The Driftwood #3: Campus Clubs

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Clubs IconFanimanga

Whenever in-person classes start up again, say hello to Fanimanga! President Abby Woodruff leads this club in weekly meetings, where they discuss anime and manga. A fun feature of this club is the bi-monthly viewing of a feature anime; previously, they’ve watched Cells at Work!, JoJo’s Bizzare Adventure, and Sword Art Online. They also take a yearly trip to the Anime Milwaukee conference, so this is a very active club. Drop in on their next meeting (whenever that is); they’d be happy to have you!

—Indigo Ramirez, Campus Clubs & Services Editor

The Driftwood #3: Theater & Arts

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Theater & Arts iconKeep Arts in Your Life at Home

Many of our campus art and theatre events have been cancelled in light of our transfer to online learning, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have fun with art, music, and theatre at home. Go to your favorite streaming services and watch classic movies like Coraline, catch up on the incredible amount of episodes of Criminal Minds, or even play some video games. Return to your Minecraft roots. You know you want to.

Our newsletter, in upcoming issues, will have Netflix and Hulu recommendations, cool podcasts to listen to while you throw a tennis ball at the wall and try not to die of cabin fever, and fun Spotify playlists to knit entire sweaters to. Stay tuned, and stay healthy.

—Cassidy MacArthur, Theater & Arts Editor

The Driftwood #3: Important Campus Services

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Services IconFeatured Service: Phoenix Cares

Do you have concerns about another student, issues on campus, or do you need help yourself? Phoenix Cares is the place to let your voice be heard, even while classes are online. If you have feedback on ways that the campus can better serve its community, bring it to the Phoenix at https://www.uwgb.edu/phoenix-cares/. There are three general categories that your query can be channeled into: reporting hate/bias incidents, students of concern, and general concerns. UW-Green Bay wants all its students to succeed, and they can’t correct problems if they don’t know they exist.

Get Help with Your Classes

During this period while classes are online, you can still get help with your classwork:

UW-Green Bay’s Coronavirus Website: Visit the new coronavirus section of the UW-Green Bay websites for tips to help you learn from home. The site also offers news updates related to Coronavirus and all four UW-Green Bay campuses.

Contact your professors: Your professors will be happy to answer questions by email, and they may also offer phone or virtual options as well. If you need help, don’t be afraid to ask for a call or video-conference session if that would be helpful.

Don’t forget about Brainfuse: This online tutoring service offers 24/7 tutoring in math, writing, and many other subjects, and it’s free for all UW-Green Bay students. Visit the Marinette Campus Learning Center website and click on the Brainfuse logo, or click here to go directly to our UW-Green Bay Brainfuse site.

Friends: Homework can be easier when you do it with a friend—even remotely. Call, Facetime, Skype, or text friends, and have a virtual study group or discussion about assignments.

—Indigo Ramirez, Campus Clubs & Services Editor

The Driftwood #3: Library News

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Feature: March Book Madness is Still Going On!

March Book Madness Logo
March 12th – April 6th:
 March Book Madness is still moving forward! The deadline to submit your bracket has passed, but you can still do your part to push your picks to the top by voting in the six bracket rounds from March 12th through April 6th at the official website.
At the end of the madness, the highest scoring students will earn prizes. Marinette campus Library Services Assistant Cheryl Charon will ensure that all winners get their prizes once classes are back in session.
Good luck, and may the odds be ever in your favor.
—Emily Burns, Books Editor

The Driftwood #3: New Library Books

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Featured Library Books: Gender Studies 

The campus library is still open through Spring Break. (After that, we’ll see.) Before you leave for Spring Break, you can still check out library books. Here’s our Books Editor’s pick for this issue:

“YouWrong Bathroom Book Cover’re in the Wrong Bathroom!” And 20 Other Myths and Misconceptions About Transgender and Gender-Nonconforming People 
by Laura Erickson-Schroth and Laura A. Jacobs

You’re in the Wrong Bathroom brings attention to 20 different myths about transgender and gender-nonconforming people—as one could guess from the title. These myths are often disguised as common courtesy or fact, though they’re not either, according to the authors. For example, take chapter six, “It’s Rude to Ask How You Should Address Someone” (It’s not.). Or chapter 16, “Testosterone Makes You Angry and Estrogen Makes You Emotional” (It’s not that black and white.). Or chapter 20, “Trans People and Feminists Don’t Get Along” (No, no, and no.).
This book poses poses regular, day-to-day questions or misconceptions, and examines them in more than one light. The reading is easy, though the topics can be emotionally difficult for some. If even one of the chapter titles piques your interest, I recommend you give the book, or at least that chapter, a read. The book will not only help you understand what it means to be trans or gender-nonconforming, but it also may help you understand the biases and other challenges these individuals face on a daily basis.
Other Gender Studies Books in the Marinette Campus Library:
  • After Marriage Equality: The Future of Equal Rightsby Carlos A. Ball
  • Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Outby Susan Kuklin
  • Bodies in Doubt: An American History of Intersexby Elizabeth Reis
  • Gender Outlaw—On Men, Women, and the Rest of Usby Kate Bornstein

—Emily Burns, Books Editor

The Driftwood #3: Recommended Reads

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Looking for a page-turner while you’re stuck inside? Our Driftwood editors and faculty advisor will be passing on some of her favorite light reading picks to pass the time while cooped up at home.

