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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 17</text>
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            <text>Few voters </text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Bauer Meets&#13;
and Confers&#13;
by Nathan Jones&#13;
"The large portion of my evenings are spent at&#13;
desk work, while most of my day is spent in meeting&#13;
and conferring." Otto F. Bauer characterized his&#13;
primary functions as the acting chancellor of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In fulfilling the term of the deceased Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, he has encountered a number of pressing&#13;
issues which have greatly absorbed his time.&#13;
However, he also sees as priorities, the need to&#13;
decrease the level of alienation that a period of&#13;
instability carries with it and increase the level of&#13;
communication, trust and cooperation between the&#13;
students, faculty and administrators.&#13;
Since Fall 1971, Bauer has been involved in an&#13;
administrative role in the Univeristy, a rofe which&#13;
has provided what he called "my greatest opportunity&#13;
for self-fulfillment. It has been the&#13;
definition of my life."&#13;
Bauer Faces Problems&#13;
While the process of se arching for and screening&#13;
possible candidates for chancellor continues, there&#13;
exist issues which need immediate attention, such&#13;
as the question of ju stice in one case, and expansion&#13;
of the present academic facilities in another.&#13;
Bauer appeared to be deeply attuned to the&#13;
seriousness of the complaints issued against&#13;
Parkside in regard to its alleged discriminatory&#13;
hiring and promotional practices. "We are trying&#13;
desperately to cope with these complaints and&#13;
retrieve these cases back into the University itself"&#13;
rather than have an outside institution solve these&#13;
Call for HUD&#13;
could stop&#13;
union&#13;
Election results&#13;
Few voters&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Otto Bauer acting chancellor&#13;
problems, he said.&#13;
"We have inherited social problems which we&#13;
have also helped create...we are going to respond&#13;
the best we can as an institution to correct it."&#13;
Bauer said that "ultimately, we won't be&#13;
evaluated on the various programs we have (here at&#13;
Parkside) but on whether or not we actually increase&#13;
employees."&#13;
SMI Building A Concern&#13;
Also drawing upon the energies of the acting&#13;
chancellor has been the construction of t he Modern&#13;
Industry Building which still awaits the approval of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents, as well as the state&#13;
legislature. Bauer is also addressing himself, along&#13;
with his staff, to the broadening of the undergraduate&#13;
program in the engineering technology&#13;
and the creation of a Master's degree program in&#13;
administrative and technological sciences. He&#13;
pointed out that these proposals have already been&#13;
submitted to the UW central administration.&#13;
Other on-going efforts that consume the daily&#13;
hours of Bauer and his acting vice chancellor,&#13;
continued page 4&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
A t urnout of about 300 vo ters,&#13;
less than 5.6 per cent of the&#13;
student body, voted last week&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, Nov.&#13;
20 and 21, in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
election.&#13;
Many of the students who did&#13;
note complained that there were&#13;
few, if any, people running in&#13;
their own division.&#13;
Under the new PSGA constitution,&#13;
half of the Senate shall&#13;
be elected in the fall from the&#13;
divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humanistic Studies,&#13;
E n g i n e e r i n g S c i e n c e ,&#13;
Management Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and undeclared.&#13;
However, in last week's&#13;
elections, no one ran in the&#13;
divisions of Scocial Science,&#13;
Engineering Science or Labor&#13;
Economics.&#13;
According to the new constitution,&#13;
"When vacancies&#13;
happen in the representation&#13;
from any academic division or at&#13;
large seat, the President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall fill such vacancies&#13;
with the concurrence of a simple&#13;
majority of the entire legislative&#13;
branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc."&#13;
John Kontz, president pro&#13;
tempore, said that appointments&#13;
to the Senate will be made soon&#13;
after the Thanksgiving holiday,&#13;
when the newly- elected members&#13;
are seated.&#13;
The election results of those&#13;
senatorial condidates who did run&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
Theresa Noto, running for&#13;
senator in the Humanities&#13;
division, won with 20 votes, while&#13;
William Noll received 17.&#13;
Kathy Sodomka, running for&#13;
senator in the Management&#13;
Science division, won with 36&#13;
votes, while Bill Ferko received&#13;
one write-in vote.&#13;
Joyce Jansen, running for&#13;
senator in the Science division,&#13;
won with 45 votes. She was&#13;
unopposed.&#13;
Lisa Iwon, running for senator&#13;
as an Undeclared Major, won&#13;
with 25 votes. She also was&#13;
unopposed.&#13;
A seat on the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, which is open for&#13;
election, was won by Eric Bingen&#13;
with 135 votes. Chet Anderson&#13;
placed second with 93 votes,&#13;
while Doug Redmond received&#13;
25.&#13;
continued page3&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
"I'll do anything I can to get a&#13;
full-scale HUD investigation of&#13;
the new Union building," said&#13;
Michael Hahner, a senator of t he&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Int.&#13;
The application which&#13;
Parkside submitted to the&#13;
Department of Housing and&#13;
Urban Development for a $3.5&#13;
million federal grant, will help&#13;
finance the new Student Union.&#13;
According to Hahner the&#13;
present floor plans, which are a&#13;
revised form of the old plans,&#13;
don't include a Student government&#13;
office or a health service&#13;
area. Instead a one-cot room is&#13;
provided.&#13;
Hahner said that he thinks&#13;
Parkside should live up to their&#13;
contract with HUD or take&#13;
Student Life and Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) offices out&#13;
of th e plan since most of t he area&#13;
in the Union is supposed to be&#13;
self-amortizing.&#13;
If the Union can cut selamortizing&#13;
areas and enlarge&#13;
non-self amortizing areas such as&#13;
Student Life and PAB offices,&#13;
then it can also afford to have a&#13;
larger health service and a&#13;
student government office, says&#13;
Hahner.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life, HUD is&#13;
aware of the revisions made on&#13;
the Union floor plan.&#13;
When Hahner was asked if he&#13;
was aware that HUD has seen the&#13;
revised floor plans, he said, "This&#13;
is what I've been told but then&#13;
why doesn't Niebuhr want us&#13;
(PSGA) to talk to them (HUD).&#13;
"Everytime you check on these&#13;
people (administrators) they're&#13;
I'm basing my whole&#13;
argument on the assumption that&#13;
HUD doesn't have .the plan&#13;
changes."&#13;
Niebuhr said that the Union&#13;
project is on a tight schedule and&#13;
if for any reason there is any&#13;
more delay in the process,&#13;
Parkside will lose the HUD grant&#13;
and thus the Union. V&gt;\ V&#13;
• Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 17&#13;
In response to Niebuhr's&#13;
statement Hahner said, "I've&#13;
been told there's a deadline (on&#13;
beginning construction of the&#13;
Union) but I don't know if I&#13;
believe it. I don't really know if&#13;
they'll lose funds if the deadline&#13;
isn't met. I haven't looked into it.&#13;
I feel there's fraud going on&#13;
here."&#13;
When asked if PSGA is going to&#13;
take any action on the issue&#13;
Hahner said, "If PSGA doesn't&#13;
want to do anything, then I will,&#13;
but I think they will (want to take&#13;
action)."&#13;
To the same question, John&#13;
Kontz, President Protempore of&#13;
PSGA, said, "I can't tell you our&#13;
strategy before we do it if you're&#13;
going to print it."&#13;
Hahner said that he plans on&#13;
acting through one of Wisconsin's&#13;
congressmen by sending all the&#13;
necessary documents and a&#13;
request for a full HUD investigation.&#13;
Hahner said he would probably&#13;
go to Rep. Les Aspin's office in&#13;
Racine on Monday Nov. 25 a nd&#13;
present the issue. Hahner also&#13;
said that "If it looks like it's going&#13;
to be dragged out by Aspin, I'll go&#13;
to HUD myself."&#13;
John Siefert a Kenosha attorney,&#13;
said that it is PSGA's&#13;
position that the maximum&#13;
amount of usable space in the&#13;
Union should be used to produce&#13;
moeny in order to help pay for the&#13;
building. Therefore PSGA should&#13;
have a say about what goes into&#13;
the Union that isn't selfamortizing.&#13;
PSGA doen't think Student Life&#13;
and PAB offices should be&#13;
located in the Union, said Siefert,&#13;
but an exception should be made&#13;
for PSGA, who would pay rent if&#13;
they had an office in the Union.&#13;
When asked if there had been&#13;
any contact with HUD since this&#13;
