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              <text>New touchtone registartion begins at UW-Parkside</text>
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              <text>t&#13;
Parent to Parent&#13;
See Page 4&#13;
t&#13;
Parkside professor to direct&#13;
concert in Milwaukee&#13;
See Page 5&#13;
tHappy Birthday&#13;
AI Heppner!!!!&#13;
VOLUME  25  -  ISSUE 27-   APRIL 24,  1997&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
-&#13;
Newtouchtone registration&#13;
begins at UW-Parkside&#13;
Market on Main&#13;
food court to open&#13;
JA&#13;
0   KL&#13;
ZAK ~~::"~~~;--&#13;
~~_~&#13;
..&#13;
N  W  I TERN&#13;
Matchmaker, matchmaker,&#13;
make me a match....&#13;
Fiddler  on the Roof opens this weekend  in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.  Cast members  shown here in a recent rehearsal:  (left&#13;
to right)  Emily Wagner ("Hodel"),  Katie Liddicoat  ("Tzeitel"),&#13;
Rachel  Velvikis ("Sphrintze"),   Mary Leigh Snider ("Bielke").&#13;
Registration began la I week for&#13;
returningstudents.&#13;
It&#13;
i the beginning of&#13;
anewsystem that ha become popular&#13;
amongcolleg s nation" ide.&#13;
The system take  advantage  of new&#13;
technologyand&#13;
\I&#13;
ill hopefully  lead to&#13;
moreadvanced technique,   uch a  reg-&#13;
isteringon a website.  Thi  y tern will&#13;
alleviatethe&#13;
anxiety&#13;
that goe  along with&#13;
waitingin long line.  II is an intermedi-&#13;
atestep between that and regi tering&#13;
fromterminals Onthe web.&#13;
The registrar at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside,  u an Johnson&#13;
indicatedthat the change stemmed  from&#13;
amoney-saving, budget issue. The sav-&#13;
ngsaccumulated by the new system&#13;
willhelp to pay the initial cost, which&#13;
approximatedto $30,000 spent on soft-&#13;
ware.Funds for the new system were&#13;
collectedfrom the add/drop fees. The&#13;
newsystem will also prevent extra&#13;
wagesfrom being paid to terminal oper-&#13;
ators.&#13;
Under the old system, students&#13;
l&#13;
See REGISTRATION page 3&#13;
VisionCommittee  to develop new university-wide&#13;
statement; student input sought&#13;
JASON KLUZAK&#13;
NEWS INTERN&#13;
Students attending the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
next semester will enjoy the new&#13;
food service to be completed by that&#13;
time.&#13;
It&#13;
will replace the existing&#13;
Coffee Shoppe and make use of the&#13;
old offices of the Ranger News and&#13;
Student Government. The fully&#13;
remodeled outlet will be done under&#13;
a $300,000 budget.&#13;
The new addition will feature a&#13;
Taco Bell Express. Other features&#13;
include serving cappuccino,&#13;
gounmet coffees, lattes and biscotti,&#13;
which are small cookies. The food&#13;
line-up will include presentation&#13;
cooking as is currently being used&#13;
in the Union Cafe. Other foods to&#13;
be offered are the grill and fryers,&#13;
i.e., hamburgers, hot dogs, etc.&#13;
However, at the present time, the&#13;
existing facility lacks adequate ven-&#13;
tilation for this type of cooking.&#13;
Joe Wojtowicz, director of food ser-&#13;
vices, stated that this would require&#13;
a separate project. New&#13;
... See MARKET page 3&#13;
RANGER   REPORT&#13;
Parks ide which has been&#13;
meeting all year. They have&#13;
been charged with writing&#13;
the Vision Statement for&#13;
UW-Parkside that will move&#13;
the university forward in a&#13;
The Vision Comrn ittee is&#13;
panof the larger University&#13;
Pia   .&#13;
nnmg Committee at the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-&#13;
compelling and positive way.&#13;
They are looking to develop&#13;
a statement which will be&#13;
embraced by the campus&#13;
community as well as&#13;
... See VISION page 3&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
last issue&#13;
of the semester May 1&#13;
The last issue of the semester for the Ranger News is&#13;
May I. Any information  that needs to be placed in t.his&#13;
issue must be turned in by I0:00am on Monday Apnl 28.&#13;
Please plan accordingly .&#13;
0k(&#13;
7,&#13;
I&#13;
""&#13;
Af:lfif&#13;
24, 1997·&#13;
page'2~&#13;
Recognition Day honors&#13;
student research projects&#13;
DONICA&#13;
DlTTMER-"&#13;
'-1-_&#13;
SPECIAL  TO THE RANGER&#13;
'.e&#13;
Alleged drug usage in housing&#13;
prompts  drug&#13;
education  program&#13;
LENAE D. HARRIS&#13;
COMM  250&#13;
real focus  is to give an informa-&#13;
tive warning  and prevent  the stu-&#13;
dent from a future predicament&#13;
that might  get them  in a lot of&#13;
trouble  and possibly  mark their&#13;
record  for life.  The student  is&#13;
informed  of the zero tolerance  of&#13;
drug misuse  on the Parks ide cam-&#13;
pus, and that there would be a&#13;
problem  if anyone  gets caught&#13;
using drugs.  If caught,  the person&#13;
would  be prosecuted  to the fullest&#13;
extent  of the law.&#13;
The program  was instituted  to&#13;
let the students  know that&#13;
the&#13;
police  know  what's  going on in&#13;
Housing  and if they get caught,&#13;
they will be prosecuted.   Word&#13;
spreads  quickly  around  campus;&#13;
chances  are if a student  is&#13;
involved  in misuse,  he or she will&#13;
be exposed.&#13;
The good part about the&#13;
"Knock  and Talk" Program  is that&#13;
students  are reporting  on other&#13;
students,  this is to say that there&#13;
are some responsible  students&#13;
who want to do the right thing&#13;
and will not tolerate  having  their&#13;
environment   com prom ised.&#13;
The University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside  will hold its third annual&#13;
Creative  and Research  Recognition   Day&#13;
on April 25 from  10 a.m. to I p.m. in&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
The Recognition   Day gives stu-&#13;
dents the opportunity  to present  their&#13;
projects  to other students  and faculty.&#13;
The students  will be provided  a 4foot&#13;
by 8 foot poster  board to explain  their&#13;
topic, their research  questions  and the&#13;
answers  they have d iscovered,   Some&#13;
special  equipment  will also be provided&#13;
such as computers,  easels  and tables&#13;
will be made available  for displaying&#13;
their work.&#13;
"Recognition   Day is a wonderful&#13;
opportunity  for students  to show off&#13;
their w.ork that they have been working&#13;
on all year,"  said Dr. Dale Wheeler  of&#13;
the Chemistry  Department  who also&#13;
leads the project.&#13;
Recognition   Day is available  to all&#13;
students  who have finished  a directed&#13;
studies  course  in any department  during&#13;
the past year.&#13;
Directed  studies  give the hands-on&#13;
Drug activity  has been report-&#13;
ed in Housing.   Most of the infor-&#13;
mation  is being  reported  by other&#13;
students  living  in the dorms  or&#13;
visitors  to the dorms  who do not&#13;
approve  of it.&#13;
"We have instituted  a pro-&#13;
gram  that we hope will curtail  the&#13;
activity.   It's called the'  Knock&#13;
and Talk' Program,"  says Police&#13;
Chief  Robert  Deane.  The pro-&#13;
gram  works  by University  Police&#13;
knocking  on the doors  of students&#13;
who might  be involved  in the&#13;
misuse.  The Officers  start by&#13;
telling  the student  that they are&#13;
suspected  of being  involved  in&#13;
the misuse  and then perm ission  is&#13;
.asked to search  their room.  They&#13;
then sit down  with the student  to&#13;
talk about the drug use and th&#13;
repercussions   of drug use and the&#13;
consequences   of the use on cam-&#13;
pus.&#13;
University  Police want the&#13;
students  to know  that the focus  is&#13;
not to arrest/ ticket  them.  The&#13;
Mark  Bernhardt,   former  UW-&#13;
Parkside   physics   major,  showed&#13;
his  project  to  Jack  Elmore  and&#13;
Jim  Sheageology    at  last year's&#13;
Recognition   Day.&#13;
experience  that most  classroom-orient-&#13;
ed courses  lack.  A directed  study helps&#13;
to strengthen  the student's  resume and&#13;
it appeals  to future  employers.&#13;
These  projects  require  a lot of&#13;
time and energy  by the students.  The&#13;
Research  and Creative  Activities  Day is&#13;
a wonderful  way  of encouraging  these&#13;
students  and gives  them the opportunity&#13;
to show  fellow  students  and faculty&#13;
what they have done.&#13;
This year's  Recognition   Day will&#13;
include  projects  from the Chemistry,&#13;
Sociology,  Art, Philosophy,  Physics and&#13;
Biology  Departments  .•&#13;
Letter to the Editor:&#13;
~~~&#13;
Sports   Editor&#13;
AI  Heppner&#13;
Copy  Editor&#13;
Jim  Hendrickson&#13;
My name is Bert Cattelino, a retired Kenosha auto assembly&#13;
plant worker, with a friendly reminder about a fast approaching&#13;
milestone for the University of Wisconsin- Parkside.&#13;
Monday, May 5, will mark exactly thirty years aeo that&#13;
Wisconsin Governor Warren P. Knowles signed into I~wSenate&#13;
Bill 38S which empowered Kenosha county to transfer 690 acresof&#13;
land for the proposed new UWP campus to the state of Wisconsin.&#13;
I would like to share some of my cherished memories withthe&#13;
students in general.  On behalf of the United Auto Workersunion&#13;
Local 72, I was present in Madison for this historic signing. If this&#13;
particular bill had failed to pass in the lezislature  the Parkside&#13;
&lt;&gt;&#13;
,&#13;
dream would never have gotten off the ground.  My other fellow&#13;
umon brothers also on hand for this auspicious occasion were&#13;
Assemblyman George Molinaro, State Senator Joseph Lourigan,&#13;
and Jack Beni,&#13;
OUf&#13;
education Committee  chairman.&#13;
After affixing his signature to Bill 38S in 1967, the governor&#13;
presented the pen he used&#13;
in&#13;
the ceremony to me. The pen anda&#13;
photograph of the gala occasion later were mounted on a special&#13;
plaque authorized by our union president Rudy Kuzel who in tum&#13;
had me present the plaque to UWP Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
My role in assisting with the creation of UWP was to confront&#13;
a stubborn Republican floor leader, Assemblyman Paul Alphonsi,&#13;
who finally agreed to support our four year campus hopes. Inaddi-&#13;
non the tireless efforts of that terrific trio, namely Kenosha news-&#13;
paper reporter Harlan Draeger, businessman George Connolly,and&#13;
county board supervisor Peter Marshall more than paid off inhelp-&#13;
109to establish Parkside.&#13;
BERT CATIELINO&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda   BUlgrin&#13;
Managing  Editor&#13;
April&#13;
Schoenberg&#13;
Campus&#13;
Features  Editor&#13;
Kendra   Macey&#13;
Community&#13;
Features  Editor&#13;
Jennifer    Puccini&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900&#13;
Wood Road&#13;
Box&#13;
2000&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
53141-2000&#13;
(414)  595-2287&#13;
Photo  Editor&#13;
John   Nunn&#13;
Layout  Editor&#13;
Kristine    Hansen&#13;
News  Intern&#13;
Jason   Kluzak&#13;
Sports  Writer&#13;
Brian   Mikolajec&#13;
Entertainment    Editor&#13;
Coleen   Tartaglia&#13;
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              <text>Tuition to be discounted for 100 out-of-state students</text>
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              <text>&#13;
.MediaServices   helps  students&#13;
sbinein class  pre  entations&#13;
Page 4&#13;
-The  semester-end  tradition of&#13;
Hepp's  Hype Heroes&#13;
Page 7&#13;
-&#13;
-UW-Parkside   gets  cash  for&#13;
Physical  education  Building&#13;
Page  2&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 28' MAY 1, 1997&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
Tuitionto  be  discounted  for&#13;
100out-of-state   students&#13;
Onehundred competitive&#13;
scholmhips,reducing co ts by&#13;
14,000for out-of-state stu-&#13;
dents,will&#13;
be&#13;
offered by the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-&#13;
Parksidethis fall.&#13;
Thescholarships are avail-&#13;
abletostudents pursuing full-&#13;
timestudy. New student a&#13;
wellastransfer students can&#13;
apply.The scholarships arc&#13;
designedto enhance enrollment&#13;
opportunities&#13;
for students, par-&#13;
iicularlyin northern IIlinoi .&#13;
"Located less than 15&#13;
milesfrom the l\Iinois border,&#13;
Illinoisis an important  recruit-&#13;
ingmarket for us," aid G.&#13;
Gary&#13;
Grace, assistant chancel-&#13;
lorofstudent affairs at UW-&#13;
Parkside."However, the high-&#13;
erout-of-state tuition costs&#13;
makeus less attractive to indi-&#13;
vidualsliving in Illinois.&#13;
Thesescholarships will help&#13;
strengthenUW-Parkside&#13;
re&lt;ruitingefforts to academ i-&#13;
callytalented out-of-state stu-&#13;
dents,particularly students in&#13;
nonhemIllinois"&#13;
Currently, out-of-state stu-&#13;
dents pay $2,732 more per&#13;
ernester to attend UW-&#13;
Park ide. In-state tuition per&#13;
ernester is $1,261.45. Tuition&#13;
per ernester for out-of-state&#13;
students is $3,993.45.  The&#13;
cholarship will represent a&#13;
a ings of $4,000 a year for&#13;
our-of- tate tudents.&#13;
The  rem&#13;
issions&#13;
are&#13;
renew-&#13;
able for a maximum of four&#13;
on ecutive years if students&#13;
maintain a minimum 2.5 grade&#13;
point average and maintain&#13;
full-time enrollment.  The pro-&#13;
gram is open to new freshman&#13;
or new  entering   transfer  stu-&#13;
dent.  Proof of state residency&#13;
i required.&#13;
Only 100 tuition scholar-&#13;
ships will be offered.&#13;
Interested applicants should&#13;
make fomnal application to the&#13;
university as soon as possible&#13;
to insure consideration for the&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
Criteria  for  consideration&#13;
of entering freshman are either&#13;
a minimum ACT composite&#13;
score of22 or high school class&#13;
rank in the top 35 percent or&#13;
higher; full-time enrollment&#13;
status, earning  a minimum  of&#13;
30 credits per academic year;&#13;
and a commitment  to reside in&#13;
an on-campus   residence   hall,&#13;
unless over the age of 22, mar-&#13;
ried  or commute  a distance   less&#13;
than 40 miles. (SAT scores&#13;
must total 1010 or higher.)&#13;
Entering transfer students&#13;
with less than 16 college cred-&#13;
its must have a college OPA of&#13;
at least 2.5 and have ranked in&#13;
the top 35 percent of their high&#13;
school graduating class or have&#13;
an ACT composite score of 22&#13;
or higher. Those with 16 or&#13;
more college credits must have&#13;
a college OPA of at least 2.5.&#13;
All transfer students must&#13;
be enrolled full-time and earn a&#13;
minimum of 30 credits per aca-.&#13;
demic year. Transfer students&#13;
who have attended another&#13;
University of Wisconsin four-&#13;
year institution within the past&#13;
five years are not eligible.&#13;
For more  infonnation   on&#13;
the program, call the UW-&#13;
Parks ide Office of Admissions&#13;
at 595-2355.&#13;
Students  register&#13;
dissatisfaction  with  new&#13;
telephone  registration&#13;
The Ranger News conduct-&#13;
ed  a small  on-campus  survey,&#13;
giving students who registered a&#13;
chance to speak out on the new&#13;
system. The survey revealed:&#13;
I.)&#13;
"I like the old system better.&#13;
ft&#13;
may be a reluctance to change.&#13;
I've been procrastinating.&#13;
Everyone I've talked to about it&#13;
~ See REGISTER page 3&#13;
Student projects&#13;
honored on  Recognition    Day&#13;
Communication,    Economics,    Modern  Languages,&#13;
Psychology and Sociology! Anthropology depart-&#13;
ments,&#13;
The School of Science and Technology was&#13;
represented by faculty and students from biological&#13;
JASON KLUZAK&#13;
NEWS INTERN&#13;
Studentsdisplayed projects that required dili-&#13;
~ntelfol1sand merited recognition during the&#13;
e .&#13;
nlVersityof Wisconsin-Parkside's  third annual&#13;
lreativeand Research Recognition Day April 25.&#13;
~ TheSchool of Liberal Arts was represented&#13;
,facultyand students from Arts,&#13;
... See RECOGNITION  page 3&#13;
JASON KLUZAK&#13;
NEWS INTERN&#13;
Last week was the&#13;
University  of  Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside's' debut of "touchtone&#13;
registration."   Susan&#13;
Joh~so~,&#13;
UW-Parkside's registrar, indicat-&#13;
ed that problems with the system&#13;
are being worked out and many&#13;
have already been solved.&#13;
Ranger Hall&#13;
convenient place to live,&#13;
say housing officials&#13;
DAN LEINEN&#13;
GUEST WRJTER&#13;
Looking for a more conve-&#13;
nient place to live while attend-&#13;
ing the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside?  Then liv-&#13;
ing in the new residence hall&#13;
would be for you. There are&#13;
many benefits to living on cam-&#13;
pus. The new Ranger Hall will&#13;
offer students many conve-&#13;
niences&#13;
by&#13;
having a setting&#13;
close to classes and university&#13;
facilities.&#13;
The benefits of living on&#13;
campus are plentiful. There are&#13;
no monthly utility. bills. The&#13;
long distance telephone calls&#13;
are inexpensive&#13;
with&#13;
no month-&#13;
ly service charge. Basic cable&#13;
will be offered in the TV&#13;
lounges and in each room.&#13;
Residents will have access&#13;
to an in-hall computer lab and&#13;
also a computer network access&#13;
in each room. The Ranger Hall&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
April&#13;
Schoenberg&#13;
Campus&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Community&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Coleen Tartaglia&#13;
will also have a fitness center&#13;
with exercise bikes, treadmills&#13;
and an eight station universal.&#13;
For studying conveniences there&#13;
will be study rooms. The hall is&#13;
also located by nearby recre-&#13;
ational facilities. One of the&#13;
most attractive benefits will be&#13;
no parking hassles because the&#13;
hall will have its own parking&#13;
lot.&#13;
The rooms in the Ranger&#13;
Hall are designed to have two&#13;
students. The rooms will be&#13;
furnished with beds that can be&#13;
used as bunks, twin beds or&#13;
lofts. The rooms will also have&#13;
mattresses, desks, chairs and&#13;
dressers. Rooms will have dou-&#13;
ble wide closets and carpeted&#13;
floors. There are also some&#13;
rooms that will be academic&#13;
intensive which will allow some&#13;
students a quieter place to live&#13;
than the other rooms.&#13;
There are also many extras&#13;
by&#13;
living on campus. Steve&#13;
Wallner, assistant director of&#13;
residence life, said)&#13;
"It&#13;
can&#13;
increase a student's chance of&#13;
success in college."&#13;
He also mentioned, "It can&#13;
heighten a student's overall uni-&#13;
versity education and experi-&#13;
ence." Other extras would be&#13;
leadership opportunities such as&#13;
resident advisors (RA) or resi-&#13;
dence hall coordinators (RHC).&#13;
Students can also be part of the&#13;
Resident Hall Association&#13;
(RHA). The residence hall will&#13;
also make it easy to meet new&#13;
people and friends.&#13;
If anyone is interested in&#13;
the dorms write to UW-Parkside&#13;
Residence Life, 4019 Outer&#13;
Loop Road, Kenosha, WI&#13;
53144 or dial 595-2320.&#13;
Wallner mentioned that stu-&#13;
dents should apply at their earli-&#13;
est convenience&#13;
to&#13;
assure a&#13;
room of their choice.&#13;
~~~&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Hendrickson&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Kristine  Hansen&#13;
News Intern&#13;
Jason Kluzak&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
Brian Mikolajec&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
Universityof&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900Wood Road&#13;
Box 2000&#13;
Kenosha,WI&#13;
53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
UW-Parkside gets cash&#13;
for Physical Education&#13;
Building&#13;
AL HEPPNER&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
This battle has been fought with the state legislature for over&#13;
two years now and it's been a roller coaster ride.&#13;
However, in a surprise tum of events, the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide may have cleared the final hill last week When&#13;
the State Building Commission approved funding for the new field&#13;
house.&#13;
The commission had wanted UW-Parkside to raise half of the&#13;
six million dollars required for the new facility, but settled on an&#13;
80-20 split. That left UW-Parkside with $1.2 million to raise from&#13;
, student fees and donations.&#13;
The new building will bring a large field house to allow UW-&#13;
Parks ide to host concerts, major sporting events, and graduations.&#13;
The field house would also provide a 200-meter indoor track, new&#13;
weight room, additional basketball and racquetball courts, and a&#13;
media room among other things.&#13;
Along with the new dorms and the new food court, the expan-&#13;
sion could help erase UW-Parkside's  label as a "commuter school"&#13;
and establish them as a powerhouse in all NCAA Division II sports.&#13;
"I'll finally be able to work out without the side effects of frost-&#13;
bite," said John Nunn, freshman.&#13;
After an initial approval two years ago, the state legislature&#13;
then divided UW-Parkside's expansion  program into two phases&#13;
while only approving the first phase. In effect, the decision took all&#13;
the air out of the expansion project.&#13;
Once again, Athletic Director Lenny Klaver came through in a&#13;
meeting with Gov. Tommy Thompson and there is renewed hope&#13;
that UW-Parkside can take strides towards becoming the place it&#13;
was originally intended to be: "the next Madison."&#13;
e ]&#13;
In&#13;
d&#13;
01&#13;
"&#13;
"&#13;
,&#13;
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              <text>'Geology Students Explore Grand&#13;
Canyon/page 11&#13;
'Maria's Melange: I am&#13;
Woman/page 8&#13;
·He Said, She Said/page 9&#13;
'Girls' Cross Country/page 13&#13;
-Hepp's Hype Picks/page 14&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 3 • SEPTEMBER 19, 1996 ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside students were randomnly picked to be models.&#13;
Clockwise, from bottom: Stephanie Knabel (Nursing); Nicholas Walls (Computer&#13;
Science); Jaimie Roberts (Elementary Ed.); Matt Sheahan (Marketing); Erin Vosberg&#13;
(Nursing); top left, Dan Tredo (Athletic Training), and Lisa Schaich (Sec. Ed.)&#13;
Photo by Amber Nichols.&#13;
Tuition Shortfall&#13;
Costs' Parkside:&#13;
Fewer Continuing Students,&#13;
Better Jobs, Could Be Key&#13;
• Ranger News Staff Report&#13;
A dip in enrollment will cost the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside an estimated $697,000 this year, under a new UW&#13;
System policy which penalizes campuses for missing their&#13;
enrollment targets when student numbers fall.&#13;
Parkside projects a student full-time equivalent (ITEJ of 3,&#13;
160 for the 1996-97 academic year. Administrators at the university&#13;
said this is 3.1 percent below the fall 1995 enrollment&#13;
of 3,262 ITE's.&#13;
The projection is also 8.7 percent below this year's enrollment&#13;
target of 3,461. This will cost the university $697,000-&#13;
the amount it missed in its tuition target of $7,324,704.&#13;
Under the new UW System policy, each campus is assessed&#13;
the full amount of any shortfall. In turn, campuses are&#13;
"rewarded" by being allowed to keep 75 percent of any tuition&#13;
they collect that exceeds projected targets.&#13;
"It looks like we'll be able to identify enough sources to&#13;
... TUITION, cont. on page 2&#13;
Student Counselors Ready for Health Office Move&#13;
• Julia Ingram&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
Green dots pimple almost everything in Barbara&#13;
Larson's office, including her computer, table and&#13;
moving boxes. She even has some stuck on her window&#13;
and hlinds. .&#13;
"I was told that everything I put a green dot on&#13;
I could take with me to put in my new office, but our&#13;
new offices don't have any windows," Barbara&#13;
explained. "We were all very sad and grieving our&#13;
loss of windows. Therefore, we had the brilliant idea&#13;
of putting green dots on them."&#13;
She is UW-Parkside's Senior Counselor in the&#13;
Student Counseling Office, presently located in&#13;
Molinaro D124.&#13;
Barbara and co-workers Marcy Cayo, UWParkside's&#13;
Prevention Program' Manager and&#13;
Counselor, have most of their boxes packed and&#13;
stacked as they prepare for their move to the new&#13;
Student Health &amp;. Counseling Center, as it will be&#13;
called. Because the Health Office required more&#13;
space for its clinic, which will help meet regulations&#13;
for a medical room among other things, the Student&#13;
Health and Counseling Offices will move to the new --- .....---------------&#13;
facility sometime this year, which is located behind ... HEALTH OFFICE, cont. on&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Barbara, a UW-Parkside employee since 1969, page 3&#13;
and Marcy, who has been here four academic years,&#13;
said that students, staff and faculty are questioning&#13;
why Counseling cannot remain on the main campus.&#13;
and they're just as confounded. '&#13;
Barbara and Marcy also stated that one reason&#13;
they cannot stay is because they are unable to get&#13;
approval for a full-time support staff. In addition,&#13;
they do not have the authority to decide whether&#13;
they will stay or go.&#13;
UniflersitlJ&#13;
Police&#13;
Beat&#13;
Sept. 3. Traffic Accident: A&#13;
UW-Parkside student's vehicle&#13;
struck another student's vehicle&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Parking Lot. Minor damage&#13;
reported.&#13;
Sept. 3. Traffic Violation: A&#13;
police officer observed vehicle&#13;
speeding approx. 52 mph in a&#13;
25 mph zone on Outer Loop&#13;
Rd. Citation issued.&#13;
Sept. 5. Unlawful Use of&#13;
Telephone: A UW-Parkside&#13;
staff member reported the incident&#13;
when she received numerous&#13;
