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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 20</text>
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            <text>Phase Out</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 20&#13;
M M Phase Out"&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey last&#13;
week ordered the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents to&#13;
formulate plans for financial&#13;
retrenchment, including the&#13;
"phasing out, phasing down, or&#13;
the consolidating of institutions&#13;
and programs."&#13;
The directive was conveyed by&#13;
letter to Regent President Frank&#13;
J. Pelisek, Milwaukee, on&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 9. It was the first&#13;
formal response to the proposed&#13;
1975-'77 UW billion dollar budget,&#13;
currently being considered by the&#13;
governor in the upcoming state&#13;
budget.&#13;
Lucey cited that the state is&#13;
facing a "time of rigid fiscal&#13;
constraints," and that predictions&#13;
indicate "a substantial&#13;
decline in numbers of students&#13;
seeking higher education in the&#13;
decade just ahead."&#13;
"For these reasons," said&#13;
Lucey, "I am asking that the&#13;
Board of Regents carefully weigh&#13;
the alternatives and make&#13;
specific recommendations for&#13;
phasing out, phasing down, or&#13;
consolidating existing centers,&#13;
campuses, colleges, and&#13;
programs."&#13;
The deadline for the recommendations&#13;
is April 15.&#13;
In Milwaukee Thursday afternoon,&#13;
speaking at the&#13;
Wisconsin Taxpayers Conference,&#13;
Lucey stated that his&#13;
directive was to insure that UW&#13;
administrators begin long range&#13;
planning now.&#13;
When asked by a reporter&#13;
whether he was seeking immediate&#13;
savings, Lucey&#13;
responded, "No, this will not save&#13;
one dime immediately. We will&#13;
not close any campuses in this&#13;
(75-77) budget."&#13;
He added that "Unless we get&#13;
people's feet to the fire, there will&#13;
be procrastination."&#13;
Lucey's directive also gave&#13;
warning that "the university&#13;
system will need to live within its&#13;
current year supply and expense&#13;
budget, and find room for additional&#13;
productivity savings."&#13;
The UW System, encompassing&#13;
27 campuses, is now spending&#13;
$507 million a year, and the&#13;
Regents have requested a budget&#13;
of $681 million for the first half of&#13;
the 1975-'77 biennium. The&#13;
Regent's proposals include a 30&#13;
percent salary increase for&#13;
faculty members ~ 17 percent the&#13;
first year, and 13 percent the&#13;
second and an undergraduate&#13;
tuition cut of 50 percent in the&#13;
second vear of the biennium.&#13;
According to a Wisconsin State&#13;
Journal report, Lucey recently&#13;
responded to the tuition proposal,&#13;
calling it "completely&#13;
unrealistic" and a "little pie in&#13;
the sky," but has refrained from&#13;
commenting on the faculty salary&#13;
increase proposal.&#13;
Task Force to be Formed&#13;
Board President Pelisek&#13;
responded to Lucey's call for&#13;
retrenchment at the regular&#13;
regents meeting in Madison&#13;
Friday:&#13;
"We must respond to the&#13;
governor's charge, even though&#13;
we may not believe that phasing&#13;
out or phasing down centers and&#13;
campuses is necessarily in the&#13;
best interest of the university&#13;
system and the state."&#13;
In order to fulfill the governor's&#13;
request, Pelisek called for the&#13;
creation of a special task force to&#13;
develop a plan for UW cutbacks.&#13;
Pelisek told UW System&#13;
President John Weaver that he&#13;
hoped the committee, to be&#13;
composed of between 20 and 25&#13;
faculty members, administrators&#13;
and students, would be picked&#13;
within the next week to 10 days.&#13;
He added that the task force is&#13;
to provide an interim report to&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
No fix on books&#13;
by J. D. Garoutte&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Allegations have been made to RANGER by&#13;
numerous students in recent weeks concerning the&#13;
possibility of some type of price gouging or fixing by&#13;
the campus bookstore.&#13;
One student claimed selling a text titled Anthropology&#13;
to the bookstore for $5.25 which&#13;
originally sold for $11.25. The text was then sold by&#13;
the bookstore for $8.45.&#13;
Another claimed selling a communication text&#13;
titled Discussion, Conference and Group Process,&#13;
for $4.25 and it is now selling used for $7.15.&#13;
Publishers Trade List Annual is a publication of&#13;
FINE! YOU BUT NEW YORK AND I'LL BY NEW&#13;
JERSEY, THEN WE'LL SUGGEST ALL TH E TEW5&#13;
MOVE THERE.&#13;
Money, money, money&#13;
Vets benup ifi&#13;
Parkside soccer ace Joseph Orr combined parenting with&#13;
registration for second semester classes last week. Son Christopher&#13;
Joseph, ft months, solemnly observed the proceedings as Orr signed up&#13;
for classes.&#13;
publishers retail prices on books. In comparing the&#13;
prices listed in the Annual with books being sold in&#13;
the bookstore, it appears price gouging or fixing is&#13;
not the case with new texts.&#13;
However, the possibility of this happening with&#13;
used textbooks is still questioned by some students.&#13;
According to Ted Wood, manager of the&#13;
bookstore, the allegations of price fixing are not&#13;
true. "Students are given the highest possible price&#13;
for the book, especially if it is to be used the next&#13;
semester."&#13;
According to Wood, a student could receive at&#13;
least 50 percent of t he original price. If it is not to be&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Records&#13;
open&#13;
Students at the nation's&#13;
colleges and universities now&#13;
have the right to see most of their&#13;
scholastic records and control&#13;
release of their records to others&#13;
as a result of implementation on&#13;
Jan. 1 of the Family Education&#13;
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974&#13;
(the so-called "Buckley&#13;
Amendment").&#13;
At Parkside. however, no&#13;
students have as yet asked to&#13;
