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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Kenneth Reardon visits UW-Parkside</text>
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              <text>Student&#13;
Newspaper&#13;
o &#13;
f&#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
o &#13;
f&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
E&#13;
Police&#13;
Beat&#13;
Senior&#13;
Seminar&#13;
raises&#13;
$2000&#13;
FEATURES&#13;
Communication&#13;
enior&#13;
Seminar&#13;
4&#13;
Things&#13;
2 do &#13;
@ &#13;
the U&#13;
3&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Reas&#13;
ns for missing&#13;
sports&#13;
in UWP&#13;
4&#13;
Women's&#13;
Basketball&#13;
4&#13;
Student&#13;
profiles&#13;
5&#13;
VIEWS&#13;
The meaningful-music&#13;
legacy&#13;
6&#13;
E~TERTAIN:vtENT&#13;
Puzzle&#13;
Student&#13;
urvcy&#13;
R&#13;
AN&#13;
G&#13;
N&#13;
EW&#13;
s&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
VOLUME&#13;
27  &#13;
ISSUE&#13;
12  &#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
10&#13;
ESTABLISHED&#13;
1972&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
Reardon&#13;
visits&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Bulgrin&#13;
of the Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
Reardon,&#13;
Associate&#13;
Professor&#13;
in urban&#13;
and regional&#13;
planning&#13;
at&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Illinois-&#13;
Urbana/Champaign&#13;
and&#13;
director&#13;
of  the&#13;
East&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Action&#13;
Research&#13;
Project,&#13;
visited&#13;
the&#13;
University&#13;
of  Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
on  Dec.&#13;
seventh,&#13;
eighth&#13;
and&#13;
ninth.&#13;
Reardon&#13;
was instrumental&#13;
in the revi-&#13;
talization&#13;
of a neighborhood&#13;
in East&#13;
St.&#13;
Loui&#13;
, II. His visit&#13;
was&#13;
sponsored&#13;
by UW-&#13;
Parksidc's&#13;
Center&#13;
for&#13;
Community&#13;
PartnershipslNeighborhood&#13;
University&#13;
Alliance&#13;
(NVA).&#13;
While&#13;
at  UW-Parkside,&#13;
Reardon&#13;
poke&#13;
to  tudents,&#13;
faculty&#13;
and a variety&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
universities&#13;
members&#13;
on  "The&#13;
Engaged&#13;
University."&#13;
He also&#13;
made&#13;
trips&#13;
to the Family&#13;
Resource&#13;
Center&#13;
of Racine&#13;
and&#13;
the Lincoln&#13;
Neighborhood&#13;
Center&#13;
of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Both&#13;
neighborhoods&#13;
are targeted&#13;
by UW-Parkside's&#13;
I-IUD&#13;
grant.&#13;
Reardon&#13;
offered&#13;
suggestions&#13;
and tips&#13;
of hi success&#13;
to the centers&#13;
on the site vis-&#13;
7&#13;
6&#13;
Jenni&#13;
Wehrli&#13;
Of the Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Staff&#13;
From&#13;
mid-October&#13;
to December&#13;
2,&#13;
there&#13;
was a "penny&#13;
war"&#13;
going&#13;
on in&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Hall.&#13;
The&#13;
first,&#13;
second,&#13;
and&#13;
third&#13;
floors&#13;
each&#13;
had their&#13;
own&#13;
jars&#13;
and&#13;
the fourth&#13;
and&#13;
fifth&#13;
floor&#13;
were&#13;
com-&#13;
bined&#13;
because&#13;
they&#13;
are smaller&#13;
than&#13;
the&#13;
other&#13;
floors.&#13;
The&#13;
idea&#13;
was&#13;
that&#13;
one&#13;
penny&#13;
counted&#13;
as one point,&#13;
and silver&#13;
its. He spoke&#13;
of his experiences&#13;
with&#13;
revi-&#13;
talization&#13;
in the East&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
neighbor-&#13;
hood.&#13;
One&#13;
of Reardon's&#13;
suggestions&#13;
to make&#13;
a successful&#13;
partnership&#13;
between&#13;
the uni-&#13;
versity&#13;
and the &#13;
community&#13;
was to make&#13;
small&#13;
and&#13;
tangible&#13;
improvements&#13;
to the&#13;
neighborhoods.&#13;
Once&#13;
these&#13;
steps&#13;
were&#13;
taken,&#13;
Reardon&#13;
believes&#13;
that the partner-&#13;
ship&#13;
will blossom.&#13;
"You&#13;
have&#13;
to walk&#13;
the walk,"&#13;
stated&#13;
Reardon,&#13;
"and&#13;
talk the talk."&#13;
Another&#13;
key to successful&#13;
communi-&#13;
ty/university&#13;
partnerships&#13;
is putting&#13;
the&#13;
community&#13;
in the drivers&#13;
seat.&#13;
To do this&#13;
in East&#13;
St. Louis,&#13;
Reardon&#13;
passed&#13;
out&#13;
maps&#13;
and disposable&#13;
cameras&#13;
to the neigh-&#13;
borhood&#13;
residents&#13;
at  the  first&#13;
meeting.&#13;
From&#13;
there,&#13;
the residents&#13;
were&#13;
instructed&#13;
to take&#13;
nine&#13;
photos&#13;
of positive&#13;
aspects&#13;
of&#13;
the neighborhood,&#13;
nine&#13;
shots&#13;
of the nega-&#13;
tive aspects&#13;
of the neighborhood&#13;
and nine&#13;
pictures&#13;
of untapped&#13;
resources.&#13;
They&#13;
were&#13;
also&#13;
instructed&#13;
to place&#13;
landmarks&#13;
and&#13;
boarders&#13;
on their&#13;
maps.&#13;
These&#13;
activities&#13;
helped&#13;
point&#13;
out troubled&#13;
areas&#13;
as well&#13;
as&#13;
teach&#13;
the&#13;
residents&#13;
about&#13;
democratic&#13;
research.&#13;
Reardon&#13;
pointed&#13;
out that a partnership&#13;
was&#13;
not about&#13;
the university&#13;
helping&#13;
the&#13;
community.&#13;
"The&#13;
term&#13;
shouldn't&#13;
be service&#13;
learn-&#13;
ing,&#13;
it should&#13;
be reciprocal&#13;
learning,"&#13;
said&#13;
Reardon.&#13;
He stressed&#13;
that&#13;
the university&#13;
could&#13;
learn&#13;
from&#13;
the  neighborhood&#13;
and&#13;
vice&#13;
versa.&#13;
Reardon&#13;
recently&#13;
celebrated&#13;
his tenth&#13;
anniversary&#13;
on the East&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Project.&#13;
He stated&#13;
that the relationship&#13;
between&#13;
the&#13;
community&#13;
and&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
must&#13;
be a&#13;
long&#13;
lasting&#13;
and sustainable&#13;
commitment.&#13;
He believes&#13;
that the role of the university&#13;
will&#13;
change&#13;
throughout&#13;
the process.&#13;
Currently,&#13;
according&#13;
to Reardon,&#13;
there&#13;
are 88 schools&#13;
with&#13;
grants&#13;
similar&#13;
to UW-&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
HUD&#13;
grant.&#13;
His&#13;
project&#13;
has&#13;
spread&#13;
to eleven&#13;
neighborhoods&#13;
in East&#13;
SI.&#13;
Louis,&#13;
II.  His&#13;
visit&#13;
concluded&#13;
Wed.&#13;
evening&#13;
with&#13;
a dinner&#13;
with&#13;
the  NVA&#13;
Partnership&#13;
Council.&#13;
WIPZ:&#13;
The only state&#13;
university&#13;
student-run&#13;
radio&#13;
station&#13;
Lisa&#13;
Nalbandia&#13;
Special&#13;
to the Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
WIPZ&#13;
is the first&#13;
completely&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent-run&#13;
radio&#13;
station&#13;
in the  history&#13;
of UW-Parkside.&#13;
WIPZ&#13;
prides&#13;
itself&#13;
in  providing&#13;
student&#13;
programming&#13;
and&#13;
being&#13;
an outlet&#13;
for all students&#13;
to&#13;
discuss&#13;
ideas&#13;
and&#13;
thoughts.&#13;
Other&#13;
universities&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
system&#13;
have&#13;
radio&#13;
sta-&#13;
tions,&#13;
but  most&#13;
run National&#13;
Public&#13;
Radio&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Ideas&#13;
Network.&#13;
At WIPZ,&#13;
we do not cover&#13;
national&#13;
or world&#13;
news.&#13;
WIPZ's&#13;
first&#13;
focus&#13;
is  student&#13;
news.&#13;
Part&#13;
of&#13;
WIPZ's&#13;
purpose&#13;
is to inform&#13;
the stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
of UW-Parkside&#13;
what&#13;
is going&#13;
on and&#13;
why.&#13;
If you&#13;
have&#13;
an idea&#13;
for&#13;
a story&#13;
or would&#13;
like&#13;
to become&#13;
part&#13;
of our&#13;
news&#13;
team,&#13;
call&#13;
or stop&#13;
by the&#13;
station&#13;
in Molinaro&#13;
0131.&#13;
As next&#13;
semester&#13;
begins,&#13;
WIPZ&#13;
is&#13;
looking&#13;
for  more&#13;
on-air&#13;
talent&#13;
and&#13;
music&#13;
directors.&#13;
If &#13;
you are interested&#13;
in music&#13;
or have&#13;
opinions&#13;
that&#13;
you&#13;
would&#13;
like&#13;
to hear&#13;
discussed&#13;
on air,&#13;
stop&#13;
down&#13;
at the WIPZ.&#13;
The&#13;
phone&#13;
number&#13;
is x2527.&#13;
If&#13;
you&#13;
are from&#13;
the&#13;
area&#13;
or are spending&#13;
the Winter&#13;
break&#13;
in the dorms,&#13;
WIPZ&#13;
is offering&#13;
train-&#13;
ing&#13;
during&#13;
the semester&#13;
break.&#13;
This&#13;
will&#13;
be a great&#13;
time&#13;
to meet&#13;
members&#13;
and&#13;
the executive&#13;
board&#13;
of WIPZ.&#13;
Penny&#13;
War&#13;
a success!&#13;
coins&#13;
or paper&#13;
money&#13;
were&#13;
subtracted&#13;
points.&#13;
The contest&#13;
caused&#13;
some&#13;
tense&#13;
competition&#13;
as people&#13;
dumped&#13;
jars&#13;
full&#13;
of pennies&#13;
into their&#13;
own&#13;
floor's&#13;
jar,&#13;
and emptied&#13;
their&#13;
pockets&#13;
of silver&#13;
into&#13;
other&#13;
floors'&#13;
jars.&#13;
The&#13;
winners&#13;
of the&#13;
contest,&#13;
the fourth&#13;
and&#13;
fifth&#13;
floors,&#13;
received&#13;
a pizza&#13;
party.&#13;
Christy&#13;
Purpero,&#13;
a resident&#13;
advisor,&#13;
and lenni&#13;
Wehrli&#13;
ran.lhe&#13;
contest&#13;
which&#13;
raised&#13;
about&#13;
$350&#13;
dollars&#13;
for Women's&#13;
Horizons&#13;
in Kenosha.&#13;
Women's&#13;
Horizons&#13;
is a battered&#13;
women&#13;
and chil-&#13;
dren's&#13;
center&#13;
that&#13;
provides&#13;
food,&#13;
shel-&#13;
ter, and counseling&#13;
for women&#13;
and chil-&#13;
dren&#13;
in trouble.&#13;
The&#13;
money&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
especially&#13;
helpful&#13;
now,&#13;
during&#13;
the holi-&#13;
day season.&#13;
Special&#13;
thanks&#13;
to La&#13;
Piazza,&#13;
Infusino's,&#13;
and Ruffolo&#13;
II for&#13;
donating&#13;
the pizza&#13;
for the pizza&#13;
party.&#13;
o&#13;
,...-4&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
w&#13;
s&#13;
POLICE&#13;
BEAT&#13;
12/02/98&#13;
Inc 98-682&#13;
Property&#13;
Damage,&#13;
Union&#13;
parking&#13;
lot,&#13;
10:51&#13;
Student&#13;
reported&#13;
her vehicle&#13;
was&#13;
damaged&#13;
while&#13;
in the Union&#13;
lot.&#13;
~&#13;
12/02/98&#13;
Inc 98-683&#13;
Lost&#13;
and Found,&#13;
Molinaro,&#13;
2:20&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Staff&#13;
member&#13;
turned&#13;
in a jewelry&#13;
item&#13;
which&#13;
had been&#13;
left in a computer&#13;
lab.&#13;
Item&#13;
inventoried&#13;
and&#13;
secured&#13;
at University&#13;
Police.&#13;
12/02/98&#13;
Inc&#13;
98-684&#13;
Harassment,&#13;
University&#13;
Apartments,&#13;
5:39&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Student&#13;
reported&#13;
receiv-&#13;
ing harassing&#13;
phone&#13;
calls&#13;
from&#13;
a boyfriend&#13;
since&#13;
the start&#13;
of school.&#13;
Investigation&#13;
pend-&#13;
ing.&#13;
_&#13;
12/03/98&#13;
Inc 98-685&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road&#13;
at JR, 9:56&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Vehicle&#13;
traveling&#13;
at high&#13;
rate&#13;
of speed&#13;
and&#13;
failing&#13;
to stop&#13;
for a&#13;
stop&#13;
sign&#13;
was&#13;
stopped&#13;
and driver&#13;
cited.&#13;
12/03/98&#13;
Inc&#13;
98-686&#13;
Worthless&#13;
Checks,&#13;
•&#13;
University&#13;
Police,&#13;
II :33 a.m.&#13;
Cashier's&#13;
office&#13;
forwarded&#13;
two NSF&#13;
checks&#13;
written&#13;
by students&#13;
in payment&#13;
of parking&#13;
citations.&#13;
Notice&#13;
for payment&#13;
mailed.&#13;
a.m,&#13;
Driver&#13;
was&#13;
cited&#13;
for failing&#13;
to stop&#13;
at a stop&#13;
sign.&#13;
.&#13;
12/03/98&#13;
Inc 98-689&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road&#13;
at &#13;
Umversiry&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
'30&#13;
m&#13;
UPP&#13;
officer&#13;
Slopped&#13;
a vehicle&#13;
\\ hi h failed&#13;
to&#13;
Apartments,&#13;
.   p..&#13;
'.&#13;
had&#13;
.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
t&#13;
ign&#13;
Investigation&#13;
revealed&#13;
driver&#13;
had&#13;
never&#13;
a &#13;
drj.&#13;
stop&#13;
,or asap&#13;
I  .&#13;
.&#13;
ver's&#13;
license.&#13;
Citation&#13;
were&#13;
Issued.&#13;
12104/98&#13;
Inc 98-690&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Stop,&#13;
HWY&#13;
.. &#13;
31&#13;
E, &#13;
404&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Officer&#13;
stopped&#13;
a vehi&#13;
Ie and&#13;
issued&#13;
the driver&#13;
a citation&#13;
for speeding,&#13;
42 mph&#13;
In a 25 mph&#13;
7  &#13;
ne.&#13;
12/05/98&#13;
Inc 98-691&#13;
Tramc&#13;
Violali&#13;
n,  &#13;
TH 31,&#13;
5 mil&#13;
soUlb&#13;
from&#13;
CTH&#13;
A., 2:26&#13;
a.rn.&#13;
ffi er &#13;
51 &#13;
pped&#13;
a vehicle&#13;
tm\ ding&#13;
at.8&#13;
high&#13;
rate &#13;
of speed.&#13;
Driver&#13;
was&#13;
ited&#13;
for &#13;
operating&#13;
without&#13;
: valid&#13;
dri-&#13;
ver's&#13;
license&#13;
- 2nd&#13;
offense&#13;
in three&#13;
years.&#13;
12105/98&#13;
Inc 98-692&#13;
Agency&#13;
Assi.&#13;
I,&#13;
JR &#13;
&amp; &#13;
Pet's&#13;
Park&#13;
10:09&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Officer&#13;
a. &#13;
sistcd &#13;
at • n a elden!&#13;
until&#13;
Ken&#13;
ha&#13;
heriff'&#13;
Department&#13;
rrived&#13;
t &#13;
the scene.&#13;
12/03/98&#13;
Inc 98-687&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road,&#13;
2:07&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Vehicle&#13;
stopped&#13;
and driver&#13;
cited&#13;
for speeding,&#13;
43 mph&#13;
in a 25 mph&#13;
zone.&#13;
12/03/98&#13;
Inc 98-688&#13;
Traffic&#13;
Violation,&#13;
Outer&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road,&#13;
3:37&#13;
p.m.&#13;
JOB&#13;
FAIR&#13;
All Saints&#13;
Healthcare&#13;
System&#13;
Lower&#13;
Level&#13;
Cafeteria&#13;
3801&#13;
Spring&#13;
Street&#13;
• Racine,&#13;
WI 53405&#13;
January&#13;
14, 1999&#13;
from&#13;
4pm-8pm&#13;
Please&#13;
call our Jobsline&#13;
to&#13;
inquire&#13;
about&#13;
our open positions.&#13;
1-800-943-5627&#13;
12/06/98&#13;
In  98-693&#13;
Agency&#13;
"isl,&#13;
Ranger&#13;
11011,&#13;
7: I   p.m.&#13;
Kcn&#13;
shu&#13;
Police&#13;
Department&#13;
)&#13;
requested&#13;
Upp&#13;
meer's&#13;
assistance&#13;
In &#13;
locatmg&#13;
8&#13;
ubjeet&#13;
believed&#13;
I &#13;
be \\ &#13;
irh &#13;
a student.&#13;
ubject&#13;
was&#13;
not l  atcd.&#13;
12107/98&#13;
Inc 9 ·694&#13;
nl wful&#13;
. &#13;
c &#13;
of Telephone,&#13;
Ranger&#13;
H II, &#13;
II:&#13;
16&#13;
p. m.&#13;
tudcnt&#13;
reponed&#13;
receiving&#13;
ann&#13;
ying&#13;
ph  &#13;
nc  &#13;
call'&#13;
fr &#13;
m on unkn&#13;
wn person.&#13;
tudent&#13;
was&#13;
told to &#13;
contact&#13;
UPP&#13;
if  oils &#13;
persi&#13;
I &#13;
r bee&#13;
me threatening.&#13;
Senior&#13;
Seminar&#13;
Raises&#13;
$2,000&#13;
in the Walk&#13;
for Literacy&#13;
Kate&#13;
Wagner&#13;
'pecial&#13;
to the Ranger&#13;
Neil'S&#13;
The&#13;
University&#13;
Of  Wiscan&#13;
'in-&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide&#13;
ommunication&#13;
enior&#13;
Seminar&#13;
raised&#13;
two&#13;
thousand&#13;
dollars&#13;
this &#13;
semester&#13;
f &#13;
r the Racine&#13;
Literacy&#13;
Council.&#13;
The&#13;
cia s sold&#13;
raffle&#13;
tickets&#13;
for the Council&#13;
and&#13;
sponsored&#13;
the&#13;
Walk&#13;
for  Literacy.&#13;
Participants&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Walk&#13;
for&#13;
Literacy&#13;
collected&#13;
pledges&#13;
for  completing&#13;
the&#13;
three-&#13;
mile&#13;
walk&#13;
through&#13;
downtown&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Rain&#13;
and&#13;
high&#13;
winds&#13;
could-&#13;
n't  keep&#13;
the&#13;
walkers&#13;
down-vthey&#13;
mi.&#13;
d  &#13;
ver one&#13;
th &#13;
usand&#13;
d &#13;
liars&#13;
and&#13;
collect&#13;
d &#13;
numer&#13;
us  &#13;
donations&#13;
for&#13;
gift bags&#13;
f &#13;
r &#13;
participants.&#13;
"We're&#13;
very&#13;
happy&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
success&#13;
of the walk&#13;
because&#13;
il rai ed&#13;
money&#13;
and awareness&#13;
for the Racine&#13;
Litera&#13;
y&#13;
ouncil,"&#13;
said&#13;
Becky&#13;
Rachoner,&#13;
a   member&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
Communication&#13;
enior&#13;
eminar.&#13;
"The&#13;
ouncil&#13;
p nsors&#13;
many&#13;
pro-&#13;
grams&#13;
to leach&#13;
literacy&#13;
and&#13;
it &#13;
was&#13;
great&#13;
to help&#13;
them."&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
Staff:&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Bulgrin&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Editor&#13;
Peter&#13;
Minor&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sonya&#13;
Flower&#13;
Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
Sarah&#13;
Schwalbach&#13;
Layout&#13;
Editor&#13;
Roman&#13;
Rodichev&#13;
Photo&#13;
Editor&#13;
Michelle&#13;
LaCount&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editors&#13;
Elise&#13;
Cochran&#13;
Stefame&#13;
Beard&#13;
Office&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Jeanie&#13;
Schober&#13;
News&#13;
Rixey&#13;
Heron&#13;
Columnists&#13;
Bill&#13;
Ager&#13;
Aaron&#13;
Rodriguez&#13;
Don&#13;
Nelson&#13;
Writers&#13;
Chris&#13;
Summy&#13;
Colleeo&#13;
LaVinka&#13;
Kelly&#13;
Voss&#13;
Vito&#13;
Tribuzio&#13;
lenni&#13;
Wehrli&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advisors&#13;
Dave&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
leff Mueller&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
is published&#13;
every&#13;
Thursday&#13;
throughout&#13;
the semester&#13;
by students&#13;
of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks&#13;
ide, who&#13;
are solely&#13;
responsible&#13;
for &#13;
its &#13;
editorial&#13;
policy&#13;
and content.&#13;
Subscriptions&#13;
are available&#13;
at the cost&#13;
of $15&#13;
for 26 issues.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to the Editor&#13;
policy:&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
encourages&#13;
letters&#13;
to the editor.&#13;
Letters&#13;
should&#13;
not exceed&#13;
250 words&#13;
and should&#13;
be delivered&#13;
to the Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
office&#13;
(WYLL&#13;
D-139C)&#13;
or e-mailed&#13;
to bulgrOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
by noon&#13;
the Friday&#13;
before&#13;
publication.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must&#13;
be typed&#13;
and include&#13;
the author's&#13;
name&#13;
and phone&#13;
number.&#13;
Letters&#13;
must&#13;
be free&#13;
from&#13;
misleading&#13;
or libelous&#13;
content.&#13;
Letters&#13;
thai fail&#13;
to comply&#13;
will&#13;
not be published.&#13;
For publication&#13;
purposes,&#13;
author's&#13;
name&#13;
can be&#13;
withheld,&#13;
but only&#13;
upon&#13;
request.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
News&#13;
reserves&#13;
the right&#13;
to edit allleneB.&#13;
•&#13;
</text>
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              <text>.. ,&#13;
!.huraday. October 12. 1888&#13;
j;fflfrfJ~ [lJJ~~'I#~~~~u)f (Q)[FW~~~(Q)[M~~[M=[p~~~~~[Q)~&#13;
~october 14-21 is Alcohol and Drug&#13;
" by J)aII Chiappetta whole point is to be Awa" h I&#13;
NewSEditor. explained N re, c 0 ces and responsible use"&#13;
Coordinator OfaUnWcypGentry, emphasized Gentry. '&#13;
. arkslde's "w t&#13;
"parly Smart" Is the na- new SUbstance Abuse Pr"ven. know~;an 'fto increase your&#13;
logo and "Smart tion Program . . e ge 1 you have high&#13;
Uonfes&#13;
consequences I Can National C~llegiate Alcohol ~~~~izadt~C~ion. People don't&#13;
(lIO CWith"Is UW·Parkside's and Other Dru A: e a some people have&#13;
we for promoting responsi- week is Octobe; 14_,,;,:rt;~~:~ta~~~~~n~~Sk than others,"&#13;
)OgO chOicesconcerning alco- goal of the week is to in- One of teY' .&#13;
~~ gnd other drugs. "The crease awareness of healthy society hav: ~eo~~an~e o~~ -r:;:DAi:------------------.:..::.=::; becoming an alcoholic. The&#13;
~ Prevenfion Begins wifh You: Apresentationgeared to chance dramatically In.&#13;
faculty and staff by Dr. James Schaefer. Director of the creases if a member of the&#13;
O!ficeof Sub~once~se Pr~vention.Universityof family is or was an alcoholic.&#13;
Minnesota, MInneapolis. Participants will also get a chance "This doesn't mean every.&#13;
to meet Nancy Gentry. COOfdinator of UW·Parkside'snew one who has a relative that&#13;
Substance Abuse Prevention Program. Feel free to bring has a drinking problem wlll&#13;
your kJnch. Molinaro 103 b&#13;
ecome an alcoholic," ex5eK,&#13;
Drugs and You: A presentation for students by Dr. I' d&#13;
James SChaefer, Director of the Office of Substance Abuse p arne Gentry. The person is&#13;
Prevention. Unlverstty of Minnesota. Mofinaro 103. also at a very high risk if&#13;
their father is or was an alcohollc&#13;
and the person is a&#13;
male.&#13;
The addiction rate for men,&#13;
women, and teenagers all&#13;
vary in average. Teenagers&#13;
average addiction rate is&#13;
from six months to one year.&#13;
Teenagers are still in the developmental&#13;
stage of life.&#13;
Teenagers are at a time In&#13;
life where peer' pressure is&#13;
very high. For women, the&#13;
average addiction rate Is flve&#13;
years. Fifteen years is the&#13;
average addiction rate for&#13;
men. The major difference&#13;
between men and women are&#13;
physiological differences.&#13;
Men continue to grow and&#13;
have a developing body.&#13;
"Men also drink at a faster&#13;
rate," added Gentry. Alcohol&#13;
VOl. XVIII. No. 8&#13;
Awareness&#13;
Is water soluble and women&#13;
do have more fatty cells than&#13;
men. In women the alcohol&#13;
doesn't have many places to&#13;
go making it more easier for&#13;
women to get drunk.&#13;
"It's also easier for women&#13;
to get high during PMS.&#13;
These are some reasons why&#13;
men have a stronger drinking&#13;
career than women."&#13;
Ninety percent of the peopie&#13;
in our snciety don't have a&#13;
problem with chemicals, Ten&#13;
percent do have a problem.&#13;
.'We want to educate-.people&#13;
on what percent they belong&#13;
to," stated Gentry.&#13;
During UW-Parkside's Alcohol&#13;
and Other Drug Awareness&#13;
Week (October 14-21)&#13;
presentations will be performed&#13;
such as;&#13;
... "Prevention Begins With&#13;
You." Dr. James Schaefer.&#13;
Director of the Office of Substance&#13;
Abuse Prevention,&#13;
University of Minnesota-Minneapolis&#13;
will perform the pr-esentation.&#13;
You can also meet&#13;
Nancy Gentry, Coordinator of&#13;
UW·Parkslde's . new Substance&#13;
Abuse Prevention Program,&#13;
... "Sex, Drugs, and You,"&#13;
Another presentation performed&#13;
by Dr. James scnaerer.&#13;
... "Profile of a Party." An&#13;
interactive presentation by&#13;
Mary Dunnington on what&#13;
happens during the course of&#13;
a party.&#13;
't&#13;
,&#13;
3:00pm&#13;
~7;!'~RAPMobIle, cbeck oet the RacineAlcoholPatrol's~3'von,&#13;
whichis fullyequipped withcommunicationscopabll~ies.&#13;
videO equipment and and intoxilyzer . ~ located on Inner&#13;
looP.. under the.UnionBridge.&#13;
MQNESDA)' ....&#13;
n»l:Xl Alcohol and Other Drug Informational()jsploys.Moinploce&#13;
Noon Walk/Run to promote Smart Choices&#13;
thiS will be a two mile run or one mile walk around inner loop&#13;
rood. Two5SO.OO drawingswiRbe held for oillhosewho&#13;
completethe course.&#13;
52.00 advance entrytee, 53.00 on site:PhyEd&#13;
A Chancellor's R~eption wid follow in Mainploce.&#13;
r ProIIIe of a Party: on Interactivepresentationby Mary&#13;
Dunningtonon what hoPP&lt;lllS duringthe course of a party.&#13;
ResidenceHal!Core Building.&#13;
Nancy Gentry •&#13;
Other activities Include&#13;
"Blasted Bowl" a competltlon&#13;
between student, staff, and&#13;
faculty testing their knowl·&#13;
edge of alcohol and other&#13;
drugs. A walk/run wlll take&#13;
place involving a two mile&#13;
run or one mlle walk to help&#13;
promote .'Smart choices". A&#13;
dance Is also Included during&#13;
the Alcohol and 0ther Drug&#13;
Awareness Week. "Street&#13;
Toyz" will be performing at&#13;
the dance. For further Intermatron&#13;
concerning dates and&#13;
times call Student Health&#13;
Services at 553·2366.&#13;
IIID6l&#13;
Noon "BIoste&lt;f Bowl; Acompennon by students.facultyand stolt10&#13;
test their know1ege of alcohol and other drugs. Moinploce.&#13;
8:30pm DoneewithStreetToyl. 52.00 UnionSquare&#13;
Excel '89 Educates Campus Leaders&#13;
By Gwen Heller&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Excel '89, a weekend lead.&#13;
ership conference in Delifield&#13;
Wisconsin, was a smashing&#13;
successaccording to many of&#13;
the students Who attended It&#13;
September SO·October 1-&#13;
ThlrtY·four student leaders&#13;
I1Ildclub members loaded a&#13;
buson Saturday and headed&#13;
fJJrCamp Sidney Cohen in&#13;
hopesof gaining 'new leader.&#13;
shlpskllis to Incorporate into&#13;
their organizations.&#13;
The staff that planned and&#13;
conducted the weekend In.&#13;
cluded Diane Welsh, coordi.&#13;
-nator of StUdent ActiVities,&#13;
ve Wallner, Assistant Dil'eetor&#13;
of Residence Life&#13;
~endY Schneider, Student&#13;
p.'Ollment Otflcer, DeAnn&#13;
.;:,ehl, Director of Resi.&#13;
W ce Life, and Mary Ellen&#13;
Stuesley,Program Advisor of&#13;
dent ActiVities. In addi. ::=" Director Of Student Life, a.:e McLaughlin, and Gary&#13;
ce, Assistant Gh:ancellor&#13;
tion between team members.&#13;
Small groups were given a&#13;
task to complete that coule&#13;
only be accomplished by&#13;
working as a team. For instance,&#13;
a group of nine had to&#13;
balance on a log and attempt&#13;
to switch places with each&#13;
other without falling off. An·&#13;
.other stallon challenged the&#13;
campers ...... to plug numerous&#13;
holes in a barrel of water&#13;
with body parts (fingers' and&#13;
toes). The outdoor portion of&#13;
the conference took up the f&#13;
better part of a morning and&#13;
provided the students with&#13;
the chance to enjoy the gor·&#13;
gelous fall weather.&#13;
-Excel parllclpant and soph.&#13;
omore Daphne Cook felt there&#13;
may have been an overabun·&#13;
dance of activities. "We had&#13;
a large number of sessions to&#13;
cover and little free time. I&#13;
think that people became&#13;
tired and could -have benefited&#13;
from a little more free&#13;
time to relax."&#13;
Others agreed with Cook.&#13;
"The outdoor activities were&#13;
for Student Affairs, presented&#13;
eye-opening - concepts about&#13;
problem-solving and methods&#13;
of approaching a task.&#13;
"I really think that the staa&#13;
did an excellent job to keep&#13;
things moving along smooth·&#13;
ly," stated sophomore Judy&#13;
Bostetter. "It was obvious&#13;
that they had put In a great&#13;
deal of time to plan the activities.&#13;
They deserve a lot of&#13;
credit! "&#13;
The sessions included&#13;
brainstorming, critical think~&#13;
lng, networking, ethics, communications,&#13;
motivation, and&#13;
member involvement in clubs&#13;
on campus .. The participants&#13;
broke Into small groups to&#13;
discuss strategies in solving&#13;
different situations. PopUlar&#13;
sessions included Energizers&#13;
(snack breaks) and the Play·&#13;
Dough Monsters Creativity&#13;
Segment.&#13;
Another major attraction of&#13;
the weekend was the outdoor&#13;
activities which were similar&#13;
to an obstacle coutse and required&#13;
the utmost In coopera·&#13;
tiring. We should have done&#13;
them after all of our sessions&#13;
on Sunday before returning to&#13;
Kenosha, ,. commented sophomore&#13;
Jim Witters. "Aside&#13;
from the busy schedule, It&#13;
was great to meet so many&#13;
interesting people! "&#13;
After eating meals togeth.&#13;
wer, riding the Jelco bus, and&#13;
waiting in line for an open&#13;
bathroom sink in the wee&#13;
hours of the morning, a closeness&#13;
was formed between&#13;
the campers. Senior Sherri L.&#13;
Garrett was impressed with&#13;
the turnout of student leaders&#13;
and club members. "We had&#13;
a very diverse group of people&#13;
from different cluljls,&#13;
backgrounds, and Interests, It&#13;
was a wonderful opportunity&#13;
to meet people who accom.&#13;
pUsh goals for thernselv.es&#13;
and for Parkside. "&#13;
2 Thursday, OCtober, 12, 1989 Ranger&#13;
VPERSONALLY, 11HINK \OOR ~&#13;
OF MaRE "LIFETIME MEM8EItSHIPs'&#13;
IN HERl'TA&lt;iE USA 1HAN 'roU COULD&#13;
PtlVSICALLY ACCOMODiQE 8ETJb\yS 4&#13;
PARTICULARLY CALLOUS1U1I~&#13;
'TOWARDYOUR CONTRI6U1ORS,&#13;
-&#13;
JIM~.l YOUHA'6.:8f~~ 'l&#13;
GUILTY OF ~E~ 'TO OVERSELUNG&#13;
~~ AND DIVERTING&#13;
MINISTRY FUNDS _&#13;
FOR PERSONAl. USE.&#13;
Opinion •••&#13;
Face lift for&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Since its construction in 1976, the Parkside u~i~n r~s&#13;
served the student body well, and has done a grea rfm 0&#13;
enhance student life on campus. Many classic. pe orrnances&#13;
have been held in Union Square and the Cinema. A~&#13;
the time the facility was built, it was both modern an&#13;
functional. That, however, Is not the case anymore. t the&#13;
Although several modifications have b~en made 0&#13;
facllity in the past, the most recent of.which is the makeover&#13;
of the Recreation Center, ~ere IS much more to be&#13;
done These renovations are ultimately the responsibility&#13;
of th~ Parkslde Union Advisory Board. This year's PUAB&#13;
chairman Is Craig Simpkins. According to Slmpkms, the&#13;
largest project on the agenda aside from the selection of a&#13;
new food service is the renovation of Union Square. At the&#13;
time the Square was built, It was the "In" place to go;&#13;
however, that is not the case ~ymore. In spite of the&#13;
many promotional campaigns to mcrease the student patronage&#13;
of the Square, the most recent being Monday&#13;
Night Footaall, money spent there barely pays for Its&#13;
operation.&#13;
We feel that renovations to the Union Square will once&#13;
again reistate it as a staple of campus life. The colors and&#13;
structural design of the Square which were popular in the&#13;
sevenUes now give it the look of an .etementary school&#13;
playroom. PUAB will be working with an architect to&#13;
come up wtth renovation Ideas, but they need your help.&#13;
PUAB will be sending out questionnaires to determme&#13;
what students want their Union hang out to look like and&#13;
what services should be offered. If you have any Ideas or&#13;
comments that would help the Union serve students better&#13;
through the Union Square please take the time to com.&#13;
plete the survey when it is offered.&#13;
Murder at Parkside?&#13;
by Lyna PauksteUs&#13;
The Parkslde community&#13;
was shocked when Gary&#13;
Grace,Assistant Chancellor,&#13;
was murdered this Monday&#13;
while having hts picture&#13;
taken with the homecoming&#13;
candidates.&#13;
"He seemed to be all right&#13;
and then he fell down, I&#13;
thought it was fake at first,&#13;
then I saw his body being&#13;
taped out at the seen of the&#13;
crime," said one witness.&#13;
This seemed to correspond&#13;
with the arrival of Chief In.&#13;
spector Jacques Claussue,&#13;
who was giving a seminar to&#13;
the campus pollee on crime&#13;
detection. The Inspector arrived&#13;
on the scene and con.&#13;
eluded that number one, he&#13;
was dead. Number two, he&#13;
was poisoned.&#13;
••A clooo was foound on de&#13;
body," said the Inspector.&#13;
"We khow dis because It said&#13;
clooo on it."&#13;
As Ihe Inspector read the&#13;
clue, It was divulged that this&#13;
was not the last murder.&#13;
(And that was speaking lightly!!&#13;
)&#13;
On Tuesday. night, come.&#13;
dian Mike Saccone was mur-,&#13;
dered after his performance&#13;
dur-ing' the Homecoming activIties.&#13;
His last words were,&#13;
"What a tough crowd! !..&#13;
Again, Clousseu arrived on&#13;
the Scene to find yet another&#13;
clue. The entire Parkside&#13;
community was in a panic! !&#13;
The Inspector is known for&#13;
solving the' famous "Pink&#13;
Panther" crimes Some years&#13;
back. In the late 1970's, he&#13;
went into seclusion, sup&#13;
Iy partying with other&#13;
ed greats like Marlon B&#13;
Jim Morrison and even&#13;
ever elusive Elvis P&#13;
He resurfaced In the&#13;
because he liked a new&#13;
called Guns·'N·Roses, We&#13;
an exclusive Interview&#13;
him, but We couldn't&#13;
any of it because we e&#13;
understand a thing he&#13;
What we do know is that&#13;
Inspector Is traveling W1~&#13;
butler, Kato, who.poke&#13;
Ciousseu with high&#13;
We tried to talk to his&#13;
Chief Inspector Dreyfuss,&#13;
It seemed that he was&#13;
ted to an institution where&#13;
he has said Is "He's bacl'&#13;
and then collapses.&#13;
Ciousseu has asked for&#13;
from every Parkside&#13;
solving this case. If&#13;
solve the clues they will&#13;
spirit points.&#13;
Who will stop the&#13;
coming killings and can&#13;
do it before the corona&#13;
'the King and Queen?&#13;
anyone have a clue towI\G&#13;
killer Is?&#13;
Steve DeAngells, ChIef&#13;
tor of the Parkslde&#13;
says that he thinks lhaI&#13;
knows who the klller_,&#13;
will not say who, bee&#13;
he says, the infor&#13;
should prove to be&#13;
. profitable.&#13;
Well, good luck Steve&#13;
good luck to you InS&#13;
and to all of the club'.&#13;
solve this case!! Ho&#13;
the Homecoming kllliJ\!S&#13;
be laid to rest be(o~&#13;
many lives are claimed.&#13;
Counselor's Corner ...&#13;
Monitoring performance is key&#13;
by stu- Rubaer&#13;
I have never understood&#13;
how some studenbl can lay&#13;
out more than a $1,000 for ruttion&#13;
and books for a semester&#13;
and go through those 16&#13;
weeks wtthout having the fogglest&#13;
Idea of how they are&#13;
doing In their classes. While I&#13;
trust the number of such stu.&#13;
dents Is small (In comparison&#13;
with the number who do know&#13;
what's going on In their lives)&#13;
It, nevertheless, Is troubling&#13;
to know that not only dollars,&#13;
but minds too, are being&#13;
wasted.&#13;
What prompted this week's&#13;
column Is the fact that we're&#13;
now closing out the sixth&#13;
week of classes, fast approaching&#13;
the halfway point&#13;
in the semester. Most instructors&#13;
have given at least several&#13;
assignments, quizzes or&#13;
tests which not only tell the&#13;
Instructor how a student's&#13;
learning Is progressing, but&#13;
ahould also be glvlng the student&#13;
a clue as to how he or&#13;
ahe Is doing In a particular&#13;
class.&#13;
then Is "Do I have an accurate&#13;
picture of how I'm doing&#13;
in my classes?" Fortunately,&#13;
most students do have a&#13;
pretty good Idea of how they&#13;
are doing thus far. At least&#13;
that's my sense of the situation&#13;
based on discussions I've&#13;
had with many students thus&#13;
far this semester.&#13;
I can't think of many valid&#13;
reasons why you couldn't or&#13;
wouldn't approach your Instructors&#13;
for this kind of assistance&#13;
or information.&#13;
Every Instructor I know&#13;
wants his or her students to&#13;
have the clearest possible pic.&#13;
ture of their performance!&#13;
And It must be discouraging&#13;
to an instructor to see a student&#13;
struggling and showing&#13;
no Interest In asking for help&#13;
and not taking advantage of&#13;
the tnstruetors willingness to&#13;
assist.&#13;
But there are always some,&#13;
for one reason or another,&#13;
Who don't .have a handle on&#13;
things. Maybe it's because&#13;
they have a lot going on In&#13;
their lives (other than school)&#13;
that Is occupying their minds.&#13;
Maybe they've never been to&#13;
college before and don't quite&#13;
know how to handle all the responslbllity&#13;
thrust upon them&#13;
literally overnight.&#13;
Remember; a major dead.&#13;
line of the semester is coming&#13;
up. You have until October&#13;
27th to drop a semester-long&#13;
Course without penalty. After&#13;
that date dropping a full&#13;
semester course becomes&#13;
troublesome If not downrIght&#13;
ImpossIble.&#13;
Whatever the case, no one&#13;
can afford to go much longer&#13;
wtthout knowing how they're&#13;
doing. If you are the slightest&#13;
bit uncertain as to how you're&#13;
performing In any of your&#13;
classes, or you want to get&#13;
your instructor's 'Viewof your&#13;
performance to see If It jibes&#13;
with yours. just go talk with&#13;
him.&#13;
No matter what point In the&#13;
semester it Is, you should&#13;
'always have your finger on&#13;
the pulse of your perrorm.&#13;
ance. The only excuse .....for'&#13;
fallure is failing to act.&#13;
The question you should be&#13;
asking yourself right now&#13;
. .&#13;
Scott Singer Asst.News Editor&#13;
Jeff Reddick ·..·..···· Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Steve DeAngelis Editor.in.chief&#13;
Dan Chiappeha· News Editor&#13;
Dan Pacetti. Copy Editor&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano Feature I;ditor&#13;
DawnMailand Entertainment Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann Sports Editor&#13;
John Kehoe .._ Photo Editor&#13;
Ranger is written a~d edit~d by students of UW·Parkside, who are solely responsible for its .&#13;
. ty and content. It IS published every Thursday during the academic year except over breakS~ days.&#13;
letters to the e~ftor Will.be accepted only if they are typed. double-spaced arid 350 words~&#13;
letters must be signed, With a telephone·number Included for verification purposes. NamesW1Ulle a held upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those Which are false and/or de. Q famatory.&#13;
Deadline for all letters, and classifiedads is Monday at 10a m for publication Thursdav. '. .&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins ·· Business Manager&#13;
Teri Fortney..· Ad Rep.&#13;
Carol Curi.··· ·· Ad Rep.&#13;
Moran&#13;
bY oan Chiappetta&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
arch 9,. 1987 Chrysler&#13;
on ~ed Its intention to buy&#13;
aDJl°un&#13;
l18,s American Motors&#13;
~ raUon from Renault.&#13;
~ s later, Chrysler an-&#13;
.,~~ the closing of the jlIllIlCr,. plant by the end of&#13;
~&#13;
J:; January 27, 1988 Chrysl·&#13;
t&#13;
llJlllounCedthe closing of&#13;
laDt The closing of the&#13;
psIUl 'ChrYsler auto plant&#13;
«enot the loss of 5,500 jobs&#13;
lIle8JIuto workers by the end lor a&#13;
ollheyear.&#13;
In Qecember 1988, Chrysler&#13;
OJrponiuon closed the 87&#13;
.old auto assembly&#13;
~auons In Kenosha.&#13;
~l was diSmayed and surd&#13;
The timing was unex- ~ted'" answered Kenosha&#13;
IJYOrPatrick Moran.&#13;
'!ilI'Jteunemployment rate In linosha expected to --be in&#13;
dDubledigits.&#13;
"People estimated the'&#13;
lDlemploymentrate to hit&#13;
3Jlio. The unemployment rate&#13;
~ at 6.9%.which Isn't good,&#13;
bUt It's not 20%," explained&#13;
Moran.&#13;
"Tbe Chrysler eloslng&#13;
pIOvidedus with either opporU1ity&#13;
or danger. The Chinese&#13;
have a symbol when they talk&#13;
abOUta crisis. They have a&#13;
Iori&lt; onthe road, one being an&#13;
opportunity fork, the other&#13;
beinga danger fork. If you&#13;
look at the outcome, the way&#13;
It's starting to revolve, it's&#13;
beenone of opportunity for&#13;
reflects on&#13;
us. You can see the number&#13;
of industries since the Closing&#13;
that have made a eommttt.&#13;
'!1?'ent to Kenosha," empha,&#13;
sized Mayor Moran.&#13;
Moran also explained that&#13;
the industries that have made&#13;
a commlttment to Kenosha&#13;
have brought much more&#13;
stability to the city. The In.&#13;
dustries that have made a&#13;
committmenf to Kenosha Inelude:&#13;
• * The Lakefront Develop.&#13;
ment of ,the 600 slip Marina&#13;
"Massive investment taking&#13;
place", stated Moran.&#13;
• The recent opening of&#13;
Super Valu .&#13;
• The opening of the new $9&#13;
million Civic Center.&#13;
• The City's Industrial Park&#13;
is filling up rapidly.&#13;
• The Lakeview Corporate&#13;
Park moving along very well.&#13;
• The Development of the&#13;
Dog Track, which Is expected&#13;
to be the largest of its kind In&#13;
the nation.&#13;
Dozens of other companies&#13;
have also made commltt,&#13;
ments to the City of Kenosha.&#13;
The Kenosha' Chrysler elos.&#13;
ing was one of the most ex.&#13;
pensive in American industry&#13;
history.&#13;
"It cost Chrysler $'4 of a&#13;
blllton, 'J added Mayor Moran.&#13;
The money went toward&#13;
PROCLAMATION&#13;
1IIIl:lt.E.U~ CrLme and tf1e 1"" 01 «i.me "",,",.ety a/leet the&#13;
1Olli&gt;cl"'l_ the qualLty olut. 01 aU lacuLty, .tall and student.&#13;
_our u.ni.VUsi.t1j communi.ty; Q.nd. __&#13;
1IIIl:lt.E.U. The li.nanc1aL los., p",sonat i.nj"'y, and comm .. nti.y&#13;
UteriDrtlt.i.fmrau1tiRlJ from crime" Qn i.ntoterobt:e; Q.n4.&#13;
~ I Campus cr;,me pnventwn QCtion.. has proven. to be a.&#13;
_fill lcweei.n ndtlCi."9 ori.me: and .&#13;
~I' "Lt is essentiAL 1:0 c:onUnue to cUstribute crime&#13;
~ l.nformation to the campus community and. encoura.ge&#13;
IIIoir lnllOlvement I.n ori.me p.. .,.,ntlon p""l,a..... i.n o,de, to heLp&#13;
l1li"" tile """"'" 01 cr\.me "lcti.ms: and:&#13;
~I Crime prevention IIdds i.mmeasura.&amp;ty to the hea(.tS.',&#13;
·flt~,GIld: I&gt;iljo, ~1UIoI-Pa,ll.side _ sfwul&lt;t I&gt;e .nco .. rP&lt;Jedand&#13;
"'PPortat by owuyone: and&#13;
!lOW, 'I1l!:1l.Fo1u:. t,' hila Xapt&lt;m; Chancello, c£o herEby:&#13;
I"OcIai.m Octo&amp;e.- 1989 as C"me Pn""nti.on nonth at the&#13;
~ ollo1\oc;ons\.n -J'&lt;&gt;n.side and: """"""9" aU tacuLty, .tall&#13;
IIIlcl studen.ts to l.na-l!&lt;I5e tf1e awar.ness 01 and partiA;Lp"tion \.n&#13;
tfflttlue&lt;nme "" ....... ion ,...&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 12,19893&#13;
closing&#13;
other way to identify the exemployees.&#13;
"Referring to Money Magazine,&#13;
they rated Kenosha the&#13;
.26th best place to lIye In the&#13;
United States. First in wts.&#13;
consin," stated Moran. "In&#13;
five years you will see the&#13;
change (In Kenosha)".&#13;
Kenosha Mayor Pat Moran&#13;
Support&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers -&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
trust funds, benefits, insurance,&#13;
the closing of the plant&#13;
the cleaning of the plant and&#13;
others.&#13;
"The 'closing of this plant&#13;
will have significant overto.&#13;
nesnationally on not only autdmobile&#13;
Industries, but all Industries&#13;
in general. There has&#13;
been Some efforts by some&#13;
legislatures to mandate such&#13;
closings," explained Moran.&#13;
Before the closing In 1988,&#13;
UW·Parkside worked with&#13;
Kenosha County. Executive&#13;
John Collins and Racine&#13;
County Executive Dennis&#13;
Kornwolf to form workshops&#13;
that would be beneficial to&#13;
the Chrysler employees. "The&#13;
Chrysler Closing: Helping the&#13;
Community Cope," workshops&#13;
were held at Parkslde.&#13;
Such workshops included:&#13;
• Creating a Safety Net for&#13;
Displaced Workers.&#13;
• Patterns of Adjustment&#13;
for Displaced Work;ers.&#13;
• Worker Survival Plan.&#13;
nlng.&#13;
• Higher Education Oppertunltles&#13;
for Displaced Work.&#13;
ers.&#13;
According to Lloyed Muelfer,&#13;
Counselor at the Financial&#13;
Aid office at Parkslde, there&#13;
are fourteen Identified ex.&#13;
Chrysler workers attending&#13;
Parkslde. Thirteen are full&#13;
time students. Mueller explained&#13;
that It is difficult to&#13;
identify ex-Chrysler- workers,&#13;
because the' ex-employees do&#13;
not receive educational fund.&#13;
ing unless they are of junior&#13;
status. Otherwise there Is no&#13;
When&#13;
you party&#13;
remember&#13;
Alcohol &amp; Other Drug Awareness Week&#13;
October-16·21, 1989&#13;
to•••&#13;
/&#13;
~4~Th~ursday:=,~Oc~:to:-~, 1~2~.1~989=Ranger== ~~ __ -::-:-~~:-=::----"-"------""1&#13;
Parkside gets into recycling business ~&#13;
bly be three different kinds of that the yard waste has to I&#13;
garbage distribution: separately composed. ~I&#13;
1. Mixed garbage. Not recy- "Recycling Is a SimPle&#13;
clable. everyone can do and I~&#13;
2. Glass bottles, jars, news- everyone would realize.....&#13;
paper, cans. Recyclable. importance it has on thee11\&#13;
3. Yard waste. A law Is al- ronment," stressed Mitch:&#13;
ready In effect for Jan. 1991&#13;
by DaD aw.ppetta&#13;
Ne_Editor&#13;
The days of throwing away&#13;
certaIn garbage ls really&#13;
coming to an end.&#13;
"'In about five years laws&#13;
will require the disposal of&#13;
proper garbage for recyclIng.&#13;
We are running out of&#13;
places," explained BUIMitch·&#13;
ell, Recycling. Manager for&#13;
Land Reclamation Company&#13;
(LRC) of Racine. Mitchell Is&#13;
also the Recycling Director&#13;
for UW-Parkslde's recycling&#13;
program&#13;
LRC ls a full service recycUng&#13;
company. LRC received&#13;
a research grant from the Department&#13;
of Energy for&#13;
~,OOO. LRC Is using the&#13;
grant In association with UWParkslde,&#13;
exploring recycllng&#13;
on campus. LRC and UWParkside's&#13;
goals are to recycle&#13;
at least 50 percent of high&#13;
grade paper and to test the&#13;
receptivity of students. This&#13;
Is also a model program for&#13;
PAS A&#13;
state agencies. UW-Parkslde&#13;
realized the need for estabUshlng&#13;
a recycling program.&#13;
"The purpose of LRC Is to&#13;
determine the avallablllty of&#13;
recycllng and to give an understanding&#13;
of what the program&#13;
ls all about. The avenablllty&#13;
and knowledge wUI increase&#13;
the participation of&#13;
recycling In the state agencles,"&#13;
explained Mitchell.&#13;
Materials that are recycIa- .&#13;
ble Include: Computer printouts,&#13;
copy paper, invoices.&#13;
bills of lading, note pad&#13;
sheets and letterhead. The&#13;
high grade paper is to be&#13;
placed in"I'm a Recycler"&#13;
box, which is found in ofices&#13;
all over campus. Jon Bar-Din&#13;
Is UW-Parkslde's Sudent Representative&#13;
for LRC. He is responsible&#13;
for the distribution&#13;
and the collection of the box.&#13;
The Residence Hall building&#13;
is also contributing to the program.&#13;
Bottles, jars, cans,&#13;
newspaper and plastic is&#13;
deposited at the Recycling&#13;
Station at the Residence Hall&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
•'On campus the volume of&#13;
paper is lower than we anttcfpated&#13;
.. stated Mitchell. It Is&#13;
also iow at the Reslden"e&#13;
Hall building. "There's a lot&#13;
of people who just don't care,&#13;
or maybe there's just not as&#13;
much high grade paper as we&#13;
anticipated ."&#13;
Other possible reasons for&#13;
the low amount is that until&#13;
recently there was no public.&#13;
ity concerning the program.&#13;
Other reasons could be that&#13;
many people may not know&#13;
what Is recyclable and how&#13;
do we recycle it.&#13;
The United States Is the&#13;
most wasteful country In the&#13;
world. People. use 400 pounds&#13;
of paper per person per year.&#13;
"We also want to make people&#13;
aware that it's more convenient&#13;
for them to recycle it&#13;
than to throw it away," added&#13;
Mitchell.&#13;
Mitchell predicts that in the&#13;
near future there will posstRecycling&#13;
efforts at Parkside&#13;
enhances lives of non-traditional 'student&#13;
by Kimberly K. Amason&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Parkslde Adult Student Alliance&#13;
ts an organization composed&#13;
of adult, non- traditional&#13;
students, whose main purpose&#13;
Is helping other adults make&#13;
a successful entry or re-entry&#13;
into academic Hfe.&#13;
H one were to walk into&#13;
PASA's office at any given&#13;
time, you would see a number&#13;
of d1f:ferent things going on.&#13;
One person may be studying,&#13;
a couple of others may be engaged&#13;
In a serious debate,&#13;
and perhaps someone else&#13;
may be tearing their hair out&#13;
as he relates to a compassionate&#13;
listener about how her&#13;
three year old daughter&#13;
spilled her chocolate milk on&#13;
her English paper that mornIng,&#13;
which Is due In an hour.&#13;
"We throw you a rope to&#13;
get you out of, the quicksand&#13;
of a new and sometimes con.&#13;
fusing environment," said&#13;
sophomore George Olson,&#13;
who is a member of PASA.&#13;
The president of PASA Is&#13;
Kathy Wakefield. she is presently&#13;
a junior at Parkside&#13;
majoring In sociology.&#13;
"I took PASA as a basically&#13;
a support group," Wakefield&#13;
Bald. "It just seems like the&#13;
SEX&#13;
DRUGS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Dr. James Schaefer&#13;
YOU&#13;
Monday, October 16 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist 103&#13;
FREE&#13;
Dr. James Schaefer from the University of Minnesota&#13;
will present information on alcohol and other&#13;
drugs and how they affect your life, in areas such&#13;
as relationships and health. Dr. Schaefer is an&#13;
exceuent speaker who presents in an objective,&#13;
non-Judgmental manner. He will provide you with&#13;
t~e information yo~ need to make educated decisions&#13;
about these Important issues.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board Student&#13;
Activities Office, Student Affairs Office&#13;
Health Services and Residence Life. '&#13;
"Spotlight on Marketing" present&#13;
by Dan-Wappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
"Spotlight on Marketing" Is&#13;
the marketing careers pro.&#13;
gram being held on Oct. 16&#13;
and 17 at UW-Parkslde. The&#13;
speakers all represent a com.&#13;
pany and will speak about&#13;
what they do and what the&#13;
program Is all about.&#13;
"The goal is to Introduce&#13;
what Is out there," empha.&#13;
sized Jo Ann Goodyear, DI.&#13;
rector of Career Planning and&#13;
Placement.&#13;
Anyone is more than welpressures&#13;
and the problems&#13;
that the older students have&#13;
are different than traditional&#13;
students. It's nice having a&#13;
place you can come to where&#13;
there are others who can relate&#13;
to what you're going&#13;
through."&#13;
The term "non-traditional&#13;
student" applies to students&#13;
usually over the age, of 25 who&#13;
are returning back to school&#13;
after a break in their education.&#13;
PASA extends that definition&#13;
by adding those students&#13;
of any age who also&#13;
have chlldren and/or famlly&#13;
they have to support.&#13;
"Non-Trade Is more an attitude&#13;
than an age," said Rick&#13;
Pazar, PASA Vice-President.&#13;
Pazara is a sophomore&#13;
majoring in labor and indus.&#13;
trial relations with a computer&#13;
minor. This is his third&#13;
year of involvement in PASA.&#13;
To help the PASA members&#13;
become more aware of what&#13;
Is expected of them after&#13;
graduation they hold brown&#13;
bag lunches every month.&#13;
"We bring people In to talk&#13;
to us informally on various&#13;
topics such as What can we&#13;
expect when we graduate and&#13;
any other topic we might be&#13;
interested in, II said Pazara.&#13;
HWe lu(e to get our members&#13;
families involved too.. During&#13;
the summer months we had&#13;
campouts and picnics which&#13;
were a lot of fun." "We welcome&#13;
any suggestions anyone&#13;
has to offer," added Wakefield.&#13;
The main reason that peopie&#13;
join PASA Is because they&#13;
want to be around people that&#13;
they have something in common&#13;
with.&#13;
•'I come here to compare&#13;
how other people are doing&#13;
who have things in common&#13;
with me," Sheri DeskIng, who&#13;
is a part-time freshman involved&#13;
with PASA:&#13;
Another member of the&#13;
group Is Shella Toya. She Is a&#13;
single parent who joined the&#13;
group after meeting the otttcers&#13;
at a special adult ortentation&#13;
she attended.&#13;
•'I am really very shy when&#13;
it comes to meeting new people.&#13;
Siilce I've been coming&#13;
here I have made so many&#13;
new friends. If it weren't for&#13;
PASA I'd probably be out&#13;
there silting at one of those&#13;
tables by myself," said Toya.&#13;
Not only do students get to&#13;
meet other students by join.&#13;
Ing P ASA, they also learn&#13;
more about the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
"I've learned a lot about&#13;
come to attend. The work.&#13;
shops are: Monday, Oct. 16,&#13;
noon-1: 00 p. m., Molinaro&#13;
D105&#13;
* Sales M:anage-ment: Brian&#13;
T.eimey, Sales Manager, Special&#13;
Markets, Jockey Interna- ,&#13;
tlonal&#13;
• Non-Profit: Laurie Maes&#13;
Marketing Associate,' St:&#13;
Luke Hospital&#13;
• Advertising: Bruce Renquist,&#13;
President, Ren,\ulst Associates&#13;
'&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 17, 5:30.6:30&#13;
p.m., Molinaro D107&#13;
the university from the&#13;
pie here, "- said Barb Me&#13;
PASA member. "This Is&#13;
place you can come to&#13;
