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University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
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Issue
Volume 9, issue 8
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UWPAC124 Ranger News
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W University of Wisconsin - Porkside 'anger
Thursday, October 23, 1980
Running against Aspin
Vol. 9 -No. 8
Canary wants change in representative seat
by Ken Meyer
Editor
Republican Kathy Canary, a
small-business woman and
presently supervisor in Delavan,
is challenging incumbent
Democrat Les Aspip for his seat in
the U.S. House of Representatives.
Canary was an assistant to
Congressman Henry Schadeburg
in 1967 and has been a member of
the Small Business Administration
Advisory Council for
11 years. She is currently chairperson
of the council.
"I've worked on local government
for four years," said Canary
during a recent visit to Parkside,
"so I think the combination of
having worked in Washington and
understanding the importance of
the function of local government
gives me a strong background to
go to Washington."
Canary won the Sept. 9
Republican primary over three
opponents after a late campaign
start on June 25. "Although the
hour was late," said Canary, "the
issues were there and there was
an opportunity to win the primary.
As I watched their (opponents)
campaigns move along, I felt that
they just weren't gaining the
momentum, the speed and all the
things that are involved in having
a victory."
"So we had an unconventional
race," said Canary, "because so
many times they're months and
months long and people spend
upwards of $80,000 on the race.
But we (campaigned) 76 days and
only spent $12,000. We had an
example of a real grass-roots
campaign where we came back
with friends, neighbors and family
and everybody got involved in the
campaign."
After her victory Sept. 9 Canary
went to Washington and participated
in the Capitol steps
ceremony. There, all the
Republicans who were in office or
were running for office met with
Ronald Reagan and George Bush
and made certain pledge to the
American people of cutting taxes,
reducing inflation and achieving
higher employment.
Said Canary of her opponent Les
Aspin: "Philosophically, we're
separate. He believes the
government holds the solutions,
can answer your problems, can
give the direction. I believe we
have to return to individual rights
and individual liberties. And we
can't have,those unless we have
economic liberties. The size of t he
government has to pull back and
the cost to the taxpayers has to be
reduced."
The size of t he government can
be pulled back, says Canary,
through better management and
by business people going to
Washington. "I have a list from
the Government Accounting
Office of $34 billion worth of
spending that's strictly in the area
of waste, fraud, misuse and
mismanagement. So we're talking
here not about cutting out
necessary programs, but
programs that, as pointed out by
the government, contain waste,
fraud, misuse and mismanagement."
"If I didn't think it was still
possible to pull back the size of the
government," said Canary, "I
wouldn't go to Washington. But I
believe that it is possible. I think
we have a real opportunity, so
when I talk to the apathetic voter,
I say, 'Look, there's a reason to
vote. Vote for me. Go one more
time. Let's do it together — the n
hold me accountable. Check in two
years.' If people are not fulfilling
Election results
P.S.G.A. Senatorial elections were held Oct. 15 - 16. The top nine
vote getters of the 10 candidates are the new senators:
DAVE HABEGGER-197
CHRIS HAMMELEV-194
RANDY KLEES -174
KATHY BAMBROUGH -166
RENEE GILLMORE-165
JAMES DOUCETTE-157
TODD LASZEWSKI -151
ERIC KLINKHAMMER -144
CHARLES PERCE-138
LOUIS VALDEJULI -124
INSIDE...
• 'Absent Friends' opens
• Review: "Private Benjamin"
• Tennis - third at state
KATHY CANARY,
the promoises that they made to
you while they were running for
election, fire' them."
"Les Aspin has had 10 years in
office," said Canary. "Ten years
to make changes and to improve
your life. What has happened? He
hasn't demonstrated the
leadership to do that. Seniority is
not the major factor in Congress
Senate race
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl
Republican nominee for 1st District Representative.
anymore — now it's clout and
leadership. And Les Aspin has not
demonstrated that."
One of the major problems we
have today is voter apathy, said
Canary. People blame the
government for the problem yet
they keep looking to the government
for the solution. "And yet
what do they get from the
politicians over the years?"
Canary asked. "Lip service,
political double-talk, political
rhetoric saying 'I'll cut taxes, I'll
reduce spending, I'll pqll the size
of the government back' and yet it
doesn't occur."
Canary believes voters are very
serious about politicians'
Continued On Page Six
Kasten challenges Nelson
by Susan J. Aluise
"I feel that Gay lord Nelson has
been in office 18 years and he's no
longer concerned or aware of the
problems facing working men and
women in the state of Wisconsin ..
. I feel he has lost touch with the
people of the state of Wisconsin
and that they understand that
there is a need for a change, a
need for new blood, a need for new
ideas."
That is the reason Robert
Kasten gives for his challenge to
incumbent Gaylord Nelson in the
race for United States Senate.
Kasten, who is 38 and has an
MBA from Columbia School of
Business, has a great deal of
government experience. He was
elected to the Wisconsin State
Senate in 1972 and in 1974 he was
elected 9th District Congressman.
In Congress, Kasten sat on the
Small Business Bommittee, the
Government Operations Committee
and the Select Committee
on Intelligence. After being
defeated by Lee Dreyfus in the
1978 Republican primary, Kasten
became a partner in a real estate
investment business in
Milwaukee.
Recognizing that inflation and
unemployment are the two most
critical issues facing the United
States and the state of Wisconsin,
Kasten has proposed a multi-step
program to ease the burden and
solve the problem. "Step number
one," Kasten said, "is across the
board tax cuts for businesses,
small businesses, farms and individuals.
Step two, I'm calling for
regulatory reform. I think we
need massive governmental
regulatory reform to stop the
growth of the regulators as well as
the regulations. Number three,
I'm in favor of balancing the
federal budget and I will work for
a balanced budget by voting
against individual programs. I
will work for a balanced budget by
voting for a total balanced budget
resolution and I also support a
constitutional amendment for a
balanced budget."
One issue of great controversy
is military strength and how the
United States can maintain
adequate defense capabilities.
Kasten sees a strong defense as
being of primary importance in
preserving world peace. "I feel
that the United States can lead the
entire world toward peace only
from a position of strength or
parity," he said. "I believe that
we want to make the volunteer
army work and so we've got to pay
them. I would support military
pay raises and I would support
increases for the reserves and the
active duty personnel ... On the
other hand, I would also support
the cruise missile ... a new
carrier, so that we would have a
fleet in the Mediterranean and I
would support increased efforts
toward tactical conventional
armaments."
The Cuban refugee situation has
generated extreme concern of
many people in Wisconsin, particularly
in light of the large
numbers of criminals who seem to
have been sent here. Kasten feels
that "I believe that they (the
criminals) should have been
identified and separated and we
should have returned these people
to Cuba ... If Castro would refuse
to take these criminals back
through normal diplomatic
channels, I would fly a plane down
to Guantanamo and let them out
the front door."
Kasten also seems to have a
clear cut stand on a very controversial
issue — abortion. "I'm
opposed to abortion and I consistently
voted for the Hyde
Amendment, which prohibited
federal funding for abortion . . . I
would vote for a constitutional
amendment banning all abortion
if I am elected."
In the potentially explosive
Iranian-Iraqi war, Kasten feels
the wisest stance by the U.S.
government is one of neutrality.
"I don't believe that our country
should be involved on either side
of this conflict," he said. "If either
party were to obstruct the shipment
of oil to the free world we,
working with our NATO and
Japanese allies, would have to
guarantee passage of the oil
tankers through that important
area of the world."
Thursday, October 23,1980
A vote for Anderson not necessarily a waste There is less than two wweeeekkss lleefftt fienol AAnaAmmUnMM J • _ 1
until the Presidential election and
the result is still a toss - up. The
only major change since the
parties' conventions has been
John Anderson's predicted drop in
the polls. x
Jimmy Carter and Ronald
Reagan have campaigned evenly
and neither can claim an easy
victory on Nov.* 4. This election
will be decided during the last few
days of the campaign when the
large number of u ndecided voters
— nearly one - third — will make
up their minds and the many weak
supporters will switch their
support to the less objectional
candidate at that time.
Having to choose the lesser of
the two evils was the reason
behind Anderson launching his
independent campaign after his
failure to catch on in the
Republican primaries. He never
had much of a chance of taking the
GOP nomination away from
Reagan. Anderson's blend of
fiscal conservatism and social
liberalism didn't mix with the
right - wing mood of his party.
When Anderson launched his
independent quest for the
presidency in late April, he faced
many insurmountable tasks. But
he achieved what many experts
deemed impossible: he collected
two million signatures on petitions
to put his name on the ballot in
every state.
Money was the major problem
for Anderson from the start. He
has collected more than $8
million, but both Carter and
Reagan received $29 million
without any of the fund - raising
that Anderson's forces had to do.
That enables Carter and Reagan
to concentrate on more important
things, such as name calling and
mud slinging.
A la ck of fu nds means the lack
of commercials and advertising.
A politician with no TV money has
no chance of winning in the media
- oriented campaigns of today.
A column of
personal opinion
by
by Ken Meyer, Editor
To add to the setbacks: Anderson,
once at 20% in t he opinion
polls, was in a Catch - 22 dilemma
where most voters wouldn't vote
for him unless they were convinced
he had a chance of winning.
But he had no chance of
winning unless enough voters
backed him in the polls so other
voters would think he could win.
I, personally, respect Anderson
for bucking the system and for
sticking out until the end.
Hopefully his "national unity"
campaign will have wide -
sweeping effects on our political
system of th e two parties and the
primaries. Both of them need an
overhaul, and if Anderson gives a
decent showing on Nov. 4, i t will
reflect that fact.
But will he do well enough? Or
will his slipping support drop even
further when people won't want to
"waste" their vote on a spoiler*'
But who is there to spoil? The
failure of Carter and Reagan to
attract much more than 35% in the
polls indicates that about two -
thirds of the people are opposed to
each or both of them.
Now it's up to each Anderson
supporter to decide which path to
take. They can either register a
protest vote and stick with Anderson
or concede the point that
he has no chance of winning and
choose the lesser of the two evils.
Hopefully enough Anderson
supporters will not want to regret
having helped select Ronald
Reagan or Jimmy Carter. A big
enough protest vote is just what
we need to show Congress that the
people want to change the
ridiculous system in which we
choose our presidential nominees.
Anthropology Club describes past and future events
To the Editor:
To begin with I would like to
thank Chavez Epps (current
President of the Minority Student
Union), for creating what I hope is
a trend. As most of us know
student participation here at
Parkside is LESS tlian adequate.
As we progress into the academic
year I would hope that the Ranger
will create a "Club Corner" so
clubs could communicate to
students the various academic
and social events taking place.
The expressed purpose of this
letter is to aquaint students with
the glories of past Anthropology
Club events and to inform conclub
events.
Anthropolgy is a "holistic
science encompassing all
disciplines within its scope. Anthropology
club has tried to do the
same. We have in the past
sponsored such distinguished
faculty as Dr. Francis Jennings.
Who at the time was the director
of the Newberry Library in
Chicago. His book The Invasion of
American is an excellent
discusstion of the Euro - American
encroachment on Native
American soils. Dr. Jennings is a
noted historian.
But Dr. Jennings is not an
unusual case for example we have
sponsored Dr. Michael Agar who
at the time was the first anthropologist
to study the drug
culture. His book Ripping and
Running is an excellent
ethnographic presentation of the
life of a Heroin addict.We have
also sponsored Dr. Alfred Crosby.
Dr. Crosby spoke to Parkside
students on "Epidemics and
Human History". The session was
attended by many of the pre - med
students and faculty. His book The
Columbian Exchange is one of the
few texts to discuss the biological
and cultural consequences of 1492.
There are more like Dr. Henry F.
Dobyns and Nancy 0. Lowrey
both outstanding academians.
But our greatest year to date
was last year. In which thanks to
SOC members and Soc. - Anthro.
faculty we sent eight students to
the Society For Applied An-
Jjitecei^..meetines in genvery,
Six of these Anthropolgy students
had prepared and presented their
papers at this conference. Including
our faculty and guests
Parkside's delegation was one of
the largest attending the
meetings. Later in the year the
President of the Society for Applied
Anthropology called
Parkside's Applied Anthropology
programs one of the best undergraduate
programs in the
country. Because of the lack of
publicity I would like to list the
presentors with the titles of their
papers.
1) Cheryl A. Last, "Reservation
- Based Tourism and Energy
Development: New Survey
Findings From The Arizona
Strip".
2) David B. Halmo, "Applied
Archeology in the Development of
a Native American Tourism
Program".
3) Sally A. C. Wood,
"Educational Hiking Trails:
Attracting Arizoha Strip Tourists
and Providing Them on Alternative
Historic Perspective".
4) Danny L. Rasch, "Applied
Visual Anthropology: The Use of
Videotape & Still Photography for
Native American Cultural
Preservation & Tourism".
5) Florence Jensen, "Campus
And Prisons: Are They Compatible?"
6) Carole Trolle, "Consequences
of a Deficiency Preliminary
E n v i r o n m e n t a l R e p o r t :
.University ... Campus Recommended
As A Site For Correctional
Facilities".
Also a note of thanks to Dr.
Richard W. Stoffle who chaired
the symposium of the first four
papers, and to Dr. Florence
Shipek whose Social Impact
Assessment course was the
vehicle for data gathering for the
last two papers. Also a special
thanks goes to Assistant Vice
Chancellor Carla Stoffle whose
efforts cannot be overlooked in the
success of the symposium.
As our past was indeed exciting
so too will be our future. The
Anthropology Club refuses to rest
on their past. This year's "Latin
American Speaker Series" will
provide insite to this potential
p o l i t i c a l l y i m p o r t a n t
geographical area.
The so called "Third World
Countries" are on the dawn of
recognition by all U. S. citizens.
Our first speaker was Dr. Thomas
G. Sanders (on October 8th which
the Ranger failed to mention).
The topic for Dr. Sanders lecture
was "Population Issues and
Policies In Latin America". This
was indeed an interesting session
lasting for two and a half hours!
Our second speaker continues in
the holistic pattern. Dr. Margo
Smith will present two different
lectures in the same day. The first
a vitally important issue to all
Behavioral Science Students "Job
Opportunites in Anthropolgy and
Related Fields". This session will
be held in Moln. Ill at noon.
The second lecture entitled
"Women In Latin America:
Migrants in Lima, Peru. This
session will be held in Moln. 105 at
two p. m. Our third speaker will be
here November sixth and seventh.
He is Dr. Paul Aspelin a noted
Brazilianist. Dr. Aspelin will be
particularly interesting because
he will have just returned from
the field (Brazil). Dr. Aspelin's
lecture is entitled "Managing
Human Rights: Economic
Development arid the Disappearance
of Brazilian Indians".
The lecture will be held Nov. 6th at
1:00 in GR. 103.
Then on November the seventh
Dr. Aspelin will lead a discussion
"Public and Private Policies
Effecting Poor People". The main
issue of this presentation will be a
discussion on activism. The fourth
speaker in the series will be from
Parkside. Dr. Carlos Boker
(communication) will hold a
public lecture on ethnographic
film making. He will also show the
documentary film he made in
Panamar
The second semester's speaker
list has not been completed but,
we will be hosting two field trips.
The first to the Newberry Library
in Chicago. The second field trip
we will visit Old World Wisconsin
in Eagle Lake, WI. Both of these
events should be fun and a great
learning experience.
In conclusion, I would like to
thank Dr. Lillian Trager our club
advisor for all of the extra hours
she puts in on the club. Also a big
thanks goes out to Dr. Richard W.
Stoffle and Dr. Florence Shipek
who both help maintain a
professional atmosphere when
working with students. And last
but not least the_ students whose
efforts can never be taken lightly.
We have among the students in
Anthropology Club a high regard
for education. Most of our
students spend 50 to 75 dollars for
scholarly journals. This is their
own money. This type of
dedication cannot go
unrecognized. I hope that in future
editions of the Ranger other
students will present their interests
and achievements.
Danny L. Rasch
Anthropology Club President.
Write a
letter
to
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ganger
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AD REPS
If you're interested, stop by our office
(next to the, Coffee Shoppe) or
Phone 553-2295
ganger
Ken Meyer
Brian Pollanrl editor
Dan Galbraith Executive Business Manager
Sue Michetti Business Manager
Wendy Westphai Editor
Dave Cramer Feature Editor
Mike Holmdohl Sports Editor
Mike Farrell, Bruce Preston Ah • h?.t0 Edit0r
Advertising Managers
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LeLuisara5f.r« I5ar2n Char,ton' Thomas Delany, Patty
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uw p^kside and they are solely
RANGER is printed^ylhe Union CooDwal*'ido ^ except during breaks and holidays,
Written permission is reJuiS ,or r«rTnfo(Vae Publis,hing Co- ^nosha, Wisconsin.
All correspondence should be ad^resslrt V T"?" °f RANGER
Parkside, Kenosha, WI 53141. ddressed t0- Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpaper
with one^n^^margjns6Abetters rnust doub,esPaced on standard size
for verification. u designed and a telephone number included
Deadline for letters ?s'^Tuesd^y'at m°Sf Max^um length accepted is S00 words]
reserves all editorial privileges in ,Z, Publication on Thursday. The RANGER
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or
Voluntarism vital in Wis. campaign
bv Susan Miohn«ti "
RANGER Thursday, October 23, 1980
by Susan Michetti
John Maclver, a Milwaukee
«!' 5?-y •is co " chairman of
the Wisconsin Reagan - Bush
Campaign, spoke on "You're
Stepping on My Grass Roots or S°ef, Y,oluntary O rganization
Really Matter?" at the Wisconsin
Political Science Convention here
on October 10.
According to Maclver, exercising
voluntarism becomes more
significant in determining the
results of the Presidentital
elections since Eisenhower was
elected.
He said that voluntarism gains
increased importance because of
the low projected voter turn - out'
in the 1980 election. Therefore
political effort which is organized
to get more voters out becomes
more significant.
"Depth of support is shallow in
this election," Maclvers said.
More voters are undecided, which
means that campaign techniques
that appear to be meaningful to
the voter may have a greater
impact on him or her according to
Maclver.
"For the first time under the
spending laws, there are some
controls being put on the amount
of paid political advertising," said
Maclver. "Here again alternative
methods of reaching the voter
become more important."
"In Wisconsin voluntarism is
even more significant than it
might be in other states," said
Maclver. "Look at the states that
run in a line basically along the
Ohio Valley and loop up (don't
include Illinois) and go directly to
the West Coast, covering Minnesota
all the way out to Oregon
and Washington, and you will find
JOHN MaclVER
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti
states where voluntarism is important
and patronage is not
important. Wisconsin is a prime
example... where there isn't a lot
of patronage, (so) the volunteers
"efforts can be very meaningful."
"In the Reagan - Bush campaign,"
said Maclver, "we have
tried to structure a voluntary
effort which ... is focusing almost
entirley on the undecided . . .
(voter) in a combination door to
door and telephone effort which is
underway right now." Maclver
expects that the volunteers will
reach between 225,000 and 250,000
voter residences.
Maclver believes that a
volunteer appearing at a door,
identifying himself or herself as a
volunteer, not pretending to be the
expert, and handing a well
prepared issue piece to the
resident, speaks well showing
commitment and enthusiasm for
his candidate in the 1980 elections.
National security challenges free speech
by Sue Michetti
Samuel Day, Jr., Managing
Editor of The Progressive and
formerly Editor of The Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists, spoke about
First Amendment Rights at the
Wisconsin Political Science
Association Convention here on
October 10.
Day said that the U. S. vs. The
Progressive was a unique case
because it was the first time in the
history of the U. S. that the
government succeeded temporarily
in preventing free speech
by prior restraint on the grounds
of national security.
Howard Morland undertook a
reporting assignment to sketch in
the details about what goes on in
the hydrogen bomb industry. Day
said, "He soon discovered that the
proprietors of information, the
Department of Energy, were in
the habit of deferring hard
questions with the magic words
that 'It is secret data and
therefore the law prevents us
from telling you about the
plutonium emission rate because
if we did then you could take that
data and deduce what the
plutonium reduction rates are and
that is a military secret.' " The
mere citation of the concept of
secrecy awes and satisfies most
people.
However, Morland was not put
TV station
good
investment
An investment in a television
station earned Grinnell College
$35 million in four years. The
small Iowa liberal arts school
bought station WDPN in
Dayton, Ohio, four years ago as a
hedge against rising costs and
declining enrollment. Trustees
risked one-quarter of Grinnell's
endowment and borrowed more
than $5 million to buy the station
in 1976, then sold WDPN for $50
million to the Hearst Corporation.
off. He read the material in the
Congressional Records and the
Senate Arms Hearing Committee
testimony.
"Morland's mission changed,"
Day said, "into a story to try to
demonstrate that the misuse of
secrecy in the hydrogen bomb
program was to suit the
bureaucracy which has interest in
the growth of that industry."
Day said that Morland showed
how an ordinary person without
any scientific training could, in
fact, come up with the deepest,
darkest secret —• how to build a
hydrogen bomb. He operated
under two rules to demonstrate
that this material was within the
public domain: he never looked at
any classified documents — o nly
the public record, and he always
identified himself as a reporter.
Day explained that there is no
reason why anyone should fear
spilling secrets. He said that the
only reason for secrecy is to
discourage the public itself from
asking questions about what is
going on in this very important and
very dangerous public program.
Day said that the public ought not
to be intimidated from asking
questions.
Day said that before publication
the story fell into the hands of one
of the friends of a scientific advisor
who was sent the material to
double check the scientific facts.
The Dept. of Energy confirmed
the accuracy of the story and then
asked The Progressive not to
publish it.
The Dept. of Energy was told
that changing so much as a single
word of technical information
would destroy the point that there
are no secrets, and that The
Progressive didn't agree with
their framework that national
security was involved.
There was an injunction but the
government abandoned the case
because it stirred up so much
interest by both the public andihe
media.
Day said that the government
can't exercise prior restraint in
such a case as The Progressive,
but that it would be different if the
story were about the sailing of a
troop ship in wartime which would
be directly linked to national
security.
Day made the point that
freedom of speech will be lost if it
is not exercised.
FIRST
'National Bank
of Kenosha
DOWNTOWN
AAAIN OFFICE
AUTO BANK
24 HOUR TELLER
BRISTOL
PLEASANT PRARIE
SOME as
Phono 658-2331
MEMBER F.D.I.C.
Parking policy changed
by Susan Michetti
Green parking permit
holders can now start parking
their cars in the Union and
Communication Arts parking
lots after 1 p. m. instead of
waiting until 3 p. m. as in the
past, according to Ronald
Brinkmann, Director of
Campus Security.
Since this will be effective
for the remainder of the school
year, the parking entrance
sign has already been changed
to reflect this fact. The change
should aid students who have
both afternoon and evening
classes.
Brinkmann said that this
change is most likely due to
the combination of class
scheduling and the one hour
activity period from 1 - 2p . m.
on Mondays, Wednesdays, and
Fridays.
Career workshop to be held
Student Development and
Community Student Services are
offering a Career Planning
Seminar for students who want
some help in making career
decisions/Students who attend the
seminar will evaluate their
values, personal characteristics,
interests and skills and learn how
to relate this informaion to occupational
decisions. The seminar
will also cover methods and
sources for career research.
The Career Planning Seminar
will be from 1 p.m. to 1:50 p.m. on
October 27 , 28 and November 3, 5,
10 and 12.
Enrollment in the workshop
will be limited. Students interested
in participating should call 553-
2573 and talk to either Wendi
Schneider or Barbara Larson
before October 22.
Citizens utility group formed
The Citizens Utility Board has
begun publishing a statewide
newspaper, CUB Prints.
"One reason the citizens of
Wisconsin established CUB was
because we need information
about energy issues and about
who is making energy decisions.
Over 5,000 Wisconsin residents —
the current CUB members — will
receive this newspaper and begin
this vital process of communication,"
said Hector de la
Mora, vice - chairman of the interim
board of directors of CUB.
The Citizens Utility Board will
conduct a statewide membership
drive this fall. Wisconsin residents
throughout the state will receive a
membership application with
their November telephone bill.
Membership is expected to reach
25,000 by the end of the year.
The first elections for CUB
directors will be held by mail
ballot in January. To vote or run
for office, you must join CUB.
Nomination papers are available
at the CUB office, P. O. Box 8003,
Madison 53708. For further information,
call CUB, 608-255-2971.
The Marx Bros.
DUCK SOUP
Hail! Hail! Fredonia!
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 30
7:00 p.m.
Admission:
$1.00 from Club members
$1.50 at the door
UNION
CINEMA
- THEATRE SPONSORED BY SWIM CLUB
ic Tanning
^Studios LTD.
1736 -22nd Ave. 551-9568
1st VISIT FREE
Tan Year Round
4 Thursday, October 23,1980 RANGER
Magic comes to stage From the Parking Lot
The first concert of the 1980-81
season on the New Music at
Parkside series at the University
o f " Wisconsin - Parkside will be
presented on Sunday, November
2,1980, in the Communication Arts
Theatre. The featured work will
be Maurice Ravel's Piano Trio,
performed by the Oriana Trio: S.
KENOSHA
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
KENOSHA SAVINGS
& LOAN ASSOCIATION '
To make your
future look
much brighter..
Captive Audience
In Old Market Square
Casual Clothes for Men and Women
• Designer Jeans by
Calvin Klein, Sassoon, Jordache, Bon Jour, Chic
• Shirts • Bib Overalls
• Sweaters • Blazers
• Cords • Accessories
We're open come in and browse soon.
Old Market Square on South Sheridan Rd., 694-8808
Shop daily 9:30 to 9,
Saturday 9 to 5
Sunday 12 to 5
by Wendy Westphal
Have you ever experienced the
magic of the stage? Where a
wooden floor is suddenly tilted, a
brick wall stands instead of a
concrete wall, and a bare space is
now a comfortable living room?
All this has happened to the stage
in the Communication Arts
Theatre to prepare for Alan Ayckbourn's
Absent Friends.
The cast has been rehearsing
constantly. They are: Andrew
Brhel of Cudahy as Colin, the
central character; Scott
Reichelsdorf of Kenosha as Paul,
the host; Patricia Casciaro of
Kenosha as Diana, his wife; and
Mary Beth Kelleher and Robert
Cash, both of Kenosha and
Rebecca Julich of Racine, as the
other guests. Director Leon Van
Dyke has been preparing them for
this opportune moment to create
laughter.
With all the preparation going
on, the most important part of th e
theatre was left bare: the
audience. This is where you are
casted. Absent Friends opens
tonight through Oct. 25 at 8 p.m.
and Oct. 26 at 2 p.m. Tickets are
$2.00 for students, senior citizens,
and UW-P faculty and staff ; $3.50
for the general public. Reservations
can be made by calling
553-2345 or 553-2042.
Fill in the
blank ethnic jokes
by G. Helgeson
Fill in the blanks. You win
absolutely nothing, no matter how
clever you are.
--In our town, there is a —
who found himself
locked in his car and had to break
three windows before he could get
out.
section.
They're building diving boards
over the cesspools.
-Where to the
— keep their armies? (Up their
sleevies.)
How did the
— A in our
— drown while getting a drink of
water? (The toilet lid fell on his
head.)
town was never able to develop a
liking for — s.
So, I was surprised one day to see
the ~ give *
coin to a monkey perched on the
shoulder of an organ grinder. "I
thought you.didn't like —
1 s," I said. "That's
true," replied the
. " But they are so cute when
they're little." _
— A was
— A s mart ,
dumb — , and
Santa Claus started walking
toward a $100 bi ll. Which one got
it? (The dumb
—. T he other two are fictional.)
— In the suburbs of a large city
there's a project going on in the —
hired to paint the center stripe
down the middle of a new highway.
The first day he completed
three miles of stripe, the second
day he completed two miles, and
the third day, only one mile.
Noting the difference, the
superintendent asked for an explanation.
"I dunno," puzzled the
: . "I guess it
just kept getting farther to go
back to that can of paint."
is
someone who in Easter will
dye Easter eggs white.
-- Why don't —s
eat M & M's? (Because they're too
hard to peel.)
REALIZING every wife's dream, Diana, played by Patricia
Casciaro, pours a pitcher of cream over the head of her wayward
husband, Paul, played by Scott Reichelsdorf.
New music at Parkside
Milwaukee Repertory Theatre
performs Mother Courage
Eden Vaning, violin; Harry
Sturm, cello; and Carol Bell,
piano. Also on the program are the
Sonatina for Clarinet Solo by
Miklos Rozsa; performed by
clarinettist Timothy Bell; Five
Dances for Small Spaces for piano
and magnetic tape by Walter
Ross, performed by pianist
Barbara English Maris; and
Movement for brass instruments
and piano by Wallingford Riegger,
performed by Nicholas Drozdorff
and W. Scott Mather, trumpets;
Stephen Miller, trombone; and
August Wegner, piano.
The series is directed by Harry
Sturm and August Wegner. Admission
is $2.00 for adults and
$1.00 for students. Concert-goers
are invited to stay for a wine and
cheese reception immediately
following the concert. For further
information call August Wegner
at 414-553-2528.
by Wendy Westphal
The Milwaukee Repertory
Theatre opened its return home
performance last "week. Performances
of Bertolt Brecht's
masterful epic, Mother Courage,
will continue through November
23 a t the Todd Wehr Theatre in
Milwaukee's Performing Arts
Center.
Written in 1939 a nd set in the
first half of the 17th century,
Mother Courage is the heroic tale
of Anna Fierling, an iron-willed
canteen woman who stubbornly
struggles to keep her family
together as the Thirty Years War
rages about her. Mother Courage
provides for her children by
selling goods to the troops from
both sides of the conflict. Unfortunately,
she realizes too late
that the war she depends on for
survival will eventually cause the
destruction of her family.
The Todd Wehr Theatre offers a
unique experience for first time
visitors. The thrust stage provides
for a close, intimate setting. Being
so close to the action draws you as
an audience into the physical
atmosphere of the play. Most of
the time the actors were situated
adequately on the stage allowing
for a good vantage point. Trouble
occurs with the scenes staged on
the side platforms. The view from
the opposite side of the house is
often limited.
War time is not very colorful.
The scenery for Mother Courage
is a dull gray. It releases a sad,
depressed mood which is ap-
A REHEARSAL with (left to right) Larry Shue, Rose Pickering, Ellen Dolan and Leland Crooke.
propriate for the plot. The
wagon's versatility is seen
through many sets. A covered
wagon, side wagon, tent wagon,
and empty wagon is all one
wagon. After a while a change is
expected but never materializes.
In all plays realism is sought
after but some costumes and
properties in Mother Courage are
quite modern. Clothing which was
supposed to be 17th century could
have been worn on the street
today. The most unrealistic
property was a bullhorn. The
actress at which it was directed
was about five feet away from the
soldier using it. An extra loud yell
would have given a better effect.
Fine acting roles are performed
by the MRT Company. Rose
Pickering, an eight year veteran
of the MRT, portrays Mother
Courage. Her rough and
courageous outer self comes out
loud and clear. Some inner
feminine features surface later in
the character. Also C.C.H.
Pounder portrays the willing
Yvette with style. Her previous
movie debut this year was with
the Academy Award - winning
film, "All That Jazz" as Nurse
Gibbons.
Laced with irreverant humor
and song, Mother Courage is a
powerful statement on the
irrationality of war, the irony of
life, and the unbreakable strength
of t he human spirit. The play is a
pointed message Brecht originallv
aimed at Germany as it slipped
Jeadily toward world war. Given
the frightening realities of today's
turbulent world, Mother Courage
is as relevant today as it was forty
years ago.
The Milwaukee Repertory
Theatre does a nice job on Mother
Courage. Performances are
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:00
p.m., Saturdays at 5:00 p.m. and
9:15 p.m. and Sundays at 7:30 p.m.
Matinees are scheduled at 2 p.m.
on October 29 and November 9,12
and 19. A signed performance for
the deaf and hearing-impaired
will be presented at 2 p.m., Nov. 9.
Ticket prices range from $3.50
to $9.00, with a $1.00 discount
available for students and senior
citizens. Tickets may be purchased
at the Performing Arts
Center box office, 929 North Water
Street, or charged to Master
Charge or Visa by calling 273-?206.
by Bruce R. Preston
It is very rare that a truly good
comedy comes along; they're
either cheap, tacky, or they try so
hard to be funny that they can't
even steal a snicker. "Private
Benjamin" is one of the better
comedies to come along in some
time, but it's still not a great one.
This movie has a lot of comic
potential (a rich woman enlisting
in the Army) but When it gives way
to a transparently failing romance
it loses the viewer's attention as
they take advantage of this
situation to buy more popcorn.
Judy Benjamin (Goldie Hawn)
who has "never got belonged" (to
someone or something) suddenly
finds herself all alone after her
husband has a heartattacleand dies
on their wedding night. A shady
Army recruiter cons her into
joining the "Army of the '80's" by
telling her she'll have her own
condo and that if she doesn't like it
she can quit.
Hawn is bright and vibrant as
the confused Private Benjamin.
Her talents as a commediane as
well as a serious actress are
wonderfully exhibited here. A
humorous example of her ability
is her audacity to ask if green is the
only color that the fatigues come
in; her professional delivery js
well rewarded by the audience's
laughter.
Eileen Brennan is the macho,
bitchy captain in charge of J udy's
platoon. She is very good and
keeps her character constant
ShC There is a lot of unnecessary sex
when shp hfls H immediately in this movie. Although some of it
bathronm L uWn SCrub the 1S needed for the story (the
(it's electric'nf1 r to°thbrush seducing by Henri and finding the
Wh6^11 T commander in bed with another
hercomSfn« k t0 stop private) it would have been just as
in rP A 8 !beingstuck g00d (better) without m the Army and becomes scenes like
someone, the humor of Hawn's
character is changed from that of
a confused person to a take -
charge person. She becomes the
first woman "Thornbird"
(parachuter). In keeping with
Judy's character change, when a
pass is made at her by the commander
of the "Thornbirds" she
demands a transfer which lands
her in Paris.
the "headache" one.
In Paris Judy falls in love
(doesn't everyone who goes there)
with Henri Tremont • (Armand
"Little Darlings" Assante).
Assante is once more cast as a
male sex symbol but this time is a
demanding, dominating European
(complete with a deep, seductive
accent) who transposes Judy into
a confused, lost soul.
The movie loses some time with
this obvious romance. A few
laughs are to be had, but not
enbugh to save this portion.
In the end Judy regains her self -
esteem and the movie's type of
comedy along with it. If more of
this comedy would have been
present instead of the romance,
the audience wouldn't have had to
gorge itself on concessions.
Some good supporting roles are
put in by Mar Kay Place (a much better.
rhfpann" h -vTfSi ?alem (a "Private Benjamin" is good for
g00o1in'ng« 7to j—ail^) , D£ amitay ovJeor 8o0r1 1h16a vlapu 8hs (esi pecially if you ar.e\
Freeman, Alston Ahern, and P. J.
Soles who play the other close
members of Benjamin's platoon.
If more time had been given to
these ladies and their antics (such
as putting blue die in a shower
cap) the film would have been
or have served in the military)
Contact
and it's worth seeing just for
Goldie Hawn but I'm still waiting
for Hollywood to give us a real
comedy.
P.S.G.A. Update
by Tracy Gruber
P.S.G.A. would like to take this
opportunity to inform you of some
of the things going on.
*** Thanks to everyone who
voted and all the candidates that
ran in last weeks P.S.G.A. Fall '80
elections. We now have six new
freshmen Senators, hopefully with
new ideas and a lot of ambition.
*** SUFAC (Segregated
University Fee Allocations
Committee) will begin reviewing
budgets the first week in Nov. This
is an important process whereby
the committee allocates approximately
one - half of a million
dollars to student organizations
and interest groups. There is
presently one open student - at -
large seat. If you are interested in
serving on this committee, you
may speak to the President of
P.S.G.A.
*** Th e SOC Fair, which was
held Oct. 8-9, was very successful.
Twenty - five clubs participated
with displays and presentations.
Many clubs attracted new
members. If you are interested in
joining any club, you can get information
about the many types of
clubs in the Student Life Office,
Union 209.
*** The Winter Carnival
Committee met for the first time
Fri., Oct. 17. They elected Chris
Hammelev chairperson.
Discussion of possible themes has
led to a contest. The student
submitting the best theme for this
year's Winter Carnival will
receive a season pass to Parkside
basketball games. If you are interested
in serving on this committee
there are open seats, talk
to Chris Hammelev or Tony
Totero, Union 209.
M' Yesterday was ,the last day
to register to vote before election
day, Nov. 4. You can still register
at the polls, Nov. 4, when you vote.
You must have identification with
proof of your current address.
*•* As always, P.S.G.A. is here
to serve you. If you have any
problems, please stop at our office,
WLLC D-137, to discuss them.
C&R AUTO SERVICE
Quality Auto Work
Done At
Reasonable Rates
10% OFF FOR
UW-P STUDENTS
Call 553-9092or 694-3712
or see Chuck In -
Union at 12:00
James presents 'doomsday talk'
A man who claims to have
served secretly as a CIA spy for
five years and to have "inside
knowledge" of Russian military
p6tential will speak at UWParkside
Oct. 23 at 8 p.pi. in the
Union theater under sponsorship
of the student organization,
Parkside Activities Board.
Peter N. James, who describes
himself as an "author, physicist,
adventurer, world traveler,
muckraker, rocket engineer and
publisher" as well as a former
spy, will present a lecture/slide
program titled, "Russia's Secret
Doomsday Weapon: World War II
and You."
His booking agency (Peter N.
James Associates) says he has
written two books, Soviet
Conquest from Space and The Air
Force Mafia. The latter work
suggests a connection between the
CIA and the Mafia, a "disclosure"
which his publicity materials
claim resulted in a "European spy
chase to get James."
James is scheduled to return to
Kenosha a week after his UW-P
appearance to speak at Carthage
College. James gives sponsors a
choice of two programs; the
"doomsday" talk or one called,
"The Embryo of an American
Police State." Tickets to the UW-P
program will be available at the
door ($1).
Recital features bassoonist
Bassoonist Daryl Durran will
present a faculty recital at 8 p.m.
on Wednesday, Oct. 29 at UWParkside.
The recital, free and
open to the public, will be held in
Cqmmunication Arts room D118
(music rehersal room).
Performing with Durran, who
teaches at UW-P, will be pianist
Michael Boyd,bassoonist Lori
Bowers and the Wayte Wind
Quintet. The Milwaukee
musicians will perform a program
of music by G.P. Telemann, C.M.
von Weber, Elliot Carter, Walter
Piston and Camille Saint-Saens.
Durran previously has held
positions with the Tucson Symphony
and Arizona Opera, and has
an extensive chamber music
background. He has performed in
recitals of baroque champer
music in Chicago and New York's
Carnegie Hall.
Thursday, October 23, 1980
Canary visits UW-P r,CAonnttiimnuine/dl FDMroAMmA nP~a g—e_ rOv.n e.
statements this time. "They
really want to know how they're
going to stand and, better, how
they're going to vote because it's
one thing to say something here
and it's another thing to go to
Washington and say something
else.
' 'And Les Aspin is a perfect case
in study of a professional
politician who's a Washingtonite
by nature," said Canary. "He
wears two hats very well. He
wears one hat back in the district
where he tells people we're going
to cut spending and we've got to
balance the budget and we have to
increase defense spending —
common lines that he gives out in
speeches. Yet when he goes back
to Washington he votes against
defense appropriations.
"I don't think there's any
question that we have to spend
more on the military than we are
now," said Canary, "but I would
certainly agree that we have to
examine exactly how that money
is spent to make sure we just don't
take money and throw it to the
problem."
More money is spent each year
on the military and Canary says
the question now is "Is our
military outmoded, outdated,
obsolete?" The harder phase of
the question is "What should we
do? Should we build the MX
missile system that may be obsolete?
Should we rebuilt the
Trident submarine?"
"Aspin, for example," said
Canary, "voted against the B-l
bomber and the MX missile. OK.
What has he got as an alternative?
What does he suggest? I tend to
favor the building of the MX
missile system because I haven't
seen a better solution."
Canary believes military pay
should be increased because the
military has become more
sophisticated and technical. "We
have to pay similar to what they
would earn in private industry.
We have to keep people from
leaving the military after they're
trained."
