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                    <text>AGGRESSIOIM
MAIM AGAINST HIMSELF
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
MARCH 25 &amp; 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

�“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
11:45a.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
10:30a.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 1. 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 ZIP AY — 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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                    <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”

■

-.ifi

04?.

..-U?

�___________ 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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                    <text>THE KALEIDOSCOPE OF LIFE
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR MARCH 24-25 1977

�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

�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 wiU 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

�THURSDAY, MARCH 24

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

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

JAMES EAGAN
EDWIN ELITTIE
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
AOGOSTUS 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”

8

�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”

9

�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 FLITTIE
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 GOHFRIED
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

•

‘f

*■ *jc*'

•

-.4

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
chemical 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.

�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.

�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 Specifica­
tions 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

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                    <text>QUALITY OF LIFE
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR APRIL 6 7 1978

�GREATNESS AFTER ALL, IN SPITE OF ITS
NAME, APPEARS TO BE NOT SO MUCH A
CERTAIN SIZE AS A CERTAIN QUALITY IN
HUMAN LIVES.
IT MAY BE PRESENT IN
LIVES WHOSE RANGE IS VERY SMALL.
PHILLIPS BROOKS

THAT IRREGULAR AND INTIMATE QUALITY
OF THINGS MADE ENTIRELY BY THE HUMAN
HAND.
WILLA SIBERT GATHER

LOOK BENEATH THE SURFACE; LET NOT
THE SEVERAL QUALITY OF A THING NOR
ITS WORTH ESCAPE THEE.
MARCUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS

LONG LIFE WITHOUT IMPROVEMENT IN
THE QUALITY OF LIFE IS ONE OF THE
TRAGIC SEQUELS TO TECHNOLOGICAL
DEVELOPMENT IN MANY COUNTRIES.
HALFDAN MAHLER

IN OUR OWN DAY, IT HAS BEEN THE
BUSINESSMAN . . . WHO HAS CONTINUED
TO ENHANCE THE QUALITY OF LIFE NOT
ONLY FOR THE SELECT AND THE WEALTHY
BUT FOR ALL OF US.
FRANCIS J. DUNLEAVY

IT IS THE QUALITY RATHER THAN
QUANTITY THAT MATTERS.
LUCIUS ANNAEUS SENECA

�QUALITY
OF
LIFE
CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR

�THURSDAY. APRIL 6

8:45 A.M.

DURHAM HALL

BRUCE TOLLEFSON
seminar director

WELCOME

"...so, WHILE THE QUALITY OF LIFE IS UP,
INEQUALITY OF LIFE IS ALSO UP."

2

�THURSDAY. APRIL 6
9:00 A.M.

DURHAM HALL

ANGUS CAMPBELL
'•THE CHANGING QUALITY OF
AMERICAN LIFE"

FOLLOWING THE ADDRESS BY DR.
CAMPBELL, COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS WILL
BE SERVED IN THE LOBBY.

3

�THURSDAY, APRIL 6
10:30 TO 11:U5 A.M.

DURHAM HALL

DISCUSSION PANEL
"ENERGY:
YOU CAN FUEL ALL THE PEOPLE
SOME OF THE TIME; YOU CAN EVEN FUEL
SOME OF THE PEOPLE ALL THE TIME;
BUT YOU CAN’T ..."
STAN HATHAWAY
TOM STROOCK

DICK BROWN
GEORGE CRAWFORD

"SOMETHING MUST BE WRONG...MY READINGS
INDICATE THAT THEY'VE DECIDED TO DESTROY
THEIR OZONE SHIELD WITH DEODORANT SPRAYS..."

4

�THURSDAY, APRIL 6

10:30 TO 11:45 A.M.
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, ROOM 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
"BIOMEDICAL ETHICS:
AND LET DIE"

LIVE

ROBERT ATHERTON
ANGUS CAMPBELL
KENT CHRISTENSEN
HARRY DURHAM
EDWIN WILLEMS
GAIL ZIMMERMAN

NOT MORE THAN 20 PERCENT
OF SURGERY IS DONE TO PREVENT
DEATH OR PROLONG LIFE.
THE REST
IS DONE TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY
OF LIFE, AND WE HAVE NO SYSTEMATIC
DATA ON THE VALUE OF THE RESULTS.

JOHN BUNKER,
STANFORD UNIVERSITY

5

�THURSDAY, APRIL 6
1:30 P.M.

DURHAM HALL

RICHARD CHENEY
"GOVERNMENT AND THE QUALITY
OF LIFE"

FOLLOWING THE ADDRESS OF MR.
CHENEY, PUNCH AND COOKIES WILL BE
SERVED IN THE LOBBY.

6

�THURSDAY, APRIL 6
3:00 TO 4:15 P.M.

DURHAM HALL

DISCUSSION PANEL
"IMAGES OF THE GOOD LIFE:
CELLULOID, SILICONE AND
• • • 9'»
•

ROBERT CARLSON
ANGUS CAMPBELL
LYNNE CHENEY

CELESTE COLGAN
DENNIS QUINN

1

�_________ THURSDAY,

APRIL 6___________

3:00 TO A:15 P.M.
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING,

ROOM 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
"ROLE OF GOVERNMENT:
WILL
THE UMPIRE WIN THE GAME?"
RICHARD CHENEY
STAN HATHAWAY

ROBERT HEILBRONER
SCOTT JONES

THE IDEA OF INDEPENDENCE
REQUIRES RESISTANCE TO THE HERD
SPIRIT NOW SO WIDESPREAD, TO OUR
WORSHIP OF QUANTITY, TO OUR UN­
THINKING DEVOTION TO ORGANIZATION,
STANDARDIZATION, PROPAGANDA, AND
ADVERTISING.
DANIEL GREGORY MASON

�THURSDAY, APRIL 6
8:00 P.M.

DURHAM HALL

ROBERT HEILBRONER
"THE OUTLOOK FOR CAPITALISM"

\

9

�FRIDAY,

9:00 A.M.

APRIL 7

DURHAM HALL

EDWIN WILLEMS
"NOW I HAVE IT, NOW I DON'T:
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND THE
QUALITY OF LIFE"

"LET THEM GO, THEY ALREADY LOOK ENDANGERED.
BESIDES, THEY MAY BE CARCINOGENIC."

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

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

�FRIDAY, APRIL 7

10:30 TO 11:^5 A.M.

DURHAM HALL

DISCUSSION PANEL
"POPULATION:
GILLETTE, JAPAN
AND OTHER SMALL PLACES"
GEORGE CRAWFORD
EDWIN FLITTIE
ROBERT HEILBRONER
EDWIN WILLEMS

"WE HAVE SOLVED THE PROBLEM, THERE IS NO
ROOM TO BREED."
11

�FRIDAY, APRIL 7

10:30 TO 11:h5
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING,

ROOM 198

DISCUSSION PANEL
"RECREATION AND LEISURE:
TIME ON MY HANDS"

ANGUS CAMPBELL
SWEDE ERICKSON
ROBERT MOENKHAUS
DENNIS QUINN
GEORGE WILSON

12

�FRIDAY, APRIL 7

1:30 P.M.

DURHAM HALL

DENNIS QUINN
’’POVERTY IN PARADISE”

13

�FRIDAY, APRIL 7
3:00 P.M.

DURHAM HALL

CONCLUDING PANEL
”HOW DO YOU KNOW WHEN
YOU HAVE IT?"
PARTICIPANTS ARE THE SPEAKERS
AND VISITING PANEL MEMBERS OF
THE SEMINAR.

"TELL ME AGAIN WHAT A GOOD TIME I'M HAVING."

14

�ANGUS CAMPBELL
B.A., M.A. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, PH.D.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY.
PROFESSOR OF
PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1950,
DR. CAMPBELL IS ALSO PROGRAM DIRECTOR,
SURVEY RESEARCH CENTER, INSTITUTE FOR
SOCIAL RESEARCH.
HIS DIVERSE PROFES­
SIONAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE POSTDOCTORAL
STUDY IN SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY, FULBRIGHT
FELLOWSHIP IN NORWAY, CONSULTANT TO THE
FORD FOUNDATION IN POLAND AND
YUGOSLAVIA, COMMITTEE AND ADVISORY WORK
ON THE SST-SONIC BOOM, AND COMMUNITY
REACTION TO THE CONCORDE.
HIS
NUMEROUS PUBLICATIONS INCLUDE THE
RECENT THE QUALITY OF AMERICAN LIFE:
PERCEPTIONS, EVALUATIONS, AND
SATISFACTIONS (WITH P.E. CONVERSE AND
W. L. RODGERS).

15

�RICHARD CHENEY
A GRADUATE OF NATRONA COUNTY HIGH
SCHOOL, MR. CHENEY ATTENDED CASPER
COLLEGE AND THE UNIVERSITY OF WYO­
MING WHERE HE EARNED HIS B.A. AND
M.A. IN POLITICAL SCIENCE.
A
SERIES OF FELLOWSHIPS PROVIDED THE
OPPORTUNITY TO WORK AS AN INTERN
IN THE WYOMING STATE LEGISLATURE,
AND A STAFF MEMBER FOR THE GOVERNOR
OF WISCONSIN WHILE HE CONCURRENTLY
WORKED ON HIS DOCTORATE IN GOVERN­
MENT.
A FINAL CONGRESSIONAL
FELLOWSHIP TOOK HIM TO WASHINGTON,
D.C. WHERE HE SERVED AS A STAFF
MEMBER IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTA­
TIVES AND HELD POSTS IN TWO
EXECUTIVE AGENCIES.
HIS MOST
RECENT GOVERNMENT SERVICE WAS AS
CHIEF OF STAFF TO PRESIDENT
GERALD FORD.
16

�ROBERT HEILBRONER
B.A. HARVARD (SUMMA CUM LAUDE) PH.D.
NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH, LL.D.
LASALLE AND RIPON.
DR. HEILBRONER
IS CURRENTLY THE NORMAN THOMAS
PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS, AND CHAIRMAN,
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS, THE GRADUATE
FACULTY OF THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL
RESEARCH. HIS FIRST BOOK, THE WORLDLY
PHILOSOPHERS HAS BEEN PUBLISHED IN
MORE THAN TWENTY LANGUAGES. MANY OF
HIS OTHER WORKS INCLUDING THE FUTURE
AS HISTORY, THE GREAT ASCENT, AND AN
INQUIRY INTO THE HUMAN PROSPECT HAVE
RECEIVED SIMILAR ACCLAIM.
DR.
HEILBRONER'S MAIN FIELDS OF INTERES7
ARE CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY AND
CONTEMPORARY TRENDS IN CAPITALISM.

