG A needs more student input&#13;
To lbe Editor: There are twO major issueS that have uanspired during lhe semester at&#13;
Parkside, and the student government would Iilte to know how the student&#13;
body feels about lhese issues. The ftrS1 issue is on lhe possibility of&#13;
Parkside becOming a non·smoking campus. This would mean that lhe&#13;
only place students or faculty would be able to smoke is in the Union&#13;
cafeteria. The second issue is on the drinking age. The student&#13;
govemmentrecenilysponsoredasit-ininsuppor1ofloweringthedrinking&#13;
age to 19. There was a great deal of area mediapresenL but only a small&#13;
number of students showed up. The Parkside Student Goveromeol would&#13;
Iil&lt;e to know how the.S1udents feel about the 19 year old drinking age and&#13;
lhe non smoking pohey. We feel it is very impor18DI that we know how&#13;
you. lhe student. feels so that we can support your opinion. Afler all as&#13;
a studentlqanization. it is our resposibility to find out how the majority&#13;
of lhestudent popula.tion feels about issues concerning their educational&#13;
expenences at Parkside and to act upon those responses. So. put&#13;
pen to paper and let usknow how you feel about the two issues mentioned&#13;
above ~ any other issueS that you are concerned abouL There arePSGA&#13;
suggestion boxes located dtroughoulthe university. You may also drop&#13;
your responses by lhe PSGA office located on the D 1 near the Coffee&#13;
Sboppe: Remember we can't support your viewpoint if we don't know&#13;
whallllS. so get your responses in.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
PSGA Senator Gary Nephew&#13;
Think when you drink&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
You have plans for your life· goals to reach· a brilliant future ...&#13;
So did Linda Lancaster. a doctoral candidate at the University of Maine&#13;
Orono. Maine. On February 18.1989. the drunken driver of a pickup truck&#13;
struCk her down as she and a classmate walked along a sidewalk in the&#13;
campus community. Linda died three hours later.&#13;
All her goals and plans for the future were wiped out in one senseless'&#13;
mom~t of drunken violence - a violence our legislatures have yet to&#13;
~~gruze as murder ~ and our counsof law waiver over justice for the&#13;
Vlcum.&#13;
You have plans for your life. but take a moment as you walk across&#13;
campus to ~nder on your chances of becoming the random victim of a&#13;
drunken driver. We all carry lhe same risk. as did Linda. But with your&#13;
help vie can • and must· keep our streets and sidewalks safe.·&#13;
:rake a ~lllnd. Refuse to ride with an intoxicated driver. Volunteer 10&#13;
~ve a friend who ~as partied ~ much. Write your congressman to&#13;
lIuua~ deterrentlegrs~auon agamst killer drivers: no time off for good&#13;
behaVior - no suspending half a sentence - no plea bargaining&#13;
Do something positive. if not for yourself or for a frien~ lhen for&#13;
someone who l!&gt;ves you .&#13;
Keep your future alive!&#13;
r ster end st Ranger Thursday, November 30,&#13;
seme ress programs to be offered&#13;
~.Jongprogram focusing on Semester-end Stresswill be presented&#13;
A ondaY thrU Thursdny, December 4-7, by the Counseling and Testing&#13;
~M.."".tHeaJthServices offices. ~s~' . d' .. ama;nrfactorill aca ermc, career, personal success and failure suess,'" ed bo . ,&#13;
lilt ofihemost talk a ut topics among counseling and health!&#13;
I professionals. . '..&#13;
~ ~exemptfrom stress. It IS importanuo be able to identify what&#13;
. Notbatcausessuess in a person's life, the effect that stress has on a&#13;
rs 'sperfonnance,relationships, and health, and how to cope with&#13;
~ effectively.The Semester-end Stress p~gram will help students,&#13;
:aodfaculty understand .stress and how their lives are affected by it, .&#13;
_lIItallO do to cope With ~t.&#13;
S1uRubftetwillbe presenung a workshop entitled "How Stressed Are&#13;
rill?" Barbara Larson of ~e Co~nseling and Testing ~ffice will be&#13;
linga program called Stinkin- Thinkin - Identifying Irrational :;aIk." Barbara will also team up with Counseling and Testing staff&#13;
_ Mary Power to talk with students about "Coping with Test&#13;
,\DllIIy."NancyGentry of Student Health Services will offer a program&#13;
aDed "SemesterEnd Crazies - Relaxation Techniques for Y0U," and&#13;
wiI~ be doinga Residence Hall program on siress for students living&#13;
IlIC111lPUSA&#13;
J6.minutehumorous fihn on stress called "Burnout," will also be&#13;
/IJIIL The mmis aimed at professionsals, teachers, social workers, and&#13;
_ in "helping" professions and focuses on how those who are _ned to helping others can help themselves when confronted with&#13;
l1lSS.producingsituations.&#13;
Tabkswill be set up on the Union bridge and staffed by Student Health&#13;
ScMces andCounseling and Testing office staff. Numerous handouts .&#13;
wiIJ be availablethat wil\ help you identify your stress level and offer&#13;
lIIIestioos on how to manage stress. Information on what foods&#13;
IllIIribute to stress will also be available.&#13;
1111 agenda for the week's activities is as follows:&#13;
1989 3&#13;
Monday December 4&#13;
In~ormation display including&#13;
P~1nted information on stress&#13;
and conSUltations with staff&#13;
Union Bridge 11:00-1:00 pm&#13;
The&#13;
Counsler's&#13;
Corner&#13;
Program: "How Stressed Are You?" Molinaro 105 "'2-12:50 pm.&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
TueOdaY December 5&#13;
Information Display Union Bridge 11:00-1:00 pm&#13;
Film: "Burnout" Union 104 12: 15pm&#13;
~Stinkin-Thinkin-ldentifY1ng&#13;
Irrational self-Talk&#13;
Holn. 111 12:00-12:50 pm&#13;
Barbara larson&#13;
Wednesday pecember 6&#13;
"Coping with Test Anxiety" Union 207&#13;
Barbara larson , Mary Power&#13;
12:00 - 12:50 pm&#13;
Film: "Burnout" Union 104 12 :15 pm&#13;
Thunday. Peceqbet 7&#13;
"Semester-end Crazies - Molo. 111&#13;
Relaxation Techniques for You"&#13;
Nancy Gentry&#13;
12:00-12:50 pm&#13;
by&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
Film: "Burnout" Union 104 12:15 pm&#13;
Residence Hall 9: 00 pm&#13;
Core Build.ing Lo.1nge&#13;
"Stresa - Relax' Enjoy It"&#13;
Nancy Gentry&#13;
[You are ~9*I to bring your lunch to any ~ tbua nooa- t__ 1&#13;
AIDSawareness week Nov. 27 - Dec. r&#13;
condoms were also available earlier&#13;
this week and will also be&#13;
distributed today atWLLC Alcove.&#13;
On Friday, Bill Houtzand Sbesyl&#13;
Lahti will discuss AIDS 101 nI&#13;
12:00 p.m. in Main Place. "We&#13;
will speak on what AIDS is, how&#13;
you can get it. how to prevent it,&#13;
ete ...,"explained Lahti. Aquestion&#13;
and answer session will take plece&#13;
after they speak.&#13;
The week of Nov. 27 to Dec. I is&#13;
AIDS Awareness Week. Activities&#13;
that took place earlier this week&#13;
were Brother Ben's discussion on&#13;
the Milwaukee AIDS Project, and&#13;
Cathi Higgins' discussion on AIDS&#13;
at the Residence Halls Building.&#13;
Videos and information on AIDS&#13;
were also available.&#13;
Today more information and&#13;
videos will be distributed. Free&#13;
Studentresponse to survey overwhelming&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
EntertainmentEditor -&#13;
foreign films or any other types not&#13;
mentioned above.&#13;
Here are the responses. For&#13;
favorite comedy, "Animal House,"&#13;
uNaked (Jun," "Punchline,"&#13;
"Rocky Horror Picture Show.?"&#13;
uUncle aBuck," "Blues Brothers,"&#13;
"Monty Python and theHoly.Grail,"&#13;
"Cheech &amp; Chong - Nice Dreams,"&#13;
and "Airplane" were chosen. (You&#13;
might be interested to know that&#13;
"Airplane" will be playing as part&#13;
of a double feature with&#13;
"Caddyshack" on Dec. I and 2 at&#13;
7:30 p.lIi. in the Union Cinema.)&#13;
For favorite drama, people&#13;
responded with: "Fatal Atrraction,"&#13;
uShane," -si, Elmo's Fire/'&#13;
"Accidental Tourist," "Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show," "Field of&#13;