phone calls at the library&#13;
reference desk from a phone&#13;
sex service ..Several subjects&#13;
were observed using a computer&#13;
to do this activity.&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
Sept. 7. Medical Assist: Two&#13;
visiting school runners were&#13;
assisted medically at the crosscountry&#13;
course for an ankle&#13;
injury and an asthma attack.&#13;
The latter transported to St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Sept. 9. Traffic Violation: A&#13;
UW-Parkside student was&#13;
cited for failure to stop for a&#13;
stop sign. Student reportedly&#13;
ran the stop sign at Outer&#13;
Loop Rd. and the&#13;
Communication Arts Parking&#13;
Sept. 10. Theft of Personal&#13;
Property: A UW-Parkside student&#13;
reported the then of his&#13;
parking permit from the&#13;
Physical Education Parking&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Sept. 13. Disorderly&#13;
Conduct: Police officers&#13;
requested to break up a fight&#13;
in the Union Square at approx.&#13;
11:50 p.m. Figbt started as a&#13;
verbal disagreement.&#13;
Sept. 14. Liquor Law&#13;
Violation: Police officers&#13;
responded to a report of a&#13;
drinking party at 11:27 p.m. in&#13;
housing. Three students and&#13;
one visitor were cited for&#13;
underage drinking.&#13;
3806 52nd Street&#13;
652-3130&#13;
BETTER BREAD, BETTER SUBS.HI&#13;
*Subs' *Soups *SaJads *Party Subs&#13;
Free medium soda with purchase of any half sub with valid Parkside ID r--~~~~~~----------------------,&#13;
: 6/,1&lt;/ :!'c FREE SUB!! :&#13;
I ·-'~~··---."-V I&#13;
I Valid thru 9/25/96 Buy any 2 subs &amp; get the I&#13;
I Good for 1 free sub per person 3rd sub FREE! (of equal or lesser value) I&#13;
I Yourchoice of mini,half or Good only at: 3806 52nd S1. I&#13;
Iwhole subs. One coupon per I&#13;
: visit;not good withany 652-3130:&#13;
~~e~f!:~: ~U£';&gt;'2:.' -... ..J&#13;
Tuition cont. from page I&#13;
cover the deficit this year,&#13;
said Gary Grace, Assistant&#13;
Chancelor of Student&#13;
Affairs.&#13;
The university&#13;
rently taking steps&#13;
with the projected&#13;
Early corrective&#13;
include:&#13;
• Leaving some staffvacancies&#13;
unfilled.&#13;
•' Using part-time professors&#13;
to teach classes where&#13;
faculty members have left.&#13;
• Eliminating or cutting&#13;
spending for some supplies&#13;
and equipment.&#13;
Studies have shown that&#13;
there is a trend in the UW&#13;
System regarding campuses&#13;
not exceeding projected&#13;
enrollment targets. Grace&#13;
is CUfto&#13;
deal&#13;
deficit.&#13;
steps&#13;
said that at UW-Pa~kside,&#13;
the predominant cause of the&#13;
enrollment slide is the&#13;
robust economy in the area.&#13;
"Most of the shortfall in&#13;
student enrollment is from&#13;
OUT adult students in the&#13;
Racine area- the economy&#13;
is so good right now that people&#13;
are more likely to pursue&#13;
~ job than an education."&#13;
According to university&#13;
officials, other possible factors&#13;
contributing to low&#13;
enrollment at Parkside may&#13;
include:&#13;
• An apparent "shift" from&#13;
college federal grants to student&#13;
loans.&#13;
• Women and racial minorities&#13;
who make up a large&#13;
percentage of Parkside students&#13;
tend to take fewer&#13;
credits.&#13;
"The main thing the university&#13;
is doing is going&#13;
through a strategic planning&#13;
exercise to review all of our&#13;
programs and services and&#13;
make sure they are relevent&#13;
to what contemporary students&#13;
want to take," said&#13;
Grace .&#13;
Currently, construction on&#13;
a new dormitory is underway&#13;
at the University.&#13;
Officials hope it will help to&#13;
expand recruiting efforts to&#13;
areas outside the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha area.&#13;
c ~&#13;
I&#13;
1996·page2i&#13;
#cc" _c, J&#13;
Campus News&#13;
~tA Glance&#13;
• UW-Parkside 1997-98 Scholarship Applications Now&#13;
Available Applications for the 1997-98 UW-Parkside&#13;
Scholarship Program are now available. Applications can be&#13;
obtained by calling the UW-Parkside Scholarship Office at (414)&#13;
595-2600.&#13;
High school seniors, first time or returning college students,&#13;
adults, and transfer students are encouraged to apply. The competitive&#13;
scholarships recognize outstanding academic achievement,&#13;
leadership, and school and community service. Partial and&#13;
full tuition awards are available and several awards are renewable&#13;
for up to four years.&#13;
Applicants are required to submit two letters of recommendation&#13;
and a 250-word personal statement outlining academic and&#13;
career goals. The application deadline is Jan. 1, 1997.&#13;
Last year, the university awarded more than $125,000 in academic&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
For more information or to request an application, call the&#13;
UW-Parkside Scholarship Office at (414) 595-2600 or write;&#13;
Linda Madsen, Scholarship coordinator, P.O. Box 2000, Kenosha,&#13;
WI. 53141-2000.&#13;
11 • Free UW-Parkside Lecture Explores Issue of Life on&#13;
Mars Three university professors will discuss the evidence of&#13;
life on Mars during a free noon lecture at UW-Parkside, Friday,&#13;
Sept. 20.&#13;
The lecture, "Life on Mars: The Cylinder Unscrews," will be&#13;
held in Room 103 of Greenquist Hall. The lecture is part of the&#13;
University's 1996 Space Science Lecture Series, sponsored by&#13;
the University's Chemistry Department. -&#13;
Uw-Parkside's presenters will be: Vera Kolb, professor of&#13;
chemistry, who has studied the origins of life; Gregory Mayer,·&#13;
assistant professor of biological sciences and evolutionary biologist,&#13;
and Richard Judge, associate professor of chemistry and&#13;
spectroscopist (studies molecules with special instruments).&#13;
From 1992-94, Kolb and five other scientists working on a $5&#13;
million NASA grant in San Diego, studied the origins of life, trying&#13;
to isolate self-replicating molecules.&#13;
The issue of life on Mars received national attention in early&#13;
August after scientists from NASA and Stanford University&#13;
found evidence inside a Martian meteorite that tentatively identified&#13;
signs of life.&#13;
For more information, call the UW-Parkside Chemistry&#13;
Department at (414) 595-2326.&#13;
• Free Lecture To Outline Political, Social Changes in&#13;
Russia "Russia: Elections and Other Disturbances" will be discussed&#13;
by a UW-Parkside Russian historian and analyst during&#13;
a free public lecture at UW-Parkside, Wednesday, Sept. 25.&#13;
The lecture, part of the University's Soup and Substance&#13;
Lecture Series. will be held at noon in Room 104 of the Student&#13;
Union, located at the far north end of the main campus complex.&#13;
Free bread and soup will be served. Free parking will be available&#13;
in all university lots.&#13;
Oliver Hayward, assistant professor of history at UWParks&#13;
ide, will be the speaker. He will discuss the social, economic&#13;
and political challenges facing Russia after the breakup of the&#13;
Soviet Union. Hayward will be joined by Sandra Knorr of Racine&#13;
and Richard Karwatka of Kenosha, who both participated in the&#13;
March UW-Parkside Study 'Ibur of Russia and Hungary.&#13;
Haywood teaches a variety of classes on Russia, Soviet and&#13;
post-Soviet studies and has coordinated 13 trips to Russia and&#13;
Eastern Europe over the past 16 years.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
the Lectures and Fine Arts Committee. FQr more information,&#13;
call the Information Center at (414) 595-2345.&#13;
Possible Reasons for&#13;
Shortfall Cited&#13;
• Ranger News Staff&#13;
Report&#13;
Fewer returning students and&#13;
better job opportunities may&#13;
account for the current enrollment&#13;
shortfall at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks ide, .&#13;
According to exit interviews&#13;
conducted by the University,&#13;
about 47 percent of those students&#13;
eligible to return are&#13;
'stopouts" who say they intend&#13;
to enroll again in a semester or&#13;
two; about 33 percent plan to&#13;
transfer and 17 percent are&#13;
uncertain of their future education&#13;
plans.&#13;
The proportion of those students&#13;
not returning due to&#13;
transfer (33 percent) closely correlates&#13;
with the proportion of&#13;
new students (37 percent) who,&#13;
at the time of enrollment,&#13;
reported on the UCLA Survey of&#13;
Freshman Cooperative&#13;
Institutional Research Program&#13;
(CIRP) that they never intended&#13;
to complete a degree at UWParkside&#13;
but to transfer.&#13;
Of those students "stopping&#13;
out" or who are uncertain of&#13;
their future education plans, 30&#13;
percent say their reasons for&#13;
doing so are personal. Roughly&#13;
40 percent cited financial or&#13;
employment reasons for not&#13;
returning at the present time.&#13;
Studies have shown that in&#13;
recent years, that UWParkside's&#13;
enrollment has fallen&#13;
around the same time when the&#13;
economy is strong and unemployment&#13;
low.&#13;
In addition, the number of students&#13;
receiving federal financial&#13;
aid at UW-Parkside since 1992-&#13;
93 has increased nearly 25 percent&#13;
and loans as a financial aid&#13;
source have increased greatly.&#13;
Sources also indicated that&#13;
many students may not have&#13;
the resources or may be "leery"&#13;
of taking on an even greater&#13;
debt to pay for college.&#13;
Studies have shown that&#13;
UW-Parkside is currently&#13;
enrolling more women and students&#13;
of color than in previous&#13;
years. In 1995-96, women made&#13;
up 59 percent of student enrollment&#13;
compared to 49 percent in&#13;
1986-87. In 1995-96, students&#13;
of color made up 12.7' percent of&#13;
student enrollment compared to&#13;
6.7 percent in 1986-86.&#13;
ersity of Wiscons&#13;
Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-&#13;
2000&#13;
14) 595-2287&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
Ass!. News Editor&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Scoll Malik&#13;
Freshmen Are People, Too:&#13;
OMSA Mentorship Program&#13;
matters concerning self esteem,&#13;
social skills, conflicts with professors&#13;
or roommates and job&#13;
searches.&#13;
With the guidance of the&#13;
OMSA office and director&#13;
Anthony Brown, the mentoring&#13;
program is designed to provide a&#13;
supportive experience for the&#13;
personal and intellectual development&#13;
of the underrepresented&#13;
racial/ethnic first year student.&#13;
The specific objectives are to&#13;
provide a continuing orientation&#13;
to the University and community&#13;
life, to help students develop&#13;
a sense of belonging, to help students&#13;
identify positively with&#13;
• Derek Bishop&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
According to The American&#13;
Heritage Dictionary, a 'mentor is&#13;
" a wise and trusted counselor or&#13;
teacher."&#13;
In Greek mythology, a mentor&#13;
was a trusted counselor into&#13;
whose care Odysseus placed his&#13;
son Telemachus. In this role,&#13;
mentor was a surrogate parent,&#13;
teacher and protector.&#13;
The Office of Multicultural&#13;
Affairs (OMSA) has initiated a&#13;
mentor program for the 1996&#13;
fall semester for students with&#13;
the University by demonstrating&#13;
a genuine concern for them,&#13;
and to inspire students through&#13;
moral support.&#13;
The long term objectives of&#13;
the mentoring program are to&#13;
increase student retention and&#13;
provide an ongoing orientation&#13;
to all aspects of the University.&#13;
Faculty and staff mentors have&#13;
set numerous individual goals&#13;
and objectives,. and have&#13;
planned many activities for the&#13;
students. For more information&#13;
contact the OMSA office, in&#13;
WYLL182.&#13;
Health&#13;
office&#13;
move&#13;
continued&#13;
from page I&#13;
Barbara Larson (left) and Marcy Cayo of the Student Counseling&#13;
Office in Molinaro 0124.&#13;
They are concerned about whether or not&#13;
students will be able to find the new facility and&#13;
if they will utilize the counseling services as&#13;
they have in the past.&#13;
Barbara wondered if enough students will&#13;
learn about their new location: ''Will we be able&#13;
to communicate to enough people to utilize the&#13;
service to let them know that we're down&#13;
here? Because there are students who don't&#13;
even know we're here on the main campus."&#13;
"Our concern is making sure people utilize&#13;
the service; that we're able to keep people&#13;
aware that we exist, where we are , and that&#13;
we're a valuable service," explained Marcy.&#13;
Barbara and Marcy emphasized that the&#13;
counseling services are very valuable to students&#13;
and they hope students will continue to&#13;
utilize and take advantage of their free services,&#13;
which are paid for through segregated&#13;
fees. They also mentioned that to see someone&#13;
in the community would cost between $85-$95&#13;
an hour. Therefore, ten sessions with one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's counselors would save a student&#13;
almost $900.&#13;
An additional advantage to Parkside's&#13;
counseling services is the short waiting period&#13;
to meet with a counselor.&#13;
"You may come in and have to wait only&#13;
two or three days."&#13;
Marcy then addressed the fact that in the&#13;
In Mem''''J of John C. Sandstrom&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AI Heppner&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Amber Nichols&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Julia Ingram&#13;
Copy Editors Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Columnists C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
Smith, Corey Mandley, Morgan&#13;
Harcey&#13;
Reporters Kerri Bachler, Becky&#13;
Schlevensky&#13;
Advisor Roseann Mason&#13;
Ranger News is published&#13;
every Thursday throughout&#13;
the semester by students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide, who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial&#13;
policy and content.&#13;
Subscriptions are available&#13;
at of $10 for 28 issues.&#13;
Member of the Associated&#13;
Collegiate Press.&#13;
community you usually cannot get in to see a&#13;
counselor immediately, and generally you're&#13;
put on a waiting list before you can even get&#13;
into meet with a counselor.&#13;
How do students know whether or not they&#13;
need these services?&#13;
Barbara Larson answered, "I think if people&#13;
have issues which are interfering with their&#13;
lives, then they know they need help of some&#13;
sort. There's something going on that Interferes&#13;
with attaining their goals in life."&#13;
Marcy explained that the services cover&#13;
many issues.&#13;
"Academically, personally, socially, in your&#13;
relationship Or if things aren't going the way&#13;
you want them to. We see everything from, IMy&#13;
roommate is driving me crazy,' to depression, to&#13;
some severe mental illness, to sexual assault."&#13;
'1b those students who may be reluctant to&#13;
seek counseling services, Marcy emphasized&#13;
the confidentiality aspect, "Not only is it confidential,&#13;
but it. is not tied to your academic&#13;
record in any way, shape, or form."&#13;
Once the Student Counceling Office moves&#13;
to its new location Marcy believes it may be&#13;
somewhat of a challenge for students to see&#13;
them, particularly if students need to see one of&#13;
the counselors between classes, and Barbara&#13;
stated that "more of a commitment will be necessary&#13;
for students to stay with counseling."&#13;
Resident Hall Advisors&#13;
Beef Up Staff&#13;
• Becky Schlevensky&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
The beginning of another&#13;
school year introduced two new&#13;
residence hall coordinators and&#13;
nine new residence hall advisors.&#13;
Seniors Arlette Kambwa&#13;
and Jeff Rhein were appointed&#13;
Resident Advisors (RA) coordinators.&#13;
Sergio Correa, Jennifer&#13;
Crum, Stephanie Goth,&#13;
Stephanie Hess, Jamilaisha&#13;
Nicholson, Charles Paksi,&#13;
Steven Proesel, Randy&#13;
Bunders and LaShawn&#13;
Stanton were assigned to each&#13;
housing unit as RAs.&#13;
The RA training week&#13;
which was led by Steve WaIner,&#13;
Arlette Kambwa and Jeff&#13;
Rhein, took place from Aug. 25-&#13;
30. The training concentrated&#13;
on programming (holding&#13;
activities for residents.) Each&#13;
RA will be responsible for&#13;
putting on one activity for each&#13;
.. six issues which make up the&#13;
"Wellness Wheel"--education,&#13;
occupation, intelligence, physical,&#13;
spiritual and social.&#13;
Because the campus community&#13;
includes individuals of&#13;
all races and sexual preferences,&#13;
diversity will be dealt&#13;
with daily. The RAs will try to&#13;
establish an atmosphere of&#13;
acceptance and respect.&#13;
"You don't earn respect by&#13;
being a certain race, gender, or&#13;
sexual preference, but by the&#13;
way you present yourself." said&#13;
Stephanie Hess.&#13;
With the RAs working&#13;
along with the RA coordinators,&#13;
they hope to have a safe,&#13;
healthy, problem-free year.&#13;
However, if conflicts between&#13;
roommates do arise, HAs will&#13;
be available for mediation. The&#13;
main goal will be to "provide a&#13;
healthy living environment for&#13;
students by enforcing policies&#13;
of housing and the university,"&#13;
said Jamilaishia Nicholson.&#13;
Women's Softball Fleld&#13;
under Construction&#13;
•Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Construction for the new UW-Parkside's women softball field is underway.&#13;
Ground breaking on the new $170,000 complex started in late August with completion&#13;
scheduled for spring of 1997.&#13;
Dr. Lenny Laver explained the need for a new field.&#13;
"The other field located in Petrified Springs Park, there was not fence, and it was not ft for&#13;
a top ranked team's varsity field; when the field is finished it will be the best women's fast pich&#13;
softball field in the state," stated Klaver.&#13;
The new filed will ,be located just eaxt of the Pbysical Education Building. The softball facility&#13;
will have two fields that will be fenced in, batting cages, concession stands, picnic area, press&#13;
bos, seating sections, and luxury boxes.&#13;
A dead&#13;
Wood alci:&gt;hO&#13;
destru .- '.&#13;
distilling&#13;
A small,&#13;
Methyls&#13;
Prope~y);&#13;
methyl alc ..&#13;
methanol;,&#13;
alcohol has&#13;
and is cOIRtl~~'~\~:;,i!;l\&#13;
How it is made:;', &lt;;P,&#13;
Methanol is crSi'itli'd''±&#13;
at a temperature ocr 1&#13;
148°F. Distillingm1.l$t}&#13;
be at least 158°F kL d&#13;
make drinkable .:.:\'&#13;
alcohol. " ;&#13;
How much Is deadly?;&#13;
1 ounce: Dangerous&#13;
3 ounces: Lethal&#13;
SOURCE: UmeA University Hospital&#13;
~*&#13;
1996 • page 41&#13;
~. .., = :J&#13;
Tuition Up Five Percent&#13;
• Kerri Bachler&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside students will be paying&#13;
a five percent tuition increase for the 1996-97 academic year.&#13;
Tuition and fees for full-time resident undergraduates are now&#13;
$2,522.90, including $3.78 for segregated fees and $1.90 for the&#13;
United Council student government fee.&#13;
Full time nonresident undergraduates' tuition and fees total&#13;
$7,986.90.&#13;
The increase was approved by the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System Board of Regents during its June meeting.&#13;
~~~- M-E&#13;
-~~;t;iqnoews media&#13;
;~il~ppeal more tq,men1&gt;qm&#13;
',iliA PllW survey shows that*i91nen relY \"&#13;
'dt-_,Ii9$~thanmen, on a vari :&lt; of&gt; ·f ews v,' "" .~i;"._ ';:::~,:,'~J&#13;
,ij~~mq~ig~ibews sources&#13;
'ilillililli:l.i~~ii~ll!;f!~,Newspapers . 16% 19%&#13;
A;1:;t.!9j;jl1Jj1~§,M'B.R*~fjL¥jlltflmf1Jlliifw§I[%11&#13;
./Y·'&#13;
i:i;j';;;;i!l!:iiiiI#?l&#13;
AND MEDIA&#13;
SOURCE: Roper poll for lhe Media Studies Forum of&#13;
2,007 registered voters, Jan 19-Feb. 10, 1996. margin&#13;
of error 2%&#13;
Faculty and Students&#13;
Featured in Art Walk&#13;
A University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
member and several graduates are featured in the&#13;
Sixth Street Art Walk on Sept. 21, in downtown&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Participating businesses, each within a short&#13;
walk of each other and identified by balloons outside&#13;
their storefronts, hold a day-long open house&#13;
starting at 10 a.m., with receptions for the artists&#13;
or book signings in each business starting at 6&#13;
p.m. until closing.&#13;
Parkside talent is featured at The Old Book&#13;
Corner, 312 6th St. which celebrates Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with a collection of 19th Century harbor&#13;
survey maps and engravings of the cities and the&#13;
work of Parkside professor Dennis Bayuzick and&#13;
Parkside graduate Gabriela Pettit. They form the&#13;
Kenosha-based Purple Parable Press. Several&#13;
other Parks ide graduates are participating&#13;
including Michael Schumacher, who is now a freelance&#13;
writer, and will autograph his books on Eric&#13;
Clapton and Phil Ochs.&#13;
Racine poet and UW-Parkside English and&#13;
History major Elizabeth Katch will autograph her&#13;
latest book appearance. Susan McIntyre, an&#13;
actress who majored in Dramatic Arts at UWParkside&#13;
will sing folk songs in the evening.&#13;
Other stops on the Art Walk include: Brandt's&#13;
Jewelers, 207 6th St. featuring the unique pottery&#13;
of Julie Schwartz whose work includes handcoiled,&#13;
raku, and Native American.&#13;
Ace &amp; Bubba's Treasure Hunters, 2186th St.&#13;
features Joyce Ottum's watercolors. Vintage&#13;
Jewelers Ltd. 403 6th St. showcases the work of&#13;
six local artists: watercolors by Alice Grudzinski,&#13;
Carla Burks, Lyle Peters, Ed and Don Donowski&#13;
and space art and oils by 'Ibm Hunt. Centre City,&#13;
418 6th St. offers a combined show of drawings,&#13;
paintings and photography by Vincent E.&#13;
Gonzales and Denise Zingg. The Cobblestone Ltd.&#13;
415 6th St. has gathered the work of nine artists&#13;
for a special showing. Floral watercolors by Mary&#13;
Burant, blown glass by Dave Drewek, 3-dimensional&#13;
ceramics by Manne Haug, hand-turned&#13;
wood vessels by Larry Jameson, pottery by Kevin&#13;
Pearson, handmade paper by Georgia Kroll and&#13;
Helen Rusk, fiber art by Nancy Justus, and transparent&#13;
watercolors by Jean Thielen.&#13;
Flowers by Walter, 503 6th St. offers a variety&#13;
oflocal artists, including works by Jonie Hostings,&#13;
Barbara Salman, Michael Nitsch, Jean Rognlie,&#13;
Arth Grebetz, M.J. Lorentzen, Rubon Pulda, Marj&#13;
Lacock and M.P. Marion.&#13;
VOLUNTEER&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES:&#13;
RACINE POLICE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
BE AN OUTREACH&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE AT THE&#13;
COMMUNITY INFORMATION&#13;
CENTER AT REGENCY MALL.&#13;
FRI. 10-2, 2-5 OR5-8 OR SAT.1-&#13;
5 OR5-8. GREET PUBLIC,HAND&#13;
OUT INFO. AND OTHER OFFICE&#13;
DUTIES. SEE CAROL IN&#13;
VOLUNTEEROFFICE - WYLLD175.&#13;
EMERGENCY! ESL ADULT&#13;
CLASSROOM HELPER NEEDED AT&#13;
THE SPANISH CENTER IN&#13;
KENOSHA. BEGIN OCT. 7TH.&#13;
MUST KNOW HOW TO SPEAK&#13;
SPANISH. MOTIVATED STUDENTs.&#13;
FuN TOWORKWITH.SEE&#13;
CAROLINTHECAREERCENTER.&#13;
ACTMTY AIDE FOR DAY·&#13;
BREAK PROGRAM AT&#13;
WESTOSHA COMMUNITY&#13;
CENTER NEAR BRISTOL. HELP&#13;
PEOPLE WITH ALZHEIMER'S OR&#13;
RELATED DEMENTIA ON&#13;
TUESDAYS OR FRIDAYS&#13;
BETWEEN10 A.M. AND 2 P.M.&#13;
MUST BE CARING AND SENSITIVE.&#13;
SIGN UP IN VOLUNTEER&#13;
OFFICE.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Museum Seeks&#13;
KYF ACTIVITY COUN- Volunteers&#13;
SELOR FOR AFTER SCHOOL&#13;
PROGRAM AT ONE OF SEVEN&#13;
SCHOOLS IN THE KENOSHA&#13;
AREA. VOLUNTEER WITH ELEMENTARY&#13;
AGE CHILDREN TWO&#13;
HOURS A WEEK. HAVE DESIRE TO&#13;
HELP AND HAVE STRONG COMMUNICATION&#13;
SKILLS. POLICE&#13;
CHECKS. SIGN UP TODAY.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS:&#13;
TEEN ROCK CONCERT&#13;
SUPERVISORS:SAT., SEPT. 21ST&#13;
BETWEEN6:00·10:30 P.M.ATTHE&#13;
YMCA IN RACINE. INVITE A&#13;
FIUEND AND HAVE FUN.&#13;
WINSLOW SCHOOL OPEN&#13;
HOUSE IN RACINE. TuESDAY,&#13;
SEPT. 24TH FROM5:30-8:00 P.M.&#13;
HELP MAKE AND SELL POPCORN,&#13;
NACHOS, AND BU'ITONS.&#13;
SEE CAROL ENGBERG IN THE&#13;
VOLUNTEER OFFICE OR CALL&#13;
595·2011 FOR MORE INFORMA·&#13;
TION.&#13;
If you like working with people&#13;
of all ages and are interested in&#13;
providing a valuable service to&#13;
the community, then you have&#13;
the right ingredients for being a&#13;
volunteer at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum. Give some of your&#13;
time, talents and enthusiasm&#13;
while meeting new people,&#13;
acquiring new knowledge and&#13;
giving back to the community.&#13;
Several volunteer positions have&#13;
openings including the "Host"&#13;
program, special events volunteers,&#13;
and program presenters.&#13;
Training for the volunteers who&#13;
work with schools and other&#13;
groups at the Museum will be&#13;
held on Tuesday mornings for 8&#13;
weeks beginning September 24.&#13;
Anyone interested in volunteering&#13;
at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum should call Nancy&#13;
Mathews at 653-4140 Monday-&#13;
Friday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. to&#13;
schedule an interview.&#13;
Calendar of&#13;
events&#13;
National Hispanic Heritage Month&#13;
Currently -Thursday 26 - Diverse Image&#13;
Distinct Form: Crafts from the&#13;
Collection of the Wustum Museum of&#13;
Art on display in the CART ge;tllery&#13;
open&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 11-5 &amp; Tue.-Wed. 11-8.&#13;
Thursday 19 - Ranger meeting at 12:15,&#13;
all staff &amp; interested writers p1ease&#13;
attend! .&#13;
.Friday 20 - Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) meeting&#13;
at noon in CART 129.&#13;
Friday 20 - "Poetry in Music" Tribute to&#13;
