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Montanan Magazine, 1969-2020 University Relations

5-1-1969

UM Profiles, May 1969

University of Montana (Missoula, Mont.: 1965-1994)

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University of Montana, Missoula Vol. 1, No. 2 May 1969 UM Sends Team to GE College Bowl Each Sunday afternoon five Scott Wheeler, senior in History, on campus but they’re certainly team will be given free tickets to students meet in the home of a UM Spokane, Wash., and William Lar­ five of the quickest.” the show. faculty member and test their wits son, senior in liberal arts, Great The team members, the alternate The students received a detailed and speed against a panel of col­ Falls. and Dr. Turner will leave list of instructions for appearing on lege-age scholars on television. The five were chosen from a by plane for and color television. They were told to The practices are to get the UM series of oral and written tests, the plan to return . wear pastel colored shirts, and a “brain” team in shape for its tele­ last of which contained 200 ques­ UM’s opponent has not been note typed in at the bottom of the vision appearance on NBC’s tions with a three to five second chosen but it will be one of four list read: “Would all students have “General Electric College Bowl” in answer time. One of the young men schools: Wesleyan University, Mid­ their hair trimmed and groomed.” New York City. will be made a team alternate. dletown, Conn.; Skidmore College, A one-minute film, prepared by Dr. Robert Turner, professor of Dr. Turner emphasized that Saratoga Spring, N.Y.; Dillard Uni­ Chet Dreher, UM Information Ser­ history, is the advisor to the UM quick recall is more important than versity, New Orleans, La., or Le­ vices photographer, showing high­ team composed of James Curry, superior intelligence for success on high University, Bethlehem, Pa. lights of the UM campus, will be senior in history from Ekalaka; GE College Bowl. “This is a game The group will receive several shown during intermission on the Robert Blair, junior in wildlife, St. based on rapid reflex action,” he fringe benefits besides its expense- show. Louis, Mo.; Robert Murdo, senior in said. “The fellows picked are not paid trip to New York. Theater Dr. Turner is optimistic about the history and economics, Billings; necessarily the five smartest ones tickets will be provided free, and probable success of his team. “I UM alumni in the New York area think we have a good chance to as well as friends and family of the win,” he said. “And losing wouldn’t even be bad,” he added, because the Explore Virusland Free team will bring back $1,000 in scholarship funds even if defeated No doubt you’ve been infected with one, but have you ever seen a virus? UM PROFILES in the first round. Do you know how bacteria work to produce your favorite beer? Vol. 1, No. 2 May 1969 If the team is victorious, it will A trip into the fascinating, often invisible world of microorganisms this Published monthly October through return to New York a week later quarter is available to citizens of the Missoula area. June, by the University of Montana and, if defeated then, receive a total The UM Department of Microbiology is offering a free, public course Information Services, University of of $4,000 for the two appearances. If designed to clarify the complex world of microbiology. Montana, Missoula, Mont. 59801. Sec­ ond-class postage paid at Missoula, it wins the second game, it will con­ Offered from 7:30-9:30 p.m. each Tuesday, the course, according to Dr. Mont. tinue to return to New York until George L. Card, assistant professor of microbiology and main instigator defeated and receive $3,000 for each of the new venture, is being offered to help “bridge a communications gap victory. between scientists and public.” Each week 60 to 90 persons, representing a diversity of ages and interests, show up in the UM Health Sciences Building. “They talk to us in our own language,” a woman-student said. Spring at UM Students Elect Ben Briscoe New Head of Central Board Benjamin B. Briscoe, UM junior “A New Direction in Student Gov­ in history and political science, is ernment.” the newly elected president of the He advocates, among other pro­ Associate Students of the Univer­ posals, a change in women’s dormi­ sity of Montana (ASUM). tory regulations to make them the Briscoe, the son of Mr. and Mrs. same as the rules governing men’s Benjamin B. Briscoe of Great Falls, dormitories; a new constitution for ran his campaign with the slogan, better apportionment of Central Board; an Academic Review Board consisting of faculty and students, and a limited pass-fail system trial Alpha Omicron Pis period. Briscoe also has suggested estab­ Begin Construction lishment of an auxiliary commis­ Members of the Beta Rho Chap­ sion to further the cause of the 19- ter of Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority year-old voting referendum in at UM should have a new home