17

�DENNIS QUINN
B.A., M.A.^ PH.D., UNIVERSITY OF
WISCONSIN.
DR. QUINN IS PROFESSOR
OF ENGLISH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF
KANSAS, FORMER DIRECTOR OF PEARSON
INTEGRATED HUMANITIES PROGRAM.
HE
HAS STUDIED AND RESEARCHED WITH
FULBRIGHT SPONSORSHIP IN HOLLAND
AND IN SPAIN.
HIS TEACHING AND
RESEARCH FIELDS OF INTEREST INCLUDE
ENGLISH RENAISSANCE LITERATURE,
JOHN DONNE, 17TH CENTURY PROSE AND
POETRY, KING JAMES BIBLE, CLASSICAL
POETRY AND PHILOSOPHY, AND MEDIEVAL
THEOLOGY.
DR. QUINN HAS PUBLISHED
A NUMBER OF ARTICLES IN THESE AREAS
OF INTEREST.

18

�EDWIN WILLEMS
B.A. BETHEL COLLEGE (SUMMA CUM LAUDE)
M.A., PH.D., UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS.
DR. WILLEMS IS PROFESSOR OF PSYCH­
OLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON; PROFESSOR
OF REHABILITATION, BAYLOR COLLEGE OF
MEDICINE; AND DIRECTOR, BEHAVIORAL
ECOLOGY PROGRAM, TEXAS INSTITUTE FOR
REHABILITATION AND RESEARCH.
HE IS
AN ACTIVE REVIEWING EDITOR FOR A
NUMBER OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALS AND
CONSULTANT IN AREAS OF REHABILITATION
RESEARCH, EDUCATION FOR THE. HANDI CAPPED,
AND CHILD BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS.
DR.
WILLEMS HAS PUBLISHED EXTENSIVELY IN
MANY PROFESSIONAL JOURNALS AND BOOKS.
A MAJOR FIELD OF INTEREST IS BEHAVIORAL
ECOLOGY.

19

�PANEL MEMBERS

ROBERT ATHERTON, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF
ZOOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING.
B.S. UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA, M.S. WICHITA
STATE UNIVERSITY, PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.
DICK BROWN, PUBLIC AFFAIRS REPRESENTATIVE,
PACIFIC POWER AND LIGHT. B.S. UNIVERSITY OF
WYOMING.

ROBERT CARLSON, INSTRUCTOR OF ENGLISH
AND PHILOSOPHY, CASPER COLLEGE. A.A. CASPER
COLLEGE, B.A., M.P., PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF
KANSAS.
LYNNE CHENEY, LECTURER IN ENGLISH FOR
THE UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING PROGRAM AT CASPER.
B.A. COLORADO COLLEGE, M.A. UNIVERSITY OF
COLORADO, PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN.
KENT CHRISTENSEN, CASPER PHYSICIAN AND
SURGEON. PRE-MED, UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING.
M.D. UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO. PRESIDENT,
WYOMING STATE MEDICAL SOCIETY.
GEORGE WILSON, ASSISTANT SUPERIN­
TENDENT OF SCHOOLS EMERITUS IN CHARGE OF
THE DIVISION OF MUNICIPAL RECREATION AND
ADULT EDUCATION, MILWAUKEE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
B.A., M.A. MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY, PH.D.
INDIANA UNIVERSITY.

CELESTE COLGAN, FORMER INSTRUCTOR AND
CHAIRMAN, LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE DIVISION
AT CASPER COLLEGE. B.A., M.A. UNIVERSITY
OF WYOMING, PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.

HARRY DURHAM, CASPER PHYSICIAN AND
SURGEON. PRE-MED, DENVER UNIVERSITY. M.D.
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY. MAYO CLINIC,
20

�SURGERY INTERNSHIP.
OF SURGEONS.

FELLOW, AMERICAN COLLEGE

SWEDE ERICKSON, DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION, CASPER COLLEGE. B.S.
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY, M.ED. UNIVERSITY OF
WYOMI NG.
EDWIN FLITTIE, PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY,
UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING. B.S. UNIVERSITY OF
COLORADO, M.A. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, PH.D.
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY.

STAN HATHAWAY, LAWYER, CHEYENNE. FORMER
GOVERNOR OF WYOMING. A.B., LL.B. UNIVERSITY
OF NEBRASKA.
SCOTT JONES, INSTRUCTOR OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE, CASPER COLLEGE. A.B. GEORGE WASH­
INGTON UNIVERSITY, M.A. UNIVERSITY OF MARY­
LAND, PH.D. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY.

ROBERT MOENKHAUS, INSTRUCTOR OF SOCI­
OLOGY, CASPER COLLEGE. B.A. ELMHURST COLLEGE,
B.A., M.S. UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING, M.DIV. EDEN
THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.
TOM STROOCK, PRESIDENT, THE STROOCK
LEASING CORPORATION. CHAIRMAN, WYOMING RE­
PUBLICAN PARTY (1975-1977). B.A. YALE
UNIVERSITY.

GEORGE CRAWFORD, PROFESSOR AND CHAIRMAN,
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS, SOUTHERN METHODIST
UNIVERSITY. B.A., M.S., PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF
TEXAS. SPECIAL INTEREST IN FOOD, POPULATION
AND ENVIRONMENT.
GAIL ZIMMERMAN, INSTRUCTOR OF ZOOLOGY AND
MICROBIOLOGY, CASPER COLLEGE. A.A. McCOOK
COLLEGE, B.S. CHADRON STATE COLLEGE, M.A. MONTANA
STATE UNIVERSITY, PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING.
21

�NOTES
3:00 P.M., THURSDAY, APRIL 6,
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING ROOM 298.
FILM AND SLIDE SHOW BY GEORGE
WILSON ON LEISURE ACTIVITY.

TO ASSIST US IN EVALUATING THIS
SEMINAR AND TO HELP US PLAN NEXT
YEAR’S SEMINAR, IT IS REQUESTED
THAT YOU TAKE A FEW MINUTES AND
COMPLETE THE EVALUATION FORMS
WHICH WILL BE PASSED OUT TO PART
OF THE AUDIENCE AT EACH SEMINAR
EVENT.

THE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR IS
SUPPORTED WITH A MATCHING GRANT
FROM THE WYOMING COUNCIL FOR THE
HUM/SNITIES. THIS FINANCIAL
ASSISTANCE IS SINCERELY
APPRECIATED.

24

�I FEEL SURE WE WILL REALIZE THAT
PROGRESS CAN BE MEASURED ONLY BY
THE QUALITY OF LIFE - ALL LIFE, NOT
HUMAN LIFE ALONE.
THE ACCUMULATION
OF KNOWLEDGE, THE DISCOVERIES OF
SCIENCE, THE PRODUCTS OF TECHNOLOGY,
OUR IDEALS, OUR ART, OUR SOCIAL
STRUCTURE, ALL THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF
MANKIND HAVE VALUE ONLY TO THE
EXTENT THAT THEY PRESERVE AND IM­
PROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE.
CHARLES A. LINDBERGH

STOP TALKING ABOUT "THE QUALITY OF
LIFE."
LEAVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE
TO POETS AND LOVERS.
KEEP GOVERN­
MENT PLANNING TO THE MINIMUM LEVEL
OF THE TOLERABLE.
GIVE THE PEOPLE
BREAD AND LET THEM MAKE THEIR OWN
CIRCUSES.
PAUL GOODMAN

IF WE COULD UNDERSTAND WHY NATURE
BEHAVES AS IT DOES, IT WOULD BE OF
TREMENDOUS HELP TO MAN IN SHAPING A
NEW QUALITY OF LIFE FOR MANKIND.
TO
ME THE QUALITY WOULD CORRESPOND ANA­
LOGICALLY TO A GREAT PAINTING WHICH
IS OF VALUE BECAUSE OF WHAT IS LEFT
OUT AS WELL AS WHAT IS INCLUDED.
JONAS SALK

OUR MAIN PRIORITY SHOULD BE THE
QUALITY OF AMERICAN LIFE, RATHER
THAN THE CONTAINMENT OF COMMUNISM.
WE MUST STRENGTHEN OUR OWN SOCIETY.
COMMUNISM IS LIKE A DISEASE; IT
ATTACKS A ROTTEN BODY
BARBARA TUCHMAN

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                    <text>HUMAN VALUES
NEW TECHNOLOGY
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR • MARCH 22-23, 1979

�"Technology and Democracy:
Getting There Is All the Pun"
Our society has been most dis­
tinctively a way of reaching for
rather than of finding. American
democracy, properly speaking, has
been a process and not a product,
a quest and not a discovery. But
a greater danger which has been
nourished by our success In tech­
nology has been the belief In
solutions. For technological
problems there are solutions.
In human history In the long
run there are no solutions, only
problems. Every seeming solution
Is a new problem. When we think
about American democratic society,
then, we must learn not to think
about a condition, but about a
process; not about democracy, but
about the quest for democracy.

The most distinctive feature of
our system Is not a system, but a
quest, not a neat arrangement of
men and Institutions, but a flux.
What other society has ever com­
mitted Itself to so tantalizing,
so fulfilling, so frustrating a
community enterprise?
Daniel Boorstle,
Democracy and Its Discontents:
Reflections on Everyday America

�HUMAN VALUES
AND THE NEW TECHNOLOGY

CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR

�HUM VALUES AND THE NEW TECHNOLOGY
THURSDAY MARCH 22

8:45 a.m.

Seminar Welcome.

9:00 a.m.

DR. GEORGE CRAWFORD

Durham
Hall

Dr. Aley, President
Casper College

"Man, Master of or Slave to Technology,
Which Shall it Be?"

PANELS

10:30 to 11:45

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

Durham
Hall

AD 198

LAND USE:

"This Land Is Your Land"

Moderator:
Membersi

Robert Wilkes
Ken Erickson, City Manager
John Burke, County Commissioner
Dr. George Crawford
Dr. Gail Zimmerman
Dave Park

RECREATION AND TECHNOLOGY:
Moderator:
Members:

"Futurefun"

Bob Moenkhaus
Dr. John Senior
Fred Elserman
Stewart Brand
Maurice F. Griffith
Mark Holder
James Burke

�THURSDAY MARCH 22

1:30 p.m.

STEWART BRAND
"Evil” a Force for Good

iTw to A: 15

PANELS

Durham
Hal 1

SURVEILLANCE AND PRIVACY:
"No Place to Hide”
Moderator:
Members:

198

)

F.E, "Skip” Gillum
Stewart Brand
Dr. C.B. "Scott Jones
Dr. Paul Kurtz
Larry R. Clapp
Bruce Ward

COSTS OF TECHNOLOGY:
"Technology on the Installment Plan"
Moderator:
Members:

Jon Brady
Dr. C.B, "Scott" Jones
Dr. Margaret Murdock
Dr. David Kathka
John Hinckley
Glenn Mitchell

8:00 p.m.

