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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Budgets finalized for 85-86</text>
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              <text>Terry Tunks,  PSGA  (Parkside&#13;
Student Government  Association)&#13;
president, announced  Monday  her&#13;
candidacyfor president  of United  .&#13;
Councilof UW Student  Govern-&#13;
ments.&#13;
UnitedCouncil serves as a lobby-&#13;
ing&#13;
group for student rights and is a&#13;
Iiasonbetween state  student  gov-&#13;
ernments, the University  Chancel-,&#13;
lars,&#13;
the&#13;
Board&#13;
of Regents  and&#13;
ex-&#13;
ecutivebranches  of   state   govern-&#13;
ment.&#13;
Ole Otto, Student  government&#13;
President, Uw-whltewater,   is also&#13;
vyingfor the UC president  position.&#13;
The UC presidency is a one year&#13;
tenn with a $10,000 salary.  Presi-&#13;
dential elections will be held  on&#13;
March30 at UW-Superior.  -&#13;
£SGA&#13;
Housing discussed&#13;
not they would be able to justify&#13;
asking for a computer. "I'm not&#13;
sure we'll be able to do that, since&#13;
we did already have funding for a&#13;
computer&#13;
this&#13;
year. and. we gave&#13;
it&#13;
back to SUFAC," he said.&#13;
Tunks said, "I think SUFAC un-&#13;
derstands  that one of the key rea-&#13;
sons we gave that money back ~&#13;
to help out with the shortfall  this&#13;
past year. That certainly wasn't our&#13;
way of saying we don't need a com-&#13;
puter."&#13;
.&#13;
Approval  was given for Jackie&#13;
Sutherlin to join the Senate. Suther-&#13;
lin completed  her Senate mternshlp&#13;
and reported  the results of .her sur-&#13;
vey, which addressed  the ISSue of&#13;
student  retention  at Parkslde.&#13;
Sutherlin reported  that most of the&#13;
students  she surveyed feel they at-&#13;
tend a quality Institution.  Most of&#13;
those who are pleased WIth the urn-&#13;
versity are so because of the good&#13;
rapport  they can develop WIth fac-&#13;
ulty and staff. Several students ~d&#13;
in the survey that a key factor 10&#13;
students leaving this campus&#13;
IS&#13;
.that&#13;
they cannot fully experien~  urnver-&#13;
'ty lifestyle because there&#13;
IS&#13;
no on-&#13;
~pus  housingavailable.  _&#13;
CoDliDued ou Pille 4&#13;
Thurs., Feb. 7, 1985&#13;
Tunks&#13;
runs&#13;
for&#13;
UC&#13;
post&#13;
by JeDDie Tnnkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
PSGA(Parkside Student Govern-&#13;
!'lent Association) brought  several&#13;
issaes of vital concern to the floor&#13;
of the senate for discussion.&#13;
During her president's   report,&#13;
Terry Tunks discussed  the idea of&#13;
~n-campushousing. "The plans are&#13;
?'&#13;
the&#13;
works for- on campus  hous-&#13;
mg,&#13;
·things are still in the rough&#13;
draft stage, but as it stands  now,&#13;
the&#13;
project will be In three phases.&#13;
FIrSt. single student housing proj-&#13;
ect&#13;
would&#13;
be built with each room&#13;
haVing&#13;
a separate bath, then down&#13;
the road there would family nous-&#13;
Ingconslructed and third would be&#13;
hOUSingfor senior citizens who are&#13;
stUdents here."&#13;
.The Senate discussed  the&#13;
possi-&#13;
bility of regaining  access  to pur-&#13;
chase&#13;
a computer. Tunks said, "My&#13;
Intentions are to go to SUF AC at&#13;
some point next week with a com-&#13;
plete rationale  and ask them  for&#13;
rnoney from reserves so we can ob-&#13;
lain a computer. I really think this&#13;
~ll be a vital move for the senate.&#13;
In terms of stepping up productiv-&#13;
Ity."&#13;
Andrew  Buchanan    Senator,&#13;
questioned&#13;
Tunks&#13;
as to' whether  or&#13;
-&#13;
.Terry Tunks&#13;
Tunks has been involved in many&#13;
organizations  and  committees  on&#13;
campus for the past four years. She&#13;
has held many leadership positions,&#13;
besides her current PSGA president&#13;
position, and has been intrumental&#13;
in policy development  on campus.&#13;
Tunks feels that the competition&#13;
for the presidency'  will be tough,&#13;
but she is looking forward  to the&#13;
race.&#13;
"I&#13;
look forward to this chal-&#13;
lenge and hope to obtain the oppor-&#13;
tunity to, through  the help of the&#13;
members  of United  Council, lead&#13;
that organization  to a beller repre-&#13;
sentation  of our  students,"   said&#13;
Tunks.&#13;
Women's track team&#13;
off&#13;
to&#13;
running start&#13;
Page 16&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Vol. 13, No. 18&#13;
Budgets finalized for 85-86&#13;
by Jennie TuDkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
percent over the 1984-85fiscal year.&#13;
"That's  not  completely  accurate&#13;
due to •&#13;
budgetary&#13;
shortfall in the&#13;
Fall  of&#13;
1984.&#13;
But  increases  In&#13;
budgets have not been extreme and&#13;
there  have  been  substantial  de-&#13;
creases," she said.&#13;
A shortfall between&#13;
$30,000&#13;
and&#13;
$40,000&#13;
plagued SUFAC early this&#13;
fall. Hensiak said that the shortfall&#13;
occured because the student projec-&#13;
tion&#13;
was&#13;
higher&#13;
than&#13;
the actual stu-&#13;
dent enrollment.&#13;
Enrollment  was low because the&#13;
economy  improved  causing  more&#13;
students to go away to school, feels&#13;
Hensiak.&#13;
To ollset  the shortfall,  SUF AC&#13;
asked each group, which had re-&#13;
quested funds last year, to "put a&#13;
little  hack in the  pot."  Hensiak&#13;
said,  "People  were  exceptionally&#13;
responsive.  Almost  every  group&#13;
gave something hack so almost the&#13;
entire shortfall amount  was made&#13;
up."&#13;
Hensiak feels that there&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
greater  budgetary  awareness  and&#13;
understanding  this year which she&#13;
attributes  to the shortfall.&#13;
But not  everyone  was&#13;
under-&#13;
standing&#13;
and&#13;
cooperative.  Hensiak&#13;
received&#13;
several&#13;
threatening  phone&#13;
calls&#13;
concerning  the posibilities  of&#13;
cutting budgets during the shortfall&#13;
"One&#13;
caller&#13;
said, 'There is going&#13;
to be hell&#13;
10&#13;
pay'&#13;
if&#13;
their&#13;
budget&#13;
was cut."  Hensiak:  is sure  she&#13;
knows&#13;
who the&#13;
threats&#13;
came from.&#13;
but she refused to name the assail-&#13;
ant, and she looks back on the situ-&#13;
ation laughingly.&#13;
"SUFAC  didn't  look  at  the&#13;
budgets&#13;
with gleaming silver&#13;
scis-&#13;
sors in our hands.&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
astounded&#13;
that someone would feel so fright-&#13;
ened about  giving&#13;
back&#13;
parts  of&#13;
their budget. Yet,&#13;
I&#13;
understand  that&#13;
budgeting&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
very&#13;
emotional&#13;
and personal -  it could be some--&#13;
ones job, or their entire mcorne.&#13;
an&#13;
the hands of&#13;
six&#13;
committee  mem-&#13;
bers,"&#13;
said Hensiak.&#13;
SUFAC,&#13;
in&#13;
cooperation   with&#13;
Jenny  Price,  Interim  Director  of&#13;
Student Life, created a post-bacbe-&#13;
lorette  internship  position  in the&#13;
CoDliDu'"&#13;
OD&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The budgeting process for service&#13;
groups for the&#13;
19B5-a8&#13;
liscal&#13;
year is&#13;
over.&#13;
.SUFAC  (Segregated  University&#13;
Fees  Allocations  Committee)&#13;
has&#13;
approved  the  allocation  of over&#13;
$500,000&#13;
to&#13;
clubs, organizations and&#13;
student services, ie. Health Center,&#13;
Child Care and Phy&#13;
Ed,&#13;
etc.  A&#13;
segregated fee is the&#13;
$164.50&#13;
assess-&#13;
ed per students  per semester&#13;
In-&#13;
cluded in tuition payments.&#13;
Budgets were  approved  by the&#13;
PSGA Senate on Friday and were&#13;
submitted for approval to the Chan-&#13;
eellor and David Holley, Controller.&#13;
The budgets will then be sent to the&#13;
Board  of Regents  for final  ap-&#13;
proval.&#13;
SUF AC is made up of six student&#13;
Senators  and two student-at-large&#13;
seals, although the committee  cur-&#13;
rently is not full.&#13;
Pat Hensiak, SUF AC chair. said&#13;
that it appears that the total budget&#13;
increase  is only about  two-thirds&#13;
SUFAC   BUDGET&#13;
rIlOrOSEII&#13;
~-&#13;
-..sfIDEaIWE   ,_&#13;
~&#13;
1914-85&#13;
1_&#13;
IDOllMSI&#13;
lDOllMSI&#13;
/RIAl1&#13;
Athletics&#13;
$58,083&#13;
$58.083&#13;
SO&#13;
O.lJOtII&#13;
$58.083&#13;
Auxiliary Servica  AccolInlilll&#13;
7.700&#13;
8.600&#13;
9lIlI&#13;
11.69lIlI&#13;
8.600&#13;
Clrild&#13;
Care&#13;
C81ter&#13;
20.855&#13;
20,855&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII   20.855&#13;
11IIIIService (Union)&#13;
90,500&#13;
90,500&#13;
0&#13;
O,lJOtII&#13;
90.500&#13;
HlIII1II&#13;
lIlIlce&#13;
&amp;7.524    71.834&#13;
4,310&#13;
&amp;,38tII&#13;
&amp;7,524&#13;
H_II&#13;
33.725&#13;
33.725&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII   33.725&#13;
!'Irksl*&#13;
Aclivllles&#13;
IoIni&#13;
51.8&amp;0    53.741&#13;
1.881&#13;
3.&amp;3fIiI&#13;
53.141&#13;
PS8A&#13;
15,810&#13;
12.711&#13;
(3,099)&#13;
-19.60"&#13;
12.711&#13;
!'Irbi*&#13;
Ullion&#13;
1&amp;&amp;.426  184.542&#13;
18,11&amp;&#13;
10,M&#13;
182,146&#13;
PIer&#13;
SlIpport&#13;
4.&amp;24&#13;
4,465&#13;
(159)&#13;
-3.44"&#13;
4.465&#13;
_r&#13;
17,880&#13;
17.880&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII&#13;
17.880&#13;
1IIcl1ltion/llllnMI1Is&#13;
44.419&#13;
45,727&#13;
1,308&#13;
2.94l\1a   45,727&#13;
SbHIetIl&#13;
Activities&#13;
81111I111&#13;
4,800&#13;
3,959&#13;
(841)&#13;
-17,52'ia&#13;
3,959&#13;
StIdetII&#13;
AcIIvIIiIS&#13;
lIlIlce&#13;
97.548&#13;
100,201&#13;
2,&amp;53&#13;
2.72'ia&#13;
100.201&#13;
StMlt&#13;
OrplliZlllOl CoIIlCiI  24.745&#13;
22,471&#13;
(2,274)&#13;
-9,19l1i&#13;
21.871&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
&amp;&amp;0&#13;
510&#13;
(150)&#13;
-22,73ft11&#13;
510&#13;
W1l118r&#13;
CarllinI/HoM.C  ••&#13;
illl&#13;
&amp;,425&#13;
0&#13;
(&amp;.425)&#13;
-I00,lJOtII&#13;
0&#13;
AU-c.pa    Evllls&#13;
11.425&#13;
11.425&#13;
11.425&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
S713,584&#13;
S741.229&#13;
SZ7.&amp;45&#13;
3.87l\1a&#13;
S718.323&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,   Feb.  7, 1985&#13;
Am&#13;
CU'fS&#13;
IN OUR MILITARY&#13;
BUDGET  WOULD,&#13;
X&#13;
FEEL,&#13;
NECESSITATE&#13;
OUR&#13;
NOT&#13;
PROVIDING&#13;
ANY&#13;
DEFENSE   FOR, Sl\Y,&#13;
NEBRASKA.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
Editor&#13;
Changing locks&#13;
becomes SNAFU&#13;
partment  informed  me that no ODe&#13;
was&#13;
on duty in the Security  office&#13;
yet,  but  that  they  would  infonn&#13;
them of my dilema when someone&#13;
came in&#13;
to&#13;
work. While I was on&#13;
'the  phone  with  the  Sheriff's&#13;
De-&#13;
partment&#13;
in&#13;
Greenquist   the  fire&#13;
alanns  started  going off. 1 had no&#13;
idea&#13;
if&#13;
there was an actual emer-&#13;
gency or&#13;
if&#13;
it&#13;
was&#13;
only a test.  .&#13;
Eventually,  a Security&#13;
person&#13;
ar-&#13;
rived&#13;
with&#13;
a&#13;
key&#13;
and  opened  the&#13;
PSGA door, but a lot of time was&#13;
wasted   because   of  a  Security&#13;
SNAFU. Blame  also should go out&#13;
to Pbysical Plant.&#13;
wbo&#13;
was suppos-&#13;
ed to make the keys. and the Stu-&#13;
dent Services, who&#13;
failed&#13;
to pass on&#13;
the names of office key holders and'&#13;
the number of keys needed for stu-&#13;