find out information&#13;
any number of things. If&#13;
dent know the answer. WI&#13;
find someone who does."&#13;
The most important&#13;
Wakefield gained fromb&#13;
a part of PASA is confiden&#13;
"I guess I've gained&#13;
dence," she said. "When&#13;
first started here I wasra&#13;
timid. I feel more com&#13;
able on campus bee&#13;
through PASA I realized&#13;
I'm not the only one.Ito&#13;
out that there were 0&#13;
who were going through&#13;
lar experiences like me.&#13;
example, when I first 5&#13;
at Parkside, the onfystu&#13;
I knew were people who&#13;
in school with my childrea&#13;
was a strange feeling."&#13;
.PASA helps give nontlonal&#13;
students a senseof&#13;
longing, a place to&#13;
friendship, and a list&#13;
ear. It helps build an island&#13;
safety In the rough seaof&#13;
lege life. .&#13;
• Retall Manage&#13;
Gary Goff, 'Owner,Pres!&#13;
Lepp's * Market Research:&#13;
Kammer, Marketing&#13;
Jacobsens Textron&#13;
• Customer Service:&#13;
Walczynski, Customer&#13;
Ice Manager, S.C. JohnSOC&#13;
The program Is being&#13;
sored by the Career&#13;
PI Sigma Epsilon (&#13;
Club) and the UW·p&#13;
School of Busineljis.&#13;
CLUBEVENTS&#13;
IIOMA TAU DELTA UWP's English&#13;
society, Sigma Tau Delta will :?tsfirst meeting at noon on Wed,&#13;
oct 18 In CA 129. Irish poet. James&#13;
UddY:r..m talk about modem Irish lit-&#13;
_ and read his poetry, Liddy I&#13;
wIlo oncews wnter-in-reetcence at&#13;
uwP teaches at Uw-Milwaukee. He&#13;
.. ,ubllShed numerous books of poet.&#13;
" and essays on modem Irish Htera·&#13;
11ft. Non-members are welcome to&#13;
IIIeDd the reading.&#13;
JIOI,ECULAR BIOLOGY meeting feaIIr!DC&#13;
video. The Molecular Biology&#13;
aub Ifill~d their second meeting on&#13;
fIeIdaY Oct. 17 in Molinaro Roon&#13;
nil at noon .. Any student interested&#13;
• KoJeeular Biology and is registered&#13;
It Parkstde in the area of biological&#13;
1dmce81s encouraged to attend. This&#13;
JDeIltlng wID feature an informational&#13;
_ program about rn.olecular biolaIf.Bring&#13;
your lunch and the pop and&#13;
_rt wID be furnished!&#13;
LOSTAND FOUND&#13;
UIIT·MEN'S white gold wedding&#13;
iliad. Lost 9/28. Greenquist Hall, 100&#13;
IIfeI outa1demen's restroom on heat· _duet by window. Contact Kurt 694-&#13;
a Reward offered.&#13;
-.08.8 RING.Name on ring, Cris,&#13;
g..p Washing H.S. Call Reggie&#13;
III""",,,. IlO3-jI973&#13;
8J:RVICES&#13;
FERED&#13;
IlENCII TUTOR Any level. Call&#13;
~a Jouvalafter 3 p.m. at 633-&#13;
!'IPING SERVICE, $1.50 per page.&#13;
~LInda at 683-9278 after 3 p.m.&#13;
_BACK RIDING le!llWns. Hertt-&#13;
.. H1Us Farms. Indtvidual'and group&#13;
!illig Ieasons, 539-3451.&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
- IOCKEYS.weekends. Male or&#13;
1ImaIe. Will train qualified people, .'4IIl.&#13;
IIIlI'oo1W'HERS, PART.TIME. -bends. MUlilt have own equipment.&#13;
$25 an hour. 639-7480.&#13;
NOOPPORTUNITIES. Cook.&#13;
ItUlllt food service director. dining&#13;
~Ddanta, dishwashers, concessions&#13;
~ ••_Wonderland camp.Conference&#13;
-. Camp Lake, WI. 414.889-4305&#13;
1fORMAJ-. LIbiIii of InfDrmafion fn U. S. •&#13;
all sUbjects&#13;
~odaY w~hVlsa/MCor coo&#13;
~.-a61-o22Z ~ in Calli. (213) 471-8226&#13;
11lli~ $2.00 10:Rosllrcllinlonnatlon&#13;
. _11,I Ave.I'lO&amp;A, Los Angeles, CA 90025&#13;
"THERE'SHOPE· WE CARE"&#13;
24 HOUR HOTLINE&#13;
414·658·2222&#13;
OF·&#13;
FREEPREGNANCY TEST&#13;
FREECOUNSELING ON OPTIONS&#13;
~BMyP&amp;LETECONFIDENTIALITY&#13;
MATERNITY CLOTHES&#13;
:rsR.!!..~NANCY CENTER&#13;
- ... ell RD. KENOSHA&#13;
--&#13;
WOULD YOU like to offer Discover&#13;
Credit Cards. Are you available for&#13;
only a few hours a week. If so, call 1.&#13;
800-932·0528 ext. 3. Will pay you as&#13;
much as $10 an hour. Only 10 positions&#13;
avialable.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
% CARAT DIAMOND ring for sale&#13;
$300. Call 553-2295 or 857·7898. Ask for&#13;
Terri.&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
TAll.OATE PARTY Phy. Ed. Parking&#13;
Lot. Oct. 14, 11 am. Price $2 with ticket.&#13;
$3 without ticket. Harqburgers, hot·&#13;
'logs, chips &amp;nd drink. Come and _&#13;
flarty before the game!&#13;
SOCIOLOGY CLUB wlll be having a&#13;
bake sale on Oct. 18 starting at 9 am&#13;
at table number 2 near the Women's&#13;
Center. The club's next meeting is&#13;
Oct. 25 at 12 pm.&#13;
MUSIC CLUB Monday. Oct 11, the&#13;
newly formed music club wlll be hold·&#13;
ing an organizational meeting. At this&#13;
meeting. officers will be elected and&#13;
brainstorming for a variety show. The&#13;
meeting will be in Com Arts 105 at 12&#13;
on Monday. For more information,&#13;
contact Dr. Kinchen at 553·2111.&#13;
nesday, but that's not unusual. Mr.&#13;
News Editor. T.A. HOW about Oct. 19.&#13;
Mr. News Editor.&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger office:&#13;
"Hey Pace. don't lay it on there just&#13;
eyeball it... -&#13;
. JOANN CIR EI Proressorat EI Prossora!&#13;
Estudent enscrtven in rojo! Es.&#13;
tudent enscriven in rojo!. Call be at&#13;
creatures house. Signed Phyly. End of&#13;
message .&#13;
C.A.Z. I miss you like home cookin:&#13;
much love, Batman.&#13;
SWM 28 black hair, blue eyes, 6'2"', 185&#13;
lbs. Athletic build prof. employed&#13;
grad. student. Enjoys gourmet cook·&#13;
ing, dining out and&gt; travel abroad.&#13;
Seeking companion for Bora Bora&#13;
Christmas vacation. I am willing to&#13;
pay all expenses. Respond to Ranger&#13;
personals and describe yourself.&#13;
PARKSIDE POSSE: wake up and&#13;
live!!!&#13;
KEVIN P. Fondle any good books&#13;
lately?&#13;
TO ALL who went to Excell 89. espci9ally&#13;
the Saturday night stargazers.&#13;
Thanks for a great evening! C.B.&#13;
JOE COOL: Glad to cheer you up last&#13;
Friday. By the way, were you kidding&#13;
about throwing yourself at me. Love&#13;
always, Woodstock.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL. NICE job. Keep it up.&#13;
Ranger Reporter.&#13;
J.D. DO you have a can of shaVing&#13;
cream that we can use? Love your&#13;
S.P.&#13;
VICKI P Do you want to go to casa?&#13;
Gu.ess Who? (M.W.)&#13;
COLLEEN R. First It was gumby.&#13;
now it·s JJ Super pretzel.&#13;
NANCY H. One up ??????&#13;
mRIS M.will you go out with me?&#13;
KingC.&#13;
ClNDI M. break any beds lately?&#13;
MICHELE W. Does the pool ladt&#13;
strike again? Pool lady one.&#13;
OPIE RETURNS Hi everybody, Opie&#13;
here, but what is here? P.S. Opie is&#13;
also happy due to Gall's decision. But&#13;
qten again, what is happy?&#13;
R,mger Thursday, October 12, 19895&#13;
this year&#13;
series Is going to be offered&#13;
at two different time periods.&#13;
The times will be either 3: 30&#13;
p.m. or 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday.&#13;
The different times will enable&#13;
different studellts to attend&#13;
who have different work&#13;
schedules. The series Is also&#13;
being booked for only this fall&#13;
semester. After this semester&#13;
It will be evaluated on how&#13;
weU It has been received and&#13;
plans to continue It will be&#13;
made on the Infonnatlon col.&#13;
lected.&#13;
"We are going to evalute It.&#13;
If people love them and want&#13;
more we will add them in for&#13;
second semester," Welsh&#13;
said.&#13;
Evaluations are also being&#13;
done at the end of every&#13;
seminar so that students will&#13;
be able to express their feel.&#13;
ings about it and possibly&#13;
give ideas for new topics and&#13;
or alumni speakers. Most of&#13;
the alumni who are presenting&#13;
topics now were recommended&#13;
by other alumni.&#13;
There is no cost to attend&#13;
the seminars and 1t is open to&#13;
all Parkside students.&#13;
Though, for the most part.&#13;
the seminars are informal&#13;
students are urged to call the&#13;
Students Activities Office to&#13;
reserve a space. This helps&#13;
the presentors prepare for the&#13;
crowd that they will be&#13;
presenting to. ThIs also helps&#13;
due to the fact that the seminars&#13;
are llinlted to 30-35 students&#13;
per sessions. The reason&#13;
for this Is to keep the&#13;
seminars more personal and&#13;
Informal. All the seminars&#13;
will be held In the Galbraith&#13;
room WLLC 363.&#13;
Some of the other seminars&#13;
that will be offered Include&#13;
..FIrst Impressions" present.&#13;
ed by Roger DeRose from&#13;
Johnson Wax. which will be&#13;
held on Nov. 14, "Political&#13;
savvy" presented by KIm&#13;
Plache who is a State Representstive&#13;
held Dec. 5 and on&#13;
Jan. 30 Jan Drewek from&#13;
Bank One will be presenting&#13;
"How To Run A Effective&#13;
Meeting. .• Though the series&#13;
are all related, students do&#13;
not need to attend aU of the&#13;
seminars to- benefit from&#13;
them.&#13;
"We will give recognition to&#13;
students who go to all of them&#13;
because we think that would&#13;
be a good achievement,"&#13;
Welsh said. "HopefuUyif stu·&#13;
dents 1(0 to one and it·s good,&#13;
they will go to another."&#13;
PAN PIZZA DEALS&#13;
DON'T COME ANY&#13;
BETTER THAN THIS.&#13;
r······················,&#13;
: PAN PIZZA DEAL : :$549 Receive a 10" Pan. :&#13;
I Pizza with your two I&#13;
= favorite toppings and =&#13;
I 1 litre of Coke for I III : • Hurry! Offer Expires : $5.49! I&#13;
I . 10/25/89. I&#13;
I :. II&gt; I&#13;
• ~~-=::,~':r=~=:=• • menS2WlllOt.lror-_IKJI~"'_""'-' •&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••• r····················~~,&#13;
= DOUBLE DEAL : :$999 Receive two 10" Pan :&#13;
I Pizzas with your two I&#13;
I favorite toppings and I&#13;
: 2 litres of Coke for :&#13;
I II$9.99! I&#13;
I - . Hurry! Offer Expires I&#13;
: 10/25/89. =&#13;
I :. II&gt; I&#13;
• =--=--=:::a~~-:;.=:=• • _G'O(JJ.O" __ .... ~ ... _-..... •&#13;
._----.._-....•...•.•..•&#13;
50 CU'TIIESE COUPOIIS .. cau. 1011&amp;1" FOIl A 110I' DEAL.&#13;
Call us Kenosha!&#13;
North: 654·5070 2136 WasnmgtOn&#13;
West 654-5Sn 4919 oOtn SHeet&#13;
South: 652-1222 8028 22na Ave.&#13;
Call us Racine!&#13;
Nontl 681-3030 3945 Efle 5t&#13;
Central: 634·26007 1100 Washington&#13;
South: 554-$543 2308 lathiOp Ave.&#13;
Alumni Leaderships Series begins&#13;
"_.....neMantuano Life, who came up WIth the '&#13;
r;iUi-e Editor idea for the Alumni Leader. ate Executive Director of the&#13;
mnI Leadership se- ship Series. Racine YMCA. Her reeponst.&#13;
111' AI;ch is newto Parkslde The series has held one blllties Include staffing, Insurnes·&#13;
'II is sponsored by the seminar already this year ance packages, employee&#13;
IIiB Y:-11 ofWisconsinPark- and anethar- is set for Oct. 17 benefits. professional devellJDive&#13;
"-.1 AsSOciationand at 3:30 p.rn. The basis of the opment of staff and human&#13;
sJde Alu,,"u Offl relations.&#13;
studeJlts Activities ce seminar will be "Communlca. Though the series holds one&#13;
aae ._~ ... to get more ongo- tlons In Leadershop" and It&#13;
~IS.':"~P workshops. on will focus on written and ver- seminar a month. The first&#13;
... ...... b I seminar that was held dealt pus' a communication and the with what leadership Is and "f.U W~ bringIn people that role body language plays In was titled "Qualities of a&#13;
~ ... nts COnsiderhave real co.mmunicatlon. The seminar Leader."&#13;
....~. expe.rIence.and have will be presented by Cheryl&#13;
.. ridtellstudentSwhat they Buckley who Is a 1984 gradu. "It went reaUy weU," said&#13;
~~ need(wefeel) students ate of Parkslde with a B.A. In Welsh.: :AU of the evalua-&#13;
~~ tske that to be more Sociology and minors In Busi- tlons were excellent. The pre-&#13;
;'ble" said Diane Welsh, ness and Women's Studies.. ::'v~~~on was very Informa-&#13;
,\SSlSl8Di Director of Student Buckley is now the Associ. To better aid students, the&#13;
lassifieds &amp; Club Events&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
JEFF HAINS. if I don't see you -again&#13;
before this goes to press. lets get together&#13;
for lunch sometime soon. My&#13;
treat if I can afford It! Maddog.&#13;
SIMPKINS, BELCH for me and lend&#13;
me 30 cents.&#13;
TO THE female with the pink hlghlIghter.&#13;
Next time leave your phone&#13;
number. Craig&#13;
TO JAN Kepkie guys in 6·B IQYeyou.&#13;
TO THE·broaders. Oh you can have it&#13;
but what is bliss?&#13;
KATHY C. Are you as dumb as a box&#13;
of rocks or were you just born that&#13;
way?&#13;
T.A. YOU LOOKED very nice Wed·&#13;
O~&#13;
HELP OTImRS, EARN EXTRA&#13;
CASH, &amp; GO TO LAS VEGAS&#13;
'This month aU new and existing donors&#13;
are eligible to win a&#13;
FREE TRIP TO LAS ,VEGAS&#13;
Including round trip airfare for tW?&#13;
with hotel accomodations on the stnp.&#13;
. plus $300 in spendingmoney .&#13;
To learn more about helping other people.&#13;
earning extra. cash and the Las Vegas tnp.&#13;
stop' in or give us a call.&#13;
PLASMA CENTER&#13;
OF KENOSHA&#13;
6212. 22nd Ave.• 654·1366&#13;
6 Thursday, OCtober, 12, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Do You Give A Dan,,;&#13;
PSGA Election Candidates&#13;
Leteaha Jude Chris DanIels&#13;
(write In)&#13;
~areer Center&#13;
~ffers workshop&#13;
graduate and professional&#13;
school programs in a variety&#13;
of areas:&#13;
• Graduate programs in&#13;
sciences&#13;
• Graduate programs In&#13;
psychology.&#13;
• MBA's graduate business&#13;
programs.&#13;
• Law school, graduate programs&#13;
in the social sciences.&#13;
• Graduate programs in humanities.&#13;
English, communication,&#13;
and engineering.&#13;
You can sign up in the&#13;
Career Center, WLLC D175..&#13;
There will be refreshments.&#13;
UW-Parkslde's Career Cener&#13;
will be offering a work-&#13;
~hop on Choosing and ApplyIn,lf&#13;
10 Graduate School on October&#13;
18, 1989 from 12:00-1:50&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Specific topics which will&#13;
"e covered Include:&#13;
• Identifying programs and&#13;
chools that suit your Intereats,&#13;
needs, and level of&#13;
jpreparedness.&#13;
• Identifying potential&#13;
sources Of financ1al assistance.&#13;
• General graduate admtsston&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Speakers will focus on&#13;
Join hundreds of satisfied employees at&#13;
the Midwest's largest and most successful&#13;
manufacturers' outlet shopping&#13;
center, The Factory Outlet Centre, 1-94&#13;
and Hwy. 50, Kenosha. Full- and' parttime&#13;
positions open in retail sales. dock&#13;
work, food service and [anitorial. Convenient&#13;
to apply. Complete one application&#13;
for 110 stores. Applications&#13;
available during shoping center hours&#13;
at the Information Center in Phase 3, or&#13;
call 857-7961 for additional information.&#13;
Applications will be reviewed by stores&#13;
seeking employees.&#13;
(I~!r]HEL~~~~TED~EY&#13;
-- --FACTORY ,&#13;
~ OUTLET&#13;
CENTRE&#13;
Bill Horner Craig Simpkins&#13;
Radio station WZRX is on the air&#13;
by Scott' Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
One of Parkside's best kept&#13;
secrets is the student run&#13;
radio station. Formally&#13;
known as WLBR, the station&#13;
has taken on a new name and&#13;
is actively pursuing goals for&#13;
the future.&#13;
"We've changed the name&#13;
of the station to WZRX," said&#13;
John Kehoe, station manager,&#13;
The new call letters have" not&#13;
been used previously by any&#13;
other radio station in the&#13;
country. Kehoe said.&#13;
The radio station also has a&#13;
new program director, Teresa&#13;
Harris. In addition to her&#13;
positlon at WZRX, Harris is&#13;
also a DJ at WKLH, a local&#13;
clasic rock station. "She has&#13;
a lot of good contacts and a&#13;
lot of excellent ideas," Kehoe&#13;
said.&#13;
"We are deflnately going to&#13;
expand. It (the station) needs'&#13;
a lot of work. I plan on getting&#13;
things situated," Harris&#13;
explained,&#13;
WZRX is currently in&#13;
operatlon from Monday and&#13;
Friday when broadcasting&#13;
ends at 4 p.m, However,&#13;
Kehoe wants to expand the&#13;
broadcast hours. "We're looking&#13;
for more people on mornings&#13;
and days and for Mon.&#13;
day and Friday evenings."&#13;
"Bids are sent out for&#13;
quency search," exp&#13;
Kehoe. Kehoe also exp&#13;
that In - approximalely&#13;
montn :'we should have a&#13;
quency." JI'he station Is&#13;
looking at getting a new&#13;
tridge machine, a new&#13;
sette deck, and a new&#13;
channel mixer.&#13;
Acordlng to Kehoe,&#13;
is becoming "an al&#13;
oriented rock station."&#13;
also -stressed that a&#13;
line is available by&#13;
553-2527, and commented&#13;
"If we have it we will&#13;
it."&#13;
•&#13;
Poll says students lack knowledge&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Appearing only shortly -&#13;
after a plethora of attention&#13;
to Wisconsin's University. System,&#13;
a new Gallop poll of college&#13;
seniors reveals disappointing&#13;
results.&#13;
According to the natlonal&#13;
poll of 696 seniors, only 45&#13;
percent of those who partlcipated&#13;
passed the 87 questions&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities (NEH) test of&#13;
history and literature.&#13;
In addition to most. of the&#13;
students not being able to&#13;
identify major works by&#13;
Plato, James Joyce, or Jane&#13;
ausen, the poll results showed&#13;
that:&#13;
- 58 percent did not know&#13;
that Shakespeare wrote THE&#13;
TEMPEST,&#13;
- 23 percent thought that&#13;
Karl Marx's famous statement&#13;
of "From each accordIng&#13;
to his ablIlty, to each according&#13;
to his need," was&#13;
part of the U.S. Constltution,&#13;
- "42 percent could not&#13;
place the Civil War In the&#13;
rect halycentury, It 0'"&#13;
during 1861-65.&#13;
- 24 percent believed&#13;
Columbus reached the&#13;
World after 1500.&#13;
Commenting on the&#13;
NEH chairman Lynne&#13;
said III .was very&#13;
pointed." The report also&#13;
dicated that all stu&#13;
should study 50 sem&#13;
hours of culture, civiliza&#13;
science, math and Ian8USl'&#13;
FAMILY COUNSELING CENTER&#13;
, Of Kenosha&#13;
-Psychological &amp; Psychiatric Evaluations&#13;
-Individu~l &amp; Group Psychotherapy&#13;
-Children s Problems, School Behavior&#13;
EmotIonal &amp; Developmental&#13;
-Drug/Alcohol Counseling&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
••..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
:'&#13;
•&#13;
Gay Bloor, M.S.W. Director ,&#13;
Julian Newman, M.D., psychiatn~&#13;
John Dalton, Ph,D" PSJichologlst&#13;
Donald A, Walters, M,S,W.&#13;
WE FIX PEOPI;.E PROBLEMS. LET US HELP YOU&#13;
{1605 . Birch Road, Kenosha&#13;
A certified Mental Health Clinicl Alocho! &amp; Drug Abuse&#13;
fudents or ttle University of&#13;
we, tile SParUide do hereby organize&#13;
WltClll'ISln . rsuant 10 Wisconsin Stalute&#13;
DU",,~IS PU'ht Parkside Student Vovlffn&#13;
J.orUl a~ fon Inc. Constitution Arl. 41 ir\&#13;
...... ' AS$OCI'~ lorft! in Itlls (()(Iilil.uliOo and&#13;
lit rnannt't 5 resenlalivl!'S 10 participate in&#13;
lflfCl ~r r':overnance in the manner set&#13;
itlSfif\lliO/l,1 We invest me powers of this.&#13;
larlllDflOW. in Ihe Parkside Sludent&#13;
con5"'U!lO~ Association Inc, AU previous&#13;
~m~lvdt'nt Government Association&#13;
PllkJillt shall De null and void upon&#13;
consllh)~lons()f It'Ii, c.;onsti1ulion on March S&#13;
r"ilica~ Tnisconsl,l "ion shall be Ihe SOle _oS: 1 .. of ParllSide "Iudent GOvernment (GIISt\';~I~Inc. and I~e studenLbodvland&#13;
~ I to"amendments.&#13;
sublectC; ~kSide Siudenl Government&#13;
Tn~'fiO:,Inc. Shall be respon5i~le to. the&#13;
NfIJC of the University of WisconSin Sludl!rI'S&#13;
~~deparkSid~ Sludenl Government&#13;
, Itlion Ine. shall have I~e pow~r to en·&#13;
ASIOC nd prolecl the follOWing articles by&#13;
/cII'c~a motions resolutions or lalo;mg legal :s~ngloirlsure'that no stUdent's rights are&#13;
w~'Ifd.students seelo;ing positions in the ::e Sludenl Government Assoclalion.&#13;
": 'IPSG.A., Inc.l must fUlfill all&#13;
In ;,rmtn"ts 01 Ihllt o~fice !n ~ccorda~ce&#13;
:: 511.1dentLifeEligibility Cnterlll specified&#13;
in trIf senale Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
Stetlon I. AU legisllltive powers granted&#13;
.ein sh,n be vesled in the Senate ot the&#13;
,SGA.,lrlC.&#13;
sKtiOn 2. Tile .Senate of the P.S.G.A .• Inc.&#13;
ilIll consistof II student me~bers, half ~f&#13;
..nIdl will be elected in the spnng and hal' In&#13;
1IIf1,11, wtloselerm Shall be for one y!ar.&#13;
Sldloll J. The senate ot the P.S.G.A., Inc,&#13;
ilIlI chOOSeth~ir own omcers and also ..&#13;
PresidentPro T~mpore. ARTICLE II&#13;
Sfdloll 4. In th~ absence Of the Vice· section 1. AlI.exKutlve powers, within this&#13;
Pl'esiclentOf P.S.G.A., Inc. Who shalt be the article. Shall be vested in the President of the&#13;
,.aidenl Of Ih~ $enate, the President Pro ParkSide Student Government ASSOCiation,&#13;
Temporeshall be the President of the Senate. Inc.&#13;
Thf President Pro Tempore Shall be .. Section 2, The President Shall hOld office _lOr' atld Shall be a member of aU Senate during the term ot one year tooether with the&#13;
CommlttetS. Vice-President who will be chosen tor the&#13;
WIlen vacancies happen in the reprnen· same term. They Shall be eligible for reo&#13;
lltillnfrom any at targe seat, the President election and Shall not serve more than 2&#13;
Pro TemPOreShall till such vacancies with consecutive terms.&#13;
lie concurrence01 a simple malority of the Before the President and the Vice.&#13;
IlIirtregislativebranch'ol the P.S.G.A., Inc. President elect enters on the execution of f~e&#13;
SKtltn 5. A simple majority of the total Oftice Of the Presidency or Vice.Presidency.&#13;
S4nete Shill constitute a quorum to do he or she shall take the followin9 oath:&#13;
lluSh'l'SS. "' dosolemnlV swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
Sftfiotl ,. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., 'nco faithfUlly ex~ute the office of President (or&#13;
... lllIave ttle power to determine the ru'es 0' Vice.Presiden}) of the Parkslde Stuoent&#13;
III proceedings, censure Its members fOr Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
diIorderlyConduct and. with the concurrence best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
" !WO fhirds Of the entire Senate. expel" defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
member. The senate shall keep a journal of Parkside Sh,ldent Government Association&#13;
",proceedingS, ana publiSh the same man· Inc."&#13;
Illy ,t/he minimum, a copy of the journal The President of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. shall&#13;
.... 11be available tor review by the public in also be 'able to draw compensation while in&#13;
IIlf P.S.G.A" Irlc. oHices. Office. the amount of which shall be deter.&#13;
TheSenateOf the P.S.G.A ..-Inc. shall meet mined by a majority vote of the entire&#13;
IIlflfSt,bliShed place and time no less than Legislative branch ot the P.S.G.A., Inc. This&#13;
tnet , week ClUring the fall and $pring compensation can be suspended by the senate&#13;
tlmeslers, anll no less than once a month whi Ie the President is on trial for purposes 0'&#13;
"'ing lIle SUmmer session. impeachment. If. however, after im.&#13;
U,*:, presentation of a petition by a simple peachment proceedings th~ President is&#13;
""Iorlly Of ttle entire Senate a meeting shall fOlp'ld to be innoce,'l't, all benefifs will be paid&#13;
IltQntdby ttl, Vice· President or in the caw to him/her retroactive from the date Of&#13;
"""VICt·President's absence lhe President suspension. Increases in compensation will , SUB-ARTICLE I&#13;
,"TtmllOl'e shall have the responsibilitv to not be awarded to a President While in office Section 1. The P.S.G.A.. Inc.. in con.&#13;
C!1' a _meet~ithln q hours. unless he/she is re.elecfed to another term of Sultatlon with the Chancellor Of the Univer.&#13;
.... 7, 8IIiI may tither orIglnale In the oWce or to hlsltter immediate successor, at sityOf Wisconsin. Parksideand sublectto the&#13;
..... or III tent to tile Senate trom the which time such benefits would begin to be final confirmation of the Board 0' Regents&#13;
..... branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Every bill. implemented. All Increases must be appt'oved shalf have the responsibility tor the&#13;
tllIIIt. rtIOIutlon or vote on whICh lhe concur· by a majority Of the entire senate. dispos1tion of th()se student fees wf'Iictl con.&#13;
.... 01 tile Senate II neceasary lhall have Upon resignation or removal from office 9' stitute substantial support for campus&#13;
~ tile Senate by a simple majority and Inability to discharge power and duties of the stUdent activities.&#13;
... bt prel8nted to the President of the Presidency. the Vice· President shall assume Sf1dlon 2. An Allocation COmmittee shall be&#13;
'.tU. Inc. babe It 18k.. effect. " the Pre- the office of President of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. established as a subcomml"ee of the&#13;
1IIdInI_ IlOl ~; ne/lhe shall send It and shall meet the constitutional P.S.G.A .• Inc. S4tNte. The comml"ee shall _10 Ihe Senate for reconslder.lIon Wllh requirements of the Presidency of the review requests fOr program support and&#13;
II/llw fIIIonltor "~"h, P.S.G.A., Inc. tx1dget allOCations of the allocable portion Of&#13;
•&#13;
• Ifttr luch -"Ah"d""'Oh, • ~~ "mp'. .. -' 3 Th. p-.,'den' ".11 ...Ion. , ~. have the 'h. , .. ,... Ied Unlverslt, fft. All action of _.10&#13;
-&#13;
'...... "POw~ by and With the advice and con$ent Of said commi"ee shall be subject to the fl..... ARTICLE V&#13;
Of tile entlJe sen.te Ihall agree to the majority of the P.S.G.A:, Inc. Senate to approv,IOf the P.$.G.A .• Inc. In conlunctlon SKtion 1. Fall elections for ttle P.S.G.A .•&#13;
-lIIIblCI.ll lhall become law. Bulin all such nominate and appoint the treas"!rer, with tf1e Chancellor of the University of Inc. shall be held the third week of Oct~.&#13;
.... Iht YOtlII Of Senate shall be determined corresponding secretary and all of her offICers Wisconsin . Parkside. At that time, one haH of the represent.flves&#13;
Dr I roll call vote. ancI the names of persons Of the executive branch of the P .S.G.A., Inc. A. MEM 8 E RSH IP. The Allocatlons "'om the legislative branch as well as.one at .&#13;
IIDlIng bind _nat the om shall be entered and all student judges with the consent of two· COmmi~ee shall consls.t of. voting memben. la&#13;
r&#13;
9f S.U.F.A.C. $eat shaU be etec:ted. Spring&#13;
~thaJaumal oIlt1e senate. If any bill shall not thirds of the entire Senate. 6 of Whom shall be P.S.G.A .. Inc. senators. elections lor the P.S.G.A .• Inc. stlall be hekll&#13;
... ralurned by the Pl'elldenl within len school The President shall have the power to line· The remaining 2 shall be chosen by the during the eighth wee!( r.tf to. t s:r1ng -Illles been PI'8I8flted to him/her. the Item veto specific portions of Senate bms. ,tudent body of tt1e University of Wisconsin. semester. At that time the Presiden, ce.&#13;
...... t th PSGA In.. ed i th sp ing one President, remaining legislative se.ats. one at&#13;
-&#13;
bIlcome law, in the manner as if He/she may line.it,.m ',',0, .·".m· . v·ltO th~ Parkside. one e,'oc,,' Thn.. 'p 5 or A • Inc • l..... e S.U.F.A.C. seat and fIve UnIOn IIId Signacs It. All P""",,,,'h.S ot the budget but shal no n· etected in tt1e a. r . . ..,... I ed&#13;
...... olItlePSG Segr*ted Fee Budget. The President may senators shall be chosen in the spring and Opera ling Board seats shall be eecl .&#13;
-- ... A.I~ .. shall be sent 10 the not veto leglslattonor any pOrtion ot ft. passed three shal~ be chosen in the fall by blind Sedion 2. The students. upon requesting a&#13;
lit Preai~h tor incorporation purposes. If by the Senate Which deals with the Senate drawing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. senators. petition with 10 percent 01 the signatures of&#13;
... vetoes the !egialation. ha/she Procedural Rules, Regulations or Senate The drawing shall be conducted by the ttle entire student bod .... shalt have the right to ... ;'Id It back to the senate. A two-thlrds appointments. Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A., inc. The request a constitutionai referendum to amend&#13;
IIfttrI4e ltwI entire Senate Ihall be required to The President shall have the power to term of oHlce shall be one year. The com. 'his constitution, or to request an advisory&#13;
lhe VtIo. . require wymen rttports from all standing or mlttee shall elect Its own d'lalrperson atter referendum. The petition shall be presented&#13;
...Itctian .. The Senate shall h.,. th. -, 'PKial committees and indIViduals to whom .ach spring election. In addnion. the to both the President and the Vice President&#13;
..... """ ~_. d ,... ted wlthlO ..... Ed ""onal 5er the President Pro Tempore 01 P.S.G.A., IClIAo.. ons, resolutions, or take legal responsibilities have been e I ed to Assistant ·Chancellor....... u . '....&#13;
fir -q Wfllth shalt be necessary and proper the PSG A. Inc. and Shall be requ r tl vices. Assls.tant Chancellor lor Ad. Inc.&#13;
CIIrrylng into executiOn the foregoing furnish written reports on hls/hff' exICu ve .&#13;
~·J:I..J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:I..J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:l.J:I..4J:1.J:l.4J:1.~~~~~~ , Jot M ... H ~ ,Jot -J:I.;};J..J:1. ~ J:I. J:I. J:I. J:I. . J:l.l1- J:I. J:l.l:I--.~ l1- 11- .. I;fI. 11-&#13;
P.S.G.A. ELECTIONS&#13;
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY OCTOBER 18 &amp; 19&#13;
id adftrtisemenl&#13;
.. "&#13;
powe~. ~nd.all other POwers vested by this&#13;
consfllutlon In the P,S.G.A .• Inc&#13;
Section 9. The Senate of the P S G.A., Inc&#13;
sh.all .have the Power to amend this con:&#13;
StltUt,qn by a IWO thirds vote of the entire&#13;
Senate~ In the event of an amendment being&#13;
passed by the Senate. said ~mendment shall&#13;
be ptecee on the ballot of the nexl election. If&#13;
t~e stUdents confirm the amen(iment b\l a&#13;
Simple maiority vote. if shall be added to the&#13;
ConS!ltution. If the Sludt'nts vote against it,&#13;
the amendment will be deleled. In Ihe event&#13;
the senate doe,S not confirm the prOPosed&#13;
amendment. saId amendment will nOf appear&#13;
on the ballot. The proponenl of an amendment&#13;
that IS turned dOWn may, if he or she so&#13;
C,hOOSes,fOHow the procedures set up in Ar.&#13;
tlcle V, Section 2 .&#13;
When amendments are up for approval they&#13;
shall appear on the October and March&#13;
ballots. In cases of urgency, .a special&#13;
referendum may be held at any time.&#13;
Section lO. The Senate shall have Ihe SOle&#13;
pow7r Of impeachment and the power to try&#13;
all Impeachments. When sitting for that&#13;
purpose they Shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When Ihe President Of the P.S,G.A .• Inc:. is&#13;
tried the Chief Juslice of the Judicial court&#13;
Shall preside, and no person shall be con&#13;
victed without the concurrence of twO.thirds&#13;
Of the entire Senate. Judgement in cases of&#13;
impeachment Shall not extenc:l furlher Ihan&#13;
removal from oHice and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or POSition that thl!&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. has jurisdiction over, appointment&#13;
to, or election for. Impeachment&#13;
Shall not begin .until two·thirds of the entire&#13;
Seoateof the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hold&#13;
an impeachment hearing&#13;
Section II. Roberts Rules Of Order shall&#13;
govern the proceedings of all Parlo;side&#13;
StUdent Gov'ernment Association. Inc.&#13;
meetings except wt'len inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A .• Inc.&#13;
activities to the I~islative erencn '01 the&#13;
P S G,A, Inc. by a majority VOle 01 the&#13;
Senate. AnV required written reperts shall be&#13;
re.quested in Writing and $hall be received&#13;
Within one Weell. 01 the presentation Of SUCh&#13;
requ~t 10 t..,... P.S.GA, Inc. member being&#13;
required 10 'umiSh Ihe reporl&#13;
The President ShaH have the power, by and&#13;
With the advice and conYnt of the LegiSlative&#13;
bf'"anch 01 the P.S.G.A., 'nc. 10 sign conlracls.&#13;
provided that a majority 01 the entire ~nate&#13;
concurs.&#13;
The President Shall draw up the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. budget and Send it to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. for approval.&#13;
The President Shall take care that Ihe&#13;
constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc. and its by.&#13;
laws be faithfully executed&#13;
The President, Vice· President and aU of.&#13;
ticers of Ihe P.S.G.A., Inc. Shall be removed&#13;
trom office for dereliction of duty or failure to&#13;
take care that the constitution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. al'ld its by·laM be faithfUlly executed.&#13;
Section 4. The Vice·President of the P.S-.G.A..&#13;
lne. sholl nominote student oppointees to all&#13;
foo:cultycodified committees with simple majority&#13;
of the '!nlir'! Senate needed for opj)l'"ovol and&#13;
sholl publish such vaconcies in Ihe stud'!nt&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
Section S. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and recipls on all&#13;
'ell;Pendituresol all P.S.G.A., Inc. monies and&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Sedjon 1. AU iudicial powers of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be vesled in judiciary&#13;
court, and in lower courts that the Senate 01&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. may establiSh. The iUdges.&#13;
Of all courts, Shall maintain gOOd behavior&#13;
and character during fheir terms Of office .&#13;
Section 2. The judicial court shall consist of&#13;
rour judges and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the judicial branch of tt1e&#13;
P.S.G.A.. Inc. Shall be University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Parlo;side students, and must be&#13;
Confirmed by the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parlo;side after a two.thlrds&#13;
apprOval by tile entire Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Appointments to tf\e ludicial branch of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc., shaH be for three years.&#13;
Section 3. tn the case Of deciding the con.&#13;
stitutionalityOf the actions Of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be bInding on all&#13;
parties invOlved, and Shall be forwarded to&#13;
the designated disciplinary head of the ad.&#13;
ministrative branCh of the University 0'&#13;
Wisconsin· ParlUide on 10 the approPriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
, Sedion 1. The P.S.G.A .• Inc .• subject to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers Of the Board of&#13;
Regents. the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin s.vstem, the Chancellor of tile&#13;
University of Wisconsin· Parlo;side, and the&#13;
facutty of the University of Wisconsin .&#13;
ParlUide shall tie active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance ~f and policy&#13;
developmt'flt fC'~ such institulions. As SUch,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. Shall have primary respon.&#13;
sibllity for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student Iile, services, and&#13;
interests. As such. the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sole represenlative stUdent group Qf the&#13;
students ot the University of WlscoGsln •&#13;
Parlo;side allowed to participate in in.&#13;
stitutional governance.&#13;
Ran&#13;
A. ~. The Alloc:otlons Committee shallo:consist01a votlng ~s. T,,-,"-or&amp; 6&#13;
P.S.G.A.. Inc. Senotor HOts. The ~ning 2&#13;
thoU be chos.., by the ,tlldent body 01 the Unl.&#13;
verslty of Wisconsln·Park.lde. one .Iected il\&#13;
the spring. one .ktctoa&lt;;t In to:rll. Thr_ P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Senc:rfon sholt be cftosen in the foil ond&#13;
fht"ee in the Iflrlng by vote of the Senate of In.&#13;
'...-.-sled P.S.G.A., tnc. Senotan. H tt-e ore&#13;
more !tlon th.... Interested Senators. t.... Senale&#13;
will VOle-by seael bollol listing 3 cho!«tS. The&#13;
voling sholf be ~nduded by rite Judidol Brandl&#13;
of Ihe P.S.G.A .. In&lt;:. The term of office sholl be&#13;
one )"lttW. The committee sholl elect its own&#13;
~::i~7e~s:~~n~c'h~~~jewe,:,hoJon;~oOd~&#13;
thief student offoil'!l oHker or their dnig~&#13;
orld the Campus Confroll...- moy sll wllh lhe&#13;
commit!" os non'VOfing m.... bers. Should 0 vo.&#13;
coney· occur ~ the AUoc~ Commlt!_ lhe&#13;
follOWing j)l'"oceduressholl be used:&#13;
I) The President Pro Tempore of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Senote, in o:onsullOlioo with lhe Chancellor&#13;
or designee, will fill ony unoccupied SenOlorlol&#13;
se&lt;rt with the .:confirmation of the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
SenOfe. The voo:contseots need not be filled wilh&#13;
SerlOfon. However P.S.G.A. Inc. Senot~,&#13;
should be given ftnt consld...-CJIton.&#13;
2. The President.Of the P.S.G.A., Inc .• in,&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or designee.&#13;
shaH appoint to any at·large seat on the&#13;
AIlOCalions Commi"ee. The P.S.G.A .• Inc.&#13;
Senate does not need to approve the&#13;
President's appointment.&#13;
8. PROCEDURES. Upon the can of the&#13;
Chancellor and Ihe Presidet'lt of the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. the Committee shall annua.lly prepare&#13;
recommendatiotls on the diSbursal of the&#13;
Segregated University Fee. Should the&#13;
P.S.G.A .• tnc. concur in the recommendation,&#13;
the President 01 P.S.G.A .• Inc. shall so advise&#13;
the Chancellor and Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Should the Chan.&#13;
cellor concur in the P.S.G.A .• Inc. recom.&#13;
mendation. he/she Shall arrange for Its im·&#13;
plementation. Should the Chancellor not&#13;
concur, the provisions under negotiations&#13;
shall be used. The Senate may not amend the&#13;
Allocations Committee recommenda.tion.&#13;
Rejection cf the Committees' recom.&#13;
mendation lakes a 2/3 vote of tt1e entire&#13;
senate. In the case of rejection by the Senate.&#13;
the reasons for rejection shall be qreed to&#13;
and forwarded to ttle Chairperson at the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The Allotations&#13;
Committee shall reconsider ils recom.&#13;
mendation and again forward /t to the Stnate.&#13;
C. NEGOTIATIONS. The President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc .• the Chairperson of S.U.F.A.C .&#13;
and the Presidenl Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senaleor their designHS (who&#13;
must be members of the P.S.G.A .• Inc.) shall&#13;
t:Ie representatives of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in any&#13;
consultalion With the Chancellor or tllsltter&#13;
designee in dealing with the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
AllocatIons Committee. If the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of tt1e P.S.G.A .• Inc. Senate is a&#13;
member 01 S.U.F.A.C. then the senator with&#13;
the mostseniQrity of the P.S.G.A., Inc. senate&#13;
witlassume the duties of Ihe Pro Tempore"&#13;
neoOffations With the Chancellor.&#13;
If the P.S.G.A .• Inc. and the C~ncellor&#13;
cannot reconcile their difference!( in the&#13;
allOCation of ~ allocable portion of&#13;
Setilreg-ated University Fees. each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
R~ts fOf' final disposition.&#13;
O. DUTIES. Tne Allocations COmmittee&#13;
'shall have primary responsibility in setting&#13;
the allotable portion of the auxiliary bud9-'&#13;
and to insure proper monetary expenditures&#13;
in total and within bUdgetary categories. The&#13;
Alhxalions Committee Shall meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion Of the&#13;
segregated Fees Budget according to fhe.&#13;
procedures set up in the senate Rules.&#13;
r Thursday, October 12.19897&#13;
5edklft I.&#13;
II FOf' recall ~lftsl a 5en4Itor or Officer of&#13;
P.S.G.A, mc.. any University of WISConsin.&#13;
Park$iiM stuGent !'Ny start the petifion and&#13;
any University of Wisconsin Parll.slde&#13;
stUdent may sign it. Fifteen percent 01 tfte&#13;
Parkside stuGent body must sign the P4tmon.&#13;
21 The recall petltloro m""t have a&#13;
statement 01 the renon(s) tor removal ff'Om&#13;
of tic •. This must deal ...,lttl .etiOn' comml"td&#13;
in the present term Of office.&#13;
31 The studentlsl Shalt present the petltkH'l&#13;
10 the Senate. Upon receivina veriflcetlon of&#13;
the petitlon, the Senate must Immediately&#13;
notify the schOOl paper that a recall Is in&#13;
progfflS and a special election will take&#13;
place. There must be an election within IS&#13;
school days a'ter notification of the valid&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
I) Upon'recelvlng Ihe recall petition fhe.&#13;
Senate must immediately tum it IN., to the&#13;
election commlttft. The election (1)mmlttee&#13;
Shall have five days to vet'"ify the nameS-on the&#13;
petition. In the event that tt1ere Is no election&#13;
commiMee. the Senate must appoint oro.&#13;
within fIve days.&#13;
If illegal names a,. found on the p"lfk3n,&#13;
and the number of legal names drop to In,&#13;
than lS"lb, the election committee mus.t notify&#13;
the studenl(s) who presented the petition.&#13;
Upon notiflcallon. the stUdents have five&#13;
school days to get the required number of&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition Stlall be declared null. At ftte requnt&#13;
of the student(s) who pr-nI'nttld the petition.&#13;
the election comm'"" must sho\IIf that Ihe&#13;
naml!l are illegal.&#13;
No le9al name can be remolted from ""&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petition is&#13;
presented to the Senar., it cannot be with.&#13;
drawn. A person can be recaUed only once Per&#13;
Offense during hisltter term in cHice. The&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petition ShaU&#13;
have hlsltter name placed on the •.~lIot&#13;
automatically unless he/she resigns.. StUCfeftts&#13;
wf'Io wiSh to run fOr Ihe positIon S/'Iall rollow&#13;
normal elKtlon procedure.&#13;
S) If a Senator or Officer resigns and is.&#13;
reappointed to a position within the term Of&#13;
Of'lce he/sl'le last held, it s!\all be conIldered&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI&#13;
Secttoft 1. An applicant Shan not be denied&#13;
acImi5Sion to the University 01 Wiscons.ln&#13;
Par~ide tor r"sons of rac_, color. national&#13;
origin religiOus creed, sex. previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political actlon. or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
SKtiOn 2. FI""nclal'ald 'nail not be den,"&#13;
ror reasons Of race, color. national origin.&#13;
religious creed. sex, previous criminal&#13;
record. political beliefs, politicaf actiOn, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section ,. StUdents are free to take ex·&#13;
ception 10 the data presented or views offered&#13;
in any cou~e of sludy and mav advo:eate&#13;
alternative opinions to those presented Within&#13;
the classroom.&#13;
hdton I.StUdents lhall be evaluated onlY&#13;
on their know/edge of the lubJect and&#13;
ac.demlc performance and In turn ant reepon.&#13;
1ib6e to maintain ItIlnd.rdl of academic pwtor.&#13;
mance eatabllIhed fOf MCh cou .... 1M)' have&#13;
.,roIIed In•&#13;
hcIkWI •• DIKIo&amp;ur41 of ItuOenta poIlt1cal or&#13;
personal beliefs In connactiOrt 'llll'tthCOUrM work&#13;
'ahail not be m.oe public without axpraa 1*-&#13;
million ot the student.&#13;
Sedton 7. Stucs.nt records on academiC&#13;
performance and disclpilnury Ik:tIonl lhail be&#13;
separa •.&#13;
5ec1ion e. Information from counseling •&#13;
diSCiplinary files shall nol be made avaUab&#13;
to persons on Of' off campus wlttlouf the ex&#13;
press consent of the ,tudent inViWvect. exc&#13;
under legal compulsion.&#13;
section t. All recotds.and Information kep&#13;
orotile 5han b. readily accnlble to ttle studen&#13;
ttl whom Itley pertain.&#13;
section 10. Students shall have the rlQht&#13;
be present at all commi"H meetings. dlrec"&#13;
affecting the students.&#13;
sectiOn 11. The constitutional rights of any&#13;
stuoent, 1$ stated in the United Statn Con .&#13;
stitution. shall not be denIed anyone, at the&#13;
University 0' Wlscnin . P.rkSlde.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
8 TMl'llttay: OCtOber. 12, .,989 Aanger ,&#13;
International&#13;
by M1cbelle·Reaee Dege·&#13;
naI8&#13;
8laff Writer&#13;
The InternatiolUll student&#13;
community Is growing here at&#13;
Parkatde. Thts year we have&#13;
sa students tram 21 countries.&#13;
WhIle they have come here to&#13;
leam, they bring many opportunities&#13;
for us to become better&#13;
acquainted with their different&#13;
cultural backgrounds.&#13;
One of the ways students&#13;
can take advantage of these&#13;
opportunities Is by becoming&#13;
active In th International Student&#13;
Organlatlon (ISO). The&#13;
ISO Is not only here to help&#13;
foreign students learn how to&#13;
relate to American culture,&#13;
but also for American students&#13;
who need to gain experience&#13;
In dealing with different&#13;
cultures, so as to be able&#13;
to compete In our expanding&#13;
global community.&#13;
Unlike many of the clubs&#13;
Student Organization performs valuable serVice&#13;
and organIzations at Parkstde&#13;
that tend to be specific to a&#13;
particular major, the International&#13;
Students Organization&#13;
can be useful to all students&#13;
and Is open to everyone. Thts&#13;
gourp sponsors activities involving&#13;
various local cultural&#13;
events, such as the trip to&#13;
Chtcago for the Chtnese New&#13;
Year celebration and visiting&#13;
the International Holiday&#13;
Folk Fair at MEECA In Mllwaukee.&#13;
They are also active&#13;
In the pursuit of recreational&#13;
activities like picnics and&#13;
participation In the Winter&#13;
Carnival, along with othe r&#13;
campus activities.&#13;
The new president of the International&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
thts year Is Kenjl Seto of&#13;
Japan. He has recentlycome&#13;
to Parkslde from Steven's&#13;
Point, where he was involved&#13;
In their ISO. Seto was one of&#13;
several students at Parkside&#13;
who were referred to Johnson&#13;
Wax to help In translating for&#13;
them Japanese. Chinese and&#13;
Spanish. OUr foreign student&#13;
can .not only be seen using&#13;
their talents In the community,&#13;
but also here at Parkside,&#13;
where Benjamin DeLatuenta&#13;
tutors hts fellow students&#13;
in Spanish.&#13;
Another service here at&#13;
Parkside which deals in the&#13;
needs of both foreign and&#13;
American students and those&#13;
of the community, Is, the International&#13;
Student Services&#13;
(ISS). The main functions of&#13;
the ISS is to help incoming&#13;
foreign students. They do this&#13;
In many ways, one of which Is&#13;
by promoting a host program&#13;
open to the students and&#13;
members of the surrounding&#13;
communities.&#13;
Unilke some host programs&#13;
the students do not live with&#13;
the host family, but are encouraged&#13;
to participate In&#13;
soclal- acti viltes and spend&#13;
time with them on holidays&#13;
and spelcal ocasslons, when&#13;
It's not possible for them to&#13;
go home. Anyone Interested&#13;
In this program should contact&#13;
Professor Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran at 553-2600. .&#13;
The ISS is not only active In&#13;
helping the foreign students&#13;
here, but also In the recruttement&#13;
of qualified foreign students&#13;
with good academic&#13;
background.&#13;
Edlma Rodriguez is an example&#13;
of this type of student.&#13;
Rodriguez is from Panama,&#13;
were she started college at&#13;
16. Being that she Is fluent In&#13;
both French and English, as&#13;
well as her native language&#13;
Spanish, she had her choice&#13;
between a scholarship in&#13;
Franch or The Central&#13;
American Peace Scholarship&#13;
offered by the U.S. GovernWorld&#13;
travels bring Professor Rahim to Parkside&#13;
Roo's Roo's&#13;
Place 1 C Open Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m: ~o'l#-lfllJ arryout&#13;
Sundays 12 Noon ....~.... --c:;:~~,&lt;'Open Sun-Thurs. HamL&#13;
' Midnight&#13;
uncheon Reservation , Fri,-Sat 11 am-2 am&#13;
657·5907 657-4455&#13;
by Gwen HeUer&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
The majestic beauty of the&#13;
Canadian Rockies In Alberla&#13;
Canada. TrInIdad and Toba:&#13;
go, two Caribbean Islands&#13;
which host a tropical climate&#13;
complete with rain forests.&#13;
The rich history of England,&#13;
the cultural hub of Europe.&#13;
Iraq, the "cradle of clviUza.&#13;
tlon" nestled between the&#13;
Tigris and Euphrates rivers.&#13;
Sounds like a travel agency&#13;
advertising for dream vacations?&#13;
Actually these are&#13;
some of the places where Dr.&#13;
Medhat RahIm, a native of&#13;
Iraq, has studled and worked&#13;
during his life.&#13;
A world traveler, R8h1m Is&#13;
a vislttng professor of Educa,&#13;
tlon (or the 1989-90 year. He&#13;
specializes In mathematics&#13;
and computer education. Dr.&#13;
RahIm, who Is a Canadian&#13;
citizen, elaborated on his own&#13;
education as well as the&#13;
education of the future teachers&#13;
he Instructs.&#13;
How did you arrive at Park.&#13;
side!&#13;
I was a faCUlty member of&#13;
the University of Alberla at&#13;
Edmonton for eight years. I&#13;
Famous for 5x5's&#13;
(1fz lb. Hamburger"&#13;
Fries for $3.25)&#13;
Long Island Ice Tea&#13;
saw an advertisement for the&#13;
position at Parkside and&#13;
decided to apply for It. Some&#13;
of my collegues were familiar&#13;
with the school and highly&#13;
recommended it.&#13;
How long will you be at Park·&#13;
side and wbere will you go&#13;
when you leave?&#13;
Through the "free trade"&#13;
agreement between the&#13;
United States and Canada, I&#13;
have permission to live here&#13;
for one year. Thts polley is indefinitely&#13;
renewable so I may&#13;
possibly reapply for my position&#13;
here on a permanent&#13;
basis. Otherwise, I will review&#13;
my options for relocation&#13;
In Canada.&#13;
What are your duties here at&#13;
Parks/tle! _&#13;
Currently I am teaching&#13;
Mathematics for Elementary&#13;
School Teachers. Also I am&#13;
teaching Fundamentals of Instructional&#13;
Technology. In&#13;
thts course, I am implementIng&#13;
chapters from a textbook&#13;
that I am writing. Furthermore,&#13;
I am supervising student&#13;
teachers In Racine and&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
II&#13;
What is your educational&#13;
background?&#13;
I obtained my Bachelor's&#13;
degree from the University of&#13;
Baghdad In Mathematics.&#13;
Later I earned my Master of&#13;
Philosophy In Pure Mathematics&#13;
from the University of&#13;
London. I received my Ph.D.&#13;
from the University of Alberta-Edmonton&#13;
in Mathematics&#13;
Education.&#13;
What do you like about Parkside?&#13;
Parkslde has a wealth of&#13;
resources and technology that&#13;
makes it a sophisticated university.&#13;
It Is a beautiful&#13;
campus with wonderful forests&#13;
and parks. I enjoy the serenity&#13;
of the outdoors. I have&#13;
also found the faculty and&#13;
students to be very, friendly.&#13;
How do Parkslde students dlf.&#13;
ter from students at Canadian&#13;
universities?&#13;
Students are basically the&#13;
same In that they have the&#13;
same types of problems and&#13;
questions In learning new&#13;
things. No matter where one&#13;
goes In the world, you see&#13;
these similarities. In comparIson&#13;
to Canada, Parkslde s~-&#13;
,&#13;
dents dress much more casually&#13;
in jeans and sweat shirts.&#13;
Canadian students tend to get&#13;
more dressed up for class.&#13;
What qlialltles do you think&#13;
are necessary to be a good&#13;
educator?&#13;
A good educator should establish&#13;
clear guidelines for&#13;
'the course, from the beginning.&#13;
Students should be&#13;
aware of exam dates, office&#13;
hours, and general expectations.&#13;
Open communication&#13;
between the Instructor and&#13;
the students are essential.&#13;
There should be quick feed.&#13;
back of information If a student&#13;
has-a problem or question.&#13;
Finally, one must be approachable.&#13;
