Lawrentians Follow Returns During ‘Election Night *68’ As millions of viewers across predictions with a trip to an in­ the nation watched election re­ auguration in January. sults, Lawrence students crowded ‘‘It will be at least a fortnight into the union for Election Night before we know who won the con­ ‘68. According to Bruce Brown, test.” Brown said. "We have sev- the event’s chairman, some 725 era hundred entries to go through tickets were sold for the all-night first.” vigil on voting returns. Political Arena Rivemew Lounge was trai»- Center In formed into a busy, press-filled political arena where students and faculty could watch major Leaves Boennigheim network news coverage. Six televisions, donated by the H. C. For Town of Eningen Prange Company, were placed about the room. Front pages of The Lawrence German Study past “New York Times’’ election Center will be moved, in July issue were hung on the walls, 1969, from its present location in "E L E C T IO N N IG H T ’68” in the union’s Riverview Lounge was packed by over seven along with numerous political Boenningheim to the town of hundred students who came to eat donuts and watch election returns come in over tele- stickers and signs. Eningen. \ision and teletype. Poet Robert Bly (circle), who had earlier read his poetry, also at­ UPI This move results from the ex­ tended the election program. United Press International in piration of the lease with Schiller New York relayed latest develop­ College in Boenntnghedm, which is ments by the teletype machine. expanding and in need of the fa­ WLFM had a crew of broadcast­ cilities now used by Lawrence. ers in Riverview Lounge, with Eningen is a town of approxi­ special apparatus to connect them mately 8,500inhabitants, a twenty with their headquarters in the minute drive from , a Music-Drama Center. city of 70,000. The LAWRENTIAN Small Hotels Large blackboards in one area Students will occupy two small of the room outlined progress in Vol. 88— No. 8 Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin Fri., November 8 , 1968 hotels in the middle of E non gen the major political contests. One Women will be housed in one, board showed the election re­ men in the other. A former school sults as Lawrence students had building will contain classrooms predicted them. WaUde - talkies and offices. Povolny’s Select Committee were used and a pubic address svstem informed the crowds of No basic changes will be made developments broadcast on the in the German study program three major networks. when It relocates in Enmgen. Plans ‘Academic Aims Day’ There may, however, be an in­ Arrangements for Elec'jon Night crease in the program’s size from Mojmir Povolny, professor of ‘68 at Lawrence were begun at forty to fifty students. the opening of school this year. government and chairman of the Courses Offered President’s Select Committee on Ticket sales, which until last Sun­ Courses offered in the first ses­ Planning, announced this week day ndght had been in the red, sion at Eningen, the 1969summer- completion of plans for “Aca­ doubled between then and Tues­ faf! session, wiH be German, art, demic Aims Day,” Thursday, day to outsell Election Night ’66 and geology. During the second November 14. There will be a at Lawrence. session German, economics, and convocation on that day concern­ Outcome Pleasing geology will be available ing the plans and goals of the ” 1 was pleased with the out­ Faculty teaching at Eningen committee, with small discussion come,” sadd Brown, “after a bad during the 1969-1970academic groups involving the entire Stu­ start in the ticket sales.” The year will be John F. McMahon, dent body taking place in the af­ cost of the tickets was used to professor of German; Ronald W. ternoon absorb such cost as printing, in­ Tank, associate professor of The convocation will be during suring the televisions, and buying geology; and Thomas E. Wercz- the regular 11:10 period and will refreshments. The remainder of lau, professor of economics. be required. There will be three the receipts will be used to pro­ Wenzlau will be the resident di­ speakers. Arthur Remley, chair­ vide the winner of the election rector for that period. man-elect of the Board of Trus­ tees, will discuss Lawrence’s con­ tinuing openness to constructive change, and will voice the full support of the trustees for the Delay In Key Door Delivery committee. M O JM IR P O V O L N Y , chairman of the President’s Select Peter Fritzell, assistant profes­ Committee on Planning, is planning a convocation entitled Holds-up New Hours Policy sor of English, and James Noble, “Academic Aims” for Thursday, November 14. That after­ A delay in the delivery of sev­ The university is paying the re­ a junior, will be the other two noon, student discussion groups will meet with members speakers. They will attempt to re­ eral components of the key card maining two-thirds. of the faculty to further investigate the aims, goals, and late their remarks in such a way systems for Caiman, Ormsby, and Abuse Privilege structure of the Uniyersiy. Sage Halls is preventing the im­ that there will be a confronta­ When asked about her earlier plementation of the "self-limiting tion of ideas which will hopefully expressed concern over the “setlf- Povolny also indicated that the work has begun in earnest. Ac­ hours” policy for women approved stimulate student interest and 1 uniting hours” policy, Miss Mor­ faculty is a matter of concern for cording to Povolny, the commit­ by LUCC last spring. thought. ton explained that the reserva­ the committee. He stated, “I per­ tee has held weekly meetings All afternoon classes on the The electric locks and the key tions were for only a small minor­ sonally believe that the excel­ since the beginning of the year, fourteenth will be cancelled or cards themselves have already ar­ ity of the women who will abuse lence of the faculty depends on and is now beginning to receive rived, according to Jack Man well, the privilege. She added, however, rescheduled in order to allow the the combination of scholarship reports from the special groups discussion groups to meet at 2 director of the physical plant. The that the majority of women should and teaching ability, but this that were formed in September. p.m. Each group wiH have a fac­ hardware necessary for the install­ not be restricted by that minority. problem is still undecided and un­ These special groups are form­ ulty chairman and a student re­ ation of the locks in the present der discussion.” ed entirely of members of the corder chosen by the group. The aïl-glass doors, although ordered, The curriculum is another mat­ committee, and are based on spe­ discussions will be centered has not yet been received from the ter being considered and is un­ cific aspects of the University manufacturer located in Cali­ around points emphasized in the which they feel need investiga­ decided. This is an area where fornia. convocation and those articulated tion. At the present, there are Phi Beta Kappa student opinion can be very help­ Mianwell expects tlhat the needed in a letter which all students four groups doing research. They ful, according to Povolny. The components, already two weeks have, or will have received, from are concerned wuth 1) the char­ committee wishes to evaluate overdue, will arrive within the Names 5 Seniors the committee. acter of the college, 2) curricu­ both the system of general re­ next two weeks. Concerning the progress of the lum, 3) special programs, and quirements, including Freshman Once they have arrived, it will The Wisconsin Gamma-Delta committee, Povolny stated that 4) institutional structure. Studies, and the value of intro­ take a day to install and wire the Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa an­ most of its work was still tenta­ In January, four new groups ductory courses. Two other aca­ stainless steel box that houses the nounced the election of five se­ tive, with many alternatives still will be formed. These include demic matters to be discvissed lock. This box is the major miss­ niors to its membership. Cited for being considered. Of primary im­ studies of the facilities, the fac­ are the system of grading and the ing part of the key card system. superior scholarship were: Den­ portance, Povolny believes, are need for declaring a major. ulty, student affairs, and the fi­ Müss Morton, dean of women, is nis Delap, a philosophy major; questions concerning whether Another consideration of the nancial aspects of the commit­ certa/in that the key card system Ann Finney, a bio-chemistry ma­ Lawrence ought to offer gradu­ committee is the possible need tee’s explorations. jor; Steven V. Ponto, am econom­ along with the self-limiting hours ate programs, and the place of for more opportunities for off- ics major; Wayne Steinbach, ma­ policy will be in operation by the a small residential college in so­ campus study programs. Povolny joring in physics, and Anne Ver- FACULTY MEETING beglinmr.g of second term if not ciety today. Povotoiv asked, said, “The important question He, an anthropology, major. late this term. “Does this type of school have here is whether Lawrence stu­ Among the issues considered She explained that the inability Scholarship Awards sufficient special value to justify dents need a broader exposure to by the faculty at Us monthly to install the locks is the only ob­ its relatively high cotf?" the world; whether the smadl-town meeting today were an an­ The society also made three stacle to implementing the “seüf- undergraduate awards for high Concerning admission policies, environment is too protective to nouncement from the Povol­ offer a compete educational ex­ ny Committee on Planning, and limiting hours” policy. DWA has scholarship. The Freshman Schol­ the crucial question seems to be successfully raised the eight hun­ perience.” comments from Mrs. Ida Wal­ arship Award was presented to the conflict between the Univer­ dred dollars necessary to pay for John Idoine and Alison Osborne. sity’s commitment to excellence, Povolny also indicated the lace. director of the ACM its onethord Share of the key card James Noble received the Junior and its social responsibility, espe­ structure and organization the Washington office. system. Scholarship Award. cially to the underprivileged. committee is taking now that its Page Two THE LAWRENTIAN Fri., Nov. 8, 1%8 Tarr Faculty Letter ‘RAISIN IN THE SUN’ Kappa Alpha Theta will spon­ sor a showing of “Raisin in the Details Developments Sun,” starring Sidney Poitier, in Youngchild 161, Monday, For the BEST BUYS in SCHOOL SUPPLIES, ART President Curtis W. Tarr an­ siMe” on the university's present November 11, at 3:30 p.m. and nounced recent administrative de­ 1620, and will do other computa­ 7:00 p.m. There will be no and DRAFTING MATERIALS cisions to the faculty in a letter tions much faster than the 1620, charge for admission, but do­ last week. the old computer will be retained nations will be collected for a SYLVESTER & NIELSEN, Inc. He noted that only a portion of temporarily for teaching purpos­ Greek foster child which the 213 E. College Ave. Appleton. Wisconsin the $375 increase recertify author­ es and economic reasons, Tarr’s Thetas sponsor. ized by the trustees will be used letter said. to increase the comprehensive fee to $2955 for the 1969-70 academic year. Lawrence’s fee will still be one of the lowest among the ten institutions comprising the Asso­ ciated Colleges of the Midwest. The letter explained that ad­ JVewcVmtage ditional funds are needed primarily ‘ B o o ^ s to increase faculty salaries, and “to make a more cdequate al­ location to the food services and dormitory functions.” Tarr »¡s» revealed in a copy of the letter sent to parents of Law­ UBU rence students concerning the I n a T i m e ICY! T; comprehensive fee increase that o f “-'II increases are planned for the fi­ T o r m e n t H 'y nancial aid budget. He said that ftMNttiKuuiau - x x ; i o i . “our development people continue y HMMI to search for gift support for ag- Hfl»: ¡UMWMRHISW i' «MM* ■ «m im: mm Arwu*- AixH V,k :. ■ nifscent increases to our scholar­ NMMilNiai ship funds.” He also noted the signing of two LUCC actions: the new dem­ ' > ! ! onstration policy and the approv­ »<.