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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Volume 2, issue 19</text>
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              <text>Second Semester Enrollment Sets Record</text>
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              <text>Second semester&#13;
enrollment sets record&#13;
Second semester enrollment at&#13;
Parkside is 4,425, a record high&#13;
for the Spring semester.&#13;
Current enrollment is seven&#13;
percent, or 282 students, more&#13;
than second semester last year&#13;
when 4,143 registered. The attrition&#13;
from first semester's alltime&#13;
high of 4,856 is considered a&#13;
normal drop from the Fall to&#13;
Spring semesters by Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn.&#13;
"Although second semester&#13;
data is preliminary, the final&#13;
figures won't vary much and&#13;
there are some very encouraging&#13;
signs," Dearborn said. He cited a&#13;
29 percent increase in the number&#13;
of freshmen over a year ago, a&#13;
doubling of minority students,&#13;
and what appears to be a good&#13;
retention rate in both categories&#13;
from first semester.&#13;
Freshman are up from 1,198&#13;
last year at this time to 1,554, and&#13;
down only six percent from Fall.&#13;
There are 222 minorities at&#13;
Parkside, more than twice the 110&#13;
last year, including 148 blacks, up&#13;
from 68 last year. There was&#13;
virtually no change from the 224&#13;
minorities who began the Fall&#13;
semester at UW-P.&#13;
"Another encouraging sign is&#13;
the expanded geographical base&#13;
from which our students are&#13;
coming," Dearborn said.&#13;
Students from outside Kenosha&#13;
and Racine counties are up 21&#13;
percent from last year, from 329&#13;
to 399. Local students also are up,&#13;
from 1,729 to 1,803 (four percent)&#13;
in Kenosha county and from 2,085&#13;
to 2,223 (seven percent) in Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
"I'm also pleased with the&#13;
number of transfer students who&#13;
are coming to us from other&#13;
schools as upperclassmen," he&#13;
said. "It showed up dramatically&#13;
last Fall and seems to be continuing.&#13;
A lot of area students are&#13;
rehiring to Parkside after&#13;
starting somewhere else."&#13;
This is borne out by the fact&#13;
that not only are Parkside's 839&#13;
seniors up 10 percent from last&#13;
year's 765, they also are up from&#13;
the 799 of last Fall despite 150 who&#13;
graduated in January.&#13;
Female students have increased&#13;
12 percent, from 1,560 to&#13;
1,755, while males are up three&#13;
percent, from 2,583 to 2,670.&#13;
The number of sophomores and&#13;
juniors are virtually unchanged&#13;
from last year and the number of&#13;
"specials" (those not in degree&#13;
programs or otherwise unclassified)&#13;
is down from last&#13;
year.&#13;
Financial aid proposal&#13;
Loan program would abolish state grants&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
A new student financial aids program for the state&#13;
of Wisconsin has been proposed by James Jung&#13;
executive secretary of the Higher Educational Aids&#13;
Board.&#13;
The main feature of the plan is that all state grant&#13;
and loan programs that exist now would be&#13;
eliminated and replaced by one large program of&#13;
loans that would be available to all resident&#13;
students. 1 e hstudent need not use the money in the&#13;
state of Wisconsin, but could attend any university&#13;
in the country.&#13;
The proposal, called the Wisconsin Guaranteed&#13;
Higher Education Plan (WGHEP), says that all&#13;
students may borrow up to $2500 per year for four&#13;
years of college, with repayment contingent upon&#13;
income level after graduation. This means that&#13;
repayment of the loan would be made based on the&#13;
individual's ability to pay. If a person's income is&#13;
low, payments will be less than those of someone&#13;
whose income is high. If after 25 years the loan is&#13;
not repaid in full, the remaining amount will be&#13;
forgiven. However, a person who has a high income&#13;
may end up paying more than was originally&#13;
borrowed, even beyond the interest on that amount.&#13;
Such a consequence might be necessary to make up&#13;
for those who cannot pay, according to Jan Ocker&#13;
director of Financial Aids at Parkside.&#13;
Aid Now Based on Need&#13;
Financial aid is presently based on need, which&#13;
considers the parents' ability to pay. Many minority&#13;
and disadvantaged students now qualify for grant&#13;
money but under WGHEP, state grants would no&#13;
longer be available. It is a known fact in the&#13;
financial aids community, said Ocker, that there is&#13;
a reluctance on the part of low-income, minority&#13;
students to accept loans, especially in the large&#13;
amounts that WGHEP would require&#13;
Ocker fears that graduates who have a large debt&#13;
to repay will be reluctant to accept high paying&#13;
jobs, fearing that their payments will be high and&#13;
that the total amount will be in excess of what they&#13;
borrowed. This could be a potential loss to the entire&#13;
work force, said Ocker.&#13;
He also fears that there will be a large increase in&#13;
tuition under WGHEP. Where tuition now makes up&#13;
P6r&#13;
^&#13;
nt 0f 1116 total costs of education,&#13;
WGHEP would make it justifiable for tuition to be&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
by Kathryn L. Kah&#13;
It works! After being on the&#13;
blink since last March, the sauna&#13;
has been fixed.&#13;
Apparently this was not a&#13;
simple matter. According to John&#13;
Galbraith of Planning and&#13;
Construction, the Metos sauna,&#13;
manufactured in Helsinki,&#13;
Finland, was the victim of&#13;
unusual circumstances.&#13;
When the State has a building&#13;
constructed, there are usually&#13;
several prime contractors involved&#13;
in the construction of the&#13;
building. A prime contractor is&#13;
the company which signs the&#13;
contract with the State; it is&#13;
usually the lowest bidder. One&#13;
company does the building,&#13;
another company does the&#13;
plumbing, another heating, and&#13;
still another does the electrical&#13;
work.&#13;
In the case of the Physical&#13;
Education Building, the original&#13;
prime electrical contractor from&#13;
Bellview, Washington went into&#13;
receivership-that is, broke. This&#13;
company obtained the sauna&#13;
from the manufacturer in&#13;
Finland and installed it. The&#13;
original cost was $850.&#13;
The State has a bonding&#13;
company, an insurance company,&#13;
which takes over in the&#13;
event that one of the prime&#13;
contractors goes broke. There is&#13;
also a one-year period during&#13;
which the original prime contractor&#13;
must fix anything that&#13;
goes wrong with its work.&#13;
The sauna failed within the oneyear&#13;
guarantee period, the&#13;
company had gone broke, and the&#13;
bonding company had to take&#13;
over.&#13;
Since the bonding company is&#13;
only an insurance company, it&#13;
had to hire a new electrical&#13;
contractor to fix the sauna. This&#13;
took until July.&#13;
According to Galbraith, It took&#13;
until sometime last September to&#13;
determine what was actually&#13;
wrong with the unit.&#13;
It seems that the failure may&#13;
have been due to improper installation.&#13;
The unit shorted out&#13;
and some of the wires burned.&#13;
The improper hook-up was&#13;
probably aggravated by people&#13;
pouring large quantities of pool&#13;
water on it.&#13;
The sauna is primarily dry&#13;
heat. It is permissible to pour a&#13;
dipperful at a time of pure water&#13;
on the stones, but NOT pool&#13;
water. Saunas of this type are&#13;
usually trouble-free if not abused.&#13;
When the trouble was finally&#13;
discovered, the whole unit was&#13;
shipped to California to the new&#13;
contractor hired by the bonding&#13;
company. Once the sauna finally&#13;
reached someone who knew what&#13;
they were doing, and the new&#13;
contractor was paid by the&#13;
bonding company, it was fixed in&#13;
short order. The cost was $150.&#13;
So people may certainly go use&#13;
the sauna once again, but please&#13;
don't pour a bucket of pool water&#13;
on it!&#13;
w The Parkside&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 Vol. II No. 19&#13;
The sad saga of the sauna,&#13;
or , where were you&#13;
when the pipes went out?&#13;
The lock is off, the door is open! After being inoperative for almost a&#13;
year, the sauna is once again functioning and available for use.&#13;
nf «hrr°&#13;
U&#13;
^&#13;
P,a*",&#13;
tS (S0P) was an effort that hadn,t really gotten out&#13;
the nrnhi T ! °&#13;
f e&#13;
'&#13;
ght or nine students started cleaning up NLK^s&#13;
Fcy&#13;
-»tr5.&#13;
here a re D"&#13;
b Donatt a nd &#13;
2 THE PARKSFDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionAid&#13;
proposal&#13;
not good&#13;
enough&#13;
"The College Money Crunch" is the title of a recent&#13;
television documentary dealing with the rising costs of&#13;
higher education. The central point was that the wealthy&#13;
people can afford to go to college, the poor get financial&#13;
aid, and the middle-class gets squeezed out.&#13;
The plight of middle-income families whose tax&#13;
dollars support financial aid but whose children are not&#13;
eligible for it, has come to the attention of the Wisconsin&#13;
Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB) and it has&#13;
produced a controversial proposal to try and rectify the&#13;
situation. While we applaud the effort, we cannot support&#13;
the plan as it now stands, for it would create more&#13;
problems than it would solve.&#13;
The proposal would replace the present stat^ grants&#13;
and scholarships with a program of loans. A student&#13;
could borrow the dollars to meet all his-her educational&#13;
costs and would be obliged to pay back the debt within 25&#13;
years of leaving school, predicated on income.&#13;
Many well-founded objections have arisen regarding&#13;
the proposal, some of them being that the loan program&#13;
would discourage students in financially poor circumstances&#13;
from attending college and incurring heavy&#13;
debts, that tuition rates would skyrocket and everyone&#13;
would be forced to borrow money, and that graduates&#13;
might be reluctant to take a higher paying job because&#13;
they would then be required to repay higher amounts.&#13;
Current loan and grant programs are based considerably&#13;
on the parents' financial status and questions&#13;
are being raised as to whether or not the parents of&#13;
students over 18 are responsible for debts and tuition&#13;
payments of their children. The HEAB proposal does&#13;
anticipate judicial sanction of students' emancipation&#13;
and attempts to alleviate other inequities and&#13;
inadequacies in the present financial aid system. For&#13;
example, the student from a middle-income background&#13;
is ignored by financial aid officers and by university&#13;
offices hiring students for part-time work. It is much&#13;
cheaper to give a job to a student on work study, for the&#13;
federal government pays 80 percent of the wages, but it&#13;
leaves out in the cold those students who aren't eligible&#13;
for aid but need a job to keep going.&#13;
While the proposal aims at a fairer system of aid for&#13;
all, we feel it just is not comprehensive enough to meet&#13;
the needs of middle and lower income students. Further,&#13;
the cost of administering it would be staggering. The&#13;
best system would be one which combines present&#13;
programs (relaxing requirements and treating each&#13;
case as individually as possible) with such guaranteed&#13;
loans as HEAB has proposed. "Need" must be&#13;
realistically redefined, and as a recent Racine Journal&#13;
Times editorial stated, "the best form of student&#13;
assistance is low tuition."&#13;
Hence, while we do not support the proposed loan plan&#13;
as the sole state financial aid program, we feel HEAB is&#13;
on the right track. We hope the plan is not completely&#13;
rejected for we would like to see its good points incorporated&#13;
into a new proposal which will give everyone&#13;
an equal chance at higher education and encourage&#13;
people to take advantage of such opportunities.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M.&#13;
Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael&#13;
Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels,&#13;
Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken&#13;
Pestka&#13;
We gletters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I applaud the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board selection of a&#13;
nationally known expert, Mr.&#13;
Frederic Storaska, to speak&#13;
here on Feb. 14 about "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults on Women."&#13;
However, I feel that advertising&#13;
this program as a "Valentine's&#13;
Day Special" is in poor taste.&#13;
After discussing this with the&#13;
individual responsible for&#13;
selecting the date, I realized the&#13;
choice of Feb. 14 was i ntentional&#13;
and that it was meant to be&#13;
ironic.&#13;
Unfortunately, this advertising&#13;
has caused concern and some&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Before everyone has finished&#13;
congratulating each other on the&#13;
fine job in building Parkside, I&#13;
would like to present a point of&#13;
view which receives much lip&#13;
service but not much elseecology.&#13;
I remember when&#13;
Greenquist was built and how it&#13;
was designed so that no parking&#13;
lot with its polluting cars would&#13;
be nearby. I remember how a&#13;
fancy expensive bus service was&#13;
instituted to preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the Parkside-Petrified&#13;
Springs area. I was proud to be a&#13;
student here. Now I am ashamed.&#13;
Why is Everyone so happy about&#13;
the new parking lots and road to&#13;
be built around Parkside? No one&#13;
said anything when the facultystaff&#13;
parking lot was set up&#13;
during the summer (when no&#13;
student government or&#13;
organizations were present to&#13;
protest). I didn't hear a sound&#13;
from any one of our ecological&#13;
life science professors-they&#13;
bring up their cars to the lot with&#13;
the rest of the professors and&#13;
administrators who are too good&#13;
to ride the buses and use the&#13;
sidewalks with the rest of us&#13;
commoners.&#13;
How many acres of fertile land&#13;
will Parkside cover with asphalt&#13;
and concrete? How many more&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside has been infiltrated&#13;
by a tribe of scofflaws...people&#13;
who know what the rules are and,&#13;
unfortunately, think that they can&#13;
break them at will and get away&#13;
with it. My guess (and hope) is&#13;
that this cadre of litter-bugs is the&#13;
tail-end of a generation which&#13;
should have been spanked instead&#13;
of "Spocked" by permissive&#13;
mothers who always (?)&#13;
picked up after their kids.&#13;
The rules here are that there is&#13;
to be no smoking in classrooms&#13;
and auditoriums. That's a State&#13;
Law. Another rule is that no food&#13;
or drinks are to be taken into&#13;
classrooms. Yet these rules are&#13;
being broken all of the time. The&#13;
proprietors of the library are the&#13;
only people around here with guts&#13;
enough to see that these rules are&#13;
observed.&#13;
Scofflaws come in all colors,&#13;
sexes, shapes and size. A weird&#13;
example of scofflawism in action&#13;
would be the young woman who&#13;
would be beautiful were it not for&#13;
the fact that she sits in class&#13;
chewing gum, sucking a cigarette&#13;
and draining a can of coke, while&#13;
taking notes...while a seemingly&#13;
oblivious professor lectures a few&#13;
feet away. Her coordination is&#13;
fantastic in an unbecoming sort&#13;
of way. And wheji class is over,&#13;
she walks out, leaving all of her&#13;
sick humor. Some people&#13;
evidently believe that an individual&#13;
who freely chooses&#13;
sexual intimacy with another&#13;
subconsciously welcomes sexual&#13;
assault. In certain instances, law&#13;
enforcement agencies and&#13;
defense attorneys have used this&#13;
premise to unjustly attack a rape&#13;
victim's credibility. For these&#13;
reasons, I consider the choice of&#13;
date and the manner of publicity&#13;
unfortunate. It highlights the&#13;
dilemma many victims face and&#13;
pinpoints the reason so many&#13;
refuse to bring charges.&#13;
Rape is not purely a feminine&#13;
problem. Recently a male inmate&#13;
cars will we accommodate to&#13;
choke our trees and plants and&#13;
run over our animals and waste&#13;
our fuel resources? What happened&#13;
to encouraging car pools&#13;
and bicycles and walking?&#13;
Speaking of dirty deals last&#13;
summer, why do we have an&#13;
instant lawn which makes&#13;
everyone so proud of the way&#13;
Parkside looks? How many&#13;
families of rabbits, squirrels and&#13;
other field creatures now live in&#13;
our freshly mowed lawn-not&#13;
many I'll bet. Why weren't the&#13;
natural plants and animals&#13;
allowed to live at our doorstep?&#13;
Now we look like a city school and&#13;
have to pay to have the lawn cut&#13;
and watered. I suppose that we&#13;
will need herbicides, pesticides&#13;
and fertilizer to keep the lawn&#13;
looking "nice." Also, do we have&#13;
to use rock salt on the sidewalks?&#13;
What's the matter with sand and&#13;
cheap student labour (to shovel)&#13;
instead of salt and tractors that&#13;
chew up the lawn?&#13;
I am a chemist, a scientist and&#13;
an ecologist. Why in the interest&#13;
of science and the name of&#13;
knowledge must we destroy in&#13;
order to learn? What causes a&#13;
teacher to ask his mushroom&#13;
class to collect 25 species of&#13;
muchrooms each, when he knows&#13;
Pets is right next to us and you&#13;
garbage behind her. Incidentally,&#13;
I've been told that it is the&#13;
professor's responsibility to&#13;
control what goes on in the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Some of our classrooms and&#13;
lecture halls look like bars where&#13;
the help went on strike...tin cans&#13;
and ash trays on desks, tin cans&#13;
along the walls and even on top of&#13;
hat racks. (I wonder who it is who&#13;
encourages smoking by putting&#13;
those ash trays in "No Smoking"&#13;
areas...and who removes the "No&#13;
Smoking" signs when they're put&#13;
up?)&#13;
Notice sometime, the number&#13;
of cigarette butts littering the&#13;
floor outside the library entrances.&#13;
And that double-decked&#13;
seating arrangement in Main&#13;
Place! ...It is usually littered with&#13;
lunch left-overs and tin cans&#13;
Sometimes it looks like a&#13;
pyramid of people trying to hatch&#13;
the cans. You'd think that their&#13;
bottoms would hurt.&#13;
When on campus we are&#13;
seldom more than fifty feet away&#13;
from a waste basket of some sort&#13;
Why not use 'em? Then, when a&#13;
waste container gets filled to&#13;
over-flowing so that it makes a&#13;
messy-looking area, the&#13;
janitorial crew will then be at&#13;
fault for not emptying it more&#13;
often. Our litterbugs should attend&#13;
Moscow U in the USSR Do&#13;
charged in court that he had been&#13;
sexually assaulted by another&#13;
prisoner. The court held that this&#13;
type of rape was impossible&#13;
Evidently the judge has seen&#13;
penal institutions only from a&#13;
distance.&#13;
I encourage all people concerned&#13;
about the serious problem&#13;
of rape to attend Mr. Storaska's&#13;
lecture and see his demonstration&#13;
of simple self-defense techniques&#13;
The evening may be one of the&#13;
most informative you will ever&#13;
spend.&#13;
Kathleen Sweeney&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
couldn't find a mushroom in the&#13;
park all fall? Other life science&#13;
professors do the same. Why? To&#13;
add to their personal collections?&#13;
I know knowledge doesn't come&#13;
free but why are so many living&#13;
things killed in order to study&#13;
them? Why does Parkside claim&#13;
to be ecological when it is not?&#13;
Why does an institution-when it&#13;
has a chance to lead its community&#13;
and preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the area-act like a&#13;
fancy factory and be concerned&#13;
with looks instead of life?&#13;
Ecology at Parkside-bullshit.&#13;
I don't have all the answers,&#13;
but sometime, somewhere,&#13;
someone has to raise a voice of&#13;
protest against unnecessary&#13;
development. The answer to full&#13;
parking lots is not to build new&#13;
ones b ut to provide alternatives&#13;
to one-person, one-car parking.&#13;
Parkside has done seme&#13;
ecological things and I appreciate&#13;
those. I just care enough&#13;
to say something before it happens&#13;
not afterwards like&#13;
everyone else. Don't build the&#13;
new road and parking lots-we&#13;
don't need them. What we need is&#13;
concern for the world we live and&#13;
learn in.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
any littering there and within&#13;
minutes you'd be hauled before a&#13;
panel of your peers and assigned&#13;
to twenty hours of work...usually&#13;
policing the grounds of the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Here's a suggestion to the&#13;
addicts who can't do without a&#13;
smoke or drink for an hour or so.&#13;
If the existing rules impose a&#13;
hardship on you, get organized&#13;
and work through the Grievance&#13;
Committee of PSGA and see i f&#13;
you can have the rules&#13;
changed...like having "Smoking"&#13;
and "No Smoking" areas in&#13;
classrooms like they now do on&#13;
airplanes. You'd better talk to the&#13;
Regents, too.&#13;
We are all privileged to use a&#13;
25-million dollar facility, thanks&#13;
to the foresight and generosity of&#13;
the people of Wisconsin. The way&#13;
things stand now a visitor could&#13;
walk around our ipdoor campus&#13;
and conclude that we're a bunch&#13;
of ungrateful slobs.&#13;
I'm sorry if it appears that I'm&#13;
scolding because I don't like to be&#13;
scolded. But it's high time that&#13;
someone talked about the smoke&#13;
pollution, cans and garbage&#13;
around here. If you want to do&#13;
something about your environment,&#13;
here is a good place to&#13;
begin.&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Racine Senior &#13;
More letters&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to David Myer's letter&#13;
of Jan. 30, in which he derided the&#13;
university and faculty for&#13;
teaching so-called "unproven&#13;
theories, Freudian dogma, explanatory&#13;
fiction, subjective&#13;
observation, and information&#13;
useful to professors in their&#13;
research and to students meeting&#13;
requirements," I would ask him&#13;
how else he would propose to&#13;
teach courses in psychology and&#13;
sociology.&#13;
The study of these two&#13;
disciplines must in fact be taught&#13;
on a theoretical basis because&#13;
that is the only basis for explanations&#13;
of phenomenon which&#13;
occur within their scopes. There&#13;
is no such thing as an objective&#13;
fact or a law within these fields&#13;
because almost all proposed laws&#13;
are able to be disproved in a&#13;
given situation. These fields do&#13;
not seek absolutes but rather try&#13;
to explore all possibilities in the&#13;
hope that the future will be able&#13;
to apply the hypotheses with a&#13;
reasonable degree of predictability.&#13;
&#13;
These disciplines, in short, are&#13;
not taught to students so as to be&#13;
applied strictly, as the laws of&#13;
science, but to awaken the minds&#13;
of students to the large range of&#13;
possible explanations, so that a&#13;
student will be free to choose the&#13;
explanation which best suits a&#13;
given situation, or if there is no&#13;
explanation, he will be able to&#13;
arrive at his own independent&#13;
situation to a problem.&#13;
For this reason, I think the&#13;
teaching of theories is important&#13;
because we must attempt to&#13;
teach our students to think and to&#13;
reason or else we shall become&#13;
subservient to any authoritarian&#13;
society which has the might to&#13;
enforce its demands.&#13;
Peter L. Strutynski&#13;
South Milwaukee Junior&#13;
flotfboojt&#13;
Loans&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
raised to cover 100 percent of total educational&#13;
costs, Ocker explained. Thus, while more money&#13;
will be available to all students, those who are&#13;
presently able to bear the cost of their own&#13;
education would, under WGHEP, be forced to&#13;
borrow money.&#13;
Ocker believes that WGHEP would cost the state&#13;
two to three times as much money as the present&#13;
program and that paperwork involved in following&#13;
up loan repayments for 25 years would be excessive.&#13;
More Accessible to Middle Income Students&#13;
The program was designed to make financial aid&#13;
more accessible to middle income students who,&#13;
under existing programs^are ineligible for financial&#13;
assistance because of their parents' income.&#13;
WGHEP is also designed to deal with the 18-yearold&#13;
Age of Majority Law. One portion of that law&#13;
stipulates that parents may not be held financially&#13;
responsible for the debts of their children who are&#13;
over 18 years of age. That portion of the law is now&#13;
being tested in court and, should the law be upheld,&#13;
existing loan programs in Wisconsin could become&#13;
illegal, according to Ocker. WGHEP would be a&#13;
solution to that problem, since need would not be&#13;
determined by parental income.&#13;
Ocker explained that under WGHEP, some grants&#13;
and work-study money would still be available.&#13;
Wisconsin would still receive federal money for&#13;
grants and work-study and the Tuition Grant&#13;
Program, which sets aside money for students&#13;
attending private colleges in Wisconsin, would be&#13;
retained under WGHEP.&#13;
Ocker outlined the type of financial aid program&#13;
that he would support. He would like to retain most&#13;
of the features of the present system, but also include&#13;
a type of loan not based on need, specifically&#13;
to aid the middle income student. Ocker would also&#13;
like to see a diversity of grant programs based on&#13;
need, relaxing that need requirement should tuition&#13;
rise.&#13;
Senator Dorman Opposes Plan&#13;
State Senator Henry Dorman (D-Racine) sits on a&#13;
subcommittee of the Joint Committee of Finance of&#13;
the state legislature. That group studies any&#13;
proposals for new student financial aid systems.&#13;
The Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB)&#13;
passed WGHEP on principle, which means that&#13;
while HEAB does not necessarily support the plan,&#13;
it will be allowed to go to the legislature for further&#13;
study.&#13;
Dorman has taken a stand against WGHEP; his&#13;
complaints about the plan closely parallel those of&#13;
Ocker.&#13;
Like Ocker, Dorman is in favor of improving the&#13;
present system rather than replacing it entirely&#13;
with a new plan. He would like to see a "balanced&#13;
aid program of scholarships, grants, work-study,&#13;
and loans."&#13;
Increased Tuition?&#13;
Dorman pointed out that aid programs like&#13;
WGHEP have been instituted at other universities&#13;
and that under these programs tuition has gone up&#13;
very quickly.&#13;
Dorman says that WGHEP will not be passed by&#13;
the legislature "because not only do I not like it, but&#13;
the UW Administration does not like it, VocationalTechnical&#13;
people do not like it, and HEAB does not&#13;
like it."&#13;
James Jung, executive secretary of HEAB and&#13;
proponent of WGHEP, explained that this plan is&#13;
not a final one and should be developed with full&#13;
public discussion, including student participation.&#13;
"You'll notice," said Jung, "that the only support&#13;
for the plan is from students." He says that the&#13;
United Council of Student Governments in&#13;
Wisconsin has come out in favor of WGHEP.&#13;
Limited Funds Available&#13;
Jung outlined some of the basic concepts of the&#13;
plan, saying that WGHEP was designed to deal with&#13;
the Age of Majority Law, to recognize that 18-yearolds&#13;
are adults and responsible for their debts.&#13;
He explained that with the limited resources&#13;
available in the state, the plan was designed to get&#13;
the most out of what Wisconsin has in the way of&#13;
funds for financial aid. "It will not be cheap for the&#13;
state," Jung said, "but it (WGHEP) targets the&#13;
money to where it's needed most."&#13;
Jung also expressed concern for the middle class&#13;
students. "They are finding it increasingly difficult&#13;
to finance their education." Jung believes that the&#13;
state has an obligation to underwrite every student&#13;
and that post-secondary education should be&#13;
available to everyone.&#13;
He pointed out that at present, 63 percent of all&#13;
state financial aid is loans (Dorman puts the figure&#13;
at 50 percent), and that repayment on these loans is&#13;
not contingent on income after graduation.&#13;
WGHEP, he said, is not a loan in the true sense of&#13;
the word: it becomes an obligation only if the&#13;
graduate's income can support it.&#13;
Ocker made this final statement on WGHEP: "All&#13;
indications I have say that the disadvantages&#13;
outweigh the advantages of this proposal. The&#13;
likelihood of it becoming a reality is very slim at&#13;
this time."&#13;
by Jane Schllesman&#13;
^&#13;
rst RANGER of this semester, reference was made to the&#13;
staff s plans for expanded coverage of campus news and events and&#13;
our hopes for 16 page papers every other week. Shortly after this&#13;
announcement we were told by our printer, Zion Benton Publishing&#13;
Company, that there is still a grave paper shortage and we will have to&#13;
hold to eight p&amp;ges every week. At the present time the printer has&#13;
enough newsprint to get us through March.&#13;
What this means is that the space problems we experienced last&#13;
semester will become even more acute, since we can no longer put out&#13;
an occassional 12 page issue to alleviate some of the strain. It means&#13;
we may from time to time be printing on poor quality paper. It means&#13;
that, effective last week, we print only 4,000 c opies instead of 5 000&#13;
since that not only saves paper but helps the budget (with the increase&#13;
in the price of newsprint it will cost as much to print 1,000 fewer&#13;
copies).&#13;
The premium on space in each issue will make it difficult to justify&#13;
many and large pictures, as we had hoped to be able to have. It will&#13;
necessitate putting many important pieces of information in Brief&#13;
News when we would otherwise have done a larger article. Much post&#13;
event coverage of lectures and concerts will have to be foregone as in&#13;
last semester.&#13;
We want to continue to provide in-depth reporting of c ertain issues,&#13;
and special features perhaps not directly related to life at Parkside in&#13;
particular. It is my feeling that such articles are not only informative&#13;
but also thought-provoking.&#13;
Some would argue that it is our charge as a campus newspaper to&#13;
put Parkside events first and I agree up to a point. We owe people here&#13;
first class reporting of PSGA decisions, faculty and administrative&#13;
moves, and coverage of what students are up to. But we also must be&#13;
concerned with broader matters that affect us as well as with life&#13;
beyond the acreage of UW-P. I put coverage of the new financial aid&#13;
proposal, for example, ahead of a P.A.B. lecture, or the academic&#13;
advising issue before homecoming. Likewise, a feature on alcoholism&#13;
or mass transit takes precedence over what's new in the Whiteskellar&#13;
or in some cases what a student organization may be doing. Each issue&#13;
will have to be judged on what I feel will be its appeal to the students&#13;
and in many cases an article will be held for several weeks until there&#13;
is space available for it.&#13;
I want people to continue to contact us when they feel they have a&#13;
story or information of i nterest to the campus community. But I also&#13;
hope our sources and readers will understand if we have to put many&#13;
items in Brief News and-or It's What's Happening, or if we cannot&#13;
cover an event at all.&#13;
Finally, I want to thank several people on campus who, when they&#13;
heard about our paper problem, immediately began calling around the&#13;
state in efforts to help us out-and they're still trying! They are&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn, Dale Irish in Purchasing, and&#13;
Don Kopriva in Public Information. Their concern and assistance is&#13;
greatly appreciated by the whole staff, and I trust also by our readers.&#13;
Storaska to lecture on rape and defense&#13;
Frederic Storaska has been&#13;
lecturing for six years about the&#13;
prevention of assault on women,&#13;
men and children. He has spoken&#13;
to about two million students at&#13;
over 300 colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Documented reports say that&#13;
Storaska's lectures have&#13;
"prevented serious assault andor&#13;
saved lives" in some 273 cases.&#13;
Storaska's concern for the&#13;
prevention of a ssault stems from&#13;
an incident he witnessed in 1964.&#13;
A young girl was brutally attacked&#13;
by several boys, and&#13;
though Storaska was able to fight&#13;
off her assailants, the girl was&#13;
seriously injured.&#13;
This incident led Storaska to&#13;
seek information on assaults at a&#13;
number of universities. When he&#13;
found that little or none existed,&#13;
Storaska set out on an intensive&#13;
research project that eventually&#13;
led to requests for lecture appearances.&#13;
&#13;
Storaska now speaks on four&#13;
major topics: Child Abuse,&#13;
Assaults on Men, and Sex and&#13;
Surviving the Dating Game are&#13;
three of those topics. The fourth&#13;
topic, and the one he will speak on&#13;
at Parkside, is To Be or Not To Be&#13;
Raped-Prevention of Assaults on&#13;
Women. The topic deals&#13;
specifically with the myths that&#13;
surround rape, the popular&#13;
methods of defense that are&#13;
supposed to work, the make-up of&#13;
the assailant (who he is, what he&#13;
wants, what he needs), and the&#13;
victim (realistic attitudes and&#13;
techniques within which a woman&#13;
can safely react in any given&#13;
assault).&#13;
Storaska's lecture is scheduled&#13;
for Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theater. Admission&#13;
price for students is $1,&#13;
for the general public it is $1.50.&#13;
The lecture is being sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
2 TEXAS-SIZE SAVINGS&#13;
TWO BONANZA&#13;
Cheese-Burgers&#13;
1/4 Lb. B eef &amp; French Fries&#13;
$1 80&#13;
• with coupon&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St. &#13;
4 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Terminations again dominate&#13;
grievance committee meeting&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday, January 30, in Upper&#13;
Main Place to hear student&#13;
complaints and to discuss issues&#13;
that had been brought up at the&#13;
first meeting on Jan. 23.&#13;
The major issue under&#13;
discussion was the protest of&#13;
faculty terminations. Anna&#13;
Hendricks, a student,&#13;
represented Alan Wallace, an&#13;
instructor of English who has&#13;
been terminated, and read a&#13;
statement that had been&#13;
prepared by Wallace. In that&#13;
statement, Wallace explained&#13;
that there are three criteria for&#13;
review of a faculty member:&#13;
ratings on SCAFE forms&#13;
(Student Course and Faculty&#13;
Evaluation), campus and&#13;
community service, and&#13;
academic research and&#13;
publication (which includes the&#13;
completion of the Ph.D dissertation).&#13;
Faculty are expected to&#13;
excell in two out of the three&#13;
areas.&#13;
Wallace explained in his&#13;
statement that he has rated&#13;
highly on SCAFE forms,&#13;
especially in upper division&#13;
courses, and that he is very active&#13;
in community service. He is&#13;
a member of the Southside&#13;
Revitalization Corporation Board&#13;
in Racine, and is a member of the&#13;
Citizen's Advisory Panel to the&#13;
State Revolutionary War&#13;
Bicentennial Commission. He has&#13;
not completed his Ph.D dissertation.&#13;
Since Wallace's termination&#13;
becomes effective at&#13;
the end of this semester, he no&#13;
longer has any recourse for&#13;
appeal, although the opportunity&#13;
was there when he was notified&#13;
last year of his termination.&#13;
Most of the students at the&#13;
meeting seemed to be concerned&#13;
about what course of action they&#13;
can take now on behalf of&#13;
professors who are presently up&#13;
for review or have already been&#13;
terminated. Thomas Callanan,&#13;
assistant professor of Sociology,&#13;
was present at the meeting "to&#13;
answer questions," he said. His&#13;
suggestions included finding out&#13;
who has been terminated and&#13;
why, looking up Tenure and&#13;
Termination guidelines in the&#13;
University Rules and&#13;
Regulations, and obtaining a&#13;
copy of the "COPP" committee&#13;
report.&#13;
PSGA senators Tom Petersen&#13;
and Mike Hahner have attempted&#13;
to obtain a listing of the status of&#13;
all faculty members, but were&#13;
refused that information. They&#13;
are presently trying to obtain a&#13;
document, the Humanities&#13;
Review Criteria for Faculty,&#13;
which was released just prior to&#13;
Thanksgiving, 1973.&#13;
Three other grievances were&#13;
aired at the meeting. One student&#13;
questioned the increase in the&#13;
price of a can of soda from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. He said he had&#13;
observed no increased prices in&#13;
Canteen-operated machines off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Another student complained of&#13;
the shortage of tables in the&#13;
cafeteria during rush hours and&#13;
requested that something be done&#13;
to obtain more places to sit.&#13;
A third student, Keith&#13;
Chambers, protested the construction&#13;
of new parking lots and&#13;
roads in the Comm Arts and&#13;
Classroom Building area.&#13;
PSGA meets, discusses&#13;
elections, grievances&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association met on&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29, a nd discussed&#13;
elections and heard a report from&#13;
the Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee.&#13;
New elections were requested&#13;
for sometime late this month or&#13;
early March, to be run according&#13;
to PSGA election laws. (The&#13;
Elections Committee met the&#13;
following Thursday and agreed to&#13;
come before the Senate and&#13;
explain some of the problems&#13;
with this and recommend that&#13;
elections be held in April, according&#13;
to the referendum passed&#13;
last semester.)&#13;
The Senate, which was not at&#13;
quorum strength, then heard a&#13;
report from Senator Mike Hahner&#13;
of the Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee.&#13;
Hahner said the committee was&#13;
investigating problems concerning&#13;
slow school clocks, the&#13;
lack of pencil sharpeners, canteen&#13;
services, termination of&#13;
faculty and also complaints that&#13;
Parkside students under 18 are&#13;
denied entrance to Student Activity&#13;
Board functions.&#13;
Ken Konkol, former PSGA&#13;
presidential candidate, took the&#13;
opportunity to criticize the&#13;
Elections Committee for their&#13;
"bias" and failure to hold elections&#13;
within the prescribed 20-day&#13;
period. Konkol also stated he&#13;
would work to defeat an earlier&#13;
proposed referendum to postpone&#13;
the regular April elections until&#13;
the Fall.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovic announced&#13;
he will be a candidate for PSGA&#13;
president in the upcoming&#13;
election. Thus far only&#13;
Milutinovic and Dan Nielsen&#13;
have announced candidacy for&#13;
this office.&#13;
The p lace t o g o&#13;
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research assistance only.&#13;
When the clock struck&#13;
nine it wasn't on time&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
The clocks at Parkside perform&#13;
a very necessary and vital function&#13;
for the students, but unfortunately&#13;
they are not always&#13;
accurate. To find out why this is,&#13;
RANGER asked Norman Madsen&#13;
of Physical Plant how the clocks&#13;
operate and how they are&#13;
maintained.&#13;
The clocks in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, Classroom&#13;
Building and Greenquist receive&#13;
hourly signals from the master&#13;
clock in the hallway in&#13;
Greenquist. The Communication&#13;
Arts Building has not actually&#13;
been completed. When it is done&#13;
and paid for, these clocks will be&#13;
connected to the rest of the&#13;
system.&#13;
The clocks themselves are&#13;
made by Simplex, and can be&#13;
found in many public schools and&#13;
state universities. Madsen said&#13;
the reason the clocks are not&#13;
fixed immediately when they fail&#13;
is that he has no means of&#13;
monitoring them. In our first&#13;
interview, on Thursday, Jan. 28&#13;
this reporter asked Madsen if he&#13;
was aware that the clock in the&#13;
cafeteria was not in order.&#13;
Madsen said he was not and the&#13;
next day the same clock had been&#13;
taken away for repairs.&#13;
For the benefit of our readers,&#13;
RANGER attempted to construct&#13;
a chart listing each main clock in&#13;
the academic complex and&#13;
showing how fast or slow each&#13;
was in relation to the master&#13;
clock. It was found, however, that&#13;
each clock varies so much from&#13;
hour to hour thai the information&#13;
would not have been timely by&#13;
the time it was printed.&#13;
.SS^Gj)&#13;
AKAI • DUAL • WATTS • SHURE • JVC • TECHNICS •&#13;
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TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS o SENNHISER • &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
The Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Students will care for&#13;
concourse plants&#13;
E. H. in the U. K.&#13;
(The Eddie Harris London Sessions)&#13;
(Atlantic SD1647)&#13;
Most of today's music defies definitions. If you call it this it's that&#13;
and vice versa. As I must venture to describe this music it's simnlv&#13;
Eddie Harris an accomplished jazz saxophonist jamming with some&#13;
of England's best rock musicians, including Jeff Beck Albert Lee&#13;
Stevie Winwood, Rick Grech, Chris Squire and Alan White the latter&#13;
two, members of YES.&#13;
Having heard some of Eddie Harris' adventures with other iazzmen&#13;
and Beck and Winwood's albums with their respective bands I was&#13;
interested to see how this fusion of rock and jazz would sound' I was&#13;
hoping for big things, few of which got off the ground. It's not the songs&#13;
themselves that are disappointing but that the musicians don't seem to&#13;
be at their best.&#13;
"Baby" opens side one with Eddie Harris playing electric sax and&#13;
trumpet and doing the vocal (singing through his horn). The theme of&#13;
the song is stated by Eddie's "singing" but he fails to elaborate upon it&#13;
very much except when the guitar, sax and piano take short solos The&#13;
band could have done more with this song.&#13;
The next song, "Wait a Little Longer," is a funky jam with the&#13;
saxophone taking the lead and wailing. This builds to a peak but finally&#13;
returns to the opening statement featuring sax and guitar which&#13;
closes the song in a fitting way. This is followed by "He's Island Man"&#13;
which contains a mediocre sax solo which doesn't get off. Neither does&#13;
the song.&#13;
"I've Tried Everything" is the best song on the album. Jeff Beck&#13;
plays the first guitar solo, but gone is his powerhouse guitar style.&#13;
Instead he substitutes clean, mellow licks which compliment the&#13;
music. Following Beck's lead, Stevie Winwood does a fine solo on&#13;
electric piano and is followed by Eddie Harris and Albert Lee completing&#13;
the song in good style, adding their own personal touches to the&#13;
jam.&#13;
A moog synthesizer opens "I Waited for You," the only song not&#13;
written by Harris. The song opens slowly and the moog is well played&#13;
by Tony Kaye. The mood of this song is laid back and relaxed as&#13;
Harris on saxophone joins along with the moog to complete the&#13;
number.&#13;
"Conversations of Everything and Nothing," over 15 minutes long,&#13;
ends the album. The first half of the song is wasted time in which the&#13;
musicians seem to be making a vague stab in the dark in an attempt to&#13;
make music. Even when the song begins to pick up, there isn't very&#13;
much "oomph" in the playing. Harris gets a few good licks in on sax&#13;
but the listener is sidetracked by a bass and-or drums that tend to get&#13;
in the way by playing too loudly and not very well.&#13;
The album is OK. Not bad but not great. Most of the songs are good&#13;
but the musicians seem to be holding back. There isn't any song where&#13;
everybody plays like they're really getting off. In other words, the&#13;
musicians seem to be suffering from a lack of feeling.&#13;
(Record courtesy J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester&#13;
underway&#13;
"The Throne of Blood,"&#13;
Japanese director Kurosawa's&#13;
1957 adaptation of Macbeth as a&#13;
15th Century Samurai warrior,&#13;
will be shown today (Feb. 6), the&#13;
second in a series of&#13;
Shakespearean films being&#13;
screened during Parkside's&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester."&#13;
All of the films are at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall, Room 101,&#13;
and are free and open to the&#13;
public. Others in the series are&#13;
Welles' "Macbeth," Feb. 13;&#13;
Burge's "Othello," Feb. 20;&#13;
Youtkevich's "Othello,";&#13;
Castellani's "Romeo and Juliet,"&#13;
March 20; Reinhart's "Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream," April&#13;
3; Olivier's "Hamlet," April 24;&#13;
and Kosinstev's "Hamlet," May&#13;
8.&#13;
Dates for two other&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester" events&#13;
have been changed. The New&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks,&#13;
Private Camps, Dude Ranches and&#13;
Resorts throughout the nation.&#13;
Over 50,000 students aided each&#13;
year. For FREE information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED envelope&#13;
to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
.. .YOU MUST APPLY EARLY....&#13;
#0$ STiiDbN' A SS'ST ANt.F PROGRAM MAS B16N AfVlEWtOBv T Mf t F OF RA i iR AQf C OMMISSION&#13;
Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, originally scheduled&#13;
to present "Romeo and Juliet" at&#13;
Parkside on March 1, now will&#13;
offer "Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" on April 9 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. A daylong&#13;
symposium on&#13;
"Shakespeare, the Media and the&#13;
Secondary School," first slated&#13;
for March 30, has been changed&#13;
to April 6.&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
In October of 1972, prior to the&#13;
open house held for the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the University&#13;
obtained plants for the plant bay&#13;
along the concourse of LLC next&#13;
to the library. Getting the plants&#13;
was not easy and one reason was&#13;
that both Central Administration&#13;
and the architect preferred that&#13;
Parkside have green plastic&#13;
plants instead of real ones. As the&#13;
University is desirous of&#13;
aesthetic beauty, however, the&#13;
plants were finally purchased&#13;
through a broker and came from&#13;
California, Florida, and Arizona.&#13;
At the present time many of the&#13;
plants have died, some have&#13;
drowned, some have been stolen,&#13;
and some of those which are left&#13;
are infested with tropical insects.&#13;
One of those which was stolen&#13;
was a cactus nursed and owned&#13;
for 32 years by Robert Esser,&#13;
associate professor of life&#13;
science.&#13;
Eugene Gas iokiewicz,&#13;
professor of life science, explained&#13;
that when purchased, the&#13;
plants appeared to be nsi ect free.&#13;
However, put in the environment&#13;
of the LLC with air conditioning&#13;
and heating, the insects have&#13;
emerged. Gasiorkiewicz also said&#13;
that since some of the plants were&#13;
taken from a tropical rain forest&#13;
with limited light and a high&#13;
temperature and humidity they&#13;
cannot be expected to grow the&#13;
same way. The plants, he said,&#13;
were started on a trial and error&#13;
basis and were chosen for diverse&#13;
characteristics, and one could not&#13;
predict the success or failure of&#13;
any plant.&#13;
The plant bay, designed by LLC&#13;
architects, should not be located&#13;
where it is, said Gasiorkiewicz. A&#13;
better locale would have been on&#13;
the other side of the concourse&#13;
where the lighting is more ample.&#13;
When the plants arrived the&#13;
responsibility for their care was&#13;
placed on one individual from the&#13;
Physical Plant who worked with&#13;
the plants during the day. Since&#13;
then the Physical Plant, as well&#13;
as the rest of the University, has&#13;
suffered from budget cuts and&#13;
since June the night crew janitors&#13;
have watered the plants once per&#13;
week.&#13;
Recently Gasiorkiewicz has&#13;
received the revenue to hire two&#13;
students to care for the plants&#13;
and the city of Racine has&#13;
donated two greenhouses to&#13;
Parkside. Gasiorkiewicz expressed&#13;
hope that one greenhouse&#13;
Budweiser&#13;
K I N G o r B E E R S S&#13;
So - you still h aven't t hought o t a gift f or y our&#13;
"Kissing B uddy" o n Valentines D ay.&#13;
Stop and talk t o the Bud girl a t 1 831 55th Street&#13;
for a Budweiser l abel g ift i tem.&#13;
She has s uch things a s. . .&#13;
K H ^&#13;
E JQ&#13;
&gt; tt&#13;
S S L E&#13;
T&#13;
S&#13;
H&#13;
I&#13;
R&#13;
T&#13;
F&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
B&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
steins&#13;
PR&#13;
O&#13;
S&#13;
T&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
S&#13;
'&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
/&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Numerous plants such as these in the LLC concourse by the library&#13;
windows have died due to lack of care. Approximately $2000 was spent&#13;
to purchase the plants but when Physical Plant suffered budget cuts&#13;
last spring, it could no longer afford to look after them.&#13;
would be up this summer and&#13;
would be used as a recovery&#13;
clinic for dying plants.&#13;
The students will water, dust,&#13;
and clean up the plants as well as&#13;
label them. Gasiorkiewicz said&#13;
that many students had sought&#13;
him out concerned about the&#13;
welfare of the plants and that any&#13;
SISHT'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
"Music for Lovers" •• th at's the name&#13;
ot a popular album — b ut also a great&#13;
gift idea for Valentine's Day. So if your&#13;
favorite guy or chick digs music come&#13;
around to Sight 'n Sound for the latest&#13;
albums and tapes at special discount&#13;
prices.&#13;
If you're a math freak; we've got&#13;
electronic calculators for as low as&#13;
$29.95. Great for doing homework and if&#13;
you haven't got enough bread for one,&#13;
tell the old man you'll let him use it to&#13;
work on his taxes if he'll help you out.&#13;
Now that we got the commercials out&#13;
of the way, let's talk seriously about&#13;
selecting audio gear.&#13;
Let's clear up one misconception,&#13;
right away - all stereo is not hi-fi and all&#13;
hi-fi is not stereo.&#13;
Stereophonic sound is simply sound&#13;
that derives from two separate sound&#13;
sources and is reproduced through two&#13;
or more speakers. This can be done by a&#13;
$19.95 phonograph or a stereo system&#13;
costing hundreds or even thousands of&#13;
dollars. The difference is fidelity - the&#13;
ability of the equipment to reproduce the&#13;
sounds as closely as possible to the way&#13;
they were originally recorded.&#13;
Although we have not reached perfection,&#13;
and probably never will, (sorry,&#13;
Memorex) good equipment is available&#13;
at modest cost.&#13;
Companies like Marantz, Superscope,&#13;
Pioneer Sherwood in receivers; Jensen,&#13;
Cerwin Vega, Rectifinear and AR in&#13;
speakers; Dual, BSR and Garrard in&#13;
turntables haveexcellent units available&#13;
in all price ranges. Also, by buying&#13;
components, you can build your system&#13;
gradually.&#13;
if you are seriously considering the&#13;
purchase of hi-fi gear in the near future,&#13;
the first step is to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the products available.&#13;
Talk with knowledgeable people, read&#13;
the manufacturers' literature and listen&#13;
to the equipment.&#13;
The Society of Audio Consultants has&#13;
published an Audio Primer which is&#13;
most helpful. It regularly sells for $1.25,&#13;
but we'll give a copy free to the first 50&#13;
who come in and mention this ad.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st&amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
student who likes to work with&#13;
plants is welcome to help.&#13;
S OO&#13;
e 5&#13;
2&#13;
a» §&#13;
n ni&#13;
&lt;/&gt; &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Whiteskellar auditions new acts in the&#13;
Whiteskellar at 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Shakespeare film festival presents Kurosawa's&#13;
"The Throne of Blood" a Japanese adaptation of Macbeth at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: PAB movie, "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" at&#13;
7:30p.m. in GR103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. ?: Third World organizational meeting at 11 a.m. in&#13;
LLC D174.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 7: Ronald Gottesman, professor of English, will&#13;
present a lecture, "King Kong: Myth, Monster, Movie" CL D105 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 8: "Mission Mountain Wood Band" at 9 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Tickets are now on sale at the Information kiosk for $1.50.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Fencing: UW-Parkside vs UW-Madison, Michigan&#13;
State and Purdue at 10 a.m. in the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Basketball: Parkside vs Grand Valley at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Midwest open bike roller race at noon in the Phy&#13;
Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Hockey: Parkside vs Harper at 6 p.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. Admission charged.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Faculty recital featuring David Littrell and Mary&#13;
Ann Littrell at 4 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
February 14: Fredric Storaska lecture on "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
• No m inimum&#13;
balance re quired&#13;
• No li mit to t he&#13;
number o f checks&#13;
