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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 28</text>
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            <text>UFOs Exist</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>'UFO's exist'&#13;
phenomena such as air planes&#13;
and baloons and others labeled as&#13;
"unknown" .&#13;
Friedman claimed that the&#13;
unknowns must be vehicles&#13;
manufactured somewhere other&#13;
than planet Earth. His reasoning&#13;
for this conviction was that in&#13;
1955when the Project Blue Book&#13;
study was completed, no&#13;
technology yet on Earth could&#13;
have produced vehicles that both&#13;
looked and acted like the&#13;
reported UFOs.&#13;
Thes "flying saucers" have&#13;
been ,described as "round diskshaped&#13;
vehicles which are bigger&#13;
in diameter than in thickness,&#13;
ranging from a few to a&#13;
hundred feet in length or&#13;
diameter" and which are often&#13;
reported emmitting a sourceless&#13;
glow of light. Others thought to be&#13;
the mother ships of the disks are&#13;
cigar shaped vehicles which are&#13;
continued on .page 7&#13;
RANGERS WIN&#13;
Story page 12&#13;
The Parksidef-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
------Wednesday. March12.1975Vol III No.28&#13;
Effects of phase out&#13;
Task force report&#13;
by Paul M. Aodersoa&#13;
00 Feb. 3. Donald K. Smith,&#13;
UW senior vice president and&#13;
director of the System Advisory&#13;
Planning Task Force, issued to&#13;
chancellors a report on the status&#13;
of the Task Force simulation&#13;
studies.&#13;
The report stated that the Task&#13;
Force was comprised of four&#13;
study committees: study committee&#13;
No.1 was to study through&#13;
simulation, the effects of&#13;
"phasing out" six universities.&#13;
including Parkside; committee&#13;
No. 2 was to study the effects of&#13;
"phasing down" several campuses&#13;
and programs, including&#13;
the "phasing out" of Parkside's&#13;
level two (upper division)&#13;
programs in the College of&#13;
Science aod Society.&#13;
In addition, the report called&#13;
for the establishment of a&#13;
"campus reference group" on all&#13;
campuses to aid the various&#13;
study committees.&#13;
The report offered the&#13;
following explanation:&#13;
"As early as possible in the&#13;
week of February 10, we hope to&#13;
have in your hands the protocol&#13;
for the simulation studies of&#13;
campus phase out to 'be undertaken.&#13;
We will need&#13;
assistance from the campuses or&#13;
Indians sue military&#13;
by Neil Klotz&#13;
~CPS)-Two years to the day after the armed&#13;
ilans?fWoundedKnee began, lawyers for the In·&#13;
Ile InVolVedhave filed a $90 million suit against&#13;
~ military leaders who authorized and&#13;
.... the illegal use of federal troops during the&#13;
......&#13;
...~ ~gal activity of the military first came to&#13;
'-n duringthe eight month trial of American InPant&#13;
Movement (AIM) leaders conducted in SI.&#13;
last year Earl . Iiainsi last summer five of the ten federal charges&#13;
\leans AIM leaders Dennis Banks. and Russell&#13;
!'red lVere dismissed when US DiStrict. Judge&#13;
,~'ChOI ruled that US Army activity durmg the&#13;
!l&lt;leraed Knee occupation was in. violation of the&#13;
tlliJ Ilaws requiring that the. President declare a&#13;
~SOrder before the military can be used for&#13;
-the C purposes. Nichol later dismissed the rest&#13;
~ charges against Banks and Means for other&#13;
1Iiretacts of government misconduct like illegal&#13;
1b \liling.&#13;
tJ.J.: new suit by the Wounded Knee Legal&#13;
~:()ffense Committee cites the sa~e. federal&#13;
~IaryPosse Commitatus Act prohibIting the&#13;
"'1iIo b-o~ enforcing civil law-as the baSIS for&#13;
...... m.llion action.&#13;
~ng, those named in the suit are former&#13;
ntial aide Gen. Alexander Haig; Wayne&#13;
Colburn, head of the Special OperatiOns Group of&#13;
the US Marshals Service; fromer Atty. Gen.&#13;
Richard Lleindienst, and Gen. Volney Warner of the&#13;
82nd Airborne Division who clandestinely directed&#13;
federal material and manpower at Wounded Knee.&#13;
M nwhile on the Pine Ridge ReservatIon where&#13;
th ~ounded Knee confrontation began, more&#13;
vi:lence has erupted which has ca~d. the&#13;
. American Indian Movement to declare a national&#13;
emergency." team&#13;
Five members of the Wounded Knee defense&#13;
and one defendant have charged they were beaten&#13;
on February 26 by the private police of Pine Ridge&#13;
Tribal Chairman Ricard Wilson. Four persons were&#13;
hospitalized. od th US Civil&#13;
Both the US Justice Department a e&#13;
. ommission have previously ruled that&#13;
RIghts C n the last tribal election illegally. It&#13;
Wilson wo . AIl' (BfA) . f the Bureau of Indian airs remains or ff- move Wilson from 0 Ice.&#13;
however, to re 'the beatings, the defense comIn&#13;
response to. disrni •• all pending . ha fled motions to =.- mittee s I es because it cannot conduct&#13;
W ded Knee cas oun th reservation without harassment.&#13;
research on e . of beatings by Wilson's soJr&#13;
. ally a series oDIC , d" despite protests to local BfA&#13;
called "goon squPina. Ridge Oglala Civil Rights&#13;
r led the e in th&#13;
po Ice. . to ask for assistance from AIM m e OrgaDlzatlOn .&#13;
lirst place two years ago.&#13;
institutions in two ways: (a)&#13;
validation of the accuracy of&#13;
information developed by staff;&#13;
and (b) development of information&#13;
on certain questions&#13;
raised in the protocol.&#13;
"I would suggest that your&#13;
campus reference group can&#13;
direct its energy most effectively&#13;
if it awaits information on the&#13;
protocol of the study. which will&#13;
identify the points at which&#13;
campus input will be most&#13;
urgent If at that time the campus&#13;
believes there are questions&#13;
concerning consequences which&#13;
should be included, but which&#13;
have not been, then these can be&#13;
In a telephone conversation&#13;
with Norwood Friday, he said&#13;
that lhe Council has been&#13;
establIshed and includes sil&#13;
Parkside faculty ,nembef's and&#13;
one student, ~.. t to be selected. He&#13;
added that the Council ha met&#13;
once SUlCe .ts establishment and&#13;
will meet again this w""k.&#13;
According to Bauer, a set uf&#13;
protocols from the Task Force&#13;
study committees, dated Feb. 22,&#13;
were sent to Parulde and&#13;
arrived on Feb. 25, at 12:00 noon.&#13;
According to Norwood, the&#13;
protocols reached his desk at 3:00&#13;
p.m. that same day and ere to&#13;
be acted upon and returned to&#13;
Madison by t:00 p.m. the next&#13;
day.&#13;
When asked by a reporter if the&#13;
Academic P1anrong Council had&#13;
reviewed any information pertaining&#13;
to the studies being&#13;
carried out by committee o. 2 on&#13;
the "phasing out" of upper level&#13;
courses in the Coil e of Science&#13;
and Society, Norwood aald,&#13;
, othing has been reviewed by&#13;
our Council on that." adclng "we&#13;
sent a partial response to their&#13;
(the Task Force) inquiry. We did&#13;
not even have time to caU a&#13;
council meeting."&#13;
eeeuec d on pa 7&#13;
Related story&#13;
page 6&#13;
identified. "&#13;
In response to the report,&#13;
Parkside's Acting Chancellor&#13;
Otto F. Bauer called for the&#13;
establishment of an "Academic&#13;
Planning Council"&gt; on the&#13;
Parllside campus to serve as a&#13;
reference group for the current&#13;
studies arxl for future studies.&#13;
The Council would be organize&lt;1&#13;
and directed by Acting Vice&#13;
Chancellor Eugene Norwood.&#13;
PEACE! Of course we want peace&#13;
for both OUR SIDES!&#13;
RANGER WIN&#13;
Story page 12&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Wednesday, March 12, 1975 Vol 111 o. 28&#13;
Effects of phase out&#13;
Task force report&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
friedman states&#13;
'UFO's exist'&#13;
On Feb. 3, Donald K. Smith,&#13;
UW senior vice president and&#13;
director of the System Advisory&#13;
Planning Task Force, issued to&#13;
chancellors a report on the status&#13;
of the Task Force simulation&#13;
studies.&#13;
The report stated that the Task&#13;
Force was comprised of four&#13;
study committees: study committee&#13;
No. 1 was to study through&#13;
simulation, the effects of&#13;
"phasing out" six universities,&#13;
including Parkside; committee&#13;
No. 2 was to study the effects of&#13;
" phasing down" several campuses&#13;
and programs, including&#13;
the "phasing out" of Parkside's&#13;
level two ( upper division)&#13;
programs in the College of&#13;
Science and Society.&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Nuclear physicist, Stanton&#13;
Friedman, last Wedne~day night&#13;
:old a Parkside audience of 500&#13;
:hat "planet Earth is being&#13;
l'l.lited by intelligently pioloted&#13;
!ltraterrestrial vehicles. "&#13;
Friedman said that the&#13;
mdence is at once overwhehning&#13;
DI at the same time frustrating.&#13;
lie called it "a pain in the neck to&#13;
!ilysicists" since it consists only&#13;
~ witness reports and&#13;
!EQtographs.&#13;
However Friedman said that&#13;
:nany of the sightings and photos&#13;
nre made by competent and&#13;
1'Sponsible people; among them&#13;
lltronauts, Air Force pilots and&#13;
~ experts. Friedman spoke&#13;
at length of Project Blue Book&#13;
:he UFO study that was spon:&#13;
Sired by the United States Air&#13;
force. The study listed several&#13;
llagories of UFO reports which&#13;
"1'e labeled either as natural&#13;
~gal activity&#13;
phenomena such as air planes&#13;
and baloons and others labeled as&#13;
" unknown" .&#13;
Friedman claimed that the&#13;
unknowns must be vehicles&#13;
manufactured somewhere other&#13;
than planet Earth. His reasoning&#13;
for this conviction was that in&#13;
1955 when the Project Blue Book&#13;
study was completed, no&#13;
technology yet on Earth could&#13;
have produced vehicles that both&#13;
looked and acted like the&#13;
reported UFOs.&#13;
Thes "flying saucers" have&#13;
been described as "round diskshaped&#13;
vehicles which are bigger&#13;
in diameter than in thickness,&#13;
ranging from a few to a&#13;
hundred feet in length or&#13;
diameter" and which are often&#13;
reported emmitting a sourceless&#13;
glow of light. Others thought to be&#13;
the mother ships of the disks are&#13;
cigar shaped vehicles wl'!ich are&#13;
continued on p ag e 7&#13;
In addition, the report called&#13;
for the establishment of a&#13;
"campus reference group" on all&#13;
campuses to aid the various&#13;
study committees.&#13;
The report offered the&#13;
following explanation :&#13;
"As early as possible in the&#13;
week of February 10, we hope to&#13;
have in your hands the protocol&#13;
for the simulation studies of&#13;
campus phase out to be undertaken.&#13;
We will need&#13;
assistance from the campuses or&#13;
Indians sue military&#13;
by Neil Klotz&#13;
(cPS)-Two years to the day after the armed&#13;
!lege ~f Wounded Knee began, lawyers for the ln-&#13;
~ns involved have filed a $90 million suit against&#13;
~ US military leaders who authorized and&#13;
Si ected the illegal use of federal troops during the&#13;
ege,&#13;
~e ill~gal activity of the military first crone to&#13;
dia during the eight month trial of American InPauin&#13;
Movement (AIM) leaders conducted in St.&#13;
last year E 1 . ag ar Y last summer five of the ten federal charges&#13;
\\ a~t AIM leaders Dennis Banks and Russell&#13;
~ ea~ Were dismissed when US District Judge "~~ . Y{lllllld tchol ruled that US Army activity ~urmg the&#13;
feoe led Knee occupation was in_ violation of the&#13;
Ci1,1{~. laws requiring that the President declare a&#13;
~Ill 1&#13;
~0rder before the military can be used for&#13;
"th~tic Purposes. Nichol later dismissed the reSt&#13;
~Ian charges against Banks and Means for other&#13;
"ir tace~ of government misconduct like illegal&#13;
~ PPtng,&#13;
~/ new suit by the Wounded Knee Legal&#13;
laiii-t~e-Offense Committee cites the same federal&#13;
lllilita e Posse Commitatus Act prohibitin~ the&#13;
the $9ory f~o~ enforcing civil law-as the basis for&#13;
Ainottllion action.&#13;
~esid g. th0se named in the suit are former&#13;
entia1 aide Gen. Alexander Haig; Wayne&#13;
Colburn, head of the Special Operations Group ot&#13;
the US Marshals Service; fromer Atty. Gen.&#13;
Richard Lleindienst, and Gen. Volney _Warne~ of the&#13;
82nd Airborne Division who clandestinely directed&#13;
federal material and manpower at Woun~d Knee.&#13;
Meanwhile, on the Pine Ridge I_teservation where&#13;
th Wounded Knee confrontation began, more&#13;
vi~lence has erupted which has ca~d. the&#13;
. American Indian Movement to declare a national&#13;
emergency." team&#13;
Five members of the Wounded Knee defense&#13;
and one defendant have charged ~ey w~e ~ten&#13;
February 26 by the private police of Pine Ridge&#13;
~ibal Chairman Ricard Wilson. Four persons were&#13;
hospitalized. th US Civil&#13;
Both the US Justice Department and e&#13;
. Commission have previously ruled that&#13;
Ri_ghts the last tribal election illegally. It&#13;
Wilson won · Aff · (BIA) . f the Bureau of Indian airs remains or ff"&#13;
to remove Wilson from o ice. however' to ·the beatings the defense com- In response '. . all ding fled motions to dismiss pen&#13;
mittee has i cases because it cannot conduct&#13;
Wounded Kn; reservation without harassment.&#13;
resear_ch on :eries of beatings by Wilson's s&lt;r&#13;
Iromcally, a ,, ·te rotests to local BIA&#13;
called "goon squPina~ dRie~~ige tglala Civil Rights&#13;
r led the e · th&#13;
po ice . t· to ask for assistance from AIM m . e Qrgamza ion&#13;
first place two years ago.&#13;
institutions in two ways: (a)&#13;
va lidation of the accura~ of&#13;
infonnation developed by staff;&#13;
a nd ( b ) development of information&#13;
on certain que ·ans&#13;
raised in the protocol.&#13;
"I would suggest that ) our&#13;
campus reference group can&#13;
direct its energy most eff ctively&#13;
if it awaits information on the&#13;
protocol of the study, which will&#13;
identify the points at hich&#13;
campus input ill be mo t&#13;
urgent. ll at that time the campus&#13;
believes there are que tlons&#13;
concerning consequen hich&#13;
should be included, but hich&#13;
have not been, then th can be&#13;
Related story&#13;
page 6&#13;
identified."&#13;
In response to the r port&#13;
Parkside's Acting Chancellor&#13;
Otto F. Bauer called for th&#13;
establishment of an "Academic&#13;
Planning Council"- on the&#13;
Parkside campus to serve as a&#13;
reference group for the current&#13;
studies and for future tud es.&#13;
The Council ould be organ z.ecl&#13;
and directed by Acting Vt e&#13;
Chancellor Eugene orwood.&#13;
PEA CE . Of cour e w want p&#13;
for both O UR ID 1 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER We"I.day, Mardi 12. 1975&#13;
o PBS Alcohol policy explained&#13;
opPQrIu I 0 ma e a serious&#13;
8y serious contribution&#13;
In regard to your "Point of View"&#13;
coIwnn published in the Wednesday,&#13;
February 19 edition. of&#13;
Ranger dealing with the subject&#13;
01 minors (those under the age of&#13;
IS years) attending events in the&#13;
.""tiVlOes Building when beer is&#13;
bemg sold, I would like to share&#13;
the foUowmg Information and&#13;
thou,;,ts:&#13;
UW.Parkslde, as alb o~&#13;
campuses in "'I)ue '\&#13;
ext ctdlt ..&#13;
WI •• 1 ,. ....&#13;
'4 ''I.af lIle Uai'u. as&#13;
....... ., .. Beantfll Rl,....&#13;
IIrlII Wbc T&#13;
*&#13;
BlIIIe Slid ' IS&#13;
aed ~ Ad·&#13;
auiDiIlard" C8de qlII&amp;e clellrlY&#13;
_ tile 8lIIlject af OIl,.e.tlr oe&#13;
of ,.::r: ill pltlclell ..,we&#13;
rII beveratft are belIl8&#13;
Cf' arid. 'l1le- laws stete&#13;
wblID "'''''''l'''''''d by •&#13;
....,sIfIl may a mlnor&#13;
IIIdI ~&#13;
Cf'e 110 ermpus policy&#13;
pblJoropby of dle Sllldent&#13;
Cf' AuldIIarr Servll.'e$ OfficeS&#13;
CIlJ!opaS .... idI deIermlDt bow&#13;
lind yoomger are to be&#13;
.... ~. but rather l1 IS ll)' Stale&#13;
put all attempt s&#13;
lit Pal bade to..mut such&#13;
~~~~to r activities by&#13;
rge Identifymg marks&#13;
OIl the1r hands lo indicate they&#13;
aid nol served or sold beer.&#13;
H ever. under the conditions of&#13;
a wded buildmg and dim&#13;
we 'Were not always&#13;
SUl:c:e"ful m our attempt to&#13;
lor this, Another problem&#13;
t U10se who were 18 or&#13;
ma es a ailable an&#13;
• cost of crime ---------&#13;
(e en r&#13;
I&#13;
go to&#13;
ad back-&#13;
, Read about&#13;
•'eophyte" contr.&#13;
. • who backed or OPposed&#13;
•. ormal." and connections&#13;
between these people and PAB&#13;
then Dean llearborn As t~&#13;
""'&gt; PAR acts as It does 'Iets&#13;
111 tune go&#13;
In the fall of 1972 a dispute&#13;
came 0\ r comnuttee tin&#13;
a then ex sea g of&#13;
.......... lSting SllJdent Union&#13;
.. ~ncl·. In the cec TllDI W . . haSSle&#13;
ass, then chauman of th&#13;
tude"t Union C . e&#13;
IPSGAlorSuew sl omm.ttee&#13;
D._u. t e eY,then PAB&#13;
.. ~n were bein .&#13;
for the POst Ma' g eonsldered&#13;
,"_ .• non Machon and&#13;
"""n Dearborn. th&#13;
~Uor of SllJde'::'taSSistant&#13;
ad\"UOd lhat S Sel'Vlces&#13;
.~ """ Ue Wesley be&#13;
- • o&gt;UA dtsagteed&#13;
Dd R. ulatioDs . Laws&#13;
(kalh "'-t state&#13;
. ~.. one of th fi&#13;
nts on the e ve&#13;
eomnuttee shaU&#13;
of --- __&#13;
older were purchasing beer for&#13;
those who were not, so the&#13;
problem was still not brought&#13;
under control. It is not a matter of&#13;
whether a student who is 18 can&#13;
better handle his beer than one&#13;
who is only 17. It is a mailer of&#13;
adhering to laws which carry&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
William R. Niebuhr&#13;
Director of Student Life&#13;
be the Slti$tit&#13;
Se&lt;lRangej,&#13;
Iml&#13;
In lhe.De¢;' ANGER it :,;~# the CCC seated&#13;
wlllrWt!stley the PAB president&#13;
~ut voting power. That same&#13;
meetmg saw Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
then ASSIstant Dean of Students&#13;
suggest that $500.00 could be&#13;
shIfted from the Student&#13;
Government allotment H id W dr . er fdea&#13;
as opped. The CCC created&#13;
the Ranger Advisory Board that&#13;
Year. They choose the Ran&#13;
Editor in Chief. gers&#13;
thin the Jan. 17, 1973 RANGER is&#13;
e story' "PSG : A, PAB skirmish&#13;
Over Union board min ,,' . • programW&#13;
g. Some of It goes "Tom&#13;
elSSstaled he felt that the SUC&#13;
Was a b tt e er vehicle for programmi PAB H ng events than the&#13;
. e also 'stated "We don't&#13;
