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              <text>Arrest of Sexual Assault perpetrator</text>
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              <text>&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
-&#13;
VOWM£&#13;
27 Issue 6&#13;
OCl'OIiER&#13;
22&#13;
Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
of  the&#13;
University&#13;
of  Wisconsin.Parkside&#13;
EsrABLlSHW&#13;
1972&#13;
Arrest.of·sexual assault perpetrator&#13;
2 .    Just one week before the&#13;
2 : statute of limitations expired on a&#13;
3 : 1992 sexual assault case occur-&#13;
3 : ring near the University of&#13;
: Wisconsin-Parkside,  33-year-old&#13;
: John Field of Mount Pleasant&#13;
:;...&#13;
, was arrested. Field faces charges&#13;
, on three&#13;
counts&#13;
of first-degree&#13;
4 : sexual assault.&#13;
4 .    The crimes were committed&#13;
4 : in 1992 and 1993 in fields near&#13;
5'&#13;
UWP.&#13;
5 '    Both of the cases in 1993&#13;
6 : took place on the university's&#13;
6 ,&#13;
.&#13;
i:ibtormation&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
grounds. The victims, a 19-year- .&#13;
old UWP student and 43-year-old&#13;
Kenosha woman were threatened&#13;
with a knife.&#13;
A third victim, a 22-year-&#13;
old Somers' woman, was&#13;
assaulted along Highway E, just&#13;
west of Highway 31.&#13;
Field was picked up on&#13;
Friday, Oct.16, after violating&#13;
conditions of his parole.&#13;
While being held at the Kenosha&#13;
Public Safety Building, Field&#13;
gave investigators a verbal&#13;
admission to having committed&#13;
the Parkside area assaults as well&#13;
as a sexual assault occurring in&#13;
Racine in 1993.&#13;
Field is currently being held&#13;
at the Kenosha County Jail.&#13;
New information which led to&#13;
the arrest was found with the&#13;
help of a new FBI data b·ank.&#13;
Wisconsin State Crime&#13;
Laboratory personnel submitted&#13;
the DNA profile of the four&#13;
matched cases to the FBI data&#13;
bank.&#13;
Field arrested for&#13;
sexual assault&#13;
"The Scarlet Letter" opens at&#13;
uWP&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
Lisa Long&#13;
Special to the Ranger News&#13;
"The Scarlet Letter" has&#13;
been called the greatest novel&#13;
ever written in the Western&#13;
hemisphere. The story brings a&#13;
woman named Hester Prynne to&#13;
America in colonial times. She&#13;
leaves her husband Roger&#13;
Chillingworth behind, only to&#13;
fall in love with a man named&#13;
Arthur Dimmesdale with whom&#13;
she has a child named Pearl.&#13;
Hester lives in sin for the&#13;
remainder of her life wearing&#13;
the scarlet letter "A" on her&#13;
gown to stand for Adulterer.&#13;
The Nathaniel Hawthorne's&#13;
work has now been turned into a&#13;
play by contemporary play-&#13;
wright Phyllis Nagy.&#13;
English Literature Professor&#13;
James&#13;
S.&#13;
Dean commented&#13;
on&#13;
the most noticeable changes.&#13;
The adaptation by Phyllis Nagy&#13;
takes the focus of the playoff of&#13;
Hester, and places more empha-&#13;
sis on the other three characters.&#13;
Dean notes the length of the&#13;
play versus the novel as a major&#13;
difference. Not just in page or&#13;
time length, but in the obvious&#13;
changes that a play brings. The&#13;
playwright must focus on divid-&#13;
iog the story into scenes, and&#13;
shortening the dialogue. Dean&#13;
stated, "There are no&#13;
long narra-&#13;
tives, and a lot of things have to&#13;
stand for something else."&#13;
Symbolism is another&#13;
important aspect that Nagy uses&#13;
to emphasize the various&#13;
themes. For&#13;
example,&#13;
Dimmesdale and Chillingworth&#13;
both have heart problems in the&#13;
play.&#13;
It&#13;
literally represents med-&#13;
ical problems, but figuratively&#13;
represents both characters diffi-&#13;
culty&#13;
in&#13;
dealing with love.&#13;
Another change in the play&#13;
is the role of Hester's daughter,&#13;
Pearl. The script calls for a&#13;
twentysomething actress to&#13;
play the part of a seven-year-old&#13;
girl. Nagy gave Pearl a second&#13;
function as the.chorus in the&#13;
play.&#13;
Therefore, Pearl had to be&#13;
mature enough to understand&#13;
and discuss the issues at hand.&#13;
An adult portraying Pearl may&#13;
be more believable given the&#13;
perceptions the playwright gives&#13;
her character.&#13;
Dean also noticed Nagy's&#13;
similar portrayal of the colonial&#13;
Salem, Massachusetts, setting.&#13;
However, the play uses contem-&#13;
porary dialogue which 'tints the&#13;
historical setting of the play.&#13;
Dean comment; on the&#13;
adaptation of the play by saying,&#13;
"It&#13;
is an updated version of it,&#13;
and has a modem slant on the&#13;
situation, it's a modem play."&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside  Drama&#13;
Department's  1998-99 Plays at&#13;
Parkside series begins on Friday,&#13;
9  Oct. 23, with "The Scarlet&#13;
9  Letter."&#13;
10&#13;
The Nathaniel Hawthorne&#13;
10  novel has been transformed into&#13;
10  a play and will be performed in&#13;
II  UW-Parkside's  Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre on Oct. 23, 24, 30&#13;
and 31 at 7:30 p.m. A matinee&#13;
will be he.o on Oct. 23 at 10&#13;
a.m.&#13;
The cast includes: Katie&#13;
Liddicoat as Hester Prynne,&#13;
Jillian LaVinka as Pearl, Matty&#13;
Winkler as Chillingsworth,&#13;
Simon Jon Provan as Rev.&#13;
Arthur Dimmesdale, Joseph&#13;
Pierto as Governor Bellingham,&#13;
Ami Orva as Miss Hibbins and&#13;
Gil Gonzalez as Julius Brackett.&#13;
Leon Van Dyke directs the&#13;
play with Keith Harris designing&#13;
the scene, lighting by Skelly&#13;
Warren, and costumes by Judith&#13;
Tucker-Snider.&#13;
Tickets for "The Scarlet&#13;
Letter" can be purchased for $8&#13;
for the general public and $6 for&#13;
students and seniors.&#13;
w&#13;
Police  Beat&#13;
10/12/98  Inc 98-555   Fire Drill, Greenquist Hall,&#13;
12:55 p.m.  Safety Manager conducted a fire drill&#13;
and all levels were evacuated.  Alarm was reset and&#13;
all-clear given.  No problems were observed during&#13;
the test.&#13;
10/13/98  Inc 98-556   Security Alarm, University&#13;
House, 2: 13 p.m. Officer responding to an alarm&#13;
found it had been activated in error.  Officers&#13;
cleared the scene.&#13;
10/14/98  Inc 98-557   Traffic Violation, Outer&#13;
Loop at CTH JR., I p.m. Vehicle was stopped&#13;
because of a defective rear tail-light.  Investigation&#13;
revealed driver was operating after registration sus-&#13;
pension.&#13;
A&#13;
citation was issued.&#13;
10/14/98  Inc 98-558   Traffic Violation, CTH G&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Outer Loop., 12:46 a.m. Vehicle was stopped for&#13;
failure to stop at a stop sign. A check revealed dri-&#13;
ver was operating after revocation, 2nd offense.&#13;
Citation was issued.&#13;
10/14/98  Inc 98-559   Security Alarm, Bookstore,&#13;
6: 18 p.m,  Officer responding to an alarm found all&#13;
doors secure and no signs of forced entry. Alarm&#13;
had reset itself.&#13;
10/15/98  Inc 98-560   Missing Person, University&#13;
Apartments,  II :56 a.m. Officer responded to a&#13;
complaint of a student who had been missing for&#13;
approximately  a week. Investigation revealed stu-&#13;
dent had just returned from a visit to her parents.&#13;
10/15/98  Inc 98-561   Motor Vehicle Theft,&#13;
University Apts., 6:20 p.m. Student reported his car&#13;
missing from the lot. Investigation  revealed the car&#13;
was located at a friend's house.  Case cleared.&#13;
10/15/98  Inc 98-562   Unlawful Use of&#13;
Telephone, Ranger Hall, 9:15 p.m. Student reported&#13;
receiving suspicious call from an individual falsely&#13;
claiming to be from&#13;
it&#13;
local police agency.  No sus-&#13;
pects at this time.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-563   Liquor Law Violation,&#13;
University Apts., 1:43a.m. Officer investigating  a&#13;
disorderly incident found two under-age students&#13;
under the influence of alcohol.  Citations were .&#13;
issued.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-564   Liquor Law Violation,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 3:04 a.m. Officer who was called on&#13;
an excessive noise complain issued a citation to a&#13;
student for underage consumption  of alcohol.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-565   Fire Drill, Child Care&#13;
Center, 9:57 a.m. A fire drill was conducted with&#13;
16 adults and 47 children evacuated  in 53 seconds.&#13;
No problems were observed and alarm was reset.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-566   Security Alarm, Cashier's&#13;
Office, 3:59 p.m. Officers responded to an alarm&#13;
which was found to have been accidentally  tripped.&#13;
Alarm reset.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-567   Medical Assist, Soccer&#13;
Field, 4:49 p.m. Kenosha Fire Dept. Med. 5 trans-&#13;
ported a visitor to the hospital who had dislocated&#13;
his hip.&#13;
10/16/98  Inc 98-568   Traffic Violation, Outer&#13;
Loop at Wood Rd., 7:40 p.m.  Officer observed a&#13;
vehicle fail to stop at a stop sign.  Driver was cited.&#13;
10/17/98  Inc 98-569   Property Damage, lawn&#13;
between CTH JR&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CTH G., 3:30 p.m.  Officer&#13;
saw a bus stuck in the mud. Tow truck was required&#13;
to remove the bus.&#13;
10/18/98  Inc 98-570   Traffic Violation, CTH G at&#13;
CTH E., 12:57 a.m. Vehicle was stopped for failure&#13;
to stop at a stop sign. Driver was cited for seat belt&#13;
violation.&#13;
10/19/98  Inc 98-571   Medical Assist, Ranger&#13;
Hall, Midnight.  Housing R.A. notified UPPS of a&#13;
student who was ill. Room-mate  took subject to the&#13;
hospital.&#13;
SUFAC and&#13;
PUAB&#13;
Member-at-&#13;
Large&#13;
Rixey  Herron&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
Luis Venevoglienti  is running  for the&#13;
Segregated  University  Fees Allocation  Committee&#13;
Member-at-Large  seat in the coming elections.  To&#13;
qualify for the seat, a student  must have a 2.0&#13;
grade point average, be in good standing at the&#13;
University,  and be carrying  6 credits.&#13;
Venevoglienti,  who meets the criteria, was the&#13;
chair SUFAC in 1997 and worked hard on orga-&#13;
nizing the SUFAC committee.&#13;
The SUFAC committee,  which is part of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government  Association&#13;
(pSGA),  is responsible  for the budgeting  and allo-&#13;
cation of segregated  fees that come out of student&#13;
tuition and pays for student  programs  like the&#13;
radio station, The Ranger News, the Racine bus&#13;
service and other at Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside  Union Advisory  Board&#13;
(PUAB) Member-at-Large  chair is up for reelec-&#13;
tion.  But according  to Corey Mandley, president&#13;
of the PSG A, "Nobody  has run for this position&#13;
since I've been here. Students  usually write in a&#13;
name for the spot on the ballet."&#13;
The PUAB Committee  is involved with&#13;
student programming  at Parkside.  The PUAB&#13;
member-at-Iarge  also is on the Food Service&#13;
Board.  Qualifications  for this position are similar&#13;
to those of the SUFAC Member-At-Large.&#13;
The Ranger News is published  every Thursday  throughout&#13;
the semester by students of the University  of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, who are solely responsible  for its editorial policy&#13;
and content.  Subscriptions  are available  at the cost of $15&#13;
for 26 issues.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy:  The Ranger News encourages&#13;
letters to the Editor.  Letters should not exceed 250 words&#13;
and should&#13;
be&#13;
delivered  to the Ranger News office (WYLL&#13;
D~139C) or e-mailed  to&#13;
bulgrOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
by&#13;
MOn the&#13;
Fllday before publication.  Letters must be&#13;
typed&#13;
and includll&#13;
tire&#13;
author's  name and phone onmher.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must be&#13;
free&#13;
from misleading  or libelous content.  Letters&#13;
that&#13;
fail to com-&#13;
ply&#13;
will&#13;
notbe  published,  For pnblication  purposes,  author's&#13;
name can be withheld,&#13;
but&#13;
only&#13;
upon&#13;
request.&#13;
Ranger News&#13;
reserves the right to&#13;
edit&#13;
all&#13;
letters:&#13;
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              <text>RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
of   the&#13;
VClI,uME&#13;
27&#13;
isSUE&#13;
7&#13;
OcroBER&#13;
29&#13;
HIGHLIGHTS&#13;
Unive.rsity&#13;
of   Wlsconsin-Parkside&#13;
EsrABu.."'iED&#13;
1972&#13;
Russ Feingold&#13;
speaks at UW-Parkside&#13;
rmwS 2&#13;
campus&#13;
News Briefil&#13;
2&#13;
On Tuesday, October 20,&#13;
r Wisconsin's Junior US Senator&#13;
Russ Feingold came to OW-&#13;
'Parkside to promote what he&#13;
likes to call Russ Feingold's&#13;
3&#13;
Access to Higher Education&#13;
4&#13;
Tour, Keeping the Door Open for&#13;
4.&#13;
All. The visit was sponsored by&#13;
4&#13;
the College Democrats group.&#13;
0$&#13;
Parkside was one stop of&#13;
5 ~ many visits to various University&#13;
6  of Wisconsin campuses.  The&#13;
6'&#13;
meeting was held in Union 104-&#13;
(}  106. A moderate gathering&#13;
appeared for the -senator's speech,&#13;
1&#13;
incluaing a history class. Some&#13;
of the gathering were not stu-&#13;
gents but loyal constituents of&#13;
the senator.&#13;
Feingold's speech was tar-&#13;
geted at college students.dis-&#13;
cussing tuition. "When I went to&#13;
school at Madison&#13;
in&#13;
the seven-&#13;
ties, my education cost a total of&#13;
$10,000, including tuition, board,&#13;
and a couple of beers as the&#13;
drinking age then was 18," said&#13;
Feingold.  "But now, that is the&#13;
cost of about one and half sernes-&#13;
MElTAINMENT 10!&#13;
ter's of college. That's too&#13;
much."&#13;
Feingold went on to voice&#13;
10&#13;
his concerns on how the subject&#13;
H,&#13;
of tuition was affecting students.&#13;
If&#13;
"Today,&#13;
I&#13;
am not seeing the opti-&#13;
II&#13;
mism in students' eyes that&#13;
I&#13;
used&#13;
n&#13;
to see. There is too much pres-&#13;
sure and worry about financing&#13;
their education.&#13;
II&#13;
The senator did not speak of&#13;
FEATURES&#13;
:3&#13;
Allifl'emlCe&#13;
Day&#13;
Things&#13;
2&#13;
do&#13;
@ the U&#13;
Walk&#13;
for&#13;
literacy&#13;
Qettins&#13;
kids&#13;
to&#13;
cooperate&#13;
Roofies&#13;
and&#13;
date&#13;
rape&#13;
Take&#13;
Back&#13;
the&#13;
Night&#13;
Breastcaneer&#13;
Ranger&#13;
IjaJl&#13;
relevance&#13;
BloodDrive&#13;
SPOITS7&#13;
Women'.&#13;
CroIlsCountry&#13;
Menl~Country&#13;
AlI-A£ademic&#13;
Team&#13;
ThIip'a&#13;
1ifllI&#13;
Colleen LaVinka&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
any specific new way to help&#13;
college students' to manage their&#13;
tuition but did point out his&#13;
opponent, Republican Mark&#13;
Neumann's actions against help-&#13;
ing college students.&#13;
"Neumann voted to abolish&#13;
the US Department of&#13;
Education," said Feingold. "He&#13;
wants to reduce the number of&#13;
Pell grants.&#13;
n&#13;
Pells grants are&#13;
non-repayable tuition grants from&#13;
the government given to students&#13;
who financially qualify,&#13;
Feingold said he has voted for&#13;
federal Pell Grants and Federal&#13;
Work Study. Beside Feingold's&#13;
podium was a placard of differ-&#13;
ent ouores that Neumann has said&#13;
against education stood posted in&#13;
bold print.&#13;
Feingold has one daughter&#13;
who is a freshman in college.&#13;
giving him the experience of&#13;
dealing with the cost of tuition of&#13;
college now. "Higher education&#13;
should not deteriorate into being&#13;
only for the higher classes. We&#13;
.must keep the opportunity ladder&#13;
in place for the young people&#13;
coming behind us," said&#13;
Feingold. "High cost education&#13;
does not fit in with keeping the&#13;
opportunity ladder in place."&#13;
Feingold then began encour-&#13;
aging students to get to the polls&#13;
and vote, ifnot for him then just&#13;
to increase the number of voters.&#13;
"1&#13;
encourage every student to go&#13;
out and tell 25 friends to vote&#13;
u.s.&#13;
Junior Senator Russ Feingold&#13;
and&#13;
keep encouraging- them to&#13;
get to the polls," said Feingold.&#13;
Feingold talked for about 10&#13;
minutes&#13;
and&#13;
then exited with a&#13;
smile and a wave, to go out in&#13;
the hall and talk to the press.&#13;
After a couple minutes answer-&#13;
ing questions and taking pictures,&#13;
Feingold left.&#13;
The College Democrats&#13;
meet at 12:30 on Mondays in&#13;
Molinaro 129. To get more&#13;
involved in politics or if you&#13;
need help to register for voting&#13;
or getting to the polls they will&#13;
help you.&#13;
.............................................&#13;
e•..•&#13;
uC·a·ndice&#13;
Glngrich speaks at GLO&#13;
Candice Gingrich, les-&#13;
bian sister of Speaker of the&#13;
House Newt Gingrich, made an&#13;
appearance at The Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Organization (GLO)&#13;
meeting Wednesday, Oct.21.&#13;
Gingrich has several&#13;
reasons for touring the area.&#13;
First, to urge people to vote: She&#13;
wants..,eople to become active&#13;
10&#13;
their community.  Also, she&#13;
wants to inform people about a&#13;
Peter Minor&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
gay bill, currently in&#13;
"coming out" story. She lives&#13;
Washington. The premise of the   openly and honestly tohelp oth-&#13;
bill is to demand equal rights for   ers&#13;
10&#13;
.the gay community.&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
xuals in the workplace.&#13;
Gingrich encouraged people to&#13;
omos&#13;
.    . h&#13;
l'&#13;
This bill will secure a safe and    be free :'Ith their .omosexua&#13;
rty,&#13;
just work environment.&#13;
It&#13;
stress-  She believes a straight forward&#13;
es that employers will not be&#13;
approach helps break down&#13;
bi&#13;
fi&#13;
n&#13;
individual because   stereotypes that people hold&#13;
a&#13;
eta  ire a&#13;
f&#13;
h&#13;
.&#13;
I pre"'erence&#13;
before they know someone who&#13;
o&#13;
t&#13;
elr sexua&#13;
11·&#13;
.   .&#13;
In 1995, at the age of&#13;
is gay. Gingrich stresses that&#13;
.  . h b gall traveling&#13;
sexual onentanon does not make&#13;
28 Gingnc  e&#13;
..&#13;
,  d h&#13;
try telling her&#13;
for a second&#13;
class-citizen.&#13;
All&#13;
aroun&#13;
t&#13;
e coun&#13;
individuals have basic human&#13;
rights that cannot be taken away&#13;
on the grounds of sexuality.&#13;
Finally, towing is&#13;
Gingrich's way of doing some-&#13;
thing. She couldn't sit idle she&#13;
said while injustice was taking&#13;
place. She knew that she needed&#13;
to make a difference.&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
~:&#13;
91&#13;
~~&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
foreign&#13;
~'1111l&#13;
Series offers&#13;
special  showings&#13;
Fieldhouse  groundbreaking&#13;
today&#13;
Wilh Wisconsin  GovernOl''T0!W!l~&#13;
Thompson  on-hand,&#13;
the&#13;
Universil)!&#13;
qf&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside    will&#13;
break,&#13;
grQUnd.l~Y'&#13;
for a 121,000  square  foot additionlo.lli¢&#13;
Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activities  Center:  Called  tli¢&#13;
Fieldhouse  Addition,  the&#13;
first&#13;
shovels, o~ditt&#13;
'&#13;
will be&#13;
turned&#13;
today, Thursday,   October&#13;
29,1&gt;1'&#13;
1:30 p.m. near tbe SAC parking  lot.&#13;
""I,&#13;
tJW·&#13;
l&#13;
Parkside  students, are welcome  to atten4th~&#13;
i&#13;
ceremony  and&#13;
the&#13;
reception  10 follow,&#13;
Scheduled  to speak  at the ceremontar~&#13;
Chancellor  Jack Keating,  Regent  AI&#13;
DeSimone,  Athletic  Director  Lenny  KJl&gt;v¢\"1&#13;
and UW-Parkside   Athletic  Association&#13;
Executive  Board  President  Richard  Elsen,&#13;
Governor  Thompson  is expected  tQ sl'l\akat&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
....&#13;
.  I&#13;
approximately   I :40, and tbe first sbovelfullj.l"   '&#13;
dirt&#13;
will be turned  at around)  :55, A,ecepti(1).   ,&#13;
in&#13;
SAC lobby starts at 2:05 p.m,&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday   events:  Feed&#13;
Yo"&#13;
body,  calm  your&#13;
Soul&#13;
Parltside  Activities&#13;
Board&#13;
(FAB) events&#13;
for Wednesday.  Nov.&#13;
4,&#13;
will feed your person&#13;
or&#13;
nourish&#13;
your spirit&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
then&#13;
belp you&#13;
calm you&#13;
soul&#13;
later&#13;
m the afternoon.  All&#13;
three&#13;
events  are free.&#13;
To feed your&#13;
person.&#13;
take in the Soup and&#13;
Substance&#13;
program&#13;
"Teaching  and Learning."&#13;
In addition  10 information  on how people  learn&#13;
and the&#13;
best&#13;
methods&#13;
for imparting  knowledge,&#13;
&gt;'l'"&#13;
can lunch on&#13;
tree&#13;
soup and bread.&#13;
The&#13;
poogiam&#13;
takea&#13;
place  iQ"UDlOD104.&#13;
Spinl  nourishmenl   can&#13;
be&#13;
found  nearby  in&#13;
the&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema.  Starting  al&#13;
noon,&#13;
the&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkstde  Music  Departmenl   presenting  the&#13;
Greendale  High School  Choir  under  the direc-&#13;
lion of Art Jaehnke.  This is&#13;
part&#13;
of the Noon&#13;
Concert  Series.&#13;
To calm  the soul, the PAB and OMSA&#13;
present  'Can  I Talk to You?" Because&#13;
approachmg   professors  can&#13;
be&#13;
scary. Skills&#13;
Developmental   Specialist  Charlotte  Short will&#13;
be&#13;
on hand to help you&#13;
find&#13;
out how to get&#13;
your questions  answered  with the least amount&#13;
of sweal and agony. This&#13;
tree&#13;
program  tskes&#13;
place allho  Intercultural  Commons,  Wylie&#13;
DI82  starting&#13;
at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
oW off1ts&#13;
new&#13;
projection  ~&#13;
!s Foreign&#13;
Film&#13;
Series&#13;
ls~&#13;
showings   of the Freneb ~&#13;
•&#13;
"When  The Cat's  Away.ff The&#13;
special~&#13;
ate&#13;
Saturday,  October&#13;
31,&#13;
at&#13;
5:30 p.m.llllI!&#13;
, Novernb~r&#13;
I,&#13;
at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
UIlil&#13;
r. Admis~ion   is $3 and&#13;
paridng&#13;
1&amp;&#13;
&amp;.Ie.&#13;
Ordinarll¥,   the&#13;
film&#13;
series&#13;
restrictII_&#13;
ticketltolders.&#13;
only,"&#13;
said&#13;
rman  Cloutier,&#13;
the)lJ.'Ollltm's&#13;
ever, we decided&#13;
that&#13;
we_&#13;
IS and the public&#13;
Il.&#13;
k\w_&#13;
rtonity&#13;
to&#13;
see the&#13;
high&#13;
ljItality&#13;
of&#13;
oar&#13;
y&#13;
acquired   projection&#13;
equiptll\llll.'&#13;
.l'ro-mted  season&#13;
ticlrets,&#13;
with al!pllllll&#13;
lower  stnderll  price,&#13;
wi&#13;
'!able ~&#13;
films,&#13;
"The ~&#13;
Acaderny~&#13;
net&#13;
"Cb&#13;
,&#13;
ap&#13;
rs.&#13;
Brown,"&#13;
wilI1IIIi:&#13;
shown  thougb  April  25.&#13;
d,&#13;
JOBS OF THE WEEK:  RECRUITERS&#13;
-CAMPUS THE WEEK OF NOVEMBER  2ND&#13;
THE ATTIC&#13;
Resale Shop&#13;
Qothing&#13;
and&#13;
Housewares&#13;
"un._&#13;
n'Rere everythiag&#13;
is&#13;
0118&#13;
of&#13;
(J&#13;
kbttJ"&#13;
Stadeat&#13;
DiIeoUDt&#13;
so,*,&#13;
Off&#13;
246&#13;
Main&#13;
Stmet,&#13;
R..;..&#13;
M£D-s.UG4&#13;
TIMBERLAND&#13;
will be recruiting  on-campus  November  3rd  1998&#13;
from&#13;
I O:O?&#13;
until 2:00 in the alcove  area on the Main Concourse.   Stop&#13;
by&#13;
and'&#13;
ask recruiters a~ut&#13;
positions&#13;
available&#13;
in&#13;
their&#13;
store.&#13;
Associate  position  duties&#13;
mclude cash register. customer. service, st~king.  and more. Hours are&#13;
approxi-&#13;
mately  10 to 25 per week,  flexIble  schedulmg.   No experience  necessary.&#13;
HIGH  WAGES,  FLEXIBLE   SCHEDULE   (NIGHTS  AND  WEEK.&#13;
E  DS AVAILABLE),   VARIETY  OF PART·TlME  (FULL-TIME   AVAILABLE&#13;
AS WELL)  POSITIONS!   CARMAX   will be recruiting  on-campus  on&#13;
Wednesday.  November  4, from  10:00 am until 2:00 pm in the alcove  area on&#13;
the MaIO Concourse.   Stop by and spl\ak with recruiters  about the&#13;
d  th&#13;
..&#13;
S&#13;
seanoer&#13;
poMtlOns:&#13;
ales Consultants,  Business Office&#13;
Administralors&#13;
C   I&#13;
A&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
us orner&#13;
551&#13;
tance Representatives,  Child Care Coordinators   and In&#13;
t&#13;
A&#13;
.&#13;
R&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
Yen ory&#13;
S~lates,&#13;
ecnuters would&#13;
be&#13;
happ~ to discuss with you&#13;
the&#13;
positions&#13;
the&#13;
ha,e  a\'lIlable  as well as your scbedulmg  needs   Slate of th&#13;
art   '.&#13;
y&#13;
.&#13;
-  -  e-   trammg  Be&#13;
ure and stop by! For infonnation   on these and other part-time  and!&#13;
'  .&#13;
.  1&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
or expenen-&#13;
lta&#13;
postllOns  available,  please  stop by the Career  Center,  WYLL  D 173. and&#13;
speak  to Shelley  Bruzas.  Student  Employment   Coordinator.&#13;
Phone:  (414)  595-2016   Fax (414) 595-2181&#13;
Ranger News Staff:&#13;
omceA    II  ..&#13;
Jeaieflc",.&#13;
T_&#13;
Becky&#13;
Ilcqmaa&#13;
~HIaa&#13;
CP&#13;
Writen&#13;
Colleen&#13;
LaVmka&#13;
KalIl&#13;
Canada&#13;
......  AHaer&#13;
Ilav.cB.M&#13;
t&#13;
JetfMJJelJer&#13;
Bill.....&#13;
A.-1lucIi&#13;
a&#13;
DllII&#13;
Noltai&#13;
a.&amp;1Iwao,&#13;
La1Mt ....&#13;
Iloman&#13;
11.0'  I  b&#13;
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              <text>RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
-&#13;
VOWM£27 Issue  8&#13;
Nm'EMflI:R&#13;
5&#13;
Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
of  th    U  .&#13;
e   nr v e r s&#13;
f&#13;
r y  of  Wisc,.onsin~Parkslde&#13;
Highlights&#13;
ESTABLISHED&#13;
1972&#13;
-&#13;
NEWS-&#13;
page&#13;
2&#13;
PoliceBeat&#13;
What&#13;
is SI&#13;
Who'sridin' the bus&#13;
FEATURES -&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
Things&#13;
2 do&#13;
@&#13;
the U&#13;
CoollictResolution Center&#13;
Novemberis National&#13;
Career&#13;
month&#13;
Affectsof Stress&#13;
SPORTS·&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
Smilesthrough Frustration&#13;
FitnessFun and it's Free&#13;
GIapplersII Win&#13;
Tulip'sTiffs&#13;
lnll1muralResulls&#13;
VIEWS -&#13;
page] 0&#13;
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Rejoinderto Rodriguez&#13;
ENTERTAI  ME  T&#13;
page&#13;
Il&#13;
Soap&#13;
Opera&#13;
Auction&#13;
HumorMe!&#13;
MovieReview:&#13;
Pleasantville&#13;
Sports and Activity Center ground breaking&#13;
brings Tommy Thompson to UWP&#13;
Amanda  Bulgrin&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
T~;;;;'y Thompson joins Parkside for the gronndbreaking  of the new sports and&#13;
activity center.&#13;
The $lI.9million  needed to successfully&#13;
complete the athletic center will come from&#13;
Parkside students' tuition. Eight dollars each&#13;
semester for twenty years will fund the ath-&#13;
letic project.&#13;
Along with Thompson, several legisla-&#13;
,tors attended the event, including:&#13;
Democratic Senator RObert~W~i~rich~';;;'---'_l&#13;
Sexual violence is a phenomenon that&#13;
affects men, women, and children, but&#13;
majority of victims are female. The national-&#13;
ly accepted statistics for the United States are&#13;
that&#13;
1&#13;
in 3 women will be raped in her life-&#13;
time.&#13;
It&#13;
is difficult to know how many people&#13;
are victims of sexual assault because it is the&#13;
most underreported crime in the&#13;
us:&#13;
only 5&#13;
to 20 percent of the crimes are reported to&#13;
officials. Seventy-eight percent of rapes&#13;
committed are done&#13;
by&#13;
someone the victim&#13;
knows. The United States has the highest&#13;
rate of sexual assault in the world, and the&#13;
rate of sexual assault is increasing 4 times&#13;
faster than any other crime rates in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
Although UW-Parkside has the luxury of&#13;
being a very low crime area, the number of&#13;
cases that go unreported have the potential to&#13;
exist. If you are a victim of sexual assault&#13;
there is help out there for you. Can someone&#13;
for help such as a rape crisis hotline (in&#13;
Kenosha 652-4333), the police, a friend, or&#13;
family member. Even if you have waited&#13;
Democratic Senator Kimberly Plache,&#13;
Representative James Kreuser,&#13;
, Representative John Steinbrink and&#13;
Representative Bonnie Ladwig.&#13;
•&#13;
On Oct. 29, the ground breaking' for the&#13;
new Sports and Activity Center brought&#13;
Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson and&#13;
an $11.9 million project to the University of&#13;
4:  Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
4 :    The 121,126 gross square footage center,&#13;
5:, scheduled to be completed in August 2000,&#13;
will connect to tbe existing athletic structure&#13;
