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              <text>PAB denies discrimination&#13;
Minority students seek input, programs&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
Charges of discrimination have&#13;
been denied by representatives of&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
and Tony Totero, director of&#13;
Student Activities and&#13;
Programming.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of&#13;
the Concert Committee of the&#13;
PAB, said in reference to those&#13;
charging discrimination, "I think&#13;
they're full of it. The PAB is wide&#13;
open to membership, and free."&#13;
"I'm against segregation in&#13;
any way, shape or form," said&#13;
Totero.&#13;
Erwin Wright, a student PAB&#13;
member last year and newlyapproved&#13;
member this year,&#13;
voiced the complaints of many&#13;
Parkside's Kim Merritt won&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union's&#13;
(AAU) National Marathon&#13;
Championship for women last&#13;
Sunday. The 26-mile, 385-yard&#13;
event was run in Central Park,&#13;
New York. Merritt, a junior, ran&#13;
the course in record time, while&#13;
establishing herself as an AAU&#13;
national champion.&#13;
Merritt, a product of Racine&#13;
Case High School, was the only&#13;
Parkside runner there. Lucian&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Has this year's student&#13;
government changed from the&#13;
back biting power playing wasy&#13;
of last year's organization?&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
spent a good part of their meeting&#13;
last week discussing a motion to&#13;
censure vice presiident, Kai Nail.&#13;
Censure is an official reprimand&#13;
issued by the Senate and is&#13;
usually taken quite seriously.&#13;
Senate wanted to speak&#13;
The Senate had privately&#13;
decided to vote against the&#13;
motion before it was even in-.&#13;
troduced. Leslie Burns,&#13;
President Protempore, said the&#13;
motion was made because it was&#13;
the only way the body knew to get&#13;
the floor and air their grievances.&#13;
She assured that everyone had&#13;
decided before-hand to vote&#13;
against the motion, to censure.&#13;
However, their intent was not&#13;
made obvious during the&#13;
discussion.&#13;
A 5 minute recess had been&#13;
called after hearing committee&#13;
reports and Senators clustered&#13;
outside the conference room,&#13;
apparently involved in a&#13;
discussion. They filed in, took&#13;
their seats, and the motion was&#13;
made to censure Nail for using&#13;
Parliamentaly procedure to&#13;
express personal opinions. It was&#13;
seconded almost before it had&#13;
been fully stated.&#13;
Nail, who had the legal right to&#13;
a closed meeting in consideration&#13;
of the topic, waived that right and&#13;
campus minority members, "In&#13;
the past, there has been certain&#13;
forms of - ra cial discrimination&#13;
which have been portrayed by the&#13;
Parkside Activity Board."&#13;
Specific biases mentioned,&#13;
were lack of programming for&#13;
minorities, unfair handling of&#13;
minorities at PAB-sponsored&#13;
events, smaller amounts of&#13;
money going toward minority&#13;
programming, lack of minorities&#13;
on the PAB and unwillingness to&#13;
attract area minorities to PAB&#13;
programs.&#13;
A dance by "Harvey Scales and&#13;
the Seven Sounds" last year,&#13;
caused, according to Wright, "a&#13;
lot of hassles for blacks who lived&#13;
out of state because they had no&#13;
Rosa, former Parkside track&#13;
star, was going to run in the sixth&#13;
annual New York Marathon for&#13;
men, in conjunction with which&#13;
the women's race was held, but&#13;
he was bothered by an injury and&#13;
did not compete.&#13;
Running her first marathon as&#13;
a freshman, Merritt finished in&#13;
seventh place last year in both&#13;
the mile and the two-mile AIAW&#13;
meet.&#13;
allowed the meeting to proceed.&#13;
Beer buying important&#13;
In reaction to the motion, Nail&#13;
said,"I think it's funny that&#13;
you're accusing me of overstepping&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order,&#13;
when I don't think you know what&#13;
they are."&#13;
Discussion of the censure&#13;
motion ranged from rationally&#13;
made complaints on procedure to&#13;
more emotionally charged&#13;
claims of undying friendship.&#13;
Another issue which seemed to be&#13;
involved, revolved around the&#13;
question of w ho had bought beer&#13;
for whom in the past, and who&#13;
was to treat in the future.&#13;
Use of profanity at meetings&#13;
was also brought up when Nail,&#13;
apparently surprised at the&#13;
criticism about him, said, "it's&#13;
too bad no one had the balls to tell&#13;
me this before the meeting. I&#13;
really think that's shitty." one&#13;
Senator contended that words&#13;
such as balls and shit are not&#13;
appropriate for formal meetings.&#13;
Nail threatens resignation&#13;
Boro Bosovich, Senator,&#13;
assured Nail that the censure&#13;
action was nothing personal&#13;
saying, "I still like you as a&#13;
friend. In fact, after the meeting&#13;
I'll buy you a beer."&#13;
Some discussion was directly&#13;
pertinent to the issue.&#13;
Nail was accused by Ed&#13;
Bielarezyk, Senator, of d irecting&#13;
rather than presiding over the&#13;
Senate, and was reminded that&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order calls for&#13;
the presiding officer to give the&#13;
state ID to confirm their age. Yet&#13;
PAB members who were not&#13;
working were let in without their&#13;
ID's being checked."&#13;
The "Scales" dance, the only&#13;
minority-directed activity last&#13;
year, cost $500. Wright questions&#13;
why PAB can pay Doc Severinsen&#13;
$13,000 an d so small an amount&#13;
for a group of black interest.&#13;
Only two blacks, Hayes Norman&#13;
and Wright, are now on the&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
"Suggestions that I'm against&#13;
black groups coming to campus&#13;
because they might attract a&#13;
rowdy element that would&#13;
damage facilities are completely&#13;
false," said Totero. "I don't think&#13;
that and have never said&#13;
anything to that effect."&#13;
Totero feels that it is easy to sit&#13;
back and blame a group. "Last&#13;
year there were no major concerts&#13;
because of o ur budget. But&#13;
minorities have never shown an&#13;
interest in sitting on the Activities&#13;
Board. Honest efforts are&#13;
being made to contact groups&#13;
that would appeal to blacks,"&#13;
Totero said. Negotiations are in&#13;
process to book Minnie Riperton.&#13;
Totero does not like to make&#13;
generalizations about any group.&#13;
"All blacks don't like soul music&#13;
just as all white students didn't&#13;
like Doc Severinsen. If we talk&#13;
types of m usic and their appealjazz,&#13;
soul, folk, rock, etc.-then&#13;
chair to another party when he&#13;
feels he can't be neutral on a&#13;
certain subject.&#13;
William Ferko, Senator, admitting&#13;
that censure was a bit&#13;
harsh, said that Nail had&#13;
probably put more work into the&#13;
Senate than all of them combined,&#13;
but that he had probably&#13;
over-stepped his bounds a little.&#13;
After some discussion Nail&#13;
threatened his resignation&#13;
saying, "I hate to be used as an&#13;
excuse for not getting anything&#13;
done. The hassle isn't worth it to&#13;
me. If I'm censured I'll resign,&#13;
it's as simple as that."&#13;
He found solace in the fact that&#13;
the Senate was acting as a body&#13;
against him, since it indicated&#13;
that they weren't breaking up in&#13;
opposing camps as happened last&#13;
year.&#13;
Nail did, however, regret the&#13;
fact that no one had previously&#13;
spoken to him on the subject&#13;
saying, "you could all let me buy&#13;
you a beer in the Union the other&#13;
night but you couldn't level with&#13;
me."&#13;
Student quieted&#13;
Karen Ficcadenti, a student&#13;
spectator, had been quietly&#13;
listening to the meeting, occasionally&#13;
showing signs of&#13;
disqust and amusement. But,&#13;
finally out of pure disqust she&#13;
spoke, condemming the Senate&#13;
for their actions.&#13;
Among other things, she said,&#13;
"this is the first time I've seen a&#13;
PSGA meeting and I'm sick. This&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
we are more accurate," he said.&#13;
He feels it would be perpetuating&#13;
the old system of&#13;
prejudice to divide the students&#13;
into groups. "We should&#13;
recognize differences and&#13;
program for them but certainly&#13;
not on a percentage basis,"&#13;
Totero added.&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks and Julian&#13;
Bond can be considered black&#13;
speakers, Totero feels, "but that&#13;
would be misleading. They have&#13;
appeal for everyone. If we went&#13;
on a percentage basis, the black&#13;
part of the budget would be&#13;
overdrawn by just those two&#13;
speakers." Gwendolyn Brooks&#13;
will receive $850; Julian Bond,&#13;
$1500.&#13;
According to Sue Wesley,&#13;
programming director of PAB,&#13;
"Most students just have no idea&#13;
of the problems in booking&#13;
groups. Many large groups&#13;
prefer a larger facility and&#13;
market than Parkside. Then&#13;
there is their availability, price,&#13;
and technical requirements. One&#13;
group we talked to had 24 p ages&#13;
of tech specifications."&#13;
The Parkside Activity Board is&#13;
considered successful if they&#13;
break even financially at the end&#13;
of the year. Doc Severinsen&#13;
replaced a scheduled Cannonball&#13;
Adderly concert. (Adderly died&#13;
late in the summer.) Severinsen&#13;
was to be playing in Iowa, had an&#13;
open date on his way back to New&#13;
York and approached the&#13;
University with a discount rate.&#13;
Peggy Hanson, PAB member&#13;
termed the Severinsen event&#13;
financially good. "We made back&#13;
most of the price we put into it. It&#13;
is necessary to appeal to as large&#13;
a cross-section as possible."&#13;
Agreeing, Strutynski added,&#13;
"Educated guesses as to a&#13;
group's fee, the physical cost of&#13;
putting the show together, and&#13;
the anticipated revenue are&#13;
brought together. If they don't&#13;
equal one another, if it's not a&#13;
break-even situation, then we&#13;
won't even consider a group."&#13;
Strutynski stressed, "Any&#13;
student at Parkside is open for&#13;
membership on PAB. The&#13;
Concert Committee works by the&#13;
democratic process. The&#13;
majority rules, although we try to&#13;
have a consensus of opinion."&#13;
When asked, Strutynski confirmed&#13;
that increased minority&#13;
participation could make them&#13;
the majority on PAB.&#13;
Totero encourages minorities,&#13;
adult students, Chicands, Indians,&#13;
any interested student, to&#13;
join PAB. He said, "Hopefully,&#13;
the coming together of different&#13;
minorities on campus, with a&#13;
willingness to work together with&#13;
other members of the student&#13;
body, will bring some type of&#13;
unity that will serve the goals of&#13;
all students."&#13;
Student silenced&#13;
PSGA fails in attempt to&#13;
censure Vice President&#13;
Softly walking through autumn browned fields, I tread&#13;
on rustic skinned pine needles,&#13;
their frozen little shapes strewn everywhere&#13;
and the newborn needles cooing with the wind.&#13;
Traveling through the cornfield, the chugging&#13;
faintly reaches me. A puff of s moke&#13;
escorts the morning air, below it an old&#13;
John Deere crawling along munching its usual autumn breakfast.&#13;
I finally reach home, taking note&#13;
of wood that has gone uncut. After the last&#13;
dried life is split I remember your early morning words,&#13;
speaking of the love we shared now dying.&#13;
My eyes began to glisten and a salty tear&#13;
fell to your warm cheek. Touch it.&#13;
Gary Rost&#13;
Alsop concert will be free&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board will present a free concert by Pet&lt;&#13;
Alsop on Thursday, Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. in the Activities Building.&#13;
Sometimes billed as a "good time guitar player," Alsop is als&#13;
known for his wit and satire. Although Alsop performs serious song,&#13;
he is best known for satirical numbers and guitar playing.&#13;
Parkside's Merritt&#13;
wins 26 mile event &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
LL-VVL-LcB&#13;
VLL V LUli&#13;
LLUVLJL3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On October 22nd and 23rd, 1975,&#13;
the P.S.G.S., Inc., will hold&#13;
general elections for Divisional&#13;
Seats in the Senate and&#13;
Allocations Committee. Students&#13;
running for a Divisional Seat&#13;
must have declared a major or&#13;
major area of interest in that&#13;
division prior to or in the Spring&#13;
Semester, 1975. Those students&#13;
who have not declared a major or&#13;
major area of interest prior to or&#13;
in the Spring Semester 1975 may&#13;
run for a Undeclared Seat (two&#13;
positions to be available in the&#13;
P.S.G.S., Inc., Office (WLLC DTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
Would you please include this&#13;
appeal to the students in your&#13;
next issue?&#13;
The Tutorial Service needs&#13;
your help and hopes to help you in&#13;
return. Many students on campus&#13;
need tutors, especially in&#13;
Chemistry, Math, and Life&#13;
Science. If you are academically&#13;
qualified, we invite you to join us&#13;
in a student-to-student tutoring&#13;
program. Your hours would be&#13;
flexible to fit your schedule.&#13;
This year, with the new&#13;
Probation and Drop policy, the&#13;
173) from October 6th through&#13;
October 16th. Petitions must be&#13;
filled and turned into the Senate&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee by 5&#13;
p.m. October 16th.&#13;
Any students interested in&#13;
participating in the running of the&#13;
elections please contact Ed&#13;
Bielarczyk, Chairperson,&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee,&#13;
P.S.G.S., Inc., or any other&#13;
member of the Committee.&#13;
Messages can be left at the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., Office.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk&#13;
service is in increased demand,&#13;
but we cannot afford to pay tutors&#13;
unless they have financial aid&#13;
(Work-Study). However, through&#13;
cooperation with the Education&#13;
Division, volunteers can earn&#13;
academic fcredit for participating&#13;
in the program as a tutor. Inservice&#13;
training is provided. If&#13;
you are interested in helping,&#13;
please contact me as soon as&#13;
possible in Tallent Hall 115, phone&#13;
553-2289 for further information&#13;
and application.&#13;
Abisola Gallaher&#13;
Coosdinator of Tutorial Services&#13;
Commentary&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
The politicians in Madison are at it again. Their latest inept act is in&#13;
the vein of typical political jive. Two Kenosha Republicans, George&#13;
Molinaro and Eugene Dorff, are currently sponsoring a bill to have the&#13;
Wisconsin University board of Regents changed from the traditional&#13;
Governor appointee system, to a new politically elected fiasco. The&#13;
bill, if p assed, would give the people of the state the right to elect the&#13;
college board. Each congressional district would elect and then send&#13;
their representative.&#13;
Even though Molinaro and Doff have extremely good intentions, it is&#13;
stil),, a valuable waste of time. Their sincere efforts in other areas&#13;
would be greatly appreciated.&#13;
The bill is currently stuck in the Wisconsin Education Committee&#13;
pending a public hearing. The Committee is headed by Racine&#13;
Democrat Michael Farrell. Farrell is a good friend of the Governor,&#13;
Patrick Lucey, and can be expected to keep this bill as a minor annoyance&#13;
rather then a serious threat. The Governor surely will not'like&#13;
a bill that decreases some of his appointee powers, since he probably&#13;
has a lot of old debts to pay to faithful democratic educators.&#13;
In time, however, the bill might have a slight chance, especially if&#13;
there is a change in Governorship from Democratic to Republican,&#13;
and if the Assembly changes similarity. But, don't hold your breath.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
IxUjIilrQLi&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by&#13;
the students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content. Offices are locat ed in D194 WLLC, U.W.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295,&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Feature Editor: Michael Palecek&#13;
Writers: Jeff Sweneki, Jeanine Sipsma, Betsy Neu, Ann&#13;
Verstegen, Bruce Wagne r, Walt Ulbricht, Bill Robbins,&#13;
Carol Arentz, amy cundari.&#13;
Photographers: Mike Nepper, Al Fredrickson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Regarding the proposed&#13;
Student Disciplinary Guidelines,&#13;
I would be interested to know why&#13;
the United Council of Student&#13;
Governments would ever prefer&#13;
to see students handled by "law&#13;
enforcement personnel" rather&#13;
than the University. The thought&#13;
of arrest, possible fine or sentence,&#13;
and a permanent record&#13;
downtown, seems far less&#13;
desirable than a confidential file&#13;
in the Dean of Students Office,&#13;
destroyed after one year, and&#13;
whatever other disciplinary&#13;
action the University may take&#13;
(which, at Parkside at least,&#13;
rarely includes suspension or&#13;
expulsion).&#13;
The court system is not the only&#13;
guarantee of fair treatment, and&#13;
the ability of the University to&#13;
accord each student internal due&#13;
process rather than subjecting&#13;
him or her to arrest and criminal&#13;
proceedings, would be beneficial&#13;
to all, including the crowded&#13;
courts and especially the&#13;
students. The UW could insure&#13;
fairness by establishing and&#13;
following hearing procedures&#13;
that allow an accused student a&#13;
choice of equitable options,&#13;
similar to that outlined in the&#13;
proposed guidelines, plus ample&#13;
provisions for appeal.&#13;
I understand our student&#13;
government is a member of the&#13;
United Council, but I do not feel&#13;
UC is representing the best interests&#13;
of students in its insistence&#13;
that non-academic&#13;
misconduct require police involvement.&#13;
Kent State is an&#13;
extreme example, but an&#13;
example nonetheless, of what can&#13;
happen when "law enforcement&#13;
personnel" are asked to handle&#13;
matters meriting University&#13;
attention and possible action. UC&#13;
should realize that if it gets its&#13;
way, local police could use such a&#13;
procedure to justify any and all&#13;
forays onto the campuses "to&#13;
investigate" misconduct, make&#13;
arrests, or just see what the&#13;
college "radicals" are up to that&#13;
particular day. Uptight administrators&#13;
or campus cops&#13;
could interpret it as giving them&#13;
license to call in the boys in blue&#13;
whenever tempers rise above 32&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit. Students a&#13;
little drunk and disorderly in the&#13;
Union could find themselves&#13;
cooling off in the county jail. Such&#13;
a regulation would be granting&#13;
excessive discretionary power to&#13;
campus security personnel as&#13;
well as local police and sheriff.&#13;
I strongly urge our student&#13;
government to forcefully dissent&#13;
from United Council's position,&#13;
and I hope students will look at&#13;
the proposed guidelines (copies&#13;
are available from the Info&#13;
kiosk). There are some problems&#13;
with them, and student input to&#13;
strengthen them in our favor&#13;
before they receive Regent approval,&#13;
is vital if we are to protect&#13;
ourselves from the possibility of&#13;
arbitrary disciplinary action.&#13;
Jane Schliesman&#13;
The following table lists registration deadlines and test dates for the&#13;
major professional and post graduate tests. The Placement Office, 107&#13;
Tallent Hall, has the applications for all of these tests.&#13;
GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST DATES&#13;
1975-76&#13;
Allied Health Professions Admission Test&#13;
Test Date&#13;
Nov. 15&#13;
Jan 24&#13;
March 13&#13;
May 15&#13;
Closing Date&#13;
Oct. 25&#13;
Jan 3&#13;
Feb. 21&#13;
April 24&#13;
Dental Admission Testing Proqram Oct 4&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
April 24&#13;
Oct. 9&#13;
Sept. 8&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
March 29&#13;
Sept 13&#13;
Federal Service Entrance Examination Nov. 8&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
Feb. 14&#13;
March 13&#13;
April 10&#13;
May 8&#13;
Oct. 20&#13;
Dec. 20&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
March 20&#13;
April 20&#13;
Graduate Management Admission Test&#13;
(formerly Admission Test for Graduate&#13;
Study in Business)&#13;
Nov. 1&#13;
Jan. 31&#13;
March 27&#13;
July 10[&#13;
Oct. 10&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
March 5&#13;
June 18&#13;
Graduate Record Examination Oc t. 18&#13;
Dec. 13&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
Feb. 28&#13;
April 24&#13;
June 12&#13;
Sept. 3&#13;
Oct 29&#13;
Nov. 26&#13;
Feb. 4&#13;
March 6&#13;
May 19&#13;
Law School Admission Bulletin&#13;
Oct. 11&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
April 10&#13;
July 24&#13;
Sept. u&#13;
Nov. 10&#13;
Jan. 8&#13;
March 11&#13;
June 24&#13;
National Teacher Examinations Nov 8&#13;
Feb. 21&#13;
July 17&#13;
Oc t. 16&#13;
Jan. 29&#13;
June 24&#13;
Optometry College Admission Test Nov. l&#13;
Jan. 17&#13;
March 20&#13;
Oct. 11&#13;
Dec. 27&#13;
Feb. 28&#13;
Pharmacy College Admission Test Nov. 8&#13;
Feb. 14&#13;
May 22&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
Jan. 24&#13;
May 1&#13;
Colleges of Podiatry Admission Test&#13;
Sept. 27&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
July 17&#13;
Sept. 1&#13;
Nov. 10&#13;
Jan 12&#13;
"r„rsy&#13;
E&#13;
"&#13;
m ,or Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
April 3&#13;
Aug. 7&#13;
Nov. 15&#13;
Jan. 17&#13;
March 13&#13;
July 17&#13;
meo.cai college Admission Test ~~~~~——————&#13;
For information regarding this test contact:&#13;
John Elmore ?,r&#13;
553-2452 Anna M. Williams&#13;
553-2441 &#13;
Mini college to deal with&#13;
series of women's concerns&#13;
.Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
PSGA meeting&#13;
A Mini-Capsule College&#13;
focusing on the concerns of&#13;
today's woman will be held&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 18, at Parkside.&#13;
The program will deal exclusively&#13;
with women's issues.&#13;
The event is one in a series of&#13;
programs in recognition of the&#13;
International Women's Year&#13;
sponsored by Parkside,&#13;
University Extension, Carthage&#13;
College and Gateway Technical&#13;
Institue.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
Oct. 6 and registration forms are&#13;
available from the Extension&#13;
Office and Information Kiosk,&#13;
Carthage, Gateway and public&#13;
libraries in Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
luncheon.&#13;
Keynote speaker will be&#13;
Ruberta Weaver of Madison,&#13;
whoe topic is "Women and&#13;
Communicating: How to Say&#13;
What You Mean."&#13;
Following her talk there will be&#13;
two one-hour-fifteen-minute&#13;
sessions during which participants&#13;
may choose one of three&#13;
seminar topics offered during&#13;
each time period.&#13;
Topics during the first time&#13;
period will be "Women's Rights&#13;
and the I,aw," a discussion of&#13;
women's rights today and&#13;
changes taking place in various&#13;
areas of the law with particular&#13;
emphasis on Wisconsin and the&#13;
There is a $4 fee which includes state lefislature, by a panel of&#13;
Hickory Wind&#13;
foot stompin'&#13;
hv .Tim Vnrffan&#13;
women attorneys chaired by&#13;
Barbara Burman, a Milwaukee&#13;
lawyer; "Women Alone," a&#13;
consideration of the concerns of&#13;
the single, divorced or widowed&#13;
woman including social pattersn&#13;
and personal life styles, by&#13;
Velma Ginsberg, a pyschologist&#13;
for theLakeland Counseling&#13;
Center and Walworth County;&#13;
and "The Competent Woman -&#13;
How to Get Organized," which&#13;
includes clutter-clearing secrets&#13;
and management techniques, by&#13;
Alma Baron of the department of&#13;
business and management at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Topics for the second time&#13;
period are "Career Change," a&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
by Jim Yorgan&#13;
What is this phenomena that&#13;
causes swollen, red hands, feet&#13;
that refuse to sit still, and vocal&#13;
outbursts of whoops and yahoos.&#13;
The experienced observer&#13;
recognizes these symptoms as&#13;
the external signs of the binary&#13;
implosion of beer and bluegrass.&#13;
At 8 p.m. the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board presented both, in&#13;
abundance, at the Student Activities&#13;
Building. "Hickory&#13;
Wind" brought us their brand of&#13;
American and European&#13;
bluegrass in the finest tradition.&#13;
For those unacquainted with&#13;
bluegrass, the standard instrumentation&#13;
is guitar, fiddle,&#13;
bass, banjo, and mandolin. This&#13;
arrangement was augmented by&#13;
the hammer dulcimer and an&#13;
occasional kazoo. The players:&#13;
Sam Morgan, Mark Walbridge,&#13;
Glenn Macarthy, Bob Shank, and&#13;
Pete Tenney picked, bowed,&#13;
hummed, strummed, and&#13;
hammered for three hours&#13;
straight, pausing only to read&#13;
their mail from the request box.&#13;
Songs titled Insect Love Affairs&#13;
and The Baltimore Fire were&#13;
received with the same ecstatic&#13;
enthusiasm as the old standards,&#13;
Black Mountain Rag and Cuckoo.&#13;
The dorian modal interpretations&#13;
of G ive the Fiddler A Dram and&#13;
Babylon's Fallen lent a haunting,&#13;
Irish taste and exhibited&#13;
continued from page I&#13;
is probably the most childish&#13;
thing I've ever seen in my life."&#13;
In retaliation, Robert Turner,&#13;
Senator, questioned her&#13;
knowledge of politics. As she&#13;
began to answer, Burns, who was&#13;
currently chairing the meeting,&#13;
cut her off sa ying that she had to&#13;
be recognized.&#13;
Ficcadenti apologized, and did&#13;
not attempt to speak for the&#13;
remainder of the meeting. One&#13;
student voice was effectively&#13;
silenced.&#13;
Senator suggests seminar&#13;
At one point in the discussion,&#13;
Avis Weber, Senator, announced&#13;
that she had a few things to say&#13;
and was going to take her time&#13;
saying them. She contended that&#13;
there was a lack of co nsideration&#13;
displayed by all members of the&#13;
Senate, including President and&#13;
Vice-president.&#13;
"This is not a tightly bound&#13;
council. In order for us to work&#13;
together, we must know each&#13;
other, be familiar with faces,&#13;
ideals, and personalities. I think&#13;
if we can conquer that, the&#13;
problem will be somehwat&#13;
limited."&#13;
"There is no interpersonal&#13;
interaction between all of us and&#13;
this is what we need."&#13;
Weber then made a friendly&#13;
amendment that the Senate meet&#13;
once a month in a seminar&#13;
(omit ting P a rli a m e n tar y&#13;
procedure) in order to discuss&#13;
problems at Parkside and to get&#13;
to know each other better.&#13;
Somehow it seemed an appropriate&#13;
place for applause, but&#13;
instead Burns quickly declared&#13;
the amendment unacceptable&#13;
because of i ts lack of pertinence&#13;
to the motion on the floor.&#13;
Burns attempted to ask several&#13;
times about the meaning of a&#13;
"friendly amendment," but was&#13;
effectively ignored by the chair.&#13;
Censure is defeated&#13;
Finally, the vote on the censure&#13;
motion was ready to be taken.&#13;
Nail questioned, "does anyone&#13;
see how similar this is to what&#13;
happened in last year's Senate?"&#13;
The Senate answered by giving a&#13;
unanimous negative decision on&#13;
censure.&#13;
For those unfamiliar with last&#13;
year's Senate, threats of c ensure&#13;
were usually used to sway&#13;
opinions during power struggles.&#13;
No one was ever officially censured&#13;
that year.&#13;
So, the Senate went on to other&#13;
business with Leslie Burns&#13;
serving as chairperson.&#13;
Avis Weber's words about&#13;
interpersonal communication&#13;
come to mind while watching the&#13;
rest of the meeting.&#13;
Someone comments on the&#13;
amount of w ork to be done, "out&#13;
of order," Burns snaps without&#13;
looking up from her paper. And&#13;
so it goes.&#13;
"Hickory Wind's" fine&#13;
musicianship, as each member of&#13;
the band took a break (solo)&#13;
while the others backed him up.&#13;
The final number, Orange&#13;
Blossom Special, had the crowd&#13;
hootin' and stompin' everytime&#13;
the violin signaled yet another&#13;
increase in tempo. Calls for&#13;
"more" were met with a version&#13;
of But It's All Over Now by the&#13;
"Stones."&#13;
For this glowing moment,&#13;
Parkside's typical rigidity was&#13;
swept aside and replaced by&#13;
dance, music, and wiggles. A&#13;
trend this writer welcomes with a&#13;
sigh of relief.&#13;
Grandpa is dying tdo.&#13;
Like last summer,&#13;
Only a little more.&#13;
But you still give him a napkin&#13;
When he easts his evening tomato;&#13;
After all, who isn't always dying a little?&#13;
And you write poems.&#13;
Hoping not to sound sentimental;&#13;
But you do.&#13;
And instead of becoming frustrated&#13;
By your lack of ability to overcome the ordinary,&#13;
Or want of creativity;&#13;
You just stretch out on the front lawn&#13;
like a languid, reclining moon goddess,&#13;
Fan yourself with your notebook,&#13;
And let the dripping Dairy Queens&#13;
From passing car windows&#13;
Be your silvery tears.&#13;
CyndiJensen&#13;
Those long, still summer nights.&#13;
The ones where:&#13;
The screen door creaks on its way to a slamming close;&#13;
A dog gets chased for lifting his leg on Ma's&#13;
Favorite bush;&#13;
The kids all along the block cry through&#13;
The breathless night air with green-apple stomach aches;&#13;
And watermelon seeds stick to your chin&#13;
Like the bluebottles on the sugar-coated fly paper&#13;
Hanging from the kitchen light.&#13;
• WITH THIS G 0UPE3N&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I ANY NEW RELEASE,&#13;
8 6 . 9 8 b . P S 8 7 . 9 8 T A PE S&#13;
$ 4 . 2 9&#13;
J Q N L T&#13;
O N E S W E E T D RI A .M&#13;
5 Q 10 7 T H A V E N U E&#13;
O N LY&#13;
$ 5 . 4 0&#13;
KENBStifl&#13;
photo by Mike Palacek &#13;
4 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
"Etc." King is first&#13;
of skellar lectures&#13;
by nV AAnn ntl Verstnrrnn • • tegen&#13;
^ E . Scott Baudhuin, campus&#13;
"Etc." king, dirty word expert&#13;
and assistant professor of&#13;
communications, will speak&#13;
today in the Skellar at the first in&#13;
a series of Professor lectures.&#13;
Baudhuin will speak at 11:30 on&#13;
two topics, "Body LanguageNon-Verbal&#13;
Communication,"&#13;
and "Graffiti." "it's ironic,"&#13;
Baudhuin said. "We had some&#13;
really good graffiti in the Skellar.&#13;
Bill Sanders, Milwaukee Journal&#13;
cartoonist, did his famous Nixon&#13;
right on the wall. Unfortunately,&#13;
they painted right over it!"&#13;
The "Etc." king title comes&#13;
with the territory. Baudhuin&#13;
teaches General Semantics, a&#13;
new way of thinking which helps&#13;
in coping with a complex world.&#13;
Korzybski, the Polish tank&#13;
driver, as Baudhuin calls him,&#13;
who founded General Semantics,&#13;
preferred being conscious of a&#13;
permanent et cetera instead of&#13;
having a dogmatic, period-andstop&#13;
attitude. The national&#13;
magazine for general semanticists&#13;
is titled "Etc." Baudhuin&#13;
has had many articles in "Etc."&#13;
The most recent, in June 1975,&#13;
was titled "Rational Emotive&#13;
Therapy and General Semantitherapy:&#13;
A Review and Comparison."&#13;
&#13;
The article came out of an&#13;
invitation by Dr. Albert Ellis of&#13;
the Institute for Advanced Study&#13;
in Rational Psychotherapy, to&#13;
attend a Rational Therapy&#13;
workshop at the American&#13;
Psychological Association&#13;
Convention in New Orleans. "I&#13;
corresponded with Dr. Ellis and&#13;
got really interested. His therapy&#13;
is very close to general semantics.&#13;
He is a very persuasive&#13;
man," Baudhuin said.&#13;
Of his general semantics&#13;
course, Baudhuin said, "Students&#13;
find it hard to switch their way of&#13;
thinking. General Semantics is&#13;
almost a philosophy tether than&#13;
Music faculty will&#13;
present free concert&#13;
Flutist Joyce Bottje will be guest artist for a concert with harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford of the Parkside music faculty at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Sept. 28, in Room 103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
They will be assisted by three new members of the Parkside music&#13;
faculty, Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano; Timothy Bell, clarinet; and&#13;
Richard Piippo, cello.&#13;
The free public program will include Episodes for Flute and Harpsichord&#13;
(1969), written for the guest artist by her husband, Will Gay&#13;
Bottje of the University of Illinois-Carbondale music faculty and&#13;
Mario Davidovsky's Synchronisms (1963) for flute and electronic&#13;
sounds.&#13;
In addition, the group will present Rameau's Pieces de Clavecin en&#13;
Concert and J.S. Bach's Sonata VI in E Major for flute, harpsichord&#13;
and cello, and Four Fragments from Chaucer's "The Canterbury&#13;
Tales," a 16th Century text in a modern setting by Lester Trimble for&#13;
mezzo soprano, clarinet and harpsichord.&#13;
Novels, psychology are course&#13;
How recent novelists have used modern psychological theories to&#13;
explore the inner recesses of human thought and feeling will be considered&#13;
in a University of Wisconsin-Extension noncredit course&#13;
beginning September 29. James Alan Runnels, who earned his Ph. D.&#13;
at Rutgers University, will instruct the course. Novels by Henry&#13;
James, Joseph Conrad, Franz Kafka, and Vladimir Novokov will be&#13;
read and discussed.&#13;
REG0RD5 AND TAPES&#13;
WATERBEDS&#13;
PIPES AND PARAPHENALIA&#13;
BEAN BAGS&#13;
LEATHER GOODS&#13;
ONE SWEET&#13;
DREAM&#13;
SD1D 7TN AVENUE&#13;
REN05NA&#13;
654-3578&#13;
in series&#13;
the English course that many&#13;
expected. It can cause a lot of&#13;
fights and arguments. But I've&#13;
gotten used to it."&#13;
Baudhuin received his PhD&#13;
from Bowling Green University.&#13;
His dissertation studied the effects&#13;
of dirty or obscene language&#13;
on attitudinal changes. From his&#13;
various experiments, Baudhuin&#13;
surmises that God is a neutral&#13;
word; religious expletives are the&#13;
least offensive, excretory words&#13;
next, and sexual references the&#13;
most offensive. Dirty words&#13;
blocked out the message to&#13;
varying degrees. "It was very&#13;
interesting," Baudhuin said, "the&#13;
higher the level of obscenity, the&#13;
less attitude change in people.&#13;
They got turned off...with one&#13;
exception. When a female&#13;
speaker gave the -message to a&#13;
male, it produced more attitude&#13;
changes."&#13;
Credit available for ads&#13;
Students interested in writing video advertisements for the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (P.A.B.) video committee are asked to contact the&#13;
ads producer, Bruce Wagner, in the PAB office, WLLC D195, as soon&#13;
as pos sible for instruction and assignment.&#13;
College credit is still available for those wishing to take part in any&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board video productions, including and&#13;
writing.&#13;
For further information, call 552-7113 or 553-2290 or 553-2278.&#13;
'No THE P.A.B.&#13;
PROUDLY&#13;
FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
GENE KELLY&#13;
"ANCHORS AWIIGH"&#13;
and&#13;
"AN AMERICAN&#13;
IN PARIS"&#13;
October 3 .- 8:00 p.m. S.A.B.*&#13;
October 5. - 7:30 p.m. S.A.B.*&#13;
Admission *1.00&#13;
* Wise. &amp; Parkside l.d.'s required&#13;
When you say Budweiser,you've said it all!&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 183155th Kenosha. Wl &#13;
The pinball crazies&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Those amazing pinball&#13;
wizards, what is it that makes&#13;
them punch 25 cents into a&#13;
machine over and over again to&#13;
watch that silver ball roll and&#13;
bounce through a maze of&#13;
sounding gadgets?&#13;
While it seems that most&#13;
pinball aces are content to get&#13;
their monies worth in lights and&#13;
bells, nonetheless, the sport&#13;
appears to be a very verbal one&#13;
for most, and requiring intense&#13;
concentration from all who play&#13;
it.&#13;
Grunting is top prerequisite.&#13;
After all, anyone who knows&#13;
anything at all about pinball&#13;
certainly knows that the&#13;
machines understand only harsh&#13;
language and good grunting is&#13;
most conducive to higher scores.&#13;
And, some folks say that&#13;
"scores" are their reason for&#13;
pumping so much money into&#13;
what many consider a purposeless&#13;
game. "To try and beat&#13;
the machine," is the idea. What&#13;
satisfaction can be found in ailAmerican&#13;
competition.&#13;
To be sure, the machine, some&#13;
say, is like the system and we are&#13;
the pinballs. Even in this&#13;
bicentennial year, though, the&#13;
machine still holds the quarter&#13;
when the game is over.&#13;
"Well then, I play for the fun of&#13;
it," the players say. Although&#13;
most of us still don't know quite&#13;
what's so fun about it, pinball&#13;
exists and that is basically why&#13;
it's played.&#13;
Don't be misled, pinball is not a&#13;
game of luck, but instead takes&#13;
talent and skill. How one flips is&#13;
the key and that ability is in wrist&#13;
action and timing. Often a player&#13;
will thrust the hips towards the&#13;
machine while flipping, but, this&#13;
really does nothing except throw&#13;
off the observers awareness of&#13;
wrist movement thereby&#13;
protecting strategy secrets. Blind&#13;
flipping is no way to play pinball,&#13;
the notion is to hit targets, get&#13;
extra balls, and to ring up points.&#13;
Some will suggest that pinball&#13;
is sexually symbolic and anyone&#13;
who does well at it is "hung-up."&#13;
"Freud said,"1 (or would have&#13;
said) "that the game is phallic&#13;
and encourages masculine&#13;
aggression," said one player.&#13;
"C'mon, let's go play the "Jungle&#13;
King."&#13;
The "Jungle King" sits next to&#13;
"Captain Card" and "Pro Pool"&#13;
and "Darling" are at the other&#13;
end of the Skellar in Greenquist&#13;
Hall. "If I can just get that multibonus,&#13;
I'll be worth thousands,"&#13;
he tells the machine. The next&#13;
remark was something directed&#13;
towards the pinball machine&#13;
about getting all the rollovers and&#13;
lights and then being eligible for&#13;
the "wows."&#13;
The machines have a personality,&#13;
their players say. To&#13;
tilt, the machines must have a&#13;
sixth sense. Some find enjoyment&#13;
in making the machine breakdown&#13;
emotionally, when the ball&#13;
gets caught speeding between&#13;
two bells and just keeps ringing&#13;
up points.&#13;
Why do people play pinball?&#13;
"Cause they're fuckin' crazy."&#13;
"Are you crazy?"&#13;
"Wouldn't be anything else."&#13;
X H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
Old&#13;
/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On tap at the Union"&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22 nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
IC&#13;
I&#13;
Homestead&#13;
fine food &amp; cocktails&#13;
1845 Racine St.&#13;
Open 11 a.m. 637-9685&#13;
gc&#13;
H&gt;tueet&#13;
©liic&#13;
^&gt;f)oppr&#13;
featuring-,&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
SPECIAL OF THE&#13;
MONTH:&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to students and faculty members only.&#13;
Permanent discount with coupon and ID card ON&#13;
ALL merchandise in our store.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
'—---—CUP AND SAVE———&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE STUDENT COURTESY CARD&#13;
The bearer of this card is entitled to a 10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount on all purchases made at&#13;
Ventura and Sons&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
The courtesy is extended to all UW-Parkside&#13;
Students and Faculty Only.&#13;
Bearer :&#13;
Not valid if not signed. Bearer must show Parkside ID. with&#13;
this card. Fair Trade Items Excepted.&#13;
YvrtfuJM &amp; S&amp;rij,&#13;
Downtown Kenosha &#13;
6 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1 9 75&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1 and Monday, Oct. 6: Meditation sessions with&#13;
Yogini Chandra Merrick in WLLC D174 from 11:30-1:15&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1: Skeller with Prof. Scott Baudhuin speaking from&#13;
11:30-1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1: Psychology Club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in CL111.&#13;
Films, Until I Die" and "Emotional Development: Aggression" will&#13;
be shown, followed by refreshments.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Disciplinary guidelines seminar in CL 217.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Women's Assertiveness Training Workshop at 6:30&#13;
p.m. at Kenosha Gateway Technical Institute. Free.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Baha'i organization meeting at 7:30 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D175.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Concert with Peter Alsop at 8 p.m. in SAB. Free&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Debate and Forensics Assn. meeting at 2:30 p.m. in CA&#13;
233.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Guest piano recital by Mark Edwards at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Movies, doublefeature of "Anchors Away" and "An&#13;
American in Paris" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Parkside Invitational golf tournament at 9:30 a.m. at&#13;
Brighton Dale in Kenosha.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Soccer game against UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Women's volleyball, Parkside vs. Marquette&#13;
University at 1 p.m. in P.E. Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 5: Movies, doublefeature of "Anchors Away" and "An&#13;
American in Paris" at 7:30p.m. in SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 5: Mass at the Chi-Rho Center at 11:15 a.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 7: Women's volleyball, Parkside vs. Carthage and&#13;
Carroll Colleges at 7 p.m. at Carthage.&#13;
A Sc ent Of Near&#13;
i look to You&#13;
as a sea tide building within me,&#13;
Your dawn smile reflecting&#13;
autumn day freshness,&#13;
a new memory&#13;
for cloud times the elation of knowing You.&#13;
i form You in mind &amp;&#13;
like a poem on paper You&#13;
become me.&#13;
touch it;&#13;
feel the scent of near,&#13;
as green leaves turn scarlet &amp; gold&#13;
dew comes melted frost.&#13;
i could be but a whisper&#13;
of summer left behind&#13;
were it not for eyes holding me to&#13;
day,&#13;
as rocks hold water to fall&#13;
in rapids whirling&#13;
past time, the past time touched,&#13;
touch it.&#13;
feel the scent of near.&#13;
Jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Mini-College&#13;
Sell ads&#13;
Earn&#13;
M&#13;
O&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
Y&#13;
CALL&#13;
553 2295&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
program designed for women&#13;
considering a job change with&#13;
emphasis on setting and attaining&#13;
realistic goals in order to plan a&#13;
new career, by Marge Rossman,&#13;
executive director, Women's&#13;
Inc., Hinsdale, 111.; "Not 'Just a&#13;
Housewife'," focusing on women&#13;
and wives and-or mothers incontemporary&#13;
society and&#13;
conflicts arising from the&#13;
emergence of the "liberated"&#13;
woman, by Dortohy Miniace,&#13;
director and counselor of continuing&#13;
education at UWMilwaukee;&#13;
and "The&#13;
Professional Woman - Choice or&#13;
Chance," a view of what it means&#13;
in terms of commitment,&#13;
preparation, determination and&#13;
satisfaction to choose and pursue&#13;
a career, by Sara Sheehan,&#13;
assistant professor, political&#13;
science, UW-Parkside, and&#13;
former director of the Women's&#13;
Center at the University of&#13;
California-Riverside.&#13;
A general session titled "International&#13;
Women's Year -&#13;
Mexico City -Where Do We Go&#13;
from Here?" will follow luncheon.&#13;
The scheduled speaker is&#13;
Ruth Clusen, president of the&#13;
League of Women Voters of the&#13;
United States, who attended the United Nations in Mexico City&#13;
International Women's Year and will provide an eye-witness&#13;
Conference sponsored by the account of the proceedings.&#13;
PAPA B URGER&#13;
TEEN BURGER&#13;
MAMA B URGER&#13;
BABY B URGER&#13;
OPEN YEAR A ROUND1&#13;
ill&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD -&#13;
YOUR ORDER&#13;
WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken -&#13;
Fish and Shrimp&#13;
&gt;2 MI LE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
The Adult Student A ssn. s ays&#13;
THANKS&#13;
for a Wonderful P icnic!!&#13;
CONTRIBUTORS&#13;
Scott Theres &amp; John Jones -&#13;
magicians&#13;
Massey Ferguson&#13;
Martha Merrill's Book Store&#13;
Ben Franklin&#13;
London Colour Photographers Lts&#13;
Tres Chic Beauty Salon&#13;
Gino's Barber Shop&#13;
Villa Capri Pharmacy&#13;
I st National Bank Racine&#13;
Kenosha National Bank&#13;
Marshall Studio Inc.&#13;
Brown National Bank&#13;
Piggly Wiggly&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Bonanza Sirloin Pit&#13;
Plaza Sewing Center&#13;
Laurent's 66 Service Station&#13;
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. Inc.&#13;
Frito Lay Potato Chips&#13;
Sentry Food Store&#13;
Paielli's Bakery&#13;
Jaeger's Bakery&#13;
Ponderosa Steak House&#13;
Boy Blue Dairy Treat&#13;
McDonald's Restaurants&#13;
Kentucky Fried Chicken&#13;
Arbee's Discount Liquors&#13;
Lehmann's Bakery&#13;
All Sport Ltd&#13;
Snap-On Tool&#13;
Capri Liquors&#13;
Mid West Construction Co.&#13;
PDQ- Racine&#13;
PDQ Kenosha&#13;
Chocolate Shop&#13;
Jeans Ltd.&#13;
Triangle Wholesale Beer Co. Inc.&#13;
Lincoln Bakery&#13;
UWP Athletic Dept.&#13;
UWP Auxilliary Services&#13;
Educator's Credit Union&#13;
SffiiS&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hours Sun-Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 t o 11&#13;
THE TRACK SHACK&#13;
ITS MM ITS JUST FOK&#13;
Game room-pool table-foos ba ll-pin ba ll&#13;
and etc.&#13;
First 25* M ichelob Fr eo w ith Parkside I.P.&#13;