inspect their records, according&#13;
to Allen B. Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for student services.&#13;
He attributed the lack of&#13;
requests, at least in part, to the&#13;
university's practice of allowing&#13;
students liberal access to Records&#13;
directly concerning them individually&#13;
and such continuing&#13;
practices as releasing transcripts&#13;
only at the request of students.&#13;
The new law covers official&#13;
university records including&#13;
continued On page 4&#13;
The new Vietnam era G.I. bill&#13;
passed last month not only increases&#13;
educational benefits&#13;
about $60 per month immediately&#13;
but also is retroactive to Sept. 1,&#13;
1974.&#13;
Kenneth (Red) Oberbruner,&#13;
Parkside counselor and coordinator&#13;
of veterans' services,&#13;
said, "Any vet who attended&#13;
Parkside last semester and has&#13;
questions about additional&#13;
payments which are due him&#13;
retroactively should contact my&#13;
office and we'll try to help."&#13;
He pointed out that veterans&#13;
with no dependents who are fulltime&#13;
students now get $270 per&#13;
month, compared to $220 under&#13;
the old rates. Those with one or&#13;
two dependents get $321 and $366,&#13;
respectively, compared to former&#13;
rates of $261 and $298.&#13;
Veterans get another $22 for each&#13;
additional dependent.&#13;
Comparable new rates for&#13;
three-quarter time students are&#13;
$203. $240, $275 and $17, and for&#13;
half-time students $135, $160, $182&#13;
and $11, respectively. That&#13;
represents increases ranging&#13;
from $35 to $51.&#13;
Oberbruner said that veterans&#13;
also may be eligible for the&#13;
Wisconsin Benefit Program,&#13;
which adds another $400 per year&#13;
in grants if married and $200 if&#13;
single.&#13;
Additional benefits under the&#13;
new bill are an extension of&#13;
eligibility time from 36 to 45&#13;
months for undergraduate work&#13;
and up to $600 in federal lowinterest&#13;
loans.&#13;
"There are many additional&#13;
benefits which we would like to&#13;
point out to vets if they'll call or&#13;
stop in and see us," Oberbruner&#13;
said. "They have certainly&#13;
earned these benefits and it's&#13;
about time the government&#13;
recognized it. Now it's up to the&#13;
vets to use them."&#13;
Normal hours for the Veterans'&#13;
Office are 8-4:30 p.m. For information,&#13;
call 553-2481.&#13;
Search and screen&#13;
Members selected&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Two students, five faculty and&#13;
one Parkside administrator,&#13;
along with one representative of&#13;
central administration have been&#13;
selected to sit on the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC) which&#13;
will be screening applications for&#13;
the position of chancellor.&#13;
The faculty representatives are&#13;
John Campbell, associate&#13;
professor of geography; Ben&#13;
Greenebaum, associate professor&#13;
of physics; Teresa Peck,&#13;
assistant professor of education;&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate&#13;
professor of English; and Larry&#13;
Shirland, assistant professor of&#13;
business management.&#13;
Campbell will be chairing the&#13;
committee.&#13;
Jan Ocker, executive director&#13;
of student services, will&#13;
represent Parkside's administration&#13;
and Adolph Wilburn,&#13;
associate vice president of&#13;
academic affairs, will represent&#13;
central administration on the&#13;
SSC.&#13;
The students which will serve&#13;
on the committee are Jane&#13;
Schliesman and Natasha Foiling.&#13;
Last month there was a dispute&#13;
between student organizations&#13;
about how student nominees for&#13;
the SSC should be selected.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
tPAB), Parkside Student Govt.&#13;
Association (PSGA), Adult&#13;
Student Association (ASA) and&#13;
Vets Club, which were the four&#13;
student organizations that were&#13;
requested by central administration&#13;
to submit&#13;
nominations for the two student&#13;
positions, went about the task in&#13;
different ways.&#13;
PAB requested nominations&#13;
from all other student&#13;
organizations at Parkside,&#13;
screened the applications&#13;
through a sub-committee, and&#13;
then voted on the nominations in&#13;
the Executive Council.&#13;
PAB nominated the following&#13;
people: Jane Schliesman, Debra&#13;
Friedell, Peter Strutynski,&#13;
Richard Kilps, Carol Merrick and&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, originally requested&#13;
that a council consisting of the&#13;
presidents of all student&#13;
organizations be formed to select&#13;
the nominees.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
action had actually taken place&#13;
with regard to the nominations,&#13;
Milutinovich answered that a few&#13;
organizations had gotten together&#13;
to select nominees. He said that&#13;
no minutes had been taken at the&#13;
meeting and that he was unable&#13;
to furnish the names of the&#13;
nominees because he had lost the&#13;
list of n ames and could not recall&#13;
them. He did mention, though,&#13;
that the two students which were&#13;
chosen to serve on the committee&#13;
were on that list.&#13;
The Vets Club chose to&#13;
continued on pa-ge 4 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan . 15 , 1 975&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
A much&#13;
needed&#13;
change&#13;
As part of merger implementation Parkside now has a&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee to disburse the 1975-76&#13;
segregated fees. The committee, composed of nine&#13;
students, is under the obligation of accepting and&#13;
reviewing requests from various organizations on&#13;
campus for operating funds. RANGER welcomes this&#13;
opportunity for students to take control of those aspects&#13;
of the university that do not deal with their academic&#13;
life. Students should have a say in course structure and&#13;
content but in such areas as Student Life, Athletics and&#13;
Health, where value judgments predominate and little&#13;
expertise in judging overall value is necessary, students&#13;