you w rite&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
Open y our free ch ecking&#13;
account soon a t&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
MemDer 9&lt; Federal Reserve System Mernoer Federal Deposit In surance Corp&#13;
500 W isconsin A ve. Racine&#13;
Classified&#13;
AFRO DANCE CLASS, also Physical Fitness&#13;
Exercise class. 7:00-7:45 p.m. and 7:45-&#13;
8:15 p.m. respectively. Wed. nights, call&#13;
Mrs. Dowman, 633-3503.&#13;
If anyone knows of any Look Nevada&#13;
bindings and some good 180 CM skis for sale&#13;
please contact Greg 639-1342.&#13;
FOR SALE: Small cabinet stereo, 2&#13;
speakers, good mechanical condition, $50.&#13;
Call 694-1873.&#13;
Personals&#13;
WENDY -- See you last nite. The trio.&#13;
K.W. IN P.S. Can you ioin us for dinner&#13;
tonite? Off campus, we promise. Jane 8.&#13;
Deb.&#13;
CLIO lecture Brief news&#13;
Gottesman Harvard accepts UW-P senior&#13;
to speak&#13;
on&#13;
"King Kong n&#13;
A talk titled "King Kong:&#13;
Myth, Monster and Movie" will&#13;
begin the second semester CLIO&#13;
Association lecture series.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, Parkside&#13;
professor of English and&#13;
humanities and an internationally&#13;
recognized&#13;
authority on film, will present the&#13;
slide-illustrated lecture at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Feb. 7 in the Classroom&#13;
Building Room 105.&#13;
CLIO lectures, on the&#13;
theme "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society," are free and&#13;
open to the public. The CLIO&#13;
Association is an international&#13;
organization connected with&#13;
"CLIO: An Interdisciplinary&#13;
Journal of Literature, History&#13;
and the Philosophy of History"&#13;
which is published at Parkside.&#13;
Gottesman, who came to&#13;
Parkside in June, 1972, from&#13;
Rutgers University is author andor&#13;
editor of a number of books on&#13;
film and film-makers and is&#13;
secretary of the Society for&#13;
Cinema Studies.&#13;
He is the recipient of a number&#13;
of awards including an International&#13;
Affairs Center Grant&#13;
to work in Moscow's Central&#13;
State Archives for Art and&#13;
Literature in 1966 and a&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowship in 1970-&#13;
71. He received his Ph.D. degree&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Other CLIO lectures for second&#13;
semester, all at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room D-lll,&#13;
are: "The Great House in 19th&#13;
Century English Literature" by&#13;
Henry Kozicki, assistant&#13;
professor of English and an&#13;
editor of "CLIO," on Feb. 20;&#13;
"The Rip-Off: A Defense in the&#13;
Context of a World View" by&#13;
Wayne Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of philosophy, on&#13;
March 13; "The Cultural Values&#13;
and Commitments of American&#13;
Businessmen" by Irvin G. Wyllie,&#13;
chancellor and professor of&#13;
history, on April 3; and prizewinning&#13;
essays by Parkside&#13;
students on May 8.&#13;
Mark Leuck, a Parkside senior from Kenosha, has been accepted for&#13;
admission by the Harvard University Law School and plans to begin&#13;
professional studies there next fall. Harvard accepts about 500 law&#13;
students each year out of more than 5,000 applicants. Leuck scored 756&#13;
out of a possible 800 on the standardized Law School Admissions Test&#13;
to place in the top one percent of students tested. He also was accepted&#13;
by the law schools at UW-Madison and Stanford&#13;
University, the only other schools where he applied.&#13;
Sigma Pi collects for March of Dimes&#13;
Sigma Pi fraternity kicked off their drive for the March of Dimes at&#13;
the Parkside-UW-Milwaukee basketball game, collecting $29. Accompanied&#13;
by their "Little Sisters," members of the fraternity caught&#13;
coins in the Sigma Pi banner while the basketball team impressively&#13;
beat UW-M. The fraternity would like to thank all who contributed and&#13;
intends to hold a basketball marathon to collect more money for the&#13;
March of Dimes.&#13;
Stage crew forming for "Harvey"&#13;
The crew sign-up sheet for the next production in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater will be posted on Tom Reinert's office door, CA 240, on&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. People signing up can&#13;
indicate a preference for lights, props, make-up, costumes, sound,&#13;
stage crew and so on. Assignments will be posted next week and the&#13;
first crew meeting held.&#13;
Third World to meet&#13;
The Third World organization will hold its first meeting of the&#13;
second semester on Thursday, Feb. 7 at 11 a.m. in D174 of the LLC.&#13;
This will be an organizational meeting and all minority students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Business irat invites new members&#13;
Students interested in establishing contacts with business, sales and&#13;
marketing executives are invited to join the National Business&#13;
fraternity, Pi Sigma Epsilon, every Sunday in the Classroom Building&#13;
D105 at 7 p.m.&#13;
Littrell to give cello recital&#13;
Cellist David Littrell will make his second public appearance as a&#13;
member of the music faculty in a 4 p.m. recital on Feb. 10 (Sunday) in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Littrell and his wife, pianist Mary Ann Littrell, will perform&#13;
Beethoven's 18th Century work, Twelve Variations in G Major on a&#13;
theme from Handel's oratorio, "Judas Maccabaeus," and three 20th&#13;
Century compositions: Prokofiev's Sonata in C Major Op. 119&#13;
Webern's Three Little Pieces Op. 11 and Martinu's Sonata No. 2.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
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Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
THE STING&#13;
Director George Roy Hill reunites Paul Newman K&#13;
Redford in another cops and robbers nostalgic spoof Butch r A&#13;
and the Sundance Kid are now affable con men oSn^n ™aS5&#13;
't&#13;
S o u t h S i d e i n 1 9 3 6 . H e n r y G o n d o r f ( N e w m a T a&#13;
5&#13;
with his apprentice Johnny Hooker (Redford) a half-million rinii'a^ ?&#13;
UP against an Irish Mafia boss. Gondorf s professional£e sS the&#13;
S murder "" Ho0ker hun&#13;
^ ™lcat&#13;
Hill opens a bag of gimmicks to capture the Chicago of the soc Ufl&#13;
interjects a half dozen illustrations from an early Norman Rockwell&#13;
s c h o o l to i n t r o d u c e t h e f i l m 's s c e n e s . A h e a v y h u e o f g r a n f S t o&#13;
evoke a nostalgic tone. Hill previously used a delicate sepia finish in&#13;
Butch Cassidy, but this result in The Sting is a te^ SacUon as&#13;
unimaginative as the ubiquitous green of Soylent Green. FinaT an&#13;
overkill of wipes and ,ns outs destroys narrative continuity Like an&#13;
amateur freaking out with a zoom lens Hill could not film a transition&#13;
without this peeling or zeroing effect Bon&#13;
Worst of all. Hill's Chicago insults me. 1 have an affectionate and&#13;
persona^feelmg for it. During the Depression crafty Uncle Bruno ran&#13;
bootleg booze and smalltime operations. G-men followed him thrnunh&#13;
World War II. Dad endured the stockyards' stench tX yZ^Antl&#13;
dug the largest collection of rusty nails and bottle caps in the block&#13;
from the alley s asphalt.&#13;
I can suspend my disbelief to accept the historical inaccuracy of the&#13;
numerous NRA posters in the film (in 1935 the Supreme Court ru rf&#13;
the NRA as unconstitutional), but I refuse to allow Hollywood's false&#13;
preconceptions to erase Chicago's greatness-its squalor and scum&#13;
Whfdy City ^ "&#13;
L&#13;
" Stations without graffiti do not exist in the&#13;
Despite Hill's inadequacies The Sting is enjoyable entertainment&#13;
Newman displays a mature self-assuredness in his underplaying. He&#13;
fades into the woodwork, but it is Newman who captures the film's&#13;
warmth and delightfulness, a subtlety which Redford has not yet&#13;
mastered.&#13;
Tonight, Wednesday, Feb. 6 Parkside has two excellent films. At&#13;
7:30 in the Comm-Arts Theater Akira Kurasawa's Throne of B lood, a&#13;
magnificent adapatation of Macbeth, will be shown. Kurasawa's&#13;
conception of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai is the best cinematic&#13;
interpretation of Shakespeare's tragedy of conscience and power.&#13;
In Greenquist 103, also at 7:30 tonight, Alan Arkin's outstanding&#13;
performance in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter completes the fine&#13;
double feature. Arkin is a deaf mute whose sense of t ouch influences a&#13;
small Alabama town. His performance as the silent and lonely Mr.&#13;
Singer is truly tender and poignant. Compare Arkin's role with Cliff&#13;
Robertson's Academy Award winning performance in Charley. Both&#13;
Arkin and Robertson were nominated that year as Best Actor, yet I&#13;
still consider Arkin's performance to be distinctly superior.&#13;
SAB to be closed for conce rt se tup&#13;
The Student Activities Building will be closed from 6-8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday to allow for set-up for the Mission Mountain Wood Band concert&#13;
that evening.&#13;
Table tennis playe rs plan pr ac ti ce&#13;
Students interested in playing table tennis are invited to contact&#13;
eitner Omar Amin in GR 341 or Vic Godfrey in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
ractices are at 4:30 p.m. on Sundays, and the first match will be held&#13;
on Feb. 17.&#13;
, «&#13;
II ii PACK SHOP&#13;
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With down clothing, sleeping bags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, a nd more...&#13;
Featuring equipment by:&#13;
M ALPINE DESIGN l#FIW#&#13;
Vets club outlines&#13;
future plans&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Since Parkside Vets Club was the only club to&#13;
receive all the C.C.C. funds it asked for-$1410-&#13;
RANGER talked with its president, Chet Anderson,&#13;
to find out what they are doing as a club and how&#13;
they plan to use the money.&#13;
Vets Club was organized in August of 1972 by Red&#13;
Oberbruner, director of Veterans Affairs, and&#13;
Chuck St. Pierre, who served as its first president.&#13;
The purposes of the club are to provide help for the&#13;
vets and to unite them so they can help each other,&#13;
said Anderson. "You've been out for four years, you&#13;
don't know what to do or where to get your&#13;
benefits...It's mainly to help each other out."&#13;
In answer to the $1410 question many students are&#13;
probably asking, a large share of the money will be&#13;
used to generate funds to pay the $2000 de bt owed&#13;
Jelco Bus Company since last school year when the&#13;
Racine bus operated at a deficit. The remaining&#13;
portion of the budget request will go to support the&#13;
recycling campaign.&#13;
The Racine bus is now self-supporting, but the&#13;
club is undertaking many avenues of fund raising to&#13;
reduce last year's debt. In addition to holding&#13;
dances, they are selling candy, and decided at their&#13;
Jan. 27 meeting to sell "totally recycled"&#13;
stationery. The stationery is totally recycled&#13;
because in addition to being made of recycled&#13;
paper, it comes in a poster instead of a throw-away&#13;
box and does not require an envelope.&#13;
In line with their environment-conscious attitude,&#13;
the Vets Recycling committee, chaired by Dietmar&#13;
Schneider, is investigating the possibility of&#13;
recycling soda cans and considering the purchase of&#13;
a can crusher. They will also sponsor another paper&#13;
drive March 1 and are hoping for better student&#13;
support than they received last semester.&#13;
"We're hoping it will pay for itself, but we don't&#13;
know if it will," said Anderson, "please urge&#13;
everyone to save their papers for us."&#13;
Vets Club meetings are held twice a month at the&#13;
Student Activities Building; officers in&#13;
addition to Anderson are John DeLaO, vice&#13;
president, and Dick Pautzke, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
In order that their 75 members be kept informed&#13;
about such things as new grants and early&#13;
registration, Vets Club publishes a monthly&#13;
newsletter. Other activities include sponsoring the&#13;
car pool program, a toy drive for underprivileged&#13;
children and the Parkside Day Care Center, and an&#13;
August beer party to get the Vets out and inform&#13;
them what benefits are available. They also would&#13;
like to get a book co-op started, but this is still being&#13;
investigated.&#13;
Chet Anderson, left, president of the Vet's Club, and secretary-treasurer Dick Pautzke, prepare to&#13;
conduct a recent Sunday afternoon meeting in the Student Activities Building. Any veteran is&#13;
welcome to become an active member of the group, which is oriented toward campus and membership&#13;
service.&#13;
Str a ight from Las Vegas&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
IDENTIFICATION REQUIRED FOR USE OF FACILITIES: Effective immediately, inly&#13;
I D. cards that have been validated tor second semester use will be honored.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 3:30-10 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-1:30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-lOpm&#13;
Handball courtsopen8:30am-10:30am&amp; 12:30pm-lOpm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-l:30 pm 8&lt; 3:30- 6 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Pool open 11 a m-1 pm&#13;
Entire building closes at 5 pm every Friday and Sat. except for special events.&#13;
Fencing meet today - Madison, Mich. State, Purdue 10 am-Gym. Gyms will be closed all day&#13;
today.&#13;
Basketball game tonight - Grand Valley 7:30 pm-JV's at 5:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-4 pm only&#13;
Swimming pool open 12:30-4 pm only&#13;
Bike Race in Gym I -12 noon. Other gyms open 2-6:30 pm. Pool 8. Handball courts open 2 pm-10&#13;
pm&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-1';30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm 8. 3:30-6 pm&#13;
Wrestling meet tonight - Marquette Univ. 8 pm in gym.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm only&#13;
Track practice in gym 3:30-5:30&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 am-12:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-1:30 pm 8.6 pm-10 pm&#13;
UW-P 13th in NAIA contest&#13;
Parkside has finished 13th in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
All-Sports Championship for 1972-&#13;
73.&#13;
Ranger teams compiled 84V2&#13;
points in national competition to&#13;
rank 13th nationally. U.S. International&#13;
University of San&#13;
Diego compiled 157V2 points to&#13;
take first place honors, just&#13;
ahead of Eastern New Mexico,&#13;
with 157. UW-Oshkosh had 128 in&#13;
third. Nebraska-Omaha (123)&#13;
and Central Washington State&#13;
(12iy2) rounded out the top five.&#13;
Area 4, composed of NAIA&#13;
schools in District 13 (Minnesota),&#13;
District 14 (Wisconsin),&#13;
District 15 (Iowa), and District 16&#13;
(Missouri), rates as the top NAIA&#13;
area nationally. And Wisconsin,&#13;
with Oshkosh, LaCrosse and&#13;
Parkside all in the top 13, rates as&#13;
the top national district.&#13;
Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, who saw Ranger&#13;
squads reach the lofty national&#13;
plateau during his first year on&#13;
the job, praised Parkside athletes&#13;
and coaches for their efforts.&#13;
"I think it shows that the&#13;
student-athletes we have here at&#13;
Parkside rank right up there with&#13;
the nation's best," Dannehl said.&#13;
"It's also a fine reflection of the&#13;
job which our coaching staff has&#13;
done in helping these athletes&#13;
reach their full potential. It's my&#13;
hope that we'll do as well or&#13;
better during the 1973-74 year and&#13;
in succeeding years."&#13;
The Rangers' national ranking&#13;
was based on national finishes by&#13;
teams and individuals in the top&#13;
ten in cross country, wrestling,&#13;
gymnastics, and indoor and&#13;
outdoor track.&#13;
The Winners&#13;
rarKsme cagers shocked UW-M in a 73-59 upset last week in what&#13;
both schools consider a final meeting. Gary Cole (43) led the Ranger&#13;
attack, pumping in 27 points. Chuck Chambliss (25) pushed his career&#13;
total over the 1,000 point mark, scoring 18 p oints.&#13;
Cagers dump UWM&#13;
and Northern Mich.&#13;
Gary Cole poured in 47 p oints&#13;
Saturday afternoon and broke the&#13;
UW-Parkside single game&#13;
scoring record as the Rangers&#13;
edged Northern Michigan 88-86 at&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
For Parkside, it was the ninth&#13;
win in 13 g ames and raised the&#13;
Rangers' season record to 10-11&#13;
with a game Tuesday night at&#13;
Milton College. A win at Milton&#13;
would give Parkside the chance&#13;
to go over the break-even mark&#13;
for the first time this season with&#13;
a win Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building,&#13;
over Grand Valley State. Game&#13;
time is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Cole's 47-point production&#13;
broke the old varsity mark set by&#13;
Eli Slaughter against Grand&#13;
Valley State in the 1969-70 season.&#13;
Cole's previous high was the 31&#13;
points he had against Aquinas&#13;
College nearly two weeks ago.&#13;
Parkside's win over Northern&#13;
Michigan gave the Rangers a&#13;
measure of revenge for the 76-66&#13;
loss suffered at Parkside earlier&#13;
in January. And it followed up a&#13;
tremendous week for Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens and his team&#13;
which saw them upset a major&#13;
college, UW-Milwaukee Tuesday&#13;
at Parkside, 73-59.&#13;
Against NMU, Cole pumped in&#13;
21 field goals on 31 attempts and&#13;
made five of seven from the free&#13;
throw line. He had 22 points in the&#13;
first half and 25 i n the second.&#13;
The big sophomore from Racine&#13;
also pulled down 17 rebounds.&#13;
Parkside and the Wildcats&#13;
were tied at 42 at the half and&#13;
Northern jumped out to a five&#13;
point lead early in the second half&#13;
but the Rangers never let the lead&#13;
get any bigger than that and&#13;
moved into the lead at 65-64 with&#13;
10:30 left in the game when Chuck&#13;
Chambliss hit on a driving layup.&#13;
The lead seesawed until Parkside&#13;
hit eight straight points to open a&#13;
75-70 lead with 6:27 left. Northern&#13;
tied the game at 77 and again at&#13;
79 before taking an 82-80 lead with&#13;
3:16 remaining.&#13;
Cole hit on a free throw with&#13;
1:59 left to reduce NMU's margin&#13;
to one at 82-81 a nd then Chambliss&#13;
made a breakaway layup&#13;
with 1:33 to go as the Rangers&#13;
moved in front, 83-82. A three&#13;
point play by Cole made it 86-82&#13;
before NMU's Kurt Ekberg put&#13;
the Cats back within two at 86-84&#13;
with 43 seconds left.&#13;
A Malcolm Mahone baseline&#13;
shot from 14 feet with 27 seconds&#13;
left moved the Rangers up by&#13;
four again. A Gene Conley layup&#13;
for Northern ended the scoring&#13;
with 13 s econds left.&#13;
Mahone had 17 p oints for the&#13;
Rangers, Chambliss 12, Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic and Joe Hutter five&#13;
and Calvin Denson two.&#13;
Parkside shot 47.5 percent to&#13;
Northern's 54.4 percent but the&#13;
Rangers converted on 10 of 15&#13;
free throws while NMU was able&#13;
to can only 12 of 26 from the&#13;
stripe. NMU outrebounded&#13;
Parkside 46 to 39.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, Cole&#13;
scored 27 p oints as the Rangers&#13;
took a 41-34 half-time lead and&#13;
parlayed it into their first win&#13;
ever over UW-M. Mahone and&#13;
Chambliss were also in double&#13;
figures with 18 points each.&#13;
Chambliss also set Parkside&#13;
history in that game as he scored&#13;
the 1,000th point of his three-year&#13;
career to become the first man in&#13;
UW-P basketball history to reach&#13;
that milestone.&#13;
w MED 1&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
• N mm&#13;
PRODI EMS?&#13;
may oiler RX via&#13;
overseas training&#13;
For the session starting Fall, 1974&#13;
Euromed will assist qualified Amer&#13;
ican students in gaining admissioi&#13;
to recognized overseas medica&#13;
schools.&#13;
And that's just the beginning.&#13;
Since t he language barrier constitute:&#13;
the preponderate difficulty in succeed&#13;
ing at a f oreign school, the Euromei&#13;
program also includes an intensivi&#13;
12 week medical and conversationa&#13;
language course, mandatory for al&#13;
students. Five hours daily, 5 days pe&#13;
week (12-16 weeks) the course i:&#13;
given in the country where the studen&#13;
will attend medical school.&#13;
In addition, Euromed provides stu&#13;
dents with a 12 week intensive cul&#13;
tural orientation program, witl&#13;
American students no w stu dying medi&#13;
cine in that particular country servini&#13;
as counselors.&#13;
Senior or graduate students currentl&#13;
enrolled in an American university ar&#13;
eligible to participate in the Euronlei&#13;
program.&#13;
For application and further&#13;
info rma tion , phone toll free&#13;
(800) 645-1234&#13;
or write,&#13;
Euromed, Ltd.&#13;
170 Old Country Road&#13;
Mineola, N Y. 11501&#13;
Highway 1-94 &amp; 50&#13;
| Open 9:00 A M to 1 A.M. Daily&#13;
| Sandwiches served at all times&#13;
BRATWURST OU R SPECIALITY!&#13;
All Regular Mixed&#13;
DRINKS SO&#13;
live Entertainment Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
ADRIAN S MITH&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Coming Soon TRUC"&#13;
"ZIGGY &amp; T HE ZEU"&#13;
"IDES &amp; SHAMES"&#13;
FEB. 23.&#13;
Cocktail waitress wanted for Fri. 8. Sat&#13;
nites - Apply in person at the BRAT.</text>
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              <text>=&#13;
JohnJarvis, the controver-&#13;
sialnomineeto the UWBoard&#13;
of&#13;
Regenls,wUl be available&#13;
to&#13;
field quesllons at&#13;
1&#13;
p.m,&#13;
FrIdayin&#13;
D137&#13;
Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Gov.TommyThompson ap-&#13;
pointedJarvis as the student&#13;
memberof the Board of&#13;
Re-&#13;
gents May&#13;
28,&#13;
and   said,&#13;
"JohnIs a  very  intelligent&#13;
studentand&#13;
1&#13;
know that  he&#13;
will&#13;
do an excellent .job&#13;
dur-&#13;
Ing his  two  year   term."&#13;
Jarvis was selected  among  16&#13;
candidatesto serve on the&#13;
17-&#13;
member board.&#13;
Thepositionof student  re-&#13;
gentwascreated In 1985,and&#13;
Jarviswouldbe the second to&#13;
bold  It,   replacing    John&#13;
SChenlan.Other regents serve&#13;
seven-year&#13;
terms.&#13;
TheUnited Council of UW&#13;
StudentGovernments,  Inc.,&#13;
hss&#13;
opposedJarvis'  nomina-&#13;
Uon&#13;
and gone as far  as&#13;
de-&#13;
clarlngSeptember14-18"§ltop&#13;
Jarvis&#13;
Week". UC does  not&#13;
believeJarvis  is  representa-&#13;
Uveofstudentinterests.&#13;
UChas described the quail.&#13;
flcatlonsfor Student Regent,&#13;
whlehsets polley for the UW&#13;
System's&#13;
26&#13;
campuses  and&#13;
180,000students,  as:&#13;
'experience In  representing&#13;
studentswithin the UW&#13;
sys-&#13;
tern&#13;
'experiencein  dealing  with&#13;
publicpolicyissues, especial-&#13;
ly&#13;
with&#13;
educallonal and  UW&#13;
University of Wlsconsln-Parkslde&#13;
system issues&#13;
*experlence as a&#13;
student,&#13;
i.e.&#13;
have   you   been   on  a  UW&#13;
campus  for most  of the last&#13;
few years&#13;
*Identlfy  with  the  average&#13;
student&#13;
*believe&#13;
in&#13;
accessible   educa-&#13;
tion for all citizens of wiscon-&#13;
sin&#13;
A June article  In the&#13;
Capi-&#13;
tal&#13;
Times,&#13;
Madison,   de-&#13;
scribed  Jarvis  as&#13;
&lt;Is&#13;
26-year-&#13;
old,    balding,&#13;
dark-suited&#13;
graduate  student  In taxallon&#13;
from Whitefish Bay attending&#13;
UW-MJlwaukee,when he Isn't&#13;
working  as  a  tax  account-&#13;
}less&#13;
Flores&#13;
Regent seeks&#13;
to&#13;
graduate  minorities&#13;
byKellyMcKissick&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
University of   Wisconsin&#13;
Boardof Regent Ness Flores&#13;
VisitedParkslde on Monday&#13;
SePtember14 to  talk  about&#13;
thefutureof the minority stu-&#13;
gent&#13;
In&#13;
education.He Is ana.&#13;
F1":of Rio Hondo,  Texas.&#13;
no&#13;
r~s, 44,&#13;
has&#13;
a BS in eco-&#13;
de&#13;
IIlicsfrom Madison, a law&#13;
Sltf""&#13;
frOm Baylor Unlver-&#13;
tic" and has a private prac-&#13;
aha.as an attorney in Wauke-&#13;
tI~loresstressed that mtnort-&#13;
lea&#13;
(mainly blacks,  hispan-&#13;
a~ and native  Americans)&#13;
uw&#13;
Under.represented in the&#13;
the ?ste&#13;
m&#13;
.  He said that  at&#13;
Ille.~st ,~oard  of  Regents&#13;
ar;reed&#13;
g&#13;
,&#13;
It&#13;
was universally&#13;
faUed  .&#13;
upon that  we  have&#13;
taInul&#13;
In&#13;
recruiting  and  reo&#13;
AeroJ&#13;
th&#13;
minOrity  students.&#13;
b&lt;!ensla e country, we have&#13;
Of&#13;
no  goant in the number&#13;
~l'UI'llit&#13;
stUdents we've  been&#13;
tIon," g into higher educa-&#13;
-&#13;
Ness Flores&#13;
One  national.  statistic   he&#13;
quoted was that  national  en-&#13;
rollment  figures  for  blacks&#13;
have decreased  from 8.4 to 8&#13;
percent,  hispanic  rates  have&#13;
risen  from  2.9 to 3 percent,&#13;
and native  American  figures&#13;
have remained  at one-hair of&#13;
one percent.&#13;
His  concern was  that&#13;
"if&#13;
this   trend   continues,   we'll&#13;
have  a  permanent  class  of&#13;
undereducated   people,   We&#13;
have got to turn this around."&#13;
Flores  said  that  the  UW&#13;
system  has tried  to Increase&#13;
recruitment  and retention fig.&#13;
ures,  but  hasn't  succeeded.&#13;
"We've  got  to change,"  he&#13;
stated.&#13;
He  reported   on  a   1986&#13;
Board of Regents study group&#13;
conducted on the future of the&#13;
UWsystem, which throughout&#13;
the year dealt with a number&#13;
of issues.  The  report,  •'Plan-&#13;
nlng and Future",  contained&#13;
about&#13;
26&#13;
different   policy&#13;
statements.   including  recruit-&#13;
ment  and  retention  of minori-&#13;
ty&#13;
students, minority faculty,&#13;
women,  and   disabled   stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
"I  would venture  to say."&#13;
Flores  commented,  "that the&#13;
great majority of you haven't&#13;
even heard  of this report  or&#13;
the  Implications  that  these&#13;
policies will have."&#13;
Flores&#13;
see page 11&#13;
Vol. 18, No. 3&#13;
ant."&#13;
The article  quotes  Jarvis'&#13;
stand  on raising  tuition:&#13;
"I&#13;
would have  supported&#13;
It.&#13;
It&#13;
was about time  the students&#13;
were asked&#13;
to&#13;
pay  an extra&#13;
proportion ...We  can't   subsi-&#13;
dize the whole university be-&#13;
cause  of hardships."&#13;
When asked  whether  gays&#13;
should be allowed to enter the&#13;
ROTC, Jarvis  said, "I'd  like&#13;
to hear  the other  sides. It's&#13;
hard  to comment.&#13;
to&#13;
Jarvis  said he does not see&#13;
any racism  on campus.&#13;
According  to  his  resume,&#13;
Jarvis  is seeking  a Master  of&#13;
Science&#13;
in&#13;
Taxation  from  the&#13;
UW-Mi!waukee,  and  received&#13;
a  Bachelor  of Business  Ad-&#13;
ministration  In 1983.He was&#13;
employed  as  assistant   con.&#13;
troller  at  Super  Steel Prod.&#13;
ucts Corp., MJlwaukee, from&#13;
AprJI&#13;
1984&#13;
through May&#13;
1987.&#13;
UC President Adrian Serra-&#13;
no  said,  "The  selection  of&#13;
John  Jarvis  is  designed&#13;
to&#13;
torpedo  the  Integrity  of the&#13;
student Regent posilion. Gov-&#13;
ernor    Thompson&#13;
has&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed a businessman to rep.&#13;
resent the Students.&#13;
"The Governor can appoint&#13;
other  Regents  with business&#13;
experience.  The  students  of&#13;
Wisconsin  deserve  a  student&#13;
with&#13;
more  experience.&#13;
The&#13;
Issues affecting  students  have&#13;
changed  a  great  deal  since&#13;
1983.&#13;
We do not believe that&#13;
Jarvis Identifies with the stu-&#13;
dents. His public statements&#13;
regarding tuition and mtnort-&#13;
ty recruitment  and retention&#13;
sound  more  like  the opinions&#13;
of big business that students.&#13;
"Jarvis  says he's&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
represent  the  students  that&#13;
are not involved on campus,"&#13;
said  serrano.  That's  ridlcu.&#13;
lous.&#13;
That's&#13;
like the Governor&#13;
saying he was elected by the&#13;
non-voting&#13;
public.&#13;
n&#13;
Steve  Marmel   and   Rob&#13;
McGinnis,  co-presidents   of&#13;
'Madison's&#13;
student&#13;
govern-&#13;
ment,   Issued  a   statement&#13;
against  Jarvis.&#13;
"It&#13;
Is WSA's&#13;
poslllon that  the  student  reo&#13;
gent  should  vote,  stralght-&#13;
line,  for  the  students  and&#13;
should  voice  student  needs&#13;
and  concerns.  This  was  the&#13;
Intenllon when the student re-&#13;
gent bUl was passed.  Gover-&#13;
nor  Thompson,   who&#13;
nomi-&#13;
nated Jarvis  for the position,&#13;
voted three limes against the&#13;
student  regent  bUl. It's  not&#13;
too difficult to see&#13;
this&#13;
as&#13;
an&#13;
attempt   to   strip   student&#13;
power away from the student&#13;
regent and In the end, totally&#13;
discredit the position,"&#13;
Marmel and McGinnis have&#13;
released a song criticizing the&#13;
nomlnallon and distributed It&#13;
to UWSystem radio stallons.&#13;
The Capital Times&#13;
has&#13;
also&#13;
reported that Jarvis  enrolled&#13;
full lime at  the UW·MUwau·&#13;
kee&#13;
in&#13;
time&#13;
for the semester&#13;
that began May&#13;
26,&#13;
according&#13;
the school's registrar.  In two&#13;
previous  semesters,&#13;
he had&#13;
Rellent see page 2&#13;
Ranger receives award&#13;
for taking a stand&#13;
The Ranger has received a  our   commitment    to   tha&#13;
First  Class  rating  from  the. campus."&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press-&#13;
In  addition&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
FIrst&#13;
INational   Scholastic   Press  Class  citation,  the  Ranger&#13;
Association for Its Spring 1987 also received a special mark&#13;
Issues.&#13;
of distinction for the areas of&#13;
ACPINSPA  Is  the  oldest  photography, art  and  graph.&#13;
and  largest  collegiate  press  Ics.&#13;
organization and rating serv-&#13;
"That's   really  important,&#13;
Ice In the country.&#13;
because&#13;
If&#13;
a  paper  Isn't  at-&#13;
A First Class rating, which  tractive  to look at,  no one's&#13;
signifies very&#13;
good&#13;
to excel.&#13;
going&#13;
to be interested  enough&#13;
lent status, places the Ranger  to read&#13;
It,"&#13;
Schneeberger ex-&#13;
in the top 40 percent  of col.  plained.&#13;
lege newspapers nationwide.&#13;
In&#13;
summarizing&#13;
the&#13;
"These  ratings  are  impor-  Ranger's    second   semester,&#13;
tant because they reaffirm  to  ACP officials said: "You&#13;
do&#13;
a&#13;
us and our readers  that  the  good  job  of  covering  the&#13;
Ranger  Is  a  top-line  news.  campus  and  don't  shy away&#13;
paper,"  said Gary Schneeber.  from controversy.&#13;
ger, former Ranger editor.&#13;
"Not everybody&#13;
will&#13;
always&#13;
"Last  year  was  a  pretty  agree, but it's better to take a&#13;
wild one, we took a lot of con.  stand  strongly  that&#13;
to&#13;
wimp&#13;
troverslal  stands  on a lot of  along."&#13;
Important  issues,"  Schneeb·    "That's  a fitting postscript&#13;
erger  .added.   "ACP  reeog-  to the whole year,"  Schneeb.&#13;
nlzed how vital  that  was  to  erger said.&#13;
e spectives&#13;
our view&#13;
Early library closing&#13;
inconvenient to students&#13;
__   sur  many students are&#13;
just&#13;
~l&#13;
be&#13;
open&#13;
unW midnight&#13;
_to&#13;
bave&#13;
ru.oon&#13;
to&#13;
e Ranger repents&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER  2&#13;
yaup views&#13;
Senator seeks student input&#13;
consln's&#13;
state schools, a seat&#13;
was designed to accomodate&#13;
a voice of the  students.  No&#13;
other state allows students to&#13;
have  such  input  into  their&#13;
own futures.  Yet,  as  impor-&#13;
tant as this position  is&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
students  of  Wisconsin,   our&#13;
Governor,&#13;
in&#13;
his fininte  wis-&#13;
dom, has appointed  a person&#13;
to&#13;
be our voice who feels&#13;
that&#13;
he must not be swayed  solely&#13;
by students,  but by everyone&#13;
in the state.&#13;
_ Unfortunately,    I  do  not&#13;
Jarvis appointment contested&#13;
Regent&#13;
from&#13;
page&#13;
f&#13;
taken less&#13;
than&#13;
a&#13;
full&#13;
load of&#13;
8&#13;
credits, records state.&#13;
Parkslde  Student  Govern-&#13;
ment  Association  President&#13;
Alex Pettit  sald  PSGA&#13;
wW&#13;
not  take  a  stand  for  or&#13;
against&#13;
Jarvia&#13;
until&#13;
after  he&#13;
speaks&#13;
on Friday.&#13;
"We'll&#13;
ask&#13;
him for a reiter-&#13;
ation&#13;
of statements  given&#13;
to&#13;
~.tress    previously,"  Pettit&#13;
One example, sald Pettit&#13;
is&#13;
.Jarvta'&#13;
statement   that  'he&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
edIlor:&#13;
Throughout the&#13;
Bummer,&#13;
a&#13;
great  deal  of  controversy&#13;
arose over the appointment  of&#13;
John  Jarvls  to the  Student&#13;
Regent's seat on the Board of&#13;
Regents by Governor Thomp-&#13;
son. The Board  of Regents&#13;
concerns  itself&#13;
with&#13;
every-&#13;
Uting&#13;
from class selection&#13;
to&#13;
tuition hikes for every one of&#13;
our&#13;
26&#13;
campuses and 160,000&#13;
students. Since this body is so&#13;
Involved  wtth  students  who&#13;
seek higher education In Wls-&#13;
woulifliOt oppose raising&#13;
tui-&#13;
tion.&#13;
"Jarvis  said he would sup-&#13;
port&#13;
a  tuition&#13;
Increase&#13;
be-&#13;
cause we cannot support the&#13;
university system on a few&#13;
hardship  cases,"   Pettit   ex-&#13;
plained.   "Not  only  is  that&#13;
statement  ludicrous,  it's non-&#13;
explanatory.&#13;
Does&#13;
he  mean&#13;
an&#13;
Increase  in the cost with-&#13;
out an increase  in the quality&#13;
of education?"&#13;
Other   statements&#13;
Pettit&#13;
plans  to  Challenge  include&#13;
Jarvis'  Interpretation~&#13;
dent representation.&#13;
"He  doesn't feel&#13;
IIlI1&#13;
dent  governments&#13;
the general opInJon&#13;
0/:&#13;
dents,"  Pettit&#13;
said, "&#13;
feels he represents .....&#13;
of silent majority&#13;
of  IIlI1&#13;
I'll&#13;
ask&#13;
him&#13;
to&#13;
cJarlfY&#13;
uIf there is a&#13;
silent&#13;
ty of students,&#13;
why&#13;
dOII&#13;
1&#13;
vote?  If he's statill~&#13;
apathetic,   you&#13;
can&#13;
t&#13;
represent  apsthY·&#13;
Ranger is written and&#13;
ed't&#13;
db&#13;
'b!e&#13;
for&#13;
itS&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
bile&#13;
h&#13;
Y&#13;
students of UW·Parkside,  who are solely respollS!&#13;
breakS&#13;
dayS.&#13;
.u&#13;
e  pu&#13;
IS&#13;
ed every  Thursday  during  the&#13;
acaoemic&#13;
year&#13;
excePl&#13;
over&#13;
Letters  to&#13;
lhe&#13;
edito&#13;
'II&#13;
b&#13;
esn&#13;
WQIdS'&#13;
letters&#13;
must  be'&#13;
r&#13;
WI ,  e accepted  only  il  Ihey  are typed,  double-spaced  and .....&#13;
is&#13;
wi'&#13;
held upon reQues'1&#13;
ned&#13;
, With a telephone  number  Included  for  verification  purposes,&#13;
Nam&#13;
Ranger reserves the  .&#13;
h&#13;
.&#13;
-~&#13;
•&#13;
famatory.&#13;
rig&#13;
t&#13;
to edltletters  and refuse those which are false arn1/crde·&#13;
Deadline lor  alileners&#13;
d&#13;
..&#13;
,    '&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
,an   claSSIfIedads. is Monday at 10 a.m.&#13;
tor&#13;
pub/iCatiOn&#13;
All&#13;
conespondenc&#13;
sh&#13;
Id&#13;
-&#13;
ncsha  WI 531&#13;
e&#13;
ou&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  10: Ranger,  UW-Parkside.  Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
ing).&#13;
41.  Telephone&#13;
414/553-2287&#13;
(Edilorial)   or  4141553-2295  (AdveJ1JS'&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Senate questions conflict of interest on SUFAC</text>
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              <text>&#13;
•&#13;
November5,  1987&#13;
Unlvers~  OfWlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol.&#13;
1.,&#13;
No. 10&#13;
senate&#13;
questions  conflict&#13;
of&#13;
interest&#13;
on&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
by&#13;
AmYH. Ritter&#13;
News EdItor&#13;
p:oposalby PSGA&#13;
sena-&#13;
Masterson to restrict&#13;
.  p on the Segregat-&#13;
verslty Fee Allocation&#13;
ttee&#13;
(SUFACI   trig.&#13;
fierY debate  Friday&#13;
the Parkslde  Student&#13;
ent&#13;
Association&#13;
JIpIe;...n&#13;
presented a res-&#13;
thatsaid since SUF AC&#13;
bers&#13;
allocate   student&#13;
y.&#13;
which Includes&#13;
sala-&#13;
_  of&#13;
students&#13;
In  some&#13;
pus&#13;
organizations.  that&#13;
tents&#13;
of these  salaries&#13;
sitonthe committee.&#13;
1lle&#13;
resolutionwlJl be voted&#13;
In&#13;
two&#13;
Iveeks.&#13;
.&#13;
!I\e&#13;
sourceof the conflict Is&#13;
funding,'~&#13;
the account&#13;
providessaIar1es.for sev-&#13;
student  organization,&#13;
jlalillons.&#13;
"Ibis&#13;
Is&#13;
to&#13;
prevent a can-&#13;
lilt&#13;
of&#13;
interest," Masterson&#13;
W&#13;
the Senate. "It's  not  a&#13;
attack against Jenny&#13;
Carr,&#13;
just re-elected to her&#13;
~C&#13;
seat&#13;
In the Oct. 21.22&#13;
, Is the' committee's&#13;
dseniormember. She Is&#13;
edltorof the Ranger, and&#13;
paid&#13;
with&#13;
128&#13;
funds.&#13;
"My&#13;
constituents   were&#13;
d,"  Masterson   said,&#13;
theylearned that&#13;
rectpt.&#13;
ofthese salaries  sat  on&#13;
committeethat  decided&#13;
Ia1arles.&#13;
ever, Scott&#13;
Peterson,&#13;
~C&#13;
chairand PSGA vice-&#13;
dent·elect,   disagreed&#13;
1&#13;
Masterson'sarguments.&#13;
am adamantiy opposed&#13;
J.J.&#13;
Masterson&#13;
i&#13;
to&#13;
this resolution."  Peterson&#13;
firmly  told the Senate;  "You&#13;
have  to stop and  think  about&#13;
the consequences  of this."&#13;
Six  of  the  eight  SUF AC&#13;
seats,   Peterson    explained,&#13;
are  held by PSGA members.&#13;
Four  PSGA  members:   presi-&#13;
dent,  vice  president,   presi-&#13;
dent  pro-tempore   and  assist.&#13;
ant   president    pro-tempore,&#13;
are  paid  with  128 funds.  So&#13;
those  four would be excluded&#13;
from the committee.&#13;
Senators   who  hold   paid&#13;
positions  In other  clubs,  such&#13;
as Parkslde   Activities  Board&#13;
(PAB) Dr Parkslde  Adult&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent  Alliance  (P ASAI would&#13;
also be refused  SUF AC seats ..&#13;
"You  would  be cutting  the&#13;
Senate's  throat,"   said  Peter-&#13;
son.&#13;
photo by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
~prOblenl8?&#13;
Dawn  Malland  didn't  have  to&#13;
hei&#13;
Iolln9 her parking space  on a recent rainy day&#13;
'tlot-fQr&#13;
:r:::.&#13;
~~a Marie ,MoriShita, ~as  W~!lingto hold&#13;
He added  that  the  resolu,&#13;
tion Is clearly  discriminatory&#13;
"AlSo, checks and balance~&#13;
against  What Masterson  calls&#13;
·a conflict of Interest  are butit&#13;
Into the system,"  he said.&#13;
SUF AC Is  constrained   by&#13;
the  Senate,  by  the  (PSGA)&#13;
coneututron,«  Peterson said.&#13;
He&#13;
.began&#13;
clUng examples&#13;
of SUF AC members  Who held&#13;
other  positions  funded by&#13;
128&#13;
money  whose  performances&#13;
were  not affected  by a con-&#13;
flict of Interest.&#13;
"Andy  Buchanan  was  the&#13;
best chair  SUF AC ever had,"&#13;
said    Peterson.&#13;
"If&#13;
this&#13;
amendment   had  been  In&#13;
ef-&#13;
'fect,  he  wouldn't  have  been&#13;
able to-serve."&#13;
Buchanan   served  as&#13;
SUF AC chair&#13;
durtng&#13;
the 1986.&#13;
87 school year  while stmulta-&#13;
neously  holding  the  position&#13;
of Ranger  Business  Manager.&#13;
He held the latter  position for&#13;
six years.  Buchanan  had also&#13;
served   on  SUFAC&#13;
durtng&#13;
1983·84 and  1985·86 while  a&#13;
PSGA senator.&#13;
Peterson   pointed  out  that&#13;
the   Ranger&#13;
budget&#13;
was&#13;
$19,500&#13;
durtng&#13;
1986-87,and reo&#13;
mains  at $19,500. during  1987-&#13;
88.&#13;
fJ-1&#13;
library doors are reopened&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Friday'S&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
meeting featured  discussion&#13;
on the' 0·1  library  doors,  a&#13;
sister  relationship   with&#13;
uw-&#13;
Milwaukee,   new  guidelines&#13;
tor  appointing   sllidents   to&#13;
committees,  and opposition to&#13;
the annexation  of Parkside  by&#13;
the city of Kenosha.&#13;
f&gt;.&#13;
sit-In was held Oct. 19-20&#13;
to protest  the  closing  of the&#13;
D-l doors which allow access&#13;
to the IIbrllry from the coffee&#13;
shop. After that, the Academ-&#13;
ic Resource  Center&#13;
offered&#13;
to&#13;
contribute  services,  and Mon·&#13;
day  the  doors  were  open  8&#13;
am.  to2p.m.&#13;
."It's  a good deal,"  Alex&#13;
Pettit,  PSGA  president,   told&#13;
the   Senate.   "I'm   pleased&#13;
about&#13;
It.&#13;
You  should   be&#13;
pleased about&#13;
It&#13;
too."&#13;
Whether the PSGA·led sit-in&#13;
or  the  Academic  Resource&#13;
·Center were the cause of the&#13;
·action  Is of no concern,  said&#13;
Pettit.&#13;
"It&#13;
doesn't  matter  who gets&#13;
credlt--just  that the doors are&#13;
'"&#13;
open.&#13;
_&#13;
Pettit's   request  for  ~ mo-&#13;
lion  to form  a  sisler-school&#13;
relationship  with UW-MiIwau·&#13;
kee  was  postponed.  Senator&#13;
Dan&#13;
Vogl  said  he  had&#13;
jUS~&#13;
come  acros,$ some  inf~rma&#13;
SCott Peterson&#13;
"So where's  the conflict  of&#13;
Interest?"   Peterson&#13;
demand.&#13;
ed.&#13;
.&#13;
"Andy    abstained&#13;
when&#13;
Ranger  votes  come  up,"  he&#13;
explatned.  "They  (committee&#13;
members)   should  abstain  on&#13;
their own budgets.&#13;
"But&#13;
If&#13;
you're  keeping&#13;
peo-&#13;
tion that he Intends to investi-&#13;
gate  before   discussing   the&#13;
issue.  He would not  reveal&#13;
what that information  Is.&#13;
A  resolution   was  passed&#13;
outlining appointments  of stu-&#13;
dents  to university  and  fac-&#13;
ulty 'commlttees  by the presi-&#13;
dent. Students&#13;
wlJl&#13;
now be&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed on the basis of&#13;
expert-&#13;
ence&#13;
in&#13;
a tiered  system  of&#13;
representation.&#13;
The tiered  system  consists&#13;
of three levels. The first level&#13;
appolnfmenjs&#13;
wlll  be  fresh-&#13;
men or some new senators.&#13;
Level 1 faculty committees&#13;
are  Academic  Actions, Aca-&#13;
demic Planning  and Program&#13;
Review,  Academic   policies,&#13;
Admission,  Records   "  Stu-&#13;
dent   Information,    Campus&#13;
Environment  and COurse and&#13;
Curriculum.   L.evel 1 untver-&#13;
pIe off the committee  for this&#13;
reason,&#13;
you  might&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
have eight&#13;
at-large&#13;
seats."&#13;
Members  of the U.S. 'Con.&#13;
gress  determine   their  own&#13;
salaries  and  determine   how&#13;
much  money  each  of  their&#13;
own districts  receive,  Peter-&#13;
son reminded   his audience.&#13;
Senator   Kevin  ZIrkelbach&#13;
agreed with Peterson.&#13;
"We  have   a  system   of&#13;
check and balances," he said.&#13;
"If&#13;
there's  a&#13;
hint&#13;
of some-&#13;
thing  questionable,   we don't&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
pass It.&#13;
"There  lire&#13;
SO&#13;
few people&#13;
Involved  (In campus  organi-&#13;
zations).  You would be limit-&#13;
Ing those few people so much&#13;
more  (by passing  this&#13;
resolu-&#13;
tion).&#13;
to&#13;
"we're&#13;
U11hking&#13;
about our.&#13;
selves,"  Masterson  objected.&#13;
"We should be thinking about&#13;
the student body."&#13;
PSGA president&#13;
Alex&#13;
Pettit&#13;
threatened  to veto the&#13;
reeolu-&#13;
tlon&#13;
if&#13;
passed  by the Senate,&#13;
and  suggested   the  vote  be&#13;
postponed  for two weeks.  A&#13;
veto  override  would  require&#13;
two-thtrds of the Senate vote.&#13;
The Senate foliowed Pettit's&#13;
advice  and&#13;
will&#13;
vote on the&#13;
matter  In two weeks.&#13;
slty committees  are  Teacher&#13;
Excellence,  University&#13;
Budg-&#13;
et  and  Student  Disciplinary&#13;
Panel.&#13;
Second  level  appointments&#13;
are considered&#13;
to&#13;
be more ex-&#13;
perienced   than  level  1 ap-&#13;
pointees,  but  not&#13;
as&#13;
experi-&#13;
enced  as  those  at  level  3.&#13;
Level  2 faculty  committees&#13;
are  Athletic  Board,  Awards&#13;
and   Ceremonies,   Teaching&#13;
and  Faculty  Senate.  Univer-&#13;
sity committees  are Academ-&#13;
Ic  Calendar,    All  Campus&#13;
Events,  MInority Affairs, Sex-&#13;
ual&#13;
Harassment.  and  Park-&#13;
side Union Advisory Board.&#13;
"Students   would  be  ap-&#13;
pointed  to level three  on the&#13;
basis  of  previous  record  of&#13;
serving  on committees  with&#13;
a&#13;
PSGA see page 2&#13;
21llun1dey,  NlNM.1bel 5, '987 R8ngef&#13;
our view&#13;
Cooperation solves problem,&#13;
creates good communication&#13;
J...t _&#13;
you had&#13;
yauT&#13;
route to the library&#13;
llgured&#13;
out&#13;
to&#13;
avoid&#13;
the&#13;
locked doors of the 0·1 level. they were re-&#13;
_ned&#13;
ne  -..&#13;
_roe  opened&#13;
OIl&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
26&#13;
and&#13;
..uJ&#13;
lUly _&#13;
Monday&#13;
tIu'ouch&#13;
Frtd&amp;y&#13;
from&#13;
8&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
pm,  thanka to th  Academic Reaouree center&#13;
(ARCl&#13;
and&#13;
Ita a~t&#13;
employ ....&#13;
ne&#13;
doo....&#13;
re&#13;
cIoeed&#13;
In the&#13;
fIret&#13;
place _   to a&#13;
etafftng&#13;
ahon&amp;ae.IM  reault of bUdget cuta. Now.&#13;
Sandy&#13;
Bunnelll-&#13;
Ier&#13;
and&#13;
r&#13;
atUdent emplo~a   at&#13;
ARC&#13;
are&#13;
accepting&#13;
more&#13;
reepollalbillU   to allow&#13;
lheae&#13;
doo..&#13;
to&#13;
remain  ~.&#13;
Aa&#13;
_Ie,&#13;
w  thank them for puttln&amp;&#13;
torlh&#13;
the extra effort&#13;
to&#13;
TV....&#13;
_~&#13;
'The&#13;
Urn ..&#13;
at   tlIch the&#13;
doo"  are ~    _re&#13;
ln1Iuen~&#13;
by  hetpful ob  rvallon by&#13;
lhOee&#13;
_Ie&#13;
who parUclpat·&#13;
ed In&#13;
the&#13;
all·1na two weeka ago. According to Parkslde&#13;
tudent&#13;
mment  A'_IIUOII   PresIdent  Alex PetUt,&#13;
who&#13;
patUclpant  In the all·w.&#13;
the&#13;
doors&#13;
were&#13;
used&#13;
m   frequenUy&#13;
between&#13;
8&#13;
a.m&#13;
and&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. It's&#13;
good&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
that&#13;
tile&#13;
Ubrary&#13;
tool&lt;&#13;
thJa&#13;
obaervallon  Into account when&#13;
they&#13;
tabllahe&lt;l&#13;
the&#13;
new&#13;
hOUrs&#13;
for the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doors.&#13;
b~ thank.you&#13;
aI80 ..-&#13;
to the&#13;
Jrtudenltt&#13;
who parUcI·&#13;
pated In&#13;
tile&#13;
a1t·w&#13;
and&#13;
kept the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doo&#13;
rs&#13;
open&#13;
two&#13;
ka&#13;
aao '"'"&#13;
"campua  leade.....&#13;
as&#13;
Chancellor SheUa&#13;
JtapIan&#13;
called them. obvloualy helped make a dlfterence&#13;
.... ~&#13;
atudenta,&#13;
10&#13;
enjoy your next stroU through the&#13;
0·1&#13;
level doors •&#13;
.-.I ..&#13;
mem&#13;
r&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
was the efforts of students. faculty&#13;
_   admlnlotrallon.&#13;
worltJng&#13;
together  and communlcat·&#13;
....  that&#13;
~ned&#13;
IMm for you.&#13;
lQ&#13;
AND If&#13;
1l£&#13;
SENATE REFUSES&#13;
"10&#13;
CONfiRM  JUDGE  CINSBURU.&#13;
I'Ll.JUST NOMINATElVEMfJ~1:&#13;
AACH'CONSERVAT&#13;
,&#13;
TWEN71ES&#13;
L::..-__&#13;
Wl&#13;
1&#13;
Reference librarian angered by letter from alum&#13;
TO&#13;
no:&#13;
1I:DrIO&amp;:&#13;
In&#13;
reepect to the Ietier Wl'It.&#13;
len&#13;
by&#13;
PIIII&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
I&#13;
feel com.&#13;
peUed to reply to ..&#13;
vera!&#13;
of&#13;
bla&#13;
atatementa.  He ltated that&#13;
be&#13;
_Uy&#13;
aw&#13;
two&#13;
reference&#13;
lIbrvioAo&#13;
at&#13;
the  _&#13;
and&#13;
_&#13;
"Wby _&#13;
It&#13;
take two&#13;
people&#13;
to&#13;
accompUah&#13;
noUI.&#13;
....!..&#13;
I&#13;
cerlalDly&#13;
don't&#13;
feel&#13;
Uka&#13;
I'".&#13;
accom~&#13;
noUI.&#13;
....:-ben&#13;
I ...&#13;
bome&#13;
at&#13;
nlIbL&#13;
8ece ...   '"&#13;
Itatt&#13;
cuta   ...&#13;
are -..&#13;
to .......&#13;
cove....&#13;
at&#13;
tbe&#13;
ret .. aw::e&#13;
deN&#13;
«onty&#13;
ODe&#13;
librarian&#13;
OIl&#13;
duty  at  a&#13;
lime.&#13;
and&#13;
no .............&#13;
at&#13;
all&#13;
011&#13;
8unda,ya1&#13;
aDd&#13;
durtq&#13;
prUne&#13;
lime&#13;
(.-t&#13;
10 Lm.&#13;
to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
when&#13;
we&#13;
aIwaya&#13;
uaed&#13;
to&#13;
ba&#13;
ve&#13;
two&#13;
lIbrvioAo&#13;
011&#13;
the&#13;
deal.&#13;
It&#13;
can  be  extremely&#13;
busy.&#13;
with&#13;
people&#13;
wallin,  In&#13;
line&#13;
to baft  their  ref..... ee&#13;
q_ ........&#13;
red.&#13;
Do&#13;
we&#13;
accompUah&#13;
nothln&amp;&#13;
In&#13;
an·&#13;
awerInI&#13;
referenee&#13;
queallona!&#13;
I&#13;
aullleat that&#13;
Tohl&#13;
talk&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
people&#13;
whom  ...&#13;
help&#13;
to&#13;
get&#13;
Il&amp;rted&#13;
011&#13;
Iem&gt;&#13;
papers&#13;
(,·_t _&#13;
do&#13;
I&#13;
use&#13;
tor&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
..... ) or  with&#13;
their&#13;
Ubrary&#13;
SkIIIa  WOrkbooka  (non·stop&#13;
queallona   on&#13;
thatl.  or  with&#13;
ftndln«&#13;
a apeclfJc fact. Or to&#13;
the&#13;
people for whom we&#13;
do&#13;
online&#13;
searehlng.&#13;
or get Inter·&#13;
library&#13;
loan&#13;
requests.&#13;
He may well have aeen&#13;
two&#13;
Ubrarlana  at  the  reference&#13;
_    at&#13;
one&#13;
time; occasional.&#13;
ly we&#13;
do&#13;
go out and confer&#13;
with&#13;
another&#13;
Ubrartan  about&#13;
......lhInc -&#13;
are&#13;
worktng on&#13;
together.&#13;
And&#13;
we  recenUy&#13;
tlIred&#13;
a temporary  reference&#13;
librarian.  Ubrarlana&#13;
do&#13;
not&#13;
come  to  Parkalde&#13;
knowing&#13;
tt'IV)'tbln«&#13;
.-t&#13;
our library&#13;
or&#13;
about&#13;
refereaee  sources,&#13;
and&#13;
eo ...&#13;
bave&#13;
a&#13;
twO-week&#13;
lJ'aInID«&#13;
period.&#13;
during&#13;
which&#13;
time&#13;
we&#13;
encourace&#13;
the new&#13;
11.&#13;
brarlan&#13;
to&#13;
lit at the reference&#13;
-&#13;
aDd _.".,&#13;
the&#13;
types&#13;
of&#13;
q-&#13;
we get&#13;
aDd&#13;
answers&#13;
we&#13;
gtve,&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
which&#13;
are&#13;
de.&#13;
aIped&#13;
to&#13;
gtve&#13;
you  better&#13;
.. rvlee.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
And durtna&#13;
Julio&#13;
In&#13;
the ac.&#13;
llon at the ref......,.   _.&#13;
we&#13;
work  on collection  develop-&#13;
ment.  Books do not just  ap-&#13;
pear on the shelves  -  some·&#13;
one&#13;
has&#13;
to decide  to order&#13;
them.  which  means  reading&#13;
hundreds of book reviews and&#13;
publishers'  nOUcesand decid.&#13;
Ing  which  books&#13;
can&#13;
best&#13;
meet  Parkside's  needs.  We&#13;
also  read  professional  jour.&#13;
nals  willie  at  the  deal&lt;, or&#13;
Wl'Ite lectures  for the many&#13;
classes  we&#13;
are&#13;
requested  to&#13;
leach.&#13;
Yes.&#13;
the&#13;
card&#13;
catalogs were&#13;
moved&#13;
to&#13;
make room for the&#13;
new online  catalog  terminals.&#13;
And since they had&#13;
to&#13;
be fit&#13;
into&#13;
a much smaller  space,&#13;
we had  to rearrange   them.&#13;
The indexes were also moved&#13;
for the same reason. Current&#13;
periodicals  were  moved  up-&#13;
stairs&#13;
10&#13;
make&#13;
1t&#13;
eaaier for&#13;
patrons  who uoed to have to&#13;
look&#13;
on&#13;
both&#13;
levels for period.&#13;
lcals.&#13;
We.&#13;
too.&#13;
hope we don·t&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
move anything&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
future&#13;
again.&#13;
but&#13;
all&#13;
of the&#13;
moves&#13;
th1a&#13;
year  were logical&#13;
and necessary.&#13;
As for the&#13;
0·1&#13;
door.&#13;
I&#13;
have&#13;
never  worked&#13;
In&#13;
or  vlstted&#13;
any  other  Ubrary  that  had&#13;
more  than  one  entrance.&#13;
ThInk&#13;
about&#13;
fl.&#13;
does Kenosha&#13;
or Racine or MIlwaukee Pub-&#13;
lic.   UW·Mllwaukee.&#13;
UW.&#13;
MadJson or any other Ubrary&#13;
that  you  know  have  more&#13;
than&#13;
one entrance?  Parkside&#13;
was definitely unusual&#13;
In&#13;
hav.&#13;
Ing two entrances  for so long.&#13;
The  L/LC  staff  has  also&#13;
been hurt  by bUdget cuts  _&#13;
we  have  lost  3~  poSitions,&#13;
which is 140 hours per week&#13;
of work  that  the  remaining&#13;
staff&#13;
has&#13;
had to absorb,  and&#13;
all&#13;
of us have taken on more&#13;
work,  from  the  staff  who&#13;
order  the books and&#13;
serials,&#13;
catalog,  process.  shelve  and&#13;
circulate  them. to the library&#13;
administrators  -  we are all&#13;
working very hard  to conlin.&#13;
ue to provide qUality service.&#13;
BI&#13;
Nletaen&#13;
Coordtoator    of   Reference&#13;
Servl"""  (L/LCl&#13;
Tiered system&#13;
proposed&#13;
PSGA from paga I&#13;
good   record   of  altelldlll&#13;
meetings  and&#13;
observed  _&#13;
science of forethought&#13;
tOWIIlII&#13;
voting:  In other wordll....&#13;
erans."  said a sheet&#13;
IWIdIII&#13;
out during discussion.&#13;
Level&#13;
3&#13;
faculty com.......&#13;
are  Graduate  Studies, ..&#13;
mation  Resources,  :;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FIne&#13;
Arts&#13;
and&#13;
F&#13;
Seminar.  Level&#13;
3 un!&#13;
committees   are&#13;
F~&#13;
Seminar.   Parking   A......&#13;
and Affirmative Action.&#13;
A re80luUon In oppoaltlollil&#13;
the  annexaUon  of&#13;
P""-&#13;
was   also   passed&#13;
dUrIII&#13;
Frlday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Jan&#13;
Kratochvil,  who ..&#13;
duced the resolution.&#13;
said"&#13;
negaUves  Involved&#13;
w1~.~&#13;
nexaUon  would be a ~&#13;
tuition  Increase  an&#13;
lUlJlOClI'&#13;
sary shift In services.&#13;
30lIIIII&#13;
provides   adequate  .. ~&#13;
now.  he  said.  and&#13;
K_&#13;
would need new dump ~&#13;
sewer tines. and ano~~&#13;
station   to  serve  ~&#13;
should  It be annexed&#13;
tAl ..&#13;
city.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by&#13;
students&#13;
of&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely&#13;
responsible&#13;
for&#13;
,ts&#13;
ed1l()(lli&#13;
I:&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
cootent.&#13;
n ~&#13;
PtJbIisIled&#13;
every&#13;
Thursday&#13;
during&#13;
the&#13;
academic&#13;
year&#13;
except _&#13;
breaks&#13;
and&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
Len ....&#13;
to the&#13;
editor&#13;
witI&#13;
be&#13;
accepted&#13;
only ~&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double-spaced&#13;
and&#13;
350&#13;
words or ......&#13;
letters  must&#13;
be&#13;
signed.&#13;
with&#13;
a t8tephone  number&#13;
inctuded&#13;
for verification&#13;
purposes.&#13;
Names WlM&#13;
be&#13;
held&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Ranoer reserves the right to&#13;
edille1ter.;&#13;
and refuse those&#13;
whicf1&#13;
are false and/or de· .,.--,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
=&#13;
lor&#13;
a1lleder,.  and _&#13;
ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m.&#13;
lor&#13;
publication&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
aOdressed to: Ranger. UW-Parl&lt;side. Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
nosha&#13;
W153141.  Telephone 414/553.2287  (Editorial) or 414/553-2295&#13;
(AdvertiS-&#13;
L,,_--::&#13;
lng).&#13;
-&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Volume 16, issue 12</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="96">
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            <elementText elementTextId="79009">
              <text>Roaches, rodents infest Union building</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="79019">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90174">
              <text>':InlverSIIy   of WlsconSln-Perkslde&#13;
e&#13;
Vol.   16,  No.  12&#13;
Ro~~hes,&#13;
rodents  infest&#13;
·Union&#13;
building&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News·Edltor&#13;
TheParkslde Union Advlso-&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB),  meeting&#13;
~daY&#13;
for the first time since&#13;
FebMlary,elected a chairper-&#13;
BOI1set a regular  meeting&#13;
1lIII~,dlScllssedthe food serv-&#13;
Ice&#13;
contract, and contemplat-&#13;
ed&#13;
remodeling  the   Union&#13;
building.&#13;
Sue Bostetter was  elected&#13;
cbaIr&#13;
by a vote of 4-3. Bostet-&#13;
ter,&#13;
whoIs also Parkside  Ac-&#13;
UvlUesBoard  (PAB)  presi-&#13;
dent,&#13;
has served on several&#13;
Unioncommittees· and  has&#13;
been&#13;
employedby the Union.&#13;
Allvoting members  of the&#13;
Board&#13;
were present  except&#13;
representativesfrom Student&#13;
OrgaoIzatlonsCouncil  (SOC)&#13;
and&#13;
the Ranger,  who  could&#13;
IlOlattend due  to  schedule&#13;
eonfllcts.Evaluating the turn-&#13;
out, the Board  agreed   to&#13;
malnlain&#13;
the meeting time at&#13;
I p,m.Friday once a month.&#13;
~.  nextmeeting will be held&#13;
"",11.&#13;
Fueling lengthy  discussion&#13;
wu&#13;
theIssue of the food ser-v-&#13;
Ice&#13;
contract.&#13;
TIm&#13;
Grygera,  a&#13;
Iludentrepresentative,  vocal-&#13;
bed&#13;
student  complaints   of&#13;
food service.  There Is little or&#13;
no food service  on weekends&#13;
he said,  and Identified  majo~&#13;
student  complaints  as carete-&#13;
ria hours, quality  of food, and&#13;
prices.&#13;
"U&#13;
we want&#13;
to&#13;
bring  stu-&#13;
dents  In from  out  of state,  .&#13;
we've  provided  them&#13;
with&#13;
housing.  we have&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
them with food." he said.   .&#13;
In  addition,  Grygera   said&#13;
Items  In the  mini-mart   are .&#13;
priced  almost  twice  that  of&#13;
those available  In Racine and&#13;
Kenosha  shopping centers,&#13;
"There's&#13;
a    substantial&#13;
problem   here,"   he  empha-&#13;
sized,  "and  something  needs&#13;
to be done."&#13;
Hostetter  noted that the res-&#13;
idence  halls  include kitchens,&#13;
allowmg' residents  to cook on&#13;
weekends  when food service&#13;
Is not available ..&#13;
Steve  McLaughlin,  director&#13;
of student  life, said that hous-&#13;
jpg officials.  are. planning  to&#13;
conduct  a  survey  to  deter-&#13;
mine&#13;
student&#13;
residents'&#13;
needs.&#13;
"That  might  give .dlrection&#13;
to  this  board  on how to go&#13;
Sue Bostetier&#13;
about taking action,"  he said.&#13;
•'This has been a problem&#13;
since  the  beginning  of  the&#13;
semester,"&#13;
said   Grygera,&#13;
-  asking   how  much   more   time&#13;
would be needed  to conduct&#13;
the survey.&#13;
McLaughlin  and  Bostetter&#13;
agreed  that It would be feasl·&#13;
ble that the surveys  could be&#13;
completed  before  the  next&#13;
PUAB  meetings.  The  Board&#13;
will  delay  action  unW  that&#13;
time.&#13;
Union Director Bill Nelbuhr&#13;
said the Union&#13;
has&#13;
a $100,000&#13;
contract&#13;
with&#13;
Professional&#13;
Food  Service.  Management&#13;
(PFM).&#13;
The  contract&#13;
was&#13;
made before the housing&#13;
was&#13;
compleled,   inclUding  kitch-&#13;
ens. He said PFM had an op-&#13;
tion of not coming back,  but&#13;
agreed&#13;
to&#13;
maintain  the  con-&#13;
tract&#13;
If&#13;
It could operate  the&#13;
mini-mart.&#13;
Nelbuhr  added   that  last&#13;
year when food service was&#13;
provided on weekends on a&#13;
trial&#13;
basis,&#13;
it&#13;
was not success-&#13;
ful.&#13;
Moving on&#13;
to&#13;
the  Issue of&#13;
remodeling  the  Union,  Nel-&#13;
buhr  distributed  -remodeling&#13;
plans submitted  by the Union&#13;
Remodeling  Task Force.&#13;
"The bottom line is that the&#13;
cost is beyond our means,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Questions  that  need  to be&#13;
addressed,  he said, are: What&#13;
do we want&#13;
to&#13;
do? How&#13;
will&#13;
It&#13;
be paid for? Will seg fees be&#13;
raised?   Whal  can  be  done&#13;
right away?&#13;
Much money&#13;
has&#13;
been lost&#13;
In' the dramatic  drop In sales&#13;
of alcoholic beverages  in the&#13;
Union, he noted.&#13;
Another  Union  problem&#13;
Ia&#13;
pesla.&#13;
Nelbuhr   said   there   are&#13;
cockroaches  present&#13;
in&#13;
tne&#13;
Union.&#13;
"They're   showing  up  In&#13;
places they've never been&#13;
be-&#13;
fore,&#13;
I.&#13;
he said. However,&#13;
an&#13;
exterminator&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
con-&#13;
tracted  to deal wlIb the prob-&#13;
lem.&#13;
There Is also a rodent prob-&#13;
lem that occurs at&#13;
this&#13;
time&#13;
every year.&#13;
Ants are also present  In the&#13;
walls.&#13;
"All I&#13;
can say&#13;
is we're&#13;
ad-&#13;
dressing   the  problem   and&#13;
we'll  continue  to."  Nelbuhr&#13;
promised.&#13;
In&#13;
closing,  McLaughlin  reo&#13;
Iated to Ibe Board discussion&#13;
of Its lack of activity  during&#13;
an&#13;
earlier  student&#13;
govern-&#13;
ment meeting.&#13;
"PSGA  (Parkalde   Student&#13;
Government  Association)&#13;
dis-&#13;
cussed the Importance  of&#13;
thIe&#13;
committee  to be up and run-&#13;
ning," he exptalned.&#13;
The&#13;
Board&#13;
agreed  to oet up&#13;
a subcommittee  to change the&#13;
group's  bylaWS to  define  a&#13;
regular  meeting time.&#13;
Non-traditional students remain a priority&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst,Feature Editor&#13;
The Assistant  Chancellor&#13;
forStUdentAffairs,  G. Gary&#13;
Grace, spoke to a group  of&#13;
lIOn·tradltionalstudents  last&#13;
WedneSday on  . Parkslde's&#13;
Viewsof the future of the non-&#13;
traditional student   on  this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Theaccepted definition of a&#13;
non·traditiOnal  student    Is&#13;
someone Who&#13;
is&#13;
23&#13;
years  of&#13;
age&#13;
or older and/or  someone&#13;
~ho&#13;
has&#13;
been out of school for&#13;
ve years or&#13;
more.&#13;
Grace  emphasized    that&#13;
communication betWeen  the&#13;
1lOn-lradillonalstudents   and&#13;
:muSlration   needs&#13;
to&#13;
can.&#13;
I ue so that  no one  group&#13;
~s left out or In the dark.&#13;
au;&#13;
l&#13;
sald&#13;
that since he Is rel-&#13;
ande Y new&#13;
to&#13;
this  campus&#13;
8tI1u~tthe same time this In.&#13;
I10cI&#13;
on Is also In a hlgh pe.&#13;
OfChange&#13;
~~e&#13;
a:&#13;
new  admlnls.&#13;
llkelihn comes In there  Is the&#13;
Il1ll OOdthat many changes&#13;
"&amp;nd&#13;
take&#13;
place," Grace said,&#13;
alp that Is partiCUlarly true&#13;
" arkslde,&#13;
Uon~~&#13;
acrestl11a baby Inslltu ..&#13;
"1Vhe&#13;
race  polnled   out.&#13;
0/&#13;
n YOUconsider  the  age&#13;
llea&#13;
llloslCOllegesand universl.&#13;
I&#13;
We'reaWl very much&#13;
in&#13;
......&#13;
our&#13;
adolescent 'period; and as&#13;
such, just  like an adolescent,&#13;
(we're)   still  trying  to  work.&#13;
out what  our personality  will&#13;
be, what exactly  is It we'll be&#13;
as  an  institution   when  we&#13;
grow&#13;
up."&#13;
-&#13;
Grace feels that thls Instltu-&#13;
tlon Is a risk-taker  as far as&#13;
Instllutlons  go. Parkslde  does&#13;
not hold on too tightly  to the&#13;
past and as a whole Is willing&#13;
to&#13;
try&#13;
new things,&#13;
"I feel that's  a good attrib-&#13;
ute&#13;
to  have,"  Grace  said,&#13;
"but&#13;
It&#13;
does  aggravate   the&#13;
communication   problem.  II's&#13;
hard    to   Reep   everyone&#13;
abreast  'of all  the  changes,&#13;
which  can  cause  confusion&#13;
and frustration.&#13;
,&#13;
. "One  of the  Issues  that  I&#13;
feel strongly  about ts that this&#13;
institution  has  backed  off of&#13;
their   commlttment   to  non-&#13;
traditional   students,"   Grace&#13;
stated,  "I have  been  told by&#13;
staff,   faculty   and  ·students&#13;
that   Parkslde   did  have  a&#13;
strong and vita! commlttment&#13;
to non-traditional   students  In&#13;
the past,  and In the last two&#13;
to&#13;
three  years  that  co~mlt.&#13;
ment has been dropped,&#13;
Grace  feels  that  the  ques-&#13;
tion of whether  or not the uni-&#13;
versity   Is  discontinuing   Its&#13;
supporl  of non-traditional  stu·&#13;
dents  was brought  Into ques·&#13;
G.  Gary  Grace&#13;
recollecl  saying anything that&#13;
could even be construed that&#13;
way. What she&#13;
does&#13;
recollect&#13;
In the meeting  where  It sup-&#13;
posedly  took  place,&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
statement  that this Institution&#13;
with the limited dollars that It&#13;
has,  ought  to be gearing  In&#13;
the direction  of trying&#13;
to&#13;
reo&#13;
crult  full-time  students,  and&#13;
to&#13;
not  devote  precious&#13;
re-&#13;
sources&#13;
to&#13;
going out and re-&#13;
cruiting  a student  who oniy&#13;
takes&#13;
a&#13;
course&#13;
at a&#13;
time.&#13;
"'That   statement   alone,&#13;
whether  valid or Invalld had&#13;
started  the rumor that this in-&#13;
stitution  longer  cared  about&#13;
the non-traditional  student."&#13;
Grace said that he does not&#13;
lhInk&#13;
that  Parkside  had ever&#13;
a non-traditional  student  ad-&#13;
Inside&#13;
visor, or&#13;
an&#13;
office for&#13;
non-&#13;
traditional   student   services&#13;
per&#13;
se,&#13;
although there  have&#13;
been staff who have worked&#13;
with&#13;
non-traditional students,&#13;
and  have  also  had  special&#13;
programs  just  for non-trsdl-&#13;
tional students.&#13;
He also feels  that  another&#13;
factor that has contributed  to&#13;
the misconception of the way&#13;
the  universlly   feels  about&#13;
non-tradtttonat  students&#13;
Ia&#13;
the&#13;
way the campus&#13;
has&#13;
become&#13;
more visibly Involved with reo&#13;
cnJ1tment. New offices have&#13;
been established  for trsdltion·&#13;
al-age   recruitment,    but&#13;
It&#13;
seems  as  though&#13;
nothing&#13;
Is&#13;
being done tor the non·tradi·&#13;
tional student.&#13;
Grace  _&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
tion  when  Vice-Chancellor&#13;
- Betty Shutler was In the posl.&#13;
pa-&#13;
3&#13;
lion of Acting Chancellor  be-.&#13;
Core&#13;
leadership&#13;
program&#13;
_&#13;
f    Sheila Kaptan look over.&#13;
o~Betty made a verbal state· .&#13;
.,.,..&#13;
5&#13;
ment  that was Interpreted&#13;
to&#13;
Pettit    vetos&#13;
resolution&#13;
....._&#13;
mean that non-traditional  stu·&#13;
dents  were  not  the  target&#13;
6&#13;
audience,  and  that  Parkslde&#13;
As  Doc  sees  It&#13;
page&#13;
should oniy be working  with&#13;
the&#13;
traditionally   aged  stu·&#13;
g8&#13;
11&#13;
dents (18-22) year aids.&#13;
'L'.;;M;;.a;;.rt;.;;;;.e...r-.;.R_o;..h1.....&#13;
8.._..&#13;
w_ln_n_er..._........;;&#13;
' '_"'.._   ..&#13;
pa&#13;
....&#13;
"Certainly   Betty   doesn t .&#13;
,&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
November&#13;
19, 1987&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Minority student wai".er~&#13;
honorable but imreelistic&#13;
t  roposal of&#13;
UW&#13;
System President  Kenneth&#13;
'nle&#13;
~~~w&#13;
fo&#13;
offer tuition  waivers  to low·income  mi-&#13;
~=)&#13;
studenla whO meet bastc academic  requirements&#13;
haa&#13;
caused&#13;
quite&#13;
a flurry of controversy.&#13;
11&#13;
Whlle Shaw's intent Is honorable--to  increase  the enro  -&#13;
ment  of minority  students  in the  System  schools--the&#13;
method of implementation  of such a plan can only serve&#13;
to hurl those&#13;
students&#13;
who are In the majority  and could&#13;
lead to additional flare-ups of racism.&#13;
In&#13;
order to otter the low-Income minority&#13;
students&#13;
tut-&#13;
tion&#13;
waivers,&#13;
existing tuition and&#13;
student&#13;
fees would have&#13;
to be Increased.  there would also have to be additional&#13;
.tate fundlng which would translate  into higher taxes.&#13;
It&#13;
la beco~ing  more and more dlftlcult for students to&#13;
y tuiUon. Every year 1t increases.  Students who must&#13;
~te&#13;
their pursuit of a degree because tuition has&#13;
be-&#13;
come out of reach&#13;
will&#13;
become angry not at the legisla-&#13;
ture&#13;
but at the minority students  who&#13;
will&#13;
avall them-&#13;
""Ivel  of&#13;
lhla&#13;
educational  opportunity.  ThIs misguided&#13;
anger&#13;
can&#13;
only lead to trouble.&#13;
Another troubling aspect of&#13;
thI.&#13;
proposal I. the&#13;
require-&#13;
ment of only a&#13;
2.5&#13;
grade  point average  to receive  thil&#13;
benefit. Studenla who graduate  with a&#13;
2.5&#13;
may not be&#13;
ready&#13;
for the rigors of university  learning. What support&#13;
8)18teme can the&#13;
UW&#13;
schools offer these students  once&#13;
they are here?&#13;
Is&#13;
It fair to bring&#13;
students&#13;
In and not be&#13;
prepared to keep them here?&#13;
Low.lncome whlla&#13;
students&#13;
will&#13;
not have an equal op-&#13;
portunity to recetve a post secondary  education because&#13;
they&#13;
will&#13;
not be Included In&#13;
lhla&#13;
program.  Basing these&#13;
acl&gt;o1arlhtpa on&#13;
race la not a sound&#13;
notion.&#13;
The System of·&#13;
ticillB and legtalators who develop this program&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
bear&#13;
the brunt of the&#13;
Ire&#13;
of the excluded white students.&#13;
but the minority students&#13;
will.&#13;
The results could be tragic.&#13;
A&#13;
better remedy and a more equltable one would be for&#13;
the System oft1clals and the legislature  to work together&#13;
to create better  student financial ald packages.&#13;
In&#13;
addl-&#13;
tlon,&#13;
the Sy.tem could work harder  to recruit and retaln&#13;
minority faculty, admlntstrators  and staff to create&#13;
peal-&#13;
tive role models for existing minority&#13;
students.&#13;
FInally, there could be a greater emphasis on recruiting&#13;
minority&#13;
students.&#13;
Unfortunately,  the most recruited  mi·&#13;
nority students continue to be athletes,  and they do not&#13;
graduate In great numbers, which demonstrates  that they&#13;
are not ready for the academic demands of the unIversity.&#13;
Recruiting academicaJly talented minority&#13;
students&#13;
would&#13;
provide lllem with an opportunIty to come to the&#13;
unrver,&#13;
sity and to stay here.&#13;
AIDS testing&#13;
available locally&#13;
Studenla&#13;
are&#13;
to be Wormed&#13;
that   the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Health   Department   Is  a&#13;
Human    Immunodeficiency&#13;
Virus&#13;
(1UV)&#13;
antibody&#13;
coun-&#13;
""Ilng&#13;
and testing site.&#13;
Testing  Is confidential  and&#13;
anonymous.  Name,  address&#13;
and  other  Identifying  totor.&#13;
mation Is not required.&#13;
All&#13;
reo&#13;
sulla of te.ting  are confiden-&#13;
tial&#13;
as&#13;
well.&#13;
Persons who consider them-&#13;
""Ivee at&#13;
risk&#13;
for&#13;
1UV&#13;
may&#13;
phone  the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Health  Department   at  __&#13;
MS4&#13;
for  an  appointment.&#13;
There Is no charge  for te.t-&#13;
ing.&#13;
Challenges&#13;
tor athe/etes&#13;
Rlwley&#13;
ffom&#13;
page&#13;
11  •&#13;
new being built, and as long&#13;
as Jerry Tapp&#13;
is&#13;
around. new&#13;
programs starting as well.&#13;
Some of the possibilities&#13;
are&#13;
having the Parkslde  women'.&#13;
fastpitch  team  play&#13;
all&#13;
their&#13;
home games  at Shane Raw-&#13;
ley's,  and  Indeed  they&#13;
wllI&#13;
play a four-team  tournament&#13;
on May&#13;
13-15,&#13;
having  world&#13;
softball   tournaments   for&#13;
teams from&#13;
all&#13;
around the&#13;
country,&#13;
tun&#13;
runs&#13;
endlng  at&#13;
Shane Rawley's,  and the list&#13;
goes&#13;
on.&#13;
(your views&#13;
Senator&#13;
continues library debate&#13;
to reopen the D-l doors&#13;
than&#13;
anything  else&#13;
I&#13;
have  done ~&#13;
my&#13;
three&#13;
years&#13;
In&#13;
student&#13;
government.&#13;
I&#13;
am  also  inviting  you  to&#13;
join  the  Legislative   Affairs&#13;
Committee  of P.S.G.A.  that&#13;
I&#13;
chair.  Our primary  goals are&#13;
holdlng the line on tuition and&#13;
increasing  Federal   financial&#13;
aid. These Items&#13;
are&#13;
hard  to&#13;
do, since only&#13;
5%&#13;
of the stu-&#13;
dent body will put any pres-&#13;
sure on their  legislators.  We&#13;
have had rallies,  letter  writ-&#13;
ing campaigns  and  at  ieast&#13;
once a semester a visit&#13;
to&#13;
our&#13;
legislators&#13;
In&#13;
Madison_&#13;
Our  representatives.    both&#13;
state  and  national,  ask  me&#13;
why&#13;
I&#13;
bother  them since stu-&#13;
dents  don't&#13;
vote.&#13;
After  all&#13;
anything  they do won't affect&#13;
us anyway.&#13;
It&#13;
doesn't  really&#13;
matter&#13;
to&#13;
them what&#13;
happeJll&#13;
In&#13;
Madison  or&#13;
Washington. I&#13;
mean they&#13;
can&#13;
only&#13;
ruin&#13;
your&#13;
future  by pricing college&#13;
"'I&#13;
of your  range  and deny!llg&#13;
you any  ald to get&#13;
through&#13;
college.&#13;
So,&#13;
Ms.&#13;
Rlnelll,&#13;
If&#13;
you&#13;
are&#13;
so  concerned  aboul&#13;
luIUon&#13;
and financial aid,&#13;
I&#13;
invite&#13;
Y'"'&#13;
to join the Legislative&#13;
AttalI'8&#13;
Committee   of  P.S.G.A.&#13;
J&#13;
won't  be  surprised  If&#13;
Y'"'&#13;
don't  because  like most&#13;
stu·&#13;
dents you complain aboul&#13;
tuI·&#13;
tion  and  financial  aid&#13;
but&#13;
don't  do  anything  aboutIt&#13;
Ms. Rlnelll, talk Is cheap:&#13;
It&#13;
takes time to try to do&#13;
som~&#13;
thing about an&#13;
Issue&#13;
thai&#13;
aJ·&#13;
fects you.&#13;
senator&#13;
Jan&#13;
KratocllYU&#13;
CbaJr.&#13;
P.S.G.A,&#13;
Legl.1sIh'O&#13;
Affairs&#13;
COmmlllSO&#13;
'~'otile&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
am respondlng  to the let-&#13;
ter of a&#13;
Ms.&#13;
Carol Rlnelll that&#13;
appeared  In the November&#13;
12&#13;
Issue  of the  Ranger.  As a&#13;
Parkslde   Student   Govern·&#13;
ment  Senator,  the most irri-&#13;
tating thing that my constitu-&#13;
ents  find&#13;
Is&#13;
the  decllnJng&#13;
amount  of services  provided&#13;
by the&#13;
campus.&#13;
An&#13;
example&#13;
Is the closing of the library&#13;
D-&#13;
1&#13;
doors and the cut back&#13;
In&#13;
li-&#13;
brary  hours.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
happened&#13;
with  the  addition  of a  new&#13;
$40,000&#13;
a year  computerized&#13;
card&#13;
catalog. The reason that&#13;
they  cut back  services  was&#13;
due to the lack of&#13;
tunds.T&#13;
find&#13;
this  to be  contradictory,   to&#13;
say the least.&#13;
I&#13;
have  gotten&#13;
more&#13;
positlve&#13;
feedback  from&#13;
the students  for my part  in&#13;
the demonstration  that helped&#13;
-&#13;
No Ranger next week.&#13;
Happy Thanksgiving!&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by&#13;
students of UW-Parl&lt;slde. who are solely responsible IlK ~&#13;
~&#13;
cy&#13;
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Is&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic&#13;
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clays.&#13;
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_&#13;
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ads,&#13;
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be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parl&lt;side. Box&#13;
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nosha WI&#13;
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(EdltoriaQ or&#13;
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::.-&#13;
lng).&#13;
-'&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
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fl.&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wlsconsin-Parkslde&#13;
nited&#13;
Council president questioned&#13;
by&#13;
Senate&#13;
by Jenny earr&#13;
Editor&#13;
er  Parkslde    Student&#13;
emment Assocation  presl-&#13;
t  and  current   United&#13;
ell&#13;
president,   Adrian&#13;
o answered some chal-&#13;
g  questions   at   last&#13;
k'sPSGAmeeting.&#13;
Serrano,near the end of&#13;
1&#13;
campus lour, brought  In-&#13;
ational&#13;
handouts  to  the&#13;
torsabout United Council&#13;
its&#13;
function. Describing&#13;
UnitedCouncil as a&#13;
"non-&#13;
t&#13;
service and advocacy&#13;
ration, 'owned and oper-&#13;
by students,"  the hand-&#13;
included information  on&#13;
organization's   platorm&#13;
what&#13;
it&#13;
has&#13;
accomplished&#13;
studenls.&#13;
At&#13;
the meeting,&#13;
Serrano&#13;
questioned .by  PSGA&#13;
sidentalex&#13;
Pettit-concern-&#13;
the operation  of United&#13;
ell.&#13;
Peilltraised the issue  of a&#13;
lble  Increase   In   the&#13;
dalory&#13;
refundable    fee&#13;
l,&#13;
the fifty cents  each&#13;
t&#13;
pays&#13;
per semester  to&#13;
be   represented&#13;
by   united&#13;
Counefl.&#13;
The  MRF  In  total&#13;
constitutes   the  entire  United&#13;
Council budget,  Rumors  have&#13;
been&#13;
ctrculattng&#13;
throughout&#13;
the  system  schools  ·that this&#13;
amount   Is  scheduled   to  In.&#13;
crease.&#13;
"I&#13;
don't  see United  Council&#13;
. as ever  raising  Its fee,"  Ser-'&#13;
rano stated.  "Because of the&#13;
process    that's   built-in,   it&#13;
would take so long, and be-&#13;
cause of the political arena&#13;
that  we are  In,&#13;
1&#13;
don't  see us&#13;
raising  the fee."&#13;
Before    Serrano    became-&#13;
president,   a  complaint   was&#13;
filed  by  three  former  mem-&#13;
bers  of United  Council's  staff&#13;
with  the  Equal  Opportunity&#13;
Commission   alleging   sexual&#13;
harrasment&#13;
in&#13;
the  form  of&#13;
.dtscrtmtnatton&#13;
and  differen·&#13;
tial&#13;
treatment  based on sex.&#13;
Serrano  stated  that he has an&#13;
appointment   with an attorney&#13;
to  review   the  matter.   The&#13;
complaint  will be discussed  at&#13;
the January  UC meeting.&#13;
A   third   concern   Pettit&#13;
raised   revolves   around   the&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
United  Council's  lack  of of&#13;
Implementation   of  the  Stu-&#13;
dents  Taking  Action  AgaInst&#13;
Rape   (STAAR)  project   for&#13;
which they received  a&#13;
$20,000&#13;
federal   grant.   The  under-&#13;
standing  the  federal  govern-&#13;
ment  had  with  UC was  that&#13;
United  Council  would  match&#13;
the  federal   funds,   thereby&#13;
creating  a total of&#13;
$40,000.&#13;
,The  grant   was  given&#13;
to&#13;
have  13 campus  volunteer&#13;
coordinators   and  one  state-&#13;
wide coordinator  to organize,&#13;
traIn  and  implement   a  pro-&#13;
gram  to asstst victims  of sex-&#13;
ual   assault.   the   program&#13;
never  got off the ground&#13;
an6&#13;
the money was spent. Serrano&#13;
told the senate  that&#13;
a&#13;
repay.&#13;
ment   program&#13;
!las&#13;
been&#13;
worked out&#13;
with&#13;
the federal&#13;
government.&#13;
"The  administration   of the&#13;
Victims   of  Crime   (VOCA)&#13;
was very  much  mislead,  as&#13;
much as the general  assem-&#13;
bly was,  as what  was  going&#13;
on  with  ST&#13;
AAR&#13;
financially.&#13;
Because  of that,  he doesn't&#13;
want a big issue made of this,&#13;
so he was worked out a very&#13;
reasonable   payback&#13;
sched-&#13;
ule,"  Serrano  sald.  "I  can't&#13;
remember  what the numbers&#13;
are,&#13;
but It is scheduled  to be&#13;
paId back  by the end of the&#13;
year.  As far  as I know, we&#13;
haven't   had   any   problem&#13;
making the payments."&#13;
Serrano  went  on&#13;
to&#13;
allay&#13;
concerns  about United Coun-&#13;
cil's  operating&#13;
budget&#13;
prob-&#13;
lems.&#13;
"I&#13;
know  there  have  been&#13;
some rumors  floating  around&#13;
that we have not been able&#13;
to&#13;
make  payroll  and that&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
spending  all  the  money  on&#13;
travel  visiting  the  campuses&#13;
and  going  all  around   the&#13;
country. We have never pay.&#13;
roll.  J anua;y,   the  beginning&#13;
of Fedruary   and  September&#13;
are the tough months because&#13;
the payroll  is paId out of the&#13;
MRF,&#13;
and we get  all of our&#13;
money  right  at the beginning&#13;
of October  and the mlddie  of&#13;
February.  Before we receive&#13;
the  money,   the  fund  gets&#13;
pretty  low, but we have made&#13;
payroll  every  time  and  we&#13;
are  on target  with&#13;
all&#13;
our&#13;
debts."&#13;
Information&#13;
concerning&#13;
United  Council's  operation  Is&#13;
available  through  the  PSGA&#13;
. office located&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
of the  Wyllie&#13;
Llbrary·Learn·&#13;
Ing&#13;
Center,  near  the  Coffee&#13;
Shoppe.&#13;
ourof Somers FD affirms Senate's position&#13;
Doug&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
e of the most&#13;
controver-&#13;
Issues at Parkslde  lately&#13;
been&#13;
the&#13;
possible annexa.&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
campus&#13;
to Keno.&#13;
. Peler Barca,  the  State&#13;
resentatlve for this  area&#13;
a&#13;
strong supporter  of th~&#13;
exaUon.&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
It's  very&#13;
Impor-&#13;
lant,not only for the bniver.&#13;
, but for the city of Keno.&#13;
, that they  are'  able  to&#13;
ex&#13;
this&#13;
land,"   Barca&#13;
ed In&#13;
an&#13;
earlier  Inter.&#13;
;:;"With the f!.anger.  After&#13;
g the Somers  fire  de.&#13;
t&#13;
ment&#13;
, the Parkslde   Stu-&#13;
IPSG~)vernment Association&#13;
felt that the annexa.&#13;
Is definitely not just  for&#13;
lbgoodof the campus,  but&#13;
er SOlelyfor the good of&#13;
nosha.&#13;
"I&#13;
don't see Kenosha  offer.&#13;
i"y more&#13;
than&#13;
Somers&#13;
ex-&#13;
to~~&#13;
higher  costs,"   Jan&#13;
vil,&#13;
a  senator   for&#13;
yeA&#13;
explained.&#13;
-r&#13;
feel we&#13;
d~lflOOddeal with Somers&#13;
ea be~~sKenosha can show&#13;
supportert~?eI'm not going&#13;
PSGA   .&#13;
!lppos"dpassed  a  resolution&#13;
1IIlbe to the change. A tour&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
an~omers  fire  depart·&#13;
ven ~&#13;
talk&#13;
given by&#13;
Lt.&#13;
t&#13;
use of the depart.&#13;
....Ogthseemed    only    to&#13;
Io~&#13;
enththelr commitment&#13;
~ _8 ~exation.&#13;
...&#13;
"Officially  we can't  take  a&#13;
stand  on  the  Issue&#13;
as&#13;
a&#13;
de-&#13;
partment   except  to say  that&#13;
we feel  we  can  serve  Park-&#13;
side's  needs  more  than&#13;
ade-&#13;
quately,"   Krause   comment-&#13;
ed.&#13;
'&#13;
.Barca   insisted   that   the&#13;
quality   of  service   Parkslde&#13;
should  receive  from Kenosha&#13;
Is better  than that of Somers.&#13;
He felt  that  the' Somers  fire&#13;
department   Is Inadequate   to&#13;
serve  a complex  as large  as&#13;
Parkslde   and  the  annexation&#13;
would   bring   an  additional&#13;
$400,000&#13;
to&#13;
$700,000&#13;
In  state&#13;
revenue  Into the city of Keno·&#13;
sha.&#13;
One of the maIn Issues&#13;
dts-&#13;
cussed   between   PSGA  and&#13;
the  Somers  departinent   was&#13;
. that  of response  time.  Once&#13;
an alarm  has been sounded at&#13;
Parkslde    for   a   fire,   the&#13;
Somers  response  time Is only&#13;
5-7 minutes  to Kenosha's  re-&#13;
sponse  time  of  up  to&#13;
15-20&#13;
minutes.  This  difference  can&#13;
be crucial,  especially  if a fire&#13;
were  to start  In the  dorms.&#13;
Their  wood  construction   and&#13;
thin  walls  leave  them  espe-&#13;
cially   susceptible   to  rapid&#13;
spread  of fire.  Kenosha'S  re-&#13;
sponse   times   may   change&#13;
upon  completion  of Its north·&#13;
side station.&#13;
Barca  claimed  that the fact&#13;
that  the Kenosha  department&#13;
Is  a   full·time   department  .&#13;
means   that   It   Is  better&#13;
equipped  to serve  the  needs&#13;
of Parkslde.  The Somers  de-&#13;
partment   claimed  that  quite&#13;
the,opposlte  Is true.&#13;
liThe tanker at Somers can&#13;
carry  up  to&#13;
1000&#13;
gallons  of&#13;
water  and  Is capable  of&#13;
un-&#13;
loading  the entire  amount&#13;
In&#13;
only  one  minute.&#13;
If&#13;
neces-&#13;
sary,"    Krause   explained.&#13;
Kenosha has no such tankers,&#13;
and relies  entirely  on the hy-&#13;
'drant   system.   Somers  also&#13;
has&#13;
two&#13;
off-road  four-wheel&#13;
drive vehicles for combatting&#13;
grass  fires. The Kenosha de-&#13;
partment   has  no such  vehi-&#13;
cles.&#13;
The paramedics&#13;
In&#13;
Somers&#13;
are  of a higher  classification&#13;
than&#13;
those  In Kenosha.  They&#13;
are required  to be re-certlfied&#13;
every  two  years,  which&#13;
en-&#13;
tails  being  up to date  on all&#13;
new procedures.&#13;
The mutual  aid box alarm&#13;
system   allows  Somers&#13;
to&#13;
draw  upon other  fire depart-  .&#13;
ments  for ald.&#13;
If&#13;
the Somers&#13;
department   found themselves&#13;
In a situation  that they could&#13;
not handie  alone,  they would&#13;
initiate'  the first  alarm,  then&#13;
the  second,  then  the  third,&#13;
and  so on.  Each  time  they&#13;
would contact a group of local&#13;
departments,   drawing  oh the&#13;
nearest  stations  first,  until In&#13;
theory   they   would   ,,"ve.&#13;
enough equipment  to manage&#13;
the  worst  Imaginable&#13;
sttua-&#13;
tlon.&#13;
The system  does not draw&#13;
too much  support  from  any&#13;
one station  so as not to disa-&#13;
ble them  from  responding  to&#13;
other  calls.  Kenosha  has  not&#13;
yet   officially   joined   with&#13;
Somers&#13;
In&#13;
this&#13;
system.&#13;
Currently,  the  Somers  fire&#13;
department  has a direct&#13;
com-&#13;
municatlon&#13;
system&#13;
with&#13;
Parkslde   security.  They  are&#13;
able  to be  told  exact  sltua-&#13;
tlons&#13;
In&#13;
the case of an&#13;
emer-&#13;
gency and are escorted  by the&#13;
campus  pollee dtrectly  to the&#13;
scene. -When a call comes&#13;
in&#13;
from  the dispatcher,  beepers&#13;
go off on the belts of the vol-&#13;
unteers. Those&#13;
in&#13;
the immedi-&#13;
ate area&#13;
go&#13;
to the station  and&#13;
bring  the  equipment&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
scene, .where those who wer~&#13;
not&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
area&#13;
at  the  time&#13;
will&#13;
meet  them  or&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
waiting for them.&#13;
On the Iowa "lerage, Somers&#13;
would respond  to a call with&#13;
12&#13;
men  to  Kenosha's   six.&#13;
Somer's  high  average&#13;
is&#13;
25&#13;
men.  Somers  would respond&#13;
to a  Parkslde&#13;
call&#13;
with. one&#13;
aerial,  one pumper,  two&#13;
tank-&#13;
ers and a rescue  unit. Should&#13;
more&#13;
be&#13;
requtred   they  can&#13;
bring  In two more&#13;
pumpers&#13;
from  their  second  station.&#13;
IJ&#13;
the  incident  were  to inVOlVE&#13;
hazardous    matertaIs,&#13;
they&#13;
carry  a book on how&#13;
to&#13;
treat&#13;
various  emergencies   involv-&#13;
Ing hazardous  materIals  at&#13;
all&#13;
times. They also have accees&#13;
to a  company  called  Chem·&#13;
track   for  additional   asslst-&#13;
ance .&#13;
'See&#13;
Som~ra&#13;
pege 3&#13;
-,,*,'-   :-,&#13;
.Inside&lt;"\&#13;
~/"'~\.:,_.",&#13;
~:~&#13;
-&#13;
",.,&#13;
,Nuclt)arvlews\OfRuS$ia'&#13;
page&#13;
4 '&#13;
_~~,cr:"&#13;
~5&#13;
;;Wargati'ier$'al'ei~wlhners,&#13;
P89!&#13;
6,&#13;
!iliiit!~lil~J'li;i.~;~~~":"'.~&#13;
J'&#13;
r&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
December&#13;
10, 1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Imperative  PUAB be&#13;
involved  in budgeting&#13;
A. the segregated University Fee Allocation Committee&#13;
approaches the budgetary process,&#13;
It&#13;
becomes quite evt-&#13;
dent that&#13;
hard&#13;
decisions&#13;
wlll&#13;
have to be made&#13;
this&#13;
budget&#13;
year  We have just been through an enrollment shortfall&#13;
and U.e pot of money from which students their funding&#13;
has&#13;
grown considerably smaller.&#13;
.&#13;
Each of the student areas&#13;
has&#13;
been prepanng  their&#13;
budgets to present them to the committee. Each area&#13;
wlll&#13;
no&#13;
doubt offer Its members  the opportunity to evaluate&#13;
the budget before&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
presented to SUFAC.&#13;
The Union building bears the burden of being the area&#13;
with the largest  financial support of the students.  Last&#13;
year,&#13;
$284,941&#13;
of the&#13;
$763,101&#13;
Segregated Fee budget went&#13;
to&#13;
support the Union.&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
vtlal that as much student input&#13;
Is&#13;
given to the budgets of the Union as possible.&#13;
ThIs Is the time to have the Parkslde  Union Advisory&#13;
Board&#13;
(PUAB) exhibit Its unique ability to evaluate the&#13;
Union&#13;
budgets&#13;
and make  pertinent  suggestions  before&#13;
SUF&#13;
AC sees them in order to afford students as much&#13;
representation as possible in the declslon-m&amp;!&lt;lngprocess.&#13;
Havtng a prtmary  student  group examine  the Union&#13;
budget before&#13;
It&#13;
goes to SUFAC&#13;
Is&#13;
not only our responsl ..&#13;
bUty, It&#13;
Is&#13;
our&#13;
right.&#13;
To'lbe&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
read&#13;
with great&#13;
Interest&#13;
the opinion stated in the Dec.&#13;
8rd Issue of the Ranger.&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
referring&#13;
to&#13;
the article on&#13;
an-&#13;
nexatlon. WhUe&#13;
I&#13;
do not know&#13;
enough about the politics of&#13;
annexation  or  the  financial&#13;
benefits received,&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
know&#13;
somethlng about the&#13;
benents-&#13;
/drawhacks  of an increase in&#13;
fire&#13;
and rescue protection.&#13;
Having spent six years with&#13;
a professional&#13;
fire&#13;
and rescue&#13;
department  as a FIrefighter&#13;
FIrst Class/Paramedic&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
that some of the etatements&#13;
make  by  the  EMT-D from&#13;
Somers  Volunteer  FIre  De.&#13;
partment  were not quite cor.&#13;
rect; furthermore,&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
my responalbility to point out&#13;
these discrepancies.&#13;
I&#13;
want to begin with the&#13;
statement  "Most of Somers'&#13;
EMTs are  certified EMT-Ds&#13;
meaning they&#13;
can&#13;
deflbrltate&#13;
in&#13;
cases&#13;
of cardiac  arrest."&#13;
ThIs&#13;
statement&#13;
Is&#13;
very&#13;
mts-&#13;
leading&#13;
to&#13;
the general public.&#13;
Most people are  unfamiliar&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
terms of&#13;
cardiac ar-&#13;
rest or deflbr1Uation.  .&#13;
C&amp;rd1ac arrest&#13;
is&#13;
a cessa-&#13;
tion of the heart  muscle to&#13;
pump  the  blood throughout&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
issue&#13;
the body.&#13;
It&#13;
also means that&#13;
the lungs are not exchanging&#13;
the gases (oxygen and carbon&#13;
dioxide) as they would&#13;
nor-&#13;
mally do.&#13;
In&#13;
the case of&#13;
ven-&#13;
trlcular  flbr1liatlon (a symp-&#13;
tom of cardiac  arrest)  the&#13;
heart's  electrical  system&#13;
Is&#13;
not flJIlctlonlng properly.  By&#13;
deflbr1liatlng, the rescuer&#13;
Is&#13;
provtdlng an outside source of&#13;
electricity  to&#13;
try&#13;
and "jump&#13;
start"  the heart back into Its&#13;
normal rhythm.&#13;
If&#13;
this&#13;
Is&#13;
sue-&#13;
essM,  the next step&#13;
Is&#13;
the&#13;
administration   of   cardisc&#13;
drugs,  such as lidocaine  or&#13;
bretylium.  When these drugs&#13;
are  not  administered   the&#13;
chance. of the patient&#13;
re-de-&#13;
veloplng  the  ventricular  fl-&#13;
br1Uation rhythm&#13;
Is&#13;
extreme-&#13;
ly&#13;
high.&#13;
An&#13;
EMT&#13;
-0&#13;
cannot admlnls.&#13;
ter these&#13;
cardiac&#13;
drugs' and,&#13;
therefore,&#13;
Is&#13;
only provtdlng&#13;
a&#13;
fraction of the treatment  that&#13;
Is&#13;
called for.&#13;
If&#13;
the rescuer&#13;
Is&#13;
not successful&#13;
in&#13;
converting&#13;
the patient into a life sustaln-&#13;
gin&#13;
heart  rhythm,  they&#13;
wlll&#13;
simply deflbr1Uate again and&#13;
again. Each time the heart&#13;
Is&#13;
deflbr1liated there&#13;
Is&#13;
a certain&#13;
amount of scar tissue formed&#13;
and severe  damage  done to&#13;
and&#13;
Ranger&#13;
:Ir------:~---------------------------~----------~:i&#13;
your views&#13;
J.&#13;
Annexation&#13;
the  heart  muscle.  At  the&#13;
same time the lactic acid&#13;
Is&#13;
building  up to lethal  levels&#13;
and other cardlsc drugs must&#13;
be  administered  to prevent&#13;
this.&#13;
What&#13;
I&#13;
am trying to point&#13;
out Is that the EMT·D Is only&#13;
provtdlng  care  one minimal&#13;
step above the EMT-A, lind in&#13;
certain cases can actually do&#13;
more  damage  to  the  heart&#13;
muscle  than  good.  When&#13;
I&#13;
was trained  as a paramedic&#13;
one  fundamental   point  of&#13;
treatment was&#13;
f'if&#13;
you can't&#13;
do any&#13;
good,&#13;
don't  do any&#13;
harm".&#13;
All EMTs have to undergo&#13;
refresher   training   periodi-&#13;
cally,  so the statement  that&#13;
"our EMTa attend a refresh-&#13;
er class every two years and&#13;
are  certified&#13;
In&#13;
CPR&#13;
every&#13;
year."&#13;
is&#13;
again very mislead.&#13;
Ing.&#13;
She&#13;
Is&#13;
Implying that the&#13;
Kenosha   Ftreflghter /EMTs&#13;
do not undergo thls same&#13;
type&#13;
of training when It Is in fact&#13;
state mandated.&#13;
The issue ·of&#13;
response  time&#13;
mentioned  by  the  EMT-D&#13;
from Somer's  also has very&#13;
amblgiJous  undertones.  The&#13;
response from Somers'  sta-&#13;
tion  has  two  major  draw.&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny&#13;
Car:r ..;&#13;
,&#13;
Ed~tor   Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kelly MC~ISSlCk&#13;
News Ed!tor   Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
A!"Y&#13;
H., Ritter&#13;
: News Edl.tor   K~n McCray&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur .. FeaturesIEntertsmment   EdItor   M.chael&#13;
J.&#13;
Rohl&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
.Terrl.DeRosier&#13;
Ass!.&#13;
F~atures Ed!tor   Aobb Luehr .••.........•......•...•.. ,&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
BemI8 Doll&#13;
Assl.&#13;
Entertslnment  Editor   Steven R. Picazo&#13;
Offics Msnsger&#13;
cartoon  draw&#13;
fir&#13;
backs:&#13;
1.&#13;
The presence  of&#13;
a&#13;
rail·&#13;
road crossing.&#13;
2.&#13;
Tfie added time needed&#13;
to&#13;
respond from home to the&#13;
sta-&#13;
tlon to&#13;
pick-up&#13;
the emergency&#13;
equipment   may   delay   reo&#13;
sponse,&#13;
just  as there  Is the&#13;
posslbUty of the first&#13;
respond-&#13;
ing  Kenosha  fire  unit  be&#13;
avaUable.  Therefore  the  reo&#13;
sponse time should not be an&#13;
Issue because It Is such an&#13;
un-&#13;
guaranteed  factor.&#13;
Finally,&#13;
I&#13;
would like&#13;
to&#13;
say&#13;
that there&#13;
Is&#13;
a need for more&#13;
research&#13;
In&#13;
the area of bene.&#13;
fits/drawbacks  to this annex.&#13;
atlon. However,&#13;
I&#13;
would like&#13;
to say that  a volunteer  fire&#13;
department&#13;
system Is good&#13;
If&#13;
no other system  Is avaUable.&#13;
But, in thls case, there&#13;
Is&#13;
an.&#13;
other&#13;
system&#13;
available.&#13;
Whether&#13;
It&#13;
Is better  than the&#13;
one presently  in place  Is as&#13;
yet to be decided.&#13;
J&#13;
.A. Ruckau  ,&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor&#13;
Your December  3rd&#13;
potttt-&#13;
cal  cartoon  which  showed&#13;
Gary  Grace   Whisking  Dr.&#13;
Jesse  Hargrove  out  of  the&#13;
Educational  Opportunity Cen•&#13;
ter  office&#13;
was&#13;
inssnslU..&#13;
the serious nature of&#13;
lila&#13;
ing from UW·Parkslde.&#13;
Dr.  Hargrove's  ~&#13;
from  his position&#13;
was&#13;
celved by the black&#13;
co&#13;
nlty as&#13;
a&#13;
slap&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
lace,&#13;
Is&#13;
respected&#13;
and&#13;
admired&#13;
the  community.  Dr,&#13;
1!Ii_&#13;
grove's,  unselfish&#13;
gtvlng_~&#13;
such organizatlOll8&#13;
as theM'&#13;
cine Youth AChievem~t&#13;
gram   (Teen  Newe),&#13;
NAACP&#13;
Educational&#13;
I&#13;
tee,  Hand·In-Hand&#13;
(an&#13;
vocacy  program for&#13;
with  dlfferently-abled&#13;
d1111i&#13;
dren)  the Love and&#13;
:MIssion (Racine's&#13;
only&#13;
·ter for the homeless)&#13;
and&#13;
active  involvement&#13;
In&#13;
"ear  election of&#13;
Wls&#13;
first  black mayor,&#13;
respect.&#13;
I&#13;
echo the&#13;
feellng&#13;
01~&#13;
cine's&#13;
NAACP&#13;
Branch&#13;
~~I&#13;
dent,&#13;
:Ms.&#13;
Corrine&#13;
OWens.&#13;
noted that wltenever&#13;
10&#13;
faculty or&#13;
adminlStra&#13;
tors&#13;
It&#13;
come&#13;
too&#13;
active&#13;
In   ~&#13;
minority community,&#13;
the&#13;
ture  at Parkslde&#13;
Is&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Glenn  Dotson,&#13;
Dr.&#13;
see Cartoon&#13;
page&#13;
3-&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written and edhed by students 01UW-Parkside. who are solely responsible&#13;
tor::~&#13;
cy and content. It&#13;
tS&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic year except over&#13;
days.&#13;
"&#13;
wotds or&#13;
leSS-&#13;
Letters to the ednor Wlllbe accepted only&#13;
ff&#13;
Ihey are typed. double·spaced&#13;
and&#13;
350    ~II"&#13;
letters&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
Signed,&#13;
WIth&#13;
a telephone number Included&#13;
for&#13;
verification purposes.&#13;
Names&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false a!1dlor&#13;
de- • '_,_&#13;
famatory.&#13;
.~&#13;
Deadline lor alilettelS.  and classified ads, is Monday al fO a.m. for publicaliOll  ""~&#13;
ThurSday.&#13;
""'.&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parkside. Box 2000.&#13;
Ke-&#13;
nosha WI 53141. Telephone 4141553·2287 (Editorial) or&#13;
414/553.2295&#13;
(Advertis-&#13;
Ing).&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
,&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Kathy Clapp-Hsrmeyer&#13;
Assl.&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manager&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Caspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiapetta.  Jim&#13;
Cole.&#13;
John&#13;
Kehoe,&#13;
George&#13;
.&#13;
• Jeff&#13;
lenvnermaon.&#13;
8ran(l0il&#13;
J.&#13;
Liebrecht,&#13;
Amy&#13;
lud:-Mg  .&#13;
Ric!':&#13;
uehr. ~&#13;
MaiIand.&#13;
Doc&#13;
Mallory.&#13;
Doug&#13;
McEvtly&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna.&#13;
!'ani&#13;
Mitt.&#13;
laura Pestka. Steven&#13;
Picazo,&#13;
Mana&#13;
Rintz&#13;
Mark&#13;
ShiII'l!'iy.&#13;
Wendy&#13;
Sor1nson,  Jeff.&#13;
Stametl.&#13;
Tyson  Wilda.'&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 14, December 10, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1987-12-10</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="79042">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79043">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79044">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79045">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79048">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="96">
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              <text>Activity hour issue goes to committee for study</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>&#13;
I&#13;
/et/?ru6ir&#13;
y&#13;
25.&#13;
Activity hour issue&#13;
goes to&#13;
committee for study&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
did  not  take  advantage    of the&#13;
",'&#13;
_&#13;
News Editor&#13;
time  to get  Involved  In activi-&#13;
ties.&#13;
"I&#13;
proposed    this&#13;
.to&#13;
better&#13;
se~e  student needs,"  he sald,&#13;
emphasizing  that  he  did  not&#13;
wish to eliminate  extracurric-&#13;
ular  activities,   just  make  bet-&#13;
ter  use  of time  that  students&#13;
could  be&#13;
in&#13;
classes.&#13;
Also,  being   forced  to  chose&#13;
between   classes   and  activi-&#13;
ties,  or  between  different  ac-&#13;
tivities.   would  better   prepare&#13;
students    for   time   manage-&#13;
ment&#13;
challenges&#13;
they&#13;
will&#13;
face&#13;
after&#13;
graduation,&#13;
he&#13;
said.&#13;
Duetsch   referred    to  a  sur-&#13;
vey   conducted    by   the   Com-&#13;
mittee    on   Campus    Environ-&#13;
ment  dated  Feb.  16, 1987.&#13;
The  committee,   in  the  sur-&#13;
vey findings,  made  the follow-&#13;
ing   recommendation:&#13;
"The&#13;
logic&#13;
behind-&#13;
the  activity   hour&#13;
is  still  legitimate.   However,&#13;
we  believe   that&#13;
an  tnvesttga-&#13;
tlon  needs  to be  done,  In&#13;
coor-&#13;
dlnatlon  with  the  student&#13;
gov-&#13;
.emment,&#13;
to   determine&#13;
the&#13;
use  of  the  activity    hour   and&#13;
the  possiblllty   of retaining   the&#13;
logic  of  setting   aside  an  hour&#13;
for  student   activity   but&#13;
mov-&#13;
Ing  It to a  time  that  will  meet&#13;
the  variety   of needs  of the&#13;
dl-&#13;
verse   student   body,  both  aca-&#13;
demic and extra-curricular."&#13;
Duetsch&#13;
argued&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Senate    should   pass&#13;
hls   proposal,    making   a   rec-&#13;
ommenda tion  to  administra-&#13;
.,. battle  was   won   In   the&#13;
t  against   elimination&#13;
of&#13;
activity hour,  but  the  war&#13;
lIyet&#13;
to&#13;
be fought.&#13;
Fifteen'stu&lt;lents attended   a&#13;
FacullySenate  meeting   Tues-&#13;
aay(Feb. 16) to oppose  a  pro-&#13;
posal&#13;
to&#13;
eliminate  the  activity&#13;
zour,&#13;
which  is  the  period   on&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
and&#13;
Frtday&#13;
from&#13;
1&#13;
p.m.  to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
whenclasses  are&#13;
not   sched-&#13;
uled.&#13;
Thestudents  hung  a  banner&#13;
outside'themeeting  room  that&#13;
read&#13;
"Remember&#13;
Shared&#13;
Goverance:    36.09(5)"&#13;
and&#13;
sported&#13;
buttons&#13;
with&#13;
that&#13;
jIU1l1ber.36.09(5) refers   to  the&#13;
aaergerlaw which  allows  stu-&#13;
E&#13;
participation   in  admlnis-&#13;
ve&#13;
decision-making.&#13;
eial&#13;
Science&#13;
Division&#13;
Larry&#13;
L.  Duetsch,   who&#13;
uced the  proposal,   said,&#13;
1\IIIjdlsmayed)  by the  Idea&#13;
this&#13;
may    bypass&#13;
stu-&#13;
rights  to  participate&#13;
In&#13;
d&#13;
governance.&#13;
This&#13;
not&#13;
be  further   from  the&#13;
th."&#13;
iluetsch  said   that   the   ac-&#13;
Iy&#13;
hour prevented&#13;
schedul-&#13;
IIlg&#13;
of&#13;
more  classes,   and  as  a&#13;
result, there  are  many  sched-&#13;
ule  COnfllcts  with&#13;
depart-&#13;
menls and   between    depart.&#13;
ments. He referred   to  the  ac-&#13;
tivity  hour    as&#13;
the&#13;
"dead&#13;
hour,"  saying   that    students&#13;
Bid&#13;
for&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A proposal  to place  a  refer-&#13;
endum-on  the   spring    ballot&#13;
SOlieitlngstudent   opinion   on&#13;
Whether   or&#13;
not&#13;
Parkside&#13;
shOUld pull    out    of   United&#13;
Council  mC)    was    defeated&#13;
Friday  at   the   Parkside&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent Government   Association&#13;
(PSGA)meeting.&#13;
Eight votes  were  needed&#13;
to&#13;
pass the  measure,&#13;
and   only&#13;
six. of   the   eleven    senators&#13;
Ptesent voted  for  It.&#13;
"I am disappointed,"    PSGA&#13;
PreSident Alex  Pettit   said&#13;
in&#13;
a   later&#13;
Interview.&#13;
"Right&#13;
~w,&#13;
1 feel, would  be  the  time&#13;
run&#13;
it&#13;
in&#13;
a  referendum,&#13;
be-&#13;
cause more  people  vote  in the&#13;
'pring election  than  In the  fall&#13;
election.  Students    are    more&#13;
~ware of&#13;
the&#13;
issue  now,  also,&#13;
eeause  news   about    United&#13;
;ouncn   has   lately   appeared&#13;
requently In the  Ranger."&#13;
.&#13;
Pettit  hopes  to  convince  the&#13;
'utudent body   to   puil   out   of&#13;
C.  He&#13;
believes   the   money&#13;
~an  be&#13;
better&#13;
spent&#13;
here.&#13;
arkside   will   pay   $8,000  to&#13;
'University&#13;
of  WlscOnslna-Parkslde&#13;
photo   by  Amy  H,  Altter&#13;
FaCUltysenate  ponders  the  Importance  of the  activity hour  at leat&#13;
week's   meeting.&#13;
tion,  who  he  said&#13;
he  is&#13;
sure&#13;
would  enlist   faculty   and&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent   opinion   betore    making&#13;
decision.&#13;
"I&#13;
would  assume  the&#13;
admfntstratfon&#13;
would   solicit&#13;
the- advice   of  student   groups&#13;
before   making&#13;
a.&#13;
decislon,&#13;
as&#13;
well as  the  advice  of the  Fac-&#13;
ulty&#13;
Senate"&#13;
determined&#13;
here.    "Having&#13;
said    that,&#13;
I&#13;
really   like  this  proposal,"    he&#13;
satd,  provoking  laughter.&#13;
Alex   Pettit,    Parkside&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent  Government   Association&#13;
(PSGA)   president,    disagreed&#13;
with  Duetsch.&#13;
"What   I'm   arguing   here  Is&#13;
that   this   resolution   is  not  a&#13;
result  of discussion  from  that&#13;
committee,"&#13;
Pettit&#13;
said.&#13;
"Had&#13;
the&#13;
committee&#13;
dis-&#13;
cussed&#13;
It,&#13;
and  had  a  student&#13;
representative&#13;
discussed&#13;
It,&#13;
and&#13;
determined&#13;
either&#13;
a&#13;
change,  or  a  modification,   or&#13;
even  tmnrlnation&#13;
of the  activi-&#13;
ty&#13;
hour&#13;
was&#13;
in&#13;
order&#13;
f&#13;
then&#13;
thai&#13;
would  be  much  more&#13;
ap-&#13;
proprlate&#13;
than&#13;
a&#13;
resolution&#13;
before  the Faculty  Senate."&#13;
The  student   8er.ate,   he&#13;
ex-&#13;
plained,&#13;
recently&#13;
passed&#13;
a&#13;
resolution   In  support   of  the&#13;
activity  hour.  "We're  not ada-&#13;
mently   oppoaed   to  changing&#13;
the  activity   hour,  but .we are&#13;
Vol.&#13;
18.&#13;
No.&#13;
17&#13;
opposed  to  making&#13;
thla&#13;
type&#13;
of  change   on  the  floor  of  a&#13;
faculty  Senate  like&#13;
this."  Pet-&#13;
tit  argued   that   student   opin-&#13;
ion  should&#13;
be&#13;
considered&#13;
be-&#13;
fore  the  Faculty   Senate  takes&#13;
a&#13;
stand.&#13;
Pettit&#13;
rebutted&#13;
Duetsch's&#13;
allegation   that  not  many&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents   use   the   activity   hour,&#13;
saytng  that   for  example,   the&#13;
student   Senate   meets   during&#13;
that&#13;
time.&#13;
Also,&#13;
smaller&#13;
groups&#13;
who  do&#13;
not&#13;
have  their&#13;
meeting    times    posted   meet&#13;
during  the  hour.&#13;
He  said  the  Academic   Poli-&#13;
cies   Committee    (APC)   was&#13;
discussing&#13;
taking&#13;
a&#13;
survey&#13;
via  postcards    to  reveal   stu-&#13;
dent  sentiment   regarding   the&#13;
activity&#13;
hour.   He&#13;
suggested&#13;
that  the  Senate  allow  the&#13;
de-&#13;
cision    to&#13;
take&#13;
its&#13;
normal&#13;
course,   through   the  commit-&#13;
tee,  before   being  decided   on&#13;
the 8enate  floor.&#13;
James  H. Shea.  Science&#13;
De-&#13;
partment&#13;
ChaIr&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
memo&#13;
ber   of  the&#13;
APe,&#13;
said,&#13;
"We&#13;
were   unaware   of&#13;
this&#13;
re80lu~&#13;
tlon, so the&#13;
APC&#13;
proceeded  as&#13;
If&#13;
we  were  going  to  be  devel-&#13;
oping&#13;
the&#13;
Issue.&#13;
One&#13;
Of&#13;
the&#13;
thInga&#13;
we&#13;
talked&#13;
about,&#13;
as&#13;
Alex mentioned,  waa&#13;
the&#13;
poe-&#13;
a1bWty&#13;
of&#13;
aurveying&#13;
atuclent.&#13;
via&#13;
some&#13;
klnd&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
postcard&#13;
arrangement.   The feeling  was&#13;
that  we ahould get  as  broad  II&#13;
response   as  we  could  among&#13;
See&#13;
Faculty&#13;
sene&#13;
I.&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
United&#13;
Council&#13;
referendum narrowly fails&#13;
UC  over&#13;
the&#13;
course&#13;
of&#13;
next&#13;
year  if it remains   a  full mem-&#13;
ber  of the  organization.&#13;
Senators   Tim  Grygera,   Jan&#13;
,Kratochvil,&#13;
Jay&#13;
Lewandow-&#13;
ski,   Steven   R.   Picazo,.   Dan&#13;
Vogt&#13;
and&#13;
.Julie&#13;
Wunrow&#13;
Friday   voted  to run  the  refer-&#13;
endum  on the  ballot.&#13;
Senators    Gary    Heggeland,&#13;
Dan   Perrault&#13;
and   Stephanie&#13;
Tatem  'voted  against.&#13;
Senators   Debl  Fritchow   and&#13;
J.J.   Masterson   abstained.   Sue&#13;
Walborn&#13;
and    Kevin    Zirkel-&#13;
bach  were  not present.&#13;
"I&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
conversation&#13;
with&#13;
(UC President)    Adrian  Serra-   .&#13;
no."&#13;
said   Heggeland&#13;
in&#13;
ex-&#13;
plaining&#13;
his&#13;
"no"&#13;
vote.&#13;
"He&#13;
had&#13;
given  us&#13;
a  list&#13;
of  legisla-&#13;
tors&#13;
from  this  area   who  said&#13;
that   United  Council  is  a  good&#13;
organization    and  an  effective&#13;
lobby.&#13;
It&#13;
seemed   like  the  or·&#13;
ganization&#13;
deserves&#13;
strong&#13;
consideration&#13;
before&#13;
going&#13;
against&#13;
it,"&#13;
Perrault&#13;
said:&#13;
"I&#13;
didn't&#13;
have   enough   information&#13;
at&#13;
the  time.&#13;
I&#13;
was  uninformed&#13;
in&#13;
my&#13;
no&#13;
vote. "&#13;
"In   my   own&#13;
jUdgment,   I&#13;
was  uncertain    on&#13;
a'&#13;
point  or&#13;
two,"  said&#13;
Tatem.&#13;
"I&#13;
wanted&#13;
to get  more  information."&#13;
Serrano,&#13;
a   former&#13;
PSGA&#13;
president,    sent&#13;
all&#13;
the   sena-&#13;
tors   a   letter   outlining   UC's&#13;
accomplishments.&#13;
Among&#13;
these   claims   are&#13;
a&#13;
$69&#13;
sav-&#13;
ings&#13;
in&#13;
tuition,  initiation  of an&#13;
amendment    that   provides&#13;
fi-&#13;
nancial   aid  for  students   with&#13;
young  children,  and  the  Intent&#13;
to  lobby  for  the  Tuition  Cap&#13;
Bill  (which  would limit  tultlon&#13;
to  33  percent   of  educational&#13;
cost).&#13;
The letter  also  said:&#13;
"Next    year    the   UC   Plat-&#13;
form  will  be  viewed 'by  (law-&#13;
makers)&#13;
as   the   platform&#13;
of&#13;
the   OW  System   students.&#13;
If&#13;
Parkside&#13;
is   not   a   member&#13;
they  will  have  had'  no  say  In&#13;
this  platform  ...&#13;
"Next   year   if  UC  does  not&#13;
officially   represent    Parkside,&#13;
UC  will   still   talk   to   policy&#13;
makers   and  odds  are  not  one&#13;
will&#13;
say,  'but  you don't  repre~&#13;
sent  Parkside,'&#13;
"Look   at   the   accomplish-&#13;
ments  and  what  your  elected&#13;
state&#13;
officials&#13;
say&#13;
about&#13;
United   Council.  Look  at   the&#13;
substance,   not  the  personali-&#13;
ties,"&#13;
If&#13;
Parkslde    does  withdraw&#13;
from   the   state   lobbying   or-&#13;
ganization,&#13;
however.&#13;
it&#13;
can&#13;
still  enjoy  the  benefits  of any&#13;
victories  won on behalf&#13;
of  ~&#13;
System  students.&#13;