6 :" which opened in 1972 and cost about $2 mil-&#13;
lion.&#13;
The features of the Fieldhouse include:&#13;
200-meter track, three basketball courts, four&#13;
7:  tennis courts, six volleyball courts, two bat-&#13;
8:&#13;
ting cages, three classrooms with movable&#13;
8&#13;
i&#13;
partitions, six team, two employee and two&#13;
8:&#13;
public locker rooms between the field house&#13;
9,,': and gymnasium,  lobby and main entrance,&#13;
concessions area, weight room, padded com-&#13;
bative  room. aerobic fitness center. confer-&#13;
ence room, dance studio, training room and&#13;
expanded offices.&#13;
While at the ground breaking,&#13;
Thompson commented, "A student to busy&#13;
100&#13;
take care of tbeir health is like a mechan-&#13;
ic to busy to take care of their car."&#13;
10 :&#13;
10:&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
Take back the&#13;
night&#13;
Photos by Amand::.a.=B:.::u::;lg"n.::'n=-- -,&#13;
Kelly Voss&#13;
Of the Ranger News Staff&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 29, a group ofmore&#13;
than 50 people met in the Union to "Take .&#13;
Back the Night."&#13;
It&#13;
is an event that started m&#13;
Germany over 20 years ago to protest a&#13;
series of sexual assaults against women. ~he&#13;
event has taken off worldwide, and a parncu-&#13;
lar interest in the event is occuring across&#13;
American college campuses.&#13;
Rallies, speeches, marches, an open&#13;
microphone for victims and w~t~esses to tell&#13;
their stories, and candlelight vigils are all&#13;
part of "Take Back the Night." The UW-&#13;
Parkside event had a surprise visit by   ,&#13;
Democratic Congressional candidate Lydia&#13;
S&#13;
d w&#13;
ho&#13;
spoke out as a parent and&#13;
pottswoo  ,&#13;
citizen against domestic violence and rape.&#13;
hours or days, a phone call may lead to the&#13;
perpetrator being caught and could prevent&#13;
someone .else from becoming a victim.&#13;
As unpleasant as&#13;
it&#13;
may sound, do not&#13;
shower yourself or clean up the crime scene&#13;
after a rape has been committed, for a DNA&#13;
sample could lead to the conviction of the&#13;
rapist. Write down a description of the&#13;
assailant so that you remember as much as&#13;
possible about the rapist.&#13;
The "Take Back the Night" rally occurs&#13;
once every semester on the Uw-Parkside&#13;
campus, but there are people working&#13;
towards justice every day. The MAVERAKS&#13;
(Men Against Violence Educating Racine&#13;
And Kenosha Students) is a campus organi-&#13;
zation that focuses on men's issues and&#13;
working with young men at local schools to&#13;
confront sexual violence. Information about&#13;
this group and other campus organizations is&#13;
available at the Womyn's Center. Stop by and&#13;
ask what you can do to educate yourself and&#13;
others in order to prevent and&#13;
protest&#13;
sexual&#13;
assault.&#13;
s&#13;
w&#13;
AT&#13;
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r&#13;
.    ~   J&#13;
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.....&#13;
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.................................................................................&#13;
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............................................................&#13;
.&#13;
ing permit revealed owner was a&#13;
chronic violator with six unpaid cita-&#13;
tions. Vehicle was towed by a local&#13;
tow company.&#13;
10/24/98&#13;
Inc 98-587   Medical&#13;
Assist, Ranger Hall,&#13;
II&#13;
:39 p.m.&#13;
Student had fallen and cut his head.&#13;
Medical assistance was refused.&#13;
All floors checked and residents&#13;
allowed back into the building.&#13;
10/19/98&#13;
Inc 98-572  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Ranger HaUlot, 9:27&#13;
a.m,&#13;
Student reported the theft of his&#13;
parking permit, No suspects at this&#13;
time.&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-580  Liquor Law&#13;
Violation/Controlled  Substance,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 2:17 a.m. Resident&#13;
Advisor contacted UPPS regarding&#13;
the smell of marijuana. An investiga-&#13;
tion revealed underage use of alcohol&#13;
and citations were issued. Items of&#13;
controlled substance confiscated for&#13;
testing.&#13;
10/29/98&#13;
Inc 98-595   Worthless&#13;
Check, University Police, 12:54 p.m.&#13;
Notice of Worthless Check and&#13;
Demand for Payment mailed to an&#13;
individual who paid for a parking&#13;
citation with a "Non Sufficient&#13;
Funds" check.&#13;
10125/98&#13;
Inc 98-588  Liquor Law&#13;
Violation, University Apartments,&#13;
1:29 a.m. Officers were flagged&#13;
down regarding a noise complaint.&#13;
Investigation revealed a party in&#13;
progress with underage drinkers.&#13;
Citations issued to seven individuals.&#13;
10/20/98&#13;
Inc 98-573  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Ranger Card Office,&#13;
10:36 a.m. Employee reported an&#13;
item turned in to them was missing .&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
•&#13;
10/20/98&#13;
Inc 98-574  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Union Square, 7:35&#13;
p.m. Student reported tbe theft of her&#13;
purse. Upon officer's arrival at the&#13;
scene, complainant could not be&#13;
located and attempts to contact sub-&#13;
ject were not successful.&#13;
10/29/98&#13;
Inc 98-596   Agency&#13;
Assist, University Apartments,  4:39&#13;
p.m. UPPS officer assisted an officer&#13;
from Wisconsin State Corrections in&#13;
locating a subject.  The individual&#13;
was found and turned over to the cor-&#13;
rection's officer.&#13;
10/25/98&#13;
Inc 98-589  Criminal&#13;
Damage to PropertylPersonal,  Ranger&#13;
Hall parking lot, 10:33 a.m. Student&#13;
reported damage to.her vehicle.  No&#13;
witnesses to the incident.&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-581  Criminal&#13;
Damage "toState Property, Union&#13;
Entrance, 5:20 p.m. Employee&#13;
reported broken glass on a directory&#13;
inside the Union entrance. No sus-&#13;
pects at this time.&#13;
10125/98&#13;
Inc 98-590   Disorderly&#13;
Conduct, Soccer Field, 3:01 p.m.&#13;
Staff member reported a student&#13;
being verbally abusive. Officer spoke&#13;
to the student and then asked him to&#13;
leave the area. Officer cleared the&#13;
scene.&#13;
10/21/98&#13;
Inc 98-575  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CTH G.,&#13;
8:56 a.m. Vehicle was stopped for&#13;
displaying expired license plate tags.&#13;
Driver was cited for non-registration&#13;
of vehicle.&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-582  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Library, 12:49 p.m.&#13;
Student reported the theft of his back&#13;
pack. No witnesses or suspects at&#13;
this time.&#13;
11/01/98&#13;
Inc 98-597   Agency&#13;
Assist, STH 31&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CTH JR&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CTH&#13;
A, 2:00 p.m. Kenosha County Sheriff&#13;
requested UPPS officers block road-&#13;
ways for Vice President Gore's&#13;
motorcade to pass through.  No prob-&#13;
lems occurred.&#13;
10123/98&#13;
Inc 98-583  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Ranger Hall, 1:15&#13;
p.m. Student reported the theft of his&#13;
Ranger card.&#13;
10121/98 Inc 98-576  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop Rd., 11:30&#13;
p.m. Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for speeding 42 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
10126/98 Inc 98-591  Traffic&#13;
Violation, CTH&#13;
JR&#13;
at Outer Loop&#13;
Road, 9:26 p.m. Driver was stopped&#13;
and cited for passing midwayan  a&#13;
steep hill.&#13;
1lI01/98  Inc 98-598   Medical&#13;
Assist, Ranger Hall, 6:52 p.m.&#13;
Student reported having chest pains.&#13;
Kenosha Med 5 took subject to St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital for treatment.&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-584  Personal&#13;
Property Theft, Comm. Arts, 3:01&#13;
p.m. Student reported the theft of his&#13;
back pack. No witnesses or suspects&#13;
at this time.&#13;
10/22/98&#13;
Inc 98-577  Security&#13;
Alarm, Wyllie D193, 5:23 p.m.&#13;
UPPS responded to an alarm which&#13;
proved to be false. Alarm reset and&#13;
Parkland will be called to service the&#13;
system.&#13;
10/27/98&#13;
Inc 98-592  Fire Drill,&#13;
Comm. Arts Building, 9:35 a.m.&#13;
Safety Director conducted an annual&#13;
drill. Building was evacuated and no&#13;
problems were noted. Alarm was&#13;
reset.&#13;
10/24/98&#13;
Inc 98-585  Disorderly&#13;
Conduct, Wyllie Hall, 5:21&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Student reported she had been shoved.&#13;
by a food service worker and had&#13;
been harassed previously by the same&#13;
individual.  Investigation pending.&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-578  Fire Alarm,&#13;
Ranger hall,&#13;
I&#13;
:41 a.m. Officer on&#13;
routine patrol noticed the fire.alarm&#13;
strobe lights flashing inside Ranger&#13;
Hall. All floors checked, alarm reset&#13;
and residents returned to the build-&#13;
mg.&#13;
10/28/98&#13;
Inc 98-593  Theft,&#13;
Bookstore, 1:12 p.m. Bookstore&#13;
employee notified UPPS of an indi-&#13;
vidual who had stolen books.&#13;
Alleged suspect was apprehended.&#13;
Investigation pending.&#13;
10/24/98&#13;
Inc 98-586  Traffic&#13;
Violation, STH 31 at CTH&#13;
JR.,&#13;
II:&#13;
14&#13;
p.m. Vehicle was stopped for a miss-&#13;
ing rear tail lamp. Investigation&#13;
revealed vehicle had not been regis-&#13;
tered. Driver cited for non-registra-&#13;
tion.&#13;
10/28/98&#13;
Inc 98-594  Parking&#13;
Enforcement/Tow, University&#13;
Apartments parking lot, 5:44&#13;
p.m,&#13;
A&#13;
check of a vehicle with expired park-&#13;
10/23/98&#13;
Inc 98-579  Fire Alarm,&#13;
Ranger Hall, 1:53 a.m. Another fire&#13;
alarm pull station had been pulled.&#13;
Ranger News Staff:&#13;
The Ranger News is published every Thursday throughout the semester by&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide, who are solely responsible&#13;
for Its&#13;
editorial policy and&#13;
content.  Subscriptions  are available at the cost of&#13;
$15 for 26 issues.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy: The Ranger News encourages letters to the&#13;
Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words and should be delivered to the&#13;
Ranger News office (WYLL D-139C) or&#13;
e-mailed&#13;
to bnJgrOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
by&#13;
noon the Friday before publication.  Letters must be typed and include the&#13;
author's name and phone number, Letters must be free from misleading or&#13;
libelous content.  Letters that&#13;
fail&#13;
to comply will not be published,  For pub-&#13;
hcatIon purposes, author's name can be withheld, but only upon request.&#13;
Ranger News reserves the right to edit all letters.&#13;
Editor-in-Chief'&#13;
Amanda Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant .Editor&#13;
Peter Minor&#13;
SpOrts Editor&#13;
Sonya Hower&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Sarah Schwalbach&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Michelle LaCOIUlt&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Elise&#13;
an&#13;
om&#13;
sSlstallt&#13;
Jea&#13;
chober&#13;
News&#13;
Tha\ll&#13;
Becky Bergman&#13;
Rixey Heron&#13;
Colo.m.nisis&#13;
Bill Ager&#13;
Aaron Rodriguez&#13;
Don Nelson&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Roman Rodichev&#13;
Write~&#13;
ChrisSunnny&#13;
Colleen LaVrnka&#13;
Kelly Voss&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
.Dave Buchanan&#13;
Jeff Mueller&#13;
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.-&#13;
~etentlOn and graduation rates, strengthen-    ours 0 operatIo~, access to ill dmgs. and  be~mm~g.  stage~  of  meeting,   the&#13;
mg a~1relevant services and programs and  the range of services on campus provided   University&#13;
IS&#13;
looking to outline a strong&#13;
recruttment of students. Other efforts will  to students as well as staff.&#13;
program  for the  University  Planning&#13;
look at the diversity of the student body&#13;
The  sixth  task  force  deals  with   Council and get enrollment and retention&#13;
and graduation rates for students.&#13;
Marketing and Public Relations with Dave   figures up and be able to fill budget impli-&#13;
Steve McLaughlin is chair for student  Buchanan as chair. This team will look at  cations by March I, 1999.&#13;
recruitment This group deals with increas-&#13;
r-----------\:...--------------------~&#13;
ing the diversity of students and the num-&#13;
ber of people who enroll in the University,&#13;
getting faculty, staff, alumni, Admissions&#13;
Office and the community involved in the&#13;
process. Laura Gellott, is the chair person&#13;
for advising. The advising task force is fro&#13;
declared  and undeclared  students  and&#13;
incoming freshmen.  They will· focus on&#13;
career development  with hopes to serve&#13;
the student and faculty better on advising.&#13;
The goal is to provide a structure  for&#13;
advising that will enhance the quality for&#13;
the student.  DeAnn Stone is the Student&#13;
Li Fe task force chair which looks at the&#13;
opportunities to involve students in extra-&#13;
curricular  activities  within the campus,&#13;
focusing  on on the health  and living&#13;
arrangements of student life and attracting&#13;
and retaining more students on campus.&#13;
Accessibility of Programs and Degree&#13;
is  headed  up  by Don  Cress.   The&#13;
University  is trying to make. classes for&#13;
students more accessible- through certain&#13;
times of the week and day.&#13;
It&#13;
also deals&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
ESTABLiSHED&#13;
1972&#13;
Freshman Midfielder Kristin Singer regains possession from a Lewis University·&#13;
forward and clears the ball, For more information on Women Soccer see page 8&#13;
Survey on University Police&#13;
Ratings low among students&#13;
Lisa Nowak&#13;
Special to the Ranger News&#13;
A police officers job is to protect and&#13;
care for hislher community. Enforcing the .&#13;
law is also a big part of a police officers job.&#13;
Many  students  at  the  University  of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside don't appreciate or feel&#13;
the need of the campus police.&#13;
A recent survey completed among stu-&#13;
dents and faculty at UW-Parkside found more&#13;
than half were satisfied with the University&#13;
Police.  However,&#13;
in&#13;
general, the students' rat-&#13;
ings were lower than ratings of faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
A large portion of students, 57%, have&#13;
never contacted the University Police for&#13;
- assistance.  Students who have had interac-&#13;
tions with the police were less satisfied with&#13;
responding officers&#13;
services than were&#13;
faculty i'nd staff. Most students have only&#13;
contacted the police when they had vehicle-&#13;
related problems.&#13;
The students also think that some of the&#13;
issues that campus police deal with are not of&#13;
great importance. Students rated assaults and&#13;
battery, domestic violence, drug and liquor&#13;
violations, and loud parties as less important&#13;
concerns for police than did faculty and staff.&#13;
A&#13;
few&#13;
students living on campus gave&#13;
their opinions of the University Police. Kate&#13;
Janoska said, "I feel like I'm in jail.  The&#13;
police should only be called in to handle cer-&#13;
tain emergency  situations."  -&#13;
Carrie Card, also a dissatisfied student&#13;
.added, "They're too eager to give out tickets&#13;
to everyone."&#13;
Linda Muftler thinks that the police&#13;
should fmd better ways to spend their time.&#13;
She said, "I-constantly see the police circling&#13;
the Ranger Hall parking lot just looking for&#13;
cars to ticket.&#13;
I'm&#13;
sure there are better things&#13;
they could be doing with their time."&#13;
Robert Deane, head of the University&#13;
Police Department, responded by saying, "I&#13;
think that tbe students are misinformed. We&#13;
patrol the halls to make sure there are no fires&#13;
or problems.  We patrol the parking lots to&#13;
.lllake sure people aren't taking the student's&#13;
parking spots.&#13;
Thi;&#13;
is all part of our job. I&#13;
would think that the students would feel bet-&#13;
ter know that we're doing our job.&#13;
II&#13;
Overall, the students at the University of&#13;
WIsconsin-Parkside  don't see the need for the&#13;
police. Many think that the police should not&#13;
be walking the residence halls or circling the&#13;
parking lots. Some also think that the police&#13;
arejust looking to get students in trouble. At&#13;
any rate, the University Police seem to be fac-&#13;
ing challenges with regard to trust and confi-&#13;
dence.that students have in them.&#13;
s&#13;
W&#13;
BEAT&#13;
N'&#13;
,E&#13;
~'p&#13;
O~"L'"&#13;
I CE&#13;
11/04/98 Inc 98-616  Weapons,&#13;
11/04/98 Inc 98-611  Property&#13;
Damage, Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activity Center&#13;
Lot, 10:44 a.m. Construction trailer&#13;
was damaged by a grounds crew&#13;
machine which slid&#13;
in&#13;
the mud,&#13;
Il/03/98 Inc 98-605  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, II :28&#13;
a.rn.&#13;
Vehicle traveling at high rage of&#13;
speed was stopped and driver cited&#13;
for failure to fasten seat belt&#13;
1l/02l98 Inc 98-599  Elevator&#13;
Rescue, Union, 4:43 p.m, An eleva-&#13;
tor operator technician was stuck in&#13;
an elevator, UPPS officers assisted&#13;
subject's release through an elevator&#13;
hatch,&#13;
University Apartments, 10:23 p.m.&#13;
Officers were dispatched regarding&#13;
an individual who was pointing a gun&#13;
at others, Investigation revealed stu-&#13;
dents were having water gun fights,&#13;
Incident escalated when one student&#13;
said he had a gun and verbally threat-&#13;
ened&#13;
others, Item a student had con-&#13;
cealed in the waist band of his&#13;
trousers was found to be a TV remote&#13;
control, Student was issued a citation&#13;
under UWS Chapter 18- display/por-&#13;
tray of any object resembling a&#13;
weapon on university lands.&#13;
00&#13;
0\&#13;
0\&#13;
1"""4&#13;
Il/03/98 Inc 98-606  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, 12:08&#13;
p.m,&#13;
Vehicle traveling at a high rate&#13;
of speed was stopped and driver cited&#13;
for failure to fasten seat belt&#13;
Il/04/98 Inc 98-612  Fire Drill,&#13;
Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activity Center, 2:24 p,m,&#13;
An annual fire drill was conducted by&#13;
the safety director. Alarm sounded&#13;
and all areas checked, No problems&#13;
were observed.&#13;
11/03/98 Inc 98-600 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, 9:26&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Vebicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for failure to stop for a stop&#13;
sign,&#13;
11/03/98 Inc 98-607  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, 12:18&#13;
p.m. Vehicle was' stopped and driver&#13;
cited for failure to stop for stop sign.&#13;
11/03/98 Inc 98-601  Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Union&#13;
Visitor's Lot, 9:54&#13;
a.m. Vehicle was stoppedand driver&#13;
cited for failure to stop for a stop&#13;
sign,&#13;
1l/04/98 Inc 98-613  Agency&#13;
Assist, 3900 Block of CTH E, 4:56&#13;
p.m,&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff requested&#13;
UPPS assist with an injury accident&#13;
Officer assisted with traffic control&#13;
until vehicles were towed away.&#13;
'"&#13;
Il/05/98 Inc 98-617  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop, I:25 p.m.&#13;
Vehicle was stopped and driver cited&#13;
for speeding 46 mph in a 25 mph&#13;
zone.&#13;
C\I&#13;
1"""4&#13;
Il/03/98 Inc 98-608  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop Road, 2:49&#13;
p.m,&#13;
Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for speeding 46 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
1l/03/98 Inc 98-602 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, 10:00&#13;
a.m. Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for non-registration of vehicle&#13;
(expired Jan. 1998),&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
:&gt;-&#13;
o&#13;
Z&#13;
11/04/98 Inc 98-614  Unlawful Use&#13;
of Telephone, Ranger Hall, 3:28&#13;
p.rn,&#13;
Student reported receiving obscene&#13;
messages on her answering machine.&#13;
Investigation pending,&#13;
Il/05/98 Inc 98-618  Traffic&#13;
Accident, Ranger Hall parking lot,&#13;
2:12 p.m, Two student's vehicles had&#13;
a minor collision in the parking lot&#13;
Il/03/98 Inc 98-609  Traffic&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop Road, 3:44&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for speeding 45 mph in a 25&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
1l/03/98 Inc 98-603 Traffic&#13;
Violation, Inner Loop Road, 10:00&#13;
a.rn.&#13;
Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for failure to stop for stop sign,&#13;
Il/05/98 Inc 98-619  Traffic&#13;
Accident, Communication Arts park-&#13;
ing lot 3:28&#13;
p.m.&#13;
One vehicle pulled&#13;
in front of a second vehicle causing&#13;
an accident. No injuries were sus-&#13;
tained, State accident report com-&#13;
pleted,&#13;
1l/04/98 Inc 98-615  Fire Alarm,&#13;
Sports&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Activity Center, 11:07&#13;
p.m,&#13;
Power Plant operator informed UPPS&#13;
- of an alarm sounding. Officer fo;'nd&#13;
no evidence of fire or smoke. Alarm&#13;
had reset itself at the power plant&#13;
11103/98 Inc 98-604 Traffic&#13;
Violation, limer Loop Road, 10:55&#13;
a.m,&#13;
Vehicle was stopped and driver&#13;
cited for failure&#13;
to&#13;
stop for stop sign.&#13;
ll/O3/98 Inc 98-610  Harassment,&#13;
University Apartments, 7:45&#13;
p.rn.&#13;
Student reported being harassed by&#13;
roommates. Investigation pending.&#13;
Victorious Parkside Graduates&#13;
. rIJ.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Z&#13;
Meridith Jnmisko&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
At least three UW-Parkside gradu-&#13;
ates were successful on November 3.&#13;
Election Day, Incumbent State Senator&#13;
Kimberly Plache beat Dave Hazen for&#13;
the 21st Senate  District  seat.&#13;
According to the November 4&#13;
Journal&#13;
Times&#13;
unofficial vote totals, Plache&#13;
received 27,277 votes (55%) while&#13;
Hazen received 21,934 votes (45%),&#13;
Plache became senator when George&#13;
Petak was recalled over the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers taxation issue.&#13;
Both&#13;
Plache&#13;
and Hazen received their&#13;
bachelor degrees from Uw-Parkside.&#13;
Plache received hers in psychology&#13;
while Hazen received his in account-&#13;
ing, Plache graduated in 1984, The&#13;
21st district includes eastern Racine&#13;
County.&#13;
.Incumbent State Representative&#13;
Robert&#13;
L.&#13;
Turner was unopposed,&#13;
except for some write-in votes. He&#13;
serves the 61st Assembly District in&#13;
Racine County, He received his bach-&#13;
elors degree" in business administration&#13;
from UW-Parkside in 1976,&#13;
Incumbent State Representative&#13;
James Kreuser was elected again to&#13;
while on the campaign  trail and&#13;
Spottswood appeared at the "Take&#13;
Back The Night" event on October 29,&#13;
serve the 64th Assembly District in&#13;
Kenosha County, He received 12,229&#13;
votes'(72%) while Don Ruge received&#13;
5,003 votes (28%) according to the&#13;
Kenosha   News&#13;
web site. Kreuser&#13;
received his bachelors degree in politi-&#13;
cal science from UW-Parkside in 1983,&#13;
Plache, Turner, and Kreuser are&#13;
Democrats.&#13;
In other key elections,  Russ&#13;
Feingold defeated Mark Neumann to&#13;
remain a U.S, Senator and Lydia&#13;
Spottswood lost to Paul Ryan, who will&#13;
now represent the 1st District in the&#13;
U.S, House, Feingold visited campus&#13;
=&#13;
~&#13;
C&#13;
Z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
~&#13;
Ranger News Staff:&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Pete&#13;
Spo&#13;
.Sonya Flower&#13;
lluslnllS$ Manager&#13;
Sarah Schwalbach&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Michelle LaCount&#13;
The Ranger News ispublished every Thursday throughout the semester by&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide, who are solely responsible&#13;
~for its editorial policy and content Subscriptions are available at the cost of&#13;
$15&#13;
L!:ti&#13;
Editor,&#13;
, or policy: The Ranger News encourages letters to the&#13;
ould not&#13;
exceed 250 words and should be delivered to the&#13;
(WYLL D-139C) Ore-mailed&#13;
to&#13;
bulgrOOO@uwp,edu by&#13;
ay before publicati    tters mnst he typed&#13;
and&#13;
include the&#13;
autho&#13;
and&#13;
mnber,  lters must. be free from. misleading or&#13;
libelons content&#13;
willnot he published, For pub-&#13;
li&#13;
ose., author's name can be withheld, bnt oniy upon request&#13;
Rang   ws reserves the right&#13;
to&#13;
edjt all letters,&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
i,;ue&#13;
I 9 Vol.&#13;
32&#13;
Alissa&#13;
Pfeffer&#13;
IlepOtlOr&#13;
On September   11th  of  last&#13;
year,&#13;
tragedy struck  America.   A  •&#13;
groupof UW-Parkside students&#13;
enrolled in a  University   Semi-&#13;
narcourse believed  they  could&#13;
do something  to  support    the&#13;
people of New York, and   they&#13;
did.&#13;
The   University&#13;
Semmar&#13;
class,   taught&#13;
by&#13;
Sandy&#13;
Puzerewzki,raised  over  one&#13;
thousand  dollars   which    was&#13;
sent to the  people   in  need.  A&#13;
pnrtionof the sum  was  usea  to&#13;
purchase a  sugar   maple;   me&#13;
statetree of Wisconsin  and  New&#13;
York.&#13;
The tree is planted   here  on&#13;
the UW-Parkside's Anna   Maria&#13;
Nature&#13;
Trail&#13;
and  a special   cere-&#13;
monywill be held  at noon  Sep-&#13;
tember U th  to  dedicate&#13;
the&#13;
sugarmaple.The ceremony   will&#13;
be at the planted  tree  and  con-&#13;
sistof four representatives    giv-&#13;
ing speeches  about   how   they&#13;
are feeling  a  year   later.  Vice-&#13;
ProvostDr.Rebecca   Martin  and&#13;
ParksideStudent   Government&#13;
PresidentMarco  Morrison   will&#13;
be two of the  individuals    that&#13;
will'be addressing   those   who&#13;
attendthe ceremony.   "Amazing&#13;
Grace"and "America  the  Beau-&#13;
lilulwill be  performed   by  UW-&#13;
Parksidemusic  major   Karolyn&#13;
Peterson.All of those  attending&#13;
the dedication  will  be  given  a&#13;
chance to tie  a  ribbon   on  the&#13;
tree.&#13;
There will also  be  time   for&#13;
other students   and   faculty   to&#13;
expres.their thoughts   and  feel-&#13;
Ingsabout the past year  and  the&#13;
Yearsto come. The  sugar  maple&#13;
Willbe a living memorial   to  all&#13;
thatWaslost on  September    11,&#13;
2001.&#13;
Photos&#13;
by&#13;
Al.   Smith&#13;
on the&#13;
Inside&#13;
The&#13;
University   of WisconsinolParkside's&#13;
Student   Newspaper&#13;
uw-&#13;
Parkside Faculty and&#13;
Staff Awarded&#13;
Get the Police Beat&#13;
for Superb Service&#13;
Page:3&#13;
Page:9&#13;
UW -&#13;
Parks ide&#13;
Remembers&#13;
Page: 10&#13;
........&#13;
-&#13;
-:"&#13;
~--&#13;
,&#13;
Pagel&#13;
September&#13;
II  -  16,1001&#13;
The  Ranger  News&#13;
Sept. 12&#13;
•  Friends  of the  UW-Parkside   Library  presents:  ''The  Sopra-&#13;
nos:"  An Analysis  and  Evaluation  of  Cable  TV's  Most  Suc-&#13;
cessful  Series  wfTV  writer  Nick  Pepitone,  director!  pro-&#13;
ducer  Dave  Dahlman,  and  "Soprano-ist."   Christa  Pepi-&#13;
tone;  7 p.m., Overlook  Lounge,  second  floor  of the UW-&#13;
Parkside  Library,  free.&#13;
Sept. 12-15&#13;
• Foreign  Film:-"Innocence"   show  times:  Thursday!  Friday&#13;
@ 7:30  p.m.;  Saturday   @ 8  p.m.;  Sunday   @ 2  p.m.;&#13;
Union  Cinema  Theater;  student  season  ticket:  $23 tick-&#13;
ets at Ranger  Card  Office.  Sept.  13&#13;
• Scholarship  Day, 4 p.m.-8:30  p.m.,  Union  Dining  Room&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
•  Dance:  Black  Student  Union  "It's  Getting  Hot  In  Here"&#13;
Jam,  9 p.m.-1  a.m.,  Union  Square&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
• Hispanic  Heritage  Month  Kickoff  Celebration,  11 a.rn-z  p.m.,&#13;
Upper  Main  Place,  free&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
• Noon Concert:  Elaine  Skorodin,  violin;  Carol Wallace,  piano,&#13;
Union  Cinema  Theater,  noon,  free&#13;
•  Coffeehouse   featuring   Jason   Levasseur,   8  p.m.-10   p.m.,&#13;
Union  Square,  free&#13;
Sept. 19-22&#13;
• Foreign  Film:  "Me You Them"  show  times:  Thursday!  Friday&#13;