want to I ' rep ace anYbody" Hi remarks . . s&#13;
ti ~ere lnterrupted from&#13;
me to time b .&#13;
refutat" Y questIons and&#13;
Ion fromm the P AB&#13;
members and ad ..&#13;
personnel" La rnInlstrative . leronS W says "PAR d ue esley&#13;
to br'· . oesn't ask if its OK&#13;
109 In Ed tt.mc Its en Stone for a&#13;
com~ 'tt the decision of the&#13;
• ee and th ministration ha e ads&#13;
never vetoed&#13;
GE nesday,&#13;
or&#13;
rch 12, 1975&#13;
Alcohol policy explained- -------..._&#13;
older were purchasing beer for toward campus&#13;
In regard to your ··P?int of View"&#13;
umn published m the Wedy,&#13;
February 19 edition_ of&#13;
Ran er ahn with the subJect&#13;
minors (those under the age of&#13;
18 attending events in the&#13;
u,ities Building when beer is&#13;
Jd I uld like to share&#13;
folio ·og information and&#13;
those who were not, so the approximatelv Progr&#13;
roblem was still not brought $1.50 of that· a~~~nt SI&#13;
~der control. It is not a matter of supports those aciti .&#13;
whether a student who is 18 can beer or other alcoh Vlties&#13;
better handle his beer than one '.11"e sold. Admittedi°~ beiwho&#13;
is only 17. It is a matter of mclude all of th }.&#13;
adhering to laws which carry ~-:ain number o~ ~ f&#13;
with them serious consequences I s, but there are 5&#13;
if not followed. If, for example, a other programs such&#13;
®Uld:· · Pm}sibW ·'·be jeopardized uncomfortable position&#13;
fr&lt;im ·such an occurrence . law to accommodat&#13;
Comparing the Activities to a ttend beer e\'ents&#13;
Building to a restaurant or a do not in any way pro&#13;
bowling alley makes no sense at support through pa~&#13;
all, as it is neither. If a label had segregated fees. As r&#13;
to be placed on the building for who are actually 17 all&#13;
definition purposes, it would have most of the year, I am ai&#13;
to be called a pub or a beer bar will just have to watt&#13;
and, therefore, cannot enjoy the legal age as I and mar:,&#13;
exceptions that are made for had to until we were 2&#13;
such establishments.&#13;
In regard to the $4.50 per&#13;
semester that each student pays&#13;
through his segr egated fee&#13;
be th Student Uni~n&#13;
,se Ranger- pf Wed.w, 19i2) i/,j •i,C/&#13;
In Uie Pee 13! 1Wi2RANGER it&#13;
is reported tfa.ff the CCC seated&#13;
~e Westley the PAB president&#13;
~ ~ut voting power. That same&#13;
meetmg saw J ewel Echelbarger&#13;
then Assistant Dean of Studen~&#13;
s~gest that $500.00 could be&#13;
shifted from the Student&#13;
Government allotment. Her idea&#13;
was dropped . The CCC crea ted&#13;
the Ranger Advisory Boa rd that&#13;
year· They choose th Ran Editor in Chief. e gers&#13;
In the Jan. 17, 1973 RANGER. the story · "PS is '. GA, PAB skirmish&#13;
over union board ming ,, So . , program- W . . me of it goes "Tom&#13;
e1ss stated he felt that the sue was a b tt e er ve hicle for progra · PAB mmmg events than the&#13;
. He also stated "We don't want to l • rep ace anybody ,, H" remarks . · 1s time to ti~ere interrupted from me by q t· refutat" ues ions and memb ion fro mm the P AB e rs and ad .. personnel ,, La mm1strative&#13;
says " PAB d ter on Sue Wesley&#13;
to br' · . oesn't ask if its OK&#13;
mg tn Ed&#13;
dJilCt!. lts the en ~~ne for a comm·tt dec1s1on of the I ee and th mirustration e ad- has never vetoed&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
William R. Niebuhr&#13;
Director of Student Lu&#13;
.. any yet .. And later&#13;
change, "Weiss a ·ed&#13;
wasn't granted the&#13;
dule events. Dearborn&#13;
" Because PAB 1&#13;
r epresentative, more&#13;
and doing a better job&#13;
and J oe Harris."' HarrtS&#13;
then PSGA vice-preside::&#13;
A Feb. 21 , !973 IC&#13;
editorial congradulta&#13;
members of the a•&#13;
Allocation Committee fer&#13;
other things, propos~&#13;
Lecture and Fine Art5&#13;
mittee be phased out b)&#13;
75 academic year and 1&#13;
be taken o,·er by 1hr Pl&#13;
eluded on that comrn1tt&#13;
Marion Mochon, SUS&amp;ll&#13;
and William • ·,ebu!lr,&#13;
Coordinator of Student U:&#13;
chairman of the COf1Ulll1&#13;
This and other ar&#13;
research will go a 1&#13;
clarifying why the ,&#13;
troubles. The adrrurustr•&#13;
its student lackeys hB'&#13;
period of time conct&#13;
power in Universil)&#13;
mittees and this [n{lu&#13;
touched the RANGER, ~&#13;
PAB, and even the I'S(,&#13;
p av1d • &#13;
Jlr example, the ride of Emily Geiger may&#13;
y be under consideration for a television&#13;
tary. It offers all the ingredients of a&#13;
hit, i.e., sex. conflict, and a historical&#13;
cance that will allow a network to advertise it&#13;
.. educationalprogram.&#13;
1M! story of this "Carolina" woman's perilous&#13;
atrikesa samiliar note when one combines the&#13;
o! Paul Revere with the untimely end of&#13;
"master Nathan Hale. Be that as it may, the&#13;
-poem, tells of an important message that had&#13;
• carried. to lithe Carolina Gamecock," General&#13;
Sumpter.A call was made for a volunteer ...&#13;
There was a sudden silence,&#13;
Butnot a man replied;&#13;
Theyknew too well of the peril&#13;
Of onewho dared that ride.&#13;
Outspokethen Emily Geiger&#13;
Witha rich flush on her cheek-&#13;
"Give me the message to be sent;&#13;
I amthe one you seek.&#13;
For I am a Southern woman;&#13;
andI'd rather do and dare&#13;
Thansit by a lonely fireside,&#13;
Myheart gnawed through with care.&#13;
".Geiger made that ride, but as fate would have&#13;
!be Wascaptured by the Tories and locked in a&#13;
ouse while the men sought a woman to&#13;
her. Fortunately she was given the time&#13;
\htehaplessNathan Hale lacked: Where he was&#13;
IVlththe evidence ...&#13;
~ lime did she lose in bewailing;&#13;
the bolt creaked in the lock,&#13;
~e ""ickly drew the precious note&#13;
at was hidden in her frock.&#13;
Wednesday. Milrch 12. 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
And sbe read it through&#13;
with burried care •&#13;
Th ' en ate It, piece by piece,&#13;
And calmly sat ber down to wait&#13;
TIll time should bring release.&#13;
A WOman was found to search Emil .&#13;
there was no evidence of her 1Il1SS1' .y 8IlshdSIDCe&#13;
released to lin on, e was con ue her journey to General Sumpter.&#13;
The poem concludes "Long sball th B'tish rue that h' e n&#13;
marc , and Emily Geiger's Ride"&#13;
Then there is the story of Dame Batherwlck T'&#13;
her may go the credit for the first British . . 0&#13;
of the war. According to Dr. Pratt, Ms a:=,:&#13;
was. working in the fields outside Concord on that&#13;
fateful da~, when the "shot heard around the world&#13;
was fired. She heard shopting and shouting about&#13;
war and th.en saw British soldiers fleeing Concord in&#13;
her direction.&#13;
"In an' t t" I ~ an, Dr. Pratt writes, "her quick&#13;
woman S Wit took in the whole situation. Drawing&#13;
herself p~oudly up (musket in hand) her eyes&#13;
flashing fICe she cired "Halt! As ye value life, advance&#13;
ye not another step."&#13;
Continuing the story in poem ...&#13;
"Ye are my prisioners, sirs!&#13;
March on! she said;&#13;
Then dropped her plants and&#13;
pointing out to them the way.&#13;
She drove them quickly on,&#13;
as she had oft abead&#13;
Driven the kine across the fields,&#13;
at sel of day;&#13;
And they, "King George's Own,"&#13;
without a word obeyed.&#13;
In Ms. Pratt's work, most of the aforementioned&#13;
men and many others receive their due. Howevert&#13;
there are many enlightening stories on the con·&#13;
tributions and achievements of women and girls.&#13;
Although the historical accuracy of many is dif·&#13;
ficult, if not impossible, to prove, the spirit and&#13;
intention of Ms. Pratt should he recognized and&#13;
applauded. For, regardless of their veracity, these&#13;
stories have their roots in our American heritage&#13;
and will certainly be the cause of much research&#13;
during the next two years.&#13;
One final lady of note was Nancy Hart who was&#13;
"known throughout the South in RevolutIOnary&#13;
times as "the giantess" (she stood over SlX feet tall)&#13;
and the "heroine of Georgia."&#13;
111 "heroinic" deeds of this woman alone eer·&#13;
tainl; merit a go minute special. Suffice-to.say: she&#13;
took several prisoners and smgle.handedly saved a&#13;
fort occupied only with women and children from&#13;
the British skirmishers. .&#13;
What became of Nancy Hart? Followmg the war&#13;
ttl rs were moving to GeorgIa so she fled to&#13;
many se e "So many&#13;
the wilderness of Kentucky because,&#13;
neighbors leave me no room to brea~.l1 We ~an&#13;
anI wonder if she crossed paths Wl~ aoo er&#13;
see~ing "elbow room" in Kentucky. - Darnel Boone.&#13;
As we approach our bicentenmal W1~ a n~w&#13;
. history these books and theICstoCles&#13;
perspectIve on . from the writers of television&#13;
will bring a prermum allk The stories of these&#13;
fiS and historians e.&#13;
progra t he told for, as Dr. Pratt wrote 85 years&#13;
wom~,~~~~s a mean cowardly maD who would say&#13;
ago, ' women'didn't go forth in battle array&#13;
,that ~ca':;:~n't do their half in saving our country&#13;
that ey ."&#13;
from the British soldiers.&#13;
ptr.l1ptrttut.6&#13;
,.mtrican ~trstnrtl&#13;
byGordon C. Mcu;an&#13;
~ charge that history is' biased&#13;
b and large, the recorders of human&#13;
, y..... n WASp·MCPs may well have been 111ft ""_. . thepast. However, as we approach our&#13;
~ many historians and writers of&#13;
'magazine, and television stories are&#13;
athistorY with a new perspective. All are&#13;
for "new" and unusual events and&#13;
Is of the Revolutionary period that&#13;
be of interest totoday's readers and viewers.&#13;
difficultassignment. -&#13;
• studentof history is already familiar with&#13;
c deeds of men like George Washington,&#13;
Franklin, Horatio Gates and the men who&#13;
the Declaration of Independence. More&#13;
in this era of ethnic pride, the deeds of the&#13;
'Baron von Steuban, the Polish Casimir&#13;
, the Jewish Haym Salomon, and the black&#13;
IAttucks have been receiving more and&#13;
attention.&#13;
whalof the distaff side of the Revolution.&#13;
national attention on the Equal Rights&#13;
t and related activities, certainly some&#13;
of the Revolution can be acclaimed.&#13;
. wouldappear to have been the objective of&#13;
.. Prall, M.D. who begins a chapter in her&#13;
History Stories series with the statement&#13;
"PeoPlewho write histories always tell how&#13;
and boldand patriotic the men and boys are;&#13;
~ seldomdo they think it worth while to tell&#13;
bravedeeds of women and girls. Now, I don't&#13;
Ibis is very' fair ...&#13;
1Ilimelyas this philosophy would appear, the&#13;
thing about this series is that it was&#13;
by the Educational Publishing Company&#13;
the same year that four states entered the&#13;
andthe Shennan Antitrust Act was passed-&#13;
---Brief news&#13;
Abortion&#13;
_(CPS) . An estimated 900.000&#13;
legal abortions wer.e perfonned&#13;
, 1974 making II the most&#13;
~~eque~tly performed legal&#13;
. I procedure after the&#13;
surg1ca&#13;
tonsillectomy.&#13;
The report came in a stndy of&#13;
the effects of the Supreme Courl&#13;
decision on abortion publiShed ~&#13;
the January-February iSSue.&#13;
'1 Planning Perspective.&#13;
F~~ y'.&amp;7.&lt;', THE YEAR&#13;
BEFORE THE supreme Court&#13;
tr k down state laws that&#13;
S UC. ted the operation, there&#13;
restnc .&#13;
600000 legal abortions.&#13;
were •&#13;
~AY, March 7' MUSIC ENSEMBLE: Northweste~n Univers~ty&#13;
.-"""Por K l' co-&lt;lICectors.7.30 IJn. . ary, Stephen Syverud &amp; William ar Ins d&#13;
~ \he111 the Communication Arts Theater. Admission is free an open&#13;
Public.&#13;
Q)FFEE H 'd the Frost Tops, in&#13;
\Stud • OUSE: Featuring King Kenosha an&#13;
entActivities Bldg. From 3:30 to 5: 30 p.m.&#13;
~AY lIIarcb 9 CHI.RHO CENTER' Mass at 11:15a.m. , d ....lI8m . . . II conductor an&#13;
~ B E ORCHESTRA: Featuring Da",d Liltr~ Arts Thealer at&#13;
:IIIp.II1edf~rd, harpsichord, in the CommuDlcatlO&#13;
.AdmiSSionis free and open to the pubbc.&#13;
----...1Brief new&#13;
AI this time, the Search and Screen Committee wiIheI to emphuiIie&#13;
that it is actively seeking nomInalions m Indi~ ",..U!!ed lor tile&#13;
post of Chance11or. PIeaae forward the names of ncminees, lDplber&#13;
with whatever background information lDlly be avlli1llble to you, to:&#13;
PARKSIDE SEARCH AND SCREEN COMMITfEE&#13;
.10m Campbell, O&gt;airman&#13;
P.O. Box 900&#13;
Kenooha, WI 53140&#13;
The Committee re&lt;JIesIs that nominallons be submllIed u -.. u&#13;
possible. The dead1ine for submialll ... is Aprillli,lm.&#13;
P.A.B. EVENTS&#13;
WEDNESDAY. MARCM 12 WHIT.SKILU. ~ ~fttt!''' tol'lt, ft'tu.ic by ()4c:1Il&#13;
The~. tl 30. m to t 30p m.. GR o,en Fr.. ""..-n to"" flIUblC ~•• llOItM'_ •• ,&#13;
Intem.t_lIy Kda eee "., m.~t. k..,.. "*"""', , 00 ClI'I'l com",-- Ar'ta""'~ TiC~&#13;
lrewrvecl ,""ngl are S1 50tor ,tl..IlMl"o~, n 00tor 0Vft" aotCI ..... , ••• t ff\e If'fOk ......&#13;
THURSO.Y. MA.CH U, FILM .. H.-... MMIIMe"'!" 11 ... "' C. T ...., 10ft '"&#13;
Parlaic!e 10 requ,,..., A e:LM.I..e: on coli .... (..~&#13;
FRIO.Y.MA.CH1_FILM; .. H...... M1Ma...... n ... m CAT .,..,'000", SAl&#13;
AdirniUJOn11. Par"odIt I"'G ,tale 10', r«lu rH&#13;
FREE ••ntt-leUniOtl.' J01vS JOom o...ow-. .. ~ eorn.Ofloc-t'l&#13;
SUND.Y. MARCH" FILM ·H.,.....MI _ ..... 1''' II m SA •• .om&#13;
Parks.oe and ~l.te 10' rlqU rH&#13;
TUESOAY, MARC.HU: FILM I~r ..,....._., "Cor"*, .fttII .. ~,. " ]I. 1ft ~&#13;
1 :lOp", ntheCOO'f1m ArtS Tl'IMlr.... om "*"'" Par""" .Or .... r..,&#13;
.'&#13;
WEDNESD.Y. MA.CH l' FILM' ·'Ct.ti .... WII.~" l' • II 1ft C" T .om '-' II&#13;
ParkS;oe 10 reqywed&#13;
ALL YOfJ&#13;
FRIDAY (\&#13;
~~t!o~~Y~&#13;
brown 11011wit" m&#13;
troclltlonal E"lIlioIl .....&#13;
pub-type bonar. ,&#13;
'-Cola 510. or Solad. ...&#13;
1f Franc:ll Frleo or •&#13;
Bokocl Potato. ..&#13;
-$179'" =&#13;
• Z&#13;
34th &amp; 52nd St. ~&#13;
YOU&#13;
~ IY/ uw PARKSlDE&#13;
~" SPRI G8REAK TRIP&#13;
TO,&#13;
m~XiCO&#13;
CITY&#13;
MAICH 3D - APll &amp;&#13;
OILY $214 COMPLETE&#13;
MARCH 27 ·APRIL 4&#13;
ONLY 5369 COMPLETE&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
o RDUMDTaF lET A.fARE&#13;
01 MCHIS DElUXE LOBCIS&#13;
o Croud Tmslers&#13;
oTips , Tam&#13;
F"or appllcalion or information&#13;
('ontaCl&#13;
C~\IF'I'STR \\ELIE,n:R&#13;
• LU D·197 Call: S53·m.&#13;
• 1_ III letAnan&#13;
• 1 Iljpts lMtilll&#13;
• GI1II. IrllSl.s&#13;
• r,s l lues&#13;
For application or mformation&#13;
Contact.&#13;
(",\)lPl'S TRA\"ELCE. 'TER&#13;
• LLCD·197 Call: ,SJ·22!Oj&#13;
itU1 ptrsptrtiuts Wednesday, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
,American 4trstnru&#13;
by Gordon C. McLean&#13;
· ular charge that history is biased&#13;
~ pO~ and large, the recorders of human&#13;
~· y1&gt;een WASP-MCPs may well have been&#13;
~have&#13;
,..- . the past. However, as we approach our&#13;
_,c,se ~al, many historians -~d wri~rs of&#13;
~- magazine, and telev1s1on stories are&#13;
~~ bistorY with a new perspective. All are&#13;
~ for "new" and unusual events and&#13;
~ents of the Revolutionary period that&#13;
--~ of interest to, today's readers and viewers.&#13;
~ difficult assignment. ·&#13;
ts• student of history is already familiar with&#13;
£¥e%ic deeds of men like George Washington,&#13;
~aminFranldin, Horatio Gates and the men who&#13;
1111,...the Declaration of Independence. More&#13;
~ in this era of ethnic pride, the deeds of the&#13;
y, Baron von Steuban, the Polish Casimir&#13;
:: the Jewish Haym Salomon, and the black&#13;
•' Att~cks hav.e been receiving more and&#13;
,ieattenuon.&#13;
ai~ what of the distaff side of the Revolution.&#13;
tlb national attention on the Equal Rights&#13;
ID!erxlment and related activities, certainly some&#13;
l!IIJUle5 of the Revolution can be acclaimed.&#13;
tllis would appear to have been the objective of&#13;
lfl L. Pratt, M.D. who begins a chapter in her&#13;
•ncan History Stories series with the statement&#13;
Ill "People who write histories always tell how&#13;
1nve and bold and pa trio tic the men and boys are;&#13;
111very seldom do they think it worth while to tell&#13;
ithebrave deeds of women and girls. Now, I don't&#13;
1iJi this is very fair ...&#13;
A.I timely as this philosophy would appear, the&#13;
JiereSting thing about this series is that it was&#13;
flblished by the Educational Publishing Company&#13;
1Boston the same year that four states entered the&#13;
lbon and the Sherman Antitrust Act was passed111.&#13;
&#13;
For example, the ride of Emily Geiger may&#13;
ieady be under consideration for a television&#13;
mentary. It offers all the ingredients of a&#13;
~ hit, i.e., sex. conflict, and a historical&#13;
iWtificance that will allow a network to advertise it&#13;
• an educational program.&#13;
The story of this "Carolina" woman's perilous&#13;
mestrikes a samiliar note when one combines the&#13;
me of Paul Revere with the untimely end of&#13;
thoolrnaster Nathan Hale. Be that as it may, the&#13;
tiry-poem, tells of an important message that had&#13;
lobe carried to "the Carolina Gamecock," General&#13;
lliomas Sumpter. A call was made for a volunteer ...&#13;
There was a sudden silence,&#13;
But not a man replied;&#13;
They knew too well of the peril&#13;
Of one who dared that ride.&#13;
Outspoke then Emily Geiger&#13;
With a rich flush on her cheek-&#13;
"Give me the message to be sent;&#13;
1 am the one you seek.&#13;
For I am a Southern woman;&#13;
and I'd rather do and dare&#13;
Than sit by a lonely fireside,&#13;
My heart gnawed through with care.&#13;
, Ms. Geiger made that ride but as fate would have ., sh ' . e was captw-ed by the Tories and locked m a&#13;
~dhouse while the men sought a woman to&#13;
:ch her. Fortunately, she was given the time&#13;
ta lhe h~pless Nathan Hale lacked: Where he was&#13;
light with the evidence ...&#13;
No time did she lose in bewailing;&#13;
As the bolt creaked in the lock,&#13;
~e WUickly drew the precious note&#13;
hat Was hidden in her frock.&#13;
'-----Brief newsAnd_&#13;
she read it through&#13;
with hurried care&#13;
Then ate it, piece b~ piece,&#13;
And calmly sat her down to wait&#13;
Till time should bring release.&#13;
A woman wa~ found to search Emil and . there was no evidence of her . . Y smce&#13;
released to continue her journey =n~::i;u:as&#13;
ter. The poem concludes "Long shall the B _tishP- rue that m h ' . n arc ' and Emily Geiger's Ride "&#13;
Then there is the story of Dame Batherwick T.&#13;
her may go the credit for the first British priso~er~&#13;
of the wai:, A~cording to Dr. Pratt, Ms Batherwich&#13;