Miehelob on ta p SO* an d 25* a glass.&#13;
Hot sa ndwiehes&#13;
Color T V for foo tball games&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Monday-Saturday 4 P.M.-Closing&#13;
Sunday 11-6 P.M.&#13;
5614 22nd A ve. 657-9714&#13;
Recipe #456.78cR&#13;
7HE&#13;
TaXCO Fl ZZ:&#13;
• 2 oz. Jose Cuervo Tequila&#13;
• Juice from one lime (or 2 tbsp.)&#13;
• 1 tsp. sugar&#13;
• 2 dashes orange bitters&#13;
• White of one egg&#13;
• A glass is quite helpful, too.&#13;
JOSE CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1975&#13;
HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN. &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Interest, programs in women's sports increases&#13;
by THOM AIELLO&#13;
The women are beginning to&#13;
enter the fall sports picture at&#13;
parkside. Recently the women's&#13;
tennis, swimming, and volleyball&#13;
teams have started their seasons,&#13;
after many hours of practice.&#13;
JudyGotta, tennis&#13;
So f ar, the tennis team is 0-3,&#13;
losing to UW-Milwaukee 4-1, UWCrosse&#13;
5-0, and Carthage&#13;
College, 3-2. Gotta said La&#13;
Crosse, in particular, "was really&#13;
a tough one to play off the bat,"&#13;
since they have physical&#13;
education majors, which gives&#13;
them more players than most&#13;
schools. Gotta also felt her team&#13;
could have beaten Carthage, with&#13;
more experience. Of her team&#13;
she said, "they all need experience...they&#13;
haven't had&#13;
match experience."&#13;
The ten nis team consists of 12&#13;
members, with seven on the&#13;
travelling squad. Which members&#13;
play, depends on&#13;
"challenge" matches. Any&#13;
player can challenge another to&#13;
gain a higher position, though&#13;
Gotta admitted, "the first five&#13;
were exactly as I thought they&#13;
would be." The leading players&#13;
are: Peggy Gordon, a freshman&#13;
that Gotta called, "a really&#13;
strong hitter, a hard hitter," and&#13;
an "experienced player;" Iris&#13;
Gericke, a sophomore, is "a real&#13;
good athlete with real good&#13;
ground strokes and good serves.&#13;
She's got to work on tactics,"&#13;
according to Gotta; Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield, a senior, was&#13;
described by Gotta as "a super&#13;
athlete. She plays about three&#13;
sports and she's real quick, really&#13;
moves well, can run, and her&#13;
game is steady." Kathy Feitchner,&#13;
a freshman, is lefthanded,&#13;
as is her doubles partner,&#13;
Kingsfield. Gotta said, "she&#13;
has a fierce forehand crosscourt;"&#13;
and Jennifer Zuehlke, a&#13;
sophomore, who's "really in the&#13;
working stages of her game,"&#13;
said Gotta, though "she has nice&#13;
ground strokes."&#13;
Gotta said, "tennis is really a&#13;
growing sport, it's catching fire,"&#13;
and there is much more interest&#13;
in it now than in past years.&#13;
Swim team small&#13;
Barb Ijawson is in her fifth year&#13;
as swimming coach for women at&#13;
Parkside. Although seven women&#13;
"expressed an interest," according&#13;
to lawson, only five are&#13;
now on the team. Lawson, 26,&#13;
thought there were several&#13;
reasons for the low turn-out.&#13;
Among these reasons were: the&#13;
problem of the old notion; "girls&#13;
can't be good after fourteen,"&#13;
which just isn't true, said&#13;
I^awson. Also, there are many&#13;
girls on this campus, Lawson&#13;
feels, that are good swimmers&#13;
but only part-time students.&#13;
Team members this year are:&#13;
freshman, Mary Beth Leitch, an&#13;
"experienced swimmer," an&#13;
"AAU type," who is probably the&#13;
best on the team; freshman Gail&#13;
Olson, a diver, who Lawson calls,&#13;
"pretty good, good basic form;"&#13;
freshman, Lynn Peterson, who&#13;
can swim and dive; and two&#13;
sisters that swam here two years&#13;
ago, when it was a clyb sport,&#13;
Sandy and Sheila Craig, a senior&#13;
and a sophomore, respectively.&#13;
Both transferred from Marquette&#13;
and are "swimmers".&#13;
Volleyball and Softball new&#13;
One of the two new women's&#13;
sports this year is volleyball, the&#13;
other being softball, in the spring.&#13;
Coaching volleyball is Orby&#13;
Moss who is a,so tho Assistant&#13;
Athletic Director.&#13;
Moss feels his 12 member team&#13;
will face "probably as tough a&#13;
schedule as any other school in&#13;
the state. "This includes&#13;
Marquette and Carthage, who&#13;
are considered to be tougher&#13;
ones, according to Moss. He&#13;
added that it is hard to tell just&#13;
how well his team "stack-up"&#13;
until they play a few games, since&#13;
the sport is so n ew here. Moss&#13;
said Diane Koloves, a&#13;
sophomore, and Karen Oster, a&#13;
freshman, were little&#13;
ahead of the rest. " Though,&#13;
as a team, he said the change has&#13;
been "180 degrees from where&#13;
they started to where they are&#13;
now." - •&#13;
Describing how the sport came&#13;
to Parside's program, and what it&#13;
is like, Moss said, "we wanted to&#13;
add more women's sports," and&#13;
the interest in volleyball on&#13;
campus was high.He called the&#13;
type of play they will use as,&#13;
"power volleyball," which applies&#13;
two primary setters to get&#13;
the ball in the sir for spikes, the&#13;
idea controlling the ball on your&#13;
side of the net to be able to get it&#13;
over the net with force.&#13;
v.&#13;
LABELS&#13;
o&#13;
Sine Qua Non&#13;
tinster&#13;
RCA&#13;
Nonesui&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Atlantic&#13;
J^c/many oVd©&lt;*&#13;
HUGE RECOf&#13;
SA&#13;
Monday thru Thursday 9 to 7&#13;
Friday 9 to, 5&#13;
Saturday 10 to 1&#13;
ROCK&#13;
The Who&#13;
Nilsson&#13;
Buddy Miles&#13;
John Sebastian&#13;
Three Dog Night&#13;
Jefferson Airplane&#13;
BLUES-FOLK&#13;
JAZZ Buffy Sainte Marie&#13;
David Brubeck Joan Baez&#13;
Ramsey Lewis Woody Guthrie&#13;
Cannonball Adderly Muddy Waters&#13;
Ella Fitzgerald&#13;
Stan Kenton&#13;
Ella F Lightnin' Hopkins itzgerald&#13;
Stan Kenton John Lee Hooker&#13;
Dizzy Gillespie Leadbelly&#13;
Gerry Mulligan Billie Holliday&#13;
Alice Coltrane&#13;
LABELS&#13;
CLASSICAL RCA&#13;
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Atlantic&#13;
London Symphony Orchestra Elektra&#13;
Colin Davis ABC&#13;
Andres Segovia Philips&#13;
Carlos Montoya Sine Qua Non&#13;
Julian Bream Nonesuch&#13;
Josef Krips Vangua '&#13;
Pablo Casals ,&#13;
and many more&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY:&#13;
LAST THREE SYMPHONIES&#13;
more&#13;
Abravanel,&#13;
Utah Symphony&#13;
Value to $23.98&#13;
$8.98&#13;
4 record set&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
COMPLETE NINE SYMPHONIES&#13;
Josef Krips&#13;
London&#13;
Symphony&#13;
Value to $41.50&#13;
$12.98&#13;
7 record set&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
SYMPHONY NO 9&#13;
AND NO. 8&#13;
Soloists&#13;
New Performance&#13;
conducted by .&#13;
Jean Fournet and Rotterdam&#13;
Philharmonic Orchestra&#13;
Value to $11.98 2 record set&#13;
$4.98&#13;
THE ESSENTIAL MAHLER&#13;
Symphony No. 1&#13;
and No. 5, mote&#13;
Value to $23 98 4 re cord set&#13;
$8.98&#13;
THE BAROQUE&#13;
TRUMPET AND HORN&#13;
AT THEIR FINEST&#13;
Maurice Andre, An&#13;
Adolf Scherbaum v9awO&#13;
Value to $29.98 5 record set&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
Andres Segovia&#13;
Laurindo Almeida.&#13;
John Williams,&#13;
Carlos Montoya,&#13;
and many others&#13;
Value to $29.98&#13;
$9.98&#13;
5 record set&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore &#13;
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
Boyjian breaks leg&#13;
Rangers win two and tie&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Ranger soccer team spent&#13;
the weekend in Minnesota and&#13;
overcame 1-0 deficits to beat&#13;
Bethel College, 2-1 on Saturday,&#13;
and the University of Minnesota&#13;
on Sunday, 5-1.&#13;
The Bethel team showed&#13;
hustle, according to coach Hal&#13;
Henderson. He also noted that&#13;
once Parkside worked out their&#13;
kinks from the travelling, they&#13;
outshot their opposition, 17-6.&#13;
Diech Ismaili, assisted by&#13;
captain, Frank Liu, and Bob&#13;
Petkovich, came through for the&#13;
Rangers' victory.&#13;
In the Sunday victory against&#13;
Minnesota, Parkside's Stan&#13;
Stadler, Ismaili, Rico Savaglio,&#13;
and Chris Carter scored goals.&#13;
Playing in a roaring wind at the&#13;
soccer field last Wednesday, the&#13;
Rangers managed to play Trinity&#13;
College to a 1-1 tie.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson called&#13;
the wind a big factor in the game.&#13;
According to Henderson,&#13;
Parkside had many opportunities&#13;
to score but couldn't put it in the&#13;
net'.&#13;
Henderson said the defense&#13;
played well, holding the 1974&#13;
Chrisitan College Tournament&#13;
champs to only one goal in the&#13;
two overtime game. It was by&#13;
Trinity's Patrick Akerele at the&#13;
30 minute mark of the second&#13;
half.&#13;
The Parkside goal came 16&#13;
minutes later on a penalty goal&#13;
scored by Tasche Bozinovski,&#13;
thus ending the scoring for both&#13;
teams.&#13;
However, Parkside managed to&#13;
lose Mike Boyjian for the year&#13;
with a broken leg. According to&#13;
Henderson, Boyajian "will be&#13;
missed a great deal. His experience&#13;
and leadership meant a&#13;
lot to this year's team."&#13;
Golfers place second in&#13;
Carthage Invitational&#13;
* by Thom Aiello&#13;
"Our best weekend of golf."&#13;
That's how Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
described the play of his golfers&#13;
this last weekend. On Friday the&#13;
Rangers placed second in the&#13;
seven-team Carthage Invitational&#13;
at Bristol Oaks. North&#13;
Central won the meet with a 389&#13;
team score. Parkside shot a 395,&#13;
led by the tourney's medalist,&#13;
Larry Rothering, who shot&#13;
rounds of 36 and 38, totalling 74.&#13;
Parkside's next leading golfers&#13;
were Mark Kuyawa with 75, Ray&#13;
Zuzenic, 76, Steve Christensen,&#13;
84, and Tim Seymour, 86.&#13;
On Saturday, the Rangers&#13;
traveled to Janesville for the UWWhitewater&#13;
Invitational that&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION&#13;
BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
FOR OCTOBER&#13;
The Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
Basketball Team will be&#13;
holding their training camp&#13;
at Parkside through Oct. 9.&#13;
These sessions are closed to&#13;
the public at the request of&#13;
the Bucks administration,&#13;
they will however hold an&#13;
open session for all staff,&#13;
students and faculty of&#13;
Parkside sometime near the&#13;
end of this period.&#13;
Your cooperation is&#13;
requested and will be appreciated&#13;
on the above!&#13;
Thank you&#13;
Building Hours Monday-Thursday 8:30a.m.-&#13;
9:30 p.m.; Friday &amp;&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-4:30&#13;
p.m.; Sunday 6 p.m.-9:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Gymnasiums Same as above schedule&#13;
with the following exceptions:&#13;
Athletic teams&#13;
practice in the gyms from&#13;
3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Friday. Special&#13;
note should be given to the&#13;
athletic events listed below&#13;
that may take place in the&#13;
gym on some dates.&#13;
Pool Hours Monday-Thursday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Monday,&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday&#13;
evenings 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.;&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Sundays&#13;
6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Handball Courts Same as building schedule,&#13;
please call in advance to&#13;
reserve a court.&#13;
Weight-training' Same as building schedule&#13;
above.&#13;
Human Hours arranged by apPerformance&#13;
pointment only, call 553-2245&#13;
Lab for Dr. Grueninger.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
needs help.&#13;
Contribute&#13;
your talent&#13;
WLLC&#13;
D * 1 9 4&#13;
involved 10 teams. Parkside&#13;
placed sixth there, with a 407&#13;
team total. Madison's golfers&#13;
took first place with a 384 t otal,&#13;
led by co-medalist Tom&#13;
Steinauer, who shot a 74, along&#13;
with Whitewater's Tom Rajek.&#13;
Rothering once again led&#13;
Parkside with a 77. K uyawa shot&#13;
a 78, Zuzenic finished at 80, as did&#13;
Jim Webers who had missed&#13;
Friday's meet because of conflicts&#13;
with his school schedule.&#13;
Seymour rounded out the&#13;
Parkside leaders with a 92.&#13;
The Ranger golfers close their&#13;
fall season this Saturday, Oct. 4,&#13;
with the fifth annual Parkside&#13;
Invitational, to be held at&#13;
Petrifying Springs at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis team fourth&#13;
Gordon leads way&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team finished fourth out of 10&#13;
teams in last Saturday's UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
Whitewater. Finishing ahead of&#13;
Parkside were UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Eau Claire, and Carthage.&#13;
Coach Judy Gotta was pleased&#13;
with the performance by her&#13;
team, as every member won at&#13;
least once.&#13;
Leading the way for the&#13;
VINOS&#13;
Northside 3728 D ouglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 18 16-16th S t.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60 th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
,n.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home o f the S ubmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2373&#13;
photo by A1 Fredrickson&#13;
Curt Spieker and Jim DeVasquez approach the finish line in a cross&#13;
country meet last week-end.&#13;
Runners beat UWM&#13;
Rangers was Peggy Gordon, a&#13;
freshman at number one singles,&#13;
who beat the tourney's top seed in&#13;
the quarterfinals before bowing&#13;
to the eventual winner in the&#13;
semi-finals, marking only her&#13;
second loss of the year. The&#13;
number one doubles team for&#13;
Parkside, Sandy Kingsfield and&#13;
Kathy Feichtner, reached the&#13;
finals in the consolation bracket,&#13;
which they lost 6-7, 5-7.&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
squad hosted a triple-dual last&#13;
Saturday. There was some good&#13;
news and some bad news. The&#13;
good news was that Parkside,&#13;
previously ranked number 12 in&#13;
NAIA standings, stretched their&#13;
lifetime record to 8-0 against UWMilwaukee,&#13;
beating them 23-36.&#13;
They also beat the UWMilwaukee&#13;
Track Club, 1940.&#13;
However, the Ranger runners&#13;
lost to Loyola 34-22.&#13;
Dennis McBride of Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet's top runner,&#13;
covering the five miles in 25:45.&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen, a&#13;
sophomore, finished second with&#13;
a time of 26:08. The next&#13;
Parkside runners were Jeff&#13;
DeMatthew in 8th, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez in 10th, Curt Spieker,&#13;
12th, and Greg Julich, who took&#13;
14th place. Also running were&#13;
Jim Heiring, 20th, and Mike&#13;
Rivers, 21st.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey said,&#13;
"We're very pleased," with the&#13;
number 12 ranking for such a&#13;
young team, but he expects to see&#13;
a drop in next week's rankings&#13;
because of the Loyola loss. The&#13;
team doesn't take kindly to that&#13;
loss, and they will be shooting for&#13;
Loyola again when Loyola hosts&#13;
the 10-team Lakefront Invitational&#13;
on Oct. 11.&#13;
The Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
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              <text>6.3% Tuition hike approved</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="91053">
              <text>by Tad McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
The Seventh Annual Model&#13;
Organizationof American States&#13;
confenmce was held at University&#13;
ofWisconsin-ParlcsideonThursday&#13;
and Friday,November Sand&#13;
9. Sponsoredand organized by&#13;
University of Wisconsin- Parks ide&#13;
Ra"nger photo by V1cki~Carraverta&#13;
the UW-P Center for International&#13;
Studies, it was attended by 290&#13;
high school students from Kenosha,&#13;
Racine, and Milwaukee counties.&#13;
. According to Prof. Gerald&#13;
Gteenfield of UW -Parkside, who&#13;
is the Director of the Center for&#13;
Continued on Page7&#13;
6.3%Tuition hike approved&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta in state tax dollars and $5.9 million&#13;
News Editor less from students.&#13;
The UW-System's Board of "Students should no longer be&#13;
Regents, on November 9, approved required to pay continual increases&#13;
a proposed systemwide 6.3 tuition in tuition and other added fees' to&#13;
hike and a '8.4 percent faculty sal- supplantdecreasedgeneraJ purpose&#13;
ary increase. The approved pro- revenues tax funding," said Bill&#13;
posal means That all 26 UW- Sys- Homer, president of Parkside's&#13;
tern campuses will have an annual Student Government Association.&#13;
tuition increase average of 6.3 for "Using student cutbacks as a&#13;
the next two years. mechanism for funding forthe UWUnder&#13;
the approved budget System is outrageous. The idea of&#13;
plan of $4.4 billion for 1991-93. usingenrollmentcutbaclcsasabarmostUW-Parlcsidestudentstuition&#13;
gaining chip at the legislature is&#13;
would increase 552.00. blackmail. This is supposed to be&#13;
"We're upset Tuition has re- a public education system," said&#13;
ally gone up in recent years. It's Lance Walter, U.c. Legislative&#13;
hurting students," said United Director.&#13;
Council president Brenda Leahy. UW·ParI&lt;sidestudents,aswell&#13;
"Students arc having to lake se- as other universities urged regents&#13;
mesters off because of tuition in- to impose a tuition freeze.&#13;
creases." "The regents heard personal&#13;
UW-System President Ken- stories concerning a tuition inneth&#13;
Shaw's original plan asking crease---they didn't listen," said&#13;
for a 7.9 percent tuition increase Leahy. "This budget illustrates the&#13;
was cut by the Board of Regents. Board of Regent's unwillingness&#13;
The Board of Regents cut $25.9 to fight to make education a priormillion&#13;
from Shaw's original pro- ity in this state."&#13;
posal by eliminating $20 million President Shaw's proposal is&#13;
related to the 5.3 percent inflation&#13;
rate and in trying to match tuition&#13;
with other public universities.&#13;
"We do need to look at a reasonable&#13;
tuition increase that will at&#13;
Men stopping rape lecture held&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
On October 12, 1990, Joseph&#13;
Weinberg,the organizer and presidentof&#13;
the nation's largest community-based&#13;
group of men workingtllendviolence&#13;
against women&#13;
andmen,spokeon"Men Stopping&#13;
Rape" in a public lecture held at&#13;
UW:Parkside.&#13;
Weinbergdiscussed issues of&#13;
IlIen,Womenand sex, recognizing&#13;
IIld Sloppingsexual assault, taking&#13;
"Do" for an answer; confronting&#13;
lIiOntan-hatingattitudes and comIllunicatingwith&#13;
women and with&#13;
Illen. .&#13;
Weinbergis president of Men&#13;
SloppingRape, Inc. which is an&#13;
Olganizalionof men in Madison,&#13;
. ,..'.. ','.'&#13;
Wiseonsin that takes action on issues&#13;
of sexuality, masculinity,&#13;
friendships b.etween men and&#13;
women and between men, sexual&#13;
assault/violence awareness, and&#13;
homophobia. Weinberg travels to&#13;
high schools and colleges around&#13;
the, state talking to men raising&#13;
their consciousness through discussion&#13;
groups, a rape myth poster&#13;
series, and by networking with other&#13;
anti- rape groups, and have organized&#13;
conferences and rallies.&#13;
M~n Stopping Rape discusses&#13;
18 steps of action that men can&#13;
take in making this a rape- free culture.&#13;
The following are a few of&#13;
Weinberg'sl8 steps.&#13;
Talk about sex. Many people&#13;
grow up with unrealistiC beliefs&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
about sex, such as talking about sex&#13;
is unmasculine, these beliefs keeps&#13;
individuals from knowing about&#13;
sexuality and enjoying a sexual&#13;
Continued on Page 17&#13;
Happy&#13;
Thanksgiving!&#13;
The Ranger will not be&#13;
published on Thursday,&#13;
November 22, which is&#13;
Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
Kenneth Shaw&#13;
least keep us even with the rate of&#13;
inflation," said UW -Parkside&#13;
Chancellor Shiela Kaplan in an article&#13;
in the Kenosha News. "YetI&#13;
believe that given the quality of&#13;
education we provide, it's still a&#13;
good value."&#13;
The legislature is expected to&#13;
approve a final UW-System budget&#13;
next June. United Council vows&#13;
to fight for the students they represent&#13;
during legislature budget debates.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Editorial Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate Page 3&#13;
Voice ofUW-P Page 4&#13;
Spotlight. Page 5&#13;
Sports Page 9&#13;
IntemationaI... Page 17&#13;
Prof. Profile Page 19&#13;
Vol. of Week .Page 21&#13;
This Week., Page 23&#13;
Classifieds Page 24&#13;
Sports PulIout Sec. C&#13;
~Ran!J5!!.ger~,PageIl!:..:2 -.-:E=.:d=i~to=-n-·a_l_---~&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
. . are Within our nghts.&#13;
To the echtor, . F . T r&#13;
We take great offense to Chris "or every 0 Ivenan "inno.&#13;
. ',' fwomen and rape. cent manlOpnson,therearelll Toltver s view 0 . lki Ore tl . tedin DA Darkside rapistswa mgon the streetsIII&#13;
asrecen YfPthnnRanger We take who have slipped through :••any -column 0 e '. . . .'" jllreater&#13;
affront with the. Ranger dicial system. Our courts oflaw&#13;
g . th columnandsupporung· bendover~ckwardslopm'_,&#13;
creaung e . di id al' . h -an . as a columnists. We In IV. U S ng ts. The q""'"-&#13;
thiS person . ' d f ... .... -"""IVIII&#13;
question the Ranger policy .an 0 Innocent men Inpnson isdeo&#13;
judgement. If Toliver's opuuons batable..&#13;
had been stated in a "Letter to the . Rape I.Sthe most undelTeJlortr4&#13;
Editor", we would have to respect cnme agamst women. A wOl1lan&#13;
his right to free speech guaranteed would notdraw attenuon tOlhefil:t&#13;
by the Constitution. To give hIS tI18t she had sex With a Illanby&#13;
opinions a highlighted area on the gomg through the humiliating&#13;
"Opinion" page ntises other ques- process of filing a rape charge.&#13;
tions. Rape and sexual assaUlt are&#13;
According to Toliver, if a the. two, most heinous Cnllles&#13;
women is unconscious she has against women. These crimes&#13;
implied consent to sex. On that should not be dealt with in any&#13;
bizarre premise, can .we turn the manner other than senously. The&#13;
tables and infer that a sleeping! brazen humor presemed to US by&#13;
unconscious man, too, has given Toliver was totally mappml'riate&#13;
his consent for us to do what we and unacceoptable. The Illylils&#13;
wish to his body? Suppose we regarding women and rapeshould&#13;
decide to remove his genitalia? In be dispelled and not allowedto be&#13;
ihegospelaccordingto.Toliver, we Continued on Page'&#13;
November 1$&#13;
I FIGURE WE'RE SAFE&#13;
UNTIL HIS POPUU\RITY&#13;
RATINGHI1S 45%&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
Over the past decade tuition at the University of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide has risen over 100%. Well,as oflast week you can tack a few&#13;
more percentage points to that figure. On Friday, the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents approved of a tuition hike. For a full-time under- .&#13;
graduate residing in Wisconsin, tuition will increase from $764 to&#13;
5816 a semester, or 6.8%. The. figures do nOIinclude segregated fees&#13;
• charged to students each semester.&#13;
UW President Kenneth Shaw no longer wants tuition to be tied to the formula that has both state and&#13;
student sharing the cost of instruction, 65% from taxes, 35% from tuition. Under Shaw's proposal, the UW·&#13;
System would be free to exceed the 35% tuition cap. Therefore, the UW System could raise in tuition the&#13;
dollars lawmakers refuse to yield in taxes. Shaw's new formula is also tied to the 5.3% inflation rate and&#13;
matching the tutions charged by other public universities in the Big Ten Athletic Conference.&#13;
This new tuition hike has its pros and cons with students. Some students who have to work all summer&#13;
and even during the school year are going to have to dig deeper in their pocketbooks when next fall arrives.&#13;
'Then there are students who have their education paid for by some otherresource and it doesn't really bother&#13;
them. There is also an elite group of students who figure that the education they are getting is well worth the'&#13;
tuition hike and don't have an opinion on the issue either.&#13;
You will not find too many members of the sWf and faculty complaining to Madison about this one&#13;
because the S 143 million increase includes a round offaculty and sWf calch-up pay raises: 38.2 million for&#13;
raises, 2.4% each year. Shaw also plans on proposing general salary increases of 6% each year for faculty&#13;
and staff, which means a combined pay ntise of 8.4% each year.&#13;
Would supporting the tuition hike for inflation adjustments be justifiable? Or does the tuition rate have&#13;
W keep rising year after year by percentage puints over the inflation rate? You can voice your opinions on&#13;
litis issue to the UW System Board of Regents by obtaining a list of Regents from the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Office located in WLLC next w the Ranger Office. Or, better yet, you can write a letter to the&#13;
edilOr, then the UW-Parksidecommunity and the Board of Regents can read your opinion at the same time,&#13;
since the Board of Regents does receive theRanger.&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
~&#13;
" , J &lt; ~.&#13;
",' . "".&#13;
.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
Subscription rate for one year is $5.00.&#13;
Please address all correspondence to:&#13;
Universay of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Post Offiqe Box 2000.&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
EditorialOffice (414) 553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414) 5.53-2295 .&#13;
Editor,in.chief&#13;
Craig A.·Simpkins 'Business Managll&#13;
Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Asst, Business Manager&#13;
Heather McGee&#13;
Advertising ManaS"&#13;
.Tern Fortney&#13;
'Distribution Manas"&#13;
RonHa"""&#13;
Circulation Managll&#13;
- ElizabethSpalla&#13;
Public Relations DiredOl&#13;
Greg Lebricl&#13;
PhotoEdito'&#13;
SunniBe&lt;cl&#13;
Photograph'"&#13;
ToddGoe!'&#13;
HenryCornell&#13;
Cartoonisb&#13;
PaulBerge&#13;
ChrisIngB"&#13;
Glen Kclly&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
Intemation'!.! Editor&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Ent~rtainment Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Sports Editor .&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editors&#13;
Mike McKowen&#13;
Ted Mcintyre&#13;
Copy Edilor&#13;
Tod McCarthy&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Sara Kahl&#13;
Advisors&#13;
-Stuart Rubner&#13;
Jan Nowak&#13;
General Staff:&#13;
Donald Andrewski, Gabe K1uka, Jim Newcomb, Rufus Thorne~~&#13;
Doherty, Mona Shannon, Lisa Vopal, John Taylor, DaVIdW~d&lt;, i&#13;
Hawkm~,Jef~ Bromstad, latesha Jude. Kelly McKissick, Kimber:&#13;
TenereUi,.Chns [)eguire, Susan Luedkes, Len Anhod, DebraHalv"'"&#13;
. .&#13;
L •• ". j \. '" ,J J,.,l ,,1,\&#13;
November15, 1990&#13;
Ranger, Page 3&#13;
.,&#13;
-&#13;
by&#13;
Donald R.&#13;
Andrewski&#13;
On 12 November I attended&#13;
theMen'sOoly Workshop on Rape.&#13;
Joe Weinberg, president of the&#13;
Madison·based "Men Stopping&#13;
Rape,"gaveapresentation directed&#13;
lOwardmen concerning the issue&#13;
ofrape.&#13;
The purpose of this meeting&#13;
wasnot sexist, but rather that men&#13;
wouldbe more open in the cornpany&#13;
of other men than in a mixed&#13;
group.&#13;
Iwas extremely disappointed&#13;
thatonly seven men showed up for&#13;
the workshop. While Irealize that&#13;
peoplehave other commitments, I&#13;
fmdit difficult to believe that the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Opinion&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
TheDevil's Advocate&#13;
Workshop att~~dancea disappointment&#13;
vast maJOn~y of ~a1e students had five percent of incidents that oc- trayed as Jewish. entire United States there are only&#13;
- ' . more pressing things to do. cur there. The truth is that most This atrocious attitude is a reo ten groups of men opposing rape.&#13;
As Iexpressed my disappoint. rapes are initiated by people that f1ectionofauniversalracistattitude When I asked Mr. Weinberg if he&#13;
ment at ~e rather dismal turnout, the victim Knew and trusted. toward members of minority and meant base groups with smaller&#13;
~. Wem~rg reassured me that Rapists are more likely to be economically-depressed groups. chapters, he replied that there were&#13;
things of this nature take time to fathers, brothers, friends, dates and To make matters worse, thecrimi- only ten in total.&#13;
develop, and seemed genuinely other acquaintances. Socio-eco.· nal justice system acts as an en. Mr. Weinbelg expressed oppleased&#13;
that anyone showed up at nomic factors do not play into this; forcer of this myth. Mr. Weinberg timism that there are several CIIIJ\.&#13;
all. rapists are doctors, lawyers, clergy. stated that over fifty percent of all puses in the UW system that are in&#13;
Mr. Weinberg presented things and police officers in addition to blacks in prison are doing time for the embryonic stages and trying to&#13;
ina manner that Icould relate. We blue collar workers and the unem- rape, while in all rape cases, over get organized. Wecantakeourcue&#13;
both had things in common. For ployed. ninety percent of those males ac- from this. Since Uwstudentsseem&#13;
example, we have both experienced It seems to me that the real cused are white. 10 be on the cutting edge of rape&#13;
divorce and the frustrations that problem is that society in general In reality, the possibility of a refonn,weshouldbecomeinvolved&#13;
men feel when a relationship turns doesn't really know what a rape is. white female being the victim of in the process. Weareeitherpartof&#13;
sour. From that point he proceeded . So as rapists commit their acts of rape by a non-white is about three the problem or pan of the solution.&#13;
to debunk the myth of rape. violence, they do not necessarily percent. A white female has more Those who disagree should&#13;
The first myth is that rape is perceive it as such. They don't to fear from a white man, more remember that one in three women&#13;
perpetuated by the stranger in the think that they need help. specifically, someone that she and one in five men are the victims&#13;
bushes. Demographically speak. Another [actor is the fear fac- knows well. of rape. Ifthis trend is notreversed,&#13;
ing, the "strangerrape" constitutes tor. While the emotion of fear Another myth is that men who it will come home toroost for all of&#13;
a comparatively small percentage itself is very real, the focus of that are sensitive about the issue of rape us. No one is immune. Remember&#13;
compared to all rapes. On a na- fearis misdirecteddependant upon are gay. While there are gay men that these are acts of violence not&#13;
tional average, approximately fifo geographic location. Forexample, that support the campaign 10 stop against statistics, but people. This&#13;
teen percent of the rapes are per- in northern Wisconsin, the the violence toward women, there places mothers, sisters, wives,&#13;
petrated by strangers. "strangers"towatehforareIndians. are a lot of heterosexual males that girlfriends, daughters, sons,&#13;
However, in smaller corn- In the Pacific Southwest, the bo- realize the negative effects that all brothers, and cousins at risk.&#13;
.munities such as small towns and geyman is Hispanic. In the rest of males feel as a result of rape and Now what do you propose to&#13;
college campuses, the "stranger" America, the potential bad guy is violence toward women. do about it?&#13;
factor only accounts [or three to black. In Europe, the rapist is por- Sadly enough, throughout the OJ&#13;
Iraq; why?&#13;
By Bill Horner&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
Senate meeting minutes&#13;
national debt (with more on the&#13;
way). We have homeless and out&#13;
of work people allover this country.&#13;
We have massive crime and&#13;
drug problems throughout this land.&#13;
Shouldn't we begin to address our&#13;
own citizens concerns before we&#13;
address some other country's&#13;
problems who could care lessabout&#13;
ours? History has clearly shown&#13;
the mistakes of the past. Are we&#13;
again going to repeat the same errors&#13;
in judgement? The current&#13;
situation is an extremely explosive&#13;
one, one that could affect the entire&#13;
population of this planet. I do not&#13;
want President George Bush, or&#13;
- any single individual, to decide my&#13;
fate or yours. unfortunately, there&#13;
is not enough space for me to&#13;
present all o[ the domplex issues&#13;
involved is this situation; however.&#13;
I do hope [ have at the very least,&#13;
struck a nerve in your conSCIOUSness.&#13;
WE as students, can possibly&#13;
affect a change in the governments&#13;
position in this matter. Do you&#13;
care?&#13;
Announcements:&#13;
Joseph Karls has been elected to&#13;
the student at-large seat on the&#13;
.Parks ide Advisory Board.&#13;
NOVEMBER 8, 1990 States being directly threatened by&#13;
hostile forces. WhogavelheUnited&#13;
States government and our offen- .&#13;
I have wanted to express my sive military forces the authority to&#13;
opinionconcerning this grave is- betheworld'spoliceagency? My&#13;
sue for the past three' months. I own opinion is that this current&#13;
have been leery of voicing my crisis is directly related to_oilinterpersonal&#13;
opinion on this subject ests and the state of Israel, Saddam&#13;
becauseof my current position in Hussein is the key figure being&#13;
PSGA, and PSGA has madeevery blamed for this crisis. Theprimary&#13;
elfon to keep partisan politics out cause of the current situation did&#13;
ofits everyday business. Our pri- not begin with Saddam Hussein. II&#13;
maryeffort has been to represent began 2,000 years ago with a group&#13;
the students at UW -Parkside in' a of religious fanatics whose only&#13;
fairandequitable manner and keep concern was their own selfish mpersonal&#13;
political ideologies at a terests, and it still continues today.&#13;
distance. [now feel, if it is not too I do not want to see one Amencan&#13;
latealready, thaI I must take a stand killed for a gallon of gas, or to&#13;
onthis deadly serious matter. prote,t some other ~ountry's per·&#13;
I am not going to stand by and sonal interests. If the Soviet Um~n&#13;
see myOwnrelatives, and my close can make a 180 degree switch III&#13;
friends here at UW-Parkside, sent governmentalmoslOvemight, why&#13;
tothe middle east alive and well to can't the U.S. government work&#13;
returnback home to their families toward a peaceful solution to.lhlS&#13;
andfriends in black neoprene body crisis in order to avoid a mllttary&#13;
bags. [do not want to see my confrontation? Itseems evident to&#13;
fellow students and friends return me by the events that have taken&#13;
to UW-Parkside with maimed, pla~e thaI a peaceful solution was&#13;
mutilatedbodies. I view the curren I never an alternative. I hav~ seen&#13;
crisisin the middle east as a purely mediar~ports that this scenariO ~as&#13;
POlitical, economic, and mili~ been planned since 1980. Why.&#13;
. 'W h e' a 3 trillion dollar, Situation. I do not see the UntIed e av ,&#13;
br ; .. ~~~'. "':-:.:-':":-:--~.. ~:'.:-'.":":":--:-:"~.:~~:~.:-:-: . :..:-:-:-::-:-::~:':!:-::-;:=:~..:__-:.::.:... ::..::::::.::. -=-_&#13;
Called to order at 12:08pm.&#13;
Roll Call&#13;
Senalors: Lindblom.TmJensen.J.Jensen.&#13;
ScI1uh.Nephew. Jude(l), OIson(E). Vee.&#13;
Prange, Simpkins, Sikora, E.Jensen,&#13;
Rosier. RiccioJustices:Jodi Robison.Frank&#13;
Martinelli&#13;
Executive Branch: BillHomer. Chris Daniel,&#13;
Maggie Frymire&#13;
Guests: Steve McLaughlin. Lika&#13;
MorisMa&#13;
Motion E.JensenJSiko'ra 1118i9O:1 To&#13;
approve the minutes 01November2. 1990.&#13;
Passes 12-lHl&#13;
Report 01the President (Homer) .&#13;
Board 01regents meeting was yesterday"&#13;
Madison regarding the budget of 1990·91.&#13;
There will probably be an increaseollu~ion&#13;
due partly to inflation and lack 01 GPR&#13;
lunding and a drop of enrollment, Parkside&#13;
will see an increase in tuitionol 15.2% over&#13;
the nexl 2 years.&#13;
Report of the Vice-President (Danieij&#13;
There will be a U.C. meeting in Plaleville&#13;
next week". II anyone wishes 10be a de~&#13;
egate for United Council,leI us know.&#13;
Motion Prange/Jude 11/8190:2 To allocate&#13;
$179.75 ($155.75 lor food. $24.00 for iodg'&#13;
ing) for the U.C. trip. &lt;Question Called,&#13;
&lt;Division Called,&#13;
Passes 7·3-3&#13;
Motion T.JenseniSchuh 11/8190:3 Toac·&#13;
cept SteveMclaughlin asa co-advisoralong&#13;
with PeggyJomes lor Ihe Parkside Student&#13;
Government.&#13;
Passes 12·!-ll&#13;
Report 01 the President Pro- Tempere&#13;
(Schuh) .&#13;
Ranger article due on November 28th WIn&#13;
be written by Schuh.&#13;
'Swearing in 01 the senator-elecls&#13;
Kadolph and Bovee·&#13;
Report 01Legislative AIia;-s (LincI&gt;Iom)&#13;
Wanted to thank everyone 101 \/Cling&#13;
on November 6thl&#13;
Report 01SUFAC&#13;
Approved budge! review forms al the&#13;
lasI meeling.&#13;
Report 01StudentSeIvices (E.Jenson)&#13;
Written report&#13;
Report 01Minority Adions Council (Jude)&#13;
Meeting Monday, November 11. al&#13;
noon inCA. 129&#13;
Meelings 101 the !olawing week:&#13;
• Legislative Affairs' Tues, Nov.&#13;
13,12:3Opm.in PSGA oIfice&#13;
- Women's Affairs· Thursday. Nov. 15,&#13;
12:15pm. in CA 142&#13;
- SUFAC • Friday. Nov 30, 3:00 in PSGA&#13;
olfice&#13;
- Student Services - Wednesday. Nov 21,&#13;
12:00. in CA 142&#13;
• Commnteeon Smoking' Wed. Nov. 21,al&#13;
11:ooin CA 233&#13;
Motion Ricciol8ovee 1118i9O:4 To adjourn&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
Passes 15-lHl&#13;
Adjourned at 12:55pm.&#13;
_"'.' "!&lt;""' :...·.·-:c-_ ..··t...,....·,........._·t·"'_±'f~,_· --. ---'---;~.~- r.~~ ...&#13;
.::=:..:.:..::::::...---.::..::::....----r~~~±~~'..:..... -:--!=--------:-~~~&#13;
~Ra~nl!~.rJ..!.!Pa~ge'-.:!.4 1 Opinion· ).~ovem~&#13;
oice Of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Dawn Tower /&#13;
"Most of my grades were&#13;
given. I'm sure all if&#13;
Ihad asked.&#13;
"&#13;
Christine&#13;
Kordecki&#13;
Tim Eager&#13;
"No! Can't estimate how&#13;
your doing without a test&#13;
u. .&#13;
- or find out how the&#13;
. . It Instructor IS.&#13;
"Did you receive a grade in every&#13;
one of your courses before the end of&#13;
the eight week drop period?"&#13;
Mike Prelewkz&#13;
" .&#13;
Yes, but in one of my&#13;
classes they had to move&#13;
up the.first exam to give&#13;
. "&#13;
you some Idea.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE &amp; THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
INVITE YOU TO CELEBRATE A...&#13;
THANKSGIVING LUNCIiEON SPECIAL&#13;
Wed., Nov. 21st 11 am-2pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
TURKEY 'N ALL THE TRIMMINGS&#13;
-ROAST TURKEY-WHIPPED POTATOES-SAGE DRESSING-GREEN&#13;
EAS OR KERNEL q&gt;RN-CRANBERRY SAUCE-PUMPKIN SQUARE&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $ 3.19&#13;
PLUS: ALARM CLOCK SPECIAL - IF THE ALARM SOUNDS WHILE YOU ARE&#13;
PAVING, TAKE HOME A FREE FROZEN TURKEV AND SIX PACKS OF SODA.&#13;
" . All of my grades&#13;
were available on&#13;
request.&#13;
"&#13;
Cliffs Notes give you a greater&#13;
. understanding of the classics.&#13;
More than 2ffl titles. Learn&#13;
more and earn better grades&#13;
as you study&#13;
tile&#13;
1Jooli21acli&#13;
[ji' Westgate Mall&#13;
4901 Washington Ave&#13;
Racine, Wi 53406&#13;
633-9380&#13;
�:.::....--_-~[ Spotlight Ranger, Page 5&#13;
. Ranger photo by Too McCarthy&#13;
Front Row from left to right: Anthony Brown (Faculty Advisor), Tina Gosey (Secretary), Melloney Wilson (President), Henry Owens(Vice-President), Stefanie Davis (Treasurer)&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
by Tod McCarthy&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
One of the most active and&#13;
fastestgrowing student organizationsonthe&#13;
University ofWisc0I1-&#13;
sin-Parksidecampus is the Black&#13;
Student Organization (BSO).&#13;
Started in the mid-1980's, 'its&#13;
membership has grown to 55-6S&#13;
members.&#13;
The Ranger has stressed involvement.&#13;
BSO is involvement:&#13;
involvement in community food&#13;
drives,participation and sponsorship&#13;
of Black History Month activities,and&#13;
as a support system for&#13;
humanrights issues. According to&#13;
BSOmemberTatiaJackson, "Even&#13;
though we're the minority, we're&#13;
domgthe majority," Whether the&#13;
event is a Homecoming activity,&#13;
athletic event, or any other UWParkside&#13;
activity, BSO is generally&#13;
well·represented.&#13;
The current Executive Committee&#13;
ofBSO is composed of four&#13;
officers elected from its membership.&#13;
This year, Melloney Wilson&#13;
is serving as President, and Henry&#13;
Owens is the Vice-President. The&#13;
other executive officers of BSO&#13;
are Tina Gosey as Secretary, and&#13;
Stefanie Davis in the position of&#13;
Treasurer. All other committees&#13;
are comprised strictly of volunteers,&#13;
which is feasible because of&#13;
jhe high level of involvement of its&#13;
membership. "We wouldn't want&#13;
to appoint someone who's not&#13;
dedicated io it" said Pres, Wilson.&#13;
Theadvisors for BSO are Dean&#13;
Barbara 'Shade and Anthony&#13;
Brown. WhenaskedofBSOmembership&#13;
requirements, Mr. Brown&#13;
stated, "The membership is wide&#13;
open." Students of all races and&#13;
cultures are welcome to join BSO.&#13;
Though primarily designed to offer&#13;
a sense of unity and cultural&#13;
awareness to African-American&#13;
students, it also offers a unique&#13;
opportunity for others to understand&#13;
the concerns of AfricanAmericans,andalso,ofthemselves.&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
provides information to its members&#13;
about heritage and how to&#13;
create a positive image without&#13;
sacrificing individualism. It also&#13;
serves as a bonding influence and&#13;
provides a second home of sorts.&#13;
BSO meetings are somewhat&#13;
unique for UW-P; the highly&#13;
democratic nature of them allows&#13;
for a multitude of ideas and options&#13;
to tackle any given issue. The&#13;
agenda may offer limitless possibilities.&#13;
Not only are events and&#13;
human rights issues often discussed,&#13;
but cultural presentations,&#13;
. such as an examination of the na-&#13;
, tion of Islam, which was presented&#13;
by Salimah Al-Qawiyy, may be&#13;
offered. BSO meetings are held bimonthly&#13;
in Moln. D-105. Held at&#13;
noon on Wednesdays, the meetings&#13;
are w~lI-attended. Stop by;&#13;
I'm sure you'll consider it an hour&#13;
well-spent.&#13;
BSO is planning a number of&#13;
upcoming events, including a Dr.&#13;
Martin Luther King Commemoration&#13;
in January, and Black History&#13;
Month activities in February. An&#13;
April field trip is also being planned&#13;
to the De Sable Museum in Chicago.&#13;
Check the Ranger for details&#13;
on events or contact BSO&#13;
mernbers ifyou 'd like information.&#13;
The membership of BSO has&#13;
nearly doubled in the past year,&#13;
according to Pres. Wilson. Though&#13;
specific issues can tend to swell the&#13;
attendance figures at some meetings,&#13;
Vice-Pres. Owens also noted,&#13;
"There are more African-American&#13;
students here, too." Ifprojected&#13;
minority student population goals&#13;
at UW -Parkside are met, BSO&#13;
promises to become an even more&#13;
necessary and effective force in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
offers the African-American student&#13;
the support needed to succeed&#13;
in the university environment&#13;
without sacrificing, and often expanding,&#13;
one's sense of self. It can&#13;
also become a calalyst for development&#13;
of a positive self-image along&#13;
with a healthy amount of self-respect,&#13;
not only for minority students,&#13;
but anyone else on campus&#13;
who needs a sense of individuality&#13;
combined with one of belonging.&#13;
Itoffers unity, buralso supports the&#13;
unique situation of each of its&#13;
members.&#13;
If you'd like to attend a BSO&#13;
meeting aod see what they have to&#13;
offer, come to Main. D-105 on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21 at noon. It's&#13;
a fine way to become involved at&#13;
UW -Parkside, and most of all, get&#13;
an opportunity to meet some ot the&#13;
students who help to make your&#13;
years at this university more than&#13;
an apathetic experience. We'll see&#13;
you there.&#13;
...&#13;
.1" ,., ,&#13;
11." .~. ~, J. J,: I ~&#13;
..r&amp;.~~.~..~~~.~~.. "" ..... ' ~ .... }It ....&#13;
"=R!ger~,Page~6------1 News } / 0&#13;
P k id A ° 0 ° B d h nges its leaderShIp - ar SI e ctrvmes oar ca· studentswanlfromus." Th'&#13;
cause of her extensive experience - will be continued as plan IS&#13;
withPAB in the past. She'sheena ; . ThemajoritYOftheexeclled&#13;
:&#13;
'nee • aU'e chait for more lhan one comrm council of PAB feels that the&#13;
and was the organization's secre- sitionwentover very smooth.~.&#13;
tary at the begmnmg of this semes- few other things will be han Cry _ c g~&#13;
ter. including the sUUggle to ree .&#13;
Aspresident Bostetrerwillrun d . 'be fUlt&#13;
.. an retain mem rs. ThisPlOblCl!l&#13;
both the general and executive faced PAB before and continues&#13;
council meetings, prepare a budge,t f th '''E one i IQ ace em. very ne IS welc......&#13;
for the Student Organizations . • .&#13;
Council (SOC) and attend SOC and everyone IS needed. They iIIl&#13;
important to PAB," Thygeson~&#13;
meetings on a regular basis. C'~ marked. . . urrentl.y, the markel;~&#13;
Changes she's planned for PAB -', I and nightlife chairs areavailab~il&#13;
are small yet st!.l1significant. n anyone IS interested.&#13;
past years, the meetings got too -&#13;
relaxed and things didn't get done Although the leadershiphas&#13;
as quickly as they should have. By Diane Thygeson changed hands, things willStiIi/ll&#13;
having more organized meetings, Pi Sigma Epsilon, the marketing as they have all semester. The&#13;
Bostetter hopes to accomplish fraternity, was' given the opportu- quality of the comedians, coffeenity&#13;
to conduct a survey of UW - houses, films, speakers anddaneea more. .&#13;
" h will remain, Also, under Deede's reign, Parkside students to see w at&#13;
