S I A Tf HIST SOC 1 t T 1 L î H oi^ sîa rt s t T h e L A madison * î s *? a / VN Volutile 89 — Number 19 Lawrenc« Friday, 27 February, 1970

Women’s Association to Sponsor Symposium on Their Emancipation By Martha Larson WITCHES and Weathermen, so­ “Many people think of the situations in an attempt to por­ ciologists, a biologist, a psychol­ Women’s Liberation Movement as tray solutions to problems pre­ ogist and representatives from a bra-buming brigade advocating sented by the moderators. These the Winnebago •State Hospital free love,” Miss Chase explained, problems include those in wliich and the National Organization of “but what we want instead is for there might be a conflict in un­ Women will be on the Lawrence peoplle to step outside their ster­ derstanding between men and campus 6-9 March for the DWA eotype social roles and realize, women. Symposium entiled “The Times man or woman, you’re both peo­ Monday the Urban Studiiw pro­ They Are A-Changin’: The Roles ple and you should have equal gram will sponsor speakcas on of Men and Women in Today’s nights.” Women's Liberation from Chica­ Society.” There will be discussion groups go When asked the reason for the Saturday afternoon to explore In addition to the planned ac­ SHREWDLY WEIGHING THE ALTERNATIVES, conference, Tibby Chase, presi­ “The Family and Its Future,” tivities, DWA expects members President Thomas S. Smith below outlines plans for re­ dent of Downer Women’s Asso­ “ Women and Medical Issues” of WITCH, (Women’s Internation­ constructing the university administrative offices and re­ ciation, replied, “We decided and '“Women and Mass Media,” al Terrorists Conspiracy from sponsibilities. that DWA was a dying organi­ as well as to answer such ques­ Hell), and Weathermen, branch­ zation and needed redirection. tions as “Why be liberated?” and es of Women’s Liberation Move­ We felt the most logical area of “Women's Liberation: What does ment, to be present on campus Streomlined Operotions activity was dealing with issues it mean to men?” for the symposium. important to women.” Role-playing, designed to com­ ‘‘We’re trying to get away from New Administrative Design Tlie purpose of the symposium plement the discussion groups restricted women’s government,” is to educate. As Miss Chase ob­ and the material presented by the Miss Chase said. “We want to served, “We recognize that you speakers, is planned for Sunday be more of a future-direcU'd or­ To be Implemented by Smith can’t have ‘liberated’ women afternoon in the sorority wing. ganization to give women an idcia without having ‘liberated’ men.” Members otf the faculty and of what they will be facing in by Jim Molitor the administration will serve as society. We want the conference Initiating the symposium will moderators while members of the to be a beginning.” She added A new streamlined administra­ tor of the Memorial Union, pres­ be a panel discussion of the ques­ role-playing groups act out their that follow-up lectures are being tive structure, consolidating ail ently reports to Wrolstad rather tion “Is Anatomy Destiny?” at interpretation of hypothetical planned. university functions under four than Lauter. 3:00 p.m., Friday 6 March, in administrative heads each re­ The post of Vice-President of the Riverview Lounge. sponsible to the president, was Development and External Af­ The panel will consist of Dr. unveiled this week by President fairs is a newly created position Jacob Shapiro, professor of biol­ Faculty May Treat Honor Thomas S. Smith. and is the greatest change re­ ogy, WSU-Oshkosh; Karen Op- Smith explained that the chang­ sulting from the new system. In­ penheim, department of sociol­ es are intended to "define more cluded an this area will be de­ ogy, UW-Madison; and Dr. System Revisions Today precisely’' the operations of all velopment, university relations George Lysloff, Director of Re­ by Martha Esch university departments and allow which includes visiting guests search and Education at the Win­ them to function more efficient­ and lecturers, the alumni office nebago State Hospital. As a result of the honor code required for admission to “I have questionnaires and a series of read the description of the Law­ ly. He added that the plan should and all university publications Mrs. Katherine Clanenbach, a eliminate any duplication of re­ (Lawrentian excluded). discussions, the LUCC Commit­ rence University Honor System, member of the National Execu tee on Judicial Systems has rec­ sponsibility existing under the At present, Smith said that and I understand its stipula­ tive Board of the National Or ommended various changes in the tions.” present system. several candidates have been in­ ganization of Women (NOW) honor code. 10) Delete “At the end of all “This doesn’t mean I'm going terviewed for the position and will present “A Sociological Over written work turned in at Law­ to isolate myself from the univer­ that he plans to speak with sev­ view of the Present Situation’ Highlighting the list of recom­ rence each student will write, sity,” Smith said. He added that eral more before reaching a de­ Friday night at 8 p.m. in the mendations is a clause removing “Pledge no unauthorized aid.” It the changes will allow him “to cision. Riverview Lounge. a student’s responsibility to re­ focus attention anywhere it’s port suspected violations of the is the feeling of this committee He added that he had not yet These two presentations will set needed” and give him “more begun to interview candidates to honor code. that there is no need for such a time to think about the general the tone for the rest of the ac­ Other major changes include a reminder of a student’s obliga­ fall the post which will be vacat­ tivities by providing a frame of direction of the university.” ed by Hulbert but said that he rewording of the signed pledge tion under the honor code, since reference for coordinating the the atmosphere which now exists The new administrative struc­ has a number of men in mind. required for admission and a total program. (as shown by 4he results of the ture will consist of four general He hopes to fill both positions by deletion of the “PNUA” (pledge Marlene Dixon, professor of so­ questionnaire i is a reminder in departments: academic affairs, August of this year but this plan no unauthorized aid) required on ciology at McGill University, itself. business affairs, student affairs, is tentative. “I’d rather be late students’ written work. Montreal, will speak more spe­ Recommendations concerning and development and external af­ than make a mistake,'’ he said. These recommendatijans, re­ cifically on “Women’s Liberation: incoming freshmen include the fairs. In any case, the new structure viewed by the honor council yes­ Past or Future?” Saturday morn­ following: Head of the academic affairs is not expected to be in full op­ terday, may be submitted to the 1) Letters of description of department will be responsible eration for at least another year ing at 10:30 a.m. in the River­ faculty for approval at the regular the honor systerr} sent to fresh­ for the operations of the library, and possibly longer, Smith said. view Lounge. Friday faculty meeting. the two associate deans of the Late last night a council spokes­ men should be written by the faculty, the conservatory, the man announced that the recom­ honor council, conforming to the computer center, and all physical mendations would be made at the new honor system, and emphasiz­ education and inter-collegiate regular faculty meeting on Fri­ ing the advantages of the sys­ tem. athletics. day, 13 March. Faculty Bars Students, 2) Cards should be revised as Presently (these operations Significantly absent from the described above. are under the direction of Mar­ list of suggestions is a proposal 3) A better education of fresh­ shall B. Hulbert, vice-president to make honor council members Reforms Frosh Studs men toward the understanding of and Dean of Lawrence and Down­ subject to public election; at the honor system should be ini­ er Colleges. Smith is searching by Rose Woodson present the members select their tiated during freshman orienta­ far a successor to this position, own successors. tion (perhaps through meetings however, since Hulbert pilans to Jerry Larger addressed Tues­ dealing with the size of Fresh­ The committee’s recommenda­ between a member of honor coun­ retire at the end of this academic day’s faculty meeting about the man Studies classes and Topics tions for changes in the honor cil and each freshman section'. year. possibility of student attendance of Inquiry courses respectively, code include the following pro­ The department of business af­ at those meetings dealing with no more than fifteen in the form­ posed revisions of honor system the Report of the Select Commit­ er, or twenty in the latter, were fairs will deal with the controller, document first tentatively revised Penn State Students purchasing, physical plant, food tee wi Planning. approved; by the honor council: Services, housing, and central After he left, a motion calling 2) Recommendation 11, which (Editor’s note: Hie “Honors Sys­ To Advise Trustees services. Marwin 0. Wrolstad, for reconsideration of the fac­ abolishes the present grading sys­ tems Document,” to which these PHILADELPHIA — (CPS) — business manager, presently co­ ulty’s earlier discussion of