should have the final say in how their money is spent.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee now has the chance&#13;
to restructure activities on campus to reflect the desires&#13;
of students and not the desires of administrators who&#13;
most often are concerned with "community image"&#13;
rather than student need.&#13;
RANGER hopes that those students on the Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee will do their homework and take a good&#13;
hard look at ALL areas involved with segregated fees&#13;
and not fear innovation and change for the better.&#13;
Sidney Chafetz&#13;
A group of prints by Sidney Chafetz, including etchings and woodcuts&#13;
satirizing human frailities, will be on display at the Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery from Jan. 15 t hrough Feb. 3. Regular&#13;
gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and 6&#13;
to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. The gallery also is open on most&#13;
occasions when public events are scheduled in the adjoining theater.&#13;
A professor of art at Ohio State University, Chafetz takes particular&#13;
delight in twitting at the foibles of academe in his etchings and&#13;
woodcuts. Signs and banners carrying Latin inscriptions underscore&#13;
his bargs in many of the works. The artist is perhaps best known for&#13;
his woodcuts, which include a number of portrait studies.&#13;
Chafetz studied at the Rhode Island School of Design, at the&#13;
Academie Julian in Paris, and with artists Fernand Leger and S. W.&#13;
Hayter. He was awarded a Tiffany Fellowship, a Fulbright Fellowship&#13;
to Paris, and several research grants from Ohio State.&#13;
He has had one-man shows in Paris, London, New York and many&#13;
other U.S. cities. His honors include awards from L'Ecole Des Beaux&#13;
Arts, Fontainebleau and the Library of Congress. His work is in major&#13;
public and private collections in the U.S., Africa, Europe, South&#13;
America, Israel and Japan.&#13;
Chafetz was a recipient of the major purchase and cash awafd at the&#13;
First Bienalle de la Gravure sur Bois in Banska, Czechoslovakia in&#13;
1970, and he was one of six artists chosen to represent the U.S. in the&#13;
Second Triennale Internationale Delia Xilographia Contemporanea at&#13;
Capri, Italy in 1972. He lectured and visited artists and schools in the&#13;
spring of 1973 in several eastern European countries as a cooperating&#13;
fellow with the U.S. Information Agency.&#13;
Recently, three of his prints were acquired by the Dahlem-Berlin&#13;
Staatliche Museen for its permanent collection.&#13;
What a relief!&#13;
December 21, 1974&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the members of the honorable&#13;
Senate of the PSGA, Inc.:&#13;
Many things have happened&#13;
since last April 10 when I was&#13;
elected senator. I remember how&#13;
a group of students, coming from&#13;
various backgrounds, banded&#13;
together to form a coalition to try&#13;
to be representatives of the&#13;
students, i.e. student government.&#13;
They brought with them a&#13;
hope as fresh as the breath of&#13;
spring in which that hope was&#13;
spawned. They had a common&#13;
bond of belief in student's rights&#13;
and a concern for Parkside's&#13;
environment. I was very proud to&#13;
be a member of that group of&#13;
students.&#13;
Our actions resulted in the&#13;
largest voter turnout that&#13;
Parkside ever had and we won&#13;
easily. Student government&#13;
became a part of the parking lot&#13;
controversy. PSGA took a stand,&#13;
united, in opposition to the&#13;
parking lots and even went as far&#13;
as to try to change the law of the&#13;
land. We almost succeeded.&#13;
Summer arrived and our&#13;
members dwindled and a&#13;
"student rights" constitution was&#13;
written. Many people contributed&#13;
to this constitution and it was a&#13;
good one.&#13;
The fall arrived, and with it,&#13;
the student body and the&#13;
remaining people in the PSGA&#13;
armed' with the best student&#13;
government constitution ever&#13;
presented at Parkside, arrived.&#13;
Also that fall, opposition to the&#13;
PSGA arrived., It became a very&#13;
strong issue and even the&#13;
typically apathetic students at&#13;
Parkside began to show signs of&#13;
interest. The members of PSGA&#13;
had to fight like hell to get the&#13;
constitution before the student&#13;
body to vote it up or down. It did&#13;
go before the student body and&#13;
the referendum drew an unpredicted&#13;
20 percent of the&#13;
student body (unheard of before&#13;
and double the national average,&#13;
and third-highest in the history of&#13;
student governments in&#13;
Wisconsin) to give their overwhelming&#13;
approval, nearly 2 to 1.&#13;
Ever since this band of&#13;
students took office, they had&#13;
been under pressure. Pressure&#13;
from the administration,&#13;
pressure from special interest&#13;
groups, pressure from themselves.&#13;
After the constitution&#13;
passed, I had to relieve some of&#13;
the pressure which I had placed&#13;
on myself from neglecting my&#13;
studies.&#13;
As a result of the passage, the&#13;
members of student government&#13;
had increased their- power and&#13;
influence. Personalities surfaced&#13;
that may have otherwise not&#13;
surfaced without that power. I do&#13;
not say power is evil, I just say&#13;
that with power comes the&#13;
capacity to abuse power. I have&#13;
seen some abuses of that power.&#13;
It takes a sincere effort not to&#13;
abuse that power.&#13;
Eventually the fall elections&#13;
and appointments took place. The&#13;
vacant seats of the PSGA were&#13;
refilled (almost). With the new&#13;
members comes a freshness&#13;
similar to the freshness brought&#13;
about last spring. The new&#13;
members may not be aware of&#13;
what took place to get PSGA&#13;
where it is now, but they have a&#13;
responsibility to the students and&#13;
to the PSGA. That responsibility&#13;
is to represent the students at&#13;
Parkside to the best of their&#13;
ability and to use the power of&#13;
their office wisely and in the&#13;
interest of all the students, not&#13;
