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              <text>THE&#13;
Rocco Wins&#13;
Vice-Presidency&#13;
Prellmlnary&#13;
Plans Include Reinstating Safewalk.&#13;
Prosram&#13;
NiJ:k&#13;
Zahn&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Bruce Rocco, the newly elected&#13;
vice president,  ran against&#13;
incumbent Deborah Cutler en a&#13;
platform promising: "A creation&#13;
of a new and expanded  Safe&#13;
Escort program, open linea of&#13;
communication between the&#13;
Student Government and the&#13;
Student Body, to insure that the&#13;
etudent body is fully represented&#13;
and informed as to their rights&#13;
and responsibilities  concerning&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 21, at 10:05&#13;
p.m., UW-ParkBide Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
announced the unofficial results&#13;
ofthe fall election for Vioe&#13;
Preeident, nine student senators,&#13;
and two committee seats for stu-&#13;
dante-at-Iarge. Pelle were held&#13;
Oct.20 and 21 from 9:00 a.m. to&#13;
8:00p.m. each day.&#13;
expansion  project, make the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent government  responsible&#13;
to&#13;
the student body, and to insure&#13;
proper representation  before the&#13;
state legislature."&#13;
New senators will be: Paul E.&#13;
Volbrenht, Mike Schaeffer,&#13;
Jamilaiahia  Nicholson, Steve&#13;
Zieman, Lennie Becker, Gary R.&#13;
Blevins, Payne-Minhael&#13;
Williams,&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Williams, and&#13;
Chris Boeset,&#13;
The new senators  and the vice&#13;
president  will be sworn in on&#13;
Monday, Nov.&#13;
1,&#13;
The student-at-large  elected to&#13;
the Segregated  University  Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee is Mark&#13;
Lewis. Dave Towle was elected&#13;
to the Uw-Perkeide Union&#13;
Advisory Board.&#13;
When the results were&#13;
announced&#13;
Rocco&#13;
said,&#13;
'1&#13;
want&#13;
to&#13;
thank the people that&#13;
supported&#13;
me.&#13;
I&#13;
vow&#13;
to&#13;
carry&#13;
out all poli-&#13;
cies set forth when the election&#13;
is validated."&#13;
"I'm glad Bruce got it," said&#13;
Cutler of Rocco. "He's going to&#13;
do well." Cutler noted that she&#13;
will&#13;
still&#13;
be&#13;
on the student sen-&#13;
ate. "Most of the activities I do&#13;
are sub-committees.  I'm still&#13;
going to stay active on campus."&#13;
There were a total of&#13;
308&#13;
votes&#13;
cast, about&#13;
100&#13;
less than last&#13;
year.  Of this relatively  low&#13;
turnout,&#13;
Rocco&#13;
said: "I'd like to&#13;
say that I'm&#13;
diesatisfled&#13;
at the&#13;
lack of showing with 300 odd&#13;
votes.  I'm deeply dissatisfied&#13;
that people care&#13;
so&#13;
little about a&#13;
$1.2 million budget."&#13;
DlsdpUnary Procedures Questioned&#13;
cony and yelling obscenities  and&#13;
sexually&#13;
derogatory  remarks  and&#13;
iunuendoes  to women who were&#13;
passing by." Wallner imposed&#13;
sanctions,  including a "two mon-&#13;
th's residence  hall probation"&#13;
and mandatory  attendance  at&#13;
educational  sessions on harass-&#13;
ment.  The students  appealed&#13;
these decisions&#13;
to&#13;
Possehl and,&#13;
on further  review, most of the&#13;
sanctions were lifted.&#13;
The students  involved in these&#13;
incidents have some serious&#13;
questions  about the procedures&#13;
l&#13;
employed in their case. "First of&#13;
~ all, none of us were around that&#13;
l&#13;
evening.  We were in and out,&#13;
l&#13;
involved with girlfriends,  friends&#13;
&lt;&#13;
and the like. Second, we&#13;
could&#13;
not get any information  about&#13;
what the allegations  were really&#13;
AlanR.&#13;
Oook&#13;
Assistant New8 Editor&#13;
On September&#13;
24,&#13;
four male&#13;
students of Parkside,  living in&#13;
the Residence Halls, were served&#13;
with notices of "alleged&#13;
involve-&#13;
ment in violations of Univere'ry&#13;
and Resident Hall Policy" from&#13;
Ms.&#13;
DeAnn POBBehl,Director of&#13;
Re8idence Life. The notic-e&#13;
directed&#13;
them to appear'&#13;
.efcre&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Steve Wallner, Assj~tant&#13;
Director of Resident Li&#13;
-e&#13;
to&#13;
answer the charges at. a discipli-&#13;
nary&#13;
hearing.  The n&#13;
m&#13;
day, the&#13;
students contacted l,Vallner. On&#13;
October 1, they me, with&#13;
Wallner, at which time they&#13;
Were informed that they were&#13;
accused&#13;
of eexurJ harassment,&#13;
allegedly "stan-i.ing on their bel-&#13;
about until we met with Steve,"&#13;
states one of the accused.  "For a&#13;
week we were sitting here won-&#13;
dering what was going on."&#13;
According&#13;
to&#13;
the students,  one&#13;
of them "got ofTafter the first&#13;
hearing, while a student who&#13;
was with him all night was sanc-&#13;
tioned and forced&#13;
to&#13;
appeal."&#13;
The students  complain that they&#13;
~ were never allowed to see the&#13;
Incident Reports&#13;
filed&#13;
against&#13;
them, nor afforded the opportu-&#13;
nity&#13;
to&#13;
confront their accusers.&#13;
"If&#13;
we had not been let off, the&#13;
next step would have been&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Dean of Students  ... and we were&#13;
afraid that he would have to&#13;
back up hie people."&#13;
"What upsets us the most is&#13;
that we were let off, but made&#13;
to&#13;
oonflnued on&#13;
pg.&#13;
2&#13;
manager,  and Jennifer Boris,&#13;
assistant  stage manager.&#13;
This play was chosen by the&#13;
Drama Department  for many&#13;
reasons.  They wanted&#13;
to&#13;
do&#13;
something that was more intel-&#13;
lectual and abstract than some&#13;
of the things previously done.&#13;
They felt they had an obligation&#13;
to&#13;
the students  and the depart-&#13;
ment to try different types of&#13;
theater.  But since the plot is not&#13;
linear and jumps around&#13;
in&#13;
time&#13;
and space, the play has been&#13;
more challenging from a&#13;
produc-&#13;
tion standpoint.  Characters  are&#13;
forced to physically change&#13;
coe-&#13;
tumes and to mentally change&#13;
time periods without much&#13;
ecenic&#13;
change around&#13;
them.&#13;
What is important  for the&#13;
audience is to suspend their dis-&#13;
beliefs and concentrate  on the&#13;
play aa a play. With this play,&#13;
Overmyer hopes to take the&#13;
audience along on a journey that&#13;
is more imaginative  and theatri-&#13;
cal than the usual path of build-&#13;
ing plot and climax. What it&#13;
does differently than other plays&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
project an optimistic view of&#13;
the future, a sentiment  missing&#13;
from most contemporary  plays.&#13;
The play tekee place over the&#13;
years 1888-1955 but the charac-&#13;
ters do not age during the period&#13;
and the audience is enticed&#13;
to&#13;
imagine the peeeage of time.&#13;
A&#13;
challenging and mentally&#13;
intruiging  foray into the charac-&#13;
ter of three women far ahead of&#13;
their time,&#13;
On the Verge&#13;
is filled&#13;
with funny, wacky, imaginative&#13;
language and is one of the rich-&#13;
est comedies of the year.&#13;
Tickets for any of the perfor-&#13;
mancee&#13;
are&#13;
available by calling&#13;
the UW-Parkoide Ticket Offioe&#13;
between&#13;
8&#13;
a.m. and&#13;
4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday at (414)&#13;
595·2564, or by purchasing  them&#13;
at the Communication  Arts&#13;
'Theatre&#13;
box&#13;
office.&#13;
Vlctorlan&#13;
Women&#13;
TraveHlns Through Time&#13;
On&#13;
The Ve18e&#13;
opens this&#13;
Friday&#13;
at&#13;
Communication&#13;
Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
OhriB Tiohuk&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Perhaps the imagination is on&#13;
the verge of recovering us rights.&#13;
-Andre Breton&#13;
On The Verge,&#13;
a delightful&#13;
comedy by Eric Overmyer, will&#13;
be the opening production of the&#13;
1993-94 Plays at Parkeide Series&#13;
with&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
performances&#13;
October 29-30 and November 5-&#13;
6. A 10:00 a.m. matinee will be&#13;
held on Thureday,  November 4.&#13;
This student production will be&#13;
held&#13;
in&#13;
the Communication  Arts&#13;
Theatre, located at the north&#13;
end of the main campus&#13;
com-&#13;
plex. Admission is&#13;
$7&#13;
for the&#13;
general public and&#13;
$6&#13;
for stu-&#13;
dents, staff, and senior citizens.&#13;
On&#13;
The Verge&#13;
is the story of&#13;
three female Victorian explorers&#13;
whose time travel adventures&#13;
take them&#13;
to&#13;
a land they call&#13;
Terra Incognita.  Their jaunt&#13;
takes them through  a continuum&#13;
of space, time, history, geogra-&#13;
phy, and fashion.&#13;
According&#13;
to&#13;
director Lisa&#13;
Kornetsky, associate professor of&#13;
dramatic  arts,&#13;
"An&#13;
important&#13;
element in the play is language&#13;
and the usage of language. How&#13;
language changes.  How lan-&#13;
guage shapes culture and how&#13;
culture shapes language.  The&#13;
play is about a journey of self-&#13;
discovery and self-exploration.&#13;
We are discovering a new world&#13;
within ourselves.&#13;
A&#13;
new world&#13;
within and without."&#13;
The cast members are Susan&#13;
McIntyre, Tina Pauketelis,&#13;
Thadd Krueger, and&#13;
Leah&#13;
Delaney.  Production  team mem-&#13;
bers include Judith Tucker-&#13;
Snider, costume designer,&#13;
Kim&#13;
Inetenee,&#13;
costumer. Skelly&#13;
Warren, scene and lighting&#13;
design, John Costigan, sound&#13;
designer, Kevin Mauer, stage&#13;
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              <text>Sandstrom Remembered For His Music</text>
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              <text>•Observations:&#13;
Bill Clinton's friendsi&#13;
page 7&#13;
• "He  Said, She  Said"/&#13;
page8&#13;
'Summer Bridge Program! page6&#13;
'Student Crowned at Kenosha County&#13;
Fair/ pageS&#13;
• Olympic Trials/ page 10&#13;
• Women's Soccer First Game of the&#13;
Season/ page 10&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 1 • SEPTEMBER 5, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
OLYMPIC TRIALS  University  of Wisconsin-Parkside   students&#13;
Danielle Kirk and AI Heppner got a brief taste of Olympic victory at&#13;
the Olympic Trials in Atlanta. See story on page&#13;
10.PhotosbyAmberNichols.&#13;
Marriott Awarded Food Contract:&#13;
Pizza Hut first&#13;
of&#13;
several brand name&#13;
vendors&#13;
to come&#13;
within the next year&#13;
ground  concerning&#13;
why&#13;
the&#13;
change in food service contracts&#13;
was made.&#13;
, "State law requires&#13;
that&#13;
you&#13;
must rebid for food contracts&#13;
every five years," explained&#13;
Niebuhr.  "Professional  Food&#13;
Management's  (PFM) contract&#13;
lasted  for six years -because&#13;
instead of going out for a low&#13;
bid contract, we used a different&#13;
type of format,"&#13;
In the past, UW-Parkside&#13;
would tell the food contractors&#13;
exactly what was wanted in t~e •&#13;
food contract. But this year, the&#13;
university went out&#13;
-Mark Hahn&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
September.&#13;
Later in the semester,&#13;
Marriott  will open a Sub&#13;
Connection  in Union Square&#13;
that  will sell New York-style&#13;
deli food. Until Sub Connection&#13;
opens, GR Deli's will remain&#13;
open.&#13;
"They are both signature&#13;
brands, and will run very much&#13;
like a national franchise would&#13;
run a Pizza Hut or a Sub con-&#13;
nection,"    explained    Bill&#13;
Niebuhr,  UW-Parkside  Union&#13;
Director. "Currently  the con-&#13;
struction   project  in  Union&#13;
Square  is running  a little&#13;
behind schedule, but should be&#13;
open by the second week of&#13;
school by the latest."&#13;
Niebhur offered some back-&#13;
... FOOD COURT, page 3&#13;
Anew food service contract at&#13;
the University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside promises to bring big&#13;
changes this fall.&#13;
Over the summer, a new&#13;
seven-year food service contract&#13;
Was&#13;
awarded&#13;
to&#13;
the Marriott&#13;
Corporation.&#13;
This fall, Marriott will open&#13;
the Firehouse Grill in Union&#13;
Square. Pizza Hut will also&#13;
openand sell personal pan piz-&#13;
~as. UW-Parkside is negotiat-&#13;
mgto have Pizza Hut sell medi-&#13;
um pizzas and provide delivery&#13;
to&#13;
the residence  halls. Pizza&#13;
Hut should open by the end of&#13;
Sandstrom&#13;
Remembered&#13;
For His Music&#13;
'Kristine Hansen&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
A fatal asthma  attack  that&#13;
claimed the life of John (Chris)&#13;
Sandstrom   has   left   the&#13;
University    of   Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside in shock as prepara-&#13;
tions  for the  new semester&#13;
begin.&#13;
Sandstrom  was pronounced&#13;
dead on Aug. 25 at 2:30 a.m. at&#13;
Memorial   Hospital   (Athol,&#13;
Mass.), near his hometown of&#13;
Wilbraham,  Mass.. Several of&#13;
Sandstrom's   friends   from&#13;
Wisconsin attended the Aug. 30&#13;
funeral in Massachusettes.&#13;
Sandstrom  was expected&#13;
to&#13;
graduate with a Bachelor ofArts&#13;
in Music in May&#13;
&lt;i1997.&#13;
He par- '&#13;
ticipated in a classical guitar&#13;
ensemble at UW-Parkside with&#13;
several other  music students&#13;
under the direction of George&#13;
Lindquist.&#13;
A hardworker, he was on the&#13;
Dean's List for the Fall 1995 and&#13;
Spring 1996 semesters.&#13;
Aug. 24, the day prior to his&#13;
death, Sandstrom  was skydiv-&#13;
ing with  friends  at Orange&#13;
Municipal Airport (Mass.). He&#13;
was   a  Federal   Aviation&#13;
Administration  (FAA) certified&#13;
Senior Parachute  Rigger and&#13;
active with the Massachusettes&#13;
Sport Parachute  Club, Inc. at&#13;
the airport.&#13;
It&#13;
was his habit to&#13;
spend the e:ntire weekend at the&#13;
airport.&#13;
"The weekend  was special&#13;
because that was going to be the&#13;
CHRIS SANDSTROM  in&#13;
a photo taken the day&#13;
before his death.&#13;
last weekend before he came&#13;
back to school," said Nick Zahn,&#13;
Sandstrom's best friend. It was&#13;
the  first  time  that  Ann&#13;
Sandstrom, his mother, watched&#13;
him perform.&#13;
Sandstrom was at the "drop&#13;
zone" and had successfully com-&#13;
pleted three jumps  when an&#13;
uncontrollable  asthma  attack&#13;
occurred. He managed&#13;
to&#13;
tell his&#13;
companions to call 911, and they&#13;
comforted him until the ambu-&#13;
lance arrived. After some time&#13;
in  the  hospital's  emergency&#13;
room, he was pronounced dead.&#13;
... SANDSTROM  ,&#13;
page 3&#13;
Alarm:&#13;
Alarmwas set offin&#13;
the cashier's office due to a&#13;
power outage. Cashier's office&#13;
was checked and alarm reset.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
POLICE&#13;
BEAT&#13;
Aug. 26.Traffic viola-&#13;
tion:&#13;
Visitor was cited for&#13;
nonregistration of a vehicle.&#13;
Aug. 27. Suspicious&#13;
Circumstances:&#13;
Parkside  Union manager&#13;
reported the disappeare-&#13;
ance of some university&#13;
keys. Investigation pending.&#13;
Aug. 27.Burglary:&#13;
The Northwestern  football&#13;
team equipment room was&#13;
burglarized  and  several&#13;
items  reported  stolen.&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
Aug.  28. Security&#13;
Sep.t. 2. Liquor Law&#13;
Violation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed a stu-&#13;
dent standing outside of the&#13;
housing area with an open&#13;
container   of  alcohol.&#13;
Citation issued.&#13;
Aug.  31.  Medical&#13;
ASSISt:&#13;
A visitor playing&#13;
soccer on the soccer field&#13;
injured his right leg. Taken&#13;
to St. Catherine's Hospital&#13;
for treatment.&#13;
Sept.  2. Property&#13;
Damage:&#13;
Three bicycle&#13;
racks were knocked loose&#13;
from the sidewalk on Inner&#13;
loop  Rd.  by  the  P.E.&#13;
Building. Possible knocked&#13;
over&#13;
by&#13;
the street sweeper.&#13;
Phy. Ed. notified.&#13;
Sept.  9.  Medical&#13;
Assist:&#13;
Astudent fell down&#13;
the stairs at the housing&#13;
area.  Medical  attention&#13;
refused. Subject taken to St.&#13;
Catherine's   by  private&#13;
means.&#13;
Aug.  31.  Traffic&#13;
Vio1ation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 62 mph in&#13;
a 45 mph zone on the 4200&#13;
block ofHighway&#13;
A.&#13;
Citation&#13;
issued.&#13;
Sep.t.  1.  Traffic&#13;
Violation:&#13;
Parkside secu-&#13;
rity officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 70 mph in&#13;
a 45 mph zone on Highway&#13;
31, South of County Rd.&#13;
Citation issued.&#13;
Compiled&#13;
by&#13;
Mark Hahn.&#13;
Campus.&#13;
News&#13;
at a&#13;
Glance&#13;
-Don Piele, Professor  of Mathematics,  was director of&#13;
the U.S. team for the 1996 International Computing&#13;
Olympiad which was held in Hungary July 25- August&#13;
1.&#13;
He conducted two preliminary rounds with high schools&#13;
from throughout the country. From these rounds, finalists&#13;
were named and brought to the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside for a week-long training program and competition.&#13;
Students programmed for five hours on two different days.&#13;
Using logic, mathematics, and computer programming&#13;
skills they attempted to create original computer programs&#13;
that solved six difficult problems. Piele organized the first&#13;
U.s. team to participate in the International Olympiad in&#13;
1992.&#13;
New Staff At Parkside&#13;
• Ranger&#13;
Staff&#13;
Report&#13;
Several administrative staff changes have been&#13;
made at the University ofWisconsin-Parks ide in&#13;
anticipation of the new academic year.&#13;
Ron Singer, associate professor ofAccounting,&#13;
has been named associate ViceChancellor for&#13;
Planning, Budget and Resource Allocation and&#13;
Graduate Dean. He will be responsible for the&#13;
overall planning and review ofthe university's&#13;
curriculum and for coordinating resource alloca-&#13;
tion.&#13;
Singer has been a member of Parkside's busi-&#13;
ness facility since 1973 and has been active in&#13;
administration and university governance, servo&#13;
ing on the University Comm-ittee, Faculty Rights&#13;
and Responsibilities Committee and Budget&#13;
Advising Committee. He also has served as&#13;
Interim Dean and Chair of the Accounting&#13;
department in the School of Business and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
Charlotte Westerhaus has been named&#13;
Assistanttothe ChancellorforEquityand&#13;
Diversity. She will be responsible for the overall&#13;
developement of Parks ide's affirmative action&#13;
lequal employment opportunity program.&#13;
Westerhaus, a Milwaukee attorney, has exten-&#13;
sive background in legal issues involving higher&#13;
education. She specializes in analyzing and&#13;
resolving issues presented by EEOC/AAlaws and&#13;
regulations. She has been an attorney at&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company&#13;
in Milwaukee since 1994. Prior to that, she was&#13;
an associate at the law firm ofFoley&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Lardner&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Westerhaus holds a bachelor's degree in jour-&#13;
nalism from Ohio University, Athens,&#13;
a&#13;
master's&#13;
degree in higher education from Ohio University&#13;
and a law degree from Indiana university.&#13;
Dennis Irwin has been named Auditor at&#13;
Parkside. He&#13;
will&#13;
be responsible for the planning&#13;
and performing of-operational and financial&#13;
audits for the entire university. Irwin has been&#13;
an account clerk at the Milwaukee County Clerk&#13;
ofCircuit Courts, Family Support Division.&#13;
Esther Wilson has been named Interim&#13;
Assistant Dean ofthe College ofArts and&#13;
Sciences. She&#13;
will&#13;
be responsible for budget, stu-&#13;
dent affairs and informational technology. Wilson&#13;
is a senior lecturer in tbe Biologoical Sciences&#13;
Department, and has been a member ofthe&#13;
Parkside teaching staff since 1982.&#13;
Rebecca Banks has been named Director of&#13;
Annual Giving and Alumni Relations. She will&#13;
serve as the university's liasion to the Parkside&#13;
Alumni Associations, directing alumni program-&#13;
ming and the university's alumni fund-raising&#13;
efforts. She will also be involved in major univer-&#13;
sity fund-raising initiatives.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Banks served as&#13;
the Senior Marketing Director at St. Catherine's&#13;
HospitalinKenoshafrom1993-95.Priortothat,&#13;
she was director ofthe Woman's Health Center&#13;
at St. Catherine'sHospitalfrom1990-93.She&#13;
holds a diploma in nursing from St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital School ofNursing and undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees in business from Parkside.&#13;
Michaelina Young has been named director of&#13;
Student HealthandCounselingServices.She&#13;
will be responsible for overall leadership and&#13;
development efforts in the area of health and&#13;
wellness, counseling, budget developement,&#13;
physicial contract and implementing outreach&#13;
services programs,&#13;
Since1994,Youngservedas the Site&#13;
Coordinator for the Milwaukee Breast Center&#13;
Awareness Program, and from 1990-94, She was&#13;
the Chief Administrator for the Milwaukee&#13;
CentralCityCatholicSchoolSystem.Young&#13;
holds a bachelor ofscience degree in nursing&#13;
from.Alverno College, and a master's degree in&#13;
nursmg from Marquette University.&#13;
_Individuals  interested  in  taking  the  Graduate&#13;
Management  Administration  Test (GMAT), to be admin-&#13;
istered at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside in October&#13;
must complete the registration  process by Sept. 13.&#13;
Applications must be mailed to the national testing service&#13;
and postmarked no later than this date. The GMAT is&#13;
required for all individuals interested in enrolling in any&#13;
master's  of business  administration  (MBA) program.&#13;
Applications for the GMAT can be obtained from the UW-&#13;
Parkside Counseling and Testing Office, Room D175&#13;
0&#13;
Wyllie Hall. The GMAT examination will be given at UW-&#13;
Parkside on Oct. 19. For more information on the GMATor&#13;
enrolling in UW-Parkside's MBAprogram, call 595-2046.&#13;
-New World Wide Web Site Launched  Current informa-&#13;
tion on programs, events, athletics and academic programs&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is now available on&#13;
the university's new World Wide Web site.&#13;
The   UW-Parkside   .home   page   address&#13;
http://www.uwp.edul&#13;
- is accessible to anyone with Internet&#13;
access and a Web browser, such as Netscape Navigator or&#13;
Microsoft's Internet Explorer.&#13;
Browsers can access a general introduction that gives&#13;
the history and general overview of the university. Detailed&#13;
information on academic offerings or enrolling at UW-&#13;
Parkside is available on the admissions page. The events&#13;
page includes a current calendar and information on fine&#13;
arts series such as Accent on Enrichment and Plays at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Other features of the Web site include current and back&#13;
issues of Perspective, the university magazine, the annual&#13;
report and campus map. These documents are available in&#13;
AdobeAcrobat format, allowing them to retain their original&#13;
design. They require the free Acrobat Reader, which is avail-&#13;
able online in Windows, Macintosh, Sun, Silicon Graphics&#13;
and IBM formats.&#13;
Other site offerings include a news headline page, with&#13;
news stones  and short features,  athletic  updates,  an&#13;
overview of various academic departments and a searchable&#13;
music lyrics archive. The site also has a photo gallery with&#13;
more than 15? photographs of students, events, sports and&#13;
the university s buildings and nature areas.&#13;
The Website is viewable with any browser but looks best&#13;
when viewed with Netscape Navigator 2.0 or higher.&#13;
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              <text>.PeerHealth  Educators&#13;
to  sponsor&#13;
on-campuslectures   on&#13;
"Depression"/page  4&#13;
s~&#13;
THIS WEEKEND ...&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
hosts   national   cross   country   meet&#13;
-UW-Parkside&#13;
student   bands   making&#13;
good   noise   in  community/page&#13;