the tem in connection with Freshman recommendations refer, was ob­ ordinates these functaons and matter was defeated. However, Studies and provides in its stead tained too late for publication; Pennsylvania Governor Raymond will continue to do so under the a subsequent motion to post the a Satisfactory / Unsatisfactory the following are highlights from P. Shafer has named the indent new system. minutes of all future meetings marking, was approved subject the committee’s list of recom­ body presidents of all thirteen Included in the area of student dealing with the report was ap­ to the following amendments: mendations.) state-supported college., and In­ affairs are the student union, reg­ proved. The points refer to the “Honor diana University of Pennsylvania istration, counseling services, fi­ a) The grade of H (Honors) These minutes, to be posted at 4) Substitute “he will respond to serve as advwory members of nancial aid, the dean of men, will be added to the categories of various locations, would also be to violations of the honor system the Board of Trustees on each the dean of women, the health S and U. made available, upon request, to of which he is aware, in whatever campus. center, the placement office, and individuals, according to Richard b) The grade of U (Unsatisfac­ honest, direct, and personal Advisory meml>crship entitles the admissions office. S. Stowe, associate professor of tory) will automatically carry no manner he is able” for the pres­ the student presidents to parti­ Charles F. Lauter, dean of stu­ French and faculty secretary. credit. ent statement, “he will report cipate in all deliberations, but dent affairs, will continue to di­ c) Sentence 2, which calls for any violation of the honor code under present law they will not rect these operations under the On the Report itself, the follow- a written evaluation to accom­ of which he is aware.” be authorized to vote in Board new system. The principal change in actions were taken: pany the grades, is deleted. 9) Change the signed pledge decisions. here is that Todd Coryell, direc­ D Recommendations 9 and 13, Ten Alternatives Considered

Choice of Brokaw A rea for

New D orm Seem s Least E vil by Sandy Zmersky Unenthusiastically described by Directly behind Plantz there is This group is often referred to a member of the Ad Hoc Commit­ not enough room to build an at­ as the Haynes Committee in refer­ tee on Residence Hails as “the tractive building — ‘‘and who ence to Richard L. Haynes, di­ lesser of ten evils,” the Brokaw wants to live ten feet from rector of dormitories. Its other Hall area was proposed as the Plantz,” a member asked. members include faculty repre­ site of Lawrence’s new dormitory East of the president’s house sentatives Miss Dorrit F. Fried- after an elimination of alterna­ and south of City Park one piece lander, associate professor of tives. of property is not obtainable so German; and Edwin H. Olson, Brokaw, the warehouse, and an entire block is not available. associate professor of psychol­ ogy; staff member Jack S. Man- one house would be razed. Student The site is also considered rath­ POET WILLIAM F. STAFFORD, professor of English committee members Carol Mid­ er far from the main campus. well, director of the physical dleton, Kathy Mayer, and Phil plant; David C. Moore, director at Lewis and Clark College and author of “Traveling Sampson House could be torn through the Dark” and other publications, will read his York explained some of the con­ down but there is definiely not ol university food serviois ani pietry on March at 7 :30 p.m. in the Riverview Lounge. siderations evolving from months enough room for a building. Charles F. Lauter, Jr., dean of 8 of deliberation. There is plenty of land in front student affairs. Several factors were weighed of Ormsby on the skating rink by the group in choosing among but the Ad Hoc Committee feels Starting with Class of '70 the land owned, m part, by the that the area is undesirable when University. The site should stay the overall plan of the campus is as close to the main campus as considered. possible, they have decided; and Next to Ormsby on the old In­ Canterbury Plans Lise of Alumni on campus, to isolate Ormsby (Mr firmary lot an attractive building Colman at the west end would could be constructed down the not be advisable. Also, there is hilHde. The state has forbidden a need for enough land to set­ building on the bank, however, be­ As Admissions Representatives off the building. cause it is slowly sliding into the by Vicki Nauschultz The committee discussed and river. dismissed the following sites: The members also noted that In an effort to create an ef­ may respond more favorably to is,” explained Canterbury. In the area between Tnever there is plenty of room near the fective alumni recruiting pro­ university representatives near Donald Boy a will serve as the and Sage, a weak soil condition gym—added, “but talk about iso­ gram, Director of Admission their own age. Canterbury point­ contact for recruiters. Richard Canterbury has an­ on the riverbank necessitates a lation.” ed out that the young recruiters Canterbury cautioned that nounced that a new program in­ dorm almost parallel to Sage. Hie matters of áte and design themselves will be more respon­ every volunteer may not be put volving recent Lawrence gradu­ Directly east of the fraternity are not yet closed, however, and sive to diversity in admission to use each year because of a ates will be initiated this fall. quadrangle, the committee be­ the student members of the com­ candidates than alumni who re­ passible lack of interested stu­ Citing the failures of previous lieves, there is not enom^i room mittee invite questions or sug­ member Lawrence as it was dents in any particular area. He attempts to organize alumni for to build anything attractive. This gestions, noting that ‘‘there is when they graduated and want emphasized that this situation recruiting purposes, Canterbury to keep it that way. is also the problem at the corner no reason to construct a new may change during the three elaborated on the program which of Lawe and Alton streets. (The building unless a majority of the The duties of the admission as­ years and that volunteers would will involve volunteers from the students are satisfied with it.” sistants will include interview­ have to keep in touch throughout yellow house is not obtainable.) 1970 graduating class serving as Financial considerations, they ing for the purpose of informing the service period. alumni assistants to the Admis­ indicated, must compromise an prospective students rather than sion Office throughout the coun­ Both Canterbury and John in evaluating them, following up ultimate ideal. try. Rosebush, director of alumni af­ on students who have been ac­ Each year a new group of 30-40 fairs, commented that older cepted at Lawrence but who have graduates will become admission alumni would still be able to con­ HEAD COUNSELOR’S had no previous contact with uni­ assistants. An individual may tribute in areas such as contact­ PETITIONS versity personnel, mid informing serve for only three years under ing the admission office about m- Any junior male who wishes the admission office of high specifications of the program. terested high school students. to he considered for a head schools in their area of students ‘‘Older alumni unless they have counselor’s position in a men’s who may be admission candi­ Rosebush commented fjavora- kept very dose contact, are sim­ residence hall should pick up dates at Lawrence. bly on the new program, calling a petition in Dean Barton C. ply out-of-touch with any univer­ it “the first step toward compre­ sity making rapid changes. White’s office within the next Interviewing procedure will be hensive involvement of alumni in Young alums will do a more rep­ two weeks. These positions will such that the recruiter will have recruiting.” He added, “Alumna resentative job,” Canterbury minimal responsibility in con­ have a great stake in Lawrence he filled before spring vaca­ said. tion. tacting students. Instead, the ad­ and they can keep (the flow of Young recruiters will also be mission office will give the name students coming.” less costly to maintain because iiiiiiHinimiimHiaHiiiiiimioniiiiiiiiiiaiiiiii!iiiiionii

