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                  <text>CHANGE:
THE KALEIDOSCOPE or LIFE
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR MARCH 24-25 ISH

�The results of political changes are hardly ever those
which their friends hope or their foes fear.
T.H. Huxley

Either death is a state of nothingness and utter
unconsciousness, or, as men say, there is a change and
migration of the soul from this world to another.
Plato

A fanatic is one who can’t change his mind and won’t
change the subject.
Saying

The sun . . .
In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight
sheds
On half the nations, and with fear of
change
Perplexes monarchs.
Milton, Paradise Lost

The more things change, the more they remain the same.
Alphonse Karr

O God, give us serenity to accept what cannot be
changed, courage to change what should be changed, and
wisdom to distinguish the one from the other.
Reinhold Neibuhr

�CHANGE;
THE
KALEIDOSCOPE
OF
LIFE
casper college
social science seminar

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�___________THURSDAY, MARCH 24
8:45 a.m. Durham Hall

DR. TILGHMAN ALEY
PRESIDENT OF CASPER COLLEGE

SEMINAR WELCOME

9:00 a.m. Durham Hall

•

IBEN BROWNING

,

'

“CLIMATE AND THE AFFAIRS
OF MEN”
Changing climate sharply alters the amount and
nature of food supply... People respond to hard times by
disposing of their priests, their political leaders, and their
excess baggage. War, migration, economic upset, and
changing ethics mark hard times...
Even if the specter cannot be driven off by ritual, we
may be cheered by the knowledge that we are here
because our ancestors dealt successfully with worse.
“Climate and the Affairs of Men”
Following the address by Dr. Browning, coffee and
doughnuts will be served in the lobby.

----------- ----

2-----------------

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24
10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Durham Hall

DISCUSSION PANEL
“CYCLES OF CHANGE: ADJUSTING
TO THE INEVITABLE”

ROBERT BARTHELL
IBEN BROWNING
INIS CLAUDE
LEONARD KRASNER
JAMES McCLURG
ALEX TANOUS
NORMAN WEIS

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24
10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Administration Building, Room 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
“ADJUSTING TO CHANGE: THE
TIMES THEY ARE A’CHANGING”

PATRICIA BOYER
PHILLIS KINNEY
AUGUSTUS KINZEL
MIRIAM KRASNER
LEO SPRINKLE
COLIN TURNBULL

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24

1:30 p.m. Durham Hall

ALEX TANOUS
“A PSYCHIC JOURNEY”
I have a vision for mankind ... I see a time when
society will encourage its members to practice their
psychic abilities ... It will be a psychic generation ... It
will be a generation in which people will apply their
psychic abilities to all of their endeavors.
If this generation comes, it will bring with it the
greatest doctors, artists, scientists, businessmen,
teachers, and priests of all times. It will truly be the
flowering of mankind.
“Beyond Coincidence”
Following the address of Dr. Tanous, punch and
cookies will be served in the lobby.

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24

3:00 to 4:15 p.m. Durham Hall

DISCUSSION PANEL
“PSYCHIC
PHENOMENON: THE
OUTER LIMITS OF INNER MAN”

RICHARD FLECK
LEO SPRINKLE
ALEX TANOUS
JAMES WALSH
scon WAYNE
ROBERT WILKES

6

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24

3:00 to 4:15 p.m. Administration Building, Room 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
“CHANGES IN MORALITY: MARY
HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN”

.

JAMES FAGAN
EDWIN FLITTIE
JOHN GERBERDING
HAM HILL
PHILLIS KINNEY
LEONARD KRASNER
THOMAS NORMAN

-

■

3:00 to 4:15 p.m. Administration Building, Room 298

DISCUSSION PANEL
“GENETIC
ENGINEERING:
GENIE IN THE BOTTLE”