was_ working m the fields outside Concord on that&#13;
fatef~ day when the "shot heard around the world&#13;
was fired." She heard shooting and shouting about&#13;
war ~d th_en saw British soldiers fleeing Concord in&#13;
her direction.&#13;
"In an instant," Dr. Pratt writes "ber quick&#13;
woman's wit took in the whole situation. Drawing&#13;
hers~lf P:oudly up (musket in hand) her eyes&#13;
flashing fire she cired "Halt! As ye value life, advance&#13;
ye not another step."&#13;
Continuing the story in poem ...&#13;
"Ye are my prisioners, sirs!&#13;
March on! she said;&#13;
Then dropped her plants and&#13;
pointing out to them the way.&#13;
She drove them quickly on,&#13;
as she had oft ahead&#13;
Driven the kine across the fields,&#13;
at set of day;&#13;
And they, "King George's Own,"&#13;
without a word obeyed.&#13;
In Ms. Pratt's work, most of the aforementioned&#13;
men and many others receive their due. Ho ever,&#13;
there are many enlightening stories on the contributions&#13;
and achievements of women and girls.&#13;
Although the historical accuracy of many is dif.&#13;
ficult, if not impossible, to prove, the spirit and&#13;
intention of Ms. Pratt should be recognized and&#13;
applauded. For, regardless of their veracity, these&#13;
stories have their roots in our American heritage&#13;
and will certainly be the cause of much research&#13;
during the next two years.&#13;
One final lady of note was Nancy Hart w~ was&#13;
"known throughout the South in Revolut1onar ·&#13;
times as ''the giantess'' ( she stood over six feet tall)&#13;
and the "heroine of Georgia."&#13;
The "heroinic" deeds of this won:an alon certainly&#13;
merit a 90 minute spe~ial. Suffice-to-say: she&#13;
took several prisoners and smgle-handed!y sa,;ed a&#13;
fort occupied only with women and children from&#13;
the British skirmishers. _ What became of Nancy Hart? Fol~owmg the war&#13;
many settlers were moving to Georgia so-~ fl~~~ the wilderness of Kentucky because, .~. m )&#13;
neighbors leave me no room to brea~. We ~an&#13;
onl wonder if she crossed paths w1~ ano er&#13;
Yk·ng "elbow room" in Kentucky - Daruel Boone. see 1 ·a1 'th a new As we approach our bicentenm w1 - -&#13;
. history these books and thel.I' stories&#13;
~rspe_ctive o~emium from the writers of television&#13;
will brmg a P . . alik The stories of these ro ams and historians e. P gr t be told for, as Dr. Pratt \\Tote 85 years&#13;
wom~,n ~~~s a mean, cowardly man who would say&#13;
ago, O, didn't go forth in battle array&#13;
.that ~cai:::t:~:t~eir half in saving our country&#13;
that ey di ,, from the British sol ers.&#13;
Abortion&#13;
~~lelDAY, March 7MUSIC ENSEMBLE: Northwestei:n Univer7s~io&#13;
. (CPS) . An estimated 900.000&#13;
legal abortions wei:e performed&#13;
. 1974 making it the most&#13;
~~eque~tly performed legal . 1 procedure after the surg1ca&#13;
---Brief newca--&#13;
At this tim , the&#13;
that it is acti ·ely in n&#13;
post of Chancellor. Pl f ard&#13;
with hate ·er background infonna ·&#13;
PARKSIDE SEARCH •o&#13;
John Campbell, Cllalrman&#13;
P.O. Box 900&#13;
Keno.5ha, WI 53140&#13;
RE&#13;
a,u, .... , ...... on&#13;
P.A.B, 'E\'&#13;
Adm ion SI, Par&#13;
FREE,&#13;
MARCH JI - APR 6&#13;
ONLY s274 CO PLETE&#13;
• Ro d T · Jet Airfare&#13;
CAT ""' pm, A&#13;
adff1ln~11n II&#13;
em&#13;
ARCH 27-APRIL 4&#13;
0 LY 369 CO PLETE&#13;
I CLUDES:&#13;
rnporar St . . K i·ns co-directors. . PJ!l · Y, ephen Syverud &amp; Wilham ari . ci&#13;
to th Ill the Communication Arts Theater. Admission is free an open&#13;
e PUblic.&#13;
tonsillectomy· The report came in a study of •&#13;
the effects of the Supren:e Coll:t&#13;
decision on abortion pub~ed ~ the January-February 1SSue_ o&#13;
• 1 Ni ts L dg' g&#13;
• Gro Tr sfers&#13;
• ROU D TR JET Al f ARE&#13;
• 1 161\TS DELUXE l0D6 6&#13;
•Gro d Trans ers&#13;
C01i'FEE H d the Frost Tops, in lhestu • OUSE: Featuring King Kenosha an&#13;
dent Activities Bldg. From 3: 30 to 5: 30 p.m.&#13;
~~AYMarch9CHI-RHOCENTER: Mass at 1l:l5a.md tor and&#13;
trances ~IDE ORCHESTRA: Featuring David _Lltt~ell~~~ T~:ater at&#13;
l:~P.rn eclfo_rd, harpsichord, in the eommun~cation&#13;
· Adnussion is free and open to the public.&#13;
·1 Planning Perspective.&#13;
Fanu y THE YEAR IN is&amp;1s14,&#13;
BEFORE THE Supreme Court&#13;
k down state laws that&#13;
struc . th&#13;
trl·cted the operation, ere res . 600 000 legal abortions. were ,&#13;
• r s &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or mf mation&#13;
Contact·&#13;
c.u1n .- R \ \'EL E. 'TER&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For pphc t1 n r mf rm 11&#13;
nt t ·&#13;
R ER&#13;
11 :553 ~ &#13;
4 THE PARK51DE RANGER Wednesday. Mardi 12. lt75&#13;
ape laws: archaic values and myths&#13;
Anti-Rape Qland1. att.emPted to&#13;
dr-my1tlI)' rape. "'lbere is DO&#13;
~ n.pe vicum-.nyboolY&#13;
.,.. be l'lIP"d. More oft8l&#13;
IIlm not. lbe rapist - y.....&#13;
bas probably studied your&#13;
mo emOlllJl and planDed bis&#13;
.. tacit. It .... baAJeD anytimO. mypIace". ADtbcmy expI.tned.&#13;
As lor !be rapist 1IlmseIf. be is&#13;
~ not lbe ~ penert&#13;
- otenoIypeS propoot. ~&#13;
CCI"IIiIII CO .. ,c" ,'C!':al test&#13;
resullJ1. .bleb are etted by&#13;
AJnit ill Pa_ ..&#13;
..-- Raft (lJaIftnlty 01&#13;
0lIcac0 ~ I. 0IlIy 3 perceot 01&#13;
IIIJ """ "'''''.s could be caJIed I*YdloCle. kw. dID&amp; to stallslics&#13;
pe.. ed by !be WIIIIwlglOn D.C.&#13;
Rape CriIb Ceat.er:&#13;
10 percent of rapes are pial&gt;-&#13;
ned.&#13;
50 pen:ent of rapes are committed&#13;
in the borne·&#13;
50 pen:ent 01 rapes are committed&#13;
by an assaiJant )mow to&#13;
tile victim. lwI&gt;-IhiJ'd5 of convicted rapists&#13;
are married and have regular&#13;
""". According to Anthony. "One of&#13;
tile main ~s we have to do is&#13;
raise awareness. AI! the recent&#13;
media attention bas brought&#13;
home !be fact that the woman is&#13;
not guilty-the rapist is."&#13;
Along with theis awakened&#13;
awareness have come demands&#13;
for cbanges in the statutory&#13;
treatment of rape. As a member&#13;
of the WiscOnsin Task Force on&#13;
Rape. Ullchny is working toward&#13;
the passage of Senate Bill 233.&#13;
'I1ris bill, which is currenUy&#13;
under study by the Wisconsin&#13;
State Judiciary and Comsuiner&#13;
Affairs Committee, would&#13;
remove rape from its present&#13;
.category of "crimes against life&#13;
fCC asles for new 'aws&#13;
on obscenity&#13;
(cps) -'!be Federal eommunicationsCommission (FCC) has asked&#13;
Congress to pass new laws clearly giving it the authority to forbid&#13;
"depktion of obscene or indecent material" on television, and to&#13;
atend its authority to include cable television.&#13;
'!be FCC said this was needed to protect children from "bannful&#13;
material" such as sex and violence in evening programming.&#13;
At the same lime. tile FCC said that self...egulation by the broadcast&#13;
Industry was preferable to rigid federal standards and praised the&#13;
ne~ks for agreeing to keep such material from being broadcast&#13;
during the first hour of prime-lime programming.&#13;
.It .also said it believes parents should bave the primary responSlllility&#13;
for controlling what their children view on TV.&#13;
"This traditional and revered principle ... has been adversely aff~ted&#13;
by the corrosive processes of technological and social changes.&#13;
• everthe1ess, we believe that it (power to forbid certain programnungl&#13;
deserves continuing affirmation."&#13;
'!be FCC ackno~ledged that regulatory action in television&#13;
::gramnung dec~ons, could risk improper governmental in- .w::: III subjeCtive programming decisions, freeze present&#13;
and discourage creative development in television.&#13;
2&#13;
Training Sale&#13;
0/ OFFALL ;;:;'&#13;
/0 BATS &amp; GLOVES&#13;
IN STOCK&#13;
Ord r your team uniforms&#13;
NOWI&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPENAT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
TUESDA!,&#13;
LADIES'&#13;
WINE&#13;
254&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN A GLASS&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
First ational Bank&#13;
and Trust Co~pany of Racine&#13;
e-&#13;
&amp;220-67 ~.ED/S ROllER RINK&#13;
Ph.652-8198 Kenosha&#13;
,&#13;
709 Wiscon.i:':INE STOREONLY&#13;
Ye.&#13;
Expert WaE &amp; 0 637·9591&#13;
IL CHANGE&#13;
with OIL FILTER&#13;
quality oil •&#13;
5&#13;
'"dUd,,,Plo qUarta of $ 88 011 filter.~ n&#13;
l&#13;
etpertc:haaai,&#13;
1.1brieation.&#13;
~1~IN'.n.&#13;
pPointment.&#13;
.&#13;
CancerII'"&#13;
(CPS) • Sclentilll II&#13;
National Cancer bIIlIIt&#13;
isolated for the 8nl1la'&#13;
closely associated wtIb III1IlII&#13;
III humans.&#13;
According to the ....&#13;
discovery may belp lIID",&#13;
new approaches II ....&#13;
diagnosis and .....&#13;
leukemia and olber _&#13;
Intensive Ulsls" fa&#13;
isolated virus to be eftIJ"&#13;
to another virus kDoIIIl II_&#13;
some types of caooer• .,.&#13;
The scientists ....... II&#13;
. however, that thecllaMJlI.&#13;
way means thaI .- II&#13;
contagious disease, but_&#13;
probably caused by, ....&#13;
factors, includingw.t....&#13;
work together to ca. -&#13;
------&#13;
I I&#13;
, I&#13;
I I ,...=0&#13;
1/lIi&#13;
==CJ&#13;
,'" '1&#13;
lin&#13;
-WIDEST SELEClII&#13;
OF BOOKS II_&#13;
• •&#13;
PAPER BACKSfII&#13;
THE DISCRIIIA1J&#13;
RUDEl&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT sl'ECII&#13;
ORDER SE.-&#13;
BRoWSERS_&#13;
AtCMtlAM..,.tt. JJ'&#13;
K-Ji&amp;~&#13;
GI4-59U,9';&#13;
65A-3bS"&#13;
GE&#13;
¼&#13;
s: archaic values and myths&#13;
ay, rch 12, 1975&#13;
oc&#13;
ned. 50 percent of rapes are committed&#13;
in the home. SO percent of rapes are committed&#13;
by an as,sailant know to&#13;
the ~&#13;
\ictim. of convicted rapists&#13;
are married and have regular&#13;
AccOrding to Anthony, "One of&#13;
the main things we have to do is&#13;
raise awareness. All the recent&#13;
media attention has brought&#13;
home the fact that the woman is&#13;
not guilty-the rapist is."&#13;
Along with theis awakened&#13;
awareness have come demands&#13;
for changes in the statutory&#13;
treatment of rape. As a member&#13;
of the Wisconsin Task Force on&#13;
Rape, UlichnY is working toward&#13;
the passage of Senate Bill 233.&#13;
This bill, which is currently&#13;
under study by the Wisconsin&#13;
State Judiciary and Comsuiner&#13;
Affairs Committee, would&#13;
remove rape from its present&#13;
category of "crimes against life&#13;
,FCC aslcs for new laws&#13;
on obscenity&#13;
) -The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has asked&#13;
rror,nr&lt;&gt;= to ~ n laws clearly giving it the authority to forbid&#13;
• piction of obscene or indecent material" on television, and to&#13;
its uthority to include cable television.&#13;
Th FCC said this was needed to protect children from "harmful&#13;
mat · I'' ch as sex and violence in evening programming.&#13;
At th same time, the FCC said that self-regulation by the broadcast&#13;
ind • was p-eferable to rigid federal standards and praised the&#13;
for agreeing to keep such material from being broadcast&#13;
th first hour of prime-time programming.&#13;
It . . said it ~eves par~nts ~ould have the primary respontilit&#13;
for controlling what thei.r children view on TV.&#13;
'1llis tradit onal _and revered principle ... has been adversely afr.&#13;
ted by th corrost~e proc~ of technological and social changes.&#13;
l , e believe that 1t (power to forbid certain program-&#13;
) · continuing affirmation."&#13;
The FCC a . ~ledged that regulatory action in television&#13;
t...-J_amrru .. ., ~ dee~~· could risk improper governmental in- C: m ~bJective programming decisions, freeze present&#13;
a and discourage creative development in television.&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPEN AT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
LADIES'&#13;
WINE&#13;
254&#13;
A GLASS&#13;
~~, A Different&#13;
}J type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
220-67 ~ED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
· Ph. 652-8198 K enosha&#13;
Mott&#13;
Amtncen&#13;
Cancer linked&#13;
(CPS) • Scientists 1,&#13;
~ational Cancer lnstilll&#13;
isolated for the first time 1&#13;
closely associated with&#13;
in humans.&#13;
According to the sci&#13;
discovery may help them&#13;
new approaches to de&#13;
diagnosis and treatm&#13;
leukemia and other canan&#13;
Intensive tests show the&#13;
isolated virus t.o be every&#13;
to another virus known ID&#13;
some types of cancer In&#13;
The scientists hastened&#13;
however, that the disrorel;&#13;
way means that cancer&#13;
contagious disease, but ra&#13;
probably caused by a&#13;
factors, including viruses,&#13;
work together t.o call5e&#13;
-------· I&#13;
I&#13;
I \&#13;
= 1! 1&#13;
=n_J&#13;
-· --......... ---~~ WIDEST SELECT!&#13;
Of BOOKS IN TO&#13;
• PAPER BACKS fO&#13;
THE OISCRIMINATI&#13;
READER&#13;
• PROMPT SPECI&#13;
ORDER SERYIC(&#13;
BROWSERS~&#13;
A\c.-lM.Mwdl~&#13;
~ !{~&#13;
Gl4-59ti-9; 3 2- i;gt·li&#13;
65A·3bc;2--&#13;
III!! ---.:- i-. ____ .. &#13;
Wednesday, Milrch 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Moral: try a llttle IeDdnn&#13;
wlute rat bwnbb.ng, stumbling,&#13;
crashing into wall after wall anes- all,&#13;
lnPPl/lg through gateways,&#13;
bloodily cormng to the end&#13;
of the labr}llth.&#13;
meanwhile, the soent t&#13;
coldly elalTUmngwlule rat&#13;
movements. observing&#13;
without tenderness or feelinll.&#13;
confused ramblings&#13;
of blood-necked rat,&#13;
you,who profess to caretoo much.&#13;
experimenting, observing.&#13;
HYPOTHESIS: TIiAT A WO.lA.:·&#13;
WOULD RELIEVE YOU FRO.l YOUR&#13;
JLL.FITTED MONIED .lARRIAGE.&#13;
DATA: SUBJECf OF EXPERIMENT&#13;
TRIES TO DIE. LITERALLY SY'lBOUCALl.Y,&#13;
REPEATEDLY; EXPERIME TOR CAl . LY&#13;
OBJEcrIVELY OBSERVE.&#13;
CO/;CLUSIO, : HYPOTHESIS I. 'CORRECf&#13;
Moral: try a litUe tenderness.&#13;
..I.b.&#13;
As achild, Keith often dreamed of himself as a boy made of wood, much like&#13;
muchLike .PmocchlO. He also dreamed of a mysterious, magical Pierrot clown&#13;
Oneday, III hIS home town of Los Angeles, he saw a man in a store window who&#13;
stoodand moved as if he were a mechanical man. Keith watched for hour s with&#13;
profoundfascination.&#13;
As he grew older, he studied and worked as an actor. He practiced and observed&#13;
thedance, and even toured for. a little while with a small circus as a clown.He&#13;
discoveredthat the secret of good theatre was magic, and the key was silence.&#13;
KeithBerger sought to recreate what he had envisioned as a child. He did just&#13;
thatby painstakingly teaching himself a style of silent performing, referred to&#13;
asthe art of Mjrne ,&#13;
If the success of his art can be measured in the response of his audience, then,&#13;
KeithBerger has succeeded completely,' Today, you can see the vehicle of all&#13;
art-the body- used to the .point of lyrical genius and sensitivity.&#13;
TODAY, you can experience KEITH BERGER.&#13;
'*' Weory&#13;
experience (life)&#13;
cannot be squeezed,&#13;
slrunk,&#13;
pushed into a symmelncal&#13;
square,&#13;
crammed into a jar&#13;
like herring;&#13;
it must be&#13;
cherished.&#13;
held in the hand&#13;
like a porelain sparrow&#13;
with a tirJle.broken wmg.&#13;
.J.b.&#13;
ee •• ,,,&#13;
ee ,IIMI=_ •&#13;
we&#13;
• I'm weory&#13;
tolk to me,&#13;
touch me,&#13;
understond my lOll&#13;
of the sun todoy--&#13;
until tomorrow&#13;
when the sIn&#13;
comes ogoin • h&#13;
Wit&#13;
LAST LETTER TO A RADICAL WOMAN&#13;
Radical woman&#13;
"flowers to the rebels failedl&#13;
'&#13;
were Sacco {;Vanzetti'S&#13;
last gasping dream.&#13;
They never forgot&#13;
the accident of their origins J&#13;
just as you won't forgive&#13;
the accident of USo&#13;
Your harsh words how unlfke&#13;
the gentler world&#13;
transcending gender,&#13;
that was their.&#13;
universal communication.&#13;
Radical woman,&#13;
with your right- on pose&#13;
and your put-on&#13;
Sappho smile,&#13;
.vour crotch politics&#13;
may get you to Washington---&#13;
but I never wore&#13;
com bat boots&#13;
for anyone.&#13;
Radical woman,&#13;
I won't. fight for slJoils&#13;
in a hitcb -goddew system.&#13;
The tail of -a tige~&#13;
just isn't my&#13;
kind of ride, '&#13;
and 1 can't&#13;
love alone, anymore.&#13;
MIck Ande.rsen&#13;
Ille--- Miclloel&#13;
Me"er&#13;
Humanities&#13;
,&#13;
Wednesday, March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
1 1:&#13;
• oral: try litU&#13;
As a.child_, Keit~ often dreamed of himself as a boy made of wood, much like&#13;
much hke.P1~occh10. He also dreamed of a mysterious, m a gica l P ierrot clown&#13;
One day, 1n his home town of Los Angeles, he saw a man in a s tor e window who&#13;
stood and moved as if he were a mechanical man. Keith watched for hours with&#13;
profound fascination.&#13;
As he grew older, he studied and worked as an actor. He pr act iced and observed&#13;
the dance, and even tour e d for _ a little while with a small c ircu s as a clown.He&#13;
discovered that the secret of good theatre was magic, and the key was silence .&#13;
Keith Berger sought to recreate what he had envisioned as a c hild . He did just&#13;
that by painstakingly teaching himself a style of silent performing, referred to&#13;
as the art of Mi-m.e.&#13;
If the success of his art can be measured in the r e spon s e of his audience, then,&#13;
Keith Berger has succeeded completely. Today, you can s ee the vehicle of all&#13;
art-the body- used to the .point of lyrical genius and sensitivity.&#13;
TODAY, you can experience KEITH BERGER. "Jlc Weary&#13;
ee®®®***®***®®®®M&#13;
LAST LETTER TO A RADICAL WOMAN&#13;
Radical woman&#13;
"flowers to the rebels failed"&#13;
were Sacco &amp; Vanzetti's&#13;
last gasping dream.&#13;
They n ever forgot&#13;
the accident of their origins,&#13;
just as you won't forgive&#13;
the accident of us.&#13;
Your' harsh words how unlike&#13;
the gentler world&#13;
transcending gender,&#13;
that was the ir&#13;
universal communication.&#13;
R adical wom.an ,&#13;
with your right- on pose&#13;
and your put- on&#13;
Sappho smile,&#13;
.:y our crotch politics&#13;
m ay get you to Washington---&#13;
but I n eve r wore&#13;
com bat boots&#13;
for anyone .&#13;
Radical woman ,&#13;
I won't fight for spoils&#13;
in a bitc h-goddess sySt em •&#13;
The t a il of -a t iger&#13;
JUSt isn't my&#13;
kind of ride,&#13;
and I can't&#13;
love alone, anymore . Mick An de.rsen&#13;
•&#13;
······-&#13;
Humanities&#13;
I'm weary&#13;
talk to me,&#13;
touch me,&#13;
understand my loss&#13;
