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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 24</text>
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            <text>Task force may miss deadline</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Hard to define 'Student*&#13;
Task force may miss deadline&#13;
by Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Task Force for Implementation&#13;
of 36.09(5) Wis.&#13;
Stats, is moving toward&#13;
presenting their recommendations&#13;
to the Board of&#13;
Regents, but, according to Allen&#13;
Dearborn, assistant chancellor&#13;
for Student Services, the outlook&#13;
for doing so before the February&#13;
15 deadline seems unlikely.&#13;
The task force will be making&#13;
recommendations concerning the&#13;
following: the definition of&#13;
"students" in the Merger Implementation&#13;
Act, student involvement&#13;
in the allocation of&#13;
student fees, and the role of&#13;
students in faculty governance.&#13;
Dearborn said, "It may be&#13;
impossible to meet the deadline&#13;
because of the amount of work&#13;
left to be done on that document."&#13;
According to Dearborn, the&#13;
major problems center around&#13;
the final wording of the recommendations.&#13;
Final wording of th e&#13;
document must be in accordance&#13;
with the wording of the Merger&#13;
Bill and with the Amended&#13;
Constitution of P.S.G.A. Inc.,&#13;
which has not yet been ratified by&#13;
the student body.&#13;
Den nis M i lut ino vic h,&#13;
President of Parkside Student&#13;
Government, and member of t he&#13;
task force, expressed the hope&#13;
that a referendum to amend the&#13;
constitution could be placed on a&#13;
ballot at the soonest possible&#13;
date.&#13;
According to Dearborn, no&#13;
votes have been taken on the&#13;
Task Force recommendations,&#13;
and none will until current&#13;
problems are resolved. He cited&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
Wednesday, February 12, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 24&#13;
the vague wording of th e Merger&#13;
Bill as one of the main reasons&#13;
why the question of student&#13;
governance is still unresolved.&#13;
The Merger Bill states that,&#13;
"The students... shall be active in&#13;
the immediate governance of and&#13;
policy developments for such&#13;
institutions."&#13;
The bill allows for students to&#13;
take an active role in the tenure&#13;
procedure, said Dearborn, but it&#13;
does not specify how they shall be&#13;
allowed to do so. He said it cannot&#13;
necessarily be interpreted to&#13;
mean that students will be able to&#13;
vote on tenure committees or&#13;
have any power other than&#13;
serving as an advisory body.&#13;
Dearborn also mentioned that&#13;
the Task Force will be having&#13;
another open hearing once their&#13;
recommendations are finalized.&#13;
This open hearing will take place&#13;
some time after the Feb. 15&#13;
deadline.&#13;
In the meantime, an interim&#13;
progress report detailing the&#13;
work of the Task Force will be&#13;
forwarded to the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Events to take place&#13;
Third world calls&#13;
black history week&#13;
White stickers sold by&#13;
'Misrepresentation'&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Business Affairs,&#13;
admitted that the parking permit&#13;
sales policy during registration&#13;
did misrepresent the parking&#13;
situation to the students.&#13;
The "misrepresentation"&#13;
resulted in the change of&#13;
restricted (white permit) areas&#13;
in the Comm Arts lot and the&#13;
issuance of tickets to students&#13;
parked in the newly restricted&#13;
areas with red permits.&#13;
Ron Singer, chairman of the&#13;
Parking and Transportation subcommittee,&#13;
said that his committee&#13;
had adopted the policy of&#13;
granting appeals to those&#13;
students fined for parking in&#13;
restricted areas in the Comm&#13;
Arts lot with red permits.&#13;
However these appeals will be&#13;
granted only to those students&#13;
fined during the week of J anuary&#13;
20-24, who appealed their tickets'&#13;
within five days of the issuance&#13;
date.&#13;
The original proposal adopted&#13;
by the Campus Planning Committee&#13;
upon recommendations&#13;
from the Parking and Transportation&#13;
Comm. at their&#13;
meeting on December 12, 1974,&#13;
stated that both the Comm Arts&#13;
and Union lots would be divided&#13;
into white and red permit areas&#13;
(approximately half and half),&#13;
but that the Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Business Affairs would have&#13;
reasonable flexibility to establish&#13;
appropriate boundaries for these&#13;
areas according to the number of&#13;
permits sold. At that time there&#13;
was no set limit on the number of&#13;
white permits that would be sold.&#13;
For the first three days of&#13;
registration week, maps showed&#13;
that half of the Comm Arts lot&#13;
would be for white permits, half&#13;
for red. By Wednesday, however,&#13;
Zuehlke reported that the Comm&#13;
CIA spys on&#13;
women leaders&#13;
(CPS) - In a story certain to send more shock waves through the&#13;
already shell-shocked Central Intelligence Agency, a group of intelligence-watchers&#13;
in Washington has revealed documentation to&#13;
prove that the CIA has secretly funded an overseas project of the&#13;
league of Women Voters in order to spy on emerging women leaders&#13;