by DaW1lMailaDd&#13;
Eat ..... Inm ... t Editor&#13;
Within the last few weeks, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has undergone&#13;
some changes in leadership.&#13;
MichelleDeederesignedfrom&#13;
her position as president due to&#13;
personal conflicts with school and&#13;
work.&#13;
As wriuen in PAB's constitution,&#13;
the vice-president then takes&#13;
over the president's seat, appoints&#13;
someone to take the open vicepresident's&#13;
seat, and have it approved&#13;
by a 2{3 majority of the&#13;
executive council. Judy Bosteuer&#13;
was the vice-president and is now&#13;
Judy Bosteller&#13;
the new PAB president She's appointed&#13;
Diane Thygeson as vicepresident&#13;
for the remainder of lhe&#13;
year, Thygeson was chosen beSCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
Applications for UW-Parkside's 1991-1992&#13;
Continuing Student SCholarship Program are&#13;
now available, These scholarships range in&#13;
amount from $500 to $1000 for full-time students&#13;
($250 part-time), and are intended for&#13;
students who demonstrate outstanding academic&#13;
and.or aesthetic achievement and&#13;
leadership.&#13;
WHO SHOULD APPLY&#13;
+Current, full·time (12-18 credits) and parttime&#13;
(6-11 credits) matriculating students whowill&#13;
have completed a minimum of 30 credits&#13;
by semeste(s end.&#13;
+Students who have demonstrated academic&#13;
excellence (3.25 gpa and above),&#13;
+Students who can demonstrate extracurricular&#13;
involvement in school and/or community.&#13;
+Previous applicants/recipients ,also eligible to&#13;
apply if they meet the above criteria.&#13;
APPLICATION DEADLINE:&#13;
February 8, 1991&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE&#13;
LOCATIONS&#13;
Admissions Molinaro 0-111&#13;
Advising Center WLLC&#13;
Information Oesk Union&#13;
Learning Assistance Office WLLC 0-175&#13;
Women's Center .WLLC Concourse&#13;
Financial Aid Office Tallent Hall&#13;
Intercultural Commons WLLC 0-182&#13;
Any Faculty Advisor&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
Admissions Office&#13;
Molinaro 0-111&#13;
(414) 553-2355&#13;
NOvember~&#13;
Suspension policy updated for 1991-92&#13;
by Dan Chiappella Ifa student is not on probation during a term of less than2.0,1he&#13;
News Editor and: 'student is suspended for at least&#13;
Last Spring semester, UW· ·-earns a grade point average one year. -&#13;
Parkside's Academic Policies thattenn of less than 2.0 butl.O or Any student on probationor&#13;
Committee examined UW, above, the student is placed on strict probation will be automaJi.&#13;
Parkside's suspension policy probation. cally cleared of probation at1lie&#13;
comparing itto othcrpolicies in the --earns a grade point average end of any term when: the term's&#13;
UW-SYSlem and proposed an up- thatlerm of less than l.O, the stu- grade point average is 2.0 or beurr&#13;
daled suspension policy. dent is placed on strict probation. on any number of credits, thee.&#13;
OnOctober2,l990theFaculty If a student is on probation mulativegrailepointaverageis2.0&#13;
Senate approved the _proposed and: or betler, and the acadcmicreconI&#13;
Suspension Policy in which every --earns a grade pOint average contains no grades of Ineomplelt.&#13;
student is expecled to maintain at that term of less than 2.0 bUII.5 or Students who feelexcepliolll&#13;
least a 2.0 grade point average on above, the student is placed on strict circumstances beyond the~eon1nJl&#13;
all work carried in every t~, in- probation. justify a waiverofsuspensionIMy&#13;
dudingsummersessions. Students --earns a grade point average make a writtenrequestforawaivtl&#13;
who fail to maintain this minimun that term of less than l.5, the Slu- to the Academic Actions Com·&#13;
grade point average will face pro- dent is suspended for at least one mitlee. - Students who havebeen&#13;
bation, strict probation, or suspen- year. suspended for alleast a year may&#13;
sion. If a student is on strict proba- apply for readmission throughtit&#13;
The following is the new sus- tion and: -Academic AClions Commiuee.&#13;
pension policy going into effect. --earns a grllde point average Readmission is not automatic.&#13;
Fall ofl991.&#13;
News Releases&#13;
Sexual Harassment&#13;
Students will have an opportuni&#13;
ty to discuss sexual harassment&#13;
during an open forum at noon&#13;
Monday, Nov. 19, in Mid Main&#13;
Place. The f~rum _will be conducted&#13;
by Dr. Karen K. KirstAshman,&#13;
a cenified sex educator&#13;
and sexual harassment consu·ltant.&#13;
At the forum students will be&#13;
able to interact with the consultant&#13;
in discussing whatconstilUles&#13;
sexual harassment, what can be&#13;
done to prevent it, and how to cope&#13;
with it if it occurs.&#13;
During her day-long visit Dr.&#13;
Kirst-Ashman, wiil also conduct&#13;
workshops for university empioyees&#13;
and administrators. She is an&#13;
associate professor at UWWhitewater.&#13;
Hervisitis sponSOred&#13;
by Chancellor S!Jeila Kaplan and&#13;
the Sexual Harassrn~nt Commit-&#13;
-lee. " ' ,&#13;
.-, ~ • v&#13;
n, ~.hiu, ·j~Dt,..", ~~(, "!,}t. '~r.ii&#13;
Philosophical Society&#13;
presents discussion&#13;
, Parkside PhilosophicalSO'&#13;
ciety presents "Sexual Moral'&#13;
ity."&#13;
A discussion led by Pr0-&#13;
fessor Aaron Snyder, P1ti!(l\O" . 2&#13;
phy on Tuesday, Nov. 20 al&#13;
pm. in CART 129. ,&#13;
" Free and o~n to thepobl1c&#13;
,&#13;
'students, faculty, and stall&#13;
~';..-1.....'J. 'I' ;'(:.;':4 .... ~;!I H " i'·&#13;
~itU:)IM~tl1o::l'IJ)i"~~I\"'t'i/IfI&#13;
Ranger. Page 7&#13;
~ber IS, 1990&#13;
Letters&#13;
continued fro!,Dpage 2&#13;
perPCtuated.&#13;
The Ranger has made lm-&#13;
~~ in the last semesters&#13;
Ibal canbe encouraged. The conlinued&#13;
oppression or women, '&#13;
iJUOUgh a column like Toliver's&#13;
cannotbe tolerated by the students&#13;
01 this university. Perhaps the&#13;
Ranger, with the risk of losing their&#13;
credibilityat hand, need to suggest&#13;
!he weekly, grocery store tabloids&#13;
IOToliverif he still experiences the&#13;
deSire to continue "writing".&#13;
Amy Capobianca, Pat&#13;
Obenburger, Lisa R. Maritato,&#13;
Theresa M. Bowers,Diane L.&#13;
Jensen,Susan Peters,Kimberely&#13;
K. Amason, Connie Desotell,&#13;
SuzanneLarson, R. Ditter '&#13;
'Got an Attitude&#13;
Please print a clearer picture&#13;
ofChris "DA Darkside" Toliver,&#13;
so that women can recognize him.&#13;
Wewantto avoid this pig with his&#13;
attitudes.&#13;
I also want to address his argument&#13;
about how women should&#13;
know when they are asleep that&#13;
they have a penis in their vagina.&#13;
WhatToliver can't sem to understand&#13;
in his warped mind, is that&#13;
whena woman awakes with a man&#13;
ontopofher, AN ASSAULT HAS&#13;
ALREADYOCCURRED!&#13;
Don'! get me wrong, Chris&#13;
Toliver,there are some nasty men&#13;
ouuhere,and it seems you're on of&#13;
lhem!&#13;
Julie Boehme&#13;
ToJeff Lemmermannr&#13;
Anger. .Disappointrnent. Resennnem,&#13;
All of these I feel towards&#13;
youand your entire staff. Did you&#13;
know that the NAIA district 14&#13;
crosscountry championship meet&#13;
washeld here at Parkside on Sat- '&#13;
urdaythe 3rd? Then I realized yes,&#13;
youor someone on your staff knew&#13;
~ hecause a few results appeared&#13;
nicely in the scoreboard. Mr.&#13;
Lemmenmann, doesn't a district&#13;
championshiptake precedence over&#13;
everything except a national&#13;
championship? A Parksideintramuralnag&#13;
football game received&#13;
an article of almost half a page! If&#13;
youfound someone to write about&#13;
aOagfOOlbailgame, I feel confident&#13;
a writer could have been Cound to&#13;
cover the district meet. Mr.&#13;
Lemmcnmann, does an 'event requirethat&#13;
a member of your sports&#13;
staff need to participate in order to&#13;
bereeognized wilba simpleanicle?&#13;
IIIopc IlOl.&#13;
For a moment. think of each&#13;
llIeRIberllflhe~s_women's&#13;
..&#13;
Opinion&#13;
team that worked so hard and so&#13;
long to display the excellence&#13;
shown on th~ 3rd. The least they&#13;
deserve ISa SImple article in order&#13;
to feel their efforts were appreciated.&#13;
The cross country teams have&#13;
becomeaccilstomed to neglect from&#13;
the Ranger. but this last episode&#13;
was a slap in the face. In one meet&#13;
Parkside produced 13 all-district&#13;
champion teams, and one district&#13;
champion runner. The women's&#13;
team took all but on of the top ten&#13;
spots available at the meet! Mr.&#13;
Lemmermann did you not know or&#13;
not care. Some of us here at&#13;
Parkside did.&#13;
Jared Brieske&#13;
DA Darkside&#13;
This is in response to Chris&#13;
Toliver's "DA Darkside" coiumn.'&#13;
Is this supposed to justify rape or&#13;
are you trying to blame women for&#13;
getting raped? Your definition of&#13;
rape left out the fact that it is a&#13;
violent CRIME against a person,&#13;
not just sex with a person without&#13;
their consent.&#13;
There are many cases of un-&#13;
,reponed rapes because women are&#13;
afraid of the publicity for exactly&#13;
what you imply ... that society will&#13;
blame the woman. There are also&#13;
incidences of rape where the&#13;
women wants to prosecute, but they&#13;
are advised not to because their&#13;
case would not stand up in court&#13;
and is not worth the expense to the&#13;
state or themselves.&#13;
As for your generalization&#13;
"Are all women being raped?" Ido&#13;
not thinks so. I do not hear about&#13;
rapes everyday and there are too&#13;
many unreported cases. -Another&#13;
point to this is that in our society&#13;
there is a double standard among&#13;
men and women involving sex. One&#13;
of the reasons a women will not&#13;
prosecute or admit they were raped&#13;
is because they are afraid they will&#13;
be blamed. You make it sound so&#13;
easy to cry rape, but it is not easy.&#13;
Society will examine the woman .&#13;
. . Did she entice him ... was she&#13;
asking for it. .. or whatever, society&#13;
, will usually think the woman is to&#13;
blame. The woman is the victim&#13;
and then society makes her suffer&#13;
further for the incident, And your&#13;
other generalization. "Arethey just&#13;
. punishing guys purposely,"\yell if&#13;
they commit rape they should be&#13;
punished Many males get away ,&#13;
with rape because the woman never&#13;
prosecutes ofr they get off the&#13;
charge for ,various reasons.&#13;
You say you wrote this to&#13;
present other aspects of rape but to hO=;::A=S-=-::-o n-;-,-c-a-m-..:p=--u-S------&#13;
me it sounded very biased against Continllfll from page 1&#13;
women. International Studies, the students&#13;
Were organized into mock delegations&#13;
representing 33 member and&#13;
two observer nations. Each delegation&#13;
had approximately ten participants,&#13;
all pupils of the sixteen&#13;
different high schools engaged in&#13;
the simulation.&#13;
The bulk of the two-day session&#13;
was spent examining current&#13;
issues affecting the actual member&#13;
nations of OAS and the finale was&#13;
a meeting held according to all&#13;
rules of order which would be used&#13;
in a typical, authentic OAS session,&#13;
Christopher Kenth, a UWParkside&#13;
senior, presided over the&#13;
meeting, which was conducted in a&#13;
strict and orderly fashion.&#13;
A number of UW -Parkside&#13;
students assisted as mentors and&#13;
committee chairpersons. David&#13;
Towle, a junior who acted as a&#13;
chairperson, said, "You really get&#13;
into the model, study, and research&#13;
very well." Perhaps the best way,&#13;
and perhaps the only way to fully&#13;
understand international interaction&#13;
, Deirdre Collier&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Throughout this semester, I&#13;
have been following the letters&#13;
written by Chris Toliver to the&#13;
Ranger. While I have not always&#13;
agreed with his rhetoric, I do think&#13;
that he has brought up valid points&#13;
concerning the widening gap of&#13;
misunderstanding between races.&#13;
I also agree that it is difficult for the&#13;
Ranger to represent the entire student&#13;
body when its staff is largely&#13;
made up of white males.&#13;
Itis to the Ranger's credit that&#13;
they have printed these highly&#13;
critical letters and have further tried&#13;
to improve the situation by giving&#13;
Mr. Toliver a byline in the paper.&#13;
Unfortunately, he has not used this&#13;
opportunity to try to bring about&#13;
better race relations. Instead, he&#13;
has chosen to use his new-found&#13;
pulpit to spew out staedy stream of&#13;
misinformation and personal&#13;
opinion on the subject of rape. His&#13;
article-reveals a lack of enlightenment&#13;
as to the issue of consent and&#13;
a high degree of sexism which is,&#13;
quite frankly, surprising coming&#13;
from a person so concerned with&#13;
bigotry. What subject will Chris&#13;
Toliver taclke next? Maybe he will&#13;
tell us how some women respect a ,&#13;
man more after they have been&#13;
roughed-up a little.&#13;
Does the Ranger need a&#13;
, broader range of voices to better&#13;
represent the student poplace?&#13;
Definitely. Do Chris Toliver's&#13;
bellicose ramblings and sexist&#13;
opinionsqualify him to be one of&#13;
these voices? Definitely Not!&#13;
, Donald Hill&#13;
is to participate in a similar experience.&#13;
Latesha Jode, a sophomore&#13;
who participated as an assistant&#13;
mentor in last year's conference,&#13;
stated. "I learned a great deal in&#13;
regards to Third World countries,&#13;
working with high school students,&#13;
and most importantly, understanding&#13;
the OAS organization."&#13;
Victoria Bennett, a UW-&#13;
, Parkside sophomore, also chaired&#13;
one of the committees. Though&#13;
she did say, "They're at an awkward&#13;
age," she found the time spent&#13;
quite satisfying. "They seemed&#13;
genuinely interesting in solving&#13;
problems of participating nations.&#13;
I also had some excellent speakers&#13;
who were well-oriented in debating&#13;
techniques."&#13;
The mock meeting is the oldest&#13;
collegiate simulation of its kind&#13;
in the United States, and if the&#13;
enthusiasm exhibited by this year's&#13;
participants is an accurate indicalor,&#13;
one of the best offered.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
K9!~!V'&#13;
ENSEMBLE OF MOSCOW&#13;
What is rape?&#13;
What is rape? Rapeisanactof&#13;
violence toward women. It does&#13;
not only include the act of penetration,&#13;
but it also includes the act of&#13;
force. This may include such things&#13;
as hitting, punching, verbal abuse,&#13;
holding the victim down, the use of&#13;
weapons such as knives, guns, or&#13;
baseball bats, Why does this happen?&#13;
Because of something called&#13;
male dominance.&#13;
I am outraged, embarrassed.&#13;
and scared to think that there are&#13;
actually people at Parkside that&#13;
. _ , L- ~ --.--.-..- continueto"blamethevictim"and Fir. lEy. r U S To u r __'&#13;
-Continuetlon Page 8.&#13;
"ENORMOUSLY ENTERTAINING/"&#13;
"A kaleidoscope of color, energy, and excitementl"&#13;
TONIGHT 8PM COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
$4 UW-P Students I $12 Others. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Center or at the door .&#13;
There will be a reception with the dancers following the&#13;
performance for the UW-Parkside community. Please&#13;
join us!&#13;
-Ra-nl!ft'-,Page-S ------L-_-=O:lpc.:i=n=-io-n---~&#13;
Letters&#13;
COIItlnucd trom page 7&#13;
voice ill I am outraged at their&#13;
closed mindedness, I am embarrassed&#13;
for them because they publicly&#13;
display it. and I am scared thaI&#13;
there are people al Parlcside thai&#13;
have the minds of rapists.&#13;
U il isn'l obvious to you thai&#13;
nol only is rape an acl of intercourse&#13;
wilhoul consent by the&#13;
woman, bul and most imponantly,&#13;
an act of force used by a man 10&#13;
eslabllsh and reinforce his maleness,&#13;
then you have a problem.&#13;
And thai problem directly relates&#13;
10 my sarely, or as far as you're&#13;
concerned-my reputation!&#13;
Women are nOI defenseless or&#13;
weaI&lt;, buI il is only logical that a&#13;
man is usually stronger lItal a&#13;
woman and therefore, il is violence.&#13;
II is obvious Ihat the purpose&#13;
of Mr. Toliver's article was 110I10&#13;
open us up 10the other side of rape&#13;
(of which there is none), but to also&#13;
address his stand on the waragainsl&#13;
racism. Please, Chris, don 'I embanass&#13;
me or yourself again by&#13;
writing such trash 10 gel your point&#13;
across. Save yourself-apologize&#13;
10 the women al Parlcside and write&#13;
something worth reading next&#13;
week.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Over lite last few months,&#13;
pieces of my mail have been misplaced,&#13;
due to lItemail service here&#13;
at UW-Parkside. So tell me, can it&#13;
be lItat my mail is being put into&#13;
oiher mail boxes by mistake? And&#13;
if !his is so, where does !hat leave&#13;
me? I, myself have been finding&#13;
mail other then my own in my&#13;
mailbox. So who has the responsibility&#13;
for the mail being placed in&#13;
lite right boxes? Can they have&#13;
such a lack of knowledge for thei&#13;
job? NOl to be putting that person&#13;
down, but I would like 10 get mail&#13;
that belongs to me.&#13;
Laura Kruppstadt&#13;
John Taylor&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Consider for a moment an air- ,&#13;
borne substance lItat contains lite&#13;
following: carbon monoxide, benzene,&#13;
toluene, formaldehyde, ammonia,&#13;
cadium, phenol, and polonium-210&#13;
(a radioactive elemen!).&#13;
It is a substance !hat most of us&#13;
brea!he in every day, yet its componenlS&#13;
include dozens of toxic&#13;
chemicals, some of which (48) have&#13;
been shown to be carcinogenic.&#13;
If nicotine is added to lite list,&#13;
you will guess lItat the subslance I&#13;
speak of is cigareue smoke.&#13;
The dangers of cigarette&#13;
smoking for lite smoker are well&#13;
publicized and widely accepted,&#13;
and include emphysema, hean disease,&#13;
lung and o!her cancers, and&#13;
chronic bronchitis. None of lItese&#13;
diseases can be laken lightly once&#13;
contraeled, but have unfonunately&#13;
little effecl on smokers until Ihal&#13;
time.&#13;
Becoming more widely known&#13;
currently are lite dangers, just as&#13;
real, for !he non-smoker exposed&#13;
to cigarette smoke.&#13;
The non-smoker is exposed to&#13;
!he full effects (96%) of cigarelte&#13;
components" because !here is no&#13;
filtration when smoke isjust blown&#13;
into lite air. Besides lite usual&#13;
headaches, eye irrations, and nausea&#13;
Ihat often accompany the&#13;
brea!hing in of cigarette smoke,&#13;
non-smokers are wgets for more&#13;
insidious problems.&#13;
Recentstudies haveshoWtlthat&#13;
non-smokers chronically exposed&#13;
to side'stream smoke are at inSCHOLALS&#13;
HIPS,&#13;
GRANTS AVAILABLE&#13;
There exists, literally, BILLIONS of dollars in&#13;
scholarships, grants and other forms of financial aid for&#13;
your higher education.&#13;
MUCH OF IT GOES UNUSED EACH YEAR!&#13;
WHY? i&#13;
Because most people don't know how or where to begin&#13;
the search for these funds.&#13;
AT PAGE ONE IT'S OUR JOB TO DO THAT FOR&#13;
YOU.&#13;
We're good at what we do, we GUARANTEE&#13;
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apd the fee is suprisingly low!&#13;
For free and complete infonnation:,&#13;
~-------------------,&#13;
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Student Financial Aid Services&#13;
I 10332 Kraut Rd, Franksville, Wi 53126&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
IName&#13;
-Address&#13;
ICity State Zip&#13;
- School now attending I&#13;
:Year: FRO SOO JRO SRO Other()&#13;
_Explain other:&#13;
-L (U.W.-~ -------------------&#13;
creased risk for cervical and other&#13;
cancers.&#13;
Many of us are allergic to: In response to DUH Parkside!&#13;
smoke, myself among' litem, ~nd You ~d. your whole i~&#13;
cannot be around it for any penod way of thinking really dis&amp;usts&#13;
of time without becoming ill. It is _and I'm sure I'm not the only:&#13;
, also a real riskfor those with aslltma Ispeak for myself when I say ilia&#13;
and other lung conditions. sad to think Ihat, YOurnarro.,&#13;
All of us have a right to clean minded views wereactuailYPriIlled&#13;
air. Please consider what you ca~ in lite newspaper, although ~&#13;
do to eeuer lite situ,ation at UW - particular arucle along withlie&#13;
Parkside, where smoking is per- .' restof'em fitperfecllyundenteali&#13;
mitted almost everywhere. Our my cats litter box! It seemslie&#13;
lungs and health demand it. paperhadnochoiceinthemattcr~&#13;
Amy Jo Cagney printing it. You wouldeitherdonq.&#13;
nate the "Letter to lite Edim(.~&#13;
Snow and Parking· tionorcomplain!hepaperisl~&#13;
Potential Hassles for becoming predjudice ,inibal&#13;
One of lite advantages all of us theywon'tprintit.ltisreallysc.y&#13;
allending UW-Parkside enjoy is _to -actually know lhat someooelll&#13;
lite beautiful campus setting. The, Ihis campus can actually thinkillt&#13;
ftrst snowfall will soon transform rape is used as an excuse. Maybe&#13;
lite surrounding landscape into a' youshouldcontacttheCemralPlt&#13;
winter wonderland. jogger and ask her aboulherEX.&#13;
Fallen snow can also present a CUSE. You never remaillld&#13;
challenge to communters. Even consistantinyour!houghtsand)'Qr&#13;
though the campus Grounds crew interprelation of facts matchesZa&#13;
will be making evcry effort to clear Zsa Gaborsacting abilitics(lbieri&#13;
sidewalks, parking lots and roads none)&#13;
in lite fastest and mosl efficient Looking back on all YOUlJll!l&#13;
, means possible, you can help by leltersandcutelilliesceneriosl'l&#13;
cooperating with a fwew simple seem to display a very largechf&#13;
requests. ' on -your shoulder. Why can'tl'I&#13;
Snow does- not always fall 'useallyour-negetive"eilergy")lII&#13;
when it is_conenient for plowing. 'have against lIteworldaadpuli.&#13;
The 'lots are cleared of snow as :some good use. -Icanon!ylinellJ&#13;
soon as possible, but you may not - eat's box ~illt yourarticiesallllt&#13;
be able to park in your usual spot. at a tim~. To be honestr.&#13;
Parking in lite unplowedpanofllte stocked till Christmas'lbaIIl&#13;
lot only makes it more difftcult fot Please don't speak for theI$Ii&#13;
snow removal operations to be lite campus or claim yourIlliW&#13;
completed. You may find snow anollter side., There are_&#13;
plOWed all around your car! : obstales this campus has IDIllf'&#13;
Park your car only in lite areas come willt out blatant iglIOlIDl&#13;
that have been plowed. Ifyour lot ~nd small mindedness thelyou'.&#13;
is not available, you may have to added.&#13;
temporarily park in anollter. Never By me way you weresayill&#13;
park on !heOuler Loop Road. Also, litis rape crisis "puzzels"you.W~&#13;
stay clear of snow plows in action their happened to be a sealsawl&#13;
-llteyarebiggerlltanyouandcan't for you atlhe workshopfOlJllll&#13;
maneuver as easily. In ;"'inter,il is against rape. But obviouslylJjill&#13;
essentialthataisles in parking lotS to educate yourself moreonill&#13;
remain open for snow plows. Don't disturbing subjectjustiSn'lOII)lIl&#13;
try to add an extra space at lite end high priority list. You obyjoUSlY&#13;
of a row. had more important thingsw~&#13;
Willt a little forethought and like buy a new pair of slJade5~&#13;
c~nsideration you will be doing practice your jump shots.&#13;
your part to help keep this campus Edito?s Note: ._&#13;
open and operating smoothly. Some letters were nolprilill&#13;
, Karl Schroeder because they did nol ntlIl&#13;
Grouhos -Supervisor ," . Eilitlltilll poucyrequireJB!llS&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
.. SPORTS&#13;
iCI10NB THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1990&#13;
~&#13;
~z&#13;
~.&#13;
j&#13;
~c·=========~,-,-__ -c -.J&#13;
Blockedf Lisa Venegas's spike auempt was blocked, as were the Lady&#13;
Ranger hopes in their Bi-Disuictlinal match against Morehead Slate.&#13;
RangerS debut&#13;
season with&#13;
two-sided play&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Two Faces of the Runnin' Rangers made its&#13;
stage debut Friday night in their season opener against&#13;
the Czechoslovakian National Team.&#13;
Act One: Determination and Success&#13;
Skaters take lumps in&#13;
'franchise' ice-breaker&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The UW-Parkside Hockey&#13;
Team opened it's 1990-91 season&#13;
this past weekend in Dubuque,lowa&#13;
by dropping 2 games to host Loras&#13;
College.&#13;
Saturday, the Rangers played&#13;
in their first ever conference game.&#13;
Things looked good early for the&#13;
Rangers as John Hisdahl scored&#13;
the games first goal at the 4:44&#13;
mark. Loras quickly countered&#13;
however, with a goal :50 seconds&#13;
later and tallied two more goals&#13;
before the first period buzzer&#13;
sounded. Ranger goalie Mike&#13;
- , . '. ( j' '~I e- J" I 5 ........ ~... ....&#13;
Rivera had a buzy first period,&#13;
withstanding an 18 shot Loras assauh,&#13;
while saving IS.&#13;
The second period saw the&#13;
Rangers score first again, Doug&#13;
Alton neued a goal at the 3:32 mark&#13;
to bring the Rangers within a goal.&#13;
Loras then rauled off three unanswered&#13;
goals to secure a 6-2 lead at&#13;
the end of the second period.&#13;
In the final period. the Rangers,&#13;
fatigued from skating only two&#13;
lines the entire game, managed ani y&#13;
one more goal. Alton netted his&#13;
second goal of the game at 14:44.&#13;
Rivera had 28 saves while allowing&#13;
8 goals, a 78% save persee&#13;
Skaters, p B8&#13;
•• ,,-,. -1", .. _ .. .,.. _ _ _ _._ _.~_."" ~&#13;
*-* ~ '" ...&#13;
--&#13;
By&#13;
DAVID&#13;
OOHERIY&#13;
Columntst&#13;
It's once again lime for UW-Parkside 10 host the NAJA National&#13;
Cross Counlry Meet. For the tenth straigln year runners from across the&#13;
Nauon will be packing their bags and heading 10Kenosha 10run on UWParkside's&#13;
grueling cross country course.&#13;
What, you thoughl cross country was a winter sport in which the&#13;
participanlS used skis? Well if you show lip for the meet Saturday you are&#13;
going 10be surprised. The majority of the athletes in this meet have never&#13;
been on a pair of skis in their life.&#13;
That's nOlIO say thai these athletes aren't used to competing with&#13;
snow on the ground. Well maybe the runners from North Florida aren't,&#13;
bUImost of these runners are used 10competing in all types of weather.&#13;
They better be prepared 10 race in any weather, because November&#13;
weather in Wisconsin is impossible 10predict,&#13;
So, if the athletes don't ski what exactly do they do? Weill hope by&#13;
now you have figured ouuhis sport has something to do with running. No,&#13;
the meet isn'l going to be held down al the track, A cross country meet&#13;
is usually held on a grass course with a few hills and other obstacles 10&#13;
make things a liule more interesting.&#13;
Races at UW -Parkside tend ioalways be interesting. The majority of&#13;
the runners Saturday will just be worried about finishing the race without&#13;
falling, or just making it up those hills which never seem 10end. Sure there&#13;
will be a few people who are actually thinking about winning the race, bUI&#13;
for the rest of the runners the race Saturday will be a mauer of survival.&#13;
So will their be anyone from UW-Parkside in this race Saturday?&#13;
Yes,boIh themen'sand women's teams from UW-Parksidequalifiedfor&#13;
the National Meet. The women's team is very strong and could surprise&#13;
a 101of people when the team trophies are handed out, The men's team&#13;
is starting topulltogether and also could surprise some people. Ifyou have&#13;
nothing better to do this weekend, and even if you do have something'&#13;
better 10do, go watch some of the best runners in the nation compete this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
solid transition team. The Rangers&#13;
game plan backfired horribly&#13;
however as latvIa did all the runWhat&#13;
do you do when your&#13;
opponenl plays the best defense&#13;
your team has ever seen? What do&#13;
you do when your opponent shoots&#13;
70 percent from the field and 56&#13;
percent from three-point land?&#13;
What do you do when they run&#13;
every play 10 precise perfection?&#13;
What else, you loose.&#13;
This was the sad story for the&#13;
Ranger Women's Baskelballteam&#13;
in its first game of the season as&#13;
they were trounced 130 10 50 and&#13;
from buzzer to buzzer by the&#13;
Latvain National Women's team at&#13;
the first International Night at&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
"Without a doubt they are the&#13;
best womens team I have ever&#13;
seen," said head coach Wendy&#13;
Miller.&#13;
Latvia came into the contest&#13;
Friday nightasanincrcdibly highly&#13;
touted squad. Coached by Juris&#13;
Garkalns, the Soviet originated&#13;
team had won 77 games in a row in&#13;
Europe, an incredible streak at any&#13;
level but especially in international&#13;
competition. This team was mil&#13;
fast and smart, the lineup had 12&#13;
women over six feel mil, the remaining&#13;
four were no smaller than&#13;
5'7",&#13;
Miller figured her only chance&#13;
was to run the Latvains into defeat&#13;
with All-American guard Brenda&#13;
Van Cuick, Terry Ingalls, and a&#13;
90' Netters turned troubles around&#13;
By TED McINTYRE&#13;
Asst. Sporls Editor&#13;
If you didn't get a chance 10&#13;
see the 1990 version of Parkside&#13;
Volleyball, you missed something'&#13;
special.&#13;
The Rangers were a hard&#13;
working, tough team whose greatest&#13;
asset was their ability 10 stick 10-&#13;
gether. Through a roller coster&#13;
season of wins and losses and a&#13;
merry-go-round of coaches, the&#13;
team endured to produce the most&#13;
suecessfuU club Parkside has had&#13;
10 date.&#13;
This mixture of experienced&#13;
and inexperienced players combined&#13;
to lake themselves all the&#13;
way to the Bi-District Championship&#13;
malCh, and just a few poinlS&#13;
shy of going 10 Hawaii for the&#13;
NAJA National Volleyball Tournament.&#13;
Parkside began the season not&#13;
knowing what to expect. They had the team was left shocked and baa&#13;
good neucleas of players back sically without direction as Linda&#13;
from the previous year. Team Draftfheadsoltballcoachjassurned&#13;
Captain Colleen Ryan, outside the interim position as coach.&#13;
hillers Lara Nieckula and Vicky Most teams would have&#13;
Pundsack and co-captain Janice cracked underthis kind of pressure&#13;
Word and middle hitter Charee' of having a new coach and not&#13;
Wendorf were sure to be tough but knowing what to expect. BUI the'&#13;
an unsolidified seller position and 90' Rangers were a very special&#13;
three freshmen were cause for groupofwomen.lnsteadoflelting&#13;
concern. uncertainty dictate their season,&#13;
Parkside soon found the an- these courageous teamates stuck&#13;
swer and although they lost six of together and grew stronger and&#13;
their first II games, Cindy Maier . more talented as a team.&#13;
and Nicole Gross were stepping up Parkside won its tournament&#13;
nicely for the Rangers at seiter and here, and had good success in&#13;
Karen Dillo and Vicky Kozich were several other tournies.&#13;
familiarizing themselves nicely at As the post season came near,&#13;
setter. oUlSide hillers Karen Strobl and&#13;
Just when it looked as if the Chris Maher added great bench&#13;
team was set to play tough volley- depth as did middle hiller Lisa&#13;
ball, the coaching breakdo'wn Venegas.&#13;
occured. Long time head coach Parkside then, behind the&#13;
Terry Paulson sudenly retired be- . leadership of assislam coach Lynn&#13;
cause of "personal" reasons and' see Adversity,.B4&#13;
"Without a doubt&#13;
they are the best&#13;
womens team I&#13;
have ever seen,"&#13;
ning and everything else. "&#13;
By the end of the first half,&#13;
Latvia had racked up enough Slats&#13;
to not even score the rest of the&#13;
contest. They shot 62 % from the&#13;
field, 50 % from the floor and 80%&#13;
from the charity stripe making four&#13;
of five. Latvia had racked up 62&#13;
Bears to steam roll&#13;
slumping Broncos&#13;
By&#13;
JIM&#13;
NMaMJ&#13;
Columnist&#13;
The Chicago Bears are still in first place this week after defeatinglbe&#13;
Atlanta Falcons at Soldiers Field: Next, they are offto Mile HighS_&#13;
in Colorado to baule the Denver Broncos. The Bears should wineasily.&#13;
As you may know, the Bears are 8-1 so far this season. Theygotibell&#13;
with solid defensive play, a revamped offense, and a relativelyfZj&#13;
schedule. They have dominatedthe NFC central division.&#13;
The Broncos are, at best. a major disappointment this year. Theoo:e&#13;
mighty Bronco defense has crumbled inlo an ineffective shambles,SJIi&#13;
the superstar led offense has completely lost lt's touch. Renownasdle&#13;
doormat of the NFC (three Superbowl losses), Denver can onlyOOpef~&#13;
a miracle.&#13;
What to look for;&#13;
Offense.&#13;
The Bears Q.B., Jim Harbaugh, has an injured shoulder,buldie&#13;
Chicago running game can win games on it'S own. The Bearshaved1e&#13;
advantage as long as Tomczack doesn't play.&#13;
John Elway isa premier passer with some real goodreceivers,butlhe1&#13;
haven't been able to win any games. Unless coach pan RecvescanbnDI&#13;
the Bron~os out of the slump, the Chicago defense will havea hugedaj&#13;
In mterceptiens.&#13;
Defense. . .&#13;
, .. w&#13;
" The,~ears are great in the first. half, but weak when theyshpill~&#13;
prevem later on. The secondary is playing well despite thelo~&#13;
cornerback Donnell Woolford. Defensive end Richard DenthaS ~&#13;
playing awesomely, as has the line. Could be a big day for sacks.tLI1&#13;
The Broncos are performing below par on defense. TheyaJlo~&#13;
many yards ljIld fail to get many turn-overs. They used to be greatth&#13;
so you never know. ' '&#13;
The Bears should win this one by at least 7 points.&#13;
'.. ,' SCOREBOARD~=~~~ ----l&#13;
Bi-District Championship at UW -Parkside&#13;
Morehead 51. overUW-Parkside 14-16, 15-3, 15-10, 15-5&#13;
NaftIC games kills ast, aces digs block&#13;
Suobl 2 0 0 0 5 0&#13;
NieCkula 4 13 0 0 14 )&#13;
Word 3 8 0 0 11 3&#13;
wencJo!f 4 10 0 2 5 2&#13;
GJOSS 3 0 8 0 5 )&#13;
MJher 4 0 0 0 0 0&#13;
PuJJdsack 2 6 0 0 6 0&#13;
Ryan 4 5 0 0 11 4&#13;
Maier 4 2 34 0 11 I&#13;
Venegas 4 7 0 ) 11 2&#13;
DiUoo I 0 0 0 0 0&#13;
J(ozich 2 2 1 0 2 2&#13;
-&#13;
Mark prrq:ntage;&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Ni&lt;dcula 122&#13;
Wendolf 122&#13;
Koziclt 44&#13;
Venegas 121&#13;
Volleyball Onal1990 results:&#13;
Top five players in each category are listed&#13;
ScrYkt Ares 9ft gamp;&#13;
Name Games Aces&#13;
NieckuIa 122 S4&#13;
Word 96 38&#13;
Wendorf 122 46&#13;
Maie' 102 33&#13;
Pundsack 77 22&#13;
Aces/g&#13;
0.44&#13;
0.40&#13;
0.38&#13;
0.32&#13;
0.29&#13;
TOl.AIk.&#13;
774&#13;
980&#13;
67&#13;
178&#13;
673&#13;
Atck. %&#13;
23.6&#13;
22.0&#13;
20.2&#13;
17.4&#13;
1M&#13;
'i'k pu game'&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Nieckula 122&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Word 96&#13;
Wendorf 122&#13;
Dilloo 39&#13;
Digs pfr game'&#13;
Name Games Digs&#13;
Nieckula 122 309&#13;
Word. % 22&#13;
Maicr 102 233&#13;
Pundsack 77 171&#13;
Gross 73 148&#13;
Kills Klg&#13;
341 2.8&#13;
287 2.19&#13;
208 2.17&#13;
244 2.0&#13;
66 1.69&#13;
Assists A/g&#13;
788 7.73&#13;
373 5.11&#13;
38 0.31&#13;
31 0.25&#13;
27 0.22&#13;
Digslg&#13;
2.53&#13;
2.29&#13;
2.28&#13;
2.22&#13;
2.03&#13;
Assists per gamS" BlockS prc gam£"&#13;
Name Games&#13;
Ryan 131&#13;
Wendorf 122&#13;
Dil!oo 39&#13;
KOlich 44&#13;
Venegas 121&#13;
Name&#13;
Maier&#13;
Grot,&#13;
Venegas&#13;
Wendorf&#13;
Nieckula&#13;
Blocks&#13;
178&#13;
146&#13;
31&#13;
34&#13;
91&#13;
Blks/g&#13;
1.36&#13;
1.20&#13;
0.79&#13;
0.77&#13;
0.75&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Cudaosto .. kla (79)&#13;
f8. f. rb&#13;
min m-a - m-a 0-1 a pf 1p&#13;
Vyonl 22 3:3 3-4 2·3 4 0 12&#13;
Kow' 37 .8-8 3-6 1-4 O' I 19&#13;
Novak 16 3·6 2-2 3·4 0 I 8&#13;
Miehalko 19 2.4 0-0 0-0 1 2 5&#13;
Michalik 18 1·4 0-0 0·5 10 I 2&#13;
Beck. 17 5-6 0-1 1-3 2 I 10&#13;
Koc'l" 7· .0-0 0-0 0-1 I 2 0&#13;
Svoroda 20 I_I 0-1 1-4 1 0 2&#13;
KameniIc 24 5·10 2-2 1·5 0 2 14&#13;
Jelinek 20 2.8 2·2 0-2 0 2 7&#13;
Totals: 200 3().SO 12.181().34 19 12 79&#13;
Percentages: FG-.600, FT-.666. 3-pointgoals: 7_14 •. 500(VyoraI3-3.Miehalko I3,Kamenik&#13;
2-5. Jclinek 1-3). Team Rebounds: 3. Blocked Shots: 5 (Michalik 3. Novak.&#13;
Kamenik).Turnovers: 17 (Vyoral 5, Kamenik 4, Kovar 2, Michalik 2. Novak, Miehalko,&#13;
'Xcka, Kocvara). Steals: 6 (Jelinek 2, Kovar, Michalko. Michalik, Kamenik).&#13;
VW.Park'id. (47)&#13;
f8 fl rb&#13;
min m·a m·a 0-1 a pC tp&#13;
June 37 5-10 1.2 7-12 0 I It&#13;
Petti, 4 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 I 0&#13;
Popel.a 18 - 1.2 0.0 0.1 I I 2&#13;
AU", 17 1-3 0.2 0.2 I I 2&#13;
Park" 6 0-2 0-0 0·0 0 2 0&#13;
t::,on ;; ~:~4 g~~:~ ~ ~ :&#13;
c:.~, 31 3.5 0-0 0-1 5 2 9&#13;
Lau", 19 3.4 0-0 0·2 0 1 8&#13;
lubkeman 3 0.0 0'0 0-0 0 I 0&#13;
Bum, 10 0-4 0-0 1-2 0 2 0&#13;
Totab: 200 19.54 1.2 12.29 12 16' 47&#13;
P"...,lages: FG-.35I, FT-.500. 3-poinl goals: 8-22,.364 (Pepelea 1·2, Allen ()'2.&#13;
Parker 0-1. EVjl1s 2-7, Cates, 34, Laurer 2-3, Bums 0-3). Team Rebounds: 3. Blocked&#13;
Shots: 2 (luric 2), Turnovers: 20 (Evans 5,Cales 5, Laurer3, Jurie 3, AUen 2, Pepelea I,&#13;
RoIlers... I). Slcals: 5 (CalCS 4. AUen~&#13;
C&gt;&lt;choslovakia 26 53 - 79&#13;
VW·Parkside 27 20 47&#13;
~ 1 }.; • , , I'&#13;
w R~:S-I I.I'IIG&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
6&#13;
•&#13;
P.\RKSIIlE II \SKE III \1.1. 1 ~.\(Oll&#13;
Tombstone Open&#13;
at Steven's Point&#13;
GOLD DIVISION&#13;
CLASS CHAMPION SCHOOL&#13;
1181bs. Ram,ey uw-sp&#13;
,126 Bird UW-Parkside&#13;
134 DuOicne UW -Parkside&#13;
142 Bradley Loras&#13;
150 Yount Chico Slate&#13;
158 Dantzler N1U&#13;
167 CosteUo Loras&#13;
177 Hemauer UW-Parkside&#13;
190 KuehJ xru&#13;
HWf Hufnus UW-Parkside&#13;
Silver Division&#13;
Dohse unattached&#13;
Dineen Marquette&#13;
Persike UW -SP&#13;
Grimm luther&#13;
Misna unauached&#13;
Broclcman UW-Parkside&#13;
Green UW-SP&#13;
Heckman NJU&#13;
Bezcne UW -Parkside&#13;
118&#13;
126&#13;
134&#13;
142&#13;
150&#13;
158&#13;
177&#13;
190&#13;
HWT&#13;
P."rkside Intramural Volleyball League&#13;
league Standings&#13;
Yi.&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
o&#13;
fum&#13;
The Untouchables&#13;
The Invaders&#13;
Pump It Up&#13;
YMCA Posse&#13;
League Results:&#13;
The Invaders d. Pump h Up&#13;
15-12; 9·15;15-2&#13;
The Untouchables d. Y~C/\ Posse&#13;
15-2;15-7&#13;
Tonight's Game&#13;
lllc Untouchables \IS. YMCA Posse&#13;
Tuesday's Game&#13;
Pump It Up \IS. The Invaders&#13;
CROSS COl'NTRY&#13;
D1STRICf 14 CHAMPIONSHIPS&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS COUl\"RY&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
I.UW·PARKSIDE 17&#13;
2. UW -Eau Claire 46&#13;
3. UW-River Falls 92&#13;
4.' UW·Stout 111&#13;
5. Edgewood 123&#13;
UW -Par1cside RUMen:&#13;
PLACE !'!Ar!lli&#13;
1. Jenny Cark&#13;
2. Paula Stokman&#13;
3. Lorri BeBlieck&#13;
S. Ann Stokman&#13;
6. Tricia Breu&#13;
7. Tara Roy&#13;
8. Wendy Orlowski&#13;
.9. Veronica Chamlee&#13;
10. Dee Collier&#13;
14. Erin McDennotl&#13;
24. Oris Scherbarili&#13;
I!M!l&#13;
18:40&#13;
18:46&#13;
18:48&#13;
19:13&#13;
19:18&#13;
19&lt;19&#13;
19,23&#13;
19:18&#13;
19:46&#13;
2M3&#13;
21:15&#13;
MEN'S.CROSS COUN,RY&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
I. UW-Parkside 31&#13;
2. UW-Eau Claire 31&#13;
3. UW-River falls 53&#13;
4. MSOE 117&#13;
UW -Parkside Rurmers&#13;
~!'!Ar!lli I!M!l&#13;
3. Pat Kochanski 26:43&#13;
6. Derek Brown 27:'18&#13;
7. Kin Miller 27:25&#13;
8. Tun Reeves 27:29&#13;
13. Olris Henkes 21:58&#13;
14. Steve Rocha 28:15&#13;
15. Dave Doherty 28:17&#13;
17. Pat Kuhlman 28:51&#13;
21. Todd We'ber 29:lJ7&#13;
23. Kevin Collins 29:2S&#13;
24. K~n By",",. 29:30&#13;
STANDtNGS&#13;
EAST DIVISION&#13;
lUM ll: 1- fC: ff U !ill&#13;
L\ Dream Team II 2 .846 908 710&#13;
Black Wllcb 10 3 .769 1032 774 t&#13;
GUde &amp;. His PO!Ise 5 8 .385 912 986 6&#13;
Old Spice 2 11 .182 747 940 9&#13;
WEST DIVISION&#13;
lUM ll: 1- fC: ff U !ill&#13;
Bad Apples 13 0 1.000 1024 740&#13;
Prime Time 7 6 .538 862 878 6&#13;
Charging Armadillos 3 10 .231 758 938 10&#13;
Wann Black Labels I 12 sn 670 9n 12&#13;
TONIGHT'S GAMES&#13;
ThUrsday, Nov. IS&#13;
o,arging Annadillos vs. Girdie &amp;. His Posse··6:OO&#13;
Black Wata. vs. Prime Tune-·7:00&#13;
Old Spice VS. Warm Blaek Labels--7:00&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. Bad Apples-8OO&#13;
Tuesday, No". 20&#13;
Prime Time vs. Wann Black labeis-.t;:OO&#13;
Bad Apples vs. Charging Annadillos--7:00&#13;
Old Spice V$, Girdie &amp; His Posse··7:OO&#13;
LA Dream Team vs. Black Wateh·-8:00&#13;
THURSDA Y'S RESULTS&#13;
Charging Annadillos 28·32 60 Prime Time 28-36 64&#13;
LA Dream Team 4048 88 Old Spice 32-30 62&#13;
SCOIilliG SCORING •&#13;
Charging Armadillos Prime Time&#13;
Sielen-6,Sme rz -14 ,Rueth -12 .Solomon- 8, Emer -16,Schneidcr-6, Glenecki·16 ParkerBrockman·1O.Yde~6.Posig-4.&#13;
6, Kaczanowski-14,WeKhett-6.&#13;
LA Dream Team Old Spice&#13;
McKowen-26,Lcwis-20.Anhold-14, Sransk e- 10, B ri elm aier-l D.N ewman -8,&#13;
Keese- 10 ,Lemmennan, 8.Hall-6. Kid-Q, Harvey ·12,Poner-4 .Redlin-8,Fuh~·&#13;
Pluskota-4. • 10.&#13;
Girdy &amp; His Posse JH4&#13;
Bad Apples 50-56&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Black Walch Girdy &amp; His Posse&#13;
Brown-34. MileheU-18. Tolliver-24.Stills- Oi rdaukas -22.Fenrick ·20 .Koc:hJcr-26,&#13;
4, H. Owens-8,Jackson-4,R. ~ns-6. Beg.t:r-6,VorpahI-2.&#13;
Warm Black Labels Bad App6es&#13;
K. Luarski-12,Ohm -12 .Tetzlaff ·10. Hemauer-2.Sehmidtmann-4.Whiuier-30,&#13;
BoIshek-o,Waldal-4.Barowski-8,Gruel1-18. Now icki -30. T opp· 4 .Ka wCl.ynsk.i -14,&#13;
- Le,J&lt;e.12. Tremmeling·IO.&#13;
TUESDA Y'S RESULTS&#13;
32·48 80 Black Walch 22·34&#13;
34·26 60 Bad Apples J().:l4&#13;
SaJRlNG&#13;
Black Walch 48·SO&#13;
Warm Black Labels 26-38&#13;
SCORING&#13;
98&#13;
6-l&#13;
76&#13;
106&#13;
56&#13;
64&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
PrlmeTlme&#13;
SCORING&#13;
Black Watch&#13;
Toliver-4)acksoo-4.Brown-26,MitcheU-4,&#13;
Roegge-14,R.Owens·Z.H,Owens-Z.&#13;
Bad Apples&#13;
Whitticr-20.Schmidtmann-12.uske·20&#13;
• Kawczynski-4,Nowicki-S.&#13;
LA Dream Team&#13;
McKowen-28. Lcmmennann-14, Lewis-S,&#13;
Lond0-6, Hall-14,Anhold-14.&#13;
PrlmeTJme&#13;
Emer·14,Parlcer-6.Glenecki-16.Tates-6.&#13;
Beger-18.&#13;
Old Spice 26-24 SO Gkdy &amp; His Posse 50.48 98&#13;
Charging Annadillos 3().18 48 Warm Blick Labefs J&lt;S.:l4 70&#13;
SCORING scoRING&#13;
Old Spice Gird)' " His Posse&#13;
Briclmaier-6,Neumann -12.Sranske· Girdaukas-28 .Koehler-30,Fen rick ·22,&#13;
26.Harvey·6. Beger·4.Vorpahl-8,Huty-6.&#13;
Charging Annidillos W.nII Black Labels&#13;
Sielen-8,Rueth-12,Brockman-6.Smen.-14, K. Laurslci-28,Ohm-6.GrvdI-14.Teu.laff·&#13;
Solomon-4,Yde..4. 16.Waldal-6.&#13;
LEAGUE LEADERS·SCORING&#13;
LAST WEEK'S LEADERS l!!IIIlf DaGm 81 .ue -SCOIilllG· Brown.) BW 13 340 26.2&#13;
Fa'lnrick, J G&amp;P 13 266 20.5&#13;
JlUQ Koehler G&amp;PI2 218 18.2&#13;
Brown BW 34 Gird.uku$ G&amp;PI3 234 18.0&#13;
Whittier BA 30 Whittier BA II 198 18.0&#13;
Nowicki BA 30 McKowen LA 12 214 17.8&#13;
McKowen LA 26 Sc:hmidtmann BA 12 214 17.8&#13;
Koehler G&amp;P 26 Sm= CA 13 224 17.2&#13;
Toliver BW 24 Toliver BW 13 218 16.7&#13;
Nowick.i, E BA 8 130 16.3&#13;
Girdaukus G&amp;P 22 lewis LA 12 180 15.0&#13;
Erner, 0 PT 11 158 14.3&#13;
lliW Clenedi PT 12 158 13.1&#13;
'Koehler G&amp;P 30 Kawetynski BA 13 158 12.2&#13;
Girdaukus G&amp;P 28 Sielen CA 13 156 12.0&#13;
McKowen LA 28 Lemmennarm LA 13 154 11.9&#13;
Brown BW 26 Mitchel! BW 13 154 11.9&#13;
Sranske OS 26 K. Lazarslti BL 12 142 11.8&#13;
K.1..al.arski BL 26&#13;
Rueth,J CA 13 148 11.4&#13;
ByJEFFLE~ERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The UW-Parkside wrestling&#13;
team opened up their 1990-91&#13;
season in style at the Tombstone&#13;
Open in Stevens Point this past&#13;
weekend, getting four first place&#13;
finishes in the Gold Division, and&#13;
two more in the Silver Division of&#13;
Morehead&#13;
Date Opponent&#13;
--regular season--&#13;
11/24 Northern Open&#13;
12/01 Warhawk Invite&#13;
12/07 uw-t.acrosee&#13;
12/08 Wis. Collegiate Open&#13;
12/28 Midlands Champinoships&#13;
01/05 Drakellowa Open *&#13;
01/05 Carthage College Invite&#13;
01/10 U.ofIndianapolis-Double&#13;
01/11 Midwest Classic&#13;
01/23 Chicago State University&#13;
01/25 Central Oklahoma State&#13;
02/01· Grand Valley State Duals&#13;
02/02 UW-Eau Claire Invite"&#13;
02/02 UW-Whitewater&#13;
02/08 Wheaton College Invite&#13;
02/13 Marquette University 7:00&#13;
--post season02/15&#13;
NCAA II Midwest Regional&#13;
02/28 NAIA Nationals&#13;
03/01 NCAA II Nationals&#13;
03/14 NCAA I Nationals&#13;
*JV Meet&#13;
the two-tiered tournament.&#13;
The Silver Division, open to&#13;
freshman only, saw five Rangers&#13;
competing in four divisions, three&#13;
of which made at to the finals. The&#13;
only thing which kept the three&#13;
finalists from all capturing titles&#13;
was that at 158 Ibs, both finalists&#13;
were from UW·Parkside.&#13;
Kevin Schmitz and Troy&#13;
Brockman faced off in an allRanger&#13;
final, with Brockman coming&#13;
out on top with a 9-3 decision.&#13;
Schmitz made it to the finals with a&#13;
6-1 quarter-final victory, followed&#13;
by a semi-final pin. Similarly,&#13;
Brockman recorded a pin in the&#13;
semis, after a 13-4 win moved him&#13;
from the quarter-finals.&#13;
see Wrestlers, B8&#13;
Fast start not enough for netters to advance&#13;
cued from front page&#13;
lIld ran off six points. The turning&#13;
point of the whole match came&#13;
with the teams noued at nine in the&#13;
secondgarne. An incredible minute&#13;
and a half long point, which had&#13;
shots and blocks of all kinds and&#13;
from every angle, went to&#13;
Morehead SI. and seemed to take&#13;
the air out of the Lady Rangers&#13;
game.&#13;
The Dragons Middle hitter&#13;
Ann Swanson pounded the Rangers&#13;
with kill after kill in game three&#13;
en route to a 15-10 win.&#13;
Parks ide had trouble with kill&#13;
shots because of Morehead's large&#13;
frontline. Concequently the RangLatvia&#13;
Season can only get&#13;
easier after Latvia&#13;
continued from 82&#13;
vere never allowed any rhythm by&#13;
Latvia,&#13;
Latvia was fuled by an a11-&#13;
around great performance as eight&#13;
players seored in double figures.&#13;
Guard Zvetlana Zitane headed the&#13;
onslaught with 18 points and eight&#13;
steals. Foreward Diana Skrastina,&#13;
.he Milwaukee World Basketball&#13;
Festival MVP, had 17 points, and&#13;
lWO blocks. Parkside was led in&#13;
seoreing by Brenda Van Cuick and&#13;