@ 7:30  p.m.;  Saturday   @ 8 p.m.;  Sunday@  2 p.m.;  Union&#13;
Cinema  Theater,  admission  by season  ticket  only&#13;
Sept.20&#13;
•  Women's   Studies  Gender,  Race,  and  Class  Book  Group:&#13;
''The  Saving  Graces"  by  Patricia  Gaffney,  discuss   led  by&#13;
Frances  Kavenik,  Union  207,  3:30  p.m.,  free,  refreshments&#13;
available,  book  available  in book  store&#13;
Sept.  20&#13;
• Men's  Soccer  vs.  SIU-Edwardsville,    1:15  p.m.,  Wood  Road&#13;
Field&#13;
•  Women's   Soccer   vs.  SIU-&#13;
Edwardsville,&#13;
3:30&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
Wood   Road   Field;   UWPark-&#13;
side   students   admitted   free&#13;
w! student  ID; adults:  $5; high&#13;
school  students  &amp; children  14&#13;
and  under  $1.&#13;
•  Lecture:   "  Health   Effect  of&#13;
Inhaled  dusts:  Idaho  farmers,&#13;
Libby   Miners,   &amp;   New   York&#13;
Firefighters"&#13;
w!&#13;
Mickey&#13;
Gunter,  U. of Idaho  professor&#13;
of   Geological&#13;
Sciences,&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.,  Greenquist   109, free&#13;
Sept.  21&#13;
•   Cross-Country:&#13;
Midwest&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Meet,    UW-Park·&#13;
Try some golf frisbee at the U&#13;
side   National    CrossCountry&#13;
Course;  noon;  UW-Parkside   students  admitted  free  w!  stu-&#13;
dentlD;   adults:  $5;  high  school  students  &amp; children  14 and&#13;
under  $1. Sept.  22&#13;
.&#13;
• Men's  Soccer  vs.  Lewis,  noon, Wood  Road  Field&#13;
•  Women's   Soccer  vs.  Lewis,  2:30  p.m.,  Wood  Road  Field;&#13;
UW-Parkside   students  admitted  free  w!  student   10; adults:&#13;
$5; high  school  students  &amp; children  14 and  under  $1.&#13;
Sept.  24&#13;
I&#13;
If«ihger  News&#13;
Hug  as many  trees&#13;
as you  can  - I do!&#13;
Deborah   Halm.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Amber   Smith&#13;
Advertisi&#13;
ng   Manager&#13;
Deborah    Hahm&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Tracv  Brownlow&#13;
Layout&#13;
Lachlan   McDonald&#13;
Kim  Meyers&#13;
Arts&#13;
and&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Amy  Rogers&#13;
Phototography&#13;
Lachlan   McDonaJd&#13;
A.  L   Smith&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page&#13;
Editor&#13;
Alex  Voskuil&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Judith&#13;
Logsdon&#13;
Contact   the  editors   31595-2287&#13;
10'&#13;
more  informacion.&#13;
•  Parkside  Adult  Student   Alliance   (PASA)   Dialog   Dinner,   5&#13;
p.m.-7  p.m.,  Union  104-106  Sept.  25&#13;
• Noon Concert:  Paul Gmeinder,  cello;  Frances  Bedford,  harp-&#13;
sichord,  Union  Cinema  Theater,  noon,  free&#13;
Meetings  are  Mondays at&#13;
noon.  Please  stop  by and&#13;
participate   as the  meet-&#13;
ings are  open  to  all those&#13;
at  Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
0·1&#13;
39C&#13;
phone:  (262)  595·2287&#13;
fax: (262)  595·2295&#13;
• Milwaukee  Area  Alumni  Regional  Reception,  at Swank,  628&#13;
N. Water  St.,  Milwaukee,   5-7:30  p.m.,  $5,  cash  bar;  RSVP&#13;
by.   Sept.&#13;
18   to    Karen&#13;
Reiher,&#13;
(262)&#13;
5952443&#13;
or&#13;
university.advancementssuwp.edu&#13;
via  email&#13;
•  Hispanic  Heritage  Month  Welcome   Back  Social,  8-10  p.m.,&#13;
The  Den,  refresh-Trent   served,  free,  campus  only  program&#13;
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throughout   the  semester&#13;
by&#13;
5tudents&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
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who&#13;
are&#13;
solely responsible for  its editorial&#13;
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Letters&#13;
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be&#13;
delivered&#13;
to&#13;
the  Ranger  office (WYLL&#13;
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&#13;
1&#13;
 Issue 10 Vol. 33 Tke University of Wisconsm-Parksitle s Student Newspaper Feb. 27-March 5, 2003 UW-Parkside mourns student's death Christine Rathke On Monday, Feb. 17, 2003, a crowd of more than 200 stu­dents, staff, friends, and family gathered on the UW-Parkside campus to mourn the death of student Christine Rathke. She was killed in a head-on car collision the previous day. Emo­tions ran high as candles were lit and tears were shed for the 20-year-old junior. A 20-minute press confer­ence took place earlier in the day to answer questions with the students and the UW -Park-side Women's Basketball team Rathke was so much a part of. Athletic Director Dave Williams was there with the Women's Basketball coach Jenny Knight and team captains Jamie Nebel and Katie Pruessing. "Our deepest sympothies go out to the Rathke family; they are our number-one concern at this point," said Williams. It appeared as if the team members had not only lost a teammate, but a good friend. "She had a way of bringing the team together," said Puessing."I can still hear her laugh." "She was always a team player," Knight commented. "She just cared about others and didn't really think about herself first." Rathke had her whole future in front of her. Sports seemed to be her life. She was awarded a full scholarship at Southeast Missouri State Uni­versity after leading the Franklin High School basketball team to the state finals for two consecutive years. She moved home after two years in Mis­souri to be closer to friends and family. It seemed like Rathke was just getting back into the feel of the game after missing the first 16 games due to injuries. Her first game back was on Jan. 23, 2003. She only scored two points and had one rebound, but the home game on the day before Rathke's death, she scored a season-high 20 points, and had six rebounds. "She did have a great game that day and she was just real­ly excited," Knight said. According to Jyl Krohn, Rathke's oldest sister, she loved the game of basketball, and "She had a way of bringing the team together...I can still hear her laugh" lived for it in every way. But she was not aspiring to go professional as an athlete. Instead, she took school more seriously seeking a degree in communi­cations and hoping to become a teacher or coach at some point. The car accident that robbed Rathke of her future is said to be the result of reckless driving. The driver of the car that crossed the center line of the highway moments before it hit Rathke's car head on was 19-year-old Victor Sanchez, who was taken into custody after being treated for head and neck injuries. He faces a charge of homi­cide by negligent operation of a vehicle and his case is being reviewed by the Milwaukee Coun­ty District Attorney's Office. Sanchez's 20-year-old passenger, Carlos Martinez Ramos, was in critical condition with severe head injuries as of February 18,2003. Those mourning the death of Rathke did not focus on who to blame as much as they focused on the fact that their friend was gone forever. The women's basketball team practice was cancelled on Monday so the team could attend the memorial service that night, and the game on Thursday was postponed for Rathke's funeral. The basketball team 'On the day before Rathke's death, she scored a season-high 20 points, and had six rebounds." attempted to get back on track with a few informal practices, preparing for their next game against Southern Indiana. Knight said they want to try and do something to memori­alize Rathke as a teammate. With only four more games left in the season, the Rangers hope to have Rathke's high spirits with them. The Parkside Student Govenment Association is planning to plant two trees on campus dedicated to the two students who passed in the last year: Christine Rathke and Amanda Fitzgerald. on the Inside Election Info Page: 4 Police Beat Page: 9 Apollo Night Page: 12 &#13;
Page 2 Feb. 27-March 5,2003 The Ranger News Things to do ^ at the U Feb. 27 Women's basketball vs. Northern Kentucky, 5:30 p.m., DeSimone Gym Black History Month event: Fashion at a Glance: Class and Culture, Union Square, 7 p.m. • Men's basketball vs. Northern Kentucky, 7:45 p.m., DeSimone Gymna­sium, UW-Parkside students are admitted free with student ID Feb. 28, March. 1 Plays At Parkside: "Honk!" Com. Arts Theatre, @ 7 p.m., adults $15, students (13 year and older)/seniors (62 or older) $12, 4-12 years $6. Tickets: call Diane Smith (262-595-2564) or access smithd@uwp.edu via email. Feb. 28 • PASA presents: The Americana Music Festi­val w/4-NOW featuring UW-Parkside Prof. Don Walter on fiddle, Union Square, 8 p.m., free March. 1 Women's basketball vs. Indianapolis 1 p.m. Men's basketball Indianapolis 3:15 p.m., DeSi­mone Gymnasium, UW-Parkside students are admitted free to all games with their student ID. Tickets: adults $5, high school students $3, children 14 years of age and under: $1. March. 2 Plays At Parkside: "Honk!" Com. Arts Theatre, @ 3 p.m., adults $15, stu­dents (13 year and older)/seniors (62 or older) $12, 4-12 years Join The Ranger News Everyone is wanted, welcome and needed. Open Positions NEWS scSoST MEWS $6. Tickets: call Diane Smith (262-595-2564) or access smithd@uwp.edu via email. 7:30 p.m.; Saturday: 5 and 8 p.m.; Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema The­ater March. 2-25 March. 6 Assistant Editor Page Editors Reporters Sports Writers Cartoonists Opinion Writers Distribution Stop by The Ranger News office wyllie D139-C or call 595-2287 Anyone can join at any time Art Exhibit: Kenosha-Racine Unified K-12 Art Teacher Invitational Exhi­bition, Com. Arts Gallery, hours: Reception: Sun­day, March 2, 1-4 p.m., Mondays/ Thursdays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays/ Wednesdays: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., free March. 3 Perspectives on Religious Issues: "Poetry and Spiri­tuality," w/UW-Parkside English Prof. Carl Lindner, Union 106, noon, free March. 4 Executive-in-Residence presents David Rayburn, president, Modine Manu­facturing, Union Cinema Theater, 9:30 and 11 a.m., free, open to all univer­sity students and staff and to the public March. 5 • Noon Concert: Marcia Porter, soprano, spon­sored by Ebony &amp; Ivory, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free • Josh Casey, comic juggler, Union Square, 8 p.m., free March. 6-9 • Foreign Film: "Italian For Beginners," show times: Thursday/Friday: Ranger News • Friends of the UW-Parkside Library presents: "Ancient Art in Wisconsin and the Midwest" w/Dr. Jack Steinbring, Overlook Lounge, second floor of the library, 7 p.m., free March. 7, 8 • Plays At Parkside: "Honk!" Com. Arts Theatre, @ 7 p.m., adults $15, students (13 year and older)/seniors (62 or older) $12, 4-12 years $6. Tickets: call Diane Smith (262-595-2564) or access smithd@uwp.edu via email. March. 7 • Multicultural Profession­al Day mini-conference, OMSA Office, 11:30 a.m. March. 8 • Concert: Mary Skop &amp; Alissa Geiger, senior recital, Com. Arts D-118, 3 p.m., free "Exploring Paths to Well­ness" holistic and integrative health conference, various campus locations, for information, call ext. 2277. March. 12 Noon Concert: UW-Parkside choirs, James Kinchen, conductor, Union Cinema Theater, noon, free Debbie taking a nap in the office. Editor-in-Chief Amber Smith Advertising Manager Deborah Hahm Layout Team Lachlan McDonald Kim Meyer Lauren Mikrut Cartoonist Jason Meekma Photography A. L. Smith Henry Gaskins lachlan McDonald Carlen Kielisch Sports Page Editor Henry Gaskins Reporters Sarah Masik Doris Washington Rebecca Rydzenski Ranger Advisor Judith Logsdon Contact the editor at .595-2287 for more information. rangerNews@journalist.com Meetings are Mondays at noon. Please stop by and participate as the meet­ings are open to all those at Parkside. Wyllie D-I39C phone: (262) 595-2287 fax: (262) 595-2295 The Ranger is published every second Thursday throughout the semester by stu­dents of the University of Wisconsin-Park-side, who are solely responsible for its edi­torial policy and content. Letters to the Editor policy:The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor. Letters should not exceed 250 words andIshould be delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D-139C) . Letters must be typed and include the author's name and phone number. Let­ters must be free from misleading or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply will not be published. For publication pur­poses, author's name can be withheld, but only upon request.The Ranger reserves the right to edit all letters. &#13;
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              <text>SUFAC completes allocations</text>
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              <text>The&#13;
IOVol.33&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
March 6- A ril I, 2003&#13;
SUFAC completes allocations&#13;
AmberSmith&#13;
EdItor-ln-Chie"-f _ tion WIPZ, and various activities&#13;
planned by Parkside's&#13;
Activities iloard.&#13;
Each club was required to&#13;
propose a detailed budget&#13;
SUFAC.The committee in turn&#13;
voted upon a budget that they&#13;
believe to be appropriate for&#13;
the club to operate with. Once&#13;
SUFAC voted on the budgets&#13;
organizations had the right to&#13;
appeal the amount they were&#13;
allocated. SUFACdiscussed the&#13;
appeal and again voted upon a&#13;
suitable budget. The budgets&#13;
still must be&#13;
approved and pass&#13;
a vote by Parksides&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
(PSGA).&#13;
It is unlikely a&#13;
club will receive&#13;
all the funding it&#13;
requested though&#13;
it is not unusual to&#13;
see an increase&#13;
from the previous&#13;
year. Sacred Circle,&#13;
UWP's American&#13;
The Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee&#13;
(SUFAC)has nnanzeo the budgets&#13;
for 2003-2004. Segregated&#13;
Fees are one of the fees that all&#13;
studentspay as part of tuition. It&#13;
is the duty of the SUFAC Committee&#13;
to distribute the funds&#13;
collected to organizations on&#13;
campus.The funds are used for&#13;
various activities uch as the&#13;
operation of UWP's radio sta195,000&#13;
110,000&#13;
115,000&#13;
180,000&#13;
175,000&#13;
170,000&#13;
185,000&#13;
'80,000&#13;
155,000&#13;
sso,OOO&#13;
145,000&#13;
'40,000&#13;
135,000&#13;
130,000&#13;
125,000&#13;
$20,000&#13;
115,000&#13;
110,000&#13;
'5,000&#13;
10&#13;
Light grey = Requested amount for 03-04&#13;
Dark grey = Amount received for 03-04&#13;
YEAR: 2001 2002&#13;
PAB 63,805&#13;
SOC 10,428&#13;
Latinos Unldos 17,500&#13;
Women's Center 10,800&#13;
PASA 4,SOD&#13;
Rainbow Alliance 6,SOD&#13;
Black Student Union 24,SOD&#13;
PSGA 38,000&#13;
Ranger N_a 14,322&#13;
WIPZ 18,100&#13;
PIC 4,000&#13;
PAO 3,300&#13;
S1uden1801 India 0&#13;
sacred Circle 3,300&#13;
CIO 6,000&#13;
Organl_ Activity Totsl 225,055&#13;
41,500&#13;
13,197&#13;
30,000&#13;
11,286&#13;
14,316&#13;
7,000&#13;
30,000&#13;
84,300&#13;
28,562&#13;
35,000&#13;
19,116&#13;
12,000&#13;
o&#13;
12,700&#13;
o&#13;
336,977&#13;
Indian and Indigenous Peoples'&#13;
Student Organization, requested&#13;
$25,100. The organization&#13;
requested $12,900 for a Pow&#13;
Wow.This would include such&#13;
necessities as a feast, dancers,&#13;
drums and a Story Teller.Along&#13;
with the funds for a Pow Wow&#13;
Sacred Circle requested money&#13;
for a luncheon, film showings&#13;
and a guest poet. Sacred Circle&#13;
also had other activities outlined&#13;
in their budget. SUFAC&#13;
allocated the organization&#13;
$19,OOO.Theclub is required to&#13;
resubmit a buaget that stays&#13;
within the amount allocated by&#13;
the SUFACcommittee.&#13;
PSGA is another organization&#13;
that is dependent on segregated&#13;
fees. PSGA requested&#13;
$49,500in funding this includes&#13;
2003&#13;
Reclved&#13;
2004&#13;
50,000 '&#13;
25,000&#13;
45,000&#13;
11,286&#13;
19,495&#13;
7,000&#13;
30,000&#13;
49,500.&#13;
20,000&#13;
33,000&#13;
35,000&#13;
15,000&#13;
15,000&#13;
15,000&#13;
o&#13;
370,281&#13;
166,781&#13;
• 25,500&#13;
;~96'OOO&#13;
112,070 I::: 14lI,000&#13;
" 49,SOO&#13;
137,812&#13;
0'71,_ 1_,162&#13;
~41,840&#13;
t 28,000&#13;
! 25,100&#13;
~&#13;
ss&#13;
60,000&#13;
25,500&#13;
40,000&#13;
11,130&#13;
27,000&#13;
17,000&#13;
37,000&#13;
44,500&#13;
30,000&#13;
30,000&#13;
10,000&#13;
25,000 .&#13;
11,500&#13;
19,000&#13;
o&#13;
387,630&#13;
$10,000 for travel expenses to&#13;
attend conferences,$5,000 in&#13;
consumable supplies which&#13;
refers to staples, paper, poster&#13;
board, etc. and also $5,000 in&#13;
miscellaneous money that is&#13;
needed to "ensure the. success&#13;
of the organization." SUFAC&#13;
granted PSGA$44,500.&#13;
All major status organizations&#13;
depend on SUFACto allocate&#13;
funding. The money is generally&#13;
used to pay salaries for&#13;
club officers, dances, dinners,&#13;
guest speakers and programs&#13;
open to all University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside students. Each&#13;
student is required to pay segregated&#13;
fees but this also means&#13;
that any students is welcome to&#13;
join any organization on campus.&#13;
on the Inside Books: New or used?&#13;
Page: 5&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Page: 6&#13;
#23 Retired&#13;
Page: 3&#13;
The Ranger News Page 2 March t- April I.2003&#13;
RThger News&#13;
March 2·25&#13;
• Art Exhibit: KenoshaRacine&#13;
Unified K-12&#13;
Art Teacher Invitational&#13;
Exhibition, Com. Arts&#13;
Gallery, hours: Reception:&#13;
Sunday, March 2,&#13;
1-4 p.m., Mondays/&#13;
Thursdays: 11 a.m. to&#13;
5 p.m.; Tuesdays/&#13;
Wednesdays: 11 a.m.&#13;
to 8 p.m., free&#13;
March 6·9&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Italian&#13;
For Beginners," show&#13;
times: Thursday/Friday:&#13;
7:30 p.m.; Saturday:&#13;
5 and 8 p.m.;&#13;
Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union&#13;
Cinema Theater&#13;
March 6&#13;
• Friends of the UWParkside&#13;
Library presents:&#13;
"Ancient Art in&#13;
Wisconsin and the&#13;
Midwest" w/Dr. Jack&#13;
Steinbring, Overlook&#13;
Lounge, second floor&#13;
of the library, 7 p.m.,&#13;
free&#13;
March 7&#13;
der Zorn Golles, CART&#13;
136,1 p.m.&#13;
March 7,8&#13;
• t'lays At .Parkside:&#13;
"Honk!" Com. Arts Theatre,&#13;
@ 7 p.m., adults&#13;
$15, students (13 year&#13;
and older)/seniors (62&#13;
or older) $12, 4-12&#13;
years $6. TIckets: call&#13;
Diane Smith (262-595-&#13;
2564) or access&#13;
smithd@uwp.edu via&#13;
email.&#13;
• Multicultural Professional&#13;
Day mini-conference,&#13;
OMSA Office,&#13;
11:30 a.m.&#13;
March 7&#13;
• German Club film&#13;
screening: Aguirre, March 8&#13;
COMING SOON!&#13;
Statistics indicate that one in three&#13;
women and one in seven men will be sexually&#13;
assaulted or abused in their lifetime.&#13;
Many people are startled to learn that the numbers are so large; this&#13;
is so, because sexual assault is hidaen behind a wall of secrecy.&#13;
Educational Arts' presentation, "Breaking Silence." includes 14&#13;
candid, intense and often unsettling interviews with women and men&#13;
who have been sexually assaulted. Listeners are provided with a CD of&#13;
the interviews and view photographs of the people they hear.&#13;
IIre.k r ;n~&#13;
SIL ENCE&#13;
Sponsored by: Student Activities, Womyn's&#13;
Center, Parkside Activities Board, ParkS ide&#13;
Student Government Association, Residence Life&#13;
and the UWP SurViving Sexual Assault Advocacy&#13;
Program.&#13;
-Ttn s advertisement is not paid for with state appropriated&#13;
funds. The University of Wisconsin-Parkside provides&#13;
services for patrons with special needs. Please contact the&#13;
Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345.&#13;
MAR 31&#13;
RECEPTIONAT5:30&#13;
APR I&#13;
APR 2&#13;
IOam-2pm EXHIBITION&#13;
4pm-8pm EXHIBITION&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
union 104/106&#13;
FREE&#13;
• Concert: Mary Skop &amp;&#13;
Alissa Geiger, senior&#13;
recital, Com. Arts D118,&#13;
3 p.m., free&#13;
• "Exploring Paths to&#13;
Weilness" holistic and&#13;
integrative health conference,&#13;
various campus&#13;
locations, for information,&#13;
call ext. 2277.&#13;
March 12&#13;
• Noon Concert: UWParkside&#13;
choirs,&#13;
James Kinchen, conductor,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, noon. free&#13;
March 14&#13;
• German Club film&#13;
screening: Run, Lola,&#13;
Run. CART 136, 1 p.m.&#13;
March 21&#13;
• German Club film&#13;
screening: Falsche&#13;
Bewegung, CART 136,&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
HI Kiml&#13;
~&#13;
o&#13;
• 0&#13;
u&#13;
I:&#13;
...J&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amber Smuh&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Layout Team&#13;
Kim Meyer&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Lauren Mikrut&#13;
Photography&#13;
A. L. Smith&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Sarah Masik&#13;
Doris Washington&#13;
Rebecca Rydzenski&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editor at 595-2287 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
rangerNews@joumalisLcom&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at&#13;
noon. Please stop by and&#13;
participate as the meet·&#13;
ings are open to all those&#13;
at Parkside •.&#13;
Wyllie D·139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595·2295&#13;
The Ranger 15published every second&#13;
Thursday ttlrouf,h0ut the semester by students&#13;
of the University ofWisconsin·Parkside,&#13;
who are solely responsible for ~ ed"&#13;
tonal policy and content.&#13;
Letters to $e Editor policy:The Ranger&#13;
encouraaes letters to the Editor. Letters&#13;
should not exceed 250 words and should be&#13;
delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D·&#13;
Il9C). Letters must be typed and Include&#13;
the author's name and phone number. letters&#13;
must be free from misleading or&#13;
libelous content. Letters that fail to comply&#13;
will not be pubUsned. For publication purposes,&#13;
author's name can be withheld, but&#13;
only upon eeqaese.The Ranpr reserves the&#13;
right to edit all letters.&#13;
University Sports&#13;
Karate Classes&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
If students were to peek their have the karate belts from&#13;
head into the karate classes in white to black and practice&#13;
the field house at the Sports Monday nights too. But those&#13;
Activity Center on Wednesday are the advanced karate c1assnights,&#13;
they might be surprised. es.&#13;
Of course, there are the ones On Wednesdays, the&#13;
who take karate seriously; they advanced group practices right&#13;
l""-~~"""~:;~ii"Tnext to the&#13;
beginner's karate&#13;
class, which consists&#13;
of 24 students.&#13;
The beginners&#13;
don't get&#13;
dressed up in&#13;
karate outfits.&#13;
They come in&#13;
their street&#13;
clothes to learn the self-defense&#13;
techniques. •&#13;
Sensei Reid Pfarr,who is the&#13;
instructor for Karate I, said it&#13;
doesn't matter why a student&#13;
becomes involved in karate,&#13;
because everyone has different&#13;
reasons. He said that even the&#13;
beginner's courses will benefit&#13;
the students in one way or&#13;
another, no matter who they are.&#13;
Sensei Earl Pfarr, father of&#13;
Reid, has taught Karate If &amp; llf at&#13;
March 6- A ril 1,2003 Pa e 1&#13;
UW-Parksidefor over&#13;
30 years.He said the&#13;
students work out an&#13;
average of four&#13;
hours a week, or L.. =:-....J&#13;
more if they want to Students sparwith each other.&#13;
put more time into it. earn a yellow belt, and about 60&#13;
Students gain rank in the months to earn a black belt.&#13;
class according to how long Pfarr said only about four or five&#13;
they have been involved with students from Karate Imove on&#13;
karate and the techniques they to the advanced classes,but the&#13;
have mastered. For instance, it ones who do seem to stick with&#13;
usually takes three months to it and enjoy it.&#13;
JACK WHITI&#13;
Pool Touroamllot, DOli-DB-DoliCliaics, lad Trick Shot P08111110t&#13;
Karate I (left) practices in the same room as Karate II&#13;
&amp; III (above) on Wednesday nights.&#13;
#23 Retired at Parkside&#13;
Monday, March 24th&#13;
Noon-1 pm TrickShot&#13;
Exhibition&#13;
1-5pm One-on-One&#13;
Clinic&#13;
7-9pm One-on-One&#13;
Clinic&#13;
Teammates of the UW-Parkside Women's Basketball&#13;
team stand together after winning their game in overtime&#13;
against Northern Kentucky Feb. 27. 2003.&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
~rts Editor&#13;
Life returned to normal at&#13;
UW·Parkside Feb.27, 2003, when&#13;
the Rangers Women's Basketball&#13;
team won by the score of&#13;
75-73in overtime against Northern&#13;
Kentucky University. It was&#13;
their first home game since&#13;
Christine Rathke died in a car&#13;
accident almost two weeks earlier.There&#13;
was a small memorial&#13;
service after the game.&#13;
Christine Rathke's jersey,#23was&#13;
retired forever&#13;
in honor of&#13;
Rathke's commitment&#13;
to the game. Teammates&#13;
and fans wore&#13;
the #23 during the&#13;
game in remembrance&#13;
ofher,&#13;
UW.Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Jack Keating and Athletic&#13;
Director Dave Williams&#13;
~(I in a mor;nent of silence&#13;
before retiring Ra~hke's Jersey&#13;
number. .&#13;
Tuesday, March 25th&#13;
11am-4pm One-on-One&#13;
Clinic&#13;
7-9pm Trick Shot&#13;
Exhibition&#13;
Wednesday, March 26th'&#13;
11am-sprn Pool&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Thursday, March 27th&#13;
11am-9pm Pool&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Friday, March 28th&#13;
Noon-1 pm Jack White plays&#13;
champions and&#13;
Awards&#13;
This advertisement Is&#13;
not paid for with slate&#13;
appropriated fullds.&#13;
The UniV8fSily of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
provides services for&#13;
patrons with special&#13;
needs. Please&#13;
contact the ParKside&#13;
Student Center fof&#13;
assistance, 595-2345.&#13;
Sponsored by&#13;
Student Activities.&#13;
d&#13;
The Ranger News Page 4 March 6- April I, 2003 -&#13;
Travel&#13;
I ItI Spring Break Vacationsl&#13;
Cancen, Jamaica, Bahamas, &amp; Florida. Best parties, Best Hotels, Best Prices! Space is limited!&#13;
HUrry up &amp; Book Now! 1-800-234-7007endlesssummertoyrs.com&#13;
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tinations @Lowest Prices Caribbean, Mexico, Florida? Padre Most Reliable Company www.sunsplashtoUlS&#13;
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Services Offered&#13;
~~ions about.abortion? Make an informed choice. Call Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
($O.25/word for students)&#13;
Name:. _&#13;
Phone:~-------------&#13;
Email: _&#13;
This form can be dropped at The Ranger News located in&#13;
lower Wyllie Hall D 139C across form the Bookstore and&#13;
Career Center.&#13;
For more information, call (262) 595-2287&#13;
Payment must be made in full when ad is dropped off.&#13;
In Hall Sign Up Week&#13;
March 24-27&#13;
Ranger News lassified Form&#13;
Ad as you would like to see it&#13;
this&#13;
5 o&#13;
Reserved&#13;
1IIdl24lll- SiF ., fIr)WIr _ ....&#13;
1IIdl25t11-SiF ., for 1.1ftnIt rotlllI0II....... 1oaf flillbe ...... 11....&#13;
1IIdl. -SiF ., for 1.1ftnIt rotlllIlI,. prlllllluL&#13;
1IIdl27lll-'" ., for 1.1InIt rotlllIill eilMr IIIIllSin;e IDoIIIoltIry al5Pll).&#13;
What some Parks ide students prefer to buy and why&#13;
By Rusty Harris&#13;
R rter&#13;
•&#13;
Do you usually buy used&#13;
books instead of new ones if&#13;
they are available? I know I do.&#13;
Formost college students this is&#13;
a simple decision, right? A lot of&#13;
students buy used books&#13;
because of the reduced cost. I&#13;
decided to investigate this issue&#13;
further,and I began at the campus&#13;
bookstore. Ispoke with Jim&#13;
Rosellini, Manager 01 the Follett&#13;
Bookstore here at the university,&#13;
and he told me that used books&#13;
cost 75 percent of the price of&#13;
brand new books. With all of&#13;
the costs associated with living&#13;
in today's world saving money&#13;
is an attractive option. I also&#13;
spoke with Shauna Conn, a&#13;
sales associate at the bookstore,&#13;
who told me about the&#13;
return and refund policy for&#13;
books. She said, "Students may&#13;
return books for a full refund&#13;
within seven calendar days of&#13;
the start of their classes. Then,&#13;
students have a two day grace&#13;
period after the seven day period&#13;
to get their refund." As you&#13;
may know, they cannot reimburse&#13;
students for books that&#13;
are unwrapped (out of their&#13;
shrink-wrapping) or written in&#13;
or that are damaged. The best&#13;
time to sell your books back is&#13;
alter your final exams are done.&#13;
Rosellini told this reporter that,&#13;
"We do not refund money for&#13;
opened or altered items&#13;
because of the possibility that a&#13;
student may have burned a CD&#13;
