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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 5</text>
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            <text>PSGA drafts constitution</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>PSGA d f&#13;
•845 J290 ra ts constlt-utlon&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
G()vernmentAssoci~tion Inc. met&#13;
for two consecutive days in&#13;
AUgust to draft their newly&#13;
proposed constitution. On Aug.&#13;
25.six senators and the President&#13;
of PSGA Inc., Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, met to informally&#13;
discuss and clarify the con-&#13;
~titution. It was decided upon at&#13;
that meeting that a special&#13;
~ession would be held the&#13;
followingday, Monday, Aug. 26,&#13;
to vote on and amend the con-&#13;
~titution.&#13;
As a result of those meetings,&#13;
PSGA Inc. voted that a&#13;
.of the constitution will be held on&#13;
Sept. 4. 5. 6 and 8. The hearings&#13;
will be open to the public in Room&#13;
LLC D-174at lOa.m.-3 p.m. and 7&#13;
p.m.-9 p.m., the 4th; 10 a.m.-3&#13;
p.m. and 7 p.m.-9 p.m., the 5th; 8&#13;
p.m.-II p.m. the 6th; and tu a.m..&#13;
referendum be held on Sept. 18&#13;
and 19 to ratify the newly&#13;
proposed constitution.&#13;
In conjunction" with the&#13;
referendum, constitutional&#13;
hearings regarding the legalities&#13;
.PSGA. Inc. proposed constitution&#13;
IS T('printed in this· week's&#13;
ItI\NGER~-seE' page 6.&#13;
1 p.m. the 8th. Concerned&#13;
stu.dents and faculty representatives'&#13;
are expected to attend.&#13;
On Sunday, Sept. 8, PSGA Inc.&#13;
will meet to consider a forma]&#13;
motion to postpone the&#13;
referendum for one week.&#13;
John Siefert. a Racine at.&#13;
torney, explained that the incorporation&#13;
of PSGA this sum.&#13;
mer means that "the constitution&#13;
of the PSGA shall serve as the bylaws&#13;
of the corporation."&#13;
"The directors of the cor.&#13;
por ation are the Senators&#13;
assembled in the student&#13;
senate." Siefert said. "The&#13;
•&#13;
members of the association are&#13;
the students registered at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
"&#13;
Siefert continued that the&#13;
purpose of the PSGA Inc.'s&#13;
lnte r vtew with PSGA. Inc.&#13;
member-s on page 7.&#13;
.&#13;
constitution IS to exercise the&#13;
powers delegated students in the&#13;
merger implementation statute.&#13;
"Specifically. the referendum&#13;
on the student constitution is&#13;
heing held pursuant to their&#13;
(PSGA Inc.) authority in Chapter&#13;
16.09sub. 5. that 'the students at&#13;
each institution or campus shall&#13;
have the right to organize&#13;
themselves in the manner they&#13;
determine to select, '" Siefert&#13;
said&#13;
If the constitution is nut&#13;
ratified. "then they (students)&#13;
will have to orgarlize themselves&#13;
in some other way. It is their&#13;
decision-their choice. They don't&#13;
have to accept this COnstitution.&#13;
They don't have to organize&#13;
themselves in this manner. They&#13;
can organize themselves in any&#13;
manner that they want."&#13;
Parking to be eased I '&#13;
vncbaer Nepper&#13;
of Ranger Starr&#13;
This year. students who use&#13;
their automobiles to commute to&#13;
campus will find a much relieved&#13;
parking situation. as two new&#13;
parking lots will soon be under&#13;
construction.&#13;
Bids for the lots were taken on&#13;
August 22. Burmeister ConThe&#13;
Parkside!-------_&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--------Wednesday, Sept.4,1974Vol.11 No_5 ----&#13;
Transit meeting&#13;
Paul Anderson&#13;
of Ranger starr&#13;
Future planning for a mass transit system between&#13;
Parkside and the cities of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
will hinge heavily on data drawn from a student&#13;
transportation survey conduc~ed duri.ng&#13;
registration week. That was the mam conclusion&#13;
drawn from an August 21 meeting on mass transit&#13;
held at Parkside with representatives from&#13;
Planning and Coristruction, Student Services,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha transit authorities, and the&#13;
State of Wisconsin attending.&#13;
According to James Galbraith, ~irect~r of&#13;
Planning and Construction, the survey IS designed&#13;
to measure students' transit needs, to map out&#13;
student residential densities in designated Racine&#13;
and Kenosha city sectors, and to pr~vide. information&#13;
on students' departure and arr-ival time&#13;
needs. see Transit, page 4&#13;
USCG on Merger&#13;
Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
of Rang"f&gt;rstaff&#13;
The United Council of Student Governments has&#13;
prepared a policy statement on stud~nt respensibilities&#13;
under the merger implementatIon statute.&#13;
The proposal has been submitted to Board of&#13;
Regents President Frank PeJisek for review.&#13;
Polisek has asked UW System Chancellors to&#13;
.('omment informally on the document for the&#13;
henofit of the entire Board.&#13;
The proposed policy statemen~ concerns t~at&#13;
section of the merger implementatIon statute WhIch&#13;
doals with student responsibilities, No. 36.09 (5).&#13;
"This section." reads the Statement. "p~ovl~es&#13;
, for structural incorporation of student pa,~tlclpatlOn&#13;
into the lIn1versity governance process. '11&#13;
The Statement goes on to say that "there .a~e S.tl&#13;
SomE'questions of interpretation and clarlfl~atlOn&#13;
involved with the section." The Statement ~s an&#13;
&lt;ltfcmpt to answer those questions and prOVide a&#13;
System policy that would apply to all UW campus.es.&#13;
SeC'lion 36~09(5) of the merger. implementatIOn&#13;
statute reads as follows: s('£' lICSG. pagE' ;:;&#13;
struction of ladison placed the&#13;
lowest bid for the two lots, an&#13;
access road and two bicycle Janes&#13;
on the road. The Dave Speaker&#13;
Co. of Kenosha was the low&#13;
bidder on the lighting for the&#13;
roads and lots.&#13;
According to James Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning and Construction.&#13;
construction on the lots&#13;
will begin sometime in September&#13;
Completion should be&#13;
reached between . 'ov. 15 and&#13;
Dec. 1. Galbraith also said that If&#13;
weather conditions and other&#13;
variable factors work out well,&#13;
the lots could possibly be hard&#13;
surfaced before next summer.&#13;
The monies needed for COnstruction&#13;
costs are paid through&#13;
segregated fees and parking&#13;
permits The funds needed for the&#13;
walk-ways. outer access road and&#13;
lighting will come from state&#13;
funds.&#13;
The parking Jot locations will&#13;
be west of the ones already in&#13;
existence near Tallent Hall One&#13;
will be placed behind the site of&#13;
the new Student Union, also&#13;
under construction. WIth a&#13;
capacity of 520 spaces. The other&#13;
lot wili be situated ~near the&#13;
Communication Arts building.&#13;
serving both the Comm Arts aoo&#13;
Physical F..ducation building.&#13;
with a capacity of 493. The Union&#13;
lot will use the access road&#13;
already In existence and the&#13;
Comm Arts lot will use county&#13;
highway JR. A separate access&#13;
road will be completed for both&#13;
lots in the spring or summer&#13;
Students may purchase ternporary&#13;
permits for both the east&#13;
and west lots The temporary&#13;
permits expire on Sept. 13, at&#13;
which time a regular permit will&#13;
see parking. page 5&#13;
unu~ numl;, nr:-&#13;
r&#13;
F&#13;
"1".r_DDr~lnr&#13;
WI\#~-"" n~~.I1_.'-."'d1&#13;
rn ~TATr&#13;
II ~II ~ .MII;.&#13;
GE •&#13;
Ford defaced&#13;
Philip Livingston&#13;
or Ranaer- starr&#13;
East Grand Rapids. Michigan&#13;
is an affluent suburban .community&#13;
separate from the city of&#13;
Grand Rapids. The police&#13;
department and municipal&#13;
building are new and architecturally&#13;
pleasing buildings&#13;
on a landscaped setting&#13;
overlooking Reeds Lake. The&#13;
community is mostly made up of&#13;
homes well above the range of&#13;
middle class homes.&#13;
East Grand Rapids has not&#13;
forgotten their favorite son,&#13;
Jorry Ford. When Ford was still&#13;
vice president. the city place? a&#13;
patriotic red. whit.e. ~nd blue SIgn&#13;
beneath city 11mIt markers&#13;
•&#13;
In&#13;
welcoming the public to the home&#13;
of the VICE'president of the United&#13;
Stales.&#13;
Ove-r half of the ten rgns were&#13;
vandalized or tampered with.&#13;
"Some of the sign were defaced&#13;
WIthbattery acid and paint, '. said&#13;
John Wielsma. East Grand&#13;
Rapids Clerk. Wielsma went on to&#13;
explain that after these vandalisms.&#13;
the signs were welded to&#13;
the city limit markers.&#13;
On August 9. 1974 Vice&#13;
President Ford became the 38th&#13;
president of the United States.&#13;
Also on this day the city had some&#13;
difficulty breaking the welds to&#13;
remove the signs.&#13;
"J speak for most of the citizens&#13;
of East Grand Rapids when I say&#13;
the city takes pride in haVing&#13;
Mich.&#13;
been at one time the home of&#13;
Jerry Ford 11confers on our city&#13;
a place in history. a slat us like&#13;
Springfield, Illinois," 'tayor&#13;
John C Baxter was quoted from&#13;
the GRA:-iD RAPID PRESS.&#13;
After the vice presidential&#13;
signs were removed they were&#13;
locked in a cage in the basement&#13;
of the police department to&#13;
"prevent pilfering." Wielsma .&#13;
explained&#13;
Wielsma said that the new&#13;
signs wi1l be one piece cIty limit&#13;
markers with the message&#13;
"Home of the President of the&#13;
lInited tates Gerald R Ford."&#13;
The new signs will be erected in&#13;
latter September on heavy duty&#13;
sign posts.&#13;
PSGA d 845&#13;
rafts constit-u 290&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
r,overnment Association Inc. met&#13;
r~r two consecutive days in&#13;
\u~ust to draft their newly&#13;
~roposed constitution. On Aug.&#13;
25. six senators and the President&#13;
ol PSGA Inc., Dennis&#13;
\lilutinovich, met to informally&#13;
di cuss and clarify the con-&#13;
~titution. It was decided upon at&#13;
that meeting that a special&#13;
~ession would be held the&#13;
rollowing day, Monday, Aug. 26,&#13;
to vote on and amend the con-&#13;
,titution.&#13;
As a result of those meetings,&#13;
psGA Tnc. voted that a&#13;
referendum be held on Sept. 18&#13;
and 19 to ratify the newly proposed constitution.&#13;
In conjunction· with the&#13;
referendum, constitutional&#13;
hearings regarding the legalities&#13;
~SGi\. Tnc. proposed constitution&#13;
ts rt&gt;printed in this • week's&#13;
Hi\NGER--see page 6.&#13;
of the constitution will be held on&#13;
~pt. 4, 5, 6 and 8. The hearings&#13;
will be open to the public in Room&#13;
LLC D-174 at 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and 7&#13;
p.m.-9 p.m., the 4th; 10 a.m.-3&#13;
p.m. and 7 p.m.-9 p.m., the 5th; 8&#13;
p.m.-11 p.m. the 6th; and lOa.m.-&#13;
I p .m. the 8th. Concerned&#13;
stu_dents and faculty representatives·&#13;
are expected to attend.&#13;
On unday. ept 8, P GA Inc.&#13;
will meet to con. ider a formal&#13;
motion to postpone the&#13;
referendum for one week.&#13;
John Siefert, a Racine attorney.&#13;
explained that the incorporation&#13;
of PSGA this ummer&#13;
means that "the constitution&#13;
of the P GA shall serve as the bvlaws&#13;
of the corporation." ·&#13;
"The directors of the corpora&#13;
ti on are the Senator&#13;
assembled in the student&#13;
enate." Siefert said. "The&#13;
t1on&#13;
memh r. of the a. · iation are&#13;
the tudenL regi tered at the&#13;
l niv r, ity of \\'i con, inPark.&#13;
ide"&#13;
, iefert continued that the&#13;
purpo~e of the PSGA In .'&#13;
lnten ie" ,\ith P.'G \, Inc.&#13;
mf'mbero; on pa &lt;' 7. . eon. titut,on I to e; ercL the&#13;
powers delegated tudents in the&#13;
merger impl mentation _tatute.&#13;
", pecifically, the refer ndum&#13;
on the . tudent con titution i&#13;
heing held pursuant lo th ir&#13;
I PSGA Tnc.) authorit. in Chapter&#13;
I( th&#13;
ratified,&#13;
will ha~&#13;
Parking .to be eased&#13;
:\lichaf'I 'epper&#13;
of Rangl"r , tarr&#13;
This year, students who u e&#13;
their automobiles to commute to&#13;
campus will find a much relieved&#13;
parking situation, as two new&#13;
parking lots will soon be under&#13;
construction.&#13;
Bids for the lots were taken on&#13;
August 22. Burmeister Con -&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------- Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1974 Vol. Ill No. s ----&#13;
Transit meeting&#13;
Paul Anderson&#13;
of Ranger staff&#13;
un&#13;
u&#13;
G&#13;
·truct1on of ladison placed th&#13;
lowest bid for the t\\O lot an&#13;
a .·s road :ind two bicycle Jan&#13;
on the road. The Dave peaker&#13;
Co of Keno. ha wa the lo\\&#13;
bidder on the lighting for the&#13;
roadi and lot .&#13;
According to Jame~ Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning and C.on-&#13;
. truction. con. tru tion on the Jots&#13;
\\ill begm ometime in eptember.&#13;
Completion :hould be&#13;
rea hed betv.een ov. 15 and&#13;
Dec I Galbrmth al o id th t if&#13;
\ ather conditions and other&#13;
·ariable factor · v. or· out ·ell,&#13;
the lot could pos ibly be hard&#13;
surfaced before next ummer.&#13;
The moni needed for con-&#13;
. truction co t are paid through&#13;
. egregated fees and par in&#13;
permit Th fun n :eded fo th&#13;
\\alk-wa) .. outer acce- road and&#13;
lighting ·ill from la e&#13;
fu cl •&#13;
Future planning for a mass transit system between&#13;
Parkside and the cities of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
will hinge heavily on data drawn from a stud_ent&#13;
transportation survey conducted durmg&#13;
registration week. That was the main conclusio!1 drawn from an August 21 meeting on mass transit&#13;
held at Parkside, with representatives from&#13;
Planning and Construction, Student Services,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha transit authorities, and the&#13;
State of Wisconsin attending.&#13;
According to James Galbraith, ~irect~r of&#13;
Planning and Construction, the survey 1s designed&#13;
to measure students' transit needs, to map out&#13;
student residential densities in designated Racine&#13;
and Kenosha city sectors, and to pr?vide . information&#13;
on students' departure and arrival time needs. see Transit, page 4&#13;
Ford defaced •&#13;
1n&#13;
USCG on Merger&#13;
Rt&gt;h&lt;'cca Ecklund&#13;
of Rangf'r staff&#13;
The United Council of Student Governments has&#13;
prepared a policy statement on stud~nl resp~nsibilities&#13;
under the merger implementat10n statute.&#13;
The proposal has been submitted to Boar~ of&#13;
Regents President Frank Pelisek for review.&#13;
Pt&gt;lisek has asked UW System Chancellors to&#13;
romment informally on the document for the&#13;
henefit of the entire Board.&#13;
The proposed policy statemen~ concerns t~at&#13;
Sl'&lt;'tion of the merger implementation statute which&#13;
deals with student responsibilities, No. 3,~.09 (~l.&#13;
"This section." reads the Statement, p~ovi~es&#13;
for structural incorporation of student participation&#13;
into the university governance process." .&#13;
11 The Statement goes on to say that "there _a:c s_ti&#13;
some questions of interpretation and clanfic_ation&#13;
involved with the section." The Statement ~s an&#13;
attempt to answer those questions and provide a&#13;
System policy that would apply to all UW campus_es.&#13;
Sc-dion :u,:o9(5l of the merger implementatron&#13;
statute reads as follows: see lJ('SG. page !J&#13;
Philip l.h ing ton&#13;
0£ Hang&lt;'r &lt;ilaff&#13;
East Grand Rapid. . 1ich1gan&#13;
is an affluent suburban community&#13;
separate from the ett~ of&#13;
Grand Rapids. The police&#13;
department and municipal&#13;
huilding are new and ar·&#13;
chitedurally pleasing buildings&#13;
on a landscaped setting&#13;
overlooking Reed Lake. The&#13;
C'ommunity is mostly made up of&#13;
homes well above the range of&#13;
middle class homes.&#13;
East Grand Rapids has not&#13;
forgotten their favorite on.&#13;
Jerrv Ford. When Ford was still&#13;
vice.president. ~e city plac~ a&#13;
patriotic red. white, and blue 1gn&#13;
beneath city limit markers&#13;
~ el comm h pubh to th h m&#13;
of the vice pre 1d t f the mted&#13;
. ate-&#13;
·er h If of the ten . ·er&#13;
vandalized r tampered v.ith.&#13;
''Som of the . i n re defaced&#13;
\ 1th battery acid and paint," aid&#13;
John \ 'iel ma. Ea t Grand&#13;
Rapid: Clerk. W1el·ma went on to&#13;
explain that after th e vandalisms.&#13;
th _ ign were welded to&#13;
the citv limit marker . On · August 9. I 974 Vice&#13;
Pre. ident Ford became the 38th&#13;
pre. ident of the nited tat .&#13;
Al o on thi day the city had ome&#13;
difficulty breaking the weld to&#13;
remove the signs.&#13;
"I peak for most of the citizen&#13;
of Ea ·t Grand Rapids when I say&#13;
the city tak pride in having&#13;
Mich. &#13;
1~~~~~S~I~D~E~ .~A~~.~E~.~W~I~'~I~d~'~Y~,~S~....,~.~4~, !1f7~4~&#13;
~ A GER&#13;
EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
08&#13;
positive&#13;
•&#13;
On S.ptemb@r " ~nd 19 P~rkslde students will have&#13;
en opportunity to r~lIfy the P~rkslde Student Government&#13;
Auocl~tlon Inc. constitution.&#13;
The Impori~nce of this vote goes t~r beyond ~ny&#13;
previous school reterlHldvm. With the recently ~ssed&#13;
Mer!ler Bill, students. for the first time, ~re !lIven&#13;
repon,lblllties In the ~dmlnistr~t1on of their c~mpus.&#13;
this constitution, the first steps In the or~niz~tlon&#13;
of tudlnts have befl\ t~ en.&#13;
A Yfl vote on the constitution will Insure th~t a&#13;
It ma Iy responsive or!laniz~tlon has the approval of&#13;
tuclent body as a whole. Thus PSGAwl1l become the&#13;
rllPr_t~tl~ body of the student community In&#13;
~1"9 with se;re;.'lted fees. faculty retention, and&#13;
other asPects of the rger' Bill.&#13;
other or~nlzatlon on campus can be as&#13;
repr_ta lve or responsive to the desires of the&#13;
denis' popul~tlon as PSGA. Other groups, be It the&#13;
Ve clUb. P r side Activities Board or the Chess club,&#13;
re spec I nterest groups. either through criteria for&#13;
membership or special areas of activity. PSGA has no&#13;
alt ria for membership. other th~n that only students&#13;
may serve nd no specl~l are~ of activity other th~n&#13;
student well b@1"9&#13;
o amnesty&#13;
point of view&#13;
A continuing forum, for opinions&#13;
other than editorial polley&#13;
CONSTITUTION VAG.U.E AND WEAK&#13;
BY Philip l. liVingston&#13;
. II' ent student reading the proposed PSGA&#13;
Any In~~t '~on will find the following problems:&#13;
Inc. cons, U.I h in the preamble PSGA Inc.&#13;
1 In the 2nd paragrap .&#13;
. th' ht to determine the spending of apassu~es&#13;
I e$r300,&#13;
g&#13;
00000 in segregated fees taken from&#13;
ProxImate Y ,. d t h&#13;
t&#13;
·t· Presently PSGA Inc. oes no ave&#13;
student u' Ion.' t PSGA I . . I t lover this fund. Whether of no nco offlc,a con ro I d f' ·t· f . t I this fund depends on the lega e rru Ion 0&#13;
will con ro I . ternentatl&#13;
d&#13;
" t dent" in the new merger Imp emen a Ion&#13;
the wor s u " II h t I&#13;
Th t&#13;
te law says "students sha ave con ro&#13;
law. e sa. . tl f th I&#13;
thO fund In the definition sec ron 0 e aw over IS·' ,&#13;
" t dent" is defined, " 'Student' means any person who&#13;
iSSr~istered for study in any institution for t.he current&#13;
d&#13;
. per'IOO" The law in no way specifIcally says aca erruc .&#13;
that the word "student" means studen! gov~r.nment.&#13;
PSGA Inc. seems assured they. wil.1 re.celve this power&#13;
nd a student voting this constItution in says he wants&#13;
~sGA Inc. to represent himself-herself in deciding&#13;
where these funds go. ..&#13;
2. The proposed election procedure rn Article. 1&#13;
governing senate elections is petty and unn.ecessaroly&#13;
complicated. PSGA Inc. thinks the most equitable way&#13;
to guaranteee representation is to divi~e students up by&#13;
their academic major. In the fall electIons you can only&#13;
vote and run for office in your declared major. If you&#13;
don'f have a major in the fall can only vote for senators&#13;
who don't have a major.&#13;
3. On Article 4 concerning student rights, President&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich stated in the RANGER-PSGA Inc.&#13;
forum that PSGA Inc. has no way to guarantee enforcement&#13;
of these rights to students. President&#13;
Milutinovich stated in the forum the rights are in the&#13;
constitution to remind students they have these rights.&#13;
Student ratification of this constitution does not change&#13;
the present situation.&#13;
4. Article 4, section 15 states students shall have the&#13;
right to evaluate employees' needs and costs paid for by&#13;
segregated fees. Segregated fees pays the salaries of&#13;
everyone in Student Life and Programming, our nurse,&#13;
various coaches in athletics, and future student union&#13;
expenses. The fact is these salaries are non-allocatable&#13;
funds and cannot be touched by anyone except under the&#13;
authorization of the Board of Regents. PSGA Inc. does&#13;
not realize this in their constitution and further displays&#13;
their lack of knowledge in the areas of budget and&#13;
money management. Students are not guaranteed that&#13;
professional accountants will handle their money. The&#13;
proposed constitution is not specific enough because its&#13;
authors are not qualified or learned in money&#13;
management.&#13;
Student governments at Parkside in the past have&#13;
been weak. They have not been controversial and have&#13;
never noticably upset our administrators. The 1974&#13;
PSGA Inc. proposes a government revolution for&#13;
Parks/de. T~e. President and six senators are the only&#13;
student potitictans left from the April elections after the&#13;
flood of resignations this summer. This skeleton crew&#13;
doe~ ~ot represent the broad backgrounds of the&#13;
malorlty of Parkside students. How can this small group&#13;
of people produce a constitution so vague and weak and&#13;
expect students to ratify it in a referendum vote.&#13;
All. stu.dents should judiciously read this proposed&#13;
conslltut,on and take the time to address the PSGA Inc.&#13;
to the changes students feel should be made. Apathy is&#13;
no excuse for a shabby constitution.&#13;
!'Jr:.The ParksMjlee-- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The PARKslDE RANGER is .&#13;
publication of the st d t a wholly Independent&#13;
. u en s of the U W P . pressing the interests " . . arkslde, exstudents.&#13;
and responsi·b~~nlon.s, and concerns of the&#13;
I~ated in 0194 LLC. ~r ,ts conten!s. Offices are&#13;
WIsconsin 53140. Phone 553·W. ParkSlde, Kenosha,&#13;
s _-2295. 553-2287.&#13;
~°Ot oj llol( ~&#13;
"0' -roU.!V'~E &lt;Ii.&#13;
~ JTEIKOI\O «!&#13;
Q~ ,,~~o~ I:&gt; 0&#13;
2&#13;
GER&#13;
"-------EditoriolfOpinion&#13;
positive&#13;
Ill have&#13;
ar beyond any&#13;
ty passed&#13;
re gl en&#13;
nesty&#13;
r campus.&#13;
organization&#13;
s&#13;
Point of view&#13;
A continuing forum, for opinions&#13;
other than editorial policy&#13;
CONSTITUTION VAGUE AND WEAK&#13;
8 y Philip L. Livingston&#13;
. Iii ent student reading the proposed PSGA&#13;
Any inttt iion will find the following problems: Inc. cons I u . h · the preamble PSGA Inc 2 d aragrap m · 1. In th~h n . P ht to determine the spending of apassu~est&#13;
I e $;: 000 00 in segregated fees taken from&#13;
prox1ma e Y ' · GA I d es not ha student tuition. Presently, PS nc. o t PSGA I ve&#13;
official control over this fund. Whether of ~od f' T n';&#13;
will control this fund depends on the le~a I e m1 t~- o&#13;
the word "student" in the new me~~er ·~~ emen a t'o~&#13;
law. The state law says "st~~e_nts sh; a;et~on1 ro&#13;
over this fund. In the def1n1t1on sec ion o e aw&#13;
" t dent" is defined, " 'Student' means any person who&#13;
. s u . t d for study in any institution for the current&#13;
rs regd is ~reper'1od " The law in no way specifically says aca em1c · that the word "student" means studen! gov~rnment.&#13;
PSGA Inc. seems assured they will receive this power&#13;
d a student voting this constitution in says he wants&#13;
an If · d 'd' PSGA Inc. to represent himself-herse m ec, ing&#13;
where these funds go. . . 2. The proposed election procedure m Article_&#13;
governing senate elections is petty and unn_ecessarrly&#13;
complicated. PSGA Inc. thinks the most equitable way&#13;
to guaranteee representation is to divi~e students up by&#13;
their academic major. In the fall electrons you can only&#13;
vote and run for office in your declared major. If you&#13;
don't have a major in the fall can only vote for senators&#13;
who don't have a major.&#13;
3. On Article 4 concerning student rights, President&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich stated in the RANGER-PSGA Inc.&#13;
forum that PSGA Inc. has no way to guarantee enforcement&#13;
of these rights to students. President&#13;
Milutinovich stated in the forum the rights are in the&#13;
constitution to remind students they have these rights.&#13;
