Homecoming 1968 this week
DEVON CARTER
JANE LY PPS
MARY JO SWANSON
KATHY TAFF
NANCY PALMER
Five queen finalists picked; THE TELESCOPE bonfire rally Thursday night 'Figure International' displays painting, A Publication of the Associa ted Students ¡ Nov. 19, 1968
With the clink of chains and shouts of " Going, going, gone !" Palomar's 1968 Homecoming Week opened yesterday with a slave sale in the Student Union. Members of the football team, coaches and cheerleaders were auctioned off to a crowd of bidders who paid anywhere from 50~ to $5 for slaves for the week. Dean Robert Bowman, auctioneer, presided over the sale which will finance Friday night's banquet honoring the team . Preliminary Homecoming Queen elections were also held yesterday. The five finalists, chosen from a field of 14 candidates, will be introduced at a pep rally at 10 a.m. tomorrow. The moustache contest, which has been in progress for several weeks, will be judged by the cheerleaders. The student with the "Most Kissable" moustache will be the winner of the contest. The five semi- finalists chosen in yesterday's election for Homecoming queen are Devon Carter, Jane Lypps, Nancy Palmer, Mary Jo Swanson, and Kathy Taff. Thursday night is bonfire night. At 6 p.m in the back parking lot freshmen and sophomores will compete for
AWS confab hosts JOO local women at MiraCosta J.C. "Speaking in terms of babies, some are born leaders and some are born boys.'' Such was one of the main points of Mrs. Margery Warmer in a speech to approximately 100 area college women at the AWS Fall Conference held Nov. 1 at Mira Costa College. The conference stressed the importance of "The Changing Woman" in our society, and the significance of women and the roles they play. Mrs. Warmer, dean of women at San Diego State, addressed the assembly, which included students from six area colleges. Twenty girls from AWS and WRA represented Palomar at the conference. Each school was given a buzz session topic to discuss. The topics and schools that attended are: "Role in the Community," Grossmont; "On-Campus," Mesa; "Effective Communication," Southwestern; "Career and Family," Palomar; "Our Influence on the Next Generation," San Diego City; and "Role in Politics," Mira Costa. Under the subjectheadingofawoman's influence in the home, the students from Palomar discussP.d "Career and Family." Among the questions asked were, "What is the woman's traditional role?'' "How does one best prepare herself to meet the many roles of a woman?'' and "What is the change that the woman's role has gone through?" Random comments were expressed on a number of subjects, including !)education ("By going to college the woman has gone a step further than those who marry right away. She can always go back to it."); 2)the traditional role of woman ("Woman's place is in the home."); 3)equality ("Woman is more significant now. Now she is becoming equal to man."); and 4)preparing to meet the roles of a woman ("By being aware of what's around you. Through experience one can truly l earn and by learning new things everyday can make us a ware.'') The conference concluded with a general assembly where st::ssion leaders reported on the findi ngs of their gr.oup.
the largest bonfire. Students are urged to be on the lookout for old chairs, sticks of wood, anything that will burn, baby burn. Class presidents George Poling and Dan Zukaitis will lead their respe ctive classes in the bonfire race. A snake dance, cheers, marshmallow roast and judging of bonfires are planned. Mr. Burrill Monk and his "Mad Musicians" will be on hand. Final queen e lections will be held Friday. A Homecoming Queen will be chosen from the five finalists selected in Monday's election. Also slated for Friday is anothe r pep rally at ll a .m. and a banquet at 7 p.m. honoring the foo tball team. The banquet is open to the public , and tickets are available in the ASB office for $2. Saturday night's Comet-Southwestern game gets underway at 8 p.m. at Memorial Field in Escondido. The Homecoming Queen will be crowned during half time festivities by Samantha Dalzall, last year's queen. Mr. Buddy Ashbrook will be the announcer and Mr. Monk and his musicians will again be on hand . The Royal Enterprise will play at the aftergame "Speakeasy." Prohibition era decorations and a still will be put up in the Student Union, and a six- foot cham-
The art of depicting the human form in sculpture and painting has evolved over the centuries, interrupted only by the Abstract Expressionist Movement of the 1950's, accordingtoBaldwin. Contemporary artists are now working in this art form with new vigor and vitality.
pagne glass, complete with balloon bubbles , has been constructed. Dress for the dance is Sunday dress for the girls and sports jackets and/or suits for the boys. The ugly legs and beautiful legs contest is now under way in the Student Union with arm and leg garters being sold by Gamma Sigma Chi.