Pettit  hopes  the  propoaaJ&#13;
to&#13;
run   the   referendum&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
brought  up again,  and  passed,&#13;
at  next  Friday'S  Senate  meet-&#13;
ing.&#13;
It&#13;
can  only  be  introduced&#13;
by&#13;
a&#13;
senator&#13;
who&#13;
voted&#13;
against&#13;
It.&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday, February 25, 1988&#13;
Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Student&#13;
etections offer&#13;
educaffonalopporluni~&#13;
ThIs&#13;
is&#13;
the coffee generation  of Parkside  student  ad-&#13;
vocacy.&#13;
This&#13;
year's Parkslde  Student Government ASSOOl·&#13;
ation (PSGA)&#13;
has&#13;
been moving and shaking&#13;
to&#13;
get things&#13;
accomplished  for students. The student attendance  at the&#13;
faculty senate meeting last week would not have hap-&#13;
pene.., In the past. There&#13;
is&#13;
Ilfe on this campus.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
has&#13;
extended  the deadline  for the return  of&#13;
peti-&#13;
tions for students who are interested&#13;
in&#13;
joining&#13;
in&#13;
on the&#13;
moving and shaking going on at Parkslde.  The hope here&#13;
Is that more students will have the opportunity to consider&#13;
holding an office and representing  the concerns of the&#13;
dt-&#13;
verse population of Parkside.&#13;
It's always easy to sit back and complain about those&#13;
who are wl1l1ngto take the risk and step forward to make&#13;
a difference.&#13;
It&#13;
Is a whole new ball game&#13;
to&#13;
take&#13;
that&#13;
risk&#13;
yourself.&#13;
This&#13;
university has always taken pride In Its fine&#13;
educe-&#13;
tional programs.&#13;
It&#13;
Is important&#13;
to&#13;
remember&#13;
that&#13;
every&#13;
opportunity that a student takes to learn about the&#13;
unrver-&#13;
slty system. the law and the budgetary  process&#13;
w1II&#13;
have&#13;
far-reaching&#13;
benefits beyond the classroom.&#13;
.&#13;
PSGA's office&#13;
is&#13;
In the D·1 level of the&#13;
WLLC&#13;
building.&#13;
The door&#13;
is&#13;
always open. There are people there who are&#13;
wl1l1ngto take a chance on students.  Take a chance and&#13;
make a difference.&#13;
Possible discrepancies&#13;
deserve a closer look&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Rltler&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The  Investigation  of&#13;
ques-&#13;
tionable partisan  activities  of&#13;
United   Council   President&#13;
Adrian Serrano Is over. but&#13;
his acquittal,  per  se, should&#13;
be questioned.&#13;
""UW&#13;
lobbying group did not&#13;
violate law,&#13;
tJ&#13;
read  the head-&#13;
Une of a Feb.  16 Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel  article,   explaining&#13;
that United Council (UC). the&#13;
Uw-Syetem&#13;
lobbying  group,&#13;
was cleared of wrongdoing by&#13;
the secretary of state's office&#13;
&amp;fier an Ivestigation  lnltiated&#13;
by a partisan  letter  sent by&#13;
Serrano and former UC Exec.&#13;
utlve Director Morty Hansen.&#13;
The letter,  sent to&#13;
all&#13;
state&#13;
assembly Democrats,  aaJd:&#13;
"Dear   As4-embly  Demo.&#13;
crat:&#13;
"We both enjoyed the&#13;
Dem-&#13;
ocratic  Assembly  Campaign&#13;
klck-off fundraiser  held  last&#13;
Tuesday at the Concourse.&#13;
Now it's our tum&#13;
to&#13;
offer an&#13;
invitation to&#13;
you.&#13;
"As&#13;
advocates  for student&#13;
concerns  for United Council,&#13;
we both  hope to work  with&#13;
you&#13;
during&#13;
the upcoming&#13;
ses-&#13;
slon.&#13;
"As members  of the Young&#13;
~mocrats   of Wisconsin, we&#13;
look forward to working with&#13;
you    to    maintain&#13;
and&#13;
strengthen  the  Democratic&#13;
majority&#13;
In&#13;
the  Assembly.&#13;
Young Democrats  played  an&#13;
important  role&#13;
in&#13;
several  im-&#13;
portant&#13;
assembly races&#13;
in&#13;
1986.Mter a successful can-&#13;
vention&#13;
in&#13;
Platteville  this past&#13;
weekend.  the YDW Is ready&#13;
to gear up for a successful&#13;
'88&#13;
campaign.&#13;
"We hope you will stop over&#13;
to&#13;
the United Council&#13;
recep-&#13;
tion on Wednesday, January&#13;
27.&#13;
"Sincerely,&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
President&#13;
Morty Hansen&#13;
Executive  Director"&#13;
This reporter  was  present&#13;
when Serrano informed sev-&#13;
eral&#13;
UW&#13;
presidents  of the sec.&#13;
retary  of state's  imminent&#13;
in-&#13;
vestigation  Feb.&#13;
2.&#13;
At  that&#13;
time, he described&#13;
what&#13;
was&#13;
aaJd In the letter.  Upon later&#13;
reading of the letter.&#13;
dtecre.&#13;
pencies were found.&#13;
PSGA President  Alex Pettit&#13;
proposed  that  a lower  scale&#13;
investigation  of Serrano's  ac-&#13;
tivities   be  conducted.   He&#13;
hoped to look for misalloca-&#13;
tions of telephone, postal. and&#13;
Ira&#13;
vel expenditures.  This Idea&#13;
see&#13;
U.C.&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
iQ&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Ranger ethics compared&#13;
to&#13;
Pravda&#13;
To the Editor: .&#13;
In&#13;
the past year&#13;
I&#13;
have seen&#13;
a few articles&#13;
in&#13;
this news-&#13;
paper that state the necessity&#13;
for freedom  of the  press.  I&#13;
agree one hundred percent&#13;
that a free press is&#13;
(if&#13;
I may&#13;
use part of a September,  1987&#13;
headline)  "Vital&#13;
In&#13;
unveiling&#13;
the  truth."   However,  there&#13;
are a few&#13;
ttifngs&#13;
that lead me&#13;
to&#13;
wonder whether this news-&#13;
paper has the freedom&#13;
to&#13;
"unveil the truth ...&#13;
To mustrate  this point. out&#13;
of the six members of the&#13;
Segregated  University  Fees&#13;
Allocations&#13;
Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), three  of them are&#13;
staff members  of this news-&#13;
paper;  and one of these news.&#13;
paper  staff  persons  Is  not&#13;
only   the   chairperson    of&#13;
SUFAC but Is also the Ediior&#13;
of this newspaper.&#13;
Since this newspaper has&#13;
to&#13;
compete&#13;
with&#13;
other  student&#13;
organizations  for&#13;
its&#13;
share  of&#13;
students'  monies,  Can&#13;
It&#13;
also&#13;
report  the decisions of this&#13;
Important   committee   fairly&#13;
and accurately?&#13;
To make  an analogy,&#13;
if&#13;
a&#13;
journalist  such as Dan Rather&#13;
or  William  F.  Buckley  Jr.&#13;
were members of the United&#13;
States  Congress.  could  they&#13;
fairly and accurately  report&#13;
Congressional  news?  (Some&#13;
argue that these two cannot&#13;
report  or  comment  on the&#13;
news fairly anyway. )&#13;
The  only other  newspaper&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
can think of that is so&#13;
closely associated  with gov-&#13;
ernment   is  Pravda&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
Soviet Union. Such a&#13;
l1nk&#13;
be-&#13;
tween the press and govern.&#13;
ment is an anathema  to our&#13;
American heritage.  -&#13;
Has there been an incident&#13;
that would be a reason for&#13;
concern about this close as-&#13;
sociation  of  the  press  and&#13;
government  on this campus?&#13;
Yes. Last November,  SUFAC&#13;
elected  the  Editor   of  the&#13;
newspaper  to be the&#13;
chalrper-&#13;
son of the committee.  How-&#13;
ever, the election was protest-&#13;
ed and then ruled  invalid  by&#13;
the judicial branch of Student&#13;
Government  because the indi-&#13;
vidual  did  not  receive  the&#13;
proper  amount  of  votes  as&#13;
stated&#13;
In&#13;
the PSGA Constitu-&#13;
tion. Why was this important&#13;
news  story  ignored  by  this&#13;
newspaper?  Does&#13;
it&#13;
have any.&#13;
thing  to do with  the  Editor&#13;
avoiding  possible  conflict  of&#13;
Interest charges  for being the&#13;
chair of SUFAC also?&#13;
That I~ why&#13;
r&#13;
question&#13;
the&#13;
ability  of this  newspaper&#13;
to&#13;
"unveil  the truth"  on issues&#13;
not only involving SUFACbut&#13;
also issues  involving student&#13;
government  and United.&#13;
Coun-&#13;
cil.&#13;
As American  citizens we&#13;
must  remember.  that  along&#13;
with  freedom  come  certain&#13;
responsibilities.  I question the&#13;
ethics of this newspaper;  but&#13;
it&#13;
also seems  that this news-&#13;
paper is not free. but&#13;
it&#13;
is en-&#13;
slaved.&#13;
Fred&#13;
Manard!&#13;
Editor's  ,note:&#13;
1&#13;
refer  Mr.&#13;
Monardi  to the Nov.&#13;
12, 1987&#13;
issue&#13;
0/&#13;
the  Ranger  which&#13;
Covers  the  controversy  su'&#13;
rounding  the  SUFAO  chai»&#13;
position.  This story received&#13;
fronf page coverage.  In addi·&#13;
tion,&#13;
1&#13;
w,w/d&#13;
like&#13;
to list the&#13;
members'&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
year's&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
committee:   Jenny&#13;
Oarr.. Rocky  Don0V4..n, Jay&#13;
Lewandowski,  Steven Picazo,&#13;
Susan' Walborn and Kevin Zir'&#13;
kelbach.  The members  of the&#13;
.Ranger staff are listed&#13;
on&#13;
our&#13;
masthead  below.&#13;
1 will&#13;
allow&#13;
the facts  to speak for them'&#13;
selves.&#13;
See&#13;
Leiter page&#13;
5  •&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor   Rsndy Lecounl&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kelly Mc~issick&#13;
News Editor   Dave McEvoy&#13;
~  Photo Editor&#13;
Am~ H. Rltt~r ·.·........•...•............  News Editor   John Kehoe&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Tern DeRos.er&#13;
Feature Editor   Robb Luehr&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Ranger is written a~d edit~d by students of UW·Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editorial poli.&#13;
cy and content  II,s publIShed every ThurSday dunng the academic year except over breaks and hoi&gt;&#13;
days&#13;
Letters to the editor willbe  accepted only if they are tYped. double-spaced and 350 words or less-.All&#13;
letters must be Signed, WItha telephone number included for verification purposes Names will&#13;
be&#13;
With·&#13;
held upon request&#13;
.&#13;
f Ranger reserves the right to&#13;
edit&#13;
letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
r-:---,&#13;
amatory.&#13;
'''~of'''~&#13;
T~~~:'   for all letters. and classmed ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication   ~li1reo&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parkside, Box 2000, Ke-&#13;
~1P....&#13;
e&#13;
~ta   WI 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287  (Ednorial) or 414/553-2295  (Advertis-&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
sr&#13;
AFF&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
,&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Steven&#13;
R.&#13;
Picszo&#13;
Operalions  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jason&#13;
(;aspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chlapena. Jim&#13;
Cole.&#13;
Mark&#13;
rrarcen.&#13;
Fred&#13;
Jobst,&#13;
George&#13;
Koerug.&#13;
Jeff&#13;
Lemmermann,  Amy lUdWig,&#13;
RicK&#13;
luehr.&#13;
Jim&#13;
Maastrlct.&#13;
Da.'MJ&#13;
Maifand.&#13;
Doc&#13;
MaIIofY.&#13;
JOhn&#13;
Marter.&#13;
Doug&#13;
Mchay,&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Michna. Patti&#13;
Nitz.&#13;
laura&#13;
Pestka.&#13;
Malia&#13;
Ainu.&#13;
Bobbi&#13;
Jo&#13;
$ate"&#13;
Wendy&#13;
Sorenson_&#13;
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              <text>Constitutional debate held at Parkside&#13;
PSGA takes 'initiative'&#13;
by Kevin Zlrkeillach&#13;
with minority concerns&#13;
Parkslde's Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Theatrewas the site of a live-&#13;
ly debate Wednesday   Oct.&#13;
24th,titled "political  Action&#13;
Committeesand the Constitu-&#13;
tion:Are They Compatible?"&#13;
Thiswas fourth in a series  of&#13;
programs at  Parkside   cele-&#13;
brating the&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
of&#13;
the United States  Constitu-&#13;
tion.&#13;
The discussion featured  a&#13;
number of&#13;
prominent and&#13;
knowledgeable participants.&#13;
Opening the  program   was&#13;
ProfessorKenneth R. Hoover,&#13;
formerprofessor of Parkside,&#13;
now&#13;
at the center  for  20th&#13;
CenturyStudies, UW-Milwau-&#13;
kee.&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Assembly-&#13;
man. Jeff Neubauer.&#13;
made&#13;
a&#13;
short presentation   outlining&#13;
hiS&#13;
personal experience  with&#13;
politicalaction committees  or&#13;
PAC's. Four  panelists,   two&#13;
pro and two con,  included:&#13;
senator WUliam  Proxrrrire ;&#13;
prominentWisconsin lobbyist&#13;
Peter Chrlstlanson;  Common&#13;
Cause&#13;
in&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
Execu~&#13;
UTeDirector Willtam Hauda;&#13;
and&#13;
Wisconsin Education  As-&#13;
sociationCouncil's Executive&#13;
SecrelaO' Morris  Andrews.&#13;
AUwere there  to deal  with&#13;
the question of the  constitu-&#13;
llonality of PAC's  and  their&#13;
lnfiuenceon the political elec-&#13;
lionprocess.&#13;
Political action committeeS&#13;
ARE&#13;
non-party organizations&#13;
or political interest  groups&#13;
that contribute money to can-&#13;
didates  for  publtc   office.&#13;
PAC's  have  always   been&#13;
around&#13;
in&#13;
one  form  or&#13;
an-:&#13;
other, but  the  number  and&#13;
kinds of PAC's  have  grown&#13;
sharply since the passage  of&#13;
the  1971 Federal   Election&#13;
Campaign Fund Act. Amend-&#13;
ments added in 1974 limited&#13;
PAC contributions  to  $5000&#13;
per election for each&#13;
candi-&#13;
dste for federal office. At the&#13;
state level, much more gener-&#13;
ous gifts  are  ailowed  and&#13;
many states have no limits at&#13;
au.&#13;
Controversy arose  as  the&#13;
.,::umber of PAC's  grew  and&#13;
~oto&#13;
by John Kehoe&#13;
~llIiam&#13;
Hauda,. Executive  Director of Common Cause in Wiscon-&#13;
Sin, exp.lalns-hIS stance on public financing and why candidates&#13;
for public office should take advantage of it.&#13;
contributions   to  candidates&#13;
multiplied.  In 1974, PAC con-&#13;
tributions  totalled  $12.5 mil-&#13;
lion.  By  1984, this  grew  to&#13;
over $105 million. As of 1987,&#13;
PAC's  supplied  more  than&#13;
one-third of funds for House&#13;
candidates and close to one-&#13;
fifth of Congressional monies.&#13;
Senator Proxmire said that&#13;
PAC's  donations  unbalance&#13;
the  opportunity  that  candi-&#13;
dates have for running for of-&#13;
fice. He said that with PAC's,&#13;
elections become .'not a mat-&#13;
ter of free speech, but of dol-&#13;
lars." Proxmire argued that&#13;
many interest  groups. make&#13;
contributions to sway a legis-&#13;
lator's stand on key issues.&#13;
This,  he  states,  equates  to&#13;
"iegal bribery"  that has been&#13;
"perfumed  to kill the odor of&#13;
corruption. ,.&#13;
Morris  Andrews  made  the&#13;
rebuttal   that   some  PAC's&#13;
allow. people without individ-&#13;
ual political  clout to make&#13;
their  views  and  attitudes&#13;
heard. Historically,  he said,&#13;
teachers  have been one of&#13;
these&#13;
under-represented&#13;
groups.  Andrews  said educa-&#13;
tion PAC's have a positive,&#13;
balancing  influence  by unit-&#13;
ing people  with common  in-&#13;
terests  and  providing  them&#13;
with a means to vocalize their&#13;
concerns,  Andrews did not&#13;
support  all PAC's, just ones&#13;
that did not center on single&#13;
issues.&#13;
In&#13;
regard to the legiti-&#13;
macy of PAC's, Andrews felt&#13;
that&#13;
If&#13;
pOlitical  candidates&#13;
make total and complete dis-&#13;
closures  of their campaign&#13;
expenditures, it would then be&#13;
up  to  the  general  common&#13;
sense of the voters to decide&#13;
whether  or  not the  funding&#13;
methods were acceptable.&#13;
William Hauda agreed that&#13;
there was the need for full&#13;
disclosure. but did not feel&#13;
that  that  would solve  the&#13;
whole  problem  of  alleged&#13;
PAC abuses. He went on to&#13;
cite the problems of donations&#13;
from other sources. These in-&#13;
cluded  the  several  thousand&#13;
dollar   honorariums   for&#13;
speeches  and  appearances,&#13;
$100 per plate luncheons and&#13;
breakfasts, as well as other&#13;
campaign  fundraisers.  He&#13;
emphasized   the  point  that&#13;
PAC's only represent a small&#13;
minority of the populace who&#13;
are  trying  to advance  their&#13;
economic agenda.&#13;
Hauda  suggested  that peo-&#13;
ple should take advantage  of&#13;
the "public financing" option.&#13;
See Debafe,&#13;
page&#13;
3 .&#13;
Thursday. Nov.&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Although Parkside  has not&#13;
experienced any major mi-&#13;
nority  student  problems,  a&#13;
student government organiza-&#13;
tion effort has arisen to cover&#13;
this   and.  other   minority&#13;
topics. The Minority Actions&#13;
Committee  (MAC)  was  de-&#13;
signed  to handle  any  prob-&#13;
lems that might occur con-&#13;
cerning minority students,  in&#13;
addition  to promoting  "posi-&#13;
tive ethnic relations,"  said&#13;
Ross Pettit.&#13;
In&#13;
the fall of 1987,under the&#13;
direction  of G. Gary  Grace,&#13;
Wayne Williams,  Director  of&#13;
the Center  for Cultural  Ad-&#13;
vancement, had been directed&#13;
to form a committee such as&#13;
MAC. Since&#13;
It&#13;
did not occur&#13;
as planned, "Student Govern-&#13;
ment  was  frustrated   by  a&#13;
lack  of significant  progress&#13;
by  the  administration   on&#13;
creating  such  a  committee.&#13;
So&#13;
we took the initiative,&#13;
H&#13;
said J. Mark&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Establshed  in April of 1988,&#13;
MAC Is headed by Hail,&#13;
Mi-&#13;
nority&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Director,  and&#13;
Pettit.&#13;
'vtce-Prestdent&#13;
of&#13;
3. 1988&#13;
PSGA. The committee  "was&#13;
created  with the intention of&#13;
increasing the studentj;  voice&#13;
in  minority   student   con-&#13;
cerns," Pettit said.&#13;
Pettit said that MAC "has a&#13;
mission  that  is two-fold:  to&#13;
monitor the effectiveness  of&#13;
policies Initiated"  by the va-&#13;
rious campus groups, and "to&#13;
promote  racial  harmony."&#13;
Pettit  also  stated  that  they&#13;
"want to make sure more&#13;
than lip service is paid to stu-&#13;
dent concerns. ,.&#13;
Pettit  feels  that  MAC is&#13;
unique&#13;
in&#13;
the sense that since&#13;
j&#13;
'Parkside  has  not&#13;
expert-&#13;
enced blatant&#13;
and&#13;
public sian.&#13;
der against  minorities."  Pet-&#13;
tit also said that the effort is&#13;
one of being "pro-active"&#13;
to-&#13;
ward minority student&#13;
con-&#13;
cerns, rather than waiting for&#13;
a  problem  to  occur  before&#13;
acting.&#13;
Pettit  was quick to stress&#13;
that the "watchdog  orgaruza-&#13;
tton"&#13;
represents more than&#13;
minorities. He satd that MAC&#13;
was  for the&#13;
j&#13;
'economically&#13;
disadvantaged&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
as&#13;
for&#13;
ethnic groups."&#13;
You've got something other peop e&#13;
are dying to have.&#13;
~.'.1&#13;
Those who give shall receive&#13;
by Geraldine Murawski&#13;
eo&#13;
The Student   Organization&#13;
uncil's  (SOC)  Food  for&#13;
Families   committee    is&#13;
Collecting donations of non-&#13;
parishable food items. Money&#13;
donations will  also  be  ac-&#13;
cepted.&#13;
Foodboxes will be placed in&#13;
ali faculty offices and at va-&#13;
rious other  sites  throughout&#13;
the University.  Linda  John-&#13;
son, Chairperson  for the Food&#13;
for Families  committee,  en-&#13;
cOUrages the  faculty,  staff,&#13;
students  and clubs to donate&#13;
generously.&#13;
Friday,  Nov. 11, PAB, in col-&#13;
laboration with SOC, is spon-&#13;
soring a dance that will fea-&#13;
ture   the  band   "Rhythmn&#13;
City."&#13;
Anyone donating two&#13;
non_parishable food items. at&#13;
the door will receive  a f,fty&#13;
percent  discount  off the cost&#13;
of admission.&#13;
In&#13;
'addition  to&#13;
half off admission,  Parkside's&#13;
Food Service  will be giving&#13;
away free drink coupons to&#13;
contributors.&#13;
Tuesday, nov. 22, the Ranger&#13;
men's  basketball  squad  will&#13;
be playing st. Xavier College&#13;
at the Phy. Ed. building. With&#13;
a donation of two&#13;
non-parish-&#13;
able food items, admission to&#13;
the game will be $1.&#13;
The saying,  "Those who&#13;
give shall receive,&#13;
,i&#13;
has&#13;
a great  deai  of merit  after&#13;
all.&#13;
.,&#13;
th,r",)H~1&#13;
'?tud~..&#13;
~:t _&#13;
"'rtaJ&#13;
tl:&#13;
to&#13;
Voter Reglstratlon&#13;
A,""",,"'  __&#13;
~""_~!l"IftQol .........-----_&#13;
......... --&#13;
_&#13;
_'I'I'I __&#13;
.. -.-.  •.•.&#13;
-.c.--   .&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Page 2&#13;
The Journeyof success&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The Counselor's Corner&#13;
Page 6&#13;
NAIA headline news and&#13;
,&#13;
Classifleds&#13;
Page 7 and 8&#13;
More sports!!!!&#13;
2 Thursday, Nov. 3, 1988 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
The journey&#13;
of success&#13;
DUKAKIS&#13;
This&#13;
product&#13;
may vary&#13;
in&#13;
passion and&#13;
liberalism&#13;
but&#13;
is&#13;
gen~ally acceptable&#13;
for&#13;
White&#13;
Household&#13;
usc.&#13;
by so«&#13;
Bearron&#13;
For many, going to college represents  a stepping stone,&#13;
a means to an end, that end being a degree wltich&#13;
will&#13;
open up the door&#13;
to&#13;
a more fulfilling career.  For others,&#13;
the university  experience  is one of self-improvement.&#13;
It&#13;
may be said of all students, you are on a path of success.&#13;
All&#13;
too&#13;
frequently, success is mistaken for a&#13;
destination,&#13;
when in reallty, it&#13;
is&#13;
a journey.&#13;
Occasionally.  when you perceive  this journey  to be a&#13;
destination. you lose sight of your purpose. When the&#13;
work. the exams,  the studies become  overbearing,  frus-&#13;
tration and apathy set in. It&#13;
is&#13;
at preciseiy this point that&#13;
you&#13;
must&#13;
remember  your mission:  this work no matter&#13;
how trivial it may seem,&#13;
is&#13;
another opportunity along the&#13;
journey.&#13;
.&#13;
Furthermore,  it is noi enough to just get the work com-&#13;
pleted. It must be the best you are capable of doing.&#13;
In&#13;
the 1950's and 60's, Sears came up with a promotional&#13;
idea&#13;
to&#13;
motivate their sales personnel&#13;
to&#13;
sell more expen-&#13;
sive products&#13;
with&#13;
longer warranties.  The Sears saying&#13;
may be one&#13;
to&#13;
which we, as students can subscribe.&#13;
"Good,&#13;
better,  best ...never let&#13;
it&#13;
rest ..&#13;
:tU&#13;
the good gets&#13;
better and the better gets best."&#13;
We are  midway&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
1988 Fall&#13;
semester.  The&#13;
going may be getting  tough, so just  remember,  that's&#13;
when the tough get going.&#13;
During this season of mid-terms,  keep your head above&#13;
water.  Hang  in there  and  continue  your  journey  of&#13;
success.&#13;
Where are American priorities?&#13;
have&#13;
mvtstoned&#13;
the American    when&#13;
it&#13;
comes&#13;
to&#13;
giving&#13;
of&#13;
dream  as they  entered  New   ourselves.   Selfishness&#13;
here&#13;
York. but who is more&#13;
impor-&#13;
demonstrates   the&#13;
degenera-&#13;
tant&#13;
human beings or a&#13;
sym-&#13;
tion of the inward person and&#13;
boli~ stone. Thousands  of&#13;
ho-&#13;
the lack of sensitivity for the&#13;
meless  cltildren,  teens,  and   welfare   of  fellow  human&#13;
adults  are  still  out  on  the   beings.&#13;
streets  of  New  York  ·City,    We're good at giving money&#13;
long after  the statue  festivi·   for&#13;
a&#13;
stone face&#13;
lift&#13;
or giving&#13;
ties were finished.&#13;
out&#13;
40'&#13;
dollars  for&#13;
the&#13;
newest&#13;
The trag-edy is we, the peo-   in sweaters  or pants. Yet,&#13;
we,&#13;
pie, put more priority  on the   the people, are terrible&#13;
at gtv.&#13;
outward appearance  of things   ing&#13;
40&#13;
hours of our time&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
than the&#13;
Inward&#13;
person which   organization  helping people.&#13;
is falling into decay. You see,&#13;
Chances are, we wouldmake&#13;
we people  are  really  selfish   it&#13;
to&#13;
our  favorite  activity,&#13;
Somewhere in the room&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
UW-Parkslde  com-&#13;
munity:&#13;
Several  times last year,  a&#13;
publication   entitled   Some-&#13;
where in the Room was dis-&#13;
tributed&#13;
throughout&#13;
the&#13;
campus.  This booklet, which&#13;
was  a  collection  of poetry,&#13;
short  stories,  artwork,  and&#13;
photography  offered students&#13;
both the chance to share their&#13;
work with others and the&#13;
op-&#13;
portunlty to be published.&#13;
This year, a new drive has&#13;
begun&#13;
to&#13;
keep  Parkside's&#13;
literary  magazine  alive  and&#13;
submissions  are  now  being&#13;
sought. Those who are willing&#13;
to contribute to Somewhere in&#13;
the  Room  can  place  their&#13;
work  in the  English  Club's&#13;
mailbox&#13;
in the PSGA office.&#13;
Somewhere&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Room&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
necessary  literary  voice here&#13;
at Parkside  and&#13;
I&#13;
encourage&#13;
.all&#13;
students  to submit  some-&#13;
thing of theirs to this publica-&#13;
tion.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Luke Klink&#13;
We the People .••&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Not&#13;
too&#13;
long ago  America&#13;
celebrated  the refurb"lshlng of&#13;
the Statue of LIberty. Millions&#13;
of dollars were spent&#13;
in&#13;
an at-&#13;
tempt&#13;
to&#13;
try  to patch  up a&#13;
symbolic stone and an Ameri-&#13;
can&#13;
conscience.&#13;
People&#13;
throughout the centuries have&#13;
tried to patch up the aesthet-&#13;
ics of society while the inside -&#13;
slowly rotted away.&#13;
It's  not wrong  to&#13;
fix&#13;
up a&#13;
statue   that   brings   back&#13;
memories  to thousands  who&#13;
No12odv.asked&#13;
me,&#13;
but. .•&#13;
Some&#13;
children received&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
treats on&#13;
Halloween&#13;
Halloween  is over,  but  It&#13;
hasn't   been  forgotten.   At&#13;
least not in my eyes and the&#13;
children who received  a spe-&#13;
cial  "treat"   in  their  bags.&#13;
Many found an&#13;
anti-Hallow-&#13;
een carton and brochure.&#13;
The cartoon  entitled  "The&#13;
Trick" is a story about "little&#13;
Johnny"  who&#13;
is&#13;
killed in the&#13;
name of satan whIle trtck-or-&#13;
treating.  It  depicts  several&#13;
scenes  of  satanic  worship.&#13;
The basic idea of the cartoon&#13;
is to convince children  that&#13;
Halloween&#13;
is&#13;
nothing but evil&#13;
and shouldn't  be celebrated.&#13;
Do&#13;
they actually  want us&#13;
to&#13;
believe that little kids dressed&#13;
up as angels and clowns are&#13;
evil because they go trick-or-&#13;
treating?  That's  what  hap-&#13;
pened to the kids in the car-&#13;
toon.&#13;
The  back  of  the  carloon&#13;
booklet says "compliments  of&#13;
Lighthouse  Baptist  Church.&#13;
Racine,  WI."  What  do they&#13;
think&#13;
this is going to accom-&#13;
plish? Sure. it may scare the&#13;
hell  out  of  little  kids  and&#13;
anger  parents.  but will any-&#13;
thing  constructive  come out&#13;
of it? Some of the older kids&#13;
may   get   their   curiosity&#13;
peaked  by this  and become&#13;
interested   in  the  topic  of&#13;
satanism.&#13;
The cartoon  was  also  ac-&#13;
companied  with  a  brochure&#13;
entitled  "The  Dark  Side  of&#13;
Halloween,"   by  David&#13;
L.&#13;
Brown. He states  that,  "Hal-&#13;
loween  has  always  been  a&#13;
celebration'  of  death,"   and&#13;
goes on to explain all of the&#13;
harmful effect. The last page&#13;
of the brochure  offers alter-&#13;
natives   to  Halloween.&#13;
In-&#13;
stead,  people  should  have&#13;
"Glory   Gatherings"   where&#13;
Christian  videos  are  played&#13;
and Christian songs are sung,&#13;
excluding  all  reference   to&#13;
Halloweeen.  Finally,  at  the&#13;
end there  are several  quotes&#13;
from the bible.&#13;
I&#13;
am  not, by far,  a devil&#13;
worshiper  or  an  athiest.&#13;
I&#13;
found this material  to be ma-&#13;
nipulative  of the bible and a&#13;
detrimental  way to go about&#13;
convincing people not to cele-&#13;
brate   Halloween.   I  don't&#13;
doubt that the history of Hal-&#13;
loween had  something  to do&#13;
with  the  occult.  But  today&#13;
Halloween is supposed to be a&#13;
fun time when both kids and&#13;
adults  can dress up and pre-&#13;
tend to be something or some-&#13;
one else. That tartnest  thing&#13;
from  their  minds  is&#13;
satanic&#13;
worship.  Many churches give&#13;
Halloween  parties  for their&#13;
parish  and perhaps even have&#13;
haunted  houses. It's harmless&#13;
fun.    -&#13;
I don't object to the cartoon&#13;
and  brochure  being printed,&#13;
after  all,  this  is America.&#13;
Everyone  is entitled to&#13;
think&#13;
what  they  want.  But, I feel&#13;
that  the  distribution  of the&#13;
material   could  have  been&#13;
done in a more discrete&#13;
man-&#13;
nero Give  It to the parents,&#13;
not the kids.&#13;
by Laura&#13;
Pestka&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron ........................•..  Editor-in·Chief&#13;
Kelly McKissick ..•......................  News Editor&#13;
Laura Pestka&#13;
,. Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann .............•...... Sports Editor&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
John Kehoe&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Christine Oejno&#13;
Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
Advisor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John Marter&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Curt Shircel&#13;
BUSiness Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Dayid Boyd,.Sheila Bugal~ki,  Ruben Carbajal. Dan&#13;
C~lapetta, Tim Cook, DaVid Debish, Tricia Ebner,&#13;
MIchelle Gaal, Lyndsay. Knoell, G~orge Koenig, Mark&#13;
Hall, Abu Hassein, David HeUer, Jill .Janovicz, Sharon&#13;
Krause, Jeff LeWIS, Heather Malzahn, Karen&#13;
McKissick, Geraldine Murawski, Carlise Newman&#13;
George Olson, Mi.ke Pic~zO, ~cott Singer, Bill Topper,&#13;
Rob Twardy, Daniel&#13;
vamn,&#13;
Michelle Van Koningsveld&#13;
Rangeris written a~dedit~dby studentsof UW·Parkside.who aresolely responsiblefor ltseditorialpol~&#13;
C&#13;
d&#13;
Y&#13;
and content. It ISpublishedevery Thursday dunng the academic year except over breakS&#13;
and  hOl~&#13;
ays.&#13;
I Letters&#13;
totheeditorwillbeacceptedonly&#13;
if&#13;
theyaretyped,double-spacedand350wordSorless.~1&#13;
~~~r~p~~~~~~e~~~ned.WItha telephonenumber ~ncludedfor verification purposes.Nameswill&#13;
be&#13;
with-&#13;
fa~~~Oe~~eservesthe right to edit lettersandrefusethose which are false&#13;
andlor&#13;
de-&#13;
T~~~sdJ~:.for all!etters, and classified ads, is Monday at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m.&#13;
for publication&#13;
n~~h~tl~S~~~i~\~~~~~eb~fg/~~is~8170:(ERdantg~r,')uw-parkside,Box 2000, ~e·&#13;
ing).&#13;
,I&#13;
ona or&#13;
4141553·2295&#13;
(AdvertlS'&#13;
---------------------_---.:==--_ ..&#13;
&lt;&#13;
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              <text>Excel '89 stresses leadership and critical thinking</text>
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              <text>Excel '89 stresses leadership and critical thinking&#13;
By Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Any Parkside student who&#13;
feels the need to learn anything&#13;
about critical thinking,&#13;
creativity, and appreciating&#13;
differences may want to be a&#13;
part of Excel '89.&#13;
Excel '89 is a leadership adventure&#13;
for all Parkside students.&#13;
"It's (Excel '89) a two day&#13;
retreat for Parkside students.&#13;
It's designed so that it will&#13;
benefit brand new students of&#13;
students who have just accepted&#13;
positions of leadership&#13;
or experienced student leaders&#13;
who come to me from a&#13;
major organization," said&#13;
Diane Welsh, Assistant Director&#13;
of Student Life.&#13;
The leadership retreat offers&#13;
participants the chance&#13;
to know other campus leaders,&#13;
share experiences, and&#13;
begin establishing valuable&#13;
networks with them.&#13;
"I wanted to make sure&#13;
who was running the Ranger,&#13;
who was in charge of PSGA&#13;
and I wanted to familiarize&#13;
myself with the orginization&#13;
itself," said Franca Savaglio,&#13;
vice-president of PAB, who&#13;
attended the seminar last&#13;
year.&#13;
The seminar is an overnite&#13;
program which is held in&#13;
Delafieid, WI. The participants&#13;
ride on a bus with each&#13;
other and leave from the&#13;
Parkside Union. The retreat&#13;
is being held at Camp Sidney&#13;
Cohen which is on Lake&#13;
Nemahbin.&#13;
"There's a lot of sharing&#13;
with each other," said Welsh.&#13;
"For freshman it's good beleaders&#13;
of organizations,&#13;
Excel *89 helps it's participants&#13;
become better leaders,&#13;
and also helps them to get to&#13;
know other leaders and organizations.&#13;
The retreat is&#13;
based on a series of educational&#13;
sessions_throughout the&#13;
"We networked and we&#13;
talked about the university as&#13;
a whole. We talked about how&#13;
we could get together and&#13;
work together," Savaglio&#13;
said. "We really brought our&#13;
ideas together.&#13;
Some of the sessions that&#13;
\(l Iwfa&amp;hip&#13;
cause they get to see what the&#13;
organizations are about.&#13;
Some of the goals that&#13;
Excel '89 tries to get acroess&#13;
to it's participants include&#13;
such things as personal skill&#13;
development, and leadership&#13;
qualities that students need&#13;
when they graduate. For&#13;
two days. Some of the sessions&#13;
are interactive type of&#13;
sessions such as a low ropes&#13;
course where participants are&#13;
challenged mentally and are&#13;
urged to come up with a solution&#13;
to a problem collectively.&#13;
Working together is one of the&#13;
major aspects of the retreat.&#13;
are being held primarily for&#13;
leaders of organizations include&#13;
critical thinking, decision&#13;
making, ethics, creativity,&#13;
communications, presenting&#13;
yourself and dealing with&#13;
difficult people.&#13;
"There is a big focus on various&#13;
types of communication&#13;
and assertiveness and self&#13;
image," said Welsh. "There&#13;
is a wide range of topics.&#13;
There will be presenters&#13;
from all aspects of the&#13;
campus, those who have a&#13;
good knowledge base in certain&#13;
topics. Though the seminar&#13;
is for any Parkside student&#13;
who feels the need to&#13;
learn more about leadership&#13;
and networking, participation&#13;
is limited. Excel '89 is limited&#13;
to about forty people. However,&#13;
attendance has never&#13;
gone over it's mark. The&#13;
main reason the seminar is&#13;
limited to attendance is to&#13;
help maintain the one on one&#13;
basis that helps participants&#13;
get the most out of the seminar.&#13;
"We wouldn't ever be able&#13;
to have a real big group because&#13;
then it just defeats the&#13;
purpose. If you get more than&#13;
forty you could go the whole&#13;
weekend without really getting&#13;
to know some of the&#13;
other individuals," said&#13;
Welsh.&#13;
Sign up for Excel '89 ends&#13;
Friday, September 23. the&#13;
cost of the seminar is ten dollars&#13;
and that includes transportation,&#13;
lodging, meals,&#13;
workship materials, and an&#13;
Excel '89 souvenier.&#13;
"It's one of the best workshops,"&#13;
Savaglio said. "It's&#13;
very comfortable, it's fun and&#13;
vou learn so much."&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center provides valuable service for students&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
"We are proud of our service.&#13;
We feel that it provides&#13;
children with what they need&#13;
and that's their childhood,"&#13;
explained Sherry Thomas, Director&#13;
of Parkside's Day Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
The day care center is considered&#13;
to be a developmentally&#13;
oriented program. A&#13;
program that looks at where&#13;
children are at their various&#13;
levels of development and&#13;
from there they are encouraged&#13;
to do what they are capable&#13;
of doing.&#13;
The day care center teachers&#13;
are a combination of a lot&#13;
of students and certified individuals.&#13;
The students come&#13;
from diverse backgrounds&#13;
and diverse majors. Such as,&#13;
business majors, nursing&#13;
majors, sociology majors,&#13;
psychology majors, and&#13;
education majors. Thomas&#13;
also conducts a monthly staff&#13;
meeting making sure all&#13;
teachers are putting in all the&#13;
necessary hours required by&#13;
the state.&#13;
"The teachers are well&#13;
trained and perform their job&#13;
very well," answered&#13;
Thomas.&#13;
"The support of parents is&#13;
very important," explained&#13;
Thomas. "We have excellent&#13;
parental support. The parents&#13;
are very active."&#13;
The day care center has an&#13;
Active Parent Group, which&#13;
conducts fundraisers, social&#13;
activities, such as family picnics,&#13;
and bring speakers. Due&#13;
to the groups fundraisers the&#13;
center was able to receive&#13;
helpful and beneficial equipment.&#13;
1. Flower Garden - children&#13;
from two weeks of age to&#13;
eighteen months.&#13;
2. Munchkin Manor - children&#13;
from eighteen months of&#13;
age to twenty-four months.&#13;
3. Pumpkin Patch - children&#13;
from two to three years&#13;
old.&#13;
4. Sunshine Room - children&#13;
from two and a half to&#13;
three and a half years old.&#13;
5. Rainbow Room - children&#13;
from three to four years old.&#13;
6. Apple Tree Room - children&#13;
from four to five years&#13;
old.&#13;
The children follow daily&#13;
routine schedules to give the&#13;
children anticipation to what&#13;
is going to happen next. The&#13;
teachers all share and conduct&#13;
the same responsibilities.&#13;
"We work together as a&#13;
team. We are very much&#13;
unique in that," said Thomas.&#13;
The teachers are paid employees.&#13;
Parkside's Day Care Center&#13;
has something most centers&#13;
don't have and that's the use&#13;
of a campus. The center uses&#13;
the campus for beneficial information.&#13;
"The campus is&#13;
full of enriched information,"&#13;
stated Thomas. The use of the&#13;
library, the police department,&#13;
the theater, the physical&#13;
education building, and&#13;
the kitchen all prove to be a&#13;
learning experience for the&#13;
children. "The campus is&#13;
always grateful for helping in&#13;
anyway, they love having the&#13;
children around."&#13;
"The teachers are well experienced&#13;
with a good background,&#13;
the parental involvement&#13;
is high, and a good surrounding&#13;
atmosphere provides&#13;
our center with good&#13;
quality service," emphasized&#13;
Thomas. "We provide an outset&#13;
where children can be&#13;
children. We provide them&#13;
with a childhood."&#13;
The center has 117 full and&#13;
part time children enrolled,&#13;
and has forty five trained&#13;
staff members. The hours are&#13;
Monday-Thursday from 7:30&#13;
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Friday&#13;
from 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.&#13;
The center has also an eveing&#13;
program that was just recently&#13;
put together. The evening&#13;
program provides services&#13;
on Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday night from 5:30&#13;
p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Page 2... Page 11...&#13;
Parking Player of the&#13;
week&#13;
2 Thursday, September 14, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Parking at Parkside&#13;
Many of us are used to the parking crunch that normally&#13;
occurs at the start of each new semester. However, we&#13;
expected that the problem would be rectified by the revamping&#13;
of the university parking procedure. What actually&#13;
happened is quite the opposite.&#13;
Prior to this academic year we received notice in the&#13;
mail which said that there would no longer be different&#13;
types of parking permits for students. The green permits&#13;
have been done away with in an effort to improve the&#13;
parking situation. So far, we at the Ranger have not seen&#13;
any improvement made by this change. Instead what has&#13;
resulted is a dog fight for parking spaces. Cars circle the&#13;
lots like vultures waiting for a spot to open. This causes a&#13;
hazard to pedestrians and motorists alike. The abolition of&#13;
the green permits also caused the hundreds of students to&#13;
pay an extra twenty dollars only to find they still have to&#13;
wait in the Tallent lot for the shuttle bus. Why even park&#13;
at school if you end up taking a bus for part of the way&#13;
anyway. In our opinion, it is not worth sixty dollars a year&#13;
to park that far away.&#13;
What the situation essentially boils down to is this. The&#13;
students that end up parking in the Tallent lot are always&#13;
going to be in the Tallent lot for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. Why should these people pay the same amount&#13;
for parking privileges as the people who park in the closer&#13;
lots.&#13;
To some people, the new system may seem more fair&#13;
than the old system based on a first come, first served&#13;
basis. We feel that if most students know that their&#13;
classes begin later in the day, they should have access to&#13;
some form of alternative parking.&#13;
South African police f hen&#13;
exercising restraint: [&#13;
A look at the Parkside parking rit-ual&#13;
by Lyna Paukstelis&#13;
Picture yourself on a journey, a journey beyond sight&#13;
and sound. A journey whose wonderous lands are that of&#13;
imagination. You are about to enter the Parkside Parking&#13;
Zone.&#13;
Submitted for your approval, one Connie Swale, the&#13;
kind of person that's never late for class, doesn't eat&#13;
sweets, doesn't drink and flosses after every meal, your&#13;
average run of the mill student. She thought it would be&#13;
just another day, she thought she'd find a parking space.&#13;
But what is awaiting Connie ahead will take all of her&#13;
skills as a driver, all of her patience, all of her courage,&#13;
for she is about to enter something so terrifying that&#13;
you'd only read about it in the Ranger. Look a little&#13;
closer, signed on her ticket, given by the kiddie kops, Welcome&#13;
to the "Parkside Parking Zone!!"&#13;
The early morning sun glistens off of Connie's parking&#13;
sticker. Life is good. No worries to cloud her mind, just&#13;
the brisk feeling of the wind on her face as she sings Bon&#13;
Jovi with the radio.&#13;
And then she sees 52 Parkside students fighting for the&#13;
only remaining parking space. Her heart begins to beat,&#13;
her palms begin to sweat, her chest begins to heave and a&#13;
prayer escapes her lips. "Oh God, why did I pay $60 for a&#13;
sticker that was suppose to serve me better! Please God,&#13;
just this once, let me find a parking space only a mile&#13;
from my class!!"&#13;
Soon, the sky darkened and as if God had considered&#13;
the request and refused it, like so many parking appeals,&#13;
the clouds parted and a thunderous voice bellowed, "Are&#13;
you kidding?"&#13;
So, disillusioned and disheartened she went on her way.&#13;
Bon Jovi was replaced with Metallica and a new road&#13;
warrior was born.&#13;
She drove for what seemed to be like hours, days,&#13;
months, years...to Tallent Hall.&#13;
"O.K. Even Phy. Ed. was full! This is war! I'm mad as&#13;
hell and I'm not going to take it anymore!!!"&#13;
Her foot hit the gas as she flew through the parking lot,&#13;
past the signs that said "We really feel sorry for you!",&#13;
even past the shuttle bus fothe shuttle bus, but there was&#13;
not a space to be found. Connie glanced at the shuttle bus&#13;
for those students who were lucky enough to be packed in&#13;
like sardines. Then she saw it, the overflow parking signs.&#13;
She followed the signs for miles, not knowing where&#13;
they would take her. She started to worry once she passed&#13;
the "You are now leaving the state" marker, but then she&#13;
saw it, the end of her journey. On the horizon she saw university&#13;
buildings!&#13;
When she got there, there were no lines, no car wars,&#13;
there were enough spaces for everyone. "This must be&#13;
heaven!" she exclaimed. "Look I can actually see the&#13;
buildings! What a great day! And I only had to leave&#13;
three hours before my class to make it here on time!''&#13;
She locked her car, like any responsible motorist, and&#13;
whistled "Wanted Dead or Alive" as she entered the&#13;
building. Soon, she realized that everything looked&#13;
strange to her. There was no Main Place, no Comm. Arts,&#13;
no Greenquist Hall. She wandered around feeling wierd&#13;
and alone.&#13;
"Could they have remodeled in just one weekend? At&#13;
Parkside? No way!"&#13;
She thought and thought, and then she past a sign that&#13;
said, "Welcome to Carthage College, your parking space&#13;
away from Parkside."&#13;
"What?! Carthage College? Maybe that's why I parked&#13;
my car with a great view of the beach. Maybe that's why&#13;
they handed me a life preserver as I drove in, in case I&#13;
slipped and fell into the lake. Maybe that's why I'm late&#13;
for my 'Parking is no excuse to be tardy' class!!"&#13;
As she walked back to her car, she thought of the nightmare&#13;
that awaits her back at Parkside. She thought of the&#13;
kiddie kops smiling as they happily give out their quota of&#13;
"illegal parking" tickets. She thought of what was meant&#13;
by "to better serve you" in the letter she received. She&#13;
thought of how nice it would be to actually park on&#13;
campus. She also thought that if she transferred to another&#13;
university she might not have to get to school six&#13;
hours in advance, or that she wouldn't have to sleep in&#13;
her space all night. ,&#13;
As she drove back, she had that strange feeling of deja&#13;
vu when she saw Outer Loop Road backed up to the Regency&#13;
Mall.&#13;
Taken with as much anticipation as waiting to-hear the&#13;
sound of "have a nitie Christmas" on the last day of&#13;
finals, Connie waits for a parking space, and she will continue&#13;
to wait in the outer terranian lots that can only be&#13;
found in the Outer Limits...oops, wrong show, in the lost&#13;
chapters of, "The Parkside Parking Zone."&#13;
Apology...&#13;
An open letter of a pology:&#13;
The 1989-90 Ranger Editorial&#13;
staff would like to take this&#13;
opportunity to apologize to&#13;
the students, faculty and staff&#13;
of UW-Parkside for articles&#13;
that appeared in the final&#13;
issue of the 1988-89 Ranger.&#13;
We hope that any misunderstandings&#13;
that arose due to&#13;
the content of the articles and&#13;
other sections of the paper&#13;
are laid to rest. We, on the&#13;
1989-90 Ranger staff, hope to&#13;
bring you objective articles&#13;
and editorials about the&#13;
campus and community for&#13;
whom we serve. What occurred&#13;
in the last issue of t he&#13;
1988-89 Ranger should not&#13;
occur in a professional newspaper&#13;
or any paper which is&#13;
liable for what it prints. A&#13;
newspaper should be a source&#13;
of information; it should not&#13;
be a forum.to print views of&#13;
personal expression, except&#13;
in cases where it is in editorial&#13;
form and well researched.&#13;
We apologize for any misunderstandings&#13;
and hope your&#13;
readership continues.&#13;
1989-90 Ranger Editorial Staff&#13;
Advertising doesn't cost&#13;
in the Ranger, It pays, call&#13;
553-2295, for a tailored&#13;
ad package just for you.&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Steve DeAngelis Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Dan Chiappetta News Editor&#13;
Dan Pacetti Copy Editor&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano Feature Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand Entertainment Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann Sports Editor&#13;
John Kehoe Photo Editor&#13;
Scott Singer Asst.News Editor&#13;
Jeff Reddick Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins Business Manager&#13;
Teri Fortney Ad Rep.&#13;
Carol Curi .....Ad Rep.&#13;
Barbi Keller Ad Rep.&#13;
cv and content "ins nnhikhprl W-IJitaHe. wf° solely responsible tor its editorial poll-&#13;
,jayS published every Thurs day during the academic year except over breaks and ho iileSmus/&#13;
be s?a r^dWwit?f a3fpi ifhthey are.typed&lt; double-spaced and 350 words or less. A ll&#13;
held upon request ' P ber included ,or verificat'on purposes. Names will be withfamat9oryreSerVeS&#13;
th® r'9ht t0 edit letters and refuse those which afe false and/or de-&#13;
Thursday. f°r a" 'etterS' a"d C,aSSified ads"is Monday at 10 a-m- tor publication&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 3&#13;
Student Community Services encourages student involvement&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The main reason Student&#13;
Community Se vices (SCS)&#13;
began is because Gloria&#13;
Ramirez, executive director&#13;
of Kenosha Voluntary Action&#13;
Center (KVAC) felt the need&#13;
to get students involved in the&#13;
community.&#13;
"It (SCS) started because&#13;
Gloria and her board felt the&#13;
need for the student population&#13;
to be more involved in&#13;
the community," said Carol&#13;
Engberg, Director of SCS.&#13;
SCS, which is located in the&#13;
Career Center at Parkside,&#13;
began on August 1, 1988, and&#13;
it's been growing stronger&#13;
ever since. One major goal&#13;
that Engberg had set for herself&#13;
was to have at least 120&#13;
students participate in the&#13;
program. The total number of&#13;
students actually participating&#13;
in the program in its first&#13;
year of operation was 140.&#13;
Though the majority of the&#13;
students who are involved in&#13;
SCS are Parkside students,&#13;
there are also volunteers&#13;
from Gateway and Carthage.&#13;
"I've had two students&#13;
from Carthage, only because&#13;
I'm not over there. I made&#13;
contact through a club, went&#13;
over there and did recruit two&#13;
from one of the clubs," Engberg&#13;
said. "I also have four&#13;
from Gateway. It was just&#13;
word of mouth. They heard&#13;
about it, I met them, interviewed&#13;
them, and placed&#13;
them in agencies."&#13;
There are four main reasons&#13;
why college students do&#13;
volunteer work. First of all,&#13;
some college students want to&#13;
be of service to others, without&#13;
thought of reward.&#13;
"Believe it or not, there are&#13;
many who come in and say, 'I&#13;
just want to do something&#13;
good for somebody,' " said&#13;
Engberg, "I didn't know how&#13;
much of that type of response&#13;
I would actually get."&#13;
Secondly, they are interested&#13;
in career development.&#13;
College students often ask&#13;
themselves, "Have I made&#13;
the right choice?" SCS helps&#13;
them answer that question&#13;
through volunteer work.&#13;
The third category includes&#13;
students who want experience&#13;
in a specific field for future&#13;
employment and/or to gain&#13;
entrance into certain studies.&#13;
Engberg said, "Seniors will&#13;
come in and say, 'I'm graduating&#13;
in psychology, but I&#13;
don't have anything on my&#13;
resume'.' I put them into&#13;
community centers, agencies&#13;
that are working with alcohol&#13;
problems, battered children&#13;
or women, and all of this&#13;
looks great on a resume'.&#13;
They have hands-on experience&#13;
and great references."&#13;
Last but not least, students&#13;
may also be required by professors&#13;
to complete a specific&#13;
number of hours of volunteer&#13;
work for class credit.&#13;
"There is a direct link between&#13;
what they (professors)&#13;
are teaching and what the&#13;
community is offering their&#13;
students," Engberg said.&#13;
Some of the professors&#13;
using the program include&#13;
Bruce Strom for Human Development,&#13;
Lana Rakow for a&#13;
Communications and Social&#13;
Change class, Carol Lee Saffioti-&#13;
Hughes for her Freshman&#13;
Seminar in Women's&#13;
Studies and Venkat Subramanian&#13;
for his Management Information&#13;
Systems class. SCS&#13;
was originally started to aid&#13;
college students in the Kenosha&#13;
area. Engberg immediately&#13;
saw a problem with this&#13;
when she realized that sixty&#13;
percent of Parkside students&#13;
are Racine residents. As a result,&#13;
Engberg added agencies&#13;
in Racine to her list of active&#13;
Kenosha agencies. The stu-&#13;
• d ent program agency list includes&#13;
the Alcohol and Drug&#13;
Council, Bradford High&#13;
School, Girl Scouts, Kenosha&#13;
Youth Foundation, Kenosha&#13;
Hospital, Women's Horizons,&#13;
Big Brothers/Big Sisters, Orphan&#13;
Kanines and the Red&#13;
Cross. Kenosha is represented&#13;
by about eighty agencies&#13;
and Racine by about fortyfive.&#13;
The agencies involved in&#13;
SCS submit requests to Engberg&#13;
regarding the volunteer&#13;
work each agency most&#13;
needs. The requests run the&#13;
gamut from animal care to&#13;
music coach, from interpreters&#13;
to AIDS presenters.&#13;
An AIDS presenter is someone&#13;
who gives presentations&#13;
on what AIDS is, how it is&#13;
contracted and what precautions&#13;
can be taken in dealing&#13;
with it. Through the Red&#13;
Cross, videos are used and&#13;
handouts given by the volunteer&#13;
presenter.&#13;
"In the Milwaukee and&#13;
Chicago areas, AIDS facilitators&#13;
start at somewhere between&#13;
$25,000-$50,000 a year,"&#13;
Engberg said. "There is one&#13;
bonus that I don't promise,&#13;
but I can see it down the line&#13;
already. When a good student&#13;
goes into an agency and does&#13;
a great job as a volunteer,&#13;
they may have a job waiting&#13;
after graduation."&#13;
In order to become a volunteer,&#13;
a student must adhere&#13;
to the policies of the program.&#13;
First, the student is interviewed&#13;
by Engberg to&#13;
determine interests, skills&#13;
and the student's choice of&#13;
placement Then a telephone&#13;
contact Is made by Engberg&#13;
with an agency, and a time is&#13;
set for an interview between&#13;
the agency and student.&#13;
Hours of work are arranged,&#13;
and a training session is set&#13;
up, if necessary. A volunteer's&#13;
work day can onlyrange&#13;
from one to three hours&#13;
a week, depending on the student's&#13;
schedule. Next, there&#13;
is a follow-up call from Engberg&#13;
to inquire about the volunteer's&#13;
progress. Often,&#13;
Engberg visits the volunteer&#13;
on the job.&#13;
"I do stress to students that&#13;
if they can't make it and they&#13;
(the agency) were expecting&#13;
you, always call, never just&#13;
not show up," Engberg said.&#13;
"It's a job and they are part&#13;
of a staff. They must treat it&#13;
that way."&#13;
Though SCS began one year&#13;
ago, there are no signs of it&#13;
or Engberg slowing down.&#13;
"I think we are on the edge&#13;
of something great. It (SCS)&#13;
could be an example for other&#13;
universities that want to get&#13;
involved in something like&#13;
this," Engberg said. "This&#13;
program was evaluated in&#13;
February by our main office&#13;
in Milwaukee, and they feel it&#13;
cannot fail."&#13;