issue arose, Siefert said, "Dennis&#13;
(Milutinovich) has been in&#13;
constant contact with HUD all&#13;
along."&#13;
continued page 3&#13;
Low attendance&#13;
PAB faces loss&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
and J. D. Garoutte&#13;
In sharp contrast to last year's attendance&#13;
records, the Parkside Activities Board (PAB) is&#13;
having serious difficulty attracting students to its&#13;
programs.&#13;
According to Tony Totero, PAB's advisor, this&#13;
live entertainment.&#13;
PAB has had successful dances in the last three&#13;
years, and those profits have always helped to cover&#13;
possible losses on the more expensive concerts and&#13;
movies.&#13;
This has not been the case this semester.&#13;
Local Bands Too Expensive&#13;
When asked if PAB has considered bringing in&#13;
some of the more popular local bands to draw a&#13;
crowd, Totero said that the price of these bands is&#13;
prohibitive.&#13;
He said that the bars in the community are able to&#13;
afford these expensive bands because they often&#13;
demand higher cover charges and can also make up&#13;
what they lose at the door by selling mixed drinks at&#13;
the bar.&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Tony Totero&#13;
year's poor attendance at concerts, movies and&#13;
dances is a direct by-product of the country's inflationary&#13;
economy.&#13;
Totero said, "We've enjoyed tremendous success,&#13;
the last three years, but we're getting caught up in&#13;
the problem that nearly every other campus is&#13;
facing: inflation."&#13;
Gas Shortage Blamed&#13;
Totero also said that PAB's problem is compounded&#13;
by the fact that Parkside is a commuter&#13;
campus. He theorized that due to the sharp increase&#13;
in gasoline prices, students are no longer willing to&#13;
make a special trip to Parkside on the weekend to&#13;
attend a dance,'especially when an increasing&#13;
number of ba r's in Racine and Kenosha are offering&#13;
Barb Burke&#13;
Parkside's Student Activities Building is licensed&#13;
to sell only beer, and the revenue from that is absorbed&#13;
not by PAB but by Auxiliary Services.&#13;
Student Requests Unrealistic&#13;
Through its periodic surveys, PAB has tried to&#13;
ascertain which attractions Parkside students are&#13;
continued page 5&#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesdayf Nov. 26, 19 74&#13;
RANGER • Editorial/Opinion— Faculty&#13;
Art&#13;
On November 21 the faculty art show opened at the&#13;
Theatre Gallery. We welcome the opportunity for&#13;
students to view the works of the art faculty. To students&#13;
in the humanities, it often seems that the criticism of&#13;
student works can be answered by "well, let's see you do&#13;
better." We have the chance to see.&#13;
RANGER will not attempt a critique at this time, as&#13;
we have planned a discussion for art majors on the&#13;
show. In doing this, we offer the art faculty an opportunity&#13;
to hear their students' reactions and an opportunity&#13;
for students to utilize their education in an&#13;
honest evaluation of faculty work.&#13;
A first reaction is some slight disappointment at the&#13;
lack of adequate facilities to allow a comprehensive&#13;
showing of the individual professors. As it is, each of the&#13;
exhibitors are allowed to show only five or six examples&#13;
of their work:'We would hope that as a continuation of&#13;
this first showing, each of the art faculty would do an&#13;
individual retrospective showing so that students could&#13;
see the progression of faculty careers.&#13;
We invite the public to take this opportunity to see the&#13;
show and to share their opinion with the art faculty and&#13;
RANGER. Election&#13;
/lonjjv s&gt; »&gt;a fi Flop&#13;
Disappointing. The elections are over and they can&#13;
only be termed disappointing. A turnout of only a few&#13;
hundred students in last Wednesday's and Thursday's&#13;
voting for PSGA offices could well sound the final note&#13;
for student government. The claim of the elected&#13;
senators that they represent the student body of&#13;
Parkside will fall on deaf ears in the administration.&#13;
Although this will represent little change from past&#13;
experience, those that see student government as a&#13;
fraternal order rather than an effective force on campus&#13;
will have new ammunition with the recent vote total.&#13;
Much of the fault for an uninspiring election that&#13;
failed to draw student interest, lies with the present&#13;
members of PSGA. This is not to say that PSGA must&#13;
create controversy to gain the attention of students, but&#13;
rather that a greater effort must be made to inform&#13;
students of the present actions of PSGA and the events&#13;
occurring throughout the UW system that may affect&#13;
students.&#13;
We call on Student Government to do its homework,&#13;
present a coherent case and show unity of purpose. In&#13;
this way students will begin to realize the potential of&#13;
student government and take the time to become interested&#13;
enough to vote.&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independeni&#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 , 553-2287.&#13;
$ XOK ^&#13;
(ft -ROUEW KKE OK&#13;
jTCRGttO ft \ HE MO&#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;
v&#13;
letters to the Editor&#13;
Third World&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is now a vacancy in the&#13;
administrative offices, due to the&#13;
passing of Chancellor Wyllie. As&#13;
of November 14th, I found out&#13;
that there were letters sent out, to&#13;
help in the choosing of a chancellor,&#13;
to groups that are supposedly&#13;
representative of the&#13;
student body here at Parkside,&#13;
that is, with the exception of&#13;
"Third World" (people of color&#13;
and those who are sympathetic to&#13;
our goals). We are an&#13;
organization which was expressly&#13;
developed to add our&#13;
values to this system. The "Third&#13;
World" organization here at&#13;
Parkside is not communist, but&#13;
is, and will be progressive in any&#13;
means to achieve a level of&#13;
educational and social&#13;
awareness. I think our being&#13;
neglected is a direct slap in the&#13;
face. Now is the time we can&#13;
grow together, but only through&#13;
timely input in all facets of this&#13;
bureaucracy. That is the only&#13;
way a true cross-section of the&#13;
student body can be achieved.&#13;
Hayes D. Norman&#13;
Third World President&#13;
ssc&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To: Otto Bauer, Acting Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn. Assistant&#13;
Chancellor, for Student Services&#13;
President. Parkside Activities&#13;
board&#13;
President, Veteran's Club&#13;
President, P.S.G.A&#13;
President, Adult Student&#13;
Association&#13;
As you all know, a new chancellor&#13;
is being selected for&#13;
Parkside. A letter was sent to&#13;
various student organizations&#13;
inviting them to participate in the&#13;
selection process. The various&#13;
groups involved represent only a&#13;
small fraction of the total student&#13;
body. In order to bring about a&#13;
*, y, *, „ . . .group&#13;
decision, a meeting was&#13;
suggested by P.S.G.A.&#13;
Selection of a new chancellor is&#13;
o very important decision which&#13;
affects all students. Manv&#13;
students and organizations are&#13;
ver-y concerned and have&#13;
threatened protests if the totai&#13;
student body is not represented.&#13;
In order to avoid any type of&#13;
confrontation, it is imperative&#13;
that some type of compromise&#13;
which is fair to all be worked out.&#13;
As responsible leaders on&#13;
campus, I ma urging you to&#13;
contact P.S.G.A. immediately so&#13;
this matter can be dealt with.&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
President,&#13;
United Council of&#13;
•' §Utd£p(.«Organizations&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Tuesday, November 26: Film (Intro, to Film 210): "Seventh Seal" and&#13;
public^* 3t 7 P m in CL 105' Admission is free and open to the&#13;
Band concert, conducted by Robert Thomason at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
S?m- ' * JTheater. Admission is free and open to the public&#13;
Wednesday, Novemhpr 27; Whitewkriiar presents Debbie Do^ from&#13;
1-2 p.m. and Phil Smith from 2-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse (GR D-201).&#13;
Free and open to the public.&#13;
Club meets every Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. building Boxing-Wrestling Room. All persons are welcome.&#13;
da^me information contact RichardPomazal, 346 GR, 553-2343.&#13;
PAB presents its "Turkey Dance," with music by Beau Geste&#13;
(playing tunes by Yes, Gypsy, Alice Cooper, Doobie Bros., The Who&#13;
and others), 9 p.m. -1 a.m. in the SAB. Admission for UW-P students is&#13;
vito' ^uests $150- l^'s required. Thursday, November 28: HAPPY&#13;
TURKEY DAY! Classes resume Monday, December 2.Saturday,&#13;
November 30: OGP (Order of Guitar Players) will present a concert at&#13;
7:30p.m. at St. George Church, 4800-8th Ave., Kenosha. Reception will&#13;
follow.&#13;
First basketball game of the season, Parkside vs. Whitewater, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the P.E. building gym. Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public, $1 for students.&#13;
