Tired President Raps on Retirement by M a r i a n n e Waters It w a s a tired and d i s i l l u s i o n e d c o l l e g e p r e s i d e n t who f a c e d E A G L E E Y E r e p o r t e r s Monday a f t e r n o o n t o talk about his early retirement p l a n s . " A lame-duck president isn't good for a n e x t e n d e d period of t i m e , " com- ' m e n t e d R i c h a r d T . P a r s o n s , the p r e s ident of L o c k H a v e n S t a t e C o l l e g e since 1942. t h e v a n g u a r d of s t u d e n t a c t i v i t y but the students b l a m e me for lack of rights." Parsons, however, placed partial b l a m e for h i s u n p o p u l a r i t y on the f a c u l t y . He s a i d , " S t u d e n t s a-e b l a m i n g Miller situation When a s k e d w h e t h e r the Harry 1. Miller(a f a c u l t y member dismissed l a s t May) s i t u a t i o n had had any c o n n e c t i o n with h i s e a r l y r e t i r e m e n t . Parsons replied, " N o , definitely not. It h a d n o t h i n g to d o with my r e t i r e m e n t , but it did h a v e a g r e a t d e a l t o d o with the a t t i t u d e of s t u d e n t s toward my o f f i c e . " P a r s o n s , w h o is r e t i r i n g t h i s A u g u s t , a y e a r e a r l i e r than e x p e c t e d , a l s o s t a t e d t h a t , " F o r the f i r s t time 1 felt that 1 c o u l d n o t c o m m u n i c a t e with c e r t a i n s t u d e n t s . . . T h e r e s e e m s t o be a great barrier between certain student l e a d e r s and their a t t i t u d e t o w a r d my o f f i c e . " Signs of fatigue P a r s o n s , s h o w i n g o b v i o u s s i g n s of fatigue, w e n t on to add t h a t , " i t h i n k the c o l l e g e s h o u l d have s o m e new president; I'm n o t getting along too w e l l . , a n d 1 j u s t d o n ' t h a v e the h e a r t a n y m o r e . . . A l l my y e a r s I ' v e b e e n on me w h e n the c o m m i t t e e s (faculty committees with student r e p r e s e n t a t i o n ) a r e formulated by the f a c u l t y . . . T h e f a c u l t y i s to b l a m e for not c o n t i n u i n g t h e p r o c e s s of u s i n g s t u d e n t s on c o m m i t t e e s , a p r o c e s s t h a t had long b e e n a p o l i c y a t this i n s t i t u t i o n , " Richard T. Parsons C o m m e n t i n g e x t e n s i v e l y on the Miller s i t u a t i o n , P a r s o n s s t i l l c l u n g to the idea t h a t , " t h e r e was no c a r e ful e v a l u a t i o n of f a c t s in the Miller c a s e on the part of c e r t a i n s t u d e n t leaders and faculty m e m b e r s . " He a l s o c o n c l u d e d t h a t " t h e r e was a l o t of e m o t i o n a l l e a d e r s h i p and not t r u i h . . . 1 d o n ' t t h i n k very many people knew the r e a l i s s u e s . " He further s t a t e d , " t h e f a c u l t y n e v e r stood on their f e e t in t i m e s of c r i s e s t o i n d i c a t e w h a t the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n h a s b e e n like and what the r e l a t i o n s h i p w i t h s t u d e n t s h a s b e e n here." C o m m e n t i n g o n w h e t h e r he w i l l h a v e a n y t h i n g t o d o with the e l e c t i o n of the new p r e s i d e n t . P a r s o n s s t a t e d , ' ' d w i l l not take p a r t in e l e c t i n g my s u c c e s s o r ; 1 w o n ' t h a v e a n y t h i n g to d o with it." The college p r e s i d e n t a l s o declared " 1 don't expect to visit this c o l l e g e . " After h i s r e t i r e m e n t P a r s o n s p l a n s to t r a v e l t o S p a i n a n d G r e e c e b e c a u s e he and h i s w i f e a r e i n t e r e s t e . n s e e ing a l i t t l e more of the w o r l d . He j o k i n g l y c o m m e n t e d t h a t he is ' n o t p l a n n i n g to write my memoirs or a n y thing like t h a t . " The To Speak Here Tomorrow the students of LHS can help in the formation of the first Chi Alpha Chapter on camp a s . An organizational meeting, open to all interested s t u d e n t s , will be held at 7:30 p.m. in room 121 of the P a r s o n ' s Union Building. Paul J . Westlocky, district C A . president of the Assemblies of God, will be present to direct. a group d i s c u s s i o n of the aims and purposes of Chi Alpha. Social a c t i v i t i e s , i n d u c i n g games and refreshments, are a l s o planned. Chi Alpha is a church related student-led movement depending on thq responsible initiative of concerned s t u d e n t s . The fjrst college Chi Alpha .fellowship vas initiated in 1948 at Southwest Missouri State College in Springfield, Missouri. Since then Chi Alpha has sparked the interest of thousands of students s o that today there are over 80 Chi Alpha groupsf on campuses throughout the UriIted:States. Local efforts are geared to meet a threefold emphasis of wrirship. training, and fellowship. With liua s s i s t a n c e of a chaplain, Revti • and Thomas E. Cline of the l.ixjk Haven Assemblies of Grlcr in C a i m I'or Ihc newspaper .X1-.Xklihar and the stMinnionlh 1\ pcruxlical FI'/\hram I I/tt f'AOiioini.sl). lie has been lieati ot the research section of llie Arab Stales Otiegalions OITicc CANCELLED A l a n Lomax, T h e f i r s t u n i v e r s i t y in the w o r l d was the U n i v e r s i t y of S a l e r n o , founded in the ninth century T h e f i r s t w o m e n ' s c o l l e g e - III. c A p r i l n K i j in A m e r i c a was Mount H o l y o k e Seminary, South H r d l e y , Humanities Film M a s s a c h u s e t t e s , c h a r t e r e d in 1836 RASHOMON Hey John Weigel of fhe English department-did you know (hat at ,^mii University of Ohio there is also a professor John WeigaKthat's 'al') who is in the English department?? He recently presented a lecture on dirty books. argument than the most s u p e r f i c i a l Arab El-Okdah Chi Alpha to Organize soundest no m o r e c o n v i c t i o n ^ ^ folksinger, will be re-scheduled Series tonight 7:30 PUB What's happening in Russell after hours? W o l f ' s Whistle Requiem for a Prerequisite by Dick Wolfsie AH, The prerequisite. The enigma of the American college student. Courses like English composition, European civilization, and freshmen biology (yesterday two girls fainted after dissecting a maple leaf) all plague tod a y ' s young scholars. What IS the origin of the prerequisite? How do most colleges arrive at their choice of required courses? I disguised myself as an olive and slipped into a cup of coffee at a recent faculty meeting. " S t u d e n t s must take English four. Learning how to footnote a secondary source, which was quoted from' a text whose author is unknown, that got its information from a book whose author is not recognized by Bennet Cerf, is a vital part of growing u p . " " N O , NO, you're all wrong. Every student must learn R u s s i a n . R u s s i a n , I say. Our young men and women must be able to speak the Russian so we can send troops to Moscow and prevent a Communist take-over." "Il agree. We must have R u s s i a n , but we need at least eight hours of intensive C h i n e s e . T h a t way, no matter who wins over there, we c a n ' t lose. Not only that, think how you'll impress your friends next time you eat at a Chinese r e s t a u r a n t . " "(German!!" "iFrench!!" "lYiddish!!" " N O , NO, you are all crazy. Students must have more humanities. I say nine hours of philosophy!!!" "iPhilosophy is no good. What in God's name can you do with philosophy. . .open a philosophy shop. We must have art, music. . . " "iWe'U make you a d e a l . You give us 6 hours of Spanish and Old Greek, and we'll let you have all the appreciation courses you w a n t . " "My God, has everyone lost their mind? We must think logically, rationally, we must not be led by b i a s . We must require witchcraft and s o r c e r y . " "lYou're all n u t s . How can man begin to understand the world, until he studies his own body. We must require the gross anatomy of the pelvis and perineum." " N o , the central