Montana. next academic year. Winning the position of vice- Construction of the ultra-modem president on the same ticket with structure at 220 Daly, Missoula, is Briscoe was Bruce Gray, junior more than one-third finished and is from Great Falls. scheduled for completion Aug. 22. During the April election, UM The building will provide chap­ students also gave approval to a ter members with their first real proposal that would place the ath­ home. Until now the girls have letic department budget under the been housed in UM dormitories. control of Central Board, the stu­ The contemporary building is de­ dent governing body. This proposal signed by Cushing Terrell Asso­ must be approved by the Board of ciates, an architectural firm from Regents before it becomes effective. Billings, which has employed a Also elected was Mark Mertens, block treatment somewhat in the junior from Three Forks, ASUM manner of the new University Cen­ business manager; senior delegates ter. The construction is mainly of Joe Mazurek, Helena, Jack Martin, glass and frame, with the exterior Dallas, Texas, and Jeff Cunniff, Flowers, pretty girls and outdoor activities all seem to blossom on the to be finished in cedar shingles Great Falls; junior delegates Keith Missoula campus during spring. Ann Galbraith, one of UM’s pretty The building will contain three Strong, St. Ignatius, and David co-eds, gets set for a brisk, game of tennis. Mrs. Galbraith, a junior dormitories, each housing 18 girls. Gorton, Billings, and sophomore in health and physical education from Pasco, Wash., is seated in front Construction cost is expected to delegates Bill Bahr, Chinook, and of the UM married students apartments where she and her husband reach approximately $300,000 . Craig Webb, Poison. Robert live. (Chet Dreher Photo) Page 2 Miss UM

The Journalism School and the Kaimin By WARREN J. BRIER Dean of the School of Journalism For more than half a century, the relationship between the UM School of Journalism and the Montana Kaimin has been somewhat like the professional bond between Rodgers and Ham- merstein or Huntley and Brinkley: They have worked together and complemented and respected each other, but they consistently and clearly have bid each other good night. That the journalism school and the student newspaper do indeed live separate lives is a fact repeated daily in the Kaimin masthead: “The School of Journalism utilizes the Kaimin for practice courses, but as­ sumes no responsibility and exer­ cises no control over policy or con­ tent.” Despite the masthead statement and despite the extended duration of this relationship, some readers continue to assume—and oc­ Karol Dea Kramer, UM senior from Missoula, shows the thrill of win­ casionally insist—that the journalism school controls both the ning the Miss UM title. Miss Kramer won out over a field of nine policy and content of the Kaimin and assumes responsibility for contestants in the annual contest April 12 to choose the contestant the material in the newspaper. It does not. So who does? The who represents UM at the Miss Montana preliminary for the Miss answer also appears daily in the masthead statement: “ASUM America contest. Marcia Wise, sophomore from Billings, and Mardell publications are responsible to Publications Board, a committee Milligan, senior from Miles City, were named first and second run­ of Central Board.” That is, the responsibility for the selection of ners-up. the paid staff, the policy and the content of the Kaimin rests directly with a committee of the student government and ul­ Campus Briefs timately with the ASUM Central Board. The link between the Kaimin and the journalism school is one UM students graduating at the istration at UM, has been named of convenience, not necessity. The school utilizes the Kaimin end of this quarter may bring as the 1968 Outstanding Young Wo­ for three practice courses—Advanced Reporting, Advanced many guests as they wish to com­ man of the Year in Montana. News Editing and Advertising Sales—and the Kaimin offices are mencement ceremonies and to the in the Journalism Building. Neither the school nor the news­ Commencement Dinner June 14. Dr. Arnold W. Bolle, dean of the paper is dependent on this arrangement, though it definitely The dinner will be held in the UC UM School of Forestry, has been provides certain benefits for both. The extraordinary profes­ ballroom at $3 per person. named an adviser to the Congres­ sional achievements of graduates of the journalism school pro­ sional Ad Hoc Committee on the vide strong evidence of the effectiveness of the curriculum and Besides the annual selection of Environment. the demanding practice courses in which students work under Miss UM, the Missoula campus was deadline pressures. the site of two other beauty con­ One-seventh of the UM student There is no prior censorship of the Kaimin. The editorial page tests in April. Mary Jane Blakely, body, or 1,018 students, achieved and opinion columns are totally separated from