"We have to provide tax incentives
to American industry to
reinvest in industry," said
Canary. "The average industry in
the United States is 20 y ears old.
In Japan it's 10 y ears old and in
West Germany it's 12 years old. I
feel it's a vital job to build a free
enterprise system where we have
tax credits such as the 10-5-3
program, which is an accelerated
depreciation opportunity for industry
to reinvest."
Canary supports limitations on
University funding squeezed
nf „n i . .
automobile imports, but she's not
sure where the specific number
will land or how the limitations
would be established. The
American automotive industry
should be given an opportunity to
reposition itself and recapture the
American market.
Canary was "very disappointed"
with the Republican
platform on the ERA amendment.
"I'm going to go to Washington
and I'm going to work actively for
equal rights," said Canary. "But
we have to look at all the issues —
unemployment, deficit spending,
taxation, regulation, defense, etc.
— the 10 major issues. And put
that on a horizontal plane and say
'If we're together on nine out of
the 10, I'll vote for you.' What is
bad is one issue campaigners.
Instead of putting (the issues)
horizontally, they put them
vertically and we can't get by the
top issue."
"We've had 25 years of
Democratic leadership that hasn't
provided the answers or
solutions," said Canary.
"Congress is where the problem
sits at and Les Aspin is part of the
problem. We've had six different
presidents in the last 25 years but
we haven't changed the leadership
of Congress.
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdoh!
KATHY CANARY
"Instead of more of the same,"
said Canary, "change the people.
Elect me. Elect new people and
hold them accountable. If people
aren't satisfied with the way
things are .. . vote for a change."
Of all state general purpose
revenue (GPR) operations expenditures
during the decade
from 1969-70 to 1979-80, the
proportion represented by the UW
System budget declined from
45.6% to 35.2%. As a proportion of
all state GPR expenditures including
local assistance, the UW
System declined from 25.8% to
17.9%. Over this same span of
time the system gained about
23,000 st udents.
The biennial operating budget
document states that in every
year since the merger (1972-73)
the UW System GPR budget has
grown less than personal income
in Wisconsin. In 1972-73 the
university system's GPR budget
was 1.37% of Wisconsin personal
income; in 1979-80 i t was 1.09%.
For libraries and supplies and
expense, the real spending power
per student has declines to 63.9%
and 66.9% of what it was at the
time of merger.
In 1972-73 GPR/fee support per
student for instruction and related
costs was $1,764 for undergraduates
and $3,123 for
graduates. In 1979-80 GPR/fee
support per student for these
same costs, using 1972-73 dollars,
was $1,659 for undergraduates and
$2,957 f or graduates.
CLASSIFIED ADS
NO
PERSONALS
WHO IS Bert's mystery date?
UNIVERSITY of Wallamaloo Rule #1
Poofdahs.
BRIGHTEST STAR has shined in the darkest
places — Moldy.
ROUND TABLE. Find Joseph of Arimethla
and you will find the holy grail. In the
corner in the back.
E.C. When will we see a little E.C.?
S.J. WAYNE — Busco un pow - pow. Cuando y
donde? — Osa Cantor.
H<^?~E Parkin8 Permits now available.
DMD •
W|OP'f!TE W',h 9ir' °' V°Ur Ch0ice; name ,he
PAB 'or your convenience we'll play
during health office hours. Coach Ham the
Scram.
ANNE ELK — was semihit, in hospital, and
out again. W.T.
BOUNCE, BOUNCE, Your Court or Mine?
Todd H. ,
Q. WHAT is Jamey's favorite dring? A
Danko's milk.
L^T'.? ?° ,he time warp a9ain! Mollnaro
Hall at 8:46. Riff Raff and lOP's
TONY, JOEL, AND RANDY: Used
Less than one-half of the money
to operate the UW System comes
from state taxes, and this
proportion has declined
significantly in recent years. In
1980, 43.9% of the UW System
authorized budget ($462 million)
was state GPR money. After the
4.4% cutback for 1980 this was
further reduced to 42.9% ($444
million). At the time of merger
50.7% of the UW System budget
was GPR. Since 1972-73 the
federally - funded portion of the
UW System budget has increased
from 13.7% to 17.1%, but prospects
for the continuation of this pattern
are not considered promising.
It would appear there has been a
major reordering of public
priorities over the last decade —
without much public discussion.
Asserfiveness group offered
The Office of Student
Development is providing a group
experience for students interested
in improving their assertiveness
skills. Participants in the group
will have opportunities to improve
their skills in expressing their
feelings, thoughts, and needs.
They will learn how to identify and
practice assertive behavior and
how to recognize and claim their
individual rights without violating
the rights of other people.
Enrollment in this group is
limited. In order to join, you must
be able to attend all six sessions,
which occur on Tuesdays and
Thursdays, from 2:00 to 3:15 p.m
(November 4, 6,11, 13, 18, and 20)
and you must contact Barbara
Larson by October 30. To do this,
call 553-2122, or stop by WLLCD175.
Parkside accepts grants
-if
II tbe
Could I have some more?!
to
toilet paper
Julie
MIKE, wear your yellow underwear
Orgasmal class? Monkey Buns
J JO — What's Mickey doing with a picture on
his finger?
VISIT Cockroach Kingdom (Parkside
Village). Races daily. Admission 5 bucks.
EXE BITMAP. D501 Ray Cameron.
A.P.: Is DPMA the dimwits programming
meaningless assignments? Chain Gang
JACQUES, Thanks for the hielp with
gastroanemic and sunsoleus, but Where's
your earring?—Ripper
JANE, If you can't afford a belt we'll buy you
one.
FRESHWOMEN, report to library's second
floor animal room — Animals
KENNY MEYER, Tom Shulak, and Ron
Parker — We won't mangle anything important.
Coach Ham the Scram.
I?'.?®1?.° cobolers cobo1 with? — Chain Gang
ATTENTION Paul Missurell; Why do the
Canadians suck? — Blackhawk booster
ALAN GUSKIN is an IOP. Right Al? — lOP's
MIKE, Guess what!? It's my birthday'
Monkey Buns
FOOTBALL POOL money due; Leader Pat
Weber must be caught.
J.O. What does your watch say?
IT HAS to get orange, just like a "punkin"! —
Kim .
BILL, How is your dill? You stud you! — K8.J
K.H. — Turn Catholic. J.C.
LAURIE, Holy shit! Oh God, Oh God! R-r-r-rr-
r-r! Toga! — Julie
NOTE: She is a virgin! BEEP BEEP BEEP
Patrick Hagerty.
YELLOW BELT, need help with your kicks?
Inquire Animal Room.
START trembling PAG, MENC, Ranger —
PSGA is ready to play football. Coach Ham
the Scram.
SUPERCHICH, Glad you're back — fill
up. The Chiches
AI?™,YOU on Villa9e's Man of Semester list?
#201 knows!
CHAIN GANG an3 lOP's: Your classifieds
are getting boring. Time for a chanqe in
your PROGRAM! "The Business
Manager"
CHAIN GANG for sale. Package deals only,
send promo, materials to Parking Lot c/o
Ranger.
CHAIN GANG: I have been waiting for weeks
for you guys to get clever. Now I'm bored,
so go suck a rock.
FOR SALE
ALTO SAXOPHONE. Call 694-1964 after 6 p
m. ^'
19711 OLDS CONVERTIBLE. Immaculate.
Call Jerry 634-2957.
1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON. Always starts,
never dies. 634-0988, 632-3893
" " d " " «, 2 M U " , e " ' A M /™ '
T™5,™«Y0E4"T'RES '4I, 'S URe"™'
S Howard. Needs work. $50. Call
6y4-4730
"o82J5c0.n 0"0 VAN' Econol'ne 150 for sale. 554-
NEW AM/FM TAPE car stereo. $60. 40 Watt
Graphic equalizer amp $45. Tri . axial
ofui 6rS ea- Call after 6 p. m. 554-
9003.
HELP WANTED
C°c.LwGFr.REP wan,ed 'o distribute
Student Rate" subscription cards at this
campus. Good income. No selling involved.
.°r '",ormati°n and application write
toTIME, INC. College Bureau, 4337 W.
Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ. 85031
WORK WANTED
RELIABLE BABYSITTER, occasional eves
5709 Canarran9e overnight stays. 634-
E^TERTA,NING? Wi)l cook, serve, cleanup.
Children s parties. Call Melanie 633-9141
i uF,Tf R"SCH00L' wee«end high
school help? Call Melanie 633-9141.
WANTED
RENTER (female) to sublease apartment
Parkside Village. Ph. 552 7889, ask for
Jeannie.
ROOMMATE NEEDED: beautiful 2 bedroom
apt. in large stone castle on Cross LSke
(Antioch). Huge fireplace, circular stairs, 3
car garage, beach property, and nice
turret. $165 includes heat and water. 20 min.
drive from P.U. Male or female. 312-395-
2603.
MISCELLANEOUS
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research
catalog — 306 pages — 10,278 descriptive
listings — Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box
25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.
Gifts and grants totalling more
than $320,000 were accepted for
Parkside by the UW Systems
Board of Regents Friday (Oct.
That sum included $316,670 from
Patronize
our Advertisers
the federal Office of Education for
the Basic Educational Opportunity
Grants Program.
Gifts accepted included $6,437
for athletic or other scholarships
from multiple donors; $100 for the
George and Madeline Molinaro
Scholarship Fund from Elsie D.
Mosca, Jefferson, La.; and $50 for
the Kenneth L. Greenquist
Memorial Scholarship Fund from
Mark Madsen, Somerdale, N.J.
The regents also accepted $250
in support of synthetic peptide
substrate research at UW-P and
$100 in support of the life science
seminar series.
CLASSIFIED
POLICY
for student/
student organization
1. Submitters must
present valid Parkside
ID.
2. Two free ads —
10 words or less.
3. 30c will be
charged for every
additional 10 words
or less.
FREE
classified ads to
STUDENTS
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE
SSSSSs:
Classification:
Name
SS No. Ranger
WLLCD139
RANGER Thursday, October 23,1980
Photo by Brian Passino
Photo by Brian Passino Winless streak at three
by Dave Cramer
The men's soccer team is still in
search of its ninth victory this
year. The elusive ninth victory
would set a new Parkside single
season victory mark. Parkside
was unable to earn that victory
last week as they dropped one
game and battled to a tie in
another game.
The men travelled to Lake
Forest and were overwhelmed by
a 3-1 score. "We stunk" said
goalkeeper Dan Opferman. Those
two words perfectly described the
way the Rangers played. The
defense played as if it was a sieve
and the offense, apart from a Mike
Kiefer penalty kick, was non -
existent.
The team took another journey
into Illinois later in the week and
fought to a 2-2 tie with the Illinois
Institute of Technology (IIT). The
tie was disheartening to a lot of
the players. "We should have
beaten them" captain Mike Kiefer
said. "We should have beaten both
those teams (referring to the
earlier loss to Lake Forest). We
just seem to be having our
problems, especially the last three
games." The Rangers have now
lost two with one tie in their last
three games.
The problems Kiefer alluded to
are the inability to score, not
playing up to their potential, and
the old cliiche of inconsistency.
"We're having trouble putting
the ball in the net. We're just not
finishing. We build well but don't
finish. We're not going to win if we
don't put the ball in the net."
"Another thing is that we're not
playing up to our potential. We
should be blowing a lot of these
teams out if we just get our act
together. It seems as if we're
playing to our competition's
level" Kiefer said.
Although the Rangers are
winless in their last three games
there isn't any need to panic.
"We're going to come out of it. No
doubt about it, we'll come
through" Kiefer promised.
"We're going to win the rest
of our games this season."
Hopefully Kiefer's prediction
will come true because the team
picked a most inopportune time to
go into a slump. There are only
three more regular season games
left before play - off competition
begins.
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl
Volleyball flops
by Dan Rasch
"We stunk. We played terribly,
we played like six individuals."
Those were the words of women's
volleybal coach Linda Henderson
after her team was demolished by
Loyola and embarassed by
Marquette. Loyola won 12-15,15-9,
15-11 and Marquette won 15-11, 15-
0. The two defeats drops the
Rangers overall record to 15 - 15.
The humiliating loss to
Marquette throws the number one
seed in state play up for grabs.
Considering the way the team has
been playing they shouldn't even
worry about the playoffs. They
must regroup and regain their
winning form or they won't even
be recognized as a formidable
opponent.
The Rangers finally had an off
weekend and it may prove to be
what they needed. The team has
been playing every weekend and
once a week since school began.
The busy schedule may have
affected the team.
The team is in action this
weekend at the Carthage Invitational.
'
^ H E I L L M A N S
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE
Visit Kenosha's Largest
Record Department
Records—Sheet Music-
—Instruction Music—
Lowest Price Always
"The Place To Buy Records"
626 56th St. 654-2932
APPLICATIONS ARE
BEHW ACCEPTED
COPY EDITOR
A a a m c t n , - _ J 0 B REQUIREMENTS
• MUST B E STUDENT ENROLLED WITH 6 CRFniTS
• MHA0T^C°SUGH KNOWLEDGE OF EWNGL.SHCRGERDAMS
• MUST KNOW PROOFREADING SYMBOLS
• MUST TAKE P ROOFREADING TEST
THIS IS A PAID POSITION
Drop Applications Off At The
RANGER OFFICE, WLLC D139
NEXTTOTHE COFFEE SHOPPE.
8 Thursday, October 23, 1980 RANGER
Working Out
Power builds muscles
and deviates from the norm
PRO PICKS Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? All you have to do is fill
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,
D139 WLLC.
Cincinnati at Houston —
New England at Buffalo
Pittsburgh at Cleveland •
Seattle at Oakland
Chicago at Philadelphia
Los Angeles,at Atlanta
Minnesota at Green Bay
New Orleans at Washington
Tampa Bay at San Francisco
Denver at N. Y. Giants
Detroit at Kansas City
St. Louis at Baltimore
San Diego at Dallas
Miami at N. Y. Jets —
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points
scored in the Miami - N. Y. Jets game.
Last week's winner: Rory Spears, 11 correct, 50 points
Name:-
S.S. No.-
Rules:
1) One entry per person
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total
points will be used as a tie - breaker)
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue
5) Ranger members ineligible
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the
Friday preceeding the games
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks
8) Entries must be legible to be considered
Tennis
Third place at state
picking up the bar with a one hand
underhand one overhand grip —
until the back is vertical — will
give you a stronger back, legs,
biceps and forearms. Again,
physical structure: (long arms
and short legs) determines how
much weight you will handle in
this exercise. Keep the back
muscles locked so that the legs
will help to lift the weight.
The squat is another recommended
exercise, as is the power
clean (andpress) — lifting the bar
from the ©round and swinging it
up to the shoulders. From this
position you should be able to
execute a standing barbell press.
Power exercises incorporate
many muscles, developing
coordination between them rather
than isolating a specific muscle,
thus enabling very heavy weights
to be used. Because the expenditure
of energy is so great,
low reps and sets are advised
after an initial warmup. After one
or two light sets of 6-8 re ps to get
should be heavy enough to permit
only about 4 reps maximum. A
fourth set should allow only 1-2
reps. The final set should be light
enough for about 4 - 6 reps.
Five sets of each of the above
four power exercises would, in
itself, be an adequate workout
done two or three times per week
only. And once a month, try to
exceed the previous month's
maximum poundage for a single
rep. Remember to wear a weight
belt when going heavy on all
exercises.
When incorporating this power
routine, all other exercises such
as curls, leg extensions, lat
pulldowns, flyers, etc., should be
omitted for peak performance and
rapid recovery, dr one power
exercise may be included in your
routine in the place of arm
training for a week or two. A gain
in power may result. Adjust your
workout to suit your own physique
and training goals.
by Pete Cramer
The women's tennis team
concluded its 1980 se ason with a
third place finish in the state
tournament last week. Coach
Noreen Goggin was pleased with
the team's tournament play as
well as the entire season play.
Parkside finished third in state
play with 22 points. Marquette
was the run away winner, with 78
Cross-Country
by Dave Cramer
The women's cross - country
team has proven numerous times
this year that they are one of the
better teams in the state. Last
week they journeyed to Waukesha
where they ran against Carroll,
Beloit and Carthage and came
away with first place.
The Rangers were allowed to
enter two teams. Kellie Benzow,
Wendy Burman, Sharon Keller
and Dona Driscoll comprised one
team while Barb Osborne, Sandy
points, Milwaukee was second
with 40 points, Carroll was fourth,
Carthage fifth and Green Bay last.
Goggin had reason to be
satisfied with her team's performance.
They went 8 - 6 on the
regular season and finished third
in state. They accomplished all
their pre - season goals and
anything beyond that would have
been a pleasant surprise.
Venne, JoAnne Carey and Linda
Pfeilstifter made up the second
unit.
Benzow, Burman and Keller
stayed together stride for stride
throughout the entire three mile
race. Benzow won the race in a
time of 19 minutes and 19.5
seconds. Burman finished a half
second behind Benzow for second
place and Keller was third in a
time of 19 minutes and 23.9
seconds. Driscoll finished the race
in fifth place. The Ranger "A"
unit won the meet with a total of
by Donald Scherrer
Power. As it is elusive, so is it
accumulated. Power is a
deviation, from the norm. Power
comes from the inside. Knowledge
is power.
Power is physical might. It is
also the time rate at which work is
done or energy emitted or transferred.
To complete a workout in
a shorter period of time than the
last is to increase one's power.
Concentrating on power
exercises for a month or two at a
time may also increase the
poundages used in your exercises.
When a power routine is followed
for longer than that, your training
may go stale, poundages may fall,
and you will probably not want to
work out because you will be using
up too much of your body's energy
reserves by overtraining.
The bench press is the most
popular of the power exercises, it
may increase shoulder and tricep
as well as pectoral strength, if
your arm length and chest girth
are best suited for the exercise. If
your arms are very short and your
rib cage very large, the bench
press will be to your advantage.
However, most people will never
be able to bench press 300 pounds
no matter how hard they try.
The deadlift — squatting and
"Everyone played well at state.
They worked real hard. Overall
we did a good job and we had a lot
of fun this year" Goggin said.
Freshman Lisa Lindsay
finished the season with an 18 - 3
singles record to lead the team in
victories and the doubles team of
Kathy Thomas and Nancy Kivi
finished 15-6, tops of the Parkside
doubles teams.
11 points. The Beloit "A" unit
was second with 35 points.
Parkside showed their depth
and talent in this race as the
Ranger "B" unit of Osborne,
Venne, Carey and Pfeilstifter
finished in third place. The other
teams in order of finish were
Carroll fourth, Carthage fifth and
Beloit "B" unit sixth.
The Rangers prepare for the
State Championship this Saturday.
The WWIAC Championship
will be held in River Falls.
SPORTS
Swimming
The UW-Parkside Swim Club is
sponsoring a Swim-a-thon to raise
money for a training trip to the
International Swimming Hall-of-
Fame in Ft. Lauderdale over the
semester break. Members are
asking for pledges for each length
swam with the money being
divided between the Swim Club,
the Arthritis Foundation, the
Swimming Hall of F ame, and the
International Travel Fund for US
Swim Teams. The Swim-a-thon
will be held at the UW-Parkside
pool on Saturday, Nov. 1 at 1:00
p.m. Each swimmer will be trying
to swim 200 l engths in the 2-hour
time limit. Anyone wishing to
contribute or pledge should
SHORTS
contact Barb Lawson, the swim
coach, at 553-2257.
The Swim Club is also showing
the movie "Duck Soup" starring
the Marx Brothers on Thursday,
October 30 in the Union Theater at
7:00 p.m. Tickets are available
from the Swim Club members or
Coach Barb Lawson for $1.00.
Tickets at the door will be $1.50.
Track
Anyone interested in joining the
men's or women's track teams
should contact coach Bob or Barb
Lawson at the Physical Education
Building. The team's first meet is
in December. All interested
parties are encouraged to contact
the coaches as soon as possible. Women humble opponents
WIN A PAIR OF RANGER
SEASON BASKETBALL
TICKETS
Name Hn 1981 Winter Carnival
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME
Carnival Theme Name
Student Name.
SS No.
13,
—RULE S &INFORMATI O N —
0 Winter Carnival will be held Feb. 9
1981.
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.
• Deadline: Friday noon, Nov. 7
• In case of a tie, a drawing will be held.
• Winner will be announced in the Nov. 20
issue of RANGER.
• Decision of Winter Carnival Committee
is final.
• Entries may be dropped off in the
RANGER office, WLLC D139 next to the
coffee shoppe.
SPORTS CALENDAR
Friday, Oct. 24: Soccer at St. Norbert College
Friday - Saturday, Oct. 24 - 25: Volleyball at Carthage Invitation;
pionslvip 251 Cr°SS " Country (women) at WWIAC Chan
ADVERTISING
REPRESENTATIVES
NEEDED
Will receive
15% Commission
on every Display Ad you sell
Applicants must be dependable a
have some type of transportatior
No experience is necessary
but would be beneficial.
Mike Farrell or Bruce Preston
In the Ranger Office
WLLC D139 — 553-2295
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Canary Wants Change in Representative Seat
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 8, October 23, 1980
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1981-04-02
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Language
A language of the resource
English
anthropology club
elections
Free Speech
kathy canary
parking policies
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/a13a010c86faf3376f6042efb17932c3.pdf
84920caf3b087dd7b5ef2e173f13d8bb
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 8, issue 25
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
O'Neil says UW-P future bright
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
T
hu
rs
da
y,
Marc
h
27
,
1
9
8
0
U
ni
ve
rs
ity
of
W
is
co
ns
in
-
P
a
rk
s
id
e
a
n
g
er
V
ol
.
8
-
N
o.
2
5
O
'N
ei
l
s
a
y
s
U
W
-P
f
u
t
u
r
e
br
ig
ht
by
Sue
Ste
ven
s
Pa
rk
si
de
's
fu
tu
re
for
the
1980's
is
m
or
e
ho
pe
fu
l
th
an
o
th
er
uni
ver
siti
es
acc
ord
ing
to
Ro
ber
t
O'N
eil,
the
new
pre
sid
ent
of
th
e
Un
iver
sity
of
Wiscon
sin
Boa
rd
of
Re
gen
ts,
and
the
non
-tra
diti
ona
l
stu
de
nt
is
the
key
.
O
'N
ei
l,
wh
o
is
su
cc
ee
di
ng
Pr
es
ide
nt
Edw
in
Youn
g,
vis
ited
th
e
U
W
-P
ar
ks
id
e
ca
m
p
u
s
on
Mond
ay,
Mar
ch
24th
a
s
pa
rt
of
a
sta
te-
wid
e
to
ur
of
the
UW
sys
te
m
.
Kn
own
fo
r
hi
s
ac
ce
ss
ib
il
it
y
,
O'Ne
il
ex
pe
cts
to
ma
ke
re
gu
la
r
vis
its
to
eac
h
of
the
UW
cam
pu
ses
dur
ing
his
ad
mi
nis
tra
tio
n.
His
fir
st
day
a
t
Pa
rk
sid
e
inclu
ded
m
ee
tin
g
wi
th
al
l
fa
c
e
ts
of
Pa
rk
si
de
's
fac
ult
y
an
d
st
ud
en
ts
a
s
we
ll
a
s
m
em
b
er
s
of
th
e
sur
rou
ndi
ng
com
mu
nit
ies
.
Mak
ing
pre
dic
tion
s
for
the
80's
see
me
d
to
be
the
or
de
r
of
the
da
y
as
O'N
eil
sp
ok
e
on
the
cha
ng
e
in
the
econ
omy
and
its
eff
ect
on
un
ive
rsi
ty
enr
oll
me
nts
.
Pa
rk
si
de
sh
ou
ldn
't
hav
e
to
wo
rry
abo
ut
a
dec
line
in
enr
oll
me
nt.
As
O'Ne
il
st
at
ed
,
"T
he
eco
nom
y
in
thi
s
a
re
a
see
ms
to
be
he
al
th
y.
"
"T
h
e
ty
pi
ca
l
st
u
d
en
t
wi
ll
beco
me
the
'p
ar
t-t
im
e'
or
non-
tra
dit
ion
al
one
du
rin
g
the
80
's,
"
sai
d
th
e
p
res
ide
nt.
"P
ar
ks
id
e
will
be
ab
le
to
cop
e
w
ith
the
upco
min
g
ha
rd
tim
es
be
cau
se
it
tak
es
ad
va
nta
ge
of
th
e
cha
ngi
ng
stu
de
nt
poo
l."
Out
-of-
stat
e
tuitio
n
will
als
o
play
a
big
rol
e
in
enr
oll
me
nt
cha
nge
s
her
e.
Altho
ugh
the
st
at
e
leg
isl
atu
re
fail
ed
to
pa
ss
a
bill
lowe
ring
the
non
res
ide
nt
tuitio
n
du
rin
g
the
las
t
ses
sio
n,
a
new
app
roa
ch
to
the
prob
lem
wa
s
con
sid
ere
d
rec
ent
ly
by
the
Bo
ard
of
Re
gen
ts.
As
O'N
eil
ad
de
d,
"T
he
re
tend
s
to
be
ve
ry
lit
tle
sup
po
rt
f
or
red
uct
ion
s
in
tuit
ion
s.
Any
pro
pos
al
lowe
ring
th
e,
fee
dif
fer
en
tia
l
is
se
en
a
s
a
los
s."
Th
e
Bo
ard
is
pre
sen
tly
work
ing
on
a
"m
od
es
t"
pro
gr
am
of
red
uci
ng
su
mm
er
fe
es
.
"H
op
ef
ul
ly
,
th
e
in
cr
ea
si
n
g
num
ber
of
out
-of-
stat
e
stu
de
nts
would
ma
ke
up
for
the
dif
fe
re
nc
e,
"
ad
de
d
O
'Nei
l.
T
he
re
a
re
ma
ny
pot
ent
ial
Pa
rk
sid
e
stu
de
nts
now
res
idi
ng
in
La
ke
Coun
ty,
Il
lin
oi
s
who
wi
ll
no
t
a
tt
e
n
d
Pa
rk
sid
e
be
cau
se
of
the
hig
h
non
res
ide
nt
fee
s.
Ge
ner
all
y,
O'Ne
il
st
at
ed
th
at
th
er
e
will
be
two
typ
es
of
un
ive
rsi
tie
s
th
at
will
grow
sub
sta
nt
ial
ly
dur
ing
the
de
ca
de
.
The
fir
st
is
the
un
ive
rsi
ty
sit
ua
ted
in
an
ar
ea
wh
ere
the
pop
ulat
ion
is
grow
ing
rap
idl
y,
suc
h
as
the
sou
thw
est
ern
pa
rt
of
the
Unit
ed
St
at
es
.
The
sec
ond
type
is
t
he
v
ery
spe
cia
lize
d
un
ive
rsi
ty.
O
'N
ei
l
se
e
s
u
n
d
e
rg
ra
d
u
at
e
edu
cat
ion
mov
ing
b
ack
t
ow
ard
the
lib
er
al
a
rt
s
and
sci
en
ce
s
whi
le
st
u
d
e
n
ts
wo
rk
fo
r
m
or
e
spe
cia
liza
tio
n
on
the
gr
ad
ua
te
lev
els
.
Th
is
is
co
nt
ra
ry
to
the
belief
th
at
un
de
rg
ra
du
at
e
s
choo
ls
ar
e
push
ing
to
a
mo
re
voc
atio
nal
c
u
rr
ic
u
lu
m
.
"
In
th
e
80
's
I'
d
ve
ntu
re
th
at
the
tre
nd
will
be
rev
ers
ed
,
with
a
red
isc
ov
ery
of
the
lib
er
al
ar
ts
and
sc
ie
nc
es
,"
sai
d
O'N
eil.
Ins
titu
tion
s
mu
st
dea
l
with
the
re
c
ru
it
in
g
of
m
in
o
ri
ti
es
an
d
wom
en
als
o.
"U
niv
ers
itie
s'
mu
st
work
to
ma
ke
them
fee
l
wel
com
e
and
co
mf
or
tab
le,
"
O'N
eil
st
at
ed
.
"M
uch
of
the
tim
e
the
fir
st
few
mi
no
riti
es
ar
e
thro
wn
into
a
hos
tile
atm
os
ph
er
e
which
they
hav
e
tro
ub
le
dea
ling
wi
th.
"
O
'Nei
l
see
s
t
hi
s
as
just
one
ans
we
r
to
the
prob
lem
of
rete
ntio
n
of
min
orit
y
stu
de
nts
and
fac
ult
y.
He
co
uld
n't
m
ak
e
sp
e
c
ta
c
u
la
r
pr
om
is
es
eit
he
r,
sta
tin
g,
"Of
co
ur
se
th
er
e
will
be
fai
lur
es
.
.
.
"
Ov
era
ll,
O
'Neil
l
sa
id
th
at
he
ha
s
be
en
q
u
it
e
im
p
re
ss
ed
wi
th
Pa
rk
sid
e
for
som
e
tim
e,
citi
ng
Pa
ks
id
e's
ou
tre
ac
h
pr
og
ram
s,
the
fac
ult
y
and
the
uni
que
Col
legi
ate
Ski
lls
pr
og
ram
as
fa
ct
or
s
th
at
ma
ke
Pa
rk
sid
e
sta
nd
out
am
ong
un
ive
rsi
tie
s.
Pickets
protest
ten
ure
deci
sion
by
Sue
Stev
ens
R
ob
er
t
O
'N
ei
l,
th
e
new
Pr
es
id
en
t
of
the
Un
ive
rsit
y
of
Wisc
onsin
Boa
rd
of
R
eg
ent
s,
wa
s
me
t
by
pic
ket
ers
Mond
ay
dur
ing
his
fir
st
visi
t
to
Pa
rk
sid
e.
Th
e
pic
ke
ter
s,
me
mb
ers
of
the
Pa
rk
sid
e
Mino
rity
S
tud
ent
Union,
we
re
dem
and
ing
jus
tice
in
the
ten
ur
e
ca
se
of
Pr
ofe
sso
r
Glen
Dost
on.
Dost
on,
the
sol
e
blac
k
fac
ulty
me
mb
er
he
re
,
wa
s
den
ied
bec
aus
e
he
did
n't
me
et
th
e
Pe
r
so
nn
el
Re
vi
ew
C
o
m
m
it
te
e'
s
cr
ite
ria
for
pub
lishi
ng,
de
sp
ite
the
fac
t
th
at
he
w
as
rec
om
me
nde
d
fo
r
ten
ure
by
his
divis
ion.
In
a
st
at
em
en
t
to
the
loca
l
me
dia
,
Ch
avez
Ep
ps
,
p
res
ide
nt
of
MSU
st
at
ed
,
"W
e
feel
th
at
Pr
of
.
Doston
shou
ld
be
exe
mp
ted
from
the
publ
ishin
g
c
ri
te
ri
a
bec
aus
e
he
has
been
out
sta
ndi
ng
in
se
rv
ic
e.
"
O'N
eil
list
ene
d
to
the
stu
de
nts
and
sai
d
he'
d
be
happ
y
to
me
et
with
min
ori
ties
abo
ut
the
ir
con
ce
rn
s.
But
he
wa
sn
't
ma
kin
g
any
pro
mi
ses
.
Sai
d
O'N
eil,
"T
he
in
st
it
u
ti
o
n
s
th
em
se
lv
es
a
r
e
rep
ons
ible
for
ma
kin
g
ten
ur
e
dec
isio
ns.
I
ca
nno
t
say
any
thi
ng
a
t
ph
oto
by
Ph
i
I
D
eL
ui
sa
thi
s
poin
t
th
at
would
infl
uen
ce,
eit
he
r
wa
y,
a
deci
sion
ab
ou
t
pe
rso
nn
el.
"
The
MSU
wa
s
als
o
con
cer
ned
with
the
rec
rui
tin
g
and
ret
ent
ion
of
mi
nor
ity
stu
de
nts
.
Du
rin
g
a
me
etin
g
with
ca
mp
us
lea
de
rs
man
y
of
th
e
pro
ble
ms
of
m
ino
rity
stu
de
nts
we
re
brou
ght
to
the
at
tenti
on
of
the
new
UW
p
res
ide
nt.
Sai
d
O'
Nei
l,
"
W
e
h
ave
se
t
so
me
am
bi
ti
o
u
s
go
al
s
re
g
ar
d
in
g
mi
no
riti
es
in
the
UW
sy
ste
m,
but
it
will
t
ak
e
som
e
ti
me
.
It
ma
y
ta
ke
as
long
as
thi
s
de
cad
e
to
me
et
th
em
."
"W
e
need
min
orit
y
fac
ult
y
on
ca
mp
us
to
lea
d
us
,"
st
at
ed
one
stu
de
nt
at
the
stu
de
nt
me
etin
g.
"W
e
jus
t
c
an
't
re
la
te
to
o
the
rs
a
s
we
ll.
"
To
th
is
O
'Neil
rep
lie
d,
"
I'
m
su
re
the
re
a
re
people
on
ca
mp
us
th
at
you
c
an
talk
to
t
ha
t
wo
uld
be
sy
m
pa
th
et
ic
."
Hav
ing
bee
n
noted
for
his
ac
ces
sib
ilit
y
t
o
st
ud
en
ts
and
fac
ult
y
in
the
pa
st,
O'N
eil
s
ee
m
s
to
b
e
a
n
ad
mi
ni
str
ato
r
who
will
lis
ten
.
At
the
end
of
the
day
O'N
eil
sug
ges
ted
th
at
a
me
etin
g
b
e
se
t
up
so
he
ma
y
he
ar
co
mp
lai
nts
mo
re
thor
oug
hly.
General
ele
ct
ion
s
Tu
esd
ay
by
Ste
ve
M.
D
ank
ert
Ge
ne
ral
elec
tion
s
will
be
held
Tu
esd
ay
,
Apr
il
1,
1980
.
Th
e
polls
will
be
o
pen
f
rom
7:
00
a.m
.
to
8:00
p.m
.
Ex
er
cis
e
your
rig
ht
s
an
d
vot
e!
Th
e
following
is
a
list
of
posit
ions
a
nd
ca
nd
ida
tes
for
tho
se
posi
tion
s.
P
re
si
d
e
n
ti
al
P
re
fe
re
n
c
e
Ca
n
did
ate
s
—
R
epu
blic
an
P
ar
ty
Geo
rge
Bu
sh,
Ph
ili
p
M.
Cr
ane
,
Be
nja
min
Fe
rn
an
de
z,
Joh
n
B.
And
erso
n,
Ron
ald
Re
ag
an
,
Joh
n
B.
Conn
ally,
Haro
ld
E
.
Sta
sse
n,
How
ard
H.
Ba
ke
r,
J
r
.
P
re
si
d
en
ti
al
P
re
fe
re
n
c
e
Ca
n
did
ate
s
—
D
em
ocr
atic
Pa
rty
Ch
arl
es
C.
Fin
ch
,
Lynd
on
La
Rouc
he,
Ed
wa
rd
Ken
nedy
,
Ed
mund
G.
Brow
n,
Jr
.,
Jim
my
Ca
rte
r.
P
re
si
d
e
n
ti
al
P
re
fe
re
n
c
e
Ca
n
did
ate
s
—
Con
stitut
ion
Pa
rty
No
Na
me
Ju
sti
ce
of
the
St
ate
Su
pre
me
Cou
rt
Lo
uis
J
.
Ce
ci
,
Do
na
ld
W.
Ste
inm
etz
Cou
rt
of
Appe
als
Ju
dg
e,
Di
str
ict
No.
2
Bur
ton
A.
S
cot
t,
Ja
m
es
Re
cto
r
Ca
nd
ida
tes
for
posi
tion
s
for
the
City
and
Count
y
of
Ra
cin
e
Ald
erm
ani
c
Ra
ce
s
Di
str
ict
2
—
Ja
m
es
R.
Fie
ne
,
Pa
tri
ci
a
A.
O
ber
nbe
rge
r
Di
str
ict
4
—
Ja
m
es
K.
Kee
fe,
Hall
L.
Ha
rdy
Di
str
ict
6
—
Dorot
hy
H.
Con-
sta
nt
in
e,
M
ari
e
Oliver
Di
str
ict
8
—
Ro
ber
t
L.
Tu
rne
r
Di
str
ict
10
—
Fr
an
k
A.
Ba
rry
J
.
Di
str
ict
12
—
J
oh
n
A.
Ei
ler
s
Di
str
ict
14
—
Ma
ria
n
J
.
An
de
rse
n,
Willi
am
J
.
Du
cha
c
D
is
tr
ic
t
15
—
R
ob
er
t
Su
ch
ard
a
Di
str
ict
16
—
J
oh
n
E
.
Otto
Di
str
ict
18
—
Ja
m
es
A.
Ea
st
m
an
Count
y
Su
per
vis
or
Ra
ce
s
Di
str
ict
1
Rut
h
R.
Ge
dw
ard
t
Dis
tric
t
2
—
Ch
arl
es
H.
Con-
st
at
in
e
Di
str
ict
3
—
John
L.
Sp
aet
h
Di
str
ict
4
—
Ja
m
es
F
.
Roone
y
Di
str
ict
5
—
F
ra
nk
N.
Mille
r
Di
str
ict
6
—
Mich
ael
Ch
arl
es
Neu,
Fr
an
kl
in
R.
Pa
yn
e
D
is
tr
ic
t
7
—
R
ay
m
on
d
J
.
DeH
anhn
Di
str
ict
8
—
Mich
ael
S.
Gall
o,
Conti
nued
On
Pa
ge
Two
ph
ot
o
b
y
Ph
il
D
eL
ui
sa
RO
BE
RT
O
'N
E
IL
,
n
ew
pr
es
id
en
t
of
th
e
Bo
ard
of
R
eg
en
ts
,
ad
d
re
ss
es
th
e
pr
es
s.
'
I
N
S
I
D
E
.
.
.
•
E
d
it
o
r
ia
l:
V
o
te
im
p
e
r
a
ti
v
e
•
R
e
v
ie
w
:
L
it
tl
e
D
a
r
li
n
g
s
te
a
s
e
•
B
a
s
e
b
a
ll
b
e
g
in
s
•
L
lo
y
d
W
ri
g
h
t
a
li
v
e
N
—
—
—
•
C
o
l
I
e
g
i
a
t
e
Crier—
W
e
th
ou
gh
t
you
'd
lik
e
to
k
n
o
w
Ju
st
in
ca
se
you
we
re
wo
nde
rin
g:
the
two
bu
s
wa
itin
g
pla
zas
con
st
ru
ct
ed
for
Pa
rk
sid
e
betw
een
1975
an
d
1977
had
a
tot
al
cos
t
of
$15,350,
acc
ord
ing
to
a
re
po
rt
to
t
he
r
eg
ul
ar
me
etin
g
of
the
UW
B
oar
d
of
R
eg
en
ts
on
Fe
br
ua
ry
8.
Draft
Re
gis
tra
tio
n
fo
ru
m
;
M
on
da
y
A
pub
lic
for
um
,
"R
eg
ist
ra
tio
n
and
the
D
ra
ft
",
will
be
held
Mon
day,
Ma
rch
31,
19
80
at
7:30
p
.
m.
in
the
Com
m.
Ar
ts
T
he
at
re
.
P
an
el
is
ts
will
inc
lud
e
Co
ngr
ess
ma
n
Le
s
Aspin
,
Lt
.
Ge
ne
ral
Dan
iel
Gr
ah
am
(USA,
R
et
.),
re
pr
es
en
tat
ive
s
fro
m
Na
tio
nal
Org
ani
zat
ion
for
Wome
n,
the
Am
eri
can
Legi
on,
and
Wisc
onsin
Co
mm
itte
e
Ag
ain
st
the
Dr
af
t.
Mo
der
ato
r
for
the
for
um
will
be
Ke
nne
th
Hoo
ver.
Fr
ee
ta
lk
o
n
Wr
ons
ki
Lo
gar
ith
ms
Wro
nski
Lo
ga
rith
ms
will
be
the
topic
of
a
fr
ee
pub
lic
talk
given
by
Was
hing
ton
S
ta
te
Un
ive
rsi
ty
p
rof
ess
or
Don
ald
Bu
sha
w.
T
he
tal
k
w
ill
be
tom
orr
ow
,
M
arc
h
28,
at
2:30
p.
m.
i
n
M
olin
aro
H
all,
Room
107
.