Student ratification of this constitution does not change&#13;
the present situation.&#13;
-4 . Article 4, section 15 states students shall have the&#13;
right to evaluate employees' needs and costs paid for by&#13;
segregated fees. Segregated fees pays the salaries of&#13;
everyone in Student Life and Programming, our nurse,&#13;
various coaches in athletics, and future student union&#13;
expenses. The fact is these salaries are non-allocatable&#13;
funds and cannot be touched by anyone except under the&#13;
authorization of the Board of Regents. PSGA Inc. does&#13;
not realize this in their constitution and further displays&#13;
their lack of knowledge in the areas of budget and&#13;
money management. Students are not guaranteed that&#13;
professional accountants will handle their money. The&#13;
proposed constitution is not specific enough because its&#13;
authors are not qualified or learned in money&#13;
management.&#13;
Student governments at Parkside in the past have&#13;
been weak. They have not been controversial and have&#13;
never noticably upset our administrators. The 1974&#13;
PSGA Inc. proposes a government revolution for&#13;
Parkside. '.~e-President and six senators are the only&#13;
student pollt1c1ans left from the April elections after the&#13;
flood of resignations this summer. This skeleton crew&#13;
doe~ ~ot represent the broad backgrounds of the&#13;
ma1onty of Parkside students. How can this small group&#13;
of people produce a constitution so vague and weak and&#13;
expect students to ratify it in a referendum vote.&#13;
All. stu_dents should judiciously read this proposed&#13;
constitution and take the time to address the PSGA Inc.&#13;
to the changes students feel should be made. Apathy is&#13;
no excuse for a shabby constitution.&#13;
~Jr.. n., P..-iee-------&#13;
RA NG ER&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER i • publication of the st d t s a wholly independent . u en s of the u w p k . pressing the interests . . · . ar side, exstudents,&#13;
and responstb::t10~s' and concerns of the&#13;
1°7ated in 0 194 LLC ~r its conten!s. Offices are&#13;
Wisconsin 53140 Ph ' .W. Parkside, Kenosha, · ones 55~-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
11-'e)&#13;
~o~ °l(Ol( ~&#13;
~ .-o~~~E°l i jTE:lKOJ{O ("!&#13;
a~ N.t~o ~ 0 &#13;
etters to the editor&#13;
ro the editor:&#13;
After reading the letters&#13;
regarding affirmative action and&#13;
personnel grievances in the last&#13;
twoissues of th~ July ra~ger, ~nd&#13;
E&#13;
ler discussmg .af~l~mahve&#13;
etion with various individuals, I&#13;
elude that there are varying&#13;
~ of confusion and hostility&#13;
tegardingaf~i~ative action and&#13;
Its true significance.&#13;
First, I am trying to un·&#13;
klerstand why one of our women&#13;
taff members wrote a highly&#13;
trnisleading letter 'which gave the&#13;
/impression that I did not want to&#13;
Ilalk to her or that I, as the afftrmative&#13;
action officer, did not&#13;
really care about discussing&#13;
complaints with her or with&#13;
anyone.&#13;
After looking into the circumstances&#13;
of this strange letter,&#13;
it occurred to me that perhaps&#13;
many of the very individuals who&#13;
might be helped by affirmative&#13;
action appear to be hostile&#13;
towards the very idea of affirmative&#13;
action. There is no&#13;
OOTt definition of affirmative&#13;
action. but basically the idea&#13;
involved is the elimination of&#13;
illegal discrimination based on&#13;
sex or race in hiring, firing,&#13;
salary increases, and promotion.&#13;
Affirmative action also aims at&#13;
ending the exclusion of qualified&#13;
minority persons and women&#13;
from the campus workforce.&#13;
With that brief definition of the&#13;
main purposes of affirmative&#13;
action. which run parallel to and&#13;
include equality of opportunity in&#13;
employment, I examine another&#13;
letter which appeared in the&#13;
Ran~er on July 17th. The author&#13;
of that letter displayed hostility,&#13;
but really said very little.She did,&#13;
however. falsely accuse me as&#13;
aHirmative action officer of&#13;
ing evasive in answering her&#13;
juestions at a meeting caned at ~~&#13;
er request. when in fact she did&#13;
t even ask me any questions.&#13;
She also represented that the&#13;
affirmative action officer was&#13;
some sort of a monster who was&#13;
oat likely to do his job properly.&#13;
Her profane characterization of&#13;
the affirmative action program&#13;
docs her little credit, and does&#13;
nothing to make the program&#13;
more effective. It is unfortunate&#13;
that there are always people who&#13;
seek to benefit by a program&#13;
which they do their best to&#13;
destroy. '!'hese people are difficult&#13;
to understand, and are as&#13;
much of a problem as those in&#13;
positions of authority who resist&#13;
affirmative action.&#13;
People in the campus community&#13;
who have grievnaces or&#13;
complaints arising from&#13;
discriminaation based on sex,&#13;
race, or national origin should&#13;
understand that if they wish to&#13;
complain to the affirmative&#13;
action officer, it will be necessary&#13;
for them to speak directly to me,&#13;
or to leave a specific call-back&#13;
message with my secretary.&#13;
Obviously if I do not receive a&#13;
message that an individual&#13;
wishes me to call him or her, it is&#13;
asif no contact had been made.&#13;
In my capacity as affirmative&#13;
action officer I amke an effort,&#13;
when a complaint is made, to&#13;
determine whether the facts&#13;
constitute subject matter which I&#13;
am authorized to investigate. The&#13;
person complaining 'should also&#13;
state whether he has complained&#13;
to any governmental agency, or&#13;
is involved in any grievance&#13;
procedures on campus. It would&#13;
be desirable to have the&#13;
grievances settled on campus, if&#13;
possible, and of course investigations&#13;
of some grievances&#13;
may reveal problems which have&#13;
been overlooked.&#13;
While it is of great importance&#13;
to have grievances heard and&#13;
resolved if possible, affirmative&#13;
action is more particularly&#13;
directed at the elimination of&#13;
discriminatory employment&#13;
practices, especially those which&#13;
cause women and minorities not&#13;
to be hired or not to be promoted&#13;
if they merit promotion. Irnplementtng&#13;
positive hiring&#13;
policies and advancement&#13;
programs will do more to effectuate&#13;
affitmative action than&#13;
will over e-concentration on&#13;
grievances since we know most of&#13;
the problems in the profile of our&#13;
workforce.&#13;
It should be stressed that it is&#13;
important that women and&#13;
minority persons who are hired&#13;
should be qualified. In America&#13;
in the past in many instances&#13;
minority persons particularly,&#13;
who were exceptionally well&#13;
qualified. have not been hired on&#13;
entirely spurious grounds. Thus&#13;
many talented persons have been&#13;
caused to Iail. Today it is to be&#13;
hoped that our society has&#13;
developed sufficiently to believe&#13;
in the principles of equal opportunity&#13;
in employment and that&#13;
the principle can be made a&#13;
reality through affirmative&#13;
action. Joseph Attwell,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor&#13;
for Affirmative Action&#13;
Trvoutstor The Amer-ican Dream and the Bald Soprano will be held on 1548 She rido n Rd.&#13;
SrPt..9 and 10 in the Comm -Arts Thlee;a:te:r~f:r:om:'3:-:5~p~.m::.~a:n:d~7~-:1O:p~.m:".~iiii~~~~~~~~::'~~~~:~= 1 . 1 ~99 . ••••&#13;
!)U UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
'" WINTERRREAK TRIP&#13;
~ .JIIIIla1Mdv HOTEL a. RACQUET CLUB&#13;
Q(upuJro&#13;
PI US 0,1000 TAX&#13;
il. O:;ERVICE BASED&#13;
ON 1 TO A ROOM&#13;
• nOUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS LODGING&#13;
• MARf'ARITA PARTY&#13;
• \' Af'HT f'RUISE OF BAY&#13;
• r.nOUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• Tips &amp; TAXES&#13;
·'1'1'1&#13;
II.&#13;
r"'M ICI\TlONfORMS AVAILABLE&#13;
PliO:; TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
I r n 111&#13;
FIGURE SKATING &amp; HOCKEY CLASSES&#13;
OIC' alail, Ic. HDCk.yal. Fil.r, Skatlill .ill ~••fter•• t~is fall. .. ~ classes .i11 h hi. at ~. ~ral.&#13;
II ~ Ie Ar.la Fi.lr. Skatill Ical ~. tabl ...... ay &amp; , .... say •• lilIS .r Tllsiby &amp;&#13;
II. "'IDSIII' .•&#13;
. Ir.. ··.-9·58 ••ckly is .fter •• Ir.. 11:.-11:51 .... &amp; ..... say ..... itIS. T11lrsuy.mliis ;I. ,.&#13;
'f •• 'Ira" ...... ~ fir ic. Ii•• at a $1.51.... ""511 per $Issi..... skat.s? II ,",I.., Extra liS are r... n" •&#13;
••h" ~..naila". at II .xtra d_I'·&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As you know, PSGA has submitted&#13;
a new constitution for&#13;
student approval. It gives a lot of&#13;
power to the students. Power&#13;
they rightly deserve. It gives that&#13;
power in turn to the PSGA. Along&#13;
with power comes the potential&#13;
for abuse of power. As students&#13;
received the power of segregated&#13;
fee money from Merger Implementation&#13;
Law, they in turn&#13;
can give that power to any&#13;
organization they want. They can&#13;
give it to any existing&#13;
organization or form a new one.&#13;
They can give it to Chess Club,&#13;
Vets Club, Third World, or&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, etc.&#13;
They can give it to PSGA. Each&#13;
organization can abuse the power&#13;
it receives. One way to prevent&#13;
power abuse is to institute a&#13;
method of reclaiming that power.&#13;
In the United States, we reclaim&#13;
power by impeachment. Show me&#13;
how you impeach someone from&#13;
Chess Club, or Vets Club, or&#13;
Third World. or PAB. I can show&#13;
you how to impeach someone&#13;
from PSGA. Think about it.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Mr. Smith. please check your&#13;
facts on the SLA motion in&#13;
question. No solidarity was&#13;
shown with the SLA. We only took&#13;
up the American Civil Liberties&#13;
Union position in the case. Of the&#13;
present members of the PSGA, a&#13;
majority either abstained or&#13;
voted no on the said motion. As&#13;
president. I will continue to allow&#13;
freedom of expression in PSGA&#13;
meetings.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President. PSGA&#13;
P.S. I would like to announce that&#13;
Mr. Smith is currently the front&#13;
rum mer in the annual Arthur&#13;
Gruhl Legacy Award.&#13;
(f'l_(fl\~&#13;
~llm}i~&#13;
"YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
COCKTAILS"&#13;
"YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
SANDWICHES"&#13;
"PITCHERS OF BEER"&#13;
&amp;&#13;
"NOON LUNCHES"&#13;
Wed'1~sd,!y&lt; .5.ept. ~" I~H T~I; P,ARI&lt;SIDE RANGER.)'&#13;
by James D. Smith. Jr.&#13;
SHADES OF GREATNESS? I shudder to think that somewhere in&#13;
this great country of ours there waits a man who has studied ~&#13;
years. worked long hour-s and suffered through the pangs of gaUI1Dg&#13;
seniority on the job, now to have aJTl~ed at a m~t. momentous&#13;
milestone in his IUe. He doesn't yet realize the pcsaibility, does not&#13;
even suspect the inevitability, would not if he c-ould, breath the&#13;
suggestion. He, chosen from among all the rest. will have his labors&#13;
rewarded when he finds himself appointed probation officer for&#13;
Richard Nixon. Boggles the mind doesn't it?&#13;
WHILE ON THE SUBJEIT OF EGOS I might mention another ooe&#13;
which is presently feeling its oats. Mine that is. I've been asked to do a&#13;
regular column for RANGER and told that I coold fill it with whatever&#13;
strikes either my funny or mad bone. Immensely flattering. J hope my&#13;
readers will get as much fun outo! it as I'm sure I will.&#13;
ATTENTION SCIENCE LOVERS!! I've just returned from'S&#13;
midnight trip to Mt. Olympus and RANGER has another scoop. All&#13;
you lab fans can get out your ceremonial knives and your marble slab&#13;
alters for a full moon rendezvous: the Virgin requirement for the&#13;
sacrifice to the god of Quant has been suspended.&#13;
JUST A KIND WORD TO THOSE IN PSGA who might be inclined&#13;
toward a repeat of the type of dazzling didactic duplicity vomited forth&#13;
in support of entities after the fashion of the SLA: to sympathize with&#13;
an organization that sets itself up as judge, jury and ex.ecut~on~,&#13;
cutting down those who disagree in a hail of cyanide bullets, IS .to invite&#13;
contempt. Those who consider the lives, and both the physical and&#13;
psychological well-being of anyone who happens to get m ~e1T way ~o&#13;
be expendable (and a small price to pay for the furthermg of their&#13;
political aims), are not quite the kind of downhome fo.lks I want my&#13;
elected representatives on PSGA to be concerned Wl~h. I. for one,&#13;
question the nature of the mental processes that go on m mmds that&#13;
would suggest solidarity with such "pee Ie".&#13;
Ice Arena&#13;
n27 60th A K_tha. Wit. 53141&#13;
"' 694-1.01&#13;
~etters to the editor Wed11esday, _S;ept. ,4,. lC?H ,THE; PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
ro the editor:&#13;
After reading the letters&#13;
regarding affirmative action and&#13;
personnel grievances in the last&#13;
two issues of th~ July ra~ger, ~nd&#13;
after discuss~ng _af~1~mative&#13;
action with various md1viduals, I&#13;
ronclude that there are varying&#13;
degrees of cor:if usio? and ~ostility&#13;
regarding affirmative action and&#13;
its true significance.&#13;
first, I am trying to understand&#13;
why one of our women&#13;
staff members wrote a highly&#13;
misleading letter which gave the&#13;
impression that I did not want to&#13;
talk to her or that I, as the affirmative&#13;
action officer, did not&#13;
really care about discussing&#13;
complaints with her or with&#13;
anyone.&#13;
After looking into the circumstances&#13;
of this strange letter,&#13;
1t occurred to me that perhaps&#13;
many of the very individuals who&#13;
might be helped by affirmative&#13;
action appear to be hostile&#13;
towards the very idea of affirmative&#13;
action. There is no&#13;
hort definition of affirmative&#13;
action, but basically the idea&#13;
involved is the elimination of&#13;
illegal discrimination based on&#13;
. ex or race in hiring, firing,&#13;
salary increases, and promotion.&#13;
Affirmative action also aims at&#13;
ending the exclusion of qualified&#13;
minority persons and women&#13;
from the campus workforce.&#13;
With that brief definition of the&#13;
main purposes of affirmative&#13;
action, which run parallel to and&#13;
include equality of opportunity in&#13;
employment, I examine another&#13;
letter which appeared in the&#13;
Ranger on July 17th. The author&#13;
of that letter displayed hostility,&#13;
but really said very little.She did,&#13;
however, falsely accuse me as&#13;
affirmative action officer of&#13;
l('ing evasive in answering her&#13;
JU&lt;'Stions at a meeting called at ,&#13;
h&lt;'r request. when in fact she did&#13;
not &lt;'ven ask me any questions.&#13;
. he also represented that the&#13;
affirmative action officer was&#13;
ome sort of a monster who was&#13;
not likely to do his job properly .&#13;
Her profane characterization of&#13;
the affirmative action program&#13;
does her little credit, and does&#13;
nothing to make the program&#13;
more effective. rt is unfortunate&#13;
that there are always people who&#13;
C('k to benefit by a program&#13;
which they do their best to&#13;
destroy. These people are difficult&#13;
to understand, and are as&#13;
much of a problem as those in&#13;
positions of authority who resist&#13;
affirmative action.&#13;
People in the campus community&#13;
who have grievnaces or&#13;
complaints ar1smg from&#13;
discriminaation based on sex&#13;
race, or national origin should&#13;
understand that if they wish to&#13;
complain to the affirmative&#13;
action officer, it will be necessary&#13;
for them to speak directly to me,&#13;
or to leave a specific caJJ-back&#13;
message with my secretary.&#13;
Obviously if I do not· receive a&#13;
message that an individual&#13;
wishes me to call him or her, it is&#13;
as,if no contact had been made.&#13;
In my capacity as affirmative&#13;
action officer I amke an effort,&#13;
when a complaint is made, to&#13;
determine whether the facts&#13;
constitute subject matter which I&#13;
am authorized to investigate. The&#13;
person complaining should also&#13;
state whether he has complained&#13;
to any governmental agency, or&#13;
is involved in any grievance&#13;
procedures on campus. It would&#13;
be desirable to have the&#13;
grievances settled on campus, if&#13;
possible, and of course investigations&#13;
of some grievances&#13;
may reveal problems which have&#13;
been overlooked.&#13;
While it is of great importance&#13;
to have grievances heard and&#13;
resolved if possible, affirmative&#13;
action is more particularly&#13;
directed at the elimination of&#13;
discriminatory employment&#13;
practices, especially those which&#13;
cause women and minorities not&#13;
to be hired or not to be promoted&#13;
if they merit promotion. Implementing&#13;
positive hiring&#13;
policies and advancement&#13;
programs will do more to effectuate&#13;
affitmative action than&#13;
will over-concentration on&#13;
grievances since we know most of&#13;
the problems in the profile of our&#13;
workforce.&#13;
Tt should be stressed that it is&#13;
important that women and&#13;
minority persons who are hired&#13;
should be qualified. In America&#13;
in the past in many instances&#13;
minority persons particularly,&#13;
who were exceptionally well&#13;
qualified, have not been hired on&#13;
entirely spurious grounds. Thus&#13;
many talented persons have been&#13;
caused to fail. Today it is to be&#13;
hoped that our society has&#13;
developed sufficiently to believe&#13;
in the principles of equal opportunity&#13;
in employment and that&#13;
the principle can be made a&#13;
reality through affirmative&#13;
action. Joseph Attwell,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor&#13;
for Affirmative Action&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As you know, PSGA has submitted&#13;
a new constitution for&#13;
student approval. It gives a lot of&#13;
power to the students. Power&#13;
they rightly deserve. It gives that&#13;
power in turn to the PSGA. Along&#13;
with power comes the potential&#13;
for abuse of power. As students&#13;
received the power of segregated&#13;
fee money from Merger Implementation&#13;
Law, they in turn&#13;
can give that power to any&#13;
organization they want. They can&#13;
give it to any existing&#13;
organization or form a new one.&#13;
They can give it to Chess Club,&#13;
Vets Club, Third World, or&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, etc.&#13;
They can give it to PSGA. Each&#13;
organization can abuse the power&#13;
it receives. One way to prevent&#13;
power abuse is to institute a&#13;
method of reclaiming that power.&#13;
In the United States, we reclaim&#13;
power by impeachment. Show me&#13;
how you impeach someone from&#13;
Chess Club, or Vets Club, or&#13;
Third World. or PAB. I can show&#13;
you how to impeach someone&#13;
from PSGA. Think about it.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Mr. Smith, please check your&#13;
facts on the SLA motion in&#13;
question. No solidarity was&#13;
shown with the SLA. We only took&#13;
up the American Civil Liberties&#13;
Union position in the case. Of the&#13;
present members of the PSGA, a&#13;
majority either abstained or&#13;
voted no on the said motion. As&#13;
president, I will continue to allow&#13;
freedom of expression in PSGA&#13;
meetings.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President. PSGA&#13;
P.S. I would like to announce that&#13;
lr. Smith is currently the front&#13;
rummer in the annual Arthur&#13;
l&#13;
~J.ffl;l\~1&#13;
~ llWJi IJ&#13;
"YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
COCKTAILS"&#13;
"YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
SANDWICHES"&#13;
"PITCHERS OF BEER"&#13;
&amp;&#13;
"NOON LUNCHES"&#13;
byJame D. mith,Jr.&#13;
SHADE OF GREATNE ? I shudder to think that somewhere in&#13;
this great country of ours there waits a man who has studied ~~ny&#13;
years, worked long hours and suffered t_hrougb the pangs of gammg&#13;
seniority on the job, now to have am~ed at a m~t. momentous&#13;
milestone in his life. He doesn't yet realize the possibility, does not&#13;
even suspect the inevitability. would not if he l.-Ould, b1:3th the&#13;
suggestion. He, chosen from among all ~e rest, will ~ve his labors&#13;
rewarded when he finds himself appomted probation officer for&#13;
Richard 'ixon. Boggles the mind doesn't it?&#13;
WHILE o. THE UBJECT OF EGO I might mention another ooe&#13;
which is presently feeling its oats. Mine that is. I've been asked to do a&#13;
regular column for RA~GER and told that I could fill it with whatever&#13;
trikes either my funny or mad bone. Immen ely flattering. I hope my&#13;
readers will get as much fun out of it as I'm sure I will.&#13;
ATTE~TIO~ ClE.' E LOVER ! ! I've ju t returned from 1l&#13;
midnight trip to tt. Ol)-mpus and RA. 'GER has another coop. All&#13;
vou lab fans can get out your ceremonial knives and your marble slab&#13;
~lters for a full moon rendezvous: the Virgin requirement for the&#13;
sacrifice to the god of Quant has been suspended.&#13;
JUST ,\ Kl. 'D WORD TO THO E I. ' PSGA who might be inclined&#13;
toward a repeat of the type of dazzling didactic duplicity vomit~ fo~th&#13;
in support of entities after the fashion of_ the S½',: to sympathiz~ with&#13;
an organization that sets itself up as JUdge, J~ and ex_ecutton~r,&#13;
cutting down those who disagree in a hail of cyarude bullets, is _to invite&#13;
contempt. Tho e who consider the lives. and both th~ phy _1cal and&#13;
psvchological well-being of anyone who happens to get m f!1e1r way ~o&#13;
be. expendable (and a small price to pay for the furthering of their&#13;
political aims). are not quite the kind of downhome f~lks I want my&#13;
elected representatives on PSGA to be concerned WI~h. I. for one,&#13;
question the nature of the mental processes that go on m mmds that&#13;
would suggest solidarity with such "people".&#13;
Tl'rnutstor Thi' Amf'rican Dream and the Bald Soprano will be held on&#13;
~Pt._ 9 and 10 in the Comm.-Arts Theater from 3-5 p.m. and 7-lOp.m. 1548 Sheridon Rd.&#13;
51-8299&#13;
,;)J'/ lW-PARKSIDE&#13;
'ff WINTERRREAK TRIP&#13;
et~&#13;
HOTEL &amp; RACQUET CLUB&#13;
a,apulco&#13;
Pl 11$ S?0 00 TAX&#13;
A. ~ERVICE BASED&#13;
ON 1 TO A ROOM&#13;
1 HOllNO TRIP JET&#13;
1 7 NIGHTS LODGING&#13;
t MJ\RC'ARTTA PARTY&#13;
1 Y J\C'HT C'RUTSE OF BAY&#13;
1 (;ROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
1 TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
' Pr&gt;1 I • . rh',lp CATIONFORMS AVAILABLE&#13;
I Ir n"S TRAVEL CENTER 117&#13;
Ice Arena&#13;
n21 60th Ave. • Kenoiha, Wis. 53141&#13;
Phone 694-1101&#13;
Fl &amp;URE SKATING &amp; HOCKEY CIASSES&#13;
Dice aiaii, Ice Hockey and Fi11re S~ati11 I will ~e offered t~is fall. Btl classes will h hid at t t ~rad&#13;
new Keaosha Ice Areaa. f i11re Skati11 I caa ~e takea H l11day &amp; Wu esday ••r1i11s er Taeday &amp;&#13;
· fra• 9·00 9.50 Hockey is efftrtd fr 1 10:11-11:50 11 l11day &amp; leueday 11r1i11s. T111rday 1or1111s · - · ·&#13;
1&#13;
- 1•1·,r, .. ttao•i• fir ice ti11 at a $1.58 ,,r ,,rs11 ,,r sessiaa. led skates? It ,r,•I••. Extra HS are r " •&#13;
we ,a11 t-•• availa~le at II extra cbr11. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIOE RANGER w.idnesclaY, Sept. ., 1W4&#13;
. Wednesdav;Sept: 4, 19T4"THE 'PARKSIDE RAt4G~.&#13;
nlon delayed&#13;
f'aclhllfS Manageme.nt wiU&#13;
'"make good" and 10_ the&#13;
do , the) say. Even by&#13;
meet,ng the deedlioe it bas been&#13;
1\ to Partside. with the&#13;
""' .... ,lIing cast or cooslnlCtion.&#13;
,og 10 Ga.lbraith, the&#13;
problem "as that Peters .. a&#13;
··too dOIii:.one ambitious. He&#13;
made ,Ill! bUlIdirC too excllll'4l&#13;
and t roee Peters 15 a very&#13;
rnab'e iDd"idua.J and tr-ied&#13;
I'd 10 rk ..,th us " Galbnllth&#13;
e p'.ined uU e mlny arcluj&#13;
IS, ~ bas lallen mto an&#13;
e ~Ilern by 'OI"klllg&#13;
pnvat peF'ORS "II the&#13;
'_._' • --e. he ba r ed he&#13;
fa ed 10 h"naell He&#13;
over the allowance '"&#13;
.... umiug IllSpia. nglll .,.;,&#13;
212 •• IItCH AD. KENOSHA.1I1.7f71&#13;
LIQUOR STOR!, BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
MALg&#13;
SHDPPE&#13;
~'ttn.,...&#13;
• kl SUITS&#13;
• &amp;GI[5" JEaNS&#13;
• LIM IGMT 5WUTfAS&#13;
A kl1lPS&#13;
StClp ;.. ,.tit te,-* ....&#13;
II CM",u.am E&#13;
4f(J~ MAIN ST. 63~-()111&#13;
R " [&#13;
Transit continued from pa.g e 1&#13;
the&#13;
II&#13;
nd&#13;
"The survey itself will be the backbone 01 th~&#13;
program" noted Donald Gerhard, UW DIrector 0&#13;
Campus' Planning and Environmental Impact.&#13;
"'There has to be something to back ~s up on black&#13;
and white," Gerhard said that stallstical data, IS&#13;
needed before government mass transit subsidy&#13;