in Third World countries.&#13;
The CIA has exerted its influence through the Overseas Education&#13;
Fund (OEF) of the League, said the Organizing Committee for a Fifth&#13;
Estate in a news conference held January 24 in the nation's capital.&#13;
The Fifth Estate is an independent organization formed several&#13;
years ago to keep track of the encroachment of the government intelligence&#13;
community into the lives of private citizens.&#13;
The first hint of CIA involvement came through an OEF employee,&#13;
Ann Roberts, who became concerned when she noticed the group was&#13;
receiving funding through the Asia Foundation, a conduit the CIA&#13;
admitted it used in funding the National Student Association from 1951&#13;
to 1967.&#13;
Roberts also noticed that OEG reports contained large amounts of&#13;
biographical data on women's leaders in South America and Asia. She&#13;
investigated further and found that 70 percent of the group's budget&#13;
came through the State Department and the Agency for International&#13;
Arts lot had been sold out with&#13;
white permits. The boundaries&#13;
were changed making Comm&#13;
Arts a white permit lot only.&#13;
Sales of white permits were&#13;
restricted from that date. According&#13;
to Duane Nuendorf, a&#13;
member of the Parking and&#13;
Transportation Comm., about&#13;
1030 white permits were sold,&#13;
with 640 going to students, while&#13;
2406 re d permits were sold.&#13;
During the first week of cl asses&#13;
those students with red permits&#13;
who parked in the Comm Arts lot,&#13;
under the assumption that it was&#13;
half red and half white received&#13;
warning tickets, with the reason&#13;
for the violation noted. Zuehlke&#13;
said that temporary signs indicating&#13;
a white permit only area&#13;
were up but they were not as&#13;
visible as those signs that are&#13;
now displayed in the lots. He said&#13;
that parking during the first week&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Third World Organization&#13;
has designated February 11-14 as&#13;
"Black History. Week."&#13;
A series of events with&#13;
corresponding themes have been&#13;
scheduled to increase social&#13;
awareness and present many of&#13;
the formalities that make the&#13;
black culture as unique as it is.&#13;
The schedule began yesterday&#13;
with Julian Thomas and Thomas&#13;
White, both of the NAACP,&#13;
speaking on "Get Up To Get&#13;
Down" and "Ujamaa the Black&#13;
Love is the Black Wealth,"&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Following Thomas and White,&#13;
The Bronze Movement, a dance&#13;
group, performed.&#13;
Today's theme is "Free Your&#13;
Mind For The Movement."&#13;
Aluerman Leroy Wooley of&#13;
Racine will speak on the&#13;
possibilities for advancement in&#13;
city government for black people&#13;
from 7-9:00 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. No&#13;
admission will be charged&#13;
T h u r s d a y 's t h e m e,&#13;
"Rememberance of Things&#13;
Afrikan" will present Margaret&#13;
Aboagye speaking on African&#13;
dentistry, and a fashion show in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
from 7-9:00 p.m. No admission&#13;
will be charged.&#13;
Friday will feature a "Soul&#13;
Dinner" in the Buffet Room&#13;
(D187 LLC) from 11-1 p.m.&#13;
The menu will include chicken,&#13;
turkey, BBQ ribs, sweet potatoes,&#13;
potato salad, green string beans,&#13;
crowder peas, cornbread and lots&#13;
more.&#13;
ICON&#13;
inside&#13;
&gt; '*:&#13;
: 1 - Au.'U-r'i&#13;
PRESIDENT'S&#13;
COMMISSION TO&#13;
INVESTIGATE&#13;
THE CIA&#13;
,f!&#13;
-i® ' I&#13;
''! VP- W; ®&#13;
m&#13;
rtHNKOW CHECKS&#13;
continued on paqe 7&#13;
'LET'S GO OVER THE PART ABOUT THEM TRIPPING UP ALL THEM NO G OOD,&#13;
PINKO, H IPPIE RADICALS!I' &#13;
2THE PA R K S I D E R A N G ER Wednesday, February 12, 1975&#13;
————&#13;
Letters to the editor RAIMGER&#13;
— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
UWP's dump&#13;
LLC cafeteria&#13;
Canteen Corps, contract comes up for reapraisal in a&#13;
few months. In all probability the same old monopolistic&#13;
situation that has existed in the past will be continued.&#13;
With one supplier handling both food service and vending&#13;
service its an easy step to see that the quality of the&#13;
food in either service is kept to a profitably low level. If&#13;
the case should ever arise where different companies,&#13;
one specializing in vending, the other specializing in&#13;
food service, should ever come to Parkside we might see&#13;
a situation in which the competition between the two&#13;
would raise the quality of food on campus.&#13;
RANGER is sure that with the present filthy conditions&#13;
in the LLC eating area and the lack of staff to&#13;
service the students Canteen Corps, is experiencing its&#13;
most profitable year at Parkside. All well and good for&#13;
the various managers whose bonus depends on exX&#13;
GUESS U)E*ftE&#13;
Goin6 To srr ow&#13;
"THE Ftooft Afci&#13;
V —4&#13;
CAFtTlftlfi&#13;
I0», OH 00 S.«€&#13;
Dl - 6EJceeding&#13;
fixed profit levels but every student is aware of&#13;
what this does to our campus. Visit the LLC cafeteria on&#13;
Saturday morning and you can get an exact count on&#13;
everything that was eaten there on Friday from the&#13;
rubbish left on the floor and tables.&#13;
Filth like this has a way of changing peoples attitudes&#13;
