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              <text>October 9, 2012&#13;
The Rane« ««"• B wrmen and edited by students of the University of Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
and they are soley responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Fall Fest Kick-Off leaves students amazed&#13;
Laura Ellen Pate Bridgers&#13;
PatebOO 1 @uwp.edu&#13;
One of the performers captivating the audience at the Dead Man's Carnival.&#13;
The recent Fall Fest 2012 Kick-Off was a blast with its vaudevilhan&#13;
circus show, prize wheel, and lollipop tree. As the students&#13;
gathered in Main Place, a thrilling atmosphere could be&#13;
felt all around.&#13;
The highlight of the event was the show by Milwaukee-based&#13;
act Dead Mans Carnival. Though not all thirty-six performers&#13;
of the show performed at the Kick-Off, "Gypsy" Geoff Marsh,&#13;
Sanjula Vamana, and belly dancer Layali were showcased.&#13;
Marsh wowed the audience with his juggling and plate-spinmng&#13;
acts, juggling balls, oversized knives, and pins. He even&#13;
presented some skill with his hat, rolling it from shoulder to&#13;
shoulder and catching it on the backs of his legs like a hackey&#13;
sack. He amazed the audience with his ability to spin plates on&#13;
long, thin, upright wooden sticks and even asked for volunteers&#13;
to hold the sticks as he set the plates spinning. Our very&#13;
own Ranger Bear gave this a try!&#13;
The most exciting part of Marsh's performance was his rope&#13;
walking act. As six audience volunteers held the rope taut he&#13;
teetered from one end to the other and added a few juggled&#13;
pins on his way back across. It is hard to imagine that just six&#13;
years ago this very man was sleeping in a park in Milwaukee,&#13;
"When we first got started we were nothing," remarks Marsh&#13;
when asked of his beginnings with Dead Mans Circus.&#13;
He maintains that the group always wanted to keep a very&#13;
risque, punk rock, do-it-yourself style and it was obvious on&#13;
Monday that they have stayed true to that ideal.&#13;
Sanjula Vamana, who got his start with being tied up and&#13;
stuffed into boxes by his siblings as a child, had some funny and&#13;
edgy acts to display. As a master of the bullwhip he precisely&#13;
halved every cluster of spaghetti noodles held in the mouth&#13;
and between the legs of Marsh. As a worn looking fan was&#13;
brought to the stage its sides fell away, host Pinky remarked,&#13;
"It is in fact Sanjula's only fan," to the laughter of the audience.&#13;
Vamana proceeded to stop the fan using the metal piercing in&#13;
his tongue. He even gave the audience a few laughs in the form&#13;
of his own audience volunteer. While a girl thought Vamana&#13;
See Fall Fest, page 5&#13;
Obama vs. Romney: Foreign Policy discussion at Parkside&#13;
James Burns&#13;
burns029@uwp.edu&#13;
A lot has been going on in this contentious&#13;
presidential political climate. Especially&#13;
now, with the first presidential debate so recently&#13;
under our belts, many are starting to&#13;
think about the people that surround two&#13;
candidates such as Barack Obama and Mitt&#13;
Romney. Questions like: Who are the people&#13;
who will handle our increasingly complicated&#13;
economic dealings with China? Who will determine&#13;
our stance on Iran's increasingly antagonistic&#13;
position towards the United States?&#13;
Enter Peggy James of the Political Science&#13;
Department here at UW-Parkside. In her presentation&#13;
to an audience composed of varied&#13;
groups, such as students from her own classes,&#13;
other teachers, and interested citizens of&#13;
Kenosha, she laid out an explanation of each candidate's&#13;
general background in American foreign&#13;
policy, and the cabinet of advisors they utilize to&#13;
make such crucial decisions.&#13;
In the beginning, James started with questions&#13;
posed to the audience to determine what we really&#13;
knew about each candidate's approach. For&#13;
example, which candidate is being attacked by his&#13;
opponents for trying to spread democracy and human&#13;
rights at the barrel of a gun. Between Obama,&#13;
and Romney, the answer was, in fact, Obama, with&#13;
his supposed over-enthusiasm to send military&#13;
aid to rebels in Libya during Gaddafi's reign. Additionally,&#13;
not to be out done, Romney came up as&#13;
the candidate that supports a NATO backed campaign&#13;
of intervention into Syria. As Peggy posited&#13;
in her presentation, the American Presidency is&#13;
designed to disappoint. Ironically, as Salma Yusuf&#13;
put it, "Foreign policy and international relations&#13;
is as much about actors, personalities,&#13;
and relationships as it is about substantive&#13;
policy and protocol". This pretty much boils&#13;
everything down to a massive game of, "Who&#13;
is who, who do you know, and how well do&#13;
you know everybody else?"&#13;
Professor James proceeded to go through&#13;
the rosters of both candidates' foreign policy&#13;
advisory boards and analyzed them.&#13;
The results turned out to be rather interesting.&#13;
Obama's cabinet was relatively small, all&#13;
things considered, consisting of only three&#13;
men: Mark Lippert, the Assistant Secretary of&#13;
Defense for Asia and Pacific who has virtually&#13;
no experience actually dealing with Asia&#13;
in any capacity equitable to his position; Ben&#13;
See Foreign Policy, page 3&#13;
The Ranger News October 9, 2012&#13;
^ RpTahneq e r&#13;
* News I'nivcrsilx ol Wisc onsin Park side Student News paper&#13;
900 Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
Phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
Fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
E-mail: rangernews@uwp.edu&#13;
Editor in Chief:&#13;
Emily Harring&#13;
harri091@uwp.edu&#13;
Executive Editor:&#13;
Maggie Lawler&#13;
lawle020@uwp.edu&#13;
Lead Photographer:&#13;
Carl Rollmann&#13;
roll mOO 1 @ uwp .edu&#13;
Staff Reporters:&#13;
James Burns&#13;
burns029@ uwp .edu&#13;
Laura Ellen Pate Bridgers&#13;
Pateb001@uwp.edu&#13;
Steven Niemi&#13;
niemi004@ uwp .edu&#13;
Nick Knebel&#13;
knebe001@uwp.edu&#13;
Lisa Gagliardo&#13;
gagli012@uwp.edu&#13;
Adrienne Trumbo&#13;
trumb005@uwp.edu&#13;
Jennifer Schmidt&#13;
schmil57@uwp.edu&#13;
Ryan Padlo&#13;
padlo006@uwp.edu&#13;
Copy Editors:&#13;
Photographers:&#13;
Cartoonists:&#13;
Designers:&#13;
James Burns&#13;
burns029@uwp.edu&#13;
Michael Jensen&#13;
jense089@uwp.edu&#13;
Hailey Foglio&#13;
fogli001@uwp.edu&#13;
Nick Knebel&#13;
knebe001@uwp.edu&#13;
Carl Rollmann&#13;
rol ImOO 1 @ uwp .edu&#13;
Zak Eden&#13;
edenOOO 1 @ uwp .edu&#13;
Walter Trush&#13;
trush002@uwp.edu&#13;
Maggie Lawler&#13;
lawle020@uwp.edu&#13;
MISSION STATF.MF.NT:&#13;
THE RANGER NEWS STRIVES TO INFORM,&#13;
EDUCATE, AND ENGAGE THE UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNITY BY PUB LISHING WELL-WRITTEN,&#13;
ACCURATE STUDENT JOURNALISM ON A BIWEEKLY&#13;
BASIS, AS WELL AS ONLINE.&#13;
The Ranger News meetings are every Friday&#13;
at noon in MOLN 107. All students and&#13;
faculty of UW-Parkside are welcome to attend.&#13;
Have any comments, concerns, questions,&#13;
or story ideas? Please e-mail us at:&#13;
rangernews@uwp.edu. Like to meet with&#13;
us? We are located in the Student Center in&#13;
room L101A.&#13;
Letter from the editor Am I the only one in complete shock that it is all ready&#13;
October? While I am in love with the brisk days and nights,&#13;
I am not in love with the fact that I have the GRE on the&#13;
13th. When I tell some friends about the test and the process&#13;
of applying for graduate school (a long, tedious, stressful&#13;
process), they question if it really seems worth it. I may&#13;
complain about the process and what I have to do to apply,&#13;
but I have not once since I began researching different&#13;
universities wondered if it is worth it. Of course it is. I can&#13;
think of very few things that are more important (to me)&#13;
than furthering my education. Of course, academia is not&#13;
going to be the route everyone takes, which is fine, but why&#13;
is it academia is one of the paths that always has to defend&#13;
itself on being worth all the trouble? If any Parksidians are&#13;
in the process of applying for graduate school, be sure to&#13;
check out the information session at 11AM on Monday in&#13;
Wyllie D175. For fellow graduating English majors looking&#13;
into graduate school, a Q&amp;A is coming up on the 17th.&#13;
The semester seems to be flying by, probably because we&#13;
have been shortened to 14 weeks. Midterms approach-eth,&#13;
so remember to dedicate a fair amount of time to studying.&#13;
That said, also remember that you need some time to rest.&#13;
I speak from experience. And don't forget the help&#13;
some good music and tea can be for studying. I&#13;
would be far less productive without Bon Iver and&#13;
blueberry tea to aid me with writing my essays.&#13;
Have a great week, Parksidians!&#13;
9 October&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Salvaged Views"&#13;
UW-Parkside Foundation Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Steal Like an Artist"&#13;
Emile H. Mathis Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: 2012 Wisconsin Visual Arts&#13;
Exhibition&#13;
UW-Parkside Fine Arts Gallery, The Rita&#13;
10 October&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: *§&#13;
UWlews&#13;
Parkside Foundation Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM~6:Q0PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Steal Like an Artist"&#13;
Emile H. Mathis Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:OOPM-6:OOPM&#13;
Art Exhibition: 2012 Wisconsin Visual Arts Juried&#13;
Exhibition&#13;
UW-Parkside Fine Arts Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM-1:00PM&#13;
Table Talk: Allies&#13;
LGBTQ Resource Center&#13;
12:00PM-1:00PM „&#13;
Career Assessment Series&#13;
Wyllie D103&#13;
12:00PM-1:00PM&#13;
Noon Concert: James and Susan McKeever/The McKeever&#13;
Duo&#13;
Bedford Concert Hall, The Rita&#13;
7:00PM-8:00PM&#13;
Science Night&#13;
Greenquist 103&#13;
11 October&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Salvaged Views"&#13;
UW-Parkside Foundation Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM 6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Steal Like an Artist"&#13;
Emile H. Mathis Gallery, The Rita&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: 2012 Wisconsin Visual Arts Juried&#13;
Exhibition&#13;
UW-Parkside Fine Arts Gallery, The Rita&#13;
6:00PM-7:00PM&#13;
Speaker: Rebecca Heineman&#13;
Poplar Room, Student Center&#13;
12 October&#13;
Center&#13;
12:00PM-1:00PM&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Month Speak Out&#13;
Walnut Room, Student Center&#13;
11:00AM 2:00PM&#13;
Day Without Stigma&#13;
Under the Bridge,&#13;
12:00PM- 1:00 PM&#13;
Student To Er&#13;
Molinaro 149&#13;
12:00PM-1:00PM&#13;
How to Write a Proposal&#13;
Walnut Room, Student Center&#13;
Send us your press releases, news tips, and opinions!&#13;
Email us at: rangernews@uwp.edu&#13;
October y, zuiz&#13;
12 October&#13;
5:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Queer-e-oke&#13;
The Den, Student Center&#13;
13 October&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Salvaged Views"&#13;
UW-Parkside Foundation Gallery, The Rita&#13;
6:00AM-10:00AM&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: "Steal Like an Artist"&#13;
Emile H. Mathis Gallery The Rita&#13;
candidates analyzed&#13;
Rhodes, National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications;&#13;
and Denis McDonough, who attained his position of Deputy National&#13;
Security Advisor through clout, having close ties with Obama.&#13;
Conversely Romney is overloaded with a proverbial army of three&#13;
hundred foreign policy advisors: Max Boot, whose opinions on the&#13;
conflict in Afghanistan and other trouble spots in the world crave&#13;
enlightenment; John Bolton, who holds a lifelong disdain for anything&#13;
multi-lateral, basically giving him built in bias; Gofer Black,&#13;
Former Vice Chair of Blackwater, Inc. (now named Xe), who led&#13;
Bush Jr s rendition program; and Dan Senor who was quoted as saying,&#13;
"Well, off the record, Paris is burning, but on the record, security&#13;
and stability are returning to Iraq." It pretty much seems like a&#13;
choice between the inept and the uncompromising when it comes&#13;
to foreign policy They each have their warts, so neither seems like&#13;
an attractive option.&#13;
If Foreign Policy actually becomes an issue in lieu of the monstrous&#13;
state of the economy which is far from likely at this point&#13;
in the race/both candidates will have to do some reevaluating of&#13;
their cabinet style choices if they are to convince voters that their&#13;
vision for Americas position in world affairs abroad is sustainable.&#13;
Otherwise, they run the very serious risk of alienating concerned&#13;
independents and the more moderate elements of their respective&#13;
parties.&#13;
12:00PM-6:00PM&#13;
Art Exhibition: 2012 Wisconsin Visual Arts Juried Exhibition&#13;
UW-Parkside Fine Arts Gallery, The Rita&#13;
19 October&#13;
10:00 AM-12:30PM&#13;
7:00PM-10:00PM&#13;
Parkside Theater presents: "Three Penny Opera"&#13;
Black Box Theatre, The Rita&#13;
20 October&#13;
7:00PM-10:00PM&#13;
Parkside Theater presents: "Three Penny Opera"&#13;
Black Box Theatre, The Rita&#13;
Next Level G A M I N C O N I I N E&#13;
Interested in video games with an academic&#13;
twist? If so, NextLevel, UW-Parkside's premier&#13;
gaming and tech website and podcast is&#13;
the place for you! Reviews on Final Fantasy&#13;
XIII-2, Soul Calibur V, the first podcasts, and&#13;
more can be found at www.nlgo.net. Next-&#13;
Level can also be found on Facebook under&#13;
NextLevel Gaming. NextLevel airs on WIPZ&#13;
every Sunday at 7PM. Check them out today!&#13;
Attention all UWParkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Looking to&#13;
advertise upcoming&#13;
events in an issue of The&#13;
Ranger News?&#13;
Email us at&#13;
rangernews .uwp .edu&#13;
for rates!&#13;
The Ranger News October 9, 2012&#13;
Lady Rangers let the bodies hit the floor&#13;
Ryan Padlo&#13;
padlo006@uwp.edu&#13;
If I had to play a soundtrack to the lady Rangers' soccer game&#13;
against Bellarmine on Friday, it would be Drowning Pools "Let&#13;
the bodies hit the floor." There wasn't too much action in terms&#13;
of great offensive play and great defense from both squads, for&#13;
the first sixty minutes of the game. On the other hand, there were&#13;
some absolute kill shots on the field that would have warranted a&#13;
fine, and suspension, from Roger Goodell (NFLs commissioner).&#13;
That was until Madison Pickett placed a perfect pass to Megan&#13;
Owens for the first goal of the game in the 64th minute. That goal&#13;
brought instant energy to the team, and crowd.&#13;
That energy was soon snapped once Bellarmine retaliated with a&#13;
goal of their own in the 80th minute. The lady Rangers kept up the&#13;
stingy defense to force the game into O.T. The first nine minutes&#13;
of overtime was a lot like the first 63 minutes of the game: tough&#13;
defense, tough girls, no shots. As soon as I started to pack it up to&#13;
leave the lady Rangers stole the ball and broke down field. Ashley&#13;
Meyer passed the ball ahead to a wide open Stephanie Barsuli.&#13;
Stephanie, on the left side of the box, lined up a shot and fired away&#13;
with a thunderous blast.&#13;
Amy Kunowski, the goalkeeper for Bellarmine, dove to try to&#13;
save the ball but there was nothing she could do because the ball&#13;
had already blown by her like the roadrunner for a goal in the right&#13;
corner. The lady Rangers pulled out an exciting upset over the 30th&#13;
ranked Bellarmine knights. When I asked the coach what were&#13;
the keys to the game he responded, "Strategically, we moved from&#13;
three in the back to four" late in the first half. He also felt this was&#13;
"a huge win" for the program, because this shows they can play&#13;
with anybody in the country.&#13;
Keep up the good job ladies. The UW-Parkside fan base is behind&#13;
you 100 percent.&#13;
Above: Stephanie Barsuli makes a break with the ball.&#13;
Below: The Lady Rangers cheer together after a well deserved victory.&#13;
Parkside Men s Soccer: A tale of two halves&#13;
Ryan Padlo&#13;
padlo006@uwp.edu&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's soccer team lost&#13;
2-0 Friday afternoon at home to Bellarmine&#13;
University. The first half was completely dominated&#13;
by Bellarmine. The Rangers looked over&#13;
powered, over matched, and just out played in&#13;
the first half. Bellarmine put constant pressure&#13;
on the Rangers' defense all half. Nick Haftalin,&#13;
UW-Parkside goalkeeper, was under constant&#13;
assault. The Rangers could not clear the ball out&#13;
of their zone. If the Rangers did clear the ball&#13;
and went on the offensive it was only for thirty&#13;
seconds at most. Then a Bellarmine player&#13;
would steal the ball, and another attack on the&#13;
ranger goal would happen.&#13;
The first half was a bit chippy between the&#13;
two teams. There was some pushing and shoving&#13;
going on when fighting for position, even&#13;
when there was no position to fight for. Bellarmine&#13;
scored both of their goals in the first half.&#13;
Bellarmine had complete momentum of the&#13;
game going into the halffime. When the opening&#13;
whistle blew for the second half, the Rangers&#13;
took the ball and shoved it down the throat&#13;
of Bellarmines defense. The Rangers getting&#13;
their first great shot on goal of the game came&#13;
with in the first minute of the second half. The&#13;
shot was a bit rush and sailed over the goal. That&#13;
was there best opportunity to score all game.&#13;
Coach Zitzke, UW-\Parkside coach, said&#13;
it would have been big for us to score in the&#13;
first five minutes of the second half; "We would&#13;
have put them on their heels, and it would have&#13;
been a whole new ball game."&#13;
Even with the squandered opportunity, the&#13;
Rangers did not keep their heads down, and&#13;
stayed on the attack. A few minutes later, the&#13;
Rangers got another decent shot, but this was&#13;
also air mailed over the goal. Bellarmine started&#13;
to feel heat of the Rangers attack, and began&#13;
to play a little dirty. Momentum was up in the&#13;
air and it looked like the Rangers were about to&#13;
snatch it. Just then a Bellarmine player blatantly&#13;
threw down a Rangers player, but not a single&#13;
referee saw it. This is when things really started&#13;
to really get physical between both teams. The&#13;
referees starting to sense the pick up in physical&#13;
play and were looking to make an example out&#13;
of someone.&#13;
That someone was a UW-Parkside player&#13;
who was hit with a red card for a tackle on&#13;
the ball. He was clearly going for the ball, but&#13;
the officials wanted to settle both teams down.&#13;
This was a controversial call at best. The referee&#13;
was way out of line with throwing that red card&#13;
like he was handing out candy on Halloween. I&#13;
never like to say the officials determine the outcome&#13;
of a game, especially when UW-Parkside&#13;
was already down two to nothing, but that red&#13;
card completely took the wind out of the Rangers'&#13;
sail and halted all hopes of a come back.&#13;
From there on out the game was pretty much&#13;
a stalemate.&#13;
Even playing with one less player, the majority&#13;
of the second half the Rangers played with&#13;
much more passion and intensity then the first&#13;
half.&#13;
[I] was very proud of the way the team&#13;
fought back in the second half," said Coach&#13;
Zitzke.&#13;
Nick Haftalin played exceptionally wel,l with&#13;
multiple jumping saves in the middle of traffic&#13;
thicker then downtown Chicago during rush&#13;
hour on a Friday night. We had a nice turn out&#13;
for the game, but we need more students to&#13;
come out and support our mens soccer team&#13;
who fight for us fellow Rangers!&#13;
October 9, 2012&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
ainment&#13;
Fall Fest: A "Dead Man's" carnival to remember&#13;
to be popping the balloons that she held with each crack of his whip,&#13;
Marsh actually hovered nearby, popping each with a pin. How was she&#13;
to know, though, when both Vamana and herself were blindfolded?&#13;
Vamana is a veteran of his art, having begun his practice at a young&#13;
age.&#13;
"I started sideshow when I was probably seven years old," he says.&#13;
While living in Madison, Wi he missed his bus one day and met Marsh&#13;
during one of his street performances, being mistaken by an onlooker&#13;
as someone in on the act." The two joined with the shows host, Pinky,&#13;
and formed Dead Mans Carnival. "Everything we've done was all selftaught,"&#13;
remarks Vamana.&#13;
Interspersed between the acts of Marsh and Vamana were the belly&#13;
dance performances of Layali. Dancing to Sataki, a traditional form&#13;
of Greek folk music, she added a little femininity to the show. As she&#13;
danced around in her beaded green costume and swirled her life-size&#13;
gold fan, the audience was captured. A true artist of her trade she enchanted&#13;
the audience members each time she danced with just a few&#13;
sidelong glances and a shake of her hips.&#13;
Students were still spinning the prize wheel as the show ended and&#13;
the Kick-Off began to wind down and it was clear that no one wanted&#13;
to cease the fun.&#13;
The Fall Fest 2012 Kick-Off was an afternoon to be remembered.&#13;
The attending students could be viewed all around taking part in the&#13;
circus-style activities and watching the stage show. This event brought&#13;
a little circus excitement into each attendee's life and reminded everyone&#13;
that school really can be fun.&#13;
Women's Volleyball falls at&#13;
Bellarmine University&#13;
Ryan Padlo&#13;
padlo006@' iwp.edu&#13;
Two performers from the Dead Man's Carnival.&#13;
The lady Rangers volleyball team took on Bellarmine University Friday&#13;
night. The opening match was one that the lady Rangers took slight control&#13;
of during the first couple of points. Bellarmine came storming back&#13;
with some nice kills and blocks. The lady Rangers took the blows and then&#13;
returned the favor with some body shots of their own.&#13;
The first match was very entertaining with some long rallies and savvy&#13;
play by the ladies. The lady Rangers, unfortunately, were not able to pull&#13;
out the tough battle in the first match, losing 25-22. This did not deter the&#13;
ladies, who came out strong in the second match. Like the first match,&#13;
the second match was a back and forth contest between the two teams.&#13;
Bellamine had two strong players who were the catalyst for the team. The&#13;
lady Rangers countered with hustle and grit from the whole team, lead by&#13;
Sarah Mlachnik.&#13;
The great defense did not translate into enough point on offense. The&#13;
lady Rangers lost another close match 25-23. The beginning of the third&#13;
match was something special to see. If you had just walked into the gym&#13;
and did not know the score, you would of thought the lady rangers were&#13;
winning the match. The entire team was rooting for one another, and had&#13;
an awesome array of handshakes before the match.&#13;
That enthusiasm was not enough to pull out the third match. The third&#13;
match was not even close at 25-10. The ladies never showed poor body&#13;
language, or turned on each other. There was just as much, if not more,&#13;
support for one another in defeat, then I have seen in some teams after a&#13;
victory. Even though we had lost the game, I was proud that those group&#13;
of girls were representing me and my university. Win or lose these girls&#13;
have a lot of integrity. This is an indicator of true champions. So come out&#13;
and watch our lady Rangers' volleyball team, because there are big things&#13;
in store for them this season.&#13;
6&#13;
The Ranger News October 9,2012&#13;
An Apple a Day&#13;
Does This Vending Machine Make Me Look Fat?&#13;
Adrienne Trumbo&#13;
Trumb005@rangers.uwp.edu&#13;
New vending machines have been installed&#13;
in both Molinaro and Wyllie Halls.&#13;
These new machines are touted as being&#13;
more energy efficient. It is appreciated&#13;
that the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
is becoming greener, does it really matter&#13;
that we have these new machines anyway?&#13;
Vending machines are a part of our&#13;
lives, whether we like it or not. In an age&#13;
of constant movement with business, work,&#13;
classes, and family, they are a convenient&#13;
and inexpensive choice. Are they the best&#13;
choice for something wholesome? Probably&#13;
not. But that is not their purpose. If&#13;
I'm trying to watch my figure, then it may&#13;
not be the best place to grab a snack. Why&#13;
does this even matter? It affects students.&#13;
This is not just about eating healthier; it's&#13;
about the options available that affect the&#13;
food choices students make, and also the&#13;
larger impact of decisions.&#13;
While there are healthier options for students,&#13;
those options are mainly for those&#13;
living on campus. UW-Parkside dining&#13;
does not have to always mean fried chicken&#13;
strips and a Styrofoam-tasting apple.&#13;
UW-Parkside Dining Services offer what&#13;
is called "The Box." This involves students&#13;
ordering fresh and organic produce, which&#13;
is then delivered to them on campus; students&#13;
simply have to fill out a form and pick it up. They&#13;
offer both fruits and vegetables of various assortment&#13;
and sizes. The problem with "Hie Box,' however,&#13;
is that it was not advertised. When living on&#13;
campus I would have taken advantage of this if I&#13;
had known it existed, but because I have changed&#13;
by status from "on campus resident" to "commuter,"&#13;
there are now limited food options for&#13;
me to grab between classes. So I, like many other&#13;
commuters, am stuck sitting in CART drinking a&#13;
watered down Verona blend while munching on&#13;
some cheddar Chex Mix. Students cannot live on&#13;
Chex Mix alone.&#13;
I'm not saying that it's Parkside's fault that I&#13;
forgot my coffee on the kitchen counter today,&#13;
or that I ate my delicious Honeycrisp apple in&#13;
the car on the way here. What I am saying is that&#13;
commuters, who don't have the luxury of going&#13;
back to their rooms to grab a snack or ordering&#13;
organic produce, should have viable options to&#13;
sustain them throughout the day that won t give&#13;
them diabetes or high cholesterol.&#13;
This cannot be just a one-sided arrangement&#13;
though. There has to be some sort of accountability&#13;
on the student's part for their growing&#13;
waistline. Sure, it could be easier to learn about&#13;
healthier programs and foods that UW-Parkside&#13;
offers, but it also takes the desire for these things.&#13;
Carrots are healthier than French fries. Apples&#13;
are healthier than cake. These are things we&#13;
know. Instead of taking frustration out only on&#13;
UW-Parkside for your growing waistline, consider&#13;
what you are putting in your body. UW-Parkside&#13;
isn't blameless, but neither are the students.&#13;
Consider going vegetarian for a day or week. Replace&#13;
those chips with celery. Take the stairs. I'm&#13;
not perfect at following these, and UW-Parkside&#13;
does not always make it easy, but anything worth&#13;
having usually isn't easy.&#13;
Am I saying that UW-Parkside should remove&#13;
the vending machines? No. UW-Parkside's job is&#13;
not that of a babysitter telling students what they&#13;
can and cannot eat. This is where things get a little&#13;
tricky. It's not just the students that would be affected&#13;
by the removal of the vending machines&#13;
but also the employees of the vending service.&#13;
The vending service used is Compass/Canteen&#13;
Vending. This is the oldest vending company in&#13;
the nation and has been around since 1929. It is a&#13;
franchise, so when UW-Parkside uses this vending&#13;
company, it is supporting local families since&#13;
it has local owners. The company as a whole prides&#13;
itself in customer "service, innovation, leadership,&#13;
quality, wellness, and people," according to the&#13;
company website. How can we punish a company&#13;
for doing what they have been employed to do?&#13;
Here we are students, stuck between a rock&#13;
and a hard place. It's not easy making the right&#13;
choices to snack on, I'm right there with you, but&#13;
it is also not easy to get a hold of them. Only a&#13;
mutual agreement between the students and UWParkside&#13;
dining services can promote any sort of&#13;
change.&#13;
Maggie Lawler&#13;
lawle020@uwp.edu&#13;
If you re anything like me, you probably can't leave home without your&#13;
cell phone. Heck, you probably can't even read this sentence without glancing&#13;
at it at least one or twice. You're the type that claims to be a fantastic&#13;
multitasker, flowing effortlessly back and forth between Facebook, Twitter,&#13;
Tumbli, and text messaging all with your fingers. You've become such a&#13;
pro at phone surfing while walking, that you don't even need to look up&#13;
anymore.&#13;
Oop, there s that familiar crack in the flooring, I must be in Molinaro."&#13;
Now I don t actually know if there's a crack in the flooring in Molinaro,&#13;
that was just an example. But stay with me. Our generation is the technology&#13;
generation. We own it. In about 20 years, our children will probably&#13;
even be operated by a sim card and a couple of triple A batteries.&#13;
Heres the question though, why is it that when we have an iPhone 4S, a&#13;
MacBook Pro, an iPad, and an iTouch, do we feel the need to go invest in&#13;
an iPhone 5? Don t get me wrong, I'm a complete sucker for new things. If&#13;
it s shiny, chances are 111 just gravitate towards it without meaning to. But&#13;
is a slightly bigger screen really a reason to drop $200 plus on a brand new&#13;
phone? I have small thumbs, and frankly I'm not sure I could get them to&#13;
stretch around the entire screen anyway.&#13;
Siri was the main reason I bought the iPhone 4S. I saw on the commercials&#13;
all of these people talking with her, and asking her to do things. That&#13;
looked so fun to me. But now, every time I ask her something she says "I&#13;
dont know, grandma. And quite honestly that is just rude.&#13;
Is technology drastically improving? Or is this all just a quick way to&#13;
make a few more bucks? I hear plenty of adults always talking about "back&#13;
in my day, things actually worked." And if we truly think about it, they're&#13;
right. It seems like every year or two this brand new technology that should&#13;
be lasting a decade fizzles out and we have to spend even more money on&#13;
a "new and improved" model.&#13;
I don't exactly need a refrigerator that has a built in television. Do you&#13;
know what that would do to me? I would never stand up again. I would sit&#13;
in a chair, in my kitchen, and watch the TV. I would open said fridge, stuff&#13;
my face, and continue to watch TV. Is this technology helpful, or hurtful?&#13;
I've been spending quite a while writing this, any ideas why? Because I&#13;
cannot stop picking up my cell phone. I got the new Jurassic Park Builder&#13;
App, and now my entire life is devoted to feeding my dinosaurs. It is the&#13;
first thing I do when I wake up, and the last thing I do before I go to&#13;
sleep. This is a problem. Anything new, I am into. I had a long relationship&#13;
with Draw Something until all of my friends got sick of me, Words&#13;
with Friends was fun until as I mentioned prior I ran out of friends.&#13;
Come to think of it, I'm sure there are apps for that too. I'll have to remind&#13;
Siri to search "friendship" later.&#13;
Really though, is all of this technology good for us? Or are we becoming&#13;
way too dependent on it? Now if you'll excuse me, I need to go feed&#13;
my dinosaurs.&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
The big eight: how to stay healthy this flu season&#13;
Nick Knebel&#13;
Knebe001@rangers.uwp.edn&#13;
You've been healthy all summer long, and the&#13;
month of September goes by in much the same&#13;
fashion. Just when you think you won't get sick&#13;
this year - a coworker gets the sniffles. Your&#13;
mom has a cough. That one kid you sit next&#13;
to in math wipes his nose a lot with his hands.&#13;
Suddenly - before you know it - there you are,&#13;
on the couch with a bucket next to you, trying&#13;
your best to just hold down a few crackers and&#13;
some water. Heres some tips on how to avoid&#13;
that burden this year, and how to NOT pass it on&#13;
to someone else should you get sick.&#13;
1. Employ basic hygiene. It's really not that&#13;
difficult. Try to wash your hands as soon as possible&#13;
after sneezing or coughing or whatever it is&#13;
you re doing that's generally just gross.&#13;
2. Once upon a time, I was walking down the&#13;
hallways on campus. A normal, everyday occurrence.&#13;
The sun was shining, the birds were chirping,&#13;
the students procrastinating: everything was&#13;
right in the world. And then she turned the corner.&#13;
A shorter girl, with flowing, long blonde&#13;
hair, carrying her books in one arm. As we came&#13;
close to each other, she sniffled (quite audibly)&#13;
and reached her free hand up to her face. Blatantly,&#13;
I was transfixed, staring at the horror that&#13;
is about to happen right in front of me. I saw&#13;
the hand approach the nose. It wiped the snot,&#13;
and continued to her hair. I kid you not - this&#13;
girl literally wiped her snot away with her hand&#13;
and then ran that same hand through her long&#13;
blonde hair two seconds later. To anyone that&#13;
would ever think this type of behavior would be&#13;
okay in public (students who publicly pick their&#13;
noses, I'm talking to you), please reconsider your&#13;
actions before you carry them out. Then, if you&#13;
still think this type of disgusting and really unhygienic&#13;
thing that you're about to do is still a good&#13;
idea, wait a minute, think about it again, and then&#13;
do us all a favor and wait a few weeks before deciding&#13;
on it or not.&#13;
3. Take a shower. Not only does it help keep&#13;
you cleaner and healthier, but we've all the unfortunate&#13;