grants can even be considered. . .&#13;
"There are a lot of people to convince, and thlS,lS&#13;
lbe type of data that is needed to get fonanclal&#13;
support," Gerhard said. "There seems to be an&#13;
apparent need. That is one of the reasons why we&#13;
are doing a technical study,", .&#13;
CurrenUy, the only mass u-ansit system 1D&#13;
operation is an hourly headway bus between&#13;
Parkside and Kenosha under the direction of the&#13;
Kenosha Transit Authority, In addition, there ISthe&#13;
Vets bus which will continue to operate between&#13;
Parkside and Racine.&#13;
According to Roger Sweeney, director of th.e&#13;
Kenosha Transit Authority, the current transit&#13;
s, tern is not. proving to be financially feasible&#13;
..eeause or a lack of student ridership. "I really&#13;
don't know wbat it takes to get people to use the&#13;
system," weeney commented.&#13;
"You can deliver such a bad product that you&#13;
('an't sell it." refut.ed Allen Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for ludent Services, Dearborn slated&#13;
that under the present Kenosha·Parkside mass&#13;
transit net work. it took his secretary 1&#13;
1&#13;
12hoUrs to&#13;
reach the campus from her home. Students or&#13;
faC'Ulty musl lransfer to the Parkside bus in&#13;
dnwnlo"n Kenosha from area buses in order to&#13;
ream Parkslde, unless the rider lives on the bus&#13;
roul~ between dO'JIrnlownand campus.&#13;
, ecney pointed out that the bus ridership to&#13;
Gal~ay Techmcal Institute has been excellent, but&#13;
C'.:w1reded that there are two direct routes which run&#13;
throo¢\ Kenosha to Gateway, thus giving faster and&#13;
m~ effiCient service.&#13;
Galbraith asked Sweeney to comment on Kenosha&#13;
1a)Of Burkee's statement of May 20, at the public&#13;
heanng on the proposed close-in parking lots for&#13;
Parkside. that bus service between Kenosha and&#13;
Parkside would be tripled this fall. Replied&#13;
For Lunch or Just Anytime&#13;
.FAST COURTEOUSSERVICE.&#13;
.NEW CLEAN DINING AREA.&#13;
.QUALITY.&#13;
.VALUE. rm--CiUii--Z¥rii---------.,-------1&#13;
II CooD FOR ft_ II Address of . If you are lookingf~ UIQ; good part-time job ..&#13;
I&#13;
Fa&#13;
MCDonala~ great working posJl I EE I ~ and nexible hoUrs.,&#13;
ICHEESEBURGER I nearest to you ~u;~~~p;~e;;.&#13;
lCA. Valid Sopt 4th I 3116 22nd AVE. AT EITHO&#13;
1 - Sept IIlb CA.- 3926 52nd ST. 3116 22ad 4rellt --------1 39~6 S21d SIred&#13;
Sweeney, ~'The !dayor does not. make poJ,j&#13;
Transit AuthorIty, The Transit Authoti( for&#13;
policy." ,Y&#13;
No immediate changes in the. servic&#13;
thcoming, according to Sweeney. e art&#13;
Transit representatives from the city&#13;
provided statistical data on a propoSed m or&#13;
system to Parkside, They pointed out, howa::&#13;
their proposals hinged entirely on the out~,&#13;
sept. 10 referendum before city of Ra~~&#13;
proposing city ownership of a bus Sf:&#13;
Racine bus system IS presently run rn.&#13;
dependent company which is under COlllrby ..&#13;
ci~ .~&#13;
According to Racine officials' data&#13;
Parkside transit system with 1.hour' a&#13;
charging 50 cents per one-way fare--wOUldIta&#13;
carry 350 riders dally (one way) in order~ "&#13;
even. Service would be between the hoursfi&#13;
and 6 p.rn. If the.hours were extended to 10 7&#13;
daily one-way riders or 250 round-trip ri~JQ.·&#13;
be needed. The Parkside bus would be linked&#13;
Racine ~etwork! making transfer to variOUs "&#13;
in the city possible.&#13;
Last year's Vets bus carried an aver&#13;
students per day, according to Chet Ande:"&#13;
Vets Club. Though the bus will operaleUtis "&#13;
system will face serio.us f~nancial diffiCUlti~ear&#13;
full student support IS given, said Anderson.&#13;
Vets bus is completely independent&#13;
without subsidies, and because of SPiraliQc&#13;
penses. more riders are needed to keep the&#13;
operating.&#13;
The August 21 mass transit meeting&#13;
with Sweeney's comment that "anyth'&#13;
leasible" if student support through ti~&#13;
there.&#13;
Parkside officials are hopeful that Ute&#13;
transportation survey will provide the in!&#13;
necessary to map out student resi&#13;
dislribution, thus allowing more efficientbus&#13;
to be drawn in the future as well as&#13;
modifying present routes. This, say the&#13;
can only be accomplished with student&#13;
and support.&#13;
"SUN DANCE"&#13;
APPEARING ,&#13;
WED, FRI" SAT. &amp; SUN,&#13;
SEPT. 4, 6, 7, 8&#13;
Kerrosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
THE PAtU&lt;SIDE A GER I ~t, t '9J4 '&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1974' THE PARKSIDE R&#13;
ANG£-&#13;
delayed&#13;
ALE&#13;
OPP~&#13;
5&#13;
TEAS&#13;
Transit continued from page 1&#13;
fall. Replied&#13;
Sweeney, "The Mayor does not make P&lt;&gt;l'&#13;
Transit Authority. The Transit Autho~(for&#13;
policy." Y&#13;
No immediate ~hanges in the service&#13;
thcoming, accordmg to Sweeney. ate&#13;
Transit re~re_sentatives from the city of&#13;
provided statistical data on a propose(! Ill&#13;
system to Parksi~e. They ~ointed out, how8: It&#13;
their proposals hmged entirely on the out er,&#13;
Sept. 10 referendum before city of Rac·CO!nt&#13;
proposing city owne~ship of a bus sys': v&#13;
Racine bus system 1s presently run by rn.&#13;
dependent company which is under contr lll&#13;
city. act lo&#13;
According to Racine officials' data a&#13;
Parkside transit system with 1-hour'&#13;
charging 5~ cents p_er one-way fare-would ha&#13;
carry 350 riders daily (one way) in order to 1't&#13;
even. Service would be between the hours&#13;
and 6 p.m. If the_ hours were extended to 10 0( 71&#13;
daily one-way riders or 250 round-trip rid~lll.,&#13;
be needed. The Parkside bus would be linked&#13;
Racine ~etwork! making transfer to variOUs to&#13;
in the city possible.&#13;
Last year's Vets bus carried an averag&#13;
students per day, according to Chet Ande~ 111&#13;
Vets Club: Though ~e bus_ will ~perate this y~&#13;
system will face serious fmanc1al difficulties&#13;
full student support is given, said Anderson_&#13;
Vets bus is . ~ompletely independent, 0&#13;
without subs1d1es, and because of spiralq&#13;
pen es. more riders are needed to keep the&#13;
operating.&#13;
The August 21 mass transit meeting cone&#13;
with Sweeney's comment that "anytb&#13;
feasible" if student support through rider:.&#13;
there.&#13;
Parkside officials are hopeful that the&#13;
transportation survey will provide the inf&#13;
necessary to map out student re id&#13;
distribution, thus allowing more efficient bus&#13;
to be drawn in the future as well as&#13;
modifying present routes. This, say the d&#13;
can only be accomplished with student&#13;
and support.&#13;
m0 "SUN DANCE"&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED, FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
SEPT. 4, 6, 7, 8&#13;
Kenoslra's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Creenbay Road&#13;
f-A,. McDonald"S -m&#13;
For Lunch or Just · Anytime&#13;
•FAST COURTEOUS SERVICE•&#13;
• EW CLEAN DINING AREA•&#13;
•QUALITY•&#13;
•VALUE• rM-c0n--~i:--------~------~&#13;
I I&#13;
I 000 FOR O E I&#13;
I FREE I&#13;
I HEESEB RGER I&#13;
I I&#13;
I C lid . t th I&#13;
·---• pt. 11th /:I:+. I&#13;
--------·&#13;
Address of&#13;
McDonald~&#13;
nearest to you&#13;
3116 22nd AVE.&#13;
3926 52nd ST.&#13;
, If you are looking (It 1&#13;
good part-time job&#13;
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just the place for yoU&#13;
APPLY IN PGISI.&#13;
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3116 22ad Awetlt&#13;
39~6 52ad Strfd &#13;
:::·&lt;;::,·~&gt;'~&lt;&gt;:'WedneSday, Sept. 4,1974 THE UCS~continued frcln, page l:r---~ .:.;"'~+"':;"'.;.;'~,,-'~";:.'~.:..''';'&#13;
to~;~~~:.~~;:~:~li~:~::s"';,~::':P::a~~bJ~~ Also P~ovided for in Part ~ ~;~~~t:~i; is ~e Con t est&#13;
prf"sidf"nt. the chancellor and the faculty shall be students right to determine who shall represent&#13;
active participants in the immediate governance of them in university governance. Duly elected&#13;
and policy development for such institutions. As student governments are protected from any insuch.&#13;
students shall have primary responsibility for terference or transfer of power that might come&#13;
from the administration. the formulation and review of policies concerning p&#13;
student life. services and interests. Students in a~t. 3 of .the Statement simply names Central&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and SUbject to the AdmmlstratlOn as the final authority and imfinal&#13;
confirmation of the board shall have the ph;:me~tor of the Policy Statement and. its&#13;
rf'sponsibility for the disposition of those student guidelines Students, in the fonn of the United&#13;
ree s which constitute substantial support for Council of Student Governments, will be&#13;
campus student activities. The students of each represented and will have a voice in' any decisions&#13;
made concerning the Policy and its im- institution or campus shall have the right to plementation&#13;
organize themselves in a manner they determine&#13;
and to select their representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance. ' The, Un~ted Council's Policy Statement is&#13;
Part 2 of the Statement elaborates on the areas of organized In three parts: 1. definitions of major&#13;
university life in which students will participate terms 2. guidelines deriving from each sentence of&#13;
section 36.09(5) 3. Central Administration's and-or have power. These include being responsibilities.&#13;
represented on an campus committees, having . Perhaps the most controversial portionof Part 1&#13;
primary responsibility for forming and reviewing IS the definition of "students. H&#13;
student life policies, and (perhaps most im- 'ry1~.merger statute itself contains no specific&#13;
portantly) having control over the disposition of definition of the word, but th-e United Council .&#13;
student segregated fees. equates "student" with "student government." parki ng continued from page 11----- _&#13;
be issued at no additional cost. of trees on the proposed sites by&#13;
Permits for the east lot only may the Concerned Student Coalition.&#13;
be picked up at the Bursar's The injunction was unsuccessful.&#13;
office after Sept. 3. Do u g I a s La FoIl e t t e ,&#13;
The cost for the permits is as Democratic Senator from&#13;
follows: Students with 1-6credits Kenosha, voiced his support for&#13;
will pay $8 for the east and west the students and eventually an&#13;
lots and $4 for the east lot only. amendment was introduced to&#13;
For those students carrying the UW Merger Bill that would&#13;
seven or more credits, the cost hlock construction of the lots.&#13;
for the east and west lots will be The amendment was opposed&#13;
$14 per semester and $28 an- hy legislators from both parties&#13;
nually. The east lot only will cost in the Racine and Kenosha area&#13;
57per semester and $14annually. and was vetoed by Governor&#13;
Annual reserve permits may be J .ucey. LaFollette attempted to&#13;
purchased for $80. Annual per- hold a two-day veto session, but&#13;
mits for faculty and staff is set at the Joint Organizational Com-&#13;
$50 and reserve permits $100. For mittee opposed the session&#13;
those students who have tickets hecause of strong sentiment that&#13;
for the new lots, parking will be the Governor should not be&#13;
available in the east lot and the embarrassed since he is running&#13;
old faculty lot until construction for re-election,&#13;
is completed. After the defeat of the veto&#13;
If things had gone as originally session. some of the students&#13;
planned. the lots would have been reluctantly conceded the defeat&#13;
near completion by now, but while others wouldn't. Kai Nail,&#13;
disagreement arose over the president of the Concerned&#13;
impact the lots would have on the Student Coalition said. "We don't&#13;
area's environment. agree with having close-in&#13;
The Administration said that parking but there isn't anything&#13;
the area was devoid of plant and more we can do. Because of the&#13;
animal life. Students disagreed. planning involved, there is not&#13;
An injunction was sought to halt enough time to put parking lots County El &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
the transplanting and destroying elsewhere and yet meet the ,. ...... _ .. """"""~&#13;
--------&#13;
'itl.&#13;
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parking needs of the increasing&#13;
student enrollment this fall."&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, made the&#13;
following statement: "PSGA, as&#13;
a body. no longer opposes construction&#13;
of these lots. To purposely&#13;
delay building these lots&#13;
would be vindictive of us." Greg&#13;
Hawkins. former PSGA senator,&#13;
did not agree. He said, "I see no&#13;
sense in making a campaign&#13;
issue out of it and then dropping it&#13;
because it became tiresome and&#13;
boring to individual participants,&#13;
PSGA's position does not&#13;
represent the feeling of their&#13;
constituency on the campus."&#13;
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m~,king's I,n&#13;
WID.S1UDIO&#13;
PARKSID~ ~A"GER 5&#13;
announced&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
Collective bargaining for faculty may be coming to America's&#13;
college and university campuses "like a tidal wave." says the&#13;
Education Commission of the States. U it comes to the Universily of&#13;
Wisconsin System, the Board of Regents intends to make SW'e it haa&#13;
some unique, innovative ideas from very non-traditional sources to&#13;
deal with this controversial subject.&#13;
A keystone of this effort is a nationwide contest which the Regents&#13;
plan to conduct. The prize money will come from a grant made by The&#13;
Johnson Foundation of Racine to the UW System.&#13;
The purpose of the contest is to seek ideas from everyone interested&#13;
in this subject. It is hoped that persons in and out of higher education&#13;
will submit ideas or plans on how a system of public universities can&#13;
best relate to salaries, fringe benefits, and other aspects of faculty&#13;
employment. The contest seeks to find new plans or ideas by which the&#13;
best relationship can be achieved while maintaining the strengths or&#13;
faculty governance-cooperative decision-making by professionals.&#13;
The contest will offer a $1,500 prize to the person who suggests the&#13;
plan that can best serve the faculy and solve some of their problems in&#13;
this area while minimizing the adversary relationship inherent in the&#13;
classic trade union collective bargaining relationship. There also will&#13;
be a S500prize for the best single idea suggested.&#13;
Expanding of the purpose of the contest, the Regents noted that to&#13;
date some 22 states have enacted some sort of collective barbainiog&#13;
legislation which may include the faculty of those states' public&#13;
universities. Also, prior to passage of that legislation, most of the 22&#13;
states had some form 01 traditional faculty governance plans-that is,&#13;
overall university decisions were made on a shared basis with [acuity,&#13;
adrn.nistrators, and boards of regents or trustees.&#13;
All entries for the contest should be sent to Regent John M. Lavine.&#13;
Chairman. University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents' Task&#13;
Force on Faculty Governance and Collective Bargaining, 1766Van&#13;
Hise Hall, UW-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706. All entries will&#13;
become the property of the Board of Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System and will be accepted up to Oct. 1, ,974.&#13;
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6125 Durand Avenue. Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORroRATION&#13;
: ... : ".".• :· · ... · -. . . . .. ' ·. . . . ·. _=/\ff:.(~·~\:~-: _ :-.: ,' Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE' RANGERS . . . . . . ~ . UCSG continued from page .. . :··-:· ", .· .. •· • •• ~. 1 ... , • . • • ······ ...&#13;
announced . . Thi' students of each institution or campus subject&#13;
to thP responsibilities and powers of the board, the&#13;
prt&gt;sidt&gt;nt, the chancellor and the faculty shall be&#13;
activP participants in the immediate governance of&#13;
and policy development for such institutions. As&#13;
~uch, students shall have primary responsibility for&#13;
thP formulation and review of policies concerning&#13;
studt&gt;nt life, services and interests. Students in&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and subject to the&#13;
final confirmation of the board shall have the&#13;
rpsponsibility for the disposition of those student&#13;
fpps which constitute substantial support for&#13;
fampus student activities. The students of each&#13;
institution or campus shall have the right to&#13;
organize themselves in a manner they determine&#13;
and to select their representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance.&#13;
Also p~ov.ided for in Part 2 of the.Stil~em~t is u;; : CO n test&#13;
students right to determine· who shall represent&#13;
them in university governance. Duly elected&#13;
student governments are protected from any interference&#13;
or transfer of power that might come from the administration.&#13;
Part 3 of the Statement simply names Central&#13;
Administration as the final authority and implementor&#13;
of the Policy Statement and its&#13;
guidelines. Students, in the form of the United&#13;
Council of Student Governments will be&#13;
represented and will have a voice in· a~y decisions&#13;
made concerning the Policy and its implementation.&#13;
&#13;
Part 2 of the Statement elaborates on the areas of&#13;
university life in which students will participate&#13;
and-or have power. These include being&#13;
represented on all campus committees, having&#13;
primary responsibility for forming and reviewing&#13;
student life policies, and (perhaps most importantly)&#13;
having control over the disposition of&#13;
student segregated fees.&#13;
The. Un!ted Council's Policy Statement is&#13;
organized m three parts: 1. definitions of major&#13;
term.s 2. guidelines deriving from ~ch sentence of&#13;
section 36.09(5) 3. Central Administration's&#13;
responsibilities.&#13;
Perhaps the most controversial portion of Part 1&#13;
is the definition of "students."&#13;
The merger statute itself contains no specific&#13;
definition of the word, but the United Council ·&#13;
equates "student" with "student government."&#13;
parking continued from page&#13;
be issued at no additional cost.&#13;
Permits for the east lot only may&#13;
be picked up at the Bursar's&#13;
office after Sept. 3.&#13;
The cost for the permits is as&#13;
follows: Students with 1-6 credits&#13;
will pay $8 for the east and west&#13;
lots and $4 for the east lot only.&#13;
For those students carrying&#13;
seven or more credits, the cost&#13;
for the east and west lots will be&#13;
14 per semester and $28 annually.&#13;
The east lot only will cost&#13;
$7 per semester and $14 annually.&#13;
Annual reserve permits may be&#13;
purchased for $80. Annual permits&#13;
for faculty and staff is set at&#13;
50 and reserve permits $100. For&#13;
those students who have tickets&#13;
for the new lots, parking will be&#13;
available in the east lot and the&#13;
old faculty lot until construction&#13;
is com!)leted.&#13;
If things had gone as originally&#13;
planned. the lots would have been&#13;
near completion by now, but&#13;
disagreement arose over the&#13;
impact the lots would have on the&#13;
area's environment.&#13;
of trees on the proposed sites by&#13;
the Concerned Student Coalition.&#13;
The injunction was unsuccessful.&#13;
Douglas LaFollette,&#13;
Democratic Senator from&#13;
Kenosha , voiced his support for&#13;
the students and eventually an&#13;
amendment was introduced to&#13;
the UW Merger Bill that would&#13;
block construction of the lots.&#13;
The amendment was opposed&#13;
by legislators from both parties&#13;
in the Racine and Kenosha area&#13;
and was vetoed by Governor&#13;
Lucey . La Follette attempted to&#13;
hold a two-day veto session, but&#13;
the Joint Organizational Committee&#13;
opposed the session&#13;
because of strong sentiment that&#13;
the Governor should not be&#13;
embarrassed since he is running&#13;
for re-election .&#13;
After the defeat of the veto&#13;
session. some of the students&#13;
reluctantly conceded the defeat&#13;
while others wouldn't. Kai Nall,&#13;
president of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition said, "We don't&#13;
agree with having close-in&#13;
parking but there isn't anything&#13;
more we can do. Because of the&#13;
planning involved, there is not&#13;
enough time to put parking lots&#13;
parking needs of the increasing&#13;
student enrollment this fall."&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich , president of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, made the&#13;
following statement : "PSGA, as&#13;
a body, no longer opposes construction&#13;
of these lots. To purposely&#13;
delay building these lots&#13;
would be vindictive of us. " Greg&#13;
Hawkins, former PSGA senator,&#13;
did not agree. He said, " I see no&#13;
sense in making a campaign&#13;
issue out of it and then dropping it&#13;
because it became tiresome and&#13;
boring to individual participants.&#13;
PSGA 's position does not&#13;
represent the feeling of their&#13;
constituency on the campus. "&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
9t-' ·~~ Restaurant&#13;
Open :&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M. -1:00 P .M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County B &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
The Administration said that&#13;
the area was devoid of plant and&#13;
animal life. Students disagreed.&#13;
An injunction was sought to halt&#13;
the transplanting and destroying Plsewhere and yet meet the ,==-•--====-===~&#13;
--------&#13;
FOR&#13;
THAT&#13;
NATURAL&#13;
LOOK&#13;
"W• Jpedal11• in Men's, W.,..,t, &amp; Children,•&#13;
Hair Slylirt9 Wit/cit Con111f1 el c..,,,pl•I• C11t11...,&#13;
Sltapillf and .,_ Ory/rt9"&#13;
fASHIOH&#13;
HAlll,IECIS&#13;
IARIU - STYLIST&#13;
Cooni• WHclrow&#13;
J1y Johnsn&#13;
Fraok '•l•r•&#13;
Prop.&#13;
BY APPOINTMENT&#13;
694-4603 OPCN wcuu.Y&#13;
l.~e ":M. ~'t~4&gt;:.:!';&#13;
m~, king's lttt&#13;
WIER. STUDIO&#13;
7Sot 45til AV(. T-• 1, Co11atry Sh•Hi .. Cuter&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
Collect;;.;e bargaining for faculty may be coming to America'&#13;
college and university campuses "like a tidal wave," says the&#13;
Education Commission or the States. If it comes to the UniversiCy of&#13;
Wiscon in System, the Board of Regents intends to make sure it ha&#13;
some unique, inno ative ideas from very non-traditional sourc to&#13;
deal with this controversial subject.&#13;
A keystone of this effort is a nationwide contest which the Regents&#13;
plan to conduct. The prize money will come from a grant made by The&#13;
Johnson Foundation of Racine to the System.&#13;
The purpose of the contest is to seek ideas from everyone interested&#13;
in this subject. It is hoped that person in and out of higher education&#13;
will submit ideas or plans on how a system of public universities can&#13;
best relate to salari1:5, fringe benefits, and other aspects of faculty&#13;
employment. The contest seeks to find new plans or idea by which the&#13;
best relationship can be achie ed while maintaining the trength of&#13;
faculty governance--&lt;:ooperative decision-making by professionals.&#13;
The contest ,,:ill offer a $1,500 prize to the person who uggest.s the&#13;
plan that can best serve the faculy and solve some of their problem in&#13;
this area while minimizing the adversary relationship inherent in the&#13;
classic trade union collective bargaining relationship. There also will&#13;
be a $500 prize for the best single idea suggested.&#13;
Expanding of the purpose of the contest, the Regents noted that to&#13;
date some 22 states have enacted some sort of collective barbaining&#13;
legislation which may include the faculty of those states' public&#13;
universities. Also, prior to passage of that legi lation, most of the 22&#13;
tales had ome form of traditional faculty go ernance plans-that i ,&#13;
overall university decisions were made on a hared ba i with faculty,&#13;
adm;ni trators, and boards or regents or trustees.&#13;
All entries for the contest hould be ent to Regent John M . Lavine,&#13;
Chairman. 'niversity of Wisconsin Sy tern Board of Regen ' T&#13;
Force on Faculty Governance and Collective Bargaining, 1766 an&#13;
Hise Hall. UW-l\ladison, ladison, Wi con in 53706. All entrie. will&#13;
become the property of the Board of Regents of the ni,·er, ity of&#13;
Wisconsin System and \\i ll be accepted up lo Oct. l, 1974.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
cl'On tep at the Unron'\,&#13;