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-Children's Problems, School Behavior&#13;
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-Drug/Alcohol Counseling&#13;
Gay Bloor, M.S.W. Director&#13;
Julian Newman, M.D., Psychiatrist&#13;
John Dalton, Ph.D., Psychologist&#13;
Donald A. Walters, M.S.W.&#13;
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Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 5&#13;
Gerard makes first dance of the year one of Parkside's best&#13;
By Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
For those of you who were&#13;
not at the dance last Friday&#13;
night, you missed an excellent&#13;
show. "Gerard" surprised&#13;
everyone that came to&#13;
the dance. They started playing&#13;
around 9:15 p.m., and&#13;
didn't stop until after 12:30&#13;
a.m. (under protest from the&#13;
audience). The attendence&#13;
was well over 300 people.&#13;
What did they do that was&#13;
so surprising? Well, it was a&#13;
number of things. First, when&#13;
they started to play, groups&#13;
of people came right out onto&#13;
the dance floor instead of&#13;
waiting to hear what the band&#13;
sounded like. Second, they&#13;
stayed out there for the entire&#13;
dance. Very few people sat&#13;
down between songs. Next,&#13;
"Gerard" played an entire&#13;
set of original music, and&#13;
everyone was still dancing.&#13;
Anyone whose been to our&#13;
dances knows how hard it is&#13;
to keep the crowd on the&#13;
floor.&#13;
When asked how and why&#13;
they chose certain music for&#13;
the group, Todd Michael, or&#13;
"Science" (his stage name),&#13;
replied, "personal taste is a&#13;
large part." Bob Rouse,&#13;
("Bob Condo") added, "We&#13;
listen to the music that is currently&#13;
popular, and see if it&#13;
would work for us."&#13;
"Gerard" just started playing&#13;
a full set of original music&#13;
about three weeks ago. At&#13;
first they were unsure how it&#13;
would go over with the&#13;
crowds, but Mike Heidemon,&#13;
("Mr. Hyde"), mentioned&#13;
that every place they've&#13;
played has loved it.&#13;
The band was originally&#13;
formed eight years ago by&#13;
two brothers and has slowly&#13;
evolved from there. The only&#13;
true veteran is Bill Gerard,&#13;
the sound engineer. However,&#13;
the "new Gerard" is only&#13;
four and a half years old.&#13;
Keedy, the lead female&#13;
singer, has been with the&#13;
band since this change.&#13;
For anyone interested, here&#13;
is a complete listing of all the&#13;
members in the band. They&#13;
are: Keedy, Becky Smith&#13;
(Ms. Thang), Eric Jordon&#13;
(Benet), todd Michael&#13;
(Science), Mike Heidemon&#13;
(Mr. Hyde), Bob Rouse (Bob&#13;
Condo), Tony Roland, Bill&#13;
Gerard and Gran Bourne.&#13;
"Gerard" put out a record&#13;
a few years ago, but has not&#13;
made anything recently. They&#13;
are, however, making some&#13;
demo tapes and trying to put&#13;
together a record deal.&#13;
With "Gerard's" sound,&#13;
they shouldn't have too much&#13;
trouble. Those of you who&#13;
were at the dance might have&#13;
seen the computer that was&#13;
on the stage. They started&#13;
using the computer a few&#13;
years ago when technology&#13;
became more modern. Sometimes&#13;
they have trouble getting&#13;
a full rehearsal in, and&#13;
they are able to simulate the&#13;
sound of those missing by&#13;
using the computer. The&#13;
music played by the drums,&#13;
keyboards and guitars is programmed&#13;
into the computer&#13;
so if members are missing,&#13;
the sound is still the same.&#13;
"Gerard" mentioned that&#13;
they remember things about&#13;
each gig that they play.&#13;
They've played in some&#13;
unique places, including at&#13;
the racetrack and on a beach&#13;
five feet from the water.&#13;
When asked what they would&#13;
remember about Parkside,&#13;
they said that the open, responsive&#13;
welcoming of the&#13;
crowd will stay in their&#13;
minds.&#13;
We'll be in great shape if&#13;
every dance is as successful&#13;
as this one. "Gerard" was&#13;
definitely a hit!&#13;
Anthony Brown named new director of CECA&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
A new director has been appointed&#13;
to the Center for&#13;
Educational and Cultural Advancement&#13;
(CECA) this year.&#13;
Anthony Brown is the new director&#13;
for the organization,&#13;
which provides a wide array&#13;
of educational and cultural&#13;
services.&#13;
Brown has had a successful&#13;
and varied career before&#13;
coming to Parkside. After&#13;
graduating from the State&#13;
University of New York at&#13;
Buffalo, Brown went on to&#13;
work there as an admissions&#13;
advisor for seven years. He&#13;
then took a leave of absence&#13;
to seek other possible places&#13;
of employment. Although up&#13;
for permanent appointment,&#13;
Brown said he "wanted a&#13;
change of scenery...I was&#13;
ready to see other university&#13;
systems".&#13;
His search lead him to the&#13;
UW-System and then specifically&#13;
to Parkside, where he&#13;
became the director of the&#13;
Educational Opportunities&#13;
Center from December 1988&#13;
to August 1989. He moved on&#13;
August l, filling the vacancy&#13;
of the position he now holds.&#13;
In addition to his work experience,&#13;
Brown holds a degree&#13;
in Business Administration&#13;
and a Masters in Vocational&#13;
and Technical Education.&#13;
He was also the director&#13;
of the Upward Bound program&#13;
while at Buffalo.&#13;
Already Brown has been&#13;
busy in his new position.&#13;
After taking over for Elaine&#13;
Miller, who was acting director,&#13;
Brown said "tutors have&#13;
been hired, and we are the&#13;
only department on campus&#13;
that puts out information on&#13;
student support to the entire&#13;
campus".&#13;
Another program that&#13;
"CECA and Brown have been&#13;
working on is the Minority&#13;
Admissions Review Subcommittee&#13;
(MARS). Brown commented&#13;
that CECA will be&#13;
"looking for more students&#13;
working with MARS. The&#13;
number of minorities has increased,&#13;
partly because of the&#13;
MARS program".&#13;
Brown hopes to help minorities&#13;
to become more involved&#13;
on campus, including,&#13;
"helping them find work on&#13;
campus, and trying to center&#13;
on campus based activities".&#13;
Besides co-advising such organizations,&#13;
as the Black Student&#13;
Organization (BAO),&#13;
Brown wants to develop "on&#13;
campus internships"&#13;
Other activities that Brown&#13;
wants to work on include:&#13;
sensitivity workshops, career&#13;
planning and placement, and&#13;
National Hispanic Week. For&#13;
more information on these or&#13;
other activities, interested&#13;
persons can contact CECA&#13;
and Anthony Brown in the&#13;
CECA office, located in&#13;
WLLC D194.&#13;
Parkside minority student population increasing&#13;
by Karen Colvin&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
By the fifth day of classes&#13;
last year there were 120 Hispanics,&#13;
161 blacks, 12 Indians,&#13;
and 56 Asian students enrolled&#13;
at Parkside. As of the&#13;
first day of this year there&#13;
are 132 Hispanics, 168 Blacks,&#13;
13 Indian, and 61 Asian students&#13;
on campus. This is an&#13;
increase of 21 percent in just&#13;
one year. There has also been&#13;
an upswing in the number of&#13;
minority faculty and staff.&#13;
Anthony Brown says that&#13;
the Design for Diversity plan&#13;
is the reason for this. It is&#13;
also the key to persuading&#13;
minority students currently&#13;
enrolled in the U.W. system&#13;
to stay here. There are several&#13;
steps to the Design for&#13;
Diversity plan, and it is their&#13;
combination that make it&#13;
work.&#13;
The Ethnic Studies Center&#13;
blends racially associated&#13;
material into courses already&#13;
taught here. One such class,&#13;
call American Minorty&#13;
Groups, is in very high demand.&#13;
It is so popular that&#13;
teachers and staff are currently&#13;
enrolled as students.&#13;
Parkside has developed a&#13;
special administrative process&#13;
for minority students.&#13;
The process involves carefully&#13;
monitoring special&#13;
tutors and study groups available&#13;
to keep the students on&#13;
the right track. Enrollees admitted&#13;
through this process&#13;
can also receive special counseling&#13;
about day to day problems&#13;
that majority students&#13;
won't normally face.&#13;
Dorm life is changing too.&#13;
Fully ten percent of students&#13;
living on campus are nonwhite.&#13;
To make is easier for&#13;
them, the dorms have&#13;
adopted a minority student&#13;
advisor. .&#13;
The state and federal governments&#13;
are also mandating&#13;
ways to persuade minority&#13;
students to stay in the UW&#13;
System. They provide 85 percent&#13;
of the financial aid funds&#13;
available for minority students.&#13;
There are special&#13;
scholarships available only to&#13;
non-white students.&#13;
There is a new discipline&#13;
system at Parkside. The&#13;
UWS-17 states that racism&#13;
will not be tolerated. "This is&#13;
one thing that I hope we&#13;
won't have to experience,"&#13;
said Brown. "Design for Diversity&#13;
is a step in the right&#13;
direction."&#13;
College Students&#13;
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6 Thursday, September 14,1989 Ranger -&#13;
Cluh Monday Night Football begins in Union Square&#13;
** The Drizes to be given away&#13;
est, there a possibilit Events CLUB EVENTS&#13;
International Affairs:&#13;
Yes, gang, It's time to regroup. CIA&#13;
will be holding Its first meeting on&#13;
September 15 at noon. In Molinaro 112.&#13;
Slated for this meeting are the election&#13;
of 1089-1090 officers, and some&#13;
work on the Model Organization of&#13;
American States. Any Parkslde student&#13;
or faculty member interested in&#13;
international affairs or the Model OAS&#13;
should attend this meeting or call&#13;
Laura Klrchoff at 633-3765.&#13;
Parkslde Adult Student Alliance:&#13;
PASA's first meeting of the year will&#13;
be held on September 20 at 12:00 in&#13;
Molinaro 111 (Faculty Lounge).&#13;
Please attend and help us start the&#13;
year right.&#13;
Molecular Biology Club:&#13;
The Molecular Biology Club will hold&#13;
their first meeting on Tuesday, September&#13;
19 In Molinaro 161 at noon. All&#13;
present members are encouraged to&#13;
attend and a warm welcome is extended&#13;
to any prospective new members.&#13;
Those wishing to join need only&#13;
to be a registered student at Parkslde&#13;
In the area of biological sciences. This&#13;
meeting will give everyone a chance&#13;
to meet the new officers and brainstorm&#13;
on new activities and programs.&#13;
Bring a sack lunch, and the&#13;
pop and dessert will be furnished!&#13;
Submitted by Katherine Turk, President&#13;
of the Molecular Biology Club.&#13;
Correction&#13;
PI Sigma Epsllon - Marketing Fraternity&#13;
meets every Wednesday at noon&#13;
in Molinaro D137 instead of the aforementioned&#13;
Sept. 5 issue stating that&#13;
meetings occured on a monthly basis.&#13;
We're starting an Al-Anon group at&#13;
Parkslde. We will meet on Mondays&#13;
from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. in Molinaro 217.&#13;
SOG would like to apologize for omitting&#13;
the following clubs:&#13;
Anthropology Club:&#13;
Purpose of Club: To share information&#13;
and ideas about anthropology&#13;
with interested faculty, staff, students&#13;
and members, as well as giving the&#13;
same ability to hear speakers in various&#13;
topics and doing projects which&#13;
will help In future field experiences.&#13;
Black Student Organization:&#13;
Purpose of Organization: To organize,&#13;
motivate and unify minority students&#13;
to speak to the Issues and policies affecting&#13;
them as students at Parkside.&#13;
In addition, BSO plans a variety of Intellectually&#13;
stimulating cultural,&#13;
social and recreational activities to&#13;
meet the needs and Interests of minority&#13;
students at the university.&#13;
"NEW CLUB" - Volleyball Club:&#13;
Purpose of Club: To create a social,&#13;
recreational and semi-competitive environment&#13;
for UW-Parkside students.&#13;
In other words, have a good time,&#13;
meet people and play some serious VBall.&#13;
"UPCOMING CLUB" - Photography&#13;
Club:&#13;
Purpose: Remains to be seen! If&#13;
you're an Interested photo buff, contact&#13;
John Kehoe In the Ranger office -&#13;
553-2295!!&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Joe Cool: The whimsical and fanciful&#13;
one has a name. It's Woodstock!&#13;
Rick and Kim Hendrlckson: Have a&#13;
nice life together. The gang!&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
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DISC JOCKEYS, weekends. Male or&#13;
female. Will train qualified people.&#13;
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WANTED. SPRING Break sales representatives.&#13;
Earn free vacations to&#13;
Cancun, Nassau, Bermuda, and other&#13;
exciting resorts. Plus, you can earn&#13;
an average of $3,500 In commissions&#13;
working part-time. Call Vacation&#13;
Planners at 1-800-47PARTY.&#13;
BABYSITTER. Female, 15-20 hrs. a&#13;
week. Must have own transportation,&#13;
or live In Racine. 6 month-old infant.&#13;
Experience preferred. Salary negotiable.&#13;
Call 632-4835 anytime.&#13;
COLLEGE CAMPUS representative.&#13;
Earn $. Flexible hours. Fun, Enjoyable.&#13;
Rewarding. Gross up to $20,000&#13;
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grants or scholarships. For information,&#13;
please call: (213 ) 967-2115.&#13;
Classifieds, cont. on page 9&#13;
by Brad Janowitz&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Nothing to do Monday&#13;
night? Come to the Union&#13;
Square and watch men in&#13;
football uniforms clobber&#13;
each other on a big screen&#13;
T.V. What is it? It's Monday&#13;
Night Football a £ Parkside!&#13;
That's right. Monday Night&#13;
Football has come to the&#13;
Union Square in Parkside.&#13;
Best of all, you can register&#13;
to win prizes, and even better,&#13;
it's all free.&#13;
Monday Night Football is&#13;
the brainchild of Chuck Petrach,&#13;
PAB's Sports and Recreation&#13;
Chair. Mary Ellen Wesley,&#13;
PAB Advisor, Bill Nieber&#13;
and Mike Metzenhuber, Union&#13;
Coordinators. Petrach said,&#13;
"Monday Night Football is&#13;
meant to get people involved&#13;
and make them aware of&#13;
Parkside's social facilities."&#13;
From September 11th to&#13;
December 11th, you can&#13;
watch football Monday&#13;
nights, on the Union's giant&#13;
screen T.V., and win great&#13;
^prizesjfwdoing^t^&#13;
prizes each Monday night are, a jersey&#13;
with the logo of o ne of the&#13;
teams playing that night, a&#13;
team hat, team pennants and&#13;
several food prizes. At least&#13;
one hundred dollars in prizes&#13;
will be given away each Monday&#13;
night. There is a one in&#13;
ten chance of winning. Plus,&#13;
in a few weeks, all the winners'&#13;
names will be placed in&#13;
a hat, and one name will be&#13;
drawn for tickets to the October&#13;
29th Packer's game at&#13;
County Stadium.&#13;
"If there's a strong interest,&#13;
there is a possibility of a&#13;
Pro Bowl, or Super Bowl&#13;
party," mentioned Petrach.&#13;
To find out which team is&#13;
playing on which night, you&#13;
can check the listings posted&#13;
in the Union Cafeteria, or by&#13;
the PAB office. "Hopefully&#13;
we can get lists posted in&#13;
Main Place, and in some&#13;
other places," Petrach commented.&#13;
" Monday night football is&#13;
brought to you by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, Parkside&#13;
Union and Parkside Food&#13;
Services.&#13;
At BANK ONE, we know&#13;
what ifs like to be a student.&#13;
Wfe also know what students lite.&#13;
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Ifs our way of introducing&#13;
you to our Student Banking program.&#13;
It features money-saving&#13;
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Plus a Jubilee/TYME®&#13;
pfirzezea!,&#13;
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money. Or, a student VISA&#13;
for those unexpected expenses.&#13;
Take advantage of Student&#13;
Banking by cutting out the&#13;
coupon below. Then tear into&#13;
a Pizza Hut pizza at our expense.&#13;
BANKSONE Eighte en Thousand People Who Care.&#13;
r&#13;
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Ranger Thursday, September 14, 1989 7&#13;
—————— —.i ggMggi&#13;
Parkside tries to improve parking procedures&#13;
By Michelle Renee&#13;
Degenais&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
By now, you will have&#13;
found out that a Parkside&#13;
parking permit does not guarantee&#13;
a parking space, only&#13;
the opportunity to park legally&#13;
in the Comm/Arts, Phy.&#13;
Ed., Union, or Tallent Hall&#13;
lots. You may have also&#13;
found how frustrating that opportunity&#13;
can be, especially if&#13;
you arrive late and find you&#13;
have to park a lot farther&#13;
from your classes than you&#13;
had planned. If you parked&#13;
illegally and only received a&#13;
warning ticket, consider yourself&#13;
lucky.&#13;
One of the many changes in&#13;
the system this year is the ay&#13;
tickets are being issued. Dave&#13;
Ostrowski, director of&#13;
Campus Police and Public&#13;
Safety, said there sould be&#13;
more instances of enforcement&#13;
of parking regulations&#13;
this year. In previous years,&#13;
parking violations were&#13;
issued by the full time&#13;
Campus Police officers who&#13;
were often called away to&#13;
perform other duties. This&#13;
year student officers will be&#13;
assigned specific lots to patrol&#13;
so there will be more&#13;
coverage of the parking lots&#13;
then before. This also means&#13;
a greater chance of being&#13;
ticketed if you are illegally&#13;
parked.&#13;
The use of warning tickets&#13;
has also been changed. Dur- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Attention Students Reserve your copy now for the first day of school!&#13;
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ing the first week of school,&#13;
generally only the most flagrant&#13;
parking violations were&#13;
ticketed. The rest received&#13;
warnings. Contrary to popular&#13;
belief it is not necessary&#13;
for an officer to issue you&#13;
three warning tickets before&#13;
you can be fined. Warning&#13;
tickets are issued at the officers&#13;
discretion. An effort has&#13;
been made to ease the confusion&#13;
as to just where and&#13;
under what circumstances&#13;
you can park here on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Parking permit fees have&#13;
not increased. Green and Reserved&#13;
student permits have&#13;
been discontinued to make&#13;
the parking situation more&#13;
equitable. This means that all&#13;
students will be paying the&#13;
same fees and will have the&#13;
same opportunity to try and&#13;
park their car. This new system&#13;
has allowed the removal&#13;
of 25% of the reserved parking.&#13;
Some of which has been&#13;
converted in to regular parking&#13;
and the rest into more&#13;
Handicap parking.&#13;
There are many student&#13;
who question the need for the&#13;
amount of handicapped parking&#13;
that has been added.&#13;
What one must keep in mind&#13;
is that the number of spaces&#13;
set aside for handicapped&#13;
parking is determined by&#13;
state statue and not by Parkside.&#13;
One of the proposals Ostrowski&#13;
has introduced is the"&#13;
removal of the meters and&#13;
the establishment of a visitors&#13;
lot. This would open up&#13;
more prime parking spaces.&#13;
There are no current plans&#13;
for any other additional lots.&#13;
Here are some solutions for&#13;
coping with the current system.&#13;
Come early if you want&#13;
a space in the closest lots.&#13;
Remember Monday, Wednesday&#13;
and Friday mornings are&#13;
the worst and that the Phy.&#13;
Ed. lot is the last to fill. Be&#13;
prepared to use the shuttle,&#13;
and after shuttle hours, the&#13;
Racine bus. Part of your&#13;
parking fees go to pay for&#13;
these free services. If you&#13;
feel it is unsafe to walk to&#13;
your car at night, call for an&#13;
escort, or you can ask that&#13;
there be a patrol car out in&#13;
the lot when you leave. If&#13;
there is a reason you must&#13;
park illegally, call the&#13;
Campus police and tell where&#13;
and the reason, so that arrangements&#13;
can be made.&#13;
Car pooling and the bus are&#13;
also possibilities to be considered.&#13;
This year's new parking&#13;
system may not have solved&#13;
the problem, but it has given&#13;
all of us the same opportunity&#13;
to find or not find a parking&#13;
space.&#13;
Recruitment fair encourages&#13;
student involvement&#13;
By Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Imagine this: you hear&#13;
somebody yell, "Hey you,&#13;
come over here. Come on,&#13;
don't walk away!" No, it's&#13;
not the Bahamas or even a&#13;
nearby bar. It's the fall&#13;
semester recruitment faire.&#13;
The faire will be held on&#13;
September 20 from 9 a.m. to 3&#13;
p.m. in Main Place, this location&#13;
was chosen since most&#13;
people pass through it at least&#13;
once throughout the day.&#13;
This year's committee&#13;
chair is Paul Ziemer. His&#13;
first involvement with the&#13;
faire was last spring, and he&#13;
was asked to carry on this&#13;
fall. Some of his work functions&#13;
include reserving the&#13;
large amount of tables&#13;
needed to hold the faire and&#13;
promotional artwork.&#13;
This year, there will be&#13;
prizes given for the best-looking&#13;
tables. Based on originality&#13;
and appearance. Amounts&#13;
of $25, $15, a nd $10 will be put&#13;
into the winning club or organization's&#13;
account.&#13;
Ziemer believes that everyone&#13;
whould become involved&#13;
with the clubs on campus.&#13;
"It'll help you grow and meet&#13;
people, especially if you're&#13;
new to Parkside."&#13;
While you're walking by&#13;
that day, stop at some of the&#13;
tables and talk with the people.&#13;
They're there to help you&#13;
find the feeling that you "belong."&#13;
m NDEE&#13;
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Dandee Liquor Mart • 4701 Taylor Ave.&#13;
• One mile north of KR on 22nd Ave. (Meachum)&#13;
Offer good throu October&#13;
i&#13;
8 Thursday, "September 14,1989 Ranger BS&#13;
Is druagn d alcohol abuse a problem at Parkside?&#13;
Kbyv MMQaI*rIr*yV LT . 1WX/«e*£eWd1 —I_ —. Tv»A £r% nf 4-V*4-&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
President Bush recently&#13;
* proposed a $7.9 billion national&#13;
drug strategy. This brings&#13;
up the question, is chemical&#13;
dependency a problem at&#13;
Parkside? And if so, what is&#13;
being done about it?&#13;
When interviewed, Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan stated, "We know&#13;
we have a problem with alcohol&#13;
on campus and underage&#13;
drinking in the residence&#13;
halls." This is a common&#13;
.problem in many schools and&#13;
is always an issue when mixing&#13;
underage students with&#13;
students of legal drinking&#13;
age.&#13;
"We're not going to run the&#13;
residence halls like concentration&#13;
camps. Students deserve&#13;
privacy, but if underage&#13;
drinking is taking place,&#13;
action will be taken." Depending&#13;
on the frequency of&#13;
abuse and the seriousness,&#13;
action will range from confiscation&#13;
of the alcohol to fines.&#13;
If caught drinking and driving&#13;
on campus your license&#13;
may be revoked by the&#13;
campus police.&#13;
Several students stated that&#13;
alcohol is available to underage&#13;
students if they want it.&#13;
No amount of security can&#13;
prevent all underage individuals&#13;
from obtaining alcohol.&#13;
Overall, students do not appear&#13;
to be severely abusing&#13;
alcohol in the residence halls.&#13;
It is well known that campus&#13;
police will confiscate alcohol&#13;
and issue fines if the matter&#13;
gets out of hand.&#13;
"We would be naive to assume&#13;
that we don't have people&#13;
here that are using&#13;
drugs," stated Kaplan. It has&#13;
been several years since an&#13;
arrest has been made on&#13;
campus pertaining to drugs.&#13;
Immediate action would be&#13;
taken if it was thought that&#13;
drugs were being dealt on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Punitive action will be&#13;
taken if necessary, but educational&#13;
programs are the main&#13;
emphasis. If someone is&#13;
caught using drugs, campus&#13;
police would arrest them and&#13;
turn them over to the KenoffOffiff&#13;
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Deposit your entry at any First Financial office, or mail to:&#13;
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One entry per student. Maximum prize is S700. Entries must be received by&#13;
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KN&#13;
sha Police. The fact that we&#13;
are a non-residential university&#13;
may be a reason the arrest&#13;
rate is so low. This may&#13;
be due to a lower student concentration.&#13;
Students stated that marijuana&#13;
is not obviously apparent&#13;
at residence hall parties,&#13;
but students do smoke pot.&#13;
The majority felt that pot was&#13;
used but was definitely not&#13;
sold on campus.&#13;
Federal law dictates that a&#13;
federally funded school must&#13;
develop educational pro-&#13;
Drugs, cont. on page 9&#13;
Should Cocaine&#13;
be legalized?&#13;
The notion of legalizing cocaine&#13;
and other drugs to solve&#13;
the country's drug problems&#13;
has generated just as much&#13;
debate as President Bush's&#13;
war on drugs.&#13;
Recently, some local governments&#13;
have reduced the&#13;
penalties for possession of&#13;
small amount of marijuana&#13;
becaust strict enforcement of&#13;
marijuana laws did not seem&#13;
to be worth the financialand&#13;
social costs.&#13;
The legalization of cocaine&#13;
and other drugs would simply&#13;
increase the availability of&#13;
cocaine. Some individuals&#13;
think there are potential&#13;
benefits in the legalization of&#13;
cocaine and other drugs. The&#13;
reduction of violence associated&#13;
with illegal drug sales is&#13;
one possible benefit. Other&#13;
reasons are that society&#13;
would save money on both&#13;
drug enforcement programs&#13;
and educaitonal and treatment&#13;
programs.&#13;
The Parkside community&#13;
has their own views on the&#13;
notion of legalizing cocaine&#13;
and other drugs.&#13;
"Legalizing cocaine would&#13;
make it more easier to receive&#13;
it and would definitely&#13;
lead to greater addiction,&#13;
society wouldn't be safe",&#13;
stated a junior, communication&#13;
major.&#13;
"I think cocaine should be&#13;
legalized, it would stop a lot&#13;
of violence and illegal sales.&#13;
If the person wants to use the&#13;
drug, why not, it's their&#13;
body", stated a senior, political&#13;
sience major.&#13;
Well over the majority of&#13;
the students I spoke to agreed&#13;
that the legalization of cocaine&#13;
and other drugs would&#13;
cause a more serious crisis.&#13;
To legalize cocaine would not&#13;
only cause easier availability,&#13;
but also more addiction,&#13;
which could possibly cause&#13;
more serious crimes and possibly&#13;
more deaths.&#13;
Legalizing heavy drugs,&#13;
such as cocaine and heroin&#13;
would be a major mistake,&#13;
because if it was made more&#13;
'available, more people would&#13;
use it", explained Chancellor&#13;
Shiela Kaplan. "You can easily&#13;
get addicted to alcohol and&#13;
cigarettes. Cocaine would be&#13;
twice as easy. The population&#13;
would destroy itself."&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 9&#13;
Suplemental Instruction gives students chance to teach others&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Looking for a way to improve&#13;
grades this semester?&#13;
Or hoping to ease the transition&#13;
from high school to college?&#13;
Supplemental Instruction&#13;
(SI) just might be the answer.&#13;
Currently offered for a&#13;
small selection of classes, SI&#13;
is run by Sandra Burmeister,&#13;
Director of Learning Assistance,&#13;
and Doris Nice, Mathematician.&#13;
Started 12 years&#13;
ago at the University of Missouri-&#13;
Kansas City (UMKC),&#13;
SI is not a remedial program,&#13;
but a program to bring together&#13;
students in a group to&#13;
help each other learn.&#13;
At Parkside there are currently&#13;
five classes which SI is&#13;
available for. These classes&#13;
are: "The Evolution of the&#13;
U.S. 1607-1865" (86-101 sections&#13;
03 and 04), "General&#13;
Physics I" (67-201-01), " Intro&#13;
to Humanities" (40-101-01),&#13;
"Calculus and Analytical Geometry&#13;
I" (66-221-03), and&#13;
"Calculus and Analytical Geometry&#13;
II" (66-222-01).&#13;
Each of these groups is&#13;
lead by a student who is well&#13;
versed in the area. These&#13;
group leaders attend class,&#13;
follow the readings, and take&#13;
notes to keep up to the class.&#13;
These students are: Donna&#13;
Bahr, Ron Gaffney, Christine&#13;
Henning, Dan Mattson, and&#13;
Laura Dallas.&#13;
Each leader is trained in&#13;
methods of stimulating the&#13;
students and leading discussion.&#13;
The leaders are reimbursed&#13;
for their services&#13;
through either a wage or&#13;
through credit in the -form of&#13;
an Independent Study credit.&#13;
Also, some of the leaders who&#13;
are doing it for credit do not&#13;
need the credit, and are doing&#13;
it to help the other students&#13;
out.&#13;
"It's one of those things&#13;
that if I had the money I&#13;
would love to have a larger&#13;
program and staff," Burmeister&#13;
said. The classes that are&#13;
selected are ones that the supervisors&#13;
of the program&#13;
have choosen because they&#13;
are "difficult classes, but&#13;
good solid classes that are&#13;
necessary for students to succeed&#13;
in to be able to continue&#13;
in the major or discipline that&#13;
that they have chosen," Burmeister&#13;
said.&#13;
"Students can begin coming&#13;
to SI anytime, they don't&#13;
have to feel that because they&#13;
didn't come the first time&#13;
that they can't start any&#13;
time," Burmeister said.&#13;
While the SI sessions are&#13;
there to help the students,&#13;
penalty will not be given for&#13;
not attending. Burmeister&#13;
also stressed that no extra&#13;
credit would be given to the&#13;
students who did attend SI&#13;
versus those who do not.&#13;
The benefits of SI have&#13;
been shown to be great. In&#13;
the past, students who have&#13;
participated in the program&#13;
achieved "a half to a full letter&#13;
grade higher," than students&#13;
with similar situations,&#13;
but that did not participate,&#13;
said Burmeister.&#13;
To participate in SI, youmust&#13;
be in one of classes it is&#13;
offered for. To find out more&#13;
information or to participate,&#13;
contact your instructor, or&#13;
the SI group leader.&#13;
Professor Kummings publishes book of poetry&#13;
Professor Kummings&#13;
Compiled By&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Dr. Donald D. Kumminhgs&#13;
professor of English and a&#13;
recognized Midwest poet, is&#13;
the author of a collection of 20&#13;
poems titled "The Open Road&#13;
Trip" recently published by&#13;
Geryon Press, Tunnel, N.Y.&#13;
The work explores the joy&#13;
and despair of intimate relationships,&#13;
the deaths of Kummings'&#13;
father and son, travel&#13;
experiences in Mexico and&#13;
the Bahama Islands and the&#13;
excesses of modern culture.&#13;
Kummings, who came to&#13;
UW-Parkside in 1970, has had&#13;
his poetry published in such&#13;
magazines as Bitterroot,&#13;
Poetry Now, The Spoon River&#13;
Quarterly, The West Hills Review,&#13;
and The Wormwood Review,&#13;
and in several anthologies&#13;
including Mandala (Harper&#13;
&amp; Row), The Landlocked&#13;
Heart (Indiana University)&#13;
and LIT (Harper and Row).&#13;
An international authority&#13;
on the American poet Walt&#13;
Whitman, Kummings has lectured&#13;
at a Modern Language&#13;
Association convention in&#13;
Comics... Jim's Journal&#13;
I'm &lt;T»w\.&#13;
A"""&#13;
TKis i* +K*&#13;
journal of my&#13;
liftto&#13;
d*tt. X+&#13;
via* o|e*y.&#13;
X cavne home&#13;
a*A vm+ohod TV&#13;
e*t* +Kou$k X&#13;
like&#13;
if. _ ^&#13;
Today X went to&#13;
my €K«*ese KistnrtJ&#13;
cla**-&#13;
Then X ordered&#13;
*p»*ia and it&#13;
tvatty kit tkt&#13;
epot.&#13;
•"A&#13;
Thepnfesorwrcte&#13;
on an oterken*&#13;
projector.&#13;
1\ w«svi-t focused&#13;
&lt;i€fy well, «*at&#13;
k*i ftvAte se*i*9&#13;
wVust sk« Mi&#13;
Vtrttifc)*&#13;
All tke takt*&#13;
wet off -too, ««J&#13;
1 r e c s W s&#13;
d««PT&#13;
L*s"t wi^Wt wsy&#13;
roowvwxtfe&#13;
ffowiUed i*&#13;
«Vwl l**1'&#13;
L1J1r1Jj fil&#13;
He tkreviopand&#13;
'then passed out&#13;
1W\S moraine ke&#13;
aot vp and told&#13;
me tWe it wbat&#13;
fell naild be like&#13;
He alco raid he&#13;
Had a pretty&#13;
9*«d time.&#13;
rlH&#13;
Washington D.C., the Walt&#13;
Whitman House in Camden,&#13;
N.J., and the Gorky Institute&#13;
of World Literature in Moscow,&#13;
USSR. He has published&#13;
more that 20 articles on Whitman&#13;
and two books: "Walt&#13;
Whitman, 1940-1975: A Reference&#13;
Guide" and "Approaches&#13;
to Teaching Whitman's&#13;
Leaves of Grass."&#13;
Kummings has bachelor&#13;
and master's degrees in English&#13;
from Purdue University&#13;
and a doctorate in English&#13;
and American Studies from&#13;
Indiana University. At Pur-&#13;
Drugs, from page 8&#13;
grams related to alcohol and&#13;
drug abuse. Parkside has recently&#13;
hired an alcohol and&#13;
drug specialist to develop&#13;
educational programs for&#13;
staff and students.&#13;
Parkside has an excellent&#13;
program to help staff if they&#13;
have a chemical dependency.&#13;
There is not a mandatory&#13;
drug test for staff or students,&#13;
and Wisconsin law does not&#13;
state that there be one. Parkside&#13;
is currently emphasizing&#13;
educational programs and&#13;
chemical dependency prevention.&#13;
due he received the Frederick&#13;
L. Hovde Award for poetry&#13;
and at Indiana University&#13;
was the recipient of the Academy&#13;
of American Poets&#13;
Prize.&#13;
"The Open Road Trip"&#13;
comes in both paperback and&#13;
hardbound editions and is&#13;
available through Birch Bark&#13;
Books, 4101 Fifth Place,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53142. Indiana&#13;
University was the recipient&#13;
of the Academy of American&#13;
Poets Prize.&#13;
Classifieds, from p age 6&#13;
LOOKING FOR a fraternity, sorority&#13;
or student organization that would like&#13;
to make $500-$1000 fo r a one week on&#13;
campus marketing project. Must be&#13;
organized and hard working. Call&#13;
Mark or Myra at (800 ) 592-212 1.&#13;
DEATH ROW prisoner, Caucasian&#13;
male, age 42, desires correspondence&#13;
with either male or female college&#13;
students. Wants to form a friendly&#13;
relationship and more or less just exchange&#13;
past experiences and ideas.&#13;
Will answer all letters and exchange&#13;
pictures. Prison rules require your&#13;
full name and return address on the&#13;
outside of the envelope. Write to: Jim&#13;
Jeffers, Box B 38604, Florence, AZ&#13;
85232.&#13;
CLASSIC CLEANERS in Racine is offering&#13;
a perfect job for Parkside students.&#13;
Need front counter help. Must&#13;
be neat, organized and personable.&#13;
Flexible hours to meet your schedule.&#13;
Interested persons should call Jan at&#13;
554-5150 daily 7:00-6:00.&#13;
LA &amp;C Workshops&#13;
/!r&#13;
PASSPORT&#13;
TO sums.&#13;
Organizing&#13;
for Exams&#13;
Wednesday, Oct 11&#13;
3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday. Dec. 4&#13;
12 noon-12:50 p.m.&#13;
How to Toko&#13;
Objective Testa&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25&#13;
12noon-1250 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 13&#13;
3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
How to Take&#13;
Essav Tests&#13;
Monday. Oct. 2&#13;
12 noon-1250 p.m. or&#13;
5:00 p.m.-5:50 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 29&#13;
12 noon-1250 p.m. or&#13;
5:00 p.m.-5:50 p.m.&#13;
NQtetaKIng&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 28&#13;
5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. fit&#13;
Monday and Wednesday&#13;
Sept. 25 sod 27&#13;
12noon-12:50p.m.&#13;
Meets In WLLC D150&#13;
Sign up In ARC&#13;
WLLC D150 -4&#13;
10 Thursday, September 14,1989 Ranger&#13;
Balance a key for Ranger cross-country men&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
UW-Parkside men's coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa is not sure who&#13;
will be his top runners this&#13;
season, but so far he is not&#13;
worried. "We have no specific&#13;
top runners yet, but I'm&#13;
quite certain we will have a&#13;
good season," said Rosa.&#13;
Last year the Rangers finished&#13;
2nd in districts, qualifying&#13;
them for nationals — t hen&#13;
placed 22nd nationally.&#13;
This year the team will&#13;
start with a somewhat uphill&#13;
battle as two of its top runners&#13;
are out with Injuries.&#13;
Senior Deric Brown hurt his&#13;
back at seasons end last year&#13;
and is still sidelined. Another&#13;
injured runner is senior Chris&#13;
Henkes who is recovering&#13;
from knee surgery. Rosa is&#13;
hoping to have both of them&#13;
back by mid-season.&#13;
As far as the rest of the&#13;
team goes, Rosa was deliberate&#13;
to not give specific&#13;
names. "Everyone is running&#13;
so close that it's tough to tell&#13;
who the top seven runners&#13;
will be." It's good for the&#13;
team that they are running&#13;
closely because Rosa thinks&#13;
they are running well.&#13;
The first couple of meets&#13;
will be an indicator to Rosa&#13;
as to who has the legs to&#13;
carry Parkside to success.&#13;
"There will be no pressure&#13;
on the team and I'll use these&#13;
first couple meets to learn&#13;
about the team and get them&#13;
to work hard in the first&#13;
month," added Rosa. As far&#13;
as the teams goals, "Oh yes,&#13;
I'm very optimistic. I'm certain&#13;
we will do better than&#13;
last year."&#13;
Women eye top ranking&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
In the past four seasons the&#13;
Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team has placed no&#13;
worse than fifth nationally,&#13;
and was first in the nation in&#13;
1986. It seems as if a tradition&#13;
of excellence has become par&#13;
for coach Mike DeWitt.&#13;
"Our number one priority&#13;
is to be in among the top four&#13;
teams in the nation", said De-&#13;
Witt of his 1989 cross country&#13;
team. Three juniors will&#13;
spearhead the effort for the&#13;
Lady Rangers. Paula Stokman&#13;
who placed 6th as an All-&#13;
Am erican last season, Jenny&#13;
Gross who was 6th in the mile&#13;
in track last season and Lori&#13;
DeBlieck who was 13th as an&#13;
All-American in cross country.&#13;
Paula's twin sister Ann&#13;
Stokman, also a junior, and&#13;
MONDA Y SPOTLIGHT&#13;
Kelly &amp; Co. to round-up Broncos&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Tricia Breu, a sophomore,&#13;
are going to red shirt the season&#13;
until October, but are&#13;
very promising potential. "If&#13;
these two are healthy, they&#13;
may be as strong as the other&#13;
three", remarked DeWitt.&#13;
DeWitt also mentioned&#13;
sophomore Marilynn Meyer,&#13;
and senior Stacy Kisting as&#13;
two who could possibly make&#13;
the team's top seven runners&#13;
by the time nationals roll&#13;
around. Jill Spagnolo and&#13;
Jennifer Zalewski are the&#13;
teams top freshmen.&#13;
"We should have another&#13;
strong team", said DeWitt.&#13;
"We have good depth".&#13;
Parkside will get a chance&#13;
to prove it's depth as the season&#13;
opens at noon Saturday&#13;
the 16th, at Parkside.&#13;
by Jeff Roddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
On Monday night two of the&#13;
fourteen undefeated teams in&#13;
the NFL will go head to head&#13;
as the Buffalo Bills take on&#13;
the Denver Broncos. The Bills&#13;
come into this game riding an&#13;
emotional high after beating&#13;
the Dolphins last Sunday on a&#13;
touchdown dive by quarterback&#13;
Jim Kelly with no time&#13;
on the clock. The Broncos&#13;
come into this game 1-0 having&#13;
turned back the Kansas&#13;
City Chiefs in a very sloppy&#13;
win.&#13;
The Bills are going to show&#13;
a slightly different look on offense&#13;
Monday as they will use&#13;
a more wide open passing offense,&#13;
something many experts&#13;
have been looking for&#13;
Marv Levy for a couple of&#13;
years. On defense the Bills&#13;
have the same members&#13;
which found them no lower&#13;
than ninth in any defensive&#13;
category last year.&#13;
The Broncos on the other&#13;
hand have a new look and its&#13;
on offense and defense as&#13;
they have 17 new faces on&#13;
this year's roster. Heavy&#13;
changes were made on the&#13;
defense which finished a miserable&#13;
27th place, but don't&#13;
look for any big improvement&#13;
this year. The offense is going&#13;
to have to put a lot of points&#13;
on the board and their going&#13;
to have to do it without a&#13;
workhorse in the backfield&#13;
(Dorsett out optimistically 8&#13;
weeks). So that leaves the&#13;
weight of the offense on, you&#13;
guessed in, John Elway and&#13;
he's proven he can't carry a&#13;
team (Superbowl XXII and&#13;
XXIII).&#13;
The keys to the game for&#13;
Denver are to prevent Jim&#13;
Kelly from picking apart the&#13;
secondary and the linebackers&#13;
to prevent Thurman&#13;
Thomas from beating them to&#13;
death out of the backfield. On&#13;
offense Elway needs time to&#13;
set up in the pocket and if his&#13;
line doesn't provide protection&#13;
it could be a long night.&#13;
The keys for the Bills will&#13;
be for Jim Kelly to be patient&#13;
in the first half and take the&#13;
short passes and draws up&#13;
the middle that the Denver&#13;
dropback zone will give him&#13;
early. On defense the Bills&#13;
must stay at home and look&#13;
for the pass and depend on&#13;
their front men to stop the&#13;
run.&#13;
But while Denver is in the&#13;
zone trying to prevent Kelly&#13;
from making the big play,&#13;
he'll be connecting on short&#13;
passes to Thurman Thomas,&#13;
which will provide long sustained&#13;
drives in the first three&#13;
quarters. And once Reeves&#13;
decides to close off the&#13;
screen, probably around half&#13;
time, there will be an air raid&#13;
in Buffalo as Kelly pummels&#13;
the Denver secondary. Elway&#13;
will still get some points on&#13;
the board, but it willbe long&#13;
after Kelly is through with&#13;
them. Look for a big first half&#13;
by Jim Kelly and Thurman&#13;
Thomas and a final score of&#13;
Buffalo 34 - Denver 14. All of&#13;
this can be seen in the Union&#13;
Square at 8 o'clock on big&#13;
screen TV.&#13;
Bowler qualifying dates set&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
During the Bowling Club's&#13;
most recent meeting, this&#13;
year's policy for making the&#13;
Intercollegiate Bowling Team&#13;
was finalized. In order to&#13;
qualify for this year's men's&#13;
or women's team, an individual&#13;
must have a minimum&#13;
GPA of 2.00 and carry a full&#13;
load of 12 credits. In addition,&#13;
every bowler who wishes to&#13;
bowl this year for the team&#13;
must go through a rigorous 18&#13;
game qualifying block. Those&#13;
18 games must be bowled&#13;
over the next two weekends&#13;
on any five days which have&#13;
been set aside for qualifying.&#13;
The days and times are as&#13;
follows: Friday, Sept. 15, 2-6&#13;
pm; Saturday, Sept. 16, 12-5&#13;
pm; Friday, Sept. 22, 2-6 pm;&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 23, 12-5 pm;&#13;
and Sunday, Sept. 24, 3-11 pm.&#13;
After which, each bowler&#13;
must throw six games a week&#13;
to keep a current record of&#13;
the hottest and most consistent&#13;
bowlers in the club. From&#13;
which, a bowler's 36 games&#13;
will count towards the following&#13;
event. For the first&#13;
semester, the events include&#13;
trips to St. Louis, Minneapolis,&#13;
Ohio and Las Vegas. If&#13;
you have any questions, or&#13;
would like more information,&#13;
stop down in the Rec Center&#13;
or call John Brooks, 553-&#13;
BOWL or Jeff Reddick, 553-&#13;
2876.&#13;
"THERE'S HOPE-WE CARE"&#13;
24 HOUR HOTLINE&#13;
414-658-2222&#13;
FREE PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
FREE COUNSELING ON OPTIONS&#13;
COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY&#13;
BABY &amp; MATERNITY CLOTHES&#13;
CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER&#13;
2222 ROOSEVELT RD. KENOSHA&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14, 1989 11»&#13;
Lem's Line&#13;
It's anybody's race again in AFC ' by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
alas football fans, another&#13;
season of Parity and Prejudice&#13;
is upon us. The NFL has&#13;
definitely reached its goal of&#13;
parity as the mad scramble&#13;
for playoff spots gets underway.&#13;
Some minor changes to&#13;
contend with in the coming&#13;
weeks: penalties on the defense&#13;
if their fans cheer too&#13;
much (golf course workers&#13;
are currently being scouted&#13;
by teams to find capable personel&#13;
to hold up "quiet&#13;
please" signs in grandstand&#13;
areas), and penalties for enjoyment&#13;
in the end zone after&#13;
touchdowns (face forward&#13;
and return quietly to your&#13;
bench after reaching the end&#13;
zone, please.)&#13;
Will a .500 team again capture&#13;
the division title in the&#13;
AFC East? Will either of last&#13;
year's super two reach the&#13;
playoffs this year? Will the&#13;
Roller Domers finally put a&#13;
cage around Ditka's Cave&#13;
Dwellers? Will the once&#13;
"America's Team" ever&#13;
learn they can only play one&#13;
quarterback at a time? These&#13;
answers and more will be answered&#13;
as the NFL looks to&#13;
its January classic.&#13;
My picks? Well, since you&#13;
asked...&#13;
AFC EAST&#13;
Buffalo - An incredible defensive&#13;
line should keep things in&#13;
control for the Bills. Jim&#13;
Kelly is due to bust out for&#13;
the Bills, if he gets the time.&#13;
Will stay atop division.&#13;
Miami - A sleeper pick to&#13;
challenge after last year's&#13;
dismal showing. Marino's&#13;
"off" year should lead to big&#13;
things- in '89 with healthy&#13;
Marx brothers combo. If they&#13;
only had a D.&#13;
Indianapolis - why this team&#13;
isn't better than they play is&#13;
a mystery. With a super&#13;
charged offense featuring&#13;
Eric Dickerson and Albert&#13;
Bently, and a good defense,&#13;
this team just hasn't learned&#13;
how to win.&#13;
New England - injuries will&#13;
hamper the Pats, especially&#13;
with the pre-season losses of&#13;
Andre Tippet and Ronnie Lippet.&#13;
Stephens is impressive&#13;
on the ground, but Pats offense&#13;
lacks punch.&#13;
New York Jets - no pass&#13;
rush, average linebackers,&#13;
week offensive line. Could be&#13;
a long year for Jets. Deep&#13;
threat A1 Toon will be loan&#13;
star in long season.&#13;
AFC CENTRAL&#13;
Cleveland - the 'DOGS' may&#13;
have enough this year to pull&#13;
off the division title this year.&#13;
Offensively, they have mor e&#13;
young backs than the Black&#13;
forest has trees. Could be big&#13;
surprises this year for opponents.&#13;
Healthy QB is key.&#13;
Houston - it's time to shoot&#13;
for the Moon in the 'House of&#13;
Pain' in Houston. Talent rich&#13;
Oilers have the offense to run&#13;
Player of the Week&#13;
m Calm in the crease&#13;
For the week of September 4th through the 10th, the&#13;
Parkside Ranger salutes soccer goalkeeper Stan Anderson&#13;
as the Parkside Player of the Week.&#13;
Anderson, at 5'11", 180 lbs., is one of the three tri-captains&#13;
which head this year's soccer team. His leadership&#13;
on the field has helped the Rangers to a 2-0-1 start in&#13;
which he has given up just one mark while turning away&#13;
22 shots on goal. His most impressive outing: a 120 minute&#13;
blanking of the Wisconsin Badgers in Racine last Wednesday.&#13;
Anderson, out of Palatine High school in Paletine, Illinois,&#13;
is in his senior year at Parkside, majoring in business&#13;
management. Coming into the season, he had recorded&#13;
a 21-8-2 record in 31 games as a Ranger. He had compiled&#13;
a 1.23 goals against average and owned 15 career&#13;
shutouts before this season. Anderson is also a 30-time&#13;
Prairie State Game participant and plays for the Croation&#13;
Eagles club team.&#13;
For going 1-0-1 and shutting out the Badgers, we congratulate&#13;
Stan Anderson as this week's "Player of the&#13;
Week."&#13;
Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
circles around division, but&#13;
defense could remain shortcoming.&#13;
Cincinnatti - Bengals must&#13;
reach deep into their pocketbook&#13;
if they want Eddie&#13;
Brown back and they must to&#13;
win. Boomer needs second&#13;
threat to pair with McGee.&#13;
Good running game will help,&#13;
but defense remains question&#13;
mark, especially the line.&#13;
Pittsburgh - team has no&#13;
where to go but up, 5-11 campaign&#13;
last year. They'll be&#13;
better, but Bubby will eat a&#13;
lot of turf again.&#13;
AFC WEST&#13;
L.A. Raiders - the real question&#13;
is how long will they be&#13;
in L.A.? Raiders ground&#13;
game, especially in AB times&#13;
(after Bob), is second to&#13;
none. If a QB could ever&#13;
produce here, team would be&#13;
unstoppable. Age in linebacking&#13;
core is major concern.&#13;
Denver - days of the Orange&#13;
Crush are long gone, and running&#13;
game received major&#13;
blow with loss of Dorsett.&#13;
Yet, in this division, never&#13;
count out any offense with&#13;
John Elway at the helm.&#13;
Seattle - at times, they look&#13;
like the class of the NFL.&#13;
Other times, they look like&#13;
they all skipped class all&#13;
year. Another stellar year by&#13;
Krieg and Largent (household&#13;
names since before electrici^&#13;
ty) is needed for the Hawks&#13;
to take title.&#13;
Kansas City - many have&#13;
finally shaken their 'kick the&#13;
dog' years in division with&#13;
changes in front office and at&#13;
helm. Will be competitive,&#13;
but still a year or two off.&#13;
San Diego - RB Gary Anderson&#13;
recorded the only 200&#13;
yard day by a back last year,&#13;
but durability is a question.&#13;
Addition of McMahon could&#13;
make this team a sleeper,but&#13;
defense must play over their&#13;
heads to really compete.&#13;
out \t\ \\t crowd&#13;
% A V 0LUMT£EK&#13;
Oshkosh Country Club&#13;
Men's Result&#13;
Individual&#13;
Steve "Dealer" Gerber 71-77-144&#13;
Rob Schultz 78-75-153&#13;
Scott Frosch 78-82-160&#13;
Scott Schuit 82-78-160&#13;
Jeff "Lewie" Lewis 76-86-162&#13;
Tom Agassi 83-81-164&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Marquette&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
in the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
WIN!&#13;
over $100&#13;
in prizes each game&#13;
• Pro Jerseys &amp; Caps&#13;
• Team Pennants&#13;
• Food (Pizza, Burgers, Etc.)&#13;
• Rec. Cir. Activity Coupons&#13;
• Packer Game Ticket Drawing&#13;
FREE&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
But you must sign in,&#13;
get a door ticket&#13;
and be in attendance&#13;
to be eligible to win.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
8:00 p.m. - Parkside Union&#13;
Monday, Night September 18&#13;
DENVER BRONCOS -VS- BUFFALO BILLS&#13;
THE WEEK AHEAD&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Sept. 16 Home vs. Rosary College-1:30&#13;
Sept. 20 Home vs. Lawrence U.~4:00&#13;
J.V. Soccer&#13;
Sept. 14 Home vs. Wheaton--4:00&#13;
Sept. 18 Home vs. National College~4:00&#13;
Golf&#13;
Sept. 17-at UW-Green Bay Invite-TBA&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Sept. 15-16 at I.U.P.U.1.-6:00-10:00&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
Sept. 16 Home-Midwest Collegiate Open~12:45&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Sept. 16 Home-Midwest Collegiate Open-12:00&#13;
Lady netters look for big results this year&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
If volleyball matches were&#13;
won on optimism, then Park's&#13;
1989 women's volleyball team&#13;
should have great success.&#13;
; 'We're looking to have a&#13;
good season, better than&#13;
last", said head coach Terry&#13;
Paulson. Paulson was referring&#13;
to the teams 31 and 23&#13;
record last season. While&#13;
those numbers are not too impressive,&#13;
Paulson thinks of&#13;
his present team as "Having&#13;
a good nucleus", this nucleus&#13;
consists of four key returning&#13;
players.&#13;
Senior Nancy Hoch was an&#13;
Ail-American last season and&#13;
is an excellent outside hitter.&#13;
Senior Nicole Pacione, was&#13;
an All-District player, who&#13;
led the nation in assists as a&#13;
junior. Colleen Ryan, a junior&#13;
this season, is a 5'11" middle&#13;
hitter who was All-District&#13;
last season. This trilogy will&#13;
also serve as team captains.&#13;
Paulson also cited Lara&#13;
Niecula as pivotal in the&#13;
team's success.&#13;
Besides those four players,&#13;
coach Paulson is relying on a&#13;
good attitude by the rest of&#13;
his team to key victories.&#13;
"This team is very hard&#13;
working and enthusiastic",&#13;
said Paulson, expressing&#13;
more optimism of his girls.&#13;
The team has already&#13;
played two matches and now&#13;
possess a one and one record.&#13;
September 1st, they opened&#13;
the season by losing in&#13;
straight games to Madison's&#13;
Badgers. "Our team was too&#13;
tired for that match", said&#13;
Paulson. Parkside recovered&#13;
to beat Oshkosh by what&#13;
Paulson referred to as;&#13;
"Playing well in spots".&#13;
If the team is going to fulfill&#13;
it's goal this season, it will&#13;
need to play well not only in&#13;
spots, but for a majority of&#13;
the season. "Our goal is to&#13;
win districts, bi-districts and&#13;
eventually qualify for nationals",&#13;
said Paulson.&#13;
Ranger defense packs blanks in Badger guns&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside Ranger soccer&#13;
team played 120 minutes&#13;
of shut-out defense last Wednesday&#13;
in gaining a draw&#13;
against the Wisconsin&#13;
Badgers.&#13;
In what coach Rick Kilps&#13;
deemed a "moral victory,"&#13;
Ranger goal-keeper Stan Adnerson&#13;
recorded 14 saves in&#13;
blanking the Cardinal &amp; Red.&#13;
The tie also broke the&#13;
Badgers string of 10 straight&#13;
over the Rangers.&#13;
Despite the score, much of&#13;
the game was wide open and&#13;
end-to-end, with the Rangers&#13;
pressure defense limiting the&#13;
Badgers scoring opportunities&#13;
to just 14 shots-on-goal and 9&#13;
corner kicks.&#13;
Offensively, despite being&#13;
outshot 13-6, Parkside put together&#13;
some impressive&#13;
drives. Freshmen Ron Knestrict&#13;
and Morten Aksglaede&#13;
set the tone with strong shots&#13;
that missed the mark 10&#13;
minutes into the game. "I'm&#13;
impressed with the play of&#13;
the freshmen so far this&#13;
year," said Kilps after the&#13;
draw. "We had more offense&#13;
in this game than we've had&#13;
in a long time against Wisconsin."&#13;
But the Ranger defense was&#13;
the story. After allowing the&#13;
Badgers to get of three shots&#13;
in the first three minutes,&#13;
Parkside's defenders, led by&#13;
the play of Mike Riley and&#13;
Chris Ryan, settled down to&#13;
take some of the pressure off&#13;
of Anderson. With just seconds&#13;
remaining in the game,&#13;
