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              <text>UWP Students in Charge of $2.4 Million</text>
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              <text>N RNarefwgse r University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Student Newspaper&#13;
News Pg. 3-6&#13;
Feature Pg. 7&#13;
Sports Pg. 8-11&#13;
Entertainment Pg. 12-14&#13;
From the Donkey's Mouth Pg. 16&#13;
Classifieds Pg. 18&#13;
Police Beat Pg. 18&#13;
September 25, 2004&#13;
UWP Students in Charge of $2.4 Million&#13;
You have a right to know&#13;
what's happening with your&#13;
money.&#13;
—Dave Koss, PSGA Vice&#13;
President.&#13;
BY EMILY RASBORNIK&#13;
Did you know the UW system&#13;
gives more power to students than&#13;
any other school system nationwide?&#13;
According to Dave Koss, Student&#13;
Body Vice President, "In 1973,&#13;
Wisconsin developed state statute&#13;
36.095, which gives students the&#13;
power to allocate our own money...our&#13;
segregated fees. There is a lot more&#13;
power in the state of Wisconsin than&#13;
there is anywhere else. For example&#13;
the chancellor from a state school in&#13;
South Carolina will give $60,000 to&#13;
allocate to all student organizations.&#13;
At UW-Parkside, our committee,&#13;
SUFAC, (Student University Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee) is given&#13;
roughly 2.4 million to divvy up.''&#13;
"SUFAC is a committee of&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA). It's not a&#13;
separate entity. It's a part of UWParkside's&#13;
student government. The&#13;
student government senators decided&#13;
where that money goes. And that's&#13;
how it is at every UW. It's our most&#13;
important committee because it&#13;
decides how best student organizations&#13;
will be able to operate with the money&#13;
they get. Allocating to our athletics and&#13;
student support services is a big deal&#13;
because it decides how the university&#13;
will be constructed."&#13;
The members of the fall committee&#13;
were nominated on Friday, September&#13;
17. The qualification for obtaining a&#13;
seat on this important committee is by&#13;
being a student body senator. All the&#13;
elected members have also had past&#13;
evolvement in other organizations.&#13;
There are four members who have&#13;
been on the board in previous years.&#13;
You must to be nominated by other&#13;
senators and then voted in. None of&#13;
these members have to take a budget&#13;
class or be finance/accounting majors.&#13;
Dave Koss said "Advisors Steve&#13;
McLaughlin and Carol Kinsley help&#13;
with decisions made. And having four&#13;
members who have been on the board&#13;
in previous years also helps.&#13;
Don't think it's easy join. This&#13;
year there was a three-way tie. Chris&#13;
Landgrebe and Yang Yang pulled&#13;
through and are two new members.&#13;
There are ten total members, nine&#13;
with voting powers and the tenth,&#13;
Dave Koss, is the director. His job is to&#13;
help with the organization and set up.&#13;
There is a ninth spot still open. Chris&#13;
Semanes, PSGA president will appoint&#13;
someone this spot. The members all&#13;
feel honored to be representing the&#13;
student body. Chris Landgrebe said,&#13;
"I felt that I could give the students of&#13;
Parkside a strong voice."&#13;
Because of lower participation&#13;
rates within organizations on campus,&#13;
the SUFAC members tend to be&#13;
involved with other organizations on&#13;
school. Some see it as a conflict of&#13;
interest if a SUFAC member votes&#13;
for an organization they are already&#13;
involved in.&#13;
SUFAC S first goal is to schedule&#13;
a regular meeting time and then to&#13;
"figure out what they will do with&#13;
the contingency fund. Then they will&#13;
move on to the business of what they&#13;
are here for, which is allocating next&#13;
year's money."&#13;
The contingency fund is a pot&#13;
of money, $138,000 to be exact, in&#13;
which last year's SUFAC created to&#13;
be dispersed to organizations how best&#13;
they felt. It was set up as a system for&#13;
checks and balances, as well as helping&#13;
SUFAC to micromanage the student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
According to some students,&#13;
SUFAC didn't seem as organized and&#13;
well run in the past. There were some&#13;
problems, but the new members on&#13;
this committee are willing to look at&#13;
what worked and change what didn't.&#13;
Dave Koss assured the student body it&#13;
won't be like that this year. "This year&#13;
SUFAC will keep excellent records of&#13;
what happens in meetings."&#13;
Your SUFAC Members&#13;
Dave Koss (Diretor)&#13;
•Jerome Garrett&#13;
Nick Henning&#13;
Yang Yang&#13;
Chris Landgrebe&#13;
•Angie Gomez&#13;
•Xavier Solis&#13;
Tony Dubose&#13;
•Jason Pinkowski&#13;
President Appoints&#13;
* indicates they have served on SUFAC prior&#13;
years.&#13;
Which departments get a&#13;
chunk of the $2.4 million?&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Health and Counseling&#13;
Childcare&#13;
Residence Life&#13;
Student Activities / Union 209&#13;
OMSA&#13;
Volunteer Program&#13;
Student Organizations (BSU, The&#13;
Ranger News, WIPZ, Rainbow-&#13;
Alliance, etc.)&#13;
So how does this&#13;
new parking system&#13;
work?&#13;
On Page&#13;
UW-Parkside's&#13;
Women's Soccer Team Rank&#13;
#1 in Region&#13;
On Page&#13;
Do you recognize this&#13;
Album&#13;
Cover?&#13;
On Page 12&#13;
2 The Ranger News September 25,20a&#13;
RANGER STAFF&#13;
Now through October 30&#13;
^SMJcfng your used cell&#13;
pons wl go to local&#13;
stic violence victims&#13;
Unused cell phone&#13;
chargers are needed, tool&#13;
M&#13;
»cipn&#13;
Activities&#13;
(Union 209}&#13;
RangerCard Office I&#13;
Liabrary&#13;
PSGA Office&#13;
Womyn's Center&#13;
Fine Arts Department!&#13;
If your&#13;
brgjcen apd doesn't work,&#13;
ifwill still be accepted for&#13;
repairs and then donated&#13;
people who need it&#13;
rh's program will nin through Domestic Violence Awareness Month (October), and is sponsored by Student I i fe Parksidc Student&#13;
aSS B— Park • d-e Ad^ Student A,,,ancc&lt; Ml&#13;
the Chancellor's Leadership institute.&#13;
ar News. Coordinated by&#13;
The Ranger News has meetings every Monday at noon. All students and faculty of UW-Parkside are welcome.&#13;
_easc feel free to attend. Have any comments, concerns, questions, or story ideas? Please e-mail us at-&#13;
VJL • therangemews_uwp@yahoo.com&#13;
A5SOCIAIHD We are located at Wyllie D- 139C&#13;
Phone:(262)595-2287 Fax:(262)595-2295&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Henry D. Gaskins&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Preston Brown&#13;
Creative Director&#13;
Emily Rasbornik&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Amanda Amason&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Tal Goldwater&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Katie Dylewski&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Russell Harris&#13;
Graphic Design Manager&#13;
Matt Gonya&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Sonya Gonzalez&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Avi Grewal&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Matt Cote&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Judith Logsdon&#13;
Corrections&#13;
In the September 11 issue it was noted&#13;
that the UW-Parkside Women's Basketball&#13;
Team was regionally ranked for the first&#13;
time since they joined NCAA Division II;&#13;
however, this statistic is from last season,&#13;
and the rankings for this upcoming season&#13;
are not out yet.&#13;
Also, the photos that went with the hall&#13;
names on page 7 were mixed up. George&#13;
Molinaro's photo was next to Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Kenneth L. Greenquist's photo&#13;
was next to Wyllie Hall, and Camelo&#13;
D. Tenuta's photo was next to Molinaro&#13;
Hall. Frank J. Petretti's photo was next to&#13;
the SAC, but he only the fieldhouse was&#13;
named after him.&#13;
4 3 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Ralph Nader Visits UW-Milwaukee&#13;
BY MATT WALLER&#13;
On September 15, presidential&#13;
candidate Ralph Nader spoke to&#13;
a responsive audience of college&#13;
students and other considered citizens&#13;
in the Wisconsin Room of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee&#13;
Student Union.&#13;
Nader touched upon a number&#13;
of issues ranging from the war in&#13;
Iraq to the decriminalization of&#13;
marijuana, specifically pointing out&#13;
the many uses for industrial hemp.&#13;
Not leaving a rock unturned, Nader&#13;
aggressively approached many issues&#13;
he feels his opponents, representing&#13;
the Democratic and Republican&#13;
Parties have sidestepped during their&#13;
campaigns for this year's election.&#13;
Nader was most vicious in his&#13;
attacks against the Democratic&#13;
nominee for President, John Kerry,&#13;
and his supporters, going so far as&#13;
to call Kerr}' "spineless." Nader also&#13;
went out on a limb to verbally accuse&#13;
such prolific liberal thinkers as anticorporate&#13;
writer Noam Chomsky&#13;
and controversial filmmaker Michael&#13;
Moore of adopting an "unconditional&#13;
surrender," of their vote and support&#13;
to John Kerry, even though both have,&#13;
on several occasions, denounced key&#13;
portions of Kerry's platform. Even&#13;
though a large amount of pressure is&#13;
currently being put on Nader to drop&#13;
out of the election, most of it comes&#13;
from people who would generally&#13;
support him.&#13;
One student at UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Thomas Jones, spoke highly of Nader,&#13;
saying, "I think we need a third party&#13;
option and I feel Nader is a good&#13;
choice," going on to mention Nader's&#13;
stance on universal healthcare. When&#13;
asked if he was worried that Nader&#13;
would take away important votes&#13;
from Kerry, or if he had adopted&#13;
an "anybody but Bush" policy,&#13;
he surprisingly responded that he&#13;
would vote for Bush before Kerry,&#13;
exemplifying the diversity of political&#13;
thought on the Milwaukee campus.&#13;
Nader, the consummate underdog&#13;
in this year's election, spoke for over&#13;
an hour, before fielding questions from&#13;
the audience, where he displayed a&#13;
knowledgeable understanding of issues&#13;
important in Milwaukee. Against&#13;
seemingly insurmountable pressure lor&#13;
him to drop out of the election, Nader&#13;
will continue to campaign up until the&#13;
end. He hopes to visit all 50 states,&#13;
saying he has already visited 49. Later&#13;
that evening he planned to speak in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
His most important objectives at&#13;
this time are to put his name on as&#13;
many states' voting ballots as possible,&#13;
which in some states can take up to&#13;
25,000 signatures, not to mention the&#13;
amount of strict rules one must follow&#13;
in gathering the signatures, and to&#13;
inform people on the alternative ideas&#13;
a third party candidate can offer.&#13;
For more information on Ralph&#13;
Nader, including his platform, visit&#13;
www.votenader.com.&#13;
Presidential candidate Ralph Nader&#13;
speaks to a crowd of more than&#13;
450 students at UW-Milwaukee on&#13;
September 15.&#13;
New System in Place for Parking&#13;
BYTAL GOLD WATER&#13;
During the summer, there was a&#13;
change in the parking system. Police&#13;
chief Michael Marzion said, "The&#13;
new parking sy stem works, that every&#13;
student gets a parking pass." And, "now&#13;
instead of people buying cards they are&#13;
given cards through the segregated&#13;
fees."&#13;
Marzion also said, "The parking&#13;
lots are us er fee funded. There are no&#13;
tax dollars, no university dollars. All&#13;
the users pay for lots. That is one of&#13;
the reasons parking is not free at the&#13;
university because of maintenance,&#13;
snow plowing and salaries." To bring&#13;
the Racine bus it costs UW-Parkside&#13;
$40,000 a year and the UW-Parkside&#13;
ranger was purchased for $70,000.&#13;
These thin gs add up, so there has to&#13;
^ a set fee. He said, "Another reason&#13;
We did this is because we changed the&#13;
computer system over. PeopleSoft (the&#13;
company t hat is now in charge of the&#13;
computer system) was not allowing us&#13;
to sell permits like we used to because&#13;
when they changed the computer&#13;
program we had to change the way we&#13;
§rve out permits."&#13;
Marzion said they did not want to&#13;
go to the old system&#13;
because it was too time&#13;
consuming. The old&#13;
sy stem had people lined&#13;
up for their pass. He&#13;
said, "So many things&#13;
are paid through this&#13;
transportation budget&#13;
almost everybody&#13;
benefits one way or&#13;
another. If some one&#13;
does not benefit they&#13;
would be a minority."&#13;
Marzion said a&#13;
problem with the new&#13;
system is that people are&#13;
parking in the residential&#13;
neighborhood and are&#13;
starting to complain. He&#13;
said, "I know the lots&#13;
are full right now, but&#13;
they are always full the&#13;
first two weeks," and ^ common&#13;
"the only reason we have&#13;
permits at all is faculty and staff." He&#13;
said he had to reassure SUFAC that&#13;
faculty could not park for free because&#13;
it would not be fair to the students.&#13;
Athletes are the only community&#13;
members who don't pay for parking.&#13;
sight at the beginning of each semester, full parking lots.&#13;
Marzion said tickets are still going&#13;
to be given out in the new system. To&#13;
appeal a ticket, you have to go to the&#13;
police station and pay $5 and fill out an&#13;
appeal form. That form goes to his desk,&#13;
and he can either void it or send it to the&#13;
parking appeals review committee. The&#13;
committee has the final word on the&#13;
ticket. If you win your appeal you will&#13;
get your $5 back.&#13;
The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Real World Experience for&#13;
Business Students&#13;
BY AARON ZABLER&#13;
In Fall 2003, the Solutions for Economic Growth (SEG) Center was developed&#13;
in the School of Business and Technology at UW-Parkside. The organization was&#13;
developed as an avenue for business students to obtain "real world" experience by&#13;
connecting them with local companies.&#13;
The SEG acts as an intermediary that joins students who desire business world&#13;
application of their skills and local businesses that are in need of business solutions.&#13;
This results in a combination that is beneficial for both parties. The business&#13;