DR. GERARD O'NEILL

Durham
Hall

"The High Frontier"

2

�FRIDAY MARCH 23
9:00 a.m.

DR. PAUL KURTZ

Durham
Hall

"The Creative Dimensions of Technology"

10:30 to 11:45

Durham
Hall

PANELS

"Colonies in Space"

Moderator:
Members:

198

Dr. C.B. "Scott" Jones
Dr. Gerard O'Neill
James Burk
Russ Rauchfuss
Stewart Brand

/technology and HEALTH:
y "How Sick Can You Afford to Be?"
Moderator:
Members:

John Meredith
Dr. Paul Kurtz
Ade la Mitchell
Dr. Gall Zimmerman
Judith Cavanah

3

�FRIDAY MARCH 23
1:30 p.m.

DR.

Durham
Hall

JOHN SENIOR

"The Alr-Conditioned Holocaust: The
New Technology and Human Values.

3:00 to 4:15

CONCLUDING PANEL

Durham
Hall

"Who Pushes the Buttons?"
Moderator:
Members:

Dr. C.B. "Scott" Jones
Dr. George Crawford
Stewart Brand
Dr. Gerard O'Neill
Dr. Paul Kurtz
Dr. John Senior

�STEWART BRAND
B.S., Stanford University. Editor, author, and
publisher, Stewart Brand Is a man of many talents.
He has been a logger. Infantry lieutenant, photo­
grapher, researcher, and designer. He was the editor,
publisher and founder of: Whole Earth Catalog, I9681971; Whole Earth Epilogue, 1973; and CoEvolution
Quarterly, 1973 on. He is the author of Two
Cybernetic Frontiers, 1973. He serves on the boards
of Neighborhood Foundation, Magic Theater, and Bread
and Roses. He has organized: Trips Festival,
Whatever It Is, World War IV, Liferaft Earth, Life
Forum, Demise Party, New Games Tournament, and the
Whole Earth Jamboree.

5

�DR. GEORGE CRAWFORD
B.A., M.S., Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Currently, Dr. Crawford Is Professor and Chairman of
the Department of Physics at Southern Methodist
University. He has published over 50 papers In
various professional journals, and has been very
active In environmental and social activities.
Participation In national and International conferences
include: Church and Society, Geneva, Switzerland,
1966; Development, Food and Population, New Delhi,
India, 1969; The Future of Man and Society In a World
of Science Based Technology, NemI, Italy, 1971; and
U.N. World Population Conference, Bucharest, Romania.

6

�DR. PAUL KURTZ
B.A., New York University, M.A., Ph.D., Columbia
University. Dr. Kurtz Is Professor of Philosophy at
State University of New York at Buffalo. He Is a
former editor of The Humanist, on the editorial board
of The Skeptical Inqulre and the International
Humanist and Ethical Union. His skepticism of the
occult and the paranormal led him to organize the
Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims
of the Paranormal. He has written hundreds of articles.
A few of his 18 books are: DeclsIon and Condition of
Man, 1965; The Humanist Alternative (ed.), 1973; The
Ful1ness of L1feT 197^; Exuberance, 1977•

7

�DR. GERARD O'NEILL
B.A., Swarthmore College, Ph.D., Cornell. Dr. O'Neill
Is Professor of Physics at Princeton University, and
specializes in high-energy experimental particle
physics. His public reputation comes from his work
with "space colonization." In 1974 he published an
article In Physics Today and began a number of
conferences on this subject. Since then possibllltes
for habitation manufacturing, and energy generation
In space have been widely discussed In the popular
and scientific press. His book. The High Frontier
was published by Bantam in 1978.

8

�DR. JOHN SENIOR
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. Dr. Senior
has taught at Cornell University, University of
Wyoming, and Is currently Professor of Classics at
the University of Kansas. His poems and reviews have
been published In Nation, the New Yorker, the
Quarterly Review of Literature, and several literary
and scholarly magazines. He Is author of The Way
Down and Out, 1959 and the Death of Christian Cuiture,
1976• He teaches In the controversial and popular
Integrated Humanities Program at Kansas which, as an
exciting adventure In liberal arts education. Is
either loved or hated.

9

�PANEL MEMBERS

JON BRADY, instructor of Political Science at Casper
College. B.A., M.A., University of Denver, J.D.,
University of Wyoming.

JAMES BURKE, member of the Technical Staff at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of
Technology, B.S. mechanical engineering 19^5, M.S.,
1938, A.E., 19^9, all from California Institute of
Technology.
JOHN BURKE, County Commissioner.

JUDITH CAVANAH, R.N., Instructor in Nursing at Casper
College. B.S., University of Utah.

LARRY R. CLAPP, serves on the Industrial Citing
Committee. B.A. in Political Science and J.D., both
from the University of Wyoming.
FRED EISERMAN, formerly of Wyoming Game and Fish,
currently with Energy Transportation Systems Incorporated,
B.A., Utah State University, Logan Utah.
KEN ERICKSON, City Manager. B.A. Political Science
from University of California at Santa Barbara 1957
and MPA University of California and Los Angeles, i960,

F.E. "SKIP" GILLUM, Instructor of Law Enforcement at
Casper College, A.S., Casper College, B.S,, Chadron
State Col lege,
MAURICE F, GRIFFITH, former president of Casper College,
former Superintendent of Public Schools, Editorial
Director of K-TWO radio and television, B.S., M.S.,
Colorado College.

JOHN HINCKLEY, Instructor of Political Science at
Northwest Community College. B.A., M,A., University
of Wyoming.
MARK HOLDER, student at Casper College, Psychology/PreMedlclne.

10

�DR. C.B. "SCOTT" JONES, former Instructor of Political
Science, Casper College, currently with C.A.C.U
A.B., George Washington University, M.A., University
of Maryland, Ph.D., American University. I
DR. DAVID KATHKA, instructor of History at Western
Wyoming Community College. B.A. 1964 in Social Science,
M.A. 1966 in History, both from Wayne State, Ph.D. 1976
in History from the University of Missouri at Columbia.
JOHN MEREDITH, Instructor of Anthropology at Casper
College. B.A., University of Colorado, M.A., Harvard
University.
ADELA MITCHELL, interim Spanish instructor Casper College.
Colegio de las Hermanas Carmelita (Tarrasa, Spain);
Institute Frances (Barcelona, Spain).

r~GLENN MITCHELL, instructor of Anthropology with the

University of Wyoming at Casper. B.A., University of
Texas, M.A., University of Michigan.J
BOB MOENKHAUS, instructor of Sociology at Casper College.
B.A., Elmhurst College, M.A., University of Wyoming,
M.DIV., Eden Theological Seminary.

DR. MARGARET MURDOCK, instructor of Political Science
at the University of Wyoming at Casper. M«A., Ph.D.,
Tufts University.
DAVID PARK, Chairman of the Wyoming Environment
Quality Council. B.S. in Range Management and a J.D.
from the University of Wyoming.

RUSS RAUCHFUSS, instructor of Business Law and Criminal
Justice at Casper College. B.S., J.D., University of
Wyoming, j

BRUCE WARD, Owner and Manager of the Casper Credit
Bureau.

Robert WILKES, instructor of psychology at Casper
College.

B.S., M.S., Iowa State University, t

DR. GAIL ZIMMERMAN, instructor in Zoology and Micro­
biology at Casper College. A.A., McCook College, B.S.
Chadron State College, M.A., Montana State University,
Ph.D., University of Wyoming.

�APPRECIATIONS

We would like to thank a few of the many
people who have made this seminar a reality.
We thank the administration, faculty, and
staff of Casper College whose support continues to
make the seminar possible.

We thank the Wyoming Council for the
Humanities for a matching grant which supports the
cost of the seminar.
We thank Wilhelm Ossa's art students who
have produced posters and covers. Cynthia Madison
and Leigh Morris had their covers selected for
publIcatlon.
We thank the seminar hostesses, the
Casper College Coquettes.

We thank the seminar participants for
their words and thoughts.

Most of all we thank the public for
coming to listen.

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                    <text>HIIAVAV AUKII
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR - MARCH 27&amp; 28,1980

�"Illusions can last a very long time,
especially when they are of the sort that
cannot be tested, but there is always a
probability that illusions that can be
tested will eventually be found out and
relabelled as error. Knowledge increases
... not by the direct perception of truth
but by a relentless bias toward the
perception of error. This is as true of
folk knowledge as it is of science."

Kenneth Boulding,
"Science: Our Common Heritage"
Science, 22 February 1980.

"It is the business of the future to
be dangerous... The major advances in
civilization are processes that all but
wreck the societies in which they occur."

Alfred North Whitehead
Adventures in Ideas

�EXPLORING THE LIMITS

OF THE HUMAN MIND

CASPER COLLEGE

SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
27-28 MARCH 1980

�THURSDAY 27 MARCH

S:45 A.M.

Seminar Welcome: Dr. Lloyd Loftin,
President of Casper College

9:00 A.M.

DR.

Durham
Hall

"Psychic Realities and Illusions:
Basic Scientific Findings"

10:30 to 11:45

Durham
Hall

CHARLES TART

PANEl^

WHAT IS IT?
"The Parameters of the Paranormal"
Moderator:
Members:

AD 198

HOLISTIC MEDICINE
"Pills, Placebos, and the Paranormal"

Moderator:
Members:

10:00 to 12:00
Ben Roberts
Commons

Rob Wilkes
Dr. Paul Kurtz
James Randi
Dr. Charles Tart
Dr. James Walsh

Bruce Tollefson
Dr. E. Lee Brubaker
Dr. Willis Harman
Dr. LeRoy Strausner
Dr. Edmund E. Wilkins

FILMS

"In Search of Ancient Astronauts"
"The Case of the Ancient Astronauts"

Following the address by Dr. Tart, coffee and
doughnuts will be served in the lobby.

�THURSDAY 27 MARCH
1:30 P.M.

Durham
Hall

DR. PAUL KURTZ
"The Paranormal:

3:00 to 4:15

Durham
Hall

PANELS

HYPNOTIC PHENOMENA AND THE PARANORMAL
"Journey through the Secret Life of
the Mind"
Moderator:
Members:

AD 198

3:00 to 5:00 P.M.

8:00 P.M.

Durham
Hall

Forrest E. Gillum
Dr. Leo Sprinkle
Dr. Charles Tart
Dr. Bruce Tollefson

RELIGION AND THE PARANORMAL
"The Mystical Experience"
Moderator:
Members:

Ben Roberts
Commons

Fact or Fiction?"