of the sun today--&#13;
until tomorrow&#13;
when the sun&#13;
comes again .&#13;
Wtt&#13;
li e&#13;
"th&#13;
me---&#13;
mu&#13;
hand&#13;
.l.b.&#13;
j r&#13;
ic oel&#13;
Nepp r&#13;
J .. &#13;
Co-op&#13;
E 5&#13;
b lchae\ 0 zyk&#13;
NOTESNote snote s&#13;
Moishe Smith, associate&#13;
professor of art at the University&#13;
or W"lSCOnsin·Parkside, is one of&#13;
six well-known American graphic&#13;
artists invited to contribute a&#13;
representative work for inclusion&#13;
in the I50th annual exhibition of&#13;
the National Academy of Design&#13;
through March 16 at the&#13;
Academy galleries in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Peter Martins' appeal for tenure hearing is schedu1edlor .&#13;
l1:30a.m. inroomD-174. This will be an openhearlngUlhl ....&#13;
who support Prof. Martin are urged to attend. Hyou WIIltlt~&#13;
call Lise Iwon at 637-3098.&#13;
----&#13;
Evening Student services are now being offered OIl 1'ulIdIIr&#13;
Wednesday nights from 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the alcove 1lelrttollle':&#13;
Shop on the concourse of the Wyllie Library Learning Cenlllr&#13;
Placement testing, academic planning, and general&#13;
'*' 7&#13;
about campus events, student services and special ~&#13;
available.&#13;
The service is staffed on Tuesday evenings by PhylllaLkIIerI,MI&#13;
Student Program intern, and on Wednesdays by COUIIIeIar 0IIIt&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
Lack of faculty consultation&#13;
draws fire&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The lack of faculty consultation&#13;
on administrative decisions that&#13;
affect the university is "irnproper&#13;
procedure" and should be&#13;
"rectified," UW Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls, told&#13;
UW President John C. Weaver&#13;
Friday.&#13;
"Is this going to be a pattern&#13;
that any important decisions b~&#13;
done without faculty consideration?"&#13;
asked DeBardeleben,&#13;
at the Regents' regular&#13;
monthly board meeting in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The clash between Weaver and&#13;
DeBareleben followed a report&#13;
given by the Regents' Executive&#13;
Committee on the enaclmen&#13;
enactment of student enrollment&#13;
ceilings at four UW campuses;&#13;
Madison, LaCrosse Eau&#13;
Claire and Stout-to help th·~UW&#13;
system cope with an austerity&#13;
budget proposed by Gov. Patrick&#13;
Lucey.&#13;
~ ceilings are designed to re-&#13;
. el :"dents, most likely&#13;
tneoming eslunen, who are non.&#13;
commuters and have undeclared&#13;
~18tors. to other campuses more&#13;
~ handle increasing&#13;
ts economically&#13;
fallThe limits, to take err';"t this&#13;
. are a Partial r~&#13;
Gov Luce . dir -""nse to&#13;
. y s ectorate of J&#13;
requesting the R an. 8&#13;
de egents to&#13;
velop plans for "pha . phasu,g down sing out,&#13;
lRStituti ' or consolidating&#13;
ODS and programs "&#13;
A set of guidelin .&#13;
mendabons e recom_&#13;
to tho are to be sulxnitted&#13;
"lias~""'r:::rAlX"il IS.&#13;
gIVen tho etta ty ever been&#13;
nee to respond?"&#13;
DeBardeleben asked UW Senior&#13;
Vice President Donald Percy,&#13;
who reported for the committee.&#13;
"We certainly had some&#13;
reaction, (though) not extensive,"&#13;
said Percy, citing that a&#13;
memo was sent out to all "faculty&#13;
concerns" and chancellors.&#13;
"I do think it's unfortunate in&#13;
an institution that faculty cannot&#13;
be heard," responded DeBardeleben.&#13;
Percy told DeBardeleben, "I&#13;
apologize for the fact that we&#13;
couldn't consult as extensively as&#13;
possible with faculty," adding&#13;
that "because of short&#13;
deadlines (the Governor's), there&#13;
was not adequate consultation for&#13;
everybody."&#13;
Regent Mrs. Robert R.&#13;
Williams, Stevens Point, said&#13;
that she and others had "talked&#13;
informally about enrollment&#13;
ceilings" before the Governor's&#13;
request was issued-talks that&#13;
included members of faculty&#13;
groups and chancellors. She said,&#13;
however, that the talks were in&#13;
light of "educational planning"&#13;
rather than "fiscal problems."&#13;
"I do deplore the fact that it&#13;
~as not given faculty consideratinn'&#13;
DeBardeleben again ~&#13;
contended, adding that&#13;
something must be done to&#13;
"rectify improper procedure."&#13;
Weaver answered DeBardeleben&#13;
by· .&#13;
saymg that possible&#13;
enrollment I· . . muts for Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee were studied a&#13;
ye,,:,"ago by the Board of Visitors.&#13;
The subject has had some&#13;
ventilation in advance ,. h .d&#13;
He dde ' esal.&#13;
an: d that, "I don't think&#13;
y ne 10 the system· . diff IS 10-&#13;
. erent to or insensitive of the&#13;
::,::rtance of faculty input. We&#13;
under some very difficult&#13;
time constraints."&#13;
He said that the IIlIllIr&#13;
tentative" and slID .. II&#13;
discussion and added, II&#13;
sure I'd say we apoloPo. ..&#13;
Percy does, because I""'"&#13;
we had a better Wl7 we ..&#13;
have operated in. IpnfIrli&#13;
the word "unfortlllate" till&#13;
pressures on us don' ••&#13;
consult faculty CII rJ&#13;
Weaver said thatbe'"&#13;
preferred to have seen II&#13;
requested by the GflIIIII&#13;
carried out over a ...,.,&#13;
period, rather than In.''&#13;
"I'm dismayed b7&#13;
Weaver's statement" rfI/IIA&#13;
DeBardeleben. "U .. ..., ..&#13;
time for adequate ~&#13;
then we need newmeaUW·MadisonIaw~&#13;
II&#13;
Finman, chalrmaa" •&#13;
University Committee.'"III&#13;
from the audiencec:.:!:.&#13;
. "the real test of a lllIIt&#13;
shared governance (II&#13;
faculty) cornes.IIff.::.,&#13;
there are easy limIII&#13;
ficult limes." III •&#13;
"We'll have tll ~&#13;
mind against tile "lit'&#13;
goals of the m~":'"fIlA&#13;
DeBardeleben l1li'-......&#13;
that "due process ~&#13;
designed for hard ....... ~.&#13;
well as easy ones.&#13;
"I didn't saY, sir,&#13;
without faculty&#13;
I said Weaver, ci~&#13;
members are ~.&#13;
on the System A(jvilI1:1&#13;
Task Force.&#13;
DeBardeleben&#13;
subject after ~ ....&#13;
Renk, Sun Prairie,&#13;
"defended the a&#13;
and the Executl\'t&#13;
the action tbeY toOkGE&#13;
nesday, rch 12,&#13;
Co-op&#13;
s&#13;
01&#13;
···········===&#13;
ceeeewweeeeeeeeeee \. . . . . .--,- . '&#13;
...&#13;
NOTESNotesnotes&#13;
Moishe Smith, associate&#13;
professor of art at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, is one of&#13;
ix well-known American graphic&#13;
artists invited to contribute a&#13;
representative work for inclusion&#13;
in the 150th annual exhibition of&#13;
the ational Academy of Design&#13;
through March 16 at the&#13;
Academy galleries in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Peter Mar~s' appeal for te~ur~ hearing is scheduled for Marth U&#13;
11:30a.m. m room 0-174. Tlus will be an open hearing and allstudeala&#13;
who support Prof. Martin are urged to attend. H you want to '11!4&gt;&#13;
call Lise Iwon at 637-3098.&#13;
Evening Student Services are now being offered on Tuesday&#13;
Wednesday nights from 5:30-8:30p.m. in the alcove next to the 11111&#13;
Shop on the concourse of the Wyllie Library Leaming Center&#13;
Placement testing, academic planning, and general inf&lt;nna&#13;
about campus events, student services and special progrlllIII&#13;
available. art&#13;
The service is staffed on Tuesday evenings by Phyllis Lidberg&#13;
Student Program intern, and on Wednesdays by counselor Onllt&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
Lack of faculty consultation&#13;
draws fire&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The lack of faculty consultation&#13;
on administrative decisions that&#13;
affect the university is "improper&#13;
procedure" and should be&#13;
'rectified," UW Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls, told&#13;
UW President John C. Weaver&#13;
Friday.&#13;
''Is this going to be a pattern&#13;
that any important decisions b~&#13;
done without faculty consideration?"&#13;
asked DeBardeleben,&#13;
at the Regents' regular&#13;
monthly board meeting in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The clash between Weaver and&#13;
~Bareleben followed a report&#13;
given by the Regents' Executive&#13;
Committee on the enactmen&#13;
en~~IInent of student enrollment&#13;
ceilings a~ four UW campuses;&#13;
Madison, Lacrosse Eau&#13;
Claire and Stout-to help th·~ UW&#13;
• tern cope with an austerity&#13;
butlg!"t proposed by Gov. Patrick&#13;
Lucey.&#13;
ct!e ceilings are designed to re-&#13;
~ students, most likely&#13;
freshmen, who are noncommuters&#13;
and have undeclared&#13;
n j , to other campuses&#13;
pt to h di more ,-i,___ an e increasing&#13;
vumt:nts economically Th limi . ts, to take effect th'&#13;
fall, e a partial res lS&#13;
Gov. I.u v' dir ponse to . ., ectorateofJan 8&#13;
tin th · e Regents to&#13;
plans for "phasing out&#13;
·tuti do en, or consolidating&#13;
and programs "&#13;
A t g ·ct • ·&#13;
tio w eline recomre&#13;
to be submitted&#13;
Go,; ernor by April 1s&#13;
the faculty ever been&#13;
nc to respond?"&#13;
DeBardeleben asked UW Senior&#13;
Vice President Donald Percy,&#13;
who reported for the committee.&#13;
"We certainly had some&#13;
reaction, (though) not extensive,"&#13;
said Percy, citing that a&#13;
memo was sent out to all " faculty&#13;
concerns" and chancellors.&#13;
"I do think it's unfortunate in&#13;
an institution that faculty cannot&#13;
be heard," responded DeBardeleben.&#13;
&#13;
Percy told DeBardeleben "I&#13;
apologize for the fact that' we&#13;
couldn't consult as extensively as&#13;
possible with faculty," adding&#13;
that "because of short&#13;
deadlines (the Governor's), there&#13;
was not adequate consultation for&#13;
everybody."&#13;
Regent Mrs. Robert R.&#13;
Williams, Stevens Point, said&#13;
that she and others had "talked&#13;
informally about enrollment&#13;
ceilings" before the Governor's&#13;
request was issued-talks that&#13;
included members of faculty&#13;
groups and chancellors. She said,&#13;
however, that the talks were in&#13;
light of "educational planning"&#13;
rather than "fiscal problems "&#13;
"I do deplore the fact that ·it&#13;
~as not given faculty consideration,"&#13;
DeBardeleben again&#13;
contended, adding that&#13;
something must be done to&#13;
"rectify improper procedure."&#13;
Weaver answered DeBardeleben&#13;
by saying that possible&#13;
enro~ent limits for Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee were studied a&#13;
ye.~ ago by the Board of Visitors.&#13;
v ,:tie . subject has had some&#13;
entilahon in advance " h 'd He dd , e sa1 . a ed that, "I don't th'nk&#13;
anyone in th . l&#13;
differ ~ system is in- . ent to or insensitive of the&#13;
unportance of faculty input We&#13;
were und · er some very difficult&#13;
time constraints."&#13;
He said that the matter&#13;
tentative" and still open&#13;
discussion and added, "I'm&#13;
sure I'd say we apologiz.e,as&#13;
Percy does, because I elm&#13;
we had a better wa} we&#13;
have operated in. I prefer&#13;
the word "unfortunate"&#13;
pressures on us don't allOI'&#13;
consult faculty on 'l1 c&#13;
Weav~r said that he would&#13;
preferred to have seen the&#13;
requested by the G&#13;
carried out over a&#13;
period, rather than in 90&#13;
"I'm dismayed by ~&#13;
Weaver's statement" r&#13;
DeBardeleben. "If we don t&#13;
time for adequate coosulll&#13;
then we need new methodSUW-Madison&#13;
law profes$T&#13;
Finman, chairman d&#13;
University Committee,&#13;
from the audience, argufl(&#13;
"the real test of a cOffillll&#13;
shared governance ( ID&#13;
faculty) comes not onlr&#13;
there are easy wnes i-it&#13;
ficult times."&#13;
"We'll have to keep&#13;
mind against the sh(tl t ,, ht&#13;
goals of the momen ·&#13;
DeBardeleben agreecl~&#13;
that "due process&#13;
designed for hard si~&#13;
well as easy ones. "'&#13;
"I didn't say, sir, lbal&#13;
without facult~. in~·-""', _-,.&#13;
, said Weaver, citi.ng&#13;
members are currently&#13;
on the System AdvisOl'Y&#13;
Task Force. ~&#13;
DeBardeleben dr tilfl&#13;
subject after f_le_gen~id -'&#13;
Renk, Sun Praine, in1S&#13;
"defended the ad~-&#13;
and the Executive c~: ... - the action theY took· &#13;
cOntin:lCd from page I&#13;
visual contact and -----&#13;
found that the Ol'bProtmptly&#13;
ec had&#13;
manue,vered to the rear of the Air&#13;
Force let and was now ch '&#13;
The Condon report :smg it.&#13;
which conclUded that' study&#13;
te' no extra- rrestrial vehicle had visited&#13;
Em:th;, stated that the radar and&#13;
!~t incident in England was onl&#13;
a natural phenomanum so y&#13;
th t i h rare a It as never happened bef&#13;
or smce." ore&#13;
Friedman attempted to&#13;
discr~it arguments made b&#13;
skeptics that no UFOs ..Y&#13;
b&#13;
exist&#13;
ecause travel b t&#13;
, e ween&#13;
w!ar systems is .impossible,&#13;
He said th t '&#13;
terstellar traffic is pgSSi~?-&#13;
because it violates no laws o~&#13;
phYSICS, but merely requires a&#13;
technology more advanced than&#13;
our own. . r&#13;
The governm tal&#13;
classifying m en h praCtice of&#13;
formati uc of the in.&#13;
on on UFo " Secret" s as Top&#13;
Fri dma came under attack by&#13;
e n Wednesds .&#13;
said "for de .Y. mght. He&#13;
un r a million dollars&#13;
We could find out who is co .&#13;
here Why". Friedman no lIUng&#13;
only one of the fourtee ted that&#13;
n reports&#13;
prepared by Project Blue Book&#13;
Was ever released to the public&#13;
while the other thirt ' ' 1 if een remain c ass led as top secret. He said&#13;
that .With a whole-sale public&#13;
relations campaign ur '&#13;
. gJng the&#13;
openmg of these files and urging&#13;
research in the area of UFOs&#13;
~we could blow the lid off th~&#13;
osrrue Watergate ...you can bet&#13;
that (With prize money available)&#13;
researchers would dig for in.&#13;
formation where no one has ever&#13;
dared dig before".&#13;
f------- conlinued hom page 1 _&#13;
added, "We)lid the&#13;
could,but it was simply&#13;
to more than pull&#13;
administratively tbe&#13;
to the specific factual&#13;
that Ithey had. We&#13;
even pretend to una&#13;
thoughtfuldiscussion&#13;
aboutthe answers to&#13;
_lheir other questions." "ed what those "other&#13;
" were, Norwood cited&#13;
les: the first concerns&#13;
sessionsat Parkside:&#13;
ibe the simula ti ve&#13;
out' 'of summer&#13;
i describe the comqualityof&#13;
life factors; .&#13;
the potential cons&#13;
of the simulative&#13;
tic 'phase out' to the&#13;
'ty qualityuf life."&#13;
second concerns the&#13;
programs offered at&#13;
asked us how valid we&#13;
lIleir criteria were for&#13;
'ng academic degree&#13;
s: what more aplactors&#13;
might be in-&#13;
~ the screening criteria;&#13;
or important aspects&#13;
Il'Ogramsdo you feel&#13;
might not be fairly represented&#13;
by their screening criteria."&#13;
, Norwood conunented, "That's&#13;
'not the sort of thing one. answers&#13;
in a half hour."&#13;
. He added, however, that he is&#13;
"less. concerned, at the moment&#13;
with the system-wide Advisor;&#13;
Planning Task Force." He said&#13;
.that the Task Force is proceeding&#13;
to meet the April 15 deadline&#13;
"with only hasty consultation&#13;
with the campuses." But, he&#13;
explained that "the whole point of&#13;
this April 15thing is that both the&#13;
system and the campuses are&#13;
engaged in long-range academic&#13;
planning, not a one-shot affair."&#13;
Mitchell in danger&#13;
(CPS-LNS) • Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell's life might&#13;
be in danger if he were sent to prison and other prisoners were allowed&#13;
access to him, according to J eb Stuart Magruder.&#13;
Magruder, who was released from prison January 7 after serving&#13;
seven months on Watergate conspiracy charges, said that some&#13;
prisoners might hold Mitcbell personally responsible for their jail&#13;
terms,&#13;
"I think there is no question tbat someone wbo has been Attorney&#13;
General of the United States, as far as many convicts are concerned, is&#13;
the one that put them away," Magruder said. .&#13;
"So I think (it would be dangerous) for someone of that stature to&#13;
have to go to a regular prison where there are inmates ... wbo might&#13;
feel very comfortable in becoming famous by eliminating the exAttorney&#13;
General."&#13;
Mitchell was foundguilty January 1 of having taken part in the&#13;
Watergate cover-up. Sentencing bas been postponed pending appeals&#13;
but the former government official could get a maximum of twenty&#13;
five years in prison.&#13;
Sunday;' March 16&#13;
AMATEUR GO·GO&#13;
~'\&gt;~ CONTEST ~~&#13;
.~~~~ . lst Prize $50°0 ~J&gt;&lt;?'4&#13;
2nd Prize' $25°0&#13;
3rd Prize $1000&#13;
•&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 P.M•• 'til Closing&#13;
atsc Featuring&#13;
A PIZZA EATING CONTEST&#13;
No cover charge with student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS WANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00- $7.00 Hourly CALL 634-9369&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS I&#13;
Nationally Acclaimed&#13;
MIMIST&#13;
.KEI'TH BERGER&#13;
RCH 12 a·OO P.M. WEDNESDA Y, MA .•&#13;
(OMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
. ADMISSiON: 51.50 • Student&#13;
. 52.00. General&#13;
TICKETS AT THE INFO. CENTER&#13;
Wednescl8V. March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Paekstde 200&#13;
National Va.rsity Club&#13;
§?~~'UIt~&#13;
194.. SO&#13;
• Pre.ents.&#13;
SILVER BULL~T&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 14th&#13;
..............................&#13;
. .&#13;
• Appearlng.&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 15th&#13;
DR. BOP&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE HEADLINERS&#13;
featuring&#13;
THE WHITE RA YEN&#13;
................................................... , .&#13;
Advance Ticket. '2'0 At Door '3'0&#13;
EVELYN WOOD&#13;
READING DYNAMICS&#13;
THERE ARE STILL A FEW&#13;
PLACES AVAILABLE IN OUR&#13;
CLASS SCHEDULED TO BEGIN&#13;
AT&#13;
7 :00 P.M. -AT CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
THURSDAY, MARCH 13th&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
312-236-1996&#13;
Wednesday, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued fron&#13;
l page l ------~-----&#13;
visual cont t found ac and promptly that the ojbect had&#13;
mF anue_vetred to the rear of the Air&#13;
orce Je and was now ch .&#13;
The Condon report :smg it.&#13;
which concluded that, no estutrdy&#13;
te tr. l X a- rres ia vehicle had visited&#13;