a Ranger defensive wall&#13;
turned away a Badger free&#13;
kick to preserve the shut-out&#13;
and gain the the tie.&#13;
Parkside, who is already&#13;
without all time leading scorere&#13;
Jens Hansen (sprained&#13;
ankle), faced a few anxious&#13;
moments when Anderson collided&#13;
with Badger forward&#13;
Brett LaFerrera in the waning&#13;
moments of the final&#13;
overtime. Anderson, after&#13;
being down for several moments,&#13;
was able to finish the&#13;
contest.&#13;
The tie was Anderson's first&#13;
complete game shut-out of&#13;
the year, raising his record to&#13;
1-0-1, moving the team's&#13;
mark to 2-0-1. Wisconsin, the&#13;
first of seven Division I&#13;
teams Parkside will meet this&#13;
year, moved its record to 1-0-&#13;
2.&#13;
"I can't say enough about&#13;
the kids for following the&#13;
game plan, having a few good&#13;
chances, and shutting them&#13;
down in the back," added&#13;
Kilps. "Sure, I would have&#13;
liked to win but I'm very&#13;
Anderson at goal happy with the tie,"</text>
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              <text>Campus reacts to Dean dismissal</text>
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              <text>Editorial ...&#13;
The guest editorialt;'is week is an open&#13;
letter from the United Council.&#13;
See it on Page 6&#13;
nside ...&#13;
Minority enrollments up at&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;side. Page 2&#13;
RangerFesl to rock Union&#13;
Square. Page 3&#13;
Check out Sam's music review&#13;
on Faith No More.&#13;
Page 4&#13;
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 4 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
Campus reacts to Dean dismissal&#13;
Dennis Clarke&#13;
News Editor&#13;
DennisDean, a OW-Parkside&#13;
professor of English and humanities,&#13;
was fired by the OW System&#13;
BoBrd of Regents after it decided&#13;
J)elID was indeed guilty of four&#13;
~of SClluaJ harasSment of stu-&#13;
",llelWeen 1985 and 1991.&#13;
Tempt481yreplacementshave&#13;
found for the three classes&#13;
was inslructing this semes-&#13;
.. Dean, a tenured faculty memj",&#13;
blldbeen involved with Parktide&#13;
since its inception in 1%8.&#13;
''Currently we have three different&#13;
people handling Dean's&#13;
classes," said Donald Kummings,&#13;
professorof English at OW-Park·&#13;
side and chairman of the English&#13;
department "They have plenty of&#13;
experience in teaching these&#13;
classes, so 1felt pretty good about&#13;
lhefactthstwedidgetgood people&#13;
to replace him."&#13;
Kummings reports that students&#13;
seem to be handl ing the&#13;
change well.&#13;
"1' veheard a few reports," said&#13;
Kummings, "and mainly they suggest&#13;
to me that students are very&#13;
glad to have this situation resolved&#13;
and have some stability in the&#13;
classes, which they deserve and&#13;
should have had in the first place.&#13;
"They (students) are happy 10&#13;
have the new instructors because&#13;
professor Dean, perhaps understandably,&#13;
was distressed and unhappy&#13;
toward the end."&#13;
Kummings reported that he is&#13;
hopeful that the quest for a permanent&#13;
replacement for Dean will run&#13;
smoothly and relatively quickly.&#13;
"I think that the department is&#13;
going to be discussing a replacernentfor&#13;
him as early as next week,"&#13;
said Kurnmings.&#13;
"We will go through a normal&#13;
recruitment process," commented&#13;
Howard Cohen, Dean of the School&#13;
of Liberal Arts.&#13;
Both Cohen and Kummings&#13;
indicated that they felt the entire&#13;
Dean controversy has been an unndian&#13;
policy change&#13;
eing debated by many&#13;
Nick Zabn&#13;
Assistant News Editor&#13;
COlltroversy has arisen surroundingthe&#13;
legitimacy of certain&#13;
persons claiming 10 be American&#13;
Indians,as shown in a report from&#13;
TheCapital Times.&#13;
"A state board wants the UniversityofWisconsin&#13;
10screen stucems&#13;
woo claim 10 be American&#13;
Indiansas a way to prevent fraud,"&#13;
aboard member said.&#13;
Cunently, UW students need&#13;
onlyto identify themselves as an&#13;
Amen.can Indi.an to be considered&#13;
one. By making that claim they&#13;
qUalifyfor grants and SChOI~Ships .&#13;
targeted for needy minorities.&#13;
the Theproblem, some say, is that ,&#13;
UW system does not check or SC:e" these applicants, so students&#13;
w 0 have no Indian background&#13;
aredefraudingthe university with-&#13;
OUttheirknowledge.&#13;
~dmissions adviser Chris&#13;
hi deeds. an American Indian&#13;
19~seIf,Ii.gores two-thirds of the&#13;
UW~?Can Indians students at&#13;
'"!'beMadison are self-identified.&#13;
III b8e Students account for as&#13;
Ilolirti as $500 ,0p0e0r year m., rruty&#13;
grants and aid," he said.&#13;
Manydeeds contends that&#13;
some "check in the box" Indians&#13;
are getting money they don't deserve&#13;
and which should be going to&#13;
other minorities.&#13;
UW administralOrsresponded&#13;
that Manydeeds' estimates were&#13;
off and said they have no recorded&#13;
evidence of actual abuse. "&#13;
Andrea "Tess" Arenas, acting&#13;
OW system special assistant on&#13;
minority affairs, wiUtalk to the 13-&#13;
member state board in Stevens&#13;
Point.&#13;
The board, created in 1979,&#13;
advises the state superintendent,&#13;
Board of Regents, the Higher Educational&#13;
Aids Board and the Vocational,&#13;
Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board on all matters related to&#13;
American Indian education.&#13;
Arenas said she is still gathering&#13;
information about the issue and&#13;
the university has not decided&#13;
whether a policy change is needed.&#13;
Board chairman Mr.&#13;
Pyatskowit, said the state board,&#13;
whose members are appointed by&#13;
the governor, will probably ask the&#13;
UW to implement some sort of&#13;
screening process. "I think they&#13;
have to look at their policy," he&#13;
said.&#13;
fortunate, albeit necessary, occurrence.&#13;
"1 think we all very much&#13;
regretted the circumstances that&#13;
led to his dismissal and wish that&#13;
none of this would have happened,"&#13;
said Cohen. "Nobody&#13;
takes any pleasure in there having&#13;
10be a dismissal of a tenured&#13;
faculty member.&#13;
''On the other hand," continued&#13;
Cohen, "he was found 10have&#13;
committed acts that justify dismissal.&#13;
I think it's good that the&#13;
University took that step, given&#13;
what they found."&#13;
Kummings reflected&#13;
Cohen's attitude. "It certainly is&#13;
unfortunate for Dennis Dean, but&#13;
it is very unfortunate for his students,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Kummings added that he felt&#13;
bad about the rate at which matters&#13;
proceeded in the case.&#13;
"Maybe the University could have&#13;
done something a little differently&#13;
over the summer," he sug-&#13;
Continued on Page 2&#13;
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1992&#13;
Long wait: students wait patiently as food service personnel&#13;
acclimate themselves 10the new charging system. The&#13;
system will soon, according 10Union Director Bill Niehbur,&#13;
cut waiting time significantly.&#13;
November is earliest date for tuition decision&#13;
Alan R, Cook&#13;
and Dennjs Clarke&#13;
News Writers&#13;
UW-Parkside students anxious&#13;
about 1993-94 tuition costs&#13;
can expect no immediate relief&#13;
for their worries from the Universitv&#13;
of Wisconsin Board of Regents.&#13;
No official decision about&#13;
next year's tuition costs will be&#13;
announced until November or&#13;
later.&#13;
"No decisions have been&#13;
made ...Nodecisions will be made&#13;
in the immediate future," stated&#13;
Judith Temby, secretary of the&#13;
Board, in a September 17 telephone&#13;
interview.&#13;
Tembyexplained the process&#13;
that the Board of Regents follows&#13;
as it deliberates on tuition costs.&#13;
At their last meeting, Board members&#13;
received a detailed study&#13;
paper that presents a variety of&#13;
options, ranging from "~o increases&#13;
at all" 10"substanual percentage&#13;
increases."&#13;
At theirOclObermeeting, the&#13;
Board of Regents will adopla set&#13;
of basic principles based on this&#13;
study. Not until November, Temby&#13;
said, when they begin their biennial&#13;
budget review, wiU actual figures&#13;
and percentages be discussed. Only&#13;
after that can an official decision and&#13;
announcement be expected.&#13;
However, there has been much&#13;
said concerning the possible tuition&#13;
increases recently.&#13;
U At Wisconsin universities, a&#13;
frrst-rate education is still very affordable,"&#13;
noted Governor Tommy&#13;
Thompson. "I want to keep it that&#13;
way."&#13;
UW Board of Regents George&#13;
Steil echoed the governor's sentiments.&#13;
"We all agree that DOneof us&#13;
want to see double-digit inflation on&#13;
the rate oftuition and that this would&#13;
be something that would be totally&#13;
unacceptable 10this board."&#13;
Steil wished to put an end to&#13;
fears that the Board of Regents would&#13;
approve a 22.2 percent tuition increase&#13;
that had been recommended&#13;
by UW System administration.&#13;
OW administrators had recommended&#13;
three separate tuition options&#13;
to raise faculty and academic&#13;
staff salaries. The other two options&#13;
called for increases of 13.6 or 12.7&#13;
percent.&#13;
It appears unlikely that large&#13;
tuition increases in the future will •&#13;
garner much support either.&#13;
Milton Neshek, the chairman&#13;
of the Governor's Compensation&#13;
Commission told the Board of Regents&#13;
that "dramatic annual increases&#13;
in tuition rates should be&#13;
avoided" and that double-digit tuition&#13;
hikes "probably would not be&#13;
acceptable."&#13;
Neshek did however add that&#13;
tuition, as well as state aid 10 the&#13;
university. must increase in order&#13;
to maintain the quality of education&#13;
throughout the UW System.&#13;
"The system is at risk if we continue&#13;
along the current path," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Steil was confident that an&#13;
acceptable remedy to the financial&#13;
bind in which theUW SySlemfinds&#13;
itself can be found.&#13;
"1 think that we'll be able to&#13;
work it out with the state of Wisconsin,"&#13;
said Steil, "and then we&#13;
would be able 10 hold the tuition&#13;
under the ten percent and keep it in&#13;
single digits."&#13;
1an nside ...&#13;
Minority enrollments up at&#13;
UW-Parkside. Page 2&#13;
RangerFest to rock Union&#13;
Square. Page 3&#13;
'"'"IEV\IS&#13;
Editorial ...&#13;
The guest editorial this week is an open&#13;
letter from the United Council.&#13;
See it on Page 6&#13;
Check out Sam's music review&#13;
on Faith No More.&#13;
Page 4&#13;
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 4 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1992&#13;
Campus reacts to Dean dismissal&#13;
Dennis Clarke&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dennis Dean, a UW-Parkside&#13;
professor of English and humanities,&#13;
~ fired by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents after it decided&#13;
J)aD wa, indeed guilty of four&#13;
_,.asofsexual harassment of sLubetweell&#13;
1985 and 1991.&#13;
Temporary replacements have&#13;
found for the three classes&#13;
Dell was instructing this semesDean,&#13;
a tenW'ed faculty memiler,&#13;
bad been involved with Parkside&#13;
since its inception in 1968.&#13;
"Currently we have three different&#13;
people handling Dean's&#13;
ctas.,es," said Donald Kummings,&#13;
professor of English at UW-Parkside&#13;
and chainnan of t.he Engli h&#13;
department ''They have plenty of&#13;
experience in teaching these&#13;
ctas.,es, so I fell pretty good about&#13;
thef.:tthat wedidgetgoodpeople&#13;
to replace him."&#13;
Kummings reports th l students&#13;
seem to be handling t.he&#13;
change wen.&#13;
"I'veheardafewreports,"said&#13;
Kummings, "and mainly they suggest&#13;
to me that students are very&#13;
glad to have this situation resolved&#13;
and have some stability in the&#13;
classes, which they deserve and&#13;
should have had in the first place.&#13;
''They (students) are happy to&#13;
have the new instructors because&#13;
professor Dean, perhaps understandably,&#13;
was distressed and unhappy&#13;
toward the end."&#13;
Kummings reported that he is&#13;
hopeful that the quest for a pennanent&#13;
replacemem for Dean will run&#13;
smoothly and relatively quickly.&#13;
"I think that the department is&#13;
going to be discussing a replacement&#13;
for him as early as next week,"&#13;
said Kummings.&#13;
'We will go through a nonnal&#13;
recruitment process," commented&#13;
Howard Cohen, Dean of the School&#13;
of Liberal Arts.&#13;
Both Cohen and Kummings&#13;
indicated that they felt the entire&#13;
Dean controversy has been an unndian&#13;
policy change&#13;
eing debated by many&#13;
Nick Zahn&#13;
Aaistant New Editor&#13;
Cmttroversy has arisen surrounding&#13;
the legitimacy of certain&#13;
JlttSOOs claiming to be American&#13;
Indians, as shown in a report from&#13;
The Capital Times.&#13;
"A state board wants t.he University&#13;
of Wisconsin to screen students&#13;
who claim to be American&#13;
Indians as a way to prevent fraud,"&#13;
a board member said.&#13;
Currently, UW students need&#13;
only ro identify themselves as an&#13;
American Indian to be considered&#13;
one .. By making that claim, they&#13;
qualify for grants and scholarships&#13;
targeted for needy minorities.&#13;
the Theproblem,somesay,isthat&#13;
UW 5Ystem does not check or&#13;
st;:e" these applicants, so students&#13;
w O have no Indian background&#13;
are defrauding the university without&#13;
their knowledge.&#13;
Ma Admissions adviser Chris&#13;
h" 0Ydeeds, an American Indian&#13;
1~~self, fi_gures two-thirds of the&#13;
UW-~~ Indians students at&#13;
~'4\IJ50ll are self-identified.&#13;
much students account for as asssooooo . . llOri , per year m m1-&#13;
ty grants and aid," he said.&#13;
Manydeeds contends that&#13;
some "check in the box" Indians&#13;
are getting money they don't deserve&#13;
and which should be going to&#13;
other minorities.&#13;
UW administrators responded&#13;
that Manydeeds' estimates were&#13;
off and said they have no recorded&#13;
evidence of actual abuse.&#13;
Andrea "Tess" Arenas, acting&#13;
UW system special assistant on&#13;
minority affair , wiU talk lo the 13-&#13;
member state board in Stevens&#13;
Point.&#13;
The board, created in 1979,&#13;
advi the state superintendent,&#13;
Board of Regents, the Higher Educational&#13;
Aids Board and the V ocational,&#13;
Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board on all matters related to&#13;
American Indian education.&#13;
Arenas said she is still gathering&#13;
information about the issue and&#13;
the university has not decided&#13;
whether a policy change is needed.&#13;
Board chafrman Mr.&#13;
Pyatskowit, sajd the state board,&#13;
whose members are appointed by&#13;
the governor, will probably ask the&#13;
UW to implement some sort of&#13;
screening process. "I think they&#13;
have to look at their policy," he&#13;
said.&#13;
fortunate, albeit necessary, occurrence.&#13;
"I think we all very much&#13;
regretted the circumstances that&#13;
led to his dismissal and wish that&#13;
none of th.is would have happened,"&#13;
said Cohen. "Nobody&#13;
lalces any pleasure in there having&#13;
to be a dismissal of a tenured&#13;
faculty member.&#13;
"On the other hand," continued&#13;
Cohen, "he was found to have&#13;
committed acts that justify dismissal.&#13;
I think it's good that the&#13;
University took that step, given&#13;
what they found."&#13;
Kummings reflected&#13;
Cohen's attitude. "It certainly is&#13;
unfortunate for Dennis Dean, but&#13;
it is very unfortunate for his students,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Kumm in gs added that he felt&#13;
bad about the rate at which matters&#13;
proceeded in the case.&#13;
"Maybe t.he University could have&#13;
done something a little differently&#13;
over the summer," he sug-&#13;
Continued on Page 2&#13;
Long wait: students wait patiently as food service personnel&#13;
acclimate themselves to the new charging system. The&#13;
sy tern will soon, according to Union Director Bill Niehbur,&#13;
cut waiting time significantly.&#13;
November is earliest date for tuition decision&#13;
Alan R.Cook&#13;
and Dennis Clarke&#13;
News Writers&#13;
UW-Parkside students anxious&#13;
about 1993-94 tuition costs&#13;
can expect no immediate relief&#13;
fortheirworriesfrom the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Board of Regents.&#13;
No official decision about&#13;
next year's tuition costs will be&#13;
announced until November or&#13;
later.&#13;
"No decisions have been&#13;
made ... No decisions will be made&#13;
in the immediate future," stated&#13;
Judith Temby, secretary of the&#13;
Board, in a September 17 telephone&#13;
interview.&#13;
Temby explained t.he process&#13;
that the Board of Regents follows&#13;
as it deliberates on tuition costs.&#13;
Attheirlastmeeting,Boardmembers&#13;
received a detailed study&#13;
paper that im:sents a v~ety _of&#13;
options, ranging from _no increases&#13;
at all" to "substanual percentage&#13;
increases."&#13;
At their October meeting, the&#13;
Board of Regents will adopt a set&#13;
of basic principles based on this&#13;
study. Not until November, Temby&#13;
said, when they begin their biennial&#13;
budget review, will actual figures&#13;
and percentages be discussed. Only&#13;
after that can an official decision and&#13;
announcement be expected.&#13;
However, there has been much&#13;
said concerning the possihle tuition&#13;
increases recently.&#13;
"At Wisconsin universities, a&#13;
first-rate education is still very affordable,"&#13;
noted Governor Tommy&#13;
Thompson. "I want to keep it that&#13;
way."&#13;
UW Board of Regents George&#13;
Steil echoed t.he governor's sentiments.&#13;
"We all agree that none of us&#13;
want to see double-digit inflation on&#13;
the rate of tuition and that this would&#13;
be something that would be totally&#13;
unacceptable to this board."&#13;
Steil wished to put an end to&#13;
fears that t.he Board of Regents would&#13;
approve a 22.2 percent tuition increase&#13;
that had been recommended&#13;
by UW System administration.&#13;
UW administrators had recommended&#13;
three separate tuition options&#13;
to raise faculty and academic&#13;
staff salaries. The other two options&#13;
called for increases of 13.6 or 12.7&#13;
percent.&#13;
It appears unlikely that large&#13;
tuition increases in the future will&#13;
gamer much support either.&#13;
Milton Neshek, the chainnan&#13;
of the Governor's Compensation&#13;
Commission told the Board of Regents&#13;
that "dramatic annual increases&#13;
in tuition rates should be&#13;
avoided" and that double-digit tuition&#13;
hikes "probably would not be&#13;
acceptable."&#13;
Neshek did however add that&#13;
tuition, as well as state aid to the&#13;
university, must increase in order&#13;
to maintain t.he quality of education&#13;
throughout the UW System.&#13;
"The system is at risk if we continue&#13;
along the current palh," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Steil was confident that an&#13;
acceptable remedy to the financial&#13;
bind in which the UW System finds&#13;
itself can be found.&#13;
"I think that we'll be able to&#13;
work it out with t.he state of Wisconsin,"&#13;
said Steil, "and then we&#13;
would be able to hold the tuition&#13;
under the ten percent and keep it in&#13;
single digits."&#13;
I&#13;
Dennis Clarke&#13;
News Editor&#13;
According to preliminary figures,&#13;
enrollment of minority students&#13;
at UW-P;ui&lt;side is up drastically&#13;
this fall, as compared to figures&#13;
from this time last year.&#13;
After the second day of registration,&#13;
figures showed that there&#13;
were485 minority studentsenrolled&#13;
at UW·Parkside, a 22.4 percent&#13;
increase over last fall's figures.&#13;
Minority enrollment includes Hispanic,&#13;
African American, Asian and&#13;
American Indian snidents.&#13;
Gary Grace, assistant chancellor&#13;
for student affairs, feels there&#13;
are various reasons for the jump in&#13;
minority enrollment. "It's a lot of&#13;
little positive steps," said Grace.&#13;
"It's recruitment, it's retention, it's&#13;
staffing. The efforts wc'veputinto&#13;
making a diverse staff - that makes&#13;
a difference."&#13;
Anthony Brown, Director of&#13;
the Center for Educational and&#13;
CulLural Advancement, agrees.&#13;
"There are a lot of students being&#13;
retained at this university," said&#13;
Brown. "I think that's where the&#13;
biggest increase in (minority) enrollment&#13;
is."&#13;
However, Brown notes that&#13;
there are other factors involved in&#13;
the increase. "First you should look&#13;
at the demographics in tl)e cities of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine. Even in just&#13;
the past five years, the African&#13;
American numbers went up from&#13;
about 3000 to 5000 now," commented&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Grace claimed that help provided&#13;
by Student Support Services&#13;
assisted in boosting the minority&#13;
enrollment figures. Brown agrees,&#13;
but Iccls thal programs such as&#13;
Student Support Services have been&#13;
inaccurately labeled as minority&#13;
programs.&#13;
''There are a lot of federal programs&#13;
that are stigmatized as minority&#13;
programs - like welfare, social&#13;
service programs. We have&#13;
federal programs on this campus&#13;
that are being wrongly stigmatized&#13;
as serving only minority students.&#13;
''There's only one program in&#13;
this university - that's our program&#13;
(the Center for Educational and&#13;
Can't save?&#13;
At ECU, saving is easy&#13;
... and you earn more!&#13;
Regular savings earns 4.55%,&#13;
yielding 4.63%!&#13;
Serving all UW Parkslde&#13;
emptoyees and students.&#13;
Iw~J Tallent HalfRm. 286 595-2150 9,30-4,00&#13;
CoraiReef&#13;
'Eatery &amp;Pub&#13;
Thursday Nite College Nite&#13;
$2 Cover • Disc Jockey&#13;
"MUS1'CD'" r, severy Thursday&#13;
DOUBLE TROUBLE&#13;
8oz. Shorties Miller or Lite: 2 for $1&#13;
$1 Shots&#13;
302-58th 51. it Kenosha q&#13;
~2~~65~2~-O~5~O2J."5~~. 6~58~-8~7~3~~~' r&#13;
hood so wonderfully," and, "Iwis~&#13;
we had more ume; there are s&#13;
many things I'd like to eXPlor&#13;
WIith you. " e&#13;
"He wanted to have sex wi~&#13;
me," Thome testified.&#13;
Jackie Arena, also a studenlil&#13;
Thome's English class with Dean,&#13;
had received an F on her finalE~&#13;
glish composition folder and had&#13;
gone todiscussher grade withDean&#13;
Arena testified that Dean askedha&#13;
if she would like to go for a wall.&#13;
Dean and Arena walked IOtheClUil&#13;
country trails where Dean a,kej&#13;
questions about Arena's parenb&#13;
and whether or not she had a boy.&#13;
friend. Arena also testified Ihai&#13;
Dean asked her, "How imponam~&#13;
this grade to you?" and that healsi&#13;
offered to "work something OUL"&#13;
Arena also testified that Deal&#13;
had grabbed her hand, pulled h~&#13;
and said, "You seem lonely and&#13;
insecure."&#13;
Kimberly Meyer testified Ihai&#13;
while she was a student of Dean's&#13;
in the spring of 1988, she approached&#13;
Dean in his office 10 d~cuss an assignment. Dean and&#13;
Meyer took a walk to Petrifying&#13;
Springs park, about a quarter or a&#13;
mile from campus. There, Meye!&#13;
claimed Dean kissed her.&#13;
Wanda Leiting, a UW-Park·&#13;
side graduate, claimed during Ihe&#13;
hearing that in 1985 Dean had&#13;
leaped on her in his office and&#13;
kissed her. Leiting said that she&#13;
Continued on Page 4&#13;
Dr. McGillicuddy's" Jagermeister .. Rumple Minz&#13;
Editor's Note:&#13;
Due to last-minute changes in layout,&#13;
a portion of the Dennis Dean&#13;
Story in last week's issue was accidentallyomitted.&#13;
Also, in a reference&#13;
to the charges against Dean,&#13;
the charges were incorrectly referred&#13;
to as assault - they were in&#13;
fact charges of harassment. The&#13;
Ranger News apologizes to its&#13;
readers and to Tala Hay, the story's&#13;
writer.&#13;
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Tut RA. 'GER Ntws, Page 2&#13;
Minority enrollments up at UW-Parkside Dean dismissal&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
gested.&#13;
Dennis Clarke&#13;
News Editor&#13;
According to preliminary figures,&#13;
enrollmenL of minority sludents&#13;
at OW-Parkside is up drastically&#13;
this fall, as compared to figures&#13;
from this time last year.&#13;
After the second day of registration,&#13;
figures showed that there&#13;
were485 minority students enrolled&#13;
at UW-Parkside, a 22.4 percent&#13;
increase over last fall's figures.&#13;
Minority enrollment includes Hispanic.&#13;
African American, Asian and&#13;
American Indian students.&#13;
Gary Grae~, assislanL chancellor&#13;
for student affairs, feels there&#13;
are various reasons for the jump in&#13;
minority enrollment. "It's a lot of&#13;
little positive steps," said Grace.&#13;
"It's recruitment, it's retention, it's&#13;
staffing. The efforts we'veputinto&#13;
making a di verse staff - that makes&#13;
a difference."&#13;
Anthony Brown, Director of&#13;
the Center for Educational and&#13;
Cultural Advancement, agrees.&#13;
"There are a lot of students being&#13;
retained al this university," said&#13;
Brown. "I think that's where' the&#13;
biggesL increase in (minority) enrollment&#13;
is."&#13;
However, Brown notes that&#13;
Lherc are other factors involved in&#13;
the increase. "First you should look&#13;
at the demographics in the cities of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine. Even in just&#13;
the past five years, the African&#13;
American numbers went up from&#13;
about 3000 to 5000 now," commented&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Grace claimed that help provided&#13;
by Student Support Services&#13;
assisted in boosting the minority&#13;
enrollment figures. Brown agrees,&#13;
buL fc~Is thal progrnms such as&#13;
StudentSupportServiceshavebeen&#13;
inaccurately labeled as minority&#13;
programs.&#13;
"There are a lot of federal programs&#13;
that are stigmatized as minority&#13;
programs - like welfare, social&#13;
service programs. We have&#13;
federal programs on this campus&#13;
that are being wrongly stigmatized&#13;
as serving only minority students.&#13;
"There's only one program in&#13;
this university- that's our program&#13;
(the CenLer for Educational and&#13;
Can't save?&#13;
At ECU, saving is easy&#13;
... and you earn more!&#13;
Regular savings earns 4.55%,&#13;
yielding 4.63%!&#13;
Serving all UW Parkside&#13;
employees and students.&#13;
I_Jti:Qi_l Tallent Half Rm. 286 595-2150 9:30-4:00&#13;
Cora[~ef&#13;
T.atery&amp;Pu6&#13;
Thursday Nite College Nite&#13;
$2 Cover • Disc Jockey&#13;
"M . D ' " Th d us1c r. s every urs ay&#13;
DOUBLE TROUBLE&#13;
8oz. Shorties Miller or Lite: 2 for $1&#13;
$1 Shots&#13;
Dr. McGillicuddy's Jagermeister RumrleMinz&#13;
Cullural Advancement) - Lhat has a&#13;
specific mission of serving African&#13;
American, Native American, Asian&#13;
and Hispanic students," concluded&#13;
Brown. Brown also notes, however,&#13;
that the CECA does not only&#13;
serve minority students.&#13;
"We don't only help minority&#13;
students," said Brown. "We help&#13;
everyone. We never tum anyone&#13;
away." With that in mind, Brown&#13;
suggested that attention be turned&#13;
to the needs of other groups of&#13;
students also.&#13;
"We should start looking at&#13;
other students whose needs aren't&#13;
being mcL," uolc&lt;l Brown. "Like&#13;
international students for example.&#13;
Our minority enrollments are going&#13;
up; international student enrollments&#13;
are going down. What's&#13;
going on there? Do they have a&#13;
home (at UW-Parkside)?"&#13;
Preliminary figures indicated&#13;
that foreign student enrollmem&#13;
stood at 27, down one student from&#13;
lasL year's mark. Enrollmenl of&#13;
while students was down slightly&#13;
also, to 4,222. Final enrollment&#13;
figures should be available soon.&#13;
Editor's Note:&#13;
Due to last-minute changes in layout,&#13;
a portion of the Dennis Dean&#13;
Story in last week's issue was accidentally&#13;
omitted. Also, in a reference&#13;
to the charges against Dean,&#13;
the charges were incorrectly referred&#13;
to as assault - they were in&#13;
fact charges of harassment. The&#13;
Ranger News apologizes to its&#13;
readersandk&gt; Tara Hay, the story's&#13;
writer.&#13;
"I'm very sorry for the inconvenience&#13;
caused," concluded&#13;
Kummings, "and feel good only&#13;
about the fact we were able to find&#13;
others to replace him (Dean)."&#13;
In November 1991, Dean was&#13;
accused of sexually harassing four&#13;
female students in separate incidents&#13;
between 1985 and 1991.&#13;
Atan open hearing before UWParkside'&#13;
s Campus Rights and&#13;
Responsibilities Committee,&#13;
Dean's accusers testified against&#13;
him , detailing the alleged instances&#13;
of harassment.&#13;
Melinda Thome, a student in&#13;
Dean's English Composition 101&#13;
class in the spring of 1991, filed a&#13;
sexual harassment complaint&#13;
against Dean after he allegedly&#13;
made improper advances toward&#13;
her.&#13;
Thome had received a D on&#13;
her final English composition&#13;
folder, and when she went to Dean&#13;
to discuss the grade, he in tructed&#13;
her to make up two assignm nts&#13;
that had not been completed. Upon&#13;
completion of the work, Thome&#13;
went to Dean• s office, at which&#13;
time Dean asked her if she wanted&#13;
to take a walk with him.&#13;
Thome agreed, thinking that&#13;
Dean wanted to discuss her grade.&#13;
However, Thome testified Lhat&#13;
Dean began asking her per onal&#13;
questionsandmalcing uchremarks&#13;
as, "You blossomed into womanhood&#13;
o wonde~ully ;· and, "I Wisl&#13;
we had more ume; there are SI&#13;
m~ny thi~g. I'd like to cxplori&#13;
with you.&#13;
"He wanted Lo have sex wi&#13;
me," Thome t.estified.&#13;
Jackie Arena, also a student'&#13;
Thome's English class with&#13;
had received an F on her final En&#13;
glish composition folder and&#13;
gone to discuss her grade with Dean&#13;
Arena testified that Dean asked he&#13;
if he would like to go for a Walk&#13;
Dean and Arena walked to the&#13;
country trail~ wher; Dean a~&#13;
question about Arena's paren&#13;
and whether or not he had a bo&#13;
friend. Arena also testified&#13;
Dean asked her, "How import.ant&#13;
this grad to you?" and that hea&#13;
offered to "work something out&#13;
Arena also te tified that&#13;
had grabbed h r hand, pulled&#13;
and aid, "You seem lonely&#13;
in ecure."&#13;
Kimberly Meyer te tified&#13;
while he wa a tud nt of Dean&#13;
in the spring of I 988, he a&#13;
pro chcd Dean in hi office tod·&#13;
cu s an as ignmenl. Dean an&#13;
Meyer took a walk to Pctrifyin&#13;
Spnngs park. a ut a quarter of&#13;
mile from campu . There, Mey&#13;
claimed Dean kissed h r.&#13;
Wanda L iting, a UWide&#13;
gr du Le, claimed during&#13;
hearing that in 19 Dean&#13;
leaped on her in hi office&#13;
kissed her. L iting . id thaL&#13;
Continued on Page&#13;
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Movies&#13;
Intramural Sports&#13;
Res. Halls Progran 1s&#13;
(Your Proi;ram Idea!)&#13;
Cultural Events&#13;
Theme Parties&#13;
Guest Lectures&#13;
Call 595· 2338 or Stop in by Moln D124 for \pplications or More Information.&#13;
Sponsored by: Student A~sistance Program&#13;
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$&#13;
;pU'm~ber~23::::",:19~9:..:2:.-- ~T~I~IE:.'R~A~N~G~EP~~Ra~Ng:~.eE~~3W~S~,&#13;
RangerFest to rock UW·Parkside's Union Square&#13;
Sam Manchester&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The first official union of&#13;
"RaclR. e Posse" bands Dead Fly B ckodabus, and Indig. o&#13;
BOY'd :setlO take place this Fri-&#13;
Roll/1Septem ber 25 in UWday.&#13;
. S ParkSide'S Unton quare.&#13;
The show is. entitled&#13;
RaDgerFest'92 and Its mtenuons&#13;
are w raiseas much money as possibleforThe&#13;
Ranger News and 1IS&#13;
publication.&#13;
SlatedIMtanat5pm. the show&#13;
'llgo on non-slOp until midnight&#13;
:'isguanmu:ed lO.satisfythroughouttheentire&#13;
evenmg.&#13;
RangerNews Editor-In-Chief&#13;
JUL' Andy Patchcame up with the idea&#13;
~ for a show featuring local talent&#13;
dha&#13;
and saw the oPPOrtunity 10have an&#13;
enjoyable benefit without the&#13;
hassles of competition or contracts.&#13;
The bands are all playing for&#13;
free and have volunteered to do&#13;
their own advertising and promotion&#13;
(with a little help from The&#13;
Ranger News).&#13;
Featured in -the show will be&#13;
OW -Parkside' s very Own Len&#13;
Anhold, better known at the popularclub&#13;
"Chain Reaction" as DJLA.&#13;
Anhold will serve as MC for the&#13;
show and will play requests before,&#13;
after and between the hands' performances.&#13;
Dead Fly Boy, winner of last&#13;
year's Battle of the Bands, is known&#13;
for their explosively energetic live&#13;
performance and will surely live&#13;
up to the audience's expectations.&#13;
Featuring a powerful&#13;
combination of thrash and alternative&#13;
influences, Dead Fly Boy relies&#13;
on a relentless rhythm section&#13;
and the intense vocals of lead man&#13;
Terry Kaprelian to whip their&#13;
crowds into a frenzied, moshing&#13;
rage. Joining Kaprelian are: Darrell&#13;
Damrow, drums; Bruce Ralston,&#13;
guitar; Steve Itzenhuiser, bass and&#13;
Steve Truesdell, guitar.&#13;
Look for the upcoming release&#13;
of Dead Fly Boy's second demo,&#13;
"In Search Of The Eternal Buzz,"&#13;
to be sold at Mainstream Music&#13;
ani! other local venues.&#13;
Also based out of Racine,&#13;
Backodabus blends funk, rap and&#13;
rock to transcend modem music&#13;
standards and give a live performance&#13;
tfiat is sure 10make-anyone&#13;
get up and move.&#13;
Centered around vocalist&#13;
Nathan Jackson's soulful tones,&#13;
Backodabus can be compared W&#13;
anyone from Living Colour to&#13;
Soundgarden witheut losing their&#13;
original sound.&#13;
Guitarist Mike Short relies on&#13;
a funky, Hendrix-esque style to&#13;
color Jackson's melodies while&#13;
rhythm sec lion partners Joey&#13;
Talbott (bass) and Sam Manchester&#13;
(drums) flow effortlessly&#13;
through tempo changes ranging&#13;
anywhere from heavv funk 10 old&#13;
school hip hop 10 heavy metal.&#13;
The energetic sound of&#13;
Backodabus can be heard on their&#13;
recently released debut demo&#13;
"Backodabus" and can be purchased&#13;
either at RangerFest or&#13;
j~ Art education lecture at UW-Parkside ~n'l : a,&#13;
'd~&#13;
ani&#13;
yi~ "PoinlSofView," a discussion&#13;
of, OIlCODternporaryarteducationfea-&#13;
'eya t'winglectures by three nationally&#13;
distinguishedarteducators, will be 'art· heldon Thursday, September 24,&#13;
: iii inthe Communication Arts Buildhoc&#13;
ing,room129, at5pm. an: Speakers David Baker, Erik&#13;
sir Forrestand Martin Rayala will dise&#13;
I cussissues such as philosophical&#13;
trends and curriculum strategies.&#13;
Bakerearned his doctorate in&#13;
art education from Pennsylvania&#13;
SIlIle University. He has written&#13;
many articles about the theory and&#13;
practice of an education. From&#13;
S4;ott Sheriff&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
197810 1989 he was the editor of&#13;
"Shoot Arts." Baker was president&#13;
of the National Art Education Association&#13;
from 1989 until 1991.&#13;
Currently, he is a professor of art&#13;
and head of the Art Education Division&#13;
at OW-Milwaukee. '&#13;
Forrest earned his degrees at&#13;
the Edinburg College of Art and&#13;
the University of Edinburg in Scotland.&#13;
He received his doctorate in&#13;
art education at Ohio State University&#13;
where he is currently a professor&#13;
of art. He has published several&#13;
articles on art curriculum topics&#13;
including British art education.&#13;
A former dean of the Fine Arts&#13;
Department at UW -Parkside,&#13;
Forrest currently has a solo exhibit&#13;
in the Art Gallery. Twenty of his&#13;
acrylic and oil paintings will be on&#13;
display until September 24.&#13;
Rayala earned his doctorate in&#13;
art education at the University of&#13;
Oregon. He is now working at the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public&#13;
Instruction where he is a state art&#13;
education consultant. Rayala has&#13;
been a leader in curriculum reform&#13;
in visual art instruction throughout&#13;
the state.&#13;
Admission 10 the Thursday,&#13;
September 24 lecture is free with a&#13;
reception to follow. For more information,&#13;
call the Art Department&#13;
at 595-2581.&#13;
The ParksideUnion&#13;
• COMMUNITY LOCKERS&#13;
• DININGROOM&#13;
• BAR &amp; GRILL&#13;
• CATERING&#13;
• ROOM RESERVATIONS&#13;
• l'RAVELPROGRAMS&#13;
• lARGE SCREEN TV&#13;
• TABLEGAMES&#13;
• BoWLING&#13;
* MEETING RO )MS&#13;
* TICKET SALt S&#13;
* CHECK CAStlfNG&#13;
* POSTAL DROI&gt;S&#13;
* FAX SERVICI&#13;
* STAMP MACI nNE&#13;
• COPY MACHl 'ffi&#13;
* FULLY ACCE.,mLE&#13;
• BILLIARDS&#13;
* FOOSBALL&#13;
* VIDEO GAMES&#13;
• TABLE TENNIS&#13;
• SPECIAL PROGRAMS&#13;
* OUTDOOR PATIO&#13;
* CINEMA THEA IRES&#13;
• INFO CENTER&#13;
• TVLOUNGE&#13;
Mainstream Music in Racine or&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Youthful Indigo Round joins&#13;
the line-up with their unique version&#13;
of "alternative-meets-jazz"&#13;
style that brings up images of Led&#13;
Zeppelin mixed with Screaming&#13;
Trees (if you can believe that).&#13;
Indigo Round will open the&#13;
live show with their set at approximately&#13;
6pm and will be preceded&#13;
byDJLA.&#13;
So come out Friday, September&#13;
25 10 support local bands and&#13;
Parkside's Ranger News publication.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Ranger office or from band members&#13;
for $3 and will be sold at the&#13;
door for $5. For more information,&#13;
call the Ranger office at 595-2295&#13;
or 2287.&#13;
Study time: Student Grant Larson gets an early start on his&#13;
mester's duties, wowng inlcntly on a pa r in the Librarv.&#13;
Wednesday Noon Concert Series&#13;
Chris Tishuk&#13;
Assistant Feature Editor&#13;
"Serving Campus and Community"&#13;
The Wednesday Noon Concert&#13;
Series, sponsored by the&#13;
music department, begins today&#13;
with a performance by&#13;
Brassworks, a professional&#13;
brass quintet. This free concert&#13;
will be held in Room D-118 of&#13;
the Communication Arts Building.&#13;
BrassWorks has performed&#13;
in recital at the Milwaukee Performing&#13;
Arts Center and the City&#13;
of Chicago Cultural Center.&#13;
During the noon concert,&#13;
BrassWorks will perform music&#13;
by G.F. Handel, Gordon Jacob,&#13;
and Victor Ewald.&#13;
Free concerts will be held&#13;
throughout the semester in the&#13;
Wednesday Noon Concert Series&#13;
and will be in Comm Arts&#13;
D-118. Upeomingperformances&#13;
include:&#13;
Sep. 30- Sebronette Barnes, soprano,&#13;
Cincinnati, performing&#13;
music by African-American&#13;
women.&#13;
Oct. 7- Soundings, a southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin-based chamber&#13;
music ensemble.&#13;
Oct. 14- Piano ensemble, James&#13;
McKeever professor and chair&#13;
of Music Department at OWParkside.&#13;
Oct. 21- Case High Master Singers&#13;
directed by Sue Crawley.&#13;
Oct, 28- Voices of Parkside,&#13;
James Kinchen, associate professor&#13;
of music, UW-Parkside,&#13;
director.&#13;
Nov. 4- Barbara Enders, pianist&#13;
and faculty member, College of&#13;
Lake County.&#13;
Nov. 11- Student Recital, UWParks&#13;
ide music students.&#13;
Nov. 18- Badger High School&#13;
Chorus, Gordon Wisniewski,&#13;
director.&#13;
Nov. 25- Brass Ensemble and&#13;
Percussion Ensemble, Randall&#13;
Ruback and Robert Rummage,&#13;
adjunct music faculty.&#13;
Dec. 2- Student Recital, UWParkside&#13;
music student&#13;
Dec. 9- Chamber Orchestra,&#13;
Pasquale Laurino, adjunct music&#13;
faculty, OW -Parkside, director.&#13;
Dec. 16- Guitar Ensemble,&#13;
George Linquist, music lecturer,&#13;
UW-Parkside, director.&#13;
All concerts are free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
~ember23_:,,_1_99_2 _______________________ -"--_____________________ ~T~•~•E~R~A~N~'G~F.~R~E~W~,P~a~g~e..:..3 ~&#13;
RangerFest to rock UW-Parkside's Union Square&#13;
Sam Manchester&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
'Jbe first official union of&#13;
. n,..,.,,." bands Dead Fly "Racine cu.,.,., .&#13;
Backodabus, and Indigo&#13;
soy,d 15• set to take place this Fri-&#13;
Roun . UW&#13;
day, Septe~bers 25 m -&#13;
f'Mkside's Uruon quare.&#13;
The show i_s . enti~led&#13;
RangerFest '92 and its mtenuons&#13;
are to raise as much money as posd • -&#13;
sible for The Ranger News an 1ts&#13;
publication.&#13;
Slared 10 ~tart at 5pm. I he show&#13;
ill go 00 non-stop until midnight :xi is guaranteed to~tisf y throughout&#13;
the entire evenmg.&#13;
Ranger News Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Andy Parch came up with the idea&#13;
for 8 shoW featuring local talent&#13;
and saw the opportunity to have an&#13;
enjoyable benefit without the&#13;
has le ofcompetitionorcontracts.&#13;
The bands are all playing for&#13;
free and have volunteered to do&#13;
their own advertising and promotion&#13;
(with a little help from The&#13;
Ranger News).&#13;
Featured in -the show will be&#13;
UW-Parkside's very own Len&#13;
Anhold, better known at the popular&#13;
club "Chain Reaction" as DJLA.&#13;
Anhold will serve as MC for the&#13;
show and will play requests before,&#13;
after and retween the hands' performances.&#13;
Dead Fly Boy, winner of last&#13;
year's Battle of the Bands, is known&#13;
for their explosively energetic live&#13;
perfonnance and will surely live&#13;
up to the audience's expectations.&#13;
Featuring a powerful&#13;
combination of thrash and alternative&#13;
influences, Dead Fly Boy relies&#13;
on a relentless rhythm section&#13;
and the intense vocals of lead man&#13;
Terry Kaprelian to whip their&#13;
crowds into a frenzied, moshing&#13;
rage. Joining Kaprelian are: Darrell&#13;
Damrow, drums; Bruce Ralston,&#13;
guitar; Steve ltzenhuiser, bass and&#13;
Steve Truesdell, guitar.&#13;
Look for the upcoming release&#13;
of Dead Fly Boy's second demo,&#13;
"In Search Of The Eternal Buzz,"&#13;
to he sold at Mainstream Music&#13;
and other local venues.&#13;
Also based out of Racine,&#13;
Backodabus blends funk, rap and&#13;
rock to transcend modem music&#13;
standards and give a live performance&#13;
tfiat is sure to make anyone&#13;
Art education lecture at UW-Parkside&#13;
Scott Sheriff&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
"Points of View," a discu ion&#13;
on contemporary art education fealUring&#13;
lectures by three nationally&#13;
distinguished art educators, will be&#13;
held oo Thursday, September 24,&#13;
in die Communication Arts Building.&#13;
room 129, at 5pm.&#13;
Speakers David Baker, Erik&#13;
Fone.,taod Martin Rayala will disam&#13;
issues such as philo phical&#13;
uends and curriculum strategies.&#13;
Baker earned his doctorate in&#13;
an educalion from Penn ylvania&#13;
Srale University. He has written&#13;
many articles about the theory and&#13;
piactice of art education. From&#13;
1978 to 1989 he was the editor of&#13;
"S hool Arts." Baker was president&#13;
of the National Art Education Association&#13;
from 1989 until 1991.&#13;
Currently, he is a professor of art&#13;
and head of the Art Education Division&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee. ~&#13;
Forrest earned his degrees at&#13;
the Edinburg College of Art and&#13;
the University ofEdinburg in Scotland.&#13;
He received his doclOrate in&#13;
art education at Ohio State Uni verity&#13;
where he is currently a professorof&#13;
art He has published several&#13;
articles on art curriculum topic&#13;
including British art education.&#13;
A former dean of the Fine Arts&#13;
Department at UW-Parkside,&#13;
Forrest currently has a solo exhibit&#13;
in the Art Gallery. Twenty of his&#13;
acrylic and oil paintings will be on&#13;
display until September 24.&#13;
Rayala earned his doctorate in&#13;
art education at the University of&#13;
Oregon. He is now working at the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public&#13;
Instruction where he is a state art&#13;
education consultant. Rayala has&#13;
been a leader in curriculum reform&#13;
in visual art instruction throughout&#13;
the state.&#13;
Admission to the Thursday,&#13;
September 24 lecture is free with a&#13;
reception to follow. For more information,&#13;
call theArtDepartment&#13;
at 595-2581.&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
"Serving Campus a11d Community"&#13;
• COMMUNITY LOCKERS&#13;
• DINING ROOM&#13;
• BAR&amp;GRILL&#13;
• CATERING&#13;
• ROOMRESERVATIO S&#13;
• TR.A VEL PROGRAMS&#13;
• LARGE SCREE TV&#13;
• TABLE GAMES&#13;
• BOWLING&#13;
* NIEETING RO )MS&#13;
* TICKET SAU S&#13;
* CHECK CASJ-1 [ G&#13;
* POSTAL DRO 1)S&#13;
* FAX SERVICI&#13;
* STAMPMACIUNE&#13;
* COPY MACHI \ffi&#13;
* FULL y ACCE )IBLE&#13;
* BILLIARDS&#13;
* FOOSBALL&#13;
* VIDEO GAMES&#13;
* TABLE TENNIS&#13;
* SPECIAL PROGRAMS&#13;
* OUTDOOR PATIO&#13;
* CINEMA THEATRES&#13;
* INFO CENTER&#13;
* TVLOUNGE&#13;
gel up and move.&#13;
Centered around vocalist&#13;
Nathan Jackson's soulful tones,&#13;
Backodabus can be compared to&#13;
anyone from Living Colour to&#13;
Soundgarden without losing their&#13;
original sound.&#13;
Guitarist Mike Short relies on&#13;
a funky, Hendrix-esque style to&#13;
color Jackson's melodies while&#13;
rhythm section partners Joey&#13;
Talbott (bass) and Sam Manchester&#13;
(drums) flow effortlessly&#13;
through tempo changes ranging&#13;
anywhere from heavy funk to old&#13;
school hip hop to heavy metal.&#13;
The energetic sound of&#13;
Backodabus can be heard on their&#13;
recently released debut demo&#13;
"Backodabus" and can be purchased&#13;
either at RangerFest or&#13;
Mainstream Music in Racine or&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Youthful Indigo Round joins&#13;
the line-up with their unique version&#13;
of "alternative-meets-jazz."&#13;
style that brings up images of Led&#13;
Zeppelin mixed with Screaming&#13;
Trees (if you can believe that).&#13;
Indigo Round will open the&#13;
live show with their set at approximately&#13;
6pm and will be preceded&#13;
byDJLA.&#13;
So come out Friday, September&#13;
25 to support local bands and&#13;
Parkside'c; Ranizer News puhlication.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Ranger office or from band members&#13;
for $3 and will be sold at the&#13;
door for $5.. For more infonnation,&#13;
call the Ranger office at 595-2295&#13;
or 2287.&#13;
Study time: Student Grant Larson gets an early start on hi!mester's&#13;
duties, working iutently on a pa r in the Libror ·.&#13;
Wednesday Noon Concert Series&#13;
Chris Tishuk&#13;
Assistant Feature Editor&#13;
The Wednesday Noon Concert&#13;
Series, sponsored by the&#13;
music department, begins today&#13;
with a performance by&#13;
BrassWorks, a professional&#13;
brass quintet. This free concert&#13;
will be held in Room D-118 of&#13;
the Communication Arts Building&#13;
.&#13;
Brass Works has performed&#13;
in recital at the Milwaukee Performing&#13;
Arts Center and the City&#13;
of Chicago Cultural Center.&#13;
During the noon concert,&#13;
BrassWorks will perfonn mu ic&#13;
by G.F. Handel, Gordon Jacob,&#13;
and Victor Ewald.&#13;
Free concerts will be held&#13;
throughout the semester in the&#13;
Wednesday Noon Concert Series&#13;
and will be in Comm Arts&#13;
D-118. Upcomingperformances&#13;
include:&#13;
Sep. 30- Sebronette Bame , soprano,&#13;
Cincinnati, performing&#13;
music by African-American&#13;
women.&#13;
Oct. 7- Soundings, a southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin-based chamber&#13;
music ensemble.&#13;
Oct.14- Piano ensemble, James&#13;
McKeever professor and chair&#13;
of Music Department at UWParkside.&#13;
Oct. 21- Case High Master Singers&#13;
directed by Sue Crawley.&#13;
Oct. 28- Voices of Parkside,&#13;
James Kinchen, associate professor&#13;
of music, UW-Parkside,&#13;
director.&#13;
Nov. 4- Barbara Enders, pianist&#13;
and faculty member, Colleire of&#13;
Lake County.&#13;
Nov. 11- Student Recital, UWParkside&#13;
music students.&#13;
Nov. 18- Badger High School&#13;
Choru , Gordon Wisniewski,&#13;
director.&#13;
ov. 25- Brass Ensemble and&#13;
Percus ion Ensemble, Randa11&#13;
Ruback and Robert Rummage,&#13;
adjunct music faculty.&#13;
Dec. 2- Student Recital, UWParkside&#13;
music student&#13;
Dec. 9- Chamber Orchestra,&#13;
Pasquale Laurino, adjunct musicfaculty,&#13;
UW-Parkside,director.&#13;
Dec. 16- Guitar Ensemble,&#13;
George Linquist, music lecturer,&#13;
UW-Parkside, director.&#13;
All concerts are free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
THE RANGERNEWS,Page 4&#13;
Music Review&#13;
Faith No More breaks the mold on "Angel Dust"&#13;
Sam Manchester&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
lines.&#13;
Eccentric guitarist Jim Martin&#13;
adds his usual battering-yet-tasteful&#13;
guitar lines to the arrangement&#13;
and continues to persevere in a&#13;
to lake a back-up role on a number&#13;
of songs, however, to keyboardist&#13;
Roddy Bottum and his powerful,&#13;
gothic organ style. Bottum is definitely&#13;
the glue that keeps these&#13;
driving songs together and his overbearing&#13;
sound sets Faith No More&#13;
apart from other modern "alternative"&#13;
bands.&#13;
The rhythm section consists&#13;
of bassist Billy Gould and drummer&#13;
Mike Bordin who, as in the&#13;
past, continues IDhammer out relentless&#13;
patterns that range anywhere&#13;
from funk to jazz.&#13;
"Angel Dust" may notgoplatinum&#13;
like its predecessor and may&#13;
notgetunendingplaytimeonMTV&#13;
but, as expected, is getting rave&#13;
reviews from everybody and will&#13;
go down as one of the most ground&#13;
breaking efforts by a band that was&#13;
never even expected to be taken&#13;
seriously.&#13;
teen energetically diverse songs&#13;
ranging from the bump and grind&#13;
funk of "Caffeine," "Be Aggressive,"&#13;
and "Everything's Ruined,"&#13;
to the surreal, gothic tones of''R V"&#13;
and "Smaller And Smaller," this&#13;
disc somehow breaks the barriers&#13;
between heavy metal, funk, rap,&#13;
and jazz.&#13;
Vocalist Mike Patton once&#13;
again proves that he is perhaps the&#13;
most original, if not the strangest&#13;
singer in the modcrn music world&#13;
with his frantic, unending vocal&#13;
melodies.&#13;
The strangest aspect of&#13;
Patton's vocals, however, is the&#13;
fact that he can actually sing. Going&#13;
from guttural barks to beautiful&#13;
harmonies ("Land Of Sunshine,"&#13;
"MidLife Crisis"), Patton's style&#13;
controls the mood of all the songs&#13;
and his voice flows effortlessly in&#13;
and out of the pounding rhythm&#13;
world of technical, unfeeling guitarists.&#13;
His best work comes on the&#13;
eerie "RV," where he drifts from&#13;
metal grinding crunch to serene,&#13;
delicate inflections. Martin tends&#13;
Afiertheir multi-platinum success&#13;
on "The Real Thing," alternative&#13;
funksters Faith No More could&#13;
have easily rehashed the same material&#13;
with a slightly different sound&#13;
to achieve repeated commercial security&#13;
(as I am sure their record&#13;
company would have loved) but,&#13;
much like their music, these five&#13;
eclectic musicians wcntagainst the&#13;
norm and ignored what was expected&#13;
of them.&#13;
"Angel Dust," Faith No&#13;
More's most recent release on&#13;
Slash/Reprise Records, is an intricate&#13;
bombardment of musical&#13;
sounds and textures which only&#13;
slightly resembles their previous&#13;
work.&#13;
To describe" Angel Dust" in a&#13;
word - hectic! Consisting of thir-&#13;
"The strangest aspect&#13;
of Patton's vocals,&#13;
however, is the&#13;
fact that he can actually&#13;
sing."&#13;
- September 23, 1992 ---&#13;
Dean dismissal&#13;
Continued from Page 2 ..........&#13;
discussed the matter with Doaa1d&#13;
Kummings, a UW-Parkside Pmfessor&#13;
of English, a couple Ytal&#13;
later and filed a sexual harassmelit&#13;
complaint against Dean in 1991.&#13;
Dean denied making Illy&#13;
sexual advances and claimed !hat&#13;
any incidence of touching duriuB&#13;
his walks with students wereeilber&#13;
accidental or were meantasarneans&#13;
of assisting the students along the&#13;
paths.&#13;
"I do not preyon IllY'Ludcn~'&#13;
Dean testified. '&#13;
Dean explained during the&#13;
hearing that he felt the adminislja.&#13;
tion at Parkside wished to dismi~&#13;
him because of his opposition 10&#13;
certain policies set forth by 0Jan.&#13;
cellor Sheila Kaplan.&#13;
He later Slated in an interview,&#13;
"There is a lot of dissatisfaetiOll&#13;
among the faculty with reganllo&#13;
administrative policies. A signifi.&#13;
cant number of the faculty ...thiDi&#13;
(Kaplan) is destroying the Univer.&#13;
sity.'&#13;
After the hearing was completed,&#13;
the Campus Rights 8Jld&#13;
Responsibilities Committee inDecember&#13;
1991 agreed that Dean was&#13;
guilty of sexual harassment and&#13;
recommended that Dean be suspended&#13;
without pay for one year&#13;
and forced ID receive counseling.&#13;
That recommendation went 10&#13;
Kaplan, who in January 1992 announced&#13;
that she disagreed wiih&#13;
the committee's recommendatiea&#13;
and intended to recommend to the&#13;
UW Board of Regents, which&#13;
would ultimately decide Dean's&#13;
future at Parkside, that Dean be&#13;
dismissed permanently.&#13;
The case at that point went to&#13;
the Board of Regents, and a decision&#13;
was made at the Board's meet·&#13;
ing in Madison September 10-11.&#13;
Notice&#13;
The UW-Parkside&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Association's Rock the&#13;
Vote Committee welcomes&#13;
Democratic Vice&#13;
Presidential Candidate&#13;
Albert Gore to the Comn&#13;
Arts Theatre Thursday,&#13;
Sep. 24 at 7 pm.&#13;
Gore will speak&#13;
on the Democratic&#13;
party's economic platform&#13;
live, via satellite.&#13;
Phoned in questions&#13;
will be taken from the&#13;
audience.&#13;
The evening's&#13;
program will also include&#13;
local political&#13;
and Jabor leaders, including&#13;
Bill Buzza, Paul&#13;
Whiteside, Sam Peeker&#13;
and Rudy Kuzel. The&#13;
program is free and&#13;
open to the general&#13;
public. Refreshments&#13;
will be provided.&#13;
September 23, 199i&#13;
!T~H!_E~R~AN~G~E~R~N~E~W~S~,Pa~ge:_4~------------------------------_;;...-------------------&#13;
Music Review&#13;
Faith No More breaks the mold on "Angel Dust"&#13;
Sam Manchester&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
After their multi-platinum success&#13;
on "The Real Thing," alternative&#13;
funksters Faith No More could&#13;
have easily rehashed the same material&#13;
withaslightlydifferentsound&#13;
to achieve repeated commercial security&#13;
(as I am sure their record&#13;
company would have loved) but,&#13;
much like their music, these five&#13;
eclectic musicians went against the&#13;
norm and ignored what was expected&#13;
of them.&#13;
"Angel Dust," Faith No&#13;
More's most recent release on&#13;
Slash/Reprise Records, is an intricate&#13;
bombardment of musical&#13;
sounds and textures which only&#13;
