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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 10, issue 4</text>
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            <text>Student Union - Neibuhr plans ahead</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>D&#13;
tJr University of Wisconsin . Perkside&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 • Vol. 10· 0.4&#13;
Neibuhr plans ahead&#13;
growth) is that we spend a lot of&#13;
time looking at food service"&#13;
Neibuhr said. "Mainly becau~&#13;
food affects all students. We did a&#13;
comparative, random - sample&#13;
survey which we got a good&#13;
response to early on. We learned a&#13;
lot - some of which was not good&#13;
news. But we're doing a much&#13;
better job as a result."&#13;
The survey caused a lot of&#13;
changes 3-1/2 years ago, Neibuhr&#13;
said. Replans to repeat the survey&#13;
at the end of the current semester,&#13;
followed by one on building usage&#13;
and programming in the spring.&#13;
The Rec. Center's business has&#13;
also "picked. up a lot in the last&#13;
two years," Neibuhr said. "That&#13;
has a lot to do with Mike Menzhuber&#13;
(Bee. Center Supervisor)&#13;
coming to campus."&#13;
Today, the Rec. Center and&#13;
Union Square work particularly&#13;
well in terms of day - to - day use,&#13;
Neibuhr said, "but the bazarre&#13;
area has been disappointing,&#13;
because we had envisioned a very&#13;
active area. But the way the architect&#13;
designed tbe stairs, it's&#13;
really out of the way for most&#13;
people. "&#13;
The Sweet Shoppe, Neibuhr&#13;
said, has been particularly. successful&#13;
so far this semester. with&#13;
sales up 50 - 100% daily over last&#13;
year. However. expansion of&#13;
Sweet Shoppe foods could possibly&#13;
compete with the Union's food&#13;
service contract with Heritage&#13;
Foods, Neibuhr said. He noted&#13;
though that it would be possible to&#13;
offer bulk ice cream or fudge -&#13;
making supplies through tbe&#13;
Sweet Shoppe in the future.&#13;
To fund these and other areas&#13;
and activities, the Union depends&#13;
heavily on the revenues collected&#13;
by food services. Its highest&#13;
source of revenue is the Union&#13;
Square, Neibuhr said, with&#13;
Heritage rebates for attended food&#13;
contract events running second.&#13;
Other major food service&#13;
money makers include the Rec.&#13;
Center, the Sweet Shoppe, and&#13;
cash bars for catered events .•&#13;
Revenue from other areas also&#13;
support the Union. Rebates from&#13;
the vending machines in the Union&#13;
building, amusement games,&#13;
facility use fees (building rentals&#13;
primarily from outsiders).&#13;
University fees and monies&#13;
carried over year to year all&#13;
contribute to the Union's&#13;
operations. Monies carried year to&#13;
year, Neibuhr said, are put hack&#13;
into the union to buy equipment,&#13;
sponsor projects, provide services&#13;
and pay for building expansions.&#13;
How does the Union spend the&#13;
money? Tbe highest yearly expenditure,&#13;
according to Neibuhr,&#13;
is the Union's debt service. a 30-&#13;
year mortgage originally funded&#13;
with federal monies. Debt service&#13;
CC6tsthe Union $105,000 per year.&#13;
The second highest expenditures&#13;
for the Union are&#13;
salaries paid to academic area&#13;
and classified workers. Other&#13;
Union expenditures include:&#13;
student help salaries, the cost of&#13;
goods, utilities (which are paid to&#13;
the University), physical plant&#13;
labor for maintenance and repairs&#13;
of the facilities, liability insurance&#13;
as required by the state, building&#13;
equipment reserve (for&#13;
replacement of major structures)&#13;
as required by the state, capital&#13;
equipment purchases (of office&#13;
equipment, kitchen equipment&#13;
and new supplies for projects),&#13;
office operating costs, postal costs&#13;
and taxes.&#13;
All monies, Neibuhr said., "stay&#13;
in the Union to provide more&#13;
services. Even with the Union's&#13;
slow start, we were more successful&#13;
sooner than we had anticipated.&#13;
Today. even thougb we&#13;
can't predict enrollment precisely&#13;
or anticipate the economy, the&#13;
costs of things or interest rates,&#13;
we balance on paper."&#13;
By spring, Neibuhr plans to&#13;
make more changes in the Union.&#13;
For example, he plans to set up an&#13;
outdoor recreation equipment&#13;
check - out area. The idea, he said,&#13;
was originally planned for the&#13;
Sweet Shoppe area, but was unfeasible&#13;
at the time because the&#13;
Union could not afford the&#13;
equipment. Now plans for the&#13;
purchase of new equipment -&#13;
camping, hiking and backpacking&#13;
supplies, along with ski equipment,&#13;
hasketballs, volleyhalls and&#13;
llANO.... .,. 0. _c:w.eaa&#13;
BILL NEIBUHR&#13;
horseshoes for the pad area - will&#13;
increase Union facility use.&#13;
Neibuhr also plans to study the&#13;
Union Square closely. "There are&#13;
dead periods which we need to&#13;
make more attractive by running&#13;
specials, introducing new product&#13;
items," he said. eibuhr admitted&#13;
that the Union will have "dead&#13;
periods" after activity periods&#13;
and in the evenings when there&#13;
aren't many people on campus, no&#13;
matter what is &lt;tfered. But he&#13;
hopes to induce more people to&#13;
"come in earlier and stay later,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
As for the pad, Neibuhr par·&#13;
tially blamed weather problems&#13;
for its lack of use by students this&#13;
fall. In the spring, Neibuhr said,&#13;
"!t'll get heavy use. We will have&#13;
the equipment set to make it&#13;
operate ~Uy, and It'll be&#13;
tolal1y e"c1o.ed by then ..&#13;
'eibuhr also hopes to do llOm&#13;
joint planning with other bran&lt;:&#13;
of Sl1Jdent life this year "The&#13;
student life office is nol the lilly&#13;
way to develop programs for the&#13;
campus," he said. He pointed to&#13;
Phy. Ed, the Health Office and&#13;
the Child Care Center IS other&#13;
units he'd like to see p1anmng&#13;
activities in conjunction wilh&#13;
Student Life. .&#13;
This period should be I&#13;
productive one for the Union,&#13;
Neibuhr said, because of ua real&#13;
positive altitude amlllg the SUff&#13;
Over the past sev-eral years we'&#13;
reorganized, made ~rsonntl&#13;
changes, had a student turnover&#13;
All these changes bnng In dif·&#13;
ferent Idea s."&#13;
UWP • Kenosha bus service cut&#13;
the funding cuts by selectiv Iy&#13;
cutting areas that have been&#13;
unproductive, such IS the talfhour&#13;
service and late runs.&#13;
With the phasmg wt of federal&#13;
subsidies. the department's&#13;
concem IS where to pick up the&#13;
needed addItional fundIDg&#13;
Alternatives include further&#13;
support with local momes or&#13;
havmg the state pick up ~ of&#13;
the bill. Supplemental locI I&#13;
support may be derived from an&#13;
increase in fares and/or some sort&#13;
of tax to help support tra~lt&#13;
operations, according to Jenkins.&#13;
35% reduction in fiscal year 1983,&#13;
a 65% cut the following year. and&#13;
in fiscal 1985 there will be no&#13;
federal support at all.&#13;
Federal monies currently pay&#13;
for 50% of the operating deficit&#13;
with the city of Kenosha picking&#13;
up 20% ri. the deficit. The state&#13;
currently pays 21% of the&#13;
operating costs; that figure will go&#13;
up to 30%beginning the first of the&#13;
year for a 21 month period.&#13;
"Y 00 may be seeing less of&#13;
buses," said dispatcher Dan&#13;
Cesario. "If (there's) no federal&#13;
subsidies, maybe no buses." The&#13;
department is trying to anticipate&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Racine students at Parkside&#13;
haven't seen any major changes&#13;
in daily bus service, but Kenosha&#13;
students have seen many&#13;
reductions in their bus service.&#13;
Kenosha's bus transportation&#13;
department experimented with&#13;
half - hour service for a full year,&#13;
hoping for a dramatic increase in&#13;
ridership. That increase never&#13;
materialized. Ridership increased&#13;
1% but operating costs jumped&#13;
40%, resulting in a $500,000loss.&#13;
The half-hour service and the&#13;
last daily run were discontinued&#13;
as cost - cutting measures. The&#13;
last daily bus leaves Parkside at 5&#13;
p.rn., not 6 p.m. as in the past,&#13;
because the last run now leaves&#13;
downtown Kenosha for the garage&#13;
at 5:40 p.m. The Kenosha and&#13;
Racine evening Jelco buses leave&#13;
Parkside at 9:30 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday.&#13;
Kenosha's bus transportation&#13;
department faces severe funding&#13;
cuts from the federal government&#13;
over the next three years, according&#13;
to Ed Jenkins, director of&#13;
transportation. There will be a&#13;
OC elects vice-chair&#13;
At an emergency meeting of&#13;
de'. Student Organizations&#13;
. il (soc) 00 Sept. 23, SOC&#13;
II" Sarkis Yogourtdjian an-&#13;
. the resignation of vice -&#13;
II" Chuck Neu and a general&#13;
embership hallot vote replaced&#13;
With Jerry Zigner of Bowling&#13;
Physics Ciub.&#13;
SOC is a sub - committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. It coordinates the&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
*&#13;
A letter! A letter!&#13;
*&#13;
"Mommie Dearest"&#13;
JERRY ZIGNER&#13;
planning of student club activities.&#13;
The BRC reviews budgets and&#13;
makes club funding recommendations&#13;
to the SOC general&#13;
membership in the spring.&#13;
*&#13;
Cross country&#13;
hosts championship&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
., 1h ma 'oriiy 0/ the editorial&#13;
Ranger editorial. reflect the oplnl,on ~'tt f I ileas to the editor for&#13;
alaI!. ParJtside students may Bubmlt e l or a be considered.&#13;
coruideratlon. Editorial ideas need not be typed to&#13;
f W n two years ago shocked Since the Task Force on the Status 0 orne id f "buried"&#13;
campus officials across the UW system with eVI o:'f ~n a plan to&#13;
sexual harassment inciden.ts, the s~stem bas been ~ d tr::l manner, 2)&#13;
I) deal with complaints fairly andb'lnthe n;;o;l ~:~g:" the behavior of&#13;
educate the system about the p~o em an&#13;
those who vicimize others in this way.. id&#13;
G ne Norwood chair of the University Committee at Parksl e, ;ys&#13;
tha~the Cammitt;""s recommendattons on implementing system p ~~y&#13;
at Parkside are due soon. And he says theydWlfllprob~~% ~7~~f'I'::cls o~&#13;
ChanceUor Guskin that a group compnse 0 mem&#13;
