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dc.contributorCox, Teresa
dc.contributorSpence, Lynne
dc.contributorFoley, John
dc.contributorGoritchan, Barb
dc.contributorMiller, Paul
dc.contributorSeguin, Paul
dc.contributorWalker, Jean
dc.contributor.advisorLang, Warren
dc.contributor.editorSchwerin, Craig
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-12T13:10:12Z
dc.date.available2023-06-12T13:10:12Z
dc.date.copyright1982
dc.date.issued1982
dc.identifier.citationPlease contact the University Archives for use permission and citation.
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/84310
dc.descriptionFifth Annual Contest in the Literary and Visual Arts, 1982. The purpose of the Prometheus contest is to encourage creativity in the arts through publication and cash prizes. Excellence is our prime criterion.en_US
dc.descriptionFiction: Stephen Duff, "A Fireman's Duty", First Prize; Jeff Dahl, "Mind Games", Second Prize
dc.descriptionNonfiction: Brian P. Ewing, "Thanks To You, James Joyce ... ", Fleming Award; Bruce Bradley, "My Weekend", Second Prize
dc.descriptionPoetry: Paul Miller, "(salvation)", First Prize; Paul Seguin, "Call From The Underground", Second Prize
dc.descriptionArts: Lynn Amlie, Untitled; Mark Flanders, Untitled; Connie Feirn, "My Frosted Window Pane"
dc.descriptionPhotography: Jill Hoffman, "Myself", First Prize; Mike Raponi, "Beggar", Second Prize
dc.description.abstractEditor's Note: Some people will argue about their reasons for working with the arts. To some it may be their interpretations of life, while to others art simply is a hobby. What it all boils down to (directly or indirectly) is self expression. Self expression comes in as many different forms as there are people. Singers sing, dancers dance, and jestors jest. Fat people, tall people, young people and _old people-they all have something special to say. Their messages come in various forms. Take a look at the pages inside. Photos, drawings, poems and stories are the media for these people. Look not at the subjects themselves or sentence structures. Observe and feel the meaning behind them all. Some may be the results of pain, fatigue, depression, or all-out desperation. The Creative Arts Journal: Prometheus serves as an outlet and encourages this creativity and expression which is so important to us all. I want to thank our faculty advisor Warren Lang not only for the time and sense of direction he provided, but also for knowing when to lay back and allow the staff the freedom to go in various directions. Words of apprecia-tion are also due to the various faculty members who judged the contest: Fiction -Paul Edmondson and Howard Foreman, Nonfiction -Publications and Issues Committee of the English Department, Poetry -Margo Criscuola and Melanie Richards, Art -Paul Delong and Jeff Metcalf, Photography -Art Juncho and Paul Stankavich. I hope that tight budgets and funding will never be a factor in the future of Prometheus. To put restrictions on such a thing would be to put restric-tions on human expression and eventually human society.en_US
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of Wisconsin--Stouten_US
dc.rightsAll rights reserved. No part of this journal may be reproduced in any form without the permission of the University of Wisconsin-Stout.
dc.titlePrometheus, v. 5, 1982en_US
dc.title.alternativeCreative Arts Journal
dc.typeJournal Issueen_US
dcterms.isPartOfStout Series 98
dc.rights.holderUW Stout Archives and Area Research Center


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