the life of Chris Sandstrom at Carthage&#13;
College in the Food for Thought Cafe.&#13;
Friday 20 - Accent on Enrichment Series&#13;
"Swingle Singers" in CART Theatre at 7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Friday 20 - Homecoming sign-up in&#13;
Union 209, Deadline tocfay!&#13;
Saturday 21 - Autumn Begins!&#13;
Tuesday 24 - Music Club meeting at&#13;
3:15 p.m. in CART 105.&#13;
Wednesday 25 - Noon Concert Series&#13;
Recital in CART D-118;Brassworks&#13;
Brass Quintet.&#13;
Wednesday 25 - S.O.c. Recruitment Fair&#13;
9 a.m. - 3 p.rn. Mainplace&#13;
Wednesday 25 - Film "Cable Guy" at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema&#13;
Former UW-Parkside student and' author Michael Schumacher&#13;
promoted his recently published biography on the internationally&#13;
acclaimed folksinger-activist Phil Ochs, entitled There But for&#13;
Fortune: The Life of Phil Ochs. A book signing took place at The&#13;
Little Professor Book Center, 7310 Green Bay Rd. Kenosha, on&#13;
b The 1996-97 series is as follows:&#13;
Saturday afternoon, Sept. 14th. Other biographies written y Persuasion (England, 1995) Sept, 19-22&#13;
Schumacher include Dharma Lion: A Biography of Allen The APU Trilogy (India)&#13;
Ginsberg and Crossroads: The Life and Music of Eric Pather Panchali, (1955) Oct. 10-13;&#13;
Clapton. The Kenoshan is presently writing a biography on Aparajito,(1956); Oct. 17-20; and&#13;
Francis Ford Coppola. The World of APU, (1959) Oct. 24-27&#13;
L ...J The Secret of Roan Inish (Ireland, 1994) Nov. 7-10&#13;
Adam's Rib (Russia, 1992) Nov. 21-24&#13;
Lamerica (Italy, 1995) Dec, 5-8&#13;
Antonia's Line (Netherlands, 1995) Jan.-Feb. 2&#13;
Belle de Jour (France, 1967) Feb. 13-16&#13;
The Flower of My Secret (Spain, 1995) Feb.27-March2&#13;
Vanya on 42nd Street (USA, 1994) March 13-16&#13;
Two Friends (New Zealand, 1986) April 3-6&#13;
The White Balloon (Iran, 1955) April 17-20&#13;
I Don't Want to Talk About It (Argentina, i994) May 1-4&#13;
Frankie Starlight (Ireland, 1995) May 15-18&#13;
IL Postino (Italy, 1995) May 22-25&#13;
Entertainment Book Sales&#13;
Saving money seems to be harder than ever these days. But not if you've purchased&#13;
your 1997 "Entertainment Book" through Big BrothersIBig Sisters of Greater Racine.&#13;
This coupon book is full 0£2-£or-1 discount coupons that you can really use! The coupons&#13;
are good on everything from sporting events and movies to fine dining and theater tickets.&#13;
There are also national discounts on travel, hotels, airline tickets and more! The&#13;
book makes a great Christman gift, too!&#13;
The cost of the book is $35.00. And you can recoup this in no time. For example, the&#13;
$24,00in free gas at Clark and Kwik Trip and the $12,00off at the Spinning Wheel&#13;
restaurant alone will pay for the cost of the book. Plus, your purchase through Big&#13;
Brothers/Big Sisters helps the agencyraise funds needed to match kids with adult volunteer&#13;
Big Brothers and Big Sisters.&#13;
Purchase your Entertainment Coupon Book today by calling Big BrotherslBig&#13;
Sisters at 637-7625. Big BrotherslBig Sisters is a non-profit, youth-serving organization,&#13;
and a member of Big BrotherslBig Sisters of America and Racine United Way and&#13;
the Burlington United Fund, ,&#13;
Free Blood Pressure Screenings&#13;
The American Red Cross Lakeshores Chapter offers monthly free blood pressure&#13;
screenings. Times and dates remaining in 1996 are: noon to 2:00 p.m. on the fourth&#13;
Mondayof the month, September 23, October28, and November25.&#13;
Screenings take place in the lower level classroom of the Lakeshores Chapter 4521&#13;
Taylor Ave., in Racine. No appointments are necessary. '&#13;
Definition: INTE::RNET\in-ter-net\ n [ME web fro]&#13;
~:_Away to communicate with other students while&#13;
giving the appearance of doing something productive.&#13;
. R~d Light Distnct (Se~): LINT (Music)&#13;
CHA~- (Meaningless ConversatIon) SChOlarships: (Money)&#13;
www.takeme.com&#13;
an ONLINE student cOlTlmunily&#13;
moer 19, 1996.&#13;
Foreign Fam Festival&#13;
Si.xteen err'toica Ily-acclaimed for,eigRn'b""ThfilmsS inclUding . -Th White Balloon" "Adam s I, e ecret ofRaon "PersuasIOn e 'M S t" d"Tw F'&#13;
I . h ""Be IIe' de Jour " "The Flower of y ecre an a nends'&#13;
W~IiSll,be shown as part' of the 15, th annual Foreign Film Series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkslde.&#13;
Season ticket holders have the option of viewing the films during&#13;
one 0f r' our screenings' . Thursdays and AlFlrifdialys 'aItI b7:30 p,m"&#13;
Satur days at 8 P .m' and Sundays at 2 p.m, ms.Wk1 e shownin&#13;
h UW-P kside Union Cinema Theatre. Season tic et holders will&#13;
tbeearallowed to bring a guest to three showi.ngs at no additi onaI charge.&#13;
The series includes films from England, Russia, Italy~ India,&#13;
Spain, United States and New Zealand. Films not ill Enghsh will&#13;
have subtitles,&#13;
Featured in this year's schedule is the APU Trilogy, a work by&#13;
Ravi Shankar and restored through the efforts of the Merchant and&#13;
Ivory Foundations, The works trace the hero's life from birth to manhood.&#13;
Together the films have been hailed as one of the richest viewing&#13;
experiences in the history of cinema,&#13;
THE ILLUSTRATED BIBLE&#13;
Does God 'Tempt' Us?&#13;
....:Every perfect gift comes from above, from the Father of&#13;
the ll.glusof heaven. With him there is no variation, no piny of&#13;
passing shadows. ,.&#13;
-James 1:17&#13;
What's wron~ with thinking that occasionally God "tempts-&#13;
~ ~olest c::faith? ~~. says St. James: it is dangerous to feel&#13;
a W8Y~ . ause we risk seemg ourselves as innocent victims&#13;
of a sadistic and tormenting God. Worse yet. it gives us a&#13;
chance to show responsibility for our actions onto God's&#13;
~~o~lders. 8 sort of reverse twist on the old "Devil made me do&#13;
It Idea ', True faith involves accepting responsibility for our&#13;
own actions. Only then can we understand God's forgiveness.&#13;
Cl996 by King Fealurcs Synd.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
.... ....,.~~~"""'(,. a gay mannus&#13;
iV 5E.A5OI.l and gay men suffer.&#13;
mosr R£AUVSTlNK!&#13;
Faculty and Students&#13;
featured in Art Walk&#13;
A University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty member and several graduates are featured in the&#13;
Sixth Street Art Walk on Saturday, September 21, in downtown Racine.&#13;
Participating businesses, each within a short walk of each other and identified by balloons outside&#13;
their storefronts, hold a day-long open house starting at 10 a.m. with receptions for the artists or&#13;
book signings in each business starting at 6 p.m. until closing.&#13;
Parkside talent is featured at The Old Book Corner, 312 6th St. which. celebrates Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with a collection of 19th Century harbor survey maps and engravings of the cities' and&#13;
the work of Parkside professor Dennis Bayuzick and Parkside graduate Gabriela Pettit. They form&#13;
the Kenosha-based Purple Parable Press. Several other Parkside graduates are participating&#13;
including Michael Schumacher, who is now a free-lance writer, and will autograph his books on llIo&#13;
Eric Clapton and Phil Ochs.&#13;
Racine poet and Parkside English and History major, Elizabeth Katch; will autograph her latest&#13;
book appearance. Susan McIntyre, an actress who majored in Dramatic Arts at Parkside will sing&#13;
folk songs in the evening.&#13;
Other stops on the Art Walk include: Brandt's Jewelers, 207 6th St. featuring unique pottery of&#13;
Julie Schwartz whose work includes hand coiled, raku, and Native American.&#13;
Ace &amp; Bubba's Treasure Hunters, 218 6th St. features ,Joyce ottum's watercolors. Vintage&#13;
Jewelers Ltd. 403 6th St. showcases the work of six local artists: watercolors by Alice Grudzinski,&#13;
Carla Burks, Lyle Peters, Ed and Don Donowski and space art and oils by 'Ibm Hunt. Centre City,&#13;
418 6th St. offers a combined show of drawings, paintings and photography by Vincent E.&#13;
Gonzales and Denise Zingg. The Cobblestone Ltd. 415 6th St. has gathered the work of nine&#13;
artists for a special showing. Floral watercolors by Mary Bur-ant, blown glass by Dave Drewek, 3-&#13;
dimensional ceramics by Monne Haug, hand-turned wood vessels by Larry Jameson, pottery by&#13;
Kevin Pearson, handmade paper by Georgia Kroll and Helen Rusk, fiber art by Nancy Justus, and&#13;
transparent watercolors by Jean Thielen. Flowers by Walter, 503 6th St. offers a variety oflocal&#13;
artists including works by Janie Hostings, Barbara Salman, Michael Nitsch, Jean Rognlie, Arth&#13;
Grebetz, M.J. Lorentzen, Rubon Pulda, Marj Lacock and M.P. Marion.&#13;
l1omEWORK?_ SiLlD'lING? ..&#13;
liJEtL 1: Am VERY PROUD&#13;
OF~ 601\l! ".....n--,&#13;
I Walk Because ...&#13;
lam&#13;
a woman of the suburbs,&#13;
securely nestled in a row of fine&#13;
houses,&#13;
a faithful one-man woman&#13;
happily married&#13;
to an adoring one-woman man,&#13;
lovingly nurturing&#13;
two beautiful children&#13;
dressed in the latest styles&#13;
and educated in quality schools,&#13;
merrily following the current&#13;
trends&#13;
and surrounding myself&#13;
with many fine friends&#13;
who are just like me...&#13;
lam&#13;
a woman of the suburbs,&#13;
and I am&#13;
walking for AIDS.&#13;
People look at me askance&#13;
and ask me&#13;
"why?".&#13;
I tell them ...&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because Ihave known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a womanand&#13;
women suffer.&#13;
I walk Tor AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a gay manand&#13;
gay men suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a straight manand&#13;
straigh] men suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a teen-agerand&#13;
teen-agers suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have know and loved&#13;
a childand&#13;
children suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS'&#13;
because Ihave known and&#13;
loved&#13;
a babyand&#13;
babies suffer.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because I have known and .&#13;
loved&#13;
a God of Love, Acceptance, and&#13;
Mercy&#13;
falsely accused of being a&#13;
god of wrath, exclusion, and&#13;
retributionand&#13;
God suffers.&#13;
I walk for AIDS&#13;
because&#13;
Death is my enemy&#13;
and the ease of suffering&#13;
is my calling-because&#13;
in reality,&#13;
lAM MORE&#13;
than just a sheltered&#13;
woman of the suburbs-&#13;
I AM AWOMAN - GAY MAN -&#13;
STRAIGHT MAN - TEENAGERCHILD&#13;
AND BABY&#13;
OF GOD&#13;
ALL ...&#13;
AND I SUFFER.&#13;
by Mary Ann Logic&#13;
Logic is co-chairing an AIDS&#13;
WALK WISCONSIN team from&#13;
St. Edward's Parish in Racine.&#13;
She is also a student at UW·&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
TODAV'S iiJ~ C&#13;
Aurora&#13;
HealthCare&#13;
M , __ ',11 ~ ~ ~ E E&#13;
JOURNAL SENTINEl&#13;
~WKTI Favorite Music. Most Fun.&#13;
UB UNITED AIRLINES&#13;
-&#13;
"'l7Jber 19, 1996·page~&#13;
Voting&#13;
Day Is&#13;
Near:·Are&#13;
You&#13;
Ready?&#13;
Observations: What We Are Missing&#13;
arrangement I defraud you, so what. Aftekrall, tl n:e';:yd ::~:&#13;
money to make a ns y.ven ur. '&#13;
iustified my means. This attitude ends&#13;
with either a surivial of the fittest mentality&#13;
or anarchy (as in the Bible "every&#13;
man did that which seem right unto&#13;
him"). Either one is socially and morally&#13;
repugnant.&#13;
One thing that worries me about society rightC{fK.~&#13;
now is its lack of a spiritual foundation. I find that"J;&#13;
as I get older I gain ever greater solace ~om ID!!';:1t,'-&#13;
faith. Yet, if you have faith in a higher being, or 1ft,::::?:'&#13;
you belive that maybe, just maybe your existance&#13;
on earth is due to more than random chance, a&#13;
large society considers you a religious kook. Why?&#13;
Is that what we have been called on as&#13;
If you look closely, you can find some people who human beings to be? I think and hope&#13;
sense than all is not well. In the past six months I not. I would rather live a life that counts&#13;
.have noted that Georgie Ann Gyer, Ellen for something more. I would like to see&#13;
Goodman, George WIn and a handful of othe~s one of our politicians sink the money,&#13;
have bemoaned the lack of spiritual guideposts In time and resources into making the&#13;
society. New York Times columnist Maureen u~ban hellholes of this nation's cities liv-&#13;
Dowd has written several pieces recently wonder- . able. My God, if we can go to the moon&#13;
mg about where this nation is heading and if some- C.J. Nelson, Columnist we can sure as hell find where to fix this&#13;
thing is missing. open and oozing wound. Nuts to a 15 percent tax cut. or how&#13;
wonderful Bill Clinton is.&#13;
Aperson's existence is about more than just how much power&#13;
he can amass. Bill Clinton says he feels our pain, yet to quote&#13;
the Bible yet again "a double-minded man is unstable in all&#13;
things, who can trust him?" The Bible also talks about a&#13;
nation's shame in how it treats its downtrodden. It exaults a&#13;
leader of quality and integrity. This is more than just rel~gious&#13;
zealotry. Maybe if we as a nation had not gone on a sel~-lndulgent&#13;
binge for the last thirty years, we .would not b~ reaping the&#13;
seeds that we have sown to the whirlwind. There IS a good and&#13;
necessary place for spirtuality in the nation. It is a salt that s~asones&#13;
society. Without it we lose our flavor and our way. Think&#13;
about it. Talk to you next week.&#13;
Arecent poll shows that most members of the baby boom generation&#13;
seem to have what best can be described as a blase attitude&#13;
concerning drugs and their childrens' use thereof. Actually&#13;
I'm not surprised the Boomer generation is one of the most self&#13;
-centered generation in this nation's history. Instant gr~tifi~ation&#13;
and situational ethics are all that seems to count. Fidelity&#13;
__to a mate, honesty and integrity in ones' business dealings, or&#13;
keeping ones words are all relative. Lie and cheat all you want&#13;
as long as you mean welL&#13;
This nation cannot help but suffer in an era of rampant relativism.&#13;
If all things are only relative, then the following logic&#13;
applies. You give me money to invest for you. If during this&#13;
Maria's Melange: It's Nice To Be&#13;
VVoman&#13;
When does a woman 'become&#13;
woman?&#13;
Is it when her young body shows the&#13;
first signs of reproductive growth? Has&#13;
she become a woman then? Or what&#13;
about when she has her first menstrual&#13;
cycle? Does she qualify at THAT point?&#13;
Is she a woman when her hips decide to&#13;
curve and her breasts make their presence&#13;
known? How about when she turns&#13;
eighteen? Isn't that supposed to signify&#13;
adulthood? Maybe when she's had her&#13;
first love or her first sexual encounter?&#13;
. Is that when it happens? Surely she is&#13;
woman when she weds. Or is she? Of&#13;
course, only a woman can give birth to&#13;
children, but is that true? WIlen does a&#13;
woman reach a place that is called&#13;
"woman?" When does she know, when&#13;
does she feel it?&#13;
When I was sixteen, I had a body&#13;
that told me and the world, I was&#13;
woman. I was reckless, careless and had&#13;
no clue ...but I thought I did. When I was&#13;
eighteen, I was very proud to say, "I'm&#13;
eighteen," because then, everyone would&#13;
know I was woman. I was anxious, inexperienced&#13;
and had no clue ...but .{&#13;
thought I did. When I was twenty-one&#13;
and had perfected the art of saying "yes"&#13;
to men and "no" to myself, I thought I&#13;
was in charge, I thought I was woman.&#13;
When I was twenty-three and I took&#13;
someone else's name and lost my own, I&#13;
felt certain that that rite of passage&#13;
made me woman. But again, I was&#13;
wrong. When I was twenty-four, I would&#13;
trip over myself trying to please my husband,&#13;
my neighbors, my family and&#13;
friends. Wben I was twenty-five and my&#13;
husband took me from my childhood&#13;
roots in Florida and brought me to&#13;
Wisconsin, I thought, "Only a woman&#13;
would support her husband's decision to&#13;
move, putting up no fuss and lending me&#13;
no opinion," but that wasn't true. When I&#13;
was twenty-seven and knew how to cook&#13;
a gourmet meal for a dinner party of&#13;
twelve, sew a button on a shirt in two&#13;
minutes flat, do one month's worth of&#13;
grocery shopping in under one hour and&#13;
with only one hundred dollars then proceed&#13;
to the bedroom for another of life's&#13;
rituals with my husband, I thought I&#13;
was woman, but I was wrong. When I&#13;
was twenty-eight and learned how to&#13;
perfect a fake smile, sexual gratification&#13;
and interest in what others were saying,&#13;
it hit me. I knew something was off; I&#13;
knew my supposed "womaness" had&#13;
NEVER been in place. I turned inward.&#13;
All of a sudden, I started realizing that&#13;
my fantasy of what was woman had been&#13;
imposed on me by family, friends,&#13;
strangers and society's view of my gender&#13;
roles. That's when my true self&#13;
began emerging. I began listening to my&#13;
own voice instead of everyone else's. I&#13;
started asking myself, "What do YOU&#13;
think, Maria?" I began looking at my&#13;
relationships, all my relationships, differently.&#13;
As a result, I lost many friends,&#13;
family members and parts of my marriage.&#13;
It turns out, they didn't want to&#13;
know someone who had a mind of her&#13;
own, who didn't care to ask permission&#13;
anymore. I had surrounded myself with&#13;
people who loved me as long as I was&#13;
tending to them and not myself. I guess&#13;
that's what I was taught: a woman takes&#13;
care of the home, the husband. the&#13;
housework. ..but not herself. What a terrible&#13;
lesson.&#13;
In a few weeks I'll be thirty. And,&#13;
although I see perky, young "girls" walking&#13;
to and fro about the campus, I must&#13;
smile ...because I see that they think they&#13;
have all the answers ...but they don't.&#13;
Students who are interested&#13;
in voting in the Nov. 5 election&#13;
can register at the polls on&#13;
Election Day. Students who live&#13;
in the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide residence halls can&#13;
vote at the Somer's Fire Station&#13;
Number 2, 818 12th St. Ynu&#13;
must provide appropriate identification&#13;
(e.g. driver's license)&#13;
and proof of residency (e.g. a&#13;
utility bill with current&#13;
address). Qualified student voters&#13;
can cast their votes in the&#13;
Nov. 5 election for both national&#13;
(President and&#13;
Congress persons) and state candidates&#13;
(state senators, state&#13;
representatives, etc.), Any student&#13;
who is a U.S. citizen and at&#13;
least eighteen years of age but&#13;
who won't have ten days of residency&#13;
by Nov. 5 can still vote in&#13;
the presidential election, but&#13;
must sign an oath that he/she&#13;
hasn't voted in another voting&#13;
district in this election and can&#13;
only vote for President.&#13;
I smile because I finally know&#13;
how to give myself what I need&#13;
and know how to say. "to hell&#13;
with everyone else." I'm no&#13;
longer caught up in what society&#13;
thinks I should be doing.&#13;
Society hands out poor lessons&#13;
all the time. I don't take orders&#13;
from people anymore and even&#13;
find myself giving them from&#13;
time to time. I've given all of&#13;
my loved ones ultimatums, not&#13;
because I'm a bitch, but&#13;
because I'm done being a doormat.&#13;
They've all receded. I've&#13;
learned how to truly laugh hard&#13;
and feel it throughout my body&#13;
and into my soul, I've come to&#13;
appreciate the notion of a tender&#13;
kiss as opposed to a night of&#13;
sex with someone named&#13;
"Louie." I enjoy waking up and&#13;
doing exactly the opposite of&#13;
what it was I'd planned to do&#13;
that day. I don't cry over everything&#13;
anymore; I just move on.&#13;
Instead of trying to convince&#13;
people to see my views, I simply&#13;
voice my opinion and walk&#13;
... Maria's Melange,&#13;
cont. on page 11&#13;
--&#13;
.Scott Malik&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
I was at a party with my&#13;
ex (she wasn't my ex at the&#13;
time, but it was shortly after&#13;
this most wonderful incident&#13;
that she became my ex), and&#13;
we both had a little too much&#13;
to drink. It wasn't long before&#13;
I got accused of everything&#13;
under the sun from wanting&#13;
to sleep with a girl at the&#13;
party to being a big asshole to&#13;
being the one on the grassy&#13;
knoll in Dallas. The thing&#13;
about this particular fight,&#13;
however, is that it wasn't&#13;
between my girlfriend and I.&#13;
We had a crowd of many.&#13;
Someof whom could be heard&#13;
scalping front row seats and&#13;
selling binoculars to those&#13;
unfortunate enough to have&#13;
arrived late.&#13;
Many of you female readers&#13;
will probably say I&#13;
deserved it because I flirted or&#13;
something. (I didn't.) Many of&#13;
my faithful, football-watch-&#13;
He Said, She Said:&#13;
Fighting in Public&#13;
ing, beer-drinking-and-fartin&#13;
g- 0 n -the -c 0 lie h-e n - a-&#13;
Sunday-afternoon manly&#13;
Army supporters will say I&#13;
should have left her there.&#13;
Well, that's what I did. But&#13;
then as I crawled into bed&#13;
something hit me: I was going&#13;
to remember this and she,&#13;
most likely, wouldn't. And it&#13;
was to be my ass if she woke&#13;
up in someone's backyard. So&#13;
I went back and got her and&#13;
she was only more smashed.&#13;
Kids, that was myexperience&#13;
with public hostility and&#13;
it was not good. I can't say it&#13;
is the most comfortable thing&#13;
on Earth. It is difficult to&#13;
watch people scream at each&#13;
other and reveal secrets about&#13;
how the other shaves his (or&#13;
her) back. She throws anything&#13;
within reach at you and&#13;
you have to act like a goalie&#13;
for a hockey team and dodge&#13;
for your life! Keep your cool,&#13;
guys. After all, there are only&#13;
so many things she can whip&#13;
at you at light speed that you&#13;
can't see coming as long as&#13;
you keep a safe distance.&#13;
And then again, from the&#13;
other side, when you are so&#13;
angry with your loved one&#13;
that you just want to deal&#13;
with it NOW you don't really&#13;
care if your mother was there.&#13;
And if anyone cares to contradict&#13;
that, well then you have&#13;
never been that angry.&#13;
Seriously, with great&#13;
anger comes great love. Only&#13;
those closest to us have the&#13;
ability to get-to us that strongly.&#13;
That's the thought to hold&#13;
on to when you can't look her&#13;
in the eyes. Remember how&#13;
much she means to you and&#13;
think of the first time you&#13;
ever saw her. Just love her.&#13;
• Morgan Harcey&#13;
Ranger Columnist&#13;
Here's the scenario. You're out&#13;
with a bunch of your friends when&#13;
two of them, who happen to be dating,&#13;
start to fight. I don't mean to&#13;
have an "argument" or to "quarrel."&#13;
I mean knock 'em down, ring&#13;
the bell for the next round type of&#13;
fight. As a friend, there is nothing&#13;
more uncomfortable than having&#13;
to listen to it. Especially if one or&#13;
both of them start looking to you&#13;
for answers, approvals, or anything&#13;
else. The worst is when to&#13;
step in; or if you should step in at&#13;
aiL&#13;
What I want to know is, why is&#13;
it a necessity for the couple to start&#13;
fighting right there in public? I&#13;
know, some of you might say, "If I&#13;
have something to say, I am going&#13;
to say it and I don't care who's&#13;
around!" First off, nobody likes to&#13;
hear two friends fight. No, I take&#13;
that back. Nobody likes to hear&#13;
anyone fight. Ninety-nine percent&#13;
of tbe people I know feel on edge&#13;
when they hear someone arguing&#13;
and feel even worse when it happens&#13;
between two friends. Unless&#13;
the fighting becomes a weekly ceremony;&#13;
in that case, I would have&#13;
to suggest blowtorch the chain&#13;
because after awhile it gets a little&#13;
dull. Plus, it must get a little&#13;
embarassing when you hear your&#13;
friends tell people, "They always&#13;
fight like that." Second, you could&#13;
risk friendships by trying to get&#13;
other friends involved. Example, a&#13;
situation where you normally hear&#13;
something like this: "Rick said ......"&#13;
or "Tiffany says ....". Who really&#13;
appreciates that?&#13;
Lastly, I don't know one couple&#13;
whom have quietly gone off to be in&#13;
private to fight. Not one couple has&#13;
ever .stepped away to go yell in&#13;
their. car. It's almost like a fight&#13;
would not be the same without&#13;
your friends around. Has anyone&#13;
wondered if fights are less dramatic&#13;
when there is no one around to&#13;
witness it? It is like watching some&#13;
sick contest that no one wants to&#13;
lose. He cuts her down to make&#13;
himself look macho. She does the&#13;
same. She loses her emotional control.&#13;
He manipulates her without&#13;
remorse. "(This does not mean&#13;
there are no women out there who&#13;
manipulate. I've seen some true&#13;
goddesses.)&#13;
In closing, I'd like to suggest&#13;
that if you and your beau tend to&#13;
have a lot of boxing matches that&#13;
you consider your friends. Maybe&#13;
wait until later to fight or if you&#13;
can't hold it in, vacate the preraises.&#13;
Don't ruin everyone else's good&#13;
time. For friends, I would say next&#13;
time a couple, whom just happen&#13;
to be your friends, get into a kick&#13;
boxing match, just tum around,&#13;
and walk away. They should have&#13;
the courtesy not to make everyone&#13;
else uncomfortable.&#13;
Maria's Melange cont.&#13;
from page I 0 _&#13;
away. I examine people more closely&#13;
now and am not afraid to tell&#13;
someone what I think about them&#13;
or anything else. I can still cook,&#13;