task of sitting through a fifty-minute gened&#13;
course when the person in the chair next to us&#13;
smells like rotting food. Nobody wants to be that&#13;
person. And you definitely don't want to be the&#13;
person causing that person next to you to have to&#13;
cover their nose like Edward from Twilight for fifty&#13;
minutes. Because, let's be honest: nobody wants&#13;
anything Twilight related.&#13;
4. If you have to cough or sneeze - do so in your&#13;
shoulder or elbow! It's such a simple action - and&#13;
it really helps. I don't understand it, but whenever&#13;
I see people that cough or sneeze into their hands,&#13;
it's like they go into "I MUST TOUCH ALL OF&#13;
THE THINGS" mode - and it's really disgusting.&#13;
You prevent the spreading of a LOT of germs by&#13;
simply avoiding ever getting them on your hands&#13;
in the first place - and, if you're lazy, I think it's&#13;
actually less energy-consuming to turn your head&#13;
and cough (ha!) than it is to raise your hands to&#13;
do so. And if you don't even cover your sneeze or&#13;
cough with your hand and just do it into the open&#13;
air - please, go home. You probably don't even go&#13;
here, extra feelings or not.&#13;
5. Drink some fluids! Eat more fruit! I know&#13;
it's hard (especially for you non-commuters) to&#13;
eat healthy (especially with the food sometimes&#13;
offered on campus) - but it's not impossible. An&#13;
apple a day actually does wonders -1 started doing&#13;
this about two months ago, and I've noticed that I&#13;
have more energy, I focus better, and I've not&#13;
gotten sick in over six months, when I used&#13;
to have the immune system of a sponge.&#13;
6. Avoid sharing beverages. Would you&#13;
kiss this person? If the answer is no, keep&#13;
your drink to yourself (or their drink away&#13;
from your mouth).&#13;
7. Wash your hands as often as possible -&#13;
ESPECIALLY after going to the bathroom.&#13;
We aren't in kindergarten anymore; I sure&#13;
hope mommy doesn't have to tell you to&#13;
"wash up after potty," when you're at home.&#13;
Tell me why I see guys walking out of the&#13;
men's bathroom all the time without washing&#13;
their hands? Oh, you're going to Subway&#13;
and want me to join you for lunch? No&#13;
thanks. Don't be disgusting, and please, keep&#13;
both yourself, and the rest of us, healthy.&#13;
8. Finally - if you're sick - the type of&#13;
contagious I'm-spreading-plague type sick,&#13;
just stay at home for the day. Drink a lot&#13;
of fluids, eat well, and get your rest so you&#13;
can come back healthy and 100%. I know it&#13;
can be a bear to miss a couple of classes and&#13;
get behind in homework, but most professors&#13;
set up their syllabi in such a way that&#13;
you have a couple of absences that won't&#13;
count against you. Use these wisely - and&#13;
when you need them - such as you're really&#13;
gross-out type sick. Don't come to school&#13;
and spread it to the rest of us. Of course&#13;
you shouldn't stay home for a fever of 99 degrees,&#13;
nor should you for a small cough, but&#13;
you should have enough common sense to&#13;
know when it's just a small cold, and when&#13;
it's not. For the sake of the rest of us - let's&#13;
hope so.&#13;
University Police make safety first priority&#13;
Adrienne Trumbo&#13;
Trumb005@rangers.uwp.edu&#13;
Images from last school year's lockdown flood my mind. How could it&#13;
not when discussing campus safety? Whatever your opinion may be about&#13;
how that situation was handled, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Police&#13;
did their best to make sure we felt safe: they escorted students around campus,&#13;
reassured us that they were on "our side," and stepped up their patrol.&#13;
It was clear. They were not to be taken lightly when safety was in question.&#13;
Their dedication to safety is clearly mapped out on their website.&#13;
I was impressed that University Police had so many procedures and involvement&#13;
in campus life. The University Police website gives detailed lists&#13;
of how to stay safe, what to do in an emergency, and options for learning&#13;
more about campus safety. Crime statistics are also on the website—let's&#13;
just say 2006 was a rough year, but these statistics seem to be improving. It&#13;
is reassuring knowing that I can call on the University Police if I am ever&#13;
in need of assistance.&#13;
When asked if she feels safe on campus, freshman Selina Amborne responded&#13;
positively with having the comfort of "knowing there are police&#13;
that are around all the time."&#13;
Amborne was aware of the safety classes that are available as well as the&#13;
PSGA Safe Walk, although she has not taken advantage of them yet. There&#13;
clearly is a reason she, and others, feel safe. The University Police are not&#13;
a silent, hidden force on campus; rather, they get involved and seem very&#13;
approachable to students.&#13;
Some of the services available to students are the PSGA Safe Walk. This&#13;
program is available by calling the University Police Department at (262)&#13;
595-2455 (ext. 2455 from an on-campus phone) or stopping by the Safe&#13;
Walk table on the Main Concourse outside of the library entrance. The&#13;
Community Service Officers are employed by the University Police and&#13;
have "undergone a criminal background check" according to the Safe&#13;
Walk website. Other available services are the safety classes. These classes&#13;
are available to students who want to gain a better understanding of safety&#13;
issues, how to prevent crimes, and what to do in an emergency. Here is a&#13;
schedule of the upcoming safety classes for the rest of the fall semester:&#13;
October 17 8c 23&#13;
•Property Crimes, noon, Molinaro 114&#13;
Different crimes explained theft, burglary, robbery, learn more and talk&#13;
to an Officer on how to best defend against these crimes.&#13;
October 22&#13;
•"Out:" Civilian response to active shooter, noon, Molinaroll4&#13;
This class will help you recognize potential violence indicators, and&#13;
describe actions to take when confronted with an active shooter.&#13;
November 14 &amp; 20&#13;
•Dangerous Drugs on campus, noon, Molinaro 114&#13;
This class takes an in depth look at current drug use across American&#13;
colleges -Prescription drugs and drinking a deadly combination.&#13;
Living on campus for two years in the past and now being a commuter,&#13;
I can honestly say I feel safe here. Leaving classes late at night and having&#13;
safety tips readily available to me increase my confidence in the University&#13;
Police and the importance of campus safety. And let's be honest, it's&#13;
super impressive that a bicycling police officer can go as fast as a car.&#13;
What is Cool? 338&#13;
Zak Eden&#13;
edenOOO 1 @uwp.edu&#13;
The Adventures of Pineapple and Bear&#13;
Part 2: Jim "The Omnipotent Owl"&#13;
Walter Trush&#13;
trush002@uwp.edu&#13;
S E T to yoa&#13;
fHoRrA CtHER 7a h, HE S P i k f !&#13;
THAT ALMOST&#13;
H I T MY&#13;
K CASTLE;? .&#13;
4N md*&#13;
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              <text>Meet the Chancellor</text>
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              <text>&#13;
L.&#13;
U. Date Auction&#13;
Bucketboys&#13;
ShantyTown&#13;
Page 5&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Page 7&#13;
THE&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
October&#13;
14, 2008&#13;
News Since 1972&#13;
The Rilnger&#13;
News is wrltrcn&#13;
Illld&#13;
edited&#13;
by smderus&#13;
of the Univers:ity&#13;
of WiSCOl1!lin'Pllrkside&#13;
Dndthey an: solely respon,ible&#13;
fOTItseditorial&#13;
policy BOOconlent.&#13;
JOKIRST&#13;
jo@therangernews.com&#13;
Due&#13;
to the unsuccessful&#13;
search&#13;
for a new Chancellor&#13;
at&#13;
the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide, an Interim&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
was picked&#13;
by the University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
System&#13;
to temporarily&#13;
fill Chancellor&#13;
Keating's&#13;
place.&#13;
The UW System&#13;
asked Dr. Lane&#13;
Earns to step up and &#13;
temporarily&#13;
lead&#13;
UW-Parkside,&#13;
until&#13;
a&#13;
permanent&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
is found.&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News got a chance&#13;
to&#13;
sit down&#13;
with Chancellor&#13;
Earns&#13;
and&#13;
ask him&#13;
a few&#13;
questions&#13;
so&#13;
that the campus&#13;
as a whole&#13;
can&#13;
get to know him better.&#13;
Dr. Lane&#13;
Earns&#13;
was born&#13;
and raised&#13;
in Michigan,&#13;
and went&#13;
to Michigan&#13;
State&#13;
University&#13;
to  obtain&#13;
his  undergraduate&#13;
degree&#13;
in high school&#13;
education,&#13;
focusing&#13;
on  history.&#13;
Right&#13;
before&#13;
he graduated,&#13;
he spent&#13;
two months&#13;
in Japan&#13;
as part of&#13;
a study abroad&#13;
program,&#13;
which&#13;
eventually&#13;
changed&#13;
the direction&#13;
of his studies.&#13;
He returned&#13;
from&#13;
Japan&#13;
one year tater. Earns&#13;
was&#13;
one of seven&#13;
American&#13;
picked&#13;
to return&#13;
to Japan,&#13;
where&#13;
they&#13;
went to different&#13;
parts of Japan&#13;
to help teach English&#13;
in Japanese&#13;
schools.&#13;
Earns went to Nagasaki&#13;
for one year as part of &#13;
this&#13;
program.&#13;
Today,&#13;
that program&#13;
is called&#13;
the Japan&#13;
Exchange&#13;
and Teaching&#13;
Programme&#13;
(JET&#13;
program).&#13;
and&#13;
has around&#13;
6,000&#13;
members.&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Earns then went&#13;
to the University&#13;
of Hawaii&#13;
for&#13;
his Masters&#13;
degree&#13;
in Asian&#13;
Studies,&#13;
and then went&#13;
back&#13;
to Japan&#13;
to teach English&#13;
at a&#13;
women's&#13;
college,&#13;
He returned&#13;
to&#13;
the University&#13;
of Hawaii&#13;
to work&#13;
towards&#13;
his PhD in Japanese&#13;
History.&#13;
He  won&#13;
a  Japan&#13;
Foundation&#13;
Dissertation&#13;
Grant,&#13;
which&#13;
allowed&#13;
him to conduct&#13;
his dissertation&#13;
research&#13;
at the&#13;
University&#13;
of Tokyo&#13;
for one&#13;
year. He spent two more years&#13;
in Nagasaki&#13;
while&#13;
finishing&#13;
his&#13;
degree.&#13;
In 1987,&#13;
he went to the&#13;
University&#13;
of   Wisconsin-&#13;
Oshkosh,&#13;
and was a professor&#13;
of  world&#13;
history&#13;
and Asian&#13;
American&#13;
history.&#13;
Eventually,&#13;
he&#13;
became&#13;
the chair of the history&#13;
department.&#13;
In 2002, he became&#13;
the Associate&#13;
Vice Chancellor,&#13;
and  in 2004,&#13;
he served&#13;
as&#13;
the Interim&#13;
Provost&#13;
and Vice&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
In 2005, he served&#13;
as&#13;
the Provost&#13;
and Vice Chancellor,&#13;
and stated&#13;
in&#13;
that position&#13;
until&#13;
coming&#13;
to Parkside in Aug.&#13;
2008.&#13;
In 2008, he was asked by the&#13;
University&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
System&#13;
to fiJI the position&#13;
of Interim&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
at the  University&#13;
of  Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
and&#13;
accepted&#13;
the  position.&#13;
Earns&#13;
remarked&#13;
that&#13;
the  position&#13;
"seemed&#13;
like an important&#13;
job,&#13;
and something&#13;
that my particular&#13;
abilities&#13;
would&#13;
he able to help".&#13;
Dr. Earns&#13;
was familiar&#13;
with the&#13;
UW System,&#13;
having&#13;
been part&#13;
of Oshkosh's&#13;
campus&#13;
for years,&#13;
and he knew&#13;
several&#13;
people&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
who helped&#13;
fill&#13;
him in &#13;
with&#13;
information.&#13;
To&#13;
him, &#13;
it &#13;
seemed&#13;
like an excellent&#13;
chance&#13;
for leadership,&#13;
and an&#13;
"opportunity&#13;
not only to help the&#13;
system&#13;
but to be part of a very&#13;
strong&#13;
campus",&#13;
Earns&#13;
thinks&#13;
that Parkside&#13;
is a beautiful&#13;
campus,&#13;
and he&#13;
couldn't&#13;
have been welcomed&#13;
any better.&#13;
A lot of work was&#13;
put into the Chancellor's&#13;
house&#13;
near campus&#13;
to make &#13;
it &#13;
livable-&#13;
-the house&#13;
needed&#13;
some general&#13;
maintenance.&#13;
in order&#13;
to &#13;
be&#13;
brought&#13;
back to top form.&#13;
He&#13;
has had "nothing&#13;
but good things&#13;
to say"&#13;
about&#13;
his&#13;
experience&#13;
thus&#13;
far. Parkside is a smaller&#13;
campus&#13;
than he's used to, bUI he finds&#13;
that a smaller&#13;
campus&#13;
allows&#13;
him to get to know more people&#13;
and get to know those people&#13;
a&#13;
Littleeasier.&#13;
Earns finds the new&#13;
Continued&#13;
10 &#13;
)(/~t&#13;
3&#13;
The &#13;
Ameth~&#13;
t Initiative&#13;
and responsible&#13;
drinking&#13;
Drunk&#13;
Driving's&#13;
(and other such&#13;
groups')&#13;
outcry&#13;
about this issue.&#13;
and the poor media&#13;
coverage&#13;
of this discussion&#13;
as a result.&#13;
the  Amethyst&#13;
Initiative&#13;
just&#13;
wants&#13;
to &#13;
engage&#13;
those outraged&#13;
groups&#13;
into talking&#13;
about the real&#13;
problem--the&#13;
poor education&#13;
that&#13;
minors&#13;
receive&#13;
about&#13;
responsible&#13;
drinking.&#13;
Amethyst&#13;
Initiative?&#13;
First,&#13;
it&#13;
meant&#13;
that  he believed&#13;
that&#13;
"we -need&#13;
to&#13;
a serious,&#13;
sustained,&#13;
unfettered&#13;
debate&#13;
about how closely&#13;
public&#13;
policy-&#13;
-specifically&#13;
the drinking&#13;
age--&#13;
and the reality&#13;
of tife in campus&#13;
community&#13;
are aligned"&#13;
.As such,&#13;
Keating&#13;
signed&#13;
on to participate&#13;
in a nation-wide&#13;
discussion&#13;
of&#13;
this issue.&#13;
and to explain&#13;
the&#13;
place of alcohol&#13;
in our own&#13;
campus&#13;
community.&#13;
Why&#13;
name&#13;
it  the&#13;
"Amethyst&#13;
Initiative"?&#13;
"Amethyst"&#13;
is derived&#13;
from&#13;
two Ancient&#13;
Greek&#13;
words:&#13;
"not" (a-), and "intoxicated"&#13;
(methustos).&#13;
Thus,&#13;
"Amethyst&#13;
Initiative",&#13;
or the&#13;
"Not-Intoxicated&#13;
Initiative".&#13;
tn&#13;
Greek.&#13;
mythology,&#13;
Amethyst&#13;
was a young&#13;
girl&#13;
who "incurred&#13;
the wrath&#13;
of&#13;
the God Dionysus&#13;
after he&#13;
became&#13;
intoxicated&#13;
with&#13;
red wine,"&#13;
Amethyst&#13;
cried&#13;
oUI to Goddess&#13;
Diana&#13;
for&#13;
help, who turned&#13;
Amethyst&#13;
into&#13;
a white&#13;
stone.&#13;
When&#13;
Dionysus&#13;
realized&#13;
what had&#13;
happened,&#13;
he cried. His tears&#13;
fell into his goblet&#13;
of wine,&#13;
which&#13;
promptly&#13;
spilled&#13;
over&#13;
and onto the white&#13;
rock,&#13;
turning&#13;
it purple.&#13;
According&#13;
to the "about"&#13;
section'&#13;
of&#13;
amethystiuitative.org:&#13;
" The&#13;
purple&#13;
gemstone,&#13;
amethyst,&#13;
was widely&#13;
believed&#13;
to be an&#13;
antidote&#13;
to the negative&#13;
effects&#13;
of&#13;
intoxication.&#13;
[... &#13;
J &#13;
The amethyst&#13;
is thus a meaningful&#13;
symbol&#13;
for &#13;
this initiative,&#13;
which&#13;
aims&#13;
to encourage&#13;
moderation&#13;
and&#13;
responsibility&#13;
as an alternative&#13;
£0 &#13;
the drunkenness&#13;
and reckless&#13;
decisions&#13;
about&#13;
alcohol&#13;
that&#13;
mark the experience&#13;
of many&#13;
young Americans."&#13;
Despite&#13;
the Mothers&#13;
Against&#13;
''WeJve&#13;
got&#13;
issues"&#13;
9oo &#13;
Wood&#13;
Rood&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
WI 53141&#13;
Phone:(262)595.2287&#13;
Fax: (262)&#13;
595·2295&#13;
Ads:&#13;
uwp_ods@yahoo.com&#13;
E-mail:&#13;
rangernews@gmall.com&#13;
ditor&#13;
in Chief&#13;
Jo Kirst&#13;
io@therangernews.com&#13;
xecutive&#13;
Editor&#13;
Mollie Egon&#13;
mollie@lherangernews.com&#13;
esign&#13;
Manager&#13;
Ruth Briones&#13;
ruth@therangernews,com&#13;
arketing&#13;
Director&#13;
Zok Smith&#13;
zok@therangernews.coffi&#13;
dvertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
Gin Gutierrez&#13;
gio@lherongernews.(om&#13;
ews Editor&#13;
Mollie Egon&#13;
mollie@therongernews.(om&#13;
rls &#13;
&amp; &#13;
Culture&#13;
Editor&#13;
Josh Diefenbo,h&#13;
diefeOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
taH Reporters&#13;
Cody Holden&#13;
ydo&lt;nedloh@yoboo.com&#13;
Rob Hensen&#13;
honseOBl@uwp.edu&#13;
George&#13;
lasley&#13;
10sleOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
Sam Anderson&#13;
onderlS3@uwp.edu&#13;
Rochel&#13;
DeLeon&#13;
eliteleono@yohoo.com&#13;
Kelsey Hoff&#13;
hoff0!3@uwp.edu&#13;
Jo,£ce Owens&#13;
owens040@uwp.edu&#13;
ues'&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Ryon Ashton&#13;
"hlo001@uwp.edu&#13;
.  &#13;
,  &#13;
..&#13;
opy Editors&#13;
Cheryl Overby&#13;
overbOOl@uwp.edu&#13;
Nitk Connor&#13;
mick2tonnor@OO!.toffi&#13;
Sam Youijg&#13;
young04S@uwp.edu&#13;
lIustrators&#13;
Brent Schuhz&#13;
wolfpock81188@yohoo.com&#13;
Joe Diefenboch&#13;
diefeOO!@uwp.edu&#13;
hotographers&#13;
Zok Smith&#13;
zakssmith@gmoil.caffi&#13;
Cedric Roy &#13;
Jr.&#13;
royOOOO]@uwp.edu&#13;
Monhew&#13;
Morsholl&#13;
morsbOll@uwp.edu&#13;
artoonists&#13;
Som Spohn&#13;
spohnOO!@uwp.edu&#13;
Jamie Stoehr&#13;
jamiejobolove@gmail.(om&#13;
Don Wanezek&#13;
Orworfist@yahoo.com&#13;
Greg Barker&#13;
borke01l@uwp.edu&#13;
Jessi(o&#13;
Ange&#13;
ts-productions@yahoo.com&#13;
Mission&#13;
Statement&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
strives&#13;
to inform,&#13;
educate,&#13;
and&#13;
engage&#13;
the UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
community&#13;
by publishing&#13;
well-written,&#13;
accurate&#13;
sfudent&#13;
journalism&#13;
on a weekly&#13;
basis.&#13;
e Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
bas meetings&#13;
every&#13;
Friday&#13;
at&#13;
con.&#13;
All &#13;
students&#13;
and &#13;
faculty&#13;
of UW-Parkside&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Please&#13;
feel free to attend.&#13;
Have&#13;
any&#13;
mments,&#13;
concerns.&#13;
questions,&#13;
or Slory&#13;
ideas?&#13;
lease&#13;
e·mail&#13;
us at; rnngemews@uwp.edu&#13;
.&#13;
e are localed&#13;
at Wyllie&#13;
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h &#13;
per.;on&#13;
may&#13;
lake&#13;
one newspaper&#13;
per issue&#13;
teo &#13;
Extra&#13;
newspaper.&gt;&#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
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for $1&#13;
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Newspapers&#13;
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on a first come.&#13;
'rS! &#13;
serve&#13;
basis.&#13;
meaning&#13;
that once&#13;
they&#13;
are gone,&#13;
hey are gone.&#13;
We &#13;
woric&#13;
on !he &#13;
hoOQf&#13;
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but&#13;
iolators&#13;
will&#13;
be  prosecuted&#13;
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Faculty&#13;
members&#13;
and&#13;
tudents&#13;
organizations&#13;
who&#13;
(E&#13;
'ish to U5e The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
n  &#13;
classrooms&#13;
sl10uJd&#13;
consuil&#13;
e editor-in-chief&#13;
to  reserve&#13;
owever&#13;
many&#13;
free copieS&#13;
they&#13;
•&#13;
ish to use.&#13;
ASSOCIATEC&#13;
...&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
14, 2008&#13;
Things&#13;
are going&#13;
pretty&#13;
well&#13;
like to take&#13;
a minute&#13;
and thank&#13;
.some&#13;
"sameold,&#13;
same&#13;
old" every&#13;
around&#13;
here ..I think&#13;
..Our .~,..Qut&#13;
;.the staff.&#13;
The people&#13;
who&#13;
bring&#13;
• week,&#13;
it makes&#13;
for an interesting&#13;
days&#13;
are~oh~~&#13;
much&#13;
~'!10Qther&#13;
..you&#13;
the  campus.&#13;
news.&#13;
~por1s.,&#13;
balance&#13;
between&#13;
the &#13;
new&#13;
stuff.&#13;
now&#13;
than&#13;
this time&#13;
last.semester,&#13;
.coverage,&#13;
album'&#13;
reviews,&#13;
and&#13;
Coming&#13;
up, we'll&#13;
have&#13;
an&#13;
We're&#13;
all out .of the of&#13;
nee &#13;
well&#13;
event&#13;
previews&#13;
and reviews&#13;
V{0{1&lt;·.&#13;
overview&#13;
of SUFAC,&#13;
and what&#13;
before&#13;
midnight;&#13;
which&#13;
never&#13;
hard to give you the most&#13;
accurate&#13;
- that organization&#13;
is all about,&#13;
a&#13;
used&#13;
to be the case.&#13;
Needless&#13;
to&#13;
information&#13;
they&#13;
can. They&#13;
put a   &#13;
chance&#13;
to sit down&#13;
with&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
say, that is definitely&#13;
a good&#13;
thing&#13;
lot of time&#13;
and effort&#13;
into their&#13;
and find out what&#13;
services&#13;
they&#13;
and makes&#13;
everyone&#13;
happy.&#13;
writing,&#13;
photography,&#13;
illustrating,&#13;
provide&#13;
the campus&#13;
with&#13;
(other&#13;
1 have&#13;
to say,&#13;
I'm&#13;
really&#13;
and so on. If it weren't&#13;
for them,&#13;
than those&#13;
nasty&#13;
parking&#13;
ticketsl),&#13;
pleased&#13;
with&#13;
how&#13;
tbe issues&#13;
are&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
would&#13;
not&#13;
theStudentHealthandCounseling&#13;
going&#13;
this&#13;
semester.&#13;
Some&#13;
of&#13;
be as strong&#13;
as it is. So: Thank&#13;
Center&#13;
(another&#13;
"what&#13;
do you&#13;
them&#13;
I like&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
others,&#13;
you,&#13;
staff&#13;
of The Ranger&#13;
News.&#13;
do?"&#13;
sort of profile),&#13;
along&#13;
with&#13;
but overall&#13;
1&#13;
couldn't&#13;
be happier.&#13;
Thanks&#13;
for your&#13;
time&#13;
and your&#13;
campus&#13;
news,&#13;
sports,&#13;
opinions,&#13;
Not only&#13;
do we have&#13;
some&#13;
great&#13;
dedication&#13;
to this&#13;
organization,&#13;
comics.&#13;
and whatever&#13;
else we can&#13;
staff&#13;
members,&#13;
but we &#13;
also&#13;
have&#13;
and &#13;
l &#13;
hope&#13;
you continue&#13;
to work&#13;
stuff&#13;
into our pages.&#13;
Also&#13;
along&#13;
an  excellent&#13;
contact&#13;
over&#13;
at   with&#13;
us next&#13;
semester,&#13;
and in the&#13;
these&#13;
lines,&#13;
we will be starting&#13;
a&#13;
Hometown&#13;
Publishing&#13;
(Holly),&#13;
semesters&#13;
to come.&#13;
collaborative&#13;
effort&#13;
with&#13;
WIPZ&#13;
who&#13;
helps&#13;
us  improve&#13;
each&#13;
Anyway,&#13;
now that the sappy&#13;
to bring&#13;
you&#13;
more&#13;
great&#13;
music&#13;
issue&#13;
from&#13;
a  technical/design&#13;
stuff&#13;
is over&#13;
with:&#13;
this issue&#13;
is   reviews,&#13;
and a glimpse&#13;
into some&#13;
standpoint.&#13;
If it weren't&#13;
for her&#13;
probably&#13;
one&#13;
of my favorites.&#13;
of the shows&#13;
that WIPZ's&#13;
DJs put&#13;
and he; tips;&#13;
we would&#13;
still &#13;
be&#13;
We've&#13;
got an interview&#13;
with Lane&#13;
on. 1 do not know&#13;
for sure&#13;
when&#13;
here&#13;
late at night&#13;
on Sundays,&#13;
Earns,&#13;
our&#13;
Interim&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
this project&#13;
will&#13;
be started,&#13;
but&#13;
pushing&#13;
to get everything&#13;
done.&#13;
A quick&#13;
rundown&#13;
of what&#13;
the&#13;
definitely&#13;
keep&#13;
your'&#13;
eyes&#13;
open&#13;
Of course.&#13;
our efforts&#13;
and Hally's&#13;
Amethyst&#13;
Initiative&#13;
is&#13;
,  &#13;
and why&#13;
for it!&#13;
efforts&#13;
are for  naught&#13;
without&#13;
it's&#13;
important&#13;
that&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
This&#13;
is the  part&#13;
where&#13;
I&#13;
Dan,&#13;
our delivery&#13;
guy. He makes&#13;
Keating&#13;
signed&#13;
on  before&#13;
he&#13;
remind&#13;
you all: If you know&#13;
of an&#13;
sure we get our issues&#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
timely&#13;
left us. We've&#13;
got some&#13;
great&#13;
event&#13;
coming&#13;
up &#13;
that&#13;
you think&#13;
fashion,&#13;
so that 1 can distribute&#13;
coverage&#13;
of Fall&#13;
Fest.&#13;
both&#13;
in  we should&#13;
cover,&#13;
a professor&#13;
that&#13;
them&#13;
quickly,&#13;
which&#13;
means&#13;
you&#13;
articles&#13;
and photos&#13;
... some&#13;
sports,&#13;
has done&#13;
something&#13;
above&#13;
and&#13;
guys&#13;
get to read&#13;
the new&#13;
issue&#13;
some&#13;
excelJent&#13;
opinions,&#13;
and the&#13;
beyond&#13;
their&#13;
normal&#13;
teaching&#13;
sooner.&#13;
same&#13;
great&#13;
comics&#13;
and&#13;
otber&#13;
duties.&#13;
so on and so forth&#13;
... tell&#13;
Now&#13;
that&#13;
we're&#13;
about&#13;
assorted&#13;
articles&#13;
that&#13;
we&#13;
have&#13;
us! &#13;
We &#13;
can't&#13;
report&#13;
on &#13;
it &#13;
if &#13;
we&#13;
halfway&#13;
through&#13;
the semester,&#13;
l'd&#13;
every&#13;
week.&#13;
I like that we have&#13;
don't&#13;
know&#13;
what's&#13;
going&#13;
on.&#13;
LICE&#13;
.We try and &#13;
be &#13;
the eyes&#13;
and ears&#13;
of the campus,&#13;
but we are only&#13;
here&#13;
for so many&#13;
hours&#13;
per day,&#13;
so many&#13;
days&#13;
per week.&#13;
We can't&#13;
possibly&#13;
catch&#13;
everything.&#13;
If&#13;
you've&#13;
got a news&#13;
tip, email&#13;
us at&#13;
rangemews@gmail.com&#13;
!&#13;
I  would&#13;
also&#13;
like&#13;
to&#13;
encourage&#13;
you all to send&#13;
us your&#13;
opinion&#13;
pieces.&#13;
You've&#13;
all got &#13;
to&#13;
have&#13;
an opinion&#13;
on something,&#13;
so why&#13;
not write&#13;
about&#13;
it? We'd&#13;
love&#13;
to  have&#13;
opinion&#13;
pieces&#13;
on  stuff&#13;
we&#13;
don't&#13;
generally&#13;
cover--the&#13;
presidential&#13;
election,&#13;
the&#13;
economy's&#13;
trouble,&#13;
locai&#13;
elections,&#13;
how&#13;
awesome/horrible&#13;
Aramark&#13;
food&#13;
or foodservice&#13;
is..,&#13;
you get the point.&#13;
Articles&#13;
should&#13;
be &#13;
about&#13;
300 words,&#13;
and anything&#13;
you say should&#13;
be &#13;
backed&#13;
up by&#13;
a &#13;
fact (unless&#13;
you explicitly&#13;
say&#13;
"I think&#13;
... "). We would&#13;
love&#13;
to&#13;
have&#13;
more&#13;
student&#13;
involvement&#13;
in our issues!&#13;
I &#13;
think&#13;
that's&#13;
about&#13;
it for this&#13;
week-&#13;
Enjoy&#13;
the issue,&#13;
send&#13;
us&#13;
your&#13;
opinions&#13;
on the issues&#13;
that&#13;
face&#13;
our country&#13;
today,&#13;
send&#13;
us&#13;
your&#13;
news&#13;
tips, and we'll&#13;
see you&#13;
next week!&#13;
Jo Kirst&#13;
Editor&#13;
in Chief&#13;
BLOTTER&#13;
10/03/08&#13;
08-2108&#13;
Elevator&#13;
Calls/Rescue.&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
HaJI.&#13;
3:05pm.&#13;
29 i I call reports&#13;
man&#13;
stuck&#13;
in  &#13;
elevator.&#13;
Officer&#13;
arrive&#13;
to &#13;
location,&#13;
man&#13;
removed&#13;
safely.&#13;
Officer&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
A.gency&#13;
Assist.&#13;
Child&#13;
Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
9:43pm.&#13;
KSD&#13;
dispatch&#13;
request&#13;
assistance&#13;
for erratic&#13;
male.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officer&#13;
approach&#13;
vehicle&#13;
in CCC&#13;
Lot.&#13;
KSD&#13;
Unlts&#13;
arrive.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officer&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/03/08&#13;
08·2112&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation.&#13;
CTH&#13;
JR  &#13;
@&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road.&#13;
10:19pm.&#13;
Jeffrey&#13;
L Miller&#13;
was ticketed&#13;
for&#13;
Fail/Stop&#13;
at Stop&#13;
Sign.&#13;
Officers&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/05/08&#13;
08-2133&#13;
Agency&#13;
Assist.&#13;
Off -  Campus&#13;
Location.&#13;
9:43pm.&#13;
KSD&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
reports&#13;
male&#13;
acting&#13;
erratic.&#13;
Subject&#13;
approached&#13;
in&#13;
Child&#13;
Care&#13;
Center&#13;
Lot.&#13;
KSD&#13;
Units&#13;
arrived,&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officer&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/04/08&#13;
08-2115&#13;
Agency&#13;
Assist.&#13;
Off -  Campus&#13;
Location.&#13;
KSD&#13;
dispatch&#13;
request&#13;
assistance&#13;
for  Crowd&#13;
Control.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officers&#13;
assisted&#13;
then&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/06/08&#13;
08-2134&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Accident&#13;
Property&#13;
Damage.&#13;
CTH&#13;
JR &#13;
@ &#13;
STH&#13;
31.&#13;
8:25am.&#13;
Complainant&#13;
reports&#13;
accident&#13;
no&#13;
injuries&#13;
reported.&#13;
Citation&#13;
issued&#13;
to David&#13;
Wynter&#13;
for Driving&#13;
Too&#13;
Fast For Conditions.&#13;
Officers&#13;
then&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/04/08&#13;
08-2117&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation.&#13;
CTH&#13;
G &#13;
@ &#13;
CTH&#13;
E.2:47am.&#13;
Donnie&#13;
L Stevenson&#13;
was ticketed&#13;
for Operating&#13;
While&#13;
Intoxicated&#13;
and&#13;
BAC&#13;
.1%+.&#13;
Subject&#13;
was&#13;
transported&#13;
to  Kenosha&#13;
Jail.&#13;
Officers&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/07/08.&#13;
08-2144&#13;
Alarm-BuildinglBusiness.Wyllie&#13;
HaJl.&#13;
7 :49am.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Alarm&#13;
Panel&#13;
reports&#13;
10/05/08&#13;
08-2128&#13;
active&#13;
alarm.&#13;
Officer&#13;
arrived&#13;
and&#13;
found&#13;
doors&#13;
locked.&#13;
lights&#13;
on and&#13;
no one in area.&#13;
Alarm&#13;
panel&#13;
reset.&#13;
officer&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/07/08&#13;
08-2145&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Accident&#13;
. Non-&#13;
Reportable.&#13;
Union&#13;
Lot. 8:57am.&#13;
Complainant&#13;
reports&#13;
damage&#13;
to&#13;
vehicle.&#13;
Officer&#13;
takes&#13;
report&#13;
and&#13;
.then cleared.&#13;
10/07/08&#13;
08-2147&#13;
Medical&#13;
Assistance.&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
HaJl.&#13;
Il:58am.&#13;
Complainant&#13;
reports&#13;
female&#13;
fainted&#13;
twice.&#13;
Officers&#13;
arrive,&#13;
Rescue&#13;
Units&#13;
refused.&#13;
Blood&#13;
Bank&#13;
Staff&#13;
tend to femaJe.&#13;
Officer&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/07/08&#13;
08-2148&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Accident&#13;
Property&#13;
Damage.&#13;
Com&#13;
Arts&#13;
Lot. 4: I3pm.&#13;
KSD&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
reports&#13;
accident&#13;
in Com&#13;
Arts&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Officer&#13;
takes&#13;
report,&#13;
.no&#13;
injuries&#13;
reported.&#13;
Officers&#13;
then&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/07/08&#13;
08-2155&#13;
Agency&#13;
Assist.&#13;
CTH&#13;
G. 10:12pm.&#13;
Orchard&#13;
Court&#13;
Apt&#13;
resident&#13;
reports&#13;
accident&#13;
tp &#13;
UWPPD&#13;
291 I&#13;
line.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officers&#13;
assist&#13;
with&#13;
traffic&#13;
control&#13;
&amp; &#13;
KSD&#13;
Unit arrives&#13;
to take&#13;
call.&#13;
UWPPD&#13;
Officers&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/08/08&#13;
08-2160&#13;
Fire&#13;
Drill.&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
I:46pm.&#13;
Scheduled&#13;
Fire Drill.&#13;
All&#13;
evacuated&#13;
safely,&#13;
Officers&#13;
then cleared.&#13;
10/09/08&#13;
08-2169&#13;
Tow&#13;
Vehicle.&#13;
SAC&#13;
Lot.&#13;
3:00pm.&#13;
Chronic&#13;
Violator&#13;
vehicle&#13;
was&#13;
towed&#13;
due&#13;
to  various&#13;
unpaid&#13;
.parking&#13;
citations.&#13;
Officer&#13;
then&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/09/08&#13;
08-2170&#13;
Warrant&#13;
Pickup-&#13;
Other&#13;
agency.&#13;
Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
4:55pm.&#13;
Ref:&#13;
08-&#13;
2169.&#13;
cm &#13;
files&#13;
indicate&#13;
active&#13;
warrant.&#13;
Confirmed&#13;
by Kenosha&#13;
JointServices.&#13;
Subject&#13;
transported&#13;
to  Kenosha&#13;
Jail.&#13;
Officer&#13;
then&#13;
cleared.&#13;
10/09/08&#13;
08-2174&#13;
2911&#13;
Disconnect&#13;
(Hang-Up).&#13;
,.I.•&#13;
�--_--.:.._---_:.=....-=---...:::...:........:~:::::::::::=::=====::::::...-_~=--=------=---&#13;
3t"-------------------;T;:;:h:.-:e:-R;;a::n::g::e::r~N::e-w-s---'--------------O::-c-t-o-:-b-e-r-l~4-,&#13;
2-0-0-8&#13;
THE=----U--&#13;
THE,POLICE&#13;
...&#13;
con't.&#13;
BLOTT~&#13;
-_/&#13;
Noon&#13;
Concert:&#13;
Vuillard&#13;
Duo:&#13;
Cathy&#13;
Schubilske,&#13;
violin;&#13;
Mary&#13;
Drews,&#13;
piano&#13;
I2:00pm&#13;
MOLN&#13;
105&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
.,&#13;
tl/lO:34pm,&#13;
KSDDispatch&#13;
report91l&#13;
hang-up&#13;
coming&#13;
from&#13;
Campus&#13;
location.&#13;
Officers&#13;
arrive.&#13;
take&#13;
report&#13;
and&#13;
issue&#13;
warning.&#13;
Officers&#13;
then&#13;
cleared,&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
14&#13;
Art Exhibition:&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Duke&#13;
II :OOam&#13;
to 8:00pm&#13;
Comm,&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
10/09/08&#13;
08-2176&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road&#13;
@ &#13;
CTH&#13;
G, II :20pm,&#13;
'&#13;
Christian&#13;
Payne&#13;
was ticketed&#13;
for&#13;
Fail/Stop&#13;
at Stop&#13;
Sign,&#13;
Officers&#13;
then cleared,&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
15&#13;
Uw-Parkside&#13;
Employee&#13;
Benefit&#13;
Fair&#13;
10:00&#13;
a.rn. to 2:00&#13;
p.m,&#13;
Main&#13;
Place,&#13;
10/10/08&#13;
08-2177&#13;
Liquor&#13;
Law&#13;
Violation,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments,&#13;
12: 14am,&#13;
f &#13;
Resident&#13;
Advisor&#13;
request&#13;
,  officers&#13;
for Underage&#13;
Drinking,&#13;
I &#13;
Officers&#13;
issued&#13;
various&#13;
Underage&#13;
t &#13;
Drinking/Consume&#13;
citations.&#13;
l &#13;
Officers&#13;
then&#13;
cleared,&#13;
Art Exhibition:&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
&amp;&#13;
, Benjamin&#13;
Duke&#13;
11:00&#13;
a,m,-8:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Cornm.&#13;
Arts Gallery&#13;
PIC Friendship&#13;
Hour&#13;
I&#13;
2:00pm&#13;
MOLND-132&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
16&#13;
Art Exhibition:&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Duke&#13;
Il:OO&#13;
a.m. to 5:00&#13;
p.rn.&#13;
Comm.&#13;
Arts Gallery&#13;
FRIDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
17&#13;
Center&#13;
for Women's&#13;
and Gender&#13;
Studies&#13;
Book&#13;
Discussion:&#13;
"Luncbeon&#13;
of the Boating&#13;
Party"&#13;
by Susan&#13;
Vreeland,&#13;
3:30p,m,&#13;
Orchard&#13;
Room.&#13;
Tallent&#13;
Hall&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Theatre&#13;
presents&#13;
''The&#13;
Foreigner"&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.rn,&#13;
Comm.&#13;
Arts Theatre&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
18&#13;
construction&#13;
a great&#13;
success,&#13;
and&#13;
completed,&#13;
and&#13;
provide&#13;
a new&#13;
thinks&#13;
it is "great&#13;
to see work&#13;
perspective&#13;
and fresh&#13;
observations&#13;
being&#13;
done&#13;
[",1 &#13;