~~th;_ stated that the radar and&#13;
Jet mc1dent in England was onl&#13;
"a natural phenomanum so Y&#13;
th . rare at _it has never happened bef or smce." ore&#13;
Friedman attempted to&#13;
discr~it arguments made b&#13;
b&#13;
skeptics that no UFOs exisi&#13;
ecause . travel b t e ween !i!&gt;lar systems is impossible.&#13;
He said that . terstella_r traffic is poss1Jr·&#13;
beca~e it violates no laws 0~&#13;
physics, but merely requires a&#13;
technology more advanced than&#13;
our own. ·&#13;
The governmental . classifying much ~ractice. of&#13;
formation on UFo o the mSecret"&#13;
ca s as "Top Fr· dm me under attack by&#13;
_ie " an Wednesday night. He&#13;
said for under a milli we could find ?n dollars&#13;
out who 15 co · here why" F ·edm mmg · ri an noted that only one of the fourtee n reports prepared by Project Blue Book&#13;
w~ ever released to the public&#13;
while the other thirt . '&#13;
1 u· een remain c ass l~ as top secret. He said&#13;
that . With a whole-sale public&#13;
rela~ons campaign urging the&#13;
openmg of these files and urging&#13;
research in the area of UFO&#13;
"we could blow the lid off ths, Cosmi W e c atergate ... you can bet&#13;
that ( with prize money available)&#13;
researchers would dig for information&#13;
where no one has ever&#13;
dared dig before".&#13;
P--------- conlinued from page 1&#13;
-------- added, "We did the&#13;
"rould, but it was simply&#13;
· e to more than pull&#13;
r administratively the&#13;
to the specific factual&#13;
that they had. We&#13;
i even pretend to una&#13;
thoughtful discussion&#13;
r,:u)ty about the answers to&#13;
it their other questions."&#13;
asked what those "other&#13;
· " were, Norwood cited&#13;
Jes: the first concerns&#13;
sessions at Parkside:&#13;
cribe the simulative&#13;
· g out' · of summer&#13;
; describe the comquality&#13;
of life factors;&#13;
· e the potential conces&#13;
of the simulative&#13;
tic 'phase out' to the&#13;
·ty quality of life."&#13;
second concerns the&#13;
programs offered at&#13;
asked us how valid we&#13;
their criteria were for&#13;
ing academic degree&#13;
. s; what more aple&#13;
factors might be in-&#13;
~ the screening criteria;&#13;
lllque or important aspects&#13;
irograms do you feel&#13;
might not be fairly represented&#13;
by their screening criteria."&#13;
Norwood commented, "That's&#13;
not the sort of thing one answers&#13;
in a half hour."&#13;
He added, however, that he is&#13;
· "less.concerned, at the moment&#13;
with the system-wide Advisor;&#13;
Planning Task Force." He said&#13;
that the Task Force is proceeding&#13;
to meet the April 15 deadline&#13;
"with only hasty consultation&#13;
with the campuses." But, he&#13;
explained that "the whole point of&#13;
this April 15 thing is that both the&#13;
system and the campuses are&#13;
engaged in long-range academic&#13;
planning, not a one-shot affair. "&#13;
Mitchell in danger&#13;
(CPS-LNS)-Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell's life might&#13;
be in danger if he were sent to prison and other prisoners were allowed&#13;
access to him, according to Jeb Stuart Magruder.&#13;
Magruder, who was released from prison January 7 after serving&#13;
seven months on Watergate conspiracy charges, said that some&#13;
prisoners might hold Mitchell personally responsible for their jail&#13;
terms.&#13;
"I think there is no question that someone wbo has been Attorney&#13;
General of the United States, as far as many convicts are concerned, is&#13;
the one that put them away," Magruder said.&#13;
"So I think (it would be dangerous) for someone of that stature to&#13;
have to go to a regular prison where there are inmates ... who might&#13;
feel very comfortable in becoming famous by eliminating the exAttorney&#13;
General."&#13;
Mitchell was found guilty January 1 of having taken part in the&#13;
Watergate cover-up. Sentencing has been postponed ~ending appeals&#13;
but the former government official could get a maximum of twenty&#13;
five years in prison.&#13;
Sunday, March 16&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO&#13;
~'\,~ CONTEST ~~ i&gt; ~ . $5000 ~ J&gt;~&#13;
_ ~~ . 1st Pri~e $2500 &lt;4&#13;
2nd Prize&#13;
3rd Prize $J 0°0 •&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 p .M .. 'til Closing also Featuring&#13;
A PIZZA EATING CONTEST No cover charge with Student I. D.&#13;
GIRLS WANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartender-s&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 • $7 .00 Hourly CALL 634-9369&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
Nationally Acclaimed&#13;
Mll,1151&#13;
. KEITH BERGER&#13;
CH 12 8·00 P.M. WEDNESDAY, MAR .&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION: $ 1.50 . Student&#13;
$2.oo . General&#13;
TICKETS AT THE INFO. CENTER&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Pu ide 200&#13;
N,tional Vanity Chlb&#13;
4437 - 22nd A enu K no h&#13;
· Wiscon in Phone 654- 7 4&#13;
r.(Jle *B'Ult . 194&#13;
~ &amp;. so&#13;
•Presents•&#13;
SILVER BULLET&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 14th&#13;
···························································&#13;
•Appearing•&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 15th&#13;
DR. BOP&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE HEADLINERS&#13;
featuring&#13;
THE WHITE RA VEN&#13;
....•..........•..............•.................... , ..... . Advance Tickets '2'° At Door •3so&#13;
EVELYN WOOD&#13;
READING DYNAMICS&#13;
THERE ARE STILL A FEW&#13;
PLACES AVAILABLE IN OUR&#13;
CLASS SCHEDULED TO BEGIN&#13;
AT&#13;
7:00 P.M. AT CARTHAGE COLLE 7E&#13;
THURSDAY, MARCH 13th&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
312-236-1996 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDERA GER"'. IIday. March12.&#13;
EIGEI&#13;
1l1lltiOllJ&#13;
YGId apoa&#13;
r:::::III lIIlIon on S aIld ~. 1,.4 1bIs&#13;
c.- ..... lbo .. 1e&#13;
I tIolI of Ille Parklide&#13;
Go •• a:wat AIIOdatkm&#13;
aIld lbo IIlIdtal body aIld&#13;
OIl!)' 1O.-dmeD .&#13;
Parkllde Siudeni&#13;
or "men I Inc sIloll be ":=~lOlbo studtllls Iithe II Ii Partside&#13;
be oobje&lt;l lD \be&#13;
RllpolIllillllltJ. IllII JlOft'I of \be&#13;
III Rec.. to, lbo PlEsiclelll&#13;
,.....,.\be QIoDceUor&#13;
.Poi' " ODd lbo Ia&lt;u1Iy&#13;
-Poi bide IDlI lbo. efoa e&#13;
" nan) ••&#13;
~:::-::':"~": at 5 0 , , JDbolaaIloi&#13;
nJDpll otadenl&#13;
.1&#13;
I " 1 d..s&#13;
Ie&#13;
Ii ..mcll ...m be&#13;
October and the&#13;
e\eCltd 1Il .'Pro&#13;
s\IoII be lor one&#13;
cfucis&gt;OIU 01 Science.&#13;
ce, HumanlSUC&#13;
s;::~~~~e rlllg ience,&#13;
~ nl enee, Labor&#13;
and undeclared&#13;
ve one Se/IOtor.&#13;
ruebirJg 52S tudents the&#13;
""'1&lt;11'" dd ooe senator,&#13;
mil lbol DO more than ooe&#13;
a;au be iicIded iJI any&#13;
",..I Iri&lt;c_. An ad,i1bonal&#13;
be added lor each&#13;
adCtiticaal __ students within&#13;
div\siOl1 Each d",slOn shall&#13;
ft al least one Senator. Only&#13;
Unl&gt; rsaty 01 WiscOnsinPar&#13;
side students who have&#13;
dedamla major b) the previous&#13;
.-mester tnll be aDowed to run&#13;
far senator lJl the undecJared&#13;
division. A sllIdenl who has&#13;
dedaml majors, or major area&#13;
01 Interest. in more than one&#13;
dIvision. in the previous&#13;
sen ester. can only run and be&#13;
elected lrun one division. Only&#13;
_ students who have declared&#13;
majors, or major area of interest,&#13;
lJl lbo previous semester in the&#13;
designaled divisions will be&#13;
aticwed to vote lor the respective&#13;
senaton. '!bose students who&#13;
bave not declared a major in the&#13;
p....mollS semester wiD vote lor&#13;
5enalOr (.) running in the undeclared&#13;
major division. A&#13;
student whohas declared majors,&#13;
or major area of interest, in more&#13;
than one division in previous&#13;
..mosters can only vote in one&#13;
division. 0 sllIdenl who has&#13;
dedared a major in the previous&#13;
_or may run lor Senator in&#13;
lbo UDdecIared major division.&#13;
II&gt;d no studenl who has declared&#13;
a major in \be previous semester&#13;
may vote lor • Senator in the&#13;
IIIIdedared major division. The&#13;
ab".. procedure tnll cortstitule&#13;
\be ....... lor \be October e1ecIiODL&#13;
In lbo evenl a new division&#13;
IS created by \be Univenily, the&#13;
said division sbaU be required to&#13;
in eJISIence lor a period 01 one&#13;
ye. before a senator may be&#13;
_I InIm thai division.&#13;
The remaJJllIll! baH of lbe&#13;
IOnsbaU be e\ecIed at large&#13;
no reqwnment as to are. 01&#13;
major. There tnll be an equal&#13;
IIWllbor Ii at large Senalors as&#13;
cI I Senators. The above&#13;
CIlIlSliIW \be ru1es lor the&#13;
election.&#13;
•• YW~.~lD ..&#13;
a&lt;adetU&lt; 1Ih1SlOaili leal the&#13;
re- •• J.ia. dl\'lsl~ •• 1&#13;
..,.:-Ii&gt; ITiiiii Li scblKll&#13;
• ~r SLaB 8O~1e •&#13;
!!!dot! Ie lID \be vo&lt;!l!9.&#13;
• '!l"'MrI etC1lrS ill aD&#13;
1&amp;5e t. the ........ la!!c al&#13;
.... IiOd _lea&#13;
'" IIIl ~ !Il&lt;y. Aller&#13;
I!!!c -1loR. die&#13;
1&amp; Tem ...... silaIJ IDi&#13;
l WliIi iIlOIl&lt;arrt.....&#13;
Parkside&#13;
lion&#13;
C:PScity. fie residing offi~r o[&#13;
Ibe seoate sball vote only m lbe&#13;
"'eDt of a tie. the president Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be a senator and&#13;
shaD be a member of all Senate&#13;
committees. A simple majority of&#13;
the total Senate shall constitute a&#13;
quorum to do businessSECTION&#13;
IV&#13;
The senate shall have the sole&#13;
power 01 impeachment and the&#13;
power to try all impeachments.&#13;
When sitting lor that purpose&#13;
lbey shall be 01 oath or affImlation.&#13;
When the President of&#13;
the Parkside Student GovernInc.&#13;
is tried, the Chiel Justice of&#13;
. lbe Judicial Court shall preside,&#13;
and no person shall be convicted&#13;
wiUlOutthe concurrence of twothirds&#13;
01 the entire Senate.&#13;
Judgment in cases of impeachment&#13;
shall not extend&#13;
further than removal from office&#13;
and diS-&lt;jualification to hold and&#13;
enjoy any ollice or position that&#13;
the Parkside Government&#13;
Association Inc. has jurisdiction&#13;
over, appointment to, or election&#13;
lor impeachment will not begin&#13;
until two-lbirds 01 the entire&#13;
senate 01 the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
have voted to hold an impeachment&#13;
hearing.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The Senate 01 lbe Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall have the power to&#13;
determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedings, censure its mem·&#13;
bers for disorderly conduct and&#13;
with lbe concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate expel a&#13;
member. The senate shall keep a&#13;
journal 01 its proceediDgs, aud&#13;
p"blisb ibe same monlbly (at a&#13;
mlDImDlD, a copY 01 the journal&#13;
sbaD be available lor review by&#13;
sludenls al Ibe Information&#13;
centen, lbe Ubrary desk aud lbe&#13;
Parkside Student Governmenl&#13;
Association -Inc. offices); the&#13;
yeas and neys of the memhers on&#13;
any question shall, at the desire&#13;
of one member of lbe senate, be&#13;
entered on the journal. The&#13;
senate of lbe Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shaDmeet at an established place&#13;
and time no less than once a week&#13;
during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than twice&#13;
a monlb during the summer&#13;
sessions. Roberts Rules of Order&#13;
shaD govern tbe proceedings of&#13;
all Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. meetings except&#13;
when mconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition&#13;
bY a sunple majority of the entire&#13;
senate a meeting shall be caDed&#13;
bY lbe VIce President or in th&#13;
case 01 the Vice PreSident':&#13;
absence lbe Present Pro Tempore&#13;
shaD have lbe responsibility&#13;
to caD a meeting.&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
thBills may eilber originate in&#13;
see Senate Or be sent to the&#13;
G nate from lbe Parkside Student&#13;
E:ern~ent Association Inc&#13;
ry bill, order resoluti .&#13;
vote on which th • on, or&#13;
!be senate' e concurrence of&#13;
have passedlSthnecessary shall&#13;
e senate b&#13;
sunple majority. hall y a&#13;
becomes la's ,belore it&#13;
presented toW, or regulation, be&#13;
Parkside Stlbe PresIdent of the&#13;
udent G Association 1 overnment&#13;
nco " lbe Pres'd molt 'e1oe Ibe leglsla I enl&#13;
lilfi tion, he shall&#13;
Pul tot-te, A two- c Gtlce&#13;
thirds vole 01 Ihe entire Senale&#13;
shaD be required to override lbe&#13;
veto. But in all such cases the&#13;
~ of the Senate shall be&#13;
d&#13;
termined by a roll call vote, e .&#13;
and the names of per~ons voting&#13;
for and againSt the bill shall be&#13;
entered in the journal 01 the&#13;
senate. II any bill shall not be&#13;
returned by the President within&#13;
5 school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him, the same shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as if&#13;
he had signed it. All proceedings&#13;
01 the Senate 01 the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive&#13;
Ior incorporation purposes.&#13;
SECTION VII&#13;
The Senate shall have the&#13;
power to make motions,&#13;
resolutions, or take legal actions&#13;
which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into&#13;
execution the foregoing powers,&#13;
and all other powers vested by&#13;
this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION vm&#13;
The Seuate' 01 lbe Parkside&#13;
Siudent Government Association&#13;
Inc., whenever two-lhirds of lbe&#13;
entire Senate shall deem it&#13;
necessary, shall propose&#13;
amendments to this constttudon&#13;
or, on the application of proposed&#13;
amendments signed by ten&#13;
percent of the entire University·&#13;
Parkside student body, which in&#13;
eilber case, shall be valid to aU&#13;
iJlients and purposes, as part of&#13;
lbis constitution when ralified by&#13;
a simple majority vote on either&#13;
lbe Oclober or April election&#13;
dates, or a speCial referendum on&#13;
election dale,&#13;
SECTION IX&#13;
The ele~ted academic&#13;
divisional representatives, excluding&#13;
the undeclared major&#13;
divisional representatives, to the&#13;
Parkside Student GoveriiiDeiil&#13;
Association Inc., shall be those&#13;
students as stated in Wisconsin&#13;
Slatute 36.13 (3), the Merger&#13;
Implementation Law, The above&#13;
eleeted academic divisional&#13;
represeulatives shall be voting&#13;
members of their respective&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees&#13;
and voting participants&#13;
at divisional faculty meetings ..&#13;
The divisional represenlatives,&#13;
excluding the undeclared major I&#13;
shall be voting members of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division.&#13;
SECTION X&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and&#13;
receipts on all expenditures of aD&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records public at&#13;
every meeting.&#13;
SECTION XI&#13;
it standing Senate Committee,&#13;
lbe Student Organization Council,&#13;
shall be established consisting of&#13;
tbe Presidents' (or their&#13;
designees) 01 all student&#13;
organizations who choose to&#13;
participate.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION&#13;
~l executive powers, within&#13;
thiS article, shall be vesled in the&#13;
President 01 the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II&#13;
The President shall be. a&#13;
Parkside student, shall carry no&#13;
less than 6 credits, must not be on&#13;
aca~emic probation and must&#13;
have completed no less than 12&#13;
credIts at the University of&#13;
Wlsconsin-Parkside,&#13;
The President shall hold the&#13;
office during the term of one year&#13;
~ther with the Vice President&#13;
~ will be chosen for the same&#13;
rm. They shall be eligible lor&#13;
1975&#13;
• or major area of interest,&#13;
~ ous semester in the&#13;
n ted divisions will be&#13;
o to \'Ole for the respective&#13;
nators. Those students who&#13;
,-e not declared a major in the&#13;
pre ious semester will vote for&#13;
tor (;) running m the wideclared&#13;
major division. A&#13;
nt who has declared majors,&#13;
or major area of interest, in more&#13;
division in previous&#13;
sei:nesters can only vote in one&#13;
on. ·o student who has&#13;
""'~".,.._. a major in the previous&#13;
serne!;ter may run for Senator in&#13;
major division,&#13;
ho has declared&#13;
In shall choose their own ofd&#13;
also 8 President Pro&#13;
firers an The Vice President of&#13;
Tempore. ud t Q-Overn· th Par Ide St en nt . octation, Inc. shall be&#13;
~ PreS dent and presiding ofcer&#13;
r tbe S nate. In bis-her&#13;
b ence. the President Pro&#13;
Tern r ball en·e in the_ same&#13;
P?cit). The pre iding officer of&#13;
the nate ball ,·ote only In the&#13;
, nt of a tie. The President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be a senator and&#13;
U a member of all Senate&#13;
mmittees. A simple majority of&#13;
th total Senate shall constitute a&#13;
quorum to do business.&#13;
. IV&#13;
The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
po er of impeachment and the&#13;
po er to try all impeachments.&#13;
When sitting for that purpose&#13;
th y shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of&#13;
th Parkside Student GovernInc.&#13;
i tried, the Chief Justice of&#13;
• th Judicial Court shall preside,&#13;
and no person shall be convicted&#13;
·thout the concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate.&#13;
Judgment in cases of impeachment&#13;
shall not extend&#13;
further than removal from office&#13;
and dis-Qualification to hold and&#13;
enjoy any office or position that&#13;
the Parkside Government&#13;
Association Inc. has jurisdiction&#13;
over, appointment to, or election&#13;
for impeachment will not begin&#13;
until two-thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
have voted to hold an impeachment&#13;
hearing.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall have the power to&#13;
determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedings, censure its members&#13;
for disorderly conduct and&#13;
with the concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a&#13;
journal of its proceedings, and&#13;
publish the same monthly (at a&#13;
minimum, a copy of the journal&#13;
shall be available for review by&#13;
students at the Information&#13;
Centers, the library desk and the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association ·Inc. offices); the&#13;