just themselves.&#13;
I have set some personal&#13;
standards to which I' have attempted&#13;
to live up to as a senator.&#13;
I have not always been able to&#13;
live up to these standards but can&#13;
honestly say that I have done my&#13;
best. I hope that in some way I&#13;
had contributed to the passage of&#13;
the best student government&#13;
constitution that Parkside has&#13;
ever had.&#13;
I have made obligations in&#13;
many areas and I now find that I&#13;
may not be able to meet all these&#13;
obligations. I find that I have to&#13;
set priorities. Because of my&#13;
obligation to complete my undergraduate&#13;
education by May, I&#13;
cannot live up to the standards&#13;
that I have set for myself.&#13;
Because of this, I respectfully&#13;
submit my resignation to you&#13;
tonight. I hope to serve PSGA in&#13;
some small capacity in the upcoming&#13;
semester. Best wishes.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
PAB not representative&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to the letter by Ms.&#13;
B. Burke and Ms. S. Goff of Dec.&#13;
4, the following comments are in&#13;
order. The aforementioned individuals&#13;
seem mystified that in&#13;
the referendum of Nov. 20-21,&#13;
more than 75 percent of the votes&#13;
cast called for student-elected&#13;
officials in P.A.B. The letter then&#13;
goes on to assure the students&#13;
that P.A.B. officers are&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
body.&#13;
They feebly attempt a defense&#13;
of their position by claiming that&#13;
P.A.B. is open to all students on&#13;
this campus and, as such, can be&#13;
directed by any student on&#13;
campus. What they fail to note,&#13;
however, is that only a certain&#13;
type of individual will have the&#13;
time, the capability and the&#13;
temperament which membership&#13;
in an organization such as P.A.B.&#13;
demands. Add to this the further&#13;
qualifications that are necessary&#13;
for election to the executive&#13;
council of P.A.B. (i.e., have ideas&#13;
which are very similar to a&#13;
majority of these individuals),&#13;
and any expectation of a&#13;
universally representative&#13;
student is rendered inane.&#13;
It has also been clearly evident&#13;
that student input has been&#13;
discouraged in that most&#13;
suggestions (all reviewed by the&#13;
council) are subsequently&#13;
rejected on the grounds that they&#13;
are unreasonable. As a direct&#13;
result of their intractability,&#13;
P.A.B. has been operating at a&#13;
loss. In their complete disregard&#13;
for the students' interests, they&#13;
have almost wound un in court&#13;
over an alleged anti-secrecy law&#13;
violation, and have become indignant&#13;
at even a request for&#13;
student voting of officers.&#13;
While it may be argued that all&#13;
clubs may be forced to have&#13;
student-elected officials, it must&#13;
be noted that clubs dedicated to&#13;
the interests of a minority of&#13;
students (e.g. Chess Club, Vet's&#13;
Club) receive only a small portion&#13;
of the segregated fees,&#13;
whereas organizations which&#13;
represent the student body as a&#13;
whole (e.g. P.A.B., PSGA Inc.)&#13;
receive large allocations and,&#13;
consequently, should also have&#13;
student-elected officers.&#13;
Clearly, if P.A.B. is to present&#13;
suitable entertainment, they&#13;
must not turn a deaf ear to the&#13;
students!&#13;
Edward R. Arndt&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
Apology&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My urging my friends to sign&#13;
my name to a petition for my&#13;
recall was poor judgment and&#13;
unethical but not illegal. I hereby&#13;
apologize to all parties involved&#13;
and assure them that it won't&#13;
happen again.&#13;
Michael G. Hahner&#13;
Student senator&#13;
US' The Parkside —&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly~indepehdenl&#13;
publication of the students'" of the U W Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible tor its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in 0194 LLC, U.W Parkside, Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553 2287. &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Newforifiy&#13;
Pope's concordance&#13;
Art news&#13;
A two-volume concordance to&#13;
the poems of Alexander Pope,&#13;
one of the most widely quoted&#13;
poets in English, has been cocompiled&#13;
by Emmett G. Bedford,&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Bedford is itl erary editor of the&#13;
concordance, which is published&#13;
by Gale Research Company,&#13;
Detroit. The other compiler is the&#13;
technical editor, Robert J.&#13;
Dilligan, assistant professor of&#13;
English at the University of&#13;
Southern California, who&#13;
developed special programs for&#13;
the computer-assisted reference&#13;
work.&#13;
The Pope concordance is the&#13;
first to use the technique of optical&#13;
scanning in which the lines&#13;
of poetry are "read" by a&#13;
mechanism somewhat like a&#13;
camera light meter. The&#13;
mechanism automatically encodes&#13;
the printed words on&#13;
magnetic tape in computerreadable&#13;
form.&#13;
This method, bypassing the&#13;
conventional keypunched IBM&#13;
cards, results in greater accuracy&#13;
and reduces the cost of&#13;
preparing the magnetic tape,&#13;
Bedford said.&#13;
At the next stage, editing&#13;
changes are made by keypunching&#13;
cards for the lines that&#13;
must be corrected or edited.&#13;
Subsequently, the lines of&#13;
poetry are "sorted" by computer&#13;
and arranged in concordance&#13;
form, so that when a reader looks&#13;
up a word alphabetically, he will&#13;
find listed under it all the lines of&#13;
Pope's poems containing the&#13;
word. Thus the book functions as&#13;
a dictionary of quotations.&#13;
Bedford has been invited to&#13;
present a paper detailing the&#13;
process at the Second International&#13;
Conference on&#13;
Computers and the Humanities to&#13;
be held April 3 through 6 at the&#13;
University of Southern&#13;
California.&#13;
The Pope concordance was also&#13;
the first to use the computer to&#13;
control the typesetting when the&#13;