Pncn ,ndudt eA,, co,ndi1 ,on ne •Lw•ut•OUI ct,Ptt1n1 •E•ec1,,c,~t1 end M'fi~1 "'I n&#13;
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- Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
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I\ 1hr rtte ~ect,on of H 1Qhways ll and 31&#13;
Pleasant&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT I. ·5 RA. 'CE CORPORA TIO, &#13;
N"ew"'''''.''''' p... for b,... Parkstde Sf".... Go'",m~' Assoctatton, lncorpor......&#13;
student constitution PREAMBLE&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parks ide do hereby invest the&#13;
powers of this censutunon in ttie Parkside&#13;
Studenl Government Association Inc. All&#13;
previous Parkside student Government&#13;
Association constitutions shall be null and&#13;
void upon ratification of this constitution on&#13;
September 18 and 19, 1974. This constitution&#13;
snen be the sole constitution of the Parks ide&#13;
Studenl Government Association Inc. and&#13;
the student body and subject only 10&#13;
amendments.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Inc.&#13;
shall be responsible to the students of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside and shall&#13;
have the responsibility for ttle disposition 01&#13;
thoSe student fees Which constitute sub·&#13;
stantial support for campus student ac.&#13;
tivities.&#13;
Elections for representatives from&#13;
ilcademic divisions and the undeclared&#13;
division to the legislative branch of the&#13;
Parkside Student Governmenl Inc .• shall&#13;
take place during the third week of October.&#13;
Also at which time the five elected at large&#13;
seats to the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. allocations committee shall&#13;
also be open. Elections for the positions of&#13;
President and Vice· President of the&#13;
executive branch of the Parks ide Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and the at&#13;
large senatorial seats 10 the legislative&#13;
branch of the Parkside StUdent Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall take place during the&#13;
third week In Aprl1.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
SECTION I. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested In the Senate of the&#13;
Pilrkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION II. The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Sludent Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
consist 01 16 members, half of which will be&#13;
elected in October and the remaining half&#13;
elected in April and whose term shall be for&#13;
one year. The divisions of Science. Social&#13;
Science. Humanistic Studies. Engineering&#13;
Science, Management Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and undeclared maior, shall&#13;
elect one Senator for every 1.000 stUdents in&#13;
their division. Each division shall have at&#13;
least one Senator.. Only those University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parks ide stUdents who have&#13;
declared a major in a division the semester&#13;
before (excluding summer session) wi11 be&#13;
allowed to run for Senator in that division.&#13;
Those stUdents who have not declared a&#13;
major by the previous semester will be&#13;
"IlO\l\led to run for senator from the undeclared&#13;
division. A student who has&#13;
declared majors in more Ihan one division.&#13;
in the previous semester, can only run and&#13;
be elected Irom one division. Only those&#13;
students who have declared malors in the&#13;
previous semester in fhe designated&#13;
divisions will be allowed to vote for the&#13;
respective Senators. Those students who&#13;
have not declared a maior in the previous&#13;
semester Will vole for Senator(s) running in&#13;
the undeclared major division. A student&#13;
who has declared majors in more than one&#13;
division In previous semesters can only vote&#13;
in one diVision. No student who has declared&#13;
11 maior in the prevIous semester may run&#13;
for Senator in the undeclared major division,&#13;
and no student who has declared a malor in&#13;
the previous semester may vote for a&#13;
Senator in the undeclared major division.&#13;
The above procedure will constitute the rules&#13;
lor the October elections.&#13;
In the event a new division is created by&#13;
the University, the said division shall be&#13;
required to be In existence for a period of one&#13;
year before a Senator may be sent from that&#13;
division&#13;
The remaining half of the Senators shall be&#13;
elected at large with no requirement as to&#13;
&lt;lrea of major. There witl be an equal&#13;
number of at large Senators as divisional&#13;
Senaton. The above shall constitute the&#13;
rules for the April elections.&#13;
When vacancies happen In the&#13;
representation from any academic division&#13;
or al large seat, the President Pro Tempore&#13;
Shall fill such vacancies w.ith the con·&#13;
currence of a simple majority of the entire&#13;
leglstatlve branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Associafion Inc.&#13;
SECTION III, A Senator of the Parks ide&#13;
Studenl Government Association Inc. must&#13;
be .. Un~versity Wisconsin Parkside student,&#13;
s1lall carry no I~ fhan 6 ~redlts. must not be&#13;
on academic probation, and must have&#13;
completed no less than 12 credits al the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkslde.&#13;
Tn. Senate of the Parks Ide Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. Shall choose&#13;
their O\I\Inofficers and also a President Pro&#13;
Tempore. In the absence of the Vice·&#13;
President of fhe Parkside Student Govern·&#13;
ment Association Inc., who shall be the&#13;
Presidenf of the Senate but shall have no&#13;
VOleunless I' vole by the Senafe is tied. the&#13;
President Pro Tempore shall be the&#13;
President of the Senate. A simple majority of&#13;
ttle total Senate shaH constilute a quorum to&#13;
do bUsiness.&#13;
SECTION IV. The Senate shall have the&#13;
..ole power of impeachment and the power fo&#13;
try &lt;Ill impeachments. When sitting for fhat&#13;
purpose they shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the ParkS Ide Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. is tried the&#13;
Chief Justice of the Judicial court shall&#13;
preside, and no person shall be convicted&#13;
wiftwut the concurrence of two thirdS of the&#13;
l'nti~ Senate. Judgment in cases of im·&#13;
Peilchment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal Irom Office and disqualification to&#13;
110ldand enjoy any office or posHion that the,&#13;
PMkside Government Association Inc. has&#13;
lurisdiction over, appointment to, or election&#13;
lOr Impeachment will not begin until two&#13;
thirds of the entire Senate of the Parks ide&#13;
StUdent Government Association Inc. have&#13;
voted to hold an Impeachment hearing.&#13;
SeCTION V. The Senate 01 the Parks ide&#13;
StUdent Government Assoc.iation Inc. shall&#13;
h,we the power to determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedinqs, punish its members for&#13;
&lt;1iSOfderly conduct &lt;lnd, with. the can&#13;
{Urrence 01 two thirds ot the entire Senale,&#13;
t'llpel a member. The senate shall keep a&#13;
IOUrn,,101 its proceedings, &lt;lnd publish the&#13;
'amI' mOnlhly; Ihe yeas &lt;lnd neys of the&#13;
ITIl'fl'lherson any question shall. at the desire&#13;
l)f one memher 01 the Senate, be enfered on&#13;
'tK' jOurnal The Sf'nllte of the PMkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. Shall&#13;
meet at an establiShed place and time no less&#13;
than once a week during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters. and no less than twice a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon pre~ntation of a petition by a simple&#13;
m&lt;ljorityof the entire Senate a meeting Shall&#13;
be called by the vice- President or in the ceee&#13;
of the Vice Prestdent's absence the&#13;
PreSident Pro Tempore shall have the&#13;
responsibility to call a meeting.&#13;
SECTION VI. Bills may either originate in&#13;
the Senate or be sent to Ihe Senate from the&#13;
execuuve branch of the ParkSide stooent&#13;
Government Association Inc. Every bill.&#13;
order, resolution. or vote on which the&#13;
concurrence of tee Senate Is necessary Shall&#13;
have passed the Senate by a simple&#13;
m&lt;ljority; shall. before it becomes law or&#13;
regulation, be presented to the President of&#13;
the Parkside StUdent Government&#13;
Association Inc. It the President does not&#13;
approve, he shall send it back to Ihe Senate&#13;
for reconsideration with his reasons for&#13;
rejection. II. after such reconsideration, a&#13;
simple majority of the entire Senate shall&#13;
agree to pass the bill. it shall become law.&#13;
But in all such cases the votes of the Senafe&#13;
Shall be determined by a rOIl·call vote, and&#13;
the names of persons voting for and against&#13;
the bill Shall be entered in the iournal of the&#13;
Senate. If .any bill Shall not be refurned by&#13;
the President within ten school days afler it&#13;
h&lt;ls been presented to him. the same Shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as If he had&#13;
SIgned it. All proceedings of the Senate of the&#13;
Parks ide Student Government Association&#13;
Inc Shall be sent to Ihe executive for in.&#13;
corporation purposes.&#13;
SECTION VII. The Senate Shall have the&#13;
power to make motions, resolutions, or take&#13;
legal actions which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into execution the&#13;
loregoing powers, and all other powers&#13;
vested by this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION VIII. The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
StUdent Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
have the power to amend this constitution by&#13;
Cl two thirdS vote of the entire Senate.&#13;
SECTION IX. The Senate of the Parkslde&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
keep recordS and receIpts on all ex·&#13;
penditures of all Parks ide StUdent Govern.&#13;
ment Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records pubtic at every meeting.&#13;
SECTION X, A United StUdent&#13;
Org&lt;lnllation Council shall be establiShed&#13;
ronsisting of the heads of all student&#13;
org&lt;lnilations on the UW.Parkslde campus.&#13;
Said counci' shall be a standing Senate&#13;
rommiltee&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION I. All executive poWe1'S,within&#13;
this article, shall be vested in the President&#13;
01 the Parks ide StUdent Government&#13;
Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II. The Presidenf shall be a&#13;
PClrkside student. shall carry no less than 6&#13;
credits. must not be on academic probalion&#13;
and must have COmpleted no less than \2&#13;
credits &lt;I' the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parks ide.&#13;
The President shall hold the office during&#13;
the term of one year together with Ihe Vice&#13;
President who will be chosen for the same&#13;
term. They shall be eligible for re·election&#13;
and shall not serve more than 2 consecutive&#13;
terms.&#13;
Before the President and Vice President.&#13;
elect enters on the execution of the office of&#13;
the Presidency or Vice Presidency, she or he&#13;
shall take the following oath:&#13;
"I dO solemnly swear (or affirm] that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice Preslden!) of the Parkslde Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve. protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions 01 the&#13;
Parks ide Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the Parks Ide Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. shall also be&#13;
flble to draw compensation while in office,&#13;
the amount of which shall be determined by&#13;
fl majority vote of the entire Legislative&#13;
branch of the Parks ide Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. This compensatlon can be&#13;
suspended by the Senate while the President&#13;
is on trial for the purposes ot impeachment.&#13;
If, however, &lt;lUer impeachment proceedings&#13;
the President is found to be innocent. all&#13;
benefits will be paid to him retroactive from&#13;
t~e date of suspension. Increases In com·&#13;
pensatlon will not be awarded to a President&#13;
while in offlce unless he is re·elected to&#13;
another term of office or 10 his immediate&#13;
successor. at Which time such benefits would&#13;
hegin to be implemented. All Increases must&#13;
be approved by a majority 01 the entire&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from C?"'ice&#13;
or inability to discharge power and dutIes of.&#13;
the Presidency, the Vice President shall&#13;
assume the office of President of the&#13;
Parkside StUdent Government Association&#13;
Inc. Clnd shall meet the constif~tional&#13;
requirements of the office of the Presidency&#13;
of the Parks ide student Government&#13;
Association Inc.&#13;
SECTiON Ill. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice a~d consent of&#13;
the majority of the Plirkside Student&#13;
Government Inc. Senate '0 nominate ~nd&#13;
,1ppoinf the treasurer, co~respondlng&#13;
'&gt;ecrelary, flnd alt other offlc.ers of the&#13;
f'xeculive branch of the Parkslde Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and all student&#13;
ludQes with the cOflsent of two·thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate.&#13;
• The President shall h&lt;lve the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
,&gt;pecial commillees &lt;'lndindividuals to w~o~&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated WIthin&#13;
Ihe Pilrkside Student Government Inc. and&#13;
"hflll be required to furnish wri."en ~epo:fs&#13;
on his eJlecutive activities to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P&lt;'lrkside Student Government&#13;
A,&gt;sociation Inc. by a m&lt;ljorlty vote of the&#13;
s...~~:e·president shall h&lt;lVe the power, by&#13;
lnd with the &lt;ldvice and conserrf of the&#13;
; f'qlslative branch of the PMkside. Student&#13;
'.overnm('nt Association Inc. to sign c~&#13;
tracTS. provided that a majority of Ihe entire&#13;
Sf'~~:e P~~~~~;~t sh&lt;lll dr&lt;lw up the Parks ide&#13;
"iIU&lt;1entGovernment AssociatiOfl Inc. budget&#13;
,1nd ..end it to the Legislative branch ~f Ihe&#13;
P,lrk ..ide student Government ASSOCiation&#13;
Inc for approval&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the Parks ide StUdent&#13;
Gove-rnment AssociatlOrt Inc. and Its by.laws&#13;
be f&lt;lithfUlly executed.&#13;
The President. Vice President and all&#13;
ctuce-s of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Associalion toe. Shall be removed 'rom&#13;
office for dereliction of duty or failure to take&#13;
care that the constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student oove-nmeot Association Inc. and its&#13;
by laws be faithfully executed,&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
SeCTION I. All judicial powers of the&#13;
P&lt;lrkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be vested in a judiciary court. an&#13;
&lt;lppellate courl. and in lower courts thllt the&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Studenl Government&#13;
Association Inc. may establiSh. The lodges,&#13;
of all courts. shall maintaIn good behavior&#13;
and character during their lerms of oHice.&#13;
SECTION II. Student metnbers of the&#13;
judicial branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
GOvernment Association Inc. shall be&#13;
University Wisconsin Parks ide students,&#13;
shall carry no less than 6 credits, must not be&#13;
on academic probation. must have com·&#13;
pleted no less than \2 credits at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkside, and must&#13;
be cOllfirmed by the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkslde alter a&#13;
two thirds approval by the entire Senate of&#13;
Ihe Parkside Student Go ...ernment&#13;
Association Inc. Administrative ap·&#13;
pointments to the iudicial branch of the&#13;
PClrkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall hold their offic~ subject to the&#13;
approval of the Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. Terms&#13;
of office shall be for 4 years.&#13;
SECTION Itl. The judiciary court and the&#13;
appellate court shaH convene no less than \0.&#13;
&lt;lnd no more than 14 school days alter a case&#13;
has been forwarded to the court trom the&#13;
designated disciplinary head of the ad·&#13;
ministratlve branch of the University 01&#13;
WisconSin Parkside, or as reQuested by a&#13;
sfudent. The judiciary court Shall meet once&#13;
&lt;I month at an established place and time.&#13;
SeCTION IV. The JUdIcial court $hall&#13;
consist of 4 judges and one Chief Justice who&#13;
shall have jurisdiction OVef' all cases&#13;
referred to it by the designated disciplinary&#13;
head of the administrative branch of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parks ide, or as&#13;
requested by a student. and shall extend its&#13;
power of jUdicial review to de&lt;ide the con·&#13;
stltutionalitvof the actions of the Park-sJde&#13;
StUdent Government Association Inc. and&#13;
shall only pass its judgment on the question&#13;
being considered In the case of dei;iding the&#13;
constitutionality of the actions of the&#13;
Parks ide Sfudent Government Association&#13;
Inc decisions Shall be binding on aU parties&#13;
involved, and snail be forwarded to the&#13;
designated disciplinary head of the ad&#13;
ministralive branch of the University&#13;
Wisconsin ParkS ide or to the appropriate&#13;
aulhorilies for implementation.&#13;
SECTION V. The appellate court shall&#13;
consist of 3 judges, one of whkh shall be a&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside student and&#13;
the other two shall be administrative ap·&#13;
pointments Upon Ihe appeal of a negative&#13;
decision by a stUdent defendant. the ap&#13;
pellate court shall have the power to review&#13;
the Citse in question and either uphold or&#13;
overturn the decision of the judicial court&#13;
The de&lt;ision rendered by a majority vote of&#13;
Ihe "ppellate court Shall be binding upon all&#13;
pllrties involVed&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV . I .&#13;
An applicant shall not be denied admission&#13;
to the University Wisconsin Parks ide for&#13;
re&lt;'lsons 01 race. color. natiOllilI origin.&#13;
religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political betiefs or political actian.&#13;
ARTICLE IV· 1&#13;
Financial aid shall not be denied for&#13;
reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
religious creed. sex, previous criminal&#13;
record. political belief or political lKtion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV. 3&#13;
Students shall have fhe right oIlreedom of&#13;
f'xpression, as defined In the conslilution of&#13;
the United States In all ctassrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 4&#13;
Students &lt;Ire free to take exception to the&#13;
(lal&lt;l presented or views offered in any&#13;
course of sfudy and may advocate alter&#13;
n&lt;ltlve opinions to those presented within the&#13;
classroom&#13;
ARTICLE IV • S&#13;
All students shall have the right to due&#13;
process of law as guaranteed by the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV·' ,&#13;
Any student shall have the right to request&#13;
in thoSe areas of student disciplinary mat.&#13;
ters that are refe1'red to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the' adminis1Y"ation, a&#13;
hearing by the judiciary court of the&#13;
Parkside Student Go-&lt;Iernment Association&#13;
Inc. "nd that request shall be binding on all&#13;
p&lt;lrties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 1&#13;
Students Shall be e...aluated only on their&#13;
knowledge of the subject and academic&#13;
perlorm&lt;lnce and in fum are responsible to&#13;
m&lt;'linlain standards of academic per.&#13;
formance established for each course they&#13;
h"ve enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV· •&#13;
Disclosure of sludents' political or per.&#13;
,&gt;on&lt;llbeliefs, in connection with course work&#13;
shall not be m&lt;lde public withOut express&#13;
permission of the sfudent&#13;
ARTICLE IV· •&#13;
StUdent records on academic performance&#13;
ilnd disciplinary actions shall be separate&#13;
ARTICLE IV· to&#13;
Inform&lt;ltion tram counseling an~&#13;
disciplinClfY files shall not be made. available&#13;
to persons on or off campus wllhout the&#13;
!'xpress consent of the slUdent involVed.&#13;
f'xcepl under legal compulsion&#13;
ARTICLE: IV . "&#13;
All records and inform&lt;llion kept on file&#13;
&lt;.h&lt;lll he readily ",ccessible to the student to&#13;
whom they pertain&#13;
"",I:TICLE IV . 12&#13;
Non &lt;'ldministrative costs shall and do&#13;
"'clude alt &lt;lreas of student services within&#13;
Ihl'&lt;.e hudQets I) student programming 21&#13;
&lt;.Iudent conference programs ) student&#13;
'lam!' rooms ~l store 51 &lt;Ill other non&#13;
ildministrative positions. The nature &lt;lnd&#13;
scope of tbese programs snail be determineo&#13;
by the students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
P&lt;lrksi&lt;le&#13;
ARTICLE IV • l]&#13;
OrganizatiOllilI activities and Intr ..murals&#13;
are completely non admlni5.frati v e .....riable&#13;
costs and as such shall be dete-rmined by 1M&#13;
students of the Uni ...ersity Wisconsin&#13;
Poi'Irkslde&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 14&#13;
ParkIng. transportation budget policies&#13;
and procedures shall be establlsbed by&#13;
students in conjunction with the faculty and&#13;
sfalf of the University Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE IV. 15&#13;
In the administration of segrevated fee&#13;
budget Ihe students of the' University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside shall evaluate services&#13;
and slaff as to their needs and cost.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • U&#13;
The stUdents of ttle Uni ...erslty Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall doetermine the scOPe of&#13;
studenf activilies and the cost for each&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 11&#13;
Organilatlon activities concerning&#13;
students shall be maintained by stu&lt;H!nts&#13;
ARTICLE IV • II&#13;
The responsibility and lKcountability lor&#13;
all 01 the pre&lt;eding artic~ shall be main&#13;
tained bv lhe students 01/ the University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 19&#13;
The students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall work closelV with the&#13;
ChancellOf of tne University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkslde or hfs stall in developing the&#13;
5e9regated lee budget&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 20&#13;
The Parkside Studenf Governmerft&#13;
Association Inc. subject to the respon&#13;
sibilities and p(lW't'f"S 01 the Board 01&#13;
Regents, fhe President of the University&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside- and the'&#13;
faculty of the University WisconsIn Parkside&#13;
Shall be active participants In the immediate&#13;
QoOvernanceof and policy development tor&#13;
such institutions. As such. the P..rkslde&#13;
Student Government Association Inc, shall&#13;
have primary responsibility for the for&#13;
mulation and re ...iew of policies concerning&#13;
student Ilte. services and lnlef"ests. The&#13;
Parkside Sludent Government ASSOCiation&#13;
Inc, in consUltation with the Chancellor of&#13;
lhe Univ~l"Sity Wisconsin Parks Ide and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the Booard&#13;
of Regenls shall ha...e the responsibility for&#13;
Ihe disposition of those studenl tees whiCh&#13;
constitute substantial support tor campus&#13;
student activities As such. the Parks!de&#13;
Student Government AsSociation Inc. shall&#13;
be the sole reprewntalive studenl group of&#13;
the stvdenB of the Uni ...ersity Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside allowed 10 particip.ate In In..&#13;
stitutional governance.&#13;
ARTICLE IV· 21&#13;
In accordance with Article '20 an allocation&#13;
commillee shall be established or&#13;
designated by the Parks ide StUdent&#13;
Government Association Inc. lor reviewing&#13;
requests for program support and budget&#13;
...Ilocations of thl! ..Ilocatable portion of the&#13;
segregated University fee and all action 01&#13;
sa,d committee snail be subiect 10 Ihe final&#13;
approval of the Parkside StUdent Govern&#13;
ment Associallon Inc&#13;
ARTICLE IV .21&#13;
Provisions lor a studenl heallh service as&#13;
defermined by the Parkslde StUdent&#13;
Gove1'nment Association Inc in consultation&#13;
WIth the chancellor of the Unlversitv&#13;
Wisconsin ParkSide shall be made to ensure&#13;
Ihat the studenl body shall nave 1M riOhI to&#13;
adequate health care&#13;
ARTICLE IV· 23&#13;