campus individuals be responsible for working WIth tbe problem at&#13;
Parkside. . gl 'nd"d I perhaps Guskin told the Ranger that he prefers a sm e I. IV' ua ,&#13;
two or three persons over a committee. He IS worried about the confidentialityof&#13;
the gro~p and concerned that a committee would not work&#13;
weU in this case. . sl h d if However, two of the three system goals would .be senou. Y .ar,?e I&#13;
the students that Guskin would exclude from active partictpatron 10 the&#13;
group are not allowed to be members.&#13;
In order to educate students about the problem, we need to understand&#13;
direcUy what student concepts of it are, and there IS no better&#13;
way to do that than to interact directly WIththem. Also, to change. the&#13;
hehavior of both tbose who harass women by their words and actions&#13;
and these who are harassed, we need to tell both groups that students do&#13;
not have to remain those acted upon, that students do h~ve the power to&#13;
act in resolving their awn problems. Sexual harassment IS a problem for&#13;
students as it is for any group of women Withlow status.&#13;
Confi~tiality can be protected in other ways, if students are a&#13;
threat: it is important now to involve students 10 an Issue that WIllaffect&#13;
them the rest of their lives.&#13;
Parkside needs a statue&#13;
by Carol Bums&#13;
There's something missing at&#13;
Parkside. Most students will&#13;
probably never realize exacUy&#13;
what it is. Years ago, it would&#13;
have been hard to find a college&#13;
without one. Parkside needs a&#13;
statue. A bust of a former chancellor&#13;
just won't do- it has to be a&#13;
full - blown statue.&#13;
Statues serve many purposes; a&#13;
place to meet friends; a landmark&#13;
for freshmen; a perch for birds;&#13;
something to paint green on St.&#13;
Patrick's Day The&#13;
possibilities are endless.&#13;
Who should be immortalized by&#13;
this statue? Parkside's officials&#13;
must realize that since they are in&#13;
the position to someday have an&#13;
entire building named in their&#13;
honor, they must be eliminated as&#13;
statue candidates. It would also be&#13;
hard to democratically choose one&#13;
member of Parkside's faculty.&#13;
The proposed statue should be a&#13;
memorial to the perpetual&#13;
student. There seems to be a lot of&#13;
them at Parkside. It could be a&#13;
composite of all the students who&#13;
have spent five eX' more years of&#13;
their lives in pursuit of a college&#13;
education.&#13;
Just think of tbe inspirational&#13;
qualities such a statue would have&#13;
for anyone who has never really&#13;
wanted to graduate! Once the&#13;
word got out, it might even attract&#13;
professional students from all&#13;
over the country. Parkside would&#13;
be a haven for students too shy for&#13;
the real world. With the increased&#13;
enrollment due to the statue, no&#13;
one would ha ve to worry about&#13;
budget cuts!&#13;
Yes, Parkside needs a statue.&#13;
SO I'D LIKE YOU TO GET IN TOUCH&#13;
WITH '(OUR SToe K&#13;
BROKE.RS &amp; INVESTORS&#13;
AND TELL THEM THAT&#13;
vou BELl~"E IN OUR&#13;
BIPARTISANRE.COVERY&#13;
pl.AN ANDTHAT yOu&#13;
WAtIT TO sEE STOCK.&#13;
PRICES GO lIB&#13;
Write a&#13;
letter&#13;
to the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago -&#13;
"Merger Effects OIl UWP could be&#13;
severe," by WarTen Nedry, Editor&#13;
- in - Chief&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie thinks&#13;
that the merger of the UWwith the&#13;
WSUsystem "could have a severe&#13;
impact on the operations at&#13;
Parkside. The governor tied the&#13;
merger to the budget and the&#13;
budget is at distinctly lower levels&#13;
than we had anticipated."&#13;
State enrollment funding to&#13;
universities is based on an&#13;
average allotment per student.&#13;
Traditionally, UW funding levels&#13;
have been higher than those of the&#13;
WSU system. Under the merger,&#13;
funding to all institutions will be at&#13;
WSU levels.&#13;
"In addition to lower funding&#13;
levels," Wyllie said, "the budget&#13;
failed to cover the decision items&#13;
in our budget proposals."&#13;
Decision items are those new or&#13;
improved areas that account for&#13;
the growth of a university.&#13;
"These decision items&#13;
amounted to $4.3 million and include&#13;
funding for new majors&#13;
fUnding for staff for tbe library&#13;
learning center and decentralization&#13;
of business services&#13;
made from Madison to the&#13;
Kenosha I Racine area ... In&#13;
effect, what we're being tDld in&#13;
this new budget is we have to fund&#13;
those items out of the average&#13;
instructional costs of the WSU&#13;
system," Wyllie said.&#13;
He characterized the lowered&#13;
funding levels as "a potential&#13;
threat to the quality of tbe UW."&#13;
Some possible effects of the&#13;
merger on Parltside are larger&#13;
classes, elimination &lt;i those less&#13;
attractive and productive&#13;
programs, temporary instructDrs&#13;
eliminated non . fllling of&#13;
vacancies, shorter library&#13;
hours ...&#13;
One advantage of the merger&#13;
system is (that) the rewording of'&#13;
the legislation will open the door&#13;
to creating a graduate degree&#13;
program at Parkside. Previous&#13;
legislation created a 4-year school&#13;
only.&#13;
- from the Parkslde Newscope,&#13;
Sept. 21, 1911, vol. 5, no. 4&#13;
5 years ago-&#13;
"Enrollment down 400: Budget&#13;
to be cut" by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33 100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay ~t their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 if projected figures&#13;
are correct and is 400 less than&#13;
last year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programming, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
10 the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Urnon, or dances and activities.&#13;
Only half of the union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other half is raised Irom&#13;
rev~1'!-u.esfrom dances and the&#13;
actIvItIes staged. This means that&#13;
as activities and dances are cut&#13;
back, revenue would fall, leading&#13;
to further cutbacks.&#13;
(Totero said), "It's too bad that&#13;
thi~ had to occur the first year, but&#13;
we 11Just have tD play it by ear&#13;
and see how it goes."&#13;
Othe~ areas that receive seg.&#13;
fees 'WIll not be as drastically&#13;
affected by the cutbacks.&#13;
The athletics,. housing, health&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry - over&#13;
funds.&#13;
Declines (in enrollment) will&#13;
not affect Parkside (academically),&#13;
according to&#13;
Gary. Goetz, director of budget&#13;
planning and analysis. Goetz said&#13;
"There will be no cutbacks of&#13;
classes and absolutely no cutbacks&#13;
of staff."&#13;
- Ranger, Sept. 29, 1976, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 4&#13;
1 year ago-&#13;
"Resolve over - crowded bus&#13;
situation,' by Gary Ledger&#13;
Racine . Parkside bus riders&#13;
!low have two express runs servIng&#13;
them. The huses will transpor~&#13;
riders from downtown&#13;
Hacme tD Parkside non-stop. The&#13;
regular route 9 bus will run as&#13;
usual, picking up students and&#13;
othe~s along the way.&#13;
This solution is the result of&#13;
overcr?w~mg conditions during&#13;
:route 9 s flrsttwo runs ... The alltime&#13;
record occurred Wednesday&#13;
(Sept. 17) when 86 students were&#13;
packed ~n. After relaying this&#13;
mformation to the dispatcher,&#13;
(the dnver) was instructed to pull&#13;
over. Five students were transfered&#13;
Immediately to a bus&#13;
SUpervIsor's car.&#13;
According to bus officials&#13;
average ridership for the first tw~&#13;
rons, before the express service&#13;
was 70 to 80 riders each. The bu~&#13;
has a seating cal"city of 41.&#13;
... the problem is to make sure&#13;
Parkside nders continue to ride&#13;
the bus. If not, the express service&#13;
WIllbe.drop~ dUring the times I&#13;
runs ndership is low.&#13;
- Ranger, Sept. 25 1980 vol ·9&#13;
110.4 " "&#13;
::;;:::;:;:::;::;;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;;;;;:;;:::;;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;;;;::::&#13;
To the editor:.&#13;
Gallagher oHers moral&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations to the Ranger for raising the issue of the B&#13;
UW - P. Naturally, when the Bookstore personnel tell the sto&#13;
moral is likely to be, "It's the fault of the faculty" or "Bla&#13;
publishers." Such morals make no difference to the students&#13;
receive their textbooks late, or not at all, But, as a faculty mem&#13;
a person ill-inclined to blame myself, I'd like to expand this s&#13;
offer a new moral.&#13;
Chapter One&#13;
In a recent semester, two required textbooks which I&#13;
properly and on time never arrived. The publisher told me that they&#13;
never been ordered"&#13;
Chapter Two&#13;
The bookstore told one faculty member shortly before the stsrt&#13;
,recent semester that his properly ordered text was out of print.&#13;
publisher subsequently told the faculty member that the bookw&#13;
deed available.&#13;
Chapter Three&#13;
Another required text properly ordered by faculty was not&#13;
from the publisher, because the Bookstore could not find the pub&#13;
phone number, even though the faculty member had provided&#13;
phone number in writing to the Bookstore.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
(DANGER: The moral approaches) While we faculty memberS&#13;
make serious mistakes on text orders (and owe students and B&#13;
apologies for these), we have discovered alarming "standard 0&#13;
procedures" which almost guarantee major problems in the&#13;
Example: the Bookstore tells me that "It is impossible to know&#13;
a book has been ordered." ApparenUy no records are kept. An&#13;
matter what ugly fate befalls your properly ordered book, youwill&#13;
hear from the Bookstore without your own initiative to investigate,&#13;
(Many chapters deleted in the interest of brevity)&#13;
MORAL: If the Bookstore does not want to take responsibili~&#13;
these semi-annual disasters (for which students pay the highest&#13;
let's take the responsibility away from this Bookstore. A univ&#13;
our caliber deserves a real bookstore.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mary Beth Gallagher&#13;
Beha vioral Science Division&#13;
Editor's -n:ote~-&#13;
, Thank you for your long - awaited letter. Is there a dissent&#13;
assenting voice out there?&#13;
