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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 16</text>
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            <text>Two year drop cut to one</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>PAB removes reporter&#13;
Charges filed&#13;
HZ. The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 16&#13;
Two year drop cut to one&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee received feedback on&#13;
their probation and drop policy&#13;
draft and made revisions at their&#13;
Nov. 12 meeting.&#13;
Discussion centered around the&#13;
proposed two-year drop period&#13;
which the majority of the committee&#13;
members felt was too&#13;
strict.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association was&#13;
given a copy of the draft, and&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
also felt two years was too strict.&#13;
Students are initially dropped&#13;
for one semester if, as first&#13;
semester freshmen, their grade&#13;
point average (GPA) for the first&#13;
15 credits is less than 1.0 or if,&#13;
while on probation, any subsequent&#13;
block of 15 credits falls&#13;
below a 2.0.&#13;
Students who are readmitted&#13;
are placed on Final Academic&#13;
Probation and are dropped for&#13;
two years if their GPA for any&#13;
subsequent block of 15 credits&#13;
falls below a 2.0.&#13;
John Zarling, assistant&#13;
professor of Engineering&#13;
Science, commented that the&#13;
chances are slimmer that a&#13;
student would come back after&#13;
two years rather than one,&#13;
because the person would get into&#13;
another mainstream of life.&#13;
John Rodgers, an academic&#13;
advisor, agreed that the job&#13;
market would absorb the student,&#13;
since this is an industrial area,&#13;
and he doubted that the student&#13;
would return after two years.&#13;
Committee members were&#13;
unsure whether a two-year drop&#13;
would give the student time to&#13;
grow up or would just force him&#13;
into the job market. At the end of&#13;
the meeting, the committee voted&#13;
to change the drop period to one&#13;
year.&#13;
The committee also discussed&#13;
whether a student should be&#13;
urged, as the draft now states, or&#13;
required to get assistance from&#13;
the Academic Skills Program,&#13;
university counseling office, or&#13;
an academic advisor.&#13;
Stella Gray, professor of&#13;
English, asked whether the&#13;
Academic Skills Program wants&#13;
those students who are forced to&#13;
seek help.&#13;
Zarling said that at least the&#13;
student would make initial&#13;
contact with the program and be&#13;
aware that it exists.&#13;
James Smith, a" student on the&#13;
committee, said that the student&#13;
is "salvageable early and you&#13;
must get the student in for help&#13;
while on probation."&#13;
Rodgers suggested that the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs could&#13;
act as "a more efficient&#13;
clearinghouse" since the&#13;
student's high school record,&#13;
rank and other facts are&#13;
available. The student could be&#13;
directed for help to the appropriate&#13;
office out of the five or&#13;
six available, such as tutoring or&#13;
Academic Skills. The advice&#13;
from the Student Affairs Office&#13;
could be forwarded to the&#13;
department that the student was&#13;
recommended to see.&#13;
Gray suggested a "registration&#13;
packet insert" which would state&#13;
that a student on probation must&#13;
contact the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs for an appointment before&#13;
completing registration.&#13;
Rodgers said a table could be&#13;
set up at registration with the&#13;
student's records so that the&#13;
appropriate appointments could&#13;
be made. Help would be offered&#13;
on courses and loads a student&#13;
could carry.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, chairperson of&#13;
the committee, suggested&#13;
checking with the academic&#13;
deans before any action is taken.&#13;
The committee has not yet&#13;
approved the draft and will meet&#13;
again on Nov. 21 for further&#13;
discussion. The final draft will be&#13;
brought before the Faculty&#13;
Senate for a vote in December.&#13;
by Gregory Hawkins&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
On October 7, 1974, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
(PAB's) Executive Board&#13;
removed from their meeting a&#13;
RANGER reporter while he was&#13;
attempting to cover this meeting.&#13;
This reporter was removed&#13;
because a portion of the meeting&#13;
was to be a closed session for the&#13;
purpose of discussing what was&#13;
termed "internal problems."&#13;
After the reporter informed the&#13;
chairperson of the meeting that&#13;
this removal from the meeting&#13;
was a potential violation of the&#13;
anti-secrecy law, the chairperson&#13;
insisted that the reporter remove&#13;
himself from the meeting. He left&#13;
immediately.&#13;
On October 8,1974 the Editor of&#13;
RANGER wrote a letter to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, claiming that&#13;
a "serious breach of state&#13;
statutes" had occurred during&#13;
this episode.&#13;
In responding to this complaint&#13;
for the Chancellor, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen Dearborn stated that it was&#13;
the contention of the PAB's advisor&#13;
that the closed session was&#13;
for personnel matters, and that if&#13;
further follow-up of the situation&#13;
was desired, RANGER should&#13;
put their interpretations of this&#13;
situation in writing.&#13;
A letter explaining the specific&#13;
portions of the anti-secrecy law&#13;
that the RANGER felt were&#13;
violated was written and sent to&#13;
the parties concerned on October&#13;
25.&#13;
In this letter, three possible&#13;
violations of Chapter 297&#13;
Wisconsin Statutes, 66.77, and in&#13;
particular in section five (5),&#13;
were discussed.&#13;
In response to these specific&#13;
complaints, Allen Dearborn&#13;
again contacted RANGER, and&#13;
stated that he had asked the&#13;
advisor of the PAB to initiate a&#13;
meeting of representatives of the&#13;
two organizations involved, "in&#13;
order that collectively you can&#13;
reach a satisfactory resolution to&#13;
your request."&#13;
On November 8, RANGER&#13;
initiated the meeting with PAB's&#13;
advisor and after some time&#13;
arrived at a conclusion to this&#13;
situation that required: (1) a&#13;
statement of admission that there&#13;
was a failure to comply with the&#13;
law, (2) an apology, (3) a&#13;
statement of policy to insure that&#13;
this sort of situation would not, by&#13;
accident, reoccur, and finally, (4)&#13;
a promise to the effect that the&#13;
policy outlined in number three&#13;
would be followed, and that the&#13;
situation would not occur again.&#13;
This statement was to be sent to&#13;
the RANGER office after it was&#13;
drafted.&#13;
On November 14, RANGER&#13;
again initiated contact with PAB&#13;
to find out if the requested&#13;
memorandum was being drafted.&#13;
RANGER at this point was informed&#13;
that PAB would get to&#13;
this matter in "their good time."&#13;
Immediately scheduling another&#13;
conference with PAB's advisor,&#13;
RANGER was informed that the&#13;
agreement reached the week&#13;
before was not going to be&#13;
followed, "as we don't feel that&#13;
we've done anything wrong."&#13;
The next day RANGER&#13;
continued on page 6 rhe story of a well-rounded musician&#13;
Bach, Brubeck and the Beatles&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Resting on the plywood-surfaced stage is a threewheeled&#13;
object resembling a piano. Unlike other&#13;
three-wheeled pianos, this particular instrument&#13;
has its shortcomings. It might be compared to a&#13;
Cadillac that had been waxed with someone's dirty&#13;
feet. And whoever did the wax job completely&#13;
overlooked the buffing.&#13;
People file into the theater, seating themselves&#13;
largely on the far side of the auditorium in order to&#13;
have the instrument's keys in good view.&#13;
When most are settled, the lights are dimmed.&#13;
Seconds later, a tuxedo-clad man appears on stage.&#13;
Meekly bowing to a light applause, he seats himself&#13;
before the ill-kept piano, creating a contrast that&#13;
would embarrass any good stage manager.&#13;
With great concentration, the musician studies&#13;
the keyboard for a moment. Then, by the touch of a&#13;
finger, he begins a whole new story for the gloomylooking&#13;
instrument. Suddenly, through the hands of&#13;
Stephen Swedish, the mood has been brightened.&#13;
The music of Chopin comes alive.&#13;
Such is the magic of an excellent musician.&#13;
Swedish carried his audience through thoughts of&#13;
passion, sadness, cheerfulness and many other&#13;
emotions in a matter of an hour. As one witness&#13;
