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11-13-1971 The iF xer, November 13, 1971 Madison College Press (Free)

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Custom Citation The iF xer, November 13, 1971. Harrisonburg (Va.): Madison College Press (Free).

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"We are all here to enjoy, to ■ ■: ^7^) ■ ! v}' know, to create, and to share our happiness with all others .:^aWj around us," ♦V / M L-&m # u ®loTI\ v-yi <§© Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Irff^jp>) I %s c i/V)\ N7 I' l-gMVrl k74.. III ' SOCIAL WORK ABBAND WESTERN STATE i. i< fNj g> '•£& ?*•/ !>■■ HOSPITAL IK yk \ -iv \ Uy RorFor any social work student 7. V ■jf J'ir^TP considering employment with 'West-Vie st- rs ern State Hospital (in Staunton),^Staimton), {•A. the followingfollowing' should be considered;considered: —0 caseloads ranging in some instances ' ' - >.7* a ^y. iT ■ uptip to several hundred; the direc- tor of Social Service is over 65; n ' IsTy 7' you may be subordinate to a Jr. a LB . A "Mn...i & * .flmsetpmiipejs• Li/ m physician v/ithwith less formal back- ground in psychology than yourselfyourself} 5 _rrue If God is One, what is your departmentdepar tment will have no in- -False_Ialse hadbad-'Charle3arles Manson '70 service training; your starting pay will be less than that of _True-True To shoot a robot genocidal R.N.'sR,N,'s without the B„S. degree; -False_False policeman in the defense and you may'be distressed to learn of life is a sacred act. that the primary method of treat- Timothy Leary '70 ment is by drugs—no, netnot psycho- analysis, group therapy or behav- _True You can only do that which ior modification, although some -False_False is called good,good. -shock therapy is still Baba Ram Dass '70 used. However, if you feel that you _True Everybody is doing the best can fight excessive red tape, in- -False_Ealse they can. adequate (number of) supporting Ken Kesey '63 mental health professionals (psy- chologists, psychiatrists, etc.),etc,), -True__True I am you, and when you ad- rigid status qucism and disorgan- J?alse-False mit that, you will be ization, maybe you should give free,free. I am just a mirror Western State a try. If, you think Charles Manson '70 of yourself as an agent of social change (constructive) you will True Only that in you which is find either site (there are 2 lo- _Palse-False me can hear what I am cations—2 miles apart) a consider- saying. able challenge. Once employed, ask Baba Ram BassDass '70 questions, challenge the answers, find out if alternatives have been _TrueJTrue You have only one body, tried, openly challenge, in staff _False_Ealse Lingerie ad '68 conferences the opinions of staff members with seniority and even _TrueJErue If the judge says death send (or better yet, carry) formal -FalseJTalse I am dead. I've been suggestions to the "powers that dead. BeathDeath is life. be" which will with relative prom- Charles Manson '70 ptness, be rationalized away. Right on, social workers! _True Obedience to the law is RorFor Peace and Justice, "False"Raise freedom. Ft.Rt. Dix,Bix, 20th Century Carl H. Hanbury

JErue-True There's cops outside and 0 "False"Raise cops inside. "The most beautiful thing in Ken Kesey '66 the world is freedom of speech."speech," BiogenesDiogenes JErue-True If you think you're free, J?alse^Ralse there's no escape pos- 0 — sible. Baba Ram DassBass '70 The male chauvinists who-;-who-; -TrueJErue You're perfect, you can called women on Madison's campus _Palse_Ralse never do any wrong,wrong. last week claiming to be con- Charles Manson '69 ducting a poll for The RixerFixer on premarital sexual relations (Cont. on page 2) were in NO way connected with the paper. Tapes of the interviews have L.,L./k-, I rV.op~-r- — -^1 ■ . the fixer. . . . . ,,,,,••...... page 2 .....*,,,,,» <• (Truth cont,)cont.) True What we are doing is go- _TrueTrue With all thosethose sidhis,,sldhis,. 'FalseFalse inging backward-butbackward-but in do- False with all those powers, ing so we become freer. wow,,wo;r,. what I can do,,do., I can Sherry and Jerry Brummel make the world a better 1970 place to live in, Heh. Watch it,lt«. Far-Out is fine,fine. I am... Baba Ram Dass 1970 Who's minding the Someone else,else. stop©?store? True What this country needs Gordon Ashby 1966 False is sanitysanityrf Individual sanity, and all the rest _True We don't want a commune, will come true,.true. False We want a community,. Ken KesayKesey 1970 Ken BabbsEabbs 1969