areas that are addressed include: information technology, operations management&#13;
and marketing solutions. The SEG's objective is "to support live student projects,&#13;
enhance [student] learning and make an impact on the community," says Dirk&#13;
Baldwin, Ph.D., of the Business Department.&#13;
Once a project is submitted, the SEG will attempt to match the project to the&#13;
appropriate class, or students may be selected to develop and complete the project&#13;
independent of a class. A faculty member is assigned to oversee the project, but the&#13;
students are in charge of handling it. Dr. Baldwin explains that the students learn&#13;
"project management methodology." "The students learn all the documentation&#13;
you have to go through to start up a project." Students also "document the requirements&#13;
of the project implement the project and communicate the status of the&#13;
project - it's as professional as possible," Dr. Baldwin said. Students have had the&#13;
opportunity to work on various projects for companies such as: Johnson Diversity,&#13;
Snap-On, Racine Volunteer Center and the Kenosha Community Health Center.&#13;
Currently, 20 students are working on 11 different projects. Jeremy Scuffham&#13;
commented on the experience saying, "As a student, it's exciting to be able to&#13;
plan, implement, and manage a program that other students will continually benefit&#13;
from." Scuffham is currently working on an Undergraduate Business Program&#13;
Marketing Project with fellow student Ben Stark.&#13;
If you would like to know more about SEG or have any questions, you can&#13;
contact the director, Suresh Chalasani, Ph.D., at sureshxhalasanrfi uwp.edu .&#13;
Put Some Muscle Into Your Resume&#13;
BEFORE You Graduate!&#13;
If you are thinking about pursuing a career at a&#13;
manufacturing company, the Racine/Kenosha Chapter&#13;
of the American Production and Inventory Control&#13;
Society (APICS) is here to help you!&#13;
YOU'RE looking for local exposure to businesses;&#13;
WE'RE looking for ambitious students interested in a real bargain&#13;
and willing to help us create a student chapter.&#13;
For $20, you will get:&#13;
•Z Your resume posted on www.rakeapics.ora&#13;
www.apics.ora&#13;
• Opportunities to attend local APICS Professional&#13;
Developmental Dinner meetings and seminars where networking&#13;
opportunities abound, all at greatly discounted rates. Your first dinner&#13;
meeting will be FREE!&#13;
•Z A competitive advantage in writing term papers by receiving a copy of&#13;
all annual APICS conference presentations.&#13;
%/ The inside track on earning a valuable CPIM certification prior to&#13;
graduation to set yourself apart from the other job candidates—on your&#13;
resume and during the interview.&#13;
Up-to-date information on manufacturing terminology and best practices&#13;
for added confidence in interviewing by receiving the APICS dictionary&#13;
and the monthly Performance Advantage Magazine.&#13;
• Opportunities for free travel to APICS events.&#13;
If you are interested, motivated and want more information,&#13;
please contact:&#13;
APICS.&#13;
mTW EKBSUOCUA8TCtOEM MMt tSiOAOGEttTKTM T&#13;
Mark Hanke, CPIM&#13;
VP of Student Relations&#13;
Racine/Kenosha Chapter of APICS&#13;
Mark.Hanke@Abbott.com&#13;
www.rakeapics.org&#13;
Will the New Union be Named&#13;
After Anyone?&#13;
A follow up from How in the Hall Did They Get Their&#13;
Names?&#13;
BY EMILY RASBORNIK&#13;
How do you get a building named&#13;
after you? Well in this day and age you&#13;
need to donate 10 percent of what the&#13;
building costs. According to Lenny&#13;
Klaver, University Relations and&#13;
Advancement, our halls were named&#13;
after people who donated no money.&#13;
But Wyllie, Greenquist and Molinaro&#13;
did not donate anything themselves.&#13;
They were instrumental figures in the&#13;
founding of UW-Parkside. Back then&#13;
there were no laws saying you had to&#13;
donate a certain amount of money in&#13;
order to get your name on a building.&#13;
Now its different. The Board of&#13;
Regents says you have to donate a&#13;
substantial amount of money. The cost&#13;
to build the SAC was $13.1 million and&#13;
$1.3 million was donated, with the top&#13;
three major donors having their names&#13;
associated with the building.&#13;
If you notice there is no name on&#13;
the communication building. When&#13;
renovations happen someone will have&#13;
to get 10 percent of the cost donated to&#13;
obtain the naming right to the building.&#13;
For our new Union being built,&#13;
the students pay for all but a small&#13;
percentage. The building is being paid&#13;
by the students for the future students.&#13;
Mud Puddle&#13;
Unites&#13;
BY EMILY RASBORNIK&#13;
On Wednesday, September 15, at 11&#13;
p.m., UW-Parkside students showed&#13;
how fun campus life can be. As&#13;
the rain poured, students created a&#13;
mud slip and slide next to the sand&#13;
volleyball courts by the campus&#13;
apartments. It started with five girls.&#13;
Sophomore Jacqui Brandenburg was&#13;
one of influential students who spotted&#13;
There is a small fee in tuition each vear&#13;
for the new union. PSGA made the&#13;
decision for building the new union&#13;
last year. The building will be named&#13;
the "Union" because naming rights aie&#13;
different for non-academic buildings.&#13;
Students now are paying for the union&#13;
they may never use. The reason they&#13;
won't be able to use it is because it&#13;
won't be built for a long time, but it will&#13;
hopefully keep our school growing.&#13;
Journalist Joseph Hanneman wrote,&#13;
"Irvin G. Wyllie was always asked&#13;
'When will the campus be complete,&#13;
w hen will everything be finished?' The&#13;
answer is never. Harvard, America's&#13;
first university was founded in 1636. It&#13;
is still a developing university, as UWParkside&#13;
will be for many years and&#13;
many future generations."&#13;
Some say the new union will help&#13;
expand the school and keep it alive. I&#13;
say if I pay tuition and graduate from&#13;
UW-Parkside and the new union still&#13;
isn't done, I should get a brick with my&#13;
name on it. Lenity said buildings are&#13;
named after someone who connotes a&#13;
legacy. We are expanding for the future&#13;
students by creating a new union, so&#13;
won't we be a legacy?&#13;
the puddle while running in&#13;
the rain with a couple of old&#13;
roomies from Ranger Hall. She&#13;
was one the first to slide in the&#13;
mud pile, "ft looked too fun.&#13;
ft was a natural Slip-n-Slide"&#13;
After Jacqui and her friends&#13;
left, dozens came out to try the&#13;
slide. Within a few moments&#13;
people were peering from their&#13;
windows, porches, and doorways.&#13;
There were a couple of chants from&#13;
the crowd and then a full moon.. .and&#13;
it wasn't in the sky. A man decided&#13;
to take this mud slide to a new level&#13;
by hitting the puddle nude. The crowd&#13;
then grew bigger and so did the&#13;
number of student's slip'n and sliding.&#13;
They went down in two's, three's, and&#13;
even four's. This puddle brought a&#13;
bit of bonding to the campus life, as&#13;
students joined together for the joy of a&#13;
good old mud bath&#13;
5 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Foreign Film Nights&#13;
Pick up a brochure at the Information Center, International Studies, Residence Life or Student Act.vit.es&#13;
Osama&#13;
September 29&#13;
9 p.m.&#13;
September 11: What Better Day For A Picnic&#13;
Good Bye, Lenin!&#13;
October 6&#13;
Student Foreign&#13;
Series&#13;
Sponsored by the Student&#13;
Center &amp; Foreign Film Series&#13;
9 p.m.&#13;
Free Popcorn &amp; Soda&#13;
sponsored by PIC&#13;
for Good Bye, Lenin!&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Concessions will be open!&#13;
BY AMBER TAYLOR&#13;
September 11, 2001 was a&#13;
day filled with tremendous tragedy and&#13;
outrage throughout the entire nation.&#13;
Hijacked jetliners hit the World Trade&#13;
Center in New York and the Pentagon&#13;
outside Washington. International and&#13;
world leaders were swift in reacting to&#13;
the terrorist attacks.&#13;
Three years later, on&#13;
Saturday, September 11, 2004, nearly&#13;
50 international students and their&#13;
house families attended the second&#13;
annual International Welcome Picnic&#13;
at Petrified Springs Park, hosted by&#13;
the Parkside International Club (PIC),&#13;
Central International Studies and the&#13;
Adventures of Life Long Learning&#13;
(A.L.L.) House Families. Students,&#13;
families and friends all showed up&#13;
for a w onderful picnic (provided by&#13;
the families) for a chance to mingle&#13;
with fellow students from all over the&#13;
world. The day was filled w ith food,&#13;
pictures, laughter, relaxation, and&#13;
the chance to start new friendships.&#13;
"We hope to grow as a tradition&#13;
at Parkside," the international&#13;
programming coordinator, Consuelo&#13;
Clemens noted that the PIC&#13;
organization helps international&#13;
students to become part of the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine community, while&#13;
building relationships with American&#13;
Students. "Everybody has become&#13;
friends. Even though we come from&#13;
different countries, we all speak the&#13;
same language," says Sherly Hamm,&#13;
a Parkside student from Indonesia.&#13;
Bindra Sukheja, another international&#13;
student attending Parkside, is grateful&#13;
to. know that after the terrorist attacks&#13;
in New York, people can still come&#13;
together and interact in harmony.&#13;
There is nothing more&#13;
rewarding than witnessing people from&#13;
all over the world interacting with one&#13;
another on September 11, the third&#13;
anniversary of a day filled with anger&#13;
among thousands of international and&#13;
world leaders and citizens.&#13;
International students and their host families get food at the Parkside&#13;
International Club Picnic on September 11.&#13;
YOUR AD&#13;
COULD&#13;
BE HERE.&#13;
Advertise with&#13;
nig The Ranger News!&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Avi Grewal (Ad Manager)&#13;
uwp_ads@yahoo.com&#13;
Phone:(262)595-2287&#13;
The Ranger News September 25,2004&#13;
Backyard Bash&#13;
BY HEATHER TODD&#13;
On September 9, from 4-11 p.m., Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) hosted the Backyard Bash, one of the first&#13;
events of the school year, outside the student Union.&#13;
Each of the featured artists gave incredible, unique&#13;
performances, ranging in style and diversity.&#13;
A great example of creativity came from a group who&#13;
call themselves Dream. They presented choreographed&#13;
routines incorporating hip-hop, house, break dance, Afro-&#13;
Cuban and West African dance styles. Dream includes&#13;
six members, all hailing from the Oakland, Calif, area,&#13;
bringing their West Coast talents to UW-Parkside. Near&#13;
the end of their segment the stage was opened up to the&#13;
audience, allowing participants to take part in a quick&#13;
workshop teaching some dance moves and routines&#13;
displayed during their performance.&#13;
After enjoying some creative dance and slam-poetry&#13;
the stage was turned over to the collaborative efforts&#13;
of the artist's featured on 'The Collective Vol. 2."&#13;
Aimagideon gave a high intensity performance giving&#13;
way to all the artists presented on this locally produced&#13;
album. A few among included Taste MC with leader&#13;
Fidell and Neptune. All the artists culminated throughout&#13;
the show to give exciting group performances.&#13;
According to PAB President Chamika Ellis, more than 125 people attended Backyard&#13;
Bash throughout the night ot September 9.&#13;
Jack White's&#13;
Back!&#13;
The King of Billiards and Trick Shots&#13;
is returning to UW-Parkside&#13;
See him at&#13;
The Den&#13;
September 27 -&#13;
October 1&#13;
Daily starting&#13;
at nam&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Register in The Den&#13;
Trick Shots by Jack&#13;
Hell teach you too!&#13;
Billiards Clinics&#13;
with Jack!&#13;
Sponsored by Intramurals - Student Activities - Parkside Student Center - The Den&#13;
Dean Marwan Wafa&#13;
Want to Meet a CEO?&#13;
BY EMILY RASBORNIK&#13;
Executive-in-Residence Program is an&#13;
event that "caters to all students, in every&#13;
department. If you're an Art major you're&#13;
going to have to know how to sell your art,&#13;
otherwise how will you make money?"&#13;
Dean Marwan Wafa, School of Business and&#13;
Technology, brings in CEO's of successful&#13;
businesses "for students to achieve a greater&#13;
knowledge of the work world. There is&#13;
something to learn from the success and&#13;
failure of businesses. We bring in these real people so they can share&#13;
their expertise with the student population at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Students should attend this special forum because of the netw orking&#13;
that will be available. "Students have gotten jobs from the past&#13;
Executive-in-Residence Programs. Through these interactions,&#13;
meeting people in the workforce and combining their knowledge with&#13;
classroom learning, our students will hopefully get their ideas out there&#13;
and become just as successful. These CEO's take us on their journey&#13;
of how they got their companies started and we find out how they&#13;
survived. Did they start out with no money? How did they know their&#13;
idea was a good one?"&#13;
Come ask your questions to Diane Doors, President of DeltaHawk&#13;
Inc. on November 9 at 9:30 a.m. or 11 a.m. The session is about 50&#13;
min. long and is located in the Union Cinema. "Learn on a personal&#13;
level how they battled through obstacles to obtain success."&#13;
7 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Featur&#13;
Third Parties: A Thing of the Past or Future?&#13;
BY AMANDA AMASON&#13;
With the 2004 presidential elections&#13;
just around the corner, most people&#13;
ate very sure who they want, or more&#13;
importantly, don't want, in the White&#13;
House come January. For the majority&#13;
of voters, it comes down to a choice&#13;
between two men: the Republican&#13;
and the Democrat. But what about the&#13;
other men and women - the third party&#13;
candidates.&#13;
There are more than 100 third parties&#13;
organized in America; yet, in the 2000&#13;
presidential election, only 3.74 percent&#13;
of Americans voted third party. In fact,&#13;
since 1856, every American president&#13;
has been Republican or Democrat&#13;
(Republicans 18, Democrats 10, for&#13;
who's counting).&#13;