commented, "He lets you see how the piano can&#13;
really be played."&#13;
Swedish began improvising on the piano when he&#13;
was six years old. Noticing this, the "stern hand" of&#13;
his father decided it was time for lessons, so the&#13;
young man was sent to a teacher in Milwaukee who&#13;
had previously been Liberace's instructor. .&#13;
The young Swedish enjoyed his new life. In a&#13;
matter of five or six years, he was doing public&#13;
recitals. By the time he graduated from high school,&#13;
he was already an accomplished musician.&#13;
He was offered recording contracts and had been&#13;
doing concert tours for quite some time, but instead&#13;
of continuing along that road, he chose to attend the&#13;
University of Indiana, considered the biggest and&#13;
possibly the best school of music in the country. And&#13;
so on.&#13;
So much for history. Swedish is as bored with it as&#13;
anyone else. He'd rather talk about Bach, Brubeck&#13;
or the Beatles.&#13;
Being a good musician is one great accomplishment.&#13;
Being well-rounded is another.&#13;
Stephen Swedish is both. He can knowledgeablv&#13;
discuss classical, jazz, rock, just about, anything&#13;
Stephen Swedish&#13;
you're into.&#13;
One of his favorite bands is Pink Floyd; he calls&#13;
them "some of the most creative artists in modern&#13;
music. On the other hand, he is currently&#13;
preparing to do a concert at Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center featuring the ragtime sounds&#13;
of Scott Joplin. Then, a few days later, he'll do the&#13;
piano work in a Brahms Trio. Who knows what&#13;
follows?&#13;
Swedish is also an instructor at Parkside. In spite&#13;
of his love for public performances, teaching is at&#13;
the top of his list. Formerly, he'd been director of&#13;
chamber music at Texas Tech. a much larger and&#13;
highly-rated school. So why come to Parkside?&#13;
There are a number of reasons. Says Swedish,&#13;
"the money is good, I love the area, and I was told&#13;
I'd have the flexibility and freedom to do what I&#13;
thought best for the music department here. I'm&#13;
also allowed to do public performances. Many&#13;
universities look down on the idea of faculty&#13;
members doing concerts during semester periods."&#13;
Whenever possible, Swedish combines his&#13;
teaching with his public tours. "I like to perform&#13;
works that I'm currently teaching to my students. It&#13;
allows them to better identify with the piece by&#13;
watching and listening to it at a live performance."&#13;
Considering teaching the most important part of&#13;
his Parkside life, Swedish says, "If I can make&#13;
someone curious enough to listen to and learn to&#13;
enjoy some kind of music, I feel great satisfaction. I&#13;
also would like to do something to raise the standard&#13;
of artistic performance at Parkside."&#13;
One of the classes Swedish teaches is Music&#13;
Appreciation. A survey course, it covers all types of&#13;
music starting from the year 900 and ending with&#13;
the present. Though his favorite period is the 19th&#13;
Century (Beethoven, Chopin, Haydn, and so on), he&#13;
has great respect for the 20th Century eras of jazz&#13;
and rock.&#13;
Swedish predicts: "One of the most important&#13;
periods of 20th Century music will be the rock era. I&#13;
think jazz, classical and rock are coming together.&#13;
For that, the Beatles may take responsibility. When&#13;
they came out of England, many people thought&#13;
they were just four scrawny kids who couldn't carry&#13;
a tune, but they have written some music that is&#13;
unbelieveably good."&#13;
Whichever way the musical trend moves, Swedish&#13;
encourages people to move with it and become&#13;
interested and active. When asked it if was&#13;
necessary to start at an early age to become a good&#13;
musician, Swedish replied, "There's a lot of talent&#13;
around that isn't being used. If you're 22 or over 50,&#13;
you're at a good age to start playing music. If&#13;
someone 22 years old thought it was too late to&#13;
learn, I'd tell them they were crazy. We have introductory&#13;
courses at Parkside that offer the opportunity&#13;
to learn any instrument desired. I'd encourage&#13;
anyone with any interest at all to give it a&#13;
try."&#13;
While it's never too late, it's never too early for&#13;
some people, either. Swedish has a one-year-old&#13;
daughter who already insists on "banging on the&#13;
keys whenever she can." Who knows what she'll&#13;
achieve by the time she graduates from high.school.&#13;
And, to avoid a humiliating thought, if a one-yearold&#13;
kid can do it. so can we, right? &#13;
2 THE PAR K SIDE R ANGER W e dn e s da y , N o vem b e r 2 0 , 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionNo&#13;
one&#13;
is above&#13;
the law&#13;
Chapter 297 Wisconsin Statutes 66.77 section (1) states&#13;
that:&#13;
''In recognition of the fact that a representative&#13;
government of the American type is&#13;
dependent upon an informed electorate, it is&#13;
declared to be the policy of this state that the&#13;
public is entitled to the fullest and most complete&#13;
information regarding the affairs of government&#13;
as is compatible with the conduct of governmental&#13;
affairs and the transaction of aovernmental&#13;
business."&#13;
The Open Meeting Law affects not only the State&#13;
Government, but County and Village Boards, City&#13;
Councils, and the University. This law applies directly&#13;
to any agency which receives funds from the state&#13;
treasury.&#13;
There are eight reasons that are considered cause for&#13;
an organization to convene in closed session under this&#13;
law, and no other reasons legally warrant a closed&#13;
meeting. Meetings that are held in violation of this law&#13;
are voidable, and there are specified punishments, not&#13;
only to the organization, but to the individual participants&#13;
involved in the violation, provided by this&#13;
statute.&#13;
At Parkside there have been potentially illegal&#13;
situations that have arisen as a result of this law and&#13;
there have been violations. One problem which has&#13;
arisen is the form of the announcement used to publicize&#13;
meetings of the executive committees in the Division of&#13;
Science. These meetings are closed sessions, which is&#13;
normal procedure.&#13;
Any committee dealing with personnel matters, under&#13;
sub-sections (b) or (e) of section (4) of t his law, has the&#13;
prerogative of c onvening in closed session. All th at has&#13;
to be done is to announce the "general nature of the&#13;
material to be discussed" in the meeting announcement.&#13;
The problem arises when one considers the violation&#13;
of a person's right to keep any potentially damaging&#13;
information from being disclosed about his or her&#13;
situation in the University, and yet follow the guidelines&#13;
set forth in the law. It is to the credit of this administration&#13;
that the situation in the Science Division&#13;
was, when questioned, corrected without discord and&#13;
with due haste.&#13;
On the other hand, there are organizations on campus&#13;
that feel they may be immune from the effects of this&#13;
law, and it may come as a surprise to them when they&#13;
discover that it is the policy of this newspaper to&#13;
this law, and to report any and all violations that cannot&#13;
be handled from within the University. This law may or&#13;
may not have been intended to affect this University,&#13;
but at this time the question is moot. The law is in effect&#13;
and will be followed.&#13;
Editor's Note: On Friday, November 15, RANGER filed&#13;
a formal complaint with the Kenosha County District&#13;
Attorney. The action concerns certain events which&#13;
took place on October 7, 1974, at a Parkside Activities&#13;
Board Meeting.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Arthur will b e back...God willing&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On the chance that I still have&#13;
some friends at Parkside who&#13;
might be interested in knowing&#13;
where I am and what I am doing,&#13;
I'll write and tell you about my&#13;
plans for the immediate future.&#13;
Shortly after Thanksgiving my&#13;
dear wife Ruth and I will leave&#13;
for Rhodesia. Our plans are to be&#13;
in that part of the world for about&#13;
three months ... God willing.&#13;
Why Rhodesia? Well, because&#13;
we have a life-long friend named&#13;
Lawrence Hautz living near&#13;
Salisbury. Larry and I grew up in&#13;
the same neighborhood on the&#13;
south side of Milwaukee over 60&#13;
years ago. We went to the same&#13;
high school (Bay View High) and&#13;
went through Scouting together.&#13;
After fumbling attempts at&#13;
college I went into Scouting&#13;
professionally and Larry had a&#13;
successful business career in&#13;