_TrueTrue Once you seesee that thethe True If you want something False roperone is not a snake, you _FalseFalse for nothing, go jerk can't make the rope into off. a snake again. The illu- Bob Weir 1970 sion's done for you,. Baba Ram Dass 1970 __True_True Nobody guaranteed you it False was going to be easy. _TrueTrue RealReal wealth cancan onlyonly in- Ken Kesy 1970 _False__False crease.crease, Buckminster Fullerl9?7 __TrueTrue There are no secrets at False all. ^TrueTrue You have toto give up know- Baba Ram Dass 1970 False ing you know in order to be it all. _True Lies, all lies. Baba Ram LassDass 1970 FalsaFaIs^ Ken Kesey 1965

_TrueTrue Not toto understand is to __True__True In the province of the False be on the inside;Inside; to un- False mind, what one believes derstand is to be on the to be true either is outside. true or becomes true, Chuang Tzu 270 B.C. John Lilly 1970

^TrueTrue It'sIt's aa bitbit hardhard toto bull-bull- _True Take what you can use, False shitshit thethe ocean, It's not False and let the rest go by. listening, you know what Ken Kesey 1969 I mean? David Crosby 1970 True Love kills., False Roy Sebern 1968i960 _True Total paranoia is total True You can only love life False awareness. _True You can only love life Charles Manson 1970 False when you can love death- — The fear of death is the prime motivating force _True If you resist evil, as False soon as it's gone you in this country at this fold. moment. Ken Kesey 1970 Baba Ram Dass 1970 - 0 _True There is only one sin. FOOD? False Fretting, Neal Cassady 19^61966 To find out what our wonderful dining hall has dreamed up to _True When the wrong man uses tempt our taste buds,, just dial "FalseFalse the right means, the MENU(6368) and a sweet, sexy, right means work in the young voice will Inform you wrong way.,way,, what your next few meals will Fritz Peris 19^91969 consist of.

_True My eating will not fill "False your stomach.stomach, , MEDITATION LECTURE Barry Stevens 1970 There will be an introductory lecture on TranscendantalTranscendental Med- JTrue_True There are no accidents itation on November 17» (Wed.), False whatsoever in the uni- at 8:00P.M.8;OOP,M, in Jackson Hall verse.verse, Room 1. All faculty, students, Baba Ram Dass 1970 and Interested persons are in- (cont.(cont, col. 2) vited to attend. This will be the begi-nning of another course. 0 0 fff f S^TlST1 dcl fo V/xpr boY yZy2d>5 S 5 Sfuci<2St u cis rxtpf arT)cJ,arl/cJ. e5 IMee^cLedIMee^cied _ >.v. cr cahC.C.U VZ75" 9C S353 -• V,- 'U-—/'V / • vrxm' The Fixer .pagepage 3,

FOOD: PART .IV WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT YOUR Dieting ECOLOGY:ECOLOGY! INSTALLMENT IV