Most of the artists in the exhibition live in the United States and are representative of those who specialize in portraying the human figure throughout the country. Among the featur ed works is one by Tom Wesselman, a leading pop artist who works often in small figurative collages with a plush surface and a dominance of red. He has exhibited in
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While the men of Palomar have been involved in football and basketball, the women have not been idle. Palomar's women's volleyball team has participated in games with Cal Western, Mesa, College of the Desert, and Grossmont. As the highlight of this year's season Pal omar will host the Women's Volleyball Tourney, tomorrow at 4 p.m. Palomar will host Mesa, San Diego State, Grossmont, Cal Western, College of the Desert, and Southwestern. Winner of this year's tournament will receive the trophy now in the possession of San Diego State, last year's winner. Members of the team are Ramona Castellanos, Nancy Kimberling, Ellie Minor, Karen Bonnett, Joanne Murphy, Mellissa Stevens, Gloria Perez, Di Risch, Cheryl Journey, Sally Larson, Pat Darrough, Manager Toni Thompson, and Coach Mrs. Viola Jeffery.
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sculptures in Gallery opening today "The Figure International: 1967- 68", an exhibition comprised of 19 paintings and five sculptures in various media, opens today at Boehm Gallery. "The artists represented are among the finest contemporary painters and sculptors of the human figure in the world today", said Russell W. Baldwin of the art department. The exhibition is being circulated throughout the United States under the auspices of the American Federation of Arts. Selections were made by Donald M. Halley, Jr . , director of the Hudson River Museum of Yonkers, New York.
NEWS BRIEFS Tryouts for tbe mini-musical production of "The Old Lady Shows Her Medals" will be continued today in the drama lab. Auditions for David Rogers' and Mark Bucci's musical began yesterday under the direction of Norman Gaskins, play director. According to Mr. Gaskins, good parts are available for four women and two men in the play. Set in London during World War I; it is the story of an old lady who pretends she has a son in the famous "Black Watch" regiment. "This warm, charming story of a brave Scottish soldier adopting the old lady is full of laughter, songs and a touch of pathos," according to Mr. Gaskins. "The Old Lady Shows Her Medals" is a one act affair running about 50 minutes. Scripts can be checked out in Mr. Gaskins' office, P-8A.
¡ San Marcos , Calif.
Some student cars he re may soon be wearing pretty yellow parking tickets if their owners continue to park them in faculty slots. ASB Judicial Committee Chairman Bill White announced late Friday that both he and the administration have been receiving increasing complaints from faculty and ASB officers who find t heir reserved spaces occupied by unauthorized cars. White said that while the practice has been to leave a warning on the offender's windshield, in many cases, it has not been heeded. He added that if the cars continue to be illegally parked that the administration would have no choice but to ask the police to start issuing citations.
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Student nurses at Palomar will answer the call next Sunday when they assist the Vista Junior Women's Club at the Diabetes Detection Clinic, to be held in the Lincoln High Cafetorium, from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Participating students a r e Shirley Turner, Jane Stocks, Linda Roberts, Mary Jo Swanson, Helen Brynie, Jean Dewhurst, June Rothlis, and Marie Baynton.
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There will be a special meeting, Thursday, November 21 at 11 a.m . in P - 32 of all students who have 60 units of college credit who plan to transfer to San Diego State College at the end of this fall semester. Due to over- crowding at San Diego State College, certain problems have arisen concerni ng the acceptance of students at San Diego State at midyear. At the meeting to be held on Thursday students will be given information concerning the situation.