Dance, sponsored by the Parkside Varsity Club, featuring Badge,&#13;
from 9 p.m.-l a.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.50 at the door. UW-P&#13;
I D. and proof of age are required.Sunday, December l: Mass&#13;
celebrated at the Newman Center at 12:15 p.m. Coffee and rolls after&#13;
the liturgy. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Flute quartet recital, beginning at 4 p.m. in Greenquist 103. A dmission&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
December 3:Discussion at St. George School (lower level) at 8 p.m.&#13;
Topic: Infallibility. Speaker: Fr. Richard Schlenker. December 4:&#13;
Communal Penance Celebration at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center.&#13;
Everyone interested in a new approach to Penance is welcome.&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimHiiiiiiiiiuininiiiiiiiiii! iiiniiiHiiiiiimiMiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&#13;
Dave Bishop, Coordinator of Auxiliary Services, said that the&#13;
Library-Learning Center cafeteria will close at 2 p.m. instead of 4 p m&#13;
on Fridays only.&#13;
Elections — —&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Also voted for were&#13;
eightAllocations Committee&#13;
seats. The PSGA constitution&#13;
calls for the establishment of a&#13;
committee for reviewing&#13;
requests for program support&#13;
and budget allocations of the&#13;
allocatable portion of s egregated&#13;
fees.&#13;
Chet Anderson received 47&#13;
votes, Doug Redmond 30 and Eric&#13;
Bingen 27. There are still five&#13;
vacancies on the Allocations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
According to the new constitution,&#13;
"Vacancies on the&#13;
Allocations Committee shall be&#13;
filled by executived appointment&#13;
subject to approval by a majority&#13;
of the entire Senate."&#13;
In other election results, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board advisory&#13;
referendum was passed by&#13;
a vote of 217 yes to 66 no.&#13;
The PAB advisory referendum&#13;
asked, "Shall the Executive&#13;
Booard of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and or Student Union&#13;
Board consist of 7 members&#13;
elected from the Academic&#13;
Division, 4 members elected at&#13;
large and 1 member chosen from&#13;
each committee of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and or Student&#13;
Union Board and shall the&#13;
president of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and or Student&#13;
Union Board be elected by the&#13;
student body?"&#13;
HUDcontinued&#13;
from page 1&#13;
Milutinovich denied any&#13;
knowledge of the proposed HUD&#13;
investigation, When questioned&#13;
on a comment which he had&#13;
allegedly made concerning the&#13;
proposed investigation,&#13;
Milutinovich admitted he had&#13;
heard that Hahner was considering&#13;
requesting an investigation&#13;
of the new Union but&#13;
had not yet spoken to him on the&#13;
subject.&#13;
During a later interview&#13;
Milutinovich said that he realized&#13;
a HUD investigation would&#13;
probably stop the construction of&#13;
the Union and that he didn't plan&#13;
on initiating an investigation.&#13;
He said that he wants to meet&#13;
with Student Life and the planners&#13;
of the Union and discuss&#13;
changes in the occupancy of the&#13;
rooms, not their reconstruction.&#13;
When asked if he believed HUD&#13;
had the revised plans for the&#13;
Union, Milutinovich said, "I&#13;
assume not becuase when we&#13;
asked HUD for information on&#13;
the Union they sent us the old&#13;
floor plans."&#13;
With, regard to claims made&#13;
that HUD does in fact know of the&#13;
new plans, Milutinovich said,&#13;
"They're lying. We've got them&#13;
(administration) by the ass."&#13;
He said, "I would like to be&#13;
quoted as saying that at this point&#13;
I'm trusting that the administration&#13;
is telling the truth&#13;
(about HUD's knowledge of the&#13;
revised plans)."&#13;
Milutinovich added later, "I'm&#13;
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Third world:&#13;
A cultural experience&#13;
by Carole Wilson&#13;
"If we-and I mean the relatively conscious&#13;
whites and the relatively conscious blacks, who&#13;
must, like lovers, insist on, or create the consciousness&#13;
of ot hers-do not falter in our duty now,&#13;
we may be able, handful that we are, to end the&#13;
racial nightmare of our country and change the&#13;
history of the world."&#13;
James Baldwin...in Conversation&#13;
Black Voices&#13;
Dan Georgakas-Anthologist&#13;
The Third World Organization, through the objectives&#13;
it has set forth, is working to do this at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
One member, Nathan Jones, secretary of Third&#13;
World, says that people are at different levels of&#13;
consciousness, and we should respect each other for&#13;
this. At the same time, the organization is working&#13;
towards opening the eyes of people to the fact that&#13;
oppression is much wider than the experience of&#13;
black people in this country. Oppression is an international&#13;
reality, says Jones, that is a part of a&#13;
system dominated by the philosophy of white&#13;
supremacy, domination as physical and&#13;
j psychological control.&#13;
One of the ways they hope to instill this idea in&#13;
people is through group solidarity. This encompasses&#13;
the creation of social awareness, the&#13;
multicultural experience and methods persons of&#13;
color use to make it from day to day. These methods&#13;
include the various psychological efforts employed&#13;
to resist the impression given through comments,&#13;
innuendoes, looks and subtleties, that people of&#13;
color are inferior and helpless.&#13;
Third World also deals with changes needed in&#13;
society for all people, regardless of c olor, to reach&#13;
their potential of growth and freedom in this world.&#13;
Just recently, Cornelius Gordon, chairperson of&#13;
the Communication Committee of Third World,&#13;
made arrangements with the Parkside Bookstore to&#13;
sell the Racine Star Times, a Racine-based&#13;
minority newspaper. Third World feels that access&#13;
to the paper will help provide a cultural sharing of&#13;
experience for the students at Parkside.&#13;
Some of the other areas Third World will be&#13;
working on at Parkside. include securing positions&#13;
for more minority faculty and general employees&#13;
(This is a long-range goal and Hayes Norman,&#13;
president of Third World, pointed out that it appeared&#13;
the Affirmative Action Officer is working in&#13;
this direction.), and scheduling social activities&#13;
such as lectures or dances featuring minority&#13;
speakers and artists.&#13;
One area of importance Third World members&#13;
feel needs to be dealt with is Classroom material.&#13;
Arlene Martin, vice president of Third World, spoke&#13;
of sociology and political science courses she has&#13;
that are not dealing with multicultural people or&#13;
experiences.&#13;
Martin feels these to be vital disciplines in which&#13;
to institute social awareness, instructors should be&#13;
made aware of the fact, she said, and material of&#13;
this nature should be implemented into the course&#13;
syllabus.&#13;
Norman pointed out that the administration and&#13;
faculty have not gone out of their way to back up the&#13;
organization.&#13;
When Third World recently attempted to sponsor&#13;
a concert featuring "The Chambers Brothers," they&#13;
were thwarted by administrative red tape. Some&#13;
members said that it appeared to be an "administrative&#13;
run-around for nebulous reasons."&#13;
For that concert, Tony Totero, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) advisor, was one of the&#13;
primary sources consulted by Third World. According&#13;
to Totero, there was a time scheduling&#13;
conflict surrounding this event that presented the&#13;
biggest problem.&#13;
Totero did say that the minority students have not&#13;
been catered to to any extent and thought the&#13;
problem to be widespread in the University. He&#13;
analogized it as a microcosm of the world situation,&#13;
but doesn't know what can be done to solve the&#13;
predicament.&#13;
Arlene Martin of T hird World met with Totero,&#13;
and out of this meeting came a recommendation,&#13;
approved by the PAB Board, to co-sponsor an activity&#13;
in February during National Black Week.&#13;
Jesse Jackson is a prospective candidate.&#13;
Another incident Hayes mentioned was when&#13;
Third World presented the film "Attica." Sociology&#13;
instructors did not attend its showing, although it is&#13;
described as a fine example of social awareness.&#13;
In this case, members considered the possibility&#13;
that their communication structure might be at&#13;
fault. They are attempting to correct this by looking&#13;
for new means of posting events and contacting&#13;
people.&#13;
The question of why there were no white members&#13;
in Third Werld.was discussed and a variety of&#13;
kreasons projected. Norman and Martin spoke of one&#13;
possible reason, that being that whites may be intimidated&#13;
by having to take a backseat position, so&#13;
to speak. The American Way usually has whites in&#13;
control of white-oriented organizations, they said.&#13;
Other causes brought out were fear of being in a&#13;
predominately black and brown environment, or&#13;