book was prepared for&#13;
publication. This method puts the&#13;
lines of poetry on the printed&#13;
page in the same form as the&#13;
original, retaining capitals, small&#13;
letters, italics, and various accent&#13;
marks just as Pope used&#13;
them.&#13;
Previously, most computerassisted&#13;
concordances have&#13;
appeared in the format of a&#13;
standard computer printout with&#13;
the familiar "typewriter" style of&#13;
typefaces, usually all capitals.&#13;
The concordance lists 20,892&#13;
word forms, which may be&#13;
considered a measure of Pope's&#13;
vocabulary. Altogether there are&#13;
269,625 quoted lines in the concordance.&#13;
&#13;
In editing the concordance&#13;
from the standard Twickenham&#13;
edition of Pope's poetry, Bedford&#13;
established the 3,164 variant lines&#13;
Pope wrote and selected for the&#13;
concordance the 2,489 he considered&#13;
significant.&#13;
He also filled in the names of&#13;
numerous historical persons&#13;
whom Pope satirized without&#13;
identifying, often referring to&#13;
them only by initial.&#13;
The concordance provides a&#13;
word frequency table designed by&#13;
Dilligan that makes possible a&#13;
linguistic analysis of each word&#13;
Pope used.&#13;
Bedford is a specialist in&#13;
English literature of the&#13;
Restoration and 18th Century.&#13;
His doctoral dissertation, at&#13;
Southern Illinois University, was&#13;
written on Pope's use of Christian&#13;
symbolism. Bedford was a&#13;
Washington, D.C. journalist&#13;
before beginning his university&#13;
teaching career. He joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1970.&#13;
Two prints by Moishe Smith, associate professor of art have been&#13;
purchased for permanent collections. "The Glory That Was Rome"&#13;
has been added to the Western Kentucky University Collection and&#13;
The Wmo" was purchased for the Rockford (111.) College of Art&#13;
Collection.&#13;
"The Wino" was part of a recent joint show by Smith and sculptor&#13;
Julius Schmidt at the Rockford gallery.&#13;
Smith's print, "The Oaks," is included in a juried members' show at&#13;
the Philadelphia Print Club through this week and another of his&#13;
works "Liguria," is included in Bradley University's 15th National&#13;
Print Show which will open Jan. 18 in Peoria, 111.&#13;
A one-man show of paintings, silkscreen prints and plexiglas constructions&#13;
by Robert Cadez, assistant professor of art, is on displav&#13;
through Feb. 2 at the West Bend Gallery, West Bend.&#13;
Cadez has exhibited his work in 19 regional exhibits since 1969 and&#13;
eight invitational shows since 1967. H e has won awards on the local&#13;
regional and national level. He has recently had shows of his work at&#13;
the Bradley Galleries in Milwaukee, at the Parkside Gallery and at the&#13;
Rockford (111.) Art Association's Burpee Gallery. He is epr resented in&#13;
the permanent collections of Cotey College (Mo.) and the Flint (Mich )&#13;
Institute of Arts.&#13;
New Physical Program&#13;
The Department of Physical&#13;
Education will offer a spring&#13;
semester class in Prescribed&#13;
Exercise, Monday, Wednesday&#13;
and Friday, 11:30-12:20. The&#13;
class will be designed to provide&#13;
individual instruction and&#13;
guidance for those with physical&#13;
disabilities that either preclude&#13;
or inhibit their enrollment in&#13;
regular activity classes.&#13;
Examples of such conditions&#13;
would include the following:&#13;
orthopedic problems, e.g. those&#13;
resulting from sports injuries,&#13;
from disease (polio, encephalitis),&#13;
from accidents or&#13;
strains (including low back&#13;
syndrome), or from congenital&#13;
causes (cerebral palsy); visual&#13;
handicaps; and other organic&#13;
impairments, ranging from asthma&#13;
to epilepsy, diabetes and&#13;
heart conditions.&#13;
Brief News&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15: Whiteskellar Coffeehouse presents&#13;
"Clover," a jazz band, from 11:30 to 1:30. Gr. 201, free.&#13;
THURSDAY, JANUARY 16: PAB presents movie, "Jeremiah&#13;
Johnson," at 11:30 a.ifi. and 7:30 p.m. in Comm Arts Theater, $1.&#13;
I D. required.&#13;
Friday. January 17: Movie, "Blume in Love," 11:30 a.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre and 8:00 p.m. in SAB, $1.1.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY. JANUARY 18: PAB presents a "greaser" dance--4&#13;
hours of 50s' rock'n roll with "William Tell." Contests in jitterbugging,&#13;
twisting and best costume; from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Admission $1 for&#13;
those in 50s' costume, $1.50 f or all others. Parkside and state I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SUNDAY. JANUARY 19: Movie, "Blume in Love," 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
SAB. $1.&#13;
TUESDAY. JANUARY 21: Michael Johnson in concert, 8:00 p.m. in&#13;
Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets $1.50 - general public $2. Tickets&#13;
available at Information kiosk.&#13;
The Parkside Chess Club will hold a chess tournament on January 18&#13;
and 19. The tournament will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday. The top four finishers will&#13;
represent Parkside at the Association of College Unions-International&#13;
tournament to be held in LaCrosse on January 30. The Parkside&#13;
tourney will offer cash prizes for the best first time player and the best&#13;
female player. Entry fee is 50 cents and registration is at the Student&#13;
Life Office, D-194 LLC. Deadline is 4:30 p.m. Friday, January 17.&#13;
L :&#13;
Since the class is being offered&#13;
first in order to ascertain the&#13;
interest in and need for special&#13;
physical education, and also&#13;
because of the late date, the&#13;
course will be offered on a nocredit,&#13;
no-cost basis,&#13;
physician's referral may&#13;
requested, depending upon&#13;
nature and severity of an&#13;
dividual's condition; similarly,&#13;
medical advice may be sought in&#13;
order to ensure that the program&#13;
a person follows will provide&#13;
maximum possible benefits,&#13;
enjoyment and safety. Inquiries&#13;
should be directed to Bob&#13;