A good educator&#13;
must be Willing to meet the&#13;
needs of the student. This&#13;
may mean meeting outside of&#13;
the specific office hours or&#13;
during lunch. , _&#13;
Undoubtedly an asset to&#13;
Parkslde Education Department&#13;
this soft spoken and&#13;
friendly man will enhance his&#13;
students' education with his&#13;
k'l0wledge and dlverse background.&#13;
~&#13;
··parcel~&#13;
. BUsines..~&#13;
. .. Services&#13;
LOOKING FOR WORD&#13;
PROCESSING THAT IS •••&#13;
ECONOMICAL?&#13;
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE-&#13;
: ~:~~m~;pers • CIBM&amp;tAPPle Self-Service&#13;
B&#13;
· d' ompu ers&#13;
• In Ing • And More I&#13;
• Self·Service Typewriters .&#13;
HOME OF THE 8' CO'PIES&#13;
803222n~'li'rs: ~on ..Fr!, 9am-6pm; Sal. lOam-2pm&#13;
ve. unnysld~ Park ShoppingCenler Kenosha&#13;
(414) 654-8000 • FAX (414) 654-8998&#13;
ment, and has recenll&#13;
ferred to Parkside wfu!.tan.&#13;
chose. 'ch,~&#13;
Another way. p&#13;
helps students learn a:kSI~&#13;
international commuru~~~&#13;
through The Center For?. k&#13;
'national StUdies. This ~ller.&#13;
is Involved with !alit&#13;
American students :~~&#13;
They also are working~&#13;
promoting the Design f •&#13;
versity Program b or Ili.&#13;
Parkside, througb ere '.&#13;
tours. ,~&#13;
These -tours are open to&#13;
dent for credit. Some of~&#13;
tours In the past have ~&#13;
ed the trips to China ~1U4&#13;
Australia, New ZealMd diI,&#13;
the Soviet Union. There IsSllf&#13;
other trip planned to lhe ••~&#13;
et Union this sPring a ~"&#13;
as a 19 to 21 ,day to~r ~"'l&#13;
,,:,iIl include Thallang, M~Cl&#13;
SIan, Smgapore and Indo ~&#13;
sia, this coming semester. ne.&#13;
...------_14&#13;
When yOU party, ~&#13;
remember 10... .0&#13;
&lt;:r====::::::1~III II&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
III&#13;
ell&#13;
•&#13;
UI&#13;
'*&#13;
0lI&#13;
III&#13;
I'IC&#13;
",&#13;
~&#13;
Itt&#13;
."&#13;
IIID 'I....&#13;
"I&#13;
lie&#13;
1WI&#13;
h&#13;
..,&#13;
1;0 1'.wIarino Me.,~ Il)O,&#13;
Cost! Mesa. CA 92626&#13;
1-llOO-tl1·2337&#13;
s..r_ oI,\moria.'''''''''&#13;
CIJl15lllll&lt;'f lII!IIi&gt;enbip.......&#13;
vpen ~ 10 I'mon""" A&#13;
Delivering&#13;
regUlar menu,&#13;
plus pizza.&#13;
3301 52nd Street, Kenosha&#13;
657-4455&#13;
I&#13;
...._----'1&#13;
IN&#13;
'r:&#13;
(if)&#13;
~ljlT.~&#13;
Meeting the speciftc&#13;
needs of PaIkside&#13;
employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent Ha&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
women'sStudies&#13;
conferenceheld&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
unity In Diversity&#13;
by Cheri Beck&#13;
Feature Writer&#13;
Interested In the&#13;
,\J1yonecms and issues raebaSicconmodem&#13;
woman will&#13;
IJlJ thet to miss the 14th an- .&#13;
not W~verslty off Wisconsin&#13;
nuai Women's Studies Oon- sY.tem&#13;
terence'conference is span- TIl: by the University of&#13;
~reonsin.parkslde Women's&#13;
\Vlsc program and the UnlStUdie.of&#13;
Wisconsin System&#13;
Vf/S1~,sStudies Consortium.&#13;
:'~eme this year is "Unity&#13;
in Diversity".&#13;
"ThI' Is the first year the&#13;
arence is being held. at&#13;
:rk.lde. We are expectm~&#13;
over 200 people to attend,&#13;
said Anne Statham, Chairmanofthe&#13;
Planning Commit-&#13;
~ wide variety of informal "-&#13;
discussionswlll be offered,&#13;
andthe conference will featare&#13;
a keynote address tilled&#13;
''Getting Minority Women&#13;
out of the Margms: Inittal&#13;
steps In Curriculum Integra.&#13;
lion," by Elizabeth Hlgglnbotham&#13;
of the Center for Research&#13;
on Women at Mem-&#13;
~ State University.&#13;
In addition to the keynote&#13;
address,discussions led by&#13;
Blderators from various UW&#13;
campuseswlll be held. ScheduIed&#13;
topics include: Aging,&#13;
Ulerature by Women of&#13;
Ollor, Schooling and Diver.&#13;
Illy, Women and the Law,&#13;
Pedagogy, and The History of&#13;
mlnism.&#13;
The Conference runs Frio&#13;
Oct. 13 and Sat. Oct. 14.&#13;
Registration Is Friday 8-8: 45&#13;
. in the Union. The fee is&#13;
for students and $15 for&#13;
-students.&#13;
"It will be a while before&#13;
IIle conference Is held at&#13;
Park.lde again, so everyone&#13;
II encOuraged to participate&#13;
lIDW,"Stratham said.&#13;
IN THE BLEACHERS&#13;
Irt Steve Moen&#13;
" ". v,',&#13;
" \ t •• \.,::.~ :~ ~\ ...&#13;
\., ,~".-&#13;
" ',' ~ "\!, •.• -, ' ... ", ,\'~:.&#13;
~!' I did It aglln, Ih guys? Missed •&#13;
• 111m... ,PIt flna' Mconell. But. hey. we',.&#13;
. . • rfghl,?~~t •.guy.? ... Guya'"&#13;
Ranger ThIJl'Sday, October U, 1989 9&#13;
The Perk aide Wind Eneemble will meke I"a fir." eppeerence on "he Mu.1e Depert:men"'. Wedne_y&#13;
Noon Recl"el Serlea on Oc"ober '1B In "he Communlcelt:on Art:. The_re. The ."uden" en.emble.&#13;
which nOrmally playa evening concerts, I. performing to ."racto II new Budlence amang the n."'enerB&#13;
at: the popular, free daytime concert: aeries.&#13;
The program includ •• selections fram B variety of world cult:u..... Including the "St:. Lawrence&#13;
SUi"e" by Mor"on Gould. "Hendel in "he B"rand" by Percy Grelnger. "See BOng." by Ralph Veughan&#13;
Williams, u.Journey to B Holy Mountaintl by Allin Hovhane ••• IlSymphonlc Danell No.2" by Clifton&#13;
Williams and "La Creja de Droll by Mar.iena aan Miguel. The Wind Ensemble fe under t:he dlrect:lan&#13;
. af Mark Eichner, Associate ProfesBor of Music.&#13;
•&#13;
Classic designer clothing&#13;
for men and women,&#13;
at savings of 30%-50%&#13;
•&#13;
-FACTORY STORE&#13;
.CREW&#13;
Lakeside Market Place. Kenosha, Wisconsin. (414) 857-9093&#13;
10 TI1\Irsday,·Qctober, 12, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Volleyball fares well&#13;
in St. Joseph tourney&#13;
VOlleyball, lrom palle f f&#13;
In put appearances In 51. Joseph&#13;
Leading the way for the&#13;
Ranger success was Nancy&#13;
Hoeh wtth 41 kills and ~1 digs,&#13;
lcole Paclone had 105 as,&#13;
u and Colleen Ryan performed&#13;
well over the weekend&#13;
making 18 blocks.&#13;
Coach Paulson also gave&#13;
credll to freshman Lisa Venepl.&#13;
.,AgaJnsl Wesleyan she&#13;
played well and stabIlIZed an&#13;
unresolved position for us",&#13;
aid Paulson.&#13;
1 thought we had a good&#13;
we kend but we needed to&#13;
rve receive better agaJnst&#13;
Kernee SI. and we need to become&#13;
cogn1zalll of the fact&#13;
thaI 1\ Ia Important to pass&#13;
well In critical matches",&#13;
laid Paulaon.&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
in the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
WIN!&#13;
over $100&#13;
in prizes each game&#13;
• Pro Jerseys &amp; Caps&#13;
• Team Pennants&#13;
• Food (Pizza, Burgers, Etc.)&#13;
• Ree. Cir. Activity Coupons&#13;
• Packer Game Ticket Drawing&#13;
FREE&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
But you must sign in,&#13;
get a door ticket&#13;
and be in attendance&#13;
to be eligible to win.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
8:00 p.m. - Parkside Union&#13;
Monday Night, October 16&#13;
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS -V$- BUFFALO BILLS&#13;
....&#13;
RANGER GOLF RESULIS&#13;
\,&#13;
District 14 NAIA Golf Tournaments&#13;
at Eau Claire C.C. (10107-10109)&#13;
NAME DAY 1 DAY 2 DAY 3 TOTAL&#13;
Gerber, Steve 39-43-82 38-39-77 40-38-78 237&#13;
Schaap, Todd 42-36-87 41-40-81 40-40-80 239&#13;
Schneider, Mark 45-42-87 42-34- 76 42-37-79 242&#13;
Schulze, Robb 41-38-79 43-39-82 45-37-82 243&#13;
Schuit, Scott 42·40-82 43-45-88 39-37-76 246&#13;
Agazzi, Tom 46-42-88 40·41-81 40-38-78 247&#13;
TEAM RESULTS&#13;
UW-Sloul 387 377 381 1145&#13;
UW-Eau Claire 397 396 396 1189&#13;
UW·Slevens Point 395 401 393 1189&#13;
UW.Qshkosh 395 390 409 1194&#13;
UW-Parkside 408 397 391 1196&#13;
UW-River Falls' 411 417 411 1239&#13;
UW-Plaleville 410 419 420 1249&#13;
UW-laCross 420 420 412 1252&#13;
M.S.O.E. 447 432 449 1328&#13;
Concordia 471 469 450 1390&#13;
·Congratulations to Steve Gerber"&#13;
• NAIA ALL-DISTRICT GOLF TEAM"&#13;
/&#13;
HelpWIIlII&#13;
The Ranger Wi~, .3&#13;
Is looking for someone&#13;
to fill the postion of&#13;
DISTRIBUTION&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
Main Responsibility is Dsistribution&#13;
of Newspapers.&#13;
Short Hours - Good Pay.&#13;
For_ Details Stop in the Ranger&#13;
Offi ce, or call 553-2287.&#13;
Monday Spotlight&#13;
Sillslittl~ challenge&#13;
for unbeaten Rams&#13;
b Jeff Reddick&#13;
AS~' sports Editor&#13;
Monday you can s~e&#13;
'I'bls undefeated team in&#13;
theon¥L the Los Angeles&#13;
the N(5.0) take on the Buffa-&#13;
~ms (3·2). The Rams are&#13;
10 rprise of the NFL as&#13;
the~u jumped out and&#13;
theYe~ean already potent of0I1X&#13;
with a now stellar defenseMeanwhilethe&#13;
Bills haferu:r'lookedanything&#13;
Iike the&#13;
yen that .finished second in&#13;
tea",Wclast year. they have th:yed weak defense and in-&#13;
~onsistentoffense thus far.&#13;
Thedifference between the&#13;
Ramsin 89 and the past IS&#13;
thatthey now have as potent&#13;
f a defense as an offense&#13;
~d both are playing up to&#13;
theirpotential. Behind what&#13;
may be the best offens ive&#13;
line in the league QB Jim&#13;
Everett has been able to sit in&#13;
the pocket and look for his fa.&#13;
vorite receiver Carl Ellard.&#13;
That line hasn't hurt Greg&#13;
Bell's rushing efforts that&#13;
much either as he leads the&#13;
legue in that category. On de.&#13;
fense the star performers are&#13;
DE Ken Greene one of the top&#13;
sack men in the game and CB&#13;
LeRoy Irvin among,' the&#13;
league leaders in tntercap,&#13;
tions.&#13;
While the Rams have been&#13;
cruising. the Bills have been&#13;
struggling from their p ace of&#13;
a year ago. They have not&#13;
performed up to expectations&#13;
as their tough defense of a&#13;
year ago has gone south in reo&#13;
, cent weeks. Included in the&#13;
defensive demise are high&#13;
scoring losses to Indianapolis,&#13;
1989·90coupon book unveiled&#13;
The UW·Parkside Athlettc pon book will be used by the&#13;
DepartmentIs pleased to an. UW·Parkslde Athletic Depart.&#13;
nounce that the 1989·90 ver- ment to' help support their&#13;
mon of tbe Ranger Dining sports teams. The primary&#13;
Plus DiscountCoupon Booklet use of the funds will be to en.&#13;
llnowavallable for purchase. sure that the UW·Parkslde&#13;
Theprice of tbe 58 page eou- athelets will be able to partie.&#13;
pon bookletis just $8.00. The ipate in NAIA and NCAA Na118&#13;
couponsin the booklet ae tlonal tournament competl·&#13;
redeemableat over 30 Keno. tlons. One hundred and&#13;
aha and RaclIJ.earea restau- twenty-eight UW·Parkslde&#13;
rant.and businesses. If all of . athletes have earned All·&#13;
the coupons are used the American honors three hunbookowner&#13;
will save' over dred and eighteen times&#13;
1200. Most of tbe coupons m----..- through their participation in&#13;
the bookare of tbe buy one fhes","--- competitions and&#13;
recive one free type, bui twenty-fous.athletes ~ve won&#13;
lOmeoffer various other dis. National Championships.&#13;
eounts.There are free meals, The - coupon booklets ae&#13;
movepases, free VHS or Beta available for inspection and&#13;
tape rentals and other dis. purchase at the Information&#13;
CiOWlIs. In Some cases, the Center in the Parkside Stuuse&#13;
of one coupon will result dent Union., The hours of the&#13;
in a savings greater that the Information Center are Mon·&#13;
purchaseprice of the entire day and Thursday 8: 00 AM to&#13;
booklet.Most of the coupons 7:30 PM, Tuesday and Wed·&#13;
are validfor tbe entire school nesday 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM,&#13;
year,with an expiration date and Friday 8:00 AM to 4:15&#13;
of May31,1990. PM. For more information&#13;
ThePr&lt;lCeedsfrom the cou- call 553·2245.&#13;
-&#13;
Cincinatti and a high scoring&#13;
VICtory Over Houston. Offensively&#13;
BUffalo Is handicapped&#13;
as they will be without the&#13;
services of QB Jim Kelly for&#13;
the next four weeks and wnt&#13;
need to rely on untested&#13;
Frank Reich who has at.&#13;
tempted only two passes&#13;
smce 1986. Withoug Kelly the&#13;
floundering Bills offense will&#13;
have to depend more on RE.&#13;
WR Thurman Thomas who is&#13;
steadily becoming orre of the&#13;
NFL's top offensive players.&#13;
Without Kelly the Bills of.&#13;
fense will be no match for the&#13;
strong L.A. defense. As as the&#13;
Buffalo defense wl1l not be&#13;
any match for Jim Everett&#13;
and company as they enjoy&#13;
the Monday spotlight shred.&#13;
ding the Bills as home by a&#13;
final score of 24-7.&#13;
Netters&#13;
lose in&#13;
quarters&#13;
by Ted McIntyre&#13;
Friday and Saturday the&#13;
6th and 7th. the volleyball&#13;
team participated In the Mis·&#13;
souri Western tournament at&#13;
St. Joseph Missouri. Twenty&#13;
teams competed in the tour.&#13;
ney.&#13;
The action began Friday as&#13;
the Rangerettes beat Ne·&#13;
braska Wesleyan 15-11, 14-16,&#13;
15-8. Next parkslde defeated&#13;
Pittsburgh St. 15-7, 15·10, but&#13;
lost to central MIssouri 4·15,&#13;
5·15. Saturday the Lady&#13;
Rangers beat Quincy college&#13;
15·2, 15·4.&#13;
Parkslde advanced to the&#13;
quarterfinals and lost to&#13;
Kernee se, 13·15,3·15, 10·15.&#13;
The. weekertd was successful&#13;
for the team as they&#13;
played better this year than&#13;
: see Volleyball, page 10&#13;
Playerof the Week&#13;
Digging out victories&#13;
For tbe week of Oct 3 through the 9th, the Parkside&#13;
Rangerextends a hearty handshake. a healthy smpe and&#13;
lbewarm glow of victory to senior volleyball standout&#13;
NancyHoch. .&#13;
Nancy,a senior and' a sociology major at UW·Parkslde,&#13;
bas giventhe Ranger volleyball squad strong play all ~ea.&#13;
son.This past week Hoch led Parksfde to victory agamst&#13;
UW·Milwaukeeon Tuesday and In successful play at the&#13;
MISSOuriWestern tournament in which she compiled 41&#13;
killsand 51 digs for the Lady Rangers. "I'm doing al·&#13;
I1ght",said Boch, "but I don't think I have reached my&#13;
POtential." ,&#13;
CoachTerry Paulson and teammates look to Nancyfor&#13;
leaderShip as she is in her fourth season at parlqu~e.&#13;
80chmaintains a humble attitude. "I'm playing canSIS-&#13;
~nUydOinlt.What I have to help the team. but personally&#13;
IIIwaiting for it (her game) to come around.&#13;
For tbis week and for her leadership on the volleyball&#13;
~urt for the Lady Rangers, the Ranger congratulates&#13;
ancyHoch as the Player of the Week. Nancy Hoch&#13;
Range, Thursday, October 12; 1989 11&#13;
Rangers a hit in&#13;
thrashing of Warriors&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Last week Wednesday tbe&#13;
Men's baseball team took on&#13;
the Marquette Warriors in a&#13;
game here at Parkside. This&#13;
was a game in which the&#13;
Rangers jumped out fast as&#13;
they found their offense for&#13;
the first time this year.&#13;
The Rangers scored in the&#13;
first inning and never had to&#13;
look back as Brian Gauthier&#13;
hit a one out two run homer&#13;
and Ron Wilke followed with&#13;
a double and later scored on&#13;
an error by the Warriors&#13;
Shortstop.&#13;
They tallied another run in&#13;
the second but the damage was&#13;
really done in the third inning&#13;
as 11 men went to the plate&#13;
and seven of them scored.&#13;
After a leadoff goundout by&#13;
Catcher Don Keller the&#13;
Ranger men followed wjth&#13;
seven stralght hits including&#13;
a Jack RIebsedai trliple and&#13;
Jeff Reikowskl's two hits in&#13;
the inning.&#13;
While the Offense was beating&#13;
up on the Warriors they&#13;
never had to worry as Jeff&#13;
Konzel was on the hill and&#13;
went the first five innings&#13;
without giving up a run allowing&#13;
only one hlt while striking&#13;
out six.&#13;
With the lead well in hand a&#13;
host of Rangers pitchers fin.&#13;
Ished up the nine inning af.&#13;
fair, while the offense countlnued&#13;
to lay wasteto aplethora&#13;
of Marquette pitchers.&#13;
Jeff Relkowski set his sights&#13;
on Warrior pitching&#13;
In the fifth nine men&#13;
stepped to the plate and four&#13;
of them scored. Again in the&#13;
sixth they came out smoking&#13;
as three runs crossed the&#13;
plate the big blow of the in.&#13;
ning was a two run homer by&#13;
Mark Thompson who went 4-4&#13;
with a homer and three sin.&#13;
gles as a late inning replace.&#13;
ment for Keller.&#13;
All of this offense was a&#13;
boost for the Rangers as they&#13;
pounded out a fIna1 score of&#13;
20-6, all five Warrior runs&#13;
came after the game was&#13;
well in hand and the mop up&#13;
squad was on for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
THUR NITES&#13;
BEGINS OCT. 26TH&#13;
CALL JEFF LEM.&#13;
551·9721&#13;
ROSTER DUE 10/21&#13;
DeBlieck paces ladies&#13;
Runners, from page 12&#13;
as Parkslde's second-best fin.&#13;
isher.&#13;
Winning the meet was Vii.&#13;
lanova, who came Into the&#13;
meet ranked number one in&#13;
the nation. The Wildcats&#13;
made ~ on timt ranking&#13;
with .. first place, twenty&#13;
point finish in dominating the&#13;
meet. The host Gophers fin.&#13;
Ished a distant second with&#13;
164points.&#13;
with a point total of 339.&#13;
The women, running in the&#13;
Golden Gopher invite in&#13;
Minnesota, just missed a top.&#13;
ten finish, coming in at the&#13;
number eleven spot with a 264&#13;
point total.&#13;
Lori DeBlieck led the&#13;
charge for the 'Lady Rangers&#13;
with a 42nd place finish in 18:&#13;
42. Teammate Paula Stokman&#13;
finished 61st with a 19:07 tlme&#13;
r&#13;
dispose of old nemisis&#13;
Lady Rangers quickly take our play for gra&#13;
need to play up to ounted&#13;
,,,&#13;
on every point." said ~ab~&#13;
Parkside did begin ~h.&#13;
up to it's ablillies an PiIr&#13;
the game around tak~ ""i&#13;
lead late in the Cot g ~&#13;
winning 15.12. nest&#13;
In game two Parkside the contest as it lacked agnow&#13;
and really know each found itself down for much of' gression. "Sometimes we&#13;
other." said Nicole. by Ted Mcintyre&#13;
1'Ueoday night at Parkslde&#13;
the volleyball team took on a&#13;
lamlliar rival In U.W. MlJwaukee.&#13;
The Lady Rangers&#13;
came Into the contest trying&#13;
to break a live game llsIng&#13;
streak. Parkside took an&#13;
early tead In game one and&#13;
never looked back deleatlng&#13;
U.W.M. In Btraight games.&#13;
Nancy Hoch had 18 kJllB,and&#13;
Nicole Pactone had 52 assists&#13;
to lead the RangeretleB.&#13;
"It 18 good to be successful&#13;
again" aald senior Nancy&#13;
Hooch. "It 18 good to be BUCcessful&#13;
agatnst U.W.M. They&#13;
are a big rival."&#13;
Parkslde won game on 15·10&#13;
by taktng an early lead.&#13;
Game three Saw p&#13;
establlsh control earfksil,&#13;
never doubting it's ~ Ir,j&#13;
rolling to a match ~ IliJli&#13;
15-7victory. e '"Cblij&#13;
/&#13;
Viccl Pundsack&#13;
among many R was&#13;
who played wellang~&#13;
(coach Paulson) ta~hi&#13;
lot in the off season g&#13;
have been able to pu~:&#13;
gether" said PUndsak au c .&#13;
Coach Paulson w&#13;
pleased with the tea"&#13;
farmance "We rna . needed&#13;
pass serve and that's ilC&#13;
did". said Paulson ~E&#13;
thing else came oil of&#13;
aspect Ofour game."&#13;
Hoch played well in the&#13;
match BCOringoften 01 spikes&#13;
set up by senior teammate&#13;
Nicole Paclone. "Nancy and I&#13;
have a good rapport, we have&#13;
played together for four years&#13;
SC?ccerovercomes turf, injuries&#13;
With 2-0 shut-out in Missouri&#13;
the two shots K.C. could man- E:---:--840000:--"'0"'00000;;;;&#13;
age in regtstertng shutout&#13;
number six for his this year,&#13;
ratslng his record to 7-2-1.&#13;
In the second half, Parkslde&#13;
netted some insurance as Bob&#13;
Rogers put home a rebound&#13;
of a Jens Hansen shot for his&#13;
second goal and fourth point&#13;
of the year.&#13;
Ranger coach Rick Kllps&#13;
acknowledged his team's&#13;
problems wtth the turf, but&#13;
still semed concerned with&#13;
his teams performance. "We&#13;
had trouble with the turf and&#13;
adjusting to the different&#13;
bounces you get on astro-turf.&#13;
It was especially a problem&#13;
because It was wet, which&#13;
makes .the ball skid more&#13;
when it hit,"&#13;
"But, I don't want that to&#13;
be an excuse for our team because&#13;
both sides had to deal&#13;
with It. 1I's just like dealing&#13;
wtth anything; rain wind&#13;
cold, it just isn't an ex'cuse. .&#13;
Men run to 13th at Notre Da&#13;
T.&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann • ski's time was just&#13;
, Sports Editor minute slower at 26:17.&#13;
next- Ranger finisher&#13;
The Parkside men, runnJngDaVenport, flnlshedin&#13;
the 22-team Notre-"15ame good enough for 59th,&#13;
vitational, placed 13th this Notre Dame, the hosi&#13;
eekend, with Pat Kochanski the team portion ofthe&#13;
eacting the way In a 23rd with a score of 85.Two&#13;
lace over-all finish. ,Wisconsin teams I&#13;
The winner of the meet the top 10, with Wh1&#13;
rtan Wilson from North Cen: placing 7th (228points)&#13;
ral College, finished the 5. Steven's Point in Bib&#13;
lie race In 25:17. Kochan- points). The Rangers&#13;
by JeU Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Edltor&#13;
The Ranger soccer team.&#13;
bBtlllng agatnst a new surlace&#13;
as well as the U. of Missouri-Kansas&#13;
City, came&#13;
away with a 2-0 vlctory over&#13;
the weekend.&#13;
Playing their lIrst game of&#13;
the year on astro-turt, Parkside&#13;
seemed to have difficulty&#13;
adjusting to the pace of the&#13;
artificial surface as they&#13;
could only manage a pair of&#13;
goals agatnst B 3-6.1 Kansas&#13;
City squad.&#13;
Bryan O'Malley hit the first&#13;
of thse goals wtth a steal and&#13;
a score at the 23:00 mark of&#13;
half number one, his first&#13;
goal of the year.&#13;
That proved to be all th~&#13;
Rangers would need, as the&#13;
Ranger defense remained&#13;
soUd thrOughout the contest.&#13;
Stan Anderson. who went the&#13;
distance In goal, turned away&#13;
The Week Ahea&#13;
Soccer&#13;
10/14 Home VS. Judson college&#13;
J.V. Soccer&#13;
10/16 at Wheaton College&#13;
VOII~yball F&#13;
10/12 at UW·Green Bay&#13;
10/16 at Elmhurst college&#13;
10/18 at UW·Milwaukee&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
10/14 at Carroll College Inv.&#13;
Women'S Cross Country&#13;
10/14 at Carroll College Inv.&#13;
Men'S and Women's sowli&#13;
10/14·15 M!dwest Collegiate InvitatiOnalat&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
The game did see continued&#13;
good play by the Ranger&#13;
bench who has consistently&#13;
played well In filling in' for&#13;
the numerous injuries suffered&#13;
by Parkside's starters'&#13;
among them Morten Aks:'&#13;
glaede, Dan Durand and&#13;
Mike Lee who could be out&#13;
for the season with a strained&#13;
knee ligament.&#13;
"The bench keeps helping&#13;
out, and that all goes back to&#13;
the Imporlance of having a&#13;
strong tea~. Our new players&#13;
~v~ contmued to do a good&#13;
Job ill dealing with our injuries,&#13;
This week it was Christensen,&#13;
last time Stephan&#13;
Caulderon dido,a nlc6 job"&#13;
added Kllps. .&#13;
The . victory raised the&#13;
Parkside mark to 7-3-1while&#13;
,Kansas City's dropped to 3-7.&#13;
1. The Rangers will next see&#13;
action on Saturday as th&#13;
meet Judson College at 1:30~y</text>
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              <text>Chris Daniel wins PSGA vice presidency on write-in campaign</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90945">
              <text>I.~..._"'....'s R"n ....r&#13;
- _.&#13;
}; i -- -- --- -&#13;
~&#13;
, II"'" "Zippy"from Madison In Sports&#13;
"Eat S art" . . I declareswar on Parkside. m nutnhon week Spring is budding with&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Page 3 - The. attack commgup. Ranger baseball and softball&#13;
Page2-The counterattack Page 6 openers.&#13;
I.. Pa~e12&#13;
Thursday. March 22, 1990&#13;
ChrisDaniel wins PSGAvice presidency on write-in campaign&#13;
byDan Cbi~ppetta sta~ ~ident-elect Bill Homer. resp.e~ted. by faculty and to be brought out" "Chris encourages student&#13;
News Ecbtor lbeliev~togetherwe(Horner) administration. We need greater Daniel credits the benefits participation by his ability to&#13;
Tomorrow, C~s Daniel, cana~mp~shthem~ygoalswe communication lines between UW-Parlcsideoffers. "The access motivate swdents. By electing&#13;
presently a Parkside Student seek, explained Daniel. students, faculty, and to faculty is most defmitely a Chris as vice president, IJWGovernmentAssociation&#13;
senator, Daniel would like to build administration." positive. High administrative Parlcside is one step closer in&#13;
IIilIbe sworn in as vice president credibility for PSGA as an 0"I would like to see alumni respect for you and the assistance gaining more student&#13;
oIPSGA. organization and would like to get come to UW-Parkside as role youreceiveisoutstanding. Iftaken involvement," said latesha Jude,&#13;
Asawrite-incandidate, Daniel a lot more student involvement not models to encourage students." advantage of, great educational UW -Parlcside senator.&#13;
defeated write-in candidate Mario only in PSGA, but other 0 Daniel would like to see opportunity. Staff deserves a 101 "By next year Iwould like to&#13;
I&#13;
REcio.The unofficial vote count . organizations. "I want to reach out local government involvement "I more praise than it gets." . see 3,000 votes, then we&#13;
!illS Daniel's60 votes to Riccio's to the students." Daniel's other would like to get local government Apathy seems to bea problem, accomplished something. If we&#13;
23VOfeS. goals are as follows. speakers to get involved. The according to Daniel. "Lack of care and if we worl&lt; to~ether, we&#13;
"Voters could not have made a 0 Daniel wants to be heard. "I significance of local government student mvotvernem IS a problem can accomplish something," added&#13;
IA~~~;h~;efo;anp;;k;id:~;hl~;di:~;~ti~~~s ~;~;:i;~tio:t~es place&#13;
byDan Cbiappetta accesstoourfunds,wecanactua1ly program service, while soc s mmutes are approved we can go on year. We have a frequency&#13;
News Editor do something now," explained purpose is to provide information the air by the end of A~." . allocated to.1lSalready:". , .&#13;
Harris for all the clubs on campus, in As of now, WZRX s budget IS Accordmg to Harris II S gomg "W:zRx will be a standing which theradiostationwould allow. frozen until the senate passes ~ totake,aIOlof~worIc. "Iknow&#13;
committee of SOC; they have their Harris was highly minutes. In other ~ords the radio what Im domg. . . .&#13;
b dget," staled Uebe. f recommendedtotake over the radio station does not exist, Anyone who IS mteresled 10&#13;
own u , . has . oaI .. WZRX can taCt There was much discussion as station. "I have ten years Harris two main g S. 8SS1S~~ '. ~&#13;
towho should run the radio station, experience, I know how a "I'm working on gewng WZRX Harri~ m PSGA, Wyllie LIbrary&#13;
PSGA or SOC. Many people felt commercialradiostationissuppose directly 10 the dorms. My other Learnmg Center D139A.&#13;
thatPSGA isnotthere to provide a to run," emphasized Harris. "If the goal IS to be on FM radio by next&#13;
OnMarch9,1990, theParlcside&#13;
SludentGovernment Association&#13;
PiSSed the proposal of allowing&#13;
UW·Parkside's radio station,&#13;
tIZRx, to be run under Student&#13;
OItanizationsCouncil, Before&#13;
'InRx OrSOC can stan any plans,&#13;
IhcPSGAsenate needs to approve&#13;
IhcMatch9, 1990 senate minutes&#13;
tiring tomorrow's senate meeting.&#13;
'Thesenateshouldn'thaveany&#13;
JlObIem passing the minutes," said&#13;
~ BethDebe, vice president of&#13;
OnFeb.16,1990,anexecutive&#13;
tlion was taken by locking up&#13;
~. Lack of leadership, lack&#13;
allOtganization,and stolen material&#13;
COntrIbutedto the locking up of&#13;
!be radiostation.&#13;
. "If the senate approves the&#13;
lllinlltes,all the funds will be&#13;
1Iansrerred to SOC," explained&#13;
Teresa Harris, WZRX station&#13;
lllanager.&#13;
~ Al this time, and during the&#13;
'up, WZRX was a sub-&#13;
=:nee of PSG~. "PSG.A /las&#13;
.... uoponant things to attend&#13;
~ lidded Debe. . . '.&#13;
.1:"':'UnderSOC we have more;.&#13;
Horn~rupsets Prange in PSGA presidency race&#13;
president. This was Homer's second term as&#13;
o Create more student senator.&#13;
involvement in PSGA and other HomerbelievesUW-Parlcside&#13;
organizations. is a very positive university.&#13;
o To help UW·Parkside get "UW-PadcsideofTersexcellent&#13;
more funding from the UW- educational quality. There'salsoa&#13;
System. close relation betweenstudentsan~&#13;
o To create more public faculty. It's a beautiful campus,&#13;
awareness ofUW -Parksidelocally he said. .&#13;
and statewide. "This is one of the Homer ISseen as a co,~med&#13;
finest, if not the finest academic and dedicated person. I w~t&#13;
institution in the system. We don't students to come to PSGA WIth&#13;
have to take a back seallOanyone," their problems concernmg faculty,&#13;
explained Homer. staff, administration, or whate:er&#13;
. Homer is a political science it may be, we Will do our best .&#13;
and psychology major who plans Homer also plans on working&#13;
. h I hard t 'ncrease enrollment and on gOlOg to law sc 00 or 0 I .' .&#13;
counseling in the future. Homer is opponunities formmonues and the&#13;
a member of the Segregated disadvantaged. Homer would also&#13;
University Fees Allocati.on like to ~ mon: programs for&#13;
Committee and theParlcside Umon students m the Dmon.&#13;
Advisory Board Food Committee. "By the end of my term, I&#13;
by Dan Cbiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
On March 8, 1990, Bill Homer&#13;
defeated the present Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
president, Don Prange. .The&#13;
unofficial vote count for president&#13;
was Homer with 122 votes to&#13;
Prange's 82 votes.&#13;
"I care about the students and&#13;
UW-Parkside," said Homer, a&#13;
PSGA senator who tomorrow will&#13;
take the office of president of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
. "Bill is a positive role model&#13;
for UW -Parkside students and I&#13;
feel that be will do the best he can&#13;
to represent the students," said&#13;
Latesha Jude, PSGA senator.&#13;
Homer has three main goals&#13;
he plans on accomplishing as&#13;
President-elect Bill HOI'Mr&#13;
would like 10 say that I&#13;
conuibuted in makinga diffecence.&#13;
I'm high on Parkside," added&#13;
Homer .&#13;
2 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
~~23QQif\ion&#13;
Parkside Says zip it, Zippy&#13;
Theleare 13 UniverSity01 Wisconsin lour-year campuses across the slate,&#13;
and believe ijor not UW·Madison is only one of them. AlthOughtheir enrollment&#13;
is by far the highest inthe sys1lllTl, they are quick to forget that they are just one&#13;
slice of the UW pie.&#13;
Uis obvious that the Madison campus turns its nose up at all of the other&#13;
campuses. They seem to IIlinkthat they are superior to all the other members of&#13;
the system. JohnZipperer states in his article (see article on page 3) that Parkside&#13;
is an inefficientindustry and should be shut down. The enrollment of the Madison&#13;
campus is roughly ten times that of Parkside. Doesn't this imply that ifthey are&#13;
an efficient business that they should be producing a product that is ten times&#13;
better than ours. This product is the college graduate, and for those of you who&#13;
have not yet realized it the schoOl on the diploma has much less to do with the&#13;
graduates' success than do the personal abilities of the individuals.&#13;
"Zippy"also says that Madison's Wisconsin Student Association could show&#13;
us how to get moneywhilewe could show them how to chum butter and slaughter&#13;
cows. This is a cute but archaic little analogy. Madison students could probably&#13;
teach us a great deal more about how to destroy an entire street on Halloween&#13;
than they could about anything else. Wake up and smell the espresso, Zippy.&#13;
More people go away to Madison to get away from the wrath of mommy and daddy&#13;
than for any other reason, and chances are they still expect mommy and daddy&#13;
to pay the bar lab.&#13;
We did not wish to stoop to the level of mudslinging that Mr. (we would like&#13;
10 call him something else other than Mr., but the Ranger likes 10 remain&#13;
joumalisticly ethical) Zipperer did in his article, but since he seems to think that&#13;
peeIilg mud off of tractor treads is the most common career of Parllside&#13;
graduates, here are a lew interesting points about the real comparisons between&#13;
Madison and Parkside.&#13;
1. Approximately 87 percent of the Parkside faculty have terminal degrees&#13;
or a Ph.D intheir field of specialty, and believe it or not they actually teach their&#13;
own classes. Parkside students are given personal instruction in the classroom&#13;
by professors who aclually know the names of most of their students. Madison&#13;
students spend a great deal more money for being instructed by undergraduate&#13;
and graduate student cronies (most 01whom cannot speak the English language)&#13;
rather than by the acluat professors in many cases. Does the professor sit in a&#13;
glass box in front of the lecture hall while a teaching assistant says, 'Here is your&#13;
professor, but he doesn't want anything 10 do with you?' Mr. Zipperer also&#13;
indirecUystates that Parkside does not have real sludents. We ask you who the&#13;
real students are here. Ale they students being taught by students or are they&#13;
students being taught by experts in their field.&#13;
2. Parkside, or any of the other'Uttie campuses' in the UW System may not&#13;
have the funding that Madison does, but at least we are not paying for a "running&#13;
in the red' football program that willnever have a winning record inthis millenium.&#13;
Parksiide doesn't need Waupun 10make license plates like Madison doesso itcan&#13;
finance its mismanaged athletic department. II the Wisconsin taxpayer were&#13;
smart, he would close up Madison's athletic program and make some so-called&#13;
athletes graduate. And once new football coach Barry A1varezhearsthe beck and&#13;
call of Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Rorida, or Arizona, he won't knoWwhere or what&#13;
Madison is.&#13;
The Badger HeraJdisan award-winning paper which many respect and look&#13;
10for style and content tips. Unfortunately, staff members like Mr. Zipperer have&#13;
done a great deal of harm 10 that image. A newspaper as professional as the&#13;
Herald should not be concemed with taking cheap shots at the newspapers of&#13;
fellow system schools. II should be concerned with professionalism and the&#13;
promotion of other joumalism programs in the UW System. The Herald should be&#13;
a model for other campus newspapers. If the He!ald is going 10stoop to the level&#13;
that Mr. Zipperer did in his recent column, weH, there's always recycling.&#13;
Once ~ note on Zippy: is this the same "Zippy" that was the weather&#13;
monkey on -I ne Today Show" in the 19505? Go figure.&#13;
J,etter to the Edjtoc&#13;
Facil~tiesfor handicaDD~d lacking on campus&#13;
_ To the EdItor: not use ",:~l~hairs. The two were again on the UWP campus next&#13;
Something was brought to my -able ID Sit m the theatre and catch year. Let's hope that some&#13;
auentiononTues.,March 13,1990, the last few minutes of a magic adjustments can be implemented&#13;
that I had never realized before. show. However, the other five into the current system to provide a&#13;
Parkside issadly Iackingin facilities children were unable to even get in more efficient atmosphere for the&#13;
forthehandicapped. Ivol~nteered the dOOrw~y. . handicapped.&#13;
at the l~ Very Special ~ Wemls~a1lbutfivemm~tes Working as a volunteer at the&#13;
Festival which was beld atParlcslde. of the show m the Co~mumcabon Festival opened my eyes to many&#13;
Roughly 1,000 st~dents f~m Arts Theatre because It too~ such of the difficulties experienced by&#13;
Kenosha and Racme counues an enormous amoun.t of ume to the handicapped in everyday&#13;
descended on the campus for a day transport the stodents m thecampus situations. Ifthe University can do&#13;
filled with culturally enriching elevators which barely held two something to alleviate potential&#13;
a~tivitiesfrompaintingtomusicto wheelchairs at a time. Larger pitfalls, I think that we owe it to&#13;
SIgn language. In most instances, elevators would allow wheelchair them.&#13;
the children were physically and! bound students better access to&#13;
oremotionally handicapped. Some different levels of the school.&#13;
of the children were wheelchair Finally, I noticed thatParkside&#13;
bound. does not have any drinking&#13;
I was appalled athow difficult fountains placed at an appropriate&#13;
itwastomaneuverthewheelchairs level for those in wheelchairs. I&#13;
around campus. The Parkside have been informed that the&#13;
facilities that serve the handicapped Physical Plant was investigating&#13;
leave a lot to be desired. The most the matter, which I enthusiastically&#13;
significant problem I noted was lbe support. I urge the Parkside&#13;
lack of ramps in the administration to look into this&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. important issue and evaluate&#13;
Stairsareavailableforable-bodied improvements to the present&#13;
spectators, but there isn'tanyroom facilities.&#13;
for wheelchairs. Iassistedagroup It is very likely that the Very&#13;
of seven children, two of whom did Special Arts Festival will beheld&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Environment&#13;
threatened by&#13;
misinformation&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
As the current environmental&#13;
- crisis finally comes ID public&#13;
prominence and mainstream media&#13;
coverage, the misinformation&#13;
propagated by the powers must be&#13;
pointed out, Eager to jump on the&#13;
environmental bandwagon, it&#13;
seems that everyone from&#13;
politicians -to multinational&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
!!!!!!~~~!.IEditorial: 553-2287 anger, r $1&#13;
~ew ~ll •.••..•.••...•..•.. ~"O.1~~~~L==~B~U~S~in~~~::5~5~3~~~2~9~5~B~O~X~2~O~oo~,~K~e~n~~~h~a~~~5~321~4~17_L~_~ ~-------~&#13;
Scott S1nqer ••••••••••••••••••..••• Layout Editor Faculty Advisor Stuart Rubner The Ranger is wrinenand edited by studentsof Uw-Perkside who aresolely&#13;
Dan Pacettl ...•••••••••••.•.•••••.••. D ~l t Copy Editor Business Staff •&#13;
responsible for its ed.itcrial policy and content, It is published every Thu"day&#13;
an appet New. Bd1tor d the demi -&#13;
Scott Slng.r .••••.•••.••••.•••• Aa.t. New. Uitor Craig Simpkin••.•.••• _••.••••••• Bu.1n ••• Mana~r unng aea. c~earexceptOYerbreaksandholidays.&#13;
Je~~ LelIIaermann •••••••••••••••••••• Spo::t. Bdl.tor 'lerri Po::tney ••.••••••••••••••••••••••• M. R;P. Letters 10the editor will only be eccepted ifthey are typed, double spaced,and&#13;
Je~~ Reddick •.••••••••••••••• Aa.t. Spo::t. Bdl.tor carol CUri ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ad. Rep. 350 wo.rdso~less. Allletten most be signed, wilh a telephone numberineluded&#13;
S. • Mant General Staff for verificauon purposes.. Names will.- be withheld upon request&#13;
u ann uano Feature Editor Th R lh D Mall' e anger reserves e nght to edilletteB and refuse those which are false&#13;
awn an~ ••••••••••••.••• Entertainment Mitor Carrie Glidden. 'lonya Ham.11ton.GwenBeller. Gabe and/or defamatory.&#13;
John Kehoe Photo Bclltor ltluka 'led.MoInt - L P uk tll Dca • -J-' yo.. a. ., Kathie Pope, dline for al11el.tersand-classified ads is Monday 8110 a.m. for publication&#13;
Ken Schuh. Thunday.&#13;
53&#13;
r&#13;
---t:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=;=;:::~~==:~:==~:=:==~=:::,==~~R~a~nge~r~T~h~u~rS~'d:a~y;,,' ~M~a~rC~h~22~,~~19~9~O~3&#13;
PublicService Announcements Pa.,r.!n~!:!e~' the TYME has come I. . from The Badger Herald&#13;
March 15, 1990 I Nursingand Pre-Med Studenls who Want experience working with EditorsnOle:The/o/lowingis/rom&#13;
I peopleinahealth related situation. "Reach Out Blood Pressure Awareness the column "Zippy"in the Herald.&#13;
Program" will train and certify you as a blood pressure Measurement God is tempting me.&#13;
I&#13;
Screenerif no' presently certified, Assist or community area clinics with He must be, or things wouldn't&#13;
bIoodpressures.sharing written information and counseling oflow income exist like the latest issue of the&#13;
people,Flexible days and times..As little as 2 hours MONTHLY. . Ranger, the school newspaper of&#13;
'&#13;
I the University of Wisconsin- Wouldyou like to be the editor or your own newsletter? Several non- Parkside. If ever a newspaper&#13;
profit agenciesinKenosha and Racine need creative people with excellent screamed for school aid, well ,•.&#13;
wriling skillsto edit,lay-out and send monthly and quarterly newsletters. It is so tempting. Let me just&#13;
Noexperienceneccessary. English and Communication majors - do you give you the facts. I am not making&#13;
qualify? this up; if! were, then it would have&#13;
something to do with the German&#13;
reunification.&#13;
In a front page story, the&#13;
Ranger reports the UW-Parkside&#13;
will be getting a TYME machine,&#13;
its first, There's even a photo of a&#13;
student standing at a TYME&#13;
machine. Perhaps it's a dramatic&#13;
reenactment of what a UWParkside&#13;
student would look like at&#13;
a TYME machine if UW -Parkside&#13;
had either TYME machines or real&#13;
students.&#13;
UW -Parkside also got its first&#13;
wheel in February. WeU, I'm&#13;
making up that pan. They haven't&#13;
gotten their first wheel yet,&#13;
Now, Parkside deserves to&#13;
enter the 20th century, so we&#13;
. shouldn't be too mean to them.&#13;
Then again, they had better hurry&#13;
because the rest of us are about to&#13;
enter the 2lstcentury,and that's a&#13;
problem for them.&#13;
What the Ranger should have&#13;
. done for Parkside students is&#13;
SpanishCenter In Kenosha has requested help with their afterschaol&#13;
bltoringprograrnfrom3-5prn onTue. andlorThur. Students from 9th-12th&#13;
grades comefor assistance inmatlt, English, and chemistry. Any time from&#13;
8·5prn Mon. through Thur.&#13;
Formore details, contact Carol in the Career Center&#13;
WLLC D175 or call 553.2011.&#13;
News Releases&#13;
FreeIncome Tax 5erviee - UWP accaunting majors and&#13;
Accounting/Rnance Club students will pre pore federal&#13;
and state income tax retums ot no charge. Thisservice is&#13;
provided through the IRSVolunteer Income TaxAssistance&#13;
Progrom and is available to anyone in the community.&#13;
Assistance provided for forms l040EZ. 1040~. 1040.&#13;
Schedules A &amp; B only; Wisc. tax forms 1A. WI-Z. 1. and&#13;
Schedule H.&#13;
Where:Union Overlook; When: EveryThursdayfrom 2:00pm&#13;
·4:oopm through April 12th.&#13;
The ·Surf Boys· will be performing at Parks/de on Friday.&#13;
March 23. Doors open at 8 p.m .. and admission is $2 for&#13;
studentsand $3for non-students ages 18andup. Therewill&#13;
be a tan line. best beachwear. and limbo contest during&#13;
the band's breaks.&#13;
On Thur.,April 19 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., the Great Skate.&#13;
622067th Street. Kenosha will hold their 18th Annual ten&#13;
hour Skate-a-thon to benefit' the Muscular Dystrophy&#13;
ASSOCiation. Anyone interested in p&lt;Jrticipoting should .&#13;
contact the Great Skate ot 652-8198. 'There isa registrotion&#13;
fee of $3 which includes 10 hours of skoting. skate rental,&#13;
lunch and dinner. Also included will be games, activities,&#13;
and the chance to earn some greot prizes. All proceeds&#13;
from the ten hour Skate-o-thon will service Kenosha area&#13;
residentsaffected by neuromuscular disease.&#13;
The Annual Battle of the Bands will take place on Frl..April&#13;
27. Entryforms can be picked up at the Union Information&#13;
Center and must be returned to the Info. Center by April 9.&#13;
A demo tape must be available. and there isan entry fee.&#13;
First place means the band plays ot Summerfest. The&#13;
second place band will win $200. and the third place band&#13;
\ViIIreceive $100.&#13;
Ms. Angelo Peckenpaugh of Milwaukee. a writer, artist&#13;
and teacher (UW-Whitewater), offers a u~ique&#13;
'Performance Piece" with slides. She presents the lives of&#13;
12women artists. accompanying the slides with readin~s&#13;
Of her Own poems which are of the noture of dram~lc&#13;
rnOnologs. Peckenpaugh provides a program of ~Ides&#13;
Identification along with a bibliogrdphy of women s art&#13;
history. The program runs 50 minutes, More informotion&#13;
about this program will be provided loter.&#13;
b&#13;
Environmental crisis needs community awareness&#13;
Continued from page 2 .&#13;
corporations are paying lip service&#13;
'to environmental consciousness,&#13;
but it is little more than Orwellian&#13;
doublespeak, as their actions, often&#13;
unbeknownst to the public,&#13;
contradict their statements.&#13;
George Bush, after declaring&#13;
himself an environmentalist long&#13;
enough 10be elected, was lobbying&#13;
to allow oil drilling off the&#13;
California coast just days after the&#13;
Exxon Valdex oil spill.&#13;
Congressmen who orate on the&#13;
destruction of the Brazilian&#13;
rainforest, necessary for global&#13;
climate control, simultaneously&#13;
overlook destruction of America's&#13;
own rainforests in the Pacific&#13;
Northwest, sold and defiled by the&#13;
U.S. Forest Service. Companies&#13;
like Dow and Waste Management&#13;
air commercials aimed at giving&#13;
them a false pro-environment&#13;
image. Dow "lets you do great&#13;
things," but the Dow corporation is&#13;
the largest depleter of the ozone&#13;
layer. Waste Management "helps&#13;
the world dispose of its problems,"&#13;
although it happened to be sued&#13;
more than any other company for&#13;
explaintothemhowtouseaTYME&#13;
machine. They might mistakenly&#13;
thinks'it's a laundry chute.&#13;
What we in the modem West&#13;
of Wisconsin must do, not unlike&#13;
West Germans traveling east, is&#13;
send teams of trained experts to&#13;
Parkside to teach them how to&#13;
handle their newfound modernity.&#13;
Maybe Michele Goodwin will go&#13;
if we ...&#13;
No, it's 100 tempting. But yet&#13;
If we set up a sister school&#13;
agreement with UW-Parkside, we&#13;
could let them benefit from our&#13;
technological sophistication, and&#13;
we could benefit by rediscovering&#13;
the quaint traditions of Parks ide&#13;
students. (Three points if you saw&#13;
this coming a few paragraphs back.)&#13;
They could show us how they chum&#13;
butter and slaughter cows for their&#13;
homecoming barn dance. We could&#13;
show them how to get money.&#13;
That's where WSAcomes in.&#13;
Think about how much we&#13;
have to offer them. We have Big&#13;
Ten sports teams, big streets, anda&#13;
big bar-to-student ratio of 2-1.&#13;
If WSA really cares about&#13;
opening up a dialog with students&#13;
of different cultures, then they&#13;
won't pass up the chance to spend&#13;
lots of money meeting with UWParks&#13;
ide student representatives.&#13;
They operate on the Dorito method&#13;
anyway: go ahead, spend all you&#13;
waste disposal violations.&#13;
This type of superficial&#13;
environmentalism is almost as&#13;
dangerous as the anti-environment&#13;
anitude which has characterized&#13;
most of U.S. history. It creates a&#13;
false sense of security; a fantasy&#13;
that our environmental problems&#13;
are being dealt with adequately. In&#13;
fact, it will take a concerted effort&#13;
want. We'll print more.&#13;
Which WSA party will put&#13;
this into their spring election&#13;
platform? Who cares about tuition&#13;
and minority retention and class&#13;
size? We're talking about several&#13;
hundred Parkside students (their&#13;
graduating class) who are doomed&#13;
to spend the rest of their lives&#13;
digging mud out of tractor treads.&#13;
Here is our manifest destiny to&#13;
civilize these people and send them&#13;
to real schools.&#13;
Look around this campus. We&#13;
have 60,000 TYME machines&#13;
here-s-one for every bar. We're&#13;
talking real civilization and we&#13;
shouldn't keep it all for ourselves.&#13;
Ifwe don't bring Parkside up&#13;
to Madison standards, then we face&#13;
the depressing task of having to&#13;
close down Parkside. It's just&#13;
simple capitalism. It's an&#13;
inefficient industry that does not&#13;
keep up with the times, and those&#13;
industries that cannot keep up must&#13;
beshutdown. That would result in&#13;
the direct transfer of thousands or&#13;
. hundreds or lots of small-school&#13;
students to big, efficient schools&#13;
like the UW, and we don't want&#13;
thaL&#13;
One last note on Parkside: on&#13;
page three of the same issue of the&#13;
Ranger, there is a quarter-page&#13;
advertisement for the editor-inchief&#13;
position at that paper. Go&#13;
figure.&#13;
on everyone's part, for it is&#13;
necessary to change the power&#13;
structure, economic system, and&#13;
virtually our entire way of life, if&#13;
IVe are to avert the impending&#13;
ecological disaster. Until this is&#13;
realized,littlecan be accomplished,&#13;
and is best not to believe every thing&#13;
you hear and half of what you see.&#13;
Brendan VaUin&#13;
[Support RangerAdvertisers]&#13;
College Students&#13;
uEARN EXTRA MONEY"&#13;
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HELP OTHERS&#13;
WHILE YOU STUDY&#13;
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Entertainment Editor&#13;
EtUlOr's Note: For the last&#13;
month, the Ranger has been&#13;
running articles on graduation and&#13;
how to get that "all-important"&#13;
first job. Hereis the last-segment in&#13;
this set of articles. In this week's&#13;
Ranger, you will find out what to&#13;
doanddon'tformakingafavorable&#13;
fust impression.&#13;
For starters. if you want to&#13;
increase the odds of making a&#13;
favorable fust-impression, wear a&#13;
tradition blue or grey suit. A&#13;
contrasting patterned or striped tie&#13;
isa man's wiser choice than a solid&#13;
or knit one. Women should avoid&#13;
noisy, distraeting jewelry. Also,&#13;
seemingly little things like freshly&#13;
shined shoes and well-groomed&#13;
fingernails can make a big&#13;
difference.&#13;
These are a few of the&#13;
principles included in the "Image&#13;
Index." The Index was developed&#13;
by Kiwi Brands, theworld' s largest&#13;
manufacwrerof shoecareproducts,&#13;
in conjunction with Kaufman&#13;
Professional Image Consultants of&#13;
Philadelphia, a firm which&#13;
specializes in counseling&#13;
executives on improving their&#13;
image.&#13;
Thekey to making a favorable&#13;
first impression is to be sure that&#13;
every aspect of your appearance&#13;
fitstogether,aceordingtoKayfman.&#13;
"If anything sticks out, orcalls&#13;
attention to itself in any way, that&#13;
can detract from 'the overall&#13;
impression," he said.&#13;
Makingafavorableimpression&#13;
in business situations is largely a&#13;
matter of paying attention to detail&#13;
and avoid extremes. However, it's&#13;
surprising to see how many people&#13;
have a difficult time in applying&#13;
the basic principles of executive&#13;
dress and good grooming when&#13;
preparing for interViews andlor&#13;
presentations.&#13;
Kaufman believes appearance&#13;
strongly influences other people's&#13;
perceptions of trustworthiness,&#13;
authority, reliability, and&#13;
professionalism. Certain&#13;
combinations of clothing and color&#13;
will convey stronger perceptions&#13;
than others.&#13;
Ingeneral,darker, basic colors&#13;
such as navy andcharcoal grey are&#13;
more conservative and&#13;
authoritative. Blue actual1y has a&#13;
calming effect. Brown is a&#13;
"friendlier" color, but tan, because&#13;
it's a lighter hue, is not as strong.&#13;
Red, and its burgundy and maroon&#13;
relatives, is more active and&#13;
attention-grabbing.&#13;
Black suitsarefuneral for most&#13;
men, and yet black is more&#13;
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When it comes to men's shirts,&#13;
white, all-cotton, tong-sleeved&#13;