Some third party candidates&#13;
such as: Ross Perot (I), John Anderson&#13;
(I) and Ralph Nader (G) are considered&#13;
"spoilers."Nader was accused of&#13;
this in the 2000 presidential election.&#13;
The Democrats pleaded with him to&#13;
drop out of the election because the&#13;
majority of Green Party voters would&#13;
normally have voted Democrat, thus&#13;
taking votes away from A1 Gore. By&#13;
the way, he's running again this year,&#13;
and they're accusing him of the same.&#13;
In a U.S. Department of&#13;
state interview, professor of Political&#13;
Science and author of "Politics at the&#13;
Periphery: Third Parties in Two-Party&#13;
America," David Gillespie says that&#13;
if a candidate "gets a large enough&#13;
percentage of the votes, demonstrating&#13;
popular support for his party's appeals,&#13;
at least one of the major parties will&#13;
adopt some of that agenda to ... gain&#13;
those votes.''&#13;
Third parties have historically&#13;
been consequential in changing&#13;
platforms on issues such as: Antislavery&#13;
with the "mid 19th century&#13;
political crisis" teaming the Free-Soil&#13;
Party, Barnburners, the Liberty Party&#13;
and the Whigs; Monetary policy and&#13;
the relationship between government&#13;
and corporations with the Greenbacks,&#13;
Knights of Labor and the Populists&#13;
around 1890; The Prohibition Party&#13;
won the 18th amendment against&#13;
production and sale of alcoholic&#13;
beverages and the Libertarian and&#13;
Green Parties are working for the&#13;
legalization of medicinal marijuana,&#13;
just to name a few.&#13;
The most successful third&#13;
party was Abraham Lincoln's&#13;
Republican Party, formed in 1854 in&#13;
opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska act,&#13;
which would inevitably spread slavery&#13;
into the western territories.&#13;
There are so many third parties,&#13;
really, all it takes is a platform, a&#13;
website and some t-shirts and bumper&#13;
stickers to become one, but here are&#13;
some of the more interesting third&#13;
parties I found:&#13;
The Multi-Capitalist Party's motto&#13;
is, "capitalism for all people equally,"&#13;
they denounce both capitalism and&#13;
socialism and believe that every person&#13;
should be a successful landowner&#13;
without excessive taxation.&#13;
The Libertarian National Socialist&#13;
Green Party believe in the personal&#13;
freedom of Libertarian Party platform,&#13;
environmental improvement of&#13;
the Green Party and collective&#13;
and personal action as in National&#13;
Socialism.&#13;
The U.S. Pacifist Party is an anti-war&#13;
party. They want to transform the U.S.&#13;
military into "a non-violent defense&#13;
and humanitarian service corps.&#13;
The Pansexual Peace Party's only&#13;
real platform issue is to protect&#13;
everyone's right to talk about and to&#13;
have sex with whomever and whatever,&#13;
wherever they please. Their motto is&#13;
"Sex is good, sex is great, yeah sex!'&#13;
The Pot Party is "a movement to&#13;
pretty much legalize marijuana" and to&#13;
mandate the growth of it.&#13;
For more information on the&#13;
significance of third parties, and&#13;
the platforms of some, go to www.&#13;
politicsl.com.&#13;
The Student Activities&#13;
Open House&#13;
Mon, Oct. 4&#13;
4-6 pm&#13;
Union 209&#13;
Find out&#13;
what we&#13;
can do for :&#13;
a- .&#13;
• v - -•&#13;
8 The Ranger News September 25,2004&#13;
Sports&#13;
UW-Parkside Women's Soccer Team Thumps&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Weiher Leads Lady Rangers With Pair of Goals&#13;
BY RUSSELL HARRIS&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
About 100 people gathered at&#13;
Wood Road Field on September 9 to&#13;
watch the Lady Rangers outscore the&#13;
Grand Valley State Lakers 4-1 in a&#13;
regional game. UW-Parkside came&#13;
in ranked 23rd in the nation in the&#13;
National Soccer Coaches Association&#13;
Poll (NSCAA), but as of September&#13;
14 was ranked first in the region and&#13;
eighth nationally. The national ranking&#13;
is the highest the women's soccer team&#13;
has made in UW-Parkside history&#13;
Junior midfielder, 16, Allison Wild,&#13;
had an attempt blocked at the 26:20&#13;
mark in the contest and GVS blocked&#13;
another attempt by UW-Parkside&#13;
at 23:07. Senior Goalie, Abbigale&#13;
Wild, played another great game as&#13;
she blocked three Lakers attempts.&#13;
UW-Parkside's scoring attack began&#13;
with 7:13 remaining in the first half&#13;
when 18, Charissa Weiher, a freshmen&#13;
midfielder, scored to make it 1-0 at the&#13;
half. In the second period, at the 41:40&#13;
mark, GVS tied the game at 1-1. But&#13;
UW-Parkside took the lead for good&#13;
when they moved the ball down field&#13;
and Weiher scored her second goal of&#13;
the day. With 16:02 left in the game,&#13;
10, freshman forward, Laura Eide,&#13;
scored on a kick past the GVS Goalie&#13;
to make it 3-1. UW-Parkside struck&#13;
again for the last time with 6:49 left in&#13;
the game as 6, Kelly Baker, a freshman&#13;
midfielder, scored to make it 4-1. GVS&#13;
had just one corner kick and only four&#13;
shots on goal in the game compared&#13;
to UW-Paikside's three comer kicks&#13;
and nine shots on goal. Laura Eide,&#13;
Charissa Weiher, Megan Jurvis, and&#13;
Katie Gaal added assists. UW-Parkside&#13;
lost 4-0 last season to GVS in NCAA&#13;
Division II Tournament play, which&#13;
makes this win a little more special.&#13;
Junior Midfielder, Allison Wild, controls the ball for UW-Parkside&#13;
Ask Dave&#13;
BY RUSSELL HARRIS&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Recently I had the opportunity to speak with UW-Parkside Athletic Director, Dave Williams, and asked him for his&#13;
thoughts about some upcoming athletic events.&#13;
Q: What and when is the second annual Texas Roadhouse Roundup?&#13;
A: "On October 1, which is Friday, the second annual Texas Roadhouse Roundup will be held here at UW-Parkside. It is ail&#13;
extraordinary promotion where Texas Roadhouse feeds 500 students. Obviously, they have fantastic food! Last year they&#13;
brought out hamburgers, hotdogs, chili, baked potatoes, fried appetizers and cinnamon butter rolls. It rained hard last year&#13;
and almost blew the tent over! So, we're going to try it again this year. Texas Roadhouse Marketing Coordinator, Elizabeth&#13;
(Liz) McHalffey, is helping us with this event. This year, if it rains, we're going to hold it indoors. The men's soccer team&#13;
will play a GLVC game at 1:15 p.m. versus SIU-Edwardsville and the women's soccer team will host SIU-Edwardsville at |&#13;
3:30 p.m. in a GLVC match up while the women's volleyball team will play GLVC opponent Northern Kentucky at 7 p.m&#13;
The Texas Roadhouse Roundup is going to happen after the women's soccer game and we are hoping that every one joins&#13;
us to eat. We're going to have the food available at the gymnasium around 5 p.m. It will be the women's volleyball teams&#13;
first home game of the year, too. It should be a tun day! We will probably be giving out free items to the crowd as well,&#13;
things like stress balls and t-shirts. You have to come to one of the games in order to get some free food at the gymnasium&#13;
Q: How can UW-Parkside students get tickets for the men's basketball game against the Wisconsin Badgers on&#13;
November 10 in Madison?&#13;
A: There will be a contest in which approximately 20-30 tickets will be given away to our most loyal fans for this game,&#13;
which includes free transportation. The more games and events one goes to before November 10, the more likely it will be&#13;
that he or she will get a ticket. We'll have a lot of fun up there and both teams will play hard."&#13;
The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Volunteering is more than going to a soup kitchen, helping&#13;
at a senior center, making cards for children or sponsoring a&#13;
food drive. Volunteering can help you succeed for your&#13;
future. Come and see what giving back to your community&#13;
can do for you. Friday, Oct. 1 • Noon • Union 106 &gt;ifp LEADERSHIP SERIES&#13;
Sponsored by Student Activities&#13;
For more information call 595-2200&#13;
or stop by Student Activities, Union 209&#13;
The University of Wisconsin- Parfaide provides services forpalronswilhspecial&#13;
needs. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-234;.&#13;
Sports Shots&#13;
Perez is GLVC Player of the Week in&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
Goalie Victor Perez, 0, was named GLVC&#13;
Player of the Week in men's soccer. The&#13;
freshman goalie blanked Rockhurst and&#13;
18th ranked Truman State on September&#13;
11 and 12 respectively.&#13;
UW-Parkside's Women's Soccer Team&#13;
Remains Undefeated&#13;
On September 12, the women's soccer&#13;
team took on Wheeling Jesuit, in a nonconference&#13;
game at Wood Road Field.&#13;
Laura Eide, 10, freshman forward, scored&#13;
one of the team's goals, and senior&#13;
midfielder Lindsey Griffitts, 12, added&#13;
a goal to help the Lady Ranger's get the&#13;
win.&#13;
Wagner Goal Lifts UW-Parkside's&#13;
Men's Soccer Team Over Rockhurst&#13;
The U W-Parkside Men's Soccer Team&#13;
got payback September 11 with a 1-&#13;
0 victory over the Rockhurst Hawks&#13;
(Missouri) in a non-conference match&#13;
up at Wood Road Field. Last season,&#13;
UW-Paikside lost 2-0 to the Hawks.&#13;
Rockhurst has nine returning starters&#13;
from last season. U W-Parkside forward&#13;
Dusty Wagner, 7, scored the only goal&#13;
that the Ranger's needed at the 66:02&#13;
mark. The assist was made by 23,&#13;
midfielder, SherYang. UW-Parkside's&#13;
freshman goalie, Victor Perez, made&#13;
seven saves in helping to preserve the&#13;
victory.&#13;
Tommenip Scores Goal to Beat&#13;
Truman State&#13;
On September 12, one day after winning&#13;
a tight game over the Rockhurst Hawks&#13;
(1-0), the UW-Paikside Men's Soccer&#13;
Team hosted Truman State and won by&#13;
a final score of 1-0. UW-Parkside has&#13;
won five consecutive games including&#13;
three other teams that appeared in the&#13;
NCAA Division II Tournament last&#13;
season. UW-Parkside got all of the&#13;
offense they needed as junior defender,&#13;
Ben Tommerup. 9, scored on an assist&#13;
by teammates Jared Lechusz. 6, a junior&#13;
midfielder, and junior midfielder, Sher&#13;
Yang, 23. UW-Paikside freshman goalie&#13;
Victor Perez, 0, had five saves to secure&#13;
his fourth shutout of the season&#13;
Great Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
Announces Expansion...&#13;
Press Release&#13;
June 29, 2004&#13;
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind- The Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC)&#13;
ami the council of Presidents have&#13;
announced that Drury University,&#13;
Springfield, Mo., Rockhurst&#13;
University, Kansas, Mo., and the&#13;
University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla,&#13;
Mo., will join the league for the 2005-&#13;
06 academic year. The addition of&#13;
these three institutions will bring the&#13;
GLVC's membership to 14 schools,&#13;
tying it with the Rocky Mountain&#13;
Athletic Conference (RMAC) and&#13;
the Pennsylvania State Athletic&#13;
Conference (PSAC) as the fifth largest&#13;
conference in NCAA Division II.&#13;
There are a total of 23 NCAA Division&#13;
II conferences in the country.&#13;
"Our institutional representatives&#13;
have been discussing conference&#13;
expansion for the past two years,&#13;
and are delighted to welcome Drury,&#13;
Rockhurst and Missouri-Rolla to the&#13;
GLVC," said GLVC Commissioner&#13;
Jim Naumovich. "All three institutions&#13;
have outstanding academic reputations,&#13;
strong presidential leadership, and&#13;
boast solid athletic programs. We feel&#13;
their addition to the GLVC greatly&#13;
strengthens our Conference and&#13;
provides our member schools with a&#13;
presence, and additional visibility in&#13;
three new markets (Springfield, Kansas&#13;
City, and Rolla, Mo.)."&#13;
The GLVC last expanded in 1995&#13;
when the University of Missouri-&#13;
St. Louis joined as the leagues 12th&#13;
member. Indiana University-Purdue&#13;
University, Ft. Wayne, Ind. left the&#13;
GLVC in 2001 to pursue&#13;
NCAA Division I membership&#13;
status. The league has&#13;
remained at 11 institutions&#13;
since that time.&#13;
Each year more than&#13;
2,500 student-athletes&#13;
participate in 17 conference&#13;
championships. The GLVC&#13;
has won a total of 10 NCAA&#13;
Division II Basketball&#13;
National Championships (i.e.&#13;
nine men's basketball titles&#13;
and one women's title). In&#13;
addition, the GLVC has had a&#13;
team participate in the men's&#13;
basketball title game for 10&#13;
consecutive years.&#13;
Work began in July to&#13;
begin development of 14-team&#13;
schedules for the 2005-06&#13;
season.&#13;
10 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Sport Shots Continued..&#13;
UW-Parkside Men's Soccer Team&#13;
Successful in Puma Classic&#13;
A crowd of about 150 spectators&#13;
came to see the UW-Paikside Men's&#13;
Soccer Team compete in its own&#13;
Puma Classic at Wood Road Field&#13;
and were not disappointed as the&#13;
team won both of its games over&#13;
the course of the weekend. The&#13;
action was fast-paced and intense.&#13;
Hie University of Findlay (Ohio)&#13;
was UW-Parkside's opponent on&#13;
September 4, at 12 p.m.. UWParkside&#13;
got the only goal they&#13;
needed 15:59 into the game as&#13;
junior forward, Alen Osmanovic,&#13;
12, scored a goal. A Findlay player&#13;
missed wide left on a goal attempt&#13;
with 23:59 left in the first period.&#13;
Findlay did not have many attempts&#13;
on goal throughout the game. The&#13;
score was 1-0 at the half, but UWParkside&#13;
got some security in the&#13;
second half as the team struck three&#13;
more times. Bojan Jovicic, 8, a&#13;
freshman forward/midfielder, scored&#13;
at the 28:55 mark to put the Rangers&#13;
up 2-0. Later, forward, Issam&#13;
Ismaili, 25, a sophomore, scored&#13;
to make it 3-0. Finally, freshman&#13;
forward, Andre Francois, 14, scored&#13;
with 12:15 left in the contest to wrap&#13;
up UW-Paikside's scoring attack.&#13;
UW-Parkside won by a final of 4-0.&#13;
On September 5, the UW-Parkside&#13;
Men's Soccer Team played against&#13;
the Gannon University Golden&#13;
Knights (Pennsylvania) and beat&#13;
them in a close game, 2-1. The&#13;
first half was scoreless until U WParkside's&#13;
Sher Yang, a junior&#13;
midfielder, found the back of the&#13;
net at the 69:44 period in the game&#13;
Derek Kilps, 18, a junior midfielder,&#13;