David Cherry
Dr. C. B. "Scott" Jones
Parker Torrence
Dr. Paul Kurtz

FID1S

"In Search of Ancient Astronauts"
"The Case of the Ancient Astronauts"

THE AMAZING RANDI
"Science and the Chimera"

�FRIDAY 28 MARCH

9:00 A.M.
Durham
Hall

DR. JAMES WALSH

"Experience, not Experiment"

10:30 to 11:45

Durham
Hall

PANELS

THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF PARANORMAL
BELIEFS: "Who Believes... and Why?
Moderator:
Members:

AD 198

MARGINAL CLAIMS ABOUT EXTRATERRESTRIAL
CONTACT:
"It Came from Outer Space"
Moderator:
Members:

10:00 to 12:00

Ben Roberts
Commons

Glenn Mitchell
Dr. George Blau
Dr. Jeff Eighmy
Dr. Tony Glascock
Dr. Willis Harman

Russ Rauchfuss
Dr. Leo Sprinkle
Dr. Peter Van Arsdale
E. Carl Higdon, Jr.
Pat McGuire

FILMS
"In Search of Ancient Astronauts"
"The Case of the Ancient Astronauts"

�FRIDAY 28 MARCH

1:30 P.M.

DR. WILLIS HARMAN

Durham
Hall

"The Issue Behind the Issues"

3:00 to 4:15

CONCLUDING PANEL

Durham
Hall

HOW GOOD IS THE EVIDENCE?
"Science? Fiction?"
Moderator:
Members:

C. B. "Scott" Jones
Dr. Paul Kurtz
Dr. Willis Harman
James Randi
Dr. Charles Tart
Dr. James Walsh

�DR. WILLIS HARWN
Willis Harman is Associate Director of the
Center for the Study of Social Policy (Stanford
Research Institute International) and Professor
of Engineering-Economic Systems at Stanford
University. He received his B.S. in Electrical
Engineering from the University of Washington in
1939, and an M.S. in Physics and a Ph.D. in
Electrical Engineering from Stanford University
in 1948.
Through the 1960's Dr. Harman was active in the
newly formed Association for Humanistic Psychology,
serving as a member of the Executive Board and a
member of the editorial board of the Journal of
Humanistic Psychology. He entered the field of
social policy and joined SRI in 1966. In 1978 Dr.
Harman became president of the Institute of Noetic
Sciences, founded in 1973 by astronaut Edgar Mitchell
to advance the state of knowledge regarding intuitive
knowing, creativity, and subjective experience. His
most recent book. An Incomplete Guide to the Future
was published in 1979.

5

�DR. PAUL KURTZ
Paul Kurtz received his B.A. from New York
University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia
University. He is currently Professor of Philosophy
at the State University of New York, Buffalo.
He is former editor of The Humanist and is
currently on the editorial board of the Skeptical
Inquirer and the International Humanist and Ethical
Union. His skepticism of claims regarding the
occult led him to organize the Committee for the
Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal.
He has written hundreds of articles. The most
recent of his eighteen books are Exuberance (1977),
The Fullness of Life (1974), The Humanist Alternative
(editor, 1973), and Decision and Condition of Man
(1965).

�JAITS RANDI
James Randi is a professional conjuror who has
appeared throughout the world as "The Amazing Randi".
His interest in the findings of parapsychology began
when he was only fifteen. Ever since then, he has
waged a battle with those who claim supernatural or
"psychic" powers.
Mr. Randi is the author of many articles for
scientific periodicals and journals (Technology
Review, La Recherche, New Scientist, The Huma^st,
etc.) and his third book, Flim-Flam: The Truth about
Unicorns, Parapsychology and Other Delusions, is due
this May from Lippincott and Crowell. His first book.
The Magic of Uri Geller (1975) was effective in
debunking the psychic status of Uri Geller. Mr. Randi
is a founding member of the Committee for the
Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
(CSICOP) and is a member of the Inner Magic Circle of
London.

�DR. CHARLES TART
Charles Tart received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D.
from the University of North Carolina. Presently he
is Professor of Psychology at the University of
California, Davis.
He has served on the editorial boards of
Alterations in Awareness and Human Potentialities
Annual, International Journal of Altered States of
Consciousness, Journal of Transpersonal Psychology,
Psi, and Psychoenergetic Systems: An International
Journal.
He has published a multitude of articles dealing
with topics such as hypnosis, out-of-body experiences,
drug-induced states of consciousness, and ESP. In
addition, he has edited Altered States of
Consciousness: A Book of Readings (1969? revised
1972), Transpe^onal Psychologi'e^( 1975), and Mind
at Large (1979)~ His own books include States of
Consciousness (1975), Learning to Use Extrasensory
Perception~[T976), and Psi: Scientific Studies of
the PsychTc Realm (1976yT

8

�DR. J/VtS WALSH
James Walsh received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D.
from the University of Washington. He has also done
postdoctoral work sponsored by NIMH in computer
applications in the behavioral sciences (at UCLA
and the University of Washington) and in statistics
(sponsored by the Social Science Research Council,
at Stanford University).
Dr. Walsh is a psychologist and statistician who
is currently a professor of Psychology at the
University of Montana. He has developed a
psychological scale for measuring social learning in
very young children; he has also done research in the
area of personality measurement and computer
simulation. Currently he is investigating statistical
procedures for separating state and trait components
in personality characteristics.
Walsh reviews books on applied statistics for the
journal Educational and Psychological Measurement and
is a member of its editorial board. He has also
reviewed psychological tests for O.K. Buros' Mental
Measurements Yearbooks.

9

�PANEL

MEMBERS

DR. GEORGE BLAU, Assistant Professor of Psychology,
University of Wyoming. B.A. University of Colorado;
M.A., Ph.D. and J.D., University of Wyoming.
DR. E. LEE BRUBAKER, Family practice physician,
Casper. Military Dependent School, Orleans, France.
B.S., University of Wyoming; M.D. University of
Tennessee; Board Certified as Diplomat, American
Board of Family Practice.
DR. JEFFREY L. EIGHMY, Assistant Professor of
Anthropology, Colorado State University. B.A.,
University of Oklahoma; M.A. and Ph.D., University
of Arizona.

FORREST E. GILLUM, Instructor of Law Enforcement,
Casper College. A.S., Casper College; B.S., Chadron
State College.
DR. ANTHONY GLASCOCK, Assistant Professor of
Anthropology, University of Wyoming. B.A., William
College; Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh.

E. CARL HIGDON, JR., Rawlins, Wyoming.
DR. C.B. "SCOTT" JONES, Former Instructor of
Political Science, Casper College. B.A., George
Washington; M.A., University of Maryland; Ph.D.,
American University.

PAT MCGUIRE, Rancher, Bos1 er, Wyoming.

GLENN MITCHELL, Instructor of Anthropology with the
University of Wyoming at Casper. B.A., University of
Texas; M.A. University of Michigan.
RUSS RAUCHFUSS, Instructor of Business Law and
Criminal Justice, Casper College. B.S. and J.D.,
University of Wyoming.

10

�DR. R. LEO SPRINKLE, Director, Division of Counseling
and Testing, University of Wyoming. B.A., University
of Colorado; M.P.S. and Ph.D., University of Missouri.
DR. LEROY STRAUSNER, Director of Counseling Services,
Casper College. A.A., Casper College; B.A. and M.A.,
University of Northern Colorado; Ph.D., University of
Wyomi ng.
DR. BRUCE TOLLEFSON, Chairman, Division of Social and
Behavioral Sciences, Casper College. B.A., St.
Cloud State College; M.A. and Ph.D., University of
Wyoming.
PARKER TORRENCE, Student, Casper College.
Arts.

Liberal

DR. PETER VAN ARSDALE, Assistant Professor of
Anthropology, Denver University. B.A., University of
Colorado; M.A., University of Maryland; Ph.D.,
University of Colorado.

ROB WILKES, Instructor of Psychology, Casper College.
B.S. and M.S., Iowa State University.
DR. EDMUND E. WILKINS, Assistant Director, Wyoming
Family Practice Residency Program at Casper, and
Associate Professor in the College of Himian Medicine,
University of Wyoming. B.S., University of California
at Berkeley; M.D., Stanford School of Medicine.

11

�IN APPRECIATION

The continued success of these seminars is
due to the outstanding support of many groups and
individuals. We would like to express our
appreciation to the administration, faculty, and
staff of Casper College whose constant backing
makes the realization of these seminars possible.
We would also like to thank the people from the
community of Casper (and other parts of Wyoming)
for your continuing interest, attendance, and
participation.
Thanks are also due to the Casper College
Coquettes who are acting as seminar hostesses and
to Wilhelm Ossa's art students who have devoted
their time to creating posters and covers for the
seminar; the cover chosen for this year's program
was designed by Katherine Looney.

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                    <text>The Continuing Revolution
CASPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR-FEB. 26-27, 1981

�Art moves toward its dissolution.
Life
and knowledge break apart.
The age of books
is over. The age of obscenity begins.
Mere
anarchy is loosed upon the world.
The barbar­
ians rise from the catacombs. Ancient authori­
ties dissolve. Science and technology turn sour.
Political reason decays. All is absurd.
But it is a remarkable age, too. Never
have there been so many books, paintings, so
much music. An explosion of knowledge and edu­
cation occurs. Poetry is read to huge audiences.
Incredible feats of the intellect abound: Witt­
genstein, Sartre, Toynbee, Russell, Levi-Strauss,
Father Teilhard, the marvels of science and tech­
nology. There is a spiritual ferment, an up­
rising of youth. New frontiers of the mind are
opened. Exciting syncretisms take place.
New
media appear for the arts and for knowledge.
But the very superabundance of achieve­
ments and novelties, pouring in as never before
on the individual exposed to them, staggers the
brain. And tremendous changes have clearly
been underway. Apocalyptic feelings therefore
abound.

After Everything

Roland Stromberg

�AMERICAN SINCE VIETNAM:

the Continuing Revolution

Casper College
Social Science Seminar
February 26 and 27, 1981

Program Cover by
Mary Wright

�EVENTS

Thursday, February 26
A Seminar Welcome by Dr. Lloyd Loftin,
President of Casper College

9:00 a.m.

LECTURE

Durham
Hall

"Is America a Dying Civilization?
PROFESSOR MAX LERNER *

Following the lecture by Pro­
fessor Lerner, coffee will be
served in the lobby.
10:30 to
11:45 a.m.
Durham
Hall

PANELS

A.

"The Fragmenting Consensus"

Professor Max Lerner
Mr. Jon Brady
Mrs. Jane Katherman
Mr. Robert Moenkhaus
Dr. Bruce Tollefson, Moderator
AD 198

B.