•«*** »««cm A IN A TIME OF TORMENT CITIES IN A RACE al of admission of women to the by I. F. Slone SIX PSYCHOLOGICAL THE RESPONSIBLE WITH TIME EGYPT: Military Society THE WISDOM OF STUDIES ELECTORATE first-floor lounge in Brokaw Hall. Am erica’s moit dis­ by Jeanne R. Lowe by Anouar Abdei-Malek INSECURITY tinguished independent by jean Piaget by V. 0. Key, ir. Copies of two enactments were in­ An interpretation — ac­ In English for the first History of 15 years of A Message for an Age journalist examines key claimed by the experts with the assistance of Egypt’s national revolu­ of Anxiety time, these essays on Milton C. Cummings, Jr. cluded with the letter. issues and personalities: — of the most important tion 1952-1967 with em­ by Alan W. Watts LBJ, Vietnam, Fulbrlght, mental development are The rationality in presi­ In conclusion. Tarr wrote that experiences of certain an incisive summary of phasis on the army re­ The foremost Western in­ The Negro, The Kennedys, American cities in tack­ dential voting between gime, the Left, and social remote terminals wil be connect­ the work of the eminent 1936-1960 is analyzed by terpreter of Zen Buddhism The Left, The Right. ling urban and human change »under Nasser. asserts that highest hap­ »-4M |1.»9. Swiss psychologist. V-462 an examination of voting ed to the new IBM 360-44 compu­ decay. A Vintage Slant $1.19. V-426 $1.95. piness is found only in V-469 » 1 9 statistics and data on ter which wili be installed at the voting behavior. V-470 awareness that imper­ $1.65.______1 manence and insecurity Irebitute of Paper Chemistry are inescapable. V-468 within the next few weeks. $1.45. While "this sophisticated third generation computer will make computations which are not pos- THE ARTIST'S JüURNEYjliXTü THE DISSENTING THE INTERIOR ACADEMY, «n and orhpt e->N«tv?> RaymondResidents ¿¿Kr Sponsor Readings “The signs announce an event of interest to people who enjoy the liberal arts.” Such was the Vietnam feeling of Jeff Woodward, head (Mfasiiffà to t Him of Raymond House Poetry Read­ ’Wmçhei. Pspck**M MKtaat by Wate Kaufmann ings, in speaking of the two ban­ >•>* IMm I ners periodically seen on campus MAN AGAINST POVERTY: HO CHI MINH THE ARTIST’S JOURNEY which read. “Poetry Today.” , WORLD WAR III by Jean lacouture THE SECRET SEARCH FOR NIETZSCHE Edited by INTO THE INTERIOR PEACE IN VIETNAM THE DISSENTING Raymond House Poetry, which The first major biogra­ and other essays Philosopher. ACADEMY Arthur I. Blaustein and phy of this puzzling world by David Kraslow & Psychologist, Antichrist has replaced last year’s similar Roger R. Woock by Erich Heller Stuart H. Loory Edited by figure ... by the author With grace, wit and eru­ by Walter Kaufmann Theodore Roszak The most comprehensive In unprecedented detail, East House Poetry, has been well of Vietnam Between Two dition. one of the lead An updated, expanded collection of present day this book reveals for the Essays criticizing the received by the Lawrence com­ Truces. V-219 $1.95. ing critics of German version of a highly re­ American academic thought on virtually all first time the labyrin­ garded, many-faceted munity. Its coordinators report aspects of poverty by literature examines the thine course of peace world, condemning its characteristic quali­ study ol Nietzsche's dryness and introversion, that attendance is much higher such figures as Martin diplomacy accompanying unique contribution to Luther King, Barbara ties of modern German the escalation of the urging it to programs of thought from Goethe to philosophy and psychol­ socially responsible ac­ than last year. Ward and Michael Har­ Vietnam war. V-152 ogy A Vintage Giant. rington. V-ll $2.49. Wittgenstein. V-439 $1.95. tion. V-472 $1.95. Readings are usually held in $1.65. V-436 $2.45. Riverview Lounge of the Union. There are no set rules as to what each session should be like. A variety of performances from poetry and prose readings to gui­ i tar playing have been given. “The purpose.” as Woodward puts it. “is to «establish a time, place, and general subject for anyone that is interested in a re­ laxing Saturday afternoon. Poetry readings are performances of PRELUDE any and all types of entertainment TO RIOT from personal antics to group di­ a v ie w o f VMMAN AMERICA gressions.” nom THE BOTTOM Most contributors to the Ray­ mond House readings are Law­ THE MILITARY HALF rence students or professors, birt FANSHEN CRISIS NOW by Jonathan Schell A Documentary of SEARCH FOR A METHOD PRELUDE TO RIOT The author of The Village Jamas M. Gavin Jean-Paul Sartre ADAM AND HIS WORKS some, like Raymond Lyons of Revolution in a In collaboration with A View of Urban America Collected Stories of of Ben Sue describes the Chinese Village Sartre’s attempt to purify from the Bottom WSU-Oshkosh who will present a destruction of rural Arthur T. Hadley Marxism and enrich it Paul Goodman by William Hinton One of the best informed by Paul Jacobs Five new stories and vir­ prose reading soon, are from off South Vietnam by the The agonizing story of witti existentialism is A blistering, superbly re­ U.S. military, committed critics of the Vietnamese summarized and fore­ tually the complete texts :ampus. rural China in turmoil as war share his views on searched account of the of the exuberant writer’s to destroying, as opposed seen in the life of a sin­ shadowed in this Intro­ rotting inner-city core to U.S. civilians abroad, major issues facing the duction to his Critique three story collections: gle northern Chinese vil­ U.S. from “error abroad and the officiousness, The Facts of Life, The intent on rebuilding lage on the eve of the of Dialectical Reason. sluggishness and hope­ SHOPLIFTERS BEWARE V-435 $1.65. to squalor at home.” V-464 $1.65. Break-Up of our Camp, The food service has less Communist takeover. A V-434 $1.99. lessness of those pre­ and Our Visit to Niagara. Vintage Giant. V-465 suming to help. V-433 V-473 $1.99 than two dollars per day per $2.99. $1.95. person with which to operate. OTHER NEW TITLES: UNITY. FREEDOM ft PEACE: A Blueprint for Tomorrow by Nelson A This includes maintenance of Rockefeller V-395 $1.95 / THE WILL TO POWER by Friedrich Nietzche V-437 $2.95 / V-474 $1.99 / THE ENLIGHTENMENT: The Rise of Modern Paganism by Peter Gay V-479 the service and salaries as well FROM ANATHEMA TO DIALOGUE: A Marxist Challenge to the Christian Churches by $2.95 I FIRST SEASON by Israel Horovitz V-476 $1.65 / THE UNDERTAKING AND OTHER Roger Garaudy V-461 $1.45 I A LOSS OF MASTERY: Puritan Historians in Colonial PLAYS by Oavid Trainer V-477 $1.65 I COLLISION COURSE Edited by Edward Parone as food cost. Every time an ash America by Peter Gay V-463 $1.65 I THE COLOSSUS and Other Poems by Sylvia Plath V-476 $1.69 / TWO-FACTOR THEORY: The Economics §1 Reality by Louis 0. Kelso and tray or sugar bowl is taken V-466 $1.25 / THE DRAGON: Fifteen Stories by Yevgeny Zamyatin V-467 $1.95 / 1649: Patricia Hetter V-462 $1.65 / SOVIET MARXISM by Herbert Marcuse V-460 $1.99 / A from Downer or Colman, mon­ THE MAKING OF A REVOLUTION by Georges Duveau V-471 $1.95 / REVOLUTIONARY TIME OF WAR/A TIME OF PEACE by Sen. George McGovern V-461 $1.69 / DISOBEDI­ IMMORTALITY: Mao Tse-tung and the Chinese Cultural Revolution by Robert Jay Lifton ENCE ANO DEMOCRACY: Nine Fallacies on Law and Order by Howard Zinn V-463 $1.4S. ey otherwise used for purchas­ ing food must be applied to re­ placement of stolen articles. If you want more food and better food, please return the missing items and refrain from lifting them in the future. CONKEY S BOOK STORE ll’£ The Lawrentian I Peace March Aftermath — I Feature Section Alumni React by CINDY HENNEY and STAFF • Editorials Columns • Features Initial reaction t<> the Lawrence I'eace March two weeks limili ago was largely limited to a few catcalls and sev eral thrown In a tw o part series. The Lawrentian Feature De­ partment will study the delayed reactions, of the greater Ruts Are a Groove Lawrence community to the Peace March, focusing this week on the attitudes of Lawrence alumni, and probing Students Pigeonholed to Fit next week the attitudes of the man-in-the-street. “Our peculiar form of Govern­ Mrs. It. A Stillings. a 1942 ment its considered to be still on graduate who has Ixhh involved tnial, and the question of its per­ in Appleton politics lor some Six Stereotyped Categoriesmanence is not yet fully settled.’’ tirme and was Appleton's first wo­ So reads a statement from an edi­ —Iowa State Daily. Iowa committee and crack the books man alderman, said "1 approve. idealism. torial in the February, 1887 issue State University, Ames. Iowa. before Johnny Carson. I think students' motivations were Like guinea pigs, writers, psy­ of The Lawrentian. Young, bearded Yippie leader When you study instead of very good Maybe they felt their chologists. educations and adver­ country was betraying them.” Jerry Kubin, whom some ot you waitching Johnny Carson, study on Right to Express Dissent tisers are stereotyping and ex­ She addl'd that although this is may have read about in the pa­ the week ends (because you can’t plaining the “ Pepsi generation ” Although times have changed pers yesterday, is a special breed. “not my way ol expressing my­ get a date) and refuse to see a They seem to be covering the sit considerably since then, Lawrence At the .same time he's our repre­ se lf she thinks young people psychiatrist, vcu definitely belong uatton so thoroughly one finds students continue to affirm (and sentative, even Chough he proba­ should be interested in what is to the monastic generations. it hard to say anything original in a much louder voice than the bly didn't watch or care about going on because “they are going Just Rewards about student dissent What two lebels of 1887' the fact that “our Johnny Carson’s annive r s a r y to inherit the world “ We newspaper editors, ad hoc sides can you offer to attach or peculiar form of Government is show Tuesday nigh!, drink beer committee members and future defend last spring’s strike at Col­ si ill on trial.” Peaceful Peace March with the guys or crack a book. peace corps workers have a umbia? The two sides may he Alumni Association President I’ve just read an article that place, too. We're benevolent The recent Peace March ex­ summed up neatly as anarchi&s Elmer Otte. class of 1930. stated categorizes us college students in dreamers wrapped up in the work emplifies this fact, and regard­ versus the establishment. Wrong. less of differences of opinion on that he approved of the march six tidy divisions, granting us ethic—hard work ends in just re­ Do all the students at Iowa State because “it was a peaceful peace “fluidity” only once in awhile ward. campus concerning the war. the argue from the same points of right to express dissent in this march We must have law and among (he divisions. On