Ms. Rysavy recommends: The HuntressThe Huntress Book Cover by Kate Quinn

    While most of the Allied countries during WWII prevented women from flying in combat, did you know that Russia had an elite squadron of female bomber pilots? Flying bare-bones, open-cockpit Polikarpov bi-planes, Russia’s all-women 588th Night Bomber Regiment dropped more than 23,000 tons of bombs on Nazi targets. Because of the whooshing sound their plywood planes made as they flew overhead—and their formidable skill in finding their targets—the Nazis called them die nachthexen, or “the Night Witches.” Even while enduring freezing temperatures in their open-cockpit planes, hand-me-down uniforms, and a lack of the parachutes and radio or navigation equipment the male pilots had, the 588th would become the most decorated regiment in the Soviet Air Force.
The Huntress focuses on Nina Markova, who leaves her whole life behind to join the Night Witches. Stranded behind enemy lines after an otherwise successful mission, she becomes the target of a lethal Nazi assassin, the Huntress. Their cat-and-mouse chase takes them from Russia through Europe and to Massachusetts, where they will have their final confrontation.
This book features edge-of-your-seat pacing, deft plotting, fascinating historical detail, and a courageous bisexual heroine to admire and root for.
To learn more about the Night Witches, you can also check out the free e-books and videos available virtually through our campus library website, including the documentary film Wasps and Witches: The Women Pilots of WWII. 

The Driftwood #3: Sports & Fitness

Mar. 17-31, 2020

Sports Icon

Local Fitness Opportunities:  

Public places like gyms are at a high risk of being contaminated with Cornonavirus. But since we promised to highlight more local gyms in this issue, here are great local gyms for after the virus passes. In the meantime, look for at-home workout options on the Apple or Android app store, Pinterest, and YouTube–and in upcoming issues of the Driftwood.

Anytime Fitness: This gym offers a wide variety of free weights and weight machines. It also has a yoga room with many different useful pieces of equipment. The gym staff is trained to help anyone from beginners to professional lifters. Anytime Fitness is one of the more expensive gyms in the area; however, it’s for a good reason. They provide a great atmosphere and overall experience, including one-on-one trainers who walk around and offer helpful workout advice.
Cost: Membership starts at $40/month.

Inferno Fitness: This fitness studio is owned by a woman who strives to make each person as comfortable as possible in the gym. Inferno Fitness also has multiple nutrition blogs that have valuable workout and diet tips. If you’re looking to get involved in a weight training program, there are multiple class options to choose from at Inferno.
Cost: $38/month.

YMCA: Looking for a place that’s very lively? Look into joining the Marinette-Menominee YMCA. They offer a wide variety of fitness programs including water exercises, cycling, BodyPump classes, Zumba, racquetball and basketball courts, and more. They also have a full weight room, child care, and even a hot tub!
Cost: Starts at $29/month plus a $50 joining fee.

Community REC Center: This recently opened building provides numerous ways to get exercise and have fun at the same time. There is indoor ice skating during the winter months and a pool for the summer. Year-round, there are multiple indoor tennis courts available to the public. The REC Center is also one of the few places in the Marinette area with martial arts classes.
Cost: $6/day pass or $34/month pass with student ID.

Truth in Function: Are you an athlete suffering from persistent injuries? Or, do you just want some expert help achieving your fitness goals, as an athlete or as a workout newbie? In either case, Truth in Function can help! The experienced trainers at this unique gym will assess your muscular and neuromuscular system, and then they’ll help you develop a workout plan to “micro-progress” you toward your goals with the least amount of injury and soreness possible. They also offer classes in hatha and vinyasa yoga, women’s self defense, adult and kids jujitsu, and group strength training, as well as custom running plans.
Cost: Classes start at $10 for a drop-in pass. Fitness assessment and first workout are free. Contact the gym for cost of other plans/services. 

—A.J Corey, Sports Editor

The Driftwood #3: Meet Bethany Welch

Marinette Campus Student Advisor

Bethany Photo

Bethany Welch started as the Marinette Campus Academic Advisor this year after teaching in the International Students program and other classes on campus. She was born and raised in Marinette, WI, and has always been connected to the area. She loves the opportunity to meet with students. The Driftwood talked to Bethany about her personal life and the pros and challenges of her new career. 

Who are you? Where are you from? Tell us anything else about yourself that you wish (hobbies, family, animals, etc.)?

I am the academic advisor at the Marinette Campus as of January 2020. From September 2008-December 2019, I taught a variety of courses including Spanish I and II, Spanish Language Through Culture, English as a Second Language, and a Cultural Identity First Year Seminar. I was born and raised right here in Marinette, WI.

Why did you choose UWGB-Marinette Campus?