.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:::::::;::::;::;;::;;;;:::;:;;:;::::;:;;;;;::;;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::;;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;;:::;;:::;;;:;:;:;::::,&#13;
~hger.&#13;
Edi&#13;
NewS E •&#13;
Feature Edi&#13;
Sports Edl&#13;
Photo E&#13;
Business Ma)lll&#13;
Ad Mana&#13;
Distribution '1:~G&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Ka ren Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicl&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
, STAFF&#13;
Greg B~nofiglio, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Earl.&#13;
Frederick, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Jim Mert·&#13;
Charles Perce, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff WickS.&#13;
RANGER is written and dOt . are so&#13;
responsible for its ed"' . e I ed by stUdents Of UW-Parkside and theY .&#13;
Published every Thur~orlal ~licV and content. holid8~&#13;
RANGER is printed b t~Y tu~mgthe acad~mic year except during break~ BndSifl.&#13;
Written permission is ~eqe. n~on Coo~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISCon&#13;
All correSPOndence sho ul~e b for reprint of any portion Of RANGER. Dl)9, U&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI ~J141 e addresSed to: Parks ide Ranger, WLLC&#13;
Letters to the Editor '11 b . dard&#13;
paper With one. inch ';;,1 ~ accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on sian mild&#13;
elUded for verification. argms. All letters must be signed and a telephoneI'll)&#13;
Nam~ will be Withheld for valid reason&#13;
Deadline for letters is T S. RltN&#13;
reserves .all. ~Itoria~ ~~~ay at 9 a:m. for PUblication on .Thursday. The f&#13;
defamatory cOntent. pt'IVI tge! II;'! refl'Slng to· P!"i.nt "ett&amp;r~ -whic.h c~t.!"-&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October I, 1981 3&#13;
University committee&#13;
discusses issues&#13;
The University Committee met&#13;
t before school opened to&#13;
tscuss three topics: the ParkSide&#13;
udget cuts, the sexual&#13;
arassment policy and the&#13;
roposed title change of Coorinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
cational Programs.&#13;
The committee made the&#13;
Howing statement about&#13;
neeIlor Alan Guskin's budget&#13;
uctions and reallocations:&#13;
"(We are) please to see that the&#13;
aintenance and enhancement of&#13;
demic programs, quality and&#13;
'ze of the faculty, and of key&#13;
pport services is a stated top&#13;
'ority in the Chancellor's plan&#13;
dealing with budget reducOIlS.&#13;
However I we note with&#13;
neern that real and very subantial&#13;
reductions have been&#13;
de in the academic area and&#13;
reductions will have a&#13;
efinite impact on academic&#13;
rams.&#13;
"Obviously, there is a two - step&#13;
ure implicit in the Adinistration's&#13;
plan. First,&#13;
ovision is being made for the&#13;
sibility of further budget&#13;
uctions in the course of the&#13;
seal year. We find this provision&#13;
be both reasonable and prudent.&#13;
cond, major budget&#13;
allocations are being cooplated.&#13;
We trust that the&#13;
ministration will continue to&#13;
ult closely with the University&#13;
mmittee and other appropriate&#13;
ps as it develops its plans for&#13;
dget reallocations."&#13;
The committee also discussed a&#13;
aft prepared by Chairperson&#13;
gene Norwood, based on the&#13;
ork of a committee chaired by&#13;
rot. Ted Finman at UWadison,&#13;
which addresses&#13;
mpus implementation of the&#13;
in!.&#13;
ook&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING&#13;
S3.00 NITE&#13;
Board of Regents - approved&#13;
policy statement on sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
Norwood reported that the&#13;
Chancellor suggested that the&#13;
word "rules" be changed to&#13;
"procedures" whenever used to&#13;
. apply to tbe faculty. The Chancellor&#13;
also raised the issue of&#13;
whether the "ombudsman"&#13;
function could be better filled by a&#13;
single person instead of a committee.&#13;
Vice - Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner proposed changing the&#13;
title of the Coordinator of Community&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Community&#13;
Outreach and Summer session.&#13;
The Committee unanimously&#13;
approved tbe following resolution,&#13;
moved by Willi. m Moy: "The&#13;
Committee objects, once again, to&#13;
the appointment of an Academic&#13;
Dean without an explicit search&#13;
for that position. The Committee&#13;
feels that there would have been&#13;
more applicants for the position&#13;
originally, if tbe title of 'Associate&#13;
Dean' were contemplated." .&#13;
The Parkside Piano Duo of&#13;
Carol Bell and August Wegner will&#13;
present the first program in the&#13;
Kemper Center Fall Concert&#13;
Series at7 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 2&#13;
in the Manor House, 6536 Third&#13;
Ave., Kenosha. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
The program will include Jesu,&#13;
Joy of Man's Desiring by Bach,&#13;
Variations on a Theme by&#13;
Beethoven by Saint - Saens, Billy&#13;
the- Kid by Copland and Three&#13;
American Dances by Gilbert.&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
OCT. 5 - OCT. 11&#13;
$.60/game&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO TELL US&#13;
ABOUT THE COLLEGIATE SKILLS PROGRAM. BUT&#13;
NEVER 0101&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
Recently a leiter reminding you of the Collegiate Skills&#13;
requirements at UW-Parkside was mailed to you. Included&#13;
with your leiter was a survey asking your reaction to the&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program. ALL students receiving the&#13;
letter are asked to complete the survey and return It to:&#13;
The Information K"lOsk (WLLC)&#13;
or .&#13;
;r,~ The Office of Educational Program Support&#13;
~"~&#13;
~"&#13;
(WLLC D 197)&#13;
',:',.;..' Surveys must be returned by October 15. .'&#13;
""~ Thank you for your assistance with this project!&#13;
""',;';;&lt; t· C ·It "'" The Collegiate Skills Evalua Ion omml ee&#13;
l'i'~'f! ...__ i......w ........ ~ ,o •• ;r..-.;;.... :,.:~.:~--:..., ,.: __ .&amp;:'_~"'·_R_""&#13;
Les Aspin to speak at conference&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin will be&#13;
the featured speaker at a day-long&#13;
conference on the effects of fiscal&#13;
cuts on health, human services&#13;
and education in Kenosha County&#13;
on Friday, Oct. 9, at Parkside.&#13;
Aspin will present a national&#13;
perspective on the effect of&#13;
federal social program cuts.&#13;
Conference sponsors said the&#13;
program is designed to help&#13;
school, human services and health&#13;
education personnel deal with the&#13;
new block grant method of&#13;
dispensing federal aid in the face&#13;
of budget cutbacks and uncertainties&#13;
about the future of&#13;
many social service programs.&#13;
Speakers in addition to Aspin&#13;
include State Rep. Dismas&#13;
Becker, chairperson of the&#13;
Committee on Health and Human&#13;
Services; Archie A. Buchmiller,&#13;
assistant state superintendent of&#13;
the Department of Public Instruction&#13;
Division for&#13;
Management and Planning;&#13;
Eleanor Fitch, director of the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Human&#13;
Concerns; Supervisee James O.&#13;
Keegan, chairman of the Kenosha&#13;
County Board Health and Social&#13;
Services Committee; Rep.&#13;
Michael A. Kirby, co-chair &lt;J. the&#13;
assembly Subcommittee on&#13;
Health and Social Services; NeIlie&#13;
Johnson, Slale Department of&#13;
Administration Human Resources&#13;
learn leader; and Prof William&#13;
Murin, director &lt;J. the Master of&#13;
Public Service Administration&#13;
Program at UW·Parkside.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
the UW-Parkside Education&#13;
Outreach Office, the UW Exlensioo&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs and Parent&#13;
Education and Childhood Enrichment&#13;
(PEACE) of Kenosha&#13;
Reservations can be made until&#13;
OCt. 5 with Esther Letven al the&#13;
Parkside Educational Outreach&#13;
Ollice. The $8.50 fee includes&#13;
luncheoo.&#13;
MBA Admission Forum scheduled&#13;
The seven graduate schools of&#13;
business in Chicago along with 88&#13;
other graduate schools of&#13;
management from across the&#13;
country will participate in a&#13;
unique MBA Admission Forum at&#13;
the University of Illinois at&#13;
Chicago Circle, 750South Halsted,&#13;
October 16th and 17th. The&#13;
Chicago Forum is one of five&#13;
regional meetings being sponsored&#13;
by the Graduate&#13;
~IIII11I11I1II11I1I11I1I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I1UlllmmnIUIIHllllmlllllllnaallllllllUllIlIlIlIllllIIlIlIIlIllll"&#13;
! I&#13;
IRATHSKELLER I&#13;
§ LOUNGE i&#13;
! I&#13;
5 ~&#13;
~ SUN. 50' Kamokazee ~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
I TUES. 75' Cocldails I&#13;
~ i&#13;
I THURS. Ladies Nite I&#13;
§ Y2 Price Drinks i&#13;
~ i&#13;
~ Variety of Music Every Night For !&#13;
= = § §&#13;
§ Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure I&#13;
All you can bowl THUR. 7 p.rn. 'til 10 p.rn. § !!&#13;
or play pool FRI. 10 p.m. 'till a.m. !!&#13;
MOONLITE BOWLING $.90/game SAT. 8 p.m. 'till a.m. I 3931 45th Street JI&#13;
1::::::::::::::::::::::~~~;;';;:~~~~;-: ~lIIl1mIllHIIIHIIU"lUllllllltunlllnlllllllnlllllllmll"-III1lI_='-&#13;
; ********************************&#13;
~ Parkside Activities Board Presents ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
g Doc Severinsen ~&#13;
t &amp; Xebron ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
g Tues., Ode 20th ~&#13;
~ 8 pm - UW-Parkside Phy Ed Building ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
~ Advance Tickets }}&#13;
~ }}&#13;
{.t $5.00 UW-Parksicle Students }}&#13;
{.t ~ $6.00 Other Students, UW-Parksicle Staff, }}&#13;
*&#13;
~ Alumni, Sr. Otizens ~&#13;
~ $7,00 General Public :t&#13;
~ A Contemporary '&lt;&#13;
~ Tickets $7.00 at the door Entertainment Event ~&#13;
~&#13;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Piano duo to perform Friday&#13;
BeIl, who teaches applied piano&#13;
students, also is the pianist of the&#13;
Oriana Trio. Wegner teaches&#13;
theory and composition and is codirector&#13;
c:J. the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series, devoted to the&#13;
performance of work by contemporary&#13;
composers. His own&#13;
compositions, which include&#13;