I think&#13;
everyone&#13;
to the campus,&#13;
He would&#13;
also&#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
happy&#13;
with&#13;
the results",&#13;
like to prove&#13;
leadership&#13;
that the&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Earns&#13;
may not be&#13;
groups&#13;
on campus&#13;
will support,&#13;
with us for very&#13;
long,&#13;
depending&#13;
There&#13;
is a lot of curiosity&#13;
upon&#13;
how&#13;
the search&#13;
for a more&#13;
surrounding&#13;
the search&#13;
for a new&#13;
permanent&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
plays&#13;
out,&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
at Parkside,&#13;
and Dr,&#13;
so for right&#13;
now&#13;
his goals&#13;
for the&#13;
Earns&#13;
remarks&#13;
that&#13;
he doesn't&#13;
academic&#13;
year&#13;
are to get some&#13;
"have&#13;
any more&#13;
knowledge&#13;
than&#13;
long-term&#13;
strategic&#13;
planning&#13;
most&#13;
people"&#13;
on the subject.&#13;
He&#13;
In&#13;
hOIOS&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Theatre&#13;
presents&#13;
"The&#13;
Foreigner."&#13;
7:30&#13;
p.rn.&#13;
Comrn.&#13;
Arts Theatre&#13;
SUNDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
19&#13;
No Events.&#13;
MONDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
20&#13;
Art Exhibition:&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
1l:00&#13;
a.rn, to 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Cornm,&#13;
Arts Gallery&#13;
Soup&#13;
and&#13;
Substance:&#13;
Pinehold&#13;
Gardens&#13;
I2:00pm&#13;
MOLN&#13;
128&#13;
Free&#13;
soup&#13;
and bread!&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
OCT.&#13;
21&#13;
Art Exhibition:&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Duke&#13;
11:00&#13;
a.m. to 8:00&#13;
p.rn.&#13;
Continued&#13;
from&#13;
front&#13;
page&#13;
will not &#13;
be &#13;
automatically&#13;
included&#13;
in the next&#13;
group&#13;
of candidates;&#13;
if &#13;
he were&#13;
interested&#13;
in staying&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
longer&#13;
term,&#13;
he would&#13;
have&#13;
to apply&#13;
for the&#13;
position&#13;
just&#13;
like everyone&#13;
else.&#13;
But,&#13;
he says&#13;
he will&#13;
make&#13;
that&#13;
decision&#13;
when&#13;
the time&#13;
comes.&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Earns'&#13;
advice&#13;
for students&#13;
is to get out there&#13;
and vote&#13;
in this election.&#13;
"It's&#13;
a&#13;
,&#13;
great&#13;
time&#13;
for students&#13;
to come&#13;
of voting&#13;
age."&#13;
he says.&#13;
"There&#13;
is&#13;
hardly&#13;
a more&#13;
important&#13;
election&#13;
than the one we have&#13;
right&#13;
now ...&#13;
given&#13;
the state&#13;
of the economy&#13;
and everything&#13;
else",&#13;
I just think&#13;
it's  an extremely&#13;
exciting&#13;
time&#13;
and &#13;
everyone&#13;
needs&#13;
to get out and&#13;
vote,&#13;
and take&#13;
advantage&#13;
of this&#13;
great&#13;
opportunity,"&#13;
There&#13;
have&#13;
been&#13;
many&#13;
Voters&#13;
Initiative&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Cornm.&#13;
Arts Gallery&#13;
Teaching&#13;
&amp;  &#13;
Learning&#13;
Center&#13;
Workshop&#13;
3:30&#13;
p,m,&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
D1SOD&#13;
Methods&#13;
for Clicker&#13;
usage&#13;
in the&#13;
Classroom-e.g,&#13;
attendance.&#13;
think-&#13;
pair-share,&#13;
immediate&#13;
feedback,&#13;
and assessment.&#13;
Talent&#13;
Night&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
8:00p,m,&#13;
The Den&#13;
questions&#13;
about&#13;
how&#13;
to  best&#13;
address&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Earns,&#13;
He&#13;
generally&#13;
leaves&#13;
it up  to  the&#13;
individual,&#13;
to&#13;
address&#13;
him&#13;
however&#13;
they&#13;
feel&#13;
comfortable,&#13;
"Most&#13;
people&#13;
just call me Lane".&#13;
he explains.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
thanks&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Earns&#13;
for his time.&#13;
and hopes&#13;
that he enjoys&#13;
his time&#13;
here at Parkside.&#13;
10.8.08&#13;
4&#13;
October&#13;
14,&#13;
2008&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
8th &#13;
Senate&#13;
Attendance&#13;
SeoatorllUo&#13;
Present&#13;
Abs.ent&#13;
Matt&#13;
Abraham&#13;
1&#13;
Matt&#13;
Bleser&#13;
I&#13;
Heidi&#13;
Curt &#13;
is&#13;
I&#13;
Christina&#13;
Bieser&#13;
1&#13;
Nathan&#13;
Dolle&#13;
I&#13;
Samantha&#13;
Fredericks.&#13;
1&#13;
Michclte&#13;
S1abik:&#13;
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Camilla&#13;
Simon&#13;
1&#13;
Heather&#13;
Porter&#13;
1&#13;
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Salerno&#13;
1&#13;
Christopher&#13;
Schatzman&#13;
1&#13;
Nelson&#13;
Se:nda &#13;
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1&#13;
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1&#13;
Andrew&#13;
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under&#13;
Represented&#13;
1&#13;
~ation:PIC&#13;
'ParksUfe&#13;
StucCent&#13;
Government&#13;
Jlssociation&#13;
PSGA&#13;
General&#13;
Assembly&#13;
Assembly&#13;
Chambers&#13;
- GQST&#13;
103&#13;
VVedn~y,October1Sm,2oo8&#13;
5:00-6:00&#13;
P.M.&#13;
CALL&#13;
TO ORDER&#13;
ROIL&#13;
CALL&#13;
DETERMlNATION&#13;
OF QUORUM&#13;
CONSENT&#13;
AGENDA&#13;
APPROVAL&#13;
OF THE&#13;
PREVIOUS&#13;
WEEKS&#13;
MlNUTES&#13;
Students'&#13;
Comments:&#13;
5 &#13;
min&#13;
•  Speaking&#13;
request&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
completed&#13;
prior&#13;
to the commencement&#13;
of the meeting.&#13;
•  Speaker&#13;
will&#13;
allocate&#13;
time&#13;
to students&#13;
wishing&#13;
to &#13;
speak. &#13;
not &#13;
to&#13;
exceed&#13;
allotted&#13;
time&#13;
given&#13;
for Students'&#13;
Comments.&#13;
I.&#13;
llxecutive&#13;
Report.&#13;
I.  President&#13;
D. Vice&#13;
President&#13;
11.&#13;
Director&#13;
report&#13;
i. &#13;
Secretary&#13;
it &#13;
SUPAC&#13;
iii &#13;
Legislative&#13;
Affairs&#13;
.iv. &#13;
Public&#13;
RdatiollS&#13;
v.  Parliamentarian&#13;
III.&#13;
Advisors&#13;
Report&#13;
IV.&#13;
Old Business.&#13;
i. &#13;
Speaker&#13;
on IT3&#13;
Ii. &#13;
Raolution&#13;
in &#13;
Suppon&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
(KRM}&#13;
Railway&#13;
iii. &#13;
Senator&#13;
Nominstions&#13;
V.&#13;
New&#13;
8usiness&#13;
VI.&#13;
CommenlSlAnnounooments&#13;
i &#13;
Executive&#13;
0, Smale&#13;
iii &#13;
Student&#13;
vn, &#13;
Adjournment&#13;
wer&#13;
":&gt;0&lt;'''''''&#13;
Student&#13;
Body&#13;
PresidentTed&#13;
Ruffalo&#13;
Speaks&#13;
at Wednesday's&#13;
VIP Event while&#13;
the Mayor's&#13;
of&#13;
Racine&#13;
and&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
listen.&#13;
Ted, Chancellor&#13;
Earns,&#13;
Mayor&#13;
Bosman&#13;
of&#13;
Kenosha,&#13;
Mayor&#13;
Becker&#13;
of Racine&#13;
and&#13;
Senator&#13;
Bob&#13;
Wirch all spoke&#13;
at the V.I.P&#13;
Event hosted&#13;
by PSGA.&#13;
Over&#13;
200 Students&#13;
Voted&#13;
Early&#13;
at Ranger&#13;
Hall,&#13;
Contrats&#13;
Parkside!!&#13;
Thank&#13;
you to all those who contributed.&#13;
Your voices&#13;
have been heard ..&#13;
IMAGES&#13;
FROM&#13;
IGN.COM&#13;
4RT&#13;
-lLTUIRE&#13;
5&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
14,&#13;
2008&#13;
CCA~LcctJ¥&#13;
M&#13;
JIll&#13;
Slavery"&#13;
Duke and Dunn&#13;
1ake &#13;
~he&#13;
cake,&#13;
oll-s_yle&#13;
JAMIE&#13;
STOEHR&#13;
jamiejobolove@yaboo.co&#13;
Throw&#13;
a  few&#13;
naked&#13;
men&#13;
and a donkey&#13;
into&#13;
an octopus&#13;
car&#13;
and what&#13;
do you&#13;
get?&#13;
Illustrious&#13;
painting&#13;
material!&#13;
Might&#13;
I  &#13;
add&#13;
to  the&#13;
list&#13;
turkeys,&#13;
elephants,&#13;
and babies&#13;
being&#13;
born&#13;
straight&#13;
at&#13;
you?&#13;
If &#13;
this sounds&#13;
like it's up your&#13;
alley,&#13;
hop&#13;
on over&#13;
to our&#13;
very&#13;
own&#13;
art gallery,&#13;
which&#13;
happens&#13;
to be featuring&#13;
a dual&#13;
show&#13;
by&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Swallow&#13;
Duke&#13;
and&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn!&#13;
Both&#13;
artists&#13;
have&#13;
used&#13;
oil  paint&#13;
to depict&#13;
social&#13;
interactions,&#13;
in  scenes&#13;
that&#13;
range&#13;
from&#13;
ecstatic&#13;
to shocking.&#13;
Through&#13;
the manipulation&#13;
of their&#13;
environments,&#13;
Duke&#13;
and&#13;
Dunn&#13;
convey&#13;
interesting&#13;
realities.&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Swallow&#13;
Duke,&#13;
a Kentucky&#13;
native,&#13;
has&#13;
a very&#13;
gestural&#13;
style&#13;
of painting.&#13;
In&#13;
"Permanent&#13;
City&#13;
Catastrophe."&#13;
viewers&#13;
see&#13;
a&#13;
graphic&#13;
and&#13;
chaotic&#13;
city&#13;
street,&#13;
abound&#13;
with&#13;
individuals&#13;
tbat&#13;
are&#13;
puking,&#13;
shooting&#13;
at one&#13;
another,&#13;
juggling&#13;
junk&#13;
food,&#13;
and toppling&#13;
boxes&#13;
threatening&#13;
to fall.&#13;
A sense&#13;
of unbalance&#13;
and angst&#13;
pervades,&#13;
while&#13;
barf,&#13;
blood,&#13;
and birth&#13;
relate&#13;
a shocking&#13;
human&#13;
truth-&#13;
violence&#13;
and the dirtiness&#13;
of simply&#13;
being&#13;
human&#13;
is relevant&#13;
everyday,&#13;
on&#13;
every&#13;
street.&#13;
Skillful&#13;
perspectives&#13;
In Photos:&#13;
RACHEL&#13;
DELEON&#13;
eliteleona@yahoo.com&#13;
abound&#13;
in his  works,&#13;
most&#13;
of&#13;
which&#13;
depict&#13;
beautiful&#13;
city scenes&#13;
with&#13;
a plentiful&#13;
barrage&#13;
of social&#13;
happenings.&#13;
In &#13;
a &#13;
seamless&#13;
flow&#13;
to &#13;
the nex.t&#13;
artist.&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
enables&#13;
you&#13;
to see into each&#13;
figure's&#13;
thoughts,&#13;
making&#13;
you&#13;
feel&#13;
.like&#13;
a &#13;
visual&#13;
eavesdropper.&#13;
Object&#13;
and intimate&#13;
human&#13;
interaction&#13;
is relayed&#13;
in&#13;
rich.&#13;
painterly&#13;
manner.&#13;
She plays&#13;
with&#13;
reality,&#13;
packing&#13;
her interior&#13;
scenes&#13;
with&#13;
seemingly&#13;
unrelated&#13;
figures,&#13;
such&#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
baked&#13;
goose,&#13;
a real&#13;
goose,&#13;
and&#13;
a figure&#13;
lying&#13;
behind-up&#13;
on  a doctor's&#13;
table.&#13;
Objects&#13;
seem&#13;
to  move&#13;
due&#13;
10&#13;
the interplay&#13;
of lights&#13;
and darks,&#13;
mingled&#13;
with&#13;
roiling&#13;
texture.&#13;
You&#13;
can&#13;
feel&#13;
her working&#13;
the brush&#13;
marks&#13;
in an incredibly&#13;
physical&#13;
way,&#13;
leaving&#13;
passionate&#13;
marks&#13;
that&#13;
can really&#13;
stand&#13;
up on their&#13;
own&#13;
two&#13;
feet.&#13;
Instead&#13;
of being&#13;
smoothed&#13;
over,&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
read&#13;
on&#13;
several&#13;
levels&#13;
as being&#13;
part&#13;
of a&#13;
process.&#13;
While&#13;
Duke&#13;
hegs&#13;
the&#13;
question,&#13;
"Is &#13;
this&#13;
the&#13;
way&#13;
the&#13;
worJd&#13;
is in this&#13;
work?"&#13;
Teresa&#13;
Dunn&#13;
"delves&#13;
into a world&#13;
where&#13;
animals.&#13;
food&#13;
and other&#13;
objects&#13;
are&#13;
important&#13;
as human&#13;
characters."&#13;
These&#13;
two masterfully&#13;
appropriate&#13;
ambiguous&#13;
images&#13;
and assemble&#13;
them&#13;
into&#13;
something&#13;
chaotic.&#13;
Come&#13;
take&#13;
a gander&#13;
and&#13;
bring&#13;
your&#13;
own&#13;
sense&#13;
of reality.&#13;
Even&#13;
after&#13;
centuries&#13;
of our&#13;
forefathers&#13;
figbting&#13;
slavery.&#13;
it still&#13;
exists&#13;
in this free&#13;
country.&#13;
Over&#13;
half a million&#13;
people&#13;
suffer&#13;
from&#13;
this&#13;
sinister,&#13;
underworld&#13;
crime;&#13;
half&#13;
are children&#13;
and the scariest&#13;
fact&#13;
of all may&#13;
be that&#13;
much&#13;
of&#13;
America&#13;
doesn't&#13;
even&#13;
know&#13;
its&#13;
ex.istence.&#13;
This&#13;
crime&#13;
is called&#13;
human&#13;
trafficking.&#13;
Human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
is the illegal&#13;
transportation&#13;
of people&#13;
into other&#13;
countries&#13;
of which,&#13;
they&#13;
are forced&#13;
to become&#13;
sex toys,&#13;
prostitutes,&#13;
domestic&#13;
slaves,&#13;
soldiers&#13;
or&#13;
unwilling&#13;
organ&#13;
donors.&#13;
These&#13;
victims&#13;
are mostly&#13;
women&#13;
and&#13;
children&#13;
from&#13;
poor,&#13;
uneducated&#13;
countries&#13;
who&#13;
are  given&#13;
these&#13;
false&#13;
ideas&#13;
of prosperity,&#13;
stardom,&#13;
or a loving&#13;
home.&#13;
-And&#13;
tragically,&#13;
these&#13;
naive&#13;
innocents&#13;
are thrown&#13;
into a sludge&#13;
pool&#13;
of physical&#13;
and&#13;
mental&#13;
abuse,&#13;
deception&#13;
and loss&#13;
of self-image.&#13;
How&#13;
can so many&#13;
people&#13;
be  trapped&#13;
in  the&#13;
nightmarish&#13;
whirlpool&#13;
of  &#13;
human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
and&#13;
hardly&#13;
anybody&#13;
brings&#13;
up&#13;
the&#13;
subject&#13;
in  newspapers&#13;
or&#13;
television?&#13;
It's &#13;
quite&#13;
simple:&#13;
the&#13;
victims&#13;
have&#13;
too much&#13;
fear&#13;
and&#13;
not-enough&#13;
communication&#13;
skills&#13;
to get help.&#13;
As stated&#13;
before,&#13;
most&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
women&#13;
and&#13;
children&#13;
are&#13;
from&#13;
developing&#13;
countries&#13;
such&#13;
as Latin&#13;
America,&#13;
Africa,&#13;
and the&#13;
former&#13;
Soviet&#13;
Union,&#13;
India&#13;
and&#13;
Asia.&#13;
They&#13;
never&#13;
learned&#13;
English&#13;
or know&#13;
very&#13;
little&#13;
of it and&#13;
so&#13;
they&#13;
become&#13;
easy&#13;
prey&#13;
for the&#13;
traffickers.&#13;
Another&#13;
reason&#13;
is that&#13;
in other&#13;
countries,&#13;
women&#13;
and&#13;
children&#13;
aren't&#13;
valued&#13;
as highly&#13;
as&#13;
men&#13;
and so they&#13;
are expendable.&#13;
And&#13;
when&#13;
they&#13;
become&#13;
enslaved,&#13;
the&#13;
traffickers&#13;
"season"&#13;
them&#13;
by  gang&#13;
raping,&#13;
beating&#13;
and&#13;
psychologically&#13;
degrading&#13;
them&#13;
until&#13;
their&#13;
humanity&#13;
breaks.&#13;
II's a&#13;
horrible&#13;
way&#13;
to live and .die.&#13;
Fortunately,&#13;
there&#13;
are people&#13;
who&#13;
have&#13;
been&#13;
abJe&#13;
to see the&#13;
grotesque&#13;
tumor&#13;
on  America's&#13;
back;&#13;
people&#13;
like&#13;
Guadalupe&#13;
Vidales,&#13;
Gina&#13;
Allende,&#13;
and&#13;
Darius&#13;
Alernzadeh,&#13;
who&#13;
have&#13;
the&#13;
passionate&#13;
dream&#13;
of  &#13;
spreading&#13;
the word&#13;
about&#13;
human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
and finding&#13;
ways&#13;
to put an end to&#13;
it. These&#13;
three&#13;
spoke&#13;
at the &#13;
human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
meeting&#13;
on  &#13;
OCL&#13;
8&#13;
at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
They&#13;
revealed&#13;
that&#13;
there&#13;
are many&#13;
different&#13;
types&#13;
of&#13;
human&#13;
trafficking:&#13;
child&#13;
soldiers,&#13;
sex trafficking,&#13;
domestic&#13;
service.&#13;
organ&#13;
trafficking,&#13;
illegal&#13;
adoption&#13;
and&#13;
forced&#13;
marriage.&#13;
Children&#13;
soldiers,&#13;
where&#13;
innocent&#13;
children&#13;
are raised&#13;
to shoot&#13;
weapons&#13;
and&#13;
serve&#13;
in  the&#13;
miJitary,&#13;
are&#13;
the&#13;
least&#13;
in demand.&#13;
while&#13;
sexual&#13;
exploitation&#13;
is at its highest._&#13;
Guadalupe&#13;
Vidales.&#13;
assistant&#13;
professor&#13;
for the study&#13;
of criminal&#13;
justice,&#13;
explained&#13;
that&#13;
Thailand&#13;
openly&#13;
embraces&#13;
prostitution&#13;
as&#13;
a sturdy&#13;
pillar&#13;
of their&#13;
economy.&#13;
Many&#13;
parents&#13;
sell their&#13;
children&#13;
to  pimps;&#13;
disillusioned&#13;
by  the&#13;
pimps'&#13;
positive&#13;
speeches&#13;
of &#13;
how&#13;
their&#13;
children&#13;
will&#13;
become&#13;
very&#13;
successful&#13;
and&#13;
rich.&#13;
Other&#13;
times,&#13;
parents&#13;
just sell their&#13;
kids&#13;
for the&#13;
sake&#13;
of drugs&#13;
or becoming&#13;
debt&#13;
free.&#13;
She also&#13;
said&#13;
that the police&#13;
force&#13;
there&#13;
is hardly&#13;
protection&#13;
because&#13;
they're&#13;
paid&#13;
off by the&#13;
pimps&#13;
to allow&#13;
their&#13;
girls&#13;
to cross&#13;
borders&#13;
that&#13;
would&#13;
be&#13;
otherwise&#13;
illegal&#13;
to do. With&#13;
a country&#13;
like&#13;
that,&#13;
it's  no wonder&#13;
why&#13;
these&#13;
girls&#13;
feel&#13;
trapped,&#13;
helpless,&#13;
and&#13;
alone.&#13;
After&#13;
the meeting&#13;
was done,&#13;
I was&#13;
able&#13;
to speak&#13;
to one&#13;
of&#13;
Professor&#13;
Vidales'&#13;
students&#13;
and&#13;
volunteer&#13;
to study&#13;
human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
across&#13;
the globe.&#13;
Her&#13;
name&#13;
was&#13;
Amanda,&#13;
a senior&#13;
at&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide,&#13;
and&#13;
she&#13;
decided&#13;
to&#13;
study&#13;
domestic&#13;
violence-a&#13;
branch&#13;
off&#13;
of criminal&#13;
justice-and&#13;
that&#13;
eventually&#13;
led her to the subject&#13;
of &#13;
human&#13;
trafficking.&#13;
Her desire&#13;
grew&#13;
exponentially&#13;
and it became&#13;
her dream&#13;
to see this issue&#13;
brought&#13;
to light&#13;
by &#13;
the&#13;
media&#13;
and &#13;
even&#13;
in&#13;
today's&#13;
politics.&#13;
"I &#13;
think&#13;
it's sad&#13;
that&#13;
not many&#13;
people&#13;
know&#13;
that&#13;
this is going&#13;
on."&#13;
Amanda&#13;
said&#13;
to&#13;
me.&#13;
For&#13;
more&#13;
information&#13;
about&#13;
human&#13;
trafficking&#13;
go 1O: www.&#13;
rescueandrestore.org.&#13;
or&#13;
caJl&#13;
the trafficking&#13;
information&#13;
and&#13;
referral&#13;
hotline:&#13;
1-888-3737-888.&#13;
latinas&#13;
Unidas&#13;
Date&#13;
Auction&#13;
10.9.08&#13;
=&#13;
=&#13;
J,\RT&#13;
6&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
14, 2008&#13;
In photos&#13;
~~~~~~Wt~~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
.&#13;
------------------------------~----&#13;
®~~~&#13;
---------&#13;
ReVIew&#13;
JOYCE&#13;
OWENS&#13;
Owens040@uwp.edu&#13;
This WillyWonka&#13;
theme&#13;
was&#13;
supposed&#13;
to focus&#13;
on the reptiles&#13;
but the real headliner&#13;
was&#13;
the&#13;
treats.&#13;
The smell&#13;
of fresh&#13;
popcorn&#13;
with&#13;
six different&#13;
seasoning&#13;
salts&#13;
for toppings&#13;
drew&#13;
many&#13;
a sweet&#13;
tootb&#13;
to the event.&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
of&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
Hall&#13;
became&#13;
a Wonka-&#13;
like&#13;
cornucopia&#13;
of sugar:&#13;
two&#13;
different&#13;
flavors&#13;
of cotton&#13;
candy,&#13;
ice-cream&#13;
floats,&#13;
and a chocolate&#13;
fountain&#13;
with&#13;
apples.&#13;
pretzels,&#13;
and cake&#13;
to drown&#13;
in &#13;
it. &#13;
All these&#13;
treats&#13;
filled&#13;
the bellies&#13;
of many&#13;
students.&#13;
A blueberry&#13;
pie-eating&#13;
contest&#13;
took&#13;
place&#13;
earlier&#13;
at the&#13;
event&#13;
and got a few laughs.&#13;
We&#13;
even&#13;
had&#13;
a  model&#13;
dressed&#13;
up as Willy&#13;
Wonka&#13;
that&#13;
was handing&#13;
out toothbrushes&#13;
to&#13;
help prevent&#13;
cavities.&#13;
At Snakes&#13;
Alive&#13;
you could&#13;
sign&#13;
your&#13;
team&#13;
up for the dodge&#13;
ball tournament,&#13;
and you could&#13;
make&#13;
a guess&#13;
of&#13;
. how&#13;
many&#13;
Nerds&#13;
were&#13;
in a jar.&#13;
Whoever&#13;
guessed&#13;
correctly&#13;
won&#13;
an  iPod.&#13;
Overall&#13;
the  kickoff&#13;
was a success&#13;
and made&#13;
us look&#13;
forward&#13;
to Fall&#13;
Fest&#13;
events&#13;
to&#13;
come.&#13;
The&#13;
Snakes&#13;
Alive&#13;
part&#13;
of the show&#13;
was&#13;
entertaining,&#13;
(if you Iike reptiles&#13;
crawl&#13;
ing on&#13;
you),&#13;
and the food&#13;
was great.&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
kicked&#13;
off&#13;
the week&#13;
of Fall&#13;
Fest&#13;
in Main&#13;
Place&#13;
from&#13;
11a.m till 1p.m on&#13;
Oct.&#13;
6. The snakes&#13;
and reptiles&#13;
were&#13;
a success,&#13;
especially&#13;
when&#13;
people&#13;
got to hold&#13;
six-foot-long&#13;
snakes&#13;
around&#13;
their&#13;
necks!&#13;
The&#13;
instructor&#13;
dressed&#13;
like&#13;
"The&#13;
Crocodile&#13;
Hunter",&#13;
but he was&#13;
polite&#13;
and&#13;
gave&#13;
facts&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
snakes;&#13;
he even&#13;
let them&#13;
out of&#13;
the cage&#13;
for students&#13;
to get some&#13;
hands&#13;
on learning&#13;
experience&#13;
...&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Hall lawn&#13;
10.9.08&#13;
-&#13;
---------&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
,&#13;
J{RT&#13;
7&#13;
october&#13;
14, 2008&#13;
KELSEY&#13;
HOFF&#13;
hoflOO&#13;
13@uwp,edu&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
is  a&#13;
major-status&#13;
organization&#13;
at&#13;
:The&#13;
University&#13;
of  Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
but&#13;
how&#13;
much&#13;
do&#13;
students&#13;
actually&#13;
know&#13;
about&#13;
it?&#13;
According&#13;
to Rainbow&#13;
Alliance's&#13;
president,&#13;
Richard&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Jr.. "Our&#13;
meetings&#13;
are a place&#13;
for people&#13;
to meet&#13;
other&#13;
queer&#13;
I&#13;
people&#13;
and&#13;
have&#13;
a good&#13;
time,"&#13;
but that'.&#13;
not all they&#13;
do,  Every&#13;
Monday&#13;
from&#13;
12:00&#13;
to  1:00&#13;
pm, &#13;
members&#13;
meet&#13;
in Molinaro&#13;
D132&#13;
to  brainstorm&#13;
and&#13;
plan&#13;
events,&#13;
which&#13;
are&#13;
discussed&#13;
agam&#13;
by the executive&#13;
board&#13;
on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
The&#13;
executive&#13;
board&#13;
eonsisIs&#13;
of  a  president,&#13;
vice-&#13;
,~t,&#13;
!'~~~!~&#13;
~a~er.&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
- .-~-~---~¥_-~-------------~-~-~&#13;
--~.----...-,~-----~---------------------------------------~----------~&#13;
t ,&#13;
:&#13;
on issues&#13;
,,",!L.,,J'&#13;
RE'"&#13;
E'H&#13;
i&#13;
students.&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
is:&#13;
:&#13;
also&#13;
hosting&#13;
the Illusions&#13;
Drag&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
Show,&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
take&#13;
place&#13;
on&#13;
Ben~f&amp;&#13;
Bro\1Llln'&#13;
i&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Nov,&#13;
13 in the Den&#13;
II":&#13;
from&#13;
7 &#13;
to &#13;
11 &#13;
pm. with&#13;
the theme&#13;
:&#13;
of "trashy&#13;
and flashy",&#13;
hosted&#13;
by&#13;
lI"omedy&#13;
.e~ult~&#13;
:&#13;
Sabin.&#13;
Admission&#13;
is $5 or five &#13;
I&#13;
.....&#13;
II&#13;
~&#13;
~:&#13;
non-perishable&#13;
food&#13;
items.&#13;
and&#13;
:&#13;
all proceeds&#13;
will&#13;
go to charity,&#13;
ten &#13;
laudhter&#13;
and:&#13;
but food&#13;
will&#13;
also&#13;
be provided.&#13;
II&#13;
&lt;!Il&#13;
:&#13;
For&#13;
a  list  of  more&#13;
upcoming&#13;
:&#13;
. events,&#13;
go to their&#13;
page&#13;
on www.&#13;
headaches&#13;
:&#13;
uwp.edu.&#13;
....:&#13;
The&#13;
ultimate&#13;
purpose&#13;
of; •&#13;
:&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
is to provide.&#13;
JOYCE&#13;
OWENS&#13;
some&#13;
audience&#13;
participation&#13;
a~:&#13;
a  &#13;
face&#13;
for&#13;
and&#13;
advocate&#13;
the &#13;
t  •&#13;
Owens040@uwp.edu&#13;
an &#13;
icebreaker.&#13;
with&#13;
doing&#13;
some&#13;
:&#13;
rights&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
LGBTQISA&#13;
,&#13;
Benji&#13;
Brown&#13;
Ke-Ke&#13;
character&#13;
:&#13;
(lesbian,&#13;
gay,&#13;
bisexual,&#13;
I  [&#13;
Benji&#13;
Brown&#13;
was welcomed&#13;
impersonations.&#13;
Then&#13;
the show's&#13;
:&#13;
~ransgender,&#13;
queer.&#13;
qllestio~ng,&#13;
, ~ to the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
host,&#13;
Milwaukee's&#13;
own&#13;
D-Rock.&#13;
:&#13;
intersex.&#13;
same&#13;
gc?der-Iovmg,&#13;
[ Parkside's&#13;
campus&#13;
on Oct.&#13;
11.&#13;
warmed&#13;
the crowd&#13;
up with&#13;
some&#13;
and&#13;
ally)&#13;
community&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
,at  8pm&#13;
in the Den.&#13;
The&#13;
crowd's&#13;
jokes&#13;
and&#13;
let  everyone&#13;
know&#13;
campus&#13;
and&#13;
educate&#13;
students,&#13;
,attendance&#13;
for&#13;
this&#13;
comedian&#13;
tlial&#13;
comedy&#13;
is just&#13;
jokes&#13;
and&#13;
faculty,&#13;
and&#13;
staff&#13;
about&#13;
their&#13;
• was&#13;
at least&#13;
tripled&#13;
in numbers&#13;
~ou&#13;
have&#13;
to laugh&#13;
at yourself&#13;
community.&#13;
Their&#13;
mission&#13;
• compared&#13;
to the first&#13;
comedian&#13;
sometimes.&#13;
Next&#13;
to come&#13;
to the&#13;
statement&#13;
says&#13;
they&#13;
exist:&#13;
"to'&#13;
[ on campus.&#13;
Chad&#13;
Daniels.&#13;
Chairs&#13;
stage&#13;
was&#13;
the supposable&#13;
"Dave&#13;
provide&#13;
social&#13;
and&#13;
educational&#13;
~ tilled&#13;
the Den&#13;
all the &#13;
\\Iay&#13;
back&#13;
Chappelle's&#13;
cou...in".&#13;
He &#13;
wa:&#13;
s&#13;
programs&#13;
and.&#13;
promotions&#13;
• to the food&#13;
area,&#13;
and eventually&#13;
similar&#13;
in appearance.&#13;
but wasn't&#13;
that&#13;
create&#13;
an  av..-areness&#13;
of  • it  was&#13;
standing&#13;
room&#13;
ani}!&#13;
even&#13;
close&#13;
as far as being&#13;
funny,&#13;
LGBTQISA&#13;
issues",&#13;
"to act as  &#13;
I&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
showed&#13;
up ill&#13;
He was okay,&#13;
he got a couple&#13;
of&#13;
a   support&#13;
system&#13;
and&#13;
liaison&#13;
I great&#13;
numbers,&#13;
but so did Racine&#13;
laughs:&#13;
but Benji&#13;
Brown&#13;
was the&#13;
for LGBTQISA&#13;
students,&#13;
staff,&#13;
* • &#13;
residents:&#13;
I  guess&#13;
they&#13;
just&#13;
true&#13;
headliner.&#13;
His topics&#13;
went&#13;
and&#13;
faculty,&#13;
and&#13;
community&#13;
wanted&#13;
to see a great&#13;
show&#13;
too.&#13;
from&#13;
politics,&#13;
"Kenosha".&#13;
scary&#13;
members".&#13;
"to&#13;
resolve&#13;
Many&#13;
small&#13;
children&#13;
and people&#13;
movies,&#13;
the typical&#13;
stereotypes.&#13;
LGBTQISA&#13;
issues&#13;
apparent&#13;
under&#13;
the age of 18.were&#13;
visiting&#13;
and&#13;
black&#13;
and&#13;
white&#13;
people&#13;
on campus",&#13;
and&#13;
"to  serve&#13;
as&#13;
in honor&#13;
of siblings&#13;
weekend.&#13;
jokes.&#13;
Then&#13;
he finished&#13;
it off with&#13;
allies&#13;
in the advancement&#13;
of the&#13;
which&#13;
is a part of &#13;
Fall &#13;
Fest.&#13;
This&#13;
a serious&#13;
word&#13;
of advice,&#13;
that&#13;
rights&#13;
of  LGBTQISA&#13;
persons&#13;
initially&#13;
made&#13;
the show&#13;
a little&#13;
some&#13;
people&#13;
couldn't&#13;
handle,&#13;
eve&#13;
'where",&#13;
lIncpmforti'!1Je&#13;
for some&#13;
because&#13;
and his famous&#13;
KE-KEEEEEEE&#13;
ainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
prov&#13;
des&#13;
of  the&#13;
"adult&#13;
language"&#13;
and&#13;
voice.&#13;
Afterwards&#13;
he hung&#13;
out&#13;
a great&#13;
way&#13;
(0 &#13;
get involved&#13;
with&#13;
"adulttopics"thatwerediscussed&#13;
in  the  Den,&#13;
gave&#13;
autographs.&#13;
important&#13;
issues&#13;
in the student&#13;
in front&#13;
of the children,&#13;
but then&#13;
took&#13;
pictures&#13;
and just socialized&#13;
community.&#13;
It&#13;
is also an effective&#13;
the children&#13;
were&#13;
just ignored&#13;
as&#13;
with&#13;
us college&#13;
kids.&#13;
constantly&#13;
way to learn&#13;
about&#13;
national&#13;
issues&#13;
far as behavior&#13;
displayed&#13;
in &#13;
front&#13;
cracking&#13;
jokes.&#13;
Benji&#13;
is just&#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
happenings&#13;
impacting&#13;
the&#13;
of them.&#13;
but this not something&#13;
naturally&#13;
funny&#13;
guy.&#13;
real&#13;
down&#13;
lives&#13;
of real&#13;
American&#13;
citizens,&#13;
j &#13;
I  would&#13;
want&#13;
my&#13;
sibling&#13;
to&#13;
to earth&#13;
and overall&#13;
this&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
and just to meet&#13;
new&#13;
people&#13;
and&#13;
j &#13;
attend.&#13;
hilarious&#13;
event&#13;
and had a great&#13;
make&#13;
lasting&#13;
friendships.&#13;
j&#13;
The&#13;
show&#13;
started&#13;
with&#13;
turn out.&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
-~&#13;
~--------------------------~----------------------------_.&#13;
special&#13;
programs&#13;
chairperson.&#13;
educational&#13;
programs&#13;
chairperson,&#13;
social&#13;
programs&#13;
chairperson,&#13;
and&#13;
a   PSGA&#13;
representative.&#13;
Out&#13;
of all of this&#13;
planning,&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
has&#13;
devised&#13;
at least&#13;
one&#13;
event&#13;
per week&#13;
for&#13;
the rest&#13;
of the semester.&#13;
One&#13;
upcoming&#13;
event&#13;
very&#13;
.important&#13;
to Rainbow&#13;
Alliance&#13;
is National&#13;
Coming&#13;
Out&#13;
Day,&#13;
wltlCll&#13;
they&#13;
recognized&#13;
on campus&#13;
on Oct.&#13;
II.&#13;
From&#13;
12:00&#13;
[0 &#13;
1:00&#13;
prn, students&#13;
and staff&#13;
shared&#13;
their&#13;
stories&#13;
about&#13;
how&#13;
they&#13;
"came&#13;
QUf'&#13;
either&#13;
as a&#13;
queer&#13;
person.&#13;
or as -an &#13;
ally &#13;
to the&#13;
queer&#13;
community&#13;
and why&#13;
they&#13;
are supportive.&#13;
This&#13;
was a great&#13;
opportunity&#13;
for students&#13;
to get to&#13;
know&#13;
Parksidc&#13;
staff&#13;
on a whole&#13;
_~w&#13;
...&#13;
le~:.!22&#13;
g~n",~:~c&#13;
...&#13;
n!!~:_&#13;
.._,-....__&#13;
r ......&#13;
~~&#13;
__&#13;
~&#13;
8&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
14,2008&#13;
hOIOS&#13;
10.10.08&#13;
--=======.:.&#13;
:::=:'&#13;
:'&#13;
===:::::=::':'==:::=:::-::=-&#13;
-~&#13;
9&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
October&#13;
14,&#13;
2008&#13;
Rangers&#13;
fall to&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Screaming&#13;
Eagles&#13;
SAM&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
ander253@uwp.edu&#13;
set  seemed&#13;
hopefu&#13;
I at  a  mere&#13;
4-4,&#13;
when&#13;
a determined&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
jumped&#13;
from&#13;
4-4 to 5-14&#13;
creating&#13;
a  tremendous&#13;
ground&#13;
to cover&#13;
and&#13;
an eventual&#13;
defeat.&#13;
This&#13;
bumped&#13;
the Rangers&#13;
down&#13;
to a 6-12&#13;
record&#13;
overall&#13;
and a 2-7&#13;
record&#13;
in the conference,&#13;
while&#13;
raising&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana's&#13;
record&#13;
to 9-10&#13;
overall&#13;
and&#13;
3-6&#13;
in the&#13;
conference.&#13;
A  &#13;
real&#13;
factor&#13;
in the&#13;
game's&#13;
outcome&#13;
were&#13;
two costly&#13;
sets&#13;
that&#13;
actually&#13;
fell&#13;
negative&#13;
for the Parkside&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Addie&#13;
Kramer&#13;
of  the&#13;
Rangers&#13;
still&#13;
managed&#13;
13 kills,&#13;
4 aces,&#13;
and&#13;
3&#13;
blocks&#13;
on the game.&#13;
Along&#13;
with&#13;
her contribution,&#13;
Kristin&#13;
Schmidt&#13;
managed&#13;
8 kills,&#13;
I ace,&#13;
and&#13;
2&#13;
blocks&#13;
in an attempt&#13;
to resurrect&#13;
the Rangers.&#13;
This&#13;
was&#13;
a crucial&#13;
The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide Rangers&#13;
were&#13;
upset&#13;
by&#13;
the Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Screaming&#13;
Eagles&#13;
in&#13;
Oct.&#13;
4's&#13;
women's&#13;
volleyball&#13;
game.&#13;
This&#13;
was&#13;
all&#13;
part&#13;
of the Great&#13;
Lakes&#13;
Valley&#13;
Conference&#13;
women's&#13;
volleyball&#13;
match&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
DeSimone&#13;
Gymnasium&#13;
at&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide.&#13;
Although&#13;
the Screaming&#13;
Eagles&#13;
pulled&#13;
away&#13;
with&#13;
a victory&#13;
on the&#13;
first&#13;
set of 25-&#13;
19, the Rangers&#13;
came&#13;
back&#13;
with&#13;
a vengeance&#13;
in&#13;
the second&#13;
set clinching&#13;
a 25-&#13;
19 victory.&#13;
Unfortunately&#13;
for the&#13;
Rangers,&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
didn't&#13;
hesitate&#13;
to lock&#13;
up the next&#13;
two&#13;
sets at 25-18&#13;
and 25-14.&#13;
The&#13;
third&#13;
staple&#13;
in the Parkside&#13;
momentum.&#13;
However,&#13;
Meg&#13;
Bushman&#13;
of&#13;
Southern&#13;
Indiana&#13;
countered&#13;
much&#13;
of  the&#13;
Rangers&#13;
offense&#13;
with&#13;
7 blocks&#13;
along&#13;
with&#13;
11 kills,&#13;
making&#13;
it for a tough&#13;
game.&#13;
Along&#13;
with&#13;
her team's&#13;
combined&#13;
effort&#13;
the Screaming&#13;
Eagles&#13;
proved&#13;
to&#13;
be a force&#13;
to be reckoned&#13;
with,&#13;
managing&#13;
to put up a .935&#13;
average&#13;
for  the  team&#13;
serve&#13;
percentage.&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Rangers&#13;
are  still&#13;
remaining&#13;
positive&#13;
despite&#13;
this&#13;
loss,&#13;
and a loss on Thursday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
9 &#13;
to &#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
of Missouri-&#13;
SI. Louis.&#13;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;
Rang~rs&#13;
represent&#13;
at home&#13;
ROB&#13;
HANSEN&#13;
Hanse082@uwp.edu&#13;
running&#13;
a personal&#13;
best&#13;
19:06.&#13;
"I didn't&#13;
feel&#13;
as comfortable&#13;
this&#13;
race&#13;
as [ &#13;
have&#13;
in &#13;
weeks&#13;
past,"&#13;
said&#13;
Heidi&#13;
after&#13;
her race.&#13;
She shaved&#13;
off&#13;
twenty-three&#13;
seconds&#13;
from&#13;
her time&#13;
on this same&#13;
course&#13;
only&#13;
three&#13;
weeks&#13;
ago.&#13;
The&#13;
story&#13;
was&#13;
similar&#13;
for&#13;
third&#13;
place&#13;
runner,&#13;
Hope&#13;
Christie,&#13;
who&#13;
ran twenty-&#13;
nine&#13;
seconds&#13;
faster&#13;
than&#13;
she did&#13;
three&#13;
weeks&#13;
ago.&#13;
She&#13;
crossed&#13;
the line in 19:30,&#13;
the 31st&#13;
college&#13;
athlete.&#13;
Also&#13;
competing&#13;
for&#13;
Parkside&#13;
was&#13;
Angie&#13;
Adams&#13;
who&#13;
ran&#13;
19:57&#13;
and&#13;
Heidi&#13;
Andersen&#13;
who&#13;
finished&#13;
in 20:37.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
women&#13;
finished&#13;
5th&#13;
out&#13;
of 31  teams&#13;
and&#13;
only&#13;
ten&#13;
points&#13;
out&#13;
of  2nd&#13;
place.&#13;
Nationally&#13;
ranked&#13;
D.II&#13;
and&#13;
NAIA&#13;
teams&#13;
dominated&#13;
the team&#13;
championship&#13;
standings.&#13;
Ferris&#13;
State&#13;
University&#13;
scored&#13;
a meet&#13;
low 98 points&#13;
followed&#13;
by Indiana&#13;
Tech&#13;
with&#13;
159,&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
with&#13;
185,&#13;
Aquinas&#13;
College&#13;
with&#13;
194&#13;
and&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
with&#13;
195&#13;
points.&#13;
On&#13;
the&#13;
men's&#13;
side&#13;
of  the&#13;
venue,&#13;
lone&#13;
senior,&#13;
Rob&#13;
Hansen&#13;
was&#13;
the&#13;
only&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
competitor&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