Milwaukee. About 20 years ago&#13;
Larry and his wife Carol decided&#13;
to serve God by becoming&#13;
Pioneers for the Baha'i World&#13;
Faith. They sold their prospering&#13;
insurance agency and their&#13;
beautiful home on North Lake&#13;
Drive in Milwaukee and moved to&#13;
Rhodesia. (We Methodists call&#13;
sucfypeople "Missionaries".)&#13;
Larry and Carol (she died in&#13;
1971) used their resources to&#13;
begin a new life in Rhodesia.&#13;
They bought some acreage about&#13;
14 kilometers outside of&#13;
Salisbury. There they built the&#13;
first American-type motel on the&#13;
long road to Victoria Falls. And&#13;
they started a school for black&#13;
children. It's called The&#13;
Salisbury Motel School because&#13;
the motel supports the school.&#13;
Ruth and I will spend part of our&#13;
time helping there. What does a&#13;
history major teach children who&#13;
are only a few steps away from a&#13;
tribal environment? Love will&#13;
point the way.&#13;
As young men Larry and I&#13;
started out to change the world.&#13;
But that's easier said than done.&#13;
Experience insisted that we scale&#13;
our goals down to a manageable&#13;
size by working to the best of our&#13;
ability on the problems nearest at&#13;
hand... beginning with ourselves.&#13;
Larry has succeeded in that&#13;
respect far better than I. With&#13;
unstinting dedication he has&#13;
planted orchards, made a lake by&#13;
darning up a meandering stream,&#13;
established a snake "farm" from&#13;
which venom for medicinal use is&#13;
sent to many parts of the world,&#13;
developed a nursery which grows&#13;
beautiful hybrid roses, founded a&#13;
school which helps hundreds of&#13;
families and he has made a&#13;
beauty spot out of what was once&#13;
African bushland. Some day a&#13;
beautiful Baha'i House of Worship&#13;
will be built on the land he&#13;
has prepared.&#13;
Parenthetically, in my opinion,&#13;
Baha'is are a special kind of&#13;
people. As I understand it, they&#13;
consider the Baha'i Faith as&#13;
further revelations of Christ's&#13;
teaching. They believe that "The&#13;
World is one country and&#13;
Mankind its citizens." Also, that&#13;
people should (and will eventually)&#13;
live together, "not with&#13;
uniformity but with unity through&#13;
diversity."&#13;
To me that sounds like a&#13;
paradoxical arrangement but&#13;
there are no "impossible"&#13;
dreams for people like Larry&#13;
Hautz. Suggestion: For those of&#13;
you who are still searching for&#13;
soil in which to root your Credo,&#13;
check up on what The Baha'i&#13;
World Faith has to offer. A visit&#13;
to the Baha'i House of Worship in&#13;
Wilmette, Illinois would be most&#13;
enlightening. End of parenthesis&#13;
and back to Larry and the upcoming&#13;
trip.&#13;
In our intermittent exchanges&#13;
of letters, Ruth and I got the&#13;
feeling that Larry was impatient&#13;
and possibly discouraged as he&#13;
waited for his better world to&#13;
materialize. In a letter written a&#13;
few months after Carol had died&#13;
he wrote, "I am now facing the&#13;
fact that I am approaching the&#13;
twilight of my life. When I was&#13;
young, I always thought that I&#13;
had plenty of time to accomplish&#13;
the things I wanted to do but now,&#13;
as I look back, I realize that I&#13;
have just scratched the surface."&#13;
And then he added this postscript:&#13;
"As I read what I have&#13;
just typed, I could not hold back a&#13;
flow of tears." Such a postscript&#13;
did not sound like the Larry we&#13;
knew whose out-going personality&#13;
always seemed to overflow&#13;
with energy and selfconfidence.&#13;
But I could understand&#13;
his frustrations. As I&#13;
thought about his letter I realized&#13;
that the Four Horsemen of the&#13;
Apocalypse are still plaguing the&#13;
world - war, pestilence, famine&#13;
and death. And two more riders&#13;
have joined the terrorists - greed&#13;
and inflation. It was after the&#13;
arrival of Larry's "postscript&#13;
letter" that Ruth and I began&#13;
thinking seriously of going to&#13;
• Rhodesia. After all,, he'd been&#13;
inviting us for years.&#13;
We learned in another letter&#13;
that Larry had been ill and a few&#13;
months ago he fell out of a tree&#13;
with a live chain saw in his hands&#13;
Of all things! Fortunately he&#13;
wasn't badly hurt but it helped us&#13;
make up our minds that maybe&#13;
Larry and I ought to get together&#13;
... that maybe he could use a little&#13;
help at the school or in some&#13;
other ways ... But no tree climbing!&#13;
So we have bought our&#13;
plane tickets and will go to the&#13;
Salisbury Motel School and share&#13;
our ecumenical spirit in our own&#13;
way ... By helping.&#13;
I must, however, confess to&#13;
some selfish motivation in&#13;
making this trip. Ruth and I&#13;
have been in over 50 countries&#13;
together but never to southern&#13;
Africa. Now, not only will we be&#13;
able to hopefully help a friend&#13;
but I will also be able to visit&#13;
places made famous by two of my&#13;
boyhood heroes - Baden-Powell,&#13;
the Founder of the Boy Scout&#13;
Movement and David Livingston,&#13;
the medical missionary who gave&#13;
his life in Christian service to the&#13;
natives of central Africa. Many&#13;
times, as we move about&#13;
Rhodesia and South Africa, we&#13;
will cross the paths once trod by&#13;
Baden-Powell and Livingston. At&#13;
times it will be like a pilgrimage.&#13;
So now you know why you won't&#13;
see me around for a few months.&#13;
We will begin our long flight to&#13;
Rhodesia on December 3rd. We&#13;
will arrive in Salisbury on the 9th&#13;
after a four day rest stop in&#13;
Johannesburg. For me Parkside&#13;
will be 8,000 miles away ... but&#13;
seldom out of mind. But don't&#13;
forget me! And while I'm away&#13;
continue to build good Traditions&#13;
for our Alma Mater ... Like good&#13;
class attendance ... and having a&#13;
litter-free campus ... And always&#13;
doing your best... and being kind&#13;
to one another.&#13;
I'll see you sometime in March&#13;
... God willing.&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Alumnus, Class of '74.&#13;
PSGA says Regents play dirty&#13;
ME The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140 . Phones 553-2295, 55 3-2287.&#13;
'OSt&#13;
£ JTCROIRO&#13;
0 A* (v NEMO&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government, P.S.G.A. Inc., had a&#13;
declaratory petition brought&#13;
before the Board of Regents of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System. This declaratory petition&#13;
was issued by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government after an&#13;
overwhelming majority of the&#13;
students, in a record-breaking&#13;
voter turnout, ratified the new&#13;
student constitution in a&#13;
University referendum. The&#13;
purpose of the declaratory&#13;
petition was to make the Board of&#13;
Regents decide whether or not to&#13;
accept the voice of the Parkside&#13;
students. In its worst, but most&#13;
accurate, connotation the actions&#13;
of the Board of Regents have&#13;
prostituted the ideals of&#13;
American democracy and&#13;
justice The Board of Regents not&#13;
only did not inform the Student&#13;
S°™™me,,t here at Parkside&#13;
that this would be on the agenda&#13;
but also Frank Pelisek, President&#13;
of the Board of Regents, claimed&#13;
that he had informed John&#13;
Siefert, attorney for the Student&#13;
Government, that he should&#13;
appear at the meeting. However,&#13;
John Siefert was not informed to&#13;
appear until five hours after the&#13;
Board had handed down its&#13;
decision. The Board of Regents&#13;
then voted down the petition for a&#13;
declaratory ruling when some of&#13;
'ts members did not even have a&#13;
copy of the declaratory petition&#13;
Pelisek, after verbally noting this&#13;
condition, proceeded with the&#13;
meeting anyway.&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
viously knows ihat^he'stldem"&#13;
Government does not have the&#13;
money necessary for legal&#13;
counsel or action. It is interesting&#13;
to note that the quality and&#13;
measure of justice one receives is&#13;
directly related to the financial&#13;
resources a party has at its&#13;
disposal. When P.S.G.A. Inc. has&#13;
no money and was deliberately&#13;
obstructed by the Board of&#13;
Regents, how can we, as the sole&#13;
governing authority of the&#13;
students, uphold and protect the&#13;
rights of the students? It was&#13;
indeed unfortunate that the&#13;
Board of Regents had to play&#13;
administrative politics at the&#13;
expense of the students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Senate,&#13;
P.S.G.A, Inc. &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 19 74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Spoon River"— Preview&#13;