slightly resembles their previous&#13;
work.&#13;
To describe" Angel Dust" in a&#13;
word - hectic! Consisting of thirteen&#13;
energetically diverse songs&#13;
ranging from the bump and grind&#13;
funk of "Caffeine," "Be Aggressive,"&#13;
and "Everything's Ruined,"&#13;
tothesurreal,gothic tonesof''RV"&#13;
and "Smaller And Smaller," this&#13;
disc somehow breaks the barriers&#13;
between heavy metal, funk, rap,&#13;
andjaz.z.&#13;
Vocalist Mike Patton once&#13;
again proves that he is perhaps the&#13;
most original, if not the strangest&#13;
singer in the modem music world&#13;
with his frantic, unending vocal&#13;
melodies.&#13;
The strangest aspect of&#13;
Patton's vocals, however, is the&#13;
fact that he can actually sing. Going&#13;
from guttural barks to beautiful&#13;
harmonies ("Land Of Sunshine,"&#13;
"Mid.Life Crisis"), Patton's style&#13;
controls the mood of all the songs&#13;
and his voice flows effortlessly in&#13;
and out of the pounding rhythm&#13;
lines.&#13;
Eccentric guitarist Jim Martin&#13;
adds his usual battering-yet-tasteful&#13;
guitar lines to the arrangement&#13;
and continues to persevere in a&#13;
"The strangest aspect&#13;
of Patton's vocals,&#13;
however, is the&#13;
fact that he can actually&#13;
sing."&#13;
world of technical, unfeeling guitarists.&#13;
His best work comes on the&#13;
eerie "RV," where he drifts from&#13;
metal grinding crunch to serene,&#13;
delicate inflections. Martin tends&#13;
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to take a back-up role on a number&#13;
of songs, however, to keyboardist&#13;
Roddy Bottum and his powerful,&#13;
gothic organ style. Bottum is definitely&#13;
the glue that keeps these&#13;
drivingsongstogelherandhisoverbearing&#13;
sound sets Faith No More&#13;
apart from other modem "alternative"&#13;
bands.&#13;
The rhythm section consists&#13;
of bassist Billy Gould and drummer&#13;
Mike Bordin who, as in the&#13;
past, conunues to hammer out relentless&#13;
patterns that range anywhere&#13;
from funk to jazz.&#13;
"Angel Dust" may not go platinum&#13;
like its predecessor and may&#13;
not get unending playtime on MTV&#13;
but, as expected, is getting rave&#13;
reviews from everybody and will&#13;
go down as one of Lhe most ground&#13;
breaking efforts by a band that was&#13;
never even expected to be taken&#13;
seriously.&#13;
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monitor, keyboard, and mouse, MS-DOS 5.0, GeoWorksTM Ensemble installed.&#13;
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To order immediately call:&#13;
S0o-688-8985&#13;
To inquire call:&#13;
800-543-2294&#13;
Come visit the bookstore and see our computer on display --- Library Learning Center • 553_2301&#13;
Dean dismissal&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
discussed Lhe mauer wilh Donald&#13;
Kummings, a UW-Parkside PQ.&#13;
fessor of Engli h, a couple )'QJ&#13;
later and filed a exuaJ rutl'assnieat&#13;
complaint against Dean in 199].&#13;
Dean denied making Illy&#13;
sexual advance and claimed 1h11&#13;
any incidence of touching dllina&#13;
his walks with students were either&#13;
accidental or were meanL as ameais&#13;
of assisting the tudents along the&#13;
paths.&#13;
"IcJonoLprcyon my ~Lu&lt;lcnu&#13;
Dean testified. '&#13;
Dean explained during the&#13;
hearing that he felt the administration&#13;
at Parkside w~ hed to dismm&#13;
him because of hi oppo ·ition 10&#13;
certain policie t fonh by Oian.&#13;
cellor Sheila Kaplan.&#13;
He later staled in an interview,&#13;
"There 1 a lot of di sati facb&lt;II&#13;
among the faculty with regard 10&#13;
admini u-ative policie . A ignifi.&#13;
cant number of the fa ulty ... think&#13;
(Kaplan) i d troying the Universily."&#13;
After the hearing wa completed,&#13;
the Campu Rights and&#13;
Respon ibiliti CommittccinDecem&#13;
ber I 991 agr that Dean was&#13;
guilty of sexual hara mem and&#13;
recommended that Dean be SUS·&#13;
pended without pay for one yr.v&#13;
and forced to receive coun' ling.&#13;
That recommendation went 10&#13;
Kaplan, who in January 1992 announced&#13;
that he disagreed with&#13;
the committee's recommendation&#13;
and intended to recommend to the&#13;
UW Board of Regent , which&#13;
would ultimately decide Dean's&#13;
future at Parkside, that Dean be&#13;
dismis d permanently.&#13;
The case at that point went to&#13;
the Board of Reg nts, an&lt;l a d~i·&#13;
sion was made at the Board' meet·&#13;
ing in Madison September 10-11.&#13;
Notice&#13;
The UW-Parkside&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Association's Rock the&#13;
Vote Committee welcomes&#13;
Democratic Vice&#13;
Presidential Candidate&#13;
Albert Gore to the Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre Thursday,&#13;
Sep. 24 at 7 pm.&#13;
Gore will speak&#13;
on the Democratic&#13;
party's economic platform&#13;
live, via satellite.&#13;
Phoned in questions&#13;
will be taken from the&#13;
audience.&#13;
The evening's&#13;
program will also include&#13;
local political&#13;
and labor leaders, including&#13;
Bill Buzza, Paul&#13;
Whiteside, Sam Pecker&#13;
and Rudy Kuzel. The&#13;
program is free and&#13;
open to the general&#13;
public. Refreshments&#13;
will be provided.&#13;
-seple~m:bet:.:23:..:._1_99_2 '" _'TilE =- --2R~A~NG~ENR~EW~SP.~ag~e5&#13;
~ Homecoming 1992&#13;
al &lt;,&#13;
~&#13;
elll&#13;
~&#13;
SI1l~&#13;
991,&#13;
~ an)&#13;
dill&#13;
I~&#13;
ei~&#13;
nl:&lt;ll&#13;
'&amp; ~ MicheleBelongia&#13;
FrenchClub&#13;
'n~ Sophomore&#13;
COlI&gt; CarUse Newman&#13;
ali TheRanger News&#13;
lIlt, Senior&#13;
I"'"&#13;
Connie Dinges&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Lilia Sotelo&#13;
Hispanic Organization&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
r:'King Candidates&#13;
II I&#13;
~ Here are the seven young men who&#13;
~ti: hope to capture the crown in the&#13;
hie!&#13;
,~~'I ,racefor UW-Parkside Homecomnil&#13;
ing King 1992.&#13;
lea'&#13;
lelI'&#13;
.11.&#13;
de&#13;
I&#13;
III&#13;
Albert RoSCOeill&#13;
MusicClub&#13;
Sophotnore&#13;
Shauna Hodges&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Diana Yaris&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Len Anhold&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Senior&#13;
Jon Barca&#13;
French Club&#13;
Junior&#13;
Morten Sunde&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Junior&#13;
Randy Cruz&#13;
Hispanic Organization&#13;
Junior&#13;
Kevin Williams&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Stacy Leonard&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
KrisMuehr&#13;
Chorale&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Queen Candidates&#13;
These eight lovely young ladies will&#13;
vie for UW-Parkside Homecoming&#13;
Queen 1992.&#13;
o OllfeCOffiln RANGER BEAR FOR PRESIDENT&#13;
lIonday and Tvaday, sept. 28 and 29&#13;
Vote for Homecoming Queen and King&#13;
Mo1lnaro Concourse - 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.&#13;
WedDeaday,sept. 30&#13;
Recruitment Fair&#13;
Upper Maln Place - 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.&#13;
Sponsored by: Student Oganlzatlon Council&#13;
Coronation&#13;
Unton Square - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
You Laugh, You Lase (Comedy Game Show)&#13;
Free to UWP to students. non-students $3&#13;
Unton Square - 8 p.m.&#13;
Th1Ullday, OCt. 1&#13;
ScavenBer Hunt&#13;
Begin at Unton Bazaar - 4:30 p.m,&#13;
Road Damage (Reggae band)&#13;
free to UWP students. non-students $3&#13;
Unton Pad - 8 p.m. - 11p.m.&#13;
Borlfire&#13;
Outside Unton Pad - 8:45 p.m.&#13;
FrIday, OCt. 2&#13;
WalklRlUlfor Parkslde VoilUlteer Program&#13;
Inner Loop Rd at Phy Ed Building - Noon&#13;
VIctDIy Party: castno Night &amp;; Record-A-Htt&#13;
Unton Bazaar &amp; Square - 8 p.m. - 12p.m.&#13;
Free to UWP students. non-students $3 ,&#13;
saturday, OCt. 3&#13;
FaaJl1yISttYfv. Students Soccer Game- Noon&#13;
5eptem_be_r-:-23_,_199_2 ___________________________________ ~~~~~~~~~&#13;
""" -- THE RA, 'GER NEWS, Page 5&#13;
,I~&#13;
---....:&#13;
al&#13;
Homecoming 1992&#13;
I'--.&#13;
Michele Belongia&#13;
French Club&#13;
ni;, Sophomore&#13;
Carlise Newman&#13;
The Ranger New&#13;
Senior&#13;
Connie Dinges&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Lilia Sotelo&#13;
Hispanic Organization&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
King Candidates&#13;
as- Here are the seven young men who&#13;
hope to capture the crown in the&#13;
race for UW-Parkside Homecoming&#13;
King 1992.&#13;
11.&#13;
111 Felix Aulozzi&#13;
, PSGA&#13;
Junior&#13;
Albert Roseoe ID&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Jon Barca&#13;
French Club&#13;
Junior&#13;
Morten Sunde&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Junior&#13;
Shauna Hodges Stacy Leonard&#13;
Black Student Organization Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Kris Muehr&#13;
Chorale&#13;
Sophomore Sophomore Sophomore&#13;
Diana Yaris&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Len Anhold&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Senior&#13;
Randy Cruz&#13;
Hispanic Organization&#13;
Junior&#13;
Kevin Williams&#13;
Black Student Organization&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Queen Candidates&#13;
These eight lovely young ladies will&#13;
vie for UW-Parkside Homecoming&#13;
Queen 1992.&#13;
• onrecom1n RAi"'\JGER BEAR FOR PRESIDENT&#13;
Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 28 and 29&#13;
Vote for Homecoming Queen and King&#13;
Molinaro Concourse - 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.&#13;
Wedneaday,Sept.30&#13;
Recruitment Fair&#13;
Upper Main Place - 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.&#13;
Sponsored by: Student Qganizatlon Council&#13;
Coronation&#13;
Union Square - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
You Laugh. You Lose (Comedy Gaine Show)&#13;
Free to UWP to students, non-students $3&#13;
Union Square - 8 p.m.&#13;
Thunday, Oct. 1&#13;
Scavenger Hwlt&#13;
Begin at Union Bazaar - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Road Damage (Reggae band)&#13;
Free to UWP students, non-students $3&#13;
Union Pad - 8 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Borifire&#13;
Outside Union Pad - 8:45 p.m.&#13;
Jl'rlday, Oct. 2&#13;
Walk/Rwtfor Parkside Volwtteer Program&#13;
Inner Loop Rd at Phy Ed Building - Noon&#13;
Victory Party : Casino Night &amp; Record-A-Hit&#13;
Union Bazaar &amp; Square - 8 p.m. - 12 p.m.&#13;
Free to UWP students, non-students $3&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 3&#13;
Faculty/StoJf v. Students Soccer Game - Noon&#13;
-------:-' ----=~-... September 23,I99l&#13;
~,&#13;
TilE RANGER NEWS, Page 6&#13;
~Le~tt~er~s -t=o -th=e:E.-d-i_to-r---------- with abstinence; unwanledPlt I 1&#13;
nancy or death from AJDSis~&#13;
price paid for sin. 1&#13;
Ifyou have concluded illall I&#13;
am ProChoice, you are COrnct. \&#13;
This does not mean tha1111tint I&#13;
thatabortion isa Wonderfultbing I&#13;
and I would not want 10 suggell !&#13;
thatitis.lbelievethatawoman's (&#13;
body is her own and she shouid e&#13;
not be forced to continue a PIt!" '&#13;
nancy if she doesn't Want 10. L I&#13;
and many like me, workror &amp;uar. 0&#13;
anteed health care, high quali~ ,&#13;
affordable child care, improved \&#13;
COnLrdCCpUOn, and quallly edu.&#13;
cation regardless of neighbor. S&#13;
hood. Women would then be I&#13;
assurcdthat thechildrcn theYbear I&#13;
would have a reasonable quality ,&#13;
of life. I&#13;
The United States has 1000g II&#13;
represented freedom to people I&#13;
around the world. Certainly, the I I&#13;
freedom to control one's own' i'&#13;
body is a freedom worth proiec.&#13;
ing. ~'&#13;
K&#13;
i&#13;
Guest Editorial .&#13;
An open letter from the United Council&#13;
level, United Council intends to&#13;
assist student leaders with issues&#13;
such as access to professor evaluations,&#13;
control of student fees, availability&#13;
of child care facilities, AIDS&#13;
awareness and retention of students&#13;
of color.&#13;
Our membership choose our&#13;
direction based on principled positions&#13;
and the needs of students system&#13;
wide. We would hope that those&#13;
who oppose our pro-student posture,&#13;
do the same. Let's work together&#13;
on issues we agree-on and&#13;
work toward an understanding on&#13;
those we do not.&#13;
In it's thirty-two year history,&#13;
United Council has gained strength&#13;
from a student movement which&#13;
desires to maintain a quality education;&#13;
yet also maintains the fundamental&#13;
principle of education as&#13;
a right, therefore accessible to all.&#13;
United Council perseveres in&#13;
a time where there is a growing&#13;
influential few, who favor a privileged&#13;
system- where money, not&#13;
merit, and circumstances, not potential&#13;
- can decide whether or not&#13;
a person is allowed to beeducated.&#13;
Enjoy your semester and exercise&#13;
your right. Educate yourself and&#13;
others around you.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ProChoice leaders are often&#13;
called radical. Yet the ProChoice&#13;
platform is simple. It calls for&#13;
reproductive freedom for all&#13;
women, regardless of age, race,&#13;
or economic condition.&#13;
Reproductive freedom&#13;
means access to contraception,&#13;
natural family planning and abortion.&#13;
It aiso means freedom from&#13;
forced sterilization and unwanted&#13;
intercourse. Finally, it means&#13;
that a woman controls her own&#13;
body without interference from&#13;
government, church or other individuals.&#13;
ProLife leaders can also be&#13;
called radical. Many, including&#13;
Randall Terry, call for an end to&#13;
sexuality education (including&#13;
AIDS education), and demand a&#13;
ban on contraception as well as&#13;
abortion. The ProLife movement&#13;
demands that sexual activity&#13;
be confined to marriage and&#13;
only if the intent is procreation.&#13;
No options will be allowed for&#13;
fallible humans who can not cope&#13;
student life and services. U.C. was&#13;
also the motivating factor behind&#13;
establishing a student seat on the&#13;
Board of Regents, which guides all&#13;
policy of the UW System. .&#13;
Historically, United Council&#13;
has lead student campaigns for increased&#13;
financial aid.lower tuition,&#13;
preservation of student's rights and&#13;
improved campus safety. More recently,&#13;
U.C. has influenced System&#13;
President Lyall to accompany&#13;
the recent tuition increase (which&#13;
we feverishly fought against) with&#13;
over $4(J(J,OOO in student grants.&#13;
We are also researching the&#13;
viability of progressive tuition and&#13;
coordinating an extensive state&#13;
wide voter registration campaign&#13;
with MTV.&#13;
That does not give us an excuse&#13;
to rest on our laurels, mind&#13;
you, This is the time we must push&#13;
ahead, more aggressively than ever!&#13;
This year United Council will&#13;
seek to increase student representation&#13;
on the Board of Regents by&#13;
restructuring the selection process.&#13;
We wil! also pursue a Student&#13;
Bill of Rights though the state legislature,&#13;
as well as reintroduce legislation&#13;
which implements a tuition&#13;
cap,a tuition wavier forteaching&#13;
assistants, and legislation to&#13;
regulate Great Lakes Higher Education&#13;
Corporation. On the campus&#13;
Dear Students,&#13;
The realities of the Fall of) 992&#13;
are striking. The graduating class&#13;
of Spring '92 hasentered the worse&#13;
job market in years.&#13;
While financial aid packages&#13;
have not kept up, tuition has increased&#13;
by 7 percent. Study time is&#13;
more likely spent working an extra&#13;
job so that a student can pay for the&#13;
increasing cost of their education.&#13;
(We always thought that you were&#13;
supposed to be educated in order to&#13;
get a good job, not vice versa!)&#13;
The adult student, often a&#13;
single mother or an individual&#13;
seeking additional knowledge to&#13;
cnsurccarceradvancement.retums&#13;
toa uni versity which has littleorno&#13;
evening courses and limited&#13;
evening services.&#13;
Meanwhile aU students are&#13;
asked to pay more, incur student&#13;
loan debt, grin and bear an increasinglynegativecampusenvironment&#13;
and endure a five, six, or even&#13;
seven year plan.&#13;
Its a long way from 1960 to&#13;
1992, but United Council has consistently&#13;
fought for affordable and&#13;
accessible education for all Wisconsin&#13;
citizens. In 1976, U.c. was&#13;
instrumental in the passage of State&#13;
Statue 36.09(5), which gives students&#13;
the primary responsibility to&#13;
imptement policy that influences&#13;
-Jcnnifer Bums&#13;
r&#13;
one's faith, but the minute •I&#13;
"Christian values" arc men- A&#13;
tioned, then I get urked, I con-&#13;
sider myself fairly religious,and Ii&#13;
I can vouch that it clearly Slates&#13;
in the Bible that abortion is an&#13;
abomination to Jesus Christ.&#13;
To further mydisgust,abortion&#13;
is not even used for its flISl&#13;
intentions. Instead, now it is&#13;
used as a form of wide-spread&#13;
binhcontrol. Icannothelpbutw&#13;
ask myself, do women know&#13;
what they are doing to their bod·&#13;
ies? Cancer of the cervix isJUSI&#13;
one of the many deadly faclorS.I&#13;
hear the same old thing, and I&#13;
understand that it is their body,&#13;
but what about the human life&#13;
within the womb? There is&#13;
around a ten year waiting list w&#13;
adopt a child - ten years! And aD&#13;
because of the selfish auitude&#13;
which abortion projects.&#13;
In conclusion, I would like&#13;
to say, representing myself as a&#13;
Christian Conformist, "We mUSI&#13;
lake back control of America.&#13;
and return back to our Christian&#13;
heritage. we must go hack!"&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Iwould like to address a few&#13;
topics concerning abortion that&#13;
have outraged me. First, I'd like&#13;
to begin with the slogan prochoice&#13;
activists preach - "We&#13;
will never go back." I've heard&#13;
stories of those tragic, back-alley&#13;
abortions, but to .get things&#13;
straight, women before Roe vs,&#13;
Wade were not forced to Sllbmi t&#13;
to an illegal abortion. They had&#13;
a choice to get pregnant, and&#13;
should have paid the due responsibilities.&#13;
If they died in the process&#13;
then it was no one else's fault&#13;
except for their own choice. I'm&#13;
sure that sounds harsh, but it is&#13;
about time the truth is shed. Now,&#13;
the only moral decision, based&#13;
on my Christian heritage, would&#13;
be to set the child up for adoption,&#13;
especially in the case of&#13;
rape or incest,&#13;
In addition, many say that&#13;
women were denied making a&#13;
moral decision, based on their&#13;
Christian religious beliefs. I'm&#13;
sorry. hilt where are the religious&#13;
values? I'm not one to questions&#13;
Tammy Johnson&#13;
United Council President !&#13;
I Gabe's Gab&#13;
Brush with greatness?&#13;
Gabe Kluka&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
President Dan Quayle, and his motorcadeof&#13;
eighty-seven police cars.&#13;
Yes folks,l saw Dan"thechampeen&#13;
speller of the westurn hemisfear"&#13;
Quayle! What a treat, eh?&#13;
I was sitting at the stoplight at&#13;
the intersection of Douglas and&#13;
State in Racine, waiting for the&#13;
light to tum green so I could make&#13;
a left tum. I looked in my rearview&#13;
mirror and saw a police car coming&#13;
up behind me. There was no reason&#13;
to flee, so I figured that I had better&#13;
just stay where I was, and let thecar&#13;
go around me. Boy was I wrong.&#13;
The light was still red as I&#13;
watched thepolicecruisercome up&#13;
bchind me, and bchind him appeared&#13;
a line of cars that mustliave&#13;
stretched for four blocks. As he&#13;
neared to within a block, I thought&#13;
I heard someone yell, but I really&#13;
didn't pay attention because I was&#13;
intently watching therearview mirror.&#13;
A few seconds later I saw it,&#13;
The limosine carrying a man who&#13;
has said more amusing things than&#13;
the Marx Brothers and the Three&#13;
Stooges combined. It took me a&#13;
second to realize just exactly how&#13;
important this moment in time was,&#13;
and I peered even deeper into my&#13;
rearview mirror, hoping to catch a&#13;
glimpse of his Quayleness.&#13;
Just then, about three of&#13;
Racine's finest were pounding on&#13;
the hood of my truck telling me to&#13;
move. After I got over being&#13;
Continued on Page 7&#13;
Almost every person, once in&#13;
their life, has a brush with greatness.&#13;
What is a brush with greatness?&#13;
It is an opportunity to be&#13;
within close proximity of someone&#13;
who is at least marginally famous.&#13;
Most people catalog these experiences&#13;
in their brains just so they&#13;
can say, "Hey, I saw someone famous&#13;
the other day!" Unfortunately,&#13;
no one seems to care about&#13;
these experiences except for the&#13;
person wbo it has actually happened&#13;
to. Well, guess what? I saw&#13;
someone famous last week! Actually&#13;
I was almost run over by someone&#13;
famous, our illustrious Vice-&#13;
-Brian Matsen&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
900 Wood Road Box 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial (414) 595-2287 Business (414) 595-2295&#13;
THE RANGER NEWS STA~T&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Andrew J. PalC~&#13;
Layout Editor Annamaria Sexton&#13;
News Editor. " •............................. Dennis Clarke&#13;
Assistant News Editor Nick ZaM&#13;
Feature Editor Sam Manches~&#13;
Assistant Feature Editor __ Chris TIShU&#13;
.. Copy Editors····· Carfise Newman Kris Drewek Gabe K1uka&#13;
Sports Editor : :..len Anho~&#13;
~ssistant.sports Editor " David Debish&#13;
hoto EdItors GwenHeller, Mike Paupore&#13;
The Ranger News is published every Wednesdayduring the&#13;
academic year except over breaks and holidays.&#13;
The Ranger News is written and edited by students of UWParkside,&#13;
who are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content&#13;
munity issues. A representative sample may be published&#13;
wh~ numerous letters expressing similiar viewpoints are&#13;
recleved. Letters to the Editor should be typed and double~&#13;
spaced and include the authors name, social security number,&#13;
and telephone number. Letters may not exceed 200 words and&#13;
should be delivered to The Ranger News. Room WLLC D-&#13;
139C, before 12 pm on Friday prior to puiblication. Letters&#13;
that do not meet the aforementioned requirements. as well as&#13;
~ose c:ontaining offensive, libelous or misleading infonna~&#13;
bOn, will beretumed to the author to be rewritten. The Ranger&#13;
News reserves the right to edit allleters.&#13;
I&#13;
:~~~:~tSB~:i~:~:rM~~~..;;· ..··..···..·..·..·..···· Mi~ePSU:=&#13;
9 ·..· · Jack .. Joh&#13;
Advi.or· ..· · Judy l09sdon. Jan Nowak. Stuart Rubf18I'&#13;
Letter 10 Editor Policy&#13;
The Ranger News encOlD'ages and invites letters to the&#13;
Ed~tor. Letters disagreeing, or agreeing with an editorial,&#13;
artlcJe. or feature pUblished in The Ranger News are&#13;
welcomed,u are readers' viewpoints on campus and com~&#13;
-;;;;;;~;~===============================;:::::::::::::;~;:::Sepcembeziiiii !!_IE RANGER NEWS, Page 6&#13;
Letters to the Editor Guest Editorial .&#13;
An open letter from the United Council&#13;
Dear Students,&#13;
The realities of the Fall of I 992&#13;
are striking. The graduating class&#13;
of Spring ' 92 has entered the worse&#13;
job marlcet in years.&#13;
While financial aid packages&#13;
have not kept up, tuition has increased&#13;
by 7 percent Study time is&#13;
more likely spent working an extra&#13;
job so that a student can pay for the&#13;
increasing cost of their education.&#13;
(We always thought that you were&#13;
supposed to be educated in order to&#13;
get a good job, not vice versa!)&#13;
Th e adult sLudcnL, oflen a&#13;
single mother or an individual&#13;
see king additional knowledge to&#13;
ensure career advancement, returns&#13;
toa university which has liul e orno&#13;
ev e ning courses and limited&#13;
evening services.&#13;
Mea nwhile all students arc&#13;
a. ked to pay more , incur student&#13;
loan debt, grin and bear an increas in&#13;
gly negative campus environment&#13;
and endure a five, six, or even&#13;
se ve n year plan.&#13;
I ts a long way from 1960 to&#13;
1992, but United Council has consistently&#13;
fought for affordable and&#13;
accessible education for all Wisconsin&#13;
citizens. In 1976, U.C. was&#13;
instrumental in the passage of State&#13;
Statue 36.09(5), which gives students&#13;
the primary responsibility to&#13;
implement policy that influences&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
student life and services. U .C. was&#13;
also the motivating factor behind&#13;
establishing a student seat on the&#13;
Board of Regents, which guides all&#13;
policy of the UW System.&#13;
Historically, United Council&#13;
has lead student campaigns for increased&#13;
financial aid, lower tuition,&#13;
preservation of student's rights and&#13;
improved campus safety. More recently,&#13;
U.C. has influenced System&#13;
President Lyall to accompany&#13;
the recent tuition increase (which&#13;
we feverishly fought against) with&#13;
over $400,000 in studenL grams.&#13;
We are also researching the&#13;
viability of progressive tuition and&#13;
coordinating an extensive state&#13;
wid e voter registration campaign&#13;
with MTV.&#13;
That does not give us an excuse&#13;
to rest on our laurels, mind&#13;
you . Thi s is the time we mu st pu sh&#13;
ahead, more aggressively than ever!&#13;
This year United Council will&#13;
seek to increase student represe ntation&#13;
on the Board of Regents by&#13;
restructuring the selection process.&#13;
We wil! also pursue a Student&#13;
Bill of Rights though the state legislature,&#13;
as well as reintroduce legislation&#13;
which implements a tuition&#13;
cap.a tuition wavier for teaching&#13;
assistants, and legislation to&#13;
regulate Great Lakes Higher Education&#13;
Corporation. On the campus&#13;
level, United Council intends to&#13;
assist student leaders with is ues&#13;
such as access to professor evaluations,&#13;
control of student fees, availability&#13;
of chi ld care facilities, AIDS&#13;
awareness and retention of students&#13;
of color.&#13;
our me mbership choose our&#13;
direction based on principled positions&#13;
and the needs of students system&#13;
wide. We would hope that those&#13;
who oppose our pro-student posture,&#13;
do the same. Let's work together&#13;
on is sues we agree on and&#13;
work toward an understanding on&#13;
those we do not.&#13;
In it's th irty-two year history,&#13;
United Coun cil has gained strength&#13;
from a student movement which&#13;
desires to maintain a quality education;&#13;
yet al so maintains the fundamental&#13;
principle of education as&#13;
a right , therefore accessible to all.&#13;
United Council perseveres in&#13;
a time where there is a growing&#13;
influential fe w, who favor a privileg&#13;
ed system- where money, not&#13;
merit, and circumstances, not potential&#13;
- can decide whether or not&#13;
a person is all owed to be educated.&#13;
Enjoy your semester and exerci e&#13;
your right Educate yourself and&#13;
others around you.&#13;
Tammy Joh nson&#13;
United Cou ncil President&#13;
Brush with greatness?&#13;
Gabe Kluka&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Almost every person, once in&#13;
their life, has a brush with greatness.&#13;
What is a brush with greatness?&#13;
It is an opportunity to be&#13;
within close proximity of someone&#13;
who is at least marginally famous.&#13;
Most people catalog these experiences&#13;
in their brains just so they&#13;
can say, "Hey, I saw someone famous&#13;
the other day!" Unfortunately,&#13;
no one seems to care about&#13;
these experiences except for the&#13;
person who it has actually happened&#13;
to. Well, guess what? I saw&#13;
someone famous last week! Actu ally&#13;
I was almost run over by someone&#13;
famous, our illustrious Vice-&#13;
President Dan Quayle, and his motorcade&#13;
of eighty-seven police cars.&#13;
Yes folks, I saw Dan .. thechampeen&#13;
speller of the westum hemisfear"&#13;
Quayle! What a treat, eh?&#13;
I was sitting at the stoplight at&#13;
the intersection of Douglas and&#13;
State in Racine, waiting for the&#13;
light to tum green so I could make&#13;
a left tum. I looked in my rearview&#13;
mirrorandsawapolicecarcoming&#13;
up behind me. There was no reason&#13;
to flee, so I figured that I had better&#13;
just stay where I was, and let the car&#13;
go around me. Boy was I wrong.&#13;
The light was still red as I&#13;
watched the police cruiser come up&#13;
behind me, and behind him appeared&#13;
a line of cars that must have&#13;
stretched for four blocks. As he&#13;
neared to within a bloc k, I thought&#13;
I heard someone yell , but I reall y&#13;
didn't pay atten tion because I was&#13;
intently watching therearview mirror.&#13;
A few seconds later I saw it&#13;
The limosine carrying a man who&#13;
has said more am using things than&#13;
the Marx Brothers and the Three&#13;
Stooges combined. It too k me a&#13;
second to realize just exactl y how&#13;
important this moment in time was ,&#13;
and I peered even deeper into my&#13;
rearview mirror, hoping to catch a&#13;
glimpse of his Quay leness.&#13;
Just then, a bout th ree of&#13;
Racine's finest were pounding on&#13;
the hood of my truck telli ng me to&#13;
move. After I go t ove r being&#13;
Continued on Page 7&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press&#13;
900 Wood Road Box 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
Edtorial (414) 595-2287 Business (414) 595-2295&#13;
The Ranger News is published every Wcdnesdayduring the&#13;
academic year except over breaks and holidays.&#13;
The Ranger News is written and edited by students of UWParksidc,&#13;
who arc solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and conlenL&#13;
Letter to Editor Polk:y&#13;
The Ranger News encourages and invites letters to th&#13;
~tor. Letters disagreeing, or agreeing with an editorial~&#13;
article, or feature published in The Ranger News are&#13;
welcomcd,as are readers' viewpoints on campus and community&#13;
issues. A representative sample may be published&#13;
wh~ numerous letters expressing similiar viewpoints are&#13;
recieved. Letters to the Editor should be typed and doublespaced&#13;
and include the authors name, social security number,&#13;
and telephone number. Letters may not exceed 200 words and&#13;
should be delivered to The Ranger News, Room WLLC D-&#13;
139C, before 12 pm on Friday prior to puiblication. Letters&#13;
that do not meet the aforementioned requirements, as well as&#13;
'!"&gt;sc ':°ntaining offensive, libelous or misleading infonnatJon,&#13;
will be returned to the author to be rewritten. The Ranger&#13;
News reserves the ri t to edit all leters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ProChoice leaders are of ten&#13;
calledradical. YettheProChoice&#13;
platfonn is simple. It calls for&#13;
reproductive freedom for all&#13;
women, regardless of age, race,&#13;
or economic condition.&#13;
Reproductive freedom&#13;
means access to contraception,&#13;
naturalfamilyplanningandabortion.&#13;
Italsomeansfreedomfrom&#13;
forced sterilization and unwan tcd&#13;
intercourse. Finally, it mean&#13;
that a woman control her own&#13;
body without interference from&#13;
government, church or oth r individuals.&#13;
ProLife leaders can al so be&#13;
called radical. Many, in luding&#13;
Randall Terry, call for an end to&#13;
sexuality education (includin g&#13;
AIDS education), and demand a&#13;
ban on contraception as well as&#13;
abortion. The ProLife move ment&#13;
demands that exual ac tiv ity&#13;
be confined to marriage and&#13;
only if the intent i procrcati n.&#13;
No options will be allowed for&#13;
faJliblehumans whocan not cope&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to addrcs, a few&#13;
topics concerning abortion that&#13;
have outraged me. First, I'd like&#13;
to begin with the slogan prochoice&#13;
activists preach - "We&#13;
will never go back." I've heard&#13;
stori es of those tragic, back-alley&#13;
abortio ns, but to gel th ing&#13;
straight, wom en be fore Roe vs.&#13;
Wade were not forced to submit&#13;
to an illegal abortion. Th ey had&#13;
a choice to get pregnant, an d&#13;
should have paid the due re ponsibil&#13;
ities.&#13;
If th ey died in th e process&#13;
then it was no one else's fault&#13;
except fortheir ow n choice. I'm&#13;
sure that so und s hars h, but it i&#13;
abou t tim e thetruthisshed. Now,&#13;
th e only moral decision, based&#13;
on my Christian heritage, would&#13;
be to set the child up for adoption,&#13;
especially in the case of&#13;
ra pe or incest&#13;
In addition, man y sa y that&#13;
women were denied making a&#13;
moral decisi on , based on their&#13;
Christian reli gious beliefs. I'm&#13;
sorry. hu t where are the religiou~&#13;
values? I'm not one to questions&#13;
with ab tine nce; unwanted&#13;
nancy or dea th from AIDS l::&#13;
price paid for in.&#13;
If you ha ve concludedtbau&#13;
am ProChoice, you are COl1'Q.&#13;
This doe~ no.l mean that I lhiJt&#13;
that abortion I a wondt,fuJlbint&#13;
and I would not want to suggea&#13;
thalit is. I believethataWOlllll•s&#13;
body is her own and she should&#13;
not be forced to continue a ing.&#13;
nancy if he doesn't WIil to. ~&#13;
and many like me , w&lt;n for gua.&#13;
anteed heal th care, high qualiy&#13;
affordable child care, imp!'O¥f.d&#13;
conLraccpuo n, and quality aJu.&#13;
cation r gardl es of neighbcr.&#13;
hood. Worn n would lhen be&#13;
sured tha t the children they bear&#13;
w uld have a reasonable quality&#13;
of Ii e.&#13;
Th United States has long&#13;
repre nted fr eedom to people&#13;
around th wo rld . Certainly,lhc&#13;
fr d m to control one' s own&#13;
body i a freedo m worth Protect•&#13;
ing.&#13;
-Jenni~ r Bu m&#13;
one' fait h, but the minute&#13;
"Chri tian va lu es" are men•&#13;
tioned, th n I gl:l urked. I conid&#13;
r my. If fairly religious.and&#13;
I can vou h th at it clearly staies&#13;
in th Bibi that abortion is an&#13;
a m ination to J us Christ.&#13;
To furth er my di gust,amtion&#13;
i not ev n used for its first&#13;
inte ntio n . In tcad, now it is&#13;
u d as a fonn of wide-spread&#13;
birthc ntro l. lcannothelpbutlO&#13;
ask my elf, do women know&#13;
what th ey are doing to their bodies?&#13;
Cancer of the cervix is jusl&#13;
one of th e many d&lt;t8dly f acun I&#13;
hear th e rune old thing, and l&#13;
unders tand that it i. their body,&#13;
but what a bout the human life&#13;
withi n the womb? There is&#13;
arou nd a ten year waiting lisl to&#13;
adopt a child - ten years! And all&#13;
because of the selfish attitude&#13;
which abortion projects.&#13;
In conclu ion, I would like&#13;
to say, representing myself as a&#13;
Christian Confonnist, "WemUSl&#13;
take back control of America.&#13;
and return back to our ChristiaD&#13;
herita ge. we mu~t go hack!"&#13;
-Brian Matsen&#13;
THE RA GER NEWS STAFI-'&#13;
Editor-In-Chief ..... .. ... . .... .. .... .... ..... ..... ........ Andrew J. Patch&#13;
Layout Editor ............... . ... .... ............... .. ......... Annamaria Sexton&#13;
News Editor .... ................ ...... ... . .......... .... . ......... Dennis Clark&#13;
Assistant News Editor ............. ....... ...................... ............ ..... ...... Nick ZJi"II&#13;
Feature Editor ........... _. ................ .. ..... .... .............. ........... Sam MancheS~&#13;
Assistant Feature Editor ....... ..... ... ....... .................................. .. Chris Ti&#13;
Copy Editors ...................... ..... Car1ise Newman Kris Drewek Gabe t&lt;1"'8&#13;
Sports Editor .. ... .......... ................... ................... '. .................... .' .. Len AnhOid&#13;
Assistant Sports Editor ..... ............... ..... ...................... ... ....... . David [)ebish&#13;
Photo Editors ................ ...... .... .......... .. .. ........ .. Gwen Heller, Mike paupo,e&#13;
!~~~':~: B~=i~:~=,M~·~···;,:············ ·· ·· ·················· ···· ······ ···~e Pal= g .. ........... .. ............ ....... ....... ... . Jackie Joh&#13;
Advlsors ... ........ ...... .. ............... Judy Logsdon, Jan Nowak, Stuart fkA,fl8I'&#13;
&lt;,&#13;
~ ---------------- seprember 23, 1992&#13;
-----.&#13;
IPteg.&#13;
is!he&#13;
Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
UTOR/CLASSROOM HELP·&#13;
~RS in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
WadewilZ.Roosevelt. Dr. Jones.&#13;
SchullC,Jcffcry.GrantElcmcmary&#13;
SchOOls.Bullen Jr. HS. Jerstad&#13;
A erholm Middle School and&#13;
GfImQle Middle School have severalrequeslS&#13;
for student volunteers&#13;
whoenjoy working with children&#13;
andwanllD help slow learner succeed&#13;
Can you share 1-2 hours per&#13;
week? Ask for more details in the&#13;
VolunteerOffice.&#13;
that II&#13;
'trecL I&#13;
think&#13;
thing I&#13;
!!gest&#13;
nan's&#13;
lOuld&#13;
preg.&#13;
o, I,&#13;
~ar·&#13;
~Iity&#13;
DVed&#13;
Cdu·&#13;
bor,&#13;
1 be&#13;
bear&#13;
llity&#13;
SHELTER WORKERS FOR&#13;
WOMEN'S HORIZONS SETS&#13;
TRAINING. If you would like to&#13;
volunreerin a sheller for women&#13;
and children, sign up for a dayong&#13;
longttaining on Saturday. Oc Lober&#13;
&gt;ple 17thin Kenosha. Flexible days&#13;
the andhoursofvolunteerservice. CaJl&#13;
iwn 595·2011.&#13;
Xl·&#13;
MALESTUDENT LIVING IN&#13;
KENOSHA COUNTY&#13;
WANTED. Become an advocate&#13;
andfriend IDa Wilmot HS student&#13;
whois autistic. Gain in-depth unue&#13;
derslaJldingof the handicapped.&#13;
n- Attend social activities 2 times&#13;
monthly. Ask for more informationin&#13;
Volunteer Office. ,d&#13;
es&#13;
lfi ZOO KEEPER'S ASSISTANT&#13;
REQUESTED. The Racine Zoo&#13;
isofferingexperience working near&#13;
wild anmals. Physical labor required.&#13;
24hoursweelcly. On-site&#13;
baining.&#13;
t-&#13;
Sl&#13;
is&#13;
ld&#13;
o&#13;
"I·&#13;
:1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Contael Carol Engberg in VolunteerOflice,&#13;
wu..C·D 175 for these&#13;
or other possible volunteer opportunities.&#13;
Gab's Gab&#13;
J&#13;
COllillued rrom Page 6&#13;
stan1ed, Irealized&#13;
jl1'llexactlywhat Ihey were saying,&#13;
"MOVEyou idiot! JuSI don 'I sit&#13;
there!"&#13;
50,1 put my Uuck in gear, turned&#13;
the comer, pulled over to the side,&#13;
and in my rearview mirror I saw&#13;
Dan Quayle. in all of his Vice-&#13;
PresidenIiaI glory, sitting in his .&#13;
limo.ThaI's all he was doing,just&#13;
sillingthere.latleastexpected him&#13;
to be holding a flashing sign that&#13;
said"Hi , I'm Dan Quayle. You&#13;
know,the guy that would be Presidenlifyoo&#13;
killed George Bush and&#13;
whocan speU potatoe now .", but&#13;
hewasn'L&#13;
I wenl home and decided that&#13;
I wasn't going to vote for him.&#13;
THE RANGERNEWS.Page 7&#13;
the Week Parkside Volunteer Program "Volunteers of the Month" for September are Candy Cooper, a Junior business major who has worked over&#13;
200 hours of volunteer service. Keith Gray. whose 250 hours include a March Habitat for Humanity trip to Savannah, Ga .• Steve&#13;
Murphy, a senior double-major in Human Behavior &amp; Society and pre-med, who worked as a volunteer in Brazil this summer, and Maddie&#13;
Williams, a :hildren in shpeslytcehr.ology major who has devoted over 120 hours to the Women's .Resource Center in Racine, working with the women and&#13;
September 23, 1992&#13;
~ Volunteer Opportunities&#13;
islhe -&#13;
UTORICLASSROOM HELPlhat1&#13;
!RS in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
wadewitz, Roosevelt, Dr. Jones,&#13;
Schuhc,Jcffcry, GrantElcmcntary&#13;
SchoOIS, Bullen Jr. HS, Jerstad&#13;
Agerholm Middle School and&#13;
Gilm&lt;YC Middle School have severaJreqUCSlS&#13;
for studen~ volu?teers&#13;
who enjoy working with children&#13;
and want 10 help slow learner succero.&#13;
Can you share 1-2 hours per&#13;
week? Ask for more details in the&#13;
Volunteer Office.&#13;
r- SHELTER WORKER FOR&#13;
WOMEN'S HORIZO. SET&#13;
TRAINING, If you would like IO&#13;
lity volunteer in a shelter for women&#13;
and children. sign up for a dayng&#13;
long ttaining on Saturday. October&#13;
pie !7th in Kenosha. Flexible day&#13;
lrn&gt; and hours of volunteer service. Call&#13;
wn 595-2011.&#13;
I·&#13;
MALE STU DE T LI VI G I&#13;
KENOSHA CO TY&#13;
WANTED. Become an adv ate&#13;
and friend to a Wilmot HS Ludenl&#13;
who is autistic. Gain in-depth unte&#13;
derstanding of the handicapped.&#13;
Attend social activitie 2 tim&#13;
monlhly. Ask for more information&#13;
in VolunteerOftic .&#13;
ZOO KEEPER' A I TANT&#13;
REQUESTED. The Racine Zoo&#13;
isoffering experience working near&#13;
wild animals. Physical labor required.&#13;
2-4 hours week.Jy. On- ite&#13;
training.&#13;
Contact Carol Engberg in VolunteerOffice,&#13;
WLLC-D175 for these&#13;
or other possible volunteer opporllmities.&#13;
Gab's Gab&#13;
Coatilaecl from Page 6&#13;
startled, I reali1.ed&#13;
justex.:dy what they were saying,&#13;
"MOVE you idiot! Ju t don't sit&#13;
there!"&#13;
So, I put my truck in gear, turned&#13;
the ccner, pulled over IO the side,&#13;
and in my rearview mirror I saw&#13;
Dan Quayle, in all of his VicePresidential&#13;
glory, sitting in his ·&#13;
limo. That's all he was doing, just&#13;
sitting there. I at least expected him&#13;
10 be holding a tlashing sign thaL&#13;
said "Hi, I'm Dan Quayle. You&#13;
know, the guy that would be President&#13;
if you killed George Bush and&#13;
who can spell potatoe now.", but&#13;
hewa.,n•L&#13;
I went home and decided that&#13;
1 wasn't going to vote for him.&#13;
T11E RANGER NEws, Page 7&#13;
~ .::::: .. . :~ \T61Unteer Of&#13;
the Week&#13;
Parkside Volunteer Program "Volunteers of the Month" for Seplember are Candy Cooper, a junior business major who has worked over&#13;
200 hours of volunteer service, Keith Gray, whose 250 hours include a March Habitat for Humanity trip to Savannah, Ga .• SLcvc&#13;
~urphy, a senior double-major in Human Behavior &amp; Society and pre-med, who worked as a volunteer in Brazil this summer, and Maddie&#13;
Williams, a psychology major who has devoted over 120 hours to the Women's Resource Center in Racine, working with the women and&#13;
;hildren in shelter.&#13;
a~s19i'ti&#13;
t~~-i~, --&#13;
Kenosha Factory Store, Lakeside Marketplace,&#13;
2ath A Exit 347, I-94, (414) 857-7333. Mon.-Sat. 10-9, Sun. 10-6.&#13;
112111 Di~~~ntinued/~lmost perfect sports and fitness stuff.&#13;
Wbcn it rains, it pours.&#13;
That was tile story for both&#13;
Ranger victories this past week.&#13;
Last Wednesday tile Ranger soccer&#13;
team hammered a defenseless&#13;
Purdue-Calumet 6-0.&#13;
The game was delayed twenty&#13;
minutes by a torrential downpour,&#13;
when the m•atch finally began&#13;
the Rangers came out strong, feeling&#13;
no ill-effects from the weather.&#13;
Fourteen minutes into tile game&#13;
Bob Rogers got tile team on the&#13;
scoreboard.&#13;
Feeling the game might be&#13;
called due to lightning, the Rangers&#13;
poured it on in a hurry. Tom&#13;
Czop scored at 25:59, Czop again&#13;
at 26: 13, then Mateo Mackbee at&#13;
27:42. These three Parkside goals&#13;
were scored within 89 seconds to&#13;
set a new school record. Completing&#13;
the first half scoring with a hat&#13;
trick was Tom Czop, who cinched&#13;
his third goal with eight minutes&#13;
lefL&#13;
The only goal scored in the&#13;
second half came from Nick Herner&#13;
justtwo minutes in. The game was&#13;
then halted in the fifty-eighth&#13;
minute due to lightning.&#13;
Ron Knestrict and Oscar&#13;
Toscano also had big games, raking&#13;
up four and three assists, respectively.&#13;
The win provided the Rangers&#13;
with a 3-1-0 record and their first&#13;
shut out of the season.&#13;
On Saturday, it was the University&#13;
of Missouri-Rolla's tum to&#13;
play the victim as the Rangers&#13;
spanked them with a 6-0 defeat.&#13;
Instead of the rain, it was tile&#13;
yellow cards cards that were pouring&#13;
on the Soccer Bowl. Frustrated,&#13;
the Division IIRolla was never in&#13;
the game. The visitors picked up&#13;
five yellow cards on the afternoon.&#13;
Just two minutes into the match&#13;
it was Bob Rogersonce again, scoring&#13;
onan unassisted goal. At34:08&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
Special Edition - Women's Volleyball&#13;
Pictorial. 82, 83&#13;
Section [8)&#13;
Cross Country Results 83&#13;
it was freshman Pat White scoring&#13;
his first collegiate goal on an assist&#13;
from Ron Knestrict, Just 20 seconds&#13;
later, Mike Kennedy also netted&#13;
his first collegiate goal after&#13;
some nifty passing from Czop and&#13;
Oscar Toscano.&#13;
With 54 minutes left to play,&#13;
Mark Gyrko of the Rangers was&#13;
given a yellow,and then was ejected&#13;
after he was given a red card for&#13;
dissent towards the referee. This&#13;
left the Rangers with a numerical&#13;
disadvantage, that the hapless Rolla&#13;
team could not capitalize on.&#13;
Playing a man down,theRangers&#13;
held strong by not only keeping&#13;
the shutout, but producing three&#13;
more goals. Five minutes into the&#13;
second half, Czop scored on an&#13;
assist from Colurn Donahue. In tile&#13;
62nd minute of play, Toscano got&#13;
on the scoreboard. Joel Meadow&#13;
earned his second assist the year&#13;
on the play. Capping off the Scoring&#13;
was Mateo Mackbee. After&#13;
Mackbee was tripped up in the goal&#13;
After opening loss, Rangers end week with win&#13;
THE RANGER NEWS Wednesday,September23,1992&#13;
Weather, officials don't stop Rangers&#13;
Please see VOLLEYBALL 82&#13;
Men and women runners nab top&#13;
ten finishes at Midwest Collegiates&#13;
Parkside's men was Ron Cavage in&#13;
a timeof27:08 good for 48th place.&#13;
Kin Miller was second for the team&#13;
with a timeof27:16, good for 55th&#13;
place over-all. RightbehindMiller&#13;
-in 58th place was freshman Kevin&#13;
Mason in 27:19. Rounding out tile&#13;
Rangers top five were Iesse Decker&#13;
in 27:40 (67), and Pat Kuhlman at&#13;
27:54 (74).&#13;
On the women's side,'UWMadison&#13;
romped home with the&#13;
victory at21 points. Southern illinois,&#13;
Indiana State, Edinboro and&#13;
Marquetterounded out the top five.&#13;
For UW -Parkside, Kelly&#13;
Watson turned in a time of 19:27,&#13;
good for 36th place and the Rangers&#13;
top finish of the day.&#13;
'I&#13;
By DAVID DEBISH&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The University of WiSconsin-&#13;
Parkside Women's Volleyball&#13;
Team opened their week up with a&#13;
loss against Wisconsin Lutheran&#13;
College.&#13;
Although tile gymnasium was&#13;
packed students and parents&#13;
for the first time this season tile&#13;
Rangers couldn't muster a stop&#13;
against Paula Stelter'S serves and&#13;
spikes. Parkside had a chance in&#13;
tile second game, but on a come-&#13;
By LEN ANHOLD&#13;
Editor&#13;
country team took to their National&#13;
Cross Country Course last Saturday&#13;
as they hosted the Midwest&#13;
Collegiate Cross Country Championships.&#13;
The men's team raced toa ninth&#13;
place finish and the women's team&#13;
finished tenth,&#13;
Edinboro College won tile&#13;
men's event. beating Hillsdale college&#13;
by five points for tile top spot.&#13;
North Central Il., Marquette and&#13;
UW-Oshkosh rounded out the top&#13;
five.&#13;
Finishing first among UWback&#13;
run there was a ten minute&#13;
delay while tile reefers conferred&#13;
on Lutheran's set up. Apparently&#13;
they were in disagreement and after&#13;
each serve kept screwing up tile&#13;
rotation.&#13;
Wbile the third game didn 'tgo&#13;
any better the previous two it&#13;
turned for tile worse when starter&#13;
Jodie Downs went out with a&#13;
twisted ankle. Jodie will be sidelined&#13;
for tile season tom ligaments.&#13;
The Rangers then traveled to&#13;
Chicago for a tournament against&#13;
University of Missouri-Kansas&#13;
City, Saginaw Valley State University,&#13;
and Norhteastern Illinois.&#13;
In their first match Parkside&#13;
lost in straight sets to Missouri.&#13;
"They started out playing as&#13;
individuals," said coach Theehs,&#13;
"and it showed up in poor playing&#13;
as a team,"&#13;
To get across tile point that&#13;
'''''v were to return playing as a&#13;
team coach Theehs took the women&#13;
JenniferZalewski was nextfor&#13;
the Rangers, taking 44th with a&#13;
time of 19:37. Rounding out the&#13;
Rangers top five were: Pam Tucker.&#13;
(58) 19:54, Tara Roy 19:55,&#13;
and Kim Johnson (78) at 20: 18.&#13;
Claire EichnerofUW &lt;Madison&#13;
won the event in a time of&#13;
17:52 with all four of her teammates&#13;
finishing in the top eight.&#13;
On the men's side, Derron&#13;
Bishop of North Central College&#13;
won tile team competition in a time&#13;
of 25:21.&#13;
The teams travel to UWWhitewater&#13;
this weekend for tile&#13;
WarhawkJPizza Hut Invitational on&#13;
Saturday. C.C. Results, B3&#13;
box the Rangers were awarded a&#13;
penalty kick, which Mackbee&#13;
promptly buried in tile back of the.&#13;
net.&#13;
The Ranger 'defense' held&#13;
strong with Joel Meadow recording&#13;
his second consecutive shutout.&#13;
The Rangers improved to 4-1-&#13;
o with the victory. Senior Bob&#13;
Rogers finished the weekend with&#13;
his season goal total at seven. Tom&#13;
Czop moved his tOtJIJto four.&#13;
The Rangers are set to face&#13;
Lakeland College at home tonight&#13;
at 4:00P.M. Next Wednesday&#13;
Next Saturday. October 3&#13;
the Rangers host&#13;
Nationally ranked Gannon U.&#13;
Look for a preview of the game next week&#13;
. .. Mike Paupore, RANGER Pulling together The Ranger vollyball playerS&#13;
huddle around second year coach Lynn Theehs. The&#13;
Rangers have started their season 7-9 with an ex'&#13;
tremely"young squad and are bUilding a talented squad&#13;
for the future.&#13;
,!5im8el donned Rangers "lronrnan'&#13;
'',';JuniQr grappler SteveX;;'peI Kimpel scored 196.5 poinG&#13;
blasted thecompetition in winning&#13;
in the victory. Junior Joel Dult(lll&#13;
the.Rangers.annual "Iron Man"&#13;
nabbed second with 180 poinG&#13;
, andjunior Dave Lovy scored 113&#13;
.Kirnpel won five events and&#13;
points to snare the third spoL&#13;
shatteredi~ordsin the rope climb&#13;
Kimpel won the bench pre~&#13;
l!I1j;ibi~~?O~~i~~ero~timb ~~~: ~~e~~~~~~~~~:wa45.2().Whiq/!,,;ll!;$et i~1984 ,'.l'ete Girolamo won the 4{) W.·i..~.i~.;..~.,.:.e.\.·~.M.r.·.,.'•·•.~.•u•c..•.t.'~·•.• . '.'.t....• '.ti•t.•~..d.t..I.:.l.e...e.,...I•..••·).~...•'·.•.~.•.;•.r•e.c.o;~:'~~i~~k.d~;~:;::;\!,~!eg 'p!'\'ss [lIax.&#13;
rs&#13;
September23, 1992&#13;
By CHRIS RYAN&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
When the lhe soccer&#13;
Calumet but match Lhc c~e feeling&#13;
the the lhe&#13;
10 Rangers&#13;
10&#13;
Completing&#13;
left&#13;
justtwominutesin. eighth&#13;
to raking&#13;
respectively.&#13;
University&#13;
ofMissouri-Rolla's the&#13;
pouring&#13;
II Rolla wasBobRogersonceagain,scoring&#13;
on an unassistedgoal. 08&#13;
from Ron Knestrict Just 20 seconds&#13;
net&#13;
led Wilh and Playingamandown,theRangers&#13;
Czop Col um the&#13;
of scoring&#13;
Asst. WisconsinParkside&#13;
againsl Lulhcran&#13;
the with the&#13;
Stelter's the comeback&#13;
the after&#13;
the&#13;
Whilethethirdgamedidn'tgo&#13;
than the sidelined&#13;
the with ligaments.&#13;
Kansas&#13;
University,&#13;
Norhteastem asa team."&#13;
the •l&gt;P.y team Please see v9LLEYBALL nab Sports The men's and women's cross&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Championships.&#13;
Themen'stcamracedtoaninth&#13;
tenth.&#13;
the&#13;
event, college&#13;
the spot.&#13;
IL, Marqueue the UWParkside's&#13;
atimeof27:08goodfor48thplace.&#13;
Kirt team&#13;
time of27:16, Right behind Miller&#13;
the&#13;
Jesse side, UWMadison&#13;
at 21 Illinois,&#13;
Marquette rounded UW-Watson turned in a time of 19:27,&#13;
Rangers&#13;
nex tfor&#13;
lop Tucker&#13;
(60) ClaireEichnerofUW-&lt;Madison&#13;
teammates&#13;
eight&#13;
the of25:UWWhitewater&#13;
the&#13;
W arhawk/Pizza the the&#13;
recording&#13;
shutout.&#13;
0 total to M. Joel Meadow&#13;
HOMECOMING PREVIEW&#13;
Saturday, U.&#13;
NEWS&#13;
players&#13;
ex·&#13;
tremely'young building forthe Kimpel lronman"&#13;
Junior Steve Kimpel&#13;
the competition the Rangers annual contest.&#13;
Kimpel sha~ered records in and sit-ups.&#13;
Theoldrecordintheropeclmb&#13;
was 5.26, which was set in 1984&#13;
but Kimpel raced up the rope i~&#13;
4.85 seconds to swipe the record&#13;
from Mike Muckerheide.&#13;
Kimpel scored 196.5 points&#13;
vicLory. Dull(/)&#13;
points&#13;
and junior DaveLovy scored 173&#13;
points to snare the third spot&#13;
Kimpel won the bench ~&#13;
reps, 100 yard dash, bench ~&#13;
max, rope climb and sit ups.&#13;
Pete 40&#13;
yard dash, Roger Spear won the I&#13;
ofleg pressesand Joel Dutton w(I)&#13;
the leg press max.&#13;
:lion&#13;
~ ;NGER NEWS SPORTS, Page 82&#13;
V@lIyball September 16, 1992 - 1992&#13;
S TerriHohmann Nicole Gross&#13;
Pos: Seller&#13;
Height: 5'5"&#13;
Year: Junior&#13;
Hometown: Men. Falls, WI&#13;
High School: Men. Falls H.S.&#13;
Jodi Downs Nichole Parker&#13;
Pas: Middle Blocker Pos: Setter&#13;
......, Height: 6'0" Height: 5'6"&#13;
V Year: Freshman Year: Sophomore&#13;
... Hometown: Berlin, WI Hometown: Milwaukee, WI&#13;
HighSchool: Berlin High School: Wis. Lutheran&#13;
TiffanyWarren&#13;
Pas: Outside Hiller&#13;
- Height: 5'7"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Pewaukee, WI&#13;
HighSchool: Pewaukee&#13;
I Janelle Maki&#13;
Pos: Outside Hiller&#13;
Height: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Antioch, IL&#13;
HighSchool: Antioch&#13;
TammiRickert&#13;
Pos: Outside Hiller&#13;
Height: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: CUdahy, WI&#13;
HighSchool: Pulaski&#13;
Cara Sulik&#13;
Pos: MB/OH&#13;
Height: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Green Bay,WI&#13;
HighSchool: Preble&#13;
Christine Maher&#13;
Pos: Outside Hitter&#13;
Height: 5'8"&#13;
Year: . Senior&#13;
Hometown: Sleepy Hollow&#13;
High School: Resurrec., IL .&#13;
Rachel!&#13;
Vandenlangenberg&#13;
Pos: Def. Specialist&#13;
Height: 5'4"&#13;
Year: Sophomore&#13;
u,:,metown: Abrams, WI&#13;
High School: Oconto Falls&#13;
Karen Dilloo&#13;
Pos: Middle Blocker&#13;
Heig ht:- 6'2"&#13;
Year: Junior&#13;
Hometown: Racine, WI&#13;
High School: SI. Catherines&#13;
Cindy Maier&#13;
Pos: Asst. Coach&#13;
Year: Redshirt&#13;
Maier is redshirting this season&#13;
and acting as assistant&#13;
coach due to a leg injury.&#13;
Lynn Theehs&#13;
Theehs is her second full&#13;
season as head coach of the&#13;
Ranger squad after&#13;
graduatating from UW-Parkside&#13;
in 1991.&#13;
This years squad is very&#13;
young, with only two juniors&#13;
and one senior, and should&#13;
be a force in the seasons to&#13;
come.&#13;
Team Breakfast&#13;
has benefits&#13;
VOllvball • from 81&#13;
to breakfast and made them eat the&#13;
same thing as a team.&#13;
In their second mateh of the&#13;
tournament the Lady Rangers&#13;
gradually returned to their quick&#13;
and aggressive play. bUIloSIstarter&#13;
Karen Dillon to a twisted ankle and&#13;
ultimately ended up losing to&#13;
Saginaw Valley.&#13;