dent offices.&#13;
This&#13;
problem  could  have easily&#13;
been  avoided&#13;
if&#13;
keys would  have&#13;
been  issued  to  key  holders  BE-&#13;
FORE  the locks were changed,  or&#13;
if&#13;
Security   personnel   would  be&#13;
around to open offices when requir-&#13;
ed, like&#13;
in&#13;
this situation.&#13;
Barbara  Johnson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Talk about campus foul-ups, this&#13;
is one (or the record&#13;
books!&#13;
Mon-&#13;
day&#13;
morning at&#13;
7:25&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
my hus-&#13;
band  and  I  arrived  on  campus.&#13;
WIlen we tried to enter the building&#13;
through  the doors at&#13;
WLLC&#13;
by the&#13;
Coffee Shoppee we found the doors&#13;
were&#13;
still&#13;
locked. The campus offi-&#13;
cially opens at&#13;
7&#13;
a.m .• so why was&#13;
the door locked?&#13;
Well, we went  up,  around  and&#13;
down in&#13;
Comm&#13;
Arts to get&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office. My&#13;
husband,&#13;
who is&#13;
PSGA vice-president,&#13;
tried to open&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office door with&#13;
his&#13;
key.&#13;
but  it did  not  work.  Apparently.&#13;
Campus Security lost a master  key&#13;
ring&#13;
quite a while ago and are just&#13;
now replacing all the locks.&#13;
So&#13;
I&#13;
called Secunty  to come and&#13;
open&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
door,  since&#13;
they were  the only ones who had&#13;
the keys. The phone&#13;
rang&#13;
at least&#13;
10&#13;
times before someone  answered  it,&#13;
and it wasn't answered  by Security.&#13;
but  by the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Sher-&#13;
ill's Department.  The Sherilf's&#13;
De-&#13;
me, but ...&#13;
harassment&#13;
Nobody&#13;
asked&#13;
"Insatiable"  was not&#13;
ing. When the lights came up. some&#13;
of  those  same  people  were anx-&#13;
iously  looking  around  to see who&#13;
saw them,  and who they could see.&#13;
1 think  the. film,  and  other&#13;
por-&#13;
nography,  for some serves' as a way&#13;
to deal  with  the  emotional,&#13;
sensi-&#13;
tive&#13;
and embarrassing  issue of&#13;
sex.&#13;
I  really&#13;
can't&#13;
see  what, harm&#13;
films  like  "Insatiable"   can&#13;
do.&#13;
If&#13;
they are made by consenting&#13;
adults&#13;
and seen by consenting  adults,&#13;
the&#13;
choice should be left up to the indio&#13;
vidual.  Personally,  during&#13;
"Insati-&#13;
able".1  kept waiting for something&#13;
different  to happen.&#13;
It&#13;
didn't. And,&#13;
while&#13;
"I&#13;
was 'waiting,  a line from a&#13;
"MASH"   show  popped  into my&#13;
head that  sums up the whole&#13;
expe-&#13;
rience  pretty  well.  "Why all&#13;
the&#13;
preoccupation&#13;
with&#13;
sex,"som~ne&#13;
asked&#13;
B,J.&#13;
"Lack  of occupation&#13;
with&#13;
sex," 'he-answered.  ,Bingo.&#13;
In&#13;
short, even when considered  as a&#13;
porn  film, ."Insatiable"    was  not&#13;
well-crafted.&#13;
On the more  positive  side, there&#13;
was no real&#13;
violence&#13;
against women&#13;
in the film. Sex, yes. Violence, 'no.&#13;
The crux of the "story"  involved  a&#13;
woman who simply could not have&#13;
her  sexual  needs  fulfilled.   This&#13;
story line pleased me a little.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
refreshing  to see a woman  seeking&#13;
her own sexual satisfaction.  This is&#13;
one of the main aims  of the femi-&#13;
nist movement,  and while the film&#13;
is no masterpiece,   at least  it con-&#13;
tained a little seed of progress.&#13;
What actually  interested  me the&#13;
most was the' fact that most  of&#13;
the&#13;
audience  at  the  show  1 attended&#13;
was male ..&#13;
During&#13;
the  film;' some&#13;
vocal  viewers   showed   just&#13;
how&#13;
much they were  enjoying&#13;
the&#13;
Iilm.&#13;
That was w!Ule the. film Was play-&#13;
hy&#13;
Karl&#13;
DixoD&#13;
Writer states&#13;
he's not a&#13;
'slaue holder'&#13;
After  two  weeks  of discussing&#13;
pornography  with almost  everyone&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
know,&#13;
I&#13;
swallowd  my femi-&#13;
nist pride, and against the wishes of&#13;
my  mother  went  to  see&#13;
"Insati-&#13;
able"  because  1 feU that&#13;
I&#13;
couldn't&#13;
form an opinion about something&#13;
I&#13;
knew nothing about.&#13;
I&#13;
left the film&#13;
wondering  what  all  the  fuss  was&#13;
about.  After enduring  what had to&#13;
be one of the most  boring  films&#13;
I&#13;
have ever seen, my desire  to have&#13;
anything  further  to  do  with  por-&#13;
nography was definitely  satiated.&#13;
The acting  in the&#13;
film&#13;
(that  re-&#13;
quired  dialogue)  was  laughable.&#13;
The scenery (not to mention  costu-&#13;
mes) was bland and easily forgetta-&#13;
ble.  The  editing  and  the  pacing&#13;
could have been done more profes-&#13;
sionally by a first-year film student.&#13;
is&#13;
her right? Can we expect  that a&#13;
mother of five who doesn't  want or&#13;
can't  afford another  child to prop-&#13;
erly care  and&#13;
raise&#13;
the  unwanted&#13;
child?&#13;
I&#13;
think  we  already  know&#13;
about  the  effects  of neglect  and&#13;
frustration.  especiaUy by the time&#13;
one reaches adolescence.  Each per.&#13;
son&#13;
has  personal  reasons  which&#13;
they feel are legitimate.  Let&#13;
God&#13;
be&#13;
the judge  not man.  Who's  to say&#13;
what we've missed.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss. I find your parallel&#13;
be-&#13;
tween myself (and others who bold&#13;
my view) and the&#13;
Nazis&#13;
and slave-&#13;
holders  to be offensive.  I'm  sure&#13;
you meant  it that  way.  How can&#13;
you judge  when you clearly  don't&#13;
know me!  Arguing one's  point  of&#13;
view&#13;
is&#13;
fine but drawing such&#13;
paral-&#13;
leIs  is  crass,  irresponsible    and&#13;
shortsighted.&#13;
I&#13;
can assure&#13;
you that&#13;
I&#13;
embrace&#13;
We&#13;
with&#13;
as&#13;
much passion&#13;
as you do.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
wish&#13;
10&#13;
respond  to&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss'&#13;
letter  to the editor&#13;
in the Jan.&#13;
17&#13;
issue of the Ranger.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss,&#13;
nobody  gave me  (or&#13;
others)  the  rigbt  to  impose  my&#13;
views on "the&#13;
15&#13;
million  unborn."&#13;
Nobody gave you the right either.&#13;
it's the individual's  right.&#13;
I&#13;
do not&#13;
think&#13;
it's&#13;
a&#13;
moral issue either,  it's a&#13;
philosophical  issue. At what  point&#13;
IS&#13;
the unborn a thinking and feeling&#13;
human  being?&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
agree&#13;
that&#13;
an&#13;
unborn&#13;
child&#13;
is&#13;
genetically  capable&#13;
of developing  into  adulthood  but&#13;
reality&#13;
seems&#13;
to&#13;
always&#13;
intercede&#13;
our  idealistic   fantasies.   Who  is&#13;
going to love the haby between  a&#13;
rapist  and&#13;
his&#13;
victim?  Would you&#13;
want your wife to&#13;
carry&#13;
around the&#13;
reminder   of  her  rape  for  nine&#13;
months?   Why  should  a  woman&#13;
when&#13;
confronted  with the real&#13;
pes-&#13;
sibility of death  from  giving birth&#13;
not be able to choose what she feels&#13;
.J&#13;
Bock named system special assistant&#13;
The former dean of the Madison&#13;
School  of  Business,   Robert&#13;
H.&#13;
Bock,&#13;
has accepted an appointment&#13;
as Special Assistant to the UW-Sys-&#13;
tern President  for Economic  Devel-&#13;
opment.&#13;
Bock&#13;
will help develop "increas-&#13;
ed  and  enhanced  communication&#13;
and  relationships   with  Wisconsin&#13;
business  and  industry,"  according&#13;
to UW-System President&#13;
Robert&#13;
M.&#13;
School   of  Busin~ss,   where&#13;
he&#13;
served  as dean  from&#13;
1972&#13;
to&#13;
1984.&#13;
His areas of special academic i~t~~·&#13;
est  include  corporate  responslblli·&#13;
ties and Wiconsin business develop-&#13;
ment.&#13;
.&#13;
Before   coming  to&#13;
wlscons'e.&#13;
Bock  was  dean  of the School&#13;
01&#13;
Business  Administration  at the&#13;
Uni-&#13;
versity of Miami (Fla.).&#13;
O'Neil, "He  will work closely with&#13;
the new assistant  vice president  for&#13;
government  and business  relations&#13;
David Martin,  and assist in a&#13;
varie-&#13;
ty of special projects."&#13;
Bock.&#13;
52.&#13;
will serve  System  Ad-&#13;
ministration&#13;
one  day&#13;
a'&#13;
week&#13;
through  June  of  this  year.  The&#13;
r~mainder  of the week, he&#13;
will&#13;
con-&#13;
tinue on the faculty of the Madison&#13;
e&#13;
o&#13;
Q&#13;
(&#13;
9&#13;
•&#13;
d&#13;
F&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Dan Stublaskl&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
_  'J'e._&#13;
&amp;lito&lt;&#13;
Pal B&#13;
Campus&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~ ==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::.~.':~~'=:::&#13;
f.:idl:&#13;
Laebr&#13;
AlII.&#13;
F_   EdIto&lt;&#13;
Carol KorteDdIct&#13;
Spor\I EdItor&#13;
~w:=.~~.~::~:::.:.::.:::::::::::::::.:::::::::::.:::::::::::.':==&#13;
MIke FarrdI&#13;
Ad&gt;alllbi&amp;  ~&#13;
Pal Zlrtdbocb&#13;
···•···•······~&#13;
Mauce&lt;&#13;
Ilrado BadllDu&#13;
AlII. -&#13;
Maucer&#13;
RII~g~r is written  lind edited by students  lit UW.Psrl&lt;side  and they are solelY re-&#13;
SPonsibl.e for its editorilll  policy  lind content.  Publish6d  every Thursday during the&#13;
IIclldemlC  Y6llr except during  bresks  snd holidsys.&#13;
Range,- is&#13;
printed&#13;
by the Racine Joutmll  Times.&#13;
f&#13;
All  C~""sPondence   should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  to: PlJTkside Ranger.&#13;
University&#13;
0&#13;
Wl$consin-Pwkside.   Box No.&#13;
2000.&#13;
Kenosha.  WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Tslephone&#13;
(414) 553-&#13;
2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414/&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
_ Letters to the ed;'or  wm&#13;
be&#13;
BCcepted if tYPflwrittsn.  double-spaced  on standard&#13;
size PBpe,. Lett~rs should&#13;
be&#13;
less thlln 350 words and must be signsd. with&#13;
8&#13;
tele-&#13;
phone&#13;
numb';'&#13;
mcludfld  for vermcatiOn  pUTpOSflS. NlImtI$  will be withheld  upon&#13;
(t-&#13;
tlUfIst. De«lline  for letters  is Tuesday at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. for publication  Thursday. Rang"&#13;
ressrves the right to edit letters and refuse lettsrs  contBining  fBlsa and dafam&#13;
storv&#13;
content.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim  Burge,  Konise  Cassity   Jay&#13;
Crapser,  Mike  Froeblte,   N~talie&#13;
Haberman.&#13;
Darryl&#13;
Hahn.  Kimberlie&#13;
Kr.anicb.  Steve  KratochVil,   Jeff&#13;
=":I,;~J~~~&#13;
L...,....&#13;
•&#13;
.~.&#13;
Chris&#13;
Pappe,   Laureen   Wa"ro   Kevin&#13;
Zirkelbach.&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 13, issue 18, February 7, 1985</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1985-02-07</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="71420">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71422">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71425">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>physical education</name>
      </tag>