yeas and neys of the members on&#13;
any question shall, at the desire&#13;
of one member of the Senate, be&#13;
entered on the journal. The&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shall meet at an established place&#13;
and time no less than once a week&#13;
during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than twice&#13;
a month during the summer&#13;
sessions. Roberts Rules of Order&#13;
shall govern the proceedings of&#13;
all Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. meetings except&#13;
when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
U~n presentation of a petition&#13;
by a sunple majority of the entire&#13;
Senate a meeting shall be called&#13;
by the Vice President or in the&#13;
case of the Vice President's&#13;
absence the Present Pro Ternpore&#13;
shall have the responsibility&#13;
to call a meeting.&#13;
E IO,· VI&#13;
th Bills may either originate in&#13;
nate or be sent to th&#13;
G °:'te from the Parkside Studen~&#13;
E~"e:n1:1ent Association Inc&#13;
t; btll, order, resoluti . vote on ·h· h th on, or th IC • e concurrence of&#13;
,. nate ts necessary shall&#13;
pa ed the Senate b&#13;
ma1· ·t Y a m on Y: shall, before it&#13;
law, or regulation b&#13;
nted to th Pr . ' e . de e es1dent of the . Student Govern&#13;
alion Inc If th ment _ the 1 1- e President&#13;
End It b g lation, he Shall&#13;
the nate&#13;
th. ds vote of the entire Senate&#13;
rr "d th shall be required to ovem e e&#13;
veto. But in all such cases the&#13;
~ of the Senate shall be&#13;
determined by a roll call vote,&#13;
and the names of persons voting&#13;
for and against the bill shall be&#13;
entered in the journal of the&#13;
Senate. If any bill shall not be&#13;
returned by tbe President within&#13;
5 school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him, the same shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as if&#13;
he had signed it. All proceedings&#13;
of the Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive&#13;
for· incorporation purposes.&#13;
SECTION VII&#13;
The Senate shall have the&#13;
power to make motions,&#13;
resolutions, or take legal actions&#13;
which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into&#13;
execution the foregoing powers,&#13;
and all other powers vested by&#13;
this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION VIII&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
student Government Association&#13;
Inc., whenever two-thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate shall deem it&#13;
necessary, shall propose&#13;
amendments to this constitution&#13;
or, on the application of proposed&#13;
amendments signed by ten&#13;
percent of the entire UniversityParkside&#13;
student body, which in&#13;
either case, shall be valid to all&#13;
Intents and purposes, as part of&#13;
this constitution when ratified by&#13;
a simple majority vote on either&#13;
the October or April election&#13;
dates, or a special referendum on&#13;
election date.&#13;
SECTION IX.&#13;
The elected academic&#13;
divisional representatives, excluding&#13;
the undeclared major&#13;
divisional representatives, to the&#13;
Parkside student Goveminent&#13;
Association Inc., shall be those&#13;
students as stated in Wisconsin&#13;
Statute 36.13 (3), the Merger&#13;
Implementation Law. The above&#13;
elected academic divisional&#13;
representatives shall be voting&#13;
members of their respective&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees&#13;
and voting participants&#13;
at divisional faculty meetings.&#13;
The divisionaf representatives,&#13;
excluding the undeclared major,&#13;
shall be voting members of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division.&#13;
SECTION X&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and&#13;
receipts on all expenditures of all&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records public at&#13;
every meeting.&#13;
SECTION XI&#13;
It standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council,&#13;
shall be established consisting of&#13;
the Pl'esidents · ( or their&#13;
designees) of all student&#13;
organizations who choose to&#13;
participate.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION&#13;
~ executive powers, within&#13;
th1s article, shall be vested in the&#13;
President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II&#13;
The President shall be a&#13;
Parkside student, shall carry no&#13;
less than 6 credits, must not be on&#13;
academic probation and must&#13;
have completed no less than 12&#13;
cr~its at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
~e President shall hold the&#13;
office during the term of one year&#13;
togeth ·th er Wt the Vice President&#13;
Who ·u b wi e chosen for the same&#13;
term. They shall be eligible for &#13;
we parkside Govern-&#13;
.~tion Inc. to Sign&#13;
Il""-provided tha t a&#13;
~~ the entire Senate&#13;
IV t shall take care&#13;
~tilution of the&#13;
!be l,\SSOciationInc. and&#13;
be faithfullYexecuted.&#13;
~, Vice Presid?nt&#13;
ofllcers of the Parkside&#13;
(JoVel1UDimtAssociation&#13;
be removedfrom office&#13;
Ilon of duty or failure,&#13;
lIN that the constitution&#13;
,.uide student Govern-&#13;
. tionInc. and its byIIfailbfullyexecuted.&#13;
AII1'ICLEIll&#13;
I&#13;
)Ifici8l powers of the&#13;
student Government&#13;
Inc.shall be vested in&#13;
court, an appellate&#13;
inlowercourts that the&#13;
01 the Pilrkside Student&#13;
at Association Inc.&#13;
. Thejudges, of all&#13;
shall maintain good&#13;
and character during&#13;
of office.&#13;
n&#13;
I members of the&#13;
!ranchof the Parkside&#13;
GovernmentAssociation&#13;
11 'be University of&#13;
·a·Parkside students,&#13;
no less than 6 credits,&#13;
DOlbe on academic&#13;
must have completed&#13;
lban 12 credits, at the&#13;
ty of Wisconsin-&#13;
,and must be confirmed&#13;
ChanceJJor of the&#13;
of WisconsinParkside&#13;
approval by the&#13;
Sellateof the Parkside&#13;
GovernmentAssociation&#13;
Administrative apto&#13;
the judicial branch&#13;
P1rksideStudent Govern-&#13;
. UonInc. shall hold&#13;
subject to the apOf&#13;
the Senate of the&#13;
Student GOvernment&#13;
Inc. Terms of office&#13;
for4 years.&#13;
III&#13;
)KIiciarycourt and the&#13;
Court shan convene no&#13;
10,and no more than 14&#13;
~ alter a case has been&#13;
10 the court from the&#13;
. disciplinary head of&#13;
. Irative branch of the&#13;
Ity of Wisconsin&#13;
, or as requested by a&#13;
·The jUdiciarycourt shaJJ&#13;
once a month at an&#13;
d Place and time IV .&#13;
JUdicial court shaJJ Of f ' ,&#13;
J .Our JUdges and one&#13;
· umiceWho shaJJ, have&#13;
cllon to' over aJJ cases&#13;
It by the designated&#13;
rar head of the ad- rste&#13;
branch of the&#13;
· y of Wisconsin-&#13;
, or as requested by a&#13;
Of, •and shaH extend its&#13;
JUdI' I ' ro."Utu CIareVIewto decide&#13;
~ th tionality of the ace&#13;
Parkside Student&#13;
llt1~tAssocia.tionInc. and&#13;
.. pass Its judgement&#13;
'der:,estion being&#13;
the ' In. the case of&#13;
"'" conslttutionality of ~.ons f Go 0 the Parkside&#13;
~ vernment Association&#13;
. OosshaH be binding on&#13;
edlll:0lVed,and shaJJ he&#13;
o the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of th&#13;
ministrativ" branch ~ adUniversity&#13;
of Wisconsin pO k ~he&#13;
or to th - ar Side . e appropriate aUthorities&#13;
for unp1ementation.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The appeJJate court shaJJ&#13;
consist of three )'udges hihsh ,oneof&#13;
W&#13;
w.c . all be a University of&#13;
Isconsm-Parkside student and&#13;
th? . oth~ two shall be ad-&#13;
~lIustratlve appointments. Upon&#13;
e appeal of a negative decision&#13;
by a student defendant, the appellate&#13;
court shall have the po&#13;
~ review the case in question ::&#13;
elth.e~ uphold or overturn the&#13;
deCISIOnof the judicial court Th&#13;
~ecision rendered, by a maj~;&#13;
vote of the appellate court shall&#13;
be binding upon all parties involved.&#13;
'&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
The members ,of the P.8.G.A.&#13;
Inc. JUdiciary Court aball be&#13;
members of the appropriate&#13;
committee designated to bear&#13;
appeals of parking vlolatloos&#13;
Issued by Safety and Seeurlly.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV-I&#13;
An applicant shall not be&#13;
denied admission to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
for reasons of race, color I&#13;
national origin, religious creed&#13;
sex, previous criminal record'&#13;
political beliefs or political ac:&#13;
tion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-2&#13;
Financial aid shaJJ not be&#13;
denied for reasons of race color&#13;
national origin, religious' creed:&#13;
sex, previous criminal recor.d,&#13;
political belief or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-3&#13;
Students shall have the right of&#13;
freedom of expression, as defined&#13;
in the Constitution of the United&#13;
States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IVol&#13;
Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or&#13;
views offered in any course of&#13;
study and may advocate alter&#13;
native opinions to those&#13;
presented within the classroom.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-5&#13;
All students shall have the right&#13;
to due process of law as&#13;
guaranteed by the United States&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-6&#13;
Any student shall have the&#13;
right to request in those areas of&#13;
student disciplinary matters that&#13;
are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the admirustration,&#13;
a hearing by the&#13;
judiciary court of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government ASsociation&#13;
Inc. and that request shall be&#13;
binding on all parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-7&#13;
Students shall be evaluated&#13;
only on their knowledge of the&#13;
subject and academic per·&#13;
formance and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards&#13;
of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they&#13;
have enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-S&#13;
Disclosure of students' political&#13;
or personal beliefs, in connection&#13;
with course work shal1 not be&#13;
made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-9 .&#13;
Student records on academIC&#13;
performance and disciplinary&#13;
actions shall be separate.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-IO .&#13;
Information from counsehng&#13;
and disciplinary files shal1 not be&#13;
made available to persons on or&#13;
off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student invol~ed,&#13;
except under legal compulSIOn.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-ll .&#13;
All records and information&#13;
kept on file shal1 be readily aCcessible&#13;
to the student to whom&#13;
they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-12 Wednesday, March 12, 1975 THE PARKS'OE RANGER 9&#13;
The student. .... 11 l!I!'!!!g!ete offici.). ne Auillaat Q!uceUw IblnIo 01 .. AUocatiou C __&#13;
and, in eonjUlletioa witb A' for StadeBI Affain, Tbe A.uiltul mJuu. Dc Cpm'", ....0 bc&#13;
Cbancel10r Ibe Cban""Uor I... '''_~~N_ titllted N boo 1 I dis' 'approve tbe ftUIIUIIIa ..... _ ttC9II .,yee [0&#13;
tributioa of Ibe aIIo bIe agd the D!Rs:!pr oJ IIpdftt every lear. Memben may .t&#13;
~istrative portlo:: of n=,_ Pygalll 'bill ,It wltk t_e serve mere _ !we .... s.a.t&#13;
Segregated University F nu: Commltke II IU-yotlll Icrpy, l1lr Deal" ...,.......&#13;
.I!0rtl.n laclndes th ee. members. No member mlY iIIJ.ber ""IS!!! IilaII be a _&#13;
admtpt'b'aUve COItt!~: e-CIIITeIl!1y eene as • P.s.GA ft_ lDe"r of eM c..&#13;
with aU studeal aetlvt;e;;; iIIc. seular officer. adUee. EK"!f! f.... CIIaIrstUdent&#13;
prosrammlns b ei~ The ....n mIcw" ~.- -1 serve&#13;
serVice, pnbllcationS ea d memb&lt;nbJp 01 .. AIIosatiou ~ .. die S.G.F.C.&#13;
orgaalzatlonsj athletl I~ Committee Immetliitel, after aid .. AIIosa_ e.-JUee ...&#13;
lramprals and elnb eDe : eacb eIedIoa Ie ...... lIlat •• omc;r ... lie •• Ii die&#13;
auxi1iary Services, INIltiilIrtl! .."., mn pi • mterthr P.s.G.A W.&#13;
lransl!O!1atloo). - ud mem..... II'e servIIK .... B. Pr ........&#13;
ARTICLE IV-O Commllke. Uan" tken Upo. tile eaII tI .. PI lJer'&#13;
In the administration 01 ~ .... 1s II9t b±·....lIIe SeuIe "Pwrbtdc· Pc' roftO c'&#13;
segregated fee budget the !fi8n ·tIfi~ PiN!'~nt if ""d'. lie. 1M: c•• !Strr&#13;
s~dents of the University of P.B.GoA. Iae. II..... _ aM ,kill I.rm .... te a semblled&#13;
Wlsconain.Parkside in tile ..... Ish. " Ar1ide IV, ........\ ~ !!gP!rt t&#13;
cordance with Arti 1 'IV ac- SedIon 17, Z oMIJ be re,leat I.r Ute AlI t1.u&#13;
evaluate servi c ~ -16,shall JMd IemeUEE ' Ie" C.mmlltee lId Iller IV&#13;
their needs an':"co~. ataff as to C&#13;
el&#13;
-&#13;
mUter&#13;
.... IIRI I!Ic g- sgrecated U!Iy!nIty lee ...&#13;
ARTICLEIV14 Pd crow ill II tIM:II a.etaded. bece 'IIeczSnl U*.g 'Ie me ..,&#13;
The resPo~Sibility and ac- 'Tht, PresIdeat ~ lwe" ~ resemmeldaU.u lor tke&#13;
countability lor all of the two memben "';LiD llIIbanaI 01 all IUds alJecaled&#13;
pre.ceding articles shall be r:;.'I1le~~ .jfl f"'Re":Zl':=i:.!i::.u.:~&#13;
mamtamed by the students of the lake ~ ~ _ Ie&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside officeNNe~ lUii1 serve f1"pmlUee I.. lIIe d!f!MorMI .-&#13;
. dan' - year. e _,serve lIIe 8W&lt;!1 Gr!9 porU!! ., tile&#13;
m aecor ce WIthArticle IV-16. more tho _ tumCbair- ~ated U~ fee IIi&amp;D&#13;
ARTICLE IV-15 •&#13;
Th tud po....... oat Ie iIlO r 1pp!Y1lJ&#13;
, e s ents of the University B. ProeednreI br a 1D8jor1"tY .f lIIe eatlre&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside shall work UJNlnthe eaII of the Cban""Uw Seaale. 'ftie .....,..,.....iiIII_&#13;
closely WIththe OlanceUor or the and Ibe Prelideal of Porbide gll ... t be aJDeDded by ..&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside St"'ent GovenuDOlt __ Seaale.&#13;
or ~IS staff, m aecordance with lac.. Ibe COIIUIIIttee shall .... iii cue of re""'tioa, tile _&#13;
Artlcle IV-16, in developing the llII811yPrepare reeomJDendatiOlll mItted bad&amp;et sball be seal .. cl&#13;
segregated fee budget. on tbe dl'bursal .1 tbe to lbe Slgdnt Gr.up Innd&#13;
ARTICLE IV·IS Segregated Unlveulty Fee. Committee wilb ,tated reaIOIlI.&#13;
The Parks ide student Sbould Ibe P.S.G.A. 1Dc. CODCIU' Afler Ibe third re!e&lt;;1!oD, tile&#13;
Go~ernment Association Inc. in tbe recolDDJendaUon, tbe Senate .ball take .rl,laal&#13;
subject to the responsibilities and President of Parbide Studenl juriadictioo I... the dtJburlal of&#13;
powers of the Board of Regents, Government Allo&lt;lati.n Inc. Ibe St"'ent Gr9QPSueport fundi.&#13;
the President of the University of shaJJ so advtse Ibe C!wlcellor ARTICLE IV 19&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor and tbe Cbalrpers.n .1 tbe Provtsions lor , student health&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin- AllocatiOllS COIDIIlittee. Should service as detemuned by the&#13;
Parkside and the faculty of the Ibe Chancellor concur in Ibe Parkside Student Government&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside P.S.G.A 1Dc. recommendatioo, Association lnc. m consultatlon&#13;
shall be active participants in the be-sbe shall arrange lor Its 1m. with the Chancellor, or deaigne ,&#13;
inunediate governance of and plementallon. Should tbe of the Unh'ersity 01 Wisconsin-&#13;
,policy development for such Chancellor not concur, Ibe Parkside shall be made 10 insure&#13;
institutions. As such, the provlsi ... under ue,otiati... that the student body shall hav&#13;
Parkside Student Government shall be used. the right 10 adequate health care.&#13;
Association Inc. shall have Rejecti.n or Ibe Commlttee's ARTICLE IV·!lI&#13;
primary responsibility for the reconunendati.n takes a s-s vote All auxiliary enterprises shall&#13;
formulation and review of of Ibeentire Senate. Iathe cue 01 be subject to review by the&#13;
policies concerning student life, rejecti.n by the Senate, Ibe Parkside Student Government&#13;
services and interests. The reasons for rejection shall be Association Inc. 10 msure that the&#13;
Parkside Student Government agreed to and forwarded 10 Ibe rights and interests of the student&#13;
Association Inc. in consultation Cbairperson of the Allocations body are met.&#13;
with the Chancellor 01 the C.mmlttee. Tbe AlI.catioAl ARTiCLE IV·!1&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Committee sball recoosJder Its All transportation proposals&#13;
and subject to the final con- recommeDdallon and again mcluding parldng sball likewise&#13;
firmation of the Board 01Regents forward it to Ibe Senate. be subje&lt;:t 10 review.&#13;
shaJJ have tbe responsibility for C. Negotiatio... ARTICLE 1V·1t&#13;
the disposition of .those student ne President and PresideDt Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
fees which constitute substantial Pro tem of Ibe Parblde Studsot organization sh'" not In Itself&#13;
support for campus student GoyernmeD! AlloclaUoA lAC. disqualify a student 01' anlzation&#13;
activities. shall be Iberepn:senlatives ollbe from student government&#13;
As such, the Parkside Student Parblde St"'eD! Government recognition or IDstitutlonal&#13;
Government Association Inc. Association 1Dc. in any COD- Uroverslty rules and regulations.&#13;
shall be the sole representative sultatlons with the Olancell ... or ARTICLE IV·Z3&#13;
student group of the students of his-ber designee in dealing wilb ARTICLE 1V-Z3&#13;
the University of Wisconsin- Ibe Parblde Student Govern- No Student Shall be dented&#13;
Parkside aJJowed 10 participate meg! ,ysoctallon IDc, membership to· any on-&lt;:ampus&#13;
in institutional governance. AllocstioD Committee recom- organizatlon for reasons of race,&#13;
ARTICLE IV.17 mendati..... color, religious creed. nlItionlll&#13;
ln a~cordance with Article IV- II tbe Parkslde Student origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
16an Allocation Committee shall Government Association lac. a'" political belief or political action.&#13;
be established or designated by Ibe Chancellor canoot reconcile ARTICLE IV-If&#13;
Government Association Inc. for Ibeir differences in the aIIocati.n Students shall have the right to&#13;
reviewing requests for program 01 tbe allocable portion of mVlte and hear speakers of their&#13;