but now I don't feel like my acceptance&#13;
into the world of 'womaness"&#13;
requires me to do so. I enjoy conversation&#13;
more now than ever before.&#13;
When I was twenty-one, I didn't&#13;
know how to listen or how to be&#13;
heard. I'm much more sensual now&#13;
and allow myself to feel sexy and&#13;
see that it is not naughty, just&#13;
woman. I know what I like, what I&#13;
don't like and won't accept anything&#13;
less. I'm selfish now, but still&#13;
enjoy giving. I wear what I want,&#13;
do what I want, go where I' want&#13;
and' although I tell some where I'm&#13;
headed, I don't feel as though I'm&#13;
seeking approval from anyone to go&#13;
there. I like getting in the faces of&#13;
people who challenge me; they&#13;
never expect it from a "woman." I&#13;
enjoy showing them that I have, in&#13;
addition to breasts, a mind of my&#13;
own. I am happy to go places by&#13;
myself now, I don't need a man. I&#13;
just happen to choose to be with&#13;
one. All of a sudden, I have choices.&#13;
I feel like I've been liberated from&#13;
my enslaved gender- roles. I choose&#13;
to be what I want, I don't just&#13;
blindly do it because of society. It's&#13;
nice to finally inderstanf myself.&#13;
It's nice to HAVEand MAKE choices.&#13;
It's nice to be woman.&#13;
Get Your Butt Out&#13;
There and Vote!&#13;
-Corey Mandley&#13;
Ranger Columnist&#13;
. Well it's about that time&#13;
for all Americans over the age&#13;
of eighteen to use a powerful&#13;
tool that shapes our society.&#13;
That's right: it's time to vote.&#13;
Now I know what you're&#13;
thinking ."1 don't need to vote,&#13;
what can one stupid vote do?"&#13;
Now, imagine if over 20 million&#13;
Americans took that same attitude&#13;
of "my vote doesn't matter".&#13;
Well, it does happen and&#13;
usually. future generations&#13;
usually end up paying the&#13;
price for such carelessness.&#13;
t Let's look to the past and&#13;
see how much voting meant to&#13;
people. Being of African&#13;
descent, I take voting very&#13;
seriously. My people fought&#13;
since the times of slavery to&#13;
have the right to vote. African&#13;
Americans were beaten and&#13;
even killed in order to be&#13;
d'enied the privilege of voting.&#13;
Ask yourself this question.t'Ia&#13;
the right to vote really worth&#13;
dying over?" It amazes me that&#13;
even after the 1965 Voting&#13;
Rights Act which stated that&#13;
"sex nor race will not have the&#13;
effect of denying or abridging&#13;
the right to vote," I find it very&#13;
hard to believe that even after&#13;
all the hard work and devotion&#13;
that people of all colors put&#13;
into the struggle for the right&#13;
to vote, many today just don't&#13;
care.&#13;
In the present ,voting is a&#13;
very powerful instrument from&#13;
which people can be heard.&#13;
More than ever people need to&#13;
'wake up and look at what our&#13;
nation is facing. There are&#13;
many issues of concerns that&#13;
everyone must face. Welfare&#13;
reform is a hot button issue.&#13;
Many believe that everyone&#13;
should' work in order to survive.&#13;
But others feel that in&#13;
order to dismantle welfare&#13;
there has to be real job opportunities&#13;
after welfare is gone&#13;
or else thousands of children&#13;
will go even deeper into poverty.&#13;
Education cutbacks is a definite&#13;
major in today's politics.&#13;
If more federal cutback laws&#13;
on education are passed, will -&#13;
that be denying a college education&#13;
to teens who cannot&#13;
afford it? Or will such cutbacks&#13;
help reduce Americas already&#13;
tremendous deficit. If you&#13;
don't use your vote on key&#13;
issues such as these .then you&#13;
don't really give a damn what&#13;
happens to the children of the&#13;
future.&#13;
We, as young people, need&#13;
to wake up and smell the coffee.&#13;
If we don't speak our&#13;
minds by using our votes then&#13;
our future looks very gloomy.&#13;
Think about it . Twenty years&#13;
from now our generation will,&#13;
be running this country. If we&#13;
don't intervene with the times&#13;
now at hand then .we are giving&#13;
up on our future. We desperately&#13;
need to stand as one&#13;
as say "We shall control our&#13;
own destinies." In order to&#13;
make this country better we&#13;
have to use our right to vote.&#13;
But in order to use our vote we&#13;
must first register to vote. If&#13;
you don't know how, go to a&#13;
post office and find out how.&#13;
Also, in order to vote you&#13;
should familiarize yourself&#13;
with the issues at hand today,&#13;
If we can get the vote out then&#13;
our voice will be heard. We&#13;
must remember that the&#13;
power in this country is in the&#13;
hands of those who learn how&#13;
to use the system.&#13;
I&#13;
Alternativ•e&#13;
or Individual?&#13;
Amy L. Stindt&#13;
P. ,~nr (',.,1 .&#13;
What is "alternative?" Is it something that defies all "normalcy"&#13;
and enters a style that attracts the, dare I say it&#13;
Freaks? Or is it teenyboppers trying to be so different and&#13;
individ~alistic that, well, they're all the same? I don't know,&#13;
though I wish I did. I always cringed an,d still do whe? someone&#13;
labels me alternative by saying "Youd like him, he s alternative!"&#13;
So? What are the qualifications of this soul? Am I&#13;
alternative because I have my nose pierced and only shop at&#13;
used clothing stores with vintage clothing? Or am I ju~t economically&#13;
smart (minus the $35 I spent for the hole m my&#13;
nose?) ,&#13;
Now that basically every single person has, or doesn t&#13;
have a tatoo branded on them, I guess everyone has made an&#13;
attempt to enter the freakish world of alternativism.&#13;
If alternative has become so mainstream please, I beg of you,&#13;
refrain from titleing me that. However, I'll still keep buying&#13;
the nose rings and shopping for outfits under $10 that's just&#13;
me. It isn't a label I want to be categorized under. It's a personal&#13;
statement.&#13;
Sick of those endless one-liners and mind games? ADVEKTUROUS FEIIALB KEW TO AREA&#13;
Q: Tired of playing "bored"games every Friday nite? SWF, 21, 5'7", athletic, SSM, 22, 6'1", hope-&#13;
Want to find your dream date or just a friend? social drinker. seeking M less romantic, hand-&#13;
A: CU!7EJI rDJletp;I;! 20-25 who loves to some, seeking lady 20-&#13;
dance, qUality time, and 30 mature, outgoing,&#13;
sense of humor a plus! and friendship first.&#13;
There are an estimated 5,000 students who attend UW-Parkside every semester. Now is your chance to&#13;
finally meet some of them. This opportunity is only offered to current Parkside students and will operate&#13;
totally in private! How? If you have an e-mail account, your already half way in finding your ideal date&#13;
or a friend. All you have to do is fill out an application and pay a small processing fee for the entire semesterl&#13;
This service will continue as long as there are students at Parkside. Ranger Ne",. will not be responsible&#13;
for any actions, nor personal issues that may arise among CREATE A DATEI subscribers.&#13;
TO APPLY, TAKE A WALK OVER TO THE RANGER NEWS OFFICE (D-139C&#13;
WYLLIE HALL) AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION TODAY SO YOU COULD&#13;
POSSIBILY TAKE A ROMANTIC MIDNIGHT STROLL THIS EVENINGI&#13;
-&#13;
"Let US find that w.et:itll someone for YOU!"&#13;
one's interests.&#13;
- Check out one of the many social events around campus, such as dances and&#13;
movies in the campus theater.&#13;
- Take a stroll through many of the trails at neighboring "Pet's Park" and check&#13;
out your favorite tree. ' .&#13;
- Join the Ranger Newspaper Staff ...we are always looking for help.&#13;
- Head down to main place and catch up with your friends while joining the&#13;
famous spectator sport of people watching.&#13;
- Check out one of the outstanding Noon Concerts at CART D-IBB. There are&#13;
guest performances as well as those from people right here at UWP. The concerts&#13;
last one hour so you can always make it to your one o'clock class. Please&#13;
no food or drinks allowed.&#13;
- Join one of the many intramural sports teams here at parkside. For more&#13;
info check out the bulletin board just as you come up the steps from the&#13;
union parking lot. -&#13;
- Go out to your car between classes and pretend to leave. Then go back in to&#13;
class. You are sure to be entertained!&#13;
- Support your classmates and your school by attending a sporting .event on&#13;
campus. Parkside has some exciting Men's and Woman's teams this year!&#13;
Whatever you do this semester, be sure to take just a little time to&#13;
get involved on campus and have a little fun, just make sure you get a little&#13;
studying done on the side.&#13;
Geology Students Explore&#13;
the Grand Canyon&#13;
-Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
Students in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's GEOL 0370/0570 course (Field Studies in&#13;
Regional Geology) took a trip to the Grand Canyon this summer. Led by Dr. Gerald Fowler, professor&#13;
of Geology, the trip's aim was to extend beyond the classroom learning experience.&#13;
Before the trip began, students were required to write a paper that was turned into a booklet&#13;
and followed throughout the trip. There was also a workbook to be completed in order to receive&#13;
the three credits.&#13;
The group left on June 15 and headed out on the highway for two weeks of geological education.&#13;
Along the way to the Grand Canyon the explorers made educational stops at museums and&#13;
campgrounds to enhance their learning. After four days of travel the group arrived at the Grand&#13;
Canyon.&#13;
Allison Barta, a geology major, was in awe of the size and age of the canyon upon first sight.&#13;
"1 was completely awestruck," Barta said with excitement, "The fishnu schist was my favorite&#13;
part; it. was all shinney. I got to walk on a lava flow. we saw rocks with images carved into them,&#13;
and it was so huge and old!"&#13;
Jack Miles enjoyed being away from civilization.&#13;
"We spent days in the canyon without being bothered by phones and other people," Miles stated.&#13;
"The climb out was the hardest part," claimed Barta, "But then when you got back up to the&#13;
top, you just looked down and thought 'I can't believe that I was down there."&#13;
What Liz Bienemann took out of the experience was that she could succeed at anything she set&#13;
her mind to.&#13;
"Yourealize that you can get by on your own," Bienemann said. "You drive yourself to do things&#13;
that you didn't think were possible. It&#13;
After their exploration of the Grand Canyon the group headed back home, making more educational&#13;
stops while discussing geology along the way.&#13;
Bienemann added, "Dr. Fowler did a terrific job; he took the time to lead the students, and for&#13;
that I thank him."&#13;
School Daze&#13;
-Aaron Kapellusch&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
By now you have been rudely awakened by the reality that you can't sleep&#13;
until 1 o'clock in the afternoon, but instead you must get up at the crack of&#13;
dawn to make it to your 8 o'clock class. Yes, those lazy, hazy summer days of&#13;
fun and sun are just about as long gone as your savings account is after paying&#13;
tuition and buying books.&#13;
Now it's time to buckle down and hit the books for another semester.&#13;
Whether you are an incoming freshman just starting your college career or ~n&#13;
old pro who has been here for a while. getting back into the groove of school IS&#13;
never easy. But there is hope. With those long hours of studying and reading,&#13;
you deserve to have some fun.&#13;
There are many things on campus to do to take your mind off o~homework.&#13;
Some are blatantly obvious, like the Rec Center under the Umon Square.&#13;
There are countless other things to do on campus to help maintain a healthy&#13;
balance of school and recreation. Here is just a small list of things you can do&#13;
around campus to make your Parkside experience a gr~at one! . . .&#13;
- Keep in touch with your' friends around the world with E-maIl.ItI~ quick,&#13;
easy, and costs about 32 cents less than a stamp. (Just beware ...usmg the&#13;
internet can become very addictiye!) .&#13;
• Join one of the various clubs on campus, there is just about one to meet every&#13;
Top Video Rentals Top 10 Singles&#13;
I.12 Monkeys starring Bruce Wil- I.Los Del Rio "Macarena" (RCA)&#13;
lis (Fox Video - Rated: R) Last Last Week: No. I&#13;
Week: No.2 2. New Edition "Hit Me Off"&#13;
2. Broken Arrow John Travolta (MCA) New Entry&#13;
(FoxVideo - R) No. I 3. Donna Lewis "I Love You AI-&#13;
3. City Hall Al Pacino (Columbia ways Forever" (Atlantic) No.2&#13;
- R) No.5 4. Celine Dion "It's All Coming&#13;
4. Executive Decision Kurt Rus- Back To Me Now" (550 Music) No.&#13;
sell (Warner - R) 14 5&#13;
5. Heat Robert DeNiro (Warner - 5. LL Cool J "Loungin' " (Def&#13;
R) No.4 Jam/Mercury) No.3&#13;
6. Mr, Holland's Opus Richard 6. No Mercy "Where Do You 00"&#13;
Dreyfuss (Buena Vista - PO) No.6 (Arista) No.7&#13;
7. Dead Man Walking Susan 7. Quad City OJ's "C'mon N'&#13;
Sarandon (PolyGram - R) No.7 Ride It (The Train)" (Atlantic) No.4&#13;
8. The Juror Demi Moore 8. Pearl Jam "Who You Are"&#13;
(Columbia TriStar - R) No.9 (Epic) No.8'&#13;
9. Rumble In The Bronx Jackie 9. SWV "Use Your Heart" (RCA)&#13;
Chan (Turner - R) No.7 No.9&#13;
10. Happy Gilmore Adam 10. 'G1oria Estefan "Reach"&#13;
Sandler (MCA/Universal - PO-B) (Epic) No. 10&#13;
No.8&#13;
I I. Get Shorty John Travolta&#13;
(MGM/UA - R) No. II&#13;
12. Diabolique Sharon Stone&#13;
(Warner - R) No. 10&#13;
13. Leaving Las Vegas Nicolas&#13;
Cage (MGM/UA - R) No. 12&#13;
14. Casino Robert De Niro&#13;
(MCA/Universal - R) No. 13&#13;
15. Black Sheep Chris Farley&#13;
(paramount - PO-B) New Entry&#13;
16. Down Periscope Kelsey&#13;
Grammer (Fox Video - PG-13)&#13;
New Entry&#13;
17. Eye For An Eye Sally Field&#13;
(Paramount - R) No. 16&#13;
18. Mighty Aphrodite Woody&#13;
Allen (Buena Vista - R) No. 17&#13;
19. Sense And Sensibility Emma&#13;
Thompson (Columbia TriStar -&#13;
PO) No. 21&#13;
20. Sabrina Harrison Ford&#13;
(Paramount- PO) No. 18&#13;
Top 10 Movies&#13;
I.The Island of Dr. Moreau starring&#13;
Val Kilmer&#13;
2. Tin Cup Kevin Costner&#13;
3. A Very Brady Sequel Shelley&#13;
Long&#13;
4. A Time To KiD Matthew Mc-&#13;
Conaughey&#13;
5. Jack Robin Williams&#13;
6. The Fan Robert DeNiro&#13;
7. Independence Day Bill&#13;
Pullman&#13;
8. Solo Mario Van Peebles&#13;
9. Emma Gwyneth Paltrow&#13;
10. She's The One Jennifer&#13;
o\nison&#13;
·pu.&lt;s -.rtlllila.!l ~ Aq 966to 4&#13;
. !8t8-!"ef&#13;
'8 ~OOZ'L ~.. uop,(:) ''ll '9 ~lIU!"'OJ&#13;
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Volleyball splits on&#13;
the road&#13;
-Tim Gaiser&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parks ide volleyball team completed its third week of competition&#13;
with two Great Lakes Conference matches on the road versus Quincy University Friday&#13;
September 13 and University of Missouri-St. Louis on Saturday. Quincy opened up against&#13;
the visiting Rangers by playing stingy defense and committing few errors, taking the lead in&#13;
game one 8-13, but the host squad wasn't able to sustain the offensive onslaught by the&#13;
Parkside squad and succumbed to V.W.P. 15-13. The Eagles never regained their composure&#13;
and Parkside routed the brown and gold in the next two games by scores of 15-9 and 15-8,&#13;
Junior outside hitter Leigh Eckert led the way for the Rangers tallying 16 kills. Saturday saw&#13;
UW-Parkside take on regionally ranked (#4) University of Missouri-St. Louis. The home team&#13;
was keyed up for the match and in game one disposed of the Rangers easily by a score of 6-&#13;
15. Game two saw a much more relaxed and confident Parkside team take the floor. The&#13;
Rangers held their own in game two siding out easily with U.M.S.L. until at 10-10, St. Louis&#13;
pulled away and took game 2 by a score of 10-15. Game three was more of the same, intense&#13;
volleyball by both teams. Parkside again had a chance to take the game and reestablish themselves,&#13;
but the home team came away with a hard fought win 14-16. Parkside is now 5-5 on&#13;
the season and 1-1 in Great Lakes Conference play. The Rangers next two matches are home&#13;
versus Southern Illinois-Edwardsville on Friday September 20 at 7 pm and Saturday&#13;
September 21 at 1 pm versus University of Indianapolis.&#13;
The Time is NOW for&#13;
Men's C.C.&#13;
-Brian Borkowski&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
•&#13;
It's time for recognition. The men's team is looking stronger than ever this year. This past&#13;
Saturday, the Running rangers took its young squad to the North Central Invitational. The&#13;
men placed 4th out of 15 teams. Redshirt Freshman Marshall Donnerbauer was the top finisher&#13;
for the Rangers with an 8km time of 25:40 and an 8th place finish (four of the finishers&#13;
ahead of Donnerbauer were non-collegians). Sophomore Bernie Radobicky ran a personal best&#13;
26:10 and finished 15th.&#13;
"It was a strong showing by our team, but we were a little spread out. Hopefully next we&#13;
can group it together and work off each other," said co-captain Andy Sarnow.&#13;
The Rangers will be at home on Saturday for the 18th annual Midwest Collegiate Open.&#13;
Rangers Top Seven:&#13;
8. Marshall Donnerbauer&#13;
15. Bernie Radobic&#13;
21. Andy Sarnow&#13;
28. Dave Sheriff&#13;
35. Nate Vseling&#13;
37. Brian Borkowski&#13;
41. Chris Hill&#13;
42. Shawn Burwell&#13;
25:40&#13;
26:10&#13;
26:40&#13;
26:54&#13;
27:16&#13;
27:20&#13;
27:35&#13;
27:37&#13;
Golf takes 2nd&#13;
at St. Joe Invite&#13;
oBrent Heit&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside golf team&#13;
got their season underway&#13;
Sept. 7 at the St. Joseph&#13;
Invitational with a secondplace&#13;
finish in the nine-team&#13;
meet in Indianapolis. The&#13;
only team to better the&#13;
Rangers was Indianapolis&#13;
University, who placed 10th&#13;
in the NCAA National tournament&#13;
last year, with a oneunder&#13;
par score of 287.&#13;
Indianapolis player Kensey&#13;
Snyder was medalist with a&#13;
two-under par round of 70.&#13;
Brent Heit, of River&#13;
Falls, led the Rangers with a&#13;
73, which put him fourth&#13;
overall. Rob Warmouth, of&#13;
Kenosha, followed with a 74.&#13;
Jason Vanacker, of Crystal&#13;
Lake (Ill.), fired 75. Tom&#13;
Gentz, of Beaver Dam,&#13;
rounded out the play sixcount&#13;
four scores format with&#13;
a 79, for a team total score of&#13;
301. Junior Brad Evans, of&#13;
Kenosha, has seen better&#13;
days and finished with an 81,&#13;
and Scott Anthes, of Portage,&#13;
was off his game and limped&#13;
in with an 84.&#13;
The Rangers beat Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
rivals Southern Indiana&#13;
(303), Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
(303), St. Joseph's (305), and&#13;
Lewis (313), as well as&#13;
Division I schools Butler&#13;
(311), Bethel (310), and St.&#13;
Francis (320).&#13;
The Ranger's "Bcteam"&#13;
tied St. Francis at 320. They&#13;
were led by freshman Steve&#13;
Anthes, of Portage, who&#13;
blazed a 75. Dan Baron, of&#13;
Aurora, finidhed with 78.&#13;
On Sept. 8 and 9, the&#13;
Rangers played at the&#13;
Winona Country Club, the&#13;
seventh most difficult course&#13;
in Minnesota, in the Winona&#13;
State Invitational. The&#13;
Ranger golf team tied for first&#13;
with Eau Claire with a 36-&#13;
hole team total of 633.&#13;
Rob Warmouth continued&#13;
his good play with 77-76&#13;
(153), which put him thrid&#13;
overall.&#13;
In fourth place overall was&#13;
Brent Heit with 77-77 (154).&#13;
Jason Vanacker was twelth&#13;
overall with 80-81 (161).&#13;
Scott Anthes shot 79-88 (167)&#13;
and his brother Steve shot&#13;
78-89 (167).&#13;
Jason Phillips of Winona&#13;
State was medalist with 72-&#13;
78 (150).&#13;
Other team scores were:&#13;
Winona State-639,&#13;
Concordia-658, Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering&#13;
(MSOE)-662, St. Mary's&#13;
(Minn.)-663, and Edgewood&#13;
(Wis.)-761.&#13;
The UW-Parkside team&#13;
has a strong ll-man roster&#13;
that includes, other than&#13;
those already mentioned:&#13;
John McCabe, Sheboyagen&#13;
Falls; Tim Dickison, Oak&#13;
Creek; and Brian Spindler,&#13;
Bartlett (Ill.).&#13;
The team aiso has a&#13;
group of redshirts, including:&#13;
Mike Meizen, Franklin;&#13;
Jason Skiera, Milwaukee;&#13;
Eric Scheible, Plymouth; Carl&#13;
Laehr, Racine; Derek&#13;
Anzalone, Racine; and Bob&#13;
Woodward, Racine.&#13;
The team is looking to&#13;
improve its 54-43-1 record of&#13;
last year which put them in&#13;
seventh overall in the Great&#13;
Lake Valley Conference, and&#13;
twelfth overall in District IV.&#13;
The road won't be easy, but&#13;
under the direction of secondyear&#13;
coach Walt Shirer, the&#13;
team is very optimistic.&#13;
On Sept. 16 the team will&#13;
travel to the DuPage Classic.&#13;
On Sept. 21-23, the team will&#13;
be at the Fall District IV&#13;
Tournament in Grand Valley,&#13;
Mich. In October, the golfers&#13;
will take part in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
Championship at Purdue&#13;
University.&#13;
•&#13;
Cross Country at Their&#13;
Best&#13;
eMargaret Ditchbum&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
The University of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
women's cross-country team ran solid at their&#13;
first race of the season Saturday. The flat&#13;
courseat UW-Oshkosh allowed many of the&#13;
girls to run their best time ever. which is a&#13;
great way to start off the season. Parkside&#13;
placed second out of the three schools that ran&#13;
with 51 points. UW-Oshkosh won the meet&#13;
with 17 points. UW-Oshkosh is ranked the&#13;
number one team in Division III and ran well.&#13;
HopeCollege trailed with 74 points.&#13;
5. Pam Tucker" 18:46&#13;
Major league baseball .&#13;
Playerswho have stolen 65"or more&#13;
bases and hit over 20 home runs in one&#13;
season:&#13;
Year SB HR&#13;
R. Henderson, Yankees '86 87 28&#13;
E. Davis, Reds '86 . SO 2"1hil&#13;
R. Henderson, Yankees '85 80 24':&#13;
J. Morgan, Heds 7:3,"67\26)\&#13;
R. Henderson, Athfetic,,«:1o 65 128iit;&#13;
~a~~hE~i~tr~KN~~~AS f~lf&#13;
11. Missy Shumway* 19:10&#13;
13. Jill Branner* 19:17&#13;
15. Amy Haines 19:25&#13;
17. Lisa Schaich* 19:30&#13;
19. Lisa Lewis 19:31&#13;
33. Jodi Wiersbicki* 20:21&#13;
*Best time ever&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt said that the flat course&#13;
had 27 turns and allowed for good times and a&#13;
strong effort by the entire team. "It was a good&#13;
early season meet." Jamie Roberts (266) was 36th at&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
VVomen's Soccer bows to&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
ranked University of Southern Illinois, who&#13;
topped Parkside 1-0. Goalkeeper Shelley Davis&#13;
had an outstanding performance, saving many&#13;
hard-driven shots by the Illinois attackers.&#13;
"SlUE is an excellent team and they knQlV&#13;
how to score," said UW-Parkside head coach&#13;
Oscar Suman, "Weheld them defensively, but we&#13;
just didn't keep their defensebusy enough."&#13;
Prior to the two losses, the team had better&#13;
luck earlier in the week against Rebert Morris&#13;
College, with a 7-0 victory. Goals were scored by&#13;
Melissa Lieb, Jennifer Ross, Nana Torres, Tracy&#13;
Rosiak, Natalie Weber, and Jeanette Claude.&#13;
The Rangers are looking forward to two tough&#13;
conference games this weekend, both at noon at&#13;
the Wood Road SoccerField.&#13;
Tracy Rosiak&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
It was an appropriate weekend for bad luck,&#13;
and the Parkside Women's Soccer Team experienced&#13;
it. On Saturday, the University of&#13;
Southern Indiana handed them a 2-0 loss.&#13;
Parkside was outplayed in the first half, but&#13;
came back strong in the second half.&#13;
Unfortunately, they came up empty-handed.&#13;
With key defensive players Angie Moulton, Erin&#13;
Miller, and Jeanette Claude fighting-injuries, the.&#13;
newest members of the team were expected to fill&#13;
the veterans' roles.&#13;
Sunday's -game was against nationally-&#13;
Men's Soccer trounce Trin ity; Trip against Truman&#13;
the second half. Parkside outshot the Bullgdogs 10-7 in the second half and knotted&#13;
the game at one on a goal by Jason Zitzke at 54:55. Parkside was clearing the ball&#13;
down the left side, off the flank, some 28 yards out from the goal. Zitzke battled for&#13;
the ball and caught the Truman State goal keeper off his line. The keeper could only&#13;
watch as the ball was placed beautifully in the back of the net. However, Parkside's&#13;
celebration was short-lived as four minutes later the Bulldogs capitalized on a Ranger&#13;
defensive lapse and increased their lead 2-1. With about twenty minutes left in the&#13;
game, UWP turned up the offensive pressure but-couldn't find the net. The final&#13;
score was Truman State Bulldogs 2 and your Parkside Rangers 1.&#13;
A special thanks goes out to all the fans and their support that were at the&#13;
game. Hopefully you will continue your support. Come and see the team bounce&#13;
back as they take on conference rivals Lewis University on Friday,September 20, at&#13;
4:30 p.m. and St. Joeseph's College on Sunday,September 22, at 2:00 p.m. at the&#13;
Wood Road Soccer Field.&#13;
by Craig Posselt&#13;
Ranger Reporter&#13;
Last Saturday, the men's soccer team defeated Trinity University by a score&#13;
of 9-0. The score had resembled the scores of the team's other two matches as well,&#13;
5-1 against the University of Missouri-R~lIa and 12-0 against Lakeland University.&#13;
The Rangers have pretty much had their way with their opponents in the past three&#13;
9amesbut would soon discover why Truman State University is a formidable Division&#13;