or taken an access code to a&#13;
web site(s) that are sponsored&#13;
by the publisher." You must&#13;
show your student identification&#13;
card to sell book(s) back. If&#13;
the book(s) are not damaged&#13;
Follett will pay you half of the&#13;
cost that they paid for the&#13;
book(s). Rosellini pointed out&#13;
that the reason books are costly&#13;
nowadays is threefold. He said,&#13;
"The cost of paper, the authors&#13;
fees are increasing, and publishing&#13;
costs."&#13;
I spoke with some students&#13;
on campus and asked them&#13;
why they would buy a new&#13;
book versus a used one. I wanted&#13;
to see how many different&#13;
responses I could get and to&#13;
see if there are any exceptions&#13;
to the 'unspoken' rule of thumb&#13;
college students have about&#13;
buying used books. Here is&#13;
what Ifound.&#13;
Parkside student Tim Prust,&#13;
a business marketing major,&#13;
told this reporter, "I buy used&#13;
books because of the reduced&#13;
cost, but I might buy a new&#13;
book if it was for a course&#13;
major and I planned to keep it."&#13;
Brook Strickland, a member&#13;
of the university's volleyball&#13;
team, told this reporter that, "I&#13;
buy used books unless there&#13;
are none left. I might buy a new&#13;
book if it was for a course&#13;
major or if the used books&#13;
were too marked up." Brook is&#13;
majoring in nursing.&#13;
I also spoke to art education&#13;
major, Sara Edwards, and&#13;
she said that,"1 buy used if they&#13;
are available and especially&#13;
because of their cost. I might&#13;
buy a new book because it is&#13;
not marked up like a used&#13;
book might be."&#13;
Accounting student Tracy&#13;
Weill says, "I buy used books&#13;
because of the lower cost and I&#13;
might buy a new book if I&#13;
planned to keep it." .&#13;
Furthermore, I spoke with&#13;
Francesca Beal who said,"! buy&#13;
used books unless the bookstore&#13;
is all out of them." Beal is&#13;
currently undecided as to her&#13;
major.&#13;
Lindsey Hartman, a Communication&#13;
Arts student who is&#13;
interested in a career in broadcasting&#13;
or theater, told me that,&#13;
"I buy used books for the cost,&#13;
but if the book is outdated and&#13;
a newer version is necessary&#13;
for the class, I will buy it (new&#13;
book)."&#13;
As for Amy Plaza, a criminal&#13;
justice major, she said that, "I&#13;
buy used books unless I think I&#13;
might use the book in the&#13;
future for another course or as&#13;
a reference book later on."&#13;
Kyle VanPelt, who is majoring&#13;
in English and doing his&#13;
minor in coaching, says that,"]&#13;
buy 'used books because&#13;
they're cost-effective. I would&#13;
buy a new book if my instructor&#13;
required a newer version of&#13;
a text for a class."&#13;
Tara Grzonka, who is currently&#13;
undecided as to her&#13;
major, said that, "I buy used&#13;
books because of their cost, but&#13;
if 1 needed a newer edition of a&#13;
book for a class I would buy it."&#13;
I keep all of my books&#13;
because I feel that at some&#13;
point I may want to refer to&#13;
them for another class or to&#13;
refresh my memory. Usually the&#13;
books are&#13;
current and&#13;
this is attractive&#13;
to me,&#13;
too. In addition,&#13;
I like to&#13;
store them&#13;
on my&#13;
shelves&#13;
because 1&#13;
think they&#13;
look cool! I&#13;
usually buy&#13;
used books,&#13;
too, but&#13;
sometimes if&#13;
, can buy a&#13;
brand new&#13;
book at a reasonable&#13;
price, I will.&#13;
purchase it. I&#13;
also keep my&#13;
books and&#13;
when my&#13;
nieces or&#13;
nephew visit&#13;
me so that I&#13;
can tell them&#13;
that I read&#13;
every page of&#13;
them! Ha! Ha!&#13;
I want to&#13;
thank everyone&#13;
who participated&#13;
with me for&#13;
._--~&#13;
.&gt;&#13;
March 6- April I, 2003 Page 5&#13;
this story.&#13;
I really&#13;
appreciate&#13;
the&#13;
student's&#13;
cooperation&#13;
and&#13;
their support.1&#13;
am&#13;
new here&#13;
myself&#13;
and I am&#13;
finding&#13;
out that&#13;
there are&#13;
so m e&#13;
really nice people around Parkside!&#13;
When I first heard about&#13;
doing this story, I wondered&#13;
what kind of responses I was&#13;
going to get.The bottom line is&#13;
that economy seems to play the&#13;
. biggest role in why students&#13;
decide to buy used books versus&#13;
new ones.&#13;
Very Involved at Porkside&#13;
LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Presents:&#13;
Get Motivated to Motivate&#13;
Friday, March 7&#13;
Union 106, Noon&#13;
Presmud by: Lenny K14&lt;Jer,Ed.D Assistant nce&#13;
Cbaru:ellor, U"i",ersity Relations ami&#13;
Adwmcement, U"i",ersity ofW'lSconsi,,-Parkside&#13;
Transformative Leadership can and does make a difference. What is it ~d what&#13;
makes it work? This presentation will feature the constructs of le~ders.hipstyle&#13;
what is based on theoretical premise, but more importantly, ~ow It can. ~&#13;
proactively applied in today's situations requiring both effecrrve leadership and&#13;
team cohesion are multiple. Learn how the construct of empo~erment~&#13;
reflective thinking, promotion of social justice, and sound et~cal practlc~ can&#13;
take an organization to new heights. Such aspects as; de:~lopmg ownership&#13;
through autonomy and collaboration, developing the ~ility .to ~te~ ba~k for&#13;
analyzing and setting new paths. overcoming the 'isms ~~ discnmm~tlo~. and&#13;
making 'doing what is right and fair' the modus operandi 10 leadership will be&#13;
discussed. This presentation is designed to be and open ~alogue ~th group d&#13;
activities and interactive participation. Come ready to think o~tslde the box an&#13;
set the stage for transforming your professional and personal lives toward a&#13;
better and more effective future.&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
• • f wt onsin- Parbide proVides 5el'Vices for patrons with fflKiai&#13;
~n~:mactl!lC the Parbide Student Center for assistarKe, (262)595-2J4S.&#13;
Page 6 March 6-April I, 2003 The Ranger News&#13;
---&#13;
eat&#13;
University Press Release&#13;
Be rewarded&#13;
for good&#13;
feminist writing&#13;
(thinking)&#13;
UW-Parkside's Women's Studies Program invites&#13;
you to enter the 12th Annual Teresa Peck Awards&#13;
for the 2002-'03 academic year. Papers written&#13;
from a feminist perspective will be considered for&#13;
cash prizes ranging from $75 to $150.&#13;
Papers must be written for a UW-Parkside course in 2002.&#13;
Students are encouraged to revise 'papers before submitting&#13;
them, taking into account their professor's feedback. Criteria&#13;
for selection: creativity, coverage of area, critical insight, and&#13;
quality of presentation. Papers should be submitted with a cover&#13;
letter describing the course assignment.&#13;
Deadline: April 20, 2003&#13;
Papers will be accepted beginning January 15,2003.&#13;
Submitto: Women's Studies Program&#13;
Greenquist 318&#13;
Attn: Linda Madsen&#13;
For more information call 595-2162 or email madsenl@uvyp.edu&#13;
The Teresa Peck Award is named in honor of a former UW-Parkside psychology and teacher&#13;
education professor and past director of the Women's Studies Program.&#13;
2-20-03 #03-97&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer. L~op&#13;
Rd/CTH JR. 11:04 am. A citatton&#13;
was issued to a driver for failure to&#13;
stop at a stop sign.&#13;
#03-98&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
RdlWood Rd. 8:37 pm. A citation&#13;
-was issued to a driver for failure to&#13;
stop at a stop sign.&#13;
#03-99&#13;
Resisting/Obstructinl;l an Officer.&#13;
University Apt. Parking Lot. 9:48&#13;
pm. Charges we:re requested for&#13;
resisting/obstructing an officer and&#13;
underage drinking.&#13;
2-21-03 #03-100&#13;
Traffic violation. HWY 31/JR. 4:44&#13;
am. Citations were issued to a dr~-&#13;
ver for Reckless Driving and Vehicle&#13;
operation after registration cancelled.&#13;
#03-101&#13;
Theft from vehicle. CART parking&#13;
lot. 8: 14 am. A UWP parking permit&#13;
was taken from a vehicle without&#13;
permission. Nothing else was&#13;
taken.&#13;
2-23-03 #03-105&#13;
Medical Assist. MOLN. 6:38 pm.&#13;
Officers were dispatched for a student&#13;
needing medical attention.&#13;
Student was transported to hospital&#13;
for treatment.&#13;
2-24-03 #03-103&#13;
Traffic Accident. CART Lot. 3:34&#13;
pm. Officers were dispatched for&#13;
two vehicles colliding. No injuries.&#13;
#03-104&#13;
Agency Assist. University Apart.&#13;
ments. 5:27 pm. Kenosha County&#13;
requested assistance in a search&#13;
warrant execution. One arrest was&#13;
made.&#13;
2-25-03 #03·106 •&#13;
Fraud. Wyllie. 1:30 pm. The&#13;
Cashier's Office notified the Police&#13;
Department of an NSF check. Pay.&#13;
ment has been made.&#13;
#03-107&#13;
Disorderly Conduct. Union Parking&#13;
lot. 10:50 am. A citation was&#13;
issued a dispute in the Union Parking&#13;
Lot.&#13;
2-26-03 #03·108&#13;
Traffic Violation. Inner loop&#13;
RdlWood Rd. 8:48 pm, A citation&#13;
was issued to a driver for a seat&#13;
belt violation.&#13;
2-27-03 #02-109&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/HWY JR. 1:35 am. Citations&#13;
were issued to a driver for Operating&#13;
a vehicle whil'e intoxicated.&#13;
NEl Future&#13;
College Grads •••&#13;
Learn How ToGet An Extra $500&#13;
College Grad Rebate On&#13;
A Hot New Nissan&#13;
At Russ Darrow Nissan!&#13;
The Ran er News March 6- A ril I, 2003 Pa 7&#13;
0 E H U A S V B J U I 0 G&#13;
V A C A T I 0 N T R E B J&#13;
l 0 l G S E 0 0 U X W S l&#13;
I Y N H Y R 0 H 0 F G J I&#13;
S 0 0 H C 0 I C K R H A T&#13;
A C C F U N M A J I F l 0&#13;
0 E P T S U N E 0 E G 0 P&#13;
I A 0 C A S 0 B I N W B G&#13;
R N l H 0 S A E B 0 N A S&#13;
0 P I E R T G H X S W K 0&#13;
l U 0 K N I A l Y F H N l&#13;
F C 0 S I J l U T G N l 0&#13;
V N H 0 l B E E R 0 G E 0&#13;
V Y K G K A I S A C C T N&#13;
Y l P E E l S M P I I 0 K&#13;
B H C A I S T 0 U X A H B&#13;
I K S U N S C R E E N T l&#13;
X S A S y I 0 N E M A S T&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
8y Madame Esme Cerrldgynere&#13;
DragontIheinerstige&#13;
Aries: (March 21-April 19)&#13;
You will be logical and admit&#13;
errors on your part. This will&#13;
astonish and confuse society.&#13;
But don't do it too much, otherwise&#13;
your face will stay that way&#13;
and people will run around calling&#13;
you "Dildo Dodo."&#13;
Taurus: (April 20-May 20)&#13;
Some bastard Cancer got a&#13;
chicken bone stuck in you ear&#13;
and now everyone wants a piece&#13;
of your breasts and thighs.&#13;
Gemini: (May 2 I-June 21)&#13;
You are energetic and enthusiastic.&#13;
You rely on luck to make&#13;
it through the night. Unfortunately,&#13;
those beer-tinted glasses&#13;
hide the truth that she.is really a&#13;
man.&#13;
C8ncer: (June U-juIy U)&#13;
In a desperate attempt to&#13;
pick up a chick you lean In,apd&#13;
whisper sweet n6thlngs in fier&#13;
ear. Unfortunately jl!lu for~ IV&#13;
floss and a chicken bone got&#13;
FUN&#13;
BIKINI&#13;
SUN&#13;
BEER&#13;
PARTY&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
SAND&#13;
OCEAN&#13;
SLEEP&#13;
SUNSCREEN&#13;
HOTEL&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
MEXICO&#13;
lodged in her head.&#13;
Now you're stuck&#13;
with her ...unless&#13;
you get the good&#13;
end of the wishbone.&#13;
MARSHALL THE&#13;
KEY TO MEETING&#13;
(i;IRLS IS HAVING:&#13;
NO FEAR&#13;
Leo: (July 23-Aug&#13;
22)&#13;
You are quicllj _."&#13;
and intelligent and inclined to&#13;
expect too much for ~ little.&#13;
The reason is because you are&#13;
a cheap little ...[BLEEP,BLEEp,&#13;
BLEEP], and ,people illSt.d!?fJ,'t&#13;
like you.&#13;
ViriO' (Aug DoSept ~l&#13;
You will spend your&#13;
Break attempting to.&#13;
bottom of thin~.&#13;
neWs.is that you,.&#13;
baq, rreW$ is-Jbat it&#13;
gallon keg of green ~&#13;
Girls 81Sports by: Justin Borus and Andrew Feinstein&#13;
-or '1,&#13;
ClA' and ~' l'&gt;ahmer ~&#13;
,alOng,with you and you have'-&#13;
~ealtlng suspicion that YOU~&#13;
~ i5 rnx,up taPW:&#13;
Ii'IIceI: (Fell 22 ~ 10)&#13;
'Ibu _being followed by l!&#13;
bearded ~. with unkem~&#13;
baif;, ••iI!lluetiirtleneck,a pair Of,&#13;
brOWn ~ with a lar!I1&#13;
brditze ,bell' btJ.ckIe with twd&#13;
~ wrestlin!! on it,anda pull!&#13;
pie lw bolQ bat with pinll trim,&#13;
ItilldeciIii&lt;iR llIne: A) Walk a u..&#13;
tie taster or ID 1I.lm around ~&#13;
run~ 11Im sbouting with&#13;
an EngIillh ~,"MUMMY. ~&#13;
.~yousol"&#13;
--,&#13;
Page 8 March 6- April I,2003 The Ranger News&#13;
Limited tickets remain for UW-Parkside Arts: ALIVE I shows&#13;
University Press Release&#13;
engagement is sold-out.&#13;
Tickets remain for the Friday,Apr.&#13;
4, concert by folk rock&#13;
legend Roger McGuinn. Best&#13;
known for co-founding the '60's&#13;
rock group "The Byrds,"&#13;
McGuinn was the creative force&#13;
behind the hits "Turn' Turn!&#13;
Turn!""so You Want to be a&#13;
Rock and Roll star,""Eight Miles&#13;
High," and the group's cover of&#13;
Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine&#13;
UW-Parkside 'has a limited&#13;
number of tickets available for&#13;
three of the four remaining performances&#13;
in its popular Arts:&#13;
ALIVE! series. The performances&#13;
include three concerts&#13;
and the Broadway production&#13;
of a popular musical.&#13;
The series resumes Thursday&#13;
Mar.20,with pianist George&#13;
Winston. This special return&#13;
Man." McGuinn latest folk CD&#13;
"Treasures from the Folk Den,"&#13;
received a Grammy nominee&#13;
as "Best Traditional Folk&#13;
Album" of 200()..200l. Through&#13;
mid-February about 75 tickets&#13;
remain for the show.&#13;
The Broadway production&#13;
of "South Pacific" comes to UWParkside&#13;
Monday,Apr.14.This is&#13;
a wartime story of two love&#13;
affairs: one involving Lt. Joe&#13;
Cable and a young Polynesian&#13;
girl, the second between Nellie&#13;
Forbush, a Navy nurse ana&#13;
Emile de Becque, a French&#13;
artist she falls in love with one&#13;
enchanted evening. One affair&#13;
will end happily, the other tragically.&#13;
The score by Rodgers&#13;
and Hammerstein ties the two&#13;
stories together and adds a fabulous&#13;
backdrop for romance.&#13;
Fewer than 20 tickets remain&#13;
for this classic production.&#13;
The series closes with a&#13;
return engagement by Four&#13;
Bitchin' Babes Friday May 8.The&#13;
Babes' repertoire ranges from&#13;
sweet sentimental songs about&#13;
motherhood like "Little Star"to&#13;
wry observations on the hectic&#13;
pace of modern living&#13;
("Microwave Life"), to laughout-loud&#13;
ribald songs like "Viagra&#13;
in the Waters."Through midFebruary.&#13;
about 45 tickets&#13;
remained for this show.&#13;
To reserve tickets for these&#13;
programs, call ext. 2345.&#13;
g H·A·R·B·Q·R,S·I·D·E&#13;
L&#13;
P EYE CARE&#13;
E&#13;
o&#13;
P&#13;
L&#13;
E&#13;
1 1&#13;
CONTACT lENSES&#13;
COO GASSES&#13;
EyE EXA~&#13;
W&#13;
I&#13;
L&#13;
L&#13;
C&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
p ,&#13;
,&#13;
T,&#13;
H,&#13;
I ,&#13;
5,&#13;
Come tinct the look l:Joulike&#13;
262.6252020 5134. 6th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
Join The Ranger News&#13;
Everyone is wanted, welcome and needed.&#13;
Open Positions&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Page Editors&#13;
• Reporters&#13;
Sports Writers&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Opinion Writers&#13;
Distribution&#13;
Stop by The Ranger News office wyllie D139-C&#13;
or call 595-2287&#13;
Anyone can join at any time</text>
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              <text>The&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-lPllrkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
Issue II Vol. 33&#13;
April 1-17,2003'&#13;
Sexual assaults on the. rise&#13;
By Michele Torner&#13;
Reporter&#13;
I&#13;
Sexual assaults on campus&#13;
are on the rise. Even more&#13;
shocking is the fact that most&#13;
perpetrators are known by their&#13;
victims. That's right- "acquaintance&#13;
rape" is occurring here at&#13;
UW-Parkside,and it is happening&#13;
more often than we'd like to&#13;
think.&#13;
The problem? "People want&#13;
to trust each other, especially in&#13;
a college environment," says&#13;
Officer Marlene Schlecht.&#13;
"College is about getting to&#13;
know and trusting new people."&#13;
While trust might be a good&#13;
thing, having too much of it&#13;
could create problems. When&#13;
alcohol is added to that mix,&#13;
one's instinct to trust is further&#13;
impaired. Unfor.tunately, the&#13;
majority of these assaults that&#13;
are reported on campus are&#13;
alcohol-related.&#13;
Schlecht is frustrated. An&#13;
advocate for sexual assault&#13;
awareness, she says students are&#13;
educated on this very important&#13;
issue at freshman orientations.&#13;
Many students are living&#13;
away from home for the first&#13;
time in an environment which&#13;
may be less restrictive, includon&#13;
the Inside&#13;
ing a larger interaction with&#13;
peers of the opposite sex. As&#13;
trust is part of the problem,peopie&#13;
might venture off with&#13;
someone they hardly know,&#13;
putting themselves in a potentially&#13;
risky situation.&#13;
Schlecht says that "clear signals"&#13;
are key to a solution for&#13;
these crimes. Women need to&#13;
communicate more clearly&#13;
what their actions are saying,&#13;
stressing, "They&#13;
need to be very&#13;
clear." Men also&#13;
need to make sure&#13;
they are receiving&#13;
clear signals and if&#13;
they are not sure,&#13;
they need to ask!!&#13;
Trust comes with&#13;
respect, and that is&#13;
something that&#13;
can only come in&#13;
time, not on a first date.&#13;
ft is important that students&#13;
are aware of the support offered&#13;
to them on campus as victims&#13;
of sexual assault. Along with&#13;
Schlecht, Deann Stone, Director&#13;
of Student Life, and Marcy&#13;
Hufendick, Manager and Senior&#13;
Counselor of Student Health&#13;
Services are the co-coordinators&#13;
of the Sexual Assault&#13;
Advocacy Program on campus.&#13;
Their union consists of three&#13;
diff.erent aspects of sexual&#13;
assault awareness: lawenforcement,&#13;
university relations, and&#13;
counseling, leaving no area&#13;
uncovered. The program teaches&#13;
sexual assault awareness to&#13;
students and trains resident&#13;
advisors as well as other mernbers&#13;
of the advocacy program.&#13;
Victims can also find support&#13;
from Student Health and&#13;
Counseling Services (595-&#13;
2366), the Dean of&#13;
Students(595-2419), Campus&#13;
Police(595-2455) and the office&#13;
of Student Life(595-2419).Most&#13;
of these staff members are&#13;
trained on sexual assault awareness.&#13;
There are also' several&#13;
pamphlets available on campus,&#13;
offering information&#13;
on preventing&#13;
sexual&#13;
assaults as well as&#13;
resources for victims.&#13;
~ While it is&#13;
~,. encouraged that&#13;
~ all. victims report&#13;
~ assaults to the&#13;
~ police, Officer&#13;
Schlecht also&#13;
wants victims to know that they&#13;
have other options. She says&#13;
that if victims "do not know for&#13;
sure what ttiey want to do, I&#13;
encourage them to call an&#13;
advocate." There are yellow&#13;
advocacy signs up around campus,&#13;
giving students contact&#13;
names and numbers. These&#13;
advocates are trained with the&#13;
resources that are available to&#13;
victims and they will walk victims&#13;
through their options. One&#13;
thing an advocate will urge a&#13;
victim to do is to seek medical&#13;
assistance. Schlecht says,&#13;
"When it comes to sexual&#13;
assault, there are a lot of things&#13;
we don't think of." Besides the&#13;
physical injuries, there are sexuDiversity&#13;
at UWP&#13;
Page: 3&#13;
ally transmitted diseases to&#13;
consider, not to mention the&#13;
emotional impact a victim&#13;
.might suffer. Schlecht adds&#13;
.that by seeking medical assistance,&#13;
-&#13;
victims .-------- .. ----&#13;
are not "Cellphones and ~areness&#13;
required&#13;
to report mightbethebestdefensein&#13;
the&#13;
c rim e ,sLIChsltlJations; not to menbut&#13;
the"&#13;
option to tion. goingwithanother perdo&#13;
so is&#13;
left open SQoifatallpo$ible:'&#13;
to them.&#13;
While&#13;
sexual&#13;
assaults with known perpetrators&#13;
might be the most common&#13;
sexual crimes reported&#13;
on campus, there have also&#13;
been a couple of 4th degree&#13;
sexual assaults reported, both&#13;
occurring on the cross country&#13;
trails during events. Therefore,&#13;
students need to take precautions&#13;
when venturing out&#13;
alone, especially in the&#13;
evening. Cell phones and&#13;
awareness might be the best&#13;
defense in such situations, not&#13;
to mention going with another&#13;
person if at all possible.&#13;
Schlecht also stresses that students&#13;
need to report anything&#13;
suspicious, despite the seemingly&#13;
harmful content. For&#13;
instance, there was an incident&#13;
of a perpetrator driving around&#13;
fnner Loop Road in the nude.&#13;
After it was reported, it was&#13;
found that the subject had&#13;
done this previously. Why wasn't&#13;
it reported before? While it&#13;
might seem comical and harmless&#13;
to some, Schlecht points&#13;
out that this "lewd and lascivious"&#13;
behavior&#13;
can very well&#13;
lead to more&#13;
serious&#13;
actions.&#13;
"What happens&#13;
when&#13;
that's not&#13;
enough for&#13;
him?" she&#13;
worries.&#13;
Schlecht,&#13;
along with&#13;
her fellow&#13;
advocates, takes her subject&#13;
very seriously. April is "Sexual&#13;
Assault Awareness Month" and&#13;
there are several events&#13;
planned on campus. March&#13;
31st-April 2nd brings "Breaking&#13;
Silence" to campus, an interactive&#13;
educational arts presentation&#13;
about sexual assault.&#13;
Schlecht saysthat they are also&#13;
looking for organizations that&#13;
want to sponsor events promoting&#13;
awareness and the options&#13;
that are available to victims on&#13;
campus, such as a talk she&#13;
would like to give on "Surviving&#13;
Sexual Assault". Anyone interested&#13;
should contact Officer&#13;
Marlene Schlecht at the&#13;
Campus Police Department at&#13;
595-2455. The rest of us should&#13;
get involved in any way we can&#13;
to help make this a very successful&#13;
Sexual Assault&#13;
Awareness Month.&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Page:9&#13;
The Stranger News&#13;
Page:5&#13;
Page 2 April 1-17, 2003 The Ranger News,&#13;
R~gerNews&#13;
Apr.1-2 p.m.; Saturday: 5 and 8&#13;
p.m.; Sunday: 2 p.m.;&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
• Latino Film Festival: ''The&#13;
Devil's Backbone," in&#13;
Spanish w/English subtitles,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, Apr. 1 at noon,&#13;
Apr. 2 at 7 p.m.&#13;
Apr. 4&#13;
• Arts: ALiVEI presents&#13;
Roger McGuinn w/Corky&#13;
Siegel, Com. Arts&#13;
Theatre, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tickets $15, call ext.&#13;
2345.&#13;
Apr.2&#13;
• Noon Concert:&#13;
Brassworks, brass quintet,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, noon, free&#13;
Apr. 5&#13;
Apr.3-6&#13;
• Hunger Clean-Up: volunteers&#13;
call Casey Jones&#13;
(ext. 2011) or stop by the&#13;
Career Center, Wyllie&#13;
Hall D173 '&#13;
• Foreign Film:&#13;
show&#13;
Thursday/Friday:&#13;
Lantana"&#13;
time~:&#13;
7:30 • Leadership Recognition&#13;
Banquet: "Dare to Dream&#13;
RUSS DARROW I'$"....fiKI~I&#13;
AMERICA'S # 1&#13;
WARRANTY&#13;
2003 AERIOS&#13;
Iso DOWN. O%APRFINANCING&#13;
~&#13;
2 SUZUKI&#13;
LOCATIONS&#13;
2003," Union Square, 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• "An Evening in Greece,"&#13;
Union Dining Room, 5:30&#13;
p.m., details: call ext.&#13;
2701&#13;
Apr. 7-24&#13;
• Art Exhibit: UW-Parkside&#13;
Student Show, Com. Arts&#13;
Gallery, hours: Mondays/&#13;
Thursdays: 11 a.m. to 5&#13;
p . m . ;&#13;
Tuesdays/Wednesdaysl&#13;
11 a.m. to 8 p.m., free&#13;
Apr. 7&#13;
• Perspectives on Religious&#13;
Issues: "Catholics &amp;&#13;
Everyday Tolerance,"&#13;
w/Prof. Yanick St. Jean,&#13;
Union 106, noon, free&#13;
• ''The Eclectic Clarinetist"&#13;
Bill Helmers, Union&#13;
Cinema, 2 p.m., free&#13;
Apr. Q&#13;
• Field Trip: Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago, tickets: $14&#13;
available at Fine Art~&#13;
Office, Com. Arts 221&#13;
Apr. 9&#13;
• Noon Concert: Eun-Joo&#13;
Kwak, piano, Union&#13;
Cinema Theater, noon,&#13;
free&#13;
• Senior Send-Off Day I&#13;
Lower Main Place, Hi&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m.&#13;
Apr. 10&#13;
• "TheYellow Dress," a dramatic&#13;
presentation on&#13;
dangerous relationships,&#13;
Union Cinema, 12:30&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
• Senior Send-Off Day II,&#13;
Lower Main Place, 3:30&#13;
to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Apr. 11&#13;
• Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Educators' Hall of Fame&#13;
banquet and induction,&#13;
cash bar: 6 p.m., dinner:&#13;
7 p.m., ceremony: 8 p.m.&#13;
Tickets: call Ruth Tyiock&#13;
(ext. 2753)&#13;
• Parkside Association of&#13;
Wargamers Amine Fest,&#13;
time/location TBA and&#13;
• Undergraduate&#13;
Conference' in Literature,&#13;
Film, and Media,&#13;
Be sure to&#13;
check out&#13;
The Stranger&#13;
News on&#13;
page Sf!&#13;
Jfar60rsUfe 'Eye Care&#13;
~ £XAMSc&#13;
J&#13;
~(~'«:'&#13;
.,&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
CONTACT ~&#13;
UNSE$&#13;
06·&#13;
e&#13;
EYEGLASSES ..!&#13;
~&#13;
t:tn~ - ~r6H ft-om ttle riolilbt 11m !&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
cool people will clip this cool peuple will clip lIlil&#13;
Lachlan's plane ....vrooml&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Layout Team&#13;
Kimberly Meyer&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Lauren Mikrut&#13;
,Photography&#13;
A. L Smith&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Sarah Masik&#13;
Doris Washington&#13;
Rebecca Rydzenski&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editor al595-2287 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
rangernewswiournalisr.com&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at&#13;
noon. Please stop by and&#13;
participate as the meetings&#13;
are open to all those&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-I 39C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
.fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every second&#13;
Thursday throughout the semester by stu·&#13;
dents of the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parks ide, who are solely responsible for Its&#13;
editorial policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy, The Ranger&#13;
encourages letters to the Editor. Letters&#13;
should not exceed 250 words and should be&#13;
.delivered.OO the Ranger office (WYLL D·&#13;
139C) . Letters must be typed and include&#13;
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Letters must be free from misleading or&#13;
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only upon request. The Ranger reserves the&#13;
right to edit all letters.&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Diversity at UW-Parkside:&#13;
~~~~~gnexchange students give account of stay&#13;
Reporter&#13;
D&#13;
iversity .truly&#13;
enhances this university&#13;
because of&#13;
!&#13;
the fact that several foreign&#13;
exchange students on&#13;
Parksides campus have&#13;
experienced a differe~t&#13;
cultures, life experiences&#13;
and perspectives.&#13;
Lucianna Tueiroz and her&#13;
friend Allana Lopes arrived in&#13;
this country on January 17,&#13;
2003, and are widely known&#13;
here at the university as the&#13;
'Brazilian Sensations!' "We&#13;
chose Wisconsin and&#13;
1&#13;
Wisconsin chose us!" said&#13;
Lopes as to why she and&#13;
Tueiroz chose Parkside.&#13;
Lucianna and Allana chose&#13;
Parkside from a list of five universities&#13;
in the United States&#13;
and Europe. "Jerry Greenfield&#13;
has been very instrumental in&#13;
this whole process. Jerry is very&#13;
nice and extremely helpful,"&#13;
they said. Greenfield is a Senior&#13;
Assistant to the ProvostlVice&#13;
Chancellor at Parkside.&#13;
Lucianna said that she has&#13;
been to this area of the country&#13;
as part of a foreign exchange&#13;
program with her high school&#13;
l&#13;
in Brazil."1 met some nice people&#13;
here and made some&#13;
friends," said Tueiroz. Lucianna&#13;
is here to experience our cullure&#13;
and to broaden her horizons.&#13;
When asked what she&#13;
liked best about Parkside,&#13;
Tueiroz said, "Ilike the campus.&#13;
The faculty at Parks ide is excellent&#13;
and treats me very well." As&#13;
I&#13;
'or housing, Lucianna is currently&#13;
living with her 'host&#13;
mom' ,Judith Logsdon, Logsdon&#13;
IS a senior lecturer in Parkside's&#13;
English Department. Lucianna&#13;
speaks fondly of Logsdon who&#13;
I&#13;
IS helping her with her transilion&#13;
into American culture,&#13;
