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              <text>EPA To Hold 4th Annual P3 Competition</text>
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              <text>~RJahne er&#13;
~Ne s Unlvenlty of Wlsconsln.Parkslde's Student Newspaper&#13;
Attention AI&#13;
freshman&#13;
Waistli&#13;
September 12, 2006&#13;
Alumni of/Color&#13;
Page 7&#13;
UW-Parkside's Backyard Game of Tag&#13;
STAFF REPORT&#13;
Music played as the aroma of grilled&#13;
food hung in the air, Thursday, Sep. 7, at the&#13;
tenth annual Backyard Bash that welcomed&#13;
new and returning students.&#13;
Held at the Union Square Patio from&#13;
3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., the event was hosted&#13;
by Parkside Activities Board, WIPZ, Student&#13;
Life, and Peer Health Educaters.&#13;
Students were able to participate in Laser&#13;
Invader and Sing Out A Tune, as well as&#13;
have a Freaky Foto taken or have a caricature&#13;
drawing made of themselves.&#13;
Student Sherli Harum said sbe had&#13;
fun dancing but did not get drawn this year&#13;
because the line was too long.&#13;
"There were more people than the&#13;
previous year." said Harum. She said the&#13;
number of students lessened by the later part&#13;
of the night.&#13;
A local band, Black Elephant, played&#13;
a free show before a drawing ihat held the&#13;
chance for a new student to win free tuition.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board advisor, Tony&#13;
Kwiatkowski, said that he estimated around&#13;
200 students attended and that tuition and&#13;
bookstore money were given away as prizes.&#13;
"It was good to see students out baving fun&#13;
and getting free stuff," said Kwiatkowski.&#13;
Parkside Ada&#13;
echnology&#13;
Page 3&#13;
EPA To Hold 4th&#13;
Annual P3 Competition&#13;
BY JONTDENECKE&#13;
schmi 133@uwp.edu&#13;
The U.S. Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency National&#13;
Center for Environmental&#13;
Research is having its fourth&#13;
Annual P3 Awards: People,&#13;
Places, Planet&#13;
competition.&#13;
The P3 competition&#13;
is held to provide grants to&#13;
groups of college students&#13;
who are interested in doing&#13;
research and developing&#13;
designing solutions to help&#13;
people and the planet. The&#13;
EPA says the agency&#13;
plans to award&#13;
up to $1.25&#13;
million&#13;
in&#13;
grants&#13;
to&#13;
teams&#13;
df srudettts&#13;
who are creative&#13;
in finding ways&#13;
to protect and&#13;
preserve the&#13;
environment,&#13;
P3 is a&#13;
partnership between public&#13;
and private sectors trying&#13;
to improve the environment&#13;
and protect natural resources.&#13;
Some of the companies&#13;
that are participating" in this&#13;
process are Diam1er Chrysler,&#13;
Dell, Herman Miller,&#13;
Hewlett-Packard, Nextant,&#13;
US Business Council for&#13;
Sustainable Development. A&#13;
few of the non-government&#13;
organizations that are also&#13;
involved are Engineers&#13;
without Borders, American&#13;
Chemical Society, and&#13;
Association of American&#13;
Geographers according&#13;
to http://es.epa.gov.lncer/&#13;
rfal2oo7/_p3_ 4thannual.htm!.&#13;
According to the EPA&#13;
"The P3 competition is open&#13;
to teams of students attending&#13;
colleges, universities,&#13;
and other post secondary&#13;
educational institutes.&#13;
Interdisciplinary teams&#13;
are strongly encouraged,&#13;
including representatives&#13;
from multiple engineering&#13;
departments and/or&#13;
departments of chemistry.&#13;
architecture, industrial&#13;
design,&#13;
economics,&#13;
policy,&#13;
social&#13;
sciences, business,&#13;
communications. etc."&#13;
There are 50 grants&#13;
of up to $ 10,000 each that&#13;
will be awarded. Proposals&#13;
must reach the EPA by&#13;
December 2l, 2006. For&#13;
application procedures and&#13;
the materials needed for this&#13;
year's grants those interested&#13;
can go to http://es.gov/ncer/&#13;
rfal2007/2007 _p3_ athannual.&#13;
html or, for more information&#13;
about this competition, http://&#13;
www.epa.gov/p3.&#13;
WISCONSIN COVENANT EVALUATED&#13;
BYDANTELROCKEL&#13;
rncke()()I@uwp.edu&#13;
In a speech to the UW&#13;
Board of Regents quoted in&#13;
theMay 5 posting of the UW&#13;
System News and Events page,&#13;
Gov. Jim Doyle discussed,&#13;
among many topics, one of&#13;
the key initiatives in the 2007-&#13;
2009 UW budget request, the&#13;
Wisconsin Covenant. The&#13;
Wisconsin Covenant is a new fI&#13;
program geared to increase&#13;
enrollment and graduation&#13;
Withinthe UW System.&#13;
"This is a basic exchange&#13;
of promises," Doyle said of the&#13;
Covenant. "I want the university&#13;
and the state of Wisconsin to say&#13;
that if you do all that [perform&#13;
well in high school and take&#13;
college prep classes], there will&#13;
be a place in the UW System&#13;
for you. We will work with your&#13;
families to assure you can afford&#13;
that education." This sound&#13;
bite was heard on the heels of a&#13;
6-percent increase in tuition at&#13;
UW- Madison. .&#13;
The program falls short of&#13;
this promise. Doyle, in another&#13;
part of the speech, makes&#13;
comments that line up more .&#13;
fully with the purpose of the bill.&#13;
After praising the chancellors&#13;
and President Reilly. for their&#13;
work to expose and change&#13;
the decreasing number of lowincome&#13;
people attending college&#13;
on a national level, Doyle said of&#13;
the low-income people, 'That's&#13;
not acceptable. It isn't fair, and&#13;
we're leaving too much talent to&#13;
the side when we're not making&#13;
sure that those kids are coming&#13;
through."&#13;
The Wisconsin Covenant&#13;
in its current form, as found in&#13;
the Feb. 9 documentation by&#13;
Sharon Wilhelm, states that&#13;
':~l?~g~e.t ~'!!U,~Q~,ed,Opy!~' \. . . ,&#13;
students from Wisconsin who&#13;
meet a three-part requirement&#13;
(education, civic, and needs)&#13;
will be given additional grants to&#13;
attend a UW campus.&#13;
The educational part of&#13;
the requirements consists of&#13;
college preparatory classes and&#13;
maintaining a high grade point&#13;
average or high-class ranking.&#13;
The civic part requires the&#13;
student to perform community&#13;
service and stay out of trouble&#13;
while attending high school. .&#13;
The final requirement is&#13;
that the student's parents have&#13;
a combined family income&#13;
of below $47,000 a year. The&#13;
ceiling for this program would&#13;
mean a married couple each&#13;
making $ 11.75 per hour for 50&#13;
weeks at 40 hours per week or a&#13;
single: parent making $23.50 per&#13;
hour working the same schedule&#13;
would be making too much for&#13;
their child to qualify.&#13;
The first students taking&#13;
part in the program should&#13;
be arriving on UW campuses&#13;
starting in 20 JJ pending budget&#13;
approval in early 2007.&#13;
C 'E&#13;
sch1ml3 @u\\pcdu&#13;
old&#13;
3Co&#13;
.~nviromm:nml&#13;
Pr 1kcUon, .~en '! Nau al&#13;
Ccn1 r tor Ell'&lt;'lfo.nmcntal&#13;
R · ·.arch h havm it t U.rtl1&#13;
., nnual A\\'llrds: P1:ople.&#13;
Plu.:cs, and the Pl.me1&#13;
n publi&#13;
l"lOni II) int&#13;
WISCONSIN COV NANT EVALUA&#13;
BY D lEL ROCK L&#13;
tockeOO!@uwp.edu&#13;
In. peed, c Regcn1.i; q imted in&#13;
th t: May po ·ling cif me uw&#13;
Sy tern cw and EvcDIS page,&#13;
discd •&#13;
arnon topic . ley in.iliuli11cs the 'JOl.)7-&#13;
20{)9 ·w bu •l quest., Coven I.. Wi~ nsin Cm•emml is an w&#13;
l)rogram gwrcd tu m · a&#13;
~ rollment nnd gr dun · on&#13;
Wllhlll the UW System.&#13;
· exchang&#13;
Promi ·e. , " Doy fo · · · Ute&#13;
CovenanL u wanr the nnivcrsi:ly&#13;
·ind t lE nf 1s.consin , y&#13;
t.lmt if do all lh l (pedi nn&#13;
well in high ~hool and t e&#13;
c lh:gc prep classes], tiler :i place he Sy rem&#13;
· or We wiU ork with amilies to !&gt; • .U Iha edm; tio11." This sound&#13;
hite was heard on the heels a&#13;
6-perce1n i crea.se in mitiun nl&#13;
UW- M is.on.&#13;
progrdl11 foll rt Lhis mi _ D yl , in ru,other&#13;
of th pee h. m' cs&#13;
omrncnL that linl! mo&#13;
u.Lly th hill,&#13;
f11:r prai. ing 1..-ha11 llr,n;&#13;
and President Reilly fi £ their&#13;
10 xpo ch1mgi.:&#13;
c numbc I lowincome&#13;
opl • attendine; t:tdlege&#13;
01I n tim1al le,·el. DoJle I.he low-in :ome IX pl , •'Thar&#13;
n l ncccptnblc. JI isn·t fail, nd&#13;