5,000-m&#13;
race.&#13;
He finished&#13;
in 32nd&#13;
'place.&#13;
Because&#13;
Parkside&#13;
only&#13;
fielded&#13;
one&#13;
athlete,&#13;
they&#13;
were&#13;
incapable&#13;
of scoring.&#13;
In the 8,000-m&#13;
race,&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
men&#13;
finished&#13;
5th&#13;
place&#13;
out of 28 teams.&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Tech&#13;
University&#13;
scored&#13;
36 &#13;
points&#13;
to capture&#13;
the victory&#13;
followed&#13;
closely&#13;
by Aquinas&#13;
College&#13;
who&#13;
scored&#13;
68 points.&#13;
Fresno&#13;
Pacific&#13;
University,&#13;
coming&#13;
all the way&#13;
from&#13;
California,&#13;
staffed&#13;
a third&#13;
place&#13;
finish,&#13;
scoring&#13;
122 points.&#13;
They&#13;
were&#13;
closely&#13;
followed&#13;
by&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Wesleyan&#13;
with&#13;
153 points&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
men&#13;
with&#13;
185 points.&#13;
This&#13;
was&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide 's  best&#13;
finish&#13;
at  the&#13;
Lucian&#13;
Rosa&#13;
Invite&#13;
in four&#13;
years.&#13;
The&#13;
individual&#13;
race&#13;
was&#13;
dominated&#13;
by  Cameron&#13;
Walter&#13;
of Indiana&#13;
Tech&#13;
winning&#13;
by 28&#13;
seconds.&#13;
His finishing&#13;
time&#13;
was&#13;
25: 14.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
top&#13;
finisher&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
men's&#13;
and&#13;
women's&#13;
cross-country&#13;
tearns&#13;
hosted&#13;
the&#13;
Lucian&#13;
Rosa&#13;
Invite&#13;
on Saturday&#13;
October&#13;
11,2008&#13;
on the Wayne&#13;
E.&#13;
Dannehl&#13;
National&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Course.&#13;
This&#13;
event&#13;
featured&#13;
four&#13;
races;&#13;
the women's&#13;
4,OOO-m&#13;
and&#13;
5,000-m&#13;
and&#13;
the men's&#13;
5,000-m&#13;
and&#13;
8,000,m.&#13;
Early&#13;
morning&#13;
temperatures&#13;
hung&#13;
.in &#13;
the mid-Sus&#13;
and led most&#13;
to believe&#13;
it would&#13;
be a crisp&#13;
autumn&#13;
cross&#13;
country&#13;
morning,&#13;
but&#13;
as  the&#13;
sun&#13;
rose&#13;
through&#13;
the October&#13;
sky,&#13;
so did&#13;
the temperature,&#13;
which&#13;
peaked&#13;
out at 70 degrees&#13;
with&#13;
the sun&#13;
beating&#13;
down&#13;
forcefully.&#13;
The&#13;
women's&#13;
4,OOO-m&#13;
was&#13;
controlled&#13;
by  Lindenwood&#13;
University&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
The&#13;
race&#13;
was&#13;
dominated&#13;
by&#13;
Francine&#13;
Nzilampa&#13;
of&#13;
Lindenwood&#13;
University,&#13;
who&#13;
finished&#13;
in 14:36.&#13;
The&#13;
first&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
finisher&#13;
was Whitney&#13;
Olson&#13;
who&#13;
crossed&#13;
the line in 15:49.&#13;
Jessica&#13;
Enderby&#13;
was&#13;
the&#13;
next&#13;
Parkside&#13;
finisher&#13;
at 15:57.&#13;
Jennie&#13;
Kindt,&#13;
Amber&#13;
Mc.clure&#13;
and&#13;
Kim&#13;
Degener&#13;
ran&#13;
step&#13;
for step,&#13;
side&#13;
by side&#13;
from&#13;
the middle&#13;
of the pack&#13;
toward&#13;
the front&#13;
passing&#13;
nearly&#13;
twenty&#13;
runners&#13;
each&#13;
to finish&#13;
l lth - L3th&#13;
all at 16:04.&#13;
It was&#13;
very&#13;
exciting&#13;
to see the Ranger&#13;
women's&#13;
split&#13;
squad&#13;
run&#13;
so  successfully&#13;
and&#13;
finish&#13;
so close&#13;
together.&#13;
The&#13;
women's&#13;
5,000-m&#13;
run&#13;
was&#13;
a  little&#13;
more&#13;
star-studded.&#13;
Senior&#13;
Jessica&#13;
Monson&#13;
competed&#13;
in  &#13;
her final&#13;
home&#13;
meet&#13;
at UW-&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide.&#13;
bringing&#13;
home&#13;
a&#13;
sensational&#13;
second&#13;
place&#13;
finish.&#13;
Her&#13;
final&#13;
time&#13;
was&#13;
l7:42.&#13;
The&#13;
winner,&#13;
Justyna&#13;
Mudy&#13;
from&#13;
Shorter&#13;
College,&#13;
ran a 17:26&#13;
5K.&#13;
She took&#13;
control&#13;
of the race&#13;
from&#13;
the gun and extended&#13;
her lead&#13;
as&#13;
much&#13;
as twent¥&#13;
seconds&#13;
during&#13;
the race.&#13;
Heidi&#13;
Ertl,&#13;
a junior&#13;
from&#13;
Marshfield,&#13;
WI,&#13;
finished&#13;
15th&#13;
among&#13;
collegiate&#13;
runners,&#13;
. &#13;
"&#13;
w.as&#13;
Rehan&#13;
Mahmood,&#13;
who&#13;
ran&#13;
a course&#13;
personal-best&#13;
time&#13;
of&#13;
26:26.&#13;
·When&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
spoke&#13;
with&#13;
Rehan&#13;
after&#13;
the&#13;
race&#13;
he &#13;
explained&#13;
that&#13;
he was&#13;
surprised&#13;
by the team's&#13;
fifth&#13;
place&#13;
finish:&#13;
"Initially,&#13;
when&#13;
I looked&#13;
at our&#13;
times,&#13;
I &#13;
didn't&#13;
think&#13;
we&#13;
had&#13;
run very&#13;
strong&#13;
as a team,&#13;
so when&#13;
I &#13;
saw&#13;
the team&#13;
scores,&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
pleasantly&#13;
surprised."&#13;
When&#13;
asked&#13;
about&#13;
his personal&#13;
performance,&#13;
he&#13;
commented,&#13;
"I was&#13;
happy&#13;
to overcome&#13;
the&#13;
less-than-perfect&#13;
conditions.&#13;
Hopefully&#13;
my teammates&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
can keep&#13;
up our momentum."&#13;
Other&#13;
Ranger&#13;
scorers&#13;
were&#13;
Ben&#13;
Orvold&#13;
in 27:00,&#13;
freshmen&#13;
Alex&#13;
Mena&#13;
and&#13;
Sam&#13;
Albrecht&#13;
running&#13;
27: II&#13;
and&#13;
27: 14&#13;
respectively,&#13;
and Dustin&#13;
Baldwin&#13;
who&#13;
crossed&#13;
the line&#13;
in 27:38.&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
also&#13;
caught&#13;
a word&#13;
with&#13;
sophomore&#13;
Bryan&#13;
McLoone&#13;
after&#13;
the race.&#13;
"I &#13;
ran&#13;
faster&#13;
than&#13;
three&#13;
weeks&#13;
ago,&#13;
but it&#13;
certainly&#13;
wasn't&#13;
my best&#13;
effort,"&#13;
was&#13;
McLoone's&#13;
opinion&#13;
on the&#13;
event.&#13;
Mcl.oone&#13;
added&#13;
that&#13;
he&#13;
was&#13;
in desperate&#13;
need&#13;
of water&#13;
midway&#13;
through&#13;
the race,&#13;
on his&#13;
second&#13;
ascent&#13;
up &#13;
the "giant,&#13;
green&#13;
llill."&#13;
The Rangers&#13;
had a successful&#13;
day on the cross-country&#13;
course,&#13;
as they&#13;
gear&#13;
up for the post season.&#13;
The&#13;
men&#13;
have&#13;
the&#13;
week&#13;
off,&#13;
where&#13;
as the women&#13;
will&#13;
travel&#13;
to UW-Oshkosh&#13;
for the Brooks&#13;
Invitational&#13;
at Lake&#13;
Breezey&#13;
Golf&#13;
Course&#13;
next&#13;
Saturday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
The&#13;
following&#13;
week,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
25th&#13;
both&#13;
the&#13;
men's&#13;
and&#13;
women's&#13;
teams&#13;
will travel&#13;
to the University&#13;
of Missouri-Rolla&#13;
for the Great&#13;
Lakes&#13;
Valley&#13;
Conference&#13;
(GLVC)&#13;
Champinnship&#13;
meet.&#13;
,&#13;
....... &#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
</text>
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              <text>New residence hall on campuses proposed</text>
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              <text>&#13;
Sharing&#13;
and caring,&#13;
Italian&#13;
style&#13;
Page 4&#13;
THE&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEWS&#13;
.&#13;
University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside'&#13;
5 &#13;
Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
is written&#13;
llIld edited&#13;
by Students&#13;
of the U··&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
•.&#13;
nrverslty&#13;
ofW1ScOnsm-Parl:slde&#13;
and lheyare&#13;
solely&#13;
respoIL~ible&#13;
for &#13;
iis &#13;
editorial&#13;
policy&#13;
and cement,&#13;
r-~--;;-~---=------------,&#13;
J&#13;
I&#13;
' &#13;
...&#13;
...&#13;
,&#13;
Fall Fest Oct. 8-l3&#13;
Campus&#13;
Disc&#13;
Golf&#13;
Tournament&#13;
(top)&#13;
Starting&#13;
at hole one, students&#13;
competed"&#13;
in a&#13;
disc golf tournament&#13;
on Oct. 9, beginning&#13;
play&#13;
at 4 p.m, As part of Fall Fest,&#13;
the event&#13;
proved&#13;
to be a challenging&#13;
match.&#13;
setting&#13;
players&#13;
head&#13;
to head&#13;
to see who could&#13;
throw&#13;
under&#13;
par for&#13;
the&#13;
course.&#13;
'&#13;
Fun Fair&#13;
(center&#13;
and hottom)&#13;
With&#13;
sumo&#13;
wrestling,&#13;
snakes,&#13;
henna&#13;
tattoos,&#13;
hayrides,&#13;
games&#13;
and free food,&#13;
the fun fair on&#13;
Oct.&#13;
13 entertained&#13;
both&#13;
students&#13;
and their&#13;
families.&#13;
Held&#13;
from&#13;
10 a.m, to 2 p.m.&#13;
in Main&#13;
Place,&#13;
it served&#13;
as a great&#13;
way to spend&#13;
the last&#13;
day of Fall Fest.&#13;
October&#13;
16, &#13;
2007&#13;
News&#13;
Since&#13;
1972&#13;
New&#13;
residence&#13;
hall on&#13;
campus&#13;
proposed&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
ROSATI&#13;
robertrosati@hotmail.com.&#13;
Due to the increased&#13;
demand&#13;
for student&#13;
housing&#13;
on campus,&#13;
a proposal&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
made&#13;
to&#13;
build&#13;
a new&#13;
residence&#13;
hall at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
The&#13;
proposal&#13;
calls&#13;
for a new&#13;
residence&#13;
hall to give those&#13;
who&#13;
will be living&#13;
in it more&#13;
privacy&#13;
than&#13;
.is currently&#13;
provided&#13;
to&#13;
those&#13;
who live &#13;
on campus.&#13;
If&#13;
the proposal&#13;
passes,&#13;
a&#13;
four-story&#13;
apartment,&#13;
which&#13;
will have&#13;
250 beds,&#13;
will be&#13;
built&#13;
northeast&#13;
of the student&#13;
union&#13;
during&#13;
thefirsr&#13;
phase&#13;
of&#13;
construction.&#13;
During&#13;
the second&#13;
phase&#13;
of construction,&#13;
there&#13;
will he 112 more&#13;
beds&#13;
within&#13;
the four-story&#13;
apartment.&#13;
The&#13;
building&#13;
will have&#13;
30 living&#13;
units&#13;
that will be made&#13;
with the&#13;
idea that four people&#13;
can live in&#13;
them&#13;
and 26 living&#13;
units&#13;
made&#13;
so five people&#13;
can&#13;
live in them.&#13;
In an area close&#13;
to the building,&#13;
there&#13;
will &#13;
be houses&#13;
to include&#13;
17 to 28 students&#13;
as well as one&#13;
resident&#13;
assistant.&#13;
The apartments&#13;
wilJ be&#13;
designed&#13;
so that the four people&#13;
who live in them&#13;
can have&#13;
two&#13;
bedrooms&#13;
for double&#13;
occupancy.&#13;
The apartments&#13;
made&#13;
for five&#13;
people&#13;
to live in &#13;
them&#13;
will have&#13;
three&#13;
bedrooms,&#13;
two for double&#13;
occupancy&#13;
and one single&#13;
room.&#13;
Additionally,&#13;
there&#13;
will be a&#13;
place&#13;
to live for the residence&#13;
hall director.&#13;
Each&#13;
of the living&#13;
..&#13;
quarters&#13;
will &#13;
have&#13;
one private&#13;
bathroom&#13;
with&#13;
separate&#13;
toilet&#13;
and shower&#13;
spaces.&#13;
Lounges.&#13;
study&#13;
areas.&#13;
a game&#13;
room,&#13;
a&#13;
computer&#13;
lab. laundry&#13;
room,&#13;
and&#13;
conference&#13;
rooms&#13;
will also &#13;
be&#13;
in the building.&#13;
Asuite&#13;
will &#13;
be&#13;
constructed&#13;
for two overnight&#13;
visitors.&#13;
roo. On the first floor,&#13;
then,&#13;
will he a full kitchen&#13;
to&#13;
prepare&#13;
food.&#13;
The basement&#13;
will&#13;
have&#13;
space&#13;
for mechanical&#13;
equipment.&#13;
bins for trash&#13;
and&#13;
recycling,&#13;
as well as an area for&#13;
general&#13;
storage.&#13;
The construction&#13;
of the&#13;
first 250-bed&#13;
residence&#13;
hall is&#13;
expected&#13;
to begin&#13;
in the spring&#13;
of&#13;
2008&#13;
and be completed&#13;
by July&#13;
of 2009.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
presents&#13;
"Legacy&#13;
of Matthew&#13;
Shepard"&#13;
with Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
~&#13;
'G·····,····&#13;
•&#13;
..  '•.,  J&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
PRESS&#13;
RELEASE&#13;
days&#13;
later&#13;
at the age of 21. His&#13;
death&#13;
spurred&#13;
a spontaneous,&#13;
unprecedented&#13;
nationwide&#13;
public&#13;
outcry&#13;
motivating&#13;
millions&#13;
to&#13;
fight&#13;
the nation's&#13;
growing&#13;
hate&#13;
crime&#13;
epidemic.&#13;
For much&#13;
of the past 10&#13;
years,&#13;
Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
has used&#13;
her grief&#13;
over Matthew's&#13;
death&#13;
to make&#13;
a difference,&#13;
speaking&#13;
before&#13;
standing-room&#13;
only&#13;
audiences&#13;
across&#13;
the country&#13;
about&#13;
what&#13;
they can do to make&#13;
their&#13;
schools&#13;
and communities&#13;
safer&#13;
for everyone,&#13;
regardless&#13;
of&#13;
their&#13;
race,&#13;
sex, religion,&#13;
or sexual&#13;
orientation.&#13;
"I feel Matthew&#13;
with&#13;
me&#13;
every&#13;
day, or I would&#13;
not he&#13;
able to do this,"&#13;
Shepard&#13;
said,&#13;
"We&#13;
realize&#13;
that we must&#13;
use the&#13;
Judy &#13;
Shepard&#13;
Hate Crime&#13;
Activist&#13;
The University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsia-Parkside&#13;
welcomes&#13;
hate crime&#13;
activist&#13;
Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
to campus&#13;
for a special&#13;
program&#13;
on Monday,&#13;
Oct. 22. The&#13;
mother&#13;
of Matthew&#13;
Shepard.&#13;
whose&#13;
brutal&#13;
murder&#13;
inspired&#13;
the acclaimed&#13;
play and film&#13;
"The&#13;
Laramie&#13;
Project,"&#13;
speaks&#13;
on "The&#13;
Legacy&#13;
of Matthew&#13;
Shepard"&#13;
beginning&#13;
at 7 p.m, in&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
of Wyllie&#13;
Hall.&#13;
On Oct. 8, 1998,&#13;
Judy&#13;
and Dennis&#13;
Shepard&#13;
learned&#13;
that Matthew&#13;
was &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
coma&#13;
after&#13;
two &#13;
men&#13;
attacked&#13;
and&#13;
savagely&#13;
heat him because&#13;
he&#13;
was &#13;
gay. &#13;
Matthew&#13;
never&#13;
regained&#13;
consciousness&#13;
and died four&#13;
,&#13;
"".&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
:Ii,&#13;
',".&#13;
~."&#13;
:..&#13;
,..&#13;
•&#13;
"Come&#13;
get&#13;
that&#13;
good&#13;
copy!"&#13;
voice&#13;
his death&#13;
has given&#13;
us. &#13;
I&#13;
realize&#13;
that what&#13;
I &#13;
can&#13;
try&#13;
and&#13;
accomplish&#13;
is to make&#13;
people&#13;
aware.&#13;
We &#13;
get so complacent&#13;
in our lives&#13;
that &#13;
we&#13;
forget&#13;
not&#13;
everyone&#13;
is 'Safe.&#13;
and &#13;
frequently,&#13;
it &#13;
is our children&#13;
who aren't&#13;
safe."&#13;
Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
has testified&#13;
before&#13;
the United&#13;
States&#13;
Senate&#13;
in support&#13;
of the Hate&#13;
Crimes&#13;
Prevention&#13;
Act. She has appeared&#13;
in television&#13;
ads aimed&#13;
at curbing&#13;
anti-gay&#13;
violence&#13;
and promoting&#13;
a greater&#13;
understanding&#13;
of gay"&#13;
issues.&#13;
Through&#13;
the Matthew&#13;
Shepard&#13;
Foundation,&#13;
she has&#13;
carried&#13;
on her son's&#13;
work&#13;
to&#13;
promote&#13;
equality&#13;
for gays&#13;
and&#13;
lesbians&#13;
and to prevent&#13;
hate&#13;
crimes.&#13;
Now&#13;
she comes&#13;
to&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
with a powerful&#13;
message&#13;
of&#13;
hope&#13;
and tolerance.&#13;
"The&#13;
Legacy&#13;
of Matthew&#13;
Shepard"&#13;
with Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
is&#13;
free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
It&#13;
is sponsored&#13;
by the university's&#13;
Center&#13;
for Women&#13;
and Gender&#13;
Studies,&#13;
the Student&#13;
Health&#13;
and&#13;
Counseling&#13;
Center,&#13;
the Alcohol&#13;
and Other&#13;
Drugs&#13;
Committee,&#13;
the&#13;
Office&#13;
of Equity&#13;
and Diversity,&#13;
the Sociology&#13;
Department.&#13;
the Theatre&#13;
Arts Department.&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities.&#13;
Student&#13;
Services,&#13;
Residence&#13;
Life,&#13;
the&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
Alliance,&#13;
and the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association.&#13;
For &#13;
marc&#13;
information.&#13;
call&#13;
262-595-2278.&#13;
2&#13;
October&#13;
16,2007&#13;
00&#13;
00&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
WI 53141&#13;
Phone:(262)595.2287&#13;
Fax: (262)&#13;
595-2295&#13;
Ads: uwp_ods@yohoo.com&#13;
Website:&#13;
rangernews@uwp.edu&#13;
dltor In Chler&#13;
.&#13;
sign Manager&#13;
K.itlyn&#13;
M.Ulm,r&#13;
ulm.rOOO@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
Saahyun&#13;
Kim&#13;
kim00009@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
VikB.di&#13;
b.diOOO1@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
d.ertlslng&#13;
Manager&#13;
Surabh&#13;
R.gmi&#13;
.   .  surabh.regmi@gm.il.cam&#13;
ews Editor&#13;
R.berl&#13;
R.s.li&#13;
robertro50fi@hofmail.com&#13;
ts &#13;
&amp; &#13;
Culture&#13;
Editor&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
OavidWhil'&#13;
Whil.04@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
Elizab.lh&#13;
M.wr!&#13;
m.wry001@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
plnian&#13;
Edltor&#13;
tall Reporte,.&#13;
.  Rach.. &#13;
1 &#13;
B.k"&#13;
B.k.r032@uwp.edu&#13;
Romon&#13;
Joim,z&#13;
j.im.001@uwp.edu&#13;
RypnM9n\ra"&#13;
ryanm.19BB@sb&lt;gl.b&#13;
•. nel&#13;
Mackenzie&#13;
Hei~e&#13;
h.ise007@uwp&#13;
.•d.u&#13;
Ry~nAshlqn&#13;
,,1.001&#13;
&lt;Wuwp.•du&#13;
hatogr"",",.&#13;
Ang.1Di"&#13;
.ng.lk.n"h.@&#13;
•• l.cam&#13;
Ph.u. Xioijg&#13;
xiang034@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
K.thryn&#13;
Evans&#13;
evans034@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
Joey SI.inmqn&#13;
st.in034@uwp&#13;
.edu&#13;
sip &#13;
Asslst .. t&#13;
Ruth Brion,s&#13;
brionOO1@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
Of' &#13;
Editors&#13;
(.Ih,rine&#13;
lombrechts&#13;
l.mbr003@uwp.edu&#13;
J. &#13;
Kirsl&#13;
dierdraphoenix@gm.il.cam&#13;
Ni,k (qnnar&#13;
mick2connor@ool.com&#13;
llustralors&#13;
K.ti. limp.1&#13;
,imp.001@uwp&#13;
.•du&#13;
Brenl S,hultz&#13;
w.llpackBllBB@y.haa.cam&#13;
L•• h (.I.man&#13;
leah.cal.man@y.hao.cam&#13;
"" .. nlsts&#13;
. T.ny Kinnard&#13;
Darkst"&#13;
13_2001@yi1hao.cam&#13;
lac K"hqn&#13;
K.eh.003@uwp.edu&#13;
.  Dan Wanezek&#13;
Drw.rtisl@yahao.cam&#13;
Jao Szabo&#13;
szab.002@uwp.odu&#13;
d Rep&#13;
(holsea&#13;
Oscarsqn&#13;
"car003@rangers.uwp.odu&#13;
Mission&#13;
Statement&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
strives&#13;
to,&#13;
inform,&#13;
educate,&#13;
and&#13;
engage&#13;
the UW-Parkside&#13;
community&#13;
by publishing&#13;
well-written,&#13;
accurate&#13;
student&#13;
iournalism&#13;
on a weekly&#13;
basis.&#13;
e Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
has meetings'every&#13;
Friday&#13;
at&#13;
n.  &#13;
All &#13;
students&#13;
and&#13;
fnculty&#13;
of UW·Parkside&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Pl~ase&#13;
feel free&#13;
to &#13;
llttend.&#13;
Have&#13;
any&#13;
mmenls.&#13;
concerns.&#13;
questions,&#13;
or SIOty&#13;
ideas?&#13;
lease&#13;
e-mail&#13;
us at: mogemews@uwp.cdu&#13;
.&#13;
e are located&#13;
lit &#13;
Wyllie&#13;
D139C&#13;
.&#13;
Each&#13;
person&#13;
may&#13;
take&#13;
one &#13;
newspaper&#13;
per issue&#13;
date.&#13;
futfll&#13;
newspapers&#13;
can&#13;
be  pUl'I:hased&#13;
for&#13;
$ [ &#13;
llpiece.&#13;
Newspapers&#13;
can&#13;
be &#13;
taken&#13;
on ; &#13;
first&#13;
come,&#13;
first&#13;
serve&#13;
basis,&#13;
meaning&#13;
that&#13;
once&#13;
they&#13;
are &#13;
gone,&#13;
they&#13;
are gOne.&#13;
We work&#13;
on &#13;
the honor&#13;
system,&#13;
but violators&#13;
will &#13;
be. &#13;
prosecuted&#13;
for theft.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
members&#13;
Ilnd&#13;
students&#13;
ffi&#13;
orgMIUltions&#13;
who &#13;
wish&#13;
10 use&#13;
The&#13;
RlUlgcr&#13;
News&#13;
in classrooms&#13;
should&#13;
consult&#13;
the &#13;
editor-jn-(:hief&#13;
•&#13;
to  reserve&#13;
however&#13;
many&#13;
free&#13;
A$S()QAfU)&#13;
copies&#13;
they wi~h&#13;
to use.&#13;
~&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Tuesday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
16&#13;
Art ~lthibit:&#13;
Psyche:&#13;
Sculptures&#13;
by Zachary&#13;
Orcutt&#13;
wlWill,Pergl&#13;
Ila.m.-Sp.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
Zachary&#13;
Orcutt&#13;
sees&#13;
himseif&#13;
as&#13;
a modern&#13;
day Don&#13;
Quixote.&#13;
His&#13;
madness&#13;
is a belief&#13;
that he can&#13;
make&#13;
art rise out of the dumpster&#13;
and create&#13;
flying&#13;
machines&#13;
from&#13;
society's&#13;
waste.&#13;
Will&#13;
Pergl&#13;
is&#13;
into found&#13;
imagery&#13;
and abstract&#13;
forms&#13;
that start&#13;
us thinking&#13;
and&#13;
imagining.&#13;
The&#13;
abstractions&#13;
they&#13;
create&#13;
are-now&#13;
on display&#13;
at &#13;
UW~&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Effective&#13;
Teachers&#13;
of Diverse&#13;
Children&#13;
and.Youth&#13;
in Poverty&#13;
5-8 p.m.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
Room&#13;
0 l39&#13;
Sweetest&#13;
Day&#13;
Auction&#13;
6-7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
17&#13;
Art exhibit:&#13;
Psyche:&#13;
$culptures&#13;
by Zachary&#13;
Orcutt&#13;
wlWilI&#13;
Pergl&#13;
lIa.m.-8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
'Sexual&#13;
Assault&#13;
101'&#13;
12-Lp.m.&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
I L2&#13;
Were&#13;
you an ally last week?&#13;
Many&#13;
of us have&#13;
girlfriends,&#13;
.&#13;
sisters,&#13;
and&#13;
mothers&#13;
who&#13;
have&#13;
survived&#13;
rape&#13;
and domestic&#13;
violence.&#13;
All &#13;
men&#13;
are invited&#13;
to&#13;
this interactive&#13;
workshop.&#13;
Join&#13;
us to help&#13;
end violence&#13;
against&#13;
women.&#13;
Lunch&#13;
served,&#13;
Noon&#13;
Concert:&#13;
Piano&#13;
Duo:&#13;
Adrienne&#13;
Alton-Gust&#13;
&amp;.Garfield&#13;
Sallman&#13;
12-lp.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
0 lI8&#13;
It&#13;
takes&#13;
a lot of time&#13;
to put together&#13;
a&#13;
weekly&#13;
paper.&#13;
This&#13;
did not really&#13;
occur&#13;
to me&#13;
until&#13;
I tried&#13;
to actually&#13;
count&#13;
the number&#13;
of&#13;
hours&#13;
I put in each&#13;
week.&#13;
According&#13;
to our&#13;
office&#13;
door,&#13;
I have&#13;
about&#13;
sixteen&#13;
posted&#13;
office&#13;
hours.&#13;
However,&#13;
the reality&#13;
is a lot more&#13;
than&#13;
that,&#13;
probably&#13;
even&#13;
upwards&#13;
of 30 or more&#13;
hours&#13;
per week.&#13;
Yes,&#13;
I get paid&#13;
a stipend&#13;
for the&#13;
semester,&#13;
but if you average&#13;
it out, I get paid&#13;
less than&#13;
a dollar&#13;
an hour.&#13;
This&#13;
is not a plea&#13;
for sympathy.&#13;
In &#13;
fact,&#13;
I&#13;
love&#13;
what&#13;
I do, and &#13;
I&#13;
get great&#13;
satisfaction&#13;
in&#13;
distributing&#13;
the papers&#13;
every&#13;
week.&#13;
knowing&#13;
that &#13;
r&#13;
helped&#13;
make&#13;
each&#13;
issue&#13;
a reality.&#13;
At the&#13;
same&#13;
time,&#13;
it is not just me. &#13;
If&#13;
I had to put the&#13;
paper&#13;
together&#13;
all by myself.&#13;
I would&#13;
not be&#13;
able&#13;
to attend&#13;
classes,&#13;
sleep,&#13;
or have&#13;
any type&#13;
of a social&#13;
life. It is my staff&#13;
and even&#13;
other&#13;
students&#13;
on campus&#13;
who&#13;
really&#13;
pull the weight&#13;
to get those&#13;
papers&#13;
on the stands&#13;
each&#13;
and&#13;
every&#13;
week.&#13;
For our Oct.&#13;
2 issue,&#13;
we increased&#13;
our&#13;
circulation&#13;
by over&#13;
14 &#13;
percent.&#13;
Although&#13;
[am&#13;
not a math&#13;
major,&#13;
I&#13;
can see that it was a'great&#13;
improvement&#13;
from&#13;
the previous&#13;
week.&#13;
I also&#13;
got a lot of feedback&#13;
on our Oct.&#13;
9 issue.&#13;
which&#13;
was&#13;
very&#13;
colorful&#13;
and &#13;
visual&#13;
and had some&#13;
great&#13;
content.&#13;
However,&#13;
it was not all good.&#13;
I&#13;
got some&#13;
negative&#13;
feedback,&#13;
too,&#13;
and I would&#13;
like to take&#13;
the chance&#13;
to explain&#13;
a few things&#13;
about&#13;
our&#13;
opinion&#13;
page.&#13;
A &#13;
few individuals&#13;
have&#13;
accused&#13;
DO&#13;
TRru&#13;
us of producing&#13;
a biased&#13;
paper&#13;
due to some&#13;
of the editorials&#13;
we ran last week.&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
uses&#13;
the opinion&#13;
page&#13;
as an open&#13;
fol'lltll&#13;
for students&#13;
to discuss&#13;
their&#13;
views&#13;
on different&#13;
issues&#13;
in a relatively&#13;
uncensored&#13;
format.&#13;
We&#13;
'not request&#13;
that people&#13;
write&#13;
certain&#13;
opinions,&#13;
and our staff&#13;
mayor&#13;
may&#13;
not agree&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
content&#13;
of the editorials&#13;
we print.&#13;
By no &#13;
means&#13;
,&#13;
is the opinion&#13;
section&#13;
a direct&#13;
reflection&#13;
of my&#13;
~&#13;
views&#13;
as editor&#13;
in chief,&#13;
nor &#13;
am &#13;
I&#13;
trying&#13;
to&#13;
any hidden&#13;
agenda&#13;
by encouraging&#13;
staff&#13;
to&#13;
write&#13;
editorials&#13;
with&#13;
a specific&#13;
slant.&#13;
That&#13;
said,&#13;
if there&#13;
is anything&#13;
in our paper&#13;
as a whole,&#13;
or specifically&#13;
within&#13;
the opinion&#13;
section,&#13;
that you disagree&#13;
with&#13;
in any way,&#13;
you&#13;
are more&#13;
than&#13;
welcome&#13;
to submit&#13;
your&#13;
opinion&#13;
to The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News.&#13;
We will&#13;
run what&#13;
you&#13;
send&#13;
us, even&#13;
if it puts&#13;
us in a bad light.&#13;
For&#13;
example,&#13;
I encouraged&#13;
one of the people&#13;
with&#13;
~&#13;
a negative&#13;
view&#13;
of our opinion&#13;
section&#13;
to'Write&#13;
an opinion&#13;
about&#13;
it. I know&#13;
that sounds&#13;
iroD(c,&#13;
but it just&#13;
might&#13;
be one of the best&#13;
ways&#13;
to &#13;
get&#13;
an opinion&#13;
heard,&#13;
rather&#13;
than&#13;
just sending&#13;
me&#13;
an e-mail&#13;
about&#13;
the issue.&#13;
Please&#13;
submit&#13;
your&#13;
opinions,&#13;
positive&#13;
or&#13;
negative,&#13;
to parkside_opinion@yaboo.com.&#13;
look&#13;
forward&#13;
to hearing&#13;
from&#13;
you!&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
,&#13;
Editor&#13;
in Chief&#13;
Kaitlyn&#13;
M. Ulmer&#13;
International&#13;
Friendship&#13;
Hour&#13;
12-lp.m.&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
0132&#13;
'Sexual&#13;
Assault&#13;
!OI'&#13;
5-6p.m.&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
112&#13;
Ladies!&#13;
Attend&#13;
this workshop&#13;
and learn&#13;
how&#13;
to identify&#13;
patterns&#13;
and techniques&#13;
of sexual&#13;
perpetrators,&#13;
high&#13;
risksituations,&#13;
and exit/escape&#13;
strategies.&#13;
Refreshments&#13;
served.&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
18&#13;
Art &#13;
exhibit:&#13;
Psyche:&#13;
Sculptures&#13;
by Zachary&#13;
Orcutt&#13;
wlWill&#13;
Pergl&#13;
II a.m.-5p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gala&#13;
6-9:30p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Friday,&#13;
OC!.&#13;
19&#13;
Searching&#13;
for Hope&#13;
&amp; Meaning&#13;
-in Illness,&#13;
Death;&#13;
and Grief&#13;
8 a.m.-3:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Mt. Pleasant&#13;
Lutheran&#13;
Church&#13;
This&#13;
workshop&#13;
is a unique,&#13;
informational,&#13;
and supportive&#13;
conferel\ce&#13;
on end of Iife&#13;
issues&#13;
that affect&#13;
professional&#13;
caregivers.&#13;
Helping&#13;
dying&#13;
patients&#13;
and their&#13;
families&#13;
is a difficult&#13;
challenge.&#13;
The&#13;
professionai&#13;
must&#13;
not only&#13;
accommodate&#13;
the various&#13;
cultural&#13;
and religious&#13;
beliefs&#13;
of their&#13;
clients,&#13;
their&#13;
traditions,&#13;
and mourning&#13;
processes&#13;
but aiso&#13;
handle&#13;
the grief&#13;
they&#13;
themselves&#13;
experience'when&#13;
clients&#13;
die, This&#13;
workshop&#13;
will offer&#13;
imporant&#13;
information&#13;
along&#13;
with&#13;
personai&#13;
support.&#13;
The&#13;
fee to attend&#13;
is&#13;
$65.00&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
inJudc&#13;
COurse&#13;
malerial,&#13;
lunch&#13;
and 7CEU&#13;
hours.&#13;
To register&#13;
call 262-595-2312.&#13;
Moliere's&#13;
'The&#13;
Imaginary&#13;
Invalid'&#13;
lOa.m.-12:&#13;
15p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Moliere's&#13;
fabulous&#13;
French&#13;
farce&#13;
about&#13;
a hypochondriac&#13;
who&#13;
will stop&#13;
at nothing&#13;
to marry&#13;
his&#13;
daughter&#13;
to a physician&#13;
just to&#13;
make&#13;
sure&#13;
there's&#13;
a &#13;
doctor&#13;
in the&#13;
house.&#13;
Romantic&#13;
twists,&#13;
clever&#13;
disguises,&#13;
and deception&#13;
fill this&#13;
satirical&#13;
poke&#13;
at the medical&#13;
profession.&#13;
Latinos&#13;
Unido&#13;
Banquet&#13;
Orgulo&#13;
Hispano&#13;
5-8:30p.m.&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
Moliere's&#13;
'The&#13;
Imaginary&#13;
Invalid'&#13;
7:30-10:15&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
20&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
ACT&#13;
Prep&#13;
Classes&#13;
9 a.m.-12&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Molinaro&#13;
0137&#13;
Area&#13;
high&#13;
school&#13;
jupiors&#13;
and&#13;
seniors&#13;
prepare&#13;
for the fall&#13;
2007&#13;
American&#13;
College&#13;
Testing&#13;
(ACT)&#13;
exain&#13;
with&#13;
four&#13;
classes&#13;
leading&#13;
up to the Oct.&#13;
27 test&#13;
date.&#13;
During&#13;
today's&#13;
class,&#13;
students&#13;
will&#13;
sharpen&#13;
their&#13;
skills&#13;
in &#13;
science&#13;
reasoning.&#13;
During&#13;
each&#13;
class,&#13;
instructors&#13;
offer&#13;
proven&#13;
strategies&#13;
to help&#13;
students&#13;
do their&#13;
best&#13;
on the test.&#13;
Similar&#13;
classes&#13;
will be held&#13;
in&#13;
spring&#13;
2008.&#13;
More&#13;
information&#13;
is available&#13;
by calling&#13;
the UW-&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide Precollege&#13;
Office&#13;
at&#13;
(262)&#13;
595-2[76&#13;
or 595-2550.&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
21&#13;
Women's&#13;
soccer&#13;
vs. Ferris&#13;
State&#13;
12-2p.m.&#13;
Wood&#13;
Rd. Field&#13;
{UW-Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
free&#13;
, &#13;
.&#13;
w/valid&#13;
university&#13;
ro,&#13;
adults&#13;
$5,&#13;
HS Students&#13;
$3, kids&#13;
12 years&#13;
and under&#13;
$1}&#13;
.,&#13;
D&#13;
Senior&#13;
Recital:&#13;
Rita&#13;
Torcaso&#13;
3-4:15p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
0118&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
22&#13;
Art exhibit:&#13;
Psyche:&#13;
Sculptures&#13;
by Zachary&#13;
Orcutt&#13;
wIWilI&#13;
Pergl&#13;
IJ&#13;
a.m.-5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Com.&#13;
Arts&#13;
Gallery&#13;
Soup&#13;
&amp; &#13;
Substance:&#13;
Subject:&#13;
TBA&#13;
12-lp.m.&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
Workshop:&#13;
'Role&#13;
of the Arts&#13;
in&#13;
Building&#13;
Communities'&#13;
3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tallent&#13;
Hall&#13;
Area&#13;
residents&#13;
are invited&#13;
to&#13;
learn&#13;
more&#13;
about &#13;
community&#13;
building&#13;
through&#13;
the arts during&#13;
a program&#13;
featuring&#13;
Maryo&#13;
Gard&#13;
Ewell.&#13;
Ewell&#13;
is a community&#13;
arts consultant&#13;
and community&#13;
development&#13;
coordinator&#13;
for&#13;
the Colorado&#13;
Council&#13;
on the&#13;
Arts,&#13;
specializing&#13;
in the use of&#13;
art for community&#13;
development.&#13;
The&#13;
daughter&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
Idea&#13;
creator&#13;
Robert&#13;
Gard,&#13;
she&#13;
was &#13;
instrumental&#13;
in launching&#13;
Neighborhood&#13;
Cultures&#13;
of&#13;
Denver,&#13;
which&#13;
pairs&#13;
artists&#13;
with&#13;
community&#13;
organizations&#13;
in the&#13;
city's&#13;
lOW-income&#13;
areas;&#13;
the&#13;
Arts&#13;
Education&#13;
Equity&#13;
Network.&#13;
teaming&#13;
educators&#13;
and citizens&#13;
to &#13;
make&#13;
arts more&#13;
pl'Omjnent&#13;
in&#13;
local&#13;
schools;&#13;
and a regional&#13;
folk&#13;
arts program&#13;
using&#13;
the state's&#13;
three&#13;
folklorists&#13;
in community&#13;
development&#13;
capacities.&#13;
Featured&#13;
Speaker:&#13;
Judy&#13;
Shepard&#13;
7 - 8;30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Main&#13;
Place&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
...&#13;
I&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Parkside computers offer a variety of services</text>
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              <text>Thursday, September 9, 1982&#13;
~ UnIVersity of WISCOnslll Porksid&#13;
Parkside computers offer a variety of services&#13;
llbrary computers :e~:~.=~~~ce would"" an asset rrogram storage, to save wear on Dan Gemoll, the Computer to ..taIIt .. WIth another, like the&#13;
b BobKiestlng The library will 'have an ex- t::' lI~py tdlSCS'IlAuser will then Center's Academic Cmsultant. Gripe ...... am wbk:b lelIa..-&#13;
Y d't . d I a e 0 ca up programs Gemoll said the Computer Center nollfy the ~_ In C8Ie at&#13;
NewsE I ~ le II ~~;:en~: uf:r~Su rant available djr~ctly. fr~m the. computer, provides a variety of services difficulty. "Generally, Grtpn&#13;
S&lt;::omp~:'~s w~~t into and "rhe ~earn[ngSC~:gu~~~~~ ,:::.ng time m checking out soft- both directly and indirectly have to do .. lth equipm nt ~I'. Tuesdsy in the D2 level reference librarians are being Ri ht the' related to the schools academic malfWlClIon, or has to do with a&#13;
"",abOO 'nda Piel the t . ed g now microcomputer rmssron. problem so_'s hav ... uaI..&#13;
, lbe library. LI . 1 e, _ ram to serve as consultants as sy~tem is not complete, but Piele "We provide student cen- software: 'Gft. I did thl and It&#13;
liIrl'Y'sHead of public Services well.. " said the system III its present state sullants lor students to use .. he should werk bul.t doesn't' Well')'&#13;
idlbe computers will he used to . The library IS planning to offer, should he lully operational soon. said "a:nd m self the academic to respond to it Imrnfld.. ta ..&#13;
:Ieod people's awareness of initially, only general software She added that if the con~ultants ~or 'sludents and Much 01 the consuluJ UD-&#13;
~I computer use and ap- packages for users. Piele said that rmcrocornputsr-, tum out to he laculty, who are experiencing dertaken by the COI1lputerCen'er&#13;
pliCJtiOll. . one 01 the programs IS a general popular, It ISlikely the system will computer problems, We provide has to do with people who decide&#13;
"It's a very .gen~ral kind. ~f data base package,. used in ap- be expanded at a later date, if keypunching services, we provide to buy a ~I computer&#13;
iItJll," Piele said, . ~ause It s phcatIons h~e mailing lists and lunds pernlit.. assistance on difficult lechnical Gemoll sa.d, ~Firsll would try to&#13;