C o nkey’s Book Store Fight Girls Fight! Rah Rah Woman’s Liberator Speaks To Oppressed Housewives, Students Marlene Dixon- Editor’s Note: The following is A year ago the movement children grown and a life (rough­ excerpted from Marlene Dixon’s stressed male chauvinism and ly 30 more productive years) of article “Why Women’s Libera­ psychological oppression; now housework and bridge parties tion?” in “Ramparts Magazine" the emphasis is on understanding stretching out before them like of December, 1969. She is a pro­ the economic and social roots of a wasteland. For many younger fessor of sociology at McGUI Uni­ women’s oppression, and the an­ women, the empty drudgery they versity and will speak on the alyses range from social democ­ saw in the suburbs life was a Lawrence campus next week. racy to Marxism. But the most sobering ountnadictiion to adodes- The 1960 s has been a decade of striking change of all in the last dreams of romantic love liberation; women have been year has been the loss of- fear. and the fulfilling role of wraum swept up by that ferment along Women are no longer afraid that as wife and mother. \.ith blacks, Latins, American In­ their rebellion will threaten thedr Third, a growing civil rights dians and poor whites — the very identity as women. They are NEWLY ELECTED LUCC OFFICERS Harold Jordan movemert was sweeping thou­ whole soft underbelly of this so- not frightened by their own mili­ sands of young men and women and Bill Baer confer after last Tuesday’s council meeting. CJety- As each oppressed group tancy. but liberated by it. Wom­ President Baer’s first meeting saw discussion of the soph­ into a moral crusade—a crusade in turn discovered that they too en’s Liberation is an idea whose which harsh political experience omore car proposal, a new drug policy, and the LUCC con­ thirst for free and fully human time has come. was to transmute to the New stitution. Lives. The old women’s movement Left. Thu Amencan dream w ^ The result has been the growth burned itself out jn the frantic riven and tattered in Mississippi of a new women’s movement, Election Results Soothe Troubled Jordon decade of the 1920’s. After a hun­ and finally napalmed in Vietnam whose base encompasses poor dred years of struggle, women Traditional political ideologies black and poor white women on won a battle, only to lose the and cultural myths, sexual mores LUCC Passes Revised Drug Policy, relief, working women exploited campaign: the vote was obtain­ and sex roles wiith them, b eg» in the labor force, middle class ed, but the new millenium did not to disintegrate in an explosion ci women incarcerated in the split arrive. Women got the vote and rebellion and protest. Discusses Sophomore Car Proposal level dream house, college girls achieved a measure of legal awakening to the fact that sexi­ Male supremacy, marriage, by Tom Hosmanek emancipation, but the real social and the structure of wage labor ness is not the crowning achieve­ and cultural barriers to full ment in life, and movement wom­ -^each of these aspects of wom­ In a hotly contested campaign, raised prior to the renewal of the equality for women remained un­ en's opppnessiun has been crucial en who have discovered that in Harold Jordan captured 67.89% junior car rule.” He requested in­ touched. to the resurgence of the wom­ a freedom movement they them­ of the vote in Tuesday’s ejection formation on the effects tjiat For over 30 years the move­ en's struggle. It must be abund­ selves are not free. to defeat classmate Tom Nathan sophomores having cars would ment remained buried in its own antly clear that radical social in the race for LUCC vice-presi­ have “on the attendance at so­ In less than four years women ashes. Women were born and change must occur before there dent. cial and quasi-academic events.” have created a variety of organ­ grew to maturity virtually ignor­ can be significant improvement More voters turned out Tues­ Lauter said he didn't want to izations from the nationally-bas­ ant of thedr own history of re­ in the social position of women. day than in the election two see Lawrence turn into a “com­ ed middle class National Organi­ bellion, aware only of a carica­ Some form of socialism is a mni- weeks ago. This time 63.83% of muter campus” and thought the zation of Women (NOW) to local ture of blue stockings and suf­ "ttffn requirement consudering the Lawrence community voted increased mobility might shift radical and radical feminist fragettes. With the end of the the changes that must come n compared to 57% in the presi­ emphasis to a social life off cam­ gnaups in every major dty in war the average age at marriage the institutions of marriage and dential election. pus. North America. The new move­ declined, the average size of family alone. The intrinsic radi­ Elections for LUCC representa­ After further discussion by ment includes caucuses within families went up, and the subur­ calism of the struggle for wom­ nearly every New Left group and tives will be held 8 April. council members the proposal was ban migration began in earnest en's liberation necessarily links The Meeting sent back to committee to pre­ within most professional associa­ The political conservatism of the women with all other oppressed tions in the social sciences. Rang­ Newly elected LUCC President pare a more detailed report. 50’s was echoed in a social con­ groups. ing in politics from reform to Bill Baer chaired his first meet­ LUOC No. 20, a new drug pol­ servatism which stressed a Vic­ The heart of the movement, as revolution, it has produced cri­ ing on Tuesday with an agenda icy to replace LUCC No. 14, was torian ideal of the woman's life: ** all freedom movements, rests tiques of almost every segment a full womb and selfless devotion containing the sophomore car also discussed. •n women’s knowledge, whether of American society and con­ to husband and children. proposal, a new drug policy, and “The major difference (in the articulated or stall only an illness structed an ideology that rejects As the bleak decade played a review of the LUCC Constitu­ new bill,” said Lauter, “is that without a name, that they are not every hallowed cultural assump­ itself out, however, three import­ tion. it restricts only the distribution inferior—not chicks, nor bunnies, tion about the nature and role of ant social developments emerged n°r quail, nor cows, nor bitches Baer's appointments of Sue and sale of dangerous drugs.” women. which were to make a rebirth of nor ass, nor meat. Women hear Fichera as recording secretary Chris Young noted, “I don’t As is typical of a young move­ the women’s struggle inevitable. the litany of their own dehuman­ and Jerry Langer as parliament a- think this bill will have any real ment, much of its growth has First, women came to make up ization each day. Yet all the effect on drug use at this col­ ian were unanimously accepted been underground. The papers more than a third of the Labor same, women know that male lege.” Others labeled it a “com­ by the council. A new treasurer and manifestos written and cir­ force, the number of working supremacy is a lie. They know will be chosen later this year. promise.” culated would surely comprise women being twice the prewar they are not animals or sexual “No bill' we could pass,” said Baer announced that a refer­ two very large volumes if pub­ figure. Yet the marked increase objects or commodities. They enda to be voted upon by the Law­ Colin Etherington, “could poefc lished, but this literature is al­ in female employment did nothing know their lives ane mutilated, rence community 8 April will sibly affect the sale and use of most unknown outside of wom­ to better the position of women, because they see within them­ include the Statement on Student drugs.” He said he supported the en’s liberation. Nevertheless, who were mane occupationally selves a promise of creativity Rights, Freedoms, and Responsi­ bill, however, because “ it does where even a year ago organiz­ disadvantaged in the 1960’s than and personal integration. bilities and the revised LUOC not lay the university open to ing was slow and painful, with they had been 25 years earlier. Feeding the contradiction be­ Constitution. civil authorities.” small cells of six or ten women, Rather than moving equally into tween the essentially creative LUCC No. 20 finally passed with all sectors of the occupational A resolution commending form­ high turnover, and an uphill and self-actualizing human being minor amendments. Proposed re­ structure, they were being forced er LUCC President Sam Ray s> niggle against fear and resis­ within her, and the cruel end visions in the LUCC Constitution tance, in \1969 all that has chang­ into the low paying service, cler­ passed unanimously. degrading lassthan-human being were discussed, but no action was ed. Groups ane growing up every­ ical, and semi-skilled categories. within her, a woman begins to John Rosenthal, the sophomore taken. where with women eager to hear Second, the intoxicating wine perceive the falseness of what car rules committee chairman, Tht meeting closed with LUCC a hard lme, to articulate and ex­ of marriage and suburban life her society has forced her to be. addressed the council. He noted Vice-President Phil York wel­ press their own rage and bitter­ was turning sour; a generation And once she perceives this, she that the committee had amended coming Harold Jordan, h’s newly ness. of women woke up to find their knows she must fight its previous proposal' to include elected successor. stipulations for off-campus park­ ing and different colored parking cations Accepted for London Center stickers. W inter-Spring Session, 1971 Charles F. Lauter, dean of ^u- presidential compensation needed? dtnt affairs, said the committee Although no formal proposal son, some believe the president Anne Budd Paul Smith had not fulfilled its original pur­ has been formulated, the idea shculd receive compensation. Kathleen Biracree Leslie Stringham pose which was “to bring back a that the LUOC president should “Yet given the plea for more Gregory Carrott James Tarr comprehensive report on questions receive compensation has been compensation from LUOC Presi­ Marjorie Fish Richard Zimanan discussed by past and present dents and sympathizers, we can­ Eleanor Greene Candace Ward LUCC presidents and sympathiz­ not naively defer and grant what­ Thomas Hosmanek