shirts are the most appropriate&#13;
because they're powerful and&#13;
authoritative. Striped or pastelcolored&#13;
shirts tend to give a more&#13;
casual appearance.&#13;
Button-down oxford shirts are&#13;
very popular and give a sense of&#13;
friendliness. Butthis"preppy" look&#13;
doesn't project much of an&#13;
authoritative message.&#13;
A white shirt, combined with&#13;
a navy or _grey pinstriped suit,&#13;
accented with a burgundy tie, is the&#13;
strongest, most authoritative outfit&#13;
a man can wear. Women,lOO, can&#13;
benefit from the similar O!ltfit -&#13;
minus the tie - because of the&#13;
authority it communicates.&#13;
However, too many women&#13;
are still wearing-oxford shirts with&#13;
bow ties under their suits, and&#13;
insteadof conveying authority, "the&#13;
look leaves the impression thatthey&#13;
don't know how, to dress&#13;
themselves," Kaufman said. The&#13;
outfit also shows a lack of vision,&#13;
and unwi1lingness to take on any&#13;
risk.&#13;
Kaufrnan suggess substituting&#13;
a well-tailored blouse, or opting&#13;
for a classic-styled dress, with a&#13;
jacket. Wearing a dress andjacket&#13;
com bination can be very&#13;
authoritative.&#13;
Many people ignore their shoes&#13;
without realizing that scuffed or&#13;
unpolished shoes can detract from&#13;
their overall appearance quotient,&#13;
"From our experience. we've&#13;
learned that unpolished shoes can&#13;
signal a lack ofattention to detail,"&#13;
said Kaufman. "And that message&#13;
could come through on an&#13;
unconscious level, loud and clear."&#13;
Froma style perspective, dress&#13;
shoes work best for both men and&#13;
women. For men, "wing tips are&#13;
always good," butany kind of basic&#13;
tie shoe is acceptable. Mid-heel&#13;
basic pumps should be the first&#13;
choice for women, although flat&#13;
shoes that are styled like pumps are'&#13;
okay, 100. Anything else - loafers&#13;
for men or sandals for women - are&#13;
deemed 100 casual.&#13;
You also communicate an&#13;
.impression through body language.&#13;
For example, a handshake should&#13;
always be firm, with men and&#13;
women. Andsomeonewhoavoids&#13;
makingeyecontactcancomeacross&#13;
as unreliable and not very&#13;
trustworthy.&#13;
The important thing to&#13;
remember is the significance of&#13;
yourfustimpressiononothers. "As&#13;
Whitesnake's sound enhanced by the gUitar of Steve Vai&#13;
by Cbris DeGuire&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
Whitesnake&#13;
Slip of the Tongue&#13;
c. Geffen Records. 1989&#13;
Many musicians have&#13;
difficulty following up a disc that&#13;
has sold five million copies. David'&#13;
Coverdale tried to avoid this on&#13;
Slip of the Tongue, and made the&#13;
three-year wait since Whitesnake&#13;
satisfying.&#13;
This time around, Coverdale&#13;
has a new group of snakes&#13;
supporting him. Among them is&#13;
ex-David Lee Roth axeman Steve&#13;
Vai, who did all the guitar work on&#13;
the disc. (The group's other&#13;
guitarist, Adrian Vandenburg,&#13;
received an injury and was not able&#13;
to perform.)&#13;
The- disc is a tribute to both&#13;
Coverdale's early days with Deep&#13;
Purple and the early days of&#13;
Whitesnake and to Vai's blistering&#13;
CITV OF KENOSHA·&#13;
Seeks Student Workers&#13;
For Summer Em·ployment&#13;
Contact Mike Plate at&#13;
UW Parkside Job Service&#13;
553-2656&#13;
AffirmlJfive Actior. Employer M/FiH·&#13;
style of guitar playing.&#13;
All of the tracks are explosive,&#13;
starting with the sizzling title track&#13;
all the way to the soothing ballad&#13;
"Sailing Ships," a Coverdale&#13;
trademark similar to his ''Till the&#13;
Day IDie" back in 1981.&#13;
"Fool for Your Lovin," a&#13;
remake of their own song from the&#13;
late 1970's, is the disc's best track.&#13;
The song displays Vai at his usual&#13;
best and utilizes the full range of&#13;
Coverdale's melodic voice.&#13;
The disc's hard rocker is&#13;
"JudgementDay:'ltcontainshintS&#13;
of 1987' s"Still of the Night," but is&#13;
slower paced and drives harder than&#13;
any other song the group has&#13;
composed.&#13;
"Kitten Got Claws" and&#13;
"Cheap an' Nasty" are fast dance&#13;
tunes that should be playing on the&#13;
radio before 100 long.&#13;
Slip of the Tongue is a wellcrafted,&#13;
hard rockin' achievemenL&#13;
IfCoverdale doesn't fire this band,&#13;
maybe we'll hear from him a lot&#13;
sooner next time.&#13;
---------------&#13;
p===--------&#13;
",... .&#13;
to protect their rights&#13;
responsibile for lea .&#13;
for",:ar~ing address. vmg&#13;
Tb: writing.torepairsornething.&#13;
itmust&#13;
pubhcauon advises te be done by the agreed upon date&#13;
throU~hthe"check-ou~~t:: unless the 1andIord is unable to&#13;
premises wiLhthe landlord because of circumstanCeS beyond&#13;
5 A . his,lher conuol.&#13;
him . tenantshouldproteetber/ S. Thelandlordcannotrequire&#13;
selffromlossofsecuritydeposit by writing down everything that is a tenant to pay anomey's fees or&#13;
wro~g w.'LhLheapartment before costs incurred by the landlord in&#13;
moving mto the apartment, The any legal action or dispute arising&#13;
te h out of a rental agreemenL Also. the&#13;
nants d d as seven days to "inspect landlord cannot be relieved.&#13;
an .. ocument ... pre-existing thro conditions," ugh wriuen agreemenl. from 6 liability for property damage c.&#13;
. Unless otherwise agreed personal injury caused by the&#13;
upon~ landlords can wiLhhold negligent acts or omissions of the&#13;
secunty deposits for the following: landlord.&#13;
tenant damage, neglect of the 9. A landlord cannot enter the&#13;
premises, nonpayment of rent premise except 10 make repairs,&#13;
nonpayment of utility servic~ inspecl the premises. c.show the&#13;
provided by the landlord. and premises 10 prospective tenants.&#13;
nonpayment of govemment utility However. entry for other purposes&#13;
charges. The landlord cannot maybemadewiLhadvaneednotice&#13;
wiLhhold security deposits for and at a reasonable agreed upon&#13;
routine cleaning. such as carpet time.&#13;
shampooing. Ifadeductionisla!&lt;en 10. An "automlllic renewal"&#13;
from a security deposil, !he tenant clause on a lease is notenfe.eeable&#13;
must be provided wiLhan itemized againsl a tenanl unless the IiCIlaDI&#13;
list of damages. was noticed in writing, betweelll5&#13;
7. If a landlord promises, in to 30 days prior to ilS effective&#13;
terval Training System utilizes body potential and improves fitness&#13;
~ SuzanneM~tuano For example, w~en one works chemical found in Lhemuscles used used interval training. After 12 use your beart raIt as a guide and&#13;
FeatureEdl~or out, th~ body rehes on three to fuel Lheircontraction. Then. Lhe weeks. Lhe interval training group go from Lhere. The fasttt your&#13;
!JIeM\. tralm~gI.S based on metabohc systems for energy. The next 90 seconds are used by Lhe showedan IS percentimproverne&#13;
nt&#13;
beart rate dropS within a rccaverY !" _. _" .. &gt;f _.",.,.. """"'" An&gt;·&gt;'C. """. ~;" • .. ,... •• " ~-". -- ... '" _. "Ok ,.. ._ ....... ~ ,_ ." .... ..-.",.,.. ._. ". ""'"'......"... "' ..... U~""•• - •• "'. • - '"&#13;
bIDes of recovery penods, Because the first twO systems are sugar. Finally,!he aerobic system constanl rate showed only aneighl nexl inlttV81· If your beat!. rale is&#13;
IlIIIIIdown. anaerobic systems, they do not begins and oxygen is !hen used as percent mcrease in cardiovaseu\ar 15-20 bealS higher than nonnaI il is&#13;
WbenapersoninterVaittains, require oxygen for energy, but the the sole source of energy. endurance. not safe to begin the next interval.&#13;
~. 8S _ • .",.,. .... '.... 00 N.... '.-"-""""' A."_" "." ...... ""_ _"&#13;
......... .- _b.b _ .. '0 • ~ m;oo._r_ "wh•• ".,,,... .-., ..... '" U""';,, ... ~~.~ ......&#13;
~ for a breaLhlessfeeling. period. Though it is a short period for faster speeds and faster times. of Massachusetts showed Ihree timeS as much time for&#13;
, .. ,"""_ ........ ""'" of.~ ........ ,~"'...... __ .... ",,,,U,;.,,,,.,,, """" " ,- of -..,. "" '_""" ...&#13;
• _~""""" """ .. go -... ,~""'" _; _~ ""...-.... i..... no...... ._~oo~"""- • _ ,_, no"" ", of _ •• ;.~. ";";" ; , p" _ -,~&#13;
• "" "' ....... ~ '" An&gt;'&gt;'C ,,;.n_.- _,,,._; __"w- "'"no&gt;&#13;
• .' __ '" .,_. no ""." _. ""."',........ r_ ..... ~'..... =m" p - _m ., .... ....., , .. ,." ........'" "'," ""'. '" ,,, "w'.' ",..... """,",. '" - .w'" ....., "'"....... ,,""". " .......'m_ _ w,,',~,...."' no "" '"... .,.. ......- .. ,,- H ••• -"-&#13;
• "" _ _, AT"'C .,,,,m .",,~ ~. 00'.......... no-."""'" "" .. 00 ...... '"'"""" "" • ...... ,....,,~_. ,""'ph.,,,.... _m,b ;" '" _, ....... '" .... ...... ....... ~" ~.'"." r_&#13;
,;&#13;
,~&#13;
date.&#13;
If a telIllllt feels her/his riShts&#13;
have been violated. there are&#13;
remedies. Citations can be issued&#13;
to Iandlc.ds for violation of hea\Lh&#13;
and safety codes. In Kenosha call&#13;
the City Health DepaI1I11enlat&#13;
656-8170 or in the counly call the&#13;
respective Township c. Village&#13;
Hall. InRacinecalltheCityHeal!h&#13;
Departmenl at 636-9203 or in the&#13;
counlY call !he re pcctive&#13;
Township or Village Hall.&#13;
To receive your own copy or&#13;
"Landlord and TenanlS: The&#13;
Wisconsin Way" contaCI the&#13;
Conswner Prou:ction Bureau at&#13;
(414) 257-8956. For further&#13;
assistanee aboul rellling in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine areas or if you&#13;
feel yourrightshavebeen violaled,&#13;
cootaCt Steve WalInet, t&#13;
DirecUlr of Residence Life at Lhe&#13;
UW-Pattside Hoosin8 Omce(553-&#13;
2320).&#13;
(fhisarticle wasadaPltJd from:&#13;
"RenterS do have la.vs 10 proICCt&#13;
rights.j&#13;
RanQllf Thursday. March 22, 111905&#13;
IsconSln renters have laws&#13;
bY StefeWallner protecting tenants as outlined .&#13;
~lto the Range~. the publication are as follow . 10&#13;
CO'. '.•.linglD the publicauon 1. Once a' s. • Th wntten agreement&#13;
,.... and Tenants. e (lease) is entered into th ,,~ »bllS' bedby the . ' e tenant ¢&gt;inWay.pu must be given a copy T .&#13;
on&#13;
sin&#13;
Departmen~ of mustalsobeprovidedwitha en~ts&#13;
~. maintell8llce IS the for any rent or security :e'~&#13;
lIIoneCOl1\plaintfromrentersgiven to the landlord. POSIt&#13;
lihe&#13;
irlandlords. 2. Landlords must disclose in&#13;
~ a staltwule survey, 23 writing. the name and address of&#13;
lI1&#13;
0fthe&#13;
studentten3?ts and the person(s) authorized to collect&#13;
~nl of the.loW.lDcome rent and maintain the property.&#13;
_5!3ftdll1atmarntenancewas ~. It is the landlords duty to&#13;
~ problem". Whether the provide premises that are "fit and&#13;
jklllS are maIntenance or habitable." This includes hot and&#13;
~g else.tenters do have cold running water; adequate&#13;
• ~ proteClthem. Lack of plu~~ing and sewage disposal&#13;
~ge abOut .these laws, facilities; heating facilities which&#13;
~, is a major problem. are safe and operable maintaining&#13;
IIl'ISneedtobe more awbarei\'.of a temperature ofat least67 degrees&#13;
iii rights. and responsl lUes Farenheit;safeelectricalwiringand&#13;
entennglOtOa lease. electrical fiXtures; and conditions&#13;
_ofthebaS1C~odes(codes which are free from risk of personal&#13;
. laws. ordmances~ or injury. The landlord mustdisclose&#13;
"unmental regulaU~ns any utilities not included in the rent&#13;
109 the constrUction, before the tenant signs the leas&#13;
ce.habitality,operation. 4. Landlords have 21 daY:~o&#13;
• use. or appearance at return security depositsaftertenants&#13;
IIpemises or dwelling unit) move out. The tenants are&#13;
student Special $501Of 3 MonthS (Bring Parkslde I.D.)&#13;
Membef Nonmember&#13;
Tanning Rates: 1 VISit $4.00 $5.00&#13;
10 VISitS $30.00 $40,00&#13;
1 week $10.00 DaY Pass $4.00 SpeCial Punch Card Rate $40.00: 20 visits&#13;
call for an appointment 633-FLEX&#13;
personalized FitnessPrograms tor Men • women· BodY Building. powel1ifting&#13;
TonIng and general conditIOnIng. $pOllS Tralnl~ . • • . FEA1URES:snack Bar w/luncheS &amp; light dinners. Pro ShOp. 10,(0) Ibs. of tree&#13;
FITNESS C E NTE A weigh"· 30 .-'" Rex ,qul,?",en\. ShOW"". Ole' &amp; Nu1ri1lonGu;donCe· ".&#13;
conditioned. Vitamins &amp; Nutrition Health Bar. 2400 Rapids Drtve. Racine. Wl 53404. Rapids ShOP·center&#13;
•&#13;
FLEX&#13;
FITNESS CENTER&#13;
(414) 633 • FLEX&#13;
6 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
~&#13;
Cuning down on fat intake also ~l&#13;
promotes weight control. I&#13;
3. Eat more high-fiber foods ~I&#13;
to reduce risks of breast, prostate ~r&#13;
and colon cancers. Good source~' fof&#13;
fiber are fruits, vegetables, and 'f&#13;
whole food items containing whole ~~&#13;
grains such as oatmeal, bran, and f!'&#13;
wheat ~l&#13;
4. Include foods rich in ~&#13;
Vitamins A and C 10 reduce the '"&#13;
risks of cancer of the ~x, ~&#13;
esophagus, and respiratory tract. ~&#13;
Good sources include cataloupes, 1&#13;
peaches, broccoli,spinach,a\ldark 1&#13;
green leafy vegetables, sweet ,&#13;
. potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, winter&#13;
squash, tomatoes, citrus fruits, and&#13;
brussels sprouts.&#13;
5. Include cruciferous&#13;
(cabbage family) vegetables to&#13;
reduces risk of colorectal and&#13;
stomach cancers. Cabbage,&#13;
broccoli, brussels sprouts; kohlrabi,&#13;
and cauliflower are vegetables in&#13;
the cabbage family.&#13;
6. Go easy on alcohol if you&#13;
do drink as this may reduce risks of&#13;
liver and oral cancers.&#13;
7. Eat less smoked, salted, or&#13;
nitrite-eured foods to limit the risks&#13;
of getting stomach and esophagus&#13;
cancers.&#13;
Formore information, contact&#13;
the American Cancer Society or&#13;
Student Health Services.&#13;
Student Health Services co-sponsors ''EatSmart"nutrition week&#13;
Swdent Health Services and&#13;
Food Services are co-sponsoring&#13;
an "Eat Smart" promotion of the&#13;
American Cancer Society's&#13;
nutrition guidelines for reducing&#13;
the risks of developing cancer.&#13;
The "Eat Smart" promotional&#13;
activities will take place the week&#13;
of March 26 through March 30.&#13;
Food services wil\ identify food&#13;
items which meet one or more of&#13;
the guidelines on Wed. and Thur.&#13;
March 28 and 29. Main entrees&#13;
that are tailored to fo\low the&#13;
guidelines will be featured. Free&#13;
brochures and recipes will be&#13;
available in the cafeteria, minimart,&#13;
and the main concourse&#13;
display. There is evidence that diet&#13;
andcancerarerelated. Some foods&#13;
may promote cancer; while others&#13;
protect you from it. The American&#13;
Cancer Society's seven&#13;
recommendations for reducing&#13;
cancer risks are:&#13;
1. Avoid obesity since it may&#13;
belinkedwithcancersoftheuterus,&#13;
gail bladder, breast, and colon. The&#13;
AmericanCancer Society's 12-year&#13;
study of nearly one million&#13;
Americans uncovered high cancer&#13;
risks particularly among people&#13;
40% or more overweight&#13;
2. Decrease fat consumption&#13;
to limit the chances of developing&#13;
beast, prostate, and colon cancers.&#13;
.....&#13;
.....&#13;
If you can't hold on to your&#13;
glasses, at least now you can&#13;
hold on to your money.&#13;
Just buy a complete pair of&#13;
glasses for $75 or more and&#13;
get a second pair, in the same&#13;
prescription, free. And for&#13;
your free pair, feel free to&#13;
choose from over 100 styles.&#13;
Plus if you break either pair,&#13;
they're guaranteed for a year.&#13;
If you am keep them that long.&#13;
But dont take long deciding.&#13;
Place your order from March&#13;
5 to 31 at participating stores.&#13;
Most single vision and flattop&#13;
bifocal lenses are included.&#13;
And please note that there are&#13;
just a few minor restrictions.&#13;
So buy one and lose one&#13;
free. Think of it as found&#13;
money. _&#13;
STERLIIING OPT •. CAL&#13;
The Surf Boys return&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
Even though school may not&#13;
quite be over, come to the Union&#13;
Square tomorrow night for a bit of&#13;
the beach. That's right! The ever&#13;
famous "Surf Boys/Class of '62"&#13;
wil1 be performing at Parkside to&#13;
close out Beach Week.&#13;
The Surf Boys have been&#13;
coming here for many years, and&#13;
everyone who stops in has had a&#13;
blast Back by popular demand is&#13;
the filling of the Square with beach&#13;
sand During the band's breaks,&#13;
there will be a tan line contest, a&#13;
beachwear contest, and a limbo&#13;
contest. Come prepared to show&#13;
off your tans, clothes, or athletic&#13;
ability.&#13;
The music the Surf Boys will&#13;
play will bring you back to the&#13;
'60s. With exce\lent renditions of&#13;
the Beatles, the Beach Boys and&#13;
.many other old favorites, the band&#13;
wil1 make you hop out onto the&#13;
sand and start dancing.&#13;
The doors open at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission is $2 for students and&#13;
$3 for non-students age 18 and up.&#13;
RESEARCHIIORMA'" Largest Ubrary of Informaflon in U.S.»&#13;
all subjects&#13;
Ord.r Catalog Today wilh Visa/MC or COO&#13;
~ BOO-351-0222 ~ mGalif,(213)47J.8226&#13;
Or, rush $2.00 to: R.... rch Inf.rmatiOll&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. 1:206·A, Los Angeles, CA 90025&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger 'Thursday, Marcn,,22, 19907&#13;
I;:;; Classifieds and Club Events~~~~&#13;
: HELP WANTED&#13;
I&#13;
LOST AND FOUND: Very&#13;
~ial ring was lost in WLLC&#13;
I [IaIhlOOm(1 think). Silver, 4 parts&#13;
1.C(llnected-apuzzlering.Reward,&#13;
639-7452(Lori)&#13;
j Adoption:Happily married couple I UNABLEto have a baby wants&#13;
deSPi:ratelyto share their love and&#13;
\&#13;
Wewithababy. Strictly legal and&#13;
confidential.PLEASE call our&#13;
mwyer,MILWAUKEE, 281-2622.&#13;
I OUTSIDEMlLWAUKEE, 1-800-&#13;
1716-7093.&#13;
Attention:Earn money typing at&#13;
hoIIIe! 32,OOO/yrincomepotential. I Details,(I) 602-838-8885, Ext. T1&#13;
14511&#13;
WIN A HAWAIIAN&#13;
I VACATIONOR BIG SCREEN&#13;
lVPLUSRAISE UP TO $1,400&#13;
INJUST10 DAYS !!! '&#13;
Objective: Fundraiser&#13;
I Commitment: Minimal&#13;
, ~ Raise $1,400&#13;
~ Zero Investment&#13;
Campusorganizations,clubs, frats,&#13;
IlIOrities call OCMC: (800) 932-&#13;
0528, or(800) 950-8472, ext, 10. IATTENTION - Easy work. CLUB ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
Excellentpay!Assembleproducts Todayandtomorrow from9am.&#13;
• borne. Details - (602) 838-8885 to 4 p.m. will be a Peace Corps&#13;
ExLW-1451l. representative will be in the Union ..&#13;
WRING!!!Cruise ship, casino, At5p.m.todaythevideo, "Choose&#13;
00ie1 jobs! Free travel benefits. La Serve," will be shown in Union&#13;
Details,(I) 602·838·8885, Ext. Y - 207.&#13;
1&#13;
14511 Setting Goals-Developing a Job&#13;
Lookingforafraternity,sorority Search Plan will be a workshop&#13;
!rs1Udentorganizationthat would ' presentedMon.,March26in Union&#13;
1ie1Oma!&lt;e$500-$I,OOOforone 204 from noon La 1 by the Career&#13;
..moo-campus marlcetingprojecl Center.&#13;
Must be organized and Identifying and Contacting&#13;
ladwlIking.CalIBeverlyorMark Employers will be workshop&#13;
1(800) 592-2121. presented in Union 207 form noon&#13;
ATTENTION: Hiring! La 1 'on Wed, March 28, by the&#13;
Oovernmentjobs-yourarea Many Career Center. Sign upin theCareer&#13;
IIDlllediateopenings without Center, WLLC D175. All seniors&#13;
lilitinglist or lest. $17,840 - are encouraged La attend.&#13;
169,435.Call 1-602-838-8385, ARE YOU INTERESTED in&#13;
Ext.RI451l. • writing as a hobby or ma~be a&#13;
EARN MONEY WHILE career? Are you a Business,&#13;
lI'ATCIDNGTV! S32,OOO/yr Communication orEnglish major?&#13;
~\lOlential. Details, (1)602- Any professor willtell you that you&#13;
i38-3885,ExlTV-14511. need good writing skills. Wntefor&#13;
PorlraitStudioseeking part-time theRangerandgetexperience. We&#13;
~Ip.Dutiesinclude typing, phone need writers for news, feature, and&#13;
illd receptionist skills. Could entertainmenl Write when YOU&#13;
Plssibly become full-time during have the time. It looks good on a&#13;
summer months. Apply in person&#13;
at Camera Masters, 5903&#13;
Washington Ave., Racine&#13;
Union Grove student needs ride&#13;
home from school Mon. and Wed.&#13;
Lastclassendsat3:15. Call Mary&#13;
878-5071. Will pay gas money.&#13;
resume. Stop in the office&#13;
sometime. We'd love to have you&#13;
here!!!&#13;
12·Steps to Recovery Meetings:&#13;
Mon - Alcoholic Anonymous, 12-&#13;
1 p.m., Moln. D13I; Mon - AIAnon,12-1&#13;
p.m., MoIn. D133; Wed&#13;
, - Narcotic Anonymous, 12-1 p.m.,&#13;
Moln. D13I; Fri - Alcoholic&#13;
Anonymous Information/Drop&#13;
In, 12-1 p.m., Moln. D13I; Fri -&#13;
AdultChiidren of Alcoholics, 12-1&#13;
p.m., Moln. D133. For more&#13;
information, call 553-2366.&#13;
Food for Families will be&#13;
sponsoring a Food Challenge to all&#13;
Parkside students, staff, faculty,&#13;
administration, and clubs. This&#13;
will be held from April 2-6, and a&#13;
table will be set up in the alcove by&#13;
the library. Individual as well as&#13;
club participation will count, 1st&#13;
place will receive S25; 2nd place ,&#13;
SIO; and 3rd place, SIO.&#13;
The March meeting of the&#13;
Molecular Biology Club has been&#13;
moved to Monday, March 26 in&#13;
Moln. 161 at noon. Dr. Chen will&#13;
discuss the various degrees that&#13;
can be earned in molecular biology.&#13;
Bring your lunch. Dessert and pop&#13;
will be provided.&#13;
Members of the 3rd New York&#13;
Battalion Revolutionary war&#13;
group who will speak on "Campus&#13;
LifeofSoldiersandTheirWomen."&#13;
Thur., March 22 in Moln. 107 at7&#13;
p.m. Refreshments will be served&#13;
OnMarch26,DI:.RichardAmmann&#13;
will speak on Yoruba art, in Moln&#13;
324 at noon. Dr. Ammann will&#13;
have many slides on the different&#13;
Yoruba artist and styles.&#13;
Refreshments will be served. All&#13;
Anthropology Club activities are&#13;
open La anyone interested.&#13;
C.I.A. is having a meeting on&#13;
Friday, March 23 in Main. 128.&#13;
Make a difference! Attend the&#13;
Minority Actions Council meeting&#13;
on Monday, March 26, 1990, at&#13;
noon in CART 129.&#13;
JOHN KEHOE got&#13;
engaged!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!&#13;
Congratulations!! !!!!! !!!!!&#13;
Franca Savaglio - It can't be the&#13;
same, so what! It can definitely be&#13;
better .. you better know whatI'm&#13;
talking about,&#13;
Atten: Now playing in the Union&#13;
Cinema, Pablo and his troop of&#13;
dancing buns.&#13;
Dear ''my boys" What's your&#13;
problem! ''The Mag"&#13;
Linda Schwejsser; Feel the&#13;
growing power of the russ&#13;
movement! Soon we will swamp&#13;
the L3! Russ Geese&#13;
Hey Craig: Are those two Chinese&#13;
specialty foods called Chow Some&#13;
Gap and Hung Young Boy. Just&#13;
wondering.&#13;
Dearest Mr. Black Fiero, When&#13;
are you gonna take me on a date?&#13;
Love, Black Acura&#13;
La- La: I hope I managed to get a&#13;
foot into the doorway. OhJeez! It&#13;
was real hard. African Embassy&#13;
Attn: Pablo Buns and Horns now&#13;
on sale in the Union Cafeteria&#13;
HEY HEY CORY DUDETTE·&#13;
Here's one ... all homonids are&#13;
homonoids but not all homonoids&#13;
are homonids!! Your Anthro pal&#13;
Anastasia: Guess who?&#13;
Stan "lead foot" Anderson -&#13;
remember the speed limit in&#13;
Normon, Oklahoma is 65, not 86.&#13;
Bubba Smith, Oklahoma State&#13;
Patrol&#13;
Rachel • you need to clip your&#13;
wing.&#13;
Jenni: What is the definition of&#13;
reality? I think it'Stime you woke&#13;
up and realized who your friends&#13;
are, or should we sayWERE! Dave&#13;
Katie Ward - Have you&#13;
RALPHED on someone lately?&#13;
Pat BeBow - next time I'm going&#13;
La rip your head off - Pablo&#13;
ATTENTIONPARKSIDE: We&#13;
are on approach and soon we'll be&#13;
jammin' the airwaves at WZRX ...&#13;
Coming at you atthespeed oflight!&#13;
TMNT&#13;
To 4F: Your party was awesome,&#13;
but a bit expensive. Can't wait for&#13;
another one! Proud to be a littlo&#13;
sister. From: The D.L. and Jules&#13;
Rachel, who told you your hair&#13;
looked good?&#13;
Jenn i: When areyou installing the&#13;
revolving door in your dorm.&#13;
Everyone but Dave.&#13;
Frances - HALLO - my name is&#13;
Indigo Mantoya, you killed my&#13;
fader, prepare to die! Hee Hee&#13;
Jenny G: What spiral stairs? I'm&#13;
jealous - Sara Padre ''90''&#13;
Dina - what's with bathrooms?&#13;
Aren't beds more comfonable?&#13;
Jenni: It's the first inning. Aim&#13;
up to bat, I have no outs, no strikes&#13;
and all balls. Just try and throw me&#13;
a curve. Dave&#13;
Jenni: to how many friends did&#13;
you lose this week. 1,5, or 10. Oh,&#13;
I forgot you can't count that high,&#13;
or is it you didn't have that many&#13;
friends to begin with. Dave&#13;
Jenni: How do you spell&#13;
girlfriend? IsitQ-S-H-K-O-S-H??&#13;
Randy (alias not Dave)&#13;
Ski (used and abused), can you&#13;
spell inflate-a-mate? (A·I·t·e·r·na-t-i-v-e).&#13;
Oh, how was the Virgin&#13;
Islands?&#13;
Ratpack, not all roses are red •&#13;
forget-me-notsarelightblue,don't&#13;
beat a dead horse, just because no&#13;
one beats and has - with you.&#13;
HEYRATPACK- Why don't you&#13;
guys take a hike .. Bart&#13;
Rachel S., one wing in your hair&#13;
isn't getting it honey. What's the&#13;
wing span for a vullure anyway?&#13;
Jenny G. Is that your bread? Sara&#13;
Sunny • how many Coronas in&#13;
Mexico? Padre ''90" Sara&#13;
Katie, why do you arch your back?&#13;
Padre "90" Sara&#13;
LISA (if this is the Lisa Lisa):&#13;
lunch at 12 still exists ... we have&#13;
just not gotten together. Why?&#13;
Have to get info for the&#13;
conversations!&#13;
To aU those who made stupid&#13;
bets with me; I am making big&#13;
Cant. on Page 8&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Attention: Government homes&#13;
fromSI (V-repair). Delinquenttax&#13;
property. Repossessions. Call I602-838-8885,&#13;
ext. GH14511.&#13;
For Sale: Plane tickets - round trip&#13;
Chicago to Phoenix. Departs Sat.,&#13;
Apr.14 &amp; returns Sat., Apr 21.&#13;
Asking $300 or best offer. Call&#13;
Jeff at 551-9721.&#13;
MEAL TICKETS: If you're&#13;
interested, pleasecalI553-290 I and&#13;
ask for Melloney.&#13;
ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT&#13;
SEIZED VEIDCLES from SIOO.&#13;
Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes,&#13;
Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-&#13;
602-838-8885, ext. A14511.&#13;
For Sale: 15 cuff Chest type&#13;
freezer. S70.00 654-4101, Bill.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ATTENTION ALL BANDS!!!&#13;
Battle of the Bands is Fri., April&#13;
27th. Entry forms are located in&#13;
'the Information Center, Union D 1,&#13;
Attention Seniors&#13;
Interviewing- A New Perspective&#13;
sponsored by Kiwanis Club of West Racine&#13;
in cooperation with V.W.- Parkside's Career Center&#13;
B siness leaders from the Kiwanis Club of West Racine wiD be&#13;
d&#13;
u. k interviews with all graduating seniors from spnng,&#13;
con ucung moe - . chane I&#13;
summer, and fall semesters of 1990. This IS your e to earn&#13;
through experience. h 28&#13;
To re Ister bring in your resume to the Career center by Marc •&#13;
Intervie~s will be conducted on Wednesday, April 11 from 5:45 ~~&#13;
8:00p.m. A reception for all aplicants and Kiwanis Club members w&#13;
follow the interviews. . . and learn new&#13;
Take advantage of this opportunity La pracuee&#13;
mtervlewmg . . .' skills Additional information is available at the Career&#13;
Center, UW-Parkside, WLLC D175.&#13;
Ir::- ..,&#13;
I Term papers or I other assignI&#13;
ments typed ,&#13;
On my in-home PC. ReaSOnablerates.&#13;
Professional&#13;
reSUlts,&#13;
Pbone 414.694.6366&#13;
.....&#13;
A free gift just for calling piUSraise up&#13;
to $1700 in only 10 days. Student&#13;
groups, frats, and sororities needed&#13;
for marketing project on campus.&#13;
'For details, plus your free gift, group&#13;
officers call&#13;
1.800~765·8472 Ext.50&#13;
CODt. from pagc 7&#13;
plans for that $162! Signed·&#13;
Syracuse rules!&#13;
Topper -I would like my $150 in&#13;
big bills only. Love you •&#13;
Suworogoll hoffensteinsky withan&#13;
H!&#13;
Let lbe games begiD. Dave&#13;
Mark: Will Saturday night ever&#13;
happen again?&#13;
Overbeard in PSGA oMee:&#13;
Maggie,comebere,lwanttosbow&#13;
you something! •.•.•I'll be rigbt&#13;
tllere, Ken.&#13;
Jenni: The game bas started. Just&#13;
be ready for extra innings. Dave&#13;
"Pray tbat the earth doesn't tire&#13;
of the way that we're putting ber&#13;
down" bless the masses. (Psycbo&#13;
killer returns)&#13;
MankandArt: Thebrainsbehind&#13;
the brawls. Good worlc on making&#13;
the wrestling meet the success of&#13;
theseason. Standup,beproud,and&#13;
make lots of $$S.&#13;
Tbe water wiD be warm in the&#13;
pool at 4A. Sat Marcb 24, 5pm.&#13;
RB: Nucha doesn't mean to be&#13;
mean, but sometimes she is NUTS&#13;
Ijust want to say hi to the&#13;
Homecoming Queen 1989-90 ..•&#13;
mIl&#13;
(What do you think this is,. ... a tv&#13;
camera?)&#13;
Wbich one of our friendly Union&#13;
student managers could have said&#13;
Classifieds and Club Events~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:&#13;
Associate Professor Lana Rakow continues lecture series&#13;
Workers are thought of as highly"&#13;
interehangable. Also, in this system&#13;
Rakow says thatrules are designed&#13;
to control and limit freedom. The&#13;
system is also hierarchical, and&#13;
power means the power over or the&#13;
power to control. Lastly, Rakow&#13;
attributes The Mechanistic system&#13;
with having a leader who is out in&#13;
front, one who presents an allpowerful,&#13;
all-knowing image.&#13;
"Being in ademocratic society&#13;
you would think that organizations&#13;
wouldn't belike this," Rakow said&#13;
"Ifwe want to begin to change this&#13;
we mustfirst thinkahoutredefining&#13;
our idea of democracy."&#13;
The other model, which&#13;
Rakowassociateswithpeace,civil,&#13;
and feminists movements, is The&#13;
Living Community. In this model,&#13;
the organization is flexible and it&#13;
shifts to accommodate its people.&#13;
Rules are set to serve individuals&#13;
this?? "near your butt ••in more" •&#13;
J.S.? ... MD&#13;
Brad Janowitz· You have the&#13;
body of a trueman - asecretadmirer&#13;
from the Padre trip.&#13;
Bart, hey you, come here! get in&#13;
the van!&#13;
Jenny: so what are you trying to&#13;
say about the green river?&#13;
by Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In a continuing effort to help&#13;
educate student leaders, Lana&#13;
Rakow, associate professor of&#13;
communication is set to give a&#13;
lecture on new models of&#13;
organizations as part of The Spring&#13;
Leadership Lecture Series.&#13;
The idea that Rakow plans on&#13;
focusing on is that models of&#13;
organizations sbould not be just&#13;
accepted, but instead, questioned.&#13;
"Wesbouldnottakethesociety&#13;
of organizations as a given, but&#13;
more of an issue to be thought&#13;
about," Rakow said.&#13;
Rakow placed most&#13;
organizations under what she calls&#13;
The Mechanistic System or The&#13;
Powerful Leader. In this system&#13;
the organization is highlystructured&#13;
and people must fit the system.&#13;
What's VGA? .~&#13;
UW·Parksld.&#13;
Campus Rep.&#13;
Ken Schuh&#13;
553-2852&#13;
T""'I'MfJU •.40MbSU99&#13;
S~"n&gt;Po" j&amp;' S.f-.aMl:&gt;f¥lo99 oOW»t99&#13;
IOOMb~oo.um&#13;
S."...." ... ,~k-lO"lb5*9'il_ n999&#13;
411~lb5_"" ...S3m&#13;
To place Jour order contact:&#13;
5E~ eens you've&#13;
ever seen!&#13;
'=&#13;
~""" Idata systems&#13;
~. -&#13;
o 0&#13;
t&#13;
-&#13;
Gary. when are you going to the&#13;
chapel? Constricted.&#13;
Sara -if you could fly, wherewould&#13;
you land?&#13;
To Lisa: let me know ifyau need&#13;
bus departure times for DeKalb,1L&#13;
to (NIU) - Gary&#13;
UW .Madison Badger Herald •&#13;
Lock your doors when closed, to&#13;
keep people like "Zippy" from&#13;
sneaking in and rambling on about&#13;
nonsense.&#13;
Dave, women don't. rip men's&#13;
hearts out; it is said that man&#13;
"chases" woman togethis ribback.&#13;
It must be true. Quit chasing and&#13;
-on that,&#13;
Katie: does jackrabbit ring any&#13;
and are modified if necessary. The :m&#13;
Living Community, as coined by···&#13;
Rakow, also has equal voice and&#13;
participation included in it's&#13;
structure. The idea of powerin this&#13;
model is based on a power within&#13;
and the ability to act upon it The&#13;
leader in this model acts as an&#13;
inspirational piece to help guide&#13;
workers to make their own&#13;
decisions.&#13;
Though both models have&#13;
relevant advantages and&#13;
disadvantages, which will be&#13;
discussed during the lecture today&#13;
in Union 106 at 3:30 p.m., Rakow&#13;
hopes to enlighten those who do&#13;
attend to evalutate or re-evaluate&#13;
their leadership style and their&#13;
organization as a whole'.&#13;
"I am very concerned about&#13;
the role that we have raised in&#13;
regards to our organizations&#13;
culnire," Rakow said. "I hope that&#13;
bells? Sara&#13;
Sunny' What a --in' burger.&#13;
Katie, if you were a fly Where&#13;
would you go? Sara&#13;
To Kristin and the gang- thanks&#13;
for a great 21st b-day!!!!! Love&#13;
L.D.&#13;
Lana Rakow&#13;
students can leave here and takea&#13;
critical view with them of whatan&#13;
organization could be like:'&#13;
Melissa Etheridge's second recording shows much improvement&#13;
by Teresa Harris&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
. MelissaEtheridge- Brave&#13;
and Crazy&#13;
Island Records, Inc, c.&#13;
1989&#13;
Melissa Etheridge is no&#13;
newcomer to the music industry,&#13;
Ii&#13;
but she is just now getting&#13;
recognition. This is her second&#13;
album and itis much better than the&#13;
first,&#13;
This lady bas a heart full of&#13;
soul and a head full of the blues.&#13;
Ten tracks to this disc, and&#13;
everyoneofthemisgreat. As usual,&#13;
I do have my favorites. "Let Me&#13;
Go," the seventh track, is the first&#13;
release, and you can hear it on&#13;
WXRT-FM (93.1) in Chicago at&#13;
least once a day. It's a great track&#13;
that she pours her heart into it. The&#13;
lyrics are particularly good.&#13;
She plays a twelve-string&#13;
Planned&#13;
Parenthood Clinics&#13;
~&#13;
HeaItbtmnh ~__.~_._.._01_&#13;
Physical Exam • Birth Control&#13;
Pregnancy Test. - STD Treaunent • lab TellS&#13;
AIDS Education - Informalion and Referral&#13;
Kenosha Clinic'&#13;
654·0491&#13;
guitar and she knows what she's&#13;
doing, especially on ''Testify," the&#13;
sixth track.&#13;
Another real hot track is "Skin&#13;
Deep:' Thisonerea11ycooks! She&#13;
really gets into it, and you will 100.&#13;
Like I said, there isn't a bad&#13;
track on this album. Every traCk&#13;
has exceptional lyrics. A well·&#13;
produced album and particularly&#13;
well-engineered is what Etheridge&#13;
'has put together.&#13;
If you like blues and jazz,&#13;
you'lI1ove MelissaEtheridge. Buy&#13;
this one on compact disc. You&#13;
won't regret it&#13;
Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
. employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent HaU&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 9:30-4:00&#13;
...&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I Transport yourself back ten&#13;
I yearsorso,ifyouwill,totheneigh_&#13;
bOrttood you grew up in. It's a&#13;
I sunny,Saturday afternoon and&#13;
I you're walking backfrom the cornerslOre&#13;
with your friend who goes&#13;
I by!he name of "Spike"&#13;
I&#13;
Witha mouthful of stick bubblegumand&#13;
a bagful of baseball&#13;
cards, you're trying to swing a deal&#13;
to uade one of those three Ned&#13;
Yost cards you just found for&#13;
Spike'sAI Bumbry card. Spike&#13;
won'tgo for it, so you agree to&#13;
drow inKurt Bevacqua card and a&#13;
pie(:e of gum. Ah! childhood&#13;
memories.&#13;
Well,the gum is still the same,&#13;
but !he stakes have changed, and&#13;
it's 110 longer for kids only. TradiIIg&#13;
cardsare back in a big way.&#13;
"Iwas probably seven or eight&#13;
wilen I started collecting cards,"&#13;
says UW-Parkside student Bill&#13;
iTopp. "I remember riding my bike&#13;
10 lIIe comer drug store in&#13;
Wauwatosa to buy packs of baseballcardsatSO.15.Atarecentcard&#13;
show, I just sold a Nolan Ryan&#13;
rookie card (1968 Topps) for&#13;
1850.00."&#13;
Toppbas been caught up in the&#13;
recentsurge in the collecting martetfOfSponscards&#13;
after collecting&#13;
IIrough grade school and some of&#13;
high school. With all the new inIeres~Topp&#13;
bas taken his hobby&#13;
IIIIC step further with Bill J"opp's&#13;
Spans Cards.&#13;
''One year ago, that Nolan&#13;
Ryan card would have been availIble&#13;
for maybe $100 or $150,"&#13;
mendonedTopp about his recent&#13;
collectables ('. memorabilta&#13;
a diuision of&#13;
SPORTSWORLD&#13;
IHVUTIIIlNT$ co&#13;
.• sets&#13;
• wax packs &amp; boxes&#13;
• supplies &amp;posters&#13;
• investment recommendation&#13;
BILLTOPP&#13;
Home 453-7663&#13;
School 553-2807&#13;
chandise at various card shows&#13;
about the area virwally every&#13;
weekend, and with his Milwaukeebased&#13;
supplier, he bas opened up a&#13;
small business here on campus.&#13;
"Rookie cards are almost&#13;
always the most valuable card of&#13;
anyindividualplayer,"addedTopp&#13;
on his trading tips. "I like to compare&#13;
it to the stock market in ways.&#13;
You must speculate on potential&#13;
Ha1I-of-Famersandreallyplan your&#13;
strategies -.Timeliness is also a big&#13;
thing, ifyoucanbesmanand timely ,&#13;
. in your trading, you can generate&#13;
some hefty returns."&#13;
Recent prices of cards show&#13;
proof of the big returns he speaks&#13;
Rain plagues baseball trip&#13;
by 10M. Fletcber&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
. .~eRangerbaseba1l team was&#13;
V1ClUnized by the elements on its&#13;
~latet spring trip to the Sho-Me&#13;
.Baseball Camp. with rain&#13;
~away six of their eight&#13;
~edt. contests in Missouri last&#13;
Greeting their arrival 'were&#13;
~ratures in the mid-eighties,&#13;
!he' leamfi was able to work outon&#13;
If IfSt day in camp. but the&#13;
~:~_~rolledin. Rain held off&#13;
""'If rust day of scheduled rm:nand Parkside met Iowa's&#13;
I&#13;
Penn t.:niversity.&#13;
.effLemmermannreceivedthe&#13;
~tnod for the Rangers. but he&#13;
ou~~Iy three innings. pitching&#13;
~ lams in the second and third&#13;
!he gs before being pulled with&#13;
SCore lied at 3-3.&#13;
III)fiOffensively, Armand Bo-&#13;
\be Jg!ionailedhis rust homerun of&#13;
season. a solo blast in the rust,&#13;
andKenNeesetripledin Don Keller&#13;
in the third.&#13;
The Rangers were kept from&#13;
taking the lead in the third when&#13;
Bonofiglio was thrown out trying&#13;
to score on a Brian Gauthierdouble&#13;
to end the inning.&#13;
That would prove costly, as&#13;
William Penn's Jim Nerat hit his&#13;
second homer of the game in the&#13;
fifth off of reliever Ross Kalinowski.&#13;
That two-run blast proved to&#13;
bethegame-winner,asneitherteam&#13;
scored the rest of the way.&#13;
Kalinowski was tagged with&#13;
the loss, as Parkside dropped its&#13;
fourth straight to open the season.&#13;
Thatwas quickly remedied,as&#13;
the Rangers faced South DakotaWesleyan&#13;
in the nightcap.&#13;
Parkside's hitters errupted for 15&#13;
runs in that game. banging out 16&#13;
hits in seven innings.&#13;
Steve Leonhard was shutting&#13;
down South Dakota in the mean&#13;
. time. giving up a single run in the&#13;
rust before seuling down to give&#13;
lain multiples of the more valuable&#13;
cards. 1986 was the rookie yearof&#13;
Karl Malone. Michael Jordan,&#13;
Charles Barkley, and Patrick Ewing,&#13;
among others."&#13;
Big profits have attracted a lot&#13;
of people back to the collecting&#13;
tables. and Topp's business here is&#13;
beginning to show that interest,&#13;
"Things started off slowly. but&#13;
recently business has picked up. A&#13;
lot of word-of-mouth 'advertising'&#13;
has helped between my friends."&#13;
While selling cards has been&#13;
the biggest part of business so far.&#13;
his door is always open for anyone&#13;
who is looking to sell. "It's a good&#13;
way for someone who finds cards&#13;
up only three hits in the final six&#13;
frames.&#13;
Bonofiglio and Jack Klebesadel&#13;
each had four hits in the&#13;
Ranger barrage, with Klebesadel&#13;
hitting three doubles and knocking&#13;
in five runs. Freshman Dom Del&#13;
Rose also added a pair of doubles&#13;
in the 15-1 rout.&#13;
Leonhard went the distance&#13;
. for the victory. Parkside's rust of&#13;
the year against four·losses.&#13;
The rest of the Ranger games&#13;
fell victim to a storm system which&#13;
dumped over four inches of rain on&#13;
the camp that night and the next&#13;
day. Among the games lost: additional&#13;
games against Penn and&#13;
Wesleyan; a doubleheader against&#13;
Missouri's School of the Ozarks.&#13;
and a pair of games against UWOshkosh.&#13;
This Saturday will mark the&#13;
Rangers home opener, as they will&#13;
facetheMarqueue Warriors. Game&#13;
time will be noon at the Ranger&#13;
Baseball Complex.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, March 22, 1990 g&#13;
Rangers&#13;
swept in&#13;
opener&#13;
ToPP brings.sport card collectin .&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann saleatacardsh "I 9 a step closer&#13;
Sports Editor be' ow. t really can' of. Take, for example a 1986 bo&#13;
a g~ mvestmem, and really of Fleer Baske ' .x at home to get some quick cash.&#13;
payoff if you do it smartly" . . al tball cards. In their RIght now I'm especially interTopp&#13;
was introduced tlte the ~~:nanlear. ~ou could go to a ested in a Jack Klebesadel rookie&#13;
card business a few years back tainin acks ase a full box con- card or the Top Gun edition of the&#13;
when the current owner of Sports- $20 ~ paTodaof cards for Just 1990 Ranger Basketball team."&#13;
world Investment Company Tim would . , y, that same box Added Topp, "Buying sets of&#13;
S&#13;
,go ror upwards of around cards' eeger, opened. up shop on 122nd $2,000.00. IS comparable ~ putting&#13;
&amp; North Ave. In Milwaukee. At "S th. li money In the bank. I ve never&#13;
the time, Topp helped with setting box of omed&#13;
mg iketn&#13;
unopened heard of a set depreciating, as long&#13;
things up, and running errands for va1uablecar~ can 0 ten be more as it's been taken care of. Some&#13;
the fledgling business. Now, he Pea Ie .. a complete set sets do better than others, and a lot&#13;
helps by selling" cards and mer- uno~n':';;illingh.tohgarnble on depends on how the rookies do that&#13;
r&#13;
..:._.....:.x.:.es::.:w=Ic:.:.:CO=UI:d~c:o:n-~year. The 1987 set with Jose&#13;
Canseeo, Will Clark, and Bo&#13;
D.U ~ . , Jackson will obviously do better Di .hhS than the 1981 set which never did&#13;
TRAIlE YL'rt C,~ pan out"&#13;
" 'k 0 S arUs Of his current collection, he&#13;
c. points out a rookie Walter Payton&#13;
(1976 Topps-S300.oo) and three&#13;
Joe Montana rookie cards (1981&#13;
Topps-S2oo.(0) as his mostvaluable.&#13;
"My favorite, though, besides&#13;
the BUddy Bianca1ana collection,&#13;
is a Robin Yount rookie (1975&#13;
Topps) worth ahout $200.00. He's&#13;
always been my favorite player."&#13;
"If your looking to buy or sell&#13;
cards, give me a call. If 1don't&#13;
bave it, I'll find someonethatdoes."&#13;
from Baseball. p, 12&#13;
it 5-4. Indiana State ended thai&#13;
threat in a hurry, scoring eight run!&#13;
in the bottom of the third to break&#13;
the game open. Final tally: Indiana&#13;
State 21, Parkside 6.&#13;
The only pitcher to escepe&#13;
without injury was freshman ROSl&#13;
Kalinowski. He rescued Fennrid&#13;
in the fifth and went the final three&#13;
and one-third innings, giving up&#13;
nothing on four hits in his r1fSl&#13;
appearance as a Ranger.&#13;
The series was the season&#13;
opener for both teams, as theSycamores.&#13;
ranked 30th in the nation&#13;
D01Ched their rust series sweep. '&#13;
"We really didn't play that&#13;
badly," added Gauthier. "Better&#13;
defense would have given us the&#13;
rust game, and the third game was&#13;
a one-run COOleSt until the roof&#13;
caved in. For being outside for the&#13;
rust time this year. it wasn't bad."&#13;
r······················,&#13;
: PAN PIZZA DEAL : i$549 Receive a 10" Pan :&#13;
I Pizza with your two I&#13;
I favorite toppings and I&#13;
: 1 litre of Coke for :&#13;
I II $5.49! I&#13;
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• v.Iid.~ 01'I'fNlll~ ............ '"'- ..... ..., II&#13;
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tNnS2ll.OllOl.w..... _tlCIl~Icw_---. •&#13;
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1:$999 Receive two 10" Pan :1 Pizzas with your two&#13;
: favorite toppings and :&#13;
I 2 litres of Coke for I III $9.99! I&#13;
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• =:;,::.:==:~-:.=r='==:,: • • "-S2ll.OllOur,*-_IKIl~b''''---- •&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
soQII.... ca" ... CAIl ••••• n FOIAIICIr DEAl.&#13;
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North: 654-5070 2136 Washington&#13;
West: 654-5577 491 g 60th Street&#13;
South: 652-1222 B028 22nd Ave.&#13;
Call us Racine!&#13;
North: 681·3030 3945 Erie SI.&#13;
Central: 634-26007 1100 WashIngton&#13;
South: 554-9543 2308 Lathrop Ave&#13;
-10 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger'&#13;
Seniors lead the way for&#13;
1990 baseball campaign&#13;
Brain Gauthier, and Jack KJebesadel&#13;
will roam the outfield this&#13;
spring, with Gauthier the latest&#13;
addition to the senior trio. Gauthier,&#13;
who moved from his catcher!&#13;
infield position of a year ago, was&#13;
moved to the outfield this spring&#13;
with hopes that it will lead to improved&#13;
offensive statistics. Last&#13;
year Gauthier batted .344 with ten&#13;
team-leading doubles. With a stable&#13;
position those numbers should go&#13;
up. Bonofiglio, who batted around&#13;
.500 two years ago, slipped down&#13;
to human numbers of .337 last year&#13;
while leading the team in RBI's&#13;
with 22. With expectations not as&#13;
high, look for Bonofiglio to relax&#13;
in center field and turn in some&#13;
impressive numbers again this&#13;
spring. Klebesadel, -who batted&#13;
.352 a year ago, will need to duplicate&#13;
those numbers in order for the&#13;
Rangers to baveasuccessful spring.&#13;
This senior trio of outfielders need&#13;
to be at the heart of the offensive&#13;
attack this spring, and being there&#13;
last year the Rangers look for big&#13;
games from them.&#13;
Pitchers - Starting pitchers for III;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;,m&#13;
the Rangers this year wiD be seniors&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann (4.84 ERA&#13;
a year ago), Darrin Pluskota (7.36&#13;
ERA), Steve Leonard (3.46 ERA),&#13;
and junior Jeff Konzcal ( 4.09&#13;
ERA). With this veteran starting&#13;
rotation in place, the only thing that&#13;
could hurt them is an early season&#13;
cold spell which can lead to inactivity&#13;
and a lack of effectiveness, a&#13;
problem which plagued this group&#13;
last year. Shoring up the bullpen&#13;
will be Jeff FeDrick, Ross Kalinowski,andTimCates,allofwhom&#13;
should provide more than adequate&#13;
relief help.&#13;
Designated Hitter - Ron Wilke&#13;
will see most of his action in this&#13;
spot after being forced out of the&#13;
outfield picture this spring. Wilke&#13;
will be looked at to help give some&#13;
, power to the line-up which may be&#13;
_a much needed component in the&#13;
Ranger attack.&#13;
Overall the Rangers look to&#13;
have the pieces in place for a sue- l':~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~&#13;
cessful season, if they can over- r&#13;
come early season inactivity via So.4itball team' en'ioys Wisconsin's less than forgiving ':J I ~&#13;
springs, they should produce a&#13;
better than a.500record this spring. successtui road. tn·p Though their tough schedule may U I • I .&#13;
hinder that, they have 16 Division from Lady Rangers, p, 12 The rains came Thursday and&#13;
I games, as well as six Division II the Parkside powerhouse, 8-0, as forced theLady Rangers oockNoM&#13;
games which will help to show Beth Hansen got her second win but coach Draft was bappy about&#13;
their strength come playoff time. and Draft was able to sub most of how the team played.· .&#13;
Ifthe Rangers are able to use the contest, "We were just putting dungs&#13;
their plethora of seniors to their In the last day of action together when we bad to leave,we&#13;
advantage and play consistent Parkside heat up the next victim, had good pitching, and our out·&#13;
baseball,thiscouldprovetoheone Hiram College, 8-0, as the final fielders did a great job, IjustbOPO&#13;
of the most exciting springs at three games for the Lady Rangers we can live up to our ~&#13;
Ranger Field. were basically bench victories. number four ranking," she said·&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
The grass is still brown from&#13;
the winter and already the baseball&#13;
season is upon us. The Parkside&#13;
men's baseball team heads into the&#13;
1990 spring campaign with one of&#13;
its most promising_teams in years.&#13;
The Rangers, who only lost&#13;
OIIC member off last year's team,&#13;
bave been building towards this&#13;
season for four years. At the conclusion&#13;
of this spring the Rangers&#13;
wiD be without the services of ten&#13;
of their top players. Spring 1990&#13;
needs to be "The Year" that the&#13;
Rangers take the District 14 title,&#13;
and they appear poised to do so.&#13;
After a disappointing 1989&#13;
season in which the team compiled&#13;
a 13·16 record, coach Red Oberbrunoer&#13;
looks for his team to put&#13;
everything together and make a&#13;
run at the District 14 title. Two&#13;
years ago the team had hiDing but&#13;
lacked effective pitching. Then last&#13;
year the bats gave way, anda much&#13;
improved pitching staff was left&#13;
holding the bag. This year both&#13;
elements need to come together in&#13;
order for the team to meet expectations.&#13;
This is how the 1990'Rangers&#13;
shape up by position.&#13;
Catcher- Gary Fritsch andStan&#13;
Diedrich will share the duties behind&#13;
the plate this season. Fritsch&#13;
isback after suffering through two&#13;
yearsofnagginginjuries.lfhecan&#13;
stay healthy he stands to be a welcome&#13;
addition in the Parkside offensive&#13;
attack. Diedrich should&#13;
see equal time in the catchers slot&#13;
after proving his effectiveness as a&#13;
platoon player in '89 when he&#13;
shared time with Brian Gauthier,&#13;
who has since moved to the outfield.&#13;
FirstBase- JeffReikowski will&#13;
hold down the right field line for&#13;
the fourth consecutive season.&#13;
Reikowski batted .313 last spring&#13;
and had an impressive .981 fielding&#13;
percentage. With those numbers&#13;
behind him Reikowski only&#13;
needs to cut down on his strikeouts&#13;
(a team leading 22 in '89) in order&#13;
to have an improved spring. Having&#13;
the unpleasant position of playing&#13;
behind a four-year starter is&#13;
Mike Caccioppi, who_ will see&#13;
limited action.&#13;
Second Base - Senior Dave&#13;
Rebro and Freshman Marc Thompson&#13;
will split time at second.&#13;
Rebro had a dismal '89, only&#13;
managing a .240 batting average.&#13;
He will definitely need to improve&#13;
if he is going to maintain his yearold&#13;
starting spot. IfRebro falters&#13;
early look for Thompson to step in&#13;
and hopefully provide some spark&#13;
in the bottom of the order.&#13;
Third Base - Don Keller will&#13;
play thebo! comer this spring after&#13;
seeing most of his action in the&#13;
outfield last year. Keller will need&#13;
to make the transition smoothly,&#13;
because his bat will be needed to&#13;
bolster the bottom of the order.&#13;
Shortstop- Kenny Neese will&#13;
maintain the position here earned a&#13;
year ago when now departed Doug&#13;
Londowentdown to injury in midseason.&#13;
Neese provided the offensive&#13;
spar!&lt; to many Ranger victories&#13;
last year as well as on the base&#13;
paths, where he led the Rangers in&#13;