Vfr)' important, It 5 an ?p- lI~ventones: y~~ can us~ It for all . Piele said the hbrary has no problems that might come up:' fmd out what type cI apphcabOll&#13;
portuoity, really, to prOVIde kinds of things, ~he said. "They Idea how popUlar tlte In addition, he said, the Center !bey had ID mind .. beD theY buy It.&#13;
.... puler literacy !o~ faculty, are very. general. : microcomputers. Will be. "We're allots time to staff and laculty ler It makes very much at a dif.&#13;
ltJ/laod students. It s III no way The lIbrary wm also offer very ",nterested III seeing how It various projects. They also rent ference what type at applleallon&#13;
_nt to do the same thi~.'_.or VIslcalc, an accounting progr~m, goes, she saId. space to a few .private users they t.d in m.lJd."&#13;
.... petewith,!be kind offacllibes and several word processlllg outside !be University. The Center wlII also IIbow IDw to&#13;
ibal are available through the programs. for checkout to users. The Languages available on the interlace a milllcomputer th !be&#13;
COOIputerCenter, which are Users WIll also be able to WrIte Computer Center DEC, which handles most of the University's Iarpr WIlla, 11II.. a&#13;
JP'CiallY deaigned to support the their programs, which can be academic werk, include Basic, program named "Villterm".&#13;
UlSlructionll mission (of the recorded on 5-1/4" floppy discs lor Parkside's Computer Center Fortran. Assembler Language, According to Gemall, 1IU Iystem&#13;
.. versity)," permanent storage. The bookstore occupies a large suite of offices on Pascal. Watlar and Watbol. The can have advantages fer penc:mal&#13;
Pleiesaid the IibrOl')lwill offer has agreed so sell the discs for the first floor of the Comm Arts IBM is used mostly for ad- computer users:&#13;
....,latioo workshops for IlI'st $3.50 each. building. Inside are the Central nlinistrative records. "You can tra .. fer data flies to&#13;
time users on a regularly Piele said the computers will be Processing Units of the school's Gemoll said there are many our disc sterage in your acrOUDI.&#13;
Kbtduled basis. llMicrocom- available for use for a two hour large computers, a year old "utility&gt;l programs available, orback. There's acertam ra .. e 0(&#13;
paten are rather complicated," period on a first come, first served Digilal Equipment Corporation which are programs provided by things thaI per..... 1a are nal ... 1&#13;
.... said, "and a simple set of basis. She helieves that this will he (DEC) PDP 11/10 and a new IBM the computer itself. .&#13;
""lien mstructlooswon't get you adequate with the library open 90 4341, instIl . 11 a ward&#13;
'l'8')' far." hours a week, but could become computers work with the ter- pr~esslng progr.ams, and a&#13;
P1e1esaid !be library is also- busy during peak times. minals throughout the university. variety of graphiCS .packages&#13;
.'o=ted in sponsoring The Apples will be connected to These two computers handle which. can be used WIth Special&#13;
nsbop&amp; by more experienced a Corvus hard disc system which Parkside's academic and ad- graphics termmals. Tbe u~ty&#13;
MJCJ"OCOI11puter users. She feels will be used for permaneo.t ministrative work, according to programs also allow one te!'mmal&#13;
NEW APPLE COMPUTERS In WLLC, 0-1 level.&#13;
Fallfest '82 launched&#13;
by Pat "eDslak&#13;
Ed"or&#13;
FalHest is an annual event&#13;
dos.8J1ed to give all students the&#13;
::unity to get acquainted. In&#13;
to appeal to a large numher&#13;
~ studenla,Fallfest will he held&#13;
I Sept. 16, 17 and 18, with dif- :"'1 events festured on each&#13;
y.&#13;
w~y, Sept. 16, will be a&#13;
Day. From 7-10 p.m., a :::~"h:will perform on the&#13;
!be Union. At 7:30&#13;
~~, tire Judging of the "Bake _&#13;
W'1hi COIlleatwill take place.&#13;
Ile 0 tire "Bake - off" there will&#13;
ca. three categeries: Cookies,&#13;
~ aoo Pies. All of the baked&#13;
itllure w~ be judged on laste,&#13;
"' a appearance. Prizes 01&#13;
11 . lDd,aoo 3rd \vill he awarded&#13;
'ho~ C8tegOl')l. In each category&#13;
""" .pr;zewill he $10, the 2nd&#13;
&gt;ilIbe"'Ube $5, and the 3rd prize&#13;
IIoe Uria&#13;
nbbon and a coupon from 'there'-1.&#13;
" ,~ll be a "Best Dressed&#13;
l~ ~nleat, to be judged at&#13;
~ JUdgeswill base their Ioat .., who is wearing the&#13;
~..... style outfit. The&#13;
winner will receive a girt certificate&#13;
redeemable at a local&#13;
western shop. Also beginning at 8&#13;
p.m. during the band break, Will&#13;
be square dancing With a real&#13;
caller. At 9 p.m., the "Needle - Ina&#13;
_ Haystack" contest prima;;;:&#13;
prize will be announced. T&#13;
contest will consist of 4 ~r 5 stac~&#13;
of hay, and each stack will contaIn&#13;
4 or 5 objects. Throughout all of&#13;
the stacks, there will be only ~&#13;
winning object. The ~rson W!'&#13;
the winning object will ~e1Ve&#13;
two tickets 01 his/her chOIce to&#13;
attend one of the plays featured m&#13;
"Accent on Enrichment." .&#13;
On Friday, Sept. 17, startmg ~~&#13;
11'30 a.m., there will be mUSl~&#13;
th~ patio behind the u~oni&#13;
Beginning at I p.m., a Shel/~&#13;
Recrultment Fair Wlll be&#13;
the lio. The music f&lt;.. tured on&#13;
the l:tiO will start agam at 2 p.m.&#13;
and end at 3:30 p.m. FrIday rughJi&#13;
in the Union Cinema, PAB w&#13;
sponsor a movie at 2:30 P'':;i&#13;
Beginning at 9 p.m.,. PAB w&#13;
sponsor a ~ance in umon square,&#13;
lasting unbl I a.m. t rting&#13;
On Saturday, Sept. '~'~ :hown&#13;
at 10 a.m., cartoons WI&#13;
• far _I "-, .....&#13;
tensive arithmetic calc:u1lltims,"&#13;
large slatistical !lings. Jike the&#13;
calculation at fIuili 4¥&#13;
They're jUlt tao 11_," Gem&#13;
said&#13;
YMCA housing provided&#13;
There is a bus stop nPar thP&#13;
YMCA, and a city bus mak&#13;
several trips to Parltslde da Iy&#13;
HO'A'ever. plans are in the "01'&#13;
for mare bus sen'lce&#13;
"1". YMCA OWIII a bus Wha'&#13;
we are taIIdoII abooat .-&#13;
and "hat we are tryl" to do&#13;
lind out the tudents' needs ,&#13;
said Schmerh .. Then the Y I('A&#13;
the student re&amp;ujents, Ind the&#13;
t:niVenlty rouId werk out al&#13;
route Um.. ler tudenl even&#13;
and other activ,U.. with the&#13;
YMCA bu&#13;
. by Jeff Wicks&#13;
The YMCA, in conjunction with&#13;
the Parkside Housing Oflice, has&#13;
agreed to open up the top three&#13;
floors in an effort to accommodate&#13;
those students who desire a place&#13;
of residence [or this school year.&#13;
The building, which has been&#13;
dubbed "Ranger Hall" on the&#13;
lease agreement, marks the first&#13;
type 01 dornlitOl')l living Parkside&#13;
has been able to offer in the&#13;
University'S 13 - year existence.&#13;
"We started out with two floors&#13;
and they IilIed up so fast that we&#13;
had to add anolher lloor," saId&#13;
Shirley Schmerling, Housing&#13;
Coordinator. ,&#13;
The three floors total 85 single&#13;
living quarters, with two Resident&#13;
Assistants (RA's) in charge of&#13;
each floor. Only students and their&#13;
guests will he allowed to the top&#13;
floors.&#13;
The room agreements state that&#13;
a student can rent a room at the&#13;
YMCA Irom September 1st, t982&#13;
until May 23rd, 1983lor a cost of&#13;
$450 a semester, or a total of S900 a&#13;
year, excluding a $120 escrow. A&#13;
room with a prIvate hath costs&#13;
$1080a year.&#13;
Also, many of the facilities of&#13;
the YMCA, such as the indoor&#13;
pool, Nautilus room, gymnasiu!'1'&#13;
recreation room, and a special&#13;
study ball are available ler the&#13;
studenla' """,&#13;
Says SChmerhng: "Our&#13;
students are first· class citizens&#13;
and I want them to he treated&#13;
accordingly ...&#13;
Schmerling says that"&#13;
negotiations between Park-side&#13;
and the YMCA have been gOing on&#13;
lor several monlhs. B&lt;lth SChmerling&#13;
and Jim Fume, the&#13;
YMCA manager, have been in·&#13;
strumental in the agrEements&#13;
worked out between the&#13;
University and YMCA offlCiala,&#13;
Accordi .. to one YMCAoffiCIal,&#13;
the YMCA "did extensive&#13;
questioning and financial&#13;
analysis" before making a&#13;
decisioo.&#13;
At one point, the negotialionl&#13;
broke down over a dispute coocerning&#13;
leasi .. lees, but flJl811yan&#13;
agreement was reached that was&#13;
acceptable to boIh parties, and&#13;
Schmerling says Furrie has been&#13;
"just super" in acrommodalilW&#13;
the new tenants' living quarters.&#13;
Because the ne'" hou ing&#13;
arrangement for Park Id&#13;
students are the lirst evrr, RA I&#13;
thaI were ch_n to head the tlrft&#13;
noors traveled to UW· River Fal '0 joon thaI Univerl11y's apedal&#13;
onentation and tralnl ... amp fer&#13;
their RA'I. Among the varl ...&#13;
top.cs a nd programs the RA"&#13;
.. rlJCI.. ted In cUntII the five •&#13;
day camp were how to handle&#13;
alcohol in re Idence floor,&#13;
re ideDce han prolrammin •&#13;
d... iplinal')' "Cldent, and&#13;
_alidea·shan.. 'ODland&#13;
recreabm aetjvibfS.&#13;
in the Unioo Cinema, at no charge.&#13;
At 11 a.m., the child Care .center&#13;
will coordinate a series ?f&#13;
children's games on the P~tiO&#13;
including a Fish Pond, a Silly&#13;
Putty Stretch, BINGO, Bob fer&#13;
Apples a Bean Bag T_, and a&#13;
Water' Relay _ BegInning al 11&#13;
a.m., a volleyball tournament wlII&#13;
he held, with the champion .team&#13;
receiving 4 large UlUon .p!"""",&#13;
and the runnet"s up recetVlng 4&#13;
smaU Union pizzas.&#13;
The final event on Saturday,&#13;
starting at 12 noon, ,,:,iIl he the&#13;
Turkey Shoot. There will be three&#13;
different competitions: a seruor&#13;
shoot for ages 17 and over. an&#13;
Intermediate shool, lor ages 10- "-&#13;
Continued On Page 12 ..... -------- ,&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
*&#13;
Summer mo ies r~.; ......&#13;
*&#13;
Political action forum&#13;
*&#13;
Tim Hildebrandt intervi&#13;
&#13;
RANGER Thunday, September 9, 1912 3&#13;
...... CSA alters policies r Political action forum I&#13;
by Stephen Kalmar II&#13;
Bitch! The United Council&#13;
poster drew many glances and&#13;
nods of silent Support. In fine print&#13;
below the bold black letters the&#13;
votmg records of Wisconsin&#13;
as~mblymen and senators were&#13;
prmted. It reminded me of how&#13;
much my life is affected by so _&#13;
ca.lled . representative opinions.&#13;
With Wisconsin primary elections&#13;
Tuesday, September 14&#13;
evaluating these opinions is very&#13;
important in casting an educated&#13;
vote. Yet, sometimes I have&#13;
trouble understanding the&#13;
questions, much less cure ~ all&#13;
cl~~es that don't explain rising&#13;
tUItIOn costs and severe cuts in&#13;
human services.&#13;
Who can we trust for our&#13;
political education? Communica&#13;
ticns between elected&#13;
representatives and the general&#13;
public are controlled by nei ther;&#13;
mass media often distorts communications&#13;
in the name of profit.&#13;
Maybe we should look closer to&#13;
home.&#13;
In Wisconsin we are fortunate&#13;
enough to have student rights built&#13;
into the state statutes that give us&#13;
a voting role in institutional&#13;
government. Students voting on&#13;
University policy and planning&#13;
helps to make some students&#13;
aware of changes that affect their&#13;
eduction. Our student government&#13;
is active in one of the strongest&#13;
lobbying organizations in&#13;
the official add / drop date. Also&#13;
there IS not a sliding price scal~&#13;
for the return of the book. If it is&#13;
ret~rned . within the two week&#13;
policy guide, and all other policy&#13;
requirements are followed a full&#13;
refund will be made. '&#13;
In order to cash a check, the&#13;
exact amount of the purchase will&#13;
~ a~c.ept~d only. Two forms of&#13;
Jdentl~lcatlOn will be required, i.e.&#13;
Parkside I.D. and a driver's&#13;
license. .&#13;
Credit card policy states that no&#13;
credit card will be accepted in the&#13;
purchase of textbooks. Credit&#13;
cards will be accepted on the&#13;
concourse level of the store and&#13;
that is all. Never for the pur~hase&#13;
of textbooks.&#13;
CSA will have a buy - back&#13;
penod:A student can receive 50%&#13;
of the current list price, as long as&#13;
CSA has in writing from a faculty&#13;
mem ber tha t the book will be used&#13;
in the following semester. Also,&#13;
the book must be the most current&#13;
edition. If the books are not going&#13;
to be used at UW-P in the next&#13;
semester, a national textbook&#13;
buying guide will be used to&#13;
determine how much the student&#13;
will receive in return for the book.&#13;
CSA will buy back any books,&#13;
including trade books. However,&#13;
trade books bring little in return&#13;
for the student if sold back.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
oIlege Stores Associates&#13;
II Cto move into the new story&#13;
bIfJIS en across from the&#13;
.... ~p the store also begins to&#13;
[,Ibrary . me of their policies. The&#13;
il"el"";in policies that have&#13;
tIrft I come into action are&#13;
rt«"t Y '"' the return of texts, :::escashil1l, and credit card&#13;
'lilt return of a textbook has&#13;
The to do with the "buy -&#13;
~;?,l!thattakes place at the end&#13;
III ch semester. The return of a&#13;
of ea textbook must take place&#13;
'U'.n teo weeks from the pur-&#13;
.. date,", the receipt. If a book&#13;
dlaS"rchased before the opening&#13;
pIl", classes, it will be return- :r. r« a full refund from the&#13;
lint day of classes until the&#13;
,.cond week. Also, the receipt IS&#13;
blolulely necessary in order to&#13;
a a book. At the time of&#13;
:::: the receipt must be given&#13;
10 die bookstore. Finally, the book II"" be totally clean, and free&#13;
from aU marks. After two weeks,&#13;
a book is not returnable for a&#13;
I!fllld. If a textbook is purchased&#13;
_ it is not returnable for a&#13;
I!fmid unless the class using the&#13;
bolk is cancelled.&#13;
A boot caMot be returned after&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
This era of involvement has&#13;
been ushered in by Jim "Iame&#13;
duck" Kreuser Before the&#13;
present administration, the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
had little or no irrcolvernent 10&#13;
United Council WCI. The United&#13;
Cooocil of University or Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments currently&#13;
includes twelve of thirteen&#13;
Wisconsin four - year campuses.&#13;
UC is funded by fifty cents a&#13;
semester from each students' fee.&#13;
Any student that does not want to&#13;
support the United Couocil can&#13;
receive a refund directly from&#13;
them via a written request. Jim&#13;
Kreuser, president of Parkside's&#13;
Student Government. has&#13;
motivated student senate&#13;
members to attend lie meetings&#13;
The organized effort of student&#13;
lead ... s has lobbied effectively to&#13;
restore 11.7 million dollars to the&#13;
present University of Wisconsin&#13;
System budget. Kreuser invites&#13;
stUdents to be vocal about lhe.ir&#13;
opinions and problems Un.&#13;
fortunately, he feels that students&#13;
must come to him for information.&#13;
I think that student leaders should&#13;
be responsible for initiating&#13;
communications with students_&#13;
Apa thy is a lack of educa tion&#13;
leading to a lack of concern. It is&#13;
not a sign of trust as Jim voiced it&#13;
must be.&#13;
To get out and vote is crucial to&#13;
guarantee rational representation&#13;
in government. To make political&#13;
leaders aware oC their responsibility&#13;
to the majority of people&#13;
who don't elect them is important&#13;
Security.;.&#13;
Parking wo~ curable&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti of vehicles tic:kelA!d for bel ..&#13;
Campus Security perked in the Jots without a __&#13;
Parking' The most talked about permit was greeter than the&#13;
topic at Parkside. New students number of vehicles with permits&#13;
have yet to learn the joys of that were unable to located a&#13;
driving around the parking lots proper parking space. If the non -&#13;
looking for an empty space. permit vehicles stayed out of the&#13;
Veterans, which everyone parking lots, there would be&#13;
becomes after a few days, know to ample room for those that have&#13;
arrive early to find a space before while permits. Everyone kno'4"S&#13;
their classes start. The really someone who brags about being&#13;
smart veterans drive straight to able to park in the lots without a&#13;
the Phy Ed lot. There they find a permit. What they fail to tallt&#13;
place to park without wasti .. gas about is the number of parkJ ..&#13;
or time. Besides, some of the tickets that they receive ~&#13;
spaces in the Phy Ed lot are ac- always claim that they can 110 a&#13;
tuaUy closer to the buildings than fuU oem_t ... wllboula"Y porfdal&#13;
some of the parking stalls in the tickets. Over 2.000 pork ... tk'keta&#13;
Cornm! Arts lot. W"'e issued last 'ear MOlt of&#13;
At Parkside, being a commuter those parking without a permIt&#13;
campus, the majority of students, received their share .&#13;
faculty and staff drive a car to the&#13;
campus. And of course, everyone&#13;
wants to park as close to the doors&#13;
as possible. Then there's that&#13;
permit that everyone is supposed&#13;
to have. "Why buy a permit?&#13;
There's never enough spaces&#13;
available." Common saying , but&#13;
that is where the parking problem&#13;
begin'l.&#13;
A survey during the spring&#13;
semest ... showed that the number&#13;
for a secure future ",. ...... of&#13;
L ruted CouncIl directly aff"'"&#13;
E'\oery ludt"llt's educilhon The&#13;
fact that we are &amp;eldcxn maclo&#13;
aware is or no concern to thto hnal&#13;
outcome Your money supports&#13;
- the adoptIon 01 tlr Equal&#13;
RI~hts Amendment.&#13;
- OpposItion to aU billa attempting&#13;
to ra..., the drinkl"&#13;
age&#13;
- OPPOSltiOO to any l'NVf'rslty&#13;
d Wisconsin Imeslmen In rlrma&#13;
doil1l bu iness In the R."..bllc of&#13;
Sooth Afnca&#13;
- d ec r im ina lt e a tac n of&#13;
marijuana&#13;
- OpposItion to any type of&#13;
national registration, sel live&#13;
service, conscflption or draft&#13;
,la)'be some of these _&#13;
don't concern 'ou. but Ithink that&#13;
ever. student . has the right to be&#13;
completely Informed of&#13;
everything that bear endorsement&#13;
Each vote ma.kes a diH ... enCt'&#13;
aod must be i ued WIth ireat&#13;
concern On ptembtr 14,&#13;
Wisconsin voters must decide&#13;
whether to upport bombers or&#13;
hosp.tals; "eapono to aM.hilat.&#13;
or services providmg baSiC human&#13;
needs. For over twenty. ears tbe&#13;
Cnited States and the Sovlel Urnon&#13;
have based communication 00&#13;
power. It is time that ...·e mak our&#13;
government understand thllt •&#13;
freeze on testi.. and bulldJ ..&#13;
nuclear weapons 15 a Sign of&#13;
strength, nol ,,·eakness. Vote 'yea'&#13;
00 the nuclear freeze referendum&#13;
on September 14, because nobody&#13;
wants a nuclear war.&#13;
UC discusses issues, sets priorities&#13;
IIanY of you may have been&#13;
I1118god when you had to write&#13;
•• dIel:k for $491.50 for this&#13;
-,,,,'s tuition. If you think&#13;
dIItns an outrageous amount to&#13;
P'1, you are right. But did you&#13;
_ that you, the student, now&#13;
pI1I fll' '11.7 percent of your&#13;
IGIc:atianal bill? This increase is&#13;
... Iq\IeOt dollar amount ever&#13;
.... in the U.W. system.&#13;
lbeCllllt of tuition was one of the&#13;
IIIIIJ _ discussed a t the&#13;
IJIil8I Council &lt;D.C.) meetings&#13;
_ the alDDm.... Other issues&#13;
... at U.C. included that of&#13;
... the drinking age. U.C. is&#13;
lInIIII1apinll this issue mainly&#13;
..... llwouklnegativelyaffect&#13;
"lIudents rights and we see&#13;
.llII1Ifor atudents to be looked&#13;
... oeeood class cltizens. At&#13;
... you are able to vote, live .")'OUr own, etc. We feel that&#13;
., ...... the age to nineteen&#13;
... would be solved .. At&#13;
..., • ane, eighteen to twenty&#13;
JIIII aIdI would just drive to&#13;
....... to drink. Does this&#13;
.... • problem or start one? ,A~ important issue&#13;
was the Tuition Tax&#13;
Cndlt bUi (Education Op-&#13;
~~ and Equity Act, S-2673&gt;.&#13;
.... would allow parents who&#13;
':' .1kV children to private&#13;
lIId to receive refunds at the&#13;
Iteub yesr. If passed, this&#13;
~ IlIo aUow Federal dollars r:t~.:-m-subsidizing priva te&#13;
..r~ colleges. Why should&#13;
...... a1 Government pay for&#13;
~~ ldloo1ing when public&#13;
~_"lIbaidlea have been&#13;
--Ycut?&#13;
~ Cauncil agrees with the&#13;
of the Board of Regents,&#13;
Robert O'Neal, that it is unfair for&#13;
graduate students to pay higher&#13;
interest rates for Guaranteed&#13;
Student Loans than for undergraduate&#13;
students.&#13;
If any of you have not registered&#13;
for the draft, you should be concerned&#13;
with yet another U .C.&#13;
issue, the Solomon Amendment. If&#13;
it passes congress, this amendment&#13;
would make it mandatory to&#13;
register for the draft in order to&#13;
get either State or Federal aid for&#13;
college. This amendment includes&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loans.&#13;
Because of this, U.C. is strongly&#13;
opposed to the Solomon Amendment.&#13;
Also, you should be happy to&#13;
hear that the Mandatory&#13;
Refundable Fee (MRFJ was&#13;
passed by tbe Board of Regents so&#13;
that you, through U.C., will be&#13;
able to be heard voicing your&#13;
opinions and concerns in the hard&#13;
economic times to come.&#13;
A referendum is approaching us&#13;
on Nuclear Freeze. U.C. and&#13;
many PSGA senate members&#13;
believe that we should vote for the&#13;
Freeze on September 14, election&#13;
day. If we all do this, we can voice&#13;
our discontent about the flow of&#13;
money being di verted to the&#13;
Defense Budget and away from&#13;
higher education.&#13;
As stated, September 14 is&#13;
election day. There are many&#13;
important races this fall,&#13;
especially those for governor and&#13;
for state assembly seats. We, of&#13;
PSGA strongly encourage all&#13;
stude~ts to register and to then&#13;
exercise their right to vote - a&#13;
basic right that can never be&#13;
taken away, but one that can die&#13;
from lack of use.&#13;
Classifleds&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Book Sale: September only,&#13;
books by / about Women. Tbe Old&#13;
Book Corner at Martha Merrel's&#13;
Bookstore, 312 - 6th St., Racine.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
Join the Dr. Wbo Fan Club. See&#13;
Tony in the RANGER office.&#13;
Rick, we loved having a laugh at&#13;
your expense.&#13;
Better yet, join the Dr. Dreww&#13;
Fan Club. See Tony in the Ranger&#13;
office. Don't forget your scarf and&#13;
brown hat.&#13;
Juli Janovicz: Have a happy&#13;
birthday! Ihope you find a job. If&#13;
not, you can always come and&#13;
answer the phone for me - Pat&#13;
Weed: Hope you're feeling&#13;
better soon. Better stop all that&#13;
hard work. Better yet, get some&#13;
rest.&#13;
Best of luck to Andy and the&#13;
Soccer team. Go get all the&#13;
trophies.&#13;
Pat - Go get 'em!! Our confidence&#13;
in you tells us that you'U&#13;
do an excellent job.&#13;
Julia - HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!&#13;
Love, Mrs. Johnson.&#13;
Janice in Ill. - Have a good&#13;
day. I hope you find a job, some&#13;
money, and a driver's license.&#13;
Who could this be from??? But of&#13;
course: your favorite cousin!&#13;
Remember, we definitely haven't&#13;
got one of those .&#13;
The White P ... mlt allow the&#13;
holder to perk In the Union, Comm&#13;
/ Arts and Phy t:d lots. Ha,",~ a&#13;
white permit does not gl\e you the&#13;
right 10 park In R .rved,&#13;
Disabled or met ... ed area . If you&#13;
park 10 a metered staU you musl&#13;
put money In the meler The&#13;
Green P ... rrut is good only for the&#13;
Tallent parki .. lot In the mor·&#13;
onhnUM 00 Pagf' "'h.f'&#13;
DON'T BE&#13;
OUT TO LUNCH! GOING TO&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL?&#13;
NOT ENOUGH CASH&#13;
TO PAY FOR IT?&#13;
IT'SYOUR JOB TOGETTHROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOL.&#13;
TIl IT'SOURJOBTOPAYFORITI&#13;
=U.S• NAVY HEALTH PROFESSION SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
"YSFOR TUITION, BOOKS, AND ALL CLINICAL&#13;
F FEES. PLUSS530.00A MONTH STIPEND. CALL&#13;
OR ANAPPOINTMENT WITH OUR MEDICAL PROGRAM&#13;
OFFICE. CALL TOLL FREE:&#13;
1·800·242·1569&#13;
DISCOVER THE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION'S&#13;
MEAL PLAN&#13;
For information&#13;
stop in the&#13;
UNION OFFICERM. 209&#13;
'fOuWORRYABOUTTHE GRADES-AND LET US or CALL: 553-2201&#13;
L;. ",. WORRY ABOUT THE MONEY&#13;
•&#13;
• • •&#13;
DAY NIG&#13;
TBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
7' SCREEN&#13;
THIS WEEK&#13;
n pI 13Cowboy5lS1 ,-"&#13;
ur .. Sepl. 'V,knvsl&amp;H1s&#13;
• 2&#13;
DDAVJIOJG&#13;
*&#13;
BEER&#13;
*&#13;
SODA&#13;
*&#13;
WINE *&#13;
POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
....&#13;
**********&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
".. parkside Accounting Club&#13;
_ina for new members. This&#13;
• lasl beComing the biggest and&#13;
:.- active club on campus. It&#13;
DaUer a number of advantages&#13;
: liS member,s. Through a~tive&#13;
.. r\icipation in the meetings,&#13;
~ and eornmittees , a&#13;
stod"'t will be able to develop&#13;
rofessional a t t t t u d e s .&#13;
~otivation. and nppor tuni ties .&#13;
JlGIl committee members will&#13;
lllve ........... 1 conlact with "real&#13;
",d" professionals throughout&#13;
I1lO year. This is a tremendous&#13;
opportunity for learning and&#13;
~lgrO\Vth.&#13;
Wltb \be job market as tough as&#13;
liotoday. \be accounting club can&#13;
lI"'" to be a big help for all&#13;
__ graduates. The club can.&#13;
blip you get in touch with a&#13;
......,.,. of potential employers&#13;
eIllI provide some valuable in-&#13;
.gtrts about the accounting&#13;
~on. The club also has&#13;
ieveraI special projects planned&#13;
. suchasinterviewing seminars,&#13;
• trip to a "Big 8" accounting&#13;
lInD. scholarships, an accounting&#13;
IeIJIIinI center, and a dinner&#13;
wIlere members meet future&#13;
.. players.&#13;
A«OUJIting Club meetings are&#13;
Parking ...&#13;
e-tlnued From Pag-e Three&#13;
"qs.After I:oop.m. the holder of&#13;
• Green Permit may park in the&#13;
\hiCIII, Comm / Arts or Phy Ed&#13;
leU except for the Reserved,&#13;
IliIIbIed ... metered areas.&#13;
'!be first few weeks of the&#13;
.. ter are hectic, but once&#13;
IIIiqpI setOe down the parking&#13;
itualion does get better.&#13;
llImember. if the lot you wish to&#13;
port m is full, you must to to one&#13;
aftbe other lots. One full lot does&#13;
IIIl give you the right to park&#13;
ilIoplly.&#13;
III future articles there will be&#13;
.-eao the parking situation and&#13;
.. eervices tha t are provIded&#13;
II\CIIISOI'!d by the Campus&#13;
ly Department.&#13;
C'MING&#13;
T'&#13;
IW.&#13;
ARKSIDE&#13;
'.INNING&#13;
....,&#13;
SEPT. 14&#13;
Club Events&#13;
the second Mond month Ever . ay of every&#13;
attend:Afte/a~~e~~ebotncotura~ed~o&#13;
stude t .' om hne IS n s mainly come to P ksi&#13;
to better their chances f ar Ide iob d ora good JO an the accounting club&#13;
help you do just that. can&#13;
The following is a sched 1&#13;
~~: afC,rCsotuntingclub's aCtivit~e f~:&#13;
semester:&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Fall Schedule&#13;
• Sept. 13 - General Membership&#13;
Meeting&#13;
te~ Sept. 14 - Workshop' Invlewmg&#13;
"On Campus" '&#13;
• Oct. 4-13 - (Week f)&#13;
Workshop: Mock InterviewingO&#13;
• Oct. 11 - General M _&#13;
bet-ship Meeting em&#13;
• Oct. 19 - Field Trip: "Big 8"&#13;
Office VIsit&#13;
• Oct. 25-29 - (Week of)&#13;
Wor~shop: Interviewing the&#13;
"Office Visit"&#13;
• ~ov. 8 - General Membership&#13;
Meeting&#13;
• Noy. 15 - Managers Dinner&#13;
• ~ec. 13 - General Membership&#13;
Meeting&#13;
**********&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
" Peer Support, an organization of&#13;
students helping students" .&#13;
proud to announce that $50 ~&#13;
scholar.ships have been awar~&#13;
to Nel.he Holtz and Sandra Tait&#13;
Nelhe Holtz, a lifelong learne~&#13;
at the age of 72. is hoping that the&#13;
Iulfi llment of her d . . ream&#13;
receiving a college degree, will ~&#13;
of enc,ouragement to others in the&#13;
pursuit of their dreams.&#13;
Sandra Talt , a continuing&#13;
student at Parkside, is fulfilling a&#13;
20 year goal and believes her&#13;
scholastic accomplishments will&#13;
e~courage other women to pursue&#13;
higher education for themselves&#13;
If you are a non - traditionai&#13;
stud~nt (over the age of 23&gt; and&#13;
are Interested in knowing more&#13;
about the scholarship program&#13;
and/or our organization, contact&#13;
P.S. volunteers located in WLLC&#13;
D175. The office is open Monday&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday fro~&#13;
9.ooa.m. !03:00p.m. Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings 5:00 to 6:30&#13;
p.m .&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 9.19" s&#13;
....... It, N..lOM Jut.•&#13;
MfAIN PLACE w~s swamped wilh sludents during the final day&#13;
o open registratIon last Wed_yo&#13;
BE A B\G WHEEL&#13;
ON CAMPUS\ . AMPAGERAllY!&#13;
Jo\n 1he ReV\OnOFOl6~~ERAMPAGES. -&#13;
W\N ONE Of 5 k..::&lt;'&#13;
Now Flex ...the fobulous Instanl&#13;
Condrtioner and Shampoo ...invites you&#13;
to be a big wheel on campus! Enterthe&#13;
Flex-Rampage Rally 5weepstakesl&#13;
lt'S&#13;
easy. ..and you may win 01983 Rampage&#13;
Sport. Dodge's personal size pickup.&#13;
The rally is a Sports Car Club of America&#13;
Solo II Skill Rally. If you win you'lI be at&#13;
the wheel of your own Rampoge. Or&#13;
win one of hundreds of other prizes&#13;
Go to your parftcipating Flex retailer&#13;
and pick up an entry blank. JUSUiiI rt&#13;
out and toke it to your partiCipating&#13;
Dodge dealer.&#13;
If your nome is drawn you'll get $50&#13;
cash a new Rampage on loon to drive&#13;
toth~ Flex-Rampage Raiiy in your area&#13;
and a year's supply of Flex Shampoo&#13;
REVLDN&#13;
and Condiftoner.&#13;
The Revlon Flex Rampage-Rally&#13;
$750,000 in prizes!&#13;
50 50&#13;
"( - T:;.. .'&#13;
: r-&#13;
.'&#13;
. -&#13;
Rolling!&#13;
ember18th is&#13;
the last day to enter!&#13;
e-.Schnelde&lt; ~""eo Component&#13;
systems&#13;
• Mitsubillli&#13;
-"AM-FM&#13;
Cor S'*-&lt;ls and&#13;
PhlNpsCor&#13;
Speakers&#13;
50&#13;
ICalIica&#13;
EF-JCameros&#13;
100&#13;
REVlD&#13;
Im~t$ell&#13;
fafMenand&#13;
Women&#13;
-_In&lt;&#13;
----&#13;
~--------------------~ -------------------- I&#13;
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~~~~~=:;~==~?r lEVERAGE 01&#13;
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SIDEU&#13;
SOUAREG ILL&#13;
CLIPand ~&#13;
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THE CAMPUS STORE&#13;
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..... '-- &lt;, - . ~ " .~ ~ ....:.--:&#13;
II .. OFFA Y ED PIZZA&#13;
I OFF A Y LRG PIZZA&#13;
ER&#13;
I alld Thru Oct. 1. 1912&#13;
1 WIlli Supply Lalh L _&#13;
,---------------------- I PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
WLLCCOFFEESHOPPE&#13;
S I 5&#13;
1201 SOFT&#13;
DRINK&#13;
WITH PURCHA'&#13;
OFANY&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
Coupon Thru oe I 1912&#13;
In&#13;
NAVY&#13;
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SI'12&#13;
'30pm&#13;
7p m&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
C&#13;
RANGER Thursday September 9, 1982 7&#13;
Fantasy films make money in summer film fest&#13;
bv RickLuehr&#13;
aadToayRogers&#13;
Is are smiling and&#13;
~",.. '""'flleir respective&#13;
,og That's exactly how I&#13;
summer movie wrap -&#13;
~ mYlor Ranger a year ago,&#13;
;,u.:Je ent is just as true&#13;
tilt :::;. as it was for last&#13;
ill' WIile RockY had. the&#13;
ll8"'" in his latest film, "tilt thegreen glow of hard&#13;
.... ~ _ "Rocky Ill" made&#13;
II_".....of dollars. "Star&#13;
",~ new record in first&#13;
U baS' office grosses, and&#13;
etJIIl' close to nudging&#13;
·tb such box • office&#13;
~ "StIr Wars" and&#13;
lofthe Lost Ark." Most of&#13;
'fiIIIIof the summer were&#13;
1Iillpod: or It least fairly&#13;
8lIt there were many&#13;
fi)ms out, although&#13;
.... 1fPCI.lIIlsnUJ!l!·tsurprising. con-&#13;
!he Ilct that more movies&#13;
ieIeoaed llis pest summer&#13;
111'/ atber summer in recent&#13;
.... , W" made big bucks&#13;
it opeoed, getting the&#13;
"" to I JllIIChYstart. In&#13;
lIhIRnCkY IS rich and famous,&#13;
III mansion, driving a big&#13;
.. lIIPoft",wor1d.But Rocky&#13;
1lII1i1 _er to survIve, to&#13;
IDwiD, Ind he is deleated by&#13;
.... Iot .. n fighter na med&#13;
LIJW. Lang does have&#13;
1aniIlI'. \lis "eye of .the&#13;
uApolIo Creed calls .t.&#13;
caane. Rocky trains to ~ome&#13;
udblitdisClubber, nght?&#13;
~lkl~ stufl. but you can·t&#13;
"Ilecky" films for being&#13;
... Ik\l..... Iny more than you&#13;
1Ilame 10 Ipple lor being an&#13;
VlMtwe can blame this&#13;
far II losing .... charm of&#13;
1lGdly used to be down .&#13;
lIIl 18 W1derdog.He used to&#13;
I llrInge old hat and a&#13;
b1Idljacket. He used to&#13;
two I1IrtIes named "Cuff"&#13;
"LIM and he used to talk to&#13;
WlinI, but he had charm,&#13;
-.Id IeeI lor him. Now&#13;
IIrid&gt; be wears designer&#13;
..... ·t have his turtles&#13;
lI!"I'... udbe bas lost much of&#13;
II\PIII. til the film Rocky's&#13;
....., IeIIs Rocky tha t,&#13;
wont thing that could&#13;
tel f!&amp;blerhas happened&#13;
,., You'vegotte, civilized."&#13;
.. rtebt·&#13;
....... Trek: The Motion&#13;
_ releaaed in '79, it&#13;
NIIrIed lbat .... film had&#13;
...... to make, a record&#13;
• '-lean film. The film&#13;
~.ai&amp;.Ulve promotional&#13;
l: .... some ads for the&#13;
~ a lull year&#13;
_ rele8aed. However,&#13;
,.... did oo1y mnderate&#13;
... lwiness, possibly&#13;
.. fUm stunk. A totally&#13;
~"!I~II.' Bliserlbly slinking&#13;
III Star Tftk warped hack to&#13;
..... Uis summer in a sequel&#13;
....... ''1!le Wrlth of Khan."&#13;
~ ala modest $12 million.&#13;
~lIIlIdtofan ad campaign,&#13;
'-1IlIde a great amount of =~blYbecause it was a .-. .J:.ead of trying to be a&#13;
extravaganza, the&#13;
... ~ to the formula that&#13;
~ original T.V. show&#13;
",_-,c- -lIrong, charismatic&#13;
...... in solid adventure ...::a promoting universal&#13;
CIoI ~~ls. The original&#13;
.... -.-. lar. the film and&#13;
........."pleodid In their per-&#13;
_~ and the excellent (but&#13;
I1Ie ) special effecls were&#13;
Loota capable hands of George&#13;
-.: Induslrial Light and&#13;
,;": an of the films of the ...,1lIer were blockhusters&#13;
..... God!. In fact. ....re were&#13;
~ 'fWy goad small films '-e: I _nd "OlDer" was one of&#13;
!l"'P~ fihn centered around a&#13;
~ IPIYs In their early&#13;