Anthony Welhonse DEUTSCH CULTCHA UND ers. ever compensations the Presi­ Kristen Johnson Leonard Wolff dents want for their time,” Frit­ Archie Koranteng CIV Peter A. Fritzell, assistant pro­ Ellen Wood zell said. ThQ compensation Robert Lindquist The German department an­ fessor of English, a member of Betsy Galaty should be somewhere between nounces the following course LUCC and interested in the pos­ Richard McLaughlin BUI Baer complete remission of tuition with Peter Mitchell for Term HI not listed in the sibility of compensation for the Harold Jordan president, believes it important a lightened course enrollment Tom Nathan course schedule as yet: Michael Magnusen and full tuition but fewer courses Tfcomas Netzow German 29: Studies in Ger­ that the president be compensat­ Richard Fritsch ed to the degree he has not been as it is presently. Martha Neufer Thomas Kinnealey man Civilization. in the past for performing his Fritzell believes that compen­ A study of modern ; Greg O’Meara George Wyeth sation for the president has the Susan Pector readings In German history, duties. James Twelmeyer In a recent interview, Fritzell possibility for improving as well Phyllis Peter George Swope thought and culture; oral and as perhaps destroying the politi­ said that the president must be Richard Reynolds Kevin Phillips written reports. Prerequisite: cization of LUOC. If there is clear a man of political motivation and John Rosenthal Frank R. Duchow German 12 or the equivalent. evidence that talented people are political aptitude: he must be Mary Donn Rossi Alexander Maas The course will be taught discouraged from running for willing to sacrifice social time, Ned Sahar Kathleen K. Martin by H. Harmut Gerlach, as­ president because of time and academic time, and some financ­ John Seaborne Charles Seraphln sistant professor of German, money, Fritzell indicated that he es for his office. The primary Richard Seeboth Ross Tuner lim e: 1:30 MWF or to be ar­ concern of the LUOC President would be interested in writing a ranged. should be politics. For this ree- proposal. V v v substantially different from ours, Fo r a M ore Honorable System then Eningen is obviously super­ THIS AFTERNOON THE FACULTY may, at their Jlztisxs. to t^s SAitox... ior. It is true that communication regular monthly meeting, act on the reform measures form­ Litters to the Editor must be typed double-spaced, kept as short asmay possi­ be hard, especially at first, ble and submitted to the Lawrentian office no later 7 p.m. than Wednes­ ulated by the LUCC Committee on Judicial Systems. The but how rewarding when you can day evening. A ll letters thus submitted 'and neither libelous it» bad nordiscuss the moonshot with Ger­ recommendations for improvement of the Lawrence Honor t**te will receive publication. The Lawrentian reserves the right to make Code seem basically very good, and the committee’s use stylistic changes and to excerpt in order to facilitate printing, without man teachers or politics with a of a student questionnaire is especially commendable. One changing editorial content. A ll letters must be signed but names beerdrinker—in may be German. How ex­ essential and long, long overdue change has been overlook­ withheld from publication for sufficient cause. citing to learn of a new custom ed, however. and to fall in love with it! And To the Editor: you are? What gives you the then you sometimes question the CONSPICUOUS IN ITS ABSENCE is a proposed re­ We decided to write this letter power to play god and give the way we do things here in the form in selection procedures. If the Honor Council is it­ in order to make clear what, ac­ final recommendation on who is Stales. self to be honorable, it must be representative of its con­ cording to us, came out of the or is not qualified for a job? I don’t believe that it is the Law- Now, on a more personal bas­ stituency. No Lawrentian need subject himself to the panel discussion we held on Mon­ is: Eningen is small but} full of judgment of a supposed peer group members of which day, Feb. 9. rentian’s place to say anything about any candidate, beyond wonderful people. We were met he has no chance to choose. The community at large should We first questioned the J-Board their platforms and letters sent by the city band and served wine finally select, through open election, those people who de­ procedures. We were told that in by other individuals remark­ in the Burgermeister’s (mayor’s) fine and safeguard parameters of academic propriety for the J-Board could not provide the ing on the candidates. council room the college. In effecting honor system reformations, the same guaranties as a civil court. faculty must not perpetuate a self-perpetuating non-repre But our point was that the last As a former journalist, I seem The Stiefelmeyers and Woms, sentational council. October session did not provide to recall that the first thing we with whom we lived, were won­ even those guaranties that J- had drummed into our heads derful to us. Herr Stiefelmeyer ANOTHER IMPROVEMENT that we should pro­ Board normally provides. was: don’t editorialize. All night, even bought each girl a reclining this editorial was in its proper vide for would be to permit all examinations to be given In his letter to the students of lawn chair. Herr Worn is now little space and was therefore on a take-home basis. Instructors could place any re­ Lawrence University (Sept. 30) building a new Gasthof, obviously “legal.” But I still fed it was strictions they wished on the exams (time, closed book, President Smith stated: “As for with the students in mind: each unjustified and unnecessary, and etc.) and students would be bound by the Honor Code to the demonstrators, I have asked room is to have its own shower an assumption on the paper’s follow their professors’ instructions. Benefits will in­ the Dean of Student Affairs to and Herr Worn will cook only for part of more power and wisdom clude an increased student responsibility for their own ed­ prepare the necessary written the students. And what a cook! ucation, a more flexible and informal learning process, and than called for, or possessed. charges so that the students in­ Study Center an easing of pragmatic problems such as those presented volved in this event will be sub­ Unjustified ‘Plug’ by three exams within two days. The only drawback could jected to the standard Lawrence As I write this, the elections The Eningen campus was es­ be that such a policy would force instructors to give crea­ University judicial procedures.” have not yet been held. I do not tablished as a study center, and tive, integrative exams rather than the simplistic memory Is what happened—jury elected know who won. But I can say many of us found it of great val­ tests which are all too common with some non-thinking after the crime, student wrongly this: If Harold Jordan loses, it ue in that respect. It would be professors here. accused of being a disrupter run­ may be due to your meddling. better designated, however, as a ning and then elected as a judge, Were I a candidate for any of­ learning center. What we learned THOUGH NOT UNIQUE, Lawrence's honor code is etc. . . a "standard Lawrence fice, I would like to lose on my from six months of contact with a positive and integral part of the self-disciplinary process University judicial procedure”? own, with no help from anyone another culture, from six months of the liberal arts experience, one that merits improving. else, least of all the campus No Fair Trial of living constantly as a small newspaper. group, and from six months of Our point was: when a court unusual independence cannot be in a democratic country finds You don’t find any other cam­ measured by grades alone. itself unable to provide a fair pus media plugging or rejecting trial according to its own rules, candidates for offifce; what gives We hope that we have not im­ or because of its lack of rules, you all the thought that you are plied that we are fighting against it drops the charges rather than better than they are? Or more the London study center. We are compromising with the democrat­ knowledgeable? It seems to me not. We are only fighting for the ic principles involved. Our ques­ that there should be more think­ German campus. No one should ing done, on other Hines, if that tion is now: what will be the spend four years in Appleton — is the case. next compromise? Can we trust it is too narrow an experience. an administration that compro­ If Harold Jordan has won, de­ Get away for a term or two. In mises with its own basic demo­ A d spite your “help,” more power our opinion—go to Eningen. This cratic principles? to him! If he has Inst, I hope program needs you. And perhaps As far as Bud Walsh was con­ that makes you feel you have you need this program. cerned, we were not questioning once again picked a winner. \ Cff* Haromtftan PENNY HAWK PRESS the civil court trial—it was not Maybe the major networks could ANN BLOMGREN is published each week of the college year except during vacations the by place the to question it—but the use you in predicting the nation­ MARTHA HANSON Lawrentian of Lawrence University. procedures fallowed by the uni­ al election results, too. MARY JO BOYNTON Second-class postage has been paid at Appleton, 54911. Wisconsin, versity in pressing the charges. MARTY BRENGLE