several chamber works, a concerto&#13;
for prepared piano and a&#13;
cantata, have been featured in a&#13;
number of concerts devoted to&#13;
new works both in the east and the&#13;
midwest.&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.rn ,&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
Management Admission Council&#13;
to enable prospective MBA&#13;
candidates to have access to&#13;
admissions officers representing&#13;
a wide range of business schools.&#13;
The forum is designed to belp&#13;
men and women decide whether&#13;
securing an MBA degree is Ole&#13;
best career decision for them&#13;
while eliminating a possibly costly&#13;
and time ccesuming search for&#13;
the same information. The MBA&#13;
Admission Forum also is designed&#13;
to provide information about&#13;
managerial careers in the public&#13;
and private sectors, graduate&#13;
programs and admission&#13;
requirements for a wide range d&#13;
~mA programs and to attract&#13;
highly qualified individuals who&#13;
might otherwise not ha ve an&#13;
opportunity to explore the many&#13;
~mA degree options available.&#13;
MBA Admission Forum hours&#13;
are from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m., October&#13;
16 and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,&#13;
October 17 on the University of&#13;
illinois campus at 750 South&#13;
Halsted. For more information,&#13;
call&gt; (800) 257-5160.&#13;
4 Thursday. october 1. 1981&#13;
Mobe.plans&#13;
film series&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Mobilization for Survival is&#13;
sponsoring a series of films on&#13;
wednesday, Oct. 7,1981. The fil~&#13;
deal with various topics relating&#13;
to the crganization. .&#13;
9:00 - Moln 116 "A City Fannstead"&#13;
and "Solar Frontiers"&#13;
10:00 - Moln 114 "EJ Salvador:&#13;
Another Viet Nam?"&#13;
11:00 - Moln 112 "Legacy of a&#13;
Dream: Martin Luther King" and&#13;
l~ven Chance!'&#13;
12:00 - Moln 107 "Who Invited&#13;
Us?"&#13;
1:00 - Moln 107 "Babies and&#13;
Banners: The Story of a Women's&#13;
Emergency Brigdade"&#13;
2:00 - Moin 112 "Wild America:&#13;
Who Needs It?" and "Time' for&#13;
Survival"&#13;
3:00 - Moin 112 "Hiroshima -&#13;
Nagasaki 1945" and "Interview&#13;
with My Lai Veterans"&#13;
3:00 - Moin 112 "Hiroshima -&#13;
Nagasaki 1945" and "Interview&#13;
With My Lai Veterans"&#13;
6:30 - Moin lOS "Hunger In,&#13;
America"&#13;
7:30 - Moin 165 "EI Salvador:&#13;
Another Viet Nam?"&#13;
There will also he a bake sale,&#13;
everyone is invited to attend the&#13;
films, •&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectioo&#13;
Ir (l)lbr&#13;
Pwrrt PlIoppr&#13;
PARlSIDE UNION&#13;
10:111 • - 4:111111&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
• BRIDGE MIX&#13;
• MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER&#13;
CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB MALTED&#13;
MILK BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN&#13;
DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL&#13;
PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGURT SESAME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK II ItT. 5&#13;
CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~~~~~Club Events&#13;
Physics&#13;
The Physics Club will meet on&#13;
Monday, october 5 at 1 p.m. m&#13;
Grnq. 230 to dis~uss t~IS&#13;
semester's field trips. Trips&#13;
planned so far include: a late&#13;
October trip to UW-Milwaukee for&#13;
a conference on physics research;&#13;
an early November tour of Fenni&#13;
Laboratory, a national researcb&#13;
lab in Illinois' and an unscheduled&#13;
tour of Yerkes Observatory in&#13;
Williams Bay in conjunction with&#13;
the Racine Astronomical Society.&#13;
Those interested in physics or in&#13;
participating in the club's activities&#13;
are encouraged to attend&#13;
Monday's meeting. The Physics&#13;
Cluh meets the first Monday of&#13;
each month at 1 p.m. in Grnq. 230.&#13;
Additional meetings will be announced.&#13;
History&#13;
The History Club will hold it's&#13;
first annual "Apathy" book sale&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 7 from 10a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m. Books will be sold on the&#13;
Union bridge, with prices ranging&#13;
from ten cents to a few dollars. A&#13;
wide range of topics of interest to&#13;
all will be available. For further&#13;
information, contact Oliver&#13;
Hayward in Moln. 377 (ext. 2697).&#13;
IIHIIE .SIROIHI9~&#13;
BIEIER JLO R&#13;
IPIHIKJLOSOIP&#13;
Women In Business&#13;
Women in Business win pr~nt&#13;
an hour long seminar entItled&#13;
"Planning a Working Wardrobe"&#13;
on Monday, Octoher 5, at Ip.m, in&#13;
Union'104. .&#13;
Mary Brunnelson of Mmnesota&#13;
Fabrics will present the seminar,&#13;
which will provide tips for making&#13;
the most of your wardrobe by&#13;
adding pieces as well as tips on&#13;
making your wardrobe last&#13;
longer. .&#13;
A brief general memhe~shlp&#13;
meeting will preceed the sermnar.&#13;
Coffee and cookies will be served.&#13;
All students are welcome.&#13;
MSU&#13;
Minority Student Union will&#13;
sponsor a dance on Saturday at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Disc&#13;
jockey James Barker will be&#13;
fea tured. Admission is $1 for&#13;
MSU members, $2 for non -&#13;
members. MSU membership can&#13;
also he purchased at the door for&#13;
$5.&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact&#13;
Sheets'&#13;
Adivity period continued&#13;
classes are held. Stud&#13;
faculty may use the tuta&#13;
to schedule meetings free Iirl&#13;
club or &lt;l'ganizationa?d Olilr&#13;
Also, many semina ev&#13;
programs will be s fa a&#13;
during activity periOds.&#13;
This fall courses are&#13;
scheduled at Park~ide aro~nd&#13;
"activity periods, Just like&#13;
last year. Activity periods are&#13;
w-minute periods (M-W-F, I -&#13;
2:50 p.m.) during which no&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thand.y. oct.!&#13;
COURSE "Investing 'Those Dollars After: You've Earned Them" Itarta&#13;
Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information. Spoo.lored by UW.ltf&#13;
FrIday, Oct Z&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "TeU'1led"&#13;
at tbe door is $2.00 for a ParksJ.de student and $2.50 for a lUeet. .&#13;
PAB. Saturday. Oct. 3&#13;
DANCE at 1:30 p.m. In Union Square. AdmlBlioD will be charled at&#13;
Spoosored by Minority Student Union.&#13;
Sunday J Oct •.f,&#13;
. CONCERT at 2 p.m. in MaiD Place featuring the Parkllde Wind E&#13;
mission is $1.00 for the general public and senior citizens will be&#13;
Monday, Oct. 5&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Donald Thompson, of lhe&#13;
Unified School Dlstriet, will talk on "The Social Sciences in High SehooI..&#13;
Status and New Directions". The program is free and open to the P1blle.'&#13;
Tuelday, Oct. 8&#13;
COURSE "Searching for Your Ancestors" starts at 7 p.m. in Tallent Han.&#13;
2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
_ Wedneldly, Oct. 7&#13;
COURSE "Current Population Issues" starts at 1:30 p.m. in MOLN 2211&#13;
2312 for registration. Sponsored by UW·Extension. .&#13;
LECTURE/HYPNOTIST at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema featuring Tom&#13;
Admission at the door Is $2.00 for a Parkside student and $2.50 for the&#13;
public. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Vol 1 No 2&#13;
/0&#13;
O• t ·b db' THE STitOH 8IE .....UY IS n ute y E F MAORIG COM"N'. 0,,"0". M'CH'GAN,""81&#13;
• . RANO 1831 • 55th 5&#13;
I t. Kenosha. Wise. 658.3553&#13;
Strolu- NEWON TAPATUNION SQUARE&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER&#13;
UA1MmieDearest"&#13;
l~ Christina Crawford remembers&#13;
~ by Pal Hensiak. soaping and scrubbing and rinsing Crawford, wanting herself and her&#13;
Crawford; incredible, as if she were a surgeon preparing home to he picture perfect is seen&#13;
a '::'illul, young, famous. That's for surgery. Steam begins to rise scrubbing the floors and inmoot&#13;
people ~memher her. from the sink and she takes the hot specting the work tbat the maid&#13;
wfard's incredible personal water and spashes It upon her has dille. If it isn't dille perfectly&#13;
is shown. in "Mommie face. Without pausing, she takes she wants to know why. •&#13;
rest " 8 movie tlu!t ca ptures ~e alcohol - covered Ice from the Crawford is presented as a&#13;
I ..beautiful young actress dish and hegins to put it on her lunatic at times, as she strives for&#13;
Is with as she acquires fame, f8.ce. The woman then showers, perfection in herself, in her hired&#13;
children and age. help and eventually in her&#13;
aye Dunaway. portrays children, especially in her&#13;
wfard excellently in all of her daughter Christine.&#13;
nt moods. The movie itself Crawford adopts a baby. She&#13;
[)UJlllway'sportrayal are both wants her to he good to herself and&#13;
· it's hard to rememher that learn how to dn for herself. It is&#13;
's' lilly a movie." difficult to leach this to a child&#13;
ra Hollel plays the young when the teacher doesn't know the&#13;
ter. Diana Scarwid plays lesson, and Crawford is at times&#13;
doughier as a young teen and very unsure of herself simply&#13;
t. The resemblance hetween from the pressures rL society.&#13;
two girls is arnazing and the Crawford also adopts a little&#13;
that both of them do IS boy, Christopher. She doesn't&#13;
.... lD8IfIt,able. seem to need to instill in him the&#13;
recurring problem throughout perfectionist qualities she forces&#13;
filDlhowever,is distinguishing on her daughter; the reason for&#13;
time that lapses from one that remains unknown.&#13;
I to another. It is difficult at . Through the entire movie, the&#13;
.. to realize bow old the girls girl always loves her mother and&#13;
and also how old Joan the mother always loves her girl,&#13;
wford is. . although both Crawford and&#13;
The picture npens with the gets dressed and has coffee. She Christina become very bitter&#13;
'01 ci an alarm clock that goes to get her coat, and racks and toward one another at various&#13;
do 4a.m. The body gets up and racks rL shoes can he seen neatly points.&#13;
to the bathroom. As a hand set aside. The woman runs This is a motion picture that&#13;
the faucet on for the sink, downstairs, gets into a chauf- shows struggle, bitterness, unity&#13;
hand is seen pouring feu red limcstne and begins and love. For a change, it's about&#13;
· g alcohol over a large dish autographing pictures - Joan a woman that very few people&#13;