stolen bases with eight, Neese, a&#13;
senior, will bave to continue to&#13;
provide the spark as he well hold&#13;
down the lead-off spot in the batting&#13;
order.&#13;
Outfield - Armand Bonofiglio,&#13;
PARACH UTI NG,--------&#13;
WITH&#13;
PARKSIDE!!I&#13;
Spon red by the Parkside Activ s Board&#13;
Sports and Recreation Committee.&#13;
April' 22, 1990&#13;
An entire day of excitement&#13;
Price: $100&#13;
$20 deposit due by Aprll4 remainder due on Aprll18&#13;
Includes transportation, clOss,and Jumplll&#13;
Bus ceeons 5:00a,m.&#13;
SIgn up at Union Into Desk no later than MARCH 21. so we&#13;
con determine price. Additional Information and more&#13;
details wiD folloW&#13;
Your Gui.de to this:&#13;
spring/s baseball and&#13;
softball action, ..&#13;
1990Ranger Baseball&#13;
~17~@@OO!Dl ~©lD1@©IJillI]@~&#13;
Date Qpponent Place Tim&#13;
Lake ForestCollege&#13;
Indianapolis Tourney&#13;
DePaul University'&#13;
Marion College&#13;
Loyola University&#13;
College of St. FranctsfIrny)&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
U. of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
UW.QshkoshTourney&#13;
51. Xavier College&#13;
U. of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Mt, Mercy Tournament&#13;
DePaul University&#13;
National College&#13;
UW-Parkside Tourney&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Lake Forest, IL&#13;
Ind., IN&#13;
HOME&#13;
HOME&#13;
Chicago.Il,&#13;
51. Francis. IL&#13;
HOME&#13;
Chicago.IL&#13;
Oshkosh, WI&#13;
Chicago.Il,&#13;
HOME&#13;
MI. Mercy. IA&#13;
Chicago,IL&#13;
HOME&#13;
Shane Rawley&#13;
'HOME&#13;
3:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
3:30&#13;
3:30&#13;
3:30&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
5:45&#13;
4:00&#13;
03/24 Marquette University HOME 12:00&#13;
03/29 St.XavierCollege Chicago,IL 1:00&#13;
03130 North Central, HOME 2:00&#13;
04/03 UW-Madison Madison,WI 1:00&#13;
04105 U.ofIllinois-Chicago Chicago,IL 12:00&#13;
04/07 Northeastem Chicago,IL 12:00&#13;
04/08 UW-StevensPoint HOME 12:00&#13;
04/10 CarthageCollege Kenosha,WI . 1:00&#13;
04/12 UW-Milwaukee Milwaukee,WI 2:00&#13;
04114 Northeastem HOME 12:00&#13;
04/17 CatTolICollege HOME 1:00&#13;
04120 NorthPark North Park, IL 3:00&#13;
04t23 NorthPark HOME 1:00&#13;
04126 NorthCentral Illinois 2:00&#13;
04128 UW-Milwaukee HOME 12:00&#13;
04!29 CarthageCollege HOME 1:00&#13;
05101 Lewis University HOME 1:00&#13;
1990 ~nger rubmen'sSoft6af[&#13;
!R~u.far Season Scliet!u.fe:&#13;
Date Opponent Place Tim&#13;
03/29&#13;
03/30-31&#13;
04/03&#13;
04/04&#13;
04/OS&#13;
04/07.00&#13;
04/09&#13;
04/11&#13;
04/14&#13;
04/16&#13;
04/18&#13;
04/21-22&#13;
04/24&#13;
04/25&#13;
04/27-28&#13;
OS/OI&#13;
-&#13;
"LadyRangers potentially the best&#13;
r I by Ted MdJ;ttyre I Sports Wnter&#13;
I&#13;
If ever there was chance for a&#13;
National Championship to come to&#13;
UW·Parksidenow is the time.&#13;
Ranke(Hourthin the NAIA polls,&#13;
!bewomen'ssoftball team is primed&#13;
I&#13;
and ready for a stellar season.&#13;
This season's Lady Ranger&#13;
I&#13;
ream will field an experienced&#13;
!Quad, in which all but two of the&#13;
I&#13;
ninepositionshaveretummgstart_&#13;
es, Head coach Linda Draft is&#13;
hopingforthe best but understands&#13;
awilltakemore than just a talented&#13;
!Ila!lclub.&#13;
"We are capable of winning&#13;
!beNationaltourney, but that will&#13;
require a little luck too," said Draft.&#13;
AmongUW-Parl&lt;side's experienced&#13;
club are six starting senm.&#13;
Starting at first base will be I Kim Vanderbush, at second base&#13;
Wendy Sackman, and at shortstop IPam Hosp. The outfield will have&#13;
IWO starting seniors, Tracy Bur1lII:h&#13;
in leftfield and Marisa Posig&#13;
in ri$htfield.As for the rest of the&#13;
I&#13;
!llIltIIIgline up, Sue Palubicki, a&#13;
~homore, will start at third base,&#13;
IIId jWliorlaura Nowdomski will&#13;
!IalI in centerfield.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, March 22, 1990 11&#13;
EXCITING WOMEN'S&#13;
PROFESSIONAL&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Minnesota Monarchs&#13;
vs&#13;
LEGENDS OF BEACH VOLLEYBALL&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 23,1990&#13;
AT&#13;
RACINE maH SCHOOL FIELDHOUSE&#13;
MATCH TIME 7:30 PM&#13;
The Ranger pill;hing staff is as&#13;
well experienced and includes four&#13;
women in the rotation. Returning&#13;
senior Karen Livesey had a 16-8&#13;
record last season for UW -Parkside&#13;
and a 1.33 ERA. Juniors Beth&#13;
Hansen; 14-8 last year, and Laura&#13;
Stock, 5-1, POSted 1.96 and 1.99&#13;
ERA's, respectively. Joining the&#13;
upperclassmen rotation is freshman&#13;
Jeanne Easelman.&#13;
These girls will have to be&#13;
ready to compete quickly as the&#13;
softball season starts this Saturday&#13;
as the Lady Rangers travel to&#13;
Pensacola, H.. for the Spring Ring&#13;
tournament lasting seven days.&#13;
UW-Parkside is scheduled to play&#13;
a minimum of II games with the&#13;
possibility of going onto the playoffs&#13;
on March 16th and 17th.&#13;
A big reason for UWParkside'snumberfiverankingare&#13;
a trio of Lady Rangers. Pam Hosp&#13;
is returning with All-American&#13;
honors as is Tracy Burbach, who&#13;
was named to last season's Nationals&#13;
all-tournament team. Wendy&#13;
Sackman was also an All-Amencan,&#13;
named to the all-tourney team,&#13;
and was the National Player of the&#13;
Week. With all this experience&#13;
UW -Parkside could easily become&#13;
overconfident, but Draft is making&#13;
sure to safeguard against this hap_&#13;
pening.&#13;
"Our motto is to take each&#13;
game one at a time, have fun, and&#13;
not look to the end of the season"&#13;
said Draft.&#13;
The Lady Ranger schedule is&#13;
incredibly busy this spring as the&#13;
team plays 57 regularseason games&#13;
inasmanydays. Mostofthegames&#13;
played will be doubleheaders with&#13;
weekend dates going to tripleheaders.&#13;
The rigorous schedule could&#13;
wear down most teams, but this&#13;
year's Lady Rangers are deep&#13;
enough to allow starters time to&#13;
rest. Pivolal players off the bench&#13;
for the Lady Rangers are sophomore&#13;
Tammy Wright at frrst base,&#13;
freshman Jodi Farberwhocan play&#13;
either shortstop or second base,&#13;
sophomore Patti Fink at thirdbase,&#13;
and freshmen Tara Carlson, Jacki&#13;
Vukos, and Rachel Silaff backing&#13;
up the outfield.&#13;
With her line up, Draft is very&#13;
optimistic about this season and&#13;
knows this is the year she has a&#13;
great chance to go on to Nationals.&#13;
"Our girls are very excited and&#13;
ready to play, I'm looking forward&#13;
to a good season."&#13;
!MONARCHS ROSTER INCLUDES:&#13;
Elaine Roque - Olympic team, All-American, Top beach player&#13;
Therese Boyle -Intemational Player, All-American&#13;
Diane Ratnil&lt; - Canadian National Team, All-Big 10, Team Canada&#13;
Andrea Gonzales - Argentina national Team, 4 Time All-American&#13;
~aENDS OF BEACH VOLLEYBALL ROSTER INCLUDES:&#13;
Linda Chisholm - Top pro beach player, Olympic team&#13;
Nina Matthies - Olympic team, Top probeach player, MLV player&#13;
Angela Rock - Olympic team, All-Tournament Canada Cup&#13;
Dale HaU - Olympic team, Italian professional league MVP&#13;
TICKETS:&#13;
$5 Adults! $6 At Door&#13;
$3 Children (12 and under)&#13;
Women'sbasketball&#13;
wraps up good year&#13;
said Miller. "We got good bench&#13;
help. The freshmen played especiallywell&#13;
for us, and HeatherTrue&#13;
also played excellent basketball at&#13;
the end of the season.&#13;
Looking ahead to the 1990-91&#13;
Lady Ranger campaign, Parkside&#13;
will be solid in the experience eato&#13;
agory with Van Cuick, Wietzel&#13;
and Ingallsallrewming to lead the&#13;
squad.&#13;
'I1ie 1989-90 'Ubmen's '13ask.f,toaf{Team.,.&#13;
from Netters, p. 12&#13;
and lead the squad in field goal&#13;
percentage, shooting .483 from the&#13;
floor. Tracy Northrop Jed the team&#13;
in the rebounding category with&#13;
7.4 pg. and scored 8.5 per game.&#13;
Terri Ingalls added 1.4 ppg.&#13;
The bench wasalsoinsuumental&#13;
in the success of the Lady Rangers&#13;
this year.&#13;
"EveryoneconbibutedflX'us,"&#13;
, '!f9JJerof the weeK ...&#13;
Van Cuick leads the way&#13;
I For excellence on the basketball court this season, and in leading the&#13;
/l&lt;idy Rangersto a 15-15 record, the Ranger extends its congratulations to&#13;
I&#13;
JIiIliOr guam Brenda Van Cuick. . . .&#13;
VanCuick, in her third season for Parkside, has sohdified.a starting&#13;
llilot whichshe held all season long. She led the Lady Rangers 1D se~~&#13;
CilagOlles this past season She averaged 13.9 pomts per game an&#13;
ISIisISper game as well as Jeading the squad in steals with 3.9 per game .&#13;
. VanCuick will have another chance to improve on these stats as she&#13;
till be --,- to spearhead the Lady Ranger attack. '-w,wlg next season . d f her&#13;
For her outstanding performance on the court this season, an or&#13;
~tions all season long for the team, the Ranger congratulates&#13;
~&lt;oIlIIVan Cuick as our Player of the Wee . ·&#13;
s&#13;
12 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
Sycamores bring .out brooms in baseball opener&#13;
s p&#13;
by 1M.F1etdler&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
Gameoneproved 10beapromising&#13;
start for the Rangers, with&#13;
Darrin P1uskola getting the starting&#13;
nod against Sycamore ace Mike&#13;
Farrell. Last year, Farrell led his&#13;
club with a 3.39 ERA, and posted&#13;
an 8-4 record including two wins&#13;
over thedefending National Champion&#13;
Shockers of Wichila State.&#13;
Parkside Baseball kicked off&#13;
last week as the "ping" of the bat&#13;
rang in early signs of spring as the&#13;
Rangers traveled 10 Indiana State&#13;
for a three-game swing with the&#13;
Sycamores.&#13;
o R T&#13;
the first round-tripper of the season,&#13;
a two-run shot 10 left, and the&#13;
teams were knotted. 2-2. Still in&#13;
that inning, the Rangers threatened&#13;
10 take the lead when Jack Klebesadel&#13;
reached on an error and&#13;
Armand Bonofiglio doubled 10 put&#13;
two runners in scoring position with&#13;
two outs. Farrell,though,gotBrian&#13;
Gauthier 10 strike out 10 end that&#13;
threat.&#13;
In the fourth, Pluskota showed&#13;
signs of fatigue as a single and a&#13;
pair of walks led 10a Sycamore run&#13;
10 put them up, 3-2, after four.&#13;
Pluskotagave way IOJeffLemmer·&#13;
mann in the fifth, and Indiana State&#13;
was able 10 generate a two-outrally&#13;
as Farrell helped his own cause&#13;
with a triple, followed by a single&#13;
by third baseman, Danny Frye. A&#13;
RangererroronaSycamoredoublesteal&#13;
capped the inning, and Indiana&#13;
State went inlO the sixth with a&#13;
5-2 lead.&#13;
Gauthier ignited things in the&#13;
sixth with a lead off triple, scoring&#13;
on a Jeff Reilcowski single, but the&#13;
Rangers could do no further damage&#13;
as Farrell again worked out of&#13;
a jam, stranding two Rangers in&#13;
scoring position.&#13;
The Sycamores went down in&#13;
order in the sixth, and Parkside had&#13;
pulled off a victory in the last inning&#13;
(the seventh), but the umpires&#13;
called the game after the hour-and- .&#13;
a-half waiting time had been used&#13;
up through the sixth.&#13;
In game two the Lady Rangers&#13;
showed why they are ranked fourth&#13;
in theNAlAas they pounced on SL&#13;
Mary's for a 6-0 win scoring three&#13;
in the first and two in the second.&#13;
From there Pam Hoop' coasted to&#13;
her first win of the year.&#13;
"I was pleased with our comebackingametwo"saidcoachLinda&#13;
Draft, "In the first game we just&#13;
struck out too much."&#13;
The next day Parkside faced&#13;
Carson Newman College. Again&#13;
the Ranger hats fell asleep, losing&#13;
2-3 as alate comeback effort failed.&#13;
In game two that afternoon,&#13;
Parkside woke up to gain another&#13;
shutout for pitcher Beth Hansen,&#13;
who had a no-hitter spoiled in the&#13;
sixth on a single.&#13;
one more chance against tJie&#13;
"Shocker-Stopper". Neesedoubled&#13;
10open the frame, but Farrell got a&#13;
pair of strikeouts and a fly out to&#13;
notch his f1tSt win of the season.&#13;
Game two saw the Sycamores&#13;
jump on Ranger starter JeffKnoczal&#13;
early, scoring six times in the fust&#13;
and once in the second 10build a 7-&#13;
o lead.&#13;
Parkside came back with a pair&#13;
of runs in the third, but the Sycamores&#13;
got those back with single&#13;
runs in the third and the fourth as&#13;
they cruised to an 11-2 victory.&#13;
Konczal and reliever Steve&#13;
Leonhard were the victims of a II·&#13;
hitSycamoreanack which included&#13;
seven extra-base hits, while the&#13;
Rangers were held to just five&#13;
singles and a double.&#13;
The final meeting in the weekend&#13;
series was a disastrous one for&#13;
the Ranger pitching staff as starter&#13;
Dan Langendorf and reliever Jeff&#13;
Fennrick were knocked around for&#13;
20 hits in four and two-thirds innings,&#13;
breaking open what once&#13;
was a one run game.&#13;
With the score 5-1, Neese&#13;
trippled in a run, Klebesadel&#13;
knocked home Neese, and Wilke&#13;
doubled home Klebesadel to make&#13;
see Opener, p. 9&#13;
• •&#13;
SIX&#13;
•&#13;
SWIR&#13;
Tuesday was showdown day&#13;
for the Lady Rangers as they came&#13;
up against the University of Western&#13;
Florida, currently ranked second&#13;
in the NAIA. The rol1ercoaster&#13;
pattern continued for Parkside as&#13;
they could not buy a run in game&#13;
one, losing a tough I~battle as&#13;
Beth Hansen got the loss. Draft&#13;
was outspoken on the umpiring and&#13;
said Parkside was "robbed of a&#13;
victory." But in game two it was&#13;
Parks ide jumping out to a 9-0 lead&#13;
and fmishing with a 10-2 victory as&#13;
UWF barely avoided having the&#13;
game called for a 10-0 margin. The&#13;
win was definitely the biggest of&#13;
the young season for Parkside.&#13;
The following day another St.&#13;
.Mary' s oflndiana was the Parkside&#13;
opponent, and the Rangers man'&#13;
aged to come 10playas they posted&#13;
an easy 8-2 victory, Later that day&#13;
Wil1iarn Jewel of Missouri fel1lD&#13;
see Softball, p.IO&#13;
Indiana Slate reachedPluskota&#13;
for a pair of runs in the bottom of&#13;
the first to stake Farrell 10an early&#13;
2~ lead, taking advantageof one of&#13;
the four Ranger miscues committed&#13;
by Parkside infielders in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside struck back in their&#13;
half of the third as Ken Neese hit&#13;
by Ted Mdntyre&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The women's softhall team&#13;
opened it's season this past week in&#13;
Pensacola, Florida, but were cut&#13;
short as the Annual Spring Fling&#13;
tournament sprang a leak with 17&#13;
inches of monsoon-like rain&#13;
cancelling the teams fmal five&#13;
games.&#13;
Before the early departure,&#13;
however, the Lady Rangers were&#13;
able to take the field and post a 6-3&#13;
record in stiff competition.&#13;
The season opened up last&#13;
Sunday as Parkside met up with the&#13;
College of St Mary's from Nebraska.&#13;
Parkside scattered five hits&#13;
for two runs, striking out ten times&#13;
at the plate, and St Mary's came up&#13;
with three runs on only four hits 10&#13;
hand the Lady Rangers and pitcher&#13;
Karen Livesey the team'sfirst loss&#13;
of the season. Parkside might have</text>
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              <text>Add-Drop policy passed despite student pressure</text>
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              <text>&#13;
�day's&#13;
RanIer&#13;
gUJlla10&#13;
says apartheid&#13;
Ii&#13;
still&#13;
has&#13;
to be fought ill&#13;
South&#13;
Mrica .:'&#13;
1-:&#13;
_~&#13;
P.ag~3 "&#13;
Insld,e SpOl't!&#13;
UW-Parkside's&#13;
Chomko&#13;
and Anderson named&#13;
to&#13;
Senior Soccer BowL&#13;
Page 10&#13;
DeLuca's&#13;
hypnotic&#13;
act&#13;
., 'thrills tlw-Parkside&#13;
,.&#13;
:,.~~,'&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
agmn.&#13;
.~~ge:-4,""&#13;
Thursday, February 22, 1990&#13;
Vol. XVIII, No. 20&#13;
Add -&#13;
drop policy passed despite student pressure&#13;
perfonninginacoursebythefourth&#13;
by&#13;
D8n&#13;
Chiappetta&#13;
week.&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Prange further explained that&#13;
OnFeb.I3,&#13;
1990, the Faculty    many stud&lt;m1Sgo beyond the fifth&#13;
_    passed&#13;
a new drop policy    week  of  a  semester   without&#13;
_  dill&#13;
a SlUdentwho drops a   knowing   how  well  they  are&#13;
llQSeduringorafterthefifth week   performingin  class. Many students&#13;
Ii&#13;
a&#13;
semester will  receive&#13;
it&#13;
go beyond  the fifth week of the&#13;
r.~·ipInOlation   of "W" for that   semester  without  taking teslS&#13;
or&#13;
CIIIIIlSe.&#13;
The "W"  stands  for   quizzes.&#13;
lIiIbdrawaI.&#13;
"How can you evaluate your&#13;
'1be&#13;
new policy takes effect    performance.  This is the sixth week&#13;
illhcFalll99lsemester,"saidDon&#13;
and I can't tell," said Prange.&#13;
Prange,president of the Parkside&#13;
The new drop policy that takes&#13;
SludentGovernment Association.&#13;
effect in the Fall of 1991, will still&#13;
"Webadabout700UW-Parkside&#13;
allow&#13;
students&#13;
tu drop until the&#13;
II1Identsignatures opposing  the   eighth week, but between the fifth&#13;
polity&#13;
change. TheJ'acuity Senate    and  eighth  week&#13;
students&#13;
will&#13;
vinua11yignored the signatures.    receivea"W,"meaningwithdrawal&#13;
TheyOOo'tseem to care what the   of a course, on their&#13;
transcripts,&#13;
In&#13;
II1IdenISsay."&#13;
the&#13;
case&#13;
of modular  or summer&#13;
According to' Prange,  the   session courses, the&#13;
"W"&#13;
notation&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Senate felt that&#13;
students&#13;
will be applied if&#13;
the&#13;
drop&#13;
occurs&#13;
Ibould know  how  they  are    after one-third of the course period&#13;
Radio station&#13;
WZRX&#13;
shut down&#13;
by&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiappetta&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
function&#13;
a comminee&#13;
that is not&#13;
reaching the interest of the students&#13;
and  is  causing   inappropriate&#13;
behavior."&#13;
Large&#13;
amounts&#13;
of material in&#13;
WZRX's  office have disappeared,&#13;
according to Prange.&#13;
"WZRX has been shut down&#13;
until further notice. They will not&#13;
function or spend money.  At this&#13;
time they are not an organization,"&#13;
stated Prange.  "WZRX's  budget&#13;
has  been  frozen  until  we&#13;
see&#13;
leadership and direction."&#13;
WZRX&#13;
is a sulH:ommittee of&#13;
PSGA, but Prange feels thatstudent&#13;
govemmentshouldnotruntheradio&#13;
station.&#13;
"PSGA'  is  there  for  the&#13;
safeguard  of student  righlS and&#13;
OnFeb.16,I990,anexecutive&#13;
ICtion&#13;
was taken by locking&#13;
up&#13;
WZRx,&#13;
UW-Parkside's   radio&#13;
1Iation.&#13;
''WZRx's  budget  has been&#13;
_n,"saidDonPrange,Parkside&#13;
'&#13;
SbldentGovernment Association&#13;
~denL&#13;
''The&#13;
locks have been&#13;
cbangoo&#13;
and&#13;
if&#13;
anybody needs to&#13;
&amp;et&#13;
10&#13;
to  get  their  personal&#13;
~~ngings  they  must  contact'&#13;
~\l\JA."&#13;
According to Prange, this&#13;
is&#13;
1he&#13;
third&#13;
time WZRX haS had to be&#13;
1lIor8lUtized.&#13;
"At this point there is&#13;
~tion&#13;
and no leadership.&#13;
IS&#13;
no sense to continue to&#13;
bas&#13;
passed.&#13;
The new add policy&#13;
passed&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
Faculty Senate will take effect&#13;
in theFall of 1990. The new add&#13;
policy  states that students may,&#13;
during the&#13;
first&#13;
week of classes,&#13;
add any course for which they are&#13;
"TheFaculty Senate&#13;
virtually ignored the&#13;
signatures,   they·&#13;
don't seem to care&#13;
what the students&#13;
say," Don Prange&#13;
interests, not to provide a program&#13;
service.   Student  Organizations&#13;
Council shouldmntheradio  station&#13;
because their purpose is to provide&#13;
information  for all the clubs&#13;
on&#13;
campus," added Prange.&#13;
The PSGA Senate&#13;
disagrees&#13;
with Prange, believing that PSGA&#13;
should&#13;
run&#13;
WZRX, not SOC.&#13;
"The resources&#13;
are&#13;
there&#13;
and&#13;
there is aneedanddesire  foraradio&#13;
station, but&#13;
if&#13;
they can't get the&#13;
interest of the students, whicb is&#13;
the purpose of the radio station,&#13;
and can't  he&#13;
run&#13;
under proper&#13;
. leadership,  there is no sense in&#13;
funding&#13;
WZRX,"&#13;
emphasized&#13;
Prange.&#13;
supportofthecoersemsnuctorand&#13;
approval   of  the  department&#13;
chairperson.   After acting on a&#13;
request   for  a  late  add,  the&#13;
department chair forwards a copy&#13;
of the request to the dean of the&#13;
appropriate school for information&#13;
purposes.  Students may make a&#13;
final appeal,&#13;
if&#13;
desired. to the dean&#13;
of the appropriate  school, if the&#13;
instructor is the department chair.&#13;
Prangeisootonlydisappointed&#13;
by the passing of the new add and&#13;
drop policy, but by the way the&#13;
Faculty Senate acted towards the&#13;
700&#13;
signatures.&#13;
"The Faculty Senate hardly&#13;
had any&#13;
response&#13;
to the fact that&#13;
students opposed the new policy.&#13;
It was&#13;
passed&#13;
with a&#13;
26-2'{)&#13;
vote.&#13;
They just don'l&#13;
care&#13;
about  the&#13;
concern of the students."&#13;
Prange brought&#13;
up&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Statue 36.09(5), which states&#13;
thai&#13;
all students&#13;
shall&#13;
have&#13;
primary&#13;
responsibility  for&#13;
the&#13;
formulation&#13;
and review of policies concerning&#13;
S1Udentlife,services,and inte:rests.&#13;
"State statute states&#13;
thai&#13;
we&#13;
have&#13;
shared&#13;
governance, that we have&#13;
the right to have&#13;
a&#13;
say, bul they&#13;
ignored&#13;
us."&#13;
Prange explained&#13;
that&#13;
if&#13;
both&#13;
smoems&#13;
and facully agreed on&#13;
a&#13;
certain&#13;
issue&#13;
shared governance is&#13;
perceived tohe greatby thefaculty,&#13;
but if students and faculty&#13;
disagree&#13;
on an issue, shared governance is&#13;
ignored.&#13;
Prange will put&#13;
his&#13;
effon&#13;
in&#13;
lIying to get profes9Ol'S to give&#13;
examsor&#13;
quizzes before&#13;
the&#13;
fourth&#13;
week&#13;
of the&#13;
semester&#13;
so&#13;
students&#13;
could have some idea&#13;
how&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
performing in class.&#13;
"It was&#13;
a negative&#13;
meeting. II&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
bad&#13;
day&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
shared&#13;
govemancesystem,"addedPrange.&#13;
Finding a Job after graduation&#13;
Compiled  by&#13;
DaWtl&#13;
Mai1aDd&#13;
Entertainment   Editor&#13;
Editor's Note: This&#13;
is&#13;
lire&#13;
r"st&#13;
of many ~g~1IIS  on gradualu&gt;n&#13;
tJIId&#13;
how&#13;
to&#13;
gtllhol"all-importa1ls"&#13;
firsljob.&#13;
With thecomingofspring,  the&#13;
Class of 1990 will he facing&#13;
ils&#13;
biggest challenge yet:&#13;
competin&amp;&#13;
successfullY   for&#13;
a&#13;
job&#13;
after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
The&#13;
matter&#13;
of&#13;
fact ~&#13;
many  collegians  aren't  always&#13;
adequately&#13;
prepared&#13;
for&#13;
their&#13;
first&#13;
encounter&#13;
with   business.&#13;
According to&#13;
a recent survey, even&#13;
straight  "A"  studenlS often  get&#13;
failing&#13;
grades&#13;
in good grooming&#13;
and&#13;
making&#13;
a ~&#13;
fll'Sl&#13;
irnptesSion on&#13;
reauiters.&#13;
A&#13;
tDtal&#13;
of&#13;
2SO personnel&#13;
professional!   nationwide  were&#13;
queried. and more&#13;
than&#13;
9S&#13;
pcn:ent&#13;
rated  good  grooming   either&#13;
exuemely   irnponant   or  very&#13;
importantforyoungjobapplicants.&#13;
However, more&#13;
than&#13;
one-quarter&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
respondents&#13;
also&#13;
said less&#13;
than&#13;
half&#13;
of their applicants metsix&#13;
b8sicfirstimpessionMldgroomina&#13;
-.dards.&#13;
The&#13;
survey asb:d&#13;
CXlIlJOI&amp;lC,&#13;
executive&#13;
reauiter.&#13;
and agency&#13;
personnel   people  how  many&#13;
app1icants met sucb grooming and&#13;
fll'Sl impression&#13;
slalldards&#13;
U&#13;
wearing&#13;
a&#13;
sui~&#13;
trimming&#13;
their&#13;
nails&#13;
and&#13;
wearing&#13;
freshly-shined&#13;
shoes.&#13;
Although 83&#13;
peroenr.&#13;
did&#13;
say job&#13;
CoDtI..&#13;
cd ........&#13;
a&#13;
2 Thursday.  February 22. 1990 Ranger&#13;
OpIn1011._&#13;
PSGA election has 13 seats and four candidates&#13;
As the Sj'.ringsemester&#13;
draws&#13;
nearer&#13;
to&#13;
spring&#13;
break,&#13;
slUdents me&#13;
busy&#13;
making plans&#13;
and&#13;
arrangements for all sorts&#13;
.of&#13;
things. Graduaung&#13;
senm&#13;
are&#13;
busy&#13;
getting out resumes&#13;
and&#13;
p~.g&#13;
parties,&#13;
clubs&#13;
an.&#13;
d&#13;
organizations me planning the next year's acUVlbeS.~~  everyone I,S&#13;
deciding what they&#13;
are&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
do&#13;
with the week off thatlS Just around the&#13;
corner. With all of these&#13;
plans&#13;
being made, it would seem&#13;
to&#13;
be ume to be&#13;
gearing&#13;
up&#13;
for the upcoming PSGA elections on March 7th&#13;
and&#13;
8th.&#13;
Wbete&#13;
is the enthusiasm supposedly connected to SbJdent government&#13;
elections?&#13;
Wbete&#13;
is the&#13;
heated&#13;
debate and competitive spirit of politics?&#13;
As&#13;
a&#13;
matter&#13;
of&#13;
fact,&#13;
where&#13;
are&#13;
the candidates?&#13;
At&#13;
rust&#13;
glanee. the PSGA election&#13;
ba1Iot&#13;
leads the&#13;
reader&#13;
to belie~e&#13;
that&#13;
one&#13;
penon&#13;
is running for every position, and&#13;
tbaI&#13;
candidate's&#13;
n:un&#13;
e&#13;
IS&#13;
"Wcile&#13;
In."&#13;
The siwation is ridiculous. There&#13;
are&#13;
two people&#13;
running&#13;
for&#13;
the ninepositionsavailable,&#13;
so&#13;
you&#13;
mightas weDwrite in yournam.e. That&#13;
is probably all it will take to&#13;
secure&#13;
you a position. The moststarthng&#13;
part&#13;
of the&#13;
ballot&#13;
is the&#13;
fact&#13;
tbaI&#13;
no&#13;
one&#13;
is running for the position of vice-&#13;
president,&#13;
so&#13;
if you me ambitious enough to persuade about half a dozen&#13;
of your friends&#13;
10&#13;
write in your name, you&#13;
will&#13;
probably be the next&#13;
VP.&#13;
The bottom&#13;
line&#13;
is&#13;
tbaI&#13;
there&#13;
are&#13;
four people running for the 13 positions&#13;
up for grabs.&#13;
Although the&#13;
cause&#13;
is not clear, the problem is. No one is interested&#13;
enough to take on the responsibilities of the various offices. The Ranger&#13;
bastroublejustifyingthesupporloflbisorganizationbySbJdentsegregated&#13;
fees where&#13;
there&#13;
is&#13;
so&#13;
little interest. Most people including ourselves do&#13;
not know what they do or more imponantly  what they get done.  The&#13;
slUdentbody bas spoken&#13;
through&#13;
their lack of interest in the organization,&#13;
and&#13;
their Sl8teIJlentis this: Why should we pay for an organization&#13;
tbaI&#13;
no&#13;
one&#13;
wants to be a&#13;
part&#13;
of, and why should we pay for an organization&#13;
1bat&#13;
no&#13;
one can justify&#13;
die&#13;
puIPOSC&#13;
of.&#13;
Letter to tbU&amp;litor&#13;
MX~!li2~andk&#13;
e&#13;
~g}!PUS;;;;;;;;;;di;;;·d;;;ha;;;;;;;Ve;;;;;;;;;an;;;;;;ba;;;V;;;in;;;g;;;''Tb;;;;;;;e;;;;FIam;;;;;;;;;e?~.&#13;
";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;ro;;;bl~e;;;m;;;a;;;t~par;;;kS~~'id~e;;;w~he;;;n;;;st;;;u~den;;;ts&#13;
social&#13;
domination of members of    overabundance   of  chauvinistic&#13;
Socially,   men  can't   ban&#13;
feel the need&#13;
10&#13;
make it one.&#13;
one&#13;
sex by&#13;
die&#13;
other, is known is    pigs,theCbancellorwouldnotonly&#13;
togetherforemotionalsupponina&#13;
Nevertheless,&#13;
men continue to&#13;
known&#13;
10&#13;
us&#13;
as sexism.&#13;
On&#13;
the    be aware of the&#13;
simauon,&#13;
but she    school endorsed "Men's  Center"&#13;
be ignored in respect&#13;
10&#13;
this issue.&#13;
colle~campus,thisW!isexconcePL&#13;
wouldn't   even  be  a. woman!&#13;
designedexpresslyforthem.&#13;
And&#13;
A&#13;
Parkside&#13;
professor  _defines,&#13;
isnotdealtwithasaunisexproblem.&#13;
Ironically,  the  women  in  these    finally,  they  are  academically&#13;
sexism in his book&#13;
as&#13;
thebeliefthat&#13;
Naturally   assumed   to  mean&#13;
programs&#13;
are&#13;
the ones who me    deprived of organizing a group of    women are inferior&#13;
10&#13;
men. There&#13;
discrimination   against  women,&#13;
sexist,  Of all things, they sponsor   ,"Men's  Studies" that would cater    is an unwillingness  on the&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
sexism&#13;
carries&#13;
with it a prejudice&#13;
bake sales&#13;
as&#13;
fundraisers!   This&#13;
to their&#13;
needs&#13;
as modern men in a    the university&#13;
10&#13;
acknowledge&#13;
as&#13;
all of its own. SbJdentsdon'trealize&#13;
only   serves   to  uphold   the&#13;
sexist society.&#13;
more&#13;
than&#13;
a feminist's  concern.&#13;
that treating&#13;
Ibis&#13;
as a feminist&#13;
issue&#13;
stereotype,like  a surrender in their&#13;
Seriously, the male side of the&#13;
As  a  result,   male  college&#13;
is in itself sexisL Although sexism    fight against  the&#13;
"Mrs.&#13;
Cleaver"&#13;
case&#13;
is often neglected.&#13;
If&#13;
men had    students are not provided  with the&#13;
ingeneralisnotamajorproblemat&#13;
image,whicbthesewomenstruggle&#13;
those  facilities  open&#13;
10&#13;
them,&#13;
same  opportunities&#13;
as&#13;
females.&#13;
ParkSide.dIe  male aspect of the    to&#13;
pul&#13;
down.&#13;
women  would be banging  down&#13;
Sadly,thecycleofprejudicegoes&#13;
matter is ignored.&#13;
WhileParksideoffersmuchto&#13;
the  doors,   demanding   to  be    on  because    Parkside&#13;
is  so&#13;
Sexism exists&#13;
10&#13;
some extent    feed&#13;
die&#13;
feminist, it starves its male    included.&#13;
accustomed&#13;
10&#13;
sexism&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
oneverycampus,yetisnotamajor&#13;
students.&#13;
On&#13;
a small scale it is&#13;
So  why  aren't   guys  out&#13;
student body is numb&#13;
10&#13;
the fact.&#13;
concern here&#13;
at&#13;
ParkSide.&#13;
All&#13;
of&#13;
the    interesting to&#13;
note&#13;
tbaI&#13;
there is a    picketing in front of the Women's&#13;
Male  students  continue&#13;
10&#13;
be&#13;
facilitiesdirectedatbattlingfemale&#13;
magazine&#13;
on&#13;
campus geared only&#13;
Center?    At  this  University,  a    victims of the ignorance&#13;
toward&#13;
a&#13;
discrirninationmaysugges\lOsome&#13;
towards the coping college female.&#13;
women can declare her femininity&#13;
word in the English language.&#13;
that this University bas a problem.&#13;
Despite&#13;
bow&#13;
well adjusted most    and be admired.  A man who does&#13;
On&#13;
the contrary,&#13;
die&#13;
real&#13;
problem&#13;
guys  me  known  to  be,  they'd&#13;
thesameiscalledamalechauvinisL&#13;
ot a beef? Write a&#13;
lies with those students who set up    appreciate some guidance&#13;
as&#13;
well.    Just&#13;
as&#13;
it is Christian to say "black&#13;
letter to the editor.&#13;
these programs  designed to deal&#13;
On&#13;
an&#13;
intellectual&#13;
ievel, males    is beautiful". butNeo-Nazi   to say&#13;
It must be&#13;
typed&#13;
and double&#13;
with the sexism they themselves&#13;
me denied&#13;
the&#13;
inalienable right&#13;
10&#13;
"white is wonderful,"  so goes the&#13;
d 0&#13;
create.&#13;
In&#13;
fact, if one tries&#13;
bard   the&#13;
circulation   of  their  own&#13;
unequal relationship between men&#13;
space.   rop it off in WLLC&#13;
enough,evenSheilaKaplancanbe&#13;
newsletter.   Women  have&#13;
"'The&#13;
and women at ParkSide.&#13;
D139C. Include real name&#13;
made to look chauvinistic.&#13;
Siren," so what's wrong with guys&#13;
Sexism   only   becomes   a&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Why&#13;
can't&#13;
I&#13;
stop?&#13;
Alcohol. The reason is it's got&#13;
you, and only you alone&#13;
can&#13;
make&#13;
the&#13;
first&#13;
decision.&#13;
Denial&#13;
'of a&#13;
,problem  never  allows anyone&#13;
to&#13;
face up to that problem. Youmust&#13;
decide for yourself if you have a&#13;
problem, and after that decision&#13;
is&#13;
made  there  are steps&#13;
10&#13;
take&#13;
to&#13;
overcome the unsatisfactorY&#13;
results&#13;
of&#13;
\00&#13;
much drinking.&#13;
Admittance  is five percentof&#13;
way  to recovery.   The "Twelve&#13;
StepProgram,"  when followed,&#13;
will&#13;
give you  the needed answers&#13;
to&#13;
overcoming  alcoholism.&#13;
There&#13;
is&#13;
still a lot of stigma and a&#13;
101&#13;
of&#13;
embarrassment  attached&#13;
to&#13;
being&#13;
an alcoholic.  What is needed isa&#13;
good   simple    definition   of&#13;
a1cobolism. Basically,analcoho&#13;
lic&#13;
is somebody who ispowerlesso&#13;
ver&#13;
alcohol and whose life&#13;
has&#13;
become&#13;
unmanagable.&#13;
Any  other&#13;
description  is fooling yourself.&#13;
Alcohol   abusers   can  be&#13;
qualified in a few notewortbysigns:&#13;
The need for a drink everydaY&#13;
to&#13;
Continued  on&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
•Editorial:   553-2287&#13;
anger.&#13;
ar&#13;
I&#13;
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=__&#13;
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Steve  DeAngel1••..•••.•••••...••.B4!tor-ln-cbl.f&#13;
Dan Pacetti  •••••••...•.•••••..•••••..&#13;
Copy JldJ.tor&#13;
Faculty Advisor ...•.•••..    Stuart Rubner&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger is&#13;
written&#13;
and&#13;
edited&#13;
by&#13;
smdeats&#13;
01UW&#13;
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an:&#13;
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Dan OU'appetta   ••••..•••••••.•••••••.••&#13;
11...  BcU.t;or&#13;
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: •.•••.••••&#13;
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wordsorless.&#13;
Allicnersmustbesigned,withatelephoncnum&#13;
r&#13;
su •..,.,.   Mantuano ••••.•••.•••.•.•••&#13;
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General&#13;
Staff&#13;
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p.&#13;
lor verification&#13;
purpose•. Names&#13;
will be&#13;
withheld&#13;
upon&#13;
reque....&#13;
101&#13;
Dawn&#13;
1la11an&lt;l&#13;
BDterta1nment&#13;
:al1tor&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger reserVes the&#13;
right to edU.leuen  and refuse those&#13;
which&#13;
are   se&#13;
John  Kehoe .•••••••••••.•••••••••••••&#13;
Photo  Bditor&#13;
Qwen&#13;
Reller,&#13;
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Molntrye,    Lyna  Pauket11.,&#13;
QU&gt;e&#13;
and/or&#13;
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•&#13;
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SCott  Singer&#13;
!'"'yout  JldJ.tor&#13;
lUuka.&#13;
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Glidden,&#13;
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Schuh,&#13;
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and&#13;
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lids&#13;
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M~p'&#13;
to&#13;
Lm.&#13;
forpubli""'"&#13;
'lony.   BuUlton.&#13;
Thursday.'&#13;
_____________________&#13;
-'--&#13;
.-.71&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
Oct. 20, 1988&#13;
...&#13;
Annexationissue boils down to municipal services&#13;
by&#13;
Scott Singer&#13;
_&#13;
to   ~ke&#13;
over    the    task    of&#13;
mented that  "there  is no rela-&#13;
change services.&#13;
If&#13;
a  decision&#13;
II'Ith&#13;
the  taste   of   the   re-&#13;
provtdlng&#13;
fire&#13;
service,&#13;
it&#13;
tionship"&#13;
with&#13;
how&#13;
much&#13;
is  made  then  Parkside&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
eeRII¥proposedannexation   of&#13;
;~~id&#13;
receive&#13;
$150,000   to&#13;
money    comes    to   this    area&#13;
consuited   to  determine    what&#13;
Pal!fJIde&#13;
by the  city  of  Keno-&#13;
~  "  ,000a  year  from  PMS.&#13;
from  PMS and  tuttton.&#13;
course  of action  is best.  Chan-&#13;
"'lIllgerlngin our  mouths,   a&#13;
W,:  will   not   change   until&#13;
Although&#13;
the&#13;
issue&#13;
of&#13;
cellor&#13;
Shella&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
has&#13;
...&#13;
tssue&#13;
has&#13;
developed.&#13;
the    CIty  and   the   town   are&#13;
changing   fIre   service   is.  not&#13;
slated    that&#13;
it&#13;
will&#13;
be   made&#13;
I&#13;
WhOshould   provide&#13;
pleas.ed   ,,:nd  ready    to   agree&#13;
ac~vely  . bemg   debated •. It  is&#13;
sure   that   "Parkside    gets  ap-&#13;
services   and   what&#13;
that   It  is  m  the  ~est  int~rests&#13;
bemg   discussed.&#13;
A   deciston&#13;
propriate&#13;
fire    service,&#13;
and&#13;
cia! consequences&#13;
if&#13;
of&#13;
everybody,&#13;
.&#13;
~SSlstant&#13;
would   have    to    come    from&#13;
you  can  be  sure  that  we'll  do&#13;
would&#13;
be&#13;
is&#13;
th&#13;
•&#13;
Chancellor   of  Admtrustratton&#13;
Somers&#13;
and&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
to&#13;
that  ..&#13;
BIfi,&#13;
'.&#13;
e concern&#13;
and    Fiscal    Affairs,   Gary'&#13;
.&#13;
tftll&amp;admlnlstrabonand  stu-&#13;
Goetz,  said.  Some  people  feei&#13;
Grece named&#13;
tirst&#13;
winner&#13;
-&#13;
aUke.&#13;
that&#13;
Somers&#13;
should&#13;
keep&#13;
I '&#13;
II&#13;
I '&#13;
Although annexation&#13;
~f&#13;
providing   the  service   because&#13;
PaIlIldewas   proposed,&#13;
It&#13;
of better   equipment   for  fight-&#13;
of Schilling Cup award&#13;
_&#13;
occurred   for    several&#13;
ing   brush    and    forest    fires.&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
reuons·&#13;
One of these  was  the&#13;
Aiso  some  feei  that  the  reac-&#13;
~  that the Town of  Somers&#13;
tion&#13;
time&#13;
from&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
...  not willing to  reiinquish&#13;
would  not  be  fast  enough.  The&#13;
Parkslds&#13;
to  Kenosha.    In    a&#13;
facts  show,  thOliC'h,that  these&#13;
lIIIIJIUIIonpassed&#13;
opposing&#13;
are  not  so.&#13;
!iIt&#13;
annexatton,    the&#13;
town&#13;
IiGiilI&#13;
slated that  "annexation&#13;
lIliJld&#13;
effectiveiy   split&#13;
the&#13;
im&#13;
of  Somers&#13;
in&#13;
half. "&#13;
.I!Itt;&#13;
the&#13;
town  felt   that    "an&#13;
6lion&#13;
of   Parkside&#13;
to&#13;
wcuid   destroy&#13;
the&#13;
identification&#13;
of&#13;
as   an   educaitonal&#13;
G. Goetz&#13;
dependent&#13;
contractor.&#13;
Changes    in   police   protection&#13;
and   solid  waste   removai    are&#13;
not    presently&#13;
being&#13;
constd-&#13;
ered,    leaving    oniy   the   ques-&#13;
tion   of  changing    fire   protec-&#13;
tion.&#13;
For    . the&#13;
protectlon&#13;
that&#13;
Somers provides,  the  town re-&#13;
ceives&#13;
$4000&#13;
each  year   from  a&#13;
state&#13;
fund    called&#13;
Payments&#13;
for  Municipal   Servies   (PMS).&#13;
The  PMS  fund  is  a  reciprocal&#13;
fund  to  provide   municipalities&#13;
with&#13;
reimbursement&#13;
for   the&#13;
expenses&#13;
that&#13;
occur&#13;
when&#13;
providing&#13;
services&#13;
to    state&#13;
universities.&#13;
If&#13;
Kenosha    was&#13;
Although    one   fire    depar-t-&#13;
ment  may  have  certain   equip-&#13;
ment   for  one  type   of  fire,&#13;
in&#13;
the  event   of  a  major   fire.  all&#13;
fire    companies&#13;
in&#13;
the   area&#13;
would   respond    to   help   out.&#13;
Also,  a  north-aide  fire  depart-&#13;
ment&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha   is  presently&#13;
Wlder  construction   that  would&#13;
reduce   reaction   time  greatly.&#13;
One  fear   of students   Is  that&#13;
if  Kenosha  was&#13;
to&#13;
assume   re-&#13;
s  onsiQJ.lities  of   fire - protec-&#13;
tion,    the    additional&#13;
cost   to&#13;
reimburse    the  city  for  the&#13;
in-&#13;
crease&#13;
would    come    in   the&#13;
form  of an  increase&#13;
in&#13;
tuition.&#13;
Since  PMS  is  not  directly   re-&#13;
lated  to tuition  costs,  this  fear&#13;
is&#13;
unfounded.&#13;
Goetz&#13;
corn-&#13;
pus police director selected&#13;
(Campus   police)   department&#13;
as   being   more   than   just   en-&#13;
forcement.&#13;
He    sees&#13;
it&#13;
as&#13;
being   education   too,  working&#13;
with  the  students,   faculty  and&#13;
staff  to really  best  provide  for&#13;
the   security    and   crime   pre-&#13;
ventron  on the  campus."&#13;
~4&#13;
Neal  Ostrowski    has&#13;
""'4&#13;
formally   offered&#13;
the&#13;
~&#13;
and has  verbally    ac-&#13;
~&#13;
the offer.  Gary   Goetz,&#13;
~t&#13;
Chancelior    of   Ad-&#13;
~   .....tIon  and   Fiscal&#13;
Af.&#13;
~&#13;
Baldpaperwork   will  be&#13;
~n..;...Ostrowski thIs  week.&#13;
ill&#13;
""t'vwsklformally   accepts&#13;
~  _tion,&#13;
he   will    begin&#13;
~ug&#13;
Wielgat,   Assist·&#13;
!Ie.&#13;
tor  of  Campus    Po-&#13;
Ioii..~&#13;
continue  to  serve   as&#13;
,'ll&#13;
Director&#13;
until&#13;
that&#13;
~ald&#13;
the  final  recom.&#13;
~&#13;
n&#13;
to&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Illern.~Plan&#13;
was&#13;
made,&#13;
IIieI&#13;
-.tz&#13;
and  Mary   Trem·&#13;
lire.&#13;
Interviewed    the&#13;
final&#13;
I!i!lt&#13;
CRndidal!as a&#13;
second&#13;
~~&#13;
&amp;carch  and    screen&#13;
\Vas  responsible&#13;
&lt;for interviewing&#13;
the   original&#13;
candidates&#13;
and   selecting    the&#13;
final  three.&#13;
Goetz  said  that  he,  the  com-&#13;
mittee   and  Tremmell   were  all&#13;
pleased&#13;
with&#13;
the    .dectslon.&#13;
"We&#13;
we-re   very&#13;
impressed&#13;
with   his  background&#13;
and   list&#13;
of  priorities,&#13;
which   were   .an&#13;
excellent&#13;
balance&#13;
of   service&#13;
and&#13;
enforcement,&#13;
t,&#13;
Goetz&#13;
said.&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
worked&#13;
for    six&#13;
years   as  a  sheriff's   Deputy   in&#13;
Washington    County   and   dU;-&#13;
Ing  that   tiJlle  he  received   his&#13;
Bachelor's&#13;
degree    from   UW-&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
in   Law   Enforce·&#13;
ment.&#13;
Goetz&#13;
sald&#13;
he&#13;
then&#13;
served&#13;
with   JC   Penney&#13;
de·&#13;
partment&#13;
stores    as   the   head&#13;
investigating&#13;
officer.   Ostrow-&#13;
skl~ is&#13;
presently&#13;
serving&#13;
at&#13;
Marquette&#13;
UnIversity&#13;
as&#13;
a&#13;
Lieutenant&#13;
speciallzing&#13;
as   a&#13;
Crime&#13;
Prevention   &lt;Investlga-&#13;
tion  administrator.&#13;
"I  think  he'll  be  excellent   in&#13;
building   bridges,'(&#13;
Goetz&#13;
com·&#13;
mented.&#13;
"He&#13;
sees&#13;
the&#13;
He  said  a  lot  of credit  must&#13;
go  to  Doug  Wielget  "for  h?ld.&#13;
ing    together&#13;
the    operation.&#13;
We've   had  a  couple  of  medi-&#13;
cal   leaves    that    have   really&#13;
brought&#13;
some    intense    pres-&#13;
sure&#13;
to'   the    department&#13;
to&#13;
cover   the  rounds   and  get  ~e&#13;
job   done.   He's   done   well   m&#13;
terms&#13;
of   providing&#13;
for   the&#13;
parking   for  the  Regent   meet-&#13;
ing  (Oct.  6·7) which  was  real-&#13;
ly  a  stressful   time."&#13;
Goetz  said  the  ,miversity   is&#13;
looking&#13;
forward&#13;
to    having.&#13;
Wielgat   continue  as  Assis~t&#13;
Director.&#13;
"Tbe&#13;
partnership&#13;
between    Mr.   ostro~skl&#13;
and&#13;
Doug  is  ideal:  Tbere  s  a&#13;
good&#13;
balance    in  the   leadership    of&#13;
the  oepratlon,"   he  said.&#13;
. Ostrowski  ,was not  avallable&#13;
for&#13;
comment.&#13;
by  Kelly McKissick&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
The   first    recipient&#13;
of   the&#13;
coveted  Paul  R.  Schilling  Cup&#13;
was   announced   at   the   Park-&#13;
sIde  Student   Government   As-&#13;
sociation&#13;
(PSGA)&#13;
Senate&#13;
meeting  last  Friday  .&#13;
The  award   is  "dedicated    to&#13;
the   honor   and   memory"&#13;
of&#13;
the  address   UW Board  of Re-&#13;
gents&#13;
President&#13;
Paul&#13;
R.&#13;
Schllling  gave  at  the  Parkstde&#13;
20th    Anniversary&#13;
reception&#13;
for  the  Regents   on  Thursday,&#13;
Oct.  6.&#13;
PSGA  Vice-President&#13;
Ro3S&#13;
Pettlt,    creator   of' the  award,&#13;
said,  "Paul   dellvered   this  me-&#13;
morial    and   riveting    address&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
approximately&#13;
315&#13;
guests  while  under   the  exten-&#13;
uating   circumstance&#13;
of   sub-&#13;
stantial&#13;
consumption    of   fer-&#13;
mented  spirits."&#13;
Pettit&#13;
stresses&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
award   is  a  legitimate    honor,&#13;
"given&#13;
to&#13;
individuals&#13;
or&#13;
groups   for  outstanding    vocal&#13;
representation&#13;
of    the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents    at   Parkside.&#13;
It&#13;
is   a&#13;
demonstration    of the  appreci-&#13;
ation   and   recognition   by  the&#13;
students&#13;
for   those   who   put&#13;
time,   effort   and   energy   into&#13;
representation    of students.&#13;
,t&#13;
The   first    recipient&#13;
of   the&#13;
awarded&#13;
was&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
&lt;named'&#13;
G.  Gary  Grace,   As-&#13;
ststant    Chancelor    of  Student&#13;
Affalrs.   Grace   was  given  the&#13;
award   for  the   "excellent    job&#13;
he  did  in  trying   to  give   the&#13;
Board  of  Regents   a  Parkside&#13;
student&#13;
profile&#13;
in&#13;
four&#13;
minutes,"    Pettit   said.  He  ex-&#13;
plained   that   Grace   was   hon-&#13;
ored  to  learn   he  was  the  first&#13;
to be given  the  Schililng  Cup.&#13;
Tbe   award    will   remain    in&#13;
the  PSGA  office  along  with  a&#13;
llst    of   those&#13;
receiving&#13;
the&#13;
award.   Pettit   said  the  senm.&#13;
ing  Cup&#13;
will&#13;
be  awarded   "as&#13;
the  Senate  deems  appropriate&#13;
for   representation&#13;
worthy   of&#13;
recognition.  _&#13;
It&#13;
is  also  award-&#13;
ed  annually   to  the  best  repre-&#13;
sentative    of  students   over   a&#13;
period  of one year. '.'..&#13;
Inside•••&#13;
page 2&#13;
.&#13;
Another side of Urllted Council&#13;
.Non-trads have it made&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
Radio station ready to.rock&#13;
pageS&#13;
Counselor's Comer&#13;
"page&#13;
6&#13;
,: ,.  Assassin ,,-rmlnat .. friends&#13;
"page?!&#13;
2 Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 20,&#13;
1988 Ranger&#13;
f"&#13;
Il.::-YO_U_P&#13;
_Vi_8W_S&#13;
I&#13;
Another side of DC&#13;
To The&#13;
Editor:&#13;
I read with Interest the let-&#13;
ter to the editor from Fred&#13;
Monardl   concerning   the&#13;
UnIted COuncil issue. As a&#13;
two-term former delegate to&#13;
United&#13;
COuncil,&#13;
I&#13;
can&#13;
attest to&#13;
the fact that the participation&#13;
of ParksJde&#13;
in&#13;
UC&#13;
is&#13;
a corn-&#13;
plete waste of time  and&#13;
money.&#13;
It&#13;
Is not merely the cost per&#13;
student  per semester&#13;
(50")&#13;
but the mulU-thousand dollar&#13;
expense  that  PSGA  must&#13;
budget each year to send the&#13;
delegation  to the meetings.&#13;
The travel money, food and&#13;
lodging allowance would be&#13;
better  used to lobby local&#13;
legislators.&#13;
In&#13;
my two year experience&#13;
In UnIted COuncil, I found&#13;
that the issues discussed at&#13;
the end of the second year&#13;
were the very  same  ones&#13;
which were discussed at the&#13;
beglnnlng of my first year. I&#13;
hardly call&#13;
that&#13;
progress!&#13;
In&#13;
addition, Parkside's campus,&#13;
because&#13;
It&#13;
Is part of the&#13;
UW&#13;
System campus,&#13;
will&#13;
beneflt&#13;
from any financial aid&#13;
legts-&#13;
latlon or tuItion caps that&#13;
UnIted COuncil could possibly&#13;
successfully attain.&#13;
As&#13;
a former&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
chair.&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
imperative  that&#13;
Parkside students continue&#13;
to&#13;
be prudent In their spending&#13;
and that they keep the money&#13;
on campus where&#13;
it&#13;
can do&#13;
the most&#13;
good.&#13;
There were&#13;
many long faces after the&#13;
budgeting   process   last&#13;
spring; perhaps there would&#13;
be more money&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
around&#13;
lf UnIted COuncildid not take&#13;
such a bite.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
NO. GET OUT OF&#13;
UNITED COUNCIL!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jenny&#13;
carr&#13;
Fonner Editor,&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Cba1r,&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Senator&#13;
ALL RIGlrr-&#13;
IT&#13;
WAS PRE.11Y&#13;
FUNN'!' WHEN&#13;
GE.ORGE&#13;
BUSH&#13;
SAIO ON&#13;
SEPTf,MBER&#13;
SEVENn~  THAT&#13;
IT WAS pEARL&#13;
Hi\RBOR DAY.&#13;
Are students coming first?&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
In&#13;
the October&#13;
IS&#13;
issue of&#13;
the RaDger&#13;
I&#13;
read a "Nobody&#13;
asked me, but..;" column by&#13;
Mark ntompson of the Park·&#13;
olde&#13;
AcUvltlee&#13;
Board.&#13;
I&#13;
must&#13;
oay that&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
cl1Rappolnted&#13;
by&#13;
lhls&#13;
peroonal attack  on&#13;
me. Mark was supposedly re-&#13;
sponding&#13;
to&#13;
a column&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
September&#13;
29&#13;
issue of the&#13;
Baager.  but  somehow  It&#13;
turned&#13;
Into a personal attack&#13;
on&#13;
Jay Lewandowski.&#13;
U&#13;
Mark&#13;
Thompson, or anyone else for&#13;
that metter,&#13;
has&#13;
a question&#13;
for me they are welcome&#13;
to&#13;
come and&#13;
ask&#13;
me FACE&#13;
TO&#13;
FACE. The opInIon&#13;
I&#13;
stated In&#13;
my article was the same one&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
have been expressing&#13;
at the Parkslde UnIon Adviso-&#13;
ry&#13;
Board&#13;
meetings all year.&#13;
As Mark  so  apUy  ex-&#13;
plained:  The poll that&#13;
ran&#13;
about the cage was an OPIN·&#13;
ION poll. ThIs is Amerca,&#13;
Mark. Everyone is entlUed&#13;
to&#13;
their opln.lon.&#13;
I&#13;
merely chose&#13;
to&#13;
express my oplnion on an&#13;
Issue that  I felt strongly&#13;
about.&#13;
If&#13;
you remember my article&#13;
1&#13;
had onIy praise for P&#13;
AB&#13;
and&#13;
all the work that they have&#13;
done. Yet, In&#13;
his&#13;
arllc1e,&#13;
Mark  accuses  both  the&#13;
RaDger and myself of "bad&#13;
judgement" for not express-&#13;
Ing both sides of the Issue.&#13;
I&#13;
would Uke&#13;
to&#13;
refer to my&#13;
arti-&#13;
cle;&#13;
I&#13;
did state why P&#13;
AB&#13;
wants to put the cage back&#13;
up. Furthermore,&#13;
I&#13;
was stat-&#13;
Ing&#13;
my OPINION,&#13;
It&#13;
is nei-&#13;
ther the Ranger's responsibil-&#13;
ity.&#13;
nor&#13;
1151t&#13;
my own&#13;
to&#13;
state&#13;
both&#13;
sides of an issue when&#13;
an OPINION is being ex-&#13;
pressed.&#13;
Mark goes on&#13;
to&#13;
state that,&#13;
·'the reallssue&#13;
is...&#13;
whether or&#13;
not guests&#13;
will&#13;
be allowed In&#13;
that  are  under  the  legal&#13;
drinking age."&#13;
I&#13;
have to disagree. The&#13;
real&#13;
issue Is:&#13;
will&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents be allowed&#13;
to&#13;
have non-&#13;
student. under age guests ac-&#13;
company them&#13;
to&#13;
dances.&#13;
Perhaps  Mark  does  not&#13;
realize that the money to put&#13;
on&#13;
all&#13;
dances comes d.1recUy&#13;
out of the tuition that each&#13;
STUDENT  pays.  Perhaps&#13;
Mark does not realize that the&#13;
primary&#13;
responsibility   of&#13;
P&#13;
AB&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
provlde activities&#13;
for Parkside  students.  Per-&#13;
haps Mark does not&#13;
think&#13;
that&#13;
the students should receive&#13;
TOP prtortty when an event&#13;
is being&#13;
planned.&#13;
I&#13;
agree that some students&#13;
may  choose not to attent&#13;
events on campus&#13;
Ii&#13;
they can-&#13;
not bring a friend. But, In his&#13;