Who are growing up&#13;
til! late t950's. The 'guys'&#13;
~!,"tler than to hang&#13;
.... """'1 Dmer and discuss&#13;
..... of importance as&#13;
football, rock records, and so on.&#13;
But the 'guys' can't seem to break&#13;
out of this teenage mentality, and&#13;
some. of their biggest problems&#13;
are learning to deal with women.&#13;
The film explores these problems&#13;
in a terrifically entertaining and&#13;
humorous way, and portrays the&#13;
period of the late fifties in often&#13;
subtle methods and small scenes.&#13;
"Diner" was made on a&#13;
shoestring budget and has a cast&#13;
of unknowns, but it was one of the&#13;
best films Isaw over the summer .&#13;
Some quick pans: "Firefox"&#13;
was a Clint Eastwood movie&#13;
without any savage 'snap.' The&#13;
film had great effects, but the plot&#13;
was silly, the characters were&#13;
cardboard, and Clint Eastwond&#13;
simply didn't bring across his&#13;
tough - guy grittiness well enough&#13;
to overcome the mire that covered&#13;
the film.&#13;
"Tron" was an even more ex·&#13;
treme case of special effects gone&#13;
overboard - there just wasn't&#13;
anything to this movie but the&#13;
effects. In a filmic video - game&#13;
computer . world fantasy, an&#13;
absolutely dead group of&#13;
characters act out the barest&#13;
thread of a story in a film that&#13;
hardly has any tempo or pace, and&#13;
not even any music. "Tron," in&#13;
fact, was very much like a video&#13;
game - it looked awfully neat, but&#13;
there wasn't much substance to&#13;
the images on the screen.&#13;
"E.T." was just as good a~&#13;
"Tron" was bad. The summers&#13;
most successful film was&#13;
basically a simple story of l~ve&#13;
between a young boy and the alien&#13;
being that he finds and cares for.&#13;
Sprung from the same genre as&#13;
films like "The Wizard of Oz" and&#13;
"The Yearling," Steven Spielberg&#13;
(the £Hm's director) has made a&#13;
film that is whimsical in its&#13;
premise, lighthearted and&#13;
exhilarating in its s~ory, and&#13;
elevating in its underlrtn~ truths.&#13;
Most of all, the film IS s.lIlcerely&#13;
touching in its executl~n and&#13;
portrayal of the friendship between&#13;
Elliott &lt;the earth boy) and&#13;
E.T. &lt;the extraterrestrial).&#13;
Also from Spielberg came&#13;
"Poltergeist." which he produc.ed.&#13;
This finely crafted horror fIlm&#13;
was directed by Tobe Hooper,&#13;
famous for giving the world "Th~&#13;
Texas Chainsaw Massa~re.&#13;
"Poltergeist" showed ~w Violent&#13;
ghosts disrupted the lIves of a&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DnAILS&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU I.OWI&#13;
COLLAGE BY TONY ROGERS&#13;
normal suburban family. One of&#13;
the admirable things about&#13;
"Poltergeist" was the use of at·&#13;
mosphere and mood, rather than&#13;
blond and gore, to seare the&#13;
audience.&#13;
"The Thing" was another well&#13;
dore horror film. Directed by&#13;
John Carpent .... it gave us a shape&#13;
changing creature from another&#13;
5935· 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414· 658-4861&#13;
4235 ·52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414·658-0120&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd .&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin&#13;
414-694·1380&#13;
8035· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 657.1340&#13;
51f.t% .... nll I YO. Dally&#13;
lalance II 5500.00 or .on.&#13;
.. arid l..-ronZlng a lonrl ret c&#13;
outpost 1lIe real r of lhe f 1m&#13;
a mal&lt; up an Reb Bollin&#13;
""ho cr alec! the \Oarlou In&#13;
carna Uons 01 the Thi~&#13;
Thi umm..- aOO ga us the&#13;
movie versaon or the hit Broadway&#13;
musical "Tllt" 8~ t I.Utl"&#13;
"h~ in T. I' tarrl~&#13;
Burt R&lt;")DOldsand Dolly Pinon.&#13;
"Whorehouse" told lhe try cl&#13;
the Chicken Rancb. .... last&#13;
bordello In T f'lled wilh&#13;
memorable ong and greal&#13;
p r o d u e t i e n n u m b e r&#13;
'WhoreIIouse' was a pleasant •&#13;
.. a) to forget our peobleml lor a&#13;
.. hile and juIt have a good Ume&#13;
Am ... l!lI .. rom... ' romedits&#13;
were "Y_II Oeden .. Left;'&#13;
and ..", .... fin T ..... AD 0.......&#13;
• 'either cl ~ f.lms .. ere a&#13;
gond as lhey could have _&#13;
"Young Doctors" tried to copy !be&#13;
success cl "Alrplanr" but inatead&#13;
delivered a tale, frequently&#13;
unfunny film "Thl.~ Are Toap&#13;
•. , " ... as the fourth film by&#13;
Cheecb and Chon~ Although&#13;
belt ... than last )ear's ", 'co&#13;
Dreams." .tstill didn I rome d ....&#13;
to .... ir first film "Up In SrnoIle "&#13;
Honors n far the .. ont film of&#13;
.... summer must be lPYen to&#13;
"Meplwft;· a totally a1up1d.&#13;
insipid _e cl celluloid What&#13;
really amara m. about&#13;
"Megaforce" IS !be fact !bat II&#13;
took four people to wnte .1. II told&#13;
of an elite group cl mercenanes&#13;
who use sophisticated .... ponry.&#13;
such as armored &lt;kine bullll1esand&#13;
fully armed motorcycl • to&#13;
preserve peace in the "orld. 1be&#13;
best performances in the film are&#13;
by the dune buggies. D,reclor Hal&#13;
• 'eedham has added Insull 10&#13;
injUry by tlreatenll~ .... public&#13;
with at least one -..eI God help&#13;
us.&#13;
Goi~ almool umot.ced 1m...&#13;
.... nond cl blockbusters was a&#13;
c__ oa Pal" \I&#13;
•&#13;
410 BrewodSlreet&#13;
Lake Genevli, Wisconsin&#13;
414·241·9141&#13;
24726· 75th Slreet· Rt.50&#13;
IPadclock Lake! Salem, Wis.&#13;
414· "3·2311&#13;
,,"U,&gt;&lt; G E&#13;
Al&#13;
•&#13;
A&#13;
WIN&#13;
YOUR&#13;
OWN&#13;
PINBAll&#13;
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CO TEST RUNS SEPT. 1.ocr.&#13;
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HOME. ALL SCORES MUST BE VERIFIED&#13;
BY REC CENTER ATTENDENT.&#13;
WH ERE: Union Rec Center. Length:&#13;
WHEN: ""on., ~p. m. -5:30p. m. Cost $2/-"""''''&#13;
BEGIN: ""on., Sept. 20 (Includes traphill&#13;
SIGN UP AT UNION REC CENTER OR CALL&#13;
FOR MORE INFO. ENTRY LIMITED TO 16"'"&#13;
....&#13;
~ . .&#13;
Tim Hildebrandt talks about fantasy&#13;
., TonY Rogers a portfolio of drawings together don't know why But I'll ha&#13;
CGP, the annual fantasy that I had done, and took them to a students come to· me from la ve&#13;
.. eonvention, was again pu~hsher. I started illustrating art schools like Pratt ln Nrge e&#13;
Plrbidethis past August. children's books - fairy tales, York and they don't ~ he&gt; '7&#13;
III be one of the largest Mother Goose, that type of thing. I draw' figures. They go into aWlif~&#13;
CGWentions10 existence, did .this for many. years until one drawing class, there's a model&#13;
..... vention was host to Christmas my WIfe game me a standing there to be drawn and&#13;
~&#13;
.,-~ frOIJ1 all oyer the the instructor says, flex press&#13;
.... had everything from yourself" Instead of learning plDes to the mythical what a' lrapezus muscle is, a&#13;
and Dragons games to pectoral, and so forth, they ... I&#13;
in cornpute~ gaming. d?,!'t know what they are lear.&#13;
IIIlfCII8ndise exhibits were on rung. Its' not anatomy. For me at&#13;
ill the Phy Ed. building, least, I need to know about&#13;
die games themselves. were anatomy. color. and design, so&#13;
... ill Main Place, Molma~o, that I can start to invent and fake&#13;
.. GfOOlI'IUisthalls. Many m- other things. Obviously, you can't&#13;
~ aDd unusual games were go find a real dragon to draw, but&#13;
~ for sale, and for hard - you do have to know animal&#13;
DID fans, the convention anatomy to invent dragon&#13;
ifill _ The highlight of the anatomy." ::eutloo' was the Tim Q: How do you go .bout doing&#13;
jijlIebraadtexhibit, with original . your paintings?&#13;
~ ., the fantasy artiat on A: "I start out by doing&#13;
~ 'I1le Hlldebr.ndt Brothers thumbnail sketches, very quick,&#13;
~bl)' best known for their TIM HILDEBRANDT little drawings to desigu a picture. :.n for the original "Star Then, if there are human figures&#13;
.... JIGIler .nd for the artwork 1975 Lord of the Rings calendar. involved in what I am going to .. iDDuai Lord of The Rings On the hack of the calendar was a paint, my wife Rita m.kes&#13;
:-'r Recently the two little notice that advertised that costumes for me, and I'll have my&#13;
......n· h.ve separated artiats were needed to illustrate friends come over and pose with&#13;
...... ny so it was Tim the calendar. So I contacted the the costumes on. I take black .nd&#13;
illd*aDdt&#13;
';'" his wife Rita Lou publisher, and got hired to the white pictures of them, and then&#13;
Il101 were at Gen Can in August. I Lord of the Rings calendar. This use that as • reference fo~ my&#13;
IIIId 18 Tim about his work. made me a 'name,' it put me on work. Then I draw 10 penCIl the&#13;
Q' _ did you lirst get in- the map, so to speak. The thing actual size the paIDtmg WIUbe, I&#13;
..... ill art specifically fan· that really made me well - known do a baSIC outline In pencIl, then&#13;
11'1' • . was the artwork for the first Star transf~r this to ~ sheet of ges~&#13;
~ "I've been drawing since I Wars poster." masomte. I pamt on masomte&#13;
• abool three years old and Hildebrandt went on to discuss because it is a very durable&#13;
: was .bout the time i was his formal training and what he surface, which I like, as opposed&#13;
Iak.. to see Walt Disney's sees in art, education today. '.'1 to canvas, which you can put your&#13;
~o'.t the movies. Later I went to a small art school back 10 fmger through. Then I hegm to&#13;
.. oat of achoal and went to art Detroit. It was a good. school, and paint, and I pamt 10 acrylics. I&#13;
IlilaaI fer .bout ~ix mQlltbs, but I taught very basic things like prefer acr'ylics - they are much&#13;
.... _ drawing all my life. I anatomy, perspective, and life' faster dryIng than OIls. It usually&#13;
tilt ...t Ia important for art. drawing. It seems as if most takes me about ~ee days to&#13;
.... Ia important, obviously, schools today have a tendency to complete a picture.&#13;
IIIjill uimportant is coming go into the abstract direction. I Q: Wh.t do you h.ve pl.nned&#13;
.......... yday .nd doing it, on&#13;
,... Oft, practicing. Practice&#13;
... perfect. So actually I was&#13;
aInJa IDIIrestedin fantasy art. I&#13;
..... IliIllCe fiction and fanta~y&#13;
111ft WIBl I was in High School I&#13;
lIIIIId III lee .U those old science&#13;
lIdila 8Ild huTor films, like&#13;
0IatIIn From the Bl.ck Lagoon&#13;
.nrarofthe Werlds,things like&#13;
"l I_ bored with drawing&#13;
IllIt ltarIII, 8Ild landscapes and&#13;
....... after I got out of school&#13;
I.... In anlm.tion for about&#13;
.. J'IrI, deaigning animated&#13;
.... 1nt!Dll backgrounds, and&#13;
......... lII!IlJon. After this I got&#13;
.... Ilalllmmaking. I moved&#13;
tI IleIr York .nd -made&#13;
..... tary films for about six&#13;
[IlII. Bat I atapped drawing.&#13;
-.a,I realized that I w.s&#13;
....... talentthat I had, so I got&#13;
Wustum announces&#13;
competition&#13;
1lIe RacIne Art Association&#13;
·-nees its 17th annual&#13;
IlIalelrtd. w.tercolor com-&#13;
~tiont Watercolor Wisconsin&#13;
... The competition and&#13;
~1Ian Will take place at the&#13;
...... A. Wustum Museum of =.... Alta in R.cine.&#13;
m.y enter up 10 two&#13;
c:re&amp;ted in .ny water .&#13;
__ media auch .s watercolor,&#13;
-'''''', lilt gouache and hand- :-e.-per. There ia.n entry fee ..::' per artist. There are over&#13;
In prizea .nd guaranteed C'"~.This year's jurors will&#13;
OIIdbl Prussian, nationally&#13;
lid ,~~ artist from Chicago&#13;
If ;;;'" Zimmerman, Director&#13;
c..r Arts, Chicago Circle&#13;
~.Unlversily of Illinois at&#13;
..~ may ship their work to • .::m between Sept. 1 and c.i.t.r it to the M.dison Art&#13;
kb)' ....~ Sept. hnd 10 or deliver&#13;
•. - to the Wuatum Sept. 16-&#13;
'ar Iurtber in( :" r.ma call ':':"~~ ~:&#13;
~. 2519 Northwestern&#13;
-.\ Raci... , WI 53404, (414)&#13;
,...71. Entry forms may also he&#13;
up duri~ museum hours.&#13;
Welcome Back&#13;
to '82 - '83&#13;
YOU'VE&#13;
GOT&#13;
STYLE&#13;
"On Tap At Union Square"&#13;
RANGER ThunUY. 5ep1embel 9. \912 9&#13;
art at Gen Con&#13;
for the fatllre'! is so ,.,. ...r ... !&#13;
A: "Right now I'm co· , "U you look at today, hicll&#13;
producing • low • budllet 111m ,.. ell'lof • bad time tlCCIDOIIllUIIy,&#13;
which is being shot in my house. It .nd you look .t the Iaat t..... we&#13;
sort of has a plot reminiscent of weot!hnlugb lIU, In the lIjrtieol,&#13;
the 1950's, the ones I grew up on. you see that ..... e of the wlldeat&#13;
My SOIl has • SID.n part in the rums ever made W~ made in&#13;
film, .nd it should corne out in Hollywood during that tim •&#13;
about three months. I'm werking Busby Berkeley, .nd cruy .luff&#13;
on a cookbook with my wife called like that. I thUlk It's aort of the&#13;
the 'Fantasy Cookbook' Its' what same Situation today. I t1a'* It&#13;
elves eat, what mermaids eat, presents .nolher world ler pecpI.&#13;
trolls, Wizards, giants, .nd so to eacape to. It's just DICe&#13;
forth. Rita has been werking 00 it eacapial Bluff, whicll we&#13;
lor .bout two yean - it has very corning back today But lhon&#13;
well . plarmed out menus and .gain, mytbl. IBUy talea. f.D·&#13;
recipes, .nd there will be.bout tasies, have been .raund for&#13;
three hundred pictures in it. bundreds .nd tbouaandI of yean.&#13;
That's due out in spring." I think its aomething that won't&#13;
Q: Why do yoal1llll1ll •• tasy .rt....._ev_er:-dl..·.r.'~'..,. __ - ,&#13;
........ ..,.T_y ......&#13;
GEN CON attracted hundreds .&#13;
GET THE BEST,&#13;
HAIRCUT OFYOUR LIFEOR&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE UNION IS LOOKING FOR&#13;
STUDENT WORKERS HAVING GOOD TECH·&#13;
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AND WEEKENDS. APPLY IN UNION OFFICE. RM.&#13;
209 MON. THRU FRI. BETWEEN8:00 A. M. &amp; .:30 P. M.&#13;
nder way&#13;
rv lor a d&lt;scnplion ol 'ho&#13;
chaDll Play bog,... on Sep&#13;
tem ber 2%rd. ",th the laal day ror&#13;
gmDllup a tesm Seplembrr 16IJl&#13;
Pia, "ill bell'" at 4 5. or 6 pm.&#13;
depOnd'DIl upon tho number 01&#13;
InS&#13;
II( lit 11\ .. lor William Tell&#13;
and lor • ou t 'On WednESday.&#13;
0ct&lt;&gt;Mr 20th tartiD/l a' t2 lID&#13;
P m In tho 10m Is our Archery&#13;
Toumam""t the "'11') form&#13;
lor tho 1)'Pfll ol divi ....&#13;
If you llunk • ou are man or&#13;
"1III\an ('IlOUgh to tall ,'and "ant&#13;
10 ha\e an inter ID/l day ,ry&#13;
Ib I Pt'R POIIT. (O!\!.&#13;
Nrrno on saturday. 0&lt;1 r&#13;
2nd rtlDll at 10 a m Ther&#13;
UI Ix' com po&gt;lIUon '" ten •&#13;
ou pick an "'" 0( \hom to..."&#13;
our title Pie the 19J1up&#13;
I for lhi \ ""I&#13;
If ou art'. (.01 t ddJct • ..,&#13;
the 011 1&lt; I!U In malcb play&#13;
participant ell! red "I'h&#13;
in the&#13;
983&#13;
r&#13;
Rang r&#13;
OV&#13;
• VA&#13;
IIICISSAI'&#13;
----&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
.... .&#13;
MO~eFr~;Y.:~~n C_ comedy named "Author.&#13;
~. Slarring Al Pacino, It&#13;
lP'" t...y of a New York&#13;
IOid ~ ~t and his family.&#13;
p111" IAut/lOr" was a very&#13;
~. and funny film. that&#13;
~ more attention than it&#13;
"'"'~ Runner" was a good&#13;
• could have been better.&#13;
I\IIU tbatHarrison Ford. the film&#13;
~ ... of a ble.k future in the&#13;
~..... tory a future where the&#13;
IlJI :: is "';vered over by brown&#13;
~ y nd poverty and squalor&#13;
..... • pent in the city streets&#13;
......... In this future world.&#13;
1It1~ ... IIY engineered human&#13;
... have been perfected&#13;
~nts. they are called) but&#13;
they possess superhuman&#13;
~ they present a threat to .......;,...1 populatIOn. This IS&#13;
~ 'Slade Runners' come in.&#13;
Blade Runners are tra med&#13;
lI,na who kill dangerous&#13;
.... cants. Ford plays Rick&#13;
~ • blade runner who falls&#13;
)ore Iwith a replicant. The&#13;
~ of course would seem to beI- Deck~rd's love for a&#13;
~.nd the duties of his job.&#13;
...,.,.. this is never explored&#13;
.., luIIY. Deckard doesn't seem&#13;
IlIl11temuch of a values break-&#13;
_when he kills replicants, and&#13;
It atiD gets to live happily ever&#13;
rlW WIth the rephcant woman&#13;
l1li1be 1oves. The film looks great,&#13;
01lbunique sets and special efIo&lt;ts&#13;
deBigned by Syd Mead and&#13;
llolIIIu Trumbull. But "Blade&#13;
_" doesn't delve too deeply&#13;
iIIIo tho human psyche, thus, we&#13;
... , leel too much as an&#13;
10 !lears ago -:-&#13;
After a nationwide search for a&#13;
replacement for Thomas P&#13;
Ros-andich, Wayne Dannehl was&#13;
chosen as athletic director by the&#13;
Athletic Board. He assumed his&#13;
new position on September 1.&#13;
Dannehl was born in the little&#13;
town of Watseka, Ill. in 1937. He&#13;
comes from a large sports minded&#13;
family and is the youngest of&#13;
twelve children. . . .&#13;
... Dannehl would like to see all&#13;
of the possible programs go into&#13;
effect here at Parkside that the&#13;
university can afford: One Course&#13;
he would like to see started here is&#13;
Techniques of Angling. While at&#13;
lllinois, he taught a very successful&#13;
angling course.&#13;
Dannehl said he is glad to be&#13;
here and that the campus is&#13;
beautiful because of the setting .&#13;
He likes to jog on campus and in&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Wednesday, September 7, 1972&#13;
audience. An entertaining film,&#13;
nonetheless.&#13;
.. A Midsummer Night's Sex&#13;
Comedy," this past summers'&#13;
offering from Woody Allen, was&#13;
another good film that might have&#13;
been better than good. Using the&#13;
early twentieth century as a&#13;
setting, with three couples&#13;
gathered at a country home as the&#13;
only characters, the film&#13;
humorously explores the boundaries&#13;
between love and lust, and&#13;
the physical, seen world, and the&#13;
TRICK SHOT&#13;
CHALLENGE&#13;
WHEN: Mon. 1 p. m. -2p. m.&#13;
WH ERE: Union Rec Cenler&#13;
COST: Free&#13;
MAKE THE TRICK SHOT OF&#13;
THE WEEK &amp; WIN PRIZES&#13;
IT'S SPECTA-CUE-LAR FUN!&#13;
metaphysical, unseen world. The&#13;
film '5 first half is clever and&#13;
quick, with verbal witticisms well&#13;
coordinated with Allen's unique&#13;
style of directing. However, the&#13;
film '5 final half crams too many&#13;
events into too short a time - the&#13;
nimble - footed pace of the plot&#13;
becomes· frantic. Thus, the final&#13;
conclusion to the love - lust&#13;
paradox is reached too quickly to&#13;
seem even remotely realistic, and&#13;
the physical - metaphysical&#13;
paradox is resolved with an absolutely&#13;
siBy ending. If you&#13;
walked in on the last five minutes&#13;
of "A Midsummer Night's Sex&#13;
Comedy," you might have thought&#13;
you were seeing a Disney Flick,&#13;
a.k.a. Bedknobs and Broomsticks.&#13;
Finally, my personal favorite of&#13;
the summer film crop is "The&#13;
World According To Garp." Based&#13;
on the popular novel by John frving,&#13;
the film stars Robin&#13;
Williams, and is the story of the&#13;
quirky life of T.S. Garp. Garps'&#13;
life is filled with bizarre occurances,&#13;
most of which center&#13;
around sex and death. For instance,&#13;
when Garp's mother,&#13;
Jenny Fields, writes a feminist&#13;
book called "The Sexual&#13;
Suspect," the book becomes a&#13;
huge bestseller. and Jenny's&#13;
house becomes a haven for the&#13;
sexually wounded, for various&#13;
RANGER Thursday, Seplember 9,1982 11&#13;
From the Files&#13;
5 !lears ago - terests ..&#13;
• •&#13;
In a convocation address last Guskm cmcluded ti state&#13;
Friday. Chancellor Alan E oftheuru\'erslty peech wtth a call&#13;
Guskin marked the end of the first to action fer Iaculry and staff&#13;
pha~e of .ad~inistralive changes "T~ University of YilSCOnsin&#13;
during his first two years as Par~lde represents a new conChancel1or,&#13;
and ouUined plans for cept~on ~ a regional university&#13;
the second phase in which that IS beu'Ig fashioned to meet the&#13;
Parkside will become a "Com- chal!enges of the late 1970's and&#13;
munity - based University." The 1980~. \\e are.1n a IXtSllJOO. to&#13;
"State of the University" address provide. the higher education&#13;
was preceded. by a luncheon for c~mmuruty 10 the United tates&#13;
faculty, selected staff members, "It~ a model 10 be follo"ed&#13;
and student leaders. lie the faculty and staff can&#13;
Community·based Universtty together. provlCle this lea~sk\lp&#13;
A "community _ based Let us. ~!?together m u.s op.&#13;
~niversity" according to Guskin. ~urut) ,&#13;
IS one "which focuses its "'ed~~. ~tember 7 19n&#13;
educational attention on mutually by Phihp L. Livu1gstm. Editor&#13;
beneficial relationships between&#13;
the university arxl the community&#13;
it serves ... such a university is&#13;
very different from the model of&#13;
the large, research based&#13;
university, which necessarily&#13;
focuses most of its attention&#13;
outside its local area while serVing&#13;
state and national in1&#13;
!lear ago -&#13;
The classified staff at Parkslde&#13;
sen"es you in offices. labs and&#13;
behind the scenes as blue collar&#13;
workers, "pink collar" workers&#13;
techniC'll employees. and safely&#13;
and sec uri ty personnel Ap.&#13;
proximately 85 percent of these&#13;
fanalical groups. and. for tran·&#13;
svestites. one of whom Garp&#13;
befriends. All this time Garp 's&#13;
struggling to raise a family and&#13;
make a living at being a 'norma)'&#13;
fiction novelist.&#13;
But Garp's life is filled with&#13;
death too - people around him&#13;
are always dying, and at one point&#13;
in the film Garp comes close to&#13;
losing his entire family in an auto&#13;
accident.&#13;
But through this Garp manages&#13;
to maintain a sunny. almost&#13;
romantic outlook on life. and&#13;
because he senses that death is&#13;
always near, he reveres life all the&#13;
more. Most importantly, we as an&#13;
audience benefit when we realize&#13;
that Garp's life. no matter how&#13;
unusual, is basically not much&#13;
dirferent from our own lives. So&#13;
why don't we revere and enjoy life&#13;
the way Garp does? A brilliant&#13;
and touching film.&#13;
Open letter .&#13;
Continued From Page Four&#13;
governance under the merger law&#13;
among the members of the UW&#13;
System community _There may be&#13;
rich possibililies for a new era&#13;
within the university community&#13;
if its members seize the moment&#13;
and they become involved in lhis&#13;
search for truth.&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
"Serving Campus and Community"&#13;
• CINEMA THEATER .COMMUTER LOCKERS • BOWLING&#13;
• INFO CENTER • DINING ROOM • BILLIARDS&#13;
• BAR &amp; GRILL • FooSBALL&#13;
• SWEET SHOPPE • VtDEO GAMES&#13;
• CATERING • TABLE TENNIS&#13;
• ROOM RESERVATIONS • OUTDOOR RENTALS&#13;
• TRAVEL PROGRAMS • HORSESHOES&#13;
• LARGE SCREEN TV • SPECIAL PROGRAMS&#13;
.. TABLE GAMES • OUTDOOR PATIO&#13;
. .'&#13;
..&#13;
.'. .-- .'.&#13;
, . .':.'.&#13;
• TV LOUNGE&#13;
• MEETING ROOMS&#13;
• TICKET SALES&#13;
• CHECK CASHING&#13;
• POSTAL DROP&#13;
• VENDING&#13;
• SPORTS EQUIPMENT&#13;
• •&#13;
classified SlAff mem tfitd ....&#13;
to )Oln are mem 0( Local 2110&#13;
of the WISCOI1SID tale Employ&#13;
l'/llon W EU ...hlch ........&#13;
.bout 25.000 employ&#13;
Chanct'ller Alan Guslun In Ilia&#13;
"cenvccatlon" __ h on september&#13;
2nd Slid "Just as the&#13;
uruversrty could llOl ex witbout&#13;
faculty. the uru, I'SIty couJd llOl&#13;
funcllon effed"e!y ...,tbout a&#13;
quality staff ..&#13;
But members of Lecal 2110 are&#13;
upset at their ~t stat ... 1&#13;
Paritslde .• nd ha\'e become Increa&#13;
Ingly \'ocal Inee tbeir&#13;
contract expired In JIlnf: Many&#13;
member feel thai the stale ts&#13;
deahng unfaIrly "lIh their&#13;
barga IJllng demands Ella&#13;
T.-go. st... llrd.nd lrUSlee of the&#13;
Execuli ..e Committee of Local&#13;
2180 pul it. these demands 're&#13;
more "a !I~ht 10 keep "hat "e&#13;
had, ratber than dem.ndong&#13;
more'"&#13;
Thursday September 10 1981&#13;
by Jeff W,cks&#13;
11lese comments aTe' my (Non&#13;
They do oot necessanly ref] t the&#13;
po'"hon of the members of the&#13;
JCRAR, Co Chalnnen, or i&#13;
slaff Fer further IIIform.tion ... a&#13;
copy of the referenced roporl&#13;
contact your Chanceller o(fi....&#13;
Student Government offiCft. or&#13;
contacl the JCRAR staff ttrough&#13;
the offIces of Stale Senater David&#13;
G Berger or State Representali ..&#13;
William J Rogers. State CaPItol,&#13;
:\ladison, Wisconsin 53702&#13;
TJ Thurow·Hankerson&#13;
CHIEf' OF STAFF&#13;
Joint Committee (or Rpvlew&#13;
of Admllustrati\ e Rules&#13;
Firebaugh gets&#13;
book released&#13;
•&#13;
"The Slatus of the Sudear&#13;
Enterprise," a new book outJini"l&#13;
current nuclear technology and&#13;
problems facing the ,ndustry. has&#13;
just been issued by Parks'de&#13;
Edited by ~lorJis W Firebaugh .•&#13;
Parkside professor of phYSICS.nd&#13;
applied computer science" Or&#13;
volume includes contrlbuhon&#13;
from five other scholars \\1th&#13;
extensive backgrounds In nuclear&#13;
technology .&#13;
In • pre!.... to the bcJok&#13;
Flreb.ugh pOlnto out thai&#13;
"phy ietS! . a represent.lI\ of&#13;
the di Iphne" Iuch ~... bIrth to&#13;
nuclear pOVt:er, ha ..e a conttnuulI&#13;
obligation to both Interpret&#13;
surrounding nuclear po\\l"r for the&#13;
general pubhc and to ensure thai&#13;
it lS used 10 a ~oclaU~ acceptable&#13;
wav A clear understanch,. lof&#13;
sxaSltlons on nuclear pcMtr&#13;
.. entlal for c\etItual resolU1Jon 01&#13;
Important d1\1.l\e I urh a&#13;
that of radu')actl\~ ... t('&#13;
mana~ment In a mant'K'f Ie&#13;
ceptable to lh(" public al lar •&#13;
The book I an outllrOVith of the&#13;
ummer mt'elm~ of the American&#13;
A."-"i.OC18110nof Ph)' ICS T eMr&#13;
ponsored by the A PT Com&#13;
mlltee on Phy ICSIn High. hool&#13;
Education&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Needs&#13;
Sports&#13;
Writers&#13;
soccer schedule ....&#13;
p&#13;
4pJll&#13;
$pm&#13;
4pm&#13;
I&#13;
India ...&#13;
112 noaa&#13;
2 pm)&#13;
Kochosler&#13;
112 noaa)&#13;
bum&#13;
12pml&#13;
K........ 4p.m&#13;
Aurora IL&#13;
(J pm )&#13;
&lt;3pm)&#13;
Aurora IL&#13;
(J P )&#13;
(S pm I&#13;
Wad_&#13;
(6 pm)&#13;
16 pm I&#13;
MacI_&#13;
6 pm I&#13;
IIpm I&#13;
AppIeccm&#13;
.....'wu otT&#13;
urrnemorv&#13;
memo board now-before you !</text>
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              <text>Fallfest kicks off today</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, September 17, 1981&#13;
Vol. 10 - No. 2&#13;
Fallfest kicks off todav&#13;
by G. Heeleegsonn fk/&gt;&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's first Fallfest, a&#13;
welcome back event designed to&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
n^&#13;
re&#13;
t&#13;
tu&#13;
,&#13;
rnin8 stents a&#13;
taste of student life on campus,&#13;
starts today at 4:30 p.m. with the&#13;
Supersport contest. Events are&#13;
scheduled through Saturday night&#13;
to appeal to a wide variety of&#13;
student tastes.&#13;
Supersport is designed to award&#13;
Parkside s most versatile game&#13;
player with the championship of&#13;
the school. Registered students&#13;
will compete in a variety of&#13;
games, including Las Vegas&#13;
solitaire, pool, bowling, video&#13;
games and basketball. The top&#13;
five finalists will return on Friday&#13;
to compete in an elimination&#13;
contest, and the winner will be&#13;
announced on Saturday night at&#13;
the Fallfest dance.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded for the&#13;
high scorer — the "Supersport" —&#13;
to the runner-up, and to each of&#13;
the five high scorers for each&#13;
event. All winners will also&#13;
receive a free admission to the&#13;
dance on Saturday. To open the&#13;
Supersport contest, there is a $1&#13;
entry fee for the contest. Tonight&#13;
will also be "Let's Get Acquainted&#13;
Night" in the Rec Center.&#13;
Tomorrow, the Union pad, and&#13;
outdoor addition to the Student&#13;
Union, will open at 11 a.m. with&#13;
Regents set 1981-82&#13;
UW-P student grants&#13;
Federal financial aid funds&#13;
for students at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
totaling $852,031 for the 1981-82&#13;
academic year were accepted&#13;
Friday, Sept. 11 by the UW&#13;
System Board of Regents.&#13;
The sum includes $388,988&#13;
for Supplemental Educational&#13;
Opportunity Grants, $324,430&#13;
for Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grants and $138,613&#13;
for the College Work-Study&#13;
Program.&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
the country rock and jazz of&#13;
Buntline Special." At the same&#13;
time, a cook - your - own food&#13;
special will allow students to grill&#13;
their own hot dogs, hamburgers&#13;
and steaks for a special price.&#13;
Between l and 2 p.m., Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin will be officially&#13;
christening the pad. Music by&#13;
'Hans and Dr. Becker" will last&#13;
until 4 p .m.&#13;
According to Dean of Student&#13;
Life Dave Pederson, "the area&#13;
will be ready. Picnic tables will be&#13;
out of storage; the horseshoe pits&#13;
will be ready; the volleyball&#13;
standards will be up." Pederson&#13;
also commented, "The patio area&#13;
will be subject to the same hours&#13;
as the Square. Weekend and&#13;
evening hours haven't been set&#13;
yet." Tomorrow, the pad will be&#13;
officially opened for the first time,&#13;
although the basketball portion of&#13;
the Supersport contest will be&#13;
played on the pad tonight.&#13;
At 4:30 p.m., the Supersport&#13;
contest will continue and at 7:30,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
present "My Bodyguard," a&#13;
Fallfest sample of their weekly&#13;
movie special for students. The&#13;
film will be repeated on Sunday at&#13;
the same time. The PAB film&#13;
series admission price for&#13;
students is $1.50 per movie.&#13;
Op Saturday, a special showing&#13;
of m orping cartoons will start the&#13;
day for children and the young - at&#13;
heart at 10 a.m. There is no&#13;
admission for the cartoons. Also&#13;
at 10 a.m., the co-ed volleyball&#13;
tournament will start. The winning&#13;
team will receive admission&#13;
to the dance Saturday night. Soda&#13;
and beer will be available&#13;
Saturday morning.&#13;
Saturday night, the Union&#13;
Square doors will open at 8 p.m.&#13;
and "Champion" will begin to&#13;
play at 9. The doors will close&#13;
again at 12:30 a.m. Sunday. Admission&#13;
to the dance is $1.50 fo r&#13;
Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
guests.&#13;
Fallfest will end Saturday night,&#13;
but according to Buddy Couvion,&#13;
Coordinator of St udent Activities,&#13;
"It is the beginning of t his year's&#13;
student activities."&#13;
A contest begins today to name&#13;
the new Union pad, and the&#13;
winning entry will receive tickets&#13;
for 2 to this year's ethnic dinner.&#13;
"Entries will be submitted to the&#13;
Chancellor," Couvion said, "and&#13;
there will be a winner, although&#13;
the University will not be held to&#13;
using the winner's idea." The&#13;
contest deadline is September 30th&#13;
at 4 p.m.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
Fallfest or other student activities,&#13;
call the Student Life&#13;
Fallfest schedule&#13;
Thursday: 4:30 p. m. Supersport contest. Through Saturday.&#13;
Friday: U a. m. Union pad opens.&#13;
"Buntline Special" Music.&#13;
"Grill - your - own". Food service special.&#13;
1 p. m. Pad christening.&#13;
2 p . m. "Hans and Dr. Beeker" Music.&#13;
4:30 p. m. Supersport finals.&#13;
7:30 p. m. "My Bodyguard" Film.&#13;
Saturday: 10 a. m. Cartoons.&#13;
Co-ed volleyball tournament.&#13;
• 9 p. m. "Champion" Music.&#13;
Until September 30th: ... ^ame the Pad" contest.&#13;
New communication faculty mark new beginning&#13;
by Susan Stevens&#13;
Four new faculty members&#13;
have joined the communication&#13;
department at Parkside this fall to&#13;
temporarily fill positions left open&#13;
during the summer. The new&#13;
people are David Habbel, JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, Debra Paschke,&#13;
and Martin Paskov. Rebecca and&#13;
Alan Rubin, Bruce Weaver, and&#13;
Diane Grattinger all left Parkside&#13;
this summer for positions&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
The turnover of personnel in this&#13;
area marks a new beginning for&#13;
Problems still exist&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The situation at Parkside's&#13;
bookstore is a familiar one: long&#13;
lines, higher prices, and some&#13;
books not arriving in time for the&#13;
opening weeks of s chool.&#13;
But don't always blame the&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
The main reasons for the&#13;
problems that have come up thus&#13;
far are faculty member errors in&#13;
ordering books and the inability of&#13;
publishers to fill the orders&#13;
quickly, if at all.&#13;
Some faculty members ordered&#13;
their textbooks late or they made&#13;
some type of mistake in ordering&#13;
them, such as inaccuracies in the&#13;
exact book title. The book may&#13;
also be out of p rint or out of sto ck&#13;
at the publishing house.&#13;
"This semester we were notified&#13;
of o ut of stocks and out of prints&#13;
from publishers much later than&#13;
we should have been," said Jan&#13;
Becker, manager of the book&#13;
store.&#13;
Parkside's bookstore is&#13;
managed by the Follett Corporation,&#13;
which operates campus&#13;
and community bookstores all&#13;
over the U.S. The bookstore&#13;
receives the majority of its used&#13;
books from Follett. According to&#13;
Becker, book orders placed&#13;
through Follett take approximately&#13;
one week while going&#13;
directly to the publishers would&#13;
take from two to four weeks.&#13;
Over 100 publishers do business&#13;
with Parkside's bookstore and&#13;
they are the ones who set' the&#13;
suggested retail prices for the&#13;
books. The increase in textbook&#13;
prices is chiefly attributable to the&#13;
increase in printing costs.&#13;
The rising costs of textbooks&#13;
have affected all students this fall,&#13;
but in varying degrees. Nursing&#13;
students face the largest total&#13;
book fee at Parkside. One nursing&#13;
student had to pay over $230 for&#13;
three nursing classes while the&#13;
"grand prize" goes to a single&#13;
nursing class in which books total&#13;
around $200.&#13;
One student complaint that&#13;
repeatedly surfaces is about&#13;
trying to resell a textbook at the&#13;
end of the semester. The&#13;
bookstore purchases books back&#13;
at 50 percent of the price for which&#13;
it was last sold, whether it was&#13;
new or old. If the book is to be used&#13;
the next semester, it is then sold&#13;
for 75 percent of t hat same price.&#13;