Grueninger, Human Performance&#13;
Laboratory, 553-2318 or&#13;
553-2519.&#13;
A&#13;
be&#13;
the&#13;
infeature&#13;
&#13;
film series&#13;
today &amp; tomorrow&#13;
JEREMIAH&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Wed., Jan. 15 &amp; Thurs., Jan 16&#13;
11:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
s1.00&#13;
COMM. ARTS T HEATRE&#13;
this weekend&#13;
BLUME IN LOVE&#13;
Fri., Jan 17 - Sun., Jan 19&#13;
8:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Next Week&#13;
CAMEL0T&#13;
Wednesdav &amp; Thursday&#13;
Jan.,22 Jan., 23&#13;
7:30&#13;
The Concerned Student Coalition is the donor of a gift of $27 to be&#13;
used for plantings on the campus.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN I Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Snt II rd ay 8:00-Noon&#13;
•M 'lie intersection 01 Highways 11 and 31&#13;
lor details.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OE THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION &#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
S&amp;UUMf i/te QineAt&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; Stolid*, fyoodi&#13;
HAPPY H OURS&#13;
FRI DAYS&#13;
£,'30 +o (o'.ZO&#13;
S , A , &amp; .&#13;
s&#13;
tcAaer»+* activities builcU&#13;
THIS FRIDAY&#13;
[Clover&#13;
3.'30 5; 30&#13;
59 °ff oil beer&#13;
Come or7 qet htiip/oy&#13;
Ojiik. us // y&#13;
\ OShIda S color woodcut of "Cherry Blossoms by the Gate is one of&#13;
" tIM D,n&#13;
f&#13;
S l,&#13;
l&#13;
is artist in th&#13;
e Ferdinand Roten Galleries collection.&#13;
ne Farkside Activities Board collection of original graphics. A&#13;
will sponsor an exhibit and sale of&#13;
approximately 1,000 original&#13;
prints from the famed Fedinand&#13;
Roten Galleries collection on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 20. The event will&#13;
be held at Middle Main Place.&#13;
Works spanning six centuries&#13;
will be featured in the show,&#13;
which will include prints by such&#13;
masters as Rouault, Hogarth,&#13;
Goya, Miro and Picasso, plus&#13;
many of today's artists. In addition.&#13;
there will be a collection of&#13;
Western and Oriental manuscript&#13;
pages, some dating to the 13th&#13;
Century. Prices start at $10 and&#13;
most of the works are under $100.&#13;
Area residents will have an&#13;
opportunity not only to view but&#13;
to leaf through an outstandin&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS F ROM UNION PARK"&#13;
"FULL LINE OF&#13;
CLASSICS AND MODERN AMERICAN" NOVELS&#13;
world-respected authority on&#13;
graphics of all types, Roten&#13;
mounts over 400 exhibits annually&#13;
for major museums&#13;
throughout the United States and&#13;
Canada. These exhibits, utilized&#13;
by museums to extend the range&#13;
of their shows, are in addition to&#13;
the 1,500 exhibits and sales&#13;
arranged by Roten each year for&#13;
universities, community&#13;
organizations and corporations.&#13;
All of the work in the forthcoming&#13;
show is displayed informally&#13;
so that visitors may see&#13;
each print at close range. The&#13;
public is invited to come and ask&#13;
questions about the work, artists&#13;
and the various graphic&#13;
techniques. Exhibit hours are&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Search and&#13;
screen&#13;
nominate two of their own&#13;
members: Bill Noll and Garv&#13;
Stewart.&#13;
According to Phyllis Lidberg&#13;
member of ASA, the association&#13;
looked for older students to serve&#13;
as nominees for the SSC though&#13;
she said that not many were&#13;
interested. The ASA nominated&#13;
the following people: John&#13;
Mcaleer, Louise Woiteshek,&#13;
Jeanette Crossland and Carol&#13;
Merrick.&#13;
Records&#13;
See page 1&#13;
academic records, Dearborn&#13;
said. Counseling and health&#13;
records are not retained as a part&#13;
of the students' permanent official&#13;
records, he said.&#13;
Dearborn said Parkside faculty&#13;
and administrative staff had&#13;
followed development of the&#13;
legislation from the initial&#13;
proposal through the current act&#13;
as amended. The law as amended&#13;
will require little change in the&#13;
university's record keeping, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Students who find what they&#13;
consider to be inaccurate information&#13;
in their records may&#13;
request correction from the office&#13;
administering the record. Cases&#13;
of disagreement over the accuracy&#13;
of records may be appealed&#13;
to the Dean of Students&#13;
Office pending development of a&#13;
formal appeals procedure.&#13;
As originally drafted, the law&#13;
raised concern among university&#13;
faculty and administrators&#13;
throughout the country over the&#13;
status of confidential letters of&#13;
recommendation for students.&#13;
Under a subsequent amendment,&#13;
letters of recommendation&#13;
written prior to Jan. 1 with the&#13;
understanding of confidentiality,&#13;
are not open to students.&#13;
Jack Elmore, director of&#13;
career planning and placement,&#13;
said the revise'd statute allows&#13;
students to waive the right to&#13;
inspect placement files if they&#13;
wish, so that letters of recommendation&#13;
may remain confidential.&#13;
A confidential letterone&#13;
recommending a student to&#13;
an employer or graduate school,&#13;
for instance-is generally conceded&#13;
to carry more weight,&#13;
Elmore said, and he expects&#13;
many students to submit the&#13;
required written waivers to seal&#13;
their placement files.&#13;
Parents also had expressed&#13;
concern over the original statute&#13;
draft, which could have made&#13;
parents' confidential financial&#13;
statements, filed by parents of&#13;
students seeking financial aid,&#13;
available to their student offspring&#13;
for examination. The&#13;
amended law retains confidentiality&#13;
of the parent&#13;
statements.&#13;
Certain classes of information,&#13;
such as a student's name, address&#13;
and telephone number, are&#13;
classified as "public information"&#13;
under the new law&#13;
and may be released to anyone&#13;
unless a student files a form&#13;