ThreeJ-'Spoon River" inhabitants strike the attitudes they'll assume in the Nov. 21-24 production bv&#13;
the Parkside Players: left to right are Jody Jones. Keith Gayhart and Michael Ward.&#13;
&lt;M,Uct,on by&#13;
by amy&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
It is difficult, very difficult, to&#13;
do justice to the work that moves&#13;
in and out of the psychological&#13;
social dimensions of a person]&#13;
and even more trying to present&#13;
this sensitive and raw side of the&#13;
whole generation that has passed&#13;
through a town. The problems&#13;
develop in the translation of such&#13;
a piece. One must be presented&#13;
with honest sentiment, real pain,&#13;
and robust anger. Otherwise, the&#13;
dramatization becomes so much&#13;
corn, surface pettiness and soap&#13;
opera affectation, that it is impossible&#13;
for any human quality to&#13;
be detected in the character&#13;
portrayed. The Parkside&#13;
production of Edgar Lee&#13;
Masters' "Spoon River Anthology"&#13;
has achieved in its&#13;
translation a rare melancholy,&#13;
sincerity, and truthfulness.&#13;
In the preview performance on&#13;
Thursday, November 15, the 12-&#13;
member cast delivered more&#13;
than 70 characters with sensitivity&#13;
and insight. The setting is&#13;
stark-like the bare wires of&#13;
nerves and minds in the now&#13;
dead, tormented inhabitants of&#13;
Spoon River. The characters&#13;
stand, silent and silhouetted,&#13;
separated by light and empty&#13;
space. They stand frozen between&#13;
their speeches like statues in a&#13;
garden, or perhaps a museum;&#13;
like the unspeaking stone they&#13;
were while alive. There was no&#13;
vocal communication among&#13;
them then, and so the confessions&#13;
and admissions go on now as&#13;
their stifled souls rage and weep&#13;
from the grave.&#13;
Someone once said, "truth will&#13;
out," and one could suppose if not&#13;
in life, then in death. It is this&#13;
truth, the stuff in the core of a&#13;
soul, that lays itself open in this&#13;
penetrating production of Spoon&#13;
River.&#13;
Music, emotion and silence&#13;
weave together in a tapestry of&#13;
strangled reality that will not&#13;
rest. Virginia King and Glen&#13;
Christiansen do an extraordinary&#13;
job of translating the honest&#13;
sentiment of Midwestern folk&#13;
songs in contrast to the&#13;
frustrated, deceiving characters&#13;
that lived in the midst of such&#13;
music, and now, have been lost to&#13;
their personal solitary.&#13;
Michael Ward is subtle, but&#13;
exploding beneath the calm is&#13;
hungry love, great longing. Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbach is sensual, insane as&#13;
a pyromaniac, and equally excellent&#13;
in all his roles. Michael&#13;
Clickner's Fiddler Jones has a&#13;
compelling rural brilliance.&#13;
Keith Gayhart is raw, seething&#13;
energy, while Charles Johnson&#13;
sensitively brings the regret and&#13;
loneliness of his characters to&#13;
life.&#13;
The women of Spoon River,&#13;
whore and bleed and scream&#13;
their existences to reality. They&#13;
are reality. They motivated the&#13;
children, seduced the men,&#13;
embraced the love of others&#13;
deeply. Susan Zietz becomes the&#13;
most holy and the most immoral&#13;
of women interchangeably, and&#13;
to perfection. Carrie Ward proves&#13;
she can play more than the&#13;
society ladies of her former roles,&#13;
achieving the poignant beauty of&#13;
women full of life, robbed of this&#13;
secret gift. Jody Jones is catty,&#13;
tender, crushing the things that&#13;
simultaneously attract and&#13;
repulse her lovers and the&#13;
audience. Kathy Kah lures you,&#13;
runs from your admirations and&#13;
then begs for them again in the&#13;
realization of some ever-present&#13;
emptiness which threatens to&#13;
engulf her characters. Nancy&#13;
Johnson presents women filled&#13;
with eternal visions and women&#13;
of biting self-ihterest.&#13;
The reason I have described&#13;
the actors as possessing certain&#13;
qualities instead of the characters&#13;
themselves is because these&#13;
actors are the characters.&#13;
The kiss just now out of reach&#13;
because of death, the factual&#13;
commitment of one spirit to&#13;
another: all things supremely&#13;
human are rendered in this&#13;
production. If they 'gift- ydirwith&#13;
what I had the pleasure of&#13;
viewing, you will have one of the&#13;
finest translations of Masters'&#13;
work you are likely to see.&#13;
Parkside no-shows&#13;
Milwaukee shows for Jackson Browne&#13;
johi ana jams rius&#13;
Finally, at 8:25, Wendy Waldman and her bass&#13;
player started out. Wendy has a good voice and at&#13;
times sounded like Joni Mitchell's high and floaty&#13;
at others like Janis Joplin's low and raspy. She kind&#13;
of made up for the long delays. Her music was good,&#13;
as was her conversation between songs. She played&#13;
guitar, then a dulcimer, and piano. Some of the&#13;
notable songs included "Train Song," "Your&#13;
Constant Companion" and "Turn a Cold Back on&#13;
Me. After she finished, I was surprised that an&#13;
impatient crowd appreciated her enough to call her&#13;
back for another song. She also seemed surprised&#13;
and flattered.&#13;
Bomb Threat Not Announced&#13;
Then came the longest delay, almost another&#13;
hour The reason for it was later discovered to be a&#13;
bomb threat. I was told about it the next day. To&#13;
leave 1300 people in the dark about this is horrible.&#13;
We are adults and could have made the decision to&#13;
stay or leave as we saw fit. We should not have to&#13;
take that kind of bullshit from someone who decided&#13;
that we were not in danger. No excuse-not even one&#13;
oi potential panic-warranted not telling the crowd&#13;
The alleged bomb was to go off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 10:10, Jackson Browne appeared and&#13;
apologized for being late. He shouldn't have had to&#13;
apologize for the way the whole thing was handled&#13;
He opened with "Redneck Friend" and went in to&#13;
Ready or Not." during which there was a lot of&#13;
static coming from the right-hand set of speakers&#13;
By the third song. "The Road*and the Skv." the&#13;
problem was corrected, and the sound in the gvm&#13;
was so good that even Jackson Browne himself&#13;
commented on the sound quality.&#13;
Plays Most pf New Album&#13;
Browne switched back and forth from guitar to&#13;
piano. He did "Fountain of Sorrow" next: 'Tor&#13;
Everyman from his second album sounded reallv&#13;
nice. Browne spoke of a dead'friend for whom "For&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
With the appearance of Jackson Browne on&#13;
November 12, Parkside opened the door to the&#13;
formerly untapped resource of Milwaukee area&#13;
concert-goers. WQFM radio of Milwaukee cosponsored&#13;
the concert, and through its efforts,&#13;
provided most of the crowd of 1300. I am told that&#13;
less than 400 students at Parkside took advantage of&#13;
having this concert in their own "back yard." It is&#13;
too bad because we don't often get musicians of&#13;
Jackson Browne's caliber to play here at Parkside.&#13;
The music flowed smoothly, the show did not. At&#13;
7:30, a half-hour before the scheduled start, a lot of&#13;
people had to stand outside the P.E. building in the&#13;
cold. When finally admitted, there were manycomplaints&#13;
about having to pay $5 to sit on the gym&#13;
floor. After the delay to get in, the delay before the&#13;
show started did not set well with many in attendance.&#13;
&#13;
a Dancer" was written, the song he performed next. ,&#13;
Upon learning that Lake Michigan was nearby (it is&#13;
not as polluted as Browne thinks it is), he sang&#13;
"Rock Me on the Water." From his latest album he&#13;
played "Walking Slow," "Late for the Sky" (the&#13;
title cut), and "Before the Deluge." He finished the&#13;
set with his AM standard, "Doctor My Eyes " After&#13;
enthusiastic applause (for 1300) he encored with&#13;
"Take It Easy" and slid into "Your Love Keeps&#13;
Lifting Me Higher." Out of eight songs on his new&#13;
album he played six.&#13;
The music for the night was good and the sound&#13;
was good. The poor judgment of the person who&#13;
decided the bomb threat was not to be announced&#13;
shouldn't detract from the music. What was also&#13;
distressing was the fact .that Milwaukee provided&#13;
three-fourths of the crowd. Parkside has a ways to&#13;
go before it can successfully put on a concert by&#13;
itself. Let's hope we don't abandon the idea of good&#13;
music being performed here. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y/ November 20, 1974&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Wednesday, November 20; Whiteskellar presents Barry Patton from&#13;
Milwaukee playing original folk and blues from 1-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse&#13;