Tal
k
w
ill
be
pre
cee
ded
by
c
offe
e
in
Mol
inar
o
Hal
l,
Room
i
l
l
,
at
2:00
p.
m.
Vio
lin-
Pia
no
rec
ita
l
o
n
Apr
il
10
A
sec
ond
violin
-
piano
re
cit
al
by
vio
lini
st
Ed
en
Van
ing
and
pia
nis
t
Elo
ise
Niwa
will
be
hel
d
Th
urs
da
y,
Apr
il
10,
at
8
p.
m.
Re
cit
al
will
tak
e
pla
ce
in
C
omm
.
Art
s
The
at
re
.
Adu
lts
$2.00,
Stu
de
nts
$1.00.
Er
ic
At
ki
ns
on
w
or
k
s
o
n
di
sp
la
y
A
one
-
m
an
s
how
of
pa
int
ing
s
an
d
dra
wi
ng
s
by
Er
ic
Atkin
son
will
be
on
dis
pla
y
in
the
UW-P
Co
mm
.
Ar
ts
Ga
lle
ry
,
now
th
rou
gh
A
pril
9.
A
n
sw
er
s
to
pr
ev
io
us
GRE
a
pt
itu
de
te
st
a
va
il
ab
le
Ans
wer
s
to
the
G
ra
du
at
e
Rec
ord
Ex
am
ina
tio
n
Apt
itud
e
T
es
t
(giv
en
las
t
Ja
nu
ar
y
12)
a
re
now
av
ail
ab
le.
To
obt
ain
a
copy
of
the
tes
t
que
stio
ns
a
nd
an
sw
ers
s
end
$2.0
0
pe
r
book
let
cop
y
to
G
ra
du
at
e
R
eco
rds
Ex
am
ina
tio
n
Bo
ard
,
P
rin
ce
ton
,
New
J
er
se
y
085
40.
Ans
wer
s
to
Ap
ril
26
and
Apr
il
28
ex
am
s
will
be
a
va
ila
ble
af
te
r
Ju
ly
1.
Ge
ne
ra
l
e
le
c
ti
o
n
s
Tuesday
T
h
e
G
l
o
b
e
at
a
G
la
n
c
e
Sha
h
g
oe
s
to
Egy
pt
The
S
hah
of
Ir
an
left
Pa
na
m
a
to
go
to
Eg
yp
t
Su
nda
y.
The
pur
pos
e
of
the
tri
p
is
to
obt
ain
me
dic
al
tre
at
m
en
t
and
tak
e
up
Pr
es
id
en
t
Sa
da
t's
inv
itat
ion
of
res
ide
nce
in
Eg
yp
t.
(CBS
New
s,
Ma
rch
23,
1980)
Mar
chai
s
w
as
Nazi
vo
lun
tee
r
In
an
ar
tic
le
call
ed
"T
he
Li
e"
,
the
P
ar
is
news
ma
gaz
ine
L'E
x-
pre
ss
sai
d
th
at
Fr
en
ch
Com
mun
ist
P
ar
ty
Le
ad
er,
Geor
ge"
M
arc
ha
is,
had
vol
unt
eer
ed
to
work
for
the
Naz
is
in
1942
.
Ma
r
ch
ais
cl
aim
s
it
wa
s
for
ced
lab
or,
and
sa
ys
he
ret
ur
ne
d
to
F
ra
nc
e
in
1943
.
L'
Ex
pr
es
s
sa
ys
th
e
Com
mu
nis
t
lea
de
r
re
tu
rn
ed
in
May
1945
an
d
tha
t
M
ar
ch
ais
's
for
eig
n
reg
ist
ra
tio
n
ca
rd
is
s
til
l
on
file
in
A
ug
sb
ur
g,
We
st
G
er
m
an
y
to
pro
ve
it.
(Ne
wsw
eek
,
Ma
rch
17,
1980
)
Eur
ope
ans
cut
Irania
n
tie
s
Re
po
rts
say
tha
t
the
Eu
ro
pe
an
Co
mm
on
M
ar
ke
t
na
ti
on
s
a
re
see
kin
g
wa
ys
to
pr
es
su
re
I
ra
n
into
rel
ea
sin
g
the
U.S.
hos
tag
es.
Th
e
way
s
this
ma
y
be
acc
om
plis
hed
ar
e
beli
eved
to
be
a
pos
sibl
e
se
ve
rin
g
of
dip
lom
ati
c
rel
ati
on
s
wi
th
Ir
a
n
.
(C
hi
ca
go
T
ri
b
u
n
e,
Ma
rch
22,
1980)
I
A
&
^
,
/
JL
r
Y
o
u
p
l
a
y
t
h
e
^
l
e
a
d
i
n
g
r
o
l
e
i
n
o
u
r
figh
t
a
g
a
in
st
su
p
p
o
rt
b
ir
th
d
ef
ec
ts
M
A
R
C
H
OF
D
IM
E
S
Ca
rte
r
cu
ts
to
pe
an
ut
s
Pr
esi
de
nt
Ca
rte
r
is
pla
nni
ng
to
prop
ose
$70
0
m
illion
in
cu
ts
fro
m
198
0
spe
ndi
ng
in
an
effo
rt
to
bal
anc
e
the
fed
era
l
bud
get.
Th
e
Pr
es
ide
nt
will
a
lso
seek
$13
to
$14
billion
in
cu
ts
i
n
t
he
prop
osed
198
1
bu
dg
et
.
A
U.
S.
Ho
us
e
of
Re
pr
es
en
tat
ive
s
pla
n
will
cu
t
$16.5
billion
from
th
e
1981
bud
get
.
Th
e
Se
na
te
beg
an
dr
aft
ing
its
own
pla
ns
ye
ste
rd
ay
.
(Th
e
New
York
Tim
es,
Ma
rch
24,
1980
)
Invest
igation
find
s
ab
u
se
s
A
Ge
ne
ral
Acco
untin
g
Office
inv
est
iga
tion
int
o
fe
de
ra
l
con
tr
ac
ts
aw
ard
ed
to
pr
iv
at
e
con
su
lta
nt
s
has
found
ser
iou
s,
per
va
siv
e
abu
se
s.
Th
e
10
month
s
tud
y
sam
ple
d
111
co
nt
ra
cts
and
found
m
is
m
an
ag
em
en
t
an
d
w
a
st
e
'
ev
er
y
w
h
er
e
it
lo
ok
ed
.
(T
he
Wash
ington
Po
st,
Ma
rch
21
,
1980)
Dollar
a
t
high
point
The
do
lla
r
rea
ch
ed
its
hig
hes
t
m
ar
k
in
2
1/4
ye
ar
s
on
worl
d
cu
rr
en
cy
m
a
rk
e
ts
,
w
hi
le
Tr
ea
su
ry
bill
ra
te
s
soa
red
am
id
fe
ar
s
of
c
re
di
t
tig
hte
nin
g
by
the
Fe
d.
Th
e
Tr
ea
su
ry
bills
now
st
an
d
at
15.7%
fo
r
6
mo
nth
iss
ue
s.
Gold
fell
to
$548
an
ounc
e
a
nd
the
Dow
Jon
es
av
er
ag
e
fell
to
765.
44,
its
lowe
st
lev
el
in
alm
os
t
two
ye
ar
s.
(Th
e
Wall
St
re
et
Jo
ur
na
l,
Ma
rch
25,
1980)
Sov
iet-
Cub
an
ta
k
eo
v
e
r
pl
an
s
su
rf
ac
e
Ant
i-Ca
stro
sp
ie
s
rep
or
t
Sov
iet-
Cu
ba
n
pl
an
s
to
he
lp
to
pp
le
go
ve
rnm
en
ts
in
Gu
ate
m
ala
,
E
l
Sa
lva
do
r,
Do
min
ican
Rep
ubl
ic,
Ha
iti,
and
Colu
mbi
a
in
1980
.
Pro
ble
m
thou
gh,
gu
eri
lla
s
nee
d
m
on
ey
.
(C
oi
nc
id
en
ce
?
L
ef
ti
st
gu
er
ill
a's
took
73
peop
le
ho
sta
ge
in
B
og
ata
,
Colo
mbia
Fe
b.
27
,1980.
Re
aso
n?
$50
millio
n,
a
mo
ng
oth
er
thin
gs.
)
(The
Sp
otl
igh
t,
Ma
r.
3,
1980
)
Cont
inued
Fr
om
Pa
ge
One
Jos
eph
L.
Ja
ge
r
-
Di
str
ict
9
—
Hart
we
ll
A.
Smi
ley
Di
str
ict
10
—
A
.
Bri
an
Calh
oun,
Thor
Lieu
ngh
Di
str
ict
11
—
Sha
ron
R.
Wid-
m
ar
,
Will
iam
H.
Mille
r
D
is
tr
ic
t
12
—
N
or
m
an
G.
Bau
ern
fein
d
Di
str
ict
13
—
Ro
be
rt
W.
J
ohn
son
Dis
tric
t
14
—
Gord
on
L.
Niels
en
Di
str
ict
15
—
Dav
id
W.
Re
t-
zin
ge
r,
Ha
min
M.
Mu
ham
ma
d
Ed
ito
ri
al
Di
str
ict
16
-
Wilfr
ed
Joh
n
Pa
tr
ic
k,
Ro
ber
t
W.
M
utc
hle
r
D
is
tr
ic
t
17
—
W
ill
iam
K.
Kn
uds
en,
Will
iam
Sklb
a
Di
str
ict
18
—
Jos
eph
M.
Kelly
Mu
nici
pal
Ju
dg
e
Ro
ber
t
Mich
elson
Co
nsta
ble
Q
ue
nt
in
G.
Ll
oy
d,
Le
w
is
Ro
gne
rud
School
Bo
ard
Me
mb
ers
,
Unif
ied
Scho
ols
Wil
liam
H.
Ku
mm
,
Ad
ore
e
M.
S
en
zi
g,
V
al
er
ie
R.
Han
sen
Eu
ge
ne
J
.
Dun
k,
Berni
ce
M
Th
om
sen
,
J
oe
H
ar
ris
,
Rich
ard
D
M
ad
de
rn,
Ma
rvi
n
J
.
Happel
Re
fer
en
da
Ques
tion
"Sh
ou
ld
Ra
cin
e
Count
y
abolish
the
ele
cte
d
office
of
coro
ner
and
re
pl
ac
e
it
with
an
appoin
ted
posi
tion
of
me
dic
al
ex
am
ine
r?"
Ca
nd
ida
tes
for
posit
ions
for
the
City
an
d
Coun
ty
of
Kenosha
Ma
yor
Joh
n
D.
Bil
otti
,
Pa
ul
Saft
ig
Al
de
rm
an
Ca
sim
ir
J
.
Miec
howic
z,
Jo
hn
C.
Wa
siul
ews
ki
Mu
nic
ipa
l
Ju
sti
ce
Da
vid
M.
Ba
sti
an
,
Ma
rk
R.
Fe
nn
em
a
Ken
osh
a
Coun
ty
Cir
cuit
Court
Br
anc
h
4
Mic
hae
l
S.
Fi
sh
er
Coun
ty
Su
pe
rv
iso
r
Don
ald
M.
Me
tte
n,
Ch
arl
es
E.
Wal
ler
Ca
nd
ida
tes
for
Schoo
l
Boa
rd
K
e
rr
y
W.
P
o
lt
ro
ck
,
Da
vid
Ha
lbr
oo
ks,
M
ark
Lin
das
,
Rob
ert
Wilson
Pa
rtt
im
e
co
sts
st
ud
ie
d
Th
er
e
a
re
ad
de
d
co
sts
for
se
rv
in
g
pa
rt-
tim
e
stu
de
nt
s
—
esp
ec
ial
ly
e
ve
nin
gs
a
nd
wee
ken
ds
—
wh
ich
a
re
not
now
reco
gniz
ed
by
the
st
at
e'
s
en
ro
llm
en
t
fund
ing
fo
rm
ul
a.
Th
at
is
th
e
c
onc
lusi
on
of
a
re
po
rt
d
isc
us
sed
by
t
he
bus
ines
s
an
d
fin
an
ce
co
m
m
itt
ee
of
the
Un
ive
rsi
ty
of
Wisc
onsi
n
Sy
ste
m
Bo
ard
of
Re
ge
nts
.
Th
e
re
po
rt
sa
ys
th
at
pa
rt-
tim
e
en
ro
ll
m
en
t
in
th
e
un
iv
er
si
ty
sy
ste
m
ha
s
in
cr
ea
se
d
by
9,632
stu
de
nt
s
in
th
e
pa
st
six
ye
ar
s
(34%
).
Th
is
gro
wth
re
pr
es
en
ts
66%
of
the
to
tal
UW
Sy
ste
m
en
ro
ll
m
en
t
in
c
re
a
se
in
th
a
t
per
iod
.
F
or
th
es
e
re
a
so
n
s,
th
e
dis
cus
sio
n
pa
pe
r
con
clu
des
,
th
e
en
ro
ll
m
en
t
fu
nd
in
g
fo
rm
u
la
shou
ld
be
mod
ified
to
rec
ogn
ize
the
co
sts
.
Fu
rt
he
r
it
sa
ys
,
the
re
a
re
o
th
er
is
su
es
re
la
te
d
to
eq
uit
ab
le
f
und
ing
whic
h
ca
nno
t
b
e
res
olv
ed
eve
n
with
a
mod
ified
fo
rm
ul
a.
g
a
n
g
e
r
is
no
w
a
cc
e
p
ti
n
g
a
p
p
li
c
a
ti
o
n
s
fo
r
th
e
E
d
i
t
o
r
fo
r
th
e
1
9
8
0
-8
1
ac
ad
em
ic
ye
ar
.
A
pp
lic
an
ts
m
us
t
b
e
re
gi
st
er
ed
UW
P
ar
ks
id
e
st
ud
en
ts
p
la
n
n
in
g
to
ta
ke
at
lea
st
6
cr
ed
its
ea
ch
se
m
es
te
r.
D
e
a
d
li
n
e
fo
r
a
p
p
li
c
a
ti
o
n
s
:
A
p
ri
l
2
1
,
1
9
8
0
Se
nd
ap
pl
ic
at
io
n
&
re
su
m
e
to
:
Ra
ng
er
WLLC
D139
UW
-Pa
rks
ide
Ke
nos
ha,
WI
531
41
V
o
te
im
p
e
r
a
ti
v
e
by
Sue
St
ev
en
s
Wh
at
ca
n
I
sa
y
i
n
an
e
di
to
ria
l
th
at
wi
ll
m
ov
e
P
ar
ks
id
e
s
tu
de
nt
s
to
vo
te
i
n
nex
t
T
ue
sd
ay
's
ele
cti
on
?
Wha
t
c
oul
d
po
ssi
bly
ha
pp
en
th
at
would
m
ak
e
you
re
al
iz
e
th
at
votin
g
is
a
ne
ce
ss
ar
y
pa
rt
of
life
in
th
es
e
Un
ited
S
ta
te
s?
How
ab
ou
t
an
in
te
rn
at
io
na
l
cr
is
is
o
r
a
sc
re
we
d
up
eco
no
my
,
o
r
eve
n
the
dr
af
t?
Would
th
es
e
is
su
es
be
eno
ugh
to
m
ak
e
a
stu
de
nt
wa
nt
to
v
ote
?
Th
ey
sho
uld
be
,
th
ey
'r
e
only
a
few
of
th
e
iss
ue
s
aff
ec
tin
g
you
r
ig
ht
now?
Th
e
W
isco
nsin
pr
im
ar
y
ha
s
a
lw
ay
s
b
een
one
th
at
pr
ov
es
to
be
a
tu
rn
in
g
poin
t
in
th
e
pr
es
id
en
tia
l
ra
ce
.
It
's
im
pe
ra
tiv
e
th
at
a
s
ma
ny
Wisc
onsin
cit
ize
ns
vot
e
a
s
pos
sib
le.
Ou
rs
is
on
e
of
th
e
few
open
pr
im
ar
ie
s
le
ft
i
n
thi
s
na
tio
n.
Ou
rs
is
one
s
ta
te
th
at
le
ts
th
e
peo
ple
de
cid
e
on
ca
nd
id
at
es
,
not
a
pol
itic
al
m
ac
hi
ne
.
Not
only
will
thi
s
ele
cti
on
he
lp
de
cid
e
th
e
no
mi
ne
es
fo
r
th
e
pr
es
id
en
tia
l
ra
ce
,
but
it
will
als
o
de
cid
e
who
ru
ns
ou
r
loc
al
co
mm
un
iti
es
.
Pa
rk
si
de
is
sup
po
sed
to
be
wo
rki
ng
clo
sel
y
wit
h
ou
r
nei
ghb
ori
ng
ci
tie
s
an
d
tow
ns.
Any
loc
al
po
liti
cal
de
cis
ion
s
ca
n
an
d
will
af
fe
ct
Pa
rk
si
de
an
d
it
s
st
ud
en
ts
both
di
re
ct
ly
an
d
in
di
re
ctl
y.
Two
we
eks
ag
o
th
e
P
ar
ks
id
e
S
tud
en
t G
ov
ern
me
nt
As
soc
iat
ion
hel
d
sp
rin
g
ele
cti
on
s.
At
th
at
tim
e
I
ple
ad
ed
wit
h
st
ud
en
ts
to
m
ak
e
a
cho
ice
.
How
m
an
y
vot
ed?
Only
one
ten
th
of
th
e
s
tu
de
nt
body
bo
the
red
to
sa
y
an
yt
hi
ng
ab
ou
t
iss
ue
s
th
at
af
fe
ct
th
em
di
re
ct
ly
.
An
i
m
po
rta
nt
res
olu
tio
n
co
nc
ern
ing
a
50
ce
nt
ra
is
e
in
tui
tio
n
wa
s
pa
ss
ed
wi
th
120
y
es
vo
tes
!
Th
at
m
ea
ns
th
at
al
m
os
t
5,000
stu
de
nt
s
will
be
she
llin
g
out
an
ex
tr
a
half
buck
be
ca
us
e
the
y
di
dn
't
b
oth
er
t
o
vo
te.
Do
y
ou
re
al
iz
e
t
ha
t
if
th
is
c
on
tin
ue
s
an
yo
ne
cou
ld
p
ut
a
re
fe
re
nd
um
on
t
he
ba
llo
t
to
g
et
mo
ney
fro
m
st
ud
en
ts
an
d
know
th
at
it
will
pa
ss
?
Th
e
s
am
e
thi
ng
ca
n
ha
pp
en
at
th
e
l
oc
al
an
d
na
tio
na
l
lev
el
.
If
you
wa
nt
so
me
thi
ng
don
e,
or
be
tte
r
ye
t,
if
you
wa
nt
to
pr
ev
en
t
so
m
eth
in
g
fr
om
hap
pen
ing
(th
e
d
ra
ft
fo
r
i
ns
ta
nc
e)
us
e
y
our
vo
te
to
ex
pr
es
s
yo
ur
op
inio
n.
Af
ter
a
ll,
t
h
a
t'
s
w
hy
ele
cti
on
s
a
re
hel
d
in
th
e
fi
rs
t
pl
ac
e.
Ande
rson
st
an
ds
apar
t
D
ea
r
P
a
rk
si
d
e
S
tu
de
n
ts
an
d
Fa
cu
lty
:
Next
T
ue
sd
ay
,
Apr
il
1
is
th
e
d
at
e
of
the
Wisco
nsin
St
at
e
P
ri
m
ar
y.
Many
of
you
hav
e
pe
rh
ap
s
not
yet
chos
en
the
c
an
di
da
te
to
wh
om
you
will
giv
e
you
r
su
pp
ort
.
Afte
r
following
the
ca
m
pa
ig
ns
for
the
la
st
se
v
e
ra
l
m
on
th
s
an
d
in
ve
sti
ga
tin
g
the
ca
nd
id
ate
s
and
th
eir
s
tan
ds
on
th
e
i
ssu
es
we
h
av
e
de
ter
mi
ne
d
t
ha
t
Jo
hn
And
erso
n
is
the
bes
t
c
an
di
da
te
fo
r
t
he
of
fice
of
the
Pr
es
id
en
cy
.
Joh
n
And
erso
n
gr
ad
ua
te
d
^
ro
m
the
Un
ive
rsit
y
of
Il
lino
is
P
hi
Be
ta
Ka
ppa
an
d
wen
t
on
to
re
ce
iv
e
his
M
as
ter
s
in
Law
fro
m
H
ar
va
rd
.
R
e
p
re
se
n
ta
ti
v
e
A
nd
er
so
n
h
a
s
se
rv
ed
in
Co
ngr
ess
sin
ce
1961
and
ha
s
pro
vid
ed
lea
de
rs
hi
p
in
Civil
R
ig
ht
s
le
g
is
la
ti
o
n
,
on
en
vir
on
me
nta
l
iss
ue
s,
an
d
su
pp
or
ts
tig
hte
r
fis
ca
l
pol
icie
s
to
cu
rb
inf
lat
ion
.
Mo
re
and
m
or
e
Am
eri
ca
ns
a
re
tak
ing
not
ice
of
Joh
n
An
de
rso
n's
st
ra
ig
h
t-
fo
rw
a
rd
ca
nd
o
r
an
d
g
a
n
g
e
r
Su
e
S
te
v
en
s,
E
di
to
r
Ke
n
M
ey
er
,
F
e
a
tu
re
E
di
to
r
D
av
e
C
ra
m
e
r,
S
po
rt
s
E
di
to
r
B
ri
an
F
el
la
n
d
,
B
us
in
es
s
M
an
ag
er
St
ev
e
D
an
k
er
t,
N
ew
s
E
di
to
r
D
an
G
a
lb
ra
it
h
,
A
d
M
an
ag
er
To
m
C
oo
pe
r,
C
h
ai
rm
an
of
th
e
B
oa
rd
S
T
A
FF
M
ar
k
A
nd
er
so
n,
Ri
ck
B
la
ha
,
P
et
e
C
ra
m
er
,
Ph
il
D
eL
ui
sa
,
Do
ug
E
d
en
h
au
se
r
r
i
„
„
„
H
el
ge
so
n,
M
.r
a
L
oc
ha
ns
ki
,
Su
sa
n
M
ic
he
tt
i,
C
ur
t
M
o
ld
en
au
er
,
K
ev
in
S
d
u
t
a
Jo
se
n
£
R
ip
p,
Do
n
S
c
h
e
rr
e
r,
D
em
se
So
bi
es
ki
,
D
av
e
V
ol
lm
er
.
r
a
a
u
ia
,
Jo
se
p
h
RA
NG
ER
is
w
ri
tt
en
an
d
ed
ite
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st
u
d
en
ts
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U
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ar
ks
id
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re
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lv
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sp
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it
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it
or
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po
lic
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nt
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so
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Pu
bl
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er
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hu
rs
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ay
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u
ri
n
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th
e
ac
a
d
em
ic
y
e
ar
ex
ce
p
t
d
u
ri
n
o
b
re
a
k
s
anH
h
„n
H
..
„
RA
NG
ER
is
pr
in
te
d
by
th
e
Un
ion
C
oo
pe
ra
ti
ve
P
ub
li
sh
in
g
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1
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 25, March 27, 1980
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1980-03-27
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
elections
politics
protest
race
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/8b14575615177052f842fff32f7e3d11.pdf
3c47ffc24846386c600921bfd348ed1a
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 8, issue 22
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
P.S.G.A. general elections March 5th and 6th
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
T
h
u
r
s
d
a
y
,
F
e
b
r
u
a
ry
2
8
,
1
9
8
0
X
jf
U
n
iv
e
r
s
it
y
o
f
W
is
c
o
n
s
in
-
P
a
r
k
s
id
e
a
n
g
e
r
V
o
l.
8
N
o
.
2
2
P.S
.G
.A.
ge
ne
ra
l
e
le
ct
io
n
s
M
a
rc
h
5th
and
6th
Th
e
Pa
rk
sid
e
Stu
den
t
Gov
ern
me
nt
Ass
ocia
tion
will
be
holdi
ng
ge
ne
ra
l
spr
in
g
e
lec
tion
s
on
M
arc
h
5
&
6,
We
dne
sda
y
an
d
Th
ur
sd
ay
,
in
the
Mo
lina
ro
Hall
con
cou
rse
.
Ele
ctio
n
booth
s
w
ill
b
e
o
pen
fro
m
9
a
m
un
til
9
pm
on
thos
e
da
ys
in
o
rd
e
r
to
ac
co
m
m
od
at
e
a
ll
stu
de
nt
s.
Two
ca
nd
id
ate
s
a
re
run
nin
g
f
or
the
posi
tion
of
P.S
.G.A
.
p
res
ide
nt
,'
Tr
ac
y
Gr
ub
er
an
d
Bill
Goh
de.
Th
re
e
peop
le
a
re
vyin
g
for
the
vic
e-p
res
ide
nti
al
posi
tion.
The
y
a
re
Ch
ris
Ha
mm
ele
v,
Ga
ry
Neu
an
d
Cl
air
e
To
lsty
ga.
Th
er
e
ar
e
als
o
se
ve
n
ca
nd
ida
tes
run
nin
g
f
or
se
na
to
ria
l
se
at
s.
Two
m
ajo
r
ref
ere
nd
um
s
will
al
so
a
p
p
e
a
r
on
th
e
b
al
lo
ts
.
Re
fer
end
um
A
de
als
wit
h
t
he
new
ver
sion
on
the
P.S
.G.A
.
Con
stit
uti
on
whic
h
a
pp
ea
rs
on
pa
ge
6
of
this
pa
pe
r.
Th
is
ne
w
con
situ
tion
in
iti
ate
s
ch
an
ge
s
in
the
ma
ke-
up
of
both
th
e
Se
na
te
an
d
SUFAC
.
In
st
ea
d
of
th
e
p
re
se
n
t
24
se
na
to
ria
l
s
ea
ts
th
er
e
will
be
18,
and
all
posi
tion
s
will
be
at
-la
rg
e
ins
tea
d
of
d
ivis
ion
al.
SUFAC
wi
ll,
be
m
ad
e
up
of
eig
ht
m
em
be
rs,
six
se
n
a
to
rs
an
d
tw
o
a
t-
la
rg
e
.
Pr
es
en
tly
SUF
AC
is
ma
de
up
of
13
me
mb
ers
,
12
at
-la
rg
e
se
at
s
an
d
one
app
oin
ted
.
Th
e
seco
nd
ma
jor
ref
ere
nd
um
de
als
with
a
res
olu
tion
prop
osed
by
the
Unit
ed
Counc
il
of
UW
S
tu
de
nt
G
ov
er
nm
en
ts
to
he
lp
sc
ho
ol
s
pa
y
th
ei
r
d
u
es
.
T
he
re
fe
re
n
d
u
m
re
a
d
s
,
"W
e,
th
e
stu
de
nts
of
U
W-P
arks
ide
a
gr
ee
to
sup
po
rt
the
UW
Sys
tem
Stu
den
t
Lobb
y,
Unite
d
Coun
cil,
thro
ugh
a
ma
nd
ato
ry
fee
,
ref
und
abl
e
upon
w
ri
tt
en
re
q
u
e
st
,
of
$.50
pe
r
se
m
e
st
e
r.
If
pa
ss
ed
,
th
is
reso
luti
on
will
be
up
for
ca
m
pu
s
wide
rec
ons
ide
rat
ion
ev
ery
two
ye
ar
s.
"
Und
er
thi
s
pla
n,
Unit
ed
Counci
l
will
au
tom
ati
ca
lly
be
fund
ed
thro
ugh
tuiti
on
ins
tea
d
of
re
ly
in
g
on
in
di
vi
du
al
'
st
u
d
en
t
go
ver
nm
ent
bud
get
s
c
ar
ry
in
g
th
e
bu
rde
n.
As
t
he
ref
ere
nd
um
st
at
es
,
thi
s
fee
will
be
ref
und
abl
e
upon
req
ue
st.
P
ar
ks
id
e'
s
du
es
thi
s
y
ea
r
am
ou
nt
to
ap
pr
ox
im
ate
ly
$2,70
0.
So
you
se
e,
as
a
Pa
rk
sid
e
stu
de
nt
,
you
ca
n
ac
tu
al
ly
ma
ke
a
d
if
fe
re
n
ce
by
vo
tin
g
in
th
is
el
ec
ti
on
.
-A
s
Ti
m
Z
im
m
er
,
Pr
es
id
en
t,
st
at
ed
,
"
I
thin
k
it
's
going
to
be
e
xc
itin
g.
W
e
ha
ve
f
iv
e
new
peop
le
run
nin
g
for
th
e Se
na
te
as
wel
l
as
som
e
for
re
ele
cti
on
."
The
cou
ntin
g
a
ft
er
the
ele
cti
on
s
will
be
do
ne
in
M
olin
aro
H
all
room
105
a
t
8
pm
wi
T
hu
rsd
ay
.
Z
im
me
r
sa
id
,
"A
ll
stu
de
nt
s
a
re
in
vi
te
d.
"
A
look
a
t
th
e
ca
nd
ida
tes
BILL
GOHD
E
B
il
l
G
o
h
d
e
By
S.
Mi
che
tti
Bill
G
ohde
is
26
ye
ar
s
ol
d,
a
nd
a
ju
ni
or
fr
om
R
ac
in
e
wh
o
is
ma
jor
ing
in
Po
liti
ca
l
Sci
enc
e.
Go
hd
e
is
c
u
rr
e
n
tl
y
a
PS
GA
Se
nat
or
an
d
on
Stu
de
nt
Se
rvi
ces
Co
mm
itte
e.
He
is
al
so
on
th
e
Union
Op
era
tin
g
Bo
ard
.
Gohd
e
wa
nts
t
o
get
m
or
e
peo
ple,
m
or
e
in
fl
ue
nc
e
co
m
in
g
in
to
PSGA
.
He
wa
nt
s
peo
ple
to
voice
the
ir
opin
ions
an
d
com
pla
int
s
on
wh
ate
ve
r.
G
ohde
would
l
ike
to
se
e
mo
re
fre
edo
m
of
all
inf
orm
atio
n
of
UW-P.
He
fee
ls
mo
st
of
the
un
aw
are
ne
ss
of
wh
at
goe
s
on
is
fro
m
a
pa
th
y
o
r
de
nia
l
of
a
cc
es
s
to
in
fo
rm
at
io
n,
or
fr
om
be
in
g
uni
nfo
rm
ed.
Gohde
wa
nts
to
let
st
ud
en
ts
know
wh
at
is
goin
g
on
and
wh
at
the
y
ca
n
d
o
ab
ou
t
it
.
He
se
es
his
rol
e
a
s
th
e
one
wh
o
re
se
a
rc
h
e
s
an
d
p
re
se
n
ts
th
e
cho
ice
s,
which
a
re
the
n
left
to
the
stu
de
nt
s
to
de
cid
e.
He
fee
ls
pa
rki
ng
will
alw
ay
s
be
a
pr
ob
le
m
.
He
be
li
ev
es
th
e
dec
isio
n
for
the
Fa
m
ily
Pr
ac
tic
e
Clini
c
wa
s
ma
de
too
fa
st
,
in
les
s
th
an
a
wee
k,
w
ith
v
ag
ue
g
oa
ls
an
d
poss
ibly
a
t
the
ex
pe
nse
of
p
res
en
t
stu
de
nt
se
rv
ic
es
.
G
oh
de
sa
id
th
a
t
te
a
c
h
e
r
ev
alu
ati
on
s
ne
ed
m
ore
con
form
ity
TRA
CY
GR
UB
ER
in
th
eir
app
lica
tio
n,
as
thi
s
i
s
th
e
only
s
tu
de
nt
i
npu
t
for
m
er
it
ra
ise
s
and
ten
ur
e.
He
thin
ks
th
at
th
e
pr
es
en
t
sy
ste
m
is
open
to
too
ma
ny
pot
ent
ial
ab
us
es
.
He
sa
id
the
fo
rm
s
sho
uld
be
rev
ise
d.
Go
hd
e
wi
ll
re
se
a
rc
h
an
y
pro
ble
ms
bro
ugh
t
to
his
att
en
tio
n
so
th
at
acti
on
ca
n
be
tak
en.
Goh-
de
's
ma
in
con
cer
n
is
ge
tti
ng
th
e
rig
ht
i
nfo
rm
atio
n
ou
t
to
thos
e
wh
o
nee
d
it
,
an
d
doing
the
rig
ht
thin
gs
with
th
at
inf
orm
atio
n.
"A
s
fa
r
a
s
coo
per
atio
n
with
the
fac
ult
y
an
d
st
af
f,
th
at
is
wh
ere
the
re
al
poli
tics
com
e
in
,"
st
at
es
Goh
de.
Th
at
is
wh
at
Gohd
e
hope
s
to
be
ab
le
to
ta
ke
ca
re
of
wh
en
ele
cte
d
to
Pr
es
id
en
t
of
the
Stu
den
t
Body
.
Trac
y
G
ru
b
er
by
S.
M
iche
tti
Tr
ac
y
Gr
ube
r
is
23
ye
ar
s
old,
fro
m
just
out
side
of
Bur
ling
ton
,
an
d
a
sop
hom
ore
who
is
a
Bus
ine
ss
m
aj
or
.
S
he
is
cu
rre
ntl
y
Pr
es
ide
nt
Pr
o
Te
mp
ore
of
th
e
P
a
rk
si
d
e
S
tu
d
en
t
G
ov
er
nm
en
t
Asso
ciati
on
Se
na
te
as
well
as
pre
sid
en
t
of
Women
in
Bus
ine
ss
clu
b.
She
wa
s
rec
en
tly
app
oin
ted
to
the
Ch
an
ce
llo
r's
Wome
ns
Tas
k
Fo
rc
e
Co
mm
itte
e.
Tr
ac
y
Gr
ub
er
ha
s
b
een
in
volv
ed
wit
h
P.S
.G.A
.
sin
ce
la
st
Sep-
CHR
IS
HAM
MEL
EV
tem
ber
whe
n
th
e
g
rou
p
w
as
s
m
al
l
an
d
she
wa
s
a
bl
e
t
o
b
eco
me
mo
re
invo
lved
.
Th
is
res
ult
ed
in
he
r
elec
tion
i
n
No
vem
ber
a
s
P
re
si
de
nt
Pr
o
Te
mp
ore
.
Gr
ub
er
st
at
ed
th
at
bef
ore
thi
s
ye
ar
the
re
we
re
no
ch
an
ne
ls
of
co
m
m
un
ic
at
io
n
op
en
.
T
hi
s
ref
lec
ted
in
the
SUFA
C
pro
ces
s,
whic
h
wa
s
len
gth
y,
an
d
eve
ryo
ne
invol
ved
wa
s
no
t
a
ble
to
a
gr
ee
on
any
thin
g
due
to
s
elf
-in
ter
est
s
an
d
powe
r
pla
ys
.
Now
mo
re
is
bein
g
ac
co
m
pl
is
he
d
by
w
or
ki
ng
tog
eth
er,
whic
h
is
he
r
ma
in
con
cer
n.
Sh
e
has
bee
n
an
ac
tiv
e
pa
rt
of
dea
lin
gs
with
the
UW-P
ad
m
in
is
tr
at
io
n
wh
en
co
m
mun
icat
ion
line
s
o
pene
d
up.
As
a
res
ult
of
thi
s,
stu
de
nt
lif
e
on
ca
m
p
u
s
h
as
in
c
re
a
se
d
an
d
beco
me
ric
he
r,
e.g
.
mo
re
clu
bs,
mo
re
b
ask
etb
all
at
te
nd
an
ce
,
m
ore
ac
tiv
itie
s
suc
h
as
Win
ter
Ca
r
niv
al.
If
e
le
c
te
d
-
to
P.
S.
G
.A
.
Pr
esi
de
nc
y,
Gr
ub
er
would
wa
nt
com
mu
nic
atio
ns
to
con
tinu
e
an
d
stu
den
t
life
to
in
cr
ea
se
.
Gr
ub
er
fee
ls
we
ha
ve
a
ver
y
va
lua
ble
scho
ol
an
d
mo
re
stu
de
nts
shou
ld
ge
t
in
volv
ed
wh
ere
th
eir
in
te
re
sts
lie.
Gr
ub
er
sa
id
th
at
th
er
e
is
a
lot
in
vo
lv
ed
in
ke
ep
in
g
co
m
mu
nic
atio
ns
.
open
an
d
clu
b
in
ter
act
ion
ac
tiv
e.
Sh
e
is
pa
r-
Women's
task
for
ce
be
gin
s
work
by
G.
H
elge
son
At
th
e
fi
rs
t
m
ee
tin
g
of
Pa
rk
si
de
's
S
tat
us
of
Wom
en
Ta
sk
Fo
rc
e
co
mm
itt
ee
on
Fe
br
ua
ry
20th,
C
han
cel
lor
Alan
Gus
kin
sa
id
th
at
"t
h
er
e
ha
s
been
a
lot
of
unh
app
ine
ss
am
on
g
the
Re
ge
nts
ove
r
the
wa
y
the
UW-S
ystem
ha
s
res
pon
ded
to
wo
me
n."
Gus
kin
sa
id
th
a
t
th
e
p
er
c
en
ta
g
e
of
ten
ure
d
wo
me
n
fac
ult
y
me
mb
ers
ha
s
a
ct
ua
lly
de
cr
ea
se
d
in
th
e
l
as
t
few
ye
ar
s,
de
sp
ite
Af
firm
ati
ve
Action
ef
fo
rts
,
an
d
the
Re
ge
nts
beg
an
the
Sy
ste
m-
wi
de
St
at
us
of
Women
stu
dy
to
find
out
why
.
Gus
kin
s
ai
d
he
tho
ugh
t
t
he
Tas
k
Fo
rce
woul
d
ha
ve
"m
aj
or
im
pa
ct
"
on
the
sy
ste
m
be
cau
se
of
the
Re
ge
nt
s'
in
te
re
st
in
it.
He
str
es
se
d
th
at
im
ple
me
nta
tio
n
of
policie
s
al
re
ad
y
ex
ist
ing
wa
s
lax
in
the
Sy
ste
m,
an
d
th
at
he
woul
d
lik
e
to
s
ee
the
Ta
sk
Fo
rc
e
"c
om
e
out
with
an
as
se
ssm
en
t
and
the
n
try
to
co
rre
ct
pro
ble
ms
in
im
ple
me
ntin
g
po
lic
ies
."
Res
pon
ding
to
a
co
mm
itte
e
m
em
be
r's
con
cer
n
over
the
iss
ue
of
se
xu
al
ha
ra
ss
m
en
t,
Gus
kin
sa
id
,
"T
he
re
hav
e
been
ac
tio
ns
ta
ke
n
to
d
ea
l
w
ith
(s
ex
u
al
ha
ra
ss
m
en
t)
pro
ble
ms
on
thi
s
c
a
m
p
u
s
."
He
al
so
sa
id
th
e
R
eg
en
ts
'
go
al
s
in
th
is
a
re
a
am
ou
nte
d
to
"m
ak
in
g
visi
ble
wh
at
is
now
in
vi
sib
le
,"
and
sa
id
,
"t
he
pow
er
of
em
ba
rr
as
sm
en
t
wo
rks
."
ThS
re
po
rt
als
o
note
s
th
at
"s
ex
ua
l
ha
ra
ss
m
en
t
ma
y
be
fa
r
mo
re
ext
ens
ive
tha
n
pre
vio
usly
re
al
iz
ed
,"
a
nd
th
at
"
it
ha
s
b
een
a
hidd
en
pro
blem
be
cau
se
.
.
.
GAR
Y
NEU
ti
cu
la
rl
y
w
or
ki
ng
w
ith
th
e
bus
ine
ss
clu
bs
in
co
op
era
tiv
e
ef
fo
rts
ins
tea
d
of
com
pet
itio
n.
Th
er
e
ar
e
spe
cifi
c
iss
ues
th
at
Gr
ub
er
is i
nte
res
ted
in.
She
would
op
po
se
m
an
d
at
or
y
h
ea
lt
h
in
su
ran
ce
for
all
stu
de
nt
s
thro
ugh
inc
rea
sed
tuitio
n
fee
s
as
beyo
nd
the
resp
ons
ibil
ity
of
th
e
UW
sy
ste
m.
She
is
als
o
in
ter
es
ted
in
te
ac
h
er
te
n
u
re
an
d
m
er
it
ev
alu
ati
on
s
by
s
tud
en
ts
as
wel
l
a
s
stu
de
nt
life.