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        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
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              <text>Reorganization plan goes to Senate</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90142">
              <text>Gramm-Rudman&#13;
explored&#13;
Pages4and5&#13;
James Cagney&#13;
remembered&#13;
Page&#13;
8&#13;
Softball season&#13;
opens with split&#13;
Rage 12&#13;
~&#13;
'Unlverstty of Wisconstn-Parkstde&#13;
Thursday, April 3, 1986&#13;
Volume 14, No. 26&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
Enjoying the sun ...while it lasts.&#13;
Students&#13;
took&#13;
advantage  of unseasonably  warm. weathe!.last week,&#13;
opting&#13;
for&#13;
the lawn instead of the Library to study and&#13;
pulling&#13;
the&#13;
bicycles&#13;
out of the&#13;
depths of the garage in preparation  for the real arrival of summer.&#13;
Reorganization  plan&#13;
goes to Senate&#13;
Kari Dixon&#13;
New. Editor&#13;
Carol Cashen,  Interim  As-&#13;
sltant  Chancellor for Educa-&#13;
tional   Services,   will  meet&#13;
with  the  Parkslde   Student&#13;
Government  Association  at&#13;
its weekly meeting tomorrow&#13;
to discuss the new Education-&#13;
al  Services  Reorganization&#13;
Plan.&#13;
The plan  was  written&#13;
by&#13;
Michael Bassts, who held that&#13;
position before Cashen, after&#13;
the directors  of the various&#13;
departments   consulted  with&#13;
their  individual  staffs  and&#13;
submitted   recommendations&#13;
to&#13;
him. Bassis conferred&#13;
with&#13;
new  Chancellor   Sheila  Ka-&#13;
plan,  Cashen  said,  and  she&#13;
(Kaplan)&#13;
Is&#13;
In&#13;
favor  of the&#13;
plan.&#13;
Copies of the plan were ctr-&#13;
culated&#13;
to&#13;
the  University&#13;
Committee,   the   Academic&#13;
Staff   Committee,   Student&#13;
Government and the&#13;
commit-&#13;
tee  comprised   of  division&#13;
chairs.&#13;
All&#13;
have responded fa-&#13;
vorably  to the  plan,  except&#13;
student   government.    and&#13;
Cashen said she would like to&#13;
lay to rest  the fear  that an&#13;
extra  layer would be placed&#13;
between the students and her-&#13;
self.&#13;
"Students  will not be&#13;
In-&#13;
volved&#13;
In&#13;
yet another layer of&#13;
bureaucratic  red&#13;
tape,"&#13;
she&#13;
said.   "The   administrative&#13;
liaison with student&#13;
govern-&#13;
ment  would remain  the  as-&#13;
sistant&#13;
chancellor-unless&#13;
Chancellor Kaplan decides&#13;
to&#13;
implement&#13;
a&#13;
Dean  of  Stu-&#13;
dents position, and then that&#13;
person&#13;
will&#13;
interact  between&#13;
the students and the&#13;
chancel-&#13;
lor."&#13;
Some of the major&#13;
organt-&#13;
zatlonal  changes  of plan&#13;
In-&#13;
clude movlng the Child Care&#13;
Center&#13;
and&#13;
the Health Center&#13;
back  under  the direction  of&#13;
Student&#13;
Life  where&#13;
it&#13;
had&#13;
been before.&#13;
"Both&#13;
of these&#13;
come&#13;
from segregated&#13;
fees,&#13;
and&#13;
It&#13;
makes budgeting&#13;
eas-&#13;
ler," Cashen said.&#13;
Another change was&#13;
dtvtd-&#13;
ing&#13;
the&#13;
personnel of Commu-&#13;
nity Student Services and&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent Development among the&#13;
various  departments&#13;
so&#13;
they&#13;
could work&#13;
in&#13;
their areas  of&#13;
expertise, and establishing&#13;
an&#13;
Enrollment Services unit&#13;
that&#13;
Plan See page&#13;
3&#13;
that  he was very  excited  to&#13;
get the appointment  from the&#13;
governor for this position and&#13;
thinks that he adds a "unique&#13;
perspective"  to the problems&#13;
that the Bpard tries to solve ..&#13;
Schenian,&#13;
25,&#13;
received&#13;
hIS&#13;
undergraduate   degree  frol?&#13;
Madison in May,&#13;
1985,&#13;
and&#13;
IS&#13;
currently  attending  the&#13;
cone-&#13;
ge's Law School. He has had&#13;
much  experience  in stu&lt;~ent&#13;
government  both at Madls~n&#13;
and with the United&#13;
Counctl,&#13;
a  state-wide   student  lobby&#13;
group.&#13;
t&#13;
Schenian    responded&#13;
0&#13;
questions  from  the  Senate&#13;
with clear,  concise  answers.&#13;
He acknowledged  the concer-&#13;
ns of the students  here,  u~at&#13;
this is a small  campus  WIth&#13;
low enrollment,  with the. en-&#13;
couraging- news that MadIson&#13;
and Milwaukee are both plan-&#13;
. g to place a cap on enroll-&#13;
~~nt  which  will  cause  stu-&#13;
dents that go there to take a&#13;
.econd  look at parkslde.&#13;
The   Ranger,   Parkslde&#13;
's&#13;
weekly newspaper&#13;
r&#13;
was given&#13;
a&#13;
rating  of "First  Class"  by&#13;
the   Associated   Collegiate&#13;
Press/National&#13;
Scholastic&#13;
Press Association for the first&#13;
semester,&#13;
1985-1986.&#13;
ACP is the oldest national&#13;
press   organization   in  the&#13;
United States, whose purpose&#13;
is&#13;
to improve scholastic jour-&#13;
nalism and&#13;
to&#13;
honor achieve-&#13;
ment.&#13;
A  "First   Class"   rating.&#13;
which represents  very good to&#13;
excellent,  places  the Ranger&#13;
in the top&#13;
40&#13;
percent of cone-&#13;
ge  newspapers   nationwide.&#13;
Newspapers   are   rated   on&#13;
every aspect, from writing&#13;
to&#13;
layout.&#13;
.&#13;
A  spokesman  from  ACP&#13;
said  that  25 percent  of the&#13;
Student Regent visits&#13;
by Jenny Carr&#13;
At the last PSGA meeting,&#13;
John Schenian,  the only stu-&#13;
dent member  of the Board of&#13;
Regents, addressed  the&#13;
sen-&#13;
ate.&#13;
Schenian  briefly  explained&#13;
to the  Senate  that  he  has&#13;
served  on  the  Board  since&#13;
November,&#13;
1985&#13;
and that he Is&#13;
the first student  to hold such _&#13;
an office.&#13;
Like the other members  of&#13;
the Board of Regents,  Scheni-&#13;
an serves as a volunteer  and&#13;
is reimbursed  only for his ex-&#13;
penses.   Unlike   the   other&#13;
Board  members   who  hold&#13;
their  positions   for   seven&#13;
years,   student   representa-&#13;
tives,  Schenian  stated,  hold&#13;
the office for two years.&#13;
The reasoning  behind  this.&#13;
according to Schenian. is that&#13;
the student is anxious  to get&#13;
started  on a career  and the&#13;
other members  of the Board&#13;
are  successful  members   of&#13;
the community. Schenlan said&#13;
Ranger receives "First Class'&#13;
rating from A&#13;
CPINSCP&#13;
over&#13;
600&#13;
newspapers&#13;
who par-&#13;
tlclpale  ln the rating service&#13;
achteve a "FIrst&#13;
Class"&#13;
rat-&#13;
Ing,&#13;
The htghe.t  award a news-&#13;
paper   can   achieve   after&#13;
"First&#13;
CIa....&#13;
Is&#13;
"AU Ameri-&#13;
can."&#13;
which&#13;
encompasses&#13;
12.15 percent  of  all  news-&#13;
papers  rated.  A&#13;
newspaper&#13;
must receive four out of five&#13;
marks of distinction&#13;
to&#13;
obtain&#13;
"All    American"&#13;
status.&#13;
Ranger  received  marks  of&#13;
distinction   for   advertlalng&#13;
and editorial cartoons.&#13;
The judge  who rated  the&#13;
Ranger commented. "A good,&#13;
good paper;  especially  your&#13;
nose  for  news  and  strong&#13;
layouL.(The  Ranger) can be-&#13;
come a prize winner, (you've&#13;
done) an excelleD&amp;&#13;
Ranger  editor&#13;
J~&#13;
klelcz,&#13;
said&#13;
of&#13;
lIIe&#13;
natllIC ••&#13;
are&#13;
vel')"&#13;
plee.-d&#13;
'1'Illa .....&#13;
ftrat&#13;
year&#13;
we'"&#13;
PIIttlllplllad&#13;
bt&#13;
the&#13;
ACP cmrte8t; and&#13;
we&#13;
are&#13;
happy&#13;
with&#13;
lIIe&#13;
..-Ita.&#13;
Is&#13;
extremely&#13;
dlfllcult&#13;
to&#13;
maln-&#13;
tain exce1leDce&#13;
at&#13;
a eampua&#13;
without&#13;
a&#13;
jounIaII.,m&#13;
pr0-&#13;
gram,  and therefore  offering&#13;
no&#13;
real&#13;
incentive  to&#13;
lItatt&#13;
members.   Fortunately,   we&#13;
have a vel')"dedIcated staff&#13;
of&#13;
superb   writers,   photogra.&#13;
phers and ad repre.entatlves.&#13;
I'm sure&#13;
that&#13;
"All&#13;
American"&#13;
statu.  I. just around&#13;
the&#13;
cor-&#13;
ner for&#13;
the Ranger."&#13;
The Ranger  will be rated&#13;
agatn&#13;
In&#13;
May for the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
2  Thursday.  Aprll3.  1986&#13;
RANGER&#13;
c&#13;
Editgrial&#13;
Save your Assistance&#13;
Will&#13;
you&#13;
be one of the students  forced  out of a college&#13;
education due to financial aid cuts?&#13;
At&#13;
a&#13;
financial aid workshop last week, one speaker said&#13;
that Parkside may lose 1000students because of cuts.&#13;
That means one-fifth of the&#13;
student  body might  not re-&#13;
turn In the fall. might not be&#13;
able to finish their  educa-&#13;
tions  and  may  lose  their&#13;
career dreams and plans.&#13;
A  laissez-faire   attitude&#13;
would be the easiest position&#13;
for  students  to take.&#13;
If&#13;
it&#13;
doesn't affect you, then&#13;
why&#13;
should you care? Or maybe&#13;
you feel there Isn't anythlng------------&#13;
you can do to slop this Impending disaster so you may as&#13;
well accept the inevitable.&#13;
The Injustices of the Gramm-Rudman  bill and Reagan's&#13;
budget plan will be the demise of accessible higher educa-&#13;
tion&#13;
If&#13;
we Ignore&#13;
It.&#13;
Students can do something to let the government  know&#13;
financial  aid is necessary.  We can FIGHT.&#13;
We don't need sticks and stones&#13;
to&#13;
fight this injustice.&#13;
Write or call your Congressmen and urge them to vote&#13;
"no" on financial aid cuts. Currently PSGA Is' sponsoring&#13;
a letter writing campaign.  PSGA will provide stationery&#13;
Editorial&#13;
See page 3&#13;
((...one-fifth of&#13;
the student&#13;
body may not&#13;
return in the&#13;
fall.&#13;
r»&#13;
=~_...............~...............----- .....'"&#13;
A CIVILIANPLANE WIll&#13;
HAVE&#13;
10&#13;
Do.&#13;
OAK&#13;
'tHINK5 HE.&#13;
so&#13;
MR.&#13;
~I&#13;
"E  BECA.USE.&#13;
HAS BEATE..,'"    l&gt;-NtOS&#13;
HIS JE.TFIC~~PE&#13;
M'l&#13;
WERE  ,o.BLE.&#13;
'v&#13;
wRATH ...&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Student kicks Ranger in the "backside"&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ten or so times a year. usu-&#13;
ally  when  I  am  bored  to&#13;
tears,&#13;
I&#13;
pick up an issue of&#13;
the illustrious Stranger  to see&#13;
what's happening In the little&#13;
minds of small people. So far&#13;
you're  batting  1000: without&#13;
faU I have been keenly disap-&#13;
pointed&#13;
in&#13;
what I have read.&#13;
In general, these comments&#13;
are  applicable  to  various&#13;
parts of every issue;  but&#13;
in&#13;
particular,   the kind of article&#13;
which prompts this letter ap-&#13;
peared  In  the  March  20th&#13;
issue, page&#13;
11,&#13;
by Hans Haus-&#13;
child, entitled  "Anti-rock bri-&#13;
gade infiltrates  Kenosha."  I&#13;
am concerned because this&#13;
type&#13;
of article  is indicative  of&#13;
the  kind  of  pseudo-Intellec-&#13;
tualism a newspaper uses to&#13;
mask over an inept reporter's&#13;
lack of objectivity.  Does the&#13;
Backside Stranger  purport to&#13;
be a newspaper?  I fear that&#13;
it&#13;
does; but then so does the Na-&#13;
tional Enquirer. The essay is&#13;
a prime example of a major&#13;
malady&#13;
in&#13;
the media of&#13;
America--the   redefinition   of&#13;
news and&#13;
objectivity.&#13;
The article written by Hau-&#13;
schild&#13;
was  quite  a  biased&#13;
essay.  Beginning  with  the&#13;
"headline,&#13;
OJ&#13;
the entire article&#13;
bordered  on being no more&#13;
than  a  diatribe  against  the&#13;