maybe not knowing whether or not whites were&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Third World is just beginning to carry out its&#13;
objectives. Martin said they must begin to set up&#13;
committees to carry out the formats which have&#13;
been laid down. Ideas are forthcoming, but they&#13;
need people to follow through qn them. Anyone&#13;
sympathetic to the cause, she said, is welcome to&#13;
&gt;articipate.&#13;
taking their (administration's)&#13;
word that they're innocent (of&#13;
deception regarding HUD's&#13;
knowledge of revised plans) like I&#13;
took former President Nixon!&amp;&#13;
word that he was innocent." McDonald's&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974&#13;
Lawsuit awaits UC membership&#13;
by Michael Oiszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
recently decided not to join the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments at this time, and&#13;
possibly will not until a contractual&#13;
agreement is received&#13;
from them.&#13;
Legal action could be taken to&#13;
enforce the PSGA constitution, if&#13;
PSGA joined United Council.&#13;
United Council has become the&#13;
largest statewide advocacy&#13;
organization with 10 of th e 13 UWSystem&#13;
student governments as&#13;
members.&#13;
Michael Hahner, PSGA&#13;
senator, said that "It's not a&#13;
question of jo ining United Council&#13;
or not, it's a question of joining&#13;
with a contract.&#13;
"Currently, they want us to&#13;
voice our opinion in the affirmative&#13;
and pay membership&#13;
fees."&#13;
To join United Council by the&#13;
spring semcster; it would cost&#13;
PSGA $750. Membership fees for&#13;
an entire academic school year&#13;
total $1500.&#13;
Harvey Hedden, another PSGA&#13;
senator, also objects to joining, at&#13;
this time, with United Council&#13;
without a contract.&#13;
"If it's money that was raised&#13;
by taxpayers or students, I can't&#13;
see just throwing it away with no&#13;
guarantee of any action."&#13;
According to a summary and&#13;
estimated cost statement on&#13;
possible legal action at Parkside,&#13;
United Council states, "A&#13;
referendum was held September&#13;
24 and 25, 1974, at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside on&#13;
whether or not to accept the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. as the&#13;
legitimate student representative&#13;
on campus. The referendum&#13;
passed.&#13;
"The association then asked for&#13;
authority to allocate student&#13;
activity fees in accordance with&#13;
36.09 (5 ) (Merger Statute). The&#13;
request was denied"&#13;
A c ase on this issue could be&#13;
filed immediately in the circuit&#13;
court of Dane County and would&#13;
be handled by John Siefert, a&#13;
Kenosha attorney.&#13;
The case would cost a&#13;
maximum of $2000, while the&#13;
estimated actual cost is $1000.&#13;
This would cover only the cost of&#13;
the initial case. Appeals would&#13;
have similar cost and would be&#13;
acted uppn by the Executive&#13;
Board of United Council before&#13;
proceeding.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, said that if student&#13;
government is going to take any&#13;
legal action, they would have to&#13;
join United Council now.&#13;
Milutinovich told a Nov. 14&#13;
meeting of the PSGA Senate that&#13;
"none of the other schools have&#13;
contracts with United Council&#13;
and you're not going to get a&#13;
contract.&#13;
"The key thing is that if&#13;
kiss United Council goodbye S?&#13;
can kiss merger implement^&#13;
goodbye, or any court battle7'&#13;
Meanwhile, the UW-Milwan'u&#13;
Student Association receS&#13;
served papers on the Board 2&#13;
Regents and UW-M Chanceli!&#13;
Werner Baum in a law*,&#13;
disputing the Milwaukee chan*&#13;
cell or's interpretation of Z&#13;
continued next page e&#13;
Bauercontinued&#13;
from page l&#13;
Eugene Norwood, are the long-range academic&#13;
plans (LORAP) and the evaluation and review of&#13;
the existing academic programs.&#13;
Unaware of "Favoritism"&#13;
Asked if he had been aware of a policy of&#13;
"favoritism" in the promotion of Parkside employees&#13;
prior to his latest appointment, he said that&#13;
it was only in the final weeks before Chancellor&#13;
^V^Jhe^dif^ the many com-&#13;
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plaints. He said that the reason he was unaware of&#13;
these complaints was because of a n existing n0ijc&#13;
which says that persons named in complain/&#13;
should be the ones who respond to them. And sine&#13;
his name appeared nowhere in the text of ft6&#13;
complaint, he was left unaware of their existence6&#13;
Bauer said that such a "favoritism" policy i s not&#13;
justified and he cannot defend such an action&#13;
because it would imply that an employee is&#13;
promoted and salaried in a manner not reflective of&#13;
his or her performance.&#13;
Speaking of his great pride in the physical plant of&#13;
the school, the former professor-turnedadministrator&#13;
lauded the Parkside community for&#13;
its respect of the buildings and property. He als o&#13;
expressed happiness with the excellence achieved&#13;
in the evaluation given the school by the North&#13;
Central Accreditation Committee, and the&#13;
academic expertise of Parkside's faculty, as well as&#13;
the academic planning that is underway.&#13;
Bauer Optimistic&#13;
As an experienced administrator, however&#13;
Bauer realizes that the school has not yet reached&#13;
the level of development to provide satisfaction and&#13;
equitable service to minorities, women and&#13;
veterans. "We recognize the needs in these areas,&#13;
but need the time to generate the programs&#13;
necessary" to fulfill these needs.&#13;
Presently, he perceives a willingness on the part&#13;
of th e students, faculty, staff and administrators to&#13;
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have arisen at this time of instability.&#13;
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Tuesday, Nov. U, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
continued from preceding page&#13;
Merger Statute.&#13;
The Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association started legal action&#13;
Xt Chancellor&#13;
^ ruled '"valid a student&#13;
appointment to one of the&#13;
university committees.&#13;
Chancellor Baum, in rejecting&#13;
t}ie Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association appointments,&#13;
the'liwiir ?1 UndSr Provision of&#13;
ft™* 311(1 re8u'ations,&#13;
he has the sole authority to appoint&#13;
students to committees.&#13;
MikS? PeLo"ay' President of the&#13;
Milwaukee Student Association&#13;
ttke? n f" Merger Law takes precedence over the&#13;
re8ulations and thus&#13;
students should take the&#13;
responsibility of appointing&#13;
members to university committees.&#13;
United Council recently voted&#13;
to support the Milwaukee&#13;
lawsuit. James Hamilton,&#13;
president of United Council, also&#13;
elsewhere1 legal action&#13;
"We anticipate that there may&#13;
be additional lawsuits forthcoming&#13;
if valid interpretations&#13;
of me Merger Statute cannot be&#13;
established on other campuses&#13;
around the state."&#13;
Curry First, a Milwaukee attorney&#13;
is currently on retainer&#13;
for the Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association. He will handle the&#13;
S?e ^hen il reaches the&#13;
Milwaukee County Circuit Court&#13;
early next year&#13;
Pipe policy retonciitorn^i&#13;
interested in. According to PAB's program&#13;
director, Sue Wesley, Parkside students have no&#13;
realistic idea of how much these attractions cost.&#13;
Some of the most frequently requested attractions&#13;
and their prices are: Alice Cooper, $50,000; John&#13;
Denver, $25,000; Howard Cosell, $10,000; and Ralph&#13;
Nader, $2,500.&#13;
Totero said that even if Parkside were able to&#13;
draw enough ticket buyers from the University and&#13;
the community to cover the cost of the concert or&#13;
lecture, the facilities here simply aren't large&#13;
enough to accommodate such an enormous&#13;
audience.&#13;
PAB has also had trouble drawing audiences for&#13;
its films this semester. Again Totero cited the expense&#13;
of travel as the reason, and said that the&#13;
weekday films offered this semester have drawn a&#13;
larger crowd because students were already on&#13;
campus and didn't need to make an extra trip.&#13;
Erotic Films Profitable&#13;
Barb Burke, president of PAB, said that the New&#13;
York Erotic Film Festival, which was shown&#13;
several times on weekdays, realized a profit for&#13;
PAB in September.&#13;
Zarling drafts alternative&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee voted to consider a&#13;
different probation and drop&#13;
policy proposal besides the&#13;
original sub-committee draft,&#13;
and to revise the policy that&#13;
makes counseling a requirement&#13;
while on probation.&#13;
The proposal, made by John&#13;
Zarling, assistant professor of&#13;
engineering science, and&#13;
modified by Wayne Johnson,&#13;
chairperson of the committee,&#13;
was an attempt to "simplify" the&#13;
original draft, according to&#13;
Zarling.&#13;
The changes made include&#13;
evaluating students after every&#13;
semester instead of after every&#13;
block of 15 credits, as the original&#13;
draft states. Students must&#13;
complete 12 credits before being&#13;