"Law or Legalism"

Chief Justice Robert R. Rose, Jr.
Mr. Forrest Gillum
Mr. R. Stanley Lowe
Dr. Margaret Murdock
Mr. Lester Obert
Mr. Russell Rauchfuss, Moderator

* biographical material, pages 6-12

2

�Thursday, February 26 (continued)

LECTURE

1:30 p.m.

"Riding into the '80s on Our
One-Hoss Shay: Economics in the
American Future"
DR. RICHARD C. EDWARDS

Durham
Hall

Following the lecture by Dr.
Edwards, coffee will be served
in the lobby.
3:00 to
4:15 p.m.

Durham
Hall

PANELS

A.

"Choice in an Age of Diminishing
Alternatives"

Dr.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
AD 198

B.

Richard C. Edwards
Douglas Crowe
David Park
Robert Suedes
Gerald Nelson, Moderator

"Contemporary Culture"
Professor Max Lerner
Mrs. Margaret Demorest
Dr. Pat Grenier
Mr. John Meredith
Mr. Robert Wilkes
Mrs. Barbara Crews, Moderator

8:00 p.m.

LECTURE
"A Foreign Policy for the United
States"
AMBASSADOR WILLIAM H. SULLIVAN

- 3 -

�Friday, February 27
LECTURE

9:00 a.m.

"Media Myths and Realities"
DR. EDIE N. GOLDENBERG *

Durham
Hall

Following the lecture by Dr.
Goldenberg, coffee will be
served in the lobby.
10:30 to
11:45 a.m.

Durham
Hall

PANELS

"Learning to Live with the
Media"

A.

Dr. Edie N. Goldenberg
Dr. Lloyd Agte
Mr. Richard High
Mrs. Arlene Larson
Mr. Pete Williams
Mr. Richard Reitz, Moderator

AD 198

B.

"America and the Developing
World"
Ambassador William H. Sullivan
Mr. Ray L. Caldwell
Mrs. Jane Katherman
Mr. Arlen R. Wilson
Mr. David Cherry, Moderator

* biographical material, pages 6-12

- 4 -

�Friday, February 27 (continued)

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE
"Changing Patterns in an Era
of Risk"
RESPERSENTATIVE SHIRLEY CHISHOLM

Following the lecture by Repre­
sentative Chisholm, coffee will
be served in the lobby.
3:00 to
4:30 p.m.

Durham
Hall

THE CONCLUDING PANEL

"Vietnam in Retrospect"
Representative Shirley Chisholm
Dr. Richard C. Edwards
Dr. Edie N. Goldenberg
Professor Max Lerner
Ambassador William H. Sullivan
Mr. Jon Brady, Moderator

"finis"

- 5 -

�MAX LERNER

Dr. Max Lerner is Distinguished Professor of
Human Behavior at the Graduate School of Human
Behavior, United States International University
at San Diego and Professor Emeritus at Brandeis
University. He has taught at Harvard, Williams,
Sarah Lawrence, Pomona and the University of Flor­
ida. He lectures at the New School in New York
City and for the Foreign Service Institute.
Dr. Lerner is a world-wide syndicated columnist
for both the New York Post and the Los Angeles Times.
Born in Minsk, Russia, Dr. Lerner came to the
United States as a young boy. He received his A.D.
from Yale, his A.M. from Washington University, St.
Louis and his Ph.D. from the Robert Brookings Grad­
uate School of Economics and Government.

Dr. Lerner was Professor of American civilization
at Brandeis University from 1949-73 and served for two
years as Dean of the Graduate School.
He is the author of fourteen books. His best
known work is: America as a Civilization.
Other
books include: Ideas Are Weapons; The Unfinished
Country; Tocqueville and American Civilization; The
Age of Overkill; and Education and a Radical Human­
ism. His latest book, published in 1976 by Phi Beta
Kappa, is Values in Education.
Dr. Lerner currently
is working on a book of political and psychological
studies of six American Presidents from Franklin
Roosevelt through Richard Nixon to be called The
Wounded Titans.

- 6 -

�RICHARD C. EDWARDS
Dr. Richard C. Edwar^ls is Associate Professor
of Economics at the University of Massachusetts.
Dr. Edwards graduated from Grinnell College
with a B.A. and has his Ph.D. in economics from
Harvard University (1972).

Before assuming a position with the University
of Massachusetts in 1974, Dr. Edwards was with the
National Bureau of Economic Research, the Harvard
Graduate School of Education and the Institute for
Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey.

Special fields of academic Interest for Dr.
Edwards Include: American economic history; poli­
tical economy; and labor economics.

Dr. Edwards has published extensively. His
books include: Methods for Assessing the ComparaWorth of Jobs (1981); Contested Terrain: the
Transformation of the Workplace in the 20th Century
(1979); and The Capitalist System (1978^
The book.
Contested Terrain, was named as an "Outstanding
Academic Book of 1979 by Choice magazine and
selected as "Best Business Book" by the Library
Journal.
Dr. Edwards currently is working on a book,
Labor Segmentation in American Capitalism: An
Historical Essay.

- 7 -

�WILLIAM H. SULLIVAN
Ambassador William H. Sullivan is President of
the American Assembly, Columbia University.
Ambassador Sullivan has his B.A. (summa cum
laude) from Brown University and his M.A. from the
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts Univer­
sity.
Ambassador Sullivan has retired from the Foreign
Service, United States Department of State where he
had served from 1947 to 1980. Ambassador Sullivan
was the United States Ambassador to Iran from 197779. He has also been Ambassador to the Philippines
(1973-77) and Ambassador to Laos (1964-68).

Ambassador Sullivan served as Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State, East Asian and Pacific Affairs
from 1969 to 1973, and he was political advisor to
General MacArthur during the Korean War.
In 1962
he played a central role in negotiating the agree­
ments on Laos.
As Ambassador to Laos, he directed both clan­
destine and overt military resistance against North
Vietnam, yet maintained close relations with the
leaders in Hanoi.
Consequently, he eventually be­
came Henry Kissinger's immediate deputy in the final
Paris peace negotiations on Vietnam.

- 8 -

�EDIE N. GOLDENBERG

Dr. Edie N. Goldenberg is Associate Professor
of Political Science at the University of Michigan,
Research Associate, the Institute for Public Policy
Studies and Faculty Associate, Institute for Social
Research, University of Michigan.
Dr. Goldenberg received her S.B. from the Mass­
achusetts Institute of Technology and her M.A. and
Ph.D. from Stanford University.

She has served with the U.S. Office of Personnel
Management (U.S. Civil Service Commission) as Chief
of the Civil Service Reform Evaluation Management
Division and Special Assistant to the Deputy Director.
Dr. Goldenberg has been Michigan Election Consul­
tant with the American Broadcasting Corporation in
1976, 1978 and 1980.

Her interest in media impact on political
institutions is reflected in numerous presentations,
articles, and publications including: "Politics and
the Mass Media;" "Media Effects in Congressional Cam­
paigns;" "Freedom of the Press in Democracy" (Kano,
Nigeria); "Interest Group Politics and the Press"
(Monrovia, Liberia); and "An Overview of the Concept
of Access to the Media." Her most recent article,
in the American Journal of Political Science, is
"Front-Page News and Real-World Cues: Another Look
at Agenda-Setting by the Media."
Dr. Goldenberg received a Director’s Award for
Superior Accomplishment by the U.S. Office of Person­
nel Management in 1980.

- 9 -

�SHIRLEY CHISHOLM
Representative Shirley Chisholm is Representative
from New York's Twelfth Congressional District to the
United States Congress.

Mrs. Chisholm has her B.A. (cum laude) from
Brooklyn College and her M.A. from Columbia Uni­
versity.
She is a former nursery school teacher
and director.
She has been an educational consul­
tant with the Division of Day Care, Bureau of Child
Welfare, New York.
She served in the New York State
Assembly from 1964-68 until elected to the Congress
of the United States in 1968.
In Congress, Representative Chisholm is Secre­
tary of the House Democratic Caucus and Vice-Chair­
woman of the Congressional Black caucus.
She is a
member of the House Education and Labor Committee
and played a major role in the passage of the mini­
mum wage bill in the House.
She serves on the Se­
lect Education, General Education and Agriculture
Labor subcommittees.

Mrs. Chisholm has received eleven honorary
degrees from universities and colleges over the
years.
She was the first recipient of Clairol's
"Woman of the Year" Award for outstanding achieve­
ment in public affairs. For the past three years,
she has remained on the Gallup Poll's list of the
ten most admired women in the world.
Representative Chisholm is the author of two
books: Unbought and Unbossed; and The Good Fight.

10 -

�SPECIAL PANEL GUESTS
Ray I4. CALDWELL - Special Assistant to the Gov­
ernor of Colorado; U.S. Foreign Service Officer.

^r. Douglas CROWE - Planning Coordinator, Wyoming Game
and Fish Department; Member, International Convention
Advisory Committee to U.S. Secretary of Interior.

to. Richard HIGH - Editor, Casper Star Tribune.

to. Pat GRENIER - Assistant Professor of English,
University of Wyoming at Casper.
to.
Stanley LOWE - Counsel, True Companies; Assem­
bly Delegate, American Bar Association House of
Delegates.
Dr. Margaret MURDOCK - Assistant Professor of Politi­
cal Science, University of Wyoming at Casper.

David PARK - Attorney; Member and former Chair­
man, State of Wyoming Environmental Quality Council.

2^. Robert
ROSE,
Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court of the State of Wyoming; former Member of the
Casper College Board of Trustees
to. Pete WILLIAMS - News Director, KTWO Radio and
Television.
Mr. Arlen R. WILSON - Assistant City Manager, Ft.
Collins, Colorado; U.S. Foreign Service Officer;
former Casper College Instructor in government
and history.

- 11 -

�PANEL PARTICIPANTS FROM CASPER COLLEGE
Dr. Lloyd AGTE - Instructor of English
to. Jon BRADY - Instructor of political science
to. David CHERRY - Instructor of political science
tos. Barbara CREWS - Instructor of education
tos. Margaret DEMOREST - Instructor of English
to. Forrest GILLUM - Instructor of criminal justice
tos. Jane KATHERMAN - Instructor of history
Mr£. Arlene LARSON - Instructor of English and
journalism
to. John MEREDITH - Instructor of anthropology
to. Robert MOENKHAUS - Instructor of sociology
to. Gerald NELSON - Instructor of geology and
geography
to. Lester OBERT - Instructor of sociology and
criminal justice
to. Russell RAUCHFUSS - Instructor of commerical
law and criminal justice; Casper attorney
Richard REITZ - Director of Information
Services
to. Robert SUEDES - Instructor of economics
Dr. Bruce TOLLEFSON - Chairman, Division of Social
and Behavioral Sciences; instructor of psychology
to. Robert WILKES - Instructor of psychology
*****

A thank you to the commercial art students of
Mr. Wilhelm Ossa for cover designs and posters.
A thank you to the Seminar hostesses, the
Casper College Coquettes.

