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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 6</text>
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            <text>Canteen prices up</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Canteen prices up&#13;
I D O N'T C A RE&#13;
WHAT JERRVFORP&#13;
5/11 D, YOU'RE IN &lt;; 1 MYCOURF&#13;
, ^; NOW.'&#13;
Canteen Vending Service has&#13;
found it necessary to increase&#13;
prices on some vending articles&#13;
at Parkside. Rising costs on such&#13;
items as sugar and wheat have&#13;
partially caused the need for&#13;
higher costs to the consumer.&#13;
Starting on Sept. 9, prices on&#13;
candy bars went up to 20c,&#13;
cigarettes 60c, and soda 30c. Ice&#13;
cream and milk will remain at&#13;
20c but will be distributed in 1-3&#13;
pint cartons rather than 1-2 pints.&#13;
Pastry will cost 25c while gum&#13;
and mints will be 15c.&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life, said that Parkside&#13;
requested Canteen Service to&#13;
provide statistics that showed an&#13;
actual need to increase prices on&#13;
vending articles.&#13;
According to Niebuhr this was&#13;
done and statistics are available&#13;
to students interested in seeing&#13;
them.&#13;
"The increases are affecting&#13;
other campuses also, not just this&#13;
one," Niebuhr said. "UW-M was&#13;
affected by this in summer and&#13;
our prices will be in effect this&#13;
Monday."&#13;
Also this Monday, a new&#13;
cafeteria was to open in LLC&#13;
rooms D185, D187 and D189. The&#13;
scheduled opening of the&#13;
cafeteria had been planned to&#13;
coincide with the beginning of&#13;
classes but due to problems in&#13;
moving kitchen equipment, the&#13;
opening date has been set back to&#13;
later this month.&#13;
Meanwhile, to alleviate the&#13;
overcrowding of present&#13;
facilities, a charcoal grill was&#13;
opened on the patio between the&#13;
cafeteria in Main Place and the&#13;
Communication Arts Building.&#13;
"The outside grill will continue&#13;
to operate as long as weather&#13;
permits," said Niebuhr.&#13;
The cafeteria in Main Place&#13;
will be remodeled by midOctober.&#13;
The operation there will&#13;
be fast-food oriented, offering&#13;
hamburgers, fries and drinks,&#13;
plus one short order of a meat,&#13;
potatoes and vegetable. The&#13;
breakfast menu will remain the&#13;
same.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 11, 1974 Vol. III No. 6&#13;
PAB charges "railroading ir&#13;
by Debra Fridell&#13;
After a week of constitutional&#13;
forums, power struggles between&#13;
student organizations, and&#13;
compromise, the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. (PSGA) has completed the&#13;
second draft of the new student&#13;
constitution. The constitution will&#13;
be placed before the entire&#13;
student body for its ratification&#13;
on Sept. 18 and 19.&#13;
Most debate centered between&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB) and the PSGA Inc. The&#13;
PAB accused the PSGA Inc. of&#13;
attempting to "railroad" the&#13;
constitution into passage and&#13;
"robbing the students of their&#13;
rights" to give a full input into the&#13;
writing of the constitution. The&#13;
PAB Executive Council issued a&#13;
statement saying that "a&#13;
skeleton crew student government&#13;
of six participants have&#13;
managed, in the first hectic week&#13;
of classes, to railroad a con3-2&#13;
vote&#13;
stitution cloaked in revolution&#13;
and psuedo-student rights past a&#13;
student body too busy to listen,&#13;
organize, or act."&#13;
PSGA began work on the new&#13;
constitution early in the summer&#13;
and have held constitutional&#13;
forums for a total of 23 hours&#13;
since the constitution's printing&#13;
in last week's RANGER. At their&#13;
meeting Sunday night, the PSGA&#13;
voted to accept amendments for&#13;
senate review through this week&#13;
and beyond that time, to print&#13;
Folan reinstated&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The Social Science Executive Committee has&#13;
reversed its recommendation to terminate William&#13;
Folan, assistant professor of anthropology.&#13;
The decision to renew Folan's contract for a oneyear&#13;
period (which extends to the end of the&#13;
academic year 1975-76) came shortly after a&#13;
reconsideration hearing held in late August.&#13;
The August 19 hearing resulted in the Executive&#13;
Committee voting, three in favor of renewing&#13;
Folan's contract, two against and three abstentions.&#13;
William Murin, associate professor of political&#13;
science, Thomas Reeves and John Buenker,&#13;
professors of history, recommended that Folan be&#13;
renewed; while Marion Mochon, then chairperson&#13;
of the Social Science Division, and Morton Nachlas,&#13;
associate professor of sociology, voted against&#13;
renewal, according to a source.&#13;
The source also claimed that James McKeown,&#13;
professor of sociology, Frank Egerton, associate&#13;
professor of history, and Philip Burnett, professor&#13;
of social science, abstained from voting.&#13;
However, Murin said that this information was&#13;
"not correct," though he did confirm the split vote&#13;
as being three for and two against.&#13;
Currently, Folan is working on an archeologieal&#13;
project in Mexico and is expected to return to&#13;
Parkside by January.&#13;
"I don't think he will return if he can help it," said&#13;
a source close to Folan. "Although he fought the&#13;
appeal on its principles and won, the whole experience&#13;
was terribly taxing on him."&#13;
"The decision is a personal victory for Dr. Folan,&#13;
yet it should in no way be construed beyond that,"&#13;
said R. Eric Solem, Folan's attorney. "We still have&#13;
a long way to go before fairness and openness are&#13;
the rule rather than the exception in academic&#13;
personnel decisions."&#13;
In early spring of this year, Folan received a&#13;
letter from Dean Norwood of the College of Science&#13;
and Society explaining that "the evidence submitted&#13;
by Professor Folan in regard to teaching&#13;
excellence and to institutional service was, in the&#13;
judgment of the Executive Committee, not sufficiently&#13;
meritorious to warrant renewal."&#13;
On May 18, a hearing was held to appeal this&#13;
decision. Bruce Davey, then Folan's attorney,&#13;
asked the Executive Committee for specific reasons&#13;
on their decision not to renew Folan's contract.&#13;
"Since this isn't a dismissal proceeding, the&#13;
burden shifts to Folan to show his good qualities in&#13;
teaching and service," responded Burton Wagner, a&#13;
University attorney, at the reconsideration hearing.&#13;
Negative letters on Folan, that were written by&#13;
John Van Willigen, associate professor of anthropology,&#13;
and Richard Stoffle, assistant professor&#13;
of anthropology, were withheld from both hearings.&#13;
Instead, positive letters on Folan's teaching&#13;
abilities were presented by his counsel.&#13;
Also, Solem presented copies of Student Course&#13;
and Faculty Evaluation (SCAFE) forms, dating&#13;
back to when Folan originally came to Parkside in&#13;
fall of 1972. Folan received a SCAFE rating last&#13;
semester of 4.4 compared with the division average&#13;
in Social Science of 4.0.&#13;
"I never heard anyone complain about Folan's&#13;
teaching methods," said Wayne Ramirez, a former&#13;
counselor at Parkside, who testified at the reconsideration&#13;
hearing.&#13;
"Student comments were geared to being comfortable&#13;
about his teaching.&#13;
"They were not intimidated or threatened by his&#13;
methods but looked deeper into the material.&#13;
"Folan sympathized with students in relation to&#13;
the community but his participation was not limited&#13;
to the Latin community."&#13;
Steve Daoutis, an assistant professor of sociology,&#13;
who appealed his termination last spring and lost,&#13;
said at Folan's hearing that "Bill was more sensitive&#13;
and interested toward the welfare of Latins at&#13;
this university than other faculty members were."&#13;
Folan and Daoutis, last semester, conducted a&#13;
census of the Latin population in the Racine area. It&#13;
was an independent study project by 18 Parkside&#13;
students in cooperation with the Spanish Center.&#13;
"It behooves the university to take this into account&#13;
as to how much he (Folan) performed,"&#13;
Daoutis said.&#13;
"The decision in this case was just, but the&#13;
process by which it was reached is still totally&#13;
lacking in fundamental concepts of due process,"&#13;
Solem said. "Although we are gratified by the&#13;
decision, the real victory will come when these&#13;
decisions are uniformly conducted in a fair and&#13;
impartial manner."&#13;
amendments for ratification on&#13;
the October senatorial election&#13;
ballot and the April election&#13;
ballot.&#13;
Most criticism centers on the&#13;
PSGA's power to handle over&#13;
$300,000 in segregated fee money.&#13;
PAB suggested, in an amendment&#13;
read before Sunday night's&#13;
senate, that student&#13;
organizations as well, decide the&#13;
distribution of the money. The&#13;
amendment failed. Some staff&#13;
feel their jobs are in jeopardy if&#13;
that provision passes by the&#13;
Board of Regents when the&#13;
constitution is reviewed by that&#13;
group in October.&#13;
Some amendments that passed&#13;
the senate include the Gary&#13;
Stewart (Vet's Club) and Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich (PSGA Pres.)&#13;
amendment which provides that&#13;
the segregated fee allocation&#13;
committee consist of one senator&#13;
from each of t he major academic&#13;
divisions and one representative&#13;
from the undeclared division. A&#13;
Rudy Lineau (of PAB) amendment&#13;
also passed the senate. That&#13;
amendment gives the elected&#13;
academic divisional representatives&#13;
a seat on their respective&#13;
faculty academic divisional&#13;
committees. Senator Keith Cliff&#13;
Chambers offered an amendment&#13;
to change all references to "he"&#13;
in the constitution to read "heshe"&#13;
and the amendment passed&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
All constitutional revisions and&#13;
amendments appear in this&#13;
week's RANGER.&#13;
In other action, the PSGA has&#13;
voted to go to the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee and ask for&#13;