All auxlllary entef'prises Shall be subject&#13;
10 review by thl! Plirkside Student Go...ern&#13;
ment AsSOCiation Inc prior 10 submission 01&#13;
fUnding request to insure that the rights .. nd&#13;
interests of the student body are met.&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 24&#13;
All transportational proposals Including&#13;
parking shall likewise be subject to re ...lew&#13;
ARTICLE IV, U&#13;
AlIltiation with an ell:tramural&#13;
Of'"9ilnil.alion shall no' In itHH d~UI., a&#13;
student orvaniz .. hon from stucMnt 1Jl'Y"'"&#13;
ment recognition or Institutlon ..l&#13;
recognition&#13;
ARTICLE IV· 2.,&#13;
No student shall be etenied memben'\Ip to&#13;
any on campus orvanilalion for rHSOM of&#13;
race. cerce. religious creed. national origin,&#13;
sex, pasl crimlnat record, political bell .. or&#13;
poillical lKtion&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 21&#13;
Students shall have the right to Invite and&#13;
hMr speaker,; 01 their chotce ..nd aoppI'"OVal&#13;
shall not be withheld by nw PerbkM StucMnf&#13;
Gov~m«ot Assoclahon Inc or unlver'slty&#13;
ltuthOrifie'S tor purpose of cemonhfp&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 21&#13;
Studeftts shall be I~ 10 auemtMe. to&#13;
demonstrate, to communicate, and to&#13;
protest individuallV or through a student&#13;
organization 50 long as no federal. state or&#13;
municipal law is vlo(ared&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 29&#13;
Stu6ents shall be free to use c..mput&#13;
facilities lor meetings 01 studef'\1&#13;
organll.atlons, subject to uniform&#13;
regulations 10 time and ~ goveorning&#13;
the tiKlllty&#13;
ARTICLE IV • Jt&#13;
Siudents shalll\aVe the right to be present It.all commlttH- meef1l"091directly MfKtlrtg&#13;
the students&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 31&#13;
In no way shall the constitutional r!Vhtl of&#13;
any sl\.ldef'lt, il$ staled in the United Slales&#13;
Constitution. eve.- be denied by anyone In&#13;
"uthOrity at the Univenity 01 WisconsIn&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE IV . ]2&#13;
The student press shall be fr" of cen&#13;
sorsltip and ad ...ance approv ..1 01 Ccv;o, ..nd&#13;
Its edUors shall be tree to develop their own&#13;
editorial policies and new5 cOlIereve'&#13;
ARTICLE IV • n&#13;
The stUdenl press sIWIll be lKcorcled aU&#13;
lhos.e rights as staled In 1M: United SI..In&#13;
Constitulion&#13;
ARTICLE IV· J4&#13;
Students shall have !tie rlghl to dlstribute&#13;
or sell ,nformafiOn of a prinred nature th.t&#13;
does not co..~tli&lt;:t With Unl ...enlty WiSConsin&#13;
Parks. bindIng contracts&#13;
ARTICLE IV . 1$&#13;
Students shall have lhe right to call lor&#13;
elections to till a ...lKat;ed ~t in their&#13;
di ...ision of the Legislative branch of the&#13;
Parks&gt;de Student Government AssoclaUon&#13;
Inc by submitting a petition with 10 percent&#13;
of the stvdents' signatures in "'elr diviskwl to&#13;
the President of the Parttslde Siudent&#13;
Government AssoclattOfl Inc. and 10 the&#13;
presic:ll!nl Pro Tempore 01 "'-: Lt!9islall ...e&#13;
branch of the Parkside' Stvdl!!nt Govl!mmet\t&#13;
AS$OCiafion Inc Specl.. 1 elecflDft5 will then&#13;
be held WIthin 70 d..VS&#13;
ARTICLE IV • M&#13;
The students, upon presenting a pelltlon&#13;
with 10 percent of signatures of the entire&#13;
!&gt;tudenl body, Shall have the riOht to requKt&#13;
1'1 cOrtSt.tut,OllilI referendum to amend thi1.&#13;
(onSIJfUlion The petition Shall be prnented&#13;
10 both the Pre-sidenl and the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of lhe P.rkslde Stv&lt;ter!t Govern&#13;
ment ASSOC1011,onInc&#13;
ARTtCLE IV. J1&#13;
The Parks ide Student Government&#13;
Association Inc shall have the po&lt;wfl' 10&#13;
enforce I'Ind prOtecl It'Ie .. boVe artICles bY&#13;
passing mollonS. reso!ut'Gm or taklna leoal&#13;
ltClion to insure thaI no studef\I'S rlvf!ts ere&#13;
violaled&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
A",endme"t I Wher .... er "declared malor"&#13;
"Pl)@.ars ,n Article l. secflon II. ··or me!or&#13;
Area 01 inlere-st·, snail 10UQIW&#13;
Amendme"t II Article' I Sec"llon II Mnlenc.&#13;
'''hall r~ The di ...,sions of SCience, Social&#13;
S&lt;.'enc;:e.Humanistic Studies. EnginMring.&#13;
Scie"ce, Ml'lnagement Science, labor&#13;
Economics, I'Ind undeclared malor Shall&#13;
Mve one! (11 .s.nator Upon rUching 1400&#13;
..tudents the di ...ision shall .ckt one 01&#13;
"enI\tor An additional HNItor shell be&#13;
I'IdOed for each addJllonal1OO slUcHnts WithIn&#13;
lhal division&#13;
Constitutional hearings D-194 LLC&#13;
Wed. 10,00 to 3,00&#13;
and 7,00 ta 9,00&#13;
Thursday 10,00 to 3,00&#13;
and 7100 to 9,00&#13;
friday 8,00 to 11,00&#13;
Sunday 10,00 to 1100&#13;
Since its creation the U.W. -Parkside has been operating with either&#13;
no student constitution or with a very weak ODe. WeI the present&#13;
Parkside Student Government Associatim Incorporated, have written&#13;
a new constitution. Under this constitution Parkside students will not&#13;
only have their rights protected to the fulleSt extent of the ConotIlUtlm&#13;
nf Ihe United States but will gain as much control over their campus&#13;
life as is allowable by law.&#13;
The new election procedures will give us the best, most equitable&#13;
and responsive representation practicable. The recently passed&#13;
Merger Implementation bill gives us an active role in the immediate&#13;
governance of and policy developement for this cam~. With this&#13;
powE&gt;r vested in us by the new constitution and the 'merger im·&#13;
plemenlalion biB we can finally have wstrong voice in our social and&#13;
a("ademic concerns on this campus,&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association Inc. has worked&#13;
through the entire summer researching this constitution, consulting&#13;
with lawyers. and finally drafting it.&#13;
We would like you to read it and suggest changes or addition. We are&#13;
holding amendment hearings this week; please drop in and help \IS out&#13;
so that we may have your constitution ready for you to ratify 00&#13;
September 18th and 19th.&#13;
RespeclfuIly,&#13;
Demis MlluIiDoridl&#13;
PresIdent P.S.GA.IDc!.&#13;
Ndewhorized a nd paid for by the Parkside Sh,dent Government Association, Incorporated.&#13;
student constitution PREAMBLE&#13;
we, the students of the University Of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside do hereby invest the&#13;
powers of this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. All&#13;
previous Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association constitutions shall be null and&#13;
void upon ratification of this constitution on&#13;
September 18 and 19, 1974. This constitution&#13;
shall be the sole constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. and&#13;
!he student body and subject only to&#13;
amendments. 1&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Inc.&#13;
shall be responsible to the students of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside and shall&#13;
have the responsibility for the disposition of&#13;
!hose student fees which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus student activities&#13;
.&#13;
Elections for representatives from&#13;
academic divisions and the undeclared&#13;
division to the legislative branch of the&#13;
Prtrkside Student Government Inc., shall&#13;
take place during the third week of October.&#13;
Also at which time the five elected at large&#13;
seats to the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. allocations committee shall&#13;
also be open. Elections for the positions of&#13;
President and Vice-Presiden1 of the&#13;
executive branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and the at&#13;
large senatorial seats to the legislative&#13;
branch of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall take place during the&#13;
lhird week in April.&#13;
ARTICLE t&#13;
SECTION t. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
Pnrkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION It. The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
consist of 16 members, half of which will be&#13;
elected in October and the remaining half&#13;
elected in April and whose term shall be for&#13;
one year. The divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humanistic Studies, Engineering&#13;
Science, Management Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and undeclared major, shall&#13;
elect one Senator for every 1,000 students in&#13;
their division. Each division shall have at&#13;
least one Senator-. Only those University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside students who have&#13;
declared a major in a division the semester&#13;
before (excluding summer session) wi)I be&#13;
allowed to run for Senator in that division.&#13;
Those students. who have not declared a&#13;
major by the previous semester will be&#13;
allowed to run for Senator from the undeclared&#13;
division. A student who has&#13;
declared majors in more than one division,&#13;
in the previous semester, can only run and&#13;
be elected from one division. Only those&#13;
students who have declared ma jars in the&#13;
previous semester in fhe designated&#13;
divisions will be allowed to vote for the&#13;
respective Senators. Those students who&#13;
have not declared a major in the previous&#13;
semester will vote for Senator(s) running in&#13;
the undeclared major division. A student&#13;
who has declared majors in more than one&#13;
division in previous semesters can only vote&#13;
in one division. No student who has declared&#13;
&lt;1 major in the previous semester may run&#13;
for Senator in the undeclared major division,&#13;
Md no student who has declared a major in&#13;
the previous semester may vote for a&#13;
Senator in the undeclared major division.&#13;
The above procedure will constitute the rules&#13;
for the October elections.&#13;
In the event a new division is created by&#13;
the University, the said division shall be&#13;
required to be in existence for a period of one&#13;
year before a Senator may be sent from that&#13;
division.&#13;
The remaining half of the Senators shall be&#13;
elected at large with no requirement as to&#13;
area of major. There will be an equal&#13;
number of at large Senators as divisional&#13;
Senators. The above shall constitute the&#13;
rules for the April elections.&#13;
When vacancies happen in the&#13;
representation from any academic division&#13;
or at large seat, the President Pro Tempore&#13;
shall fill such vacancies w.ith the concurrence&#13;
of a simple majority of the entire&#13;
legislative branch of the Parkside Studer\!&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION 1111 A Senator of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Asso&lt;:iation Inc. must&#13;
be a Unlversity Wisconsin Parkside student,&#13;
Stiall carry no le~ than 6 ~redits, must not be&#13;
on academic probation, and must have&#13;
completed no less than 12 credits at the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
The Senate Of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. shall choose&#13;
their own officers and also a President Pro&#13;
Tempore. In the absence of the VicePresident&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc., who shall be the&#13;
President of the Senate but shall have no&#13;
vote unles, a vote by the Senate is tied, the&#13;
President Pro Tempore shall be the&#13;
President of the Senate. A simple majority of&#13;
the total Senate shall constitute a quorum to&#13;
do business.&#13;
SECTION IV. The Senate shall have the&#13;
sole power of impeachment and the power to&#13;
try all impeachments. When sitting for that&#13;
Purpose they shalt be Of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. is tried the&#13;
Chief Justice of the Judicial court shall&#13;
Preside, rtnd no person shall be convicted&#13;
without the concurrence of two-thirds of the&#13;
rntire Senate. Judgment in cases of impeachment&#13;
shalt not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or posltion that the,&#13;
PNrkside Government Association Inc. has&#13;
1urisdiction over, nppointment to, or election&#13;
for Impeachment will not begin until twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. have&#13;
voted to hold an impeachment hearing.&#13;
SECTION V. The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Assoc.iation Inc . shall&#13;
hNve the power to determine the rules of its&#13;
Proceedinqs, punish its members for&#13;
disorderly conduct and, with the concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of the entire Senate,&#13;
&lt;')(Pel a member. The Senate shal I keep a&#13;
iournr1t of its proceedings, and publish the&#13;
.-..nn1f\ month ly; the yeas and neys of the 111"mhers on any question shall, at the desire&#13;
Of one n1emher of the Senate, be entered on&#13;
It,,, journal The Srnate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association tnc. shall&#13;
meet at an established place and time no less&#13;
than once a week during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than twice a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate a meeting shall&#13;
be called by the Vice-President or in the case&#13;
of the Vice President's absence the&#13;
President Pro Tempore shall have the&#13;
responsibility to call a meeting.&#13;
SECTION VI. Bills may either originate in&#13;
the Senate or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
executive branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. Every bill,&#13;
order, resolution, or vote on which the&#13;
concurrence of the Senate is necessary shall&#13;
have passed the Senate by a simple&#13;
majority; shall, before it becomes law or&#13;
regulation, be presented to the President of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. If the President does not&#13;
approve, he shall send ii back to the Senate&#13;
for reconsideration with his reasons for&#13;
rejection. If, after such reconsideration, a&#13;
simple majority of the entire Senate shall&#13;
agree to pass the bill, it shall become law.&#13;
But in all such cases the votes of the Senate&#13;
shall be determined by a roll-call vote, and&#13;
the names of persons voting for and against&#13;
the bill shall be entered in the journal of the&#13;
Senate. If any bill shall not be returned by&#13;
the President within ten school days after it&#13;
has been presented to him, the same shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as if he had&#13;
signed it. All proceedings of the Senate of !he&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive for incorporation&#13;
purposes.&#13;
SECTION Vtt. The Senate shall have the&#13;
power to make motions, resolutions, or take&#13;
legal actions which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into execution the&#13;
foregoing powers, and all other powers&#13;
vested by this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION Vtll . The Senate Of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
have the power to amend this constitution by&#13;
a two-thirds vote of' lhe entire Senate.&#13;
SECTION IX. The Senate Of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
keep records and receipts on all expenditures&#13;
of all Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records public at every meeting.&#13;
SECTION X : A United Student&#13;
Organization Council shall be established&#13;
consisting of the heads of all student&#13;
organizations on the UW-Parkside campus .&#13;
Said council shall be a standing Senate&#13;
committee ARTICLE tt&#13;
SECTION t. All executive powers, within&#13;
this article, shall be vested in the President&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION It. The President shall be a&#13;
Parkside student, shall carry no less than 6&#13;
credits, must not be on academic probation&#13;
and must ave completed no less than 12&#13;
credits at the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The President shall hold the office during&#13;
the term of one year together with the Vice&#13;
President who will be chosen for the same&#13;
term. They shall be eligible for re election&#13;
nnd shall not serve more than 2 consecutive&#13;
terms.&#13;
Before the President and Vice President&#13;
elect enters on the execution of the office of&#13;
the Presidency or Vice Presidency, she or he&#13;
shall take the following oath :&#13;
" I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice President) of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. shall also be&#13;
nble to draw compensation while in office,&#13;
the amount of which shall be determined by&#13;
" majority vote of the entire Legislative&#13;
hranch of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. This compensation can be&#13;
suspended by the Senate while the President&#13;
is on trial for the purposes of impeachment.&#13;
If. however, after impeachment proceedings&#13;
the President is found to be innocent, all&#13;
benefits will be paid to him retroactive from&#13;
!Re date of suspension. Increases in compensation&#13;
will not be awarded to a President&#13;
while in office unless he is re-elected to&#13;
rH'\other term of office or to his immediate&#13;
successor, at which time such benefits would&#13;
neg In to be implemented. All Increases must&#13;
be approved by a majority of the entire&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from ~ffice&#13;
or inability to discharge power and duties of,&#13;
the Pres idency, the Vice President shalt&#13;
assume the office of President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
1 nc. and shall meet the constit~tional&#13;
requirements of the office of the Pres,dency&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION tit. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the majority of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Inc. Senate to nominate ~nd&#13;
oppoint the treasurer,, co~respond1ng&#13;
c:.ecretary, and all other off1c.ers of the&#13;
f'xecutive branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and all student&#13;
iudaes with the consent of two-thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate.&#13;
' The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports ~ro,:n _all standing or&#13;
c:.pecial committees and ind1v1duals to w_ho~&#13;
respansibilities have been delegated within&#13;
lhe Parkside Student Government Inc. and&#13;
&lt;;,hall be required to furnish wrttten ~epo_rts&#13;
on his executive activities to the Leg1slat1ve&#13;
hrnnch of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Ac:.sociation Inc. by a majority vote of the&#13;
s~~~:e.President shall have the power, by&#13;
,,nd with the advice and cons_em of the&#13;
l f'Qislative branch of the Par-ks1de_ Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. to sign c?n&#13;
trr1cts , provided that a majority of the entire&#13;
sr;~:ep~:~~;~; shall draw up the Parkside&#13;
Stud~nt Government Assoc!ation Inc. budget&#13;
.,no &lt;;.end it to the Legislative branch ?f !he&#13;
p,,rkc;ide Student Government Association&#13;
Inc for approval.&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and its by-laws&#13;
be faithfully executed&#13;
The President, Vice President and all&#13;
officers Of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall be removed from&#13;
office for dereliction of duty or failure to take&#13;
care that the conshtution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Assoc iation Inc. and its&#13;
by laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
ARTICLE Ill&#13;
SECTION ,. All judicial powers of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shat! be vested i n a judiciary cour1, an&#13;
appellate court, and in lower courts that the&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. may establish. The judges,&#13;
01 all courts, shall maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their terms of office.&#13;
SECTION II. Student members of the&#13;
judicial branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc shall be&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside students,&#13;
shall carry no less than 6 credits, must not be&#13;
on academic probation, must have completed&#13;
no less than 12 credits at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkside, and must •&#13;
be confirmed by the Chancellor Of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkside after a&#13;
two thirds approval by the entire Senate of&#13;
lhe Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. Administrative appointments&#13;
to the judicial branch of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Assoc iation&#13;
Inc. shall hold their Office subject to the&#13;
approval of the Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. Terms&#13;
of office shall be for 4 years .&#13;
SECTION t t t. The judiciary court and the&#13;
c1ppellate court shall convene no less than 10,&#13;
and no more than 14 school days after a case&#13;
has been forwarded to the cour1 from the&#13;
designated disciplinary head of the administrative&#13;
branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Park.side, or as requested by a&#13;
student. The judiciary court shall meet once&#13;
a month at an established place and time.&#13;
SECTION tV. The Judicial court shall&#13;
consist Of 4 judges and one Chief Justice who&#13;
shall have jurisdiction over all cases&#13;
referred to it by the designated disciplinary&#13;
head of the administrative branch of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside, or as&#13;
requested by a student, and shall extend its&#13;
power of judicial review to decide the con.&#13;
stilutionality of the actions of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. and&#13;
shall only pass its judgment on the question&#13;
being considered In the case of deciding the&#13;
constitutionality Of the actions of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc decisions shall be binding on all parties&#13;
Involved, and shall be forwarded to the&#13;
designated disciplinary head of the ad&#13;
ministrative branch of the University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside or to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
SECTION V . The appellate court shall&#13;
consist of 3 judges# one of which shall be a&#13;
University Wisconsin Park.side student and&#13;
the other two shat! be administrative ap.&#13;
pointments. Upon the appeal Of a negative&#13;
decision by a student defendant, the ap&#13;
pellate court shall have lhe power to review&#13;
the case in question and either uphold or&#13;
overturn the decision of the judicial court&#13;
The decision rendered by a majority vote of&#13;
lhe appellate court shall be binding upon all&#13;
parties involved&#13;
ARTICLE tV&#13;
ARTICLE tV - 1 .&#13;
An applicant shall not be denied admission&#13;
to the University Wisconsin Parkside for&#13;
reasons of race. e.olor. national origin,&#13;
religious. creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record. political beliefs or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 2&#13;
Financial aid shall not be denied for&#13;
reasons of race, color, national origin&#13;
religious creed, sex.. previous criminal&#13;
record, political belief or political action&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 3&#13;
Students shall have the right Of freedom Of&#13;
Pxpression. as defined in the constitution of&#13;
the United States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 4&#13;
Students are free to take exception to the&#13;
dc1ta presented or views offered in any&#13;
course of study and may advocate alter&#13;
native opinions to those presented within the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - S&#13;
All students shall have the righl to due&#13;
process of law as guaranteed by the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 6&#13;
Any student shall have the right to request&#13;
in those areas of student disciplinary matters&#13;
that are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the administration, a&#13;
hearing by the judiciary court of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc . and that request shall be binding on all&#13;
parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 7&#13;
students shall be evaluated only on their&#13;
knowledge of the subject and academic&#13;
performance and in tum are responsible to&#13;
maintain standards of academic per- formance established for each course they&#13;
have enrol led in.&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 8 Disclosure of students# political or perc:.onal&#13;
beliefs. in connection with course work&#13;
shill! not be made public without express&#13;
permission of the student&#13;
ARTICLE IV · ' student records on academic performance&#13;
r1nd disciplinary actions shall be separate&#13;