(GR D-201). No admission charge.&#13;
Student music recital begins at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," based on the Nobel&#13;
Prize-winning novel by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, will begin at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Admission is $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
^&#13;
Ur&#13;
day&#13;
;,&#13;
November 2I: People for a N°n-Sexist Society will meet at&#13;
12:30 in Classroom D-128.&#13;
Attention Pre-Pharmacy Students: Pam Palmer from the Madison&#13;
School of Pharmacy will be on campus on Thursday, Nov. 21 from 9&#13;
a.m. to noon in Tallent Hall room 121. Call Placement Office, 553-2452&#13;
for an appointment.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" at 7:30 p.m. in GR&#13;
103. Admission is $1 and UW-P I.D. is required.&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology" will begin at 8 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1 for UW-P students and staff and $2 for the&#13;
general public. Tickets are available at the Information kiosk or at the&#13;
door. The play continues through Sunday, November 24.&#13;
FAST FOR A WORLD HARVEST sponsored by the Newman Club in&#13;
conjunction with Americans across the nation.&#13;
Friday, November 22; Film: "Twelve Chairs," a Mel Brooks creation&#13;
will begin at 8 p.m. in the Student Activities Building. Admission is $1*&#13;
UW-P and state I.D's required.&#13;
Sunday, November 24; Vets Club meeting at 4 p.m. in the SAB.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers Ski Show from 12 noon to 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building. Admission is $1 and is open to the public. Includes fashion&#13;
show, booths set up for ski resorts, ski patrol, orienting, movies, and&#13;
ski swap.&#13;
Mass at Newman Center beginning at 12: 15 p.m. at the Carthage&#13;
College Meditation Chapel. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Film: "Twelve Chairs," at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. UW-P and state&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26&#13;
"The Church Today" - a discussion at St. George School at 8 p.m. by&#13;
Fr. Richard Schlenker. Everyone interested is most welcome.&#13;
December 8: The Vets Club will sponsor a paper drive from 8 a.m. -&#13;
3:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall parking lot. The drive is to help support&#13;
the operation of the Racine Vets Bus&#13;
VOTE&#13;
it's to uyop u&#13;
MOCK US TAP&#13;
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At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
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AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
Bogus bomb threat&#13;
delays Browne concert&#13;
According to Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, a bomb threat&#13;
delayed for about 20 minutes the&#13;
Jackson Browne concert which&#13;
was held in Parkside's Physical&#13;
Education Building, on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 12.&#13;
He said that the estimated 1300&#13;
to 1500 people attending the&#13;
concert were not informed of the&#13;
bomb threat.&#13;
Deputy Dale Crichton of the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's Dept. said that&#13;
the threat was called in to the&#13;
Kenosha Police Dept. by a young&#13;
male who said the bomb was to go&#13;
off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 8:59 p.m. the Kenosha Police&#13;
Dept. contacted the Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. which sent out four&#13;
deputies and two detectives.&#13;
They searched the building,&#13;
along with Parkside's Safety and&#13;
Security force, from 9:15 until 10&#13;
p.m. but failed to find a bomb.&#13;
Crichton said that the decision&#13;
not to inform the audience about&#13;
the bomb scare was made by&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor of Administration.&#13;
Crichton also said that he was&#13;
informed that there had been at&#13;
least four bomb scares in the last&#13;
two months at Parkside.&#13;
Zuelke commented that there&#13;
have been three bomb scares&#13;
since Labor Day and it was his&#13;
decision not to announce any of&#13;
them.&#13;
He said that Parkside has been&#13;
getting bomb scares ever since&#13;
the buildings were opened, but&#13;
that this is not a unique situation&#13;
since many institutions receive&#13;
threats.&#13;
When a bomb threat is received&#13;
at Parkside, the procedure is not&#13;
to inform faculty or students of&#13;
the threat, but to make a&#13;
thorough search of the building&#13;
and then decide whether or not to&#13;
evacuate, Zuelke said.&#13;
He mentioned that the&#13;
evacuation measure has never&#13;
been taken and that to his&#13;
knowledge, a bomb scare has&#13;
never been announced to the&#13;
students at Parkside.&#13;
"We try to be as inconspicuous&#13;
as possible when something like&#13;
this happens," Zuelke said. "The&#13;
caller wants to disrupt things and&#13;
we don't want to give him the&#13;
satisfaction of doing so. The less&#13;
that is said, the better off we&#13;
are."&#13;
UW p roposes SSC make-up&#13;
Minorities left out&#13;
Donald Smith, senior vice&#13;
president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System, sent a letter to&#13;
the presidents of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB), the&#13;
Adult Student Association (ASA),&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. (PSGA)&#13;
and the Vet's Club concerning,&#13;
among other things, the process&#13;
whereby students will be&#13;
nominated to the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC).&#13;
The SSC is responsible for&#13;
screening applications for&#13;
chancellor and will consist of&#13;
students, faculty, and administrators.&#13;
&#13;
In this letter, Smith requested&#13;
that each of the above&#13;
organizations submit at least two&#13;
nominations for each of the two&#13;
student positions on the committee.&#13;
He also mentioned that&#13;
attention was to be given "to the&#13;
inclusion of women and-or&#13;
minorities among the nominees."&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, said that Smith ignored&#13;
feminist groups and minority&#13;
groups such as Third World.&#13;
He said, "I think it's wrong for&#13;
any single organization to send&#13;
potential nominees for the SSC,&#13;
the reason being that some&#13;
organizations were ignored.&#13;
What I want is for all&#13;
organizations to pick the&#13;
nominees together."&#13;
Milutinovich has sent a letter&#13;
which should reach every student&#13;
organization on campus,&#13;
requesting that a meeting take&#13;
place to discuss student nominees&#13;
to the SSC.&#13;
According to Milutinovich, he&#13;
is requesting that the presidents&#13;
of all interested organizations&#13;
come to the meeting with a list of&#13;
nominees which will be screened&#13;
by this council and sent to Smith.&#13;
He said that those&#13;
organizations which were&#13;
mentioned in Smith's letter would&#13;
still have the prerogative of&#13;
sending Smith their own&#13;
nominations in addition to those&#13;
sent by the council of presidents.&#13;
Milutinovich said, "Instead of&#13;
relying on input from separate&#13;
organizations, this would insure&#13;
greater student input."&#13;
Christmas spirit&#13;
hits Sigma Pi&#13;
Christmastime is just around&#13;
the corner and Sigma Pi&#13;
Fraternity is once again donning&#13;
its Santa suit in order to conduct&#13;
its 3rd annual TOY DRIVE. The&#13;
proceeds collected from this&#13;
year's drive will be donated to&#13;
various charity organizations in&#13;
the Kenosha - Racine area including&#13;
the Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
The TOY DRIVE will run from&#13;
November 20 to December 13&#13;
with collection stations placed at&#13;
the following locations: the Information&#13;
Kiosk in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the corridor&#13;
between LLC and Greenquist&#13;
Hall, inside the main entrance to&#13;
the Classroom Building, the main&#13;
corridor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
Building, and inside the main&#13;
entrance of Tallent Hall. Sigma&#13;
Pi brothers will be out making&#13;
door-to-door collections and&#13;
soliciting local merchants for&#13;
donations throughout the period.&#13;
Last year's TOY DRIVE was&#13;
an overwhelming success, according&#13;
to Jerry Ferch, this&#13;
year's social-publicity chairperson,&#13;
and a repeat performance&#13;
is expected.&#13;
FREE DEL IVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
?&lt;&#13;
SHO REC RES T&#13;
639 5305&#13;
GEOR GETOW N&#13;
554 7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS: Sun. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A.M.&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fr i. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