,.... ., leavi g lUO m.klll lO&#13;
Lhe "idc: when we're n l nr ing&#13;
sur th:ll those lids are comini&#13;
lhrou h."&#13;
The Wis.con.sin Co't'Cll&#13;
Us urrcnt roan, a. doc mental.ion haron Wilh Im, e. &amp;,t&#13;
cumpu .•&#13;
prut 11&#13;
the quirement con is.ts of&#13;
ge preparatm)' clns.s-.:~ ll!ld&#13;
1 i tai ing poim&#13;
11 rag cln king&#13;
The c • ic an requin::s. lhc:&#13;
tudc: rU t 1 pcm rm comm1mitv&#13;
er.'ic sta_ oul o ll'Ollh ~&#13;
\loJ ile !lending high i,;ch l.&#13;
lb fin req ui~ment I at studcm 's pare.nh h 1;e&#13;
'Come get that good copy ,u&#13;
~&#13;
t&#13;
pe I• • on&#13;
ED&#13;
2 Sept 12, 2006&#13;
Road&#13;
Kenosha. WI 53141&#13;
Phone:(262)595.2287&#13;
Fax: 262) 595-2295&#13;
Ads: uwp_ods@yohoa.com&#13;
Website: r:angernewsOvwJ:&gt;.edu&#13;
Edl,.,.I...c:hlef&#13;
CM. Fanning&#13;
Fanni007@uwp.edu&#13;
VI,OP.o.ldonl/C.py Manage.&#13;
Andrew C Westbrook&#13;
W.stb002@uwp .• du&#13;
Do.lgn Manago.&#13;
Sooyun Kim&#13;
Kim00009@uwp.edu&#13;
Bu.lno .. Manago.&#13;
Parminder Singh&#13;
SinghOOOO@uwp.,du&#13;
Adve.'I.lng Manago.&#13;
. Henry O.Gaskin&lt;&#13;
UWJlIP,moy@yohoo.carn-&#13;
Now. Pogo Edl, ••&#13;
Koi!lyn Ulmer&#13;
eopo,666@yohoo.com&#13;
Sp•• " Pogo Edl,o.&#13;
Tyrone Payton&#13;
Poyto004@uwp.edu&#13;
A.'. anel Cul'u.o Pogo Edlto.&#13;
D. Whn,&#13;
Whne04l@uwp,edu&#13;
Pho'o Manago.&#13;
Dan Torkilsen&#13;
dtork02@yohoo.carn&#13;
llIu,'.a'o.&#13;
Britlony Farino&#13;
ortzyonimegiri@ool.com&#13;
SlaH Ropo.'o.,&#13;
Nooh Gilbert&#13;
Gilbe004@uwp.edu&#13;
Robert RDIDfi&#13;
RosotOOI@uwp.edu&#13;
Bren Houdek&#13;
HoudeOOO@uwp,edu&#13;
Joni Denecki&#13;
Sthmil33@uwp,edu&#13;
pom Jensen&#13;
Jense055@uwp.edu&#13;
Ca.'oonl.,.&#13;
. Tany Kinnord&#13;
dorl&lt;51or13_2001@yohoo.carn&#13;
Zochory Keehon&#13;
KeehoOO3@uwp .• du&#13;
Aaron Fanning&#13;
,odio"hodoW@holmoil.com&#13;
TJ HI""II&#13;
Hyse!OOI@uwp.edu&#13;
Advl,o.&#13;
Jud'rth log&lt;dan&#13;
logsdon@uwp ••du&#13;
Mission' Statement&#13;
The Ranger strives to&#13;
.inform, educate, and engage&#13;
the UW-l'arkside community&#13;
publishing well-written,&#13;
accurate student iournalism on&#13;
a weekly basis.&#13;
The Ranger News nas meetings every Monday&#13;
III noon. AU students and faculty of UW-Parkside&#13;
are welcome. Please feel free to attend. Have any&#13;
comments, concerns. questions, or story ideas?&#13;
Please e-mail us al: rangemews@uwp.edu.&#13;
We are located at Wyllie D139C&#13;
Each person may take one newspaper per is!&gt;ue&#13;
date. Extnl newspapern can be purchased for $1&#13;
apiece, Newspapern can be laken on a firsl come,&#13;
first serve basis, meaning that once they are gone,&#13;
they are gone. We work on the honor system,&#13;
but violators will be prosecuted ffi for theft. Faculty members and&#13;
students organizations who&#13;
wish to use The Ranger News •&#13;
in classrooms should consull the ASSOC&amp;-.TIb&#13;
editor-in-chief to reserve however c:a.u&lt;iVJt:&#13;
many free copies they wish 10 u.'iC, Pam&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
, mber 12, 2006&#13;
11:00 AM-8:00 PM&#13;
Art exhibition: Roy and Mary Behrens&#13;
Wednesday, September 13. 2006&#13;
10:30AM-!:30 PM&#13;
Student Organizations &amp; Involvement Fair&#13;
Main Place&#13;
11:00 AM-8:00 PM&#13;
Art exhibition: Roy and Mary Behrens&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
4:00 PM-8:oo PM&#13;
WIPZ Patio Concert&#13;
Union Square&#13;
7:00 PM-8:oo PM&#13;
Science Night: 'Saving Panama's Amphibians'&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
9:00 PM-Il:00 PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Thursday, September 14, 2006&#13;
11:00 AM-5:OO PM&#13;
Art exhibition: Roy and Mary Behrens&#13;
COin. Arts Gallery&#13;
12:00 PM-I:OO PM&#13;
Study Abroad Information Session: South Africa&#13;
Tallent Hall 180&#13;
6:00 PM-Il:00 PM&#13;
ARU Social&#13;
Union W7 &amp; The Den&#13;
7:00 PM-II:00 PM&#13;
WIPZ Uoderground&#13;
1beDea&#13;
7:30 PM-9:3O PM&#13;
ForeipYdm: 'Look at Me'&#13;
UllillD Cinema&#13;
~~15,20Q6&#13;
t:oo'PM-3:(J() PM&#13;
• Men', Soccer vs. Soutllem nlinOis-BdwardsvUle&#13;
WOQd Rd. Yield&#13;
l:ll!l PM-I 0:00 PM&#13;
:fleIooDle Back. CooIwut &amp;:&#13;
~Mll~S&#13;
3:30 PM-5:30 PM&#13;
Women's Soccer vs, Sout!Iem Dlinois-EdwaldsvUle&#13;
Wood Rd. Field&#13;
3:30 PM-5:OO Gender, Race &amp; Oass Book Oub: 'On BaiitY'&#13;
Union1lY7&#13;
5:30 S:3O PM&#13;
Scholar &amp;: Donor Recognition Night&#13;
Parkside Cafe!&#13;
7:00 PM-9: 45 PM&#13;
Community Band rehearsal&#13;
Com Arts 0..118&#13;
7:30 PM-9:30 PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
9:00 PM-II:59 PM&#13;
Delta Sigma Theta dance&#13;
Union Square&#13;
(Admission: TBAI&#13;
Saturday, September 16, 2006&#13;
12:00~'OOAM&#13;
Delta Sigma Theta dance&#13;
Union Square&#13;
12:45 PM-J:20 PM&#13;
Midwest Collegiate Open ClQSs-roUlllt'Yrace&#13;
Nat'l Cross-Country Course&#13;
5:00J&gt;M-7:00 PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
8:00 PM-IO:00 PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Sunday, September 17, 2bo6&#13;
12:00 PM-2:00 PM .&#13;
Men's Soccer vs. Quincy University&#13;
Wood Rd. Field&#13;
2:00 PM-4:00 PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
2:30 PM-4:30 PM&#13;
Women's Soccer vs'. Quincy University&#13;
Wood Rd. Field&#13;
5:00 PM-7:oo PM&#13;
Foreign Film: 'Look at Me'&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Monday, September 18. 2006&#13;
11:00 AM-5:oo PM&#13;
Art exhibition: Roy and Mary Behrens&#13;
Com. Arts Gallery&#13;
-12:ooPM-I:J5 PM&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Month Kick-nff&#13;
Main Placc &amp; others&#13;
P liCE .....,.,.,.,.".. BLOTTER&#13;
09/06-523 Alarm - BuildinglBusiness. Wyllie Hall. 7:51am.&#13;
UWPPD alarm panel reports active alarm. Officer&#13;
responds to location, and was met by FMC personnel who&#13;
accidentally set off alarm. Alarm reset, Officer cleared.&#13;
.06-524 Agency Assist. Center University Grounds.&#13;
4: 17jpm. Kenosha Sheriff Dept. request assistance I locating&#13;
yoa. Autistic Boy. Child was located, Officers cleared.&#13;
06-525 Traffic Accident - Property Damage. Comm Arts&#13;
Lot. 8: 07am. Officer takes Accident Report and issued&#13;
citation to Allyson R LLanas for Speeding. No injures&#13;
reported. Officer cleared.&#13;
06-526 Theft From Building. University Apartments.&#13;
4:08pm. Officer takes Theft report. Officer cleared.&#13;
06-527 Liquor Law Violation. University Apartments.&#13;
. l1:04pm. Officers issued 4 Citations for Underage Drinlcing&#13;
Possess/Consumption. cleared.&#13;
06-528 Warrant Pickup - Other Agency. University&#13;
Apartments. 11:46pm. crn indicated active warrant. Subject&#13;
unable to Post Bond. Then transported to Kenosha Sheriff&#13;
Dept, to Public Safety Building "Jail". O!ficer cleared.&#13;
06-529 Alarm - BuildinglBusiness. Com Arts Bldg.&#13;
7: 16am. UWPPD alarm panel indicate acti ve alarm. Officer&#13;
responds to location, alarm set off by custodial staff at&#13;
unmarked door. Alarm reset, officer cleared.&#13;
06- 530 Other UWS 18 Violations. Com Arts Lot. 1:21pm.&#13;
While patrolling officer observed flyers placed under&#13;
the windshield wipers of vehicles. Verbal Warrnng to&#13;
DeRango's management. Officer cleared,&#13;
06-531 Other UWS 18 Violations. tom Arts Lot. 1:53pm.&#13;
While patrolling officer observed subject distributing flyers.&#13;
Nowak warned, she apologized and left campus. Officer&#13;
cleared.&#13;
06-532 Theft - From a Motor Vehicle. Union Lot. '4:22pm.&#13;
Officer takes report for UWP Parking Permit stolen from&#13;
vehicle. No other damaged reported to vehicle. Replacement&#13;
permit issued. Officer cleared. .&#13;
06-533 Misuse of Handicap Placard. Union Lot. I 2:25pm.&#13;
Citation issued to Adam J Frederiksen for Misuse of a&#13;
Handicap Permit. Officer cleared.&#13;
06-534 Theft s-From a Motor Vehicle. Com Arts Lot.&#13;
1:26pm. Officer takes report for UWP Parking Permit&#13;
stolen from vehicle. No other damaged reported to vehicle. '&#13;
Replacement permit issued. Officer cleared.&#13;
06-535 Misuse of Haodicap Placard. Ranger Lot. 5:00pm.&#13;
Citation issued to Kanika Jones for Misuse of a Handicap&#13;
Permit. Officer cleared.&#13;
06-536 Medical Assistance. Inner Loop Road Underneath&#13;