many Uni ted States galleries and his entry in the Boehm exhibit is in acrylic and collage on board , done in 1963. Outstanding among the sculptures is "Spectre I", a figure cast in aluminum by John Battenberg, who is fascinated with objects of World War I. He collects old uniforms in junk shops and has done works in laminated fiber glass using parts of World War I planes --an Ansaldo wing section, a Fokker D7 aileron, and a Fokker DR I hanging in a diving attitude from the wall with a cast aluminum pilot, leather seat, and machine works. Such works have been described by Art News as "dashing, decadent and awful" and "gruesome and delightful". '!'here are anti- war connotations in Battenberg's sculpture. His pilots are always empty uniforms with neither faces nor hands. His war heroes are indeed "hollow mP-n". Australian-born Brett Whitely is represented by "New York I", a combination of sculpture in which yellow dominates, because he feels that yellow is the major color of the city. Materials in his contribution include oil, photography, and chrome . Whitely now lives in London, but has spent the past year in New York painting. Pol Mara of Belgium has entered her
oil painting "Why Always Run?" . "Mad Woman" is one of the Kabuki Se ries by Mo r r is Broder son, and was composed in 1963 in mixed media on paper. Philip Pearlstei n is a New York painter who has exhibited at the Carnegie Institute and extensively in Penns ylvania and New York. He is a r egular contributor to "Arts" magazine. Roy Schnackenberg is r epresented by "Woman With Green Bir d", a polyester resi n form - canvas painting. One of the largest paintings in the exhibit, it measures 91" x 65". Joseph Raffael has in the exhibit "Couples", a collage and oil done on canvas in 1965. James Strombotne has e ntered his sculpture "Two Bathe r s ". "Long-haired Woman", a sculpture of painted elm wood, was created by David Hostetler of Columbus, Ohio. Other artists inc luded in the di splay are sculptor Niki Saint- Pha lle, whose "F r ederica" is composed of "material on chicken wire" with a base; and John Wesley, a New York painte r who has an oil entered . T he painting and sculptures arrived last week in huge orange and yellow crates- -some five fee t high and about 10 feet square- -from a s howing in Corpus Christi, Texas. The exhibit will continue to Dec . 7.
Ghanian foreign student faces deportation by U.S. By Jim Time is running out for one of the best like d students at Palomar College unless the students here do something about it. Ben K. Appiah, a native of Ghana who has chosen to go to school here has come under fire by the US Immigration a nd Naturalization Service as an indirect result of that decision. When the school term began in September, Ben was living with a family in Alpine and in order to get to school he faced a round trip drive of over a hundred miles eve ry day. The longdistance drive didn't seem to faze the young African until one foggy morning last month, on the winding road that leads from Alpine, he totaled the compact car he was driving,and only his good luck allowed him to escape the crash with nothing more serious t-han cuts and bruises. Right after this mishap, Ben finally decided that it was time to move closer to school and that's when the trouble started. When the Ghanian student announced his decision to get closer to San Marcos, the family of Christian missionaries with whom he had been living decided that they could no longer bear the burden of his sponsorship. When the immigration service learned of this, they notified Ben that his visa was thereby cancelled and that he had two months to find another sponsor or face being deported. In order to sponsor a foreign student, the sponsoring agent, be it an individual or a group , must post a $1,000 surety bond with the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Suddenly the young, black man found that he had friends he didn't even know. When Palomar student George Anderson heard of Ben's predicament he contacted
Strain ASB president Kim Clark, and together they decided t hat if no one else came forward then somehow the students here could raise the money. T hrough the Inter- Club Council, the International Club was put i n charge of the investigation of the ways a nd means of posting a bond for Ben. Engineering instructor William Bedfor d got in touch with the INS in San Diego and assembled the details of regulations and rules for such sponsorship as well as reassuring the federal agency that a solution to Ben's plight was in the works. Several instructors as well as the Escondido doctor who treated Ben after his accident volunteered to put up sizeable amounts toward the bond, but so far the ICC is holding this strength in reserve as the plan seems to be for the students to somehow do it themselves. At last Thursday's ICC meeting, t he possibility was discussed of having some sort of bonding agency put up the money as a stopgap until t he students can raise it. Another committee was appointed to look further into it. At present the effort seems still somewhat disjointed and unorganized but ICC president Ron Simecka has pr omised that by this Thursday's meeting concrete plans for fund raising will definitely be introduced. In the meantime, the usually placid Ghanian seems just a little apprehens ive as , reassurances notwithstanding, his fate is still up in the air. Nevertheless , the ICC in its accus tomed slow fas hion, is gathe r ing its resources, and by next week we s hould hear of s ome definite plans to go on. Students are advised to start saving their "Bucks for Ben."
MOUTHPEACE
FROM THE RIGHT SIDE
Has Max Rafferty heard of freedom?