about the place they work in and the people they serve.&#13;
Canteens attitude seems to be that the students can eat&#13;
in filthy surroundings perhaps the next step is filthy&#13;
food.&#13;
It's time for more competition for the students' food&#13;
dollar. RANGER calls for more companies to be&#13;
represented on campus so that capitalist competition&#13;
can do justice to the students.&#13;
Murder a private decision?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Because of the 1973 U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court decision which&#13;
legalized abortions, women are&#13;
now free to choose whether to&#13;
bear a child or obtain an abortion.&#13;
&#13;
But, since that decision, there&#13;
has been much activity on the&#13;
part of anti-abortionists to limit&#13;
or even reverse the Supreme&#13;
Court's ruling. Right now, a flood&#13;
of legislation, including some&#13;
Constitutional amendments,&#13;
threatens to undermine the&#13;
Supreme Court's decision. In&#13;
fact, some of this legislation has&#13;
already been passed, at both the&#13;
state and federal levels. Terminating&#13;
a pregnancy should&#13;
remain a matter of personal&#13;
liberty and privacy, to be decided&#13;
by individuals, not the state.&#13;
A Wisconsin-based group,&#13;
COALITION FOR RIGHT TO&#13;
CHOICE, has organized to&#13;
counteract abortion foes. In&#13;
Kenosha, a branch of the&#13;
coalition has recently been&#13;
started. They would like to start a&#13;
24-hour telephone answering&#13;
service for women who have&#13;
questions or problems concerning&#13;
pregnancy, birth control,&#13;
or related areas. Abortion&#13;
Neophyte returns&#13;
To our most beloved Editor^and&#13;
his erectifing staff and to all you&#13;
gossip spewing mucous minded&#13;
students (Senators and NonSenators&#13;
included):&#13;
Greetings: I am replying to M.&#13;
Hahner, Pres. of AWOL, and J.&#13;
Kontz, Pres Pro-tem of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc, (God knows what the hell&#13;
for?) letters as they appeared in&#13;
the RANGER issue of 2-5-75.&#13;
Regarding your authorized and&#13;
paid for by AWOL letter, let me&#13;
just say this: opinions are like&#13;
assholes and you've already used&#13;
up your allotment. As for PAB, at&#13;
least they are giving the students&#13;
something for their money.&#13;
Unfortunately, the same can't be&#13;
said for the two organizations you&#13;
happen to belong to. As for "let's&#13;
make a deal," isn't that what you&#13;
were playing with the administration&#13;
when you were&#13;
trying to stop the building of the&#13;
new Student Union?&#13;
As for the RANGER'S article&#13;
on P.S.G.A Inc, you hit it right on&#13;
the head when you said the&#13;
problems stemmed from personality&#13;
problems rather then&#13;
philosophical problems. I must&#13;
commend your reporter for&#13;
noticing that. With the exception&#13;
of a few, there are no&#13;
philosophies in P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
As for myself, I am hereby&#13;
calling for the immediate&#13;
resignation of all student&#13;
government members except for&#13;
the treasurer (who doesn't do&#13;
anything anyway) for the&#13;
following reasons:&#13;
1. They are taking things to&#13;
seriously and because of this&#13;
attitude are creating problems.&#13;
2. They are then taking these so&#13;
called problems and trying to&#13;
make us, the student body, take&#13;
these problems seriously.&#13;
3. they are trying to get us to&#13;
them seriously.&#13;
4. They are forcing us to stretch&#13;
our imaginations to the hilt in&#13;
keeping up with their psudeoeverything-matters&#13;
type of attitude.&#13;
&#13;
5. They refuse to accept the fact&#13;
that a vast majority of us don't&#13;
care.&#13;
6. They refuse to acknowledge&#13;
the fact that most of us firmly&#13;
believe that one problem is one&#13;
too m any. The P.S.G.A. Inc. at&#13;
this point in time "is one too&#13;
manv."&#13;
7. Because of their refusal to&#13;
Segregated fees vote&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the P.S.G.A.Inc. Senate:&#13;
Due to the controversy that has&#13;
arisen since the segregated Fee&#13;
Committee has finished its job, I&#13;
am sending to the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
Senate the following Executive&#13;
motion:&#13;
The budget shall be itemized and a Yes&#13;
and No block shall appear after each&#13;
itemized budget. This will be put before the&#13;
student body along with the proposed con&#13;
stitutional amendments.&#13;
I will be seeing actingchancellor&#13;
Bauer Feb. 10 or 11 to&#13;
see if this can be accomplished&#13;
within the time frame established&#13;
for him by the Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside closing?-&#13;
counseling is another project&#13;
they are interested in.&#13;
The purpose of the Coalition is&#13;
to insure that each individual has&#13;
the right to choice concerning&#13;
abortion, contraception and&#13;
sterilization, that church and&#13;
state remain separate, as stated&#13;
in the United States Constitution&#13;
and that no church, institution or&#13;
government, at any level, interferes&#13;
with the individual's&#13;
right to choice.&#13;
If anyone is interested in&#13;
getting involved in this&#13;
organization, please contact&#13;
Janet Scott at 652-4686. Thank&#13;
you.&#13;