dropped.&#13;
A student is placed on&#13;
academic probation if his&#13;
cumulative grade point average&#13;
(GPA) for up to 29 credits accumulated&#13;
is less than a 1.7, or if&#13;
his cumulative GPA is less than a&#13;
2.0 for 30 through 120 c redits.&#13;
Under Zarling's proposal, a&#13;
student is dropped if his&#13;
cumulative GPA for 0-29 credits&#13;
is less than 0.8; for 30-59 credits is&#13;
less than 1.6; for 60-89 credits is&#13;
less than 1.8 and for 90-120 credits&#13;
is less than 2.0.&#13;
The rest of the alternate policy&#13;
proposal is the same as the&#13;
original sub-committee draft.&#13;
Discussion followed on whether&#13;
or not the second policy would&#13;
"introduce wrinkles that were&#13;
not in the block system" according&#13;
to Eugene Norwood,&#13;
acting vice chancellor. He&#13;
suggested taking a transcript and&#13;
trying it on the system.&#13;
The committee hopes to vote on&#13;
the proposals Nov. 26 since it is&#13;
the last meeting before the&#13;
December Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. The sooner a policy is&#13;
accepted, the sooner practical&#13;
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Totero said that PAB is now exploring the&#13;
possibility of showing daytime films on weekdays so&#13;
students may view them while already on campus.&#13;
However, there is again the problem of facilities&#13;
since the theater and most large lecture halls are in&#13;
use throughout most of the day.&#13;
What will happen now that PAB isn't drawing the&#13;
revenue that had been projected in its budget?&#13;
Solutions Being Sought&#13;
A possible answer now being considered by PAB&#13;
is to cancel some dances and films and replace&#13;
them with the more successful mini-concerts.&#13;
Another possibility would be to reschedule some&#13;
films to weekdays when prospective ticket buyers&#13;
are more accessible.&#13;
Burke also said that PAB has been contacted by&#13;
its counterpart at Carthage College and the two&#13;
organizations are now considering the possibility of&#13;
co-sponsoring some dances and concerts in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Totero said that PAB was never meant to be a&#13;
profit-making organization, but is comparable to&#13;
athletics in that it offers activity and entertainment&#13;
to the students and is university funded. He added&#13;
that it (PAB) is an organization of students, not a&#13;
student organization."&#13;
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Harriers awarded letters&#13;
Eight members of the 1974&#13;
Parkside cross country team&#13;
havebeen awarded letters, coach&#13;
Vic Godfrey announced Monday.&#13;
Winning their fourth letters&#13;
were senior Lucian Rosa of&#13;
Kandy, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and&#13;
senior Chuck Dettman of&#13;
Marinette. Earning letters for the&#13;
second time were sophomores&#13;
Jim DeVasquez of Waukegan,&#13;
111., and Wayne Rhody of&#13;
Waterford. First-time letterwinners&#13;
included sophomores&#13;
Joe Bel anger of Salem (Central)&#13;
I1"!, Heiring of Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) and freshmen Gary&#13;
Pnem of Racine (Case) and Curt&#13;
Spieker of Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Rhody was named captain of&#13;
the team.&#13;
PArkside place 15th as a team&#13;
in the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
national championships Sa&#13;
day, Nov. 9, and previously&#13;
taken third in the NAIA Dist&#13;
14 meet and runner-up honor:&#13;
the U.S. Track and Fi&#13;
F e d e r a t i o n Mid-Ame r&#13;
championships.&#13;
Rosa won the district title&#13;
the fourth consecutive year&#13;
placed fifth in the nationals&#13;
earn ail-American honors for&#13;
third straight time.&#13;
While Stephens also expressed&#13;
pleasure with his team's attitude&#13;
and praised the team's unity even&#13;
in a hard-fought intrasquad&#13;
game, the coach was displeased&#13;
with some basic things.&#13;
"I wasn't pleased with our&#13;
offensive continuity~we looked a&#13;
bit ragged at timeds—but we&#13;
have concentrated on defense in&#13;
practice and we have tried to&#13;
open our game up considerably,"&#13;
Stephens said. "Our overall shot&#13;
selection was good, however, a nd&#13;
both teams shot over 50 percent.&#13;
"I was happy with the play of&#13;
the freshmen since they came&#13;
into the game cold and had not&#13;
practiced a minute with the&#13;
avrsity," Stephens added. "It's a&#13;
testimonial to (assistant coach)&#13;
Rudy Collum that the job is being&#13;
done with the freshmen&#13;
program."&#13;
Stephens lamented Parkside's&#13;
ability to come up with a steal or&#13;
force a loose ball but then be&#13;
unable to come up with the&#13;
recovery. The coach also warned&#13;
of problems if Sobanski and Cole&#13;
get into early foul trouble as they&#13;
did in the Green-White contest.&#13;
"We're also having trouble&#13;
converting from offense to&#13;
defense and we'll have to work on&#13;
that." Stephens said.&#13;
In Whitewater, Parkside will&#13;
be facing a team that has built a&#13;
winning tradition. "Even though&#13;
\yhitewater has a new coach this&#13;
year I expect that they'll continue&#13;
to do things as they have in the&#13;
past," Stephens said. "You don't&#13;
monkey around with success."&#13;
Coach Jim Miller, scouting the&#13;
Parkside intra-squad game, said&#13;
his team will run more this year&#13;
than in the past. His top players&#13;
are 6-4 twins Garry and Larry&#13;
Grimes. The two forwards have&#13;
started 77 straight games over&#13;
the past three seasons for&#13;
Whitewater and have identical&#13;
career averages of 12.6 points per&#13;
game.&#13;
Other Whitewater starters are&#13;
6-7 Gerald Coleman at center and&#13;
6-2 Ken Peyer, a former Parkside&#13;
player, and 5-8 Tyron Brown at&#13;
guards.&#13;
"Our biggest weakness is not&#13;
having played as a unit under&#13;
fire," Miller said. "We have a&#13;
number of new people and the&#13;
twins are the main people back."&#13;
""We'll be facing them cold,"&#13;
Stephens said. "They've seen us&#13;
play and know more about us&#13;
than we do about them. It should&#13;
be a great game with some fine&#13;
matchups."&#13;
Likely matchups include&#13;
Parkside's most physical player,&#13;
Sobanski, against the 6-7, 220 lb. ,&#13;
Coleman, and Parkside forwards&#13;
Cole and Hanke against the&#13;
Grimes brothers. Parkside's&#13;
fastest man, will likely be&#13;
matched with Brown, the small&#13;
but quick guard.&#13;
After the Whitewater game,&#13;
Parkside will go on the road for&#13;
the first time for a three-game&#13;
swing through Michigan. The&#13;
Ranger's will face a vastly-i&#13;
vastly-improved University of&#13;
Detroit team that's been ranked&#13;
high nationally among the major&#13;
colleges, in the Titans' opener&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 3. Parkside will&#13;
then hopscotch scross the state to&#13;
Rochester for a game against&#13;
Oakland University on Dec. 5 and&#13;
Grand another against Grand&#13;
Valley State College in Allendale&#13;
(near Grand Rapids) Dec. 7.&#13;
The Rangers will not be home&#13;
again after the Whitewater game&#13;
until Jan. 4 against St. Xavier&#13;
College.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesday, Nov. 26 , 1974 Open season&#13;
Cagers begin&#13;
Nov. 30&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FfllK M IKIP&#13;
THURSDAY, F RIDAY, S ATURDAY,&#13;
657-9791&#13;
games with a broken thumb while&#13;
Sobanski averaged 15.0 points&#13;
and 7.8 rebounds despite missing&#13;
half the season with a broken&#13;
foot.&#13;
They'll go at forward and&#13;
center, respectively, while Mike&#13;
Hanke, a 6-4 sophomore from&#13;
Milwaukee (Hamilton) will go at&#13;
the other forward spot. He sat out&#13;
last year but started as a freshman&#13;
in 1972-73 and averaged 13.7&#13;
points a game.&#13;
At guards will be 6-2 senior&#13;
captain Chuck Chambliss of&#13;
Racine (Park) and 6-4 junior&#13;
Malcolm Mahone of Kenosha&#13;
(Chicago Gordon Tech). Top&#13;
reserves are 6-7 forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) and 5-11 guard Stevie&#13;
King of Chicago (Gordon Tech).&#13;
"We found out that our&#13;
rebounding and our depth are two&#13;
of our biggest strengths,"&#13;
Stephens said after the Thursday&#13;
night game in which the&#13;
"Whites" (the above-mentioned&#13;
starters) dropped the "Greens"&#13;
89-67. "I was pleased because we&#13;
got a good look at a number of&#13;
people in a game situation for the&#13;
first time this year. Our outside&#13;
shooting was also much improved&#13;
with Hanke and, particularly,&#13;
with Sobanski."&#13;
Cole was the game's leading&#13;
scorer with 27 points while&#13;
Sobanski tallied 21 and Hanke,&#13;
Mahone and Chambliss were also&#13;
in double figures. Leading the&#13;
"Green" squad were Leartha&#13;
Scott with 14 and freshman Frank&#13;
Watkins with 13.&#13;
Scott, a 6-4 guard, along with 6-&#13;
10 Marshall Hill, will be on the&#13;
sidelines until Jan. 8 when the&#13;
p a i r g a i n s e l i g i b i l i t y a f t e r&#13;
transferring to Parkside from St.&#13;
Louis University.&#13;
A confident and talented&#13;
Parkside basketball team will&#13;
open its season Saturday night,&#13;
Nov. 30 at home against defending&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