letter Mark talks about allow-&#13;
Ing&#13;
20&#13;
NON-STUDENTS Into&#13;
an event&#13;
that&#13;
was planned&#13;
and paid for by the&#13;
sru-&#13;
DENTS. C,mon Mark.  get&#13;
real!&#13;
If&#13;
we can allow the stu-&#13;
dents to bring a guest so they&#13;
have someone&#13;
to&#13;
talk&#13;
to.&#13;
let's&#13;
do&#13;
It.&#13;
but don't spend the&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
JIlOlje.)L.Oll,&#13;
NON·&#13;
STUDENTS_&#13;
THE&#13;
STU-&#13;
DENTS   MUST   COME&#13;
FIRST!&#13;
In&#13;
one of Mark's  closing&#13;
statements he uses the word,&#13;
"crazy"&#13;
in&#13;
reference&#13;
to&#13;
me.&#13;
I&#13;
would Uke to remind Mark of&#13;
the strong 1Il0vemenl' to get&#13;
the cage removed last year.&#13;
The current 'pollcy Is the re-&#13;
sult of months of work&#13;
by&#13;
many students, including my-&#13;
self and past P&#13;
AB&#13;
officers.&#13;
If&#13;
you ,re&#13;
calling&#13;
me crazy&#13;
Mark then at least&#13;
I&#13;
am not&#13;
alone.&#13;
I could go on&#13;
to&#13;
answer&#13;
each  misconception,  para-&#13;
graph  by  paragraph,   In&#13;
Mark's letter, but by now&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
you all realize  that&#13;
Mark Is trying&#13;
to&#13;
make this a&#13;
personal vendetta. I&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
stoop that low. Mark&#13;
is&#13;
the&#13;
only person I know that has&#13;
ever compared P&#13;
AB&#13;
to a&#13;
Nee-&#13;
Nazi organization!&#13;
PAB members recognized&#13;
See&#13;
Leiter,&#13;
p.&#13;
3&#13;
IT WAS FAIRLY&#13;
AMUSING  WHEl'l&#13;
HE JOKED ON&#13;
SEPTEMBER.&#13;
1WENTY'FIFTH&#13;
1HAT IT WM&#13;
C.HRISTMAS,&#13;
Non-trads have it made&#13;
Non.tradltlonal  students. We have&#13;
tt&#13;
made. We've&#13;
been&#13;
out In the world for awhile. In some Instances&#13;
a&#13;
long&#13;
while. so we know what we want out of&#13;
life.&#13;
We've had varying degrees of expertence dealing&#13;
With&#13;
people In counUess ways so we can easily handle different&#13;
teaching styles and class sttuatlons.  Our social ltves&#13;
are&#13;
well established so we don't look' to our time on&#13;
campus&#13;
as a time for Interactldn and growth.&#13;
We've done all these things and can now concenlrsts&#13;
fully and exclusively on our studies. Right?&#13;
Wrong! To many people - other students, faculty,&#13;
sci.&#13;
mlnlstators, family and friends - these truths seem&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
self-evldent. However,&#13;
if&#13;
you could climb Into the mind&#13;
of&#13;
one of us "non-trads" you would see how far from&#13;
the&#13;
troth those assumpttons can be.&#13;
We come to school&#13;
with&#13;
just as much baggage as every·&#13;
one else. Most of us are back In the academic&#13;
realm&#13;
be-&#13;
cause we are at a' turnlng point In our lives. Weoften&#13;
come&#13;
in&#13;
search of new direction or&#13;
with&#13;
a direction&#13;
in&#13;
mind that changes as SWiftly as that of the traditional&#13;
freshman.&#13;
WhIle we do have social lives and support systems,&#13;
many times they are not able to absorb the unique&#13;
experi-&#13;
ence of being back&#13;
in&#13;
school. Yet. because of lifeexperl-&#13;
ences,&#13;
we know how important it Is to take full advantsge&#13;
of an oppportunlty like education.&#13;
We want more than reading and writing, We've come&#13;
to&#13;
a place In our lives that enables us to celebrate the d1/fer·.&#13;
ences In people and we want&#13;
to&#13;
be a part of the&#13;
eelebra-&#13;
tion. We are trying to tie all the pieces together somehow,&#13;
to&#13;
add a new facet while maintaining the old ones,&#13;
Being a&#13;
non-trad&#13;
has its benefits. We do have&#13;
a&#13;
long&#13;
hls·&#13;
tory&#13;
to&#13;
draw on when In new&#13;
situattons,&#13;
professors seem&#13;
fairly approachable  and we usually have a support&#13;
sys·&#13;
tem willing&#13;
to&#13;
help us even though they rarely understsnd&#13;
us.&#13;
But being an older student, by virtue of itself, doesn't&#13;
ma~e our time in school easier. We want as&#13;
much&#13;
as&#13;
the&#13;
tadltional&#13;
student,&#13;
maybe more. We want it&#13;
all,&#13;
Wehaves&#13;
lot&#13;
to&#13;
offer but we also want to listen. So the next time&#13;
you&#13;
see an "old person" sitting&#13;
in&#13;
the coffee shop&#13;
come&#13;
over&#13;
and say&#13;
"Hi".&#13;
Let's&#13;
talk.&#13;
Ask me what&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
to&#13;
bs&#13;
when&#13;
I&#13;
grow&#13;
up,&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron ......•..••....•.......•...  Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kelly&#13;
McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Laura Pestka ••.•..•........ Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Kevin  Zirkelbsch   ...........•.........•..&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
John  Kehoe  .•.....•..•.••..•..•.••.•.....   Photo  Editor&#13;
Christine  Dejno&#13;
Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
"&#13;
AdviSOf&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Cratg Simpkins&#13;
Circulation  Manager&#13;
John M~uter&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Curt Shlrcel&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Dayid&#13;
Boyd, Sheila&#13;
Bugal~ki,  Ruben Carbajal,  Dan&#13;
C~lapetta, Tim&#13;
Cook,&#13;
DaVId Debish, Tricia Ebner.&#13;
MIChelle  Gasl.  Lyndssy.  Knosll,  George  Koenig,  Mark&#13;
Hall, Abu Hasse,".  DaVid Heller, Jill Janovicz,  Sharon&#13;
Krause, t:teather Malzahn, Karen McKissick,  Geraldine&#13;
M.urawski, carl~   Newman, George&#13;
Otson,&#13;
Mike&#13;
PIC8ZO,&#13;
Scott Si"i!"f,&#13;
Rob Twardy, Daniel Vsllin&#13;
Mtchelle Van KOnlngsve!d&#13;
,&#13;
~:nagn~~o~:~~~nl:~~pe~~tl~dhb&#13;
Y&#13;
d&#13;
students of UW·Par~ide. who are solely responsiblefor&#13;
its ~&#13;
=:&#13;
days.&#13;
.&#13;
IS&#13;
e  every Thursday durmg the academic year except over br~&#13;
liN&#13;
le~~~~~~t~:   :~itor&#13;
Will.&#13;
be accepted only if they are typed, double-_spacedand&#13;
350&#13;
wordS ~r 1eSS',AI&#13;
held upon reques~~ned,With a telephone number Included for verification purposes. Nameswill&#13;
be&#13;
with'&#13;
f=~e~~eserves&#13;
the&#13;
right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
Deadline for all letters  and  I&#13;
sil'&#13;
.&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
•&#13;
c&#13;
as&#13;
led ads, IS Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
All correspondence shOUld&#13;
be&#13;
dd&#13;
nosha WI 53141. Telephone 4f4lt53-eSS2ed2st70:ERanger,UW-Parkside,  Box 2000,&#13;
Ke-&#13;
Ing).&#13;
( dltonal)&#13;
Of&#13;
414/553-2295  (Adver1JS-&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 17, issue 7, October 20, 1988</text>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Multifaceted Union facelift project is underway</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="91070">
              <text>,&#13;
Atlong last, remodeling of&#13;
theUnionIs underway. As Is&#13;
common knowledge. Parkside'sUnionis&#13;
In dire need of&#13;
renovation.According to Bill&#13;
Niebuhr, director of the&#13;
Union.the remodeling project&#13;
will be undertaken In stages.&#13;
No definite timetable has&#13;
beenestablished.&#13;
Neihburstated that the processwill&#13;
be done in segments&#13;
to sidestep the additional&#13;
coststhat would be Incurred&#13;
byorganizing the remodeling&#13;
processas one project. The&#13;
cost of implementing a one&#13;
part renovation scheme, on&#13;
thescale of the Union, would&#13;
dictatethat the State be involved.&#13;
Remodeling the Unton will&#13;
include recarpetlng certain&#13;
areas, painting or wallpaper.&#13;
ing many walls, and installlng&#13;
new furniture in conferencerooms.&#13;
According to the .&#13;
plan,a majority of the Union&#13;
willbe renovated.&#13;
The cafeteria .will undergo&#13;
a few changes. IIIn an atThree&#13;
Thursday, teBe I---'D~Cq~~-.1&#13;
j,Jf iJrFJ ~ [)JJ [M ~~~[R1~~uW(Q)[FW~~~(Q).[M~~ [M=~~[R1~~~'[Q)~&#13;
Atlong last... ..&#13;
MultifacetedUnionfacelift project is underway---&#13;
by Kel1lePaccagnella&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
The face of Union Square will soon be changing&#13;
tempt to rid the cafeteria of&#13;
the mllltary-ilke atmosphere,&#13;
we hope to have dividers and&#13;
planters placed In the dining&#13;
area," stated Ntebuhr. This&#13;
will stlll allow maximum&#13;
seating for special occasions&#13;
and banquets. The serving&#13;
area of the cafeteria will also&#13;
be renovated with new menu&#13;
Parkside profs&#13;
~&#13;
JOhn Stockwell, Parkside&#13;
vice chancellor, announced&#13;
day that three professors&#13;
have been named to newly&#13;
created deans' positions as&#13;
part of the University's academic&#13;
reorganization.&#13;
They are: Eugene NorWOOd,Racine,&#13;
dean of the&#13;
Schoolof Liberal Arts; Ben&#13;
Greenbaum. Racine, dean of&#13;
the School of Science and&#13;
TeChnology; and Barbara&#13;
Shade, Racine, dean of the&#13;
School of Education. The&#13;
three join Beverlee Anderson&#13;
Whowas appointed dean of&#13;
theSchoolof Business In 1987.&#13;
Deans Will oversee budget,&#13;
CUrriculum and personal matlers&#13;
in their respective&#13;
schools.&#13;
Alsonamed to new administrative&#13;
positions were Robert&#13;
Canary, Racine, associate&#13;
\1lncechancellor for graduate&#13;
s dies and planning and&#13;
Laura Gellott, Racine, associpage&#13;
2•••&#13;
The Cost of&#13;
Apathy&#13;
en Greenbaum&#13;
ate vice chancellor for undergraduate&#13;
studies.&#13;
"The leadership of the new&#13;
deans and associate vice&#13;
chancellors is crucial to the&#13;
succesS of Parkside's acapage&#13;
3... .&#13;
: Student Becomes&#13;
MIllionaire&#13;
boards.&#13;
Another change that will&#13;
occur In the building is the&#13;
refurbishing of meeting&#13;
rooms. All of the meeting&#13;
rooms will be reearpeted. The&#13;
rooms wlll be either painted&#13;
or wallpapered and will receive&#13;
new furniture.&#13;
As most students have&#13;
to fill new&#13;
demic reorganization," Stockwell&#13;
said. "We have a strong&#13;
pool of candidates and this&#13;
made the deciston for fllllng&#13;
the positions difficult. Nor-&#13;
-wood, Greenbaum, Shade, canary&#13;
and GeUott are solid&#13;
leaders and will be instrumental&#13;
In malntaintng and&#13;
building the strength of the&#13;
University's academic goals."&#13;
Norwood, former head of&#13;
the division of humanities and&#13;
a professor of German, has&#13;
been at Parkslde since 1970.&#13;
He holds a doctorate in German&#13;
from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.Madison. . The&#13;
School of Liberal Arts will&#13;
comprise the former divisions&#13;
of behavioral science. humanlties,&#13;
social science and&#13;
fine arts.&#13;
The School of Science and&#13;
Engineering replaces the&#13;
divisions of science and engtneering&#13;
science. Greenebaum,&#13;
currently an associate&#13;
page 4•••&#13;
WLBR Plans&#13;
to Expand&#13;
Apr.&#13;
seen, the Ree Center facelift&#13;
hs begun (i.e., the new ceiling).&#13;
Further Rec Center improvements&#13;
are in the works.&#13;
One of the most obvious&#13;
and appreciated renovations&#13;
will be that of the Union&#13;
Square. The entire Square&#13;
will be remodeled, from a&#13;
new menu to seating arrange.&#13;
merits. Niebuhr said many of&#13;
the ideas for making over the&#13;
Square have come from students.&#13;
Many feel removing&#13;
the existing booths and partlstons&#13;
would increase the ca.&#13;
pacity and esthetics of the&#13;
room.&#13;
Another addendum to the&#13;
present-day Square would be&#13;
a television/lounge area. Nelbuhr&#13;
stated, "Currently, we&#13;
don't have the proper equipment&#13;
for everyday use down&#13;
in the Square. If we furnish&#13;
students with these facilities&#13;
and eqUipment, it would allow&#13;
them a place to relax and&#13;
watch TV."&#13;
Another change that may&#13;
occur is the availability of alcohoUc&#13;
beverages in the&#13;
Square. "Because of the&#13;
change in the drinking age,&#13;
e,&#13;
Vol. XVII. No. 25&#13;
and the results that can occur&#13;
from the drinking laws. beer&#13;
sales have gone down&#13;
dramatically," stated NIebuhr.&#13;
He commented that&#13;
there could be a posslbl1lty of&#13;
having beer and wine avallable&#13;
for special occasions only,&#13;
such as comedians.&#13;
If all goes according to&#13;
plan, the Union Bazaar won't&#13;
be excluded from the Union&#13;
refurbishment crusade. NLe·&#13;
buhr plans to hold a meeting&#13;
With the Parkslde Union Activlty&#13;
Board, Res Hall Board&#13;
and the AdVisory Board, to&#13;
work on redeflntng the Bazaar's&#13;
function and runcttonalIty&#13;
as a facl1lty.&#13;
Niebuhr would like to see&#13;
the Bazaar remade into a&#13;
lounge area with permanent&#13;
furniture. "Obviously, the&#13;
Union Bazaar area 18a large&#13;
space. This space could be&#13;
used more efficiently. Parkside&#13;
could always use another&#13;
area for special occasions,"&#13;
stated Niebuhr.&#13;
Because the remodeling&#13;
project Is being executed In&#13;
stages. the tolal cost of the&#13;
project Is unknown.&#13;
dean positions--&#13;
Barbara Shade&#13;
dean of faculty, head of the&#13;
science divisIon and a professor&#13;
of physics, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1970. He holds&#13;
a doctorate In physics from&#13;
Harvard University.&#13;
Shade earned a doctorate In&#13;
page 8•.•&#13;
Sex Questionnaire&#13;
Results &amp; Classlfleds&#13;
education from the UW·Madlson&#13;
and came to Parkslde In&#13;
1981. She has headed the&#13;
education division since 1986.&#13;
canary, associate dean of&#13;
faculty and professor of Eng·&#13;
lIsh, has been at Parkside&#13;
since 1970. He has a doctorate&#13;
In English from the trruverslty&#13;
of ChIcago. canary will&#13;
oversee Parkslde's graduate&#13;
studies and grants program.&#13;
He also will be responsible&#13;
for academic planntng and&#13;
scheduling.&#13;
Gellott. assistant profeS80r&#13;
of history. joined Parkslde In&#13;
1982. She holds a doctorate In&#13;
history from the UW·Madlsian.&#13;
She will coordinate academJc&#13;
advisement and student&#13;
policy issues. general&#13;
education. freshman seminar.&#13;
honors. interdisciplinary centers&#13;
and faculty development&#13;
lnItiatives.&#13;
These new positions w1lJ become&#13;
effective July 3.&#13;
page 10•••&#13;
Sports! Sports!&#13;
Sports!&#13;
-&#13;
2 Thursday, Apr. 6, 1989 Ranger&#13;
lour view- I&#13;
The opportunity costs&#13;
that are lost in apathy&#13;
Why does Parkside have a student newspaper?&#13;
Well, It's lhts ltrne of year again.&#13;
The Ranger has embarked upon the annual task of selecting&#13;
and appointing the upcoming year's editor-inehlef.&#13;
As with any organization. times of changeover are&#13;
also times of self-evaluation, times of reckoning.&#13;
The Ranger Is, above all else. a facllltator of education;&#13;
a learning experience that augments and enhances the&#13;
classroom curriculum. This act aside, your student newspaper&#13;
exists as a service; we're here to serve you. The&#13;
Ranger Is by no means a standard by which other journalistic&#13;
endeavors are jUdged. Be that as It may, as an orga.n1zatlon&#13;
we are better than the Individual talents and&#13;
efforts of our staff. And foremost, the experience of being&#13;
more than just a student is rewarding and educational in&#13;
lis own right.&#13;
The jist of the drive Is simply lhts: Involvement reaps&#13;
benefits much greater Ulan the effort invested.&#13;
As a newspaper, the propensity exists to affect a great&#13;
many people on a regular timetable. As the chief officer&#13;
of an orga.n1zation, the level of Involvement Is bounded&#13;
only by the number of hours In a day. On the reverse side&#13;
of the same coin, the benefits harvested are proportlonatIy&#13;
and equally as high.&#13;
Applications for the position of editor-In-chief are available&#13;
in The Ranger ottice. by JO'n Hearron&#13;
Nobod~Jmb&#13;
Campus Police is being&#13;
cuffed by penny pinchers&#13;
You're silting around&#13;
waiting for Campus Police to&#13;
respond to your call (be it a&#13;
key assist or noise complaint&#13;
or rescue) and the response is&#13;
a long time In coming. To&#13;
your dismay, you laler discover&#13;
that the delay was&#13;
caused by a faulty squad car.&#13;
Fortunately, these failures&#13;
have not come at critical&#13;
times. But they have happened.&#13;
Faulty squads and equipment&#13;
are not a new occurrence&#13;
on this campus. Symptoms&#13;
of the problem begin&#13;
with mlsadjusted headlights&#13;
and broken window cranks.&#13;
Unfortunately, the problem&#13;
does not end with worn out&#13;
tires and squads thai just&#13;
don't start.&#13;
In fact, the symptoms get&#13;
worse. For instance, a squad&#13;
was recently made unuseable&#13;
by an engine failure In the&#13;
middle of a single officer&#13;
shift. As recently as this past&#13;
Friday night the drlverslde&#13;
door came off of its hinges on&#13;
squad 15.&#13;
What Is the problem with&#13;
Administration? Don't they&#13;
view the maintenence of&#13;
Campus Police vehicles and&#13;
equipment with the same priority,&#13;
11 not more, as the&#13;
aging waterpipes In WLLC or&#13;
the Phy Ed pool?&#13;
Keep in mind. in a medical&#13;
emergency such as a stroke.&#13;
heart attack, seizure or accident,&#13;
Campus Pollee Is the&#13;
first to respond. How can&#13;
they respond if they can 'I&#13;
reach the victlm(s) because&#13;
they don't have a safe, let&#13;
alone. working car?&#13;
Ii's shocking to 1hInk thai&#13;
the higher echelon of Admin.&#13;
Istration would attempt to tie&#13;
the hands of the fine men and&#13;
women of the Campus Pollce&#13;
department.&#13;
Administration Is short&#13;
changing Campus Pollee on&#13;
the new equipment In addition&#13;
to dragging their feet on&#13;
needed repairs of existing,&#13;
alllng equipment.&#13;
How can we expect David&#13;
Ostrowski, director of&#13;
Campus Police, to provide&#13;
quality service when he Isn't&#13;
given what is needed to keep&#13;
his department In working&#13;
order? Another question to be&#13;
asked is who will take the fall&#13;
when someone gets killed or&#13;
injured?&#13;
It certainly won't be those&#13;
truly responsible: the penny.&#13;
pinchers in administration.&#13;
~~L-,~ '. e:L.:::::Z:4.&#13;
1HE EfFECTS Of 'TIlE EXXONVALDEZ OIL SPILL CONTINUE 10&#13;
Pool project&#13;
rebuttal&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
After reading the Iwo articles&#13;
in the March 23 edition of&#13;
the Ranger regarding the&#13;
swimming pool project, I&#13;
wanted to present an Informed&#13;
viewpoint on the matter.&#13;
The administration and&#13;
staff involved in this construction&#13;
project, as well as&#13;
all others, are dedicated and&#13;
concerned professionals. Despite&#13;
the chains of bureaucracy&#13;
that bind, hinder and&#13;
inhibit I their performance,&#13;
they continually strive to provide&#13;
this University with their&#13;
utmost concern.&#13;
Uninformed criticism on&#13;
any SUbject indicates a complete&#13;
lack of Intelligence, and&#13;
certainly is counter-produc,&#13;
tive.&#13;
My qualifications: 29 years&#13;
of "hands on" experience in&#13;
the . construction industry,&#13;
rangmg from laborer. to&#13;
Project Manager and General&#13;
Manager; responsible for&#13;
Commerical, Industrial, and&#13;
MIlItary contracts throughout&#13;
the United States.&#13;
Bill Horner&#13;
Full time student&#13;
Senator/PSGA&#13;
Student assistant to&#13;
Facilities Engineer .&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jon Hearron Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Kelly McKissick News Editor&#13;
Kellie Paceagnella Asst. News Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann Sports Editor&#13;
John Kehoe Photo Editor&#13;
Michelle Gaal Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Stu Rubner .............••....................... Advisor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF c . S· ki ralg Imp Ins Business Manager&#13;
Brad Behhng .....••................. Advertising Manager&#13;
John Marter Distribution Manager&#13;
. GENERAL STAFF&#13;
David ~oyd, Christine Dejno, Dave Debtsh, Abu&#13;
HasselO,.Sharon Kra!JS8, Jeff Lewis, Karen McKissic&#13;
Chuck Might, Geraldine Murawski, Scott Singer 8'11&#13;
Topper, R.0b Twardy, Daniel Valfin. Vickie Pund~a~k&#13;
Jeff Red~ICk, Da~n Malland, Felix Konklin, Suzann '&#13;
McCormIck, Louie Tenore, Mario Lemeiux.&#13;
~a~~~ ~swritten and edit~ by students of UW-Parkside,who are solely responsiblefor its&#13;
d~Ys. ontent. It IS published every Thursday during the academic year except overbreakli&#13;
letters to the editor w·1I b . . ...&#13;
letters must be' I . e accepted only If they are typed. double-spaced and 350VM .....&#13;
held upon reqlJe~~~ned,With a telephone number Included for verification purposes.Names&#13;
fa~~~oe~~eservesthe right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or deDeadlinefor&#13;
all letters a d I lf . .&#13;
Thursday. ' n c assi led ads, IS Monday at 10 a.m. for publicatIOn&#13;
n~~h~ow~g~ndenceshould be"'ddressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside, Box 2000, Keing).&#13;
141. Telephone 414/553-22B7 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Advertis-&#13;
&gt;.&#13;
The Ranger is -now&#13;
accepting application&#13;
for the&#13;
position of&#13;
Editor-/n-Chief&#13;
for the&#13;
19.89 - 1990 academic y&#13;
The Editor-In-Chief job is ap&#13;
position and may be open to&#13;
Parkside student carrying 6 c&#13;
or more.&#13;
Qualifications must include:&#13;
• Strong Grammar Skills&#13;
• Writing Ability&#13;
• Positive Attitude&#13;
Applications may be picked up in t&#13;
Ranger office, which is located in&#13;
coffee shoppe area, Room WLLC 01&#13;
soC undergoes Ranger Thursday, Apr. 6, 19893&#13;
by Kelly McKissick changes with new leaders&#13;
News Editor&#13;
student Organizations&#13;
cll (SOC) will undergo&#13;
coun tnternal and external&#13;
~ges under the direction&#13;
f 'Isnew President, Rhonda&#13;
o 'ck and Vice President,&#13;
Bra Beth Israel·Casey.&#13;
~Ck and Israel-Casey ran&#13;
IIllcontestedfor their' posltiOnsat&#13;
the April :VSOC meet.&#13;
~ ~ura KITchoff won fue&#13;
officeof secretary. They wlll&#13;
takeoffice at the next meet-&#13;
~gon Monday, April 17, reo&#13;
plSCfngPrestdent Kevin Polheber&#13;
and Vice President&#13;
WandaLeiting.&#13;
Brock,a juntor majoring in&#13;
English,has represented the&#13;
Wargamersclub in SOC for&#13;
Ibepast five semesters. Beforerunning&#13;
for SOC Prestdent,she&#13;
was Vice President&#13;
01Wargamers.&#13;
As President, Brock will be&#13;
responsiblefor running the&#13;
SOCmeetings, keeping the&#13;
organizationin contact with&#13;
!be campus as a representa.&#13;
tiveto the administration and&#13;
maintainingor changing SOC&#13;
poUcies.I 'Personally, I am an&#13;
ambitiousperson and would&#13;
like,as President, to try to&#13;
makeIt to at least one of&#13;
eachof the club's Individual&#13;
meetingsnext year.' I she&#13;
said.&#13;
Shesought the Presidency.&#13;
becauseshe enjoys working&#13;
with people. "You can see so&#13;
much potential with SOC,&#13;
especially When you're ento&#13;
see SOC as a whole sponsoring&#13;
things. This year they&#13;
sponsored the fUm 'Ibe Color&#13;
Purple for Women's HIstory&#13;
Month and a few lecturers on&#13;
campus. I think that's always&#13;
a good idea.' I&#13;
Israel-Casey, a freshman&#13;
majoring in Nursing, has&#13;
been involved in SOC in a&#13;
number of ways this year.&#13;
She was chairman of the&#13;
committee to plan AIDS&#13;
Awareness Day on campus&#13;
and has participated as a&#13;
member of the Sociology&#13;
club.&#13;
She wanted to become Vice&#13;
President because she&#13;
"wanted to learn more about&#13;
how to deal with the beauracratic&#13;
system and how to get&#13;
things accomplished. I want&#13;
some practical life expertence&#13;
and skllls. Also. I feel I&#13;
have a lot to offer the organization."&#13;
One of Israel-C3.sey's major&#13;
responsibilities will be to run&#13;
the Budget and Review Oommlttee&#13;
(B &amp; RC) for SOC. She&#13;
presently serves on the committee&#13;
and explained that It&#13;
will undergo some major&#13;
guideline revisions next year.&#13;
B &amp; RC aids the individual&#13;
clubs in their budgeting process&#13;
each year. "The B " RC&#13;
guidelines definitely need&#13;
some changes. There are a&#13;
few rough spots In them," she&#13;
saId.&#13;
1srael-Casey feels that a&#13;
good addition to SOC meet.&#13;
ings would be the particlpa.&#13;
tion of major status organlza.&#13;
nons, administration from the&#13;
Student Life/Student Actlvtties&#13;
office and possibly Cnancetlor&#13;
Sheila Kaplan. "I&#13;
would really Ilke to see the&#13;
major status organizations&#13;
take advantage of tnetr- voting&#13;
power," she said. "I think&#13;
that If all major status organlzations&#13;
work together, a lot&#13;
more can get accomplished"&#13;
One message she would like&#13;
to relay to the students Is that&#13;
th.ey should get Involved with&#13;
the clubs and organlzatiolUl.&#13;
"I've learned a lot of sktJa&#13;
through my experience, jusl&#13;
in dealing with things In a&#13;
protesstonar manner, ,. Israel ..&#13;
Casey stated.&#13;
Brock's message to the students&#13;
Is, "I'm accessible. If&#13;
someone wants to see me or&#13;
write me a letter, I'm more&#13;
than happy to listen. I want to&#13;
know what people think about&#13;
SOC, because If there Is only&#13;
one person nmn1ng Ute whole&#13;
show, it defeats U1.epurpose&#13;
of representing everyone."&#13;
photo by John KoIloe&#13;
Rhonda Brock (Iell) is the new SOC President and Mara Beth I....&#13;
rael-Casey is the VIce President,&#13;
compassing as much of the&#13;
student body as we do. I've&#13;
had fun with SOC so far, I&#13;
just wanted my shot at It,"&#13;
Brock said.&#13;
Although Brock claims that&#13;
she does not want to make&#13;
any major changes in the&#13;
way SOC is run, she would&#13;
like to expand the, organtza,&#13;
tion to make it more visible&#13;
on campus. "The general student&#13;
body either hasn't heard&#13;
of or doesn't care about SOC.&#13;
I think that's kind of a pity&#13;
because we are supposed to&#13;
represent such a wide range&#13;
of people," Brock said. "I&#13;
would like to make us more&#13;
understood and accessrble.:&#13;
that's what SOC is for."&#13;
She plans on implementing&#13;
these image changes next&#13;
semester. "The Recruitment&#13;
Fair is always a very good&#13;
place for the clubs to be recognized,&#13;
II she said. "I'd like&#13;
BE&#13;
GRADS&#13;
Studentbecomes "millionaire"&#13;
tition were actual stocks, but&#13;
were not actually traded on&#13;
Wall Street. "The stocks were&#13;
traded for real in the compe- BrianParagamlan, a Park- trtion, but did not affect the&#13;
sidesenior, not only ranked actual trade market in any&#13;
sixthout of 11,252 university way," claimed Paragamian.&#13;
'tudentsat the AT&amp;T oonegt- Paragamlan, a finance&#13;
ate Investment Challenge, he major. said he became interalso&#13;
became a millionare in ested in the competition when&#13;
fourmonths. a friend saw an ad in the Wall&#13;
UnfOrlunately, the money Street Journal and Informed&#13;
investedwas not real. Each him of the competition. To&#13;
stUdentwas given $500,000 to enter the competition Paraga-&#13;
'tart out wtth. The $500,000 mtan had to pay a $60 admlswas&#13;
not actual currency I but siem.fee.&#13;
forthe purpose of the competitionIt&#13;
was accepted to buy Paragamlan turned $500,000&#13;
andsen stocka. . into a grand total of&#13;
$1,331,652. The top ten stulrolndlvidual&#13;
competitors dents were awarded with a&#13;
IIIacross the country had one week trip to New York&#13;
to set up their own portfolio and the Bahamas in addition&#13;
~fSlocks,and commence with to dividing $65,500 In cash&#13;
uYingand selling. All trans- prizes.&#13;
~Cretion of the competitors. actionswere Initiated at the .--------;;:;-~;:;;n.W~~------~~=J&#13;
~..;~s::c~~:~:' ~I ao~a~~ Ay-GpOIZOZ~~tICKSTOPVIDEOS&#13;
~,OOo'PIUScompetitors were&#13;
th sponslble for dealing with . PIZZA SPECIAL&#13;
Ine.trslock brokers and keep· ERED&#13;
ing traCk of their stock hold· \ $3 00 OFF PIZZA DELiV&#13;
g. '00 OFF PIZZA PICKED·UP&#13;
, $4. . ERY OF PIZZA AND VIDEOS IS FREE&#13;
ac'For fOur months I sat TDOELTIVHEPARKSIDE CAMPUS.&#13;
uprc:ss from the phone booths HUR ONLY&#13;
ho In MainPlace and did my SPECIAL RUNS FROM MON. THRU T •&#13;
a:ework, call1ng my broker 551-0300&#13;
p ut tWice an hour." stated 1543 SHERIDAN RD •&#13;
tharagamaIn. Paragamlan explained that· l~~~~~---_:'=--------__====:&#13;
e stocks used In the compe.&#13;
by Kellie Paecagnella&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
We've got the&#13;
Hot Ford&#13;
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of your choice&#13;
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Take It&#13;
L&#13;
Or&#13;
eave I&#13;
-..:== ...-&#13;
data&#13;
systems - ,.&#13;
One of the best kept secrets&#13;
of the University Is the stu4ent&#13;
nm radio station,&#13;
WLBR. Over the past year&#13;
w'LBR nas undergone a&#13;
tra.n.sfonnsUon from eontusion&#13;
and scandal to a smooth&#13;
running organization preparIng&#13;
for the future.&#13;
Presently, the statIon Is&#13;
prepartng Itself for the upcommg&#13;
. r, "We're starting&#13;
our setee on process (or new&#13;
• tatloo Manager:' said John&#13;
Kehoe. cnaimen of the board.&#13;
Appll uons for the poslUon&#13;
are being accepted now in&#13;
nlon 209. \~'LBR (Union&#13;
2031. the Ranger. and In the&#13;
P. G otrlce unUl April 17.&#13;
..A lot of people don·t know&#13;
110'" exist because we just&#13;
bl'Olldcast to the aee center,&#13;
and th re are Inherent limitations&#13;
In that," sald Kehoe.&#13;
According to Kehoe. an emphasts&#13;
1a being placed on&#13;
promotion of the station so&#13;
that more students will be&#13;
aware of the listening opportunity.&#13;
• \\ e try to meet the needs&#13;
of the diversified audience,"&#13;
sald Kehoe. Iuch of this Is&#13;
obtained by alloWIng the OJ's&#13;
some creative freedom. The&#13;
OJ's. whO are volunteers, are&#13;
not restricted to a specific&#13;
play l1.at. "we encourage the&#13;
DJ's to brtng In the type of&#13;
musIc that they like to ptay .&#13;
Dave Rebro (left) and Jeff Relkowakl entertain liat......&#13;
WLBRbroadcaatlng room.&#13;
it's part of our variety."&#13;
"The music choice Is varted&#13;
from OJ to OJ. You can usually&#13;
find something you like&#13;
listening to," said Kehoe. It Is&#13;
this variety that Kehoe and&#13;
WLBR want to bring to a&#13;
wider audience.&#13;
Plans are being made to&#13;
hire a consultant to analyze&#13;
the situation and report on&#13;
how to best expand the scope&#13;
of the operation. "We're looking&#13;
at something we can expand&#13;
with. and something&#13;
that would be cost effective,"&#13;
Kehoe said, The optlons being&#13;
consIdered Include FM: or AM&#13;
transmissIon, carrIer current,&#13;
and cable casting.&#13;
The most desirable medium&#13;
would be FM, but It must&#13;
flrst be determined if there Is&#13;
an available frequency in this&#13;
area. If achieved, broadcast&#13;
would be at most a local exper-renee.&#13;
Operatlng at "&#13;
power level It WOU"I'd~:=~&#13;
campus and a&#13;
communities,&#13;
No matter what m&#13;
decided on WLBR 1a&#13;
Ing their horlzona III&#13;
ways. They will be&#13;
Ing to the College MIllIe&#13;
nal (CMJ). "We're 1aaI... i1&#13;
getting CMJ. It·. a ve.,.&#13;
tool for showing record&#13;
panles that we do 0IlIIt&#13;
operate on a regular&#13;
With that they are&#13;
more wlJltng to Bend...&#13;
rIal to use," Kefwe uJd.&#13;
Kehoe saId he 1a veIJ&#13;
pressed with the otatr.&#13;
really quite proud of till&#13;
pie working up there.&#13;
done a good job and&#13;
gether - they are wlIIt&#13;
radio statIon 1a au&#13;
They work day In _&#13;
and deserve the crediL&#13;
Psychology student creates&#13;
career information center&#13;
by Kelly. IcKJssIck&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Many psychology students&#13;
do not realize the number of&#13;
job fields In which their degree&#13;
W\Il be applicable. Janetle&#13;
DeChant will provide&#13;
for these students through a&#13;
career and job information&#13;
center to be held during&#13;
April.&#13;
DeChant, a psychology&#13;
major graduating In Decem.&#13;
ber, Is presently an intern for&#13;
career counselor Beverly&#13;
Burnell In the Career Planning&#13;
and Placement office.&#13;
DeChant saw a need for guld.&#13;
ance for psychology majors&#13;
and developed the informa.&#13;
tion center program, Ute&#13;
Career and Job Information&#13;
Center. It W\Il be held every&#13;
Tuesday In April In Molinaro&#13;
275Afrom 10 a.m.-3 p.m.&#13;
She was been working on&#13;
the program since the beginning&#13;
of the semester. •'I've&#13;
been ta.lk.1ngwith the professors&#13;
and fellow psychology&#13;
majors to see what is needed&#13;
for the program. Also, I real.&#13;
Iy was not quite sure of what&#13;
I could do with my psychology&#13;
major, so I developed the&#13;
VoD-SCOij-,.l WLBR prepares for expansi&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Janette DeChant&#13;
program to help others while&#13;
I answered my own questions&#13;
~bout the field," she said, It&#13;
IS Intended for psychology&#13;
majors or those considering a&#13;
psychology major. DeChant&#13;
said it is not intended to serve&#13;
as a job placement seminar&#13;
but rather an informatlonai&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The Career and Job Information&#13;
Center will provide Information&#13;
about liberal arts&#13;
programs and what ...&#13;
done wIth them; ~&#13;
and volunteer oppo~&#13;
methods of chooalng IIIlI&#13;
plying for graduate&#13;
the labor market and&#13;
guides for job aeek.....&#13;
Chant will also have ~&#13;
tion available on the&#13;
Plarming and Placement&#13;
ter.&#13;
An added benefit to till&#13;
gram will be the srol&#13;
computer, which Is a job&#13;
vey program. Studenll&#13;
are not certain of their&#13;
field respond to a su",",&#13;
computer generates.&#13;
on the students' lnteresta.&#13;
computer W\Il provide&#13;
market suggestions. I&#13;
also be able to refer&#13;
to other sources for&#13;
career counseling,"&#13;
saId.&#13;
"I really did not _&#13;
I wanted to do with •&#13;
chology major, and I&#13;
there is a lot of negaUve&#13;
tton to the fIeld," """&#13;
"There are really more&#13;
opportunities out thera&#13;
you know about. The&#13;
is an affirmaUon that&#13;
are jobs out there. It ....&#13;
VIde a more opumllllO&#13;
of the field. "&#13;
1" ce/e~ratl~q' and recognition&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News ,Editor&#13;
&lt;!ampus organizations win&#13;
bavethe opportunity to recog.&#13;
pJze !heir outstanding memo&#13;
berswhlle celebrating a suecessfUlyear&#13;
at the 1989 StudelltAwards&#13;
Banquet, to be&#13;
heldFrida)', May 5,&#13;
The festivities will begin&#13;
with a reception In the Union&#13;
D!Jrlng Room at 6 p.m. Dinner&#13;
will be served at 6: 45&#13;
p,m" and awards wtll be&#13;
presentedat 7: 30 p.m, All students&#13;
who participated In a&#13;
campus organization or club&#13;
this year are invited to attend.&#13;
The cost of tickets for' most&#13;
organizations' staff members&#13;
Is covered within their budgets.Tickets&#13;
for guests will be&#13;
$7,25. Students are encouraged&#13;
to contact their organlzation's&#13;
executives to deter.&#13;
mine ticket distribution for&#13;
the banquet&#13;
~ Each major status organi_&#13;
zation. Will be given 10 In&#13;
durmg the awards pres~ta:&#13;
tions to give persOnal awards&#13;
to Its members. The StUdent&#13;
Organlza~lons Councu (SOC)&#13;
will be gIVen 20 min. for presentations,&#13;
to be split u&#13;
among Its "I"bs. p&#13;
Nomination forms are now&#13;
aVallable at the Union Infor.-&#13;
mation Desk and In Union 209&#13;
f?r the PhD Progreba Memo_&#13;
nal Award, Dlstlngutshed&#13;
Student awards, and Advisor&#13;
of the Year award. Nomina.&#13;
tlons must be turned In by&#13;
no,?n on Monday, May 1. The&#13;
Phil Progreba Memorial&#13;
Award is given to the student&#13;
who has made significant&#13;
contributions to Parkslde this&#13;
academic year.&#13;
The Dlstlngutshed Student&#13;
awards are presented to two&#13;
members of each organization&#13;
for their achievements&#13;
Local government offers&#13;
summer lntern positions&#13;
Summer Intern positions at&#13;
local and national governmentagencies&#13;
are available&#13;
through an internship program&#13;
at Parkslde.&#13;
The Public Ser.vlce Intern.&#13;
ship Program (PSIP) provides&#13;
college students pi-actl.·&#13;
cal experience In helping with&#13;
legal services for the poor,&#13;
assisting local court agencies&#13;
and researching constituent&#13;
problems for. legislators and&#13;
political campaign work. students&#13;
Can earn three to six&#13;
credits In the program.&#13;
Intern sites Include the offices&#13;
of congressmen Les&#13;
Aspin and Gerald. Kleczka,&#13;
the District Attorney's Office,&#13;
the Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Court, Walworth County&#13;
Court, the Kenosha County&#13;
Juvenile Court and the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Local&#13;
Affairs.&#13;
The program Is open to any&#13;
sophomore, junior or senior&#13;
college student who has completed&#13;
at least six credits of&#13;
political science classes.&#13;
Samuel Pemacciaro, associate&#13;
dean at Parkside, is&#13;
coordinator of the program.&#13;
The PSIP program is one of&#13;
the oldest and largest internship&#13;
programs In the UW System&#13;
according to Pernacclaroo&#13;
Initiated In 1976, the program&#13;
has placed more than&#13;
150 students In sites throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and WashlngtonD.C,&#13;
For more information, call&#13;
PerI)acciaro at 553-2032.&#13;
Cityof Kenosha Seeks Student Workers&#13;
Por Sulil.er •• ploy.ent&#13;
C0lltllctMlko Plate at gw·Porksldo .loll Sorvlce&#13;
551-2656&#13;
K.no.... County .resldency not required&#13;
AHir.atlve Action •• ployer&#13;
M·P·H&#13;
Ifeveryone over 50 had&#13;
colorectalcancercheckups,&#13;
the cure rate could be 75%.&#13;
Call us.&#13;
~ AMERICAN CANCER soaETY'&#13;
within the organization. One&#13;
rlStingutshed StUdent award&#13;
s also presented to the stu.&#13;
dent who has shown contrfbu.&#13;
tions representing all organizations,&#13;
Advisor of the Year&#13;
Is given to the best advisor of&#13;
an organization. A Prestdent's&#13;
Award Is also given to&#13;
a student who represents accomplishments&#13;
and contributions&#13;
on campus, but is determined&#13;
through nominations&#13;
by each organization's executives.&#13;
All Campus Events will be&#13;
sponsoring a dance that evening&#13;
at 9 p.m., featuring the&#13;
top 40 band "Blame the&#13;
Drummer." Those attending&#13;
the banquet will be admitted&#13;
free. The dance Is open to all&#13;
students for a $2 admission&#13;
fee.&#13;
USAA scholar&#13;
Parkslde student Linda M.&#13;
Jones was recenUy named an&#13;
All-American Scholar by the&#13;
United States Achievement&#13;
Academy.&#13;
The program was establIshed&#13;
to offer deserved recognition&#13;
to superior students&#13;
who excel in academic disciplines,&#13;
EligibUlty requtrements&#13;
include a 3.3 grade&#13;
point average or better and a&#13;
nomination from a dean, professor,&#13;
coach or athletic director&#13;
as having an excellent&#13;
academic record.&#13;
Jones will receive recognition&#13;
In the All·American&#13;
Scholars Collegiate Program&#13;
Directory and the opportunity&#13;
to compete for cash scholarships&#13;
awarded by the Councll&#13;
exclusively to All·American&#13;
Scholars.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Compiled by KeWe Paccagnel1&amp;&#13;
Asat. ews Editor&#13;
Keep legislature out of UW system&#13;
According to a btU sponsored by Rep, Bob Larson, RMedford,&#13;
all University of Wisconsin professors should&#13;
spend at least 12 hoon a week In the classroom, reported&#13;
the RaclDe .JouroaJ 'l'bne8.&#13;
The RaclDe ,JouroaJ 'l'bne8 believes the Legislature&#13;
should not have the power to decide such management decisions.&#13;
The .JouroaJ also believes the answers to such altuatlons&#13;
are not the respona1bUlty of the Legislature.&#13;
Instead, Issues which hold such a powerful Impact on&#13;
the university ahou1d be made by the campua adrnlntstra.&#13;
t1on. The ,JouroaJ fee18 that In order to beet meet the&#13;
needs of the student body at each campus, campus administration&#13;
should be the oniy organizaUon to hold the power&#13;
to make campus related decisions.&#13;
Colleges install condom machines&#13;
In a multt-faceted effort to educate stu&lt;leota on protectIng&#13;
themselves against AIDS and other sexuaJly transmit.&#13;
ted diseases, colleges around Wisconsin have Installed&#13;
condom machines in campus restrooms.&#13;
Many representatives stated that the InstsUstlon of the&#13;
machines Is not to endorse sexual activity, but Instead to&#13;
make students aware of the rising problems of AIDS,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Plattevtle, which baa condom&#13;
machines, In Its AIDS policy states, "These educatlonal&#13;
efforls are not Intended to encourage sexual acnvtty&#13;
In those who choose to abstsln, but are Intended to en.&#13;
courage protection, responsible dee\.slon making and safer&#13;
sexual beha viars In those who choose to be sexuaJly active."&#13;
Fall enrollment deposits Increase&#13;
According to the University of Wtsconsln·Oshkosh more&#13;
freshmen students have put down thler enrollment deposIts&#13;
for the Fall semester than usual, reported the Oslll",.11&#13;
Nortbwe8tern. This indicates that highe.r enrollment&#13;
standards at the university are not scaring studenta away.&#13;
The standard admission for graduating high school&#13;
classes has been raised this year form the top 60 percent&#13;
to the top 50 percent In the high school class.&#13;
For now the university will stop taking appllcaUona for&#13;
next Fall, and will turn away discretionary-admit stu.&#13;
dents.&#13;
NOTICEI&#13;
STUDENT JOB&#13;
OPENINGS IN THE&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
All pos~ions availsllla thISSemester With&#13;
some special evenl wOO&lt; reqUired&#13;
Students must have a minimUm cumulative&#13;
GPA of 2,00, AppIocationsfo.-student&#13;
manager positions must have a minimUm&#13;
cumulatoveGPA 012.50.&#13;
STUDENT MANAGERS, .&#13;
Responsible for evening snd weekend building&#13;
operation and inlernal secunty. Involves ,&#13;
coordination of special events, cash receipt&#13;
handling snd student payroll sud~. Must be&#13;
personable and have the abilityto work WIth&#13;
others.&#13;
BARTENDERSfCASHIERS&#13;
InvolveS over·the-counterCO~lOn .~les,&#13;
check out and rental of recreation faCIlities!&#13;
equipment, admission and ticket sales. Cash&#13;
register and cash handling expenence preferred&#13;
bu1 not required,&#13;
UGHT • SOUND TECHNICIANS&#13;
Involvesset-upltear-down ope18toon,&#13;
maintenance of electronic lighting and sound&#13;
eqUipment. Operating knowledge and/o.- prior&#13;
expenance reqUired. Some specific tralnlng wtll&#13;
be provKIed. Must be sIlle to work .......nlngs and _ends.&#13;
SET -UPITEAR-DOWN WORKERS&#13;
Involvesthe ..,t-up and tear-down 01 chairs,&#13;
tsbIes, etc.. lor dances, receptionS, meetIngs&#13;
and special events. No prior e~perience&#13;
.-sstY, but applicants should be in good&#13;
physical condition.&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN UNION ROOM 209&#13;
The p_ Union.... oq .... -",nIty .."ploy... W we ~ 10apply.&#13;
"Three top hits from IBM&#13;
This offer is si~ply irresistible!&#13;
If it's value that counts, and it u~ually&#13;
does, you can't afford to mls~ this offer on&#13;
these IBM Personal System/2. models.&#13;
Now- at a special campus 'pnce~you&#13;
have your choice of thr~e hit computers&#13;
with high quality graphics to hell? Y0U_&#13;
organize your class notes and wnte and&#13;
revise papers. Check it out. ..three great&#13;
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" .- .. '".,.. \.&#13;
PS/2 Model 30 286&#13;
The 8530-E21 includes 1 Mb Memory, 80286&#13;
(10 MHz) processor, one 3.5" diskette drive&#13;
(1.44 Mb), 20 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse,&#13;
8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, Microso!t'Word,&#13;
Windows/286 and hDC Windows Express&gt;,&#13;
Software is loaded and ready to go!&#13;
list price $4,437.""&#13;
Your special price' $2,399.00&#13;
PS/2 Model 50 Z&#13;
The 8550-031 includes 1 Mb Memory, 80286&#13;
(10 MHz) processor, one 3.5" diskette drive&#13;
(1.44 Mb), 30 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse,&#13;
8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, IBM Micro Channel&#13;
Archttecture«, Microsoft Windows/286, Word,&#13;
Excel and hDC Windows Express.&#13;
Software is loaded and ready to go!&#13;
list price $6, II 7.'''&#13;
Your special price' $2,799.00&#13;
PS/2 Model 70 386&#13;
The 8570-E61 includes 2 Mb Memory, 80386&#13;
(16 MHz) processor, one 3.5" diskette drive&#13;
(1.44 Mb), 60 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse,&#13;
8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, IBM Micro&#13;
Channel Architecture, Microsoft Windows/386,&#13;
Word, Excel and hDC Windows Express.&#13;
Software is loaded and ready to go!&#13;
list price $8,912.""&#13;
Your special price' $4,449.00&#13;
"This offer is limited to qu~lified students, facul,ty and staff who orde~ an IBM PS/2 Model 8530-E21, .8550-031 or 8570~E61 on or before June 30, 1989. Prices ucted do not include sales tax, handling&#13;
and/or processing charges. Check with your school regarding these charges. Orders are subject to availability IBM may withdra th . q. . h . otice&#13;
. • W e promotion at any time Wit out written n .&#13;
IBM Personal Svstem/z and PS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation IBM M· Ch I A hi . .&#13;
Microsoft is a registered trademark of the Microsoft Corporation hOC wince 'S E . . rcro an.ne rc necture IS a trademark of IBM Corporation.&#13;
• l "" xpress IS a trademark of the hOC Computer Corporation.&#13;
For more information contact the Computer Support Center&#13;
553-2235&#13;
WLLC-D150A&#13;
-,&#13;
Wingspread~ellows benefit in many ways&#13;
by Ellen Habeck&#13;
WlngllpreadFellow the . Issues surrounding a&#13;
partIcular topic. At each con.&#13;
ference, fellows have expo.&#13;
Sure to group dynamics, the&#13;
exercise of leadership skills&#13;
and the art of oral and writ:&#13;
ten presentations. Fellows&#13;
are able to observe the pro.&#13;
, fesslonals who affect polley&#13;
decisions through the process&#13;
of first defining problems,&#13;
and then searching for the&#13;
best solutions.&#13;
In short, What the Wing.&#13;
spread Fellows program of.&#13;
For the past four years, fers to students Is an oppcrtuparksidehas&#13;
been one of thir-, nlty for professional developteenMidwestern&#13;
colleges and ment In a setting Ideally suit.&#13;
un!versitles active In the ed for the purpose. I strongly&#13;
W'n-spread Fellows Pro- recommend the program to&#13;
.'b tI I t" h I any eligible student.&#13;
gram. Par c pa mg sc 00 s L; ..:sa-, Ellglbillty Is based prima.&#13;
are allowed to designate a rily on academic record, perumitednumber&#13;
of students to Ellen Habeck sonal Interest, and a strong&#13;
serve as conference ob- sense of commitment to the&#13;
servers. ference experiences. program.&#13;
The other purpose of the The first step In the setec.&#13;
Wingspread Fellows Program tion process is a letter of recIs&#13;
to give the fellows an op- ommendation from a faculty&#13;
portunity to benefit person- member. I encourage faculty&#13;
ally from conference partict- members to nominate ellglble&#13;
patton, As one of this year's students. (Contact your divtfellows,&#13;
I found the value of sion head. or Dr. Willie&#13;
the program to be far greater Curtis, the Wingspread Felthan&#13;
initially anticipated. ~ lows Program Director, for&#13;
What the fellows can gain more information.) The dead.&#13;
from their participation is line for nominations is April&#13;
more than an appreciation for 15, 1989.&#13;
ThIS week marks the begin.&#13;
. of the annual drive to&#13;
nJ!I£lifY and select the next&#13;
~r's Parkslde Wingspread'&#13;
l"'"":"OWS. HFellows" are stu- :;ts who serve as delegates&#13;
frOnt Parkside to local, na1IOJl2.l,&#13;
and International conlerencesheld&#13;
at the Wing.&#13;
spread Conference Cel}ter In&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Thepurpose of the program&#13;
istwo·fold.First, the fellows&#13;
act as information liaisons&#13;
betweenthe conferences and&#13;
theuniversities which the felIlowsattend.&#13;
Newspaper articles,&#13;
classroom discussion,&#13;
student club presentations,&#13;
and roundtable .....discussions&#13;
are some of the _ ways in ~&#13;
whichfellows share their con.&#13;
National y&#13;
Volunteer Week&#13;
Apr. 9-15&#13;
Theweek of April 9·15 has&#13;
beendesignated National VolunteerWeek,&#13;
to honor indivtduals&#13;
who have given of&#13;
theirtime to help others.&#13;
To recognize the students&#13;
whohave enrolled in the StudentCommunity&#13;
Service program&#13;
and have actively&#13;
volunteeredduring the Spring&#13;
semester, a complimentary&#13;
continentalbreakfast will be&#13;
heldon Wednesday, April 12,&#13;
7:30·9:301it the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Volunteer pictures will be&#13;
on display and appreciation&#13;
favors'.~illbe given to those&#13;
attending.&#13;
-&#13;
BrOChure&#13;
designer&#13;
needed&#13;
The Reach.Out program at&#13;
the St. Mary's Health Center&#13;
1Jl RaCineis in need of a brochuredeSigner.&#13;
~&#13;
th The volunteer will assist in&#13;
e deSign and development&#13;
~f a brochure for the Blood&#13;
ressure Awareness proram,&#13;
Which focuses- on the&#13;
~w-inc~me and disadvanC&#13;
ged ill the Racine area.&#13;
- onUl1unication and market-&#13;
~g skUls would be helpful for&#13;
IS Position. For more information,&#13;
stop by Union 209 or&#13;
call 553.2200.&#13;
"QWIZSKtlLS&#13;
EVA~UATION SYSTEM COLLEGE IS&#13;
TOUGH&#13;
ENOUGH!&#13;
Shouldn't you make it easier&#13;
by learning those programs&#13;
that make your assignments&#13;
GRADE A material? One-OnOne&#13;
Instruction, flexible&#13;
schedules.&#13;
Call Faith At&#13;
Merrick Business Center&#13;
1. Typing&#13;
2. 0010 Enlry&#13;
3. MulhmOle&#13;
4. WorelStor&#13;
5. wordPerfett&#13;
6. DisployjWrilll 3&#13;
7. O·Bole III Plus&#13;
e. lotus 1-2·3&#13;
TUTORIAL SOFTWARE PACKAGES&#13;
~falMERRICK&#13;
f&gt;.:j llUSlNE..'iS CENTER&#13;
MERRICK BusfNESS ClNTER_ ~ A ewlSlOf) 01 MemCk Cot1sunanl$. Jnc.&#13;
for further information (414J 658-8914&#13;
Earn more at ECU!&#13;
We'll get right to the point ... the .&#13;
percentage point ... and we give you&#13;
more points - higher rates- when y?U&#13;
t ECU Regular savings, IRA s, save a .&#13;
Christmas, CD's, etc.. I&#13;
Sharpen your pencil and sign up now.&#13;
i.-~\}CATOits)&#13;
(j!J&gt;&#13;
Serving UWP employees&#13;
and students&#13;
Tallent Hall,&#13;
Hm.286,&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Ranger Thursday, Apr. 6, 19897&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
FrIday, April 17&#13;
SEMINAR "Focus on Women: The FernJ.nlzation ot Pov.&#13;
erty" begins at 12 noon. Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Monday, April 10&#13;
ROUND TABLE "Intergenerational FamUy Relation.&#13;
ships: Impllcatlons for Mental Health In Later Adult.&#13;
hood" by Prof. Jeanne Thomas at 12:15 pm In Union 108.&#13;