support and budget allocations of segregated University fees, eacb choice and approval shall nol be&#13;
the alloctable portion of the will submit a set 01 rec.m· withheld by the Parkslde Studenl&#13;
gregated University fee and all mendations to Ibe Board 01 Government Association lnc or&#13;
se tion of said committee shaH be Regents lor final dispOSitiOn. University authorities for pur-&#13;
:~bject to the final approval of Article IV-1S pose of censorshtp.&#13;
the Parkside Student Govern- Student Group FundlDg ARTICLE IV·ZS&#13;
ment Association Inc. m con- Committee . Students shall be lree to&#13;
. nction with the ChanceJJor 01 A. Membership assemble, to demonst"t., to i~University of Wisconsin- The Stullenl Group Funding conununicate, and to ~rotest&#13;
e k 'd Conunittee sball conslsL of 7 mdividual1y or through a student&#13;
~rme. . .&#13;
The Allocations committee members' 511 members selected orgamzation so long as no&#13;
M bershlp by Ibe Chairpers.n of the Student federal, state or municipal I."IS&#13;
A'Th:mAllocatiOns Committee Organiz~tion CounCil, from violated.&#13;
shall consist of 11 voting m~m. amo.ng itS mem=,pof a~d ARTICLE 1V-Z6&#13;
rs (except 'additional voting confirmed by. tw~ e Students shall be free Lo use&#13;
be b' may be added under Student OrgallWltion Councll and campus lacilities lor meetings 01&#13;
mem ers . ions of the next one member. who shall serve as student organizationst SUbject to&#13;
the provis U el ted b Ib hl 5 elected in Ibe fa Ibe Chairpersoo, s ec Y e&#13;
~ragrap _' b Ib Cb' I the All ti and 5 elected in the spring Y e 8lrperson 0 oca ODS&#13;
dents at large. and Ibe Committee Irom among tbe&#13;
stu 'd t .1 the Student elected 'D1embers of thai ComPresl&#13;
en . of'- ed b t . tiOD CouDcil (ex- mlttee and co urn Y WOO OrgaDIZa&#13;
Continued&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Public Notice&#13;
• • I' t. •&#13;
Parkside Govern- .1 the . Ill iation Inc. to sign&#13;
~ rovided that a&#13;
acts, pthe entire Senate&#13;
t)' of&#13;
. ident shall draw up&#13;
~de Student GovernparkS\ation&#13;
1nc. budget and&#13;
~ r..egislative Branch&#13;
~ to ~~de Student Governpar&#13;
· ation Inc. for ?PASf,OClrresident&#13;
may sign '!11e 'th th only consistent wi e&#13;
~JV 'dent shall take care&#13;
~onstitution of the&#13;
the t AS50ciation Inc. and&#13;
be faithfully executed .&#13;
.iaws51.dent Vice President&#13;
Pre ' • f{icers of the ParkS1de&#13;
;It ~vernment Associa~on&#13;
~ be removed from office&#13;
jfeliction of duty or failure&#13;
care that the constitution&#13;
Parkside Student GovernlJt&#13;
A5,10Ciation Inc. and its bybe&#13;
faithfully executed. ·&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
ONI&#13;
judicial powers of the&#13;
. Student Government&#13;
· tion Inc. shall be vested in&#13;
court, an appellate&#13;
and in lower courts that the&#13;
of the Parkside Student&#13;
nment Association Inc.&#13;
establish. The judges, of all&#13;
shall maintain good&#13;
' and character during&#13;
fa1llS of office.&#13;
ON II&#13;
ent members of the&#13;
branch of the Parkside&#13;
t Government Association&#13;
shall be University of&#13;
nsin-Parkside students,&#13;
carry no less than 6 credits,&#13;
not be on academic&#13;
tion, must have completed&#13;
than 12 credits, at the&#13;
rsity of Wisconsin-&#13;
. , and must be confirmed&#13;
the Chancellor of the&#13;
·ty of Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
atwo-thirdsapproval by the&#13;
Senate of the Parkside&#13;
t Government Association&#13;
Administrative apts&#13;
to the judicial branch&#13;
Parkside Student GovernA&amp;,ociation&#13;
Inc. shall hold&#13;
office subject to the apof&#13;
the Senate of the&#13;
Student Government&#13;
· tion Inc. Terms of office&#13;
be for 4 years.&#13;
ON Ill&#13;
judiciary court and the&#13;
le court shall convene no&#13;
Qian IO, and no more than 14&#13;
days after a case has been&#13;
ed to the court from the&#13;
~ disciplinary head of&#13;
~ strative branch of the&#13;
ers1ty of w· . de isconsm&#13;
' or as requested by a&#13;
t. The judiciary court shall&#13;
once a month at an&#13;
tished Place and time&#13;
IV .&#13;
Judicial court shall&#13;
of four · ' J . Judges and one . Ustice who shall . ha&#13;
iction ve ed to . over all cases&#13;
iplin it by the designated&#13;
,str:tr_Y head of the adtve&#13;
bra h ·1ersit nc o{ the&#13;
·d Y of Wisconsine,&#13;
or as nt requested by a&#13;
o·fj:r shall_ extend its&#13;
ionstitutal r~view to decide&#13;
~ th 10nahty of the acetnrn&#13;
e Parkside Student&#13;
ent Asso . t· onJy . c1a 10n Inc. and&#13;
the Pass 1~S judgement&#13;
~ider:estion being&#13;
ng th · In . the case of&#13;
action: constitutionality of&#13;
t G of the Parkside&#13;
·derj8·overnment Association&#13;
Parti~~ns shall be binding on&#13;
arde;n~olvect, and shall be&#13;
0 the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of th · · t t· e ad-&#13;
;•?1s r~t ive branch of the&#13;
mvers1 y of Wisconsin p k . or to th . - ar side . e appropriate authoriti&#13;
for unplementar es 100.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
Th_e appellate cotirt shall&#13;
co~s:t ~f three judges, one of&#13;
Ww. c s_ all be a University of&#13;
isconsm-Parkside student and&#13;
th~ . othe~ two shall be ad-&#13;
~rustrative appointments. Upon&#13;
e appeal of a negative decision&#13;
by a student defendant the&#13;
pellat~ court shall have the po::&#13;
~ review the case in question and&#13;
e1th_e~ uphold or overturn the&#13;
decision of the judicial court Th&#13;
~ecision rendered by a maj~ri;&#13;
vote of the appellate court shall&#13;
be binding upon all parties involved.&#13;
•&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
The members of the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Judiciary Court shall be&#13;
members of the appropriate&#13;
committee designated to hear&#13;
appeals of parking violations&#13;
issued by Safety and Security.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV-1&#13;
An applicant shall not be&#13;
denied admission to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
for reasons of race, color&#13;
national origin, religious creed'&#13;
sex, previous criminal record'&#13;
political beliefs or political ac:&#13;
tion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-2&#13;
Financial aid shall not be&#13;
denied for reasons of race, color,&#13;
national origin, religious creed,&#13;
sex, previous criminal recor.d,&#13;
political belief or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-3&#13;
Students shall have the right of&#13;
freedom of expression, as defined&#13;
in the Constitution of the United&#13;
States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-4&#13;
Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or&#13;
views offered in any course of&#13;
study and may advocate alter&#13;
native opinions to those&#13;
presented within the classroom.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-5&#13;
All students shall have the right&#13;
to due process of law as&#13;
guaranteed by the United States&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-6&#13;
Any student shall have the&#13;
right to request in those areas of&#13;
student disciplinary matters that&#13;
are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the administration,&#13;
a hearing by the&#13;
judiciary court of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. and that request shall be&#13;
binding on all parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-7&#13;
Students shall be evaluated&#13;
only on their knowledge of the&#13;
subject and academic performance&#13;
and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards&#13;
of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they&#13;
have enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-8&#13;
Disclosure of students' political&#13;
or personal beliefs, in connection&#13;
with course work shall not be&#13;
made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-9 . Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinary&#13;
actions shall be separate.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-10 . Information from counseling&#13;
and disciplinary files shall not be&#13;
made available to persons on or&#13;
off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student invol~ed,&#13;
except under legal compulsion.&#13;
ARTlCLE IV-11 . All records and infor1?abon&#13;
kept on file shall be readily accessible&#13;
to the student to whom&#13;
they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-l2 Wednes~ay, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE NGER 9&#13;
The students shall f and · . - _ormulate&#13;
- ' 1D con1unction with th&#13;
Chancellor e distributi • approve the - on of the allo bl administr ti ca e non- Se a ve P&lt;&gt;rtions of the&#13;
gr~gated University Fee. This&#13;
l!_ortion includes th&#13;
admini b'a e non- . s tive cos~ associated&#13;
.wtth all student activities ( e g&#13;
student programming, heaith&#13;
!!rvice, publications and&#13;
organizations i athletics, intra~urals&#13;
and club sports i&#13;
aUXi.liary services, parting and&#13;
transportation).&#13;
ARTICLE IV-13&#13;
In the administration of&#13;
segregated fee budget the&#13;
s~dents . of the University of&#13;
Wiscons10-Parkside, in accordance&#13;
with Article IV-lS shall&#13;
ev~uate services and staff as to&#13;
their needs and cost.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-M&#13;
The responsibility and accountability&#13;
for all of the&#13;
preceding articles shall be&#13;
maintained by the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
in accordance with Article IV-16.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-15&#13;
The students of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside shall work&#13;
closely with the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
or his staff, in accordance with&#13;
Article IV-16, in developing the&#13;
segregated fee budget.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-16&#13;
The Parkside student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
subject to the responsibilities and&#13;
powers of the Board of Regents,&#13;
the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor&#13;
of the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and the faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and&#13;
policy development for such&#13;
institutions. As such, the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have&#13;
primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests. The&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. in consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and subject to the final confirmation&#13;
of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for&#13;
the disposition of .those student&#13;
fees which constitute sub.5tantial&#13;
support for campus student&#13;
activities.&#13;
As such, the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shall be the sole representative&#13;
student group of the students of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
allowed to participate&#13;
in institutional governance.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-17&#13;
In accordance with Article IV16&#13;
an Allocation Committee shall&#13;
be established or designated by&#13;
Government Association Inc. for&#13;
reviewing requests for program&#13;
support and budget allocations of&#13;
the alloctable portion of the&#13;
segregated Universf~y fee and all&#13;
action of said conuruttee shall be&#13;
subject to the final approval of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Cha~cellor . of&#13;
the University of W1sconsmParkside.&#13;
. The Allocations Committee&#13;
A. Membership . The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall consist of 11 voting m~mbers&#13;
( except additional votmg&#13;
members maY be added under&#13;
the provisions of the next&#13;
ragraph), 5 elected ?1 the fall&#13;
ii'd 5 elected in the sprmg by the&#13;
students at large, and the&#13;
'dent of the Student pres1 . Organization Council ( exPub&#13;
Ii C Notice •.. ' ';&#13;
Funding&#13;
Committee&#13;
A. Membership&#13;
'lbe Stutlent Gr up&#13;
Committee shall con i l of&#13;
members; six members selected&#13;
bv the Chairperson of th Stu.dent&#13;
Organization Council from&#13;
among its member hip and&#13;
confirmed b,· hn-third of the&#13;
Student Organization Council and&#13;
one member, who hall serve as&#13;
the Chairperson. selected b:y the&#13;
Chairper on of the Allocations&#13;
Committee from among the&#13;
elected member of that Committee&#13;
and confirmed by tw~&#13;
fr ~o&#13;
tr t«&gt;, to&#13;
communicate, and to ,.ro t&#13;
indi ·idually or through a tud nt&#13;
organization o long&#13;
fed ral, late municipal In&#13;
violated.&#13;
ARTI LE l\'-%6&#13;
udents shall be free to&#13;
campus faciliti for m ti s of&#13;
udent organizations, ub] t to&#13;
Continued&#13;
Page 9 &#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednescl.y, fMrch 12, 1975&#13;
of ....&#13;
•&#13;
9&#13;
of&#13;
In DO ... y shall the ceoslIl1ltional&#13;
rigbls III any ......... t.&#13;
as slated In the Umted Stales&#13;
CansIltaaion, ....... be denied by&#13;
aD)·on. in autbority at tne&#13;
Um•• rslty 01 WisconsinPartsidt&#13;
ARTICLE IV4t&#13;
1bt .........1press sba11 be ne&#13;
III ctI&gt;IQr'ShIp and advanct approval&#13;
III ""PY. and its editors&#13;
sbaII be 11ft to cit ...... tbtir own&#13;
••litorlal policIes and n... s&#13;
.......-age.&#13;
ARTICLE IV"&#13;
1bt sbIdtaI press shall be&#13;
....... dod aU \hoot nghts as&#13;
bted In th. United States&#13;
ConslIlaaion.&#13;
ARTICLE 1V-31&#13;
ubject 10 UDI•• rsity&#13;
_. stodtnts shall ha••&#13;
the I to dislribute or oeIl&#13;
Ulfonnallcln of a pnnted nall1rt&#13;
t d nol cennict .. ,th&#13;
t)·of I8COf\Wl-Parllsidt&#13;
conlrads&#13;
.utTICLE (\'-3Z&#13;
"- ..... 1 1 • ReaD u.....&#13;
.!!!.!!!!!:-&#13;
1, F.. a dh 10.. 1 recaU&#13;
.a ta t..... ,~~.~ly&#13;
" W ....... Parbidt lladtat&#13;
I..- the dIvisIGD may start a&#13;
recaU DdilloD ....... bIa-1Jtr&#13;
SC!'lIrJijIiV :twIegta from that&#13;
cMvls10D may sip It. 15Sof&#13;
the dIvisIGD mliSisip peullon&#13;
f« .aIIdItY ' For a n:can agaiDIt au al-1arl·&#13;
Se_tor .. omeer of piii'b!d.&#13;
...... t Gov~t ~lIon&#13;
1IIc. uy Uaiv~ty of WtscollSiD- •&#13;
~ stDdtDt may start the&#13;
pelilloo and any UnI.erslty of&#13;
w~ParbIdt studeDt may&#13;
!!&amp;!J!,.&#13;
%) 111. recaU ~tlon must&#13;
ha •• a slaltre""t Of1lle reason!s}&#13;
I. removal Ir&lt;Im ofllet, 'I1aJs&#13;
m.. t dtaI with actlous COlDmItIt&lt;I&#13;
In the preseat term 01&#13;
qUia: U. Sepptgr or OffIcer&#13;
reslJDI and Is rt!J!POiDted to a&#13;
I!!!llloD wlthID the term 01 the&#13;
offke be last bt1d, It shaD be&#13;
l'9fIIlfkmI only a coatIDnalion 01&#13;
bIs term.&#13;
S) 111. sludeul(s) shall pres.nt&#13;
lb. polill., to a;;; StJaate. Upon&#13;
ncelvlng verification of tbe&#13;
polilion lb. Senate must im·&#13;
mediately oollfy the school paper&#13;
that a recaD is lD progress and a&#13;
"P"clal .Ieclloo wID tat. plac •.&#13;
lb.re must be an .lecUoD. There&#13;
must be au election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of&#13;
the valid petition Is recel.ed by&#13;
lbe Senate.&#13;
4) Upou receiving the recall&#13;
pelltion lbe Senate must im·&#13;
mediately turn It o.er to the&#13;
elecllon commltlee. The election&#13;
committee sb8ll 68ve five days to&#13;
verify lbe names on lbe petillon,&#13;
ID tbe event tbat lbere Is no&#13;
elecllon commltlee, tbe Senate&#13;
must aPJlOlnt one within five&#13;
days,&#13;
If illegal names are found on&#13;
the petition, and the Dumber of&#13;
legal names drop to less Iban 15&#13;
percent, Ibe election commltlee&#13;
must notify tile stUdent!s} wbo&#13;
presented the petition. Upon&#13;
notification, tbe students bave&#13;
five school days to get Iberequired&#13;
number 01 names, If&#13;
Ibey fall to do so, tbelr recall&#13;
pettttou sball be declared null, At&#13;
Ibe request of Ibe student who&#13;
presented the petition, the&#13;
election committee must show&#13;
that the names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
'rom the petltton after filing.&#13;
Once Ibe petitton is presented to&#13;
Ibe Senate. It cannot be wilb·&#13;
President of tIae&#13;
electtons&#13;
20 dayS,&#13;
ask Force on Impl~mentatio&#13;
A co ImTIEE \,&#13;
, ;0.1\ EBSITY Of lIilSCQ • rsP.UlKSIDE&#13;
CIlA.l'TI:R 44&#13;
44. &amp;1 tlo BOariI&#13;
1bt lorce recognizes a&#13;
Ira d111ou.aI and justIfiable&#13;
predominant faculty role In the&#13;
r Vl w and control of intercoUe&#13;
late athletics We&#13;
Is role concermng inand&#13;
III be&#13;
e suggest a&#13;
~:::~ lIItte&amp;Se the P lion of dents and ~=~&#13;
lact that the D of tiCS IS, and IS&#13;
to remam, a faculh&#13;
member • est that th~&#13;
IMmbersh P COllSIt 01 tbe&#13;
ot tics tJ:~mC:lo).&#13;
lacult). Olle communiI)'&#13;
member four studen ,no&#13;
oue of .. hUD hall&#13;
particlpat. In Intercollegiate&#13;
os a member 01 the&#13;
dra al1enbon to 44.08&#13;
SUl~st that "to the&#13;
aU Committee ~ be&#13;
added after bxI el."&#13;
under ~.08 (3) 10 we&#13;
recommend Ih. addition&#13;
to the la&lt;ull)' and&#13;
ot d through the&#13;
G A Inc Irom time to&#13;
have its runctions changes&#13;
somewhal and will no longer&#13;
have a direct policy role. We&#13;
recommend no change in&#13;
membership.&#13;
44.11 Lectures and floe Arts&#13;
Commitlee&#13;
Sillce lItiS committee no longer&#13;
utilizes Segregated Fee lunds,&#13;
Ibe present constitutency and&#13;
charge seem appropriate.&#13;
44.1% Campus Coocerns Committee&#13;
---we- recommend extensive&#13;
changes in Ibis committee. The&#13;
membership, we believe, should&#13;
be 4 students (selected by the&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc.), 2 laculty&#13;
(selected by the University&#13;
Committee;, 2 members 01 the&#13;
academic staff (one selected by&#13;
the Dean of Students and one&#13;
selected by the Oiancellor) and&#13;
one member 01 the classified&#13;
slafi !selecled by the O1an.&#13;
cellor).. This membership&#13;
dl.stiibubon necessitates that the&#13;
committee no longer be a laculty&#13;
corruruttee since the membership&#13;
00 longer contains a majority or&#13;
laculty.&#13;
,~~e.runctions and responsdililtes&#13;
should include:&#13;
(I) acting as a liaison between&#13;
student organizations and the&#13;