Gr
ub
er
thin
ks
th
at
sh
e
ha
s
the
CLA
IRE
TOLS
TYGA
le
ad
er
sh
ip
ex
pe
rie
nc
e,
an
d
is
not
af
ra
id
to
ge
t
invo
lved
to
pu
t
he
r
tim
e
and
eff
ort
s
int
o
work
if
ele
cte
d
to
Pr
es
id
en
t
of
P.S
.G.
A.
Chr
is
H
am
m
el
ev
By
S.
Mic
het
ti
Ch
ris
Ha
mm
ele
v
i
s
18
yea
rs
o
ld,
fro
m
Ken
osh
a,
an
d
a
fre
sh
m
an
who
will
be
a
Psy
cho
logy
m
ajo
r.
Ha
mm
ele
v
is
cu
rre
nt
ly
a
n
ele
cte
d
Se
na
tor
on
PSGA
.
As
s
uc
h
sh
e
is
Conti
nued
On
Pa
ge
Two
C
o
l
l
e
g
i
a
t
e
C
r
ie
r
Media
trip——
——
——
——
—-
Med
ia
S
erv
ice
s
t
ri
p
p
lan
ned
for
Ma
rch
9-19,1980
is
s
et
.
Cost
$46
6
-
$500
,
dep
end
ing
on
st
ud
en
t
s
ta
tu
s.
T
ra
v
el
by
a
ir
M
ilw
au
ke
e
to
Was
hing
ton,
by
tra
in
to
New
Yor
k.
R
etu
rn
to
Milw
auke
e
by
a
ir
.
Inf
orm
ati
on
,
co
nta
ct
M
r.
Ja
m
es
Ma
gui
re,
ext
ens
ion
256
7.
A
rg
an
b
ri
g
h
t
pe
rf
or
m
s—
D
al
la
s
W
eek
ly
an
d
Na
nc
y
Arg
anb
rig
ht
will
per
for
m
one
-
pian
o
fou
r
han
ds
work
s
Su
nda
y,
Ma
rch
2
a
t
8
p.m
.
in
the
Com
m
Ar
ts
Th
ea
tre
.
Acce
nt
on
En
ric
h
me
nt
pro
gra
m
will
inc
lud
e
wor
ks
by
Mo
zart
,
Sc
hu
be
rt,
Dv
ora
k,
Men
dels
soh
m,
Ra
vel
an
d
Li
st.
Tic
ket
s
a
va
ila
bl
e
$6.50
each
fro
m
Pa
rk
sid
e
Union
Info
Ce
nte
r.
Births
up
—
Ind
ica
tio
ns
ar
e
th
at
the
bir
th
ra
te
for
197
9
will
r
ea
ch
73,0
00
live
bir
th
s.
Thi
s
is
the
sec
ond
hig
hes
t
af
te
r
1971
ra
te
of
77,455
;
bu
t,
ra
te
ma
y
c
lim
b
e
ven
hig
her
unt
il
1990,
when
num
ber
of
wom
en
of
chi
ld
be
ari
ng
age
is
e
xp
ect
ed
to
p
eak
a
t
1.2
5
m
ill
io
n,
ac
co
rd
in
g
to
Wisc
onsin
D
ep
ar
tm
en
t
of
He
alth
an
d
Soc
ial
Se
rvi
ce
s.
wo
me
n
fe
el
un
co
m
fo
rt
ab
le
,
they
tal
k
abo
ut
per
son
al
inc
ide
nts
of
se
xu
al
ha
ra
ss
m
en
t."
And,
lik
e
ra
pe
vic
tim
s,
sex
ua
lly
ha
ra
ss
ed
wom
en
ar
e
often
conv
ince
d
th
at
noth
ing
w
ill be
don
e
if
they
re
po
rt
it,
it
will
be
trea
ted"
ligh
tly
or
rid
icu
led
,
or
th
at
they
will
be
bla
me
d
or
suf
fer
rep
erc
us
sio
ns.
Gus
kin
sai
d
th
at
pa
st
ca
se
s
of
d
is
cr
im
in
at
io
n
or
se
x
u
al
ha
ra
ss
m
en
t
sh
ould
only
be
ra
ise
d
by
the
com
mi
tte
e
.a
s
iss
ue
s
to
stu
dy
if
"
it
ha
s
eff
ect
on
the
pre
se
nt.
If
it
is
a
ver
y
se
rio
us
pro
ble
m
now,
it
sho
uld
be
sta
ted
a
s
su
ch
.
The
pur
pos
e
of
the
co
mm
itte
e
is
not
to
p
ut
c
om
pla
int
s
th
ro
ug
h
th
e
du
e-
pr
oc
es
s
m
ac
hi
ne
ry
."
Gus
kin
als
o
sa
id
,
thou
gh,
th
at
pa
rt
of
the
com
m
itt
ee
's
res
pon
sib
lity
would
be
to
Investm
ent
taugh
t——
——
Non
-
cr
ed
it
cou
rse
tau
gh
t
by
Ja
m
es
Me
yer
s
of
R
ob
ert
W.
Bai
rd
In
v
es
tm
en
t
B
an
ki
ng
F
ir
m
,
Ra
cin
e.
Cla
ss
me
ets
six
Wed
ne
sd
ay
s
begi
nnin
g
M
arc
h
19,
7-9
p.m
.
in
Ta
lle
nt
Ha
ll.
En
ro
llm
en
t
lim
ite
d.
Ph
on
e
553
-231
2.
F
ee
$30.
Math
workshop
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Th
is
UWEX
spo
nso
red
cla
ss
beg
an
ye
ste
rd
ay
.
It
me
ets
five
We
dne
sda
ys
a
t
Ta
lle
nt
Hall
,
7-9
p
.m
.
In
fo
rm
at
io
n
,
ca
ll
K
ar
en
Sku
ldt
553
-23
51.
R
eg
ist
rat
ion
,
ca
ll
553
-23
12.
F
ee
is
$18.
Student
cau
fcu
s-—
——
——
——
On
F
rid
ay
,
Fe
br
ua
ry
29
and
on
Sa
tu
rd
ay
,
Ma
rch
1,
1980
,
Uni
ted
Council
will
host
198
0
L
eg
isl
ati
ve
Con
feren
ce
an
d
Wisc
onsin
St
ud
ent
Cau
cus
a
t
the
Union
Sout
h,
227
No
rth
R
an
d
al
l
Av
e.
F
o
r
in
fo
rm
at
io
n
co
n
ta
ct
Ki
m
Ka
che
lym
er
at
608
-233
-342
2/36
44,
or
a
t
hom
e
608
-23
3-5
916
.
Fre
e
movie
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
One
hou
r
color
rel
ea
se
,
Sh
iok
ari
Pa
ss
,
is
a
tru
e
sto
ry
.
It
will
be
show
n
a
t
1
p.m
.
in
Union
Cin
em
a
Th
ea
tre
.
Spo
nsor
ed
by
I.C
.V.
F.
2
T
h
u
rs
da
y,
F
e
b
ru
a
ry
28,
1980
Ra
ng
er
M
e
e
t
th
e
C
an
di
da
te
s
(c
°n
t.
fr
o
m
p
g
.
l
)
T
h
e
G
l
o
b
e
a
t
a
G
l
a
n
c
e
January
Inflation
Ne
ws
Consumer
pric
es
wer
e
up
1.4
perc
ent
las
t
mon
th.
I
f
pri
ces
cont
inue
to
ris
e
at
tha
t
ra
te
it
means
an
a
nnu
al
i
nf
la
tio
n
of
18.
5
per
cen
t.
In
con
tra
st,
19
79
in
fla
tio
n
ra
te
was
13
.3
per
cen
t,
the
wo
rst
in
33
yea
rs.
(Chic
ago
Tri
bu
ne,
Fe
b.
22,
19
80)
The
Hostages,
Progress
a
t
Las
t?
Am
eric
ans
have
been
in
cap
ti
vi
ty
i
n
Teh
eran
fo
r
mo
re
tha
n
10
0
days
.
Un
ite
d
Nati
ons
Sec
reta
ry-
G
en
er
al
K
u
rt
W
al
dh
ei
m
wa
s
expec
ted
to
(an
d
did
)
announce
fo
rm
a
tio
n
of
an
in
te
rn
a
ti
o
n
a
l
com
miss
ion
t
o
hea
r
gr
ieva
nces
of
bot
h
I
ra
n
and
the
Un
ite
d
States.
(News
week,
Feb
.
25,
19
80)
Fighting
in
Afgh
an
Capita
l
Pro
tes
t
aga
inst
Soviet
m
ili
ta
ry
pre
se
nc
e
sp
re
ad
th
ro
ug
ho
ut
Afgh
anis
tan.
For
eign
ers
rep
orte
d
seeing
Sov
iet
t
roops
and
arm
ore
d
person
nel
ca
rri
er
s
in
Ka
bu
l,
the
c
a
p
it
a
l
c
it
y
of
A
fg
ha
ni
st
an
.
Af
gh
an
M
os
le
m
re
be
ls
ar
e
rep
orte
d
thre
ate
ning
ma
jor
at
tacks
on
the
c
ap
ita
l.
(The
Ca
pit
al
Tim
es,
Fe
b.
22
,
1980
)
XIII
Olympics
end
The
X
II
I
Win
ter
Oly
mpi
cs
a
t
La
ke
Pl
ac
id
finis
hed
,
w
ith
the
U.
S.
O
ly
m
pi
c
Ho
ck
ey
te
am
be
at
in
g
ou
t
Cz
ec
ho
slo
va
kia
,
No
rw
ay,
Ro
ma
nia
,
West
Ger
ma
ny,
Rus
sia,
and
Fi
nl
an
d,
and
ty
in
g
the
Swedes,
to
take
the
G
old
Me
dal.
E
ri
d
Heid
en
of
Mad
ison
,
Wiscon
sin
also
took
fiv
e
gol
d
meda
ls
in
speed
sk
ati
ng
;
th
e
most
medal
s
ever
won
in
an
event
in
W
in
te
r
O
ly
m
pi
cs
.
(C
hi
ca
go
Tri
bu
ne
,
F
eb.
25,
19
80
)
M
or
e
Troubles
for
West?
Yug
osla
via
is
a
source
of
con
cern
to
the
West
now
tha
t
pres
iden
t
Joseph
Bro
z
Tit
o
is
in
w
or
se
ni
ng
he
al
th
.
P
re
si
de
nt
Car
ter
disclo
sed
tha
t
he
he
ld
"f
re
qu
en
t"
talk
s
w
ith
Eur
ope
an
leade
rs
about
the
situ
atio
n
in
the
Ba
lka
n
nat
ion
.
I
t
is
fea
red
tha
t
Ru
ss
ia
w
il
l
tr
y
to
pr
es
su
re
Yugo
slav
ia
int
o
close
r
ties
to
Mosco
w.
(U.S.
New
and
Wo
rld
Re
por
t,
F
eb
.
25,
198
0)
Forme
r
Nazis
ge
t
jail
A
West
Ge
rma
n
judge
sen
ten
ced
th
re
e
fo
rm
er
Ge
sta
po
agents
to
p
riso
n
f
or
co
mp
lici
ty
in
the
m
urd
er
of
Jews
du
rin
g
W
orl
d
War
I
I
.
The
three
—
He
rbe
rt
Hage
n,
K
ur
t
Lis
ch
ka
,
and
Er
ns
t
Hei
nrich
soh
n,
wer
e
give
n
sen
tences
rang
ing
fro
m
6
to
12
years.
(News
week,
Feb
.
25
,
1980
)
Wooin
g
TV's
Da
n
Rather
Aft
er
he
ari
ng
the
same
offe
r
fro
m
the
thre
e
m
aj
or
netw
orks
CBS,
ABC
,
and
N
BC
,
Da
n
R
ath
er
of
CBS'
Six
ty
Minu
tes
fam
e
decided
on
the
CBS
job.
Ra
the
r
w
ill
outdo
the
b
ioni
c
ma
n
w
ith
an
$8
m
ill
io
n
s
pread
over
fiv
e
yea
rs.
(T
im
e,
Fe
b.
25,
19
80)
Le
gis
lat
ive
Af
fai
rs
Di
re
ct
or
,
a
Wa
ys
an
d
Me
an
s
C
om
m
itt
ee
mem
ber,
and
pa
rt
of
the
Ad
H
oc
Com
mitt
ee
of
the
Un
ite
d
Cou
ncil
of
St
ud
en
t
Go
ve
rn
m
en
ts
(a
n
associa
tion
of
UW
system
stud
ent
gove
rnme
nts)
on
the
dr
af
t.
She
has
fu
lfi
lle
d
the
necessar
y
duties
of
secr
etar
y
since
the
po
sitio
n
was
vacat
ed
on
PSGA
.
Ham
mel
ev
wou
ld
lik
e
to
see
UW-
P
mo
re
invo
lve
d
w
ith
the
Un
ite
d
Cou
ncil
because
they
do
muc
h
lob
byi
ng
in
leg
isla
tur
e
and
to
the
boa
rd
of
r
egen
ts
on
studen
t
and
com
mu
nity
issues.
Some
issu
es
w
hi
ch
in
te
re
st
Ham
me
lev
ar
e:
clea
ning
up
the
teacher
eva
luat
ion
and
tenu
re
pr
oc
es
se
s;
cl
ea
ni
ng
up
th
e
pa
rk
ing
prob
lems
and
the
busi
ng
pro
blem
s;
ins
uri
ng
tha
t
studen
t
orga
niza
tions
do
no
t
have
t
o
mov
e
fro
m
Tal
len
t
H
a
ll
if
the
Fa
m
ily
Pr
ac
tic
e
and
expans
ion
of
the
Nu
rsi
ng
Pr
og
ra
m
ar
e
bro
ugh
t
in
since
the
proposed
loc
atio
n
wou
ld
be
Ta
llen
t
H
a
ll;
oppo
sition
to
m
an
da
to
ry
st
ud
en
t
he
a
lth
in
suran
ce,
wh
ich
wo
uld
rais
e
tu
itio
n
fees
when
mos
t
student
s
are
al
re
ad
y
co
ve
re
d.
In
st
ea
d
she
wou
ld
sup
port
an
opti
ona
l
sy
stem
-
wi
de
in
su
ra
nc
e
p
la
n
;
an
d
st
re
ng
th
en
in
g
the
w
o
rk
in
g
rela
tion
shi
p
b
etwee
n
the
stude
nts
and
the
U
W-P
ad
mi
nis
tra
tio
n.
H
am
m
el
ev
th
in
ks
she
w
ou
ld
ma
ke
a
good
PSGA
Vice
-
Pr
es
id
en
t
bec
aus
e
she
ha
s
lead
ersh
ip
ab
ili
ty
and
respo
n
si
bi
lit
y
and
wou
ld
become
in
volve
d.
G
ar
y
N
eu
By
S.
M
ic
he
tti
Ga
ry
Neu
is
25
yea
rs
old
,
a
jun
ior
f
ro
m
Raci
ne
(b
ut
m
ov
ing
to
Kenosh
a)
who
is
m
aj
or
in
g
in
Sociology
and
Psy
cho
logy
.
He
is
c
u
rr
e
n
tl
y
a
PS
GA
Se
na
to
r,
ch
air
ma
n
of
Ways
an
d
Mean
s
Com
mit
tee
,
and
a
me
mb
er
of
Student
Servic
es
Com
mitt
ee.
He
is
a
wo
rk/
stu
dy
stud
ent
for
a
B
eh
a
vi
o
ra
l
S
cie
nce
pr
of
es
so
r.
Ga
ry
Neu
sees
his
ro
le
as
an
educa
tor
to
get
stude
nts
mo
re
aw
are
of
wha
t's
hap
peni
ng
on
camp
us
po
lit
ic
al
ly
.
He
also
sees
him
se
lf
as
a
watch
dog.
He
thin
ks
stude
nts
need
mo
re
powe
r
and
org
aniz
atio
n
to
preve
nt
t
he
lac
k
of
knowle
dge
abou
t
issues
whi
ch
conc
ern
cam
pus
dir
ec
tio
n.
He
feels
the
adm
ini
str
ati
on
's
co
ncer
n
is
not
w
ith
stud
ents
bu
t
ra
th
er
Letters
to
th
e
Ed
ito
r-
Bure
aucra
cy
thr
eat
ens
Task
Fo
rce
fcont.
fr
om
pg
.
1)
re
fe
r
com
pla
ints
to
the
prop
er
au
tho
riti
es.
He
stressed
tha
t,
"
I
f
the
co
rre
ct
process
is
used,
the
com
pla
int
wou
ld
bever
be
made
pu
bli
c.
We
h
ave
to
be
ve
ry
,
ve
ry
sen
sitiv
e
and
ca
re
fu
l."
Gu
skin
adde
d
that
"a
gg
reg
ati
ng
of
te
sti
m
on
y"
of
those
volun
tee
ring
inf
or
ma
tio
n
to
the
com
m
itt
e
e
wo
ul
d
he
lp
ke
ep
in
div
idu
als
anonym
ous.
"
I
f
you
have
thre
e
or
fou
r
peop
le
w
ith
the
sam
e
co
m
pl
ai
nt
s,
p
u
t
th
em
toge
ther
,
and
the
re
is
pr
ot
ec
tio
n.
"
Gus
kin
sai
d
tha
t
h
e
was
awa
re
th
at
some
com
mit
tee
mem
bers
fe
lt
tha
t
the
ir
own
posi
tions
were
ris
ke
d
by
t
he
ir
inv
olv
em
ent
in
the
Task
Fo
rce
,
tha
t
h
e
"c
ou
ld
n't
be
tha
t
naiv
e
as
to
suppose
there
w
as
no
ris
k
in
vo
lv
ed
,"
bu
t
tha
t
"t
he
size
of
the
gr
oup
an
d
the
na
tur
e
of
the
m
emb
ers
w
ill
be
p
ro
te
cti
on
."
Pa
rks
ide
's
Task
Fo
rce
on
the
St
at
us
of
Wo
men
co
m
m
itt
ee
mee
tings
a
re
open,
and
those
who
w
is
h
to
at
te
nd
m
ee
tin
gs
or
vo
lu
nt
ee
r
in
fo
rm
a
ti
o
n
to
th
e
com
mit
tee
can
do
so
by
c
ont
act
ing
S
to
ffl
e
or
ot
he
r
co
m
m
itt
ee
mem
bers
for
me
etin
g
loca
tion
s,
dates
and
tim
es.
To
the
ed
ito
r:
In
ha
vin
g
been
goin
g
to
this
un
ive
rsi
ty
on
and
off
for
fiv
e
ye
ars
now
,
and
by
ha
vin
g
one
of
m
y
degrees
in
socio
logy,
I
have
become
somew
hat
fa
m
ili
ar
w
ith
the
po
liti
ca
l
str
uc
tur
e
of
this
in
sti
tut
ion
.
One
of
m
y
fea
rs
in
the
lac
k
of
ma
tur
e,
respon
sible
inv
olv
em
ent
by
the
studen
ts
here
,
is
tha
t
we
are le
av
ing
the
to
ta
l
con
tro
l
of
our
u
n
iv
e
rs
it
y
up
to
the
ad
mi
nis
tra
tor
s.
Studen
ts,
we
sup
p
o
rt
th
is
u
n
iv
e
rs
it
y
an
d
ar
e
re
ly
in
g
on
i
t
for
our
educ
ation
.
Ha
vin
g
just
rec
en
tly
rea
d
an
a
rt
ic
le
in
the
A
m
er
ic
an
So
ci
ol
og
ic
al
Re
vie
w
ti
tl
e
d
"C
on
tra
dic
tio
n
of
Do
min
atio
n
an
d
Pr
od
uct
ion
in
Bu
re
au
cr
ac
y"
by
Ro
be
rt
Anto
nio,
I
cou
ld
not
help
re
lat
in
g
th
e
m
at
er
ia
l
to
P
ark
sid
e.
In
set
ting
the
stag
e
I
wou
ld
li
ke
to
pres
ent
Webe
r's
fee
ling
of
"b
ur
ea
uc
ra
cy
."
"B
ure
au
cra
cy
is
te
ch
n
ic
al
ly
the
mo
st
h
ig
h
ly
develo
ped
powe
r
ins
tru
me
nt
in
the
hands
of
its
co
nt
ro
lle
rs
."
"T
he
tendency
tow
ard
eff
ici
en
t
dom
inat
ion
tends
to
becom
e
an
end
in
its
elf
some
what
discon
necte
d
from
any
tru
e
co
mm
itm
ent
to
serv
ice.
The
und
erst
and
ing
of
bure
auc
racy
as
a
str
uc
tur
e
of
dom
inat
ion
b
ears
li
tt
le
re
lat
ion
to
its
of
fic
ia
l
serv
ice
goals,
to
the
main
tena
nce
of
soci
al
well
-bei
ng
or
even
to
the
long
-
te
rm
pe
r-
pit
ua
tio
n
of
the
bur
eau
cra
cy
it
se
lf.
C
or
ru
p
t,
w
as
te
fu
l
an
d
in
e
ff
ic
ie
n
t
be
ha
vi
or
of
te
n
is
tole
rate
d
and
somet
imes
even
becomes
a
pre
qui
site
of
offi
ce
in
'ef
fic
ie
nt
'
bu
rea
ucr
atic
str
uct
ure
s
so
long
as
i
t
avoid
s
di
re
ct
and
se
rio
us
in
te
rf
er
e
nc
e
w
it
h
the
ma
ste
r's
powe
r
over
persons
and
res
our
ces
."
Fu
rth
er
sup
port
comes
fro
m
Noa
m
Chro
msby
in
his
book
"R
ea
so
ns
of
S
ta
te
"
in
hi
s
discuss
ion
of
B
.
F
.
Skin
ner,
the
b
e
h
a
v
io
ra
l
m
o
d
if
ic
a
ti
o
n
is
t.
"S
k
in
n
e
r'
s
ap
pr
oa
ch
sug
ges
ts
tha
t
co
ntr
ol
of
speech
by
dir
ec
t
pun
ishm
ent
shou
ld
be
avoid
ed,
bu
t
th
at
i
t
i
s
q
uite
ap
pro
pri
ate
fo
r
speech
to
be
con
trol
led
,
say
by
re
st
ric
tin
g
good
jobs
to
people
who
sa
y
wha
t
is
app
rove
d
by
the
designer
of
the
cu
ltu
re.
In
ac
cordan
ce
wi
th
Ski
nne
r's
ideas,
there
wou
ld
be
no
vio
lat
ion
of
acad
emic
free
dom
if
prom
otio
ns
were
gran
ted
only
to
those
who
con
form
,
in
the
ir
speech
an
d
wr
itt
in
gs
,
to
the
rul
es
of
the
cu
ltu
re
.
.
.
"
Mi
ch
ae
l
Pa
re
nt
i
in
his
ar
tic
le
"P
o
lit
ic
a
l
Bi
go
try
in
Aca
dem
e"
states
tha
t
uni
ver
siti
es
are
sup
posed
to
consis
t
of
scho
lars
wi
th
div
ers
e
po
lit
ic
al
a
nd
p
hil
iso
ph
ica
l
pers
pect
ives
,
b
ut
in
re
al
ity
mos
t
uni
ver
siti
es
consis
t
of
po
lit
ic
al
orth
odo
xy.
Mic
hae
l
belie
ves
tha
t
i
t
is
no
t
the
b
ig
o
tr
y
ag
ai
ns
t
wo
m
an
or
mi
no
rit
ies
(bo
th
of
w
hic
h
we
h
ave
few
o
f,
if
an
y)
bu
t
b
igo
try
aga
inst
po
lit
ic
al
dissen
ters
tha
t
s
hould
be
our
m
aj
or
conc
ern.
H
er
e
a
t
P
a
rk
si
de
in
th
is
bu
rea
ucr
atic
in
st
itu
tio
n
it
appe
ars
tha
t
we
,
here
to,
h
ave
thi
s
t
ype
of
co
ntr
ol
or de
sign
er.
Wh
at
happens
to
profess
ors
who
a
re
not
m
olde
d,
who
have
too
mu
ch
pr
ide
an
d
dig
nit
y
to
con
form
to
som
ethin
g
they
do
n't
belie
ve
in?
I
t
is
as
Skinn
er
suggest
s,
they
are
not
gra
nte
d
tenu
re
or
tha
t
the
ir
con
trac
ts
are
not
renewe
d?
Stude
nts!
You
do
have
a
voice
i
n
tenu
re
decision
s
and
con
tra
ct
rene
wals
.
Teach
er
eva
lua
tion
s,
let
ter
s
of
sup
port
,
and
let
ter
s
to
the
ed
ito
r
ar
e
some
of
th
e
tools
w
e
have
as
stude
nts.
Use
the
m!
Be
ha
vio
ral
Science
Sena
tor,
Yo
gi
Ga
ry
Neu
wi
th
the
b
ig
business
of
education
w
ith
studen
ts
lo
wer
on
th
e
scale.
Neu
's
p
rim
ar
y
c
once
rn
is
to
the
stud
ents
,
not
the
adm
inis
trati
on.
He
looks
at
the
u
niv
ers
ity
from
a
so
ci
ol
og
ic
al
vi
ew
po
in
t
and
questi
ons
event
s.
He
has
spent
mu
ch
tim
e
and
ef
fo
rt
work
ing
w
ith
th
e
PS
GA
Sen
ate
.
The
pos
itio
n
of
Vic
e
-
Pres
iden
t
of
PSGA
wou
ld
give
hi
m
more
leve
rag
e
to
acc
omp
lish
mor
e.
Neu
is
inte
nse
ly
invo
lve
d
in
che
ckin
g
into
teache
r
eval
uations
.
He
wan
ts
stude
nts
to
have
more
say
abou
t
profe
ssors
who
are
denied
te
nur
e
because
th
e
polit
ics
in
vo
lv
e
d
sh
ou
ld
be
pu
rsu
ed
.
E
v
a
lu
a
ti
o
n
re
su
lts
sh
ou
ld
be
pub
lish
ed
or
mad
e
ava
ilab
le
in
the
lib
ra
ry
whe
re
stu
dent
s
cou
ld
read
wh
at
p
ast
stude
nts
thoug
ht
about
a
prof
esso
r
befo
re
sig
ning
up
for
classes.
I
f
this
is
not
done,
then
Neu
wou
ld
lik
e
to
see
student
alt
ern
ate
eval
uatio
ns
made
to
be
used
as
a
n
av
ail
ab
le
resou
rce.
Neu
is
also
conc
erned
w
ith
o
ther
issues.
He
thin
ks
tha
t
the
money
fro
m
stude
nt
tuit
ion
s
(@$
139
)
for
stude
nt
orga
niza
tion
s
and
ad
m
in
is
tra
tiv
e
func
tions
should
be
questi
oned
how
i
t
is
spent.
He
wou
ld
lik
e
to
im
ple
me
nt
evenin
g
Conti
nued
On
P
age
Three
Sport
ing
&
Athle
tic
Equipment
One
of
The
Mi
dw
es
ts
Lar
ge
st
Sele
ction
s
DISCO
UNT
PRICES
14
th
Ave.
at
62
nd
St
.
Es
tab
lish
ed
in
1
9
3
0
Te
nu
re
proce
ss
a
t
w
o
rk
To
the
E
d
it
o
r:
I
t
rec
en
tly
has
com
e
to
m
y
a
tt
e
n
tio
n
th
a
t
D
r
.
R
ic
h
a
rd
Pom
aza
l
has
not
been
gra
nte
d
tenu
re
b
eyond
the
cu
rre
nt
spr
ing
seme
ster.
Ce
rta
in
ru
m
or
s
amo
ng
the
stude
nts
have
i
t
tha
t
ther
e
m
ay
be
p
o
li
ti
c
a
l
m
o
tiv
at
io
n
s
invo
lved
he
re.
I
f
thi
s
is
inde
ed
the
case,
I
thi
nk
th
at
the
school's
ad
mi
nis
tra
tiv
e
bra
nch
ha
s
qu
ite
a
lo
t
to
be
asha
med
of.
D
r.
Po
ma
zal
is
a
fine
in
st
ru
ct
or
,
as
anyone
wh
o
has
ever
taken
a
class
w
ith
hi
m
w
il
l
n
o
d
oubt
tes
tify
to.
He
is
soft-s
poken
,
pat
ien
t,
w
itt
y
and
int
ell
ige
nt
.
The
best
way
to
judge
a
co
llege
pro
fesso
r
is
by
the
im
pa
ct
tha
t
he
or
she
has
upon
his
or
he
r
s
tuden
ts.
As
fa
r
as
I
kno
w,
Prof
esso
r
Po
ma
zal
's
im
pa
ct
has
be
en
p
o
si
tiv
e
th
ro
ug
h
an
d
th
ro
ug
h.
W
ith
ho
ld
in
g
se
n
io
ri
ty
fro
m
such
an
in
di
vi
du
al
str
ike
s
me
as
being
pa
rt
ic
ul
ar
ly
c
ru
el
and
un
jus
t.
In
le
tti
ng
hi
m
go,
our
po
licy
ma
ker
s
a
re
s
hor
t
chan
ging
the
Un
ive
rs
ity
.
Those
inte
res
ted
in
re
ta
in
in
g
D
r.
Po
ma
za
l
shou
ld
con
tact
the
E
xe
cu
tiv
e
C
omm
ittee
of
the
B
e
h
a
vi
o
ra
l
Sci
enc
e
Di
vis
ion
.
Joseph
Ku
lb
is
ki
Pr
of
.
W
rig
ht
rig
ht
pro
fes
sor
Le
tte
r
to
the
ed
ito
r,
As
a
for
me
r
stud
ent
of
Sam
Wr
igh
t
—
socio
logy
,
I
wou
ld
lik
e
to
b
ri
n
g
to
yo
ur
a
tte
nt
io
n
the
fol
low
ing
—
Pro
fess
or
Wr
igh
t's
co
ntr
act
at
P
ark
sid
e
was
r
ece
ntly
not
rene
wed.
T
his
ter
mi
na
tio
n
has
dep
rive
d
our
Un
ive
rs
ity
of
the
se
rv
ic
es
of
th
is
ou
ts
ta
nd
in
g
teac
her.
Studen
ts
a
nd
concer
ned
fac
ulty
sho
uld
als
o
be
awa
re
th
at
th
is
was
a
co
ntr
act
non-
rene
wal
decision
and
no
t
a
te
nur
e
de
nia
l.
Profes
sor
W
rig
ht
has
be
en
teac
hing
he
re
fo
r
fi
v
e
ye
ar
s
w
it
h
ou
ts
ta
nd
in
g
teach
er
eva
lua
tion
s,
and
would
have
come
up
for
tenure
nex
t
ye
ar.
i
Studen
ts
a
nd
fac
ult
y
who
sh
are
m
y
respe
ct
fo
r
Pr
of
.
Wr
igh
t
can
be
he
lpf
ul.
The
appe
al
process
state
s
tha
t
a
reco
nsid
erati
on
can
be
mad
e
on
the
basis
of
new
evide
nce.
L
ett
ers
of
suppor
t
fro
m
student
s
tes
tify
ing
to
his
con
trib
uti
on
s
wou
ld
be
valua
ble
and
us
efu
l
t
o
this
end.
Please
take
a
few
min
ute
s
to
w
rit
e
a
let
ter
for
someone
who
has
give
n
to
us
so
mu
ch
of
his
tim
e
and
ene
rgy:
I
t
shou
ld
be
addressed
to
Pr
of
.
M
a
ld
o
n
a
d
o
,
C
h
a
ir
p
e
r
s
o
n
,
Be
ha
vio
ra
l
Science
Div
isio
n.
Do
ris
Mye
rs
g
a
n
g
e
r
Sue
St
ev
en
s,
E
di
to
r
Ke
n
M
e
y
e
r,
Fe
at
u
re
Ed
ito
r
Da
ve
C
ra
m
er
,
S
po
rts
Ed
ito
r
Br
ia
n
F
el
la
nd
,
B
usi
nes
s
M
an
ag
er
Ste
ve
D
a
n
ke
rt
,
N
ew
s
Ed
ito
r
D
an
G
al
b
ra
ith
,
A
d
M
an
ag
er
To
m
Co
op
er,
C
ha
irm
an
of
t
he
Bo
ar
d
S
T
A
FF
M
a
rk
An
de
rs
on
,
Ri
ck
B
la
ha
,
Pe
te
C
ra
m
e
r,
P
hi
l
D
eL
ui
sa
,
Do
ug
Ed
en
ha
us
er
,
Gi
ng
er
He
lg
es
on
,
M
ir
a
Lo
ch
an
sk
i,
Sus
an
M
ic
h
e
tt
i,
Cu
rt
M
ol
de
na
ue
r,
K
ev
in
Pa
du
la
,
Jos
eph
Ri
pp
,
Do
n
Sc
he
rr
er
,
De
nis
e
So
bie
sk
i,
D
av
e
V
ol
lm
er
.
RA
NG
ER
is
w
rit
te
n
an
d
ed
ite
d
by
stu
de
nts
of
UW
-P
ar
ks
id
e
an
d
the
y
ar
e
so
lel
y
re
sp
on
sib
le
fo
r
its
ed
ito
ria
l
po
lic
y
an
d
co
nte
nt
.
Pu
bli
sh
ed
e
ve
ry
Th
ur
sd
ay
du
rin
g
th
e
a
ca
de
mi
c
ye
ar
ex
ce
pt
du
rin
g
b
re
ak
s
a
nd
ho
lid
ay
s,
RA
NG
ER
is
p
ri
nt
e
d
b
y
t
he
U
nio
n
C
oo
pe
ra
tiv
e
P
ub
lis
hi
ng
Co
.,
K
en
os
ha
,
W
isc
on
sin
.
W
rit
te
n
p
er
m
iss
io
n
i
s
re
qu
ire
d
f
or
re
p
rin
t
of
an
y
p
or
tio
n
of
RA
NG
ER
.
A
ll
co
rre
sp
on
de
nc
e
sh
ou
ld
be
ad
dre
sse
d
to
:
P
ar
ks
id
e
Ra
ng
er
,
W
LL
C
D139
,
UW-
Pa
rk
si
de
,
Ke
no
sh
a,
W
l
53141.
Le
tte
rs
to
th
e
E
di
to
r
w
ill
be
ac
ce
pte
d
if
ty
pe
w
rit
te
n,
do
ub
les
pa
ce
d
on
st
an
da
rd
size
pa
pe
r
w
ith
on
e-i
nc
h
m
ar
gi
ns
.
A
ll
l
et
te
rs
mu
st
b
e
si
gn
ed
an
d
a
tel
ep
ho
ne
n
um
be
r
inc
lud
ed
fo
r
ve
ri
fic
a
tio
n.
Na
me
s
w
ill
be
w
ith
he
ld
fo
r
va
lid
rea
son
s.
M
a
xi
m
u
m
le
ng
th
ac
ce
pte
d
is
500
wo
rds
.
De
ad
lin
e
fo
r
le
tte
rs
is
M
on
da
y
at
12
noo
n
fo
r
pu
bl
ic
at
io
n
on
Th
ur
sd
ay
.
Th
e
RA
NG
ER
re
se
rve
s
al
l
e
di
to
ria
l
pr
iv
ile
ge
s
in
re
fu
si
ng
to
p
ri
n
t
le
tte
rs
wh
ich
co
nt
ain
fa
lse
or
de
fa
m
at
or
y
co
nt
en
t.
I
t
ap
pe
ar
s
th
at
i
f
th
is
bu
rea
ucr
atic
ins
tru
me
nt
is
used
co
rre
ctl
y
by
the
con
tro
ller
s,
it
w
il
l
giv
e
these
i
nd
ivi
du
als
dom
ina
tion
over
the
ir
areas
of
th
e
in
sti
tu
tio
n.
B
u
re
a
uc
ra
tiz
a
tio
n
is
th
e
cen
tra
liz
ati
on
of
powe
r
over
persons
and reso
urces
.
Ide
al
ly
this
shou
ld
produ
ce
bet
ter
serv
ices
,
thou
gh
this
does
not
appe
ar
to
a
lwa
ys
be
the
case.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 22, February 28, 1980
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1980-02-28
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
alcohol
candidates
elections
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/20d12e0432efe610e7361346e0a830f2.pdf
95b6f9164f42a58c85466a1aceb3b6b5
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 8, issue 6
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
SAGA continues at UW-Parkside
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
University
o
f
Wisconsin
-
Parkside
Wednesday
October
10,
1979
SAGA
continues
ot
UW-Parkside
by
Wait
R emondini
When
friends
attending
dif
ferent
colleges
get
together
one
of
he
questions
that
is
usually
asked-
'
!!
Ho
W
's
the
food?"
Answers
IS
'
,orv
but
often
times
way
"How
s
"
va
r
y
but
printable
co mments
follow.
"torn
^at
the RANGER
tound
the
situation
here
at
Parkside
has
both
its
pluses
and
minuses,
but
the
general
consen
sus
is
that
food
service
has
shown
improvement
ove r
past
years.
According
to
Fred
Moore,
of
SAGA
Foods,
the
which
handles
food
UW-P,
"The
been
some
we've
manager
company
service
here
at
comments
this
year
have
pretty
good...
we
had
complaints
last
year
but
done
the
best
we
could
to
rectify
them,
and
so
far
I
think
we
have
done
a
good
job."
The
majority
of
complaints
in
the
past
have
been
centered
around
the
high
cost
and
the
poor
quality
and
selection
of
food.
Commenting
on
the
cost,
Moore
said,
"Some
students
have
complained
about
the
fact
that
some
items
are
more
expensive
here
than
in
the
supermarket
but
on
many
items
we
are
barely
•making
end s
meet."
One
of
the
reasons
is
that
SAGA
only
receives
5%
of
the
profit
on
sales.
The
Parkside
Union
receives
10%.
In creased
employee
salaries
and
rising
food
costs
have
also
been
influenzal
in
the
rising
prices.
When
comparing
prices
to
other
UW
schools
M oore
claims,
"The
prices
here
are
about
dead
average
while
on
some
items
such
as
cold
sandwiches,
small
hamburgers,
and
beer,
they
are
substantially
below
average."
When
asked
about
the
nutri
tional
quality
of
the
food,
Moore
commented,
"Some
students
have
requested
we
use
more
whole
grains
and
having
whole
wheat
muffins,
wheat
germ,
vegetarian
dishes
and
the
like,
but
with
the
increased
costs
this
would
entail
I
I
really
don't
know
if
the
students
would
buy
it."
SAGA
has
instituted
vege
tarian
main
dishes
this
year,
but
sales
have
been
going
very
slowly.
"Last
week,
we
had
to
end
up
selling
half
of
the
dish
to
the
staff
at
reduced
rates,"
said
Moore.
He
also
added
that,
"Vegetarian
meals
also
pose
an
additional
problem
because
none
of
the
food
can
be
reused,
nonetheless
we
will
continue
to
provide
the
vegetarian
dishes
on
a
regular
basis
until
we
can
make
a
further
evaluation
of
whether
or
not
they
are
profitable
for
us."
Moore
also
added
that
he
would
be
trying
to
make
improvements
in
both
the
salad
bar
and
soup
areas.
"I.
feel
that
both
the
salads
and
soups
are
one
ot
the
best
buys
in
southeastern
Wisconsin,
and
we
will
try
to
enlarge
the
variety
of
offerings
in
this
area."
Moore
concluded,
"1
think
that
if
students
really
wanted
to,
they
could
eat
nutritional
meals
but
when
you
see
dozens
of
students
come
in
and
grab
four
big
cookies
and
a
coke
it
really
makes
you
wonder."
"Much
time
has
been
spent
trying
to
respond
to
student
needs,"
stated
Moore.
"We
made
some
changes
in
personnel
on
the
staff
and
also
began
the
football
promotion
this
year
where
we
have
away
$253
worth
of
coupons
in
the
first
week."
Mohre
also
plans
to
continue
pasf"
favorites
such
as
the
indoor
picnic
over
the
winter.
"I
thinK
thus
far
the
students
have
been
generally
pleased
with
our
ser
vice."
says
Moore.
If
sales
are
any
indicator,
he
is
right.
Food
sales
last
year
jumped
to
over
$340,000,
up
over
$255,000
in
1977
-
78.