WILLIAM BOSCH
APRIL CROSBY
AUGUSTUS KINZEL

THE

IBEN BROWNING
MARK HOLDER
JAMES MILEK

�____________THURSDAY. MARCH 24__________

8:00 p.m. Durham Hall

COLIN TURNBULL
“CULTURES IN ADAPTATION”
.. there is a void in the life of the African, a spiritual
emptiness, divorced as he is from each world, standing in
between, torn in both directions. To go forward is to
abandon the past in which the roots of his being have
their nourishment; to go backward is to cut himself off
from the future, for there is no doubt where the future
lies. The African has been taught to abandon his old
ways, yet he is not accepted in the new world even when
he has mastered its ways. There seems to be no bridge,
and this is the souce of his terrible loneliness.
“The Lonely African”

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�___________ FRIDAY, MARCH 25____________

9:00 a.m. Durham Hall

INIS CLAUDE
“THE CHALLENGE OF CHANGE IN
THE WORLD OF STATES”
Change is a law of life, and, particularly in the
postwar period of international relations, it has become
the dominant feature of life... Moreover, change is a sign
of life. Alterations are not always improvements, of
course, but evidence of capacity for change is the essential
indication of vitality.
“The Changing United Nations”

�_____________ FRIDAY, MARCH 25_________
10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Durham Hall

DISCUSSION PANEL
“POLITICAL CHANGE:
GOVERNMENT IN A BRAVE
NEW WORLD"

DAVID CHERRY
INIS CLAUDE
EDWIN FLiniE
MAYNE MILLER

---------------- 10 --------------

�__________ FRIDAY, MARCH 25_____________
10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Administration Building, Room 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
“SOCIAL AND CULTURAL
ENGINEERING: ARCHITECTURE
FOR UTOPIA”

WILLIAM BOSCH
APRIL CROSBY
MIRIAM KRASNER
COLIN TURNBULL
10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Administration Building, Room 298

DISCUSSION PANEL
“REFLECTIONS
OF
CHANGE:
PREVIEW OR REVIEW?”

ROBERT BARTHELL
MARGARET DEMOREST
HERBERT GOTTFRIED
HAM HILL
CARROLL McKEE
CURTIS PEACOCK
---------------- 11

�FRIDAY, MARCH 25

1:30 p.m. Durham Hall

AUGUSTUS B. KINZEL
“WHAT PRICE PROGRESS?”
People must understand what is involved in
improving the physical, mental and spiritual well-being
of mankind because technologists will continue to apply
new scientific findings, such as those in genetics, and will
give the public whatever it wants to pay for.
Unfortunately, the price may be more than dollars, often
including some degrading of the environment, some
danger to health, or a variety of risks. In any case, in a
democracy, the public calls the tune.

A. Kinzel

12

�FRIDAY, MARCH 25_____________
3:00 p.m. Durham Hall

CONCLUDING PANEL
“PROJECTING THE FUTURE:
THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS”
Participants are the speakers and visiting panel
members of the Seminar.

Nothing endures but change.
Heraclitus

13

�IBEN BROWNING
B.S. Southwest Texas State Teachers College,
M.A., Ph.D. University of Texas. Dr. Browning is a
research scientist who presently directs the Thomas Bede
Foundation. He holds many patents in various fields and
has served as a consultant to business and government in
cheniical research, intelligence, conservation, computer
applications, and bio-engineering. Co-author with Nels
Winkless of Climate and the Affairs of Men, he has also
written a sequel yet to be published. Weather, Weapons,
and Wisdom. Dr. Browning lectures extensively on the
commercial impact of changing climate.

14

�INIS L. CLAUDE, JR.

B.A. Hendrix College (with High Honors), M.A.,
Ph.D. Harvard. Educator, and political scientist. Dr.
Claude is currently Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., Professor
of Government and Foreign Affairs at the University of
Virginia. His numerous publications include: National
Minorities, Swords Into Plowshares, 4th ed., Power and
International Relations, and The Changing United
Nations. A consultant to the U.S. Department of State,
Dr. Claude has also been a member of many committees
and boards concerned with conflict resolution and
studies of international organizations.