Minority creates peril on campus By Steven A. Krueger The past weeks have seen two major uprisings on California College Campuse s. One, the revolt at San Francisco State College, was so dangerous, that Robe rt F. Smith, president of the college , has closed the school indefinite ly. The othe r took place at San Fernando Valley State College near Los Ange les. Let us examine the latte r first. Two weeks ago yesterday, a protest demonstration was staged by m e mbe r s of the Black Students Union. What began as a common sit- down de monstration turned into a "mas s kidnapping" in the words of police officials. At knife point, college officials we r e he ld captive in the administration building until they granted a mnesty to the c riminals hold ing them prisone r . Soon after being free d, the pres ident of the college revoked the amnesty saying that any amnesty granted unde r duress is null and void. Members of the BSU howled in anguish at thi s "doublecross " by the administration officials. Felony c ha rges have been pressed against the leaders of the r evolt. The felony c harges m ay seem s tiff for students only having "fun", but kidnapping is a federal crime and a felony. All told, 28 pe rsons, identified as members of the BSU he ld captive 34 school offici-als for our hours on the fifth story of the administration building. It would see m that the ma jority of students on the San Fe rnando campus a r e opposed to the methods and aims of the · BSU's revolt. Petitions supporting s trong measures against the protestors were signed by over 2500 s tudents in less than half a day, according to an ar ticle in the Los Angeles Times. In view of this, one can only ponder the significance of the recent cut back of ad mi ss ion to state .college's last week. Four Southe rn California colleges were closed to all new admissions . Among then was San Fernando State , sight of the vicious kidnapping of school officials. The worst episode irr this tragedy of student r evolt staged by young r adicals occurred at the campus of San Francisco State College , hom e of over 17,000 s e rious students and a ha ndful of revolutionaries bent on destruction. Members of the BSU on that campus called a s trike to protest the policy of the school in not ope ning a departme nt cate ring to the "Black
Studies". A portion of that student s trike was carried over the CBS Eve ning News. The student bookstore did c los e , but that was about all that did . Most facu lty members , according to the reporter, held the ir classes despite the strike called by BSU m e mbe rs. When only a handful of s tud e nts appear ed for a r a lly in front of the administration building, black bereted Negros marc hed into the c lassrooms and instructed professors to dis band classes, in thei r wo rd s , "'Cause there's a strike on, baby!". One stud e nt interviewed appeared to be quite shaken by the happenings of the s trike . He explained to the r eporter that he and about a dozen other s tud e nts were liste ning to an instructor's lecture in c alculus when three BSU m e mbe r s marched in and told the profess or to break up his class. Fearful for the safety of his c lass , the instructor did as ordered . Young hoodlums s hould not be a llowed to dic tate to c ollege ' s leadership what s hould or should not be done . A s tud ent voi ce s hould be heard •. but only to gather opinion for us e in deci sion making by the administration. Stude nts s hould not be allowed to take over a college nor s hould they be allowed to run unchecked to the point where the actions of a few can c lose the e ntire system for the m a jority of serious , honest, law respecting stud e nts. On every major college campus , there i s a vocal minority which seeks to disrupt the calm, natural e ducational system es tablished by me n and wome n more learned than we. Those few r evolutionaries should be opposed by students who are in colle ge for an educa tion. Ac tions such as we have see n at the campuses of San Francisco a nd San Fernando State Colleges s hould not be tol er ated. Those taking part, not just the leaders, s hould be s uspe nded from c ollege and black-balled from e ntering any othe r publicly financed institution in thi s country. F urthe r, if actions warrant it, c riminal charges should be pressed aga inst these hoodlums to insure peace on the c ollege campus. This columnist salutes the preside nt of San Fernando State College in his action against the m e mbers of the Black Stude nts Union. Let us hope more college ad ministra tors will stand up to these hoodlums a nd give the m what their actions deserve.
. , wounded are moan1ng ...
'Boon docks bards'
'The
SA IGON (AP)-- Sometimes the r e is no other way of saying it except in poe try, when the moment is to be grasped and the e motion fr oze n for time. When Virgil sang "of arms and man" he became one of the first of the long line of war poets . The fighting man in Vie tnam, both the U. S. servicem a n and the North Vietnamese s oldier, is keeping up the tradition, as examples printed in American service publications and dia ries found on the bodies of Northern d ead attest. For one Am e rican at the U. S. airbase at Da Nang, the rising s un m eant the end of a perilous night. He cel ebrated it in this poem: The sun jus t came up and the first golde n spears Came piercing the sky like a child's flowing tears . . . The wounde d are moaning the dead make no sound, The story of las t night is soaking the ground.
* * * A North Vietnamese s oldier , expressing the war-weariness of all soldie rs, writes: F la me trees are in fu ll blossom in the midst of a summ er day. The flam e tree flowe rs in de fiance of the winds and The flame of war . Youth must be like the flowe rs And stand firm in their de termination to face the rigors of war.