II opponent. The Bulldogs and Rangers began at a blistering pace. Parkside&#13;
seemedto have the edge by dominating the shots on goal and corner kicks, as well&#13;
as fan support. Then, about ten minutes before halftime the Bulldogs went ahead&#13;
1-0.&#13;
While Parkside was planning their second half attack, fans were enjoying&#13;
fresh roasted pig, courtesy of Latinos Unidos, which helped bring more fans to the.&#13;
game. Down a goal, the Rangers regrouped during halftime and came out sharp ,n&#13;
Hepp's Hype Picks&#13;
-AI Heppner&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Detroit over Chicago&#13;
Kansas City over Denver&#13;
Sanders keeps the Bears reeling.&#13;
Broncos barely got by Bucs, while&#13;
Chiefs are looking strong early.&#13;
Can anyone stop the Packers?&#13;
The good news is that one team from&#13;
New York will get a win this year.&#13;
'Skins could even make the playoffs, off'&#13;
their soft schedule. A win here is huge for the organization.&#13;
Cards are simply worse.&#13;
Too many offensive weapons on the 4ger side.&#13;
The resurgence of RB Reggie Brooks lifts Bues to first victory.&#13;
Bledsoe back on track and so are the Pats.&#13;
A make or break game for the Cowboys. The 'boys make it!&#13;
Raiders need to generate more offense to pull this one out.&#13;
Eagles flying high again after taming the Lions.&#13;
Another big showdown, but Dolphins are still the team to beat&#13;
in theAFC.&#13;
Green Bay over Minnesota&#13;
N.Y. Jets over N.Y. Giants&#13;
Washington over St. Louis&#13;
New Orleans over Arizona&#13;
San Francisco over Carolina&#13;
Tampa Bay over Seattle&#13;
New England over Jacksonville&#13;
Dallas over Buffalo&#13;
Oakland over San Diego&#13;
Philadelphia over Atlanta&#13;
Miami over Indianapolis&#13;
Last Week: 9-4 (.692)&#13;
Season Thtal: 24-4 (.857)&#13;
Last Week's winner: Andy Boedecker 10-3 (.769) [You still owe me $10 though]&#13;
Outpick the Hepp&#13;
Are you ready for some foo.tball? Well, you&#13;
know the Hepp is. Now, you can test your football&#13;
knowledge against Ranger Columnist Al&#13;
Heppner and if you can beat him, then lunch is&#13;
on us.&#13;
All you have to do is turn in your NFL picks&#13;
by noon on Fridays to a folder hanging outside&#13;
the Ranger office (located next to the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe in MainPlace). Ifyou end up with a better&#13;
record then Hepp.. you will be put into a&#13;
drawing for a free lunch. The winner will&#13;
receive a coupon for a free regular sub and a&#13;
medium drink. Good luck and get pickin'.&#13;
Weather and&#13;
Winning&#13;
-AI Heppner&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Fact: The men's soccer team lost 2-1 to Truman State.&#13;
Opinion: They are super team with the worst luck.&#13;
Fact: Marriott offers brunch just like PFM.&#13;
Opinion: What happened to the Omlettes? (They were the only&#13;
good part.)&#13;
Fact: The weather in Wisconsin is not warm.&#13;
Opinion: While watching the women's soccer game on Sunday, I&#13;
went from .&#13;
sweating to freezing in a period of less than ten seconds.&#13;
Fact: The Packers won again.&#13;
Opinion: Ok, ok, ok, I admit it. Green Bay is the team to beat.&#13;
Fact: The Bears lost again.&#13;
Opinion: They're the team that's beaten.&#13;
Fact: The Union Square was supposed to open on Monday.&#13;
Opinion: Yeah, whatever!&#13;
Fact: The men's c.c. team placed 4th out of 15 teams at North&#13;
Central.&#13;
Opinion: This could be their hest team since the mid 80's.&#13;
Sports Quiz&#13;
by Larry Duncan&#13;
I. Who was International Olympic&#13;
Committee chairman at the 1936&#13;
Summer Games?&#13;
2. What Triple Crown-winning&#13;
horse took the 1973 Belmont Stakes&#13;
by 31 lengths?&#13;
3. Who predicted he would, but&#13;
didn't, win six gold medals at the&#13;
1968 Summer Olympics?&#13;
4. What two skills make up the&#13;
winter biathlon?&#13;
5. What sport features sculls,&#13;
strokes and slides?&#13;
6. What is the nickname of the&#13;
Iowa State football team?&#13;
7. How many laps make up the&#13;
Indianapolis SOO?&#13;
.8. What sport features the fastestmoving&#13;
ball?&#13;
Play Belter Goll with JACK NICKLAUS BRO AS IT ""AY&#13;
(bE TO eELlEVE~&#13;
SCIE.NTISTS CL.AIM&#13;
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::-..FINE.ST GOLFE.~5'&#13;
~ MAXIMUM CLU~HEAD&#13;
." Aee ELE'Rf\TION&#13;
~;\, OCCuRS e:&gt;E.FOf2..E.&#13;
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Ranger News classified ads&#13;
Clip-N-Save Today&#13;
Rate $.25 per word&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
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City/State/zip&#13;
Must be pre-paid before issue print&#13;
Amount enclosed $&#13;
Ad:&#13;
•&#13;
Mail or bring to the Ranger News,WYLL D.139C&#13;
Attn: Derek Bishop, Business Manager.&#13;
900 Wood Road Box 200&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141.2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
6201 22nd Avenue' Kenosha, WI • Ph. 657-9142 _ SIIKEN'STOCK:- THE ORIGINAL COMFORT SANDAL&#13;
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Narrow to Wide Widths&#13;
Takegood care&#13;
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Super Crossword&#13;
ACROSS the Aftai(' 98 "From- 4 "Gross'" hrs. graphe(sabbr.&#13;
t Arrangement 52 Weatherman Eternity" 5 Baritone 44 Cooler 88 Word with&#13;
6 ·Pygmalion" Willard 100What i.e. Cappuccilli 45 - boom circus or&#13;
playwright 54 Pres. Clinton. stands for 6 Brake part 49 Bring down collar&#13;
10 Chaplin prop e.g. 102 Kenton or 7 King's thing the house 92 Make it&#13;
14 -code 55 con Gell 8 Pantrypes. 50 Clouta cad 93 Rock's-&#13;
17leisurely,to 56WWllarea 103DivaLuclne 9 Illy-billy 53Magnetic· Floyd&#13;
Leoncavallo 57 On edge 104"TheSea 10 Feverish I induction 94 Total&#13;
19 Whetstone 58 'The - Wolf" author place? units 95 Tenor Slezak&#13;
20 Addis - Woman" 106 Gambol 11 Plenty 55 Improvised. 97 Sixth sense&#13;
22 "Bells- ('82 song) 109 Roman 12"- ThatTune" ina way 99 Rootpart&#13;
Ringing" 61 Tenor Mario fountain 13 Subside 58 Frequently 101 Pipe cleaners?&#13;
23 Dessert 62 Venture 110 Jeff of the 14 Dessert 59 A linle Italian 103 Van Gogh&#13;
choice 64 Grain con- Honeydrippers choice number locale&#13;
25 Summer tainers 111 Conflict site 15 Physicist 60 Piano part 105 Humpback's&#13;
hummer? 65 Monk's title 113 Petty or Joliot·Curie 81 Audio home&#13;
27 Medical grp. 86 Scheduled Poston 16 Quick look antiques? 106 Cabemel&#13;
28 Less available maintenance 116 Assuage 18 Mediterra- 63 Renown color&#13;
29 Khayyam 67 Dessert choice 118 Dessert nean port 66 Gone 107 - impulse&#13;
quaff 72 Kind of house choice 21 Tijuana 68 Coop critter (suddenly)&#13;
30 Flooring 75 Humorist 121..JohnnyYuma, Brass man 69 Commotion 108 Cock and bull&#13;
material George for one 24 Attempt 70 Surpass at 109 O'Hara&#13;
31 Child's mount 76 Ruminate 122 Musical 26 Literary supper homestead&#13;
32lnsull nClammy biography pseudonym 71 Seize 110 Angler's&#13;
35 Neutral tone 81 New York city 123 Like Steven? 29 Bawled 72 ~AII- Go to danglers&#13;
36 Mini-misun- 82 Fiery felony 1241ndic ian- 31 'Harper Heaven" 112 Dollars tor&#13;
derstanding 84 Clementi guage Valley _to ('89 film) quarters&#13;
39 Travel like a -I composition 125 Mad - hatter 33 Scarcely any 73 Radius' 113 Autocrat&#13;
tortoise 86 - es Salaam 126 Peter Wim· 34 Cost sidekick? 114 Shawnee's at&#13;
40 Lacking 87 Pesky insect say's school 35 Cornice kin 74 Dessert 115 A sweeping&#13;
standards .' 88 G-man's org. 127 For fear that 36 Hero's horse choice success?&#13;
41 Dessert 89 Couch- 128 Fancy fiddle 37 Famed 78 Take on 117 ~- been&#13;
. choice potato's woe DOWN caravel 79 See 119Down had!"&#13;
46 Rainy 90 Vein contents 1 Belt for a 38 Passion 80 Fuss with 118 - canto&#13;
47 Cardinal's 91 Cold-war org. bishop 39 - ice (fails feathers 119 With 79&#13;
residence 92 Shake - 2 Gouda to impress) B2 Drive the Down,&#13;
48 April initials (hurry) alternative 41 Golda of getaway car SChubert&#13;
51 Greene's 93 Buddy 3 Chihuahua Israel 83 Verdi opera hymn ~&#13;
"The -of 96 Dessert choice snack 43 Yellowstone as Photo- 120 Prone&#13;
1 3 5 6 7 8 9 "'0""1" "1'2"';:;3- 14 '5 16&#13;
17&#13;
23&#13;
27&#13;
42&#13;
51&#13;
56&#13;
82&#13;
81&#13;
87&#13;
91&#13;
116&#13;
121&#13;
'25&#13;
r&#13;
A student worker at last week's Poster&#13;
Sale on the Union Bridge offered students&#13;
new designs for their dorm rooms,&#13;
Top R&amp;B/Soul&#13;
1. New Edition "Hit Me orr-&#13;
(MCA) New Entry&#13;
2. Keith Sweat "Twisted"&#13;
(Elektra) Last Week: No.2&#13;
3. Aaliyah "If Your Girl Only&#13;
Knew" (Blackground/Atlantic) New&#13;
Entry&#13;
4. SWV "Use Your Heart" (RCA)&#13;
No.3&#13;
S. LL Cool J "Loungin' " (Def&#13;
Jarn/Mercury) No.1&#13;
6. Maxwell "Ascension (Don't&#13;
Ever Wonder)" (Columbia) No. 11&#13;
7. Whitney Houston "Why Does&#13;
It Hurt So Bad" (Arista) No.6&#13;
8. D'Angelo "Me And Those&#13;
Dreamin' Eyes Of Mine" (EMI) No.&#13;
IS&#13;
9. Dru Hill "Tell Me" (Island) No.&#13;
9&#13;
10. Az Vet "Last Night"&#13;
(Laface/Arista) No.4&#13;
" --&#13;
"You built this with your&#13;
Legos?!"&#13;
,... .., 0_ ..... ... _&#13;
"Are you sure a live remote&#13;
is in good taste?"</text>
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              <text>f &#13;
199&#13;
6 &#13;
See &#13;
candidate &#13;
photos &#13;
and &#13;
bios &#13;
on pgs. &#13;
5 and &#13;
6 &#13;
•Ki&#13;
rk &#13;
wins &#13;
national &#13;
l.&#13;
5 k m/p&#13;
age &#13;
14 &#13;
•Soccer &#13;
alumni &#13;
signs &#13;
contr&#13;
act in &#13;
Germany/page &#13;
12 &#13;
VOLUME &#13;
25 &#13;
• &#13;
ISSUE &#13;
4 • &#13;
SEPTEMBER &#13;
26, &#13;
1996 &#13;
ESTABLISHED &#13;
1972 &#13;
Wildcat&#13;
s' &#13;
Theft &#13;
Remain&#13;
s &#13;
Under &#13;
Invest&#13;
igation &#13;
by &#13;
Mark &#13;
Hahn &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
When &#13;
Northwestern &#13;
Illinois &#13;
University&#13;
1&#13;
s  football &#13;
team &#13;
arrived. &#13;
at &#13;
Camp &#13;
Kenosha &#13;
for &#13;
their &#13;
final &#13;
day &#13;
of &#13;
pre-season &#13;
scrimmage &#13;
drilJs &#13;
Aug, &#13;
27, &#13;
they &#13;
received &#13;
quite &#13;
a shock. &#13;
The &#13;
Wildcats' &#13;
equipment &#13;
room &#13;
was &#13;
burgla.riud &#13;
sometime &#13;
belwoon &#13;
9 p.m. &#13;
Aug. &#13;
26 &#13;
and &#13;
7:30 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
Aug. &#13;
27. &#13;
"'Someone &#13;
1immied' &#13;
and &#13;
forced &#13;
the &#13;
door &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
team &#13;
equip-&#13;
ment &#13;
room &#13;
and &#13;
took &#13;
quite &#13;
a &#13;
bit &#13;
of &#13;
stuff," &#13;
explained &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
police &#13;
chief &#13;
Robert &#13;
Deane. &#13;
"It's &#13;
s\lSP&#13;
i• &#13;
cious &#13;
in &#13;
nature &#13;
because &#13;
such &#13;
a  large &#13;
amount &#13;
of &#13;
item$ &#13;
was &#13;
taken. &#13;
Besides, &#13;
you &#13;
don't &#13;
just &#13;
walk &#13;
out &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
wcightbench-&#13;
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September &#13;
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on &#13;
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day. &#13;
Students &#13;
who &#13;
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the &#13;
UW•Parkside &#13;
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at &#13;
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Sommers' &#13;
Fire &#13;
Stat&#13;
i&#13;
on &#13;
Number &#13;
2,118 &#13;
loeat-&#13;
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12th &#13;
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Since &#13;
1976, &#13;
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electiuon &#13;
laws &#13;
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(4 14&#13;
) 595-2399. &#13;
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ction. &#13;
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school &#13;
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has &#13;
served &#13;
120 &#13;
students &#13;
since &#13;
its &#13;
inception &#13;
in &#13;
January &#13;
1995. &#13;
Tb0 &#13;
prison &#13;
outreach &#13;
program &#13;
is &#13;
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prison. &#13;
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              <text>&#13;
jib&#13;
-Russian Performers  Limpopo&#13;
visit UW-Parkside/page  4&#13;
.. -"Tin Cup" movie review/page  8&#13;
-Six Flags Great America's  Fright&#13;
Fest/page  8&#13;
-Donnerbauer  leads Men's Cross&#13;
Country/page  9&#13;
BY MARK  HAHN&#13;
NEWS  EDITOR&#13;
Two one-year-old  infants were discovered&#13;
unattended  in the backseat  of a 1982 Chevy&#13;
station&#13;
wagon&#13;
parked&#13;
outside&#13;
the&#13;
Communication   Arts Building  loading  dock&#13;
at 2:29 p.rn. Sept.  18.&#13;
"I talked  with the people  going  out to buy&#13;
supp-lies   for  our&#13;
Dracula&#13;
production,&#13;
and&#13;
they  told me they   were  pretty  sure  the car&#13;
was   there   when   they   left,"   explained&#13;
University   of  Wisconsin-Parkside    theatre&#13;
manager  Keith  Harris,  who  initially  report-&#13;
ed the incident  to University  police.&#13;
"They  made  about  three  stops  and  when&#13;
they returned  about 35 minutes  later, the car&#13;
was  still there,"  said  Harris.  "Another   ser-&#13;
vice  gentleman   told  me  there  was  a  child&#13;
VOLUME 25 - ISSUE 5 - OCTOBER 3, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
University   of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
students   tapping  into&#13;
their e-mail  accounts  in the  Molinaro  Computer  Lab.  The&#13;
Computer Center  will soon be installing  a new "it.uwp.edu"&#13;
machine.&#13;
Photo by Scott Malik&#13;
University  Outreach&#13;
Teaches Inmates&#13;
Lessons  Behind Bars&#13;
BY MARK&#13;
HAHN&#13;
NEWS  EDITOR&#13;
About  twice  a  week,  a  new&#13;
group  of  inmates   are   shuttled&#13;
\- - into   the   Racine    Correctional&#13;
:y-&#13;
Institute in Sturtevant,  Wis ..&#13;
Upon  arrival,   inmates   are&#13;
required to attend  a reception-ori-&#13;
entation  program  where  they  are&#13;
given a rule book  and  briefed  on&#13;
prison  rules,  available   programs&#13;
0:&#13;
and what expectations   are set  up&#13;
for them by prison  officials.&#13;
This  week,  another   group  of&#13;
individuals   are   being   escorted&#13;
through    those&#13;
same&#13;
ragged&#13;
barbed-wire&#13;
and   chain-linked&#13;
gates  and  given   instruction   on&#13;
prison  policy,  procedure  and reg-&#13;
ulations.&#13;
But the  members  of this group&#13;
aren't  being assigned  to a room  in&#13;
the housing  unit  and given a roo-&#13;
mate.    Where    they   are   being&#13;
placed,   however,   are   in  class-&#13;
rooms  set up specifically  to intro-&#13;
duce  inmates  to nonviolent  mod-&#13;
els  of heroism  through  the study&#13;
of humanities.&#13;
The  classes   are  part  of  the&#13;
Prison  Outreach  Award  Program&#13;
that  is underway  this  fall   at the&#13;
Racine    Correctional&#13;
Institute.&#13;
The  program   is open  to  inmates&#13;
with  a high  school  diploma,  and&#13;
are   taught   by   a  group   of   15&#13;
instructors  from the University  of&#13;
Infants Abandoned  at&#13;
UWP Loading  Dock:&#13;
One-year-old boy, girl&#13;
found crying&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks  ide.&#13;
Classes  in philosophy,  sociolo-&#13;
gy,  theatre  and  literature  will  be&#13;
taught  with  the  expectation   that&#13;
participating   inmates  can  use the&#13;
skills  learned  in these  classes  to&#13;
help them  make the right choices&#13;
when  they  return  to  society  and&#13;
not   become    repeat   offenders.&#13;
There   are   15-20   inmates    per&#13;
class,  which  are  being  taught  on&#13;
Mondays  and Wednesdays.&#13;
"I have  five returning  students,&#13;
and they keep coming  back when&#13;
classes&#13;
are&#13;
offered,"&#13;
said&#13;
Roseanne   Mason,  a specialist   at&#13;
the Writing  Center  who  is partic-&#13;
ipating  in the program.   "We have&#13;
one student  who has been coming&#13;
crying  inside of it and  [he&#13;
1&#13;
wanted  to know&#13;
who  the child belonged  to."&#13;
Harris  said that  he reached  his hand  into&#13;
the  window  and  unlocked   the  back  door,&#13;
and that  was when  he saw there were  actu-&#13;
ally two  children  inside  instead of  one.&#13;
"Surely  someone  shot off for a second,  but&#13;
why give them the benefit  of the doubt hav-&#13;
ing  two   infants   unattended?"    explained&#13;
Harris. "I'm  not sure where you get a mind-&#13;
set to do something  like that."&#13;
UW-Parkside   police  chief  Robert  Deane&#13;
said  that  a check  was  run  on the vehicle  in&#13;
an  attempt   to  find  out  who  the  vehicle&#13;
belonged  to, but no one returned  to the car.&#13;
University  Police  are currently  withold-&#13;
ing the name of the vehicle's  owner  pending&#13;
investigation.&#13;
...  INFANTS,  cont,  on page. 2&#13;
since  our  very first  grant  project,&#13;
and  we  also  have  a  'lifer'   who&#13;
keeps  coming  back.  It's fortunate&#13;
that  they  are  trying  to  make  the&#13;
best of their situation."&#13;
Mason  said the theme  of the&#13;
class she teaches  is "What  is an&#13;
everyday  Hero?" The class is cur-&#13;
rently   reading   a  book   called,&#13;
Warriors Don&#13;
t&#13;
Cry.&#13;
The  book  is&#13;
about  school  integration  in Little&#13;
Rock, Ark.  in 1957.&#13;
Mason said that her students  are&#13;
being asked to pick out characters&#13;
in  the  book  that  they  think  are&#13;
heroes.&#13;
"We expect  certain  conflict  of&#13;
ideas  to  develop,   but  it  can  be&#13;
helpful,"  explained  Mason.  "The&#13;
topic  lends  itself  for  getting  dif-&#13;
ferent  perspectives,   and  one  of&#13;
the  main   requirements&#13;
is  that&#13;
inmates  both  listen  and  respect&#13;
other people's  opinions."&#13;
Mason  said that next week, her&#13;
class will be discussing  what this&#13;
means  on  a  broader   scale,  and&#13;
examine   why   individuals   have&#13;
these   perspectives    and   explore&#13;
where  they come  from.&#13;
At her  last class,  Mason  said&#13;
inmates    were   asked   to   write&#13;
down  their  description   of a hero.&#13;
"One man said. 'It's easy to find a&#13;
television   hero,  but  they're   not&#13;
real heroes.'&#13;
•  LESSONS,   cont.  on page 2&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Books&#13;
by Ralph Hollenbeck&#13;
UWP Team walks for AIDS&#13;
BECKYSCHLEVENSKY&#13;
RANGER  REPORTER&#13;
AIDS kills. How many peo-&#13;
ple have known someone who&#13;
has died from AIDS? If they&#13;
haven't,  statistics  show  that&#13;
everyone will be effected by this&#13;
disease somehow.&#13;
On Sept. 22, 12,614 people&#13;
rallied  and walked  in a fight&#13;
against -AIDS at the 7th annual&#13;
AIDS  Walk  Wisconsin&#13;
In&#13;
Milwaukee. The rally began with&#13;
an Opening  Ceremony  where&#13;
Bette Midler spoke and 'revved'&#13;
everyone  up. The  Ceremony&#13;
intensified  the  overwhelming&#13;
spirit  of the struggle  against&#13;
AIDS.  Following  the Opening&#13;
Ceremony,  the 6.2 mile walk&#13;
began   at  the  Summerfest&#13;
Grounds. All walkers, receiving&#13;
donations from sponsors, raised&#13;
together $1,005,042,  surpassing&#13;
the goal of $1,000,000.&#13;
Sandy Puzerski, along with&#13;
Jeanne Sanchez, assembled the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
team which participated in AIDS&#13;
Walk Wisconsin event. The team&#13;
of 25-30 students and faculty&#13;
were motivated&#13;
by&#13;
the intense&#13;
spirit of this fight. Many of the&#13;
.people who participated are look-&#13;
ing forward to rallying again next&#13;
year.  Puzerski  stated,  "I am&#13;
already  strategizing  for next&#13;
year's AIDS Walk Wisconsin and&#13;
hope that a lot more students will&#13;
join us."&#13;
Carthage   College   also&#13;
attended the Walk with a busload&#13;
of 100 students and faculty who&#13;
made their presence known. Next&#13;
year UW-Parkside's  goal is to&#13;
organize a team that will be big-&#13;
ger and more enthusiastic than&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
CORRECTIONS&#13;
If you see an inaccuracy printed in the&#13;
Ranger News,&#13;
call 595-2287&#13;
and leave a detailed message.&#13;
ISSUE 2 (Sept. 12, ·1996) 'In the article about PSGA, it should&#13;
have specified that "wargamers" should-not be associated with or&#13;
specify the members of the UW-Parkside Association of Wargamers.&#13;
ISSUE 4 (Sept. 26, 1996) • Danielle Kirk competed in a&#13;
15&#13;
krn&#13;
race, not the 1.5 km race that appeared in the headline.&#13;
-Homecommg Queen candidate Baisha Strother's' biography was&#13;
inadvertently cut off on page 5. The complete biography appears in&#13;
this week's issue.&#13;
-The photo caption for the&#13;
"One-Handed&#13;
Idea" story was incorrect It&#13;
should have read: Engineering students in instructor Dennis&#13;
Stevenson's ENGR 210 class designed and made this car for a com-&#13;
petition against universities like Purdue and Michigan State in the'&#13;
summer of'95.&#13;
.&#13;
-t'Observations : In Case You Missed&#13;
It"&#13;
was an unintentional reprint&#13;
from a 1995 issue.&#13;
'The article informing students, faculty, and staff of the annual fire&#13;
alarm schedule was incorrect. The schedule is as follows.&#13;
Lessons&#13;
cont. from&#13;
page&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
thought it was good that he&#13;
could  make  the  distinction&#13;
between the people held up by the&#13;
media as heroes and those who&#13;
are heroes for a day."&#13;
The Prison Outreach Award&#13;
Program is the onIy one of its&#13;
kind at any Wisconsin  prison.&#13;
Inmates could previously acquire&#13;
Pell Grants to pay for college&#13;
tuition, and this prompted many&#13;
universities to offer courses on-&#13;
site at prisons. But the federal&#13;
government   prohibited   an&#13;
inmate's access to Pel! Grants in&#13;
1994.&#13;
The program has served 120&#13;
students since its inception in Jan.&#13;
1995, funded  by consecutive&#13;
$2,000 grants from the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council (WHC).&#13;
This year, the university was&#13;
awarded a $10,000 grant from the&#13;
WHC to continue  its Prison&#13;
Outreach Award Program.&#13;
Other UW-Parkside staff mem-&#13;
bers involved  in the program&#13;
include: Ngure Wa Mwachofi,&#13;
Farida Khan, Roby Rajan, Jean&#13;
Thieme, Anne Statham and John&#13;
Schmidt.&#13;
4th Monday (9123); 2nd Tuesday&#13;
(10/8); 4th Thursday (10/24); 2nd&#13;
Wednesday    (11113);   4th&#13;
Wednesday (3/26); 2nd Monday&#13;
(4/8); and, if needed, 4th Tuesday&#13;
(4/24).&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
regrets the&#13;
above errors.&#13;
Infants&#13;
cont.&#13;
from&#13;
page 1&#13;
"We couldn't tell if someone&#13;
had just ran into the building or&#13;
abandoned   them,"  explained&#13;
Deane. "We were lucky the chil-&#13;
dren  weren't  injured  and the&#13;
weather wasn't  too hot or too&#13;
cold. We were also lucky that no&#13;
one came by and walked away&#13;
with them."&#13;
The police chief said Social&#13;
Services was notified of the inci-&#13;
dent,  and referred  University&#13;
Police  to the Juvenile  Crisis&#13;
Center  in Kenosha  for further&#13;
action.&#13;
"A worker came out with the&#13;
intent ofturning the children over&#13;
to their parents, " said Deane. "It&#13;
was a happy ending to what could&#13;
have been a sad story."&#13;
Deane said that students and&#13;
staff are encouraged  to notify&#13;
University  police  if they find&#13;
children or animals unattended in&#13;
a parked vehicle.&#13;
"It could become a health haz-&#13;
ard," Deane said.&#13;
SUSPECTS,  by Thomas Berger&#13;
(Morrow: $23,(0). A meld of Sir&#13;
Walter Scott's "Oh, what a tangled&#13;
web we weave" and Sir William&#13;
Gilbert's "The policeman's lot isnot&#13;
a happy one" would provide anideal&#13;
summation  of THomas Be.rger's&#13;
latest novel. Berger, author of such&#13;
best-sellers as "Little Big Man" and&#13;
"Neighbors," himself has one of&#13;
his&#13;
characters describe the commitment&#13;
that uniforms and plainclothesmen&#13;
(and women) in law enforcementas-&#13;
sume. "The job makes a lot&#13;
of&#13;
demands on you, and usually comes&#13;
before your personal  life," Nick&#13;
Moody,  Detective  First Grade,&#13;
states. "The public never&#13;
sees&#13;
the&#13;
worst of what you confront day after&#13;
day ... Sickening stuff you never&#13;
suspected was possible, at least not&#13;
in this country. You're not only sup-&#13;
posed to handle it but rise above it&#13;
and go on to something that's worse,&#13;
and then rise above that and still&#13;
be&#13;
human." Ironically, Moody, diverted&#13;
from his planned suicide, offers that&#13;
advice to one Lloyd Howland,&#13;
whose&#13;
sudden appreciation of&#13;
Moody&#13;
and&#13;
the Force is one of those&#13;
O.&#13;
Hen-&#13;
ryesque twists in Berger's narrative.&#13;
Lloyd, a drifter, had been one ofthe&#13;
suspects in the particularly&#13;
gruesome&#13;
murder of his sister-in-law, Donna,&#13;
and his young niece. So was Lloyd's&#13;
half-brother, Larry, the rising young&#13;
salesman whose supposed business&#13;
trip masked a tryst with his&#13;
boss'&#13;
amoral wife. Even the police arenot&#13;
as true blue as one could hope.&#13;
Berger's  burrowing  beneath the&#13;
green sod of suburbia lays bare the&#13;
rather unpleasant reality of much&#13;
small-town life in a most engrossing&#13;
fiction.&#13;
'puAs&#13;
Sa.rtl19a..oJ:&#13;
Bu!}I&#13;
.&lt;q&#13;
96610&#13;
pJeAJeH&#13;
'8~.IPpl~.&#13;
L&#13;
~tZ·9&#13;
~~uo.~&#13;
~Wtl'Ztl'4S&#13;
'v&#13;
~uosl~N&#13;
O!llUOH  '&#13;
'f&#13;
:uel,(a&#13;