8&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 10 • NOVEMBER7. 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
~f  ..;&#13;
-/&#13;
..&#13;
,.&#13;
j .'&#13;
//.";&gt;&#13;
~~.,r-&#13;
President Bill  Clinton,&#13;
above,&#13;
signing    a  bill.   Voters   acrossAmerica&#13;
chose    him  to  serve   anoth-&#13;
er Presidential  term   in  Tuesday's&#13;
election,&#13;
winning&#13;
over   Republican&#13;
challenger&#13;
Bob   Dole.&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
AI&#13;
Gore   visited&#13;
Racine    on  Monday&#13;
to  support&#13;
Lydia   Spottswood&#13;
of  the   1st&#13;
Congressional  Dist.,   Spottswood&#13;
lost  a  marginal&#13;
race   to  incumbant&#13;
Mark   Neumann.&#13;
$100,000 endowed engineering&#13;
scholarship fund established in&#13;
memory of Kenosha engineer&#13;
BY&#13;
AMANDA  BULGRIN&#13;
authority&#13;
on&#13;
industrial&#13;
power-&#13;
neering   students.&#13;
NEWS   EDITOR&#13;
transmission,    died  in August&#13;
His&#13;
Jaeschke's    involvement   with&#13;
wife,   a   1971   graduate&#13;
of   UW-&#13;
UW-Parkside   began  in the  1970s,&#13;
Parks ide,   set   up   the   Ralph&#13;
L&#13;
when&#13;
he&#13;
invited&#13;
George&#13;
Jaeschke&#13;
Memorial&#13;
Endowed&#13;
Perdikaris,    a  UW-Parkside    com-&#13;
Engineering Fund.&#13;
puter  science and engineering&#13;
This&#13;
gift&#13;
establishes&#13;
the&#13;
professor,&#13;
to   teach   an   in-house&#13;
largest  endowed   scholarship   fund&#13;
class   on  digital   control   systems.&#13;
in   the   28-year&#13;
history    of   UW-&#13;
Perdikaris&#13;
conducted    classes    at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The  fund  will  provide&#13;
Eaton    which    resulted    in   Eaton&#13;
four    renewable&#13;
scholarships&#13;
to&#13;
hiring  many  UW-Parkside   gradu-&#13;
engineering   and  computer  engi-    ates.&#13;
In memory of the  late  Ralph&#13;
L.&#13;
Jaeschke,a $100  000  endowed&#13;
en'·&#13;
'&#13;
glneermgscholarship   fund  has&#13;
been   established&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Park'd&#13;
I&#13;
51&#13;
e Benevolent  Foundation&#13;
nco&#13;
'&#13;
Jaeschke,&#13;
who&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
Kenosha'&#13;
.&#13;
engineer&#13;
and    leading&#13;
Welcome aboard&#13;
Marriott: a new food&#13;
contract&#13;
BY CARLOS GARNER&#13;
RANGER  NEWS   SPECIAL&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
new  food&#13;
contract   has   been   approved   and&#13;
accepted&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
Marriott&#13;
Corporation  Business.&#13;
The  contract   is  a  legal  docu-&#13;
ment  from  the  State  of  Wisconsin&#13;
and  is valid  for  seven  years.  UW-&#13;
Parks ide  is the  first  school   in the&#13;
UW  System  to  have&#13;
its  food&#13;
service  provided   by  Marriott.&#13;
Marriott food service  business-&#13;
es are located nationwide  in such&#13;
universities    as  Arizona   State,&#13;
Butler  College,  Virginia  State and&#13;
Northwestern   Illinois  University.&#13;
Construction&#13;
of the&#13;
food service&#13;
project  will begin  in the  spring  of&#13;
1997, and  is expected   to  be  com-&#13;
pleted   by  the   fall  semester.   The&#13;
location  of  these   new   food   fea-&#13;
tures   will   be   downstairs&#13;
below&#13;
Mainplace   near   Wyllie   Hall,   in&#13;
place  of&#13;
the Ranger News&#13;
and the&#13;
Parks ide    Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association  offices.&#13;
The  different   type  of  restau-&#13;
rant  outlets   being  considered   for&#13;
the   project&#13;
include:   Taco   Bell,&#13;
Upscaled   Bar  and  Grill,&#13;
and  an&#13;
optional   Gourmet   Coffee  stand-&#13;
Bill  Niebuhr,   Parks ide  Union&#13;
director,  is responsible  for over-&#13;
seeing  the  daily  operations   of the&#13;
food service  and its contract.&#13;
"I believe  this transition work-&#13;
ing  with   Marriott   will  be  a  suc-&#13;
cess  and&#13;
it&#13;
will  offer  students  a&#13;
better   selection   of  food  to  eat  on&#13;
campus."&#13;
Students&#13;
at&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parks  ide&#13;
offered suggestions  to&#13;
improve  the current food  service&#13;
at the University.&#13;
Tanesha ~ Franks   said,   "I&#13;
would   like  to  see  more  pasta&#13;
instead   of   Chinese   entrees,   and&#13;
said    the   current&#13;
yogurt    flavor&#13;
should   be  switched   with  real  ice&#13;
cream,  complete  with  a sundae&#13;
bar."&#13;
Deshon&#13;
Jackson&#13;
said&#13;
"I&#13;
would    like   to   see   a   choice   of&#13;
healthier    salads&#13;
served,&#13;
and   the&#13;
hours  on campus  for students  to&#13;
eat  at  the  food   service   out-&#13;
letsshould   be  more  consistent&#13;
Votes are In! Students elect next&#13;
president!&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
President  Bill  Clinton   and  Vice&#13;
President  AI  Gore  were  declared&#13;
the   winners   of   the   Presidential&#13;
Pre-Election&#13;
conducted&#13;
at   the&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parks   ide&#13;
Bookstore  Oct   23.&#13;
The  election   was  "held  in  con-&#13;
junction   with   500  other   schools&#13;
nationwide    and    was   part   of   a&#13;
national   campaign   to  increase&#13;
awareness   of  campaign   issues&#13;
among   students   to  encourage&#13;
them  to  vote this  week  at the Nov.&#13;
5  election.   The  campaign   was&#13;
conducted&#13;
by    Follett&#13;
College&#13;
Stores,    an   Elmhurst,&#13;
III.&#13;
based&#13;
company.&#13;
...  See  how  students&#13;
votes&#13;
com-&#13;
pared  with  the  nation  on page  3.&#13;
November&#13;
7, 1996·&#13;
P8tJ$2&#13;
Student Government UW-Parkside announces spring&#13;
Rocks the vote&#13;
public service internships&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT    Procurement&#13;
Institute,&#13;
Housing  Authority;   and Kenosh&#13;
Milwaukee;    Nineteenth    Judicial&#13;
and  Racine  police  departments.'&#13;
Circuit   Court,   Waukegan,&#13;
Ill.;&#13;
The   program    is  Open to&#13;
Racine    nrobation.    and   carole&#13;
soohomore.    iunior  or senior&#13;
col&#13;
agencies;&#13;
Racine   Correctional&#13;
lege  students   who  have COntplet:&#13;
Institute;  Wisconsin   Credit  Union&#13;
ed at least  six credits  of political&#13;
League,   Pewaukee;   and   the   science.&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
offices&#13;
of&#13;
Samuel   Pernacciaro,   associ.&#13;
Congressmen&#13;
Russell   Feingold&#13;
ate  professor   of political  science&#13;
and  Herb  Kohl.&#13;
at UW-Parkside,   is coordinatoror&#13;
Other   sites  are  the  Racine&#13;
the program.&#13;
County  Public  Defender's   Office;&#13;
For more  information  and an&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Area&#13;
Development&#13;
application,&#13;
call  Pemacciaro  at&#13;
Corp.;    the   Kenosha&#13;
County&#13;
595-2399,   or write  PSIP, Political&#13;
District   Attorney's&#13;
Office;    the    Science   Department,    University&#13;
Racine  and Kenosha  county  juve-&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
nile   courts;   Walworth    County&#13;
Hall,   Rm.   367,   Kenosha,&#13;
WI&#13;
Court;   the  Milwaukee&#13;
District&#13;
53141-2000.&#13;
Attorney's   Office;  Racine  County&#13;
(President   pro-temp   of P.S.G.A.)&#13;
and  Christy   Purpero   (P.S.G.A.&#13;
senator)   spoke  about  the  issues&#13;
and the imnortance of votinc&#13;
The  rally&#13;
also&#13;
gave  students&#13;
information   on where&#13;
to&#13;
vote and&#13;
how to register.   Teri Jacobson&#13;
was  pleased   by  the  number   of&#13;
students  that registered.&#13;
"We  were  pleased   that  we&#13;
had 450  students  register  to vote,&#13;
not  many  people  stayed  for  the&#13;
speakers,    but  lots  of  students&#13;
picked   up  information,"&#13;
said&#13;
Jacobson.&#13;
BY AMANDA  BULGRIN&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
Intern  positions   at local  and&#13;
national   gnvemrnent    acencies&#13;
and  public  service  organizations&#13;
will   be  available    this   spring&#13;
through&#13;
the    University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks   ide.&#13;
The  Public   Service   intern-&#13;
ship   Program   (PSIP)   provides&#13;
UW-Parkside    students   practical&#13;
experience   in helping  with  legal&#13;
services  for  the  poor,  assisting&#13;
court  agencies   and  researching&#13;
constituent   problems   for legisla-&#13;
tors.   Students   can earn  up to  12&#13;
credits  in the program.&#13;
Several  new  sites  have  been&#13;
added  and  include  the Wisconsin&#13;
On  Oct:   30  the   Parks ide&#13;
sruoent  liovernment   ASSOCIatIOn&#13;
(P.S.G.A.)    hosted   a  "Rock   the&#13;
Vote"  rally  in Main  Place.&#13;
The primary  goal of the rally&#13;
was to remind  students  to vote in&#13;
the elections.&#13;
Jamin    Spitzer,    from   the&#13;
Lydia&#13;
Spottswood&#13;
(1 st&#13;
Congressional&#13;
dist.)  campaign,&#13;
Teri   Jacobson&#13;
(president&#13;
of&#13;
P.S.G.A.),·&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
Sanchez&#13;
Corrections:&#13;
Native American&#13;
(ISSUE   9 Oct.  31,1996):   -The  article  profiling   the  MAVAREKS&#13;
was  mistakenly   attributed    to Reginald   Slaughter.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
Reginald Parish who wrote the article.&#13;
activities planned&#13;
for November 4-7&#13;
Top chocolat&#13;
eaters&#13;
The 10 biggest killers&#13;
More than  17 million 01 the 52 million people  who died in 1995 were&#13;
killed by intectious  diseases.   Number  of people  killed, in millions:&#13;
Yearly consumption   01 chocolate&#13;
per citizen,  in kilos,&#13;
1995&#13;
pneumonia!~~~~~~~~;:::&#13;
Diarrhea-related&#13;
diseases&#13;
Tuberculosis&#13;
Malaria&#13;
2.1&#13;
RANGER  NEW~ REPORT&#13;
Ojibwa  tribe,  will discuss  the sig-&#13;
nificance    of  Native   American&#13;
culture.   Both events  are free and&#13;
open  to the public.&#13;
Throughout    the  week,  ven-&#13;
dors of Native  American  arts and&#13;
crafts,   in formation    tables  and&#13;
books  and artifacts  will be on dis-&#13;
play  from   10  a.m.  - 7 p.m.  in&#13;
Main  Place.&#13;
All  activities   are  sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
Native&#13;
American&#13;
I&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Committee,&#13;
the&#13;
Kenosha    and   Racine   Native   ~&#13;
American&#13;
Council    and&#13;
uw&#13;
1&#13;
Parks Ide's  University   Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
9~0&#13;
7.4&#13;
7.1&#13;
6.9&#13;
6.7&#13;
6.6&#13;
6.2&#13;
6.0&#13;
5.9&#13;
5&#13;
Switzerlan\!&#13;
Netherlands.&#13;
Norway&#13;
Belgium&#13;
U.K.&#13;
Native    American&#13;
dance&#13;
drumming   arts  and  crafts  will  be&#13;
featured  during  Native  American&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Month&#13;
at    the&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parks    ide&#13;
Nov.  4-7.&#13;
At  I  p.m.  on  Nov.  6,  the&#13;
Woodland   Woodticks,   an Ojibwa&#13;
drum group,  will perform  in Mid-&#13;
Main  Place.   They  will  perform&#13;
drumming,   singing  and tradition-&#13;
al dance.&#13;
Following   the  program   at 2&#13;
p.m.,   Chief   Joe   Ackely    and&#13;
Thurza   Defoe,   members   of  the&#13;
Hepatitis  B&#13;
1.1&#13;
HIV/AIDS&#13;
1.0&#13;
Measles&#13;
1.0&#13;
Neonatal  tetanus.&#13;
0.46&#13;
Whooping  cough.&#13;
0.35&#13;
&lt;&#13;
,..,&#13;
;. Intestinal  worm.&#13;
0.14&#13;
. S~URCE:    Worl~  -Health  Organization&#13;
Austria&#13;
Denmark&#13;
Ireland&#13;
Germany&#13;
Sweden&#13;
SOURCE:   News   reports&#13;
~~~&#13;
,&#13;
In MemorlJ of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom,   former Managing   Editor, Aug.&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chiel&#13;
Kristine   Hansen&#13;
Managing   Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amanda  Bulgrin&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Kendra  Macey&#13;
Features   Editor&#13;
Jennifer   Puccini&#13;
fail to comply  will not&#13;
be&#13;
published.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
reserves  the right to editletters&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Roseann   Mason&#13;
Ranger   News&#13;
encourages   Leuers   to  the&#13;
Editor.  Letters  sbould  not exceed  250  words&#13;
and should  be delivered  to the&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
office   (WYLL   D139C)   or  e-mailed    10&#13;
hansen8@il.uwp_edu    by  noon  the  Monday&#13;
before  publication.  Letters must be typed  and&#13;
Include  the author's  name and phone  number.&#13;
To be published,   letters  must  be free  from&#13;
mislea~ing   or  libelous  content.  Letter-s that&#13;
------&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
is 'published   every  Thursday&#13;
throughout   the  semester  by students  of the&#13;
University   of  wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
who  are&#13;
solely  responsible  for its eduonal  policy and&#13;
content.  Subscriptions  are available  at the cost&#13;
of  $10  for  28&#13;
issues&#13;
Member   of  the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press.&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Scott  Malik&#13;
Sports   Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy Editors&#13;
Genevieve&#13;
Guran,  Jocelyn  Hoppe&#13;
Layout  Editor&#13;
Julia  Ingram&#13;
Photo  Editor&#13;
John  Nunn&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Derek  Bishop&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Baisha  Strother&#13;
Staff  Columnists&#13;
C.J. Nelson&#13;
Maria Smith,  Corey  Mandley,   '&#13;
Morgan   Harcey&#13;
Staff  Reporters    Kerri Bachler&#13;
Brian  Borkowski,   Margaret&#13;
'&#13;
Ditchburn,   Tim  Gaiser,  Aaron&#13;
Kappelusch,   Jason  Kluzak  Tim&#13;
Mote, Craig  Posse  It, Walt  '&#13;
Shirer,  Coleen  Tartaglia,  Ryan&#13;
Verbruggen&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900  Wood  Rd&#13;
Kenosha,  WI  53141-2000&#13;
(414)  595-2287&#13;
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              <text>Students troubled by tuition proposals; cut in state support would be harmful</text>
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              <text>......~--~;-~----..., ,... ?eatuu4&#13;
-Tupac Shakur's new album out&#13;
just two months after'his death/&#13;
page 8&#13;
.Culture Fest on campus next&#13;
week/page 4&#13;
;&#13;
-Siers named GLVC Player of&#13;
the Year/page 9&#13;
VOLUME 25 - ISSUE 11 - NOVEMBER 14, 1996 ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
PHOTO BY JO N NUNN&#13;
Withfinals only a month away, University of Wisconsin-Parkside student&#13;
Will Leggett (a.k.a. Worms) cracks down on his homework for a computer&#13;
programming class.&#13;
University Police receive&#13;
federal grants&#13;
BY JASON KLUZAK&#13;
RANGER REPORTER&#13;
to look up and share information&#13;
such as license plate numbers&#13;
and permit numbers with other&#13;
patrolling officers.&#13;
The Cops More Grant will provide&#13;
University Police the funding&#13;
to go toward, purchasing&#13;
additional computer equipment&#13;
to assist the midnight dispatch.&#13;
As part of President Clinton's&#13;
plan to put more police officers&#13;
on the streets, the Department of&#13;
Justice provided University&#13;
police with the Cops Universal&#13;
Hiring Grant. The Grant offers&#13;
University Police an additional&#13;
$75,000 to go towards hiring&#13;
another police officer over a&#13;
three-year period. This grant will&#13;
pay 75 percent of the officer's&#13;
salary and benefits. University&#13;
Police are responsible for paying&#13;
the other 25 percent. This position&#13;
will be filled within the next&#13;
few weeks.&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
police department was&#13;
the recipient of federal zrant&#13;
eo&#13;
money this year.&#13;
As part of the Police&#13;
Technology Grant, University&#13;
Police acquired two mobile databases&#13;
that have yet to be installed&#13;
In police vehicles. These data-:&#13;
bases will allow police officers&#13;
Students troubled&#13;
by tuition proposals;&#13;
cut in state support&#13;
would be harmful&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
MADISON ~ On Nov. 7&#13;
student leaders expressed grave&#13;
concerns over tuition proposals&#13;
that were approved by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents Business and&#13;
Finance Committee. The proposals&#13;
are in response to the&#13;
Department of Administration's&#13;
request for state agencies to submit&#13;
budget proposals that include&#13;
a 3.5% reduction in state support.&#13;
For the lIW System, this reduction&#13;
would be $27.1 million.&#13;
The first tuition proposal&#13;
would result in tuition increases&#13;
of approximately 9.5%, when&#13;
factoring in a partial faculty&#13;
salary increase. This proposal&#13;
would also include an enrollment&#13;
reduction of approximately 3,900&#13;
students. Under the second proposal,&#13;
there would be no reduction&#13;
in enrollment; however, the&#13;
tuition increase would be 13.7%&#13;
when accounting for a partial&#13;
faculty salary increase.&#13;
"C learly, these tu ition&#13;
increases are more than students&#13;
could handle," said Timothy L.&#13;
Casper, President of United&#13;
Council of UW Students. "With&#13;
the tuition increases in the last&#13;
biennium, we saw student enrollment&#13;
drop in the UW System. If&#13;
tuition were to increase at triple&#13;
the rate of inflation, many working&#13;
and middle class families&#13;
could decide it is no longerfeasible&#13;
to send their son or daughter&#13;
to a UW institution."&#13;
Providing continued quality&#13;
education to the citizens of&#13;
Wisconsin would be extremely&#13;
difficult with a permanent budget&#13;
reduction of $27.1 million. In&#13;
the last biennium, the UW&#13;
System's $33 million reduction&#13;
resulted in large cuts to administrative&#13;
services. With little left in&#13;
administrative costs, these potential&#13;
cuts would directly impact&#13;
instruction.&#13;
"A reduction of this magnitude&#13;
is going to directly impact&#13;
the quality of instruction students&#13;
in the UW System will receive,"&#13;
said Casper. "I am sure that universities&#13;
will have to contemplate&#13;
eliminating academic programs,&#13;
reducing course offerings,&#13;
and cutting back on student&#13;
services such as academic advising,&#13;
computer access, and tutoring."&#13;
The Governor will be introducing&#13;
his 1997-99 biennial budget&#13;
to the Wisconsin legislature&#13;
in late January.&#13;
"My hope is that the&#13;
Governor proposes to invest in&#13;
education and the economy of&#13;
Wisconsin by not . cutting&#13;
resources to the UW System,"&#13;
said Casper.&#13;
.I~;ril~fember 14,1QQ8tPiit~e2&#13;
Applications now available for UNCF*Merck Science&#13;
Fellowships; targeted to African-American students&#13;
The College Fund/UNCF .&#13;
• •&#13;
a consortium of 40 private hi&#13;
&gt; IStori&#13;
cally black colleges and u '.&#13;
. . . nt&#13;
versiues. It IS the oldest and&#13;
most successful minority high,&#13;
e.duc~tion assistance organiza:&#13;
non In the country. The Colleo,&#13;
Fund currently administers mo~e&#13;
than 350 educational programs&#13;
that give students access to hioher&#13;
education and career oppo~u.&#13;
nities, and strengthen its member&#13;
colleges. It is ranked first amons&#13;
educational organizations by th:&#13;
Chronicle of Philanthropy and&#13;
fifth among educational nonprofits&#13;
organizations by Money&#13;
Magazine. To date, more than j'&#13;
300,000 men and women have&#13;
graduated from UNCF colleges&#13;
and universities.&#13;
I&#13;
* Fellowship stipend up to&#13;
$40,000&#13;
* Department grant up to&#13;
$15,000&#13;
Merck &amp; Co., Inc. is a leading&#13;
research-driven pharmaceutical&#13;
products and services company.&#13;
Merck discovers, develops,&#13;
manufactures, and markets a&#13;
broad range of innovative products&#13;
to improve human and animal&#13;
health. The Merck-Medco&#13;
Managed Care Division manages&#13;
pharmacy benefits for more than&#13;
40 million Americans, encouraging&#13;
the appropriate use of medicines&#13;
and providing disease management&#13;
programs, Through&#13;
these complementary capabilities,&#13;
Merck works to improve&#13;
quality of life and to lower overall&#13;
health-care costs.&#13;
stipends totaling $10,000&#13;
2)UNCF*Merck Graduate&#13;
Science Research Dissertation&#13;
Fellowships. Twelve graduate&#13;
fellowships will be awarded in&#13;
1997. Each fellowship covers a&#13;
minimum of 12 months up to a&#13;
maximum of 24 months of graduate&#13;
study. Each fellowship&#13;
includes:&#13;
* Fellowship stipend up to&#13;
$25,000&#13;
* Department grant up to&#13;
$15,000&#13;
3)UNCF*Merck Postdoctoral&#13;
Science Research Fellowships&#13;
Ten postdoctoral fellowships&#13;
will be awarded in 1997. Each&#13;
fellowship covers a minimum&#13;
period of 12 months up to a maximum&#13;
of 24 months. Each fellowship&#13;
includes:&#13;
must be postmarked for return to&#13;
The College Fund/UNCF by&#13;
January 15, 1997. .&#13;
Each year for the next nine&#13;
years, scholarship and fellowship&#13;
awards will be made on a competitive&#13;
basis to 37 students at&#13;
the undergraduate, graduate, and&#13;
postdoctoral levels. These&#13;
awards will be announced in&#13;
April of 1997. They are:&#13;
I ).U N C F * Mer c k&#13;
Undergraduate Science Research&#13;
Scholarships. Fifteen undergraduate&#13;
scholarships will De awarded&#13;
to undergraduate students&#13;
who expect to graduate in 1998.&#13;
Each scholarship award&#13;
includes:&#13;
* Tuition scholarship of up to&#13;
$25,000&#13;
* Two Merck summer interr ship&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
Applications are now available&#13;
for the UNCF*Merck&#13;
Science Fellowships. These fellowships&#13;
are part of a ten-year&#13;
initiative known as a&#13;
UNCF*Merck Science Initiative&#13;
- funded by Merck &amp;.Co., Inc.&#13;
and administered by The College&#13;
Fund/UNCF. The goal of the&#13;
Initiative is to expand America's&#13;
pool of world class AfricanAmerican&#13;
biomedical research&#13;
scientists.&#13;
The fellowships are targeted&#13;
to African-American students at&#13;
both minority and majority colleges&#13;
and universities. Students&#13;
can obtain applications through&#13;
the office of their department's&#13;
chairperson. The application&#13;
Hotline or hot site: students&#13;
get free guidance on paying&#13;
for college&#13;
-&#13;
~ - \&#13;
§ll1]1cll~]])II W1n~(!;@]])~n]]) &gt;&#13;
&gt;&#13;
JEcll 1]1enlln@]])&#13;
A~~@(!;nmllD. @]])&#13;
,&#13;
(§Q WYQIEQ&amp;Q~ ~~~~]])~ \&#13;
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§~®llm~l1nC!: m®®[[&#13;
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•, ll~&lt;;;;l~~ nm W1lllln® ~&#13;
• Mmnm WllmC!:®Q&#13;
..&#13;
....&#13;
- ---&#13;
\&#13;
to help them get ready for college 'I&#13;
every step of the way, as well asa&#13;
personal finance tutorial to help&#13;
them manage their money&#13;
responsibly once in college,&#13;
Families can get answers to&#13;
their questions by calling College&#13;
Answer toll free at 1-800·891·&#13;
4599 (weekdays from 9 a.rn. to 9&#13;
p.m. Eastern time), or by visiting&#13;
Sallie Mae's Web site at&#13;
http://www.salliemae.com.&#13;
Federally chartered and&#13;
stockholder-owned, Sallie Mae is&#13;
the nation's leading source of&#13;
funds for higher education.&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
College students and their&#13;
families who are stranded in a&#13;
tuition desert, trapped under a&#13;
mountain of financial aid forms,&#13;
or drowning in-a sea of confusing&#13;
advice can find a help line on the&#13;
phone or the Internet.&#13;
Representatives at the&#13;
College Answer Service, a tollfree&#13;
hotline from Sallie Mae, are&#13;
standing by to answer questions&#13;
about college financial aid. Not&#13;
sure of how to begin your search&#13;
for educational grants, workstudy&#13;
or other financial aid?&#13;