Dreams," "American Anthem,"&#13;
"Kramer vs, Kramer" and "Mike"s&#13;
Murder."&#13;
Parkside's favorite thrillers&#13;
included such movies as: "Tbe&#13;
Terminator." "Poltergeist."&#13;
uAlien," "the Freddy series," "My&#13;
Stepmother is an Alien,"&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Fiually,there has been enough&#13;
npies so !hat we can print the&#13;
IIIWers to the movie survey that&#13;
lISasked 00Nov. 9 and 16 in the&#13;
Rqer.lnordertorefresh people's&#13;
IiliIs, here wasthe question.&#13;
Write down your favorite&#13;
~s) fromthe f~llowing types:&#13;
lllIledy, drama, thriller, romance,&#13;
lIUlical,adventure, war/spy,&#13;
dassics, dance, science fiction,&#13;
1jItery, biography/documentary,&#13;
FINANCIAL&#13;
SERVICES P .S.G.A. is looking for a person&#13;
LOOkl!'3for a career with to fill a secretarial position. The&#13;
~keso~ future? Do you&#13;
o help people? Do tasks include: filing, correspon- t; Want unlimited earn-&#13;
/::1tential? To join the dence, and record!~g of se~ate&#13;
~ d's largest insurance&#13;
~~ flna.nclal corporation minutes. The pOSItIOn reqUIres&#13;
Pack enjoy fUll benefit no more than ten hours per ml age, . salary, com-&#13;
~ion, bonus, clientele, week. Interested people sho~ld , $50,000 first year&#13;
0:ential. Send resume apply in the P.S.G:A O!~Ice&#13;
p Manager . (WLL~ Dl~~-A). ThIS pOSItion&#13;
4711~de!'ltial Insurance&#13;
"'h,'!9'on Ave.. Suile 120 is a paId pOS~~IG~.~~NEQuALOPPORruNI1YEMPLOYER RaCine, WI 53406&#13;
~ ~", .. ,&#13;
Political Savvy&#13;
and the Political Process&#13;
KimPlache -- UW·Pubf.de '84 ~holoO&#13;
State Representative. 62 _Iy Dlstriet&#13;
Tuesday. Dec. 5&#13;
3:30 p.m. Galbraith Room (WLLC 363)&#13;
CedI 553-2278 to re:scmr a..tOGCe&#13;
...&#13;
4 Thursday, November 30. 1989 Ranger&#13;
Classifieds and club events ...&#13;
anytime, leave a message, 553-&#13;
2874.&#13;
Auention: GOVERNMENT&#13;
SEIZED VEHICLES from $100.&#13;
Fords, Mercedes, Corveues,&#13;
Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-&#13;
602-838-8885, ext. AI4511.&#13;
Racine and Kenosha areas for the&#13;
benefit of Kenosha Achievement&#13;
Center (A Sheltered Workshop).&#13;
Call Lorraine Damask at 652-5973&#13;
• leave name and phone number.&#13;
GOVERNMENT HOMES from&#13;
$1 (U • repair). Delinquent tax&#13;
property. Repossessions. Call 1-&#13;
602-838-8885, ext. GH14511..&#13;
Hide.A.Bed: Good condition,&#13;
black vinyl chair and 2 end tables.&#13;
$75.00 for all. Must sell soon!!!&#13;
Call 694-5778.&#13;
* Computer * AST 286-10, 1 meg&#13;
ram,1.2meg,360k,etc .. $1799-&#13;
Call 652-4876.&#13;
LIGHT MECHANICAL work&#13;
done here: oil changes, brakes,&#13;
shocks, light exhaust, minor tuneups.&#13;
Free estimates, very&#13;
reasonable rates. CallJon Bar-Din&#13;
Difference." The talk will be held PERSONALS&#13;
in CA 129 starting at 12 noon on&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 6. The talk .is&#13;
'free and open to the public.&#13;
Saturday, Dec.2,Pot Luck Party&#13;
at Union Square from 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sponsored by Int'l Student&#13;
Organization. Please' try to bring&#13;
food enough for yourself so we can&#13;
all share.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
LOST&#13;
Stolen! Blackleatherjacket Please&#13;
return to lost and found!!!!!&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Entertainment '90 Books, $30.00.&#13;
Choose from hundreds of 2-for-1&#13;
coupons for dining, movies, shows,&#13;
concerts, sports, and many other&#13;
exciting offers in the Milwaukee,&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
Clubs: You're invited to join the&#13;
Winter Carnival Cornmiuee. Tons&#13;
of Fun! Come to our next meeting,&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 30 at 12:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 202. See you Ibere!!!&#13;
Tbe Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board will be meeting Monday,&#13;
Dec.4 at 12:00 noon in Moln. 111.&#13;
The main topic of discussion will&#13;
be the remodeling ofUnion Square.&#13;
If there is an item that you would&#13;
like to see on ihe agenda, please&#13;
contact Craig Simpkins at 553·&#13;
2295. Allstudents are encouraged&#13;
to attend and submit ideas.&#13;
Tbe Parkslde Pbilosopbical&#13;
Society presents Prof. Wayne&#13;
Jobnson in a talk entitled "God and&#13;
Morality: Wby 'God' Makes a&#13;
Got notbing to do Ibis week&#13;
There's a double feature end?&#13;
(Airplan.e and CaddyshnCk)&#13;
playing m the Union Cinema.&#13;
Come out and see it!!!&#13;
Stolen! Black leather jacket&#13;
Please return to lost and fowtdllil&#13;
Lu - Sorry the bigger message""&#13;
comes a few weeks late _&#13;
newspaper deadlines, etc.&#13;
Joseph .&#13;
Hey Opie: Say tbis!!!&#13;
Heather from fmance - And&#13;
said that you never getany~&#13;
mthepaper. Remindmetolell&#13;
aboutTuesdaynigbt! Seeyour&#13;
Da,,:ne (also from finance). ~,&#13;
Gerl: You were right. Eng' .&#13;
studentsareOnlyinitforthe~ DV _.•.~.&#13;
Hope: Don't give up! He'snotlbc&#13;
one for you. Besides, he'sonlyt&#13;
freshman and you're the "dance'&#13;
Contonp.!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Building Maintenance/Handyman:&#13;
experience preferred but not&#13;
necessary. Starting $5 - per hourapprox&#13;
~ hrs. per week, flexible.&#13;
Contact Mathis Gallery, 328 Main,&#13;
Racine WI. Call 637-1111, 11-4&#13;
Tue tbru Fri. .&#13;
Attention: HIRING!&#13;
Govemmentjobs.yourarea. Many&#13;
immediate openings without&#13;
waiting -Iist or test. $17,840'&#13;
$69,485. Call1-602-838-8885,ext.&#13;
R14511.&#13;
Alaska now hiring. Logging,&#13;
cODSt,fishing, nurses, teachers.etc.&#13;
Excellent pay. For more&#13;
information call206· 748-7544,exL Up A·181. .&#13;
to your ears? .&#13;
Dig yourself out with a&#13;
deal on an IBM PS/2.&#13;
Fine Italian &amp;&#13;
Arnertcancu isine&#13;
• Cocktails&#13;
• D~i1yLuncheon Sp~cials&#13;
• Dmner • Sunday Brunch "~&#13;
- .....-...- .&#13;
'iiIJI!if.~ ill..,.+;, ~-,,-..&#13;
~ ....,..&#13;
1\o~~:JSys)"Uget s~ under with work this year, get an IBM&#13;
tem/2. Choose from five different paeka of hanl&#13;
ware and soflwa~-now at special low student prlces~ach -&#13;
syste~ comes With easy-to-use software loaded nd d I&#13;
Whats more. when you bu PS/2\!&gt; . a rea y to go.&#13;
~ ~s-::ha~~:!~hjE:t~~~~:;?~:ll r:::.&#13;
se&#13;
~,&#13;
prlCt' on t~ PRODIGY\!) service. too. a specla ow Afl1'tlf: ~ 1&#13;
IB~'tSide fro~ all this. three of the most popular ~¥{;~~~~'&#13;
• prmters are available at special low rices'" - - -= _ ~&#13;
Don t get left out in tbe cold! Offer ends Fe:ruar; IS, 1990. • Co . mem ay. tod&#13;
How're yoU going to do it? PS/2 it!&#13;
See us In Molinaro Concourse Wedn d&#13;
December 6, or contact Craig SimPk~:s~l&#13;
1-800-866-4772&#13;
Facilities for Weddings • Parties •&#13;
Luncheons • Dinners • Banquets&#13;
L;;;;illlID.t.1!:",; ..•.."........ ~~ ~ &lt;at A u~~~"&#13;
DAILY 12:~0, 3:00, 5:10, 7:20, 9:35&#13;
CIOssifie'ds&#13;
coat.rrom p. 4. a croW=d.:"~6:' et~th~e~b~in-t~ho-ne-y!------===========================&#13;
Sexual Consdence: thanks for Rat P.ack - Raise your band if your who you are, and who I am for that It!! (the persoaal, thot Is.-)&#13;
car got hit. • Ben . ulf thankGodl&#13;
::~~re O~.esday to pull Haay Buds. Will they shave my ~:.o::_Hi Do you realize ::-:;F~I:r:~;: are alive."&#13;
my -" ..... ion, You're a belly button in San Diego, too?&#13;
great roommate'" La that you 100k absolutely delicious Just a Iinle quote from my book,&#13;
'" ve ya To all you bomeboys and Tbanks for the tile in sweatpants?1I! Signed someone your roomie&#13;
suppon at area homegirls: Could vou please cut fmaI soccer game Sian ,- who really doesn't think men are Mary Kay: N"ICC uousers. P.S.&#13;
. . the cord before my year is over. Where's the snake? P.P.S. Can&#13;
~:hne • How naive can you be! Marl&lt; G. ~~;"III'. BIIIIIuulIo edillt you buy 'em like that.&#13;