adminislr.ation when a student&#13;
organIZation so requests&#13;
(2) offering advi~e ~nd&#13;
re,commendations to the d&#13;
IlI1Jlislr I' . a - alan m matters which&#13;
are not the p";mo~, sibilil I . -._, responyo&#13;
either laculty staff&#13;
students. " or&#13;
(31 off . , enng advice on specific&#13;
lSSUes not predominatel&#13;
COIIcern I Y the =~~o another COmmill&#13;
th:. ",:,st oIth~ lac~;'&#13;
!4) the luncti admimstration.&#13;
ons 01the Co&#13;
Ceremonies Commit'- mpus&#13;
44.211. = (UW.p&#13;
I 5) the lunctions 01&#13;
munlcation Arts And' the Com·&#13;
Gallery Commillte ltonum and&#13;
(6) Ihe luncti~ns&#13;
Umversity Book t 01 the&#13;
mittee. Sore Com_&#13;
~.13 University Co .&#13;
lUi Codlflcaif mmlttte&#13;
44.15NOIlllnaU:n&#13;
Com!lUltee&#13;
W os Commitle&#13;
e recommend e Publl tha~ these&#13;
e Notlee&#13;
committees continue to be&#13;
composed exclusively of faculty,&#13;
which seems to us appropriate.&#13;
We do, however, suggest that&#13;
under 44.14 (2) the lollowing be&#13;
added: "The Commillee shall&#13;
consull with students through&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. where appropriate."&#13;
44.16 Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee&#13;
Recognizing that such a&#13;
co~mittee is necessary. we&#13;
believe the current constituency&#13;
is adequate.&#13;
44.17 Library and Learning&#13;
Center Committee&#13;
The present constituency&#13;
seems adequate, though the&#13;
Committee seems unusually&#13;
large.&#13;
44.18 Campus Planniog Committee&#13;
We leel that students are under-represented&#13;
on this committee.&#13;
One studenl should be&#13;
added, necessitating one faculty&#13;
member being added, the latter&#13;
bemg elected at large. The&#13;
PreSident 01P.S.G.A. Inc. (or hisherdeslgnee)&#13;
shall be a member.&#13;
Particular attenlion should be&#13;
paid to (3) (a) with regard to the&#13;
membership 01 sub-committees&#13;
and provisions should be made&#13;
that when sulH:ommittees deal&#13;
~th "pol.icies concerning student&#13;
life, serVIces, and interests" that&#13;
any recommendations or actions&#13;
be lorwarded to the P.S.G.A Inc.&#13;
and to the O1ancellor&#13;
44.19 Natural Scientific Areas&#13;
Committee&#13;
The co 't . mm. tee currently&#13;
can tams no students. We&#13;
recommend thai two students&#13;
mSc~Jormg in the Division of&#13;
lence be added.&#13;
44.20 Acade~' P I' . mittee u.u.C 0 lCles Com~&#13;
de=le this commiltee clearly&#13;
. m matters that are a runary responsibility· 01 the&#13;
acuity, significant student&#13;
mwembership seems j'ustillable&#13;
e rec .&#13;
added ~mmend two students be&#13;
com . give a lotal 01four on the&#13;
di I mltlee. In light of Ihe&#13;
s nbutional . facult. reqU1reme~t for&#13;
, y, 11seems appropriate to&#13;
reqUlre that no more than two&#13;
THE P R SIDE RA GER esd•y,&#13;
from the divisioa may scan a&#13;
rttaU ~titioa agaJnst bis-her&#13;
sc11tor, Qgly stgdepta from tbat&#13;
di may sign It, 15 percent of&#13;
~ divisJGa mast sip the petition&#13;
for aUdJty.&#13;
For a rttall against an at-large&#13;
aator or Officer of Parkside&#13;
adent Govenuneat Association&#13;
~- HY Ualvenlty of Wisconsin-.&#13;
ParbJde student may start the&#13;
petitioa and any Unlvenity of&#13;
in-Parbide student may&#13;
~ ! 1 The recall petition must&#13;
hue a statf'a:mt of the reasoo(s)&#13;
fw removal from office. 1bJs&#13;
m t deal with actions commldNI&#13;
In the present term of&#13;
qffk:r u a Seutor or Officer&#13;
ps and ls reapeolnf;ed to a&#13;
ltioa Idun the term of the&#13;
be la held, It shall be&#13;
must be an election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of&#13;
the valid petition is received by&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall&#13;
petition the Senate must immediately&#13;
turn Jt over to the&#13;
election committee. The election&#13;
committee shall have five days to&#13;
verify the names on the petition.&#13;
In the event that there is no&#13;
election committee, the Senate&#13;
must aepolnt one within five&#13;
days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on&#13;
the petition, and the number of&#13;
legal names drop to less than 15&#13;
percent, the election committee&#13;
must notify the student( s) who&#13;
presented the petition. Upon&#13;
notification, the students have&#13;
five school days to get therequired&#13;
number of names. H&#13;
they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At&#13;
the request of the student who&#13;
presented the petition, the&#13;
election committee must show&#13;
that the names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
'rom the petition after filing.&#13;
Once the petition is presented to&#13;
the Senate, it cannot he withce&#13;
on lmplementatio&#13;
functions changes&#13;
nd will no longer&#13;
committees continue to be&#13;
composed exclusively of faculty,&#13;
which seems to us appropriate. v du- t policy role. We&#13;
recommend no change in&#13;
and Fine Arts&#13;
. The functions and responibiliti&#13;
should include:&#13;
1 &gt; ting as a liaison between&#13;
nt or anizations and th&#13;
~ tr_ation when a studen~&#13;
organization so requests.&#13;
2 offering advice and&#13;
r .c~mmendations to the admuustration&#13;
in matters which&#13;
are no the prim,,,.., bil t r . --·-.1 respon1&#13;
Y o either faculty staff&#13;
dents. • , or&#13;
( 3) offering advice on specific&#13;
not predominatel th&#13;
COllmf Ye&#13;
o another COJlUnitt&#13;
bod)de• at the request of the fac~tyor&#13;
nts or the &lt;&gt;-A_,_. tr . • 4) the f . a-.uunis ation&#13;
unctions of th Ca · monies Commitie: mpus&#13;
44 21 ). (UW.p&#13;
(S) the functions or the&#13;
muniration Arts AUdito . Comallery&#13;
Committe nurn and&#13;
( &amp;) the funct~~&#13;
mversity Book tns of the&#13;
rnitte . s ore Com.&#13;
Ul nh·ersity Co . iU4 Cocrn mnuttee I cation Co .-&#13;
We do, however, suggest that&#13;
under 44.14 (2) the following be&#13;
added : "The Committee shall&#13;
consult with students through&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. where appropriate."&#13;
&#13;
44.16 Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee&#13;
Recognizing that such a&#13;
coI?mittee is necessary, we&#13;
believe the current constituency&#13;
is adequate.&#13;
44.17 Library and Learning&#13;
Center Committee&#13;
The present constituency&#13;
seems adequate , though the&#13;
Committee seems unusually&#13;
large.&#13;
44.18 Campus Planning Committee&#13;
&#13;
Wefeel that students are und~r-represented&#13;
on this comrruttee.&#13;
One student should be&#13;
added, necessitating one faculty&#13;
m:mber being added, the latter&#13;
bem~ elected at large. The&#13;
President of p .S.G .A. Inc. ( or hisher&#13;
~esignee) shall be a member .&#13;
Pa.rticular attention should be&#13;
paid to (3) (a) with regard to the&#13;
membership of sub-committees&#13;
and provisions should be made&#13;
th.at when sub-committees deal&#13;
~th "po~cies concerning student&#13;
hfe, semces, and interests" that&#13;
any recommendations or actions&#13;
be forwarded to the P.S.G.A Inc.&#13;
and to the Chancellor&#13;
44.19 Natural Scientific A&#13;
Committee reas&#13;
Th&#13;
e. committee currently&#13;
;ontams no students. We&#13;
ec?m_mend that two students&#13;
;~Jormg in the Division of&#13;
ience be added&#13;
..!!:20 Academic .Policies Com-&#13;
.!!!_1ttee&#13;
de:I~ this committee clearly&#13;
. m matters that are a&#13;
runary responsibility of the&#13;
acuity' significant student&#13;
::~bership seems justifiable.&#13;
add ecom_mend two students be&#13;
com ed ~ give a total of four on the&#13;
distr~It~ee · In light of the&#13;
facultbut~onal requirement for&#13;
r . Y' it seems appropriate to&#13;
equu-e that no more than two &#13;
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-197 ('all: 55:~.22~4&#13;
r-:::-:-- .:Wednesdily, March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
If you think Koda&#13;
is just pretty pictures&#13;
you ought to have&#13;
your chest exa i e&#13;
~-:;;;&#13;
radiologist-and, most important, reduced radi..&#13;
ation exposure. , .&#13;
Researching and crealin~ better x-ray fIlms&#13;
is good for our business, which ,ISwhy we went&#13;
Ontothem in the first place. But It does our SOCII&#13;
t ood too-which isn't a bad feeling. After all, eyg , . ty&#13;
ur business depends on our socie -so we o .&#13;
care what happens to It.&#13;
. '~'~'ws that you have a&#13;
When a chest x-ray s cer it's not a pretty , I'k TB or can , 't p~otentialkiller Ie, rtant picture because I&#13;
picture, But it's an Imcf~ ct and catch the killer&#13;
can' help the doctor e e&#13;
in time, ut to catch these poten-&#13;
. When doctors are ~ sharpest, clearest x..ray&#13;
tial killers, th&amp;Ywa~t ~nd that's why people a~&#13;
films they can ge, hours creating new an&#13;
K dak spend so m~ny t Already, the results&#13;
b~tter x-ray film ,equIP~~~he patient, economy&#13;
'nclude convenience 0 more useful tool for the . I 't I an even for the hOSPIa , .&#13;
INof~ FINE FOODS&#13;
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SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
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l&#13;
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~ONE 634-1991 - PICKUP OR ~ SOFT DRINKS WINES&#13;
, ·R~k •Jazz •Pop •Folk&#13;
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Parts and Service for HOT FOODS All I ported Cars ANYTIME! pl PING TO YOUR HOME&#13;
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EXPRESS&#13;
ARCH 29-APRIL 6&#13;
ONLvs135&#13;
COMPLETE.&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
Transp t . lloto oration via Deluxe Ix r Coach&#13;
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ltierato Beach Shores&#13;
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·~ Roorns With Kitchenette&#13;
Y World Option - $10&#13;
p~ . apphc t·&#13;
a ion or information&#13;
1 \" Contact: l~Plis,-&#13;
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. ,( D.197 Call· s··1 ·,2n• .... a .... ;-,-.&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
also&#13;
QUAun· ROAD ERVJC[&#13;
. I! you think Koda&#13;
1s Just pretty picture&#13;
you ought to h v&#13;
-your chest examine&#13;
, shows that you have a&#13;
When a chest x-ray cer ·1t's not a pretty&#13;
· . l'k TB or can , . potential kill~; I e . ortant picture becau~e it&#13;
picture. But its an imp t t and catch the killer&#13;
can· help the doctor de ec&#13;
in time. ut to catch these potenWhen&#13;
doctors ar~~ sharpest, clearest x-ray&#13;
tial killers, they wa~t ~nd that's w~y people a~&#13;
f i I ms they can ge . hours creating new an&#13;
Kodak spend so m8:ny t Already, the results&#13;
better x-ray film _equ1p~~~he patient, economy&#13;
include con~enien~~en more useful tool for the&#13;
for the hospital, an&#13;
- ...... ~ri&#13;
radiologist-and, most important, reduced radiation&#13;
exposure. . . Researching and creating better x-ray films&#13;
is good for our business, which _is why we wen!&#13;
into them in the first place. But 1t do_es our society&#13;
good, too-which isn't a bad feel~ng. After all,&#13;
our business depends on our society-so we&#13;
care what happens to_ it._&#13;
~ Kodak. ~ More than a blislness. &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Weclnesd• .,. March 12. 1975&#13;
PSE starts&#13;
cancer drive&#13;
wtlI be p1a)~ opemng with contests&#13;
I 1.-" wiD meet II 2::10SltunlIy 1/IemoOIl.&#13;
212. BIACH RD. KENOSHA·551.1tTI&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
nd from lelt) of the fraternity is shown presenting tickets to his brolber BIIlu..&#13;
Bob Ung';'" (seen _.'Afttor while Ranger iceman Jerry Madala (left) and John Bl'1IIleIUlaot ..&#13;
eancer SOCIetycoo.=- •&#13;
Cole and Chambliss stand out&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
The Rangers wipped Morningside&#13;
of Sioux City Iowa in&#13;
tbe1r first game of the MAlA&#13;
playoffs in Kansas City yesterday&#13;
by a score of 57-54.&#13;
After cold shooling by the&#13;
Rangers in the first haH, the&#13;
Rangers came back from a 2&amp;-24&#13;
deficit to take the lead with 44-38&#13;
and 9: 12 lefl in the game.&#13;
Gary Cole. Parksides leading&#13;
se&lt;rer with 2S points fouled out&#13;
with 3:12 left in the game.&#13;
Morningside made a determined&#13;
effort to cut the lead with Cole out&#13;
bringing the score to $4-50 with&#13;
1:03 left.&#13;
Parkside called a time out with&#13;
the score ~2 and 32 seconds left&#13;
to go. King inbounded to Learths&#13;
Scott who was shoved out of&#13;
bounds with 31 seconds on the&#13;
clock. Scott hit on one free throw&#13;
to bring the score to 55-52.&#13;
Lomack of Morningside hustled&#13;
the ball down court and hit to&#13;
make it 55-54. Chambliss hit on a&#13;
charity shot with IS to go and the&#13;
score stood at 57-54. King was&#13;
fouled with 7 seconds to go. He&#13;
missed his shot and time ran out&#13;
as Morningside got the throw&#13;
away. .&#13;
On the last play of the game&#13;
Marshall Hill went up for the&#13;
rebound and came down on his&#13;
bad ankle. There is no word as&#13;
yet if he will be available for&#13;
todays game against Marymount&#13;
College of Kansas. Parkside&#13;
plays Marymount at 11: 15 this&#13;
morning. Marymount is slated as&#13;
the number four leam in the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
••&#13;
: "SPECIAL"&#13;
: SPLASH:&#13;
: SALE!! •&#13;
: A COMPLETE&#13;
• WATER BED SET.lJp.&#13;
: .Deluxe Frame •&#13;
• • Headboord •&#13;
• .Pedestol&#13;
.• .Liner&#13;
•&#13;
• • Mottress $1 rt/tfS&#13;
• only vt .&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
Quality Leather Goods&#13;
-'&#13;
'lflC~ 06 DOWN&#13;
P/wM 654·3578&#13;
Pipes Papers&#13;
Tapestries&#13;
Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
m re than a spring &amp; padding mattress ...&#13;
m re than a waterbed ...&#13;
• ONEJ'W4&#13;
ET•&#13;
• DRE$v1 •&#13;
• olso hos&#13;
: 0 fine selection of ~&#13;
• Bags ond 0 complete&#13;
• af woterbed prodUCts&#13;
• including&#13;
• Aqua Queen&#13;
.: (U.L. AP~rov.ed.H~~&#13;
•••••••&#13;
IRe Jlir/orm ~fer cJJraffre88&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
"""returns man t h" . 0 IS source&#13;
2 E PAR SIDE RA GER ednesday, March 12, 1975 ~-·-~~&#13;
S1&#13;
E starts&#13;
canc,er 1&#13;
drive&#13;
( nd from left) of the fraternity is shown presenting tickets to his brother Bill U&#13;
Bob Ung~ tyseco dinator while Ranger iceman Jerry Madala (left) and John Bruneau look,,.. Cancer Soc1e coor , ....&#13;
Cole and Chambliss stand out&#13;
The Rangers wipped Mor-&#13;
'de of Sioux City Iowa in&#13;
their first game of the MAIA&#13;
play in Kansas City yesterday&#13;
by a score of 57--M.&#13;
Al cold shooting by the&#13;
Ran _ ers in the first half, the&#13;
Rangers came back from a ~24&#13;
deficit to take the lead with 44-38&#13;
and 9:12 left in the game.&#13;
Gary Coie, Parksides leading&#13;
r with 2S points fouled out&#13;
"th 3:12 left in the game.&#13;
orning de made a determined&#13;
effort to cul the lead with Cole out&#13;
bringing the score to 54-50 with&#13;
1:03 lef&#13;
Parkside called a time out with&#13;
the scoce ~2 and 32 seconds left&#13;
to go. King inbounded to Learths&#13;
Scott who was shoved out of&#13;
bounds with 31 seconds on the&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
clock. Scott hit on one free throw&#13;
to bring the score to 55-52.&#13;
Lomack of Morningside hustl!!d&#13;
the ball down court and hit to&#13;
make it 55-54. Chambliss hit on a&#13;
charity shot with 15 to go and the&#13;
score stood at 57--M. King was&#13;
fouled with 7 seconds to go. He&#13;
missed his shot and time ran out&#13;
as Morningside got the throw&#13;
away.&#13;
On the last play of the game&#13;
Marshall Hill went up for the&#13;
rebound and came down on his&#13;
bad ankle. There is no word as&#13;
yet if he will be available for&#13;
todays game against Marymount&#13;
College of Kansas. Parkside&#13;
plays Marymount at 11: 15 this&#13;
morning. Marymount is slated as&#13;
the number four team in the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
~arymount beat M&#13;
therr game Monday b} 1&#13;
82-76 and now stands&#13;
for the season.&#13;
Cole stood out 85&#13;
standing player scoring&#13;
pulling in 6 re&#13;
blocking 4 shots.&#13;
seored 11 and pu!kd&#13;
rebounds. Bill Sobanski&#13;
rebounders with n ai.i&#13;
points.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss S&lt;X!&#13;
four points but two of&#13;
with 15 seconds on the&#13;
give the Rangers their&#13;
margin.&#13;
The pressure of&#13;
play showed in the&#13;
percentage figures&#13;
Rangers scoring ooly3U&#13;
overall and 24.3 in the ~&#13;
Parksides record no,r atm&#13;
23.8.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
•• •• • •••&#13;
: "SPECIAL"&#13;
: SPLASH :&#13;
: SALE!! :&#13;
• A COMPLETE t&#13;
: WATERBED SET-UP:&#13;
• •Deluxe Frame f&#13;
Qualit · Leather Goods Tapestries • • •Headboard • 1&#13;
h n&#13;
!Re&#13;
Pipe Papers Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
· paddin mattre&#13;
'Uric rm ~fer cJJ'{affresa&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
. returns man t h" . 0 is source&#13;
• •Pedestal t&#13;
• •Liner t&#13;
: • Mattress $1999s:&#13;
• only&#13;
• •&#13;
oN£J'WEET&#13;
DREifo&#13;
• also hos f&#13;
• . . of Bear t&#13;
• a fine selection Ir. t&#13;
• Bags and a complete t&#13;
• of waterbed products I&#13;
• including :&#13;
</text>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65062">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 28, March 12, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65063">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65064">
              <text>1975-03-12</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65067">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65068">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65069">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65070">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65071">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65072">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65073">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65074">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65075">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="546">
      <name>UFO</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