a change in the name of the new&#13;
Campus Center to "Student&#13;
Union" or "Student Center."&#13;
Senator Chambers suggested&#13;
that by calling the new Union a&#13;
"Campus Union" removes, to a&#13;
subtle extent, that it is being paid&#13;
for by student money.&#13;
Milutinovich agreed, saying that&#13;
through the new merger implementation&#13;
law "appropriate&#13;
student input is to be made for&#13;
events in the "student union." He&#13;
asked senators if our union is not&#13;
a "student union" would there be&#13;
a possibility to schedule events&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Fearn resigns&#13;
Isom Fearn, coordinator of&#13;
Tutorial Services at Parkside,&#13;
resigned from the counseling&#13;
staff Saturday, August 31, 1974.&#13;
Fearn became the second&#13;
counselor in a jnonth to leave&#13;
Student Services. Wayne&#13;
Ramirez, a specialist, resigned&#13;
July 26, 1974.&#13;
Fearn has been appointed as&#13;
director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunities Program at the&#13;
University of N ew York-Genseao.&#13;
He will coordinate a program to&#13;
assist disdvantaged students who&#13;
normally are not admissible to a&#13;
university due to academic and&#13;
economic default.&#13;
Fearn said that the reason why&#13;
he took the new position at Genseao&#13;
was that his "Career objective&#13;
is in educational administration."&#13;
&#13;
"Parkside never provided me&#13;
with this opportunity," said&#13;
Fearn, who joined the counseling&#13;
staff in the fall of 1971.&#13;
During the spring of 1973 Fearn&#13;
organized Tutorial Services to&#13;
provide individualized academic&#13;
help to students.&#13;
"Tutorial Services will continue,&#13;
and until a replacement is&#13;
found for Isom, other staff&#13;
members will coordinate the&#13;
service," said Echelbarger.&#13;
This summer, Fearn served on&#13;
a committee that organized a&#13;
Learning Skills Program for&#13;
students having difficulty in the&#13;
reading, writing and math skills.&#13;
The Learning Skills Program&#13;
will be underway by the second&#13;
semester. It will coordinate&#13;
present remedial courses,&#13;
counseling sessions and&#13;
diagnostic testing into one main&#13;
program.&#13;
Fearn said that a determination&#13;
of how effective the&#13;
Learning Skills Program will be&#13;
is whether or not it will be&#13;
voluntary, or if students will be&#13;
placed in the program.&#13;
"My personal belief is that&#13;
people will have to be placed in&#13;
it," Fearn said. "A voluntary&#13;
service tends to get the relatively&#13;
good students anyway." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. li, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
• Editorial/Opinion—.&#13;
Dissent&#13;
without&#13;
reprisal&#13;
Since its election last spring our student government&#13;
has demonstrated to the student body again and again&#13;
that it acts in a responsible manner, showing an unceasing,&#13;
dedicated concern for the students of Parkside&#13;
and their rights. The senate worked diligently through&#13;
the summer on the constitution and, anxious to get it to&#13;
the Board of Regents for approval in October, has&#13;
placed it before the student body first thing this&#13;
semester asking for amendments and revisions.&#13;
It is certainly a right and a duty of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) as well as other individuals and&#13;
organizations to offer their amendments and&#13;
suggestions to the PSGA, but the PAB acted in a selfserving,&#13;
hostile and reactionary manner upon&#13;
discovering that PSGA would handle distribution of&#13;
funding for all organizations. Rumors fly that scores of&#13;
people will quit their jobs if s tudents gain control over&#13;
student money, that those who don't quit will be fired by&#13;
the PSGA, that Parkside will no longer have a basketball&#13;
team, and that Parkside students will have to use&#13;
pay toilets.&#13;
RANGER continues to have the utmost trust in our&#13;
student government and finds that such rationalizations&#13;
and embittered reactions will only serve to divide&#13;
students without any justifiable cause. Most importantly,&#13;
however, our student government must&#13;
remember that it is a political organization trusted to&#13;
make objective decisions for the good of the student&#13;
body as a whole. The conduct of some senators at&#13;
Sunday night's h?..&#13;
Although we agree that most amendments offered by&#13;
the PAB had either been negated by other earlier&#13;
amendments or were not proper amendments for other&#13;
reasons, the fact that it was the PAB that offered the&#13;
amendments should have made no difference to the&#13;
PSGA. All suggestions should have been given total&#13;
attention and received debate.&#13;
The hostilities between the two groups are, at the&#13;
moment, high. President of PSGA, Milutinovich, has&#13;
done a most excellent job in offering compromise and&#13;
leadership. His senate should strive to achieve those&#13;
same qualities.&#13;
If the PSGA is to receive the trust and credibility that&#13;
it must have in order to function, it must learn soon that&#13;
opposition is to be taken seriously and that the senate&#13;
cannot abuse its power as it did on Sunday. This country&#13;
has suffered enough at the hands of self-serving&#13;
governments and people with power. If our student&#13;
government continues to act in the manner it did&#13;
towards the PAB, students will have lost their right to&#13;
speak freely and our student government will indeed be&#13;
a powerful one-too powerful.&#13;
Our constitution contains a provision for students to&#13;
speak freely in opposition to their professors in classes.&#13;
We must also have the right to speak in opposition to our&#13;
student government. RANGER urges the PSGA to again&#13;
gain control of their tempers and to show the leadership&#13;
they have so often displayed since the elections.&#13;
i K.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independent&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, expressing&#13;
the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
wy OK&#13;
(k jTCRC6RA $&#13;
KEM6 jT&#13;
Students entitled&#13;
to direct input&#13;
On August 20, 1974 Professor William J. Folan&#13;
received a one year extension of his contract at&#13;
Parkside. This reversal on the part of the administration&#13;
is largely a direct result of student efforts.&#13;
* Upon hearing the decision to terminate Professor&#13;
Folan in February of this year students began an effort&#13;
to reverse that decision. Through student demonstrations,&#13;
rallying support from citizens in the&#13;
surrounding communities, letters of support and&#13;
commendation from students, and articles in RANGER,&#13;
students made their opinions known and heard.&#13;
The reversal of the termination of Folan is a victory&#13;
for students and a demonstration of the inadequacies of&#13;
the present system of faculty review.Under the present&#13;
system, only after a decision of faculty retention or&#13;
termination is made can the students express their&#13;
opinion of the decisions. Thus the students are forced to&#13;
turn to public pressures to have their voice heard.&#13;
The recently passed Merger Bill states: "The board&#13;
and its several faculties after consultation with appropriate&#13;
students shall adopt rules for tenure and&#13;
probationary appointments, for the review of faculty&#13;
performance and for the nonretention and dismissal of&#13;
faculty members."&#13;
This section gives students a direct voice in&#13;
establishing the review procedures to be followed in&#13;
future cases. Let us hope that a system is established&#13;
wherein the opinions of students are sought before the&#13;
final decision is made.&#13;
RANGER calls upon the administration and faculty to&#13;
put aside fears and prejudices towards students&#13;
"meddling" in their areas, and work to build a system in&#13;
which student input is welcomed.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
must be typed, doubledspaced,&#13;
and not exceed 350&#13;
words in length. The&#13;
editors reserve the right to&#13;
edit letters for length and&#13;
content. All letters must be&#13;
signed, but names will be&#13;
withheld upon request.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Students, I urge you to boycott&#13;
the soda pop and cigarette&#13;
machines. An extra nickel means&#13;
a lot to all of us, let's get together&#13;
and stop inflation.&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Sophomore, Kenosha&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has always seemed to me&#13;
that when a person runs for&#13;
elected office, he or she seeks the&#13;
right to represent other people on&#13;
a decision-making body, and as&#13;
such, is accountable to those he&#13;
or she represents. Further, the&#13;
elected official is subject to the&#13;
criticism of constitutents who are&#13;
dissatisfied with the job being&#13;
done on their behalf. Constitutents&#13;
should not be rudely&#13;
put down for daring to take issue&#13;
with their representatives, yet&#13;
this is exactly what happened to a&#13;
spokesperson for a group of&#13;
students when he took the time to&#13;
appear at last Sunday evening's&#13;
PSGA meeting with a list of&#13;
amendments to the proposed&#13;
constitution.&#13;
Granted, these amendments&#13;
were prefaced with an emotional&#13;
and strongly-worded letter of&#13;
protest about PSGA's original&#13;
(and absurd) deadline for&#13;
amendments to the constitution. I&#13;
would say the letter was an overreaction,&#13;
but it certainly made&#13;
the point that PSGA wasn't&#13;
allowing students adequate time&#13;
to review the constitution, realize&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The following statement by&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President of&#13;
PSGA, was published in the Sept.&#13;
4th RANGER. "To have the Vet's&#13;
Club and all the other&#13;
organizations control the money&#13;
is not representative of students&#13;
because all these organizations&#13;
are out for their own interests."&#13;
(in reference to control of&#13;
segregated fee money)&#13;
If that statement is true and the&#13;
Vet's Club's purpose is to "cover&#13;