ARTICLE IV · 10&#13;
Information from counseling an~&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the&#13;
rxpress consent of the st':'dent involved,&#13;
rxcep1 under legal compulsion&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 11&#13;
A II records and information kept on file&#13;
.,_ hall he readily nccessible to the sfudent 1o&#13;
whom they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV · 12&#13;
Non ~dministrative costs shall and_ ~&#13;
,nclude c1II areas of student services within&#13;
thc!-e hudqets l} student programming 2)&#13;
&lt;;.fucient conference programs 3) student&#13;
qamr rooms 4) store 5) all other nonildministrative&#13;
positions. The nature and&#13;
scope Of these programs shalt be determineo&#13;
by the studMts of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 13&#13;
Organizational activities and i ntramurals&#13;
are completely noo admin;stTative var·able&#13;
costs and as such shall be determ;ned by tl&gt;e&#13;
students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 14&#13;
Parking. transportation budget policies&#13;
and procedures shatt be estabt,sl\ed by&#13;
students in conjunction with the faculty and&#13;
staff of the University W isconsin Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV . ts&#13;
In the administration of segregated ltt&#13;
budget the students of lhe University&#13;
'Wisconsin Park.stde shall evaluate services&#13;
and staff as to their needs and cost&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 1'&#13;
The sfU&lt;lents of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall determine the scope of&#13;
student activities and the cost for each.&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 17&#13;
Organization activities concerning&#13;
~hJdents shall be maintained by Studfflts.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 11&#13;
The responsibility and accountability fOf"&#13;
all of the preceding articles shall be main&#13;
fained by the students of he University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE IV · 19&#13;
The students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall worl&lt; closely w ilh the&#13;
Chancellor of tne University Wiscon,sin&#13;
Parkside or his staff in developing the&#13;
segregated fee budget.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 20&#13;
The Par'kside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. subject to the rnponsibilities&#13;
and powers. of the Board of&#13;
Regents, the President of the University&#13;
Wisconsin system_ the Chancellor of the&#13;
University Wisconsin Parkside and the&#13;
facutty of the University Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
shall be active participants in the immediate&#13;
qovernance of and policy development for&#13;
such institut ions. As such, the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Associahon tnc. shat!&#13;
have primary responsibility for he formulation&#13;
and review of poticies conc.eming&#13;
student life, services and interests, The&#13;
Parkside Student Goviernment Association&#13;
Inc., in consuttation w;th the Chanciellor of&#13;
the University Wisconsin Parkside and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the Board&#13;
of Regents shall have the responsibility for&#13;
the disposition of those student fees which&#13;
constitute substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities As such, the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association tnc. shall&#13;
be the sole representative student group of&#13;
the student-s of the Uni\lersity Wisconsin&#13;
Park.side allowed to participate in in&#13;
stitutional governance:&#13;
ARTICLE tV · 11&#13;
tn accordancewiih Article 20 an allocation&#13;
committee shall be established or&#13;
designated by lhe Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association tnc. for reviewing&#13;
requests for program support and budget&#13;
rtllocations of the allocatable port;on of the&#13;
,egregated Univers,ty fee and atl action Of&#13;
sa,d committee shall be subject to the finat&#13;
11pprovaI of the Par 5ide Student Govem&#13;
ment Association Inc&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 21&#13;
Provisions for a student health service as&#13;
determined by the Parksicte Stvdent&#13;
Government Assodation Inc In consultation&#13;
with the chancellor of tne Univtt"S,tV&#13;
Wisconsin Par"side !.hall be made to en.sore that the student body shall have the ro9ht to&#13;
.-&lt;!equate heatth care&#13;
AR TtCLE IV • 13&#13;
All auxiliary enterprises shall bP subiec:t&#13;
to review by the Parksidte Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc prior to submisston Of&#13;
fund,ng request to Insure that the rights &amp;nd&#13;
interests Of the student body are met.&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 14&#13;
All transp0rtational proP()Sals ,nctuding&#13;
parking shall likewise be subject to review&#13;
ARTICLE IV • lS&#13;
Affitiation with en extramvr•t&#13;
organization shall not ltwtf dl$Qu.loty a student or9ani1at on from student govern&#13;
m4'nt recognition or lnlt,tutlonel&#13;
rec:ogn,t,on&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 26&#13;
No student shall be cten,ed m mbersh,p to&#13;
3ny on campvs. orga.nfration tor rqso,s cit&#13;
race. coior, religious cr-..c:J. naltonal orig,n. ~x. past criminal record, POhtu:al bet,e+ or&#13;
political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 27&#13;
Students shat! he•" the right to Invite artd&#13;
hear !&gt;peak"rs of tt,eir chOice and epp,ovel&#13;
shall not be withheld by the Perks,oe Student&#13;
Governme-nt Association Inc. or i.mcvN1,1ly&#13;
authoritiH tor purpose ot censont,ip&#13;
ARTICLE lV • 11&#13;
Students shall be fret to auembl4', to&#13;
demonstrat4', 10 communicate, and to&#13;
protest ,rtdividually or thrOU9h • student&#13;
organization so ong as no fede'ral. ~tate or&#13;
mun1c,pa1 law ,s viOlate-d&#13;
•ARTICLE IV • 1'&#13;
students shall be trM to uu cam~ facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations. subiect to uniform&#13;
regulations to time and manntt 00Vlf'Tl11'1Q&#13;
the tacihty.&#13;
ARTICLE tV • lO&#13;
Students shall have th• r,ghl to be present&#13;
"'' all committee mMtinos direc-tty affec.l'-"Q&#13;
tht! students&#13;
ARTICLE IV • JI&#13;
In no w&amp;y shall the constitutional right$ 01&#13;
any student, as slated ,n the UnilO!d States&#13;
Constitution. ever be denied by anyone ,n&#13;
,.ulhority at tt&gt;e un;verslty of Wlscons•n&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ARTICLE IV - l1&#13;
Tt&gt;e student prHS shall be frtt of cen&#13;
sorship nd advance approval of copy, nd&#13;
,ts ed; ors shat! be free to develop heor °""'&#13;
ed;toriat pohc,es and l1t!WS covera9e.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • U&#13;
Tt&gt;e student p,ess Shall be accorded all&#13;
!hose rights as stated In the un,te&lt;I States&#13;
Constitulion&#13;
ARTICLE tV • 34&#13;
Students shall have lhe nght o dlslrll&gt;ute&#13;
or sett information of a printed nature that&#13;
doe'S not co.,flict with Ur1ivers1ty Wis«:oos,n&#13;
Parl&lt;s;&lt;fe bonding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE IV · lS&#13;
Stuctents shall ha"e lhe righl 10 call tor etec-t.ons to fill a v.cated .,,._, 1n their&#13;
div,slon of the Legislative branch of he&#13;
Parkside Stude-nt Gove-rnment Association&#13;
Inc bV ,wbmitting a petition w,th 10 percent&#13;
of the students• sionatur•s 1n their d1vis on o&#13;
the Pres,ctent of the Parl&lt;s d,r Student&#13;
Go\l~ment Associat,or, Inc. and o tn•&#13;
Pres,&lt;fent Pro Ttmp0rie of Leglslat,v&#13;
branch of he Parl&lt;s,dt! Stu~! Government&#13;
Associalion tnc Speclat t,lect v,111 then&#13;
be held w th,n ?O days&#13;
ARTICLE IV· U&#13;
The stuttent'$~ up,on prn,,nflng a l)t"t1tion&#13;
w,t 10 percent of signatures of the ent,re&#13;
student bocly, shall have the r,ght to requHt&#13;
a tOf'lstitutiOl'\al rf'fet"~um tO amend his&#13;
cons, tu11on The pet,tion halt be preen1e&lt;1&#13;
10 bOth 1he Pr~ dent and he Pr.Sid nt Pro&#13;
T('mPOre o1 the Parks;de, Stud I Govem&#13;
menf Ass.oc,at,on Inc&#13;
ARTICLE IV • l7&#13;
Tr,e Parks,dt Stucttn1 Govttnment&#13;
A~sociat,on Inc shall have the i:,owe,- to&#13;
enforce "nd protrct ti.. bCWe articles by&#13;
passing mct,on~. re~ut,on o, tak ng ,_,&#13;
,11chon to nsurt that no studf'nt·s rlgtl" are&#13;
vio1ltt..cf&#13;
ARTtCLEV&#13;
Am~ndment t WhtH"e-v~r " de&lt;:I rt-d ~ior"&#13;
.. ~11rs 1n Artacte t, Sttt,ori II. .. °" rn11or&#13;
ltrea of ntet@'st·• Shall foUo-w&#13;
Amtndment fl , Arhcte I Sect,on II "'" net&#13;
1 &lt;hllll rt•ad Th&amp;div,s,ons of Sc,M«:e, Social&#13;
Sc,ence. HumAn,stic Stud1H, nginttring,&#13;
Science. M"nagemtnt Sch,nce, L•bor&#13;
Economics. "nd unOecl red major hall&#13;
Mvt, one ( t I Senator Upon rNChing l«&gt;O&#13;
&lt;tvaents the &lt;11v,slon hatl add on (11&#13;
&lt;enAtor An adct,t,onat _,or hall be&#13;
~N:f tor P&amp;C.h MJ&lt;21t,on 1100 tude,,t w,tf'l!,n&#13;
that div,s,on&#13;
Constltutlonal hearings D-194 LLC&#13;
Wed. 1 0:00 to 3:00&#13;
and 7:00 to 9:00&#13;
Thursday 10:00 to 3:00&#13;
and 7:00 to 9:00&#13;
Friday 8:00 to 11:00&#13;
Sunday 10:00 to 1:00&#13;
Since its creation the U.W. -Parkside has been operating with either&#13;
no student constitution or with a very weak one. We, the present&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association Incorporated, have written&#13;
a new constitution. Under this constitution Parkside students will not&#13;
only have their rights protected to the fullest extent of the Constitution&#13;
of the United States but will gain as much control over their campus&#13;
life as is allowable by law.&#13;
The new election procedures will give us the best, most equitable&#13;
and responsive representation practicable. The recently passed&#13;
Merger Implementation bill gives us an active role in the immediate&#13;
governance of and policy developement for this campus. With this&#13;
power \'ested in us by the new constitution and the "merger implementation&#13;
bill we can finally have cPstrong voice in our social and&#13;
academic concerns on this campus.&#13;
Th&lt;' Parkside Student Government Association Inc. has worked&#13;
through the entire summer researching this constitution, consulting&#13;
with lawyers. and finally drafting it.&#13;
\\'&lt;' would like you to read it and suggest changes or addition. We are&#13;
holding amendment hearings this week; please drop in and help us out&#13;
!"O that we may have your constitution ready for you to ratify on&#13;
S&lt;-ptember 18th and 19th.&#13;
Respectfully'&#13;
DeMis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.G.A. Inc. &#13;
Wednesday, sept. 4, 1974THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
PSGA conducts constitution forum&#13;
by Marion Morawicz&#13;
and Philip L.Livingston&#13;
01the RANGER stall&#13;
Editor's note: The following is a partial transcript of an interview&#13;
with the Parkside Student Government Association Inc. concerning&#13;
their proposed constitution. On September 18 and 19 a special election&#13;
will be held to ratify the constitution. Space does not permit including&#13;
the entire interview. but pertinent portions are reprinted here.&#13;
R~NGER: Why should a declared major be an important&#13;
requirement to run for Senator of PSGA Inc.?&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President: The way I thought a lot of the other&#13;
Senators saw it was, that at large you really don't know who your&#13;
representative is. The problem of the last Senate, for example, and all&#13;
the previous Senates, was you had 16 people that were elected by&#13;
maybe 300 people and the 3600 or whatever, didn't know who-those&#13;
people were. More than likely I by being a major in a division, he will&#13;
know quite a few people within his area. So I can see representation&#13;
would be a little bit closer.&#13;
What happens when you have two or more very qualified people and&#13;
thev would like to be part of the PSGA Inc., and they're running under&#13;
the same division?&#13;
Keith Chambers. Senator: If they run in the fall election, only one of&#13;
them will be able to be seated, unless the division has more than 1000&#13;
students per Senator. And, if another qualified person (rom that&#13;
division wants torun, then he should wait until the at large seat comes&#13;
up. which would be the following Aoril.&#13;
What if you're only having one person running from each division?&#13;
Isn't that person automatically assured of being elected in the October&#13;
l'lf'c'f1on? ' Milutinovich: YOU COUIO nave a write-in vote and It would probably&#13;
he the same procedure as. other last write-ins, but the only stipulation&#13;
would be that the write-in would have to be a person from that division.&#13;
Is that rair? Here you had two qualified people; one really wanted to&#13;
Ltd in hut 1If' couldn't because somebody beat him.&#13;
Mtlutinovich: That would be up to the students to decide. I don't&#13;
think the PSG A could make a resolution or a motion stating that these&#13;
are the qualifications for a candidate that's really interested. It's up to&#13;
the candidate to present himself to the students.&#13;
Who is going to administrate. regulate. and supervise this very&#13;
('01111)1ica ted election?&#13;
Milutinovich: We've been thinking about forming the fall elections&#13;
committee.&#13;
For what.reasons would a Senator or a President be impeached?&#13;
Milutinovich: .We left it vague for the legislative branch to decide&#13;
what dereliction 01 duty would be at that time, and failure to uphold&#13;
the constitution.&#13;
Why does a simple majority of the Senate constitute a quorum? Why&#13;
r-an uim- Senators conduct PSGA Inc. meetings instead of two-thirds?&#13;
Mike Hahner, Senator: I'll tell you why, because we've always had a&#13;
problem getting members to show up, and this is o~e way t~ keep&#13;
people from being obstructionist in nature by not showmg up. I~~Just&#13;
one way of making sure there is a much better method of obtaining a&#13;
quorum and carrying on business faithfully.&#13;
Rut is this fair to the student body? Under United Council interpretattou&#13;
of Merger Law. PSGA Inc. will be primarily responsible&#13;
for approximately $300.000 in segregated fees.&#13;
Milutinovich: Ithink it is.&#13;
Chambers: 1t (a small quorum) encourages senators to show up" If&#13;
they say they're not showing up, they'll never get a quorum ..But If a&#13;
quorum is easy to obtain. then that person who stays home IS under&#13;
risk of impeachment. . . .&#13;
,,'an tht&gt; Sf'nate determine any type of rules they see ht m Im~&#13;
lWachmrnt proceedings? : . .&#13;
\1i1utinovich: For the presidential impeach~ent, the chIef JustIce of&#13;
the judicial branch will preside, An of~ense agalOs~ the ,PSGA would be&#13;
left tip to the legislative branch to decIde what a CrIme IS,&#13;
What tVpll of punishmt&gt;nt are you referring to in Art. 2. Sect: 5 where&#13;
lIu. S('n~tf' has thf' right to punish its members for disorderly&#13;
hf'hadOl'? .&#13;
Milutinodch: That would entail the legisl~tive branch o~ce agam to&#13;
df'('idc if anv senator is disrupting meet,lOgs. If meetmgs c~~o~&#13;
('ontinuf'. then it's up to the senate to decIde whether to expe a&#13;
'member for that one meeting.&#13;
Who will be the chief justice of the Judiciary presiding over impeachments?&#13;
Milutinovich: He will be an appointment by the executive branch&#13;
confirmed by two-thirds of the entire senate.&#13;
,Hahner: Also, the chancellor will have some say on that.&#13;
What are the requirements for the other officers? The Constitution&#13;
lists no requirements for treasurer. corresponding secretary. or other&#13;
crrtcers.&#13;
Milutinovich: It'll be up to the president of PSGA Inc. to lind the&#13;
people he would like or she would like within the execntivp hranch.&#13;
Non-students could be in those positions?&#13;
Chambers: Right, but it would be pretty hard to get approval by a&#13;
majority of the entire senate if the person wasn'ta student.&#13;
What in the Constitution guarantees that the president pro tempore&#13;
of the Senate is an elected senator?&#13;
Milutinovich: Nothing.&#13;
Rut does he have to De a senator?&#13;
l\1i1utinovich: Correct.&#13;
Hahner: The president pro tempore of the senate is going to be a&#13;
senator because he'll be elected by his colleagues in the senate.&#13;
What means of enforcement can PSGA Inc. have in guaranteelng&#13;
students rights?&#13;
Milutinovich: No enforcement whatsoever except for the simple fact&#13;
that we are notifying the students that we leel these are the rights&#13;
which should be granted to them, and that if these rights are denied.&#13;
that they have the possibility 01 legal action.&#13;
00 :"'0\1 have any specific way of monitoring student rights&#13;
violations?&#13;
wtuuunovtch: No. except for a student filing a complaint.&#13;
',11 Arttcte 15 of student rights. how can you expect a civil employee&#13;
paid from segregated fees 10 be under the scrutiny of PSGA Inc. at the&#13;
same time they are under the scrutiny of the administration for adi\1iIutino\'ich:&#13;
segregated fee money that is being paid to those&#13;
people are student monies and the PSGA Inc. representatives of the&#13;
student body have a right to monitor those jobs and make sure those&#13;
oeoole are doing their jobs.&#13;
00 you r-eally think that the administration is going to let you control&#13;
somebodv's salary?&#13;
vmuunovtca. Absolutely no. It is up to state law&#13;
1., it true that the whole issue of who controls segregated fees hinges&#13;
on the dE"finitionof "student" in the Wisconsin merger implementation&#13;
law?&#13;
\li1l1tino\'ich: When we were up in Madison lobbying, the senators&#13;
we talked to implied thai "students" would connotate student&#13;
government.&#13;
Park~idf' Aeti\'i~ies Board informall! proposed that 8 segregated fee&#13;
allocations c0r:"m~ttee be totally partisan. with members from every&#13;
student organteauoe represented on this committee.&#13;
Milutinevich: To me, it would bea bit redundant to set up a cornmittee&#13;
like that when you already have the PSGA in existence. To have&#13;
the Vets Club and all the other organizations control the money is not&#13;
really representative of students because all these organizations are&#13;
out for their own interests.&#13;
1n implementing p?-licies concerning student life does PSGA Inc.&#13;
propose students voting on programmed entertainment?&#13;
:\li1ulino\'ich: Exactly. Only through student government can you do&#13;
that. P.A,B. r Parkside Activities Board) is not responsible to the&#13;
students. They are responsible to the president and the people in&#13;
PAS.&#13;
Is PSr.A Inc. fully confident that its supporters in the last election&#13;
will ratify the constitution?&#13;
:\1i1utinO\'ich:Ithink we are going to have a higher vote turnout than&#13;
this university has ever seen. Because, whether you are for it or&#13;
against it. it is important to go out and vote. Ibelieve with the student&#13;
rights and everything else. it's one hell of a constitution.&#13;
What if studt'flts do ratify the coostitutlon and certain sections of it&#13;
:Wf' not rfo('o~nizl"dby thE'Board of Regents. such as United CouncU's&#13;
I)rnposro Rf"~f'nt policy statement 00 student responsibUities?&#13;
'li1utinodch: Everything that is in that constitution and is ratified&#13;
hy thp students we will go into court (and defend),&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
PSGA conducts constitution forum&#13;
by Marion Morawicz&#13;
and Philip L. Livingston&#13;
of the RANGER staff&#13;
Editor's note: The following is a partial transcript of an interview&#13;
wit~ the Parkside S~ud~nt Government Association Inc. concerning&#13;
their proposed constitution. On September 18 and 19 a special election&#13;
will be _hel_d to r~tify the con~titution. Space does not permit including&#13;
the entire mterv1ew, but pertinent portions are reprinted here.&#13;
R~NGER: Why should a declared major be an important&#13;
reqmrement to run for Senator of PSGA Inc.?&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President: The way I thought a lot of the other&#13;
Senators saw it was, that at large you really don't know who your&#13;
representative is. The problem of the last Senate, for example, and all&#13;
the previous Senates, was you had 16 people that were elected by&#13;
maybe 300 people and the 3600 or whatever, didn't know who- those&#13;
people were. More than likely, by being a major in a division, he will&#13;
know quite a few people within his area. So I can see representation&#13;
would be a little bit closer.&#13;
What happens when you have two or more very qualified people and&#13;
they would like to be part of the PSGA Inc., and they're running under&#13;
thf' same division?&#13;
Keith Chambers. Senator: If they run in the fall election, only one of&#13;
them will be able to be seated, unless the division has more than 1000&#13;
students per Senator. And, if another qualified person from that&#13;
division wants to run, then he should wait until the at large seat comes&#13;
up. which would b~ the following Aoril.&#13;
What if you're only having one person running from each division?&#13;
lsn 't that person automatically assured of being elected in the October&#13;
f'lf'rtion? Milutinovich: rou coUIO nave a wr1te-m vote and 1t would probably&#13;
he the same procedure as.other last write-ins, but the only stipulation&#13;
would be that the write-in would have to be a person from that division .&#13;
Is that fair? Here you had two qualified people; one really wanted to&#13;
gt't in hut Ill' couldn't because somebody beat him.&#13;
Milutinovich: That would be up to the students to decide. I don't&#13;
think the PSGA could make a resolution or a motion stating that these&#13;
are the qualifications for a candidate that's really interested. It's up to&#13;
the candidate to present himself to the students.&#13;
Who is going to administrate. regulate. and supervise this very&#13;
rnmplicated election?&#13;
Milutinovich: We've been thinking about forming the fall elections&#13;
committee.&#13;
For what.reasons would a Senator or a President be impeached?&#13;
Milutinovich: .we left it vague for the legislative branch to decide&#13;
what dereliction of duty would be at that time, and failure to uphold&#13;
the constitution .&#13;
Why does a simple majority of the Senate constitute a quorum? Why&#13;
1·an nilw Senators conduct PSGA Inc. meetings instead of two-thirds?&#13;
Mike Hahner. Senator: I'll tell you why, becalli&gt;e we've always had a&#13;
problem getting members to show up, and this is or~e way t~ k~p&#13;
people from being obstructionist in nature by not showing up. I! ~ Just&#13;
one way of making sure there is a much better method of obtammg a&#13;
quorum and carrying on business faithfully.&#13;
Rut is this fair to the student body? Under United Council intl'rpretation&#13;
of Merger Law. PSGA Inc. will be primarily responsible&#13;
for aJlproximately $300,000 in segregated fees.&#13;
Milutinovich: I think it is.&#13;
Chambers: It (a small quorum) encourages senators to show u~. If&#13;
they say they're not showing up, they'll never get a quorum. _But if a&#13;
quoruin is easy to obtain, then that person who stays home 1s under&#13;
risk of impeachment. . . . Can the Senate determine any type of rules they see fit m 1m1wachnwnt&#13;
proceedings? : . . :\1ilutinovich: For the presidential impeachID:ent, the chief Justice of&#13;
the judicial branch will preside. An offense agams~ the _PSGA would be&#13;
left up to the legislative branch to decide what a crime 1s.&#13;
What tvp(\ of punishment are you referring to in Art. 2. Sect: 5 where&#13;
tlw Sen;tP has the right to punish its members for disorderly&#13;
lwha\'ior? · -~-, t· .· I • That would entail the legislative branch once agam to ,., 1 II 1110\ IC I. f t· Ot&#13;
cl&lt;'cide if anv senator is disrupting meetings. I mee mgs cann&#13;
continue. th~n it's up to the senate to decide whether to expel that&#13;
· member for that one meet~. Who will be the chief justice of the Judiciary presiding over impeachments?&#13;
&#13;
M~lutinovich: He will be an appointment by the executive branch&#13;
confirmed by two-thirds of the entire senate.&#13;
, Hahner: Also, the chancellor will have some say on that.&#13;
What are the requirements for the other officers? The Constitution&#13;
lists no requirements for treasurer, corresponding secretary, or other&#13;
officl'rs.&#13;
Milntinovich : It'll be up to the president of PSGA Inc. to find the&#13;
people he would like or she would like within the execntivP hranch.&#13;
Non-students could be in those positions?&#13;
C~a~bers: Rig~t, but it would be pretty hard to get approval by a&#13;