the other hand, if the view? order ” He emphasized that al­ Malevolent Dreamer world’s not worth saving in your manner is generally well accept­ though the right to dissent is ac­ If you’re Jerry Rubin you’re in way of thinking, you're a hdppde What Category Today? ed. But how does Appleton—the av­ ceptable. “there is a responsibil­ Psychology Today’s malevolent seeking sanity and doing your I urge you to read—pick up a erage citizen, the “man in the ity to see that the dissenter is dreamer category. The article own thing. Hopefully, you’re a Saturday Evening Post, a Harp­ street.” the high school student not necessarily right ” says that on sighting you the uni­ member of at least one of these er’s, almost any current period« —react to the idea of protest'’ versity administrators pray si­ five categories or else you’re cal. Listen — to the bearded “ Proud of Your Kids’’ The Lawrentian talked with o lently, “restore us the apathy of among the graveyand generation ones in the Commons, to the girls Also expressing the opinion number of Lawrence alumni, high the 1950’s.” Malevodent dreamers That’s self-explanatory. down the hall. Change can only that the right to protest is com­ school students, and other towns­ are also bnanded as activists, left­ If this excites youf interest, an­ come when we read and listen to pletely defendable as long as the people to find out. ists, radicals or anarchists. If other academician offers 15 hy­ ideas we’ve never heard before, demonstration does not become you feel out of place among potheses to explain what is hap­ when we learn new arguments to Several alumni felt strongly disorderly was Mrs R C Duck- beards and blue jeans, you might pening to the younger generation. issues. If there’s nothing for you that the march and other activi­ low, a 1942 LawTence graduate be a member of the “kept genera­ For instance, you have a choice to learn, what category are you ties of the past few years are “I would be self-conscious doing tion.” You fit here if you still between his critical hypothesis in today? having an adverse effect on the it,” she said “ 1 wish I had the write home, work on homecoming which blames parents for our ‘‘Lawrence image.” Eanl Miller, courage I’m proud of you kids. class of 1932, said "If they want You told us something.” to hold these things, it’s all right Expressed Approval as long as they don't infringe on the rights of others. I was against For the mw* part, alumni re­ the blocking of roads against Ma­ actions reflected considerable rine recruiters last year. Every­ open-mdndedness regarding the One college does more one has a right to use those idea of student protest. The in­ roads.” terpretations varied, and were in a few cases completely unfavor­ than broaden horizons, ft “Needed to Be Hosed” able. but the majority of those A woman from the class of interviewed expressed approval 1948, who wishes to remain anony­ NEXT WEEK: The high school sails to them, and beyond. mous, said “The college-age students, secretaries, sign-hang- group should be dissenting. But ers, waitresses, salesmen, etc. 1 don’t approve of the way Law­ Now there's a way for you to know rence students have been going the world around you first-hand. about it.” She added that her A way to see the things you’ve church was picketed twice by read about, and study as you go. Lawrence students, and “they all The way is a college that uses the 'looked like they needed to be Parthenon as a classroom for hosed off.” Ski Buffs do it! a lecture on Greece, “I’m afraid one group of stu­ and illustrates Hong dents has taken over, and these Kong’s floating student leaders are being contin­ societies with an ually re-eleoted,” she added. hour’s ride on a harbor sampan. Ralph McGowan, an insurance Every year Chapman College’s man from the class of 1925, said World Campus Afloat takes two that Lawrence is “just trying to groups of 500 students out of their WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT be another Berkeley” and “jump­ Director of Admissions ing on the political bandwagon in classrooms and opens up the Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666 imitation of larger schools.” He world for them. And you can be added that he was “surprised” ' • w one of the 500. Your new campus Please send your catalog detailing curricula, at the participation of area minis­ courses offered, faculty data, admission require­ is the s.s. Ryndam, equipped with ters. modern educational facilities and ments and any other facts I need to know. a fine faculty. You’ll have a com­ “Future Gold Star Mothers” SCHOOL INFORMATION plete study curriculum as you go. Mr. A businessman from the class English feather Miss of 1940 who feels that “college And earn a fully-accredited Mrs. ir semester while at sea. Last Nam* ...... First Initial' students should not form their Chapman College is now accept­ opinions so definitely until later ing enrollments for Spring ’69 Nam* of School in life” recalled a panade led by and Fall ’69 semesters. Spring ’69 Campus Address Street Lawrence students in 1939 or 1940 called the “Future Gold Star LOTION circles the world, from Los Angeles t ï t y ...... State through the Orient, India, South zip Mothers’ Parade.” St u d e n t s « u n on »aw»»«** Campus Phone ( ) marched with baby buggies to Africa, to New York. Fall ’69 leaves Arsa Cod* New York for Europe, the Mediter­ demonstrate that they didn’t want ranean, Africa, South America, Yaar in School Appro«. GPA on 4.0 Scale to lose their children in World War II, which the U.S. had not ending in Los Angeles. English feather* HOME INFORMATION yet entered. The world is there. Here’s a For men who want to be where the good way for you to find out what’s The group had received a per­ action is. Very schussy. Very mas­ happening. Send for our catalog Horn« Address Street mit from the city which was can­ culine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION. celled at the last minute so the $2.50, $4.00, $6 50. From the com­ with the coupon at right. City State Zip plete array of ENGLISH LEATHER parade was limited to campus men's toiletries. Safety Information: The Home Phone ( ) areas “Lawrence and Appleton,” s.s. Ryndam, registered in the Ares Code A PtOOUCV Ol Ml M COMPANY. INC.. NOilHVAli, N | 0>W7 Until.______Info should bo sent to cam put □ horn# Q the alum told the reporter, “were Netherlands, meets International approx. data on non-speaking terms for a year Safety Standards for new ships I am interested In □ Spring Fall □ to or so.” developed in 1948 and meets 1966 □ I would Ilka to talk to a representative of WORLD fire safety requirements. CAMPUS AFLOAT. Fri., Nov. , which was that "most college students have dynamicism, prominence, and ab­ replaced in Germany by a less a grade school understanding of ility to relate to members of the Hauirnitiatt radical organization, the (SHB), Christ”. Lawrence and AppVeton commun­ and seems to have been replaced ities. it published each week+f the college year except during vacations on this by the campus. Such student or­ “You have to start over and They are manifestations of Fath­ Lawrentian of Lawrence University. ganizations actively demonstrate er Janssen’s prediction that “the Second-class postage has been paid at Appleton, 54911. Wisconsin. examine your evidence, primarily against unfavorable party policies the gospels,” he said; “rational stiffness in religion is going to The Lawrentian is printed by Timmers Printing Company of Appletonand help to enlighten the coun­ Subscriptions are$4.50 per year. thought has to be the basis for have to disappear . . . but not the try’s future leaders. Heidenheim- your Christian faith.” dignity.” In light of their cam­ EDITORdN-CHIEF ...... NEIL HILLEK g er supports this type of activity. Toycen Stressed the importance pus and community commitments, BUSINESS MANAGER ...... BOB JENKS O “The German soortization pat­ they are some of the several pos­ Associate Editor ...... Kurt Baer 0 tern thus provides mechan­ of the historical knowledge and evidence of Christ given in the sible examples of the “mounted Managing Editor ...... Nick Candee 3 isms for students to sow their meditation" of which Reverend Advertising Mianager ...... Ledfie Schriber g intellectual wild oats as subsi­ scriptures. He saw this as the starting point for Christian faith, Engelman spoke, functioning with­ Feature Editors ...... Steve Bogue, Cindy Henney dized kibitzers before assuming as empirical evidence on which to in the church which William News Editor ...... Kick Fanner the reponsibilities of organization Boardman saw as "the shell of an men within the party fold proper. base rehgious beliefs. Sports Editor ...... Al Esterline institution to meet social needs." Make-up Editor ...... Bill French Their preparation is in some In the Action ways less rigorous than that of Associate Feature Editor ...... Jim Kehoe Returning to the issue of change Amerk'an politicians-to-be, who, Assistant Feature Editor ...... Elzie Williams in forms of worship that was ______at typical state universities, must Assistant Sports Editor ...... Greg O'Meara touched upon in a previous part display their own prowess in or­ Members of the Lawrentian Assistant Sports Editor ...... Jeff Reiser of the series. Fr. Janssen believes ganizing float panades. their abil­ staff contributing to the last Circulation Manager,...... Tim Hickey ity to manage mammoth athletic that the congregation “should be involved in the action" during part of “Religious Renais­ STAFF events, and their acumen in flat­ tering their elders." (The Govern- the liturgy, but thinks perhaps sance” included Al Esterline, Mary Carlson. Greg Carnott. Patti Davidson. Bob Fellows, Mike ments of Germany) that "the pendulum has swung Jim Kehoe, Jim Molitor. Tina Gordon, Janet Huehde, Rick Johnson, Trish Lemley, Kathy Madi­ I think his comments and the too far" with the recent changes son, Kathy Mayer, Jim MoUtor, Kathy Poptawski, Tina Ronard, Renard and Sue Schreiner. new trends at Lawrence make a that have taken place, and that Cynthia Rudolf, £ue Schreinder; David Steinhom. Pat Suhrcke. lot of 9ense. May the Peace perhaps the churches need to get Tom Warrington, Cheryl Warren, Andrea Western. 7>ondra Zmrer- March be only the beginning. sky. JAMES SNODGRASS Page Four THE LAWRENTIAN Fri.. Nov. 8. 