.s has shown the)nterest, now Marty. Thanks for letting me use SOlfNwlUJt.) Soccer F8DS,lbanb for a good 4&#13;
take him up.on it! II your phone and making me feel Jodi In 4H or sbould I say to the yrs.,3 JC&#13;
:e&#13;
y&#13;
~mlgos: Can you Surf in better. The girl from'Florida who Invisible Woman. When are you So what In'm a _1 It's none&#13;
oat amp? WhatiCyoucan't. loves the Ditch. going 10&amp;0 out for "Wings" again? oCyourbusiness. ThosewhoWk,&#13;
Jose Hopeless: You girls from Florida Edward: Let's be best friends, don't, Ihose who don't Wk,&#13;
W#2 - SO you broke rule #1 huh? are all alike. Up here, we be careful bang-out buddies, comrades, probablydoandtbeyprobablyhave&#13;
Well I guess that means I get to of snow and ice (and ditches). I amigos, got the picture? I dol AIDS. _Frisky&#13;
break rule #2 hey? guess you had 10investigate what it However,ILOVEALLmyfriends. Ed: lbanb for the hean-to-heart&#13;
Rick • Better luck !lCxt year! means to be "ditched" twice!!! •Your honey talk on my bed Sunday night. You&#13;
Signed, Bambi Shame, shame. Love, O. Marie Hey Beatie! Are you nuts? I You really helped Hope and I out.&#13;
To the White Bear Connection ... Wbensomeonedieswesbouldnot gooCykid! thanksforfoolin' with You'reverymuchappeciatcdlGreatseasonll&#13;
Love,? bedepressed ...weshouldcelebrate. my brain. I needed that. Stay cool, DawneandHope&#13;
DearMs.NiceGirl: I know what Thayer; 11-16-89 let'spartysoonl Love, Teresa jobn,GladyoucameoverSaturday&#13;
you can do! Become a slut! joke!. After furlber review, the Detroit HEY! • Uke hey man, don't you night. Coote back soon. Maybewe&#13;
-Frisky LiODSare2-~. know ANYTHING? That last can talk iCyou're not taken. Please&#13;
Dooald p~You looked very nice Afterfurlberreview, the Packers personal wasn~dooe like the way n:pIy. 40, Lv. girl&#13;
in your Suil Sorry I didn't get a are now tied with the Vikings. they do it in the SlOne, manl Hey Ople, Who tbe bel are JOOl&#13;
chance to tell you myself. KJ. Detroit will never .achieve that. Sorry _, "Proper" ronDllt... because DO one really cares!!l!!!&#13;
Wanted· one Hot Sexy horny, THE PACK IS BACK WITH "carelessly ommllted" 011 tb. Stocker: 1'llgiveyouS.soforthat&#13;
athletic guy (soccer or basketball THE MAJIK! previous _at. But HEY, tbo Bears Jersey. Any bets on the&#13;
playerS preferred) to do light Gretchen: pretty in pink! S"'," wouId'BI bav. enD prIDted CoatinDed oa paae'&#13;
"housework"anddishesforusgirls. Hey Opie!!! Get a real job, you&#13;
Will pay you VERY well among little punk.&#13;
"benefilS" just for you! You'll OverbeardintbePABoffice: Jon&#13;
love this job. Guarenteed!!! If Viola thinks guys are sexy with&#13;
you're interested in beingour"Love their clothes off.&#13;
Slave"letusknow! ·oneaparunent Washington D.C.: have you yet&#13;
of horned out women figured out who you are? I know&#13;
green, yellow and blue makes&#13;
Green, Green, I'm Green, you're&#13;
II_Ulnlrot_IrIU.S .• .-A_&#13;
green, 49 days - if you know what 0I0er Catalog T':.::=:iWMC 01coo&#13;
I mean. Fix it Michele! HELP! • 8OlI-aIiHIZZZ&#13;
HoHoHo Green Giant - Sprout ~""" ,,,,,,,,.,,,,&#13;
Or. ruih 12.00 10: a..rctl ........&#13;
l1J221di1hD A'tIt IlO6-A. Las AnQIllIS. CA 9JCl25&#13;
qIIIl'-JIoPC you bad a great time in&#13;
IIII~ LUV - guess who?&#13;
SL ~a1ot of geeks in this&#13;
:: WIlydon't you all get a&#13;
i/II w'sskiPlhenicl&lt;el, nickel,&#13;
:quanerandgetsuaightoothe&#13;
five cents. The Fuzz • .&#13;
::S1D6A: Wehada~tti~e&#13;
III $tIlJIday. Let's do It agam,&#13;
RiJ*d I and Richard 2 ,&#13;
()N. you'reinvited !lljoin tile&#13;
_carnival cannuttee. T~ns&#13;
.!llII1I ComelDournextmeenng,&#13;
l1IL!loV.30at l2:30p.m. in Union&#13;
3tJ. See you Ibere! .&#13;
(JllIIIeIrdlntheoffice: (Q) why&#13;
ltlbeYcalI you 0I0ps? (A) Go&#13;
llllwith IIIe and you'll (md out!&#13;
(\1IIIR did !bat come from?&#13;
_boIdinyourold age, aren't&#13;
" o,saaI) ....... y (Madame Dupont) • I&#13;
p'llDow aboutyou, but with the&#13;
AIl(IIioo of a few hours late&#13;
s.daY night,Ihad a terrific time&#13;
.-youl&amp;1tweekend. You looked&#13;
IB .. qel in black. Mornings&#13;
IlI1i wonderfu1lOgether.. Hope to&#13;
IIIyousoon. Joey&#13;
C. we still say F---- in the&#13;
~-D.L.&#13;
npess there's your answer.)&#13;
10k beds come a lot more in&#13;
IiIIdy if you're going to play&#13;
"pmes." Then yoiJr roommate&#13;
WI1I'tseeyou!Hahaha!!!&#13;
Joe: Don'tforgetlOwax your ship&#13;
1IeI&lt;Ke you goOUI - Ben&#13;
"Iwoiscompany"BUT ''Three is&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 3D, 1989 5&#13;
NOTICEI&#13;
STUDENT JOB&#13;
OPENINGS IN THE&#13;
'PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
All positions available this Sef'!lester with&#13;
some special event work reqUl~ed. Students&#13;
must have a minimum cumulatIve GPA of&#13;
2 00 Applications for student manager p0-&#13;
sitions must have a minimum cumulative&#13;
GPA of 2,50.&#13;
XC ~KI T~~lc~m~u~~o~~~~ ski&#13;
Re.sJ?ons!ble ~~t~~Oiki season. Use of professional&#13;
traIls d.unng Wi ment. Operating expene!"'ce of snow-&#13;
~~gr~I~%:~~a~le. Specific training prOVIded. Must&#13;
be available for weekend work. .&#13;
STUDENT MANAGERS&#13;
~nsi~1e for evening and weekend buil~ing. oper·&#13;
abon.andIsntemal security. Invovles coordination of&#13;
SPecIalevents, cash receipt handling and student&#13;
!eyrOIlaUdit. Must be personable and have the abil-&#13;
'" to ~rk with others. Includes hands-on as well as.&#13;
::IVISOry work. Ability to make critical, soun~ dectand&#13;
handle pressure situations a necessity.&#13;
I BARTENDERS/CASHIERS&#13;
ortYolves over-the-counter concession sa~es, check&#13;
; ~~ rental of recreation facilities/eqUipment,&#13;
h...~~S,IQnand ticket sales. Cash register and cash&#13;
'''''lOlIng experience preferredbut not required.&#13;
LE IN UNiON ROOM'209 ,.,. APPLICATIONS AVAILAB d mlnorltles are encouraged to apply.&#13;
"Irkalde Union 1&amp;an equal opportunity employer. Women an - . _ .&#13;
SET.UPITEAR.DOWN WORKERS&#13;
Involves the set-up an~i~~~r-~::;;i~~~~~I~ss~:~:r'&#13;
etc., for dances, recep. 'necessa but applievents·hNoIPdrbio.re,nXgP~~~npcheYSicalcon'dition.&#13;
Must be&#13;
cantss ou k d .&#13;
able to work evenings and wee en s.&#13;
, .. , ,.,&#13;
PAN PIZZA DEALS&#13;
DON'T COME ANY&#13;
BETTER THAN THIS.&#13;
r······················,&#13;
I PAN PIZZA DEAL I&#13;
I $549 Receive a 10" Pan I&#13;
I Pizza with your two I&#13;
I favorite toppings and I&#13;
I 1 litre of Coke for I&#13;
I II $5.49! I&#13;
I • Hurry! Offer Expires : I 12/13/89. I&#13;
I :. • I&#13;
I _.~_wIJ Not...,.... .., __ lIlW ~---.., •&#13;
e-cr-~...- ..._ ~.wo-, _ Ow ....... '*"'.. •&#13;
• ....UGOO.O" lWll~ ..... _&#13;
•................. -....~&#13;
r······················,&#13;
I DOUBLE DEAL !&#13;
II$999 Receive two 10" Pan I&#13;
Pizzas with your two I I favorite toppings and I&#13;
I 2 Htresof Coke for I&#13;
I II $9.99! I&#13;
I Hurry! Offer Expires I&#13;
I . 12/13/89. I&#13;
I .. • I&#13;
I&#13;
YIIIid.~*"-.,Not ....... .., ......--~..,-. •&#13;
~,..,.~ ... __L.-IIIIIlI-'-"_ O"' ..... c.ry... •&#13;
• ... ao.oo. 0ur 1lOI ~- .........&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
SO CWllESE CCMIlOIIS.. CAll nll.lilf fOIA lOr DW..&#13;
Call us Kenosha!&#13;
North: 654-5070 2136 Washington&#13;
West: 654-5577 4919 60th Street&#13;
South:652-1222 8028 22nd Ave,&#13;
Call us Racine!&#13;
North: 681·3030 3945 Ene 51.&#13;
Central: 634-26007 1100 Washington&#13;
South: 554-9543 2308 lathrop Avo.&#13;
-6 Thursday. November 30. 1989 Ranger ::&#13;
Marquette Editor and Ad Director suspended&#13;
Business Manager fired&#13;
by Dan Cbiappetta Greg Myers, editor of the&#13;
News Editor Marquelle Tribune, and Brian&#13;
Kristofek, advertising director,&#13;
were suspended for the remainder&#13;
of the semester. Judy Riedl, a&#13;
member of the staff who held the&#13;
position of business manager, was&#13;