Molinaro Bridge ..9:54pm. Officer o~serve subject having&#13;
Asthma attack. Medical Unit requested they arrive. Subject&#13;
refuses transport to Hospital. Officers cleared.&#13;
06-537 Possession of MarijuanaIDrug Paraph. Ranger&#13;
Hall. JO:2Ipm. Officers responded to a Marijuana smell&#13;
complaint. One citation issued for Underage Drinking.&#13;
And Two citations issued for Possession of Marijuana.&#13;
One of the subject placed on Probation &amp; Parole Hold, and&#13;
transported to Kenosha Public Safety Building "Jail" per&#13;
their request. Officers cleared.&#13;
09/08/06&#13;
06-538 Theft - From Building. Ranger Hall. 12:25am,&#13;
Officer takes Theft Report. Officer cleared.&#13;
,&#13;
900 Wood Roud&#13;
Kenama. l'hone;{2U)S95.228i'&#13;
J-ax: (26.2) 2295&#13;
Adr uwp acl ahocu::om&#13;
Weluffe: rang•m.ws@uwp.edu&#13;
hslgn Man• g•r&#13;
lus QI&#13;
SooVIJIIKf&#13;
m00009@vwp u&#13;
&amp;d¥ffH1lng•11•9ff&#13;
~enry D. Wins&#13;
UWJGP!(boy@yno.com&#13;
New1 Paa• Hitor&#13;
Sporl1 ••1• Editor&#13;
Poto, ...... ,&#13;
l•1tnlor&#13;
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nltlfoo el&#13;
HOllde.OOO@llJlip.edu&#13;
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1 ll@uwp.edu&#13;
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Liipion@uo,ip.nu&#13;
Mission Slate111 nl&#13;
Tile Ronger News 5lrives infilrm, educc:rtet c.md enga9e&#13;
he Parkside c:ornmunil:y&#13;
by p1J:blishLng weU·writtun,&#13;
joum lism a WHkly basis.&#13;
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0 DO&#13;
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Women· r 1 -Ed&#13;
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Gender. Club: Beauty'&#13;
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Recogmt1on Par i e 'af~&#13;
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Saturday, Sept.ember 2006&#13;
12.00 M-2:00AM&#13;
Delta Sigma The&amp;a dance&#13;
oun.c&#13;
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ni\~r tt&#13;
nl\ ll&#13;
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9/01/06&#13;
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09/05/06&#13;
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ot. 7 m. take Ac ide t R on i ucd&#13;
it tion Ally o LLanrui pe ·ng. o reporte O cer cleared&#13;
526 Th f - rom Buildin . Univ ·ity Apart nts.&#13;
08pm. Offic r utlc , r port. cleared,&#13;
527 · qu r Viol lion. Apartrn nt .&#13;
11 :04pm. Offi rs C1tatiori or Undc e rinking&#13;
P · ·s/ onsump ion. Officers de d.&#13;
5-8 p·c up Olher Agf."11 y. Univ rsity&#13;
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5 9 A)ll[[D - B ilding/Busine s. Ans 1 run. aJarm an l indicat active a1arm, re ponds Jocation, a1ann . • t u ·todial u.runacke r. Alami reset; office ac d.&#13;
30 Othe UWS 1 8 ol.rti . om Arts Lot. 1: 2.1 pm.&#13;
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y,~nd. "el wi()L"TS Warning DeR ngo' cleru-ed.&#13;
06~ ~ J Other: UW Viol tions. Com An Lot 1 :'While ffi r ab erved di. ribu ing Hye&#13;
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de.are .&#13;
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09/07/06&#13;
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Permit Offic r [eared.&#13;
00-534 The - From a Motor Lot&#13;
I :t s Pllf'king Pennit&#13;
to1en fr m v hicle. o th rd aged repo , d ehiclc.&#13;
Replacemc l pennit L. u J. deared.&#13;
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Oflh:i.:r tilke. Thef1 port. Orli ·er d "ared.&#13;
~~ P_~~R~&#13;
I&#13;
_sept12,2006 ~&#13;
The Ranger News =-....-..=~~-------------- __&#13;
3&#13;
.Parkside Adapts to Technology&#13;
Some of Durso's&#13;
duties include&#13;
setting up classroom&#13;
technology policies,&#13;
strategies, standards,&#13;
and directions.&#13;
security of UW-Parkside's&#13;
technology, she also looks&#13;
at cost efficiency and the&#13;
technical support services&#13;
for each managed network,&#13;
server. desktop, and classroom&#13;
BY BRETT HOUDEK&#13;
houdeOOO@uwp.edu&#13;
Due to constant and rapid&#13;
advancements around the&#13;
globe, technology is literally&#13;
impossible to keep up with.&#13;
Like the rest of the world,&#13;
UW-Parkside has made some&#13;
Changes to adapt to modem&#13;
technology. UW-Parkside,&#13;
however, is "behind.the times"&#13;
in some areas. too.&#13;
UW-Parkside's chief&#13;
information officer, Ann Marie&#13;
Durso, said that "learning to&#13;
effectively manage, adopt,&#13;
leverage, and exploit the&#13;
benefits of new technology&#13;
"LEARNING TO&#13;
EFFECTIVELY&#13;
MANAGE, ADOPT,&#13;
LEVERAGE,&#13;
AND EXPLOIT&#13;
THE BENEFITS&#13;
OF NEW&#13;
.TECHNOLOGY IS&#13;
NO LONGER AN&#13;
OPTION BUT A&#13;
REQUIREMENT."&#13;
-SAID ANN MARIE DURSO, UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER.&#13;
is no longer an option but a&#13;
requirement. " While ensuring the ongoing&#13;
operational reliability and CONTINUE PAGE 4&#13;
At the Ranger Card Office r;:::::::::::::::::==-""&#13;
The House on&#13;
Mango Street&#13;
PurchaseYour&#13;
Parking Permit&#13;
TODAY .&#13;
The Freshman Common Read Contest&#13;
Want to Win $lOO?&#13;
Incorporate the Common Read into Cash!&#13;
Just lise a main themefrom Sandra Cisneros 'The House 011 Mango S/leet&#13;
Open to all new freshmen students!&#13;
Permits may also&#13;
be purchased at the l":~~;~~~~~~~ Bookstore &amp; Police&#13;
Department&#13;
• Like to express YQIIrselfwItII wonls1 Write IIIessay or poem!&#13;
• Are you an artist? Create a YIsuaI presentation!&#13;
• Is dance, theater or music your thing?&#13;
Create an original dance, skit, or song and record It!&#13;
(Guidel .... aw1iloble in WyllieDJ75 OI'@IM UWPweb.riJe. ~l HE)&#13;
pens: Sept. 25"&#13;
eadline: October 9'" Sponsored by the First Year Expeneoce&#13;
R&#13;
sept 12, 2006 -&#13;
Parkside Adapts to Technology&#13;
B BREIT HOUDEK&#13;
houddX)O@ 1w .cdu&#13;
Due to constant and rdpid&#13;
advancements arou.nd the&#13;
globe; tcchnnlogy h Ht ally&#13;
impus~ihle lo c.ep up wit ,&#13;
Like U1c re. 1 o lb· orld,&#13;
W-Park.-;ide ha.! made some&#13;
change. lo adapt lLl modem&#13;
lt.:(;hn lo y. UW- · side,&#13;
ho cv r,' ''behind lhc times"&#13;
in some arew.. too.&#13;
UW-Parki ide', chid&#13;
i formation officer, nn farie&#13;
Ourso. said lhal .. ltmming l&#13;
effecti ·dy mmmge, adopt.,&#13;
l eroge. and c:i.ploil the:&#13;
bene b of J1ev. techn~llogy&#13;
G TO&#13;
L&#13;
MANAGE, ADOP ,&#13;
LEVERAGE,&#13;
A D EXPLOIT&#13;
THE BE EFITS&#13;
TECHNOLOGY IS&#13;
NO LO GER AN&#13;
OPTION BUT A&#13;
REQUIREMENT.''&#13;
-SAJD ANN MARIE DURSO, UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
CHIEF NFORMATJON OFFICER.&#13;
· no I ng~r an r,pti rt but •&#13;
f~ljllircm 'nt ...&#13;
While ·munn II · un in&#13;
,lpeI liuuaJ rcl iabil it} ~&#13;
CONTI UE PAGE 4&#13;
P chasey0&#13;
Parki g ermit&#13;
Th Freshman Common ead Conte ·t&#13;
3&#13;
TO A lncorpo o mon d I· to Cashl&#13;
Ju tu a 111 in theme from Sandra Cisneros '=The:.=-:H:.:.=.:i=Lf"""e..:.:&gt;.:.i..::..:=~~~&#13;
At the Ranger Card Office&#13;
Bring your&#13;
activated&#13;
Ranger Cardt&#13;
Per its may lso&#13;
be purchased at , he&#13;
Books ore &amp; Po ice&#13;
Department&#13;
Open o all&#13;
T&#13;
• Like to express yourselfwlttl words? Write an essay or poem!&#13;
• Are you an artist? Create a visual presenta on!&#13;
• Is dance, theater or music your th ng7&#13;
Create an original dance skit or song and record It!&#13;
f&#13;
-= .&#13;
4&#13;
-The Ranger News Sept 2OCi6-&#13;
-&#13;
The Ska Kid's Top 5 Songs&#13;
d Plug-&#13;
Pho!O by Dan lbrkilseo&#13;
UW-Parkside student has a free caricature drawing done Thursday, Sep 7 at&#13;
Backyard Bash, which was sponsored by Parkside Activities Board, WIPZ, Peer&#13;
Health Educators, and Student Health.&#13;
Sustainable Racine, Sirens of Cinema, Sparta Rocks!,&#13;
Wisconsin on the Reel, Ripp Productions,&#13;
and Bear Tooth Wiring Present. ..&#13;
~ Q -Es:rS::-_~~~~ ......&#13;
IT CAM1! f'~lA K1! MlOHlCA N!&#13;
HORROR/SCI·FI/FANTASTY FILM FESTIVAL&#13;
OCTOBER 20-26, 2006&#13;
RACINE CIVIC CENTER RACINE, WI&#13;
PAID IN PART BY THE STATE OF WISCONSIN&#13;
DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM&#13;
CONTACT: WCLINGMAN@WI.RR.COM OR VISIT: WWW.ITCAMEFROMLAKEMICHIGAN.COM&#13;
TECHONOLOG~&#13;
CONTINUE&#13;