person  and views of Peters,&#13;
the subject of the essay. and&#13;
thus.  indirectly,  upon  those&#13;
who   would   hold   similar&#13;
views. Hauschild  offered  al-&#13;
ternate   interpretations   for&#13;
each of the ideas he chose&#13;
to&#13;
quote from Peters, but in only&#13;
a single instance did he offer&#13;
anything more than his own&#13;
opinion to back  up these al-&#13;
ternate  views. In this single&#13;
Instance, (about the origins of&#13;
the term "rock-and-roll"),&#13;
his&#13;
claim to back up his view Is&#13;
weakly presented.  Indeed,  I&#13;
myself have a book at home&#13;
which contradicts Hauschild's&#13;
assertion  and backs up Pe-&#13;
ters'  assertion.  This simply&#13;
shows that some people care-&#13;
fully choose their  sources  In&#13;
order to back up their own&#13;
pre-conceived opinions.&#13;
I can hear Hauschild now:&#13;
"What  do you think  Peters&#13;
was doing at that seminar?&#13;
His views were just as one-&#13;
sided!"   Certainly   that  is&#13;
right. The difference is that&#13;
Peters was conducting&#13;
a sem-&#13;
inar at which he announced&#13;
up&#13;
front what his views were&#13;
(at least this Is what Hauschl-&#13;
Id says--I wasn't  there). Con-&#13;
sidering  the  setting  of  the&#13;
seminar,  could anyone truly&#13;
Jennie TunkJelc&#13;
Edltor&#13;
Karl&#13;
Dlxon&#13;
New. Editor&#13;
Kim KranIch&#13;
A•• t. News Editor&#13;
Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Feature  EdItor&#13;
Gary&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
As.t. Feature  Editor&#13;
Klch Blay&#13;
Sports EdItor&#13;
Robb Loehr&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter ......•.........••....... Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Dave Roback&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Andy Buchanan .•••.........•......•....••• Bu.lness Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan ........•....... Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Steve P1eazo.•....••............•...•.•. Dlstribution Manager&#13;
attend  It with the idea  that&#13;
Peters would simply routinely&#13;
say,  "Here   are  the  good&#13;
points. and here are the nega-&#13;
tive  polnts ....Now  you  can&#13;
make  up your  own mind."&#13;
No,&#13;
rather, Peters was trying&#13;
to  Influence  people  to  his&#13;
point of view. And there  Is&#13;
nothing wrong with this; It Is&#13;
this presentation  of differing&#13;
points of view that  helps  to&#13;
balance our society and keeps&#13;
It from going too far to the&#13;
right  or  the  left.  And  the&#13;
proper way to do this Is in the&#13;
manner Peters conducted it.&#13;
In contrast, the essay writ-&#13;
ten by Hauschild was presen-&#13;
ted in a medium that is as-&#13;
sumed to be objective and un-&#13;
influenced by any special seg-&#13;
ment of society.  Sadly, how.&#13;
ever,  the  reaction  by  the&#13;
Backside  Stranger  simply il-&#13;
lustrates   how  one  social&#13;
group&#13;
reacts  when they feel&#13;
they are  threatened  by the&#13;
lifestyle of another group ..&#13;
This, then is the core of the&#13;
matter:  a  newspaper  is&#13;
a&#13;
public forum, and is held in&#13;
the public trust as being&#13;
ob-&#13;
jectlve  enough to search  out&#13;
and present both&#13;
sides&#13;
of an&#13;
issue in order for the public&#13;
to make an Informed choice.&#13;
Hauschild's essay&#13;
simply&#13;
par-&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Kim&#13;
Barekafttkt,  Leo  Bose,&#13;
Jenny  Carr,   Scott&#13;
Curty,&#13;
William Dezoma,  Mike&#13;
Farrell&#13;
Gretchen  Gayhart,&#13;
Tammy&#13;
Hannah,&#13;
Kristy  Harrington,&#13;
Hans&#13;
Hauschild,&#13;
Carol&#13;
Kortendick,&#13;
Rick&#13;
Luehr&#13;
Kimberly&#13;
Mir&#13;
Hetdarf,&#13;
Eri~&#13;
Nowicki,  Michelle&#13;
Petersen&#13;
Mike&#13;
ROhl,&#13;
Scott Scheuber,&#13;
Bili&#13;
Serpe,&#13;
Debbie   Siegel,   Nick&#13;
Toper.&#13;
roted  the  response  of  what&#13;
has been stereotyped  as an Ir-&#13;
responsible   generation:   this&#13;
emotional  issue was not ob-&#13;
jectively  reported,   but  was&#13;
made  more emotional.  Thus&#13;
the stereotype  is strengthened&#13;
and  the  public  trust  is be-&#13;
trayed.  Hauschild's  essay is,&#13;
of course,  printed  under  the&#13;
responsibility  of&#13;
the&#13;
editor,&#13;
and  therefore  Jennie  Tun-&#13;
kleicz  must  be  equally  held&#13;
responsible  for  the  journal-&#13;
Istic  sham  of the  Backside&#13;
Stranger.  Indeed,  if one ex-&#13;
amines the institutions  of the&#13;
country,&#13;
It&#13;
can be found that&#13;
there  is  accountability&#13;
ex-&#13;
pected  of every  segment  of&#13;
society--except for the media,&#13;
which  launch  into  a  Ftrst-&#13;
Amendment   tirade   at  the&#13;
very mention of responsibility&#13;
In reporting.&#13;
It&#13;
Is this lack of&#13;
responsibility  that has eroded&#13;
the confidence of the public&#13;
for the media.&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
peculiar&#13;
thing that people like the edi-&#13;
torial  staff  and reporters  of&#13;
the Backside Stranger  feel it&#13;
is such&#13;
a&#13;
"frightening"  thing&#13;
for  Peters  to  exercise  his&#13;
Constitutional right to inform&#13;
those who willingly  came  to&#13;
hear  what  he  had  to  say.&#13;
These same people, however,&#13;
see nothing wrong with using&#13;
the  University  newspaper to&#13;
present  page after page, issue&#13;
after  Issue  of bigoted, one-&#13;
sided  oplnlons ..regardless of&#13;
the fact that they themselves&#13;
continually  cry out thai Ihis&#13;
campus's   plurallstlc  sludenl&#13;
body needs all polnls of view&#13;
(apparently   that  means all&#13;
points of view that agree with&#13;
their own).&#13;
There are adages to descri-&#13;
be  this  situation:  "Practice&#13;
what  you  preach,"  "What's&#13;
good for the goose is good for&#13;
the gander,"  "You need&#13;
a&#13;
litt-&#13;
le  of your  own&#13;
medicine."&#13;
George Orwell even wrote&#13;
a&#13;
book that  described  the atti-&#13;
tude of the editorial staff,&#13;
and&#13;
in the book&#13;
"1984"&#13;
he&#13;
describ-&#13;
ed one group which felt that&#13;
..All animals  are  equal. But&#13;
some are&#13;
a&#13;
little more&#13;
equal&#13;
than others.&#13;
to&#13;
Jon Anderson&#13;
Bditor'«  note:  Hauscnild's&#13;
story  was  a feature,  not&#13;
a&#13;
news  story,  and  was  con-&#13;
cerned  with  his impressions&#13;
of what  he saw and expert:&#13;
enced,  along&#13;
with&#13;
aUenwJive&#13;
interpretations    of  incidents&#13;
the&#13;
seminar·&#13;
discussed:  The&#13;
RANGER&#13;
stande&#13;
by&#13;
his&#13;
cc-&#13;
count as offering a look at the&#13;
"other  side"  Of a complex&#13;
issue&#13;
ar~~~fezr&#13;
i:e~~ttc.n  and e~it~d by &gt;s.tudent~at UW·Parkside  and&#13;
they&#13;
pUbliShed' eve~&#13;
n;!g~~&#13;
s:&#13;
l'JC!litO&#13;
nal&#13;
policy&#13;
and&#13;
content.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
breaks and h&lt;:Jlidays.&#13;
s&#13;
ay&#13;
urmg the&#13;
academic  year except during&#13;
1Je~~~:~7~~~~~ce   shou~&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Parkside&#13;
Ranger,&#13;
Utli.&#13;
phone&#13;
(41~).&#13;
553.2295n~~(4~;f;53~~:7.NO.eooo,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Telc· .,&#13;
Advertasmg rates&#13;
$4&#13;
.&#13;
deadline&#13;
is&#13;
Tuesday :;~&#13;
a&#13;
t~ef,&#13;
COlu,::l'!' lnt?h or&#13;
less in&#13;
bulk.&#13;
Advertising&#13;
AI.&#13;
Letters to the edit&#13;
:'1'&#13;
or&#13;
pu&#13;
reah~&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
....&#13;
on standard&#13;
size&#13;
papeo;&#13;
~;t~&#13;
be a;:ccldPted&#13;
if&#13;
typewrUten,  double·spaccd    ..&#13;
be&#13;
signed,&#13;
with&#13;
a tele .&#13;
0&#13;
crs&#13;
s ou,  be tess than 350&#13;
words&#13;
and must   ..&#13;
Names will bc withhe~  unc number&#13;
mcluded&#13;
for verification&#13;
pur]. ses.  _&#13;
for&#13;
letters&#13;
is&#13;
Tuesd&#13;
,pon&#13;
request.&#13;
Deadline&#13;
•&#13;
Thursday. Ranger&#13;
~%s~:v:&#13;
~hm.&#13;
for pUblic~tion&#13;
M..&#13;
mbt&gt;,oflh~&#13;
..&#13;
ters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse&#13;
letters&#13;
contai&#13;
e.,&#13;
T1g~t.!oedit let·&#13;
aSSOClaTeo&#13;
famatory content.&#13;
nmg Ja_e and&#13;
de·&#13;
COlleGiare&#13;
Ti::::.&#13;
ger&#13;
is&#13;
printed  by the Racine&#13;
Journal&#13;
PR€"SSEFI&#13;
.&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Plays at Parkside " A Midsummer Night's Dream" is a magical escape</text>
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              <text>r&#13;
THE ~N&#13;
April25 May 9, 2002&#13;
INSloe ...&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Things to do @ the U&#13;
Page 3&#13;
How Healthy is the health&#13;
care center?&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Faculty Profile:&#13;
Donald Kurnmings&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Sports:&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
I&#13;
Plays at Pa-rkside "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a magical escape&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
uw-p Public Relations Director&#13;
When Director Dean&#13;
Yohnk began workmg&#13;
on the Plays At&#13;
Parkside production of "A&#13;
Midsummer Night's Dream"&#13;
he was faced with a dilemma&#13;
four centuries in the making:&#13;
how to take a 400 year-oldplay-&#13;
even Shakespeare's most&#13;
beloved comedy-and make it&#13;
fresh for today's audience.&#13;
Part of the solution came from&#13;
the actors who view this tale of&#13;
love and comic confusion with&#13;
a fresh perspective.&#13;
fIAnytime a show is done,&#13;
it's 'new' because you have a&#13;
totally different group of&#13;
artists working on it," Yohnk&#13;
said. "What any group of&#13;
artists do on any classical piece&#13;
•&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
Rehearsals are currently underway for "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which opens on Friday April 26th&#13;
Photos by Deborah Hahm&#13;
is to find what the play says to&#13;
us in the present world and&#13;
then take that and make it&#13;
clear to our audience."&#13;
In essence, If A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a tale of&#13;
escape, Yohnk said. In this)&#13;
case, two couples escape the'&#13;
restrictive court wor1d of&#13;
Athens for the fantasy world&#13;
of the forest.&#13;
As Theseus, the duke of&#13;
Athens, and his bride Hippolyta&#13;
prepare to wed, lovers&#13;
Hermia and Lysander escape&#13;
to the woods so she can avoid&#13;
marrying Demetrius as her&#13;
father demands. Helena, who&#13;
secretly loves Demetrius, leads&#13;
him to search for Hermia in&#13;
the forest, which is filled with&#13;
mischievous spirits.&#13;
What follows is an amusing&#13;
series of mistakes: enchanted&#13;
lovers&#13;
falling in&#13;
I a v e&#13;
with the&#13;
wrong&#13;
people,&#13;
spir,its&#13;
playmg&#13;
tricks on&#13;
a troupe&#13;
of comic&#13;
actors,&#13;
the&#13;
queen of&#13;
the&#13;
fairies&#13;
falling in&#13;
I a v e&#13;
with a&#13;
human&#13;
who has&#13;
the head&#13;
of donkey.&#13;
In&#13;
the end, of course, loves conquers&#13;
all and the duke invites&#13;
the two couples-now correctly&#13;
matched-to join him and his&#13;
queen in a triple wedding.&#13;