qog&#13;
·Z&#13;
~puel'.zll"'S&#13;
·1&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
encourages   Letters  to the&#13;
Editor  Letters should&#13;
110t&#13;
exceed 250 words&#13;
and should be delivered to the&#13;
Runger News&#13;
office  (WYLL  D I39Cj  or  e-ntailed  to&#13;
hansen8@iLuwp,edu   by noon the Monday&#13;
before publication,  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;
comply will not&#13;
be&#13;
published&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
----&#13;
In Memory of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom, former ManalJinlJ Editor,&#13;
AUIJ.&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
..&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Entertam.ment Editor&#13;
.    Columnists  C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
M&#13;
.  Ed'&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Smith Corey Mandley Morgan&#13;
anagmg&#13;
ttor&#13;
S'&#13;
"&#13;
A&#13;
·1&#13;
S h  b&#13;
ports EdItor&#13;
Harcey&#13;
pn&#13;
c oen erg&#13;
AIH&#13;
News Editor&#13;
eppner&#13;
Reporters  Kerri Bachler, Becky&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
BUSiness Manager&#13;
Schlevensky, Tim Gaiser, Aaron&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Derek Blsh.op&#13;
Kappellusch, Walt Shirer, Tim&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Layout EdItor&#13;
Mote, Margaret Ditchburn&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Jp.uhliatlngram&#13;
Advisor Roseann Mason&#13;
00&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
J h N&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
n unn&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
.&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Copy Editors Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
is published  every Thursday&#13;
throughout  the semester  by students of the&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parkside,   who are&#13;
solely responsible  for its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Subscriptions  are available at the cost&#13;
or  $10  for  28  issues   Member  of the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press&#13;
,&#13;
(&#13;
,&#13;
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              <text>Parking Permit Thefts</text>
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              <text>�&#13;
CD Review&#13;
/page   8&#13;
$¢&#13;
SeePSGA election candidates and&#13;
biographies/  page 7&#13;
Men's Cross Country in Notre&#13;
Dame Invite/page 10&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 6 • OCTOBER 10, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
.J-kmecomingXng    andQueen&#13;
Joel Buschmann  (right)  and  Johnrae  Stevenson  (left)  were  UW-Parkside's   1996&#13;
Hoemcoming   King  and  Queen&#13;
Parking permit&#13;
thefts&#13;
By&#13;
Jason   Kluzak&#13;
Ranger  News  Reporter&#13;
The  little tags  students  hang&#13;
from their  rearview  mirror  allow&#13;
them  to park  on  University  of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside   property&#13;
without  being  penalized.&#13;
But so  far this year,  seven&#13;
. parking  permits  have  been  stolen,&#13;
as opposed  to a total  of twelve&#13;
last year.&#13;
A majority  of these  incidents&#13;
take place  every  year  in the&#13;
beginning  of the  semester,  at any&#13;
time  of day, but normally  in the&#13;
warmer  months.  The types  of&#13;
stolen  permits  range  from  one&#13;
and two  semester  penn its, to&#13;
housing  and general  parking  per-&#13;
mits .&#13;
Robert  Deane,  Chief  of&#13;
University   Police,  says  that  park-&#13;
ing permit  thefts  are, "not  a real&#13;
problem,"   but University   police&#13;
are  still  keeping  tabs  on stolen&#13;
permits.&#13;
Deane  said  the  University&#13;
police  department   keeps  a list of&#13;
stolen  permits  and  actively  looks&#13;
for them.  Deane  said  that  in the&#13;
two  years  he has  been  with  the&#13;
Department,   four or five have&#13;
been  recovered.&#13;
A standard  one  semester,  12&#13;
credit  hour  permit  will  cost  a stu-&#13;
dent  $43.  Ifthe   permit  is stolen,&#13;
the  student  must  then  pay  that&#13;
amount  again  to replace  the&#13;
stolen  permit,  along  with  any&#13;
other  citations  given  for failing&#13;
to display  a parking  permit.  This&#13;
could  end  up costing  the student&#13;
-&#13;
close  to a hundred  dollars.&#13;
\Vben  apprehended,   the&#13;
permit  thief  will  be fined  $25&#13;
and  will  be dealt  with  by the&#13;
Dean  of Students  independently&#13;
of the  University  police  depart-&#13;
ment,  said  Deane.&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
1\&#13;
Permit  Thefts,  page 3&#13;
University Police Implement Bike Program&#13;
By Ryan  Verbruggen&#13;
Ranger   Reporter&#13;
of  that   duty   and  others   to  the&#13;
new  bicycle   patrol   program   on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The  program   began  back  in&#13;
June,  according   to  UW-Parkside&#13;
Police  Chief  Robert  Deane.    He&#13;
said   the   department    uses   bicy-&#13;
cles   to   patrol   the  parking   lots&#13;
and   various   trails  around   cam-&#13;
pus,   along   with   soccer   games&#13;
and  cross-country   events.&#13;
"It's  nice  to  have  because&#13;
it&#13;
(the  bicycle)   can  go  where  the&#13;
cars   can't,"&#13;
explained    Deane.&#13;
He  also  said  the  police  depart,&#13;
ment  will  continue   implement-&#13;
ing&#13;
bicycle&#13;
patrol&#13;
at&#13;
the&#13;
University   as   long   as  weather&#13;
permits.&#13;
Currently&#13;
the   department&#13;
only   has   one   bicycle.&#13;
Deane&#13;
said  that  in the  future  the  police'&#13;
If you  have  noticed   that  the&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside  squad   cars   have    not&#13;
been&#13;
patrolling   the  parking   lots&#13;
as&#13;
much  lately,  there  is a  reason&#13;
for that.&#13;
Univ&#13;
.&#13;
ersity&#13;
Police  has  left  some&#13;
department&#13;
would   like   to   get&#13;
more.   However,   not  all  of  the&#13;
officers  on  the  force  are  able  to&#13;
use   the   bike.&#13;
Patrol-persons&#13;
must  first  complete  a state  train-&#13;
ing program  to become  certified.&#13;
Deane   said  that  eventually&#13;
the police  department  would  like&#13;
to have  all of its officers  trained.&#13;
The  bicycle  currently  being&#13;
used  for  patrol  was  donated   by&#13;
Total Cyclery  of Kenosha.&#13;
It&#13;
is a&#13;
TREK&#13;
7400    mountain&#13;
bike,&#13;
fully  equipped   with  a rear  rack,&#13;
bags,   and  a  "I ighting"   system.&#13;
The bike  is specifically   made  for&#13;
police   use   by  Trek.   Estimated&#13;
cost  of  the  bicycle   is  over  one&#13;
thousand  dollars.&#13;
For  more  information&#13;
about&#13;
theprogram   contact  theUW-&#13;
Parks ide  Police  Department   at&#13;
Voting campaign mass&#13;
transit services discussed at&#13;
PSGA meeting&#13;
Wyllie Hall&#13;
Fpod&#13;
Court construction&#13;
calls for relocation&#13;
of student offices&#13;
was scheduled last Tuesday in&#13;
Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Steven Mcl.aughlin, dean of&#13;
students, plans to discuss the&#13;
mass transportation issue further&#13;
at this week's PSGA meeting.&#13;
Visitors Parking&#13;
Besides the bus issue, ways to&#13;
improve visitors parking was dis-&#13;
cussed. "We are visitor unfriend-&#13;
ly," explained Jacobsen. A possi-&#13;
ble $30 parking fee paid by each&#13;
individual student could help to&#13;
e1eviate the hassle of purchasing&#13;
a $73 annual parking permit each&#13;
academic year, and also eliminate&#13;
meter usage for visitors, said&#13;
Jacobsen.&#13;
Food Court Expansion&#13;
The last item on the agenda&#13;
at the Oct. 4 meeting was discus-&#13;
sion of the Food Court, slated to&#13;
open at the beginning of Spring&#13;
1997 semester. PSGA, along with&#13;
the UW-Parkside Adult Student&#13;
Alliance (PASA), and the Ranger&#13;
News will re-locate their offices.&#13;
The new PSGA office will allow&#13;
access to wire in two computers&#13;
for Internet access, and the over-&#13;
all space will be slightly bigger.&#13;
Construction will begin on&#13;
Dec. 18 and is scheduled&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
completed by the end of January.&#13;
By that time, all of the offices&#13;
will be in their new locations.&#13;
PASA will be forced to move&#13;
sooner because of the interim&#13;
Coffee Shoppe,&#13;
Leadership House, housing six&#13;
female students.&#13;
At the Oct. 4 meeting, seven&#13;
members of PSGA signed up for&#13;
committees   dealing   with:&#13;
Legislative,  Student  Affairs,&#13;
Social  Issues,  Constitutional&#13;
Ballot, Academic Student Affairs,&#13;
and several others.&#13;
"If you're part of the PSGA,&#13;
you have to serve on two com-&#13;
mittees. It's a must - if you don't,&#13;
you're gone," said Weniger.&#13;
Weniger reminded students&#13;
of vacancies on the Election&#13;
Committee, advising those who&#13;
are not running for the election to&#13;
take part. "It is part of your&#13;
Senatorial duties to serve on the&#13;
Election Committee," he said.&#13;
Mass Transportation Surveys&#13;
Besides the "Get Out the Vote"&#13;
campaign, the mass transporation&#13;
surveys were discussed.  UW-&#13;
Parks ide students are being asked&#13;
to complete multiple choice sur-&#13;
veys about their usage of the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine bus services.&#13;
Additional attempts at circulating&#13;
the surveys were made by con-&#13;
tacting professors  and asking&#13;
them to distribute in class.&#13;
Several professors refused.to&#13;
comply with the surveys, arguing&#13;
that it would consume class time.&#13;
Students' imput is great-&#13;
ly appreciated because "if we&#13;
keep the bus service, it's going to&#13;
come out of [students'] segregat-&#13;
ed fees," Jacobsen said. A forum&#13;
Registering students to vote&#13;
in the Nov. 5 election is on the&#13;
main agenda for the University of&#13;
rently located in this space will  Wisconsin-Parks ide's  Student&#13;
be moved to the area near the  Government (PSGA) this sernes-&#13;
Student Records and Financial  ter.&#13;
The   University   of  Aid offices.&#13;
The "Get Out the Vote" cam-&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide  Student    The new location for the  paign, engineered by PSGA pres-&#13;
Government&#13;
Association  PASA office has not been con-  ident Teri Jacobsen and Senator&#13;
(PAGA), Parkside Adult Student  firmed.&#13;
' Jeanne Sanchez, has agoal to reg-&#13;
Alliance (PASA) and the Ranger    Once the offices and the food  ister 1,400 UW-Parkside voters&#13;
News will all be moving into new  court are completed, high traffic  by Oct. 22. Besides registering&#13;
offices to make room for a new  is expected throughout the lower  with PSGA, students can also&#13;
food court to be located in Wyllie  level of the Wyllie Hall, especial-  obtain registration information&#13;
Hall.&#13;
ly in front of the bookstore.&#13;
from Samuel Pernacciaro, profes-&#13;
The PSGA office will be    The remodeling, being done  sor of political science at UW-&#13;
relocated to the area at the lower  by Warner Design Associates,  Parkside.&#13;
level entrance to the library that  will begin during the winter    In an effort to recruit voters,&#13;
is currently locked.  The new  break and will be ready for use in  Jacobsen  went to the UW-&#13;
office will edge into the current  the spring of 1997 semester.&#13;
Parkside Activity Board (PA.B.)&#13;
library lobby space.&#13;
A representative for Warner  and Latinos Unidos meetings last&#13;
The Ranger will move into a Design said, "The principal dri-  week. Jacobsen also plans to&#13;
slightly larger office than the one  ving force behind the project is attend 13 University Seminar&#13;
it now occupies. The new office,  that we're going to have a poten-  classes within the next two&#13;
which will be constructed in the  tial400 more people on campus."  weeks.&#13;
foyer near the Career Center, will  (Due to the new dorms.)&#13;
PSGA  President  Jason&#13;
include a private office for the    No further information is Weniger and Tanya Hoffman,&#13;
Editor-in-Chief and a darkroom  available about the new food  Senator, also agreed to speak to&#13;
with a revolving door.&#13;
court as it isstill inthe early plan-  University  Seminar  students&#13;
,-_-,T",h",e:.....:v"en",d",i",n",g_m=a:::ch:.:,i:.:.n::e::.s...:c::u::r_-&#13;
-....:n:::i:::n:;:g...:s:::ta:::g~e::s:....    about the importance of voting.&#13;
Other items on the agenda&#13;
that were discussed included:&#13;
Committees&#13;
Students are still needed to serve&#13;
on the  Physical  Education&#13;
_Building Expansion committee&#13;
and the committee  that will&#13;
decide future plans concerning&#13;
the  Chancellor's   residence.&#13;
Currently, the house is used as a&#13;
BY KERRI BACHLER&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORTER&#13;
This Week In History&#13;
On October 12,1492, Christopher&#13;
Columbus and his crew sighted land&#13;
in what is now the Bahamas ... Oc-&#13;
Iober 8,1755, the British moved the&#13;
Acadian French from Nova Scotia to&#13;
Louisiana ... October 7,1765, nine&#13;
American colonies, ledbyNew York&#13;
and Massachusetts, convened at the&#13;
Stamp Aet Congress inNew York ...&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
is published every Thursday&#13;
throughout the semester by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,  who are&#13;
solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Subscriptions are available at the cost&#13;
of SID for 28 issues  Member  of the&#13;
Associated Collegiate Press.&#13;
Ranger  News&#13;
encourages  Letters to the&#13;
Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words&#13;
and should be delivered to the&#13;
Ranger N(!K!s&#13;
office  (WYLL  D139C)  or e-mailed  to&#13;
hansen8@it.uwp.edu&#13;
by noon the Monday&#13;
before publication. Letters must be typed and&#13;
include the author's name and phone number.&#13;
To&#13;
be&#13;
published, letters must be free from&#13;
mis-&#13;
leading or libelous content. Letters that fail to&#13;
comply will not&#13;
be&#13;
published.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters.&#13;
-----&#13;
In MemorlJ of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom,  former Manat]int] Etlitor, AUt].&#13;
25, 1996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Columnists  C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
Kristine.Hans~n&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Smith, Corey Mandley, Morgan&#13;
Managong EdItor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Harcey&#13;
AprilSCh~enberg&#13;
AlHeppner&#13;
Reporters Kerri Bachler, Becky&#13;
News EdItor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Schlevensky, Tim Gaiser, Aaron&#13;
Mark Ha~n&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
Kappellusch, Walt Shirer, Tim&#13;
News EdItor .&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Mote, Margaret Ditchburn&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
J I' I&#13;
'&#13;
Features Ed',tor&#13;
u&#13;
ia&#13;
ngram&#13;
AdVIsor Roseann Mason&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Copy Editors Genevieve&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2900&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Enrollment falls 6.5%; recruitment includes central Wisconsin, northen Illinois</text>
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              <text>.Career Center's   report  on recent'&#13;
UW-Parkside grads/page   5&#13;
-"The  Associate"   starring  Whoopi&#13;
Goldberg/page   8&#13;
-Profiles  of Mens  Cross  Country&#13;
runners/page  9&#13;
VOLUME 25 - ISSUE 7 - OCTOBER 17, 1996&#13;
ESTABLISHED1972&#13;
Enrollment falls 6.5&#13;
0/0;&#13;
recruitment includes central&#13;
Wisconsin,northern Illinois&#13;
Target dates set&#13;
for Phys. Ed.&#13;
building project&#13;
The  chancellor    will  meet  with&#13;
the  Administrative    Council,   gov-&#13;
ernance groups and representa-&#13;
tives    of   classified&#13;
staff    before&#13;
making   final  decisions   on  budget&#13;
cuts.&#13;
According    to  a  report   filed  at&#13;
the  University,   UW-Parkside    was&#13;
one  of  five  UW-System   campus-&#13;
es  with  enrollment   declines   from&#13;
fall   1995.  Campuses   at  Oshkosh,&#13;
Milwaukee,&#13;
Platteville&#13;
and'&#13;
Stevens&#13;
Point    were    below    fall&#13;
1995  enrollments&#13;
A  total   of  six&#13;
campuses&#13;
missed&#13;
their&#13;
enroll-&#13;
ment targets&#13;
by&#13;
one percent or&#13;
more.&#13;
However, increases in the num-&#13;
ber  of  new  transfer   students   who&#13;
leave   other   colleges   or  universi-&#13;
ties  to  attend   UW-Parkside    rose&#13;
by  15 percent.&#13;
Retention    of   continuing&#13;
stu-  .&#13;
dents   is  down    at   UW-Parkside.&#13;
According to exit interviews con-&#13;
ducted   by  the  University,   47  per-&#13;
cent  of  those   students   eligible   to&#13;
Inactive transmitter gives WPRS&#13;
Radio "dead-air"&#13;
RANGER  NEWS   REPORT&#13;
return  are&#13;
"stopouts"&#13;
who  say&#13;
they   intend   to  enroll   again   in  a&#13;
semester   or two;  about  33 percent&#13;
plan   to   transfer    and   17  percent&#13;
are uncertain of their future&#13;
plans.&#13;
Gary  Grace,  sssistant  chancellor&#13;
of  student   affairs,   said  better  job&#13;
opportunities  may  also account&#13;
for  part  of  the  current  enrollment&#13;
shortfall.&#13;
"Most   of  the  shortfall   in  stu-&#13;
dent  enrollment   is from  our  adult&#13;
students in the Racine&#13;
area-s-&#13;
the&#13;
economy   is so awfully  good  right&#13;
now  that  people   are  more   likely&#13;
to  pursue  a job  that  is good  rather&#13;
than an education."&#13;
Efforts   to  increase   enrollment&#13;
are  currently   being   implemented&#13;
by   the   University.&#13;
Construction&#13;
of  a new  student  residence   hall  is&#13;
presently&#13;
underway,&#13;
and   when&#13;
finished,   is expected  to house  400&#13;
students.&#13;
+FALL,&#13;
cont.   on  page  3&#13;
phase  two  of  this  expansion   pro-&#13;
ject,&#13;
according&#13;
to&#13;
William&#13;
Streeter,   Assistant   Chancellor   of&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
If  approved,   the&#13;
plans  then  go  to  the  state  legisla-&#13;
ture  for  funding  ideas.&#13;
The  second   phase   consists   of&#13;
adding'  on  a new  fieldhouse.    The&#13;
new&#13;
fieldhouse&#13;
would&#13;
cover&#13;
58,504    square    feet,   and   would&#13;
house   an  indoor  track.&#13;
The  sur-&#13;
face  would  be  very  similar  to  the&#13;
synthetic&#13;
surface&#13;
recently&#13;
removed   from  the  existing   gym.&#13;
The  new  gym  would  be  used  for&#13;
track, tennis, soccer, and other&#13;
sports.&#13;
Currently,   the  outdoor   sports,&#13;
such   as   baseball,&#13;
softball,    and&#13;
soccer,  are  having  trouble  finding&#13;
a   place    to   practice&#13;
when    the&#13;
weather is not cooperating out-&#13;
side.   The  new  gym  would  solve&#13;
this    problem,&#13;
and   would    give&#13;
ample&#13;
space&#13;
to    all    the    sport&#13;
teams.&#13;
"This  would  be  a  huge  benefit&#13;
to our  outdoor  teams,"   said  Draft.&#13;
The  indoor  sports,   like  bas-&#13;
ketball,  and volleyball   would  also&#13;
be  able   to  use   the   new   facility.&#13;
However,&#13;
they    will   still   play&#13;
. their   games   and   practice   on  the&#13;
new wooden surface in the exist-&#13;
ing fieldhouse.&#13;
Draft  said  the  project  has  been&#13;
long  in the  making,   and  will  ben-&#13;
efit eversyone   connected   with  the&#13;
University.&#13;
"Just  to see the  shovel  hit the&#13;
ground   in  March   is  going   to  be&#13;
rewarding,"   explained   Draft.&#13;
BY RYAN  VERBRUGGEN&#13;
RANGER   REPORTER&#13;
Plans  for  the  first  phase   of  the&#13;
Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
Building&#13;
expansion   project  are  expected   to&#13;
be  set  in motion  early  this  spring,&#13;
with  several  other  key  dates  set.&#13;
Ground   breaking   ceremonies&#13;
are   expected&#13;
in   mid   March    of&#13;
1997,  and  completion   of  the  first&#13;
phase   is  expected   by  August   of&#13;
1998,  according   to  Linda   Draft,&#13;
Associate&#13;
Athletic&#13;
Director&#13;
at&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
"We are one more year behind&#13;
schedule    than   where   we   would&#13;
like  to  be,"  said  Draft.&#13;
The   first  phase   of  the  project&#13;
includes   remodeling    of  the   first&#13;
floor  to  provide  additional   locker&#13;
room space, a new training room,&#13;
weight&#13;
room,&#13;
and&#13;
equipment&#13;
issue room.  The second floor&#13;
will   also   have  work   done   on   it.&#13;
This  includes  an  additional   class-&#13;
room,&#13;
office&#13;
space,&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
dance/aerobics    studio.&#13;
Before   any  of  this  can  happen&#13;
though,   some  details  still  need  to&#13;
be   worked   out.&#13;
In  January    of&#13;
1997,  plans  will   be  released    for&#13;
bids&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
contractors.&#13;
Approximately&#13;
one&#13;
month-&#13;
later,&#13;
the  bids  will  be  awarded   for  con-&#13;
struction,    and   then   the   building&#13;
can  begin.&#13;
The  ground  breaking  ceremony&#13;
is not  the  only  big  event  happen-&#13;
ing   in   March.&#13;
The   Wisconsin&#13;
Building   Commission   will  again&#13;
meet   in   the   spring,    and   either&#13;
approve   or  disapprove   plans   for&#13;
Enrollment  at the  University   of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside    is  down   6.5&#13;
percent, and  is expected   to  cause&#13;
a  $780,000   shortfall&#13;
in  revenue&#13;
from tuition.&#13;
UW-Parkside's   total  enrollment&#13;
for  the    1996    fall    semester&#13;
is&#13;
4,538, down  from  4,851   in  1995.&#13;
The  University    missed    its   full-&#13;
time-equivalent&#13;
enrollment target&#13;
by&#13;
340  students.   This   figure    is&#13;
nearly  10 percent   below   the  pro-&#13;
jected target.&#13;
The University   is currently   tak-&#13;
ing steps   in  anticipation&#13;
of   the&#13;
,&#13;
projected deficit.   Early  corrective&#13;
steps include:&#13;
•  Leaving   some   staff  vacan-&#13;
eies unfilled.&#13;
•  Using  part-time   professors&#13;
to  teach   classes    where    faculty&#13;
members have  left.&#13;
•    Eliminating&#13;
or&#13;
cutting&#13;
spending  for  some   supplies   and&#13;
equipment.&#13;
badly   in  need  of  a  new  transmit-&#13;
ter  that  would   give  the  radio  sta-&#13;
tion   a  stronger    signal   for&#13;
long-:&#13;
range  broadcasting.&#13;
"We  have  a radio  station  and  it&#13;
is doing  something,   but  I think&#13;
it's been years since we have&#13;
had  a transminer   capable  of  long&#13;
range  broadcasting,"    explained&#13;
Greenfield.&#13;
(-RADIO,&#13;
cont,   on  page  3&#13;
the  radio   and   catch  the  latest  on&#13;
WPRS,&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Radio-&#13;
the   station   listed   in  the   campus&#13;
directory   that   apparently,    "does-&#13;
n't even exist."&#13;
But  this  isn't   due  to  the  per-&#13;
sonnel   at  WPRS    Radio   keeping&#13;
their  doors  locked  to  the  public.&#13;
WPRS&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Gerald&#13;
Greenfield   said  the  problem   aris-&#13;
es   because    the   radio   station    is&#13;
BY  MARK   HAHN&#13;
NEWS   EDITOR&#13;
&amp;&#13;
APRIL   SCHOENBERG&#13;
MANAGING   EDITOR&#13;
When it comes  to hearing  tunes,&#13;
most students  at the  University   of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside   resort  to  car-&#13;
rying around   their   own  headsets&#13;
and CD players.&#13;
According to exit interviews,&#13;
it's not  like  students   can  flip  on&#13;
University officials "refresh" staff employees on&#13;
Wisconsin Act 177&#13;
The University  defines sexual&#13;
harassment  as unwanted, unwel.&#13;
come sexual  advances,  requests&#13;
for sexual favors, and any other&#13;
physical, written, or verbal intim-&#13;
idation  of an offensive  nature&#13;
where:&#13;
• Compliance  may be made&#13;
a  condition   of  education  or&#13;
employment.&#13;
•  In  relationships   among&#13;
equals,  when  such  harassment&#13;
has a harmful effect on ability to&#13;
work or study.&#13;
For more information on sexu-&#13;
al harassment,  refer to the&#13;
UW·&#13;
Parks ide  Sexual   Harassment&#13;
brochure   or  contact  Frances&#13;
Kavenik,  Chair  of the Sexual&#13;
Harassment  Commitee  at (414)&#13;
595-2644.&#13;
son who is unconscious or men-&#13;
tally&#13;
ill&#13;
or mentally deficient.&#13;
Third Degree:  sexual  inter-&#13;
course with a person without that&#13;
person's consent.&#13;
Fourth Degree: sexual con-&#13;
tact   (meaning    intentionally&#13;
touching of an individuals's&#13;
inti-&#13;
mate parts) without the person's&#13;
consent.&#13;
Sexual  Exploitation  by a&#13;
Therapist: intentional sexual con-&#13;
tact by a therapist  during  any&#13;
ongoing therapist/patient  or ther-&#13;
apist/client relationship.&#13;
All instances of sexual assault&#13;
are reportable under Wis. Act 177&#13;
regradless   of  the  degree  of&#13;
assault, or whether the perpetra-&#13;
tor  is  known  to  the  victim&#13;
(aquaintance    rape)   or  not&#13;
(stranger rape).&#13;
ed through the Women's Center&#13;
(ext.  2170)  and the Woman's&#13;
Resource Center in Racine (633-&#13;
3233).&#13;
The following are definitions of&#13;
