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                  <text>■■■MSEQ
CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
MARCH 25-26 1976

�“I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility
against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”
Thomas Jefferson

‘‘The marvel of this infernal enterprise is that the
leader of each army of murderers blesses his flag and
solemnly invokes God before going to exterminate his
neighbor.”
Voltaire

�4“Aggression: Man Against Himself”

EVENTS

Thursday, March 25
8:45 a.m. A Seminar Welcome by DR. TILGHMAN
ALEY, President of Casper College.
ADDRESS

9:00 a.m.
Durham
Hall

“Hostility, Aggression, Destruction: For
What Purpose, To What End.”
LARS PETERSON

Following the lecture by Dr. Peterson, coffee
and doughnuts will be served in the lobby.
PANELS
10:30 to
11:45 a.m. A Recreational Aggression

Durham
Hall

“Sports: Everyman’s Aggression”
ROBERT WILKES, moderator
CHARLIE JOHNSON, SWEDE ERICKSON,
ROBERT MOENKHAUS, panelists

�Thursday, March 25 (continued)
AD 298

b. Psychotic Aggression
“Violence: Human Nature or Psychopathol­
ogy”
RON BALE, moderator
LARS PETERSON, DON CHAPIN, B.J.
FITZGERALD, panelists

AD 198

C. Fanatical Aggression
“Terrorism: Who’s Next?’’
BURTON LEISER, moderator
STANLEY MILGRAM, MANUS MIDLARSKY, panelists.

ADDRESS
1:30 p.m.

Durham
Hall

“The Eichman Next Door”
STANLEY MILGRAM

Following the lecture by Dr. Milgram, punch
and cookes will be served in the lobby.

PANELS
3:00 to
4:15 p.m. A. Constitutionalized Aggression
Durham
Hall

“Gun Control”
LES OBERT, moderator
RAMSEY CLARK, ROBERT ZIPAY, ROB­
ERT J. KUKLA, panelists

AD 298

B. Economic Aggression
“The Ultimate Weapon”
PETER SIMPSON, moderator
FREDERICK HARTMANN. THOMAS CROC­
KER, CHARLIE JOHNSON, JOHN VAN
DERWALKER

�Thursday, March 25 (continued)
AD 198

C. Vicarious Aggression
“Beauty and the Beast”
JAMES GAITHER, moderator
MARGARET DEMOREST, GLYN THOM­
AS, STANLEY MILGRAM, MAYA AN­
GELOU, CELESTE COLGAN, panelists

ADDRESS

8:00 p.m.
Durham

“Crime in America”
RAMSEY CLARK
Friday, March 26

ADDRESS
9:00a.m. “Conflicts and Crisis in International affairs”
FREDERICK HARTMANN

Following the lecture by Dr. Hartmann, coffee
and doughnuts will be served inthe lobby.
PANELS

10:30 a.m. A. The Oldest Aggression
Durham
Hall

“The Aggressive Woman: Between a Rock
and a Hard Place”
ANN TOLLEFSON, moderator
CAROL ASPINWALL, REJANE BURTON,
MAYA ANGELOU, RON BALE, LARS
PETERSON, panelists

�Friday, March 26 (continued)

AD 298

AD 198

B. Legalized Aggression
“Death Penalty”
F.E. “SKIP” GILLUM, moderator
BURTON LEISER, RAMSEY CLARK,
panelists

C. International Aggression
“Games Leaders Play”
SCOTT JONES, moderator
FREDERICK HARTMANN. MANUS MIDLARSKY, JON BRADY, panelists
ADDRESS

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

“The Fine Line Between Ambition, Greed,
and Aggression”
MAYA ANGELOU

Following the address by Ms. Angelou, punch
and cookies will be served in the lobby.
CONCLUDING PANEL

3:00 p.m.
Durham
Hall

“The Problem of Aggression and the Nature of
Man”
BRUCE TOLLEFSON, moderator
Participants will be lecturers and panel guests
of the seminar.

“We have met the enemy and he is us.”
Pogo

�MAYA ANGELOU.

A woman of many talents,
Ms. Angelou can be referred
to as an author, screen
writer, educator, dancer,
poet historian, lecturer, act­
ress, producer, editor, song
writer, and playwright. She
has appeared in roles in
“Porgy and Bess,” “Calypso
Heatwave,” and “Cabaret
for Freedom.” Her poems
have been published by Ran­
dom House, and her auto­
biography, “I Know Why A
Caged Bird Sings” published
by Random House in 1970
was listed by NEWSWEEK
as one of the best books in
1970. After spending time in
Africa writing for the only
English language news
weekly in the Middle East,
she visited Ghana and later
became Assistant Adminis­
trator of the School of Music
and Drama at the University
of Ghana. At one time she
worked with the late Dr.
Martin Luther King.