ice The woman then scrubs her Crawford. knew wen, except for her&#13;
· and arms very thoroughly, At many limes during the movie daughter.&#13;
elain sings at Vance's&#13;
'!be program will include March&#13;
. I in F by Beethoven, GeschDdmarsch&#13;
by Hindemith,&#13;
medre by Vaughn Williams,&#13;
de for 13 Winds, op. 7, by&#13;
... and Florentiner March - I I&#13;
lXIeMarciaItaliana by Fucik. psarty m.one Tbe ensemble's other fan I&#13;
y ¥ES' I I I&#13;
will he SUnday, Nov. 8 at I I&#13;
p.m. and Tuesday, Dec. 15 at I&#13;
:30p.m., both in Main Place. I I&#13;
I When you buy an Extra large (I8") or Super size (36") I&#13;
I&#13;
sandwich or sub. 0 . f I I&#13;
P t this week or weekend? Order your favorite in ~ bigger size. on tool I a;;u~d with ~11kinds of stuff to munch-simply get ~n Exlr~ luge or Super&#13;
I Iii.';;;;; Hi;:~rSandwich Shops :&#13;
I&#13;
Two heads ARE better than one' III • HEADWEST 3812RoowveltRo.d 694·1212 15-&#13;
I&#13;
HEADEAST 506· 56th Strul 652·1212&#13;
(ned 10the l.&amp;keThe.I,") I&#13;
I • WI:.KEOI'ENWH[.'\IYQUREHl'CM) I&#13;
I&#13;
. 5un-Thu. 10)(/,om lOll JO.lm&#13;
PR 101 1 TP ~,,5., to lO.m ul J,om I&#13;
I rCOUPON~ _&#13;
-------_ ....&#13;
by Joe Fromm&#13;
Saturday night at Vance's&#13;
in Sturtevant, rising young&#13;
try singer Charly McClain&#13;
armed for two shows. About&#13;
nd &amp;Isemble&#13;
perform&#13;
first 01 three fall concerts&#13;
the Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
by Prol. Scott Mather&#13;
be presented at 2 p.m. on&#13;
y, Oct. 4, in Main Place of&#13;
WyDie Library - Learning&#13;
ter. Admission is $1 for the&#13;
I public; free for senior&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Adverlisers&#13;
six hundred people showed up for&#13;
the concert, which was promoted&#13;
by Chuck Edwards of WWEG&#13;
radio and Vance's Bar.&#13;
The Jim Chambers hand opened&#13;
for Charly at 8 p.m. The Charly&#13;
McClain band played for about an&#13;
hour before Charly came out. The&#13;
band included drummer Dr. Don&#13;
Mars, keyboard player Steve&#13;
Ingeson, bass guitarist Steve Hill,&#13;
and country guitarist Joe Erkman.&#13;
McClain sang "Women Get&#13;
Lonely" "You're a Part of Me,"&#13;
and top ten hits like "Sleepin' With&#13;
the Radio On" and "Who's&#13;
Cheatin' Who."&#13;
McClain has been on the road&#13;
for about four years playing one -&#13;
night stands. Her last stop was&#13;
Nashville, Tenn.; their next stop&#13;
will he Tampa, Fla. The band&#13;
originated in Nashville. CHARL Y McCLAIN&#13;
Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
ocr. 5 - ocr. 9&#13;
BACKGAMMON TOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee MON., OCT. 5, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
I VIDEO GAME TOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee WED., OCT. 7, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
CHESSTOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee WED., OCT. 7, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
BILLIARD TOURNEY $2.00 Entry Fee FRI., OCT. 9, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 5&#13;
Mooradian to speak&#13;
on artist Gorky&#13;
Arshile Gorky, the 20th century&#13;
artist who has been caUed "the&#13;
Armenian - American Van Gogh,"&#13;
will he the topic of two lectures by&#13;
Karlen Mooradian, a widely •&#13;
respected authority on Armenian&#13;
art history and a nephew of&#13;
Gorky, on Monday, Oct •.&#13;
Mooradian will give a free&#13;
public lecture at Parkside at I&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Building,&#13;
Room 125. At 7:30 p.m., he will&#13;
speak before members of the&#13;
Racine Art Guild at the Wuslum&#13;
Museum, Racine.&#13;
Gnrky's work is the subject 01 a&#13;
massive retrospective show including&#13;
more than 250 paintings&#13;
and drawings which opened last&#13;
May at the Guggenheim 1useum&#13;
in New York. Currently in Dallas,&#13;
the show then moves to Los&#13;
Angeles. Critics view Gorky as the&#13;
bridge between European&#13;
modernism and abstract expressionism&#13;
in America.&#13;
At Parkside, Mooradian's&#13;
lecture will highlight the&#13;
historical and stylistic&#13;
achievements of Gorky througb&#13;
slides and will feature unusual&#13;
insights into the artist's life and&#13;
times. Mocradian is in a unique&#13;
position to evaluate Gorky from&#13;
the perspectives of an art&#13;
historian, a student 01 the artist&#13;
from 1942until 1948and a family&#13;
member.&#13;
During his academic career,&#13;
Mooradian bas been a p1l1leer in&#13;
oral art history techniques. He baa&#13;
completed two books and three&#13;
monograpm on Gorky and OVOS'&#13;
the years he has conducted over&#13;
8,000 pages of mterviews and&#13;
tapes on G&lt;&gt;rItywith OVOS' 1:10&#13;
people associated with the artiat&#13;
His most recent book IS "11M!&#13;
Many Worlds rL Anhile Gorky,"&#13;
published in 19l1l by Gilgam h&#13;
Press, Chicago.&#13;
Mooradian currenLly is a&#13;
professor rL jaumahsm at the&#13;
University of Oklahoma and&#13;
formerly taught at American&#13;
University in Washington, DC,&#13;
and Ball Stale Uoiveraity,&#13;
Muncie,fIX!. He received his Ph D&#13;
degree from orthwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
His Partside appearance is&#13;
sponsored by the Art Discipline&#13;
WHAT MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
STUMBLE?&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
NEXT&#13;
WEEK'S&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
FEATURE&#13;
IS&#13;
8 FILM SERIES&#13;
s~~:7:30 p.rn,&#13;
$1.50 Union Cinema&#13;
LADY&#13;
SINGS&#13;
THE&#13;
BLUES&#13;
$1.50&#13;
Does:&#13;
Park n't (But "')&#13;
WEEK&#13;
6&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 RANGER&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
• •&#13;
ConstitUtlO~.,,~...&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
of Ih~ University of&#13;
We. the stUdents do hereby organize&#13;
Wisconsin parkS:d~o Wisconsin sretvre&#13;
OUfMlves PUn.Uil~ ks'de Student Govern36&#13;
091.51 an.:' Ihe I er C~t1t1Jtlon Art. 4.' In&#13;
mtfl' Assoclatlt~ :;~'Inthis conslltution and&#13;
the mat'll"ler n e:enllltives to pltrlicipale in&#13;
select our rep' . Ihe manner set&#13;
Inslltulional gOYet'nanc~ ::. powers of this.&#13;
forth bel~. We Inve Parlu,jde Student&#13;
consllhHlon In 'lt1e, Inc All previous&#13;
Gov!rnmenl AsSOC atlon t Association&#13;
P.rlUlde Student Gov.. nm:'nd void upon&#13;
CO,,.lItullons shall be null on on March 5&#13;
ratificalion of Ihis c~~s~:~I~all be the SOIf'&#13;
and 6, 1910 This cons 1 U I Governmefll&#13;
conslilullon ot P",kslde s,~ t body and&#13;
Assoc:la'lon Inc. and Ihe s en&#13;
, I 10 amendments.&#13;
sublKt OIl Yk Id Studrnt Government&#13;
Th~ II:::' I~ ~hall be responsible to.'h!&#13;
=n~s 0; Ihe' Unive-rslly of Wiscon.sln -&#13;
P'T'hk&gt;,ideparkslde Siudent Government&#13;
I h me power 10 en·&#13;
::CI::np~~~ec~hf~e ,~=~g t:~~~e~~&#13;
piIIu",g mollons,.!e$O.,: studenl's rights are ad Ion to INure '"&#13;
Viol: sludenlS seeking po5itions i.n the&#13;
pa~ksi~.sS,~~: 7~~~)rnr;~ns't Afs~~:~t~~i&#13;
Inc Ir~ments of Ihal office in accord~~ce&#13;
~~~ Studenl Lite Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
in the ~nate Rules&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
s.ctlon l. All legislallve powers gran:~&#13;
r.t'ein shall be vesled In !tie Senale of e&#13;
Ps.G~ ~n;'h&lt;e Senate of 'he P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
sh~onsl;' of 11 sluoent members, hall', ?'&#13;
W!'liChwill be elected in the spring and ha In&#13;
ttle lall, wnCl!leterm Shall be for one year.&#13;
Sectlon J. The' Senate of Ihe P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall choose their 0WTl officers and also a&#13;
President Pro Ternpore. .&#13;
s.d' &lt;4 In tile absence of Ihe Vice·&#13;
presld':t at PS.GA" Inc. who shall be the&#13;
",denl of the Senale, the Presldenl Pro&#13;
'rernpore shall be tile President of the Senale.&#13;
The President Pro Tempol'"e shall be a&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of ell Senate&#13;
CommlNees.&#13;
When vacancies happen In the repr~sen;&#13;
lallon Irom any al large !leal, tile Preslden&#13;
Pro Tempore Shall 1111 such vec.an~les with&#13;
me concurrence of a simple malOrllv of Ihe&#13;
tn'''e legislalive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
s.cttOn 5. A simple malorlty ot Ihe tolal&#13;
$erlafe shall constilute a quorum to do&#13;
bu::;s.:n •. Th. Senate of the P,S.G.A" Inc.&#13;
thalllNlv.,he ~r to delermine the rules of&#13;
its procHdings, censure Its members for&#13;
d,sord«ly conduct and, with Ihe concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of ""e I!'lllre Senale, eX~1 a&#13;
,,*,"11« Th. SeNlte shall keep a lournal of&#13;
,ts prOCe.dings, end publish the same mon&#13;
""\'1' .t the mlftlmum, a copy Of the journal&#13;
....a" be .yallatwe kif' reYlew by 1M public: In&#13;
.... PSG A., Inc. oftK:ft&#13;
TM s.Nte 0' til. PSGA., Inc. shall m~1&#13;
al an established place and lime no less ~an&#13;
onCl a week during the '.11 anet spring&#13;
semlSt ..... and no less than once 1!I month&#13;
during Itle SI.Imm~r session&#13;
Upon p4"ftefllation of a petllion by a SImple&#13;
malOrttyof the enlir~ Senate a met!tlng shall&#13;
bec.lled by the VicePrlSidlnt or In the case&#13;
of ~ Vice President's abMnc.th. Presidenl&#13;
Pro Tempor. shill! have the responslbll1ty to&#13;
U111 iI m..,ing within "I hour,&#13;
Sect*' 7 SlIlt 'Ny either originate In the&#13;
s.n._ or be sen! to 1tI. s.nate from the&#13;
bee-utly. brilnch of ttl. PS.G.A., Inc. Every&#13;
bill. oreMr', r'ftOlutlon, or vot. on which the&#13;
concurrence of til. senat. Is necessary shall&#13;
l\ii;y. paMICl the Senate by • ,Impl. malority&#13;
al1d sMll be Pf'lMnted to the President of the&#13;
P S GA" Inc, befOre It taklS effect. If the&#13;
Presj~t don not .~e, h./sh. shall Send&#13;
It ~ck to th. s.n.te for reconsldertlon wIth&#13;
hl'lMr rNSClft$ fOr r'!Ktlon.&#13;
If, aHer Wctl reconslderallm, a sImple&#13;
maJority of 1M Intir. Sanat. shall agrN to&#13;
pen 1M bill, It shall become I..,. But In all&#13;
sud! caNS ttl. votes of san.te shalt be&#13;
~mlMd by a roll ull YOt.j al1d tt1e names&#13;
of p.naftl voting tor _net .,.In,t tt1e bill shan&#13;
be Mter.a In 1M laumal of the Senate. If any&#13;
btll $Nil not be r.tum.a by tM PreskMnt&#13;
Wf"",n tin "hool days aft... It has been&#13;
pr-.nt~ to hlmltler,"'" same shaill becom.&#13;