This Seminar has been made possible by funding
from Casper College, the Casper College Foundation
and private donations.
Seminar Director, Mr. Jon Brady

- 12 -

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                    <text>CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
FEBRUARY 25-26,1982

�"I don't know what is meant by justice,
but I do know that it cannot exist in
the absence of law."
Daniel

Ka tki n

"There is no such thing as justice —
in or out of court."
C1 a rence

Da r row

�LAW:

A SEARCH FOR JUSTICE

CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
FEBRUARY 25 AND 26. 1982

SEMINAR DIRECTOR
F. E. "SKIP" GILLUM

�EVENTS
TH U RS DAY, FEBRUARY 25, 19^2______________

A Seminar Welcome by Dr. Lloyd Loftin,
President of Casper College
9: (X) a.m.

Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE

"The Legal System
and How It Works"
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERT ROSE

Following the lecture by
Chief Justice Rose, coffee
will be served in the lobby.

10:30 a.m.

Durham
Hall

PANELS

"Equal Justice Under Law"
Chief Justice Robert Rose
Gerry L. Spence
Vincent Bugliosi
Frank Chapman
Margaret Murdock
Russell Rauchfuss, Moderator

AD 198

"Capital Punishment and Deterrence"
Rudy Restivo
George Blau
Henry Abraham
Leonard Meacham
Robert Wilkes, Moderator

1

�THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1982

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE
"Gunning for Justice"
GERRY L. SPENCE

Following the lecture by
Mr. Spence, coffee will be
served in the lobby.

3:00 p.m.

Durham
Hal 1

PANELS

"Whose Rights: The Victim's,
the Suspect's, or Society's?"
Henry Abraham
Richard Honaker
Ronald Ketchum
Maggie Edler
Mi ke Lynch
David Cherry, Moderator

AD 198

"Justice Without Lawyers"

Jon Brady
Stephen Davidson
Pat Boyer
Robert M. Forrister
Robert Moenkhaus, Moderator

8:00 p.m.
Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE
"Criminal Justice:
for Change"

A Case

CHARLES E. SILBERMAN

2

�FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1982

9:00 a.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE

"The Sensationalism of Crime"
VINCENT BUGLIOSI

Following the lecture by Mr. Bugliosi,
coffee will be served in the lobby.

10:00 a.m.

Durham
Hall

PANELS

"Fair Trial and a Free Press"
Pete Williams
Richard High
Dave Park.
Peter Feeney
Vincent Bugliosi
Les Obert, Moderator

AD 198

"Plea Bargaining:
Whose Best Interests?"

Charles S i1berman
John Barrett
Dan Spangler
George Zimmers
Linda Miller
Mahlon Sorenson, Moderator

3

�FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1982

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE
"Judging or Legislating: Reflections
on the Judicial Role in a Democratic
Self-Governing Society"

HENRY J. ABRAHAM

Following the lecture by Dr. Abraham,
coffee will be served in the lobby.

3:00 p.m.

Durham*
Hal 1

CONCLUDING PANEL

"Justice:

Image or Reality"

Henry J. Abraham
Vi ncent Buglios i
George Blau
Charles Silberman
Jon Brady
F. E. "Skip" Gillum, Moderator

�CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERT ROSE
Robert Rose received his law degree from the
University of Wyoming in 1941. After serving in the
U.S. Air Force during WWII Chief Justice Rose served
in the Wyoming House of Representatives from
19^9"1951, as mayor of Casper from 1950-1951, and was
an Assistant Secretary of the Interior in Washington,
D.C. in 1951-1952.
Returning to Casper Chief Justice
Rose served on the Casper College Board of Trustees
for twelve years and as a member of the Community
College Commission for four years.
In 1975 he was
appointed to the Wyoming Supreme Court and was
elevated to Chief Justice on January 5, I98I.

In addition to lecturing extensively in Wyoming about
legal issues, Chief Justice Rose is a faculty
member of the National College for Criminal Defense
in Houston and the Western Trial Advocacy Institute
of the University of Wyoming. He has also published
articles in regional legal publications.
5

�GERRY L. SPENCE
Since receiving his Law Degree Mr. Spence has been
involved with various aspects of criminal and civil
practice in Wyoming. He has served as a Fremont
County and Prosecuting Attorney, was appointed as a
special prosecutor for the State of Wyoming, has
engaged in private defense work, and has represented
numerous clients in civil matters, some of which
have received national attention.
Some of his more publicized cases include the
prosecution of Mark Hopkinson, the defense of
Ed Cantrell, the suit filed against Penthouse
Magazine by a former Miss Wyoming, and the law
suit by Karen Silkwood against Kerr McGee.

6

�CHARLES E. SILBERRAN
Charles Silberman received an A.B. degree from
Columbia University in 19A6, and was awarded an
Honorary L.H.D. from Kenyon College in 1972. He is
a former senior editor of Fortune magaz i ne and
served as Director of the Study of Law and Justice,
a Ford Foundation research project, from 1972 to
1979. Mr. Silberman is currently a member of the
American Bar Association.

In addition to teaching and tutoring in economics,
Mr. Silberman has authored many articles and books
including: Crisis in Black and White; Crisis in
the Classroom; and his most recent book, C r i mi na1
Violence, Criminal Justice.

7

�VINCENT BUGLIOSI
Vincent Bugliosi received his undergraduate degree from
the University of Miami while on a tennis scholarship.
He attended the University of California at Los Angeles
Law School and graduated first in his class in 1964.
Mr. Bugliosi served as a Deputy District Attorney for
Los Angeles for eight years. During that time he
conducted close to 1,000 criminal trials, loosing only
one felony trial. His most famous trial was the
Manson case which became the basis for his best selling
book Helter Skelter which has sold more copies than any
other crime related book in America. Mr. Bugliosi was
also a Professor of Criminal Law at the Beverly School
of Law.

Mr. Bugliosi has lectured extensively at major colleges
and universities about legal issues. He is also the
author of two other books: Till Death Us Do Part and
Shadow of Pain.

8

�HENRY J. ABRAHAM
Henry J. Abraham is the James Hart Professor of
Government and Foreign Affairs at the University of
Virginia.
He received his A.B. suma cum laude from
Kenyon College; A.M. from Columbia University; and a
Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. He was
awarded an honorary L.H.D. in 1972 from Kenyon
Col 1ege.

He is a member of the Editorial Board, of The
Encyclopedia of the American Constitution. He has
also written numerous journal articles and contribu”
ted to numerous books. Dr. Abraham is the author
of numerous books including: The Judicial Process:
An Introductory Analysis of the Courts of the United
States, England, and France; Justices and Presidents:
A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme
Court; The Judiciary: The Supreme Court in the
Governmenta 1 Process; and Freedom and the Court:
Civil Rights and Liberties in the United States.
9

�PANEL MEMBERS
JOHN BARRETT, Chief of Police, Evansville, Wyoming.
B.S. University of Wyoming.
GEORGE BLAU, Assistant Professor of Psychology,
University of Wyoming. B.A. University of Colorado;
M.A., Ph.D., and J.D., University of Wyoming.

PAT BOYER, Assistant Professor of Social Work,
University of Wyoming. B.A. Mankato State College;
M.S.W. (with honors) University of Pittsburgh.

JON BRADY, Instructor of Government and Political
Science, Casper College. B.A. and M.A. University of
Denver; J.D. University of Wyoming.
FRANK CHAPMAN, Attorney-at-Law, former Wyoming State
Public Defender. B.S. and J.D. University of Wyoming.

DAVID CHERRY, Instructor of Government and Political
Science, Casper College. B.A. Washington and Jeffer­
son; M.A. Southern Illinois University.
STEPHEN DAVIDSON, County Court Judge, Natrona County.
B.A. and J.D. Creighton University.
MARGARET EDLER, Victim, Witness—Assistance Counselor,
Natrona County Attorney's Office.

PETER J. FEENEY, Attorney-at-Law, Municipal Judge,
City of Casper. A.B. Kean College; J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.

ROBERT M. FORRISTER, District Court Judge, Seventh
Judicial District.
B.S. Antioch College; J.D. Harvard
Law School.
F.E. "SKIP" GILLUM, Instructor of Criminal Justice,
Casper College. A.S. Casper College; B.A. Chadron
State College; M.P.A. University of Wyoming.

RICHARD B. HIGH, Editor, Casper Star Tribune.
RICHARD HONAKER, Attorney-at-Law, former Wyoming State
Public Defender, B.A. Harvard; J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.

RONALD KETCHUM, Deputy Sheriff, Natrona County.
Casper College; B.S. University of Wyoming.
10

A.S.

�PANEL MEMBERS CONTINUED
MICHAEL LYNCH, Instructor, Wyoming Law Enforcement
Academy. B.S. University of Wyoming; M.P.A.
University of Florida.

LEONARD MEACHAM, Undersheriff, Laramie County, former
Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary.

LINDA MILLER, Attorney-at-Law, Assistant Wyoming
State Public Defender. B.S. Colorado State University;
J.D. University of Wyoming.
ROBERT MOENKHAUS, Instructor of Sociology, Casper
College. B.A. Elmhurst College; M.A. University of
Wyoming; M.Div. Eden Theological Seminary.
MARGARET MURDOCK, Assistant Professor of Political
Science, University of Wyoming. B.A. Creighton
University; M.A. and Ph.D. Tufts University.
LESTER G. OBERT, JR., Instructor of Sociology and
Criminal Justice, Casper College. A.S. Casper College;
B.S. and M.S. Brigham Young University.

DAVID PARK, Attorney-at-Law.
of Wyoming.

B.S. and J.D. University

RUSSELL RAUCHFUSS, Instructor of Criminal Justice and
Business Law, Casper College, Attorney-at-Law. B.S.
and J.D. University of Wyoming.

RUDY RESTIVO, Instructor of Criminal Justice, Laramie
County Community College, former chief of police,
Cheyenne, Wyoming.
MAHLON SORENSEN, Instructor of Business, Casper College.
B.S. and J.D. University of Nebraska.

DAN SPANGLER, District Court Judge, Seventh Judicial
District. B.A. University of Wyoming; M.A. London
School of Economics; L.L.B. Stanford.
ROBERT WILKES, Instructor of Psychology, Casper College.
B.S. and M.S. Iowa State University.
PETE WILLIAMS, News Director, KTWO Television and Radio.

GEORGE ZIMMERS, Attorney-at-Law, County and Prosecuting
Attorney, Albany County. B.A. and J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.
11

�ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We would like to thank the following persons for
their help in making a success of the seminar.

