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For ni And t Recently The State priv morality on campus. One I that if you get caught "do months in Jail and-or a $101 also lose your right to adultery, sodomy, fornical of other little goodies of a The State also condemns openly living together in s and in the opinion of The St, One impression render venture on to the Universi balling in classrooms, ir shelves, on top of cars, in steps of the administratioi We may be the liberated around here. In fact w promiscuous than our ; Generally, we are more hc -the hypocrisy or hWly faced This is not the Victorian liberalized society. This c people are doing it more i means that it is accepted e) Fornicating is between y else. Man made the law. Go The State makes us ou discriminating animals w banging. This isn't exactly would rather fornicate the law. Today revisi Not but ] By JO Col Lt. William Calley has b now decide the sentence, w or the death penalty. They have convicted the America has convicted ti The men that should be Richard Nixon. Calley is bu have committed far worse Both Nixon and Johnson this country for wasting so the hell that we call Indocl America to the fanaticism For-it is not the flag waving patriot of this country ; it is symbol of symbols, the flag It is the people who are t country from the fate of inc is the people that cherish nation and others who are Never again should Nix< that our young die. Nixon a destroy the human resour< Germany in World War II Why do we need to fear pipresent "red" threat whE 'Moket dangerous one in QU! .ation - he law ited an editorial aimed at im nteresting element was the fact )ing It" you are subject to six ) fine. The big kicker is that you vote. The law emcompasses Ion (out of wedlock) and a raft i hedonistic nature. the blatant practice of couples in. Trial marriages are Illegal 3te should be prosecuted. ?d by the editorial is if you ty campus you will see people i shrubbery, between library the reflection pool and on the i building. generation but it Isn't that good a probably aren't any more iarents were 20 years ago. nest, open and do not resort to e exhibited by our elders. Age and, we do live In a more oesn't necessarily mean that ind enjoying it more. It simply cactly for what it is - Sex. )u, your girlfriend, and nobody d gave us sex. I to look like a bunch of un ho spend all of our free time true, but since they ask--Yes, I in vote, and yes, fornicate the ted Calley; Nixon HN GASH umnist een found guilty. The jury will hich may be life imprisonment wrong man. ae wrong man. nred are Lyndon Johnson and I the fall guy for these men who crimes. should be tried as traitors to many, many American lives in nina. Let us never again treat f Nixon's so-called patriotism. advocate of the war who is the not the people who worship that , who are the patriots. rying to save the young of our lochina who are the patriots; it the lives of the people of this the patriots, mn have the power to demand nd Johnson have done more to :es of this country since Nazi the so-called omnipptent, om 'n we have a far worse and far - midsts? c E .IVES! AN SOMeooY QOtir TfE-.MIN. Oo Stop so1 SCO'T DERKS 01 Associate Editor ti Twenty-five years ago General di Yamashita was tried in a military h, court in Manila and before the a United States Supreme Court. He sq was charged with the atrocities ji committed by his men. ki Yamashita was convicted and tf charged as a war criminal. ci Under the ruling issued in the h. case, Gen. William Westmoreland, ci Army chief or staff, could be tried' d for the crimes now heaped upon men like Lt. William Calley. w General Yamashita had no gt knowledge of the crimes being er committed by his men in the cc Philippines. The court found that pi immaterial. et Justice Frank Murphy, who ai issued the only dissenting opinion in the high court ruling, si prophesized that "the fate of some si future president of the United ir States and his chiefs of staff and A military advisers may well have w been sealed by this decision." h It is unlikely that Johnson, Nixon p Can he i By ARTHiIURt HOPPE ja The beginning of the trend can' be at dated from March 22, 1971, when th Mr. Nixon appeared on nation- d( wide, prime-time television in an m hour-long interview with ABC's su Howard K. Smith. wi it was not what Mr. Nixon said. He explained his policies in sa Southeast Asia with precisely the sj same vigor--and virtually the same at words--as on numerous previous ju< occasions. It was the ratings. p In New York, he drew 11 per cent m: of the viewing audience. The se ratings