the journalism a sophomore in health and physical the honor roll during the 1969 win­ curriculum. No faculty member sees what is to be published. education from Missoula, on April ter quarter. Of the total, 155, or 14 Decisions are made exclusively by the student editors. Although 10 was selected Miss UM Rodeo. per cent of the honor students, the editors are encouraged to consult with journalism faculty Christina Jovin, a freshman in earned straight A’s. members and often do, they are under no compulsion to do so health and physical education from and they do not have to follow advice if it is offered. The faculty Missoula, was crowned Miss Mon­ “The Frightful Punishment,” by adviser, a representative of the School of Journalism and not of tana during the state preliminary Warren J. Brier, dean of the UM the University faculty, acts solely in an advisory capacity. This of the Miss Universe pageant April School of Journalism, has been re­ is not a perfect system and sometimes it has been frustrating to 22. Miss Jovin will go on to Miami, leased by the UM Press. The book, members of the faculty and administration. Nonetheless, it Fla., to compete in the Miss U.S.A. second in a series of Montana his­ should be noted that student newspapers per se have been a pageant. tory, is the story of frontier prize­ “problem” through the years to university administrations and fighter, Con Orem. that the Kaimin has operated with only one administrative Enrollment at UM reached 6,522 interruption since 1898. last month, a record for Spring William F. “Duke” Crowley, UM The separation of the student newspaper and the School of Quarter on the Missoula campus associate professor of law, has been Journalism does not imply a lack of interest by the school. The and a 11.9 per cent gain over last appointed by Gov. Forrest H. An­ journalism faculty long has been proud of the fact the University year when there were 5,851 stu­ derson to head a study in prepara­ of Montana is the smallest state college or university with a daily dents. tion for reorganizing Montana’s student newspaper and that in total number of pages published executive branch of government. each year the Kaimin ranks with universities with as much as Dr. Patricia Douglas, director of five times the enrollment of UM. Journalism professors have State Technical Services and an as­ been and continue to be constructive critics of the Kaimin as sistant professor of business admin- well as vigorous defenders of its editorial freedom, insisting that Calendar at a university opinions and ideas must have an outlet and must Saturday, —“Semi­ be able to clash openly. To suggest otherwise would be to refute nar for Montana Newsmen,” 8 the tradition, structure and very purpose of a public university Alumni a.m.-4:45 p.m. Talks by How­ and the historic concept of freedom of expression. Harold Stearns, Harlowton, was ard C. Heyn, newsman and Editorial trends in the Kaimin in recent years are typical of installed as the 1969-70 UM Alumni editor, the Associated Press, the general trend in the nation’s college press. It is no revelation Association president at the Asso­ New York, and Howard C. to point out that college newspapers across the country are ciation’s Spring meeting April 25- Taylor, editorial consultant, placing more emphasis on what the editors regard as social, 26 in Havre. . . . Colin W. Raff, Copley Newspapers, La Jolla, political and economic shortcomings of our society. There has Butte, vice-president of Montana Calif. . . . Track, UM vs. MSU been an increasing propensity to challenge authority, to question Power Co., has been named presi­ at Bozeman. the status quo, to demand responses to questions that conven­ dent-elect of the UM Alumni Asso­ Friday, May 16—Big Sky iently have gone unanswered for decades. ciation for 1970-71. . . . Two UM Allied with these changes is the growing tendency to blame Golf, Track and Tennis Cham­ alumni—Dr. Herbert E. Robinson, pionships, through April 17. the news media—including the college and the national press— president of the Swift Chemical for fostering the wrenching social problems of the late . Saturday, —Business Co., and Hugh D. Galusha Jr., presi­ Administration’s 50th Anni­ Though the media surely must share the blame if they have— dent of the Federal Reserve Bank as critics contend—failed to “tell it like it is,” they certainly do versary and Scholarship Ban­ in Minneapolis—will receive hon­ quet, 6:30 p.m., UC ballroom. not deserve chastisement for reporting the present turbulence orary doctorates June 15 during in American society. In this regard, one might recall the poor . . . Council of 50 meets, U UM commencement exercises. . . . Center. messenger who is an “honest man” when he tells Cleopatra A memorial fund for Walter L. things she wants to hear but a villain to be “stew’d in brine” Pope, former UM law professor, Friday, — “Canned when he reveals that Antony has married Octavia. As Cleopatra has been established by four of