maJonty of the entire senate if the person wasn't a student.&#13;
What in the Constitution guarantees that the president pro tempore&#13;
of the Senate is an elected senator?&#13;
1ilutinovich: Nothing. But does he have to be a Senator?&#13;
Milutinovich: Correct.&#13;
Hahner: The president pro tempore of the senate is going to be a&#13;
senator because he'll be elected by his colleagues in the senate.&#13;
What means of enforcement can PSGA Inc. have in guaranteeing&#13;
students rights?&#13;
Milutinovich: No enforcement whatsoever except for the simple fact&#13;
that we are notifying the students that we feel these are the rights&#13;
which should be granted to them, and that if these rights are denied,&#13;
that they have the possibility of legal action. J)o you haw any pecific way of monitoring tudent righ&#13;
, iolations?&#13;
'1ilutinovich: o. except for a student filing a complaint.&#13;
~n ,\rticle 15 of student rights, how can you e pect a civil employee&#13;
paid from segregated fees to be under the crutiny of P A Inc. at the&#13;
.,aml' time they are under the scrutiny of the administration for ad-&#13;
:\lilutino\'ich: Segreg~ted fee money that is being pa id to those&#13;
people are student monies and the PSGA Inc. repre entati es of the&#13;
student body ha,·e a right to monitor tho e jobs and make sure tho e&#13;
oeople are doing their jobs.&#13;
Do you really think that the administration i going to let ·ou control&#13;
soml'bod~··., salar~?&#13;
\lilutino,ich: Ab olutely no. It is up to tate Jaw.&#13;
Jc; it true that the whole is ue of who control egregated (e hing&#13;
on th1&gt; definition of "student" in the Wi con in merger implementation&#13;
law?&#13;
'\1ilutino\'ich: When we were up in :J:ad1 on lobbying. the senators&#13;
we talked to implied that " students' ' would connotate student&#13;
government .&#13;
Park~idl' .\cth·i~ies Board informall: propo ed that a segregated fee&#13;
allocat1011s co~,m~ttee be totall)' partisan. with member from e\·er)&#13;
c;tudent organization represented on this committee.&#13;
\1ilutino\'ich: To me. it would be ·a bit redundant to set up a committee&#13;
like that when you already have the PSGA in existence. To have&#13;
the Vets Club and all the other organizations control the money is not&#13;
really representative of students because all these organizations are&#13;
out for their own interests.&#13;
ln implementing p~licies concerning student life does PSGA Inc.&#13;
propos1&gt; students votmg on programmed entertainment?&#13;
\lilutinovich: Exactly. Only through student government can you do&#13;
that. P .A.B. &lt;Parkside Activities Board) is not responsible to the&#13;
students. They are responsible to the president and the people in&#13;
P.A.B. ts PSGA Inc. fully confident that its supporters in the la t election&#13;
will ratify the constitution?&#13;
:\1ilutino\'ich: I think we are going to have a higher vote turnout than&#13;
this university has e\'er seen. Because. whether you are for it or&#13;
against it. it is important to go out and vote. I believe with the student&#13;
rights and everything else. it's one hell of a constitution.&#13;
Whal if studenl._ do ratify the constitution and certain sections of it&#13;
,1rf' not rl'cognized by the Board of Regents. such as United Council's&#13;
11roposf'd Regent policy statement on student responsibilities?&#13;
\1i111ti110\'ich: Everything that is in that constitution and is ratified&#13;
h~· the students we will go into court (and defend). &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RA GER wed .... v. sept. 4. 1974&#13;
~ M.&#13;
01 Ibe IlA ER&#13;
PAR&#13;
_u p. '.p&#13;
..-&#13;
would be the culmination of his&#13;
art and his literary a~-&#13;
co';'plishments the proPessedhetIC&#13;
footnote of such a prof&#13;
ambition. In many ways,&#13;
lishima had to kill himself; had&#13;
~o make an orfering. H~ was&#13;
bound to tbe spiritual mind of&#13;
medieval Japan, and he was the&#13;
advocate of eros and ecstasy&#13;
possible only in ideal selfsacrifice.&#13;
yultio Mishima's prose is a&#13;
~al romance. an epic love&#13;
afrair with death by: It9 most&#13;
faIthful poetizer. The finest of the&#13;
erct!e experienced through&#13;
abandonment. The expresslOn~ of&#13;
thiS consuming death wish&#13;
~ace in ultimate realization, in&#13;
his final and ju t released w?rk,&#13;
Thf' OKay or the Angel. Il IS a&#13;
tribute to the love he first explored&#13;
to such earlier works as&#13;
the onff'ssions of the Mask.&#13;
lishima IS the man masked,&#13;
&lt;Ill gursed by moods; veiled by&#13;
rehglous fevers for perfection.&#13;
He arrived vital, conscious. for a&#13;
moment of true being the body&#13;
calls death Death, for Mishima,&#13;
was never resigned to, it was&#13;
pursued&#13;
lle elbt&#13;
~Wttt ~boppt&#13;
OPEN&#13;
on. thru Fri.&#13;
10 A.M ••&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
Located on Concourse&#13;
between Library&#13;
earning center &amp;&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
PART TIME JOBS&#13;
U ITED PA cn SERVICE IS TAKING&#13;
APPLICATIO S FOR PRESENT &amp;&#13;
FUTU E OPENINGS AT OUR&#13;
BU I 101 LOCATION&#13;
Y FlIlAY I 3-5 s ,. day,&#13;
.-il,.1 '''.1tricks&#13;
$: 5:15 U. - 1 U. Ir I u. -11:31 U.&#13;
Ir I , ... - 1:31 , .•.&#13;
WAGESz '4.11 p.r hour to Itart&#13;
'5.11 p.r hour within 5 monthl&#13;
"" AT: U ITED PARCEL SERVICE&#13;
u.., West RurlmRton. Wis.&#13;
&lt;;,.pc 51h 10: a.m.--4:30 p.m.&#13;
" lor \lr Charles Friends&#13;
.. Qt \1 oPPOfITI:. 'lTV E!\lI'I.fIYF.R&#13;
Fun &amp;gal11&#13;
Dances&#13;
P.A.B.; along with other campus organizations, spoR!lll&#13;
Saturday nights throughout the semester.&#13;
P.A.B. will hav~ a variety of dances throughout the&#13;
with special Thanksgiving and Christmas dances. Live m&#13;
have guaranteed active crowds in the past, and dances&#13;
among Parkside's most well·attended events.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
of the RANGER staff&#13;
The park~i'de Activities Board has announced' its sc&#13;
tertainment Cor this fall semester.&#13;
The to committees that make up the P.A.B.: COff.. "",&#13;
n games house. outing, performmg arts &amp; lectures&#13;
I 10, t pub'licity and video, work together to produce' iIlI concer " t 1 v . ts throughoutthe school year a a ow cost to stUdenta&#13;
eV;"A B activities are funded through segregated fees.n.-&#13;
. . 'mulation of $88 taken from each student's lui..... the accu . bo t $ ...... portion of seg.re,gated fees IS a u 6.&#13;
The admisSIon mQney from P.A.B. events helps su~&#13;
. iti that do not charge admiSSion or do not generate nvines d 'd as the Whiteskellar coffeehouse an VI eo, pUbliCity iii&#13;
committees. . .&#13;
At the end of the year, all left-ove,r money in P,A.B'&#13;
rs "The End," an annual year send celebratiOll' I&#13;
~~~g and usually a national.name act among severat-..&#13;
Films&#13;
Films are shown .in. the Communication Arts ~&#13;
Student Activities BUIld mg. Beer and popcorn are sold i11111e&#13;
building during movies: .&#13;
This semester's films include: Paper Moon, Sept. &amp;and,.&#13;
Jackal,Sept.!t; M:A.S.H.,Sept. 20 and 22; The First Ne.y&#13;
Film Festival, sept. 26, 'n and 29; Su~rman, Oct. 4 and!; ..&#13;
&amp; Billy the Kid,Oct. IIand !3; The ThIef Who Came to Dboo,&#13;
The Godfather, Oct. 23 and 24; The Other, Oct. 31; Co&#13;
Merkin Ever Forget ~ercy Humpe and Find True H.&#13;
and 3; Rilly Jack, Nov 6; Empe~or of the North, NOV.lh~&#13;
Day in the Life of Ivan Desonovlch, Nov. 20; Twelve ~&#13;
and24; Clockwork Orange, Dec. 6andS; andScareero.,Dk&#13;
Film schedules are available at the Information Kiea&#13;
posted.&#13;
Tim Weisberg Concert&#13;
On Saturday, sept. 21 at 8 p.m. in the Phy, Ed. Buildio&amp;&#13;
Flutist. Tim Weisberg will appear in concert. Weisber1i1&#13;
Recording artist and has three albums on that label. He&#13;
1970·Monterey Pop Festival with critical raves, and_&#13;
stunned audiences with high energy concerts na&#13;
Weisberg maintains a large, enthusiastic following..&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison, and this is his first concert illIII&#13;
Kenosha area. Tickets are $2.50 for Parkside studentsin&#13;
$3.50 at the door. They are available at the Information .&#13;
Admission tickets are available at Beautiful Day, JJ&#13;
Records in Racine, and One Sweet Dream in Kenosha.&#13;
On Sept. 28 at 9 p.m., the Uncle Vinty Show will&#13;
unusual crazy antics to a beer-drinking crowd, in the&#13;
tivities Building. Last semester Uncle Vinty succeededi&#13;
everyone with his 5-piece back-up group and thOl1S8D II&#13;
worth of sound equipment.&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
Free weekly folk concerts are held every Wednesday&#13;
until 3 p.m. in the Whiteskellar, Room D201 in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
WhiteskeJlar also sponsors the free Folk Festival, Od.&#13;
Student Activities Building from! p.m. to 6 p.m, Whit&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin as the only regular coffeehousef&#13;
folk talent every week with no admission charge.&#13;
'Performing Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
The Communication Arts Theatre will be the placer«&#13;
Performing Arts ~nd Lectures committee's programs.&#13;
On Wednesday, Sept. 25 at 8 p.m. in the Theatre, JerT'f&#13;
give his presentation on plants. His book, Plants Are&#13;
among others, has attracted national attention and&#13;
pearances on the Today Show and others has astoonded&#13;
public. . "&#13;
On th~ evening· of Oct. !8, the Student Activities&#13;
become the P.A.B. Jazz Nightclub. Siggy Millonzi, jazz .&#13;
band Will perform. Last year this nightclub drew a large,&#13;
Jazz following. Mixed drinks will be served.&#13;
On Friday,.Oct. 25, the UW-M Dance Company wiD&#13;
Theatre. The Company is composed of (aculty and studll'o&#13;
gamed a very good reputation in the statR&#13;
Humanities News Release: Chicago _ Sept. 3 and. .&#13;
weeks. the Women's Film Festival will be held. Foreigll&#13;
films will be shown. The Tribune has ·put up an esti&#13;
this cultural event. Included are 25 feature length filJDS,&#13;
two documentaries: Attic by Firestone, and Promised&#13;
tage. Workshops will be conducted throughout the&#13;
professional filmmakers. Information on times andJill&#13;
obtained through the·Tribune.&#13;
"WELCOME BACK STUDENTS"&#13;
Compliments of the ,,'&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOU&#13;
RANCH&#13;
RESTAURANTS&#13;
10lTH,I SOlill SHE" II.&#13;
I HE p R SIDE RA GER eel sday, Sept. 4' 1974&#13;
e eibt&#13;
t &amp;boppt&#13;
OPEN&#13;
on. thru Fri.&#13;
10 A. •&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
FtM.Al.E&#13;
U ITEO PARCEL SERVICE IS TAKING&#13;
PPLICATIO S FOR PRESENT &amp;&#13;
FUTURE OPENINGS AT OUR&#13;
BURLI GTON LOCATION&#13;
FRIDAY, 3-5 llo rs per day,&#13;
1/ I i l tr cks&#13;
AY&#13;
S: 5: 5 a.a. - 9 a.a. tr I a.a. - 11:30 a.a.&#13;
er I J . - 9: J.a.&#13;
AGES: $4.11 per hour to start&#13;
5.11 per hour within 5 months&#13;
pp ll:&#13;
Fun &amp;gan,&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
of the RANGER staff&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board has announced its SC&#13;
t . ment for this fall semester.&#13;
ter am k th PA B The 10 committees that ma e up . e . . . : corree~ . mes house, outing, performmg arts &amp; lectures&#13;
ftlm, gat ublicity and video, work together to produce v· concer , · p 1 t 1 t t events throughout the schoo year a a ow cos o stlldents.&#13;
P.A.B. activities are funded through segregated r~· Tbese&#13;
the accumulation of $88 ta~en from each students tuition_&#13;
portion of segregated fees is about $6.&#13;
The admission money from ~-~-B. events helps sup~&#13;
tivities that do not charge adm1ss1on or d~ not generate&#13;
as the Whiteskellar coffeehouse and video, Pllblicity&#13;
committees. · At the end of the year, all left-ove; money in P.A B•,&#13;
rs "The End " an annual year s end celebrau ... sponso ' . t "" dancing and usually a national name ac among several lllllSlr&#13;
Films&#13;
Films are shown in. the Communication Arts Th~tre&#13;
tudent Activities Building. Beer and popcorn are sold intbt&#13;
building during movies.&#13;
This semester's films include: Paper M~n, Se~t. 6anda lit&#13;
.Jackal, Sept. 11; M.A.S.H., Sept. 20 and 22, The First Ne• \"11t&#13;
Film Fe tival, Sept. 26, '1:l and 29; Su~rman, Oct. 4 ands; Pi1&#13;
&amp; Billy the Kid, Oct. 11 and 13; The Thief Who Came too-,&#13;
The Godfather, Oct. 23 and 24; The Other, Oct. 31; Can H&#13;
:\1erkin Ever Forget ~ercy Humpe and Find True Happi.eai,&#13;
and 3; Billy .Jack, Nov 6; Empe~or of the North, Nov. ISIJld&#13;
Day in the Life of Ivan Desonov1ch, Nov. 20; Twelve l\ain&#13;
and 24; Clockwork Orange, ~ec. 6 and 8; and Scare~row,Det&#13;
Film schedules are available at the Information Kioa&#13;
posted. Tim Weisberg Concert&#13;
On Saturday, Sept. 21 at 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Building,&#13;
Flutist, Tim Weisberg will appear in concert. Weisberg b&#13;
Recording artist and has three albums on that label. He&#13;
1970 Monteny Pop Festival with critical raves, and Sllll'f&#13;
tunned audiences with high energy concerts nati&#13;
Weisberg maintains a large, enthusiastic following in&#13;
1ilwaukee and Madison, and this is his first concert in lht&#13;
Kenosha area. Tickets are $2.50 for Parkside students ina&#13;
$3.50at the door. They are available at the InformationKioa.&#13;
Admission tickets are available at Beautiful Day, JJ&#13;
Records in Racine, and One Sweet Dream in Kenosha.&#13;
On ept. 28 at 9 p.m., the Uncle Vinty Show will&#13;
unusual crazy antics to a beer-drinking crowd, in the&#13;
tivities Building. Last semester Uncle Vinty succeeded ID&#13;
everyone with his 5-piece back-up group and thousaoos i&#13;
worth of sound equipment.&#13;
Whiteskellar&#13;
Free weekly folk concerts are held every Wednesday fi-.&#13;
until 3 p.m. in the Whiteskellar, Room D201 in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Whiteskellar also sponsors the free Folk Festival, 0d&#13;
Student Activities Building from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Whit&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin as the only regular coffeehousef&#13;
folk talent every week with no admission charge.&#13;
Dances&#13;
P.A.B., along with other campus organizations, sporw&#13;
Saturday nights throughout the semester.&#13;
P.A.B. will have a variety of dances throughout the&#13;
with special Thanksgiving and Christmas dances. Live mtaJC&#13;
have guaranteed active crowds in the past, and dances&#13;
among Parkside'S most well-attended events.&#13;
·Performing Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
The Communication Arts Theatre will be the place for&#13;
Performing Arts and Lectures committee's programs.&#13;
On Wednesday, Sept. 25 at 8 p.m. in the Theatre, Jem,&#13;
give his presentation on plants. His book, Plants Are LIii&#13;
among others, has attracted national attention and&#13;
pearances on the Today Show, and others, has astounded•&#13;
public.&#13;
On the evening· of Oct. 18 the Student Activities&#13;
becom~ the P.A.B. Jazz Night~lub. Siggy Millonzi, jazzpiali&amp;&#13;
?-3nd will ~rform. Last year this nightclub drew a large, Jazz followmg, Mixed drinks will be served.&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 25, the UW-M Dance Company will~&#13;
Th~atre. The Company is composed of {acuity and studf!III,.&#13;
gamed a very good reputation in the state.&#13;
Humanities News Release: Chicago - Sept. 3 and c~n ._&#13;
~eeks, ~he Women's Film Festival will be held. Fore_ign ed&#13;
films will be shown. The Tribune has put up an estirnat&#13;
this cultural event. Included are 25 feature length fi!JllS. 31&#13;
two documentaries: A.ttic by Firestone, and Promised&#13;
lage. Workshops will be conducted throughout the&#13;
professional filmmakers. Information on times and pt!'&#13;
obtained through the Tribune.&#13;
"WELCOME BACK STUDENTS''&#13;
Compliments of the ···&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOU&#13;
RANCH&#13;
RESTAURANTS&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOI ill SHEIid II, &#13;
I TH ~ S1D£ RA GER Wtd"nd.)'. sept. t. l"t&#13;
ty at Parksid&#13;
servi.c~as - us&#13;
PhIllIp C. Gon' Army&#13;
specialist, receivla1es&#13;
,••&#13;
education degree ~ h~&#13;
S~ate Universit ro~&#13;
director of the k He ~ •&#13;
New Me' eadlllg&#13;
. XICO&#13;
University Where he hi&#13;
M.A. degree and .&#13;
consultant and dl haa&#13;
a numberof r~~~&#13;
for Indian and M lI1g&#13;
and also has ~X1~&#13;
training teache n ""~&#13;
groups. rs f"&#13;
Robert L. Mori&#13;
teaching areas ar~tle,&#13;
and secondar '&#13;
mathematics mYthscleDtt&#13;
his. doctoral t~ai~'&#13;
University of Wyom~lng•&#13;
also was a m ng,&#13;
teaching staff. ember.&#13;
c&#13;
o&#13;
In learning disabilities re&#13;
~u1W1I ith local and regional&#13;
l!"llUPS on delivery of social&#13;
Sft"\ lees and education programs&#13;
to BI.cIt children and was inIved&#13;
In an e\-aluation of the&#13;
H... d tart Progr.m in Racine.&#13;
He ha Laught at both UWl,lw.uIlee&#13;
and UW-Madison and&#13;
been employed in severaal&#13;
prof nal social work posts.&#13;
fktmf'r I president of Black&#13;
f".dU&lt;8tors (or Young Black&#13;
C"tllldrr-n and a member of&#13;
ral other professional&#13;
IUtiOn eevoted to early&#13;
tkt100d cdue.llon. G""" Allen Doston, who did his&#13;
"ork at 'Of1hwestern&#13;
University. will teach two new&#13;
courses this fall, "Teaching for&#13;
the Multi-Cultural Society" and&#13;
"Values Clarification and Affective&#13;
Education."&#13;
Be(ore taking the Parkside&#13;
post. Doston was supervisor of&#13;
master of arts teaching interns at&#13;
Northwestern and was director of&#13;
research at the Teacher Training&#13;
Coordinating Center at Southern&#13;
University. where he earned his&#13;
M.A. degree. He is a contributor&#13;
to a book on multi-cultural&#13;
education to be published this&#13;
year at Northwestern and also&#13;
had extensive human relations&#13;
training experience during his&#13;
Investment expert added •&#13;
In SMI&#13;
The . o( . 'adem Industry&#13;
r Par de "'" aMounce&lt;! apmelt&#13;
o( (our new (a&lt;olty&#13;
meml&gt;..... IIldudlllg the Iirst&#13;
nnamcdtotheS llfa&lt;ully.&#13;
• raunbf'r of new course&#13;
(or Ihe fall semester.&#13;
f8(uJty members are&#13;
, Fisher, lecturer in&#13;
BuSU&gt;&lt;'SS ~emenl: Jobn C.&#13;
rrt"lt lecturer, Business&#13;
mml "llliam W. Petrie,&#13;
lanl pro(es or of Labor&#13;
~&#13;
::::~'n.: and lahesh C. Jain,&#13;
t pro( . SOl' of Business&#13;
t&#13;
• RaClOP native. has&#13;
..,.,tnod110011"aU. treet for nine&#13;
~' to\' ent re!'earch and&#13;
investment administration&#13;
positions and was an assistant&#13;
vice president at First National&#13;
City Bank in New York before&#13;
returning to Wisconsin. She holds&#13;
a BS degree in economics and an&#13;
MBA in finance from UWMadison.&#13;
Starrett. an authority on&#13;
management information&#13;
computer networks, has 16 years&#13;
experience at all levels of information&#13;
systems work from&#13;
programmer to vice president for&#13;
C'Ommunications systems for the&#13;
Midwest Stock Excllange, the&#13;
post he held before accepting the&#13;
p,arkslde position. He received&#13;
hiS BA and MBA degrees from&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
21,&#13;
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f&#13;
or 15&#13;
a ter receiVing d&#13;
commerce and lawer-&#13;
~adison, also was ex'WI&#13;
mvolv.ed in labor&#13;
work In California be{;&#13;
the Parkside faculty. Oft&#13;
Jai~ was a professor II&#13;
co~ntmg at North CarOOla&#13;
Um~ersity for 13 yean&#13;
commg to Parkside and.&#13;
Involved In teaching and&#13;
progr.am~ of several",*,&#13;
dustnes mcluding ffiM A&#13;
of India. he graduatedh..&#13;
Univeristy and was ill&#13;
accountant before com~&#13;
U.s. 15 years ago. He&#13;
~A d~gree from Atlanta&#13;
University and did his&#13;
work at the Universityi&#13;
Carolina at Chapel Hill&#13;
FUJI- "Aqa,n Numblor '.&#13;
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KENOSHA, WIS. ,,11&#13;
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74&#13;
culty at Parksid&#13;
servi_c~ as a U.S&#13;
Phtlhp C. Go . Army Olt&#13;
ed • n learning disabilities&#13;
University, will teach two new&#13;
courses this fall, "Teaching for&#13;
the Multi-Cultural Society" and&#13;
"Values Clarification and Affective&#13;
Education."&#13;
Before taking the Parkside&#13;
post. Doston was supervisor of&#13;
master of arts teaching interns at&#13;
orthwestern and was director of&#13;
research at the Teacher Training&#13;
Coordinating Center at Southern&#13;
University. where he earned his&#13;
M.A. degree. He is a contributor&#13;
to a book on multi-cultural&#13;
education to be published this&#13;
year at Northwestern and also&#13;
had extensive human relations&#13;
training experience during his&#13;
. 1· nzaJes . spec1a _1st, receive(! ! a r&#13;
education degree f hts 4'&#13;
State Universit rorno ·.&#13;
director of the~- H~ is a&#13;
New Mex· eading&#13;
U . ICO&#13;
mversity where Iii&#13;
M.A. degree her and ha&#13;
consultant and dia s a number of react~OS!ie:&#13;
for Indian and Mex•_ng&#13;
and also has b 1&#13;
~n- c t · . een&#13;
rammg teach tnv&#13;
groups. ers for&#13;
Robert L. Mor· teaching areas 1&#13;
sse11e&#13;
and secondar are _el&#13;
~a thematics n{eth science&#13;
his_ doctoral trai ~- Umversity of Wyo ~Ing&#13;
also was a nung, ·•&#13;
teaching staff. member ti&#13;
Investment expert added • 1n SMI&#13;
-&#13;
,&#13;
SHA&#13;
investment administration&#13;
po itions and was an assistant&#13;
\'ice president at First National&#13;
ity Bank in New York before&#13;
returning to Wisconsin. She holds&#13;
a BS degree in economics and an&#13;
MBA in finance from UW-&#13;
\tadison. Starrett. an authority on&#13;
management information&#13;
computer networks, has 16 years&#13;
experience at all levels oi information&#13;
systems work from&#13;
programmer to vice president for&#13;
co_mmunications systems for the&#13;
hdwest Stock Exchange the&#13;
post h~ held before accepti~g the&#13;
Parkside position. He received&#13;
h:s BA and MBA degrees from&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
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. Petrie, an attorne w&#13;
m _various labor reI1li:&#13;
private industry f&#13;
f or 15 a ter receiving d commerce and I egre Md. aw fl'f a ison, also was · ext involved in labo&#13;
k . . r ar!)j wor m California b r th . eore e Parkside faculty&#13;
Jain was a prof=· t&#13;
. ="Qf i co~n mg at North Carol&#13;
Um~ersity for 13 years&#13;
~ommg to Parkside and&#13;
involved in teaching aoo&#13;
progr_am~ of several ma&#13;
dustr1_es including IBM A&#13;
of India. he graduated from&#13;
Univeristy and was i&#13;
accountant before coming&#13;
U.S. 15 years ago. He rec&#13;
~A de_gree from AUanla&#13;
University and did his&#13;
work a t the University 0&#13;
Carolina at Chapel Hill.&#13;
FUJI " Aqam Numbtr 1 11&#13;
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Great Seledion-S,-, 11 5pa~i;s·eN~&#13;
6206 22nd Ave. l'I,,&#13;
Mon &amp; Fri 9 lo 9 lilOI I&#13;
HOUIS: 9 lo 6 Sn! 9 lo S; clo5ell&#13;
2728 l s2nd street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS- 53111&#13;
P.-ts -~ Senict r&#13;
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also&#13;
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Open: 6 a .m. Mon. th11111'&#13;
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~\&#13;
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SERVICE&#13;
@&#13;
RESTAURA~&#13;
3oth Ave. &amp; RoOst~tll-' &#13;
tin american scholar hired&#13;
social science division at&#13;
ide has added eight new&#13;
ty members effective for&#13;
fall semester. .&#13;
anted assistant professors of&#13;
omics are Thomas J.&#13;
Iiment and Douglas P.&#13;
er.&#13;
arliment did his doctoral&#13;
at Satate University of New&#13;
.Binghamton and presently&#13;
member of its teaching staff&#13;
'lteH as senior research&#13;
'ate at its Center for Urban&#13;
. His instructional and h specialties are public&#13;
and urban economics.&#13;
agner, a doctoral cadidate at&#13;
l'bilt University, has been a&#13;
her of its teaching staff and&#13;
t of Fisk University. His&#13;
ipal instructional interests&#13;
labor economics, eximental&#13;
approaches to&#13;
ehing, applied micronornics&#13;
and statistics.&#13;
ppointed an assistant&#13;
fessor of History, Gerald&#13;
ael Greenf!eld received his&#13;
A.B.D. degree from Indiana&#13;
University and has taught at&#13;
Indiana. His areas of&#13;
specialization", are Latin&#13;
American and African history&#13;
and he is the author of a study on&#13;
urban growth in 'Sao Paulo&#13;
Brazil.&#13;
Named visiting assistant&#13;
professors of -Polltical. Science&#13;
are Samuel J. Pemacciaro and&#13;