You
may
conclude
that
SAGA'S
large
profits
are
to
blame
for
the
high
price
of
the
food
(the
major
complaint
among
students),
but
according
to
Moore,
employee
salaries
and
the
high
rate
of
inflation
are
the
major
contribu
tors
to-the
rising
costs.
"You
are
always
going
to
hear
complaints
about
prices,
but
I
think
that
for
the
money,
the
quality
and
value
of
the
food
are
very
good."
Another
area
which
SAGA
has
looked
into
this
year
is
the
possibility
of
contracting
to
provide
a
meal
plan
for
students
living
near
the
campus,
particular
ly
those
in
the
Parkside
Village.
This
practice
helps
keep
food
costs
low
at
other
UW
campuses
such
as
UW-LaCrosse
and
Eau
Claire
where
the
number
of
students
living
on
campus
is
substantial.
"If
we
had
a
few
hundred
students
who
we
know
would
become
involved
1
think
we
could
come
up
with
a
feasabie
plan,"
he
commented.
in
the
meantime,
business
continues
to
grow,
and
Fred
Moore
wishes
it
to
keep
growing
by
encouraging
customer
feedback.
'We
are
always
looking
for
customer
feedback
in
order
to
continue
doing
the
best
possible
job
we
can."
PSGA
holds
fall
elections
Oct.
24-25
-•
••
•
•
- -
i
•
j
• -
g
fhe
meHNHgrH
Hii idrntK
we
on
monitor*
around
ttehool
originate
here
MediaSei
Message
wheel
rolling
^
M'
ra
Lochanski
P
the
'wri
^'
c
'
entl
ar
|
d
effective
are
^•versitv
M
Sed
t0
describe
th
c
mode
of
css
a
8
e
Wheel,
a
new
c
"
n
Wrni
,J
mn
U
"
licating
nless
a
8
cs
sponsored
,
C
U
'
ms
or
activi,ics
facuitv
•,
j
,
variou
s
student.
Edition
to
S
'
a
t
'
o
r
8
aniza,ions
in
%"eics.
community
groups
and
Presently,
there
are
two
such
"wheels"
or
monitors
in
existence
at
Parkside.
Monitors
are
located
in
Main
Place
and
in
the
Media
Services
Center.
The
message
wheel
is
updated
twice
daily,
once
at
8
am
and
also
at
4:30
pm.
The
message
wheel
runs
.front
8
-
1 0.30
pm
daily.
Typical
messages
that
are
played
on
the
wheel
include:
concerts,
plays,
films,
exhibits.
and
sporting
events
as
well
as
important
deadlines
and
special
reminders.
Stu
Rubner.
in
charge
of
the
wheel,
said
that
if
any
club
or
organization
on
campus
would
like
an
announcement
made
on
the
wheel,
it
must
do
so
one
week
in
advance
of
the
date
the
activity
is
Colli,
on
l>"¥
r
(>
The
Parkside
Student
Govern
ment
Association
will
be
holding
fall
elections
on
October
24
and
25
in
order
to
fill
vacancies
on
the
Senate,
the
Segregated
University
Fees
Allocations
Committee
(SUFAC),
and
the
Union
Oper
ating
Board
(UOB).
Those
students
interested
in
running
for
one
of
these
positions
must
file
a
petition
with
PSGA
bv
Friday.
October
12
at
noon.
Forms
for
petitions
are
now
available
in
the
PSGA
office
located
on
the
D-l
level
in
Main
Place.
Candidates
must
gather
25
signatures
of
UW-Parkside
students
in
order
to
appear
on
the
ballot
for
the
election.
Write-in
candidates
will
be
accepted
at
late
as
Friday.
October
19
at
noon.
According
to
Tim
Zimmer.
President
of
PSGA.
"There
are
only
three
people
wing
for
the
22
positions
open."
There
are
currently
12
Senatorial
seats
up
for
grabs
and
five
each
on
SUFAC
and
UOB.'
All
students
wishing
to
run
in
the
upcoming
elections
must
meet
certain
requirements
set
by
the
PSGA
constitution.
These
are:
1(
candidates
must
be
UW-Parkside
students.
2(
candidates
must
be
carrying
at
least
6
regular,
on-campus
credits.
and
3(
candidates
must
not
be
on
final
academic
probation.
As
Tim
Zimmer
stated.
"We
need
people
who
are
ready
to
get
things
moving
on
the
UW-Park
side
campus.
It's
about
time
the
students
took
charge
of
the
things
they
have
a
right
to
control."
INSIDE..
^
•
KI.O
shines
iij:nin
•
Soeeer
leum
shutout
•
News
Briefs
V
J
ill
1979
Ranger
2
T
|
^"'"her
1U.
iv^
(W.I
Lmt
•
*«to*
Absolutely
mM.
They've
been
there
since
ihe
60V
If
the y
h aven't
done
anything
since
then,
there
shontdn't
be
any
problems.
Jim
Allegretto
-
senior
I'm
a
student
and
I
d on't
know
anything.
Now
that
I
think
about
it,
I'll
say
no.
because
I
really
haven't
thought
much
about
it.
Hike
Seevl
M
No;
it
would
be
impossible
for
hem
to
spy
on us
because
they
[now
everything
about
us
already.
Margaret
Stauder
•
senior
1
think
it's
a
bunch
of
b ullshit.
I
think
it's
a
false
issue
created
to
distract
from
real
serious
problems,
like
radiation
leaks
involved
in
nuclear
power.
To
the
Editor
Perspective
on
Prisons
with
this
coupon
$1.50
off
RAINBOW
uptown
Vegimal
Hats
kenosha
offer
expires
Oct.
30,
1979
''...
V.;
'
*
•'
:
•
-
:j
J
'
"•<
!i
*
V".
««p.
during
breaks
and
holidays.
"
'
ne
Company.
Zion.
Illinois
rCPn
m
°
f
3n
>
P
0
"
10
"
RANGER
conten t.
At
ZZTtTJ
be
a ddressed
,o
Parkude
Ran ger.
U .W.
Parkside.
WL LC
D-,39
Km
Mntf
IVwif
Idtah auMf
Wf
M f'flh
lU*n»
Padialj
...
\l.kr
Marph
Editor
..
Business
Manager
Feature
Editor
Sports
Kditor
News
Editor
Photo
Kditor
.
A dvertising
Manager
REPORTING
STAFF
°
ran
d
""'
,,an
{
'"
ih
™
i,h
-
.
k
s
n
U
M
"*
H«d
McMillan.
I.nri
K*
N.«
W,h
Rrmnndini.
Don
seberrer.
Jo,
Svkora.
Vkki
Wellens
PHOTO
ST
A
IT
Mjrk
Rhonda
(krolmo.
Jim
Knnlek.
Brian
Pacsinn
Mars
Arnold.
Naacy
Hrrnaader
LAYOIT
I
Mi
Andersen
AD
STAFF
<
ha r*,
Clifton.
Dan
(.albraith.
S,„c>
Mikaelian.
Mike
M„rph>
he
Edti
IN
link
).
jdhn
»r
wil l
h e
accepted
i
s
Alt
letters
must
h
number
fbr
vcrfft
i
F riday
jt
10
am,fi
ion.
M
publica
ten.
double
.paced
on
uandard
si/c
pa,*..
Name,
will
he
.viihheld
for
ealid
reason-
m
loncth
accepted
is
soo
words
«
following
Wednesday.
To
the
Editor,
A
major
concern
at
Parkside
lately
has
been
the
controversy
over
the
negative
effects
a
prison
would
have
on
our
campus.
Prisons
suggest
to
us
a
number
o
negative
images.
While
certainly
there
are
legitimate
grounds
for
concern,
Jt
seems
that
the
focus
has
been
misplaced.
In
particular
the
treatment
of
this
issue
has
emphasized
safety
factors.
If
a
prison
is
built
on
campus
does
it
mean
that
we
will
all be
robbed
or
raped
in
the
parking
lot?
These
thoughts
or
something
similar
probably
cross
most
people's
minds
and
no
one,
so
it
seems,
has
thought
any
further.
This
kind
of
thinking
may
very
well
constitute
discrimination.
Prisoners
have
always
been
considered
outcasts;
people
unfit
for
and
unwanted
by
society.
Like
other
minority
groups,
prisoners
and ex-prisoners
have
been
denied
opportunities,
jobs
and
education.
A
number
of
studies
show
that
poor
people's
crimes
are
pros
ecuted
more
often.
Perhaps
some
of
these
people
have
victimized
others
because
they
have
been
victimized
themselves.
Will
this
ever
stop
if
we
keep
denying
people
convicted
of
crimes
their
human
dignity?
The
feasibility
of
locating
a
prison
on
or
near
a
university
campus
certainly
has
to
be
questioned.
No
doubt
there
are
many
problems
that
would
have
to
be
considered.
Perhaps
the
effort
would
be worth
it.
A
p rison
near
a
university
would
give
the
people
convicted
of
crimes
opportunities
that
they
would
not
have
if
they
were
put
in
more
isolated,
secluded
areas.
These
are
human
beings
whose
lives
are
influenced
by
decisions
we
as
"free"
people
have
the
right
to
make
for
them.
If
they
have
the
privilige
of
education
and
the
other
opportunities
a
university
provides,
their
lives
may
change
for
the
better.
And
hopefully
our
attitudes
toward
them
will
c hange
too.
Sharon
Svendsen
The
Ranger
appreciates
hearing
from
you!
If
you'd
Hke
to
^
a
letter
to
the
Editor,
just
follow
these
guidelines:
All
letters
must be
in
the
Ranger
office
by
10
am
on
the
Friday
before
publication.
The^
Ranger
office
is
located
at
WLLC
D13
(next
to
the
Coffee
Shoppe).
The
maximum
length
for
letters
accepted
is
500
words.
They
must
be
typewritten,
double-spaced
with
one-inch
margins
on
standard
typing
paper.
All
letters
must
be
signed.
Names
will
be
withheld
for
valid
reasons.
Include
a
phone
number
for
verification.
All
letters
will
be
printed
without
editing.
Remember
to
check
for
typing
errors,
mis
spellings,
and
grammatical
errors.
The
Ranger
has
editorial
priviliges
and
may
refuse
to
publish
letters
found
to
be
defamatory
in
content.
Procrastination
just
a
put
off
To
the
Editor,
I
would
like
to
respond
to
the
article
in
The
Ranger
(Last
issue)
entitled
"Procrastination".
As
a
Counselor
and
as
a
reader,
I
was
concerned
with
the
message
contained
in
the
article;
namely,
that
it
takes
skill
and
iniative
(sic)
to
become
a
good
procrastinator
and
it's
(sic)
a
fun
game
in
the
process.
Furthermore,
the
article
inspires
students
to
use
their
creative
"juices"
in
a
negative
fashion
—
to
procrastinate
in
an
original
way.
One
purpose
of
the
paper
(The
Ranger)
is
to
provide
a
service
to
the
students.
Why
then
would
it
support
such
a
disservice
to
its
readers?
For
most
people,
procrastina
tion
is
a
serious
problem
and
is
seen
as
an
escape
from
living
in
the
present
to
the
fullest
extent.
It
is
a
serious
problem
to
the
degree
that
anxiety
and
guilt
often
accompany
the
Choice
of
procrastination.
Also,
the
development
of
the
self
is
limited
because
procrastination
r—
CHICAGOLAND'S
KELLY
GIRL
PROUDLY
PRESENTS
"
Kelly
V
Hero®/
starring
Dedicated
College
Students
Secretaries
-Typists
-
Clerks
came
in
anTaTmM
ringle^Ldedly
dTt"
9
'
were
,o
u
9
h
-
T
t
W
rary
office
problems
with
their2
°
h
5(
1
^icagdand's
tempo-
sequel.
y
o
u
,
00
C
an
star
in
this
exciting
cTrama
nCW
th
'
e
Uncanny
how
easy
they
made
it
look"
-Les
Hassle,
Kelly
Gazette
"Even
better
than
the
original
IT
th at
s
possible"
-Moe
R,
Money,
Kelly
News
KLDIfe'
SERVICES
AJ1I
People
NOW
SHOWIWr
Chicago
786-1250
West
Suburbs
654-4060
South
Suburbs
233-1005
North
Suburbs
729-2040
_
4n
E
9
ual
Opportunity
f
°rm
can
be
seen
self-delusion.
Dr.
Wayne
Dyer,
j,
Erroneous
Zones,
believes
a
rationale
of
procrastinate
"
part
"self-delusion
and
hv
0
'
eseape".
Some
rational/
holding
onto
procrastinate
You
can
avoid
ever
havii
by
avoiding
all
activities
involve
some risk.
In
this
;n
§t
(l
»
a)i
never
have
to
come
f
ac
e
.
with
your
self-doubt.
Atu
em.
rationale
is
that
you
are
a
i
justify
sloppy
or
l
ess
acceptable
performance
0
j
thing
if
you
put
it
off
l
on
,
and then
just
allow
a
mini
ma
;
segment
for
getting
it
don e
r !
are
many
more
rationales
ba
Sf
personal
differences
»),,
continue
to
hold
onto
this
defeating
behavior.
The
procrastinator
has
choices.
If
the
procrastinate
accept
the
following
p
tet
then
the
attitudes
behind
p
r(
<
tinators
can
be
recognized
behaviors
that
implement
c ht
can
be
put
into
action.
J
premises
are:
J)
I
am
more
talented
skilled
than
I
thought,
2)
I
make
mistakes
and
f
mistake
not
to
allow
myself
freedom.
If
the
reader
is
going
to
a;,
creative
energy
towards
a
nej
goal
such
as
supporting
self-defeating
behavior,
then
not
utilize
this
energy
in
a
pose
way.
For
example,
your
c at
could
be
titled
"Technique
> ,
Avoid
Procrastination"
»t
could
also
provide
humc:
suggestions
as
well
as
hel:
students
discover
ways
no:
defeat
themselves.
To
intrinsically
reward;stair
for
behavior
that
is
contrar
their
success
at
school
ultimately
life
is
not:
detrimental
to
them
but
also:
purpose
of
your
paper.
Vicki
Martin
UW
offers
creative
outli
Creative
possibilities
fa
writing
of
poetry
will
encouraged
and
explored
University
of
Wisconsin-!
sion,
UW-Parkside
noifa
course.
Instructor
Carol
Saffioti,
a
UW
Parkside
ft
professor,
says
writing
P
1
/
be
required.
A
study
structural
elements
of
P*-
reading
works
of
estafr
writers,
and
by
reading
the"
fellow
members
in
the
class.'
a
part
of
the
course.
Text"
available
in
the
Parkside
store.
Classes
will
mee
i
^
Thursdays,
beginning
0<®'
.7:30
-
9 :30
p.m..
'
n
//
Wyllie
Library
Learning
room
D
-
17 4.
Register
"
1
i
with
University
Extensio
553
-
2 312.
.
-
Coming
Soon-
•
'MEXIFEST
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 6, October 10, 1979
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1979-10-10
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
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University of Wisconsin-Parkside
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The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
elections
parkside activities board (PAB)
prison
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/6fe66c80c8ac7cfc1b508594d0cd0089.pdf
e6054278411b579aa972c2ae90633339
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University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
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Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
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Issue
Volume 47
Headline
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Congress candidate Randy Bryce visits campus
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UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
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Since 1972 Keep up to date with the news at TRNonline.org. April 18,2018
Check out
our next
issue
May 2!
The Ranger News is written and edited by students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content.
PSG incumbents
reelected
Corey Hoskins
and Keough
Lemieux to remain
in executive
positions
AUSTIN KRIEGER
krieg004@rangers. uwp.edu
Parkside Student Government
(PSG) elections for officers were
held between
April 10-12.
Spots on the
ballot included
both PSG
president and
vice president.
Corey Hoskins,
junior and acting
PSG president,
was the
only member included on the ballot
for president, though write ins were
acceptable.
Current vice president, Keough
Lemieux was also the only member
on the ballot for vice president. The
unofficial results of the election
reveal that
Hoskins with
61 votes and
Lemieux with
59 votes will re-|
main in the current
positions
as president and
vice president,
respectively.
Corey Hoskins
Keough Lemieux
Congress candidate Randy Bryce visits campus
Randy Bryce connects with Parkside students on immigration, DACA
Randy Bryce visited UW-Parkside April 2 to open a dialogue with students and to
NAOMI DORN FELD
dornfO01 Grangers, uwp. edu
As a fitting precursoi UW-Parkside's
Immigration Week, congress
candidate Randy Bryce visited campus
on Monday, April 2 to discuss
the topic of Immigration and connect
with students.
The dialogue between Randy
Bryce, students and members from
partner organizations was organized
by Latinos Unidos president Crystal
Garcia. The event was open to the
public and announced on the Latinos
Unidos social media profiles.
Running for senate
Randy Bryce opened the conversation
with a brief description of
his entry point into his campaign:
working hand in hand with Voces
de la Frontera, a membership-based
community organization which
fights for workers' rights and against
discrimination, specifically as it
pertains to migrants. It was while he
was protesting with them at the May
Day March that senator Chris Larson
asked if he would consider running
COURTESY OF CELIA SCHULZ-PHOTOGRAPHY
voice his commitment to fight for immigrant students.
for senate against Paul Ryan. After
looking around and seeing thousands
of determined faces, he could
not consider "no" as an answer to
campaigning.
Building a bigger table
The first item on the agenda for
discussion was the priority to push
the Clean Dream Act. Announcing
that the bill was far overdue, Bryce
stressed the importance for it to be
pushed through as promised. Second,
he voiced his support for Deferred
Action for Parents of Americans
and Lawful Permanent Residents
(DAPA) and pointed out the importance
of taking care of the people
that are here. Bryce proceeded to
address cuts to legal immigration,
for profit prisons, U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and
the travel ban. To sum his strategies
on the topic of immigration, he
expressed that "These are things that
are very important as part of building
a bigger table and having more
people able to be included." The
theme of table-type conversation
was spread See BRYCE page 3
4 president with experience
Hoskins began his involvement
with PSG as a senator nearly
two years ago now. After being
senator, he was elected into the vice
president position and later moved
into the acting president position
after the previous president Jessica
Diaz graduated. After the elections,
Hoskins solidified his position as
president. Hoskins was confident in
his abilities for the position saying,
"One of the main things 1 bring is
experience...and 1 know the school
a lot." By "knowing the school"
Hoskins insured that he has focused
on building relationships with other
students, gaining a reputation as
"really friendly" and someone whom
students feel comfortable coming to
with concerns.
Diversity within the ranks
Hoskins claims that his main motivation
for running was that he believed
it "brings hope to some [studentsJ
See ELECTIONS page 3
"Punish a Muslim Da/' threat sparks concerns
Campus leaders and students addresslettersandMa^
NAOMI DORNFELD Administrative response
dornfO01 @rangers. uwp.edu
In response to the announcement
of a so-called "Punish a Muslim"
day, campus administrators
reminded students of UW-Parkside's
commitment to inclusion and safety.
Anonymous announcement
Anonymous letters sent out to
addresses all across England in early
March proposed to set April 3rd
2018 as "Punish a Muslim Day". As
awareness of these notes circulated
on social media and the announcement
was reported through various
news media outlets, concerns spread
throughout the country, eventually
spreading across the Atlantic. The
announcements sounded alarms to
communities throughout the states.
The ill-intentioned flyers sparked
worries in many U.S. cities and
campus communities, including
UW-Parkside. The issue was addressed
in an e-mail from the Office
of the Dean of Students, informing
students and staff that the University
Police would be monitoring
the day's events and instructed
recipients to report any inappropriate
actions or threats to the police
immediately. The e-mail included a
reminder to the campus community
of the leadership's pledge to uphold
a productive and inclusive space for
academic development, stating that
"UW-Parkside is committed to maintaining
a learning environment that
celebrates diverse knowledge and
perspectives through the academic
engagement of a diverse community.
Be at Parkside
#YouAreWelcomeHere
COURTESY OF UW-PARKSDE
#YouAreWelcomeHere is part of UW-Parkside's diversity campaign.
We value all of our students, faculty among students throughout the
and staff and the diversity of their
cultures, thoughts, beliefs, and lifestyles."
Although no other campuswide
issuance was sent out regarding
the issue, conversations continued
week on the topic of discrimination,
specifically Islamophobia.
Student suggestions
See THREATS page 3
INDEX
Campus News 2-3
Police Blotter 3
Culture 4-5
Editorial Desk 6
Staff & Mission.. 6
Opinion 6
Bearly News 7
Sports 8
Third graders as
UWP students aboui
mammoths.
See page 2
CULTURE
John Oliver's book
a hopping success.
See page 4
OPINION
Turning towards'
ignorance:
TPUSA.
See page 6
BEARLY NEWS
What do the stars
say about you?
See page /
2 CAMPUS NEWS The RANGER News April 18.2018
Questions about our news
reports? Contact Austin Krieger,
krieg004@ rangers.uwp.edu.
Local Events
April 18
Creativity-community commerce
/ Digital fabrication lab panel
discussion I 4 p.m.-7p.m. I CAR T
D113
Open House for our Digital
Design and Fabrication Lab. We
will fete the opening of our Digital
Design and Fabrication Lab with a
tour and demonstration of our new
equipment. We will also have a panel
discussion to talk about the process
of designing the lab and new curriculum
with Professors Trenton Baylor,
Jody Sekas, and Carey Waters. Open
house, reception, and panel discussion
from 4 to 7 pm in D113.
April 19
Emotional CPR Practitioner Certification
Training I 8 a.m. - 5p.m.
I UW- Parkside, Student CenterOak
Room
Emotional CPR (eCPR) is an
educational program of the National
Empowerment Center (NEC) and
is designed to teach people to assist
others through an emotional crisis by
three simple steps: C=Connecting,
P=emPowering, and R=Revitalizing.
This two-day certification training
is all inclusive and provides training,
hands-on practice and coaching,
eCPR workbook, and evaluation for
certification.
May 1
Graduation application deadline I
all day
Public Speaking night I 7 p.m. I
Student Center Cinema
For more info contact: Bonnie
Peterson
May 2
Sigma Tau Delta Induction Ceremony
I 5 p.m .-7p.m. I Oak Room
student center
Sigma Tau Delta Induction:
Keynote Address, and Welcome
Reception
Welcome Address by Chair of
Department of Literatures and
Languages; Keynote Speaker:
Carly-Anne Ravnikar, Poet Laureate
of Kenosha; Induction of New
Members
May 3
UW-Parkside Writers Conference I
8 a.m .-8p.m. I Stud ent Center, Oak
Room
May 4
Stewarding Resources: Financial
Management 18 a.m.-3:30p.m. I
UW-Parkside Tallent Hall
Nonprofit financial management
has unique elements that differentiate
it from the business sector.
In this module, you will gain an
understanding of the principles of
nonprofit financial management.
Learn how to apply the fundamentals
of accounting, budgeting processes,
cash flow analysis, internal controls
and audits.
Identify the most important things
that the Board and funders look for
in your financial statements. Be
equipped to use financial tools and
reports to interpret information to
make management decisions that
lead to the long term sustainability of
your organization.
Corrections:
In the last issue, we failed
to mention the author of the
DACA resolution passed by
Parkside Student Government.
The author of that resolution is
Yoger Aguilar.
Artist talks about latest "Them Boys"
David Alekhuogie's multidisciplinary photography is now featured in the Fine Arts Gallery.
COURTESY OF EVA STEINER
David Alekhuogie (center) discusses and displays his work to his audience.
KIARA FOX
fox00034®rangers. uwp. edu
David Alekhuogie's photography
called "Them Boys" explores the
bodies and states of (un)dress, as he
exposes and subverts the meanings
and mythologies that we ascribe to
fashions and the bodies they simultaneously
cloak and reveal.
The photographs featured in this
exhibition apply a type of printing
called cyanotype, which uses salts
and light to create a sort of "blueprint"
of the piece.
Who is he?
Alekhuogie was born and raised
from Los Angeles, California. He
received his degrees from the School
of Art Institute in Chicago and got
his master at Yale in 2015. His
work has been featured in The New
Yorker, The New York Times and
Time Magazine. Over the years, he
has worked in photography, sculpture,
video and much more.
Influence and inspiration
Alekhuogie's biggest influence
was Hiroshi Sugimoto, who traveled
the world taking photos of seas,
horizons and landscapes. Alekhuogie
says, "Landscape is a big part of
what I do and what I practice and
how I became interested in photography."
He goes on to say that
he " think[s] all of the work in this
show is about landscape." With this
in mind, "Them boys" features the
body as a landscape, and Alekhougie
claims that the series revolves
around "thinking about the body as
an arena where people are sort of enacting
a kind of cultural theater. Like
what I feel like we are going through
in this present day."
What now?
Alekhuogie has been studying
classic sculptures and this is due to
growing up playing sports. He talks
about how he imagined Michael
Jordan as a kind of hero and a character
"like in a play that is flattened
against our cultural conversation
about him." Alekhuogie sees the
sculptures as another type of hero.
"Them Boys" looks at the ideas of
race, culture, and politics. Alekhuogie
turns his experiences into works
of art that make you question what
can be considered a "landscape".
From sagging pants with Tommy
Hilfiger underwear to the Nike
swoosh, "Them Boys" is a collection
of artwork that stands out.
Group of students build home over spring break
Habitat for Humanity members traveled to Alabama to work on project
KIARA FOX
fox00034Grangers, uwp.edu
While some students went on vacation
over spring break and others
caught up on homework, UW-Parkside's
Habitat For Humanity went
to Mobile, Alabama, to help build a
home for a deserving family.
The local chapter
UW-Parkside's Habitat for
Humanity is just one of the many
chapters in the organization. The organization
as a whole has a mission
to serve communities by providing
every man, woman and child with
a decent, safe and affordable place
to live, and UW-Parkside's Habitat
for Humanity focuses on serving
the people of Racine and Kenosha
counties.They also help build and
remodel homes and raise awareness
for homelessness, poverty, and other
specific needs in the community.
The program
According to Marley Uran, the
President of UW-Parkside's Habitat
for Humanity, "This program is not
simply a free, give away house program.
Families must help build their
home or have family/friends help.
In addition, they pay a mortgage on
the home. However, the housing
costs are significantly lower than an
average house on the market thanks
to volunteers and donors."
Making a difference
Fifteen students got the chance
to make a difference nationally. For
this project, UW-Parkside students
worked on several aspects of
housing structure, such as roofing,
windows and doors. Not only
did this work help communities in
Mobile, but it could also help the
local communities here in Racine
and Kenosha. Uran said, "Students
can bring back this knowledge into
their own community to implement
change." To join the team, contact
Marley Uran at uran0001@rangers.
uwp.edu.
COURTESY OF UW-PARKSIDE'S HABITAT FOR HUMANITY
Left to right; Grace Vorpahl, Holly Boyce and Marissa Menchaca working on
the roof of the home they volunteered to help build in Alabama.
Third graders seek answers
about mammoths
Bose Elementary students sent letter inquiries
to anthropology students at UW-Parkside
AUSTIN KRIEGER
krieg004Grangers, uwp. edu
Third grade students at Bose
elementary school in Kenosha have
been learning about mammoths and
how scientists have been attempting
to bring mammoths back through genetic
engineering. Over 50 students
from the third grade class wrote letters
filled with questions about mammoths
and what humanity would do
if mammoths were brought back.
Receiving the questions
Dr. Gillogly, a professor in anthropology,
received an email from the
third grade teacher at Bose elementary
who was hoping that some of their
students could have their questions
answered by real anthropologists. Dr.
Gillogly then reached out to Nathan
Gray, vice president of the anthropology
club, and fellow students in the
club to help respond to these letters.
The anthropology club responded
individually to the letters with the
help of four students, Dr. Gillogly
and Dr. Sasso of the anthropology
department.
The right people to ask
Dr. Sasso often references mammoths
in his archaeology courses,
specifically a very well known mammoth
excavation in Kenosha known
as the Schaefer site. With the knowledge
between the club's students and
advisors, the letters were answered
accurately about how mammoths
lived during their time on Earth.
Gray and the anthropology
club hope that by answering these
questions, it will help sustain these
students' interests in fields such as
anthropology and archaeology. The
club hopes to pave the way for future
students in the fields they are earning
degrees in now.
RANGER R ADIO
The Top 5 most played albums during the week of April 8,
on WIPZ 101.5 FM:
1. Talk Talk Talk - Carissa Johnson and the Cure Alls
2. Attention Seeker [EP] - Regrettes
3. We Can Live Here Forever - Barely Civil
4. I'll Be Your Girl - Decemberists
5. How To Socialise & Make Friends - Camp Cope
WIPZ is looking for a Promotions Director who would
help keep tabs on current ads as well as sell underwriting,
and a Music Director for next academic year.
If interested, please contact
Daniel Dreckmann at dreck001@rangers.uwp.edu
Download WIPZ's app called Tune-In and listen to their
radio station at 101.5 FM. Listen online anywhere at
anytime on wipz.org or check out their radio schedule
and other cool information.
April 18.2018 THE RANGER NEWS CAMPUS NEWS 3
Briefs
Winners of Wisconsin's
Spring Election
TRAVIS NORTHERN
north004Orangers. uwp. edu
In Wisconsin's Spring General
Election on April 3,2018. over
20,000 Kenosha County residents
came out to the polls to vote for a
Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice.
County Supervisors and Alderpcrsons.
Winning the 10-year term in the
Justice seat was liberal candidate
Rebecca Dallct over conservative
candidate Michael Screnock.
County Supervisor victors are as
follows: William R. Grady. Terry
W. Rose. Jeffery Gentz, Michael
Goebel. David Celebre. Edward D.
Kubicki. Dayvin MA. Hallmon.
Zach Rodriguez. John J. O'Day,
Andy Berg, Ronald J. Frederick.
Gabe Nudo, John Franco. Boyd
Frederick. Greg Retzlaff, Daniel Esposito.
Jeff Warn bolt. Monica Yuhas.
Mike Skalitzky. John Poole. Mark
Nordigian. Erin Decker, and Dennis
Elverman.
Aldcrperson victors are as follows:
Eric Haugaard. John Fox. Jan
Michalski. Holly Kangas. Rocco J.
LaMacchia Sr., Dave Paff. Patrick
A. Juliana. Brace Fox. Keith W.
Rosenberg. Anthony Kennedy.
Stephanie L. Kemp. Mitchell Pedersen.Curt
Wilson. Daniel L. Prozanski
Jr.. Jack Rose. Dominic Ruffalo.
and David F. Bogdala.
Other winners include Jim
K re user for County Executive and
Jason A. Rossel for Circuit Court
Judge Branch 2.
China's One Child Policy Is
Being Phased Out
KRYSTALDOOGE
(hofnOOeOrang9rs.uwp.edu
On April 3. Dr. Fuxiam Yi. Senior
Scientist from UW-Madison gave
a presentation on China's one child
policy. Yi discussed the history of
the policy, changes made recently
and what he foresees happening
in the future. It has been a topic of
controversy for decades.
Yi has played a great part in
repealing the One Child Policy.
The policy was based on inaccurate
research and the fear of a population
explosion. In 2014. the Selected
Two Child Policy was implemented
in specific regions. In 2016. it converted
to the Open Two Child Policy
for the whole country. In March
2018. China dismantled the Family
Planning Commission.
BRYCE: Moving
forward together
throughout his message.
Forward together
Throughout his presentation.
Bryce emphasized the importance
of face-to-face interaction between
groups with differing perspectives
and backgrounds, promoting the
importance of the American people
moving forward together. Although
vehement in his position to fight
for the protection of immigrant
youth and to stay true to the values
iascribed on the Statue erf Liberty,
Bryce made known his determinaXXJRTESY
OF C8JA SCHULZ-PHOTOGRAPHY
Students and community members gathered to speak with Randy Bryce.
tion to represent the whole community.
and not a singular faction of it.
Campus community conversation
After presenting his vision to
address concerns about immigration
in the U.S., Bryce opened the floor
to receive questions from any in attendance.
Members from the Racine
community and longtime Latinos
Unidos partners. League of United
Latin American Citizens (LULAQ,
campus leaders and student groups
were present in discussion. Throughout
the question and answer session,
participants filled the room, eventually
filling every seat with attentive
and engaged conversation.
The Vice President of Latinos
Unidos and Parkside Student Government
Senator, Yoger Agular. commented
that what he would like to
see. in the event that Bryce is elected
. as congressman, is that be fulfills
his promise to work as a representative
of the whole community , with
all the groups together and also that
be pushes for the Clean Dream Act.
Agular asserts that. "DREAMERS
and DACA recipients deserve more
rights: tbey deserve that pathway to
take them to citizenship. For most
of them, this is the only country that
they know "
After the meeting came to a close,
students were invited to meet Bry ce
and follow his campaign journey.
THREATS: Exposes
under discussed issues
discussion on ways to confront the
divisive and destructive nature of
religious and racial discrimination.
UW-Parkside student Mohamed
Mursal commented, "We all know
it's a problem. Why don't we talk
about it more? One thing that could
help the situation is if non-Muslims
would begin to speak up about the
issue to get people's attention. It
would also be good to have open
classes where people have the opportunity
to actually learn about
other religions to find out what the
core of the beliefs are."
Mursal suggests that more community
conversation and educational
opportunities would help dispel false
notions about the Muslim religion
and to build a stronger, more diverse
community.
Article editorial
As disappointing as it is that
"Punish a Muslim Day" is somehow
a real topic of conversation, despite
how utterly asinine the idea is on
basically every level, it exposes
otherwise under discussed issues
of discrimination and can inspire
groups and individuals to oppose it
more directly. Every member of the
campus community has the power to
reject expressions of hate as intolerable
or to allow them to permeate
our culture. Let's be mindful of the
space we create here and brave nonviolent
confrontation of less-than
inclusive words or actions in our
classrooms, dorms, cafeterias and
off-campus conversations. #YouAreWelcomeHere
MUSLIM
Aprii 2018
COURTESY OF OSBriHELGAZETTE VIA TWITTER
A list of pro posed hate acts against Muslims was sent across England in Mar .
ELECTIONS: PSG to become a resource for students
especially a lot of [students) on
campus of color." As of last semester,
80% of the positions in PSG
senate were occupied by multicultural
students. Hoskins hopes that his
progression to president is "giving
others the idea or motivation" to be
successful in the face of adversity .
The newly elected president ended
with words of encouragement: "as
most of the senate now is multicultural.
it lets us know that if we can
make this than ire at school, we can
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make this change in the world "
Preparing for the future
PSG is also working on rebuilding
their organization. Hoskins pointed
out that many of the previous board
members graduated the previous two
semesters. Lemieux. the vice president
elect, flourishes with off campus
responsibilities such as staying
in contact with representatives from
the UW System. Hoskins believes
this adds to the great dynamic the
pair have in their positioos.
Lemieux stated be would like to
work to remove any "stigma built
around PSG". including working
together with other campus organizations
to become resources for
ERBERT & GERBERT'S
Police Blotter
April 5
DISORDERLY CONDUCT I
MOLN Hall. 3:28 pm. Complain
ant (Student) reports music playing
while students studied . Officer took
report.
April 6
CHAPTER 51 (SELF COMMIT
MENT) I Student Health. 11:28 am
SHCC request officer, officer arrived
to location. Student Self Chapter,
student was then transported to
Racinc Facility.
AGENCY ASSIST I Tallent Hall.
3:28 pm. UWPPD officer requested
to escort two student to meet DC!
Agents
April 7
911 HANG UP/OPEN LINE I
Sports/Activity Center. 10:41 am.
KSD reports 3 911 calls coming for
campus location. UWPPD officer
assisted, area checked, everything
repotted okay.
April 8
THEFT I Ra nger Hall. 7:34 pm.
Complainant (Student) reports personal
items were taken. Officer took
report. Under Investigation.
653 8255
6217 22nd Ave
one another. Additionally. Lemieux
hopes to make student representation
stronger within the UW System
stating. "We have UW System
President [Ray Cross) who has
worked actively to undermine our
ability as students to contribute to
the decision making process of UW.
1 fed it is my duty as an active and
informed student to stand up for
shared governance and fight f<* UW
students in any way 1 can."
Lemieux. Hoskins and PSG hope
to make both student government
and UW-Parkside a more inclusive
environment while working
to collaborate with other student
organizations to overcome issues
for UW-Parkside students. Lemieux
reiterates PSG's goals saying he
hopes PSG can become "an org that
will gather together campus leaders
so that we can actually work together
and become resources for one another.
rather than as separate groups
or individuals."
April 10
TRAFFIC VIOLATION I University
Drive. 10:25 am. Driver
(Student) was ticketed for Speeding
over posted limits.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION I University
Drive. 10:37 am. Driver
(Student) was ticketed for Speeding
over posted limits.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION I University
Drive. 10:53 am. Driver
(Student) was ticketed for Speeding
over posted limits.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION I
University Drive. 4:23 p.m. Driver
(Student) was ticketed for Fail/Stop
for Stop Sign.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION - PROPERTY
DAMAGE I Univ ersity Drive.
4:56 pm. Complainant (Non-Affiliate)
reports accident with no injuries.
Citation issued for Failure to Yield
Right of Way Making Left Turn.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION I Range r
Lot. 10:34 pm. Driver (Student)
was ticketed for Improper Display of
Rates. Operating While Suspended
A Possession or Use of Marijuana
Driver was then transported to local
jail on a Dept . Of Correction Hold
illl
POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA/
DRUG PARAPH I Pike River Suites.
6:03 pm. Anonymous complainant
reports resident smoking marijuana
Citation issued for Possession or Use
of Marijuana
12
TRAFFIC ACCIDENT - HIT A
RUN 112:20 pm. Witness reported
seeing HA.R accident. Officer took
report.
TRAFFIC VIOLATION ICTH E
(12th St). 7:29 pm. Driver (NonAffiliate)
was ticketed for Proof of
Insurance and giver Verbal Warning
for Speeding over posted limit*.
POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA/
DRUG PARAPH ! Ranger Hall. 9:39
pm. Hall Director request officer for
smell of marijuana. Citation issued
for Possession Or Use of Marijuana
April
April
April 13
CHAPTER 51 (SELF COMMTIMENT).
Pike R iv e r S u ite s. 2:23 am.
Officer escorted female to hospital
for Self Commit
UWPPD Emergency: 262-595-2911
Non-emergency: 262-595-2455
April 18,2018
4 | CULTURE
Children's book takes on Pence's anti-LGBT agenda
"A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo" is a hopping success in the most adorable way possible
COURTESY OF OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT
Vice President Mike Pence (left) and his family pose with their pets, including Marlon Bundo the bunny (center).
HOLLACEVILLARREAL
villa068@rangers. uwp. edu
On March 21 "s episode of
"Last Week Tonight with John
Oliver", the host of the show
spent a portion of time discussing
Vice President Mike Pence's
views on LGBT rights.
At the end of the show, he
told the audience that Pence's
pet bunny, Marlon Bundo, had a
book written about him by one of
Pence's daughters, which was hitting
bookstores that week. However,
John Oliver also had a book
about the Bunny Of The United
States (BOTUS) up his sleeve.
A day to remember
Written by Jill Twiss and illustrated
by EG Keller, "A Day in
the Life of Marlon Bundo" was
almost painfully cute as Marlon
Bundo narrated his day, hopping
through the gardens and falling
in love with a neighboring boy
bunny named Wesley.
The bunnies hop together
through the lawn, through the
house, and through some "very
boring meetings with very boring
people." When they decided that
they never wanted to hop with
anyone else again, Marlon and
Wesley decided to get married.
The Stinkbug, an obvious
caricature of Mike Pence, opposed
the marriage. However,
when they put the marriage to a
vote with all of Marlon's animal
friends and neighbors, their marriage
won out. They were allowed
to be married.
Beautifully written
The book is sincerely delightful,
despite having been initially
written as a joke.
The use of repetition and
rhythm work wonderfully and
the illustrations are charming,
with funny little details thrown in
(such as a stinkbug emblazoned
on The Stinkbug's podium).
While this book was short, it
has made an impact. The book
is currently sold out on Amazon,
with over 180,000 copies sold
within 48 hours (Pence's book
has sold 100,000 copies to date).
The Audible version has a starstudded
voice cast, consisting of
Jim Parsons, Jesse Tyler Ferguson,
Jeff Garlin, Ellie Kemper,
John Lithgow, Jack McBrayer and
RuPaul.