1%8 Soviet Censorship — II Fri., Nov. X. 1(X>8 THE LAWRENTIAN Page Five 'Capable of Loving Only the Dead? LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By R. L. YATZECK Assistant Professor of Slavic Literature Because the language of imag­ “The First Circle” seized by the Finally, Saxarov feels that those ery and allusion is more difficult secret police. (It is now suspected bureaucrats on both sides of the to censor than as straight journa­ that the novel was released in the Iron Curtain who demagogically lism, Russian literary artists have, West by the secret police to com­ inspire their own people with na­ since the 18th century, borne the promise Solzhenitsyn by opening tionalism and whip up their fears burden of social and political com­ him to the charge of treason which in order to secure their ow n power mentary in their country. As pro­ had been leveled at Sinjavskij and will certainly lead the wrorld to viders of almost the only believ­ Daniel). speedy destruction if rational and able printed material, literary ar­ The author goes on to say that free discussion in an atmosphere tists have enjoyed great and wide- he hopes that the Union will help of mutual trust does not take the s|>read respect. This tradition has him to seek redress in his trouble place of such methods. continued in Soviet times, and but that if it does not he is quite Co-Developer of H-Bomb writers in Russia today are paid willing to die if that is the only Takes Freedom in Hands in accordance with their popularity road to publication, although he as we^il as with their politics. The essay, published this July warns that “stopping a writer’s in the “New York Times,” is the The poet Voznesenskij, no liter­ pen has never ennobled our his­ most recent phase in the attempt ary or party hack, can expect tory.” of Soviet intellectuals to both take quiet sell-outs of 300,000 volume Petition Had No Effect a hand in the governing of their editions of his poetry. Book prices On the Writer’s Position own country and converse respon­ are relatively low if, as in the case sibly with the outside world Saxar­ This protest letter was signed by of Voznesenskij or Evtusenko, the ov, the holder of the Stafi'in prize 82 members of the Writers’ Union writers have a reputation for bold­ and a co-developer of the Soviet (out of six thousand», one of the ness and honesty. Since writers hydrogen bomb, has taken his life, signers being Andrej Vo?nesenskij do occupy such a position, the gov­ or at least his freedom, in his who was forthwith deprived of his ernment is predictably annoyed at hands by publishing this essay. passport and refused permission anti-government protest. And such His statements, like those of the to give a series of poetry readings protest has, in the last two years, above mentioned writers, must in the United States. The petition begun to appear in the Soviet Un­ certainly be viewed in the West " i f HAFP£N6 m & m z MAK£ATECHNICAL A P /A N C f— had practically speaking, no pos­ ion. as something more than a projx» HZ CXMte IN AN' PKIViS OUT O f TH STUDENT UNION/ itive effect on Solzhenitsyn’s posi- ganda victory if future life on Two examples of public protest ion as a writer, and he has further earth is to be assured. Let us “dig­ are of special interest—that of the been subjected to systematic nify” these writers with the right novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn newspaper vilification because of kind of attenton. Our half of the Former Editor Is Awarded and that of tfhe nuclear physicist the planned publication in the world is not so free of the diseases Andrej Saxarov. Both deal, in West against his express wü¿h, of diagnosed by these Russan writers whole or part, writh the problems For School Censorship Fight the novel “The First Circle.” that we can afford to ignore their of cultural and intellectual oppres­ NEW YORK, Oct. 31—A former challenging the claim of college The publishing houses of Praeg- words. administrators that no criticism sion dn Russia and, by extension, college newspaper editor today er and Dutton dropped publication received the first Freedom Award of state officials was |>ermittcd in the whole world. Both place plans when Solzhenitysn protested for independence in collegiate because the state “owned” the their authors in serious fegal jeop­ publication, but several oftiher frms journalism. campus publication. ardy because they appeal to world —Diai and the German Possev • CALENDAR■ Gary C. Dickey, former editor Dickey, a Vietnam veteran, was public opinion and therefore will among them, are either planning of the Troy State College news­ expelled from the college in Au­ certainly be understood as treas­ publication or have already pub­ paper in Alabama, received the gust 1967 after publishing a blank onous attacks on the Soviet state. lished the work in the West, re­ award at a convocation of the Na­ space in the “Troypolitan” mark­ gardless of the effect that this Friday, November 8— “One Day in the Life tional Council of College Publica­ et! “censored” in place of an ar­ may have on Solzhenitsyn’s fate. Greek Symposium Of Ivan Denisovich” tions Advisers and the Associated ticle banned by college adminis­ Nevertheless, and with more help Panhel — Union, 3 p.m. Collegiate Press. trators because it criticized the Solzhenitsyn, the author of ‘‘One from his fellow writers than from Closing Address — Dr. J. H. The presentation was made by actions of state legislators. Day in the Life of Ivan Deniso­ western publishers, Solzhenitsyn Hollomon, Univ. of Okla.: Dr. Dario Politella, NCCPA pres­ Dickey took his ease to the vich” and of the recently publish­ has courageously made his point. Chapel, 8 p.m. ident and head of the department U.S. District Court and was or­ ed ‘‘The First Cirde,” circulated, Discussion—Union, 10:30 p.m. for journalistic studies at the dered readmitted to the college at the Congress of the Union of Protest Not Limited German Department films, University of Massachusetts. The on the grounds that “a state can­ Soviet Writers in May of 1987. a To Literary Figures Youngchild 161, 7 p.m. award was provided to the not force a college student to for­ petition protesting the conditions Cultural and intellectua1! protests Film Classics — “Les Carabin­ NCCPA by the John Hancock Mu­ feit his constitutionally protected under which Soviet writers are in Russia have, finally, not been iere «The Riflemen',” Stephen­ tual Life Insurance Co. right of freedom of expression as forced to work. restricted to the literary world. son 201, 7 p.m. Politella said Dickey was chos­ a condition to his attending a The most recent and most thor­ Saturday, November 9— en for journalistic courage in state-supported institution.” In this letter Solzhenitsyn at­ oughgoing examination by a pri­ Film Classics — “Les Carabin­ tacked the institution of censor­ vate citizen of Soviet intellectual iere (The Riflemen),” Young­ ship as medieval and destructive and political policy is the nuclear child 161, 7:30 p.m. of living literary culture. In this physicist Pavel Saxarov’s essay Phn Mu Alpha Sinfonia party connection, referring to the prac­ “Thoughts on Progress, Peaceful (invitational), The Ivanhoe, 8 tice of rehabilitating controversial 0\A and Bra»"* Co-existence and Intellectua1! Free­ p.m. wriiters after their deaths, he, in dom” which was privately distri­ Beta Theta Pi-Kappa Alpha Thê­ Pushkin's words, accused the bur­ buted last July in the Soviet Un­ ta party, Pennings, 9 p.m. to eaucrats, quoting the line “they ion and was released at the same 1 a.m are capable of loving only the time in the West through major Sunday, November 10— dead.” He asserted further that newspapers. Film Classics — “Les Carabin­ literature cannot exist be ween the Saxarov asks iin his essay for a iere (The Riflemen),” Young­ words “permitted” and “ not per­ rational and scientific approach child 161, 7:30 p.m. mitted.” to world problems in an atmos­ Monday, November 11- phere of free discussion He con­ More Than 600 Writers Geology field trip to Kettle demns the continuation of political Seized by the Secret Police Moraine — all day imprisonment in Russa, and spec- Chamber Music Series — Cam- Solzhenitysn then went on to at­ fically asks for the release of erata Bern string easemble, tack the Writers’ Union itself. Sinjavskij ar.d Daniel. Harper, 8 p.m. Quoting from iits constitution he Tuesday, November 12— noted that one of the Union’s func­ Russian Writers Also Freshman Studies lecture — tions was “to protect the copy­ Against Vietnam War Prof. .lames A. Coleman, Am­ rights and other rights of writ­ He warns that the problems of overpopulation, famine, and nu­ erican Iniematonal College on ers” He noted that since Stalin’s “Modem Theories of the Uni­ rise more than six hundred mem­ clear destruction cannot be solved in a merely national framework verse.” Stansbury, 9:50 a.m. bers of the union had been seized Lawrence Christian Fellowship, by the secret police and that in but will demand genuine coopera­ tion between the United States and YoungchiM 166, 7 p.m. every case the Union had aided GENUINE SCOTCH GRAINS BY the Soviet Union. LUCC, Union. 8 p.m. and abetted the police. He im­ Wednesday, November 13— He attacks the war in Vietnam plied that the Union might as well Freshman men’s dinner meet­ disband if it was orVly capable of as a “crime agaiast humanity’’ ing, Harper, 6:30 p.m. but also vigorously castigates Sov­ selling out its members. Lawrence University Theatre — iet medd'i'ing in the Middle East Lady Bostonians “Camino Real,” Stansbury, Solzhenitysn Book and blames Russia for the most Published in West 8 p.m. recent Arab-Israeli conflict. Junior Panhel study break for The classic moccasin styled with a saucy man«) Finally Solzhenitsyn described freshmen women tailored touch in pebble-textured scotch grain. Ex­ his own literary problems since Thursday, November 14— the publication in 19C>2 of the pris­ FIRST OF A SERIES quisitely crafted! Excruciatingly comfortable! Just Editor’s Note: Yatzeck’s two Convocation — Povolny Commit­ stop in and try on a pair—but bring money..,you on camp novel “One Day.” With tee, Chapel, 11:10 a.m. the increase of bureaucratic pres­ part essay on government cen­ may want to wear them home. sorship in the Soviet Union is Student recital — Thomas Lar­ sure to stop criticizing Soviet life son. string bass; Jeannette J. he had found it first difficult, then the first in a continuing series of articles faculty members Joiner, piano: Daniel Foster; Some styles to 11 — $13 and $17 impossible to publiish. He was not Harper, 8 p.m. paid regularly, refused permission have consented to write for The Lawrentian ir< succeeding Lawrence University Theatre — to give lectures and readings, and ‘‘Camino Real,” Stansbury, 8 HECKERT SHOE CO. months. finally his apartment was search­ p.m. ed and the manuscript of the novel Reader’s Digest Says . Page Six THE LAWRENTIAN Fri., Nov. 8. 1068

liiiiiQiiiiiiiiiiiiatiiiiitiiiitaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiMiiaiiiiiiHiiiiaiiiiiimiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiimiiaiuuMii'i Professoriat Exterminates == Liberal College EducationI Conservatory Events (Editor’s Note: The following they are the victims of a 20-year commodity.” r.iiniiiDiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiitiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiOMiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiinioiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiimiioiiiiii]? is a reprint from a “Header’s Di­ long academic revolution that has “Like all monopolists,” Fischer gest News Release.” ) benefited faculty members, but writes, “they used this new-found Miss Joiner s a piano student In attacking college adminis­ no one elise. power to enhance their own Camerata Bern of Theodore Rehl, associate pro­ trations are campus rebels hitting In a November Reader’s Digest wealth, prestige, and authority. fessor of music. Larson studies the wrong targets? article (condensed from Harper’s), Today $50,000 incomes—from sal­ String music from the 17th, 18th with Professor Kenneth Byler. In the view of editor John Fisch­ Fischer traces that revolution ary, government, and foundation and 2()th centuries will comprise Both recitalists are candidates for er, the answer is yes. He blames from the end of World War II, grants, outside lectures, and con­ the Chamber Series program by the Bachelor of Music degree with faculty—a deeply entrenched “pro­ “when the demand for higher ed­ sulting fees—are not uncommon the U-member Camerata Bern. majors in music education. ucation began to grow with ex­ The Swiss-based ensemble, open­ fessoriat”—rather than college ad­ in academic circles.” On most Debussy ministration for the death of lib­ plosive speed.” campuses today it is the faculty ing attraction of the four-concert Miss Joiner will play “Papil­ eral education in this country. And University teachers — the only that decides who shall be hired series, will perform at 8 p.m. on he suggests that campus rebellions ones who could meet the demand and fired, what shall be taught, Monday, November 11, in Harper lons, Op. 2,” by Schumann; “Noc­ are happening because liberal-arts —changed virtually overnight from and to whom. Hall. turne in C-sharp minor, Op. 27, Selections on the program in­ No. 1,” by Chopin; and “Min­ students are just beginning to rea­ “humble pedagogues to the sole About the only thing teachers clude the “Concerto Grosso, Op. strels,” by Debussy. lize that they’ve been had—that purveyors of a scarce and precious don’t do is teach, says Fischer. 