accept points 5 and 6, they are&#13;
resorting to Police Gazzete type&#13;
of sensationalism, i.e. ass&#13;
beatings (with or without rubber&#13;
hoses) physical attack (wgs it in&#13;
a fit of love or rage?) and finally&#13;
NAME CALLING (booger or ?-!-&#13;
+ ;—) in order for us not only to&#13;
take notice, but take them&#13;
seriously.&#13;
The treasurer should be the&#13;
only person to be allowed to have&#13;
anything to do with the {&#13;
P.S.G.A.Inc. It is she and she&#13;
alone that has carried out the&#13;
wishes and dreams of the vast&#13;
majority of us. Who cares? We&#13;
don't and she doesn't either. Keep&#13;
up the good work Treasurer and&#13;
the rest of you crawl back into the&#13;
.woodwork and don't come back&#13;
until the next century mark.&#13;
Authorized and layed for by&#13;
NYMPHS FOR NEOPHYTE&#13;
Normal Nice Neophyte,&#13;
President&#13;
High Priest of the Swami Swams&#13;
Ltc.&#13;
Reigning Kenosha Snow Queen&#13;
and&#13;
President of Society for the&#13;
prevention of cruelty to Cherubs.&#13;
P.S. Keep our oceans wet and&#13;
wild and our dreams to.&#13;
I must urge that the senate act&#13;
promptly on this matter. I&#13;
estimate that this can and must&#13;
be put before the student body&#13;
with in three weeks.&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.A. Inc.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
A task force has been set up by&#13;
the Universities central administration&#13;
in Madison to&#13;
recommend ways to save money.&#13;
The task force is to report to U. W.&#13;
president John C. Weaver.&#13;
A study committee of this task&#13;
force on economy is conducting&#13;
simulated studies on closing&#13;
parts of campuses. At Parkside&#13;
the study involves the simulated&#13;
closing of junior and senior work&#13;
in the college of science and&#13;
society, leaving only freshman&#13;
and sophomore programs in the&#13;
humanities, social science,&#13;
science and education.&#13;
While this is supposedly only a&#13;
simulated study, even the&#13;
suggestion of such a curtailment&#13;
of programs is ominous. Many&#13;
faculty members have been or&#13;
soon will be released in these&#13;
areas. If these proposals are ever&#13;
implemented Parkside would&#13;
grant only business related&#13;
degrees and would be relegated&#13;
to the role of a junior college in all&#13;
other areas.&#13;
It seems that the College of&#13;
Science and Society is trapped in&#13;
a vicious circle. As faculty&#13;
members art cut in these areas&#13;
more students switch majors or&#13;
leave the university; as a result&#13;
of this additional faculty&#13;
reductions are made. The current&#13;
fiscal emergency is providing tne&#13;
perfect excuse for further&#13;
reductions.&#13;
The citizens of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin were promised a&#13;
comprehensive four year&#13;
university. Now is the time to&#13;
build program &gt;t, Parkside, not&#13;
to eliminate Liberal Arts&#13;
prograr &gt; na ve been allowed to&#13;
decline too far already, the&#13;
Parkside administration, faculty,&#13;
and students must act now to&#13;
prevent any further decline. The&#13;
situation has gone too far when&#13;
numerous faculty members are&#13;
advising their students to transfer&#13;
to another university,&#13;
because in their estimation a&#13;
degree in the liberal arts from&#13;
Parkside will soon not be worth&#13;
the paper it is printed on.&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to invite all interested&#13;
parties to attend the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Senate meeting to be held&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 13, 197 5 a t 4:00&#13;
p.m. in LLC-D174. Student&#13;
governments response to these&#13;
proposals will be discussed.&#13;
John Kontz,&#13;
president pro tempore&#13;
P.S.G.A Inc Senate &#13;
Wake,&#13;
and hear the silence&#13;
of the pinesand&#13;
see the doe&#13;
walking by&#13;
If on ly from the tracks&#13;
of h er passingyou&#13;
will know&#13;
in time&#13;
That you&#13;
live—&#13;
Michael Nepper 1975&#13;
UNTITLED STUDY&#13;
Time&#13;
Was in nothing but the&#13;
Grimace and Resolve...&#13;
But to utter it to&#13;
The Soul...&#13;
Escape....&#13;
Doonan, 12-1974&#13;
Actualization&#13;
Beyond secrecy,&#13;
patterned and untrue.&#13;
Inadequate expectations&#13;
beyond analysis,&#13;
giving way to alternatives always&#13;
always.&#13;
A rutt&#13;
A rutless ritual presents itself&#13;
itself,&#13;
bilingual&#13;
in involution and dimension:&#13;
To try, to learn&#13;
To risk, to grow.&#13;
-Martin Andersen&#13;
BURIED SELVES&#13;
History tales bury something&#13;
for its art towers to the natural guides&#13;
of wounded icons...&#13;
Now...&#13;
confronted by the brown, underlined saying&#13;
each smile breaksunder&#13;
aversion \&#13;
with the God under stone gravel.&#13;
He tapes his lips to pointless ecstasy&#13;
from the honest globe&#13;
revolving blue states that show&#13;
pictures of the past.&#13;
The sublime tale enjoys power&#13;
for good trials of the jungle&#13;
Curfew...&#13;
for the brother's way.&#13;
Doonan, 1975&#13;
photo b\ miehael nepper&#13;
who was it that said beauty is only skin deep?&#13;
beauty is like a single candle in the dark&#13;
from wherever it shines&#13;
to where you see it&#13;
radiating in every direction&#13;
to where you are&#13;
not an image, not from the surface&#13;