Tueiroz's hobbies include hangI&#13;
,ng out at the beaches back in&#13;
Brazil, listening to music, and&#13;
Watching movies, Getting used&#13;
to American food has not been&#13;
easy for her. The weather is takAllana&#13;
Lopes and Lucianna Tueiroz from Brazil&#13;
ing time for her to get accustomed&#13;
to as well. "It is almost&#13;
always eighty degrees where I&#13;
live,"explained Tueiroz.As far as&#13;
the future is concerned&#13;
Lucianna plans to go back to&#13;
Brazil to pursue a career as a&#13;
lawyer, She says that," The practice&#13;
of law is completely different&#13;
than it is here in the United&#13;
States,"&#13;
AlIana Lopes is taking criminal&#13;
justice, American politics,&#13;
international law, and some&#13;
general education courses.She&#13;
said that she is here to expand&#13;
her horizons and to experience&#13;
American culture, Allana is&#13;
twenty-two years old and&#13;
arrived in this country on&#13;
January 17,2003, She said that,&#13;
"Coming here is a great professional&#13;
experience, I hope to&#13;
improve my English (language),&#13;
too." She really likes the&#13;
campus and said that students,&#13;
faculty, and cafeteria employees&#13;
are really nice, Lopes enjoys&#13;
movies, partying, dancing, and&#13;
singing in her spare time, She is&#13;
living with her host mom, Molly&#13;
Ortwein, Allana speaks kindly&#13;
of Ortwein saying she is helping&#13;
her with a lot of things.As far as&#13;
the future goes, Allana plans to&#13;
travel back to Brazil to finish&#13;
law school. Then she wants to&#13;
save some money while she&#13;
works and continues her education&#13;
for two more years,&#13;
obtain her masters degree, and&#13;
then go to Spain to hopefully&#13;
find work with an international&#13;
firm, She is strongly interested&#13;
in working in company relations,&#13;
diplomacy, or imports and&#13;
exports.&#13;
In addition, Oluwabukola&#13;
Harrison Idowu is a foreign&#13;
exchange student from Nigeria,&#13;
He is majoring in International&#13;
Studies, with a minor in&#13;
Communications, Idowu came&#13;
to the Unised States in 200 1 to&#13;
attend the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. He said&#13;
that he came to Parkside after&#13;
meeting and corresponding&#13;
with Anthropology professor&#13;
Lillian Trager, Trager assists&#13;
Idowu with housing, too."] really&#13;
like my professors here at&#13;
Parkside. They give a great deal&#13;
of individualized attention."&#13;
fdowu also said that colleges in&#13;
his native Nigeria are. much&#13;
. larger than Parkside, He really&#13;
likes the campus and is making&#13;
friends here, Idowu plans to&#13;
graduate from Parkside with his&#13;
degree and then return to&#13;
Nigeria to work, Idowu goes by&#13;
his middle name, Harrison, here&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
. Winston Okole a twentyeight&#13;
year old Pre-Pharmacy&#13;
student is from Cameroon, He&#13;
had lived in Cameroon his&#13;
entire life before coming to the&#13;
United States in 2002 to attend&#13;
UWP as a full-time student. He&#13;
is taking eighteen credits this&#13;
April 1-17,2003 Page ]&#13;
in America&#13;
semester. He chose UWP they cook it differently here, and&#13;
because it was recommended the social life. The biggest differby&#13;
a friend. Getting used to this ences in his opinion are in tech-&#13;
• country was difficult for Okole. nology, weather, and cost of livHe&#13;
says, "The food here is not ing. "Communication in the&#13;
too bad. I am still trying to get United States is more advanced,&#13;
used to pizza.l like it a little bit:' In addition, in Cameroon, there&#13;
When asked what he likes the are only two seasons; the rainy&#13;
best about UWp, Okole said, "I season and the dry season. The&#13;
like the student-teacher rela- cost of living is higher in&#13;
tionships here. I also like the America, too," said Okole. As for&#13;
coalition of the buildings here, the future,. Winston plans to&#13;
They are connected and when.!!l obtain his degree from Parkside&#13;
I walk around I am in one con·.!!l and in the future he would like to&#13;
stant climate.Winston says that work to help poor people and&#13;
students have been easy to get hopefully land a position with an&#13;
along with and are friendly, American company that has&#13;
.Okole enjoys listening to music overseas connections, hopefully&#13;
In his spare time, which is limit- . in Africa,&#13;
ed due to the fact he is taking This reporter extends his grato&#13;
eighteen credits. He lives In the itude to those who have taken&#13;
university apartment complex their time to speak about their&#13;
here on campus. In his opinion, experiences, UW- Parkside is&#13;
the greatest similarities delighted to have you and we&#13;
between Cameroon and wish you the best of luck in the&#13;
America are the food, although future!&#13;
Oluwabukola Harrison Idow from Nigeria&#13;
Jo'in the Ranger News&#13;
·you like tQ write? How&#13;
, facts? Stilt&#13;
but can't&#13;
find one that actually pays you?&#13;
Well come apply at The Ranger&#13;
News to be a part ()/ next years&#13;
team.The Ranger News needs a&#13;
. new staff to replace the members&#13;
that are'leaving. PosItions&#13;
that wUl be opening are, Editor·&#13;
i&amp;Chief, Assistant Edilor,&#13;
Business Manager,Ad Manager,&#13;
various Page Editol'S&gt; We will&#13;
also have room for at least two&#13;
Graphic Designers. All these&#13;
positions are paid and all qualifyior&#13;
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Corne put your slant on the&#13;
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meet great people all while getting.&#13;
Pick up an application at&#13;
the news office Wyllie D 139-C.&#13;
Applications must be returned&#13;
by Wednesday April 16, 2003.&#13;
Please attach two of your best&#13;
works with the application and&#13;
amember ()/ The Ranger News&#13;
will be in touch,&#13;
Page 4 April I 17,2003 The Ranger News&#13;
....&#13;
Spread the knowledge!&#13;
Do you want an STD?&#13;
Sandee Cornell&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Besides- HIV/AIDS,there are&#13;
over twenty STDs and if left'&#13;
untreated, many can cause cancer,&#13;
infection, sterility,and possibly&#13;
even death. According to&#13;
the UWP Peer Health&#13;
Educators, 33,000 Americans&#13;
get an STD every day. That&#13;
makes 12,045,000 people per&#13;
year. 'That is a lot of peoplel&#13;
Why are so many people&#13;
getting infected each day?&#13;
Surely, there are hundreds of&#13;
reasons. There are also many&#13;
ways you can help to keep yourself&#13;
from getting infected.&#13;
First and foremost, you cap&#13;
stop having sex. To some of&#13;
you, this may seem absurd so&#13;
luckily for you, the 1800s&#13;
unveiled the first latex con'&#13;
doms. While not 100%effective,&#13;
it is considered to be the best&#13;
way to protect everyone against&#13;
STDs.&#13;
Another way to avoid getting&#13;
an STD is to stay in a&#13;
monogamous relationship. It all&#13;
makes sense, doesn't it? Have&#13;
sex with one uninfected pariner,&#13;
and you reduce your own&#13;
risks. A precautionary action&#13;
you and your partner (or partners&#13;
if you choose to be with&#13;
several people) can take to&#13;
help protect yourselves is to get&#13;
tested for STDs every year and .and search for Nikko's name to&#13;
to pay 'attention to your body. If see how he ruined peoples'&#13;
you notice any abnormal dis- lives by not being responsible.&#13;
charge, pain or bumps near If you find out that you do have&#13;
your genital area, go to the doc- HIV/AIDSor another STD,it is a&#13;
tor to get it checked out. If you felony to continue to have sex&#13;
just plan a doc- -- __ ------"'"':'---without distor&#13;
appoint- "If you find out that closing your&#13;
ment ortce a you do have HIV/AIDS infection to&#13;
year, which is your sexual&#13;
probably a or another STD, it is a partner(s).&#13;
good idea any- felony to continue to Lastly, the&#13;
how, just plan Peer Health&#13;
to get tested fo' have sex without dis- Ed u cat 0 r s&#13;
STDs the same closing your infection suggests not&#13;
day. Find out if mixing alcoyour&#13;
doctor to your hoi (or drugs)&#13;
will do it. sexual partner(s)." with sex. It is&#13;
o the r wi s e , possible that&#13;
P I ann e d some of you&#13;
Parenthood would be able to may have accidentally done it.&#13;
help you out. wwwplannedpar- I know guys who say that&#13;
enthood.org I think most of drunken sex is the best, and&#13;
you would consider just one maybe they think they are right&#13;
day out of your busy schedules but let's face it, alcohol and&#13;
a small price to pay for such an drugs affect your ability to&#13;
important task. If preventative make responsible choices, so it&#13;
maintainence does not con- is probably not a good idea.&#13;
vince that you should get test- The number one reason to&#13;
ed, I strongly suggest that you be careful now is~thaJ every&#13;
read the story about Nikko day. the choices of un infected&#13;
Biteramos, the college student partners gets more and more&#13;
who knew he had HIV and still limited. If things continue this&#13;
had unprotected sex with peo- way, by the year 1013, around&#13;
pie. For that story,you can go to 120,450,000 people will have&#13;
www. causesthatmatter.com STDs. What do you want to do?&#13;
UW-Parkside presented&#13;
"SPANGLISH" discussion&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
takes an in-depth look&#13;
at the emerging language called&#13;
"Spanglish" during a panel discussion&#13;
Thursday, Mar. 27.&#13;
Presented by the Friends of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Library, the program&#13;
begins at 7:15 p.m.&#13;
Titled "The Legitimacy 'of&#13;
'Spanglish," the program looks&#13;
at a language that isn't really&#13;
English while not quite being&#13;
Spanish. The discussion is moderated&#13;
by Alex McNair who&#13;
teaches Spanish as well as&#13;
Spanish literature and culture&#13;
as an assistant professor in UW&#13;
Parkside's Modern Languages&#13;
Dept. He is joined by panelists&#13;
Maria del Carmen Martinez, visiting&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
English; FayYokomizo Akindes,&#13;
director of 'the university's&#13;
Center for Ethnic Studies; and&#13;
Aida Fill,a lecturer in Spanish&#13;
at UWParkside.&#13;
This promises to be a lively,&#13;
thought provoking discussion.&#13;
It takes place in the Overlook&#13;
Lounge, second floor of the&#13;
UWParkside Library. The program&#13;
is free and open to the&#13;
public. .&#13;
For more information on&#13;
this and future Friends of the&#13;
Library programs, call. Dina&#13;
Kaye at (262}595-2215.&#13;
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3-6-03 #03-127&#13;
TrafficAccident CART parking lot.&#13;
2:10 pm. A vehicle struck a school&#13;
bus while backing out of a parking&#13;
space. No accident report filed.&#13;
#03-129&#13;
Traffic Violation. Inner loop Rd.&#13;
8:28 pm. A citation was issued to a&#13;
d,riverfor failure to stop at a stop&#13;
slgn~mproperstop.&#13;
3-8-03 #03-133&#13;
Traffic violation. CTH El30th Ave.&#13;
5:28 pm. A Citation was issued to a&#13;
d!iver for failure to stop at a stop&#13;
SlgMmproper stop.&#13;
#03-134&#13;
AgencyAssist CTH GfWood Road.&#13;
4:11.pm. Kenosha Sheriff's Dept&#13;
advised of a vehicle In a ditch. Officer&#13;
stayed until vehicle was&#13;
removed.&#13;
3-9-03 #03-135&#13;
Liquor violation. Ranger Hall. 4:34&#13;
am. A citation was issued to a student&#13;
for underage drinking with a&#13;
verbal warning for disorderly conduct&#13;
3-11-03 #03-136&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/CTH G. 12:07 pm. A citation&#13;
was issued to a driver for traveling&#13;
47 mph in a 25 mph zone,&#13;
#03-137&#13;
TrafficViolation, CTHA, 1:56 prn.A&#13;
citation was Issued to a driver traveling&#13;
57 mph in a 35 mph zone,&#13;
3-12-03&#13;
Traffic Violation, CTH ElCTH JR,&#13;
5:54 am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 67 mph in a 45&#13;
mph zone.&#13;
#03-139&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
- ..&#13;
#03-140&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/CTH JA. 11:26 am. A citation&#13;
was. Issued to a driver for failure to&#13;
stop/lmproper stop at a stop sign.&#13;
#03-141&#13;
Medical Assist. SAC, 1:43 prn, A&#13;
stud~nt was transported to the&#13;
hospital due to going into shock in&#13;
the swimming pool.&#13;
#03-142&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/Unlon Parking lot. 3:52 pm. A&#13;
student was issued citations for&#13;
fc:'-i1ure to stop at a stop&#13;
slgn/lmproper stop, failure to yield&#13;
and mandatory seatbelt Violation.&#13;
3-13-03&#13;
Agency Assist. CTH H/CTH E,&#13;
11 :08 am. Officers assisted&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's Dept. with a&#13;
#03-145&#13;
HE~Future&#13;
College Grads •••&#13;
Learn How To Get An Extra $500&#13;
College Grad Rebate On&#13;
A Hot New Nissan&#13;
At Russ Darrow Nissan!&#13;
SUbject havinq a seizure in a car in&#13;
the middle of a traffic lane.&#13;
#03-146&#13;
Theft Personal Property. Ranger&#13;
Hall. 3:41 pm. A student reported&#13;
mon~ytaken from her room. Case&#13;
pending follow-up investigation.&#13;
#03-147&#13;
Liquor viola~ion. University Apts.&#13;
9:48 pm. A Citation was issued to a&#13;
student for underage drinking.&#13;
#03-148&#13;
Liquor violation. Ranger Hall.&#13;
11 :05 pm. A citation was issued to&#13;
students for underage drinking.&#13;
3-14-03 #03-149&#13;
Liquor violation. Ranger Hall 1:03&#13;
am. A citation was issued to a student&#13;
for underage drinking.&#13;
#03-150&#13;
Parking Enforcement. Union Lot.&#13;
2:10 pm. A citation was issued to a&#13;
student for being in violation of&#13;
parking regulations! lot closed.&#13;
Dispatch advised of 20 unpaid&#13;
parking citations. Vehicle was&#13;
towed.&#13;
Bat&#13;
3-17-03 #03-151&#13;
Alarm. University Apts. 3:25 am.&#13;
Officers were dispatched due to a&#13;
fire ala~m.After investigation i! was&#13;
determined that the alarm was triggered&#13;
by one of two subjects. Case&#13;
pending ..&#13;
#03-152&#13;
Agency Assist. Outer loop Hd,&#13;
4: 17 am. While investigating above&#13;
fire alarm complaint a warrant was&#13;
found from the Racine Police Dept.&#13;
on one o:fthe subjects for underage&#13;
possession of alcohol. Subject was&#13;
transported to Kenosha County&#13;
Jail.&#13;
#03-153&#13;
Fire Drill. Child Care Center, 11:22&#13;
am. A fire drill was held at the Child&#13;
Care Center. The staff of 11 adults&#13;
evacuated 32 children in 52 seconds.&#13;
3-18-03 #03-154&#13;
Agency Assist. CTH NCTH KA.&#13;
10:20 prn, KenoshaSheriff's Dept.&#13;
requested assistance in removing a&#13;
large tree that had fallen in the middle&#13;
of WoodRoad,&#13;
April I 17,2003 Page 9&#13;
#03-155&#13;
Alarm. UniversityHouse. 9:00 am.&#13;
Dispatch was alerted to an alarm&#13;
sounding. An officer respon6'ed&#13;
finding the house secure. The&#13;
alarm was reset.&#13;
3-19-03&#13;
Worthless Check. Cashier's Office.&#13;
2:02 prn, A NSF check was&#13;
returned to the Police Dept. Case&#13;
pending payment of the check.&#13;
#03-156&#13;
#03-157&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH G!lnner Loop&#13;
Rd. 6:07 pm. A citation was issued&#13;
to a driver for failure to&#13;
stop/improper stop at a stop sign.&#13;
3-20-03 #03-158&#13;
Traffic violation. Wood Rd/HWY E.&#13;
5:33 a~.During a vehicle stop for a&#13;
~efectlvehead lamp, a citation was&#13;
Issued for expired registration and&#13;
revoked with special time restrictions&#13;
for hours of operation of a&#13;
motor vehicle.&#13;
#03-159&#13;
Alarm. Union. 7:57 am. Officers&#13;
were dispatched due to an employee&#13;
not disarming an alarm.&#13;
#03-160&#13;
Alarm,Tallent(ECU),8:34am, Officers&#13;
were dispatched due to an&#13;
employee having difficulty in disarming&#13;
the alarm.&#13;
#03-162&#13;
Traffic violation. CART parking lot.&#13;
10-06 pm. A citation was issued to&#13;
a driver for failure to obey an officerl&#13;
signal.&#13;
3-21-03 #03-163&#13;
Agency Assist. 5TH 31/CTH E,&#13;
12:27 am. Officers assisted&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff Dept. with 2 intoxicated&#13;
subjects.&#13;
#03-164&#13;
Alarm. Wyllie Hall. 6:51 am. Officers&#13;
responded to an alarm in Wyllie&#13;
Hall. Door was secure. Alarm&#13;
reset.&#13;
UWP presents "Breaking Silence,"&#13;
a sexual assault exhibit.&#13;
University Press Release&#13;
The UW-P presents a powerful&#13;
multimedia program on the&#13;
devastating effects of sexual&#13;
assault-titled "Breaking Silence:'&#13;
The exhibition can be experienced&#13;
Monday, Mar, 31 through&#13;
Wednesday Apr, 2, in room 104-&#13;
106 of the Student Union,&#13;
Sexual assault is often hidden&#13;
behind a wall of secrecy.&#13;
But when one out of every&#13;
three women and one out of&#13;
every seven men suffer sexual&#13;
assault or abuse in their lifetimes,&#13;
the sheer magnitude of&#13;
the problem demands that this&#13;
secret be revealed,&#13;
"Breaking Silence" tells the&#13;
stories of 14 women and men&#13;
who have been sexually&#13;
assaulted, A large portrait photograph&#13;
of each person is displayed&#13;
and viewers are provided&#13;
portable CD players containing&#13;
interviews done with&#13;
each person, They speak candidly&#13;
about the profound&#13;
, impact sexual assault had on&#13;
them, What they have to say is&#13;
intensely emotional and often&#13;
unsettling, The intent is to create&#13;
awareness of the human&#13;
toll sexual assault takes and by&#13;
doing so make it more difficult&#13;
for perpetrators to continue&#13;
their crimes.&#13;
"Breaking Silence" is open&#13;
from 10a.rn.to 2 p.m.and again&#13;
from 4 to 8 p.m. each day.The&#13;
exhibition is sponsored by&#13;
Student Activities, the Womyn's&#13;
Center, the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Residence Life, and the&#13;
UW-Parkside Surviving Sexuai&#13;
Assault Advocacy Program,&#13;
For more information about&#13;
this unique and enlightening&#13;
exhibit, call (262) 595-3339,"&#13;
ian&#13;
April 1-17,2003&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Presents: .&#13;
Resolving Conflicts Within your&#13;
Organization (however you perceive it)&#13;
Friday, April II&#13;
Union 106, Noon&#13;
Presented by: Thomas Rudey, SPHR, Senior Vice President, Human&#13;
. Resources, Bank ofElm'UJood&#13;
lbpicAreas:&#13;
Hidden Sources of Conflict-the one's they never tell you about&#13;
• Don't get "blind sided"&#13;
, Tricks to shorten the conflict resolution process&#13;
• When "I win-you lose: and "you win-I love" is the best solution&#13;
• It can't always be win-win and should never be lose-lose&#13;
Dealing with and eliminating the conflict carousel&#13;
• "Upping the ante"-Who's got the highest stakes and how to determine it&#13;
Getting what you want from Conflict&#13;
• When to "PlayNice" (light fair) and when not to dirty tricks and dirty secrets&#13;
• Playing the "managed conflict" game or "how to get burned for sure"&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
The University of Wisconsin- Parks ide provides services for patrons with special&#13;
needs. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595·2345.&#13;
'4&#13;
sponsored by PAl&#13;
may 3rd&#13;
may 3rd may 3rd&#13;
HIIND&#13;
is coming soon&#13;
watch for more information&#13;
.l!!-&#13;
:l!!&#13;
-&#13;
--a..&#13;
M&#13;
;:&#13;
-..u&#13;
•u&#13;
:!&#13;
-u·&#13;
.;;..&#13;
M&#13;
:;;;&#13;
-&#13;
Letter to the&#13;
Womyn's Center&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
March 10 2003&#13;
The Womyns Center is a&#13;
place to find resources and&#13;
inlormation about STD's,&#13;
harassment and assault It is a&#13;
place where girls in need of&#13;
help are able to receive attention&#13;
and adequate care.&#13;
As a student at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
I often pass by the&#13;
center, and have casually used&#13;
its seating area as well. During&#13;
each of those times I observed&#13;
large groups of men and&#13;
women hanging around the&#13;
counter 01 your center. The&#13;
m groups were loud, obnoxious&#13;
and defiantly a hindrance to&#13;
your organization.&#13;
Although I have not had a&#13;
need for your center, I will not&#13;
sit in its vicinity any longer.&#13;
Women are having problems&#13;
and when they go to your center&#13;
for help they are expecting&#13;
you to help them in a discreet&#13;
way.Surely the center is aware&#13;
that if a girl is struggling with&#13;
harassment and assault she is&#13;
not going to watt to publicize&#13;
her problem with the groups&#13;
that join her at the counter&#13;
It has also come to my&#13;
attention that your center has&#13;
no problem displaying graphic&#13;
photographsol the male and&#13;
fem"le. private. parts. There&#13;
muslhave been II reason or&#13;
±&#13;
educational purpose behind&#13;
these illustrations. I,however,do&#13;
question whether it is a legitimate&#13;
motivation.&#13;
I am deeply offended and&#13;
insulted by these inappropriate&#13;
graphics. I believe these pictures&#13;
are examples 01 poor and&#13;
ineffective marketing skills. I&#13;
also am skeptical that the center&#13;
is benefiting many women.&#13;
The center provides no confidentiality&#13;
because its location&#13;
and reputation for being a&#13;
"hang out" place.&#13;
My fellow students and I&#13;
deserve more respect than your&#13;
organization is providing. The&#13;
degrading images that have&#13;
been put on public display&#13;
should be eliminated or moved&#13;
to a non-visible location. The&#13;
center should also consider&#13;
delegating the traffic flow, or&#13;
perhaps moving to an entirely&#13;
new location on behal! 01 the&#13;
women that need help.&#13;
The Womyns Center is able&#13;
to help women. If they contemplate&#13;
some 01 these ideas, I am&#13;
convinced the enter and the&#13;
Parkside students will both be&#13;
able to reap the benefits. I am&#13;
confident that the staff at the&#13;
Womyns Center is willing to&#13;
take that extra step in order to&#13;
help women. .&#13;
Holli Brown&#13;
UWPStudent&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
anger News enjoys printing Letters to the&#13;
here are a few things you need to&#13;
one in. Letters cannot exceed&#13;
muSt have the name of the&#13;
dent I. D. number, and a&#13;
s will not be edited but&#13;
eceived. Drop your let9-C&#13;
or e-mail them at&#13;
com ..We look forward to&#13;
B&#13;
The Ran er News&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
., Madame Esme Cerridgynere Dragonflheinerstlge&#13;
Aries: (March 2 I-April 19)&#13;
It \I time for spring cleaning for&#13;
jIGlL Go through your files and&#13;
iWIbIe them more realistically.&#13;
For example, "Naughty:' "Very&#13;
IlIUghty and needs to be&#13;
spIIIked:"'To Beat," and the usual&#13;
"Deciphered launch codes for&#13;
MOAB," and "Snerge' Your Virgo&#13;
boss will become angry with you,&#13;
but not for the reasons you suspect.&#13;
Taurus: (April 20-May 20)&#13;
You accept the fact that you are a&#13;
pathological liar, but you are&#13;
unable to believe yourself. This&#13;
.... result in the enevitable conIlWSltion&#13;
with yourself of "Nuuh!"&#13;
•"Uh-huh!" •"Nu-uh!" •"UhhtIIr&#13;
."Nu-uh!" •"Uh-huh!" .etc.&#13;
Gemini: (May 21-June 21)&#13;
I'eople will finally understand&#13;
,our obsessive-compulsive showertns&#13;
behavior when you confess&#13;
that ~r profession is the oneman&#13;
cleaning crew for the local&#13;
porn store off 1-94.&#13;
Cancer: Oune 22-July 22)&#13;
You will notice that everyone of&#13;
your friends have different socks&#13;
on. Its actually stranger than&#13;
~ feeble mind could imagine.&#13;
TIley are all part of an elite pagan&#13;
cult that is celebrating Sock Swap&#13;
Oar In preparation for your "initiatlon."&#13;
That's code word for their&#13;
IOOna sacrifice you.&#13;
Leo: Ouly 23-Aug 22)&#13;
You will deliberately annoy people.by&#13;
standing tOO close to them&#13;
Ul line and constantly saying "Oh,&#13;
Excuse me!" Tomorrow: stand a&#13;
little too far away and hold out&#13;
!'OUr hands shouting "STOP&#13;
TOUCHING METHAT WAY!"&#13;
~: (Aug 23.Sept 22)&#13;
It is time to face the music. Your&#13;
~ employee has stated .plainly&#13;
....w they feel about you. Buck&#13;
~ "To Beat" isn't far off from&#13;
~ naughty and needs to be&#13;
1panked."&#13;
LIbra: (Sept 23·0ct 23)&#13;
You will be fascinated by the idea&#13;
of one word, two meanings concept.&#13;
This will cause ~ to ponder&#13;
the connection between "seasons"&#13;
on your food and ":reasons&#13;
of the year. This will only snowbal&#13;
mto thoughts of why Spring a&#13;
Fall are action words and Wlnt&#13;
and Summer aren't. ..oh say Shiver&#13;
and Shimmy.&#13;
Scorpio: (Oct 24·Mov 21)&#13;
You will start a band and decide on&#13;
the name "Anything But That.&#13;
This is due mainly because not&#13;
everyone like "Clenched Buttocks&#13;
and only you liked "Titty Twiste&#13;
Tweek Together." In the future the&#13;
band that will become "Clenched&#13;
Buttocks" will get a huge record&#13;
deal, multiple a&lt;lvertisement deais&#13;
with Buns of Stee&#13;
Bunmaster2000, and other work&#13;
out videos, while yours make&#13;
decisions based on anything but&#13;
what you want leaving your but&#13;
tocks clenched. Irony. It's a bitch.&#13;
Sagittarius:(Nov22.Dec 21)&#13;
A Taurus will begin a debate with&#13;
you. only to burst into a tirade&#13;
with themselves. Do yourself&#13;
favor and stay away from Leos and&#13;
Ubras. They aren't any better. You&#13;
life is too boring to discuss with&#13;
out the interaction of others, so&#13;
maybe you should try messing&#13;
with all three. You might seem&#13;
interesting then!&#13;
Capricorn: (Dec 22·Jan 19)&#13;
You're not paranoid. The lawn&#13;
mower man is following you, your&#13;
latte has an odd taste to the&#13;
cream, and there is "This end up'&#13;
tattoo on your ass. And if you are&#13;
a hamster, that is not a scientist&#13;
with a butter knife, its and undergraduate&#13;
with a scalpel,&#13;
Aquarius: Oan 20-Feb 21) I&#13;
Your magnetic quality is strength.il&#13;
ened thanks to the metal plates inl&#13;
your head and that lightning ro&lt;Iin;'&#13;
your pants, Go get 'em tiger.&#13;
,&#13;
Pisces: (Feb 22-March 20) I&#13;
If you act NOW. you could aetual-'l&#13;
Iy have the very first moat and!&#13;
working drawbridge on yourl&#13;
block. Call now 1.9OQ..SS5-MQAT.I&#13;
ONLY $19.95! Does?p!:. irn:ludel&#13;
boiling tar and feather!&gt;. Sharks "'\I&#13;
additional $S.DO/per snark.. I&#13;
ol&#13;
J&#13;
A ril 1-17,2003 Pa e II&#13;
• Movie Stars •&#13;
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er, Nicholas CAGE Greta GARBO&#13;
·. Tom CRUISE Judy GARLAND River PHOENIX&#13;
Matt DAMON&#13;
l&#13;
Johnny DEPP&#13;
Cary GRANT Molly RINGWALD&#13;
Tom HANKS Mickey ROONEY&#13;
Robert DINERO Rock HUDSON Elizabeth TAYLOR&#13;
" Michael DOUGLAS Queen LATIFAH Denzel WASHINGTON&#13;
"&#13;
Clark GABLE Vivian LEIGH Bruce WILLIS&#13;
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Girts&amp;: Sports by Justin Boros and Andrew Feinstein&#13;
)00 HAD&#13;
MEAT&#13;
HEllO&#13;
.• AND 'THEY'RE PlAYI~&#13;
'~ MOSICALL&#13;
NIGlHT. SO ARE&#13;
)00 IN?&#13;
...rrs TEN DOlLARS&#13;
-ALL YOO CAN DRlNK,-&#13;
. THfRE'Il BE TONS&#13;
OF IiIRLS... ~&#13;
HELLO MY DEAR FRI£/II)&#13;
BRADlEY. I'VE" GiOT THE&#13;
mm OF THE YEAR&#13;
~ OS TONIGiHT...&#13;
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ril 1-17,2003 The Ranger News&#13;
J. University Sports&#13;
GLVC Indoor Track&#13;
Meet at UW-Parkside&#13;
By Henry Gaskins&#13;
Soprt Editor&#13;
The Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference (GLVC) Indoor&#13;
Track Meet was held in the&#13;
Petretli Fieldhouse at the UWParkside&#13;
Sports Activity Center&#13;
on Saturday, March 1,2003.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Women's&#13;
Track Team took seventh place,&#13;
scoring 47 points, which is good&#13;
considering they only had 12&#13;
participants in the meet. The&#13;
Men's Track Team scored 72&#13;
points, taking fifth place.&#13;
Events included shot put,&#13;
high jumping, pole-vaulting, and&#13;
.a variety of running competitions,&#13;
such as hurdles and&#13;
relays.&#13;
Robyn Stevens came in second&#13;
place in the Women's 5000-&#13;
Meter Run, scoring eight points&#13;
. for the team. Anne Favolise&#13;
came in fourth place in the&#13;
race scoring 5 points. Adam&#13;
Anderson came in third for the&#13;
Men's 800-Meter Run, scoring 6&#13;
points for the Men's team.&#13;
UW-Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director Dave Williams said&#13;
that the Rangers did well in the&#13;
standings. Some of the teams&#13;