nervous s y s t e m . " " H e a d and N e c k . " "Wpper E x t r e m i t i e s . " "Circumpolar r e g i o n s . " " T h a t ' s an anthropology course, you idiot. Has everyone gone loco? Where would man be without religion? We must require the Old Testament." " T h e New T e s t a m e n t . " " T h e Talmud." " A s head of the anthropology department, I must say that anthropology should be required of every student. Everyone must take my c o u r s e . In fact, sometimes when I look at my c l a s s , I think everyibody d o e s . " "Anthropology is no good. Man must study sociology. We must tequire every student to take juvenile delinquency and criminology. . . or something closely related ~ like marriage and the family." " 1 am amazed at my learned colleagues that they will not admit to themselves that English literature is by far the most fascinating and important intellectual endeavor. If it were not for Shakespeare's t r a g e d i e s , comedies and errors, there would be little culture in the world." " I ' l l trade you Shakespeare for Homer." " I ' l l give you the romantic movement, for Victorian l i t e r a t u r e . " "li'll give you the American short s t o r y . " "Ii'U give you a punch in the n o s e . " " I ' l l give you a kick in the f a c e . " " A n d I'll break every bone in your damn body." "Gentlemen, gentlemen. C a n ' t you stop those ladies from fighting? This bickering is getting us nowhere. We're mature, intelligent, rational individuals, so l e t ' s stop acting like teachers and get to work." At this point i was forced to l e a v e , but 1 want to reassure my readers that everything will work out for the b e s t . Taking into account the new pass-fail s y s t e m s , large lecture c l a s s e s with unlimited c u t s , and the whole attitude of today's student, does it really matter what c l a s s e s you don't have to go to. opinion To the editor: In your publication of F e b . 2, 1970 you printed the following: " T o m Wolfe, parliamentarian, stated his view that 'this would be insulting to the facultyl V This statement is not correct. I was not especially concerned with the feelings of the faculty; 1 w a s referring to the students. 1 s t a t e d that 1 felt the 10% d i s count on books in the oookstore to faculty members would be an insult to the integrity of the s t u d e n t s . I further commented that 1 felt that the 10% discount, while proposedly a jesture of good will might take the appearance of try ing to " b u y l o v e " . 1 further stated that 1 feel such a move seemed to emphasize rather than do away with the dichotomy b e tween students ana faculty which I feel must be bridged for more meaningful cooperation. This proposed bridging of the gap b e tween student and faculty by a more general feeling of equality would i » t in any s e n s e l e s s e n feelings of r e s p e c t . On the contrary it would lead to a better type or more profound degree of resepect; that of a more persona! sro/vf mu fizz A 'ould allow heresay or advice Dased on rumor to judge a sifi before she knows her. .\ prejudgement of this type is totally unfair and destroys the object of rush and the entire Greek ideal! Perhaps it is this type of action that gives " G r e e k " the unappealing name it has seemed to acquire lately. Therefore I ask out of concern for all Greeks on this campus, that evryone be given an equal chance from the beginning. In all probability the girls whom you wish to ignore would not want your sorority in the end. However a pre-judgement of the type displayed by this sorority is unnecessary and ignorant. I ask why a sorority of the quali ty of Tri-Sigma would allow such a thing to happen? Name withheld for obvious reasons. meathnlls subs -Will deliver orders over $$ Rt. 220 HogM Blvtf. 748-3277 T o the editor: It seems that the sororities are having trouble recruiting pledges It really is a pity you know, that this year many freshmen seem to have a mind of their