Steve Stephens&#13;
Conference co-champion UWWhitewater.&#13;
Game time at the UW-P&#13;
Physical Education Building is&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission is $2 f or the&#13;
general public and $1 to all&#13;
students with I.D.s. Children&#13;
under 12 are admitted free.&#13;
For Parkside Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens, this is the year his&#13;
Rangers are aiming at a trip to&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#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;
the NAIA national tournament in&#13;
Kansas City. But the 27-game&#13;
schedule begins here and&#13;
Stephens' team will have to&#13;
hurdle formidable opponents&#13;
such as Whitewater within the&#13;
state if i t's to make the national&#13;
tourney trip.&#13;
Parkside was 14-15 last year&#13;
and two of those losses were&#13;
against the Warhawks, 70-56 at&#13;
Parkside and 81-69 at&#13;
Whitewater. Whitewater, 21-5&#13;
last season, lost to UW-Eau&#13;
Claire in the NAIA District 14&#13;
Championship game. Eau Claire&#13;
had defeated the Rangers 50-46 to&#13;
knock Parkside out of the tournament&#13;
in the district semifinals.&#13;
"I'll be disappointed if we don't&#13;
have a good year," Stephens says&#13;
"And frankly, I'll be disappointed&#13;
if we don't make a strong run at&#13;
the national tournament."&#13;
"As evidenced by our&#13;
GreenWhite game Thursday&#13;
night, we've got much better&#13;
depth this year although we don't&#13;
want any injuries and obviously&#13;
Gary Cole or Bill Sobanski would&#13;
be hard to replace."&#13;
Both Cole and Sobanski missed&#13;
different halves of t he season last&#13;
year with injuries.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 junior from Racine&#13;
(Park), and Sobanski, a 6-7 junior&#13;
from Oak Lawn, HI. (Chicago Mt.&#13;
Carmel), are the two big cogs in&#13;
the Parkside game plan this first&#13;
month of the season.&#13;
Cole averaged 22 points and 12&#13;
rebounds a game last year&#13;
despite missing the first seven&#13;
photo by Cliff Croxford&#13;
ICON pg. 2 Tuesday November 26&#13;
StawAifi fate&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
Grace Slick and the JEFFERSON STARSHIP (formerly JEFFERSON&#13;
AIRPLANE) landed at the Milwaukee Arena, on November&#13;
15 and again at the Chicago Auditorium, on November 17. Both performances&#13;
were first class, but there were differences.&#13;
One significant difference was the 'back-up' bands. Both TRIUMV1RAT&#13;
(Milw.) and TIDAL POWER (Chicago) are comprised of 3&#13;
musicians each, the only thing they have in common. TRIUMVIRAT,&#13;
probably Germany's best rock band, consists of a drummer, bass&#13;
guitar, &amp; moog-keyboards players. Their sound is very close to&#13;
Emerson, Lake, &amp; Palmer's music (perhaps where E L &amp; P were a&#13;
year ago). They played good complex rock, but the solos (especially&#13;
moog) just don't compare with E L &amp; P's solos. The light show was&#13;
good and not overdone. They played for 50 pleasandt minutes.&#13;
TIDAL POWER, in the Chicago performance, stunk. They were&#13;
extremely loud and eo-centered. The lead guitar, bass guitar and&#13;
drummer, if compared to the loud GRAND FUNK, make GRAND&#13;
FUNK sound great. The only possible reason for them to play was to&#13;
show how really dynamic and polished the JEFFERSON STARSHIP&#13;
is.&#13;
GRACE SLICK and the JEFFERSON STARSHIP played the same&#13;
set of songs in Milwaukee as in Chicago.&#13;
"Ride The Tiger"&#13;
".. .its like a tear in the hands of a western man&#13;
tell you about salt, carbon, and water..."&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP has a new lead guitarist and bass&#13;
guitarist. To dispel any doubts about the new lead player's ability, the&#13;
STARSHIP started out both concerts with "Ride the Tiger," in which&#13;
the lead player does a short solo. His energetic style fits in nicely with&#13;
Grace's voice.&#13;
"Devils Den"&#13;
"... every answer you think you've ever said is&#13;
just a guess and the king of clocks just locks&#13;
up-every day..."&#13;
The old black man who plays electric violin in STARSHIP is Papa&#13;
John Creach. He kinda hops, shuffles, boogies, dances, slides, bounces&#13;
across the stage and plays exrraordinary violin! He played slightly&#13;
more fantiastic in Chicago than he did in Milwaukee.&#13;
"Wooden Ships"&#13;
The light show was similar in both cities, though the one in&#13;
Milwaukee was somewhat better. It was most noticable on the next&#13;
son "Wooden Ships," which featured a good lead solo both times. It&#13;
was the only song featured that was not written by a member of&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP-AIRPLANE.&#13;
"Come Again? Tocan"&#13;
"...Miss takes are made are maid because worlds&#13;
are miss under stud. It's all in vowel you talk..."&#13;
They next did "Come Again? Tocan" from Grace Slick's single&#13;
album "Manhole." That album was advertised as "Grace Slick-the&#13;
voice that lauunched a thousand trips." David Freiberg played good&#13;
jazz-rock piano on this one.&#13;
"Hyperdrive"&#13;
"...I never thought there were corners in time&#13;
til I was told to stand in one..."&#13;
"Hyperdrive" off their new album was a good sample of their music ^&#13;
and how the seven people in STARSHIP blend their sounds in harmonious&#13;
space-rock music.&#13;
"I'm a Bum"&#13;
Papa John Creach then sang a fine blues number, his only vocal in&#13;
the set. He brought both Chicago and Milwaukee audiences to their&#13;
feet, cheering, at the conclusionof his violin solo. It was incredible&#13;
when I heard it in Milwaukee and even when I expected it in Chicago,&#13;
it still shot rushes up and down my backbone. Papa John is probably&#13;
the oldest rock idol working today.&#13;
"Better Lying Down"&#13;
"...She doesn't recognize you standing up~&#13;
she thinks you look better lying down..."&#13;
Grace can sing the blues too. In her son "Better Lying Down" she&#13;
proved that. The new bass guitar player Pete Sears proved he could&#13;
play piano, as Dave Freiberg proved he could play bass. They switched&#13;
instruments for a few songs, this being the first one. In&#13;
Milwaukee Grace said Paul Kantner "wasn't getting into it, but he&#13;
will, as soon as we get back to the Holiday Inn, bless his little ass."&#13;
"That's For Sure&#13;
"...all things that live have a right to be free..."&#13;
John Barbata delivered a dazzling drumming display in tne song&#13;
"That's For Sure." The packed house in Chicago gave a larger vocal&#13;
response which in turn resulted in a longer ( and better) drum solo.&#13;
"All Fly Away"&#13;
"...as I drift into a dream and&#13;
I feel the comet scream..."&#13;
Grace did an expressive vocal on this one, from the new STARSHIP&#13;
album "Dragonfly." Five other songs playered were from&#13;
"Dragonfly." Two from Grace's solo album, one from Papa John's,&#13;
one from "Long John Silver," one from "Volunteers," one from&#13;
"Surrealistic Pillow." The majority of the material was recent.&#13;
"Come To Life"&#13;
In this song, the new bass guitar player Pete Sears, shows his style,&#13;
and what he can do in a bass solo, and why he deserves to play with the&#13;
STARSHIP. What really struck me was that both new members of the&#13;
group, lead and bass guitars, did not remain obscure in the&#13;
background and let Grace and the old Jefferson Airplane members&#13;
carry them along, but instead stood out when they should and blended&#13;
in when needed.&#13;
.O&#13;
0&#13;
' Z&#13;
A&#13;
/ /&#13;
jk//'/&#13;
7 / !&#13;
UltllL&#13;
"Milk Train"&#13;
"...have a little taste of mine. It'll cost you&#13;
nothing..."&#13;
Grace's voice got together with Papa John's violin to put feeling intc&#13;
the song they co-authored, "Milk Train." At the Chicago performance.&#13;
John was slightly better than Grace; while at the Milwaukee performance,&#13;
Grace was slightly better than John.&#13;
"Have You Seen The Stars Tonight"&#13;
In Milwaukee, Grace asked the audience if they would like to hear&#13;
"a forty minute song complete with feedback." They did, of course&#13;
Sure enough, it lasted over forty minutes complete with extra good&#13;
bass and lead and violin solos, powerful vocals midpoint where the&#13;
only lights that remained on in the whole place were the off-on lights&#13;
on the amps, and Grace's words ending the song and the set "...Car&#13;
you believe it?--no more war."&#13;
TCiey received a standing ovation that was near pandemonium ir&#13;
Chicago. Also in Chicago, when they came back to play the encore, a&#13;
member of the audienceplaced a wrapped box on stage for Grace She&#13;
opened it, removed the red roses it contained, and sang:&#13;
"Somebody To Love"&#13;
The JEFFERSON AIRPLANE song that rocked the country in 1967&#13;
the song that made America aware of the strange goings-on in the&#13;
Haight-Asbury district of S an Francisco, the song that brought manj&#13;
beautiful people into contact with each other, the song that took u&lt;&#13;
back and there again. Or there and back again.&#13;
" Volunteers "&#13;
Then they played a second encore song (most unusual in these days&#13;
of rock ripoffs), "Have a Revolution." Grace sang and marched bact&#13;
and forth across the stage and the hearts of the audience. She couldn'i&#13;