Having trouble filling out the&#13;
Ranger News is published every Thursday&#13;
throughout the semester by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkslde. who are&#13;
solely responsible for its eduonal policy and&#13;
content. Subscriptions are available at the cost&#13;
of S I0 for 18 issues. Member of the&#13;
Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
Ranger News encourages Leiters to the&#13;
Editor Letters should not exceed 150 words&#13;
and should be delivered to the Ranger News&#13;
office (WYLL DIJ9C) or e-mailed to&#13;
hansen8@ituwp.edu by noon the Mondav&#13;
before publication. Letters must be typed and&#13;
include the author's name and phone number.&#13;
To be published, leners must be free from misleading&#13;
or libelous content. Letters that fail to&#13;
comply will not be published. Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
----&#13;
"&#13;
In Memory of John C. Sandstrom, former Manaljinlj Editor, AUIj. 25,&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Amanda BUlgrin&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
7996&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Baisha Strother&#13;
Reporters Kerri Bachler, Brian&#13;
Borkowski, Margaret Ditchburn,&#13;
Tim Gaiser, Shantee Jude,&#13;
Aaron Kapellusch, Jason&#13;
Kluzak, Tim Mote, Craig&#13;
Posse It, Becky Schlevensky,&#13;
Wall Shirer, Collen Tartaglia,&#13;
Ryan Verbruggen&#13;
Advisor Roseann Mason&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Genevieve Guran&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
.Julia Ingram&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
News&#13;
Ulet~e"'6tt'f&#13;
Po-etee ~ea,t&#13;
Nov. t. Persona I Property&#13;
Theft: University of Wisconsinparkside&#13;
student reported that on&#13;
10/31/96while in the Cornrn Arts&#13;
LI hallway, he left his jacket on a&#13;
lounge chair and found it missing&#13;
when he returned over an hour&#13;
later.&#13;
Nov. 1. Fire Drill: Preschool &amp;&#13;
Children's Center. A fire drill was&#13;
conducted at 2:40 p.m. Drill went&#13;
without incident.&#13;
Nov. 3 Traffic Violation: 12:45&#13;
a.m. University Police stopped a&#13;
vehicle on Hwy. 3 I just off of&#13;
Hwy. E for non-working headlight&#13;
and expired registration. Dept. of&#13;
Transportation revealed registration&#13;
expired 07/95. Citations&#13;
issued.&#13;
Nov. 4 Sexual Assault:&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept. reported a&#13;
sexual assault which Deemed on&#13;
10/25/96 south of Hwy. A and&#13;
west of Wood Road. Investigation&#13;
Nov. 4 Personal Property&#13;
Theft: A University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide housing student&#13;
reported that money was&#13;
taken from her purse which was in&#13;
an open area of her unattended&#13;
dorm room. Case pending.&#13;
Nov. 5 Unauthorized&#13;
Presence: A disgruntled student&#13;
interrupted a class in the&#13;
Greenquist Building to confront&#13;
another student who had cut her&#13;
off in traffic.&#13;
Nov. 5 Personal Property&#13;
Theft: . A University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide student&#13;
reported the theft of his housing&#13;
Students attend Gore rally&#13;
BY APRIL SCHOENBERG&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
Vice President AI Gore was&#13;
in Racine Nov. 4, to campaign&#13;
and support candidate Lydia&#13;
Spottswood (D-Kenosha) for&#13;
Congress Spottswood lost the&#13;
highly-publicized race to incumbent&#13;
Mark Neumann (RJanesville)&#13;
by approximately&#13;
4,500 votes.&#13;
Approximately 750 people,&#13;
including several University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside students,&#13;
attended the breakfast, which was&#13;
held at Memorial I-Iall on 7th St.&#13;
and Lake Ave. "1 felt the rally&#13;
marked an historical breakthrough&#13;
for this district, because&#13;
it is one of the few limes that a&#13;
celebrity like AI Gore has visited&#13;
the area, I felt honored that he&#13;
came," shared sophomore Tonya&#13;
Hoffman. Corey Mandley, a&#13;
freshman that attended the breakfast&#13;
shared similar sentiments.&#13;
'?&#13;
•&#13;
"Seeing the Vice President overwhelmed&#13;
me, 1 felt that my vote&#13;
really meant something with him&#13;
here."&#13;
Students Teri Jacobson, Zac&#13;
"~&#13;
E&#13;
TE&#13;
Pawlowski, and Jeanne Sanchez&#13;
were greeters and helped serve&#13;
breakfast at the rally. "Ann&#13;
Manhiern, a coordinator for the&#13;
campaign, called me and offered&#13;
50 tickets to attend the breakfast.&#13;
My volunteer time stemmed from&#13;
my involvement in the campaign:'&#13;
shared Jacobson.&#13;
Jacobson also coordinated the&#13;
"Rock the Vote" campaign here&#13;
on campus, which registered&#13;
approximately 450 Parks ide students&#13;
to vote.&#13;
Some students were a bit disappointed&#13;
by the rally. Alumnus&#13;
Jim Hendrickson stated, "The&#13;
wait for AI Gore and Tom Barrett&#13;
(D-Milwaukee) was frustrating,&#13;
and it was a bit of a letdown.&#13;
What the advertisers called&#13;
breakfast was in fact a kringle&#13;
and coffee." Pawlowski said, "I&#13;
volunteered because I wanted to&#13;
hear Gore speak, but it felt like&#13;
preaching to the converted that&#13;
late in the election."&#13;
There was a rally for candidate&#13;
Neumann, later that day at&#13;
Racine's Batten Air Field.&#13;
Governor Tommy Thompson&#13;
headlined the rally and approximately&#13;
130 people attended. In&#13;
retrospect Pawlowski stated, "in&#13;
hindsight,. while Racine was a&#13;
good location there are other Parkside Student Government President Teri Jacobsen led the&#13;
areas that would have been more "Rock the Vote" campaign registering students to vote.&#13;
advantageous for the campaign." L- ---------'&#13;
a) Depression is a bunch of. symptoms&#13;
exhibited by weak people. .&#13;
permit. Theft occured prior to&#13;
Oct. 28 according to complainant.&#13;
in payment of a parking citation.&#13;
Notice letter sent.&#13;
Nov. 5 Attempted Theft: A&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
student reported an attempted&#13;
theft of his vehicle. Complainant&#13;
stated someone had forced open&#13;
the right rear window. Incident&#13;
occurred in the Tallent Lot.&#13;
Nov. 6. Traffic Violation: A&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
student was cited for failing to&#13;
stop at a stop sign on Outer Loop&#13;
Rd. and HWy. JR.&#13;
Nov. 7. UWS Chapter 18&#13;
Violation: Unknown persons&#13;
wrote with chalk on a chair in&#13;
Wyllie Hall. Gum was also put on&#13;
a window.&#13;
Nov. 6. Agency Assist:&#13;
University police officers assisted&#13;
the Kenosha Sheriff's Department&#13;
with traffic control for a vehicle in&#13;
a ditch at Hwy. 31 and Hwy. JR at&#13;
7:59 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7. Actual Fire: A cigarette&#13;
caught trash on fire in a cigarette&#13;
urn outside of Molinaro Hall. Fire&#13;
was extinguished by University&#13;
police without incident.&#13;
Nov. 6. Worthless Check: A&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parksidc&#13;
.studenr issued a worthless check&#13;
Commonly&#13;
Unbearable.&#13;
b)Depression is an unbearable suppression&#13;
of brain activity that can strike anyone.&#13;
Dangerously&#13;
I;3elievable.&#13;
Subsequently&#13;
Straiqhte . . runq out all the misconceptions, the correct answer is .&#13;
'b'. It's a concept we should all understand and remember, and here's Fatal.&#13;
Why. Depression strikes millions of young adults, but only lout of 5 ever seeks treatment for it. Too many just drag themselves along&#13;
th Y see relief through suicide. Why not treatment? Partly lack of awareness. Partly or eventual! k reli&#13;
heunwarranted negative stigma. This is what needs fixing .. This is where we need you to UN TR EA 1E 0&#13;
~ ange your attitudes. It's an illness not a weakness. And it's readily treatable. DE PRES·SION&#13;
oreadinq the word and making thlscommon knowledge is everybody's assignment. -- ,.. - -, '" .~ ... -'&#13;
Public Service message from SAWE (Suicide AwarenessWoices of Education)&#13;
#1 Cause of Suicide&#13;
http://wwW.save.org&#13;
#1 Cause of Suicide&#13;
uNTRE.ATED&#13;
DEPRESSION&#13;
http://www.save.org&#13;
On-campus fundraiser&#13;
to benefit&#13;
Saffioti- Hughes' late&#13;
daughter&#13;
BY JENNIFER PUCCINI&#13;
FEATURES EDITOR&#13;
A tragic automobile accident&#13;
that claimed the life of an English&#13;
professor's daughter is now the&#13;
focus of a fundraiser organized by&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and the Children's&#13;
Hospital of Milwaukee.&#13;
The Parks ide Community&#13;
Outreach Club (PCOC) is sponsoring&#13;
the on-campus fundraiser&#13;
Nov. 18 through Nov. 22. The&#13;
fundraiser was started by Carol&#13;
Lee Saffioti-Hughes, UWParks&#13;
ide professor of English,&#13;
after the loss of her daughter&#13;
Autumn, to help educate and&#13;
entertain other children. Autumn&#13;
RACINE&#13;
died in January of 1995.&#13;
Because the fundraiser is in&#13;
the form of a game, prizes will be&#13;
awarded. The money raised will&#13;
be used to purchase books for the&#13;
children who are staying in the&#13;
hospital. Each book donated will&#13;
feature a photoplate of Autumn&#13;
inside the front cover.&#13;
PCOC would also like to help&#13;
students and faculty become more&#13;
aware of the fact that Children's&#13;
Hospital of Milwaukee is the only&#13;
children's hospital in Wisconsin.&#13;
The event will be held on the&#13;
Molinaro bridge on November 18&#13;
and 19, and in Main Place on&#13;
November 20 and 21. The event&#13;
will take place from 10a.m. to&#13;
2p.m. each day.&#13;
Spectrum gallery&#13;
BY JENNIFER PUCCINI&#13;
FEATURES EDITOR&#13;
Area residents Lisa Bohan&#13;
and Lori Artimov are presenting&#13;
their work at the Spectrum&#13;
Gallery in Racine. Their presentation&#13;
began on Nov. 8 and will&#13;
run until Dec. 1. Bohan's work&#13;
creates itself through a process&#13;
starting with a blank page and&#13;
evolving. Her work, which was&#13;
influenced by Zen philosophy,&#13;
results in everything from splash&#13;
paintings to work that has been&#13;
described as "elephant scratchings."&#13;
,&#13;
Bohan works with colored&#13;
glass to produce lamps and hangings&#13;
that combine contrasting&#13;
shapes and colors. Lori's pieces&#13;
also evolve as she works, resulting&#13;
in spontaneous design and yet&#13;
retaining structure.&#13;
Spectrum Gallery hours are&#13;
Friday from 5-8 p.m., and&#13;
Saturday and Sunday from 12&#13;
noon until 5 p.rn. For more information&#13;
call 634-4345.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Orpheum Theatre's&#13;
celebrates one year&#13;
The Orpheum Theatre, in&#13;
downtown Kenosha, is getting&#13;
ready to celebrate its one year&#13;
anniversary. November 17 marks&#13;
a year since it reopened as a discount&#13;
theater, offering relatively&#13;
current movies for $2 a showing,&#13;
although the building itself will&#13;
be seventy-five years old in 1997.&#13;
The anniversary celebration&#13;
will take place on November 20&#13;
and 21. On those nights, admission&#13;
will drop down to just twenty-five&#13;
cents. The theater asks&#13;
that patrons also bring along a&#13;
non-perishable food item to&#13;
donate to a local food pantry.&#13;
Shows generally begin at&#13;
7p.m. on weekdays and noon on&#13;
Saturdays and Sundays.&#13;
Thursday nights are college&#13;
night, when admission is $1.50&#13;
with a college 1.0., and on&#13;
Tuesdays, all movies are only $1.&#13;
The Orpheum Theatre is&#13;
located at 5819-6th Avenue, right&#13;
down the street from Library&#13;
Park. Make the short trip downtown&#13;
and help celebrate a piece&#13;
of Kenosha's history.&#13;
&lt;i\-',):l&#13;
':;)}':)--,,:,,: """ ' , , "&#13;
'Ii;!:Ptf#Ji1:~~.14,"199~.pagefCulture&#13;
Fest arrives next&#13;
week&#13;
MONDAY: Discussion: "Myths&#13;
&amp; Stereotypes: The Search For&#13;
Cultural Identity" in Union 104-&#13;
Native American Awareness&#13;
Here comes Culture Fest!&#13;
Next week, Nov. 18-21, Office of&#13;
Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
(OMSA) will sponsor a multitude&#13;
of events, all of which are&#13;
absolutely free! Beginning on&#13;
Monday, Culture Fest will offer&#13;
discussion, movies, music, dancing,&#13;
a fashion show, and much,&#13;
much more. Signs are posted, but&#13;
in case you've missed them, here&#13;
is a listing of what's in store:&#13;
106, 2p.m. to 4p.m.; Movie:&#13;
"Uncommon Ground" in Union&#13;
Cinema, 7p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY: Resume and Cover&#13;
Letter Workshop In the&#13;
Intercultural Commons area&#13;
(WYLL 0-182), ) la.m. to&#13;
12p.m.; The Rug" ~eaver,&#13;
Rosalind Begay in Main Place&#13;
(through November 22);&#13;
"Uncommon Ground", 7p.m.&#13;
WEDNESDAY: Inroads&#13;
Internship Service in MOLN 105,&#13;
noon; Around the World in One&#13;
Night (music and dancing) in the&#13;
Union Cinema, 6p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY:&#13;
Fashion Show&#13;
7p.m.&#13;
A Contemporary I&#13;
in Union Square,&#13;
This will be the first Culture&#13;
Fest at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside and a history-making&#13;
event. Attendance is&#13;
desired and welcomed. Oh, and&#13;
by the way, EVERYTHING'S&#13;
FREE"I See you there.&#13;
Compiled by Kendra Macey,&#13;
Features Editor.&#13;
Week commentary&#13;
Most students are probably&#13;
aware that November is Native&#13;
American Awareness Month,&#13;
thanks to the artists, vendors,&#13;
dancers and speakers that spent&#13;
most of last week in Main Place&#13;
sharing their culture. All this&#13;
month there will be exhibits and&#13;
vendors on campus, but&#13;
November 4-7, Native American&#13;
Awareness Week (NAAW), was&#13;
the highlight of the celebration.&#13;
On Nov. 4, 5 and 7, artists,&#13;
vendors, videos and the library's&#13;
display of Native American&#13;
books and artifacts were made&#13;
available. On Wednesday, in&#13;
addition to the events of the previous&#13;
days, Spotted Eagle High&#13;
School's Woodland Woodticks&#13;
brought their traditional drum,&#13;
Chief Joe Ackely spoke, as did&#13;
Thurza DeFoe, who was also&#13;
responsible for some traditional&#13;
dancing. Additional singers. were&#13;
also on hand; like, Lois McGuire,&#13;
and others. All that combined to&#13;
make for a mighty interesting,&#13;
eye-opening week. This year&#13;
marks the seventh successful year&#13;
of events for NAAW at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide.&#13;
I f, for some reason you&#13;
missed these, and would like to&#13;
see other Native American displays,&#13;
check out the library and&#13;
look for Rosalind Begay, a&#13;
Navajo rug weaver, weaving and&#13;
selling pieces in Main Place&#13;
November 18-22. For those of&#13;
you who made it and enjoyed&#13;
what you experienced, look for it&#13;
again next November.&#13;
¢&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
\&#13;
I ,&#13;
Compiled by Kendra Macey,&#13;
Features Editor.&#13;
Native American Merchant&#13;
I would like to share with&#13;
everyone my experience with a&#13;
Native American merchant. On&#13;
Monday I went window shopping,&#13;
looking for something&#13;
un ique and pretty. Isaw someone&#13;
I knew there, she too was looking&#13;
over the items on the table. We&#13;
started asking the lady "how&#13;
much is this," and "how much is&#13;
that." She had some vases that&#13;
were $10.00 each separately, but&#13;
$25.00 as a set. (what's up with&#13;
that?) My friend made a purchase&#13;
and paid by check. The lady&#13;
asked her if the check was good.&#13;
She said, "yeah, my check is&#13;
good."&#13;
On Tuesday I went back and&#13;
found two small vases worth purchasing.&#13;
I asked the lady how&#13;
much they were. She said,&#13;
"they're $4 dollars each." I could&#13;
have easi Iy written her a check&#13;
but I remembered how she asked&#13;
my friend if her check was good&#13;
before she took it. So I asked if&#13;
she would hold them until tomorrow.&#13;
"Sure," she said, "just wear&#13;
those pretty earrings tomorrow, so&#13;
I'll know who you are" It sounded&#13;
easy enough to me. On&#13;
Wednesday, I went back to make&#13;
my purchase and low, and behold,&#13;
she wasn't there. Needless to say&#13;
I was disappointed.&#13;
So I went back on Thursday;&#13;
she was there and so were my two&#13;
little vases. She asked me how&#13;
much did she say they were. I&#13;
said "you told me $4 dollars&#13;
each." She said, "oh no I didn't&#13;
say $4 dollars; I must have said&#13;
$10 dollars. The little ones are $4&#13;
dollars." I thought to myself,&#13;
damn, I can't believe this. I really&#13;
wanted them, but I wasn't&#13;
going to allow myself to be hustied.&#13;
So I told her I didn't want&#13;
them for $20. She pretty much&#13;
said oh well, too bad. Then she&#13;
picked one of the vases up and a&#13;
little white price sticker fell off.&#13;
The price on the sticker was&#13;
$7.50. I just played it off Iike I&#13;
didn't even see it because Iwasn't&#13;
going to pay $15 either. In her&#13;
final effort to sell them, the price&#13;
went to $5 each. In her eyes I&#13;
would have saved $10, but in my&#13;
eyes I would have overpaid by $2.&#13;
In the end, I bought a $8 dream&#13;
catcher from a different merchant.&#13;
From this story I wish to inform&#13;
students not to buy something&#13;
unless you really want it and/or it&#13;
has a price tag on it. Maybe&#13;
Parks ide can make it a requirement&#13;
that all merchants place&#13;
price tags on their items.&#13;
.·1&#13;
Karen Whyte&#13;
F '&#13;
features&#13;
KENOSHA HUMANE&#13;
SOCIETY REQUESTS&#13;
VOLUNTEERS&#13;
Groom and exercise animals,&#13;
clean cages and assist customers.&#13;
1-3 hours weekly&#13;
between 12:00 noon - 6:00 pm,&#13;
Monday - Saturday. Sign up in&#13;
the Volunteer Office.&#13;
DOCENT NEEDED BY&#13;
ANDERSON ARTS&#13;
CENTER.&#13;
Provide information and assistance&#13;
to patrons at the art center.&#13;
Must have people skills and&#13;
memorize historical data. 3&#13;
hours weekly. Get more informarion&#13;
in the Volunteer Office.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS:&#13;
National Smoke-Out Day&#13;
staff can use help distributing&#13;
materials from table on the&#13;
University of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide concourse between&#13;
10:00-2:00 on Thursday,&#13;
November 21 st. Volunteer I&#13;
hour.&#13;
Cerebral Palsy Overnight&#13;
from Saturday, Nov. 23 (noon)&#13;
to Sunday, Nov. 24 (noon). Help&#13;
with persons with disabilities at&#13;
Best Western Hotel in Kenosha.&#13;
One-on-one help with recreation&#13;
and meals. Future teachers&#13;
and Sociology majors would&#13;
benefit from this experience.&#13;
See Jennifer Brooks in the&#13;
Volunteer Office in the Career&#13;
Volunteer of the week&#13;
Students are selected as&#13;
"Volunteer of the Week" on the&#13;
basis of their altruistic attitudes,&#13;
the amount of lime shared within&#13;
the community and the impact&#13;
their service has made in the lives&#13;
of others. This weeks volunteer is&#13;
ROSEMARY SHIAVI.&#13;
Rosemary IS a junior&#13;
enrolled in the Pre-Med Program.&#13;
As a freshman, Rosemary began&#13;
volunteering in the emergency&#13;
room at Kenosha Hospital and&#13;
Medical Center, received her&#13;
training with Hospice Alliance&#13;
and helped out with the After 5&#13;
and Very Special Arts Festival.&#13;
As a sophomore she added&#13;
SEWAP (Southeast WI AIDS&#13;
Project) and the Kenosha Co.&#13;
Medical Examiner's Office&#13;
assisting with autopsies. After 5&#13;
and the Racine Christmas House&#13;
were added to her special events.&#13;
~ENDANGERED~\&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL TUTOR&#13;
NEEDED.&#13;
Case High School student needs&#13;
help with chemistry, economics&#13;
and algebra. 1-3 hours weekly.&#13;
Student is highly motivated to&#13;
learn. See Carol in Volunteer&#13;
office.&#13;
ANIMALS&#13;
cHant&#13;
Panila&#13;
Red List's 3 categories:&#13;
• CriIically endangered,&#13;
endangered, vulnerable&#13;
Species tIlllt meet any of&#13;
these are "endangered":&#13;
• Population has fallen at&#13;
least 50% in last 10 yoo.rs or&#13;
3 generations .&#13;
• Populatiotd5rojected to&#13;
halve in 10 years or next&#13;
3 generations&#13;
• Population is less than&#13;
250 mature individuals&#13;
Population is less than&#13;
nd expected to&#13;
st 20% in next&#13;
impacted by HIV/AIDS. She&#13;
also volunteered at the Prairie&#13;
Springs Halloween Party this fall.&#13;
Darleen Chiappetta,&#13;
Volunteer Coordinator for&#13;
Hospice AlIiance, reported how&#13;
pleased she is with Rosemary's&#13;
assistance. "Rosemary does an&#13;
excellent job of encouraging conversations&#13;
with her Hospice&#13;
patient who resides in the nursing&#13;
home."&#13;
Why does Rosemary volunteer?&#13;
She said, "Volunteering&#13;
isn't a chore that I perform so I&#13;
can have something on my&#13;
resume, but it is an activity that I&#13;
really enjoy. I have met interesting&#13;
people, learned many valuable&#13;
lessons and skills, and I have&#13;
had a lot offun in the process."&#13;
Thanks Rosemary for your&#13;
positive attitude while going the&#13;
extra mile to help others.&#13;
Rosemary Shiavi&#13;
This year Rosemary is continuing&#13;
with her weekly activities and has&#13;
added the responsibility of CoCoordinator&#13;
of the UW-P Hearts&#13;
for Camp Heartland Club, an&#13;
organization that helps children&#13;
"Your parents are like the&#13;
smell of cooked cabbage.&#13;
They come for dinner, but&#13;
then they linger." 17&#13;
11&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
~,/h...&#13;
i",",' E:""&#13;
I,&#13;
The Wand Conservation Union ~ released a Red List of l&#13;
end~red species, the most complete analysis of world ,Wildille. 'I'&#13;
~[,.&#13;
~ [" endanQBI'e,~&#13;
f CountrY· '.' $peel",&#13;
l,' ·&gt;w ...~0c·· .&lt;;~'"&#13;
f' 256&#13;
L-&#13;
. Denmark IT"'IT"'IT"'C'&#13;
U.K.&#13;
4&#13;
leading threats&#13;
Human poputation growth&#13;
f "c,,"&#13;
Economic development ;r&#13;
Hunting, fishing . ". ;~&#13;
1 pollution; climate change&#13;
STOP THE VIOLENCE DAY IS&#13;
NOVEMBER 22 - MAKE A PLEDGE&#13;
FOR P~ACE!&#13;
"Living next door to a safari&#13;
park has its disadvantages."&#13;
......._. _ ........-&#13;
~&#13;
;~ -r--rt' m&#13;
'~&#13;
'J~'i?i70 9", '~f::&#13;
~~p~",,"&#13;
.-,.,. co.--~[f-~ ~~m&#13;
~tfI ~ '. ", -=&#13;
,&#13;
..........&#13;
Harmonious Wails&#13;
comes to Racine&#13;
BY JENNIFER PUCCINI&#13;
FEATURES EDITOR&#13;
On Saturday November 16,&#13;
1996 at 8:00 p.m. the Prairie&#13;
Performing Arts Center&#13;
Entertainment Series will present&#13;
its second show of the season&#13;
featuring Harmonious Wails&#13;
from Madison, Wisconsin. This&#13;
band is a vocally oriented all&#13;
acoustic instrument string band.&#13;
The members of this band are&#13;
Sims Delaney-Potthoff, mandolin,&#13;
Maggie Delaney-Potthoff,&#13;
on vocals and percussiontwhich&#13;
sometimes includes brush-sticks&#13;
on a duct-taped cardboard box--&#13;
"just because they like the&#13;
sound"), Henry Boehm, stand up&#13;
bass, and longtime member&#13;
Doug Brown, acoustic guitar.&#13;
The Harmonious Wails have&#13;
traveled throughout the United&#13;
States and Europe and are the&#13;
winners of four WAMI&#13;
(Wisconsin Area Music Industry)&#13;
awards. They have one CD&#13;
released entitled Airborne on the&#13;
Bufflehead label. Individual&#13;
tickets are $12.00 for adults and&#13;
$10.00 for students and seniors.&#13;
Tickets are available at all&#13;
Heritage Bank locations and at&#13;
Schmitt Music at 1409&#13;
Washington Ave. in Racine. ~f4iO I~&#13;
Tickets may also be reserved by s...../.u&gt;M I",~ ~ ~&#13;
calling the Prairie School at '1', . tr'"&#13;
(414) 260-3545. The Prairie -wI~~M",dI"",,~-.L&#13;
Performing Arts Center is wheel- f!il"''''+''''-"''- u.:.",w/. ",$ ~~-&#13;
chair accessible and is located on .p;.l"" rt:.. v~ ~&#13;
the campus of the Prairie School ~ ~ ~ t....J&#13;
at 4050 Lighthouse Drive in&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin. ~ H~, W~.&#13;
CO ?rtf CS&#13;
OUT ON A LIMB by GARY KOPERVAS&#13;
.-----:--:-----..:-'-t&#13;
',\~y \-.~F-iZY", /(1'/ Ctctofl G~V~\1' 'fo 0&#13;
\l!',\I\'f''31\.I~1 /AU1''; "u~f, 1'0 i«f'[&#13;