We're supposed to be Virginia How we can save some trees: slim in Amerika,Amerika. And so we diet. It's hard though. ■*Try*Try not to use the post office at The food-makers and food-sell- all; communicate long distance via ers are always tempting us. Can- messenger (a much more cosmic dies and cookies are deliberately method). If you must write, don't placed near the check-out counter use envelopes and seal letters so we'll grab at them while wait- with degradeable glue. No waste ing,ing. Canada Dry "tastes like love" scratch paper or stationery. Use tweytaey tell us, and we'11"comewe*11"come a- both sides; write small. Explain liue on Pepsi;Pepsi;' They offer us bot- to correspondents what you're do- tled and packaged replacements ing. for the real thing, and in one ^Cancel subscriptions to newspa- way or another most of us get su- pers that don't keep to minimum cked in without knowing it. size and which are two-thirds ad- People often overeat and eat vertising (most of it designed to sweet stuff when anxious or frus- further increase individual con- trated. Amerika creates bad jobs, sumption of products), and which bad vibes, bad wars, bad schools, use up to 350 pages a week per and bad rules about how people subscrib9r--asubscribsr--a tremendous rip- should relate to each other, and off of trees; more paper is used then Amerika offers to relieve up for daily papers than for any- some^of out tension with tran- thing else. quilizers, aspirin, make-up, "escape machines," T.V. dinners, ^Pressure newspaper publisher to nibbles, feasts, and drink. But de-ink and recycle their news- Amerika never offers to quit do- print,print. ing what it is doing to us. We're *0r,^'Or, better still, no newspapers not treated like people; we're or magazines. Try the 30-day TV treated like consumers. If we had news test; if you're still having a better life, many of us wouldn't withdrav/alwithdrawal pangs, libraries sub- consume our way into it, and we scribe. Post "No Handbills" on wouldn't overeat. your door, file obsenity forms Infants get sugar in formulas against companies who send you and in bottled baby foods. Kids junk mail. get it when they're good. By the *No disposable diapers. time we're adults we NEED sweets, *Shop^'Shop Salvation Army, Crippled and we hook kids on them in turn. Civilians, and second-hand stores Kids get told, "Clean up your for clothes. Break the style hab- plates," and are praised for eat- it.it, Give old clothes back to ing. Eating becomes a way of be- these places, don't hoard things ing good. In these ways many of you never use. Keep recycling! us were brought up to be over- *Avoid paper plates, cups, paper weight ., towels, towellettes, etc.--goetc.—go Women get it coming and going. back to washable linen napkins, If we're overweight, we are ridi- like we used to use. culed. But we get whistled at and What we can do today to make this attacked whenVvhen we're slim and possible tomorrow:tomorrow! # "sexy,""sexy,'" Since we're made ourselves ■^EachEach parent should be succeeded over into their image, they think by only one off-spring (two child- they own us. It's one reason why ren per family). In other words a lot of women sabotage their own to obtain environmental quality, efforts to lose weight. we shouldn't have more than two We demand control over our bo- children per family, dies. We don't want to get fat ■•^Support^Support free access for everyone because they threaten or seduce to birth control information and us into eating and drinking. But adopt a birth control method of we (cont.(cont, page ^1-)^l-) your own) with the assistance and advice of your doctor.doctor, IT IS IlTTEKDSTIiTCrIlTTERESTIHGr TO NOTE;ITOTE: ^Support"^Support legislation to permit representative suggesting that around 11:00 PM on week-ends all financial IncehtiVes'-beincentives"-be withdrawn the couples with blankets, , ., totally. Also suggest that finan- the spots in the movie screen'in cial incentive be afforded for Wilson (holes, what else),,.,else),., , those married couples who do not have children or who do not have the "silent" entrance and exit do- more than two. ors of the library, , , MADISON! GetG-et your clocks together!togetherI! ! Canadian Whole Earth Almanac • the . fixer,,the fixer^ ,pagepage 4 (food continued) but a high school drop-out from don't wauy to be a "great body" Brooklyn named Bobby Fischer, either,eitiier, Uevie do want strong and Fischer wgs the traditional child healtnyhealtiiy bodies. Insurance conroani comoani chess geniusgenius,winningfwinning the American es show that people who a.are e 20% championship at aQ'&qe0 Id,14, Shortly overweight die at a rate of 17% after,haafter,he decided he knew what he higher than people with normal wgnted to do and it didn't include weight, ratbat makes us sidesick before spending his-time in school,From It makes us dead.»dead. And £atfat is un- that time on,Fischer has been the comfortable,comfortable. 