�RAMSEY CLARK

Ramsey Clark was the At­
torney General of the United
States under President Lyn­
don Johnson. He was first
nominated as assistant to the
Attorney General of the
United States by President
John F. Kennedy where he
played an important role in
the controversial admission
of James Meredith to the
University of Mississippi.
During his years with the De­
partment of Justice, Mr.
Clark worked actively in the
areas of criminal law en­
forcement, civil liberties,
and was the first Attorney
General to propose abolition
of the death penalty. He also
helped in the creation of the
Federal Bureau of Narcotics
and Dangerous Drugs. More
recently he has worked pro­
fessionally as a lawyer to end
political repression, the vio­
lation of human rights,
torture and international
violence, and abuse of
prisoners in Brazil, Greece,
Ireland, and Spain. He is also
working on the reform of the
American prison system. He
has written extensively, and
several of his more recent
works include Crime In
America, and The Role of
The Supreme Court, (With
Senator Sam Ervin.)

�FREDERICK HARTMANN
Dr. Hartmann is presently
the Alfred Mahan Professor
of Maritime Strategy, and
Special Academic Advisor to
the President of the Naval
War College where he holds
the academic rank of Super­
visory Professor. He holds
the rank of Captain in the
U.S. Naval Reserve. Dr.
Hartmann earned his A.B. in
1943 from the Universiy of
California (Berkley) and his
M.A. and Ph.D. in 1949 from
Princeton. A Fullbright Res­
earch Professor at the Uni­
versity of Bonn, Germany,
he also carried on his
research in Germany in 1959
under a Rockefeller Grant.
Since 1962 he has lectured
frequently at the Air War
College, Army War College,
National War College, and
Naval War College as well as
various universities. He has
taught on a visiting basis at
Brown University, Wheaton
College, the University of
Rhode Island, and most rec­
ently (1974-1975) as Visiting
University Professor at Tex­
as Tech University. Dr.
Hartmann’s
publications
deal in the international field
and include Basic Docu­
ments of International-Rela­

tions (McGraw-Hill, 1951);
Readings in International
Relations
(McGraw-Hill,
1952); The Relations of Na­
tions (Macmillan, 1957, 1962,
1967, 1973); The Swiss Press
and Foreign Affairs in World
War II (U of Florida Press,
1960); World In Crisis (Mac­
millan, 1962, 1967, 1973); Ger
many Between East and
West (prentice-Hall, 1965);
The New Age of American
Foreign Policy (Macmillan,
1970); and a large number of
articles which have appear­
ed in American and Europe­
an journals and periodicals.

�STANLEY MILGRAM

A social psychologist, Dr.
Milgram believes that many
important human problems
can be illuminated by apply­
ing scientific, and specifical­
ly, experimental methods to
the exploration of such prob­
lems. His doctoral work at
Harvard concerned the ex­
perimental method as he
tried to determine if Norweg­
ians or Frenchmen conform­
ed more to group pressure.
His conclusions were pub­
lished in Scientific American
noting that conformity pres­
sures were greater in the
relatively small, homogen­
eous society of Norway, than
in France, with its traditions
of intellectual dissent. At
Yale University, Dr. Mil­
gram turned to the study of
obedience to authority. This
work in 1965 was awarded the
annual socio-psychological
prize of the American Assoc­
iation for the Advancement
of Science. What does a per­
son do when he is told to
carry out orders that conflict
with his conscience? The
results of this most recent
study were published in
Obedience to Authority. They
are startling, and boldly il­
luminate a basic moral
dilemna of our time.

�LARS P. PETERSON

Dr. Lars P. Peterson is
presently serving as Chief,
Psychology Service, VA,
Hospital, Tuscaloosa, Ala­
bama. Born in Sweden, he
finished his high school
education in South Dakota
and after serving several
years in the Marine Corps
entered the University of
Wyoming where he received
a B.A. in Psychology and
Math in 1950, and his M.A. in
1951. In 1959 he received his
Ed.D. in Psychology and
Counseling Psychology from
the University of Nebraska
and has worked in post-doc­
toral Clinical Psychology at
the University of Minnesota,
1964-1965. He worked in 1966
in Neuro-Psychology with
Ralph Reitan at Indiana
University. Dr. Peterson has
been a Consultant at many
institutions, and presented a
number of papers on The
Communication
Process,
Suicide, Deprivation, Behav­
ior Pathology, Aged, Minn­
esota Multiphasic Personal­
ity Inventory, Crisis Inter­
vention, Psychiatric Treat­
ment, Millieu Therapy, Psy­
chotherapy, Death and Dy­
ing, Team Concept in Psy­
chiatric Treatment, Attitude
Therapy, Reality Orienta­
tion, Behavior Modification,
Motivation, and Adjustment.