""UNION&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
NOV. 20, 22, 23, 24&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 654-0485 &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Art faculty to bare all&#13;
Art profs show stuff&#13;
^ , w f THE TRIAL OF BILLY JACK&#13;
There s a ot of truth in the old saying that "the guilty cry the loudest&#13;
for justice. Remember John Mitchell's witch-hiL for nattona&#13;
subversives or Richard Nixon's pledges to eet to thl JSfl I&#13;
Watergate? I get that uncomfortable feeline with th bott&#13;
°™ of&#13;
Laughlin-Delores Taylor epic agS ^s^'L'Sfy Stf IZ&#13;
Released from prison, Billy Jack returns to the Arizona Indim&#13;
reservation and picks up the truth crusade (any similarity to B1W&#13;
Graham is purely intentional). During his absence, Our Miss BrS&#13;
Jean Roberts, at the progressive Freedom School has made a few&#13;
changes. The students aren't the drop-outs one step away from crime&#13;
or jail as portrayed he first flick, but left-overs from Cleara™&#13;
commercials, turned self-styled Nader Raiders&#13;
Through government grants and in the "spirit of love" the kids have&#13;
the ultimate toybox: a TV station, a recording studio, Yoga Sport, an&#13;
international center for the study of human rights, and of course a&#13;
Peter Pan retreat from warped adult society.&#13;
But this paradise is threatened by the lecherous, blood-thirsty&#13;
townfolk. And why not? These hip kids have expensive ski outfits&#13;
belly-dancei classes, an olympic-size swimming pool, and wall-to-wall&#13;
color TV sets, the essence of the American Dream. The outside world&#13;
naturally wants an equal share of that wealth plus that envious&#13;
freedom from taxation, work, and responsibility.&#13;
Billy Jack pretends to defend the helpless students (they already&#13;
imported a Korean Karate instructor) and the oppressed minority&#13;
(the Indian brothers are never seen swimming in the integrated pool),&#13;
but Billy s bravado and Jean's saccharine philosophy of love and&#13;
brotherhood are cleverly distinguished hypes.&#13;
It's the old shell game. Keep the Indians happy with colored beads&#13;
and never worry about rent. Espouse virtue and collect federal funds.&#13;
Their "heroics" are selfish, exploitative impulses. Marjoe the&#13;
hustling evangelist, resembles a canonized saint against this deceitful&#13;
duo.&#13;
We've been Billy-Clubbed!&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest&#13;
Members of the UW-Parkside&#13;
art faculty will hold their first&#13;
joint show in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery Nov. 21 through&#13;
Dec. 13. An opening reception will&#13;
be held Thursday, Nov 21, from 6&#13;
to 8 p.m. Regular gallery hours&#13;
are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and 6 to 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Robert Cadez and Erik Forrest&#13;
will be represented by paintings&#13;
and prints, Moishe Smith by&#13;
etchings, Rollin Jansky by&#13;
sculpture in fiber glass reinforced&#13;
resin and John Murphy by&#13;
ceramic pieces and ceramic&#13;
sculpture. Also included are&#13;
paintings by David Zaig, who was&#13;
a visiting faculty member at&#13;
Parkside in 1972-73 and has&#13;
continued to teach on a part-time&#13;
basis. The show is made up of&#13;
recent work by the various artists.&#13;
&#13;
Cadez has recently had shows&#13;
of his paintings at the Bradley&#13;
Galleries in Milwaukee, at the&#13;
Parkside Gallery and at the&#13;
Rockford (111.) Art Association's&#13;
Burpee Gallery. He works&#13;
principally in water color and&#13;
acrylics. A native of Michigan, he&#13;
received his master of fine arts&#13;
degree from UW-Madison. His&#13;
work has been included in a&#13;
number of juried shows and invitational&#13;
exhibitions and has&#13;
won awards on the local, regional&#13;
and national levels. He is&#13;
represented in the permanent&#13;
ff&#13;
Help the hungry&#13;
A nationwide "Fast for a World&#13;
Harvest" on Thursday,&#13;
November 21, sponsored by the&#13;
Newman Club, will invite wellfed&#13;
Americans to share the&#13;
hunger that is the daily experience&#13;
of one billion of the&#13;
earth's people. The money saved&#13;
by going hungry for one day will&#13;
help small farmers in Asia,&#13;
Africa and Latin America grow&#13;
more food in the areas where&#13;
most of these people live. Kurt&#13;
Waldheim, Secretary General of&#13;
the United Nations, says; " 'Fast&#13;
for a World Harvest', sponsored&#13;
by Oxfam-America, is a welcome&#13;
example of how individuals have&#13;
a chance to join together in&#13;
ACCOUNTING A ND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
Let us help you:&#13;
PLAN AHEAD&#13;
To Become a CPA&#13;
THE BECKER&#13;
CPA REVIEW COURSE&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
414-276-7271&#13;
Our Successful Students Represent&#13;
1/AOFUSA&#13;
creating greater awareness of&#13;
alarming global food shortages&#13;
and in sharing their resources&#13;
with those in greater need."&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest"&#13;
will be nationally observed by&#13;
colleges, churches, high schools,&#13;
community organizations and&#13;
individuals who feel that a more&#13;
equitable distribution of the&#13;
world's resources is needed.&#13;
Contributions will be used for&#13;
development programs such as&#13;
water storage, better seeds, and&#13;
i m p r o v ed liv e s toc k&#13;
management.&#13;
The Fast will also direct&#13;
national attention to the critical&#13;
global food shortage. Drought,&#13;
floods, and fertilizer shortages&#13;
have reduced farm yields in&#13;
many parts of the world. Increasing&#13;
population in the&#13;
developing countries and dietary&#13;
changes in affluent nations are&#13;
compounding food shortages. The&#13;
average American now requires&#13;
almost a ton of grain a year&#13;
(much of it to feed animals for&#13;
meat), while the average Bengali&#13;
is lucky to receive the equivalent&#13;
of a pound of grain a day. Implications&#13;
for the future are&#13;
particularly grim for children,&#13;
whose growth and mental&#13;
development are seriously and&#13;
permanently impaired by&#13;
malnutrition.&#13;
A SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DINNER&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
NOV. 2 6, 1 974&#13;
HAM OR TURKEY&#13;
WITH ALL&#13;
THE TRIMINGS&#13;
• NEW HOURS •&#13;
L.L.C. MOD., T HRU THURS. - 7:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 7:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
BUFFET ROOMS&#13;
M0N-THURS 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union&#13;
99&#13;
collections of Cotey College (Mo.)&#13;
and the Flint (Mich.) Institute of&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Forrest, an internationallyknown&#13;
art educator and painter,&#13;
has had one-man shows in major&#13;
English and American cities and&#13;
has frequently served as a juror&#13;
for exhibitions. Before coming to&#13;
Parkside in 1969, he was assistant&#13;
head of the school of art&#13;
education at the College of Art in&#13;
Birmingham, England. During&#13;
the 1965-66 academic year, he&#13;
was an artist-in-residence at UWMadison.&#13;
He is a graduate of&#13;
George Hariot's School and the&#13;
College of Art, both in Edinburgh,&#13;
Scotland and also has done postgraduate&#13;
work at a number of&#13;
English institutions.&#13;
Smith, a printmaker, has had&#13;
one-man shows in Italy, Switzerland&#13;
and throughout the U.S.&#13;
and has been represented in&#13;
invitational exhibitions in Germany,&#13;
Spain, Italy, Mexico and&#13;
the U.S. His work is in more than&#13;
70 permanent collections in&#13;
Europe and the U.S. including&#13;
that of the Elvehjem Art Center&#13;
in Madison. He previously taught&#13;
at Southern Illinois University&#13;
and Stout State University (now&#13;
UW-Stout) and has been a&#13;
visiting faculty member at UWMadison,&#13;
Ohio State University,&#13;
Utah State University and the&#13;
University of Iowa. His work has&#13;
won numerous prizes and&#13;
purchase awards. He received&#13;
his masters degree at the&#13;
University of Iowa and also did&#13;
graduate work at the Academia&#13;
of Florence (Italy).&#13;
Jansky, who won second prize&#13;
last year in a national sculpture&#13;
exhibition, "Sculpture'73"&#13;
sponsored by the Southern&#13;
Association of Sculptors, works in&#13;
polyester impregnated fiberglass&#13;
with emphasis on pigmentation of&#13;
resin finishes through a variety of&#13;
experimental methods. He has&#13;
had one-man shows of his&#13;
distinctive modular works at a&#13;
number of Midwestern institutions&#13;