ON Yov~ p.,~1 rtf y(Z()//I £]fuyyIN17 /1\'1&#13;
~~ Wn\\ MY f~"o~\'l'e.&#13;
iw-tJt('?17iVltJG f1j(;",&#13;
-::x&#13;
\1''&lt;; CP.~\-.1iO '"&#13;
~U(l\~I'IN f1&gt;.1'CH&#13;
VOTING 15 WHAT&#13;
mAKES 'JI.l15&#13;
COUNTRY GREA1,&#13;
PAULINE'&#13;
Inroads Internshi&#13;
LO Meeting Unio&#13;
ce: "The Not S(}&#13;
,I$I:~:,~on-perishablef()&#13;
ound the World&#13;
) Union Cinem&#13;
BUTCH AND DOUGIE by ALEX HOWELL&#13;
&amp;JO:ANpMA &amp;AVe; Me; A nmro"--;:=;7,-;---:::=--;--.;:-. 1IIlIJ"--::-=--=:-:-7'"'":---~&#13;
NEW BliAI&lt;:FO" MY&#13;
BI~THDAY,I&#13;
reat American&#13;
dsor Dance&#13;
onternporary&#13;
.rn.&#13;
Editorials&#13;
\):",&#13;
-,', , -':.&#13;
,'":&#13;
T}i'''....:c __~:,_" -~&#13;
~i¢j~1&#13;
EVERYONE WILL GIVE YOU&#13;
THEm TWO CENTS WORTH, BUT WILL&#13;
THAT BE ENOUGH TO RETIRE ON?&#13;
T&#13;
oday there seems to be an investment expert or&#13;
financial advisor almost everywhere you turn. But&#13;
just how qualified are all these experts?&#13;
Peace of mind about your future comes from solid&#13;
planning. From investments and services designed and&#13;
managed with .your needs and retirement security&#13;
specifically in mind. The kind of investments and services&#13;
TIAA-CREF has been providing for more than 75 years.&#13;
And we're nonprofit, so our expense charges are&#13;
among the lowest in the insurance and mutual fund&#13;
industries." That means more of your money is where it&#13;
should be - working for 1'0U.&#13;
TIAA-CREF is now th~ largest private pension&#13;
system in the world, based on assets under management&#13;
- managing more than $150 billion in assets for more&#13;
than one and a half million people throughout the nation.&#13;
WE'LL HELP YOU BUILD&#13;
A REWARDING RETIREMENT&#13;
TIAA-CREF:&#13;
THE CHOICE THAT MAKES SENSE.&#13;
Our counselors are trained retirement professionals&#13;
who have only you and your Furure in mind, So you're&#13;
treated as the unique person you are, with special needs&#13;
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With TlAA-CREF, you have plenty or choice and&#13;
flexibility in building your retirement nest-egg - from&#13;
TIM's guaranteed traditional annuity to the investment&#13;
. opportunities of CREF's seven variable annuity accounts,&#13;
It's tough to wade through all the "advice" to find a&#13;
reliable pension plan provider. But as a member of the&#13;
education and research community, your best choice is&#13;
simple: TlAA-CREF. Because when it comes to helping&#13;
you prepare for retirement, our annuities will add up to&#13;
more than spare change.&#13;
For more information about how TlAA-CREF can&#13;
help you prepare for the future, call our Enrollment&#13;
Hotline at I 800 842-2888.&#13;
Ensuring the future&#13;
for those who shape it."&#13;
~ Standard &amp; POO('$ Insurance Raring Analysis. /995; Lirl'rrAm,/Yliad $rrvi('r.': ~n.·" Li,Pper-.Di:l:Clors' ~nalylical Data, 1995 (Q"nr/rrly).&#13;
CREF arliji~·{//r.' arc ,IlAr;f,u./rt!f,y TlA/I-CRt'F Int!'v,(llInl c.' In.,IIII1I/"{I,,/$rrVlL·r.•.&#13;
Gay and Lesbian studies class&#13;
to be offered this spring&#13;
Gentlepeople,&#13;
I am pleased to announce that I will&#13;
be offering U. W-Parkside's only&#13;
course in Gay and Lesbian studies,&#13;
Women Studies 290/Engiish 464: Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Writers, meeting&#13;
Wednesdays from 6 - 8:45 p.rn., beginning&#13;
January 22. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to register for the class, either for credit&#13;
or audit. There are no prerequisites.&#13;
The course surveys literature by Gays&#13;
and Lesbians from the end of the nineteenth&#13;
century through the present, as&#13;
well as history and theory. It is highly&#13;
recommended for anyone interested in&#13;
literature, gender, sexual orientation,&#13;
diversity, and humankind.&#13;
Registration for Spring semester&#13;
begins December 2 through January 17,&#13;
1997 or students may register by&#13;
attending the first class meeting.&#13;
Beginning students should enroll for&#13;
the course as Women's Studies 290;&#13;
those wishing credit for advanced study&#13;
should register for English 464. I urge&#13;
all interested learners to sign up for this&#13;
course NOW; low enrollment will mean&#13;
cancellation not only of this but of&#13;
future courses in gay and lesbian studies!&#13;
Sincerely, Carole Vopat Professor of&#13;
English &amp; Women Studies&#13;
Native American Merchants&#13;
on campus for NAAW&#13;
Dear students, faculty, and staff,&#13;
I would like to share my experience&#13;
with a Native American merchant.&#13;
On Monday f went window&#13;
shopping. I saw someone I knew there&#13;
who was also looking over the items&#13;
on the table, We started asking the&#13;
lady how much is this and how much&#13;
is that. She had some vases that were'&#13;
$10.00 each separately, but $25.00 as&#13;
a set. (What's up with that?) My&#13;
friend made a purchase and paid by&#13;
check. The lady asked her if the&#13;
check was good, She said, "yeah my&#13;
check is good." On Tuesday I went&#13;
back and found two small vases worth&#13;
purchasing. I asked the lady how&#13;
much they were.&#13;
$2. In the end, I bought a $8&#13;
dream catcher from a different&#13;
merchant. Maybe UW-Parkside&#13;
can make it a requirement that all&#13;
merchants place price tag on&#13;
their items.&#13;
Sincerely, Karen Whyte&#13;
She said they're $4 dollars&#13;
each, I could have easily written&#13;
her a check but I remember how&#13;
she asked my friend if her check&#13;
was good before she took it. So&#13;
I asked if she would hold them&#13;
until tomorrow. Sure she said&#13;
?ust wear those pretty earrin~&#13;
omorrow, so I'll know who you&#13;
are." It sounded easy enough to&#13;
me, On Wednesday, I went back&#13;
to make my purchase and low&#13;
and behold she wasn't there,&#13;
Needless to say I was disappointed.&#13;
So I went back on Thursday,&#13;
she was there and so were my&#13;
two little vases. She asked me&#13;
how much did she say they were.&#13;
I said "you told me $4 dollars&#13;
each," She said, "oh no I didn't&#13;
say $4 dollars; I must have said&#13;
$10 dollars. The little ones are $4&#13;
dollars." I thought to myself,&#13;
damn, I can't believe this. I really&#13;
wanted them, but I wasn't&#13;
zoina to allow myself to be huse&#13;
e&#13;
tied. So I told her I didn't want&#13;
them for $20, She pretty much&#13;
said oh well, too bad. Then she&#13;
picked one of the vases up and a&#13;
little white price sticker fell. The&#13;
price on the sticker was $7.50. I&#13;
just played it off like I didn't&#13;
even see it because I wasn't&#13;
going to pay $15 either. In her&#13;
final effort to sell them, the price&#13;
went to $5 each, In her eyes I&#13;
would have saved $10 but in my&#13;
eyes I would have overpaid by&#13;
TUp;3C Shakur:&#13;
~ @~~tw~£1&#13;
his new album&#13;
reveals&#13;
BY SHANTEE JUDE&#13;
RANGER ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
In certain circles of the hiphop&#13;
community, people are still&#13;
debating whether Tupac Shakur&#13;
is really dead. His death in&#13;
September on Friday the 13th,&#13;
~early a week after being shot&#13;
four times in Las Vegas, his&#13;
hasty cremation and the continuing&#13;
search for suspects all are&#13;
seen as evidence of a fix by his&#13;
record label, Death Row, to boost&#13;
sales and enhance his gansta&#13;
credibility.&#13;
In Shakur's new album he&#13;
introduces us to his new character&#13;
"Makaveli", (borrowed loosely&#13;
from Machiavelli, a gangster who&#13;
faked his own death). His new&#13;
Books&#13;
by Ralph Hollenbeck&#13;
album, The Don Killuminati: the&#13;
7 Day Theory, is in stores now.&#13;
This album is just a recycling of&#13;
the same .gansta theme, beats, and&#13;
language that Shakur has written&#13;
in the past. This album is based&#13;
on a pay back, such as in "Hail&#13;
'Mary" he raps: "I ain't a killa but&#13;
don't push me/Revenge is Iike&#13;
the sweetest thing." This album&#13;
is on its way to the top just like&#13;
the album of six months ago, All&#13;
eyes on Me, in which he&#13;
expressed death as just being&#13;
around the comer. Yes, all eyes&#13;
were on Tupac Shakur; and will&#13;
remain, just like his music.&#13;
Rated: Very Intriguing&#13;
#&#13;
",- ""'-- .. -',_,_,_,_,_,_,__ &lt;::: _:,V -&#13;
....••.. '&gt;wi&gt; t9g6 ~;p.i3ge8&#13;
Set lit -O·ff&#13;
BY SHANTEE JUDE&#13;
RANGER ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
There is a strong message in&#13;
the film Set II Off that tells us&#13;
that when life lets you down and&#13;
when bad things happen to good&#13;
people, don't make lemonade,&#13;
take control: rob a bank.&#13;
This movie is a girl-group&#13;
version ofBoyz N the Hood. In&#13;
the beginning, four friends find&#13;
themselves facing the unfairness&#13;
of life inside and outside the&#13;
ghetto where they live. Basically,&#13;
this story is about four women&#13;
who are desperate. They get in&#13;
trouble, and some win and some&#13;
lose. Frankie (Vicica A. Fox),&#13;
loses her banking job when she is&#13;
wrongly accused of being conTop&#13;
10 Movies&#13;
nected with a robbery. Instead of&#13;
suinz her former employer, she&#13;
b&#13;
dec ides to rob banks. She provides&#13;
the behind the scenes&#13;
knowledge for pulling off the&#13;
banks heists. Stony (Jada&#13;
Pinkett) is no saint. She's a&#13;
woman who's had enough and&#13;
she wants out. Stony had a&#13;
chance to make it at UCLA, but&#13;
when her brother is tragically&#13;
killed by the police she wants&#13;
someone to pay. Tisean&#13;
(Kimberly Elise, newcomer), will&#13;
do anything for her baby. When&#13;
the child is taken away from her,&#13;
she'll do anything to get him&#13;
back. Tisean needs to convince&#13;
the welfare authorities she's a fit&#13;
mother; she decides to rob banks.&#13;
This was the same choice for&#13;
Top 10 Singles&#13;
1. No Mercy "Where Do You Go"&#13;
(Arista) Last Week: No. I&#13;
2. Los Del Rio (Bayside Boys&#13;
Mix) "Maca rena " (RCA) No.2&#13;
3. Celine Dion "It's All Coming&#13;
Back To Me Now" (550 Music) No.&#13;
3&#13;
4. RuPaul"Snapshot" (Rhino) No.&#13;
6&#13;
5. Sheryl Crow "If It Makes You&#13;
Happy" (A&amp;M) No.4&#13;
6. Az Yet "Last Night"&#13;
(Laface/Arista) No. 10&#13;
7. Aaliyah "If Your Girl Only&#13;
Knew" (Blackground/Atlantic) No.&#13;
5&#13;
8. John Mellencamp "Key West&#13;
Intermezzo (I Saw You First)" (Mercury)&#13;
No.9&#13;
9. Keith Sweat Feat. Athena&#13;
Cage "Nobody" (Elektra/EEG) No.&#13;
7&#13;
10. Westside Connection "Bow&#13;
Down" (Priority) No.8&#13;
Cleo (Queen Latifah). She's a&#13;
tough, lesbian car thief, streetcallused,&#13;
with a humorous, fun&#13;
loving heart. It's Cleo who suggests&#13;
bank robbery as a way to&#13;
escape the troubles the women&#13;
encounter. Moreover, they are all&#13;
friends who have joined forces to&#13;
rob banks and plan to get away&#13;
with it.&#13;
This story has action, adventure,&#13;
death, turmoil, even love.&#13;
The challenge of this movie was&#13;
to bring it all together with credibility&#13;
and integrity, and I think it&#13;
delivered.&#13;
1. Sleepers starring Brad Pitt&#13;
2. The Ghost and the Darkness&#13;
Michael Douglas&#13;
3. First Wives Club Diane Keaton&#13;
4, The Long Kiss Goodnight&#13;
Geena Davis&#13;
5, The Chamber Gene Hackman&#13;
American experience. Yet one 6. That Thing You Do Torn Hanks&#13;
wonders how Colin Powell is over. 7. The Glimmer Man Steven&#13;
looked, even in the Index, while Seagal&#13;
Louis Fartakhan rates a 3-inch bio, 8. D3: The Mighty Ducks Emilio&#13;
Not the "Ultimate Reference" it Estevez&#13;
LOOK IT UP! - BENET'S claims. 9. Get On The Bns Charles Dutton&#13;
READER'S ENCYCLOPEDIA, &lt;&gt;'996 by King Features Synd. 10. Fly Away Home Jeff Daniels&#13;
edited by Bruce Murphy (Harper- II.CityHaIlAIPacino(Columbia&#13;
Collins: $50.00). William Rose TriStar - R) No.9&#13;
Benet's 1948 "The Reader's En- TIRED OF THE SIN" 12. The Substitute Tom Berenger&#13;
cyclopedia: now in its fourth edi- GLES'SCENE? (Live Home Video - R) No. 10&#13;
tion, remains first in merit as guide CREATE"A-DATE!! 13. Heat Robert DeNiro (Warner&#13;
to the panorama of world literature. - R) No. 13&#13;
Poet Murphy's update adds 53 pages STOP BY THE RANGER 14. Mr, Holland's Opus Richard&#13;
to new reference overthe last edition NEWS AND JOIN THE Dreyfuss (Buena Vista - PG) No.&#13;
- much devoted to culturally OTHER STUDENTS 11&#13;
diverse writing emanating outside 15. Broken Arrow John Travolta&#13;
Western tradition, A MUST! ".DIC- WHO HAVE ALREADY (FoxVideo - R) No. 15&#13;
TIONARY OF THE WORLD, BENEFITED FROM 16. The Juror Demi Moore&#13;
edited by David Munro (Oxford (Columbia TriStar - R) No. 19&#13;
-Univ. Press: $39.95). You may never THIS $1 SERVICE.&#13;
want to visit "Hvannadaishnjukur," .&#13;
.but if you did. you'd find the Icelan- ii"',,;;~~!il~~~~~l ro;~lFi~~~'il~~~itl~~~~i!~!f!!~i die mountain listed among the ri&#13;
15,000 entries in this handbook to an&#13;
ever-changing globe. As current as&#13;
the latest reports from Chechenya ...&#13;
THE COLUMBIA BOOK OF&#13;
QUOTATIONS BY WOMEN,&#13;
edited by Mary Briggs (Columbia&#13;
Univ. Press: $24.95). English professor&#13;
Briggs plays no political&#13;
favorites - remarks by both Hillary&#13;
Clinton and Elizabeth Dole are included&#13;
among 3.000 quotations&#13;
ranging over a diversity of subjects&#13;
and time. Arranged by topic. with an&#13;
intriguing list of authors (Annette&#13;
Funicello!). Of interest to either sex&#13;
'" THE PEOPLEPEDlA, by Les&#13;
Krantz and Jim McCormick (Holt:&#13;
$35.(0). There is much to recommend&#13;
this "new concept" in setting&#13;
forth popular thought on national issues&#13;
and statistical profil~, of, the&#13;
Set 110ft - A must see movie&#13;
which sets off something worth&#13;
the money.&#13;
Rati-v R (violence, profanity).&#13;
,&#13;
"&#13;
I&#13;
,I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
• • • •• ••&#13;
1. The Birdcage starring Robin&#13;
Williams (Warner - Rated: R) New&#13;
Entry&#13;
2. Executive Decision Kurt Russell&#13;
(Warner - R) No.2&#13;
3. From Dusk Till Dawn George&#13;
Clooney (Buena Vista - R) No. I&#13;
4. The Quest Jean-Claude van&#13;
Damme (MCA/Universal- PG-13)&#13;
New Entry&#13;
5, Up Close And Personal Robert&#13;
Redford (Buena Vista - PG-13) No.&#13;
4&#13;
6. The Truth About Cats &amp; Dogs&#13;
Uma Thurman (Fox Video - PG·&#13;
13) No.6&#13;
7. Sgl. Bilko Steve Martin&#13;
(MCA/Universal - PG) No.5&#13;
8. Mulholland Falls Nick Nolte&#13;
(MGM/UA - R) No.3&#13;
9. 12 Monkeys Bruce Willis (FoxVideo&#13;
- R) No.8&#13;
10. Happy Gilmore Adam&#13;
Sandler (MCA/Universal - PG-13)&#13;
No.7&#13;
Sports&#13;
rSoccer players' awarded; .,&#13;
Siers is the big winner&#13;
BY AL HEPPNER From the women's soccer rn-cc---,---==~&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR team, Jeanette Claude was&#13;
named second team All-Region.&#13;
Even though the men's soc- The defender was second on the&#13;
cer team came up short in its team in scoring with four goals&#13;
GLVC semi-final match against and four assists. The women's&#13;
Quincy, the Rangers came up soccer All-Conference Team&#13;
big in post-season awards. Dave had not been released at press&#13;
Siers became the first four-time time. The 1996 All-American&#13;
All-Region player in school his- Team will be named later this&#13;
tory with his selection to this week. Siers is a strong con- ~='i=~:,g;~~&#13;
year's team. The two-time cap- tender for a spot on that team as&#13;
lain and Ranger award winner well.&#13;
was also named the GLVC play- From GLVC men's soccer&#13;
er of the year. Siers was "the Lewis is a lock to make the&#13;
motor that made the Rangers NCAA II Regional Tournament.&#13;
run." The UWP men's team still has&#13;
Senior Defender Craig slim hopes for an at-large birth&#13;
Posse It was also named first Into the tournament. Had they&#13;
team All-Conference and second beaten Quincy in the semi-final,&#13;
team All-Region. The hard- the Rangers would have been in ~===~==~==&#13;
nosed defender is also the soccer good shape even if they&#13;
reporter for the Ranger News. would've lost the final.&#13;
Netminder Mike Guzaski was However, a 0-2 record against&#13;
named second team All-Region Quincy makes the NCAA much&#13;
and set a school record for more likely to pick Quincy i:&#13;
shutouts (39). Sophomore Jason they select a second team from&#13;
Zitzke and Senior Troy Troskey the GLVC. Nonetheless, it was&#13;
were named second learn AII- a remarkable season for the&#13;
~nference. Rangers.&#13;
p&#13;
GB&#13;
GLVC 1996 Volleyball Blue Division Standings as of&#13;
Nov. 9, 1996&#13;
Intramural Basketball Standings&#13;
" L&#13;
7 2&#13;
6 )&#13;
5 )&#13;
5 ,&#13;
5 ,&#13;
. ,&#13;
2 6&#13;
2 7&#13;
I 8&#13;
Garneume&#13;
Quando,Ouendc.Ocandc&#13;
Racine All-Stars&#13;
Prime-Time Players&#13;
Team Bujo&#13;
Fundamentally Sound&#13;
Eastba)' Funk&#13;
Mas Blau&#13;
Bailers&#13;
I&#13;
15&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
25&#13;
"5&#13;
6&#13;
81m Ohision&#13;
IUPU-Ft Wayne&#13;
StU Edwardsville&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
SaLnl Joseph's&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
GLVC&#13;
W L Pet.&#13;
15 I 9J8&#13;
12 4 750&#13;
II 5 688&#13;
7 9 .438&#13;
Overall&#13;
W L Pet~&#13;
27 7 794&#13;
22 \5 595&#13;
17 11 60'&#13;
14 16 467&#13;
7 20 25&lt;)&#13;
6 27 182&#13;
4 12 333&#13;
3 13 .188&#13;
Men's soccer loses&#13;
another heartbreaker&#13;
BY CRAIG POSSELT&#13;
SPORTS REPORTER&#13;
Last Wednesday the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
soccer team started off the first&#13;
round of the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Tournament with a&#13;
victory against Indiana PurdueWayne&#13;
and then moved on to&#13;
Lewis University where the final&#13;
four was held. The Ranger's&#13;
opponent was Quincy University&#13;
and the Rangers had a chance to&#13;
wipe out the loss against Quincy&#13;
during the regular season. It was&#13;
a cold and windy day that also&#13;
showed some flurries but that did&#13;
not stop either team from going&#13;
out and giving it their all. The&#13;
first half belonged to the Rangers,&#13;
but, just like during the regular&#13;
season, they were not able to converge&#13;
on a number of opportunities.&#13;
The first half remained&#13;
scoreless.&#13;
Quincy started off the second&#13;
half as if it was a new game, The&#13;
Rangers came out cold but then&#13;
finally warmed up because about&#13;
20 minutes into the second half&#13;
junior midfielder Steve Gall&#13;
scored the goal of the year. It was&#13;
a cracker from the right side of&#13;
the 18 yard box, in the upper left&#13;
, hand side of .the goal.&#13;
Unfortunately there was a.defensive&#13;
lapse with about 10 minutes&#13;
left and Quincy seized the opportun&#13;
iry by tying the game at 1-1.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
The match then went into two 15&#13;
minute overtimes where UWParks&#13;
ide again scored first, the&#13;
second goal coming from senior&#13;
forward Troy Troskey, but were&#13;
not able to hold the lead. Quincy,&#13;
now a man down because of a red&#13;
card to one of their players, came&#13;
back to tie the match once again.&#13;
After the two 15 minutes the&#13;
score remained 2-2 and as a result&#13;
the match went into penalty kicks&#13;
where Quincy pulled out the victory&#13;
and earned the right to face&#13;
Lewis University in the final.&#13;
It was a great season for the&#13;
Rangers, 16-3-1, and a great&#13;
career for the seniors. They will&#13;
be missed. A special thanks goes&#13;
out to all the coaches, especially&#13;
coach Kilps and coach Vacca&#13;
from the seniors. It was a great&#13;
four years. Thanks, and good&#13;
luck in the future.&#13;
Results from the semi-final&#13;
shootout vs. Quincy&#13;
UW-PARKS!DE&#13;
Adam Riesz, good&#13;
Craig Posselt, good&#13;
Dave Siers, good&#13;
Dave Johnson, good&#13;
Jason Zitzke, no good&#13;
QUINCY&#13;
Jason O'Donnell, good&#13;
Matt Mader, good&#13;
Andy Ippensen, good&#13;
Scott Rogles, good&#13;
Matt Rakers, good&#13;
UW-Parkside soccer player named&#13;
GLVC conference player of the year&#13;
RANGER SPORTS REPORT Wisconsin-Parkside men's soccer&#13;
team has had this season (16-&#13;
3-1). A huge reason for this success&#13;
is the contributions of three&#13;
seniors and team captains:&#13;
defender Craig Posse It, goalkeeper&#13;
Mike Guzaski and midfielder&#13;
Dave Siers. Guzaski&#13;
broke the school record of 35&#13;
shut-outs and ends the season at&#13;
39 with a possible post-season&#13;
game still at hand. He was the&#13;
First Team goalkeeper in the&#13;
NCAA All-Midwest Team in&#13;
1995 and First Team AIIConference.&#13;
He has been in the&#13;
top ten national list of goalkeepers&#13;
all season. In 1995 and 1994,&#13;
he was nationally ranked #8 and&#13;
# I respectively. Guzaski played&#13;
19 games (I J10m inutes),&#13;
allowing only 9 goals. HlS goals&#13;
against average is 0.4-7.&#13;
Senior Dave Siers was&#13;
named the GLVC Player of the&#13;
Year for 1997. Siers amassed 9&#13;
goals and 17 assists in 20 games&#13;
played to lead the Rangers in&#13;
both categories. In addition,&#13;
Siers made the GLVC AIIConference&#13;
First Team and the&#13;
Sports Information Directors&#13;
NCAA Division II Ail-Central&#13;
Regional Team. Other Rangers&#13;
that received honors were: Craig&#13;
Posse It (First Team All&#13;
Conference, Second Team SID&#13;
Ali-Central Regional), Troy&#13;
Troskey and Jason Zitzke&#13;
(Second Team, All-Conference)&#13;
and Mike Guzaski (Second&#13;
Team, All-Conference).&#13;
The honors rellect the success&#13;
that the University of&#13;
Siers also has been in the&#13;
National Top Ten list in assists&#13;
all season with 35 points in the&#13;
season (9 goals, 17 assists). The&#13;
three time NCAA All-Midwest&#13;
(1993, 1994, 1995) midfielder&#13;
has started in 78 straight games&#13;
for the Rangers. He ranks third&#13;
on the schools' All-Time mark of&#13;
assists with 46. An outstanding&#13;
achievement considering that&#13;
Siers had to sit his freshman year&#13;
due to surgery to reconstruct a&#13;
tear in his ACL.&#13;
The defense has been led by&#13;
Craig Posselt. In 1995, Passel!&#13;
made First Team ALL-GLVC.&#13;
Posse I! has led the team to 12&#13;
shutouts this year and has also&#13;
put up impressive offensive statistics,&#13;
contributing to 4 goals&#13;
and 8 assists. The sturdy defend- .&#13;
er has started ·in '76 games for"&#13;
Parks ide. His only time off the&#13;
field was in 1995 GLVC semifinals&#13;
and final when he sustained&#13;
a knee injury.&#13;
The three players all agree&#13;
that their best trait is that of&#13;
being hard workers. Their modesty&#13;
comes out strongly, as they&#13;
are quick to give 'credit to the&#13;
team as a whole. "Many times&#13;
my defenders have saved a sure&#13;
goal when I have made a mistake.&#13;
This has made the shut-out&#13;
possible," adds Guzaski. Siers&#13;
has a similar story: "It would not&#13;
be an assist if my teammates&#13;
would not score off my pass."&#13;
The ".'Tri-Caps" were essential&#13;
in the Rangers' bid to get&#13;
revenge on Quincy University in&#13;
the GLVC semi-finals on&#13;
Saturday at Lewis University.&#13;
The game ended '2-2 after two&#13;
overtime periods but, in the&#13;
penalty kick shoot-out the&#13;
Rangers lost 3-2. It was a bitter&#13;
disappointment as all expected to&#13;
win the GLVC tournament.&#13;
They were just getting over the&#13;
bitter memories of last year's&#13;
tournament in which they lost in&#13;
the final game 2-1 to Northern&#13;
Kentucky.&#13;
The loss left UW-Parkside&#13;
with a 16-3-1 record. The&#13;
Rangers will now await the possibility&#13;
of post-season play.&#13;
Either way, the contributions of&#13;
Dave Siers, Craig. Posselt and&#13;
Mike Guzaski will be greatly&#13;
missed next year. Hopefully we&#13;
will continue to enjoy their play&#13;
in a professional career in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
Hepp's Hype&#13;
Picks&#13;
Kansas City over Chicago&#13;
Everything's pointing towards a&#13;
blowout in this one.&#13;
Carolina over St. Louis Back&#13;
to earth for the Rams after 59&#13;
point explosion last week.&#13;
Buffalo over Cincinnati Bills&#13;