scored the game-winning goal.&#13;
The roster for the All-Tournament&#13;
Team for the Puma Classic includes&#13;
midfielders Alen Osmanovic and&#13;
Sher Yang, defenders Ethan Richter&#13;
and Ben Tommerup, and goalie&#13;
Victor Perez.&#13;
Baker Leads UW-Parkside&#13;
Women's Soccer Team over&#13;
Findlay&#13;
On September 5, the UW-Parkside&#13;
Women's Soccer Team continued&#13;
to look sharp as they handed the&#13;
Findlay Oilers their second loss of&#13;
the season. Freshman Kelly Baker, 6,&#13;
a midfielder, scored two goals. Senior&#13;
Lindsey Griffitts, 12, a midfielder,&#13;
scored once. Freshman forward Laura&#13;
Eide, 10, scored a goal for this exciting&#13;
young soccer team, also.&#13;
You Are Invited To "Midnight&#13;
Madness" at UW-Parkside!&#13;
When? Friday, October 15, 2004&#13;
Time? 6:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.&#13;
Where? DeSimone Gymnasium at&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Why?&#13;
First official practice for the Men and&#13;
Women's basketball teams.&#13;
Join Head Coaches Luke Reigel and&#13;
Jenny Knight as they open tire 2004-&#13;
05 basketball season with their first&#13;
official practices of the year. The teams&#13;
will also scrimmage and conduct a&#13;
free clinic for all youth in attendance.&#13;
'Midnight Madness" is free and is&#13;
open to the public. So bring your&#13;
family out for some hoops and some&#13;
fun. For more information, please&#13;
contact Steve Nelson at 595.2512.&#13;
Come join the ranger's as they prepare&#13;
for a great season of exciting NCAA&#13;
Division II basketball!&#13;
UW-Parkside Race Walkers Excel&#13;
At U.S. Olympic Trials&#13;
UW-Parkside's Ben Shorey finished&#13;
sixth at the U.S. Olympic Trials 50k&#13;
race-walk at Chula Vista, Calif, on&#13;
February 15 . He walked the 31 1&#13;
mile distance in 4:27:37. He was tire&#13;
youngest competitor in tire event,&#13;
while UW-Parkside's Stephen Quiike&#13;
was the next youngest. Quiike placed&#13;
10th with a time of 4:46:29.&#13;
Women's Soccer Team Upset by&#13;
Northern Kentucky...&#13;
Wilder, KY: The women's soccer team&#13;
(5-1) was upset on Sep. 17 in a road&#13;
game against the Northern Kentucky&#13;
Norse by the final score of 2-0. This&#13;
was the GLVC (Great Lakes Valley&#13;
Conference) opener for both teams.&#13;
UW-Parkside entered the contest&#13;
ranked #8 in the nation and #1 in the&#13;
region, while Northern Kentucky came&#13;
in at #23. Abbigale Wild registered&#13;
four saves for the Lady Ranger's.&#13;
Men's Soccer Team Knots Northern&#13;
Kentucky 0-0...&#13;
Wilder, KY: UW-Parkside (5-1 -1)&#13;
played well on the road against&#13;
#18 ranked Northern Kentucky,&#13;
but did not score any goals. The&#13;
Ranger's had more shots on&#13;
goal than the Norse, including a&#13;
shot that bounced off the Norse&#13;
post near the end of regulation!&#13;
Freshman goalkeeper, Victor&#13;
Perez, made two saves in the&#13;
game. This was also a GLVC&#13;
opener.&#13;
Women's Volleyball Team Loses&#13;
First Two GLVC Games...&#13;
Southern Illinois: The women's&#13;
volleyball team (4-6 overall, 0-2 in&#13;
GLVC) lost their match on Friday,&#13;
Sep. 17, against SIU Edwardsville&#13;
30-19,30-27, and 30-22. It was&#13;
their GLVC opener and was played&#13;
in Southern Illinois. Senior Brook&#13;
Strickland, #14, had eight kills&#13;
while senior Noelle Swartz, #9,&#13;
and senior Kandi Bauer, #3, added&#13;
seven each. Swartz added 13 digs&#13;
and junior Ashley Vycital, # 2,&#13;
contributed 29 assists.&#13;
Southern Indiana: On Saturday,&#13;
September 18, the Lady Ranger's&#13;
played Southern Indiana and lost&#13;
30-24,23-30,30-16,25-30, and&#13;
15-10. Stricklapd contributed 20&#13;
kills, while junior Lindsey Jones,&#13;
#12, had 11 and Noelle Swartz&#13;
added 11 The match was grueling&#13;
and tight and lasted approximately&#13;
two hours. Vycital had 53 assists.&#13;
them a lot closer and our team is&#13;
definitely improving. We have a lot of&#13;
young players, but this was definitely&#13;
a growth experience for us. We played&#13;
well," said Todd Streeter, Assistant&#13;
Coach.&#13;
UW-Parkside Rugby Team Plays&#13;
Hard in Loss to UW-Whitewater...&#13;
On Saturday, September 18, the UWParkside&#13;
Rugby Team (0-2) matched&#13;
up with UW-Whitewater at the&#13;
outdoor track here at UW-Parkside.&#13;
UW-Parkside trailed for a good part of&#13;
the contest and had to fight an uphill&#13;
battle to try to catch up, which is&#13;
just what the squad did, but came up&#13;
just short losing by the final score of&#13;
21-12. "Last week, UW-Whitewater&#13;
won by a score of 91-7, so we played&#13;
UW-Parkside Keeps Pace at 26th&#13;
Annual Midwest Collegiate Cross-&#13;
Country Open...&#13;
On Saturday, September 18, UWParkside&#13;
hosted the 26th annual&#13;
Midwest Collegiate Open and&#13;
overall had a strong day. It was a&#13;
gorgeous, sunny, and somewhat&#13;
breezy day as numerous spectators&#13;
gathered to watch and cheer on&#13;
runners in the competition. The&#13;
women's team placed 7th overall out&#13;
of 20 teams with a score of 210 in&#13;
the 5,000 meter run. Junior, Michelle&#13;
Boldon, finished 23rd with a time of&#13;
19:17, while junior, Tiff Belongia,&#13;
finished third with a time of 19:41.&#13;
Other UW-Parkside finishers include&#13;
Naomi Bong who placed 47th with&#13;
a time off 20:05 and sophomore,&#13;
Jill Winkler, was 51st with a time of&#13;
20:09. Junior, Emily Junion, finished&#13;
57th with a time of 20:24. On the&#13;
men s side, junior Cal Kromm,&#13;
covered the 8,000-meter course in&#13;
25:39 and finished eighth overall.&#13;
Iowa State's Grant Shadden won&#13;
the race in 24:53, just beating out&#13;
former UW-Parkside runner, Quinn&#13;
Newton, by 10 seconds at the finish&#13;
line! Newton, running unattached,&#13;
finished in 25:03. There was some&#13;
Division I school's participating in&#13;
the event as well.&#13;
11 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
UW-Parkside Sports Schedules &amp; Standings&#13;
UW-Parkside Women's Softball Schedule&#13;
Date Opponent Time&#13;
Sept. 11 HIC Tournament 10 a.m., 12 &amp; 6 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 12 NIC Tournament 10 a.m. &amp; 2 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 18 Chicagoland Classic 3, 7 &amp; 9 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 19 Chicagoland Classic 2 &amp; 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 25 Trinity International 10 a.m.&#13;
Sept. 25 St. Francis 2 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 25 St. Xavier 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 26 UW-Oshkosh 10 a.m.&#13;
Sept. 26 College of Lake County 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 26 McHenry County 12 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 3 NIU Tournament t.b.a.&#13;
Oct. 9 Wisconsin t.b.a.&#13;
Women's Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Date Onnonent Time&#13;
Sep. 18 Midwest Collegiate Open 12 p.m.&#13;
Sep. 24 Augustana Invitational 5:45 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 2 Loyola Lakefront Invitational 11 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 9 Wartburg Invitational 11 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 16 UW-Parkside Invitational 1 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 23 GLVC Championships (NKU) 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 6 NCAA II Regionals (SIUE) t.b.a.&#13;
Nov. 20 NCAA II National (Evansville, Ind.) tb.a.&#13;
Men's Track/Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Date&#13;
Sep. 6&#13;
Sep. 18&#13;
Sep. 18&#13;
Sep. 25&#13;
Oct. 2&#13;
Oct. 9&#13;
Oct. 16&#13;
Oct. 23&#13;
Nov. 6&#13;
Nov. 20&#13;
NCC Open (Naperville, 111.)&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Invite&#13;
Midwest Collegiate Open&#13;
Griak Invite (Minneapolis, MN)&#13;
Loyola Lakefront Invitational&#13;
Carthage Invite&#13;
UW-Parkside Invite&#13;
GLVC Championship (NKU)&#13;
NCAA II Regionals (SIUE)&#13;
NCAA II Nationals&#13;
11 am.&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
12:45 p.m.&#13;
10:45 a.m.&#13;
11a.m.&#13;
11 am.&#13;
1:45 p.m.&#13;
11 am.&#13;
t.b.a.&#13;
t.b.a.&#13;
Home Matches Bolded&#13;
UW-Parkside Sports &amp; Activity Center&#13;
"Activity Space" Semester Hours&#13;
(Weight room, racquetball courts, gym, fieldhouse and issue room)&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Mon-Thurs: 7 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Fri: 7 a.m.-7 p.m.&#13;
Sat: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
Sun: 6-9 p.m.&#13;
PHONE NUMBERS&#13;
Issue Room: 262-595-2159&#13;
Pool Hours: 262-595-2780&#13;
GLVC Men's Soccer Standings/As of Sep. 14, 2004&#13;
Overall&#13;
Win Loss Tie Pet&#13;
Lewis 1 6 0 0 1.000&#13;
N. Kentucky 4 o Mil 1 0.900&#13;
UW-Parkside 5 \ l 0 0.833&#13;
SIU Edwardsville 5 l 0 0.833&#13;
Beilarmine 2 i M 1 0.625&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan 2 2 0 0.500&#13;
Indianapolis 2 2 1 0.500&#13;
Quincy 2 3 2 0.429&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 2 3 0 0.400&#13;
Southern Indiana 1 4 1 0.250&#13;
St. Joseph's 1 4 0 0.200&#13;
GLVC Women's Soccer Standings/As of Sep. 14, 2004&#13;
Overall&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Beilarmine&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
N. Kentucky&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
QuincyO.OOO&#13;
SIU Edwardsville&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Win Loss Tie Pet.&#13;
5 0 0 1.000&#13;
3 1 0 0.750&#13;
4 2 0 0.667&#13;
3 2 0 0.600&#13;
2 2 0 0.500&#13;
1 1 2 0.500&#13;
2 3 0 0.400&#13;
2 4 0 0.333&#13;
0 1 1 0.250&#13;
1 5 0 0.167&#13;
0 3 2 0.200&#13;
GLVC Women's Volleyball Standings/As of Sep. 17,2004&#13;
Region&#13;
Win Loss&#13;
Lewis&#13;
SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
N. Kentucky&#13;
S. Indiana&#13;
Indianapolis&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Quincy&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Beilarmine&#13;
Kentucky Wesleyan&#13;
Pet&#13;
0.500&#13;
0.667&#13;
0.400&#13;
0.250&#13;
0.000&#13;
1.000&#13;
0.286&#13;
0.750&#13;
0.250&#13;
0.000&#13;
0.000&#13;
Overall&#13;
Win Loss&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
10&#13;
2&#13;
7&#13;
Pet&#13;
0.700&#13;
0.667&#13;
0.636&#13;
0.600&#13;
0.583&#13;
0.444&#13;
0.364&#13;
0.273&#13;
0.231-&#13;
0.000&#13;
0.000&#13;
(Call pool for open swim hours. Schedule changes weekly)&#13;
12 The Ranger News September 25,2004&#13;
#4 - John Bult - "Julie's Sixteenth Birthday"&#13;
This photo appears to have been taken closer to Julie's&#13;
27th birthday, but let's pretend for a minute. I think they&#13;
wanted this to be a sweet image of a father consoling his&#13;
daughter on her sweet sixteen. What I see is a married&#13;
guy (wedding ring) in a bar (beer and cigarette), holding&#13;
hands with a girl who is twenty years his junior. She&#13;
appears to have been in his trunk for 2-3 days, he let her&#13;
out so they could go on a first "date". The crazed man&#13;
is shewn here, insisting that she love him or else.&#13;
She is busy wondering which unknown actor will play&#13;
her in a recreation of this exact scene, on a future episode&#13;
of'Cold Case Files'.&#13;
#2 - Devastatin' Dave - "The Turntable Slave"&#13;
Something tells me that Dave never quite devastated&#13;
his way to the top. This top ten may have been his&#13;
only shot at number one. From the hair washed in&#13;
Wesson oil, the lightening bolt earring, to the outfit&#13;
stolen from the wardrobe room of Brcakin' 2 - The&#13;
Electric Bugaloo. You can't read the tiny yellow&#13;
banner across the top corner, but it reads "Hear our&#13;
message! Say no to drugs!". Note that the&#13;
important "message" font is at least 8 times smaller&#13;
than the "ZAP" covering Dave's crotch.&#13;
b&#13;
# 3 - Millie Jackson - "E.S.P"&#13;
I know exactly how this cover layout came to be.&#13;
See.. Millie is yet another former porn actress turned&#13;
singer. Her producer called to do the shoot, but she&#13;
was in the third of a nine-day coke binge and couldn't&#13;
be reached. He looked through an archive of her&#13;
photos and came across this one - which was taken&#13;
just as she was about to perform her signature move&#13;
on co-star, Rusty Tailpipe. Alter that, it was only&#13;
a matter ol digitally replacing the man part with a&#13;
cry stal ball.&#13;
#1 - Tino - "Por Primera Vez"&#13;
This album cover was made because not enough&#13;
people in Tino's hometown hated him. Por&#13;
Primera Vez means "For The First Time". As in -&#13;
for the first time I have an excuse to wear my little&#13;
sister's clothes. Tino is a smoldering latin heartthrob..&#13;
wearing Jordache shorts that were made for an 8 year&#13;
old girl, and an Izod golf shirt stretched so light that&#13;
you can see through it. The element that pushed&#13;
this cover over the edge was his left hand, placed&#13;
uncomfortably over the abdomen. (Tino now works&#13;
delivering mail for UWP. If you see him - say hi.)&#13;
TWs list was found somewhere onlim; &amp; edited by Katie Dylewski&#13;
worst album cowers of all time&#13;
#8 - Country Church - No Title&#13;
The first concept for this cover showed the men with a&#13;
piece of straw in each of their mouths, but that was too&#13;
much like smoking, and thus too edgy. Plus, the guy on&#13;
the left kept tickling the other guys with his. The lady in&#13;
front is the set designer's sister in law, and was brought&#13;
in to keep the wholesome group from looking"tbo gay".&#13;
Due to a scheduling conflict, the group was unable to&#13;
accept an invite to play this year's Republican National&#13;
Convention. They did, however, find time to autograph&#13;
the President's personal copy of the album.&#13;
#6 - The Minister's Quartet - "Let Me Touch Him"&#13;
A title like this conjures images that have nothing&#13;
to do with praising the gospel.&#13;
#7 - Joyce - "Joyce"&#13;
That's right, just "Joyce". It practically sells itself&#13;
for as much as 50 cents, judging by the price tag.&#13;
Kudos to the marketing genius who came up with&#13;
this layout. If not for the rainbow jumpsuit,&#13;
Sally Jesse glasses, and strategically placed rose,&#13;
Joyce may not be the superstar that she is today.&#13;
The Beatles kicked themselves when they saw&#13;
this sexed-up cover art - Ringo had suggested&#13;
the "naked huddle" concept years before&#13;
the Orleans even came out., but Paul just figured&#13;
Ringo was actin' a fool and told him to "hush".&#13;