dismissed.&#13;
The Board of Student Editors, in&#13;
which Myers, Kristofek and Riedl&#13;
were members of, made the final&#13;
decision 10 print the pro-choice ad.&#13;
''The members of the Board of&#13;
StudentEdilOrs looked through the&#13;
university policy and they couldn't&#13;
fmd anything wrong with the&#13;
printing of the ad," explained Lori&#13;
On November 13, Marquette&#13;
UniversitysuspendedtheedilOrand&#13;
advertising duector of the snident&#13;
newspaper and fired a member of&#13;
the adminisuation who held, the&#13;
position of business manager for&#13;
printing a pro-choice abortion ad&#13;
entitled "Stand Up. Be Counted&#13;
While YouStillHaveTheChance,"&#13;
The printing of the ad violated&#13;
university policy, according to MU&#13;
officials,&#13;
continued from page 6&#13;
Personals&#13;
Bears-Packer game. The Fuzz&#13;
Schmidtles: So what does your&#13;
wedding dress look like anyways?&#13;
Hey Opie: PHILOSOPHY&#13;
TIDS!!!!!!!!!&#13;
You're invited to join the Winter&#13;
Carnival Commiuee. Lots of fun.&#13;
Next meeting, Thur., Nov. 30 at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in Union 202. See you&#13;
there!&#13;
Hey Cbops • We make a good&#13;
team, don't we??? - Crystal&#13;
A. Rondinelli, acting editor. "The&#13;
students interpreted that they had&#13;
thefinalsay. ThepolicYdoesstate-I--'!'!""-~~~~~:-------------&#13;
that the University has the right to continued from page 1&#13;
acceplorrejoctanyadvertisement" Regent visit. .. ----------&#13;
The pro-choice ad was paid by&#13;
Mobilize For Women's Lives, a&#13;
national pro-choice group&#13;
, organization. On November 12,&#13;
there were over 100 pro-choice&#13;
gatherings allover the U.S.&#13;
The Tribune will continue to&#13;
publish without Myers and&#13;
Kristofek, who are plarming to&#13;
return when iheirsuspensions come&#13;
to an end in January. The Tribune&#13;
has a circulation of about 7,500&#13;
copies.&#13;
Those new hand-soap things in '&#13;
the ladies' washrooms are nice if&#13;
they'd WORK sometimes. 1 do&#13;
like to wash my hands with soap&#13;
after 1use the toilet 1don't know&#13;
about everyone else.&#13;
Jaque #2: The love shack is&#13;
temporarily closed due to&#13;
malfunctions beyond our control,&#13;
Try back later!&#13;
Kevin B., I'm sorry 1 missed you&#13;
when you were passed out! Please&#13;
~&#13;
. Parcel~ -&#13;
Business -&#13;
, Serviees&#13;
LOOKING FOR WORD&#13;
PROCESSING THAT IS '"&#13;
ECONOMICAL?&#13;
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:&#13;
• Resumes • IBM &amp; Apple Self-Service&#13;
• Term Papers Computers&#13;
• Binding • And More!&#13;
• Self-Service Typewriters&#13;
HOME OF THE 8' COPIES&#13;
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9am-6pmi Sat. tnam-zpm .&#13;
8032 22nd Ave .• Sunnyside Park Shopping Center Kenosha&#13;
(414) 654-8000 • FAX (414) 654-8998&#13;
be home Thursday at 12:00&#13;
midnight - I'll give you a call! -&#13;
Gloria&#13;
I know wbat tbat"thing" next to&#13;
the library is. It's the brains of the&#13;
Ranger Staff after Monday nights.&#13;
- Frisky&#13;
HEY OPIE·SMELL Y A&#13;
LATER!!!!!&#13;
Overheard in the Ranger Office:&#13;
"This stuff tastes pretty good for as&#13;
bad as it smells!!!&#13;
,&#13;
ca"".,) - Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent H'all&#13;
Room 286&#13;
,553·2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
-&#13;
Vos was very pleased with his&#13;
visit to the UW -Parleside campus.&#13;
"I was very impressed with&#13;
your student government They do&#13;
a very good job representing the&#13;
students," answered Vos.&#13;
"Parleside is lucky to have&#13;
Chancellor Kaplan. She is a very&#13;
good advocate for Parkside, She&#13;
worles hard 10 make sure the&#13;
students views are heard," added&#13;
Vos.&#13;
"I hope that people realize&#13;
that student government isn't a&#13;
joke and that they should 8et&#13;
involved. Express your viewsIII&#13;
student government, that's what&#13;
they are therefor,"saidVos. "Get&#13;
involved."&#13;
Thefollowing is how ynucan&#13;
contact Student Regent Robin&#13;
Vas;&#13;
Phone number 414·472·5785&#13;
Address:&#13;
Robin Vos&#13;
252 East University Center&#13;
Whitewater, WI&#13;
53190&#13;
"II's important thatwerealize&#13;
how much power studentshave.&#13;
but they don't 1 want to educare&#13;
students on what they can do10&#13;
have an impact," addedVos."Gel&#13;
Involved".&#13;
College Students:&#13;
Need Extra Money for&#13;
Christmas?&#13;
Cash Payments for&#13;
Donations&#13;
,&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
6212 22nd Ave.&#13;
M-W-F 8:30-3:30&#13;
654-1366&#13;
T-TH 10-5:30&#13;
\~review... .'&#13;
"Dad"ispleasant mixture of emotion and humor&#13;
I byDavid Iorio played by Olypia Dukakis, had a ers. Thanks to his father. John was&#13;
'StalTWriter heart atlack.&#13;
John quickly helped his father' able 10 become closer to his own&#13;
\ ' "Dad" has been learn to stan taking care of himself son. Billy. '&#13;
Themovie film' that will 'and enjoy life. The bond that grew Jack Lemmon gaveanoutslandd£!'ribed&#13;
as a rare I , ing performance as Jake Tremont. I yOUlaugh and cry. I:-vas between the two was something&#13;
JIIke ionb the relation special. John wanted to make up His portrayal of an aging, dying&#13;
filled:;:~~~nbeiween the son for the time he lost with his father fatherwas soreaIistic thathe moved&#13;
jjp hn tthemovie while he was pursuin g hi'Scareer. the audience from laughter to tears&#13;
,.tbisfatherlhroug u . . and back again.&#13;
able to look at the posi- Whenhis motherretumed borne.&#13;
!beYwere , TedDansondidanexcellentjob , , aspects of life and are strong everything started to fall into place. as well in his role as John Tremont.&#13;
~.~h other throug,h th,e tragic That is, until Jake discovered that&#13;
.. - He was very convincing as the&#13;
I IiDe&amp; ThispictureWillgive you a hehadcancer. From then on, things estranged son who slowly showed&#13;
fldingof familyunity and love. started to crumble and John had to his concern and love for his father&#13;
-, Lemmonplays Jake Tre- face the fact that his father was&#13;
1- and family. OlympiaDukakiswas&#13;
_JohnTremont,Jake'sson,is dying. great as the loving, yet dominant,&#13;
pruayedbyTedDanson. John, a WelI,Jakerecoveredandpulied wife and mother.&#13;
Wall SIreClexecutive. was forced the whole family back together. Thismovieshouldootbemissed&#13;
~oomehometo take care of his He added some joy and activity to because it is a heart-warming.&#13;
fIIhet when his mother Betty, their lives by reaching out to oth- touching film.&#13;
Contestextended; "In View" magazine to award cash to college women&#13;
, Extra. extra, read all about it! preservation of the environment, or at the Union Information Cen-&#13;
'In View"Magazinehas extended outstanding achievementrelated to ter.&#13;
lsdeadlineforits contest In case academic interest and outstanding Anyone unable to locateanentry&#13;
JOUmissed thelastnotice about the contribution to interracial harmony form or who needs more informaIOOtesl,hereit&#13;
is again. and understanding. tion inay write or call Ms. StephaI&#13;
"In View,"Whittle Communi- The winners. who will be an- nie Green, In View Awards Pro-&#13;
, • publication for College nounced next May. will each re- gram. WhittieCommunication,505&#13;
n,willaward $2,500 to each ceive $2,500 in cash and be inter. Market Street, Knoxville. TN&#13;
lellcollegewomenforoutsland- viewed for the April/May 1990 ,37902. or, you may call 1-800-&#13;
accomplishmentsbeyond the issue of "In View." The runner- 251-5002. ext 5188.&#13;
m, Sponsored by May- ups will receive certificates of rec- As of yet, there has not been a&#13;
belline, the awardswill be given to ognition and acknowledgement in large number of applications subn&#13;
to attend accredired four- the April/May issue ofuln View," mitled. The guidelines are in the&#13;