* * * Another Ame rican "boon docks bard" hits on the r ecurrent theme of the r eality of war and death for the soldier: Today at dawn a round came in. I lost a buddy, I lost a friend. I asked m yself t he reason why There is need for a man to die .
* * * A North Vietnam e se writes : When I had to lay a mine , how my hand trembled. And then I watched the blasting human flesh, the splattering ra in of blood.
Whose blood was it? The blood of pe ople like ourselves. My people's blood, mother . .
* * * Still another trooper thought upon the time when the war would e nd, and penned these lines : When the war has e nded and the road is open again. The same stars will c ours e through the heave ns. bones heaped together In desolate graves.
(Ed. note : This editorial was written by Kimo Campbell , editor of the Marin College Ti'mes near San Francisco. It was written concerning a lette r t_o the editor which was published in his newspape r.
'Is this where contestants register for the talent contest?'
ILEITERS TO THE EDITOR Dear Ed itor, I would like to compliment and c ommend the ve ry r espectable and honorable le tter of The Telescope, Nove mber 5, from Miss Ma rtha Miller. I agree with her that our Olympic team has brought both honor and true fellowship th-rough the "spirit of cor-·pet'tion ." Hats off to Martha Miller, our Olympic Team and the athletes of a ll othe r nations that participated in the games . P atrick Lombardi Commissioner of Athletics D69
* * * Dear Editor, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you fo r the generous and excelle nt coverage whic h TH E T ELESCO P E has given to the dramatic produc tions during the fall semester. A production without an audie nce is a production that may as well have not been given. Palomar' s drama pro-
* * * Another U.S. soldie r wrote the following "ambush praye r" : Now I lay me down to wait, The night is c old, the hour is late . Bullets rip through the night Men dying is a he ll of a sight The war is not over, only the fight We will be ou t aga in tomorrow night.
* * * A counterpart among the North Vie tnamese, writing to a sweetheart back home, combines a love lyric wi th antiAmerican fervor. Your twisted hair looks like the m eadows In m y mother's native land. But comes a time when the mother country is torn by storms, bombs and hate. I am the mountain standing against the Americans; You are the river pus hing them to the sea. Do you agree with me that the mountain and river are immortal?
* * * And an American s umming up hi s feelings about the war, wrote: In this land of many people I know they won't forget, The fr ie nds who came and fought And that freedom will come yet.
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Ed. Note: (The preceding was taken from the Prince George " Citizen" , Prince George, British Columb ia.)
THE TELESCOPE Published Tue s day and Friday of each school week, except during final examinations or holidays, by the Communications Department of Palomar College, San Marcos, Calif. , 92069 . Phone: 7441150, Ext. 40. Advertising rates are $1.50 per column inch. Opinions expressed in signed editorials a nd articles are the views of the writers and do not necessarily represent opinions of the staff, views of the Associated Student Body Council, college administration, or the Board of Governors . The TELESCOPE invites responsible "guest editorial s" or letters to the editor. All communications must be signed by the author, including I. D. number. Names will be withheld upon request. Letters may be submitted to the TELESCOP E editorial office, R-1. Editor-in-Chief . . .. . Steve Schneider Page l, Tuesday . . . .. Steve Krueger Page 2, Tuesday . . .. Jackie Easley Page 1, Friday . . . . . . . . . . Jan Hart Tom Ande rson Page 2, Friday . . . . .. .. Chris Re ad Assistant . . . . . . . . . . Jim Strain Exchange Editor . . . . Lois Cavalier Advertisements . . . . Starr Bennett Staff Artist . . . . . . .. Joe Warren Photographers . . . . . David Williams , Ted Karounos, Betty Gei ser, Edward Means, Roger Stovold Journalism Advi sor . . . . F red Wilhelm Photography Advisor . .. Justus Ahrend Graphic Arts Advisor . . James McNutt
gram exis t s not only to give students who are inte r ested in acti ng and dramatic production expe ri e nce in their fields of interes t but a lso, and pe rhaps most i mportantly , to make it poss ible for non-drama stud ents to broade n the ir cultural e xpe ri e nce through play-going. TH E TELESCOPE has been of great ass istance in publici zing our productions on c ampus and thus he lping to · attrac t the aua ience in whic h we are most kee nly inte r ested --the students of Palomar College. Norman E. Gaskins T ec h. Director Theatr e & Sp eec h Art s Dept.