its ass," then why has the Club&#13;
invested hundreds of man-hours&#13;
and thousands of dollars in the&#13;
Racine Bus? Why is the Club the&#13;
only student organization to&#13;
sponsor ecology projects like&#13;
paper drives and tree planting?&#13;
Why did the Club take the time to&#13;
build toy shelves for the Day Care&#13;
Center and assist in filling them&#13;
with toys? Why does the Club&#13;
sponsor social activities for all&#13;
its implications, and suggest&#13;
changes. The senators of PSGA--&#13;
elected to represent the studentsreacted&#13;
insultingly to criticism&#13;
from this group of their constitutents.&#13;
The immaturity they&#13;
displayed indicates they have a&#13;
long way to go before being&#13;
"adult enough," as one of them&#13;
claimed, to handle the power&#13;
which they seek and to which I&#13;
have always felt students are&#13;
entitled. Their rejection, in most&#13;
cases unanimously, of 16 of the 17&#13;
amendments which two Parkside&#13;
Activities Board members stayed&#13;
up an entire night to draft in time&#13;
for PSGA's deadline, was obviously&#13;
for reasons of spite and&#13;
personal biases, not for concerns&#13;
of student welfare and a sound&#13;
constitution.&#13;
Personally, I a m not willing to&#13;
entrust to so self-serving&#13;
narrow, and defensive a group&#13;
the sole power or even the&#13;
balance of power in determining&#13;
how student funds will be&#13;
allocated. This is one of the&#13;
primary powers PSGA Inc.&#13;
deems as its own under the UW&#13;
merger law, and includes in its&#13;
proposed constitution. This&#13;
students every semester? Why&#13;
does the Club volunteer for BS&#13;
jobs like ushering at graduation&#13;
and acting as tour, guides for&#13;
social groups who visit the&#13;
campus? Need I go on?&#13;
The plight of Veterans is a&#13;
definite and major concern of the&#13;
Vet's Club, but to imply that it is&#13;
the only concern of the Club is&#13;
totally irrational. How can a man&#13;
who claims to represent all&#13;
students be so blind as to not see&#13;
what his fellow students are&#13;
doing?&#13;
Whomever controls segregated&#13;
fees must be in a position to&#13;
objectively evaluate all student&#13;
organizations, their activities&#13;
and their purpose. Statements&#13;
made by the President of PSGA&#13;
make it obvious that he has not&#13;
objectively evaluated the Vet'^&#13;
Club, its activities or its purpose.&#13;
Dietmar Schneider&#13;
President, Vet's Club&#13;
document repeatedly refers to&#13;
PSGA Inc. as the sole&#13;
representative student group, yet&#13;
senators of PSGA are so arrogant&#13;
as to think themselves above and&#13;
beyond the reach of some of those&#13;
they claim to represent (that&#13;
sounds familiar)!&#13;
Since PSGA itself has a stake in&#13;
the allocation of student monies,&#13;
as do the Activities Board and all&#13;
other student organizations, the&#13;
Health Service, and Athletics,&#13;
among others, and since last&#13;
Sunday's meeting demonstrates&#13;
that our representatives&#13;
represent first their own interests&#13;
and listen last or not at all to&#13;
those who would have other&#13;
priorities, we would be fools to&#13;
approve a system of allocation&#13;
which would allow one of the&#13;
competing groups to control at&#13;
least 50 percent of the allocations&#13;
committee votes and potentially&#13;
100 percent (as they presently&#13;
have it planned). Better to have&#13;
an all-student committee that in&#13;
fact fairly represents all&#13;
students.&#13;
Jane Schliesman&#13;
Senior, Racine &#13;
II&#13;
railroading"&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
without student input?&#13;
The PSGA also defeated a&#13;
motion to place students Greg&#13;
Hawkins and Jim Smith on the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
The two had once been confirmed&#13;
by the senate, yet inaccurate&#13;
records were made and&#13;
Milutinovich took the matter&#13;
before the senate for review.&#13;
Milutinovich accepted the blame&#13;
for the error and called on the&#13;
senate to reconsider and accept&#13;
their nominations "in fair play."&#13;
However, senators in opposition&#13;
felt that in fair play, the openings&#13;
should be publicized and any&#13;
student interested should have&#13;
the opportunity to be nominated&#13;
for the vacant seats.&#13;
PSGA also voted to check the&#13;
legality of the forms being issued&#13;
by which student organizations&#13;
file for charter. Although the&#13;
forms require the signature of the&#13;
PSGA president, none have been&#13;
sent to him for signature.&#13;
Milutinovich suggested that&#13;
perhaps the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee had been acting in his&#13;
place in signing the forms.&#13;
The next PSGA meeting will be&#13;
held in LLC-D174 at 4 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday. The meeting is open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 11, 1974 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Regents discuss Vet. school&#13;
Bv Paul Anderson&#13;
of the Ranger Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Board of Regents met Friday,&#13;
Sept. 6th, in Green Bay, and&#13;
approved a gift of $2,000 from&#13;
American Motors Corp. for&#13;
continuing support of a study on&#13;
environmental quality in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin and a&#13;
federal HEW institutional grant&#13;
of $5,000 for equipment and&#13;
materials to improve undergraduate&#13;
instruction at Parkside.&#13;
The environmental quality&#13;
study is being conducted by an&#13;
inter-disciplinary team of&#13;
Parkside professors. The lastest&#13;
Defines students&#13;
Bauer responds to U C&#13;
Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
Parkside's response to the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Government's Proposed Policy&#13;
Statement on the student&#13;
responsibilities section of the&#13;
merger statute has been drafted&#13;
and sent to the president of the&#13;
UW system John Weaver.&#13;
Though Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
refused to release Parkside's&#13;
statement for publication, calling&#13;
it an "informal response," Vice&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer offered his&#13;
own comments on the United&#13;
Council proposal.&#13;
"All definitions should be&#13;
consistent with definitions used&#13;
for other policy statements," said&#13;
Bauer, referring to the United&#13;
Council's interpretation of the&#13;
word "students" as "student&#13;
governments."&#13;
Bauer does not believe that&#13;
United Council should have sole&#13;
responsibility in developing this&#13;
policy statement since they do&#13;
not represent all students.&#13;
Bauer aided in the drafting of&#13;
Parkside's response. He said that&#13;
it deals with procedure and with&#13;
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questions of the policy's effectiveness&#13;
for Parkside.&#13;
Among the problems that&#13;
Bauer personally sees with&#13;
United Council's proposal are the&#13;
o n e - s i d e d c o m m i t t e e&#13;
representation and the ability of&#13;
student governments to select&#13;
qualified people to serve on&#13;
academic committees.&#13;
The fact that students will have&#13;
formal representation on all&#13;
academic committees yet will&#13;
have exclusive jurisdiction on&#13;
student committees Bauer feels&#13;
is "patently one-sided."&#13;
It is also Bauer's feeling that in&#13;
the selection of representatives to&#13;
academic committees, the&#13;
student government should&#13;
choose from a list of people who&#13;
have been recommended by a&#13;
qualified organization. Bauer&#13;
feels that in this way more&#13;
capable people will be chosen.&#13;
Parkside's response to United&#13;
Council's Policy statement&#13;
proposal will go first to President&#13;
Weaver, then on to the Board of&#13;
Regents on October 3 for consideration&#13;
in the final formulation&#13;
of the UW policy&#13;
statement on student responsibilities&#13;
under merger.&#13;
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contribution brings AMC gifts for&#13;
the study, initiated in 1969, to a&#13;
total of $20,000.&#13;
Further actions included a&#13;
discussion of the present state of&#13;
Wisconsin in Veterninary&#13;
Educational facilities. As stated&#13;
in a Educational Committee&#13;
resolution:&#13;
"That the state of Wisconsin&#13;
currently faces (a) a deficit in&#13;
opportunity for qualified&#13;
Wisconsin residents seeking&#13;
education for the Doctor of&#13;
Veterinary Medicine degree, and&#13;
(b) a deficit in veterinary services&#13;
to the state of Wisconsin,&#13;
including the availability of&#13;
practitioners, the availability of&#13;
continuing education for practitioners,&#13;
and the availability of&#13;
diagnostic and clinical referral&#13;
services."&#13;
According to the resolution, the&#13;
State of Wisconsin should consider&#13;
two approaches to the&#13;
problem:&#13;
"(a) The establishment of a&#13;
new School of Veterinary&#13;
Medicine at UW-Madison, with&#13;
satellite facilities at UW-River&#13;
Falls, either operating independently&#13;
or operating as a&#13;
part of a regional plan for&#13;
strengthening veterinary&#13;
medical education and service&#13;
^involving at the outset the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
and the University of Minnesota,&#13;
or&#13;
(b) Contracting on a long-term&#13;
basis for an enlarged number of&#13;
placement opportunities for&#13;
qualified Wisconsin residents in&#13;
an expanded School of Veterinary&#13;
Medicine at the University of&#13;
Minnesota, with a concomitant&#13;
development of expanded&#13;
programs of continuing&#13;
education and clinical and&#13;
referral services in Wisconsin.&#13;
Such a long-term contract would&#13;
require an appropriate per&#13;
student payment by Wisconsin to&#13;
the University of Minnesota for&#13;
the educational ervices&#13;
provided."&#13;
It was further reported that a&#13;
joint meeting between the Board&#13;
of Regents of both Wisconsin and&#13;
Minnesota will take place on Nov.&#13;
22-23 to d iscuss plan (b) and the&#13;
possibility of a joint Veterinary&#13;
Medicine School constructed in&#13;
one of the two states. The&#13;
Regents voted 14-2 in favor of the&#13;