1 most colorful and most promising .Oti-j'Tu. ..i.J T AIbib IT,,r unless you really rp?. renegade in the game,His strange need it.it0 Then understand why you clothes,strong opinions,and disdain do gain weight and why it's for protocal have egrnedearned him negr- hard to lose it,it. Start only hatred from any of Kisfiis peers and -- menwnen /ou want to lose,lose. Don't get made him chess'ohess' brightest superstar, inl-oinjio diet pills. They'reThey* re a bad s T rr , ..... , lostI ost Americans have no idea hewhow trip.t- If vyou crash dietdiet,vou'11/you'll importimportantant chess is to much of the end up (if you stick with it) rest of the world.It is to Russia weak, with vitamins and minerals what football is to the US,{thereUS,(there stripped from your body. Pounds are tales of 100,000 entrants in a that go quick come back r-gick go quick come back .■rick single chess tournament there,while Sat well in small amounts, 200 is a rather large tournament anaanc eat good things. Real food here,)Thoughhere,)Though-Fischer Fischer is relatively wiuhwi th protein sticks longer than protein sticks longer than unknown here,he draws crowds,crowds^head- head- the other stuff, and you'll be lines, and standingstanting ovations in many less hunggry when you're getting European countries, what your body needs,Cut out what your body needs.Cut out Bobby Fischer has had many dis- the badoaa stuff,thestu: f,the ice cream and ice cream and appointments in his career,hov;ever.career,however. cakes anaan " donuts. Get exercise, - donuts. Get exercise, He became so disheartened at one Thisihis way it will be your body -it will be your body point that he quit official chess you're dieting, not a vogue dieting, not a vogue play for over two years,Evidently model•bo moael■bodyly that's always up for heho really got it all together during grass,grams, and it will feel good,good. that layoff because he has lost a ItisItJ s not important how it tournament or match since his iome-ieme- lookslooks^jo jo them. It's important important b§ckbgck. now it feels to vou.you. # In the matches to see who would Try to-eatto-sat mostlyimostly; vegetables vegetables gain the right to challenge the eggs,eggs tea, 1 slimlim milk,nil]-; lean megt. world's champion,Fischer'schampion,Fischer s first poultry, soy meanbe ans,, fish; opponet was internationalInternational GrandmasteGrandraaste Eat sparingly; Fat sparingly: fruits , grains r Hark Tgimanov.HeTgimanov.Ka destroyed Taimon- (breads, noodles.noodle i, ricerice. , and • ov six games to none,which is probamproba~» cerea's) oils , noney,honey cheese.se, ly the equivalent of pitching six and3.nd producesproducjs of "* of these foods,saahfoods suah perfect feaeebfMhadebfll games in a row in dSCIS :e and pies.pxes. a UorldITorld Series.Next,againstSeries .Next, against 3ontBent Larsen (whom mosfexpertB"most"experts" expected % A RlSHTd to be the next challenger)he did the PiT. y -o sanesame thing,Then came Tigran Petro- WA•'■1 ON /I) ■:fv -v sin,a former world champion himself, o- if'-" Fischer won the first game,?etrosiangame,?etrDsian - s~\ H: the second,follov/cd by three draws. fm kit' 4 '3 At this point Petrosian made some statement about not being impressed mm i by Fischer's playing,Bobby thenthan won the next four games in a row to qua- lify to play Boris Spassky for the worldv/orId title. LWS Enter politics,Fhilepolitics/Fhile everyone in the•cne US,exceptUS, e: :ceot a few die hards,had ""gguirrs-rs "blissfully ignored chess all his/ Drop-Out HakesI lakes Good her life,withlife v7ith Fischer's remarkable Theihe Russians have totally'dou-totally"dom— / play there was suddenly a chance for inated thgthe game of chess foroverforovsr some free propaganda, American edi- 20 years. To give you an idea of tors looked up -howhow to spell,spell chess their supremacy, a little over" in the dictionaries and started da« a yyear ar ago there was a USSR vs. vs. ily colums on Fischer,TypicalFischer.Typical was The World chess tourngraent.tournament, The The an editoral in one of our local news ten oest chess piay: 1 St che s irs from Russialussia paper saying.saying,"Fischer 'Fischer bagtsbegts Russians vsvs! ^the ten fbest3 Players ni from-p. ^ est players from the hooray for our side,side,"Uhat "TJhatii- incredible Qiiv-^T-i f-1 thet worldworld.