Terry Ingalls with II each. Latvia&#13;
out rebounded Parkside 4 I to 20&#13;
and shot 70% to Parksides 35%&#13;
from the field.&#13;
"It was hard to play againtst&#13;
thier outstanding no dribble fast&#13;
break," said Miller.&#13;
The Rangers look fore ward to&#13;
the rest of the season and are glad&#13;
they got the oportunity to play&#13;
Latvia. "It was a fun game, you&#13;
really can't evaluate who will start&#13;
the rest of the season after a game&#13;
like this," said Miller.&#13;
When the game was over, the&#13;
Rangers had one comforting&#13;
thought, from here the season is all&#13;
downhill, at least as far as competition&#13;
goes.&#13;
ers tried to hit dinkers to confuse&#13;
Morehead but poor placement allowed&#13;
the Dragons easy seoring&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
The last three games were like&#13;
a bullfight for the Rangers, everywhere&#13;
they turned they saw red of&#13;
the Dragon's jerseys as nothing&#13;
worked for Parkside,&#13;
Just six minutes into the final&#13;
game, Parkside was down 9-0 and&#13;
the team was discouraged by&#13;
Morehead's superiority on the&#13;
court. Parkside managed five token&#13;
points to prolong the defeat of&#13;
15-5 ending their season.&#13;
Leading the match statistically&#13;
for the Rangers were Cindy Maier&#13;
with 34 assists and Lara Neickula&#13;
with 13 kills and 14 digs. Parkside&#13;
once again used a familiar balanced&#13;
attack wi th everyone playing&#13;
in spots.&#13;
"We only made a few mistakes,"&#13;
said Coach Draft, "but they&#13;
did not make any."&#13;
Parkside's biggest problem&#13;
may have been the let down after&#13;
winning an emotionally and physicallydraininggamcone.&#13;
Morehead&#13;
just out played them in the match.&#13;
"We played well, they just&#13;
played better," said Draft.&#13;
IBMlParkside's Jltfilete oftlie 'Week:&#13;
"&#13;
Leading by example&#13;
9:00 Madison,WI&#13;
9:00 WhiteWater, WI&#13;
3:00 HOME&#13;
9:00 ·HOME&#13;
TBA Evanston,IL&#13;
9:00 Des Moines, fA&#13;
9:00 Kenosha,WI&#13;
6:00 Indianapolis,1N&#13;
2:30 Indianapolis,1N&#13;
6:30 Chicago, n.&#13;
7:00 Edmond,OI(&#13;
TBA Allendale,MI&#13;
9:00 Eau Claire,WI&#13;
7 :00 Whitewater, WI&#13;
4:00 Wheaton,lL&#13;
HOME&#13;
11:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
Edwardsville, IL&#13;
Butte, MT&#13;
Fargo,ND&#13;
Ames,IA&#13;
Adversity.&#13;
Group grew stronger&#13;
from coaching turmoil&#13;
continued from 82&#13;
Thiese, was ready for the post season.&#13;
The Lady Rangers won the&#13;
District 14 Championship by&#13;
beating host Viterbo twice. Then&#13;
they fell one match shy of going to&#13;
Nationals in Hawaii when they lost&#13;
Saturday to Morerhead St.&#13;
"This is an exccptionallydcse&#13;
group," said head coach Linda&#13;
Draft. "They showed greatcharater&#13;
to play even stronger undersuch&#13;
adversity as they have endured:&#13;
So if you missed the 9O'Ranger&#13;
Volleyball tearn you did not only&#13;
miss top notch volleyball but you&#13;
missed a great team at work.&#13;
~~~~~~~* * ** * ~~&#13;
Sun Breaks! . Ski Breaks!l\&#13;
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, , ,,,,-_1-.8.00.-3.6;.;6;;"1~9;:8~5_ ... _1~.8::;O;O;;;;-3;6;6-~19.8.5"I&#13;
Prime time congrats to this weeks RANGER IBM Athlete of the&#13;
Week, Lara Nieckula for her hard working hard hitting style of volleyball&#13;
all season long.&#13;
A redshirt her first season, Lara returned her sophomore year as a&#13;
fiery and consistent starter. Justcompleting her junior season, Lara led the&#13;
netters inattacks with 980, in kills with 122 (2.8 per game) and in aces with&#13;
54 on the year.&#13;
A business major, Nieckula was named to the All District 14 teamfor&#13;
her exceptional play in helping Parkside capture its first ever Districk 14&#13;
Championship title.&#13;
Parks ide moved Onto the Bi-Districts, also a first for the Rangers and&#13;
Nieckula again was up for the challenge as she had 13 kills, 14 digs and&#13;
a block in the loss to Moorhead St.&#13;
The Rangers have had great support from everyone all season long,&#13;
but Nieckula's play has not only been consistent, but also exceptional .... ====&#13;
throughout the 1990 campaign.&#13;
Congratulations to Lara Nieckuia as our Athlete of the Week. Lara Nieckula&#13;
c.nLT.D. '&#13;
~OIJ: .5·o¢ --rappers&#13;
$Z,7511'fchll.rs'&#13;
~ $2,76Rte),ers&#13;
,-WEDS: J)ance +0 +he&#13;
'1o,H80s with a-R£Gf; 1ER0ALL&#13;
free RiA; I dri"k Wifj, 1a.rkS,de. I,t&gt;.&#13;
1HU~-jQm a~in with .&#13;
'Thrks:des Oeff' LemlYli2rrYlarln&#13;
fF,I,4-g/f!: l.VDZQ'S BUl- kERN&#13;
Sj!!;!:'1Oo16ALl ALL '[WI!!:&#13;
5100 %eaehe;n g;poa~&#13;
cJ2aclne 55J.r -ge9:5&#13;
host, thus receiving an automatic&#13;
bid 10 the tournament. Had they&#13;
won their Area,their automatic bid By MIKE McKOWEN Claire's next runner took 5th one&#13;
would not have been needed, and a Sports Writer spotahead ofDerek Brown 10move&#13;
Boca Raton_loss---lea- es, -=:;::~-is~ec~o~n~d~att-l~ar~c;,JJb:i!idLlowalULlllJJaYe-+=::;;;:;;~~;;;rr;;~:;;;;~~;--:~;'::'~~~~~.'.~P:ItItS~~ld~e.&#13;
n available. t e gmmng of the season Close behind Derek were teamThe&#13;
second bid went to IOlh Coach Lucian Rosa wanted the males Kin Miller and Tim Reeves at large Rangers at h ranked,Catawba,NC. They lost in District 14 title. At points in the in 7th and 8th while Eau Claire's&#13;
- ome their Area final to the nations top- seasonitdidn'tlooklikethiswould Joe Turk and Mark Albrecht were&#13;
ranked team, West Virginia- ever happen. With injuries 3 seconds behind Reeves. With&#13;
Wesleyan. by a 1-0 score. throughout the season his runners each team having 4 runnersacross&#13;
In the Area 5 final, Viterbo came back just in time. Led by Pat the line the Rangers held a two&#13;
College, who knocked UW _ Kochanski's third place finish and point lead but the fifth runner for&#13;
Parkside from competition, de- the return of freshman Derek Eau Claire finished I Ith two spots&#13;
feated Judson College, II by a 3- I Brown, UW -Parksidcand UW-Eau ahead of Chris Henkes.&#13;
margin. Claire tied with 37 points. With the main goal of the&#13;
Everyone knew the battle was season accomplished Parksid&#13;
going to be between the Rangers would like to beat UW-Eau Claire&#13;
and the BJugolds, and by the mile at the Nationals here in two weeks.&#13;
markeveryonewascountinglOsee With an off weekend before the&#13;
who was ahead at points in the race meet the Rangers will use the time&#13;
each team held the lead. EauClaire to get healthy and tune up for anhad&#13;
their first runner cross in 2nd other match-up with the Blugolds.&#13;
place one spot ahead of Pat Coach Rosa would like to leave no&#13;
Kochanski, the Rangers first run- doubt whose the best District 14&#13;
ner to cross the finish line. Eau team.&#13;
By JEFF LEMMERMANN&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The at-large hopes of UW·&#13;
Parkside'ssoccerteam fell quietly&#13;
by the wayside this weekend, as&#13;
the selection committee bypassed&#13;
on the 9th ranked Rangers.&#13;
One of the main factors was&#13;
the loss by Boca Raton, FL in their&#13;
Area finals, Boca Raton, ranked&#13;
2nd in the nation, is the tournament&#13;
Road' to NAIANational-hoops&#13;
Tourney a tough one&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
Domination.lt'slheonlyword&#13;
IOdescribewhattheUW-Eau Claire&#13;
BlugoldBasketball team has done&#13;
10 District 14 opponents in the&#13;
NAIARegional Tournament.&#13;
The Blugolds have captured&#13;
theDisbict 14Championship for 5&#13;
years running, and have won the&#13;
thetitlean amazing 9 outofthe last \&#13;
12Years. In two of the three years&#13;
theBlugolds did not win the title,&#13;
they were defeated by the Terry&#13;
POller/Dick Bennett teams of&#13;
StevensPoint in the championship&#13;
game, r:&#13;
This year, the Blugolds are&#13;
ranked number 1 in the NAJA&#13;
National Poll after coming off a&#13;
30-4season which was highlighted&#13;
by a second place finish in the&#13;
NAIA National Tournament in&#13;
Kansas City, In 1981and 1989,the&#13;
Blugolds captured thirds in Kansas&#13;
City, and a fourth in 1980.&#13;
UW -Parkside has drawn berths&#13;
in the District 14 Tourney for 14&#13;
plus straight years, but hasn't gone&#13;
to ihe big dance since 1978. The&#13;
Ranger's main road block: the&#13;
Blugolds. In the past 12 years, the&#13;
Blugolds have eliminated the&#13;
Rangers from lOurnamentplay nine&#13;
times.&#13;
The last time the Rangers won&#13;
a district championship, was 1978,&#13;
when they finished off Oshkosh to&#13;
complete a four year run of championships,&#13;
dating back 10 1975. The&#13;
, four year stretch of championships&#13;
included two victories over, Eau&#13;
Claire, one over Stout and one over&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
The Rangers highest seed in&#13;
the National Tourney was 8th in&#13;
1976, and they have never won&#13;
, .. '.'&#13;
more than one game in K.C.&#13;
Last year, the sixth seeded&#13;
Rangers were ousted in the first&#13;
round by third ranked Stevens&#13;
Point, and in 1989thefounhseeded&#13;
Rangers were blanked by number&#13;
five Oshkosh.&#13;
The teams are selected for the&#13;
Tournament based on their Dunkel&#13;
Rating. The top six Dunkel Ratings&#13;
from the district along with two&#13;
automatic bids are seeded according&#13;
10their Dunkel Rating, with the&#13;
winner going to the National&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
This year the Rangers hope to&#13;
make it 15 straight invitations to&#13;
the District 14Championships, but&#13;
it will be an uphill climb, with&#13;
strong state teams such as u.w.&#13;
Platteville, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, Viterbo,RiverFalIs,&#13;
and UW-Stout also vying for&#13;
tourney spots.&#13;
.........&#13;
The Rangers jumped out and&#13;
never looked back. The battle for&#13;
the individual title was between&#13;
Jenny Clark, Paula Stokrnan.Lorri&#13;
DeBlieck and the only non-Parkside&#13;
runner 10 finish in the top 10&#13;
Jeni Wickham of UW -Eau Claire.&#13;
At the half-way point in therace&#13;
Jenny, Palua, and Lorri were running&#13;
together until Jenny pulled&#13;
away to beat Paula by 6 seconds.O&#13;
Coach DeWitt feels the keys&#13;
to doing well at Nationals is the&#13;
team getting adequate rest, having&#13;
a proper mindser and controlling&#13;
their emotions. He doesn't want&#13;
the runners to be to up before thl&#13;
race and have them channel their&#13;
energy during their meet.&#13;
If the season ended now it&#13;
would have been a successful year.&#13;
But. that doesn't mean the team&#13;
isn't hungry for more. The biggest&#13;
goal is still ahead. The Lady&#13;
Rangers hope to finish in the top 5&#13;
at Nationals in two weeks, but a&#13;
National Championship is a real:&#13;
istic goal. Coach DeWitt needs&#13;
each of his runners 10 be at their&#13;
best and it is possible 10 be the first&#13;
team to win three NAJA Championships.&#13;
Ranger men take&#13;
first in district 14&#13;
Nation's Top 800&#13;
to compete hereBy&#13;
MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
proximately I I:45 a.m.&#13;
Admission is S2.00. Parking&#13;
will be available in the UW-Parkside&#13;
Physical Education, Communication&#13;
Arts and Union Lots.&#13;
In the men's race the seventime&#13;
defending champions Adams&#13;
State will be favored along with&#13;
Lubbock Christian College, Texas:&#13;
and Malone College, Ohio.&#13;
In the women's racedefendinll&#13;
champion Adam's State, Colorado&#13;
will be the favorueonceagain along&#13;
withPacificLutheran, Washington;&#13;
North florida University and the&#13;
host UW -Parkside,&#13;
The NAIA National Championships&#13;
are back at the UW-Parkside&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
Course. Nearly 800 runners&#13;
throughout the country will compete&#13;
in the 1990 Men's and&#13;
Women's Championships on Saturday,&#13;
November 17_&#13;
The runners are representing&#13;
115 colleges and universities. The&#13;
women's 5000 meter race will begin&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. and the men's&#13;
8000 meter race will begin at ap-&#13;
I&#13;
The NAIA-'W'oD1en's Na't10n .&#13;
;qjrff;I;;j\!Jt;;"t&lt;i' Keys to success for women&#13;
;j'::1&#13;
. DeBlieck points to pace, and controlled running&#13;
For women running&#13;
Parkside's NAJA National&#13;
Cross Country course for the-&#13;
'first time, UW-Parkside senior.&#13;
Lorri DeBlieck offers sound&#13;
advice,&#13;
"The first mile go out at a&#13;
good pace and try to break away&#13;
from the pack. But don't go too&#13;
fast or you'll bum out. Then&#13;
. pace yourselffonhe next stretch&#13;
and at the two mile mark, give it&#13;
everything you have, whatever&#13;
is left." warns DeBlieck.&#13;
Sound advice from a&#13;
knowledgable source as Lorri&#13;
Placed 13th at Nationals last&#13;
year and has as much experience&#13;
as possible on&#13;
the treacherous 5000 meter&#13;
course.&#13;
With hundreds of runnners&#13;
set to converge for the Nationals&#13;
this Saturday, the course,&#13;
habitually the sight of Nationals&#13;
formenand women, is the center&#13;
of attention.&#13;
. ".., ..&#13;
race which you should nmyour&#13;
best because you have been&#13;
training for it all season," said&#13;
Lom.&#13;
By ternpature contrast,Lolli&#13;
advises runners to take varied&#13;
apporoaches to different&#13;
weather conditions. "If the&#13;
tempatures are in the 60's you&#13;
should drink a lotoffluids. lfits&#13;
cold, J think it would be a plus&#13;
for the teams from up north&#13;
simply because southern&#13;
schools are not used to the cold,"&#13;
added Lorri.&#13;
The course itself is nationally&#13;
renouned for its toughneSs&#13;
on competetors.&#13;
Lorri herself recalls the first&#13;
time she ran the course. "The&#13;
first time J ran itljust remember&#13;
it was so tough. Part of thaiwas&#13;
because J was just out of hIgh&#13;
school and not used 10 the&#13;
mileage.&#13;
''The best advice is to remember&#13;
to run under conuol.~ ~"'"..."~"~iii(1 ~n~ct~..";.",-~,,·~~~,~,,,,·&#13;
What makes the course so&#13;
interesting iswhat also makes it&#13;
so difficult. The huge hill at the&#13;
start of the race, the killer 1/4&#13;
mile, stretch of grass and sod&#13;
which has killed so many talented&#13;
runners hopes will again&#13;
be center stage.&#13;
"Nationals is 'a time and a&#13;
Lori DeBlieck&#13;
Q&#13;
.&gt;.&#13;
/&#13;
.\&#13;
Roo&#13;
Keys to success for men&#13;
Doherty says to watch out on hills, avoid burn-out&#13;
"The hill at the fourmile mark,&#13;
is the real killer," explains UWParkside&#13;
sophomore Men's Cross&#13;
country runner David Doherty, "the&#13;
hill teases you and makes you think&#13;
it is not 100 big, it looks small, but&#13;
then it gets bigger and bigger right&#13;
as you begin to run it. That hill&#13;
seems like it will never end."&#13;
Welcome to the NAIA Cross&#13;
Counlry.Nationais and the worlds&#13;
most treacherous course.&#13;
The hill Doheny describes is&#13;
not even the biggest hill on the&#13;
UW -Parkside Cross Country&#13;
Course. Dave an experienced runner&#13;
of the course explained his&#13;
feelings of what the course is like&#13;
and what first time runners should&#13;
. expect.&#13;
"If you go out too hard, the&#13;
course will beat you, you will not&#13;
beat the course. 50 runners must&#13;
be able to start off more cautiously&#13;
in order to run a good race."&#13;
The familiar sight of NAJA&#13;
Nationals is most famous for its&#13;
huge and ominous hill at the beginning&#13;
and three mile mark of the&#13;
"The guys on our&#13;
team have nicknamed&#13;
that hill&#13;
'heartbreak hill',"&#13;
-runner Dave Doheny&#13;
race for men. Since the men run an&#13;
8000 meter race they are forced to&#13;
climb this monster twice. This hill&#13;
is where a racer will help or condemn&#13;
himself as Dave did his very&#13;
frrst time at Parkside. "My worst&#13;
experience here was my freshman&#13;
year in my first meet. I took off too&#13;
fast because of inexperience and&#13;
dropped out after the two mile&#13;
mark," explained Dohrety,&#13;
For Dave and other Parkside&#13;
runners, the big hill is overcome&#13;
with experience but that hill at the&#13;
fourmile mark is the real nail inthe&#13;
coffin, ''The guys on our team have&#13;
nicknamed that hill 'heartbreak&#13;
hill'," he explaines.&#13;
Dave, running in his second&#13;
Nationals meet, has advice for other&#13;
first time runners:&#13;
Be cautious at the beginning&#13;
of the race because the race does&#13;
not even begin until after the 3 and&#13;
1/2 mile mark.&#13;
The cold weather ( providing&#13;
it will be cold) will have to affect&#13;
the performance of'Southcrn teams&#13;
while most of the midwcst tcan1S&#13;
arc used to the cold.&#13;
"In SOdegree or over weather,&#13;
the honer it is, the more conservative&#13;
you have to be because of the&#13;
heat. Fatigue is then a factor.&#13;
In weatherof25 to 50 degrees,&#13;
the course gets faster while the&#13;
ground hardens and that's what I&#13;
prefer to run in, 45 degrees would&#13;
be ideal for me.&#13;
The cooler the weather, the&#13;
faster the race. as long as there is no&#13;
snow on the ground," Dave e -&#13;
plained.&#13;
But when asked aboutrunning&#13;
in sub zero weather as he did at last&#13;
ycarsNationalseompetition, ''Then&#13;
I run pretty damn fast so I can get it&#13;
over with:'&#13;
z --&#13;
I.&#13;
, Skaters&#13;
Defenseless Ranger&#13;
skaters sheUed by Loras&#13;
continued froD1 rroot page .CJU:istian Hans~~neued a fllSl&#13;
. ~. period goal, asslSledby Doug&#13;
centag~. ~".. t"' •• "'~ hi Inthe second game onSunday,' Alton. m...e~,",&gt;,pvc JPPedin&#13;
Loras took a commanding 4-1 tst with 2 assists., '&#13;
- iod lead and never looked back, The Ranger s are not looking&#13;
::'ting the Rangers by a final of at this weekend's d-:featS:asa step&#13;
10-4. . in the wrong direction '. "Loms is&#13;
The games only highlight, if one of the better-teams m thecen.&#13;
you call it one, was an amazing 49 ference, and Idon't think we plaYed&#13;
saves by Rivera while allowing too badly for our fICStever game."&#13;
only 10 goals. an 83% save per- stateddefensemenCasslOppo. "We&#13;
centage.Rivera was pelted by 16 gota little u~ed towards the end of&#13;
shots in the Ist, saving 12,21 in the the games since we are only skat.&#13;
2nd, saving 19, and 22 shots in the ing two lines"&#13;
3rd, saving 18. , . TheRangerswilllookfonheir&#13;
The Ranger team offense im- first ever victory when they host&#13;
proved in the 2nd game, with John Cornell College on December lst&#13;
Hisdahl netting 2 goals and assist- and 2nd auhe Kenosha County Ice&#13;
ing on a Steve Silvasi score. Arena.&#13;
Czech second half is show&#13;
stopper for Ranger debut&#13;
... points of the contest from the&#13;
continued fl'Glllrro.t page freethrow line with just under a&#13;
minute left. Kovar finishes with a&#13;
team-high 19, and the Czechs hold&#13;
their biggest leadof the night at 79-&#13;
47.&#13;
UW -Parksidc 1 0 3 4&#13;
Lcras College 4 2 4. 10&#13;
FIRST PERIOD· Scoring: 1, Lens,&#13;
Keenan (Westol, Mignon), 4:37.2, Loras,&#13;
Mignon (Westol, Courtney), 8:00. 3,&#13;
Parkside, Hanstcdt (Alton). 12: 12. 4,Loras,&#13;
Guzaldo(Weslol), 12:48. 5,Loras,Mignon&#13;
(J&lt;jylahan), 14:02 Penalties: Burke,&#13;
Parkside (Too Many men on ice), 10:01;&#13;
O'Connell, Loras (Inlerferen&lt;:e) .. 6:11;&#13;
Filippelli, Parkside (Misconduct&gt;, 4:12;&#13;
Rivera, Parkside (Interference), 3:17;&#13;
Caccioppo, Parkside (Charging);0:04.&#13;
SECOND PERIOD· Se..-Ing:6. Lora.,&#13;
Uoy,l(Counney,Allhau.),IU3,7.Lon ••&#13;
Mignon(Westol, U9yd),16:04,Penallles:&#13;
Silvasi, Parkside (Too Many Men On Ice),&#13;
15:29;Ryan,Lora. (HighStickmg),13:ll8;&#13;
Counney, Lora.(Roughing),12:44.&#13;
THIRD PERIOD· Seoring: 8. Lon'.&#13;
Coonney (Mignon),t:05.. "9. Parksid.,&#13;
. Hisdahl(Cacciopo), 2:24,to,Lor", Uoyd&#13;
(Counney), 5m. 11, Loras, Guzaldo&#13;
(MuI.en),1:09. 12,Lora•. Guzaldo, 7:32&#13;
t3, Parl&lt;.ide.Hi.dah1(Ca.sioppo), 8:35.&#13;
t4, Parkside, Silva~i (Hisdahl), 13:25.&#13;
PenaIUes: Kivlahan,Lora. (Roughing).&#13;
9:55;Hisdahl,Parl&lt;.ide(Roughing~9:55;&#13;
Flickinger, Loras' (Charging), 5:21;&#13;
Kivtahan, Lo... (High Stickinj),2:27;&#13;
managed a takedown in.the final 4 title viclQry over Greg ~wis. . Hisdahi;Parl&lt;.ide(HighSticking).2:27.&#13;
seconds of that mall:h to wrestle Scott Wessley came up one Mon, ""rl"ide (fripping)0:29,&#13;
the title from Skarda, who was 32- match short in his attempts for the Shoes on Goal:&#13;
, I 2 3 T 7-'1 last year. 1901b title, losing:in the finals to ;:UW:::-:-Pa::-:-rl&lt;-:.i"'de~-:-6-9~~1~5-c3;;;;O&#13;
, Tim Whiting bounced back. Mark Kuehl of Non hem IHinois by Lora.College 16 21 22 59&#13;
from his quarter-fmalloss to cap- an 8-2 score. ll.eforethat, Wessiey Goalies: Parl&lt;.ide.Rivera,(59Shol•. 49&#13;
tho d I ·th··, th . Saves). Loras·, Aaheny(.6Shots,·5Saves), ture If p ace WI ,a pm m e hadwtm three matches, including a Miessler(24.hou, 21save.)&#13;
fmals ofthe consolation division at 52 second pin in his opening match. consolation finals.&#13;
1581bs. Whiting's loss came the Fortitrcnumberfour,thesqUad 0.. • "1 was pleased with havi,og&#13;
the eventual winner in the division,' had to rely on hea . ht R' k vywelg IC two champs in the Gold and WI,th T.C. Dantzler, After beating Hufnus Hu&lt;nus had tr bl&#13;
Whiting 11-2, Dantzler, from wI'th the f'eld 'th " ." no ou e two in the Silver," said coachJim .&#13;
1 , sconng ree V1CtO- Koch. "We were close to having Northern Illinois University~ .cap- ri's highl,'ghted b 100"&#13;
- , y a - wm m five with Skarda's loss in the last tured the title with an 8·6 win over ti]e finals over Scott Deitz of Lor as&#13;
Chris Walker (Unattached.) seconds."&#13;
College. Kevin Tremelling, who Missing from action for the.&#13;
At 177 Ibs, Mark Hemauer lost to Deitz in the opening found, f . ' ry were&#13;
marched through his four matches came back to finish fourth in the .Rangers becau~eo In)U ance&#13;
enroute to the lItle, He outscored division for the Rangers H Joel Dutton (ankle) and L&#13;
, . . e won S hm'd (k ) .hiSO~QlSI15-,l~.ip~llllliNla;7f .. W~ maJChe$JJc{QreI ' . til . CIt nee. •..&#13;
I~·"·~';.7i~.,~!~':'l~:1~~~~~'~"\~:'-;~:~~\~~.:~~",~~L!1~,(~i.,~ilt~i-4 .••r:t~:'4ii:?g..,.L.'li. ~el~I~:~,:;';-;~L~!t-tl~~A,~;,,-,·f-~4M~&#13;
• '- - - l- t·t 1 ! , J Plot lfi.i .1~j~Col~~Lh-'l't1t=-'''~~f-f'i'"J'',t~i~c''','''~~_- --;;...-------------------~~.&#13;
Czechs&#13;
trifectas in the first ten minutes,&#13;
and fICStyear guard, John Evans,&#13;
looks impressive in his debut with&#13;
w.. first-half points.&#13;
Czechoslovakia, on the other&#13;
side of the court, Joots sloppy.&#13;
Their poor passing and poor shot&#13;
selection keeps the balJ in ranger&#13;
hands for much of the fICStten&#13;
minutes.&#13;
Act Two: Prelude to Destruction&#13;
The Ranges fail to score for a&#13;
five minute stretch, allowing the&#13;
Czechs to find their game. New&#13;
defensive intensity by the Czechs&#13;
eads to a pair of lay-ups by Pavel&#13;
Becka to make it 20-19. Vladimir&#13;
vyorar S itu ec-poira baeket caps&#13;
off a 10-0 run, giving them a 22-20&#13;
lead with 4:49 remaining.&#13;
UW-Parkside regroups after&#13;
that, regaining the lead on a Cates&#13;
long-ranger with just one second&#13;
remaining, The Rangers enjoy a&#13;
27-26 halftime advantage, committing&#13;
only five turnovers in me&#13;
process,&#13;
Act Three: The Good, the&#13;
Bad, the Shooting&#13;
~ After scoring the first basket&#13;
of the half, the Rangers fail to score&#13;
again until the 14:30 mark,&#13;
Meanwhile, Czechoslovakia runs&#13;
off thirteen-straight points, most&#13;
on easy shots and freethrows.&#13;
UW -Parkside regroups again&#13;
momentarily, rediscovering the&#13;
three· pointer which was their main&#13;
weapon in the ftrSt,half. Artie&#13;
NG t&#13;
Jurie led the Rangers In sconng&#13;
&amp; rebounding against the Czechs.&#13;
Pepelea hits one, followcd by a&#13;
basket by Evans, A Cates steal&#13;
leads to a Tim' Roberson basket,&#13;
and the Rangers find themselves&#13;
down by just five with 11:40 remaining.&#13;
The Czechs quickly put an end&#13;
to that run with a three-pointer by&#13;
Josef Jelinck, followed by a landslide&#13;
of scoring. Pressure defense&#13;
unravels UW'-Parkside' s offensive'&#13;
attack:as theCzeehs score at will.&#13;
The g3IfIC' s fmal ten minules sees'&#13;
the Rangers outscored.31-9.&#13;
Jaroslllri Kovar scores the' fin3I&#13;
"&#13;
Epilogue:&#13;
Poor shooting proved to be a&#13;
large pan,butonly halfofthe whole&#13;
problem for the Rangers. Iii the&#13;
second half, while the Czechs were&#13;
shooting at a blistering 71 %, the&#13;
Rangers hit at less than 30%. For&#13;
the game, Czechoslovakia hit an.&#13;
even 60% of their shots, compared&#13;
to 35% for UW-Parkside.&#13;
Rebounding accounted for&#13;
another large pari of the ugly second-half&#13;
story. After holding the&#13;
Czechs off the glass for much of&#13;
, the fICSthalf, UW·Parkside was&#13;
out-boarded by a 20-15 margin,&#13;
And whocan forgetturnovers?&#13;
As the Rangers unraveled on offense,&#13;
their 15 second half giveaways&#13;
led to a number of Czech&#13;
lay-ups. The combination of a flat&#13;
offense, no rebounding, a worndowJl&#13;
defcnse, turnovers, and poor&#13;
shooIi~g were simple ingredients&#13;
for a 32 point loss.&#13;
For the game, four Czechs&#13;
scored in double-figures, and the&#13;
team out-scored the Rangers from&#13;
thefreethrow line by a 12-1 margin.&#13;
Only Juric finished in twin-figures,&#13;
for the Rangers: He scored eleven,&#13;
while getting twelve rebuunds.&#13;
. UW -Parkside starts for real&#13;
,November 16th when they !(avel&#13;
to Lewis University for the Lewis&#13;
lilvitational Tournament.&#13;
UW-Parkside Hockey Boxes&#13;
Uw-Parkslde at Loras College&#13;
• Game#l&#13;
I 2 3 T&#13;
I 2 3 I&#13;
UW· Parkside at Loras College&#13;
• Game #2&#13;
I 2 3 T&#13;
UW -Parkside . L 1 J 3&#13;
Loras Colleg""e 3 3 2 8.-'&#13;
FIRST PERIOD· Scoring: 1, Parkside,&#13;
Hisdahl, 4:44. 2, Lcras, Westul (Mignon),&#13;
5:33.3, Loras. O'Connell (Molsen), 9:32.&#13;
4, Weslul.14:40. Penalties: Sheehan, Loras&#13;
(Roughing), 5:50; Caccioppo, Parkside&#13;
. (Minor!Misoonduct.},3:24.&#13;
SECOND PERIOD ·Scoring: 5, Parkside~&#13;
Allan, 3:32. 6, Loras. Weslul (Migon),&#13;
10:04. 1,Loras, Weslul (Migon), 10:56. 8,&#13;
Loms, O'Connell (Brimeyer) II :35. PenaltieS:&#13;
Allon, Parkside {Minor Hi-Sticking).5:59,&#13;
.&#13;
THIRD PERIOD· Scoring: 9. Lor .. ,&#13;
Coortney(Althau'),3:t4,Ip.Lora'"Molsen&#13;
(Brimeyer)6: 12. ,t I, Parkside;·AJton,l,4:41.&#13;
PenalUes: Westul. Lo... (Hoiding);8:41;&#13;
Keenan. loru (Interference), 5:11;&#13;
Guzaldo, Loras(HooIting),2:19;C",cioppo,&#13;
Parkside (Checking from BehindJMiscOO.&#13;
duet),1:20;Counney,Lor.. (1looking):24,&#13;
Shots on Goat:&#13;
Wrestlers&#13;
Wrestlers take four titles in season 'opener&#13;
continued from B4&#13;
The other Ranger title in the&#13;
Silver Division, came in the&#13;
Heavyweight division, where Jim&#13;
Bezoue captured his title with a&#13;
pair of triumphs, one via the pin in&#13;
the semi·finals, and the second via&#13;
a 3-0 decision.&#13;
In the Gold Division, UWParkside&#13;
collected four fICSt-place&#13;
fmishes, two seconds, and a third&#13;
with competitors in eight of the ten&#13;
divisions.&#13;
One of the most impressive&#13;
victories came in the 126 Ib division,&#13;
where Kevin Bird, a senior&#13;
who finished with a 27-10 record&#13;
last year, met a highly touted&#13;
freshman, Mat Hanutke, who had&#13;
not lost a malch in his high school&#13;
career. Birilwas carrying a 2·1&#13;
lead when Hanutke was forced:to&#13;
retire because of injury.&#13;
At 134 Ibs, Dennis DuChene&#13;
opened his 1990-91 quest with a&#13;
pair of pins before lJlOning into&#13;
Rocky Majkowski. Majkowski,&#13;
wrestling for Maiquette University,&#13;
iook DuChene to overtime before&#13;
last year's NCAA 11runner-up was&#13;
~ble to capture the victory. From&#13;
there, DuChene went on to a 6·2&#13;
win in the final!&gt;for the Rangers&#13;
second title of the tournament.&#13;
Steve Skarda won three consecutive&#13;
decisions to make it to the&#13;
finals at 150 Ibs, but his title hopes&#13;
ended with a 5-4 loss to Roben&#13;
Young of Chicago Slate. ,Y.O.uJ1g&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;·.ide9 10 II 30&#13;
Lora.CoUege t8 12 6 36&#13;
Goalies&gt; Parl&lt;.ide,Rivera,(36' Shot •• 28&#13;
Save.~Loras,Flaheny(24Shots,22Saves),&#13;
Miessler (6 sh~. 5 saves)&#13;
BASKETBALL 90&#13;
~erION C . THURSDAY,NOVEMBER IS, 1990 SECTION C&#13;
Youngteam starts 'fresh ,for the nineties&#13;
LOSS of four starters, tough&#13;
schedule, to challenge Rangers&#13;
- JEFF LEMMERMANN Lyons. .&#13;
By Sports Editor Whatd~scoachAIScheisser&#13;
. have 10 the wings to replace 68.6%&#13;
It could be a rocky beginning of last year's offense? Five memforihisyear'seditionoftheRunnin'&#13;
bers from the 89-90 roster return.&#13;
Rangers.Any team which replaces The top-scoring returnee is&#13;
nineof their wins from last year 6'4" forward, Doug Burns. Burns,&#13;
with teams which are likely to be a deadly shooter from outside, avtener&#13;
already has their work cut eraged 7.1 points a game last year,&#13;
outfor them. Add to that the fact playing in all 28 games with an&#13;
thatfour of ihe starters from last average of 17.3 minutes.&#13;
year's 14·14squad are gone, and - Tim Cates returns in the&#13;
youhave a potentially disasterous Ranger backcourt, looking to fill&#13;
siwation. the shoes of two of the best colleGone&#13;
from the schedule are giate guards in the state. Last year,&#13;
the likes of Grace College, IN; SL he shot 48.8% from the field in&#13;
Norberts,Lake Superior State, and averaging 4.5 points on just 10.9&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.Replacing them: minutes a game. He also averaged&#13;
KentuckyWesleyan, last year's 1.5 rebounds from a guard spot.&#13;
NCAAII champs with four re- One of the most important&#13;
turningstarters; Wayne State, MI; players returning iscenterTihomir&#13;
BemidjiSlate; and St. Xavier. Juric. The Rangers, who were exGone&#13;
from the roster: last trernely soft in the middle last year,&#13;
year's top three scorers in Andy will be further stressed in the front&#13;
Schmidunann (14.2 points per court with the loss of Lyons. Juric&#13;
game),Sieve Jerrick (13.3), and averaged 4.9 rebounds a game last&#13;
RodWhittier (12.5). Gone also is year, but will need to improve on&#13;
!he teams leading rebounder, Dan those numbers in 90-91.&#13;
FALLING TO EARTH&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;side'sswitch to a 3-pt offense has affected many of the&#13;
teamsother Slats. Total field goals per game have declined, along&#13;
with rebounds. Listed are the final stats from the past three years.&#13;
1987-88was the teams final year before the 3-pt blitz.&#13;
~ - Ylc:lori_&#13;
..&#13;
~"&#13;
~ -3p1sJDam.&#13;
.. - - - - 'O'o-m-&#13;
.. , ' ': ::' Ao_mo&#13;
ee&#13;
, .&#13;
.. "- .... .. '- - - -- ..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
,.&#13;
,.&#13;
..&#13;
,. ..' -- '" J"&#13;
v&#13;
-- • .• ..&#13;
.. .&#13;
• ~-~&#13;
• rr.· .&#13;
•&#13;
1887-_ ._.... 1ee.eo&#13;
-&#13;
ToddGofn.UNGDl&#13;
Artie Pepelea and a host of young guards will taJ:e over control of the Ranger offense this year.&#13;
:n (Juric) will be an All- In thatgame,Juricpulleddown overall talen than in the past few&#13;
American before he leaves here," twelve rebounds while scoring years. How quickly that talent will&#13;
stated Schiesser. He's greatly irn- elevenpoints,numbershewillhave come together is anybodys guess.&#13;
proved over last year, and his per- to continue producing if the "I expect us to struggle early.&#13;
fonnance against Czechoslovakia Rangersexpecuobaveany success It is a waiting process for our&#13;
showed what he can do against D- this year. younger players to pick up the ofI&#13;
caliber players." Thetearn,asawhole,hasmore see Outlook, C4&#13;
Women looking for up-tempo&#13;
style from talent filled bench&#13;
niors on the team' and will serve as tween thecollege level and playing&#13;
this year's co-caplains. Their lead- in high school.&#13;
ershipwillbe sorely needed to show Wi!h the regular season openthe&#13;
freshman the difference be ing Saturday, 11/17 at Lewis University,&#13;
Coach Miller is still undecided&#13;
about her other starters. She&#13;
feels she can use a lot of players,&#13;
keep the team fresh and run an up&#13;
tempo game. "The starters will&#13;
change at times depending on who&#13;
we play, and the jury is still out on&#13;
a few of our girls as to who is going&#13;
to step forward and lake control,"&#13;
said Miller.&#13;
A tough Ranger schedule will&#13;
be highlighted by opponents like&#13;
top 10 rated St. Joseph's. tho U.S.&#13;
Naval Acadamy is in the top 20,&#13;
Bi-District champion, MinnesotaDuluth&#13;
and National runner-up 51.&#13;
Ambrose, paving a tough road to&#13;
the post-season.&#13;
By MIKE McKOWEN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The 1990 version of the OWParks&#13;
ide women's basketball will&#13;
see six freshman, four sophomores,&#13;
two juniors and two seniors lake&#13;
the court. At point guard, the&#13;
Rangers will have sophomore&#13;
Jenny Neubert and a trio a freshman&#13;
leading the transition game&#13;
the Rangers would like to have. At&#13;
the post position. the loss to graduation&#13;
of Sue Mass and Tracy&#13;
Northrop will push some very inexperienced&#13;
post players into immediate&#13;
action to help control the&#13;
boards. But, the tearn isn't completely&#13;
without experience. At&#13;
shooting guard and at small forward&#13;
the Rangers do have theluxury&#13;
of two seniors. Brenda Van Cuick&#13;
'and Diana Wetzel are the only se- Coach Wendy Miller&#13;
# 12 Ed Pettis&#13;
HT: 5'9" WT: 160&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Milwaukee, WI&#13;
Red Shined last season, played at&#13;
Oobebi&lt;: Conununity College in '88-&#13;
'89. Averaged 14 PP8 8 apg, Honorable&#13;
Mention All-Region, Helped Ieed&#13;
Whi01a1 toWlAA Slate Championship&#13;
in 1988. Honors include: All State. All&#13;
Slate Tourney Team, All-Area, &amp; 41b&#13;
Team All Slate.&#13;
# 44 Donovan Stephens&#13;
HT: 6'0" WT: 160&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: G&#13;
Home: Racine, WI&#13;
Originally from Chicago, moved&#13;
to Racine before High School. Helped&#13;
leed Racine Horlick to a WIAA State&#13;
Toumamentbirth. Averaged 12.5 ppg,&#13;
5.2 spg, 6.3 apg &amp; 2.3 rpg. Currently&#13;
rna' rin in En ineerin .&#13;
# 25 Tom Parker&#13;
HT: 6'3" WT: 185&#13;
Yr: So Pos: F&#13;
Home: Williams Bay, WI&#13;
All Conference in Basketball as&#13;
well as Football. Redshirted last season.&#13;
Majoring and English and minoring&#13;
in Coaching. Plans on teaching&#13;
secondary education.&#13;
# 13Artie Pepelea&#13;
HT: 5'10" WT: 165&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Anderson, IN&#13;
Holds 9 individual records al&#13;
Anderson High School. Averaged 16&#13;
ppg and 9.5 apg. 2nd Team AI Slate,&#13;
151Team All Conference. Ranked 3rd&#13;
in the Slate in Assists. Majoring in&#13;
Political Science and Business.&#13;
# 32 John Evans&#13;
HT: 6'3" WT: 185&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: G/F&#13;
Home: laCrosse, WI&#13;
Averaged 23ppg, 8rpg, and 2 apg&#13;
at laCrosse Logan High School. AlIConference.&#13;
All Coulee Region Player&#13;
of the Year and 3rd·Team All-Slate.&#13;
# 00 Tihomir Juric&#13;
HT: 6'9" WT: 195&#13;
YR: SO Pos: C&#13;
Home: Zagreb, Yugoslavia&#13;
Played with Maksimir Club team&#13;
in Yugolavia. Won 1990 Summer&#13;
Tourney in Kelm, Gennany and captured&#13;
Slam Dunk Championship. Came&#13;
to America in American Academic&#13;
Youth Exchange. All Area at&#13;
Graettinger H.S .. IA. Currently majoring&#13;
in Applied Computer Science.&#13;
,.,.&lt;;;:·,l~"""""'\1i&#13;
J... . ." 4. . F'" C:l~90.199,j&#13;
~~"i·l ilib ~ !~ge~-&#13;
B&#13;
\!,rti~.;~.ft~!rill ~Sl\e .'a&#13;
'f'I-""" . ~&#13;
! !&#13;
! !&#13;
# 24 Todd Allen&#13;
HT: 6'2" WT: 170&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: Palos Park, IL&#13;
Red Shined last year because of&#13;
knee injury. Played 1st 13 games as a&#13;
Frosh. I,102 career points at Carl&#13;
Sandbug HS. All-Conference &amp; AllArea.&#13;
3 years. Senior year averaged&#13;
19.2 ppg, Honorable Mention AIISlate.&#13;
Majoring in Pre-Med.&#13;
# 40 Mark Lauer&#13;
HT: 6'6" WT: 190&#13;
YR: Jr Pos: F&#13;
Home: KOUIS, IN&#13;
Transferred from Northeastern Jr.&#13;
College in Sterling, CO before last&#13;
season. Set several records in 1988 at&#13;
Kouts HS inBasketball, Cross-Counny&#13;
and Track. Majoring in communications.&#13;
Carrer Aspiration: Sales Representative&#13;
for a major corporation.&#13;
# 41 Todd Lubkeman&#13;
HT: 6'6" WT: 210&#13;
YR: Fr Pos: FIC&#13;
Home: Bristol, WI&#13;
Redshirted last season. Will&#13;
back up Juric at the center position.-&#13;
r'..:&#13;
# 34 Tim Cates&#13;
HT: 6'2" WT: 190&#13;
YR: So Pos: G&#13;
Home: New Munster, WI&#13;
.Averaged 21.3 ppg at SaI'lII&#13;
Central HS in Senior year. lstTeam&#13;
All-Conference. IstTeam Burlington&#13;
Area &amp; All-Kenosha County, 3 Years.&#13;
Honorable Mention All-Slate, 2)'eln.&#13;
Team MVP, 3years and team captain&#13;
as a senior. Also excelled inBaseball&#13;
_Majoring in Business.&#13;
#42 Doug Burns&#13;
HT: 6'5" WT: 185&#13;
YR: So Pos: F&#13;
Home: Wolcott, IN&#13;
Two-Time All-Conference&#13;
player at Tri-Couruy HS. The 411t&#13;
leading scorer in Indiana averaging&#13;
-28.4 ppg, highlighted by a 51 point&#13;
game. Majoring in Education.&#13;
# 33 Tim Roberson&#13;
HT: 6'5" WT: 190&#13;
YR: Ir Pos: F&#13;
Home: Brinkley, AR&#13;
Graduated from Brinkley HS in&#13;
Arkansas A&#13;
ttended Oakland Jr.Col·&#13;
.' his~" lege inMichigan where he led fill"&#13;
to the Distict ChampionshIPS' :....&#13;
fertedto UWP Ibis season. M.",-&#13;
in Communicatiops .., 1&#13;
~ 't;&lt; "&#13;
#14Cynthy Freund-G&#13;
.#33 Joy Wallner-C #40 Jenny Raniewicz-C&#13;
#23 Diana Weitzel&#13;
Pos: F Year: Sr&#13;
Ht: 5'S&#13;
Home: Waunakee, WI&#13;
Diana is a versatile athlete who will&#13;
be needed to play inside and outside.&#13;
Being able to post up and shoot the ;;;;:;=::&#13;
three-pointer makes her a valuable&#13;
asset to the Rangers. Diana is a cocaptain&#13;
and considered the most&#13;
steady and solid player on liIe team.&#13;
#22 BrendaVan Cuick&#13;
Pos:G Year: Sr&#13;
Ht: S'S&#13;
Home: Hortonville, WI&#13;
Brenda will once again return 3$ the&#13;
teem leader. Honorable Mention&#13;
All-American honors. Brenda is a&#13;
CO-captainfor the Rangers this&#13;
season and is a vital part of the&#13;
offensive attack for Ranger success.&#13;
The catalyst for the fast-break she.&#13;
will need to push the tempo to lead&#13;
the transition game. An improved&#13;
defensive player this year. Blenda&#13;
will be the all around player the&#13;
l\ansers need.&#13;
,~ I l-~" . , ~ :c ~"I;&#13;
'. •&#13;
, . .&#13;
It...• IJr.&#13;
#31 Gina Benn-G ...&#13;
#50 Becky Lulloff- F&#13;
#34 Alicia Haag&#13;
Pos: G Year: Jr&#13;
Height: 5'9&#13;
Home: Waunakee, WI&#13;
Alicia is a transfer from Madison&#13;
AIea Technical College and will&#13;
bring some experience to the point&#13;
position on this young team. She is a&#13;
heads up pcint guard and an&#13;
excellent shooter. She brings size&#13;
and strong defense to the point&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
#32 Ann Schmid-G&#13;
•&#13;
....&#13;
#54 Terri Ingalls&#13;
Pos: F Year: Jr&#13;
Height: 5'9&#13;
Home: Wildwood, IL&#13;
Terri is the best outside shooter on&#13;
the team. If she gets bet, the Ranserl&#13;
want the ball in her hands. She is •&#13;
good smart player with a lot of&#13;
offensive talent and her defense -&#13;
keeps improving. If the Rangers&#13;
need to score look for Terri to have&#13;
the ball.&#13;
NAJA Men's Basketball Preseason Poll&#13;
1st Place Total&#13;
RIIlIt Team&#13;
1 Wisc:onsin-Eau Claire&#13;
2 Minntsota·Dululh&#13;
3 Oral Roberts OK&#13;
4 Georgia Southwestern&#13;
S David Lipscomb&#13;
6 Cenlra1 Arkansas&#13;
7 Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
8 Pfeiffer NC&#13;
9 Georgetown KY&#13;
10 Auburn·Mon'gomery AL&#13;
11 Columbia MO&#13;
12 Aldenon·Broaddus WV&#13;
13 MaloneOH&#13;
14 Western Washington&#13;
IS Belmon. TN&#13;
IS wesencm CA&#13;
11 Emporia State KS&#13;
18 Bumingham-Southem AL&#13;
19 William Carey MS&#13;
20 Central Washington&#13;
21 Hawaii Pacific&#13;
22 Grand Canyon AZ&#13;
23 Oklahoma City OK&#13;
24 DruryMO&#13;
2S Limestone SC&#13;
Vote Points&#13;
27 787&#13;
695&#13;
656&#13;
643&#13;
3 607&#13;
466&#13;
447&#13;
41g&#13;
406&#13;
393&#13;
349&#13;
334&#13;
332&#13;
307&#13;
297&#13;
297&#13;
279&#13;
2 2S5&#13;
199&#13;
183&#13;
173&#13;
159&#13;
152&#13;
143&#13;
136&#13;
l \\-Eau Claire Blugolds (30-3)&#13;
WCATION: Eau Claire, Wisconsin&#13;
COACH: Ken Anderson (529-117 23rd year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: WSUC&#13;
tllll9-9O HIGHUGHTS: Defealed Platteville to capture&#13;
1be District 14 Championship. Advanced lhrough the 32&#13;
Ieam f\tld to the finals of !he NAIA National Tournament,&#13;
but weredefealedby Birmingham South. Their 14-2conferonce&#13;
reconl was load for 2nd in the WSUC. Senior Tim&#13;
Blair was named to the WSUC All Conference Team, !he All&#13;
District 14 Team and Third Team NAlA AU-American.&#13;
Junior Mike Johnson was also named All-Conference and&#13;
All District along with Honorable Mention All- American.&#13;
~ETURNING PLAYERS: Johnson(13.4 PPI, 8.9 rpg),&#13;
Mike Pusher (14.0 ppg, 3.7 rpg, 2.1 apI), Mau Benedict&#13;
(11.0 PPI, 13 apg), Duane Bushman (113 PPI, 5.1 rpg),&#13;
Todd Oehrlein (6.4 ppg, 5.2 rpg), Lanse Carter (4.4 ppg, 3.0&#13;
rpg~ Thane Anderson (2.0 PPl, 2.7 rpg), Chris CarroU(l.l&#13;
pp&amp;&gt;&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Information Not Available&#13;
t.w -Plattev ille Pioneers (26·3)&#13;
LOCATION: Platteville, Wisconsin&#13;
COACH: Bo Ryan (113-52 7lh Year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: WSUC&#13;
Il1l19-9OIDGHUGHTS: Captured WSUC title wilh a15-&#13;
1 conference record. Lost to NAIA Finalist UW-Eau Claire&#13;
in District 14 championship. Guards Shawn Frison and&#13;
Robby Jeter were named to !he WSUC All-Conference and&#13;
&gt;All District 14 Teams. Frison was also named Honorable&#13;
Mention NAIA All-American.&#13;
RETURNING PLAYERS: Frison-G,Sr,6-4(1 5.9ppg, 5.2&#13;
1]&gt;8. 2.1 apg), Jeter-GJr, 6-2(12.2 ppg, 35 rpg, 1.8 ap&amp;&gt;.&#13;
OelanoBrazil-F,SR,6-4(10PPl, 3.1 rpg), Sean Poole-C.Sr,6-&#13;
7(~ 1ppg:S5 rpg),Michael Jones-G,Sr,6-4(6.7ppg, 2.9rpg).&#13;
Bnan Gilmore-FJr,6-5(6.0 PPl. 4.1 rpg), TJ Van Wie- Ilm,l!Blfl!@&#13;
\1,So,6.0(5.1 ppg. 1.7 rpg), Tim Decorab-G,Sr,6-0(13 ppg)&#13;
--&#13;
continued from Cl&#13;
fense and defense. By the end of next year, I expect&#13;
this team will hav,gone a long ways from what we are&#13;
now."&#13;
With no conference to worry about, the Rangers&#13;
will gear their progress to the two tournaments on I/teir&#13;
schedule, and the big tournament at the .end of the year.&#13;
The team opens With the Lewis UmversitYlourna.&#13;
ment this weekend, then willplay in the UW -laCrosse&#13;
toumamentover Thanksgiving. In the Lewis tourney&#13;
the Rangers will be up against three impressive ta1len~&#13;
in North Dakota, Grand Valley State, and the host&#13;
Lewis. /: I&#13;
"It will be interesting to see how our young team&#13;
handles the full-COurt press and half-court trap of&#13;
Lewis. That tournament will be a good early test for&#13;
us ...&#13;
The main goal overall is the D- I 4 toumamen~&#13;
which will bea tough climb as always. UW-EauClaire&#13;
retums four starters from a team which was runner-up&#13;
in the NAIA National tournament last year, and is&#13;
ranked numberone in the nation in the NAIA preseason&#13;
poll; UW-Stevens Point, who beat the Rangers three&#13;
times last year, has much of their team intact; and an&#13;
always tough, UW-Plalleville is currently ranked&#13;
seventh in the nation.&#13;
"It's a rough trip [when you're an independant&#13;
vurses being in a conference. There isn't the luxury of&#13;
shooting for conference goals during the season, everything&#13;
must be aimed at the district playoffs. The&#13;
Wisconsin District (District 14) is especially lough,&#13;
and we really need tocome togetherasa team. Whoever&#13;
can win the District 14toumament, should go a long&#13;
way.&#13;
Kentucky Weslyan Panthers (31-2)&#13;
LOCATION: Owensboro, Kentucky&#13;
COACH: Wayne Boultinghouse (31-2 2nd year)&#13;
CONF: Grear Lakes Valley&#13;
1989-90 IDGHUGHTS: Captured NCAA DivisionD&#13;
National Championships in their 9lh straight 2lH-win lea'&#13;
son. Also the champions of the GLVC, the Panthers were&#13;
ranked 4lh on the final NCAA Div. II Poll. Guard Corey&#13;
Crowder was named 1st Team All American by Kodak!&#13;
NABC and the Basketball Gazette, 2nd Team All-American&#13;
by the BasketbaU Times and was the Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference Player of the Year. Crowder and Forwmd&#13;
Vincent Mitchell were named to the NCAA Division nAllTournament&#13;
Team.&#13;
RETURNING PLAYERS: Crowder-G. Sr, 6-5(lg.6Wg,&#13;
7.3 rpg), MitcheU-F, SR, 6-3 (12.1 ppg, 3.2 rpg), Tim&#13;
Griffln-G,Sr,6-2 (10.1 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 2.1 apg), JunebugRak,,·&#13;
G,Sr,6-4 (9.2 ppg, 2.5 rpg, 5.2 apg), Kenneth Martin-F,Jr,6-&#13;
4 (8.4 ppg, 2.5 rpg), Greg Baughn-G,Sr,5-1O(6.0 ppg, 1.4&#13;
rpg), SteveDivine-G,So,6-2(5.3 ppg, 1.4rpg),HerbAmarson·&#13;
G,So,6-4 (3.7 ppg, 1.2 rpg)&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Jon Moore-C,So,7-0, Corey Parr'&#13;
F,So,6-7, Will Perdue-C,Fr.6-7, Mike Stacey-F.Fr,6.1&#13;
Ferris State Bulldogs (18·11)&#13;
LOCATION: Big Rapids, Michigan&#13;
COACH: Tom Ludwig (173-82 IOlh year)&#13;
CONFERENCE: Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
1989·90 HIGHI.,IGHTS: 14-2 Conference markgoodfor&#13;
1st place finish in lhe GLIAC. Led by' 2nd team All·&#13;
Conference" forward Leon Larthridge.&#13;
, RETURNING PLAYERS: Larlhridge-F,Sr(16.8 ppg,&#13;
4.9 rpg), Byron Jolmson-G,So (6.9 ppg, 3.4 rpg), Mik.&#13;
Jolmson-G,Jr,(6.9 ppg, 1.9 rpg), Marcus Tumblin-C,So(S.8&#13;
ppg,' 4.8 !Pg), Chris Smilh.F,Sr(4.5 ppg, 3.8 rpg~ Jamd&#13;
Hudson:F,So (3.6 ppg, 3.5 rpg), Mike Allen-F,Sr(3.2pPIo&#13;
2.5 rpg), Hans Gappy&#13;
NEWCOMERS: Keith Lobsinger-F, Ty Miller-G&#13;
•&#13;
International Rangu. Page I'll&#13;
FiIS,I990&#13;
GreatExpectations&#13;