3, No. 11 in D Minor,” by Antonio “Today, few well-known schol­ Larson has programmed move­ Vivaldi; “Chaconne in G Minor,” ars teach more than six hours a ments from Marcello “Sonata in by Henry Purcell; "Concerto for week,” he writes. “The routine E Minor;” and the Mozart “Con­ Violin and Orchestra in A Minor,” problems of mass higher educa­ certo in B-flat, K. 191” He will Yenderbush’s Arrival by J. S. Bach; “Sonata da chiesa tion have fallen by default to grad­ also play “Apres un Reve,” by for Viola d’amore and Strings,” Faune; and “Chaconne,” by Ar­ uate students. What liittle teach­ by Frank Martin; and “Sinfoniet- mand Russefl. Thwarts Panty Raid ing the professors do is often dull ta for String Orchestra, Op. 52,” and ineffective. The typical pro­ by Albert Roussel. A panty raid on tihroe women’s entrance When a girl opened a first fessor couldn’t care fess about un­ Tickets for the concert and for dormitories lasit week didn't quite floor door to look out. The doz­ dergraduates.” the series are on sale at the box come off as Dean of Men Kenneth en were quickly turned out, how­ Who gets hurt? Mostly the lib­ office in the Music-Drama Cen­ NEED A H. Venderbush followed and ever, and the group went on to eral-arts students—who are often ter. Other programs on the series thwarted a hard-core group of Colman. the brightest students of all. These are the cello-piano team of Gabor NEW HANDBAG? Brokaw freshmen as tliey went Responding to chants of “We young people come to college and Alice Rejto, Monday, Jan. 13; Choose from over 1000 from Sage to Ormsby to Colman want silk!” Colman girls were uncertain of career goads, but harpsichordist Gertrud Roberts, models at Pah-low’s halls. said to be more enthusiastic, wanting to find understanding: Monday, March 10; and classical Of the several attempts at Sage throwing assorted items from up- “and they hope to pick up at least guitarist Michael Lorimer, Mon­ Priced from $3 to $100 to break in, one entry through a per-story windows. a smattering of it by talking to day, April 14. side window was successful for Going through ;*n open window wise, mature men; by reading un­ Conservatory seniors Jeanette PAH-LOW'S six men until they were flushed on the Panhel wing of the dormi­ der those men’s guidance; and by Joiner, a pianist, and Tom Lar­ LUGGAGE — GIFTS out by the dean. tory, two people made their way observing how such men conduct son, a string bass player, will 303 W. College Avenue The crowd, which shortly be­ to the front door, which they open­ their own lives.” present a public recital at 3 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 114, in Harper On the Street of Quality fore 11 p.m. had grown to 100-200. ed to admit the crowd of fifty-plus Their chances of meeting these Hall. broke up except for some fifty clustered outside. goals today “are clo 6e to zero,” men, most of whom were Brokaw Some two dozen freshmen made Fischer declares. residents, who proceeded to Orms- it up the stairs before Venderbush The freshman drawn to a uni­ *>y arrived to block and oust the rest versity in hopes of liberal educa­ At Ormsby about a dozen gained of the raiders. tion quickly finds it is unavail­ The dean pursued those who had able. “Hence,” says Fischer, “his gone upstaiirs; most fled of their accusations of hypocrisy, his dis­ VIEW FROM THE BENCH Dean Venderbush own accord. One of the last to illusionment, and his impulse to leave, however, was met at the throw bricks through classroom By AL ESTERLINE door by Venderbush. windows.” Attends Workshop The retreating raider attempted Here, declares Fischer, is the Kenneth R. Venderbush, dean to escape recognition by pulling underlying—and understandable— of men, represented Lawrence at the dean’s hat over his eyes. None­ reason for campus rebellions. In the past few years, it has become almost common­ a consultation workshop for per- theless, Venderbush grappled with “When undergraduates demand place to hear people question the value of intercollegiate sonnel workers sponsored by the the freshman, who somehow man­ “student power,” they want a American College Personnel As­ aged to wrestle the dean to the voice in what is taught, so that sports at a small liberal arts college. Few people, how­ sociation held in Detroit last ground and pin him. at least some courses will be rel­ ever, take the time to consider the alternatives, or to actu­ week. Mustering his decanal powers, evant to their lives and interests, ally examine the premises under which intercollegiate This consultation-workshop was Venderbush persuaded the fresh­ rather than to the graduate schools athletics at Lawrence operate. the first of four to be held this man that his identity could not and the research projects of the month in Omaha, Hartford and remain unknown for long, and con­ professors.” Coach Heselton, Professor of Physical Education and San Francisco. The meeting’s top­ vinced the freshman to stop sitting Giving them such a voice may director of Lawrence’s athletic program, explained to me ic was “Student Personnel Work on him. well be a “sensible sedition” to thi> week the philosophy behind intercollegiate competition and Response to Cultural Differ­ The fi^eshman gave up and re­ the campus problems that have at Lawrence. ence,” and was attended by 50 leased the dean, after which they erupted so suddenly and violently, Heselton stated that the MWC “has the most sane ath­ white delegates and 25 black dele­ talked about the incident. he says. gates. letic program in the nation.” He added that the various Speakers included the black As­ schools realize that their prime objective is academic, as sistant Dean of Rutgers University, is exemplified by the fact that in all member schools, the .lames C. McDonald, whose topic faculty has complete control over the athletic department. was “Black Pre-college Culture.” LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS He used the example of Beloit in 1951, when they had The second speaker was Matthew built up an outstanding basketball team by overemphasis Stark of the University of Minne­ and overscheduling. Meloit then proceeded to out-class the sota, the coordinator of human re­ conference with the expressed intent of not furthering the lations and programs, who spoke aims of the conference, but of winning a high place for it­ on “The Issue-Response of Cultur­ self in the national ratings. As a result. Beloit, for a num­ al Difference.” Tlie third speaker, ber of years, was expelled from the MWC. Clarence Shelley, Illinois’ Assist­ ant Dean of Student Personnel and As far as Lawrence in particular is concerned, Heselton Assistant to the Chancellor, spoke explained that the athletic department realizes that Law­ on “Black Campus Culture.” rence is not a Big Ten University, and it is not their posi­ Venderbush is writing an exten­ tion to pressure people into participating in sports. Tie men­ sive report of the meotiimig which tioned that on a number of occasions he has come to know will be circulated on campus. He a person well because of the person’s participation in a described the meeting as “elec­ sport, and when this person decided, for some reason or tric” and felt that many people other, not to go out for the sport, their relation was not there were shaken by the speeches changed at all. and discussion. Asked for the reason for the W hen asked if an athlete could benefit as much from four consul ta tiion-workshops, Ven­ intramural sports as from intercollegiate competition. Hes- derbush quoted from the A.C.P.- clton responded: “ If the collcge had just intramural sports, A.’s statement of purpose. “The the good athletes would control the situation. We do both publication of the Kerner Report, because this is the best-the combination of intramural and the activities of our black students, intercollegiate gives the greatest number of boys a chance together with associatiated prob­ to compete within their own class.” He also noted that lems of poverty and the urban an outstanding athlete, Chuck McKee, for example, would ghetto, made it clear that society be terribly bored with intramural competition. must address itself to these and Athletes in general. Heselton claimed, arc an important related concerns. The world of part in the development of many people. He cited the fact American higher education is be­ that many ex-athletes at Lawrence had written to him coming heavily involved in the telling how the discipline and spirit they had experienced search for alternatives and solu­ 11 I'VE HALF A MINP TO TUM 0OTU OF YOU IN TO THE 6>üPEfclNT£NP£Nr O f &Ü\\X>\U6S& GfcOüNVS." in intercollegiate sports had been profoundly beneficial tions to society's problems,” the in future life. statement said. Book Review The Light Around the Body f By Robert Bly I

The forty-three poems of Rob­ Mr. Bly is at his poetic best requires an explanation longer ert Bly’s second volume. “The when he abandons the protest for than the poem itself (however fine Light Around the Body.” won the which he is noted, when he aban­ the explanation—and Bly’s were National Book Award for Poetry dons the didactic and gives us sujierb > lacks something as po­ for 1967 and it therefore behooves rather a fresh view of reality etry. The best poetry is ¥ike tliat any critic (and how much more through another man’s eyes: he of the Japanese and Chinese mas­ this one > to read these works with is at his best in lines like these ters whom Mr. Bly praised so special care and to avoid as much from “Free of Despair Has Been often in the course of his reading— as passible the treacheroiB influ­ Our Saviour": it stands ill one, sufficient and com­ ences of first impressions. plete in itself. Having observed these precau­ This autumn, I tions, I find the book a curious Cannot find the road Earlier Volume mixture of the powerful and mov­ That way: the things that we Mr. Bly has written some such ing with the indifferent and i some- must grasp. poetry and some of it was pub tfimes» baffling. The signs, are gone, hidden lashed in an earlier volume. “Si­ by spring and fall, leaving lence in the Snowy Fields,” which Mr. Bly is well-known as a pro­ A still sky here, a dusk there, although it wo» no national test poet but one cannot help feel A dry cornleaf in a field; where awards, seems to this writer to that in general the poetic value of has the road gone? All lie by far the better part of Robert “A BODY SURE DOES GET AROUND.” Poet Robert the selections in “Light Around the Trace lost, like a ship sinking. Bly’s work. Body” is inversely proportional Hly gesticulated while reading his aiul others' works at Where what is