but as a single candle&#13;
it glows with warmth&#13;
from within&#13;
-Greg &#13;
ICON Vol. 1 No. 4 pg. 2&#13;
WOMEN&#13;
7&#13;
/3 Final Clearance&#13;
on&#13;
SKI CLOTHES&#13;
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Calm after the storm&#13;
Woody Herman&#13;
and His Thundering Herd&#13;
by Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
On January 28 there was a thunderstorm&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine, complete with&#13;
thunder and lightning. It was most unusual&#13;
for January. The next night, January 29,&#13;
Woody Herman and His Thundering Herd&#13;
played at Parkside to a sold-out, Comm.&#13;
Arts Theater audience. It was most&#13;
unusual for Parkside.&#13;
The musical evening started out with&#13;
Parkside's Jazz Band which played four&#13;
songs beginning with "Sea Moon" and a&#13;
fine alto sax solo by Curt Hanrahan. The&#13;
second song was the rockish "Sun Catcher"&#13;
and was received well by the crowd.&#13;
The third song, even closer to rock, was&#13;
Janis Joplin's "Move Over" which contained&#13;
a trumpet solo, and two&#13;
trombone solos which were grey (a&#13;
combination of black and white). The&#13;
fourth and final song "Turquoise" was&#13;
arranged by a student. Jim Sodke sounded&#13;
good on fugelhorn. The audience liked the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Band, evinced by the applause.&#13;
&#13;
After a few minute break, out came the&#13;
Thundering Herd and Woody Herman. As&#13;
they sat down behind the raven-adorned&#13;
music stands, two thoughts flashed in my&#13;
mind. One was that it was not a very big&#13;
band to be labeled the big band sound (16&#13;
counting Woody). Two, was that they&#13;
looked like a bunch of long-haired freaks,&#13;
not nearly as conservative-looking as the&#13;
type of people that the music was to appeal&#13;
to.&#13;
They started out with "Woodchopper's&#13;
Ball" in which the string bass with electric&#13;
hook-up sounded very nice. The next tune&#13;
was a Chic Corea tune called "Spain". It&#13;
started out very mellow with a lead-in by a&#13;
bassoon and had a nice fugelhorn solo.&#13;
The Thundering Herd had three tenor&#13;
and one baritone saxes. From time to time&#13;
Woody Herman would play alto sax,&#13;
soprano sax or clarinet. The next tune&#13;
"Early Autumn" featured some very good&#13;
sax playing. The fourth song "Giant&#13;
Steps" was the title song from their&#13;
The second set started with the piano&#13;
players own composition "Lake Taco." It&#13;
was his last performance with Woody and&#13;
Woody played a real fine soprano sax solo.&#13;
One of the best trombone solos came in&#13;
the next song "What Are You Doing the&#13;
Rest of Your Life" which was a very&#13;
mellow song. The best baritone sax solo&#13;
came in the next song, "Crosswind". In&#13;
keeping with the mood of the night and&#13;
knowing Valentine's Day is just around the&#13;
corner, Woody and his herd played "My&#13;
Funny Valentine". They then played&#13;
another familar tune, "McArthur Park".&#13;
Woody Herman and His Thundering&#13;
Herd finished the night with a very loose,&#13;
jazzy song, complete with percussion&#13;
provided by every horn player in the band&#13;
(excluding Woody). Horn players set down&#13;
tneir horns and beat out a rythmn with&#13;
sticks, blocks, trombones, and tapped,&#13;
thumped, banged their way to a finale. The&#13;
crowd applauded but not enough to bring&#13;
them back for an encore, which I thought&#13;
they deserved.&#13;
grammy award winning album. Dennis&#13;
Johnson played an excellent fugelhorn solo&#13;
in the next tune "Come Rain, Come&#13;
Shine." One of the golden oldies in which&#13;
The Four Brothers demonstrated how well&#13;
the brass section played together.&#13;
One of Wisconsin's sons, Buddy Powers&#13;
did a very fine trumpet solo in "I Can't Get&#13;
Started With You". Up until then,&#13;
theThundering Herd were featured almost&#13;
exclusively, but then Woody did'his thing&#13;
(cause he came to sing.) He sang the next&#13;
song This Time." The crowd loved it. Most&#13;
of the program contained big band and&#13;
jazz sounds. One of the jazziest tunes was&#13;
the Temptation's song "I Can't Get Next&#13;
To You, Baby", featuring Gregory Herbert&#13;
with a powerful tenor sax solo to&#13;
conclude the first set.&#13;
It was a good concert, although I heard&#13;
some say Woody did not play enough.&#13;
Woody did not have to for he led the band. I&#13;
was surprised that Woody didn't play all&#13;
nostalgia tunes, but instead he included&#13;
many modern jazz tunes. I'm glad that he&#13;
did, as he gave a free concert that afternoon&#13;
and spent the day with various&#13;
music students. Hopefully Woody Herman&#13;
and his Thundering Herd thunder their&#13;
way back again to Parkside.&#13;
In keeping with his majesty's, King&#13;
Jerry, proclamation of t his being women's&#13;
year, and the very noticeable fact that the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Band and Woody Herman's&#13;
Ihundering Herd are all male, the next&#13;
review will feature a band containing&#13;
women members as well as men. &#13;
pg. 3 ICON&#13;
HARD PLACE NOT TO BE&#13;
Anywhere&#13;
_ is a hard place to be&#13;
when i need to be&#13;
another&#13;
place -&#13;
time ticked &amp; tocked twelve&#13;
hours twice&#13;
since i thought&#13;