ROBERT WICKESBERG The Lawrentian is printed by Timmers Printing Company of Appleton.We were questioning a system where everybody feels innocent CINDY SCHALLER Year Subscription $5; Overseas Airmail $15; Seamail $6 and where it is impossible to find SCOTT L. GREGORY News Editor ...... Jam Molitor an individual or a group who is To the Editor: MARK SANAZARO Photo Editor ...... Karen Spangenberg responsible for initiating the Having recently returned from DIANA BERRY VERONICA BALASSONE Sports Editor ...... Greg O’Meara chargies. We were told that any an invaluable six month’s exper­ individual witnessing a disorder­ LINDA R. BAUMBERGER Associate News E ditors ...... Ellen Priest, Tom Warrington ience at the Lawrence campus ly conduct can initiate charges, Associate Feature Editor ...... Cheryl Warren in Eningen u.A., we would like but that Mr. Lauter did not do to highly recommend this pro­ Foreign Correspondence Editor ...... Nancy J. Paulu it as an individual. That there gram to a31 Lawrence students. Assistant News Editor ...... John Rosenthal was no faculty vote. That Presi­ We are firmly convinced of the Assistant Feature Editors ...... Rick Spain, Harold Jordan dent Smith had said “something CALENDAR • Mahe-up Editor ...... Karen Swanson that could have been directed at value of such an experience and Copy Editor ...... Janet Huehl Mr. Lauter”, but there is nothing would hate to see the program discontinued from lack of inter­ Advertising Manager ...... Mike McKenzie in the records about it. Wo still Friday, 27 February est or from financial difficulties Circulation Manager ...... Roger Hildebrand don’t know who—or what commit­ 4:30 p.m. — Faculty Meeting, due to competition from the Lon­ Associate Advertising M anagers...... Gayle Erickson, Martha Larson tee-decided to press charges Art Center don program. Assistant Business Manager ...... Scott Matthews against Bud Walsh. 8:00 p.m.—“The Kinetic Art,” Mr. Lauter with the hedp of We personally feel that, given Stansbury the opportunity, you would be some faculty members made also Saturday, 28 February wiser to go to Eningen than to some points by questioning the 1:30 pm . — Swimming, Inter- London; as they are offering in­ disrupter’s attitude towards J- squad, Gym troductory German courses in Board at the time of the trial. 6:30-12:30 p.m.—Delta Gamma. Eningen this summer, everyone There is no doubt, at least in the Pi Beta Phi and Phi Gamma opinion of some of us, that this does in fact have this opportunity. Delta Pledge Formal, Em­ attitude was questionable indeed. Unless you are mainly interest­ bassy Motor Lodge But we also have the feeling that ed in the British Isles, London 8:00 p.m.—“The Kinetic Art,” asking those questions was a way is not a very suitable location Stansbury of dodging those of ours that re­ from which to travel. mained without an answer. We Sunday, 1 March were asking who was responsible Eningen. on the other hand, lies 8:00 p.m. — Faculty Recital: TO: for initialing charges against approximately two hours from Allan Jacobson, pianist. Harp­ France, Switzerland and Austria; ABC — Appleton Bud Walsh, and we were answer­ er you can go almost anywhere for e /o THE LAWRENTIAN ed that he. himseif, obviously 8:00 p.m.—“Tlie Kinetic Art,” the weekend. It is true that Lon­ Stansbury Lawrence University wanted to go to jail. We think it was an easy way out. don naturally offers more cul­ Tuesday, 3 March Appleton. Wis 54911 USA tural opportunities than Eningen, MARC BLOCH 9:50 a.m.—Freshman Studies if by this term you mean activi­ Film, second showing erf Enclosed please find my check for $ ...... LOUIS BUTLER STEVE HALL ties such as concerts, plays, op­ “Rashomon,” Stansbury to ABC — Appleton. JAMES LACE era, etc. However, ’s bal­ 3:00 pm . — Junior Recital: JOHN THURMANN let is rated as one of the top three Susan Hrentman Denk, piano, companies in the world. Harper Stuttgart (only 45 minutes from Wednesday, 4 March Eningen by car) also has an op­ 7:00 p.m. — Lawrence Chris­ To the Editor: era, a symphony, theaters, and tian Fellowship, SH 166 many guest artisrts (such as Se­ I have just read your little ar­ Thursday, 5 March govia) appearing there. ticle plugging Tom Nathan for 8:00 p.m. — Artist Series, De­ (All donations will be acknowledged with receipts) LUCC vice president. And there’s If, by ‘cultural opportunities,* troit Symphony Orchestra; just one question I’d like to ask. you mean the opportunities to Sixten Ehrling, conductor, Who the hell do you guys think live and partake of a cutture Chapel To The E ditor. . .

To the Editor: other”. The artidfe later speaks I hope that most Lawrence stu­ of "the obvious plays for power dents are sophisticated enough among the various dep¿¡irtments, not to accept at face value the especially between the sciences article in last week’s Lawrentian and the humanities in general. The entitled “ ‘Inanity’, ‘Asininity’ ‘former claims that the latter Characterize Purveyors of ‘Law­ ‘run the university which means rence Rhetoric’ ?”. The article that the university is not respon­ paints a totally unrealistic pic­ sive to the sciences’ commitment ture of the atmosphere and pro­ to research.’” In reality there ceedings of the current series of is very little division of opin­ faculty meetings at which decis­ ion among the faculty along sharp ions are being made concerning departmental border-lines. De­ the recommendations of the Pov- partments are frequently split olny Committee. right down the middle in the vo­ ting on important issues. I must The question of whether the de­ admit that the "obvious plays parture from reality occurred at for power among the various de­ the level of the faculty members partments” have not been at all who gave statements to the re­ obvious to me. I am a member porter or at the level of the man­ of a science department, but I >• M *V**V K ner in which the reporter hand­ do not subscribe to the above led the statements given to her claim that is attributed to the is not of prime importance; the Lawrence science departments, “THE KINETIC ART/’ a three «lay showing of varied cinematic experienmcnts, starts to­ important matter is that the ar­ and in fact I have yet to find night at 8:00 p.m. in Stansbury and will continue on Saturday and Sunday night at the ticle presents a set of impres­ among any of my scientific col­ same time. sions that are not only naive and leagues anybody who would sub­ misleading, but also are needless­ scribe to it. ly damaging to the sense of com­ munity that so many students Distribution Requirements and faculty at Lawrence are try­ The article quotes a faculty Students U nprepared Fo r ing, each in his own way, to pro­ member as saying in regard to mote. We need understanding, not the faculty’s recent elimination misunderstanding. of distribution requirements, Let me cite several excerpts "This move was not really ef­ In d ia n D isp lay o f A p ath y from the article. Faculty mem­ fective because it was not really bers are quoted as saying, “No liberal. It was just a facade for Lawrence students who recent­ first came face-to-face with the Some students “lived” in In­ matter what you say, it isn’t shifting requirements from the ly returned from India feel they Indian mode of thinking. “They dian homes, some in apartments, really going to make any differ­ university to the various depart­ faced an experience there which (the Indians» call it tolerancy; I and some in an Indian woman’s ence as long as you’re not a part ments.” Again, this statement is even the one term’s prior orien­ call it apathy,” she said. Many hostel. of the ruling elite", and, referring simply totally out of contact with tation session did not prepare officials expressed very little Group members were affiliated to the Povolny Report, "You get reality. The faculty clearly has them for. concern for immediate action on with Deocan Collqge, a graduate eliminated distribution require­ the feeling that the thing is being J a nine Sagert, Jean St. Pierre, such issues as birth control and institute offering courses in so­ shoved down your throat." Also, ments, and to my knowledge no malnutrition. Their attitude is ciology, archaeology, and linguis­ department has any secret and and Charles Pain were among . . there’s a tendency to re­ thirteen students who comprised partially reflected in the sorts of tics, and they continued their quire action while discussion is sinister plot afoot to sneak dis­ work hours many keep. They ar­ language and civilization studies tribution requirements back in. the ACM’s new study program in sometimes incomplete.” These rive at 11 a.m., take off from in addition to pursuing an inde­ The ultimate power of decision Poona, India. statements do not reflect reality. 