Puck, played by Ed Jenkins,&#13;
controls the action on stage.&#13;
Jenkins sees Puck as a basically&#13;
good spirited character who&#13;
simply can't keep himself; he&#13;
must create trouble. And Jenkins&#13;
loves him for it.&#13;
"He's just a great fun character.&#13;
[Puck] is very energetic&#13;
and he has great language,"&#13;
Jenkins said. "Doing Shakespeare&#13;
is really fun. I love the&#13;
language of Shaksepeare."&#13;
Yohnk said with a cast of&#13;
nearly two dozen actors and a&#13;
stage that changes from reality&#13;
to fantasy world in the blink of&#13;
an eye as well as the prose of&#13;
Shakespeare, the audience&#13;
should expect magic.&#13;
"The audience will be able&#13;
to see Puck on stage doing the&#13;
magic; causing lovers to fall in&#13;
and out of love and leading&#13;
lovers on wild goose chases, '&#13;
Yohnk said. "We'll be able to&#13;
see Puck create the magic theatrically."&#13;
"A Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" is presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 26 and 27&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, May 1 and 2 at 10&#13;
a.m.; and Friday and Saturday,&#13;
May 3 and 4 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $10for adults and $7 for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
Group rates are available. For&#13;
more information or to reserve&#13;
tickets, call Diane Smith at&#13;
(262) 595-2564 or access&#13;
smithd@Uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
(&#13;
(l\!&#13;
}&#13;
f&#13;
THE ANG&#13;
April 25 May 9, 2002&#13;
INSIOE&#13;
Pagel&#13;
Things to do @ the U&#13;
Page3&#13;
How Healthy is the h alth&#13;
care center?&#13;
Page4&#13;
Faculty Profile:&#13;
Donald l&lt;ummings&#13;
Page7&#13;
Police Beat&#13;
Sports:&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
Veritas University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Plays at Parkside "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a magical escape&#13;
Dave Buchanan&#13;
UW-P Public Relations Director W hen Director Dean&#13;
Yohnk began working&#13;
on the Plays At&#13;
Parkside production of "A&#13;
Midsummer ight's Dream"&#13;
he was faced with a dilemma&#13;
four centuries in the making:&#13;
how to take a 400 year-oldplay-&#13;
even Shakespeare's most&#13;
belov d comedy-and make it&#13;
fre h for today's audience.&#13;
Part Qf the solution came from&#13;
the actors who view this tale of&#13;
love and comic confu ion with&#13;
a fr h perspective.&#13;
"Anytime a show is done,&#13;
it' 'new' because you have a&#13;
totally different group of&#13;
arti t working on it," Yohnk&#13;
said. "What any group of&#13;
arti ts do on any classical piece&#13;
is to find what the play says to&#13;
us in the present world and&#13;
then take that and make it&#13;
clear to our audience."&#13;
In essence, "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" is a tale of&#13;
escape, Yohnk s!,)id. In this 1&#13;
case, two couples escape the&#13;
restrictive court wor1d of&#13;
Athens for the fantasy world&#13;
of the forest.&#13;
As Theseus, the duke of&#13;
Rehearsals are currently underway for "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which opens on Friday April 26th&#13;
Photos by Deborah Hahm&#13;
Athens, and his bride Hippolyta&#13;
prepare to wed, lovers&#13;
Hermia and Lysander escape&#13;
to the woods so she can avoid&#13;
marrying Demetrius as her&#13;
father demands. Helena, who&#13;
secretly loves Demetrius, leads&#13;
him to search for Hermia in&#13;
the forest, which is filled with&#13;
mischievous spirits.&#13;
What follows is an amusing&#13;
series of mistakes: enchanted&#13;
lovers&#13;
falling in&#13;
1 0 V e&#13;
with the&#13;
wrong&#13;
people,&#13;
s pi r_i ts&#13;
playing&#13;
tricks on&#13;
a troupe&#13;
of comic&#13;
actors,&#13;
t h e&#13;
queen of&#13;
t h e&#13;
fairies&#13;
falling in&#13;
l o v e&#13;
with a&#13;
human&#13;
who has&#13;
the head&#13;
of donkey.&#13;
In&#13;
the end, of course, loves conquers&#13;
all and the duke invites&#13;
the two couples-now correctly&#13;
matched-to join him and his&#13;
queen in a triple wedding.&#13;
Puck, played by Ed Jen.kins,&#13;
controls the action on stage.&#13;
Jenkins sees Puck as a basically&#13;
good spirited character who&#13;
simply can't keep himself; he&#13;
must create trouole. And Jenkins&#13;
loves him for it.&#13;
"He's just a great fun character.&#13;
[Puck] is very energetic&#13;
and he has great language,"&#13;
Jenkins said. "Doing Shakespeare&#13;
is really fun. f love the&#13;
language of Shaksepeare."&#13;
Yohnk said with a cast of&#13;
nearly two dozen actors and a&#13;
stage that changes from reality&#13;
to fantasy world in the blink of&#13;
an eye as well as the prose of&#13;
Shakespeare, the audience&#13;
should expect magic.&#13;
"The audience will be able&#13;
to see Puck on stage doing the&#13;
magic; causing lovers to fall in&#13;
and out of love and leadin§&#13;
lovers on wild goose chases, '&#13;
Yohnk said. "We'll be able to&#13;
see Puck create the magic theatrically."&#13;
"A Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" is presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 26 and 27&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, May 1 and 2 at 10&#13;
a.m.; and Friday and Saturday,&#13;
May 3 and 4 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $10 for adults and $7 for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
Group rates are available. For&#13;
more information or to reserve&#13;
tickets, call Diane Smith at&#13;
(262) 595-2564 or access&#13;
smithd@uwp.edu via e-mail.&#13;
Page 2 THe F1QNGeFl April 25 May.200-2&#13;
THINGS H&#13;
Apr. 25-28 Apr. 29&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Yi Yi" show times: Thursday IFriday: 7:30 p.m., • War, Terrorism, and Conflict: Armenian Genocide WI Hilmar&#13;
Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater Kaiser, 1 p.m .. Molinaro 0-101, free May activities&#13;
Apr. 25 May 1&#13;
• Info Breaks: Word: How to Work Around Unwanted Features, • In Her Footsteps &amp; Making Her Mark Award Luncheon,&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie 01500, 10 a.m., free location &amp; time to be announced, campus only program&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Wisconsin's Birds of Spring" • Noon Concert: Tom Hooper, tenor, noon, Union Cinema The&#13;
ater, free&#13;
wi Charles Hagner, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge&#13;
May 1-4&#13;
Apr. 26&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: "A Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "The Last Report on the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, May 1,2 at 10 a.m.: May 3, 4 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Miracles at Little No Horse," by Louise Erdrich, Molinaro Hall room 111, 3:30&#13;
May 3&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student Recital, noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
Apr. 26-27&#13;
May 4&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: UA Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
• Wisconsin School Music Association (WSMA) State Solo and&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.; tickets: $10 adults, $7&#13;
students 1faculty 1staff / seniors&#13;
Ensemble Contest, various campus locations, all day&#13;
MayS&#13;
Apr. 27&#13;
• UW-Parkside Choirs, James Kinchen, conductor, UW-Parkside&#13;
• Softball vs. Missouri-St. Louis, 1p.m., two games&#13;
Apr. 28&#13;
Orchestra, Alvaro Garcia, conductor, 3:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
ArtsTheatre, tickets: $51$3&#13;
• Softball vs, Indianapolis, noon, two games&#13;
Co-E"ditors-in-Chief&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
'Arr!1r Smith&#13;
" Assistant Editor&#13;
DeboraJ;tHahm&#13;
~&#13;
y.,j:lditor&#13;
Pemble&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Deborah Halim .&#13;
Michelle Rager f&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi Agora&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
Voskuil 'if&#13;
Col';hlan Jr&#13;
e Rager&#13;
Antonia&#13;
Matt Grace Mi~r$;:'::~ SandeeC&#13;
$ A&#13;
Ranger Advisor JJ&#13;
Prof. Judilh Logsdon&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and participate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Contact tI:ie edito s at 595·&#13;
2287 for mo,~.information. Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Edi&#13;
The Ranger is p~blished every Thurs~~out~'the semester b t.e:tters ~ the ~ltor policy:The ~ encourages letters to the E2:&#13;
nusleadmg or libelous content Letters that fail to comply will not&#13;
e, who aresolely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
should be delivered to the Ranger office (WYlLD-139C) Lette be ed d i&#13;
's name can be withheld, but only upon request. The Rang~r re:~~Ut~e rig~ to ~it ~cll~er:~e author's name and phone number. Letters must be free from&#13;
Page2&#13;
Apr. 25-28&#13;
• Foreign Film: "Yi Yi" show times: Thursday /Friday: 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
Saturday: 8 p.m., Sunday: 2 p.m.; Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Apr. 25&#13;
• Info Breaks: Word: How to Work Around Unwanted Features,&#13;
Instructional Tech Center, Wyllie Dl50D, 10 a.m., free&#13;
• Friends of the Library presents "Wisconsin's Birds of Spring"&#13;
w I Charles Hagner, 7 p.m., Overlook Lounge&#13;
Apr. 26&#13;
• Race, Class, &amp; Gender Study Group: "The Last Report on the&#13;
THe FIA GeFI April 25&#13;
Apr. 29&#13;
• War, Terrorism, and Conflict: Armenian Genocide w I Hilmar&#13;
Kaiser, 1 p.m .. Molinaro D-101, fre May activitie&#13;
Mayl&#13;
• In Her Footsteps &amp; Making Her Mark Award Luncheon,&#13;
location &amp; time to be announced, carnpu only program&#13;
• Noon Concert: Tom Hooper, tenor, noon, Union Cinema The&#13;
ater, free&#13;
May 1-4&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: "A Midsummer ight's Dream,"&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, May 1, 2 at 10 a.m.; May 3, 4 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Miracles at Little No Horse," by Louise Erdrich, Molinaro Hall room 111, 3:30&#13;
May3&#13;
p.m., free&#13;
Apr. 26-27&#13;
• Plays At Parkside presents: UA Midsummer Night's Dream,"&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.; tickets: $10 adults, $7&#13;
students/ faculty/ staff/ seniors&#13;
Apr. 27&#13;
• Softball vs. Missouri-St. Louis, 1 p.m., two games&#13;
Apr. 28&#13;
• Softball vs. Indianapolis, noon, two games&#13;
Co--Editors-in-Chief&#13;
Benjamin Schmidt -&#13;
Amber Smith&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Keeley Pemble&#13;
Design and Layout&#13;
Lachlan McDonald&#13;
Arts and Entertainment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Tiffany Grant&#13;
Sports Page Editor&#13;
Dena Coady&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Becky Olson&#13;
Rosie Veziridis&#13;
Adebesi Agoro&#13;
Will Brinkman&#13;
Alex Voskuil&#13;
Michael Coghlan Jr&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Amber Antonia&#13;
Matt Grace&#13;
Amy Rogers&#13;
Michael Pawlowicz&#13;
Sandee Cornell&#13;
• Noon Concert: Student Recital, noon, Union Cinema Theater, free&#13;
May4&#13;
• Wisconsin School Music Association (WSMA) State Solo and&#13;