resolution citing that a final&#13;
decision be made on the two&#13;
alternatives no later than Jan. of&#13;
1975.&#13;
The next UW Regents meeting&#13;
is slated for Friday, Oct. 4th, in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
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BETWEEN 9 &amp; 5 P.M. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Wed nesd ay, Sep t. 1 1 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Relief in cjghf&#13;
CSC outlines program&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Kai Nail, President of the&#13;
Concerned Student Coalition,&#13;
stated recently that the goals of&#13;
CSC for this academic year will&#13;
be "to change the atmosphere&#13;
here at Parkside from a commuter-work&#13;
campus to an&#13;
academically student-oriented&#13;
campus."&#13;
Nail feels that this can be&#13;
achieved by three new CSC&#13;
projects: coo-op housing, a cooperative&#13;
food store, and a&#13;
financial aid counseling serice.&#13;
The co-op housing project will&#13;
be planned, established and&#13;
operated by CSC. The Coalition&#13;
hopes to build the co-op east of&#13;
the P.E. building in the corner of&#13;
the loop road.&#13;
The size of the co-op will&#13;
depend on the students. A survey&#13;
will be taken to see how many&#13;
students would be interested in&#13;
staying in the housing co-op.&#13;
Housing features outlined&#13;
The estimated cost for room&#13;
and board for two semesters will&#13;
be $800. The co-op will have two&#13;
beds to a room, a lounge area,&#13;
and a dining area. All rooms will&#13;
be furnished. Students in the coop&#13;
will be responnsible to help&#13;
cook and clean at times during&#13;
the week.&#13;
The co-op will elect a house&#13;
person who will be responsible&#13;
for contracting services, making&#13;
sure that evyone is doing their&#13;
jobs, and general management.&#13;
This project has not yet been&#13;
approved, though Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction&#13;
James Galbraith and Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Allen Dearborn have&#13;
agreed to it. the CSC hopes to get&#13;
a low interest federal government&#13;
looan, or use state&#13;
resources. After the loan is paid&#13;
off, the building will become the&#13;
property of the university.&#13;
Co-op Food Store Planned&#13;
Any Parkside student can join&#13;
the co-operative food store. There&#13;
will be a $10 fee, which will be&#13;
returned when the student withdraws&#13;
from the co-op. The fee&#13;
will cover the initial cost of the&#13;
food. The food store will sell&#13;
canned food and other non&#13;
perishables in bulk rates; fresh&#13;
food will be sold when awailable.&#13;
The CSC will try to sell food at&#13;
cost. At the start of the project,&#13;
students will not have to work at&#13;
the co-op. If the project is sueOPEN&#13;
&#13;
Mon. 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;
cessful, CSC may schedule people&#13;
to work for only a few hours a&#13;
week. The Coalition will try to&#13;
start this program by January 1.&#13;
CSC to Counsel&#13;
on Financial Aid&#13;
The third program CSC is&#13;
starting is the financial aid&#13;
counseling. Nail stated that "75&#13;
percent of the students at&#13;
Parkside do not apply for&#13;
financial aidMany feel that they&#13;
are ineligible, and they are really&#13;
not."&#13;
The Coalition would establish a&#13;
group of students who would&#13;
counsel students on financial aid&#13;
matters. Any student having&#13;
questions about filling out forms&#13;
or other financial aid porblems&#13;
can go to these counselors for&#13;
help. The Coalition hopes to get&#13;
this project started in December.&#13;
The Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition was started last spring.&#13;
It ran candidates on a slate for&#13;
PSGA elections, distributed&#13;
literature in support of its candidates,&#13;
discussed issues with&#13;
students and encouraged them to&#13;
participate in the elections. The&#13;
result was the largest voter turn&#13;
out in Parkside's history.&#13;
This summer the CSC voted to&#13;
change from a political to a nonpolitical&#13;
organization. Nail explained&#13;
the reason for the&#13;
change. "With the old direction it&#13;
would be difficult to successfully&#13;
pursue the various projects we&#13;
have in mind."&#13;
The Coalition has no&#13;
qualification for membership.&#13;
Any student can join and become&#13;
members of the committees that&#13;
will be operating the co-op&#13;
housing project, the co-op food&#13;
store, and the financial aid&#13;
counseling service.&#13;
Fred Bultman&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Bill Wyman has been holding down the bottom line for the Rolling&#13;
Stones for the past ten years. Nobody ever thought much of him, no&#13;
one expected that he could write, no one thought he would do an album,&#13;
and what a surprise-it's excellent. "Monkey Grip" is the best thing to&#13;
come out of the Stones since "Sticky Fingers." Seeing as the Stones&#13;
have sunk into mediocrity, Wyman would do well to start his own band&#13;
with Danny Hootch and Dallas Taylor, who handle the guitar and&#13;
percussion work. He's got the nucleus of a fine band. Wyman writes,&#13;
plays acoustic guitar and bass and sings.&#13;
It's definitely a "grows on you" album. When I first listened to it, I&#13;
didn't like it. It sounded flat and overdone-too much percussion, too&#13;
many horns and voices, etc., until I got used to it. Then it all blends&#13;
together and mellows out. "Pussy" and "White Lightning" are toe&#13;
tappin' country tunes with some fine fiddling by Byron Berline. "I'll&#13;
Pull You Thru" is soul Aretha would be proud of. "It's A Wonder" is&#13;
mellow and possibly the best song on the album. "What A Blow" is&#13;
good but suffers from mushy vocals. "Monkey Grip Glue" is too long&#13;
and repetitious. It's catchy, though, and is going to get caught in the&#13;
Top Forty treadmill. Despite the diverse styles, Wyman's vocals pull&#13;
everything together and give the album some unity. Now, if the rest of&#13;
the Stones would....&#13;
Records,courtesy of One Sweet Dream, are donated to&#13;
the Learning Center after review.&#13;
TUESDAY, Sept. 10 - FILM: Introduction to Film 210, "Birth of a&#13;
Nation" a short, at 7 p.m. in the Classroom Bldg., room 105. Admission&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 11 - FILM: "Day of the Jackal" sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
SATURDAY, Sept. 14 - DANCE: From 9 p.m.-l a.m. in the Student&#13;
Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50. Band is to be announced.&#13;
SUNDAY, Sept. 15 - RECITAL: By guest tenor Richard Sjoerdsma&#13;
from Carthage College and his accompanist Mary Ann Lackovich at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
SATURDAY Sept. 21 - TIM WEISBERG JAZZ ROCK CONCERT&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board, Saturday, Sept. 21 at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Physical Education Bldg. Tickets are $2.50 for Parkside&#13;
students and $3.00 for general admission. Advance tickets for the&#13;
above prices are available at the Information kiosk in the Librarv&#13;
Learning Center, Main Place. umrary&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED!!! .&#13;
Life guards for the Physical Education&#13;
Building pool. Part time work, weekdays.&#13;
Contac t Athletic Office Mr. Loren Hein, 553-&#13;
2162 o r 2245.&#13;
WANTED: Responsible person to drive five&#13;
year old to school daily or combination of&#13;
days. 9 -IS a m An hour round trip. Call 553&#13;
2293 o r 652 3996&#13;
AFRO DANCE CLASSES ~ Wed. nights, 7&#13;
7 45 p m , starting Sept 11, Racine YWCA,&#13;
instructor Betty Briggs. For information call&#13;
633 3503. Mrs Watts.&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC: Affidavits, pape rs, etc&#13;
notarized Contact Betty Briggs, Bus. Mgmt&#13;
Major eveninq classes Mon . Tues., Thurs.&#13;
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Saturday 10:00 5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:00 5:00 &#13;
This advertisement authorized and u x, ~&#13;
P d for by the Parkside Student Government Association, Incorporated.&#13;
Amended Constitution&#13;
PREAMBLE&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside do hereby organize&#13;
themselves pursuant to Wisconsin Statute&#13;
36.09 ( 5) and the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. Constitution Art. 4-20&#13;
in the manner set forth in this constitution&#13;
and select their representatives to participate&#13;
in institutional governance in the&#13;
manner set forth below. We 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;
the student body and subject only to&#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 the disposition of&#13;
those student fees which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus student ac&#13;
tivities.&#13;
Elections for representatives from&#13;
academic divisions and the undeclared&#13;
division to the legislative branch of the&#13;
Parkside 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 President 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;
third week in April.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
SECTION I. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION II&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Governmant Association Inc. shall consist of&#13;
student 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 700 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) will 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 un&#13;
declared 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 majors in the&#13;
previous semester in the 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;
a major in the previous semester may run&#13;
for Senator in the undeclared major division,&#13;
and 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 Ihe 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 larqe 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 with the con&#13;
currence of a simple majority of the entire&#13;
legislative branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
• Go vernment Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION III. A Senator of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. must&#13;