have been better. *&#13;
In total: the concert at the Chicago Auditorium had two things goinc&#13;
for it that the Milwaukee Arena concert did not: (1) It was sold oui&#13;
Milwaukee was % full) and (2) the Auditorium has better acoustics&#13;
In Chicago, STARSHIP seemed more polished and responsive to th&lt;&#13;
louder crowd reaction. Chicago also had higher prices ($1.50 higher!&#13;
and a bad back-up band. Paul Kantner apologized for the high price?&#13;
in Chicago and had made arrangements for some $4000 worth o&#13;
posters to be given away at the end of the concert.&#13;
the rock scene in America today, I honestly believe tha:&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP is the best American rock band. In an ag(&#13;
where ERIC CLAPTON plays for 1 hour 20 minutes, DAVID BOWIE ]&#13;
hour 5 minutes, LOU REED 1 hour 35 minutes, it was nice to heai&#13;
somone good who can play energetic rock music for 2'/2 hours or&#13;
Friday, Sunday, and Monday and still apologize for the high price o&#13;
tickets. Don't you want somebody to love. JEFFERSON STARSHIP&#13;
some of us still do.&#13;
WMtrfwrrtss Tistvs&#13;
'heir SeC°nd ediUo" of ™E&#13;
students to be handed out to thA fi ry(only)writtenbythe&#13;
sasBscBs^^ss.-:&#13;
foremost a WOMAN and most of her ^ Sexton was first and&#13;
— withAmeSeJrt„„^„me^S^.rra„^™S&#13;
ICON pg. 3 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Prints by Moishe Smith,&#13;
associate professor of art at&#13;
Parkside are in four current&#13;
exhibitions in Segovai, Spain,&#13;
New York City, Madison and&#13;
Nashua, N.H.&#13;
Two of Smith's prints, "Roman&#13;
Holiday" and "Sierra Nevada,"&#13;
are included in the first international&#13;
Biennial Exhibition of&#13;
Graphic Art and Multiples&#13;
organized by the Fundacion&#13;
Enrique IV de Castilla in&#13;
Segovia, Spain.&#13;
His etching, "Green Apples," is&#13;
included in the Fortieth Anniversary&#13;
Exhibition of&#13;
Associated American Artists on&#13;
display through Nov. 27 in New&#13;
York and in the Collector's&#13;
Choise Exhibition at the Elvehjem&#13;
Art Center in Madison&#13;
through Dec. 15.&#13;
Another print, "The Oaks," is&#13;
included in the Second New&#13;
Hamps h i r e I n t e r n a t i o n a l&#13;
Graphics Annual at the Arts and&#13;
Science Center, Nashua, N.H.,&#13;
through Nov. 23.&#13;
Artist participating in the first joint show by members of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
m«Jude, from left, Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest, Rolin Jansky and David Zaig. The sculpture,&#13;
foreground, is one of Jansky s distinctive polyester impregnated fiberglass works. Paintings in the&#13;
background are by Forrest. The show will be on display through Dec. 13 in Parkside's new Com-&#13;
«" Gallery ^Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays&#13;
SI F f Tuesdays and Thursdays. The show includes paintings, prints, ceramics and&#13;
sculpture. Artists represented in addition to those pictured are John Murphy and Moishe Smith.&#13;
«ww „ u u by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
down, up ££ ^ g'aSS b°™Ce 3"d&#13;
agIWX^ai™tSl„bd"Sr:harder' a"dliktog d *"•«&#13;
She stopped when the drink spilled on the front of her shirt. The finger, held up close for scrutinv&#13;
was red and scraped. Delighted, she plunged it back in the cold liquid. "Yikes'" The alcohol bit hard&#13;
on the scraped spots^Licked quickly, then plunged back in the drirlk, licked again&#13;
Games, games. Shit. What next.&#13;
''aS/SSaSS SilUng U? jS en°Ugh t0 see" "Aha!" That was a g°°d 0"e. "Aha!" Louder.&#13;
Ahh! Haa! A blank echo made it sinister, deee-lightful.&#13;
tho ffamp kS J",?*acigaretteThe flame was nice. Up close it filled the room. She waved&#13;
n ' ^C, Tu ? m r°nt °f her eyes" 11 danced-il dickered, it spun and spun.&#13;
Whoa-ho. The flame licked her fingers, dropped burning to her lap. One-handed brush, to the&#13;
iioor, stamped out.&#13;
«wuneu fl?mt1,i,tT]ler,erS' wide: lauShin8' absorbed. Swish, swish, she made the sound for it.&#13;
Whush, whush Back, forth, until flame met fingers, dropped again, wait. One second, two, three,&#13;
then brush, off, to the floor, out. A smouldering hole left in her pants, put out with a drop from the end&#13;
of her finger.&#13;
"Flame game." A small laugh met her lips, escaped, blew out the next match. She sighed tiring of&#13;
it, lit a cigarette finally. B&#13;
The last of the liquid left the glass. "Hm, hm." Trying twice, she stood up, moved in a shuffle to the&#13;
kitchen. A chair placed itself in front of her toes, stubbed. "Shit!" Rage tore a growl from her throat&#13;
she kicked at the chair, missing.&#13;
Madder and madder, her uncovered feet aimed again, again at the offender. The room went white&#13;
her teeth bit hard together, tight screams coming out between them. A fl ying kick tipped the chair&#13;
and toes throbbing, the rage escaped.&#13;
The light came down, a large sigh settled the room. On to the cupboard, take the bottle down&#13;
another drink. A quick hard shot, then half a glass to sip. Back to the other room. Full circle.&#13;
this drumming in my brain, come out next Friday nite. worse or for less I have seen enough of it&#13;
all. I waxed all the proportions I watched the sun trying to come through, but it never could.&#13;
We will all freeze up. Love that cold Love Love that cold. cold. cold.&#13;
as being a critic I often go nutty after gazing blankly at sentences, paragraphs, pages and books. My&#13;
thought of t heir type of li fe was probably as hopeful as yours. Beg my pardon if I am wrong but the&#13;
better for you.&#13;
As for me the little old critic never reaching her real goal of writer I must check new tales of&#13;
unknown each day. How dry does one get after seeing the familiar pattern. But I must not complain&#13;
or feel sorry it is bad for ones person. Just pass me that drink. I k now all the drinks in t he world. Lots&#13;
of p eople do, but I, oh I am a specially good critic of the damn drinks all their tastes let not one nite&#13;
pass oh I would have tasted a drop of something.&#13;
It is at the roots, the roots where I must keep watered daily with the preciousness of t aste. Leave&#13;
me now. Stop by again, soon.- Magnellum&#13;
llimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIMIIIMIMIIMIIMIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII&#13;
the healing of hearts is a gift *&#13;
that children and wise ancients possess&#13;
where no kisses exist&#13;
and no curses live&#13;
there is only perfection, the clear honesty&#13;
of a childe's song&#13;
or an old woman's hands&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
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Once you were someone else, now you've gone blind,&#13;
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Sill 11&#13;
ICON pg. 4 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Sta^,n .f h? because he d»dn't want her to know&#13;
that in the shadows and the paths of the sheets&#13;
the heat had fled&#13;
he sat at the counter and rubbed his eyes and&#13;
f«s face in Je "mber reflections of the coffee cup&#13;
and told us how she hurt him,&#13;
by wanting him so much&#13;
all he wanted was a little love&#13;
oh, her breasts were incredible, beautiful&#13;
and her wet darkness could tighten and torch icewater&#13;
and her hands knew how to touch the velvet of his pride&#13;
and excite, but&#13;
she didn't ever get enough&#13;
and he couldn't give her any more&#13;
and she Wouldn't take a lover, as he asked her to&#13;
may be... someone younger,&#13;
someone new&#13;
he laid his head in his hands and cried&#13;
because she never kissed him anymore, she only reached for what is&#13;
the breakfast plates rattled and the waitress wiped her eyes&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
The faces group round,&#13;
Pale eyelids raise.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
Words faint and far,&#13;
Tears for a deed.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
They cry and they pay&#13;
Turn the knife deep. Jjfr (How does it go; like this?)&#13;
' / N -Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
a non analytic&#13;
the mother of your dreams and lost faith&#13;
unborn children&#13;
enters&#13;
eternally beautiful&#13;
her body like a mountain against life&#13;
as it desires you death&#13;
her arms are black holes in torment&#13;
freeing you from age and guilt&#13;
all here&#13;
she knows everything&#13;
knowing herself&#13;
amy 1974&#13;
~ II a„ is an end,ess&#13;
the Refusal of it all therefore free in formulating wild pasfion Dl^AMS 6 C°U'd ^ WH Y?&#13;
You still amaze me You are You I lo ve YOU the You that is free \rn r •&#13;
such freedom, sometimes I yearn for that kind of flavor BUT i hawmv SUch ima8inat'on&#13;
How exciting Is life this PLAYGROUND my °Wn Waysall&#13;
children we are I prove that child in us all....&#13;
watch me dance, scream, listen I am child&#13;
and old and ridiculous&#13;
THERE is nothing left this pen doesn't write eood anvm/»D anymore I feel lost 8ooa anymore the writer doesn't write good&#13;
Apple Blossssooommm&#13;
Blossom blosm blossom&#13;
, 1. 4. tree&#13;
, 5. crickett&#13;
3. 6. shoe . *&#13;
over defined - and under nourished - well adjusted - low visability&#13;