1_, In ttl. manner a, It IlI/Sh. h~ slgn.a it.&#13;
Allllf'OCHdIngs of ttl. sen.t. of the P.S.G.A..,&#13;
Inc. ll\all be Hnt to "". blCutlv. branc:h fOr&#13;
IncorporatIOn PUr'PClMS. If IN Presldant&#13;
.....on rM leglslanon, hI/itt. lhell Mncl It&#13;
bkJl; to "". sentte. A Noto-Itllrdl \tOf. of the&#13;
antlr. Senate sIMtI be requlr", to oyerrlde ttl.&#13;
....&#13;
s.ctteft •. The SlNte snail h..... "". powe,-&#13;
to make motlm" resolutions, or take legal&#13;
K'l1Oro' Which shall be fllCfSUry .and proper .&#13;
for carrying Into lUCutlon IN foregoing&#13;
ere vested by this powers, and all omer pow Inc&#13;
constitution in the P.;G~:the P.·S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section •. The seoe to amend fhls con.&#13;
shall have the pow,:r vote of Ihe entire&#13;
stltution by a tWO.~h;d:n amendment being&#13;
Senate. In the even . amendment shall&#13;
passed by the se:l~e't ~~'fhe next election. If&#13;
be placed on the . 0 amendment by a&#13;
the studen.ts .confirm i~h:hall be added to the&#13;
simple maloroty votet&#13;
dents vole against it,&#13;
Constitulion. If th~ IS~ deleted. In ttle event&#13;
the amendment wll f'rm the proposed&#13;
Ihe Senate doe.~ n~e~~t wlll not appear&#13;
amendment, sal a tof an amendment&#13;
on the ballot. The proponen If he or she so&#13;
that is tu••,;;: ~~;r:~~res set up in Ar. chooses,&#13;
ticle V, Section 2. t are up for approval they&#13;
When amend men s October and March&#13;
sha'h lIppear on th~ urgency a special&#13;
ballols. In cases °held at an; time.&#13;
ref@l'"e~um mT·hy~:nate shall have the sale&#13;
SectIon 10. e wer to try&#13;
power of impeac~m~~~ ~7~i~ for thai&#13;
all impeachm~nll'be of oattl or affirmati0'.l'&#13;
purpose they s a of the PSG A., Inc. IS&#13;
w, ,~':.n!','c~~:;11::ice of the' J'udicial court&#13;
,,~ '" rsOfl shall be con·&#13;
shall pr~side't ~hnd ~c~ence of two_thirds&#13;
vicled wlthou e c ment in cases of&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judge end further than&#13;
impeachmenl Sh;.I~en~tn:x~isqualificatlon to&#13;
removal from 0 I off'ce or position that the&#13;
hopS"0"'" enll~:. a~~s i'urisdicllon over, ap,.&#13;
.... , . to Impeachmen&#13;
paintment to,. or el.ectlon th'~dS of the entire&#13;
shall not begll'l until two· t oled to hold&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., .lnc. have v&#13;
an im,?eachment~,~g~les of Order shall&#13;
sect,on th Ro . f all Parkside vern Ihe proceedings 0 •&#13;
ri'udent Gover,"wn:,:t in~::i~:~~o;'ithl~~~ meetrngs excep&#13;
Consfitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE II ...&#13;
S ct- 1 All execullve powers, wlthll'l th IS&#13;
art7cl;0=ha'lI be Yestecl in the President .of .'he&#13;
parkside Studei'll Government ASSOCiation,&#13;
In~~ction 2. The President shall hold .office&#13;
during the term of one year together With :~e&#13;
Vice-President who wlll be c~~en for e&#13;
same lerm. They shall be ellgtble for reo&#13;
election and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive lerms. .&#13;
Before the Presidei'll and Ihe VlcePresident&#13;
elect enters on the ~xecutio~ of the&#13;
office 01 the Presidency or vlc~-preSld~nCy,&#13;
he or she shall take the follOWing oath. .&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
falthfullv execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice·President) of the Parkslde. Student&#13;
Governmenl Association Inc. and Will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, ~rotect and&#13;
defend Ihe constitution and actions o.f !he&#13;
Park$lde Student Government AssOClat,on&#13;
Inc"&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Sh~1l&#13;
also be abl. to draw compensation while In&#13;
Office, ttle amount of which shall be det~r.&#13;
mined by a majority vote of the entl~e&#13;
LegIslatIve branch 01 the P.S.G.A., Inc. ThIS&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the Presidenl is on trial for purpose~ of&#13;
impeachment. if,. however, af!er ,",:"&#13;
peachment proceedings the PreSident tS&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactlye from the date of&#13;
SUsPension. Increases In compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to hiS/her immedlete successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
Implemented. All Increases must be approved&#13;
by a malorlty of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignatlon or removal from office or&#13;
InabilllV to discharge pow@l'".anddutlesof the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice·President Shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and Shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
section 3. The President shall have ttle&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the malority of the P,S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secrelary and all ottler officers&#13;
of the ellecutive branch of the P.S.G.A.., Inc.&#13;
and all stuDent Iudges With the consent of two.&#13;
thirds of the entIre Senate.&#13;
The President shall haye the power to lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
H'/"'e may l1ne·item yeto ttle P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
budQIt, but shall not line-Item veto the&#13;
segregated Fee BUdget. The President may&#13;
not vito legIslation or any portion of it, passed&#13;
by the senate whIch deals with the Senate&#13;
PrOCedural Rules, Re&lt;o!ulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special commIttees and IndiViduals to whom&#13;
responsibilities haye been delegated wIthin&#13;
1M P.S.G.A., Inc. and Shall be required to&#13;
furnish MINen reports on hlslh@l'" executive&#13;
. latlve branch of the&#13;
activities to th~ le:,SmajOrlty vote of the&#13;
p.S.G.A., Inc..y rttten reports Shall be&#13;
Senate. Any requl~ed w nd shall be received&#13;
requested in writing a esentlltion of such&#13;
within one week ofdh&#13;
: ~nc. member being&#13;
request to the P:S. the·'report.&#13;
required to furnish ve the power, by and&#13;
The Presl~enl sha~~:entof the L.egislative&#13;
with the adVice ang A., Inc. to sign contracts,&#13;
branch of the P.S. : u of the entire Senate&#13;
prOVided that a malorl Y&#13;
concurs. d w up the p.S.G.A.,&#13;
The President shal~ rt&#13;
ato the Legislative&#13;
Inc. bUdget and sen 'Inc. for app·roval.&#13;
branch of t~e P.S~.~l' take care that the&#13;
The p~esldent pas G A Inc. and its by·&#13;
constitution of the .. ted'&#13;
lawS be fai!hfulty :~~~~res'ident and all of.&#13;
The President, I shall be removed&#13;
ficers of. the P.s.Ge~~tio~c~f duty or faHure to&#13;
from offlcef~rt~er onsf1tution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
takecare.'hat e~ be faithfully executed.&#13;
Inc. and ItS by·la P es'dent of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Section 4. The r I t oinlees to all&#13;
Inc. shall nominate stu~~~eSa':ith a simple&#13;
fac~lt~. Codlfi::e&#13;
c:::;ir;'~ Senate need~ f~r&#13;
malOrity of II blish such vacancies tn approval and sha pu&#13;
the student newspaper. f the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Sedion 5. The tr:~~re:n~ recipts on all&#13;
Inc. sh~1t keep r,', ~ S G A. Inc. monies and expenditures of a ...'.&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III 1 the&#13;
Sed,on 1. All IU~~!~~,:w~:slu~IClary&#13;
PSG A, Inc shall urts that the Senate of&#13;
courp"s'ond~n :~e:;,~~establish The ludges,&#13;
the, . ood behaVior of all courts, shall matn!atn g office&#13;
a~e~~:~a2~t~~ed~~~~~I~:~~¥~e~Fr~11:0~tS~~~~:&#13;
four ~;e~fant~eon~Udlc:al branch of the&#13;
mem A Inc shall be University of&#13;
PSG 1'1 l~ Parkslde stUdents, and must be&#13;
WtS;~r:ed by the Chancellor of the UntverSlty ~f"~'SConStn Parkslde after a two thl':S&#13;
I b the entire Senate of the PSG ,&#13;
~~~r~~apol~tments to the ludiclal branch of&#13;
the PSG A , Inc, shall be for three years&#13;
SectIon 3. In the case of deciding the con&#13;
st,tut,onal,ty of the actions of the PSG :11.&#13;
Inc the deCISions shall be btndlng on t&#13;
rtles II'Ivolved, and shall be forwardE:&lt;f a&#13;
~e deSignated diSCiplinary head of th,"',&#13;
I branch of the Uftlversl y a&#13;
:;;:~~~,~ve Parkslde on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE I.V&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc., sublect to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Boa.rd of&#13;
Regenls, the President of the Unlverslfy of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chanc~l1or of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin . parksld~, and. the&#13;
faculty of the University of WISC~SIn&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants In !he&#13;
immediate governance .of and pOlICy&#13;
development for such InStlfut.lons. As wch,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary r.espon.&#13;
sibliity for the fOrmulation. and r~vlew of&#13;
policies concerning student life, serVICes, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sale representative student group of .'he&#13;
students of Ihe University of Wisco:nSln. _&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate In In·&#13;
stitutlonal governance.&#13;
SUB-ARTlCL.E I&#13;
Sedion I. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in con·&#13;
sultatlon with the Chancellor of the Univer.&#13;
sityof Wisconsin. ParkSlde and subject to the&#13;
final confirmatIon of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility 'for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee-shall be&#13;
established as a sUbcommlNee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All aellon of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approve I of the P.S.G.A., Inc. In conJunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Parkslde.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
CommitteeShall consist Of 8 voflng members,&#13;
6 of Whom shall be P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The remainIng 2 shall be chosen by the&#13;
stUdent body of the UnlY8t'sity of Wisconsin _&#13;
Parkside, one elected in the spring, one&#13;
elected in the fall. Three P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senators shall be chosen In the Spring and&#13;
three Shall be chosen in the fall by blind&#13;
draWing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The drawing shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A.., Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The commIttee&#13;