�PANEL MEMBERS

Carole ASPINWALL — A.S. Casper College; Business Woman,
Student.
Ron BALE — A.B. University of Michigan, M.A. University of
Detroit, Ph. D. University of Cincinnati; Director of Train­
ing and Research - Mental Health Program - University of
Cincinnati.
Jon BRADY — M.A. University of Denver, J.D. University of
Wyoming; self-employed.
Rejane BURTON — License-es-Letters Sorbonne-Paris, M.A.
French Literature, University of Wyoming.
Donald CHAPIN — J.D. University of Wyoming, Attorney at
* Law.
Celeste COLGAN — B.A., M.A. University of Wyoming, Ph.D.
University of Maryland; Chairman, Language and
Literature Casper College
Thomas CROCKER — A.B. Bowdoin College, Ph.D. University
of Missouri; Professor of Economics, University of Wyo­
ming.
Margaret DEMOREST — B.A., M.A. University of Wyoming;
Instructor of English, Casper College.
“Swede” ERICKSON — B.S. Kansas State University, M.ED.
University of Wyoming; Basketball Coach, Casper College
T-Birds.
B. J. FITZGERALD — A.B. Colorado College, Ph.D. Ohio State;
Professor of Psychology, University of Wyoming.
James GAITHER — B.F.A., M.ED. Temple University, In­
structor of Art, Casper College.
Charlie JOHNSON — B.S. New Mexico State University, M.S.,
D.SC., Washington University, St. Louis, Quarterback,
NFL, 15 years currently with Denver Broncos, and Chemi­
cal Engineer Crawford Enterprises.
Scott JONES — A.B. George Washington Unviersity, M.A.
University of Maryland, Ph.D. American University; USN
Ret.; Instructor of Political Science, Casper College.
Robert J. KUKLA — Attorney at Law, Author of Gun Control,
Member of the Board of the National Rifle Association.
Manus I. MIDLARSKY — B.S. Chemistry; City College of
New York, M.S. Physics Stevens Institute of Technology,
Ph.D. Political Science, Northwestern University; Profes­
sor of Political Science, University of Colorado.

�Robert MOENKHAUS — B.A. Elmhurst College, M.Div.; Eden
Theological Seminary, M.A. University of Wyoming; In­
structor of Sociology, Casper College.
Les OBERT — B.S., M.S. Brigham Young University, Instruc­
tor of Sociology, Casper College.
Peter SIMPSON — B.A., M.A. University of Wyoming, Ph.D.
University of Oregon, Assistant to the President, Casper
College.
Glyn THOMAS —B.A., M.A., Ph.D. University of Illinois, Prof­
essor of English, University of Wyoming.
Ann TOLLEFSON — B.A., M.A. University of Wyoming; In­
structor of French, Natrona County High School.
Bruce TOLLEFSON — B.A. St. CLoud State College, M.A.,
Ph.D. University of Wyoming, Chairman, Social and
Behavioral Science, Casper College.
John VAN DERWALKER — Assistant Regional Director, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service.
Robert WILKES — B.S., M.S., Iowa State University, Instruc­
tor of Psychology Casper College.
Robert ZIPAY — Chief of Police, City of Casper.
FORREST “SKIP” GILLUM - B.S. Chadron State
College, Instructor of Criminal Justice, Casper
College.
BURTON LEISER - B.A. University of Chicago,
M.H.L. Yeshiva University, Ph.D. Brown Uni­
versity; Chairman, Department of Philosophy,
Drake University.

�A special thank you to the Wyoming Committee for the
Humanities for providing a grant to make this Social Science
Seminar possible.
Our appreciation is also extended to the administration and
faculty of Casper College for the continuing support of the
concept and reality of the annual Social Science Seminar.

Seminar Director — Bruce Tollefson, Ph.D.
Program Cover — Rodney Aaker, Linda White

Library displays — Nora Van Burgh
Posters — C.C. Commercial Art Class

Hostesses — C.C. Coquettes

Publicity — Bill Bragg

This program has been made possible with a matching
grant from the Wyoming Council for the Humanities and the
National Endowment for the Humanities.

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