sexual assault:&#13;
First Degree: sexual intercourse&#13;
or contact without consent which&#13;
causes  a pregnancy  or inflicts&#13;
great bodily harm; or which is&#13;
accomplished  using or threaten-&#13;
ing to use a dangerous weapon;&#13;
or without consent while aided by&#13;
one or more persons.&#13;
Second Degree: sexual inter-&#13;
course or contact without consent&#13;
through use of threat of violence,&#13;
or intercourse  or contact which&#13;
causes  injury  including  illness,&#13;
disease or impairment of sexual&#13;
organs  or mental  anguish,  or&#13;
intercourse or contact with a per-&#13;
a student who has been sexually&#13;
assaulted to report the incident to&#13;
the University's dean of students,&#13;
for the purpose of disseminating&#13;
this information  to the student&#13;
body.&#13;
If the victim wishes to remain&#13;
anonymous, the incident may be&#13;
reported  without  including  a&#13;
name. Because sexual assault is a&#13;
crime and can have long lasting&#13;
negative  effects on the victim,&#13;
employees of the institution are&#13;
required  to urge the victim to&#13;
seek assistance  through Student&#13;
Health and Counseling  Services,&#13;
University Police or the Dean of&#13;
Student's Office.&#13;
McLaughlin said trained advo-&#13;
cates are available on campus to&#13;
assist  the  victim.  Additional&#13;
referrals and support are provid-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS REPORT&#13;
Officials at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside  are notify-&#13;
ing staff employees of the impor-&#13;
tance of complying with State of&#13;
Wisconsin Act 177 when dealing&#13;
with either witnessing or receiv-&#13;
ing reports from individuals who&#13;
have been sexually assaulted.&#13;
lOWe normally  issue  a&#13;
copy of the statement around the&#13;
beginning of the school year as a&#13;
'refresher'  for our employees  to&#13;
help them define what first, sec-&#13;
ond, third and fourth degrees of&#13;
sexual assault  are," said Steve&#13;
McLaughlin, dean of students.&#13;
Act  177  requires  all&#13;
employees of the institution who&#13;
witness a sexual assault on earn-&#13;
pus or who recieve a report from&#13;
Corrections:&#13;
let us know. Call 595-2287 and leave a detailed correction and atlii!'19l't~.~li~iii)lane~ijacking&#13;
has been~ppkul~tii!~M;iii~1ii~t&amp;&amp;iii~i\d  f'liiside&#13;
nts&#13;
'!~g¥9i8I'!IjI'IMI'!J1'lpd~(tI"re.  ar.".~!P.e ..qfJMiWqrld'$rii\ii$t:hQteworthy hijackings'&#13;
number where you can be reached should we have any questions.&#13;
"I,:'f1l31f ..·\"·..:'·..&#13;
···{·t..t.·.t111ao;V'tHtpVPE!tV!t&#13;
V&#13;
i'!j'l1l111i"li!V&#13;
"  ,&#13;
1~94'&#13;
'&#13;
; qrst reco~dedi  ' ""   ,n!!"l r~poJ1il&lt;C: ;::'.&#13;
I,:',;&#13;
P~kl&amp;.ijnianshijaCked&#13;
" French Airbus hijacked&#13;
Issue&#13;
6&#13;
(October  3,&#13;
1996):&#13;
-In the article about PSGA, Jason&#13;
, ,r,rp~ane hlJ!'cklOg    , hlJaSklOgI,nthe  ",,,,'   an. Egyptttir plane The,&#13;
'10&#13;
Algiers for release of&#13;
Weniger was incorrectly identified as President  He is Vice-President'   00 plac~ ,'nPeru"&#13;
dSotvletutnlon&#13;
l&#13;
;  d'  ,,,   plane wa~'slgnned  and   ' jailed opposition leaders.&#13;
.&#13;
.,''I"  ', '&#13;
a a no 'ra ease  "',&#13;
'59&#13;
pggple died"" d,&#13;
Ii,&#13;
,'Hijackers  killed&#13;
•The Ranger&#13;
apologizes for the poor quality of the front page photo  "    .  ,",:'   '.&#13;
i,''''&#13;
Yr,  , ,',-,,:Hi "';,'&#13;
":',;-1':'&#13;
/J"N,&#13;
I&#13;
of Homecoming Kmg and Queen Joel Buschmann and Johnrae&#13;
~&#13;
Os&#13;
19405&#13;
'j!1Sus&#13;
.96us&#13;
19lUS&#13;
1911us I    199051&#13;
Stevenson.&#13;
1Il00l!llllllllllillilmmUOOIl!I!!illilllllilillilmrnllllmllllIlU!!lIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll111II1l11l111111lllllllll!II11111111&#13;
:~~:~ :t~~~~;~~::::~;.&#13;
;~:ta~~~o&#13;
h~:t~~::~r  ~~;i:~;r~~~:r;::~~nts&#13;
:'::~il~!I!!lt..:: ...;,~·:·&#13;
'::;;n;;!;;i'.'::~~~~;!;II:I!,rlllii:I:II!I:·i.!IIII:111::III.~\liiii::;+:::,;:'·"&#13;
I&#13;
1996:&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
from Engineering Club designed and made this car for competition&#13;
h"~~~dSchubttle; I'&#13;
s   Two Arab.'9uelTilla~.§iiiiiii;lii&gt;"Two sib&lt;iliaoi pulled   Sudanese airplane&#13;
.&#13;
.   . .   .'&#13;
IJ&#13;
U&#13;
an pane&#13;
a plane&#13;
In&#13;
Cyprus Egyptiar;'/  shotg'un from rnusi  I&#13;
bo&#13;
d f  A&#13;
against uruversmes lIke Purdue and MIchigan State in the summer of&#13;
flown&#13;
to&#13;
Mexico&#13;
starting&#13;
commandos stormed    ...--"-'.'.&#13;
s. ro&#13;
musl~a&#13;
un  or  rnman,&#13;
'95&#13;
a&#13;
hii  k 'd I&#13;
".'"&#13;
mstrument cases. Nine Jordan, diverted to&#13;
.&#13;
uac e panes..    .. . the planeH,5k.ill!lll'VV· ....    died&#13;
as&#13;
th&amp;&#13;
plane&#13;
WI'S&#13;
London. IrIlqihijackers&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
has two new staff members. We&#13;
Cuba, US,Mexico   .... ..' ···············"::..:  ..&#13;
'~n?Li:::.\I!ii;;llill;::!:i:;;iib&#13;
seek politicalasylum&#13;
welcome Baisha Strothers, Assistant Business&#13;
Manager, and Aaron Rich,Secretary, to our staff.&#13;
. Ranger    Nf!WS&#13;
is published  every Thursday&#13;
throughout  the semester&#13;
by&#13;
students  of the&#13;
University  of Wisconsin-Parkside,   who  are&#13;
solely responsible  for its editorial  policy and&#13;
content. Subscriptions  are available allhe cost&#13;
of  $\0  for  28  issues.  Member   of  the&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
encourages   Letters  to  the&#13;
Editor. Letters should  not exceed  250 words&#13;
and should be delivered  to the&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
office  (WYLL   D139C)   or  e-mailed   to&#13;
hansen8@it.uwp.edu&#13;
by noon  the  Monday&#13;
before publication.  Lellers must be 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 conlent.  Letters that fail to&#13;
comply will not be published.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters.&#13;
----&#13;
In MemorlJ of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom,  former Manat]int] Editor, Aut].&#13;
25, 7996&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kristine Hansen&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Features  Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Columnists  C.J. Nelson, Maria&#13;
Smith, Corey Mandley, Amy&#13;
Slindt, Morgan Harcey&#13;
Features  Editor&#13;
Jennifer Puccini&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AIHeppner&#13;
Copy Editors  Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Julia Ingram&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Ranger  NeW5&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
900 Wood Rd&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
(414) 595-2287&#13;
Reporters  Kerri Bachler, Brian&#13;
Borkowski, Margaret Oitchburn,&#13;
Tim Gaiser, Aaron Kapellusch,&#13;
Jason Kluzak, Tim Mote, Becky&#13;
Schlevensky,  Walt Shirer,&#13;
Ryan Verbruggen&#13;
Advisor  Roseann Mason&#13;
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              <text>Presidential Pre-election Held at University Bookstore</text>
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              <text>&#13;
·OMSA coordinator's  retire-&#13;
ment/page  S&#13;
-Brad  Pitt's&#13;
Twelve Monkeys&#13;
now on video/page  8&#13;
-Women's  Volleyball team  returns&#13;
home  for two games  this week-&#13;
end/page  9&#13;
VOLUME 25 • ISSUE 8 • OCTOBER 24, 1996&#13;
PHOTO BY SCOTT KOLP&#13;
wit#.&#13;
J.iall...een&#13;
j-st&#13;
,",.-nd&#13;
the&#13;
Cotnet.&#13;
many  lo&lt;al  people  _&#13;
getting&#13;
in"&#13;
the  Sl'lRlT&#13;
(fio&#13;
p"n&#13;
in19nded)&#13;
IBOOI&#13;
Presidential Pre-Election  Held at'&#13;
University  Bookstore&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
.  Students  at the  University    of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide  had   the&#13;
opportunityto make their voices&#13;
.heard  in a  Presidential   Pre-&#13;
Election held on Oct. 23 in the&#13;
Universitybookstore.&#13;
"We did this last year, and it&#13;
was a lot of fun for us  as  well  as&#13;
for  the  students   -,&#13;
commented&#13;
N&#13;
'&#13;
ancy  Schroeder,  bookstore&#13;
manager. "It's&#13;
informative&#13;
to&#13;
studentsand it will be interesting&#13;
to see which issues on the ballot&#13;
stud~nts&#13;
were most interested&#13;
by."&#13;
Students voted for their presi-&#13;
dential   did&#13;
.&#13;
can&#13;
I&#13;
ates&#13;
of choice  and&#13;
indicated,&#13;
from   a   list,   the   top&#13;
three  campaign    issues   that  influ-&#13;
enced   their  vote.  The  voting   was&#13;
conducted&#13;
in   conjunction&#13;
with&#13;
500 other colleges and universi-&#13;
ties  nationwide.&#13;
The bookstore was open&#13;
.during&#13;
regular&#13;
business&#13;
hours   Oct.-&#13;
23&#13;
and students had the opportunity&#13;
to vote  at anytime&#13;
dur&#13;
ing the day.&#13;
Election  results  will 'be  made&#13;
available   to the  media  and posted&#13;
in    the&#13;
University&#13;
bookstore&#13;
before Oct. 3&#13;
I.&#13;
Results will include a listing of&#13;
how  students  at  UW-Parkside&#13;
voted,   along  with  national  results&#13;
from the 500 other colleges and&#13;
universities&#13;
that   participated&#13;
in&#13;
the  voting.&#13;
The  Pre-Election    was  designed&#13;
to&#13;
create&#13;
interest&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Presidential&#13;
Election&#13;
that   will&#13;
take place on Nov. 6, as well as&#13;
the   campaign&#13;
issues&#13;
that   sur-&#13;
round   it.  The   Pre-Election&#13;
was&#13;
also   designed    as  a  reminder   to&#13;
UW-Parkside   students  of  the&#13;
importance    of  getting   out  their&#13;
vote.&#13;
The  campaign   was  sponsored&#13;
by Follett College Stores. Follett,&#13;
an Elmhurst, 111.based company,&#13;
operates  more  than  500 other&#13;
Follett  stores  in 45 states that&#13;
participated  in the  Presidential&#13;
Pre-Election.&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1972&#13;
Contest  aimed to&#13;
increase  athletic&#13;
atten-&#13;
dance;"flip  the bill"&#13;
for tuition  costs&#13;
BY  MARK   HAHN&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
Students   now  have  a chance&#13;
to take time out to attend sport-&#13;
ing events  while  at the  same  time&#13;
covering   their  tuition   costs   in   a&#13;
new   contest   offered   this  year  at&#13;
the   University&#13;
of   Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
Each  time  a  student   attends   a&#13;
home volleyball  match, basket-&#13;
ball game, or wrestling dual meet&#13;
this year at UW-Parkside,  they&#13;
can  sign  their  name  at the  desig-&#13;
nated   place   and  time   and  enter&#13;
themselves&#13;
into  a drawing   to  be&#13;
held at the last home basketball&#13;
game  of  the  season.&#13;
The  contest   provides   a way  for&#13;
students   to get  their  tuition  at the&#13;
in-state  rate paid  for  next  fall,  or&#13;
get  reimbursed  for the tuition&#13;
students   pay  second   semester    if&#13;
they graduate  at the end of the&#13;
academic   year.   Student   fees  are&#13;
not  included.&#13;
"We're trying to do something&#13;
positive   to  provide   more  oppor-&#13;
tunities   to get  students&#13;
involved&#13;
with&#13;
campus   events,"   explained&#13;
Dr. Lenny  Klaver,  director  of&#13;
athletics.  "UW-Parkside  is pri-&#13;
marily&#13;
a&#13;
commuter&#13;
school   and&#13;
it's  harder  to  get   students   who&#13;
don't    live   on   campus&#13;
to   get&#13;
involved. This could be a way to&#13;
get people to come  to athletic&#13;
events who might otherwise not&#13;
come."&#13;
Klaver also said that poor atten-&#13;
dance  at  sporting   events   such  as&#13;
men's  basketball   games  can  have&#13;
a negative    impact  on  the  perfor-&#13;
mance of athletic teams.&#13;
"It&#13;
can be a dismal to student&#13;
athletes performing when there is&#13;
nobody watching in the stands;'&#13;
explained Klaver. "This could be&#13;
a way  to  develop   enthusiasm    as&#13;
well  as give  students  some  incen-&#13;
tive  to get  involved."&#13;
Klaver  commented    that a lot of&#13;
students   at  the   University&#13;
may&#13;
not be  aware of what level of&#13;
competition  UW-Parkside's  ath-,&#13;
letic&#13;
teams&#13;
play    at   in   their&#13;
respective   conference.&#13;
"In basketball, the Great Lakes&#13;
Valley   Conference&#13;
is  outstand-&#13;
ing,"  said   Klaver.   "The   confer-&#13;
ence  is recognized   very  highly   in&#13;
NCAA Division II Basketball."&#13;
Each  time  a student  attends  an&#13;
athletic  event  at UW..Parkside&#13;
and signs up for the contest, they&#13;
increase    their   chances&#13;
of   win-&#13;
ning.    Students&#13;
can   sign   their&#13;
names on a slip of paper handed&#13;
out  at the  beginning   of  the  event&#13;
when they show their valid UW-&#13;
Parkside  IDs, and students  can&#13;
put the slip into the designated&#13;
box  that  is available   on their  way&#13;
out&#13;
after  the  event.&#13;
A   schedule    of   UW-&#13;
Parkside's   sporting  events   can&#13;
be&#13;
picked up at the Athletic Office&#13;
or  at  the  student   Donn   Office.&#13;
Students    are  allowed&#13;
only&#13;
one&#13;
entry per night, and only current&#13;
UW-Parkside  students are eligi-&#13;
ble to enter. Scholarship' ath letes&#13;
are not eligible to enter the con-&#13;
test.&#13;
__________________&#13;
-...;1&#13;
•oMSA &#13;
coordinator's &#13;
retire-&#13;
ment/page &#13;
5 &#13;
• &#13;
Brad &#13;
Pitt's &#13;
Twelve &#13;
Monkeys &#13;
now &#13;
on &#13;
video/page &#13;
8 &#13;
•Women's &#13;
Volleyball &#13;
team &#13;
returns &#13;
home &#13;
for &#13;
two &#13;
games &#13;
this &#13;
week-&#13;
end/page &#13;
9 &#13;
VOLUME &#13;
25 &#13;
• &#13;
ISSUE &#13;
8 • &#13;
OCTOBER &#13;
24, &#13;
1996 &#13;
PHOTO &#13;
BY &#13;
SCOTT &#13;
KOLP &#13;
'with &#13;
kallo,,,een &#13;
)"st &#13;
ato"nd &#13;
the &#13;
Cotnet, &#13;
many &#13;
lo&lt;al &#13;
people &#13;
a,e &#13;
getting &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
SPIAIT &#13;
&lt;,lo &#13;
P"" &#13;
intended) &#13;
IBOOI &#13;
Presidential &#13;
Pre-Election &#13;
Held &#13;
at &#13;
University &#13;
Bookstore &#13;
RANGER &#13;
NEWS &#13;
REPORT &#13;
. &#13;
Students &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
had &#13;
the &#13;
, &#13;
opportunity &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
their &#13;
voices &#13;
heard &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
Presidential &#13;
Pre-&#13;
Election &#13;
held &#13;
on &#13;
Oct. &#13;
23 &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
bookstore. &#13;
"We &#13;
did &#13;
this &#13;
last &#13;
year &#13;
and &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
of &#13;
fun &#13;
for &#13;
us &#13;
as &#13;
'well &#13;
as &#13;
~r &#13;
the &#13;
students," &#13;
commented &#13;
ancy &#13;
Schroeder, &#13;
bookstore &#13;
manager. &#13;
"It's &#13;
informative &#13;
to &#13;
st&#13;
udents &#13;
and &#13;
it &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
interesting &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
which &#13;
issues &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
ballot &#13;
st&#13;
udents &#13;
were &#13;
most &#13;
interested &#13;
by." &#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
udents &#13;
voted &#13;
for &#13;
their &#13;
presi-&#13;
dential &#13;
candidates &#13;
of &#13;
choice &#13;
and &#13;
indicated, &#13;
from &#13;
a &#13;
list, &#13;
the &#13;
top &#13;
three &#13;
campaign &#13;
issues &#13;
that &#13;
influ-&#13;
enced &#13;
their &#13;
vote&#13;
. The &#13;
voting &#13;
was &#13;
conducted &#13;
in &#13;
conjunction &#13;
with &#13;
500 &#13;
other &#13;
colleges &#13;
and &#13;
universi-&#13;
ties &#13;
nationwide. &#13;
The &#13;
bookstore &#13;
was &#13;
open &#13;
during &#13;
regular &#13;
business &#13;
hours &#13;
Oct. &#13;
23 &#13;
and &#13;
students &#13;
had &#13;
the &#13;
opportunity &#13;
to &#13;
vote &#13;
at &#13;
anytime &#13;
during &#13;
the &#13;
day. &#13;
Election &#13;
results &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
available &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
media &#13;
and &#13;
posted &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
bookstore &#13;
before &#13;
Oct. &#13;
3 I &#13;
. &#13;
Results &#13;
will &#13;
include &#13;
a  listing &#13;
of &#13;
how &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
voted, &#13;
along &#13;
with  national &#13;
results &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
500 &#13;
other &#13;
colleges &#13;
and &#13;
universities &#13;
that &#13;
participated &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
voting &#13;
The &#13;
Pre-Election &#13;
was &#13;
designed &#13;
to &#13;
create &#13;
interest &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Presidential &#13;
Election &#13;
that &#13;
will &#13;
take &#13;
place &#13;
on &#13;
Nov. &#13;
6, &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
campaign &#13;
issues &#13;
that &#13;
sur-&#13;
round &#13;
it. &#13;
The &#13;
Pre-Eleetion &#13;
was &#13;
also &#13;
designed &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
reminder &#13;
to &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
importance &#13;
of &#13;
getting &#13;
out &#13;
their &#13;
vote. &#13;
The &#13;
campaign &#13;
was &#13;
sponsored &#13;
by &#13;
Follett &#13;
College &#13;
Stores. &#13;
Follett, &#13;
an &#13;
Elmhurst, &#13;
Ill. &#13;
based &#13;
company, &#13;
operates &#13;
more &#13;
than &#13;
500 &#13;
other &#13;
Follett &#13;
stores &#13;
in &#13;
45 &#13;
states &#13;
that &#13;
participated &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Presidential &#13;
Pre-Election. &#13;
ESTABLISHED &#13;
1972 &#13;
Contest &#13;
aimed &#13;
to &#13;
increase &#13;
athletic &#13;
atten-&#13;
dance; &#13;
''flip &#13;
the &#13;
bill'' &#13;
for &#13;
tuition &#13;
costs &#13;
BY &#13;
MARK &#13;
HAHN &#13;
NEWS &#13;
EDITOR &#13;
Students &#13;
now &#13;
have &#13;
a  chance &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
time &#13;
out &#13;
to &#13;
attend &#13;
sport-&#13;
ing &#13;
events &#13;
while &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
time &#13;
covering &#13;
their &#13;
tuition  costs &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
contest &#13;
offered &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
. &#13;
Each &#13;
time &#13;
a  student &#13;
attends &#13;
a &#13;
home &#13;
volleyball &#13;
match, &#13;
basket-&#13;
ball &#13;
game, &#13;
or &#13;
wrestling &#13;
dual &#13;
meet &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
at &#13;
UW-Parkside, &#13;
they &#13;
can &#13;
sign &#13;
their &#13;
name &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
desig-&#13;
nated &#13;
place &#13;
and &#13;
time &#13;
and &#13;
enter &#13;
themselves &#13;
into &#13;
a  drawing &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
held &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
last &#13;
home &#13;
basketball &#13;
game &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
season. &#13;
The &#13;
contest &#13;
provides &#13;
a way &#13;
for &#13;
students &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
their tuition &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
in-state &#13;
rate &#13;
paid &#13;
for &#13;
next &#13;
fall, &#13;
or &#13;
get &#13;
reimbursed &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
tuition &#13;
students &#13;
pay &#13;
second &#13;
semester &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
graduate &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
end &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
academic &#13;
year. &#13;
Student &#13;
fees &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
included. &#13;
"We're &#13;
trying &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
something &#13;
positive &#13;
to &#13;
provide &#13;
more &#13;
oppor-&#13;
tunities &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
students &#13;
involved &#13;
with &#13;
campus &#13;
events," &#13;
explained &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Lenny &#13;
Klaver, &#13;
director &#13;
of &#13;
athletics. &#13;
"UW-Parksid&#13;
_e &#13;
is &#13;
pri-&#13;
marily &#13;
a &#13;
commuter &#13;
school &#13;
and &#13;
it's &#13;
harder &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
don't &#13;
live &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
involved. &#13;
This &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
a way &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
people &#13;
to &#13;
come &#13;
to &#13;
athletic &#13;
events &#13;
who &#13;
might &#13;
otherwise &#13;
not &#13;
come." &#13;
Klaver &#13;
also &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
poor &#13;
atten-&#13;
dance &#13;
at &#13;
sporting &#13;
events &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
men's &#13;
basketball &#13;
games &#13;
can &#13;
have &#13;
a  negative &#13;
impact &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
perfor-&#13;
mance &#13;
of &#13;
athletic &#13;
teams. &#13;
"It &#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
a  dismal &#13;
to &#13;
student &#13;
athletes &#13;
performing &#13;
when &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
nobody &#13;
watching &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
stands," &#13;
explained &#13;
Klaver. &#13;
"This &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
a  way &#13;
to &#13;
develop &#13;
enthusiasm &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
as &#13;
g~ve &#13;
students &#13;
some &#13;
incen-&#13;
tive &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
involved." &#13;
Klaver &#13;
commented &#13;
that &#13;
a  lot &#13;
of &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
may &#13;
not &#13;
be &#13;
aware &#13;
of &#13;
what &#13;
level &#13;
of &#13;
competition &#13;
UW-Parkside's &#13;
ath-&#13;
letic &#13;
teams &#13;
play &#13;
at &#13;
in &#13;
their &#13;
respective &#13;
conference. &#13;
"In &#13;
basketball, &#13;
the &#13;
Great &#13;
Lakes &#13;
Valley &#13;
Conference &#13;
is &#13;
outstand-&#13;
ing," &#13;
said &#13;
Klaver. &#13;
"The &#13;
confer-&#13;
ence &#13;
is &#13;
recognized &#13;
very &#13;
highly &#13;
in &#13;
NCAA &#13;
Division &#13;
II &#13;
Basketball." &#13;
Each &#13;
time &#13;
a  student &#13;
attends &#13;
an &#13;
athletic &#13;
event &#13;
at &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
and &#13;
signs &#13;
up &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
contest&#13;
, they &#13;
increase &#13;
their &#13;
chances &#13;
of &#13;
win-&#13;
ning. &#13;
Students &#13;
can &#13;
sign &#13;
their &#13;
names &#13;
on &#13;
a  slip &#13;
of &#13;
paper &#13;
handed &#13;
out &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
beginning &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
event &#13;
when &#13;
they &#13;
show &#13;
their &#13;
valid &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside &#13;
IDs, &#13;
and &#13;
students &#13;
can &#13;
put &#13;
the &#13;
slip &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
designated &#13;
box &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
available &#13;
on &#13;
their &#13;
way &#13;
out &#13;
after &#13;
the &#13;
event. &#13;
A &#13;
schedule &#13;
of &#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside's &#13;
sporting &#13;
events &#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
picked &#13;
up &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Athletic &#13;
Office &#13;
or &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
student &#13;
Dorm &#13;
Office. &#13;
Students &#13;
are &#13;
allowed &#13;
only &#13;
one &#13;
entry &#13;
per &#13;
night, &#13;
and &#13;
only &#13;
current &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
eligi-&#13;
ble &#13;
to &#13;
enter. &#13;
Scholarship&#13;
. athletes &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
eligible &#13;
to &#13;
enter &#13;
the &#13;
con-&#13;
test. &#13;
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              <text>&#13;
&gt;&#13;
OMen's Cross Country fights for&#13;
fourth in GLYC/page 13&#13;
~eatau4&#13;
OTheRocky Horror Picture Show&#13;
oncampus tonight. For a shopping&#13;
list,see page 6&#13;
OA review of&#13;
Bram Stoker's&#13;
•&#13;
Dracula&#13;
performing in the Comm&#13;
Arts theatre/page 9&#13;
VOLUME  25&#13;
°&#13;
ISSUE&#13;
9&#13;
°&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
31,1996&#13;
HIlPPY   HL\LLOWEEN&#13;
ESTABLISHED  1972&#13;
Flu shots available at&#13;
Student Health Center&#13;
A day of atonement&#13;
BYCARRIE MCNAMARA&#13;
SPECIALTO THE RANGER&#13;
In a classroom where students&#13;
gather, someone sneezes, another&#13;
person coughs, and a few others&#13;
blow their noses.&#13;
No one wants to catch this cold.&#13;
Therefore, after class, taking a&#13;
walk to the Student Health and&#13;
Counseling  Center in Molinaro&#13;
Hall, Room D-115 to get a flu&#13;
shot can help to sustain good&#13;
health.&#13;
Last year, the Center of Disease&#13;
Control reported over 4,000 cases&#13;
of influenza in the United States.&#13;
Reports indicated that the number&#13;
of cases could have been greatly&#13;
reduced and less severe&#13;
if&#13;
sick&#13;
persons had received  a yearly&#13;
PHOTOBYCASPER vaccine for influenza.&#13;
AI&#13;
IIeppnet&#13;
~e1t)&#13;
and&#13;
Jolon&#13;
11&#13;
0&#13;
M,&#13;
both stan membets 01&#13;
tIoe&#13;
Aanget&#13;
Ileols,s,...t&#13;
tIoei.&#13;
Now through mid-November is&#13;
hall_   &lt;ost-~s (the{te sopposed&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
ghosts).·&#13;
the best time to get the flu shot&#13;