have more than 30 athletes, so&#13;
naturally they would score&#13;
more points than a team of&#13;
only about IS, according to&#13;
Williams.&#13;
The event was the only&#13;
track meet held at UW-Parkside&#13;
this year, except for the&#13;
Women's Race Walking Track&#13;
Championships on Saturday,&#13;
May 17,2003. -&#13;
Intramural spring events&#13;
, 16" Co-ed Softball •&#13;
Tuesdays and Tbursdays - April I&#13;
.Co-ed Sand Volleyball •.&#13;
Mondays and Wednesdays. April 2&#13;
» .... , '&#13;
'Basminton Tournament -&#13;
" Itay 8-,ho 6 p.m.&#13;
The UW~Parkside Dance Team recently completed another successful season. The troupe perlormed at halftim.e&#13;
of both the men's and women's basketball games. Pictured, front row. from left. are Carlen Kielisch, MissyRanki,ne,&#13;
Wood, who served as the team's co-captain, and Allisa Pfeffer. Standing. from left, are coach Megan Butler, Hanssa&#13;
Schoen. cc-captafn Katie Geisler, Cori Meyer,Amy Hessefort, and Stefanie Parrone. -&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
2003 Baseball Standings&#13;
As of A.M. April 1, 2003&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
Indfanapolis&#13;
.Wis.-Parkside&#13;
Quincy&#13;
Northern Kentucky&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
Saint Joseph's&#13;
SID Edwardsville&#13;
Bellarmine&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
Lewis&#13;
OVERALL&#13;
W-L Pet. W-L Pet.&#13;
6-2 .750 18-5 .783&#13;
8-3· .727&#13;
7-3 .700&#13;
6-3 .667&#13;
7-4 .636&#13;
5-5 .500&#13;
5-5 .500&#13;
6-7 .462 12·12.500&#13;
3-9 .250 6-21 .222&#13;
2-7 .222 10-15 .400&#13;
2-9 .. 182 6-23 .207&#13;
19-Q .760&#13;
10-9 .526&#13;
14-10 .583&#13;
13-10 .565&#13;
11-8 .579&#13;
13-12.520</text>
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              <text>The&#13;
Issue 12 Vol. 33&#13;
The University of Wiscolllsin.Pllrkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
April 17-May I, 2003&#13;
Controlling the geese on campus I Michele Torner&#13;
Re orter&#13;
When it comes to the&#13;
feathered species that&#13;
we share this campus&#13;
with, opinions vary&#13;
from love to hate. The&#13;
Canada Geese that&#13;
greet us as we walk&#13;
from the parking lot to&#13;
the entrance doors are&#13;
a nuisance to some&#13;
and a warm welcome&#13;
to others. No matter&#13;
how one looks at it, l.....- -=~&#13;
they are causing quite&#13;
a stir.&#13;
By the end of the 19th century&#13;
the Canada Goose was&#13;
nearing extinction due to&#13;
excessive hunting and mass&#13;
This .c1ose encounter is a common experience for those walking from the&#13;
parkmg lot to the Communication Arts building.&#13;
killing. According to the&#13;
Humane Society"of the United&#13;
States, the International Migratory&#13;
Bird Treaty Act was created&#13;
to protect the surviving&#13;
species. fn the 1 960s,measures&#13;
were taken to rebuild the geese&#13;
populations. These efforts&#13;
caused an over abundance in&#13;
the species and the overflow is&#13;
highly evident in urban populations.&#13;
As these relocated geese&#13;
have not learned their species'&#13;
migratory patterns; they have&#13;
instead remained year-round in&#13;
urban and suburban areas&#13;
where wide lawns, parks, golf&#13;
courses, and artificial ponds&#13;
mimic their natural habitats.&#13;
UW-Parkside'scampus and surroundings&#13;
provide all of these&#13;
elements.&#13;
Some of the more common&#13;
complaints from students living&#13;
in the dorms are the early&#13;
morning wake-up calls of the&#13;
vocal variety provided. by the&#13;
geese. Most people have a story&#13;
or two about being chased or&#13;
hissed at by these territorial&#13;
web-footed creatures. Since&#13;
they are currently in mating&#13;
season, they tend to be more&#13;
UW-Parkside students cast their votes&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
President earning 243 votes.&#13;
Kellogg and Sidhu will both be&#13;
sworn in along with the Senate&#13;
on April 25, 2003. They will&#13;
begin their terms on June 1st,&#13;
2003 when the 2002-2003 term&#13;
ends for the current PSGAPresident&#13;
Marco Morrison.&#13;
UWP student Peng Her stated&#13;
that "while at first I was kind&#13;
of shaky about the idea of Kyle&#13;
winning, ...he seems to have his&#13;
head on straight and he seems&#13;
to feel that he owes something&#13;
to those that voted for him.&#13;
After being elected he seemed&#13;
to realize the responsibilities of&#13;
the position. I think he'll do&#13;
fine next year:'&#13;
The ballot also proposed a&#13;
constitutional amendment&#13;
seeking to change the number&#13;
of Senators to fifty.The student&#13;
voters passed this amendment.&#13;
The University ofWisconsin&#13;
Parkside students also voted to&#13;
On March 5th and 6th Parkside's&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) held their&#13;
annuaf elections to determine&#13;
who would be in power for the&#13;
2003-2004school year.&#13;
Junior Kyle Kellogg won his&#13;
bid for the Presidency with 266&#13;
votes while Vik Sidhu won&#13;
reelection to his post as ViceComedian&#13;
Tammy Pascatelli&#13;
entertains Parkside students on the Inside Page: 3&#13;
fill the positions of senators.&#13;
Elected senators are Elizabeth&#13;
Batterham, Jerome Garrett, Erin&#13;
Hammond, Adriana Lear,&#13;
Stormie Mitchell, Skyla Roper,&#13;
Lisa Smith, Matt Swanson, Todd&#13;
Drangstveit,Tal Goldwater,Tony&#13;
Jones, David Koss, Josh Meyer,&#13;
Jason Pinkowski, Chris Semenas,&#13;
Xavier Solis and YangYang.&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Page: 6&#13;
aggressive. But the most tommon&#13;
complaint? You guessed itthe&#13;
green droppings spattered&#13;
all over the campus' walkways.&#13;
That is where the Maintenance&#13;
department comes in. Of&#13;
course, sidewalks can be hosed&#13;
off to rid them of the geese&#13;
feces, but that is both time consuming&#13;
and fruitless.An experiment&#13;
is currently being conducted&#13;
in which a product&#13;
called Flight Control Plus® is&#13;
being spread on the grass in an&#13;
effort to deter the geese from&#13;
the sidewalks. According to&#13;
Donald Kolbe, UW-Parkside's&#13;
Facilities Management Director,&#13;
the product is"safer than sugar."&#13;
It is not a poison and will not&#13;
harm the geese; it is only meant&#13;
to give the grass a bad taste for&#13;
them. If the geese can be discouraged&#13;
from grazing on the&#13;
Continued on page 7.&#13;
•&#13;
I' The Ranger&#13;
I· News&#13;
If you are interested in&#13;
being a part of our team next&#13;
fall, come fill out an application&#13;
now11ime is running out.&#13;
Positions open for Editor-inChief,&#13;
Assistant Editor, Copy&#13;
Editor, Business Manager,&#13;
Advertising Manager, Page Editors,&#13;
Graphic Designers,&#13;
Reporters, and Cartoonists.&#13;
Apply now! Our student newspaper&#13;
needs you.&#13;
Parkside Elections&#13;
Page: 4&#13;
&#13;
The Ranger News April 17-May 1,2003 Page]&#13;
Comedian Tammy&#13;
Pascatelli entertains&#13;
UW-Parkside students&#13;
By Rusty Harris&#13;
CoNC1"I2.ATULATION6 TO TlJb. A\VArw I2.b.CIPIb.NT6 ..&#13;
FROtv1 T lJb. 2003 6 TUDb.NT Rb.COCjNITION I:'ANOU6-.T&#13;
lJb.LD ON APRIL 31&#13;
Student Leadership Scholarship for 2003·2004&#13;
Brigette Dei&#13;
Leadership Series VIPs&#13;
Brigette Dei - Leadership Fellow&#13;
Valerie Mendralla - Leadership Fellow&#13;
Michael Schopp - Emerging Leader&#13;
Emerging Student Leaders&#13;
Yoceline Espinoza de Vargas&#13;
Mirella Perez&#13;
Bridgette Schaefer&#13;
Cameron Hart&#13;
~rter _&#13;
Philadelphian native Tammy Paseatelli&#13;
came to Parkside on March 27&#13;
2003,at 8:00 p.m., to perform her comi~&#13;
act. Admission was free and approxiamately&#13;
twenty-five students attended.&#13;
The show was held in a darkened, candie&#13;
lit Union Square. Pascatelli entertained&#13;
students for an hour. Pascatelli&#13;
gave a great show and really involved&#13;
the audience in her act. She got a lot of&#13;
laughs. Her material included our blustery&#13;
Wisconsin winters, cheese head&#13;
jokes, and her experience as a member&#13;
of a Sicilian family. At one point, Pascatelli&#13;
asked what it was that I was writing&#13;
down. After telling her I was a&#13;
reporter there to cover the story. she&#13;
joked about people stealing her material.&#13;
She thumbed through a copy of The&#13;
Ranger News on stage and added her&#13;
Mike Kelias&#13;
Pete Phara&#13;
Kathleen Thomas&#13;
Lisa Smith&#13;
Redelia Souter&#13;
Danielle Talbert&#13;
Distinguished Student Leader&#13;
Dannie Moore&#13;
WAR,&#13;
RACISM,&#13;
AND THE NEED FOR.POLITICAL ACTION&#13;
comic twists and perspectives regarding&#13;
the tOPiCSof the stories, too. Pascatelli&#13;
has done her act on Home Box Office&#13;
(HBO) , and other stages. She will be&#13;
appearing on the Tonight Show sometime&#13;
within the next month or so, and&#13;
will be traveling on another USOTour to&#13;
the Kuwait area to entertain the American&#13;
troops. She expects to go to the war&#13;
torn region sometime between June I&#13;
and June 15 of 2003. Pascatelli lives in&#13;
Los Angeles. She has met many famous&#13;
comedians, including Jerry Seinfeld. She&#13;
has toured with Jennifer Lopez in the&#13;
past, too. Pascatelli provided the crowd&#13;
with a fresh perspective on life and was&#13;
very amusing. The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) sponsored the event. A&#13;
spokesperson for the PAB reminded students&#13;
to contact their office (D I 14A-·&#13;
UNION) if the~ have any ideas for future&#13;
shows or activities.&#13;
;&#13;
Keynote Speaker:&#13;
DR. CARLOS MUNOZ, JR.&#13;
Professor Emeritus of Ethnic Studies&#13;
University of California-Berkeley&#13;
Sponsored by: PARKS IDE INTERNATIONAL CLUB&#13;
Wednesday, April 30, 2003&#13;
Noon to 1:30 pm&#13;
UW-Parkside: Main Place&#13;
Free and Open to the Public&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
PERSPECTIVES ON IRAQ,&#13;
The University Engages the Current Crisis&#13;
All-Day Conference: April 30, 9:00 am-6:00 pm; Uw-Parkslde Main P1ace&#13;
ALL-DAY CONFERENCE sPONSORED BY, Th~ Pmtsidc InlmlationaJ Club, COOlDIunicatioo Dt:partment,&#13;
Program in Contliel AnH.1ysis lIlId Resolution, History Depanmi:nt.lnstitule for Comrnunity-BasOO Lean&gt;ing, the C.nt~&#13;
lor Intel1\litional Studies, Aikido P_e Action. and the Center for Ethnic Studies.&#13;
Outstanding Student Organization of the Year&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Advisor of the Year&#13;
Curtis Bickham - Black Student Union&#13;
Latinos Unidos&#13;
Latinos Unidos&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Circle K, WIPZ and Volunteer&#13;
Program&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Parks ide Activities Board&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Student Organization Community Service Program&#13;
Circle K&#13;
Outstanding Organization Member (Highest GPA) If.&#13;
Kelly Zito - SOC organization (Accounting Club) \It'&#13;
Lisa Smith - Major Status organization ~&#13;
Leadership Recognitions:&#13;
University Ambassadors to the UW-System:&#13;
Julian Thomas· Macy Yuen&#13;
BACCUS &amp; GAMMA Peer Education Network Student Trustee:&#13;
Valerie Mendralla&#13;
Chancellor's Leadership Institute:&#13;
Will Brinkman Cheryl Langel&#13;
Rufus Manual Valerie Mendralla&#13;
Sabrina Morgan Vik Sidhu&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Special thanks to the St~dent Organizations Council for sponsoring the banquet decorationsand SOC organizationtickets.Sponsoredby StudentActivities.This advertisement&#13;
was not paid for with state appropriated funds.&#13;
Page 4 April 17 May I, 2003&#13;
_ion&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Parkside elections -2003&#13;
Sandee Cornell&#13;
Why did only about 14% of&#13;
larkside's enrollment vote in&#13;
the past Sfudent Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) presidential&#13;
election? I am sure some of&#13;
you are thinking,"Well, I did."As&#13;
someone who thinks voting is&#13;
very- important and believes&#13;
that every vote does count, I&#13;
would personally like to&#13;
thank the 736 people who did&#13;
vote. Whether the results are&#13;
good or bad, voting makes a difference.&#13;
For the rest of you,&#13;
what's the matter? Don t you&#13;
care about your university?&#13;
I was quite involved with&#13;
Jamie Freeman's campaign.&#13;
Working with Jamie, who, as&#13;
some of you may know, ran for&#13;
president on the write-in ballol,&#13;
gave me the chance to talk to a&#13;
number of people during the&#13;
two voting days and I asked&#13;
them some questions. When J&#13;
approached some people to&#13;
ask them if they had voted yet&#13;
and they told me.r'No", I·asked&#13;
them why they hadn't. The two&#13;
most common responses that I&#13;
received were, either that they&#13;
did not know enough about the&#13;
candidates, or that they did not&#13;
even know anything about the&#13;
elections. These are both poor&#13;
excuses. I think those people&#13;
were just trying to avoid my&#13;
incessant campaign-crazed&#13;
harassing which I apologize for,&#13;
but I am sure you know that&#13;
that is the way campaigns work.&#13;
For those of you who really did&#13;
not know about elections or&#13;
really did not know enough&#13;
about the candidates, I have to&#13;
ask you, "Where have you&#13;
been?"&#13;
For about a week before&#13;
elections, Parksides own radio&#13;
station, WIPZ, aired a taped&#13;
debate between the presidential&#13;
and vice presidential candidates.&#13;
Each candidate asked the&#13;
other candidates questions and&#13;
reported their campaign platforms.1f&#13;
anything, that was most&#13;
likely your best source to get&#13;
more information about candidates&#13;
and to form valuable&#13;
interesting questions since&#13;
WIPZ aired the debated several&#13;
times a day.&#13;
For those of you who cannot&#13;
tune into WIPZ because of its&#13;
limited range that seems to go&#13;
only to the University Apartments&#13;
and back, you could&#13;
have gone to the live debate in&#13;
Upper Main Place on Wednesday&#13;
March 5, 2003. It was there&#13;
that you could have listened to&#13;
all of the candidates, except, of&#13;
course, the one who was golfing,&#13;
talk about their platforms&#13;
and all of the potential plans&#13;
they envisioned for PSGA next&#13;
semester. There was a limited&#13;
question and answer session&#13;
after the speaking, but despite&#13;
the briefness of the Q&amp;A, I was&#13;
happy to see that all of the candidates&#13;
seemed to be willing to&#13;
answer any individual questions&#13;
not only after the debate,&#13;
but also any other time in the&#13;
hallways.&#13;
Considering the excuse that&#13;
you simply did not want to vote&#13;
is not an acceptable excuse,&#13;
there really is no excuse at all&#13;
for not having voted. It Sure&#13;
takes time to research the candidates,&#13;
and believe me, I was&#13;
far too pressed for time during&#13;
elections week then I would&#13;
have liked to have been, but I&#13;
definitely feel good about the&#13;
fact that not only did I vote, but&#13;
I was also an educated voter,&#13;
even if I don't think that "Cereal"&#13;
(A.k.a. Kellogg) will do the&#13;
Parkside" [student] body good".&#13;
Voting is important. So, next&#13;
semester, make sure that you&#13;
throw down your clubs and get&#13;
seriously involved in the elections.&#13;
• •&#13;
IS coming soon&#13;
watch for more information&#13;
sponsored by PAR&#13;
This advertisement was not paid for with state appropriated funds.&#13;
Ar.&#13;
Sponsored by:Womyn's Center&#13;
In Her Footsteps and&#13;
Malting Her Mark Awards&#13;
The In Her footsteps Award recognizes women faculty&#13;
and Staff who have served as role models and mentors. These&#13;
women motivate and encourage others at uWP.&#13;
The Making Her Mark Award is given to women&#13;
students at UWP who have made contributions to the campus&#13;
through their academic and personal commitment.&#13;
Nominations forms available at Womyn's Center and Student Activities&#13;
Recipients will be honored at a luncheon on April 30 at noon in Union 104. Nominees and nominators are encouraged 10'attend.&#13;
Please RSVP the Wornyn's Center or the Student Activities Office by friday, April 25.&#13;
Thursday, April 24th 2003 is...&#13;
Moms and dads, enjoy an interactive day of learning and f~n with your children.&#13;
Bring them to work with you and let them learn what you do on your daily job as&#13;
well as other careers at UWP. There will be a variety of demonstrations and&#13;
workshops to attend put on by various departments. Don't miss this great&#13;
opportunity to show your kids a variety of career opportunities.&#13;
Sign up at the&#13;
Womyn's Center&#13;
by April1Sth&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
Salimah Rashada&#13;
Womyn's Center Coordinator&#13;
(262) 595·2170&#13;
SalimahOO@hotmail.com&#13;
Sponsored by the Womyn's Center&#13;
This advertisement was not paid for with state appropriated funds.&#13;
Buy 3 Discs, Get 1 FREE!&#13;
CD&#13;
Get 10% off each disc purchased&#13;
Special orders are not subject to the promotional discounts. Selection varies.&#13;
We carry: Ranger Card Office&#13;
UW-Parkside Union&#13;
Hours 8:00am - 4:30pm&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
262-595-2345 .&#13;
This advertisement was not paid for with state appropriated funds.&#13;
Page 6 April 17-May I, 2003 The Ranger News&#13;
-&#13;
4-9-03&#13;
c Traffic Accident. CTH J.R/Outer&#13;
Loop Rd. 7:50am. Two vehicles&#13;
collided after one vehicle was making&#13;
a left hand turn and didn't&#13;
notice the other vehicle.&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH E. 5:27 pm. A&#13;
citation was issued to a driver for&#13;
traveling 66mph in a 45mph zone&#13;
4-10-03&#13;
Security Alarm. WYLl. 11:33 pm.&#13;
An alarm panel indicated a door&#13;
motion detector was activated.&#13;
Area was checked with no suspects.&#13;
Alarm reset.&#13;
Traffic Violation. HWY E/HWY JR.,&#13;
4:50 am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 61mph in a&#13;
45mph zone.&#13;
Traffic Violation. HWY E/HWY JR.&#13;
5:30 am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 66mptl in a&#13;
45mph zone.&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH E. 5:46 am. A&#13;
citation was issued to a driver for&#13;
failure&#13;
to stop at a stop sign/improper&#13;
stop.&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outerloop&#13;
Rd/HWY JR. 12:08 pm. A citation&#13;
was issued to a driver for traveling&#13;
55mph in a 25mph zone.&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outerloop&#13;
Rd/HWY JR. 12:20 pm. A citation&#13;
was issued to a driver for traveling&#13;
48mph in a 25mph zone.&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/CTH JR. 12:39 pm. After stopping&#13;
a vehicle for expired registration&#13;
plates, a citation was issued for&#13;
a mandatory seat belt violation.&#13;
Traftic Violation. CTH G/lnner Loop&#13;
Rd. 5:34 pm. A citation was issued&#13;
for driving while revoked/suspended&#13;
license.&#13;
Traffic Violation. Outer Loop Rd.&#13;
6:27 prn. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 49mph in a&#13;
25mph zone.&#13;
Alarm. Union. 8:37 am. A fog&#13;
machine activated an alarm dUring&#13;
a dance. Machine was shut off and&#13;
alarm reset.&#13;
4-11-03&#13;
Traftic violation. STH 31/CTH E.&#13;
5:52.am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 70mph in a&#13;
55mph zone.&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH ElSTH 31.&#13;
.7:05 am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 63mph in a&#13;
45mph zone.&#13;
4-12-03&#13;
Traffic Accident. CTH E/CTH G.&#13;
8:28 am. Two vehicles collided at&#13;
an intersection. No injuries.&#13;
Traftic Violation. HWY 31/CTH JR.&#13;
3:53 pm. A citation was issued for&#13;
failure to stop! improper stop at a&#13;
stop sign.&#13;
4-13-03&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH E. 10:57 am.&#13;
Citations were issued to a driver&#13;
for operating a vehicle with a sus·&#13;
pended license and failure to fasten&#13;
seatbelt. Passenger was cited&#13;
for failure to fasten seatbelt.&#13;
4-14-03&#13;
Parking Enforcement. CART Lot.&#13;
2:05 am. Officers noticed 8" vehicle&#13;
parking in the lot with parking citations&#13;
on windshield and no permit&#13;
displayed. A citation was issued&#13;
and vehicle was towed.&#13;
RANGERCARD&#13;
ONliNE!&#13;
Deposit Funds&#13;
Chec~ your Account Balance&#13;
Track your Transaction History&#13;
Report your Card Lost or Stolen&#13;
www.rangercard.uwp.edu&#13;
Sponsored byRanger Card Office&#13;
If YOOP!.AN ON GRADUATING IN THE NEXT 12&#13;
MoNTHs OR HAVE ALREADY GRADUATED, YOU MAY&#13;
BE EUGIBLE FOR UBERTYVIUE MlTSUBISHI'S&#13;
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The Ranger News April 17-May 1,2003 Page 7&#13;
Nominate Your Teacher for the&#13;
2002·2003&#13;
Stella Gray Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
and the legendary,r&#13;
present ...&#13;
The Committee on Teaching &amp; Leaming is soliciting nomination. for this year's&#13;
Stella Cray Teaching Excellence Award. All continuing full-time memben of the&#13;
faculty and teaching academic staff who have taught at UW-Pa .....ide for at lemt five&#13;
yean are eligible to receive this award.&#13;
Recipients of the award for the last seven yean are nat eligible. They are&#13;
Professon Christine Christie, Norman Cloutier, Doug DeVinny, Thomas Fo~melle,&#13;
Laura Cellott, Cerald Creenfield, Julie King, Judy Logsdon, Carl Lindner, Penny Lyter,&#13;
Jane Pinnow, Jonathon Shallor, Carol Vopat, and Annette Wiesner •&#13;
Name of FacultylT eaching Academic Staff member you wish to nominate:&#13;
returDiDg fro. blev York ... FULL ON RECORDING ARTIST&#13;
WWW.Wneelie barlllUsic. COIll&#13;
Reason for nomination: _&#13;
with&#13;
95 VIIL 1001 20Cl:a :B.a:ttle oj'"Ute Baade l.ta.a.l..1Bt&#13;
Send nominations to Walter Feldt, Secretary of the Faculty, Molinaro D13Sor em~i1&#13;
waltedeldt@uwp.edu. The nomination deadline isApril 21, 2003. You may also submit&#13;
nominations in the ballot box at the Library Circulation Des~.&#13;
The Brat Stop is located at 1-94, and Hwy 50 in Kenosha. For more info, go to&#13;
www.bratstop.com. Show starts at 9 p.m. Must be 21 or over.&#13;
--------- ....&#13;
Controlling the geese&#13;
on campus&#13;
Continued from page one.&#13;
we step, but to share the environment&#13;
that is home to more&#13;
than just the human species.&#13;
grass, they will not leave their&#13;
droppings on the sidewalks.&#13;
But the application of this&#13;
product is also time-consuming&#13;
and costly, as it must be&#13;
applied after each mowing. The&#13;
Health, Safety, and Physical&#13;
Environment Committee on&#13;
campus is studying the effects&#13;
01 this product and Kolbe says&#13;
that his department hopes the&#13;
committee will advise them on&#13;
the wide range of other possible&#13;
options. Within time, they&#13;
hope to come up with a solution&#13;
that is efficient and effective.&#13;
In the meantime, we must&#13;
learn to not only watch where&#13;
The Business School's summer&#13;
course schedule is available at:&#13;
www.uwm.edu!s&lt;hedule!&#13;
Summer2003!BUSADM.html&#13;
Join UWM's Business School&#13;
as a Summer Guest Stuclent&#13;
The UWM School of Business is offering&#13;
over fifty different courses this summer&#13;
offering you the opportunity to:&#13;
• Speed your progress towards&#13;
graduatian - courses transfer easily&#13;
within the UW System&#13;
• Complete courses ..at times appropriate&#13;
to your busy summer schedule -&#13;
bath day and evening course&#13;
sections are offered&#13;
If you are interesting in enrolling&#13;
in these U"V-~{ilwaukee courses.&#13;
please contact;&#13;
UWM'sSummer Session Office&#13;
414-229-6732 or&#13;
email: oarss@uwm.edu&#13;
Harborside 'Eye Care&#13;
UNIVERSITYolWISCONSIN&#13;
lMMlLWAUKEE&#13;
• .-=: .&#13;
School ofBusiDeoI Adminiotralioo&#13;
CONTACT LENSES&#13;
t'tnor.ba - atrO&amp;t from the. tto\ld31 Inn&#13;
www.uwm.ecIu/business&#13;
The Ranger News page8&#13;
Comatulatiom: to tho Jack WhitQ&#13;
Pool T oumarnsnt WihMt!:&#13;
RUSS DARROW "=$~§t"&#13;
b-~A~~~i::~~I~~A~~';'5TY-::#:-:1"""';_~.~ ••~.~,,~)"&#13;
2003 AERIOS Sitlrfing from.&#13;
$199per&#13;
. Mo._ W&#13;
110 DOWN. O%APR FINANCING f:::....~~Et.'l'D1·T·1&#13;
A£RIO S,x.&#13;
1ST Morgan "The King" Kriese&#13;
2ND Mike "Mountain Dew" J.&#13;
3RD Nick "Hitman" Weber&#13;
1ST Erin "Foxy Lady" Enright&#13;
2ND Erin "Lady Dynomite" Bozich&#13;
Each winner received a certificate for&#13;
pool equipment at Hansen's Pool &amp; Spa.&#13;
Would like to thank&#13;
Jimm's Pizza and&#13;
American Bottling for&#13;
their support.&#13;
Sponsored by lntramural, Student Activities,&#13;
The Den and Parkside Student Center 2 SUZUKI&#13;
LOCATIONS ~Tnis advertisement is not paid for with state appropriated funds."&#13;
Taste the food and be entertained&#13;
by the world.&#13;
At ~ P~de fta# efI.i,~ a ta UU-te&#13;
~~~&#13;
Monday: Enropean Offering&#13;
Tnesday: Indian with entertainment sponsored hy the students of India&#13;
Wednesday: Asian menu with Hamilton Asian Club Dancers&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Asian Organization&#13;
Thursday: Middle Eastern !'lenu ':'lith entertainment sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside International Club&#13;
Friday: Mexican men~ with Ballet Folklorieo Nacional Holy Cross IMCE&#13;
sponsored by Latinos Unidos&#13;
114m - Ipm&#13;
"This advertisment is Dot paid for with state" appropriated fODds.1I</text>
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              <text>The&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside' s Student Newspaper&#13;
Issue 14 Vol. 33&#13;
Flaming fields at UW-Parkside&#13;
(above) Kay&#13;
Ludwig fuels&#13;
the fire.&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Reeor:!._er/Photographer ______ _&#13;
Fires burned the prairies at UW-Parkside on&#13;
April 23 and 24 as groundskeepers took care of&#13;
the two-year maintenance of the fields.&#13;
"It helps prairie restoration," according to&#13;
Sherry Jay, who i~ a groundskeeper here."We do&#13;
this about every other year."&#13;
The groundskeepers lit the fires early in the&#13;
morning, starting at about 7:30 and spreading&#13;
the fires through the fields until the fields were&#13;
completely burned, which took almost eight&#13;
hours each day.They used a mixture of unleaded&#13;
and diesel gasoline to spread the fires with&#13;
a drip torch.&#13;
"In about three weeks the grass will start&#13;
sprouting again through the burned soil," said&#13;
Jay.&#13;
Police officer Chris Moeller was on the&#13;
scene to supervise and make sure no living animals&#13;
were being harmed.&#13;
May I, 2003&#13;
Fires ripped though the prairies at UWParkside&#13;
April 23 and 24.&#13;
Scott Berzinsky leads the fire through the&#13;
field using a gasoline drip torch.&#13;
President elect, Kyle Kellogg, addresses PSGA&#13;
Rusty Harris&#13;
~orter&#13;
Kyle i&lt;:ellogg, UW-Parkside's&#13;
new President spoke about his&#13;
upcoming term. First, Kellogg&#13;
thanked all of those who voted&#13;
and especially for those who&#13;
voted for him. He says the past&#13;
staff of the PSGA has done a&#13;
good job and that he is glad to&#13;
have a lot of the things to work&#13;
with already that have been put&#13;
into place. "I am currently narrowing&#13;
in on a candidate for&#13;
the Directors position and I&#13;
hope to organize an election&#13;
committee over this summer,"&#13;
said Kellogg. Kellogg spoke of&#13;
his objectives and goals and he&#13;
said that he&#13;
PSGA in a positive direction. "I&#13;
would like to&#13;
create an efficient&#13;
relationship&#13;
with&#13;
administration&#13;
and is hopeful&#13;
that he will&#13;
have solid communication&#13;
between PSGA&#13;
students, and&#13;
administration.&#13;
Kellogg wants&#13;
to present new&#13;
avenues and&#13;
''I am excited&#13;
about my term and&#13;
really look forward&#13;
Kyle Kellogg&#13;
want to build&#13;
good relationships&#13;
with&#13;
PSGA members&#13;
and have activities&#13;
for us to do.&#13;
I am excited&#13;
about the creation&#13;
of the&#13;
activities," stated&#13;
Kellogg. Kellogg&#13;
described&#13;
his upcoming&#13;
administration&#13;
in one word,&#13;
guide "benevolent." Before May 18,&#13;
2003, Kellogg wants to present&#13;
the executive board as a whole.&#13;
Over the summer, Kellogg plans&#13;
to work on the system of&#13;
checks and balances and focus&#13;
on the Director's duties and&#13;
implement the structure for the&#13;
judicial system. Kellogg plans to&#13;
organize the cabinet and says&#13;
he will sit in on committees&#13;