Heat” concert. vents her anguish and fury on him, the messenger does manage Judge Pope’s former students: Saturday, — Inter­ to utter a line that has relevance even in May, 1969: “Gracious Judge Russell E. Smith, Missoula; scholastic track meet. Madam, I that do bring the news made not the match.” George H. Boldt, Tacoma, Wash.; Saturday, June 15 — Com­ William D. Murray, Butte, and W. mencement, 2 p.m., Fieldhouse. J. Jameson, Billings. Page 3 UM Graduate Student Publishes Poetry Book By REBECCA YATES Minneapolis longer than any other “He has those qualities a poet has novel, Welch said, may be his first UM Information Services place,” he said, “but I have nothing to have and cannot learn,” Hugo and last. “Arthur Wills said every to write about Minneapolis, or explained. “He has a tremendous one has his one good novel, and "The land I write most about is Alaska, or Washington. gift for the sound of language, a this one may be mine.” not mountainous; it’s kind of stark good ear for hearing rhythms and plains, the sudden green of the Milk tonalities. River Valley.” “He also is gifted with an imagin­ ation that permits him to exploit On the Blackfeet Reservation at his private world poetically, to use Browning, Mont., Jim Welch and it in the selfish way poets have to his family used to plant alfalfa on use it in order to write,” he added. a 40-acre tract of land called the Welch’s poetry is still closely Earth Boy 40, after its original bound with that of his teacher and owner, Earth Boy. mentor, Hugo, and still shows “Riding the Earth Boy 40” is also Hugo’s influence. “I think Hugo is the tentative title for Welch’s first probably one of the two or three book of poetry, soon to be published best poetry writing teachers in the by the World Publishing Co. country,” Welch said. “He knows Born James P. Welch Jr. in when to be tough to get the most Browning, 28 years ago, the young out of a student.” Blackfeet poet is now a UM gradu­ After completing his B.A. degree ate student working toward his in liberal arts in the Spring of 1966, Master of Fine Arts degree. Welch enrolled in his first poetry “There are no conscious socio­ Jim Welch course with Hugo. “At first I didn’t logical implications in my poems,” even know what went into a poem,” Richard Hugo Welch states; however, many of the A private world of Indian myth, “I take unreasonable pride in my folklore and disparate people. the student related. “All that 68 poems in his book deal with spring, that summer, all next year students when they write well.” Indians and their conditions, Indian I was writing a poem a day trying past and the contrasting present, esting from the standpoint of a to get technique down, a rhythm and, of course, the land of the In­ writer who is one of them by race,” down.” dians—what it was to them and he added. “Jim has a remarkable capacity what it means now. Welch’s “private world” of In- to learn very fast,” Hugo marveled. Richard Hugo: Usually starting with a certain dan folklore, myth and a disparate “I don’t believe I’ve ever seen a locale to structure the poem, Welch people is a tremendous asset to him poet learn so fast. He has been Montana Poet as a poet, according to Richard F. writing for only three years. I had uses tight, imagistic language, a “Good Luck in Cracked hard steady rhythm to describe a Hugo, UM associate professor of been writing 12 years before I pub­ “The country and people in lished a book.” Italian” by Richard F. Hugo, people and their actions “objec­ UM associate professor of Eng­ tively.” northern Montana are more inter- Now living in Missoula with his English. wife, Dr. Lois Monk Welch, UM as­ lish, will be the first edition in The son of Mr. and Mrs. James P. a new poetry series being pre­ Welch, now of Fort Belknap Hugo, himself a highly acclaimed sistant professor of English, Welch Northwest poet and teacher of crea­ is at work on a novel about an In­ pared by the World Publish­ Agency, Welch traveled quite ex­ ing Co. tensively in other states when he tive writing at UM said, “I take a dian family on the reservation to­ tremendous pride in Jim. day. This very autobiographical The poetry volume, Hugo’s was young. “I probably lived in third book, will be brought out in both paperback and hardbound this fall, kicking Archaeologists Search for Indian Sites off a series which also will in­ clude “Riding the Earth Boy UM anthropology instuctor Pryor Mountains, south of Billings, the expedition is being financed by 40” by UM graduate student Lawrence L. Loendorf and a crew surveying and locating archaelogi- grants totaling approximately $10,- James P. Welch. of students again this summer will cal sites. 500 from the National Park Service, The World Publishing Co. put in back-breaking work in the For the second consecutive year, the Forest Service and the Bureau also has accepted another book of Land Management. of Hugo’s poetry, “The Lady Last summer, with a team of in Kicking Horse Reservoir,” seven students, a pet raven and a to be published approximately dog named Jackson, Loendorf found a year after the first. 