halt spirited Cincinnati run.&#13;
Denver over New England Is&#13;
th is finally the Broncos year?&#13;
Pittsburgh over Jacksonville&#13;
Nom iscues this week for the&#13;
Steeiers.&#13;
Atlanta over New Orleans&#13;
Who cares?&#13;
Indianapolis over N.Y. Jets&#13;
BY AL HEPPNER&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
Look who comes to town to save&#13;
the Colts.&#13;
Detroit over Seattle .Seahawks&#13;
looking good, but Lions are better&#13;
at home.&#13;
Philadelphia over Washington&#13;
'Skins in trouble with 4gers and&#13;
Cowboys (2x) looming.&#13;
San Francisco over Baltimore&#13;
A free-bee.&#13;
Miami over Houston A must&#13;
fwjn for Marino and Miami.&#13;
N. Y. Giants over Arizona Sit&#13;
down Boomer.&#13;
San Diego 'over Tampa Bay&#13;
Come on, have Bues ever won&#13;
two games in a row.&#13;
Oakland over Minnesota Stick&#13;
a fork in 'em, the Vikings are&#13;
done.&#13;
Dallas over Green Bay Uh-oh,&#13;
trouble in Cheesehead Land.&#13;
Last week: 6-9 (.400)&#13;
OWWWCH'&#13;
Season Total: 90-45 (.666)&#13;
Last week's winner: Jose Gomez&#13;
8-7 (.533) See, it can be done'&#13;
E-mail your picks to: heppner@it.uwp.edu&#13;
or call 595-2848&#13;
and leave your picks on the&#13;
answering machine,&#13;
Men"s CC places 10th in&#13;
GLVC Regional&#13;
BY BRIAN BORKOWSKI&#13;
SPORTS REPORTER&#13;
This past weekend the&#13;
Rangers competed In the&#13;
ivision II Great Lakes&#13;
Regional, Central Missouri, in&#13;
what they hoped wouldn't be&#13;
their last meet of the season. The&#13;
Great Lakes Regional is one of&#13;
the toughest in the nation and the&#13;
men knew what they had to do. It&#13;
was an excellent 35 degree day to&#13;
run and we were ready for battle.&#13;
The results: Rangers - 10th. A&#13;
surprising 10th out of 21 teams!&#13;
"Things went good for most,&#13;
but a lot of runners were hurting&#13;
by injuries towards the end of the&#13;
season. We have a very talented&#13;
national qualifying team," said&#13;
Bark.&#13;
As for the race, Marshall&#13;
Donnerbaur was the top guy for&#13;
the Rangers with a 27th place finish&#13;
and 33:05 for a time, Dave&#13;
Sheriff came on strong once&#13;
again and was second for the&#13;
Rangers at 41st, 33:47. Sarnow&#13;
and Bark were next 42nd (33:55)&#13;
- 69th (34:33) respectively.&#13;
A !though the men didn't&#13;
qualify, the guys feel they had a&#13;
season to smile about and&#13;
improve. We will be tough,&#13;
we're only graduating two guys&#13;
and everyone will be back. A lot&#13;
of us feel we have a lot of unfinished&#13;
business to take care of. So&#13;
look out track world because here&#13;
come the Rangers.&#13;
"Good luck, women, in&#13;
California. We know you can do&#13;
it." - The Men's CC Team.&#13;
Results&#13;
27 Marshall Donnebauer - 33:05&#13;
4 J Dave Sheriff 33.47&#13;
42 Andy Sarnow 33:55&#13;
69 Bark 34:33&#13;
89 Shane Carr 35: I 0&#13;
93 Bernie Radobickey 35:23&#13;
109 Nate Uselding 36:03&#13;
Qvember 14, 1996· page 10&#13;
Blowing games &amp;&#13;
basketball coaches&#13;
BY AL HEPPNER&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
Fact: GLVC Player of the Year&#13;
Dave Siers led the conference in&#13;
assists (17) and was third in scoring&#13;
(35).&#13;
Opinion: Ifhe doesn't make AIIAmerican,&#13;
I'll shoot the selection&#13;
committee.&#13;
offsides. The re-kick 1T0m five&#13;
yards closer finally put the 'Skins&#13;
out of their misery. (Don't laugh,&#13;
the Packers lost too.)&#13;
Fact: The women's cross country&#13;
team made it to Nationals.&#13;
Opinion: Two runners, Wendy&#13;
Licht and Pam Tucker, have good&#13;
shots at earning All-American.&#13;
Fact: The Packers lost,&#13;
Opinion: Just had ia mention&#13;
that twice, because it almost&#13;
never happens.&#13;
Fact: The men's soccer team lost&#13;
their GLVC semi-final match to&#13;
Quincy despite out shooting them&#13;
11-3.&#13;
Opinian:WE WERE ROBBED'&#13;
Fact: The men's basketball team&#13;
has a different coach (Jeff Rutter)&#13;
than last year.&#13;
Opinion: The men's basketball&#13;
team is better than last year. Go&#13;
Rangers!l!l!&#13;
6. Who hit three home runs in the&#13;
final game of ,he 1977 World Series'&#13;
7. How many yards are there from&#13;
goal line to goal line in Canadian&#13;
football?&#13;
8. What country won the 1960&#13;
Olympic gold medal in hockey?&#13;
'puA"sliamlll'&lt;ld Bu!}I.{q 966IO&#13;
'sn oQl'8 ~Oll&#13;
'L ~ulu.II!)1 pJ&lt;Y] S ~Pl 'P 'auou '£&#13;
'ears A!Jcudd ~41 gp!SU! .z: ~~~141'{&#13;
SJlIMSUV Z!nD slJodS&#13;
Lunch with the b-ball team a success&#13;
PHOTO BY JOHN NUNN&#13;
·Men's and women's basketball&#13;
teams line up for introductions&#13;
duringthe "Meet the Rangers"&#13;
basketball luncheon on Monday.&#13;
BY AL HEPPNER&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
It wasn't exactly midnight&#13;
madness, but if you missed it,&#13;
you missed some good pizza and&#13;
a good time.&#13;
Monday's lunch with the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
basketball team&#13;
proved to be a successful event as&#13;
UW-Parkside officially kicked&#13;
off its basketball season. Many&#13;
students and parents attended the&#13;
promotional event. The Ranger&#13;
faithful started out with delicious&#13;
pizza, courtesy of Casa Capri.&#13;
(My roommate and I treated&#13;
it as an all-you-could eat buffet.&#13;
After we finally finished, we&#13;
could barely walk into the gym to&#13;
watch the scrimmages.) The&#13;
women and the men each played&#13;
ten minute scrimmages, highlighted&#13;
by Men's Coach Jeff&#13;
Rutter's insightful and humorous&#13;
play-by-play commentary.&#13;
"We're really good at passing,"&#13;
Rutter said as his team&#13;
passed the ball around the&#13;
perimeter. "We just need to learn&#13;
how to shoot how."&#13;
Rutter's light-hearted ness is&#13;
a welcome contrast to the ranting&#13;
Fact: In case you missed it, the&#13;
Cardinals beat the Redskins 37-&#13;
34 in OT&#13;
Opinion: Never in the history of&#13;
the NFL has one team blown a&#13;
game worse than the Redskins&#13;
did last weekend. After squanderine&#13;
a two-touchdown lead&#13;
twice ~(the second time was with&#13;
7: 13 left in the fourth quarter),&#13;
the Redskins kicked the winning&#13;
field goal in overtime only to&#13;
have it called back on a holding&#13;
penalty. The re-kick from ten&#13;
yards back was no good. Then&#13;
the Cardinal's and ex-Bear Kevin&#13;
Butler missed the game winning&#13;
field goal, but the Redskins were&#13;
Sports Quiz&#13;
by Larry Duncan&#13;
1. How many times in a row maya&#13;
volleyball be struck by one team?&#13;
2. Where must a soccer goalie&#13;
stand to be permitted to handle the&#13;
ball?&#13;
3. How many Olympic medals did&#13;
gymnast Cathy Rigby win?&#13;
4. What is the maximum number of&#13;
clubs a golfer may use in a round?&#13;
5. Who succeeded A very&#13;
Brundage as International Olympic&#13;
Committee chairman?&#13;
and raving oflast year's coach.&#13;
A fter a pass was picked off&#13;
Rutter commented, "He's trying&#13;
out for the Packers next week."&#13;
At the completion of the&#13;
scrimmages, fans came onto to&#13;
the court and received a dollar for&#13;
a basket made from designated&#13;
areas. Then, students participated&#13;
in a game of lightning, where&#13;
the winner received ten dollars.&#13;
"The basketball was OK, but&#13;
I loved the pizza," said UWParks&#13;
ide freshman John Nunn.&#13;
it was a great start to what&#13;
will hopefully be a great season.&#13;
PHOTO BY JOHN NUNN&#13;
Three UW-Parkside women b-ball&#13;
players attempt to get a position&#13;
for a rebound during the luncheon.&#13;
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ACROSS robins ..." 96 "Woe is me!" dessert 43 Publisher 86 Knight time&#13;
1 Clock feature 50 Holdup man? 98 Zombie base 5 Bioi. or chem. Conde 87 Asset&#13;
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9 Pale purple 57 Glisten 101 James 7 Feels of now)&#13;
14 Hopkins of 59 Like bisque Brown's group wretched 46 Kramden's 90 Walked&#13;
"Family 60 Place 105 Curious 8 Scenter of vehicle 92 Pitfall&#13;
Matters" 61 Lead singer of Greek your face? 49 Asian capital 93 Christiania,&#13;
19 Jai - The Police 108 Acllike Etna 9 On the - 51 Fernandoor today&#13;
20 Muse of 62 Vegetates 109 Printing (fleeing) Lorenzo 95 Sauteed. then&#13;
history 64 Hr. segment process - 10 A mean Amin 52 Pennsylvania simmered&#13;
21 Writer Rogers 65 Gilda 110.A.ctress 11 Dawson of sect 97 Chalet shapes&#13;
St. Johns Hadner's - Thlirman football fame 53 ~A,~ldLang 100 Bunch of&#13;
22cKeep-to Wawa 111 "O-babbino 12 Actor Ray battalions&#13;
the ground 67 Cyclone caro" (Puccini 13 '72 Minnelli 55 Word with talk102 Hold the title&#13;
23 Little center aria) film or tennis 103 Like - of&#13;
Anthony's 68 Ending tor 113 High·flying 14 Neutral shade 56 Dutch export bricks&#13;
group "spat" agcy. 15 Remnant 58 Whichever 104 Human&#13;
25 Wayne 69 Bud helder 116 Gluck's M_ ed 16 Over-ogles? 59 Craw's toes 105 Smokes a&#13;
Fontana's 70 Dion's group Euridice" 17 Tenor Del 61 Maestro Nella cigar&#13;
group 73 Hoene's 120 Sly's group Monaco 63 Bridges or 106 Diva Lucine&#13;
27 Peter Tosh group 126 Ruby's group 18 Punishable Bochner 107 Christened&#13;
was one 75 Checkers or 128 Mirella 01 the pyrotechnics 66 Where the 112 Bismarck or&#13;
28 Secondhand hopscotch Met 24 Rampur heart is Hahn&#13;
30 Mare's morsel 76 Sault - 129 Patriot Allen royalty 69 Zodiac sign 114 Composer&#13;
31 lpenema's Marie, Mich. 130 Yemeni 26 007's school 70 "The-Jungle Khachaturian&#13;
locale 77 Female rei. seaport 29 "- Book" bear 115 Bar supply&#13;
32 Geraint's 79 Belgian river 131 Pro foe Rheingold" 71 Overact 117 Stooge Larry&#13;
better hall 80 U.N. branch 132 '78 Peace 33 Sealed a deal 72 On edge 118 Word lorm fOI&#13;
34'Top 81Makes money Nobelist 35Pay with 73Bedroom "outer"&#13;
38 Singer/actor 83 Went wrong 133 "Lorna -" plastic lurniture 119 Medical suffix&#13;
Paul- 85 "Aida" settinq 134 Spar 36 Brother 74 "Dogs" 121 One -milliol41&#13;
Dr. Hook's 89 Nadir 135 MGM's lion 37 Tom of "The 75 Singer Andy 1221gnited&#13;
group 91 Liberate and others Seven Year n Vilify 123 Palindromic&#13;
4!:":"Cain's 93 Peter of DOWN Itch" 78 Landed: abbr. cry&#13;
nephew "Becket" lit grows on 39 Sows' swains 81 Mr. Topper 124 Opera's&#13;
46 Command 94 Transvaal you 40 Punta del - 82 Medieval Merriman&#13;
17 Hellenic residents 2 - maier 41 Fragrant herb menials 125 Vane letters&#13;
letters 95 Legendary 3 Dozes 42 Adams or 84 Shocking 127 Aardvark's&#13;
48 ~- of Yankee 4 Did without Brickell swimmers morsel&#13;
"1-"2;-"'3;-"'4 -, 5 6 7 8 0-""",00-",71--","'2-'1"'3:-- '5 '6 17 18&#13;
'9&#13;
23&#13;
27&#13;
-,-.)&#13;
SET-THE-TREND&#13;
WORD SQUARE&#13;
..&#13;
e&#13;
IT takes a TREND-setter of sorts to&#13;
complete this word square. As you&#13;
see, the word TREND appears&#13;
across and down, providing end-letter&#13;
clues to four more two-way&#13;
words. Definitions of these words&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
1. "You gotta have -," says&#13;
an old song.&#13;
2. Aged berry word7&#13;
3. 0 DEAR, this Is a word to&#13;
Idolize, said the anagram·&#13;
matlet, shuffling letters.&#13;
4. Second time around for a&#13;
movie, for instance.&#13;
5. Tendency of events&#13;
(TREND, in place).&#13;
j-temember. words read the&#13;
same both across and down.&#13;
·puSJJ. ·S ·unJa~&#13;
... &amp;JOP~ ·C ·Jap13 ·Z ·lJItSH . ~&#13;
W ish i n g ;iWe ll®&#13;
2643787382763&#13;
PNAJSGTOOEIAY&#13;
8787326728757&#13;
L C S K F A ITS A 0 H Y&#13;
2786278252464&#13;
o 0 A GNU E A E L B H U&#13;
6723476723732&#13;
TRGRNGTURONMO&#13;
3·745453648255&#13;
TSDLAPEINSWIM&#13;
3232384835554&#13;
ETNHAETTGSENW&#13;
3453545646454&#13;
EEERAARFLUTNH&#13;
HERE IS A PLEASANT LITTLE GAME that will give you a&#13;
message every day. It'l a numerical punle designed 10&#13;
Ipell out your fortune. Counllhe lellers in your lirst name. II&#13;
the number olleftars II 6 or more, subtract-4. lIthe number&#13;
II lell than 6, .dd 3. Th. r.lult II yOur key number. Stert at&#13;
the upper leU-hand corner and check one of your key numberl,&#13;
lett to right. Then re.d the me .. age the letterl under&#13;
the checked flgur .. give you.&#13;
- .&#13;
challenlUer THE INTERNATIONAL &amp; ® CAOSSNUMBER GAME&#13;
DIRECTIONS: "If L£:&#13;
Fill each square with. number, one through nlne./Mifuj";/.&#13;
• Horizonlal squares shook:! add 10 totals on right.&#13;
• Vertical squares should add to totals on bortcrn.&#13;
• Diagonal squares through center should add 10&#13;
toter in upper and lower right.&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
THERE MAYBE MOAE&#13;
THAN ONE SOLUTION 9&#13;
Tocay's Challenge&#13;
Time 6 Minutes&#13;
6 Seconds&#13;
Your Working&#13;
Time Minutes&#13;
Seconds&#13;
2 11&#13;
9&#13;
2 16&#13;
8 15 13 9&#13;
WPRS ~ I&#13;
. I -+-+-+-+ Open Contest CaCC+-+-+-+- ~&#13;
Students, facu{ty, and staff needed to design sfogan an i&#13;
{agoforParkjide's revived radio station 11/P:RS. 'The I&#13;
winning entry cannot include VW-Parkjide (ago on tfie ~&#13;
designs. Winner(s) wi{{ receive $30 and tfie deadline for ~&#13;
su6mission is Priday, Novem6er 22.&#13;
Pfease, incfude name and vita{ statistics witfi entry.&#13;
Su6mit to CRg,ngerNews office. 'ITianltyou.&#13;
Note: 'The radio station wi{{ post office fiours in su6sequent,&#13;
(j(angerNews cfassifieds, and campus </text>
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              <text>Windsor Dance Company to per-&#13;
formAfrican-American  dancing&#13;
tonight&#13;
See page 5&#13;
The Media's Reponsibility to the&#13;
University&#13;
See page 7&#13;
Mens basketball team slamdunks&#13;
its first victory&#13;
See page 10'&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 12 • NOVEMBER21, 1996&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
PHOTO BY JOHl'I'NUNN&#13;
StephScherbl spends a carefree weekend on campus painting her little&#13;
sisler'schristmas present. Steph is considering majoring inArt .&#13;
Area high school students&#13;
participate in model OAS&#13;
RANGERNEWS REPORT resources and border ecosystems,  ing them."&#13;
and enhancing the conditions of   On both days of the assembly,&#13;
.&#13;
hizh school students worked In&#13;
women.&#13;
b,&#13;
h d'    d&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, professor of committees to turt er iscuss an&#13;
history at UW-Parkside, is coor-  argue Issues. The entire assembly&#13;
di t r of the OAS simulation.  debated final Issues and voted In&#13;
Ina&#13;
0&#13;
.&#13;
t'&#13;
Art Theatre&#13;
Students from the UW-Parkside  the Commumca IOn  s&#13;
Club for International Affairs  from 1-4p.m. Nov. 15.. ,  .&#13;
. d&#13;
High schools participating&#13;
also assrste .&#13;
li t   P airie&#13;
"This program gets students  included: B~r&#13;
ing&#13;
on,  r&#13;
I ,&#13;
discussing hiostory, politics and  Walden, Hor"c~, Park, Case, and&#13;
events"  explained Greenfield.  SI. Catherine s of  Racme;-&#13;
"B  c~mbining classroom and  Bradley  and  Tremper&#13;
0&#13;
pe;'onal research, this simulation  Kenosha, and w~sit~I~~h~~~tr~~&#13;
takes learning one step further:-  and Marquette  g&#13;
it gets students involved by dis-  Milwaukee.&#13;
cussing issues and not Just read-&#13;
Nearly 200 high school stu-&#13;
dents took roles  as Latin&#13;
Americandiplomats and tackled&#13;
ISsuesof&#13;
politics&#13;
economics&#13;
and&#13;
social issues&#13;
d~rino&#13;
the 13th&#13;
Annual Model Org:n ization of&#13;
American States (OAS) at the&#13;
UnIversity  of  Wisconsin-&#13;
ParksideNov. 14-15.&#13;
Studentslearned first-hand the&#13;
challenges of diplomacy. The&#13;
~nterscholastic   competition&#13;
Includeddebates on various top-&#13;
ICS'&#13;
I&#13;
, meuding urban poverty ter-&#13;
r .&#13;
,&#13;
onsm, regulation  of shared&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
WPRS's first meetings&#13;
of the year; focus on&#13;
obtaining radio&#13;
frequency, raising funds&#13;
BYSTEPHANIE HESS&#13;
SPECIALRANGERREPORT&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Radio Club has had its&#13;
first official meetings of the year&#13;
this month.&#13;
Approximately 17-20 students&#13;
were on hand to attend each&#13;
meeting, and discussed objec-&#13;
tives set up by radio station per-&#13;
sonnel in order to help get the&#13;
Radio Club off to a functional&#13;
start.&#13;
The radio station has currently&#13;
set up three goals in order to&#13;
accomplish this. The first and&#13;
most difficult is to obtain radio&#13;
frequency through the approval&#13;
of the Federal Communications&#13;
Commission (FCC) The second&#13;
goal is to acquire efficient funds&#13;
to help buy equipment and publi-&#13;
cize the radio station's revival.&#13;
The third goal is to fill the now&#13;
vacant radio room with equip-&#13;
ment desperately needed in order&#13;
for the station to operate effi-&#13;
ciently.&#13;
Dianna Duwe, president of the&#13;
Radio Club, is currently in the&#13;
process of writing up contracts&#13;
and outlines of the radio station's&#13;
needs in order to present them to&#13;
the surrounding community for&#13;
support, donations and recogni-&#13;
tion.&#13;
The radio station hopes to&#13;
obtain funding from area busi-&#13;
nesses in exchange for on-air&#13;
publicity. The radio station also&#13;
hopes to receive donations from&#13;
other organizations on campus.&#13;
, "The purpose of trying to re-&#13;
establish this organization is to&#13;
inform, entertain and become a&#13;
morale booster, not only for the&#13;
students  and staff at UW-&#13;
Parkside, but also for the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha  communities,"&#13;
explained Radio Club member&#13;
Nicole Sicuro.&#13;
Radio station personnel feel that&#13;
having a radio station on campus&#13;
could help the other organiza-&#13;
tions under the S.O.C. (Students&#13;
Organizations Council) umbrella&#13;
advertise their events across cam-&#13;
pus.&#13;
"Presently, UW-Parkside's&#13;
enrollment is down, and advertis-&#13;
ing on the air would be&#13;
a&#13;
great&#13;
way to get the word out and inter-&#13;
est people in obtaining informa-&#13;
tion about the facilities UW-&#13;
Parkside has to .offer,' explained&#13;
Radio Club member Michelle&#13;
Hansen.&#13;
Mike Graczyk, another student&#13;
involved with the Radio Club,&#13;
commented: "There are a lot of&#13;
strikes against us right now, but&#13;
we are working hard to change&#13;
people's views about starting up&#13;
the radio station again."&#13;
The Radio Club is currently&#13;
looking for support and help with&#13;
fundraising from interested stu-&#13;
dents and faculty members.&#13;
Anyone interested in learning&#13;
about the radio broadcasting&#13;
industry is welcome to attend&#13;
weekly  meetings,  held  on&#13;
Thursdays at 12:15 p.m, in the&#13;
Union Recreation Center. For&#13;
more  information,  contact&#13;
Dianna Duwe at 595-2527.&#13;
to  19-year-olds   in  their  first  three&#13;
months on the job  ... November   20,&#13;
011&#13;
November&#13;
19,   1620,    the&#13;
1993, the Senate endorsed  the North&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Pilgrims&#13;
landed&#13;
the    American   Free   Trade   Agreement&#13;
Mayflower  at Cape Cod, the original    (NAPT A) set to  take  effect  January&#13;
destination  having  been  Virginia   ...   I,  .1994   ... November&#13;
18,   1994,&#13;
November&#13;
19,   1863,   President&#13;
Palestinian  police  fired  on  militants&#13;
Abraham  Lincoln  delivered  his Get-   in  Gaza   City,   claiming    that   the&#13;
tysburg   Address  ...  November    20,   demonstrators   fired  first  ... Novem-&#13;
1950,   U.S.    forces&#13;
reached&#13;
the    ber   18,  1994,  the  militant   Hamas&#13;
Chinese'   border   ...  November&#13;
22,   organization   appealed   for  calm  ...&#13;
1963,  President   John   F.  Kennedy    November    21,  1994,  Yasir  Arafat&#13;
was shot and fatally  wounded  by an   warned  against  further   violence   ...&#13;
assassin  as  he  rode  in  a  motorcade    November&#13;
21,   1994,   39   NATO&#13;
through  downtown  Dallas,  Texas  ...  warplanes   from   four  countries   _&#13;
November   22,1963,   Vice President   Britain, France, the Netherlands,  and&#13;
Lyndon  B. Johnson  was sworn  in as   the U.S.  -    bombed  a Serb  air base&#13;
president&#13;
aboard   Air   Force   One   in  Croatia   in  response   to  Serb  air&#13;
shortly  after the president's   death  ...  attacks near Bihac, Bosnia, a govern-&#13;
November&#13;
22,  1963,&#13;
Lee&#13;
Harvey   ment enclave and UN-declared  "safe&#13;
O?wald   was  a.rr~ted   and  charged   area" ... November   22,1994,  having&#13;
with  the assassmation  -.. November&#13;
seized&#13;
an&#13;
estimated&#13;
450    UN&#13;
24,  1963,  Jack  Ruby,  52,  a  Dallas   peacekeepers   and  30  UN  military&#13;
nightclub   owner,   shot   and  fatally   observers as hostages,  the Serbs fired&#13;
wounded    Lee  Harvey   Oswald   ...  missiles   at  two  British   aircraft   on&#13;
November&#13;
19.-20,.1985,   President   NATO   patrol    ...  November&#13;
23,&#13;
Reagan  and Mikhail  Gorbachev,  the  1994,50   NATO  aircraft  responded&#13;
general  secretary  of the Soviet Com-  to the  Serb  attack  with  an attack  on&#13;
munist   Party,   talked   privately   for  three Serb missiles  bases.&#13;
five hours  at a summit conference  in&#13;
Geneva,   Switzerland   ... November&#13;
19,1989,   President Bush signed  into&#13;
law  an  increase   in  the  minimum&#13;
wage;  at  $3.35  an  hour,  the  wage&#13;
would  rise to $4.25 an hour by 1991,&#13;
with a training wage of $3.35 for 16-&#13;
SIGMA&#13;
TAU    DELTA,&#13;
wel-&#13;
comes    new   members.&#13;
A   life-&#13;
time  membership    is $35.00  and&#13;
includes   a  pin,  certificate,    and&#13;
honor   cord.   Members&#13;
need   a&#13;
3.0   g.p.a.    in  English    courses.&#13;
Checks   to  Sigma   Tau  Delta   to&#13;
Prof.  McLean,   CA&#13;
278;&#13;
include&#13;
social    security&#13;
numpber&#13;
and&#13;
date  of  graduation.&#13;
SOURCE: U.N. Population  Fund&#13;
CORRECTIONS&#13;
If you   see  an  inaccuracy&#13;
printed    in&#13;
The Ranger News.&#13;
we  want&#13;
you  to  let  us  know.   Please   call&#13;
595-2287;&#13;
if there   is  no  one&#13;
available    to  take  your   call,   please   leave  a  detailed    message   and&#13;
a  number    where   you   can  be  reached   should   we  have   any  ques-&#13;
lions.&#13;
Thank   you!&#13;
-&#13;
"]"1&#13;
\.,A&#13;
k  .&#13;
&lt;:n'&#13;
...&#13;
:/X"~&#13;
Jj;~~(dJf996&#13;
-eJ!JI!1&#13;
Hearts  for Camp  Heartland&#13;
Club  at UW-Parkside&#13;
RANGER   NEWS  REPORT&#13;
Top fuel-&#13;
efficient&#13;
cars&#13;
For.the  second&#13;
year,  the Geo&#13;
Metro is the&#13;
most fuel-&#13;
efficient vehicle&#13;
sold in the  U.S.&#13;
Top  10 vehicles:&#13;
'Different  engine sizes,&#13;
transmission  systems&#13;
SOURCE,&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency&#13;
annual report&#13;
Hearts   for  Camp   Heartland&#13;
at  Parks ide  is  a  new  club  on  the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Initiated   this   fall,   the&#13;
goal   is  to   raise   funds   for   the&#13;
Camp   Heartland    program   while&#13;
raising    awareness&#13;
of  AIDS   on&#13;
campus   and   the   greater   Racine&#13;
and  Kenosha   communities.&#13;
The   camp    Heartland&#13;
pro-&#13;
gram  works  to  enrich  the  lives  of&#13;
children   impacted   by  the  AIDS&#13;
virus,   whether    they   themselves&#13;
are   living   with   the  disease   and&#13;
the  fear and  isolation  that accom-&#13;
panies  it,  or  have  someone  close&#13;
to them,  their  mother,  father,  sis-&#13;
ter,  or  brother,   living  or  already&#13;
lost  to  the  deadly   virus.    These&#13;
·0,;:::·'j;1&#13;
·"&lt;Cr··  ..&#13;
,f&gt;&#13;
.&#13;
,,,.&#13;
children  are  able  to spend  a week&#13;
"RuSsi,a's&#13;
low&#13;
during  the  summer   at one  of  the&#13;
•.&#13;
life  expectancy",&#13;
Camp   Heartland   summer   camps&#13;
. with   other   children    like   them.&#13;
Poor nutritiOnimdhigh  alcohol"&#13;
consumption  have  reduced&#13;
They   are   surrounded    by  people&#13;
male life'expectancy in Russia.  ..'&#13;
--'------------------------&#13;
Male flIe expectancy&#13;