Besides that, if I ever 'wake up into a dream'&#13;
where I'm surrounded by a bunch of hairy&#13;
naked hippies, it had better be die result&#13;
of a toxic snake bite and/or a fever induced coma.&#13;
#5 - Orleans - "Waking and Dreaming"&#13;
13 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
— Events Calendar —&#13;
9/26&#13;
David HB Drake, 3-4pm - Bong Recreation&#13;
Area&#13;
"Back From Iraq", 1:30pm - Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum&#13;
9/27&#13;
Decide, Cattle Decapitation, Diabolic - HOB/&#13;
Chicago&#13;
"Boys without Girlfriends" Night - Common&#13;
Grounds/Kenosha&#13;
9/28&#13;
"Rock Against Bush" with Midtown &amp; Anti-&#13;
Flag -Metro/Chicago&#13;
Ben Lee w/ Pony Up - Schubas/Chicago&#13;
Ani Difranco w/ Margaret Cho - Overature&#13;
Center/Milwaukee&#13;
Dead To Fall - The Bottom Lounge&#13;
This AfterProject, Beneath This Ashen Sky&#13;
- Bar 312/Buffalo Grove&#13;
Godsmack - Orpheum Theatre/Milwaukee&#13;
"Expressions In Stone" Exhibit (last day)&#13;
- CART/UWP&#13;
9/29&#13;
A1 Green - Potowatomi Casino/Milwaukee&#13;
9/30&#13;
The Temptations &amp; The Four Tops -&#13;
Potowatomi Casino/Milwaukee&#13;
10/1&#13;
Alter Bridge - HOB/Chicago&#13;
Lewsi Black - Potowatomi Bingo Casino/&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
10/1&#13;
Folk Music Hootenanny, 7- 10pm - Anderson&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
10/2&#13;
Brian Wilson - Auditorium Theatre/Chicago&#13;
Taking Back Sunday w/' Fallout Boy- Congress&#13;
Theatre/Chicago&#13;
Alan Jackson &amp; Martina McBride - Bradley&#13;
Center/Milwaukee&#13;
Bill Cosby - Overture Center/Milwaukee&#13;
10/5&#13;
"Vote For Change" with Jon Mellencamp &amp;&#13;
Babyface - Riverside Theatre/Milwaukee&#13;
Dave Matthews Band - Kohl Center/Madison&#13;
10/6&#13;
Cee-Lo, Tweet, Teedra Moses - HOB/Chicago&#13;
10/8&#13;
Love w/ The Zombies - Park West&#13;
lot HIM it Mm! The rnmors aie true. Bob Dylan's 'College Tour' bus will roll down 75th&#13;
Street on Saturday, October 30th. Unbelievable? Hell yes.&#13;
On September 15th, BobDylan.com announced new dates for it's&#13;
upcoming 'College Campus Tour'. Carthage College, located right on&#13;
Kenosha's lakefront, is getting a piece of the action. The big event will take&#13;
in the N.E Taible Athletic mid Recreation Center (TARC). Tickets are&#13;
at $39.50, and go on sale October 4th through Ticketmaster. Bob's&#13;
website reports that a portion of tickets will only be sold to students,&#13;
assumed the attenders of Carthage. -KD&#13;
this issue wel teke a looksie ck:&#13;
_ ******** -vr-tT -onaraidomfiickayni^L PA0DY O S PUB&#13;
5022 7th Ave. ph: 262 .652.7223&#13;
LAYOUT: Three main sections, not a big open area., more like a wide hallway.&#13;
Front: Small bar area, stools &amp; tables. Rear: Pooltable, electronic darts.&#13;
Outside: Big fenced-in grassy area with picnic tables.&#13;
DECOR: Lots of framed Frank Sinatra.&#13;
MUSIC: Jukebox played all night Huge variety of music, from rock classics&#13;
to the lesser-known bands of today. Jukebox gets an A+.&#13;
THE CROWD: Ages varied - mostly boys. A lot of socializing, no dancing.&#13;
Relaxed atmosphere - didnt spot any high heels or&#13;
silky button-down shirts.&#13;
JUKEBOX BREAKDOWN:&#13;
A few of the choices:&#13;
Radiohead, Glassjaw, Me First &amp; The Gimmie Gimmies,&#13;
Bob Dylan, Thursday, The Beatles, The Mars Volta, Rage&#13;
Against The Machine, 'Before They Were Punk' - etc.&#13;
14 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
Foreign Film Fest&#13;
BY SARAH RINKE&#13;
A free movie on Wednesday nights?&#13;
What more could UW-Parkside&#13;
students ask for? When&#13;
students, on select Wednesdays&#13;
throughout the school year,&#13;
present their Ranger Card at&#13;
the box office at the Union&#13;
Theatre, they will be granted&#13;
free admission to the foreign&#13;
film shown that evening.&#13;
The Foreign Film Series has&#13;
been going on since 1983, 23&#13;
years in 2005. Fourteen films&#13;
are chosen from a survey taken&#13;
by patrons in the spring to be&#13;
shown over the academic year&#13;
with seven films each semester.&#13;
Being self-sustaining, the films do&#13;
not have a designated sponsor and&#13;
the money is primarily made through&#13;
ticket sales.&#13;
A $25 charge is issued to patrons&#13;
and other citizens throughout the&#13;
community who are interested in&#13;
seeing these films. Although this&#13;
price may seem a little steep, it is&#13;
actually for a "season pass" to view all&#13;
fourteen films throughout the year. It is&#13;
recommended to purchase tickets early&#13;
in the year, for Saturday showings&#13;
have sold out for the past 22 years.&#13;
The films are shown in the Union&#13;
Theatre every weekend starting&#13;
Thursday nights at 7:30 p.m. Other&#13;
times are Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday&#13;
at 5 and 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 and 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Director of the Foreign Film Series&#13;
Committee, Norm Cloutier says that&#13;
the films "are a unique opportunity&#13;
for students here at Paikside because&#13;
in order to see films of this ilk,&#13;
they'd have to be going to Chicago&#13;
or Milwaukee. It's an opportunity&#13;
for students to see other cultures,&#13;
see other languages and appreciate&#13;
the difference in cultures and the&#13;
commonalities that all people share."&#13;
The film "Good Bye Lenin!" for&#13;
example, is set in Germany and is&#13;
sure to appeal to those looking for a&#13;
good laugh. On the other hand, "The&#13;
Magdalene Sisters" deals with deeper&#13;
issues and should not be taken lightly.&#13;
Cloutier says, "These films differ&#13;
so much from the standard Hollywood&#13;
fair. They really tell engaging stories.&#13;
You're not going to see very many&#13;
car chases, and usually not too much&#13;
violence, but what you will get is&#13;
engaging human stories." These&#13;
films not only offer a highly educated&#13;
experience, but they also promise a&#13;
most enjoyable time.&#13;
For more information on the&#13;
Foreign Film Series, visit the website&#13;
at: www.uwp.edu/events/forfilm&#13;
Foreign Film&#13;
Fest Calender&#13;
September 29&#13;
Osama&#13;
September 13&#13;
Good Bye, Lenin!&#13;
September 27&#13;
The Magdalene Sisters&#13;
November 10&#13;
Dirty Pretty Things&#13;
November 17&#13;
Rana's Wedding&#13;
December 01&#13;
Autumn Spring&#13;
&amp; cx ^1 Fpo -&#13;
^ * Pub * " * An Irish hib... With A Rock N Roll Attitude&#13;
Racine &amp;&#13;
Kenosha 's&#13;
ONLY&#13;
True Irish Pub&#13;
Corner of Meachem Road&#13;
&amp; Taylor Avenue in Racine&#13;
Minutes Away from&#13;
UW-ParksideI&#13;
554-9695&#13;
Parkside's favorite&#13;
Pub for over 6 years&#13;
Every day Featuring music from bands across the globe&#13;
including Ireland, Scotland, England, Canada, Australia,&#13;
Hawaii and almost every other state in the U.S.&#13;
Mondays&#13;
Miller Lite Pints -$1.50&#13;
Tuesdays&#13;
$2.00 Off&#13;
ALL&#13;
cover charges with&#13;
student ID&#13;
PLUS&#13;
Every day is&#13;
Mystery Beer Day!&#13;
Pitchers of Miller Lite — $3.50 or Import pitchers — $7.00&#13;
Wednesdays&#13;
$2.00 Long Islands + KARAOKE&#13;
Thursdays&#13;
OVER 50 Irish/Scottish Beers &amp;&#13;
Spirits&#13;
Home for Live, Local and International Music&#13;
Please Remember...&#13;
to have fun, you&#13;
must be 21!&#13;
20 oz. Rails $3.00, 20 oz. Millers $1.75 + Jill the&#13;
Bartender!&#13;
Every Friday and Saturday&#13;
Live local, and International Music!&#13;
The Ranger News September 25. 2004&#13;
Match The Student to their&#13;
Underwear&#13;
Boxers&#13;
No Underwear&#13;
Boxer Briefs&#13;
A. Nichoie Tafum&#13;
Junior&#13;
21&#13;
Junior Nursing Major&#13;
B. Kurwin Wilson&#13;
Freshman&#13;
18&#13;
Undecided&#13;
C. Xavier Solis&#13;
Senior&#13;
25&#13;
Political Science&#13;
D. Arniya Wright&#13;
Junior&#13;
20&#13;
Criminal Justice&#13;
E. Matt Fordirosa&#13;
Freshman&#13;
1?&#13;
Education&#13;
iDOMjepun ON 3&#13;
:q siexog o sjtejg jexog:g mB-V :sjeM$uv&#13;
SWSmlS®mtml§MM&#13;
m Si&#13;
f iesta Carnival&#13;
with Low Riders,&#13;
Inflatables, Ciafts&#13;
and mors!&#13;
10am-2 pm&#13;
limn Qqmte/Pzffo&#13;
Hypnotist s^Pm&#13;
f rederiek Winters Union Cinema&#13;
Open Recreation in The Den&#13;
Union Cinema gjj{j9Kjg. Bowling - Air Hockey&#13;
M-p Hfe/Freaky Snapshots ?-11fn The Den&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
race - not - mcc hot ncc - not&#13;
Mtuma*&#13;
m mm mf#matm «• mm to m&#13;
wiotrKf mm* vmmt to&#13;
16 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
F&lt;d0^c s&#13;
Mouth&#13;
Television&#13;
Healthy&#13;
or&#13;
Not?&#13;
BY HENRY GASKINS&#13;
The need for information has increased greatly in the past&#13;
century, and television has played one of the most important&#13;
roles in allowing that to happen. The need for information is&#13;
not a bad thing, but the way television has taken over many&#13;
people's free time and become such a priority can be pretty disturbing. Television&#13;
can be addictive and often increases laziness while diminishing attention span.&#13;
The addictive part of television doesn't refer to a particular show a&#13;
person watches, because enjoying a show and wanting to see what happens next&#13;
is not a trait of addictiveness. The real addiction to television happens when&#13;
a person has nothing better to do, so they turn on TV. Whenever this person&#13;
has nothing to do, they will turn sit down and start watching it. People get so&#13;
addicted to it that it becomes a priority, a daily way to spend time, and eventually&#13;
they start scheduling their lives around it.&#13;
An inference can be made that when people become addicted to&#13;
television, they lose motivation to do other things. It's obviously easier to&#13;
procrastinate while the TV has you hooked, and it can be hard to convince&#13;
yourself to turn it off and take care of business rather than to just keep watching.&#13;
The thought of physical activities can really sound like a hassle to a person&#13;
who allows themselves to be addicted to television. Of course, when a person&#13;
chooses to stay fixated on the television instead of being productive within the&#13;
actual world they live in, laziness is being committed. It's not a crime to be lazy&#13;
or anything, it's just that wasting time instead of being active helps nobody, let&#13;
alone a person's self.&#13;
Not only is television addictive and a contribution to laziness, but it&#13;
diminishes a person's attention span as well. TV stations know how quickly a&#13;
person can flip the channel, so they are constantly trying to update and change&#13;
subjects in order to keep the viewer tuned in. If you watch MTV, you'll notice&#13;
how they almost never show the same camera angle for more than five seconds,&#13;
and rarely stay on the same subject for more than two minutes. That is because&#13;
viewers of their programming have a short attention span and get bored quickly.&#13;
Young people often have trouble reading books. They are used to getting all the&#13;
information quickly through visual and audio medias, where in a book it takes&#13;
longer because they have to read each sentence and form a mental image of what&#13;
is happening. When the brain is used to television as a source of information, it&#13;
becomes harder to pay attention to other forms of media such as reading (laziness&#13;
is a factor here too) and listening to lectures. It takes more effort to read and&#13;
listen to a speaker for an hour than to watch television, which caters to short&#13;
attention spans.&#13;
For these reasons, television is harmful to humans. It has become,&#13;
however, an important part of being an informed citizen. The same goes for the&#13;
internet. With news channels constantly allowing people to know the latest and&#13;
shows such as "Sesame Street" teaching children, it must be realized that there&#13;
are positive aspects of television and internet. But all to often people get sucked&#13;
into these "activities" for hours, wasting time by watching pointless programs or&#13;
surfing the web and accomplishing nothing.&#13;
To keep up on the latest important information while simultaneously&#13;
strengthening an attention span, I recommend the printed media.&#13;
BY PRESTON BROWN&#13;
Television has crept it's way into the lives of millions of people&#13;
around the planet in the last fifty years, paving the way for a&#13;
mass communication wave and providing valuable information&#13;
on multiple subjects ranging from sports to cooking to carpentry&#13;
or science, television has helped create the information friendly world of today.&#13;
Even the most critical of critics can't deny television its place in history as&#13;
a milestone in mankind's progress toward rapidly dispersing knowledge to&#13;
others. Before we had the tube, newspapers, books and hearsay were the most&#13;
likely ways of gaining access to the outside world, but since the mainstream&#13;
introduction of the television, people can gain massive quantities of data in&#13;
a matter of minutes. It brought the Mars rover landings into our homes and&#13;
allowed us to watch national political debates, while still keeping updates on the&#13;
local news and weather.&#13;
Although television's programming isn't perfect, the majority of shows that are&#13;
broadcast can be used to teach people something about life, love and laughter.&#13;
From the Discovery channel to the Cosby show, like anything else, it all depends&#13;
on what we do with the information given to us that determines its use and&#13;
effectiveness.&#13;
Before the television exploded into our homes, the number of people who were&#13;
able to access data was restricted to those who were educated and had developed&#13;
particular types of reading skills. No longer is information restricted to the elite.&#13;
One of the easiest and most effect ways to learn is to watch someone else do it&#13;
first and then apply the knowledge in a useful way.&#13;
In today's technologically advanced society, we have the power to learn all day&#13;
long while still being entertained, which is an advantage all it's own. People&#13;
no longer have to give up entertainment for knowledge, because modern day&#13;
broadcasting has combined the two in a useful way that lends itself to most&#13;
viewers. You can simply click on the "babysitter" and learn about volcanoes or&#13;
forensic sciences, travel the depths of Egypt or explore the world of sharks. It&#13;