collegesor universities. Contest entry forms and rules article, and it doesn't take much&#13;
The awardswill be given in five are available in the September/ time to apply. Since the deadline&#13;
categories: outstanding October and November/December has been extended. there' sstill time.&#13;
'butionto community serv- issues ofuIn View," and are now AlI entries must now be postmarked&#13;
lriumphover personal adver· available on camus. These issues no later t1)anDecember 15, 1989.&#13;
.• 000tslandingcontributionto the can be found in the housing office&#13;
Join Our Winning Team&#13;
NOW HIRING *&#13;
EA~N UP TO $100 TOWARDS. BOOKS&#13;
(redeemed at end of semester) *&#13;
16per hours week minimum to qualify&#13;
For more information,&#13;
Contact Michael or Leah&#13;
1-94&amp; Hwy.50&#13;
12214. 75th St., Kenosha&#13;
857-9322&#13;
Ranger Thursday. November 30, 1989 7&#13;
Jack Lemmon and Ted Danson&#13;
Treatyourself...or a friend&#13;
to a holiday gift of music and theater!&#13;
UW-Parblde'. Accent on EDrlebm.nt Serl .. orren three , .. at&#13;
entertainment baqalna._.All for Oae low price.&#13;
Jalt $24 for aD threel&#13;
rlae" for IDdIvldaal performane .. abo uallahl••&#13;
1.-'(- ~ .1 The Shanghai Quartet&#13;
L-.-:&lt;... /l:V:.'" February 19 .[ :!.T .. • Mmfuloa $7&#13;
~&#13;
' The Broad...., Mlllleal&#13;
• ""... DTeamgirl.&#13;
"',. March 29&#13;
Adm1ulon $14 ' ~m¢J=~!a::enla Zukerman&#13;
All perfomuine •• an at 8 p.m.&#13;
... the UW-Parlrlide CommnnlcaUon Arts Theatre&#13;
Toplaee ,Iour order, eall tlJe /fW·Par1tllde Infol71Ultlon Center&#13;
553·2345._JlfasterOJrd tUrd V1I11'aecepted&#13;
Sponsored fly the Parhide Activities Board&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
Application forms are now available&#13;
for UW-Parkside's Continuing Student&#13;
Scholarship Program&#13;
WHO SHOULD APPLY&#13;
1. Continuing, full-time, degree~seeking&#13;
students who have earned a minimum of&#13;
30 credits.&#13;
2. Students who have demonstrated&#13;
academic excellence (3.25 GPA and&#13;
above).&#13;
3. Students who can demonstrate&#13;
extracurricular involvement in school&#13;
and/or the community.&#13;
4. Previous applicants and previous&#13;
scholarship recipients also eligible to&#13;
apply.&#13;
Applications are available in Student Enrollment&#13;
Services, WLLC, Di95, The Advising Center, or I&#13;
see your faculty advisor.&#13;
•&#13;
8 Thursday, November 30. 1989 Ranger&#13;
Mark P. Marlaire named new Director of Continuing Education&#13;
collaboration with Gateway Tech- munity 1I5 much as&#13;
nical College 10 form-a Satellite bring more people inJlOssibie&#13;
o tho 0 COnlh Tele-Conferencmg program. IS umversity." ....&#13;
Marlaire is also b'ying 10 get more' Eighty percent of&#13;
people involved with Continuing that the office sees ~&#13;
Education so that the office can from the revenues it bin .&#13;
begin 10 run in the black. One thus Marlaire finds it &amp;I,&#13;
main goal that Marlaire has set for get more people inVolved&#13;
himself as new Direetor of Con- getmoreprogramsofflbe&#13;
tuRuing Education is 10 help bring "We have a problein 0&#13;
more people from the community the office has been ~&#13;
in contact with the university. deficit for some lime.~&#13;
"Continuing Education is gen- correct that," saidMadiil&#13;
erally an outreach program look- guess it's rnostIya mauer&#13;
ing 10 bring people into the cam- ing. There'Sbasical1Ya~&#13;
pus," Marlaire said. "(My main program here."&#13;
goal) is 10 reach out inlO the comtake&#13;
pan in the travel plans that are&#13;
offered. .&#13;
"Most of the people who participate&#13;
in the program are non&#13;
students coming on 10 the campus,"&#13;
Marlaire said. "But, we do&#13;
havea large percentage of students&#13;
who haven't taken part in our travel&#13;
program."&#13;
Getting the office running in the&#13;
black and' implementing new opporwnities&#13;
for Continuing Education&#13;
are two tasks that Marlaire&#13;
plans 10 head as new director, To&#13;
fulfill the tasks Marlaire is cur- .&#13;
rently looking inoo new typeS of&#13;
pro~s 10 offer. One includes a&#13;
with peopIe who were going 10 use&#13;
them," said MarIaire.&#13;
As Director of Continuing&#13;
Education MarIaire will beresponsible&#13;
for managing the programs&#13;
offered by the service. Some of the&#13;
programs offered by Continuing&#13;
Education, which are generally&#13;
non-credit classes, include; Com·&#13;
puter Programs, Tours and Travel,&#13;
Languages,BusinessOutreaeh,and&#13;
Pmona1 Enrichment. Though the&#13;
_ offICe is 10cated on campus, most&#13;
oCtile people who aclWl1lytake adVlIIIllI8eoC&#13;
the program lire those&#13;
within the community. However,&#13;
there are several students who do&#13;
by SUZ8DDe MantuaDO&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Mark P. MarIaire has n=ltly&#13;
been named new Directcr of Continuing&#13;
Education.&#13;
For the past five years Marlaire&#13;
had been associaled with the Wisconsin&#13;
FOlIDdation for Vocational&#13;
Technical, add Adult Education,&#13;
Inc. in Madison,as an instructional&#13;
videospecialist where he produced&#13;
IIId nwkelcd video programs for&#13;
adulls,&#13;
"I worked with schools like&#13;
Parkside 10 implement the pr0-&#13;
grams, but I didn't work directly&#13;
Jazz Ensemble to feature soloist Puppy) and Michael Balch creat a _ overtones throughotalbell&#13;
bighenergyreIease. On''OasIted. .." saves the LP Iiom beiDa' .&#13;
they create a combination of up -' other typical dancealooi'&#13;
tempo dance tracks with dirgey Also, the graveDy&#13;
industtial sounding tracks. reminisientofLeeb'd&#13;
Starting with the sonic "No SkinnyPuPPY,addlO1be&#13;
limit" the LP slides inoo oppres- this release.&#13;
slve songs like "Hyprocisy", Overall "Gashed&#13;
"Shutdown". and my personal Crossfue"isanim~&#13;
favorite, "Prayer". "Digital Ten- For fans of Skinny Puppy&#13;
~on Dementia" wms the tide back essential X-Mas buy.&#13;
~ 1010 more catchy dance tracks.&#13;
One big plus is the gloomy&#13;
previously taught at Northern IllinoisUniversity&#13;
and been active as&#13;
a performer, arranger and clinician&#13;
in the Chicago area. Once the&#13;
leader of theChicago Jazz Quintet,&#13;
heperformed with theCJQthroughout&#13;
the u.s.&#13;
Conducting the emse~ble will&#13;
be Tim BelL Admission is $4 for&#13;
the general public and $2 for&#13;
Parkside students, faculty/staff and&#13;
senior citizens.&#13;
Front Line Assembly&#13;
"Gashed Senses and Crossfire"&#13;
On Friday, December I,&#13;
Parkside wiJI host a jazz ensemble&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatreat8p.m.&#13;
Parksidestudentsand&#13;
community members from KenoshaandRacine&#13;
will be performing&#13;
at the ensemble.&#13;
Featured will be trumpet soloist&#13;
Mike Steinel, who is a jazz trumpeter,&#13;
pianist, composer and arranger.&#13;
Currently an assistant&#13;
professor of jazz studies at the&#13;
Unversi of NOM Texas, he has&#13;
Wax Trax Records, Wax&#13;
7075&#13;
TUDENT NURSES&#13;
Nurse Intern&#13;
Mary Beth Hinrichs •&#13;
"As a student nurse, I was looking for a challenging job but one&#13;
that would alS? enhance my clinical skills and prepare, m~ for the&#13;
future as a registered nurse. I found that challenge answered by .&#13;
th.e Nurse Inter~ Program ~t Aurora .Heal~h Care. It presented a&#13;
glimpse of the real world of workmg with patients in a hospital&#13;
setting. .&#13;
~ot only did my clinical skills improve, but so did my confidence&#13;
tl.me management, ~nd organizational skills! The experience it ha;&#13;
given me has been mvalu~ble. I feel confident that my transition •&#13;
from student nurse to registered nurse will be greatly facilitated&#13;
by my expenence as a nurse intern."&#13;
If you. like Mary Beth. would like to use the nursin kills vou' . - . Aurora Health Care. We are pleased to offer 0 thg&#13;
SIS you .ve learned, consider the nurse intern programat&#13;