If the book will not be used the&#13;
following semester, the bookstore&#13;
refers to the Blue Book to see what&#13;
to pay the student.&#13;
One of the new features at&#13;
Parkside this fall is the Campus&#13;
Book Exchange, located on the&#13;
the communication program here.&#13;
While the fact that four people left&#13;
at once presents hardships for the&#13;
discipline and many of its&#13;
students, it gives the program the&#13;
transitional period needed for&#13;
changes.&#13;
The business world today is&#13;
constantly changing, and the&#13;
communication program here will&#13;
change with it. According to&#13;
communication professor Lee&#13;
Thayer, "In the 80's and 90's we'll&#13;
see an explosion of o pportunities&#13;
in the communication and information&#13;
fields, and we want to&#13;
be sure we have our students&#13;
ready to meet the challenge."&#13;
"While the journalism (particularly&#13;
the broadcasting) industry&#13;
has about three to four&#13;
hundred jobs open each year and&#13;
three to four thousand students,!&#13;
other applications of communication&#13;
will need many more&#13;
people each year, and the demand&#13;
will keep increasing instead of&#13;
decreasing," Thayer added.&#13;
The program here will take on a&#13;
new direction in order to acLevel&#13;
1 Concourse in WLLC. After&#13;
a student brings in a used book,&#13;
the Book Exchange sells the book&#13;
for 65 percent of the book's&#13;
original list price, even if the book&#13;
was initially bought used. The&#13;
Book Exchange keeps 6.5 percent&#13;
of th e original price for operating&#13;
expenses and the student who&#13;
previously owned the book&#13;
receives 59.5 percent of the&#13;
original price.&#13;
The only notable change at the&#13;
bookstore this fall is in its trade&#13;
department, which includes&#13;
everything that isn't textbooks or&#13;
supplies. There are now more&#13;
books in the trade department,&#13;
such as reference, educational aid&#13;
and children's books. The&#13;
bookstore also sells plants, has a&#13;
new line of backpacks and will&#13;
have a record sale once&#13;
semester. New merchandise&#13;
the sportswear department&#13;
eludes women's shorts and shirts.&#13;
comodate this demand. The new&#13;
faculty members will help in this&#13;
redirection effort. "We're&#13;
strengthening the academic and&#13;
intellectual side of the program&#13;
and extending the professional&#13;
qualities of the discipline. There&#13;
are unique aspects emerging as&#13;
we redo the personnel roster,"&#13;
Thayer said.&#13;
"We were very fortunate to get&#13;
these first class people in the&#13;
amount of time we had. These&#13;
people were chosen through a&#13;
general search and screen&#13;
process. They were all hired for&#13;
temporary positions in order for&#13;
more time to be given to the hiring&#13;
procedures to fill the vacancies&#13;
permanently." Thayer stresses&#13;
that, although the four were taken&#13;
on temporarily, they are all first&#13;
rate candidates for permanent&#13;
positions. Applications will be&#13;
accepted at the end of this&#13;
academic year to fill the communication&#13;
roster permanently.&#13;
The following is the result of a n&#13;
interview with David Habbel.&#13;
Watch next week's Ranger for&#13;
interviews with other new communication&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
David Habbel received a&#13;
Bachelor of Science degree in&#13;
Interdisciplinary Communication&#13;
from the State University College&#13;
of Brockport, New York. He&#13;
earned a Master of Arts degree in&#13;
Communication Theory and is&#13;
presently working on his doctoral&#13;
dissertation for Suny State&#13;
University at Buffalo, New York.&#13;
Habbel decided to enter the field&#13;
of communication because he&#13;
feels that we can improve our&#13;
abilities to communicate. "There&#13;
seems to be a low level of communication&#13;
ability in our society&#13;
today," he said. "People don't&#13;
communicate as well as they&#13;
could, and I'd like to help create&#13;
some understanding of communication&#13;
theory and its&#13;
relevance in our world."&#13;
"I hope to help students&#13;
organize their knowledge of&#13;
communication rather than give&#13;
them bits of information to deal&#13;
with," Habbel added.&#13;
Habbel chose Parkside as a&#13;
place to teach for several reasons.&#13;
'The size of the university is good,&#13;
there is an emphasis on teaching&#13;
rather than on research (not that&#13;
research isn't important), the&#13;
program is flexible and&#13;
developing, and the population erf&#13;
older students is interesting," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Habbel and his wife, JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, have been married&#13;
for 10 years and attended&#13;
graduate school together. He likes&#13;
the Racine area. "It reminds me&#13;
of the Finger Lakes area of New&#13;
York state," he said.&#13;
When asked if he would like to&#13;
stay here, he responded "Yes, I&#13;
like it here, and that's very&#13;
probable."&#13;
Parkside students may also&#13;
enjoy the new ideas brought to the&#13;
communication discipline by&#13;
Habbel and his counterparts.&#13;
Watch next week's Ranger for&#13;
more information about JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, Debra Paschke,&#13;
and Martin Paskov.&#13;
a&#13;
in&#13;
inINSIDE...&#13;
&#13;
• More editorials; no letters yet&#13;
• Review: "Atlantic City"&#13;
• Coach Lawson resigns&#13;
• Volleyball: Women slaughtered &#13;
Editorials&#13;
areas (where minors could&#13;
have un - I.D. - checked access&#13;
to alcoholic beverages) and&#13;
because of Heritage's contract&#13;
with the University (students&#13;
may not consume any alcohol&#13;
but theirs).&#13;
There is another way to look&#13;
at this "white elephant." At&#13;
least Physical Plant, who built&#13;
the fence, care about students&#13;
in a way that Parkside administrators&#13;
don't. Administrators&#13;
want students to&#13;
drive home after they drink;&#13;
Physical Plant wants students&#13;
to be able to roll under, climb&#13;
over and knock down the&#13;
fencing so that they can sleep&#13;
it off on the grounds and make&#13;
it to classes in the morning.&#13;
Thank you, Physical Plant,&#13;
for caring about students&#13;
more than you do about&#13;
students' money.&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
stajf. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
A white elephant?&#13;
After expenditures, totaling&#13;
approximately $17,000 —&#13;
much of it contributed by&#13;
students segregated fee&#13;
monies — Parkside is ready to&#13;
christen the new Union pad.&#13;
The pad is supposed to be an&#13;
area for students to relax and&#13;
enjoy the outdoors while&#13;
consuming beer and wine&#13;
supplied (of course) by our&#13;
own Heritage Food Service. It&#13;
is also supposed to provide&#13;
grounds outside the Union for&#13;
students to enjoy outdoor&#13;
games.&#13;
But at this date, it is difficult&#13;
to see many students actually&#13;
enjoying the pad. After all,&#13;
what did they get for their&#13;
contribution? So far, a fence&#13;
that falls down and isn't worth&#13;
much when its standing up.&#13;
By the way, the fence is&#13;
there because of a state law&#13;
that prohibits drinking in open&#13;
Empty space!&#13;
Although no one dares to mention it, the space inhabited until&#13;
last June by the Chiwaukee Prairie Co-op is still up for grabs&#13;
The vacant area is in the Child Care Center building next to&#13;
Parkside Village.&#13;
After noticing that some faculty and staff are tripling up in&#13;
offices, that student groups are being asked to give up office&#13;
space to other concerns and that there is never even a place to&#13;
eat lunch in the Coffee Shoppe, it seems odd that Jim Kreuser,&#13;
President of PSGA and the person in charge of re - allocating the&#13;
vacant space, has not been contacted by any individual or group&#13;
on campus with a request to use the space.&#13;
Why? There seems to be some sentimental voluntary hold for&#13;
bids on it. For one thing, no one wants to mention the Co-op for&#13;
any reason (the battle between them and Parkside's administration&#13;
was bitter). For another, no one wants to be seen&#13;
moving into the space, or profiting off of the Co-op's problems.&#13;
At any rate, there is a stigma of association that everyone would&#13;
like to avoid.&#13;
However, this is a very practical time and it calls for very&#13;
practical moves. For example, Central Receiving is now surviving&#13;
very nicely-way over in Tallent Hall. Somehow, it must&#13;
be practical.&#13;
It would only be reasonable to be as practical about the old Coop&#13;
space. Space is valuable and it is not economical or conducive&#13;
to a good atmosphere on campus to squeeze in some places and&#13;
leave other space vacant.&#13;
We are not suggesting that faculty, staff or even students take&#13;
up residence, since the building is so far from other resources&#13;
that all three groups need easy access to.&#13;
We are "ot even suggesting a specific use for it - at this time.&#13;
What we do suggest is that some brave soul who doesn't mind the&#13;
hike dare to petition for the space.&#13;
HEAVENS FOR&#13;
rea&#13;
gan; rr's about&#13;
T.&#13;
15Ji=&#13;
s&#13;
^?&#13;
NE freed us&#13;
JWES FROM UNDER THE.&#13;
.THUMB OF THE HAVE-NOTS1&#13;
.&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
The bookstore, hives &amp; ads&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Since today is the first day of&#13;
Fallfest, the cool weather this&#13;
week seems to make sense&#13;
somehow. You would think the&#13;
Student Life office could have&#13;
arranged for a few more dried&#13;
leaves to make an appearance on&#13;
the pad, though. Oh, well. You&#13;
can't have everything the way you&#13;
want it to go.&#13;
Another page one story this&#13;
week, by News Editor Ken Meyer,&#13;
makes it clear that not even the&#13;
bookstore can have everything&#13;
run smoothly. There are major&#13;
problems with the bookstore at&#13;
Parkside, as just about every&#13;
student knows, and it seems we&#13;
need some ideas for change. Two&#13;
ways you can present your ideas&#13;
to other students (along with&#13;
faculty and staff) are by writing a&#13;
letter to the Ranger or by&#13;
presenting an editorial idea to me&#13;
Either way, you'll get farther than&#13;
you do when you give up, go to the&#13;
Union and gripe to your friends.&#13;
Of course, friends can help you&#13;
over the bumps of everyday&#13;
frustrations, but if you want&#13;
something done about a campus&#13;
problem, your best bet is to let&#13;
people know you want to see&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Parkside Village Nears Completion"&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion ... at last. All&#13;
students who have already signed&#13;
leases to live in the the new&#13;
student apartment complex will&#13;
be in... by the end of September.&#13;
As of now, Global Business and&#13;
Residential Centers, Inc., owner&#13;
of the complex, is providing free&#13;
housing for more than 24 students&#13;
at the Holiday Inn, and for 10&#13;
students at partially completed&#13;
units at the site. In addition, many&#13;
students are continuing to commute&#13;
until their places are ready.&#13;
The Village, which will contain&#13;
66 units for single students and 22&#13;
for married students and faculty,&#13;
was supposed to be ready for&#13;
occupancy by September 1st.&#13;
However, the project has been&#13;
plagued from its outset by&#13;
numerous setbacks.&#13;
(A land purchase agreement)&#13;
was not reached with the owner&#13;
until May. By that time several&#13;
small contractors had decided not&#13;
to undertake the project... in the&#13;
first week of June, the crews sent&#13;
in were not large enough to make&#13;
the rapid progress needed. A final&#13;
touch was a recent carpenters'&#13;
From the Files&#13;
strike in the area which stopped&#13;
construction completely for a full&#13;
week.&#13;
— from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Newscope, vol. 5, no. 2&#13;
September 13, 1971&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"UW-P employees accept state&#13;
offer" by Christopher Clause&#13;
Last June, 40 Parkside employees,&#13;
all members of the&#13;
American Federation of State,&#13;
County and Municipal Employees&#13;
(AFSCME), began negotiations in&#13;
an attempt to obtain their first&#13;
contract with the state.&#13;
At stake has been employee&#13;
wages, which union spokeswoman&#13;
Mary Lou France said have not&#13;
kept pace with those of private&#13;
industry.&#13;
The union had been holding out&#13;
for a 9percent (.34 hr.) raise. The&#13;
state had offered 6 percent (.25&#13;
hr.). (The state) told the union&#13;
members there were plenty of&#13;
unemployed people who would be&#13;
glad to have their jobs.&#13;
According to France, the state&#13;
also refused to take the matter to&#13;
a fact - finding committee or bring&#13;
in an independent mediator . . .&#13;
Union members were left with two&#13;
choices; to strike or to accept the&#13;
state's offer.&#13;
. . . members voted to accept&#13;
the state's offer of 6 percent.&#13;
— from the Ranger, vol. 5, no. 2&#13;
Wednesday, September 15, 1976&#13;
1 year ago —&#13;
"Enrollment causes parking&#13;
problems" by Patty DeLouisa&#13;
Parkside students have found&#13;
campus parking limited during&#13;
the first week of school. Many&#13;
students have complained about&#13;
the lack of parking places.&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Campus Security, said that the&#13;
probably cause of the parking&#13;
problem was this year's increased&#13;
enrollment . . . According to&#13;
Brinkman, 160 additional mini-car&#13;
spaces have been added to the&#13;
Union parking lot. This brings the&#13;
total to 2,650 spaces on campus.&#13;
Brinkman optimistically&#13;
commented, "Watching the lots, I&#13;
was encouraged by the mini - car&#13;
parking."&#13;
There are 1,433 white permit&#13;
spaces. Using a 1.55 oversell&#13;
factor, 1.967 white student permits&#13;
were sold . . . One thousand two&#13;
hundred twenty - five green&#13;
permits were sold for the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking lot area which&#13;
contains 428 actual spaces.&#13;
— from the Ranger, vol. 9, no. 2&#13;
Thursday, September 11, 1980&#13;
change. There's no better way to&#13;
do that than to let the Ranger&#13;
know. We may not be able to do&#13;
anything about unruly children or&#13;
hives. And we are not ever going&#13;
to run an advice to the lovelorn&#13;
column. But if you want to see&#13;
changes in campus organizations&#13;
or rules or facilities, you'll&#13;
probably reach the right person&#13;
through the Ranger.&#13;
In case you've forgotten,&#13;
Ranger letters must be 1) concise,&#13;
2) typed neatly, 3) signed, and 4)&#13;
somewhat factual. Don't call&#13;
anyone a bad name in the Ranger.&#13;
Along with the new editoriai&#13;
policy printed on this page, please&#13;
take a look at the cartoon below.&#13;
You'll be seeing this artist's work&#13;
weekly this year in the Ranger.&#13;
Last week, it seemed like there&#13;
were an awful lot of press releases&#13;
in the Ranger about new faculty&#13;
members (for a university facing&#13;
hiring freezes). This week, Sue&#13;
Stevens has begun a 2-part story&#13;
on the new faculty in communication.&#13;
Next week, along&#13;
with the conclusion of her interviews,&#13;
look for Pat Hensiak's&#13;
story on Parkside graduates&#13;
teaching here. Did you ever&#13;
suspect that you would never&#13;
graduate, or worse, that you'd end&#13;
up spending as much time here&#13;
after graduation as before?&#13;
In the midst of all this hiring,&#13;
one faculty member and coach&#13;
left Parkside this week. For the&#13;
details, read Sports Editor Karen&#13;
Norwood's story on page 6. And&#13;
fill out your Pro Picks forms!&#13;
Even if you've never won the&#13;
Illinois State lottery, you can&#13;
probably pick up some beer from&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
This week, Feature Editor Tony&#13;
Rogers' movie review is on&#13;
"Atlantic City." Next week, you&#13;
will get a peek at a movie not yet&#13;
released — "Continental Divide."&#13;
Carol Burns, who recently joined&#13;
the staff, got the review from a&#13;
preview in Milwaukee.&#13;
A couple of stories got left out of&#13;
the paper this week — mostly&#13;
because of space considerations.&#13;
We need ad reps to help us pay for&#13;
the paper. Even if you don't want&#13;
to sell ads, wouldn't you have&#13;
liked to read Jim Kreuser's&#13;
"Strollin' Boner" awards? He's&#13;
trying to be another Proxmire,&#13;
with a local twist. Or, wouldn't&#13;
you like to know what the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association does at their&#13;
meetings? Maybe that one doesn't&#13;
sound too interesting, but they do&#13;
control quite a bit of your&#13;
segregated fee money. So if we&#13;
can sell a few more ads and reach&#13;
a few more writers, you'll be&#13;
reading about these and other&#13;
things soon.&#13;
Enough of that mercenary rot.&#13;
Enjoy Fallfest: I hope I'm there&#13;
when Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
christens the pad and knocks&#13;
down the wobbly fencing.&#13;
Use Ranger Contact Sheets!&#13;
Wewant to hear from you!&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
VVkks&#13;
61*' J&#13;
'&#13;
m Mer,ins&#13;
' Charles&#13;
uw"'&#13;
rRs&#13;
"&#13;
,e ana&#13;
- —»&#13;
W r m e n ^ e r&#13;
5 b y the U n i o n&#13;
' c o S S S l S ' P u b l i s h 6 * " , ^ d U r i "&#13;
9 breaks a n d h o l i d a y s, An Permission is required for renr£?Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
All correspondence should be" sddre^HP&#13;
°&#13;
rUon of RANGER '&#13;
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SSTSr'sC'i:&#13;
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&amp;2£Z£r&gt; - ' ' S i K &#13;
Social Science&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
Roundtable offered&#13;
"Island in tv^/v o % Island in the Shade- tk„&#13;
Politics of Barbados," a talk h&#13;
Parkside English Prof ai y&#13;
Shucard, who spent the las'!&#13;
academic year as a FiikJ S&#13;
Fellow at the U^versitv&#13;
West Indies in Barbados nl S&#13;
the Social Science r*\ T^&#13;
d&#13;
s e r i e s a t U W - P t h i s f a l l ?&#13;
Monday. '&#13;
as&#13;
t&#13;
Roundtable sessions, free anri&#13;
£5 D°m ??&#13;
Wic&#13;
-&#13;
a™ held at&#13;
12..15 p.m. in Union Room 106&#13;
Bmiffpfw10nS schedul&#13;
ed are: Budget Wars - Part TTwf&#13;
E NPirK Strikes Back&#13;
" by fep Jeff Neubauer (D-RadJ) „&#13;
P&#13;
n&#13;
"Worker Education: An Invtstbte&#13;
Dimension of DmVers ty&#13;
Director ^^Univerafty^Ex&#13;
temim &amp;hooi for Workers, on&#13;
,5 ,&#13;
Th&#13;
.&#13;
e Social Sciences in the High&#13;
Schools: Current Status and New&#13;
SKSr; by Donald Thompson,&#13;
Director of Social Studies for the&#13;
Oct&#13;
C15&#13;
C ied Sch(X)1 District, on&#13;
"Predicting the Academic&#13;
°&#13;
f Black Students in&#13;
Higher Education" by Marvin&#13;
nrn7 p&#13;
arkside sociology&#13;
professor and co-author of an&#13;
nf kiL L°n f'&#13;
cademic Performance&#13;
ol blacks at a predominately white&#13;
university which appeared in the&#13;
Winter 1980 issue of "College and&#13;
University";&#13;
And, "The Perils of Academic&#13;
Publishing" by Thomas Reeves,&#13;
Parkside history professor and&#13;
author of "The Life and Times of&#13;
Joe McCarthy," to be published&#13;
by Stein and Day in November.&#13;
Reeves also is the author of&#13;
several other books including&#13;
"Gentleman Boss: The Life of&#13;
Chester A. Arthur," a major study&#13;
of the nation's 21st president.&#13;
Bible study&#13;
offered Fridays&#13;
There will be a Bible Study in&#13;
Communication Arts 132 from&#13;
11:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. every&#13;
Friday this semester for UWParkside&#13;
faculty, staff, classified&#13;
employees, and non - traditional,&#13;
adult students.&#13;
June Pomatto, a Kenosha artist&#13;
and long - time Bible student, is&#13;
leading the study which is on the&#13;
Book of Acts. Everyone is invited&#13;
to bring a lunch and join us&#13;
regularly or as one's schedule&#13;
permits. The study is sponsored&#13;
by Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship.&#13;
If you have any questions call&#13;
June Pomatto at 552-8650 or&#13;
Barbara Larson (faculty adviser&#13;
of I. V. C. F.) at 553-2122.&#13;
UW-P leads energy savings&#13;
UP-Parkside showed the&#13;
greatest energy savings of any&#13;
state facility in 1979-80, according&#13;
to the State Department of Administration's&#13;
annual report.&#13;
Energy use at UW-Paricside&#13;
dropped 21.7 percent from 1978-79,&#13;
which was best among the 30&#13;
facilities listed. Parkside's energy&#13;
use since the base year of the&#13;
report, 1972-73, is down 32 percent.&#13;
Overall, state facilities dropped&#13;
10.1 percent in energy use last&#13;
year, and 19.8 since 1972-73. The&#13;
top seven energy savers were&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
campuses. UW-Eau Claire was&#13;
next best, down 18.8 percent. All&#13;
but three of the state facilities —&#13;
the Ethan Allen and Fox Lake&#13;
correctional institutions and the&#13;
Waupon prison complex — showed&#13;
improvement over the previous&#13;
year.&#13;
The 13 UW four - year campuses&#13;
showed savings of 11.7 percentthe&#13;
12 Department of Human and&#13;
Social Services facilities saved 3.7&#13;
percent; two Department of&#13;
Administration facilities saved 5.7&#13;
percent; two Department of&#13;
Public Instruction facilities saved&#13;
11 percent; and the veteran's&#13;
home at King saved 2 percent.&#13;
Parkside Physical Plant&#13;
Director Jack Dudley cited&#13;
"mechanical improvements and&#13;
ingenuity" by the staff of Robert&#13;
McGrath, assistant director for&#13;
utilities, as accounting for at least&#13;
one - third of the savings.&#13;
RALPH'S CORNER&#13;
NEW HOURS&#13;
Monday thru Thursday&#13;
3pm til closing&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday&#13;
12 noon til closing&#13;
TAP BEER&#13;
PITCHER $2.75&#13;
-RALPH'S PACKER BACKERSSunday&#13;
Afternoon Packer Games&#13;
FREE FOOD - Hot Beef - Potato Salad - Chips&#13;
$2.00 PITCHERS&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
3-5 pm&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
-HAPPY HOUR&#13;
HIGHBALLS 60&lt;&#13;
TAP BEERS25C&#13;
Tap Beer ALL YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
7-11 PM $3.00&#13;
-TUESDAY&#13;
Pitcher Night $2.00 PITCHER&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
Ladies Night 1/2 PRICE ALL DRINKS&#13;
50C CAN OR BOTTLE DOMESTIC BEER&#13;
Kame - Kaze Madness $5.00 PITCHER&#13;
— THURSDAY&#13;
HEINEKEN, BECKS $1.00 BOTTLE&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
$2.00 Cover At Door&#13;
1 5C TAP BEER8-11 pm&#13;
2 Pool labia* - Vldaa «aow*&#13;
2232 ROOSEVELT RD. KENOSHA *54-1601&#13;
NEWS&#13;
BRIEFS&#13;
Tenure granted to 6 profs.&#13;
Computer logic&#13;
to be offered&#13;
A course in computer logic for&#13;
junior high school students will be&#13;
offered at Parkside on Saturdays&#13;
Sept. 26 through Nov. 21, from 9:30&#13;
to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
The course, using BASIC&#13;
computer language, will include&#13;
computer arithmetic, logic&#13;
flowcharting, use of the computer&#13;
terminal, gaming and problem&#13;
solving and individual projects.&#13;
Registration information is&#13;
available from the University&#13;
Extension Office (553-2312) in&#13;
Tallent Hall. Fee for the course is&#13;
$45.&#13;
Harvest Festival&#13;
to be held&#13;
River Bend Nature Center is&#13;
holding its annual Harvest&#13;
Festival from 1-5 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Sept. 20 at the Nature Center, 3600&#13;
Green Bay Road, Racine.&#13;
Activities include hayrides,&#13;
cider making, canoe rides,&#13;
pumpkin painting, quilt making,&#13;
beekeeping, wigwam making and&#13;
the blue grass band "Just&#13;
Pickins" will perform.&#13;
Admission is $2 for adults, $1 for&#13;
children or $5 for a family.&#13;
For further information call&#13;
River Bend Nature Center, 639-&#13;
0930.&#13;
Tenure was granted to six&#13;
Parkside professors over the&#13;
summer by the UW System Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
Promoted from assistant&#13;
professor to associate professor&#13;
with tenure are Bruce R. Branching&#13;
chemistry; Leo P.&#13;
Comerford, mathematics; David&#13;
V. Holmes, art; James J. Polczynski,&#13;
business and administrative&#13;
science; and Donald&#13;
A. Walker, psychology. Dileep G.&#13;
Dhavale, business and administrative&#13;
science, was granted&#13;
tenure at his current rank of&#13;
associate professor.&#13;
Associate professor of life&#13;
science Robert E. Esser and&#13;
professor of German Harry A.&#13;
Walbruck were granted emeritus&#13;
status.&#13;
Esser, who retired at the end of&#13;
the spring semester 1981, began&#13;
teaching at Parkside when the&#13;
campus was extablished.&#13;
Walbruck retired in the spring of&#13;
1980 and is a consultant and editor&#13;
for publishers of German&#13;
language textbooks.&#13;
"Buy union products&#13;
and services&#13;
as you would have&#13;
union wages&#13;
paid unto you."&#13;
UNION L ABEL-COLDEN RULE"&#13;
ucnj i&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
REC&#13;
CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY&#13;
TOURNEYS/SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 21 - SEPT. 26&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING&#13;
$3.00 NITE&#13;
MOON LITE BOWLING&#13;
MON.9am - 12 pm&#13;
TUE. 12pm -6pm&#13;
FRI. 3 pm -6 pm&#13;
THUR. 7 pm -10 pm&#13;
FRI. 10 pm -1 am&#13;
SAT. 8 pm -1 am&#13;
« - — V I D E O G A M E T O U R N E Y&#13;
WED. 1 pm - 2 pm&#13;
* FOOSBALLTOURNEY&#13;
FRI. 1 pm - 2pm&#13;
Sign up for Tournaments at Rec Center Desk&#13;
Earn your&#13;
degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
and your&#13;
commission&#13;
at Marquette&#13;
Army ROTC is a leadership&#13;
development program on college&#13;
campuses throughout the country. It&#13;
prepares students for responsible&#13;
positions as officers in the active&#13;
Army and Reserves.&#13;
Even though Army ROTC is not a&#13;
department on your campus, you can&#13;
take the courses through M. U. at&#13;
UWP.&#13;
You'll get the same management&#13;
training and experience that students&#13;
at M. U. get. You'll get the same&#13;
opportunities for scholarships and&#13;
the same financial benefits during&#13;
your junior and senior years ($100&#13;
per month, up to 20 months).&#13;
So while you earn your chosen&#13;
degree at your college, you can earn&#13;
your officer's commission through&#13;
ours.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rebirth and renewal in "Atlantic City"&#13;
by bv Tnnv Tony RoRncrpr gers c .•» «« «»,. . •&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Renewal and rebirth: two&#13;
recurring themes in many of&#13;
todays' films. In "Atlantic City,"&#13;
the latest offering from director&#13;
Louis Malle, renewal is found in&#13;
the re-building of Atlantic City,&#13;
and rebirth takes place in the&#13;
spirit of Burt Lancaster as "Lou."&#13;
Like the city itself, Lou is aging&#13;
and decaying in the supposed&#13;
glory of his past. Once a&#13;
messenger for the local underworld,&#13;
Lou now makes his&#13;
living by serving as a kind of&#13;
bodyguard / servant to Grace&#13;
(Kate Reid), a one-time beauty&#13;
contestant who lives her life in a&#13;
pink - pillowed bed. Grace, like&#13;
Lou, is a "has-been" who has&#13;
retreated from life.&#13;
Enter Sally. The picture of the&#13;
drive and ambition of youth, Sally&#13;
entertains dreams of someday&#13;
becoming a blackjack dealer in&#13;
Monte Carlo. Sally, played by&#13;
Susan Sarandon (remember Janet&#13;
from "The Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show?") encounters problems&#13;
when her estranged husband and&#13;
pregnant sister arrive at her&#13;
doorstep to live. Sally's husband&#13;
Dave is a cocaine dealer; to make&#13;
contacts to sell coke within the&#13;
city, Dave enlists Lou's aid. But&#13;
the mob soon catches up to Dave,&#13;
and he is killed after stashing the&#13;
drugs at Lou's apartment. Lou&#13;
sells the rest of t he coke and uses&#13;
the money to pay for Dave's&#13;
funeral and to wine and dine Sally.&#13;
Lou is deeply infatuated with&#13;
Sally, and uses his new - found&#13;
wealth to present a facade of&#13;
upper - class elegance to impress&#13;
her. Eventually a love relationOPEN&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
65*&#13;
per GAME&#13;
'Aha," says Strollin' Bowlin', "Automatic: Bowling lanes.'&#13;
AS HE CONTINUES HIS INVESTIGATION HE FINDS&#13;
THAT OPEN BOWLING IS ONLY 65C PER GAME IN THE&#13;
REC CENTER. WHY NOT FIND OUT WHAT STROLLIN'&#13;
BOWLIN' HAS ALREADY LEARNED; HOW MUCH FUN&#13;
OPEN BOWLING IS IN THE REC CENTER.&#13;
ship develops between them, and&#13;
Lou's rebirth is almost complete.&#13;
At the conclusion of "Atlantic&#13;
City" Lou and Sally both seem to&#13;
find their niche in the world. Lou&#13;
goes back to Atlantic City to spend&#13;
his life with Grace, and Sally&#13;
heads towards Monte Carlo. The&#13;
films' conclusion may be a bit&#13;
optimistic when compared with&#13;
the overall outlook of the film, but&#13;
I sensed that there could have&#13;
been no other proper ending for&#13;
the film. Lou belongs with "his"&#13;
city, the city that fit his personality&#13;
like an dd worn coat.&#13;
Sally belongs in the world of her&#13;
hopes and dreams, in the glamor&#13;
and splendor of Monte Carlo. In&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
this sense, "Atlantic City" is&#13;
somewhat prophetic from the&#13;
first.&#13;
"Atlantic City" is an adult&#13;
drama — a respite from&#13;
teenybopper thrills - and - chills&#13;
flicks. Malle's direction is&#13;
definetely low-key, and at times&#13;
the storyline could be "tighter"&#13;
and more evenly paced. But the&#13;
excellence of the film as a whole&#13;
overshadows these flaws. The&#13;
film's cinematography, while not&#13;
visually exciting, is graphically&#13;
realistic in its' portrayal of&#13;
Atlantic City — decaying&#13;
buildings and garbage fill the&#13;
screen. The film is mature&#13;
technically, made somewhat in&#13;
the classic tradition of o lder film&#13;
dramas.&#13;
Unfortunately, however, this&#13;
type of film almost always garners&#13;
a low box-office turnout.&#13;
Other films, like "Eye of The&#13;
Needle," have been met with the&#13;
same type of unenthusiastic&#13;
reception from movie - going&#13;
audiences. This is a disturbing&#13;
trend in the movies: lunatic&#13;
killers slashing innocent people to&#13;
death seems to be more popular in&#13;
films than do serious human&#13;
dramas. It is sure that movie&#13;
companies will see little reason to&#13;
make mature dramas in the&#13;
future when they bomb at the boxoffice.&#13;
Consequently, we should all&#13;
prepare ourselves for a barrage of&#13;
thriller - slasher - bloody - gore&#13;
flicks. In the meantime, be sure to&#13;
see "Atlantic City" soon, as it is&#13;
on a limited engagement in&#13;
Racine only.&#13;
Youthgrants offers&#13;
research programs&#13;
The Youthgrants Program of&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities is alive and well and&#13;
will once again offer a limited&#13;
number of awards to young people&#13;
in their teens and twenties to&#13;
pursue non - credit out - of - the -&#13;
classroom research projects in&#13;
the humanities. The deadline for&#13;
receipt of completed application&#13;
forms is November 16, and funded&#13;
projects begin next.May.&#13;
Some examples of college - level&#13;
projects funded in this highly&#13;
competitive program are: an&#13;
annotated exhibition of 20th&#13;
century war - time "home - front"&#13;
activities in Minnesota and&#13;
Wisconsin; a complete historical&#13;
survey, presentation, and&#13;
guidebook on a tradition - steeped&#13;
small Florida coastal island; a&#13;
collection and study of migrant&#13;
worker border ballads in South&#13;
Texas; and a film on a small&#13;
Oregon town's innovative survival&#13;
method — backyard goldmining&#13;
during the Great Depression.&#13;
Up to 75 grants will be awarded,&#13;
offering as much as $2,500 for&#13;
individuals, and a few group&#13;
grants up to $10,000 ($15,000 for&#13;
exceptional media projects).&#13;
Youthgrants are intended&#13;
primarily for those between 18&#13;
and 25 who have not yet completed&#13;
academic or professional training&#13;
but can demonstrate the ability to&#13;
design and perform outstanding&#13;
humanities research and translate&#13;
that into an end product to&#13;
share with others. The humanities&#13;
include such subjects as history,&#13;
comparative religion, ethnic&#13;
studies, folklore, anthropology,&#13;
linguistics, the history of a rt, and&#13;
philosophy. The program does not&#13;
offer scholarships, tuition aid, or&#13;
support for degree - related work,&#13;
internships, or foreign travel&#13;
projects.&#13;
If you are interested in the&#13;
program, write to:&#13;
Youthgrants Guidelines&#13;
Mail Stop 103-C&#13;
National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20506&#13;
This Friday&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
FALLFEST SPECIAL&#13;
GRILL YOUR OWN&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
UNION SQUARE PATIO 11:00 am - 2:00 pm&#13;
'/, Lb. Burgers, % Lb. Brats, % Lb. Jumba Dog,&#13;
with Potato Salad &amp; Pi ckle&#13;
$1.50&#13;
(Additional Sandwich M.00 Extra)&#13;
RIB E YE STEAK '2.50&#13;
LIVE ENT ERTAINMENT BY: MINE UNE SPECIAL &#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
^•°!!!!&#13;
lLbrin9s&#13;
'&#13;
a&#13;
S Club meetings announced&#13;
Center will open its fall season on&#13;
The Prairie Performing Arts&#13;
Center will open its fall season on&#13;
Friday, September 18 with a&#13;
concert featuring Milwaukean&#13;
Don Nedobeck's Water Street&#13;
Tavern Band.&#13;
The six-man combo is well -&#13;
known throughout the midwest for&#13;
its free - wheeling Dixieland style.&#13;
Nedobeck himself plays jazz&#13;
clarinet and trumpet. For two&#13;