left and what SHAWN DUFFY to the strength of the protest. the Art Center last Tuesday. The award-winning anti-war goes down both bring despair. poet later lent his guru-some presence to the "Election There are exceptions, certainly: Not finding the road, we are Night V>8” proceedings. “Counting Small-Boned Bodies" slowly pulled down. (“If only we could make the SECOND THOUGHS bodies smaller . . . If only we Amateur Fencers Voice from the Right could make the bodies smaller ... . The above review of “ The Light smaller . . . If only we could Around the Body" was written be­ Rank Lawrentienne make the bodies smaller . . . We fore Robert Bly’s appearance here Ripon Hears Buckley Slam could fit a body into a finger-ring, on November 5. This writer was In Nation’s Top Ten for a keepsake forever.” » achieves much impressed by both Mr. Bly its protest in and * through the ;ind his reading but stiFi believes Miss Mary Heinecke, assistant Current Unrealizable Goals poem; the protest is a part of the that hris first estimation of “The professor of physical education, is the first Wisconsinite m history By BRUCE BROWN poetry, not something that seems Light Around the Body” is, es­ to achieve a national ranking in After microphone failure greet­ plosions have been campusized, merely to have been tihrust upon sentially, a valid ore. fencing. She has been ranked ed his opening joke about Hubert city-ized,” futilely, Buckley said the poetic form for a free ride. The long explanations with which Humphrey. William F. Buckley, tenth in the nation by the Ama­ that the answer to pacify the Uni­ At times Mr. Biy slips into the Mr. Bly prefaced many of his Jr. spoke for 80 minutes to a teur Fencers League of America. ted States was not in a Vietnam simply incomprehensible, as in poems in the reading were often standing room only audience of or race issue settlement, because Miss Heinecke, who has dom­ these lines from “The Current Ad­ necessary explanations, explana­ 1400 inside the Ripon College (proposition four), “America has ministration” : inated Wisconsin women’s fenc­ gymnasium last Tuesday evening. tions without which the sense of lately given itself over to the Snow fell on a farmyard ing for the past several years, Presenting an ‘‘account of dis­ realization of unrealizable goals” the poems was at best elusive. shares the number ten position in Montana. orders in America,” ever witty (e.g., Marin Luther King’s “free­ These explanations oujjht to have with two other women. And the Assyrian lion blazed been included in the written work. and erudite, Buckley probed the dom now” ). The ranking was given primar­ phenomenons of “discourtesy,” above the soybean fields. Yet one feds that a poem that As a conservative spokesman, The last haven of Jehovah, down ily for her outstanding perform­ the “moral imperialism” deny­ he felt that after much use of ance m the National Champion­ ing the democratic process (e.g. from the old heavens, “We shall overcome.” there has Hugged a sooty corner of ships held in Miami, Fla., last the controversy surrounding Ron­ June. Miss Heinecke reached the been “nothing much happening.” the murdered pine. ald Reagan’s appearance at Yale semi-final round and narrowly with a consequent “fall from the Arabic numerals Student Directors as a Chubb fellow), and the rise missed making the finals Had delerious state of anticipation” Walked the earth, dressed in crime rate (‘‘it is statistically in the last two years. “Govern­ she competed In the finals, she as bankers and sportsmen riskier to walk a half a block in ment has tried to do what God To Present Playswould have qualified to partici­ One looks hopefully to the bottom New York than to actively par­ and personal idealism are for.” Thanksgiving weekend the Ex­ pate in the final Olympic trv-outs of the page for a sprawling foot­ ticipate in a riot.”) Passing over the new left and perimental Theater will be the held in Teaneck, N.J.. last month. Suggesting that these are inter­ note and—finding none—despairs drop outs, he added that "the scene of three student-directed related, the ex-mayoralty candi­ of ever fathoming the sense of larger group” is alienated by plays. Bruce Iglauer will direct an date and debating opponent of the thing. “materialism that robs the self adaptation of Stud Terkdfs famous Gore Vidal offered four “propo­ of individualism’’ quoting Richard Antithetical Virtues “Division Street Chicago,” and sitions": "The cost of disobedi­ Nixon. Buckley acknowledged the But if there are didacticism and Craig Hamilton will stage Edward ence is too high.” “This society’s world’s “unresponsiveness to us” obscurity in “The Light Around Albee’s “Sandbox” and William unwillingness to prosecute law­ and “what we think.” but cau­ the Body,” there are also power B. Yeats’ "Purgatory.” lessness is moral weakness,, not F-A-S-T tioned against “the narcotic and control in many places through­ “Division Street Chicago" is a strength.” out; and in the best of the selec­ frenzies of ideology.” series of 18 actual interviews with Buckley said that the axiom tions these two antithetical virtues In a subsequent question and ordinary people conducted in the film “change must be effected by due of power and control are fused, answer period Buckley suggest ed streets of Chicago. In the Law­ process has become a tenet we are synthesized, to create some­ that George Wallace is void of rence production the 18 characters processing are unsure oí,” but blamed “a thing at once forceful and beauti­ rise m flow technodogy” which ideological consistency, has no will be portrayed by a company of backing of recognized conserva­ ful. six actors rotating rdies through­ obscures the direct hurting of in­ Interestingly enough, the poems tives, and s “an embarrassment out the play. Large selection of Portable dividual persons by covertly dis­ by Robert Bly in which this com­ rupting societal processes. By to conservatives.” The editor of Tape Recorders bination of power and control oc­ "Division Street Chicago” was historical analogy, he reminded National Review promised a less curs are not poems of protest, originally a controversial book. that “we will move against each colorful engagement of seman­ Kodachrome and Kodacolor. but poems of despair, which is Iglauer describes the dramatic ad­ other" to preserve our ideals. tical parrying when he again joins Two Day Service! quilte a different thing, for protest aptation as a portrait of a major Third, “the United States is in­ Gore Vidal on the same platform city with people as colors and the “with lots of distance between assumes that improvement is pos­ Black and White, brought in experienced at losing” and used streets as canvas. by 9 a.m. ready same day. to winning. Pointing out that “ex- us” this election night. sible. "The Sandbox," one of Albee’s Largest selection of qual­ earlier plays, describes a group of ity cameras in the area. people waiting for the expected. Performed first in Germany and later off-Broadway, Albee’s "Sand­ Lawrentians . . . box” is considered by many critics to hold more than the usual con­ tents of its namesake. • COMPLETE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING SERVICE Off-College Avenue • SPECIAL STUDENT RATES “ Purgatory,” one of a few “cot­ • HALF-BLOCK OFF CAMPUS erie” plays written by Yeats, deals with the relation between man’s • WK WELCOME CHARGE ACCOUNTS past ideas and present emotions. Hamilton has described these two unusual plays as effective anti­ dotes for pre-finali jitters. Within these three off-College Avenue productions, there promise ideal photo t to be elements of the unusual, the PEERLESS exciting and the interesting for 222 E. College Ave. Lawrence theatre goers. LAUNDERERS & DRY CLEANERS ELZIE WILLIAMS 307 East College Ave. One-half Block off Campus Fri. Nov. 8, 1968 THE LAWRENTIAN Page Seven LAWRENTIAN SPORTS Lawrence University Choral Society presents Varsity — Frosh — Quad Squads — View From The Bench GEORGE FREDERICK HANDEL'S ORATORIO Pioneers Creak Past Vikes "MESSIAH” Despite Last Quarter FightSunday, December 8, 7:30 P.M. The Vike Gridders wene hand­ the first half by kicking off to then ended in a 0-0 draw ed their fifth set-back of the sea­ the Pioneers. They then held Lawrence Chapel son last Saturday afternoon by Grinnell in its own territory, The Vikes received the second- half kick off, but were unable to the Grinnell Pioneers in a game forcing the Pioneers to give up played at Grinnell. the pigskin. For the rest of the do anything with it. Turning the ball over to the Pioneers, they LAVAHN MAESCH, Conductor Needing only a field goal to win quarter, the Vikes maintained then saw their opponents march Kathleen Harris, Lawrence University, soprano the contest, Lawrence had a first- good field position, and although down field and eventually over Marcia Roberts, Madison, contralto and-ten situation on the Grinnell not scoring themselves, neverthe­ the double stripe. Robert Johnson, Chicago, tenor 24. The Vikes, however, were less prevented any scoring threat Ralph Stang, New York, bass thrown back to their own 45, and on the part of Grinnell. The Pioneers, having a 7-0 lead, with the clock running out, lost The second stanza was char­ kicked off to Lawrence, but the their last chance to take the acterized by a see-saw battle, boot was fumbled and the Pio­ with the game. with neither team consistently neers settled on the Vike 12-yard Lawrence opened the action in having field position. The half line. The Lawrence defense held, but Gninr.ell capitalized on its field Lawrence Symphony Orchestra position, and split the uprights to capture a 10-0 lead. Kenneth Byler conductor and Harriers Defeat Pioneers* As the fourth quarter rolled around, the Vikes were fighting 180-Voice Choral Society desperately to stay in the game. Vie for Third in ConferenceThey finally put together a drive ADVANCE Campus Mail Order Sale The Lawrence cross country He was followed closely for three which took them well into Grin­ team pushed their winning streak miles by Lawrence’s Randy nell territory whene a pass from Students should fill out and detach ticket order, en­ to three last Saturday, as they Smith. Then, according to Smith, John Van de Hey to Hank Kinzie close payment and self-addressed envelope with dorm­ pirt Lawrence on the score board. edged the Grinnell Pioneers 27- “he took off.” Smith held on, itory and room number. Post in campus mail or leave 29. This contest was the last despite vestiges of a stomach For the conversion. Van de Hey slipped off right tackle to put the at University box office; tickets will be returned dual meet for the harriers and cramp, to finish second in a time promptly. Student tickets are $1 ; adults, $2. allowed them to finish the sea­ of 22:04, the best clocking for Vikes within two points of Grin- son with a dual meet record of a Lawrence runner this year over m 0. Regular box office counter sale will not begin until four wins and five 'losses, 3-4 in four miles. In the closing minutes of the Nov. 18. Mail advance orders to MKSSIAH, Music- ccnference meets. Third place was taken by Rus­ contest, after the ball had chang­ Drama Center. First place was taken by Eric sell of Grinnell, followed by Bill ed hands a number of times, Tim Jahns of Grinnell, who toured Giese of Lawrence. Next for the Meyer antercepted a Pioneer the flat Grinnell course in 21:43. Vikings was co-captain Mark aerial, and returned it to the Leonas, who ran a steady race Grinnell 24. The Vikes tried to to finish sixth. He was