extensive clinical experience at one of our twoYm~J'0 e OPPtortumtf&#13;
Yt? ~nhance your nursing education through&#13;
To q al'f b' . r acu e care aClhtles&#13;
u 1 y, you must e a Jumor or senior level nurs' t d .&#13;
rotation. mg s u ent or have completed your first acute care clinical&#13;
Positions are available in variety of specialty areas W h "&#13;
uary 2, 1990 and June, 1990. The opportunity exists t e av~ comp~ehensIv~ onentations planned beginning Jan,&#13;
the summer. 0 wQr part time durmg the school year and full timein&#13;
We'd like to talk with you and share in your r th . choice: g ow as a nursmg professional. Call the Aurora affiliate of your&#13;
St. Luke's Medical Center III&#13;
2900 West Oklahoma Avenue Sinai Samaritan Medical Center&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53215 2000 W. Kilbourn Avenue&#13;
"......_~ ~--..,; ...;.;...:4~1:!:4-!:64!!9-:!62;!81~3_~ M_ilJw4a~ufke~e(r,WI~53=2=33~ ~ 14-937-5099&#13;
II&#13;
I&#13;
FellowshipSUPP?rt offered f~r science and engineering graduate students&#13;
effort to increase Amer- uuuon ~nd required fees. The su- the most competitive of all govern- -aeronautical and astronautical application by Jan. 17, 1990.&#13;
, ~nanhnicaIstrength in defense- pend IS: $15,000 In I99!)-9 I, rnent graduate programs. ' engineering; biosciences; chemi- Application materials are availI&#13;
1C3sle'areas, the U.S. Department ~ 16,000 In 1991-92, and $11,000 To beconsidered for the fellow- cal engineering; chemistry; cogni- able from Battelle at&#13;
I Jd~ense is offering graduate In 1992-93. Also, each fellow's ship,astudentmustbeacitizenor tive, neural, and behavioral sciof&#13;
'upport to outstanding graduate academic department will national of the UnitedStatesandbe ences: computer science; electrical&#13;
fcllOWSIuPdSengineeringgraduates receive $2,000 per year. at or near the beginning of his or scien~; electrical engineering;&#13;
~wncean " II h' ., d . .&#13;
' ~ 'g advanceddegrees. . ore ows Ip recipients 0 ~Ol her graduate study in science or geosciences; manufactunng SCIseekiJI&#13;
Department of Defense Inc~r any military or other service engineering. The 1990 recipients ences and engineering; materials&#13;
The awardapproxinIately 120 obligauon, must receive bachelor's degrees science and engineering; mathepJanS~ee.year&#13;
National Defense Now ~ its ~ond year, the before the beginning of the Fall matics, mechanical engineering;&#13;
~ andEngineering Graduate program ~s adml~lstered by Bat- 1990 school term. naval architecture and ocean engisc~ncesh'psinAPriIl990forstudY&#13;
telle, the rnternauonal technology Preference will be given to neering; oceanography; andphys- For more information about the. Fellow I ral' , thro h i R h . Dr&#13;
researchleading to docto orgamzauon, ug Its esearc applicants who intend to pursue ies., fellowship program, contact .&#13;
and Tnnagle Park, N,C., offices. Last docloraldegreesinorcloselyrelal- To be considered for a fellow- Outterson at Battelle, (919) 549-&#13;
~wshiP recipients will re- year, almost 4,500. applications ing to the following specialties: ship, a student must ~ubmil an 8505. ' u'pend in addition to full were received, making Il among .~ ... •&#13;
i:OlVO a s _&#13;
Sup port ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;; Guitarist MikeRayburnto perform---&#13;
By Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Eduor&#13;
On Wednesday,December 6 at&#13;
9p.m"MikeRayburnwill perform&#13;
l'arkside.For those of you who&#13;
Iiave nol yet heard of. him,: ~e&#13;
Rayburn is an acOUSbC guitanst,&#13;
bever, he's not only a guitanst,&#13;
's also a comedian, entertainer&#13;
lidpick-me-up.&#13;
Hismusicalanistry and skills as&#13;
aguiraristhavewon him numerous&#13;
awards for his acoustic playing,&#13;
originalilyand audience appeal.&#13;
Wilbsomanygood entertainers on&#13;
d1ecollegecircuil,there has to be a&#13;
tpICiaI quality that makes a great&#13;
-.aiDer stand OUL For Mike&#13;
bJb!un, it's his personality. It&#13;
ClIIIes duough in every chord,&#13;
Mry song. He leaves an inIpreslila&#13;
Ihat will stay with you for a&#13;
lilgtime.&#13;
Partofhisimpression lies in the&#13;
wile I8IIgeof material he plays.&#13;
He is equally comfortable playing&#13;
selections from his 400 + song&#13;
playlist which includes artists as&#13;
diverse as The Eagles, Charlie '&#13;
Daniels, James Taylor, Billy Joel,&#13;
REM, J.S. Bach, Simon &amp; Garfunkel,&#13;
Bon Jovi, Elton John, Bob&#13;
Seger and the Beatles&#13;
Themusicalselectionmakesthe&#13;
show, and the show is where it&#13;
comes all together for Mike. His&#13;
ability to find the humorous side of&#13;
everything from term papers to&#13;
parking tickets helps him create a&#13;
performance experience thai will&#13;
not be soon forgouon,&#13;
His songs; stories and personality&#13;
mesh to create a performance&#13;
capable of captivating any audience.&#13;
His friendliness and downhome&#13;
quality along with his talent&#13;
will dazzle the adience.&#13;
In short, Mike Rayburn's personality&#13;
and infectious appeal have&#13;
induced instant rapport and hot&#13;
reviews on campuses across the&#13;
Mike Rayburn&#13;
country, He leaves students laughing,&#13;
clapping and singing along&#13;
with him. The only remaining&#13;
question is, "Hey, when is he&#13;
coming back?"&#13;
Well, you can make up your&#13;
own minds about this fantastic&#13;
entertainer. He'll be playing in the&#13;
Union Square on Dec. 6 at 9 p.m.&#13;
There is no admission charge!!!&#13;
See you there.&#13;
Whoreallycareswhat------&#13;
-Opie~&#13;
thinks!!!&#13;
COMPUTER MRCH I NE OPERRTOR· - FULL TI ME&#13;
. ." for a full time computer . Heritage Bank has an immediate openlR~ c cle sorting, and .&#13;
Operator. Duties will include ~C.Hproces~lng.flRe b~~~~I~~,w~rk Independently.&#13;
otherrelated operations. POSitions reQ.U1resan at ~e well organized and halle&#13;
Mustbe f1eHible and dependable. Candidate ~~~30 a m- -,10:30 a.m., with&#13;
theability to meet deadlines. Hours Mon - Fr.. ••&#13;
OttasionalSaturday morning.&#13;
Interested apPlicants may apply at:&#13;
Equal opportunity affirmative action employer&#13;
. Heritag-e Bank of Kenosha&#13;
3928 - 60th Street ,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53142&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 30, 1989 9&#13;
NDSEG Fellowship Program&#13;
200 Park Drive. Suite 211&#13;
P.O.Box 13444&#13;
Research Triangle Park. N.C.&#13;
27709&#13;
Attn: Dr. George Outterson&#13;
----Ranger"'----&#13;
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10 Thursday, November 30, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Parkside's running Miss All-American:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
..•&#13;
•&#13;
ll1.tIl-.:.._-' :-&#13;
For lite weeks of November 1411to November 28th the Rangerextends&#13;
its congratulations to Lori De Blieck as our player of the week.&#13;
Throughout the women's cross country season, De Blieck has been the&#13;
pride and joy of MiJ&lt;:eDeWiu'ssquad, taking first in several meets for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
As you may recall, De Blieck is a former Ranger player of the week.&#13;
Lori, in her junior season, is a geography and elementary education major.&#13;
She came toParkside from Geneseo High School in Geneseo, Ill. Last&#13;
Saturday her season's accomplishments peaked as she reached AllAmerican&#13;
honors by placing in lite top 25 (1311t)at the NAJA Nationals&#13;
here at lite UW-P course.&#13;
So once again congratulations Lori De B1ieck for earning All-American&#13;
honors and being selected the Ranger player of the week.&#13;
With intosh&#13;
you can even do •&#13;
........".&#13;
bee this~cintosh~computers ~ve alwaysbeen easy to use,But theyve never&#13;
n easy to own. PresentingThe Macintosh Sale. .&#13;
fAp ~ug~January 31,you can save hundreds of dollars on a variety '&#13;
ope Maantosh computers and peripherals. .&#13;