years he played with the legendary&#13;
Clyde McCoy's Band.&#13;
Tickets for the concert are $5.00&#13;
and are available at the three&#13;
•&#13;
Heritage Banks in Racine and at&#13;
the Schmitt Music Co., 1409&#13;
Washington Ave.&#13;
Artist O Keefe film to bo shown&#13;
The film "Georgia O'Keeffe: A&#13;
Celebration" will be shown during&#13;
the 1-2 p.m. activity period on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23 in Moln 105.&#13;
The 60-minute color film,&#13;
produced in 1977, presents the&#13;
artist discussing her life and her&#13;
work. She tells of h er marriage to&#13;
IMMM&#13;
photographer Alfred Stieglitz and&#13;
recounts their involvement in the&#13;
formative years of the modern art&#13;
™en&#13;
i!&#13;
nt in America. It includes&#13;
O Keeffe's paintings, showing&#13;
their wide range in subject and&#13;
style.&#13;
The event is being sponsored by&#13;
the Library / Learning Center.&#13;
Pre-Med&#13;
Itching to listen to a good&#13;
speaker? Dr. Zaezeung Kim, a&#13;
Raane allergist, will speak to&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Med Club about&#13;
his busy practice on Thursday,&#13;
September 17, in the Library Staff&#13;
Lounge, D-l level at 7:30 p.m. The&#13;
meeting is free of charge and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
History&#13;
The Parkside History Club will&#13;
meet Monday, Sept. 21 from 1-2&#13;
p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Election of club officers will&#13;
take place, along with discussion&#13;
of the club's SOC budget and&#13;
setting the agenda for fall, and&#13;
some spring, activities.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Budget cuts aimed at&#13;
Veterans Administration&#13;
By ending or reducing four&#13;
Veterans Administration (VA)&#13;
programs that failed to achieve&#13;
their original objectives, VA&#13;
estimates that $110 million will be&#13;
saved toward carrying out the&#13;
pledge of Congress and the&#13;
President that important veterans&#13;
benefits will not be curtailed.&#13;
Congressional legislation signed&#13;
into law by the President in&#13;
August ended most subsidized&#13;
flight training, reduced payments&#13;
for correspondence training, put&#13;
severe restrictions on education&#13;
loans to veterans receiving&#13;
education payment and changed&#13;
dental and burial benefits for&#13;
some veterans.&#13;
The programs and savings&#13;
involved are:&#13;
• Flight Training. Effective&#13;
Oct. 1, VA payments for flight&#13;
training will end for all those not&#13;
participating in the program on&#13;
August 31. Those who enroll in&#13;
flight training in September will&#13;
be paid only for flight training&#13;
performed before Oct. 1. In July,&#13;
5,840 veterans were receiving&#13;
benefits for flight training.&#13;
Elimination of the program will&#13;
save $14.1 m illion in fiscal year&#13;
1982, VA said.&#13;
Rationale for ending the&#13;
program was based on General&#13;
Accounting Office and VA studies&#13;
which showed that most trainees&#13;
in GI Bill funded flight training&#13;
programs used the skill only for&#13;
avocational purposes. Only 16 per&#13;
cent of the graduates had full -&#13;
time jobs related to the training,&#13;
according to the GAO report.&#13;
• Correspondence Training.&#13;
Based on a number of studies that&#13;
show an extremely high dropout&#13;
rate among trainees enrolled in&#13;
correspondence training&#13;
programs and a high incidence of&#13;
fraud and abuse, the law now&#13;
requires that veterans who train&#13;
in correspondence programs&#13;
share a larger part of the cost. The&#13;
amount reimbursable by VA for&#13;
such programs will be reduced on&#13;
Oct. 1 to 55 per cent of the cost of&#13;
training. VA now pays 70 per cent&#13;
of the cost. Estimated savings in&#13;
fiscal year 1982 will be $3.2&#13;
million. Enrollment at the end of&#13;
July in such programs totaled&#13;
25,615.&#13;
• Education Loans. Ending for&#13;
most veterans on Oct. 1 is a&#13;
&lt;?,\&#13;
addition to their GI Bill payments,&#13;
low interest loans from VA. A&#13;
savings of approximately $6&#13;
million is expected from sharply&#13;
curtailing this program in fiscal&#13;
year 1982 and avoiding the losses&#13;
from the high default rate in the&#13;
loan program.&#13;
• Dental Care. The period of&#13;
time under Which former servicemen&#13;
could get free dental care&#13;
for up to a year after leaving&#13;
military service has been reduced&#13;
to 90 days. This reduction will&#13;
save an estimated $17.7 million.&#13;
• Burial Benefits. A burial&#13;
allowance of $300, previously&#13;
available to all war veterans, will&#13;
be limited to veterans eligible for&#13;
VA pension or compensation and&#13;
to those who die in VA medical&#13;
facilities. The estimated savings&#13;
is $75.2 million.&#13;
VA officials said that&#13;
regulations governing the administration&#13;
of these changes are&#13;
now being written and will be&#13;
forwarded shortly to VA regional&#13;
offices in each state.&#13;
For the first time in Parkside's&#13;
history, "Big 8" accounting firms&#13;
will be recruiting here this year.&#13;
To help students prepare for these&#13;
interviews, Accounting Club is&#13;
sponsoring a 2-part workshop on&#13;
"Interviewing Strategy." The&#13;
first part, conducted by the "Big&#13;
8" firm Peat, Marwick, Mitchell&#13;
and Co., will give business majors&#13;
an opportunity to develop interviewing&#13;
skills and strategies.&#13;
The workshop will feature a&#13;
simulated interview. • T he&#13;
workshop* will take place on&#13;
September 17 at 7 p.m. in rooms&#13;
104 and 106 in the Union.&#13;
A second workshop on September&#13;
30th will feature several&#13;
mock interviews between students&#13;
and representatives of four "Big&#13;
8" firms.&#13;
vi Women in Business&#13;
The new Women in Business&#13;
Club will be holding their first&#13;
meeting on Friday, September 18,&#13;
at 2:30 p.m. in Union 207. The&#13;
purpose of the Women in Business&#13;
Club is to promote participation in&#13;
social, community and school&#13;
activities as well as provide&#13;
educational experiences for&#13;
women entering all fields of&#13;
employment.&#13;
The meeting agenda is as&#13;
CAN YOU&#13;
HANDLE?&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
COMING TO&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
follows:&#13;
— Elect new officers.&#13;
— Set up new committees.&#13;
— Complete plans for tentative&#13;
events such as: seminars to attend,&#13;
guest speakers, membership&#13;
in Phi Gamma Nu, fund raisers&#13;
and community involvement.&#13;
— Wine and cheese will be&#13;
served.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Like to bowl? Travel? Meet new&#13;
people? Why not try out for the&#13;
1981-82 Parkside Intercollegiate&#13;
Bowling Team! A 24 game&#13;
qualifier is being held to determine&#13;
the 8 men and 8 women that&#13;
will make up the Intercollegiate&#13;
teams.&#13;
The Parkside Bowling team&#13;
currently participates in the&#13;
Wisconsin Big 6 bowling conference&#13;
which includes five other&#13;
UW schools: Milwaukee Madison,&#13;
Oshkosh, Whitewater and Platteville.&#13;
In addition the team annually&#13;
competes in a number of&#13;
local, area and national tournaments&#13;
with the highlights being&#13;
the Collegiate Team Match game&#13;
in St. Louis and the Walt Peabody&#13;
Classic in Las Vegas.&#13;
If you are interested in trying&#13;
out for this year's team, contact&#13;
Mike Menzhuber in the Rec.&#13;
Center. Qualifiers will end Sept.&#13;
27, so if you are interested in&#13;
bowling this year, stop down now&#13;
in the Rec. Center and sign up for&#13;
your Qualifying times.&#13;
Sunnysirte Club&#13;
7517 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Store Hours: Daily 8 A. M. to 2 P. M.&#13;
HOME OF THE INFLATION FIGHTERS&#13;
3 NEW WAYS TO STRETCH YOUR DOLLAR!&#13;
2 FOR 1 SPECIALS!!&#13;
Buy 1 get 2nd FREE!&#13;
Different Special Eveiy Hour!&#13;
Food and Drinks&#13;
All Day Long Every Day&#13;
Come See Our 2 For 1 Board&#13;
Bp AT THE QPiTKM&#13;
Discounts On All Drinks&#13;
At Different Hours&#13;
Between 1-2 p. m. &amp; 6-7 p. m.&#13;
OH* JSJC* SPECIALS&#13;
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MON. thru&#13;
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ALL YOU CAN&#13;
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COME FILL YOURSELF U P&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Spaghetti&#13;
w/Meat Balls&#13;
All Served with Soup or Salad, Bread and Butter&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Lasagne&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Fish &amp; Fries&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Stuffed&#13;
Shells&#13;
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ART SUPPLIES&#13;
10% off&#13;
(With Parkside I.D.)&#13;
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9 p. m. Union Square&#13;
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A contemporary entertainment event &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Lawson resigns&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
As the grass begins to turn&#13;
green this March a familiar face&#13;
will be missing from the Parkside&#13;
track and field scene.&#13;
Bob Lawson, who is the only&#13;
original Parkside coach&#13;
remaining since the university&#13;
was erected in 1969, officially&#13;
bowed out as. associate professor&#13;
of physical education and men's&#13;
head track coach on Tuesday.&#13;
Lawson will be heading east to&#13;
the United States Naval Academy&#13;
in Annapolis, Maryland where he&#13;
will be associate professor of&#13;
physical education and assistant&#13;
track coach.&#13;
The reason for his departure is&#13;
simple. "Professional betterment.&#13;
Plus the track program and&#13;
development are ideal," Lawson&#13;
said.&#13;
Lawson, who was a world class&#13;
decathalete in the late 1950's, will&#13;
be joining newly elected coach A1&#13;
Cantello, a long time friend and&#13;
former world record holder in the&#13;
javelin at the Naval Academy.&#13;
During his 12 years of c oaching&#13;
at Parkside, Lawson has&#13;
demonstrated why he is thought of&#13;
as one of the best coaches of track&#13;
and field in America. He has&#13;
coached 20 athletes to 26 na tional&#13;
titles within the past decade. His&#13;
record is unsurpassed by other&#13;
Wisconsin collegiate track and&#13;
field coaches.&#13;
Lawson also led Ranger teams&#13;
into the top 10 finishes at the NAIA&#13;
national track meet for seven&#13;
consecutive years between 1973-&#13;
1979. In addition, he coached cross&#13;
country for three years with&#13;
sensational results. In 1971 he le d&#13;
the men's team to seventh place in&#13;
the national meet. Correspondingly,&#13;
after a nine year layoff, he&#13;
guided the women's cross country&#13;
team to a national title last year.&#13;
Yet Lawson still has reluctance&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
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CLOSED SUNDAYS A HOUDAVS&#13;
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NEXT&#13;
WEEK'S&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
FEATURE&#13;
F&#13;
A&#13;
E&#13;
Athletic budget cut&#13;
BOB LAWSON&#13;
towards his days at Parkside.&#13;
"The biggest disappointment&#13;
while being here was that we&#13;
didn't have the numbers of&#13;
athletes to work with. But the&#13;
talent we produced was good," he&#13;
said, adding "Most of our personnel&#13;
came from right here in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
Although Lawso n's&#13;
achievements shine through as&#13;
being a great coach of runners,&#13;
jumpers and throwers, he is also&#13;
the American pioneer coach of&#13;
race walkers. His talents have&#13;
helped develop numerous&#13;
collegiate as well as national&#13;
champions.&#13;
"I had never intended to coach&#13;
walkers until an athlete of mine,&#13;
Mike DeWitt, came and asked me&#13;
to put him in exhibitions as a race&#13;
walker in the 1971 season,"&#13;
Lawson said. "I agreed, and since&#13;
the sport was new to me I began to&#13;
investigate and learn more about&#13;
the event." Since then, he has&#13;
become known as the guru of the&#13;
American walking scene and is&#13;
now responsible for the training of&#13;
Olympic Development Program&#13;
for Race Walking.&#13;
Career Center to&#13;
hold workshop&#13;
Wednesday, September 23 from&#13;
1:00 to 1:50 p.m. a mini - workshop&#13;
will be given on how to use&#13;
Parkside's Career Resource&#13;
Center for occupational related&#13;
research. The session will take&#13;
place in Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center, D-174.&#13;
No advanced registration is&#13;
necessary. For more information&#13;
contact Wendi Schneider, Community&#13;
Student Service (553-24%)&#13;
or Barbara Larson, Student&#13;
Development (553-2122).&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Never say die! This seems to be&#13;
the motto of the Athletic Department&#13;
after $77,000 wa s cut out of&#13;
their budget to meet state - ordered&#13;
reductions. The Athletic&#13;
Department not only will lose&#13;
equipment and supplies money,&#13;
but also 2.5 presently occupied&#13;
positions.&#13;
Parkside's men's and women's&#13;
swimming teams will be cut, and&#13;
the coaching position presently&#13;
held by Barb Lawson will be&#13;
eliminated during the 1982-83&#13;
school year. Also cut is the faculty&#13;
position held by Rudy Collum.&#13;
Men's and women's track teams&#13;
will be combined under one coach&#13;
in the 1982-83 school year.&#13;
Presently the two track coach&#13;
positions are held by Barb and&#13;
Bob Lawson; however, according&#13;
to some sources, Bob Lawson has&#13;
accepted the position of A ssistant&#13;
Track Coach at the Naval&#13;
Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, Parkside's&#13;
Athletic Director, commenting on&#13;
the athletic budget cuts, said that&#13;
the University has gone through a&#13;
reordering of priorities and that&#13;
the athletic program "came out a&#13;
little short." Although Dannehl&#13;
didn't necessarily agree with the&#13;
budget cuts, he felt that it was the&#13;
athletic department's turn to be&#13;
trimmed.&#13;
Dannehl also said that the&#13;
coaches whose positions were&#13;
eliminated would not be placed in&#13;
other positions. He went on to say&#13;
that they would not be rehired&#13;
until the budget cuts were&#13;
restored, and he is "not optimistic&#13;
that the money will be returned."&#13;
Linda Henderson, women's&#13;
volleyball coach, was "very&#13;
disappointed" with the athletic&#13;
budget cuts, but she believes that&#13;
"We (the athletic department)&#13;
will survive and be strong."&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
Stoffle, when asked to comment&#13;
on the budget cuts, remarked,&#13;
"Dannehl and the coaches have&#13;
done a good job, but athletics&#13;
could not go untouched." Obviously,&#13;
they could not cut the&#13;
academic budget and leave the&#13;
athletic budget untouched.."&#13;
Stoffle felt that "Parkside has&#13;
had an excellent athletic&#13;
program." Parkside athletics will&#13;
have to get through this period as&#13;
best it can.".&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by your picks and&#13;
bring the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC D139.&#13;
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Buffalo at Cincinnati&#13;
Houston at N.Y. Jets&#13;
Kansas at Seattle —7-&#13;
Miami at Baltimore&#13;
Minnesota vs. Green Bay at Milw.&#13;
New England at Pittsburgh&#13;
New Orleans at San Francisco —&#13;
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Oakland at Detroit&#13;
St. Louis at Tampa Bay&#13;
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Washington at Philadelphia&#13;
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will be the total combined points scored in&#13;
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S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
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2. Entrants must be Parkside students.&#13;
4 5n?Sf&#13;
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preceedin^ ttTgamS™"'° "* Ranger&#13;
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fflCe by noon of the Friday&#13;
6. Winners will be chosen by the Sports Editor.&#13;
7. Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8. Entries must be legible to be considered.&#13;
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ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
ORANGE SLICES&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
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CHECK WEEKLY SPECIALS 40% OFF REGULAR PRICES! &#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women get slaughtered&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team got off to an up&#13;
and down start this past week with&#13;
wins over UW-Whitewater and&#13;
UW-Madison and two losses to&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers started the season&#13;
last Wednesday with a poorly&#13;
played victory over Whitewater in&#13;
an away game. "We played really&#13;
poorly, but they played worse,"&#13;
commented coach Linda Henderson,&#13;
adding, "They&#13;
(Whitewater) have a new coach&#13;
and they're not really organized.&#13;
They never were a volleyball&#13;
power."&#13;
Last Friday the Rangers&#13;
travelled to Madison for games&#13;
against Wisconsin and UWGolf&#13;
opener&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside turned the&#13;
tide in their first match with the&#13;
Madison team. After losing the&#13;
first game 12-15 Parkside came&#13;
back taking the next three games,&#13;
15-7, 15-12 an d 15-10.&#13;
"The kids played extremely&#13;
well, and Madison had difficulty,"&#13;
said Henderson. Sherry Festge,&#13;
Lauri Pope, Callie Lee and Laurie&#13;
Hess were all outstanding in this&#13;
match.&#13;
The Rangers then lost to&#13;
Milwaukee in three straight&#13;
games, 9-15, 1-15, and 12-15. "We'&#13;
started out awfully slow. They're&#13;
old and intelligent," said Henderson.&#13;
&#13;
The bad luck and bad play&#13;
carried into Monday's match at&#13;
Mi'waukee, which the Rangers&#13;
again lost in three games, 13-15, 9-&#13;
15 and 5-15. "Every time you dress&#13;
them in black (Parkside's away&#13;
uniforms) they play like they're in&#13;
a morgue," said Henderson.&#13;
The Rangers will take their 2-2&#13;
record into this weekend's Ranger&#13;
Invitational. Ten teams will take&#13;
part with games starting on&#13;
Friday at 3 p.m. and Saturday at&#13;
8:30 a.m. The championship game&#13;
will be Saturday afternoon at 5&#13;
p.m. Teams competing with&#13;
Parkside in the tournament will&#13;
be Loras College, Carthage&#13;
College, Northern Illinois&#13;
University, Chicago Circle,&#13;
College of St. Francis, UW--&#13;
LaCrosse, Chicago State, St.&#13;
Xavier and Valparaiso.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
THE WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL TEAM in action Tuesday night.&#13;
Rangers place 10th sP&#13;
orts Calendar&#13;
• Thursday, Sept. 17-Tennis vs. Marquette, (3 p.m.)&#13;
by Earlene Frederick&#13;
Parkside's golf team began its&#13;
season last Friday by competing&#13;
in the Stevens Point Open at the&#13;
Stevens Point Country Club. The&#13;
Rangers finished tenth out of&#13;
fourteen teams with a score of 419.&#13;
UW-Madison won the tournament&#13;
with a score of 387. Tied for&#13;
medalist in the 18 hole event were&#13;
Scott Turnbull of LaCrosse and&#13;
Rob Peters of Madison with one&#13;
over par 73.&#13;
Scoring for the Rangers was led&#13;
by fourth year player Todd&#13;
Schalinske with 79. Todd was last&#13;
years' most valuable player.&#13;
Mark Peterson, third year&#13;
player, scored 80. Second year&#13;
players Bob Sobol, Gary Fox and&#13;
John Schneider scored 82, 88, a nd&#13;
90 re spectively.&#13;
"I'm hoping we'll be pretty good&#13;
this year," said Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens. "They are all very&#13;
capable."&#13;
Sunday and Monday the team&#13;
competed in a tournament in Eau&#13;
Clair at the Eau Clair Country&#13;
Club. The Rangers finished&#13;
eleventh out of sixteen teams with&#13;
a score of 810. UW-Whitewater&#13;
won the tournament with a score&#13;
of 756.&#13;
"The team will progressively&#13;
get better," said Bob Sobol. "It&#13;
has a lot of potential."&#13;
Todd Schalinske was the&#13;
tournament medalist with a first&#13;
-19 _ day score of 69, two under par, and&#13;
Sign up for intramurals now ^T44&#13;
onddayscoreof75 foratoM&#13;
"I feel I did pretty good,&#13;
especially since it's a big tournament,"&#13;
said Todd. "Off the tee&#13;
made the difference because it's a&#13;
tight course." |&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 17 — Tennis vs. Marquette, (3 p.m.)&#13;
Fr?.&#13;
d&#13;
f,&#13;
y&#13;
' lf* "" Golf vs&#13;
- UW-Oshkosh Invitational, Appleton;&#13;
Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational, (3 p.m.)&#13;
Saturday^ Sept. 19 — Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational, (8:30 a m )•&#13;
Marquette, Mitchell Park, Milwaukee; Tennis vs'.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Tournament, (8 a.m.)&#13;
SUpm^' SCPt 20 ~~ S&#13;
°&#13;
CCer VS&#13;
' West Michigan, Kalamazoo, Mich. (2&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 22 - Tennis vs. Carthage College (3 p.m.); Soccer vs&#13;
Aurora 111. College (3:30 p.m.); Golf v s. Marquette &amp; UW-Milwaukee&#13;
at rumblebrook C.C.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 24—Tennis vs. DePaul University (2:30 p.m.)&#13;
Parkside's Intramural&#13;
Department is offering several&#13;
events this fall. The purpose of&#13;
intramural sports is to provide&#13;
students with an opportunity to&#13;
participate, learn lifelong sports&#13;
skills and achieve physical fitness.&#13;
The scheduled events are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
FLAG FOOTBALL (COED) —&#13;
Sign up is through Sept. 16. Flag&#13;
Football League is from Sept. 21 -&#13;
Nov. 6. S ign up sheets are in the&#13;
PE Building on the wall opposite&#13;
the trophy showpase. There will&#13;
be nine players to a side.&#13;
4th annual CROP&#13;
Walk to be held&#13;
The fourth annual CROP Walk&#13;
for Hunger will be held Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 4.&#13;
The walk will begin at the First&#13;
United Methodist Church parking&#13;
lot, at the corner of 60th St. and&#13;
Sheridan Road in Kenosha.&#13;
Registration will begin at 12:30&#13;
p.m. and the walk starts at 1 p.m.&#13;
Ten miles later, the route will end&#13;
at the same parking lot.&#13;
Last year 25% or about $2,400&#13;
was returned to Kenosha for the&#13;
Kenosha Ecumenical Hunger&#13;
Committee to use to supplement&#13;
their emergency food program in&#13;
the country.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Pat Elmer at 658-8966.&#13;
GOLF (MEN'S AND&#13;
WOMEN'S) — Peoria Golf will be&#13;
played at Petrifying Springs at the&#13;
players' convenience and expense.&#13;
All players must play with&#13;
partners to verify scores.&#13;
TENNIS (MEN'S AND&#13;
WOMEN'S) — September and&#13;
October, singles only. Round&#13;
robin; two out of three sets. No&#13;
add scoring, tie breaker at 6-6.&#13;
Sign up sheets are in the PE&#13;
Building.&#13;
SOFTBALL ONE DAY&#13;
TOURNAMENT (COED) — O ct.&#13;
17. A team consists of 11 players.&#13;
Sign up sheets are in the PE&#13;
Building.&#13;
RACQUETBALL — A tournament&#13;
will be played after opponents&#13;
contact each other and&#13;
arrange for their court time.&#13;
Tournament arrangements will be&#13;
determined according to the&#13;
number of entries received. Both&#13;
singles, male and female, and&#13;
mixed female and male doubles&#13;
will be offered.&#13;
TABLE TENNIS — The table&#13;
tennis table is in the upstairs&#13;
lobby in front of the FencingRoom.&#13;
Opponents are to sign up&#13;
for their matches and pick up&#13;
their rule sheets in the Issue Room&#13;
to avoid conflicts. The type of&#13;
tournament is dependent upon the&#13;
number of entries. Paddles may&#13;
be checked out, but you must&#13;
provide your own table tennis&#13;
balls.&#13;
Bob Sobol finished with 163&#13;
Gary Fox, 163, Mark Peterson, 165&#13;
and John Schneider, 175.&#13;
"The attitude of the team is&#13;
very good," said Coach Stephens.&#13;
"They really know their game&#13;
they like golf, and it makes it fun&#13;
for the team and the coach."&#13;
The team's next tournament is&#13;
Friday in Appleton at the Chaska&#13;
Golf Course. The event is hosted&#13;
by Oshkosh.&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
IS C OMING&#13;
U NI ON S QUARE&#13;
i&#13;
s&#13;
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SPEC]&#13;
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Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
SAVE 50* when you buy a regular size&#13;
HOT BEEF BOMBER&#13;
Meaty mounds of sliced hot beef, piled inside of a fresh trench roll. Try a hot&#13;
beef topped with two slices of melting mozzarella, swiss, or your favorite&#13;
cheese. Expires 9/30/81&#13;
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Hungry Head Sandwich Shops&#13;
Two heads ARE better than one!&#13;
HEAD WEST 3812 Roosevelt Road 694-1212&#13;
HEAD EAST 506 - 56th Street 652-1212&#13;
•&#13;
(next to the Lake Theatres)&#13;
WE RE OPEN WHEN YOU RE HUNGRY&#13;
Sun-Thur: 10:30am til 2 30am&#13;
Fri-Sat: 10:30am til 3am&#13;
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Wednesday, Sept. 23&#13;
12 noon-2 p.m.&#13;
Union 104-106&#13;
NO ADMISSION&#13;
CHARGE&#13;
Wine will be sold&#13;
"YASOU" PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
Thursday&#13;
IS GREEK&#13;
GYROS&#13;
DAY&#13;
Spiced Greek meet slices in&#13;
folded pita bread, topped wifti&#13;
sliced onions, tomatoes and&#13;
a creamy dressing.&#13;
51 ~ &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers win at home&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
In their second effort away from&#13;
home, the Parkside soccer team&#13;
dropped a 3-2 overtime decision to&#13;
Northern Illinois University&#13;
(NIU) on September 9th. As in the&#13;
Madison (Camp Randall) game of&#13;
September 5th, the team played&#13;
on artificial turf. Their lack of&#13;
experience on turf was a major&#13;
factor in the loss at DeKalb as well&#13;
as at Camp Randall. On natural&#13;
"home" turf, Parkside overturned&#13;
Beloit 9-0 on Saturday.&#13;
The score at half-time (1-1) was&#13;
the result of only three shots taken&#13;
at NIU's goal. NIU had taken&#13;
thirteen shots at our goal by halftime.&#13;
&#13;
In the second half, Parkside&#13;
took sixteen shots at their goal,&#13;
while NIU took three. At the end of&#13;
the game, Parkside outshot NIU&#13;
19-16. Jeff Dennehy had the "hotfoot"&#13;
that knocked in both goals.&#13;
Game's end score was 2-2.&#13;
In the ten minute overtime,&#13;
Parkside had plenty of opportunities&#13;
to score, but only one&#13;
shot hit the goal. Three others&#13;
were deflected with six minutes to&#13;
go.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Jeff Dennehy had the "hot-foot"&#13;
again on Saturday when Parkside&#13;
played Beloit at home on natural&#13;
turf. He scored four goals, and set&#13;
a new school record. Dennehy&#13;
scored a record six goals in two&#13;
games, breaking the old record of&#13;
five. Dennehy's spectacular&#13;
performance aided in Parkside's&#13;
9-0 slaughter over Beloit. Also&#13;
scoring for Parkside were John&#13;
Onyiego (with one goal and two&#13;
assists), Rich Blay, Don Cops,&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, and Dan Theisen.&#13;
Carlos Duchicela and Bob&#13;
Newstrom had three and four&#13;
assists respectively.&#13;
Within the first 4 1 /2 minutes,&#13;
Parkside had three chances to&#13;
score. Roger Menk added some&#13;
excitement by kicking two shots&#13;
over the goal. Later Menk injured&#13;
his ankle attempting to steal the&#13;
ball.&#13;
Dennehy started the rally off by&#13;
scoring at the 12:45 mark. Theisen&#13;
then scored at the 21:10 mark&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23&#13;
SEMINAR "Child Abuse" at 8:30 a.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Union 104-106 featuring Mike and Barbara Smith&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "Georgia O'Keefe: A Celebration" will be shown at 1 p.m. in MOLN 105.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and staff.&#13;
SEMINAR "Sexual Assault" at 3 p.m. in Union 207. Panel participants are: Barb&#13;
Wooden of St. Catherine's Hospital, Kathy Geniesse of the Sexual Assault&#13;
Treatment Center; Robert Zapf, the District Attorney of Kenosha County, Paula&#13;
Michaelson of the Kenosha Police Department and Linda Marcussen of the&#13;
Kenoshans Against Sexual Assault, Inc. Admission is free for Parkside students,&#13;
staff and faculty. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED babysitter needed.&#13;
Daytime hours to fit your schedule, occasional&#13;
or routine. Own transportation&#13;
desirable, wind Point, Racine. Call 639-&#13;
0996.&#13;
RIDE TO UW-P by 7 a.m. Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday. Call 637-3705.&#13;
COLLEGE REP WANTED to distribute&#13;
"Student Rate" subscription cards at this&#13;
campus. Good income, no selling Involved.&#13;
For Information and application write to&#13;
Campus Service/Time Inc., 4337 W. Indian&#13;
School "C", Phoenix, Ar. 85031.&#13;
STUDENT PHOTOGRAPHER at UWParkside&#13;
needs female nude models, ages&#13;
20 and up of more or less average proportions,&#13;
for independent study proiect exploring&#13;
deeper aspects of beauty (working&#13;
title: "Archetypes" - advisor: Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick). Most photographs will not show&#13;
model's face. Photographs chosen may be&#13;
exhibited at Parkside, published In portfolio;&#13;
signed releases required. Sessions&#13;
chaperoned If r equested. Write: D.R., P.O.&#13;
Box 5112, Racine, wis. 53405. Include full&#13;
length photo (returnable, need not be&#13;
nude), brief description.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
HANDBOOK • Psychology 101, three books&#13;
for English .101. 654-0595.&#13;
DORMATORY SIZE REFRIGERATOR, 4.4&#13;
cu. feet, coppertone Coldspot. 19" high, 19"&#13;
deep, 21" wide. 652-0324 after 9 p.m.&#13;
USED BOOKS AT Martha Merrell's "old&#13;
book corner." 3096 off all books If y ou bring&#13;
this ad with you. Hardcover books at&#13;
r^r.&#13;
b&#13;
."&#13;
CL&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
lces&#13;
-&#13;
312 Six,h st ' Racine,&#13;
-&#13;
B00K EXCHANGE is a better&#13;
deal! Open M-W-F, 1 - 2 p.m. See ad this&#13;
Issue.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
TYPING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOST - Two black Samsonlte briefcases in&#13;
Comm Arts parking lot. Contents: government&#13;
forms and grad school textbooks.&#13;
R^ard. Contact Mr. Oberbruner, phone&#13;
553-2269.&#13;
SKI THE&#13;
AUSTRIAN&#13;
ALPS&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Transportation to&#13;
and from Innsbruck&#13;
• 8 Nights Hotel&#13;
• 15 Meals &amp; More&#13;
$ 200 deposit due 10/15/81&#13;
Jan. 2-11, 1982 Just*821&#13;
Contact Glenn Loschenkohl&#13;
554-6224&#13;
from twenty feet out. The next&#13;
score on a kick by Rich Blay at&#13;
23:36 into the half. Dennehy then&#13;
added his second goal at 26:48,&#13;
and 3 minutes later John Onyiego&#13;
added to the score. At this point,&#13;
the crowd came alive and&#13;
cheered. With 1:44 left to go in the&#13;
half, Ralph DeGraff boosted&#13;
Parkside's score higher with a&#13;
goal that deflected off of the&#13;
goalies' hand. The half-time score&#13;
was 6-0.&#13;
Within the first five minutes erf&#13;
the second half, Parkside had two&#13;
goals invalidated due to penalties.&#13;
Fifteen minutes later, Don Cops&#13;
scored, bringing the crowd&#13;
scattered throughout the stands&#13;
back to life. Dennehy then struck&#13;
again with 24:39 and 18:14&#13;
remaining on the clock. The final&#13;
score stood at 9-0.&#13;
The first time Beloit shot at our&#13;
goal was 23:24 into the game.&#13;
Beloit put up a good fight in the&#13;
second half, despite the number of&#13;
injured players.&#13;
Coach Henderson said: "Injuries&#13;
can happen. It is just unfortunate&#13;
that it had to happen&#13;
now. Any team can have an&#13;
abundance of injuries at any one&#13;
time."&#13;
At half-time, Beloit had taken&#13;
two shots at our goal, compared to&#13;
twenty-seven shots at theirs. The&#13;
total at the end of the game was&#13;
44-5. Parkside had four goalie&#13;
saves, and Beloit had 18. The&#13;
Rangers had twenty-two personal&#13;
fouls to Beloit's 11, plus one yellow&#13;
card.&#13;
* • *&#13;
Parkside will be on the road for&#13;
the next four games. Their next&#13;
home game, the UW Chancellor's&#13;
Cup Tournament, is Oct. 2-3. The&#13;
game will be held behind the Phy&#13;
Ed Building.&#13;
photo by Jim Mertins&#13;
THE SOCCER TEAM has better luck on their home turf.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726&#13;
-&#13;
75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5V4% Interest Iff Your Dally&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 er Mere!&#13;
WE'RE HIRE TO HHP YOU GRO¥ </text>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69814">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 2, September 17, 1981</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69815">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69816">
                <text>1981-09-17</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69819">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69820">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69821">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69822">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69823">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69824">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69825">
                <text>Text</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69826">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69827">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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