15

�AUGUSTUS B. KINZEL

A.B. Columbia, B.S., D. Met. Eng. Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, D.Sc. Nancy University.
Scientist, engineer, inventor and author of numerous
technical publications. Dr. Kinzel’s long career included
Vice President - Research, Union Carbide Corporation.
He has served as chairman and member of many boards
and scientific councils, and is past president of the
American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and
Petroleum Engineers. A member of the American
Philosophical Society, he is former president, Salk
Institute for Biological Studies.

16

�ALEX TANOUS
B.A., M.A. Boston College, M.A. Fordham
University, M.D.Ed. University of Maine, Doctor of
Divinity, College of Metaphysics, Indiana. Instructor in
Parapsychology, University of Maine, Dr. Tanous is a
musician, composer and arranger, having collaborated
on over 500 songs. Displaying unusual psyhic powers at a
very early age, he is now a national lecturer and panelist.
Co-author with Harvey Ardman of Beyond Coincidence,
he has been extensively tested by the American Society
for Psychical Research and himself conducts scientific
investigations into a wide spectrum of the paranormal.

17

�COLIN TURNBULL
B.A. (Honors), M.A. Magdalen College, Ph.D.
Oxford University. Currently visiting Professor of
Anthropology, West Virginia University. Dr. Turnbull
has made extended field trips to India and especially
Africa. Former assistant curator at the American
Museum of Natural History, he has also served as
consultant on Africa for the U.S. State Department. His
extensive publications include: The Forest People, The
Lonely African, Tibet (with Thubten Norbu), Mountain
People, and Man in Africa. A current interest is
combining drama and anthropology in both research and
teaching.

-18

�PANEL MEMBERS:
Robert J. Barthell, Assistant Professor in English, Northwest
Community College. B.A. University of Denver, M.A. University of
Northern Colorado.
William J. Bosch, S.J., Associate Professor of History, Le
Moyne College. A.B., M.A., Ph.L. Loyola University, Chicago,
S.T.L. Woodstock College, Ph.D. University of North Carolina.
Author, Judgment on Nuremburg: American Attitudes toward the
Major German War-Crime Trials.
Patricia Ann Boyer, Assistant Professor of Social Work,
University of Wyoming. B.A. Mankato State College, M.S.W.
University of Pittsburgh.
David Cherry, Instructor of Political Science, Casper College.
B.A. Washington and Jefferson College, M.A. Southern Illinois
University.
April E. Crosby, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Colorado
Women’s College. B.A. Colorado College, Ph.D. Vanderbilt
University.
Margaret Demorest, Instructor of English, Casper College.
B.A., M.A. University of Wyoming.
James W. Fagan, Attorney at Law, Casper. B.S., B.S.L. and
LL.B. University of Wyoming.
Richard F. Fleck, Associate Professor of English, University of
Wyoming. B.A. Rutgers University, M.A. Colorado State
University, Ph.D. University of New Mexico. Author, Palms, Peaks
and Prairies, editor. The Indians of Thoreau: Selections from the
Indian Notebook. In press. Clearing of the Mist.
Edwin G. Flittie, Professor of Sociology, University of
Wyoming. B.S. University of Colorado, M.A. Stanford University,
Ph.D. Northwestern University. Contributor to major professional
journals, book on Study of American Retirees in Mexico recently
completed.
Reverend John H. Gerberding, Grace Lutheran Church,
Casper. B.A. Yale University, B.D. Northwestern Lutheran
Theological Seminary.
Herbert W. Gottfried, Assistant Professor of Art, University of
Wyoming. B.A. Colby College, M.A. University of Montana, Ph.D.
Ohio University.
Hamlin L. Hill, Jr., Professor of English, University of New
Mexico. B.A. University of Houston, M.A. University of Texas,
Ph.D. University of Chicago. Author, Mark Twain and Elisha Bliss,
Mark Twain: God’s Fool.

19

�Mark Holder, student, Casper College.
Phillis Kinney, psychologist. Southeast Wyoming Mental
Center, Laramie. B.A. Olivet College, M.A., Ph.D. University of
Wyoming.
Leonard Krasner, Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry,
State University of New York at Stony Brook. Ph.D. Columbia
University. Co-author with L.P. Ullmann, A Psychological
Approach to Abnormal Behavior, and Behavior Influence and
Personality: The Social Matrix of Human Action. In press.
Environmental Design: Values, Training, and Application.
Miriam Krasner, educator. North Country School, Stony
Brook, New York. M.A. Columbia University.