100 sites ranging from wikiups, or “Good Luck in Cracked wooden houses, approximately 100 Italian” was completed last to 150 years old, to cave sites of year after Hugo returned about 4,000 years old, tepee ring from where he was stay­ sites, pictograph sites, rock art sites, ing on a Rockefeller grant. It a number of vision quest structures was begun in 1963, the year be­ and some sites of about 6,000 years fore Hugo came to UM, when in age. he also visited a year in Italy. However, the crew found diffi­ During World War II he was culties in conducting its surveys. stationed in the Mediterran­ “The area has been so looted and ean country as a bombardier vandalized by so many people,” pilot. Loendorf said, “and the mining “My poems are landscape operations have so defaced the area poems,” Hugo explained, “but Two members of last summer's UM archaeological team survey an that now most of the material has the landscape is essentially historical tepee ring site. been lost. We have to try to recon­ one that’s internal. The place struct something on the artifacts that starts the poems is only we did find,” he added. used to start it; ultimately, the Among the artifacts found were poem is psychological and pri­ modules of stone from which arrow vate.” heads were chipped, arrow heads “The Lady in Kicking Horse and stone tools. Reservoir” contains many The expedition this summer, “Montana poems.” Loendorf said, will have a larger The landscape in Montana, crew and be extended to 12 weeks, Hugo said, is “panoramic.” “It corresponding with the summer has changed my vision some­ school session and allowing partici­ what in the poems,” he said. pants to receive university credit. “There is an incredible sad­ “It’s hard work,” he said, “with lit­ ness in Montana. I find this tle pay.” kind of sadness poetically at­ The study was begun, he ex­ tractive, because my vision of plained, because it is hoped a rec­ the world is essentially one of reation area can be established sadness,” he added. there. “People were leaving the Hugo’s previous books of Yellowtail Reservoir and heading poetry are “A Run of Jacks,” up to the mountains in the sum­ Minnesota Press, and “Death mer,” he said. “It is believed this of the Kapowsin Tavern,” area is fairly rich in archaelogical Harcourt, Brace and World Historical Indian markings show clearly on the side of a cliff in the remains, ‘wild horses’ and large Publishing Co. Pryor Mountains area south of Billings. limestone caves.” Page 4 Harry Adams Relays Professors Plan Study Of Poison in Area Lakes Two UM professors this summer fects of pesticides in bodies of will begin a study to determine the water. effects of pesticides on the environ­ Beginning in June, the two men, ment in the Flathead Lake, Flat- assisted by graduate student Phillip head River and Ninepipes Reser­ C. Tourangeau, Salt Lake City, voir area. Utah, will collect and analyze From preliminary evidence the samples of water, mud, plants and effects of pesticides may be quite animals, and determine their pesti­ immediate and toxic on aquatic cide residue content with the aid life, according to Dr. Arden R. of a device called a gas chromato­ Gaufin, professor of zoology. graph. Dr. Gaufin and Dr. Richard A. DDT and other insecticides are Solberg, professor of botany, asso­ used extensively throughout the ciate dean of the College of Arts Flathead area for the control of and Sciences and director of the insect pests of cherries and other Yellow Bay Biological Station on crops. The chemicals break down Flathead Lake, have received a very slowly and residues are grad­ $3,855 grant from the Water Re­ ually building up in the lake de­ sources Research Council to try to posits. locate sources and determine ef- Samples of the area have been taken over the past two years and Roy Robinson, UM junior from Glasgow, makes winning the 100 yard Dr. Gaufin explained that “pesti­ dash with a time of 9.5 seconds look easy during the second annual cide residues have been found in Harry Adams Relays in Missoula. Robinson came in second in the 220- mud samples from the bottom of yard dash, just losing to UM freshman Bill Zins, Great Falls, who had Coach Sherbeck Yellow Bay and in kildeer, phea­ a time of 21.7 seconds. State, UM and conference records for the sant eggs and fish from the Nine- javelin throw were bested during the meet when UM senior Mike To Speak at UM pipes area. Lyngstad, Columbia Falls, threw for 253 feet nine inches, almost 15 “Even now,” he continued, “there inches better than his own previous conference record. (Jerry Michels Hal Sherbeck, former coach and is considerable concern that high Photo). instructor at UM from 1955 through enough levels of DDT may be pre­ 1960, will return to Montana June sent in Kokanee salmon, migrating 16-19 to lecture during the football into the north fork of the Flathead portion of the fourth annual UM River to spawn, to