when they are deemed as&#13;
being important. Kyle lives in&#13;
Minnesota. One of Kellogg's&#13;
major issues will be the organization&#13;
of the universities parking&#13;
system and the economic&#13;
concerns it poses for students.&#13;
on the Inside University Sports&#13;
Page: 10 -11&#13;
Steam leak&#13;
Page:8-9&#13;
He thanked his audience for&#13;
coming and said "I am excited&#13;
about my term and really look&#13;
forward to it!" At 12:00 noon on&#13;
April 25, 2003 in Molinaro 137,&#13;
the Student Government Association&#13;
held a meeting in which&#13;
its new Senators were sworn&#13;
into office. The new Senators&#13;
were encouraged to spend time&#13;
in the PSGA office to become&#13;
accustomed to their new surroundings.&#13;
Congratulations to&#13;
all of the other new Senators as&#13;
well. The Senators will begin to&#13;
have voting rights as of June 1,&#13;
2003.&#13;
Bits &amp; Pieces&#13;
Page:15&#13;
Page 2 May I, 2003&#13;
• Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Wind Ensemble &amp; Community&#13;
Band, Mark Eichner,&#13;
conductor, Com. Arts&#13;
Theatre, 7:30 p.m., tickets:&#13;
adults $6, students/&#13;
seniors $4&#13;
May3&#13;
• "The End," daylong event&#13;
featuring Freeway, Sports&#13;
&amp; Activity Center west&#13;
parking lot, starts 1 p.m.,&#13;
Freeway concert lnside&#13;
SAC at 9 p.m.&#13;
• Wisconsin Student Music&#13;
Association State Contest,&#13;
daylong event, various&#13;
campus locations; the&#13;
best student musicians in&#13;
Wisconsin meet and compete.&#13;
May4&#13;
• Concert: Spring Choral&#13;
Showcase, James&#13;
Kinchen, conductor, Com.&#13;
Arts Thegtre, 3;30 p,m.,&#13;
tickets: adults $6, students/&#13;
seniors $4&#13;
THE ROAD TO SUCCESS&#13;
Doesn't Have To Be EXPENSIVE.&#13;
RUSS DARROW I $ SUZUKl I&#13;
AMERICA'S #1&#13;
WARRANTY •&#13;
2003 AIRI0S ,_,...,$199~~ ~&#13;
lso DOWN&#13;
RUSS DARROW&#13;
SUZUKI-NORTH&#13;
9101 W. Brown Deer Rd., Milw&#13;
1-866-278-3333&#13;
leJ.Sllf&#13;
2 SUZUKI&#13;
LOCATIONS&#13;
IOI IOUR YEARS 011 I APPROVlD WDlf&#13;
RUSS DARROW&#13;
SUZUKI-SOUTH&#13;
3520 S. I 08th St, Greenfield&#13;
1-888-600-3661&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
May 5-8&#13;
• Art Exhibit: Senior Show I,&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery, hours:&#13;
Mondays/Thursdays: 11&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays/&#13;
Wednesdays: 11&#13;
a.m. to 8 p.m., free&#13;
Mays&#13;
Perspectives on Religious&#13;
Issues: "Evil, Religion,&#13;
Sex and Death: Ernest&#13;
Becker and his Pulitzer&#13;
Prize Work 'The Denial of&#13;
Death,"' w/UW-Parkside&#13;
Emeritus Philosophy&#13;
Prof. Wayne G. Johnson,&#13;
Union 106, noon, free&#13;
May7&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student&#13;
Recital, Union Cinema&#13;
Theater, noon, free&#13;
Maya&#13;
• "Safari to South Africa"&#13;
travelogue w/Mary Ruetz,&#13;
Galbraith Room, 11 :45&#13;
a.m.&#13;
• Arts: ALIVE! presents Four&#13;
Bitchin' Babes, Com. Arts&#13;
Theatre, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
May9&#13;
• 4th Annual UW-Parkside&#13;
Teaching Conference,&#13;
Galbraith Room, afternoon&#13;
program&#13;
• Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Symphony, Alvaro Garcia,&#13;
conductor, Com. Arts&#13;
Theatre, 7:30 p.m., tickets:&#13;
adults $6,&#13;
students/seniors $4&#13;
May 12-15&#13;
• Art Exhibit: Senior Show II,&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery, hours:&#13;
Mondays/Thursdays: 11&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays/&#13;
Wednesdays: 11&#13;
a.m. to 8 p.m., free&#13;
May 16&#13;
• Women's Studies Gender,&#13;
Race, and Class Book&#13;
Group: "Passion of&#13;
Artemisia" by Susan&#13;
Vreeland, , discussion&#13;
leader: Janice Krukowski,&#13;
Union 207, 3:30 p.m., free&#13;
May 18&#13;
• UW-Parkside Commencement&#13;
2003, 10 a.m. and&#13;
2:30 p.m. ceremonies,&#13;
Sports and Activity Center&#13;
-&#13;
R~hger News&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
,\mix·, Sm,1h&#13;
Aclvertismg Manager&#13;
Dd,01 "h l lal1111&#13;
Layout Team&#13;
K1111;\kn·1&#13;
L1chla11 \ !d)on,tld&#13;
l..imcn \1iknn&#13;
Photoi,•raphy&#13;
.\. l Sm11h&#13;
I knn Ga,kiu,&#13;
l ... 1d11'11i ;\ldlnn.tld&#13;
Spm1.\ Page Editor&#13;
I kn&gt;") C;~ ,l-.111~&#13;
Rcprntcr,&#13;
D1111, \\ ,1,hi11;,1nn&#13;
Hd1ecca lhd1&lt;·11,k1&#13;
Sar;,!, \Lt,,k&#13;
RanKer Ach;sor&#13;
.Jll(liih l;,~"rlon&#13;
Contarl 1hl· l'&lt;litor ;11 .,'15-1!287 for&#13;
1norc inl(&gt;nnahon.&#13;
Meetings are Mondays at&#13;
noon. Please stop by and&#13;
participate as the meetings&#13;
a.re open to all those&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every second&#13;
Thursday thr-oughout the seme:rter by students&#13;
of the University ofWisconsin .. Parlc·&#13;
side, who are solely responsible for its editorial&#13;
policy and content.&#13;
Letters to the Editor policy:The Ranger&#13;
encourages letters to the Editor. LetterS&#13;
should not exceed 2S0 words and mould be&#13;
delivered to the Ranger office (WYLL D·&#13;
I 39C) . Letters mu,t be typed and Include&#13;
the author's name and phone number. Let•&#13;
ters must be free from misleading or&#13;
libelous c.ontent. Letters that fail to c;:ompty&#13;
will not be published. For publicadon purposes,&#13;
autho,..s name can be withheld, but&#13;
onty upon request. The Ranger reserves d,e&#13;
right to edit all 1etten.&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
On April 16, 2003, at 8:00&#13;
p.rn., hypnotist Fredrick Winters&#13;
gave an entertaining show as he&#13;
hypnotized volunteers from the&#13;
audience (mostly Parkside students&#13;
and some from the public).&#13;
About 75 people attended&#13;
and admission was free. The&#13;
event was sponsored and organized&#13;
by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB). Winters travels&#13;
over 200,000 miles per year giving&#13;
his shows to corporations&#13;
and universities. He has hypnotized&#13;
over 100,000 people and&#13;
travels 9 months every year. He&#13;
gave a noon show at Alverno&#13;
College in Milwaukee, Wisconsin&#13;
earlier in the day Winters is&#13;
from Delavan, Wisconsin, and&#13;
still makes his home there. The&#13;
show lasted for about ninety&#13;
minutes.&#13;
Before Winters asked for volunteers&#13;
from the audience to&#13;
join him on stage to be hypnotized&#13;
he said, "I do not know&#13;
what is going to happen in the&#13;
May 1,2003&#13;
show at Union Square&#13;
pants moved their arms, to the&#13;
pleasure of the audience, in&#13;
humorous ways. In fact,&#13;
throughout the night, the crowd&#13;
laughed more than they did&#13;
anything else as Winters had&#13;
his 'hypnotees'&#13;
do and ",•••&#13;
react to dif- }.. -~~- •• __ •• __ •&#13;
ferent com- ul&#13;
rnands. He&#13;
asked an&#13;
audience&#13;
member to&#13;
come on&#13;
stage and&#13;
the participants&#13;
in a&#13;
trance were&#13;
told that Fredric:kW'lIlters,hypnOti$t&#13;
whatever * •••••••••••••• this person&#13;
said was the&#13;
smartest thing that anyone&#13;
could ever say This person told&#13;
them that he used green milk&#13;
toothpaste and listening to the&#13;
participant's responses was&#13;
very entertaining to say the&#13;
least as they all hailed him.&#13;
Another scenario was that Winters&#13;
had the 'hypnotees' driving&#13;
in their favorite car down the&#13;
road and then a siren was&#13;
sounded in the Union and they&#13;
were told that they were being&#13;
pulled over for speeding. This&#13;
was just&#13;
one of the&#13;
many situa- can tions the&#13;
'hypnotees'&#13;
were&#13;
put into&#13;
including&#13;
being told&#13;
they were&#13;
on the&#13;
J err y&#13;
Springer&#13;
show to tell&#13;
about their&#13;
experience&#13;
of seeing a&#13;
UFO! Winters has visited Parkside&#13;
in the past and a lot of the&#13;
students who saw him perform&#13;
then were in attendance proving&#13;
that his show has entertainment&#13;
value as it keeps the audience&#13;
and participants active&#13;
and entertained and coming&#13;
think hypnotism&#13;
help bring positive&#13;
change to our lives and is&#13;
a great way to improve&#13;
our memory skills."&#13;
Page 3&#13;
back. The sound show was&#13;
done tastefully Winters used&#13;
seyeral sounds on the sound&#13;
system to assist him in his show.&#13;
Hypnotism has many skeptics&#13;
and Winters' performances&#13;
are 'not magic' he said. He used&#13;
to do clinical work and says,"]&#13;
think hypnotism can help bring&#13;
positive change to our lives and&#13;
is a great way to improve OUT&#13;
memory skills. I recommend&#13;
doing it to college students&#13;
before tests, too"&#13;
Winters sells his CD's on&#13;
hypnotism and other topics&#13;
about bringing healthy change&#13;
in people on E-bay 'at fredrickwinters.&#13;
com at very competitive&#13;
prices. Winters closed the&#13;
show by reminding the audience&#13;
that sometimes hypnotism&#13;
works and sometimes it does&#13;
not. He thinks it is a great thing&#13;
and recommends it to those&#13;
who are looking for positive&#13;
changes in their lives and the&#13;
ability to relax. Make sure to see&#13;
him next time if you could not&#13;
make it to the show. He is a definite&#13;
crowd pleaser.&#13;
Worldwide opportunities for students&#13;
Hypnotist gives entertaining&#13;
Rusty Harris show. Partic. ip.ants will know&#13;
Reporter wha t they are doin. g and do&#13;
not blackout. I cannot make&#13;
anybody do anything." To&#13;
begin, Winters had everyone&#13;
put their hands together with&#13;
only their index fingers, touching.&#13;
After a moment or so, 1,like&#13;
most, had difficulty pulling&#13;
index fmgers apart! This was&#13;
amazing. Furthermore, eighteen&#13;
volunteers from the audience&#13;
sat in chairs on the stage&#13;
and were put into a trance as&#13;
the stage lights were dimmed&#13;
and some relaxing music was&#13;
played. Then, participants on&#13;
stage and those who tried it&#13;
from the audience, including&#13;
me, stared at a bright light that&#13;
was brought on the stage for a&#13;
moment and then shut our&#13;
eyes while listening only to&#13;
Winters' voice. Feeling relaxed&#13;
and calm was easy Once under&#13;
the trance, participants were&#13;
asked to do some things&#13;
including holding one of their&#13;
arms in the air and then being&#13;
told they had to move it in a&#13;
certain manner. Most partici-&#13;
Michele Torner&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Consuelo R. Clemens, International&#13;
Programming Coordinator&#13;
at the Center of International&#13;
Studies (CIS), and Program&#13;
Assistant Laurie Odegaard&#13;
have a goal: they want to&#13;
get the word out about the multiple&#13;
opportunities that CIS has&#13;
to offer both students and faculty&#13;
Clemens' wish is for international&#13;
education as a whole&#13;
to become part of the mindset&#13;
for all students. She saw Rusty&#13;
Harris' article on foreign&#13;
exchange students in the April&#13;
1-17 issue of The Ranger News&#13;
as a perfect opportunity to follow&#13;
up on what CIS is all about.&#13;
Clemens sees the role of CIS&#13;
as a connector, a bridge for&#13;
other faculty members to get&#13;
students involved. So far, the&#13;
message that she gets from UWParkside&#13;
is that the institution is&#13;
very committed to international&#13;
education. The university&#13;
saw the importance of establishing&#13;
a center and of ultimately&#13;
hiring a full-time International&#13;
Programming Coordinator-&#13;
Clemens has been on&#13;
board since January She&#13;
recently spoke about the "three&#13;
hats" CIS wears: the academic&#13;
side of International Studies,&#13;
the Study Abroad/Study Tour'&#13;
Programs, and International&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
The International Studies&#13;
degree program offers both a&#13;
major and a minor as well as a&#13;
certificate in Global Skills, providing&#13;
opportunities for graduates&#13;
in business, government,&#13;
economics, and politics, to&#13;
name a few. As the CIS Program&#13;
Assistant, Odegaard&#13;
wants students to know that&#13;
they can call or stop by the&#13;
center anytime with questions&#13;
or concerns about international&#13;
education. There are&#13;
approximately 40 students currently&#13;
enrolled in International&#13;
Studies.&#13;
CIS' Study Abroad/Study&#13;
Tour component is composed&#13;
of travel opportunities at three&#13;
levels. UW-Parkside offers shortterm&#13;
study tours to countries&#13;
such as China and Ghana led&#13;
by a faculty member who has&#13;
expertise in the specific country&#13;
There are long-term&#13;
exchange programs available&#13;
through the UW system and CIS&#13;
can provide students with the&#13;
appropriate information. CIS is&#13;
also affiliated with other study&#13;
abroad opportunities such as&#13;
CEA (Cultural . Experience&#13;
Abroad) and ICCE (International&#13;
Council for Cultural Experience.)&#13;
Funding opportunities&#13;
are available to students&#13;
through UW-Parkside's Financial&#13;
Aid office to travel overseas.&#13;
Since the spring of 2000,&#13;
state funding has been available&#13;
in the form of grants and&#13;
awards to eligible students for&#13;
travel/study abroad programs.&#13;
Students can attend monthly&#13;
information sessions or stop by&#13;
CIA for information oil any of&#13;
these programs.&#13;
Clemens says that one of&#13;
her goals as International Programming&#13;
Coordinator for CIS&#13;
is to break down the three&#13;
myths regarding studying&#13;
abroad: (1) no money, (2) no&#13;
time within the education program,&#13;
and (3) the fear factor,&#13;
such as being alone in a different&#13;
country. Clemens sees&#13;
these myths as best challenged&#13;
right away in freshmen orientations.&#13;
While she admits that&#13;
studying abroad is not for&#13;
everyone, she feels that it is her&#13;
job to help students, parents,&#13;
and faculty make informed&#13;
decisions.&#13;
The third hat of CIS is the&#13;
services offered to the inbound&#13;
international students studying&#13;
at UW-Parkside. Odegaard says&#13;
that there are approximately&#13;
sixty-five students currently&#13;
enrolled. Most are here as&#13;
transfer students, but several&#13;
will attend 3-4 years for their&#13;
bachelor or master degrees.&#13;
CIS will begin providing services&#13;
to make the transition for&#13;
the student as comfortable as&#13;
possible by interfacing the student&#13;
within the academic program&#13;
as well as within their&#13;
local community CIS currently&#13;
works with Adventures in life-&#13;
Long Learning (A.L.L.), setting&#13;
international students up with&#13;
local families who can provide&#13;
a contact person, airport transportation,&#13;
and even an&#13;
overnight stay in their home.&#13;
Other ways in which CIS&#13;
promotes awareness of international&#13;
education is through cultural&#13;
programs, such as the&#13;
recent Evening fn Greece. In&#13;
previous years, "Evening In"&#13;
showcased a culture to include&#13;
information about language,&#13;
education, and entertainment&#13;
from countries such as Brazil,&#13;
Italy,and Pakistan. Lectures are&#13;
presented focusing on a specific&#13;
area, political figure,economic&#13;
issue, or international crisis.&#13;
The goal is to bring international&#13;
issues to the forefront and&#13;
share information about world&#13;
events with students and the&#13;
community.&#13;
Page 4 May I, 2003 The Ranger News&#13;
With a Russian accent&#13;
Roman Pobaruyev&#13;
Russian Class Facilitator&#13;
When freshmen enter&#13;
the doors of the University&#13;
for the first time&#13;
in their lives, they&#13;
unavoidably experience&#13;
a complex mix of&#13;
excitement and overwhelmingness.&#13;
I too remember my confused&#13;
state of mind in my first&#13;
day at Parkside, when I didn't&#13;
know exactly what offices to go&#13;
to, what people to talk to, and,&#13;
most importantly, what classes&#13;
to take right away,However, this&#13;
sensation was nothing in cornparison&#13;
with my feeling of thrill&#13;
and anticipation of great educational&#13;
opportunities and&#13;
chances that were ahead of me.&#13;
"I am finally in college! I am&#13;
finally an adult' Now I can do&#13;
and accomplish something&#13;
that wasn't possible in high&#13;
school and before, something&#13;
that I have dreamt about all&#13;
this time, something that will&#13;
surprise even me,"&#13;
I am a Russian class facilitator&#13;
here at Parkside. I am a&#13;
student just like you, helping&#13;
others to learn this beautiful&#13;
and interesting language. Russian&#13;
is my native language, and I&#13;
am always happy to help others&#13;
who express interest in it.&#13;
Russian 101 starts this fall and&#13;
is organized as a distance&#13;
learning class. The instructor,&#13;
Gwen Walker, is in UW-Stevens&#13;
Point with another group of&#13;
students from the class. Lectures&#13;
are held as video conferencing&#13;
sessions, and, in my&#13;
opinion, this makes the whole&#13;
experience even more interesting.&#13;
I help students with homework,&#13;
and provide immediate&#13;
assistance with jiijii_'jii ......__&#13;
how to pronounce&#13;
the&#13;
new words correctly&#13;
and how&#13;
to make sense&#13;
of grammar&#13;
rules, etc. If studenls&#13;
need&#13;
extra help, I&#13;
offer free tutoring&#13;
after classes.&#13;
You may be&#13;
interested in&#13;
Russian for various&#13;
reasons. Some of you have&#13;
always been fascinated by Russian&#13;
culture, history and literature,&#13;
some plan to work with&#13;
Russian companies in the&#13;
future, some have friends in&#13;
Eastern Europe, and some may&#13;
just want to impress their&#13;
friends and relatives. Beside&#13;
these reasons&#13;
to study Russian,&#13;
there is a&#13;
really good&#13;
practical&#13;
one: taking&#13;
Russian will&#13;
fulfill your&#13;
, Parkside Ian- g u age&#13;
requirement,&#13;
which says&#13;
that every student&#13;
needs at&#13;
least two&#13;
semesters of&#13;
a foreign language to graduate.&#13;
A lot of students tell me that&#13;
if they had known before that&#13;
Russian was offered at Parkside,&#13;
they would have taken it.&#13;
Due to some unfortunate cir-&#13;
A lot of students tell&#13;
me that if they had&#13;
known before that&#13;
Russian was offered&#13;
at Parkside, they&#13;
would have taken it.&#13;
_I&#13;
cumstances (the previous&#13;
instructor, Pro Robert Price&#13;
passed away last summer), th;&#13;
program was under threat 01&#13;
termination. Maybe that'swhya&#13;
lot of students didn't hearaboul&#13;
this class.&#13;
I am really happy that Russian&#13;
stayed at Parkside, because&#13;
it helps to make this schoola&#13;
true university - a place, where&#13;
anyone can do something different.&#13;
Anyone interested in taking&#13;
this unique journey is welcome.&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
feel free to talk to either&#13;
me (my e-mail is romanvoland@&#13;
yahoo.com) or Professor&#13;
Christoph, the chair of the&#13;
Department of Modern Languages.&#13;
Good luck to you all in your&#13;
own Parkside experience, and&#13;
"Do Svidan'ya": (sign up for&#13;
class to get the translation)&#13;
SECOND ANNUAL ENGLISH CONFERENCE A SUCCESS&#13;
"A testament to the caliber of students"&#13;
Mlichele Torner '&#13;
Reporter&#13;
UW-Parkside has&#13;
something to boast&#13;
about-for the past two&#13;
years, it has been host&#13;
to one of the largest&#13;
undergraduate conferences&#13;
in the country.&#13;
On April 11th, the Second&#13;
Annual Undergraduate&#13;
Conference&#13;
in Literature, Media,&#13;
and Film was held on&#13;
our campus, proving a&#13;
success for both participants&#13;
and attendees.&#13;
The brainchild of English&#13;
Professors Dean Karpowicz&#13;
and Jay McRoy, the goal of the&#13;
conference is to bring together&#13;
students of all majors and background.&#13;
McRoy says,"Dean and&#13;
I recognized that the student&#13;
body at UW-Parkside consists of&#13;
It isa testament to&#13;
the enthusiasm and&#13;
intelligence of Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
some of Wisconsin's brightest&#13;
and most creative minds, and&#13;
we wanted to provide a forum&#13;
where students could share&#13;
their ideas, perspectives, and&#13;
understandings of a wide variety&#13;
of literary and filmic texts.&#13;
Participating&#13;
in conferences&#13;
is a&#13;
vital aspect&#13;
of the educat&#13;
ion a I&#13;
process, and&#13;
to have an&#13;
undergraduate&#13;
conference&#13;
is very&#13;
special. It is&#13;
a testament&#13;
to the enthusiasm&#13;
and intelligence of Parkside&#13;
students." McRoy adds that&#13;
participating in an event such&#13;
as this looks great on resumes&#13;
and graduate school applications.&#13;
According to McRoy, last&#13;
year's Inaugural conference&#13;
was a "resounding success" and&#13;
this year's conference was&#13;
McRoy&#13;
_ .t&#13;
equally successful. McRoy&#13;
feels the highpoint of the conference&#13;
was "being able to see&#13;
and hear so many excellent&#13;
papers." He sees it as a "testament&#13;
to the caliber of students&#13;
we have here at UW-Parkside,"&#13;
which is a&#13;
quality that&#13;
is "remarka&#13;
b I e&#13;
McRoy felt&#13;
the same&#13;
"rush" at the&#13;
conference&#13;
that he feels&#13;
each time&#13;
he leaves a&#13;
classroom-a&#13;
literal "buzz"&#13;
from his students'&#13;
insights and intellectual&#13;
energy.&#13;
This year's keynote speaker,&#13;
Eric Hoffman from Northern&#13;
Illinois University, is a close personal&#13;
friend of McRoy's.&#13;
McRoy thought Hoffman's&#13;
keynote address,"Sub-Creation,&#13;
Mediation, and Commercialization:&#13;
The Lord of the Rings and&#13;
•.&#13;
McRoy feels the highpoint&#13;
of the conference&#13;
was "being able to see&#13;
and hear so many excellent&#13;
papers."&#13;
the Art of Magic'was not only a&#13;
timely topic, but a point of&#13;
interest for many of the people&#13;
attending the conference.&#13;
All in all, Karpowicz and&#13;
McRoy were "tremendously&#13;
pleased" with this year's confere&#13;
nee&#13;
McRoy says&#13;
t hat&#13;
although&#13;
this year's&#13;
conference&#13;
was about&#13;
the same&#13;
size as last&#13;
year's, this&#13;
year's event&#13;
was "better&#13;
attended."&#13;
One&#13;
notable difference compared&#13;
to last year was that this year's&#13;
conference was opened up to&#13;
students from neighboring&#13;
schools, bringing a couple of&#13;
participants from UW-Milwaukee&#13;
and UW-Whitewater.&#13;
In years to come, Karpowicz&#13;
and McRoy would like to see&#13;
the conference get "larger and&#13;
'===---"":r-r==T====~""",,,~~~ _&#13;
larger." They hope this increase&#13;
will come not only from students&#13;
and faculty at UW-Park·&#13;
side, but from more participants&#13;
from other Midwestern universities&#13;
and colleges as well. Stu·&#13;
dents from all academic disciplines&#13;
are&#13;
encouraged&#13;
to participate,&#13;
and&#13;
anyone&#13;
interested in&#13;
reading in&#13;
next year's&#13;
conference&#13;
can contact&#13;
McRoy at&#13;
mer a y&#13;
@uwp.edu&#13;
for more&#13;
information, as he feels it is&#13;
never too late to start preparing.&#13;
Who knows, maybe in a few&#13;
years time, UW-Parkside will&#13;
have even more to boast of-that&#13;
of being the host to the Midwestern&#13;
Undergraduate Confer·&#13;
ence in Literature, Film, and&#13;
Media.&#13;
The Ranger News May 1,2003 Page 5&#13;
Fantastic display at studen&#13;
Above&#13;
Erin Hopkins&#13;
"lnk girl"&#13;
india ink &amp; stick&#13;
Left&#13;
Joshua Brennan&#13;
"Selt-pcrtait # 37&#13;
acrylic, graphite, collage.&#13;
I\&#13;
\&#13;
Above&#13;
Amanda Roslansky&#13;
"I am"&#13;
photography.&#13;
Right&#13;
Amy Sorensen&#13;
Self Portrait&#13;
(In the style Alice Need.)&#13;
oil&#13;
Beware - "The End" is coming&#13;
Sat. May 3, 2003 at the Sports and Activities building on campus&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Reporte",r _&#13;
In the fall of 1999,&#13;
Jamie Freeman envisioned&#13;
a gathering&#13;
known as The Main&#13;
Event which would&#13;
unite all students of&#13;
the UW-Parkside community&#13;
He and other&#13;
student leaders, such&#13;
as Michael Kamphius&#13;
coordinated an all day&#13;
gathering that featured&#13;
bands, games, and novelty&#13;
activities.&#13;
"That event was a great success,"&#13;
Freeman said." We had a&#13;
huse turnout. and the diverse&#13;
crowd had a good time."&#13;
The idea, and the venue was&#13;
effective in bringing people&#13;
together, which made it seem&#13;
worthwhile to do again, according&#13;
to Freeman.&#13;
Now, in the spring semester&#13;
of 2003, a committee has been&#13;
formed to organize the same&#13;
type of event, but on a larger&#13;
scale. The Main Event, also&#13;
known as "The End", will be&#13;
held on Saturday May3,2003 in&#13;
the fieldhouse at the Sports&#13;
Activity Center, which can comfortably&#13;
fit more than 3,000 peopIe.&#13;
"This is my last semester&#13;
here at Parkside" said Freeman.&#13;
"I wanted to help leave one&#13;
final impression."&#13;
Sabrina Morgan, who is President&#13;
of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) has spearheaded&#13;
(PIC), and Students of India&#13;
(SOl).&#13;
"Alot of people have spent&#13;
a lot of time working together&#13;
to help&#13;
make this&#13;
event a success:'&#13;
Morgan&#13;
stated.&#13;
The&#13;
event will&#13;
be divided&#13;
into two&#13;
parts. The&#13;
first part,&#13;
from 1:00&#13;
P.M.to 7:00&#13;
pm, will be&#13;
free to all&#13;
students and feature seven&#13;
bands including Crash, a Dave&#13;
Matthews cover band. It will&#13;
also have various novelties&#13;
such as rock climbing, bouncy&#13;
the initiative for the idea, gathering&#13;
a group of student leaders&#13;
from various organizations to&#13;
help push the end-of-the-year&#13;
bash and.&#13;
make it a ,- .. - .. - .&#13;
reality.&#13;
. These orga- . "This is my last~ester&#13;
n iz a t io n s&#13;
include h¢re at Parkside:~.said&#13;
PAB, Parkside&#13;
Adult' , Freeman. "I Wanted to&#13;
Student&#13;
A II ian c etaelp leave one final&#13;
(PASA), ~ . ..... ...• ... &gt;"&#13;
Par k s id e ' Impresston.&#13;
Student t .. Govern-$&#13;
ment Association&#13;
(PSGA), The Ranger&#13;
News, Black Student Union&#13;
(BSU), Rainbow Alliance, Park- .&#13;
side Agent Organization (PAO),&#13;
Parkside International Club&#13;
boxing and spaceship laser tag.&#13;
The second half of the event,&#13;
7:30 P.M.to 11:00 P.M.,will be&#13;
held inside the fieldhouse. Performances&#13;
will include DJs,&#13;
local rap groups, and headlining&#13;
from Roc-A-FellaRecords is&#13;
hip hop artist Freeway After&#13;
Freeway performs, dancing will&#13;
continue as Jamie Freeman&#13;
gives his last WfPZradio show..&#13;
Tickets are required for the second&#13;
half of the festivities and&#13;
are on sale for $10 in advance&#13;
at the Ranger Card Office in the&#13;
Union, or $15 at the door.&#13;
"This is going to be a great&#13;
event,"said Assistant Director of&#13;
Student Activities Stephanie&#13;
Sirovatka-Marshall. "The committee&#13;
has been working very&#13;
hard to have the firstbig national&#13;
act in years on this campus&#13;
be a success at all levels:&#13;
---&#13;
Page 6 May I, 2003 The Ranger News -&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
CHALLENGING PLAY "STOP KISS"&#13;
KENOSHA,Wis.-The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parksides&#13;
Plays At Parkside series presents&#13;
the final four performances&#13;
of the challenging new&#13;
play "Stop Kiss"May 1 to May 3.&#13;
Written by Diana Son and&#13;
directed by UW-Parkside Theatre&#13;
Arts Professor Tom Sunstrom,&#13;
the production contin-&#13;
. ues with two evening performances&#13;
and two matinees.&#13;
"Stop Kiss"tells the story of&#13;
two women, Callie and Sara.&#13;
Sara, played by Tara Ketterer,&#13;
moves from St. Louis to New&#13;
York to become a school&#13;
teacher. After Callie, portrayed&#13;
by Jacquie Beyer, meets Sara,&#13;
the two women are unexpectedly&#13;
attracted to each other.&#13;
"ft's about two people who&#13;
fall in 10ve,"Sunstromsaid."The&#13;
fact that they're of the same sex&#13;
is, f think, secondary to the&#13;
story The main point is about&#13;
commitment.The main character&#13;
is put in a position where&#13;
she is forced to make some&#13;
decisions about her life and&#13;
make commitments, long-term&#13;
commitments, to something for&#13;
the first time ever. And that's&#13;
something anybody can relate&#13;
to."&#13;
Callie and Sara's relationship&#13;
is not without consequences,&#13;
consequences that&#13;
change their lives forever.&#13;
Sunstrom called "Stop Kiss"&#13;
a very powerful and very uplifting&#13;
play, a play that is gaining&#13;