1-4 p.m., go for a tea break at pendent study project. concerning the breadth of dis­ Janine commented, "We were 4:30 p.m., and leave work at 5:30 Janine did her independent proj­ Debate ad nauseum tribution of a student’s liberal warned of almost everything, but p.m. ect on the Hindu joint family, education is now in the student’s This is simply not the way the I guess it’s a matter of the orien­ which she related to achievement own hands, and this is the honest Justice? Lawrence faculty runs its busi­ tation period being separated motivation. Her project involved will of the majority of the fac­ ness or makes its decisions. Ev­ from reality; what we were warn­ She also commented on the In­ going into schools to do a series ulty. ery faculty member has the full ed about beforehand didn’t come dian’s tendency not to think in of tests on 11 to 14-year-old stu­ opportunity to express his views. No ‘Ruling Elite’ across until we oould experience terms of justice. When traveling dents. Charlie did some research Each issue is debated as fully as i t ” B$r third dass train, Janine com­ on a Hindu cult, Dattatreya, My own modest powers of ob­ the faculty wishes, sometimes ad mented that it was not unusual which has seldom before been re­ servation force me to say that Orientation Term nauseum. Fortunately the some­ to see a family arrive at the sta­ searched. A couple of biology maj­ what contradictory statement that the Lawrence faculty is not a col­ Prior to their departure last tion, buy only one ticket, and all ors participating in the program lection of various departments 17 June, all students selected for appears earlier in the article crowd into one small train com­ did independent projects on birth comes closer to reality: "... at pitted against each other and the program spent one term on partment. In such a situation, she control in India. least sixty per cent of the talk manipulated by a "ruling elite”, the Carleton campus. During the said, officials are apt to register coirid have been eliminated.*' but is instead a group of persons orientation, the students studied little concern. L' HII111111111111II1111111111111111111111 May we continue to have too much who are openly, freely, sincerely Marathir, the language spoken by Similarly, she explained that rather than too little debite! and sometimes heatedly defeating 33,000,000 Indians living in the and deciding the fate of the rec- west-central portion of the coun­ she once spent three hours in a Another set of quotes and state­ commendations of the Povolny try, and took a seminar in Indian post office waiting to mail a pack­ ments in the article was equally Committee. In these deliberations civilization intended to provide age because Indians continued to SKI out of contact with reality. "All the major guiding principle is them with a brief introduction to cut in line rather than wait their persons interviewed agreed on at honestly the best interests of the the art, politics, literature, and turns. Equipment least one basic point—that, valu­ Janine did offer an explanation university as a whole. If anybody social structure of that country. able or invaluable, there was for this mode of thinking. “About quite a bit of discussion which has any concrete evidence to the The sorts of problems which 98% of it is related to the Hindu a n d usually resulted in pitting var­ contrary. I’d like to hear about it. were to be encountered during retiigion,” she said. ious departments against each CLIFFE D. JOEL their stay became apparent im­ Indian Attitudes mediately following the group’s Associate Professor of In India, group members had arrival in Bombay. Before depart­ CLOTHES many opportunities to formulate Chemistry ing for headquarters in Poona, they met for several days with some conception on Indian atti­ tudes, for despite the fact that HEAR members of India's leading poli­ they studied as a group in Poona, tical parties. on SALE they had frequent opportunity to A T T E N T I O N At this point, Janine said, she interact with the Indian people. Contempo MUSIC LOVERS Large Savings at See and hear the Valley’s with most complete selection of top name brand Hi-Fi compo­ JIM CHOUDOIR nents and systems. Terms and lowest catalogue M on. thru Saturday discount prices on FISHER KENWOOD, DUAL, PICKER­ 10:05 to 10:30 p.m. ING, SHURE, TEAC, SONY, ALL KINDS OF JAZZ ACOUSTIC RESEARCH, oth­ EBERGGREN’8 SKt= ers. ¡AND SPORT 8HOPE APPLETON HI FI E 203 W. COLLEGE AVENUE E WH BY =A PPL ETON, WISCONSIN 54011= CENTER 1230 on Every Dial 323 W. College Ave., Appleton f t .Tmiiiiiiiimiimmiiiiiiimiiimmr

MAXWELL’S P U B WILL PIT II HR 01 VOI» « Thucydide» und W agner

En in g en C ourses To O f f e r

S tu d ies In C la ssics, M u sic by Nelson Freeburg Next year Lawrence’s Eningen Music 50, Wagner and the Mu­ J. Bruce Brackenridge, profes­ Study Center in Germany will sk; Drama, will be offered dur­ sor of physics, will teach Phys­ offer some unusual courses in ing the winter term. Technical ics 3-4; either or both terms may classics and music to comple­ knowledge of music is not requir­ be elected. Brackenridge indicat­ ment those in physics and Ger­ ed but some background, pref­ ed that the first term will em­ man. erably Music 10, will be neces­ phasize the history of physics Mrs. Mary Ann Brackenridge, sary. while the second term will con­ lecturer in classics, will conduct The course will deal with the centrate on an experimental ap­ a two term course entitled Clas­ music of Wagner’s mature op­ proach. sics in Translation. The summer eras—Tristan, Die Meistersinger, Traditional courses in German term will deal with Greek liter­ the complete Ring cycle — and grammar and literature will also ature while the fall term will be with the legends upon which they be offered next year. The instruc­ spent on Latin authors. The are based. tor for the two lower level gram­ course will then be repeated dur­ Other music courses to be of­ mar courses, German 4-5, has not ing the winter and spring terms. fered are Music 19, History of yet been announced. However, Mrs. Brackenridge provided Music in the 19th Century, and Paul O. Haberland, instructor in the following description of the Music 47, Literature of the Piano. German, will teach German course: Music 19, which wdH be offered 11-12 as well as several higher in the fall and spring terms, is level literature courses. “Students are often reminded a study of all forms of music Among the literature courses ABC PARTICIPANT TONY NEWBORNE performs that it is man’s natural and uni­ composed during the 19th Cen- to be taught are German 31, one of the mundane chores required of ABC house resi­ versal concern to discover his Age of Goethe and German 23, an dents. In the estimation of the student participants, life in own pißt. (Freshman Studies introduction to German litera­ the house provides welcome relief from the daily travails participants will be reminded of ture, a special Eningen course. in Appleton schols.. our recent bout with Darwin’s The Origin of Species.) “In this Classics course, sourc­ M oney Needed for Survival es of our Western cultural tradi­ tion will be studied in English translation. Among the Greek au­ ABC Provides Quality Education thors are Homer. Thucydides, Aeschylus, and Euripides; among the Latin authors are Plautus, Lucretius, Catullus, Sallust, and For Disadvantaged Area Pupils Horace.” by Kathy Peach She suggested that “Douglas Knight’s lecture on Homer’s Disadvantaged students may students are active in campus . In succeeding years the Dart­ Odyssey this month provided an also be interpreted as children life they assist Mr. and Mrs. mouth ABC program grew to 80 eloquent testimony to the per­ growing up in a culturally hom­ Stoner in helping the ABC par­ males and similar programs petual relevance of this epic to ogeneous area such as Appleton. ticipants meet the academic and were begun on four other college man's appreciation of his parf If ABC is going to survive in social challenges of a different campuses. and to his eternal search for Appleton, concerted effort on the learning experience. Association The initial eight male students identity. The various readings of part of the Lawrence campus and with Lawrentians reminds the were chosen by their school au­ this course in translation are se­ the Appleton community is a thorities or community leaders lected to facilitate a search into necessity. Money is a need for to apply for the A Better Chance the background of the traditions survival now, and interest must program. Each person nominat­ and values that define our partic­ be continued on a larger scale. ed was screened by the Indepen­ ular condition today. It is good NEARBY TTie ABC program gives high dent Schools Talent Search Pro­ to go back to the roots.” SQUARE school students from deficient gram, which recruits all the stu­ She indicated that she ‘“will educational backgrounds a bet­ dents in the ABC program. be happy to entertain further tury with a consideration of mu­ ter chance to earn a quality sec­ A guarantee to complete stu­ quo5Jtioms about the course.” sical conditions prevalent at the ondary education to prepare dies at a high school ris prom­ Robert C Below, associate pro­ time. The recommended pre­ them for college. The ABC stu­ ised after a successful eight-week fessor of music, will conduct requisite is Introduction to Mu­ dent is chosen for his superior summer program cm the Dart­ four courses in music. sic. academic potential which might mouth campus. The schedule is Music 10, Introduction to Mu­ Literature of the Piano, to be be stifled if he remained in his rigorous concentrating on good sic, will be offered during the taught during the spring term, is disadvantaged neighborhood with writing style, reading, and math­ fall and winter terms. Although described by Below as “a pro­ poor school systems. ematical reasoning. Acceptance any student may elect the course, fessional course