The event is tree and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, April 1:&#13;
CONCERT at 1 p.m. In CA 0118 featuring Parkslde music&#13;
students. The concert Ia tree and open to the publlc.&#13;
COMEDIAN Tom Anzalone performs at 9 p.m. In Unlon&#13;
Square. The event is tree and open to-the publlc and being&#13;
sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Tbunday, April 13&#13;
MOVIE "U2 Rattle and Hum" (PG) will be shown at&#13;
p.m. In the Union Cinema. Admlsston is $1.00 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $2.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
"~o 22" 652-4700&#13;
~ FAMILY HAIR CAPE&#13;
Specializing in perms. spiral perms. chper CUi • haircuts.&#13;
highlighting. manicuring, sculptured nails and ups&#13;
Student Special&#13;
Get Haircut and ext Haircut i I Price.&#13;
Jud)' Pulera 3021 - 22nd venu&#13;
Owner Keno ha, \\ tscon in&#13;
Present Parkside J.D. At Time or Haircut&#13;
THE&#13;
U\v-PJll{KSIDE&#13;
STUDENT AJ{T&#13;
SHO\v&#13;
COMMUNICAnON ARTS GALLERY&#13;
April 11th thru May 2nd&#13;
Opening reception April 11th 7-9 pm&#13;
Gallery Hours: Mon.-Thurs .. 1·6 pm .• Tues.-Wed. 7·10 pm.&#13;
results' are" ~releasecl-: ....: r.. . •&#13;
Stranger sex . questIonnaIre&#13;
., -Oral.Roberts is, or-course."&#13;
completely,. undoubtedly,&#13;
without reservation, unnaturaL&#13;
by Jon Hearron&#13;
Edltor-In·CbIef&#13;
The enee-or-twtce-tn-a-utetime&#13;
Stranger sex questionnaire&#13;
generated responses&#13;
from all comers of the Unlveralty.&#13;
A sum total of 32&#13;
hours were spent compiling&#13;
the results of the questionnaire.&#13;
To be frank, reading a&#13;
research paper on the sex life&#13;
of the African Tree Toad was&#13;
more exciting than the .results&#13;
of the Stranger's sex questionnaire.&#13;
Anyways here are&#13;
the tallles; enjoy.&#13;
I. GENERAL INFORMATION&#13;
• Of those who completed&#13;
the survey. 1537 were males.&#13;
1669 were females. (Grand&#13;
total: 3206).&#13;
• Of the 3206 survey filleroutters,&#13;
12 were freshmen,&#13;
970 were sophomores, 200&#13;
were juniors, 3 were seniors,&#13;
and 1201were eight-year wonders&#13;
... 820 answered with&#13;
question marks.&#13;
• As far' as age. 19 were 19&#13;
and under. 19 were 19 and&#13;
over, the remainder left the&#13;
question blank.&#13;
• The sexual orientation (of&#13;
all you sick, dlsgustlng, morally&#13;
corrupt) of those who responded&#13;
chose &lt;O(D) Whips&#13;
and Chains. I.&#13;
D. SEXUAL KNOWLEDGE&#13;
• According to the tally,&#13;
everyone who completed the&#13;
questionnaire believes that&#13;
women are unable to become&#13;
pregnant while Immersed In&#13;
Cream of Wheat... (Idlots!)&#13;
• Similarly, everyone believes&#13;
intercourse with the&#13;
lights on Is dangerous If you&#13;
don't know what you're doing.&#13;
(I bet most were speaking&#13;
from expertenee.)&#13;
• All except for the 3 senIors&#13;
feel autoeroticism Is indeed&#13;
OK If the auto Is parked&#13;
In a safe place.&#13;
• Except for the 1201eightyear&#13;
wonders and the 3 seniors.&#13;
all believed oral sex to&#13;
be natural.&#13;
Intro to Filipino culture to&#13;
be held at uW-P&#13;
An Introduction to PhI1lppine&#13;
culture complete with&#13;
arts and crafts, dinner. music&#13;
and a sUde presentation will&#13;
be held at Parkside saturday,&#13;
Aprll15.&#13;
&lt;0An Evening In the PhI1lppines"&#13;
will be held at 6:30&#13;
p.m. In Main Place.&#13;
Highlights will Include Filipino&#13;
dancing by Silahls, a FilIpino&#13;
dlnner complete with&#13;
chlcken Adobe, a popular dlsh&#13;
In the PhI1lpplnes and a bazaar&#13;
featuring baskets, textiles-and&#13;
jewelry. A zo.mtnute&#13;
slide presentation focusing on&#13;
the culture and people of the&#13;
Phlilpplnes will be shown by&#13;
Dick Ammann and Lllllan&#13;
Trager. both professors at&#13;
Parkslde. The two have lived&#13;
and conducted research in the&#13;
PhI1lpplnes.&#13;
Cost is $15 for the general&#13;
public, $13.50 for educators&#13;
and senior cltlzens and $12for&#13;
students. Reservations are required.&#13;
Discounts are available&#13;
for people registering In&#13;
groups of six or more.&#13;
The event is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's Office of International&#13;
Education.&#13;
WLBR&#13;
is now accepting&#13;
applications for&#13;
Station Manager:&#13;
Other management&#13;
positions are also&#13;
available.&#13;
Applications available from:&#13;
WLBR Union 203&#13;
Student Life Union 209&#13;
Senator John Kehoe D139C&#13;
PSGA D139A .&#13;
APPLICATION DEADLINE&#13;
IS&#13;
APRIL 17, '1989 AT 5:00P.M.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
m, VOCABULARY&#13;
• 53% of those who responded&#13;
were 94% sure of the&#13;
definition of the word "condominium."&#13;
120/0 were 63.8%&#13;
sure, and the remaining 35%&#13;
weren't sure now sure they&#13;
were.&#13;
• Angiosperm was definitely&#13;
a word of confusion; nobody&#13;
was sure how sure they&#13;
were.&#13;
• Everybody was 94% sure&#13;
of the meaning of "night&#13;
stick ."&#13;
• 1662 (of the 1669 females&#13;
questionnaired) were familiar&#13;
with "Peninsula envy:' None&#13;
of the male flller-outters responded.&#13;
• ..oops..... dah.&#13;
• Surprisingly enough,&#13;
"stinky twinky" was a word&#13;
familiar to all except ..the.z fe-':,&#13;
males not familiar with- "penInsula&#13;
envy." '&#13;
POSSIBLE .PROanatomy&#13;
.are edible .•.tlwt.&#13;
mouth program. '&#13;
. • Dlsgustll1g Impulses \bat&#13;
keep cropping up ... eitheriiidlvldual&#13;
or group, the&#13;
bllltles are IImlUess! PO!IoI•&#13;
Editor's Note: We, of tAe&#13;
Stranger/Ranger clan/31411&#13;
hope you enjoyed laat weet~&#13;
attempt at' humor.&#13;
----Classifieds:------&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
LOCAL PART TIME JOBS with nexible&#13;
hours available summer/fall for&#13;
students interested in sales. Unlimited&#13;
earning potential. No prior experience&#13;
necessary. call the reservation regtstry&#13;
1-800-733-3333.&#13;
cun.o CARE for summer. Needer: a&#13;
person who is caring. patient. with&#13;
references for a chlld with special&#13;
needs. Please call after 6 p.m. ISM9418.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
QEOLOGY CLUB: Rock and Gem&#13;
Sale. April 12·14, 9 a.m.·a p.m. Union&#13;
Bridge.&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED; $225 mo.,&#13;
cable. M/F July 1. Call B.T. cat 6S9-&#13;
1977 AFT 553-2223.&#13;
FOUND: LOCK by bike racks at phys&#13;
ed building. Claim it with your key at&#13;
Security.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
THANK YOU to everyone who helped&#13;
make Pi Upsilon Beta's TALENT&#13;
NlTE happen!&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS NOELLE1&#13;
Behavioral Science Division Queen.&#13;
IV.&#13;
GRAMS&#13;
'. Well, finding the bathroom&#13;
ina strange house was&#13;
obviously a group program&#13;
according to our c.ompiled&#13;
psuedo-data.&#13;
• Practically Impossible&#13;
positions was, conversely. an&#13;
activity for exploring with a&#13;
gorgeous date. (Note: the&#13;
cheerleaders who returned&#13;
the questionnaire believed It&#13;
to be a group program. )&#13;
• How to "Just say no" was&#13;
a peer-group possible program&#13;
... though we know we'd&#13;
all fail this one!&#13;
• How to say Yes, Yes, Oh&#13;
God Yeeesss! was, again, a&#13;
group program - but only for&#13;
those of you who are sick. disgusting,&#13;
morally corrupt people.&#13;
• some parts of the human&#13;
WARREN A.K.A. Paul. How 'bout&#13;
those Peter Pan Peanut Butter Buns?&#13;
SIOUX: THE weather is cold but the&#13;
thought is warm. so get rid of the eyeball.&#13;
From Sin Clair.&#13;
OVERHEARD in SC ·"Rock a bye&#13;
baby!"&#13;
HEY MALmU Ken, whaz-up? Settle&#13;
down here! Listen up now! R·E·L-A·&#13;
X. .&#13;
STARING MAN in coffee "enop. take a&#13;
picture. it lasts longer. '&#13;
RONDA: BEWARE Ali Baba is back&#13;
to catch you in the act.&#13;
RONDA: HOW WAS the blue-eyed&#13;
pizza pizza man.&#13;
MARIE: NEED your hormones expelled?&#13;
See me! .&#13;
JEANETTE: WHAT happened to my&#13;
curel? Or did you use it to shrink my&#13;
sweatshirt?&#13;
6B ·BILL Ohm. answer the phone.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Brian!! Love,&#13;
Jen.&#13;
5E ·T.P. YA right! You'll call!&#13;
WANNA CLIQUE' PAD' We'll&#13;
"clique" ya in the forehead.&#13;
SO ·J.D. YA Right!&#13;
SA ·M. MONROE What goes on in&#13;
there? JFK&#13;
JOHN A. RAKOW; Your still not over&#13;
the hill. Happy B-Day Bro.&#13;
INTERPRETED: "A friendship is a&#13;
relationship and I am a bitch."&#13;
ARMANDO ·WE "Wanda" have an·&#13;
SummerFinancial Aid Applica·&#13;
·tion deadline is April 22, 1989.&#13;
Summer aid is awa,rded using&#13;
1988·89 need analysis docu·&#13;
ments.If you did not·apply for&#13;
1988-89and wish to apply for&#13;
Summer 1989, do so immedi·&#13;
ately. The Pell Grant processor&#13;
must receive your application&#13;
by May 1, 1989. Contact, the&#13;
Financial Aid Office, 284Tallent&#13;
Hallfor details.&#13;
other party! This ones in the ....&#13;
okay? -Wanda 1 &amp; Wanda 2.&#13;
DAN EMER. HO\I,' about a aCJ&#13;
Gives us a cail! ·The "Wanda" .......&#13;
I WAS just wondering ·11"II&#13;
real?&#13;
SIPPY THE "bundle man," ,. ..&#13;
not forgotten.&#13;
CLIFF: THE eyeball 11=1' scuba diver -piease come hontt.&#13;
YER-YERlt?&#13;
6B -M.M. ·VA right!&#13;
5A ·K.G. ·YA right! 'You'U caBf&#13;
4J -B.J. ·YA rIght! You'U caUl&#13;
PROKOS FUNERAL Home:&#13;
was busy sacrificing vlrginB ..&#13;
!&#13;
ing neighborhood dogs ·RA SA .&#13;
Leave that Jon.&#13;
GO GREYHOUND" and lea" ..&#13;
driving to Rose.&#13;
30 ·D.M. YA right! You'll CIBlI&#13;
won't pressure you!!&#13;
4J ·WHAT are you? Who ".JIll&#13;
wearing? -Passton PrinCelJ8.&#13;
DAVE AND JULIE. dota, tkIIdiIt.&#13;
questions en trenceie, SYLVIA,.&#13;
SHEILA.&#13;
ALL WE are saying ...lI give III'"&#13;
ass.&#13;
A BIG THANK you to allwI»'"&#13;
me celebrate my 23rd. It WlUI.1IIIt'&#13;
to remember. Love Ya AU, Naaer'&#13;
better known as Lush.&#13;
3B -J.P YA Rlght!&#13;
HEY 3C girls -we hear you're_&#13;
cool, let's ~et together and JIlUVI~&#13;
TIM D. COOK -We haven't .""&#13;
see you a lot. I think you are .-&#13;
lutely gorgeous and wanted ,..&#13;
know. -An Admirer. .....&#13;
HEY "DENNY" I'm sWlfIDdIM''''&#13;
everywhere from Frltt&amp;1! .... ,&#13;
dance!? Michelle --a 111:&#13;
EUGENE, LET'S cut tile --r&#13;
and got on with it! It.&#13;
U'ITLE DIRDIE now lmOWI&#13;
cret. It is not flowers, It II - ...!t nuts. IT is grapes. oranpI._&#13;
nanas that lead to a women" "'"&#13;
DOUG S. LOOK out behiml JCIl:I, ...&#13;
you enter bathrooms; 1'111iitII&#13;
=~~u~~~: :tiliu:.tor'"&#13;
You have one hour to prove&#13;
to us! ·Wonder Women.&#13;
.MIt. BELLYBUTTON -III!t%&#13;
"a lack of professionsJ1slP&#13;
lfrci;'S:'~OT.eus 1/1'. 111ft'&#13;
ton is the Ayatullah!&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the RollI" '" "Kehoe's losing his baUI .....&#13;
turn Is it to dean e~." ..-!&#13;
~::~Esl~t~ at ~ rI&#13;
time!" O.K, M.B. bad 1Ift~&#13;
THE BISON lives! Too I ,,,,,&#13;
UP to another threesome ••&#13;
ners.&#13;
Club&#13;
Events&#13;
HOMECOMING&#13;
COMMITTEE&#13;
ntecoming committee&#13;
=.n, are now available from&#13;
e Welsh In Union 209.&#13;
: committee hopes to meet&#13;
f1lI1In the next few weeks.&#13;
fIJ1OD' interested In partici-&#13;
~ In the planning of next&#13;
p.ar'sHomecoming event is&#13;
invited to sign up.&#13;
RAClNE.KENOSHA&#13;
"HOYNATURE CLUB&#13;
\lie Racine·Kenosha Hoy Na-&#13;
\UI'S Clubwill meet Thursday,&#13;
April 6 at Riverbend Center,&#13;
S800 N. Green Bay Rd., Ra-,&#13;
cine. At6 p.m, there wlll be a&#13;
WIldflOwerwalk, and at 7'&#13;
pm, liMen &amp; Women in Con- -&#13;
servatlon,"will be presented&#13;
by LIlaBerge. The public is&#13;
invited to attend. Refreshmentswill&#13;
be served.&#13;
PSICWt&#13;
PSYCIIOLOGY CLUB&#13;
PSiCHI/Pschology club will&#13;
be having a bake sale Wednesday,April&#13;
12, from 10 a.m,&#13;
to 2p.m. in the alcove across&#13;
from the library. Anyone interestedin&#13;
atending the PSI&#13;
em convention in Madison on&#13;
AprU.29, or becoming an officer&#13;
for next year should see&#13;
oneof the present officers for&#13;
information.&#13;
ENGINEERING CLUB&#13;
TheEngineering Club will be&#13;
holdingan all·you-can.eat fish&#13;
fry on April 14, from 5 to 9&#13;
p.m., at the Kenosha National&#13;
GuardArmory iocated at 4200&#13;
13rd Ave.&#13;
Ticketsare $6.50 and can be&#13;
pu~chasedat the engineering&#13;
·offlee(MOLN 253)&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
bookkeeper&#13;
needed,&#13;
CDispute Settlement of Rame&#13;
needs a bookkeeper who&#13;
can volunteer 1-2 hours twice&#13;
~emonth. Do you have bookrt&#13;
epIng skills and need expewence&#13;
on your resume? Do rat you can to assure emp&#13;
oyment after graduation&#13;
('d be a valuable volunteer&#13;
~ a small non~profit agency.&#13;
cor more information, .call&#13;
U&#13;
a':"'l at 553-2200 or come to&#13;
Dian209.&#13;
RESEARCH INFORMATION&#13;
~ LIbra" of InfDrmatlon In u.s. • AU&#13;
o Sflb}e&lt;t5·&#13;
r;er CatalogTOdaywith Visa/MC or COO "i;fi,al'!.,III, 800..351..0222&#13;
o In aliI. (213) 477-8226&#13;
I~'rush$2.00to: Research Information&#13;
322 Idaho Ave, N206-A, los Angeles. CA 90025&#13;
~~.:~ a lot is hanging·&#13;
semester winds d~ semester about this time As th&#13;
a lot hangs In the ba~ome students begin to re~llze lha~&#13;
begin to mount and llfe~~e. End of semester pressures&#13;
bee:r;-.~e past twelve weeks~er seems as casual as it had&#13;
Its important, not to let all th&#13;
get the best of you. Grab e semester_end activities&#13;
you have assignments an: calendar and map out when&#13;
final exams are. Mark in the b:ers due. and when your&#13;
do your assignments and e you think you'll need to&#13;
prepare for finals. If you're&#13;
Since y'QU asked. ..&#13;
The&#13;
Counselor's&#13;
Corner&#13;
by Stu Rubner&#13;
working and going to school, mark down your work hours.&#13;
And don't forget to put down other scheduled events like&#13;
family activities, concerts, ballgames and the like.&#13;
What you're tr-ying to do is get a picture of just how&#13;
much you have going on in the remaining weeks of the&#13;
semester. If your first priority is schoolwork then almost&#13;
everything you do In the remaining weeks should revolve&#13;
around that commitment.&#13;
.If it doesn't look like you7&#13;
ve got enough uncommitted&#13;
time for studying7 paper writing7 and preparing for teste,&#13;
make some adjustments!&#13;
• Since so many students work in addition to going to&#13;
school, this is one area that requires serious scrutiny.&#13;
Talk with your employer about the possibility of tempo'&#13;
rarily reducing some of your hours or getting someone&#13;
. else to work your scheduled tsmes.&#13;
• 'Stick to the times you7ve identified as study times. It&#13;
may be tough passing up an opportunity to be.outside on a&#13;
warm Spring day, but it wi!! be tough startmg the Sum'&#13;
CLASSIFIED STAFF&#13;
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE&#13;
AWARD&#13;
Deadli~e for the Classif.ied~taff D~stinguished&#13;
Service Award nominatIons IS April 14, 1989.&#13;
Criteria • Nominees should be those who:&#13;
1. are carrying or have carried exceptional&#13;
workloads&#13;
2. show exceptional performance&#13;
3 are engaged in activities that ~romote the well-&#13;
. being of the campus community and/or general&#13;
public 4 exhibit exceptional effort that enhances the&#13;
. individual'S work site. department, and/or&#13;
university in general.&#13;
mination forms and a list of eligible.&#13;
N~ssified staff are available at the URlO~&#13;
~nformation Ce~ter and the library/LearRlng&#13;
Center CirculatIon Desk.&#13;
Ranger Thursday. Apt. 8. 1989 9&#13;
in the balance ...&#13;
mer or FaU aemeateT Oft. wa.rniftg or probatiotl..&#13;
• Make ....re you find as quiet a place as poarible for&#13;
studying.&#13;
• Use effective techniques for preparing for f1-1s (see&#13;
• next week's Ranger for some helpful_gest"",").&#13;
. • The Lea1"'ning Assistance and COKMeliKg office is giv~&#13;
.ng a workshop on Tuesday, April 18th from 3'~pm. in&#13;
WLLO D-150en.titled HHow to Take Objective Teata. U Til'"&#13;
is a Hmust attend:" event unle33 you kn.ow euerything&#13;
there is to know about taklng this tllPe of test; no reserva'&#13;
tions a.re needed ... ;u.st show up.&#13;
• Make sure you have as clear an idea a3 posaible as to&#13;
what will be covered on your finals. You should also know&#13;
what criteria wiU be used to judge papera you are submit·&#13;
ting. Remember, the best surprise i3 flO aurpTise.&#13;
• There are "Review for Final.s'7 sesaions coming .cp for&#13;
math 015~016, and I1f!. Sponsored by Learning As"iatance&#13;
and Oounselingl&#13;
these review session..! are held Oft. Mall&#13;
2nd and ..tn. and fLO reservation&amp; are needed. Watch for&#13;
dates and time" in th.e Ranger and Oft. bu.lletin board". in&#13;
clas"rooms.&#13;
If all of this is simply too much to deal with, make an&#13;
appointment to sit down and talk with one of the two&#13;
counselors on campus - Barbara Larson or Stu Rubner.&#13;
Both are located In the Counseling and Testing ornce,&#13;
WLLC D·l75. They will help you sort th1ngS out and get&#13;
you thJnking about how to manage your life more effectively&#13;
during these rema.lnlng weeks of the semester.&#13;
In any case, do what you can to be as successful as possible.&#13;
A lot of resources are at your disposal. The rest is&#13;
up to you.&#13;
.&#13;
College Students&#13;
"EARN EXTRA MONEY'&#13;
AND&#13;
HELP OTHERS&#13;
WHILE YOU STUDY&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
6212 22nd Ave. 654-1366&#13;
M-W-F 8:30-4:30 T-TH 10-7&#13;
•&#13;
SHERATON ~&#13;
now accepting applications&#13;
for the following positions:&#13;
• Cashier. Host/Hostess&#13;
• Waiters/Waitresses • Bussers&#13;
• Room Service Waiters&#13;
Benefits include: Full medical &amp;&#13;
dental; paid vacations; paid breaks&#13;
with meals; length of service awards;&#13;
as well as many other incentive&#13;
programs.&#13;
Trump's otters flexible schedule for&#13;
a.m. &amp; p.m. shifts.&#13;
If you feel qualified to join the&#13;
Sheraton/J. Trump's team, please pick&#13;
up an application at the restaurant&#13;
hostess stand.&#13;
Washington Avenue, Racine&#13;
•&#13;
10 Thursday. Apr. 6. 1989 Ranger&#13;
Price,StephensonAII-Americans---&#13;
fourth match of the tourney.&#13;
Tremelling suffered his tourney-ending&#13;
loss when he was&#13;
pinned, despite holding the&#13;
lead before he was taken to&#13;
his back.&#13;
Steve Roher, Scott Wessley,&#13;
and Rob Fox also participated&#13;
In the NAIA tourney, but&#13;
all failed to win matches.&#13;
Wessley drew the national&#13;
champion in his first bout,&#13;
then was eliminated by the&#13;
number four finisher in the&#13;
competition.&#13;
As a team, the Rangers finished&#13;
impressively in both&#13;
tournaments. despite having&#13;
to split their squad as both&#13;
tournaments were on the&#13;
same weekend. In the NCAA&#13;
II Nationals, the rangers&#13;
placed 16th, and in the NAIA&#13;
Nationals, they finished 26th.&#13;
In the final national polls, the&#13;
Rangers were ranked 16th&#13;
and 12th in the NCAA and the&#13;
NAIA respectively.&#13;
Price. from page 12&#13;
at the hands of Western Mon·&#13;
tana's Rod Clugston, who&#13;
placed third, and Casey&#13;
Schweitzer from Valley City&#13;
State, who finished fourth.&#13;
Five other Rangers nearly&#13;
earned All American honors.&#13;
Mark Hemauer and Arthur&#13;
Demerath both competed in&#13;
the NCAA II Nationals, each&#13;
coming within one victory of&#13;
All American status. Each&#13;
won their first match and lost&#13;
their second, both by eight&#13;
points and both to the respective&#13;
number one seeds in&#13;
their weight class. Likewise,&#13;
in their next matches,&#13;
Hemauer and Demerath both&#13;
lost. 6-4, and were eliminated&#13;
from the tourney. Tim Whit·&#13;
ing, John Karl. and Keven&#13;
Tremelling all wrestled in the&#13;
NAIA tourney with each coming&#13;
within one victory of All&#13;
American status. Whiting&#13;
won his first match after receiving&#13;
a bye in the first&#13;
match, while Karl and 'r'remelling&#13;
won their first two&#13;
Pitching fails, Rangers drop two ...&#13;
by Mario Lemeiux kota was reached for four Rangers lost the servlcoC\&#13;
The Parkslde Ranger Base.' runs, the big blow coming on .c:'"tcher Gary Fritsch for"&#13;
baU team, after being Idle for a one-out, two-run by Lewis' .slbly a week as he reaqa.&#13;
almost three weeks because Bill Judge. ,vated. a hamstring •&#13;
of the weather. returned to The score remained at 4-1 .early m game one. The&#13;
action last Friday against until the fifth when a lead-off Fritsch jumbled the&#13;
Lewis University by losing a double and a RBI single :line-up as freshman Don&#13;
pair to the Flyers in Romeo. knocked Pluskota out of the :ler, normally a catcher.&#13;
ville, Illinois, game and extended the Flyer .himself in the lead-off&#13;
The Ranger hitters didn't lead to 5-1. Dan Langendorf the Ranger ltne-up 88&#13;
waste any time in getting on relieved Pluskota and retired started in left field.&#13;
the board against the Flyers. six of the seve; batters he Pa~kside's offense&#13;
Ken Neese, the Parkside faced to shut down Lewis. no ttme in ~etting OIl&#13;
third-baseman, led off .the Unfortunately. Lewis board again. In the top&#13;
contest by roping a double to starter Roger Popplewell was second, consecutlve&#13;
left, and he later scored on also shutting down the by .Neese and Jeff Re&#13;
Brian Gauthier's double to Rangers as he spread out 19n1ted. a three-run raIIt&#13;
stake the Rangers to a 1-0 three Ranger singles in the the third, they picked&#13;
lead. final five innings. relinqulsh- where they left off by s&#13;
That lead lasted until the ing only one more run as the four times as parkslde!&#13;
bottom of the second. when Flyers took the opener 5-2. advantage of. three&#13;
Ranger starter Darrin Plus- More. importantly, the errors in jumping outto&#13;
- lead.&#13;
Starter Jeff Lemme&#13;
was unable to protect lbe&#13;
BRAS S TAP his offense staked ~-,&#13;
After retiring the Ill'IR'&#13;
men in order. Lemm 1618 63rd St. faltered by walking the off batter in what lunl&#13;
Just East of Armando's Body Shop to be a five-run inning Flyers which pulled&#13;
Attn: Students over 21 within a pair 7·5. Jeff Fennrick ri&#13;
Sh 10 d d 0 ff Lemmermann. and&#13;
OW your car s an get 1 0/0 0 Flyers reached him fo~r&#13;
all beer and drink prices. (Student runs in the fifth, takiDi lead when MIke S&#13;
discount does not apply to any other scored on Dave Re . I ) throwing error after hI--&#13;
specra S. pled to tie the game.HI&#13;
Parkside threatened&#13;
Listen to Kenosha's best juke box sixth when Gauthier&#13;
t h 5&#13;
a one-out double, bUt sys em were songs are still just and Relkowski both&#13;
50~!!Featuring Dokken, INXS, AC/DC down on strikes agatnst&#13;
d&#13;
reliever Jay Russ&#13;
NO PURCHASE&#13;
an many more., ended the' game at siX&#13;
NECESSARY. FROM THE - Pool, Darts, Video Games, and&#13;
~~~~--&#13;
R~:e/~~~~~d d:P1~&#13;
P-SI DE FOOD-SERVICE. Pinball also available. So stop in the Lewisraisedtheir~ ~ 'd 6. On the day. Gau&#13;
rn ays &amp; Saturdays starting at 8 p.m. four for seven with a&#13;
Parkside Food-Service Employ' ees doubles and an Neese was three tor&#13;
and Contract Administrators not BRASS TAP with two doubles runs scored. Plu SIld&#13;
eligible to win. received the loss lit&#13;
L&#13;
..:- -.J 1618 63rd St. one, dropped his re •7'"-:-:----------------------.J and Fennrlck, the nightcap, alSO dr&lt;&gt;PtMllJ&#13;
Scott Stephenson&#13;
AII·Amerlcan at 158 lbs,&#13;
. ,&#13;
matches before losing. Whit·&#13;
ing lost his next two matches.&#13;
first to the eventual winner&#13;
and next to the' fourth-place&#13;
finisher. Karl came within&#13;
one point of All American.&#13;
but lost a 4-3 decision in his&#13;
COMING SOON!&#13;
REGISTER AND&#13;
WIN A SCHWINN&#13;
TEN SPEED BIKE&#13;
STARTING&#13;
APRIL 17TH.&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
Home Double Header&#13;
vs. Lake Forest&#13;
Game 1-&#13;
UW-Parkside 10&#13;
Lake Forest 6&#13;
Win - Hansen (4-2)&#13;
•• The Ranger record !lOW stands at 7-&amp;··&#13;
.Game 2-&#13;
UW.Parkside 13&#13;
(5 innings) Win - Livesey, Karen (1-3)&#13;
Lake Forest 2&#13;
�illVaukee10ronlONil'&#13;
york·&#13;
DetroitCleValandoaklandKanllS&#13;
City·&#13;
Texlt'&#13;
MinnesotacaliforniaChicagosealllePillaburgh.&#13;
New YorkMontrealChicagoSt.&#13;
LouisPhiladelphiaJeff&#13;
Lammermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
AL EAST&#13;
This young colt has the staml .&#13;
run-if all four legs get healthy ~~~o Win a stretch&#13;
Anther good bet to place but a st stay that way.&#13;
could give them wire-ta-wire win rong start&#13;
All depends upon how hard this 1,0 ..&#13;
holds onto the reigns. Early injurie rse SIJOCkey&#13;
this runner boxed in. . s cou d keep&#13;
This aging horse has the experience to sta .&#13;
. strong, but won't have the kick to keep up rt th&#13;
stretch run. . In e&#13;
Too many distractions in home stabl&#13;
this pony to repeat last year's come_efrsomto_bexpect&#13;
hinder. . eStill&#13;
a future project with potential down the&#13;
road. Apprentice Jockey will use this race f&#13;
penance. or exAn&#13;
8th place, finish in last year's seven hor&#13;
race. Expect a slow start again this race ..:ell·&#13;
prove by \I pole; , 11m·&#13;
Ranger Thursday. Apr. 6, 1989 11&#13;
A's, Mets have right stuff&#13;
to capture baseball titles&#13;
Al WEST&#13;
This thorou~hbred has wire-to-wire potential in&#13;
Improvmg field. Should win going away after&#13;
tight start.&#13;
An old favorite who could steal this one away.&#13;
Has good mix of experience and new blood. Will&#13;
have to nde whip.&#13;
Always lots of promise, but past runs have been&#13;
drssappointtnq. Could turn trend with new blood&#13;
this year.&#13;
Lived off storybook race in maiden year, not&#13;
ready to run in improved field. .&#13;
Ques.tionable pitching staff will cause this philly&#13;
to fade In the second turn. A good bet to come&#13;
around in a few.&#13;
Running way above class in this race. Needs&#13;
good claiming race to find way into money down&#13;
the road.&#13;
Home stables give this foal problems in all&#13;
areas. Past performance indicate poor races&#13;
ahead.&#13;
NL EAST&#13;
A sleeper with a veteran jockey. May win photo.&#13;
Class of field, but outside pressure could take&#13;
toll. . .&#13;
Always a good money bet. Could surprise field.&#13;
Lights are on, but only an outside shot at best.&#13;
Would fare better in weaker field. Lacks big&#13;
guns.&#13;
Lottery ticket would be better investment.&#13;
NL WEST&#13;
Cincinnati- Consistent money finisher will finally find roses.&#13;
San Diego. Made big class move over break, Will contend&#13;
early.&#13;
Los Angeles- Did it with mirrors in last. Not enough to repeat.&#13;
Houston- Pitching will keep them there early, but will fade.&#13;
San FranciSCO-Young staff not quite ready. Wait.&#13;
Atlanta- Just here to fill the card.&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
A.L. EAST&#13;
Toronto has finally put all the&#13;
~gos aslde and, for the first time&#13;
In three years, all the pieces fit&#13;
together. Sorry Milwaukee fans&#13;
that BreCrew cannot win from Ii&#13;
hospital bed. If they can get&#13;
healthy early they're legit. Look&#13;
for Cleveland as a darkhorse. If&#13;
they can put all the personnel&#13;
moves Into a cohesive unit they&#13;
may edge out everybody. Boston&#13;
IS too worried about 'The days&#13;
and nights of Margo Adams' to&#13;
do anything. Detroit is becoming&#13;
genatnch while Naw York will&#13;
see themselves in the paper so&#13;
much they'll believe thay'ra in&#13;
first (but the ink is compliments&#13;
of George Steinbrenner). If Baltimore&#13;
were any worse the whole&#13;
team would be sent down to the&#13;
farm.&#13;
A.L. WEST&#13;
Oakland is about to start the dynasty&#13;
of the 90's much like their&#13;
empire of the early 70's. What&#13;
more can you say about a team&#13;
capable of hitting over 250&#13;
homers while holding opponents&#13;
to two runs per game. Minnesota&#13;
finally puts it together and the&#13;
west suddenly isn't the other&#13;
division. Too bad for them.&#13;
texas is gaining and may only&#13;
be a year away while the rest of&#13;
the division is made up of pretenders&#13;
who are all at least two&#13;
or three years away from having&#13;
any cases of pennant fever.&#13;
N.L. EAST&#13;
Start spreading the news - the&#13;
Mets are unstoppable. The best&#13;
starting rotation in the majors&#13;
supported arguably by the best&#13;
bullpen. With a staff lika this a&#13;
triple A team could provide&#13;
enough run support to carry&#13;
them to a pennant. So cool off&#13;
Daryl, you're not the whole team.&#13;
Pittsburgh needs big years from&#13;
everybody and the Mets to open&#13;
a M'NS'H unit, but don't expect&#13;
it this year. Montreal has&#13;
just about enough ripe talent&#13;
to start trading it off ala Gary&#13;
Carter. If they do stand pat&#13;
they're not far away, but not this&#13;
Who will win where,&#13;
k&#13;
td ~~ t H&#13;
according to the Par Sl e exper s 000&#13;
AL East AL West NL East NLWest&#13;
Jon Hearron Milwaukee Oakland New York San Diego&#13;
(Ranger Editor) Cincinnati&#13;
Wayne Dannehl New York Oakland New York&#13;
(Athletic Director) Cincinnati&#13;
Bill Topp Boston Minnesota pittsburg&#13;
(Basketball Writer) Cincinnati&#13;
Gary Fritsch Toronto Minnesota New York&#13;
(Baseball Captain) Cincinnati&#13;
Kelly McKissick New York Oakland New York&#13;
(News Editor) . New York Los Angeles&#13;
Craig Simpkins Milwaukee Oakland&#13;
(Business Manager) San Diego&#13;
Brad Behling Mitwaukee Oakland Chicago&#13;
(Advertising Manager)&#13;
xear. 5t. Louis may do very well&#13;
(It IS an odd year isn't tl) yeah&#13;
sure. and Baltimore will win a&#13;
hundred games. A starting rotalion&#13;
of nobodies won't get to Tod&#13;
"We are the" Worrell who will&#13;
get a much needed year off and&#13;
a lot of rest even if he doesn't&#13;
need it. The Cubs keep getting&#13;
more fans and this winter was no&#13;
exception as they added many&#13;
Texas Rangers fans to their support&#13;
by sending Texas a Christmas&#13;
present in Rafiel Palmeri&lt;&gt;.&#13;
The Phillies need nine young&#13;
Mike Schmidts and that ain't&#13;
going to happen any time soon.&#13;
N.L WEST&#13;
San Diego has the right stuff&#13;
this year. Thay plugged two big&#13;
hoies by acquiring Jack Clark&#13;
and Walt Terrel. lt's enough to&#13;
win out here. Cincinnatti perenn~&#13;
al second place finishers will be&#13;
there again, you can bet on that&#13;
Pete. It's going to take Los ~&#13;
geles 'till August to forget '88&#13;
and move on to '89 and WII be&#13;
too late even in this dIViSion.&#13;
Houston has great pttching because&#13;
of its huge park. but that&#13;
isn't very good for the hitters.&#13;
Move in the pasture a bit and&#13;
show confidence in the staff if&#13;
you've got a chance. San Francisco&#13;
needs a new park if they're&#13;
ever gOlOg to contend. Atlanta&#13;
may start a new seoes of the At·&#13;
lanta Murders only thiS time on&#13;
the Baseball FIBld.&#13;
The postseason will feature&#13;
the matchup evarybody wanted&#13;
last fall - New York and Oakland.&#13;
This fall they will get n.&#13;
With New York commq out on&#13;
top because pitching wins the&#13;
fall claSSIC and that's enough of&#13;
an edge for the Mets pitchers&#13;
who don't need many edges. Of&#13;
course if Cleveland can .. - or MHo.&#13;
waukee mlqhl... etc ... etc,&#13;
Pack&#13;
of Lies.&#13;
When~u party&#13;
remember to..,&#13;
Ix.il 1,'11 ~n.did.UIOU'''''llJl"" ,,- .&#13;
(J' 1Wl'e llJl,;urelei:out"":'..&#13;
ehe do Ita!dn u •&#13;
First National's TYME&#13;
Twice As Convenient&#13;
Many Parkside students and faculty rely heavily&#13;
upon TYME machines for their basic banking&#13;
needs,&#13;
The First National Bank of Kenosha makes that&#13;
more convenient because it has two TYME&#13;
machines only minutes from Parl&lt;side,&#13;
• SOmers Branch&#13;
1350-22nd Avenue&#13;
• North Branch&#13;
30th Avenue and Washington Road&#13;
In all. the First National Bank has seven locations&#13;
in Kenosha County. Let us serve you in all of&#13;
your banking needs.&#13;
~ FIRST NATIONAL BANK W of Kenosha&#13;
Other LocatiollS: _...-&#13;
OOwlrtOWR K-aa. AI.tto 8atlll; 50lrUl an.tl IkWldl&#13;
SSZZIttlA". SSOI1tt1A". ""IOtII"- MOO......&#13;
_.....&#13;
F.D.I.C.&#13;
_..-&#13;
c:or- oi' 1tWf. .._10&#13;
Ranger baseball splits in home opener- .....&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside's men's baseball&#13;
squad opened up their&#13;
horne schedule last Saturday,&#13;
splitting a twin bill with Indiana-Purdue&#13;
University of Indianpolls.&#13;
In the opener, Parkside&#13;
jumped out to an early 3-1 advantage&#13;
with Armand Bonoflgllo&#13;
hitting his first homerun&#13;
of the year In the 1st and Ron&#13;
Wilke driving In a run In the&#13;
two.run second. Starter&#13;
Dennis Oakley made the lead&#13;
stand until the fourth, when&#13;
the Metro's Tony Long hit a&#13;
bases loaded single off Oakley'S&#13;
glove to tie the score at&#13;
3-3. Coach Red Oberbrunner&#13;
went to his bullpen and&#13;
brought In Dan Langendorf,&#13;
who escaped the fourth with&#13;
no further dama~e.&#13;
In the fifth, however,&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. reached Langendorf&#13;
for two more runs, keyed&#13;
by Bob Limbaugh's double.&#13;
The Metros weren't finished&#13;
there, as they knocked Langendorf&#13;
out of the box in the&#13;
sixth by scoring five times.&#13;
Chris Assmusen relieved him&#13;
and didn't fare much better&#13;
as he was greeted by an RBI&#13;
double and a two-run nomerun&#13;
in the eight-run sixth to&#13;
lock the game for the Metros.&#13;
The Ranger offense, on the&#13;
other hand, was shut out from&#13;
the second inning on, reachIng&#13;
base only four times In&#13;
the final innings. Langerdorf&#13;
suffered the loss. his first of&#13;
the season as Parkside&#13;
dropped their fourth straight&#13;
of the young season.&#13;
In game two. the Ranger&#13;
hitters came out flying, scoring&#13;
seven times in the openIng&#13;
inning. Doug Londo's tworun&#13;
double and Don Keller's&#13;
three-run double were the big&#13;
blows as eleven Rangers&#13;
stepped to the plate In the Innln!l'~_&#13;
The Metros chipped away&#13;
at the lead with a run In the&#13;
second and two in the third&#13;
before Parkside scored again&#13;
In the fourth with a single&#13;
tally, but were unable to put&#13;
the Metros away as they&#13;
stranded the bases loaded In&#13;
the inning. \&#13;
Again, I.U.P.U.I. chipped&#13;
.away against Ranger starter&#13;
steve Leonard with single&#13;
runs In the fourth and fifth to&#13;
pull within 8-5.&#13;
Finally, the Rangers carne&#13;
with the knockout punch, this&#13;
time scoring four runs in toe&#13;
sixth as Gauthier doubied&#13;
horne Bonoflgllo with - his&#13;
fourth hit of the contest to&#13;
pump the Ranger lead back&#13;
to 12-5.&#13;
Darkness cut the game to&#13;
only six innings as Leonard&#13;
went the distance for the win,&#13;
.his first of the year. On the&#13;
t()ffensive slate, Gauthier was&#13;
.a perfect four for four with&#13;
:two runs scored and an RBI.&#13;
Doug Londo and Keller each&#13;
were two for two as Keller&#13;
:!knocked in four and Londo&#13;
1knocked In two and scored a&#13;
]pair, as the Rangers scored&#13;
112times, their highest output&#13;
fOfthe season. Parkside, now&#13;
'2-5, will next take on UW-&#13;
.Madison on Tuesday in Madi-&#13;
.son, Indiana's record stood at&#13;
.7-17after the split.&#13;
Loss of&#13;
Fritsch&#13;
hasjumb&#13;
line-up&#13;
(Pric~ adds largest of&#13;
jewels to his crown&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
The Parkside wrestling&#13;
team ended the season on a&#13;
very successful note this&#13;
year I as Ted Price became&#13;
the seventh ever Ranger to&#13;
win a national championship.&#13;
He accomplished this at the&#13;
NCAA II Nationals held at&#13;
California State University of&#13;
Pennsylvania. Wrestling In&#13;
the 167lb. class, Price had to&#13;
defeat tour wrestlers to win&#13;
the title.&#13;
His first win was an 8·2 triumph&#13;
over Rich Wright of&#13;
Ashland College. Next, Price&#13;
won by Injury default when&#13;
Indianapolis University's&#13;
Chris Pughese dropped out&#13;
while trailing 11-3. In the&#13;
semi finals, Price was pushed&#13;
In his tightest match of the&#13;
meet, defeating Dave Yahner&#13;
of Pitt-Johnstown In overtime,&#13;
5-1. Ted rallied from a'&#13;
1-Qdeficit with just 20 seconds&#13;
~.. remainlng in the overtime&#13;
with a reversal and a near&#13;
fall to put h1rn In the finals.&#13;
Brad Morris of Ferris State&#13;
was Price's final opponent of&#13;
the tournament. The two had&#13;
met on two previous occaslons,&#13;
with Morris winning&#13;
last. year and Price wlnnlng&#13;
earlier this year. Price won&#13;
Ted Price&#13;
a season of success&#13;
the rubber match with a 5·4&#13;
victory which he controlled&#13;
from wire to wire.&#13;
The victory gave Price a&#13;
season mark of 47-4. the most&#13;
wins by any NCAA wrestler&#13;
In the country. The national&#13;
championship was the first&#13;
for Parkside ..since Bob&#13;
Gruner did It In 1979 at 158&#13;
lbs. In the NAIA. Since then,&#13;
33 Rangers have earned AllAmerican&#13;
honors, but none&#13;
have reached the top of the&#13;
award stand as Price did.&#13;
Price's win qualified him to&#13;
compete In the NCAA I National&#13;
Championships In Oklahoma&#13;
City. Amateur Wrestling&#13;
News had Price ranked&#13;
number 11 in the nation coming&#13;
into the tournament.&#13;
In his opener, Ted defeated&#13;
Mark Perkins, the New England&#13;
League Champion from&#13;
New Hampshire, by a 5-2&#13;
margin. Price then carne up&#13;
against John Hefferman from&#13;
the perennial powerhouse&#13;
Iowa University. Hefferman&#13;
a two-time All American wa~&#13;
the third ranked wrestl~r at&#13;
, 167lbs. In one of the most exciting&#13;
matches of the tournamen~,&#13;
Price lost In overtime&#13;
by a 2-1 score after tying In&#13;
regulation 4·4. Fresno State's&#13;
Dan Nlehbur eliminated&#13;
Price from the tournament&#13;
with a 10-2 win In a consolation&#13;
match.'&#13;
One other Parkside wrestier,&#13;
Scott Stephenson, earned&#13;
All American -honors, as he&#13;
competed In the NAIA Cham&#13;
plonshlps In, JamestownNorth&#13;
Dakota. Stephenso~&#13;
placed seventh, going 4-2 In&#13;
the tourney. His losses were&#13;
See All-Americans, page 10&#13;
THE WEEK AHEA&#13;
Men's Baseball:&#13;
TODAY at UI-Chicago Circle&#13;
Aprl 8th HOME vs. M.S.O.E--NOON&#13;
Apr. 11th HOME vs. Carthage College--1:00&#13;
Women's Softball:&#13;
Apr. 8th HOME vs. DePaul U.--NOON&#13;
Aprl10th at UW-Green Bay--5:00 P.M.&#13;
Apr. 11th HOME ~s. UI-Chicago--3:00 P&#13;
Men's Tennis:&#13;
Apr. 10th HOME vs. UW-Milwaukee--3:00R&#13;
Apr. 11th HOME vs. Concordia--3:00 p,&#13;
Men &amp; Women's Track:&#13;
Apr. 8th PAHKSIDE OPEN--NOON</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 17, issue 25, April 6, 1989</text>
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              <text>State rep addresses student Senate to encourage annexation endorsement</text>
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              <text>&#13;
December 3, 1987&#13;
University of WisconSln-Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
Vol.&#13;
18.&#13;
No.&#13;
13&#13;
State rep addresses  student&#13;
encourage  annexation&#13;
to&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Slate Representative  Peter&#13;
W&#13;
Barca spoke before&#13;
25&#13;
stu.&#13;
deBts&#13;
Nov.&#13;
20&#13;
at the&#13;
Parkside-&#13;
StudentGovernment Associa-&#13;
llon(pSGA) meeting,  In an&#13;
attempt&#13;
to&#13;
persuade    the&#13;
PSGASenate to reverse  the&#13;
standit has taken against  the&#13;
annexationof Parkside  by the&#13;
city&#13;
ofKenosha.&#13;
Barca was not aware  until&#13;
Ills&#13;
arrival that  the students&#13;
bad&#13;
actually passed a&#13;
resolu-&#13;
llonstating their opposition.&#13;
"I&#13;
think it's  very  impor-&#13;
tant,not only for the univer-&#13;
sity,but for the city of Keno-&#13;
sha,&#13;
that they  are  able  to&#13;
annexthis land, " Barca  said.&#13;
Barca  refuted  suspicions&#13;
tbat annexation would cause&#13;
a rise&#13;
in&#13;
tuition  costs,&#13;
and&#13;
Pl'lmised&#13;
to&#13;
send the students&#13;
formal&#13;
correspondence  from&#13;
Madtsonverifying this.&#13;
He explained that  the pro.&#13;
ceduresby which  munIcipal&#13;
rvices are&#13;
paid&#13;
in&#13;
wtscon,&#13;
havechanged. In the past,&#13;
said, cities  charged&#13;
urn-&#13;
verslties  directly  for services&#13;
rendered.   Now,  a  separate&#13;
line-term   provision   In  the&#13;
state   budget   covers   these&#13;
costs.&#13;
The  city  will benefit  from&#13;
annexation,  Barca  explained,&#13;
because services are  relm.&#13;
bur-sed&#13;
based   on   quallty.&#13;
While the Town of&#13;
Somers&#13;
Is&#13;
reimbursed&#13;
$30,000&#13;
to&#13;
$40,000&#13;
per year for the services&#13;
it&#13;
provides,&#13;
which  includes  its&#13;
volunteer   fire   department,&#13;
the  city  of  Kenosha  would&#13;
gain  ten times  that  amount.&#13;
Barca  said Kenosha.  because&#13;
it has a full-time  fire depart-&#13;
ment and its own police de.&#13;
partment,   would  be  reim-&#13;
bursed  up to&#13;
$400,000&#13;
by the&#13;
state.&#13;
.&#13;
.'4you can  see  that  the&#13;
amount  of  revenue  coming&#13;
back  to  our  community,  .to&#13;
this area,  would increase  ten.&#13;
fold,"  Barca   told  the  stu.&#13;
dents.   .&#13;
Barca  said that the quality&#13;
of services will also improve&#13;
in&#13;
other   areas,   but   he&#13;
stressed   the  importance   of&#13;
uition waivers not the&#13;
nly&#13;
recruitment method&#13;
by ,fenny&#13;
Carr&#13;
EdItor.&#13;
Explainingthat his campus&#13;
t had a two·fold purpose,&#13;
he&#13;
responsive  to&#13;
faculty,&#13;
and stUdents arid to try&#13;
Interpret for the citizens of&#13;
area what the Board  of&#13;
ents&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
doing, the&#13;
dent&#13;
of&#13;
the UW Board of&#13;
nts,&#13;
Lawrence   Wein*&#13;
, met With the  campus&#13;
COlllmunityon Nov. 17.&#13;
Wi~e most  pressing   issue&#13;
the&#13;
the media  concerning&#13;
Board of Regents was the&#13;
::rtt&#13;
y&#13;
student tuition waiv-&#13;
S   l1alive proposed by UW&#13;
s:te&#13;
m&#13;
president   Kenneth&#13;
den&#13;
w.&#13;
Weinstein  does  not&#13;
~ y&#13;
that  the UW minority&#13;
bl.~mg  effort is abomlna-&#13;
Ie&#13;
on  fact, that the System&#13;
Ie.&#13;
I the level of the national&#13;
tba~&#13;
:oes not reduce the fact&#13;
cardin&#13;
e national average,  ac-&#13;
dIsas&#13;
g&#13;
to&#13;
Weinstein  is  "a&#13;
to&#13;
doter." The Regenta  want&#13;
a.eragbetterthan the national&#13;
IV&#13;
e.&#13;
Ill.:,&#13;
ste&#13;
in&#13;
blames&#13;
the&#13;
~&#13;
for&#13;
latching&#13;
on to  a&#13;
4loc&#13;
POrtion of a  35 page&#13;
"he~ent presented  by Shaw&#13;
Ide8$ ~&#13;
he outlined  several&#13;
Or recruiting  minority&#13;
11IIoo...-&#13;
students.&#13;
In&#13;
a brief  summary  of the&#13;
document  proposed  by Shaw,&#13;
adequate  funding  for recruit-&#13;
ment of minorities  and for reo&#13;
tatnlng the students  once they&#13;
are  In -the  university   were&#13;
also addressed.&#13;
_&#13;
In&#13;
addition,    Shaw   has&#13;
called for the federal  govern-&#13;
ment  programs  which have&#13;
demonstrated   that  they w~rk&#13;
like the TRIO program,  Peli&#13;
grants,  Head  Start,  Upward&#13;
Bound to continue.&#13;
Weinstein  placed  a  great&#13;
deal  of emphasis  on retent-&#13;
nlon.&#13;
"It&#13;
is a -tragedy  to come&#13;
Into the system  and not sur-&#13;
vive.&#13;
It&#13;
Is wrong  to recruit&#13;
students  for  numbers  only.&#13;
We must  think  of who these&#13;
students  are  and  what  they&#13;
will  need  to  be  successful&#13;
here."&#13;
Weinstein  emphasized  th~cl&#13;
the  entire  Shaw  proposal  IS&#13;
still  to  discussed   at  open&#13;
hearings   . In  ,January..   He&#13;
noted that one of the heanngs&#13;
coUld be held  near  Parkside&#13;
and he encouraged  people&#13;
to&#13;
participate&#13;
in&#13;
those hearm~s.&#13;
"It&#13;
is important  to exa~lne&#13;
the entire issue and&#13;
not&#13;
Just&#13;
focus  on a small  portion  of&#13;
it."&#13;
he concluded.&#13;
Peter Barca&#13;
full-time professtonal  fire pro-&#13;
tection.&#13;
Somers'  volunteer  fire de-&#13;
partment  is adequate  for&#13;
a&#13;
residential  area, he said, but&#13;
not for dorm  residents  and&#13;
the daily concentration of stu-&#13;
dents on campus.&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
event&#13;
of  a   chemical   fire,   the&#13;
Senate&#13;
endorsement&#13;
Somers    fire    department&#13;
would be called, and the city&#13;
woUld  provide&#13;
back-up&#13;
if&#13;
needed.&#13;
If&#13;
annexed,  Parkside&#13;
would  call  the .city fire  de-&#13;
partment  directly.&#13;
As&#13;
a&#13;
member of the Envi-&#13;
ronmental Resource Commit.&#13;
tee, Barca  said he was&#13;
re-&#13;
cently  presented  With a bill&#13;
that   would   require   fire-&#13;
fighters  to be famillar  With&#13;
chemicals  used  In their  dis-&#13;
trict  llkely  to  cause  fires.&#13;
This was&#13;
in&#13;
response&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
in.&#13;
cident  in Madison  in which&#13;
.several&#13;
persons were killed&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
fire because firefighters ar-&#13;
rived on the scene and&#13;
did&#13;
not&#13;
know how&#13;
to&#13;
treat a particu-&#13;
. lar chemical.&#13;
.&#13;
"Universities were included&#13;
In this bill, at no small cost to&#13;
the state,"  he said, "because&#13;
we believe so strongly  In the&#13;
need to protect students."&#13;
Other  benefits  to Parkslde&#13;
would include ambulance and&#13;
police  services,  as  well as&#13;
garbage&#13;
pfek-up.&#13;
"I  believe  very  strongly&#13;
that (annexation) would be a&#13;
very  positive  beneflt  to stu-&#13;
dents, as well&#13;
as&#13;
to&#13;
this&#13;
insti-&#13;
tution that I care very&#13;
much&#13;
about, " said Barca,  who re-&#13;
sides&#13;
1'h&#13;
miles from campus.&#13;
"So  I would  hope  that  you&#13;
would in fact reconsider this&#13;
resolution  (opposing annexa-&#13;
tion) and reverse  your posi-&#13;
tion."&#13;
The resolution  also stated&#13;
that PSGA was joining&#13;
Chan-&#13;
cellor Sheila Kaplan In&#13;
oppos-&#13;
ing annexation.  Barca  said&#13;
that  his  conversations   with&#13;
Kaplan  have  indicated  that&#13;
although she has some can.&#13;
cems, she does not oppose the&#13;
venture, but supports it.&#13;
In&#13;
a later  telephone inter-&#13;
view,  Kaplan  said  that  she&#13;
never took a stand in opposi-&#13;
tion to annexaton,  and that, In&#13;
fact,  PSGA never  asked  her&#13;
what her position was.&#13;
"We want&#13;
to&#13;
look more&#13;
ex.&#13;
tenslvely Into the impllcations&#13;
of annexation,"  she said. •&#13;
'U&#13;
It would be good for the&#13;
unI-&#13;
versity,  and&#13;
if&#13;
the Town of&#13;
Somers and other parties in-&#13;
volved are not negatively im-&#13;
pacted,&#13;
then&#13;
we should seri-&#13;
ously consider&#13;
it.&#13;
IJ&#13;
Somers F.D. offended by Barca&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The  Somers  Fire  Depart-&#13;
ment apparently  took offense&#13;
to comments  made  by State&#13;
Rep.  Peter  W. Barca  here&#13;
Nov.&#13;
20.&#13;
Barca,   In  delivering   a&#13;
speech  to the  Parkslde&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent Government Association&#13;
(PSGA)  supporting   the  an-&#13;
nexation  of Parkside  by the&#13;
City of Kenosha, said that the&#13;
university   could  better   be&#13;
served by Kenosha's  full-time&#13;
fire department than Somers'&#13;
volunteer fire department.&#13;
PSGA President  Alex Pettit&#13;
said he was contacted  by off!·&#13;
Congrats&#13;
College&#13;
Bowl&#13;
Winning&#13;
Wargamers!&#13;
cials with the Somers squad&#13;
who Invited him to tour their&#13;
facilities&#13;
to&#13;
illustrate  their&#13;
competence.&#13;
Pettit  said  he  and/or  Jan&#13;
Kratochvil,  a PSGA senator,&#13;
wllI&#13;
tour the facility  Wednes.&#13;
day,  Dec.&#13;
2,&#13;
and  Invited  a&#13;
Ranger reporter  to attend.&#13;
According to a Nov.&#13;
25&#13;
artl-&#13;
cle  in  the  Kenosha  News,&#13;
members of Somers Fire and&#13;
Rescue squads appeared at a&#13;
Nov.  24  meeting   of  the&#13;
Somers  Town Board  to pro-&#13;
test the annexation.&#13;
David Holtze, Somers Town&#13;
Chairman,  said  the board  is&#13;
evaluating  the issue.&#13;
"We still don't know the full&#13;
lmpact," he said.&#13;
Town   attorney&#13;
Robert&#13;
Kendall   was   directed   by&#13;
board members&#13;
to&#13;
research&#13;
annexation  laws and report to&#13;
the board In early December.&#13;
A meeting  between  City of&#13;
Kenosha and Town of Somers&#13;
representatives&#13;
to&#13;
discuss&#13;
the&#13;
possibility  of annexing  Park.&#13;
side will be held Dec.&#13;
8&#13;
at&#13;
5:30p.m.&#13;
In&#13;
a Nov. 29 article,  Holtze&#13;
told the News the suggestion&#13;
that Kenosha  With tts 24.hour&#13;
fire  department   could  do a&#13;
better  job&#13;
than&#13;
Somers'  voi-&#13;
unteers&#13;
is&#13;
"a  slap  in  the&#13;
face."&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
December&#13;
3. 1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Roaches, rodents require&#13;
responsible action&#13;
-'It&#13;
18&#13;
not easy&#13;
to&#13;
put&#13;
in&#13;
stories&#13;
in&#13;
the paper&#13;
each week&#13;
and lIBten to the wrath of students, faculty, staff and ad-&#13;
ministration when&#13;
the&#13;
stories are not popular. The impor-&#13;
tant lhtng for the reader to remember&#13;
Is&#13;
that the Ranger&#13;
does not make the news.&#13;
It&#13;
just reports&#13;
It.&#13;
In&#13;
our last issue, there was a story concernIng  the cock-&#13;
roaches and rodents In the Union butldlng. Many thought-&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
was sensationalist to&#13;
run&#13;
It&#13;
on the front page and to&#13;
headline&#13;
It&#13;
as It was.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
Is&#13;
shortsighted thinking.&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
clear that readers are not Interested In when com-&#13;
mlttees meet and what they&#13;
diseuse.&#13;
U&#13;
the readers were&#13;
concerned about the meetings. they would attend them.&#13;
U&#13;
that particular  story had been&#13;
run&#13;
on page&#13;
6&#13;
referring to&#13;
the mundane business of the committee. very few readers&#13;
would&#13;
know about the seriousness of the&#13;
cockroach prcb-&#13;
lem and very UtUe extra  would have been done to correct&#13;
the&#13;
problem. That approach was taken and we were told&#13;
that we were added to a lIBt of people who had&#13;
com-&#13;
plalned.&#13;
With almost&#13;
IlO&#13;
percent of the Segregated  Fee money&#13;
lIOing&#13;
to the mortgage.  upkeep of the Union buUdlng and&#13;
salartes&#13;
of some of Its employees. It&#13;
la&#13;
imperative  that&#13;
8tUdenta&#13;
are aware of&#13;
what&#13;
their money&#13;
is&#13;
providing for&#13;
them.&#13;
U&#13;
thla&#13;
story&#13;
had&#13;
been burled,  who would have&#13;
known?&#13;
Some of the nay-sayers clalmed that the cockroach&#13;
sttu-&#13;
atlon was well In control after reading the paper. yet the&#13;
day before the paper hit the stands. roaches were sUll&#13;
evt-&#13;
dent In the Union. Since the story hit. the roach&#13;
control-&#13;
lers have&#13;
hit&#13;