I wanted to live and work here in Marinette, where most of my family and friends are. I got my AAS from UW-Marinette in 2002, and I knew it would be a great place to work, with great colleagues—and I was right!

What do you like most about your job?

I love interacting with students, getting to see what interests them and what motivates them. I enjoy working with colleagues who are passionate about education and make lifelong learning a priority.

What can be challenging about your job?

There are certain weeks in the semester where it feels like there just aren’t enough hours in a day to get everything done, or to meet with everyone. I enjoy a challenge, though, and lists help me to prioritize those responsibilities. We can’t really control or manage time as well as we think we can—we can only prioritize!

What made you decide to switch jobs to Academic Advisor?

I really enjoy the opportunity it provides to meet all of the students on campus, not just the ones who take my classes. Advising appointments still feel like teaching, so I’m not missing out on the interaction—just on the planning and grading, which is fine with me! Finally, the International program on campus has not continued to grow, so it was unlikely I would be able to continue teaching ESL in the future, and I was ready for the administrative change that advising presented.

If you are an ice cream person, what would be your favorite flavor?

Of course I’m an ice cream person! Cookies and cream is my favorite.

—Interview by Breanne Bedgood, Profiles Editor &
Driftwood Social Media Coordinator

The Driftwood: Issue #2

Mar. 3-Mar. 16, 2020

Ahoy there! This here publication be The Driftwood, courtesy of the students in Marinette Campus’s Practicum in Literary Publishing classTake a gander at local events, learn about a campus resource, check out the club highlight, scrutinize this issue’s book review, and meet another member of the Marinette Campus team!


Editorial Staff

The Driftwood is published by the Marinette campus’s Practicum in Literary Publishing class.

  • Issue #2 Editor: Sierra Adams
  • Books Editor: Emily Burns
  • Events Editor: Sierra Adams
  • Profiles Editor: Breanne Bedgood
  • Clubs & Services Editor: Indigo Ramirez
  • Sports Editor: A.J. Corey
  • Theater & Arts Editor: Cassidy MacArthur

Questions or News Items? Contact The Driftwood’s advisor, Tracy Fernandez Rysavy. 

The Driftwood #2: Meet Tracy Fernandez Rysavy

From the 3/3-3/16 issue:
Marinette Campus English Literature & Writing Lecturer

Rysavy HeadshotTracy Fernandez Rysavy teaches English at the Marinette Campus. While she mostly taught composition her first year, this year, she moved to literature and creative writing. She’s also The Driftwood’s advisor and teaches the Practicum in Literary Publishing class behind this newsletter and the 2020 Northern Lights Literary & Arts Journal. 

Who are you? Where are you from?
I teach literature, creative writing, and the occasional composition class here at the Marinette Campus. While I grew up two hours south of Marinette in Random Lake, WI, I’ve lived all over the U.S. and even in Seoul, Korea.

What brought you to UW-Green Bay, Marinette Campus?
My original career goal was to teach college English, but I married a Naval officer who moved us around every two years, so I became a nonprofit magazine editor-in-chief on a telecommuting basis and taught creative writing workshops and college writing on the side every once in a while for fun. When my husband retired from the Navy, we settled here, and when a spot opened up on campus, I knew I’d love to go back to teaching full time.

What are your plans for Northern Lights Literary & Arts Journal
I’m the faculty advisor for the campus Creative Writing Club, and last year, we published Northern Lights as a club project. (The journal has a long history on the Marinette campus, but it hadn’t been published since 2015.) The English department chair liked it and asked me to make it the centerpiece of a Practicum in Literary Publishing class, so this year, that class will be creating and publishing the journal. (And we don’t even have to have a bake sale to drum up money to print it!) While we’re waiting for submissions to roll in, that class created The Driftwood e-newsletter. I’m pretty proud of their work and look forward to seeing what they do with Northern Lights. (Please submit your work to Northern Lights by March 27th!)

What is the most challenging part of creating a good publication piece?
For me, it’s facing the blank page. To paraphrase an apocryphal quote from Dorothy Parker, my favorite part of writing is “having written.” Once I’ve blasted out a rough draft (which I do while figuratively holding my nose and trying not to worry about being perfect), it’s so much easier for me to go back and edit or fix things. I love the part where I get to tweak and polish something that’s already in existence.

How would you represent your writing and publishing to others?
During my 20-year career as a journalist, I published hundreds of articles in magazines and have been in a couple of nonfiction anthologies. In addition, I’ve published eight romantic suspense novels with Harlequin and Kensington/Zebra, though I hit pause on fiction writing when my daughters were born. Honestly, though, my favorite part about creative writing is teaching it!

When did you first decide on becoming an English Professor?
Fresh out of grad school, but life had other plans until now. So far, I really love my mid-life career switch!

If you were a crayon, what color would you be and why?
Red. It’s my favorite color, and it doesn’t make me look like I have ebola when I wear it (like every pastel in existence). As it’s known as an emotional color, I’ll also say that it fits me since I tend to be rather passionate about the things I love, like my family, really good books, and the Oxford comma.

—Interview by Breanne Bedgood, Profiles Editor &
Driftwood Social Media Coordinator