for his competition that so night were a Rowan and Martin wi special, 42 per cent; and Doris th D)ay, 25 per cent. m It was the invidious comparison p1 with Doris Day that started se Republican party leaders thinking. cc 'No one's surprised that Rowan and Martin outdrew the President p, of' the United States four-to-one," dc said a GOP chairman, "but Doris IDay'" sa1 Consequently, a week later, is party leaders called on Mr. Nixon a in the White House to discuss the wl crisis. y, "Mr. President," began one senator. "It's obvious from your p, steady decline In the television wi ratlings that you're doing something wrong. Your message - DON' T M/IND N NAdS r#Ree M/Di PLU S d 1'd~ PR/ re T41 RM P44 ffR ciety's hyj r Westmoreland will be brought to w -ial for the war crimes in In- ar Dchina. We don't punish men for hc Dlding jobs. But what is the job of wI soldier and what are the rules of h. !lf-preservation? How are we to idge the right and wrong ways to ill? If a soldier kills a civilian .on ie ground he is guilty of a war ime. We find it legal, on the other and, to bomb a village and kill pl, vilians because we cannot see the Ma ad. ofif Calley is guilty of the crimes of ht hich he is charged He is also Jai ilty of being a scapegoat for the res itire United States Army but his inviction has become a wi 'onouncement of guilt over the wi itire tradition of America war m( id its warriors. The publication of the My Lai m aughter in Life Magazine and iie H< ibsequent trials will be recorded "v history as a turning point in lef merican thinking. Americans f ant out of Indochina. The wi leeding bodies they saw on those pr ages showed the real color of the rel eha ick Doris st isn't getting across lately." IT "After two years in office, sir," W Ided a Congressman, "and A0 ousands of speeches, people just rt in't seem to be, listening any ore. Do you have any N ggestions, Mr. President, as to at the trouble could be'?" of "Ie me say this about that," tv id the President, frowning icerely. "As I look down the road h)a ead, it is my opinion, in my 81 tigment, that no matter how I) pular anid easy another course r1 ght be, I must do my duty as I e it, rightly or wrongly, though W me Americans may disagree, cr sich is their right, and I defend w( at right, even though...Excuse th e, Congressman, would you re ease nudge the Senator? He ems to have...Congressman? wi ngressman!"-M "Oh. I'm terribly sorry, Mr. Ir< -esident. I guess I must have to zed off. You were saying, sir?" fu "How do I know what I was ca .ving? Miss Perkins, please read s'b ick what I was saying for the nefit of the Congressman, weP ro... Miss Perkins? Miss brkins!" si, 'Hmmm? What'? Oh, sorry, Mr. in esident. I'm ready to begin ad enever you are." he l'he meeting lasted either a veral more minutes or several ,, '4'. NIE ONlY *rlC*fZ XIPi d 0 1 OCr1Sy ir. It made the war look dirty d now they want the war to end. I pe that our society will recognize tr for what it is and stop the pocrisy. Trustees (Continued From Page 1) ty only once. Games with ryland and Virginia may be cut laryland Athletic Director nes Kehoe gave a negative ponse. It's more sensible to compete th teams within 150 miles than th one 300 miles away. There is re crowd favor." Kehoe said he regretted the USC )ve. UNC Athletic Director rmer Rice said arrangements rould have -to be made at a igue meeting." darchant said the University 11 continue to develop its athletic >gram within a conference gulated structure. He would not borate on the statement. Day? ore hours. 'The participants ere hazy on this.) But, un rtunately, no conclusions wn ached. TIhus, the trend deepa ' the spring of 1972, when i7N ixon matde a major policy ad ess. he drew only .0003 per cent the viewing audience---namely ao dear spinsters in Wichita. He was renominated, however, -his loyal party. The Democrats, ielling blood, jubilantly put up ris Day for President. From the tings, she seemed a shoo-in. f'he campaign was an odd one. ile Miss Day attracted larger wds, Mr. Nixon's audiences hnt home curiously refreshed ulgh confessing they couldn't ~all a word he'd said. Jfter a grim experience with a try night rally in Ba tine. (the audience wasi zen solid the next morning the .janitor's falling asleep at the nace), Mr. Nixon took to ryimg a large alarm clock to nal that his speech was over. )n election day, of course, he i in a landslide. ~s one lady voter explained, "I op better nights with Mr. Nixon the White House. At least," she ded thoughtfully, "on the nights m1akes televised speeches." >nyright Chronicle Publishing ItAI I