'In their last and hardest match&#13;
of the tournament Parkside upset&#13;
Northeastern and upstaged them as&#13;
Northeastern went on to win the&#13;
tournament.&#13;
Even though the Rangers are&#13;
plagued with injuries the level of&#13;
play by the freshman Cara Bulik&#13;
and Janelle Mak, have stepped in&#13;
and filled some big roles.&#13;
The Ranges will be home this&#13;
weekend to host Quiney, Southern&#13;
Indiana, and Kentucky Weslan.&#13;
The Ranger Invitational will begin&#13;
Friday the 25th al3:OOpmand again&#13;
on Saturday the 26th at 10:00am.&#13;
Ranger Invitational&#13;
Friday and Saturday at P.E. Bid.&#13;
Featured Teams&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Quincy&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
Kentucky Weslyan&#13;
Support your Rangers&#13;
Photos by&#13;
Mike Paupore, Ranger&#13;
~i on --:;:~;:~;-~~~~-----------------------------------;;,EA NEWS SPORTS, Page 82&#13;
V@llyball -&#13;
Terri Hohmann&#13;
pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Middle Blocker&#13;
5'10"&#13;
vear: Sophomore&#13;
Hometown: Greendale.WI&#13;
High School: Martin Luther&#13;
Jodi Downs&#13;
Pos: Middle Blocker&#13;
He~ht: 6'0"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Berlin, WI&#13;
High School: BerUn&#13;
Tiffany Warren&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Outside Hitter&#13;
57"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
· Hometown: Pewaukee , WI&#13;
H~h School: Pewaukee&#13;
Janelle Maki&#13;
Pos: Outside Hitter&#13;
Heght: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Antioch, IL&#13;
H~h School: Antioch&#13;
Tammi Rickert&#13;
Pos: Outside Hitter&#13;
Heght: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Cudahy, WI&#13;
High School: Pulaski&#13;
Cara Bulik&#13;
Pos: MB/OH&#13;
He~ht: 5'9"&#13;
Year: Freshman&#13;
Hometown: Green Bay, WI&#13;
H~h School: Preble&#13;
Nicole Gross&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Setter&#13;
5'5"&#13;
Year: Junior&#13;
Hometown: Men. Falls, WI&#13;
High School: Men. Falls H.S.&#13;
Nichole Parker&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Year:&#13;
Setter&#13;
5'6"&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Hometown: Milwaukee, WI&#13;
High School: Wis. Lutheran&#13;
Christine Maher&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Outside Hitter&#13;
5'8"&#13;
Year: Senior&#13;
Hometown: Sleepy Hollow&#13;
High School: Aesurrec., IL&#13;
Rochell&#13;
Vandenlangenberg&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Def. Specialist&#13;
5'4"&#13;
Year: Sophomore&#13;
~,:,metown: Abrams, WI&#13;
High School: Oconto Falls&#13;
Karen Dilloo&#13;
Pos:&#13;
Height:&#13;
Middle Blocker&#13;
6'2"&#13;
Year: Junior&#13;
Hometown: Racine, WI&#13;
High School: St. Catherines&#13;
Cindy Maier&#13;
Pos: Asst. Coach&#13;
Year: Redshirt&#13;
Maier is redshirting this season&#13;
and acting as assistant&#13;
coach due to a leg injury.&#13;
September 16, 1992&#13;
1992&#13;
Lynn Theehs&#13;
Theehs is her second full&#13;
season as head coach of the&#13;
Ranger squad after&#13;
graduatating from UW-Parkside&#13;
in 1991.&#13;
This years squad is very&#13;
young, with only two juniors&#13;
and one senior, and should&#13;
be a force in the seasons to&#13;
come.&#13;
Team Breakfast&#13;
has benefits&#13;
YollybaU - from B1&#13;
to breakfast and made them eat the&#13;
same thing as a team.&#13;
In their second match of the&#13;
tournament the Lady Rangers&#13;
gradually returned Lo their quick&#13;
and aggressive play, but lost starter&#13;
Karen Dilloo to a twisted ankle and&#13;
ultimately ended up losing to&#13;
Saginaw Valley.&#13;
· In their last and hardest match&#13;
of the tournament Parkside upset&#13;
Northeastern and upstaged them as&#13;
Northeastern went on to win the&#13;
tQamament.&#13;
Even though the Rangers are&#13;
plagued with injuries the level of&#13;
play by the freshman Cara Bulik&#13;
and Janelle Ma.ki have stepped in&#13;
and filled some big roles.&#13;
The Ranges will be home this&#13;
weekend to host Quiney, Southern&#13;
Indiana, and Kentucky Wcslan.&#13;
The Ranger Invitational will begin&#13;
Friday the 25th at 3 :()()pm and again&#13;
on Saturday the 26th at 10:00am.&#13;
Ranger Invitational&#13;
Friday and Saturday at P.E. Bid .&#13;
Featured Teams&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Quincy&#13;
Southern Indiana&#13;
Kentucky Weslyan&#13;
Support your Rangers&#13;
Photos by&#13;
Mike Paupore, Ranger&#13;
RANGER NEWS SPORTS, Page B2&#13;
Trivia Time ...&#13;
Last Week's Question: Brewer Robin Yount achieved&#13;
his 3000th hit. all with Milwaukee. How many of the other players&#13;
with 3000 or more hits accomplished all their hits with the same&#13;
club?&#13;
Ty Cobb-Detroit Tigers, Stan Musial-St. Louis Cardinals,&#13;
Carl Yastremski-Boston Red Sox, Honus Wagner-Pittsburg&#13;
Pirates, Willie Mays-New York/San Fransisco Giants, AI&#13;
Kaline-Detroit Tigers, Roberto Clemente-Pittsburgh Pirates. r------~------~--------------, ISee your name in the Ranger News Sports. I&#13;
:Just answer the question correctly and drop :&#13;
:off in the Ranger News office by Monday. :&#13;
I' I&#13;
IThis Week's Question: I&#13;
: Who is the all-time boxing knock-out leader? :&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
II Answer II&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
: Your name, year, major : ~----------------------------~&#13;
We're&#13;
Mavin'&#13;
Racine &amp; Kenosha's Hottest Night Club&#13;
Every Thursday Night is College Nizht&#13;
with UW-Parkside's DJ.L.A. '"&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Floor Aerobics&#13;
now meets in the&#13;
Union Recreation&#13;
Center.&#13;
For more information&#13;
contact Jim&#13;
Koch at x-2267&#13;
DANCE EXTRAVAGANZA&#13;
Dance all week long at Cha in&#13;
Wednesday - Backbeat X&#13;
Thursday - D.l.L.A.&#13;
Friday - The Larry's&#13;
Saturday - Modem Art&#13;
Thursday Specials&#13;
$3.00 Pitchers&#13;
$1.00 of Ouzo&#13;
.50¢ Cactus Juice&#13;
UW-Parkside students&#13;
get $1.00 off all band&#13;
covers with a SI udent&#13;
J.D.&#13;
- Midwest Collegiate ChampionShips $&#13;
Women's Results Men's Resufts&#13;
1 UW-Madison 21 1 Edinboro 70&#13;
2 S.llIinois 65 2 Hillsdale College 75&#13;
3 Indiana State 74 3 North Central 77&#13;
4 Edinboro, PA 98 4 Marquetee 94&#13;
5 Marquette 211 5 UW-Oshkosh 131&#13;
6 UW-Oshkosh 224 6 Indiana State 15)&#13;
7 Hillsdale College 232 7 Eastem Illinois 216&#13;
8 Eastem Illinois 260 8 UW-Eau Claire 279&#13;
9 UW·Eau Claire 274 9 UW·Parlcslde ~&#13;
10 UW-Par1&lt;side 276 10 Lindenwood 3211&#13;
UWP Flnlshers- Kelly Watson UWP Flnlshers- Kin Miller27'11&#13;
19:27. Jen Zalewski 19:38, Pam Kevin Mason. 27:19,Jesse .&#13;
Tucker 19:54. Tara Roy 19:55, Kim 27:39, Pat Kuhlmann 27:54,~&#13;
Johnson 20:18,Tracey Pcrpe20:40, Lepak 28:14. Dave Doherty28a&#13;
Kim Dahm 20:48. Kim Avery 20:55, Kevin Collins 28:30, JoshuaToil&#13;
Gina Stelzer 21 :04, Melinda 28:45, Dan Koch 28:56,Teo&#13;
Vaskato 21:12 liz Fashun 21:26, Schmierer29:09, AnthonyW.&#13;
lisa Majerla21 :31,Ali DeWitt21 :54 29:09, Pat Chanery 29:47&#13;
BE TRUE TO YOUR SCHOOL&#13;
&amp; EARN MONEY TOO!&#13;
The Office of University Relations needs seven&#13;
students and/or alumni to serve as Telemarketing&#13;
Specialists, calling potential alumni donors for the&#13;
first annual Pride of Parkside Campaign.&#13;
Compensation will be $5 an hour plus an incenlive&#13;
bonus. Specialists must be available Monday -&#13;
Thursday and every other Sunday from 5:45 to 9:1&#13;
pm, October 7 - November 19. Schedule varies&#13;
slightly each week. Each Telemarketing Specialist&#13;
will work approximately 70 hours over the six week&#13;
period, including training.&#13;
Prior sales, telemarketing, or customer service&#13;
experience is highly recommended. Specialists&#13;
must be enthusiastic, motivated and PARKSIDE&#13;
POSiTIVE.&#13;
--&#13;
Phone 551-9131&#13;
1518 Sheridan Rand&#13;
I&lt;enosha. WI 53140&#13;
HURSDAYS&#13;
Allthe tappers you can drink&#13;
Plus!&#13;
One shot of your choice:&#13;
DR's-Rumple Mintz- Yager&#13;
Rootber-Cactus Juice-Peach-Apple&#13;
. One coupon per customer please&#13;
....------ -----------, I:$ Present Coupon at door I for hourly. cash drawings $!&#13;
L Pnntnamec1earJy J ------------ MUST BE 21 TO ENTER! PlcrURE ID RE UlRED!&#13;
RANGER NEws SPoRrs, Page B2&#13;
Trivia Time ...&#13;
Last Week's Question: Brewer Robin Yount achieved&#13;
his 3000th hit, all with Milwaukee. How many of the other players&#13;
with 3000 or more hits accomplished all their hits with the same&#13;
club?&#13;
Ty Cobb-Detroit Tigers, Stan Musial-St. Louis Cardinals,&#13;
Carl Yastremskl-Boston Red Sox, Honus Wagner-Pittsburg&#13;
Pirates, Willie Mays-New York/San Fransisco Giants, Al&#13;
Kaline-Detroit Tigers, Roberto Clemente-Pittsburgh Pirates. r----------------------------~ 1 See your name in the Ranger News Sports. •&#13;
: Just answer the question correctly and drop :&#13;
:off in the Ranger News office by Monday. :&#13;
I I&#13;
1 This Week's Question: 1&#13;
: Who is the all-time boxing knock-out leader? :&#13;
I I&#13;
I I 1---------------- I&#13;
1 Answer I I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I 1---------------- I&#13;
: Your name, year, major : L------------------------- --- J&#13;
Chain . 11'&#13;
~e1,cttO&#13;
Racine &amp; Kenosha's Hottest Night Club&#13;
Every Thursday Night is College Nioht&#13;
with UW-Parkside's D.J.L.A. ~&#13;
' DANCE EXTRAVAGANZA&#13;
Dance all week long at Cha in&#13;
Wednesday - Backbeat X&#13;
Thursday - D.J.L.A.&#13;
Friday - The Larry's&#13;
Saturday - Modem Art&#13;
Thursday Specials&#13;
$3.00 Pitchers&#13;
$1.00 of Ouzo&#13;
.50¢ Cactus Juice&#13;
UW-Parkside students&#13;
get $1.00 off all band&#13;
covers with a s1 udent&#13;
I.D.&#13;
We're&#13;
Movin'&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Floor Aerobics&#13;
now meets in the&#13;
Union Recreation&#13;
Center.&#13;
For more information&#13;
contact Jim&#13;
Koch at x-2267&#13;
Midwest Collegiate Championships&#13;
women's Results Men's Results&#13;
1 uw-Madison 21&#13;
2 S. Illinois 65&#13;
1 Edinboro 70&#13;
2 Hillsdale College 7S&#13;
3 North Central n 3 Indiana State 74&#13;
4 Edinboro, PA 98 4 Marquetee 94&#13;
5 UW-Oshkosh 131 5 Marquette 211&#13;
6 UW-Oshkosh 224 6 Indiana State 157&#13;
7 Eastern Illinois 216 7 Hillsdale College 232&#13;
8 Eastern Illinois 260 8 UW-Eau Claire 279&#13;
9 UW-Parlcslde - 9 UW-Eau Claire 274&#13;
1 O UW -Par1&lt;side 276 1 O Lindenwood 328&#13;
UWP Finishers- Ke lly Watson&#13;
19:27, Jen Zalewski 19:38, Pam&#13;
Tucker 19 :5 4, T ara Roy 1 9 :55, Kim&#13;
Johnson 20:18, Tracey Pope 20 :40,&#13;
Kim Dahm 20:48, K im Avery 20 :55,&#13;
Gina Stelzer 21 :0 4, Meli nd a&#13;
Vaskat o 21 :12 Liz Fashun 2 1 :26,&#13;
Lisa Majerle21 :31, Ali DeW itt21 :54&#13;
UWP Finishers- Kirt Miller 27.11&#13;
Kevin Mason, 27:19, Jesse ·&#13;
27:39, Pat Kuhlmann 27:54&#13;
Lepak 28:14, Dave Doherty~&#13;
Kev in Collins 28 :30, Joshua t&#13;
28 :45, Dan Koch 28:56, T&#13;
Schmierer29 :09, AnthonyW ·&#13;
29:09, Pat Chenery 29:47&#13;
BETAUETOYOUASCHOOL&#13;
&amp; EARN MONEY TOOi&#13;
The Office of Univ ersity Relations needs seven&#13;
students and/or alumni to serve as Telem arketing&#13;
Specialists, calling potential alumni donors for the&#13;
first annual Pride of Parkside Campaign.&#13;
Compensation will be $5 an hour plus an ncent1ve&#13;
bonus. Specialists must be available Monday -&#13;
Thursday and every other Sunday from 5:45 to 9 1&#13;
pm, October 7 - November 19 . Schedule vanes&#13;
sli g ht ly each week . Each Telemarket ing Specialist&#13;
w ill work apprcximately 70 hours over the s,x week&#13;
pe riod, including training.&#13;
Pri or sales, telemarketing, or customer se rv ice&#13;
ex p erience is highly recommended . Speciali sts&#13;
must be enthusiastic, motivated and PARKS IDE&#13;
POS ITIVE.&#13;
Contact Joan Fecteau at the Office of University&#13;
Relations, 595-2'233. --&#13;
Phon 5r:: l -91:11&#13;
l 5'18 Sh rlclnn Roacl&#13;
I&lt; nosha. WI 53140&#13;
HURSDAYS&#13;
--&#13;
A ll th e tapper you can drink&#13;
Plus!&#13;
One shot of your choice:&#13;
DR's-Rumple Mintz- Yager&#13;
Rootber-Cactus Juice-Peach-Apple&#13;
One coupon per custome r plea e r- ----------------,&#13;
I Present coupon at door I : $ for hourly cash drawing $:&#13;
I ---~:-=:=-:-r---.---- I L _ _ _ _ _ Pnnt nam e clearly - J ------------ MUST BE 21 TO ENTER! PICTURE ID RE UJRED!&#13;
~-bet23-.1992--::..:::--------====~~ Tns RANGER NEWS, Page 11&#13;
I&#13;
11&#13;
,7&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
'2&#13;
B&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
@oI take.'TAe Microbi%8yof Po+enfially&#13;
Pat~ogeh/c8e~a-Hemo/yfic. Jtrepto(occ;.'&#13;
Or The fvolu+lon of the &gt;ituat/~nComedy.'&#13;
DoI really Wdht to li\le with Judy the&#13;
neat freak-~.I c8n'+ believe Ive&#13;
got Ut"ltil MOr'lda'l to decide itI'm Q Biolo3Y&#13;
?'r?a T~eatre tnCVor. Have Icompletely los~&#13;
It. W'// 18ver be able to make t:l decirio/)&#13;
a9ai/l? '1ait a rnif)ute,juff yefferday, I'wQ;&#13;
able to plcl&lt; a phohe company with&#13;
abSolutely no proble/Y\ ... YlJ5,there if h~pe:&#13;
With AT&amp;T,choosing.a phone company is easy&#13;
Because when you sign up fur AT&amp;TStudent&#13;
Saver Plus, you can pick from a complete line&#13;
of products and services designed specifically to fit your&#13;
needs while you're in college. Whatever they may be.&#13;
Our Reach Out' Plans can save you money on&#13;
AT&amp;TLong Distance, no matter where and when you call. Call&#13;
Manager will separate your AT&amp;TLong Distance calls from the&#13;
ones your roommates make. And the AT&amp;TCalling Card&#13;
makes it easy to call from almost anywhere to anywhere.&#13;
Also, when you sign up for AT&amp;T,your first call&#13;
is free"&#13;
And with AT&amp;T,you'll get the most reliable long&#13;
distance service.&#13;
AT&amp;TStudent Saver Plus. It's the one college decision that's&#13;
easy to make.&#13;
If you're an otT-campus student, sign up for&#13;
A'OO'Student Saver Plus by calling 1800 654-0471 Ext. 85L ATaT&#13;
. d dl dialed, rouHO-«lalIt night and M:ettnd calling based&#13;
C11992 ATotT.·You'll tea:iW one S3 ATiT L.D. Certificate equiVllJent ~ 2l1ll~~~ W::k en Offer limited '00one ccrtllicaJe per StudmL&#13;
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-:,;.---&#13;
\\&#13;
@o I take_'TAe Microbiolo8y 0f Po+erdia/ly&#13;
Pa+709 ervc Be~ a -Hernoly+ ic r +reptococci.'&#13;
Or The ~vofufton of the )ifuat,~n Comedy.'&#13;
Do I really want to H11e with Judy the&#13;
neat freak-~.! can·+ believe Ive&#13;
got tJhtil Monday to decide iF I'm a Biolo.9y&#13;
?I" a T~eatre rnajol". Have I complefely lost&#13;
,t? W,11 I ever be able fo make a deci,ion&#13;
a9ain? "'(ait a tr11hute,Ju1 f ye.rferday, I wa{&#13;
able fo p1cl&lt; a phohe company with&#13;
ab sotuteJy no problern .•. Yll5 1 there ir hope:&#13;
W ith AT&amp;T, choosing a phone company is easy. ............ , .· . . ones your roommates make. And the AT&amp;T Calling Card&#13;
Because when you sign up for AT&amp;T Student ·it· .l'f&amp;'f' \t makes it easy to call from almost anywhere to any-&#13;
Saver Plus'. you ca~ pick fro1? a complete line ·• ';.;J_IJ.i'fv·t.·. ·.•. ·~er\ Also, when you sign up for AT&amp;T, your first call&#13;
of products and erv1ces designed specifically to fit your ~ ~~~ 1s free.&#13;
needs while you're in college. Whatever they may be. .. :,::: ;t~I \ And with AT&amp;T, you'll get the most reliable long&#13;
Our Reach Out· Plans can save you money on · distance service.&#13;
AT&amp;T Long Distance, no matter where and when you call. Call AT&amp;T Student Saver Plus. It's the one college decision that 's&#13;
Manager will separate your AT&amp;T Long Distance calls from the easy to make.&#13;
If you're an off-campus student, sign up for&#13;
Am' Student Saver Plus by calling 1800 654-0471 Ext. 85L AT&amp;T -&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING&#13;
THE RANGERNEWS, Page 12&#13;
. . . Th Ranger News office located in room D139C i~ the Wyllie Librarylle ......&#13;
To place classified advertising in the Universny of Wisconsin-Parks ide - The Ranger News, stop In b1.e f n All classitied ads placed by full or part time UW-Parkside stui;."&#13;
Center, next to the Coffee Shoppe. Deadline for classified advertising is 12:00pm Friday {;X'~o ~~d1C~:~nts are $5.00 per week run. Payment must accompany order. W II&#13;
UW-Parkside staff are 50¢ per week run. All classitied ads placed by anyone other than .- a;.;). e snsin-Parkside _The Ranger News, and ns employees, staff and ~&#13;
error occurs, the ad will be run free of charge the folloWing ~eek. No refunds. The un:e~s~ a IS~ews reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertising at ns discr8lion&#13;
are not responsible for the content of advertising placed by ns customers. The UW-Pa Sl e anger .&#13;
Please direct all inquiries to The Ranger News' Assistant Business Manager, Jackie Johnson at (414) 595-2295.&#13;
IMISCELLANEOUS ~PERSONAL-S ,• I&#13;
I could use a ride and share the gas&#13;
expense. Pleasecontaetmeat763-&#13;
3806.&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
If interested in the following support&#13;
groups please call Marcy at&#13;
595-2338. Eating disorders suppongroup,&#13;
Co-Dependentsanonymous,&#13;
Sexual Assault/Incest Survivors&#13;
Support Group, AI-Anon,&#13;
Adult Children of Alcoholics.&#13;
CLUB EVENTS I&#13;
Attention all Psych majors-minors&#13;
• first Psychology Club meeting is&#13;
on Sept, 23, 12:30, in Moln. 317.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Andreas, Obwohl du weider zu&#13;
hause in Deutschland bist, und ich&#13;
hier in der schule, sind meine&#13;
gedanken immer bei dir. Ich hoffe,&#13;
dass wir, egel was passiert, immer&#13;
fur einander da sind. Du bist mein&#13;
bester freund, den ich jemals haue.&#13;
IGh vermissc dich und ich Iicbc&#13;
dich! Gina G.&#13;
Welcome back PAStA. AlIi&#13;
summer of work. study lIId&#13;
climbing its time to ~&#13;
Coffee Shoppe again. Dope,.&#13;
SERVICES&#13;
PERSONALS I Parkside Philosophical Society will&#13;
hold its forst organizational meeting&#13;
on Thursday, Sept, 24, al3:30&#13;
in CART 233. CUIIUU;l Aaron&#13;
Snyder atx2603 for more inforrnalion.&#13;
To me man who goes by the name&#13;
"Brian"-Iet's do lonch. Word proeessingservice. Six&#13;
experience with term papen,&#13;
tors, Ph.D Theses. Pick&#13;
ery, RacinelKenosha. $1.&#13;
256-1338, leave message.&#13;
this ad!&#13;
Wanted: a room in ~&#13;
Kenosha in exchange for m .&#13;
nance work. Hoursperwed:&#13;
liable. Leave wriuen IIleS!II!&#13;
the Ranger News door inthe&#13;
box.&#13;
AA-A1coholics Anonymoos meets&#13;
every Monday at noon in Moln.&#13;
Dl33. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
+200 parking spots (CART) - 30&#13;
spotshandicapped osed by 6 people&#13;
(CART) - 50 spots more reserved&#13;
for teachers - 100 spots (more than&#13;
100 spots) in Union realignment.&#13;
Student gain? "You can car-pool."&#13;
Attention: looking me babe of me&#13;
week. Apply in person 10 DJLA or&#13;
PAPOO. All entries welcome!&#13;
Accounting Club meeting - Sept.&#13;
30,noon. Speaker: DaveSchwanz&#13;
"Doing Taxes on the Side." Meets&#13;
in the Main Place. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Free pregnancy tests. Contact UWP&#13;
Health Services, 595·2366, or&#13;
Moln. 0133 for more information.&#13;
To my Honey Bunnies - I love you&#13;
lots - and your smile is like a ray of&#13;
sunshine -from your Cuddle Puppy.&#13;
The semester's first meeting of&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta, UW-P's English&#13;
honor society, will meet Monday,&#13;
Sept. 28 at noon in CART 135.&#13;
Find out what it's all about,&#13;
Contraceptives for sale at affordable&#13;
prices. Condoms 10 for $1&#13;
and birth control pills $4 a packet,&#13;
Contact UW·P Health Services,&#13;
595-2366, or Moln. 0133 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
Did you find the rest of the article&#13;
on Dennis Dean yet? Try looking&#13;
in the park.&#13;
, I&#13;
Who is the Blonde Bombshell?&#13;
What does she look like? Does she&#13;
live? Idon'tknow! 1haven'tseen&#13;
her. PAPOO.&#13;
•&#13;
To all UW-Parkside Students:&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Association&#13;
Advisory Board meeting on&#13;
Sept, 25, 12:15-12:30 in PASA&#13;
office. Anyone interesting is encouraged&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Accounting Club meeting - Sept.&#13;
23, noon in Moln 0107. Speaker:&#13;
Jeanie Wood from Robert Half&#13;
Associares speaks on "How to Get&#13;
Hired in Today's Job Markel"&#13;
Refreshments served.&#13;
Thank you for your patience and understanding durin!&#13;
this past registration-vthe first one conducted utilizingtil&#13;
new Student Information System.&#13;
It will be better next time!&#13;
Office of Registrar Staff&#13;
FiFi - well hello there! Did you&#13;
find the keys yet? Get you lighter!&#13;
Why are we at Darkside? Oh, I&#13;
meant Parkside!&#13;
NA-Narcotics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Wednesday at noon in Moln.&#13;
Dl33. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Chedda Man - sing some Jane's for&#13;
us. Howcomeyoudidn'trunaway&#13;
last time we saw you? Nice soccer&#13;
playing! Never thought you knew&#13;
how to run. Garkey and Jan.&#13;
Flu shots available in Health Services&#13;
after OCl. I. Cost is 57. Call&#13;
595-2366 for an appointment,&#13;
Multiple Sclerosis Support Group&#13;
meetings on Fridays, 7-9pm in&#13;
Union 104. Cat Man, holy violence yoo butthead!&#13;
Do you have any torture&#13;
belts Pete? Hey remember the dog&#13;
races? HerecomesBamey. Garkey&#13;
and Jan.&#13;
Brown bag lunch sponsored by&#13;
PASA. "Parents for Peace on the&#13;
Streets," by Pat Franco, vice-president.&#13;
Discussion to follow. Mon,&#13;
Sept. 28, at noon in CART 129.&#13;
I-F-OR R_ENT III&#13;
If you come from Burlington or&#13;
through Burlington, and if your&#13;
forstclass is at8am on M, W, &amp; F.&#13;
No Selling &amp; No Experience Necessary&#13;
Conveneint afternoon &amp; evening hours&#13;
Good pay: $5.50/$6.00 hour to start&#13;
Bonus pay over 25 hours/week&#13;
Holiday, vacation pay&#13;
Regulary scheduled merit increases&#13;
Take advantage of this chance 10 gain a varietyof&#13;
office experience.&#13;
The Best Part-time&#13;
r-t'i.ere are a lot of pan-time jobs Job Ever .. ~ut there thal'll help you make&#13;
ends meel. But a part-time job with the Army National Guard&#13;
offers more than ju.st ~ extra paycheck. Instead of spending&#13;
your .w~ekends dehvenng pizza or bagging groceries, you could&#13;
be ~nvmg an M-l tank ~r repelling down a mountain side.&#13;
Bestdes thefun you'll have during an average&#13;
we~~end dnll, you could qualify for the 50%&#13;
TUllIon Grant, the Montgomery GI Bill, and&#13;
the Student Loan Repayment Program. Find&#13;
out more about the best pan-time job you'll ever NATIONAL&#13;
have, call GUARD&#13;
SGT. lst Class Bryon Barnes&#13;
(414) 656-6496&#13;
Border wanted: single woman with&#13;
big house in quiet neighborhood.&#13;
20 minutes from Parkside. Call&#13;
now for more information. 886-&#13;
4972.&#13;
I~FOR S~ALE -II , For fund raiser: toaster oven,likenew&#13;
dishes. never-used silverware&#13;
to auction. 637-2761 after 3pm.&#13;
Live near UW-P bus route.&#13;
Ca1Lltlda~ &amp;607~&#13;
or&#13;
Apply in person: 1100 Commerce Drive, Suite IO~&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
(EnsenadaslNo\'ak Appliance ofT of Hwy 101&#13;
Americans&#13;
HELP WANTED at their best I&#13;
Wanted: blackjack dealers for&#13;
Homecoming 1992. October 2.&#13;
No experience needed. Call Karla&#13;
or Chuck at 595-2277.&#13;
INDIGOROUND • OJ LA • BACKODABUS· DEADFLY Boy&#13;
IT'S TIME FOR A NEW BEGINNING •..&#13;
Travel free! Sell quality vacations&#13;
to exotic destinations! Jamaica,&#13;
Cancon, and Horida. Work for Ihe&#13;
most reliable spring break company&#13;
with the best commission and&#13;
service. Fastest way to free travel!&#13;
Sun Splash Tours 1-800-426-7710.&#13;
GER FE5T'92&#13;
25 SEPTEMBER 1992 • UNIONSQUARE&#13;
_~::::::::::::~~~~;;~.~5P~M~T;0~M.t;D;NI:G:HT~~.~$3~:':::::::~ IN ADVANCE IN RANGER OFFICE • $5 ATmE DOOR&#13;
THE RA GER NEWS, Page 12 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING&#13;
. . · Th Ranger News office located in room 0139C i~ the Wyllie library,t8arn-..,&#13;
To place classified advertising in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside - The Ranger ~ews, _stop in bl.8 tion All classified ads placed by full or part time UW-Parkside SIIJde;;."&#13;
Center, next to the Coffee Shoppe. Deadline tor c(~ssified advertising is 12:00pm Friday t;{;~:rk~d::ud~nts are $5.00 per week run. Paym~nt must accompany order. ff or&#13;
UW-Parkside staff are soe per week run. All classified ~ds placed by anyone 0th er th a~ . f w· consin-Parkside _ The Ranger News, and rts employees, staff and me "&#13;
error occurs, the ad will be run free of charge the following "'.'eek. No refunds. The Un:~~5\ 0 is News reserves the rig ht to refuse to pub lish any advertising at its diser~&#13;
are not responsible for the content of advertising placed by its customers. The U~-Pa SI e anger _2295 .&#13;
Please direct all inquiries to The Ranger News' Assistant Business Manager, Jackie Johnson at (414) 595 ·&#13;
CLUB EVENTS I&#13;
Attention all Psych majors-minors&#13;
• first Psychology Club meeting is&#13;
on Sept 23, 12:30, in Moln. 317.&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society will&#13;
hold its first organizational meeting&#13;
on Thursday, Sept 24, at 3:30&#13;
iu CART 233. Cu,11.ai.:1 Aaiun&#13;
Snyder at x2603 for more inf ormation&#13;
.&#13;
Accounting Club meeting - Sept&#13;
30, noon. Speaker: DaveSchwartz&#13;
"Doing Taxes on the Side." Meets&#13;
in the Main Place. Refreshments&#13;
will be served .&#13;
The semester's first meeting of&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta, UW -P's English&#13;
honor society, will meet Monday,&#13;
Sept. 28 at noon in CART 135.&#13;
Find out what it's all about&#13;
Parkside Adult Student Association&#13;
Advisory Board meeting on&#13;
Sept 25, 12:15-12:30 in PASA&#13;
office. Anyone interesting is encouraged&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Accounting Club meeting - Sept.&#13;
23, noon in Moln D107. Speaker:&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
If inrerested in the foJJowing support&#13;
groups please call Marcy at&#13;
595-2338. Eating disorders supportgroup,&#13;
Co-Dependentsanonymous,&#13;
Sexual Assault/Incest Survivors&#13;
Support Group, Al-Anon,&#13;
Adult Children of Alcoholics.&#13;
AA-Alcoholics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Monday at noon in Moln.&#13;
D133. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Free pregnancy tests. Contact UWp&#13;
Health Services, 595-2366, or&#13;
Moln. DJ 33 for more information.&#13;
Contraceptives for sale at affordable&#13;
prices. Condoms 10 for $1&#13;
and birth control pills $4 a packet.&#13;
Contact UW-P Health Services,&#13;
595-2366, or Moln. D133 for more&#13;
infonnation.&#13;
NA-Narcotics Anonymous meets&#13;
every Wednesday at noon in Moln .&#13;
D133. Call 595-2365 or 595-2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Flu shots available in Health Services&#13;
aft er Oct. I. Cost is $7. Cal I&#13;
595-2366 for an appointm ent&#13;
I MISCELLANEOUS I&#13;
I could use a ride and share th e gas&#13;
expense. Please contac tme at763-&#13;
3806.&#13;
PERSONA LS I&#13;
To the man who goes by the name&#13;
"Brian"-le t's do lunch.&#13;
Attention : lookin g the babe of the&#13;
week. Apply in person to DJLA or&#13;
PAPOO. All en tries welcome!&#13;
To my Hon ey Bunnies• I love you&#13;
lots -and your smile is like a ray of&#13;
sunshine -from your Cuddle Puppy.&#13;
Who is the Bl onde Bombshell?&#13;
What does she look like? Does she&#13;
live? I don 't know! I haven't seen&#13;
her. PAPOO.&#13;
FiFi - well hello there! Did you&#13;
find the keys yet? Get you lighter!&#13;
Why are we at Darkside? Oh, I&#13;
meant Parkside!&#13;
Jeanie Wood from Robert Half&#13;
Associates speaks on "How to Get&#13;
Hi.red in Today's Job Market. "&#13;
Refreshments served.&#13;
Brown bag lunch sponsored by&#13;
PASA. "Parents for Peace on the&#13;
Streets," by Pat Franco, vice-president&#13;
Discussion to follow . Mon,&#13;
Sept. 28, at noon in CART 129.&#13;
Multiple Sclerosis Support Group&#13;
meetings on Fridays, 7-9pm in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
Chedda Man- sing some Jane's for&#13;
us. How come you didn't run away&#13;
last tim e we saw you? Nice soccer&#13;
playing! Never thought you knew&#13;
how to ru n. Garkey and Jan.&#13;
Cat Man , holy violence you butthead!&#13;
Do you have any torture&#13;
belts Pete? Hey remember the dog&#13;
races? HerecomesBamey. Garkey&#13;
and Jan .&#13;
[ FOR RENT I&#13;
Border wanted: single woman with&#13;
big house in quiet neighborhood.&#13;
20 minutes from Parkside. Call&#13;
now for more information. 886-&#13;
4972.&#13;
FOR SALE I For fund rai ser: toaster oven, lik enew&#13;
dishes , ne ver-u ed sil verware&#13;
t~ auction. 63 7-2761 after 3pm.&#13;
Live near lJW . p bus route.&#13;
HELPWANTEO }&#13;
If you come from Burlington or&#13;
through Burlington, and if your&#13;
first class is at 8am on M, W, &amp; F.&#13;
The Best Part-time&#13;
'"l;,,re are ' lot or pm1- time jobs J ob Ever .J. : ut th ere that'll he lp you make&#13;
ends meet. But a part-llme job with the Anny ational Guard&#13;
offers more th an j u_ t ~ ext~a paycheck. Instead of spending&#13;
t ur _w~e kend s deJr verr ng pizza or bagging groceries , you could&#13;
e ~rr vmg an M-1 lank !)r repelling down a mountain ide.&#13;
Besid es the_ fun you 'll have during an ave rage&#13;
we~ ~en d dnll, yo u coul d qua lify for the SO%&#13;
Tuition Grant , th e Montgom ery GI Bill , and&#13;
the Student Loan Repayment Program . Find&#13;
out more about th e best part -tim e job yo u'll ever&#13;
have, call&#13;
SGT.1st Cla s Bryon Barnes&#13;
(414) 656-6496 Americans&#13;
at their best&#13;
PERSONA LS I Andreas, O bwohl du weider zu&#13;
hause in Deutschland bist, und ich&#13;
hier in der schule, sind meine&#13;
gedanken immer bei dir. Ich hoff e,&#13;
class wir, egel was passiert. immer&#13;
fur einander da sind. Du bist mein&#13;
bester freund, den ich jemals h ue.&#13;
kh vcrmis.sc tlich uni.J 1l:h hebe&#13;
dich! Gina G.&#13;
+200 parking pots (CART) - 30&#13;
spots handicapped used by 6 pcopl&#13;
(CART) • 50 spots more reserved&#13;
for teachers - I 00 pots (more than&#13;
100 spots) in Union realignmen t&#13;
Studentgain? "Youcancar-pool."&#13;
Did you find the rest of the article&#13;
on Dennis Dean yet? Try looking&#13;
in the park.&#13;
•&#13;
Word _p e _ingservice. Six)&#13;
expcn n e with term papers,&#13;
tcr , Ph.D Th eses . Pickup/(b&#13;
ery, R ci ne/Keno ha. Sl.40&#13;
256- I 338, I ave message. s&#13;
th i ad!&#13;
W nted : a r m in Rae"'&#13;
K no ha in exchange for ·&#13;
nance work. Hours perwea&#13;
liable. Leave wriuen me~&#13;
the Ra nger cw door in !he&#13;
box.&#13;
To a ll UW-Park ide Student&#13;
Thank you for your patience and und r tanding durini&#13;
this past regi tration--the fir tone conduc ted utilizing the&#13;
new Student Information Sy tern.&#13;
It will be better next time!&#13;
Office of R gi trar Staff&#13;
Market Rese arch&#13;
Gain Valuable Experience&#13;
Woring in Your Spare Time&#13;
No Selling &amp; No Experience Neces ary&#13;
Conveneinr aft rno n vening h urs&#13;
Good pay: $ 5 .50/ 6 .00 h ur t sta rt&#13;
Bonu pay over 25 h ur. /w t.:k&#13;
Holiday, vacation pay&#13;
Reg ul ary chedu1ecl merit increa. cs&#13;
Take advantage of thi chan e to gain a variety of&#13;
office exp rience.&#13;
t...iu.WUlla,,JI. a86.74(W.&#13;
or&#13;
Apply in person: I 100 Commerce Drive, Suite JO-'&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
(Ensenadas/Novak Appliance off of Hwy !OJ&#13;
Wanted: blackjack dealers for&#13;
Homecoming 1992. October 2.&#13;
No experience needed. Call Karla&#13;
or Chuck at 595-2277.&#13;
INDIGO ROUND • DJ LA B&#13;
• ACKODA BUS • D EAD f Ly Boy&#13;
Ir's TIME FoR A NEw BEGINNING •. -.&#13;
Travel free! Sell quality vacations&#13;
to exotic destinations! Jamaica&#13;
Cancun, and Florida. Work for th;&#13;
mo t reliable spring break company&#13;
with the best commission and&#13;
service. Fastest way to free travel!&#13;
Sun Splash Tours J-800-426-7710 _ GER FFSr'92&#13;
25 SEPTEMBER 1992 • UNION SQUARE 5 11.1 . _&#13;
• PM TO !YlUJNIG}IT $3&#13;
• IN ADVANCE IN RANGER OFFICE • $5 AT TI{E DOOR</text>
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�ll&#13;
VOlUME&#13;
21 &#13;
ISSUE&#13;
20&#13;
ler&#13;
Editorial&#13;
...&#13;
nside...&#13;
,~,:vw-pmkside&#13;
freshmen&#13;
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Marquita&#13;
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resuIts &#13;
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a  nationwide&#13;
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IlllI'iJIg &#13;
freshmen&#13;
at&#13;
the&#13;
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mj  &#13;
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last&#13;
Call,&#13;
were&#13;
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~&#13;
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opin-&#13;
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II &#13;
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swdem&#13;
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0\&#13;
~&#13;
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lifelong&#13;
objec-&#13;
Ij&#13;
jIeS.&#13;
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Arepon &#13;
from &#13;
Diana&#13;
L.&#13;
Sharp,&#13;
~!&#13;
_t&#13;
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student&#13;
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Since&#13;
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the&#13;
Cooperative&#13;
:~&#13;
I1I1irotionai&#13;
Research&#13;
Program&#13;
I!!  &#13;
IJRP)&#13;
has&#13;
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l!IUlIenlS&#13;
auending&#13;
new&#13;
student&#13;
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The&#13;
majority&#13;
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stu-&#13;
.. unending&#13;
have&#13;
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18-&#13;
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)III &#13;
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Over&#13;
8S&#13;
percent&#13;
live&#13;
!&#13;
New color&#13;
copier&#13;
in media&#13;
services.&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
One&#13;
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to &#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
nationwide&#13;
that&#13;
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Of&#13;
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UW&#13;
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least&#13;
a&#13;
"B" &#13;
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men&#13;
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that&#13;
they&#13;
would&#13;
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men&#13;
and&#13;
women&#13;
in&#13;
performing&#13;
volunteer&#13;
work&#13;
or&#13;
community&#13;
service&#13;
.&#13;
Continued&#13;
on&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
Theft&#13;
annoys&#13;
computer&#13;
science&#13;
department&#13;
Gabe&#13;
Kluka&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
When&#13;
Professor&#13;
Morris&#13;
e&#13;
Mrebaugh&#13;
tried&#13;
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his&#13;
class&#13;
on&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Feb&#13;
16,&#13;
he&#13;
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no&#13;
idea&#13;
~hewould&#13;
be&#13;
delayed&#13;
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a thief.&#13;
, wheeled&#13;
the&#13;
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into&#13;
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turned&#13;
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~ed."&#13;
It&#13;
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OUl&#13;
the&#13;
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by&#13;
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who &#13;
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off&#13;
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video&#13;
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megabyte&#13;
~&#13;
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about&#13;
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Professor&#13;
Firebaugh,&#13;
who&#13;
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his&#13;
lecture&#13;
notes&#13;
electronically,&#13;
he&#13;
had&#13;
that&#13;
Tom&#13;
Deluca&#13;
promises&#13;
fun&#13;
for&#13;
all.&#13;
Page&#13;
5&#13;
Collect&#13;
some&#13;
brownie&#13;
points&#13;
and&#13;
norni-&#13;
nate your favorite&#13;
professor&#13;
far an award.&#13;
See &#13;
ft &#13;
on Page&#13;
6&#13;
Do&#13;
frozen&#13;
door&#13;
locks&#13;
suck?&#13;
Find&#13;
out the&#13;
answer&#13;
on:&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF WISCONSIN&#13;
- PARKSIDE&#13;
within&#13;
50&#13;
miles&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
campus,&#13;
and&#13;
most&#13;
expressed&#13;
plans&#13;
to&#13;
live&#13;
with&#13;
parents&#13;
or&#13;
relatives&#13;
while&#13;
attend.&#13;
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college.&#13;
The&#13;
majority&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
students&#13;
lisled&#13;
a Roman&#13;
Catholic&#13;
or &#13;
Luiheran&#13;
religious&#13;
background.&#13;
Finally,&#13;
nearly&#13;
75&#13;
percent&#13;
had&#13;
a "B"&#13;
aver-&#13;
age&#13;
or&#13;
beuer&#13;
in&#13;
high&#13;
school.&#13;
The&#13;
top&#13;
three&#13;
reasons&#13;
students&#13;
selected&#13;
UW·Parkside&#13;
have&#13;
re-&#13;
mained&#13;
the&#13;
same&#13;
since&#13;
1989.&#13;
The&#13;
criteria&#13;
include&#13;
low&#13;
tuition,&#13;
size&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
school&#13;
and&#13;
desire&#13;
to&#13;
live&#13;
near&#13;
home.&#13;
While&#13;
slightly&#13;
over&#13;
40&#13;
percent&#13;
of&#13;
entering&#13;
students&#13;
here&#13;
chose&#13;
the&#13;
university&#13;
because&#13;
they&#13;
wanted&#13;
to&#13;
live&#13;
near&#13;
home,&#13;
21.3&#13;
percent&#13;
na-&#13;
tionwide&#13;
selected&#13;
a college&#13;
for&#13;
that&#13;
reason.&#13;
This&#13;
correlates&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
fact&#13;
that&#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside&#13;
has&#13;
a large&#13;
enrollment&#13;
of&#13;
students&#13;
that&#13;
corn-&#13;
mute,&#13;
thus&#13;
these&#13;
numbers&#13;
are&#13;
not&#13;
surprising.&#13;
Low&#13;
tuition&#13;
was&#13;
also&#13;
an&#13;
importam&#13;
selection&#13;
factor&#13;
for&#13;
students&#13;
nationwide.&#13;
days&#13;
lecture&#13;
backed&#13;
up&#13;
on&#13;
another&#13;
system,&#13;
and&#13;
was&#13;
able&#13;
to&#13;
continue&#13;
with&#13;
his&#13;
class.&#13;
The&#13;
thief&#13;
managed&#13;
to&#13;
break&#13;
into&#13;
a&#13;
doubly&#13;
locked&#13;
room&#13;
in&#13;
Molinaro,&#13;
unscrew&#13;
the&#13;
case&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
computer,&#13;
remove&#13;
the&#13;
items,&#13;
and&#13;
replace&#13;
the&#13;
case.&#13;
A&#13;
theft&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
nature&#13;
is&#13;
highly&#13;
unusual,&#13;
because&#13;
as&#13;
Firebaugh&#13;
put&#13;
it,&#13;
" ...&#13;
we&#13;
(the&#13;
computer&#13;
science&#13;
department)&#13;
don't&#13;
want&#13;
everyone&#13;
thinking&#13;
this&#13;
is a parts&#13;
store&#13;
so&#13;
we&#13;
keep&#13;
a close&#13;
eye&#13;
on&#13;
everything."&#13;
There&#13;
were&#13;
no&#13;
signs&#13;
of&#13;
forced&#13;
entry,&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
thief&#13;
tried&#13;
to&#13;
cover&#13;
his&#13;
or&#13;
her&#13;
tracks&#13;
by&#13;
replacing&#13;
the&#13;
case&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
computer.&#13;
This&#13;
kind&#13;
of&#13;
theft&#13;
would&#13;
indicate&#13;
the&#13;
thief&#13;
was&#13;
trying&#13;
to upgrade&#13;
a computer,&#13;
and&#13;
knew&#13;
exactly&#13;
what&#13;
he&#13;
or&#13;
she&#13;
was&#13;
looking&#13;
for.&#13;
Paul&#13;
Sorenson,&#13;
a technician&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Computer&#13;
Science&#13;
depart-&#13;
....&#13;
,&#13;
ment,&#13;
and&#13;
theperson&#13;
whoreported&#13;
the&#13;
theft&#13;
to&#13;
Campus&#13;
Police,&#13;
said&#13;
that&#13;
as&#13;
a result&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
the&#13;
Com-&#13;
puter&#13;
Science&#13;
Department&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
fastening&#13;
everything&#13;
down,&#13;
in·&#13;
eluding&#13;
the&#13;
covers&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
com-&#13;
puters.&#13;
He&#13;
added&#13;
that&#13;
this&#13;
type&#13;
of&#13;
theft&#13;
was&#13;
a rare&#13;
occurrence&#13;
here,&#13;
and&#13;
that&#13;
he&#13;
was&#13;
really&#13;
disap-&#13;
pointed&#13;
by&#13;
this&#13;
because&#13;
" ...the&#13;
person&#13;
who&#13;
took&#13;
this&#13;
stuff&#13;
was&#13;
stealing&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
rest&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents."&#13;
Chemical&#13;
spill&#13;
closes&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Hall&#13;
Nick&#13;
Zahn&#13;
Assistant&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
AStudent&#13;
helper&#13;
taking&#13;
inventory&#13;
and&#13;
reorganizing&#13;
chemicals&#13;
at about3;30/4;00&#13;
Thursday&#13;
accidently&#13;
Co1l1Sed&#13;
a bottle&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
broken,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in emergency&#13;
procedures&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
evacuation&#13;
of&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
hall.&#13;
of&#13;
1renicaIly,&#13;
the&#13;
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Instead&#13;
aJPhabeucally&#13;
as&#13;
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.&#13;
.,&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
Trimethylamine&#13;
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commonly&#13;
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under&#13;
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pressure&#13;
and&#13;
at co&#13;
d&#13;
lentperatures.&#13;
When&#13;
the&#13;
bottle&#13;
was&#13;
dropped&#13;
the&#13;
cap&#13;
broke,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in a sudden&#13;
loss&#13;
of pressure.&#13;
The&#13;
half&#13;
ahter&#13;
of&#13;
liquid&#13;
boiled&#13;
rapidly&#13;
and&#13;
beeame&#13;
gaseous.&#13;
.'&#13;
Fortunately&#13;
said&#13;
Stan&#13;
Gruenwald,&#13;
the&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
Lab&#13;
Manager,&#13;
"while&#13;
all&#13;
chemlc~s&#13;
aretoxtC&#13;
to s?me&#13;
e~tent,lhis&#13;
particular&#13;
chemical&#13;
isn't&#13;
that&#13;
bad.&#13;
At&#13;
worst&#13;
it resulted&#13;
in an&#13;
obnOXIOUS&#13;
odor,&#13;
an&#13;
odor&#13;
that&#13;
fdled&#13;
~~G'&#13;
'1 .&#13;
reenqUlst&#13;
hall&#13;
due&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
venu&#13;
auon&#13;
system.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
24, 1993&#13;
Serving&#13;
it &#13;
Up...&#13;
,,:1 &#13;
!t"Ol:~&#13;
]&#13;
'~I&#13;
,,'1i(&#13;
I&#13;
,,1&#13;
\..;&#13;
••....&#13;
11;"&#13;
,~-~&#13;
~--.8&#13;
"The&#13;
RaJ,gcr&#13;
Nc:ws&#13;
photo&#13;
by &#13;
Mike&#13;
Paupon:&#13;
Members&#13;
of&#13;
PASA&#13;
distribute&#13;
free&#13;
homemade&#13;
non-alcoholic&#13;
beverages&#13;
during&#13;
Work&#13;
Share&#13;
Fair.&#13;
The&#13;
three&#13;
my&#13;
event&#13;
was&#13;
an&#13;
opportunity&#13;
for&#13;
members&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
community&#13;
to&#13;
display&#13;
their&#13;
talents&#13;
and&#13;
abilities.&#13;
See&#13;
the&#13;
commentary&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
event&#13;
in the&#13;
"Letters&#13;
to the&#13;
Editor"&#13;
section,&#13;
written&#13;
by&#13;
PASA&#13;
president&#13;
Cheryl&#13;
Murphy.&#13;
P &#13;
ARKSIDE&#13;
S11JDENf&#13;
GoVERNMENT&#13;
AssociATION&#13;
~ WmIIWG&#13;
lEILlEC&#13;
'lI'II&#13;
&lt;Q)&#13;
N ~IHIIEIID&#13;
ll1lLIE&#13;
Currently&#13;
- Petitions&#13;
available&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
_ PSGA&#13;
constitutions&#13;
available&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office.&#13;
_ Referendums&#13;
&amp; &#13;
amendments&#13;
due&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
by&#13;
4;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Petitions&#13;
due&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
by&#13;
4;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Absentee&#13;
ballots&#13;
available&#13;
in PSG&#13;
A office&#13;
at&#13;
5;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
24&#13;
Mon.&#13;
Mar.&#13;
1&#13;
_ Validation&#13;
of&#13;
Petitions&#13;
and&#13;
candidate.&#13;
_ Release&#13;
Forms&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
at&#13;
1;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Ballot&#13;
drawing&#13;
at&#13;
I; &#13;
15.&#13;
_ Candidate&#13;
biographies&#13;
due&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
by&#13;
5;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
· Day&#13;
one&#13;
of&#13;
elections.&#13;
Poll&#13;
open&#13;
9;00&#13;
AM&#13;
- 8;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Day&#13;
two&#13;
of&#13;
elections.&#13;
Poll&#13;
open&#13;
9;00&#13;
AM&#13;
- 8;ooPM&#13;
_ Ballot&#13;
count&#13;
8;30&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Unofficial&#13;
Results&#13;
posted.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Mar.&#13;
10&#13;
Thur.&#13;
Mar.&#13;
11&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Mar.12&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Mar.&#13;
17&#13;
· Contestation&#13;
Heard&#13;
in PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
at&#13;
12;00&#13;
PM.&#13;
_ Senate&#13;
meeting&#13;
to swear&#13;
in&#13;
new&#13;
candidates.&#13;
· Newly&#13;
elected&#13;
candidates&#13;
take&#13;
office.&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Mar.&#13;
19&#13;
-&#13;
-_..:...._----------------------------------------------------:::;:-...&#13;
February&#13;
2~, 1993&#13;
.&#13;
---:&#13;
mInOrity&#13;
threatened&#13;
Tns RANGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page 2&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
24&#13;
MUSIC -&#13;
South&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
High School&#13;
Choir,&#13;
Wolfgang&#13;
calvin,&#13;
conduc-&#13;
tor; Noon;&#13;
CART&#13;
0118;&#13;
free.&#13;
HEALTH&#13;
-&#13;
Cholesterol&#13;
level and blood&#13;
pressure&#13;
screening&#13;
by UW &#13;
-Parkside&#13;
R.N.,&#13;
Sandra&#13;
Riese;&#13;
Main&#13;
Place;&#13;
10 &#13;
a.m. to &#13;
2 &#13;
p.m.;&#13;
free.&#13;
LECTURE&#13;
- &#13;
Dr. Cassell&#13;
Lawson,&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
of Kensha's&#13;
Gateway&#13;
Technical&#13;
College;&#13;
Noon;&#13;
Union&#13;
104-106;&#13;
free;&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
by Black&#13;
History&#13;
Month&#13;
Committee.&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
-&#13;
Essence&#13;
ofWo~an&#13;
Contest;&#13;
7 &#13;
p.m.; Union&#13;
Square;&#13;
sponsored&#13;
by Black&#13;
History&#13;
Month&#13;
Committee.&#13;
ATHLETICS&#13;
-&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
pool, &#13;
3 gyms,&#13;
wresllingroom&#13;
and racquetball&#13;
coons&#13;
are available&#13;
for walk-in&#13;
use with studentlD&#13;
card.&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
25&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
- &#13;
Away;&#13;
UW-Eau&#13;
Claire;&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
SEX - &#13;
Condom&#13;
Olympics&#13;
at Core&#13;
Building;&#13;
2 &#13;
persons&#13;
to team&#13;
(any&#13;
combination),&#13;
one must be donn&#13;
resident;&#13;
10 &#13;
competitions&#13;
with prizes;&#13;
7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
UVE MUSIC -&#13;
Electric&#13;
Hellfire&#13;
Club;&#13;
alternative&#13;
rock; Union&#13;
Square;&#13;
8:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
26&#13;
UVE MUSIC -&#13;
Talent&#13;
Night;&#13;
four guest&#13;
bands&#13;
share&#13;
the spotlight;&#13;
7 p.m.;&#13;
Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
27&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
- &#13;
Home;&#13;
vs. Northern&#13;
Michigan;&#13;
2 p.m.;&#13;
$3.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
- &#13;
Away;&#13;
St. Ambrose&#13;
U. (Iowa);&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
DANCE&#13;
- &#13;
OJ. -Dance;&#13;
8 p.m.;&#13;
Union&#13;
Square;&#13;
sponsored&#13;
by the Black&#13;
History&#13;
Month&#13;
Committee.&#13;
MONDAY,&#13;
MARCH&#13;
1&#13;
HEALTH&#13;
-&#13;
Soup and Substance&#13;
lecture&#13;
by Rebecca&#13;
Banks,&#13;
R.N., M.B.A.&#13;
of&#13;
St. catherine's&#13;
Women's&#13;
Center;&#13;
"The&#13;
Politics&#13;
of Breast&#13;
Cancer";&#13;
Noon;&#13;
Union&#13;
207; free; sponsored&#13;
by UW-Parkside&#13;
Women's&#13;
History&#13;
Month.&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
ICE BREAKER&#13;
-&#13;
Program&#13;
for follow-up&#13;
help to cure "com-&#13;
puter stress&#13;
anxiety";&#13;
Noon;&#13;
WLLC&#13;
0182;&#13;
co-sponsored&#13;
by PASA&#13;
and the&#13;
counseling&#13;
office.&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
- &#13;
Home;&#13;
vs. Michigan&#13;
Technical;&#13;
5 p.m.;&#13;
$3.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
- &#13;
Home;&#13;
vs. Michigan&#13;
Technical;&#13;
7:30 p.m.;&#13;
$3.&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
MARCH&#13;
2&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
FAIR -&#13;
Agencies&#13;
and organizations&#13;
which&#13;
serve&#13;
women&#13;
will be&#13;
on dlspl~y;&#13;
Main&#13;
Place;&#13;
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.;&#13;
sponsored&#13;
by UW-Parkiside&#13;
Women&#13;
s History&#13;
Month.&#13;
Legality&#13;
of&#13;
scholarships&#13;
Andrew&#13;
J. &#13;
Patch&#13;
Editor-In-Chief&#13;
Stacey&#13;
Shears,&#13;
Recruitment&#13;
and Retention&#13;
Coordinator&#13;
for the&#13;
United&#13;
States&#13;
Student&#13;
Association&#13;
(USSA),&#13;
will be on campus&#13;
today&#13;
from&#13;
10 &#13;
a.m. to &#13;
2 &#13;
p.m. to discuss&#13;
and answer&#13;
questions&#13;
concerning&#13;
the status&#13;
of minority&#13;
scholarships&#13;
in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Students&#13;
across&#13;
the country&#13;
wrote&#13;
letters&#13;
of concern&#13;
to Secre-&#13;
tary &#13;
of Education&#13;
Lamar&#13;
Alexander&#13;
lastsemesterafter&#13;
it &#13;
was announced&#13;
that scholarships&#13;
aimed&#13;
solely&#13;
to-&#13;
ward&#13;
minorities&#13;
would&#13;
be banned.&#13;
This&#13;
letter-writing&#13;
campaign&#13;
re-&#13;
sulted&#13;
in a postponement&#13;
of the&#13;
decision&#13;
until a study&#13;
by the Gen-&#13;
eral Accounting&#13;
Office&#13;
on the ef-&#13;
fects of such a move&#13;
can be com-&#13;
pleted.&#13;
President&#13;
Clinton&#13;
has not yet&#13;
issued&#13;
a formal&#13;
statement&#13;
declar-&#13;
ing his stance&#13;
on the legality&#13;
of&#13;
minority&#13;
scholarships,&#13;
although&#13;
according&#13;
to the USSA&#13;
presiden-&#13;
tial voter&#13;
guide&#13;
Clinton&#13;
is in favor&#13;
of such a policy.&#13;
The University&#13;
of California&#13;
at Berkel&#13;
y Law School&#13;
and several&#13;
other&#13;
influential&#13;
universities&#13;
are in&#13;
the process&#13;
of revieWing&#13;
the' &#13;
at&#13;
firmative&#13;
action&#13;
admissiO!l&#13;
~i:&#13;
cies&#13;
due to complainlS&#13;
lOdged&#13;
against&#13;
them by Alexanderandhead&#13;
of the &#13;
Office&#13;
of Civil&#13;
Rigb&#13;
'&#13;
Michael&#13;
Williams.&#13;
U&#13;
Shears'&#13;
visit is intended&#13;
Iina&#13;
'&#13;
to &#13;
inform&#13;
students&#13;
of the&#13;
cUJreot&#13;
predicament&#13;
of mmority&#13;
scholar.&#13;
ships&#13;
and afflfffiative&#13;
action'poli.&#13;
cies, &#13;
and second&#13;
to initiate&#13;
aletle,.&#13;
writing&#13;
campaign&#13;
on &#13;
this&#13;
CaJ1l)lJs&#13;
to combat&#13;
the banning&#13;
of&#13;
minority&#13;
schol&#13;
arsh ips and legisJatioo&#13;
again.&#13;
affirmative&#13;
action.&#13;
Studen~&#13;
are&#13;
asked&#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
part&#13;
by writing&#13;
Presi.  &#13;
j&#13;
dent Clinton&#13;
and &#13;
the&#13;
Depanmem&#13;
l&#13;
of Education&#13;
either&#13;
personallYIir&#13;
I&#13;
in the manner&#13;
of a&#13;
form&#13;
leuerShean&#13;
J&#13;
will distribute.&#13;
USSA&#13;
mem~&#13;
,&#13;
are touring&#13;
campuses&#13;
throU"h_.&#13;
..... &#13;
~&#13;
the nation&#13;
with the intentofSlalt.&#13;
ing similar&#13;
campaigns.&#13;
~&#13;
More&#13;
than &#13;
40,000&#13;
minority&#13;
~&#13;
students&#13;
in the United&#13;
Slates&#13;
Ie&#13;
~&#13;
recipients&#13;
of scholarships&#13;
designed&#13;
J&#13;
solely&#13;
for minorities.&#13;
Sluden~of&#13;
~&#13;
color&#13;
constitute&#13;
only 2Opercemof&#13;
the total&#13;
undergraduate&#13;
sludellt&#13;
population&#13;
across&#13;
the country.&#13;
USSA&#13;
will have a &#13;
Iable&#13;
dis·&#13;
play in the alcove&#13;
next&#13;
the &#13;
WOIllell'S&#13;
Center&#13;
in the main concourse.&#13;
SPRING&#13;
BREAK&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
t&#13;
TANNING&#13;
SALE&#13;
r &#13;
-10&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
-"\&#13;
:  ONLY&#13;
$35.00&#13;
:&#13;
I&#13;
15 SESSIONS&#13;
I&#13;
l  &#13;
ONLY&#13;
$45.00&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
3 MONTHS&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
UNLIMITED&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
:&#13;
I&#13;
ONLY&#13;
$100.00&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
, !!iV'&#13;
" &#13;
I  &#13;
FREE&#13;
BOTfI..E&#13;
OF&#13;
I&#13;
~./.D'JV&#13;
:&#13;
TROPICAL&#13;
SUN &#13;
TAN-:&#13;
f\.~&#13;
I &#13;
NING&#13;
LOTION&#13;
WITH&#13;
I&#13;
1I.IIRSTUIJIO&amp;r',I'.VINGCENTER&#13;
I&#13;
ANY&#13;
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I&#13;
3519&#13;
52nd&#13;
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I&#13;
654-6154&#13;
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~n&#13;
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of&#13;
the&#13;
Guard,&#13;
you&#13;
could&#13;
also&#13;
receive&#13;
up&#13;
10&#13;
tar&#13;
$10,000&#13;
in &#13;
student&#13;
loan&#13;
repayments,&#13;
plus up to&#13;
~(&#13;
$6. t20 through&#13;
the Montgomery&#13;
G.!. Bill.&#13;
~j.&#13;
Check our all/he benetits&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
Th,&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
National&#13;
Guard&#13;
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50%&#13;
College&#13;
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