Parental visit a smashing success&#13;
Anmtensefeelingofjub"1 ti d&#13;
- . " I a ronan Rock Cafe we scoured the town by bread and specialties like lamb relIefengulfedmeaslgreetedth b bv f '&#13;
'th th " " em us, y .00t, and by underground. curry. The pubs are popular hang- WI en USIaSUC bear hugs The Th "I be" f .&#13;
hiliratine e, • e u ascmated my father outs wilb the Yuppie lunch crowd&#13;
ex. I ~tmg adventure I had been. who is a geography teacher and as well as the tourists and neighenjoying&#13;
for the past twomonlbs mapenlbusiast.lnfacl,heknewall borhood locals.&#13;
was about ~o »e~ome richer and of the majortube stations and lines Westminster Abbey, the&#13;
more fulfilling WIth the amvalof by the end of the first day. By the Tower of London, Dicken's home,&#13;
my parents. end of the week he could have Covent Garden, and Harrod's deAlthough&#13;
my parents had drivenadoubledeckerbuslhrough panment store are a sampling of&#13;
traveled thousands of miles to See rush hour traffic! My mother, on the sights we saw, but for me our&#13;
Mysweaty palms gripped the the sights of London with me, I the other hand, agreed with me that day in Greenwich was the ultimate.&#13;
railingthatseparatedthe expectant woul~ have been content to sit on a the tube is a necessary evil if you At the Old Royal Observatory we&#13;
rrieDds andrelatives from the clec- parkbench in Hyde Park all week want a somewhal efficient, if not stood on the Prime Meridian and&#13;
1I\llIiC doors. My heart pounded. catching upon the news from home. expedient mode of transportation. then posed with one ann and leg in&#13;
like a bongodrum and a light film Instead we wasted IiIUe time in Herforte was choosing pubs both the eastern and western hemioIperSpirationformed&#13;
on my tip-. condensing an action-packed with cozy Victorian furnishing for spheres. After esploring theCuuy&#13;
per lip. The moment I had been agenda for Oct. 21-27. Having' lunch, or ones with crackling fire- Sark,lbelastexistingteaclipperof&#13;
anxiOUSlyawaiting since my ar- raided the local library in Kenosha, places and mugs of ale in the eve- the English trade, we cruised the&#13;
rival inLondonwas about to hap- 'myparentsknewexacUy what they nings. The King's Head, The Thames in an old-fashioned&#13;
pen. Theflightboardindicated that wanted to see and do before they Chepstour" Courage, and Prince riverboat, the Viscount.&#13;
!he planehatllanded ten minutes. arrived. Edward's are older than the crown Touring London wilb m arearly.&#13;
Throughthe endless stream. Thus we managed to s ueez equivoca ighlight&#13;
ofpassengersand the-sea sf sui~O . 10 one week than I have the British Museum. Pub grub ?f my study abr~ad tnp, We encases.lsp&lt;llledmy&#13;
mom and dad in a month on my own! From varies from shepard's pie, sausage Joyed each other s company and&#13;
brisklymovingthrough the crowds. Buckingham Palace to the Hard and chips, cottage pic, granary even managed to find humor in the&#13;
by&#13;
Gwen&#13;
Heller&#13;
trialscfpublic transportation. Unfonunately,&#13;
the time evaporated&#13;
much too quickly and before we&#13;
realized it. we were saying&#13;
goodbye.&#13;
I find myself missing them&#13;
even more now than Idid befo,,"&#13;
they came to London. Fortunately,&#13;
Iwill be home in plenty of time to'&#13;
get into the holiday spirit for&#13;
Christmas and catch up on all the&#13;
local news from my sisters, Emily&#13;
and Abigail.&#13;
Today Ireceived pbotosofmy&#13;
parents' visit in lbemail.As I&#13;
looked them over, it made me realize&#13;
how fortunate I am to have&#13;
shared such unique memories with&#13;
them in a city that has so much to&#13;
offer. As my dad wrote, "it is a trip&#13;
is one vacation even National&#13;
Lampoon's Clark W. Grizwald&#13;
couldn't top!&#13;
Men stopping rape&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
relationship. When relationships&#13;
discuss what makes them comfonable&#13;
and uncomfonable, it reo&#13;
duces the risk of sexual assualt.&#13;
Take"no" for an answer.&#13;
Unless we are willing to a&lt;X:ep1&#13;
uno" from our partner. "yes" has&#13;
no meaning. Even after a person&#13;
has given consent, he or she still&#13;
has the right to change his or her&#13;
mind.&#13;
SlOpusingpornography. Pornography&#13;
and advertising use im·&#13;
ages of violence and subjugation 10&#13;
tum individuals on. They show&#13;
individuals enjoying rape and&#13;
abuse. Consider how this has&#13;
shaped our altitudes aboul women&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Pretending. Men often assume&#13;
lbat if a woman doesn't&#13;
say"no"shemean"ycs". Individuals&#13;
must SLOPpretending submission&#13;
is consent. Consenl requires&#13;
understanding, respect and agreemenl&#13;
between equal partners.&#13;
Fantasizing. SlOPfantasizing&#13;
aboul rape. Snch fantasiesJl{l: danSmsll&#13;
Scale Humor by Chris lilgram&#13;
,&#13;
e Chris Ingram1990 «I want the tail"&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
gerous because they encourage individuals&#13;
to become excited by a&#13;
woman's suuggling against them.&#13;
Ask. Ask women what makes&#13;
them feel unsafe. Over 80 percent&#13;
of rapes are commiued by some·&#13;
one the victim knows. Find out&#13;
how your behavior affects lbe&#13;
women in your life. Once you&#13;
know, il will be easier to act in&#13;
ways tlw help your woman feel..&#13;
more secure.&#13;
Discuss. Discuss yourexpee·&#13;
lations. Acting on expeclations&#13;
wilboUI suffICient inforrnauon can&#13;
cause serious misund~tandlOgs&#13;
andleadlO~. Discu Illgsexual&#13;
expeclations is the best way of confrrming&#13;
mutual agreement. Share&#13;
),our hopes, feelings, fears, and&#13;
fantasies with friends, datcs, and&#13;
lovers.&#13;
Weinberg's visil was spon·&#13;
soredbyUW-Parksidc'sWomen's&#13;
Center, the Residence Hall Association&#13;
and Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
o .' r ., r ~ a a 0 a 0 •• - • ~ •• - .. e- •• - 0: "", 6': .-••,l .&#13;
. ""&#13;
1~Ran~S!5!!r.!!:,Pa~ge~I~8 L O~p_i_n_i_o_n __"""":""--t---------:..:.:No:..:..:vem:::::ber=-.:..:::15:..:.,I990~~&#13;
.- ~ _ ...... 01&#13;
Discount applicable.on oonsale item";.only. Offer expires&#13;
t&#13;
~. I • • • • • • • • • •• • '"' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . .! ~ '" _ ~ "&#13;
~ ~~~&#13;
•&#13;
Daymare&#13;
by Rufus Thome&#13;
''1.can't do this!", a girl exclaimed as&#13;
sae walked out of the room leary eyed. She&#13;
was trying to give a speech and got cold feet&#13;
in a big way.&#13;
What was she nervous about? Did she&#13;
think one of us was going to kill her if her&#13;
speech wasn't good? Did she think we were&#13;
going to tease her and ridicule her no matter&#13;
how good the speech was? Just what was she&#13;
nervous about?&#13;
. People become nervous all the time&#13;
especially over little things. They work&#13;
themselves up so far that the only way for&#13;
them to get down is to fall, and that spells&#13;
breakdown. I have talked to people that still&#13;
get nervous about the first day of school.&#13;
. Why? They've been going to school all their&#13;
lives and they're still nervous about it.&#13;
. I've even seen professors nervous about&#13;
the first day. They constantly straighten and&#13;
rearrange their papers while talking about&#13;
their syllabuses.T!1ey wipe their sweaty,&#13;
shaky hands on their pants whileltheir voices&#13;
crack through the room. What is going&#13;
tough their minds?C Do they think that we&#13;
wiiI tie them up and give them papercuts on&#13;
their retinas if we don't. like the way they&#13;
teach? _.&#13;
Children have no problem giving&#13;
speeches or speaking their minds in front of&#13;
groups .. What is it that we lost from our&#13;
childhood that now makes so many ofus reel&#13;
like jibber-jabbing idiots anytime we're put&#13;
on the spot?&#13;
It doesn't make sense. I'd embellish&#13;
more on the subject but I have a speech to&#13;
give tommorrow andl'm really nervous about&#13;
it&#13;
Letters to the&#13;
Editor policy&#13;
The Ranger encourages letters to the&#13;
editor and will print all letters that follow&#13;
Ranger editorial guidelines.&#13;
. Letters must be signed by the writer&#13;
or representative of the group submitting&#13;
the letter and must contain writers name,&#13;
social security number, and phone number&#13;
'for verification purposes. Names of&#13;
writers will be withheld on requests.&#13;
Deadline for leners is 12:00noonan&#13;
Monday before publication. Letters can·&#13;
taining offensive, libelous material or&#13;
mlsleadingfnformation will be given back&#13;
to the writer to correct.&#13;
The Ranger will not edit letters to&#13;
the editor unless requested. Opi~iOns&#13;
expresses on the editorial and -oplPJon&#13;
pages are IIOt netcessarliy lllllSe ofd1e&#13;
.Ranger staff.&#13;
�15,1990&#13;
Political Science&#13;
FaU openings&#13;
1lIe-1'QIiticalService Internllipslnlgmm&#13;
(PSW) at the Uni~&#13;
llnilyofWisconsin-Parkside has&#13;
FaI1aIesleropeningsforstudents&#13;
"toeamPoliticai Science&#13;
lRdiaas interns in local, state or&#13;
IIIlioDaI governmental agencies&#13;
.]IIbIic service 'private o;ganiIlIIilas.&#13;
. PSIP students receive practicalelperiencein&#13;
working in politilIIcampaigns,helping&#13;
with legal&#13;
IIIYices for the poor, solving conllilueatproblems&#13;
for legislawrs,&#13;
lliisting local administrators in&#13;
Internship&#13;
available&#13;
providing community services,&#13;
working with planning agencies,&#13;
and assisting local court agencies.&#13;
Students can earn from 3 to 6 credits&#13;
as interns.&#13;
In the past few years, PSIP&#13;
interns have worked for Congressman&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman&#13;
Gerald Kleczka, the City of&#13;
Kenosha, Racine Jail A1Jernatives&#13;
., .&#13;
Program, Kenosha Police Department,&#13;
Racine Police Department,&#13;
Racine County Public Defender's&#13;
Office, Kenosha Dis!rictAuomey's&#13;
Office, Kenosha Area DevelopProgram&#13;
has&#13;
to students&#13;
ment Corporation, Wisconsin Department&#13;
of-Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Court, Racine Clerk of Courts,&#13;
Kenosha Coumy Juvenile Court,&#13;
Walworth County Court, and oIher&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Persons intereSled in enrolling&#13;
in PSIP can pick up application&#13;
forms in the Political Science Department,&#13;
Room 367, Molinaro&#13;
Hall, UW-Parkside or phone Professor&#13;
Samuel Pemacciaro a1553-&#13;
2399.&#13;
Community Service Announcement&#13;
~or Profile Fea ture Ranger, Page 19&#13;
, yoo visiting professo=r~o=-::f~C~h'~' ~.~-r=1==========~.&#13;
byMonaSbannon· '. emlstry Administration is Cosson's specialty&#13;
. Starr Writer tween leacher d .&#13;
lab "S' an students 10 the By Mona Sbannon M of th IUd .. eelOg the professor in an any e s ents are people&#13;
ARgnes You is a visiting pro- office is different than seeing the changingcareenand needing new&#13;
fc$SIICofchemi~tryeaching Ana- professor in the research lab. It's Cyndy Cusson works in the skill or to upgrade skills. Cosson&#13;
IjliIIIChemistryand Pre-College much more relaxed." continuing education office as an has noticed that many local com-&#13;
(beIIIistlY. She received a B.S. in . Y00 is in the process of apply- A~minislrative Specialist. She panies are sending their employ-&#13;
(beIIIistlY from the College of St. 109 for a research grant for her describes her job as that of a paper eestooootinuingeducalion classes&#13;
(laIl:is in Joliet, Ill., and she also research in organic reagentsynthe_ pusher, but thepaperworkshedoes to learn a foreign language. There&#13;
baS&#13;
aPh&#13;
.&#13;
D&#13;
. in Chemistry. SIS.The compound she makes will keeps the classes going. She deals are always students who are just&#13;
She says she just fell into -be sentto a group of scientists who with students and professors in- taking classes for fun. Whatever&#13;
CheIDistlY. "I knew I wasn't good do research in membrane elec- . volved in non-credit classes. She they are looking for, Cyndy will&#13;
• soCialscience, so it had to be trodes, Membrane electrodes are also does a little advising, helping help them find the right class.&#13;
_lhing [in] natural science ". I ~sed in the study of ion movement students find the classes they need. Classes are various lengths from&#13;
bSl a choice between math and 10 the human body system, Although she does not make the whole semester to semmars thaI&#13;
chemistrY;that's what was being She finds Parkside's science final decision, she does have a lot last just a few hours.&#13;
offereda!lSL Francis]." Because Angnes Voo department well-equipped for an of input into what classes are of- Thecontinuing education ofIIIIIhbecOmesmore&#13;
abstract at the undergraduate school. She says fered. There is a governing body, ficeisintheprocessofestablishing&#13;
dr everyone has bee . JACCE,thatoverseeswhatclasses 1-'&#13;
bigherlevels,he felt she would be' en were born, she worked at' . n very ruce to her. ate ecu",=ncecenterinTallenl&#13;
awre comfortable in something Abbott as a research chemist. Af- She finds the difference in ages and are offered at UW -Parkside, Gate- 281. COSSOl\'S responsibililies in&#13;
_concrete like chemistry. ter three children, she returned to backgrounds gives the professors a way and through the Extension in that area invohefood service, and&#13;
Yoois interested in the syn- graduate school with the goal of real challenge, especially in the order to avoid overlap of services. making sure everything in the oft&#13;
chi S entry level cours Most of the students in con- fi . ---, ble E Ibetic part of chemistry, mixing ea mg. he prefers teaching to' es. ICe IS .. " .... ona . vennaally,&#13;
lbingltoget!lertomakesomething. the isolated atmosphere of labora- . In her free lime, she enjoys tinuing education are non-tradi- she'llbeleamingtoruntheequi~&#13;
She also wanted to he able to use tory research. She is still able to do playing tennis and golf. She also tional age students frorn theRacine- ment, She also handles registramalh,&#13;
so she chose;~t~he~fl~·e~ld~O~f_~researeQ!!!!liDh~as~a~teac:.::h:er~,;so:;s:he~ca~n:-~en~jo~y~s~a~tte~n~d~in~g~C~o~nc~e~rts~w~i7.th~h:e~rt;.K~e:no~s~ha~ar~ea~a~nd:no:rthe;;,:m:I~lli:'n:o:is~, husb _:tio:n:-,:for=Ca~PS~ule~Col~~le~g~e~, wh~ich~I__ AnalyticalChemistry dealin comb' . 0 - _ oeLnts.Before her chil- _ f a rel children, it is often difficult to aI- returrurrg to the work force want- lege for Kids and Elderbotel,&#13;
~ _.-.," more 0 a relaxed atmosphere be- tend many of the campus activities. 'ing 10 gain compuler knowledge. which Ulkeplace in the summer.&#13;
~PSTOPILLITERACY. The RacineLileracy Council will train you to teach an I1hteratead~lttoreadand&#13;
flrite-I hour per week. The training is from 9:00 - 12:00 in the morning on November 27,29 December 4 and&#13;
6.Afee of $8.00 is charged for materials. Please contaet Carol in the Career Center.&#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL NEEDS READERS ON NOVEMBER 21 FOR one HOUR. Read to small&#13;
8Dlupofkindergarten children from 8:30 _9:30 am al Bain Elementary School. School is competing withschoo\&#13;
Dear Green Bay; WI: Have fun at this one-time volunteer experience. Ask about transportation. Deadline:&#13;
Monday,November 19th in Career Celtler. , .&#13;
USED WINTER JACKETS REQUESTED BY COMMUN1TY IMPACT PROGRAM STAFF, Do you&#13;
have a medium or large child's J'acket in your closet? Can you give it to someone who doesn't have one? Drop&#13;
It ff' .&#13;
o Inthe Career Center Oy November.21ST. .'&#13;
TUtORS FOR "A T,RIS1&lt;" CHILDREN' PLEASE RESPOND. Help JUSIone child one hour per week.&#13;
~ving of your tim~ and inteie~l-Io someone else is the best gift you can give. Day and ume flexlble ...See Carol&#13;
IDtheCareer Center today. ,'." . '. ,'" .&#13;
~~r more inrormationcontact Carol Engberg in the Career WLLC-D175 or call 553-2011.&#13;
,~ '.~." .- ••• ':-,.','. ~...'. ::.'. i: •• ~ '0'&#13;
Blood Drive&#13;
Student Health Services will he sponsoring a Blood Drive&#13;
on Wednesday November21 from 9:00AM 103:30PM in Union&#13;
104-106. 1belast Blood Drive was very successful due 10your&#13;
efforts and willingness to panici pate.&#13;
We hope lhatyou will considerdonating-again andencourage&#13;
your students and friends to donate also. 1beonly source of&#13;
replenishing our blood supply is people like you. 1be Blood&#13;
Center relies on volwueer donors who want to give blood. To&#13;
give one pint of blood requires a healthy and wining donor al&#13;
least 17 years of age, weighing at least I IO powxls and volunteering&#13;
45 minutes of time. Blood may be donated every eight&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Please complete a Dohor Pledge Card indicating the time&#13;
you prefer between 9:00 AM - 3:00PM. Cards are available in&#13;
Student Health Services, Molinaro 0115 or contact Student&#13;
Health Services at 553-2366.&#13;
Parks ide Food Service&#13;
Hours&#13;
Wednesday Nov. 21st&#13;
Union Dining room 7:30 am-2:00 pm&#13;
Coffee Shoppe 7:30 am-6:00pm&#13;
Union Square Grill Closed&#13;
Union Deli 11:00 am-6:00pm&#13;
Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
Closed Friday Nov. 23rd&#13;
Contest Rules:&#13;
Drop 3ping pong&#13;
balls from the L 1&#13;
leveloftheUnion&#13;
to the D 1 level&#13;
into aZenith Data&#13;
Systems insu:&#13;
lated cup holder&#13;
and win the cup.&#13;
If the cup has one&#13;
of the 25 CD tokens&#13;
win a compact&#13;
disk.&#13;
University of Wisconsin- Parkside's&#13;
PI SIGMA EpSI LON&#13;
gamma 'Beta Cliapter'&#13;
Presents&#13;
The Great Ping Pong Drop Contest&#13;
Monday, November 19th&#13;
Round I lO:OOam-2:00pm&#13;
Tuesday, November 20th ,&#13;
Round II 12:15pm&#13;
-In the Union BazzarZENITH&#13;
data systems&#13;
All compact&#13;
disk winners&#13;
qualify for&#13;
round, II to try&#13;
for a Sony&#13;
Discman Disk&#13;
. Player. Stop at&#13;
the contest for&#13;
.: more details.&#13;
Prizes supplied by Zenith Data Systems All proceeds benefit Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
~&#13;
. ;,,;,-..-- ..-- ..- ..- ..... - _--iii--_·~-·~-iii--_-__ iiIIIioo~"~' ~"~' ~,.~~'~' - ~-'".;.''~~~~~~~~~~..,;. ......... ~~&#13;
• .. ... "'~.'.l,«..o .......~"r dol" .• • ~ i ' .'(,&#13;
Luellen Breed, President of the SE&#13;
WI Literacy Alliance, reported how&#13;
satisfied she was with Laura's work.&#13;
In.September, Laura volunteered&#13;
at a fund raiser for Kenosha&#13;
Homecare Services where the proceeds&#13;
benefited the poor elderly&#13;
who are receiving home delivered&#13;
meals. The children in the learning&#13;
disabled class at Jeffery Elementary&#13;
School in Kenosha were also&#13;
benefactors of Laura's community&#13;
r---GIVELIFE:---!&#13;
Laura Burnett, a senior in 'GIVE PLASMA. I,&#13;
C&lt;immunication,recentlyaccepted I t&#13;
a volunteer project for the South- I I&#13;
eastern Wisconsin Literacy A1ti- I I&#13;
'ance. Her interest in illiteracy I I&#13;
awareness and her writing ability 'I I&#13;
matched up with acommunity need. I I&#13;
l----============"""""l~_:-.-.......:.-;~~-t-IKoslovYouthDanceEnsemblecomingto&#13;
UW- I&#13;
Parkside to perform in Comm. Arts Theatre I Briaa;:.':'~=S15.00&#13;
byDawn Mailand' the Soviet Union. the audience. The ensemble will I' for yoarllnt doadOL&#13;
Entertainment Editor The Koslov Youth Dance En- keep you entenaineafrom stan to Plasma Donor Center&#13;
semble, founded in 1960, concen- finish. I '&#13;
trated from the beginning on de- Broughuoyou by theParl&lt;side I Of Kenosha, Ine.&#13;
veloping discipline, diligence and Activities Board's Performing . Arts II 8212·22nc1 1to__ .W1 Avo.&#13;
an amazing sense of responsibility Committee, students will beableto I M-W-F-8:30-3:30&#13;
in its young members. Dancers seethisphenomenalgroupofyoung I T·T 10:00-5:30&#13;
who were in the Ensemble as dancers from Moscow for only $4, 1 (414)654-1366&#13;
youngsters now star in companies insteadofthercgularticketpriceof IPeople Helping People For Life,&#13;
of international repute such as the $12. ~-~---------------------~ -&#13;
Pyatnitsky State Academic Russian This deep discount is possible&#13;
Folk Choir, the Moiseyev and the because pan of each UW-Parkside&#13;
Alexandrov Song and Dance En- student's tuition goes toward&#13;
semble of the Soviet Army. bringing these performers on&#13;
The ensemble currently has campus. I guarantee you'll have a&#13;
around 50 performers and performs great time watching the ensemble's&#13;
regulary at Moscow's famed exhilirating performance in the&#13;
Tchaikosvsky Concert Hall, as well Communication Arts Theatre at 8&#13;
'as becoming al}indispensable pan pm on Thursday, November 15.&#13;
of many events coordinated by the Don't pass this unique opportunity&#13;
Soviet Ministry of Culture. The up, or you'll regret it!&#13;
energy, enthusiasm and excitement&#13;
radiates from these children into&#13;
service. She volunteered 75 houq&#13;
last year, helping children on a&#13;
one-to-one basis. Maryette&#13;
McKiltip, the supervising teacher&#13;
Staled, "Perfect! Laura had been&#13;
such a great help~ She was good&#13;
with the kids and they just loved&#13;
her!" Laura's friendly, caring personality&#13;
has enriched the people&#13;
she has met and the community in&#13;
which she lives.&#13;
Ranger photo by Sunnl Beeck&#13;
Carole Montgomery performed at UW -Parkside Union 0&#13;
edDesday,November 7.&#13;
I&#13;
Itis DOloften when we, as&#13;
SIlIdcnls"getthe opportunity to&#13;
experienceother cultures firstIIaad.&#13;
However,our chance is here&#13;
hecause the Koslov Youth Dance&#13;
Ensemble of Moscow will be perbalingiDtheCommunicationArts&#13;
Thealreal8pm on Thursday, Novembet&#13;
15.&#13;
The Youth Ensemble ranges&#13;
, in Ige from six to sixteen, and is&#13;
renowned throughout the ~Soviet&#13;
Unionand many countries of&#13;
Eastern Europe. This is the&#13;
ensemble'sfU"StWestern tour ever ,&#13;
andtbey'vechosen favorites from&#13;
a repertoireof over 100 dances,&#13;
JIleSentingakaleidoscopeofaction&#13;
11~color in a program of works&#13;
typicaJ of the various republics of&#13;
We would like to thank everyone&#13;
that has already contributed&#13;
to the Food for&#13;
Families, and to remind everyone&#13;
else to please bring&#13;
your non-perishable food&#13;
items by Nov. 21st, so the&#13;
food can get to the families&#13;
in need by the holidays.&#13;
Thank You,&#13;
Food for Families Committee&#13;
soc cautious of radio station's progress&#13;
by Jeff Bromstad WKLH in Milwaukee, is basically partiCipation is what's&#13;
an&#13;
advisor/overseer who is rarely unwarranting," said Brenda WilStaff&#13;
Writer son, Vice-President of SOC.&#13;
The history of p~t etforts to seen. , th Former radio station paniciorganizeand&#13;
stabilize a permanent ' "Theresa left a message 1D e&#13;
radiostation here at UW-Parkside SOC office staung that she was pant BiU Hawkins, one of the sevbas&#13;
' THE statl'on manager. However, eral fowJding members of WZRX&#13;
members of the Student Orga- I ~&#13;
nizationsCouncil (S.O.c.) leary forthe pasllhree weeks she hasn't ~~~t~d~;u~;: ~om:~~~~e:.~&#13;
aboutits current progress, prima- visitedtheSOCOfficeandwe:;~ maybe two or three other people&#13;
mybecause of irresponsible lead- getareply when weleav~ ~~s Her were doing all the work while&#13;
C1Sbip. on her answenng mac I . Theresa received all thecredit, She&#13;
~J) MilPi\¥'I' Theresa knowledge and eX~~~~~'ur31r' I. , , ' . , ·C' , -" d P 22&#13;
ltairis, a f~ll:tim'; e~';]riJ~iil"T~l"1jt1ihifY her'f'oh'hb b!&gt;silion;lJ h onlmue on age -==------------&#13;
.&#13;
Ranger, Paze 22&#13;
November 15, 1990 Entertainment&#13;
Radio station's progress closely monitored&#13;
fiontinued from page 21&#13;
never said what needed 10 be done we had workedup10by contacting waiting10go 10work forthem, bUI&#13;
or how10goabout doinganylhing. people whose influencecould fur- unless we see more active particiHer&#13;
communication lacked in re- ther or detour its progress. Then I pation like submilting agendas or&#13;
"turning messages and she was al- realized WI what she was doing keepinga weekly recordof what's&#13;
waysconcemedwith her'tille' and was not in tbe best interest of !he going on up there, wewillexercise'&#13;
DOl!he responsibilities mandated university, but her own ego; she's. ourrighllOimposeabudgelfreeze."&#13;
by ilSfunction. Plus !he fact lhal not a team player, so Iwithdrew." Wilson added "Yes, we want&#13;
when I confronted her about !he Judy Robison, President of them 10 give us a steady flow of&#13;
possibility of the other members SOCstated/'We aretotally willing communication with us in SOC.&#13;
8Ild I taking over !he station, she 10 help them. They've had an ap- They need active interest if they&#13;
threatened 10 desuoy every!hing provedbudget sinceApril of 1989 are 10 establish themselves,'&#13;
Chris Biemeck, Special&#13;
Projects Manager of WZRX, and&#13;
MichouRoss,MusicDirector. both&#13;
understand that their station manager'sabsenceand&#13;
the lack of communication&#13;
are major minuses in&#13;
SOC's book. BUI!hey both think&#13;
that Theresa has helped them a&#13;
great deal along the way and they&#13;
expressed their confidence in her.&#13;
They are also well aware of !he&#13;
Because it does. Smart investors growth throtIgR dividends. CREP's&#13;
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.&#13;
stations responsibility to gain&#13;
SOC's support," and we fully in.&#13;
lend to do just thar; we know we&#13;
need 10 voice ourselves more at&#13;
meetings."&#13;
"The stationdid haveproblems&#13;
inthebeginning,bUIilhasstabilize&lt;j&#13;
after months of watching people&#13;
flow in and out of positionsuntilit&#13;
became obvious who would be&#13;
dedicated. Now we just needDis.&#13;
Other thanthat, we're readyto go "&#13;
explained Biemeck.· ,&#13;
"The radio station is only&#13;
broadcasting a couple.of hoursa&#13;
day because of our DJ shOrtage.&#13;
Our door is open 10 anyoneinter.&#13;
ested in being a OJ. experienced&#13;
and non-experienced welcome'&#13;
There are fourpeople beingtrained&#13;
at this time, bUI we need more&#13;
people to fill slots so. we' can&#13;
broadcast longer," addedRoss.&#13;
Joe Rodrigues, who has participated&#13;
in the station's&#13;
developement on a touch and go&#13;
basis, had tiule 10 say about the&#13;
stations present status. "Things&#13;
were going well in thebeginning,'&#13;
However, he hasn't fullycommu,&#13;
ted to it because, "How mimy&#13;
meetings can you go 10 before&#13;
things start 10 happen?"&#13;
Rodrigues declined '10 comContinued&#13;
on naze 23&#13;
IllEARClr ....&#13;
urgest LlbralY of InlotlMllon In U.S••&#13;
IIIsub/tCIs .&#13;
Order Catalog Today with Visa/Me or coo&#13;
~ lI!;i~P,~.•&#13;
. Or. rush $2.00 10: R.... rclIlntormIIon&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A. Los Angeles, CAeom&#13;
;.... I&#13;
"Hawk's ~&#13;
2319 63rd St.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 652-8988 *"&#13;
where music matters"&#13;
*&#13;
Nov. 16 Carry Nation&#13;
Nov. 17 Last Rites&#13;
Nov. ,&#13;
20 America's .&#13;
Ultimate Five&#13;
(Male Dance Troupe&#13;
Women Only&#13;
Call 551-8805 for more info)&#13;
Nov. 21 DeCameron&#13;
(Pre·thanksgiving party)&#13;
Nov. 22 Warp Drive&#13;
(Wisconsin's bestrock&#13;
band)&#13;
Nov. 23 DeCameron&#13;
Nov. 24 Angel Landing&#13;
"Don't sit by the TV&#13;
and eat turkey-get out&#13;
/ and party!"&#13;
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20&#13;
IAIl ENSEMBLE: Comm. Arts Theatre, 8 pm, Tim Bell _ director. _&#13;
ARTSlLENTAUCTION SHOW: will be held through December 6. Gallery hours are Mon-ThUT. 1-6 p&#13;
TueJWed.7-10 pm.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21&#13;
STUDENT.RECITAL: Comm. Arts 0118, noon, free. ART SILENT AUCTION SHOW: will be hel&#13;
ibrougb December 6. Gallery hours are Mon- ThUT. 1-6 pm, Tue/Wed. 7.10 pm.&#13;
SENIORDROP IN HOURS: Career Center, WLLC 0175, 2-4 pm,&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28&#13;
PARKSIDECHAMBER ORCHESTRA: David Schripsema, director. Noon in Comm. Arts Dl18.&#13;
ARrsn:ENT AUCTION S : WI :. _ ._&#13;
TuelWed. 7-10 pm. ,&#13;
SENlORDROPIN HOURS: Career Center, WLLC 0175, 2-4 pm.&#13;
RadioStation&#13;
Contlnued from page 22&#13;
.. Harris' performanq;,&#13;
1llere are mixed sentiments&#13;
m:aningthe station's progress&#13;
mIIIlbepersons involved with&#13;
~"SIalioo, as well as members&#13;
of~. Some hold the view&#13;
1i*~lIIing is unfolding as it&#13;
!boIId, wilh the exception of the&#13;
I!Ip l1Iat occur in the process of&#13;
forming anyorganization. Others&#13;
lind to. think that it hasn't proI\lIIedrapidlyenough,especially&#13;
IlIIISidering one year has elapsed&#13;
liatelbeprojectwas taken up.&#13;
Accordiog to Robison, "If&#13;
there was blatant progress, we&#13;
would at least try to fund their&#13;
hookup into the dorms. We would&#13;
definitely consider utilizing. their&#13;
budget for mat purpose, if th~t wa;:&#13;
the direction they were heading,&#13;
Itis not as if the radio station&#13;
h~s accomplished nothing, but&#13;
accomplishments seems to have&#13;
occurred in the beginning stages,&#13;
. The radio station does have an .&#13;
identity. WZRX stands for "ZROX"&#13;
and its identity is,rooted 10&#13;
me 80's to today's most alive aliernative.&#13;
There will be hour&#13;
spotlights on- various styles like&#13;
Blues, Jazz, 60s and 70s, Rap, etc.&#13;
"We willalsospotlightanyone who&#13;
has recorded their own stuff," explained&#13;
Biemeck.&#13;
"This is my first time DJing,&#13;
butI'm familiar with this equipment&#13;
and feel excited about being here,"&#13;
said Chris. "Michou and I are up&#13;
here every day straightening things&#13;
out, brainstorming for ideas. improving&#13;
old ones ... there's basically&#13;
no reason why we shouldn't&#13;
be successful. We definitely aim to&#13;
improve communications with&#13;
SOC so that we can continue what&#13;
S b -;,;,., "'I.&#13;
IOhh WHAT It} . 'n ' ?; n , ft£,lINfi .. -&#13;
~\VC' =-j-T-N-E-V-E-R-Fj-i\-j L"':S:-.&#13;
p;):~ EVERYTIME WE PLAY&#13;
~&#13;
,~Ill\;~11 TI-\IS LIONEL R lTCHIE&#13;
, \V.'! _ 'l~, SONG!&#13;
"., ,\ )7&#13;
. " you'R£ DANel"" J .&#13;
,~ WH£NON -me CfJUI!G!&#13;
~.~__ rl ~, . ,'" .', "',~ :/., ,&#13;
.,&#13;
((&#13;
\, );..,~ ',.'. 1... :.-.'.: ••••••• : ••••&#13;
~\ ••• P., ...... _. ".'. ~'~'.&#13;
~ II---- -.:Ra=n:l!g~er"-,:.:Pa::!!B&lt;:.e=23&#13;
Movie Review&#13;
Child's Play 2&#13;
By David Wick&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
This is a beautiful love story&#13;
about a boy and a mean, nasty,&#13;
sadistic, Psychopathic, potty.&#13;
mouthed, ugly, killer, cabbage&#13;
patch kid from heU with a major&#13;
attitude problem. Oh goody. The&#13;
wait is over, because Chucky is&#13;
back. Child's Play 2 is playing at&#13;
the Cinema's 5 theatre in Kenosha.&#13;
At the end of part one, Chucky&#13;
had been shot, ripped apart, and&#13;
burned toa crisp, so it' sonly natural&#13;
that he come back for part two.&#13;
The young boy (played by&#13;
Alex Vincent) lhat was terrorized&#13;
in pan one is also back. He is now&#13;
living in an orphanage, because his&#13;
mother was placed in a mental facility.&#13;
Chucky is put back together&#13;
by the people at the Good Guy Doll&#13;
Factory.&#13;
Ihave no ideal why they did it.&#13;
rest of the movie trying to get to'&#13;
V incent,andkillsacoupleof people&#13;
who get in the way.&#13;
There are no noteworthy per.&#13;
formances. The fact that unknowns&#13;
were hired for alllbe other roles is&#13;
Ron's . 1'\&#13;
~C~on .•sun. ~ 1,&#13;
IIa.m.&#13;
7 Days A Week&#13;
Luncheon Reservation&#13;
651-5907&#13;
Famous for 50's (1/2&#13;
lb. Hamburger &amp; fries&#13;
for $3.50) Souvenir&#13;
Long Island Mugs&#13;
Now On Sale&#13;
3301 S2nd Street, Kenosha I \lISA i 657-4455&#13;
Ron's&#13;
Carryout&#13;
Open Sun-Thurs.&#13;
Il:un-Midnight&#13;
Fri-Sai, 1Jam-201m&#13;
657-4455&#13;
(c:uryout and delivery only&#13;
We Now Deliver&#13;
Breasted Chicken and&#13;
our complete menu&#13;
estgate&#13;
all&#13;
Washington Ave. (Hwy 20) &amp;. OhIo 51.,Racine&#13;
23 GREAT STORES TO SHOPTOTALLY&#13;
ENCLOSED MALL.&#13;
...- -- ....-..&#13;
VNovcmbcr 15. 1990 Classified&#13;
Ran.er, Pa...'i4&#13;
CLUB EVENTS "'--C-L-U-B-EV-E-N-T-S--I I FOR SALE [ LOST AND FOUND I I PERSONALS]&#13;
IL. I I . U· Cinema on Oct Mark Lauer, congratulations&#13;
valued at $1400. Asking Losttn rnon .&#13;
IVCF invites you for a time ing to join need only to be a 2 .Grey nylon jacket _with on your engagement! I guess&#13;
f thanksgiving and praise. registered student at UW - $700. Call 763-9681 before: . $30 reward. that means no more fun. Hal&#13;
P&#13;
arkside in the area of bio- 6 00 pm sliver smpe. L ". I . 7E" . Wednesday, ov. 21, 1990. :. 553-2843. ove gir s m&#13;
Moln. 107, 12:00. Prayer logical sciences. Bring your&#13;
meeting every Friday. Moln lunch; the soda and desert&#13;
126,12:00. will be furnished.&#13;
Musician , poetS, assorted&#13;
talent wanted for Coffeehou&#13;
. Wednesday, Dec. 5.&#13;
7:00-11:00. Union Square.&#13;
Free. Registration forms&#13;
vailable in union 209.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
ov. 30, 1990.&#13;
The Hispanic Organization&#13;
meetingisFriday,Nov.16in&#13;
the Writing Center at noon.&#13;
HOP's recruitment party is&#13;
Monday, Nov. 19, noon, at&#13;
the SEC office.&#13;
. Molecular Biology Club will&#13;
hold their meeting of the '90-&#13;
91 school year on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 20 in Moln. room #161&#13;
at noon. All present members&#13;
are encouraged to attend&#13;
and a warm welcome is exterrded&#13;
to any prospective&#13;
new members. Those wish&#13;
Up coming book raffle. First&#13;
prize $100.00 gift certificate&#13;
towards books for next semester,&#13;
2nd prize is a $50.00&#13;
gift certificate, 3rd prize- (2)&#13;
$25.00 gift certificate. Tickets&#13;
sell for $1.00. Look for&#13;
the raffle. Sponsored by&#13;
f&gt;.S.E. December 3,4 &amp; 5.&#13;
"Club Members Only" Precious&#13;
moments figurines for&#13;
sale. Please call Becky at&#13;
654-1292.&#13;
Computer System Amiga 500 .&#13;
A500 CPU, color monitor,&#13;
Panasonic 1080, printer, 2nd&#13;
drive, 1 meg RAM, desk and&#13;
lots of software. $800 OBO.&#13;
654-9587.&#13;
Women's wedding and engagement&#13;
rings. Brand new,&#13;
Retail- Seasonal Sales Associates&#13;
Full and Part-time&#13;
Liz Claiborne,Inc.is seekingindividualsto worllbothfuiland part-time,&#13;
duringthe holidays,inourOutletStorelocatedinKenosha,Wisconsin.&#13;
This is an outstanding opportunityto become parr of the holiday&#13;
excitemenland earn extracash forthis specialtimeofthe year. These&#13;
posnons mayalso leadintoemploymentopportunitiesafterthe end of&#13;
the holiday season.&#13;
We offer competttivesalaries, flexibleschedules and generous emplOyee&#13;
discounts.&#13;
To learn about these exctting opportunities, apply in person&#13;
between10am-Gpm,Monday-Saturdayor cailfor an appointment:&#13;
liz Claiborne Outlet store- Lakeside Market Place&#13;
112111201h Avenue Kenosha, WI 53142&#13;
(414) 857·9333&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer ,,....,:J====='-="'''=~~i===--!I&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
FUND RAISING I&#13;
_~...:...------ Don't miss Tremper's MadBest&#13;
fund raiser on campus rigal Feast. A Christmas Tralooking&#13;
for fr;ll~rnity/soror- dition.Advancedticketsonly.&#13;
iry or student organization Dec 13,14,15 at 6:30 pm.&#13;
that would like to eam $500- Matinee Dec. 16, 2:30 pm.&#13;
$1000 for one week on cam- Contact Kurt Chalgren. 697-&#13;
pus rnarxenng project, Must 2230. $2'.00 conation.&#13;
be organized and hard working.&#13;
Call Beverly or Jeanine&#13;
at 800-592-2121.&#13;
Travel free! Sun Splash tours&#13;
offers the most exciting and&#13;
affordable spring break'&#13;
packagestoJamaica,Cancun, I PERSONALS I&#13;
Margarita Island! The easi- "-_---------J&#13;
est and fastest way to earn&#13;
free travel and extra $$$.&#13;
Become a representative.&#13;
Call 1-800-426-7710.&#13;
Black leather women's jacket&#13;
with fringe. Size M. Excellent&#13;
condition. Asking $150.&#13;
Call 889-4819 before 5:30&#13;
pm.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Help wanted. Full/part-time,&#13;
am.pm. Dining, banquet and&#13;
cocktail servers. Sheraton&#13;
Hotel and Conference Center.&#13;
Call 886-6100.&#13;
Make quick Christmas $$!&#13;
Earn $6.00-$10.00 per hour.&#13;
Delivery positions available.&#13;
Apply at any Kenosha or&#13;
Racine Domino's Pizza store.&#13;
Student Snow Shoveler.&#13;
$5.25/hour. Must be available&#13;
for early morning work,&#13;
physically fit and hold a valid&#13;
drivers license. Contact UW _ .&#13;
Parkside Grounds Dept. at&#13;
553-2228 for appointment.&#13;
Lost, Black wool women's&#13;
coat. Small size. Please call&#13;
553-2295.&#13;
- Raphael and Lisa Wanltogo&#13;
back to bed. The mouseis&#13;
mine and we're friends. Let's&#13;
talk. GWTM&#13;
To the S&amp;B Queens,youhave&#13;
to suck harder so it doesn't&#13;
drop on the floor! KAA&#13;
Terri Beck - You're gorgeous.&#13;
I would like to meet &amp; getkl&#13;
know you. - Very Intrigued&#13;
. on TIR 9:30.&#13;
W~e N' Bak~! Quality va-' I SERVICES OFFER~&#13;
cations to exotic destinations&#13;
for spring break in Jamaica/&gt; Word processing: TYJllllI&#13;
Cancun. Starting at$429.00! - done on computer. $l.~&#13;
Organize group travel, free! page. Resumes, term Jl'IIIl&#13;
Book early and save $30.00. and dissertations acceplei&#13;
Call 1-800-462-7710. Pick-up and delivery&#13;
able. Call 551-7431.&#13;
To the Progressive Rock&#13;
Band looking for a singer,&#13;
~ontact Tim Whiting 551-&#13;
0220. Excellent singer, great&#13;
Bruce Springsteen impersonator.&#13;
He's an incredible&#13;
vocal talent waiting to be discovered&#13;
but too modest to&#13;
come forward personally.&#13;
Term papers, resumes, mit&#13;
cellaneous typing done(II&#13;
Word Perfect. Choose fonu,&#13;
page formats. $1.00perpagc&#13;
for term papers: roughdraf~&#13;
editing footnotes and bibli·&#13;
ographyincluded. Don'twail&#13;
until the last minute! ContaCI&#13;
Nancy at 637 -8507 after4:OO&#13;
M-F or any time on weekend&gt;&#13;
Check our Checking!&#13;
,/ No minimum balance&#13;
,/ High interest with $250.00+&#13;
,/ 24 Hour telephone banking&#13;
and bill paying&#13;
Serving all UW·ParksiJI,&#13;
employees and studentS&#13;
\!.D\lCAl'OJfS&#13;
·(ti)&#13;
~~l)~'!l\# ~&#13;
Tallent Hall - Room 286 i"~&#13;
553,2150 9:30-4:00 ~&#13;
• ~ A • ..,</text>
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              <text>UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDESeptember&#13;
22, 1994&#13;
PSGA Meeting Held&#13;
Senator Rocco asks for show&#13;
of support&#13;
by Karen Diehl&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
its third weekly meeting on&#13;
Friday, September 16.&#13;
Several things were discussed&#13;
before the meeting went into&#13;
closed session. Future&#13;
meetings of the election&#13;
committee and SUFAC were&#13;
mentioned briefly, as well as&#13;
the September 13 budget cut&#13;
meeting. A preliminary copy&#13;
of a new PSGA constitution&#13;
was also proposed. If PSGA&#13;
were to adopt the new&#13;
constitution, it would have to&#13;
be approved by the student&#13;
body in a future election.&#13;
The last order of business&#13;
before the meeting went into&#13;
closed session was a speech&#13;
by Senator Bruce Rocco.&#13;
Rocco addressed the issue of&#13;
the "inappropriate" reporting&#13;
of the last United Council&#13;
meeting. Rocco asserted that&#13;
there was a proper&#13;
representation of Parkside&#13;
students at the United&#13;
Council, and that there was&#13;
nothing phony or fake about&#13;
the receipts collected by the&#13;
delegates for reimbursement.&#13;
Political Parties and Pressure&#13;
Groups&#13;
This fall's Political Parties&#13;
and Pressure Groups Political&#13;
Science class will have four&#13;
guest speakers. The&#13;
Democratic Party State&#13;
Chair, Marlys Matuszak will&#13;
speak on Thursday, October&#13;
6th, and the Republican State&#13;
Chairman, David Opitz, will&#13;
speak on Tuesday, October&#13;
11th. Also speaking are&#13;
GeorgeWilliams,&#13;
representative ofthe&#13;
Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association on Tuesday,&#13;
October 18th, and Mordecai&#13;
Lee, Executive Director of the&#13;
Milwaukee Jewish Council for&#13;
Community Relations on&#13;
Tuesday, November 1.&#13;
UW-Parkside students who&#13;
are interested in hearing any&#13;
ofthese speakers are invited&#13;
to attend the sessions. The&#13;
class meets at 12:30 p.m.,&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday in&#13;
Molinaro 126.&#13;
Eating Disorders Support Group&#13;
Formed&#13;
I&#13;
Students with eating&#13;
problems are invited to attend&#13;
an informational meeting&#13;
about starting an on-campus&#13;
counseling support group. The&#13;
group will be led by Corde&#13;
DellaPia, ACSW from&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Medical and Social Services&#13;
who is experienced and&#13;
trained in working with&#13;
people who have eating&#13;
problems.&#13;
The informational meeting&#13;
will be Wednesday, October 5,&#13;
at 12:00 noon to 12:50 in&#13;
Union 104. At the&#13;
informational meeting those&#13;
interested will decide the best&#13;
meeting time. Ifyou have any&#13;
questions about this group or&#13;
cannot attend this meeting,&#13;
call Student Health and&#13;
Counseling Services at 595-&#13;
2365 or 595-2366.&#13;
He stressed the support that&#13;
should be given to senators&#13;
Deb Cutler and Chris&#13;
Bossert, president Jennifer&#13;
Buchholz and former vice&#13;
president Dan Blake.&#13;
Finally, Rocco stated, "I feel it&#13;
is a necessary and respectful&#13;
request to stand and applaud&#13;
as a show of support ..." After&#13;
Rocco's speech and the round&#13;
of applause, it was moved&#13;
that the meeting enter closed&#13;
session. Wben a meeting&#13;
enters closed session, people&#13;
who are not senators,&#13;
advisors or executive officers&#13;
of PSGA are asked to leave.&#13;
P§'l;$e'fat9r~.aPJJlO:Jtd~n r,?spOn$1! to .&#13;
:a'rnC~.j()P~o·s.pdtlf9r.asIlQw O'f"Clel~.tand&#13;
filJitellijity.~·'l'hisshow of support Wasfor&#13;
the membersre~ently inuolued.taith: ihe last&#13;
United Council meeting.&#13;
However, a motion was made&#13;
that former vice president&#13;
Dan Blake should stay for&#13;
closed session due to his&#13;
involvement in the situation&#13;
being discussed, .&#13;
Student Health Services ond&#13;
Counseling Offered At UW-Parkside&#13;
Beginning fall 1994 all&#13;
personal counseling services&#13;
available to UW-Parkside&#13;
students will be offered&#13;
through Student Health and&#13;
Counseling Services. .&#13;
Students who are having&#13;
personal concerns or&#13;
problems that are interfering&#13;
with their academic&#13;
achievement or personal goals&#13;
may call 595-2365 or drop by&#13;
MOLN D124 to make an&#13;
appointment to meet with a&#13;
counselor.&#13;
Students receive help from&#13;
a counselor on a variety of&#13;
issues and concerns such as:&#13;
relationships, alcohol/drug&#13;
abuse, stress, anxiety, selfesteem,&#13;
depression, addictive&#13;
behavior, eating problems&#13;
and personal crisis. The short&#13;
term counseling offered at&#13;
UW-Parkside is free and&#13;
confidential. Students who&#13;
need long term help can get&#13;
referrals to community&#13;
resources. Any student with a&#13;
troublesome problem or&#13;
concern is encouraged to call&#13;
595-2365 for an appointment,&#13;
or drop by MOLN D124 to&#13;
make an appointment with a&#13;
counselor.&#13;
Students with physical&#13;
health problems or potential&#13;
problems are encouraged to&#13;
call 595-2366 for an&#13;
appointment with a nurse.&#13;
Some examples of Health&#13;
Care services are: acute care&#13;
for illness and emergencies,&#13;
physician referrals, strep&#13;
screens, TB skin testing,&#13;
measles immunization,&#13;
counseling for reproductive&#13;
health concerns, low cost&#13;
contraceptives, lending of&#13;
orthopedic devices, special&#13;
parking for disabled students,&#13;
and information about&#13;
Student Health Insurance.&#13;
All medical records and&#13;
student visits are&#13;
confidential; without a&#13;
student's written permission&#13;
Student Health and&#13;
Counseling Services staff&#13;
cannot share student medical&#13;
records or information about&#13;
a visit with anyone. For&#13;
questions concerning health&#13;
care services offered or to&#13;
make an appointments,&#13;
please call 595-2366 or stop&#13;
by MOLN D115.&#13;
Research Experiences for Undergraduates&#13;
program held at Parkside Last Summer&#13;
The Summer of 19.94&#13;
brought an exciting&#13;
opportunity for&#13;
undergraduate students in&#13;
the fields of molecular biology&#13;
and biochemistry. The&#13;
Research Experience for&#13;
Undergraduates (REV)&#13;
program took place this&#13;
summer at UW-Parkside.&#13;
The REV program, funded&#13;
by the National Science&#13;
Foundation,provided&#13;
undergraduate students with&#13;
at least two years of schooling&#13;
an opportunity-to gain field&#13;
experience in various&#13;
laboratories on campus. Only&#13;
half of the participants came&#13;
from UW-Parkside. The&#13;
others came from as far away&#13;
as California and New Jersey&#13;
to participate in the program.&#13;
-&#13;
All students were provided&#13;
with a $2500 stipend, and&#13;
housing was provided for&#13;
those who required it.&#13;
The REV curriculum was&#13;
based on ten weeks of full&#13;
time research. Other&#13;
requirements of students&#13;
included a brief written&#13;
abstract describing their&#13;
research, and a final 20&#13;
minute oral presentation of&#13;
their discoveries. Fun events&#13;
were also planned, such as a&#13;
pig-roast, a bike-ride through&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park, and&#13;
a final "beach party" held at&#13;
the volleyball court outside&#13;
the housing.&#13;
"The REU program has&#13;
opened a lot of doors for me. I·&#13;
didn't just learn about blood&#13;
plasma proteins, I also&#13;
learned about the day-to-day&#13;
aspects of being a scientist,"&#13;
commented Karen Diehl, a&#13;
junior who worked with Dr.&#13;
Gary Wood of the Chemistry&#13;
Department. Diehl went on to&#13;
say, "The skills that I've&#13;
learned as undergraduate will&#13;
really give me an edge in&#13;
pursuing future goals. Most&#13;
people don't get the&#13;
opportunity to do intensive&#13;
research until they're a&#13;
graduate student.'&#13;
In November, all available&#13;
REV participants will travel&#13;
to Illinois for a symposium at&#13;