FROM PAGE 3&#13;
technological&#13;
~trueture, ~·icatioalj&#13;
tools, and services.&#13;
According to&#13;
Durso, UW-Parkside&#13;
has historically been&#13;
more conservative with&#13;
respect to new technology&#13;
introduction and adoption.&#13;
"This approach bas both&#13;
positive and negative&#13;
impacts," she said.&#13;
The primary&#13;
positive effect is that&#13;
a "slower adoption of&#13;
new technology is less&#13;
traumatic on users, as&#13;
the methods and tools&#13;
in use are more constant&#13;
and familiar." A major&#13;
disadvantage, according&#13;
to Durso, is that certain&#13;
technological methods&#13;
and tools quickly become&#13;
obsolete, unreliable, and&#13;
incompatible with the&#13;
newer technologies.&#13;
Maintenance and&#13;
support for the older&#13;
technologies becomes&#13;
problematic because&#13;
technology manufacturers&#13;
ofteo stop producing&#13;
replacement parts. They&#13;
also drop technical support&#13;
for older technological&#13;
systems and methods.&#13;
"A more reasonable&#13;
and sustainable position&#13;
for UW-Parkside," Durso&#13;
said, "is to be a fast&#13;
follower of affordable,&#13;
proven technologies&#13;
from reputable vendors&#13;
that meet our needs&#13;
and keep us legally and&#13;
organizationally secure&#13;
and compliant with the&#13;
regulatory requirement&#13;
for the higher education&#13;
community."&#13;
She went on to say&#13;
that UW-Parkside studenlS,'&#13;
faculty, and staff should&#13;
be enabled to naturally&#13;
and efficiently interact&#13;
and share knowledge and&#13;
information electronically&#13;
in support of our&#13;
educational objecti yes.&#13;
The Ran er Septr 12, 2006&#13;
Jess . The Toa te -&#13;
~'Don't Let t&#13;
H R :/&#13;
C 0&#13;
Park kle tud nt caricatwe de. ing d n 1111,rsday, ep Bash. w ParksideActivities WIP'Z, HeaJlh Edu ators. 1-FI/F A T S V Fili&#13;
OM&#13;
AW.&#13;
IV&#13;
2 -2 , 20&#13;
N Cl C C£ TER ACt E, I&#13;
ECHONOLOGY&#13;
ONTlNUE&#13;
FROM PAGE 3&#13;
PAR y w sea SlN&#13;
DEPARTME T TOU SM&#13;
5--=:========----~===TTh~e~R~a~n~g~e~Er~N~e~w~s~~=~~~C--=~_:;_:~~----~=_---:-~-~----=-~~~~~~~--------======~s~e~Pt~1~2~,~~espeare Project 'Inspires Inmates&#13;
- "i;. ~.._... • . .&#13;
.&#13;
Help Make A&#13;
Dream&#13;
Come True.&#13;
Our egg donor program is wmpletel.t:J anon.t:Jmousa~d&#13;
is owned and operated b.t:Jour I?rofesslonal and car~ng&#13;
nursing staff, Weare in need ot health.t:J,non-smoking&#13;
females between the ages of 21-30 .t:Jearsold. Local&#13;
ph.t:Jsiciansand gas reimbursement are available,&#13;
• Matches made 9uickl.t:J:&#13;
• 24-/7 donor support.&#13;
The Center/or EGG Options&#13;
LLe&#13;
BY ROBERT ROSATI&#13;
robertfosati@hotmaiLcom&#13;
For two years, the&#13;
Shakespeare Project&#13;
has allowed inmates at&#13;
the Racine Correctional&#13;
Institution to perform&#13;
Shakespearean&#13;
drama. The&#13;
Shakespeare&#13;
Project consists&#13;
of nine months of&#13;
studying, training,&#13;
and rehearsing&#13;
for whichever&#13;
Shakespeare play&#13;
will be performed at&#13;
the conclusion of the&#13;
aforementioned time&#13;
frarne.&#13;
Since 1995,&#13;
professor Jonathan&#13;
Shailor has been&#13;
teaching a variety of 5H A I LO R&#13;
communication and&#13;
conflict classes at the&#13;
Racine Correctional&#13;
Institution with "some of them&#13;
using role playing to work out&#13;
solutions to conflicts." Shailor&#13;
met a woman at a conference&#13;
who had been directing and&#13;
producing Shakespeare in&#13;
prison, and she told him&#13;
about her recent production&#13;
of "Hamlet" Shailor thought&#13;
it was "wonderful" because&#13;
"literature can teach us a lot&#13;
about human nature and how&#13;
to deal with conflict."&#13;
With this in mind, Shailor&#13;
sent a proposal, which was&#13;
approved, for the production&#13;
of t'King Lear," which was&#13;
performed by the inmates&#13;
from the Racine Correctional&#13;
Institute in April 2005,&#13;
directed 'and produced by&#13;
Shailor.&#13;
''We got a story in the&#13;
New York Times and a lot&#13;
of local press as well and a&#13;
very favorable reaction," said&#13;
Shailor, "so immediately Iput&#13;
in a proposal to do a second&#13;
one, "Othello," which is what&#13;
we did last [summer] .... which&#13;
was also a great success. We&#13;
got Wisconsin Public Radio&#13;
coverage."&#13;
Jean Feraca, the host of&#13;
"Here on Earth," which airs&#13;
on Wisconsin Public Radio,&#13;
was.in attendance for the&#13;
performance of "Othello." She&#13;
interviewed Shailor as well as&#13;
some of the inmates for her&#13;
show, on which she played&#13;
various excerptsirom the&#13;
play.&#13;
There were some&#13;
difficulties that Shailor&#13;
encountered while working&#13;
with the prisoners. Playing&#13;
Desdemona (a female&#13;
character) made one of the&#13;
male prisoners "really nervous&#13;
and very anxious." When&#13;
. another inmate pulled his&#13;
chair out from under him, the&#13;
"Desdemona" threatened him&#13;
and a fight seemed imminent&#13;
. until Shailor and other&#13;
inmates stepped forward to&#13;
"intervene and deal with the •&#13;
situation. "&#13;
Since Shailor is in&#13;
charge of&#13;
production,&#13;
heis in&#13;
charge of&#13;
such things&#13;
as finding&#13;
proper text&#13;
materials,&#13;
costumes, and&#13;
props to be&#13;
used during&#13;
the play. For&#13;
"Othello,"&#13;
he borrowed&#13;
costumes&#13;
from the&#13;
UW,Parkside&#13;
Theater Arts&#13;
Department&#13;
and also had&#13;
some original&#13;
costumes designed and&#13;
constructed by a costumer in&#13;
Massachusetts.&#13;
The real benefit that the&#13;
inmates gain from performing&#13;
Shakespeare, from Shailor's&#13;
perspective, is that "they&#13;
learn something about the&#13;
consequences of choices&#13;
that [they] make, because&#13;
Shakespeare's characters are&#13;
very richly portrayed human&#13;
beings who have&#13;
to make very&#13;
difficult decisions&#13;
in complex&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
The&#13;
consequences are&#13;
often clear, very&#13;
positive or very&#13;
negative:'&#13;
"LITERATURE CAN&#13;
TEACH US A LOT&#13;
ABOUT HUMAN&#13;
NATURE AND HOW TO&#13;
DE.Ai. WITH CONFLICT."&#13;
-PROFESSOR JONATHAN&#13;
MINIMUM $),000 COMPtNSATION&#13;
EGG DONORS NEEDED!&#13;
847.656.8733&#13;
773.490.EGGS&#13;
www.egg411.com&#13;
inlo@egg411.com&#13;
•&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
s~espe1\re. Project ~ires Imnates&#13;
SY ROBE.RT ROS Tl&#13;
rot,ertnr· ti@hcnmail.i.:om&#13;
fcir two years. the&#13;
Shake!&gt;pe re Pr di:ct&#13;
h3, allowL:d inmate- at&#13;
the R·1 in~ orre ion I&#13;
I ni,ti Ill tlon to ·rfi rm&#13;
ot I ,a] p •1,;, ru II nd a&#13;
\ ·e fa,wmhle n:al'.tion.."' saiu&#13;
~hailor, "s immcdiat ty 1 put&#13;
m a propo to tlo a e ·ond&#13;
on "Othello.'· which i what&#13;
w • did lat lsumme11 ... which&#13;
and 1.1 ghl •med imr "nc:n t&#13;
until Shailor an other&#13;
inmate~ ~tepped t rward to&#13;
"intcrv ne and dc.al •ith lh1:&#13;
situ tinn.&#13;
h ke pearcan "LITE AT URE CAN&#13;
drama Th&#13;
h,1ke:peruc&#13;
Projed com,i t&#13;
of nln(; mont , of&#13;
sWdJ ·11g. t.mining.&#13;
TEACH SA LO&#13;
ABOUT HUMA&#13;
inc&#13;
,t rehcar:s1 g&#13;
fnr which~, er&#13;
hake r'arepla NA URE AND HOW ...&#13;
11,ill bt.: perfonn d · 1 'I 0&#13;
the cunclu ion f Lh •&#13;
.1fo num1tom:d ti.n11 D A L W T&#13;
trame,&#13;
co F&#13;
Since 199.,&#13;
pmfeswrJonathan - ROFESSOR JONATHAN&#13;
hailer ha&lt;, lx.'!;n&#13;
tea hi a varict~ of 5 A I LOR&#13;
1.:ommuni ati n um.l&#13;
11 ll ict cla · !-e:&lt;. at lhc&#13;
R mi: orrectiom11&#13;
In 1iwtioll \'iLh "some of th.em&#13;
u~mg rol pla ·ing t 1 wur out&#13;
!,0)1Jtiom, to conflict.." • h ilor&#13;
met a woman al a conferen e&#13;
ho had en directing and&#13;
prndu in ha e,pcan: in&#13;
. 11\0ll, un l Id tum&#13;
about he recem protlnclion&#13;
of "Han1kt." SbaHor thought&#13;
it was '"\\ on erful" becau c&#13;
'"literatu can h 1.1s a lol&#13;
' ut human mnure :ind ow&#13;
to uelll ilh co fl' ."&#13;
With thi in n,tnd. ha.1 lor&#13;
sent a pro l&gt;al. whic i wa&#13;
approved , for e protlu I.I&#13;
of "King Lear."' 1,vhich w .&#13;
perform •i.l lh inm tes&#13;
from Lh Ra :in Com!criona.1&#13;
ln muli.: 1.n April 2 5&#13;
din:-ctcd and produc~d by&#13;
Sha.ii r.&#13;