The book is restocked and
currently for sale online, so be
sure to pick up a copy, as all proceeds
from "A Day in the Life of
Marlon Bundo" are going to the
Trevor Project and AIDS United.
Join The Ranger News for a
Fake News Workshop!
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"Battlefront II" is a huge disappointment
The new Star Wars reboot shames the legacy of a classic
-DR. BENSON'S STUDENT POETRY PICKSidioms
of the defect
by Travis Northern
infected redwoods begin
with tainted burrowing roots
advantage is a veiling wall
cemented brick by brick
to deter undesirables
means justify abrupt ends
as magnates tear pages
from unfinished textbooks
lithium keeps the demons
at bay but they say
one is needed to expose the other
memoria melts in maelstroms
as jagged needles drain
idiosyncrasies from veins
the human expense
seems cheap as fuck
advice emboldens philophobia
yet true fear screams hey
wait to the runaway train
spirits live like flickering candles
without fire they
fade away
Teaser art of the latest "Star Wars: Battlefront II."
NEXTLEVEL GAMING ONLINE
EVAN MACINTOSH
macinO01 @rangers. uwp. edu
Historically, the "Star Wars:
Battlefront" games have been lauded
for their large-scale ground and
space battles with rather enjoyable
game play. However, with this last
installment in the series, "Battlefront
II", there has been a lot of animosity
and negative feelings floating around
involving the series.
Predominantly, it stems from EA
and their inane comments defending
the game and its, initially absurd,
progression system which consequently
ruined the loot system. Had
EA not fumbled with this, the game
would have been perceived in a far
less negative light than it was.
Mechanics
The class system in this game is
very reminiscent of many shooters
today, in that there are several
weapons to choose from and many
bonuses to apply to one's character.
This is well and good, but because
of this, there can be some strange
ambiguity within a given class and
even between classes. In addition,
certain aspects of the characters,
namely the heroes, feel very coarse
and insufficiently thought-out.
Specifically, the lightsaber combat
feels very rudimentary, as if the
characters are without technique,
swinging baseball bats. Had they
gone back to their roots for this second
"reboot," mirroring the iconic
rigid classes and refined mechanics
of the other games, I would have
had significantly less problems with
the way the classes play as it would
have made the multiplayer more
entertaining
Atmosphere
One thing about this game that
is much more solid and pleasing
than the other parts is the visual
and audio elements. If there is one
facet of "Battlefront II" that captures
the magic of "Star Wars", it is the
game's blend of music and sound design.
The music, while not composed
by John Williams, is still a sound
track that most certainly belongs in a
piece of "Star Wars" media.
The sounds of the blasters,
soldiers, environments and vehicles
are undoubtedly reminiscent of
"Star Wars" as well. This is a boon
because they are the most significant
pieces of the game's world. Without
a doubt, the game's loyal atmosphere
COURTESY OF BAGOGAMES VIA FLICKR
is the single biggest contribution to
my final score for this game.
Entertainment value
While this is a "Battlefront" title,
it feels too much like a "Battlefield"
title, another franchise by the developer
DICE. While the pacing of the
action is nice, the frustration that can
arise from an opposing player having
a blatantly better weapon/upgrade is
quite prominent.
Many of my game play sessions
lasted less than half an hour;
I needed to take breaks because the
competitive balancing is so awful.
This infuriating multiplayer experience
and brief, weak single-player
campaign blend into a piece of failed
entertainment that I cannot recommend.
Overall Score: 47/100
Next Level Gaming Online
(NLGO) is an online magazine and
podcast, centered on the gaming
industry. NLGO covers video games,
tabletop games, hardware, software,
internet news, and anything techrelated.
For full reviews and more
game news, visit their website at
nlgo.net.
April 18,2018 THE RANGER NEWS CULTURE | 5
From Robin Williams to "The Rock"
ROSEMARY SCHWEITZER
schwe035@rangers.uwp.edu
As someone who grew up watching
and rewatching "Jumanji", I was
cautiously optimistic at the thought
of a reboot, because in recent years,
film and TV have not had a stellar
record in the reboot department.
Granted, when revamping old
favorites, it is impossible to satisfy
everyone, but one surefire way keep
fans of the original happy is to keep
what made the original good while
adding a fresh spin.
In the beginning, there
was a board game
The original "Jumanji", released
in 1995 and starring the genius that
was Robin Williams, introduced
audiences to a vague and dangerous
world hidden inside of a seemingly
innocent board game. However,
those drawn in by the pounding of
drums soon realized that Jumanji
itself is not so harmless.
Complete with killer mosquitos,
African bats and the looming threat
of being sucked into the game itself,
"Jumanji" was a thrill ride for the
ages. That being said, I have a feeling
that a heavy cloud of nostalgia
may be influencing my opinions, to
a point.
At its core "Jumanji" was about
finding your inner strength, learning
to trust the people around you and
finishing what you start—and yes 1
might be reaching here, but just go
with me for a minute. Assuming 1
am not over-romanticizing one of
my favorite childhood movies, and
there really were deeper themes of
self-realization, it is time to see how
well the 2017 reboot stands up.
Was it lost in translation?
The first point to evaluate would
be the plot. The original movie was
not too heavy on plot, which was to
finish the game. The reboot expands
this by turning Jumanji into a video
game and giving it a rough story
about retrieving a powerful jewel.
Giving the game an actual story
and setting opens up the possibilities
of extended universes and future
sequels, though I t hink perpetuating
the "Jumanji" franchise could have
"Final Destination"-like effects.
The second point would be the
characters. In the original, the relationships
between characters start
off shaky and become more cemented
as they help each other survive.
"Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle"
followed the same principle, only
the characters were all the same
age and had a basic knowledge of
each other before the game began.
Their personalities, while relatively
r
1 '
- w > i l # > 1 1 & .i »'
*1 1 f .
COURTESY OF WWW.SPACE.CA
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in the most recent "Jumanji 2"
generic and stereotypical for teenagers,
were fleshed out well enough,
and this made their being trapped in
adult bodies rather amusing.
The chemistry between actors
was fluid and each had their own
funny quirks, but by far, the best
performance had to be from Jack
Black. I'm sure it is not the easiest
thing to play a teenage, technologyobsessed
girl trapped in an overweight
man's body, but if anyone
can do it, high-pitched voice and all,
it is Jack Black.
It was also funny to see Kevin
Hart and Dwayne Johnson almost
making fun of themselves and the
types of characters they would
normally play. Most notably when
Johnson, as Smolder Bravestone
constantly flinches away from danger
and makes use of his smolder,
or when Hart as Franklin "Mouse"
Finbar constantly complains about
his short stature.
The delicate reboot balance
My final note for the time being
would be the references to the
original film. Reboots and sequels
walk a fine line between paying
tribute, blatantly copying and totally
diverging from the source material.
The 2016 "Ghostbusters" simply recycled
the first film's plot and added
in some new jokes, making it predictable
and a little disappointing.
The 2016 "Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles" abandoned the original
show's style and went for explosions
over the ninja-like stealth. But
"Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle",
in my personal opinion, managed to
walk the line well, paying homage
while still keeping it fresh.
This Week In History:
PEIlANP PET$MAKBllFE
tiring today!
The Titanic:
A Tragedy at Sea
RORY LARSON
Iarso066@rangers. uwp. edu
The sinking of the Titanic is one
of the most famous shipwrecks in
history, occurring early in the morning
of April 15,1912, and resulting
in over 1,500 deaths due to improper
safety regulations. The Titanic's
construction lasted two full years,
spanning from 1909 to 1911, and
was heralded as the most advanced
ship to date, a true luxury vessel.
It contained new technology, such
as watertight bulkhead compartments,
and could carry nearly 2,500
passengers each trip with almost
900 crew members. So what went
wrong?
Departure
The Titanic departed from Southampton,
England, on April 10,1912.
It was set to make several stops
along the way to its destination of
New York and was all the buzz, being
the largest ship ever built. Many
of those aboard the Titanic were
wealthy elites, officials and celebrities,
though out of the three classes,
the third class passengers made up
the bulk of the riders, totalling over
700. When it departed, the number
of souls on board, crew included,
was about 2,240.
Spotting the ice
The first three days of the voyage
were calm and presented little problems.
It was not until April 14 that
the Titanic crew began to receive
reports about ice from nearby ships.
Around 11:30, out of the fog, the
crew spotted a large iceberg and
sounded the alarms.
The ship made a quick turn, and
to the passengers on the deck, it
appeared that the danger had been
narrowly avoided. Unfortunately,
beneath the surface of the water, the
Questions about our culture articles?
Contact Hollace Villarreal.
villa068@rangers.uwp.edu.
Culture Events
iceberg had caused a nearly 300-foot
wide slash below the waterline of
the ship.When the captain and crew
went to investigate the damage and
saw what had happened, evacuation
began.
Evacuation was haphazard and
poorly planned. There were 16
lifeboats and four inflatables on the
ship, which could only carry 1,100
passengers if loaded to full capacity,
which was far less than the number
of passengers on the ship.
Despite it being woefully inadequate,
this did surpass British safety
requirements at the time. The first
lifeboat was lowered with a mere 28
people out of the 65 it was designed
to fit and multiple boats after also
faced similar capacity problems.
The captain estimated that the boat
would only stay afloat one and a
half hours maximum, but luckily for
those on board, it floated for three.
Safety Hazards
The Titanic's state-of-the-art
watertight bulkheads were faulty, as
the walls that separate compartments
from one another were only a few
feet above water level, meaning that
if the ship tipped, water would pour
over the top of one wall and into the
next compartment.
The front of the ship became
unbalanced when this exact scenario
occurred and began to sink faster
than the rest of the ship. At 2:20 am,
the ship finally sank with some crew
still left aboard and many of the
lower class passengers having never
escaped to the lifeboats.
When those who had escaped to
the lifeboats were rescued, only 705
survived. The Titanic serves as a
sad reminder of human error and the
importance of safety standards and
regulations.
April 18
Creativity Digital Fabrication Lab
Panel Discussion I 4 p.m. I Ap ril 18
I CART D113
Open House for our Digital
Design and Fabrication Lab. We
will fete the opening of our Digital
Design and Fabrication Lab with
a tour and demonstration of our
new equipment. We will also have
a panel discussion to talk about the
process of designing the lab and new
curriculum with Professors Trenton
Baylor, Jody Sekas, and Carey
Waters. Open house, reception, and
panel discussion from 4 to 7 pm in
D113.
@ The Rita: Bradford High
School Bands I 7 p.m. I April 18 I
Bedford Concert Hall
Bradford High School bands
perform at Parkside!
April 19
Concert: Parkside Range I 7 pjn. I
April 19 I Ma in Stage Theater
Parkside Range is a contemporary
a cappella group, mastering songs
from popular genres. Audiences of
Parkside Range experience fresh,
quality entertainment.
April 20
Parkside Unites: No Place For
Hate I 9 a.m. I April 20 I M id. Main
Place
By coming together in the
Parkside Unites: No Place for Hate
March, we show that UW-Parkside
will continue to be a university
that stands behind our hallmark of
inclusion and respect. We are and
continue to be a campus where all
voices, all identities, and all values
are welcome and treated with dignity
and respect. It is on all of us to build
the community we want to see.
The event will begin with a sign
making opportunity at 9 a.m. in
Midmain place. Supplies will be
provided. The march will begin at 10
a.m. and will conclude with a rally
at the Student Center Terrace around
10:30 a.m.
The Rally will open with several
speeches. After these speeches there
will be an open forum during which
anyone may speak. If the weather is
poor, then the march will take place
in doors.
Eurydice I 7 pjn. I April 20 I Bla ck
Box Theater
On the day Eurydice is to marry
her true love, a tragic misstep sends
her plummeting to the Underworld.
Memories are forbidden, but an
unexpected reunion with her father
awakens Eurydice's mind to the love
she felt in life.
When Orpheus braves the gates
of hell to find her, Eurydice must
decide whether to remain with her
father or return to her Earthly love.
The timeless myth of a love that
transcends death is retold from the
heroine's perspective using a lyric
mix of the mythic and the modern.
April 21
Eurydice 17 pan. I April 211 Black
Box Theater
April 27
Eurydice 110 ajn. I April 27 1
Black Box Theater
Eurydice I 7 pan. I April 27 I Bla ck
Box Theater
Foreign Film Series- Toni Erdmann
I 7:30 pan. I Ap ril 27 I Pa rkside
Student Center Cinema
I
6 I OPINION THE RANGER NEWS
The views and opinions expressed in these articles are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official views or opinions
U.S. response to Syrian chemical
attacks could be disastrous
Last year, following a similar
chemical attack in Syria, Trump
ordered a series of cruise missile
strikes against Assad's forces but did
so without warning; however, Trump
seems more hesitant to retaliate
this time around. Three days after
denouncing Assad and his allies,
Trump wrote, "Never said when an
attack on Syria would take place.
Could be very soon or not so soon at
all!" on Twitter. "Not so soon at all"
seems to suggest that a response may
never occur.
of The Ranger News.
Turning to ignorance:
TPUSA
Parkside s newest student org has suspect origins
RORY LARSON
Iarso066@rangers. uwp. edu
Turning Point USA is a college conservative group with over 1,000 chapters
across our nation, and it is dedicated to educating young conservatives
about fiscal responsibility, free markets and limited government. They are
known for pulling interesting stunts on campuses to promote their organization,
but not without some good old incendiary actions to cause a bit of controversy.
They claim to promote free speech and have posters that read things
like "Socialism: ideas so good they have to be mandatory ""Taxation is theft"
and "The Real Free Speech Zone", paired with images such as police officers
with batons about to attack a citizen,.
The organization has been under fire multiple times in the past for illegal
campaign activity and racial bias and have their very own "Professor
Watch List", which consists of professors who disagree with conservatives.
It sounds like something HUAC would have done in the 1930's Red Scare.
As of recently, we have gotten our very own chapter of this organization at
UW-Parkside.
I would like to start by saying that I do enjoy the idea of free speech and
the free speech ball on campus was a lovely idea. I participated by writing
"respect should be the default" on it. When I was asked about what I had
wrote on the ball by a fellow classmate, the first thing to come out of his
mouth in response was "No. Respect should be earned." I was somewhat baffled
that his response to my opinion was "no", so I explained why I believe
respect ought to be the default and could be lost. He responded by telling me
that he wrote on the ball that "life was hard and people needed to get over it".
I was at a loss for words as I walked away, nearly late to class.
On my journey back to class, I was somewhat stumped. As an organization
that promotes free speech, why did this person not understand what free
speech was and that I was entitled to my opinion about respect? Why did he
tell me "no"? This is an example of how now, and in the past, this person
has thought of free speech as something only he is entitled to, criticising and
policing everyone else's opinions. This demonstration fell flat in the regard
of educating people such as this classmate. He used the ball to argue other
people's opinions, not respect them.
I will admit I do lean left, but TPUSA is yet another disheartening disappointment
of an organization that could actually lend some legitimacy to the
conservative movement. Obviously, their reputation precedes them from protesting
safe spaces with a grown man wearing a diaper, to having one of their
own members of color expose them for internal racism. If TPUSA cannot
educate college students on the simple principle of what free speech means,
how do they expect to educate anyone about the values of being conservative?
I'd like to welcome our own chapter of TPUSA to the campus but warn
them: be cautious in the way you proceed with your education because plenty
of chapters in other schools have left a lot to be desired and made a mockery
of your organization. I hope you can do better.
Rory Larson is a senior majoring in history.
The Conservative Ranger
Governor Scott Walker's accomplishments
Questions about opinions,
editorials? Contact Ethan Costello,
mitoOl 2@ran>>ers.uwp.edu.
JIMMY GRAHAM
graha028@rangers. uwp. edu
In October of 2017, Wisconsin
Governor Scott Walker announced
that he would be running for a third
term. During his first two terms,
Governor Walker has achieved
much. From historically low unemployment
to freezing college tuition,
the governor has greatly impacted
the state of Wisconsin for the better.
Under Scott Walker's leadership,
Wisconsin has achieved 2.9 percent
unemployment, the lowest in the
state's history. The last time the
state unemployment was nearly that
low was in 1999 under Republican
Governor Tommy Thompson. Also,
according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, Wisconsin is ranked number
six out of all 50 states for lowest
unemployment.
In 2014, under Governor Walker,
the bottom state income tax rate
was lowered from 4.4 percent to 4.0
percent. This adjustment has help
put more money into the pockets
of many Wisconsin residents. The
Governor has also tried to help lower
taxes for individuals by softening
the marriage penalty. Before Walker,
the marriage penalty made it so that
individuals who filed their taxes
jointly ended up paying more in
taxes than they would have if they
filed independently.
Along with lower income taxes,
many corporations and businesses
have benefitted from manufacturing
and agricultural tax credit benefits
under Scott Walker. These benefits
have helped businesses expand and
have helped in creating jobs.
Currently, Scott Walker's administration
has put more money into
K-12 education than ever before.
An extra $200 has been put forth
for every student, and an additional
$204 increase per student is planned
for this coming year. As a result,
Wisconsin's ACT scores are some of
the highest in the country. On top of
that, Wisconsin's graduation rate is
one of the best in the country.
One the biggest things the Governor
has done that has impacted
college students is freezing college
tuition for all undergraduate students.
For the past six years, tuition
has been frozen in Wisconsin. This
freeze has helped make college more
affordable for many students. Along
with the tuition freeze, Wisconsin's
government is also working with
financial institutions to help college
graduates refinance their student
loans.
The aforementioned actions
are only a few of Scott Walker's
accomplishments. I am in support
of what the Governor has done in
Wisconsin. Personally, I will support
the Governor in the 2018 election.
Also, I would encourage anyone who
likes the direction our state is going
in to also vote for the governor in the
upcoming election.
Jimmy Graham is a sophomore
majoring in business management
and is political director of College
Republicans.
JOSEPH CANNING
canniO01 @rangers, uwp.edu
A probable chemical attack was
carried out in Syria by President
Assad's forces last Saturday, April
7, in the city of Douma. That city
has seen much violence since the
beginning of Syria's still-ongoing
civil war in 2011, but the apparent
chemical attack has brought unprecedented
brutality to Douma. Chemical
weapons are banned by the Chemical
Weapons Convention; Syria is ostensibly
part of that convention, yet it
continues to use chemical weapons.
The President talks back
The Syrian government's actions
have garnered international condemnation.
U.S. President Donald Trump
took to Twitter to voice his ire,
claiming "President Putin, Russia,
and Iran are responsible for backing
Animal Assad" and also threatening
that they would have a "big price
to pay." He has suggested that price
may be more cruise missile attacks.
The implications of action
Taking no military action at all
for the attack is certainly the best
option. There is no reason to believe
another volley of cruise missiles will
persuade Assad any more than the
last time the U.S. did it, and there is
reason to believe that a stronger response—whatever
that may entail—
could put US forces in direct combat
against Russian and Iranian troops.
Further deterioration of relations
COURTESY OF EN.KREMLIN.RU
President Assad is accused by the U.S. of using chemical weapons against his
own people and tensions between U.S. aliies and Russian allies is rising.
Community Connections:
Take pride in LGBTQ resources
KRYSTAL DODGE
thorn008@rangers. uwp. edu
There are many resources available
for Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender
Queer (LGBTQ) students on campus
and in the community. UW-Parkside
has strived to be a safe place. Attitudes
have gotten better towards LGBTQ
students, but there is still room for
improvement.
UW-Parkside has a LGBTQ
Resource Center on campus in Wyllie
Hall. The mission statement says, "The
mission of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside
LGBTQ Resource Center
is to provide a safe, inclusive, and
comfortable environment on campus
for LGBTQ and Allied students,
faculty, staff, and community." It has
books, movies, and informational
material available. The center also
hosts things like Queer Thanksgiving,
Safe Zone Training, Lavender
Celebration—which honors graduating
members of the LGBTQ community—
and educational events.
Safe Zone Training was created to
reduce homophobia and heterosexism
on campus. It is a series of training
totaling approximately 4.5 hours. This
training is a great way for faculty, staff
and students leaders to show their support
of the LGBTQ community. They
are currently working on training dates
for the Fall 2018 semester.
In addition to the LGBTQ Resource
Center, Rainbow Alliance is a studentlead
organization that advocates for
supporting and educating about those
whose sexuality, gender, romantic
orientation and/ or gender expression
does not conform to traditional norms.
They provide educational events as
well as social events. The meetings
are every Wednesday at noon in the
LGBTQ Resource Center.
with either state could mean disaster
for the U.S. and the world.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
spoke on April 12 in the Pentagon,
attempting to temper Trump's words
and calling for more deliberation
on how and why the U.S. should
respond. About the U.S.'s strategy
in Syria, he stated that the they
were trying to "stop the murder of
innocent people, but on a strategic
level it's how do we keep this from
escalating out of control." Mattis
is referring to the tensions between
the U.S. and Syria's allies, Iran and
Russia.
An uncertain future
Mattis has had a long military
career and was a major general in the
Iraq War, so his advice is informed
by much experience. The world is
in a dangerous order. Trump even
wrote on Twitter, "Our relationship
with Russia is worse now than it
has ever been, and that includes the
Cold War." Trump is trying to say
the right thing, but his knowledge of
recent history is clearly lacking—the
two nations' discourse has grown
increasingly accusatory, but they are
hardly aiming ICBMs at each other.
As US military officials are
attempting to reverse (or at least
delay) Trump's military response,
it is becoming less clear what that
response may look like or if it may
arrive at all. The UK and France too
are weighing military action. One
can only hope the West's leaders
tread lightly in Syria.
Joseph Canning is a junior majoring
in computer science.
Editor's note: this piece was written
before President Trump ordered
missiles to strike alleged chemical
factories in Syria in retaliation.
LGBT of Southeastern (SE)
Wisconsin is based out of Racine.
They offer support groups and crisis
services. As resources are available,
they help with transportation, medical,
senior, financial, pet, hotel, realty and
more. Their address is 1456 Junction
Ave Racine. Their number is (262)
664-4100. The hours of operation are
Monday through Friday 11 a.m. to 5
p.m., Saturdays 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
There is a whole list of hotlines
available on the LGBT of SE Wisconsin
page. Here are a few hotline
numbers: LGBT National Hotline is
1-888-843-4564, Runaway Safeline is
1-800-786-2929 and Suicide Prevention
Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255.
There are even more resources held
at Howard Brown Health in Chicago,
Illinois, which is a trans and gender
non-conforming health facility. The
address is 4025 North Sheridan Road,
Chicago, IL. The phone number is
773-388-1600. Their cost is on a sliding
scale based on income. They offer
hormone administering and monitoring,
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV) and Sexually Transmitted Infection
(ST1) testing, specialized HIV
medical care, breast cancer screens,
gynecological care and pharmacy
services. According to Howard Brown
health, "We offer programs that address
the unique barriers faced by trans
and gender non-conforming client."
There is a strong community out
there with many resources. In the
words of George Takei, "We should
indeed keep calm in the face of difference
and live our lives in a state of
inclusion and wonder at the diversity
of humanity."
Krystal Dodge is a junior majoring
in psychology.
The Ranger News
900 WOOD ROAD
KENOSHA, Wl 53141
rangernews@uwp.edu
The Ranger News strives to
inform, educate and engage
the UW-Parkside community
by publishing well-written,
accurate student journalism
on a bi-weekly basis, as well
as online.
Editor-in-Chief
ETHAN COSTELLO
costeO 12@ rangers. uwp.edu
Deputy Editor
AUSTIN KRIEGER
krieg004@rangers.uwp.edu
Campus News Editor
VACANT
Culture Editor
HOLLACE VILLARREAL
villa068@rangers. uwp. edu
Sports Editor
VACANT
Design and Layout Editor
ANDRE PEREZ
perez 103@rangers. uwp.edu
Managing Copyeditor
ALYSSA GOROSKl
gorosO01 @ rangers, uwp.edu
Social Media Rep
KATHRYN SINGER
singeOI 5@rangers. uwp.edu
Business Manager
AMY SCHUSTER
schusO 7 0@rangers. uwp. edu
Media Group Advisers
DEAN KARPOWICZ
karpowicz@uwp. edu
April 18,2018 BEARLY NEWS Volume 3 I Issue 5 | 7
BEARLY NEWS!
Bearly News" is not real news. In fact, you could say it is unreal news. Really, it Is real unreal news.
Please, bear with us here.
Ranger Bear's latest victim
HOLLACE V1LLARREAL
villa068@rangers. uwp. edu
When we last left off, this
Bearly News reporter was trapped,
along with our Private Eye, T.
Ruxpin, inside the basement of
Ranger Bear's den. We had just
recognized missing students scattered
across his walls. Then, we
stared deep into Ranger Bear's
mouth, into the eyes of a trapped
individual.
"There's someone trapped inside
Ranger Bear," T. Ruxpin told
the Bearly News in hushed tones
as we hid behind a couch, "We
need to free them."
The Bearly News reminded
T. Ruxpin that we are a media
organization and that we do not
get into the affairs that we report
on, as that would create a bias and
a moral grey area. T. Ruxpin made
no comment and slowly crept
closer to the beloved mascot.
Ranger Bear was moving
through the house-cave, tilting
his head upwards as if he were
sniffing the air. T. Ruxpin froze.
This reporter leaned up to snap a
picture of the bear in action, but
was tackled to the ground by T.
Ruxpin, rendering the photograph
useless.
"Do you want to get us killed?"
T. Ruxpin asked, his voice a
low hiss. This reporter could not
answer, as this is not an opinion
piece.
Ranger Bear sniffing out his prey: us.
Ranger Bear seemed to have
been alerted by the noise and the
flash. He stomped over to us, dirt
from the floor shaking with every
step. T. Ruxpin and this reporter
held our breath, trying to hide. It
was futile. Ranger Bear stood in
front of us, glaring down behind
his sewn-on eyes.
"Who are you?" The Bearly
News asked, holding up a recorder
to the Bear. All we received is an
COURTESY OF THE ARCHIVIST
audio recording of heavy breathing.
However, he did take off his
mask to reveal:
The face of Ranger Bear
Professor Carpwitz, the advising
professor for The Bearly News
and "Feralglow", the school's
literary magazine.
"Is this why you've been missing
meetings?" The Bearly News
asked, shaky hand holding out the
recording device.
The professor did not speak, but
instead turned to T. Ruxpin.
"You've shown school spirit,"
Ranger Bear said. The Bearly
News would like to disclaim that,
though we now knew that Professor
Carpwitz was inside the suit,
he still did not move his mouth
to speak. The voice seemed to
be coming from the head of the
costume, held out in the professor's
hands.
The Bearly News would also
like to point out the extraordinary
school spirit that T. Ruxpin had
displayed in the past, including
going to a sports game once a
semester, attending an after-class
activity once a month, and going
to the Bridge for free food every
day at noon. In more recent times,
he happened to be wearing a Parkside
hoodie on School Spirit Day.
By all accounts, he was wild about
our fine institution.
A new Ranger Bear
"You have been granted the
honor of becoming Ranger Bear,"
Ranger Bear said, lowering the
head onto the shocked T. Ruxpin.
This reporter took this distracted
opportunity to run to the bedroom,
locking the door. Hopefully
the editor of the Bearly News can
receive this, and the artists rendition
of the bear I have included, in
time for help to arrive.
April Fool's: Seniors play Easter prank on local twerps
T."ll
E G | G
rQQ
s Q r e t /Q I E D
T E r
N E: 0
50| T m
loB
m
tjQ T
himself.
The serial
trespasser
took time
out of his
schedule to
pander to
some ungrateful
gremlins,
but he had no
idea that he
would never
arrive at his
destination.
The Biology Club tried to identify
the rabbit's trail based on DNA tests
from melted marshmallows and
crushed eggshells. The Psychology
Club looked to examine the mentality
of suspected seniors. Campus
police looked for anything they
could to incriminate specific students
and find that glorified mascot, yet
their search was Peepless.
Even T. Ruxpin—a famous PI
working on campus—failed to turn
up any evidence. In fact, no one has
heard from him in several weeks.
This must indicate that the search for
Ranger Bear is going swimmingly.
With the faltering of the search, it
appears that the whining munchkins
of southern Wisconsin have finally
been dealt justice by a group of
anonymous vigilantes. Easter turned
out to be an April Fools' joke all
along and has now been cancelled
for all eternity.
Maybe now the children will
finally grow up, get adult jobs,
and quit being entitled snowflakes
already. From the secret prison of
the Easter bunny, this has been the
Bearly News.
The Astrological Ranger:
TRAVIS NORTHERN
north004@rangers. uwp. edu
Aquarius
You will read a newspaper today.
Bam. See what 1 did there? Magic.
Pisces
The last meal you ate was laced
with rat poison. Get to the nearest
toilet and regurgitate it as fast as
you can.
Aries
Remember: skip class, and you
will not pass. Attend class, and have
an existential crisis about the dwindling
number of high-paying jobs in
your field.
Taurus
You will win the lottery this year.
The only catch is that you must hunt
down every other ticket holder and
give them a firm "talk".
Gemini
Soon.
Cancer
The FBI is watching you right
now through this very paper. Yes,
you. Smile for the cameras!
Leo
You are feeling particularly
charitable today. So charitable, in
fact, that you will donate your life's
savings to the Bearly News.
Virgo
Your new spirit animal is the
Canadian Goose. Have fun carrying
that shame with you for all eternity.
Libra
If you do not start driving to a
zoo in the next thirty seconds, the
ghost of Harambe will kidnap your
firstborn child.
Scorpio
Make the most of your life today.
Read a book. Sing a song. Give
a hug. Run a marathon. Wrestle
a luchador. Befriend a mountain.
Eat a forklift. The possibilities are
endless.
Sagittarius
As of today, you will now be
haunted by the ghost of a frog
named Cletus. You will scream at
Cletus in anguish, but his sole retort
is a croak, for he is a frog.
Capricorn
You should be optimistic, Capricorn!
You still have eleven and
a half years to live before you are
brutally murdered in a Las Vegas
alleyway.
mm eiun The Joke
The Easter
bunny's
private heliCOURTESY
OF AN ANONYMOUS JERKcopter was
This letter was found in the Chancellor's mailbox. expected to
land on the
mmd
TRAVIS NORTHERN
north004@rangers. uwp.edu
There are plenty of this people in
this world deserving of punishment.
However, none of them are more deserving
than children. Their rampant
freeloading and perpetual laziness
have gone on long enough, and a legion
of heroic UW-Parkside seniors
have gotten the sweetest revenge.
An Easter event was planned this
year on the first of April, which is
conveniently the most maniacal holiday
in existence (excluding Thanksgiving,
of course, since nothing
is more cruel than being forced to
interact with your family). The children
were set to have brunch with
none other than the Easter bunny
top of the RITA on that fateful morning,
but instead, an anonymous note
arrived in Chancellor Ford's mailbox
(picture enclosed).
Word spread quickly of the
celebrity disappearance. Brats across
the country begged their parents for
chocolate, but the banshees wailed
in vain. The egg-hiding nincompoop
was out of the picture, and the kidnapping
became the most ambitious
April Fools' day prank in recent
memory.
The Fallout
After faculty were forced to turn
a horde of sniveling scamps away
from UW-Parkside's doors, an investigation
began.
Drawing
contest!
instructions:
Step 1. Draw a picture
according to the prompt. But
remember, you're an artist.
Everything is up for interpretation.
Step 2. Write your name
and contact info below.
Step 3. Cut out and drop
into the drawing box outside
our Office (LftH'A Student
Center).
Submissions will be considered
for print in our next print
issue.
i Draw us a picture of your tombstone after finals claim
your life! Send it in to be featured in our next issue!
Name
Email/Phone:
8 | SPORTS THE RANGER NEWS April 18 2018
Sramek, Bittenbender help lead Rangers to split
- • —-— ... - - - • i• i i I——m ! ftr*"*" '.
ROMEOVILLE, Wis. - Behind
a pair of good games from Nick
Sramek and Troy Bittenbender, the
Parkside baseball team earned a
split of Lewis on the road Saturday
afternoon. The Rangers won a thrilling
game one 7-6 but dropped game
two 9-3.
Game one was a rollercoaster
with four lead changes, including a
go-ahead run in the top of the ninth
inning for Parkside. The Green &
White started hot, scoring a run in
the first inning off a Domenic Hammudeh
RBI single to left center to
make it 1-0. In the top of the third
inning, the Rangers capitalized a
Lewis mistake, as Bittenbender laid
down a sacrifice bunt and Sramek
came in to score on an error. Later
in the inning, Paul Weise hit an RBI
single that score Bittenbender to
make it 3-0.
Lewis bounced back to take the
lead in the bottom of the third inning,
scoring four runs as the first
four batters reached in the inning.
Parkside didn't stay down long, with
an RBI double by Sramek and an
RBI single by Bittenbender to take
the lead right back in the top of the
fourth inning. The Rangers tallied
another run in the top of the seventh
inning off a Hunter Weddel RBI
single, making it 6-4. Lewis was
able to tie it up at 6-6 in the bottom
of the seventh, forcing the game into
extras. Parkside got three straight
two-out singles from Bittenbender,
Hammudeh and Max Widmar (RBI)
COURTESY OF UW-PARKSIDE ATHLETICS
Troy Bittenbender (34) at bat, assisted Rangers in game against Lewis.
to take a 7-6 lead they would hold
on to.
Nicholas Rana pitched the first
7.0 innings and came away with the
no decision while Weddel came in
to earn the win, throwing the last 2.0
innings perfect with a strikeout on
just 15 pitches.
Offensively, the team pounded out
15 hits in game one, as Bittenbender
had a huge game going 4-for-4
with three runs and a triple. Sramek
finished 3-for-5 with three runs in
the leadoff spot and Lane Ochs went
2-for-4.
In game two, Lewis had a pair
of big innings to jump out to a 9-0
lead after four. The Rangers battled
back, scoring a pair in the top of the
fifth off a Widmar two-run double
and another run in the sixth thanks
to Hammudeh getting hit by a pitch
with the bases loaded.
Sramek and Bittenbender again
had good games, going 2-for-4 and
2-for-3 respectively. After the starter
Jarrett Rossiano, Conner Lowman
and Isaac Lawler pitched the final
2.2 innings scoreless with Lawler not
allowing a hit in 2.0 innings.
The Rangers will stay on the road
next weekend, battling IllinoisSpringfield
in a four-game series on
April 21 and 22.
Oak Creek's Jazmine Neal signs
with Parkside volleyball
- X < I.IV, of j
- I *
v
^20i§)
ranSKRS [ ' '•
Aliverti's walk-off single helps
softball to fourth straight split
mm i
).»!• < iff-4 :, Wi> | ( )..!• < m-H- Hlfdt b<
COURTESY OF UW-PARKSIDE ATHLETICS
An excellent student and athlete, Jazmine Neal will join the Rangers in the fall.
VIA UW-PARKSIDE ATHLETICS local student-athlete play at Parkside
SOMERS, Wis. - Parkside
volleyball and head coach Leigh
Barea have announced the signing
of Jazmine Neal to the team starting
in Fall of 2018. Neal will join other
signees Jessie Bradshaw, Yiannoula
Kirimis, and Alivia Marks.
"Jazmine will be a great addition
to our team next year," Barea said.
"She brings athleticism and potential
and is a great all-around person.
We're excited to have another top
and join the Ranger family.'
Neal, a 5' 11 right side hitter
from Oak Creek, Wis., helped her
team to become Regional Champions
and Conference Champions in
2017. She was named First Team
All-Conference and Team MVP as
a senior and second team as a junior
while leading the team in blocks both
years. Neal has made the honor roll
in every semester in high school and
was named the Kiwanis Student of
the Year for 2017-18.
*s ^mmmmmmmrnrnrn
COURTESY OF UW-PARKSIDE ATHLETICS
Megan Aliverti (21), the Rangers catcher, hit a point-scoring line drive.
QU1NCY, 111. - The Parkside softball
team earned its fourth straight
split this season on the road at
Quincy, as the Hawks won game one
3-1 with the Rangers taking game
two 4-3 behind a walkoff single by
Megan Aliverti in extra innings.
Game one was a pitching duel, as
the Rangers were limited to six hits
and Allison Hausl gave up just seven
to Quincy. The Hawks plated a run in
the top of the first inning to grab an
early lead and the Rangers responded
with a run in the bottom of the third
inning off an Aliverti RBI single that
MILWAUKEE BUCKS PRESENTED BY
PROGRAM
Lir > TO JOIN VISIT =
isk. JBUCKSCOM ISTUDENTBIISH
$10
J^ABKkWenf Rush Program & get notified of
sgeciapstudent tickehpricing for every Bucks home game!
I'AR-IVTEF.U sri OfM
IICKEI I'tiK iW,
per game
ort on ticket availability
scored Jessica Shields, but that was
all Parkside's offense could muster
up in game one. Quincy scored the
go-ahead run in the top of the fourth
inning and added an insurance run in
the top of the sixth.
Morgan Sikon went 2-for-4 while
Aliverti went l-for-4 with an RBI
and Kellie Fenza went l-for-4 with a
stolen base.
In game two, Aliverti ripped a
line drive to center field that scored
Hausl to give the Rangers the win
in the bottom of the eighth inning.
Because the game was supposed to
played at Parkside, the Rangers had
the benefit of being the home team.
Parkside pounded out 13 hits in
game two, with four players finishing
with multiple hits on the day. Sikon
went 3-for-4 with a double, Danielle
Crockett went 2-for-4 with a run,
Adrien Hall hit a pair of doubles
and drove in a run and Hausl went
2-for-3 with a pair of runs. Fenza and
Shields, who is the conference leader
in stolen bases, each stole a base in
both games.
Per usual, freshman Alyssa Hrncar
pitched the complete game to earn
the win and improve to 12-6 this season.
She allowed eight hits and just
three runs with a pair of strikeouts. It
was her 17th complete game of the
season.
Sports Standings
NCAA Div II GLVC E ast
cenf Div "total Streak
2018 Softball
1. Illinois Springfield
2. Indianapolis
3. McKendree
2018 Baseball
1. Illinois Springfield
2. Bellarmine
3. Southern Indiana
2018 Wrestling
1. Mckendree (5)
2. UW-Parkslde (2)
3. Indianapolis (9)
18-3 0-0 2841 W1
14*4 0-0 2040 W1
144 0-0 28*1 2 W2
104 0-0 284 W21
114 0-0 28-10 W 4
M 0-0 17*18 L2
6*0 NA
1*1 NA
4*2 NA
17*8 W
11*1 W3
1040 W1
INDEX
(#) = NCAA Div 2 rank
$ = Conference Champions
T indicates Tie
Sports Schedules
SOFTBALL
4/21-12P.M., 2P.M.
WILLIAM JEWELL (MO.) (DH)
LIBERTY, MO
4/22-12P.M., 2P.M.
TRUMAN STATE (DH)
KIRKSVILLE, MO
4/28-12P.M., 2P.M.
DRURY (DH)
SOMERS, Wl
4/29- 12P.M., 2P.M.
MISSOURI S&T (DH)
SOMERS, Wl
WOMEN'S TRACK &
FIELD
4/20- TBA
UW-LA CROSSE PHIL
ESTEN CHALLENGE
LA CROSSE, Wl
4/27- TBA
HILLSDALE GINA RELAYS
HILLSDALE, Ml
4/28- TBA
UW-WHITEWATER DRAKE
ALTERNATIVE
WHITEWATER, Wl
5/3-5/5- TBA
8^Hffi
TD00R CHAMPi
"
ROMEOVILLE, IL
5/10-5/11-TBA
DR. KEELER LAST CHANCE
MEET AT NORTH CENTRAL
NAPERVILLE, IL
5/24-5/26- TBA
NCAA OUTDOOR CHAMPI
ONSHIPS
CHARLOTTE, NO
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 47, April 18, 2018
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2018-04-18
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
elections
habitat for humanity
islamophobia
mammoths
Randy Bryce
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/36b3219e6d5b7e13fabcb803c35c8969.pdf
123f4efe3a9e15cf842771f7d6034ed4
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 39, issue 10
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Barack Obama- The President-elect
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 39, issue 10, November 11, 2008
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2008-11-11
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
black student union
elections
native americans
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/5500f7e21c32ab3a2dfdd174f56c4331.pdf
30a419e15282e9529fee6bb6c0df9c83
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 39, issue 4
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
V.I.P. aims to get students voting
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
pSGA
faJl
Fest
Casino
Night
Page
4
Page
6
Page
7
THE
RANGER
NEWS
The
Ranger
News
,
.