Sara Burr Sheehan'.&#13;
Pernacciaro, who received his&#13;
Ph.D. degree from Southern&#13;
Illinois University-Cerbondale,&#13;
has been a faculty member at&#13;
UW·Whitewater and College of&#13;
DuPage (Ill.). He is tbe author of&#13;
several scholarly studies on&#13;
voting patterns and his teaching&#13;
fields include American&#13;
government and politics, public&#13;
adm inist r at inn, legislative&#13;
behavior and the executive&#13;
process.&#13;
Sheehan did her doctoral work&#13;
at the University of CaliforniaRiverside&#13;
and was a member of&#13;
its faculty. ·Her ·fjel&lt;k of&#13;
sych profs appoi nted&#13;
ght new science division&#13;
ulty members have been&#13;
inted at Parkside effective&#13;
this fall semester.&#13;
our ofthe appointments are in&#13;
mathematics dicipline.&#13;
othy V Fossum, Norbert J.&#13;
e1enberg and Julian Stuart&#13;
iams were named assistnat&#13;
fessors and Robert S.&#13;
was named visiting&#13;
.stant professor.&#13;
ossum, whose specialization&#13;
algebra, received his Ph.D.&#13;
from the University of&#13;
goo. He has taught at Oregon,&#13;
University of Utah and&#13;
. ersity of Illinois and is the&#13;
thor of a number of scholarly&#13;
pers.&#13;
Ielenberg received his Ph.D.&#13;
from the University of&#13;
IIleSota and taught in its&#13;
Iof mathematics where he&#13;
awarded a citation for&#13;
ching excellence in 1972. For&#13;
post year he has taught at the&#13;
·v.... ity of Maryland.&#13;
Uiams, a native of England,&#13;
lVedhis Ph.D. degree from&#13;
University of London's Queen&#13;
College. He previously&#13;
ught at the University of&#13;
IIfornia-Riverside and is the&#13;
thor 01 a number of scholarly&#13;
pers.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
WINTERRREAK TRIP&#13;
Fton, '279&#13;
f'1l)5 '&gt;7000 TAX &amp; SERVICE&#13;
Rl\&lt;;~O ON 3 TO A ROOM&#13;
Round Trip Jet:&#13;
7 Nights Lodging&#13;
Hum Punch Welcome&#13;
Ground Transfers&#13;
Tips and Taxes&#13;
Forapplication or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
•&#13;
r~~PUSTRAVEI.CENTER&#13;
1.1.(' 11-197 Call: 553·2294&#13;
Tragesser, who received his&#13;
Ph.D. degree from William&#13;
Marsh Rice University, taught at&#13;
Rice, the University of Idaho,&#13;
Stanford University and the&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle. His principal teaching and&#13;
research' interests are logic,&#13;
philosphy of mathematics and&#13;
science and phenomenology.&#13;
Also appointed to science&#13;
division posts are two assistant&#13;
professors of Psychology, David&#13;
F. Barone and Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal.&#13;
Barone did his doctoral work at&#13;
the University of CaliforniaSanta&#13;
Barbara where he conducted&#13;
studies on "Behavioral&#13;
Self- Management for College&#13;
Students" under an Exxon&#13;
Education Foundation Grant and&#13;
taught in the department of&#13;
psychology. He has published a&#13;
number of studies on personality&#13;
theory and behavior&#13;
modification.&#13;
Pomazal did his doctoral work&#13;
at the University of Illinois where&#13;
he also taught psychology&#13;
courses and worked with the&#13;
student counseling serivce. His,&#13;
major research' interest is the&#13;
study of altruism and he has&#13;
published several related studies&#13;
including one ti~led "Helping on&#13;
specialization include western&#13;
European politics, contemporary&#13;
Latin America and urban&#13;
politics. Prior to [oing the&#13;
Parkside faculty she was coordinator&#13;
of the Women's Resource&#13;
Center at Riverside.&#13;
Named to tbe anthropology&#13;
faculty are Henry F. Dohyns,&#13;
visiting professor, John M. Hickman,&#13;
visiting associate&#13;
professor, and Lorraine Zimmerman,&#13;
visiting assistant&#13;
professor.&#13;
Dobyns received' his Ph.D.&#13;
degree from Cornell University&#13;
and has taught at Cornell, the&#13;
University of Arizona and the&#13;
University of Kentucky. His field&#13;
research in anthropology has&#13;
taken him to Peru, Equador,&#13;
Bolivia, Mexico and the U.S.&#13;
southwest.&#13;
Dobyns is the autbor 01 eight&#13;
books and more than 100&#13;
scholarly articles and reviews&#13;
and is currently scientific editor&#13;
for the Indian Tribal Series at&#13;
Phoenix, Ariz.&#13;
• • In sCience&#13;
the Hihhway: The effecis of&#13;
dependency and sex." He also&#13;
has studied. the determinants of&#13;
drug abuse and their implications&#13;
for drug education and COWlseltng&#13;
programs.&#13;
Named an assistant professor&#13;
Life Science is Edward P.&#13;
Wallen, who received his Ph.D.&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Kansas. He previously taught at&#13;
Northern Illinois University and&#13;
comes to Parkside from the&#13;
department of physiology and&#13;
cell biology at Kansas. His&#13;
primary teaching interests are&#13;
endocrine physiology and&#13;
reproductive physiology and he is&#13;
the author of a number of&#13;
scholarly papers in his area of&#13;
specialization.&#13;
Named an assistant professor&#13;
01 Chemistry is Allan Neal&#13;
Tischler, who did his graduate&#13;
work at the University of&#13;
Califor nia-Bet-keley , He was&#13;
involved in organic research both&#13;
in private industry and at&#13;
Berleley before coming to&#13;
Parkside. His major areas are&#13;
synthesis and structure of&#13;
organic molecules and enzymology.&#13;
Wednesday. Sept. 4. 1974THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Hickman, also a Cornell Ph.D.,&#13;
has taught at California State&#13;
College, Los ~eIes. and at&#13;
Lawrence University. His field&#13;
studies in Bolivia and Peru have&#13;
resulted in a number of scholarly&#13;
articles: His teaching and&#13;
research specialties include&#13;
ethnogra-phy .and communtty&#13;
studies focused on Latin&#13;
America, cross-cultural studies&#13;
and methodology and statistics.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Anthropological Association and&#13;
Society for Applied Anthropology&#13;
.&#13;
Zimmerman received her Ph.·&#13;
D. lrom Wayne State University&#13;
and has taught at Wayne State&#13;
and at Lawrence. She has done&#13;
field work in New Guinea and&#13;
among the Amish ofnorthen()hio&#13;
and has published a number of&#13;
articles hased on her research He&#13;
work has focused on social anthropology,&#13;
political systems,&#13;
kinship and economic and urban&#13;
anthropology ..&#13;
Hum. adds&#13;
french prof&#13;
Elizabeth Esperaac:a Colford&#13;
Callaghan has been named a&#13;
visiting professor of Fn!nch at&#13;
Parkside effective for the faU&#13;
semester.&#13;
A specialist in 19th and 20th&#13;
century Frmch literature, sbe&#13;
received her Ph.D. degree from&#13;
Duke Univeristy. She has held&#13;
several positions as a tri-lingual&#13;
interpreter (Engliah-F'renchSpanish)&#13;
and bolds a certificate&#13;
of distinction in translation from&#13;
the Institut Britanique of Paris.&#13;
Pro!. Callaghan taught courses&#13;
in literature and EnglishPortuguese&#13;
translation in Brazil.&#13;
She has traveled and studied&#13;
throughout South America and&#13;
Europe.&#13;
{Pre,.. tI}&#13;
•&#13;
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FREE. RDMISSION WITH&#13;
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with or without this coupon&#13;
atin american scholar hired&#13;
,Che social science division at&#13;
kside has added eight new&#13;
?Ulty members effective for&#13;
. fall semester. .&#13;
\lamed assistant professors of&#13;
•onomics are Thomas J .&#13;
rlirnent and Douglas P .&#13;
goer.&#13;
arlirnent did his doctoral&#13;
k at Satate University of New&#13;
k-Binghamton and presently&#13;
member of its teaching staff&#13;
well as senior research&#13;
iate at its Center for Urban&#13;
udies. His instructional and&#13;
rch specialties are public&#13;
iance and urban economics.&#13;
agner, a doctoral cadidate at&#13;
lnderbilt University, has been a&#13;
ember of its teaching staff and&#13;
at of Fisk University. His&#13;
incipal instructional interests&#13;
e labor economics, ex-&#13;
. irnental approaches to&#13;
aching, applied microonomics&#13;
and statistics.&#13;
Appointed an assistant&#13;
fessor of History, Gerald&#13;
ichael Greenfield received his&#13;
A.B.D. degree from Indiana&#13;
University and has taught at&#13;
Indiana . His areas of&#13;
specialization . are Latin&#13;
American and African history&#13;
and he is the author of a study on&#13;
urban growth in Sao Paulo&#13;
Brazil.&#13;
Named visiting assistant&#13;
professors of Political. Science&#13;
are Samuel J. Pernacciaro and&#13;
Sara Burr Sheehan·.&#13;
Pernacciaro, who received his&#13;
Ph.D. degree from Southern&#13;
Illinois University-Carbondale, has been a faculty member at&#13;
UW-Whitewater and College of&#13;
DuPage (Ill.). He is the author of&#13;
several scholarly studies on&#13;
voting patterns and his teaching&#13;
fields include American&#13;
government and politics, public&#13;
administration, legislative&#13;
behavior an4 the executive&#13;
process.&#13;
Sheehan did her doctoral work&#13;
at the University of CaliforniaRiverside&#13;
and was a member of&#13;
its faculty. Her -field of&#13;
specialization include western&#13;
European politics, contemporary&#13;
Latin America and urban&#13;
politics. Prior to joing the&#13;
Parkside faculty she was coordinator&#13;
of the Women's Resource&#13;
Center at Riverside.&#13;
Named to the anthropology&#13;
faculty are Henry F. Dobyns, visiting professor, John M. Hickman,&#13;
visiting associate&#13;
professor, and Lorraine Zimmerman,&#13;
visiting assistant&#13;
professor.&#13;
Dobyns received" his Ph.D. degree from Cornell University&#13;
and has taught at Cornell, the&#13;
University of Arizona and the&#13;
University of Kentucky. His field&#13;
research in anthropology has&#13;
taken him to Peru, Equador, Bolivia, Mexico and the U.S. southwest.&#13;
Dobyns is the author of eight&#13;
books and more than 100&#13;
scholarly articles and reviews&#13;
and is currently scientific editor&#13;
for the Indian Tribal Series at&#13;
Phoenix, Ariz.&#13;
sych profs appointed • • 1n science&#13;
Eight new science division&#13;
culty members have been&#13;
inted at Parkside effective&#13;
this fall semester. Four of the appointments are in&#13;
mathematics dicipline.&#13;
mothy V Fossum, Norbert J.&#13;
elenberg and Julian Stuart&#13;
lliams were named assistnat&#13;
fessors and Robert S.&#13;
agesser was named visiting&#13;
istant professor.&#13;
Fo sum, whose specialization&#13;
algebra, received his Ph.D. gree from the University of&#13;
egon. He has taught at Oregon,&#13;
e University of Utah and&#13;
iversity of Illinois and is the&#13;
thor of a number of scholarly&#13;
pers.&#13;
Wielenberg received his Ph.D.&#13;
gree from the University of&#13;
innesota and taught in its&#13;
ool of mathematics where he&#13;
awarded a citation for&#13;
ching excellence in 1972. For&#13;
past year he has taught at the&#13;
iversity of Maryland.&#13;
WiUiams, a native of England,&#13;
e1ved his Ph.D. degree from&#13;
e University of London's Queen&#13;
ary College. He previously&#13;
ught at the University of&#13;
h£ornia-Riverside and is the&#13;
thor of a number of scholarly&#13;
pers.&#13;
UW-P ARKSIDE&#13;
WINTERRREAK TRIP IJ 1 , -, . . .&#13;
the Hihhway: The effects of&#13;
dependency and sex." He also&#13;
has studied the determinants of&#13;
drug abuse and their implications&#13;
for drug education and coun- seling programs.&#13;
Named an assistant professor&#13;
Life Science is Edward P .&#13;
Wallen, who received his Ph.D.&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Kansas. He previously taught at&#13;
Northern Illinois University and&#13;
comes to Parkside from the&#13;
department of physiology and&#13;
cell biology at Kansas. His&#13;
primary teaching interests are&#13;
endocrine physiology and&#13;
reproductive physiology and he is&#13;
the author of a number of&#13;
scholarly papers in his area of&#13;
specialization.&#13;
Named an assistant professor&#13;
of Chemistry is Allan Neal&#13;
Tischler, who did his graduate&#13;
work at the University of&#13;
California-Berkeley. He was&#13;
involved in organic research both&#13;
in private industry and at&#13;
Berleley before coming to&#13;
Parkside. His major areas are&#13;
synthesis and structure of&#13;
organic molecules and enzymology.&#13;
&#13;
·'":. 0\ NE f-WEET :;' vR-EAffif&#13;
;· 5010 7tA Ave.&#13;
t" .. f·\ KenoJha&#13;
,,511,-'578&#13;
f;. ..• (&#13;
r , T8llCK DA f)Ol+'N&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Hickman, also a Cornell Ph D •&#13;
has taught at California State&#13;
College, Los Angeles, and at&#13;
La\\Tence University. His field&#13;
studies in Bolivia and Peru have&#13;
resulted in a number of scholarly&#13;
articles. His teaching and&#13;
research specialties include&#13;
ethnography and community&#13;
studies focused on Latin&#13;
America, cross-cultural studies&#13;
and methodology and statistics. He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Anthropolo·gical Association and&#13;
Society · for Applied An- thropology:&#13;
Zimmerman received her Ph.-&#13;
D. from Wayne State University&#13;
and has taught at Wayne State&#13;
and at La\\Tence. She has done&#13;
field work in New Guinea and&#13;
among the Amish ofnortherrOhio&#13;
and has published a number of&#13;
articles based on her research He&#13;
work has focused on social anthropology,&#13;
political systems,&#13;
kinship and economic and urban&#13;
anthropology.&#13;
Hum. adds&#13;
french prof&#13;
Elizabeth Esperanca Colford&#13;
Callaghan has been named a&#13;
visiting professor of French at&#13;
Parkside effective for the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
A specialist in 19th and 20th&#13;
century French literature, she&#13;
received her Ph.D degree from&#13;
Duke Univeristy. She has held&#13;
several positions as a tri-lingual&#13;
interpreter &lt; English-French- Spanish) and holds a certificate&#13;
of distinction in tran lation from&#13;
the Institut Britanique of Pari . Prof. Callaghan taught courses&#13;
in literature and EnglishPortuguese&#13;
translation in Brazil.&#13;
She has traveled and tudied&#13;
throughout South America and&#13;
Europe.&#13;
::/7~ ~'Ult-~ DAILY 194 &amp; SO&#13;
,, -CPrcseats}&#13;
FRIDFIV SEPT b-ui&#13;
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STUDENT i.O.&#13;
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• r • •• • • COUPON GOOD SEPT. q THRU 13 •&#13;
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P\ II S \70 00 l AX &amp; SERVI CE&#13;
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w ith or \\ 1thout this coupon &#13;
THERE'S TOO MANy&#13;
DRAGquEEN's AI&#13;
THI\T BAR. LAST&#13;
wEEK I WAS&#13;
50 CONFUSED,&#13;
I WENT&#13;
HOME WITH&#13;
A REAl:::&#13;
,nsulaled. the roof will he in- , :&gt;-.'"" woM A N ~&#13;
sulated. and all windows wiu he ~' "'-"&#13;
double-glued The mech&#13;
l&#13;
aclnlcdal I. -......- -c&#13;
\ "lHating system wit In U e&#13;
heat reclaim devices as well as .......&#13;
an econom'zer cycle, botb. of hich "ill save heat or cooling 1~1:J~~ii;f.f""'li;';;;~&#13;
~ throughout tbe year." tbe&#13;
report continues.&#13;
~ public aeee road which will&#13;
connect wuh twu new parking&#13;
._ heduled for completion by&#13;
1 te fall-IO,II ",ncrease efficiency&#13;
In traffiC n0"4 as well as improve&#13;
) and convenience to the&#13;
pede tnan H&#13;
The propo ed parking lot&#13;
nor1bea I of the union will ac-'&#13;
""",modate appn&gt;ximately 520&#13;
ca rs&#13;
The report 00 tbe proposed&#13;
wuon contends ilial "the basic&#13;
need for tbl facility and the&#13;
mpro\"ed convenience and&#13;
~tJooal and SOCialresources&#13;
for the campus community make&#13;
Ih the best use of this land."&#13;
\\ Ith no overriding en-&#13;
\ tronmental concerns. there is no&#13;
.... "'" ,..hl tlus project should&#13;
no! proceed." the report coo'&#13;
cludes&#13;
encres consulted in&#13;
..... ""r.tJon of the preliminary&#13;
en ,roomental report included&#13;
F.WRPC, Department of&#13;
at ural Re&gt;oun:es. Department&#13;
Adrnmistrauon, Department or&#13;
Boo.I and Urban Develop11\{"Ilt..&#13;
OCfice or lhe Governor.&#13;
Department of Transportation&#13;
Keoo&lt;ha Coonty Clerk.&#13;
o ca study out&#13;
dent union&#13;
Campbell appointed&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Geography John Campbell has&#13;
been appointed chairperson of&#13;
the Social Science Division by&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
Dean Eugene L. Norwood&#13;
following an advisory election by&#13;
divisional faculty.&#13;
Chairpersons of Parkside's&#13;
other divisions were re-elected.&#13;
Chairpersons serve for a oneyear&#13;
term beginning Sept. l.&#13;
The previous chairperson of the&#13;
Social Science Division, Marion&#13;
J. Mochon, was selected last&#13;
March as an American Council&#13;
on Education Fellow in the 1974·&#13;
75 Academic Administration&#13;
Program. She will begin a ninemonth&#13;
internship this fall at the&#13;
University of California-Irvine.&#13;
Mochan, an associate professor&#13;
of anthropology, plans to return&#13;
to Parkside following her inlernship.&#13;
Campbell joined the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970. He pre~&#13;
taught at the University 01&#13;
Washington, where he recei'teJ&#13;
his Ph.D. degree.&#13;
In 1971, he was awarded I&#13;
National Science Foundaticl&#13;
(NSF) grant of $21,000in suP\lOlt&#13;
of a study of the relaliOOSllp,&#13;
among industries which rca.&#13;
tribute to their physical grou.-.&#13;
in an area. He received an additional&#13;
NSF grant this s~"&#13;
continue studies of interrelioall&#13;
interindustrial linkages.&#13;
Reports of his research batt&#13;
appeared in a number at&#13;
scholarly journals both in l1li&#13;
U.S. and abroad .&#13;
Other divisional choi.".,..&#13;
in the college are Norbelt&#13;
Isenberg, science; Orpb.&#13;
Johnson, humanistic studies;'"&#13;
Paul Kleine, education. Ala&#13;
Grossberg heads the engin"""&#13;
science division in the SdHxi II&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
PIQ\.Iback&#13;
the eledroniCplayground&#13;
nell&#13;
till=:; ~ E:::: III&#13;
• RIC VE TURI ADC&#13;
~OSS ;1&gt;/tUM~ II&#13;
IEID ~~ STaNTOn&#13;
r1!la &gt;t~'v'8A'v'ld maxell&#13;
TEAC THOl\EN5 ~&#13;
(~ ... ~ ..... ~. INFINITY&#13;
r:mn TANDBERG .ILLOYD~I&#13;
.. ~HITACHI .&#13;
BASF n&#13;
SONY: @PIONEER&#13;
•&#13;
0 C&#13;
ude&#13;
I study out&#13;
t • union&#13;
Campbel I appointed&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Geography John Ca!71pbell has&#13;
been appointed chairp~r~on of&#13;
the Social Science D1V1s1on by&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
Dean Eugene L. No~wood&#13;
followin an advisory election by&#13;
di isional fatuity.&#13;
Chairpersons of Parkside's&#13;
other divisions were re-elected.&#13;
Chairper ·ons serve for a one-&#13;
·ear term beginning Sept. 1.&#13;
The previous chairperson of the&#13;
ial Science Division, Marion&#13;
J. ,1'ochon, was selected last&#13;
1arch as an American Council&#13;
on Education Fellow in the 1974-&#13;
75 Academic Administration&#13;
Program She will begin a ninemonth&#13;
internship this fall at the&#13;
niversity of California-Irvine.&#13;
1ochon, an associate professor&#13;
of anthropology, plans to return&#13;
to Park ide following her intern&#13;
hip.&#13;
Campbell joined the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970. He_ previo Y&#13;
taught at the University o!&#13;
Washington, where he recej~&#13;
his Ph.D. degree.&#13;
In 1971, he was awarded 1&#13;
National Science Foundati&#13;
(NSF) grant of $21,000 in SUpP01t&#13;
of a study of the relationslips&#13;
among industries which&#13;
tribute to their physical groupq&#13;
in an area. He received an~&#13;
ditional NSF grant this spring to&#13;
continue studies of interregiona;&#13;
interindustrial linkages.&#13;
Reports of his research ha&#13;
appeared in a number of&#13;
scholarly journals both in&#13;
U.S. and abroad.&#13;
Other divisional chairperscm&#13;
in the college a-re orbert&#13;
Isenberg, science; Orphe&#13;
Johnson, humanistic studies;&#13;
Paul Kleine, education. Alan&#13;
Grossberg heads the enginee&#13;
science division in the School d&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
Plauback&#13;
the elecrronic playground&#13;
SONY.&#13;
-&#13;
&gt;i8VSAV7d maxell&#13;
-. _THO~ 00&#13;
.-..._._... •• _ INFINITY&#13;
TANDBERG ll[LLOYD~I&#13;
@HITACHI ·&#13;
D &#13;
.. IDE GE&#13;
, esident 01 Parks ide&#13;
lr I. outllO"'9 ~wP athletic director&#13;
~~~:~:;: or sa.ooot;:..1f 01 the organization,&#13;
.. l~ erl on be I support 01 UW·p&#13;
bu eel 0 ~ ~~o.n Looking on as i~'&#13;
orrna Tirabassi. who will&#13;
'~lde&lt;'t s OOlTunlck lIthe lu II&#13;
.. upon approva 0&#13;
n~ I meeting DeSimone, '5 annua . e&#13;
sldent is resigning becaus&#13;
onl pre b t' will remain on the ......~W11 du es, u&#13;
Semester&#13;
Intramural&#13;
programs&#13;
Initiated&#13;
nlramural football&#13;
11be run IIns fall by&#13;
Intramural ocrin' This WIll&#13;
I n t III "'ral programs&#13;
'~~hou\the )car The ,,,..omen - ha'. """derpuff fool·&#13;
if the tnt t IS present.&#13;
r tbaU. the IgIl-Up sheels&#13;
round al lhe bus SlOP,&#13;
II I n boards. Physical&#13;
I10n Butldulll. and Kenosha&#13;
r..,,,,n,,, RutldJn~ The sheels&#13;
~ returned to Loren Hein.&#13;
cal rAucatlon Building,&#13;
beT 12, and Ihellrsl&#13;
11 be p1a~ed on sep11&#13;
1bf' lJme of the ga mes&#13;
~ 15 10 5 15 on Tuesdays&#13;
Thvrs . ~;'iI&amp;- wf&gt;d ('venlogs&#13;
Fr; /l. 5,,1&#13;
"illnd"'Y&#13;
RANG.&#13;
L---------SpOrts&#13;
P.E.schedule---- __&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
f\,'C!'l Thurs&#13;
rrl &amp; 5'"&#13;
&lt;;""d;o\l&#13;
MOn Thurs Wed IiI 10,30 a.m.I&#13;
I rool open Mon 8-&#13;
Fri&amp;SilI ..&#13;
,&gt;"ndIlY hours listed above for bUlldln~. However, Ihese~&#13;
/lv&lt;o" ...nre 'he Silme b k up for physical education cresses When Ihfrt&#13;
th('avm ;ssChe&lt;'uledilS ac&#13;
. I d above for building. "",m(' hour,&gt; "'~ ll~ e&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
. Soccer Game. '2 p.m&#13;
"",I ')"'PI 1 Alumni I o vs wrscoosto.j.ao c.m.&#13;
",,0 ,)(,pl 8 RUClbyCUI 'vs Carthage, Steven's Point, Wllilewlltfr». CrOSSCoon ry , .&#13;
C;",t ')rpl 14 b vs Marquette, 1: 30 p.m&#13;
C;",I So'pl U RUCle~vs. N 111,3p.rn .&#13;
C;AI S('pl" secc vs G",ry,lnd,1:30P.m&#13;
&lt;;Al Srpl 11 RUQbY. 'sTennlsvs.UWM,3:30p.m&#13;
l"P'&gt; Sr-pl 1d" women W rs. power Lifting Cllampionshlp~, lOa m&#13;
&lt;;,,1 Srpl 18 Souiller,na IS&#13;
&lt;;,'1 sec! UI C 11 am&#13;
CrCKScoun1ry vs -s T~nnlsvs. WW, 3:30 p.m&#13;
MOn ..('pi 30 Women&#13;
pOOL, HANDBALL CTS: BUILDING&#13;
TYMNAStUMS: WE&#13;
WEIGHT TRAINING ROOM:&#13;
m;be&#13;
Eibing&#13;
Room&#13;
4:00 P.M. 'til Closin~&#13;
2416 _ Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
3928 - 60th St.&#13;
Member F.DJ.C,&#13;
1Ue'u~"&amp; ~ ~&#13;
1Ud4~~ ...&#13;
*REFERENCE&#13;
*PAPER BACKS Amusing" Inforlalin &amp;&#13;
Dictionaries, Sludy Glides,&#13;
Outlines, Noles, Tables.&#13;
1Qe~ ~ Itve ~D~ ~&#13;
~~~ SITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
G&#13;
sldent of Parkside&#13;
.p hletic director&#13;
1 of he organization,&#13;
000 n support of UW-P&#13;
1 o. Loo ing on as inTlr&#13;
bassi, who will&#13;
pp oval of the full&#13;
1 m e Ing. DeSimone,&#13;
• is r lgnlng because&#13;
111 r main on the&#13;
Semester&#13;
n ramural&#13;
RANGE=&#13;
\....---------Sp or&#13;
P.E. schedule-----&#13;
l\'\Of'1 Thur&#13;
Fri .. ill&#13;
&lt;;ttl'ld~Y&#13;
n Thurs Tor g. Wrd ('ven1ngs&#13;
rn 11, Sal&#13;
CiundAV&#13;
R EGULAR HOURS&#13;
f\/ Thu.SMon &amp; Wed Iii 10 30 a m J tnot open&#13;
rr, &amp;Sill&#13;
c,undrw th same hours listed above for building However. these&#13;
J\v"ilr1~lle hede uled as back up tor physical education classes Ytt\en tt..-.&#13;
lh"' QVM 1", ~C "°"&#13;
~m t1ovr~ ~,s listed abOve for building&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
1 7 Atu.nn, soccer Game. 2 p .m&#13;
&lt;,~I S"I' 8 R qbV Club vs W isconsin , 1 30 p m&#13;
&lt;;un Srpl 1• C~o&lt;s countrv vs. carlhage, Steven's Point. Whitewaitt 1 SAi &lt;,rpt • · 30 GI&#13;
s.,t pl 14 RuqbV vs Marquette, 1 P m&#13;
,,.,, Sf&gt;pl , 1 soccer vs N 111 . 3 p .m&#13;
I &lt;;rpl 11 RuQbV vs Garv. Ind • 1 30 Pm&#13;
T;,,.5 $tpl ,. womrn'sT~nnisvs u.w,M,3 ·30p m&#13;
&lt;;Al t;rpl 78 southern w,s Power L1ft1ng Champ,onshlps, 10 a"'-&#13;
..,,,1 sepl ,e rro&lt;s covntrv vs U I C • 11 a m . Mon sept 30 women's Tennis vs. ww. 3. 30 p,m&#13;
BUILDING: POOL: HANDBALL CTS :&#13;
TYMNASIUMS WE&#13;
W IGHT TRAINING ROOM&#13;
~bt&#13;
1Ltbtng&#13;
Room&#13;
4:00 P .M. 'til Closing&#13;
3928 - 60th St.&#13;
Member F.D.LC.&#13;
*REFERENCE Dictionaries, Study Guides,&#13;
Outlines, Notes, Tables.&#13;
ts *PAPER BACKS Amusing,, Informative &amp; lit </text>
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