•·we got a ·tory in 1.he&#13;
New mk TimL~ and a lot&#13;
wa al a greDl ucce . .,_ We&#13;
gm l onsin Public Rndlo&#13;
overage."&#13;
Jean Femctt, the ho l of&#13;
"He eon Earth,-• whlch air&#13;
on \l 1sco11. in Publk Radio .&#13;
w in attendance fur the&#13;
performance or ello . . he&#13;
inter,riewed Sbail as well as&#13;
some af the inmate. or her&#13;
show, n which ~he playctl&#13;
,•ariou cerpts from the&#13;
Pay.&#13;
Tb&gt;re were ~omc&#13;
diflil:u.h I! th l Shail r&#13;
M1Nl~.1\U~~ $) i000 (Otv~PtNS~TION&#13;
GG DONORS EEDED!&#13;
lte&#13;
ailor i · in&#13;
dttlf£C of&#13;
produ lion.&#13;
he i m&#13;
•hirrge ot&#13;
such thi •&#13;
Help Make A&#13;
Dream&#13;
Corne True&#13;
Center o EGG&#13;
Options&#13;
1-Ll:&#13;
Our egg d nor rogram i - c inpl t~l_y nonLJmo 1s :md&#13;
1s o •n . and ted bt:J our P.rc te!-s10r731, nd canng&#13;
t.a . We re ,n n ed u~ he lthi ni n-sml king&#13;
fomale5 o. n the ~ s f l-70 Lear.:. old. L I&#13;
~_ysicr n - nd ga~ re1~bursem nt _ re varbbl ,.&#13;
• atches mad&#13;
• 2+/7 don ir .sup rt.&#13;
E&#13;
Sept 12, 2006&#13;
RT&#13;
Sept ,&#13;
6&#13;
Husband and Wife 'Artistically Adorn the' Gallery':"&#13;
his works seem 2-dimensional, symbiotic,&#13;
historical, and complex. "He bas a Lotof&#13;
in his art," doesn't width design, Richmond wondered if the artists&#13;
knew one another before reading the&#13;
displayed biographies, later learning&#13;
that they were husband and wife. "They&#13;
mindset, with differenr&#13;
approach," said Richmond. shows&#13;
using pictures; uses&#13;
a lot of man-used nbjects without showing&#13;
man."&#13;
Mary at Mount the Art and Design. In 1982, she received&#13;
a Bachelor of Fine Arts She has&#13;
worked in fiher, collage, and assemblage&#13;
and often uses found materials like wood&#13;
and fabrics. •&#13;
Behrens' art&#13;
was metaphoric. mysterious and raised&#13;
questions the artist questions the wood Why smooth&#13;
and some rough? And is it personally&#13;
symbiotic? "Her stuff is interesting; you&#13;
want to she in statement,&#13;
"My methods and material have changed&#13;
over the 49 years of my life. "She added,&#13;
"elements the the went on, art these interrupt their dormancy their&#13;
worth, life of utility," said Behrens.&#13;
BYD. WHITE&#13;
digital various Mary&#13;
have an in Communication Arts this month.&#13;
art at&#13;
Northern Iowa, where he teaches graphic&#13;
design, illustration, design history.&#13;
He is a contributing editor of&#13;
PRINT magazine and art American Review. He was nominated in&#13;
Institution's&#13;
at various art schools universities than years.&#13;
"As who always cballenge), distinction hetween&#13;
my&#13;
'studio my case an&#13;
amalgamation of research, writing,&#13;
exhibiting, and designing)."&#13;
graduate Parkside, RQY&#13;
digital surrealist that&#13;
• RE&#13;
12, 2006&#13;
.&#13;
Artistically the Gallery ·&#13;
hb dlmensional, symbiotic.&#13;
historical. has lot of&#13;
history iv h1s an.n said Richmond. "He&#13;
doe.,n ·1 just do it; even with the wiuth of&#13;
the design. he has order."&#13;
WHITE!&#13;
Using digilal imagery and&#13;
variou&lt; forms of hanging fabrics and&#13;
miscellaneous items, Roy and M:u-y&#13;
Behrens hnve on exhibition the&#13;
Communication Ans Gallery Ibis monlh.&#13;
Roy Behrens is a professor of nn al&#13;
Nonhem Iowa. be Leaches de,ign. illustrauon. and de.sign h1&gt;1Qry_&#13;
i.&lt; conlribuung PRL'IT magn.dne and an editor of North&#13;
wa.&lt; 2003 for the Smithsonian lnstuutioa's&#13;
prestigious National Design award. He&#13;
has taught al variou, an school&gt; and&#13;
univcrsitics for more Lhan 35 years,&#13;
He said in a prepared statement,&#13;
a person delights in teaching&#13;
(although it is alway, a challenge). I&#13;
purposely make no di&gt;tmction between&#13;
my classroom teachings and my&#13;
"studio work' (which in my caw is :m&#13;
research. writing.&#13;
exhibiting. designing),"&#13;
Keith Richmond, a graphic design&#13;
gradual&lt;! from UW-Pru-kside. said that Roy&#13;
Behrens was a dil(iutl ,urrcaJ.ist and tb111&#13;
arusL,&#13;
anothl!t bcfofi! b1ogruphtes, lcaming&#13;
!hat use the same minr.l-et, but wilh different&#13;
appro:ich." &lt;aid Richmond "He ,hows&#13;
life u~ing actual digital picrures; she use.1&#13;
used objects w11hou1 n\rut.'~&#13;
Behrens studied 01 Moum Mary&#13;
College and 1he Minneapolis College of&#13;
An Desi11n. 1982. • Ans degree. fiber. collage. use, Richmond said Mary an&#13;
meluphoric, numerous question, for anist. He had&#13;
several que,lions about her work: why are&#13;
lhc sheet and hanging there? Why&#13;
the unfinished lines? is some ,moolh&#13;
ii siuff inll!rc,ling· wam know what &lt;he is saying."&#13;
She said a prepared sta1ement,&#13;
melhcl&lt;l.s -'Many of my visual elemcnlS are&#13;
metaphors of memory, both rhe wonderful&#13;
and lhe horrible." She wem on. "By&#13;
making my art from the:.e leavings, I&#13;
intemipl tbdr domuutcy and renew dieir&#13;
purpose and wonh, paying homage to a&#13;
utility." s:tid&#13;
 ~P.:.1.t;.:2::.,_2_00_6 :-~_2The~~Ra~n~g~er~N~e=:W~S~· =========~7&#13;
Alumni of Color&#13;
BY D. WHITE&#13;
wbile04l @uwp.edu&#13;
1999UWPark.&#13;
side alumna and&#13;
natioual touring comic&#13;
OJastity Washington&#13;
electrified lhe cinema&#13;
willi an hour of&#13;
comedy, on Sep 5.&#13;
Racism, student and&#13;
donn life, parenting,&#13;
1eachitig, her Own&#13;
family, and membas&#13;
of lhe audience were&#13;
some of lhe serious&#13;
topics, which were&#13;
lightened willi cooiedy,&#13;
slight profilnilies,&#13;
impersonations.&#13;
and Washington's&#13;
II3llml\ animation.&#13;
"It's a lifuloog&#13;
calling, n said&#13;
W:isbiogton.&#13;
PhOlOby D. White Audience&#13;
members entering after sbe started became&#13;
targets. The first comical insult was directed&#13;
toward an African-American male weariQg a&#13;
fitted tank top. "You don 'tlook lilre 50 Cent, bot&#13;
15Cent," said Washington.&#13;
Next she talked about Slndent life, DOmoney&#13;
nn RangerOne Cards, saving change. "Watch your&#13;
Ranger Cards; after one month, you wiD be eating&#13;
hnt tamale candy and Ramen NOodles foc supper,"&#13;
said Washington.&#13;
Washington warned new SlUdents about lhe&#13;
hazards of sharing rooms and ba1hrooms in college.&#13;
She said to buy Comet cleanser and sponges and&#13;
watch for "musty" students. "Go in lhe Ranger Hall&#13;
and wash up!"&#13;
Washington used humor to present serious&#13;
subjects. She talked about 1he value of an education&#13;
. and entering lhe real world afterward. "You have to pa.!.!~stuff 1hat's supposed to he free, like ligbts and&#13;
w~.&#13;
~asbington told a stoIy about her teaching&#13;
ape .. e....., and her encounter with a drunken. parent.&#13;
SbeimiLated lhe drunken&#13;
IIIOlber by&#13;
characters on tele•vision, using vocal impersonations.&#13;
She impersonated Mayo Angelo, Whoopi Goldberg,&#13;
Cicely Tyson, Tina Turner, and Janet Jackson.&#13;
She next compared her gay uncle to the&#13;
Cowardly Lion from The WlZard of Oz and her aunt&#13;
to Edith Bunker from "All in the Family." The crowd&#13;
laughed when they heard her voice impersonations.&#13;
Her last rendition was of Michael Jackson memories&#13;
and dances. '1 know be looks like Liza Minnelli&#13;
but be still is one of the greatest performers," said&#13;
Washington.&#13;
Student Krystina Howard said Washington was&#13;
awesome and that everything was funny. "lt's good to&#13;
see someone who used to go to Parkside come back&#13;
and support."&#13;
After Washington's performance, the comic&#13;
joined students and other alumni from UW-Parkside&#13;
for music, food, and dinner in the Union 'Square for&#13;
an Alumni of Color Reunion. This event gave alumni&#13;
an opportunity to reunite at their old campus and&#13;
motivate the current students.&#13;
The tabl"" were topped with white cloth and&#13;
bl",* center mats and were illuminated by candles&#13;
anI'Idecorated with silverware and water glasses.&#13;
The serving table was complete with cut fruits&#13;
and vegetables, Swedish meatballs. and&#13;
breaded chicken breast.&#13;
Washington said it is important For&#13;
alumni to come back and support&#13;
UW·Parkside and current students.&#13;
"It's necessary and needed to inspire people;&#13;