Program Designs by:

Posters by:

Donna Smith and Laura Pawlowski.

Students of Jim Stewart and
Jon Rossenberger.

The persons who provided the public address systems.
The Coquettes.
The Administration, faculty, and staff of
Casper College.

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Miu:
H SEARCH

OkSPER COLLEGE SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR* FE^ 25-26, 1982

�"I don't know what is meant by justice^
but I do know that it cannot exist in
the absence of law."
Daniel

Ka tk i n

"There is no such thing as justice —
in or out of court."
Clarence Da r row

�LAW:

A SEARCH FOR JUSTICE

CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR
FEBRUARY 25 AND 26&gt; 1982

SEMINAR DIRECTOR
F. E. "SKIP" GILLUM

�EVENTS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1982

A Seminar Welcome by Dr. Lloyd Loftin,
President of Casper College

9:00 a.m.
Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE

“The Legal System
and How It Works"
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERT ROSE

Following the lecture by
Chief Justice Rose, coffee
will be served in the lobby.

10:30 a.m.

Durham
Hal 1

PANELS

“Equal Justice Under Law"
Chief Justice Robert Rose
Gerry L. Spence
Vi ncent Bugliosi
Frank Chapman
Margaret Murdock
Russell Rauchfuss, Moderator

AD 198

“Capital Punishment and Deterrence"
Rudy Restivo
George Blau
Henry Abraham
Leonard Meacham
Robert Wilkes, Moderator

1

�THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1982

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE

"Gunning for Justice"
GERRY L. SPENCE
Following the lecture by
Mr. Spence, coffee will be
served in the lobby.

3:00 p.m.

Durham
Hal 1

PANELS

"Whose Rights: The Victim's,
the Suspect's, or Society's?"

Henry Abraham
Richard Honaker
Ronald Ketchum
Maggie Edler
Mi ke Lynch
David Cherry, Moderator
AD 198

"Justice Without Lawyers"
Jon Brady
S tephen Dav i dson
Pat Boyer
Robert M. Forrister
Robert Moenkhaus, Moderator

3:00 p.m.
Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE
"Criminal Justice:
for Change"

A Case

CHARLES E. SILBERMAN

2

�FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1982

9:00 a.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE

"The Sensationalism of Crime"
VINCENT BUGLIOSI

Following the lecture by Mr. Bugliosi,
coffee will be served in the lobby.

10:00 a.m.
Durham
Hall

PANELS

"Fair Trial and a Free Press"
Pete Will lams
Richard High
Dave Park
Peter Feeney
Vincent Buglios i
Les Obert, Moderator

AD 198

"Plea Bargaining:
Whose Best Interests?"
Charles S i1berman
John Barrett
Dan Spangler
George Zimmers
Linda Miller
Mahlon Sorenson, Moderator

3

�FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1982

1:30 p.m.

Durham
Hal 1

LECTURE
"Judging or Legislating: Reflections
on the Judicial Role in a Democratic
Self-Governing Society"
HENRY J. ABRAHAM
Following the lecture by Dr. Abraham,
coffee will be served in the lobby.

3:00 p.m.

Durham
Hall

CONCLUDING PANEL

"Justice:

Image or Reality"

Henry J. Abraham
V i ncent Bug 1ios i
George Blau
Charles SiIberman
Jon Brady
F. E. "Skip" Gillum, Moderator

4

�CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERT ROSE
Robert Rose received his law degree from the
University of Wyoming in I9AI. After serving in the
U.S, Air Force during WWII Chief Justice Rose served
in the Wyoming House of Representatives from
19^9-1951, as mayor of Casper from 1950-1951, and was
an Assistant Secretary of the Interior in Washington,
D.C. in 1951-1952. Returning to Casper Chief Justice
Rose served on the Casper College Board of Trustees
for twelve years and as a member of the Community
College Commission for four years.
In 1975 he was
appointed to the Wyoming Supreme Court and was
elevated to Chief Justice on January 5, I98I.

In addition to lecturing extensively in Wyoming about
legal issues. Chief Justice Rose is a faculty
member of the National College for Criminal Defense
in Houston and the Western Trial Advocacy Institute
of the University of Wyoming. He has also published
articles in regional legal publications.
5

�GERRY L. SPENCE
Since receiving his Law Degree Mr. Spence has been
involved with various aspects of criminal and civil
practice in Wyoming. He has served as a Fremont
County and Prosecuting Attorney, was appointed as a
special prosecutor for the State of Wyoming, has
engaged in private defense work, and has represented
numerous clients in civil matters, some of which
have received national attention.
Some of his more publicized cases include the
prosecution of Mark Hopkinson, the defense of
Ed Cantrell, the suit filed against Penthouse
Magazine by a former Miss Wyoming, and the law
suit by Karen Silkwood against Kerr McGee.

6

�CHARLES E. SILBERMAN
Charles Silberman received an A.B. degree from
Columbia University in 1946, and was awarded an
Honorary L.H.D. from Kenyon College in 1972. He is
a former senior editor of Fortune magazine and
served as Director of the Study of Law and Justice,
a Ford Foundation research project, from 1972 to
1979. Mr. Silberman is currently a member of the
American Bar Association.
In addition to teaching and tutoring in economics,
Mr. Silberman has authored many articles and books
including; Crisis in Black and Whi te; Crisis in
the Classroom; and his most recent book. Criminal
Violence, Criminal Justice.

7

�VINCENT BUGLIOSI
Vincent Bugliosi received his undergraduate degree from
the University of Miami while on a tennis scholarship.
He attended the University of California at Los Angeles
Law School and graduated first in his class in 1964.
Mr. Bugliosi served as a Deputy District Attorney for
Los Angeles for eight years.
During that time he
conducted close to 1,000 criminal trials, loosing only
one felony trial. His most famous trial was the
Manson case which became the basis for his best selling
heater Skelter which has sold more copies than any
other crime related book in America. Mr. Bugliosi was
also a Professor of Criminal Law at the Beverly School
of Law.

Mr. Bugliosi has lectured extensively at major colleges
and universities about legal issues. He is also the
author of two other books: Till Death Us Do Part and
Shadow of Pain.
' - -----------8

�HENRY J. ABRAHAM
Henry J. Abraham is the James Hart Professor of
Government and Foreign Affairs at the University of
Virginia.
He received his A.B. suma cum laude from
Kenyon College; A.M. from Columbia University; and a
Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. He was
awarded an honorary L.H.D. in 1972 from Kenyon
Col 1ege.

He is a member of the Editorial Board, of The
Encyclopedia of the American Constitution. He has
also written numerous journal articles and contribu­
ted to numerous books.
Dr. Abraham is the author
of numerous books including: The Judicial Process:
An Introductory Analysis of the Courts of the UnfTed
States. England, and France; Justices and Presidents:
A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme
Court; The Judiciary: The Supreme Court in the
Governmenta1 Process; and Freedom and the Court:
Civil Rights and Liberties in the United States.
9

�PANEL MEMBERS
JOHN BARRETT, Chief of Police, Evansville, Wyoming.
B.S. University of Wyoming.

GEORGE BLAU, Assistant Professor of Psychology,
University of Wyoming. B.A. University of Colorado;
M.A., Ph.D., and J.D., University of Wyoming.

PAT BOYER, Assistant Professor of Social Work,
University of Wyoming. B.A. Mankato State College;
M.S.W. (with honors) University of Pittsburgh.
JON BRADY, Instructor of Government and Political
Science, Casper College. B.A. and M.A. University of
Denver; J.D. University of Wyoming.

FRANK CHAPMAN, Attorney-at-Law, former Wyoming State'
Public Defender. B.S. and J.D. University of Wyoming.
DAVID CHERRY, Instructor of Government and Political
Science, Casper College. B.A. Washington and Jeffer­
son; M.A. Southern Illinois University.
STEPHEN DAV IDSON, County Court Judge, Natrona County.
B.A. and J.D. Creighton University.

MARGARET EDILer, Victim, Wi tness--Ass istance Counselor
Natrona County Attorney's Office.
PETER J. FEENEY, Attorney-at-Law, Municipal Judge,
City of Casper. A.B. Kean College; J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.

ROBERT M. FORRISTER, District Court Judge, Seventh
Vh
Co'lea*! J.O. Harvard
Law ocnoo1.

F.E. "SKIP" GILLUM, Instructor of Criminal Justice,
Casper College. A.S. Casper College; B.A. Chadron
State College; M.P.A. University of Wyoming.
RICHARD B. HIGH, Editor, Casper Star Tribune.

RICHARD HONAKER, Attorney-at-Law, former Wyoming State
Public Defender, B.A. Harvard; J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.
RONALD KETCHUM, Deputy Sheriff, Natrona County.
Casper College; B.S. University of Wyoming.

A.S.

10

�PANEL MEMBERS CONTINUED
MICHAEL LYNCH, Instructor, Wyoming Law Enforcement
Academy. B.S. University of Wyoming; M.P.A.
University of Florida.

LEONARD MEACHAM, Undersheriff, Laramie County, former
Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary.

LINDA MILLER, Attorney-at-Law, Assistant Wyoming
State Public Defender. B.S. Colorado State University;
J.D. University of Wyoming.
ROBERT MOENKHAUS, Instructor of Sociology, Casper
College. B.A. Elmhurst College; M.A. University of
Wyoming; M.Div. Eden Theological Seminary.

MARGARET MURDOCK, Assistant Professor of Political
Science, University of Wyoming. B.A. Creighton
University; M.A. and Ph.D. Tufts University.
LESTER G. OBERT, JR., Instructor of Sociology and
Criminal Justice, Casper College. A.S. Casper College;
B.S. and M.S. Brigham Young University.

DAVID PARK, Attorney-at-Law.
of Wyoming.

B.S. and J.D. University

RUSSELL RAUCHFUSS, Instructor of Criminal Justice and
Business Law, Casper College, Attorney-at-Law. B.S.
and J.D. University of Wyoming.

RUDY RESTIVO, Instructor of Criminal Justice, Laramie
County Community College, former chief of police,
Cheyenne, Wyoming.

MAHLON SORENSEN, Instructor of Business, Casper College.
B.S. and J.D. University of Nebraska.
DAN SPANGLER, District Court Judge, Seventh Judicial
District. B.A. University of Wyoming; M.A. London
School of Economics; L.L.B. Stanford.
ROBERT WILKES, Instructor of Psychology, Casper College.
B.S. and M.S. Iowa State University.

PETE WILLIAMS, News Director, KTWO Television and Radio.

GEORGE ZIMMERS, Attorney-at-Law, County and Prosecuting
Attorney, Albany County. B.A. and J.D. University of
Wyomi ng.
11

�ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank the following persons for
their help in making a success of the seminar.