easy to Hold&#13;
i feel like an asshole I am embarrassed for what I have ever done&#13;
-Magnellum&#13;
Make-Be lieve&#13;
A lig ht faintly shaded,&#13;
A fe eling of death.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
To let people shape you, be what they want, h&#13;
You're hurting yourself, you're losing your Self&#13;
To wear a character like a mask&#13;
When inside you. are coming apart,&#13;
To say "I am one with you"&#13;
When there is nothing for which you can sav&#13;
"This is me,"&#13;
Then you have lost yourself.&#13;
Be what you are.&#13;
the love sonata&#13;
the kiss,&#13;
suffered at the hands of your lover&#13;
down a thousand filthy alleys and&#13;
a thousand black&#13;
a body rejected, a soul locked inside the rejector&#13;
now,&#13;
we will say good-byes with&#13;
our hellos&#13;
i will hold your hand and wave it away&#13;
then, with brown images and thoughts&#13;
of p ain and great impress *&#13;
i will guess what you've become&#13;
moving always forward and&#13;
beyond me&#13;
into the music of white white&#13;
of brittle roses&#13;
with their rotting stems still in stagnent water&#13;
A silence in the morning&#13;
As the stars disappear;&#13;
No sound is needed&#13;
For the glory of golden sun.&#13;
It's brightness fills the skies,&#13;
It's bigness fills your minds.&#13;
Burning away the foggy dew.&#13;
Reaching out to life on earth.&#13;
What could be more beautiful?&#13;
Not the stars, never.&#13;
ICON pg.5 Tuesday November 26&#13;
should true winter come:&#13;
like you&#13;
then, it would be thw rold's winter; with its&#13;
great cleansing and crystal&#13;
if it is your winter&#13;
then, i suppose some overwhelming personal&#13;
cruelty and tragedy will overtake the flight&#13;
of lovers&#13;
(as they become angels with love)&#13;
it will not breath or speak&#13;
but remain self-indulging, unconscious of all but&#13;
itself&#13;
over which it constantly fawns&#13;
with despair&#13;
pity and sometimes consolation&#13;
winter in hell ;&#13;
no fire,&#13;
just ice on the cheeks of a million demons&#13;
amy nov. 1974&#13;
When y ou are feeling very small and sad,&#13;
Remember there are others worse off than you.&#13;
Find someone who needs your help;&#13;
Take him by the hand, look in his face,&#13;
And kick the living shit out of him.&#13;
Thus do you become a true Man.&#13;
« * »vg.*"'* '*• •*"'&lt; * '* ' " &lt;&#13;
my autumn harvest heart&#13;
childe,&#13;
waiting for a childe&#13;
waiting&#13;
what is beautiful perishes&#13;
mystery to mystery&#13;
beyond the far-yields&#13;
of gold and russet&#13;
in the orb-organisms of suspicion&#13;
to you&#13;
seasonal dressful undressing&#13;
your great single eye thick in the darks&#13;
of your face&#13;
a boon to superstition&#13;
dear searich evenings&#13;
lights so numerous dreams attend&#13;
you unprivate body preludes icy death&#13;
you cool-grassed hips deny it&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
pale good morning&#13;
where the virgin verdant illusions flicker stil&#13;
pale flicker&#13;
ashen flame&#13;
unmentioned sorrow, here to dwell&#13;
deep, well deep, in your gut&#13;
more swift than the unleashed blood of great wounds&#13;
faster. \ •-&#13;
even faster than death&#13;
take away the manners of love&#13;
remove the rites of kiss, of dream&#13;
pale, unspeakable&#13;
the images unquiver and smash in shafts lifelessly&#13;
through your mind&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
so now, good morning&#13;
lest we miss the deeds you'd do today&#13;
the new torments&#13;
still waiting for him&#13;
behind the arches of your eyes&#13;
ICON pg.6 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Ante&#13;
locate*&#13;
Goners by Conrad Bishop; 8 p.m. weekends thru&#13;
Dec. 22; at the Body Politic, 2257 N. Lincoln Ave.&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
The House of Bernardo Alba by Lorca; presented by&#13;
Theater First, at 8:30 p.m. Friday for weekends&#13;
thru Dec. 8; Athenaeum Theater, 2936 N. Southport&#13;
Ave., Chicago.&#13;
The Sea by Edward Bond, an American premiere •&#13;
since last Tuesday thru Dec. 22 at 7:30 p.m •&#13;
Goodman Theater Center, 200 S. Columbus Dr.&#13;
A Li ttle Night Music with Jean Simmons, Margaret&#13;
Hamilton, George Lee Andrews; thru Jan. 4 except&#13;
Sundays; Shubert Theater, 22 W. Monroe St&#13;
Meanwhile, Back on the Couch; thru Dec. 11 except&#13;
Mondays; Shady Lane Theater, Marengo.&#13;
Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, with Chicago&#13;
Group Theater; opens Dec. 9 for Mondays only thru&#13;
Dec. 30.&#13;
The Good Doctor by Neil Simon; Chicago premiere&#13;
Dec. 19 thru Feb. 2; Forum Theater.&#13;
13 Rue de 1'amour by Feydeau, with Leslie Caron,&#13;
Louis Jourdan; opens Dec. 6 for an indefinite run;&#13;
Aldington Park Theater, Arlington Heights.&#13;
fftu&amp;Cc a*ut V&lt;utcc&#13;
Coming: The Nutcracker, the Ballet will be held at&#13;
McCormick Place beginning Dec. 18 thru Jan. 4.&#13;
For further information contact the Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
National Dance Company of Senegal, Nov. 27 and&#13;
28; Auditorium Theater.&#13;
Artemisia, 226 E. Ontario St. Paintings by Vera&#13;
Klement, closed Sundays.&#13;
Art Institute: Max Ernst closes on Sunday. The&#13;
sculpture, drawings, paintings and prints of Alberto&#13;
Giacometti, an exhibition from the Rather&#13;
Collection in Gallery 108, thru Jan. 12. Triptychs&#13;
and Diptychs from the Buckingham Collection in&#13;
Gallery 114, thru Jan. 5. Contemporary Japanese&#13;
Prints from private Chicago Collections in Gallery&#13;
113, thru Jan. 12.&#13;
Jacques Baruch Gallery, 900 N. Michigan Ave.&#13;
Contemporary Tapestries, thru Nov. 30.&#13;
Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Blackstone Ave.&#13;
"Images derived from Photographs" thru&#13;
November.&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art: Alexander Calder&#13;
Retrospective, thru Dec. 8.&#13;
Dorthy Rosenthal Gallery, 223 E. Ontario St.,&#13;
Picasso graphics and Ceramics, continuing.&#13;
Maurice Sternberg Gallery 140 E. Ontario St.,&#13;
Chagall, Agam, Calder, and Miro, thru Nov. 30.&#13;
Circle Gallery 108 Michigan Ave. Paintings and&#13;
lithographs by LeBaDang, thru November.&#13;
Parkside Theater Gallery, the work of the art&#13;
faculty. On exhibit thru Dec. 12.&#13;
Rubino Galleries, 18 E. Delaware PI. Alfred Louis&#13;
Menotti, and C. R. Petrauskas, thru Dec. 14.&#13;
Museum of Judaica, 618 S. Michigan Ave., "Magic&#13;
and Superstition in the Jewish tradition, thru Jan.&#13;
26, and "Solomon" thru Feb. 8.&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
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(Compounds A nnually to 5 .62%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
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THREE CO NVENIENT LO CATIONS:&#13;
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ACCOUNTING AND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
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Milton, thou should'st be living at this hour," the poet Wordsworth wrote in the 19th Century and&#13;
contemporary scholars concurred Tuesday as they held concluding sessions of a four-day Milton&#13;
ercentenary Conference at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside marking the 300th anniversary of&#13;
tne death of English poet and moralist John Milton in 1674. The conference drew Milton scholars from&#13;
throughout the English-speaking world including left to right, Vincent Leitch of Mercer University&#13;
ndrew McLean, coordinator of t he Parkside sessions, John T. Shawcross of City University of New&#13;
k S S„ °{ 1116 University of Oklahoma. Shawcross and Sims were among those&#13;
presenting papers on Milton and his work. Initial sessions of the conference were held at UWMilwaukee&#13;
and Marquette University which sponsored the event with UW-P. In conjunction with the&#13;
Included^rp a m r d'SplayS °f Milt0nk work' which are °Pen t0 the Public- Rpipfnfn- h 19th Century Book of Common Prayer and a 1680 edition of Milton's "Paradise&#13;
°f 17th Ce."^ Miltonic manuscripts including five&#13;
Mi."°n's ""J"- ? 1629 Bible a book of Milton's poems published in 1673, a year&#13;
before his death, will be on display in the Special Collections Area of the Library through Nov. 21&#13;
? y contemPorary Milton books will remain on display in the Circulation Area through&#13;
mid-December.&#13;
0?ewuvio&gt;4&#13;
SHORECREST GEORGETOWN&#13;
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Restaurant&#13;
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PHit 152-6667&#13;
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The&#13;
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('1.19 for a chopped s teak, salad &amp; toast!)&#13;
('1.19 for a ranch s teak, sa lad &amp; toast!)&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night&#13;
^°F a e^e steak dinner!)&#13;
( 1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49C.&#13;
an n!wf0t '"g ri8h*a*°"™ of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger.&#13;
. an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49c - to make you smile.&#13;
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AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY</text>
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