helps teachers teach in the classroom while allowing us to explore our dreams&#13;
and options. We even learn about family values from shows like "The Facts of&#13;
Life" and "The Fresh Prince of Bellaire."&#13;
After five decades in the homes of millions, television is still improving and&#13;
growing. Some critics would like to say that most television is worthless. That&#13;
is merely a cynical viewpoint that ignores the rest of the facts. Although some&#13;
programming is less than quality, the cable waves stay humming with a huge&#13;
variety of high quality information that is transmitted into our fives on a daily&#13;
basis. There is no other way that currently exists to flow ideas into the general&#13;
population as effectively and quickly as the motion picture box.&#13;
The growth and potential of television has no end in site and with the arrival of&#13;
the information and technology age, it looks like it's here to stay. Television&#13;
helps people stay connected to the rest of the world, a world that was only&#13;
dreamed of before, but never experienced. So let's celebrate television for all its&#13;
glory and usefulness, let's keep watching the world grow.&#13;
"From the Donkey's Mouth" is not intended to have a political connotation.&#13;
The writers each take different sides of any particular argument whether&#13;
Ihey agree or not, and defend their side as best as possible. Suggestions&#13;
for future arguments are always accepted. Please send ideas or feedback&#13;
to rangernews@uwp.edu.&#13;
\fcfco Gamer 3 Hours&#13;
Mon - Thurs:&#13;
9am - 9pm&#13;
J ^ FFrrii aanndd SSaatt:: Buy, Trade, P|ay 9am - Mid,iiehl&#13;
'&#13;
The next level for Video Gamers is HERE!!!&#13;
Sun:&#13;
10am - 8pm&#13;
5901 75th Street Kenosha. At the corner of Hwy 50 and 60th Ave in Speedway Plaza&#13;
Buy Games!!!&#13;
Trade Games!!!&#13;
Rent Games!!!&#13;
Xbox - PS2 - GameCube - GameBoy Advance - PC&#13;
Video Games Cubed not only sells and rents games...&#13;
They also have 4 state of the art video game rooms!!!&#13;
Play video games on a 150" High Definition Screen!!!&#13;
Digital Surround Sound and Leather Reclining Rumble Chairs!!!&#13;
Up to 16 people can play at a time!!!&#13;
3 FREE Rentals&#13;
With a new membership&#13;
Limit one coupon per household Can not be&#13;
combined with any other offer. Duplication of&#13;
this coupon is fraud. Video Games Cubed&#13;
retains the right to refuse redemption of this&#13;
coupon at their discretion.&#13;
Expires 1/1/05&#13;
RN-l&#13;
10% off a USED game j&#13;
5% off a new game&#13;
Limit one coupon per person per visit Can not&#13;
be combined with any other offer. Duplication&#13;
of this coupon is fraud Video Games Cubed&#13;
retains the right to refuse redemption of this j&#13;
coupon at their discretion.&#13;
Expires 1/1/05&#13;
RN-l j&#13;
$5.00 OFF&#13;
A Monthly Game Pass j&#13;
Regularly $34.99&#13;
! Limit one coupon per person per pass. Can not;&#13;
be combined with any other offer. Duplication :&#13;
of this coupon is fraud Video Games Cubed ;&#13;
retains the right to refuse redemption of this!&#13;
| coupon at their discretion.&#13;
Expires 1/1/05 RN„ |&#13;
18 The Ranger News September 25, 2004&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
(262) 595-2287 • uwp_ads@yahoo.com&#13;
Classified Ad Rates&#13;
30 words for $5.00&#13;
and $0.25 for eveiy additional&#13;
word.&#13;
Spring Break 200S Travel with STS,&#13;
America's #1&#13;
Student Tour Operator to&#13;
Jamaica, Cancun, Acapulco, Bahamas and&#13;
Florida. Now&#13;
hiring on-campus reps.&#13;
Call for group discounts. Information/&#13;
Reservations&#13;
1-800-648- 4849 or&#13;
www.ststravel.com.&#13;
WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE&#13;
Polished Chuck Norris wannabe&#13;
searching for slightly crazy guitarist,&#13;
slightly stoopid bass player, mental&#13;
drummer and really important creative&#13;
clapper to start punk rock band!&#13;
call Kevin Coburn at 994-5298&#13;
''Questions about abortion?&#13;
Make an informed choice.&#13;
CaU Alpha Center 637-8323&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
8-20-04 Bad move, 5:37 am. A citation was issued to a driver for Resisting&#13;
or Obstructing an Officer&#13;
8-25-04 Shake them hatters off. 22nd Avenue. 10:52 pm. Officers assisted&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's Dept. with a driver of a vehicle that had several active&#13;
warrants&#13;
8-27-04 Why so fast? HWYE. 10:08 pm. Citations were issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 64mph in a 45mph zone and Operating a vehicle with a&#13;
suspended license.&#13;
8-28-04 Leam to buckle Up. STH 31/CTH E. 2:40 pm. A citation was issued&#13;
lo a driver for Failure to Fasten Seatbeit.&#13;
8-26-04 Needed food that A«f?MOLN. 10:27 am. A vending machine&#13;
representative reported damage to vending machines.&#13;
8-31-44 Thm womld such. Outer Loop Road. 10:00 am. A student reported a&#13;
missing wallet.&#13;
9-1-04 Wonder what they were drinking? Outer Loop Road. 12:18 am.&#13;
Citations were issued to students for underage drinking&#13;
8-1-04 Lead foot. CTH G/CTH E. 2:33 pm. A citation was issued to a&#13;
driver for traveling 53mph in a 35mph zone.&#13;
8-1-04 Ptirkmg m that bad? Union Parking Lot. 12:30 pm. A student&#13;
reported a parking permit was removed without permission.&#13;
9-2-04 Hope they're alright University Apartments. 9:39 am. Officers&#13;
assisted with a student having a seizure. Student transported to hospital.&#13;
8-2-04 Comnsehng needed. 12:17 pm. A student reported having a&#13;
temporary restraining order on a subject.&#13;
9-2-04 How could he decline if he was unresponsive? GRNQ. 2:14 pm.&#13;
Officers were dispatched to GRNQ with a report of an unresponsive student.&#13;
Student declined medical assistance.&#13;
Chancellor Jack&#13;
Keating serves&#13;
students sherbet&#13;
during the Ice&#13;
Cream Social on&#13;
September 8 in&#13;
Upper Main Place.&#13;
9-3-04 Maybe we need a shuttle from here to bars. Wood Road. 11:25 pm.&#13;
Citations were issued to a driver for Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated&#13;
and Operating with a B AC . 10. Driver was taken to Kenosha County Jail.&#13;
9-3-04 Inexperienced. Outer Loop Road. 6:39 am. A citation was issued for&#13;
underage drinking. Subject was transported to hospital by rescue.&#13;
9-3-04 Laid out. Wood Road. 8:51 am. Officers assisted a subject lying on the&#13;
side of Wood Road. Subject was transported to hospital.&#13;
9-6-04 Sounds annoying Ranger Hall. 1.49 am. Officers were dispatched to&#13;
Ranger Hall for a distuibance at a door.&#13;
9-6-04 Wow buddy, late? Outer Loop Rd/CTH G. 2:46 pm. A citation was&#13;
issued to a driver for traveling 47mph in a 25mph zone.&#13;
9-6-04 Someone's getting a new car Union Lot. 9:27 pm. Officers were&#13;
advised of a vehicle fire in the Union Lot. No injuries. Kenosha Fire Department&#13;
responded. Vehicle was towed.&#13;
9-7-44 This is the third person - what's in the air? MOLN. 10:27 am Officers&#13;
were dispatched to MOLN with tire report of an unconscious subject. Subject&#13;
transported to Kenosha Hospital.&#13;
9-7-04 Bo they have to pay for new ones? Union Lot. 3:34 pm. A staff member&#13;
reported a parking permit missing from her- unlocked vehicle without nermission.&#13;
9-7-44 Old boyfriend? Union Parking Lot. 3:39 pm. A student reported damage&#13;
to her vehicle in the parking lot.&#13;
8-7-04 I guess maybe die boyfriend got the wrong car. CART Lot. 5:00 pm. A&#13;
staff member report damage to her vehicle while parked in the parking lot.&#13;
9-8-44 Yeah that's pretty fast. CTH JR/STH 31. 8:48 am. A citation was issued&#13;
to a driver for traveling 56mph in a 35mph zone.&#13;
9-9-04 And they keep getting worse. CTH JR/STH 31 9:09 am. A citation was&#13;
issued to a driver for traveling 60mph in a 35mph zone&#13;
9-9-04 Hopefully third time is the charm? Union Parking Lot. 4:10 pm. A staff&#13;
member reported damage to his vehicle while parked in the Union Parking Lot.&#13;
Application to save money on furnishing&#13;
your college crib&#13;
SVE02234658-04 Form Approved by IKEA / www.ikeafinancialaid.com&#13;
WARNING: Any person who knowingly does not use IKEA t o furnish their dorm room is subject to high prices or&#13;
really bad milk crate and cinder block furniture.&#13;
IKEA SCHAUMBURG: North of Woodfield Mall (847) 969-9700&#13;
Mon-Thurs: 10am-9pm, Fri: lOam-lOpm, Sat: 9am-10pm,&#13;
Sun: 10am-8pm&#13;
PIEASE PRINT NEAT1Y OR TYPE. COM PARE PRICES CAREFUUY.&#13;
APPLICANT (to be completed by furniture-less student)&#13;
Last name: First name:. Ml:&#13;
Sex: 0MALE [ ;FEMALE Expected graduation date: 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Dorm room:.&#13;
(circle one) 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 sq/ft&#13;
Age:&#13;
Window: DYES • NO&#13;
FURNITURE Price of typical&#13;
furniture IKEA price YOU SAVE&#13;
Lounging/Entertaining&#13;
1. Did you choose this school based on an advantageous male to female ratio? • YES • NO&#13;
2. Does your school rank in the "party school" top ten? • YES • NO&#13;
3. Do you like experimenting with new things? • YES Q NO&#13;
If you answered YES on the previous questions, see below:&#13;
If you answered NO, you might need a change of scenery, see below:&#13;
$466.63 • $199&#13;
KLIPPAN sofa&#13;
$114.99 13 $4.99&#13;
MORKER lamp&#13;
$46.63 • $19.99&#13;
KIMME chair&#13;
$31.65 • $3.99&#13;
GRANAT cushion&#13;
(each)&#13;
$71.98 • $4.99&#13;
MARIENTA RUTA&#13;
RAG rug&#13;
$59&#13;
ROBIN&#13;
Cramming&#13;
1. Does studying cut into your falking-to-people time?&#13;
2. Do you practice a discriminating highlighting technique?&#13;
3. Do you heart studying?&#13;
If you answered YES to the questions above, see below:&#13;
If you answered NO, for your parents sake, see below:&#13;
O YES • NO&#13;
• YES • NO&#13;
• YES • NO&#13;
$206,33&#13;
$146.31&#13;
$149.66&#13;
$26.98&#13;
• $29.99&#13;
KRISTER desk&#13;
• $29.99&#13;
K1LBY bookcase&#13;
• $29.99&#13;
TRAKTOR stool&#13;
• $9.99&#13;
PYRE storage&#13;
Total savings&#13;
Enter to win an IKEA $1000 Furniture Scholarship _ ,&#13;
Fill out fhe scholarship application at ikeafmaiictalaid.com, print it out and bring it to the store. Don f be surprised it you win&#13;
furniture that will dress up your dorm for as long as your expected graduation date.&#13;
Cool furniture costs you less money, thereby leaving you with excess cash (Cheddar, cake, c.r.e.a.m dead presidents, etc.). More&#13;
cash that you can spend on an ice cream float with friends. And some pizza. And chicken wings. And a burnto as big as your head.&#13;
After that you can go lie down on some of that cool furniture that saved you all that money.&#13;
For a better life at college, visit&#13;
ikeafinancialaid.com&#13;
Promise to save: I promise to save money by going to the nearest IKEA store to buy my furniture. All savings under the terms of this&#13;
Note plus any other savings that may occur with IKEA merchandise not mentioned on this Note may increase my ability to do things&#13;
other'than sit in my dorm and stare at the (windowless) wall. IKEA furnishings may provide leftover money for a trip to the movies or&#13;
the obligatory college tattoo. Failure to shop at IKEA stores may reduce frequency of these or similar extracurricular activities. I understand&#13;
that I may cancel or reduce the size of the savings I receive at any time, by choosing not to go to IKEA stores.&#13;
My signature certifies that I have read, understood and agreed that IKEA stores are my best bet for saving money on college&#13;
crib furnishings.&#13;
Signature of Financially Educated Student&#13;
See slots for officio I rulesN. o purchase necesscry for 0017. While supplies lost. Soto products require assembly.&#13;
© Inter RCEA Systems B.V. 200 4. Visit us online 01 www.ilaafinanciacKd.com&#13;
Date (MM/DD/YY)&#13;
ARE YOU PLANNING TO&#13;
GRADUATE THIS DECEMBER?&#13;
If you are planning to graduate in December, make sure you are eligible to&#13;
attend Commencement activities. Apply for your degree summary/application&#13;
to graduate in the Student Records office. The application form is also&#13;
available on-line at:&#13;
http://oIdweb.uwp.edu/admin/registrar/graduation.htin&#13;
All eligible students who have applied by&#13;
this deadline will receive Senior Send-off&#13;
and Commencement ceremony information&#13;
by the end of October.&#13;
The deadline for filing is Friday,&#13;
October 8,2004.&#13;
Senior Send-off will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, November 10th from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and&#13;
Thursday, November 11th from 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. in lower Main Place.&#13;
Students will be able to order caps, gowns, invitations, rings, have&#13;
portraits taken, check with reps from financial aid and the&#13;
cashier's office, and confirm all degree requirements are »&#13;
met.&#13;
Food, drinks and a free gift will also be ,&#13;
provided.&#13;
Fall 2004&#13;
Commencement will&#13;
be held in the Sports&#13;
and Activities&#13;
Gymnasium on&#13;
Sunday, December&#13;
19th, 2004.</text>
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              <text>UW-Parkside&#13;
gets Regent&#13;
approval&#13;
ror&#13;
new bUilding&#13;
addition&#13;
The University&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
System&#13;
Board&#13;
of Regents&#13;
on&#13;
August&#13;
19, approved&#13;
a $9.1&#13;
million&#13;
capital&#13;
project&#13;
to&#13;
expand&#13;
and&#13;
remodel&#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
physical&#13;
education&#13;
building.&#13;
Regent&#13;
approval&#13;
is the first&#13;
step&#13;
in the process&#13;
to fund&#13;
the&#13;
project.&#13;
The&#13;
next&#13;
step&#13;
is State&#13;
Legislature&#13;
approval&#13;
to&#13;
allocate&#13;
funding&#13;
for the&#13;
project.&#13;
Of the $9.1&#13;
million,&#13;
$1.3&#13;
million&#13;
must&#13;
come&#13;
from &#13;
non-&#13;
state&#13;
sources.&#13;
Last&#13;
April,&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
approved&#13;
an increase&#13;
in segregated&#13;
fees&#13;
.f$8&#13;
dollars&#13;
a semester&#13;
per&#13;
student,&#13;
beginning&#13;
this&#13;
fall.&#13;
The remaining&#13;
$700,000&#13;
will&#13;
be &#13;
raised&#13;
through&#13;
a&#13;
community&#13;
fund-raising&#13;
effort&#13;
undertaken&#13;
by the University&#13;
ofWisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Benevolent&#13;
Foundation&#13;
Inc.&#13;
"We&#13;
are very&#13;
pleased&#13;
about&#13;
the Regent&#13;