ben University Wisconsin Parkside student,&#13;
shall carry no less than 6 credits, 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 Vice&#13;
President of the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc., who shall be the&#13;
President of the Senate but shall have no&#13;
vote unless 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 shall 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, and no person shall be convicted&#13;
without the concurrence of two thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate. Judgment in cases of im&#13;
peachment shall not extend further than&#13;
rpmoval from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
Parkside Government Association Inc. has&#13;
jurisdiction over, appointment to, or election&#13;
•or Impeachment will not begin until two&#13;
thirds 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 Association Inc shall&#13;
have the power to determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedings, punish its members for&#13;
. disorderly conduct and, with the con&#13;
currence of two thirds ot the entire Senate,&#13;
members on any question shall, at the desire&#13;
of one member of the Senate, be entered on&#13;
,o_urnal. The Senate of the Parkside&#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;
du^no thS' and n&#13;
° '&#13;
eSS ,han twice a mo«th during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
12'&#13;
,he en,ire Senate a meeting shall&#13;
be called by the Vice President or in the case&#13;
JrJr, . o&#13;
6 Presidenf&#13;
'&#13;
s absence the&#13;
President Pro Tempore shall have the&#13;
responsibility to call a meeting-.&#13;
th!1&#13;
CT&#13;
'?N Vl&#13;
" Bi,ls 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;
maiority; 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 it back to the Senate&#13;
for reconsideration with his reasons for&#13;
reiection. If, after such reconsideration, a&#13;
simple maiority 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;
he 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 the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc shall be sent to the 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;
foregoing powers, and all other powers&#13;
vested by this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION Vlll. 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 the entire Senate.&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. shall have the&#13;
power to amend this constitution by a twothirds&#13;
vote of the entire Senate. In the event&#13;
of an amendment being passed by the&#13;
Senate, said amendment shall be placed on&#13;
the ballot of the next election. If the students&#13;
confirm the amendment by a simple&#13;
majority vote, it shall be added to the&#13;
Constitution. If the students vote against it,&#13;
the amendment will be deleted. In the event&#13;
the Senate does not confirm the proposed&#13;
amendment, said amendment will not appear&#13;
on the ballot. The proponent of an&#13;
amendment that is turned down may, if he or&#13;
she so chooses, follow the procedures set up&#13;
in Article . 7-36. When amendments are up&#13;
for approval they shall appear on the October&#13;
and April ballots. In cases of urgency,&#13;
a special referendum may be held at any&#13;
time.&#13;
SECTION IX. The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
keep records and receipts on all ex&#13;
penditures of all Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment 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;
&lt; ommittee&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION I. All executive powers, within&#13;
this article, shall be vested in the President&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II. 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 have completed no less than 12&#13;
credits at the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The President shall hold the office during&#13;
fhe 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;
and shall not serve more than 2 c onsecutive&#13;
terms&#13;
Before the President and Vice President&#13;
elect enters on the execution of fhe 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;
able to draw compensation while in office,&#13;
the amount of which shall be determined by&#13;
a majority vote of the entire Legislative&#13;
branch 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;
the date of suspension. Increases in com&#13;
pensation will not be awarded to a President&#13;
while in office unless he is re elected to&#13;
another term of office or to his immediate&#13;
successor, at which time such benefits would&#13;
begin to be implemented. All increases must&#13;
be approved by a majority of the entire&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from office&#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;
Inr and shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the office of the Presidency&#13;
of the" Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc&#13;
SECTION III. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with Ihe advice and consent of&#13;
the maiority of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Inc. Senate to nominate and&#13;
appoint the treasurer, corresponding&#13;
secretary and all other officers of the&#13;
executive branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and all student&#13;
ludges with the consent of two thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power to lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills He&#13;
may line-item veto the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. budget, but&#13;
shall not line-item veto the Segregated Fee&#13;
The President maV not veto&#13;
legislation or any portion of it, passed by the&#13;
Senate which deals with the Senate&#13;
Procedural Rules, Regulations, or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special committees and individuals to whom&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated within&#13;
the Parkside Student Government Inc. and&#13;
shall be required to furnish written reports&#13;
on his executive activities to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. by a majority vote of the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power, by&#13;
and with the advice and consent of the&#13;
Legislative branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. to sign con&#13;
tracts, provided that a majority of the entire&#13;
Senate concurs.&#13;
The President shall draw up the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. budget&#13;
and send it to the Legislative branch of the&#13;
Parkside 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 constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. and its&#13;
by laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
SECTION I. All judicial powers of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be vested in a judiciary court, 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;
of 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;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. Administrative ap- .&#13;
pointments to the judicial branch of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#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 III. The judiciary court and the&#13;
appellate court shall convene no less than 10,&#13;
and no more than 14 school days after a case&#13;
has been forwarded to the court from the&#13;
designated disciplinary head of the ad&#13;
ministrative branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside, or as requested by a&#13;
student. The judiciary court shall meet once&#13;
a month at an established place and time.&#13;
SECTION IV. 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;
stitutionaiity 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 Parkside student and&#13;
the other two shall be administrative ap&#13;
pointments. Upon the appeal of a negative&#13;
decision by a student defendant, the ap&#13;
pellate court shall have the 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;
the appellate court shall be binding upon all&#13;
parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV 1&#13;
An applicant shall not be denied admission&#13;
to the University Wisconsin Parkside for&#13;
reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
reliqious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV 2&#13;
Financial aid shall not be denied for&#13;
reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
reliqious 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;
expression, as defined in the constitution of&#13;
the United States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IV 4&#13;
Students are free to take exception to the&#13;
data 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 5&#13;
All students shall have the right to due&#13;
process of law as guaranteed by the United&#13;
States Constitution&#13;
ARTICLE IV 6&#13;
Any student shall have the right to request&#13;
in those areas of student disciplinary mat&#13;
tors that are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the administration, a&#13;
hoarinq by the judiciary court of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
inc and that request shall be binding on all&#13;
par ties1 involved&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 7&#13;
Students shall be evaluated only on their&#13;
knowledge of the subject and academic&#13;
performance and in turn are responsible to&#13;
maintain standards of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they&#13;
have enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 8&#13;
Disclosure of students' political or personal&#13;
beliefs, in connection with course work&#13;
shall not be made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 9&#13;
Student records on academic performance&#13;
and disciplinary actions shall be separate&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 10&#13;
Information from counseling and&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the&#13;
express consent of the student involved,&#13;
except under legal compulsion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 11&#13;