nationwide attention and&#13;
acclaim.&#13;
"Slowly but surely, it's the&#13;
play that moving it's way across&#13;
the country and it's becoming&#13;
very very popular," he said.&#13;
fn addition to Beyer and&#13;
Ketterer in the lead roles, the&#13;
cast includes Brandon Anderson&#13;
as Peter, Sara's boyfriend&#13;
from St. Louis; Lenny Banovez&#13;
as George; Carina Henderson&#13;
as Mrs. Winsley; Brian Van-&#13;
Schyndel as Del. Cole; and&#13;
MelissaVanSwol as the nurse.&#13;
This production is intended&#13;
for mature audiences.&#13;
"Stop Kiss" is performed&#13;
May 1 at 10 a.m., May 2 at 7:30&#13;
p.m., and May 3 at 4 and 7:30&#13;
p.m. Seating is limited. For tickets,&#13;
call Diane Smith at ext.&#13;
2564.&#13;
• OPII&#13;
l.en Letters to the Editor:Womyn's Center responds to Brown's article&#13;
To an that read thl!' Ranger&#13;
News:&#13;
look at the rebuttal letter that&#13;
should have been sent out, but&#13;
now it is in reference to the&#13;
peopfe that believe to what that&#13;
.student said and thought were&#13;
true. This is to the other Holli&#13;
Brown's of Parkside.&#13;
Doris Washington&#13;
assaulted. They are affected just&#13;
as much as the primary survivor.&#13;
Many of these secondary&#13;
survivors are men. We speak&#13;
with them too on a confidential&#13;
basis. The Womyn's Center&#13;
is to be a place where one can&#13;
relax and feel safe. Many times,&#13;
men come in here for the purpose&#13;
to get away.There is nothing&#13;
. that. Many stay&#13;
omevoluna~&#13;
eherel&#13;
Ie maybe&#13;
serious matcurs,&#13;
the&#13;
Ioeaand&#13;
there have never been&#13;
graphic pictures up this year.&#13;
When you look into the&#13;
Womyn's Center, you will see&#13;
positive names for women that&#13;
are used 'today and pictures of&#13;
historic women and their bios.&#13;
Because of your misinformation,&#13;
I encourage you to come&#13;
and visit Our area. Ihope we can&#13;
remove your fears and views of&#13;
the Womyn's Center.&#13;
Truthfully Yours,&#13;
Doris Washington and&#13;
Salimah Rashada&#13;
Womyn Center Coordinators&#13;
Ms.Holli Brown,&#13;
Icertainly hope you are not&#13;
perusing a career in Journal-&#13;
. so, Istrongly suggest you&#13;
many criminal law&#13;
rses rei fo Joumalism&#13;
poss fore you find&#13;
ou fast track 1:0 a&#13;
. 5t you. ram&#13;
anger News&#13;
print something&#13;
that had not been verified&#13;
by facts or substantial evidence.&#13;
Such practice is completely&#13;
unprofessional and&#13;
unacceptable.&#13;
Though my supervisors&#13;
were much more coy with you.&#13;
Ms. Brown, I on the other hand&#13;
as a volunteer who was highly&#13;
offended by your letter,willnot&#13;
be.&#13;
There's a saying about&#13;
"putting the wagon before the&#13;
horse", the interview you conducted&#13;
with the Womyn'scenter&#13;
should have been considered&#13;
before your"accusing"artic&#13;
de was written and published.&#13;
Hopefully this will not hail'&#13;
pen again. Iwould hate to see~&#13;
group of aspiring professiona~&#13;
risk they're jobs and lose theY'1&#13;
credibility all due to the irKaj&#13;
pacity of one student. I&#13;
Peace and Harmony,&#13;
August-Marie&#13;
Wagner-Richardson I Womyn's Center Volunteer&#13;
(2Q02-2003) ;,&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Letter from the editor&#13;
importance of being aware of&#13;
things like health and awareness&#13;
in correspondence to academics&#13;
and success here at&#13;
UW-Parkside.1attended various&#13;
events including a woman's&#13;
,- --, basketball game.The&#13;
game that I attended&#13;
happened to be the&#13;
one that a woman's&#13;
Ranger basketball&#13;
player's jersey was&#13;
retired after the&#13;
game. This was done&#13;
because this student&#13;
was killed in a tragic&#13;
automobile accident.&#13;
All 01 the proceeds&#13;
from the&#13;
game were given to&#13;
start a scholarship&#13;
fund in this student's&#13;
name. It was very&#13;
touching as the student's&#13;
parents were&#13;
in attendance and I&#13;
immediately realized&#13;
that this school,&#13;
in some senses, is&#13;
like a big family&#13;
The atmosphere&#13;
here at UW-Parkside&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Editor·in-Chief&#13;
I have known since Septemberthat&#13;
this issue, the last of the&#13;
2003 academic year, would also&#13;
be the last in which I would be&#13;
acting as the Editor-in-Chief. I&#13;
have spent countless hours in&#13;
front of my computer, on the&#13;
telephone, editing articles and&#13;
scrambling for something to fill&#13;
the last two open columns in&#13;
an otherwise completed edition;&#13;
I have benefited. from&#13;
every moment spent on this&#13;
endeavor.&#13;
An overwhelming fear of&#13;
failure enveloped me as I&#13;
walked into The Ranger News&#13;
office on my first day in January&#13;
2002. f had no idea what I&#13;
was doing or what to expect,&#13;
but with the help of some&#13;
exceptional individuals I&#13;
learned that it was a task that I&#13;
could complete. Deborah&#13;
Hahm started as my Advertising&#13;
Manager and became a person&#13;
I will call friend for the remainder&#13;
of my days. She is intelligent,&#13;
caring and most importantly&#13;
she is not afraid to tell&#13;
me when Iam wrong. I also met&#13;
good fortune the day that I met&#13;
Professor Judy Logsdon. On a&#13;
countless number of occasions&#13;
I have called upon Professor&#13;
Logsdon to share her immense&#13;
wisdom. Not only has she been&#13;
willing to do so in the matters&#13;
of newspaper production, she&#13;
has also shared her intelligence&#13;
in the matters of life as well.&#13;
She is a strong, loyal and courageous&#13;
woman whose influence&#13;
I will continue to carry with me&#13;
long after my last issue of The&#13;
Ranger News is completed.&#13;
As I· prepare to lock the&#13;
office door one more time&#13;
behind me I am curious as to&#13;
what new and terrifying places&#13;
my life will take me. I never&#13;
expected to be the Editor-in-&#13;
Chief in a college newspaper&#13;
and I am certain that whatever&#13;
might come next will be equally&#13;
surprising and can only hope&#13;
that it will be as satisfying as my&#13;
job here at UWP"s student&#13;
newspaper The late jazz singer&#13;
Nina Simone states it best, "Tis&#13;
the morning of my life;' and I&#13;
look forward to walking&#13;
through the day into the&#13;
evening.&#13;
New editor&#13;
makes his&#13;
observations&#13;
Rusty Harris&#13;
After one semester here as a&#13;
student at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside, I have grown&#13;
accustomed to living a rich academic&#13;
and cultural lifestyle. I&#13;
attended a technical college&#13;
prior to attending UW-Parkside&#13;
where there were less students,&#13;
smaller class sizes, and smaller&#13;
classrooms. I have found that by&#13;
just walking from class to class&#13;
here one burns a lot of calories!&#13;
I was shocked when I went to&#13;
my first class and saw over fifty&#13;
students. Feeling overwhelmed&#13;
by these new surroundings and&#13;
new course work was difficult,&#13;
but after a few weeks of school I&#13;
felt a lot more at ease on campus.&#13;
I took a class called university&#13;
seminar and found that it&#13;
really helped me become&#13;
accustomed to university life.&#13;
The seminar taught me the&#13;
Do You Love Safely?&#13;
Safety is offered at the Student Health and Counseling Center&#13;
for a Small Price:&#13;
Male Condoms:&#13;
Female Condoms:&#13;
Dental Dams:&#13;
8/$1. 00&#13;
3/$4.00&#13;
May 1,2003 Page 7&#13;
• Affordable&#13;
• Stylish&#13;
• FunTo Drive&#13;
is wonderful, the professors are&#13;
very knowledgeable, and the&#13;
students here are nice. The&#13;
people here at UW-Parkside&#13;
have made me feel at home&#13;
and I think this speaks volumes&#13;
about this school and its curriculum.&#13;
I sense that the UWParkside&#13;
community is rich in&#13;
diversity and culture,&#13;
I will become Editor-in-&#13;
Chief of The Ranger News&#13;
beginning in the fall of 2003, so&#13;
feel free to stop by the office&#13;
and say hello! I look forward to&#13;
serving this school and representing&#13;
it in a positive manner.&#13;
Current Editor-in-Chief,Amber&#13;
Smith, has done an outstanding&#13;
job and I hope to mirror&#13;
what she has done in her time&#13;
as Editor-in-Chiefand am glad&#13;
that I will inherit a lot of the&#13;
tools she has put into place. I&#13;
have a lot to learn but I am&#13;
looking forward to working for&#13;
you.Your voices are essential to&#13;
this school and to the production&#13;
of a quality newspaper. I&#13;
hope you have a wonderful&#13;
summer and I will see you in&#13;
the fall'&#13;
,&#13;
\1&#13;
I&#13;
.- 3 .."&#13;
A __ ..&#13;
Page 8 May I, 2003 The Ranger News&#13;
Taking a closer look at the Ste~&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Guest reporter&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parksides Physical&#13;
Plant provides the&#13;
heat and air conditioning&#13;
to all the building&#13;
on campus. The heat is&#13;
supplied by high pressure&#13;
steam while the&#13;
airconditioning is provided&#13;
by chilled water.&#13;
Keeping the temperature&#13;
comfortable in all the buildings&#13;
the entire year is no easy task,&#13;
but the university staff takes to&#13;
the challenge gallantly. When a&#13;
problem does arise it is taken&#13;
care of efficiently and in a manner&#13;
that is well thought out.&#13;
arely is there a problem that !iS so large the university&#13;
staff is unable to handle it,&#13;
but on the occasions when such&#13;
problems do arise the staff&#13;
must depend on the assistance&#13;
of outside contractors.&#13;
Presently such a problem&#13;
does exist. There is a steam leak&#13;
between the Communication&#13;
Arts building and the Sports and&#13;
Activities building.&#13;
The steam through out campus&#13;
is kept at a constant pressure&#13;
of l25psi. This ensures that&#13;
there is enough heat to warm&#13;
Sports and Activities Center needs hot water all&#13;
year around and heating during the colder months&#13;
The steam leaks are around this area. They are&#13;
around 10 feet deep and surrounded by concrete&#13;
Commonly used toot path&#13;
for people traveling between&#13;
Comm Arts and the SAC&#13;
buildin&#13;
Steam is constantly drifting&#13;
towards the sky.&#13;
Expansion joints for expansion&#13;
and contraction. These are well&#13;
below the ground&#13;
the campus even on the coldest&#13;
days.&#13;
When there is a leak in a&#13;
steampipe the pressure drops&#13;
making the warming process&#13;
inefficient. When there is a leak&#13;
in an easily accessible area the&#13;
university staff is quick to make&#13;
the repairs. However, when - a;&#13;
there is a leak in a confined&#13;
space,such as the one between ti&#13;
the SAC and Communication tl&#13;
Arts buildings, it poses rE&#13;
increased dangers and a need b'&#13;
for more specialized machin- 31&#13;
ery. and specialized contractors b&#13;
  leak&#13;
l Access areas for inspecting&#13;
and working on equipment&#13;
Heating and Cooling Plant. In the foreground one of the two large heaters&#13;
capable of heating up the whole campus during the winter. Behind are the two&#13;
smaller heaters. It IS usually more efficient to run these smaller ones during&#13;
spnng, summer, and fall.&#13;
The Sports and Activities Building is&#13;
supplied by the underground steam&#13;
pipe. There are also other suppiy&#13;
pipes which give the SAC buiiding&#13;
child water for air conditioning and&#13;
power.&#13;
The grass was alwayS&#13;
green during winter&#13;
's cut away section shows what would&#13;
rwise be out of sight and underground.&#13;
only visible parts are the two access pits&#13;
north access is commonly seen spewsteam.&#13;
The pits are around 10ft deep.&#13;
pipe is laid in a concrete tunnel and can&#13;
reached at the bottom of the access area.&#13;
a~ceSSity.&#13;
tre were three holes in&#13;
t~ampipe leading between&#13;
hUildings. One has been&#13;
'eld and another patched,&#13;
)~ third will need to be&#13;
,eledthrough the use of&#13;
lOOlachinery.&#13;
University Sports&#13;
Page 10 May 1,2003 The Ranger News&#13;
Peng Her teaches Kung Fu class&#13;
in his chosen profession.&#13;
"It's a good opportunity to&#13;
learn Kung Fu", said Dennis&#13;
Butzen."It's free too."&#13;
Her teaches his students&#13;
escape techniques, various&#13;
fighting movements, and even&#13;
.wall climbing. He presents scenarios&#13;
to help students envision&#13;
how his teachings might&#13;
be useful.&#13;
"Karate, Tai Kwan Do, and&#13;
Kickboxing all have a similar&#13;
style," according to Jill Clark,&#13;
who is a student of Her's."Kung&#13;
Fu is completely different:'&#13;
All of Her's students recommend&#13;
his Kung Fu class and&#13;
plan on taking it as long as it is&#13;
offered at UW-Parkside.&#13;
With enough student interest,&#13;
Her hopes to teach Kung Fu&#13;
this summer. Students interested&#13;
should stop in the intramurclasses.&#13;
Peng Her started&#13;
instructing intramural Kung Fu&#13;
this semester, and his classes&#13;
are more than helpful in learning&#13;
self-defense techniques.&#13;
They are action-packed and&#13;
exciting.&#13;
Kung Fu is a Chinese form&#13;
of self-defense where fluid circular&#13;
movements of the arms&#13;
and legs are used to-attack an&#13;
opponent.&#13;
Her's students say that Kung&#13;
Fu has been a great learning&#13;
experience because his teaching&#13;
is very hands-on and never&#13;
boring. Some of his students&#13;
take the class because they&#13;
feel it will be useful in their&#13;
careers after they graduate.&#13;
Zachary Scott, for instance,&#13;
plans to become a police officer.&#13;
He said learning Kung Fu&#13;
will without a doubt be helpful&#13;
Her helps his students get ready to&#13;
practice Kung Fu movements.&#13;
Henry Gaskins&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Peng Her teaches students in his Kung Fu class how to&#13;
escape certain holds.&#13;
UW-Parkside has a student&#13;
who is so experienced in. martial&#13;
arts that he teaches his own&#13;
al office at the Sports Activity Center or call Intrarnurals&#13;
Director Tami Falk-Day at 595-2656.&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
2003 Softball Standings&#13;
As of A.M. April 28, 2003&#13;
GLVC&#13;
TEAM&#13;
SID Edwardsville&#13;
Northern Kentucky&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
Bellarmine&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
Wis.-parkside&#13;
Saint Joseph's&#13;
Quincy&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
OVERALL&#13;
W-L&#13;
17-3&#13;
15-5&#13;
15-5&#13;
13-7&#13;
12-8&#13;
11-9&#13;
11-9&#13;
7-13&#13;
4-14&#13;
3-15&#13;
0-20&#13;
Pet.&#13;
.850&#13;
.750&#13;
.750&#13;
.650&#13;
.600&#13;
.550&#13;
.550&#13;
.350&#13;
.222&#13;
.167&#13;
.000&#13;
W-L&#13;
39-9&#13;
35-13&#13;
26-18 .&#13;
24-16&#13;
26-17&#13;
25-18&#13;
24-25-1&#13;
18-28-1&#13;
10-29&#13;
13-29-1&#13;
0-30&#13;
Pet.&#13;
.813&#13;
.729&#13;
.591&#13;
.600&#13;
.605&#13;
.581&#13;
.490&#13;
.394&#13;
.256&#13;
.314&#13;
.000&#13;
Kristen Brestan practices batting with the help of Jennene Fields.&#13;
University Sport,&#13;
UWPARKSIDE&#13;
~ IJY DISC&#13;
-'If GOLF--&#13;
COURSE&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
"It's fun and&#13;
it's free." •&#13;
Sean Gonzales&#13;
Why do you play&#13;
disc golf?&#13;
"Just for fun."&#13;
• Danny&#13;
Gotschalk&#13;
"It's something to&#13;
do and it's free." •&#13;
Mike Mich&#13;
"You get to be outside." I&#13;
• Korrey Pyne&#13;
May 1,2003 Pa e II&#13;
"Because I'm the best."&#13;
• Eric Carroll&#13;
Spring Fling&#13;
DISC GOLF SALE&#13;
Buy 3 Discs,&#13;
Get 1 FREE!&#13;
Ranger Card Office&#13;
UW-Parkside Union&#13;
www.rangercard.uwp.edu&#13;
262-595-2345&#13;
We carry:&#13;
Page12 MayI,2003 TheRangerNew~s=======================_&#13;
#1 Spring Break Look no lurther! 12 Free 'llipsl Free Parties w!MlV free MealslDrinks&#13;
Hottest Destinations @ Lowest Prices Caribbean, Mexico, Florida, Padre Most Reliable&#13;
Company wwwsunsplashtoulS com 1-8()()..426-7710&#13;
ServieesOfrered&#13;
~ Questions about abortion? Make an inlormed choice. Call Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
POSITIONS AVAILABLE&#13;
United Council of UW Students has the following positions available&#13;
(positions may be for one or two years and are indicated as such):&#13;
ExECl1I'lVE DIRECTOR (lyr)&#13;
LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS DIRECTOR (2yr)&#13;
MULTICULTURALIsSUES DIRECTOR (lyr)&#13;
SHARED GOVERNANCE DIRECTOR (2yr)&#13;
WOMEN'S ISSUES DIRECTOR (2yr)&#13;
ORGANIZING Be COMMUNICATIONS (2yr)&#13;
United Council is the state student association for&#13;
the University of Wisconsin System. Currently,&#13;
United Council represents me students at 24 of&#13;
the 26 UW System campuses.&#13;
SKILLS AND KNOWLEDGE REQUIRED:&#13;
Good verbal and written communication skills&#13;
Familiarity with student issues&#13;
Ability to network with organizations concerned about higher education&#13;
Working knowledge of the UW System&#13;
Ability to work in a variety of situations and as a member of a team&#13;
Directors work an averageof 60 hours per week and attend monthly meetings on&#13;
weekends. Frequent in-state travel is also required.&#13;
To apply, send resume, coverletter and three referencecontacts.&#13;
Applications must be receivedvia email,fax (608.265.4070)or postal mail by'5pm,&#13;
Friday, May 16th, 2003. Interviews will be held Friday and Saturday, May30th &amp;:&#13;
31st&#13;
,2003in Madison, WI or viaphone.&#13;
For more information and detailed job descriptions: see www.unitedcouncil.net;&#13;
call608/263-3422;e-mail executive@unitedcouncil.net;or write to:&#13;
UNITED COUNCIL OF UW STUDENTS, INC.&#13;
ATTN: SEARCH AND SCREEN COMMITTEE&#13;
122 STATE STREET, SUITE 500&#13;
MADISON, WI 53703&#13;
United Council is an Equal Opportunity Employer.&#13;
De-Stress Yourself!&#13;
Now&#13;
By:ValeriMe endralla&#13;
Peer Health Educator&#13;
Term papers, presentations,&#13;
assignments, projects, final&#13;
exams....these, just to name a few,&#13;
can be sources of stress for students,&#13;
especially in the beginning 01&#13;
May. It i.s normal to leel some worry&#13;
belore this difficult time of the&#13;
semester, but letting these feelings&#13;
build up can be detrimental to your&#13;
health. Not allowing yoursell to destress&#13;
in healthy ways can lead to&#13;
anxiety, sleep deprivation,and a lowered&#13;
immune system making you&#13;
more susceptible to illness.&#13;
Unhealthy ways of dealing with&#13;
stress include irresponsible alcohol&#13;
consumption, increased caffeine&#13;
intake, and staying up too late at&#13;
night. These unhealthy tactics can&#13;
lead to even more stress in your&#13;
future.&#13;
So, what are some healthy&#13;
ways to de-stress? Well, the Peer&#13;
Health Educators will be holding a&#13;
Stress Relief event on Monday, May&#13;
5, through Wednesday. May 7. They&#13;
will have a table set up in Molinaro&#13;
where students can come by and&#13;
relief their stress in healthy ways.&#13;
Some things they can do include&#13;
making stress balls, marble paint,&#13;
play Nintendo 64, enter to win free&#13;
movie tickets to Tinseltown, and&#13;
much more! Teaming up with PASA&#13;
(Parkside Adult Student Alliance),&#13;
there will also be massage school&#13;
students on-hand to give FREE massages&#13;
for limited times throughout&#13;
the three-day event. Another added&#13;
bonus is a free party to students in&#13;
The Den (located on the ground&#13;
level of the Union) on Wednesday,&#13;
May 7, lrom 3pm-7pm. Bowling,&#13;
pool, loosball, air hockey, sure shot&#13;
basketball,and ping pong will all be&#13;
FREE to students between those&#13;
hours. Food is not included.&#13;
Stress is something that can&#13;
be managed if you know how to do&#13;
it. The Peer Health Educators invite&#13;
you to visit their Stress Relief event&#13;
and lind out which de-stressing&#13;
technique works best for you. Start&#13;
your summer off the right way-stress&#13;
free!&#13;
I(;he (;J?,an§er&amp;rews&#13;
would bke to congratulate&#13;
(;J?,ustpaJeanis on becom&#13;
in§ the 6'hlo/ 8LdzttJrfir&#13;
" the CiRan§er &amp;rews q(&#13;
eYal12003 and&#13;
~prin§ 200+&#13;
X:9ood luck ~ustp.&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
*&#13;
4-15-03&#13;
Worthless Check. Union. 8:48 am.&#13;
OHicers were dispatched to the&#13;
Union in response to several NSF&#13;
checks. Case pending.&#13;
4-23-03&#13;
Traffic Accident. Outer Loop&#13;
Rd/CTH G. 11:11 am. Two vehicles&#13;
collided in the Union parking lot.&#13;
There were no injuries.&#13;
4-23-03&#13;
Fire Drill. Sports Activity Center.&#13;
2:08pm. A fire drill was conducted&#13;
at the SAC. Building was evacuated,&#13;
alarm was reset.&#13;
4-23-03&#13;
Agency Assist. CTH Y/CTH E. 5:51&#13;
pm. Officers assisted KSD with a&#13;
driver&#13;
under the influence along with a&#13;
passenger with a warrant. Both&#13;
subjects were arrested.&#13;
4-24-03&#13;
Traffic Violation. STH 31/CTH E.&#13;
7:46 am. A citation was issued for&#13;
Operating a vehicle with a suspended&#13;
license.&#13;
Bat 4-24-03&#13;
Traffic Violation. CTH JR/CTH E.&#13;
7:37 pm. Citations were issued to a&#13;
driver for operating while suspended&#13;
and non-registration of a vehicle.&#13;
4-25-03&#13;
Liquor violation. University Apts..&#13;
12:08am. Officers responded to an&#13;
underage alcohol/noise complaint.&#13;
Several citations were issued.&#13;
4-25-03&#13;
Traffic violation. HWY E/30th Ave.&#13;
5:39am. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for a mandatory seatbelt violation.&#13;
Pancakes, Sausages Links, Scrambled Eggs,&#13;
Breakfast Breads, Milk, Juice, and Coffee.&#13;
With special&#13;
guests serving&#13;
the food and&#13;
beverages.&#13;
f~//f I'i&lt;tEl,q&#13;
FREEII!&#13;
fREElU&#13;
~~~~\\\&#13;
\~~~\\&#13;
.' "&#13;
Sponsored by Dining Service&#13;
May 1,2003 Page 13&#13;
4-26-03&#13;
Fire. Greenhouse/Service Road.&#13;
3:07 pm. An officer noticed smoke&#13;
coming from the service road by&#13;
the greenhouse. Dispatch called&#13;
the Fire Dept.&#13;
4-26-03&#13;
Traffic Accident. SAC Parking Lot.&#13;
5:05pm. Two vehicles collided in&#13;
the SAC lot. All passengers&#13;
declined medical attention.&#13;
disorderly conduct along with&#13;
charges of a 4th Degree Sexual&#13;
assault.&#13;
4-27-03&#13;
Security alarm. Wyllie. 10:23 pm.&#13;
Officers were dispatched as a&#13;
result of an active entry alarm.&#13;
Alarm was reset.&#13;
4-27-03&#13;
4th Degree Sexual AssaulUDisorderly&#13;
Conduct. Union. 12:19 am. A&#13;
subject was taken into custody for&#13;
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.Check your Account Balance&#13;
Track your Transaction History&#13;
Report your Card Lost or Stolen&#13;
www.rangercard.uwp.edu&#13;
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M"N"II~,MII~.~....,.~""3&#13;
... :.... PM - .~ MIDNI., .. I&#13;
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Opel) to all studel)ts&#13;
Rachel Baker&#13;
Luis Benevoglienti&#13;
Angela Berry&#13;
Erin Bozich&#13;
Kimberly Brogan&#13;
Shelley Brown&#13;
Tamara Bushweiler&#13;
Alicia Dietz&#13;
Gary Dreyer&#13;
Yoceline Espinoza&#13;
Ernesto Evangelista&#13;
Eric Finkelstein&#13;
Adrian Flores&#13;
Valentin Garcia&#13;
Merranda Houston&#13;
Richard Hoyt&#13;
Thad Jacobson&#13;
Jamie Jeka&#13;
Nikkie Kadri&#13;
Paul Kehrii&#13;
Shannon Kehring&#13;
DeAira Kennemer&#13;
Michael Kielas&#13;
Office Assistant-Res Life&#13;
Office Assistant-Res Life&#13;
Ranger Card Office&#13;
Cashier&#13;
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Office Assistant-Res Life&#13;
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Set-up.&#13;
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Rebecca Klindera&#13;
Cheryl Langel&#13;
Kashedra Logan&#13;
Rufus Manual&#13;
Joseline Marquez&#13;
Isaac Matus&#13;
Sabrina Morgan&#13;
Erin Nielsen&#13;
Tanya Perkins.&#13;
Sarah Rekenthaler&#13;
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Matt Simson&#13;
Ryan Strash&#13;
Dylan Strube&#13;
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Sponsored by Student Life&#13;
This advertisement was not paid for with state&#13;
appropriated funds.&#13;
The Ran er News Ma 1,2003 Pa e 15&#13;
Horrorscopes&#13;
By Madame Esme Cerridgynere Dragonflheinerstige CARTOON -CRAZE&#13;
Aries: (March 2 I-April 19) n$o2t,14gr6adduuaete.to late fees; you will By Deborah G. Hahm&#13;
You find out that you did not pay&#13;
the last installment for tuition. Scorpio: (Oct 24-Nov 21) BEACH FESTIVALS GARDENING SCHOOL TANNING you will not graduate. You aced all your finals, but BEER FINALS MOSQUITOS SHORTS VACATIONS&#13;
Taurus: (April 20-May 20) because of the 3 absents rule you&#13;
failed all your classes; you will not CAMP FIREWORKS MOTORCYCLE SUNBURN&#13;
Your High School Spanish classes graduate. CONCERTS FLIPFLOPS POOLS SWIMSUITS were not accepted; you will not&#13;
graduate. Sagittarius: (Nov 22-Dec&#13;
Gemini: (May 21-June 21) 21)&#13;
As you walk up to receive your Your professors have felt sorry W F R 0 I A S T H M N S L A V I T S E F diploma, your Math 101 teacher for you all of college and passed you hoping you would gain some I A V D R E E B E A C H I L I 0 V R E I stops you to say you didn't pass; inteJligence. They now realize&#13;
you will not graduate. that you will never be smarter M K T A R T H N I S T F G U F N S u Q R&#13;
Cancer: (June 22-July 22) than pudding but can't do any- Q 0 R Y S J I K M V I A D Q I M B N L E&#13;
thing about it; you will graduate.&#13;
You will receive a letter in the B U R A P W R E 0 Y H 0 N P S E U K C W&#13;
mail from the Library saying you Capricorn: (Dec 22-Jan 19) H C y A n H '" . T V E .. A ~ " H j) • .. .. QW~$.0.49 for an C¥~~?: t·:.~~. D 1'. !'!.:. n ,. ~ .- " , v '""'" .... d .. n ...&#13;
You refuse to pay because you You blacK mailed all at your pro-&#13;
fessors and received A's. The T M 0 S L U Q M 0 N R V 0 S I T 0 Y F R&#13;
never checked the book out; you Department chairs realized your&#13;
will not graduate. diabolical scheme; you will not I T M L F C L W R T y I B W K N I R M K&#13;
graduate, but you will get excel- S L 0 0 P L A N C H T Y W A 0 M G B T S leo: (July 23-Aug 22) lent recommendations for the&#13;
You realize that you took all of Spies-R-Us University. U R D E I T B 0 Y A R A M 0 S Q u V E S&#13;
your classes with out applying to N H C N L R U Y C 0 N C E R T S R I U W&#13;
Parks ide; you will not graduate. Aquarius: (Jan 20-Feb 21)&#13;
UW-Milwaukee has flunked you You will have a coughing fit as you B S T Y F I N A L S 0 P U P E Q u V C I&#13;
on the grounds that you never walk up the aisle for graduation, U V N M W E V U E K P L E W L M S S U M&#13;
showed up to you classes; you finding out too late that you have y S T T R M " will not graduate from there SARS; you will not graduate, but R U W C V P T S 0 G S E S&#13;
either. not because you didn't deserve it.&#13;
N I 0 P T Y J F E S E Y C W Q u 0 P L U&#13;
Virgo: (Aug 23-Sept 22) Pisces: (Feb 22-March 20) A D ·.F 0 J A L V I S W D K 0 P Y R H 0 I&#13;
You did not pass the Literacy Your reign over the geese as head R M 0 S Q u I T 0 S T A R W A J I C T&#13;
class from the Library; you will goose has been found out. A&#13;
not graduate. Attacks from the geese wifl L A C R I F G H V C M N Y R U N 0 A W S&#13;
diminish with your imprisonment.&#13;
G 0 H F A N I T I S H W A L M D E V libra: (Sept 23-0ct 23) as well as your subconscious I E&#13;
You have a parking ticket from power over the geese. Oh, you G A R D E N I N G W F E L M A P K I T K&#13;
freshman year that now total won't graduate either.&#13;
B&#13;
SHOULD I TRY&#13;
TO KISS HER?&#13;
WHAT IF I TRY&#13;
AND SHE OOESN'T&#13;
WANT TO?&#13;
WHAT IF SHE&#13;
WANTS TO BUT&#13;
I DON'TTRY?&#13;
I WONDER IF&#13;
THESE NEW SHOES&#13;
MATCH THIS DRESS&#13;
Do you doodle?&#13;
How about coming to&#13;
The Ranger News and&#13;
doing a doodle for us.&#13;
(we're talking about cartoons,)&#13;
Page 16 May I, 2003 The Ranger News&#13;
Also Free daytime activities include:&#13;
..&#13;
Novelty games, Crash (a Dave Matthew'.s tribute&#13;
band) and Native American Michael Jacobs and&#13;
lots of local talent. Outside the Sports &amp;&#13;
Activity Center from 1-6pm.&#13;
Tickets on sale April 16&#13;
$10 each or $15 at the door,&#13;
call 262-595-2345&#13;
lU~8~ or: ,'.~ _&#13;
The University of Wisconsin- Parks ide provides services for patrons with special&#13;
needs. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595·2345 .&#13;
Sponsored by The End Committee&#13;
This adv~rtisement was not paid for with state appropriated funds.</text>
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