Argonne National Laboratory.&#13;
There, they will present their&#13;
findings to people in similar&#13;
fields of research.&#13;
2 ,&#13;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~F~a~c~uillltyfV1R~e;Ccllita01II-- '&#13;
M&#13;
. h I J Perotto Rummage feels that Ringo fit&#13;
by IC ae . the Beatles perfectly, and&#13;
Parkside percussion helped significantly define .&#13;
instructor Robert Rummage their sound. Rummage's early&#13;
will be performing this years were also influenced by&#13;
coming Wednesday, rock groups such as the&#13;
September 28, at noon here at Doors, Cream, and Jimi&#13;
Parkside in the recital hall . Hendrix. However, in high&#13;
(CART D118). He will be school Rummage transformed&#13;
performing a percussion solo, his musical tastes over to jazz&#13;
and also be performing a . and other various forms of&#13;
variety ofjazz standards with intricate drumming. Thus the&#13;
a few of his musical friends. career in music begins.&#13;
The solo Rummage has Rummage graduated from&#13;
chosen to perform was the University of Kentucky&#13;
originally an improvisation by (his home state) in 1984 with&#13;
Max Rhodes, a 1950's jazz a degree in applied music. He&#13;
drummer who worked for is currently finishing up his&#13;
Charlie Parker and Cliffotd Master's degree at DePaul I&#13;
Brown, among others. University in Chicago. He u&#13;
Bassist/trumpet player gives private lessons to about !&#13;
Brad Goode, pianist Carl six Parkside students and I ,&#13;
Manzka, and sax player Tim teaches a Percussion Methods II&#13;
Bell will also be performing class here. He also teaches in I&#13;
along with Rummage. Elmhurst, IL, (where he now&#13;
Rummage, Goode, and resides) at a local college.&#13;
Manzka will form a trio to Aside from instructing&#13;
perform standards like students, Rummage performs&#13;
"Autumn Leaves" and about four nights a week at&#13;
"Incantations," an Afro-Cuban various functions. As well as&#13;
styled piece that is in 12/8 his jazz group, Rummage is&#13;
time. They will also be also engaged in wedding&#13;
playing in the styles of Latin bands and is a recording&#13;
and Swing, and possibly a session musician.&#13;
ballad or two. Tim Bell will When asked why he has&#13;
join them for a few songs to chosen a c'!!ieErrin the music&#13;
form a quartet, and Rummage business, Robert replied that&#13;
and Goode will be performing he could not conceive of doing&#13;
a drum/trumpet duet. anything else. He feels that&#13;
Robert Rummage began he is well established in his&#13;
playing drums at the age of 4 field and finds his work most&#13;
and has been playing for 30 enjoyable. He also feels that if&#13;
years. He cites his earliest you really feel that you want&#13;
influence as drummer Ringo to be a working musician, and&#13;
=:~e:~~oab:~;:ee to make ~;;:~e~a~:~:~~~w much f::o;':~~:~::v~fv'J~ an Sstarr. Man&#13;
drum&#13;
y people unbdterrate its&#13;
t&#13;
in your blood, then pursue&#13;
.. ~,a P .. ts will b t d thi t hni tarr as a mer, u 1 .&#13;
a positive cnrrerence, articipan e expec e s ec ique,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Police Incident Report&#13;
citation for underage from poles. (Note) - state and 9/15/94 INC 94-452 Personal&#13;
consumption of Alcohol and 9/11/94 INC 94-445 Medical USA flags found with only property theft - on 9/13/94&#13;
charged with criminal Assist (1:26 pm) - Soccer field. Parkside flag missing. between noon and 8:45 pm,&#13;
trespass to dwellings. Soccer athlete broke her wrist unknown personts) stole&#13;
playing soccer. Fire/rescue 9/13/94 INC 94-449 Unlawful complainant's parking permit&#13;
responded. Victim use oftelephone (12:56 am) - #91517 from his unlocked&#13;
transported via ambulance to 4019 Outer Loop Road, 6D. vehicle.&#13;
St. Catherine's Hospital. Student received three&#13;
obscene phone calls from&#13;
unknown older male who&#13;
gave name Derek and knew&#13;
student's name. Student&#13;
knows no one by that name.&#13;
Advised.&#13;
Act Now: Friday Is Last Day&#13;
Social Action Theater Comes to&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
This is a call for students,&#13;
faculty and staff interested in'&#13;
joining a social action group&#13;
at UW-Parkside!&#13;
Sponsored by the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Department and the&#13;
Division of Student Affairs,&#13;
the Social Action's purpose is&#13;
to foster understanding and&#13;
appreciation of cultural&#13;
diversity.&#13;
Those who become involved&#13;
will be trained and then&#13;
asked to identify actual&#13;
events of campus or&#13;
community discrimination or&#13;
insensitivity. Once developed&#13;
into brieflife-story skits, they&#13;
will be presented to classes,&#13;
studentorganizations,and&#13;
community groups. Actoraudience&#13;
interaction and&#13;
facilitated discussion will&#13;
help to heighten cultural&#13;
awareness and understanding&#13;
of cultural differences.&#13;
The goals of Social Action&#13;
are to strengthen the climate&#13;
ofrespect and trust for all&#13;
campus groups and to&#13;
increase campus tolerance&#13;
through education.&#13;
Participants are not&#13;
expected to be drama majors&#13;
or experienced in theater. All&#13;
that is needed is a genuine&#13;
9/9/94 INC 94-439 Animals&#13;
(7:40 am) - Lost dog, exterior&#13;
of CART building. Owner&#13;
notified and retrieved dog.&#13;
9/9/94 INC 94-#0 Medical&#13;
assist (9:00 pm) - Student&#13;
fainted in Phy. Ed. Gym.&#13;
Treated by nurse and refused&#13;
transport by Med. 5.&#13;
9/9/94 INC 94-441 Traffic&#13;
Accident (11:25 am) -&#13;
Accident report taken in Phy.&#13;
Ed. lot.&#13;
9/10/94 INC 94-#2&#13;
Disorderly Conduct (12:55&#13;
am) - 4019 Outer Loop Road,&#13;
4B. Two individuals were&#13;
arrested for disorderly&#13;
conduct and criminal trespass&#13;
to dwellings and conveyed to&#13;
UPPS for questioning and&#13;
statements. Complaint and&#13;
summons issued on one&#13;
perpetrator and the other was .&#13;
issued UWS chapter 18&#13;
Participants will go through&#13;
special training in all the&#13;
techniques they will be&#13;
expected to utilize in Social&#13;
Action Theatre.&#13;
There are several ways to&#13;
become involved in Social&#13;
Action. You may choose to&#13;
assist in the writing ofscripts&#13;
and the development and&#13;
training ofrole players. Those&#13;
interested in performing&#13;
before groups may wish to&#13;
become role players. Each&#13;
presentation needs a&#13;
discussion facilitator to&#13;
structure audience-actor&#13;
interaction. Some&#13;
participants may simply wish&#13;
to coordinate "behind the&#13;
scenes" logistics. Ifyou have&#13;
an interest, they can utilize&#13;
you in some important way.&#13;
Through your involvement,&#13;
Social Action will provide the&#13;
opportunity to learn or&#13;
further develop&#13;
communication and human&#13;
relations skills, contribute to&#13;
a positive change at Parkside,&#13;
fight intolerance, and&#13;
establish new relationships&#13;
on campus.&#13;
Itis hard to quantify the&#13;
time involvement in a new&#13;
undertaking. However, you&#13;
to go through 10 to 12 hours&#13;
ofinitial training on the&#13;
social action techniques. Once&#13;
trained, participants will be&#13;
asked to assist in a selection&#13;
ofreal life incidents of&#13;
discrimination or&#13;
insensitivity. these&#13;
experiences will be written&#13;
into script form and used to&#13;
"rehearse" role·players. Each&#13;
skit will need 3 or.4 role&#13;
players. It is hoped that we&#13;
will have sufficient interest to&#13;
develop several troupes of&#13;
role players. Once the troupes&#13;
are ready to perform, the time&#13;
commitment will depend&#13;
upon your availability and&#13;
campus requests for this&#13;
educational program.&#13;
If you would like further&#13;
information or would like&#13;
more about this exciting new&#13;
opportunity at UW-Parkside,&#13;
you should plan to attend one&#13;
of the upcoming informational&#13;
meeting on Friday,&#13;
September 23, from noon to 1&#13;
pm. Members of the Dramatic&#13;
Arts faculty and staff from&#13;
Student Affairs will be on&#13;
hand to provide an overview&#13;
ofthe program and an&#13;
opportunity to ask questions.&#13;
In addition, a live skit will be&#13;
9/10/94 INC 94-443 Simple&#13;
Battery(3:26 am) - 4019&#13;
Outer Loop Road, 4G.&#13;
Possible fight. Earlier in the&#13;
evening, complainant and&#13;
friends had verbal&#13;
confrontation with four other&#13;
acquaintances (suspects.)&#13;
One complainant was struck&#13;
with blunt object causing left&#13;
eye to swell. The four&#13;
suspects left the apartment&#13;
and were gone upon arrival of&#13;
the UPPS officers.&#13;
Complainant refuses to&#13;
prosecute.&#13;
9/15/94 INC 94-453&#13;
Worthless check (3:17 pm) - A&#13;
$72.00 NSF check written for&#13;
a parking permit returned.&#13;
Notice and demand for&#13;
payment sent.&#13;
9/12/94 INC 94-446 State&#13;
property theft (flag) - (3:20&#13;
am) - Allthree flags missing&#13;
from flag poles. Wisconsin&#13;
flag found D-l level of CART&#13;
building and US flag found in&#13;
UPPS department. Parkside&#13;
flag still missing.&#13;
9/13/94 INC 94-450&#13;
Suspicious persons (1:03 pm)&#13;
- Two individuals preaching&#13;
to students outside north side&#13;
of Union building. Advised.&#13;
9/15/94 INC 94-454 (1:52) a&#13;
9/2/94 warning citation issued&#13;
for expired registration (10&#13;
days to show) has not shown&#13;
as of this date.&#13;
9/12/94 INC 94-447 Criminal&#13;
damage to property - State&#13;
(10:27 am) - Unknown&#13;
person(s) removed coin slot to&#13;
feed clothes dryer #419161 in&#13;
housing. No suspects at this&#13;
time. .&#13;
9/14194 INC 94-451 Personal&#13;
property theft - between 2pm4pm&#13;
on 9/12/94 unknown&#13;
personts) took complainant's&#13;
purse inadvertently left in&#13;
WLLC containing cash and&#13;
credit cards.&#13;
9/16/94 INC 94-455 Fire&#13;
alarm -,Power plant - no&#13;
smoke or fire - checked the&#13;
building.&#13;
9/11194INC 94-444&#13;
Suspicious Circumstances&#13;
(9:00 am) - Broken beer&#13;
bottles found outside east&#13;
entrance of Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
No property damage and no&#13;
suspects.&#13;
9/13/94 INC 94-448 State&#13;
Property Theft (flags) - (9:26&#13;
am) - All three flags missing&#13;
Editor-in-Chief NickZahn&#13;
Managing Editor .: Moss Ingram RANGER&#13;
1&#13;
News Editor Karen Diehl&#13;
Feature Editor Jim Hendrickson&#13;
Sports Editor Scott Fragale&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor AIHeppner&#13;
Entertainment Editor Julia Treiber&#13;
Calendar Events AmyTucker&#13;
Photography Editor Anastasia Lehman&#13;
Box2000• 900WoodRoad'&#13;
Kenosha,WI53141&#13;
DeliveredSubscriptionsAvailable&#13;
414-595-2295FAX414-595-2630&#13;
Business Mgr Erin Meranda&#13;
Production Advisor .R. George Wiggins&#13;
Your comments are valuable. Questions, concerning specific articles should be forwarded to appropriate section&#13;
editor.Leitersto the editorto be publishedmustfolioweditorialguidelinesoutlinedinthe EditorialSection.&#13;
3&#13;
Reeves' Discusses Presidential&#13;
Character Disabled is&#13;
not Unable by Jim Hendrickson&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
visiting the homes of friends.&#13;
Just r~cently I played a part&#13;
III getting a wheelchair ramp&#13;
constructed for accessibility of&#13;
the Post Office in downtown&#13;
Kenosha. It is vital that all&#13;
buildings make it possible for&#13;
individuals in wheelchairs to&#13;
enter rather than being shut&#13;
out.&#13;
Social relationships are also&#13;
disrupted. Divorce rates&#13;
among married couples after&#13;
one partner incurs a disability&#13;
is as high as 80%. My&#13;
marriage lasted for twelve&#13;
years before I was diagnosed&#13;
with MS, and we became part&#13;
of that 80%. Because ofthe&#13;
negative attitudes towards&#13;
. disabilities and the physical&#13;
barriers, continuing social&#13;
relationships and achieving&#13;
acceptance into social&#13;
situations are struggles for&#13;
persons with physical&#13;
disabilities.&#13;
People with disabilities aresaid&#13;
to become stronger in .&#13;
their struggle against&#13;
hardship. I know that I have.&#13;
People with physical&#13;
conditions which significantly&#13;
limit their ability to perform&#13;
their daily activities are still&#13;
as loving and caring as&#13;
anyone else. Get to know us.&#13;
We may surprise you!&#13;
byDave Schmitt&#13;
Myname is Dave, a student&#13;
here at UW-Parkside, and I&#13;
am afl1ictedwith MS&#13;
(MultipleSclerosis). It wasn't&#13;
until I was diagnosed in 1986&#13;
that I had ever thought about&#13;
hoWthat condition was going&#13;
to change my life. I had never&#13;
thought about how society&#13;
treated people who have&#13;
disabilities. Negative&#13;
attitudes towards people with&#13;
disabilities are still common.&#13;
Emotional and social barriers&#13;
in the form of negative&#13;
attitudes are far too common&#13;
throughout our society.&#13;
Peoplewith disabilities are&#13;
stillfrequently viewed as&#13;
"damagedgoods," and&#13;
incapable of achieving any&#13;
success. In public, a person&#13;
with a disability may no&#13;
longerbe seen as being&#13;
capableto speak for&#13;
themselves.These negative&#13;
attitudes can cause more&#13;
problemsfor a person with a&#13;
disabilitythan the disability&#13;
itself&#13;
Physical barriers for&#13;
accessibilityare widespread.&#13;
Architectural barriers prevent&#13;
the continuation of previously&#13;
enjoyableactivities, such as&#13;
diningat favorite restaurants,&#13;
attendingmovie theaters, or&#13;
Presidential character is&#13;
not going away. It is still an&#13;
issue, and not just on the&#13;
right-wing. Referring to&#13;
Presidential character, liberal&#13;
columnist Meg Greenfield&#13;
recently wrote, "Character is&#13;
everything." On September&#13;
14, Thomas C. Reeves, UWParkside&#13;
professor of history&#13;
took up this issue in the first&#13;
Soup and Substance&#13;
discussion of this school year.&#13;
Reeves, who has taught at&#13;
UW-Parkside since 1970 has&#13;
written A Question of&#13;
Character: A Life of John F.&#13;
Kennedy, Gentleman Boss:&#13;
The Life of Chester Alan&#13;
Arthur, and The Life and&#13;
Times of Joe MacCarthy: A&#13;
Biography.&#13;
Reeves told his audience&#13;
that the issue of character&#13;
itself goes back at least as far&#13;
as Plato or the Old&#13;
Testament. Our character is&#13;
what we are down deep, as&#13;
opposed to our personality,&#13;
which is only what appears&#13;
on the surface. Who we are is&#13;
connected to what we do. The&#13;
sixteenth-century philosopher&#13;
Erasmus wrote, "No man can&#13;
be an effective leader without&#13;
being a good man."&#13;
If Erasmus' dictum is true,&#13;
then it is obvious why&#13;
character is an important&#13;
determining factor in the&#13;
effectiveness of the&#13;
Presidency. Our elected ruler,&#13;
the President is also the&#13;
world's most powerful man.&#13;
As such he is under constant&#13;
surveillance. "The President&#13;
is powerful; he is a moral&#13;
symbol, and he always has&#13;
been," asserted Reeves. To&#13;
succeed, the President needs&#13;
intelligence, diligence,&#13;
experience, political and&#13;
communication skills,&#13;
managerial competence, good&#13;
advisers, and luck.&#13;
It is always necessary to&#13;
judge Presidents reasonably.&#13;
Presidents are politicians&#13;
with political goals and&#13;
pressures, not saints with&#13;
supernatural assurance.&#13;
Truman had good character,&#13;
for instance, but at times he&#13;
lied or cajoled to be a more&#13;
effective leader. Also, Reeves&#13;
suggests that we throw out&#13;
the trivial instances of onetime&#13;
infidelity or marijuana&#13;
use. A consistent pattern of&#13;
lying, thievery or&#13;
irresponsibility is much more&#13;
important than these.&#13;
Reeves considers our&#13;
country fortunate because the&#13;
Presidency was designed for a&#13;
man of George Washington's&#13;
caliber. Washington&#13;
possessed strength, prudence,&#13;
integrity, dignity, and a sense&#13;
ofjustice. Thomas Jefferson&#13;
said Washington possessed&#13;
the whole art of governance,&#13;
Volunteer of the Week&#13;
The Career Center selects&#13;
"Volunteers of the Week" based&#13;
on their altruistic attitudes,&#13;
the amount of time shared&#13;
within the community, and the&#13;
positive impact their service&#13;
.,.has made in the lives of others.&#13;
.....This week's volunteer is John&#13;
Aalto.&#13;
John Aalto is a senior&#13;
majoring in biology with a&#13;
concentration in pre-health. He&#13;
became a member of the&#13;
Parkside Volunteer' Program in&#13;
July 1993. John's volunteer&#13;
experiences include: Kenosha&#13;
i!!!lITm!m==:lTl=""l Hospital and Medical Center,&#13;
Kenosha County Medical&#13;
Examiner's Office, and&#13;
Parkside tutoring. John's busy&#13;
schedule has also involved onetime&#13;
events for the Alcohol and&#13;
p;m;;'c;1Iimmr::,1lrrrrtW!!Wntr1l!ik.1 Other Drugs Prevention&#13;
Programs such as: the Pike&#13;
.... Creek Duck Race, the Just-&#13;
""'"Wliii[U:;llli:Z£2ZitllMiEtlCilli1iillJ···· Say-No Swim Party, the 4-H .&#13;
Day Camp, the Picnic in the&#13;
Park, Girl Scout outings, the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival, and&#13;
the Kenosha Youth Festival&#13;
Corporate Cup.&#13;
"Observing John while&#13;
working with youth, I see that&#13;
he is totally committed to&#13;
whatever role he has&#13;
undertaken. John's patience&#13;
and dedication are some of his&#13;
greatest assets," reported&#13;
Donna Raetzke, AODA&#13;
Volunteer Coordinator.&#13;
by Barb Churchill&#13;
Ed. Note. This article was&#13;
written before the invasion of&#13;
Haiti was called off.&#13;
Obviously, Clinton agreed&#13;
that the bending of a&#13;
campaign promise to invade&#13;
Haiti was less unethical than&#13;
the possible waste of US&#13;
soldiers' lives.&#13;
Today I would like to talk&#13;
about ethics and the giving of&#13;
one's word, either implied or&#13;
explicit. Clinton gave his&#13;
word during his campaign&#13;
that he would get rid of the&#13;
dictatorship in Haiti. He&#13;
seemed at every point to say&#13;
that it was an insult to him&#13;
and the United States&#13;
because it is within our&#13;
sphere of influence in the&#13;
Caribbean. (After all, it's only&#13;
a few miles away which is&#13;
evident by all of the boat&#13;
people who have made it over&#13;
to the US.) The problem is&#13;
that his word was too easily&#13;
given. There is no real&#13;
national interest at stake&#13;
except the "offensiveness" of&#13;
the dictatorship to our United&#13;
States sensibilities.&#13;
Now I'm not saying I like&#13;
dictatorships. (Someone like&#13;
me would probably be strung&#13;
up and shot.) However, as an&#13;
ex-wife of a former Army&#13;
soldier, it deeply offends me&#13;
that our country would send&#13;
soldiers into a country that&#13;
we have explicitly told would&#13;
be invaded unless they bowed&#13;
to the party line. Isn't that a&#13;
bit dictatorial on the US's&#13;
part? Telling another .&#13;
sovereign country, "Do this or&#13;
else!" is exactly what we are&#13;
trying to prevent in Haiti.&#13;
Talk about hypocritical!&#13;
Observations&#13;
Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due?&#13;
C. J. Nelson&#13;
Before I begin today let me&#13;
talk to the Republicans in the&#13;
audience. Come on people, I&#13;
don't like him either but even&#13;
a .220 hitter can occasionally&#13;
get around on a fastball. Let's&#13;
give President Clinton credit&#13;
or at least thank his luck&#13;
concerning Haiti. He may&#13;
have gotten one right on&#13;
foreign affairs.&#13;
I had prepared a perfectly&#13;
good piece for this week&#13;
concerning the probable&#13;
invasion of Haiti. Leave it to&#13;
a Democrat to foul it up. Now,&#13;
I must not only write a new&#13;
one. I must also give credit&#13;
where credit is required.&#13;
President Clinton did show&#13;
he was prepared to back up&#13;
his word (although giving the&#13;
order to attack while an expresident,&#13;
current Chairman&#13;
.of the Senate Armed Services&#13;
Committee and a retired&#13;
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs&#13;
of Staff were still in Haiti was&#13;
perhaps a little too cute for&#13;
comfort).&#13;
I still have difficulty with&#13;
the idea of President Clinton&#13;
being Commander-in-Chief&#13;
due to his prior opinions and&#13;
actions concerning the&#13;
military and military service&#13;
(which he has said in the past&#13;
he loathes). But the military&#13;
followed its orders well&#13;
(continuing a winning streak&#13;
began under the Republicans)&#13;
and it looks like the no blood&#13;
will be shed initially.&#13;
Nevertheless, several points&#13;
should be addressed. The&#13;
level of hypocrisy on this&#13;
issue on both partisan sides,&#13;
would if it was rocket fuel, be&#13;
enough to fly a rocket to the&#13;
sun and back several times&#13;
over. We as a nation were&#13;
treated to the sight of&#13;
Also, after telling Haiti&#13;
which ships will be&#13;
dispatched and vyhere they&#13;
will land, no matter how&#13;
inefficient the Haitian&#13;
military is said to be, isn't it a&#13;
little dumb to give out free&#13;
information like this? More&#13;
American soldiers may be&#13;
killed as a result. War is not&#13;
worth it. Just because Clinton&#13;
gave his word to remove this&#13;
offensive dictatorship doesn't&#13;
mean he has to do it this way.&#13;
How about further&#13;
negotiations? How about&#13;
using Voice of America&#13;
broadcasts to give accurate&#13;
information to the Haitian&#13;
public so they will eventually&#13;
rise up and revolt? You see.&#13;
there are alternatives. In1I!y&#13;
opinion, it's less unethical to&#13;
back out of an unnecessary&#13;
war than to break one's&#13;
campaign promises.&#13;
politicians backtracking and&#13;
eating their words.&#13;
Republicans all of a sudden&#13;
discovered how important the&#13;
War Powers Act (shunned by&#13;
previous Republican Chief&#13;
Executives) was. Conversely&#13;
the Democrats found out how&#13;
constricting and annoying the&#13;
same law could be (the&#13;
Democrats used to wax oh so&#13;
eloquent about this law once&#13;
upon a time). Hawks became&#13;
doves, and doves became&#13;
hawks, and the public had a&#13;
Mylanta moment.&#13;
It should be noted that&#13;
Jean-Bertrand Aristide is&#13;
hardly the Haitian equivalent&#13;
of George Washington. He'&#13;
has a seamy side of his own to&#13;
defend, and has as much&#13;
blood on his hands as the&#13;
Haitian Generals about to be&#13;
deposed.&#13;
To rain on the President's&#13;
parade just a little, what if&#13;
Speaking of the giving of&#13;
one's word, the baseball&#13;
owners severely broke their&#13;
word by canceling the rest of&#13;
the season and the World&#13;
Series over a political dispute.&#13;
There are many other&#13;
solutions to improving the&#13;
game than a salary cap,&#13;
including ending salary&#13;
arbitration, beefing up the&#13;
minor leagues and paying.&#13;
them better (to build farm&#13;
systems of the major leagues),&#13;
and sharing television money&#13;
equally among all 28 teams.&#13;
Now we won't get to see&#13;
whether Ken Griffey, or&#13;
Frank Thomas, or Matt&#13;
Williams would have broken&#13;
Roger Maris' single-season&#13;
home run record. Or whether&#13;
Tony Gwynn would have hit&#13;
.400 over the course of the&#13;
season. The owners chose to&#13;
break the players' union at a&#13;
the Generals refuse to leave&#13;
on 'October 15? Or, what if&#13;
they have moved their men&#13;
and equipment (such as it is)&#13;
into hiding so they can&#13;
emerge a few days or weeks&#13;
from now to start picking off&#13;
Americans? What ifthe body&#13;
bags start coming home then?&#13;
Will public still be impressed&#13;
(let us not forget the Somalia&#13;
example). Is it possible that&#13;
General Cedras is counting&#13;
on a few US bodies being&#13;
enough to force us out of&#13;
Haiti. Remember according to&#13;
the agreement he is not&#13;
required to leave, just give up&#13;
power (at least according to&#13;
today's Chicago Tribune). It is&#13;
conceivable that he still&#13;
intends to give the US the&#13;
universal salute, he's done it&#13;
before. Food for thought.&#13;
President Clinton deserves&#13;
a large share ofthe blame for&#13;
getting this country into a&#13;
time when attendance was up&#13;
(in Cleveland, as well as&#13;
elsewhere) which explicitly&#13;
shows that the public is less&#13;
important than a political&#13;
struggle. 100 years of history&#13;
goes down the drain. A shame&#13;
and a waste.&#13;
And finally, what about the&#13;
PSGA? Keep your partying to&#13;
a minimum, hey! Your&#13;
conduct as represented in last&#13;
week's issue was questionable&#13;
at best. As representatives of&#13;
this university, your implied&#13;
word is that you will conduct&#13;
yourselves in an adult&#13;
manner during any sort of C&#13;
proceedings (no matter how ~l;&#13;
boring you may find them). If&#13;
you believe you are being&#13;
persecuted over your own&#13;
behavior, look first to I.&#13;
yourself. After all, people in&#13;
glass houses should not throw&#13;
stones.&#13;
predicament Where invasion&#13;
of Haiti was required in the&#13;
first place. His flip-flops and&#13;
reach for political gain on this&#13;
issue brought us to the brink.&#13;
That having been said lets&#13;
give him the credit he&#13;
deserves, he did not have to&#13;
invade and initially it will be&#13;
a peaceful occupation.&#13;
Instead of an "Oh Brother"&#13;
this week, I want to award an&#13;
"Atta Boy" to Senators .&#13;
Russell Fiengo ld and Joe&#13;
Biden for staying consistent&#13;
on their views concerning the&#13;
War Powers Act and use of&#13;
American military force.&#13;
While others had to dodge&#13;
and weave their past, you&#13;
gentlemen remained&#13;
consistent in your views. A&#13;
rare commodity in the last&#13;
few days. Atta Boy.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in reference to&#13;
the article in the September&#13;
15, 1994, issue of The Ranger&#13;
News. The article was&#13;
entitled, "United Council: Is&#13;
It Worth 75 Cents?" by Jim&#13;
Hendrickson.&#13;
I am President of a student&#13;
organization on campus and&#13;
feel a great responsibility to&#13;
the University to properly&#13;
manage the funds that have&#13;
been allocated for my&#13;
organization's use. As a result&#13;
of this, I find the comments&#13;
attributed to Deb Cutler -&#13;
SOC Secretary and member&#13;
of several organizations - to&#13;
be insulting to my&#13;
organization as well as all&#13;
other clubs on campus. It is&#13;
my experience that clubs and&#13;
organizations take University&#13;
funding very seriously and&#13;
would not begin to think of&#13;
.ways to "get"extra money&#13;
from the University. She also&#13;
made a comment regarding&#13;
the abilities of the Program&#13;
Assistant, Karla Zahn, to .&#13;
detect the cheating. I would&#13;
imagine that the Student&#13;
Activities Office trusts clubs&#13;
to be honest and would need&#13;
a reason to investigate&#13;
reimbursable receipts.&#13;
Deb Cutler advocated&#13;
getting an additional receipt&#13;
from a restaurant in order to&#13;
get more money from the&#13;
University. I wonder how&#13;
many other times she has&#13;
cheated the University and,&#13;
as a result, cheated the entire&#13;
student body.here at&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Name withheld upon request.&#13;
To the anonymous writer:&#13;
Thank you for writing your&#13;
article about the gayllesbian&#13;
magazines that are now&#13;
available. Just when&#13;
everybody was beginning to&#13;
think that bigotry and&#13;
intolerance had ceased to&#13;
exist here at Parkside, you&#13;
have proven otherwise by&#13;
writing your humorously&#13;
ignorant letter against us. By&#13;
doing so, you have only&#13;
helped the Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Organization grow stronger&#13;
and larger in number of&#13;
supporters.&#13;
Inresponse to your letter I&#13;
would like to state that I am&#13;
also a student here at&#13;
Parkside, as well as the&#13;
person responsible for get.ting&#13;
the publications on campus.&#13;
These publications are not&#13;
new. In fact, they have been&#13;
on the campuses ofUWMadison&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee&#13;
for quite some time now.&#13;
As for your gene theory and&#13;
letting all rapists, murderers&#13;
and child molesters out of&#13;
prison is concerned, all I have&#13;
to say is you're forgetting one&#13;
underlying principle: gays&#13;
and lesbians are not harming&#13;
anyone.&#13;
As far as your three-yearold&#13;
daughter picking up the&#13;
magazine, well, evidently you&#13;
have not taught her how to&#13;
read the front cover yet, or&#13;
have not taught her how to&#13;
hate homosexuals. Last year I&#13;
saw a beautiful poster on&#13;
campus. It was a picture of&#13;
L •&#13;
two little kida.one black and&#13;
the other white, happily&#13;
playing together. The caption&#13;
underneath stated, "Bigotry&#13;
is a learned behavior." It's&#13;
nice you're taking your&#13;
daughter to college so that&#13;
she may Iearn to follow in&#13;
your footsteps.&#13;
John Powilaites&#13;
Coordinator of GLO&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Scene&#13;
by Amy Tucker, Calendar Editor&#13;
Thursday, September 22&#13;
Lecture: Fair Trials for Blacks and Whites, noon in&#13;
Union 104. Attorney John C. Chandler. Sponsored&#13;
byPAB.&#13;
Racine State Representative- Kim PI ache will be&#13;
speaking to UW-Parkside students as part of the&#13;
State Legislator tour for The Election of 1994. The&#13;
class meets at 11 am, Tuesday and Thursday in&#13;
Molinaro 213.&#13;
Friday, September 23&#13;
Women's Soccer- UWP at home vs. UW-LaCrosse , 4&#13;
pm, Free to all UWP students.&#13;
Film-Dracula, 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema. $1 for&#13;
UW-Parkside students, $2 for guests.&#13;
Saturday, September 24;&#13;
Women's Soccer- UW-Parkside vs. Lewis University,&#13;
1:30pm. Free to all UWP students.&#13;
Academic- 50% percent refund policy for complete&#13;
withdrawal from classes and credit reduction.&#13;
Sunday, September 25&#13;
Evita- A spectacular musical hit. A compelling story&#13;
ofArgentina's charismatic Eva Peron, who rose from&#13;
poverty to become one of the richest, most powerful&#13;
women in the world. 7 pm, in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater. $12 for UWP students and $24 for the&#13;
community.&#13;
Monday, September 26&#13;
Workshops- Learn how to present yourself on paper.&#13;
Need to polish your resume? Resume writing&#13;
workshop. 5- 5:50 pm in Union 207. Need effective&#13;
cover letters? This workshop from 12-12:50 pm, in&#13;
Union 104. Job seekers, come to WLLC D175 to&#13;
register for the workshops you plan to attend.&#13;
Tuesday, September 27&#13;
Wisconsin State Legislator- Bonnie Ladwig will be&#13;
talking to UWP students as part ofthe State&#13;
Legislator tour for The Election of 1994. The class&#13;
meets at 11 am ,Tuesday and Thursday in Molinaro&#13;
213.&#13;
Wednesday, September 28&#13;
Men's Soccer- UWP vs. Lakeland College, 4 pm. Free&#13;
to UWP students.&#13;
Noon Concert- Faculty Recital, Robert Rummage,&#13;
percussion, James McKeever, piano. CART DU8.&#13;
Free and open to the public.&#13;
Music- Parkside Activities Board presents Earth&#13;
TonesA Capella Pop, 9 pm in the Union Square.&#13;
Free to all.&#13;
Soup &amp; Substance- Noon, in Union 104. UWParkside&#13;
Chancellor Eleanor Smith discusses "The&#13;
State of African-Am~ricans in Higher Education." .&#13;
EVITATHE&#13;
AWARD-WINNING INTERNATIONAL&#13;
HIT MUSICAUII&#13;
The University ofWisconsinParkside's&#13;
Accent On&#13;
Enrichment Series presents&#13;
for one night only EVlTA,&#13;
performed in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre,&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 25, 7 pm.&#13;
Admission for UW-Parkside&#13;
students with a validated&#13;
UW-Parkside ID card is $12.&#13;
Admission for non-Parkside&#13;
students will be $24.&#13;
EVITA first opened in&#13;
London in 1978, and then&#13;
opened on Broadway in 1979&#13;
staging 1,567 performances.&#13;
Since then touring companies&#13;
throughout the world have&#13;
kept the legend ofEVITA&#13;
alive. The seven Tony Awardwinning&#13;
Broadway revival of&#13;
EVITA will be performed by&#13;
the PACE Theatrical Group&#13;
(PTG), a national touring&#13;
company which operates&#13;
theaters and Broadway&#13;
subscription series in 25&#13;
cities. EVITA will also be&#13;
staged by choreographer&#13;
Larry Fuller, who&#13;
choreographed the original&#13;
Tony Award-winning&#13;
Broadway production, as well&#13;
as the original London&#13;
production.&#13;
EVITA's beautiful musical&#13;
5&#13;
~~ ......&#13;
"A New Argentina, " from Andr~w LlDyd Webber's.&#13;
EVITA,The NaI(onal Tour. .&#13;
",&#13;
score, including the show's&#13;
most memorable song, "Don't&#13;
Cry For Me Argentina," was&#13;
composed by the renowned&#13;
Andrew Lloyd Webber, and&#13;
lyrical composition by Tim&#13;
Rice. Other Webber and Rice&#13;
collaborative credits include&#13;
Joseph And The Amazing&#13;
Technicolor Dreamcoat and&#13;
Jesus Christ, Superstar.&#13;
EVITA is baseii on the life of&#13;
Eva Duarte Peron, the&#13;
beautiful First Lady of&#13;
Argentina and second wife of&#13;
dictator Juan Peron. Eva's .&#13;
Loyal followers, the&#13;
Descamisados (the shirtless&#13;
ones), called her Evita.&#13;
The play begins with her&#13;
death from cancer in 1952&#13;
when she was only 33 years&#13;
old. The story is told through&#13;
the eyes of an Argentinean,&#13;
Che Guevara, who became a&#13;
Cuban Revolutionary. He&#13;
leads us through her historyhow&#13;
a poor, but enterprising&#13;
girl of 15 first began her rise&#13;
to power to become the most&#13;
powerful woman Argentina,&#13;
or even Latin America has&#13;
ever seen!&#13;
This .is one show you won't&#13;
want to miss' To purchase&#13;
tickets, please call the UWParkside&#13;
Information Center&#13;
at 595-2345.&#13;
-'&#13;
Tm not ... aure I W1IDt to do this lUI)'IIlorel"&#13;
-&#13;
FOREIGN fiLM&#13;
SERIES'COMING&#13;
ATTRACTION: r:U:o:Di=i;;-gR;;-o~:l ESP~~':i&gt;~~ ON :FI~ppy'nirf1utay:&#13;
Tornatore, Bertolucci, and Giordana, three 11.;I~III!ilii:",::'!:;'~~a)~~@:~', ;~;::,/: ,~;;;!:llifll&#13;
~~ll;~a~;~:e ':'o~s:hi:c~;i~~;;~f ~:~:~t:~:t lIce Cream Conei ~::::~:~);t~i~~:E~::~~l~~~~~ II!jJI'I~ll~[ill;!ek¥~'l;~~'I~illllll~iill';' ji;1&#13;
who rejects him. In the title episode, a I I&#13;
middle-aged rogue's attempts to seduce a IOffer valid through 9 - 28 1994 eI&#13;
beautiful woman awaken the ardor of her lfl&amp;-U&#13;
troubled young companion. A lonely widow a=Pl .... P""'""ta,,,,,, of otderin&amp; Not vaUd with any. ...I~&#13;
other offer or promotion. One cu~ per customer per visit.&#13;
and her daughter-in-law share a unique - - - - - - - - -&#13;
bond of love in&#13;
Snow on Fire, a S d ",f&#13;
touching essay on econ Nature by Moss&#13;
aging and desire ..&#13;
(Italy, 1993) 86&#13;
min. Short: Isle of&#13;
Flowers (Furtado)&#13;
15 min.&#13;
Ifyou haven't&#13;
purchased your&#13;
Foreign Film&#13;
Series season&#13;
passes yet, you&#13;
can get them at&#13;
the Union&#13;
Information .&#13;
Center for $17&#13;
(students and&#13;
senior citizens).&#13;
Or for more&#13;
information call&#13;
595-2345.&#13;
01993 Mop&#13;
Wh.... beginning slr:)'diversba_ DO choice&#13;
•&#13;
Garland Leads Improving x-country Team&#13;
together to improve the&#13;
Ranger's team score. Brian&#13;
Borkowski (28:30) and Jeff&#13;
Rlrien rounded out the top&#13;
seven for the team.&#13;
The Ranger's confidence is&#13;
growing. "1.thought that the&#13;
team worked well together:&#13;
.said red-shirt Freshman&#13;
Brian Borkowski. The men&#13;
will take their teamwork to&#13;
the UW-Whitewater&#13;
Invitational tlri~ Saturday.&#13;
Men's Results (389&#13;
finishers):&#13;
76. Greg Garland 27:10&#13;
89. Randy Bunder 27:29&#13;
108. AI Heppner 27:53&#13;
123. Jesse Decker 28:02&#13;
130. Ryan Benson 28:10&#13;
143. Brian Borkowski&#13;
28:30&#13;
Jeff Rhein 28:44&#13;
Will VanAxen 29:02&#13;
Brad Timm 29:47&#13;
Dan Koch 29:56&#13;
William Leggett 30:04&#13;
154.&#13;
164.&#13;
180.&#13;
182.&#13;
186.&#13;
tad' Rangets.pfere&#13;
im~.re$$~'{eInJhet~:Tas:tQLJting~&#13;
• Return Clerks&#13;
• Receiving&#13;
by AI Heppner&#13;
. Assistant Sports Editor&#13;
you can finish. Itfeels like&#13;
the opposite of a famous R.&#13;
Kelly song. Your mind's&#13;
telling you yes, but your body,&#13;
ouch, your body is telling you&#13;
no. .&#13;
After losing the majority of&#13;
their top 7 last year, the '94&#13;
version of the men's team is&#13;
learning to run through that&#13;
pain. Mostly underclassmen,&#13;
the squad beat over half the&#13;
teams in last week's Midwest&#13;
Collegiate Open at Parkside.&#13;
Junior Greg Garland led the&#13;
way in 27:10, followed by&#13;
Randy Bunders (27:29). AI&#13;
Heppner (27:53), Jesse&#13;
Decker (28:02), and Ryan&#13;
Benson (28:10) hung close&#13;
Ittakes a special person to&#13;
become a cross country&#13;
runner. You need to have a&#13;
certain fire inside of you and&#13;
you have to learn to run with&#13;
pain. And when you near the&#13;
end of a race, you wonder if&#13;
Haines Leads Parkside ToA 5th Place Finish&#13;
by Ranger Staff with an impressive time of&#13;
18:37. Haines's time ended up&#13;
being the 12th best Parkside&#13;
time ever recorded on the&#13;
home course. Following&#13;
Haines were Tracey Pope at&#13;
34th (19:13), Lisa Lewis was&#13;
52nd (19:24), and Colette&#13;
Morotto was 55th (19:26).&#13;
Morotto was closely followed&#13;
by Valerie Niese, who was&#13;
56th (19:26). Freshman&#13;
Michelle Melcher came in at&#13;
62nd place (19:38) and Liz&#13;
Fashun was 81st (19:52).&#13;
There were 335 collegiate&#13;
finishers.&#13;
Parkside's fifth place finish&#13;
(out of 28 schools) put them&#13;
ahead of some pretty tough&#13;
schools including UWMilwaukee,&#13;
Central Miclrigan&#13;
and UW-LaCrossejust to&#13;
name a few.&#13;
The women will be&#13;
traveling to UW-Whitewater&#13;
tlris coming weekend to take&#13;
part in the Warhawk&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Tlris past weekend, the'&#13;
women's cross-country team&#13;
finished 5th at the Midwest&#13;
Collegiate Invitational.&#13;
Marquette won the race with&#13;
37 points, followed by Olrio&#13;
University who had 58 points,&#13;
Hillsdale was next with 106&#13;
points, UW-Oshkosh with 178&#13;
points and Parkside had 196&#13;
points (lowest score wins).&#13;
Amy Haines led the Lady&#13;
Rangers, fmislring fourteenth&#13;
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•&#13;
p&#13;
Athlete Of The&#13;
Week&#13;
byScott Fragale&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Vanessa Parada&#13;
Women's Soccer&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Business.Major&#13;
Hometown: Rockford, Ill.&#13;
Vanessa co-captained her&#13;
bigh schoolteam and earned&#13;
All-State honors her last&#13;
three years there. Vanessa&#13;
choseto attend Parkside after&#13;
weighingher options and&#13;
turning down scholarship&#13;
offersfrom several schools,&#13;
iocludingLoyola of Chicago.&#13;
She has scored 4 goals&#13;
already this season, including&#13;
the game-tying goal against&#13;
Edwardsville. She has also&#13;
added2 assists and was&#13;
recently named to the St.&#13;
Joseph's College Classic AlITournament&#13;
Team.&#13;
Vanessa said her goals for&#13;
the season are "To always try&#13;
to be in the middle of the&#13;
actionon the field and to&#13;
scoreas many goals as&#13;
possible. I would also like to&#13;
have a lot of assists and help&#13;
the team win" she added. If&#13;
she is able to continue at her&#13;
early pace.all of her goals&#13;
should be easily obtained.&#13;
Coach Ron Rainey describes&#13;
Vanessa as a "skilled&#13;
attacker who can score".&#13;
Vanessa said her work ethic&#13;
quickness, and her ability t;&#13;
never give up on a play are&#13;
the strengths of her wellrounded&#13;
game. "My weakness&#13;
is probably that I sometimes&#13;
get tired and I can't do&#13;
everything I want".&#13;
Endurance doesn't appear to&#13;
that great of a problem&#13;
considering that she has&#13;
played all 90 minutes in&#13;
almost every game thus far.&#13;
Vanessa appears to be one of&#13;
the bright young stars of&#13;
Parkside's team. With the&#13;
talent and work ethic she&#13;
possesses, Vanessa Parada is&#13;
a name to remember when&#13;
discussing women's soccer in&#13;
the future.&#13;
Women's Volleyball Team&#13;
Continues To Struggle&#13;
UW-Parkside lost to Winona&#13;
State 9-15, 15-13, 13-15, 11-&#13;
15Saturday at Parkside. The&#13;
Rangersrallied from a 10-0&#13;
deficitin the second game to&#13;
wio 15-13.Leading Parkside&#13;
wereMichelle Danielson, who&#13;
,7&#13;
Back To Back Wins For UW-P Women&#13;
by Scott Fragale&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
After a slow beginning, the&#13;
UW-Parkside women's soccer&#13;
team is running on all&#13;
cylinders. On Wednesday, the&#13;
Rangers beat UW-Whitewater&#13;
4-1 to gain their first win of&#13;
the season as well as their&#13;
first win in team history.&#13;
Then on Saturday they made&#13;
it two in a row when they&#13;
shut out UW-Oshkosh 2-0 at&#13;
the Wood Road field.&#13;
Freshmen Natalie Weher&#13;
scored the game's first goal in&#13;
the 21st minute off mid&#13;
fielder Jill Litkowski's corner&#13;
kick. The goal was the result&#13;
of constant pressure in the&#13;
Oshkosh zone. The Rangers&#13;
outshot Oshkosh 25-13 and&#13;
were constantly attacking&#13;
throughout the game.&#13;
In the 30th minute of the&#13;
first half, sophomore Kristen&#13;
Haase scored her 1st goal of&#13;
the season after another&#13;
corner kick by Litkowski.&#13;
Litkowski placed the ball&#13;
perfectly in front of the net&#13;
where several Rangers&#13;
converged on it. Freshman&#13;
forward Vanessa Parada&#13;
attempted to get a shot off but&#13;
was blocked off by the&#13;
Oshkosh defense. She then&#13;
dished the ball off to Haase&#13;
who knocked it in the goal for&#13;
the game's final point.&#13;
Freshman goalkeeper Shelly&#13;
Davis had another fine game&#13;
in saving 8 ofthe 13 shots on&#13;
goal and once again lowered&#13;
her goals allowed average.&#13;
UW-Parkside played their&#13;
most complete game to date.&#13;
Not only was the offense&#13;
constantly applying pressure,&#13;
but the defense stepped up as&#13;
well. Coach Ron Rainey&#13;
credited the defense led by&#13;
senior Anne Schmid for a big&#13;
part of the victory. "The back&#13;
four did a great job,"Rainey&#13;
said. "They took away&#13;
Oshkosh's offensive attack.&#13;
Anne Schmid did a great job&#13;
of getting to the ball," he&#13;
added. Jeanette Claude, Anna&#13;
Tempesta, and Likowski&#13;
joined Schmid in leading the&#13;
defensive effort. Unlike some&#13;
of their previous games,&#13;
Parkside's defense had no&#13;
letdowns late in the game,&#13;
Parkside's smothering&#13;
defense kept Oshkosh in&#13;
check until the final whistle.&#13;
With the win Parkside&#13;
improved their record to 2-1-2&#13;
in this inaugural season.&#13;
With seemingly a new star&#13;
emerging in each game, the&#13;
young and talented Rangers&#13;
appear to be well ahead of&#13;
schedule in their attempt to&#13;
build a quality program.&#13;
The Rangers will host UWLaCrosse&#13;
at 4 pm Friday.&#13;
SportsJeopardy&#13;
1. Answer: This team&#13;
• Recently snapped the longest&#13;
losing streak in college&#13;
football&#13;
2. Answer: This team's&#13;
scoring average for collegiate&#13;
football was higher than 12&#13;
NCAA basketball teams.&#13;
3. Answer: He recenly&#13;
surpassed Jim Brown as the&#13;
N.F .L.'s all-time leader in&#13;
touchdowns.&#13;
had 44 assists and 16 digs, Rangers Off To Fast Start&#13;
Jess Morrison, who had 14&#13;
kills, Melissa Wolter, who&#13;
had12 kills, and Kelly Krupo,&#13;
who had 7 kills four blocks,&#13;
and 13 digs.&#13;
Advertise in the&#13;
Ranger!&#13;
by Ranger Staff&#13;
The men's golf team made&#13;
its fall debut this past week&#13;
with a strong 6th place&#13;
showing at the University of&#13;
Indianapolis Invitational and&#13;
followed it up with a victory&#13;
at the Pointer Invitational.&#13;
Led by senior captain Andy&#13;
Boedecker and junior Aron&#13;
Hogden the Rangers found&#13;
themselves in the middle of&#13;
the pack at Indianapolis.&#13;
With Hogden leading the way&#13;
after posting a strong 78 the&#13;
rest of the team followed with&#13;
scores of 79 by Rob&#13;
Warmouth, 80 from&#13;
Boedecker, 81 from Dave&#13;
Kopp and 82 from freshman&#13;
~ Brett Bertucci.&#13;
After shifting their lineup&#13;
for the Pointer Invitational&#13;
the Rangers were able to&#13;
capture their first victory of&#13;
1. Question: Who is Kent&#13;
University'i,&#13;
2". Question: Who is The&#13;
Florida Gat~rs (70.3)?&#13;
3. Question: Who is Jerry&#13;
Rice?&#13;
the season. Leading the&#13;
charge was co-medalist Rob&#13;
Warmouth with a 75 and&#13;
Dave Kopp with a 79. Also&#13;
scoring for the team was&#13;
Hogden at 80 and transfer&#13;
Brent Heit at 82.&#13;
The Rangers head to&#13;
Kentucky this Friday to&#13;
compete in their fall Division&#13;
IIdistrict tournament at the&#13;
tough Quail Chase Golf Club.&#13;
Men's Soccer: Late Rally Saves Ranger Record&#13;
byTomCzop&#13;
The Ranger _men's soccer&#13;
team had a lot to prove last&#13;
weekendwith games against&#13;
a nationally ranked opponent&#13;
and a midwest regional rival.&#13;
TheRangers not only had the&#13;
pressures oftwo tough&#13;
opponentsbut they also&#13;
neededto keep their national&#13;
ranking of number ten.&#13;
TheRangers opened up&#13;
against Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
whocame in ranked number&#13;
seventeen.Both teams&#13;
shOWedwhy they were&#13;
nationally ranked by&#13;
attacking from the opening&#13;
whistle. As the game&#13;
continued the Rangers took&#13;
control and set up some&#13;
scoring chances. Late in the&#13;
first half senior Corey Hanes&#13;
found himself streaking&#13;
toward the UMSL goal only&#13;
to have his shot go wide ofthe&#13;
goal. The second half offered&#13;
more of the same chances for&#13;
the Rangers as once again&#13;
Hanes whistled a shot just&#13;
wide. The Rangers weren't&#13;
the only team with chances,&#13;
as UMSL had brief moments&#13;
near'the Ranger goal. Senior&#13;
goalkeeper Chris&#13;
Sagar played&#13;
brilliantly and came&#13;
" up big when the&#13;
.. team needed him -,&#13;
Late in regulation&#13;
play with the game&#13;