All records and information kept on file&#13;
shall be readily accessible to the student to&#13;
whom they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 12&#13;
Non administrative costs shall and do&#13;
include all areas of student services within&#13;
these budgets: 1) student programming 2)&#13;
student conference programs 3) student&#13;
game rooms 4) store S) ail other non&#13;
administrative positions. The nature and&#13;
scope of these programs shall be determined&#13;
by the students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 13&#13;
Organizational activities and intramurals&#13;
are completely non administrative variable&#13;
costs and as such shall be determined by the&#13;
students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 14&#13;
Parking, transportation budget policies&#13;
and procedures shall be established by&#13;
students in conjunction with the faculty and&#13;
staff of the University Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - IS&#13;
in the administration of segregated fee&#13;
budget the students of the University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside shall evaluate services&#13;
and staff as to their needs and cost.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 16&#13;
The students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall determine the scope of&#13;
student activities and the cost for each&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 17&#13;
Organization activities 'concerningstudents&#13;
shall be maintained by students&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 18&#13;
The responsibility and accountability for&#13;
all of the preceding articles shall be main&#13;
tained by the students of the University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 19&#13;
The students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside shall work closely with the&#13;
Chancellor of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside or his staff in developing the&#13;
segregated fee budget.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 20&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. subject to the responsibilities&#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;
faculty of the University Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
shall be active participants in the immediate&#13;
governance ot and policy development for&#13;
such institutions. As such, the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc. shall&#13;
have primary responsibility for the for&#13;
mulation and review of policies concerning&#13;
student life, services and interests. The&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc., in consultation with the Chancellor 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 Inc. shall&#13;
be the sole representative student group of&#13;
the students of the University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate in institutional&#13;
governance.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 21&#13;
In accordance with Article 20 an allocation&#13;
committee shall be established or&#13;
designated by the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. for reviewing&#13;
requests for program support and budget&#13;
allocations of the allocatable portion of the&#13;
segregated University fee and all action of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approval of the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc in conjunction with&#13;
the Chancelldr of the university of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The Allocations Committee shall consist of&#13;
one representative from each of the Major&#13;
Academic Divisions, one representative&#13;
from the undeclared division, and an equal&#13;
number of representatives to be chosen at&#13;
large.&#13;
Qualifications and times of elections shall&#13;
be the same as those stated in Article I,&#13;
section II and III.&#13;
Vacancies on the Allocations Committee&#13;
shall be filled by executive appointment&#13;
subject to approval by a majority of the&#13;
entire Senate.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 22&#13;
Provisions for a student health service as&#13;
determined by the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. in consultation&#13;
with the chancellor of the University&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside shall be made to ensure&#13;
that the student body shall have the right to&#13;
adequate health care.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 23&#13;
All auxiliary enterprises shall be subject&#13;
to review by the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc. prior to submission of&#13;
funding request to insure that the rights and&#13;
interests of the student body are met.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 24&#13;
All transportational proposals including&#13;
parking shall likewise be subject to review.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 25&#13;
Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
student organization from student government&#13;
recognition or institutional&#13;
recognition.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 26&#13;
No student shall be denied membership to&#13;
any on campus organization for reasons of&#13;
race, color, religious creed, national origin,&#13;
sex, past criminal record, political belief or&#13;
political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 27&#13;
Students shall have the right to invite and&#13;
hear speakers of their choice and approval&#13;
shall not be withheld by the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. or university&#13;
authorities for purpose of censorship.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 28&#13;
Students shall be free to assemble, to.&#13;
demonstrate, to communicate, and to&#13;
protest individually or through a student&#13;
organization so long as no federal, state or&#13;
municipal law is violated.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 29&#13;
Students shall be free to use campus&#13;
facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform&#13;
regulations to time and manner governing&#13;
the facility.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 30&#13;
Students shall have the right to be present&#13;
at all committee meetings directly affecting&#13;
the students.&#13;
ARTICLE IV • 31&#13;
In no way shall the constitutional rights of&#13;
any student, as stated in the United States&#13;
Constitution, ever be denied by anyone in&#13;
authority at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 32&#13;
The student press shall be free of censorship&#13;
and advance approval of copy, and&#13;
its editors shall be free to develop their own&#13;
editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 33&#13;
The student press shall be accorded all&#13;
those rights as stated in the United States&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 34&#13;
Students shall have the right to distribute&#13;
or sell information of a printed nature that&#13;
does not conflict with University Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 35&#13;
Students shall have the right to call for&#13;
elections to fill a vacated seat in their&#13;
division of the Legislative branch of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. by submitting a petition with 10 percent&#13;
of the students' signatures in their division to&#13;
the President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and to the&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the Legislative&#13;
branch of the Park'iide Student Government '*&#13;
Association Inc. Special elections will then&#13;
be held within 20 days.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 36&#13;
The students, upon presenting a petition&#13;
with 10 percent of signatures of the entire&#13;
student body, shall have the right to request&#13;
a constitutional referendum to amend this&#13;
constitution. The petition shall be presented&#13;
to both the President and the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE IV - 37&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have the power to&#13;
enforce and protect the above articles by&#13;
passing motions, resolutions or taking legal&#13;
action to insure that no student's rights are&#13;
violated.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Amendment I. Wherever "declared major"&#13;
appears in Article I, Section II, "or major&#13;
area of interest" shall follow.&#13;
Amendment II. Article I Section II sentence&#13;
2 shall read The divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humanistic Studies, Engineering,&#13;
Science, Management Science, Labor&#13;
Economics, and undeclared major shall&#13;
have orie (1) Senator. Upon reaching 1400&#13;
students the division shall add one (1)&#13;
senator An additional senator shall be&#13;
added for each additional 700 students within&#13;
that division&#13;
Amendment III. The President pro tempore&#13;
shall be a senator and shall be a member of&#13;
all Senate committees.&#13;
Amendment IV. The elected Academic&#13;
Divisional Representatives, excluding the&#13;
Undeclared Major Divisional Representatives,&#13;
to the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall be those students as&#13;
stated in CH 36.13 (3) of the Merger Implementation&#13;
Law the above elected&#13;
Academic Divisional Representatives shall&#13;
be members of their respective Faculty&#13;
Academic Divisional Committee.&#13;
Amendment V. Wherever the word students&#13;
or students of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside appear in Articles IV-12, 13, 14, 15,&#13;
16, 17, 18, 19, insert words "In accordance&#13;
with Article IV-20."&#13;
Amendment VI. The President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall nominate student appointees to all&#13;
faculty codified committees with a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate needed for&#13;
approval and shall publish such vacancies in&#13;
the student newspaper.&#13;
Amendment VII, Wherever the word he-she,&#13;
shall follow.&#13;
Amendment Vlll. Roberts Rules of Order&#13;
shall govern the proceedings of all Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association Inc.&#13;