Editorial 'Good bye to all that' (F rom the Montreal Star) Soldiering has always had a double m eaning. But taki ng it in the litera l se nse of bearing a rms one can sense a new note that has crept into the practice of this ancient art. Ge nerals of the United States Army nowadays are sending soldie rs to the front lines for fa ilure to salute an officer. This notion of the van of battle as a punishment is qui te differen t from the traditional notion . In the old day-- a nd not very old days -a s lack sold ier was sent be hind the l ines . The front line was a position of honor and to be retu rned to the c om parative safety of a base was a corresponding dis grace . Now this has changed. It may be a change peculiar t<;> the VietNam war and the lac!\ of e nthusiasm it ge ne rates . But what has happened to the keep s oldier, the fe llow who saluted smartly, did his dangerous job without complaining, considered the front of battle as a place of honor ? Ge nerations of valiant men will shiver in their tombs at the thought that the gallant sold ier has dis appeared. Instead we have the other meani ng of the verb 'to soldier', which is: to get by, to do a s little as possible. There is one speck of c onsolation in all this - if all the soldier' in thi s sense, there c an be no more wars. · But it doesn't seem to be a uni ve rsal r.. a lady So far it has been confined to the U.S. troops who find thems e lves half around the world.
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A plain gold ring made in the Philipines was los t by a Palomar student yeste rday morning in the ladies restroom in t he R wing. She has offered a reward for its return. Anyone finding the ring should call 748- 2474
Last week's Reader's Rap contained a letter from Pat Pomerly, a College of Ma rin library assistant, which frankly scared the hell out of me. Miss Pomerly took part in last Octobe r's demonstrations at the Oakland Induction Center, was a r rested and serve d ten days in jail for "distu rbing the p eace" after p leading no contest. Three wee ks ago, she received a letter from the State Board of Education presided over by that champion of civil liberties, Dr. Max Rafferty. The Board informed he r that he r t eaching c r edential was te mporarily revoked (and after review late r thi s month may be pe rmanently voided) for "moral turpitude and unprofessional conduct" . I. E. , un- Rafferty like political expression. The Idea that a teacher can be unce r.,.. e moniousl y bounced for teac hing that which the c ommunity sees fit to desagree with is an unpleasant aspect of education--one which Is aided by apathy on the part of thos e involved . If it has now become "unprofessional" to express your political and moral beliefs, then the Bill of Rights will have to go into the s hop for r epairs. Not even considering the obvious violation of constitutional law involved, let us conside r the possibilities ope ned up by this a ct of administrative fiat. It is now the right of the Board of Education, self-granted, to dismiss any teacher it wishes for whatever moral, political, religious, or e thical r eason the Board wants to give. Dissent is now made a taboo, and conformity- or-e lse is the watchword. The individual is subordinated to the society even more than is now the case, and those who try to be someone- - the ir pe rsonal someone rather than the mass-produced "person" society (hold it, wrong te rm, it's not fair at l east I hope it's not-- to equate Rafferty's Board with "society") would like the m to be are c rushed. This sort of fascistic harassment is pure and simple punishment for political "crimes"-- some thing that is not supposed to happen in this country. T he only way such things occur is if people allow the m to. Pat Pome rly and othe rs like her need help--they should ge t all the support the students, faculty , and administration c an give. If you do not fight injustice visited on othe rs today, you may be fighting your battle alone tomorrow. There Is a fi e rce , primal reactiontaking place in America today. The American animal is changing, and he is resisting the change. Those of us who want to see humanistic c hange , and a truly free nation-- the one In the Constitution, not the one on the streets of Chicago--have to get together and fight repression whereve r it occurs . If we just sit back and say "the country is going fascist- conservative-police oriented" without doing anything to stop these things, we are giving up. And this we have no right to do. As Thomas Mo r e said of man "our natural business lies In escaping". You do not escape by riding. To hide you have to change. Thr;refore , if you hide you lose a little of yourse lf in the hiding, and shoulrj not expe ct to find it again. Call it love, or pride , or conscience. Those things are what give men courage , and even at the risk of being he roe s , we must occasionally stand up for what we believe in. That mood of hate and repression has to be turned into one of change and hope. If we only sit and wait for the axe to fall, the n:
Paranoia strikes deep, Into your life it wi ll cree.b. It starts when you're always afraid Step out of line, the Man come arul take you away. - - Steve Sti lls
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