approval,"&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Eleanor&#13;
Smith&#13;
said. "Weexpect&#13;
to work&#13;
very&#13;
closely&#13;
during&#13;
the next&#13;
months&#13;
with&#13;
local&#13;
legislators&#13;
and the Foundation&#13;
Board&#13;
to&#13;
secure&#13;
the necessary&#13;
funding.&#13;
The benefits&#13;
of the project&#13;
will&#13;
be &#13;
reflected&#13;
in improved&#13;
educational&#13;
facilities,&#13;
additional&#13;
space&#13;
for athletics&#13;
and extracurricular&#13;
activities&#13;
and provide&#13;
for important&#13;
contributions&#13;
to the regional&#13;
economy."&#13;
Features&#13;
of the proposed&#13;
building&#13;
include&#13;
a 60,000-&#13;
square-foot&#13;
field&#13;
house,&#13;
an&#13;
NCAA&#13;
regulation&#13;
indoor&#13;
track,&#13;
three&#13;
classrooms.&#13;
expanded&#13;
locker&#13;
rooms,&#13;
additional&#13;
racquetball&#13;
courta,&#13;
a new dance&#13;
studio,&#13;
renovated&#13;
and expanded&#13;
training&#13;
and&#13;
weight&#13;
rooms&#13;
and&#13;
a lifetime&#13;
wellness&#13;
center.&#13;
The&#13;
new&#13;
field&#13;
house&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
the largest&#13;
free-span&#13;
space&#13;
in&#13;
southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
is&#13;
intended&#13;
to handle&#13;
large&#13;
events&#13;
for both&#13;
collegiate&#13;
and&#13;
community&#13;
use.&#13;
The&#13;
existing&#13;
physical&#13;
education&#13;
building,&#13;
constructed&#13;
in 1972,&#13;
was&#13;
designed&#13;
primarily&#13;
for men's&#13;
intramural&#13;
and&#13;
intercollegiate&#13;
team&#13;
sports.&#13;
A field&#13;
house&#13;
was&#13;
part&#13;
of the original&#13;
plan.&#13;
However,&#13;
state&#13;
budget&#13;
cutbacks&#13;
prohibited&#13;
a new&#13;
field&#13;
house.&#13;
"UW-Parkside&#13;
has utilized&#13;
the current&#13;
building&#13;
beyond&#13;
its capacities,"&#13;
Rep.&#13;
Jim&#13;
Kreuser,&#13;
D-Kenosha&#13;
said.&#13;
"This&#13;
is a building&#13;
which&#13;
even&#13;
from&#13;
its beginning&#13;
was&#13;
not&#13;
large&#13;
enough&#13;
to accommodate&#13;
the demands&#13;
of a full-scale&#13;
University&#13;
athletic&#13;
program&#13;
or the needs&#13;
of the&#13;
community.&#13;
This&#13;
project&#13;
is&#13;
definitely&#13;
justified&#13;
and&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
fully&#13;
utilized&#13;
in our&#13;
community&#13;
for university&#13;
and&#13;
non-university&#13;
events."&#13;
"The&#13;
existing&#13;
physical&#13;
education&#13;
building&#13;
reflects&#13;
an&#13;
outdated&#13;
set of priorities,"&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Athletic&#13;
Director&#13;
Linda&#13;
Draft&#13;
said.&#13;
"The&#13;
proposed&#13;
building&#13;
renovations&#13;
will&#13;
support&#13;
the&#13;
University's&#13;
growth&#13;
in&#13;
women's&#13;
intercollegiate&#13;
sports,&#13;
the increased&#13;
emphasis&#13;
on intramural&#13;
sports&#13;
and&#13;
wellness&#13;
and&#13;
allow&#13;
for greater&#13;
use by the urban&#13;
region."&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
expects&#13;
the&#13;
renovated&#13;
facility&#13;
to be&#13;
available&#13;
to community&#13;
organizations&#13;
on at least&#13;
twenty&#13;
weekend&#13;
days a year&#13;
on a fee-for-use&#13;
basis.&#13;
Deadline&#13;
for GMAT&#13;
Examination&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
September&#13;
16&#13;
Individuals&#13;
interested&#13;
in&#13;
taking&#13;
the Graduate&#13;
Management&#13;
Admission&#13;
Test&#13;
(GMAT),&#13;
to be administered&#13;
at the University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
in&#13;
October,&#13;
must&#13;
complete&#13;
the&#13;
registration&#13;
process&#13;
by Friday,&#13;
September&#13;
16.&#13;
The GMAT&#13;
is required&#13;
for&#13;
allindividuals&#13;
interested&#13;
in&#13;
enrolling&#13;
in any&#13;
Masters&#13;
of&#13;
BUSiness&#13;
Administration&#13;
(MBA)&#13;
program.&#13;
Applications&#13;
forthe GMA&#13;
T can be obtained&#13;
from&#13;
the UW-Parkside&#13;
Counseling&#13;
and&#13;
Testing&#13;
Office,&#13;
Room&#13;
D175&#13;
of the&#13;
WYllie&#13;
Library&#13;
Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Applications&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
mailed&#13;
to the national&#13;
testing&#13;
service&#13;
and postmarked&#13;
no&#13;
later&#13;
than&#13;
September&#13;
13.&#13;
The&#13;
GMAT&#13;
examination&#13;
will&#13;
be given&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
on&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
October&#13;
15.&#13;
Individuals&#13;
interested&#13;
in&#13;
learning&#13;
about&#13;
the UW-&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
MBA&#13;
program&#13;
are&#13;
encouraged&#13;
to attend&#13;
an Open&#13;
House&#13;
at 7 p.m,&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
8 in Room&#13;
104-106&#13;
of the lJW-Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Admission&#13;
requirements,&#13;
prerequisites,&#13;
curriculum&#13;
overview&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
evening&#13;
class&#13;
schedule&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
discussed.&#13;
For more&#13;
information&#13;
on the&#13;
GMAT&#13;
or enrolling&#13;
in lJW-&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
MBA&#13;
program,&#13;
call&#13;
(414)&#13;
595-2280.&#13;
September&#13;
1, 1994&#13;
ISSUE&#13;
#1&#13;
Parkside&#13;
to Begin&#13;
New&#13;
Recycling&#13;
Program&#13;
by &#13;
Karen&#13;
Diehl&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
is&#13;
starting&#13;
a new recycling&#13;
program&#13;
this&#13;
fall in order&#13;
to&#13;
comply&#13;
with&#13;
new&#13;
state&#13;
law.&#13;
In&#13;
the past,&#13;
the campus&#13;
has&#13;
recycled&#13;
only paper.&#13;
However,&#13;
with&#13;
the new&#13;
system,&#13;
waste&#13;
products&#13;
will&#13;
be separated&#13;
into three&#13;
categories.&#13;
The&#13;
first&#13;
is trash.&#13;
Trash&#13;
receptacles&#13;
will&#13;
be the&#13;
shortest&#13;
of the containers&#13;
and&#13;
green&#13;
in color.&#13;
Wax coated&#13;
paper&#13;
cups,&#13;
relatively&#13;
unclean&#13;
Styrofoam&#13;
plates&#13;
or cups,&#13;
food&#13;
products&#13;
and&#13;
wrappers&#13;
would&#13;
all be thrown&#13;
in the trash&#13;
bin.&#13;
Recycling&#13;
of paper&#13;
will&#13;
continue&#13;
also.&#13;
Paper&#13;
bins&#13;
will&#13;
be middle-sized&#13;
and&#13;
brown.&#13;
Any&#13;
papers,&#13;
including&#13;
windowed&#13;
envelopes,&#13;
magazines,&#13;
file folders,&#13;
glossy&#13;
or coated&#13;
paper,&#13;
colored&#13;
paper&#13;
and post-it&#13;
notes&#13;
can &#13;
be&#13;
placed&#13;
into&#13;
the paper&#13;
recycling&#13;
basket.&#13;
The&#13;
newest&#13;
addition&#13;
to the&#13;
recycling&#13;
program&#13;
will be&#13;
commingled&#13;
(pronounced&#13;
coh-&#13;
mingled)&#13;
recyclables.&#13;
Commingled&#13;
recyclables&#13;
include&#13;
aluminum&#13;
cans,&#13;
plastics,&#13;
tin and&#13;
relatively&#13;
clean&#13;
Styrofoam&#13;
cups and&#13;
plates.&#13;
Recycling&#13;
in campus&#13;
housing&#13;
will remain&#13;
as it was&#13;
previously,&#13;
exceptthat&#13;
cardboard&#13;
will&#13;
also&#13;
be&#13;
recycled.&#13;
Anyone&#13;
with&#13;
cardboard&#13;
to recycle&#13;
can take&#13;
it to the housing&#13;
office.&#13;
The&#13;
amount&#13;
of goods&#13;
recycled&#13;
on campus&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
monitored&#13;
by the state&#13;
in&#13;
order&#13;
to be certain&#13;
that&#13;
UW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
is in compliance&#13;
with&#13;
the new&#13;
laws.&#13;
These&#13;
laws&#13;
will&#13;
be affecting&#13;
everyone&#13;
on a &#13;
local&#13;
level,&#13;
not&#13;
just&#13;
on state-owned&#13;
property.&#13;
However,&#13;
the amount&#13;
of&#13;
recycling&#13;
required&#13;
from&#13;
UW-&#13;
system&#13;
colleges&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
higher.&#13;
Also,&#13;
the amount&#13;
of&#13;
required&#13;
recycling&#13;
will&#13;
increase&#13;
each year.&#13;
For&#13;
example,&#13;
the recycling&#13;
done&#13;
in 1996-97&#13;
will&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
surpass&#13;
that&#13;
in 1995-96&#13;
.&#13;
The&#13;
paper&#13;
recycling&#13;
will&#13;
~continue&#13;
to be taken&#13;
care&#13;
of&#13;
by the Peltz&#13;
Corporation.&#13;
The&#13;
commingled&#13;
recyclables&#13;
and&#13;
trash&#13;
will&#13;
be handled&#13;
by the&#13;
Land&#13;
Reclamation&#13;
Company&#13;
(LRC).&#13;
Once&#13;
the commingled&#13;
goods&#13;
leave&#13;
the campus,&#13;
they are&#13;
brought&#13;
to the LRC&#13;
recycling&#13;
facility&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
There,&#13;
the&#13;
recyc1ables&#13;
are placed&#13;
on a&#13;
conveyer&#13;
belt and separated.&#13;
Then&#13;
these&#13;
products&#13;
are&#13;
shredded&#13;
and&#13;
baled.&#13;
Bales&#13;
of&#13;
recycled&#13;
goods&#13;
look&#13;
much&#13;
like&#13;
bales&#13;
of hay,&#13;
only&#13;
three&#13;
times&#13;
the size. These&#13;
bales&#13;
are then&#13;
sold&#13;
to markets&#13;
where&#13;
they&#13;
will be made&#13;
into consumer-&#13;
ready&#13;
products.&#13;
The&#13;
trash&#13;
that&#13;
comes&#13;
out of&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide will&#13;
be taken&#13;
to&#13;
LRC's&#13;
landfill,&#13;
also&#13;
located&#13;
in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The&#13;
landfill&#13;
has an&#13;
estimated&#13;
4-6 year&#13;
life span&#13;
left.&#13;
The&#13;
state&#13;
hopes&#13;
to divert&#13;
25%&#13;
of waste&#13;
products&#13;
from&#13;
landfills&#13;
by recycling.&#13;
If this&#13;
is the case,&#13;
the life span&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
particular&#13;
landfill&#13;
could&#13;
be extended&#13;
from&#13;
4-6 years&#13;
to&#13;
6-8 years.&#13;
"It's&#13;
really&#13;
difficult&#13;
to predict,"&#13;
states&#13;
Mark&#13;
Hanley&#13;
of LRC&#13;
recycling,&#13;
"There's&#13;
no guarantee."&#13;
.Ten years&#13;
ago, there&#13;
were an&#13;
estimated&#13;
800-850&#13;
open&#13;
landfills.&#13;
Today,&#13;
there&#13;
are&#13;
perhaps&#13;
only&#13;
200&#13;
still&#13;
operating.&#13;
"The&#13;
problem&#13;
with&#13;
these&#13;
landfills&#13;
is keeping&#13;
them&#13;
current,"&#13;
comments&#13;
Hanley.&#13;
"The&#13;
landfills&#13;
of&#13;
today&#13;
are built&#13;
more&#13;
stringently&#13;
than&#13;
the&#13;
hazardous&#13;
waste&#13;
dumps&#13;
of 10&#13;
years&#13;
ago."&#13;
Training&#13;
meetings&#13;
have&#13;
already&#13;
occurred&#13;
in order&#13;
for&#13;
faculty&#13;
and&#13;
statTto&#13;
learn&#13;
about&#13;
the new&#13;
program.&#13;
There&#13;
will be more&#13;
meetings&#13;
for any students&#13;
interested&#13;
in&#13;
learning&#13;
more,&#13;
or faculty/staff&#13;
who may have missed&#13;
the&#13;
first meetings.&#13;
These&#13;
training&#13;
sessions&#13;
will be held in Union&#13;
104 on September&#13;
21and&#13;
27&#13;
at 10:30am,&#13;
12:00&#13;
noon,&#13;
and&#13;
1:30pm.&#13;
Annual&#13;
Competition&#13;
for Fulbright&#13;
and&#13;
Other&#13;
Grants&#13;
ToClose&#13;
Soon&#13;
The&#13;
1995-96&#13;
competition&#13;
for Fulbright&#13;
and&#13;
other&#13;
grants&#13;
for graduate&#13;
study&#13;
will&#13;
close&#13;
October&#13;
31, 1994.&#13;
Only&#13;
a few more&#13;
weeks&#13;
remain&#13;
in which&#13;
qualified&#13;
graduate&#13;
students&#13;
may&#13;
apply&#13;
for one of the approximately&#13;
800 awards&#13;
which&#13;
are&#13;
available&#13;
to over&#13;
100&#13;
countries.&#13;
The&#13;
purpose&#13;
of these&#13;
grants&#13;
is to increase&#13;
mutual&#13;
understanding&#13;
between&#13;
the&#13;
people&#13;
ofthe&#13;
United&#13;
States&#13;
and other&#13;
countries&#13;
through&#13;
the exchange&#13;
of persons,&#13;
knowledge&#13;
and&#13;
skills.&#13;
They&#13;
are provided&#13;
under&#13;
the terms&#13;
of the Mutual&#13;
Educational&#13;
and&#13;
Cultural&#13;
Exchange&#13;
Act of&#13;
1961&#13;
(Fulbright-Hays&#13;
Act)&#13;
and&#13;
by foreign&#13;
governments,&#13;
universities.&#13;
corporations&#13;
and&#13;
private&#13;
donors.&#13;
Most&#13;
of the grants&#13;
offered&#13;
provide&#13;
round-trip&#13;
transportation,&#13;
tuition&#13;
and&#13;
maintenance&#13;
for one&#13;
academic&#13;
year;&#13;
a few provide&#13;
international&#13;
travel&#13;
only, or a&#13;
stipend&#13;
intended&#13;
as a partial&#13;
grant-in-aid.&#13;
Applicants&#13;
must&#13;
be U.S.&#13;
citizens&#13;
at the time&#13;
of&#13;
application,&#13;
and&#13;
must&#13;
generally&#13;
hold&#13;
a bachelor's&#13;
degree&#13;
or its equivalent&#13;
before&#13;
the beginning&#13;
date&#13;
of&#13;
the grant.&#13;
and in most cases,&#13;
should&#13;
be proficient&#13;
in the&#13;
language&#13;
of the host&#13;
country.&#13;
Except&#13;
for certain&#13;
specific&#13;
awards,&#13;
candidates&#13;
may not&#13;
hold&#13;
the Ph.D.&#13;
at the time&#13;
of&#13;
application.&#13;
Creative&#13;
and&#13;
performing&#13;
artists&#13;
are not required&#13;
to&#13;
have a bachelor's&#13;
degree,&#13;
but&#13;
most have &#13;
fOUT&#13;
years&#13;
of&#13;
professional&#13;
study&#13;
or&#13;
equivalent&#13;
experience.&#13;
Candidates&#13;
in medicine&#13;
must&#13;
have&#13;
an M.D.&#13;
or the&#13;
equivalent&#13;
(e.g.,&#13;
O.D.,&#13;
D.D.S.)&#13;
at the time of applications.&#13;
Application&#13;
forms&#13;
and&#13;
further&#13;
information&#13;
may&#13;
be&#13;
obtained&#13;
from&#13;
college&#13;
or&#13;
university&#13;
Fulbright&#13;
Program&#13;
Advisers,&#13;
IIE's&#13;
New&#13;
York&#13;
headquarters&#13;
or one of its&#13;
regional&#13;
offices&#13;
in Chicago,&#13;
Denver,&#13;
Houston,&#13;
or San&#13;
Francisco.&#13;
The&#13;
deadline&#13;
for receipt&#13;
of&#13;
applications&#13;
is October&#13;
31,&#13;
1994.&#13;
Requests&#13;
for&#13;
application&#13;
materials&#13;
received&#13;
after&#13;
October&#13;
15,&#13;
1994&#13;
will&#13;
not be honored.&#13;
NEWS&#13;
SECTION&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
Buchholz&#13;
Becomes&#13;
New PSGA&#13;
President&#13;
By: Karen&#13;
Diehl&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
roughly&#13;
a month&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
half.&#13;
At the end&#13;
of the&#13;
year,&#13;
it was&#13;
discovered&#13;
that&#13;
Vince&#13;
Borner&#13;
did not fulfill&#13;
the academic&#13;
requirements,&#13;
nor did Dana&#13;
Larsen,&#13;
president&#13;
pro-temp.&#13;
Buchholz&#13;
received&#13;
no&#13;
official&#13;
word&#13;
of the change.&#13;
"One&#13;
day I got a phone&#13;
call&#13;
from&#13;
one of the senators&#13;
who&#13;
said,&#13;
'Hello,&#13;
Madame&#13;
President!'"&#13;
commented&#13;
Jennifer.&#13;
The&#13;