. . So now there's no ~n to settle for an ordinary PC.WithThe&#13;
MaantWiosthhSale,youdin~wind up with muth more of a computer&#13;
lOUt speno g a lot more money. ,&#13;
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D&#13;
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Saue Rs.~.&#13;
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Print ...&#13;
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QUit&#13;
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The Macintosh Sale&#13;
Now throughJanuary 31&#13;
Computing Support center&#13;
t gllne slide hurts Ranger chances&#13;
(JlIIIl BoWlers,p. 16&#13;
. divisionfirst went to&#13;
lie bluen.~h with 10978,&#13;
,. LOJIg ....- in! . higan St. 10850, th&#13;
~with theUniversity of&#13;
1 and the University of&#13;
On. the ladies side Indiana SI.&#13;
successfully defended their title&#13;
withSanJoseSt.secondandMorehead&#13;
St. third. .&#13;
As always the scores were high&#13;
and three 300 games were shot&#13;
with more than ten other games&#13;
over 290.&#13;
For the Rangers Boris led the&#13;
w~ywitha2055(228avg.),Brooks&#13;
2050 (227 avg.),Reddick 1913(212&#13;
avg.),JeffLemmermann 1789 (199&#13;
avg.),Jensen 1063 (6 game avg. of&#13;
177), and Riccio 533 (3 game avg.&#13;
of 177). Highgame and high Series&#13;
on the team went to John Brooks .&#13;
with a 290 and a 757 series. Honorable&#13;
to Guy Boris with two 726&#13;
s State sweeps at&#13;
".-_National meet&#13;
Inim Finals, p.u&#13;
I.\crmore people, "EveryiDabole&#13;
by going out too&#13;
.. said DeWitt.&#13;
W'lIlalso mentioned that the&#13;
lIS II good as they get for&#13;
NaIionaIs oomptetion and&#13;
lis gids ran well.&#13;
De BUeck ran a great second&#13;
lOVing from 90th place at the&#13;
ny point to a 13th place fin-&#13;
!be ,Roy and Spagnolo aver25secondimprovements&#13;
jmious averages.&#13;
DeW'1ll did not see the frigid&#13;
118IIobslacaIefor his girls,&#13;
CIIOl think the weather was&#13;
amajedac1Ilr,"&#13;
Iaiing fOl1lllll to next season&#13;
laIy Rangers should have a&#13;
lIallsevenofDeWill's&#13;
DI1UleIS will be returnFw1lleRangerMen,Saturday's&#13;
WI! a bit of a letdown. The&#13;
TmltintoNationals lookIIaflip&#13;
15 finish and an out-&#13;
. IIIot at being in the top ten&#13;
y •• Sometimes you just&#13;
IIIma as well as you can,"&#13;
CC8ChLucian Rosa of&#13;
tam's 20lh place finish&#13;
Asin 1IIeWIllDen'smeet ,Adams&#13;
• !llIelged from the biuer cold&#13;
Iibninating victory placing&#13;
IUIIDers in the top five spots&#13;
IlXIring 39 points. Malone&#13;
"Bs1leCOnd withS3 points,&#13;
• SI8le was lhird with 63,&#13;
Claire a dislant fourth scored&#13;
. lidSinton Ftaiser with 224&#13;
. IOUnded OUt the five.&#13;
~ ~498pointswithits&#13;
finish. Rick Robirds of&#13;
I\t StareWOOthemeetin2A:Ol. Patsidc, lIOphomore Pat&#13;
Kohanske finished 61si' overall&#13;
running a 26:13; senior Mike Nelson&#13;
80th ran 26:27, juniors John&#13;
Marter ran a 27:39 and fmished&#13;
205thandTunReevesplaced2A8th&#13;
with a timeof28:09. "Iwas counting&#13;
on our top five to do well, but&#13;
our fourth and fifth did not run as&#13;
'well as I expected."&#13;
Forthe Rangers Pat Kohanske&#13;
. ran a good race, "He is improving&#13;
year to year and should do well in&#13;
the next two Nationals. Nelson&#13;
also had a good race as did Reggie&#13;
Davenport. Davenport ran incredibly&#13;
well considering that just 60&#13;
yards into the race he was tripped&#13;
up and trampled over by several&#13;
competitors. " I was really pleased&#13;
with Reggie. He showed courage&#13;
to finish as strong as he did,"said&#13;
Rosa. .Davenport was taken to a&#13;
hospital following the race for a&#13;
check up. He suffered no injuries.&#13;
"I do not blame the cold&#13;
weather, many kids run well in the&#13;
cold, it. was a team meet, if the&#13;
whole team doesnot perform well&#13;
you cannot win."&#13;
series and two 279 games.&#13;
Overall the Rangers finished in&#13;
27th place and had a very produc-&#13;
-tive weekend as they showed they&#13;
are a force to be reckoned with in&#13;
the race for this years National&#13;
Championship.&#13;
The Rolling Rangers will be in&#13;
Madison this week for their second&#13;
conference match as they lry to&#13;
maintain their first place standing&#13;
in the Big Six.&#13;
Lady Rangers&#13;
losefirst&#13;
from Lady netters, p. 12&#13;
unfriendly in a 93-74 loss, this was&#13;
the first loss of the season for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
NorthemMichigan,averytough&#13;
Division IIteam, caused problems&#13;
for Parkside." Our biggest problem&#13;
was that we threw the ball over&#13;
22 times," said Miner&#13;
Parkside fell behind early andit&#13;
cost them as a comeback effort&#13;
came too little too late." We tried to&#13;
rush everything to get back into the&#13;
game too quickly. Our decision&#13;
making at times was very poor,"&#13;
said Miller .&#13;
At halftime Parkside was down&#13;
by only ten points, but failed to&#13;
score until three and a half minutes&#13;
into the second half. By then the&#13;
score was 56-38 and Northern&#13;
Michigan was pulling away. " We&#13;
jusuostourcomposure, we were in&#13;
such a hurry that we could not&#13;
score."&#13;
There were bright spots for&#13;
Parkside however, Becky Lulloff&#13;
had 12 points six rebounds and a&#13;
steal, and Senior Tracy Northrop&#13;
played great, scoring 12 and corralling&#13;
eight boards: "I think our&#13;
biggest problem is that we do not&#13;
play with poise, but we lry to make&#13;
up for it ( lack of experience) with&#13;
effort and 820d D," said Miller.&#13;
Ron's l" Ron's&#13;
Place ~~~ Carryont&#13;
Open Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m'l~~~S~~~ Open sun-rnurs. l1am- Midnight&#13;
7 Days A Week • Fri -Sat. 11 am-2 am&#13;
Luncheon Reservation 657-4455&#13;
~57·5907&#13;
Famous for 5x5's&#13;
(1fz lb. Hamburger &amp;&#13;
. Fries for $3.25)&#13;
Long Island Ic~ Tea&#13;
3301 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
657·4455 .&#13;
We Now Deliver&#13;
Broasted Chicken&#13;
..&#13;
League Standillgs:&#13;
TEAM w Pel 'E fA CI&#13;
LA Dream Team 4 0 \.000 312 178&#13;
S.M. Connection 3 0 \.000 200 172 .S&#13;
Five Guys 2 I .667 t90 204 \.S&#13;
NY Knightmarc 2 2 .500 238 224 2&#13;
Cavaliers 2 2 .500 224 234 2&#13;
Kepkies I 3 .250 168 210 3&#13;
The Dealin' Crew 0 2 .000 130 106 3&#13;
Posse In Effect 0 4 .000 166 212 4&#13;
11116 BClylta"&#13;
LA Dream. Team.. 90 (50-40) VI. Five Guys. 56 (28-28)&#13;
S.M. CoueetJOD. S6 (30-26) VI. NY Knightmare. 54 (~28)&#13;
POISCIn EffeCt. 0 VI. Kepkies. 2 -·forfeh&#13;
The Dulin' Crew. S4 (24-30) n. Cavaliers,70 (16-34)&#13;
lODjpM" G,mu'&#13;
6:00-· S.M. CODDeetion vs. The Dealin' Crew ~~Mili Up&#13;
6:00 (C)-~ LA Dream Team. n. NY K:o.lgbtmate&#13;
7:00~~ S.M. CODIlectiOD VI. Five Guy.&#13;
7:00(Cr~ Cavalien ¥s. Pone In Effect&#13;
8;OO~~The DealiD' CreW' ¥s. Kepkies&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
in the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
WIN!&#13;
over $100&#13;
in prizes each game&#13;
• Pro Jerseys &amp; Caps&#13;
• Team Pennants .&#13;
• Food (Pizza, Burgers, Etc.)&#13;
• Rec, Cir. Activity Coupons&#13;
• Packer Game Ticket Drawing&#13;
FREE&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
But you must sign in,&#13;
get a door ticket&#13;
and be in attendance&#13;
to be eligible to wi!}.&#13;
Union Square~&#13;
8:00 p.m. - Parkside Unipn&#13;
Monday Night, December 4-&#13;
BUFFALOBIllS ·vs· sEAm~ SEAHAWKS&#13;
12 Thursday, November 30, 1989 Ranger&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Rangers learn manners DeBlieck leads l~&#13;
in Point Tip Off tourney runners to sixth ~&#13;
rigid NAIA finals . point game.&#13;
The guests continued their rude&#13;
ways as the Ranger's SteveJerrick&#13;
and Rod Whittier hooked up on a&#13;
3-point tally and a pair of freethrowslOmakeit27-18.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Three Amigos, Jerrick, Whittier,&#13;