Ensemble Contest, various campus location , all day&#13;
May5&#13;
• UW-Parkside Choirs, James Kinchen, conductor, UW-Parkside&#13;
Orchestra, Alvaro Garcia, conductor, 3:30 p.m., Communication&#13;
ArtsTheatre, tickets: $5/$3&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Deborah Hahm&#13;
Michelle Rager&#13;
Ranger Advisor&#13;
Prof. Judith Logsdon&#13;
Contact the editors at 595-&#13;
2287 for more information.&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
Meeting~ ~re Mondays at noon. Please stop by&#13;
and part1c1pate as the meetings are open to all&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
Wyllie D-139C&#13;
phone: (262) 595-2287&#13;
fax: (262) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger is published every Thursc:t..y throughout the semester by SIUde!'lts of the University of Wlec:onein-P · Ldters (O the Editor policy: The Ranger encourages letters to the Editor letters shoul n arkside, who are _solely ~nsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
11\lSleadmg or libelous content. Letters that fail to comply wiU not be Jmbllshed. For p~bu:.'ifo~~~~:,~':.'.~ ~d:-:~!fd :u~lyer office (WYLtLThD-13Ran99C) · Letters must bl: typed an_d indude the author's name and phone number. Letters must be fn!e ftoll1 , upon reques . e ger reserves the nghi lo edit all letters.&#13;
healthy the Health Center?&#13;
By, Tiffany Grant,&#13;
A&amp;E Editor&#13;
Have you not felt well&#13;
lately? Have you had a&#13;
slight temperature and&#13;
body aches for over two&#13;
weeks? You already know that&#13;
there is nothing that be done&#13;
for the "common cold," but&#13;
this has persisted for over two&#13;
weeks, and your gut tells you&#13;
there is something not right.&#13;
So, if you decide to go to the&#13;
Health Center on campus&#13;
think twice. The Health Center&#13;
may seem convenient and it is&#13;
basically free, but the care&#13;
equals the cost of the visit.&#13;
When you arrive at the&#13;
Health Center and get into the&#13;
exam room and describe your&#13;
symptoms all that is done is a&#13;
rapid strep test and you are&#13;
told to gargle salt water. You&#13;
are given some Sudafed, cough&#13;
drops, and a sheet on how to&#13;
manage the "common cold."&#13;
You know that something is&#13;
wrong and what you have is&#13;
not the "common cold." Well,&#13;
this is what happened to me.&#13;
I ended up having my&#13;
housemate drive me down to&#13;
lllinois the next day to see my&#13;
doctor. My doctor took one&#13;
look at me and was positive I&#13;
had Mononucleosis. She took&#13;
a blood test to confirm, but&#13;
was percent sure it was&#13;
Mono. The next day the test&#13;
cameback positive for Mono.&#13;
I know that the nurses are&#13;
not doctors, but Mono is very&#13;
common among college students&#13;
and they should know&#13;
the symptoms of Mono. I&#13;
remember while I was waiting&#13;
in the waiting room, I noticed&#13;
a l'amphlet saying, "So,&#13;
You ve been diagnosed with&#13;
Mono". Wouldn't you think if&#13;
there were a pamphlet on in&#13;
the waiting room, the health&#13;
care providers would know&#13;
the symptoms?&#13;
I had all the classic symptoms&#13;
of&#13;
Mono. Such&#13;
as: swollen&#13;
glands in my&#13;
neck, a slight&#13;
fever (as high&#13;
as swollen tonsils,&#13;
extreme&#13;
tiredness, and an inflamed&#13;
spleen, of which all these&#13;
symptoms had lasted for&#13;
about three weeks.&#13;
What would have happened&#13;
to me if I did not have&#13;
the luxury of going and seeing&#13;
my own physician? I would&#13;
still have been walkmg&#13;
around, trying to go to my&#13;
classes, and would end up&#13;
more sick than Ialready was. I&#13;
could have even ended up in&#13;
the hospital.&#13;
Not only have I witnessed&#13;
this treatment at UW-Parkslde,&#13;
but have also heard other&#13;
such stories at other universities&#13;
like Northern Illinois Uni- .&#13;
versity (NIU). A student had&#13;
had flu like symptoms for&#13;
about two weeks when he&#13;
developed a rash. He went to&#13;
the NIU Health Center and he&#13;
was told there was nothing&#13;
they could do and he would be&#13;
fine in a few days. He went&#13;
back horne to his own physician,&#13;
because he too knew that&#13;
there was something not right.&#13;
He was diagnosed with Scarlet&#13;
Fever.&#13;
Iknow that the care is limited,&#13;
but these&#13;
that should&#13;
be known to&#13;
a registered&#13;
nurse. I was&#13;
given the&#13;
option of seeing&#13;
the doctor&#13;
on campus. I was told that&#13;
should call my doctor in a&#13;
few days. What kind of care is&#13;
that? I went to the Health&#13;
Center so I could try and not&#13;
go see my doctor, because my&#13;
tuition includes selective treatment&#13;
at the Health Center, and&#13;
if I had to pay $20 to see the&#13;
doctor that is better than Ialso did not want to inconvenience&#13;
my housemate and&#13;
have her drive me to Illinois. I&#13;
ended up having to do both&#13;
those things, because the registered&#13;
nurse did not properly&#13;
diagnose me.&#13;
Wouldn't you think if&#13;
there were a pamphlet&#13;
on it in the waiting&#13;
room, the health care&#13;
providers would&#13;
know the symptoms?&#13;
;'..".;. 'Q"'&#13;
• ~&#13;
:2&#13;
"'az&#13;
:i!&#13;
;"':"'l&#13;
U.;:.; .'.". Q'"' z&#13;
~&#13;
ill e&#13;
;:l&#13;
U.::;&#13;
GET IN SHAPE WITH&#13;
FEDEX GROUND&#13;
$9.50-$10.00/Hr to Start&#13;
Pedfx Ground, h:15opt'fling-; for inJivid.u:Jh to SOil,&#13;
rcure or load and unload nucks and tr~lt'fs our&#13;
Milwaukee rcrmiual: Slll"i aV4il:ihle: 2:30:Ull A&#13;
7:jO,IjO, J 2pm ' 4plll &amp; 4pm - 9pm,&#13;
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Hours tIJ your selwol sOHdUk&#13;
• Tuition asnsmru:e -after 30 Jays&#13;
• $,j0lbr. increase afin' t1dys .&#13;
To qualify. mwt he -lit least 18. ab.le to the UJIlt' Mooday.ftiday, &amp;: able (0 tift 5otb. boxes,&#13;
Qllalifial canwdact'S should apply in pef'$oOnMonday M Wedne~day. 9luo 4pm at:&#13;
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414-769-1983, prompt 3&#13;
terrrunal located ~ff Pennsyivania Ave in 1M Mrlchell&#13;
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Avenue)&#13;
FecEGround&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Editorial: Hello&#13;
Goodbye&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
With my time as Co-&#13;
Editor-In-Chief of The&#13;
Ranger drawing to a&#13;
close in these last days of&#13;
school, have found myself&#13;
reflecting upon the past year.&#13;
There were many times this&#13;
year that I wanted to pull my&#13;
hair out and I spent many&#13;
hours awake wanting only to&#13;
sleep, due to some of the oddball&#13;
hours that my job at The&#13;
Ranger demanded, and yet I&#13;
find myself missing the paper,&#13;
though have not even finished.&#13;
Being involved with the&#13;
paper has meant being&#13;
involved with the campus&#13;
community. I have had the&#13;
pleasure to make acquaintances&#13;
and some cases&#13;
befriend a number of people&#13;
that I would not have had the&#13;
opportunity to meet if I had&#13;
not worked for the paper. For&#13;
better or for worse they have&#13;
either inspired or forced personal&#13;
growth in me. The&#13;
Ranger has been by far my&#13;
most educational and rewarding&#13;
experience at UW-Park-&#13;
SIde.&#13;
I wanted to use this last editorial&#13;
as an opportunity to&#13;
invite anyone corning back&#13;
next semester to visit The&#13;
Ranger and consider joining.&#13;
Since I wilI not an editor&#13;
next year your participation&#13;
with the paper does not direct-&#13;
Iy benefit me. Working for the&#13;
paper will help you meet peo--&#13;
pie, it will help you deal WIth&#13;
adverse circumstances, and it&#13;
will put some very important&#13;
published material into your&#13;
portfolio. I invite you to join&#13;
The Ranger because believe&#13;
that it wilI benefit you as it has&#13;
benefited me. Stop in the office&#13;
that can say, "Hello," to&#13;
you before I say, "Goodbye."&#13;
If gambling is a problem,&#13;
it's never too late to call for help.&#13;
0.',0'·",.,·&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Problem Gambling&#13;
1 800 GAMBLE · 5&#13;
Apr1! 25 May 9 2002 THe R~R&#13;
How is rapia Illinois 90 came back students&#13;
famphlet it sympties&#13;
University&#13;
home physician,&#13;
I know limittoms&#13;
sli~t&#13;
100.7),&#13;
tonsils,&#13;
nausea,&#13;
ed, are diseases&#13;
not even&#13;
seeing&#13;
doctiredness,&#13;
happened&#13;
wo~d&#13;
I I already l&#13;
witnes~ed&#13;
OW-Parkside,&#13;
I universitor&#13;
I treatment&#13;
$100.&#13;
I also inconvenience&#13;
bo_th&#13;
registered&#13;
&lt;,It&#13;
oi:&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
~&#13;
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0&#13;
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u~&#13;
~&#13;
Hr Fc&lt;lEx G1our1d, lus o(&gt;i'nings individuJh to 5"tt,&#13;
,ouce ~nd uolo;id trucks am! trailers III M,lw::iuh~ terminal: Sh1hs avail,hle: !:30am •&#13;
30:un, I , 4pm ~ · 9pm.&#13;
• Part-time shifts avai!ll.bk&#13;
• Hou,-s to fit JIOIIT sd,&lt;&gt;01 sched.Je&#13;
assistance after days&#13;
• S.50/hr. increau after 90 days&#13;
qualify, you must be ,u lrast 18, ab_lc 10 work the same shift&#13;
Monday•Friday, &amp; to 11ft 50lb. boxes.&#13;
Q""1ifi~ candid,uc;. person Monday - Wcclneld.ty, 9am · ar.&#13;
X&#13;
Fed.Ex GroWld&#13;
5;oo S. Dr.&#13;
769-1983, pcompr (The tennsrial is off of&#13;
Pennsylvania ill the MrtcheU&#13;
Park. 1/2 mle •l011l• College A.venue).&#13;
Page3&#13;
By Benjamin Schmidt&#13;
---- ---&#13;
Co-Editor-In-Chief&#13;
CoEditor-&#13;
dose I _past yea_r.&#13;
oddball&#13;
pap_er,&#13;
I finished:&#13;
acquaintances&#13;
in personal&#13;
rewardu:'&#13;
g OW-Parkside.&#13;
editorial&#13;
will be directly&#13;
~ p~ople,&#13;
with&#13;
I will so I ttAl1Atl C)f th&#13;
foRESi&#13;
W.stlAMAN.US.C&#13;
00,c,,&#13;
• ~&#13;
• S&#13;
THe ~QNGe~ April25 9 2lI!! ;tNif-fariiS,. ~,ty Profile: Committee considers&#13;
.Protessor l1DlJaid Kumming~new value statement&#13;
I&#13;
man at numerous professional;&#13;
meetings induding the Wa1~&#13;
Whitman House in Camden;&#13;
=~::l~t"idi::a;:~~&#13;
~osco~, Russia. Professor&#13;
. Kununings is also the awardwinning'&#13;
author of a collection&#13;
of poems entitled, The Open&#13;
Road Trip. . 1&#13;
When asked why he choose!&#13;
UW-Parkside, Professor KUDlmings&#13;
stated the location as a1&#13;
factor. He said that he enjoyed&#13;
,gbeing situated between two&#13;
lmajor cities. He also feels that&#13;
IRacine and Kenosha "Are&#13;
. small cities with a lot to offer&#13;
the ElIIlIsll deparlment~diStinfllliSlIed in the~axs of symphonies and,&#13;
ProtessOl' Donald Kuilllllmgs theaters.' Professor Kum-&#13;
. y Dickinson, Henry mings also utilizes the racquet-&#13;
William Carlos ball ball courts at Parkside's&#13;
s and is&gt;considered "!" Sports Activities Center.&#13;
expert on Walt Whitman. He IS . If the picture above is nob&#13;
the .author of three books on enough to make you farniliar 'YffitInan, his .most recent IS with professor Kununings you'&#13;
titled, Walt Whltl1Uln: An Ency- ~iI1 be sure to recognize the.&#13;
clopedUi, a work that he co-edit- corduroy pants and checkered!&#13;
ed, He has lectured on Whit- shirts he so often sports.&#13;
Page4&#13;
Albert Mensah&#13;