shall elect its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In additIon, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for EducatIonal ser.&#13;
vIces, ASSIStant Chancellor for Admlftlstratlon&#13;
and F~~~I s~ff~I,~~' t~~ cot~e&#13;
Campus Controller meers Should a&#13;
mtttee as non-vo:~ng A~~atlons Committee&#13;
vacancy occur on ~res shall be used&#13;
the follOWing p~oc~ Pro Tempore of the&#13;
1 The presld~ In consultlltlon With the&#13;
PSG A .Inc sene e. Will fill any unocChancellor&#13;
or destgn~~ th the confIrmatIon&#13;
CUpied Senatorial sea I te&#13;
of the PSG A ,Inc Sf~: PSG A, Inc, In&#13;
2 The President ofChancellor or ceeranee.&#13;
consultation With the t large seat on the&#13;
shall appotnt to any a The PSG A, Inc&#13;
AllocatIons committeeect fa approve the&#13;
Senate does not ne&#13;
President's appo~n~~e~pon the call of the&#13;
B PROCEDU . dent of the PSG A ,&#13;
Chancellor and t~t~:r~~11 annually prepare&#13;
Inc the Comml the disbursal of the&#13;
recommendatIons on F e Should the&#13;
Segregated Uniyersitrhe r:Commendat,on,&#13;
PSG A ,Inc co~cr~nA Inc shatl so advise&#13;
the PresIdent of Chairperson of the&#13;
the Chancellor ant~ e Should the Chan&#13;
Allocations Comml ep&#13;
S G A Inc recom&#13;
cellor concur I~ thehall arran~e for Its ,m&#13;
mendation, he/ e Sid the Chancellor not&#13;
plementat,on ShOsU,ons under negotlaflons&#13;
concur, the pr~v~ nate may noframend the&#13;
shall be used Z em~ttee recommendation&#13;
AllocatIOns om CommIttees' recornRelect,on&#13;
of the 213 vote of the entire&#13;
~~~d,:tl~;t~:~~S:Of r.ejectlC:;1 b~e~~~:~:t~~&#13;
the reasons for relec"ol1 sh •• tho&#13;
ded t the Cha irperson&#13;
and forwar 0 ttee The Allocations&#13;
Allocations Comml nS'der ItS recomComml!tee&#13;
shalll::::'~~a:d It to the Senate&#13;
m~nd~~:'OaT'1A~~NS. The PreSident of the&#13;
PSG A, Inc, the Chairperson of S U ~ At;e&#13;
nd the PreSident Pro Tempore&#13;
~ S G A , Inc Senate or their designees ~:~&#13;
must be members of the P S.G A , Inc)&#13;
be e resentatlves ofthe PSG A ,Inc In any&#13;
co:s~tatlon With the chancellp.'s ci :,s~~~r&#13;
d e In dealing With the ,&#13;
A'IT'~~~flons CommIttee If the Pres,denf Pro&#13;
of the PSG A, Inc Senate!s a&#13;
Tempore f S U F A C then the Senator with&#13;
~:~~~~ ~enlonty of the PSG A ,Inc Senate&#13;
will assume the dutIes of the Pro Tempore In&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor. "&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Cha~ce or&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences. In th~&#13;
allocation of the allocable p~tlon ~&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Rents for final dISposition. .&#13;
~. DUTIES. The Allocatio~~ C?mmlt!ee&#13;
shall have primary responslbill.'Y In setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the aUXiliary b~dget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary ellPe~dltures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocalions Committee shall moo! year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICL.E II -&#13;
Section 1 A standing senate Committee,&#13;
the Student OrganIzation Council,. shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to partIcipate. .&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be ~en~ed&#13;
membership to anyon-campus orgamzatlon&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
Section J. Students sQall be fre.e to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to commUnicate,&#13;
and to protest indivldualiV or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
.Sedion 4. StUdents shal1 be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of stUdent&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regul~t.lons&#13;
to time and manner governing the faCIlity.&#13;
Section S. Students Shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approvalshall not bewitheld bV the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section 6. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
stUdent organization from stUdent govern.&#13;
ment recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Sedlon 7. The stUdent press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and Its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
Section I. The student press shall be ac.&#13;
corded all those rights as stated In the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Sedion •. Sfudents shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does nof conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkslde binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Section 1. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A."&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of Oelober.&#13;
At that time, one half of the representatlYe5&#13;
•from the legislative branch as well as one at _&#13;
large S U F A C seat shall be etecttl;l&#13;
electrons for the PSG A , Inc Shall&#13;
dur Ing the eighth week Of the&#13;
semester At that time the Presllltnt&#13;
PreSident, remaining legiSlative sea"&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat ancl f1~t'&#13;
Operating Board seers shall be et&#13;
sectten 1. The students, uPOnrtqu&#13;
petf tfon With 10 percent Of the Signa&#13;
the entire student body, shall have lilt&#13;
request a constrtunonet referendl,lm!o&#13;
this ccnstttuttcn. or to request an&#13;
referendum The petition shall be&#13;
to both the President and the Vice.&#13;
aOO ttle President Pro Tempore Of p&#13;
Inc. ,&#13;
Section J.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or&#13;
p.S.G.A., Inc., any University of&#13;
Parkslde student may start the petl&#13;
any Universlfy of Wiscon$ln . p&#13;
student ma,y sign it. Fifteen perCtnt&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the&#13;
2) The recall petition must&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for remov&#13;
office. This must deal with .actions&#13;
in t.he present term of offIce.&#13;
3) The student(s} shall.p~esentthe&#13;
10 the Senate. Upon receiving verI!&#13;
the petition, Ihe Senate must im&#13;
notify the school paper that a r&#13;
progress and a special election&#13;
place. There must be an election w&#13;
school days after notification of Iht&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon recelvin!!: the recall. Petit&#13;
Senate must immediately turn It OVIl\'&#13;
election committee. The election&#13;
shall have five days to verifythenames&#13;
petition. 11'1 the event that there is no&#13;
committee, the Senate must a&#13;
Within live days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on the&#13;
and the number of legal names drop&#13;
than 15%, the election commIttee must&#13;
the student{s) who presented the&#13;
Upon notification, the stud~nls&#13;
school days to get the r~Ulred n&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At th&amp;&#13;
of the studenf(s) who presented the&#13;
the election committee must shOW&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petl&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot&#13;
drawn. A person can be recall~onIY.&#13;
offense during his/her term In 0ff,e&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petl&#13;
have his/her name placed ~n the&#13;
automatically unless he/she r';S,gns.5&#13;
who wish to run for the position $hl!I1I&#13;
normal election procedure.&#13;
S) If a Senator or Office.r resigns&#13;
reappointed to a position Wlttlin Ihe&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be e&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI .&#13;
Section 1. An applicant shall not be&#13;
admission to the University of W&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, ~IOf, :&#13;
origin, relig ious creed, sex, p~evlous&#13;
record, political beliefs, political ae&#13;
sexulll preference,. . h It not be&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid s a fonal&#13;
for reasons of race, color, n.a's eri&#13;
religious creed, sex, prevl.ou&#13;
record, political beliefs, politICal&#13;
sexual preference. t&#13;
Section 3. StUdents are free. 0&#13;
caption to the data presented or VI&#13;
in any course of study and may&#13;
alternative opinions to those presen&#13;
the classroom. ." "y&#13;
Section 4 All Student O,sclp 1'1&#13;
will be pr~essed through the ug&#13;
Wisconsin . Parkside Student I&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section S. Students shall be eva~bl&#13;
on their knowledge of the .s&#13;
academic performan.ce ~nd tl:nd&#13;
responsible to maintain s heel&#13;
academic performance est~bl1s&#13;
course they have enrolled 10. tsPO!&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of stu~en "",I&#13;
personal beliefs in connect:&#13;
c&#13;
w&#13;
work shall not be made Pu t&#13;
press permIssion of the studen .&#13;
Section 7. Stud~nt. r~cord~c~&#13;
performance al)d d,sclpllnary&#13;
sepa rate. aU&#13;
Section 8. Information from c de&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be m.~out&#13;
to persons on or off campus ""'v'olV&#13;
press consent of the student In&#13;
under legal compulsion. . 01&#13;
Section'. All records and.'nf tofft&amp;&#13;
on fileshall be readily acces,ble&#13;
to whom they pertain. e It1II&#13;
Section 10. Students shall h:'&#13;
inll5 be present at all committee m&#13;
affecting the stUdents. rig&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional 511&#13;
student, as stafed in ltIe ~nlt~yUIft&#13;
stitution, Shall not be denl~ r:Slde,&#13;
University of Wisconsin· a&#13;
FALL SENATORIAL&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
OCT. 14 &amp; 15&#13;
Petitions Available in P .S.G.A. Office&#13;
, .,~...... ,.. ~,&#13;
olleybcJlI&#13;
~Women's team splits pair&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser __ '"&#13;
h Parks ide women's&#13;
ebaH loom continued on its&#13;
&lt;Ynt treed, winning ooe and&#13;
'08 one as they defeated North&#13;
Coll;,geand lost to Carroll&#13;
ege in a home meet Monday&#13;
~~lDg the first ,game of&#13;
'de's match against North&#13;
k the women played exr&#13;
ely well as they decemated&#13;
~pnnents IS-I. After that, as&#13;
cb Linda Henderson put It,&#13;
ey didn't mentally conII'8te."North&#13;
Park came back&#13;
take the second game of the&#13;
IA:h before the Rangers won the&#13;
gameby a close 15-13 score. In&#13;
t last game the Rangers were&#13;
. g 9-3, l&gt;It North Park tied&#13;
1C(I'e at orne.&#13;
rroU CoUege, a much imteam&#13;
over a year ago, heat&#13;