L-':':':'=~-':':'''':''--':':'.--':':=-'--':':----.!..~-=-~ __&#13;
-=-==---_=---&#13;
-;-_-;;&#13;
__&#13;
-;:-_--'&#13;
Although peak flu season is not&#13;
Recurrmg fights between students&#13;
until December, getting the shot&#13;
early allows the body's immune&#13;
•&#13;
system to become strongest at&#13;
cause for disciplinary action&#13;
thi~~~:nza,  or the flu, is more&#13;
than just a common cold.  The&#13;
symptoms corne go fast and can&#13;
leave people in bed for over a&#13;
. willing to go.&#13;
In order to provide a safer&#13;
environment  at dances,  where&#13;
many fights take place, a faculty&#13;
or staff member is required to be&#13;
at the  dance  as well  as a&#13;
University Police officer.&#13;
Dean McLaughlin explained&#13;
his thoughts on why violence is a&#13;
problem in today's society and&#13;
what he plans to do to ensure&#13;
safety at UW-Parkside.&#13;
"With    the    Dispute&#13;
Resolution  Center we hope to&#13;
have  students  learn  to  talk&#13;
through  their problems  rather&#13;
then fight," said McLaughlin.&#13;
BYAMANDA BULGRIN&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
In response to this episode,&#13;
the students were brought in to&#13;
meet with McLaughlin, who dis-&#13;
cussed  with the students  the&#13;
importance of solving their prob-&#13;
lems through peaceful actions.&#13;
A meeting with the dean is'&#13;
the first action taken in response&#13;
to violence at UW_Parkside.&#13;
McLaughlin  said  another&#13;
way UW-Parkside  students can&#13;
learn to cut back on violence is&#13;
by visiting  the  new Dispute&#13;
Resolution Center.  Students can&#13;
go&#13;
to&#13;
the Dispute  Resolution&#13;
Center to discuss any problems&#13;
they may be facing with a.media-&#13;
tor as long as both parties are&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
An increasing  number  of&#13;
fights at the  University   of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has prompt-&#13;
ed Steve McLaughlin,  dean of&#13;
students, to explain the discipli-&#13;
nary action against students who&#13;
choose violence to solve prob-&#13;
lems.&#13;
At a Black Student Union&#13;
(B.S.U.)  dance   in   early&#13;
September,&#13;
a&#13;
fight  erupted&#13;
between-twostudents in a "frater-&#13;
nity pride" situation.  The stu-&#13;
dents started raising their voices&#13;
and then proceeded to push each&#13;
other around.&#13;
DEREK BISHOP&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
An&#13;
estimated  one million&#13;
African-American  men of all ages&#13;
stood together in a totally non-threat-&#13;
ening way to discuss and show sup-&#13;
port for one another in Washington,&#13;
D.C. on Oct. 16, for the "Million&#13;
Man March."&#13;
It&#13;
is now the march's&#13;
anniversary  and there are several&#13;
effects of the march still ripping&#13;
through the world.&#13;
,&#13;
week. Fever, chills, fatigue, and&#13;
muscle aches are the key signals&#13;
that your body is being attacked&#13;
by the virus. This will often lead&#13;
to a sore throat, cough, and loss&#13;
. of appetite.   Since the virus&#13;
spreads through the air, anyone&#13;
who comes in contact with a sick&#13;
person is a possible candidate for&#13;
infection.&#13;
The flu shot will not only keep&#13;
those vaccinated healthy, but it&#13;
will also ward off the spread of&#13;
the disease.&#13;
Sharon Eaves, a Registered&#13;
Nurse who works at the Student&#13;
Health and Counseling  Center,&#13;
encourages  students to get the&#13;
vaccine each fall.&#13;
"Everyone is exposed to every-&#13;
0!1e else at school, and that puts&#13;
all students at risk," explained&#13;
Eaves ..&#13;
Students, faculty, and staff can&#13;
obtain the flu vaccine for $7 at&#13;
the   Student   Health   and&#13;
Counseling  Center in Molinaro&#13;
Hall,  Room  D-115  through&#13;
October.   No appointment  is&#13;
needed.   The Student  Health&#13;
Center is open Monday through&#13;
Friday from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and&#13;
from I p.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
PURPQSE&#13;
As the nation watched this his-&#13;
toric  moment,  Nation  of  Islam&#13;
Minister and march organizer Louis&#13;
Farrakhan,  plus  other  key-~te&#13;
speakers,  delivered  powerful  mes-&#13;
sages for two and a half hours direct-&#13;
ed at the hearts and souls of African-&#13;
American men.&#13;
. Farrakhan  confessed  to CNN&#13;
Senior  Washington  Correspondent&#13;
Charles Bierbauer (Oct. 15, 1995),&#13;
"Million Manmarch,cont.&#13;
p.&#13;
3&#13;
Chinese culture high-&#13;
lighted at UW-Parkside&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
. The people and the culture of&#13;
China will be the focus of "An&#13;
Evening   in  China"   at  the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
on Nov. 16.&#13;
The program will begin with a&#13;
traditional  Chinese banquet, fol- \&#13;
lowed  by  the  Yellow  River&#13;
Performing Arts Group. The pres-&#13;
figious group from Chicago will&#13;
I&#13;
·terform   traditional   Chinese&#13;
!&#13;
usic  and  Shaolin  Kung  Fu&#13;
,&#13;
(Chinese  martial arts). All three&#13;
Imain  artists  graduated   from&#13;
I&#13;
'Shanghai  Music  Conservatory&#13;
and  worked  in the  Shanghai&#13;
National Music Orchestra, which&#13;
is one of the premier orchestras in&#13;
China.&#13;
An illustrated presentation will&#13;
be given. by four UW-Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff. Ron Pavalko,&#13;
Carol Tebber, George Wang and&#13;
Esther Letven. who all recently&#13;
spent the summer in China, will&#13;
provide  information -on China's&#13;
education, business and culture.&#13;
A display of Chinese paintings&#13;
and crafts will be provided  by&#13;
Deyong  Jia,  the  Educational&#13;
Consul of the Consul General of&#13;
the People's Republic of China in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
The event, sponsored by the&#13;
Center for International  Studies,&#13;
will begin at 6 p.m. and will cost&#13;
$20 per person for attendance.&#13;
Reservations  are required  and&#13;
there is limited seating available.&#13;
For more information or to make&#13;
a reservation, call UW-Parkside's&#13;
Center for International  Studies&#13;
at 595-2701.&#13;
CORRECTIONS&#13;
If you see an inaccuracy printed in&#13;
the  Ranger  News,&#13;
we want you to&#13;
let us know. Call 595-2287 and leave a detailed correction and a&#13;
n~mber where you can be reached should we have any questions.&#13;
ISSUE 8 (Oct. 24, t996) -The article about the Wingspread confer-&#13;
ence should have said that Prof. James did not attend the conference,&#13;
two of the six UW-Parkside Wingspread Fellows (Rebekah Bakke&#13;
and Susie St. Germaine) did. Also, four Fellows attended the confer-&#13;
ence, with two being from UW-Parkside. -The Calendar of Events&#13;
incorrectly dated the Blood Drive as Oct. 25.&#13;
It&#13;
is Nov. 25. -In the&#13;
Feature story about MTV's "The Real World," Sarah' graduated&#13;
from Zion-Benton  Township high school in 1988, not 1987. -The&#13;
correct number for Chay's Tae Kwon Do is 633-7090.&#13;
The  Ranger   News&#13;
regrets the above errors.&#13;
So,what's your&#13;
Halloween costume?&#13;
oaooer&#13;
31, 1996·&#13;
pag:j&#13;
Planning committee seeks campus&#13;
input on university's mission&#13;
RANGER NEWS REPORT&#13;
The planning committee  will  sion, objectives and strategies by .&#13;
also develop a "vision statement"   December  I so they can be con-&#13;
that  will  detail  what  the  sidered  when  budgets  for the&#13;
University is striving to become.   1997-98 fiscal year will be dis-&#13;
The committee is composed of  cussed.&#13;
faculty, staff, students, adminis-&#13;
In late October, drafts of the&#13;
trators, deans, department chairs,   committee's  work&#13;
will&#13;
be distrib-&#13;
classified   staff,   governance   uted for discussion  and will go&#13;
groups and the community  and  before students, an external focus&#13;
had developed drafts of the mis-  group,   the  faculty   senate,&#13;
sion statement  and objectives.   Academic  Staff Committee and&#13;
Copies have been circulated  via  classified staff.&#13;
e-mail and other means.&#13;
Feedback from the University&#13;
According to Dick Brown, dean  will be used to revise the mission,&#13;
of the School of Business  and  strategies  and objectives.  The&#13;
Technology,  who is facilitating   planning  committee  plans  to&#13;
the Planning Committee, the goal  develop a set of measurable out-&#13;
is to have good drafts of the mis-  comes in January.&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside's   35-mem-&#13;
ber    University&#13;
Planning&#13;
Committee  is seeking input from&#13;
the campus community  on the&#13;
University's 'mission,  its priori-&#13;
ties and its future.&#13;
The group has been meeting&#13;
since August on strategic plan-&#13;
ning. Its task is to develop a mis-&#13;
sion statement describing the pur-&#13;
pose of the University, a set of&#13;
objectives  and measurable  out-&#13;
comes, strategies to accomplish&#13;
the objectives and a monitoring&#13;
system to check on results.&#13;
•&#13;
"Where  Fun  Just  Happens!"TM&#13;
2117 52nd  St., Kenosha&#13;
414/658-GAME&#13;
CYBERGAMES&#13;
CHADWICKS GAMES&#13;
• Espresso    • Cappuccino&#13;
• Mocha&#13;
Bar  drinks   are 20% off  with  Parkside   ID&#13;
• Gourmet   Pizza!   • Ben&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jerrys   Ice  Cream&#13;
10% Discount   w/Parkside   ID (equal  or  greater  value!)&#13;
OPEN&#13;
24&#13;
HOURS  ON WEEKENDS!!&#13;
7&#13;
DAYS A WEEK!!&#13;
Dedicated   in memorlJ of John&#13;
C.&#13;
Sandstrom,   former Managing   Editor&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kristine   Hansen&#13;
Managing  Editor&#13;
April Schoenberg&#13;
Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
Derek Bishop&#13;
Assl. Business  Manager&#13;
Baisha Strother&#13;
Co-News Editor&#13;
Mark Hahn&#13;
CO-News Editor&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Co-Features  Editor&#13;
Kendra Macey&#13;
Co-Features  Editor&#13;
Jennifer   Puccini&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Scott Malik&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
AIHeppner&#13;
Copy Editors  Genevieve&#13;
Guran, Jocelyn Hoppe&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Julia  Ingram&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
John Nunn&#13;
Staff Columnists  C.J. Neison,&#13;
Maria Smith, Corey Mandley,&#13;
Morgan&#13;
Harcey&#13;
Staff Reporters  Kerri Bachler,&#13;
Margaret Ditchburn, Tim Gaiser,&#13;
Aaron Kappelusch, Jason&#13;
Kluzak, Tim Mote, Becky Schl-&#13;
evensky, Walt Shirer, Coleen&#13;
Tartaglia, Ryan Verbruggen&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Roseann&#13;
Mason&#13;
Ranger   News&#13;
encourages  Letters to the&#13;
Editor, Letters should not exceed  250&#13;
words and should be delivered  to the&#13;
Ranger   News&#13;
office (WYLL D139C) or&#13;
e-mailed to&#13;
hansen8@it.uwp.edu&#13;
by noon&#13;
the Monday before publication.  Letters&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
typed and include the author's&#13;
name and phone number. To be published,&#13;
I~tters must be free from misleading  or&#13;
libelous content. Letters that fail to com-&#13;
--&#13;
............&#13;
ply will not be published.&#13;
Ranger   News&#13;
.reserves the right to edit letters.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
is  published   every&#13;
Thursday throughout the semester by stu-&#13;
dents of the University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, who are solely responsible lor&#13;
its  editorial   policy   and  content.&#13;
Subscriptions  are available at the cost of&#13;
$10 for 28 issues.  A member  of the&#13;
Associated Collegiate 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>Lamb named interim chancellor</text>
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              <text>Backyard&#13;
Barbeque&#13;
.to be held Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
11, 1998 at 7:30&#13;
.C;&#13;
The&#13;
er &#13;
News&#13;
The Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
VOLUME&#13;
26·ISSUE&#13;
I-SEPTEMBER&#13;
11, 1997&#13;
ESTABLISHED&#13;
1972&#13;
Lamb&#13;
named&#13;
interim&#13;
chancellor&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
BULGRIN&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF&#13;
developed&#13;
effective&#13;
budget&#13;
procedures&#13;
and&#13;
established&#13;
a foundation&#13;
board&#13;
and development&#13;
program&#13;
to raise money&#13;
for the university.&#13;
In the Fall Convocation,&#13;
Lamb&#13;
stated&#13;
his&#13;
goals&#13;
for UW-P.&#13;
First,&#13;
to turn the enrollment&#13;
around&#13;
and establish&#13;
new parameters&#13;
and proce-&#13;
dures&#13;
for recruiting&#13;
and retaining&#13;
students.&#13;
Along&#13;
with that, implemenl.the&#13;
strategic&#13;
plan so&#13;
that we may use the impetus&#13;
from our planning&#13;
to project&#13;
the University's&#13;
position&#13;
into the next&#13;
several&#13;
years.&#13;
As well as, work&#13;
to establish&#13;
or&#13;
reestablish&#13;
where&#13;
necessary,&#13;
a strong&#13;
presence&#13;
in the community.&#13;
The former&#13;
president&#13;
of Northeastern&#13;
Illinois&#13;
University,&#13;
Gordon&#13;
Lamb,&#13;
has been named&#13;
interim&#13;
chancellor.&#13;
Lamb&#13;
Lamb&#13;
has replaced&#13;
Eleanor&#13;
1. &#13;
sm ith, who retired&#13;
in May after three&#13;
years&#13;
as chancellor&#13;
of the University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
Lamb&#13;
was president&#13;
of Northeastern&#13;
Illinois&#13;
University,&#13;
an institution&#13;
with 7,400&#13;
undergrad-&#13;
uate and 2,800&#13;
graduate&#13;
students&#13;
from&#13;
1986-&#13;
1995.&#13;
While&#13;
at the Chicago&#13;
institution&#13;
Lamb&#13;
began&#13;
a technology&#13;
development&#13;
program,&#13;
Student&#13;
written&#13;
and directed&#13;
play,&#13;
Still Haven't&#13;
Found&#13;
... to be performed&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
BULGRIN&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF&#13;
The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will&#13;
be graced&#13;
with two student&#13;
productions&#13;
beginning&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
II. Still&#13;
Haven't&#13;
Found&#13;
... and Minnesota&#13;
Moon&#13;
will&#13;
be held at 7:30 on September&#13;
II and 12, with&#13;
a 2 p.m. production&#13;
on the 13th.&#13;
The perfor-&#13;
mances&#13;
will be held in the Studio&#13;
Theatre,&#13;
located&#13;
in the lower&#13;
level of the&#13;
Communication&#13;
Arts Building.&#13;
Admission&#13;
is&#13;
$3 and donations&#13;
will be accepted&#13;
for the&#13;
Dramatic&#13;
Arts Scholarship&#13;
fund.&#13;
Still Haven't&#13;
Found&#13;
.., written&#13;
by Matty&#13;
Winkler&#13;
and directed&#13;
by Hank&#13;
Hilbert,&#13;
both&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students,&#13;
is a series&#13;
of short scenes&#13;
that deals&#13;
with life's questions.&#13;
Minnesota&#13;
.&#13;
Moon,&#13;
.written&#13;
by John Olive&#13;
and starring&#13;
the&#13;
director&#13;
and playwright&#13;
of Still Haven't&#13;
Found,&#13;
is the story of two friends&#13;
spending&#13;
one last evening&#13;
in a cornfield&#13;
of southern&#13;
Minnesota&#13;
in 1968.&#13;
"The theme&#13;
of both plays center&#13;
around&#13;
life questions,&#13;
everyone&#13;
can relate&#13;
to some&#13;
aspect&#13;
of these two plays,"&#13;
stated&#13;
director&#13;
Hilbert.&#13;
Playwright&#13;
Many&#13;
Winkler&#13;
added,&#13;
"The&#13;
Studio&#13;
Theatre&#13;
location&#13;
provides&#13;
the &#13;
audience&#13;
R&#13;
with the ability&#13;
to be close enough&#13;
to touch&#13;
the actors,&#13;
feel their pain and experience&#13;
their&#13;
joy."&#13;
There&#13;
is never&#13;
a dull moment&#13;
in the two&#13;
performances&#13;
being&#13;
presented.&#13;
They provide&#13;
the audience&#13;
with the chance&#13;
to let go; think.&#13;
Still Haven't&#13;
Found&#13;
...is the perfect&#13;
combina-&#13;
tion of humor&#13;
and sadness,&#13;
pain and joy.&#13;
After viewing,&#13;
the audience&#13;
walks&#13;
away feel-&#13;
ing emotions&#13;
of every&#13;
sense.&#13;
For people&#13;
who are intimidated&#13;
by the the-&#13;
atre or reluctant&#13;
to give it a chance,&#13;
Still&#13;
Haven't&#13;
Found&#13;
...and Minnesota&#13;
Moon&#13;
are the&#13;
ideal,&#13;
innocent&#13;
introduction.&#13;
The cast includes:&#13;
Nick Westfal,&#13;
Gil&#13;
Gonzalez,&#13;
Mathew&#13;
Schnaare,&#13;
Ami Orava,&#13;
Sara Anzaldua,&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Hlavka,&#13;
Mathew&#13;
Beeman,&#13;
Michele&#13;
Hanson,&#13;
Rich Ditter,&#13;
Michael&#13;
Winkler,&#13;
Hank&#13;
Hilbert&#13;
and Many&#13;
Winkler.&#13;
The crew includes:&#13;
Hank Hilbert,&#13;
Sandra&#13;
Simon,&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Cushing,&#13;
Nick Westfal,&#13;
Chip Wienke,&#13;
Many&#13;
Winkler,&#13;
Ami Orava,&#13;
Simon&#13;
Jon Provan,&#13;
Michelle&#13;
Callan,&#13;
Michael&#13;
Clickner&#13;
and KT Christenson.&#13;
For ticket&#13;
information,&#13;
call the UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ticket&#13;
office&#13;
between&#13;
8a.m.&#13;
and&#13;
4p.m.&#13;
Monday&#13;
through&#13;
Friday&#13;
at&#13;
414595.2564.&#13;
Tatruffe&#13;
April 24-25,&#13;
1998"&#13;
7:30&#13;
April 30, 1998 "I 0:00am&#13;
May 1-2, 1998 "7:30pm&#13;
Plays&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
present:&#13;
Look&#13;
Back in Anger&#13;
February&#13;
27-28,&#13;
1998 "7:30&#13;
March&#13;
5, 1998 "I 0:00am&#13;
March&#13;
5-6, 1998 "7:30pm&#13;
Antigone&#13;
October&#13;
24-25,&#13;
1997 "7:30pm&#13;
October&#13;
30, 1997 "IO:OOam&#13;
October&#13;
3 l-November&#13;
I, 1997&#13;
All in the Timing&#13;
December&#13;
5-6, 1997 "7:30pm&#13;
December&#13;
II, 1997 "IO:OOam&#13;
December&#13;
12-13,&#13;
1997 "7:30pm&#13;
I&#13;
'1&#13;
C&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
J&#13;
A&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Septemher&#13;
11-&#13;
-&#13;
©Backyard&#13;
Bash with a&#13;
concert&#13;
by the Little&#13;
Blue&#13;
L&#13;
Crunchy&#13;
Things.&#13;
6-&#13;
9:30p.m.&#13;
Union&#13;
Patio.&#13;
Opening&#13;
bands&#13;
include&#13;
E&#13;
"The other Side"&#13;
and&#13;
Sweater&#13;
Girl".&#13;
N&#13;
Friday,&#13;
September&#13;
12-&#13;
©Dance&#13;
Club,&#13;
9p.m.-&#13;
I&#13;
a.m. &#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
D&#13;
©Fall&#13;
Convocation,&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
Campus&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room-Union&#13;
A&#13;
©Women's&#13;
Volleyball:&#13;
7:00p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
vs.&#13;
UMSL&#13;
R  &#13;
Saturday,&#13;
September&#13;
13-&#13;
©Women's&#13;
Volleyball:&#13;
I:00 p.m. UW-Parkside&#13;
vs. Quincy&#13;
0&#13;
©AOE:&#13;
Corky&#13;
Siegel's&#13;
Chamber&#13;
Blues&#13;
7p.m.&#13;
CART&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
F&#13;
Tuesday,&#13;
Septem&#13;
ber 16-&#13;
©Speaker:&#13;
Dr. Jenna&#13;
Eisenberg.&#13;
II &#13;
a.m,&#13;
Union&#13;
104&#13;
E&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
September&#13;
17-&#13;
©Film&#13;
"Dazed&#13;
and&#13;
V&#13;
Confused"&#13;
7p.m.&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
©Last&#13;
day to sign up for&#13;
E&#13;
Leadership&#13;
2000 program.&#13;
N&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
18-&#13;
©AOE:&#13;
Kayaga:&#13;
Performers&#13;
of Africa&#13;
7&#13;
T&#13;
p.m. CART&#13;
Theatre&#13;
©Dance&#13;
Club,&#13;
9 p.m.-&#13;
I&#13;
a.rn. Union&#13;
Square&#13;
S&#13;
-FREE-&#13;
iiA$1i1ilii;..l".~",,9-~&#13;
9~?~le.i]&#13;
Heather&#13;
Wittenberg&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
of the week:&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Opportunities&#13;
Students&#13;
are selected&#13;
as "Volunteer&#13;
of the Week"&#13;
by there altruistic&#13;
ani-&#13;
tudes,&#13;
the amount&#13;
of time shared&#13;
within&#13;
the community&#13;
and the impact&#13;
their ser-&#13;
vice has made&#13;
in the lives of others.&#13;
This weeks&#13;
volunteer&#13;
is Heather&#13;
Wittenberg.&#13;
Heather&#13;
Wittenberg&#13;
is a senior&#13;
majoring&#13;
in Business/MIS.&#13;
Two years&#13;
ago Heather&#13;
responded&#13;
to a computer&#13;
entry request&#13;
from St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Coordinator&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
via the Parks ide Volunteer&#13;
Program.&#13;
Fifty hours&#13;
plus and three volunteer&#13;
coordinators&#13;
later, Heather&#13;
is still volun-&#13;
teering&#13;
at the hospital.&#13;
The present&#13;
coordinator,&#13;
Karen&#13;
Kennedy,&#13;
recorn-&#13;
TUTORS&#13;
FOR ADULTS-The&#13;
Racine&#13;
Literacy&#13;
Council&#13;
is offering&#13;
information-&#13;
al meetings&#13;
on Sept. 16th or Sept. 25&#13;
from 6-7:30pm.&#13;
Discover&#13;
if you have&#13;
what it takes to help adults&#13;
improve&#13;
their&#13;
reading&#13;
and writing&#13;
skills.&#13;
Call the&#13;
Council&#13;
at 632-9495&#13;
or sign up in the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
"EVEN&#13;
START"&#13;
TUTOR&#13;
FOR CHIL-&#13;
DREN-Help&#13;
children&#13;
ages 8-11 at&#13;
Racine&#13;
Gateway&#13;
or at Janes&#13;
School&#13;
one&#13;
evening&#13;
a week between&#13;
5-7:30pm.&#13;
Work with a Racine&#13;
Unified&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Knowing&#13;
Spanish&#13;
is a plus.&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in&#13;
the Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
LAB VOLUNTEERS&#13;
NEEDED-SC&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Elementary&#13;
School&#13;
in Racine&#13;
needs&#13;
help 1-3 hours&#13;
weekly&#13;
to assist children&#13;
and teachers&#13;
during&#13;
computer&#13;
lab sessions.&#13;
Great&#13;
for&#13;
future&#13;
teachers&#13;
and computer&#13;
science&#13;
majors.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Bulgrin&#13;
Coleen&#13;
Tartaglia&#13;
Features&#13;
Editor&#13;
Jenny&#13;
Puccini&#13;
mended&#13;
Heather&#13;
for this recognition.&#13;
She stated,&#13;
"Heather&#13;
has been with St.&#13;
Catherine's&#13;
Hospital&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Department&#13;
since October&#13;
of 1995.&#13;
Her&#13;
computer&#13;
skills are extremely&#13;
benefic&#13;
ra1&#13;
to the success&#13;
of the Volunteering."&#13;
Heather&#13;
enjoys&#13;
volunteering,&#13;
She&#13;
responded,&#13;
"Volunteering&#13;
at St.&#13;
Catherine's&#13;
Hospital&#13;
has been very inter-&#13;
esting&#13;
and I've met some great people!&#13;
Over the past two years,&#13;
I've gone from&#13;
simply&#13;
inputting&#13;
volunteer&#13;
hours&#13;
to&#13;
learning&#13;
how to run various&#13;
reports.&#13;
It is&#13;
amazing&#13;
to see how many&#13;
people&#13;
volun-&#13;
teer at the hospital&#13;
and how much&#13;
work&#13;
they put in every&#13;
day. I plan to continue&#13;
volunteering&#13;
there after I graduate&#13;
in&#13;
December."&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
HORIZONS,&#13;
INC.-&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Shelter&#13;
Advocate,&#13;
Children's&#13;
Program&#13;
and Advocate&#13;
for the&#13;
Leap Program&#13;
Volunteers&#13;
are needed&#13;
to&#13;
maintain&#13;
a successful&#13;
shelter&#13;
for victims&#13;
of domestic&#13;
violence.&#13;
Training&#13;
provided.&#13;
Ask for more info.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
VOLUNTEER-For&#13;
the Domestic&#13;
Violence&#13;
Project&#13;
of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Help plan fund raisers&#13;
using&#13;
good organizational&#13;
skills.&#13;
Business&#13;
and&#13;
Communication&#13;
majors&#13;
may benefit.&#13;
HEAD&#13;
START&#13;
VOLUNTEER-For&#13;
Racine&#13;
site. Work&#13;
with three and four-&#13;
year-olds&#13;
reading&#13;
stories,&#13;
art projects&#13;
and&#13;
motor&#13;
activities.&#13;
Any day between&#13;
8-&#13;
II :30 or 1-4:30.&#13;
Help as little as one&#13;
hour weekly.&#13;
CURTIS&#13;
STRANGE&#13;
ELEMENTARY&#13;
SCHOOL-in&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
needs&#13;
volunteers&#13;
in grades&#13;
K, 1st, 2nd, 3rd and in one&#13;
computer&#13;
lab. Help children&#13;
on a one-to-&#13;
one basis.&#13;
Make&#13;
a difference&#13;
in a child's&#13;
Communications&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ann Marie&#13;
Schaeffer&#13;
Layout&#13;
Editor&#13;
Connie&#13;
Wolfe&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
of the Week,&#13;
Heather&#13;
Wittenberg&#13;
life while&#13;
volunteering&#13;
as little as one&#13;
hour a week.&#13;
LEGAL&#13;
GUARDIANS-For&#13;
people&#13;
who&#13;
are unable&#13;
to make&#13;
decisions&#13;
due to dis-&#13;
abilities&#13;
and age. Training&#13;
provided.&#13;
Mature,&#13;
dependable&#13;
people&#13;
please&#13;
inquire.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
EVEN'rS-&#13;
Saturday&#13;
September&#13;
20th 10-1.&#13;
Help the City of Kenosha&#13;
Recycling&#13;
Program&#13;
at an Open&#13;
House.&#13;
Assist&#13;
with&#13;
children's&#13;
activities,&#13;
refreshments,&#13;
crowd&#13;
control,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Sunday&#13;
September&#13;
21st 12-4&#13;
AIDS&#13;
WALK&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
needs&#13;
walk-&#13;
ers along&#13;
Milwaukee's&#13;
lakefront.&#13;
Contact&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
Sanchez&#13;
for necessary&#13;
forms:&#13;
sanchOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in the Volunteer.&#13;
Office&#13;
in the&#13;
Career&#13;
Center&#13;
(WYLL-DI73)&#13;
for infor-&#13;
mation&#13;
and placement.&#13;
Drop-ins&#13;
are&#13;
encouraged.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
'.&#13;
</text>
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