Program Designs by:
Posters by:

Donna Smith and Laura Pawlowski.

Students of Jim Stewart and
Jon Rossenberger.

The persons who provided the public address systems.

The Coquettes.

The Administration, faculty, and staff of
Casper Col lege.

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                    <text>Casper College Social Science Seminar: March 1-2

�CASPER COLLEGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR

SEMINAR DIRECTOR—Dr. Bruce Tollefson

Cover Designed by
Matthew Tuss

�THURSDAY MARCH 1
What was 1984? ... a warning about the future of human freedom in a world
where political organization and technology can manufacture power. .. What
Orwell had done was not to foresee the future but to see the implications of the
present.
— Walter Crunkile
Preface to 1984

8:45 a.m.

Seminar Welcome

9:00 to 10:15

PANEL

Durham
Hall

ORWELL’S 1984

Moderator:
Members:

10:30 a.m.
Durham
Hall

Dr. Loftin, President
Casper College

DR. LEON MARTEL
“1984: How Near? How Far?

Mrs. Margaret Demorest
Dr. Leon Martel
Ms. Rosemary Burwell
Ms. Linda Cantrell
Ms. Carol Clark
Ms. Suzan Hines
Ms. Rhonda James
Mr. Tim Miller
Mr. Jeff Thompson
Ms. Jennifer Wall

�THURSDAY MARCH 1
Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they
have rebelled they cannot become conscious.
— Georye Orwell
Winsion’.s diary 1984

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

DR. LEE BROWN
“A Euture Direction for Policing in America”

3:00 to 4:15

PANELS

Durham
Hall

BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU
Moderator:
Members:

AD 198

8:00 p.m.
Durham
Hall

Mr. E. E. “Skip” Gillum
Dr. Lee Brown
Mr. William Colby
Dr. David Lykken
Mr. Erank Snepp

TAKING A BYTE OUT OF PRIVACY
Moderator: Dr. John Meredith
Members: Mr. David Burnham
Mr. Dick McKay
Dr. Allan Skillman
Ms. Meg Weist

MR. WILLIAM COLBY
“The World of the 8O's: Intelligence
Looks Ahead”

2

�FRIDAY MARCH 2
Newspeak was designed not to extend but to diminish the range of
thought... The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium
of expression for the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees
of Ingsoc, but to make all other modes of thought impossible.
— George Orwell
Principles of Newspeak
Appendix to 1984

9:00 a.m.
Durham
Hall

10:30 to 11:45

MR. DAVID BURNHAM
“The Rise of the Computer State”

PANELS

Durham
Hall

NEWSPEAK AND DOUBLETHINK
Moderator: Ms. Arlene Larson
Members: Mr. Richard High
Mr. Bob Price
Mr. Frank Schepis
Mr. Frank Snepp

AD 198

FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
Moderator:
Members:

Dr. Lloyd Agte
Mr. Charles Blatz
Mr. David Cherry
Dr. Pat Greiner
Dr. John Meredith

�FRIDAY MARCH 2
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLA VERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
—George Orwell
1984

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall
3:00 to 4:15

Durham
Hall

MR. FRANK SNEPP
“1984: Here and Now”

CONCLUDING PANEL
IS IT REALLY 1984?
Moderator:
Members:

Mr. Jon Brady
Remaining Guests

KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
—Francis Bacon
Meditations Sacrae, 1597

�DR. LEE BROWN
Houston Police Chief Lee P. Brown previously served as Atlanta’s Public Safety
Commissioner and had responsibility for the city’s civil defense operations, fire
and correctional services, as well as police operations. Chief Brown began his
career as a patrolman with the San Jose, CA Police Department, after which
he held the position of director of law enforcement programs at Portland, OR
State University, where he was instrumental in establishing a program in
criminal justice. He later became associate director of the Institute for Urban
Affairs and Research at Howard University in Washington, D.C. Chief Brown
holds masters and doctorate degrees in criminology from the University of
California at Berkley, a masters’ degree in sociology from San Jose State U.,
and a bachelor’s degree in criminology from Fresno State University.

�MR. DAVID BURNHAM
Mr. David Burnham is presently a reporter for the Washington Bureau of The
New York Times. As a reporter he has covered the performance of the police,
courts and prosecutors, including the Serpico corruption series and the
performance of the Federal agencies in handling such issues as
communications, occupational disease, conflicts of interest and nuclear energy.
His book. The Rise of the Computer State, is about the impact of computers
and telecommunications on the American people. Mr. Burnham’s articles have
been published in The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Magazine, The
Nation, fVashingtonian, The Reader’s Digest, True Magazine and The
Reporter. He earned a B.A. in American history from Harvard College.

�MR. WILLIAM COLBY
William E. Colby’s career spanned World War II, the Cold War, Viet Nam,
Watergate, and the sensational revelations of the CIA’s role in them. As
Director of the CIA from 1973 to 1976, he had the awesome responsibility of
guiding American intelligence in order to estimate future events and interpret
our evermore complex world. As Director of Central Intelligence, Colby
emerged as a leading figure in American Foreign Policy. Mr. Colby sums up
his defense of the Agency in these words: ‘it may have done some things in the
past which were either mistaken or wrong, but it corrected them itself. The
CIA today is the best intelligence service in the world. ... It is the envy of the
foreign nations.” Mr. Colby received an undergraduate degree from Princeton
and his law degree from Columbia.

�DR. LEON MARTEL
Leon Martel is a political scientist and a futurist, specializing in the forecasting
of economic, political, social and resource issues. He is the author of LendLease, Loans and the Coming of the Cold War, and co-author (with Herman
Kahn and William Brown) of The Next 200 Years. His current book, in
process, is Managing Change: How to Prepare for the Future. Dr. Martel is
also a captain in the United States Naval Reserve with extensive professional
experience in the fields of political and military intelligence. Dr. Martel holds
a B.A. from Dartmouth College, and an M.S., Ph.D., and Certificate of the
Russian Institute from Columbia University.

�MR. FRANK SNEPP
Mr. Frank Snepp is a best-selling non-fiction author, at television and motion­
picture consultant, and a screen writer. He is a lecturer and broadcast
commentator on international relations and national security affairs and
related legal issues. As a former CIA analyst and operative he was responsible
for White House-oriented analyses, briefings, speech writing, interrogations,
and the management of espionage networks in hostile territory. Other
positions included promotion writer and researcher for CBS news, and
producer/writer for WRVR-FM, New York.
Since September 1983, Mr. Snepp has been the Otis Chandler Distinguished
Lecturer at the University of Southern California’s School of Journalism, with
responsibility for courses on censorship and investigative journalism. On
December 16, 1983 the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi,
presented him its national First Amendment Award “in recognition of strong
and continuing efforts to preserve and strengthen freedom of the press and the
First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America.” Other
honors include special grants and awards from J. Roderick MacArthur
Foundation and Hugh M. Hefner Foundation, and the CIA Medal of Merit.
Mr. Snepp holds a B.A. from Columbia University’s Columbia College in
literature, and a Master’s degree in International Affairs and a Certificate from
the European Institute, Columbia University’s School of International Affairs
in strategic issues.

/N APPRECIATION
The continued success of these seminars is due to the outstanding support
of many groups and individuals.
We would like to express our
appreciation to the administration, faculty, students, and staff of Casper
College whose constant backing makes the realization of these seminars
possible. We would also like to thank the people from the community of
Casper, and the state of Wyoming for your continuing interest,
attendance, and participation.

9

�LIBU
SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS
LLOYD AGTE, instructor of English at Casper College. B. A., University
of Idaho, M.A., Sul Ross University, Ph.D., Kent State University.

CHARLES BLATZ, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University
of Wyoming. B.A., University of Cinncinati: M.A., Ph.D., University of
Michigan.

JON BRADY, instructor of political science at Casper College. B.A.,
M.A., University of Denver, J.D., University of Wyoming.

ROSEMARY BURWELL, student.
LINDA CANTRELL, student.

DAVID CHERRY, instructor of political science at Casper College.
B.A., Washington and Jefferson, M.S., Southern Illinois University.
CAROL CLARK, student.
BARBARA CREWS, instructor of education at Casper College. B.A.,
M.A., Louisiana Tech.
MARGARET DEMOREST, instructor of English at Casper College.
B.A., University of Montana, M.A., University of Wyoming.

E. E. “Skip” GILLUM, instructor of Criminal Justice at Casper College.
A.S., Casper College, B.A., Chadron State College, M.P.A,, University
of Wyoming.
PAT GREINER, Assistant Professor of English at the University of
Wyoming-Casper. B.A., University of Delaware, M.A., Ph.D., Ohio
State University.
SUZAN HINES, student.

RICHARD HIGH, Editor, Casper Star-Tribune.

RHONDA JAMES, student.
JANE KATHERMAN, instructor of history at Casper College. B.A.,
M.A., University of Missouri.

ARLENE LARSON, instructor of English at Casper College. B.A.,
University of Northern Iowa, M.A.T., Colorado College.
10

�SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS
DAVID LYKKEN, professor of psychiatry at the University of
Minnesota. B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Minnesota.

RICHARD M. McKAY, Manager, Wyoming Higher Education
Computer Network. B.S., Western Illinois University.
JOHN MEREDITH, instructor of anthropology at Casper College.
B.A., University of Colorado, M.A., Harvard, Ph.D., University of
Arizona.
TIM MILLER, student.

ROBERT MOENKHAUS, instructor of sociology at Casper College.
B.A., Elmhurst College, M.A., University of Wyoming.
LES OBERT, instructor of sociology and criminal justice at Casper
College. A.A., Casper College, B.S., M.S., Brigham Young University.

BOB PRICE, Vice President and General Manager of KTWO-Radio and
Television.
FRANK SCHEPIS, Director of Natrona County Library System. B.A.,
University of Dallas, M.L.S., North Texas State University.

ROBERT SUEDES, instructor of economics at Casper College. B.A.,
Dakota Wesleyan University, M.B.A. University of Denver.
ALLAN SKILLMAN, Dean of Faculty at Casper College. B.S.,
Montana State University, M.S., University of Utah, Ed.D., Montana
State University.

JEFF THOMPSON, student.

BRUCE TOLLEFSON, Chairman, Social and Behavioral Sciences at
Casper College. B.S., St. Cloud College, M.A., Ph.D., University of
Wyoming.
JENNIFER WALL, student.
MEG WEIST, Computer User Consultant at Casper College. B.A.,
Valparaiso University, M.A., Portland State University.

ROB WILKES, instructor of psychology at Casper College. B.S., M.S.,
Iowa State University.

--------------------------------------------------- 11 ---------------------------------------------- —

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