University
of
Wisconsin-Parkside's
Student
Newspaper
-
September
30, 2008
News
Since
1972
-
V.I.P
MOLLIE
EGAN
mollie@therangemews.com
Accidents
happen,
especially
when
sex-
is
involved.
Fortunately,
Plan
B emergency
contraception
is now available
for
students
at the University
of
Wisconsin
-
Parkside,
Sandra
Leicht,
the Nurse
Practitioner
at the
Student
Health
and
Counseling
Center
(SHCC),
took the initiative
to make
sure students
at UW-Parkside
had the chance
to get Plan
B.
Students
had been
asking
for the
pili to be at UW-Parkside
and
Leicht
obliged
them
by adding
Itto tbe list of over-the-counter
medications
tbat
the
SHCC
orders.
It
will
cost
students
$35
togetPlan
B
at the SHCC
but, as
farasLeicht
knows
it
is cheaper
thangelling
it at a Walgreen's.
Plan B is an emergency
Contraception
that
prevents
pregnancy
after
birth
control
r.,ls--for
example,
broken
Condoms,
missing
two or
more
consecutive
birth
control
pills
Or
be'
'
p
mg late for the next
Depo
p;overa
shot.
Leicht
said
that
h
an
B
could
also
be used
after
d
aVlng
unprotected
sex. Leicht
Des caution
that using
this
med·
.
. lcatlon
will
not.
stop
an
eXlstino
.I
0
pregnancy
or protect
glr
S
.
d. agamst
sexually
transmitted
lseases
such
as gonorrhea,
Chlamydia
or HIY.
"Plan
B"
Leicht
said,
"Is most
effective
when
taken
as
soon
as
possible
after
unprotected
vaginal
intercourse."
Plan
B
works
by giving
the
body
a short,
high,
burst
of
a synthetic
hormone
(Levonorgestrel,
a
hormone
used
in birth
controJ
pulls
for over
35
years),
which
disrupts
hormone
patterns
needed
for pregnancy.
Plan
B may
be effective
up to
12!l
hours
(5
days)
after
intercourse,
but it is most
effective
within
the first
24 hours.
Plan
Bean
reduce
the risk
of pregnancy
by
75-89%.
Leicht
says
that
Plan
B
should
not be used
as regular
birth
control,
and
she adds
that
other
birth control
methods
are
much
better
at keeping
a woman
from becoming
pregnant.
Students
can go to the SHCC
and meet with
a
nurse or the nurse
practitioner
where
everything
is
strictly
confidential.
The nurse
will
ask
a
few questions
to make.
sure that the girl is not allergic
to
the medication
and to
make
sure
they need
the
medication.
Leicht
says
that
students
should
consider
certain
things
before
they
go to the SHCC
ro
obtain
Plan B or for any visit a
student
might
make,
She
said
that students
should
write down
any questions
they
have
in
advance,
to prevent
forgotten
questions.
Leicht
also said that
students
should
feeJ
free to take
notes
during
their
visit.
She
explained
that students
shouldn't
be afraid
to speak
up;
"If
you
don't
understand
something,
ask to have it explained
again.
Ask
all the questions
you
need
to and
don't
leave
without
understanding
everything
you have
been
told."
Leicht
stressed
that students
should
be
honest
about
themselves,
and
said
that
students
shouldn't
be
embarrassed
to describe
their
symptoms.
health
and
sexual
history.
"For
when
students
are truthful,"
Leicht
said.
"they
can
get
the
proper
care
that
they
need."
Leicht
suggested
students
should
provide
a list of
their
medications;
tbis includes
prescription
drugs,
over-the-
counter
medications.
vitamins.
herbal
remedies
and
other
supplements.
Lastly,
Leicht
said
that
students
should
feel free
to
bring
someone
with
them when
they
visit
SHCC.
If the student
needs
moral
support
or if it helps
the
student
to relax;
they
should
ask a partner,
friend
or a family
member
to go with
them.
He or
she can also remind
the student
of questions
to ask and can help
the student
remember
what
was
said.
"·We've
got issues"
2
September
30, 2008
900 Wood
Road
Kenosha.
WI 53141
Phone:(262)595.2287
Fa"
(262)
595-2295
Ads: uwp_odJ@yahoo.com
E·mall:
rang.rnews@gmall.com
dltor
In Chief
Jo Kirst
10@lherongernews.(Qm
nluth,e
Editor
II
Mo i. Egon
mollie@therongernewl.(Qm
e.lgn
Manager
Ruth B,lones
ruth@therangernews.,om
arketlng
Director
Zok Smith
lOk@therongernews.rom
dvortl.lng
Manager
Gio Gutierrez
glo@therong"news.rom
ow. Editor
Moille Egon
mollie@therongernewl.rom
rll
&
Culture
Editor
h
Jos Dlefenbo(h
diefeODO@uwp
.•du
taff Reporter.
Cody Holden
ydocnedloh@yohoo.rom
Nitholos
ludy.
ludyDOI@uwp
.•du
Geo!Jj'
losloy
losleODD@'uwp.edu
Nom Young Kim
klmOD20@uwp.edu
Joson Schneid"
sche041@uwp
.•du
Rochel
Deleon
eliteleono@yohoo.rom
Kelsey
~off
h,ffOl~o~p.edu
UOl'
Reparler
RYanAshllln
osnloOD1@uwp.edu
apy Editor.
(heryl Overby
ove,bOOl@uwp.ed.
Nick (annor
mlck2ronnor@ool.rom
Som Young
young04l@uwp.edu
lIu.trataPl
Brent Schulll
wolfpockOIIOB@yohoo.rom
Joe Dlefenbo(h
dlefeDOl@uwp.edu
hotagraphePl
'Zok Smith
lOkss[Jllth@gmoil.rom
Mpnhew
Morshall
mershD21@uwp.edu
arlaanl.1I
Som Spohn
spahnDOl@uwp.edu
Jamie Stoehr
jamlelobolove@gmoll.rom
Dan Wan"ek
Drwortlst@yohoo.com
Greg Bork,r
borkeOI2@uwp.edu
Jeisiro
Ange
tl_pradudlons@yohoo.rom
Mission
Statement
Th. Ronger
News
strives
to inform,
educote,
and
engage
the UW.
Parksid.
community
Dy publishing
well.written,
accurate
student
journalism
on a weekly
basis.
e Ranger
News
hu meetings
every
Friday
III
oon,
All
students
and
faculty
of UW-Park!ido-
rc welcome,
Please
feel ~ 10llttend.
HaYe
Itny
ommenb,
concerns,
qUi:StlooS.
or story
ideM?
lease
e·mAIl
U5at: rangemews@uwp,edu.
e
lU'e
IOCtlletlll1
WylJh:
D139C
ch person
may
take one newspaper
per Issue
ale.
Extra
newspapers
ClIll
be
purchased
for $1
piece.
Newspapers
can
be
tnken
on a
til'!lt
come,
nt serve
bmls.
meaning
that once
they
lI.tt
gone.
hey are gone.
We work
on the honor
system,
but
loilltors
will
be
prosecuted
or then.
FAculty
memben
nnd
ludent!
olllanlzlltions
who
ffi
151lto use The Ranger
News
n c1ll!lsrooms
should
consult
he edJtor·ln-chlef
to I'tscrve
wever
lIlllny
fr'ce
copies
they
•
Ish
to
u~.
ASSOCIAYIJ)
I think
for the most
part,
we're
doing
well
this semester.
We've
managed
to come
up
with
a handful
of news
stories
for each
issue
(sometimes
less is
more-take
this week's
issue,
for
example),
have
a steady
stream
of arts
and
culture
pieces,
a
"revived"
sports
page,
and
several
other
improvements
to the paper
as "whole.
. ,
l'viy'persoh1ll
avorite,
though,
has
to be the sudden
influx
of
new
members.
At our Sept.
26th
meeting,
we had over 20 people
in
the office!
That's
almost
everyone
on staff,
and knowing
that totally
made
my day. The only
downside
to this is that we may
have
to
change
the meeting
space.
since
we all barely
fit in the office
...hut
we'lJ
jump
that hurdle
when
we
get to it. Right
now,
I
am happy
to
have
so many
staff
to help lighten
the workload.
Unfortunately,
with
the
good
must
come
the bad.
We've
discovered'
that
we can't
open
Microsoft's
new
file extension.
The Ranger
News
".docx'',
which
has caused
us
problems
on more
than
one
- occasion.
Unrelated,
but
still
unfortunate:
I've
noticed
that
people
have
begun
to "advertise"
their
events
on
our newsstands
by
leaving
a stack
of
fliers
next
to
the newspaper,
or even
replacing
the
newspapers
with
their
fliers.
This
is the part
where
I
play
"newspaper
police"
and
remind
everyone:
Our
news
tands
are
NOT
a pnblic
display
board,
and should
not be used
as such.
The Ranger
News
and the other
little
"freebie"
papers
are the
ONLY
papers
that
belong
on
those
newsstands.
If you'd
like to
advertise
with
us, please
contact
Gia or Zak (find
their
emails
in
the staff
list on your
left).
Along
these
lines,
I've gotten
a few emails
from
students
wbo
wish
to have
articles
published
in The Ranger
News.
I'm going
to remind
everyone
that
opinions
should
follow
ALL
the opinion
guidelines.
We do, in fact,
require
a name
and
email
in order
10
LICE
09/19/08
08·1934
Theft
- grom
a Motor
Vern
Ie.
Ranger
Lot.
1:08pm.
Complainant
reports
OwP
Parking
Permit
be~
taken
from
vehicle.
~epofl
is taken,
replacement
permit
issued.
09120/08
08·1937
Traffic
Violation.
4100
Block
of
CTH
E. 12:42am.
Amanda
D Mozdzinski
was
ticketed
for Speeding
mph
in a
posted
45 mph
zone.
Officers
cleared.
09/20/08
08·1949
Agency
Assist.
Off - Campus
Location.
II :06pm.
KSD
request
assistance
for
suspicious
vehicle
call.
UWPPD
Officers
and KSD
Unit
arrived.
Suspicious
Vehicle
is gone
from
area.
UWPPD
Officer
cleared.
.'h.....".~
'eft
iBLOTTER
09/21108
08·1953
SkateboardIRoller
Blade
Violation.
Ranger
Lot.
11:0Iam.
Officer
observed
a male
Skateboarding/Roller
Blading
on
UW-Lands.
Citation
issued,
due
to
male
not
cooperating
with
Officer.
Officer
then cleared.
09/21108
08.1958
Traffic
Violation.
STH
31 @ CTH
E.IO:42pm.
Ryan
C Bennett
was ticketed
for
Reckless
Driving
&
Racing
on
Highway.
Andrew
P Gordon
was
ticketed
for Reckless
Driving
&
Racing
on
Highway.
Officers
then cleared.
09/22/08
08·1962
Theft
- From
BUilding.
Com
Arts
Building.
1O:33am.
Complainant
reports
various
items
were
taken.
Officer
takes
report
then cleared.
run any
opnuon
(including
the
100 words
or less
I).
We reserve
the right
to not run any opinion
for
any
reason--but
you
are
certainly
welcome
to ask
why
your
piece
wasn't
run,
Please
do not send
us articles
about
a
"REALLY
AWESOME"
album
you just listened
to, or the newest
blockbuster
hit.
For
quality
control
purposes
(and
my sanity),
onl
The
Ranger
ews
staff
are allowed
to submit
articles.
Otherwise,
I
have
no control
over
the content
of issues,
and people
start
to get cranky
and ask "Well,
you ran Jimmy's
article,
why
not
mine?!"
Just a FYI...
Now
that
I've
stepped
down
from
my soapbox,
we can
continue
on to what's
coming
upl
Fall Fest
is rapidly
approaching,
so check
out the FalJ Fest preview
in this issue.
We've
also
got the
lowdown
on the VIP program
and
Plan
B being
offered
at Parkside.
Add
in
some
opinions
and cross
country
photos,
and we've
got a
packed
issue.
Next
issue
will bring
09122/08
08.1964
Theft
- From
a Motor
Vehicle.
University
Apartments
Lot.
1I:53am.
Complainant
reports
UWP
Parking
Permit
was stolen
from
vehicle.
Report
was
taken,
replacement
permit
issued.
09/22/08
08·1965
Theft
- From
a Motor
Vehicle.
Off-Campus
Location.
12:oopm.
Complainant
reports
UWP
Parking
Permit
was
stolen
from
vehicle.
Report
was
taken,
replacement
permit
issued.
09122/08
08.1966
Medical
Assistance.
Ranger
Hall.
12:00pm.
Report
of male
haVing
a medical
crisis.
Officer
and Rescue
Unit
arrived,
male
transported
to local
Hospital.
Officer
then cleared.
a preview
of The
Foreigner,
the
scoop
on the Amethyst
Initiative,
and more
of the same
great
arts
and culture
articles
and opinions
that you find in every
issue.
Even
though
our numbers
have
grown
considerably
in the
last few
weeks,
we are still
not
able
to catch
everything
that
goes
on at Parkside.
If
you've
got a story
idea,
send
it to us at
rangernews@gmail.com,
leave
us a note
in our mailbox
(please
leave
your
name
and email
so we
know
who
to contact
in
case
of
questions
!),
or stop by our meeting
and
let
us
know.
We
can't
cover
it
if we don't
know
it's happening!
Okay,
I'll let you
get on
with
reading
the rest of the issue.
Enjoy,
see you next
week!
Jo Kirst
Editor
in Chief
09/22/08
Alarm-Fire.
12:40pm.
UWPPD
Alarm
Panel
reports
active
fire alarm.
Officer
responds
to
location,
no fire/no
smoke.
Staff
report
that contractor
set off
alarm.
Alarm
reset,
officer
then
cleared.
08·1967
Parkside
Union.
09122/08
08·1969
Harassment-Stalking.
Molinaro
HalJ.
2:56pm.
Complainant
reports
harassment.
Officer
takes
report
and
then
cleared.
09123/08
08·1973
Medical
Assistance.
Ranger
Lot.
1:36am.
Callbox
was
activated,
female
reports
male
vomiting
very
bad.
Officers
and Rescue
Units
arrived.
Male
transported
to local
hospital.
Officer
then cleared.
.'
~---------------;;:--:-----:-::------------
~::-::=---:~::::-:-=:-:::-::~
~Th~e~R~a~n~g~e!:-r
!!N~e~w~s~
~se~p~t~e:!:m~b~e~r~3~O~,~2~O~O!8
THE POLICE/
...
can't.
THINGS
TO DO
~j23J'll
OS-I'ns
BLOll
~
WEDNESDAY,
ocr; 1
,
HE
Worthless
Checks
- Less Than
09/24108
08.2003
Study Abroad
Fair
$
1000.
lallent
Hall.
7:17am.
Medical
Assistance.
Tallent
Hall.
10:00am
to 3:00pm
Main Place
officer
ta~s report
for worthless
8:30pm.
check.officer
then cleared.!
Male
having
trouble
breathing.
/
Officer
and Rescue
Unit arrive
09/23/08
08·1978
male transported
to local bospital:
Traffic
Accident
- Hit and
Officer
then cleared.
Run. Com Arts Lot. 12:15pm.
complainant
reports
accident.
Officer
takes report
then cleared.
09/23/08
08-1994
Agency
Assist.
Off-Campus
Location.
11:2pm.
KSD Dispatch
request
assistance
for Disturbances
Call. UWPPD
assisted
then cleared.
09/24/08
08·1996
Traffic
Violation.
CTH E
@
CTH
JR.5:45am.
Thomas
J Carroll
was ticketed
for
Speeding,
62mph
in a posted
45
mphzone. Officers
then cleared.
09/24/08
08-1999
Suspicious
Circumstances.
Molinaro
HalJ. 12:37pm.
Complainant
reports
suspicious
graffiti.
Officer
takes
report
andthen cleared.
09/25/08
08-2011
Medical
Assistance.
Health
Services.
10:15am.
SH&CC
request
Rescue
Unit for
sick male.
Officer
and Rescue
Unit
arrive.
male
transported
to local
hospital.
Officer
then
cleared.
09/25/08
08-2024
Traffic
Violation.
CTH E
@
CTH
A.
9:42pm.
Scott D Wear Jr. was
ticketed
for Non-Registration
of
MY. Officer
then cleared.
09/26/08
08-2026
Traffic
Violation.
CTH A
@
CTH
E.12:0Iam.
Christopher
M Roy was ticketed
for Operating
while
Intoxicated.
Subject
transported
to Kenosha
Jail. Officers
then cleared.
Art
Exhibition:
Teresa
Dunn
&
Benjamin
Duke
II:OOam
to 8:00pm
Comm.
Arts Gallery
Noon
Concert:
Mark
Eichner,
James
and Susan
McKeever
Noon
Molinaro
105
THURSDAY,
OCT. 2
Art Exhibition:
Teresa
Dunn
&
Benjamin
Duke
11:OOam
to 5:00pm
Comm.
Arts Gallery
Far Beyond
Frail
Noon
Student
Union
FRIDAY,
OCT. 3
CCP
Workshop:
Training
9:00am
Tallent
Hall
Advocacy
U
Career
Premiere
Movie
Series:
"Indiana
Jones
and the Kingdom
of the
Crystal
Skull"
7:00pm
Union
Cinema
SATURDAY,
OCT. 4
Zeta
Sigma
Chi
Women's
Multicultural
Leadership
Conference
TimeTBA
Location
TEA
Volleyball
vs. Southern
Indiana
3:00pm
DeSimone
Gym, SAC
SUNDAY,
OCTOBER
5
No
Events.
MONDAY,
OCTOBER
6
Fall Fest Kickoff:
"Snakes
Alive"
11:OOam
to 1:OOpm
Main Place
Art
Exhibition:
Teresa
Benjamin
Duke
II :OOam
to 5:OOpm
Carom:
Arts Gallery
Dunn
&
Center
Presentation:
"Internships
&
Job Opportunities
at tbe Department
of State"
4:00pm
Molinaro
D105
TUESDAY,
OCTOBER
7
Art Exhibition:
Teresa
Dunn
&
Benjamin
Duke
II :OOam
to 8:00pm
Corum.
Arts Gallery
Fall Fest Movie:
"Willy
Wonka
and the Chocolate
Factory"
Original
version!
Noon
Union
Cinema
Teaching
& Learning
Workshop
3:30pm
Wyllie
DI50D
Center
UWP Alumni
Association
Casino
Night
6:30pm
to 1O:30pm
Main Place
Perspectives
on Religious
Issues:
"Faith
and Politics,
A Look at the
Candidates"
Noon
Molinaro
D 137
Fall Fest Disc Golf Tournament
4:00pm
Disc Golf Course
Fall Fest Chillin'
and Grillin'
6:00pm
Union
Patio
Fall Fest Movie:
"Willy
Wonka
and the Chocolate
Factory"
LIVE!
Featuring
The Warped
Cast
8:00pm
Union
Cinema
THE
RANGER
NEVVS
IS OPEN
TO
PHoToBYZAKSMITH
WE ARE
NOW
H'R'N~
Positions
Open:
-Reporters
-Photographers
-Graphic
Designers
-Advertising
Representatives
4
September
30,
2008
-
The Ranger
News
PSGA
General
Assembly
University
ofWiscon.sm
Parkside
Assembly
Chambers
- GQST
101
Wednesday,
OCtober
1"" 2008
5:0Q..6:oo
P.M.
'ParksUfe
5
tudeni
fiovernment
.lIs
oeiation
Sept
17th
Senate
Attendance
Senator
/Rep
Present
Absent
Matt
Abraham
1
Matt
Bieser
1
Heidi
Curtls
1
Christina
Dodd
1
Nathan
Dolle
1
Samantha
Fredericks
1
Kayelyn
Harris-Lang
1
Anton
House
.
-
1
Heather
Porter
1
Shane
salerno
1
Christopher
Schaum
1
Nelson
5enda
Jr
1
Deshun
Levingston
1
Andrew
Klng
1
James
Jones
1
Cheryl
Kobs
1
Patrick
McMarity
1
Ben
Holmes
1
Curtis
Jackson
1
James
Allen
1
PIC
-,~~~
.
.,.
."
-
1
PAO
1
Sacred
Circle
1
BSU
1
LU
1
PASA
1
Rainbow
Alliance
1
171
CALL
TO ORDER
ROLLCALL
DETERMINATION
OF QUORUM
CONSENT
AGENDA
APPROVAL
OF THE
PREVIOUS
WEEKS
MINUfES
Students'
Comments:
5
min
• Speaking
request
will be
completed
prior
to the commencement
of the meeting.
• Speaker
will
allocate
time
to students
wishing
to
speak,
not to
exceed
allotted
time
given
for Students'
Comments.
I.
Executive
Reoort.
i.
President
ii.
Vice
President
ll.
Director
report.
i.
SecretlIry
ii.
SUFAC
iii.
Legislative
Affiurs
iv. Public
Relatioos
v. Cbief
Justice
Ill.
Advisors
Report
IV.
Speaker
on 1+3
V.
Old Business.
i,
sur
AC Appointments.
ii.
oea!rer
from
Transit
ow on
the
JCR.lI,!
iii.
Resolution
in Supt:>Ort
of Kenosha
Racine
Milwaukee
fKRM)
Railwav.
VI.
CommentslAnnouooement.
i. Executive
ii.
Senate
iii.
Student
VlI.
AdJOurnment
I have
a passion
for politics
and vote
in every
single
election
and primary,
whether
it is a national
presidential
election
or a local
election
for
the city council
or school
board.
Sometimes
the media
does
not do a good
enough
job of providing
information
about
local
issues
and
elections,
but there
are so many
nonpartisan,
credible
sources
for information
on national
issues
and elections
that
I find
it impossible
to
understand
why
people
would
NOT
vote.
We live in a democracy,
in which
our country's
direction
and the policies
pursued
by our leaders
are determined
by our choices.
These
choices
touch
every
single
aspect
of our lives:
how
we educate
our children;
how
we take
care
ofthe
old, the poor,
and the disabled;
how
we keep
our country
secure
and safe;
how
we save
for the future;
how
we take
care
of the environment
we live in; how
we pay for our health
care;
and how
we compete
for jobs
and resources
in the global
marketplace.
The only
way
to
empower
yourself
in a democracy
is to exercise
your
right
as a citizen:
in the voting
booth,
you get to choose.
Mary
Lenard
English
Department
Director,
Center
for Women's
and Gender
Studies
Win reimbursment
for your
parking
pass!
Decorate
your
car to promote
V.I.P.
and you
could
win reimbursment
for the price
of your
2008-09
parking
permit.
Visit the PSGA
Offi.ce
for more
info today!
Student
Organizations
can win up to $1000
in event
cosponsorship
by bringing
the most
voters
out on Oct. 8. Have
an org rep visit
the PSGA
office
for more
info today!
'5
TheRanger
News
September
30, 2008
Om
GJ(Dili)~
ommunltv
av .
Sept.22,
2008
Main Place
i
O£
==
J,\RT
6
The
Ranger
News
itty
GIA GUTIERREZ
gia@therangernews.com
_The
University
of
Wisconsin-Parkside
holds
an
annual
fall festival
that lets
students
interact,
compete,
and have a great deal of fun
participating
in activities.
This
year's
theme
is Willy Wonka
and
the Chocolate
Factory.
Get ready for a scrumptious
Pall Pest kickoff
in Main Place
on Oct. 6. The kickoff
includes
Snakes
Alive,
an interactive
presentation
that brings
students
up dose.
to
the
reptiles.
sweets.
and giveaways.
Don't
forget
your sweet tooth
1
On Oct. 7, the Warped
Cast
from
the Milwaukee
Times
Cinema
Theatre
will
be
performing
"a "Rocky
Horror
Picture
Showv-esque
version
of
Willy Wonka
and the Chocolate
Factory
in the
Student
Center
Cinema.
The Warped
Cast wi
II
be performing
to the backdrop
of
I
r/
•
the original
Willy Wonka
and the
Chocolate
Factory
f
lm.
You can
also catch
the original
version
of the
film
Oct. 7 at noon in the
Student
Center
Cinema.
Don't miss the Bucket
Boys
on OCl. 9' The Bucket
Boys are
a percussive
duo that combine
laughter,
crowd
interaction.
and
a medley
of junk to create
music.
The show starts at' 9pm on the
Ranger
Hall lawn. Look for the
bonfire'
If
you're
looking
for
something
more
competitive,
try the Campus
Disc-
Golf
Tournament;
held on Oct. 7th
at 4pm. Tentatively.
this event
is scheduled
to be held on Hole
5 of the Disc Golf Course.
It's
a
two-person
team tournament
that will wind through
Parks ide's
18-hole
Disc Golf Course.
Prizes
are
given
to the top scorers.
Disc
Golf not your thing?
Sign
up
for the 3rd Annual
Dodgeball
tournament
on Oct.l l from
I:OOpm
to 5:00pm
in the Pctretti
RACHEL
DE LEON
eliteleona@yaboo.com
Music
that tells the story of
human
spirit
as
it
traverses
ughout
the mundane
world.
. ying the whispers
of the
while dutifully
embracing
odd customs
and tradition
ber music.
The
concert
was
held
in
Communication
Ana
D118
on
Wednesday,
Sept.
24, starting
promptly
at
noon.
When
it
started,
the
music
instantly
grabbed
my ears
and
forced
me to listen to its tales.
Alexander
Sascha
Mandl
was
the violist
who
bas earned
notable
recognition
amongst
many orchestras
and symphonies
including:
Concertmaster
Fieldhouse.
Registration
ends
on Oct. 7, and those
who are
participating
are reminded
to
bring a sweatshirt
to donate
to a
local shelter.
There
are several
more
events
scheduled
as part of
Willy
Wonka's
Fall Fest,
but
we wouldn't
want to spoil your
appetite
for fun!
of
the
Beloit-Janesville
Symphony
Orchestra,
Assistant
Concertmaster
oftbe Milwaukee
Chamber
Orchestra.
and guest
Concertmaster
of the Kenosha
Symphony.
Alvaro
Garcia.
the
Associate
Professor
of Music
at
lJW-Parkside,
was the. skillful
hands behind
the violin.
The
first
piece
they
performed
together
gave
a nostalgic
flair of social
gatherings.
such as a wedding
and
one
cou
Id
i
magi
ne
the
twirling
of
white
lace.'
and the
throwing
of bouquets.
It
didn't
take long for the audience
to see
that
these two gentlemen
were
highly
skilled
and capable
of
fluidity.
When
Carl Starnitz's
(the song's
original
composer
from the early nineteenth
century
era) sophisticated
melody
ended,
Dr.
Mandl
and Mr. Garcia
received
much applause
from an
admiring
audience.
After
a brief two-minute
pause,
Dr. Mandl
retired
"backstage",
while
Mr. Garcia
returned
with
Alejandro
Alumbreros,
a pianist
not
unfamiliar
with the University
of Wisconsin-
Parkside;
he has
often held nooo recitals
and has
received
a Masters
in Music
at
Carnegie
Mellon
University.
Mr.
A1umbreros
clearly
showed
his skills on the piano as he and
Mr. Garcia
performed
"Harold
in Italy".
composed
by Hector
Berlioz
in
the
late nineteenth
century.
The song had energetic
explosions
both expressed
by
the piano
and viola and then it
would
sink
into
a melancholic?
meditative
state,
only to rush
back up in a surge of newfound
energy.
It
was an instrumental
anthem
of the seasons
of youth.
After the gentlemen
eased into a
softened
end to an adventurous
tune,
the audience
responded
with rapid applause;
as if the
song
had given them an unknown
source
of enthusiasm.
To bring
the concert
to a
close.
the masterful
musicians
chose
to play
".!lip
Pieces
Op.
83". composed
by
Max
Bruch
in
the late ll\neteej,1th
Cdltury.
This
piece
~ed
a harmomoos
balance
-;,.t>etweel\
1be
\bJ<'e
c1airvoy&1lt
",!R~nts.
The
piano was the stroo&!!J!\n
llOldiDgj;
the barbell.pf'1:Onsdatmey,
while the violin
and viola
weN'
acrobatic
twins
that elegantly
flipped
about
in gymnastic
grace.
Together,
they designed
a delightful
orchestrated
tale
that equally
higb!j~
their'
unique
voices
arid
capabnjtjea.
Once
the song
ended,
the
audience
showered
Dr. Mend\,
Mr.
Garcia
and
Mr.
Alumbreros
with a few, long minutes
of their
natural
percussion
instruments.
Being
accustomed
with such
concerts.
the
three
gentlemen
smiled
and bowed
respectively
which
produced
another
spike of
applause
before
everyone
rose to
vacate
the room.
Chamber
music
is more
than
"black
squiggles
'On
paper".
It
is the embodiment
of unspeakable
raw
emonons-
some of which
cause the average
person
to stammer
like a fool.
Prom trilling
out tunes of ecstatic
days, to the solemn,
sober dirges
of tragedy,
chamber
music may
as
well be JIesh and blood
walking
around
upon lands far and
near.
One doesn't
have to be royalty
or "well educated"
to understand
the depth of
thia
genre;
one just
npods
to have open ears and an
-open
heart.
The Ranger
News
September
30,
2008
Dublin Core
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Title
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The Ranger News, Volume 39, issue 4, September 30, 2008
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2008-09-30
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
community
elections
emergency contraceptive
federal reserve system
voting
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/cdd40140473e1f38b8eae9de2b821145.pdf
cd1651f01778da4d9679eb5defaa9424
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 37, issue 28
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Parkside responds to Virginia Tech
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
UW-Parkside
honors
Virginia
Tecb and those lest.in
the shootings
on April 16. A ribbon
hanging
on a tree outside
of Wyllie
Hall (top) bas messages
of sympathy
and support
written
on
it. Another
ribbon
sits outside
of the library
(bottom).
_ April 24, .2007
Parkside
responds-to
.Virginia
Tech
ANDREW
C.
WESTBROOK
westbOO2@uwp.edu
The shootings
at
Virginia
Tech on April 16 left ripples
that
were
felt
by
every
school
in the
country,
UW-Parkside
included.
The
day following
the
tragedy,
John Keating,
chancellor
of
Uw-Parkside,
sent out an e-
mail
to
all
students
enrolled
at
UW-Parkside,
which,
in part,
expressed
sympathy
toward
the
Virginia
Tecb campus
on behalf
ofUW-Parkside.
"I
want to assure
the campus
community
that we are very
cognizant
of the fact that any'
University
is vulnerable
to such
horror
because
of the very nature
of a University
as an open
and
welcoming
institution.
UW-
Parkside
is no exception,"
the
e-mail
stated,
in
part,
and
went
on to emphasize
that
Parkside
Police
officers
are very
well
trained
in such
matters
and that
administration
also
participates
in table-top
scenarios
of campus
disasters.
Michael
Marzion,
chief of
Parkside
Police
said he met with
all of the UW-Sysrem
chiefs
by
teleconference
on Tuesday,
April
17,
and
discussed
their
crisis
response
plans,
assessing
both
their
strengths
and
weaknesses.
He also
said
that
further
meetings
with
students,
faculty.
and staff
Of
UW-Parkside
would
be held
LO
further
address
such
issues.
Marzion
said that, altbough
no more
officers
were
being
hired
presently,
the coverage
by the
current
officers
was exempJary.
"1
have
three
officers
on from
1:00 in the afternoon
to 5:00 at
night,
and then Ihave three officers
on from 9:00 at night to 1:00 in
the morning,
and those
are
the
times when we have the highest
level
of calls,"
Marzion
said.
He
went
on that three
officers
on duty
at once
is a sufficient
number
for
this university.
Marzion
reiterated
the
chancellor's
statement,
saying
that
he and those in the chancellor's
cabinet
practice
the crisis
response
plan
annually
through
table-
top exercises
involving
various
scenarios.
Marzion
said
that
there
would
be
a scenario
presented
to
the
group
"and
we spend
hours
talking
about
how
we would
respond,
what
resources
we would
direct.
how
the university
would
handle
the siruation,"
he said,
"so we're
pretty
well-versed
as
a university
on how
to apply
OUf
crisis
response
plan,
and
I
think
that
we'
d
gel some
measured
outcomes
or some
consistent
outcomes
if
we
implemented
that
plan."
Parkside
Police
are already
given
active-shooting
training,
which
concerns
what
to do with
a shooter
on campus
or in the
dorms,
according
to Manion,
and they will be doing additional
.training
soon
with
the Kenosha
SWAT
team.
UW-Parkside's
Crisis
Response
Plan
can be located
on
the university's
Web
site by using
the "Campus
Safety"
link on the
home
page
and,
subsequently,
the
"Safety
Department"
link on the
Parkside Police
and Public
Safely
page.
The plan's
purpose
is "to
provide
University
of Wisconsin-
Parkside
(UWP)
administrators
with
procedures
to follow
in
the event
of a crisis
situation,"
according
to the site.
The
document
addresses
various
potential
campus
crises.
including
natural
occurrences
CONTINUE
TO PAGE
3
Election
winners
announced
in PSGA
meeting
.
,
ANDREW
c.
WESTBROOK
·newconstitutionandareferendum
debate
whether
a mandate
.of
.westbOO2@uwp.edu
. asking
whether
srudents
wanted
two non-PSGA-officer
students
to stay in the United
Council
of was
necessary
or a good
UW Srudents.
The constitution
idea.
PSGA
Senator
Andrew
was approved
by 85 percent,
and Scheeler
questioned
the need
the students
voted to stay in UC.
for
a
resolution,
saying
that this
After
results
were
given,
the
stipulation
is essentially
already
senate
moved
on to the only piece
in place,
noting
that
all
student
of legislation
on the agenda.
the
organizations
must
advertise
their
"Student
Involvement
in PSGA
trips to the entire student
body if
Travel"
resolution
introduced
they
use segregated
university
the previous
week
by PSGA
fees.
Senator
David
Wilson.
The
The
resolution
was
voted
resolution
calls
for two or more
down
by
the PSGA
senate
..
students
who
are'
not
PSGA
Several
announcements
were
officers
to be included
in any 'also made during
the meeting.
PSGA
conference
or United
UW-Parkside
Dean
of
Council
general
assembly,
with
Students
Stephen
McLaughlin
the burden
of proof on PSGA's
said that after the shootings
at
executive
committee
to show
that
Virginia
Tech,
President
of
DW-
considerable
effort was made if System
Kevin
Reilly
called
for
the two spots are not filled.
all campuses
to review
their
The senate
continued
to emergency
plans and discussed
Michael
Scerpella
annOunced
the winners
of the
Parkside
Student
Government
ASSociation's
elections
which
took place
last week.
The
announcement
was made
during
~GA's
regular
meeting,
April
Tony Dubose'
was elected
Pesidem
of
student
government
w·
h
'
. Jl
Terrence
Shaw being voted
~n.
as vice
president.
Michael
ptegelhoff
and Adam
Schemm
WereVotedto the two spots open
~n the Segregated
University
COs
Allocation
Committee.
All
senate
.
nominees
on the ballot
Were
Voted
in, as well.
Also on the ballot -were the
"Come.
get
that
good
copy!"
so m e
of the ideas talked
about by the
university,
including
a reverse
911
system
and bulk text messaging
in
the event
of emergencies.
PSGA
Senator
Curtis
Jackson
announced
that the
upcoming
Greek
Week
will be
used to raise funds
to donate
to families
of victims
of the
shootings
at Virginia
Tech.
April 24, 2007
The Ranger
News
2
900 Wood
Road
Kenosho,
WI 53141
Phone:(262)595.2287
Fox:.(262)
595-2295
Ads:
uwp_ods@yahoo.com
Website:
rang~rnews@uwp.edu
r
----=:::;:~::::::~:::..-.......:~--------_:_---,-------_,
we have which
I
know sounds
cliche,
hut unfufiunately,
these things
have
happened
too frequently
for me to
envision
having
any revealing
new ideas.
I'
ve read over the various
articles
regarding
what happened
and
why. Some Pl'ople
bl~e
loose gun
laws, some movies.
Some
will
say
there was a mental
imbalance
or genetic
~'
predisposition.
Others
will
assume
;my
number
of motives
held in the mind of -
the killer that brought
him to action.
I
guess the unsettling
part of all of it is
that there are so many reasons
Or factors
.
involved.
It's hard to Point to one
element
and say, if this had been done or
not done, the incident
could
have been
averted.
That inability
to find and strike
the root of a situation
can be unnerving
to
say the least.
I
extend
my sympathies
to all who
were hurt by the deaths
at Virginia
Tech
and the incident
as a whole.
I
commend
__ "'-' those who have begun
efforts
10
help
victims
or who have just taken time to
acknowledge
the loss of life, and
I
hope we don't have to
repeat
the process.
I
would
say more, but
I
really don't know how much
more there is to say.
I
don't know where
to point
fingers.
and I don't know what preventative
advice
to give. except
to
say that things
like this are happening,
and we need to pay
attention.
The more we know,
the more we can prevent.
If
there is an underlying
reason
in the genes or somewhere
else,
it behooves
us all to find it.
Edltor-in-Chle'
Andrew
C.
Westbrook
W.s1b002@ijwp.etlu
Executive
Editor
Koililn Ulmer
eopoe666@yohoo.com
Design
Manager
.
Soohyun Ki",
KimOOO09@uwp
.•du
Advertising
Manager
TInaSfrou~
,trouOI2@uwp
.edu
Arts ond Culture
Page Editor
D.Whit.
Whit.D41@uwp
.e
du
Opinion
Page Editor
Ramon
Joimez
joimeDDl@uvip
.e
du
z
<
~
Stall Reporters
Mo"hew Macomber
macomD02@uwp.edu
Robert Rosoti
robertrosatj@holmail.(om
AJ.Margoo
margoDI7@uwp.idu
.
Mark Snodgrass
marktll0035@hotmoi[com
.J~
Christie
chri'123@uwp.edu
I
was silting
around
trying
to think of what to write
in the second
to last Letter
from the Editor
of my career
at
The Ranger
News.
I
figured
that the most obvious
subject
would
be Virginia
Tech; writing
about anything
else would
leave a conspicuous
bole in the page,
I
think.
However,
the
problem
I
had was that
I
had no idea what to say. [don't
presume
to know what we should
all learn from this tragedy
.or what we need to do to prevent
it from ever happening
again.
I
don't think that [have
the qualifications
or the
information
to assess
the reasnns
why such a tragedy
would
or could happen.
I
don't know how many people
really are.
I
guess what
I
take from it is reassurance
that we all
need to watch out for each other and
be
happy
for what
.Copy Editors
-Andrew
C. Westbrook
Editor-in-chief
(o\Soodra
Wheeler
wheeIDI9@uwp.edu
Design
Assistants
.
]mothy Keith Griffin Jr.
Dorian_Magjc@yohoo.com
Erica Knutsen"
knutsOD8@uwp.edu
DO
THINGS
T
THE U
Cartoonists
Iooy Kinnard
darkstor 13_200l@yohoo.com
lomolY Keehoo
KeehoD03@uwp.edu
Kolie limpel
,impeOOl@uitp.idu
Friday,
April
27, 2007
10:OOAM-12:30
PM
Parkside
Theatre
presents
"The
Musical
Comedy
Murders
of
1940"
August
Wegner
Studio
Theatre
12:00 PM-l:OO
PM
Noon Concert:
Ken Fabis
Senior
Recital
Union
Cinema
Theater
7:30 PM-IO:OOPM
Parkside
Theatre
presents
"The
Musical
Comedy
Murders
of
1940"
August
Wegner
Studio
Theatre
Parkside
Theatre
presents
''The
Musical
Comedy
Murders
of
1940"
August
Wegner
Studio
Theatre
6:00 PM-9:00
PM
Celebrazione
Italiana
Main Place
For more information,
call Dr.
Carmel
Ruffolo
at (262) 595-
2174.
Tuesday,
April
24, 2007
11:00 AM-8:oo
PM
Art exhibition:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Show
Com. Arts Gallery
factors
leading
to suicidal
attempts.
This afternoon
session
is primarily
targeted
for
school
counselors,
counselors.
therapists,
social workers,
clergy
and
other interested
parties.