inspiration helped me."&#13;
Also attending, 2005 graduate Jerome Garrett&#13;
is now an assistance improvement management&#13;
consultant for Aurora Health Care. Garrett fell it was&#13;
also important to return to UW-Parkside and fell the&#13;
dinner:was nice. "It's a good way to give back,"&#13;
f 'l" "i&lt;: go s- slurring&#13;
words&#13;
and&#13;
SIliggering ~&#13;
00 SlalW- The drunken mother&#13;
came fD school. Washington said, because a teacher '&#13;
had disciplined bee son. Washington added humor to&#13;
this stoIy by teUing lhe drunken mother that ber son&#13;
was 26 years uld and in !be. 8'" grade.&#13;
She told !be mother she was at the scbool for&#13;
lhe wrong reasons and sbouId be helping her son's&#13;
education. "Family support is important, n said&#13;
Wasbington.&#13;
Toward lhe end, Washington displayed her&#13;
versatility by comparing her family members to&#13;
cj&#13;
Racine Bus Schedule&#13;
Route #1 Monday through Friday Service effective. February 29.04&#13;
345 6 7 8 9 9 8 7 654 3&#13;
2 5 "'AM 5"'" 552NA&#13;
';&gt;0'" 6:"15 AM 6~19AM 6~31NA 6-40AM o:~~ 6;52 NI.&#13;
SWAM 5-31 AM 5:40AM 5:45* ssr ... _... .". ... 772AM&#13;
8.45 ..... ...... l:01HA 710AM 7.104 AM&#13;
556AM 6.01 AM 6:10AM. 6~15AM 627'" 6:31/IM 635.... 6~Mt&#13;
1~45AM 7:-49* 1lO .... 8:10AM 8:141&gt;JA 8:22AM&#13;
6:56AM 7:01 AM 7~10AM 7:15 ..AM 7CO'" 7:31'" 7""'" ,""... 8-44NA a-SlAM '51'" ....... _... """- Il.l$AM 8:19AM 8:31AM 8:40AM&#13;
7:261W. 7'31 AM 7.MlAM 7A5AU&#13;
'i:O!}MI 9:15AM k19AM ...31_ 9:"40NA 9+4~ 9:52N1o&#13;
8:25AM 8:31 AM 8:40AM 8:45~ _... ........ ........ ,o:,OAM 10:1.NA 10.22 NIo&#13;
IU5AM 921.... _... _.... ......... ....... ,....... to.1Il AM&#13;
8:56AM 9:01 AM 9:10AM ,_'" 1O::45AM 10;49"" 11:01 AM 11:10AM 11:14AM 11:22AM&#13;
to;15Aa1 '1Y.l7'" ,""' ... """'... 9:56AM 10;01 AM 10:10/IN. ,1.tSMll H:19H' 11.31,AM 1140AY 1144AM ":52AM&#13;
1026 AM 10;31 AM 10:40 AM . 'O:45AM 10:511'11 111tl ,.. 11.;05 .... 11.OQAU&#13;
1-"" 12:15 PM '2:18PM '231"" '2:40PM 12:.... PM 12:52 PM&#13;
11;26 AM 11:31 AM 11:40 AlA 11:&lt;I5-AU 11:51"'" 12iI5"" ,........ 1249 AI 1:01 PM 1:10PM 1:14PM 1:22 PM&#13;
'Z27 .... 1231"" .2:35'" ''''''''''' 12......&#13;
11'56 AM 12;01 PM 12:10PM 12:15 PM&#13;
,:30"" 1;45"" 1:49PM 2&lt;1,"" 2:10PM 2:14 PM =... 12:56PM 1:01 PM 1:10PM U5PU 'CO"" 1:31 fill ."".... 2'15'" 2:19PM 23'''' 2:40PM 2:44PM 2:;5-ZPM&#13;
291 .... 205"" .". ... 1~26PM 1:31 PM 1:40PM 1'-45:", ''''''''' _"" 3015 .... 3:19PM 303'''' 3:40PM 3:44PM 3:52PM&#13;
.". .... _....&#13;
2:26 PM 2:31 PM 2:40PN """.... =.... 3:49"" 4.:Q1P'U 410PU 4~14PM .22'"&#13;
3;15PU 327"" :&lt;3'''' 3:35'" :t39PM 3:-45PN&#13;
2:56 PM 3:01 PM 3;10PM&#13;
4.0.45PU 4.C9P11 "'" ... 510PU 5:14 PM 522"'" "".... """... .:30'" 3:56 PM 4:01 PM 4:10PM 4:15PM -... 5:19PM 531 PM 5 ...... "..... ...... 5:52 Aot 4S1"" 5...... _"" ........ 5:,15~&#13;
4'26 PM 4~31PM 4:40PM&#13;
6.."05'" . ......... 8:15 PM 6:19PM 6:3''''' "",,""&#13;
5~26PM 5:31 PM 5:40 PM 5~45P11 -"" _... ....... ........ 7ff1PU 1.10 PM 7:WPM&#13;
6:27 .... ........ 635'" 0:30""&#13;
5:56 PM 6:01 PM 6:10PM 6:15PU&#13;
..... .n:&#13;
"!"!E. -o£.. "' .. {!::;.&#13;
racinebuscommentS@uwp.edu&#13;
2006-Q7 UW-Parkside&#13;
Shuttle Bus Schedule&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Depart UWP for Georgetown&#13;
Passenger Pick-up ar Georgetown&#13;
Arrive UWP&#13;
7:45 am&#13;
8:00 am&#13;
8:15 am&#13;
Regular Inner Loop route&#13;
Depart UWP for Georgetow ~&#13;
Passenger Pick-up at Georgetown&#13;
ArriveUWP&#13;
11:00 am&#13;
IU5am&#13;
II:~O am&#13;
Regular Inner Loop route&#13;
Monday - Thursday Last Roule&#13;
Final Depart UWP for Georgerown 5:~0 pm&#13;
Final Passenger Drop-off at Georgetown 5:45 pm&#13;
Arrive UWP - End of Route 6:00 pm&#13;
Friday's Last Route&#13;
Final Depart UWP for Georgetown 3:30 pm&#13;
Final Passenger Dtop-off at Georgetown 3:45 pm&#13;
Arrive UWP _ End of Route 4:00 pm&#13;
The bus will WlUtin rhe McDonalds Parking lot&#13;
12, 2006&#13;
7&#13;
,,.&#13;
...,,,,,. S;AOIM ,,. ~ .. 15. flt- ..... ,,. 8..-10.-M &amp;.15MI e27MI - 7:ot,.. NO* 'nl• ..... ... ,..&#13;
1AM ,,,. l: ,. m• ,.. .... .. ,.. ... - - - .. ,,,&#13;
10MII 1!2JM - ,. -,. Ml ,., 10:Jllllli ----&#13;
? Z - - . -- T· -&#13;
oPt&#13;
8&#13;
~~lio'N _ ~ Wi1hsomeone-c1Ulcbangt your life. The other day&#13;
(iiiKr,.~vmiltlollwilli Mll!ur Poletti. ~ of a book calIIod "God Does No! Ei Meat; and he IQI,d me hOw a discussion whit his daughter more tIJan IS yqars&#13;
ago inllpired him to take a whole new palll m life. I am DOta vegetarian, but from&#13;
taIkilig to Arthur, Iam interested in his book. He asked me to spread die word that&#13;
he is bllving a book sigJling at Barnes &amp; Noble in Racine Wednesday. September&#13;
13 at 6 p.m, He also gave me. extri books to give to anyone who might be&#13;
interested. So check this out: three people to come to The Ranger News&#13;
officeaod ask for the hOok can a free copy.&#13;
Henry D. Gaskins&#13;
AdvCJ1ising Manager, The Ranger News&#13;
It was strange to see my name on The Ranger News when Istarted to work here.&#13;
Now, Igot the first issue with my name as the graphic design manager. Every&#13;
single mistake makes me nervous! We had lots of mistakes on the first newspaper,&#13;
but Ipromise to everybody that we will be better and that Iwill work hard! Thank&#13;
you to The Ranger News familiy for giving me this opportunity!&#13;
Soohyun Kim&#13;
In my year and a half with The Ranger News, I've only written something for this&#13;
section once or twice, but we had extra room this week, so I'm going for my own&#13;
personal opinion triad. This being my last semester at The Ranger News, and at&#13;
UW-Parkside in general, Ijust wanted to encourage all the new and nQt-sostudents&#13;
here to get involved. As Inear graduation, the one thing that Iregret 18&#13;
that I didn't join an organization earlier. I'd go on aboutlill the ways that my ti~&#13;
at The Ranger News has benefited me, but I'm kind of a windbag, so IprObab~&#13;
wouldn't be able to adhere to die limits imposed by the title of this aectiOD, 80 see&#13;
ya!&#13;
Andrew C. Westbrook,&#13;
Vice president/copy manager/senior editor of The Ranger News&#13;
r.&#13;
LS&#13;
Sepf12. 2006&#13;
GUEST EDITORIAL&#13;
The Jess the Ska Kid on 88.5 WIPZ///&#13;
Hi! My name is Jess the Ska Kid Anyways, to put it into simpler terms&#13;
for all of those that do not know me; I Ska is reggae with horns and a quicker&#13;
am the OJ Representative for WIPZ. I tempo. This kind of music makes ynu Want&#13;
am the peace-keeper in our organization. to jump up from your seat and dance. It&#13;
So Iguess it is only fining that I play tbe will grab you. When you become hooked&#13;
kind of music Iplay. For all of those that there is no turning back you will want&#13;
know me 10u know I play Ska but, for to listen to more. Well, WIPZ will have&#13;
~cl~~~~ j~~s&#13;
know me and have not SKA IS REGGAE opportunity&#13;
yet tuned into listen to for you not&#13;
88.5FM on Monday, WITH H.ORNS AND only can you&#13;
Wednesday, and' Fridays ' listen to me'&#13;
12:00 P.M. to 1:00 P.M. A QUICKER TEMPO. from 12-&#13;
,lou might be wondering THIS KI"'D OF MUSIC lP.M.every&#13;
what Ska is. Well, here I' Monday,&#13;
is a brief history lesson; NT Wednesday,&#13;
Ska is a music form that. MAKE S YOU WA and Friday;&#13;
originated in Jamaica TO J UMPUP FROM but on the 8&#13;
in the 50's. The original of December&#13;
namefor~skindof YOUR SEAT AND in the Union&#13;
upbeat reggae was called Square a&#13;
Blue Beat. This music DAN CE• few gnod&#13;
was born because at this Ska bands&#13;
time the British were ruling the Jamaican will be playing. It will be a Ska Fest, with&#13;
islands with an iron fist. This was a The Invaders and The Deals gnne Bad&#13;
unifying music. People wanted the violence head lining. There will also be the great&#13;
to. stop and this music, which is represented' .local talent: Big Miggafers and Our Own&#13;
by a black and white checkerboard, Syndrome as well as the Hired Geeks. So&#13;
brought everyone together. Then in the 70's make sure you grab your tickets in advance&#13;
the sound was picked up and changed into at only $5 because if you wait you will&#13;
a punk/reggae reel that became Ska and have to pay $8 at the door. The show is&#13;
