THE NEW PERSPECTIVE Thursday, October 24, 2002 News
• Volume 26, Issue 3
Features
New career counselor, page 3 Domestic violence, page 4
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http://newperspective.cc.edu
Arts & Entertainment
Birth control, page 8 Buying a used car, page 9
The Red Tent, page 13 Sharkey’s shuttle, page 16
Sports Football, page 19 Soccer, page 20
The Student Newspaper of Carroll College
Are your secrets safe? Jessi Bauer Staff Writer
The ability is there, but no one is spying on you. For the past two and a half years, ITS has had the ability to view students’ work on campus computers, but they do not use it, said ITS workers Boyang (Romeo) Wang and Scott Fudali. The ability to access students’ accounts came with a software package the college acquired over two years ago to help make updates on campus computers easier and more efficient. The software, called a deployment server, is used to clone all the college owned Windows computers on campus. Cloning is done whenever Windows updates need to be done and can include such programs as new versions of Photoshop or Microsoft Word. In the past, when updates needed to be done, each computer had to be taken apart and the updates completed manually. The whole process could take several days to complete, said Wang and Fudali. Fudali, a part time student at Carroll and intern with ITS, remembers the days of manually fixing and updating computers. He said it was a long process and would not go back if given a choice.
The way the software works is somewhat like a remote control. One main computer on campus has the updates installed, and with the click of a button, all the computers in a specific area of campus are updated. The process still takes a few hours for one computer lab to be completed, but it is much faster than the old way. Now, the entire campus can be cloned in just a day or two. “This program has changed our lives,” Wang said. With the ability to update computers efficiently and effectively comes the ability to view students’ work on campus computers. The main time this is used is when a person has a problem with the computer they are working on. The user can call ITS, and with the users’ knowledge, Wang or Fudali can fix the problem while accessing the students’, professors’, or staffs’ machine. Often though, it is easier for the ITS worker to simply go to the lab and fix the problem in person. Fudali said that although the software speeds up the process for updates, it is too slow and “not practical” to use for individual computer problems. When updates or changes need to be done across camSee ITS Page 3
Photo by Andrew Farrell
Saturday night party in the P.I.T. Students find a new variety of entertainment and beverages in the P.I.T. Saturday night as Student Senate brings a local band to stage.
Doyle, McCallum lead the way Maren Weber Staff Writer
On Nov. 5, you will have the chance to decide who will lead our State and Nation for the next several years. Elections will be held here at Carroll College, in the Campus Center. Never voted before? Not from Waukesha? No problem. Registering to vote is simple. When you go to vote, bring proof of residence. This must
include your full name, and complete residential address. A driver’s license and a checking account statement would be sufficient. In a matter of minutes, you will be a registered voter in the State of Wisconsin. The entire state will be voting on who will become Wisconsin’s attorney general, governor, secretary of state, and state treasurer. Here, in Waukesha, we will also be voting for our State Assembly rep-
resentative for the new 97th district, our state senator for the new 33rd district, and for our U.S. representative for Wisconsin’s new fifth district. There are eight candidates for governor. The front runners are incumbent Scott McCallum, and current Wisconsin Attorney General Jim Doyle. Jim Doyle is running on See Election Page 4
Delta Rho Upsilon Alumni Association files suit against college Elizabeth Martin Staff Writer
Photo by Andrew Farrell
The Delta Rho Upsilon fraternity house on McCall Street remains empty, but the organization’s Alumni Association has filed a lawsuit against the college to get the house back.
The Delta Rho Upsilon Alumni Association filed a lawsuit against Carroll College Sept. 26. The lawsuit seeks to settle ownership rights with regard to the property where the fraternity’s house is located. During the late 1960s and the early 1970s, members of the Delta Rho Upsilon Alumni Association negotiated and closed the purchase of the two properties that are now known as 124 McCall Street, stated H. Stanley Riffle, the Alumni Association’s attorney, in an interview with The New Perspective. He also said that the association contracted for the design and construction of the house. Fraternity members first inhabited the house
in fall of 1974. “The Alumni Association has paid every penny of the mortgage, every penny of utility costs, every penny of maintenance and upkeep,” said Riffle, who graduated from Carroll in 1977 and is a Delta Rho Upsilon alumnus. The Alumni Association estimates that it has spent between $40,000 and $50,000 on upgrades and improvements. However, Carroll College holds the title to the property and agreed to do so “as a convenience for the Alumni Association.” Riffle said that in 1973, the college assured the Alumni Association that it would be happy to sign over the title to the property at such time as the mortgage was paid off. The mortgage has been paid off, and Carroll See Fraternity Page 4