meetings except when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association Inc. extends&#13;
the opportunity for all interested students to bring&#13;
in any amendments they feel should be made to this&#13;
latest amended version of the constitution. Come to the&#13;
PSGA Inc. Office, D193. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 11, 197 4&#13;
by James Smith&#13;
THERE'S A LOT OF TALK ABOUT AMNESTY going around these&#13;
days. In the past, I've had mixed feelings about it. My brother pointed&#13;
out something a few days ago that rather sews it up for me though. Our&#13;
president, our congress, our military; they're all ready to forgive&#13;
North Vietnam. And N. Vietnam was shooting at us! All the dodgers&#13;
and COs wanted was to be allowed not to shoot at anybody. I find that&#13;
easy enough to forgive. Good God, they let Jimmy Hoffa out of jail,&#13;
Calley's being called a hero, and nobody's mentioned two years of&#13;
ditch-digging for Nixon to earn his way back into society.&#13;
ATTENTION FOOD FANS! Unmuzzle your maws and unclamb&#13;
your canines. Let not your desires be damped. For those who would be&#13;
saved from the fickle finger of Fate's fishbone in the throat; for those&#13;
epicurean enthusiasts who up til now have hesitated to indulge in the&#13;
delectable diurnal delights of our denizen dinner to the degree desired,&#13;
the news is as follows:&#13;
In view of the increasing quality of cafeteria collations and&#13;
management's awareness of the threat of gaggin undergrads, monies&#13;
have been appropriated for and shipment has been received of: a&#13;
CHOKE-SAVER. This is a pliers-like device for retrieval of offending&#13;
morcels of meat and potatoes from the pharynx of fools who jam it too&#13;
much at one time. This medical marvel will be available in the&#13;
cafeteria for all friends in need who feed too fast and full. Isn't that a&#13;
jewel?&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUILDINGH&#13;
Journey to Ixtlan?&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK: Two Trips - Acapulco and Jamaica - Both&#13;
Between January 3-10, 1975.&#13;
ACAPULCO - $244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El Matador&#13;
Hotel &amp; Racquet Club. Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming&#13;
Margarita Party. Includes tips and taxes. For further information&#13;
contact the Student Life Office, Library Learning Center, room D197&#13;
at 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA - MONTEGO BAY - $279 plus $20 tax and service based on&#13;
3 to a room. Includes round-trip jet transportation. 7 nights at Toby&#13;
Inn, only a short walk from famous Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and&#13;
taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS - $309 plus $20 ta x and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round-trip transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located on&#13;
the beach on Cutlass Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle Party and&#13;
unlimited free tennis are included as well as reduced golf rates at&#13;
Upton Country Club. For forther information contact the Student Life&#13;
Office, 553-2294.&#13;
The beer's the thing •••&#13;
Milwaukee - The Premiere Production of James Nicholson's Down&#13;
By The Gravois (Under The Anheuser-Busch) will launch the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company's 1974-1975 season. Opening&#13;
on Friday, Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. in the Todd Wehr Theater of the Performing&#13;
Arts Center, the new dark comedy will run for 50 performances&#13;
before closing on Oct. 26.&#13;
Both of the phrases in the title of Mr. Nicholson's play refer to the&#13;
South side of St. Louis, Missouri--"Gravois" being a major avenue in&#13;
the city-and the action itself takes place in the household of the&#13;
O'Grady family which resides in an Irish-American neighborhood in&#13;
that area. The physical boundaries and limits of the play are set immediately,&#13;
but the emotional and psychological walls which held the&#13;
O'Gradys have long ago shattered-or crumbled away from atrophy.&#13;
Artistic director Nagle Jackson, who is directing Down By The&#13;
Gravois, has said the play is essentially about indolence, that most&#13;
prevalent American disease which causes us to expend all our energy&#13;
in a frantic effort to avoid work. For the O'Gradys, it is ignoring and&#13;
dodging the work necessary to keep any semblance of love in their&#13;
relationships. On the surface, the O'Gradys are a family held together&#13;
more by beer than by care. However, the desperation which occasionally&#13;
peers out above the cloud of insults and meaningless&#13;
disputes is as strong to the senses as the smell of yeast from the&#13;
brewery when the wind is right.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On tap at the Union 99&#13;
I Dunno bout y ouse,&#13;
but a d ime's a d ime!&#13;
The U -Boat&#13;
sandwich shoppe&#13;
1946 State Street&#13;
Racine&#13;
633-7386&#13;
lot&#13;
off&#13;
coupon&#13;
any U-Boat&#13;
THE NUMBER ONE BOOK OF THE YEAR!&#13;
NOW-THE SUSPENSE FILM OF THE YEAR!&#13;
FredZlnnemanns&#13;
orm&#13;
THE JACKAL&#13;
WED., SEPT. 11, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Comm. A rts Theater - $1.00&#13;
Tim Weisberg&#13;
Weisberg will appear in concert&#13;
at Parkside on Sept. 21 at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Phy.Ed. Building.&#13;
Tickets are $2.50 in advance for&#13;
UW-P students and are available&#13;
at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Services&#13;
Available&#13;
campus ministry&#13;
by amy&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
A major problem with the&#13;
social mood of a non-residential&#13;
campus is its impersonal and&#13;
cold atmosphere. Students who&#13;
must face this environment, day&#13;
in and day out, find that there is&#13;
little affirmation of their wellbeing&#13;
and worth because there is&#13;
no interaction with those around&#13;
them. Feelings of confusion and&#13;
loneliness are compounded by&#13;
academic difficulties and the loss&#13;
of direction. The Catholic&#13;
Campus Ministry,^under the&#13;
direction of Fr. Wayne Wotciechowski&#13;
and Sr. Collette&#13;
Zukowski, has a program to help&#13;
those, students who feel alientated,&#13;
troubled, or just wish to&#13;
talk to someone.&#13;
The Ministry offers concerned&#13;
students some sincere help. Fr.&#13;
Wayne and Sr. Collette are attempting&#13;
to open up lines of&#13;
communication between&#13;
students. They will be in LLCD174&#13;
on Mondays and Thursdays.&#13;
The phone number for the&#13;
Newman Center is 552-8626.&#13;
Flyers pertaining to the services&#13;
this center offers will be&#13;
available in the Information&#13;
kiosk. Any further announcements&#13;
of activities&#13;
planned for students who are&#13;
interested in sharing something&#13;
of themselves with others will be&#13;
carried in RANGER.&#13;
» 1&#13;
Jibing&#13;
Eoom&#13;
4:00 P .M. 'til C losing&#13;
2416 - Lathrop Ave. &#13;
Humanities&#13;
Antisecrecy&#13;
&#13;
discussed&#13;
by amy&#13;
of the Ranger Staff&#13;
On September 3, the&#13;
Humanities Division held the&#13;
first committee meetings of this&#13;
semester. The purpose of the first&#13;
meetings is organizational. The&#13;
Budget and Administration&#13;
Committee appointed Dennis&#13;
Dean to chair them. Members of&#13;
this committee are John Murphy,&#13;
Stella Gray, Orpheus Johnson&#13;
and Mary Johnson. The budgets&#13;
of most of the separate&#13;
humanities departments are&#13;
already decided," only the&#13;
Theater's budget has not been&#13;
distributed.&#13;
Most of the discussion at the&#13;
meeting was on the new antisecrecy&#13;
laws and the legislation&#13;
just passed on open meetings.&#13;
This would permit individual&#13;
students and faculty members&#13;
who do not sit on a particular&#13;
committee, to come into the&#13;
meeting and listen to its&#13;
discussion. Further, the new&#13;
legislation says that committees&#13;
must post the times and topics of&#13;
their meetings in advance so that&#13;
any interested parties may attend,-&#13;
there is no time limit&#13;
designated for exactly what&#13;
constitutes advance posting.&#13;
All meetings will be considered&#13;
open unless personnel up for&#13;
tenure or renewal are to be&#13;
discussed, and these meetings&#13;
can be opened if the individual&#13;
under discussion so wishes to&#13;
attend. Then, the meeting will be&#13;
open to all other parties who ask&#13;
permission to attend.&#13;
The Personnel Subcommittee&#13;
also met on Tuesday. Their ninemember&#13;
board voted Robert&#13;
Canary to the chair, and then&#13;
began to study the proposed&#13;
document that the committee&#13;
would use in their recommendations&#13;
on tenure, renewal&#13;
and pay promotions. The&#13;
document, as it was, did not&#13;
satisfy the committee, especially&#13;
members Aaron Snyder and&#13;
Brian McMahon. Snyder said he&#13;
would prepare a written set of&#13;
alterations on the document and&#13;
present them at the next meeting.&#13;
The meeting was then adjourned&#13;
and called for 12:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 5.&#13;
At the Thursday meeting, the&#13;
revised document written by&#13;
Canary and the Snyder amendments&#13;
were presented, and the&#13;
final document, including the&#13;
majority of Snyder's proposals&#13;
was ratified and will be sent to&#13;
the faculty that is up for renewal&#13;
and tenure.&#13;
HUMANITIES NOTE: Student&#13;
and faculty input from the&#13;
Humanities Division is being&#13;
solicited for the column The&#13;
Muse's Opinion. This column will&#13;
serve as a forum for the arts;&#13;
subjects are left to the writer's&#13;
discretion. Content may take the&#13;
form of an essay, creative exposition,&#13;
or dialogue between&#13;
individuals in a particular field of&#13;
the arts. Issue may be taken with&#13;
any opinion expressed in this&#13;
column. Therefore, rebuttal by&#13;
interested persons or parties is&#13;
invited. -Humanities Editor&#13;
PART-TIME&#13;
OPENING&#13;
$75.00 per w eek&#13;
Ideal f or students&#13;
CALL 654-5664&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Films by Women-Chicago, 1974&#13;
the^rofde' of" wompr!1" the 1890s&#13;