and Andy Schmidtrnann later parlayed&#13;
an eight point run at the end&#13;
of the half 10forgea41-26 Ranger&#13;
advantage.&#13;
The second half turned into a&#13;
different story though.asj'arkside,&#13;
with a lillie reminder from the officials,remembered&#13;
theirmanners,&#13;
Turning from blistering 10dismal,&#13;
they shot 27% in the second half&#13;
and scored just 15 points.&#13;
Point, on the other hand, utilized&#13;
their depth, going ten deep in&#13;
keeping fresh bodies in the game&#13;
as they slowly rallied in the second&#13;
half. Andy Boario, who scored&#13;
only two first half points, cUIinto&#13;
tbe Ranger lead quickly with his&#13;
eleven second half points including&#13;
a pair of three pointers with&#13;
Julius continuing his assault with&#13;
eight of his sixteen.&#13;
Parkside had few second half&#13;
highlights as they watched their&#13;
first half lead dwindle away, finally&#13;
falling to the Pomters 58-56.&#13;
.'&#13;
Lady netters jump to 2-1 start&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
No matterhnw good you play,a&#13;
visiting ream isn't supposed tobeat&#13;
a host ream in a holiday tournament,&#13;
and luckily the Rangers&#13;
remembered that in time during a&#13;
Thanksgiving tournament last&#13;
weekend.&#13;
After a uernendous first half in&#13;
which the Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team shot a blistering 64%, hit&#13;
10 of) I free throws, and held a 41-&#13;
26 lead, the Rangers fell 10 host&#13;
StevensFllint in thefmalsofPoint's&#13;
Tip Off Tourney 58-56.&#13;
Not being a very kind guest in&#13;
the house of the hnst Pointers,&#13;
Parkside turnedan early 9-6deficit&#13;
into a 16-9 lead midway through&#13;
the opening half 10 set the early&#13;
tone.&#13;
The lead bulged to ten for the&#13;
first time shortly after, as Doug&#13;
Burns hit a pair of free throws 10&#13;
make it 20-12, capping off a 14-3&#13;
run for the Rangers,&#13;
The basically shocked Pointers&#13;
regrouped momentarily, with Jon&#13;
Julius, who led the Pointers on the&#13;
night with 16 points, converting 4&#13;
of 4 free throws 10 make it a six&#13;
by red McIntyre&#13;
The Rangers proved to be unfriendly&#13;
hosts in their season&#13;
opener, handing rival UW LaCrosse&#13;
a 58-49 loss in womens&#13;
h&lt;qls. A balanced scoring attack&#13;
and excellent contribution off the&#13;
bench provided the Lady Rangers&#13;
with their fiISt 'w' of the season.&#13;
'''That was exactly the type of&#13;
depth we need," said head coach&#13;
Wendy Miller. Sue Mayer had II&#13;
points and two three pointelS ,and&#13;
Terri Ingalls poured in 15 off the&#13;
benchftl"theRangerettes. "Its great&#13;
then the bench can contribute 26&#13;
points," added Miller.&#13;
Junior Brenda Van Cttick and&#13;
senior center Sue Maass paced the&#13;
starteIS an with 13 and 15 points&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Parkside played lOugh in all&#13;
faccets of the contest, Miller was&#13;
quick to point out 'the major reasons&#13;
for the win. The key 10 that&#13;
game was that we buckled down&#13;
defensively, especially in the second&#13;
half." Parkside occasionally&#13;
l()Okedftl" a fast break as they were&#13;
able to control the boards.&#13;
Pryor to a season opener, teams&#13;
are generally faced with uncertainty.&#13;
Parkside,however, was able&#13;
, to emerge from the contest with&#13;
some security. " We saw a great&#13;
deal of improvement," said Miller.&#13;
Unfortunately for the Lady&#13;
RangeIS the 'game also produced a&#13;
negative. Freshman Sue Mayer&#13;
suffereda stress fracture in her foot&#13;
and will be out of action until&#13;
Chrisunas time. .&#13;
The ball continued 10bounce in&#13;
Ranger favor last Tuesday as&#13;
Parkside distroyed Canoll college&#13;
81-57 at Parkside.&#13;
Once again the Rangers used a&#13;
Only threeRangelSscoredin double&#13;
figures for the game, with Whittier&#13;
andSchmidtrnann scoring 12apiece&#13;
and Dan Lyons getting 10 on a&#13;
perfect night of shooting with 3 of&#13;
3 from the field and 4 of 4 from the&#13;
line.&#13;
The Rangers reached the finals&#13;
of the tourney by defeating Valley&#13;
City St, 80-63 the night before,&#13;
riding a 26 point performance by&#13;
Schmidtmann as he bit 5 of8 trifectas,&#13;
The Rangers, who were tied at&#13;
the half 39-39, answered -m the&#13;
second half with a 41-24 advantage&#13;
in what amounted 10 their ftrst&#13;
"easy" contest&#13;
Twelve Rangers saw playing&#13;
time in the contest, with nine of&#13;
them scoring. Whittier and Jerrick&#13;
both finished in double ftgures with&#13;
13 and 12 respectively to put all of&#13;
the Amigo's in double digits for&#13;
the ftrst time this year. Tihomir&#13;
Juric, seeing his first 'prime time'&#13;
oftheyear,pulleddown9rebounds&#13;
and scored 7 points in just 18 minutes&#13;
of action. _&#13;
Next up for the2-2 Rangers will&#13;
be Grace College of Indiana on&#13;
December Istat7:3Oin theParkside&#13;
Athletic Center •&#13;
balancedscoringauaekasParlcside&#13;
had five women in doublefigures,&#13;
"Basically w~ just wore Carroll&#13;
down," said Miller.&#13;
- The bench was again a key in&#13;
wearing Carroll down as sophomore&#13;
Terri Ingalls scored I I, and&#13;
freshman Jenni Newbert added 11&#13;
points two steals and two asssists.&#13;
The bench racked up 31 points.&#13;
Brenda Van Cuick had an excellent&#13;
game scoring 12, grabbing&#13;
9 boards, threeassists,ablock,and&#13;
six steals.&#13;
"BrendahadareaJlygoodgame&#13;
all around," said Miller. Center Sue&#13;
Maass poured in 20 points and&#13;
forward Diana Weitzel fmished&#13;
with 13 including two second half&#13;
three-pointelS.&#13;
Saturday, Northern Michigan&#13;
overpowered Parkside as the&#13;
friendly confmes of home turned&#13;
see Lady Rangers, p. 11&#13;
by·Ted McIntyre&#13;
infreezing cold tempatures and&#13;
bone chilling winds, Parkside '&#13;
hosted the 1989 Men's and&#13;
Women's CrossCountryChampionships&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 18th.&#13;
Competitors feverishly jogged,&#13;
jumped up and down, and performed&#13;
numerous calisthenics in&#13;
preparation for the two events.&#13;
In the women's race, Adams&#13;
St.of Colorado won the meet with&#13;
79 points. Western St. was second&#13;
with 132 points. On their heels was&#13;
third place Hillsdale college ,134&#13;
points, fourth was North Florida,&#13;
adapting to Wisconsin weather by&#13;
scoring.137. Fifth place went 10&#13;
Paciftc Lutheran 200 points, and&#13;
Parkside took a close sixth with&#13;
204. Wanda Howlett of Puget&#13;
Sound College won the race with a&#13;
time ofl7:55.&#13;
In past seasons.Dewut's tearn&#13;
has been able 10rise to the occasion&#13;
to place in the top four. This year,&#13;
while everyone improved at nationals&#13;
by about ten seconds,&#13;
Parkside fell shon ofits IlIP.¥o..&#13;
goal of reaching the topio;""&#13;
"We were able toruna lill!e&#13;
than ~v~e," said CO&amp;;!)&#13;
neWill, If there is anylie .&#13;
isthatwedidnOlmakeour~&#13;
goal," 1l\I~&#13;
Never the less Par .&#13;
women ran a greal race. !Jli&#13;
Blieck finished 13th 0Yelll&#13;
18:24, Jill Spagnolo was 116&#13;
18:51. Late season SlIlJlrise&#13;
Roy came on strong to fmisb&#13;
In 19: 11: Paula Stokmanllo1lS&#13;
behind finishing 70thin19:1~&#13;
rounding out theParksidelli:e&#13;
Sara Bailey J05th,19:44;&#13;
lynn Meyer, BOth in 19:48&#13;
Dee Collier, 121st, 19;54.&#13;
Overall theteam washappy&#13;
the race. "It was a goodra:e&#13;
because in the seoond baIf&#13;
one moved up for us," ex .&#13;
neWill.&#13;
Parkside started mOle&#13;
than they would havelikedl'l,&#13;
found itself chasing inthe&#13;
balf of the race as mosloflbe&#13;
• see NAIA"p, II</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 18, issue 12, November 30, 1989</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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