still scoreless, Craig&#13;
Posselt fired a free&#13;
. kick that the UMSL&#13;
i\:c;;t; .. ~:r~~ ~:::~h:v;::ee&#13;
'" to overtime. In&#13;
'I&#13;
overtime the Rangers almost&#13;
sealed a victory when senior&#13;
Peter Gyurko beat two&#13;
defenders and fired a shot at&#13;
the UMSL net only to have&#13;
their goalkeeper make&#13;
another fine save. In the&#13;
closing minutes Craig Posselt&#13;
fired another free kick that&#13;
just sailed over the net to end&#13;
the game at 0-0.&#13;
Sunday brought another&#13;
tough battle for the Rangers&#13;
against regional rival&#13;
Northeast Missouri State.&#13;
This game was a very&#13;
emotional one for the Rangers&#13;
because Northeast Missouri&#13;
beat them last year 1-0 to up&#13;
end their chance at post&#13;
season play. Northeast came&#13;
out fired up. and capitalized&#13;
on Ranger mistakes in the&#13;
second minute of the game.&#13;
Thanks in part to the lack of&#13;
communication from the&#13;
Ranger defense, a Northeast&#13;
forward found himself one-onone&#13;
with goalkeeper Mike&#13;
Guzaski and chipped the ball&#13;
into the Ranger goal. This&#13;
was only the second goal&#13;
scored on the Rangers this&#13;
season and the first time they&#13;
trailed in a game. The next&#13;
fifteen minutes offered more&#13;
of the same play from the&#13;
Rangers and Northeast&#13;
continued to attack. It was&#13;
this play the opted Coach&#13;
Kilps to move Peter Gyurko&#13;
to sweeper. and Mike&#13;
Kennedy into the midfield.&#13;
Gyurko took control of the&#13;
back and immediately the&#13;
game shifted into the hands&#13;
of the Rangers. In the forty&#13;
sixth minute the Rangers&#13;
equalized. Sergio Correa sent&#13;
in a cross that Pat White&#13;
recrossed to freshman Steven&#13;
Goll who in turn headed past&#13;
the Northeast goalkeeper.&#13;
The Rangers then took&#13;
control and pounded at the&#13;
Northeast goal. In the last&#13;
minute of regualtion play&#13;
Corey Hanes fired a shot that&#13;
a defender cleared off of the&#13;
goal line to send the game&#13;
into overtime. Steve Goll once&#13;
again came through for the&#13;
Rangers as he beat his&#13;
defender and sent in a cross&#13;
that forward Tro Troskey&#13;
headed hom" to give the&#13;
Rangers a 2-1 lead. Late in&#13;
overtime Northeast mounted&#13;
their last attacks only to find&#13;
out that Ranger goalkeeeper&#13;
Mike Guzaski was on top of&#13;
his game. The Rangers held&#13;
on for a 2-1 victory.&#13;
The Rangers showed that&#13;
they have the heart and&#13;
character to be the top team&#13;
in the nation. The Rangers&#13;
played back t,o back overtime&#13;
games and showed that they&#13;
could come-from behind when&#13;
needed. This weekend should&#13;
give the Rangers the&#13;
confidence that is needed&#13;
asthe Rangers travel to&#13;
Michigan to play the fourth&#13;
ranked team in the nation,&#13;
Oakland University. The&#13;
Rangers record now stands at&#13;
5-0-1.&#13;
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w/college /D</text>
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              <text>December 9, 1995 el¥llle&#13;
He said, She said...&#13;
Breaking Up: When The Fat Lady Sings.&#13;
"Mike Zurad&#13;
Sleigh bells ring. Are you listening?&#13;
Inthe lane, snow is ...HEY! Are you&#13;
listening? You never listen to anything&#13;
I say. And even when I ring sleigh&#13;
bells-big, loud, nasty honkin' sleigh&#13;
bells-you're off someplace else.&#13;
And just like that, a simple&#13;
Christmas carol is transformed into a&#13;
lively argument. Arguments are&#13;
healthy, though. It keeps the road of&#13;
communication open, even if it's a&#13;
rough one. But when the road is&#13;
closed-or when carolers at the door&#13;
provoke night long fights-it's probably&#13;
time to re-evaluate your situation.&#13;
I'd like to get through my half of the&#13;
column with as few Neil Sedaka&#13;
references as possible (column column&#13;
down, doobie doo ~own down), but they&#13;
say that breaking up is hard to do.&#13;
(They talk a lot, don't they?) Anything&#13;
that once greatly enhanced your life,&#13;
i.e., playoff games, a twenty dollar bill,&#13;
your soul mate, is going to cause you&#13;
despair when they're lost. Unless your&#13;
team didn't even make it to the&#13;
playoffs.&#13;
Man buys ring, woman throws it&#13;
away. Same damn thing happens&#13;
everyday. But some couples have more&#13;
at stake than others, and these matters&#13;
("we're married, and she's the rich one")&#13;
further complicate things. Divorces are&#13;
expensive, involve lawyers, and are&#13;
generally ugly. Children become pawns&#13;
in their parents' wicked games. Even&#13;
when it's strictly physical, there's still&#13;
something missing afterwards-the&#13;
other person.&#13;
Ifyou've learned anything from this&#13;
column over this semester, it is that&#13;
men are rational and women are ...not.&#13;
However, all rationality gets thrown&#13;
out the window-along with all the&#13;
little things to remember her by-just&#13;
before the relationship does. When a&#13;
relationship collapses on itself, it leaves&#13;
an enormous and powerful black hole&#13;
that sucks in everything and makes&#13;
everything suck.&#13;
I generally do not actively advocate&#13;
the termination of any relationship,&#13;
because if! didn't want to be in a&#13;
relationship, I wouldn't have put myself&#13;
there in the first place. Communication&#13;
heals all wounds. But how do you talk&#13;
when both the man and woman have&#13;
gone bonkers? How can you resolve a&#13;
situation that will not change?&#13;
Removing yourself from the situation&#13;
works, and this allows you to divert&#13;
your time to such healthy activities as&#13;
revenge, moping, aggressive driving,&#13;
drinking alone, Nine Inch Nails, and&#13;
looking for Miss Rebound. Hey! Time&#13;
for some male bonding, household&#13;
projects, or automotive repair. A real&#13;
man would incorporate all three into&#13;
one, in addition to a few of the healthy&#13;
activities defined above. Hey! Wonder&#13;
what's on TV? Look!' You've got the&#13;
remote, although a real man would&#13;
have had the remote all along. And you&#13;
can break wind for as long and as loud&#13;
as you like. Isn't life grand?&#13;
Of course life is grand! It's great to be&#13;
alive! Just keep telling yourself that.&#13;
Ifyou were an awesome writer, but had&#13;
to move on with your life and abandon&#13;
your column for The Real World, she&#13;
wouldn't dream of continuing it with&#13;
someone else! You are irreplaceable!&#13;
She knows that! One fine day, you'll&#13;
show her! Of course, you will have&#13;
forgotten all about it by then.&#13;
ThatTop IOTime of Year&#13;
Get Shorty: John Travolta&#13;
recreates his character from&#13;
Pulp Fiction in this comedy&#13;
of errors concerning&#13;
gangsters in Hollywood. A&#13;
bit of Pulp mixed with a bit&#13;
of the Sting.&#13;
Tank Girl: It's stupid. It's&#13;
obnoxious. It's not even all&#13;
that clever. But sometimes&#13;
stupid, obnoxious and not&#13;
clever are just what we&#13;
need.&#13;
Die Hard 3: Someday&#13;
Hollywood will run out of&#13;
ways to use this formula.&#13;
The third installment in the&#13;
series is beginning to wear it&#13;
Since this is the last issue&#13;
ofthe Ranger for this year,&#13;
and since I am the&#13;
theoretical entertainment&#13;
guru ofthe paper, it must be&#13;
time to present my top 10&#13;
lists for 1995. At least I'll&#13;
get a jump of a week or so on&#13;
everyone else who will be&#13;
doing it in the coming&#13;
weeks. Here we go.&#13;
Top 10 Movies of the Year&#13;
Goldeneye: Bond is back,&#13;
and he's still fun in the PC&#13;
90's.&#13;
" Karen Diehl&#13;
Breaking up sucks. Whether&#13;
you're the one doing the breakfng&#13;
or the one, er, being broken, It s&#13;
rarely a pleasant expenence.&#13;
Like a root canal. Or finals week.&#13;
Or a pelvic exam. Eew.&#13;
One ofthe funny things about&#13;
ending a relationship is that the&#13;
responsibility for the break-up&#13;
always falls into the hands of the&#13;
person who brings it up first. I&#13;
don't care how nice the ending&#13;
was, there's always a "dumper"&#13;
and a "dum pee." "It was a&#13;
mutual decision" is just a nice&#13;
way of saying, "He dumped me&#13;
before I had a chance to dump&#13;
him." And people know this!&#13;
Have you ever said, "It was&#13;
mutual," to someone? Do you&#13;
know what their first response is?&#13;
Something like, "Oh ... so, are you&#13;
okay with it? Is he okay with it?&#13;
Who started it?" They want to&#13;
know who got dumped!&#13;
Although I personally don't&#13;
have a whole lot of experience in&#13;
this category, being the "dumper"&#13;
can't be much fun. Let's face it,&#13;
at least 90% of the time when a&#13;
relationship ends, one of the 2&#13;
parties involved isn't happy about&#13;
it. So, if you're the "dumper",&#13;
you're pretty much taking&#13;
someone else's emotional state&#13;
into your own hands - and then&#13;
squishing it. Yeah, that'd make&#13;
me feel like turning cartwheels.&#13;
Being the "dum pee" isn't any&#13;
picnic, either. If you're at the&#13;
receiving end of a break-up,&#13;
thin, but it still works.&#13;
Crimson Tide: High seas&#13;
drama featuring brilliant&#13;
performances by Denzel&#13;
Washington and Gene&#13;
Hackman.&#13;
Desperado: Not quite as&#13;
good as its low budget&#13;
prequel, El Mariachi, but&#13;
tons of fun with Antonio&#13;
Banderas.&#13;
Mallrats: Another sequel&#13;
that doesn't quite live upto&#13;
the cult status of the&#13;
original, but stays amusing&#13;
with its humor for&#13;
Generation X.&#13;
The Professional: An&#13;
action movie with a twisted&#13;
moral sense and an unusual&#13;
tale offamily values.&#13;
Kids: A much too true&#13;
portrayal of today's youth.&#13;
Frighteningly real.&#13;
Casper: Manages to be a&#13;
family movie without getting&#13;
too sweet. In fact it's a lot&#13;
less saccharine than the&#13;
cartoons it came from.&#13;
Top 10 Worst Things in the&#13;
Movies of 1995&#13;
The next Jurassic Park:&#13;
Isn't it about time to stop'&#13;
making a film out of&#13;
everything that Michael&#13;
you're sort of helpless, and no&#13;
likes feeling helpless. Thereis&#13;
one cool thing about being&#13;
dumped, though. You get better&#13;
it each time it happens to you.&#13;
For example, you learn all the&#13;
sneaky break-up lines. Anmve&#13;
"dum pee" might understand thl&#13;
implications of "I'm leaving you.&#13;
or "It's over," or even, "Let'stry'&#13;
being friends - you know, see&#13;
other people." However, it tak~&#13;
a person trained in The Art of&#13;
Being Dumped to recogoize, 'VI&#13;
want different things out of ths&#13;
relationship," or "I can't answer&#13;
all your questions, so maybe I'm&#13;
not what you need," or the sly,&#13;
"We need to slow down." YouaJ;&#13;
get better at handling the postdumping&#13;
blues. You learn what&#13;
cheers you up . throwing darts!&#13;
his picture, leaving nasty&#13;
messages in the dirt on his car,&#13;
making gingerbread men and&#13;
calling each one by his name&#13;
right before biting their heads&#13;
. and you learn what hurts -&#13;
reading the sappy letters he&#13;
wrote you, remembering your&#13;
first kiss, thinking of him with&#13;
someone new - and you try to d~&#13;
more of the former and less of&#13;
latter.&#13;
In closing, I'd like to wish&#13;
Mikey, my fellow "He Said She&#13;
said ..." columnist, lots ofluck&#13;
after graduation. So, even&#13;
though he's leaving me all by&#13;
myself and I'll have to find a n&#13;
writing companion next semess&#13;
there's no hard feelings. Really.&#13;
It's a mutual thing.&#13;
Crichton ever wrote? Or,&#13;
worse, trying to be like.hiJ1&#13;
without using him. This&#13;
year saw Congo, Outbreak,&#13;
and Species come and go&#13;
no one really cared.&#13;
Throwing too much mon&#13;
at low budget producers of&#13;
cult hits: We saw Robert&#13;
RodriguezWesperado, El&#13;
Mariachi) and Kevin&#13;
Smith(Mallrats, Clerks) t~&#13;
to redo their breakthroug~&#13;
hits using more money an&#13;
failing. What small time&#13;
film maker will Hollywood&#13;
r1{anger JYems&#13;
AIDS Quilt'Comes to&#13;
Parkside&#13;
• Genevieve Guran&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Four panels of the&#13;
NAMES Project AIDS&#13;
Memorial Quilt were on&#13;
display ·Dec. 4 and 5 at&#13;
Parkside as part of the&#13;
commemoration of World&#13;
AIDS Day, celebrated&#13;
nationally on Dec. 1.&#13;
The Quilt began in a San&#13;
Francisco neighborhood as a&#13;
memorial to the more than&#13;
1,000 San Franciscans who&#13;
died of AIDS between 1980&#13;
and 1987. Word of the Quilt&#13;
quickly spread and&#13;
thousands more panels were&#13;
added. The Quilt now&#13;
contains over 31,000 panels&#13;
and would cover 13 football&#13;
fields. All 50 states and 38&#13;
other countries have&#13;
contributed panels.&#13;
Panel materials are very&#13;
diverse, including&#13;
everything from jock straps,&#13;
condoms. and feather boas to&#13;
Barbie doll" stuffed&#13;
animals, and wedding rings.&#13;
Regardless of the materials&#13;
or number of panels, the&#13;
goals ofthe Quilt remain the&#13;
same: to preserve the&#13;
memory of those who have&#13;
died as a result of AIDS, to&#13;
increase awareness of AIDS&#13;
and HIV prevention, and to&#13;
increase support for those&#13;
living with AIDS and HIV.&#13;
Marcy Cayo, Program&#13;
Manager of Parkside's&#13;
Health and Counseling&#13;
Services, was instrumental&#13;
in bringing the panels to&#13;
Parkside. Cayo said of the&#13;
Quilt: "Some of the panels,&#13;
you don't know what they&#13;
mean. Some are very vague.&#13;
Some are very clear. You&#13;
think, 'Gosh, this is what he&#13;
was about.'" In order to get&#13;
the panels for this week's&#13;
commemoration of World&#13;
AIDS Day the panels had to&#13;
be reserved a year in&#13;
advance. The university had&#13;
to pay a small fee ($250 -&#13;
$300) and had to guarantee&#13;
the security of the panels.&#13;
Itis hoped that the Quilt&#13;
will raise awareness of AIDS&#13;
here at Parkside and in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
According to a survey&#13;
published in the October&#13;
1995 Wisconsin AIDS / HIV&#13;
Update, there were 227&#13;
cases of AIDS or HIV&#13;
infection reported in&#13;
Kenosha County and 237&#13;
cases reported in Racine&#13;
County between 1982 and&#13;
Sept. 30, 1995. Anyone&#13;
interested in confidential&#13;
and anonymous testing&#13;
should contact the Kenosha&#13;
Health Dept. (653-6950) or&#13;
the Racine Health Dept.&#13;
(636-9498) or, for more&#13;
information, contact the&#13;
Southeast Wisconsin AIDS&#13;
Project at 657-6644 or 1-800·&#13;
924-6601.&#13;
Ask Amber&#13;
• Amber Nichols&#13;
Starting next semester&#13;
there will be a lock box&#13;
available for any of you to&#13;
put your questions. Also,&#13;
any of you can feel free to&#13;
write questions to my email,&#13;
nichols@it.uwp.edu&#13;
and be sure to include how&#13;
you would like to be&#13;
addressed. Thank you to&#13;
the ones who have written&#13;
me questions.&#13;
Dear Amber,&#13;
My friend committed&#13;
suicide not too long ago, and&#13;
I'm still trying to deal. I'm&#13;
having a hard time with not&#13;
only studies, but with my&#13;
social life as well. I don't&#13;
know how long I can fight to&#13;
hold everything together.&#13;
Concerned&#13;
Dear Concerned,&#13;
It's hard getting back&#13;
into the social scene, and&#13;
don't expect yourself to be&#13;
someone you don't feel like&#13;
right now. Time is what&#13;
you need, and you will heal.&#13;
There are people on&#13;
campus ...Peer Health&#13;
Educators, and counselors&#13;
to talk to. And if you feel&#13;
that you do not need or&#13;
want to talk to these people,&#13;
many times the peace God&#13;
can give through prayer&#13;
outweighs many other&#13;
options.&#13;
Leadership 2000&#13;
• Melissa Noto&#13;
Knowledge, skills, and&#13;
increased opportunities are&#13;
just the beginning of&#13;
Leadership 2000: The&#13;
Parkside Challenge.&#13;
Students learn how to excel&#13;
in a changing, diverse&#13;
society by talking with&#13;
community leaders and&#13;
participating in various&#13;
seminars and workshops&#13;
over a ten week period.&#13;
(February 6-April 9)&#13;
Leadership 2000 is a&#13;
program designed to equip&#13;
first and second year&#13;
Parkside students with an&#13;
understanding of essential&#13;
leadership skills for success&#13;
in the 21st century.&#13;
Parkside freshman and&#13;
sophomores with good&#13;
acaderpic standing are&#13;
eligible. The program is free&#13;
but registration is limited to&#13;
30 students and is processed&#13;
on a first come basis. Forms&#13;
must be received by Friday,&#13;
Jan. 26 and are available&#13;
through the University&#13;
Activities Office in Union209,&#13;
Ext. 2278.&#13;
Keanu Less Than Memorable as Johnny&#13;
• TY Wilda&#13;
In the future, according to&#13;
the cyberpunk author&#13;
William Gibson, evil&#13;
COrporations rule the earth&#13;
with an eye only on the&#13;
profit margin, the Yakuza&#13;
roam the streets killing&#13;
Without restriction,&#13;
epidemics that make AIDS&#13;
look harmless abound and&#13;
hard wired heads are as&#13;
common as color TVs. In&#13;
the future according to&#13;
Johnny Mnemonic, all of&#13;
these elements are&#13;
incapable of combining to&#13;
create an interesting movie.&#13;
The movie concerns an&#13;
information courier known&#13;
only as Johnny (Keanu&#13;
Reeves). In his head is&#13;
stored the cure for a&#13;
neurological disease of the&#13;
future that is dropping the&#13;
citizenry like flies. The only&#13;
problem is, he can't get it&#13;
out and everyone wants it.&#13;
Reeves wanders through&#13;
this role listlessly, barking&#13;
out monotone lines as he&#13;
runs from everyone who&#13;
wants his info. It's really a&#13;
shame that he can't be killed&#13;
without losing the data,&#13;
because after about the first&#13;
20 minutes of the film you&#13;
wish that someone would&#13;
put him and us out of our&#13;
misery. He faces off against&#13;
an endless supply of&#13;
Japanese killers whose&#13;
characterizations are&#13;
slightly less deep than the&#13;
Japanese bad guys of a&#13;
World War II propaganda&#13;
film.&#13;
Along the way he meets&#13;
with friends IceT and Henry&#13;
Rollins, rock and rap stars&#13;
turned actors in charge of&#13;
the stereotypical friendly&#13;
underground/rebellion. Ice&#13;
T plays the same function&#13;
here as he did in Tank Girl,&#13;
the mistrusting, tough&#13;
talking rebel leader who will&#13;
eventually save the day.&#13;
Rollins comes in as the&#13;
brilliant doctor who's going&#13;
to save the world with&#13;
Johnny's data. Somehow&#13;
both of these characters&#13;
have more substance to&#13;
them than Reeves' title&#13;
character, which sums up&#13;
one of the real problems&#13;
with the movie, everyone&#13;
else is just bouncing around&#13;
Johnny, waiting for him to&#13;
get attacked by the enemy&#13;
so they can save his life yet&#13;
again, but all of them are&#13;
able to care for him a lot&#13;
more than he can make the&#13;
audience care.&#13;
Johnny Mnemonic is big&#13;
on effects and flash. It&#13;
features a dystopian&#13;
futureworld that rivals the&#13;
beauty and technology&#13;
shown in Blade Runrter.&#13;
There are cyberspace scenes&#13;
using state of the art&#13;
computer graphics that are&#13;
visually stunning and&#13;
captivating. It's lacking in&#13;
emotional appeal. There is&#13;
just nothing here to make&#13;
you care what happens next.&#13;
Gibson's original story that&#13;
the film was based on was&#13;
only a short story and the&#13;
padding necessary to make&#13;
it into a two hour movie&#13;
shows. Long on action and&#13;
effects and short on story&#13;
and character, Johnny&#13;
Mnemonic fails to pull the&#13;
viewer in.&#13;
• Sy Stevens&#13;
A small group of the&#13;
Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team arrived back&#13;
home this past monday from&#13;
running the 1995 United&#13;
States Cross Country&#13;
Championships, which took&#13;
place at Franklin Park in&#13;
the city where Cheers was&#13;
born. The race consisted of&#13;
two races, the Senior&#13;
Nationals which was a 6K&#13;
(3.7 miles) open race, and&#13;
the Junior Nationals which&#13;
was 5K (3.1 miles) for&#13;
women 19 years of age and&#13;
under. The top six runners&#13;
of the senior race hurdle&#13;
themselves to the World Cup&#13;
Championships which will&#13;
be held in March of 1996.&#13;
The winner of tire Senior&#13;
Nationals, which was&#13;
comprised of 238 runners,&#13;
was Joan Nesbit from the&#13;
Boston area with a course&#13;
record time of 19:02. This&#13;
time broke the preexisting&#13;
record which belonged to&#13;
Lynn Jennings by 30&#13;
seconds. The second place&#13;
runner was Kate ~oJ!!,-eJ1.&#13;
with a time of 19:32, and the&#13;
third place runner was Lynn&#13;
Jennings, and the seven&#13;
time U.S. Nationals winner&#13;
and the three times World&#13;
Cup winner, with a time of&#13;
19:35.&#13;
Running for Parkside in&#13;
this race were J en Moss in&#13;
the 184th position with a&#13;
Hepp's Hype Picks&#13;
Cincinnati over Chicago:&#13;
Blake gets back on track&#13;
with big-play bombs on the&#13;
Bear's defense in a Cincy&#13;
Shocker.&#13;
Washington over N.Y.&#13;
Giants: If only the&#13;
Redskins could play the&#13;
Cowboys every week. But&#13;
really, the Giants were&#13;
outplayed last time these&#13;
two teams met. The 'Skins&#13;
to play Ferotte at QB and let&#13;
Brian Mitchell run the ball.&#13;
Green Bay over Tampa Bay:&#13;
Packers are on a roll, but&#13;
Meghan Patterson and Missy Shumway&#13;
time of 25:15, Julie Barnhill 32nd position was Missy&#13;
in the 192nd position with a Shumway with her personal&#13;
time of 26:10, and Catherine best tie of 20:18. Following&#13;
Rice in the 194th position Missy was Lisa Schaich with&#13;
with a time of 26:40. Senior a time of 20:35 in 36th place,&#13;
Jen Moss comments that,"It and with a time of 20:45,&#13;
was my last Cross Country Meghan Patterson was in&#13;
race and I felt positive about 42nd place. Jaimmee&#13;
my ability to run well." Jen Robers finished with a time&#13;
was also in awe of running of 21:17 for the 45th&#13;
on the same course that position.&#13;
Lynn Jennings was Coach DeWitt was very&#13;
breathing and running on' proud of his group of&#13;
that day. (I wasn't supposed runners that went out to&#13;
to mention that). Boston, "The girls got to see&#13;
The winner of the Junior some of the best runners in&#13;
National Race, which the world:, he said as he&#13;
comprised of 64 runners, smiled and mentioned to me&#13;
was Casey Florida of Abilene that Missy and J en ran the&#13;
Christian with a time of best races of the day.&#13;
17: 17. The second place Honorable mention does go&#13;
runner was Nicole Jefferson out to Ali DeWitt and Amy&#13;
of Western with a time of Haines, who are "cool" for&#13;
17:50, and then there came picking everybody up at the&#13;
the Parkside women. In the airports.&#13;
• AI Heppner&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Favre has to hold off on the&#13;
trash talk until he beats the&#13;
Niners or Dallas.&#13;
Minnesota over Cleveland&#13;
San Diego over Arizona&#13;
New England over N.Y.Jets&#13;
New Orleans over Atlanta&#13;
San Francisco over Carolina&#13;
Dallas over Philadelphia&#13;
Detroit over Houston&#13;
Denver over Seattle&#13;
Oakland over Pittsburgh&#13;
Buffalo over St. Louis:&#13;
Mark Rypien versus the&#13;
Bills. Puh-lease! Rams&#13;
better hope Miller can&#13;
bounce back from his 5th&#13;
concussion in 15 months.&#13;
Indianapolis over&#13;
Jacksonville: The Colts roll&#13;
their playoff dice against the&#13;
other expansion team this&#13;
week. Fortunately for Indy,&#13;
the Jags don't have the same&#13;
roar as the Panthers.&#13;
Last Week: 10-4 (I'm the&#13;
champ, yep-yep)&#13;
Season Record: 87-42 (.674)&#13;
• Margaret&#13;
Ditchburn&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
wrestling team is&#13;
gearing up for a&#13;
tough season.&#13;
They are in good&#13;
shape coming out&#13;
of last weekend's&#13;
tournament with&#13;
two champions.&#13;
There were 16&#13;
schools&#13;
represented and&#13;
224 wrestlers&#13;
packed into&#13;
Parkside's PhyEd&#13;
building on&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Roger Spear&#13;
won the 118 lb&#13;
division. He had&#13;
four wins and no losses for&#13;
the day. All of Rogers wins&#13;
were by major decision or&#13;
match termination, where&#13;
he beat his opponent by 15&#13;
points or more.&#13;
Jeremie Ott dominated his&#13;
opponents winning the 177&#13;
lb weight class. He won his&#13;
first match ofthe day with a&#13;
pin and finished with one of&#13;
the most exciting matches&#13;
and a come from behind&#13;
victory.&#13;
At 158 pounds, Boone&#13;
Smith took second at the&#13;
tournament losing the&#13;
championship round by a tie&#13;
breaker. Senior, Myles&#13;
Muckerheide placed third in&#13;
the 167 lb weight class. Out&#13;
of the 224 competitors,&#13;
Myles was picked by coaches&#13;
and referees for the Ray&#13;
Larson Sportsmanship&#13;
Award. Myles also beat&#13;
Mike Schneider of&#13;
Marquette who had pinned&#13;
four opponents earlier that&#13;
day.&#13;
Myles Muckerheide&#13;
Parkside had three ofthe&#13;
top six in the 134 lb weight&#13;
class. They included&#13;
Freshman Brad Shefchik&#13;
who took fourth, Trevor&#13;
Hasenjager (last years NAJA&#13;
National Champion at 118&#13;
lbs) and Shawn Maye, alsoa&#13;
freshman, who tied with&#13;
Trevor for fifth.&#13;
Freshman Andy Tubbs&#13;
placed fifth in the 190 lb&#13;
weight class. Brett&#13;
Stubblefield and Todd&#13;
Raymond both took sixth in&#13;
the 158 lb and heavyweight&#13;
respectively.&#13;
This week Parkside has&#13;
three tough dual meets. The&#13;
schedule this season will be&#13;
tougher that previous years&#13;
but Coach Koch is&#13;
optimistic, "We have some&#13;
outstanding freshman that&#13;
have contributed to the team&#13;
and we are relatively&#13;
healthy." This season Koch&#13;
hopes to have three or four&#13;
All-Americans and that is&#13;
definitely not out of reach&#13;
for the wrestlers.&#13;
Wrestlers Dominate in&#13;
Season Opener&#13;
• ToddRaymond Schroeder, 11-3;134lhs,Brad&#13;
Shefchik,13-3;142lhs,Pete&#13;
. . 6- Miller,3-5;150lhs,D.C.LeWlS,&#13;
6; 158lhs,BooneSmith,8-5;167&#13;
lhs,MikeCole,6-5; 1771hs,Myle&gt;&#13;
Muckerheide,8-3; 190lbs,Andy&#13;
'Iubbs,8-5; Hwt lhs,JeremieOtt,&#13;
5-2.&#13;
D.C.Lewis and JeremieOtt&#13;
bothwrestledup twoweight&#13;
classesand stillpounoedtheir&#13;
opponentsand cameawaywith&#13;
impressive victories.&#13;
TheParksidewrestlingream&#13;
continuesitswinningtradition&#13;
overWhitewater.Withtheir&#13;
competitionstaking planemainly&#13;
awayfromParksidesofur, they&#13;
heldtheirfirst homemeet&#13;
Wednesday,November29at the&#13;
ParksidePhysicalEducation&#13;
Building.&#13;
Parkside's Record: 118lhs,&#13;
RogerSpear,11-2;126Ihs,Justin&#13;
anger&#13;
servatlons,&#13;
cont from p. 4&#13;
Campus arrest,&#13;
cont from p. I&#13;
sacred obligation to raise&#13;
them to be productive and&#13;
positive adults. Ifyou shirk&#13;
this responsibility, much will&#13;
be required, and many&#13;
others could be damaged.&#13;
Spouse and child abuse does&#13;
not exist in a vacuum. Many&#13;
others get caught in the web&#13;
and damaged.&#13;
With the education we are&#13;
seeking here at Parkside&#13;
goes a responsibility to use it&#13;
wisely. It would be one of my&#13;
fondest hopes that students -&#13;
are not attending just so&#13;
they can be trained to make&#13;
money. What a shallow&#13;
existence. What a wasted&#13;
resource. We have an&#13;
obligation to use our&#13;
education in positive ways.&#13;
Making money is not wrong,&#13;
but there must be more to&#13;
reported seeing him down on&#13;
the second floor of the&#13;
library, and another saw him&#13;
down in lower Greenquist.&#13;
"What really surprises me&#13;
is that other people saw this&#13;
and did nothing," said&#13;
Knoell. "I'm just glad there&#13;
were the three of us there to&#13;
put a stop to it."&#13;
"The police told us that&#13;
he's got a rap sheet a mile&#13;
long," said Rudelich. "He's&#13;
from Mukwonago and police&#13;
said he has done this at&#13;
other universities as well.&#13;
He should be in a .&#13;
correctional institution. He&#13;
wasn't affiliated with&#13;
Parkside- he wasn't a&#13;
student or anything- and&#13;
he had no business being&#13;
here doing that."&#13;
life than just the almighty&#13;
dollar.&#13;
Take time over this&#13;
holiday season to count the&#13;
blessings that you have.&#13;
Even if they are meager, if&#13;
you have had a rough go of&#13;
it, you are still breathing&#13;
and as long as you are there&#13;
IS a chance for you for a&#13;
better life. During the last&#13;
few months, life has been&#13;
more stimulating for me&#13;
than I would have preferred.&#13;
But, I believe that God is in&#13;
heaven, arid that he has&#13;
given me many talents. He&#13;
expects me to use my talents&#13;
wisely, and he expects you to&#13;
do the same. God bless you&#13;
and have a good holiday&#13;
season. We'll talk again in&#13;
January.&#13;
5'11",200 pounds, with a&#13;
salt-and-pepper beard. J\t&#13;
the time of the incident, he&#13;
was wearing metal frame&#13;
glasses, a baseball cap, navy&#13;
slacks, and cowboy boots. He&#13;
was carrying a cellular&#13;
phone.&#13;
"He looked like a normal&#13;
person," said Hansen. "He&#13;
didn't look dangerous or&#13;
anything."&#13;
"What gets me is that it&#13;
was 10 to 15 minutes before&#13;
anyone showed up," said one&#13;
witness to the capture. "It&#13;
shouldn't be 10 minutes at a&#13;
small university like&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
There were other accounts&#13;
of people witnessing acts of&#13;
misconduct in the hours&#13;
leading up to the&#13;
confrontation. One person&#13;
De a SImple one: greed. The&#13;
leaders of these companies&#13;
get obscene bonus payments,&#13;
yet more arid more run-ofthe-mill&#13;
workers are on&#13;
unemployment. One could&#13;
wonder if these so-called&#13;
"industry leaders" receive a&#13;
bounty for every job that&#13;
they get rid of! Much has&#13;
been given, and much should&#13;
have been received. The only&#13;
consolation is that someday,&#13;
much will be required of&#13;
them. I hope that I only live&#13;
to see that day.&#13;
This concept means more&#13;
than money. How could a&#13;
man who is blessed with the&#13;
love of a wife even&#13;
contemplate striking her? If&#13;
you are blessed with&#13;
children, you have a most --_.._--&#13;
• Murmansk&#13;
i..&#13;
-~~~-~'. '"&#13;
~"(&#13;
" i&#13;
"\)&#13;
\\ jjJj \;£7 i~:'&#13;
'\.;--~~)&lt;;.., ...&#13;
Suzdal @ -,...,,~:/&#13;
,&#13;
::.:«~.~~,.,~._.J~, RUSSIA&#13;
}&#13;
, \,&#13;
~8aku; --.&#13;
,=-~!.."&#13;
-~~o .&#13;
HUNGARY&#13;
oCJ Nelson&#13;
Ranger Communist&#13;
'tis the season for&#13;
reflection on one's blessings.&#13;
The biblical concept of "To&#13;
whom much is given, much&#13;
is required" has been on my&#13;
mind. When this concept" is&#13;
mentioned in church it&#13;
usually refers to money, but&#13;
it means much more than&#13;
that. If you have many&#13;
blessings, be them money,&#13;
education, the love and&#13;
enjoyment of a stable family&#13;
life, or a stable and lucrative&#13;
occupation, you also have a'&#13;
commensurate responsibility&#13;
that accompanies them.&#13;
Society seems to be missing&#13;
this point.&#13;
Once upon a time, part of&#13;
the so-called American Myth&#13;
was the concept of&#13;
responsibility for community&#13;
good. This is where the Rush&#13;
Limbaughs and the Newt&#13;
Gingriches of the world err.&#13;
Rush is eternally asking on&#13;
his show, "Why should&#13;
people who "have" pay for&#13;
those who "have not?" The&#13;
answer, my corpulent one, is&#13;
that this nation does not (or&#13;
at least, didn't used to)&#13;
aspire to emulate the&#13;
conditions that Charles&#13;
Dickens found so repugnant&#13;
170 years ago.&#13;
One hundred years ago,&#13;
Social Darwinism defended&#13;
the rampant and&#13;
One Liberal's Opinion&#13;
"Barb Churchill&#13;
Ranger columnist&#13;
CJ's column this week&#13;
talks of people who have&#13;
failed to use their immense&#13;
wealth and talent to help&#13;
those of us that are less&#13;
fortunate, and exhorts those&#13;
of us at Parkside to use our&#13;
education wisely, and not&#13;
just for our personal gain. As&#13;
far as it goes, I am in&#13;
complete agreement. But,&#13;
his column does not go far&#13;
enough.&#13;
Social Darwinism has&#13;
reared its ugly head again&#13;
here in Wisconsin. No better&#13;
explanation of this is&#13;
required than the new&#13;
"Wisconsin Works," or W-2&#13;
program that will be&#13;
replacing Welfare as of Jan.&#13;
1, 1996. This program fails&#13;
to take into account&#13;
education OR people with&#13;
serious illness, and puts&#13;
everyone into the same&#13;
category. This is just plain&#13;
wrong.&#13;
Now, if everyone in the&#13;
world could work, they&#13;
should. And, most do. Itis&#13;
demeaning for an adult to&#13;
take Welfare or SSI money&#13;
when they could be working&#13;
and earning their OWN way.&#13;
And, yes, there are some&#13;
deadbeats out there that&#13;
could and SHOULD be&#13;
working, but they don't.&#13;
However, punishing&#13;
everyone for the sins of a few&#13;
is inexcusable.&#13;
What good 01' lovable&#13;
Tommy Thompson (the&#13;
honorable one himself) has&#13;
failed to take into account is&#13;
that some people&#13;
(temporarily or&#13;
permanently) simply&#13;
CANNOT work. Those&#13;
people include cancer&#13;
patients (pretty hard to&#13;
work while taking chemo or&#13;
radiation), the elderly (you&#13;
mean that my eighty-seven&#13;
year old grandma would&#13;
HAVE to work if she didn't&#13;
have her savings and her&#13;
house?), the very young, and&#13;
students. Yes, students! The&#13;
current proposal for W-2&#13;
would force some of our lowincome&#13;
Parkside students to&#13;
work rather than go to&#13;
school and improve&#13;
themselves. They might be&#13;
forced to take minimum or&#13;
sub-minimum wage jobs&#13;
(yes, W-2 provides for this&#13;
too) rather than continuing&#13;
in their efforts to build a&#13;
better life. And, last of all,&#13;
W-2 would hurt the very&#13;
young by denying their&#13;
mothers AFDC benefits.&#13;
After two years on Welfare,&#13;
AFDC benefits (even if there&#13;
are young children in the&#13;
house) will be cut off,&#13;
regardless of how hard the&#13;
people are trying or how&#13;
severe the need.&#13;
Whoever thought this&#13;
program up needs his head&#13;
examined. This program will&#13;
cause more pain than any&#13;
other in existence. Even&#13;
rationed health care (coming&#13;
soon, due to Medicare and&#13;
Medicaid cutbacks) is. not as&#13;
big a threat as this W-2. And&#13;
it is built squarely on Social&#13;
Darwinist principles-the&#13;
survival of the fittest, and&#13;
(more importantly) the&#13;
survival of the RICHEST.&#13;
Right now, the city of&#13;
Racine is reeling. We have&#13;
the highest crime rate in the&#13;
state, a Senator that should&#13;
and will be recalled (due to&#13;
the fact that he does not feel&#13;
the need to listen to his&#13;
constituents), federal and&#13;
state cutbacks, a new county&#13;
sales tax that we don't want&#13;
or need, and now this new&#13;
W-2 program. The mind&#13;
reels.&#13;
The problem is that the&#13;
state's priorities are&#13;
seriously screwed up. Rather&#13;
than helpmg the workmg&#13;
poor with tax breaks, help&#13;
with further education, and&#13;
with new programs designed&#13;
to help those most in need,&#13;
they shaft us. Again and&#13;
again and again. We almost&#13;
need a miracle in order to&#13;
get out from under. And that&#13;
is not what America is all&#13;
about.&#13;
During this Christmas&#13;
season, do your best to help&#13;
those less fortunate, and&#13;
pressure your legislators to&#13;
help the lower and lowermiddle&#13;
classes. It's time to&#13;
"take back" our country from&#13;
over-paid lobbyists and nonlistening&#13;
representatives. If&#13;
we raise our voices, we can&#13;
not and WILL not be held&#13;
down forever. Remember,&#13;
God helps those who help&#13;
themselves, and right now&#13;
we need a peaceful&#13;
revolution to get our country&#13;
working again.&#13;
.irresponsible capitalism&#13;
the day by arguing that God&#13;
allowed the rich to become&#13;
richer because they were&#13;
more fit as people.&#13;
Unfortunately, Social&#13;
Darwinism continues to rear&#13;
its ugly head Although God&#13;
(in all probability) DID allow&#13;
some measure of wealth to&#13;
be accumulated, God also&#13;
thought that some measure&#13;
of responsibility for using&#13;
that wealth for the&#13;
betterment of human kind&#13;
should go without saying. No&#13;
.._'~;&#13;
better representation of this&#13;
was Andrew Carnegie. He&#13;
amassed enormous wealth,&#13;
yet founded schools and&#13;
libraries that continue to&#13;
help everyone in&#13;
Pennsylvania. Where are&#13;
these people when we need&#13;
them today?&#13;
Today, we see company&#13;
after company downsizing.&#13;
They put people out of work&#13;
when (sometimes) their&#13;
profits are at record level.&#13;
Why? The answer seems to&#13;
Cont. on page 8&#13;
Famous u.s. Women's A/pine Ski Team Diet&#13;
During Ihe non-snow olf season Ihe U S W ' . . members used the 'Sk! .. . .. omen s Alpine Sk' Team&#13;
fiqhl ~ 20 pound . ~Team diet to tose zo pounds In two weeks. TllarS&#13;
action and was dS&#13;
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the U S Sk' lC evised by a tamous Colorado physician especially101&#13;
reduc'ing. ~O~ak~' N"~r~al energy IS ,malnlained (very irnoortaru'. V\'hile&#13;
thai way It's a d' ep u. - no starvallon - because the die: is designed&#13;
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wom:~~'~lh?n~e~t~,~ fanlastlcallysuccessful diet. IIit weren't. 1I1PUS .&#13;
give yourself the salm:~~ w~uldn't be permitted to use ii' Righi? So,&#13;
scienlific, proven wa Evea. the, U.S,. Ski Team gets. Lose weif;h! lhe&#13;
yoursell to try the uYs :;n Ify~Uve tned all Ihe other diets, you o'lo'e1110&#13;
reallydo wanl to lose 20 omen s Alpine Ski Team Diet. Thai is il .ou&#13;
as a reminder. pounds In two weeks. Order today' Tear lhif out&#13;
Send only $8.95 ($9.60 in Calif)- . .&#13;
American Institute 721 E . . add .50 cents RUSH service 10&#13;
93454-4507. Don't' order un~a," Streel, Dept 254, Santa Maria, CA&#13;
weeks! Because th t' h ss y?u expect to lose 20 pounds In two&#13;
a swat the Ski Team Diet willdo&#13;
. ©1995&#13;
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LOSE 20 POUNDS&#13;
IN TWO WEEKS&#13;
American President:&#13;
Future American Classic&#13;
• Keith Klein&#13;
She's a savvy&#13;
environmental lobbyist&#13;
hired to help push&#13;
legislation through an&#13;
unfriendly congress. He's ...&#13;
the American President. Do&#13;
they have a realistic chance&#13;
at having a meaningful&#13;
relationship with the&#13;
leeches from the media&#13;
following their every move&#13;
during an election year?&#13;
Director Rob Reiner&#13;
suggests in his engaging&#13;
movie The American&#13;
President that they have a&#13;
great chance.&#13;
Andy loves Sydney. But&#13;
the romance isn't that&#13;
simple. As a widowed&#13;
President (Michael&#13;
Douglas), Andy Shepard's&#13;
been able to avoid all&#13;
character attacks from his&#13;
rivals because it's not smart&#13;
politics to go on the&#13;
offensive against a widower.&#13;
When the lonely widower&#13;
begins to date a former&#13;
political activist and&#13;
present-day adversary of&#13;
politicians (Annette&#13;
Bening), President&#13;
Shepard's chief rival Bob&#13;
Rumson (Richard Dreyfuss)&#13;
goes on the attack. The&#13;
result is a media circus with&#13;
Rumson as the ringmaster.&#13;
The film is a resounding&#13;
success, as a romantic&#13;
comedy and as a look at&#13;
American politics. You don't&#13;
have to take a 400-level&#13;
PoliSci class to understand&#13;
the political complexities&#13;
involved in the film, but it's&#13;
not at the third-grade level&#13;
either. Reiner reaches an&#13;
intelligent, happy medium.&#13;
Romantically, Reiner&#13;
tries to make a Capra-esque&#13;
love story. Sydney is&#13;
completely intimidated by&#13;
the White House scene at&#13;
first. While Andy&#13;
acknowledges that he "has&#13;
the best home court&#13;
advantage in the world," he&#13;
refuses to take the&#13;
relationship slowly. They&#13;
dive in, and to Reiner's&#13;
credit, end up as a fantastic&#13;
couple.&#13;
As the public begins to&#13;
question the President's&#13;
"family values" because of&#13;
his affair, opinion polls&#13;
show the President is in a&#13;
free-fall, plummeting from a&#13;
63% approval rating to 41%&#13;
in seventy days. But Andy&#13;
understands that he's guilty&#13;
only of falling in love. He&#13;
refuses to fight the bully&#13;
Rumson on the character&#13;
issue in the press. He has&#13;
no comment about Sydney&#13;
to the bloodhounds who&#13;
follow his every move.&#13;
The main focus of The&#13;
American President is the&#13;
question "what real right&#13;
does the public have in&#13;
regards to the private life of&#13;
a political figure?" This&#13;
topic is entirely relevant in&#13;
today's tele-crazed society&#13;
(just ask Bill Clinton or&#13;
onetime presidential&#13;
contender Gary Hart).&#13;
President Shepard reacts&#13;
with a "no comment." He&#13;
feels that any comment&#13;
would lend credibility to his&#13;
rivals' seedy claims and end&#13;
up working against him.&#13;
When his approval rating&#13;
hits an embarrassing 41%&#13;
though, he is forced into&#13;
action. The result is&#13;
retribution, politically and,&#13;
after Sydney begins to feel&#13;
the strain of the&#13;
relationship, romantically.&#13;
The American President&#13;
also does an excellent job of&#13;
showing us the merry-goround&#13;
and fantasyland that&#13;
is the Presidency. When&#13;
Sydney spends the night at&#13;
the White House, panic&#13;
ensues among the&#13;
President's staff and their&#13;
intimacy is interrupted by&#13;
the revolving door of&#13;
nervous advisors.&#13;
There are several&#13;
sparkling performances in&#13;
the film. While there is&#13;
already Oscar-talk about&#13;
Douglas's great performance&#13;
as the title character, I&#13;
believe Bening deserves.&#13;
equal praise. Bening is&#13;
completely giddy, yet strong.&#13;
As a lobbyist she is&#13;
intelligent. As a loveinterest&#13;
she is striking.&#13;
Bening is helped by the fact&#13;
that the movie is as much&#13;
hers as it is Douglas's;&#13;
Reiner portrays not only the&#13;
President's struggles with&#13;
an unrelenting media, but&#13;
he also shows Sydney's&#13;
downsides, both privately&#13;
and professionally.&#13;
MichaelJ. Fox, who's&#13;
been playing the same&#13;
character for the last ten&#13;
years, breaks out of his&#13;
slump with a superb&#13;
performance as President&#13;
Shepard's antsy Domestic&#13;
Policy Advisor. Martin&#13;
Sheen also gives a winning&#13;
portrayal as Shepard's Chief&#13;
of Staff and best friend. But&#13;
the performance that&#13;
everyone will talk about is&#13;
Douglas's.&#13;
Douglas is splendid in&#13;
the very difficult role. He&#13;
comes across as a decent&#13;
guy who just wants to&#13;
return to the time when the&#13;
President was given the&#13;
benefit of the doubt in his&#13;
private life. Unfortunately&#13;
for him that time is long&#13;
past. Douglas also does a&#13;
good job of showing his&#13;
funny side (before going to&#13;
bed with Sydney for the&#13;
first time, he reminds her&#13;
that "the most powerful&#13;
man in the world" is only a&#13;
political term). The&#13;
performance is wellrounded&#13;
and worthy of all&#13;
the acclaim it will receive.&#13;
When was the last&#13;
successful romantic comedy!&#13;
intriguing political film? ..&#13;
It's been a long, long time.&#13;
Director Rob Reiner's The&#13;
American President is quite&#13;
an accomplishment, and&#13;
quite a film.&#13;
Christmas Music&#13;
• Barb Churchill&#13;
Ranger Curmudgeon&#13;
Christmas music&#13;
everywhere, and 'not a drop&#13;
to drink.' Yes, folks, the overabundance&#13;
of Christmas&#13;
music is driving me nuts. As&#13;
of this writing, there is still&#13;
over twenty days to&#13;
Christmas, and yet you'd&#13;
think it was going to be&#13;
tomorrow by all the&#13;
Christmas music in the&#13;
stores and on the radio&#13;
stations. Even Muzak&#13;
(elevator music) has gotten&#13;
into the act, playing one&#13;
Christmas song (like the&#13;
ever-popular" Jingle Bells)&#13;
over and over and OVER&#13;
again until you're sick of it.&#13;
Then they playa Muzak&#13;
standard such as Barbra&#13;
Streisand's "Wet." It's&#13;
enough to make me hurl!&#13;
At the malls, they have&#13;
(unfortunately for us&#13;
consumers) picked up on&#13;
this Muzak trend, and&#13;
feature thousands of&#13;
different versions of "Let it&#13;
Snow, Let it Snow, Let it&#13;
Snow," "Jingle Bells," the&#13;
"Christmas Song" (otherwise&#13;
known as "Chestnuts&#13;
roasting on an open fire."),&#13;
and of course "Rudolph the&#13;
Red-Nosed Reindeer." Better&#13;
titles for the above records&#13;
(after you've heard them one&#13;
too many times) are "Let it&#13;
Snow so you can get into a&#13;
car accident and die," "Jingle&#13;
Bell Hell," "Fire-roasting&#13;
your chestnuts over&#13;
Christmas Day while&#13;
watching the Packers beat&#13;
the Bears," and "Rudolph&#13;
lords it over the other&#13;
inferior reindeer." A few&#13;
songs like "I am Santa&#13;
Claus," by Black Sabbath&#13;
are appropriate Christmas&#13;
type tunes, but the others&#13;
can "take a long walk off a&#13;
short pier" as far as I'm&#13;
concerned.&#13;
So, what can you do about&#13;
this Christmas song&#13;
invasion! Refuse to hum,&#13;
sing, or otherwise&#13;
participate in Christmassong&#13;
singing until the week&#13;
of Christmas. If you are into&#13;
alternative music, get out all&#13;
your favorite albums and&#13;
sing to them. One older song&#13;
that I like singing to after&#13;
listening to Christmas songs&#13;
all day at work is "Man in&#13;
the Wilderness" by Styx.&#13;
And, of course, there is&#13;
always my favorite song,&#13;
"Dirt," that I can sing along&#13;
with that immediately&#13;
washes the bad taste out of&#13;
my mouth. "Oh, you are so&#13;
special. You have the talent,&#13;
to make me feel like dirt.&#13;
Oh, you use your talent, to&#13;
fake me under, and cover me&#13;
with dirt." This song always&#13;
helps to remove Christmastype&#13;
propaganda from my&#13;
brain.&#13;