in&#13;
1995,&#13;
in years:&#13;
Russia&#13;
==='='---&#13;
U.S.&#13;
In&#13;
Germany   •&#13;
France&#13;
United Kingdom&#13;
Spain&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Scott  Malik&#13;
Sports   Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy  Editor   Genevieve&#13;
Guran&#13;
Layout  Editor&#13;
Julia  Ingram&#13;
Photo   Editor&#13;
John  Nunn&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Derek  Bishop&#13;
In MemorlJ of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom, former Mana9in9 Editor, AU9.&#13;
25,  1996&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Managing   Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amanda  Bulgrin&#13;
Features    Editor&#13;
Kendra  Macey&#13;
Features    Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Assistant  Business  Manager&#13;
Baisha  Strothers&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Kerri Bachler,  Aaron&#13;
Kapellusch,  Jason   Kluzak, Brian&#13;
Mikolajek, Tim Mote, Walt&#13;
Shirer,   Ryan  Verbruggen&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Hoseann&#13;
Mason&#13;
who  care  about  them  and  who  do&#13;
not  fear  them.    They   are  free  to&#13;
play  and talk  about  their  feelings,&#13;
including   the  pain   and  fear  that&#13;
they    experience&#13;
every    day   of&#13;
their  lives.   The  Camp   Heartland&#13;
program  is open  to  children   from&#13;
these&#13;
various&#13;
socio-economic&#13;
groups   since  all  camp   costs   and&#13;
travel   expenses   are   covered    by&#13;
the&#13;
carpp.&#13;
The  Camp   Heartland&#13;
program   also   works   to   educate&#13;
people    about    AIDS,&#13;
with    the&#13;
goals  of teaching   compassion    for&#13;
people    living   with   the   disease&#13;
and  preventing   the  transmission&#13;
of  HIV    The  education   program&#13;
is unique&#13;
in&#13;
that  children   impact-&#13;
ed  by  the  disease   are  given   the&#13;
forum  to  talk  about   their  experi-&#13;
ences   and   given   the   chance    to&#13;
affect   positive   change   concern':'&#13;
ing  AIDS.    This  method   of  edu-&#13;
cation,   peers  educating    peers,   is&#13;
thought   to  be  the  most  effective&#13;
L'~&#13;
City&#13;
driving&#13;
44&#13;
40&#13;
40&#13;
39&#13;
39&#13;
38&#13;
Highway&#13;
driVing&#13;
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,  ,,,34&#13;
47&#13;
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¥&#13;
Ranger  New.'!&#13;
encourages&#13;
Letters&#13;
to    the&#13;
Editor.   Letters   should   not  exceed    250   words&#13;
and  should   be  delivered   to  the&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
office&#13;
(WYLL&#13;
D139C)&#13;
or&#13;
e-mailed&#13;
to&#13;
hansen8@itllwp_edu&#13;
by   noon&#13;
the    Monday&#13;
before   publication.&#13;
Letters   must&#13;
be&#13;
typed   and&#13;
include   the  author's   name  and  phone   number,&#13;
To  be  published,   letters  must  be  free  from  mis-&#13;
leading   or  libelous   content.   Letters   that  fail  to&#13;
way   of   teaching    AIDS   preven-&#13;
tion.&#13;
Hearts   for  Camp   Heartland&#13;
at  UW-Parkside    is excited  to join&#13;
the  network   of  students   working&#13;
nationally&#13;
in   support    of  these&#13;
amazing    programs.&#13;
They  hope&#13;
that  our   chapter    will  be  able to&#13;
help   many   children    to  enjoy  a&#13;
week   of  fun,   smiles,   and  laugh-&#13;
ter,  as  all  children   should.   They&#13;
feel   good   about   supporting   the&#13;
educational&#13;
efforts&#13;
of   Camp&#13;
Heartland,&#13;
as  they   believe   it  is&#13;
only   through&#13;
those   who   care,&#13;
contributing&#13;
time    and'  energy,&#13;
that  we  can  prevent   further&#13;
trans-&#13;
mission   of  the  disease.&#13;
The  club  has  many  ideas for&#13;
fund  raisers  and  education  efforts&#13;
in the  future  and  ·invites everyone&#13;
who  has  time  and  energy  to&#13;
con-&#13;
tribute   to  join   them   in  making&#13;
these  ideas  a  reality.&#13;
nn&#13;
"I'm not sure what I did,but&#13;
- you'll need to defeat the&#13;
ninja to get our&#13;
bank&#13;
records,"&#13;
~&#13;
.'&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
comply   will   not&#13;
be&#13;
published.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
reserves   the  right  to  edit   letters;&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
is   published&#13;
every   Thursday&#13;
throughout&#13;
the   semester&#13;
by   students    of   the&#13;
University&#13;
of   Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
who   are&#13;
solely   responsible&#13;
for  its  editorial    policy   and&#13;
content.   Subscriptions&#13;
are  available   at  the  cost&#13;
of    $10&#13;
for&#13;
28&#13;
issues&#13;
Member&#13;
of    the&#13;
Associated    Collegiate&#13;
Press.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
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              <text>Greek &#13;
Organizations &#13;
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Aprrl &#13;
Schoenberg &#13;
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Editor &#13;
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Hahn &#13;
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Editor &#13;
Scott &#13;
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Nunn &#13;
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Kerri &#13;
Bachler, &#13;
Brian &#13;
Borkowsk&#13;
i. Margaret &#13;
Oitchburn&#13;
, T,m &#13;
Gaiser&#13;
, &#13;
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              <text>Plans for new graphic design program underway</text>
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              <text>Features&#13;
SPDrts&#13;
What the Alpha brothers 'are&#13;
Wrestlers wriggle their&#13;
doing at UW-Parkside/3&#13;
way to no. 1ranking&#13;
News&#13;
Student fees case&#13;
appealed in Madison/2&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
VOLUME  25·   ISSUE  14·   JANUARY   16, 1997&#13;
Plans for new graph-&#13;
ic&#13;
design program&#13;
underway&#13;
KRISTINE  WENNINGER&#13;
RANGER NEWS&#13;
The University of Wisconsin·Parkside  may&#13;
finally&#13;
be&#13;
able to offer its students a degree in&#13;
graphicdesign.&#13;
The art department has been requesting a&#13;
graphicdesign program ~ r several years. and ifall&#13;
goesas planned the new program may be in place&#13;
b) fall&#13;
"r&#13;
100&#13;
1&#13;
Until now, the closest UW System schools&#13;
offering a graphic design degree were UW-&#13;
Milwaukee and UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The art department chair, professor Doug&#13;
• See PLANS&#13;
on&#13;
page 2&#13;
One Card idea might simplify&#13;
students' wallets, says Neibuhr&#13;
VICTORIA BLOUNT&#13;
RANGER NEWS&#13;
card.&#13;
The One Card, which has&#13;
been investigated by the campus&#13;
taskforce for two years, is now&#13;
being   presented   before&#13;
Chancellor Eleanor Smith for&#13;
final acceptance. The taskforce&#13;
has observed the success the&#13;
card has had at other universities&#13;
such as Michigan and Florida&#13;
State, and hopes that UW-&#13;
Parks ide will have similar suc-&#13;
cess.&#13;
UW-Parkside plans to start&#13;
slowly with the features the card&#13;
will offer, then expand as the&#13;
card becomes more popular.&#13;
The One Card will offer&#13;
such benefits as laundry ser-&#13;
We've seen the commer-&#13;
cials, heard about it at the bank,&#13;
butjust what is the One Card?&#13;
And what can it do for the&#13;
University  of  Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
The One Card is a small&#13;
plastic card that has a magnetic&#13;
strip in the front and the stu-&#13;
dent's picture and number on the&#13;
front.&#13;
It&#13;
is an upgrade from the&#13;
present student&#13;
JD&#13;
card that wi&#13;
II&#13;
Work much like a checking&#13;
account. Money can be deposit-&#13;
ed into an account, then with-&#13;
drawn as the student uses the&#13;
vices, cafeteria accounts, vend-&#13;
ing machines, and anything else&#13;
a student would normally use&#13;
cash  for. Eventually  UW-&#13;
Parkside would like to add long&#13;
distance phone services, connec-&#13;
tions to an on-campus bank, and&#13;
electronic dorm key entrance.&#13;
Bill Neibuhr, director of the&#13;
Parkside Union, stated that "the&#13;
One Card will be safe and effec-&#13;
tive. If the card is ever stolen, it&#13;
will be immediately deactivated&#13;
and replaced with a new one."&#13;
Students believe that the&#13;
One Card will benefit those&#13;
• SeeONE CARD&#13;
on&#13;
page&#13;
2&#13;
ESTABLISHED   1972&#13;
Acting Ranger&#13;
editor named&#13;
RANGER NEWS STAFF&#13;
REPORT&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin, former&#13;
News Editor at the Ranger&#13;
News, has been named acting&#13;
Editor-in-Chief of the Ranger&#13;
News for the spring  1997&#13;
semester.&#13;
Kristine Hansen, Editor-in-&#13;
Chief since July, has accepted a&#13;
reporting  job  with  CNI&#13;
DeVinny, states, "Parks ide's art department has&#13;
had a real deficiency without agraphic design pro-&#13;
gram ...a new program like this could double the&#13;
(number of)&#13;
art&#13;
majors." He believes that graphic&#13;
design is an important part of today's business&#13;
world.&#13;
The new program would be structured to&#13;
include basic introductory art classes and intro-&#13;
ductory typography and graphic design classes. A&#13;
series&#13;
of graphic&#13;
design&#13;
and illustration&#13;
Former Ranger Editor-in-&#13;
Chief Kristine Hansen&#13;
Newspapers,  Inc. in New&#13;
Berlin. Hansen's responsibilities&#13;
will include reporting on city&#13;
and police in the suburb of Oak&#13;
Creek.&#13;
Bulgrin,  a sophomore,&#13;
joined the Ranger staff in&#13;
January of 1996as astaff writer.&#13;
Since that time, she has reported&#13;
on women's soccer, PSGA,&#13;
movie reviews, and the He&#13;
SaidiShe Said column (She&#13;
Acting Ranger Editor-in-&#13;
Chief Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Said). In addition, Bulgrin has&#13;
assisted the Ranger's business&#13;
department with subscriptions&#13;
and pick-up of ads.&#13;
Derek  Bishop,  former&#13;
Business Manager,  resigned&#13;
from his position and is now&#13;
working in advertising.sales at&#13;
Happenings  Magazine  in&#13;
Kenosha. Corey Mandley, a&#13;
freshman, has been hired as the&#13;
Ranger's  Asst.  Business&#13;
Manager and will help coordi-&#13;
nate ad sales and subscriptions.&#13;
Applications  are being&#13;
accepted for News Editor and&#13;
Business Manager at the Ranger&#13;
office, GRNQ 0-113 and D-115&#13;
or by calling 595-2287.&#13;
.&#13;
What does "diversity" mean to us as individu-&#13;
als,and as acommunity?&#13;
Convocation is today in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater from 1-4:30 p.m. with a recep-&#13;
tion to follow, sponsored&#13;
by&#13;
the Diversity&#13;
Awareness Committee.&#13;
Student fees case&#13;
appealed in Madison&#13;
MADISON  -  Students  on Dec.&#13;
6  supported   the  UW  System&#13;
Board  of  Regent's   decision&#13;
to&#13;
appeal  'the Southworth  et. al. v.&#13;
Grebe&#13;
et.&#13;
al.  student  fee  case.&#13;
The decision,  as it stands,  would&#13;
alter the current  student  fee poli-&#13;
cy which  has been in effect over&#13;
the past twenty  years.&#13;
"Students   throughout    the&#13;
UW System  are elated  with the&#13;
Board  of Regent's  commitment&#13;
to the current  student  fee policy&#13;
and shared governance system of&#13;
the  university,"   said  Timothy&#13;
Casper,   president   of  United&#13;
Council.   "The  decision  shows&#13;
their  belief  in  the  democratic&#13;
process,   which  students   have&#13;
developed   in  accordance   with&#13;
state statute."&#13;
The Southworth  case has the&#13;
potential  to limit the use of stu-&#13;
dent  fees to fund activities  and&#13;
organizations   at all UW campus-&#13;
es.  If limits were placed  on the&#13;
use  of  student  fees,  leadership&#13;
opportunities   and  experiences&#13;
may  be  reduced   for&#13;
students.&#13;
Additionally,  students  would  not&#13;
have  the opportunity&#13;
to&#13;
discuss&#13;
and  debate  the numerous   ideas&#13;
they do today.&#13;
"Student&#13;
organizational&#13;
leadership   opportunities    have&#13;
been a hallmark  of a UW educa-&#13;
tional experience,"  said Casper.&#13;
"These   opportunities&#13;
provide&#13;
students  with skills to make them&#13;
more  employable   upon  gradua-&#13;
tion."&#13;
The appeal  will be heard  in&#13;
the  United   States  7th  Circuit&#13;
Court  of Appeals.  Students  and&#13;
UW officials  are hoping  the rul-&#13;
ing will be overturned.&#13;
PLANScont.  from page one&#13;
xcourses  would be emphasized  at several&#13;
levels, and a senior level internship at an area&#13;
graphic  design  firm may also be involved  in&#13;
the major.&#13;
.&#13;
"By the time a student  completes  his or&#13;
her four year degree,  he or she may should·&#13;
have exceilent  entry level skills and a strong&#13;
portfolio,"  explained  DeVinny.&#13;
Along  with planning  for the new pro-&#13;
gram, the art department is also planning for&#13;
The  art department   and art majors  are&#13;
very excited  about the incoming  program,&#13;
but DeVinny  states, "Even  though  we are&#13;
employing   a graphic  design  program,   we&#13;
still encourage  all arts, and the new program&#13;
shouldn't  diminish  the importance  ofprofes-&#13;
sional artists  or art education."&#13;
a new faculty member to teach the graphic&#13;
design  curriculum.   On-ce official&#13;
authoriza-&#13;
tion  is given,  the department   will  be con-&#13;
cerned  with a nationwide  search  for a candi-&#13;
date. Interviews  are set to begin this spring.&#13;
Plans for a new computer  lab are also in&#13;
the making.   The new lab would  be located&#13;
in the Communication   Arts building.   When&#13;
it is built, this lab, as well as existing  labs,&#13;
will be used.&#13;
January&#13;
16,1997·&#13;
page~&#13;
ONE CARD cont. from&#13;
page 1&#13;
living  on campus,  but has some&#13;
reservations   for  those  commut-&#13;
the  library."  Another  concern  is&#13;
the cost of the card, which is still&#13;
being  negotiated   by the campus&#13;
taskforce.&#13;
Wh iIe the  card  may  cause&#13;
concern  for some.  to many it is&#13;
the right step.&#13;
J&#13;
mg.&#13;
Tame  Steiner,  a sophomore,&#13;
said,   "Many   of  the  services&#13;
offered  will not be used by com-&#13;
muter  students  who simply  need&#13;
an&#13;
ID&#13;
for basic purposes  such as&#13;
Alumni association seeks&#13;
award nominations&#13;
The  University  of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Alumni  Association  is&#13;
seeking  nominations   for its 1997 distinguished   alumni  awards. The&#13;
annual  awards  recognize  graduates  who have excelled  in their cho-&#13;
sen field or preformed  exemplary   service  to the community  and/or&#13;
Parkside.  Nominees  must hold a bachelor's   or master's  degree from&#13;
Parkside.  The Distinguished   Achievement   Award  is given to a grad-&#13;
uate  who has excelled  in his or her profession.   Nominees  will&#13;
be&#13;
evaluated  by several  factors,  including  positions   of leadership  in&#13;
professional   societies/organizations,&#13;
a commitment   to excellence&#13;
and lifelong  learning  and evidence  of continued  growth  in his or her&#13;
profession.  The Distinguished   Alumni  Service  Award  is presented  to&#13;
an individual  who demonstrates   outstanding   and significant  contri-&#13;
butions  to the community   and/or  Parks ide. Letters  of nomination&#13;
should  include  the name,  current  address  and phone  number  of each&#13;
nominee   and  the  name  and  phone  number   of  the  nominator.&#13;
Nominators   must  address  specifically   how  individuals   meet selec-&#13;
tion criteria  and also include  strong  supportive  comments.  All mate-&#13;
rials  should  be sent  to the  UW-Parkside   Alumni  Association,&#13;
cia&#13;
Office  of University   Relations,   Box&#13;
2000,&#13;
Kenosha,   WI&#13;
53141-&#13;
2000.&#13;
Deadline  for receipt  of nominations   is January&#13;
31.&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
'Poau,,;".&#13;
z&lt;it4&#13;
Jte:ud&#13;
U4C&#13;
~~.Icwed~&#13;
-.d~t&lt;;.~&#13;
~p-tk~.k&#13;
""~&#13;
t&lt;; ~&#13;
tIb.&#13;
fn-&#13;
~    wA&lt;,&amp;,.&#13;
kFof~-&#13;
tiO...&#13;
-.d~   ."&#13;
Donald Hall, poet,&#13;
1994.&#13;
In Memory of ~n&#13;
C.&#13;
~andstrom, former Managing Editor, Aug_&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Acting  Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda  Bulgrin&#13;
Managing  Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amanda  BUlgrin&#13;
Campus  Features   Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Community   Features  Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Entertainment   Editor&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Genevieve Guran&#13;
News  Intern&#13;
Jason  Kluzak&#13;
Arts and Entertainment   Intern&#13;
Coleen Tartaglia&#13;
Features  Intern&#13;
Troy Getter&#13;
PRODUCTION&#13;
Layout  Editor&#13;
Julia Ingram&#13;
Photo  Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Graphic  Design&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
Office  Assistant&#13;
Aaron Rich&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
Ass!.  Business   Manager&#13;
Corey Mandley&#13;
comply  will not be published.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves  the right to edit letters.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
encourages   Letters  10 the&#13;
Editor.  Letters  should  not exceed&#13;
250&#13;
words&#13;
and should  be delivered  10 the&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
office (GRNQ&#13;
0-113, 0-115»&#13;
or e-rnailed  to&#13;
bulgrin@iluwp.edu&#13;
by  1100n the  Monday&#13;
before  publication.  Leiters must&#13;
be&#13;
typed and&#13;
include  the author's  name and phone number&#13;
To be published,  letters must be free from mis-&#13;
leading  or libelous  content.  Letters that fail to&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
is published   every  Thursday&#13;
throughout  the semester  by students  of the&#13;
University  of  Wisccnsm-Parkside,    who  are&#13;
solely  responsible  for its editorial  policy and&#13;
content,  Subscriptions  are available  at the cost&#13;
of  $10  for  28  issues.   Member   of  the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
gOO Wood  Rd Box&#13;
2000&#13;
Kenosha,   WI&#13;
53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
Newsroom&#13;
(414) 595-2295&#13;
Advertising&#13;
FAX&#13;
(414) 595-2630&#13;
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              <text>News&#13;
-&#13;
.Safetytips on ATM usage&#13;
Seepage 2&#13;
Features&#13;
M&#13;
+Printmake-,  recognized at Parkside&#13;
ezzotmt show&#13;
See page 3&#13;
KRISTINE  HANSEN&#13;
EDITOR·IN·CHIEF&#13;
Students&#13;
studying&#13;
on&#13;
December&#13;
15,&#13;
the  Sunday   before&#13;
finalexams.  in the  University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin·Parkside's&#13;
library&#13;
were interrupted   by   a  flood    of&#13;
water.&#13;
A&#13;
failed   sprinkler&#13;
head&#13;
that went  off  in  a  second&#13;
floor&#13;
studyroom around&#13;
4&#13;
P.M.  caused&#13;
the&#13;
flood.&#13;
Over&#13;
100&#13;
pounds    per&#13;
square    inch&#13;
pressure&#13;
was&#13;
released. The student   studying&#13;
in&#13;
theroom notified  the  library   staff&#13;
immediately.&#13;
"There   were   between&#13;
two&#13;
and&#13;
three&#13;
thousand&#13;
gallons&#13;
of&#13;
water released&#13;
from&#13;
the    One&#13;
sprinkler,"  said   Ed   Meachen&#13;
Associate  Vice   Chancellor&#13;
of&#13;
InfonmationServices.   "There   are&#13;
hundredsof square  feet  of  carpet&#13;
damaged;destroyed."&#13;
The third  floor   is  the   only&#13;
area&#13;
not damaged.&#13;
Carpeting&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Instructional Media   Center&#13;
and&#13;
Infront of the second   floor   study&#13;
rooms&#13;
Was&#13;
damaged.&#13;
The   book-&#13;
stacks    on   the   second    floor   that&#13;
were&#13;
on&#13;
loan&#13;
from&#13;
UW-&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
will&#13;
have&#13;
to    be&#13;
moved.&#13;
"Only   because    we  had  plas-&#13;
tic  available    could   we  cover   the&#13;
bookstacks,"&#13;
said  Meachen.&#13;
"We&#13;
didn't    lose  any  books   due  to  the&#13;
wonderful&#13;
library    staff   on  duty.&#13;
We  had   a  whole    bunch   of  stu-&#13;
dents    who    helped,&#13;
who   didn't&#13;
even work here, and they were&#13;
getting   ready   for  finals"&#13;
But,&#13;
"It&#13;
was   funny   because    some   of  the&#13;
students&#13;
kept   on   studying&#13;
right&#13;
through   the  whole   disaster."&#13;
Those   who   abandoned&#13;
their&#13;
books   for  a  few  minutes&#13;
to&#13;
help&#13;
out    were:&#13;
Mark&#13;
Rizzo,&#13;
Joel&#13;
Buschmann,&#13;
Vilay&#13;
Phonesavanh,&#13;
Lisa  Lewis,   Deborah   Eden,  Sarah&#13;
Masley   and  Jeanne   Sanchez.&#13;
David&#13;
Gehring&#13;
and   Linda&#13;
Piele   of  the  library   staff  were  on&#13;
hand&#13;
to    assist&#13;
the&#13;
students.&#13;
Rosann    Mason   and  her  daughter&#13;
were&#13;
in   the    library&#13;
also    and&#13;
helped   out.&#13;
The   ceiling    in  the  office   of&#13;
Multicultural&#13;
Student&#13;
Affairs&#13;
(OMSA)    came   down,   destroying&#13;
computers&#13;
and    miscellaneous&#13;
papers.&#13;
"The   water   in  the  hall-&#13;
ways   was   coming    down   like  a&#13;
waterfall,"    said  Meachen.&#13;
Also,   on  the   91   level,   the&#13;
paper   storage   room  for  duplicat-&#13;
ing   received&#13;
damage&#13;
but   was&#13;
able   to  be  saved   from  complete&#13;
destruction.&#13;
Meachen    estimated   the  cost&#13;
for  repairs   to be between&#13;
$30.000&#13;
and&#13;
$40,000.&#13;
The   carpet   will&#13;
cost   from&#13;
$29,000&#13;
to&#13;
$30,000&#13;
to&#13;
replace.    The  ceiling   tile,  at about&#13;
$50&#13;
a   tile,   will   cost   between&#13;
$10,000&#13;
and&#13;
$1 1,000.&#13;
However,   he  said,  there  will&#13;
be  bare   concrete    floor   until   the&#13;
damaged&#13;
carpet&#13;
areas&#13;
are&#13;
replaced   in  May.&#13;
Meachen&#13;
said    there&#13;
is   a&#13;
TUmor  that  a  student   in  the  sec-&#13;
ond  floor  study  room,  a few  days&#13;
prior  to the  flood,  witnessed   drip-&#13;
ping   water,   but  did  not  report   it.&#13;
Had   the   report    been   filed,   he&#13;
said,&#13;
$40,000&#13;
in  damage    could&#13;
have  been  prevented.&#13;
"I  can  not  praise   enough   all&#13;
the   work   the   students    did   that&#13;
night,"   he  said.&#13;
KRISTINE  HANSEN&#13;
EDITOR-IN&#13;
-CHIEF&#13;
MADISON&#13;
B"&#13;
h&#13;
W·&#13;
.  .&#13;
cans&#13;
-.   egmrung&#13;
t&#13;
is year,   IsconslOltes&#13;
Ran tart&#13;
making&#13;
Badgers&#13;
out   of   their   kids.   Or&#13;
gw&#13;
s&#13;
. Or Warhawks~&#13;
pre a ~SConsinparents&#13;
and  grandparents&#13;
can  start&#13;
wif  Ylng for  college   tuition    at  any   University&#13;
of&#13;
Iner~o$~nSystem  school   by  opening   an  account.   A&#13;
incre  .&#13;
0&#13;
opens    the   account.&#13;
Compared&#13;
with&#13;
UW'Shlngly steep   tuition    charnes&#13;
at  some   of  the&#13;
sc  001   thi   .&#13;
~&#13;
5,&#13;
IS IS&#13;
cheap.&#13;
"Units"   are  purchased   based  on  the  current&#13;
average  of&#13;
UW&#13;
undergr~duate  tuition.  One year's&#13;
tuition   is equal&#13;
to&#13;
100&#13;
UOltS.&#13;
Futuristic  parents  can purchase  anywhere  fr:om&#13;
one unit to the full four-year  tuition cost at any time&#13;
for  their  college   bound   students.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
It is not necessary  to deslg~ate  which Universi-&#13;
ty  at the  time  of  payment.   And  If a student   chooses&#13;
not&#13;
to&#13;
attend   college,&#13;
99&#13;
percent   of  the  money&#13;
would   be  refunded.&#13;
.'&#13;
hi&#13;
h&#13;
There   are&#13;
20&#13;
states   besides&#13;
wisconsm&#13;
'I'&#13;
IC&#13;