Pari&lt; 15-11 and 15-10 with&#13;
net play and overall team&#13;
·urn.&#13;
.de put on their own&#13;
y of team playas they&#13;
elted Carroll in the first game&#13;
IIlatmatch, 15-7. Carroll came&#13;
with enthusiasm in the&#13;
d and third games to heat.&#13;
'de liHl and 15-13.&#13;
'In the lirst games of both&#13;
Idles they (Parkside) played&#13;
y weD, then they just lost&#13;
. eeneentration," said Hen-&#13;
. ''They can't hold their&#13;
cl play against weaker&#13;
s,"&#13;
'Sherry Festge played exUy.Shehit&#13;
well, set well and&#13;
," sa id Henderson. "Kim&#13;
Tesher also played well. She's&#13;
always played well defensively,&#13;
but last night (Monday) she was&#13;
more aggressive at the net."&#13;
Parkside will lake its' 5-5 record&#13;
to the Michigan Slate Invitational&#13;
this weekend for some tough&#13;
games. A new member to the&#13;
team, Bonnie Schmelter from&#13;
Ashwaubenon, will make the trip,&#13;
giving the team a little more&#13;
depth.&#13;
RANGER pho!O by 0." McCorm_dl&#13;
I Sport shorts I&#13;
The men's and women's track&#13;
teams are practicing every day at&#13;
3: 15. All interested students&#13;
should contact Coach Lawson.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Tom Coursiere - 9 correct&#13;
.picks, 25 combined points.&#13;
The Swim Club is forming now&#13;
for students interested in competitive&#13;
swimming, water polo,&#13;
diving, etc. Practice is Monday -&#13;
Thursday, from 3:30 to 5:30 in the&#13;
pool.&#13;
:.:.:.;.:.:.:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::.:::.:.:.:.:.:.&#13;
..:.:-:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;::.:.:::::::.:.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::&#13;
NOW&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 1, 1981 7&#13;
Sports Calendar ,&#13;
Friday, O&lt;:t. z: eross.&lt;:ountry VS. otre Dame invItational, (2 p.m ).&#13;
Golf vs. UW - Parkside InvitatiooaJ, (8:30 a. m.): Soccer . UW&#13;
Chancellors Cup Tournament (I p. m)&#13;
Saturday, 0&lt;:1.3:Soecer v... UW Chancellors Cup Tournament (3p. m ),&#13;
Volleyball vs. Michigan State Invitational; Cross-country at&#13;
Northern Illinois Invilational.&#13;
Wednesday, 0&lt;:1.7, Soccer vs. Lawrence University (4 p. m ). T nob&#13;
vs. College cl SI. Francis (5 p. m.)&#13;
50% OFF&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONLY&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
·VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
(STUDENT MUST PRESENT 10 CARD)&#13;
CALL NOW 552-9513&#13;
OFFER EXPIRESOCT. 16, 1981&#13;
OFFERVALID ONLY AT&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
HY. 32 &amp; K.R.&#13;
•&#13;
8&#13;
. Thursday. October 1. 1981 RANGER&#13;
Golfers place 3rd and 5th&#13;
b Cbarles Perce finish. Number 1 player Todd Saturday. UW:Oshkosh ca&#13;
~d d S turday the SChelienske was plagued With first place with a total Pilt&#13;
Last Fn ay an a , . hl ba k t k hil U 01 Parkside Ranger golf team severe muscle s~sms 10 IS C. S ro E!S' w e W-Steve~&#13;
com ted in the Green Bay In- On Saturd~y, ram pelted down aU the wmner of the tournalll&#13;
vitalfonal. The 36 hole tournament day, causmg the 11es on t~e previous weekend, claill1ed&#13;
was played at Brown County for fairway to .be very difficult to hit. Arch - rival UW-Milwaukee&#13;
the first 18 holes and at North- Accomp~mng the heavy ram were ninth with 886.&#13;
brook for tlie next 18. Seven 35-45 mile per hour wmds .. To Chris S~lft of Marqueltt&#13;
tams participated' Parks ide illustrate how strong the wmds the medalist shooting a&#13;
~aced third with a ~core of 801. were, a very tall, double oak tree 157.Bob Sobol shot 163with&#13;
p UW-Stevens Point took first with a diameter of ab&lt;)ut 3 feet of 84-79, Mark Peterson&#13;
with a score of 775 while rival was feUed by the wmd. For- (86-81), John Schneider&#13;
competitorUW-Milw~ukee placed tnnately, no one was injured. (88-85), injured Todd Sc&#13;
fifth with a score of 853. UW-Green On Sunday and Monday, Sep- had a 174 (92-82), and G&#13;
Bay hosted tbe tournament but did tember 26 and 27, Parkside placed rounded off the field shoo'&#13;
not have a final score because fifth out of .ten teams at the (96-82).&#13;
they didn't have a full team due to Mascutin CoUegiate Invitational Parkside's next match'&#13;
injuries. at Berlin, Wisconsin. The 36-hole - UW-Parkside Invitation:&#13;
Karl Smith of UW-LaCros~e, total for Parkside was. 855, 54 Friday, September I&#13;
was the medalistfor the meet WIth more strokes than on Friday and Brightendale G.C.&#13;
a score &lt;i 78-71 for 149. Parkside&#13;
scores were: Todd Schelienske,&#13;
82-72, 154; Bob Sobol, 76-78', 154;&#13;
Gary Fox, 87-77, 159; Mark&#13;
Peterson, 87-80, 167; John&#13;
Schneider, 93-74, 167.&#13;
"There were many factors&#13;
contributing to the third place&#13;
,&#13;
RANGER pMto by Dan McCormack •&#13;
0055 country&#13;
Rangers host championship&#13;
by Patty De LuIsa&#13;
The Parksidecnlll8 country trail&#13;
blazed this past Saturday as the&#13;
Rangers hooted the TFAIUSA Mid&#13;
_ American CoUegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championships.&#13;
Forty-six men's and women's&#13;
teams competed for midwest&#13;
titles. Gordm Sanders of Hillsdale&#13;
won the men's 8,000 meter race&#13;
with an excellent time &lt;i 26:03.&#13;
The team crown was taken by&#13;
Saginaw VaUey (Michigan),&#13;
paced by foorth place runner&#13;
Duane Johnsm. His time was&#13;
26:21.&#13;
The Parkside men also did quite&#13;
well. Sophomore Dan Stublaski&#13;
was the rmt Ranger to cross the&#13;
fIDisb l1ne, with a time of 27:57 for&#13;
75th place. Rqbert Mayfield, a&#13;
freahman. captured 97th place&#13;
with a clocking of 28:27.&#13;
Sophomore Tom Barrett placed&#13;
103rdwith a time of28:39. The two&#13;
remaining sophomores, Steve&#13;
8nlnner and AI Correa, ran&#13;
cIooely together for 1071h and&#13;
IlIIth places, respectively and&#13;
Junior Rich SOWU.. ran 142nd.&#13;
Also running for Parkside were&#13;
frelltunen Austin Book .. and John&#13;
Cogan. As a team, the Rangers&#13;
took 16th place.&#13;
The women's 5,000 meter event&#13;
was just as exciting. Junior&#13;
Debbie Spino was the first Ranger&#13;
to finish the race at 46th place with&#13;
an exceptional time of 19:39.&#13;
Senior Barb Osborne ran the 5K in&#13;
20:40, a good time to place 77th.&#13;
Immediately behind her was&#13;
teamrna te Dona Driscoll, a junior.&#13;
Dona's time was 20:42 for 78th&#13;
place.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer contributed&#13;
a time of 21:58 for the&#13;
105th position. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik did her part also by&#13;
mnoing 119tb. Two sophomores&#13;
also scored for UW-P, Sandy&#13;
Venne and Linda Pfeilstiefter.&#13;
FOrIDer Parkside star barrier&#13;
Wendy Burman, now a junior at&#13;
Purdue, dazzled spectators with&#13;
her usual running style and her&#13;
time &lt;i 18:29. Wendy placed 12th&#13;
individually.&#13;
Dorthe Rasmussen of Iowa&#13;
State won the event with a speedy&#13;
time of 17:46.The Iowa State team&#13;
ran away with the Mid - American&#13;
title'scoring a total of 42 points.&#13;
Parkside took 14th place overaU .&#13;
. SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATlUTIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR AU SPORTS&#13;
TEAM SALES - AU 8l'ORTS&#13;
Oktoberlesf&#13;
;S Old Style&#13;
Time'&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
The deadline for classified ads&#13;
in the Ranger is noon m Friday&#13;
for publica tion the following&#13;
Thursday. Cost: 5~ per ten&#13;
words.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
NEED AMBITIOUS PEOPLE to help operate&#13;
business six hours a week. two to three days&#13;
- Own hours 658-4678&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
TYPIN.G . Resumes, termpepets. theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
MEN'S TAILORING - suits, coats, jeans,&#13;
alterations, repairs. 633-7946,3 to 7 p.m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
NEED A RIDE BOTH WAYS for Mon., 'roes.,&#13;
Wed. 6 p.mzctass. All Ol'" anyone day, Will&#13;
share expenses. Live near Lathrop and&#13;
TaylO1'" in Racine. Call 554-0712.&#13;
POOL&#13;
.$150&#13;
Per Hour'&#13;
"Pool tables in the Rec Center," says Strolliu Bowlin' "and&#13;
the cost is only $1.50 per hour. I sure would like to get ~ good&#13;
game of 8 - ball going." If your an 8 - ball player or just like&#13;
to playa little pool why not stop down to the Rec Center and&#13;
try out the tables? The pool tables are available 7 days a&#13;
week and 8 - ball leagues begin the week of Oct. 5. Sign up is&#13;
at the Rec Center control desk.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% latere.t H Yo. Dally&#13;
Balaace II5500 00 •. · or onl&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU 1.0&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - ,658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414·694-1380&#13;
'IROOItS 'CONVEflIl ,.,.===:.w:. ::" :=T ..... '1'VtAA t 'AlDlNG&#13;
lliI-'..&amp;.IL ,. tPONY tHEWIAl.AMCl&#13;
... T.' ,. ~_".IIOLDl'f'&#13;
ThI_._OnoSlap 01:=.&#13;
694-9206 _ ....._.&#13;
4235 • 52nd Street&#13;
. Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
·414·657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisco&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - RI.&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem,&#13;
414 - 843-2388</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 4, October 1, 1981</text>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69855">
              <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="69856">
              <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="69857">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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      <name>child care center</name>
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    <tag tagId="1382">
      <name>Health Office</name>
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    <tag tagId="1377">
      <name>parkside student union</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1381">
      <name>physical education office</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1299">
      <name>student life office</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1379">
      <name>the sweet shoppe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