So, do whatever you like to&#13;
do to drive these mindless,&#13;
boring, and pretentious&#13;
Christmas songs from your&#13;
life. It'll do you some good to&#13;
remind yourself of the&#13;
tedium, mediocrity, and&#13;
futility of daily life after&#13;
listening to sickly-sweet&#13;
Christmas songs&#13;
EVERYWHERE YOU GO.&#13;
"~~P,'P1~&#13;
~.Q1-&#13;
ss&#13;
etu.-I"&#13;
Top Ten goes on,&#13;
from p.2&#13;
ruin next year?&#13;
Big time soundtrack albums:&#13;
It's apparently not enough for&#13;
the movie business to get your&#13;
ticket price, now they want you&#13;
to buy the CD too. The problem&#13;
is, does anyone remember&#13;
extensive use of any of the songs&#13;
from the Batman Forever or&#13;
Johnny Mnemonic soundtracks&#13;
in the movies?&#13;
Junior: Did the world really&#13;
need yet another pregnant man&#13;
movie? Especially one featuring&#13;
Schwarzenegger?&#13;
Thomany damn kid movies: It&#13;
wouldn't be so bad if it weren't&#13;
for the merchandising. Was&#13;
there anything imaginable that&#13;
you could buy this past summer&#13;
without a picture of Pocahontas&#13;
on it?&#13;
Quentin Tarantino: I'm one of&#13;
his biggest fans actually, but he&#13;
is really beginning to be&#13;
overused and overrated.&#13;
The Net: The information&#13;
superhighway is the newest bad&#13;
movie device to come into vogue.&#13;
I wish my E-Mail was as coolas&#13;
the system in Disclosure or that&#13;
it was easy to get rid of someone&#13;
using it as it was to get rid of&#13;
Sandra Bullock in The Net.&#13;
Comedy sketches as movies:&#13;
Stuart Saves His Family? The&#13;
Jerky Boys? The fine work of&#13;
Adam Sandler? C'mon people, is&#13;
it really that hard to come up&#13;
with an entertaining idea? •&#13;
Threats of government&#13;
intervention: Big government&#13;
thinks that the movie industry&#13;
is what is eroding today's society&#13;
and destroying family values.&#13;
So the movie makers promised&#13;
they'd be good and work on the&#13;
problem. Yeah right. As long as&#13;
we keep shelling out the dollars&#13;
for sex and violence, they'll keep&#13;
giving that to us. At least&#13;
Showgirls bombed.&#13;
The best movie of 1995: Was&#13;
there anything out there that&#13;
didn't claim to be that? If not&#13;
the best, than at least the most&#13;
heart-warming, most thrilling or&#13;
the most action packed. Spare&#13;
us the hyperbole guys.&#13;
So, that was 1995 in the&#13;
theater. What can we expect in&#13;
'96? More ofthe same of course.&#13;
December 9, 1995· page 8&#13;
December:&#13;
Time to Celebrate&#13;
• Melissa Noto&#13;
Celebrate all the&#13;
holidays of December in&#13;
"Let Us Light Candles,"&#13;
an original multicultural&#13;
musical event for the&#13;
entire family. The&#13;
concert will be Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 9 at 2 p.m. in&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. The&#13;
performance was created&#13;
by Patrick McGuire, a&#13;
UW-Parkside professor.&#13;
"The Parkside Chorale"&#13;
and "The Voices of&#13;
Parkside" will be&#13;
featured under the&#13;
direction of James&#13;
Kinchen. Also featured&#13;
SUFAC, cont from p, I&#13;
the future. Music&#13;
Department's request for&#13;
an increase that would&#13;
nearly double their budget&#13;
was considered&#13;
inappropriate at this time&#13;
and it was voted to give&#13;
them no increase at all.&#13;
The largest increases&#13;
were requested by BSU,&#13;
Latinos Unidos and the&#13;
AthleticlIntramurals&#13;
Department. ·BSU and LU&#13;
asked for money to pay&#13;
their officers and to&#13;
increase community and&#13;
on-campus programming.&#13;
These increases would&#13;
have doubled the budgets&#13;
for each ofthe&#13;
organizations. While&#13;
SUFAC felt the efforts of&#13;
both groups were&#13;
worthwhile, they also felt&#13;
that this was not a good&#13;
time to ask for such large&#13;
increases. A compromise&#13;
was made of giving a 25%&#13;
increase to each group.&#13;
The&#13;
AthleticslIntramurals&#13;
Dept. asked for an increase&#13;
of $80,000. This increase&#13;
would have meant a rise in&#13;
tuition of $22 per full time&#13;
student per semester.&#13;
Linda Draft, chair of the&#13;
department, explained the&#13;
request as an increase of&#13;
the costs of the&#13;
department due to&#13;
participating in the GLVC&#13;
athletic conference and a&#13;
need to purchase an&#13;
additional van for team&#13;
transportation. SUFAC&#13;
members felt that the&#13;
department should have to&#13;
raise some ofthis money&#13;
. on their own and not place&#13;
the whole burden on the&#13;
students. In a hotly&#13;
debated vote of 6 for and 2&#13;
against, the committee&#13;
authorized an increase of&#13;
$20,000. The two&#13;
members who voted&#13;
against the measure felt&#13;
that even this increase&#13;
was too much.&#13;
SUFAC will hear any&#13;
appeals on its decisions on&#13;
Dec 6th. Expected to&#13;
appeal are the Athletics&#13;
Department and the Union&#13;
Rec Center. The final&#13;
recommendations ofthe&#13;
committee will be&#13;
presented to PSGA for&#13;
approval on Dec 8th. If&#13;
they are approved there,&#13;
they will go before the&#13;
Chancellor for final&#13;
approval. As the budget&#13;
currently stands, there&#13;
will be an increase in&#13;
segregated fees of&#13;
approximately 2% in the&#13;
96-97 school year.&#13;
will be the Parkside&#13;
Classical Guitar&#13;
Ensemble, directed by&#13;
George Lindquist.&#13;
Following the&#13;
performance you are&#13;
welcomed to continue&#13;
the celebration with a&#13;
holiday reception&#13;
including refreshments&#13;
and further&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
Tickets are $5 for&#13;
adults, and $3 for&#13;
children 14 and under.&#13;
For additional&#13;
information or tickets&#13;
contact the Union&#13;
Information Center at&#13;
2345.&#13;
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Book Of Bargains!!&#13;
So Many Bargains&#13;
And Specials We&#13;
Can't Advertise&#13;
Them All! Stop In&#13;
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TANUNES&#13;
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              <text>THE&#13;
RANGERNEWS December 2, 2008&#13;
News Since 1972&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
The Ranger News is wriuen and edUed by students of .he Universi.y of Wisconsin-Parkside and ,hey arc solely responsible for i* ednorial pobcv and eon.cn,.&#13;
Monson: Great cross country&#13;
career closes&#13;
ROB HANSEN&#13;
Hanse082@uwp.edu&#13;
On Saturday Nov. 22, 2008,&#13;
Jessica Monson capped off an&#13;
amazing cross country career&#13;
at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
with a fifth place&#13;
finish at the NCAA II National&#13;
Championship cross country&#13;
meet held Slippery Rock, Penn.&#13;
Temperatures dwindled in the&#13;
lower 30s and snow covered a fair&#13;
amount of the 6,000 meter course&#13;
which Monson covered in 21:38.&#13;
The winner was Jessica Pixler,&#13;
a junior from Seattle Pacific&#13;
with a time of 20:59. Monson&#13;
commented that some areas of&#13;
the course had been plowed, yet&#13;
others had nearly in inch of snow&#13;
on it.&#13;
Jessica's fifth place finish is&#13;
among only a handful of topfive&#13;
finishes at nationals for the&#13;
UW-Parkside women runners.&#13;
This finish earned Monson, her&#13;
third cross country All-American&#13;
award. She also has five more&#13;
Ail-American awards between&#13;
indoor and outdoor track and&#13;
field. Monson stayed off of the&#13;
early pace which was set but&#13;
Pixler, and came through the mile&#13;
in 15th place or so. Her mile split&#13;
was 5:59, which is considerably&#13;
slower than what Monson was&#13;
used to: "There was a monstrosity&#13;
of a hill at the 400 meter mark, and&#13;
it f elt as if I was walking up it."&#13;
By the 5,000 meter mark Jessica&#13;
had moved into fifth position&#13;
where she worked desperately&#13;
to reel in the front four. She&#13;
managed to catch the fourth place&#13;
female, Heather Wood of Adams&#13;
State, but did not have enough to&#13;
get around her.&#13;
"This has been the most&#13;
gratfying feat for me definitely.&#13;
1 n ever would have thought that&#13;
1 cou ld place fifth at the national&#13;
meet from where I started as a&#13;
freshmen. Cross Country has&#13;
always been more of a challenge&#13;
for me more than track has," said&#13;
the 2nd place 1500 meter runner&#13;
from last year's outdoor NCAA II&#13;
meet and multiple time 800 meter&#13;
All American.&#13;
The Ranger News asked&#13;
Monson to reflect back upon her&#13;
cross country career and her track&#13;
career to this point. She told us&#13;
that her sophomore year Distance&#13;
Medley Relay 2nd place finish&#13;
in Boston, MA at the NCAA II&#13;
indoor championship meet was&#13;
her fondest memory; "...it is so&#13;
rewarding to be successful with&#13;
a team that you've been training&#13;
with for a long period of time,&#13;
it was amazing to share such a&#13;
success with other hardworking&#13;
individuals (Naomi Fulton,&#13;
Valerie Kelly and Jill Winkler, all&#13;
graduated)."&#13;
This year was one of only a&#13;
handful of years that the UWParkside&#13;
women did not qualify&#13;
as a team for NCAA II National&#13;
Meet. Monson expressed her&#13;
disappointment in her team not&#13;
qualifying; "Cross country is a&#13;
team sport, and nationals are a&#13;
great place to compete, I wished I&#13;
could have shared the experience&#13;
with them." Monson expressed&#13;
how hard-working her teammates&#13;
are, and that they really deserved&#13;
the opportunity to be there as&#13;
well. The team's number one&#13;
goal for next year is to right the&#13;
ship and get back to the NCAA II&#13;
meet.&#13;
For now, Monson will focus&#13;
solely on indoor track. She has an&#13;
ultimate outcome goal of being the&#13;
first UW-Parkside woman to run&#13;
under 4:40 in the mile. This feat&#13;
would land her near the top of the&#13;
nation in the DII meet, and even&#13;
very near the top of the NCAA&#13;
DI elites. "With the right training&#13;
and the right focus I am confident&#13;
that I will attain each of my goals.&#13;
My Coach is fantastic, there is no&#13;
one who knows running better&#13;
than he does, so 1 feel certain&#13;
that my goals are within reach."&#13;
Monson admits she has her work&#13;
cut out for her, but with the whole&#13;
UW-Parkside crowd behind her,&#13;
nothing can stop her.&#13;
As for a post-collegiate career&#13;
for Monson, she is unsure of any&#13;
exacts. "I will still be running,&#13;
and training, and competing, but&#13;
I am not sure of anything other&#13;
than that, I am focused solely on&#13;
this indoor season right now." She&#13;
will be graduating in May with a&#13;
nursing degree from Parkside and&#13;
looking for a position in that field,&#13;
which will allow her to train and&#13;
compete on a full-time basis.&#13;
When The Ranger News asked&#13;
Monson if she believed the recent&#13;
hype considering her the greatest&#13;
runner at UW-Parkside history&#13;
she said, "There are many great&#13;
runners that have come before her,&#13;
runners that have accomplished&#13;
as much and sometimes more&#13;
than 1 have." Monson said she&#13;
simply gives her best and that s&#13;
all a person can do. Monson&#13;
would like to attribute her success&#13;
to several sources. She attributes&#13;
much of her success to God for&#13;
having given her the ability to&#13;
run and compete. In addition she&#13;
mentioned her Coach, with whom&#13;
she'd be lost without. Also, she&#13;
is thankful for her family for all&#13;
of the support they have given;&#13;
"They are at almost every meet,&#13;
and there are countless instances&#13;
where someone rides a bike&#13;
next to me to keep me company,&#13;
especially on a long day. She also&#13;
made mention of her teammates&#13;
throughout the years. "Without&#13;
their encouragement, I could have&#13;
achieved very little."&#13;
With one more indoor and one&#13;
more outdoor season of track and&#13;
field, Monson, having already&#13;
achieved so much, still have a lot&#13;
to accomplish. Her extreme focus&#13;
and dedication have her primed&#13;
to close out her UW-Parkside&#13;
running career very successfully.&#13;
"We've got issues&#13;
if &#13;
The Ranger News December 2, 2008&#13;
)esign Manager&#13;
Ruth B riones&#13;
ruth@therangernews.com&#13;
Marketing Director&#13;
Zak Smith&#13;
zak@therangernews.com&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Moilie Egan&#13;
mollie@therangernews.com&#13;
Arts &amp; Cu lture Editor&#13;
josh Diefenbach&#13;
diefeOQO@uwp.edu&#13;
Staff Reporters&#13;
Cody Holden&#13;
ydocnedloh@yahoo.com&#13;
Rob Hansen&#13;
hanse082@uwp.edu&#13;
Geome Lasley&#13;
lasle000@uwp.edu&#13;
Sam Anderson&#13;
ander253@uwp.edu&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141&#13;
Phone:(262)595.2287&#13;
Fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Ads: uwp_ads@yahoo.com&#13;
E-mail: rangernews@gmail.com&#13;
Iditor in Chief&#13;
Jo Kirst&#13;
jo@therangernews.com&#13;
Executive Editor&#13;
Moilie Egan&#13;
mollie@therangernews.com&#13;
Sues! Reporter&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
llustrators&#13;
Rachel DeLeon&#13;
eliteleona@yahoo.com&#13;
Kelsey Hoff&#13;
hoff013@uwp.edu&#13;
Joyce Owens&#13;
owens040@uwp.edu&#13;
Christian Schackelford&#13;
shack002@uwp.edu&#13;
. Ryan Ashton'&#13;
ashto001@uwp.edu&#13;
i" i i&lt; • . ; • «/ Id&#13;
Cheryl Overby&#13;
overb001@uwp.edu&#13;
Njck Connor&#13;
mick2connor@aol.com&#13;
Brent Schultz&#13;
wolfpack8U88@yahoo.com&#13;
Joe Diefenbach&#13;
diefe001@uwp.edu&#13;
'hotographers&#13;
Zak Smith&#13;
zakssmith@gmail.com&#13;
Cedric Ray Jr.&#13;
ray00007@uwp.edu&#13;
Sam Spahn&#13;
spahn001@uwp.edu&#13;
Jamie Stoehr&#13;
jamiejobolove@yahoo.com&#13;
Dan Wanezek&#13;
Drwartist@yahoo.com&#13;
Greg Barker&#13;
barke012@uwp.edu&#13;
Zak Eden&#13;
eden0001@uwp.edu&#13;
Sean Fallon&#13;
fallo001@uwp.edu&#13;
Katie Walter&#13;
walte021@uwp.edu&#13;
Mission Statement&#13;
The Ranger News strives to inform,&#13;
educate, and engage the UWParkside&#13;
community by publishing&#13;
well-written, accurate student&#13;
journalism on a weekly basis,&#13;
"he Ranger News has meetings every Friday at noon. All&#13;
Undents and faculty of UW-Parkside are welcome. Please&#13;
eel free to attend. Have any comments, concents, questions,&#13;
&gt;r story ideas?&#13;
'lease e-mail us at: rangernews@uwp.edu .&#13;
Wc are located at Wyllic D139C&#13;
Lach person may take one newspaper per issue date. Extra&#13;
lewspapers can be purchased for $1 apiece. Newspapers&#13;
be taken on a first come, first serve basis, meaning that&#13;
&gt;nce they are gone, they are gone.&#13;
We work on the honor system, but&#13;
iolators will be prosecuted for&#13;
left. Faculty members and students&#13;
irganizations who wish to use The&#13;
{anger News in classrooms should&#13;
insult the editor-in-chief to reserve&#13;
towever many free copies they wish&#13;
ASSOCIATED&#13;
We came pretty close to&#13;
not having an issue this week.&#13;
Several reporters never turned in&#13;
their stories, and as such there&#13;
is a limited amount of articles in&#13;
this issue. 1 don't know if endof-sCmester&#13;
burnout is upon&#13;
us, or if it was the holidays that&#13;
threw everyone off schedule, or&#13;
something else, but I'm somewhat&#13;
disappointed 'arid )5ufj&gt;ri4ed at'&#13;
this.&#13;
Despite these difficulties, the&#13;
issue looks good. It should be a&#13;
good read, with a good chunk of&#13;
photojournalism to back it up. It's&#13;
definitely not our usual caliber,&#13;
but I'll take it. I am rather anxious&#13;
to get back to our 12-page issues,&#13;
however. ,,&#13;
Due to the weather on&#13;
Sunday, Ruth wasn't able to&#13;
make it to the office to lay out&#13;
the paper. A friend of The Ranger&#13;
News, Jeremy Topczewski, came&#13;
in and put the issue t&amp;gdftfiir'fbSr&#13;
us instead. We really appreciate it&#13;
and hope he joins us next semester&#13;
as a designer.&#13;
As the serrfester dwindles&#13;
THE POLICE&#13;
to a close, I would like to invite&#13;
you all to join us next semester.&#13;
Whether you're interested in&#13;
writing, cartoons, photography,&#13;
or design/illustration, we've gqt&#13;
a space for you. Currently, our&#13;
meetings are in Wyllie D139C,&#13;
but come spring we'll be in the&#13;
Student Union. I don't know what&#13;
room number we'll be yet, but as&#13;
sooh ak I kn'ovV 1 y&#13;
ll let"you know!'&#13;
The time will still be the sameFridays&#13;
at noon.&#13;
If you'd like to work with us&#13;
for an internship, we can do that&#13;
as well. Stop by and collect the&#13;
forms you'll need, and we'll get&#13;
you set up for next semester. The&#13;
most common internship is for&#13;
reporting, but that doesn't mean&#13;
we're not willing to work out&#13;
internships for other positions.&#13;
Stop by the office or email me if&#13;
you have any questions.&#13;
That about sums it up for thi$&#13;
week. Enjoy the issue, and well&#13;
see you next Tuesday.&#13;
Jo Kirst&#13;
Editor in Chief&#13;
BLOTTER THE U&#13;
11/24/08 08-2628&#13;
Agency Assist. Off-Campus&#13;
Location to Soccer Fields.&#13;
9:10pm. KPD Dispatch request&#13;
assistance with chase in progress.&#13;
UWPPD Officers assisted, suspect&#13;
GO A. Officer then cleared.&#13;
11/25/08 08-2638&#13;
Traffic Violation. 900 Block @&#13;
CTH G. 10:49pm. Christopher&#13;
D Williams was ticketed for&#13;
Speeding 51 mph in a posted 35&#13;
mph zone. Officer then cleared.&#13;
11/26/08 08-2641&#13;
Liquor Law Violation. Ranger&#13;
Hall. 12:58am. Resident Advisor&#13;
request officer for intoxicated&#13;
subject. Officer and Rescue Unit&#13;
arrive. Female transported to local&#13;
hospital. Officer then cleared.&#13;
candidates should have&#13;
achieved and what qualities&#13;
they want the new chancellor to&#13;
possess. Attendees will receive&#13;
information from the committee&#13;
on the progress and procedures&#13;
of the chancellor search and&#13;
screen process. The final forum&#13;
is Thursday, Dec. 4, from 7:30 to&#13;
8:30 a.m. in Molinaro 107. Free&#13;
parking is provided to the public&#13;
in the Student Center (Union)&#13;
parking lot during the forums.&#13;
PIC Friendship Hour&#13;
12:00 PM to 1:00 PM&#13;
Moln D-132&#13;
Share a little friendship!&#13;
Noon Concert: UW-Parkside&#13;
Student Recital&#13;
12:00 PM to 1:30 PM&#13;
Molinaro 105&#13;
UW-Parkside students as the&#13;
center of attraction for 60 minutes&#13;
of music you won't want to miss.&#13;
UW-Parkside Winter Cultural&#13;
Celebrations&#13;
12:00 PM to 1:15 PM&#13;
Main Place&#13;
It's 11 holiday celebrations&#13;
wrapped up in one neat present.&#13;
With Christmas fast approaching,&#13;
11/20/08 08-2578&#13;
Alarm-Fire. Partside Union.&#13;
7:39am. UWPPD Alarm Panel&#13;
reports active fire alarm. Staff&#13;
reportscontractorset-offalarmdue&#13;
to welding. Staff stated he would&#13;
reset alarm. Officer then cleared.&#13;
11/22/08 08-2598&#13;
Harassment - Stalking. Wyllie&#13;
Hall.4:05pm.Complainant reports&#13;
being actively threatened. Officer&#13;
takes report and then cleared.&#13;
11/24/08 08-2618&#13;
Theft - From Building. Ranger&#13;
Hall.9:14am.Complainant reports&#13;
theft from mailboxes.Officer&#13;
takes report and then cleared.&#13;
11/24/08 08-2622&#13;
Possession of Marijuana/Drug&#13;
Paraph. Ranger Hall. Anonymous&#13;
Crime is reported. Officer&#13;
issued citation for Possession&#13;
of Marijuana and then cleared.&#13;
Four UW-Parkside senior art&#13;
majors show their best work to&#13;
close out their undergraduate&#13;
studies. Experience the creations&#13;
of Nathan Abell, Christina Bodi,&#13;
Matthew Gilliland, and Saumya&#13;
Vajhala.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3&#13;
Art Exhibition: UW-Parkside&#13;
Senior Show&#13;
11:00 AM to 8:00 PM&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
Chancellor's Search and Screen&#13;
Committee Open Forum&#13;
12:00 PM to 1:00 PM&#13;
Greenquist 103&#13;
The university's Chancellor's&#13;
Search and Screen Committee&#13;
holds the second of three open&#13;
forums to engage faculty, staff,&#13;
students, and the community in&#13;
interactive listening sessions.&#13;
The committee invites feedback&#13;
from attendees on what&#13;
accomplishments potential&#13;
Art Exhibition: UW-Parkside&#13;
Senior Show&#13;
11:00 AM to 8:00 PM&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
i &#13;
3_ _&#13;
U\V-parkside student&#13;
organizations join with the Office&#13;
^Multicultural Student Affairs&#13;
to display the diverse cultures and&#13;
traditions that are represented here&#13;
on campus. Find out more about&#13;
Kvvanzaa, Hmong New Year,&#13;
Ramadan, Hanukkah, Germany's&#13;
St. Nicholas celebration,&#13;
parrandas and Posadas from&#13;
Puerto Rico and Mexico, the&#13;
Native American Time of Telling,&#13;
Befana from Italy, Pasko from&#13;
the Philippines, and the Hindu&#13;
celebration of Diwali. The is&#13;
the mo st festive you'll see Main&#13;
Place all year!&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4&#13;
Chancellor's Search and Screen&#13;
Committee Open Forum&#13;
7:30 AM to 8:30 AM&#13;
Molinaro 107&#13;
Art Exhibition: UW-Parkside&#13;
Senior Show&#13;
11:00 AM to 5:00 PM&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
Women's basketball vs. Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
5:30 PM&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium, SAC&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's&#13;
basketball team opens its Great&#13;
Lakes Va lley Conference season&#13;
against the Panthers of Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan College. This is an&#13;
exciting youngRanger team that's&#13;
already showing signs of the&#13;
good things the future holds. GO&#13;
RANGERS!&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Vegas&#13;
Night&#13;
7:00 PM to 10:30 PM&#13;
Main Place&#13;
Arts Alive presents Tingstad &amp;&#13;
Rumbel Holiday Show&#13;
7:30 PM to 9:00 PM&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
Back by request! Grammy&#13;
Award winners Eric Tingstad and&#13;
Nancy Rumbel have performed,&#13;
recorded and toured together for&#13;
over 22 years with 19 albums&#13;
to their credit. Eric and Nancy&#13;
began their collaboration in 1985.&#13;
Their debut album, 'The Gift,'&#13;
quickly became a holiday classic.&#13;
In 1998. 'American Acoustic'was&#13;
honored as Acoustic Instrumental&#13;
Album of the Year. And in- 2003&#13;
they received a Grammy Award&#13;
for 'Acoustic Garden.' A new&#13;
album by Eric, 'Southwest,' was&#13;
a 2007 Grammy Award nominee.&#13;
Historic preservation and the&#13;
environment are just a couple of&#13;
the many special interests Eric&#13;
and Nancy share and lend their&#13;
names to—all part of their love for&#13;
nature, beauty, and creativity that&#13;
takes center stage in their music.&#13;
Men's basketball vs. Kentucky&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
7:30 PM&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium, SAC&#13;
The Rangers kick off the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference season&#13;
with perennial powerhouse&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan College in&#13;
town. GO RANGERS!&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5&#13;
Conference: Making Mentoring&#13;
Work&#13;
7:30 AM to 12:00 PM&#13;
Student Center&#13;
AC {$25, includes breakfast}&#13;
Mentor Kenosha &amp; Racine, an&#13;
affiliated program of the Center&#13;
for Community Partnerships,&#13;
hosts the Making Mentoring&#13;
Work Conference. Co-sponsored&#13;
by the Racine Co. Workforce&#13;
Development Center and United&#13;
Way of Kenosha Co., the&#13;
conference is held in the Student&#13;
Center. Keynote speaker for the&#13;
conference is internationally&#13;
acclaimed mentoring researcher&#13;
Dr. David DuBois of the&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago. Dr.&#13;
DuBois has authored numerous&#13;
studies ol youth mentorina.&#13;
His speech is titled 'What can&#13;
Mentoring Research Teach us?&#13;
Practical Applications for the&#13;
Field.' Following the keynote,&#13;
conference workshops include&#13;
Fundraising for Mentoring&#13;
Programs, "The Power of&#13;
Mentoring Relationships," and&#13;
"A Practical Guide to Using&#13;
Evaluation to Improve Program&#13;
The conference is appropriate&#13;
tor educators, program leaders,&#13;
counselors, youth workers,&#13;
and any community members&#13;
interested in lear.&#13;
Premiere Movie Series: "The&#13;
Dark Knight"&#13;
12:00 PM to 2:20 PM&#13;
Student Center Cinema&#13;
Batman is back and once again&#13;
he's facing The Joker but this time&#13;
the clown with the bad taste in&#13;
clothes ain't jokin'. He's out to kill&#13;
the Dark Knight and anyone else&#13;
who gets in his way. Heath Ledger&#13;
is spectacularly evil as The Joker&#13;
in what should be an Academy&#13;
Award performance. Watch for&#13;
The Pencil Trick, stay away from&#13;
Gotham General Hospital and off&#13;
the ferryboats, and for goodness&#13;
sake don't go near the mayor's&#13;
office window! Oh, and avoid&#13;
two-faced politicians. You'll need&#13;
ear plugs~and seat be lts—for the&#13;
last 30 minutes because they are&#13;
loud (LOUD!) and the action is&#13;
furious. This is the best Batman&#13;
ever and you can see it free!&#13;
Premiere Movie Series: "The&#13;
Dark Knight"&#13;
7:00 PM \o 9:20 PM&#13;
Student Center Cinema&#13;
Parkside Theatre presents&#13;
Shakespeare's 'The Winter's&#13;
Tale'&#13;
7:30 PM to 10:00 PM&#13;
Wegner Theatre&#13;
Shakespeare's theatrical&#13;
masterpiece. The Winter's Talc'&#13;
is a story of jealousy, love and&#13;
penitence. In a jealous rage, the&#13;
king falsely accuses his pregnant&#13;
queen of infidelity. In his rage,&#13;
he loses both wife and child,&#13;
and orders the destruction of the&#13;
'bastard' babe. Even from the&#13;
coldness of this winter's tale,&#13;
the Bard provides a springtime&#13;
that will warm your heart—a&#13;
moving story about family and&#13;
forgiveness.&#13;
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6&#13;
Wisconsin Open Wrestling Meet&#13;
9:00 AM to 7:00 PM&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair&#13;
10:00 AM to 3:00 PM&#13;
Main Place/Main Concourse&#13;
A long-running southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois&#13;
holiday tradition, the University&#13;
of Wisconsin- Parkside Arts and&#13;
Crafts Fair, returns. Celebrating&#13;
its 34th year, the Fair is held along&#13;
the university's main concourse&#13;
and on all three levels of Main&#13;
Place in Wyllie Hall. Some 200&#13;
vendors will offer unique jewelry,&#13;
clothing, and holiday decorations&#13;
along with hand crafted metal and&#13;
wood items. A variety of striking&#13;
and beautiful floral arrangements&#13;
willbe offered as will unique gift&#13;
ideas not to be found anywhere&#13;
else. Proceeds from the 34th UWParkside&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair&#13;
fund student scholarships. Shop&#13;
'til you drop!&#13;
Women's basketball vs. Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
1:00 PM&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium, SAC&#13;
GO RANGERS!&#13;
Men's basketball vs. Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
3:00 PM&#13;
De Simone Gymnasium. SAC&#13;
GO RANGERS!&#13;
UW-Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
3:30 PM to 5:00 PM&#13;
Com. Arts D118&#13;
George Lindquist leads the UWParkside&#13;
Guitar Ensemble in an&#13;
afternoon of great string music.&#13;
Handel's "Messiah"&#13;
7:00 PM to 10:00 PM&#13;
Cathedral of St. John. Milwaukee&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Music Department&#13;
presents two performances of&#13;
Handel's masterwork "Messiah"&#13;
Saturday. Dec. 6, in Milwaukee,&#13;
and Sunday, Dec. 7. at the&#13;
Kenosha campus. The program&#13;
features the Voices of Parkside and&#13;
Master Singers, led by Dr. James&#13;
B. Kinchen. Best known for "The&#13;
Hallelujah Chorus" which has&#13;
brought audiences to their feet for&#13;
more than 250 years, Dr.Kinchcn&#13;
calls "Messiah" a "wonderful&#13;
piece of music" that "is as good&#13;
as people say it is." "Messiah"&#13;
tells the story of Jesus in three&#13;
movements. The first movement&#13;
is about the Messiah's birth with&#13;
soaring songs like "Every Valley&#13;
shall be Exalted" and "For unto&#13;
us a Child is Born."&#13;
Parkside Theatre presents&#13;
Shakespeare's 'The Winter's&#13;
Tale'&#13;
7:30 PM to 10:00 PM&#13;
Wegner Theatre&#13;
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7&#13;
Handel's "Messiah"&#13;
3:30 PM to 6:00 PM&#13;
Com. Arts Theatre&#13;
Intern with&#13;
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ARTS CUJJURE&#13;
The Ranger News December 2, 2008&#13;
heartbreak/ age/ to a circus&#13;
JOE DIEFENBACH&#13;
diefeOOl @uwp.edu&#13;
You know it is the last quarter&#13;
of the year when three of pop&#13;
music's biggest stars try to leave&#13;
a lasting impact on 2008. Kanye&#13;
West, The Killers, and Britney&#13;
Spears are striving for domination&#13;
ot the charts and your attention.&#13;
Kanye West takes his diehard&#13;
fans on a rollercoaster of a ride&#13;
with his experimental side on&#13;
808s &amp; Heartbreak. The usually&#13;
arrogant rapper takes a woeful&#13;
approach to his new project, after&#13;
the devastating experiences of his&#13;
mother's deadly plastic surgery&#13;
and breakup with his fiancee. In&#13;
addition to Kanye's therapeutic&#13;
writing influences, he takes a&#13;
blind stab at singing with the&#13;
help of Auto-Tune, a recording&#13;
technology made to cover-up&#13;
In Photos&#13;
mistakes. 808s &amp; Heartbreak's,&#13;
first two singles, "Heartless"&#13;
and "Love Lockdown", are&#13;
successful with the Auto-Tune.&#13;
Both are poignant tunes wrapped&#13;
in heartache getting help from the&#13;
powerful Roland TR-808 drum&#13;
machine, after half the album is&#13;
named. The drum effect is like&#13;
candy to the ear, with the tribal&#13;
beats ringing its sweet melody.&#13;
The song that resonated the&#13;
most with me was "Welcome&#13;
To Heartbreak", an intament&#13;
discussion of things that everyone&#13;
would want (kids, marriage),&#13;
but happen to slip away and the&#13;
realization that success mixed&#13;
with fame is not what as good as&#13;
it looks. 808s &amp; Heartbreak, may&#13;
disappoint those who expect the&#13;
same radio-friendly, repetitive&#13;
music that Kanye has presented&#13;
in the past. But to those open will&#13;
enjoy this portrait of pain and&#13;
well crafted artistry.&#13;
Moving on from heartache&#13;
to playful rock, Vegas-natives&#13;
The Killers are back with their&#13;
third album Day &amp; Age evolving&#13;
with a new-wave flavor, but never&#13;
abandoning their rock roots. You&#13;
can definitely hear The Killers&#13;
with their ringing anthems&#13;
paying major omige to their great&#13;
predecessors such as: Queen,&#13;
David Bowie, Elton John and&#13;
New Order. With the lead single,&#13;
"Human", it c aptures a thumping&#13;
energy; its electronic edge isn't&#13;
suffocating, but is lighthearted&#13;
and rollicking. Lead singer,&#13;
Brandon Flowers described the&#13;
song the best with his interview&#13;
with Rolling Stone Magazine,&#13;
"Johnny Cash meets the Pet Shop&#13;
Boys". Day &amp; Age is by far a&#13;
great progression for the band&#13;
well on their way on being one of&#13;
the best rock bands of our time.&#13;
With the songs like "Neon Tiger",&#13;
"A Dustland Fairytale" and "This&#13;
Is Your Life" are cherries on top&#13;
of a luscious line-up of alternative&#13;
goodness.&#13;
When you think about&#13;
Britney Spears, come on you can&#13;
admit it, you cannot deny that&#13;
her life is nothing short of a wild&#13;
Circus, a fitting title for her sixth&#13;
studio effort. We all know the&#13;
headlines of her divorce, mental&#13;
capacity and children. And you&#13;
would think after being under the&#13;
hellish glare of the media spotlight&#13;
she would want to address her&#13;
issues upfront, unfortunately&#13;
she barely touches on the tough&#13;
subjects. One exception is "Out&#13;
from Under", which expresses the&#13;
rawness of her pain with vague&#13;
lyrics like: "..and part of me still&#13;
believes when you say you're&#13;
gonna stick around and part of&#13;
me still believes we can find a&#13;
way to work it out". Why not just&#13;
scream his name with expletives&#13;
all around it?&#13;
The rest of Circus is back&#13;
to the pop basics, lots of glitz&#13;
and an insufficient amount of&#13;
substance. The fact is that Britney&#13;
seems less of a ring leader and&#13;
more of a marionette puppet,&#13;
with her strings being pulled for&#13;
her. Despite that minor pitfall, the&#13;
album is a collage of mediocre&#13;
dance songs, with the most&#13;
impactful hits being "Kill The&#13;
Lights" and "Unusual You" , both&#13;
produced by Timbaland protege,&#13;
Danja. If there is a lack of talent,&#13;
what is there to be entertained&#13;
by?&#13;
.Talentilialit 11.28.2008&#13;
Four man troop&#13;
RACHEL DE LEO N&#13;
eliteleona@yahoo.&lt;om&#13;
Room D118 was crowded&#13;
with an energetic audience. Both&#13;
the youthful and the elderly&#13;
wiggled excitedly in their seats for&#13;
the performance that was about&#13;
to take place. David Bayles, the&#13;
director of the featured program&#13;
introduced the upcoming song and&#13;
mentioned that he himself would&#13;
be one of the performers. As three&#13;
other men joined Mr. Bayles,&#13;
everyone eagerly awaited the&#13;
interesting percussion instruments&#13;
that silently stood before them.&#13;
"Temptation Revamp" was&#13;
performed first and was arranged&#13;
by the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. Parkside's Percussion Ensemble.&#13;
; - Thi's required the drums; played&#13;
by Mr. Bayles; the xylpphone,&#13;
played by Matt Tatlock; and the&#13;
marimba, played by both Adam&#13;
Gerlach and Paul Westfahl. It was&#13;
a bouncy, upbeat introduction for&#13;
these instruments, some of which&#13;
I h aven't heard since I was a kid.&#13;
To hear the xylophone again made&#13;
me smile and think back to when&#13;
I had a smaller model as a little&#13;
child. Next came a solo act done by&#13;
Mr. Westfahl and the vibraphone.&#13;
The song was titled "Music of&#13;
the Day", but the second that the&#13;
vibraphone was struck, I instantly&#13;
felt as if I was in a dream world.&#13;
The texture of the notes was thick&#13;
and mellow; everyone in the room&#13;
seemed to chill out in their seats.&#13;
Like a pebble hitting a pond, the&#13;
song would have a single high&#13;
pitch note, then elongated ripples&#13;
of gentle notes would tremor&#13;
afterwards.&#13;
Yet one particular&#13;
performance exploded forth&#13;
and racked everyone's minds.&#13;
It was the song, "Trio Per Uno"&#13;
composed by Nebojsa Jovan&#13;
Zivkovic and it already appeared&#13;
to be a special composition since&#13;
Mr. Bayles explained how the&#13;
song would be played. As the title&#13;
states, there are three separate&#13;
pieces combined into one; these&#13;
are called "movements" and that&#13;
each movement is completely&#13;
different from the last. While Mr.&#13;
Bayles was talking, the audience&#13;
began to perk up in their seats as&#13;
a giant drum was brought into&#13;
the center of the room. The first&#13;
movement began with the "bumbum-bum"&#13;
of the bass drum as&#13;
Mr. Westfahl, Mr. Tatlock, and''&#13;
Mr. Gerlach each took a pair of&#13;
huge sticks and pummeled in an&#13;
aggressive manner. The style of&#13;
drumming was Kodo: the Japanese&#13;
style of drumming. Many would&#13;
be familiar with this style since it&#13;
is known as "the drums of war",&#13;
sedn in multiple fantasy and&#13;
samurai movies whenever an epic&#13;
battle scene appeared. Instantly,&#13;
the crowd was captivated by the&#13;
warlike rhythm and some even&#13;
bobbed their heads to the beat.&#13;
Attached to the colossal drum&#13;
were the dwarfed bongos and&#13;
cymbal gongs that were placed&#13;
in front of each man. As the song&#13;
progressed, the rhythm grew&#13;
more complex and intense as each&#13;
percussionist switched from bass&#13;
drum to bongos to gongs within&#13;
seconds. Their arms were mere&#13;
blurs as they continued with the&#13;
intensity of a thousand warhorses&#13;
rampaging down the countryside.&#13;
Then without warning, the song&#13;
abruptly ended with a final&#13;
harsh blow upon the bass drum.&#13;
The audience went wild with&#13;
applause and cheers as the three&#13;
percussionists bowed.&#13;
With such an intense first&#13;
movement, the second gave time&#13;
for the musicians to rest their&#13;
burning arms. Movement Two&#13;
was a tranquil aftermath of a&#13;
fierce battle. The soothing tones&#13;
of the vibraphones made a solemn&#13;
comeback while chimes, cymbals,&#13;
and the rain stick chimed in.&#13;
Movement Three was a trinity of&#13;
union and division. This time the&#13;
three percussionists had their own&#13;
separate snare drums and tomtoms,&#13;
but they still performed&#13;
as it they were sharing the&#13;
same instrument. With the same&#13;
ferocity as the first movement, the&#13;
third one had a primal aspect to&#13;
it; along with drumming rapidly,&#13;
each man let out a yell, of which&#13;
the other two would echo back.&#13;
At the end, the entire four&#13;
man percussion troop joined&#13;
forces and played another poppy&#13;
song. What was interesting was&#13;
that as the song drew closer/to&#13;
ending, the rhythm increased&#13;
in speed. As the Percussion&#13;
Ensemble finished they were met&#13;
with a standing ovation by most&#13;
and uproarious clapping. &#13;
RANGERS SUFFER&#13;
OVERTIME LOSS&#13;
SAM ANDERSON&#13;
ander253@uwp.edu&#13;
The Rangers were leading with&#13;
°nly 34 minutes left in regulation before&#13;
the Robert Morris Eagles came back.&#13;
This was a non conference game played&#13;
at Loyola University in Chicago. The&#13;
Rangers t ied it up thanks to Amy Selk's&#13;
ljunSp shot that sent the game into an&#13;
overtime* This was just one of Selk's 14&#13;
points o n the game. The shot was not a&#13;
moment t oo soon as the Rangers needed&#13;
'he basket to stay in the game and try to&#13;
resurrect t heir once obvious lead.&#13;
Brittany Bever was the high scorer&#13;
tor the Rangers in this game with her&#13;
15 points and Katie Weiglein fouled&#13;
ou&#13;
t, but not before rebounding 11 shots.&#13;
Bie rebounds, though helpful, were&#13;
lot enough to counter the Ranger's 33&#13;
'"movers and the Eagle's 29 points that&#13;
were scored due to those turnovers.&#13;
Weiglein also managed an assist, a steal,&#13;
and a block in the game. Two free throws&#13;
turned out to be the deciding factor in the&#13;
game, however, as the Eagles sealed the&#13;
71-69 victory by sinking both with only&#13;
one second left on the clock.&#13;
This was a stunning upset as Amanda&#13;
Gibson gave the Rangers a glimmer of&#13;
hope by landing a three point shot just 3&#13;
seconds prior to the forced free, throws&#13;
to tie up the game, it was an impressive&#13;
effort, as the Rangers only made'6 .of&#13;
their 13 3-point attempts and managed&#13;
26 of their 62 shots on the basket Robert&#13;
Morris only managed 5 of their 26 3- point&#13;
attempts and an even less impressive 22&#13;
of their 66 shots were completed.&#13;
The Rangers' first home game will&#13;
be held Thursday, December 4th versus&#13;
Kentucky Wesylan and will be their first&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference game of&#13;
the year. &#13;
6 The Ranger News December 2, 20QA&#13;
. DThe &gt;4 Ranger&#13;
vNews&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
Intern with us!&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
offers an internship&#13;
opportunity for any&#13;
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OPlRTONS&#13;
I EDITOR I&#13;
I repeal: The eu/lomer IS&#13;
AlUlflYS WROIIG.&#13;
CODY G. HOIDEN&#13;
ydo&lt;nedloh@yahoo.&lt;om&#13;
A week ago I posted an article halfheartedly&#13;
r anting about the raucous crowds&#13;
show up to retailers on Black Friday&#13;
and the frustrations that retail employees&#13;
deal with throughout the year. I came home&#13;
from work this past Friday and turned on&#13;
television only to discover that the&#13;
article did have some truth to it after all. A&#13;
Val-Mart employee from Queens, NY was&#13;
trampled to death by a group of stampeding&#13;
customers trying to get their hands on $400&#13;
Hat screen television sets and $69 digital&#13;
ameras. These door buster sales lived up to&#13;
their name as some two-thousand customers&#13;
literally k nocked down the entrance doors&#13;
)f the Wal-Mart, stepping over the man who&#13;
hey kil led while pushing other employees&#13;
out of the way who tried to help him. In&#13;
order to a fford all of those great sale items;&#13;
these customers choose to sell their souls in&#13;
lieu of being decent human beings.&#13;
I would truly hate to be the recipient of&#13;
me of those $9 DVDs that was purchased&#13;
only moments after its buyer stepped over&#13;
i employee's lifeless body just to beat the&#13;
rash of the customers behind them. It's like&#13;
receiving drug money in a birthday card; nice&#13;
I gesture, but it isn't clean. Perhaps some of&#13;
those buyers went home and decided to give&#13;
that 50-inch screen television set to their son&#13;
I or daughter e arly. Maybe they came home&#13;
ad plugged it in early enough to see the&#13;
tiagedy that unfolded right under their feet.&#13;
For them, Christmas is now saved because&#13;
they got this wonderful deal on a television&#13;
set the whole family can enjoy. They should&#13;
be thankful they are able to go home to their&#13;
families, as Jdimytai Damour, the Wal-Mart&#13;
employee from Queens, can not.&#13;
According to a police report, a 28-year&#13;
old pregnant woman was also trampled&#13;
amongst this heartless crowd. She and the&#13;
baby were reported to be doing fine, but if&#13;
makes you wonder: what in the hell is wrong&#13;
with people? As I mentioned in my previous&#13;
article, I've been in retail for a long time.&#13;
I've honestly witnessed family members&#13;
get physical over a toy. I've seen complete&#13;
strangers pushing each&#13;
other just to get a damn fgSfiS&#13;
DVD player. Seriously,&#13;
consider the safety of&#13;
others before you think&#13;
of how much your *&#13;
nephew could really use&#13;
that item. It is absolutely&#13;
ridiculous. &lt;&#13;
Probably the most&#13;
disheartening report&#13;
out of the Wal-Mart&#13;
incident aside ftom an&#13;
innocent man losing his&#13;
life over a temporary&#13;
price markdown were&#13;
the customer reactions.&#13;
Witness Kimberly Cribbs&#13;
described the customers&#13;
as acting like "savages." claiming that many&#13;
continued to shop after complaining about&#13;
being in line since Thursday morning. 1&#13;
realize how frustrating that must be, but...&#13;
YOU WERE JUST INVOLVED IN A&#13;
MURDER! Where are your morals?&#13;
Police continued to review the footage&#13;
through Saturday in hope of discovering any&#13;
and all parties responsible for the death of the&#13;
34-year-old employee. Hopefully the police&#13;
force can inherit enough evidence to lock up&#13;
as many of those callous individuals as they&#13;
possibly can. But in the end. the employee's&#13;
family are the ones who are really punished&#13;
as they have one less family member in the&#13;
name of this 'glorious* annual tradition.&#13;
December 2, 2008&#13;
BAD IffillD&#13;
GEORGE LASLEY&#13;
Lasle000@uwp.edu&#13;
Here at the University&#13;
of Wiseonsin-Parkside, there&#13;
are many different ethnicities.&#13;
1 here is a competitive spirit&#13;
here on campus within those&#13;
Don't Let&#13;
This Be You.&#13;
Get your flu shot... today.&#13;
Stop by an Aurora QuickCare.&#13;
No appointment necessary.&#13;
Flu vaccines for $30&#13;
Pneumonia vaccines for $45&#13;
Aurora QuickCare Locations:&#13;
Open days, evenings and weekends&#13;
Kenosha • Inside Piggly Wiggly, 262-553-9325&#13;
Racine • Inside Aurora Pharmacy, 262-639-6409&#13;
Aurora QuickCare is supported by&#13;
Aurora Health Care's extensive network&#13;
of physicians and facilities. For more&#13;
information, call 1-877-QUICK02 or&#13;
visit www.Aurora.org/QuickCare.&#13;
)p in and men&#13;
his ad to receive&#13;
FREE P'«a cu&#13;
"&#13;
While wpp"^&#13;
ice vou must present your insurance c°a&#13;
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rd&#13;
0&#13;
*i&#13;
yS^^ C9Aurora QuickCare&#13;
A visit ranges in price from $49-IW. we accey..&#13;
,,,wv&#13;
'''"7. j ' „ car4 Prices of tests, vaccines&#13;
of your service If using insurance, you must presen ^y ^ or Q|der tQ receive vaccines.&#13;
screenings may vary. Patients must be 6 months or oiaer, a y&#13;
*&gt;81057 (11/08) ©AHC &#13;
cX»&#13;
HEY GOOD-LOOKING,&#13;
WHATS COOKING?&#13;
YOU Nte CRGAUN6 &amp;&#13;
vHosmx uxx.^&#13;
oblMkMT.&#13;
TAKL O ff W OPlH£5&#13;
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'c«KfApx£&gt;M!i &gt;&#13;
ftv\£.?4 W- Mo CLOTHES 1&#13;
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fLMvGcflLNG TO &lt;?0&#13;
UMG XM m wcot&gt;S,&#13;
Send us your&#13;
Email us at&#13;
rangernews@gmail.&lt;om&#13;
Send us you press releases, news, tips, and opinions!&#13;
Email us at rangernews@gntail.&lt;om&#13;
DON'T JEOPARDIZE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER.&#13;
Contact Attorney Jon G. Mason, LLC&#13;
Poor judgment can be "fatal" to your future.&#13;
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Our law firm can help!&#13;
Over 30 years experience.&#13;
Madrigrano, Aiello &amp; Santarelli, LLC&#13;
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December 2, 200ft 8 The Ranger News&#13;
The Blazing Kattz by Katie Walter&#13;
[walte02l@uwp.edu |&#13;
Onionkind by Sam Spahn&#13;
[spahn001@uwp.edu]&#13;
Elemental Eye by Dan Wanezek&#13;
[drwartist@yahoo.com]&#13;
HEY KATT BLAZE!&#13;
WAKE UP! </text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>English</text>
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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="88232">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Text</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>black friday</name>
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        <name>cross country</name>
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      <tag tagId="2766">
        <name>diversity</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3422">
        <name>talent show</name>
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</itemContainer>