forbidding release. No other&#13;
information about a student can&#13;
be given to anyone without the&#13;
student's permission, except to&#13;
parents who listed the student as&#13;
a dependent on their income tax&#13;
forms for the previous year.&#13;
/McDonald's Breakfast/Menu&#13;
/YL Five great ways to start the day AA&#13;
* ® Served 8: 00a.m. until 11: 00a. m. daily-Noon Sundays |McDonaU&#13;
Hotcakes &amp; Sausage&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Egg McMuffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Toasted English Muffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
A man-sized sausage party&#13;
surrounded by two light, golden&#13;
hotcakes cooked to order,&#13;
served with butter and syrup&#13;
Your choice of tou r luices and&#13;
a cup ot great coffee.&#13;
^99- cheese, Canadian&#13;
bacon neatly stacked on a&#13;
toasted English Muffin Choose&#13;
a juice and coffee and you're&#13;
ready to battle traftic&#13;
Simple but elegant&#13;
Two Pastries&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Delicious Pastries Juiceand&#13;
coffee Has container and will&#13;
travel&#13;
Two twenty cent Donuts&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
4 T H E P A R K S I D E R A N G ER W e d n e s d a y , J a n . 15, 1975 &#13;
Counselors&#13;
Review applicants&#13;
Applicants are currently being&#13;
interviewed for a counseling&#13;
position in the Dean of Students&#13;
Office. The job responsibilities&#13;
include counseling students on&#13;
academic probation; working&#13;
with the Tutorial Service;&#13;
general personal, social and&#13;
educational counseling; and&#13;
dealing directly with minority&#13;
students.&#13;
Three candidates for the&#13;
position are: Eddie L. Chambers,&#13;
Helen Abisola Gallagher, and&#13;
Consuelo Contreras Reyes.&#13;
Chambers, who is presently a&#13;
counselor with the Division of&#13;
Student Educational Opportunities&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wyoming in Laramie, was on&#13;
campus last week and met with&#13;
various students, faculty and&#13;
staff in addition to the members&#13;
of the Counselor Screening&#13;
Committee. He earned his M.A.&#13;
in Sociology in 1973 from Atlanta&#13;
University. Originally from Ohio,&#13;
he has worked with Upward&#13;
Bound students, and also did&#13;
community work as a tutorcounselor&#13;
with the Big BrotherBig&#13;
Sister Program, speaks&#13;
Spanish, and is active in sports.&#13;
Gallagher will be on campus&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday of this&#13;
week (Jan. 15-16), and will be&#13;
available in the WRKR Room&#13;
(LLC D173, behind the Information&#13;
kiosk), at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday to meet with any&#13;
interested students. Her M.S. in&#13;
Counselor Education-Student&#13;
Personnel Services was from&#13;
UW-Whitewater in 1974. She is&#13;
currently an intern in educational&#13;
administration with Central&#13;
Administration in Madison&#13;
concentrating on academic affairs&#13;
and affirmative action. She&#13;
has also worked as a teachercounselor&#13;
with the Model Cities&#13;
Program in Chicago, and has&#13;
been coordinator of two Sickle&#13;
Cell Anemia Programs in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Reyes, who earned her M.A. in&#13;
College Student Personnel&#13;
Services from Bowling Green&#13;
State University in 1974, will&#13;
tentatively be at Parkside on Jan.&#13;
21-22, and would meet with interested&#13;
students at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 22 in LLC D173.&#13;
She recently worked as a&#13;
Hispanic Affairs specialist at&#13;
Bowling Green, where her&#13;
respons ibil ities included&#13;
recruitment and counseling of&#13;
minority students; supervision of&#13;
student recruiters, tutors and&#13;
peer counselors; and work with&#13;
financial aids. Last summer she&#13;
was coordinator of a Summer&#13;
Migrant Head Start Program&#13;
conducted by La Raza Unida de&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
Anyone wishing further information&#13;
about the candidates&#13;
or the counseling position may&#13;
contact Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate dean of students, in&#13;
TallentHall 115, phone (553-)2342.&#13;
The screening committee encourages&#13;
all interested persons to&#13;
take advantage of this opportunity&#13;
to meet the job applicants&#13;
and provide feedback to&#13;
committee members to assist&#13;
them with the hiring decision.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
advertisers!&#13;
Michael Johnson will appear in the Communication Arts Theatre on&#13;
January 21. Student tickets are $1.50. Tickets for the General public&#13;
are $2.00. The performance begins at 8 p.m.&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN&#13;
inc.&#13;
1170 N. 22nd, Ave.&#13;
| SEE YOU&#13;
AFTER T HE GAME!&#13;
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THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
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for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru THURS&gt; LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine OF BEER ONLY $1.25 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y, Jan. 1 5, 1 9 75&#13;
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CUSTOM-MADE BAR LAMPS to accent any&#13;
decor. Lamps made from Pabst, Coors, Bud,&#13;
or any other can. For more information&#13;
contact Jon Olson, Racine 634-0414.&#13;
B-25 AMPEG AMPLIFIER for sale, slightly&#13;
used. Good condition, BEST OFFER over&#13;
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6220 -67th ST. PH. 652-819(1 KENOSHA&#13;
Classified&#13;
Cagers cream&#13;
cougars&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
of RANGER Ranger&#13;
While the Southern IllinoisEdwardsville&#13;
Cougars were&#13;
concentrating on boxing-in Gary&#13;
Cole Saturday night, Leartha&#13;
Scott dumped in 31 points to lead&#13;
the Rangers to their eighth&#13;
straight victory by a score of 81-&#13;
67. Scott became eligible to play&#13;
January 8, after transferring&#13;