offer  similar  programs  to parents.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
+Eugene O'Neill's  Desire Under the&#13;
Elms a hit in Racine&#13;
See page 5&#13;
RANGER   NEWS   REPORT&#13;
Students&#13;
from&#13;
across&#13;
the  state  of  Wisconsin&#13;
collected&#13;
more  than&#13;
13,500&#13;
postcards    ask-&#13;
ing  the  Governor&#13;
to  fully   fund&#13;
the   UW   System's&#13;
1997-1999&#13;
Biennial&#13;
Budget&#13;
request.&#13;
Postcards&#13;
were   collected&#13;
from&#13;
students,&#13;
parents,&#13;
alumni,&#13;
prospective&#13;
students,&#13;
friends,&#13;
and  community&#13;
leaders.&#13;
"More&#13;
than&#13;
13,500&#13;
were&#13;
collected    which   shows   the  high&#13;
level  of concern   people   have  for&#13;
the  UW  System,"    said   Timothy&#13;
L.&#13;
Casper,   president&#13;
of  United&#13;
Council   of  UW  Students.&#13;
The    UW    System&#13;
budget&#13;
suffered   a net  cut  of&#13;
$43&#13;
million&#13;
in   state    support,&#13;
and    tuition&#13;
increases   totaled&#13;
10.5&#13;
percent   to&#13;
14.2&#13;
percent   during   the&#13;
1995-97&#13;
biennium.    The  result   of  admin-&#13;
istrative  cuts was  a reduction  in&#13;
services   and   access   to  them.&#13;
UW&#13;
institutions   were  forced  to&#13;
limit  the number  of course  sec-&#13;
tions    and   to   offer    others&#13;
less&#13;
frequently.&#13;
There&#13;
were&#13;
also&#13;
reductions  in campus  police  and&#13;
public  safety  services.&#13;
For  the&#13;
1997-99&#13;
biennium,&#13;
the  UW  System   was   instructed&#13;
to  submit   budget   plans   for  a&#13;
3&#13;
percent  increase  and  also  a 3.5&#13;
percent  reduction.  According  to&#13;
Steve   Perala,   legislative&#13;
affairs&#13;
director&#13;
of   United&#13;
Council&#13;
of&#13;
UW&#13;
Students,&#13;
"If&#13;
the&#13;
UW&#13;
System  sees another  cut in state&#13;
support,&#13;
there&#13;
will&#13;
be   even&#13;
greater    reductions&#13;
in  classes&#13;
and  an  increase   in  department&#13;
closings,&#13;
which   would    be  dev-&#13;
astating   to  students   and  their&#13;
potential   job  opportunities."&#13;
Students&#13;
are    particularly&#13;
concerned   with two funding  ini-&#13;
tiatives:   academic   advising  and&#13;
distance&#13;
education.&#13;
Better&#13;
advising&#13;
would&#13;
improve&#13;
the&#13;
retention   of freshmen,  help  stu-&#13;
dents    take   courses&#13;
that   would&#13;
make  them  more  marketable   in&#13;
the   workforce,&#13;
and   allow   stu-&#13;
dents   to  get   their   degrees    in  a&#13;
shorter   period.&#13;
"This   is the  part  of the  bud-&#13;
get   UW   System&#13;
students&#13;
have&#13;
set   as  apriority,"&#13;
said   Amy&#13;
Bechtum,&#13;
academic&#13;
affairs&#13;
director&#13;
of   United&#13;
Council&#13;
of&#13;
UW  Students.&#13;
The&#13;
UW    System&#13;
budget&#13;
also   requested&#13;
funding    for  site&#13;
support   in  distance   education&#13;
and  improvements   in classroom&#13;
technology.&#13;
This   funding   would&#13;
allow   increased   access  to  stu-&#13;
dents   who  wish  to  participate&#13;
in&#13;
distance    learning,    as  well   as&#13;
provide    support    for  faculty   and&#13;
staff&#13;
who&#13;
need&#13;
additional&#13;
instruction&#13;
on   how   to   offer&#13;
these  courses  to students.&#13;
"Distance&#13;
Education    is  a&#13;
growing&#13;
field,"&#13;
said&#13;
Bechturn.&#13;
"Students  want  to be sure that  if&#13;
they   are   tak ing   these    courses,&#13;
they   wi&#13;
II&#13;
have   the  support    and&#13;
appropriate&#13;
technology&#13;
to&#13;
ensure    that   they   are   getting    a&#13;
quality   education."&#13;
"Students&#13;
are   concerned&#13;
about   the  future   of  funding    for&#13;
the  UW  System    and  are  urging&#13;
the   Governor&#13;
to   make    higher&#13;
education&#13;
a   priority&#13;
in   the&#13;
upcoming&#13;
state    biennial&#13;
bud-&#13;
get,"   said  Casper.&#13;
UW System offers savings&#13;
account tuition plan&#13;
•&#13;
January&#13;
24, 1997·&#13;
page&#13;
2J&#13;
,&amp;"%.&#13;
.&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
seeks  award nominations&#13;
Un iuersit&#13;
y&#13;
Po Iic e Be a&#13;
t&#13;
tocNominatorsmust&#13;
address&#13;
specificaJ~&#13;
how individualsmeet&#13;
selection&#13;
aiteria&#13;
and&#13;
also&#13;
includestrong&#13;
supportive&#13;
COOi-&#13;
mens.&#13;
Allmatetialsshould&#13;
be&#13;
sent&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
UW-ParksideAlumni&#13;
As5ociatioo,&#13;
do&#13;
Office&#13;
of&#13;
Univesiiy&#13;
Relalions,&#13;
Box&#13;
2000,   Kenosha,&#13;
WI&#13;
53141-2000.&#13;
Deadline&#13;
for&#13;
rereijx&#13;
of&#13;
nominatim;&#13;
is&#13;
January&#13;
31.&#13;
For&#13;
more  infunnalion&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
compJere&#13;
list&#13;
of&#13;
nominalioo&#13;
aitfria,&#13;
call&#13;
the&#13;
Office&#13;
of'University  Relations a 595-&#13;
2414.&#13;
sionNomineeswill&#13;
be&#13;
evaluated&#13;
by&#13;
sev-&#13;
eral&#13;
fuel""&#13;
including&#13;
positions&#13;
ofleader-&#13;
ship in  professional&#13;
socetiesorganiza-&#13;
tions,a commitment&#13;
to&#13;
excellenceand&#13;
lifelongleaming&#13;
and&#13;
evidence&#13;
of contin-&#13;
ued&#13;
growth&#13;
in&#13;
hisor&#13;
her&#13;
protesslOl1.&#13;
The  DistinguishedAlumni&#13;
Service&#13;
AwanJis&#13;
presented&#13;
to&#13;
an individ-&#13;
ual&#13;
who&#13;
dernonstrates outstanding&#13;
and&#13;
significantconnibutions&#13;
to the&#13;
communi-&#13;
ty&#13;
and'orParkside.&#13;
Leoers&#13;
of&#13;
nominalioo&#13;
should&#13;
include&#13;
the&#13;
name,&#13;
curreot&#13;
addness&#13;
and&#13;
phone&#13;
number&#13;
of&#13;
each&#13;
nominee&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
name&#13;
and&#13;
phone&#13;
number&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
nomina-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
REPORT&#13;
the  alarm   while   looking    for&#13;
a  telephone.&#13;
Jan.   1. Traffic    Violation:&#13;
University&#13;
police&#13;
issued    a&#13;
traffic&#13;
citation&#13;
for    exces-&#13;
sive    speed.&#13;
The    subject&#13;
was    driving&#13;
18   mph    over&#13;
the&#13;
posted&#13;
speed&#13;
on&#13;
South    31.&#13;
The&#13;
Universityof WISConsin-&#13;
ParksideAlwnni Associationis seeking&#13;
nominationsfor&#13;
its&#13;
1997distinguished&#13;
a1l1111niawards.&#13;
The&#13;
annualawan:ls&#13;
rec-&#13;
ognize&#13;
graduates&#13;
who haveexcelledin&#13;
the~&#13;
chosenfield or&#13;
prefilnned&#13;
exem-&#13;
pary&#13;
serviceto&#13;
the&#13;
cocnmunityand'or&#13;
Parksde,&#13;
Nomineesmustholda&#13;
beebe-&#13;
lor'sormaster's&#13;
degree&#13;
from&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The&#13;
Distinguished&#13;
AchievementAwanJis&#13;
given&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
grndu-&#13;
ate&#13;
who&#13;
has&#13;
excelled&#13;
in&#13;
hisor&#13;
her&#13;
profes-&#13;
Jan.   5.   Traffic   Violation:&#13;
University&#13;
police    issued&#13;
a&#13;
traffic    citation    for  failure    to&#13;
fasten&#13;
a    seat&#13;
belt&#13;
and&#13;
operating&#13;
a   vehicle&#13;
after&#13;
suspension&#13;
of&#13;
license.&#13;
The&#13;
vehicle&#13;
was&#13;
initially&#13;
stopped&#13;
for&#13;
excessive&#13;
speed.&#13;
The&#13;
incident&#13;
occurred&#13;
on  South   31.&#13;
Jan.   3.&#13;
Security&#13;
Alarm:&#13;
University&#13;
police    respond-&#13;
ed&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
alarm&#13;
in    the&#13;
Tallent&#13;
Building.&#13;
A  main-&#13;
tenance&#13;
supervisor&#13;
set   off&#13;
Safety when using bank ATM's&#13;
According   to securi-&#13;
ty   experts,&#13;
the   chances    of&#13;
being    involved&#13;
in   an  ATM,&#13;
also&#13;
called&#13;
"automated&#13;
teller   machines,"&#13;
crime   in&#13;
the   United&#13;
States   are   very&#13;
remote.&#13;
Only   one  in  every&#13;
3.5   million&#13;
transactions&#13;
results&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
robbery.&#13;
Nevertheless,&#13;
ATM  crimes&#13;
do   occur,&#13;
so   consumers&#13;
need  to be cautious   and  vig-&#13;
ilant  when  transacting    busi-&#13;
ness  at  an  ATM.&#13;
ATMs&#13;
can   be  found&#13;
throughout&#13;
most   communi-&#13;
ties.&#13;
The   24-hour&#13;
per   day&#13;
convenience&#13;
of using  ATMs&#13;
to conduct   banking   business&#13;
has  grown&#13;
to   over   7-billion&#13;
per  year.&#13;
With    such   a  phe-&#13;
nomenal   growth   in use,  the&#13;
potential&#13;
for&#13;
robbery.&#13;
also&#13;
grows.&#13;
However;&#13;
with   a&#13;
number&#13;
of&#13;
simple&#13;
precau-&#13;
tions    your    trip&#13;
to   the   ATM&#13;
can  be  a safe,  efficient   and&#13;
positive   experience:&#13;
•   Nearly&#13;
half   of   all   ATM&#13;
crimes   occur   between    the&#13;
hours&#13;
of    7   p.rn.    and   mid-&#13;
night.&#13;
That's    why   it's   important&#13;
to&#13;
look   for   ATM   machines   that&#13;
have  good  lighting   and  are&#13;
in a location   that   is highly&#13;
tr ave le d.&#13;
•    When    using&#13;
an   ATM,&#13;
perform   a quick  visual  scan&#13;
of    the    machine&#13;
itself&#13;
and&#13;
the   immediate&#13;
area   sur-&#13;
rounding&#13;
it.    If  you  see  any-&#13;
thing&#13;
odd    or   anyone&#13;
who&#13;
looks   or  is  acting   suspi-&#13;
cious,&#13;
simply&#13;
do   not&#13;
use&#13;
that&#13;
machine&#13;
and&#13;
choose&#13;
another.&#13;
*&#13;
Avoid  setting   a pattern&#13;
of    always&#13;
using&#13;
the    same&#13;
machine   at the same  time  of&#13;
day   or   the   same  day   of   the&#13;
week.&#13;
•  If  you   feel   safer  using   an&#13;
ATM&#13;
in   daylight,&#13;
be  aware&#13;
of    changing&#13;
seasonal&#13;
pat-&#13;
terns&#13;
and   shift&#13;
to    making&#13;
transactions&#13;
in the  morning&#13;
or  during   your   lunch   hour   in&#13;
winter   rather   than   waiting&#13;
until   after   work   when   it&#13;
gets  dark   early    in  the   after-&#13;
noon.&#13;
*&#13;
Avoid   locations    with&#13;
excess&#13;
shrubbery,&#13;
nearby&#13;
blind   cor ner s,  or  a  design&#13;
which    does  not   provide&#13;
you&#13;
with&#13;
clear&#13;
lookout&#13;
and    a&#13;
safe  feeling.&#13;
•   Approach&#13;
the   machine&#13;
prepared.&#13;
Do    not    fumble&#13;
around&#13;
when&#13;
USIng    a&#13;
machine   at"  night   or  when&#13;
other&#13;
people&#13;
are&#13;
in   'line&#13;
waiting   to use  the  machine.&#13;
By   making&#13;
every&#13;
effort&#13;
to&#13;
conduct&#13;
your   transaction&#13;
quickly&#13;
and  efficiently,&#13;
and&#13;
by&#13;
getting&#13;
on&#13;
your&#13;
way&#13;
rapidly,&#13;
you    make   yourself&#13;
less  of a target  for a wou ld-&#13;
be  thief.&#13;
•  Have  your   ATM   card  out&#13;
and    ready&#13;
to    use.&#13;
Have&#13;
your   PIN   (personal&#13;
identifi-&#13;
cation   number)    memorized&#13;
and&#13;
know&#13;
what&#13;
business&#13;
you  want  to transact.&#13;
•   Never   write   your   PIN   on&#13;
your&#13;
ATM&#13;
card.&#13;
Do&#13;
not&#13;
write   it  anywhere&#13;
with   a&#13;
notation&#13;
a&#13;
robber&#13;
could&#13;
access,   who  might  rummage&#13;
through&#13;
your   belongings,&#13;
*&#13;
Show  the  same  concern&#13;
and  wariness   when  bringing&#13;
cash  to  an  ATM   machine    for&#13;
deposit&#13;
as    when&#13;
leaving&#13;
with&#13;
cash    you    have    with-&#13;
drawn.&#13;
When&#13;
depositing&#13;
checks,&#13;
always&#13;
use   a&#13;
restricted    endorsement&#13;
such&#13;
as  "For&#13;
Deposit&#13;
Only."&#13;
Do&#13;
not  use  the  ATM   machine    to&#13;
deposit   coins.&#13;
*&#13;
Exercise   extreme   caution&#13;
and  do  not  give  out  infor-&#13;
mation   about   your  card   or&#13;
PIN&#13;
by&#13;
phone,&#13;
even&#13;
to&#13;
someone    you   think&#13;
may   be :&#13;
connected&#13;
with&#13;
your&#13;
bank.&#13;
If   there    is  a    problem&#13;
with&#13;
your   account   or  PIN,   dis-&#13;
cuss  it in person.&#13;
•    When&#13;
using&#13;
a   drive-&#13;
th rough&#13;
ATM,&#13;
keep&#13;
your&#13;
engine    running,&#13;
keep   all&#13;
doors   locked,    keep  windows&#13;
other    than    the   one   used  in&#13;
the&#13;
transaction&#13;
rolled&#13;
up.&#13;
Observe   what   is  happening&#13;
around&#13;
and&#13;
behind&#13;
you&#13;
before&#13;
rolling&#13;
down&#13;
the&#13;
window&#13;
to    use    the    ATM,&#13;
and  be  aware   of  any  strange&#13;
movements&#13;
throughout&#13;
the&#13;
transaction.&#13;
•  If  you   encounter&#13;
an ATM&#13;
site    that&#13;
is   poorly&#13;
lighted,&#13;
has obstructed    views,  or has&#13;
overgrown&#13;
shrubbery,&#13;
report&#13;
the   problems&#13;
to   the&#13;
financial&#13;
institution&#13;
so  it&#13;
can    rectify&#13;
them.&#13;
We   all&#13;
must  use  the  very  same  pre-&#13;
cautions    in  using   ATMs  as&#13;
when&#13;
carrying&#13;
cash    to   or&#13;
from&#13;
the    bank&#13;
itself.&#13;
8y&#13;
doing   so,   we  will   ensure&#13;
that   our   transactions&#13;
are&#13;
efficient&#13;
and  safe.&#13;
J&#13;
l&#13;
j&#13;
!&#13;
j&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
'I&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
\&#13;
comply  will not be published.&#13;
Rmrger News&#13;
reserves  the right to edit letters.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
encourages    Lellers   to  the&#13;
Editor.  Leiters  should  not exceed  250 words&#13;
and should  be delivered  to the&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
office&#13;
(GRNQ   0-113,   D-115)}&#13;
or e-rnailed&#13;
10&#13;
bulgrin@it.uwp.edu&#13;
by  nOOI1 the  Monday&#13;
before publication.   Letters  must be typed and&#13;
include  the author's  name and phone  number.&#13;
To be published,  letters must be free from&#13;
mis-&#13;
. leading  or libelous  content.  Letters that fail to&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
is  published   every  Thursday&#13;
throughout   the  semester&#13;
by&#13;
students  of&#13;
the&#13;
University   of  Wisccnsin-Parkside,&#13;
who  are&#13;
solely  responsible   for its editorial  policy  and&#13;
content.  Subscriptions  are available  at the cost&#13;
of  $10   for  28  issues.   Member   of  the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press&#13;
In Memorv of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom, former Managing Editor,Aug.&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kristine   Hansen&#13;
Acting  Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda BUlgrin&#13;
Managing  Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Campus  Features  Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Community   Features  Editor&#13;
Jennifer   Puccini&#13;
Entertainment   Editor&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy  Editor&#13;
Genevieve   Guran&#13;
News  Intern&#13;
Jason Kluzak&#13;
Arts  and Entertainment  Intern&#13;
Coleen Tartaglia&#13;
Features  Intern&#13;
Troy Getter&#13;
PRODUCTION&#13;
Layout  Editor&#13;
Julia Ingram&#13;
Photo  Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Graphic  Design&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
Office  Assistant&#13;
Aaron Rich&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
Asst.  Business  Manager&#13;
Corey Mandley&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900  Wood  Rd  Box  2000&#13;
Kenosha,  WI  53141-2000&#13;
(414)  595-2287   Newsroom&#13;
(414)  595-2295   Advertising&#13;
FAX  (414)  595-2630&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Permanent base budget cut possible</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90384">
              <text>.Reading  group   to  meet  on  cam-&#13;
pus&#13;
See page   2&#13;
·Shadow   Conspiracy&#13;
opens  Friday&#13;
See  page  4&#13;
• Lady  Rangers   defeat   Mastadons&#13;
See page  6&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 16 • JANUARY30, 1997&#13;
Construction update&#13;
AMANDA  BULGRIN&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF&#13;
The  University&#13;
of   Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside  is  currently&#13;
under&#13;
con-&#13;
structionin order&#13;
to&#13;
accommo-&#13;
date students   with   housi  ng,   pro-&#13;
vide renovated   offices&#13;
for   several&#13;
student organizations&#13;
and   offer    a&#13;
varietyof dining selections  in&#13;
a&#13;
newfood court.&#13;
The new dormitory,&#13;
being    con-&#13;
structed west   of   Molinaro&#13;
Hall,&#13;
willbe essential   to  the  growth&#13;
of&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
The&#13;
dorm&#13;
will&#13;
double  the   housing&#13;
capacity&#13;
at&#13;
UW-Parkside,  providing&#13;
housing&#13;
for 400  more   people&#13;
and    elimi-&#13;
natinga yearly  waiting    list  of   100&#13;
students.  The   $8.8   million&#13;
facil-&#13;
ity has  a  scheduled&#13;
completion&#13;
date of August   1997.&#13;
Another  construction&#13;
project&#13;
at&#13;
UW-Parkside  is   taking&#13;
place&#13;
on&#13;
the lower level  of  Wyllie    Hall.&#13;
In&#13;
this spot, Market   on  Main,&#13;
a  food&#13;
court is  being   buili    to   give    stu-&#13;
dents a  vast   assortment&#13;
of   food&#13;
options. Taco  Bell,&#13;
New    Market&#13;
and Salona  Grill   will   be   the   fea-&#13;
tures   at  "Market&#13;
on  Main"    giving&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
a  variety&#13;
of   selec-&#13;
lions.&#13;
Taco   Bell   will   be  a  self-service&#13;
set   up.&#13;
Salona&#13;
Grill    will   have   a&#13;
demonstration&#13;
grill   serving&#13;
burg-&#13;
ers,    sandwiches,&#13;
soups&#13;
and    stir-&#13;
fry.   The   New   Market    will   feature&#13;
gourmet&#13;
coffee.&#13;
pastries,&#13;
and&#13;
frozen&#13;
yogurt.&#13;
The    construction&#13;
will   begin   April&#13;
I  and   is  planned&#13;
to  be  finished    by  the  beginning&#13;
of&#13;
the   1997-98    school    year.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News,&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
(PSGA)&#13;
and&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Adult&#13;
Student&#13;
Alliance&#13;
(PASA)&#13;
are   in&#13;
temporary&#13;
offices&#13;
until&#13;
the   new&#13;
offices&#13;
are&#13;
completed.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
office&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
moved&#13;
to   GRNQ&#13;
0-113,&#13;
PSGA&#13;
to&#13;
MOLN&#13;
0-124,&#13;
PASA&#13;
to&#13;
MOLN&#13;
0-127.&#13;
These&#13;
student&#13;
organizations&#13;
are&#13;
scheduled&#13;
to&#13;
move    into   their   new   offices    with-&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
next&#13;
couple&#13;
of&#13;
weeks,&#13;
according&#13;
to   Steve    McLaughlin,&#13;
Dean   of  Students.&#13;
ESTABLISHED'1972&#13;
Free ice&#13;
cream Friday&#13;
On  Friday.   Jan.   3 I  an  ice  cream   social   will  be&#13;
hosted    by  University&#13;
Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
From&#13;
noon   to  I  p.m.   students&#13;
have   the  opportunity&#13;
to&#13;
be  served    free   ice  cream    cones   in  a  variety   of  tla-&#13;
vors   by  various    faculty   and   staff   members.&#13;
In  order   to  promote&#13;
good   relations&#13;
between    the&#13;
faculty   and   the  students&#13;
several    staff   members&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
dishing    out  the  fun   flavors   of  ice  cream.&#13;
Permanent base budget&#13;
cut possible&#13;
A  permanent&#13;
base   budget   cut  could   be  made   if&#13;
enrollment&#13;
is  not  increased&#13;
at  The   University-&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
UW·P   may   face   a cut  of  as&#13;
much   as  $1  million   due&#13;
to&#13;
the  decline   of  enroll-&#13;
ment.&#13;
The   fall   1996  enrollment&#13;
was  below   the  target&#13;
rate   leaving    the  University&#13;
with   a  $779,000    tuition&#13;
revenue&#13;
shortfall.&#13;
6  percent    of  state   general    pur-&#13;
pose   revenue    budget   may   be  lost  if  efforts   to  boost&#13;
enrollment&#13;
are  not  successful.&#13;
UW   System    campuses&#13;
that  do  not  meet   the&#13;
required&#13;
revenue    targets    will   have   to  forfeit   the&#13;
amount&#13;
of  short   fall  if  targets    are  not  met   over   time&#13;
under   a  new   tuition-revenue&#13;
management&#13;
policy.&#13;
In  fall   1997  a  new  residence&#13;
hall  will  be  ready&#13;
for  students    to  inhabit,    enabling    400  more   people&#13;
to  attend   the  University.&#13;
This   will  double   the  orig-&#13;
inal  housing    capacity    and  eliminate&#13;
a  yearly    100&#13;
person    waiting    list.    The   new   donn    will   greatly&#13;
increase&#13;
the  enrollment&#13;
at  U\y-P.&#13;
A&#13;
Building Relationship:&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
Students and the Fireside Theater Connection&#13;
CHRIS   HEILGEIST&#13;
RANGER  REPORTER&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Cushing.   Rebecca    Goessl.&#13;
and   Simon&#13;
Provan.&#13;
University&#13;
l&#13;
~Wi~con.sin - Parkside&#13;
theater    students.&#13;
get  paid   to  build   sets  for&#13;
,  p&#13;
e&#13;
~Ireslde, a  professional&#13;
theater&#13;
in  Fort   Atkinson.&#13;
Wis.&#13;
UW-&#13;
r&#13;
/rkslde    faculty   and   students&#13;
have    been    building&#13;
sets.    hanging&#13;
19hts.&#13;
and creating   special    effects    for  Fireside&#13;
productions&#13;
for  the&#13;
pasl&#13;
five years.&#13;
The relationship between   UW-Parksides&#13;
Theater   Department&#13;
andFiresidebegan over  live years  ago.  At the time, Skelly Warren,&#13;
aSSOCIate&#13;
f&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
hel&#13;
pro  esser   of  dramatic&#13;
arts.   was   designing.&#13;
and   With  t  e&#13;
P of  students,   constructins&#13;
Fireside's&#13;
sets.&#13;
Warren    and   crew&#13;
SOOn fnu&#13;
d h&#13;
0&#13;
n   t  ey had  more  work  than  they  could  handle.    When&#13;
Warren   tried&#13;
to&#13;
end   the  relationship&#13;
Fireside    management&#13;
asked,&#13;
"Is  there  any  why   we  can  make  this  work?"&#13;
Euzene   Norwood:&#13;
former&#13;
Dean  of  the  School   of  Am   and&#13;
Sciences.&#13;
finalized    the  details   of  the  arrangement:&#13;
Fireside   would&#13;
provide   UWP   with   a  grant   which   would  cover   the  salary   of  a  full&#13;
time   shop   foreman.&#13;
part   time   wages   for  two   to  three   scene~sho.p&#13;
assistants,   cost  of  materials,   and  necessary   tools.    In  return,   UWP  s&#13;
Theater    Department&#13;
would   construct&#13;
and   install   Fireside's&#13;
sets,&#13;
hang  lights.   and&#13;
insure&#13;
that  everything   was  working   prior&#13;
lO&#13;
open-&#13;
inz.nisht&#13;
The  asrcernent&#13;
was  formalized.&#13;
eTh;at~r   is  :   :ollaborative&#13;
art   and   this   collaboration&#13;
has  been&#13;
successful   for  all.   Fireside   has  gotten  reasonably    priced   sets,  light-&#13;
ing  and  special   effects   built  to  specifications.&#13;
They.·ve  saved  space&#13;
by  having'their&#13;
sets  built  off-site.&#13;
They've    saved   ume  and  money&#13;
by  having   UWP  manage   the  students   who-tum   designs   into  reality.&#13;
UWP  Theater  Department.  has  added  Michael  Clickner,  shop&#13;
foreman   and  technical   director.   to  their   staff,  purchased    additional&#13;
tools  for  their   shop,   increased   the  quality   of  UWP  theater   produc-&#13;
lions    because&#13;
of   Clickner's&#13;
expertise.&#13;
and   provided&#13;
additional&#13;
learning   opportunities&#13;
for&#13;
their&#13;
students.&#13;
~&#13;
As  for  UWP   theater   students.   just   ask  Kevin  Cushing   how  valu-&#13;
able  the  Fireside   experience    has  been.    Because   of  Fireside   credits&#13;
on  his  resume.   he  got  a  summer   job   building   sets  for  the  Santa   Fe&#13;
Opera Company  in California.   Not  too shabby for a guy  who two&#13;
years  ago  discovered    that  "he  liked  building   things   more  than  busi-&#13;
ness&#13;
See Fireside/page  3&#13;
Volunteer of&#13;
the&#13;
week&#13;
Students are selected as&#13;
Volunteer of the Week" becGuse&#13;
of their altruistic  attitudes, the&#13;