PSGA&#13;
constitution&#13;
requires&#13;
that&#13;
three&#13;
meetings&#13;
occur&#13;
over&#13;
the&#13;
Last&#13;
March,&#13;
elections&#13;
were&#13;
held&#13;
for senatorial&#13;
and&#13;
executive&#13;
positions&#13;
in&#13;
-Parkside's&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
(PSGA).&#13;
At that&#13;
time,&#13;
Vince&#13;
Borner,&#13;
a former&#13;
Senator,&#13;
was&#13;
elected&#13;
president,&#13;
and&#13;
Jennifer&#13;
Buchholz&#13;
was&#13;
elected&#13;
vice-&#13;
president.&#13;
These&#13;
offices&#13;
were&#13;
filled&#13;
by Borner&#13;
and&#13;
Buchholz&#13;
for&#13;
summer.&#13;
However,&#13;
there&#13;
were&#13;
not enough&#13;
of the&#13;
senators&#13;
president&#13;
to elect&#13;
even&#13;
a temporary&#13;
vice-&#13;
president.&#13;
Therefore,&#13;
Buchholz&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
assuming&#13;
the duties&#13;
of both&#13;
present&#13;
and&#13;
vice-president.&#13;
At the first&#13;
PSGA&#13;
meeting&#13;
of the school&#13;
year,&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
be held&#13;
on&#13;
September&#13;
2, the senate&#13;
can vote&#13;
on a temporary&#13;
replacement.&#13;
The&#13;
official&#13;
election&#13;
will&#13;
occur&#13;
in&#13;
October,&#13;
when&#13;
the entire&#13;
student&#13;
body&#13;
can vote.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Opportunities&#13;
September&#13;
10, from&#13;
9 am to 4&#13;
pm. Excellent&#13;
experience&#13;
for&#13;
Pre-Health&#13;
and Psychology&#13;
.&#13;
students.&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Crisis&#13;
Worker/Shelter&#13;
Supervisor&#13;
Training.&#13;
Three&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
agencies&#13;
have&#13;
scheduled&#13;
a joint&#13;
27 hour&#13;
training&#13;
beginning&#13;
Monday,&#13;
September&#13;
19, from&#13;
5:30&#13;
to&#13;
9:30&#13;
pm on Mondays&#13;
and&#13;
Wednesdays.&#13;
Become&#13;
a &#13;
vi &#13;
tal&#13;
part&#13;
of Women's&#13;
Horizons&#13;
Inc.,&#13;
The Domestic&#13;
Violence&#13;
Project,&#13;
or Kenoshans&#13;
against&#13;
Sexual&#13;
Assault.&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in&#13;
the Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Hospice&#13;
Alliance&#13;
Training.&#13;
An eight&#13;
session&#13;
training&#13;
course&#13;
begins&#13;
in Racine&#13;
on&#13;
Monday,&#13;
September&#13;
12, in&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
on Tuesday,&#13;
September&#13;
27, or in&#13;
Burlington&#13;
on Monday,&#13;
October&#13;
10. Learn&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
disease&#13;
process,&#13;
psychological&#13;
reactions&#13;
to &#13;
death,&#13;
family&#13;
dynamics,&#13;
and&#13;
communication&#13;
skills.&#13;
All&#13;
Saints&#13;
Hospice&#13;
of Racine&#13;
is&#13;
offering&#13;
training&#13;
on Saturday,&#13;
One-Time&#13;
Events&#13;
Need&#13;
Volunteers.&#13;
River&#13;
Bend&#13;
Harvest&#13;
Festival,&#13;
Racine,&#13;
on&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
September&#13;
18, for a&#13;
two-hour&#13;
shift;&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
. Corporate&#13;
Cup&#13;
at KYE&#13;
on&#13;
Saturday&#13;
or Sunday,&#13;
September&#13;
17/18&#13;
for a two to&#13;
three&#13;
hour&#13;
shift,&#13;
and Keep&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Beautiful,&#13;
on&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
September&#13;
24, for&#13;
three&#13;
hours.&#13;
See Carol&#13;
in the&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
Office&#13;
is located&#13;
in&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
Library&#13;
and&#13;
Learning&#13;
Center&#13;
D175.&#13;
For more&#13;
information&#13;
call 595-2011.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Names&#13;
Coordinator&#13;
for Student&#13;
Employment&#13;
Joyce&#13;
Sadler,&#13;
Sorriers,&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
named&#13;
the coordinator&#13;
for student&#13;
employment&#13;
at&#13;
the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sadler&#13;
will assist&#13;
students&#13;
in finding&#13;
part-time&#13;
work&#13;
with&#13;
area&#13;
businesses&#13;
through&#13;
a computerized&#13;
job board&#13;
that&#13;
Red Cross&#13;
CPR Classes&#13;
Begin&#13;
allows&#13;
area&#13;
businesses&#13;
to &#13;
list&#13;
employment&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
The&#13;
new&#13;
position&#13;
is part&#13;
of&#13;
the university's&#13;
Career&#13;
Center.&#13;
Sadler's&#13;
background&#13;
includes&#13;
retail&#13;
management&#13;
and sales&#13;
for P.A.&#13;
Bergner&#13;
Company,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The Lakeshores&#13;
Chapter&#13;
of the&#13;
American&#13;
Red Cross,&#13;
serving&#13;
the&#13;
Racine,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
and Walworth&#13;
Counties,&#13;
in conjunction&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
Bristol&#13;
Fire&#13;
Department,&#13;
is&#13;
annoucing&#13;
current&#13;
openings&#13;
in the&#13;
CPR&#13;
for the Professional&#13;
course&#13;
to&#13;
be held&#13;
at the Bristol&#13;
Fire&#13;
Department,&#13;
located&#13;
at 8301&#13;
-&#13;
190th&#13;
Avenue,&#13;
Bristol.&#13;
Please&#13;
call&#13;
course&#13;
is one step&#13;
beyond&#13;
Community&#13;
CPR&#13;
(Adult,&#13;
Infant&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Child&#13;
CPR&#13;
one man).&#13;
Upon&#13;
completion,&#13;
students&#13;
will receive&#13;
a one (1) year&#13;
certification,&#13;
text&#13;
book&#13;
and pocket&#13;
mask.&#13;
Cost:&#13;
$37.65.&#13;
September&#13;
19 &#13;
&amp; &#13;
21,&#13;
Monday&#13;
&amp; &#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
7:00-&#13;
10:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
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              <text>Cross Country: Women take Nationals</text>
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              <text>pege&#13;
.3&#13;
PAS&#13;
proposes&#13;
constitutional changes&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
African students&#13;
criticize campus&#13;
page&#13;
13&#13;
Basketball team&#13;
in rebuilding season&#13;
University ofWisconsln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol. 15. No.1 2&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Womentake Nationals&#13;
seventh  place finish, and a&#13;
school record of 18 minutes,&#13;
three  seconds.  Sarah  Hiett&#13;
was the second runner&#13;
in&#13;
fore&#13;
the  team,  placing  18th. Her&#13;
time of&#13;
18: 20&#13;
was her per-&#13;
sonal best. Freshman  Jackie&#13;
Melotick placed 24th, and ran&#13;
her  best  time  by thirty  sec-&#13;
onds,  finishing  In 18:25. All&#13;
three  runners  achieved  All-&#13;
American  status&#13;
by&#13;
placing&#13;
in&#13;
the top 25.&#13;
Ji1Ieen Pobair- was the next&#13;
finisher.   Her  time  equaled&#13;
her best effort&#13;
as&#13;
she placed&#13;
38th&#13;
In&#13;
18:40. Colleen Wismer&#13;
placed  67th, running  her sec-&#13;
ond fastest  time on the&#13;
Park-&#13;
side  course.  Nancy  Marter&#13;
was the first  sixth  runner  to&#13;
finish the race. Her time was&#13;
19:15.&#13;
Julie&#13;
Wunrow, who was&#13;
slowed by a knee Injury,  fin-&#13;
Ished 202nd in 20:47.&#13;
Achieving  goals  was  the&#13;
order  of the day. "At the be-&#13;
ginning  of the  year  we  sat&#13;
down and  set six goals:  the&#13;
first was to score under 125&#13;
points,  then  to finish In the&#13;
top four,&#13;
win&#13;
the NCAA DIvi-&#13;
sion&#13;
n&#13;
regional,  be top seven&#13;
at  NCAA Nationals,  defeat&#13;
80% of&#13;
all&#13;
schools and 90% of&#13;
all Division I .schools,"  said&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt. "We met&#13;
all these goals except winning&#13;
the  Great  Lakes  Regional,&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
count the final ranklngs&#13;
for  meeting  the  top  seven&#13;
goa) for&#13;
NCAA&#13;
because  we&#13;
were ranked seventh.&#13;
It&#13;
The team's score of 121&#13;
points  was  well below  their&#13;
goal of 125. It was the highest&#13;
score ever  to win Nationals,&#13;
but DeWitt didn't belleve the&#13;
field was getting any weaker.&#13;
He said,&#13;
"The&#13;
teams  were&#13;
really&#13;
even. There wasn't one&#13;
dominant  team  out there,&#13;
or&#13;
even two Uke there has been&#13;
in&#13;
the past."&#13;
The women's  performance&#13;
was&#13;
helped&#13;
by&#13;
some  poor&#13;
showings of other team's  top&#13;
runners.  Last year's  national&#13;
by&#13;
Michael&#13;
J.&#13;
Rohi&#13;
Asst.Sports Editor&#13;
This&#13;
past  weekend,   the&#13;
Parkslde women's   cross-&#13;
countryteam, which  hadn't&#13;
won&#13;
an InvItational  all&#13;
sea-&#13;
1lII,&#13;
captured the most impor-&#13;
tantone of the year  .  the&#13;
Nallonal&#13;
Association of Inter-&#13;
eoIleglateAthletics  (NAJA)&#13;
Nat10nal&#13;
Championship.&#13;
The&#13;
women,&#13;
who&#13;
were&#13;
raDked&#13;
third&#13;
In&#13;
the most&#13;
re-&#13;
....t&#13;
NAJA&#13;
poll, out-distanced&#13;
_ber.one&#13;
ranked  Pacific&#13;
~&#13;
and  number-two&#13;
,,-HIllsdale.&#13;
The top four&#13;
~    \Vere:&#13;
Parkslde,&#13;
121&#13;
......  Emporia  state   151.&#13;
:ma&#13;
State. 156; and' Hills:&#13;
.180.&#13;
Pacu!e Lutheran  finished&#13;
IIxth&#13;
and MIlwaukee finished&#13;
• dlstant tenth.  Places  two&#13;
tbrouby&#13;
gil&#13;
six were  separated&#13;
only&#13;
11&#13;
points.&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside  women  all&#13;
l::n:&#13;
trong&#13;
races.  Michelle&#13;
r&#13;
led the team  with a&#13;
photo by&#13;
8t1WI&#13;
P....&#13;
no&#13;
Sarah HIett's&#13;
1_&#13;
shc&gt;wsthe atraln&#13;
01&#13;
runnIng five kilome-&#13;
te.. In&#13;
lest&#13;
Saturday's  NAIA&#13;
Croaa&#13;
Country Natlonsla. The&#13;
effort&#13;
was&#13;
worth It, though, as she and her teemmat ..&#13;
c.p-&#13;
tured the team tille.&#13;
Natlonala see&#13;
page 16&#13;
mean $172 fee hike next fall&#13;
Tuition&#13;
increase will&#13;
den of higher tuition, to guar-&#13;
anteelng    employment    for&#13;
graduates  In teaching.  medi-&#13;
cal  and  engineering&#13;
protes-&#13;
slons,&#13;
"This&#13;
isn't an attack,"  Tol·&#13;
efree  said  of  the  proposal.&#13;
"It's  just  an attempt  to ad-&#13;
dress Issues Important  to stu-&#13;
dents. "&#13;
Seemann's,  Tolefree's  and&#13;
Emerson's  remarks  were met&#13;
with cheers  by fifteen Madi-&#13;
son  students  who  protested&#13;
the  proposed   tuition  hikes&#13;
with  signs  and  black&#13;
arm-&#13;
bands.&#13;
The protestors  also cheered&#13;
when Regent  John SchenJan,&#13;
the Board's  sole student  rep-:&#13;
resentaUve, introduced a mo-&#13;
tion to eliminate  the addition·&#13;
al&#13;
$9&#13;
million&#13;
in&#13;
academic&#13;
fees, transferrtng  that money&#13;
Into additional  GPR requesta.&#13;
SchenJan's motion, although&#13;
defeated   11·3. drew  strong&#13;
support   from  Regent  Ness&#13;
Flores.  "We're  making&#13;
to·&#13;
day's  students  pay  for  the&#13;
mIstakes  of the past."  Flores&#13;
Tuition ~&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
tion.&#13;
"I've&#13;
heard&#13;
a  lot&#13;
about&#13;
maintaining  a level of quality&#13;
education In WIsconsin," saId&#13;
Gary Seemann,  WSA legisla-&#13;
tive affairs  director.  "But&#13;
I&#13;
haven't  heard anything  about&#13;
affordabillty   and&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
that's&#13;
a&#13;
concern&#13;
that&#13;
should&#13;
be addressed as well.&#13;
"You have  to reallze  that&#13;
what you're doing Is going to&#13;
affect thousands&#13;
of&#13;
students,"&#13;
Seeman continued. "It&#13;
Is&#13;
very&#13;
easy for you to sll back and&#13;
play  around  with  numbers.&#13;
But you have to reallze  that&#13;
to&#13;
those  numbers   connect&#13;
up&#13;
with people."&#13;
System President  Kenneth Shaw&#13;
(I)&#13;
and Regenl Thom..  Lyon&#13;
Bryce  Tolefree,  UC presl-&#13;
listen to studenltesllmony.&#13;
.&#13;
dent,  and  Ed  Emerson.  the&#13;
n!&#13;
m&#13;
organizationts   Academic&#13;
Af·&#13;
$156,483,400of the $~,81,252~&#13;
':tej,resentatives   from  the   fairs  director,  presented  the&#13;
total  needed   to   maUl   "   Wisconsin  Student  Assocta-   Regents  with a "Declaration&#13;
current  levels  of operatlo~&#13;
tion (WSA), the UW-Madlson   of Basic Principles"  ouU1nlng&#13;
was to come from GPR.    e   campus   government,    and   ten  allematlve   funding  pro-&#13;
remaining    $24,768,900  was   UnIted  CouncIl  (UC).  ad·   posals to dilute the negative&#13;
earmarked  as academic  f~S't&#13;
dressed   members   of  the   effects   of  raising   tuition.&#13;
Nearly  $9 millIon  of   a&#13;
Board   regarding   the  pro·   Those  recommendations   ran&#13;
tuition    money   represents&#13;
posal&#13;
stating that to adopt It   the gamut from the establish·&#13;
qualitY    Improvement&#13;
In-   would block thousands  of stu-   ment of a four-year  flnanctal&#13;
creases  In tuition  to be paid    dents  from  a college educa- _ aId package  to offset the bur- -&#13;
....... cohllipnts over  the  bie,n·&#13;
by&#13;
Gary&#13;
L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
=:N.-vocal&#13;
student&#13;
op-&#13;
9IIlce&#13;
thwasn't enough to con-&#13;
Oll\e&#13;
0&#13;
UW-System Board&#13;
IlIai&#13;
bgedgnts&#13;
to&#13;
reject  a blen-&#13;
lor&#13;
bJt.&#13;
u  et&#13;
proposal  calling&#13;
It&#13;
!be ~&#13;
Increases&#13;
at&#13;
17.4%&#13;
It&#13;
earn&#13;
dIson and Mllwauk-&#13;
eluete&#13;
r&#13;
Pllses&#13;
b&#13;
and 14.3% at the&#13;
To&#13;
ee ools&#13;
P    .&#13;
'Ill!&#13;
m&#13;
arkside students,  that&#13;
~    ean&#13;
an annual  fee In-&#13;
Illng&#13;
WlO!&#13;
at least $172 begin-&#13;
198i.&#13;
th the fall semester,&#13;
'lb.&#13;
1987&#13;
ted by ~&#13;
budget,  pr-esen-&#13;
1lelh8ha&#13;
m&#13;
President  Ken-&#13;
"'lbnenlw, also proposes  en-&#13;
Illcans&#13;
reductions   as   a&#13;
fun&lt;ls,&#13;
e~lf'   supplementing&#13;
Ill" ProVl&#13;
led as GPR mo-&#13;
'l'Ii&#13;
e&#13;
ded by the state.&#13;
Planli~3&#13;
gents approved  the&#13;
AI&#13;
•&#13;
Illee~o&#13;
dUring the speical&#13;
llIutlon  :&#13;
Nov. 13 was a res-&#13;
Ia~&#13;
oeatlng  operating&#13;
o!nd&#13;
sea&#13;
In both state  GPR&#13;
.\II  ~:::~~&#13;
..&#13;
~e,;s.(tuJ.!~on).&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 12, November 20, 1986</text>
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        <name>national association of intercollegiate athletics (NAIA)</name>
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