to think to be at all -&#13;
concrete voices bid me i cannot hear&#13;
to sense their direction&#13;
to eat&#13;
to sleep&#13;
to see - my eyes are windows&#13;
shaded from the day -&#13;
i s ense my falling unhampered&#13;
unbroken time in place&#13;
unfaltered emptiness&#13;
unknown past&#13;
apathetic morrows i spend lonely&#13;
contemplate lonely&#13;
wordy phrases no one has spoken -&#13;
Jeffrey j.swencki&#13;
photo by m ichael ncpper&#13;
UNTITLED STUDY&#13;
The Birth Shriek&#13;
forms depth&#13;
by confronting a detail&#13;
of absent form... of space.&#13;
Doonan, 12-1974&#13;
HOMAGE TO NIGHT&#13;
Revenge,&#13;
the Silent projection&#13;
of Forever&#13;
Now,&#13;
persists in the Mind&#13;
Ever&#13;
without...&#13;
Why...&#13;
rebirth.&#13;
Doonan, 1-75&#13;
lover, mother- ofpearl&#13;
skin on the heart of s ighs&#13;
a thousand answers&#13;
and no one forms the question&#13;
how tlid i say it?&#13;
it was never right&#13;
and you seeing past the eyes and lines&#13;
understood my blood and wounds&#13;
understood the moon-timing of my body&#13;
warm&#13;
scarlet flowing, rain down peaks to the sea&#13;
from all silence&#13;
to all life&#13;
you are walking from the shore, living&#13;
in individual infancies&#13;
decides each moment, and there are seconds in love&#13;
- amy&#13;
HE&#13;
HE&#13;
HELD HIS BRUSHES&#13;
WI TH THE EASE OF THE PAI NTER&#13;
DABBING A LITTLE, LIGHTLY AT FIRST&#13;
AND THEN, IN A LOVER'S CONFIDENCE&#13;
HE STRUCK&#13;
WI TH HIS BLUES&#13;
AND HIS WHITES&#13;
HE STRUCK AT THE CANVAS EMPTY'WHITE^&#13;
IN COLORLESS COLORS OF JOY&#13;
AND WHEN THE CANVAS HAD FILLED&#13;
WI TH HIM&#13;
he vanished&#13;
-M. Nepper&#13;
photo b\ michael nepper&#13;
ICON&#13;
contributors: Cliff Ch ambers&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki, Greg&#13;
Michael Nepper, Doonan&#13;
Martin Andersen&#13;
The Bach Chamber Choir and Orchestra of Milwaukee will present a&#13;
free public concert on Saturday, February 15 at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
The concert is being sponsored by Parkside's Humanities Division.&#13;
Photography by John Schulze and some of his students at the&#13;
University of Iowa will be on display at the Parkside Comm Arts&#13;
Gallery Feb. 12 through 27. Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
Schulze will be on campus on Feb. 20 to present a free public lecture&#13;
on "New Dimensions in Photography" at 7 p.m. in Room D155A of th e&#13;
Comm Arts Building. The lecture and show are sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside art faculty. &#13;
ICON pg, 4&#13;
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KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINELLI&#13;
Pictures talk.&#13;
Some little&#13;
boysdont&#13;
Some inner cities have special schools. For&#13;
little boys who don't talk.&#13;
Not mute little boys. But children so withdrawn,&#13;
so afraid of failure, they cannot make the slightest&#13;
attempt to do anything at which they might fail.&#13;
Some don't talk. Some don't listen. Most don't&#13;
behave. And all of them don't learn.&#13;
One day someone asked us to help.&#13;
Kodak responded by working with the teachers.&#13;
Showed them how, through the language of pictures,&#13;
the children could communicate as they never could&#13;
before. And the teachers sent the kids out to take&#13;
pictures with their cameras.&#13;
And then the miracle. Little boys who had never&#13;
said anything, looked at the pictures and began to&#13;
talk. They said "This is my house." "This is rriy dog."&#13;
"This is where I like to hide." They began to explain,&#13;
to describe, to communicate. And once the channels&#13;
of commumcation had been opened thev&#13;
began to learn. ' 1&#13;
,&#13;
does Kodak stand to gain from this'? Well&#13;
we re showing how our products can help a teacher'&#13;
and maybe creating a whole new market And&#13;
we re also curtivating young customers who will&#13;
fhaTth®.&#13;
buy&#13;
,&#13;
their&#13;
°&#13;
wn cameras and film. But more&#13;
who , m WS x cu&#13;
'&#13;
t,val,n9 alert, educated citizens&#13;
Who will someday be responsible for our society&#13;
After all, our business depends on society So&#13;
we care what happens to it.&#13;
y&#13;
"&#13;
Kodak.&#13;
Kore than a business. &#13;
mL. 1 lif™.' I&#13;
I'lUVleKVil&#13;
quadrant of the Comm Arts lot.&#13;
The two southern quadrants of&#13;
the Union lot are restricted to&#13;
white permits while the back&#13;
quadrants are open to both red&#13;
and white permit parking.&#13;
misrepresented those students&#13;
who had purchased red permits,&#13;
and left them under the&#13;
assumption of be ing able to park&#13;
in the back half of the Comm Arts&#13;
lot. The Committee approved a&#13;
The Parkside Association of Wargamers will be meeting every&#13;
Sunday at 1:30, Tuesday and Thursday at 6 p.m. and Wednesday at 7&#13;
p.m. in CL 140. Meetings are open to all who are interested&#13;
IIIH &lt;ikI&#13;
24 hours Soprano Eileen Swedish and Pianist Stephen Swedish, of the&#13;
Parkside music faculty, will present a free public recital at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Feb. 9, in the Comm Arts Theater. The program will include&#13;
songs of Rossini, Schumann, Debussy, Duparc and Menotti.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12: P.A.B. Whiteskellar coffeehouse committee presents Mike&#13;