amount of time shared 'within the&#13;
community  and the positive&#13;
impact their service has made in&#13;
the lives of others.  This.week's&#13;
volunteer is&#13;
Maurice (Moe)&#13;
Guertin II.&#13;
As a senior Psychology major,&#13;
Maurice Guertin II became&#13;
active in the Parkside Volunteer&#13;
Program in October of 1996&#13;
when he began volunteering, two&#13;
times a week, at Bain&#13;
Elementary School helping first&#13;
grade children learn and become&#13;
better children.  Maurice or&#13;
"Moe" has returned to Bain for a&#13;
second semester in the same&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Bain School, a central city.&#13;
school in Kenosha, has a cultur-&#13;
ally diverse population. Sheri&#13;
Ludwig, teacher, thinks&#13;
Moe&#13;
works well with all the children,&#13;
She reported, "The children real-&#13;
ly like him and look forward to&#13;
the days he is with us. He is&#13;
willing to stay and work with&#13;
students at recess and he seems&#13;
to take an interest in their&#13;
progress."&#13;
Moe has a philosophical out-&#13;
look on&#13;
his&#13;
volunteer experience.&#13;
He said, "Children are our&#13;
future, and therefore should be&#13;
an integral part of our lives.&#13;
That is not to say that we can&#13;
solve all of tomorrow's problems&#13;
in this manner, but it certainly is&#13;
a start. Volunteering is a means&#13;
by.which we can start the&#13;
process and gain the experience&#13;
necessary for dealing with future&#13;
problems." Moe feels a sense of&#13;
Maurice Guertin II, volun-&#13;
teers at Bain Elementary.&#13;
personal reward when volunteer-&#13;
ing. He reported, "I have a feel-&#13;
ing of genuine compassion for&#13;
the children and I'm pleased&#13;
when I realize the progress they&#13;
have made and the enjoyment&#13;
they express during the time we&#13;
have tugether."&#13;
Moe has also volunteered at&#13;
the YMCA in Racine supervising&#13;
teenagers at the Saturday night&#13;
rock concert. Whether Moe is&#13;
helping teens or young children,&#13;
he is leaving a lasting, positive,&#13;
impression on our youth.&#13;
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
KENOSHA LITERACY&#13;
COUNCIL REQUESTS&#13;
HELP&#13;
Office receptionist for Tues. or&#13;
Thurs. evenings. Responsible&#13;
people with pleasant personali-&#13;
ties are needed from 6:00-9:00&#13;
p.m, Answer phones and data&#13;
entry. Two people may wish to&#13;
work together at Uptown&#13;
Library. See Carol for more&#13;
details.&#13;
ALL SAINTS HOSPICE&#13;
TRAINING SCHEDULED.&#13;
Respond quickly to this&#13;
Saturday, February 1st training&#13;
for this Racine service&#13;
h}&#13;
terrni-&#13;
nally ill patients. Time: 8:00&#13;
a.m.-4:30p.m.  See Carol in the&#13;
Volunteer Office for placement.&#13;
DO YOU ENJOY BEING&#13;
WITH OLDER PEOPLE?&#13;
Various opportunities are avail-&#13;
able&#13;
to&#13;
you. Brookside Care&#13;
Center and Claridge House in&#13;
Kenosha and Lincoln Lutheran&#13;
Facilities in Racine. Spend as lit-&#13;
tle as 30 minutes weekly making&#13;
people happy.&#13;
ST. CATHERINE'S HOS-&#13;
PITAL NEEDS YOu.&#13;
Become a library clerk-research&#13;
and find articles for doctors or&#13;
help in the gift shop communi-&#13;
caung with customers and work-&#13;
ing with cash register.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENT NEEDS&#13;
75 VOLUNTEERS&#13;
Sign up today to help at the&#13;
Winter Carnival in Memorial&#13;
Hall in Racine on Sat.,Feb I or&#13;
Sun., Feb 2. Volunteer with chil-&#13;
dren's activities during a 2-3&#13;
hour shift. This is fun!&#13;
See Carol in the Volunteer Office&#13;
in the Career Center between&#13;
8:00a.m.-4:30p.m. M-F or e-mail&#13;
engberg@it.uwp.edu.&#13;
~~~&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
News Intern&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Jason Kluzak&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Features Intern&#13;
AIHeppner&#13;
TroyGetter&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
. Genevieve Guran&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Office Assistant&#13;
Jim Hendrickson&#13;
Aaron Rich&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda BUlgrin&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
AprilSchoenberg&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Corey Mandley&#13;
Campus Features  Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Community Features Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
encourages Leiters 10the Editor Letters should not exceed&#13;
250 words and should-be  delivered to the&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
office (WYLL&#13;
D139C)&#13;
or&#13;
e-ntailed to hansen8@illlwp.edll  by noon the Mondav before&#13;
publication.  Letters must be typed and include the author's name and&#13;
phone number. To be published, letters must be free from misleadinu or&#13;
libelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not&#13;
be&#13;
published.&#13;
RU/;ger&#13;
News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
is published every Thursday throughout  the semester bv&#13;
s~udel~tsof the. Ul:;\ersi~y of Wisconsin-Parkside,  who are solely respo~-&#13;
SIble tor Its editorial policv and content. Subscriptions  are available atthe&#13;
cost of&#13;
$1 0&#13;
for 28 issues. Member of the Associated Collegiate  Press&#13;
•&#13;
Jahuary 30,&#13;
1997·&#13;
pa~ 2&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
READING GROUP OPEN&#13;
TO COMMUNITY&#13;
Drama, mystery and short essays will be highlighted during a read-&#13;
ing group meeting in spring at the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
The Race, Class and Gender Study Group is free and open to the&#13;
public. Participants should have read the books prior&#13;
to&#13;
the meet-&#13;
ings. Books and meeting dates are:&#13;
Friday, Jan. 24 -  "Oranges are not the Only Fruit," by Jeanette&#13;
Winterson.  A coming out story of a young lesbian from a working&#13;
class family raised in a fundamentalist  Christian community.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 14 -  "Killing Rage: Ending Racism," by Bell&#13;
Hooks. A collection of essays on race and racism in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Friday, March 14 -&#13;
"I&#13;
Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," by&#13;
Maya Angelou. A poignant chronicle of Angelou's life up to the age&#13;
of 16, and including the birth of her son.&#13;
Friday, April 18 -  "Snow Falling on Cedars," by David&#13;
Guterson.  On an isolated island a fisherman is found suspiciously&#13;
drowned and a Japanese American is charged with his murder. The&#13;
story recounts the courtroom drama and surprising turns of evidence.&#13;
Friday, May 16 ~ "A Yellow Raft in Blue Water," by Michael&#13;
Dorris. A generational story of three American Indian women who&#13;
bring together a shared past and future.&#13;
All meetings will be held from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the UW-Parkside&#13;
Faculty/Staff lounge, Room III of Molinaro Hall. Free parking will&#13;
be in all university lots. Books for the discussion group can be pur-&#13;
chased at the UW-Parkside Bookstore.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the UW-Parkside Women's Studies&#13;
Group. For more information, contact Mary Kay Schleiter, associate&#13;
professor of sociology and director of the Women's Studies Center at&#13;
(414) 595-2536.&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
TO HOLD MEETING,&#13;
FORUMFEB.l&#13;
The annual meeting of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Alumni Association&#13;
will be held at noon on Saturday,&#13;
'. Feb. I in room 104 on the&#13;
Parkside Student Union. The&#13;
meeting is open to all UW-&#13;
Parkside graduates.&#13;
An alumni forum will precede&#13;
the meeting, beginning at 8 a.rn.&#13;
Participants will have the oppor-&#13;
tunity to express ideas on how&#13;
the university can strengthen its&#13;
relationship with alumni.&#13;
During the meeting, the&#13;
Alumni Association will hold&#13;
elections for the Board of&#13;
Directors. Candidates are; John&#13;
Ernst, 1986, communications;&#13;
Gail Whittier, 1986, business&#13;
management; Tashe Bozinovski,&#13;
1976, business management;&#13;
Aldred Days, 1993, political sci-&#13;
ence, and Marty Sturino, 1973,&#13;
business management, 1992&#13;
masters in business adrninistra-&#13;
tion, all of Racine.&#13;
All UW-Parkside graduates are&#13;
eligible to vote in the election.&#13;
Ballots should be returned by&#13;
Friday, Jan. 3l, and can be&#13;
obtained by calling the UW-&#13;
Parkside Office of Alumni&#13;
Relations at (414) 595-2414.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
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              <text>Parkside KO's Nations top team</text>
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              <text>...&#13;
+Julia Hare to speak on&#13;
campus&#13;
See page 3&#13;
+Black History Month celebrated&#13;
See page 4&#13;
+Rutter brings fever to the&#13;
basketball team&#13;
See page 7&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
VOLUME 25  •  ISSUE 17  •  FEBRUARY6,  1997&#13;
Parkside&#13;
KO's&#13;
nation's&#13;
top&#13;
team&#13;
BRIAN  MIKOLAJEK&#13;
SPORTS REPORTER&#13;
It's not often that a team gets the opportunity&#13;
toface the number one ranked team in the&#13;
nation. On Feb. I, the University  of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Men's basketball team not&#13;
onlygot that chance, but capitalized  on&#13;
it&#13;
in&#13;
theirown backyard.&#13;
The Rangers&#13;
knocked&#13;
off the NCAA&#13;
Division II number  one ranked  University  of&#13;
Indianapolis,63-45,  at the Parkside&#13;
Gymnasium, handing  the visitors  their first loss&#13;
of~heseason, and ending the nation's longest&#13;
active winning  streak at ] 8 games.&#13;
Steve Sanders led UW-Parkside  with a game&#13;
Virus Alert&#13;
APRIL SCHOENBERG&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR&#13;
Internet users beware!  The&#13;
Internet community is once&#13;
again plagued by a computer&#13;
virus. Instead of a destructive&#13;
trojan virus (like most viruses)&#13;
this virus, referred to as&#13;
Deeyenda Maddick, performs a&#13;
comprehensive search&#13;
on  your&#13;
computer, looking for valuable&#13;
information such as e-mail and&#13;
login passwords, credit cards,&#13;
personal information and so&#13;
forth. The Deeyenda virus is&#13;
virtually undetectable, and once&#13;
attacked, your computer will be&#13;
Insecure.&#13;
Some viruses in the past have&#13;
proven to be a hoax, however;&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Vice-President, Jason Weniger&#13;
learned the reality of the virus&#13;
after Deeyenda got a hold of his&#13;
computer.  "My $3000 computer&#13;
has now become a paper-&#13;
weight." shared Weniger frus-&#13;
tratingly. Weniger learned of&#13;
the virus about two weeks ago&#13;
and has been warning fnends&#13;
f&#13;
page  7/Basketball&#13;
Levi  Bradley&#13;
f&#13;
Students host on-campus rave&#13;
I&#13;
about it.&#13;
The Deeyenda virus is also&#13;
capable of staying in memory&#13;
for a long time while running a&#13;
host of applications and opera-&#13;
tion systems, such as Windows&#13;
3.11 and Windows 95. What&#13;
this means&#13;
(Q&#13;
internet users is&#13;
that when a login and PASS-&#13;
WORD are sent to the server,&#13;
this virus can COPY this infor-&#13;
mation and send it out to an&#13;
unknown address. The nature of&#13;
the virus and the security risks it&#13;
causes are the reason for all of&#13;
the attention it has received.&#13;
Although i·tcan attack any&#13;
as,&#13;
this virus is most likely to&#13;
attack those users viewing Java&#13;
enhanced Web Pages (Netscape&#13;
2.0+ and Microsoft Internet&#13;
Explorer 3.0+, which are run-&#13;
ning on Windows 95.)&#13;
If&#13;
you receive the Deeyenda&#13;
virus, you should delete it&#13;
immediately.  Virus problems&#13;
can usually be remedied with a&#13;
disinfect program that will&#13;
remove the virus. However, be&#13;
aware that disks infected with&#13;
the virus have the potential of&#13;
reinfecting your computer.&#13;
was held.&#13;
Additionally, Inner Loop Road was closed off to traf-&#13;
fic. And all of the doors to the Union, except for the&#13;
entrance from the Union parking lot, were sealed off.&#13;
"We were expecting that problem because they gave us&#13;
rules of no pass-out alcohol. I've been to university&#13;
activities for the last eight years -  it's been the first one&#13;
with a no-alcohol rule because of non-students being&#13;
there," said Hansen.&#13;
Hansen said he witnessed alcohol being sold to stu-&#13;
dents entering the Union cinema who he said "were&#13;
obviously not students."&#13;
"There's been some miscommunication,"  said Rich&#13;
Karwatka, Student Organization Council (S.O.c.)  presi-&#13;
dent. "People (were) running off and doing things with-&#13;
out asking first." But Karwatka said he was only&#13;
involved in the "outskirts" of planning the event.&#13;
Hansen said that the club wants to be recognized but&#13;
not to receive funding. The club was formally recognized&#13;
last semester, with a status similar&#13;
to&#13;
that of Intervarsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship (IVCF) and the fraternities on cam-&#13;
pus.&#13;
"They're recognized as a club by SOC, but because in&#13;
their constitution they charge dues, they are not eligible&#13;
for funding," said Karwatka. In the club's constitution is&#13;
a statement of purpose to promote UW-Parkside.&#13;
The Admissions office planned to use the event as a&#13;
See  Rave/page  2&#13;
KRISTINE  HANSEN&#13;
RANGER REPORTER&#13;
A&#13;
ne~ly formed club at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parksldehad its first official event in an unofficial way -&#13;
arave in the Parkside Union coupled with disc jockeys&#13;
anda live band.&#13;
While up to 5,000 people were expected to show for&#13;
theJan. 31 event, called the Nuclear Winter Rave,&#13;
only&#13;
about60 to 70 people came. Tim Hansen, assistant dircc-&#13;
~r of th~ University of Wisconsin~Parkside  Student  .&#13;
oundatlOn,said that eight police officers in full dress&#13;
and h&#13;
•&#13;
tree&#13;
10&#13;
four State Patrol cars and two campus police&#13;
carswere outside the Parks ide Union, where the rave&#13;
;~Ie:"'&lt;t'w~i&#13;
.I!![•.&#13;
",&#13;
-'''''''.&#13;
-"''c ..&#13;
c__    ''_,&#13;
,,:,&#13;
k;;-····,·,,,·~'&#13;
"'k",   ,.,.,."-..,.,.-.",,,.,.,.-.,.,....-,-.&#13;
Full house at lecture on&#13;
spiritual decline&#13;
JASON    KLUZAK&#13;
NEWS   INTERN&#13;
Union   104 was  packed   with&#13;
faculty  and  interested   listeners&#13;
when  University   of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside  history  professor&#13;
Thomas   Reeves  delivered   a lec-&#13;
ture  regarding   the  question:   "Is&#13;
America   a Christian   Nation?"   on&#13;
Wednesday,  January   29,&#13;
Approximately    50  to  60  people&#13;
attended,&#13;
Reeves  provided   those  that&#13;
attended   with  a brief  lecture  on&#13;
church  history  and  its  movement&#13;
across  the  seas  into  colonial&#13;
America.    America    has  histori-&#13;
cally  been  a Christian   nation.&#13;
During  the  Reformation,   there&#13;
were  conflicts   between   the&#13;
Catholic   and  Protestant   clergy&#13;
when  the  issue  of  mingling&#13;
church  and  state  came  up.&#13;
Despite  the  differences,   few&#13;
early  Americans   doubted   their&#13;
relationship   with  God,&#13;
The  resolution   to  this  and&#13;
other  religious   conflicts   came&#13;
with  the  drafting   of  the  First&#13;
Amendment.    Reeves  emphasized&#13;
that   "America   was  founded  on&#13;
the  freedom   of  religion  and  not&#13;
from  religion,"   In  the  1950's,&#13;
church  attendance   in America&#13;
was  at a  peak  and  Reeves  termed&#13;
this  decade&#13;
"the  Golden  Age  of&#13;
Religion."   At  that  time,  President&#13;
Eisenhower   attended  a Prayer&#13;
Breakfast   and  it  was  there  that&#13;
the  popular   phrase,   "In God  We&#13;
Trust,"  became   our  national&#13;
motto.  Also  at  this  event  the  two&#13;
words,  "...under  God ... " were&#13;
added  to  our  Pledge  of&#13;
Allegiance,&#13;
Along  with  this  background,&#13;
Reeves  gave  statistics   indicative&#13;
of our  country's   dedication   to  its&#13;
religion.  These  statistics&#13;
appeared   to  be  optimistic   about&#13;
the  state  of  the  church  in modern&#13;
PCOC  Looks  For  Volunteers&#13;
JEl'iNIFER&#13;
PUCCINI&#13;
FEATURE   EDITOR&#13;
For  all you  students   who  are&#13;
interested   in  volunteering   some&#13;
of  your  time  to  your  community&#13;
either  for volunteer   time  towards&#13;
your  major  or  for  pleasure,&#13;
think  about  joining   the  PCOC&#13;
(Parkside's   Community&#13;
Outreach  Club),   This  club  is&#13;
involved  with  events  in both&#13;
Racine  and  Kenosha   counties&#13;
and  other  counties   as  well.&#13;
PCOC  was  responsible   for&#13;
The  Children's   Hospital&#13;
Fundraiser   of Wisconsin   that&#13;
was  held  at Parkside   last  semes-&#13;
ter  and  also  donated   food  and&#13;
presents   to the  needy  families&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Amanda  Bulgrin&#13;
Managing   Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Corey  Mandley&#13;
Campus    Features&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kendra  Macey&#13;
Community    Features&#13;
Editor&#13;
Jennifer   Puccini&#13;
for  Christmas,&#13;
They  also  dedi-&#13;
cated  some  of their  Lime to  the&#13;
"Festival   of&#13;
'Irees"&#13;
and  "The&#13;
Winter  Carnival"   which  were&#13;
both  hcld  in Racine,   This  club&#13;
is looking  for  more  volunteers&#13;
to  help  with  this  semester's&#13;
events.    Spring  events  include&#13;
Easter  projects,   Beach  Clean  Up&#13;
in  Racine  and  much  more.&#13;
For  anyone  interested   in join-&#13;
ing  the  PCOC,  their  meetings&#13;
are  held  every  Monday  at  12:00&#13;
in Molinaro    114,   If you  are&#13;
unable  to  attend  the  meetings,&#13;
but  would  like&#13;
to&#13;
volunteer&#13;
some  of your  time  please&#13;
con-&#13;
tact  Jenny  at  597-5215,    You&#13;
may  also  visit  their  stand  at the&#13;
Recruitment   Fair  which  will  be&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Coleen  Tartaglia&#13;
Sports    Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy  Editor&#13;
Genevieve   Guran&#13;
Copy  Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Hendrickson&#13;
Layout   Editor&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
times,  But  following   these  stars,&#13;
Reeves  differentiated   between&#13;
what  he  termed  as  "Cultural&#13;
Christianity"    and""Consumer&#13;
Christianity."   He  described   our&#13;
current   faith  as  having  "lost  its&#13;
authenticity"   and  as&#13;
having,    .&#13;
"absorbed   ideas  and  attitudes&#13;
that  will  lead  to  the  demise   of&#13;
Christianity."&#13;
After  the  lecture,  Reeves,  who&#13;
has  authored   and  edited   len&#13;
books,  hosted  a book  signing   for&#13;
his  book&#13;
The Empty Church' The&#13;
Suicide of Liberal Christianity.&#13;
He  has  also  authored   the  New&#13;
York  Times  Best  Seller  A&#13;
Question of Character,'&#13;
A&#13;
Life of&#13;
John F Kennedy, The Life and&#13;
Times of Joe McCarthy,'&#13;
A&#13;
Biography,&#13;
and&#13;
Gentleman Boss:&#13;
The Life of Chester Alan Arthur.&#13;
All  of the  Soup  and  Substance&#13;
lectures  are  held  in room&#13;
104&#13;
of&#13;
the  Parkside   Union,&#13;
February&#13;
6, 1997.&#13;
PBge2&#13;
Rave&#13;
from page&#13;
1&#13;
recruitment   technique.   Cynthia&#13;
Jensen   is the  club's   advisor   and  a&#13;
strong  right  arm  in  boosting   sup-&#13;
port.  "She  has  been  amazingly&#13;
helpful,   I would   recommend    any&#13;
club  who  needs  an  advisor   to&#13;
seek  her  out,"  said  Hansen,   On&#13;
the  night  of  the  rave,  Jensen&#13;
walked  over&#13;
to&#13;
housing   to  rally&#13;
up  students.&#13;
Tickets  were  sold  from  the&#13;
Information   Desk   in  the  Parkside&#13;
Union,  Complimentary&#13;
tickets&#13;
were  also  given  to  WPRS,&#13;
Parksidc's   radio  station.&#13;
"We  strategically    comped&#13;
about  300  tickets   -&#13;
25  for&#13;
WKTI&#13;
to&#13;
give  away  on  their&#13;
morning   show,  we  camped   both&#13;
the  basketball   teams  but  we&#13;
don't   know  what  happened&#13;
to&#13;
them,"  said  Hansen.   "We&#13;
comped   a couple   of  the  high&#13;
schools,   Bradford   and  Tremper,&#13;
Carthage   (College)   actually&#13;
pushed  our  event   for  us,  They&#13;
stamped   like  50  flyers:'&#13;
Also,  to encourage   dancing   at&#13;
the  rave,  they  gave  tickets to&#13;
people   who  they  saw danced&#13;
well  in  local  clubs  that they&#13;
attended,&#13;
About   the  lower  than expected&#13;
attendance    at  the  rave, "a lot of&#13;
1&#13;
our  problems   had  to do with&#13;
Union  209,  They  didn't  like&#13;
what  we  were  doing,"  said&#13;
f&#13;
Hansen.&#13;
The  club  had  originally&#13;
planned   a  rave  for  last&#13;
(&#13;
December,   called  the  Santa&#13;
Rave,  and  planned   to donate pro-&#13;
I&#13;
ceeds   for  charitable   means, food&#13;
for  families.&#13;
It&#13;
was  cancelled&#13;
l!&#13;
because   the  club  was  not fonned&#13;
I I days  before   the  event  - a uni-   (&#13;
versity&#13;
rule.&#13;
For  the  Jan,  31  rave,  Hansen&#13;
I'&#13;
and  the  club's   director  Patrick&#13;
Budic   together   spent  about $600&#13;
in  lighting   for  the  rave,&#13;
"We're   going  to  try to do&#13;
\&#13;
something   again,  but  we person-&#13;
ally  dropped   $2000  out of our&#13;
own  pockets,"   said  Hansen.&#13;
"The&#13;
next  one's   going  to be  bigger:'&#13;
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
BULLEN   JUNIOR&#13;
HIGH   SCHOOL&#13;
OPEN-&#13;
INGS    Tutors/monitors    are  needed   for  7th&#13;
graders   who  are  failing,    Help  with  math,&#13;
English,   social  studies  or  science.    MfTrrH   or&#13;
Fri  between  2:40  - 3:25  p.m.   Help  one  session   a&#13;
week.   You may  be  able&#13;
to&#13;
help  students   pass&#13;
their  courses.    Please  sign  up  in  the  Volunteer&#13;
Office,&#13;
FOOD   BANK  HELPERS&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
Our  Saviors  Food  and  Clothing   Bank  in  Racine&#13;
requests   volunteers   on  Tuesday  or Thursday&#13;
from  I :00c3:00  p.rn.   one  to  three  times  a  month,&#13;
Work  directly  with  people   in  need,  -More  details&#13;
in Volunteer  Office.&#13;
BIG  BROTHERIBIG&#13;
SISTER    ESCORT&#13;
I~&#13;
you  don't   have  time  for  a weekly  commitment&#13;
News  Intern&#13;
Jason   Kluzak&#13;
Features&#13;
Intern&#13;
Troy Getter&#13;
Photo   Editor&#13;
John   Nunn&#13;
Office  Assistant&#13;
Aaron  Rich&#13;
Ranger   Reporter&#13;
Kristine   Hansen&#13;
but  enjoy  being   with  children   sign  up to  be an&#13;
1&#13;
escort   for  the  Big  BrothersJBig    Sisters  of Greater&#13;
I&#13;
Racine  or  for  Big  Sisters   of  Greater   Racine.&#13;
Help  a minimum   of&#13;
2&#13;
times  yearly  for a special&#13;
event  planned   for  children&#13;
on&#13;
the  waiting  list.&#13;
l&#13;
Application    and  police   check   necessary.&#13;
Licensed/insured&#13;
drivers.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
EVENTS:&#13;
Cerebral   Palsy  Overnight   at  Best  Western  in&#13;
Kenosha,&#13;
Be  a companion    of  13-21  year  old&#13;
persons   with  disabilities,&#13;
Begins  at  II :00, Feb,&#13;
21,  and  ends  at  noon  on  Feb,  22,   Group  activi-&#13;
ties  and  swimming   planned.&#13;
Free&#13;
to&#13;
volunteer.&#13;
Family   Services   of  Racine   needs  50 people  to&#13;
help  with  a  fundraiser   on  Friday,  March   14,&#13;
II :OOam - 5:00pm,&#13;
Sell  raffle  tickets,  serve  food&#13;
and  check  coats,    Sign  up  in Volunteer  Office,&#13;
J&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900  Wood   Rd&#13;
Kenosha,  WI  53141-2000&#13;
(414)  595-2287&#13;
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