then in the 90's Ska became big in the U.S. from 7-l1P.M. so grab a rude girl and head&#13;
with the help of such bands as the Mighty fnr the dance floor and make sure to tune&#13;
Mighty Bosstones and Reel Big Fish. into Jess the Ska Kid on 88.5FM WIPZ&#13;
OPI&#13;
8&#13;
100WORDS&#13;
itu f'Ib&#13;
LS&#13;
GUEST EDITORIAL&#13;
The Jess the Ska Kid on 88.5 WIPZl ' •'&#13;
Anyway.., to put it i11tn i.mple-r enn.·&#13;
i~ re far i1h horn and a ui ker&#13;
tempo. Thi. kind f mu ic m c you want&#13;
t, jump up frum )'&lt;mr. eat nd dance, Lt&#13;
\lo'tll grab )'Oil. b n you be omc boo d&#13;
I.here i: o turnini hack you ill want&#13;
10 Ii len lo m ri.:. \V l . \\1PZ will h.ttvc&#13;
SKA IS REGGAE&#13;
ju ;:t thi&#13;
opportuni1&#13;
for you 110; w D H HO NS A&#13;
A QU CKER T MPO&#13;
USIC THI&#13;
MAK&#13;
0 JUMP U&#13;
AN&#13;
F OM&#13;
YO R SEAT AND&#13;
DANC - •&#13;
nly n yoo&#13;
listc tom~fmm&#13;
12-&#13;
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lllnd.a) •&#13;
\ e&lt;lnc la .&#13;
anil --n a)~&#13;
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of D mber&#13;
in th Umon&#13;
It's mg prou 0 your sc 00 an . g care 0 the&#13;
campus environment, both social and physical, It's a really The&#13;
nice campus, I think For one thing, it's natural, and I like Centerfior&#13;
that. Also, getting students involved. Especially young EGG (847) 656-8733 students. They're new and don't know where to start.&#13;
Trying to pull them in is important; otherwise, they might 3) 490 EGGS choose to stay on the outside, and they won't get involved Options 77 - __ ----'--,".-W until the end when they wish they would have been in the LLC&#13;
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€ommunicatiolt'"Major- =====:;==:;=:::l;;;;;~~;:;;~~~~====;;:;=~~~~"It's having school spirit and having a lot of people&#13;
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Tom Chiapete, 22, Senior&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
"Being a part of the Parkside community and knowing&#13;
that you are a part of it no matter who you are,"&#13;
Elizabeth Trudeau, 17, Freshman&#13;
English Major&#13;
''1'd have to say it's the comradery on campus. That little&#13;
feeling youget when you say, 'I'm from UW-Parkside'&#13;
and someone you don't know says, 'yeah, me too' and&#13;
you're instantly friends." .&#13;
Brian Schutz, 20, Junior&#13;
English Majnr&#13;
"Being proud of your school and working together.&#13;
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Emily Neueodorf, 18, Freshman&#13;
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'.I~ - •&#13;
9&#13;
The Ranger News Sept 12, 2006&#13;
10&#13;
Intro to Intra:&#13;
Sign-up for Intramurals Today&#13;
Scoring Opportunity for Sports Journalists&#13;
awards must be postmarked by&#13;
Dec. 8, 2006.&#13;
In addition to completing&#13;
the application form, juniors&#13;
must supply an official&#13;
college transcript and a letter&#13;
of recommendation from&#13;
a journalism professor or&#13;
supervisor of their work. If&#13;
they have had a professional&#13;
internship, they must supply a.&#13;
letter of recommendation from&#13;
their employer.&#13;
Students also need to submit&#13;
three published examples of&#13;
sports journalism work, such&#13;
as newspaper articles, program&#13;
copy, published photographs,&#13;
editorials, television and/or radio&#13;
scripts. ( VHS tapes aod cassettes&#13;
will be accepted.)&#13;
A selection committee&#13;
determined by thePreedom&#13;
Foru and NCAA will judge aD&#13;
awlid winDers.&#13;
PortheEfoIlD.&#13;
sllldents can AA&#13;
Web site at \Itlp:l. •&#13;
'1\}lear/lIllJ;lle'" _&#13;
~ IIqc lIIUrelte1l . '-Wi&#13;
omm,&#13;
between five to twelve&#13;
members. Sign-up sheets&#13;
are located in the Sports&#13;
&amp; Activity Center for&#13;
any student that has an&#13;
interest in joining.&#13;
BY DAN TORKILSON&#13;
dtork02@yahoo.com&#13;
With thestart of&#13;
a _ Sl'Qle$eT begins&#13;
the start tlf intrdlllUTaIs.&#13;
Intramural sports are&#13;
vanous sports that appeal&#13;
to students casually&#13;
interested in athletics who&#13;
can play for fun or for&#13;
I~""'" Iilteral:li.on.&#13;
JIW-~debas&#13;
~_~lfinlJ:amuraJ&#13;
f.lIat 811)' SlUdenlsl'Ql:&#13;
tlll\fe&#13;
o~ssuCbas&#13;
_CeF,&#13;
BY TYRONE PAYTON&#13;
paytoOO4@uwp.edu&#13;
Through a donation from the&#13;
Freedom Forum, the NCAA will&#13;
be offering a sports journalism&#13;
scholarship program for eight&#13;
fortunate students.&#13;
The nonpartisan foundation&#13;
based in Arlington, Va. gave&#13;
$3IJ ,000 to the NCAA in hopes&#13;
to assist future sports journalists&#13;
at the collegiate level. This&#13;
NCAA scholarship program, now&#13;
in its 15· year, will be awarding&#13;
eight $3,000 scholarships for the&#13;
2007-08 academic year to this&#13;
year's current, full-time juniors.&#13;
"The scholarships provide&#13;
students with an opportunity&#13;
to learn the strategies of sports&#13;
writing and to practice the trade&#13;
while in school," said Charles&#13;
L. Overby, chairman and chief&#13;
executive officer of the Freedo&#13;
Forum. "The NCAA continue&#13;
to focus on academics as it wo&#13;
with students who will provide&#13;
accounts of issues and events in&#13;
collegiate sports and beyond."&#13;
A lications for these&#13;
first Day of Class&#13;
Through the Semester&#13;
Mon-Fri 11am-11pm&#13;
Sat&#13;
Noon-11pm&#13;
Sun Spm-10pm&#13;
ClJ-:&#13;
Food - Beverages - Billiards&#13;
Air Hockey - Bowling - Fooshall&#13;
Tahle Tennis - Video Games Sponsored by&#13;
Student Union&#13;
2, w rd mw L bL: po Lm· ked D ·• , 2)06.&#13;
· 1&#13;
ign-or tramural Today1&#13;
add'tion w c mplcling&#13;
lhe npphtalim1 f m, Junior.;&#13;
mL1sl upplf offo:1al&#13;
o!k-£i: tntn. ri L n11J ;i kucr&#13;
1r re umm ~n:t.!mion rom&#13;
D jounuili~m prof . ~or Jf&#13;
supcn•1. ·o ur lh i work. U&#13;
hnv h:iJ pn1k l nn.J&#13;
inl~m~ltip, lhey mu. l ~uppl)'&#13;
let! r n=commendaLL n f m&#13;
lhei empl 1.:..&#13;
, lmknis al u nc 'tJ ltl ubmil&#13;
Lhree publish •d f&#13;
·porti; joumnH~m ::i n w, p per progrmn&#13;
cop. , 1 ublished photographs.&#13;
editorinb,, 1clt:visi n or scrip ts_. Vl-1 S Lape am.I casselle.&#13;
wi i l l;lt! lectioo c·1 Jm1rn,u1J,;~-dctennim:&#13;
by~ Freedom&#13;
Furn 1 ind Judge al)&#13;
.· Welco1ne to .the Fall&#13;
Semester al Parkside&#13;
~~&#13;
First of Class&#13;
Mon Fri 1 pm&#13;
1 pm&#13;
5pm-In Th Union&#13;
a ' :&#13;
Food• B ,,er~ eL • Ai o kejr •&#13;
Tab e T~nni&#13;
o,v-li11 on&#13;
~ G nes&#13;
I&#13;
)(}flffJred h •&#13;
L ·t ldenl Unim&#13;
--&#13;
BY TYRONE PAYTON&#13;
paytoOO4@uwp.edu&#13;
A college myth is out to&#13;
shift the notches on your belts! Fall&#13;
semester is only one week old and&#13;
undoubtedly some students may&#13;
have overheard the old rumor, the&#13;
"freshman fifteen."&#13;
Who are these dreaded&#13;
newcomers to campus you might·&#13;
ask? Well, it isn't who. It's what.&#13;
The notorious freshman fifteen is&#13;
the name designated to the pounds&#13;
that supposedly will be gained by&#13;
freshman in their first semester in&#13;
college.&#13;
Although not all new&#13;
students will gain weight, and even&#13;
some might Jose weight, it is the&#13;
freshmen who do put on the excess&#13;
pounds that have brought weight to&#13;
this rumor.&#13;
All puns aside, and to help&#13;
dispel the myth that all freshman will&#13;
pack on this extra fat, here are several&#13;
strategies from Cornell University's&#13;
Web site that all students can use to&#13;
help them avoid the freshman&#13;
fifteen and remain healthy.&#13;
Avoid skipping meals,&#13;
as the chances of overeating later&#13;
are greater, and try to separate&#13;
snack time and study time. You&#13;
don't want to lose track of that&#13;
full bag of chips while reading,&#13;
The Ranger News&#13;
, 1&#13;
..&#13;
Shakespeare's "Much Ado About&#13;
Nothing." There could be much ado&#13;
about nothing left in the bag by the&#13;
time you get to the second act.&#13;
Also, trade in those chips&#13;
and other vending machine no-nos&#13;
for healthier options, whether they're&#13;
brought from home or bought on&#13;
campus. When at the cafeteria, skip&#13;
the fried foods and desserts more&#13;
often, and late at night, refrain from&#13;