Gorman, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 .mp ., GR D201, no admission charge.&#13;
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13: FILM: P.A.B. presents Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight in&#13;
"Midnight Cowboy," 11:30a .m., C.A.T., admission $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14: FILM: P.A.B. p resents "Midnight Cowboy," 11:30 a.m., C.A.T.&#13;
and 8 p.m., S.A.B., admission Si. Parkside and state l.D.'s required.&#13;
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16: FILM: P.A.B. presents "Midnight Cowboy," 7:30 p.m., S.A.B.,&#13;
admission $1, Parkside and state l.D.'s required.&#13;
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18: FILM: "The Wild Bunch," 11:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., C.A.T.,&#13;
admission $1, Parkside I.D. required. Sponsored by P.A.B.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19:: FILM: P.A.B. presents "The Wild Bunch, " 11:30 a.m. and&#13;
7.30 p.m., C.A.T., admission $1, Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22: P.A.B. presents a dance featuring the soulful music of Harvey&#13;
Scales and the Seven Sounds, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., S.A.B. Tickets are $1.50 in advance for students&#13;
and $2.00 for guests and at the door Special: During Black History Week (Feb. 1014) student&#13;
tickets will be sold for only $1. Tickets are available at he t Info Kiosk.&#13;
H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
P&#13;
Pure Brewed From God's Country,&#13;
On Tap at the Union"&#13;
Drag yourself and a friend (or two, if you have them)&#13;
over to Hfjafeeps; Parlor&#13;
for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru FRl. I LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
OF BEER ONLY $1.25&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
1Joofcw&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine&#13;
Misrepresentation&#13;
Wednesday, February 12, 1 975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
0f classes was a very confusing&#13;
situation for the students.&#13;
Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction, James Galbraith,&#13;
said that much of the problem&#13;
was due to a mistake in&#13;
judgement as to the number of&#13;
white permits students would&#13;
buy. F&#13;
ar more students&#13;
^an&#13;
were anticipated by the Campus&#13;
planning Comm. bought white&#13;
permits and indicated a&#13;
preference for the Comm Arts&#13;
lot. Campus Planning and advanced&#13;
the policy that those&#13;
students with white permits&#13;
would have some kind of&#13;
reserved space.&#13;
At the Campus Planning&#13;
Committee meeting, called&#13;
January 23, to review the parking&#13;
situation, Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
P.S.G.A. Pres. said that the&#13;
adminis tration h a d&#13;
motion to make tl,e southwest&#13;
quadrant of the Comm Arts lot&#13;
available for both white and red&#13;
permit parking.&#13;
Milutinovich also said that&#13;
students with red permits, who*&#13;
parked in the Comm Arts lot&#13;
under the assumption that it was&#13;
legal but were fined, should have&#13;
their tickets voided. Ronald&#13;
Bnnkman, Director of Security,&#13;
said that warning tickets had&#13;
been issued the first week of the&#13;
semester therefore those tickets&#13;
received after that date should&#13;
not be voided. The Parking and&#13;
Transportation sub-committee&#13;
has, however, adopted the policy&#13;
of accepting the appeals under&#13;
the conditions stated before.&#13;
As for the present situation in&#13;
the Comm Arts and Union&#13;
parking lots, red permit parking&#13;
is allowed only in the southwest&#13;
rief news&#13;
A stu dent organization, Inter-Connection, will sponsor a Valentine&#13;
Sweetheart contest February 10 through 13. Students will have an&#13;
opportunity to vote for their favorite set of li ps, owned by such personages&#13;
as Acting Chancellor Bauer, Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn and other members of the Parkside staff. Voting will take&#13;
place next to "Ye Olde Candy Shoppe" Monday-Thursday from 10&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m. The winning lips will be displayed on Friday, Valentine's&#13;
Day, along with the winner's name. The Valentine Sweetheart&#13;
will receive a box of candy.&#13;
A blood drive will be held for the Veterans at Woods Hospital on&#13;
Thursday, March 6, between the hours of 2 p.m . and 8:30 p.m. at the&#13;
Somers American Legion Post (located on County Highway E, 2V2&#13;
miles east of 1-94).&#13;
The purpose of the drive is to replace blood used by Kenosha County&#13;
Veterans.&#13;
If i nterested, send a notice to the American Legion Hall, Hy. E -&#13;
Somers stating that you wish to donate blood. Include name, address,&#13;
phone number and signature.&#13;
For more information call Steve Savas 859-2222, Tom Cox 859-2323 or&#13;
Floyd Hughes 694-3341.&#13;
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FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
We Sell I nstant F un!&#13;
1101 N . M ain St. Racine&#13;
633-5244&#13;
by Brenda Mead&#13;
The Parkside Hockey Club had&#13;
their 12 game winning streak&#13;
broken by Stevens Point on«&#13;
Friday, February 7. The game&#13;
- was called off by the referees in&#13;
the third period with less than&#13;