and is represented in&#13;
several permanent collections.&#13;
On the UW System art faculty&#13;
since receiving his graduate&#13;
degree from UW-Madison in 1965,&#13;
he was on leave from Parkside in&#13;
1971-72 as a senior lecturer in&#13;
sculpture at Cheltenham College&#13;
of Art and Design at Gloucester,&#13;
England.&#13;
Ceramist Murphy has&#13;
exhibited his work throughout the&#13;
United States and in Canada and&#13;
is the winner of numerous awards&#13;
on the local, state and national&#13;
levels. Much qf his recent work is&#13;
in stoneware with lustre and&#13;
white earthenware. He received&#13;
his graduate degree at the&#13;
University of Montana and came&#13;
to Parkside in 1969.&#13;
Zaig, who was born in&#13;
Jerusalem and received his art&#13;
training in London, is a painter,&#13;
printmaker and filmmaker.&#13;
Before coming to the U.S., he&#13;
taught at several English institutions.&#13;
His work is in the&#13;
collections of the Victoria and&#13;
Albert Museum and several other&#13;
English collections and he has&#13;
exhibited in the U.S., Portugal&#13;
and London.&#13;
Krekling&#13;
takes&#13;
singing&#13;
finals&#13;
Douglas Krekling, Racine, won&#13;
the finals (upper male division)&#13;
of the National Association&#13;
Teachers of Singing at Lawrence&#13;
University this past weekend. He&#13;
was competing with other singers&#13;
from Madison, Eau Claire and&#13;
Milwaukee. Krekling is a senior&#13;
at Parkside and is a voice student&#13;
of Lee Dougherty.&#13;
A Different&#13;
, ru type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S R OLLER R INK&#13;
6220 -67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
SILVER&#13;
BULLET&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
NOVEMBER 22nd &amp; 23rd&#13;
FRIDAY FREE ADMISSIO N WITH&#13;
UW-P STUDENT I.D.&#13;
.THANKSGIVING H OLIDAY&#13;
THE UNION&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th &#13;
6 THE PARK SIDE RANGER W e dnes day, N ovember 2 0 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
More tar less dust&#13;
Com&lt;z,,com&lt;2&gt;&#13;
That'5 no n&#13;
way for a&#13;
I senatorial&#13;
^candidate&#13;
/Vto act.&#13;
Parking lot opens,&#13;
parking lot closes&#13;
PS. 6. A&#13;
offi ce&#13;
Traffic and parking patterns at&#13;
Parkside changed completely&#13;
Monday morning, Nov. 18, when&#13;
the first of two new "close-in"&#13;
parking lots opened, as well as&#13;
the public access road to serve&#13;
them.&#13;
Opening Monday was the&#13;
"Arts-Athletics" lot which holds&#13;
485 vehicles and is convenient to&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
and the Communication Arts&#13;
building, which houses the&#13;
theater and the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Opening no later than Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 1, is the Union parking lot,&#13;
with 525 spaces convenient to the&#13;
classroom building, Greenquist&#13;
Hall and the proposed Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The new public access road&#13;
which opened Monday runs from&#13;
30th Ave., near the HeatingChilling&#13;
plant, to Hy. JR, which&#13;
connects Hy. E and Hy. 31. It is a&#13;
two-way road which must be used&#13;
to reach the new lots.&#13;
The temporary gravel lot on&#13;
the Student Union site closed&#13;
permanently Sunday night.&#13;
There will be no access to&#13;
either new lot from the "BusService"&#13;
road, which encircles&#13;
the academic buildings and&#13;
which is familiar to those who&#13;
have driven the campus or ridden&#13;
shuttle busses from the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking areas. Shuttle&#13;
busses will continue to run from&#13;
the Tallent and East lots around&#13;
the "bus-service" road.&#13;
Parking regulations for the&#13;
public who are not students or&#13;
staff at Parkside remain the&#13;
same. The public may park in&#13;
any space in any campus lot after&#13;
7:30 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday, after 5 p.m. Friday,&#13;
and all day on weekends and&#13;
holidays. Weekdays after 6 a.m.,&#13;
the public must park in visitors&#13;
spaces which are marked in all&#13;
lots or obtain a temporary&#13;
parking permit from the Safety&#13;
and Security Office at the rear of&#13;
Tallent Hall. Parking for handicapped&#13;
is also marked in all&#13;
lots.&#13;
PSGA p roposes referendum&#13;
Elect PAB executives&#13;
Charge by Terrie Caffery&#13;
PSGA has proposed an advisory&#13;
referendum stating that&#13;
the,members of the Executive&#13;
Board on the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) should be elected at&#13;
large by the Student body. The&#13;
present structure of PAB is set up&#13;
in such a way that anyone&#13;
wishing to participate would&#13;
apply, be interviewed, and if&#13;
qualified, would serve by&#13;
working on a committee and then&#13;
possibly be elected to the&#13;
Executive Board.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President&#13;
of PSGA said that trying to improve&#13;
that structure by way of an&#13;
advisory referendum is totally&#13;
legal. "It's just to see if the&#13;
majority of the student body&#13;
approves or not. If not, O.K.,&#13;
we'll drop it. But if they do, it's up&#13;
to the Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) and other student&#13;
administrative channels to take&#13;
action."&#13;
The reason for an attempt to&#13;
change PAB's structure relates&#13;
to a sideline of the constitution&#13;
that says the entire student body&#13;
should be represented. If the&#13;
members were elected, it would&#13;
give students the opportunity to&#13;
choose members that would&#13;
reflect their desires.&#13;
One function of PAB is to bring&#13;
continued from page 1 in outside entertainment for&#13;
P a r k s i d e 's a c tiv iti es.&#13;
Milutinovich claims that PAB is&#13;
bringing in entertainment that&#13;
does not reflect the students'&#13;
interests.&#13;
He pointed out that less than&#13;
one percent of Parkside's student&#13;
body is represented by PAB&#13;
members, yet they make all the&#13;
decisions for entertainment and&#13;
use of the students' tuition money&#13;
to do so. Milutinovich said,&#13;
MIf&#13;
they are willing to share the&#13;
responsibilities that affect the&#13;
remaining student body, they&#13;
damn well better be elected!"&#13;
However, Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
Director of Student Life, and&#13;
Tony Totero, PAB's advisor,&#13;
argue that present PAB members&#13;
will resent the elected&#13;
students for attaining power and&#13;
position through a popular vote,&#13;
rather than serving on the&#13;
committee before proving to be&#13;
qualified.&#13;
It is known that PSGA and PAB&#13;
aren't on friendly terms, but&#13;
Milutinovich said, "We're not&#13;
doing this to get down on PAB. It&#13;
is reasonable, if you just look at&#13;
the facts."&#13;
representatives met with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney&#13;
to discuss this situation. It&#13;
was at this meeting that it was&#13;
determined that there was a good&#13;
chance that a violation of state&#13;
law had in fact occurred.&#13;
Later that afternoon, the&#13;
RANGER Editorial Board met&#13;
and decided that the next course&#13;
of action would be to file a formal&#13;
complaint against PAB concerning&#13;
this matter. The complaint&#13;
was filed promptly with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney,&#13;
who stated that the&#13;
matter would be investigated to&#13;
see if the situation warranted&#13;
legal action.&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS .&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
B^ASS&#13;
ALBEY.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
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24 hours&#13;
EDGEWATER&#13;
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TWIN L AKES enue&#13;
"ACROSS FROM ONION PARK"&#13;
15% Discount with Parkside I.D&#13;
1 NOVEMBER 20th thru N OV. 26th&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
ALSO APPEARING&#13;
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Wednesday, November 20, 1974 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Muscles!&#13;
Approximately 600 men and boys attended&#13;
Parkside's fifth annual Wrestling Clinic last&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16.&#13;
Mark Massery, former NCAA champion and now&#13;
assistant coach at Northwestern University,&#13;
demonstrates all-star technique as participants of&#13;
all ages and sizes look on.&#13;
Six different areas of wrestling were offered in&#13;
hour-long workshops. The clinic ran from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
to 4&#13;
PHY. ED. BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