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water to his house without electricity or plumbing. Seeing his first&#13;
Amencan movie at age ei!Jht, Albert witnessed the unparalleled&#13;
opportunities here. Attending a US college became a dream and&#13;
after "practically ,&#13;
living in the library," Albert received a four-year scholarship.&#13;
He now is an internationally known speaker where he leaves lastmg&#13;
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Schools and businesses&#13;
across the country write&#13;
mission statements, which&#13;
are supposed to enhance the&#13;
atmosphere of the workplace.&#13;
It should also provide a guideline&#13;
for employees and students&#13;
to follow.&#13;
UW-Parkside is no exception&#13;
since we have our own&#13;
mission statement as well as a&#13;
vision statement. Yet, few students&#13;
actually know they exist,&#13;
much less know their content.&#13;
This year, some members of&#13;
the University Planning Council&#13;
felt it was important to&#13;
include a value statement .to&#13;
the list.&#13;
uIt is an idea, acting on&#13;
what we want to accomplish,&#13;
and how we hope to do so,"&#13;
said Professor Peggy James, a&#13;
University Planning Council&#13;
member.&#13;
It will take months to write&#13;
the values statement since the&#13;
values of an entire university&#13;
community are so diverse and&#13;
complex.&#13;
"This is something we can&#13;
show the community and&#13;
prospective students, to give&#13;
them a sense of who we are&#13;
and what we do," said James.&#13;
It is also a tool tha t the univer·&#13;
sity can use in order to their growth and achievements.&#13;
Still, the proposal leaves&#13;
others wondering what purpose&#13;
the new statement would&#13;
have for students.&#13;
Those who question the proposal&#13;
point to other business&#13;
statements such as the Enron&#13;
Corporation's value statement.&#13;
Enrori's statement refers to&#13;
words such as respect, integrity,&#13;
communication, and excellence;&#13;
however, the values&#13;
obviously. had n? affect on&#13;
Enron officials, Still, the University&#13;
Planning Council still&#13;
shows signs of continuing with&#13;
the proposed writing of a values&#13;
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UW-Parkside Faculty Profile: Professor Donald Kummings rnan professional&#13;
including Walt&#13;
Camden, [Professor Donald Kurn- ",. . .,,.__ New Jersey, and at the Gorky&#13;
mings has been sharing Institute of World Literature in&#13;
his knowledge of liter a- Moscow, Russia. Professor&#13;
ture with the students of Park- Kummings is also the awardside&#13;
since 1970, when the .o:•~• winning author of a collection&#13;
school was two years old. He of poems entitled, The Open&#13;
came to the school because of .. ,..,11'....J. Roaa Trip. .&#13;
an advisor's advice to go When asked why he choose&#13;
where he could put his "two UW-Parkside, Professor Kwncents&#13;
in.'' He instructs such mings stated the location as a&#13;
subjects as Introduction to Lit- factor. He said that he enjoyed&#13;
erature, Literary Analysis, g being situated between two&#13;
American Humor, and he peri- l major cities. He also feels th.at&#13;
odically teaches a seminar on .w Racine and Kenosha "Are&#13;
Emily Dickinson and Walt • . . i.: small cities with a lot to offer&#13;
Whitman. Professor Kum- The English department~ distln1tt1slled in the wavs of symphonies and&#13;
min~ received both his Bache- Professor Donald Kummmgs theaters.,, Professor Kumlors&#13;
Degree (1%2) and his man, Emily Dickinson, Henry mings also utilizes the racquetMasters&#13;
Degree (1964) from Jam~, Wi~am . Carlos ball ball courts at Parks1de's&#13;
Purdue Umv~rsity in West Williams and IS co:151dered ~ Sports Activities Center.&#13;
Lafayette Indiana. He th.en expert on Walt Whitman. He JS the picture above is not&#13;
rec~iv~ ~ PhD from Indiana the . author ~f three books o_n enough to make you familiar&#13;
Uruvers1ty m 1971. . ".V}titman, his .most recent IS w~th. professor Kwnmings you&#13;
Professor Kumnungs has titled,. Walt Whitman: An Ency- will be sure to recognize the&#13;
published over 140 articles on cloped,a, a work th.at he co-edit- corduroy pants and checkered&#13;
such subjects as Walt Whit- ed. He lectured on Whit- shirts he so often sports.&#13;
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oth r busin~&#13;
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lence; howev r, obviously no officials. Uni·&#13;
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ues gath·&#13;
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By Deborah G. Hahm&#13;
_.---c-Asslstant Editor "find helpful in [her] near&#13;
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343, Latinas and Latinos in a chance to hear lectures that&#13;
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ew M~ority: The M tiple and e Dean of Students gra-&#13;
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JR Rocha stated, "the topics Chica~o conference.&#13;
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dent at Parkside's education about new concepts to be conerogram,&#13;
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cation Controversy." Along another culture or learn more&#13;
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A w C H B T J 0 L p G D T B J T T 0&#13;
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By Deborah G. Hahm &amp; Amber L Smtih&#13;
Going Home UW-Baraboot'&#13;
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Expenenco small cla.&amp;$8S tauQh! proh.tsso,s campua&#13;
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_APril 25 May9 2002 THe FlI:lNC!leFl Page 1&#13;
04/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-287 UWS Chapter&#13;
51, Crisis Intervention,&#13;
Ranger Hall,&#13;
1: 19 a .m, Officers&#13;
responded to a report&#13;
of a disorderly person&#13;
in the hallways.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in subject cited&#13;
for underage drinking-&#13;
2nd offense.&#13;
Subject was trans- I ported to local hospitals&#13;
for evaluation.&#13;
Inc 02-288 Liquor Law&#13;
Violation, Outer Loop&#13;
Road at the Union&#13;
parking lot, 1: 51&#13;
a .m. An underage&#13;
individual was found&#13;
to be ill and intoxicated.&#13;
Investigation resul ted&#13;
in a citation&#13;
issued for&#13;
identification card&#13;
violation.&#13;
Inc 02-290 UWS Chapter&#13;
18, Pike River&#13;
Woods off CTHA, 12:04&#13;
p.m. A visitor with&#13;
fishing gear was&#13;
informed of the Chapter&#13;
18 no fishing on&#13;
university lands regulations.&#13;
Subject&#13;
left the area.&#13;
Inc 02-291 Me die a 1&#13;
Assist, SAC Softball&#13;
Field, 3:41 p.m. A&#13;
visitor had been&#13;
struck in the face by&#13;
a softball. Kenosha&#13;
Med 5 transported the&#13;
subject to Aurora&#13;
Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Inc 02-292 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments, 8:28 p.m.&#13;
A student reported&#13;
that someone had broken&#13;
the front living&#13;
room window&#13;
to her apartment. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses.&#13;
04/17/02&#13;
Inc 02-294 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, Wood Road&#13;
&amp; HWY E, 12:26 a.m.&#13;
A driver was cited for&#13;
failure to obey a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 02-296 Par kin g&#13;
Enforcement-Tow, Visitor's&#13;
parking lot,&#13;
9:09 a i m, A student&#13;
illegally parked with&#13;
four unpaid citations&#13;
was ticketed and&#13;
towed".&#13;
04/18/02&#13;
Inc 02-301 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, CTH JR at&#13;
CTH E, 9:13 p.m. A&#13;
driver whose vehicle&#13;
had a burned-out&#13;
headlamp was stopped.&#13;
I n v est i gat ion&#13;
revealed restrictions&#13;
required driver to be&#13;
accompanied by another&#13;
person with a valid&#13;
license . Driver was&#13;
cited for violation of&#13;
license restriction&#13;
and a verbal warning&#13;
given for defective&#13;
headlamp.&#13;
04/19/02&#13;
Inc 02-303 T r a f fie&#13;
Violation, 4000 Block&#13;
of Outer Loop Rd.,&#13;
9:07 a.m. A driver&#13;
going at a high rate&#13;
of speed&#13;
was stopped. A citation&#13;
issued for nonregistration&#13;
of vehicle&#13;
and verbal warning&#13;
for speed.&#13;
04/20/02&#13;
Inc 02-304 H a r ass -&#13;
ment-Threats, University&#13;
Apartments, 2:23&#13;
a.m. A student&#13;
reported feeling&#13;
threatened by two&#13;
individuals. Residence&#13;
Life office&#13;
staff will be requested&#13;
to meet with the&#13;
parties&#13;
involved.&#13;
My enjoyment of sports writing&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports page Editor&#13;
For my last article for The&#13;
Ranger I deceided to&#13;
write about my enjoyment&#13;
of sports writing here at&#13;
UW~Parkside.I have enjoyed&#13;
wntmg about sports for The&#13;
Rangera great deal, especially&#13;
because r was able to meet&#13;
otherswho were also interested&#13;
in the sports field. I have&#13;
alwayshad a passion for writmgand&#13;
sports, so I decided to&#13;
put them together and started&#13;
sports writing.&#13;
. ~e best part of sports writmg&#13;
IS interviewing coaches&#13;
and student athletes Interviewing&#13;
student athletes is a&#13;
lot of fun because you also get&#13;
a chance to know about the&#13;
student athlete as a student.&#13;
They may play a particular&#13;
sport but they also have the&#13;
same kinds of interests other&#13;
students. Do not forget that&#13;
they also have to study for&#13;
those,dreadful mid-terms and&#13;
finals. Interviewing coaches is&#13;
fun because you get to know&#13;
how a coach sees their players.&#13;
You also see that they&#13;
want their players to know&#13;
that academics are important,&#13;
not just playing a sport. The&#13;
coaches here at University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside also are&#13;
very helpful in getting statistics&#13;
and information to&#13;
reporters.&#13;
The main sport that I have&#13;
loved writing about is basketball.&#13;
In fact I now would like&#13;
to write for the NBA or&#13;
WNBA. Writing for basketball&#13;
here has helped me get to&#13;
know the plays, whether it is&#13;
the offensive or defensive&#13;
side. Coach Stein and Coach&#13;
Rutter were great to interview&#13;
and always gave me enough&#13;
information to write up my&#13;
article, both were always&#13;
available whenever I needed&#13;
to an interview," I was never&#13;
into soccer but after writing&#13;
about it, I got interested in&#13;
watching. Coach Kilps of the&#13;
men's soccer team was very&#13;
helpful in the interviews up&#13;
close and the interviews over&#13;
the phone.&#13;
Last year during the baseball&#13;
season I got to interview&#13;
former coach Sal Banda Jr.&#13;
For those who don't know&#13;
who-he is, he is Sal Banda Sr.'s&#13;
son. Sal Banda Sr. is a former&#13;
major leaguer and is currently&#13;
the Special Assistant to the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer's President&#13;
Wendy Selig-Preib, so it&#13;
was pretty cool to interview&#13;
someone who has a famous&#13;
family here in Wisconsin.&#13;
Not only have I gotten a&#13;
chance to write about sports&#13;
at Parkside, but I also got to&#13;
write about the professional&#13;
sports around Wisconsin and&#13;