designed pri­ He spends one or two years NICK ELAM prepares for the fol­ by an approved high school pro­ Below noted that it “is a basic marily for pianists.” A survey living in a community like Ap­ lowing day’s classes. gram is contingent upon success­ introduction to music listening, of principal composers for the pleton, attending its high school, ful completion of the summer for persons who have no back­ piano, technical knowledge is and goes on to college to grasp students that college entrance is session and upon faculty recom­ ground in music.” The course definitely required. an opportunity that his social en­ an attainable goal. mendation by the ABC summer will cover “many different types Below pointed out that each of vironment might have prevented. faculty. and styles of music” including the music courses will undoubted­ Consensus among those students The Appleton community and The combined efforts of Ed­ symphony and opera as well as ly be supplemented by concert questioned was that it is their Lawrence University combined ward B. Wall, former director of chamber, piano, organ, and vo­ offerings in Stuttgart and else­ fellow students in the house “that provide the physical plant and admissions now at Amherst Col­ cal music. where. make ABC” for them. Leaving environment necessary to insure a familiar community for a new lege, and Francis L. Broderick, the success of the program Fi­ all-white community poses the former Dean of Lawrence and nancial contributions and more difficulty of maintaining an iden­ Downer Colleges now at the Uni­ students who will volunteer as tity within the new environment versity of Massachusetts at Bos­ tutors are still needed to keep while preserving ties to the old. ton, brought the ABC program the program moving and suc­ Several students speaking for to Appleton. cessful.- the house as a whole felt they The goal of each student after Lawrence provides the bene­ were isolated from the Appleton ABC is college. June ’69 gradu­ fits of the library, Cultural Cen­ Community. The Cultural Center ates attend the following schoods: ter, Union recreational facilities, on campus is aware of this prob­ T. J. Jenkins, Arizona State Uni­ exposure to a college atmosphere, lem and compensates for the gap versity; Tom Davis, Lawrence and most important, interaction by maintaining interaction with University; Becky Bryant, Salem with enthused personnel helping the black students on campus College and Mae Unkart has the students with their daily life. The ABC program was initiat­ been accepted by the University The two-story residence ad­ ed in the summer of 1963 by of Pennsylvania. jacent to the Fiji House on Alton Dartmouth College with the sup­ The success of ABC students Street houses ten students from port of the Rockefeller Founda­ in the Appleton School District across the country. Two Law­ tion. The first group of male stu­ illustrates what can be done. rence student teachers, Peter dents numbered 55. Fifty four Growth and support of the pro­ Watson and Eli Brewer, and completed the program, and 47 gram must come from the Ap­ Mr. and Mrs. Alan Stoner live were recommended to prepara­ pleton community and the stu­ A VIEW OF ENINGEN from the girls’ hotel. at the ABC House. Although both tory schools. dent body at Lawrence. Detroit Symphony Thursday evening, 5 March, QUAD SQUADS the Detroit Symphony Orchestra By VANCE GUDMUNDSEN will appeal- in concert at the Me­ First term Quad sports ended morial Chapel. Concert time is with the Fijis resting comfort­ 8 p.m. ably on top of the standings hav­ The concert, marking the first ing won football, volleyball, and appearance in Appleton of the swimming. The Delts were in Detroit Symphony, is ithe third second place and the Phis held to be presented by the Lawrence the third spot. Artist Scries. Second term sports are well on Founded in 1914, the Detroit the way to completion. Handball Symphony Orchestra consists of and squash are under way on a 103 members under the musical tournament basis, ping pong has directorship of Sixten Ehrling. It just begun, bowling and basket­ is widely recognized as a front- ball will be over by Saturday. ranking symphonic ensemble, IFC basketball is standing in whose activities are constantly the line with one shot coming. increasing and diversifying. The Fijis and the Phis are tied It gives some 200 concerts an­ for the lead with 7-2 records. As­ nually, including adults’ and suming both contenders get by young people’s subscription se­ the Delts and Betas respectively ries, tour concerts, sponsored on Tuesday night, a playoff will concerts, various series for ensue. In the two meetings be­ school children, Cabaret “Pops” tween them the Fijis won the Concerts, free outdoor summer first 42-40, and lost the second concerts, tour concerts, and par­ 49-48. The Fijis are paced by ticipates annually at the Wor­ Roger Hildebrand and Dapper UNDER THE DIRECTION of conductor Sixten Ehrling”, The Detroit Symphony Or­ Dave Sanmona. With the help of cester, Mass., and Meadow Boo'c, chestra will present their first concert here 011 5 March at 8:00 p.m. in the Chapepl. Tick­ Mich., music festivals. a devastating fast break and a ets are still available at the box office. tough 1-2-2 defense the Purpte- Sixten Ehrling, music director men may be favored to cap this and conductor of the Detroit Sym­ year's title. phony, was born in Sweden in However, coach Red Merra and 1918. His early musical back­ has neophytes Tom Vanderhyden ground included piano and violin and Pux Rechner may decide dif­ studjes while a boy, four years of Placement Calendar This is not just a y o u n g m an ’s fancy. ferently. It has been eight years study at the Royail Academy of since the Phis have lost a Buck­ Music in Stockholm, and event­ ets championship; this year’s ually the launching of his con­ Monday 2 March— Glencoe, Illinois Schools playoff should be exciting. More­ ducting caiear in 1938 at the over, the Phis have been aided Dresden State Opera, where he Tuesday, 3 March— this year by two men wearing worked with Karl Boehm. Prior Grafton, Wisconsin Schools striped shirts who do not score to joining the Detroit Symphony much themselves, but lead the in 1963, Ehrling was chief con­ Wednesday, 4 March— Chubb & Sons, Inc. league in anriatB. ductor and music director of the The Betas have been bothered Royail Opera in Stockholm. Dubuque, Iowa Schools Hartford, Wisconsin Joint by cold shooting. Lance Alwon, His honors in the music field Rabbit Ramsay, and Pistol Pete School District are numerous, including the 1969 Saving have been cleaning the President’s Award from the Uni­ Thursday, 5 March— boards, but they have not put it versity of Detroit for his con­ Elgin, Illinois Schools togwtiier against the front-run­ tributions to “generating a new Lake Forest, Illinois District ning teams With their 5-4 record cultural dynamism’’ in Detroit. No. 67 Schools the Betas should take third place. Valter Poole, associate conduc­ Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin Fourth place will go to either tor of the orchestra, graduated Schools the Delts or thn Taus. Both teams from the New England Conserva­ have had to rely on individual tory of Music tin Boston with spe­ Friday, 5 March— Clarkston, Michigan Take a look at any campus. Big. Small. Rural. Urban. You performances from Andy Reitz cial honors in string quartet and (Taus) who is averaging dose to Community Schools see the same thing: guys and gals. Same books. Same looks. ensemble, and secondary honors 20 points, and from the sporadic First Wisconsin National Bank Same hopes. in theory. He later studied at tthe output of Clark Simmons and And you are there. Conservatory in Paris. of Milwaukee Dave Hachmiester. As the symphony’s educational Some students really jam in every bit of opportunity they The Eps have come close, 34-38 director, Poole’s voice and po­ can grab hold of. Some just drift through. against the Fijis, but are winless dium manner are known by thou­ Which are you? for the season. Their hrgh flying sands of Detroit school children. SUMMER JOBS Here’s a good tip: If you join the Air Force ROTC program fast break is led by Harold Jor­ Hundreds of Detroit Symphony on your campus you’ll know you’re grabbing a big opportunity. dan and Bob Mueller, but the them broadcast, have been given I N E U R O P E Financial assistance is available. You’ll graduate as an officer— team has lacked consistency. educational! concerts, many of American students are wanted under his direction. to fill 165 direct selling jobs a leader on the Aerospace Team. You have executive respon­ sibility right where it’s happening. Where the space age break­ Program for the 5 March con­ in Belgium, Germany, Spain “SLOW DANCE” BUSES cert includes performances of and Italy. Choice of $300 month­ throughs are. You’ll be able to specialize in the forefront of Boses will leave for Neenah Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 7, A ly wage guaranteed or com­ modern science and technology—anything from missile elec­ from the Union for the Tlmr*- Major, Opus 92,” Gubche’s “Epi- missions only which average tronics to avionics. You can also be a pilot. You won’t get lost day, 5 March Attic Theatre metheus USA, Op. 46,” R. around $700 a month. Jobs, in some obscure job with no future. production of "Slow Danoe