November 23: Ranger Invitational Swim Meet, 12 Noon, POOL.&#13;
November 27: Building open regular hours; will close at 9:30 p.m.&#13;
November 28: Thanksgiving. Building will be closed.&#13;
November 29: Building will be closed, but athletes may practice.&#13;
November 30: Building will be closed until 4 p.m. JV basketball at&#13;
5:30 p.m. Rangers face Whitewater in season&#13;
opener at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
December l: Building open as usual: 6 p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural&#13;
eager league&#13;
The Intramural Department is&#13;
holding a basketball league on&#13;
Wednesday and Sunday&#13;
evenings. Entry blanks may be&#13;
obtained at the Phy. Ed. Building&#13;
office. All entries are due&#13;
November 28. For further information,&#13;
contact Loren Hein,&#13;
P.E. extension 2162.&#13;
Season&#13;
opener&#13;
Parkside's basketball team&#13;
will be holding their annual&#13;
green-white varsity' scrimmage&#13;
on November 21 at 7:30 PM in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Admission is free, and this would&#13;
be a good chance for the Parkside&#13;
community to preview this year's&#13;
team.&#13;
U&#13;
WIDESfSELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS W ELCOME&#13;
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658-3652 632-5195 I&#13;
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•* &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 20, 1974&#13;
Ski show Sunday&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside's Third Annual Ski &amp;&#13;
Outdoor Recreation Show will be&#13;
held in the Physical Education&#13;
Building this Sunday, Nov. 24,&#13;
from noon to 6 p.m. Admission is&#13;
$1, with children under 12 admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers Ski&#13;
Club has merged with the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
Outing Club to present an afternoon&#13;
of displays and&#13;
demonstrations to acquaint the&#13;
outdoors person with the&#13;
equipment necessary to experience&#13;
and explore the great&#13;
outdoors.&#13;
Scuba diving, canoeing and&#13;
kayaking demonstrations will&#13;
take place in the pool. Rappelling&#13;
from the bleachers and rafters in&#13;
the gym will be Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, demonstrating rock&#13;
climbing maneuvers and knotmaking.&#13;
&#13;
With the main emphasis of the&#13;
show being skiing, the wrestling&#13;
room will offer a chance for the&#13;
showgoers to view a continuous&#13;
series of ski flicks.&#13;
The local ski patrol will be&#13;
demonstrating splinting and&#13;
taping techniques in preparation&#13;
for the upcoming season.&#13;
Cross-country and downhill&#13;
exhibits will appeal to beginning&#13;
and advanced skiers alike, as&#13;
they look over the new lines of&#13;
equipment and talk with the local&#13;
ski shop owners.&#13;
The latest in ski fashions will be&#13;
modeled at 1, 3 and 5 p.m.&#13;
For the dare-devils, a display&#13;
of hang gliders may prove to be&#13;
the most exciting exhibit at the&#13;
show.&#13;
. Information on various ski&#13;
areas and trips will also be&#13;
available.&#13;
An informal ski swap for&#13;
selling off or purchasing usedbut-in-good-condition&#13;
s ki&#13;
equipment will be an dei al way to&#13;
conserve dollars in outfitting the&#13;
new skier for the slopes. Anyone&#13;
interested in selling equipment&#13;
should contact Student Life at&#13;
553-2278 or bring it to the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building Sunday morning prior to&#13;
the show.&#13;
Skis, poles and assorted door&#13;
prizes will be raffled during the&#13;
show.&#13;
Caaers open Thursday&#13;
Season tickets on sale&#13;
Season tickets for basketball&#13;
and other winter sports are still&#13;
on sale at the Information kiosk&#13;
Main Place and at the Physical&#13;
Education Building. Reserved&#13;
seating in the north bleachers is&#13;
being offered as an option for the&#13;
first time with the basketball&#13;
season passes, priced at $5 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
are going fast, according to the&#13;
athletic department.&#13;
Unreserved seating is also&#13;
available for season ticket&#13;
purchasers anywhere in he t south&#13;
bleachers or in unreserved seats&#13;
in the north bleachers. The cost&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
of an unreserved pass is also $5.&#13;
Cost to the general public is $10.&#13;
The season pass will admit the&#13;
bearer to nine home basketball&#13;
games and all home contests in&#13;
wrestling, gymnastics and&#13;
fencing. Single game admission&#13;
for basketball is priced at $2 for&#13;
the general public, $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff and&#13;
free for children under 12.&#13;
Parkside will go into action for&#13;
the first time at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thursday in the Green-White&#13;
game, with the varsity team split&#13;
in half and freshmen filling in&#13;
both rosters. Admission is free.&#13;
The first regular season action is&#13;
scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 30, at the Physical&#13;
Education Building against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
A superb performance of grace&#13;
and beauty led Parkside women&#13;
gymnasts to victory in a meet&#13;
Friday with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside collected a total of 106&#13;
points while Whitewater finished&#13;
with 78.&#13;
Demonstrating their gymnastic&#13;
abilities, Parkside's two&#13;
advanced competitors, Jackie&#13;
Levonian and Paris Wohlust,&#13;
received the highest individual&#13;
scores in all their events.&#13;
=K= =3f=&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
g&amp;uuttf UtB O-ineAt&#13;
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2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
THE&#13;
TRUIlIf&#13;
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10% DISCOUNT T O&#13;
STUDENTS W ITH T HIS A D.&#13;
1412 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
RACINE 634-4672&#13;
PARKSIDE V ARSITY C LUB P RESENTS&#13;
BADGE&#13;
(Formaly Caravan)&#13;
- 1:00&#13;
SAT N OV. 2 3rd&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
$1°° Advance Tickets&#13;
$1&#13;
50 At Door&#13;
ID's REQUIRED&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Desperately need typists to type research&#13;
paper over Thanksgiving Holiday Weekend.&#13;
Approxgnately 25 pages lonq. Call 632 4$34&#13;
evenings.&#13;
For Sxle: Complete set of The Great Books&#13;
of the Western World. It includes a complete&#13;
set of Gateway to the great Books, in&#13;
troduction set and book case. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 634 6459 this week.&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare for&#13;
the CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course.&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414 276 7271.&#13;
LOST: one pair black gloves and grey liners&#13;
Comm. Arts boys can 100 l evel. $5 reward,&#13;
633-7814 a sk for Pat or see info desk.&#13;
FIAT 1971, 850 Spider. Excellent condition,&#13;
under 20,000 miles. Perfect for student or&#13;
second car. Best offer. Call 1 312 872 7025.&#13;
BHCHELOH S U&#13;
5601-24 AVE. K ENOSHA&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Saturday&#13;
4:00-9:00 P.M.&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY C HAMPS) Men &amp; W omen&#13;
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in Kenosha&#13;
* OPENING S OON *&#13;
The Smoke 'ouse </text>
          </elementText>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 16, November 20, 1974</text>
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          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>1974-11-20</text>
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              <text> Student publications</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="64875">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <text>English</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <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>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <name>academic policies committee</name>
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      <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
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      <name>stella gray</name>
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      <name>student affairs office</name>
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      <name>theatre</name>
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    <tag tagId="835">
      <name>wayne johnson</name>
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</item>