affect eagles in UM Ambassadors Visit Montana Coaching Clinic on Yellow Bay of the area that are feeding on the Flathead Lake. The UM Student Ambassador program starting next fall will be salmon.” that the ambassadors will visit Sherbeck has been head football Program has met with a great deal The zoologist noted that the of success, according to Fred Tra- various civic clubs through invita­ and golf coach, athletic director lake’s osprey population has been and chairman of the health and ber, new chairman of the program. tion. declining steadily and evidence Civic groups interested in hear­ physical education department at shows that pesticides are partly The Student Ambassador Pro­ gram was launched in the fall of ing the ambassadors, Traber said, Fullerton Junior College in Cali­ responsible. Also, levels of DDT may contact the UM Alumni As­ fornia since 1961. His football have been detected in plankton 1967 to inform high school students about college and university life sociation at UM for further infor­ teams have won top ranking na­ fish and bird eggs. It suggests, Dr. mation. Student speakers will be tionally twice and have been Gaufin said, “that these insecticides and stimulate their interest in at­ tending the University in Missoula. available throughout the year for ranked in the top 10 nationally are gradually building up in the this segment of the program. three times. food chain.” Traber, a sophomore majoring in Coming to Western Montana accounting from Great Falls, said with the former Big Sandy native the executive committee has re­ will be his wife, Dona, and their ceived a considerable number of three children, Loriann, 15; David, Television Studios letters from high school adminis­ Summer Session 13, and Eric, 11. trators throughout the state and Queries Increase Others lecturing will be Jerry Expanded, Updated out-of-state praising the program’s Tarkanian, head basketball coach, Extensive remodeling of UM’s objectives. The 1969 summer session at State College at Long Radio and Television Studios was A total of 104 student ambassa­ the University of Montana Beach; Maurice “Red” Guyer, completed recently. dors participated in the program should prove to be a successful noted track and field official and Phillip J. Hess, studio director last year, visiting high schools in one if requests for information starter from Laguna Beach, Calif.; and associate professor of journal­ their respective communities dur­ are any indication. Bob Graves, head track coach at ism, and Mrs. Penny A. Wilson, ing Thanksgiving and Christmas Summer session begins June Billings West High School and a studio production director, are now vacation periods and spring breaks. 23 and provides a nine-week former UM graduate, and Don using the many new instructional Some 54 high schools were visited program through Aug. 22. Peterson, head basketball mentor conveniences brought about by the during the most recent spring Divided into two sections, the at Laurel High School, another UM “face-lifting” in the Journalism break. session dates are June 23-July grad. Building. Most recent innovation in the 23 and July 24-Aug. 22. Dr. Walter C. Schwank, summer session coordinator, said brochures about the pro­ gram have been circulated and catalog requests this year have far exceeded requests during the past two years. He attributes this response to the proposed summer fac­ ulty, programs and appealing environment at UM. For six to nine weeks with nine or more credits, fees for the summer session are ap­ proximately $113. No out-of- state fees are charged during the summer and no advance registration is conducted. Among the special events Recent visitors to the UM cam­ illegalities in getting involved. Fol­ and to report the “conditions which scheduled are various art ex­ pus included Dr. Benjamin Spock, lowing his speech, 21 UM students produce contfrontation.” hibits, lectures by nationally left, noted pediatrician and Viet­ and faculty members turned in Dr. Galbraith, author of “The and internationally known nam War critic; NBC news corres­ their draft cards for mailing back New Industrial State,” was the speakers, concerts, films, ath­ pondent Don Oliver, and Dr. John to local boards in protest of the second speaker in the Mansfield letic activities, tours and pack Kenneth Galbraith, right, Harvard War. Lectures on International Relations. trips to surrounding scenic University economics professor. Oliver, speaking at the 13th an­ He predicted the two main federal areas and a week of family Dr. Spock told a crowd of some nual Dean Stone Night banquet, problems in the coming years will camping on the Flathead In­ 1,600 persons he feels Americans said he feels journalists have a re­ be “getting military power under dian Reservation in the Mis­ have a right to dissent the War be­ sponsibility to give equal treatment control” and establishing a tax re­ sion Mountains. cause the United States committed to people with unpopular causes, form program.