oa Strausss’ “Don Juan, Tone Poem work permits, travel docu­ You’ll also enjoy promotions and travel. the Killing Ground,’' by Will­ (After Nikolaus Lenau), Op. 20” ments and all other necessary So graduate with our blessings. iam Hanley. Coffee and dis­ and “La Valse” by Ravel. papers are being issued on a And a commission. cussion immediately following first come, first served basis the performance. to students at selected accredi­ RADIO PETITIONS DUE ed U.S. colleges only. For ap­ WLFM has announced that plication forms, job descrip­ ROTC COMMITTEE petitions for the four station tions and full details by re­ The Ad Hoc Committee on management positions are due turn air mail send $1 (for air­ Air Force ROTC invites all on 15 March. Openings are for mail postage and overseas -fc COMPLETE LAUNDRY and DRY General Manager, Program interested persons to submit handling) to SALES PLACE­ position papers for considera­ Manager, Operations Manager MENT OFFICER, ASIS, 22 CLEANING SERVICE and “AM” Manager. tion by the committee. Papers Ave. de la Liberte, Luxem­ should be sent to E. H. Olson, Petitions for director slots bourg, Europe. are due by 22 March, includ­ Science Hall. ☆ WEEKLY SPECIALS ing: news director, sports di­ rector, music director, special ☆ HALF-BLOCK OFF CAMPUS events director, promotions di­ WANT TO CHARGE IT? rector, publicity director, con­ servatory events director, Open a Student Account! chief operator, chief announcer, DAILY DORM PICK-UP and DELIVERY and “AM” advertising direc­ — FAST SERVICE ON REQUEST — tor. Students without prior radio background will be considered for any position if they have PHONE 733-4428 or 733-6678 had sufficient related experi­ ence. Program Manager Shawn Duffy, Trever — ex. 317, or Chris Bowers, Plantz—ex. 307, wfll answer any questions. The “PILLS AND THINGS’* petitions are available at the station and may be turned in 204 East College Avenue to the Program Manager’s We carry a complete line of COSMETICS and WLFM mailbox in the Music- TOILETRIES Drama Center. W arden, Dyer Top Scorers

V ikes D efeat M t. St. P a u l

Beaten B y Redm en 77-61

by Bob Haeger Three consecutive baskets by In the first half the Moors were • the year for the Vikes and it Ripon’s Donn Weise helped the able to pick up 15 offensive re­ hopefully provided them wdth Redmen jump to an early 10-1 bounds in the finst half to nullify some momentum for their road lead, a lead they never relin­ some poor shooting. trip this weekend. They travel to quished in last Saturday’s tra­ Except far the first few min­ Iowa to confront Grinnell and ditional match with the Lawrence utes of the second half Lawrence Cornell, both of whom beat the five. The game was close until was in control the rest of the Vikes earlier in the year. the last four minutes when Ripon way. The final score was 80-73 in Standings broke it open for a 77-61 victory favor of Lawrence although the W L which maintained Ripon’s share game was not as close as the Ripon 9 4 SOPHOMORE STRAT WARDEN hauls in a rebound in fo first place in the MWC. scare indicates. Carleton 9 4 last Saturday’s contest with Kipon College. Warden was The Vilkes fought back from The Vikes put all five starters Cornell 9 5 their early deficit to within 22-18 into double figures. They wore St. Olaf 8 5 high scorer against the conference leaders with 23 points. with 6:30 left in the half. But the led by Dyer who tallied 22 points. Monmouth 8 6 Redmen, capitalizing on a cou­ He was followed by Hickerson Coe 7 6 ple of quick Vike errors, stretch­ who poured through 20. Farmer Grinnell 5 8 "Football is W ar" ed the gap to 38-27 at intermis­ finished the game’s leading re­ Knox 5 8 sion. bounder with |10. Lawrence 4 10 The main problem for the The victory wa6 the fifth of Beloit 3 11 Athletic Revolution Leader Vikes in the first period had been offense. Their defense had been strong in keeping the bigger Rejects iDumb Jock ’ LabelRedmen off the boards, but the Vikes were able to manage 9 OAKLAND, GAL—(CPS)— A (Other Ways Book Dept. EPO Box field goals from the floor in 39 T H E revolution fs simmering in college 13133, Oakland, Cal). attempts. athletics. Scott, in an interview at his It looked as if Ripon might PHY. ED. M AJOR And one of the men responsible Oakland home, emphasized that have the game when it increased for a new consciousness among athletes are human beings, not ilbs lead to 49-36 at 16:02. But the athletes is Jack Scott, a 27-year chattel. He condemned the profes­ Vikes, paced by the scoring of S A I D old former Stanford track man sionalization of amateur athletics, Strat Warden came back to with­ and teaching colleague at the the second class irole assigned to in five at 63-58 with four minutes University oi California. He is black and women athletes and the remaining. JOCULARLY: author of Athletics for Athletes nationalist bent of the Olympics. But from here it was all Ripon. In recent weeks Scott’s U.C. The Vikes went into a half-court class, Education 191D, “The Role press which the Redmen had no of Athletics in the University—A trouble breaking. They reeled Trackmen Travel Social Psychological Analysis,” off six straight points. They won has drawn nationwide attention. going away 77-61. The winners Perhaps no single class has re­ were sparked in those last four To Carleton For ceived such publicity since El- minutes by Greg Nickoli who dnidge Cleaver taught an experi­ had 10 of their last 14 points and First Indoor Meet mental class here last fall. finished with 21. Last Saturday, in theijr first Besides his teaching duties, The Vikes boasted the contest’s Scott is working on a Ph. D. in highest scorer in Warden who meet of the indoor season, ¿a poured 23 podnts, 17 in the last undermanned Lawrence track Hucafoon and is writing a book team made a strong showing en- with his friend and 1968 Olympic half. Lawrence had three others iroute to a third place finish be­ boycott organizer Harry Edwards. in double figures, Jim Dyer (12), hind victor Carirton and Cornell Scott spoke mast articulately Rick Farmer (11), and Karl on the Carleton College track. about the connection between ath­ Hickerson (10). letics and the military. He said Lawrence came back last Mon­ The eight Viking competitors ' ‘inter-collegiate athletics is the day night to play runnand-gun amassed a total of 20 points win­ training ground for second lieu­ with Mount St. Paul in a non- ning three events as co-capt. tenants . . . and the colleges with conference contest. In the Vikes’ Larry Eihsptahr vaulted 12’6*’ to the mast comprehensive sports highest scoring game of the year win his specialty, co-capt. Andy programs are the military aca­ they came off the court 80-73 vic­ Gilbert high junked 5’ 10” to demies . , tors. place first and triptie jumped to In fact politicians may invoke The Vikes got off to a slow third place, and frosh Bill Daven­ sports, football in particular, to start against the bigger Moors. port ran ahead of the competi­ sanctify their policies. Thus, Mount St. Paul who measured tion in tihe 60 yard high hurdles. President Nixon is portrayed as 6’6” 6’5”, and 6’4*6” mauled the Ken Zwtiinski placed fourth an avid fan CaUfonta State Su­ boards early in the finsit period in the 60 yard dash to round out perintendent of Public Instruction enroute to building up a 31-23 the blue and white scoring. Abo Max Rafferty says ‘ football is lead. competing were soph. Kent Vin­ wiar.” Robert Kennedy sadd “next Fighting back with tough de­ cent, mile and 2 mile; Bill to war, football is the best prep­ fense and rebounding, the game Gneutzmacher, 60 yard dash and aration for American life.” was tied by two free throws by mile relay; Bob Baker, 880 and So athletes come to be consid­ Willie Davis ait 31-all. The game mile relay; and Steve Swete, 440 ered part of the status quo—“just was seesaw untril the half when and mite relay. dumb jocks,” according to Scott. the Vikes held onto a precarious Hampered by lack of a good Yet Scott says that when a per­ 41-40 lead. practice area end temporary lack son is called a name like “jock” of full time coaching the team he comes to fell the roike almost put in a fine performance. All in spate of himself. Athletes be­ training is presently focused on come stereotyped and “develop Petitions Due to the Conference Meet to be held hostility to the reöt of the univer­ in Chicago on 6 March. sity.” Manage V-Room AH applicants for the position of Viking Room Manager should have some previous experience M I L L E R in a managerial position, includ­ ing a firm understanding of fi­ nances and public relations. M AKES IT RIGHT! Each position should be ac­ companied by two letters of rec- commendation; one from a fac- SEND US uky member or dean and one YOUR from a student at large Though ADVERBIAL the position is open to the entire PUNS ABOUT student body, junior or third COLLEGE term sophomore men applicants MAJORS. IF are preferred. PUBLISHED, Petitions should be turned in WE’LL SEND to the Union Director as soon as YOU A possible, but not later than 4 REFRESHING CONVENIENT CENTRAL LOCATION March. REWARD. IN APPLETON, WISCONSIN Dean Whitfield, a union mana­ COLLEGE BOX 482 Phon* 414/734-2111 C MILLER BREW. CO. ger who will answer any ques­ MILW., WIS. 53201 MOTOR HOTEL J M ccfins F«cilHI«i for 10 lo 350 tions concerning the job, can be reached at ext. 212.