' 016 movies have distorted&#13;
housSCa Lrr," r°„nf„°^&#13;
qUe CKriTtTS&#13;
-&#13;
An&#13;
^-headed&#13;
box office Drofits hut fic * 0r g boobs not only guaranteed&#13;
our society. perpetuated demeaning myths of women in&#13;
r&#13;
ing&#13;
- Th today&#13;
'&#13;
s changing ima&#13;
*&#13;
e&#13;
women have mfrt! ^-discover the important contributions&#13;
decades of snrini j image-makers behind the camera. Despite&#13;
outstanding 2 h ?&#13;
ro&#13;
if&#13;
sslonal discrimination, women have set&#13;
tws Writers edhnrQS&#13;
"J*?&#13;
8 38 ima8&#13;
inative aad intelligent direc-&#13;
«wu ' edltors&#13;
' and cmematographers.&#13;
makersA™™ that WOmen are comP*tent film&#13;
Art Inst'it ifp anH 00k&#13;
'&#13;
dlrector of the Film Center at Chicago's&#13;
week"wus of^omin^f&#13;
S&#13;
f of&#13;
.&#13;
PUms by Wo™"--Chicago '74, a two week locus of women in international film making&#13;
screened tSf feature films and over 30 shorts will be&#13;
exMrim^n^R 8 t °&#13;
ne reelers&#13;
' modern documentaries, and&#13;
J™131&#13;
^&#13;
mm shorts&#13;
- Workshops in animation, video, and&#13;
critics making W,U be hosted by professional filmmakers and&#13;
Dolenaiffiwi ,&#13;
Tue&#13;
f&#13;
day evenin8 with "The Blue Light", a&#13;
Pprmsn ' 3&#13;
f Ut 3 lon&#13;
?&#13;
ly moun&#13;
t&#13;
a&#13;
in girl by Leni Riefenstahl. One&#13;
xLwerM tnHS&#13;
f ZT°&#13;
St d&#13;
£&#13;
eetors and P&#13;
r&#13;
°ducers, she created the&#13;
powerful and frightening "Triumph of the Will" a technically superb&#13;
documentary of t he massive 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremburg,&#13;
and the graceful cinematic study of athletic motion of the 1936&#13;
Olympics in Berlin.&#13;
Riefenstahl's brilliant technique of kinetic editing which captures&#13;
physical and psychological energy remains an undisputed standard in&#13;
mm making. Her films have influenced other directors like Charles&#13;
Chaplin, Stanley Kramer, and Lucino Visconti.&#13;
Unfortunately, a rare public appearance by the 74-year-old&#13;
Riefenstahl was cancelled Saturday. Demonstrators protested her&#13;
involvement with Nazi propaganda, although she never became a&#13;
party member and ceased Nazi filmmaking in 1938. How easy it is to&#13;
pardon political leaders, but an artist can never be forgiven.&#13;
Other highlights in the festival include an appearance by Jill Godmilow,&#13;
co-director with folksinger and recent film maker Judy Collins&#13;
with her film, "Antonia". Nelly 'Kaplan, a French-film maker and&#13;
outspoken feminist, will also appear with "A Very Curious Girl", the&#13;
satirical story of a prostitute's revenge against a village's hyprocrisy.&#13;
Two excellent documentaries examine contemporary crises: Cindy&#13;
Firestone's "Attica", a sensitive probe of the tragedy at Attica State&#13;
Prison in New York, and Susan Sontag's "Promised Lands" about the&#13;
Israeli-Arab conflict demonstrate women's expanding role in social&#13;
commentary.&#13;
Women filmmakers have been unfairly ignored for the last 75 years.&#13;
Obscured and restricted by foolish myths that denied talented female&#13;
expres&amp;ion, women are at last being recognized as important artists.&#13;
"I'm not that dumb," complained a young woman to her companion as&#13;
she waited to enter the festival. "I'm smarter than what you give me&#13;
credit for."&#13;
The scriptgirl now sits in the director's chair.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. II, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Deed&#13;
Apologetic prayers of forgiveness&#13;
because of Sin.&#13;
Leather-worn holes&#13;
whose battered tears&#13;
fall...empty.&#13;
, Dry with confusion,&#13;
, an encrusting mouthful of Dirt.&#13;
Drink deep&#13;
1 the Wine of Dead Cells&#13;
f and rejoice merrily&#13;
, in the Black Lagoon&#13;
. of illusion.&#13;
Rope&#13;
Shooting and&#13;
reaching...&#13;
Tying together&#13;
the strands&#13;
of uniqueness.&#13;
Bringing forth&#13;
the Essence of Youth&#13;
and&#13;
the Result of Age.&#13;
Perfection&#13;
is a lonely thought,&#13;
and in the center&#13;
of all things.&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
IN&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
A &amp; M RECORDING&#13;
ARTIST&#13;
ON Jazz-Rock F lute&#13;
September 21, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Physical E d. Building&#13;
UW-P Students *2.50 Advance Tickets&#13;
*5.00 General Public&#13;
*5.50 All D oor Sales&#13;
Available at I nformation Kiosk&#13;
A PAB and Beautiful D ay Production BncttEun's n&#13;
560/-24AVE. KEN05HH&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE CDCKTRIL HOUR&#13;
mend*p.&#13;
4:00- 9-00 R M. (61M LETS&#13;
3 FOOS8RLL TUBUS&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY CHAPIPSjA1EN4WOMEN&#13;
// OA&amp;me&#13;
^reneo &gt;50oa/d — •&#13;
W KEA/Q&amp;HR 'COSE &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 1 1 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Excitement&#13;
by Pete Strutynski&#13;
RUGBY—Game, Passion, or Brawl?&#13;
The sport of r ugby has been called all of these and to a degree, it is.&#13;
The game, which is considered the fastest rising amateur sport in the&#13;
nation, is an event that is fun for participants and spectators alike.&#13;
Rugby combines the quickness and stamina of s occer and the brute&#13;
force and power of football, to come up with a team sport unlike all&#13;
others in the world.&#13;
It is not a game for individual heroics, but one in which an over-all&#13;
effort by all the players is needed.&#13;
Rugby is truly an amateur sport because the clubs finance all&#13;
competition through funds collected from the participants. The only&#13;
compensation they receive is the satisfaction of fi nishing a game and&#13;
living to tell about it.&#13;
Rugby players run about the field and periodically cluster into&#13;
large, seemingly uncoordinated masses, which look like bar-room&#13;
brawls. Sometimes fights do develop, but all is forgotten after the&#13;
game, when the two teams adjourn to a nearby tavern to soothe aching&#13;
bones, short tempers and parched throats with large quantities of cold&#13;
beer. The drinking and singing together bands all ruggers into a&#13;
universal fraternity, which exists for the enjoyment of all.&#13;
Rugby games are free to all who want to watch and everyone is&#13;
invited to enjoy the escapades following each game.&#13;
Parkside Rugby Club is open to any student, faculty or staff who&#13;
wishes to participate in this contact sport. Practice sessions are held&#13;
every Monday and Thursday evening at the Wood Road field.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
.Sports&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
WINTERBREAK TRIP&#13;
JAMAICA&#13;
From •279&#13;
PLUS $?0 00 TAX 8. SERVICE&#13;
BASED ON 3 TO A ROOM&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Rum Punch Welcome&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips and Taxes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 C all: 553-2294&#13;
Kenosha's Fi nest Condominiums&#13;
Why rent when you can own a condominium&#13;
home for about the same monthly payment.&#13;
30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
/&#13;
irchuioo&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
ONE BEDROOM RANCH STYLE $24,500&#13;
TWO BEDROOM RANCH STYLE &gt;29,500&#13;
THREE BEDROOM T0WNH00SE &gt; 36,000&#13;
THREE BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE &gt;39,000 - &gt; 39,900&#13;
Prices include: • Air conditioning • Luxurious carpeting • Electric range and self-cleaning oven&#13;
• Frost-free refrigerator • Dishwasher • Food waste disposal ^Central FM/TV antenna&#13;
• Country clubhouse, with sauna "And many other design and convenience features.&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
For m ore information&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 to 8 P H O N E 1 —552 -93 39&#13;
Or b y personal showing at your convenience PARKSIDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and 8uilt by U S General, Inc.&#13;
Hockey&#13;
There will be an organizational&#13;
meeting for the Hockey team on&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building. Anyone interested&#13;
in playing and unable to&#13;
attend should contact Vic Godfrey&#13;
at ex. 2245.&#13;
IJfe Guards&#13;
Life guards for the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building pool are needed for the&#13;
following times: Week days - 11&#13;
a.m.-2 p.m.; Sundays - 6 p.m.-9&#13;
p.m.; evenings - 6:30 p.m.-8:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Contact Athletic office: Mr.&#13;
Loren Hein, 553-2162 or 2245.&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Anyone interested in men's or&#13;
women's gymnastics, contact the&#13;
Physical Education Department.&#13;
Archery&#13;
The Archery Club will hold a&#13;
meeting on Friday, Sept. 13 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. in the gymnasium&#13;
section of the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
For more information, call Vic&#13;
Godfrey, ex. 2245 or P.E. office.&#13;
Judo&#13;
The Judo Club will meet every&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 in&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS&#13;
STUDENT SAVINGS&#13;
Free checking...Free checks&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Mondav-Thursday 7:00-5:30 OPEN: Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Saturday 8:00-Noon&#13;
At the intersection of Highways 11 and 31&#13;
* Stop in or call for details.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
'ewuvto- 4&#13;
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Switchboard&#13;
24 hours&#13;
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COUNSELING&#13;
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INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57 th street&#13;
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§VUM*to tU* Qmeit&#13;
Ptf$a &amp; Hiolicut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
A 5010 7th Ave.&#13;
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* 'TRUCK on DOWN&#13;
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Keep your energy high and your mind mello with Pyramid Products </text>
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