the nation. I have writen&#13;
about Miller Park, the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers and the Milwaukee&#13;
Bucks. With the&#13;
Bucks article I did last year,&#13;
when the team made the playoffs&#13;
and won the Central Division&#13;
Tittle, I got to interview a&#13;
team official. The one article&#13;
that has meant a lot to me,&#13;
especially now, is the Salt&#13;
Lake City Winter Olympic&#13;
Games article. I did this on&#13;
the security at the Olympics,&#13;
because it all changed after&#13;
Sept. 11, 2001.&#13;
Knowing this is my last&#13;
article ever at The Ranger, I&#13;
thought it would be great to&#13;
do the article on letting everyone&#13;
at UW-P know about my&#13;
interest in writing and sports.&#13;
So farewell to all at OW-P,and&#13;
hopefully I will be seen on the&#13;
sidelines of TNT interviewing&#13;
those NBA players.&#13;
Amber Antonia leads&#13;
the women's track team&#13;
and in the 5000m Run, third in&#13;
the 10000m Run and forth in&#13;
the 3000m run. Other strong&#13;
performances included Lindsay&#13;
DeWitt,who finished third&#13;
in the 3000mSteeplechase and&#13;
Robyn Stevens who finished&#13;
fourth in the 5000m run and&#13;
fifth in the 3000m run. Amy&#13;
Scott also had a good performance&#13;
finishing fourth in the&#13;
High Jump&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter The Women's Track Team&#13;
competed in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
at St. Joseph College this past&#13;
weekend and placed 7th out of&#13;
nine schools. The team finished&#13;
with 47 points finishing&#13;
in the 7th position, three&#13;
points shy of fifth place.&#13;
Amber Antonia finished sec-&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
The Parkside Women's&#13;
Softball team improved&#13;
to a 17-12 overall record&#13;
the past few weeks. The team&#13;
began their improvement&#13;
against Bellarmine by spliting&#13;
two games. Last Tuesday the&#13;
Ranger's split again, this time&#13;
versus St. Joseph's thanks to a&#13;
3-0 shutout in game two. Parkside&#13;
continued their tough&#13;
play on Wednesday splitting&#13;
yet another series, this time&#13;
against Olivet Nazarene. Parkside&#13;
went 2-1 on the weekend&#13;
losing to Findlay 5-4 and then&#13;
beating Mercyburst 7-3. Saturday&#13;
topped Saginaw Valley&#13;
State 61 on Saturday. Emily&#13;
StrobLusch leads the team&#13;
with a .354batting average and&#13;
16 RBI's.&#13;
BUY&#13;
A&#13;
TUX&#13;
FOR&#13;
$50&#13;
BUCKS&#13;
COAT,SlACK,&#13;
VESTA TIE =- MIKf BPN'S- = IIOlIlII TUX WORLD .:::.&#13;
AS SEENON 'WILD CHICAGO TV!!!"·&#13;
POllel - -----RIil _,. ___ _&#13;
04/16/02&#13;
Inc 02-287 UWS Chap ter&#13;
51, Crisis Inter vention,&#13;
Ranger Ha ll ,&#13;
1:19 a.m. Off icers&#13;
responded to a r e p ort&#13;
of a disorderly pers on&#13;
in the hallwa ys.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in subjec cited&#13;
for underage dr inking-&#13;
2nd of f e nse .&#13;
Subject was t rans ported&#13;
to local h ospitals&#13;
for evalua tion .&#13;
Inc 02-288 Liquor La w&#13;
Violation, Outer Lo op&#13;
Road at the Union&#13;
parking loL, 1:51&#13;
a . m . An underage&#13;
individual was found&#13;
to be ill a nd intoxicated&#13;
.&#13;
Investigation resulted&#13;
in a citation&#13;
issued for&#13;
identification card&#13;
violation .&#13;
Inc 02-290 UW S Chapter&#13;
18, Pike River&#13;
Woods off CTH A, 12:04&#13;
p . m . A visitor with&#13;
fishing ge ar was&#13;
informed of the Chapter&#13;
18 no fis hing on&#13;
university lands regulations.&#13;
Subject&#13;
left the area.&#13;
Inc 02-291 Me d i c a l&#13;
Assist, SAC Softball&#13;
Field, 3:41 p.m. A&#13;
visitor had been&#13;
struck in the face by&#13;
a softball. Kenosha&#13;
Med 5 transported the&#13;
subject to Aurora&#13;
Hospital for treatment.&#13;
Inc 02-292 Criminal&#13;
Damage to State Property,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments, 8:28 p.m.&#13;
A student reported&#13;
My enjoyment of sports writing&#13;
By Dena Coady&#13;
Sports page Editor For my last article for The&#13;
Ranger I deceided to&#13;
write about my enjoyment&#13;
of sports writing here at&#13;
U\-y~Parkside. I have enjoyed&#13;
wnting about sports for The&#13;
Ranger a great cfeal, especially&#13;
because I was able to meet&#13;
others who were also interested&#13;
in the sports field. I have&#13;
~lways had a passion for writmg&#13;
and sports, so I decided to&#13;
put them together and started&#13;
sports writing.&#13;
. ~e b_est part of sports writmg&#13;
is interviewing coaches&#13;
a~d _student athletes. Interviewmg&#13;
student athletes is a&#13;
lot of ft.in because you also get&#13;
a chance to know about the&#13;
student athlete as a student.&#13;
They may play a particular&#13;
sport but they also have the&#13;
same kinds of interests other&#13;
students. Do not forget that&#13;
they also have to study for&#13;
t~ose dreadful mid-terms and&#13;
finals. Interviewing coaches is&#13;
fun because you get to know&#13;
how a coach sees their players.&#13;
You also see that they&#13;
want their players to know&#13;
that academics are important,&#13;
not jus t playing a sport. The&#13;
co aches h e re at University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside also are&#13;
v e ry hel pful in gettin~ statistics&#13;
and informa hon to&#13;
reporters.&#13;
The main s p ort that I have&#13;
loved w riting about is basketball.&#13;
In fact I now would like&#13;
to write fo r the NBA or&#13;
WNBA. Writing for basketball&#13;
here has helped me get to&#13;
know the plays, whether it is&#13;
the offensive or defensive&#13;
side. Coach Stein and Coach&#13;
Rutter were great to interview&#13;
and always gave me enough&#13;
information to write up my&#13;
article, both were always&#13;
available whenever I needed&#13;
to an interview. I was never&#13;
into soccer but after writing&#13;
about it, I got interested in&#13;
watching. Coach Kilps of the&#13;
men's soccer team was very&#13;
helpful in the interviews up&#13;
close and the interviews over&#13;
the phone.&#13;
Last year during the baseball&#13;
season I got to interview&#13;
former coach Sal Banda Jr.&#13;
For those who don't know&#13;
who he is, he is Sal Bando Sr.'s&#13;
son. Sal Banda Sr. is a former&#13;
major leaguer and is currently&#13;
the Special Assistant to the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer's President&#13;
Wendy Selig-Preib, so it&#13;
was pretty cool to interview&#13;
someone who has a famous&#13;
family here in Wisconsin.&#13;
Not only have I gotten a&#13;
chance to write about sports&#13;
at Parkside, but I also got to&#13;
write about the professional&#13;
sports around Wisconsin and&#13;
the nation. I have writen&#13;
about Miller Park, the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers and the Milwaukee&#13;
Bucks. With the&#13;
Bucks article I did last year,&#13;
when the team made the playoffs&#13;
and won the Central Division&#13;
Tittle, I got to interview a&#13;
team officia[ The one article&#13;
that has meant a lot to me,&#13;
especially now, is the Salt&#13;
La'ke City Winter Olympic&#13;
Games article. I did this on&#13;
the security at the Olympics,&#13;
because it all changed after&#13;
Sept. 11, 2001.&#13;
Knowing this is my last&#13;
article ever at The Ranger, I&#13;
thought it would be great to&#13;
do the article on letting everyone&#13;
at UW-P know about my&#13;
interest in writing and sports.&#13;
So farewell to all at UW-P, and&#13;
hopefully I will be seen on the&#13;
sidelines of TNT interviewing&#13;
those NBA players.&#13;
that someone had broken&#13;
the front living&#13;
room window&#13;
to her apartment. No&#13;
suspects or witnesses.&#13;
04/17/02&#13;
Inc 02-294 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, Wood Road&#13;
&amp; HWY E, 12:26 a.m.&#13;
A driver was cited for&#13;
failure to obey a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
Inc 02-296 P a r k i n g&#13;
Enforcement-Tow, Visitor's&#13;
parking lot,&#13;
9:09 a.m. A student&#13;
illegally parked with&#13;
four unpaid citations&#13;
was ticketed and&#13;
towed.&#13;
04/18/02&#13;
Inc 02-301 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, CTH JR at&#13;
CTH E, 9:13 p.m. A&#13;
driver whose vehicle&#13;
had a burned-out&#13;
headlamp was stopped.&#13;
I n v e s t i g a t i o n&#13;
revealed restrictions&#13;
required driver to be&#13;
accompanied by anoth-&#13;
Page7&#13;
er person with a valid&#13;
license. Ori ver was&#13;
cited for violation of&#13;
license restriction&#13;
and a verbal warning&#13;
given for defective&#13;
headlamp.&#13;
04/19/02&#13;
Inc 02-303 T r a f f i c&#13;
Violation, 4000 Block&#13;
of Outer Loop Rd.,&#13;
9:07 a.m. A driver&#13;
going at a high rate&#13;
of speed&#13;
was stopped. A citation&#13;
issued for nonregistration&#13;
of vehicle&#13;
and verbal warning&#13;
for speed.&#13;
04/20/02&#13;
Inc 02-304 H a r a s s -&#13;
ment-Threats, University&#13;
Apartments, 2:23&#13;
a.m. A student&#13;
reported feeling&#13;
threatened by two&#13;
individuals. Residence&#13;
Life office&#13;
staff will be requested&#13;
to meet with the&#13;
parties&#13;
involved.&#13;
Amber Antonia leads&#13;
the women's track team&#13;
By Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter The Women's Track Team&#13;
competed in the Great&#13;
Lakes Valley Conference&#13;
at St. Joseph College this past&#13;
weekend and placed 7th out of&#13;
nine schools. The team finished&#13;
with 47 points finishing&#13;
in the 7th position, three&#13;
points shy of fifth place.&#13;
Amber Antonia finished second&#13;
in the 5000m Run, third in&#13;
the 10000m Run and forth in&#13;
the 3000m run. Other strong&#13;
performances included Linasay&#13;
De Witt, who finished third&#13;
in the 3000m Steeplechase and&#13;
Robyn Stevens who finished&#13;
fourth in the 5000m run and&#13;
fifth in the 3000m run. Amy&#13;
Scott also had a good performance&#13;
finishing fourth in the&#13;
High Jump&#13;
Softball team plays hardball&#13;
_ _ B-'-y Michael Coghlan Jr.&#13;
Staff Reporter&#13;
day topped Saginaw Valley&#13;
State 61 on Saturday. Emily&#13;
StrobLusch leads the team&#13;
with a .354 batting average and&#13;
16 RBl's.&#13;
AS SEEN O,V "lr/LD CHIC~GO nr!!!":&#13;
Parkside Activities Board &amp;&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Alliance&#13;
presents&#13;
, ..&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
FEATURING I(ON%&#13;
. free &amp; open to the campus and community.&#13;
Enjoy a wonderful cookout! $5 admission for barbecue.&#13;
j&#13;
I i&#13;
I&#13;
WHERE: UW-Parkside Union Patio&#13;
WHEN: Saturday, April 27, 2002&#13;
TIME: 2:00pm - 7:00pm&#13;
In case of rain, activities will be moved to Union Square.&#13;
Novelties: 2:00pm - 7:00pm&#13;
Pat McCurdy: 2:30pm - q:OOpm&#13;
Hit Unit: q:15pm - 5:00pm&#13;
Iconz: 5:30pm - 6:30pm&#13;
i I&#13;
~.&#13;
.I&#13;
for more information ca1/595-2650&#13;
~ "-rhe University of Wisco~sin- Parkside provides services for patrons with special&#13;
~ '" ~eeds. Please contact the Parkside Student Center for assistance, (262) 595-2345.&#13;
I&#13;
• I&#13;
,r&#13;
) ;&#13;
,l&#13;
_,,, I I&#13;
ICON%&#13;
$5 WHERE.: WHE.N: TIME.: 1:_&#13;
1:Lf: lconz: more ca/1595-"t,,,ll?'rhe 'ff</text>
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