5:00 PM-8:oo
PM
Understanding
Youth Depression
&
Suicide
Tallent
Hall
This evening
session,
targeted
for K-12 Educators
and parents,
will
focus on recognizing
signs
of depression
and suicide
in the
classroom.
7:00 PM 8:15 PM
"What's
the Latest
on Walt
Whitman
and Who Cares?"
Overlook
Lounge
(Library)
Friends
of the UW-Parkside
Library
presents
emeritus
English
Professor
and Whitman
scholar
Donald
Kurnrnings.
7:30 PM-IO:OO
PM
Parkside
Theatre
presents
"The
Musical
Comedy
Murders
of
1940"
AugustWegner
Studio
Theatre
The plot sounds
like an Agatha
Christie
novel but it's played
strictly
for laughs.
A theatre
troupe
is preparing
for a backer's
audition
when a blizzard
traps
•them in a mansion
full of sliding
panels
and secret passages.
The guests
include
a pompous
director,
a B-list comedian,
Nazi
saboteurs,
and the "Stage
Door
Slasher"!
It's a murder
mystery
fuHof surprises,
disguises,
and plenty
of fun. It's a silly
romp of a murder
mystery
full
of surprises.
disguises,
and
confusion.
Wednesday,
April
25, 2007
11
:00 AM-8:00
PM
Art exhibition:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Show
Com. Arts Gallery
12:00 PM-I:oo
PM
Noon Concert:
UW-Parkside
Student
Recitals
Union.
Cinema
Theater
UW-Parkside
students
take
center
stage for a series of
recitals.
12:00 PM-2:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Baseball
vs. St.
Joseph's
Oberbruner
Field
12:00 PM-4:30PM
UW-Parkside
Softball
vs. St.
Xavier
Case Field
UW-Parkside
has two games
scheduled
with non-conference
opponeut
St. X.
7:00 PM-9:oo
PM
Parkside
Activities
Board
Vegas
Night
Main Place
This event is for UW-Parkside
students
only.
Advisor
Jud~h Logsdon
Logsdon@uwp.edu
Sunday,
April
29, 2007
12:00 PM-2:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Baseball
vs,
Drury
of Missouri
Red Oberbruner
Field
12:00 PM-4:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Softball
vs.
Missouri-St.
Louis
Case Field
The Riverwomenpaddle
all the
way from St. Louis to playa
doubleheader
in Kenosha.
12:00 PM-2:oo
PM
Men's
Soccer
vs. DePaul
_
Wood
Rd. Field
2:30 PM-5:30
PM
Men's
Soccer
vs.
Wisconsin
Wood
Rd. Field
3:30 PM-5:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Symphony
&
Community
Orchestra
.
Com. Arts Theatre
adults
$6, students,
faculty,
staff,
seniors
$4
Monday,
April 30, 2007
I
J
:00 AM-5:00
PM
ArtExhibition:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Show
Com. Arts Gallery
Saturday,
April
28, 2007
12:00 PM-4:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Softball
vs.
Quincy
Case Field
The Rangers
face the GLVC
rival Hawks
from Quincy
in a
doubleheader.
12:00 PM-4:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Baseball
vs. Drury
University
Oberbruner
Field
The final home baseball
weekend
of the season
begins
with a twin bill against
Great
Lakes Valley
Conference
rival
Drury University.
1:00 PM-3:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Men's
Rugby
Highway
E Field
The UW-Parkside
men's
rugby
hosts the Sheboygan
Sharks.
3:30 PM-5:00
PM
Concert:
UW-Parkside
Guitar
Ensemble
Com. Arts D-118
George
Lindquist
leads the
UW-Parkside
Guirar
Ensemble
til
rough a concert
of exceptional
classical
guitar music.
4:00 PM-6:30
PM
Mission
Statement
The Ranger
News
strives
to
inlOrm,
educate,
and engage
the UW-Parkside
community
by publishing
well-written,
accurate
student
[oumolism
on
a weekly
basis.
The Ranger
News
has meetings
every
Monday
at noon,
All students
and faculty
of UW-Parkside
are welcome.
Please feel
free
10attend. Have any
comments.
concerns.
questions,
or story ideas'?
Please
e-mail
us at: rangemews@uwp.edu.
Weare
located
at Wyllie
D139C
Each
person
may
lake one newspaper
per issue
date. Extra
newspapers
can be purchased
for
$\
apiece.
Newspapers
can
be
taken on a
first
come,
Hrst
serve basis, meaning
thai
once they are gone,
they are gone.
We work On the
honor
system,
but violators
will
be
prosecuted
ffi
for
!.heft.
Faculty
members
and
students
organizauons
who
wjsh to use
The
Ranger
New~
•
in classrooms
should
con.~ull
the
ASSOOATtl)
editor-jn~hJer
to reserve
however
COUf(jIATl
~nany free copies they
wi~h let
u"C:
P'ItBS
Thursday,
April
26, 2007
II :00 AM-5:00
PM
Art exhibition:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Show
Com. Arts Gallery
1:30 PM-4:30
PM
Understanding
YouLh
Depression
&
Suicide
UW - Parkside
Tallent
This presentation
will identify
warning
signs and high risk
Tuesday,
May
1, 2007
I t:OOAM-8:00
PM
Art exhibition:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Show
Com. Arts Gallery
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 37, issue 28, April 24, 2007
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2007-04-24
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
asian-americans
elections
graduation
parkside student government association (PSGA)
rugby
virginia tech
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/6d510284f5d201c0e052ac53d8ccb69b.pdf
df0fe0717bf687707267a12150a11bde
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 37, issue 26
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Constitution On Hold
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
One of the ways Jonathan
Shailor,
associate
professor
.
of Communications,
will
be
celebrating
his 50'" birthday
is by
running
26.2 miles on April 16 in
the Boston
Marathon
for the Dana
Farber
Cancer
Institute.
It
will be a kind
of
homecoming
for the Boston
native
and the realization
of a dream
for
the man who has already
run seven
marathons,
including
Chicago
and
New York, since 1997. "There's
a whole
kind of aura about
the
Boston
Marathon,
it's the longest
continually
running,
no pun
intended,
marathon
in the world,"
he said.
Shailor
started
runni-ng
in
1976.
'1
started
running
after Isaw
Rocky;'
he said, "I was a college
student,
and I got psyched.
It was
a running
craze,
and
1 got
into
it."
.It . would
not be until the
early
1990s,
when
Shailor
met
his wife, that he even considered
marathons.
He said. "We~ve
done
most of our training
together:'
Shailor
would
not have been
able to run the Boston
Marathon
officially
if not running
for
charity.
His best marathon
time
of
four
hours,
14
minutes,
and
1-------------------'--------,------------------1
29 seconds
(sub-ten-minute
miles)
is nearly
an hour off the
required
time to officially
run the
marathon.
Running
for Dana Farber
is
a
"point
of pride"
for Shailcr
who
had set a goal earlier
of raising
$5,000
but raised
it to $10,000
after meeting
the initial
mark.
Accordingto
Shailor,
"Running
for
charity
is something
that
became
much bigger
and something
I'm
much
more
invested
in than
I
thought
I would
be."
Shailor
even
recruited-
a
student,
Paul J. Glysz,
to help. In
class,
Shailor
recognized
Glysz
as "a student
who was obviously
good at organizing."
Glysz
interviewed
runners
chosen
by Dana
Farber
and
organized
a
benefit
event for. the
Dana Farber
Marathon
Challenge
held March
31. Glysz
received
credits
for the work, as welL
Glysz said, "Working
on this
project
with Professor
Shailor
.
.
..
.
"
.
"
.
Constitution
on
hold
ANDREW
C.
WESTBROOK
westb002@uwp.edu
parkside
Student
Govenunent
Association
was
unable
to pass its constitution
through
the senate
in its meeting
on Friday,
April 6, two weeks
beforeit is supposed
to be put on
theballotduring
PSGA
elections
April18and 19.
After two special
meeti
ngs
and time during
regular
PSGA
meetings
spentontheconstitution,
the
senate voted on the document
as
a whole,
after a few final
words,on April
6. The
initial
vote
was 18 yeas, two nays, and
fourabstentions.
It
was
pointed
outafter that that the document
required
two-thirds
approval
fromthe senate
to pass. The full
quorum
of the PSGA
senate
is
34,
so
a vote of 23 yeas would
have been required
to approve
the constitution;
however;
only
24.members
were in attendance.
A
second
vote was then
taken, whi.sh..w&!l,1t!l!!jnL
...
~vwt!i;!!""_
16-4-4,and the senate
tabled
the
constitution
until the next.regular
meeting,
Friday,
April
13. At
the
conclusion
of the meeting,
PSGA
President
Tyson
Fettes
overrode
the
senate's
decision
to
tablethe constitution
and instead
called
an
emergency
meeting
forWednesday,
April 11, at ~:OO
p.m.,
based
on
a
suggestion
by
President
Pro-tempore
Brian
Graziano.
Fettes
said that if the
constitution
fails on the Friday
before
elections,'
it
would
be
problematic.
After
constitution
talk
ceased,
the
senate
moved
on
to
discuss,
andeventually
pass, three
newresolutions
being presented.
The
first resolution
«Resolution
in
Support
of C~mpassionate
Care of Rape
Victims
Bill
(LRB-1387/3),"
was presented
by Senator
Emily
Junion,
and
sponsored
by her and the PSGA
Women's
Issues
Committee
and
Was
CO-sponsored
by Senator
Michelle
Slabik.
Accordingto
the Wisconsin
Alliance
for Women's
Health
"Th
'
e Compassionate
Care for
Rape
Victims
Bi
\I
requires
hosp.itals
providing
...emergency
~edlcal
care
to
rape victims
to
giveinformation
about emergency
c?ntraception
and, if requested.
dispense
the
medication."
The resolution
states,
"BE
IT RESOLVED,
that students
of UW-Parkside
support
the
dIstribution
of EC [emergency
Contraceptives]
information,
and hospital
emergency
rooms
CONTINUE
TO.
PAGE
3
,
....
-
--
UW-Parkside
holds the Asian Awareness
week kickoff
on Monday,
April 2, in upper Main Place.
Dancing
was a major aspect
of
the
celebration
that
took
place
from
noon to
1 p.m., as a
variety
of
performers
took part in the multicultural
event
.
Spring
Fest 2007
TINA
STRAUSS
Slrau012@uwp,edu
SUFAC
gave the council
$4,006
to use for UW-Parkside's
80 student
organizations
as they
saw
fit.
Tyson
Fettes,
president
of Parkside
Student
Government
Association
and member
of
the Presidents'
Council
said
every
organization
was
invited
to participate
in the planning
process.
Members
of the Presidents'
Council
decided
to host Spring
Fest
as
a way to make campus
organizations
more
visible
to
students,
as well as encourage
students
to get involved.
All
organizations
are encouraged
to
contribute
to the event in
various
ways.
Other
possible
events
included
a
homecoming
game,
block
party,
and multi-cultural-
themed
event.
It
was also
suggested
that. the Presidents'
Council
split the money
evenly
between
student
organizations.
Fettes
explained
that this
idea was rejected
because
each
organization
would
only receive
$50.00.
He said that Spring
Fest
woold
be "a place
for people
to gather"
and interact
with
organizations,
making
it the best
option.
Fettes
also
said
that,
although
the Presidents'
Council
is looking
forward
to Spring
Fest,
they did not ask for any money
from SUFAC
for next year.
Gladiators,
dancing
beads,
and free food are among
the many
activities
planned
for Spring
Fest's
main
event,
Thursday,
April 19, in Mid-Main
Place.
A
dodge
ball tournament
on Friday,
April20;will
complete
the Spring
Fest activities.
The
event will be
hosted
by the Presidents'
Council
with money
allotted
to them by
SUFAC
last year.
The Presidents'
Council
is an organization
comprised
of
officers
of UW-Parkside
student
organizations.
Their purpose
is
to
inform
each other of campus
events
and discuss
ways to work
togeth~r.
"Come
get thatgood
copy!"
Parkside
professor
celebrates
50
th
by .
•
runrung
for cancer
institute
GUEST
REPORTER
LUKE
ZAMMIT
lzammit5500@gmail.com
CONTINUE
TO
PAGE
5
........
2
April
10,
2007
The
Ranger
News
900 Wood
Rood
Kenosha,
WI
53141
Phone:(262)595.2287
Fox:
(262)
595·2295
Ads:
uwp_ads@yahoo.com
Website:
rangernews@uwp.edu
Editor·in·Chief
Andr,w
C.
Westbrook
W,s1b002@uwp.edu
Executive
Editor
K,ill~n
Ulmer
. "pll,666@y,hoo.<om
De'lgn
Manager
.
Soohyun
Kim
Kim00009@uwp.edu
Advertising
Manager
.
TI"" SlreUjS
streu012@uwp.,du
Arts
and Culture
Page
Editor
D.Whne
White041@uwp.edu
Oplnioa
Page
Editor
'"
Roman
Joim~z
.
.
. j,im,DD1@uwp.edu
StaH
Reporters
Mo1th,w
Ma<omber
mecemDD2@uwp.edu
R,bert
Rosati
reb,rtreSllti@h,lm<Jil.,om
AJ.
Morg,n
morg,017@uwp.edu
Mork Snodgress
merkliton3S@hotmai[,am
Copy
Editors
Cassandre
Wheeler
wheeI019@uwp.edu
Design
Assistant
TImathy
Keith Griffin
Jr.
Dorian_Magic@yahoo.com
Erica Knutsen
knuts008@tiwp.edu
I
was
thinking
lately
about
how
much
I
couldn't
wait
for the school
year
to end.
I couldn't
wait
for classes
to be done
and
I
could
walk
at
graduation,
a semester
later
than
I originally
intended.
When
I
started
college,
it was about
a
year
after
~nearly
bombed
out of high
school.
I
went
to the University
of Wisconsin-
Waukesha
for
2 years
before
transferring
to Parkside
in the fan of '04.
When
I started
college,
I
pretty
much
went
to class,
went
to work,
and went
home,
just
like most
people.
After
my first
semester
at Parkside,
1joined
The
Ranger
News
as a copy
editor,
When
[ graduate,
I'll have
spent
two and a half years
at The
Ranger
News,
and
I
can say that I think
I've gained
more
than
I've
lost by doing
It.
I
know
registration
is at hand,
and
I
want
to encourage
students
to leave
room
in
their
schedules
for something,
something
to get themselves
involved
on campus.
Last
week.
after
we all thought
spring
~d warmer
we~ther
were
upon
us, we saw snowflakes
sweeping
across
our windows
and realized
that
we'd
spoke
too soon,
Granted,
it wasn't
much,
but the POlOt
was sttl! made.
It
seemed
fitting
to me, though,
that the dramatic
change
10
weather
coincided
so
well
with
the start
of registration.
Picking
classes
and
planning
a schedule
are
times
in which
we may
think
we know
what
we're
getting
into
and what
we
can expect
and then
see
in
retrospect
that w
7
wOul.d
rather
have
done
sO~!h!ng
else.
I
thought
about
4 or 5 different
potential
majors
before
eventually
pIcking
English.
and
I'm starting
to
think
tbat
J
would
have
liked
at least
I
or 2 of the
IIItl:nlativea
~
than
the
one
I
picked.
I
think
dlat
a
lot
of people
come
to school
and think
they
know
exacdy
what
path
they
want
to
follow
in
their
time
here.
They
know
what
they
want
to major
in, and they
know
that
they
want
to spend
no more
time
on campus
than
the
few hours
of class
they
have
each
day and the time
it takes
to walk
to their
cars
and back.
I
think
that
if
I
hadn't
joined
The
Ranger
Nevis,
I
might
have
loobd
back
thought
that
I
missed
something
in my
time
at Parkside.
So,
I
just want
to
encourage
people
to think
and
rethink
about
their
schedules
as they
plan
their
classes
for next
year.
.
I
have
three
more
letters
from
the editor,
and I'm really
gone
to try to make
one of them
fun to read.
but if you've
become
sick
of me giving
advice,
I'll
be
easing
myself
into retirement
soon
enough.
-Andrew
C. Westbrook
Editor-in-Chief
THI'NGS
T DO
----=--=-==-~~TRE
U
PAE
Night
in The Den
The Den
2, Wyllie
Hall
A friendly
student
gathering
around
food
ani! music.
:00 PM:1O:28
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
Cartoonists
Tony Kinnard
darkstar
13_2001@yahao.cam
Zachary
Keehan
Keeha003@uwp.edu
Kati' Zimp,l
zimpeOO1@JJWP.edu
•
Advisor
Judith
Logsdan'
lagsdon@uwp.,du
•
Mission
Statement
The
Ranger
News
strives
to
inform,
educate,
and
engage
the UW·l'orkside
community
by publishing
well-written,
accurate
student
[ournolism
on
a weekly
basis.
The
Ranger
News
has meetings
every
Monday
at noon.
All
students
and faculty
of UW-Parkside
arc welcome.
Please
feel free
\0
attend.
Have
any
comments,
concerns,
questions.
or story
ideas?
Ple.ise
e-mail
us at: rangemcws@uwp.edu.
We are located
ar Wyllie
D139C
Each
person
may
take
one
newspaper
per issue
date.
Extra
newspapers
can
be-
purchased
for
$[
apiece.
Newspapers
can
be
taken
on a fiThtcome.
first serve
basis.
meaning
thm once
{hey
are gone,
they
are gone.
We
work
on the honor
system.
but
violators
will
be
pro.<iCcuted
ffi
for
theft.
Faculty
membets
and
students
organizations
who
wish
to u>c
1lle
Ranger
News
in
•
cirl.s-srooms
should
consult
the
A$SOClATUl
cditor-in-ehief
to reserve
however
cou.fGlAlI
many
free copies
they
wish
10 use.
'
Pam
Tuesday,
April
10, 2007
\1:OOAM-8:!JO
PM
Art exhibition:
Parkside
Iuried
Student,
Show
Com.
Arts
Gallery
The best
work
of the year
by UW·Par
ide art students
is shown
but only
for three
weeks.
Wednesday,
April
11, 2007
11:00
AM·8:00
PM
Art exhibition:
Parkside
Juried
Student
Show
Com.
Arts
Gallery
12:00
PM-5:00
PM
UW-Parkside
Baseball
vs.
Quincy
Oberbruner
Field
The Hawks
from
Quincy
University
visit
Oberbruner
Field
.12:00
PM-I:30
PM
"Religion
&
Politics
in
America"
TBA
12:00
PM-l:OO
PM
Noon
Concert:
Student
Recital
Union
Cinema
Theater
12:00
PM-I:15
PM
Holocaust
Survivor
Aaron
Elster
Communication
Arts
140
Carole
Vopat
welcomes
Holocaust
survivor
Aaron
Elster
10
her Literature
of the
Holocaust
class.
7:00
PM-8:00
PM
Science
Night:
"Water!
Water!
Water!
Water
in the Great
Lakes"
Greenquist
103
8:00
PM-9:30
PM
Thursday,
April
12, 2007
11:00
AM-5:00
PM
Art exhibition:
Parkside
Juried
Student
Show
Com.
Arts
Gallery
12:00
PM·I:OO
PM.
UW-Park:side
Master
Plan
presentation
Molinaro
112
Bill Streeter,
John
Desch,
and
Steve
McLaughlin
present
.
the same
information
on the
Master
Plan
that was recently
. shown
to the UW
System
Board
of Regents.
7:00PM·8:15
PM
FoL:
"Muslim/Christian
Conflict
in Medieval
Spain"
Overlook
Lounge
(Library)
7:30
PM·8:58
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema.
7:30
PM·9:oo
PM
Arts
Alive
presents
Chapter
Six
Com.
Arts
Theatre
(Tickets
TBA
J
Friday,
April
13, 2007
10:15
AM·2:00
PM
Student
Showcase
2007
Various
campus
locations
UW·Parkside
celebrates
student
research
during
Student
Showcase
2007.
12:00
PM-I:OO
PM
Noon
Concert:
UW-Parkside
Percussion
Ensemble
Com,
Arts
0-118
7:~OPM-8:30
PM
"An
Evening
of Original
Music,
Part
3"
Com.
Arts
0118·
All proceeds
go to benefit
music
scholarships.
7:30
PM·8:58
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
Saturday,
April
14, 2007
12:00
PM-4:30
PM
UW-Parkside
Softball
vs,
Indianapolis
Case
Field
Tbe
Rangers
welcome
Indianapolis
for a pair of Great
Lakes
Valley
Conference
games.
5:00
PM-6:28
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
[Season
passes,
UW-Parkside
students
admitted
free
to
Sunday's
5 p.m.
show
with
a
valid
university
ill
J
8:00
PM-9:28
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
Sunday,
April
15, 2007
8:00
AM-3:00
PM
UW-Parkside
Indoor
Triathlon
Sports
and Activity
Center
{UW-Parkside
student
$15,
UW-Parkside
faculty/staff
$25,
individual
$30,
UW·Parkside/
community
team
$60}
12:00
PM·4:00
PM
UW·Parkside
Softball
vs. St.
Joseph's
College
Case
Field
The
Indiana
onslaught
continues
with
a pair
of
conference
match-ups
against
the Pumas
of St. Joseph's
College.
2:00
PM-3:28
PM
foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
2:00
PM-3:30
PM
Concert:
Voices
of Parkside
Ist United
Methodist,
Racine
5:00
PM-6:28
PM
Foreign
Film:
"Millions"
Union
Cinema
{Season
passes,
UW-Parkside
, students
admitted
free
to
Sunday's
5 p.m.
show
with
a
valid
university
ill}
Monday,
April
16, 2007
I
8:00
AM·IO:OO
PM
Human
Race
Machine
Main
Place
A unique
diversity
experience!
The
Human
Race
Machine
gives
you the opportunity
to
envision
yourself
as a different
race.
11:00
AM-5:oo
PM
Art exhibition:
Parkside
Juried
Student
Show
Com.
Arts
Gallery
Tuesday,
April
17, 2007
8:00
AM·
10:00
PM
Human
Race
Machine
Main
Place
I !:OO
AM·8:00
PM
Art exhibition:
Parks
ide Juried
Student
Show
Com.
A,ts
Gallery
-
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 37, issue 26, April 10, 2007
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2007-04-10
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
cancer
elections
parkside student government association (PSGA)
spring fest
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/ca2bb732e2de3b9106499eb1c70481cd.pdf
faae5c8391b8815df81423be6c3fc4d5
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 36, issue 26
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
PSGA Pres-Elect Optimistic for '06-'07
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
Thefieldson the UW-Parkside
campus
go up
Inflames
every
three
years
in a process
known
as
~prairie
restoration,"
The
main
purpose
is
to
clear
out
brush
and
weeds.
according
to
the
grounds
crew here.
~-
Child
Care Center
&e,,,,Hel
p
Page
3
WIPZ
Plans
Frequency
Change
sTEPHEN
c.
KlS
BY W1PZ,
UW-Parkside's
radio
. I'Smaking
some
changes
stalI°
n
,
I'
t
may
result
in
~ore
isteners.
tba
W1PZ
is movmg
to
a
different
frequency,
from
101.7
flo!
to
88.5 FM,
in order
to
p""drecepuon
dlStanc~.
.
ex
eurrently
the receptIon
IS
\lelWeen
5
and
10
miles
from
!he
station.
However,
after
!he
station
makes
this
switch,
reception
should
at least double.
'litis means
WIPZ
will be
bIOadcasting
in both Racine
and
Kenosha
counties.
Members
ofWlPZ
are
!toP"ful
thai
the new broadcast
~bilities
will result
in a
greaternumber
of listeners.
Liz
(Jarcia,
a
DJ
for WIPZ,
expects
!he
estimated
200 listeners
WIll
iJtere3Se
by another
100 once all
the
changes
are made.
Those
who have not tuned
in
before
can expect
a diverse
varietyof music.
WIPZ
plays
numerous
genres
such
as
techno.
hip-hop.
metal.
indie.
Christian.
andclassic
rock. The future
of
WlPZlooksvery promising
for
Iludents
who do not live in UW-
Parkside's
backyard
and wish to
tune
in.
Also, the station
is
sponsoring
a contest
to design
a
newlogoforWTPZ.
A prize
of a
$50
gift
certificate
10
The Olive
Garden
will be awarded
to the
designer
of the winning
logo. All
entriesmust
be
received
by
May
l.
A
winner
will
be announced
May
4.
Students
who would
like
toenterthe
contest
can drop
their
logodesigns
off
at
the
radiostation.
The
only
criterion
fora
logo
design
is that
it
must
use
the
colors
green,
black,
and
white.For more information
on
this
contest
contact
Garcia
at
lillg@wipzradio.com.
=
Permit
Purchased
Against
Pollution
Page 4
A
8,2006
Parkside
Hosts
2nd Annual
Triathlo
Page 6
PSGA
Pres-Elect
Optimistic
for '06-'07
BY
HENRY
D GASKlNS
t d
Id
.
Everyone
has
d'
ff
s u ents cou
go back to their
lack of trust there."
what PSGA
is doing.
"I
want to
a I erent
high schools
and talk about
Fettes
and Dubose
both
make
things
known"
he said
comment
on what cnmes
out
college
t
UW
P
ksi
d H
.
'
.
of Bur lin ton Wisconsi
a
- ar
SI
e. e
Said they have plans
to get
Running
under
the S.T.A.R.
tho
;.'
sconsm.
But
also wants
student
government
more
information
out to the
(Students
Talking
About
Real
IS ~uc
IScertainly
true: the
to work
with other
student
student
body,
the biggest
plan
Issues)
slate,
a big focus
of
2006
2007
PSGA
president-elect
orgamzauons
more,
which
he
being
a monthly
or bi-monthly
Fettes's
campaign
is to "keep
does.
Only
a sophomnre
thIS
thought
would
boost
morale
newsletter
on what student
. segregated
fees al a reasonable
~:~;;~~~nhas
III
want
to
amnng
people
government
is doing
and what
level,"
but segregated
fees
who are involved
issues
students
are facmg.
Fettes
are nearly
doubhng
next year
at least two
restore
a sense
on campus.
said he
wants
nothing
behind
to more than
$825.
Fettes
years
left at
Focusing
on the-
the scenes
so everyone
can see
UW-Parkside,
of pride
back into
positive
things
'
which
could
h
•
."
would
be one
be enough
t e university.
of the most
time to make
important
things,
a significant
Tyson
Fettes,
2006-2007
according
to
difference
PSGA
President-Elect
Fettes.
in
student
governance
at UW-PaI·kside.
"One
of my major
goals,
probably
ahead
of
everything,
is
1
want
to restore
a sense
of pride
back into
the university."
said Fettes.
commenting
00
how he thinks
rnost
students
are not
proud
to go to school
here at UW-
Parkside.
"1 want to do things
to
make
people
say,
'I'
III
glad to be
here.'''
To help create
that sense
of
pride.
Fettes
said he is working
with the director
of admissions
to
start a
program
by which
PRESIDENT-ELECT
page
10
Fettes
and his running
mate,
Vice
President-Elect
Tony
Dubose,
both said that in order
for
student
government
to
be
successful
next year. students
are going
In
have to know
what is going
on. Fettes
also
said that there
was a need to
"restore
a trust"
back in student
government.
-'1
think
that people
don't
exactly
know
what's
going
on with PSGA,"
said Fettes.
"Everything
we
do
is great,
but
I
Tyson
Fettes,
PSGA's
2006-2007
president-elect,
confidently
raises
his
don't
think
anyone
knows
about
hand
next to Steve
McLaughlin,
dean of students,
during
last Friday's
it. and that's
why there's
that
student
government
meeting.
Tiny Turnout
for PSGA
Elections
BY HENRY
D. GASKINS
Although
less than
to
percent
of the UW-Parkside
student
body
voted
in the student
government
elections
on April
5
and 6, a clear
victory
was given
to TYson
Fettes
as
he achieved
302 votes
from students.
In
second
place
was write-in
candidate
Andrew
Scheeler.
who
received
only 64 votes.
This year's
elections
director
for PSGA,
Michael
Scerpella,
said he
was
happy
with
the
turnout
and that he thought
the
elections
were run wen. despite
his not having
any guidance
on
how to run the election.
Scheeler
had a different
opinion.
but
he did not blaine
it directly
on
Scheeler
W35
elected
into the
senate
for next year. He said he
PSGA
or the way the election
was tun procedurally,
"I'm thoroughly
disgusted,..---------------,
with the student
bndy as
a whole
with
having
less
than 500 people
vote:'
said
.Total
Students
• Students
who
voted
• Fettes
would
do his part to
support
what
he hod
campaigned
for
.
"Next
year.
the most
important
thing
that's
going
to has e
to
happen
L
-'
is for people
to take
a serious
interest
in student
government:'
said Scheeler.
"Get
all the senate
scats filled
with
people
that
have
opinions
of
there
own that
aren't
aligned
with
some
ridiculous
pseudo-political
slate like S.T.A.R.
this is
student
government,
not partisan
politics:'
The S.T.A.R.
(Studerus
Talking
About
Real Issues)
slate
is the platform
that Fettes
and
the majority
of elected
senatorv
ran on. S.T.A.R.
is also the party
that the current
PSGA
president,
Dave
Koss,
ran on. According
to
Scheeler,
Fettes
was bred to
be
the next PSGA
president
from
the current
S.T.A.R.
president.
"He was [Koss's]
hand-
groomed
successor,"
said
Scheeler.
"All it is is another
guy
toeing
the tine."
• Scheeler
o
Other
Scheeler.
"Anything
that happens
in the next year that the students
don't
like. they have no one
(0
blame
bUI
themselves
for it
happening:'
Scerpella
said that he has
no
interest
in
being
the elections
director
again
next year, but that
he
has ideas
that might
ensure
a
larger
student
voter turnout,
including
3
mass e-mail
to UW-
Parkside
students.
Scheeler
said he didn't
have
a lot of
confidence
in Fettes
as
president
and that he intends
to
stand
in his wayan
the issues
they differ
on.
ul think
he is an absolute
joke,"
said Scheeler,
"l'don't
think
he
is
fit to lead the students,
and anybody
that says point-
blank.
they want to dump
more
money
into the pit known
as
athletics,
fm not so cool with:'
d
,,,
"Come
get
thoi
goo
copy.
2
April
18, 2006
900
Wood
Road
Kenosha,
WI
53141
Phone:(262)595.2287
Fax: (262)
595·2295
Ads: uwp~Qds@yahoo.com
Website:
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ls.l.tant
Editor
Copy
Manager
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fonniD07@uwp.edu
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Copy
Editing
Con.ultant
John Kellogg
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lIIu.trator
Brinony
farino
ortzyonimegirl@ool.com
Bu.lness
Manager
Elso Taube
ioioOOOO@uwp.edu
Advertising
Manager
letcsha
Woods
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News
Page
Editor
Koitlyn
Ulmer
eapoe666@yohoo.com
Sporls
Page
Edilor
Kyle Von Pelt
kvpthomp
l@hotmoil.com
Design
Manager
Designers
Mott Gonyo
rongergrophi,@yohoo.com
Soohyun
Kim
kim00009@uwp.edu
Jomie
Zohn
namers09@holmoil.com
Pholo
Manager
Slaff
Reporlers
Don Ierkilsen
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Payton
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t_,_de_witt®hotmoil.com
Cartoonists
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keeho003@uwp.edu
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Fanning
zodiocshodow@hotmoil.com
Advisor
Judith
Logsdon
logsdon@uwp.edu
Mission
Statement
The
Ranger
News
strives
to
inform,
educate,
and
engage
the UW·Parkside
community
by publishing
well·written,
accurate
student
iournalism
on a weekly
basis.
The
Ranger
News
has meetings
every
Monday
at noon.
All
students
and faCUlty
of UW-Parkside
are welcome.
Please
feel free to attend.
Have
any
comments,
concerns,
questions,
or story
idea~?
Please
e-mail
us al: rangcmcws@uwp.edu
.
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Each
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may
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date.
Extra
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Newspapers
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We work
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to reserve
howevl;':T
COUL<ilATt
many
free copies
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to use.
PIm
The Ranger
News
GS TO DO
HE U
A
II
11:00
AM:
Juried
Student
Art
Eldtibition,
Com,
Arts
Gallet)'
11:30
AM:
Native
American
Dancers,
Main
Place
6:00
PM: Film:
'Flgbt
Club:,
Union
(:inema
7:00
J>M;
Speaker:
Thl:ri
Jendusa-NicQ!/li.
Ulli4n
Square
19
8;00
AM:l>al'
of Silence,
Union
Square
l1;O!lAM:
Juried
Student
Art
Bxhibition,
Com.
Arts
Gallet)'
12:00
PM:
Noon
COncert:
l1W-ParksldeChoirs,
Union
Cinema
Theater
1;00
PM:
Baseball
vs, Indianapolis,
Oberbruner
Field
9:00
PM:
Foreign
Film:
'A Very
Long
Engagement'
, Union
Cinema
20
11:00
AM;
Juried.Studenr
Art Exhibition,
Com.
Arts
Gallery
!2:00
PM:
"Gayperady,
Union
Square
7:30
PM:
Foreign
Film:
'A Very
Long
Engagement',
Union
Cinema
21
3:30
PM:
"The
Gardens
of Kyoto"
by Kate
Walbelt,
Union
207
7;O(lPM:
Foreign
Film:
'A Very
Long
Engagement',
Union
Cinema
7:30
PM:
Parkside
Theatre:
'Romeo
&
Juliet',
Com.. Art'
Theatre
8:00
PM:
Black
&
White
Ball,
Union
Square
22
12:00
PM:
Softball
vs, Northern
Kentucky,
Case
Field
5:00
PM,
Foreign
Film:
'A Very
Long
Engagement",
Union
Cinema
7;30
PM:
ParksideTheatre:
'Romeo
&
Juliet',
Com.
Arts
Theatre
&:00
PM;
Foreign
Fi!m.
'A Very
Long
Engagement'
Union
Cinema
23
12;00
P]I.. Softb
III\s
Bdiamlinc
Case
FI Id Great'
,akes
\ alley
Conference
lloubleheader
2:00
1'1\"[
Foreig:JI
Film;
.A Very
Long
Engagement'Union
Cinema
5:00
PM:
Foreign
Film:
'A
Very
Long
Engagement'
Un.ion
Cinema
24
10:00
AM:
Parkside
Theatre:
'Romeo
&
Juliet'
Com.
Arts
Theatre
11;00
AM:
UW-Parkside
Senior
Exhibition
I
CQm.
Ans
Gallery
12,00
PM:
.Ranger
Golf
Invitationa!
Meadowbrook
CC, .Racine
1:00
PM;
Softball
Vs.Ferris
State
(
Case
Field
Non-eonference
dOUbleheader
5;00
PM:
Dinner
and Dialogue
Union
Square
7:00
PM:
Concert:
Bill Miller
Union
Cinema
25
I I:00 AM:
UW-Paik.$ide
Senior
E'I!1i.bition
I
COIn.
~
Gallery
3:00
PM:
'Life
with
Alzbeimers;
Finding
the Joy
in Caregiving'
Union
Cinema
7:00
PM:
Film:
'OutfOXed'
Molinaro
0139
7:30
PM,
Mozart
Celebration
Reut1)er
Auditorium,
Kenosha
26
11:00
AM:
UW-ParksideSenior
El\hibition
I
Com.
Arts
Gallery
12:00
PM:
Pipe
Ceremony
for Unity
and
Understanding
Renish
Outdoor
Classroom
12:00
PM:
Noon
ConceIt:
Student
Recital
Union
Cinema
Theater
BLOTTER
4·7·06
06-285
Traffic
Violation.
Inner
Loop
Road/Crn
G. 3:49
am.
A citation
was issued
to Joseph
Sweeti
for Failure
to Stop/Improper
Stop
at
a Stop
Sign.
4·10·06
06·29!
Theft-From
building.
SAC.
2:33
pm.
A complainant
reported
items
missing
from
an unlocked
office
without
permission.
from
a SAC
hallway.
While
an
officer
was taking
a report
SAC
staff
returned
the items
to the
owner.
4-8·06
06-286
Traffic
Violation.
CTH
FJ
ern
G. 2:30
am.
A citation
was issued
to Andrew
Valeri
for Operating
While
Intoxicated
and Operating
While
Intoxicated
BAC
.1%+.
Driver
was transported
to Kenosha
County
Jail.
06-287
2911
Disconnect
(Hang-up),
SAC.
8,25
pm,
Dispatched
received
a 29! I call from
the SAC.
No answer
when
call
was received.
Officer
responded
and checked
area.
No cause
for the
alarm
was found.
4·12·06
06-292
Agency
Assist.
Ranger
Hall.
7:49
pm.
Mt. Pleasant
Police
Department,
notified
dispatch
they
would
be
on campus
looking
for a subject.
Subject
apprehended
by UWP
officer
and turned
over
to Mt.
Pleasant
officer.
4·14·06
06·293
Suspicious
Circumstance.
SAC.
12:30
am.
Officers
reported
a broken
window
at
the SAC
barn.
L
06-294
Medical.Assist,
Ranger
Hall.
2:38
am.
Officers
received
a report
of an
unconscious
intoxicated
subject.
A
medical
unit
transported
subject
to
Kenosha
Hospital.
4·9·06
06-288
Traffic
Violation.
STH
31/
CTH
E. II:02 am.
A citation
was
issued
to Carolina
. Calvillo
foe Failure
to Fasten
Seatbelt.
06-289
Traffic
Violation.
1I:58 am.
A citation
was
issued
to Sara
B.
Peterson
for Failure
to Fasten
Seatbelt.
06-290
Theft
- Fearn
building.
SAC.
5:27
pm.
A complainant
reported
Items
missing
.
.
.
~
"
,
Corrections
In the April
I!. 2006
issue
of The
Ranger
News.
I wrote
an article
entitled
"Professor's
Transgender
Dissertation
Transferred
into New
Book."
1 would
now
like
to
make
an entire
retraction
of that article.
It has been
brought
to my
attention
by the individual
I
i
nterviewed
fOJ"
Ihat article.
"as'l;istam.ptofe;sor
Katherine
Gregor).
that
J
entirely
misquoted
or fabricated
much
of the
information
that I wrote
in the article.
GregQf1reguesled
that I refrain-from
using
a tape
recorder
during
the 'interview,
so I did not have
a'more
accurate
souro;.:e
than
m) notes
to write
the article.
If
1 were
allowed
to tape
record
the interview,
J
am sw'c
I would
have
accrued
accurate
infonnation
and this
retraction
would
not be lleccssary.
As an Engli~h
major
with
concentration
in writing.
f
am serving
my required
internship
as a reporter
for this paper.
I have
always
stressed
doing
a
professional
job
011
my multiple
contributions
I have
given
to The Ranger
News,
even
when
TQriginally.
began
writing
articles
for the newspaper
back
when
r
was
a freshman
and sophomore.
so jfl wrote
an unprofessional
pjece,
then
[am
glad
to do the professional
act of retracting
the story.
J
n my article,
Prof.
Gregory
wished
to,note
these
numerous
errors:
*
She is an assistant
professor
and not an associate
professor.
*
It wasn't
a trip to South
America
or the Dominican
Republic
that influenced
her topic.
It
was anending
a conference
in Jamaica
that helped
her to make
the
connections
around
migration.
*
The
sex workers
did not have
to cut through
her bullshit,
because
she didn't
have
any that was passed
against
them.
*
The
book
was on her doctoral
and not "oral"
dissertation,
which
was
something
she reworked
for !8 months
after
she starred
teaching
at Parkside.
*
She did not say the word
"pile"
to represent
a social
group
comprised
of gays,
lesbians,
and transgendered
people.
*
She bas gathered
video-based
ethnographic
data
on Islamic
youths
and
Hip Hop
in the Netherlands
for another
project
for the past
3
112
years.
I hope
this retraction
is found
satisfactory,
and in the future,
I will take
further
steps
in verifying
my information.
Tyrone
Payton,
Reporteriintern
In Brief
Effect!ve
fa1l2<J?6,
students
who
place
into ACSK
083:
College
Reading
and
Learnmg
Strategies
must
complete
the course
with
a C\or
better
within
their
first two Semesters.
Students
who
fail to do so cnnnot
enroll
in further
classes
until
this requirement
is met.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 36, issue 26, April 18, 2006
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2006-04-18
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
child care center
earth day
elections
germany
parkside student government association (PSGA)
radio station
women
workforce