James E. McClurg, Associate Professor of Natural Science and
Science Education, University of Wyoming. B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
University of Michigan. Author, Caves and Their Mysteries,
Geology and Earth Sciences Sourcebook, Earth Science Speciflcations for School Development.
Carroll D. McKee, Instructor of Speech and Drama, Casper
College. B.A. Henderson State College, M.A. University of
Arkansas.
James A. Milek, Instructor of Biology and Genetics, Casper
College. A.S. Casper College, B.A., M.S. University of Wyoming.
Mayne W. Miller, Attorney at Law, Casper, LL.B. Vanderbilt
University.
Reverend Thomas J. Norman, First Christian Church,Casper.
B.A., M.Div., D. Ministry, Phillips University.
Curtis Peacock, Instructor of Music, Casper College. B. Mus.
Ed., B. Mus., M. Mus. University of Colorado.
R. Leo Sprinkle, Associate Professor of Psychology and
Director of Division of Counseling and Testing, University of
Wyoming. B.A. University of Colorado, M.P.S., Ph.D. University
of Missouri. Author, Self Improvement Handbook, contributor of
“Hypnotic and Psychic Implications in the Investigations of UFO
Reports,” in Coral and J. Lorenzen, Encounter with UFO
Occupants.
James A. Walsh, Professor of Psychology, University of
Montana, Missoula. B.S., M.S., Ph.D. University of Washington.
Co-author with Carol Tomlinson-Keasey and Douglas Klieger,
Acquisition of the Social Desirability Response.

Scott Wayne, student, Casper College.
Norman D. Weis, Instructor of Physical Science, Casper
College. B.S. Iowa Wesleyan, M.B.S. University of Colorado.
Robert Wilkes, Instructor of Psychology, Casper College. B.S.,
M.S. Iowa State University.

�Our appreciation is extended to the administration,
faculty and staff of Casper College for the continuing
support of the concept and reality of the annual Social
Science Seminar.

Seminar Director — Scott Jones

Library Displays — Bernie Anderson &amp; Carrie Dunn

Hostesses — Casper College Coquettes
Publicity — Bill Bragg

Posters: Basic Design II 30-104, 01
Program Design: Commercial Art Classes

Cover Design: Steve Hughes and Rodney Aaker
Newspaper Ad: Kim Holder

The Social Science Seminar has been made possible
with a matching grant from the Wyoming Council for the
Humanities and the National Endowment for the
Humanities. Their continued support is sincerely
appreciated.

21

�________________ ART EXHIBIT_________________

Art on the theme of “Change” by students from
Kelly Walsh and Natrona County High schools is being
shown across the corridor from Durham Hall in Room
305.

Future Shock, a 42-minute movie based on the book by
Alvin Toffler, and Stranger Than Science Fiction, a 17minute movie will be shown Thursday at 10:30 a.m. and
3:00 p.m., and Friday at 10:30 a.m. in AD 151. At 4:30
p.m., Friday, they will be shown in Durham Hall.

22

�Thank you for attending the 1977 Social Science
Seminar. Planning for the 1978 Seminar is under way.
Any comments and suggestions provided on the format
and content of the Seminar will be carefully considered.
This page may be torn out and placed in any of the boxes
marked Seminar Comment.

23

�The absurd man is he who never changes.
Auguste M. Barthelemy

Wars are not “acts of God.” They are caused by man, by
man-made insitutions, by the way in which man has
organized his society. What man has made, man can
change.
Fred M. Vinson

The world’s a scene of changes, and to be
Constant, in Nature were inconstancy.
Roger de Bussy-Rabutin

The old order changeth, yielding place to new;
And God fulfills himself in many ways.
Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.
Tennyson

Keep what you have; the known evil is best.

Plautus

Changes never answer the end.

Roger North

�4«

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