the Union&#13;
hard&#13;
because  no one wants&#13;
to&#13;
stay&#13;
away. No one wants to lose business In these already&#13;
hard&#13;
Urnes.&#13;
The roaches are now under control.&#13;
It&#13;
meant increasing&#13;
the.vlalts of the pest control man.&#13;
It&#13;
meant spending some&#13;
money. but the Union butldlng&#13;
Is&#13;
being taken&#13;
care&#13;
of now&#13;
and&#13;
presents&#13;
a&#13;
more&#13;
appeaUng&#13;
picture to Its patrons who.&#13;
tor&#13;
a&#13;
IILrge&#13;
part.&#13;
are&#13;
also&#13;
Its benefactors.&#13;
Student money&#13;
la&#13;
well spent when&#13;
It&#13;
provtdes all stu·&#13;
dents&#13;
with a place we&#13;
can&#13;
be proud of. and even when It&#13;
means&#13;
that  an unpopular.  unpleasant  topic Uke&#13;
cock·&#13;
roaches&#13;
has&#13;
to be&#13;
discussed,&#13;
It&#13;
will&#13;
be worih the wrath to&#13;
see&#13;
that there&#13;
la&#13;
follow·through by the responsible parties.&#13;
-----Lefters------&#13;
Student leaders&#13;
should lead&#13;
Tuition waivers&#13;
draw support&#13;
To&#13;
tile&#13;
EdItor:&#13;
Your&#13;
November&#13;
19th&#13;
edi-&#13;
torial entitled. "MInority&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent  walvers  honorable  but&#13;
unreal1Btlc," mlased the&#13;
real&#13;
problem of&#13;
UW&#13;
System&#13;
presl·&#13;
dent  Kenneth  Shaw's  pro-&#13;
posal.&#13;
Your    basic    argument&#13;
against his proposal was that&#13;
It&#13;
would hurt "those students&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
In the majority  and&#13;
could lead to additional&#13;
flare.&#13;
ups of racism."&#13;
Three&#13;
times&#13;
In your editorial  you stated&#13;
that students  of color would&#13;
be vtctlms of white students'&#13;
anger&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
plan  were&#13;
adopted.&#13;
Thla&#13;
kind of shallow&#13;
thinking&#13;
makes  me wonder&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
are&#13;
cynical or misguIded&#13;
see&#13;
Waivers&#13;
P"lI8&#13;
11&#13;
To&#13;
tile&#13;
Edllor:&#13;
What   '"&#13;
J.J.&#13;
Masterson&#13;
thinIllng&#13;
about?&#13;
RIa&#13;
vlews&#13;
on&#13;
student&#13;
tn-&#13;
volvement&#13;
in&#13;
Parks1de's ac-&#13;
tlvlty program  reek of short·&#13;
oIghtedneas and&#13;
naivete.&#13;
lead-&#13;
Ing&#13;
me to belleve he ham't&#13;
learned lesson one about the&#13;
campus or the constltuency&#13;
he's been elected to serve.&#13;
HIs&#13;
rationale Is that such a&#13;
sUpulation  would  eUmlnate&#13;
potential  confUct&#13;
of&#13;
Interest&#13;
during&#13;
fee allocation for stu-&#13;
dent organizations.&#13;
He and those who&#13;
think&#13;
like&#13;
him&#13;
argue  that&#13;
If&#13;
cerlafn&#13;
regulations&#13;
are&#13;
l\Ood&#13;
enough&#13;
see,.,d ...&#13;
pegs 11&#13;
~'JW'~&#13;
HEY!&#13;
CAN'TVouS~&#13;
THAT I'M ON&#13;
THE ~,&#13;
•&#13;
.\your views.&#13;
~&#13;
Annexation, tuition&#13;
waivers bring lots of letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It&#13;
seems to me a few facts&#13;
should  be  brought&#13;
to&#13;
light&#13;
ahoutthe   annexing  of&#13;
Park-&#13;
side. The city and other&#13;
elect-&#13;
ed officials falled to&#13;
do&#13;
their&#13;
homework before they did&#13;
their  studies  and  speeches.&#13;
Let me llst them:&#13;
1.&#13;
Security&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
campus  Pollce  and  backup&#13;
by Kenosha County Sheriff.&#13;
2.&#13;
Fire   Protection&#13;
Somers&#13;
has&#13;
equipment  rang.&#13;
Ing&#13;
from grass rigs, tankers.&#13;
pumpers and an aerial.  Fire-&#13;
men  are  thoroughly  trained&#13;
by certified Instructors  of the&#13;
State plus regular  scheduled&#13;
training.&#13;
All&#13;
this&#13;
la&#13;
done on&#13;
their&#13;
own&#13;
time  (no  pay).&#13;
Somers  also  has  two&#13;
(2)&#13;
"Jaws of Life" complete&#13;
with&#13;
all the attachments.  CIty&#13;
of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
has&#13;
one.&#13;
3.&#13;
Ambulance  Servtce  _&#13;
Somers  has  three&#13;
(3)&#13;
vehi-&#13;
cles,  City  of  Kenosha&#13;
has&#13;
three&#13;
(3)&#13;
and&#13;
one&#13;
(1)&#13;
reserve&#13;
Most of Somers'  EMTs&#13;
ar~&#13;
certlfled   EMT-Ds  meaning&#13;
they can deflbrllate&#13;
In&#13;
cases&#13;
of  cardiac   arrest.   CIty  of&#13;
Kenosha  -  EMT  only.  The&#13;
Paramedic   program   talked&#13;
about&#13;
will&#13;
be avatlable&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
county units. not just the city.&#13;
Besides   regular   scheduled&#13;
training,  our EMTs attend  a&#13;
refresher   class  every   two&#13;
years  and  are  certified&#13;
In&#13;
CPR&#13;
every year.&#13;
Somers  belongs&#13;
to&#13;
Mutuaf&#13;
Aid   Box   Aiann    System&#13;
(MABAS) which enables us to&#13;
draw  any type of equipment&#13;
and  manpower   from  com-&#13;
munities  In Racine  County&#13;
to&#13;
northern illinois&#13;
In&#13;
the case of&#13;
an emergency.  Somers&#13;
also&#13;
has&#13;
signed mutual  afd agree.&#13;
ments  with  our  neighboring&#13;
communities.   The  CIty  of&#13;
Kenosha refUsed&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
part&#13;
of&#13;
MABAS and  refused  signing&#13;
mutual  afd  agreement   w1th&#13;
Somers or PI~t&#13;
Pratrte,&#13;
Even with Kenosha's  north&#13;
side station,  ambulance  serv-&#13;
Ice  Would come  from  22nd&#13;
Avenue    and    Washington&#13;
Road.&#13;
If&#13;
they  are  avatlable,&#13;
or another part of the city. No&#13;
response time gained.&#13;
II"&#13;
case  of&#13;
fire&#13;
proteolillll,'-&#13;
major equlpment&#13;
WOII1d_&#13;
from other&#13;
stations&#13;
also.&#13;
III&#13;
response time gslned.&#13;
4.&#13;
Garbage&#13;
Colleclkln-&#13;
belleve&#13;
thla&#13;
Is&#13;
contract.1l1&#13;
thla&#13;
time.&#13;
5.&#13;
Money -&#13;
Somers-&#13;
celved&#13;
$4000&#13;
and ~&#13;
hopes to receive&#13;
$400.-&#13;
which no one&#13;
else&#13;
In&#13;
K&#13;
County   would&#13;
receltt&#13;
I&#13;
penny.&#13;
6.&#13;
Prestige -&#13;
To&#13;
1bI&#13;
thla&#13;
la&#13;
a&#13;
big&#13;
uem&#13;
sIOIlI&#13;
money.&#13;
Should the&#13;
ChalIceD«··&#13;
group from Psrkslde.&#13;
lbIat&#13;
fathers,  or  Kenos~&#13;
wish&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
our&#13;
eq&#13;
rI*&#13;
give us&#13;
a&#13;
call, we""';..&#13;
Ing to&#13;
be&#13;
aahamed&#13;
of,&#13;
next time get thefa:,.,&#13;
your&#13;
speeches  and P,&#13;
articles.&#13;
_h  ..&#13;
0010_  M•• -   •&#13;
·EMT·D&#13;
80mers&#13;
Be&amp;&lt;O"&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
~.£aKi~;;:.:..···············..·· · ···&#13;
Edito&lt;  Randy&#13;
LsCounl&#13;
Sparts Editor&#13;
on.v"",  -..    ._&#13;
-•. _-&#13;
News&#13;
Editor   Dave&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
Poot  E .&#13;
~   H Riner&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ken ~&#13;
····················A..s..·t..·P·hot&#13;
O&#13;
Ed~tor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur.. FeatureslEntertainmentEditor  M--~-.I&#13;
J&#13;
:. .&#13;
S..  0 dltar&#13;
T&#13;
0.0_'..&#13;
A._&#13;
F&#13;
t&#13;
Ed'&#13;
ncn:n  •&#13;
OhI&#13;
Oistnbutlon Manager&#13;
.....  ~&#13;
~.   eaures  itor  Robbluehr&#13;
C·&#13;
Bernie&#13;
DoII.••..•...•&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Entertainment Editor  Steven R ~""""""""""""&#13;
opy EdItor&#13;
.&#13;
...••............ Office Manager&#13;
BUSINESSST&#13;
-AF-F------&#13;
GENERALSTAFF&#13;
.-   "'-'.   "'" _.&#13;
'm&#13;
Cole,  _&#13;
Kehoe&#13;
G.",,,&#13;
Don&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
Business  Manager   ~&#13;
~,&#13;
~Clon&#13;
J.&#13;
liebret/ll. AmYltKl 9&#13;
Kathy&#13;
CIapp4iarmeyer   .•-&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Busmess  Manager&#13;
WIctlna&#13;
Paaa&#13;
Hill&#13;
latn&#13;
Ptsaca&#13;
Mallory,&#13;
Doug McEvoy.&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Jon Hearron&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Mark&#13;
shiIhavy&#13;
w'-.....&#13;
t'~_A":&#13;
Sleven&#13;
PIcazo.&#13;
Mana&#13;
Rmtz.&#13;
.  ,,,...., ......"'''''''""  Jeff.Stanlch.  Tyson Wilda&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79020">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 13, December 3, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79021">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79022">
                <text>1987-12-03</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79025">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="79026">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="79027">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79028">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="79029">
                <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="79030">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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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="79033">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2680">
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      <tag tagId="2668">
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          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
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            </elementText>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78994">
              <text>Hargrove contract not renewed</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>&#13;
UniverSity of WisconSin-Parks Ide&#13;
photo  by Dave McEvoy&#13;
FlIIhmanDickieCoshun is assisted  by Doug Wlelgat, as-&#13;
!.!!:!nt&#13;
director&#13;
01&#13;
campus police  Iroman  elevator shalt.&#13;
-.un  and twelve other stude~ts  were trapped  in the&#13;
.~    Inthe library between floors lor&#13;
a&#13;
hall hour Tues-&#13;
-JlVening.&#13;
.&#13;
NewSUFAC chair&#13;
elected&#13;
by&#13;
Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~te&#13;
controversy  sur-&#13;
..    g&#13;
her Involvement In&#13;
'110&#13;
committee,Jenny  Carr,&#13;
~  also&#13;
holdsthe position of&#13;
lbair&#13;
r Editor, was elected&#13;
ltIattyO/&#13;
the Segregated Uni-&#13;
IlIItee&#13;
Fees Allocation Com.&#13;
lIIilI'.11(SUF&#13;
AC) Wednesday.&#13;
Carr'&#13;
~   reluted accusations of&#13;
lraani&#13;
Ofinterest with four&#13;
llId.&#13;
:ts.&#13;
First of all, she&#13;
IllIlIe ~&#13;
bUdget decisions&#13;
llIIjo&#13;
next&#13;
year will affect&#13;
IlIIiIl&#13;
Sh&#13;
year's&#13;
budgets,&#13;
til.&#13;
SoC:&#13;
n&#13;
:"  have graduat.&#13;
.... 7.&#13;
y, she said  she&#13;
~elds&#13;
the chair when&#13;
II,&#13;
llIdag tta&#13;
he&#13;
Ranger&#13;
budg-&#13;
!II&#13;
R•• :&#13;
s&#13;
Ins from voting&#13;
";;;"'l!er  iSsues. Thirdly,&#13;
to&#13;
:tte&#13;
e&#13;
meetings  are&#13;
lrtlcon\&#13;
public and anyone&#13;
~A ~to attend. Finally,&#13;
enate aPProves all&#13;
I!lSde&#13;
by SUFAC.&#13;
~ely   that anything&#13;
done&#13;
to&#13;
undermine&#13;
Hargrove contract not renewed&#13;
by Steven R. Picazo&#13;
.Jesse  Hargrove  was&#13;
in.&#13;
formed by mall (Oct&#13;
30)&#13;
that&#13;
his contact was not going&#13;
to&#13;
be renewed after this year.&#13;
This news came as a surprise&#13;
to&#13;
him especially since he had&#13;
just&#13;
reentry&#13;
been reassigned&#13;
from Parkside's Educational&#13;
OPPOrtunity  Center  (EOC) ,&#13;
where  he  was  director,&#13;
to&#13;
what he believed was a high-&#13;
er position In administration,&#13;
as a special assistant to the&#13;
Vice Chancellor and&#13;
a&#13;
Span-&#13;
ish instructor.&#13;
Under Parkside's  academic&#13;
staff rules, all its employees&#13;
are given one year's notice-of&#13;
termination.  His position on&#13;
campus&#13;
will&#13;
end October,&#13;
1988.&#13;
Hargrove   was  originally&#13;
hired as the director of the&#13;
EOC&#13;
1n·1985.&#13;
It&#13;
is a federally&#13;
funded  program,   which  Is&#13;
currently&#13;
in&#13;
the process  of&#13;
being rewritten  and&#13;
submit-&#13;
ted  for&#13;
its&#13;
next  three-year&#13;
funded  cycle. Hargrove  has&#13;
been active in recruiting low-&#13;
income&#13;
and&#13;
minority&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
When the new position was&#13;
outlined for him In&#13;
Septem-&#13;
ber,&#13;
he saw it as a move in a&#13;
positive direction and&#13;
a&#13;
way&#13;
for him to better  serve  the&#13;
campus&#13;
in&#13;
a wider capacity.&#13;
G. Gary  Grace,  assistant&#13;
chancellor for student affairs,&#13;
described the new position as&#13;
being a vehicle which could&#13;
break Hargrove out of the rut&#13;
of only working with minority&#13;
programs.&#13;
"The new position was de-&#13;
signed to be a combination of&#13;
teaching  duties&#13;
and&#13;
some&#13;
general  staff&#13;
duties."&#13;
Grace&#13;
said.&#13;
"It&#13;
was not a&#13;
promo-&#13;
tion; it was a lateral move of&#13;
ances.&#13;
"The committee  is so mis-&#13;
understood  by the campus,"&#13;
Carr said. "Peopie&#13;
think&#13;
the&#13;
committee  makes  decisions,&#13;
when In fact, all Its decisions&#13;
are approved by the Senate."&#13;
Carr said she pursued  the&#13;
SUFAC chair to repay a per-&#13;
sonal debt&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I&#13;
feel that the University&#13;
has&#13;
done&#13;
a&#13;
lot for me,"  she&#13;
said. "I'm  taking on&#13;
thl&#13;
it&#13;
,s rei&#13;
sponsiblllty,  although   s no&#13;
.a&#13;
pleasant  one,  because}&#13;
hope it wlll benefit students.&#13;
Carr said the job is difficult&#13;
when "people&#13;
1&#13;
know and reo&#13;
spect"&#13;
request  funds  that&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
cannot be approved.&#13;
"You  have  to say  no&#13;
to&#13;
the Integrity  of the budgeilng    everyone&#13;
In&#13;
one way or an-&#13;
process,"  said Carr, "least of   other,"  she  explained,  ~e-&#13;
all by me."&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
cause the committee  is. quite&#13;
She said Senate approva  0   limited on the f?oney It can&#13;
all SUFAC actions provides a  'dole out to.or,gamzations.&#13;
system  of checks  and, bal- , . , , , .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
,"&#13;
,&#13;
...&#13;
Jesse Hargrove&#13;
a&#13;
reassignment nature ...&#13;
Hargrove  felt he was&#13;
mis-&#13;
lead about the permanance  of&#13;
his new position.&#13;
"They&#13;
had&#13;
me&#13;
sold on the&#13;
move,&#13;
so&#13;
I&#13;
saw no&#13;
reason&#13;
not&#13;
to take it. But they got me&#13;
over there and a month later,&#13;
they  dropped&#13;
this&#13;
bomb on&#13;
me,&#13;
PI&#13;
Hargrove  told the Ke-&#13;
nosh News.&#13;
The  letter  of termination&#13;
came from Grace and&#13;
it&#13;
gave&#13;
it no reasons for Hargrove's&#13;
dismissal. Hargrove has&#13;
since&#13;
submitted  a formal  request&#13;
for the reasons of&#13;
his&#13;
termi-&#13;
nation.&#13;
Hargrove  went on&#13;
to corn-&#13;
ment that he saw&#13;
his&#13;
firing as&#13;
being&#13;
in&#13;
direct conflict with&#13;
OW&#13;
System  President  Ken-&#13;
neth Shaw's commitment&#13;
to&#13;
10creasing&#13;
mtnortty&#13;
faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
In&#13;
a Racine Journal Times&#13;
article  on Saturday,  Novem-&#13;
ber&#13;
7,&#13;
Shaw was asked&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
recent  dismissal  of&#13;
Park.&#13;
side's&#13;
only&#13;
black In the upper&#13;
admlnistration  ran 10 confllct&#13;
to&#13;
UW&#13;
commitment&#13;
to&#13;
retain-&#13;
Ing minorities.  He said  he&#13;
was not In a poslUon to tully&#13;
access the situation .&#13;
Shaw dld defend the chan-&#13;
cellor's right&#13;
to&#13;
"rigorously"&#13;
evaluate employees.&#13;
I'We&#13;
rigorously recruit.&#13;
we&#13;
evaluate people," Shaw said.&#13;
"The one&#13;
thing&#13;
we won't&#13;
do&#13;
Is&#13;
patronize&#13;
one group."&#13;
Grace feit that the issue of&#13;
Harirove's   termination  and&#13;
UW's  commitment&#13;
to&#13;
In.&#13;
crease  minority  faculty&#13;
are&#13;
two different topics.&#13;
"This  Institution  has  not&#13;
backed off on Its commitment&#13;
of  actively   searching   for&#13;
qUallfted minority faculty and&#13;
staff. We&#13;
are&#13;
stlll deeply In.&#13;
volved&#13;
In&#13;
this  effort  even&#13;
though we&#13;
felt&#13;
it&#13;
was neces-&#13;
sary&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
this particular&#13;
personnel change."&#13;
In&#13;
an interview with Racine&#13;
Journal    Times,   Corinne&#13;
Owens, Racine  president  of&#13;
the National  Associalon&#13;
tor&#13;
the Advancement  of Colored&#13;
People (NAACP) saw the ac-&#13;
tion&#13;
as "an&#13;
earthquake&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
minority community.  We had&#13;
so&#13;
much  confidence&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
work&#13;
he's&#13;
doing."&#13;
Thomas  Loftus,  State  As-&#13;
sembly  Speaker  and an ac-&#13;
quaintance   of  Hargrove's&#13;
through the Wisconsin&#13;
ASSOCi_&#13;
ation  of Equal  Opportuntty&#13;
Program  Personnel,  Bald it&#13;
Hargrove was let go because&#13;
of a lack  ot&#13;
runds,&#13;
it sWI&#13;
doesn't show very much&#13;
unt-&#13;
verslty commitment.&#13;
Loftus&#13;
has&#13;
offered his serv-&#13;
ices to lOOk&#13;
into&#13;
the&#13;
matter&#13;
11&#13;
asked. He said that Hargrove,&#13;
as of yet,&#13;
has&#13;
not asked him&#13;
to do so.&#13;
Hargrove  said  he will be&#13;
asking&#13;
for&#13;
a&#13;
reconsideration&#13;
on the decision  and.  or at&#13;
least, a&#13;
full&#13;
explanation&#13;
into&#13;
the rationale behind&#13;
his&#13;
being&#13;
let&#13;
go.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Jarvis road block&#13;
page 3&#13;
..&#13;
Campus radio station&#13;
page 5&#13;
Twins, twins, twins&#13;
pages 6,7&#13;
Basketball preview&#13;
page 12&#13;
_,....-L;.!   -------&#13;
2 Thursday, November&#13;
12,1987&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Newly elected V.P. and&#13;
Senate take office&#13;
by Kelly McKlsll1ck&#13;
....d&#13;
Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
Ne_EdIlors&#13;
In&#13;
ceremonial  fashion. vice&#13;
prell1denl Scott Peterson  and&#13;
nine&#13;
senators&#13;
took the oath of&#13;
office Friday at the Parkside&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Assocta-&#13;
lion (PSGA) meellng.&#13;
senators  Steve Picazo, Dan&#13;
Vogi, Stephanle Tatem,  Debl&#13;
FrItchow, Julie Wunrow, Jim&#13;
Cole,  Susan  Walborn,  Dan&#13;
Perrault  and Gary Heggeland&#13;
were  sworn  In.  (Heggeland&#13;
replaced  Tyson  Wilda  who&#13;
won the election but resigned&#13;
before entering offlce.)&#13;
Addressing the new Senate,&#13;
PSGA president  Alex Pettit&#13;
reported  that  to  meet  last&#13;
year"  deficit of&#13;
$2,1311,&#13;
budg·&#13;
eted  eecretary  wages  were&#13;
eut&#13;
by&#13;
1801.87&#13;
and the&#13;
prest-&#13;
dent'.&#13;
8&amp;lary&#13;
was reduced&#13;
by&#13;
n,lIII.1I&#13;
PelUI&#13;
abo&#13;
expressed hopes&#13;
of forming&#13;
a&#13;
sister&#13;
relation-&#13;
sIIIp with UW·MIIwaukee. He&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
earnJng&#13;
money&#13;
there as a&#13;
computer  consult-&#13;
ant.&#13;
The  8egreated  Unlverstty&#13;
Fees  Allocallon  Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) report&#13;
abo&#13;
brought&#13;
news of a solution to deficit&#13;
problems .&#13;
..After a number of months&#13;
of debate and discussion,  we&#13;
have  finally   resolved   the&#13;
$63,000&#13;
budget shortfall  from&#13;
1986-87."   said    Peterson,&#13;
SUFAC chair&#13;
througt;&#13;
Novem-&#13;
ber •.&#13;
In&#13;
a later interview,  Peter-&#13;
son said the money was taken&#13;
from   uncommitted&#13;
equity&#13;
funds and audited  from nor-&#13;
mal operations reserves.&#13;
SUFAC had considered tak-&#13;
ing&#13;
15 percent  from each or-&#13;
ganlzatlon's  operating  budg-&#13;
et  he said, but decided that&#13;
w~u1dbe too damaging.&#13;
"We  felt  this  way  would&#13;
hurt  people the least&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
current year,"  said Peterson.&#13;
The  uncommitted   equity&#13;
funds dipped into&#13;
will&#13;
not be&#13;
repaid. "There shouldn't be a&#13;
big build-up In that fund any-&#13;
way,"  he  said,  explaining&#13;
that  the slate  can and  does&#13;
often  take  those  types  of&#13;
funds away from the univer-&#13;
sity.&#13;
The reserve  funds will be&#13;
repaid next year,  Peterson.&#13;
ThIrty-six percent of each or-&#13;
ganIzaton's   reserves   were&#13;
taken.  8eg fees&#13;
will&#13;
have to&#13;
be raised to replenish&#13;
thlB.&#13;
Ghostbuster slated for&#13;
campus presentation&#13;
Have  you  ever  wondered&#13;
Jusl what really goes on when&#13;
someone sees a ghost? Have&#13;
you been curtous&#13;
to&#13;
learn the&#13;
eonnection  ESP  and  other&#13;
peychlc  abilities  have  w1th&#13;
slghllngs  of apparitions.  or&#13;
when someone&#13;
ls&#13;
involved&#13;
In&#13;
a  poltergeist   disturbance?&#13;
Are&#13;
you ever questioning the&#13;
way the movles portrsy  the&#13;
experiences  people have with&#13;
ghosts and ESP  or how the&#13;
researchers  and lnvestiators&#13;
are seen?  Ever. wonder  "who&#13;
ya gonna&#13;
caD"&#13;
If&#13;
thlB&#13;
happens&#13;
to you?&#13;
Parkslde  Actlvltles  Board&#13;
presents  "ESP. HAUNTINGS&#13;
AND&#13;
POLTERGEISTS,"&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
present  you w1th&#13;
answers  to  the  above  and&#13;
other   questions.   Real-life&#13;
"ghost-buster"&#13;
Lloyd   Auer-,&#13;
back&#13;
wtll&#13;
cover the way para-&#13;
psychology,   the   scientific&#13;
study of psychic phenomena,&#13;
looks at these and other expe-&#13;
riences. He&#13;
will&#13;
discuss what&#13;
parspsychologists&#13;
have&#13;
learned about the way we all&#13;
seem to be psychic, and&#13;
will&#13;
center&#13;
in&#13;
on encounters&#13;
peo-&#13;
ple have w1th happenings that&#13;
moat  people  associate  with&#13;
horror films: apparitions,  pol-&#13;
tergeists, and hauntlngs.&#13;
He&#13;
will&#13;
closely  examine&#13;
some of the theories parapsy-&#13;
chologists have put forward.&#13;
But moat of all, learn how a&#13;
parapsychologist  really inves-&#13;
tigates   such   cases   of&#13;
"ghostly"  occurrences,   and&#13;
how they help people not only&#13;
stop the exprlence  (In effect,&#13;
"bust the ghost"),&#13;
If&#13;
that  Is&#13;
what  Is asked  of them,  but&#13;
also  how  people  Can learn&#13;
from such experiences.&#13;
Auerbach  will speak  Tues-&#13;
day, November  17, at 8 p.m,&#13;
In  the  Union  CInema.  the&#13;
event&#13;
Is&#13;
FREE  and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
As  a  special  promotion,&#13;
PAB&#13;
will&#13;
present  the movle&#13;
"Ghostbusters"  on Monday.&#13;
November 16, at 7 p.m. and&#13;
9:30 p.m. In the CInema.&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kelty&#13;
Mct&lt;i&#13;
ct&lt;..&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur .. FealUfeSlEntertalnment   Editor&#13;
Terri&#13;
DeRosier&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Bernie  Doll&#13;
Asst.&#13;
EntOl18inment  Ed"or&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Student responds&#13;
to&#13;
Alum's views&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I  am  responding&#13;
to&#13;
Phil&#13;
Tohl's editorial in the October&#13;
29 issue.  I am&#13;
a-&#13;
sophomore&#13;
transfer student who uses the&#13;
library  a  lot.  I  have  often&#13;
used the services of the refer-&#13;
ence staff and the librarians&#13;
there have been great at help-&#13;
Ing me. Tohl's remark  about&#13;
them being there  doing noth-&#13;
ing hit me as extremely  inac-&#13;
curate.&#13;
The  librarians   there  have&#13;
taken  time  to  help  me  in&#13;
doing research  for my papers&#13;
as well as help me find infor-&#13;
mation  on  companies   with&#13;
which I have had interviews.&#13;
In either instance,  they spent&#13;
a LOT of time in helping me.&#13;
I  feel  their  assistance   has&#13;
been very valuable  and I feel&#13;
Tohl's derogatory  statements&#13;
against  them  are  unwar-&#13;
ranted.&#13;
I just&#13;
think&#13;
It's time ......&#13;
one  said  something GOOD&#13;
about the library. I'm&#13;
Ured,"&#13;
rel\dIng all these cynicalll1l-&#13;
cies in the paper. Rather&#13;
!bID&#13;
argue about somethlng!lupld&#13;
like   library   doors,&#13;
wIIJ&#13;
doesn't  anyone attack REAL&#13;
problems  that  really&#13;
aIIocI&#13;
us.  like  DECREASING...&#13;
dent  financial  aid and&#13;
IN·&#13;
CREASING TUITION?&#13;
carol&#13;
JIlIlIiI&#13;
Trani said in letters&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
flip&#13;
administrators   of 34&#13;
inde-&#13;
pendent  colleges and unlver·&#13;
sities, 16 vocational, technic!l&#13;
and adult educatlon &lt;listric..&#13;
and the UW System's&#13;
13&#13;
unl-&#13;
versities.&#13;
System V.P. to head trade committee&#13;
MADISON--Eugene&#13;
P.&#13;
Trani,&#13;
the  academic  affairs&#13;
vlce president  of the Univer-&#13;
sity of "wIsconsin System, has&#13;
been  appointed  to head  the&#13;
Education  Committee  of the&#13;
Wisconsin World Trade  Cen-&#13;
ter.&#13;
The center  was established&#13;
In June through the efforts of&#13;
a state task force and Charles&#13;
Mulcahy, a MIlwaukee attor-&#13;
ney who now serves  as the&#13;
center's president.&#13;
It&#13;
is head-&#13;
quartered&#13;
in&#13;
Milwaukee  and&#13;
operates  to  help  Wisconsin&#13;
businesses  succeed&#13;
in&#13;
interna-&#13;
tional trade.&#13;
In&#13;
his capacity  as chair  of&#13;
the center's education&#13;
com-&#13;
mittee,  Trani  has  called  on&#13;
all  of  the   state's   higher&#13;
education  institutions  for in-&#13;
formation  on services  they&#13;
provide or are able&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
to the business  community  in&#13;
the  area  of international   af-&#13;
fairs.&#13;
"We have  an  opportunity,&#13;
by&#13;
organizing  ourselves  and&#13;
working with this (trade  cen-&#13;
ter)  group,  to make  a state-&#13;
wide  academic  contribution&#13;
to&#13;
the  international   business&#13;
community   in  Wisconsin,"&#13;
RANGER&#13;
.&#13;
The   trade   center ...&#13;
planned  and established;::&#13;
funds  from  the city of ~&#13;
waukee,  Milwaukee&#13;
eoun&#13;
I&#13;
and the slate. Mulcahy&#13;
sald.,d&#13;
will&#13;
operate   on  fees,&#13;
"thus  ensure  that the ~&#13;
'ees ~&#13;
center,  provides  servi&#13;
uonaJ&#13;
value&#13;
to&#13;
interna&#13;
traders,"&#13;
Ra_ngeris written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by students of UW-Parkside.  who are solely responsible for its&#13;
e:~~&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content. It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday duling the academic year except over orea&#13;
days.&#13;
.'&#13;
~1eSS'~&#13;
~  letters  to the e~itor&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they are typed. double-spaced and&#13;
350&#13;
words&#13;
will&#13;
be'"&#13;
letters must be sIgned. with a telephone number included for verification purposes. Names&#13;
tletd upon fequest.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse those which are false and/or de- •...&#13;
:.,....,,0/,.,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
..&#13;
Oead~ne for all letters. and classified ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
d'sbc~&#13;
ThurSday.&#13;
-&#13;
~~.&#13;
All correspondence  should be addressed 10: Ranger. UW.Parl&lt;side.&#13;
Sox&#13;
2000.&#13;
K..&#13;
••  nos~a.y!i&#13;
.53~4l·.&#13;
T.el~J!hone&#13;
4141553,2287&#13;
(Editonal)  or&#13;
414/553.2295&#13;
(Advertis·&#13;
.hgl.&#13;
• .••   , •••  ' ••  ~.  . • • • • ••    . •••••.••&#13;
Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ..··&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray&#13;
Ass!. Photo Editor&#13;
~   Hearron ··..··   ·•·&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manager&#13;
MtChaei&#13;
J.&#13;
RohI&#13;
Oistribution  Manager&#13;
Robb  L"""r&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
------&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF    .&#13;
Jason&#13;
Caspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiipeua.  John&#13;
l&lt;etIOe.&#13;
George&#13;
I&lt;oenig&#13;
Ooc&#13;
Jeff&#13;
lel1)lT'llll'~.  fUny.l~.&#13;
Rick&#13;
lllehL&#13;
DaWn&#13;
Mailall(i&#13;
MaIkl&lt;v.&#13;
_McE",.&#13;
lie""&#13;
Midma.P  ""'&#13;
'"&#13;
Pacione.&#13;
Steven&#13;
l'icuo.&#13;
Maria&#13;
RiAtz.&#13;
Mark Shilhavy.  Wendy&#13;
Sorenson.  Jeff StaAictl.  Tyson WiIIla.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 11, November 12, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78991">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="78992">
                <text>1987-11-12</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78996">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78997">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="79000">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <text>&#13;
ian&#13;
Editorial&#13;
...&#13;
EVVs&#13;
~ndy&#13;
berates&#13;
the&#13;
university's&#13;
one-of-a-&#13;
kind&#13;
text-book&#13;
purchasing&#13;
procedure.&#13;
See &#13;
ft  &#13;
on &#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
nside...&#13;
We're&#13;
Low&#13;
Budget&#13;
Radio&#13;
is&#13;
back&#13;
wnh&#13;
a new&#13;
manager&#13;
and&#13;
an nude.&#13;
Page&#13;
2&#13;
Women's&#13;
Center&#13;
announces&#13;
spring&#13;
events.&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Where&#13;
can you find a three&#13;
cent&#13;
speon?&#13;
Gabe&#13;
knows&#13;
...&#13;
Page&#13;
4&#13;
VOLUME&#13;
21&#13;
ISSUE&#13;
16&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
-&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
"The&#13;
communities&#13;
sur-&#13;
rounding&#13;
the&#13;
campus,&#13;
have&#13;
been&#13;
plagued&#13;
by&#13;
thefts&#13;
from&#13;
parked&#13;
ve-&#13;
hicles,"&#13;
-Dave&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
Police&#13;
Chief&#13;
mediate&#13;
medical&#13;
attention.&#13;
Noth-&#13;
ing was&#13;
stolen&#13;
from&#13;
the vehicle.&#13;
They&#13;
provided&#13;
the following&#13;
de-&#13;
scriptions&#13;
of the suspects:&#13;
Suspect&#13;
I:&#13;
Male,&#13;
black,18-19&#13;
years&#13;
old, 6'1",150&#13;
pounds,&#13;
slen-&#13;
der build,&#13;
faint&#13;
mustache,&#13;
fair com -&#13;
plexion,&#13;
wearing&#13;
a blue/white/black&#13;
"team"&#13;
jacket&#13;
and&#13;
black&#13;
leather&#13;
gloves.&#13;
Suspect2:&#13;
Male,&#13;
black,19-20&#13;
years&#13;
old, 5'9",&#13;
athletic&#13;
build,&#13;
faint&#13;
mustache,&#13;
wearing&#13;
black&#13;
leather&#13;
Professor&#13;
and&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
campus&#13;
settle&#13;
tenure&#13;
dispute&#13;
Nick&#13;
Zahn&#13;
Assistant&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Professor&#13;
Ceil&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
willreceive$126,ooo&#13;
as &#13;
pan &#13;
of&#13;
a settlement&#13;
between&#13;
her ana&#13;
the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
over&#13;
her denied&#13;
ten-&#13;
ure,&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
claimed&#13;
that she&#13;
hadheen&#13;
denied&#13;
tenure&#13;
because&#13;
she is a woman&#13;
and was&#13;
preg-&#13;
nant.&#13;
She filed&#13;
a lawsuit&#13;
in U.S.&#13;
Dishict&#13;
Court&#13;
in October&#13;
1991&#13;
fora reversal&#13;
of the tenure&#13;
deci-&#13;
sion.lnaddition,shedemanded&#13;
!hatshe&#13;
be given&#13;
back&#13;
pay .com-&#13;
pensation&#13;
for damages,&#13;
and re-&#13;
IDSratementatthe&#13;
OW -Milwau-&#13;
kee.&#13;
Although&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
now&#13;
teaches&#13;
at OW-Green&#13;
Bay,&#13;
un-&#13;
der the settlement&#13;
she can also&#13;
seek&#13;
tenure&#13;
at OW-Parkside&#13;
or&#13;
OW-Milwaukee_&#13;
She will receive&#13;
the pay of a&#13;
tenured&#13;
faculty&#13;
member&#13;
at OW-&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
even&#13;
if she is denied&#13;
tenure&#13;
there&#13;
a second&#13;
time,&#13;
and&#13;
is working&#13;
at OW-Parkside&#13;
or&#13;
UW -Milwaukee.&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
will receive&#13;
an im-&#13;
mediate&#13;
review&#13;
by an indepen-&#13;
dentcornrnittee&#13;
at UW-Milwau-&#13;
kee under&#13;
a new&#13;
state&#13;
law grant-&#13;
ing review&#13;
to a professor&#13;
denied&#13;
tenure.&#13;
Finding&#13;
denial&#13;
based&#13;
on dis-&#13;
crimination,&#13;
this committee&#13;
has&#13;
the power&#13;
to overturn&#13;
the deci-&#13;
sion.&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
will&#13;
receive&#13;
$40,000&#13;
in back&#13;
pay,&#13;
$25,000&#13;
for legal&#13;
expenses&#13;
and $61,000&#13;
in personal&#13;
expenses.&#13;
coat,&#13;
black&#13;
leather&#13;
gloves&#13;
and&#13;
black&#13;
athletic&#13;
shoes.&#13;
Suspect&#13;
3: Male,&#13;
black,&#13;
me-&#13;
dium&#13;
build,&#13;
wearing&#13;
a red/white&#13;
"team"&#13;
jacket&#13;
and a navy&#13;
blue&#13;
or&#13;
black&#13;
baseball&#13;
cap.&#13;
Suspect&#13;
4:&#13;
Male,&#13;
black,&#13;
wearing&#13;
a black&#13;
jacket.&#13;
"Thecornmunities&#13;
surround-&#13;
ing thecampus&#13;
have&#13;
been&#13;
plagued&#13;
by thefts&#13;
from&#13;
parked&#13;
vehicles,"&#13;
said&#13;
UW -Parkside&#13;
Campus&#13;
Po-&#13;
lice Chief&#13;
Dave&#13;
Ostrowski.&#13;
He  advised&#13;
that&#13;
valuables&#13;
such&#13;
as radar&#13;
detectors,&#13;
loose&#13;
change&#13;
or rapes&#13;
not be left where&#13;
they&#13;
are visible&#13;
from&#13;
the exterior&#13;
of the car.&#13;
"Because&#13;
you&#13;
never&#13;
know&#13;
what&#13;
is an attraction&#13;
to a thief,"&#13;
said Ostrowski,&#13;
"it is best to keep&#13;
the interior&#13;
of &#13;
yourcar&#13;
clear,&#13;
stor-&#13;
ing things&#13;
in the trunk,"&#13;
Although&#13;
Campus&#13;
Police&#13;
regularly&#13;
patrol&#13;
the&#13;
lots,&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
said that students,&#13;
fac-&#13;
ulty and &#13;
staff &#13;
can assist&#13;
by report-&#13;
ing suspicious&#13;
activities&#13;
or per-&#13;
sons&#13;
that are loitering&#13;
in the lots.&#13;
"It is not usual&#13;
to have&#13;
people&#13;
just&#13;
sitting&#13;
in their&#13;
cars&#13;
in our lots,"&#13;
said Ostrowski.&#13;
"Most&#13;
legitimate&#13;
people&#13;
park&#13;
their&#13;
cars and go into&#13;
the buildings,"&#13;
Ostrowski&#13;
notes&#13;
that&#13;
there&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page&#13;
5&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
JANUARY&#13;
27,1993&#13;
Dr. King&#13;
Commemorative&#13;
...&#13;
\&#13;
In &#13;
honor&#13;
of Dr. Martin&#13;
Luther&#13;
King,&#13;
late civil&#13;
rights&#13;
advocate,&#13;
a&#13;
public&#13;
commemoration&#13;
was&#13;
held&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
January&#13;
20 in Upper&#13;
Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
The Voices&#13;
of Parks&#13;
ide, directed&#13;
by James&#13;
Kinchen,&#13;
kicked&#13;
off the&#13;
program.&#13;
Terri&#13;
Greathouse&#13;
served&#13;
as Master&#13;
of Ceremonies&#13;
and Tracy&#13;
Nicole&#13;
Williams,&#13;
Chairperson&#13;
of the Black&#13;
History&#13;
month&#13;
Committee,&#13;
gave&#13;
the &#13;
opening&#13;
speech.&#13;
Continued&#13;
on &#13;
Page&#13;
5&#13;
UW-System&#13;
to institute&#13;
new&#13;
student&#13;
fees&#13;
Dennis&#13;
Clarke&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Fees&#13;
for services&#13;
to students&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
are &#13;
expected&#13;
to&#13;
go up next&#13;
year,&#13;
according&#13;
to a&#13;
memo&#13;
issued&#13;
taErie&#13;
Bovee,&#13;
Presi-&#13;
dentoftheParksideStudentGov-&#13;
ernment&#13;
Association,&#13;
from&#13;
G.&#13;
Gary&#13;
Grace,&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Chancel-&#13;
lor for Student&#13;
Affairs.&#13;
Thememo,datedJanuary&#13;
19,&#13;
contains&#13;
a chart&#13;
that outlines&#13;
fees&#13;
that are currently&#13;
permissible&#13;
un-&#13;
der&#13;
OW&#13;
System&#13;
policy.&#13;
The&#13;
memo&#13;
also&#13;
states&#13;
that&#13;
the OW-&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Administrative&#13;
Council&#13;
is considering&#13;
applying&#13;
some&#13;
of&#13;
those&#13;
fees to university&#13;
services.&#13;
"Although&#13;
no decisions&#13;
have&#13;
been&#13;
made&#13;
to date,"&#13;
reads&#13;
the&#13;
memo,&#13;
"it is likely&#13;
that we will&#13;
factor&#13;
in some&#13;
of the fees outlined&#13;
here as we build&#13;
the 1993-94&#13;
bud-&#13;
get."&#13;
The&#13;
chart&#13;
outlines&#13;
various&#13;
student&#13;
service&#13;
fees,&#13;
the cost&#13;
of&#13;
each&#13;
fee, the number&#13;
of users&#13;
per&#13;
Student&#13;
accosted&#13;
in robbery&#13;
attempt&#13;
Astudent&#13;
and &#13;
his &#13;
friend&#13;
were&#13;
struck&#13;
several&#13;
times&#13;
by  the sus-&#13;
aecostedonJanuary21,&#13;
1993&#13;
when&#13;
pects.&#13;
The&#13;
suspects&#13;
then&#13;
fled&#13;
the&#13;
theyconfronted&#13;
someone&#13;
who&#13;
was&#13;
area,&#13;
possibly&#13;
in a small,&#13;
blue&#13;
ve-&#13;
insidethestudent's&#13;
vehicle&#13;
while&#13;
it&#13;
hiele.&#13;
was &#13;
parked&#13;
in the Union&#13;
Lot.&#13;
The&#13;
student&#13;
and his friend&#13;
re-&#13;
According&#13;
to Campus&#13;
Police,&#13;
turned&#13;
to a residence&#13;
in Racine&#13;
-&#13;
theswdent&#13;
and his friend&#13;
had been&#13;
where&#13;
they&#13;
called&#13;
Campus&#13;
Police&#13;
usingtheRecreationCenter,andat&#13;
to report&#13;
the incident.&#13;
approximately4:&#13;
15 p.m.,&#13;
they&#13;
went&#13;
Neither&#13;
of them&#13;
was seriously&#13;
cuI&#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
car &#13;
to leave&#13;
campus.&#13;
injured,&#13;
and&#13;
neither&#13;
required&#13;
im-&#13;
The student&#13;
saw an individual&#13;
sitting&#13;
inthe front&#13;
passenger&#13;
seat of&#13;
hisvehicle,&#13;
The car doors&#13;
were&#13;
left&#13;
unlocked&#13;
because&#13;
of broken&#13;
lock-&#13;
ing &#13;
mechanisms.&#13;
As they&#13;
approached&#13;
the car,&#13;
theSludentverbally&#13;
confronted&#13;
the&#13;
suspect&#13;
by asking&#13;
the suspect&#13;
what&#13;
hewasdoing.&#13;
It&#13;
appeared&#13;
that&#13;
the  suspect&#13;
had been&#13;
looking&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
vehicle's&#13;
glove&#13;
compartment.&#13;
The&#13;
suspect&#13;
replied,&#13;
"What!&#13;
Do&#13;
you&#13;
havea problem&#13;
with&#13;
it?" and&#13;
the&#13;
student&#13;
said he did, asking&#13;
the sus-&#13;
pectagain&#13;
what&#13;
he was&#13;
doing&#13;
in-&#13;
side &#13;
his &#13;
car.&#13;
The suspect&#13;
exited&#13;
the  &#13;
car,&#13;
verbally&#13;
challenging&#13;
the student.&#13;
The &#13;
suspect&#13;
then&#13;
punched&#13;
the stu-&#13;
dentin &#13;
the &#13;
jaw.&#13;
The&#13;
suspect&#13;
was&#13;
joined&#13;
by three&#13;
other&#13;
suspects&#13;
who&#13;
were&#13;
evidently&#13;
sitting&#13;
in a nearby&#13;
vellicle,&#13;
During&#13;
the struggle,&#13;
which&#13;
lasted &#13;
less than&#13;
two minutes,&#13;
both&#13;
!he&#13;
student&#13;
and&#13;
his  friend&#13;
were&#13;
service&#13;
per year,&#13;
the estimated&#13;
in-&#13;
come&#13;
to be generated&#13;
by the imple-&#13;
mentation&#13;
of each&#13;
fee and concerns&#13;
about&#13;
each&#13;
fee.&#13;
According&#13;
to Bovee,&#13;
the  fol-&#13;
lowing&#13;
fees&#13;
are being&#13;
considered&#13;
at&#13;
OW -Parkside:&#13;
-Oriernation&#13;
Fee,&#13;
charged&#13;
10 &#13;
all&#13;
new&#13;
students&#13;
and transfers&#13;
at a cost&#13;
of $25,&#13;
regardless&#13;
of attendance&#13;
at&#13;
orientation&#13;
events.&#13;
An  estimated&#13;
1000&#13;
students&#13;
would&#13;
use this&#13;
service&#13;
each&#13;
year,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in an income&#13;
of S25,OOO.&#13;
Concerns&#13;
over&#13;
this fee include&#13;
the&#13;
financial&#13;
hardship&#13;
it would&#13;
cause&#13;
for&#13;
some&#13;
students.&#13;
Non-traditional&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
are the largest&#13;
group&#13;
that does&#13;
not attend&#13;
orientation.&#13;
-Withdrawal&#13;
Fee,charged&#13;
to stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
upon&#13;
withdrawal&#13;
from&#13;
school&#13;
at a cost&#13;
of S25.&#13;
An estimated&#13;
900&#13;
students&#13;
would&#13;
use this service&#13;
each&#13;
year,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in an  income&#13;
of&#13;
$22,500.&#13;
II&#13;
is possible&#13;
that students&#13;
could&#13;
be charged&#13;
only&#13;
for early&#13;
with-&#13;
drawal&#13;
or for &#13;
withdrawal&#13;
after&#13;
a cer-&#13;
tain point&#13;
in the term.&#13;
-Late&#13;
Registration&#13;
Fee,&#13;
charged&#13;
to &#13;
students&#13;
who&#13;
register&#13;
late for the semester&#13;
at a cost of up&#13;
to $25.&#13;
An&#13;
estimated&#13;
200 students&#13;
would&#13;
use this service&#13;
each&#13;
year,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in an inceme&#13;
of S5000.&#13;
One&#13;
concern&#13;
is thai such&#13;
a policy&#13;
might&#13;
encourage&#13;
students&#13;
to regis-&#13;
ter early,&#13;
thus&#13;
resulting&#13;
in a de-&#13;
crease&#13;
in income.&#13;
-Drop&#13;
Courses&#13;
or  Credit&#13;
Change&#13;
Fee,&#13;
charged&#13;
to students&#13;
who&#13;
drop&#13;
courses&#13;
after&#13;
the tenth&#13;
dayatacostof510percredit.&#13;
An&#13;
estimated&#13;
2500&#13;
credits&#13;
would&#13;
be&#13;
dropped&#13;
by students,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in&#13;
an income&#13;
of S25,ooo.&#13;
-Graduation&#13;
Fee,&#13;
charged&#13;
to&#13;
the &#13;
graduating&#13;
class&#13;
at acosrof'S&#13;
10&#13;
per student.&#13;
This&#13;
would&#13;
cover&#13;
the&#13;
cost&#13;
of&#13;
commencement&#13;
activities,&#13;
transcripts&#13;
and diplomas.&#13;
An esu-&#13;
mated&#13;
500 students&#13;
would&#13;
use this&#13;
service&#13;
each&#13;
year,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in an&#13;
income&#13;
of 55000.&#13;
-Transcript&#13;
fee, charged&#13;
to &#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
upon&#13;
request&#13;
for transcript&#13;
at&#13;
Continued&#13;
on Page&#13;
2&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
NEWS,&#13;
Page 2&#13;
WLBR boasts new manager andanew outlook&#13;
Dennis&#13;
Clarke&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
WLBR,&#13;
UW-Parleside's&#13;
little&#13;
known&#13;
and easily&#13;
dismissed&#13;
radio&#13;
station,&#13;
won't&#13;
be so little known&#13;
and easily&#13;
dismissed&#13;
if&#13;
Vincent&#13;
Bomer&#13;
has any say.&#13;
Bomer,&#13;
a UW-Parkside&#13;
psy-&#13;
chology&#13;
major,&#13;
has recently&#13;
been&#13;
named&#13;
station&#13;
manager&#13;
of WLBR,&#13;
and he, along&#13;
with a staff of ap-&#13;
proximately&#13;
15 other&#13;
students,&#13;
has&#13;
big plans&#13;
for the campus'little&#13;
sta-&#13;
tion.&#13;
"Our biggest&#13;
goal fortheradio&#13;
station&#13;
is to enlighten&#13;
students,"&#13;
comments&#13;
Bomer. "Ourmission is&#13;
to cater to the whole&#13;
campus&#13;
com-&#13;
munity:'&#13;
Bomer&#13;
says that he wants&#13;
the&#13;
station&#13;
to establish&#13;
a voice&#13;
for the&#13;
entire&#13;
campus,&#13;
get people&#13;
involved&#13;
in campus&#13;
activities&#13;
and promote&#13;
and market&#13;
UW-Parleside.&#13;
"There&#13;
are followers&#13;
and there&#13;
are leaders.&#13;
We'releadingthepack&#13;
right now,"&#13;
says Bomer&#13;
of himself&#13;
and his staff.&#13;
In order to familiarize&#13;
students&#13;
- with&#13;
the new station&#13;
and staff,&#13;
Bomer&#13;
has organized&#13;
a party&#13;
to be&#13;
held tomorrow&#13;
night&#13;
in the Union&#13;
Recreation&#13;
Center.&#13;
"It's going&#13;
10be the beginning&#13;
of what I hope is going&#13;
10be a long&#13;
lasting&#13;
relationship&#13;
with Parkside,"&#13;
says Bomer.&#13;
Bomer&#13;
says he hopes&#13;
to have&#13;
"It's&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
the&#13;
beginning&#13;
of&#13;
what&#13;
I&#13;
hope&#13;
is&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
a&#13;
long&#13;
lasting&#13;
relation-&#13;
ship&#13;
with&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
- Vince&#13;
Borner&#13;
other&#13;
promotions&#13;
in the future&#13;
to&#13;
help generate&#13;
interest&#13;
in WLBR.&#13;
He said he would&#13;
like to work with&#13;
the Student&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Council&#13;
or the Parkside&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board&#13;
to&#13;
get ideas.&#13;
Bomer&#13;
also says he is anxious&#13;
to hear ideas&#13;
from&#13;
as many&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
as possible.&#13;
. "We'd&#13;
like 10have input from&#13;
everybody&#13;
on the campus,"&#13;
Bomer&#13;
says.&#13;
"If&#13;
people&#13;
have something&#13;
to&#13;
say, bring&#13;
iuo us. Tell us what it is&#13;
that you feel or how you feel about&#13;
asituation.&#13;
"We're&#13;
looking&#13;
forward&#13;
to&#13;
getting&#13;
a lot of letters&#13;
and getting&#13;
a&#13;
lot of people&#13;
involved."&#13;
As far as musical&#13;
program-&#13;
ming&#13;
goes,&#13;
Bomer&#13;
says that the&#13;
station's&#13;
philosophy&#13;
is to cater&#13;
to&#13;
many&#13;
diverse&#13;
tastes&#13;
as possible.&#13;
"We're&#13;
rrying&#13;
to open the door&#13;
tonew ideas andnew avenues, new&#13;
programming,"&#13;
comments&#13;
Bomer.&#13;
"We're&#13;
not limiting&#13;
ourselves&#13;
to&#13;
anyone&#13;
formal"&#13;
Bomer,&#13;
who&#13;
has owned&#13;
his&#13;
own disc jockey&#13;
service&#13;
for the&#13;
past ten years&#13;
and who has worked&#13;
at various&#13;
radio&#13;
stations&#13;
and clubs&#13;
in the Chicago&#13;
and Milwaukee&#13;
ar-&#13;
eas, says that his experience&#13;
will&#13;
help him in his role as station&#13;
man-&#13;
ager.&#13;
"We had a search&#13;
and screen&#13;
committee&#13;
that went&#13;
through&#13;
ap-&#13;
plications&#13;
for several&#13;
people&#13;
who&#13;
were interested&#13;
in the position&#13;
and&#13;
based&#13;
on my experience&#13;
and back-&#13;
ground,&#13;
I got the position,"&#13;
says&#13;
Bomer.&#13;
"I think&#13;
the connections&#13;
I&#13;
have from various&#13;
endeavors&#13;
make&#13;
me a little more&#13;
qualified."&#13;
-&#13;
January&#13;
27, 1993&#13;
-&#13;
New student fees&#13;
Continued&#13;
from&#13;
Page&#13;
1&#13;
a cost of $4 per request.&#13;
An esti-&#13;
mated&#13;
7000 requests&#13;
would&#13;
be made&#13;
each year,&#13;
resulting&#13;
in an income&#13;
of$28,OOO.&#13;
UW-Parksidecurrently&#13;
charges&#13;
$3 per request.&#13;
-Catalog&#13;
Fee, charged&#13;
to stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
who request&#13;
more&#13;
than onc&#13;
course&#13;
catalog&#13;
at a cost of $3 per&#13;
catalog.&#13;
Under&#13;
this plan,&#13;
the first&#13;
catalog&#13;
would&#13;
be free of charge,&#13;
and a distribution&#13;
system&#13;
would&#13;
need to be established&#13;
to limiteach&#13;
student&#13;
10one catalog.&#13;
Bovee&#13;
said that he believes&#13;
students&#13;
are suffering&#13;
as a result&#13;
of&#13;
the UW System's&#13;
lack of funds.&#13;
"The&#13;
Governor&#13;
and the state&#13;
legislature&#13;
don't&#13;
want 10raise taxes&#13;
because&#13;
that's&#13;
a political&#13;
night-&#13;
mare,"&#13;
said Bovee.&#13;
"They&#13;
find it&#13;
easier&#13;
10 put the cost (of the ser-&#13;
vices)&#13;
on our (students')&#13;
backs."&#13;
Bovee&#13;
is worried&#13;
about&#13;
what&#13;
he sees as a trend&#13;
of forcing&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents&#13;
to &#13;
bear&#13;
the bruntofbudgetary&#13;
shortfalls.&#13;
"If things&#13;
keep going&#13;
theWay&#13;
they're&#13;
going,"&#13;
commemsj&#13;
Bovee&#13;
"our tuitions&#13;
are just going&#13;
tokee~&#13;
going&#13;
up and up and up."&#13;
He notes&#13;
that the OW System&#13;
is not the first 10 consider&#13;
these&#13;
types&#13;
of fees for services&#13;
to Stu.&#13;
dents.&#13;
"All these&#13;
things&#13;
on thallisl&#13;
are done&#13;
at other&#13;
schools&#13;
(arOUnd&#13;
the country),"&#13;
he noted.&#13;
For example,&#13;
the University&#13;
of Texas&#13;
at Austin&#13;
charges&#13;
an ad-&#13;
vising&#13;
fee 10students&#13;
depending&#13;
on&#13;
which&#13;
school&#13;
a student&#13;
is &#13;
enrolled.&#13;
with a low of $25 for its School&#13;
of&#13;
Li beral&#13;
Arts and a high of $200for&#13;
its graduate&#13;
School&#13;
of Business.&#13;
According&#13;
to Bovee,&#13;
no advising&#13;
fees are being&#13;
considered&#13;
at &#13;
UW.&#13;
Parks&#13;
ide.&#13;
VVednesday,&#13;
January&#13;
27&#13;
PAB will sponsor&#13;
"Fun&#13;
Flicks,"&#13;
in which&#13;
you can make&#13;
your own music&#13;
video.&#13;
The Hispanic&#13;
Organization&#13;
presents&#13;
"Cultural&#13;
Black&#13;
Women&#13;
- Achievement&#13;
Against&#13;
the Odds"&#13;
at the Wyllie&#13;
Library&#13;
display&#13;
cabinet&#13;
in Ll&#13;
Also,&#13;
HOP&#13;
invites&#13;
students&#13;
10drop in for advice,&#13;
not tutoring,&#13;
with its Black&#13;
or Hispanic&#13;
Peer Mentoring&#13;
Service&#13;
for math&#13;
and English.&#13;
The Women's&#13;
Center&#13;
at UW-Parleside&#13;
will sponsor&#13;
a presentation&#13;
by the "9 to 5" organization&#13;
from&#13;
10 a.m. &#13;
to &#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
FILM-&#13;
Under&#13;
Siege&#13;
in the Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
January&#13;
28&#13;
FILM-&#13;
Citizen&#13;
Kane&#13;
in the Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
at4:30&#13;
p.m. and 7 p.m.&#13;
Friday,&#13;
January&#13;
29&#13;
FILM-&#13;
Citizen&#13;
Kane&#13;
in the Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
at 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m,&#13;
WRESTLING-&#13;
away,&#13;
Mid East Regional,&#13;
9 a.m.&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
January&#13;
30&#13;
WRESTLING-&#13;
away,&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Dual&#13;
Meet,&#13;
I p.m.,&#13;
admission&#13;
$3.&#13;
.&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
January&#13;
31&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
BASKETBALL-&#13;
away,&#13;
McKendree&#13;
College&#13;
in Illinois,&#13;
3 p.m.,&#13;
admission&#13;
$3.&#13;
Monday,&#13;
February&#13;
1&#13;
WINTER&#13;
CARNIVAL&#13;
Event&#13;
#1- "YELL&#13;
UKE&#13;
HELLl"&#13;
12 noon,&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
Event&#13;
#2- PIE EATING&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
12 noon,&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
Event&#13;
#3- EGG&#13;
TOSS&#13;
12 noon,&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
Event&#13;
#4- JEOPARDY&#13;
at the Union&#13;
Cinema,&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Event&#13;
#5- COLLEGE&#13;
BOWL&#13;
(game&#13;
show&#13;
format)&#13;
at the Union&#13;
Cinema,&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Event&#13;
#6- Great&#13;
Escape&#13;
at the Union&#13;
Cinema,&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Also,&#13;
WINDOW&#13;
PAINTING&#13;
on the Union&#13;
Bridge&#13;
Overpass&#13;
and SPY'S&#13;
DEMISE,&#13;
a scavenger&#13;
hunt beginning&#13;
at 5 p.m.&#13;
Call 595-2278&#13;
or sign up in Union&#13;
209.&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
BASKETBALL-&#13;
away,&#13;
Northern&#13;
Michigan&#13;
University,&#13;
7:30 p.m. E.S.T.&#13;
Tuesday,&#13;
February&#13;
2&#13;
WINTER&#13;
CARNIV&#13;
AL CONTINUES&#13;
Event&#13;
#7- TUG&#13;
OF WAR&#13;
in Union&#13;
Square&#13;
at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Event&#13;
#8- COLLEGE&#13;
BOWL&#13;
FINALS&#13;
at Union&#13;
Bazaar&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Event&#13;
#9- FAMILY&#13;
FEUD&#13;
in Union&#13;
Scuare&#13;
at8 p.m.&#13;
-------'lill.a~iliIiI.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Ranger News, Volume 21, issue 16, January 27, 1993</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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