ordering pizza and wings for supper.&#13;
As for conversations at the&#13;
dinner/cafeteria table, try not to have&#13;
them, because the chances that you'll&#13;
eat more increase when hanging .,&#13;
around near food.&#13;
For proper digestion, be sure&#13;
to drink water and chew food slowly&#13;
while eating. Avoid&#13;
· high-calorie&#13;
· fluids like&#13;
sodas&#13;
and&#13;
alcoholic beverages that contain&#13;
hidden calories. Instead, drink'&#13;
plenty of water, and besides staying&#13;
hydrated, students should regularly&#13;
exercise three to four times a week&#13;
for 30 to 45 minutes.&#13;
With these tips and some&#13;
common sense, the student body can&#13;
keep on the healthy track the whole&#13;
year long.&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
UW Parkside's newest sorority is Sigma Sigma Sigma.&#13;
Be a part of something new ... be a leader!&#13;
Colonization Weekend&#13;
September 15 - September 17&#13;
Open House is Sept. 15 from 7:00pm to 8:00pm in U104-U106&#13;
enticed&#13;
L.~~_""'.&#13;
$1.00 OFF&#13;
any grande size&#13;
beverage&#13;
, (with this coupon)&#13;
7180 75th St •• Kenosha I ..&#13;
F R E E (adjacent to Tinseltown) • 262-925-9055 BEANER 5&#13;
~ convenient drive thnt· www.beaners.com CO FFEE ~ wiIlbe~ OfterexpmSept.71,2006.&#13;
Gclod 8I.Ihl.lDl:BtlQo onl)'. Not \IQOd wlIh lIllY other offer. No ~ 01 thl5 coupCllI .&#13;
seP 12. 2006 Health&#13;
Attention All&#13;
BY.IT.RO E ~1-.:,{)04 uwp.ed&#13;
coll ·ge b, ut . hift th notchc on your b~lt&lt;t! f'lfUc:'.tcr i!,, on w-cek o d i oub dly some slll nL~ ma~·&#13;
ha c erhcrud lh.c old rumor, fre. hm n fifteen:·&#13;
Who are th · dmidc:d&#13;
ruinor.&#13;
AJl PtlD-" askl , and el&#13;
di 1 that atl frc:.Jiman I · ~ • thi ex: fnt, h • urc sevc:tal&#13;
str:ue ie Uni ... ~ . ily'&#13;
si Iha aH tu.den · us lo&#13;
I m avoid lhe freshman&#13;
fifteen nd r~main healthy.&#13;
• k.ip in as the chan e of m,•cr~ating ter&#13;
are greater, and LT)' parale&#13;
snack time and tudy time. You&#13;
don' l IJ.' t LO loo;e track of that&#13;
full of while rcadil'lg&#13;
re hB1an Waistlines!&#13;
S · kc pt,:.1Tc' · •• uch Ad A ul&#13;
Nolhing.' Then:: could be ad&#13;
about nothing left in tJ b11g th&#13;
Lime: y u lO e se ond III t.&#13;
so. lmde in lho. e chips&#13;
\lending him: nn&#13;
h lthi er optio s. \\ hethc, they T re&#13;
ho ooug.hi n&#13;
campu . Whl:II al Lhe ell eri[t. ki&#13;
frie "oods d. sscns oft~n, and lalf: at nighl, refrain from&#13;
ordering piu. and win s for supper.&#13;
A~ f r conve tion t he&#13;
dinner/ feteria table, T)' not to have&#13;
them. bct:ausc lhe chance~ that you'I!&#13;
i.::al. in rca.i.c ban ·ng&#13;
around near fo d&#13;
r p,e dig •slion, ure&#13;
'nk wat rand chew food •hile hig -calorie&#13;
l'luid T'ke&#13;
od s&#13;
minute..&#13;
\\1th t~e lip.'- anJ some&#13;
n • th tuuenl OOu} ·p un Lht healthy trnc lhe "'l, I&#13;
yearlong.&#13;
11&#13;
SIGMA S[GMA SIGA)&#13;
"&#13;
ParksideJs ALL \ TUDEMT ORGAMIZATIOM&#13;
&amp; ADVISOR MEETING&#13;
.. . -· ........ -·. '· -.&#13;
o n·zation Week d&#13;
S ptemb r 1 - Septemb· r Open House is s pt 15rrom 1 OOprnto s·aopm inU1 -U106&#13;
a y • (' 1i, tnrs eotJP0"1)&#13;
BEANER'S®&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
TUESDAY, \E.PTEMBER 191"&#13;
7·8:310PM&#13;
UNION \QUARE&#13;
•-~~ • • .. +&#13;
--• , ... _,r- - •-· ".. ... ~,~-~--; ;r-~ . ..., ·,. • :-:i a ' --.·.&#13;
.... ,.&#13;
.~,. ,, ,..,i, ..' ,,,·- .&#13;
;• .-&#13;
,·. ; .. _ ·_.&#13;
,.' .&#13;
. - .......&#13;
-&#13;
Now Hiring&#13;
12&#13;
The Ranger News Sept 12, 2006&#13;
•&#13;
Charles the Hammer By zachary J. Keehan&#13;
e rejoin Chem. Morin, Rim,and Lapis&#13;
in their search for the stolen cat bat.&#13;
bar1emasnel pe back the cat bat&#13;
Rim save to Morin!&#13;
ever! And you'll&#13;
never find it in its&#13;
secret hidinll place&#13;
Moot Point By TJ Hysell&#13;
Another. Sub Plot By Mathew Gonya and Henry D. Gaskins&#13;
p; ~W JAnother of a col-&#13;
«: v/ ..-:leclion of scribbles Tony Kinnard .&gt;/" . &lt;:1/ &lt; made by&#13;
As you may know, this season of 'Survivor" has tribes that are&#13;
~&#13;
separated by race. Well, during the summer, not-so ace reporter&#13;
Tony Kinnand revealed that there was more going on behind the&#13;
scenes at CBS. Check out some of the new shows under CBS' fall&#13;
line-up.&#13;
Barry Borids,&#13;
you're fired ...and&#13;
not because you&#13;
are a steroidinduced&#13;
freak.&#13;
Touched by an&#13;
.Aryan&#13;
The Baseball Manager&#13;
wI Marge Schott&#13;
Tv Movie:&#13;
The Jon Nodtveidt&#13;
sto&#13;
60 Minutes&#13;
featuring the KKK&#13;
Classified&#13;
Party time help. We will work&#13;
around your hours. Selling jobs&#13;
and ski, board, and bike service.&#13;
Ski and Sports Chalet (262) 658-&#13;
8515 10 a.rn. to 6 p.m.&#13;
Christian family looking for&#13;
consistent child care provider in&#13;
our borne for two children, 5 and&#13;
2, every Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Must have own transportation.&#13;
$6.50Ihour.262-909-3074.&#13;
Famous Dave's is hiring! We're&#13;
located in Pleasant Prairie off&#13;
Hwy. 50. Looking for outgoing&#13;
personalities for our host&#13;
counter position. Stop by for an&#13;
application and return.&#13;
Now hiring Old Navy at Prime&#13;
Outlets in Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Hiring extravaganza Saturday&#13;
September 3010 a.m. to 6&#13;
p.m, at Lakeview RecPlex.&#13;
Applications and immediate&#13;
interviews. Contact Sara, 414-&#13;
287-0792.&#13;
Services&#13;
Call STS for the best deals to&#13;
this year's top 10 Spring Break&#13;
destinations I'Earn the highest&#13;
rep commissions! Ask about&#13;
our group discounts! Voted best&#13;
party schedules. 1-800-648-4849.&#13;
www.ststravel.com.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Parkview Manor Apartments&#13;
now accepting applications.&#13;
Studio - $385&#13;
1 Bedroom - $485&#13;
2 Bedroom - $585&#13;
Air, heal, appliances,&#13;
underground parking, balcony,&#13;
on-site storage and laundry, park'&#13;
like setting, quiet and secure,&#13;
professional staff, on the busline&#13;
2200 Washington Ave. Racine.&#13;
Please call for a tour today! (262)&#13;
898-3953&#13;
Stndio apartment, 6505 22'"&#13;
Ave. Rear, Kenosha. Utilities&#13;
and appliances included. $400&#13;
per month plus security deposit.&#13;
Contact Betty at (414) 828-5024.&#13;
Respectable, dependable,&#13;
and easy-going roommate&#13;
wanted to share spacious 2&#13;
bedroom apartment near GTC&#13;
in downtown Racine. Available&#13;
1011/06. No pets or smoking.&#13;
E-mail missmarilynbelJ@yahoo.&#13;
com for more information.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
MOVlNG SALE! Entertainment&#13;
center, television, DVD player,&#13;
5-disc stereo system, leather&#13;
recliner. Must go by September&#13;
30. CHEAP! 262-939-4604&#13;
12&#13;
foot Point By TJ Hy1,clJ&#13;
. · As you may know, this season orsurvl or- has bibes&#13;
separa ed by mce. Well. during the sul11f118r; ot-so&#13;
Tony Kinnard re-.i aled that there mom going on&#13;
scenes a CBS. Cheek out som of !he new shows under CBS'&#13;
line-up.&#13;
The Baseball Manager&#13;
w/ Marge Schott&#13;
San:y Born!&#13;
)"OIJ're recLand&#13;
notbecauR)"OIJ&#13;
a 1tvroldlnducad&#13;
11111k.&#13;
Touched by an&#13;
Aryan&#13;
60 Minutes&#13;
featuring the KKK&#13;
Sept 12, 200&amp;&#13;
as&#13;
. .&#13;
01' lTlll&#13;
f;1mil look.iM for&#13;
L I c ild can: pr~, ida 1n&#13;
our h rm: ti o children, .5 till&#13;
-. every Saturdav and. umbv.&#13;
u. hav • o n transport lio~.&#13;
$650/hour. 262-909-3074.&#13;
F:nuom Da 'e~s il&gt; hiring! c're&#13;
I led in Pkwmnt Pr.iirie off&#13;
. 0. Looking for outg ing&#13;
perSQnaliti s for our ho I&#13;
nt r sition. Slop b; ~ ran&#13;
·an aml retunL&#13;
Services&#13;
Call f, r the oost JcaJ [O&#13;
lhfr ear ~ rop IO Spring Break&#13;
deslin:iri o. ! Earn tl1~ hi e~t&#13;
rep commis1,i n~ ! ~ · a ut&#13;
grnu ui:.count !. Voted best&#13;
pan y sdledut~s. I -800 64~ - !WY.&#13;
www .. ·b,Lravcl.com.&#13;
ioru; .&#13;
For Sale&#13;
0 ING ALE E11i.erta.i:nmeC1t&#13;
center. l 1evision, DVD player,&#13;
~i stereo • y te:m, leather&#13;
n:cJincr. lliil go by ptember&#13;
30. CHEAP! 262-939-4604</text>
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