five minutes remaining.&#13;
Parkside was losing by the score&#13;
of 9 to 3, and held no hopes for&#13;
victory in the fight marred game.&#13;
The referees were kept very&#13;
busy calling penalties throughout&#13;
the game, with five major game&#13;
misconduct penalties for each&#13;
team, resulting in ten players&#13;
being ejected from the game. The&#13;
Parkside players kicked out&#13;
were: Steve Bentel, Roy Swartz,&#13;
Kurt Sandien, Gary Cukla, and&#13;
Robin Lipski.&#13;
The only scorers for Parkside&#13;
were Keith Church, for his second&#13;
goal; John Bruneau, for his tenth&#13;
goal; and Jerry Simonsen, the&#13;
second highest scorer, connected&#13;
for his 16th goal of the season.&#13;
Stevens Point had 58 s hots on&#13;
goal during the game, but only&#13;
managed to get past Parkside's&#13;
goalie, Bob Arneson for nine&#13;
goals. Parkside attempted 35&#13;
times, but only hit on three goals.&#13;
Saturday, February 8,&#13;
Parkside regained their winning&#13;
status by defeating the Madison&#13;
Area Technical College team by&#13;
the score of 10 to 1. Parkside's&#13;
record is now at 17 wins and 4&#13;
loses.&#13;
The Madison team was understrength&#13;
due to illness and&#13;
injuries, and played most of the&#13;
game with just one replacement&#13;
player. Parkside played a more&#13;
subdued game, with only five&#13;
penalties for the night.&#13;
Parkside's high scorers for the&#13;
game were Jim Nehls, with five&#13;
goals, and Jerry Madala, with&#13;
two goals. Other scorers were&#13;
Roy Swartz, Keith Church and&#13;
John Bruneau. Jim Nehls is still&#13;
the team's high scorer with a&#13;
total of 24 g oals.&#13;
This weekend the team plays&#13;
Eau Claire on Saturday February&#13;
15, a nd Lewis College in Illinois&#13;
on Sunday 16 February. The next&#13;
home game will be Sunday,&#13;
February 23 a gainst Platteville.&#13;
Rangers down Whitewater&#13;
lose to Illinois&#13;
rebounds, Leartha Scott dumped&#13;
23 points, Malcolm Mahone 10,&#13;
and Marshall Hill shot 6 and&#13;
made 9 rebounds.&#13;
Whistles were blown as the&#13;
fouls were called and the&#13;
Rangers were concerned with&#13;
fouling out, so they took it very&#13;
easy on the boards during the&#13;
second half.&#13;
The last minute of the game led&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Stevie King&#13;
and Cole to the bench with their&#13;
final fouls while the Panthers&#13;
went to the ine l to shoot their final&#13;
points.&#13;
Fred Myers and Brad Warble&#13;
made 16 buckets each while Steve&#13;
Rich and Bev Mitchell respectively,&#13;
hit on 14 and 13 to display&#13;
the balance on the Panther team.&#13;
Eastern Illinois is currently&#13;
ranked 5th in the nation in the&#13;
NCAA Division 2.&#13;
The Rangers outshot the&#13;
Panthers, connecting on 30 ou t of&#13;
67 attempts for 45 p ercent while&#13;
Eastern hit on 28 of 66 attempts&#13;
for 42 p ercent.&#13;
Leartha Scott stole the scene&#13;
with 30 points as he led the&#13;
Rangers to their 17th victory of&#13;
the season against the&#13;
Whitewater Warhawks in&#13;
Tuesday night's game with a&#13;
final score of 84-78.&#13;
Whitewater, in tight zone&#13;
defense, shot over Parkside&#13;
defense, allowing the battle to&#13;
begin early in the first half. It&#13;
wasn't until the second half that&#13;
the Rangers dumped enough&#13;
points to run away with the lead.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens said, "I&#13;
was pleased with the way we&#13;
stayed in during the first half and&#13;
made it in the second half.&#13;
The Warhawks keyed in on&#13;
Marshall but he played an excellent&#13;
game, dumping 19 points.&#13;
Gary Cole added to Hill and&#13;
Scottie's scoring with 22 points.&#13;
The Rangers connected on 33 of&#13;
64 baskets for 52 percent while&#13;
Whitewater hit 33 out of 84 for 39&#13;
percent.&#13;
The Rangers will challenge&#13;
four more teams on the road and&#13;
then return home for their final&#13;
game on Tuesday, Feb. 18 when&#13;
they meet with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
8-25 AMPEG AMPLIFIER for sale, slightly&#13;
used. Good condition. BEST OFFER over&#13;
$250. Ph. 859 2642 or 637 3361.&#13;
Roommate wanted, female preferred, share&#13;
rent, phone 652 2366 after 4 p.m.&#13;
A D ifferent&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
REWARD LOST bracelet in the library,&#13;
first week of classes. Sentimental value.&#13;
REWARD. Call 657 6294 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
to Stevens Point&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Rangers gained a measure&#13;
of revenge against Whitewater&#13;
last Tuesday night to make it 16&#13;
straight and broke the streak&#13;
Thursday night when they lost to&#13;
Eastern Illinois on the free throw&#13;
line.&#13;
The Rangers led 32-30 at the&#13;
half but the Eastern Illinois&#13;
Panthers cashed in for a game&#13;
total of 23-31 free throws and a 79-&#13;
72 victory during the second half.&#13;
This was the Panthers" 13th&#13;
straight win on their home court.&#13;
High scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Gary Cole with 26 p oints and 11&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
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DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME </text>
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