followed take it in for a TD or at least MESSIAH TICKET ORDER . by Andy Reitz and Vem Witmat, for a better field goal position. Enclosed find check (or money order) in amount of But Van de Hey was dumped who finished seventh and eighth $...... f o r ...... adult and-or ...... student ! Sailing Club Gains respectively, to hold off the re­ twice while trying to pass, and mainder of the Grinnell team. the Vike6 ended up in a punting tickets. I enclose a self-addressed envelope for your j New Opportunities Stu Torgerson, Lawrence’s sixth situation on their own 45. All the convenience. My seating preference: runner, held off the Pioneers’ Pioneers had to do was run out The Lawrence Sailing Club’s □ Main floor, front □ Balcony, sides charter membership in the Wis­ fifth man to insure the Vike vic­ the clock. consin Intercollegiate Sailing As­ tory. Tomorrow the Vikes play at □ Main floor, rear Q Balcony, rear j sociation formed last year and Tomorrow the Lawrence har­ Monmcu^h for their last game of its membership in the Midwest­ riers will meet the nest of the the season. After a disappointing N am e...... Addresss ...... I ern Collegiate Sailing Association conference at Chicago’s Washing­ season, which after the first game Please mail order to “Messiah,” Music-Drama Center | have provided Lawrentians with ton Park, where a new confer­ seemed to be one of their better, sailing opportunities which are ence champion will be determin­ the Lawrence Gridders will be far superior to those of virtually ed. looking for vindication. Mon­ all schools of comparable size. mouth. however, has a 5-1-1 rec­ With the progress they have ord, handily defeated Beloit, 37 The WISA facilities aie pres­ made since the beginning of the STUDENTS ently in Milwaukee, and the or­ to 14, last week and smothered season, the Vikings are aspiring GrinneM the week before, 50-0 ganization is in the process of for a first division finish and may Use Our COMPLETE Facilities obtaining use of the North Shore possibly place as high as third. The Monmouth game will also Coast Guard Station. mark the finale for 11 seniors. WALK-UP TELLER SERVICE Carleton College, the defending 9 am. - 10 am. 3 pm. - 5 pm. In addition to the opportunities champion, is once again favored They are co-captain Dennis De presently offered by the MCSA to take the title, with St. Olaf Cock at defensive tackle, co-cap­ to Lawrence < intercollegiate com­ rated a close second. Earlier in tain Gar Kellom at center, quar­ petition with Big Ten and other terback Dave Frasch, defensive the season St. Olaf was ranked FIRST , large schools), many opportuni­ as a potential upset team, but end Dale Schuparra, end Tom ties will be offered by the Wis­ they lost this status after drop­ Callaway, guard Rifl Baird, mid­ ■ ÏI consin Association. In c 1 u d e d ping a dual meet to Carleton by dle guard Bob McKee, tackle Pete among these are sailing on Lake NeulisJt, end Hank Kinzie, end a sizeable score. Michigan, using many large and Rick Miller, and tackle Mike An­ varied classes of boats (some of The Vikes will be in the midst drews. Member F.D.I.C. them Olympic class). of a scramble for third with Coe, The WISA hopes to hold a Cornell Grinnell and Monmouth. Grinnell: 0-0-10-0 matched race regatta in 5.5 meter Coach Davis gives his team an Lawrence: 0-0- 0-8 boats next spring, and will also even chance to come out on top Grinnell Lawrence enable Lawrence to increase the of the heap. He explained, “Your First Downs 19 10 . i « a ( : tT > number of participants in its pro­ opponent only has two arms and Yards Rushing 1145 86 i t', campu^ fashion* gram. legs, just like you.” Yards Passing 107 8fi Total Yard 252 172 fcr ltllov\> and j;ai" Punts Ave. 4-31 4-36 1968-69 VARSITY SWIM SCHEDULE Passing 13-26-1 4-7-0 Fumbles Lost 3-0 3-3 Sat., Nov. 23—Telegraphic-Air Force Academy—1:30 p.m.—Home Sat., Nov. 30—Ripon-Lawrence (V&F) — 1:30 p.m...... Home Saturday, December 7 — Oshkosh R elays...... Away Results Friday, Janarv 10 — Carleton. 4:00 p.m...... Home MU ra p f. Saturday. January 11 — St. Olaf. 1:30 p.m ...... Home Results Last Week (Nov. 2) Saturday, January 18 — Ripon (VAF), 1:30 p.m ...... Away Cornell 51, St. Olaf 27 Sat., Jan. 25—Wis. State U, Stout, and St. Cloud College Away Grinnell 10. Ijawrmce 8 Friday, January 31 — Cornell, 4:00 p.m ...... Away Monmouth 37, Beloit 14 ¿ â IttA.CIcise Saturday, February 1 — Grinnell, 1:30 p.m ...... Away Ripon 35. Carleton 0 . / ^ ' and Friday. February 7 — U. of Wis. - Oshkosh. 4:00 p.m ...... Away Coe 43. Knox 14 Wednesday. Feb. 12 — U. of Wis. - Steven Point, 4:00 p.m.—Home Final Games Tomorrow (Nov. 9) her corner’ Saturday, February 22 — Beloit (V&F), 1:30 p.m ...... Home St. Olaf at Ripon Friday Mid Sat.. Feb 28-Mar. 1 CONFERENCE at Knox College. Coe at Grinnell Galesburg, Illinois Beloit at Cornell—Dad's Dr.y Lawrence at Monmouth— Par­ ?n0 Cast (Citllfiir Aurmir, ents Day Pape Kight THE LAWRENTIAN Fri., Xm. S. I‘*hS Carleton at Knox Frf., Nov. 8, 1968 THE LAWRENTIAN Pape Nine New Cage Coach Is Hopeful For Successful First Year by AL ESTERLINE Coach John E. Poulson, the new pressive guards, Brian Bock and Lawrence University Varsity Bas­ Don Brooke, who have graduated, ketball Coach, looks forward to leaving the team with little depth an exciting and successful season in the guard slot this year. Poulson has coached Concerning strategy, Poulson high-school ball for 17 years, the said: “We are changing our de­ last five at Clinton, Iowa. He fensive tactics. We plan to press hopes to up-hoild his outstanding more than usual.” In practice the coaching record in his collegiate Vike cagers have been working debut year. mostly on fundamentals. Poulson noted that the change in schedule in the MWC will have Sophomores Decent an effect on the practice routine. For a full-court press to be ef­ In the past, the first conference fective, it is necessary for a team game for the Vikes came at the to have considerable depth, since beginning of the second term substitutions have to be made (January), and there were two freely for fatigued players. So non-eonference games at the end far, I’oulson stated, there are of first term (December*. This about ten people out for basket­ year, however, there are two con­ ball , and he expects another four BOB TOWNSEND, a senior varsity basketball player, takes a jump-shot at a recent pre­ ference games around the end of or five after the football season, season team practice. Sophomores Mark Frodesen and Rick Farmer look on. Under new November, one on November 30 which should give the team suffi­ coach John E. Poulson, the team looks forward to a successful season. against St. Olaf, and the other on cient depth. Also, he added, “the December 2 against Carleton. sophomores look fairly decent.” Less Time to Prepare Asked about his impression of I^awrence, Poulson responded: “I This change in schedule has like coaching at Lawrence. The Booters Boast 5-3 Record* two imporant implications; first athletes seem to be very inter­ the Viking cagers have lass time ested They have the right out­ Vanquish Marquette, Beloit to prepare for the all-important look on the game; they give to conference matches, and second, basketball during the basketball The Lawrence University soc­ During the second half Law­ there will be almost a month time, and dedicate a tat of the cer team continued its rampage rence pressured the Beloit goalie break between the Carleton game rest of their time to academic over the weekend and extended with 25 shots. But it was not and the Holiday Tournament, matters. This isn’t a Big Ten its winning streak to four straight until late in the third quarter which takes place just after school, but the (athletic) com­ by defeating Bedoit 3-2 at Insti­ that Archie Koranteng tied the Christmas. petition is here.” tute Field Saturday. This was the score by heading in a corner Commenting on the team, Poul­ second victory in less than 24 kick from Nordstrom. son said: “We have the personnel Not Much Attendance hours, as the booters had previ­ for a real good ball dub. I’m sure Comparing his situation at Law­ ously scored an impressive 2-1 Second Overtime we’ll be a contender.” He added rence with his previous position, win over a strong Marquette This forced the game into a that there has been a “marked Poulson said: “Where I coached eleven in Milwaukee. second overtime The referee improvement in the past few prac­ before, it was a basketball con­ called a foul on the Belodt goalie. Uphill Battle tices.” ference.” He explained that at­ and Lawrence was awarded an tendance often went over the two Against Marquette, the team indirect free kick. Korenteng con­ Guards Could Re Problem thousand mark, and many of the fought an uphill baittle to gain the verted a pass from Hermann lie also stated that “guards games were televised. He also lead and then held on to take Obletz, and the Beloit team walk­ could be a problem; we might noted: “ From what I understand, the decision. Marquette got on ed off the field The game is have to shift some personnel.” there em't much attendance at the scoreboard early in the game presently under protest. when a Lawrence defender, in Last year, I^awrence had two im- basketball games here.” attempting to clear the ball, kick­ Hustling. Confident ed it into his own net. The Lawrence l>ooters have Then, midway into the second played well since their first two quarter, Rusty Nordstrom tied losses and now have a 5-3 rec­ the score on a high drive that ord. They have developed into a went over the goalie’s outstretch­ hustling, confident, and co-ordi­ What’s so special about ed hands. Both teams were un­ nated unit that should garner the able to penetrate strong defenses. first winning season in the history of soccer at Lawrence. However, Lawrence hustled and, forcing the Marquette goalie to make an enror, took the lead Beechwood Ageing? on Nordstrom's second goal, a I V / Ì Y / ÍV/fV/ÍVY IV? |Vv drive into the open net. The goal We must be bragging too much about we let Budweiser ferment a second occurred with only a few sec­ onds left in the third quarter and Beechwood Ageing. time. (Most brewers quit after one was the last score of the game. CAMPUS Because we’re starting to get some fermentation. We don’t.) Jumped Into Lead BARBER SHOP flak about it. Like, “ Beechwood, These beechwood strips offer extra Determined to square their Beechwood . . . big deal.” And “ If surface area for tiny yeast particles series with Beloit after a 3-1 for appointment dial Beechwood Ageing is so hot, to cling to, helping clarify opening game loss, the Vikings why don’t you tell every­ the beer. And since these jumped into the lead when Bruce 9-1805 Brown converted a penalty kick body what it is?” strips are also porous, they in the first quarter,. However, Be­ 231 E. College Aye. So we will. help absorb beer’s natural loit took advantage of a tired “edge,” giving Budweiser Lawrence eleven and came surg­ Appleton, Wis. First, it isn't big wooden its finished taste. Or in other ing back to grab a 2-1 edge on casks that we age Budweiser words, “ a taste, a smooth­ blasts from the 18 yard mark. in. ness and a drinkability you Budweiser.LMt« im But it is a layer of thin will find in no other beer at

wood strips from the beech ItfWlD AND CANNtO IT any price.” L .A» tree (what else?) laid down ÄL t'rUMHD k Ah yes, drinkability. That's — irm i ...... mr * in a dense lattice on the w h at’s so special about bottom of our glass-lined Beechwood Ageing. brewing tanks. This is where But you know that.

ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! Enter the ’69 Inter­ collegiate Music Festival, co-sponsored by the brewers of Budweiser. Write: I.M.F., Box 1275, Leesburg, Fla. 32748.

CONVENIENT CENTRAL LOCATION Budweiser. IN APPLETON, WISCONSIN Phon« <14/734-2*11 KING OF BEERS« • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTON . COLUMBUS

MOTOR HOTEL J Meeting Facilities for 10 to 350 Page Ten THE LAWRENTIAN Fri., Nov. 8, 1968 Former Dean in Mass. Education Broderick Favors Downtown Site For U. of Mass.-Boston Campus By NEIL HILLER BOSTON, MASS. - The unoffi­ style desk, and heavy curtaining into colleges of 2500 students as cial sign in the entrance of the of the former office of Consoli­ the school reaches its projected building at 100 Arlington St. here dated Gas’ executive assistant to 15.0000 enrollment reads “Welcome to the Univer­ the president have been removed sity of Massachusetts - Boston and modern appointments install­ Pontifical Titles Campus?” The structure, for­ ed. Each of the colleges will prob­ ably be headed by a dean, though merly the headquarters of Con­ Orderly Confusion sol »dated Gas of Massachusetts, is the master plan originally called echoing-old and somber. The familiar orderly confusion for what Broderick termed "an of yellow legal pads, appoint­ incredible array of pontifical REHEARSALS FOR “CAMINO REAL” by Tennessee Forced Patience ments calendar, maniia files, and titles.” W illiams enter their final stage this week as opening night, In the lobby, students cluster books covering the new chancel­ Though observing that by 198i) Wednesday, November 20. draws near. ‘Carnino Real’ will and converse (occasionally in lery desk top illustrate the life Massachusetts will probably be be the last production directed by F. Theodore Cloak, Spanish) lounge against the being generated by the new 30.000 places behind the number professor of theatre-and drama, before he retires in June. many packing crates, read Dos­ school in the old building. of ]>eople who will then wish to toevsky singly, play cards in Through the large windows set attend public colleges, Broderick groups, or wait with silent, forced into the paneling beside and be­ is optimistic about the quality of patience for the elevators which hind the desk is visible the U. the liberal arts education at the ‘Camino Real’T o Portray are designated for either the even- of Mass.-Boston “campus” — an new institution he heads, and or odd-numbered of the building's armory/library, former office about the personnel the school Lucid, Intelligible World’ twelve floors of classrooms. buildings, and factories, among can attract. “We’re in a strong By COLIN ETHERINGTON on the realization of the freedom other structures. competitive position,” Broderick The office of Chancellor Francis Production on “Camino Real” and liberation. The set design, said, “We re in Boston.” L. Broderick, former Dean of Talking About Space by Tennessee Williams is now incorporating the thrust stage Lawrence and Downer Colleges, “We stopped talking about site Innovation Hard nearing completion as November does much to capture the mood, is on the top floor of the building. 13, the opening night, draws near. especially with the close audi- and started talking about space,” Comparing U. of Mass.-Boston Rehearsal over the last few enee-actor relationship which is Attended by 3500 Broderick said. By November 22 and Lawrence, Broderick observ­ weeks has been much helped by evident throughout the play. \ “We are dealing with students the Massachusetts trustees wuith ed, “Innovation is hard to come the presence of William Munchow, The experience of Munchow who five years ago wouldn’t have has advice will decide whether to by both here and there,” and add­ guest-actor, who will play Gut­ will do much to stimulate the en­ dreamed of going to college,” develop the present campus by ed “We are sometimes mired- man in F. Theodore Cloak’s pro­ tire cast to capture the required Broderick said. “Ten years ago “merging into the community” or down in our own training; even duction. Mr. Munchow who play­ color and carnival atmosphere of there were 4000 people m public start over with an alternative a little timid.” The former dean ed Hamlet in Cloak’s production freedom and liberation. “My de­ higher education m the whole $350,000,000 project elsewhere in expressed enthusiasm for the of 1949, and who has been a pro­ sire,” says WHliams, “was to estate. There are now 18,000. - Boston. Povolny Committtee study at fessional actor, acting through­ give the audience my own Twelve years from now there wiH Lawrence. He also cited the tra­ sense Shared Facilities out the country since he gradu­ of something wild and unrestrict­ be 40,000.” dition of Lawrence and the phil­ ated from Lawrence, was asked ed that ran like water in the Broderick, who favors the for­ osophy at his new post that “to Fifteen thousand of those stu­ mer plan, believes that a truly to return to Lawrence and Ap­ mountains, or clouds changing justify its expenditure of money dents will be at the Boston school urban university, sharing build- pleton, his home town, to play in shape in a gale, or the continu­ Broderick heads which charges and talent” an educational insti­ Cloak’s final production before he mgs, theatres, laboratories and tution must continually strive for ally dissolving and transforming $200 annual tuition, which is pres­ other facilities with private con­ retires in June. images of a dream.” excellence. ently attended by 3500 students cerns, can be developed out of When reviewing CSoak’s reper­ Tickets for Lawrence students taught by 225 6aniky, and which the school’s present holdings and Courageous Act tory over the past forty years, are available at no cost at the will graduate its first class in new acquisitions in the area. Broderick, who held the posi­ with play« ranging from “Boy box office in the Music-Drama June. tion of Dean of Lawrence and Meets Girl” by Bella and Samuel Center from 32:30 to 6 p.m., daily According to the former Law­ Spewack, to Ben Johnson’s “The In a State of F lu rence dean, the Boston campus Downer Colleges for two and a except Sunday. half years concluded “ It was a Alchemist” it is not surprising The decor of Broderick’s office is presently “heavily dependent” to find that he has chosen “Ca­ —Early 20th Century Dreary- on the business and administra­ courageous act by Terr to bring in as dean someone without ex­ mino Real” as his last produc­ like the new urban university it­ tive faculties of the recently com­ tion. self, is in a state oi flux from the pleted Amherst branch of the perience in college administra­ Breaking with the realistic Broderick Advises: odd to the new. The dark wood Massachusetts system. Plans for tion. I could never have come theatre, Williams has produced paneling remains, but the over­ the Boston campus include divi­ here if I hadn’t had the experi­ in “Camino Real” a long incan­ stuffed black leather couch, T- sion for administrative purposes ence at Lawrence” ‘Just Say Phooey!’ tation with a large cast of char­ acters drawn from history and Reprinted from The Boston Globe fiction, ranging from Casanova During a recent discussion at a to Lord Byron to Camille and Harvard Graduate School of Edu­ Kilroy, and back to Don Quixote, cation meeting on the role of uni­ and a constant flow of mood and versities in changing city school experience which is lucid and systems, one student asked how to pertinent answer those who claim dealing “A sensitive virtuoso,” com­ with social probfems is not the mented Brooks Atkinson, drama business of a university. critic of The New York Times. “Just say, ‘Phooey”’ Dr Fran­ “Mr. Williams knows how to cis Broderick, new chancellor of % B create an intelligible world. As the University of Massachusetts- theatre, ‘Camino Real’ is as elo­ Boston, responded. quent and rhythmic as a piece “That’s the proper answer for of music.” universities that want to publish From the actor’s point of view, scholarly books and don’t want Mr. Munchow commented, “How to have an impact on the civiliza­ right, how perfectly right are the tion around them. They just damn words, the action in Williams’ well better be a part of that civ­ “Ten years ago 'there were 4000 “We’re in a strong competitive “We are sometimes mired-down in play.” ilization or they might not be there people in higher education in the position. We’re in Boston.” our own training; even a little Much emphasis has been ap­ at the beginning of the 21st cen­ whole state.” timid.” plied throughout this production tury.”

CHRISTMAS CARDS, BOOKS, ALBUMS, STATIONERY — SOMETHING FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY — SHOP NOW OR AT YOUR LEISURE CONKEYS BOOK STORE