from St. Louis University.&#13;
Scott was backed up by Gary&#13;
Cole who added 18 points, and Bill&#13;
Sobanski with 16. High scorer for&#13;
the Cougars was Keith McFarland&#13;
with 23 points.&#13;
The contest put an end to the&#13;
Edwardsville seven-game&#13;
winning streak and raised the&#13;
Rangers' record to 9-3.&#13;
Though the Rangers started out&#13;
slow, they were leading at the&#13;
half 41-36. Edwardsville tied the&#13;
score at 43 with six minutes left in&#13;
the game. The game was very&#13;
close for two minutes as the lead&#13;
bounced back and forth until the&#13;
Rangers put on a great final&#13;
effort to achieve a 14-point&#13;
spread.&#13;
Parkside out-rebounded the&#13;
Cougars 40-31. Cole had 15 of the&#13;
rebounds and Sobanski 13. The&#13;
Rangers hit 50 percent of shots&#13;
from the field compared to 44&#13;
percent for the Cougars.&#13;
The Rangers' next home game&#13;
is Thursday night at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
against Loras College. Saturday&#13;
night the Rangers will host St.&#13;
Norbert College at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy Ed Building. &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
ii Phase out VI&#13;
the regents at their February&#13;
meeting and then give a final&#13;
report to the board at a special&#13;
meeting before the April 15&#13;
deadline.&#13;
Regent Arthur DeBardeleben,&#13;
park Falls, objected to the April&#13;
!5 deadline, citing that the&#13;
governor's goal "could not but&#13;
result in a hasty, ill conceived&#13;
Nojix&#13;
conclusion."&#13;
asked Sj&#13;
eSP°&#13;
nded 8131 he had&#13;
asked the governor for more time&#13;
that Toe er 016 alterna«ves, but UiatLucey masted on the April 15&#13;
date Pehsek added h&#13;
hat the April 15 report is m&#13;
mtended as a dt ^ ^&#13;
r a t h e r g u 1 d el i n e -1 y pe&#13;
statements." y p&#13;
used again, a student would receive wholesale price&#13;
for the book, which is considerably less than 50&#13;
percent.&#13;
The contract between Follett Corporation, owners&#13;
of t he bookstore, and the university, prohibits the&#13;
sale of b ooks on campus by anyone other than the&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
When asked about competition on campus, Wood&#13;
stated, "I personally would like to see some form of&#13;
competition because it would keep me on my toes."&#13;
Asked if it would lower book prices, Wood stated,&#13;
"What it would really do is not allow me to be forced&#13;
to reorder books that were short in numbers for any&#13;
particular class. I could refer them to the competition.&#13;
Book prices would be about the same."&#13;
At UW-Milwaukee there is a co-op bookstore run&#13;
Mike Zannin has announced his&#13;
candidacy for State Senator from&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by the student government. Students set their own&#13;
prices. A charge of 10 cents per book is made when&#13;
the book is brought in. An additional charge of 10&#13;
cents is made for books selling under a dollar and 35&#13;
cents for books selling over a dollar to cover employment&#13;
cost.&#13;
According to Jim Wexler, student coordinator of&#13;
the bookstore, "we have been very successful the&#13;
past couple of years, more so in the spring than the&#13;
fall."&#13;
The store gives students the opportunity to&#13;
receive more for their books than offered by the&#13;
local bookstore; it allows students to purchase&#13;
books at a lower price than at the local bookstore,&#13;
Wexler explained.&#13;
IiIm ,IHl&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57th street&#13;
6&lt;58~help&#13;
Rangers rampage&#13;
The last Ranger basketball&#13;
game before the semester break&#13;
was a victory over UW-Oshkosh&#13;
which brought Parkside's season&#13;
record to 5-3.&#13;
That game marked four consecutive&#13;
wins by the Rangers.&#13;
During the semester break,&#13;
Parkside won three more times&#13;
to achieve a record of 8-3 and&#13;
seven straight wins.&#13;
The first of these was in the&#13;
Spring Arbor Holiday Tournament&#13;
in Michigan, which ran&#13;
from December 26-28. Parkside&#13;
defeated Ferris State 67-63, led by&#13;
Gary Cole with an amazing 31 of&#13;
the 67 points scored. High scorer&#13;
for Ferris was Greg McGown&#13;
with 16 poi nts.&#13;
Cole also led the Rangers in the&#13;
January 4 home game against St.&#13;
Xavier College of Chicago with 34&#13;
points. Head coach Steve&#13;
Stephens remarked, "Gary Cole&#13;
has been playing excellent ball&#13;
every game. It was just a normal&#13;
game for him."&#13;
The Rangers downed Xavier&#13;
100-76, with strong support by&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, 24 points; Bill&#13;
Sobanski, 18; and Malcolm&#13;
Mahone, 16.&#13;
Leading scorers for Xavier&#13;
were Pat Devine and A1&#13;
Nemantis, with 21 and 20 points&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The latest game was played on&#13;
January 6 against Northern&#13;
Michigan here at Parkside.&#13;
Though the Rangers were down&#13;
at the half 37-27, they came&#13;
through with a 52-point blitz in the&#13;
second half to defeat Northern&#13;
Michigan 79-73.&#13;
This blitz was led by Mike&#13;
Hanke who scored 18 of his 22&#13;
points in the second half.&#13;
The overall high scorer was&#13;
again Gary Cole who dumped 27&#13;
points, raising his season's total&#13;
to 311.&#13;
Northern Michigan held the&#13;
lead for the first 11 minutes of the&#13;
second half until the Hanke-Cole&#13;
rush took it away.&#13;
Bill Sobanski dumped in 13 o f&#13;
the remaining 30 p oints.&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
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</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 20, January 15, 1975</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1975-01-15</text>
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              <text> Student publications</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <name>Format</name>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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