- The only bullshit. To add even more irony surpii0iiK; thing anout the tour- nament was thatlulll gJtheDOXlt rest the of tour-the to the , . 116 J est; of the (Continued on pageJ 8) Worlduorlai.orld loqtlost ayby onlyt" one" game.game, (Continued on page 8) Suteut whowno should appear on the appear on the scenecene to challenge them, with S-ingshots_incrshot and chessboard xnm han^.,han^i,. the fixer . . . page ^5 '•. "Tim"THEI WILL DEDICATE THEIR LIVES TO LAW AND ORDER AND JUSTICE IN THIS GR- EAT LAND OF OURS" Liberation News Service "Law and order will be preserved at whatever cost to individual lib- erties and rights." —William H.H, Rehnquist "The radical left—expert in such matters—knows the charge of repres- sion. It is a cover for leftist-inspired violence and repression. It is also a propaganda line designed to undermine confidence in our free in- stitution, to brainwash the youth and ultimately overthrow our democratic system,system. "It is unfortunate that so many non-radical Americans are taken in by this leftist line. They unwittingly weaken the very institutions of free- dom they wish to sustain. They may hasten the day when the heel of repre- ssion is a reality—-notreality—not from the sources now recklessly defamed but from whatever tyranny follows the overthrowoverthro'w of representative government. "This is the greatest danger to human liberty in America." ——L—Lewis ew j. s F. PowellE o w o x -l "Lewis Powell, William Rhenquist--thos9Rhenquist—those are the names you will remem- ber because they will add distinction and excellence in the highest de- gree to the Supreme Court of the United States." —Richard M. Nixon WASHINGTON (LNS)—With an air of solemnity which only he can generate-- after 25 years of practice—Richard Nixon announced his all new nominat- ions for the two vacant seats on the Supreme Court: "Except for the contribution he may be aoleable to make to the cause of wor- ld peace, there is probably no more important legacy that a President can leave in these times than his appointments to the Supreme Court." Since Supreme Court Justices John Harlan and Hugo Black resigned from the bench in September, Nixon has been—as usual—hedgy and secretive about who he was going to pick to replace them. First the wordvjord was out that it would be Richard Poff, a conservative Southern ■SSenator.enator. And i^henwhen it seemed like there would be too much hostility tox^ardtoward him, Nixon came up with six names that he was going to present to the American Bar Association (ABA) for evaluation. Those six were quite a group in themselves—they ranged from a woman who was one of the key people invol- ved in putting together the Washington'Washington DC NO-Knock Lav;Law to a male corpor- ate lawyer from Arkansas who spent his free time fighting desegreation of schools. It's not clear what went on between the time the six were rejected by the ABA and Nixon's nomination of Powell and Rohnquist. In the press, Nixon and Mitchell got on their high horses about someone leaking the ABA rejections but now it seems that a Washington Post reporter had gone to :he-he Justice Dept. and was given the information which he was supposed to lave leaked. So there is some question as to whether Nixon ever intendedIntended to really nominate two of the six or whether he was saving his two trump cards for the right time.time, Nixon calculated well when he selected his two new choices. The NY Times and the Washington Post which had criticized Nixon's choices of the six on the grounds of mediocrity seemed perfectly delighted: Said the Times: "Mr. Powell admirably combines the fundamental requirements of legal and intellectual distinction with Mr. Nixon's insistence on political conservatism and Southern origin,origin. Mr. Rehnquist, a Goldwater conservative, has a brilliant professional background..." Oh, but what about those politics? Up before the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee hearing, Rehnquist said reassuringly he would "totally disregard my own personal personal beliefs" in interpreting the Constitution and laws. In any case Nixon has gotten the chance to sew up two nominations for the Supreme Court for William Rehnquist, an Assistant Attorney General to John Mitchell who spoke for the Justice Dept, in their statements about the Mayday demonstrations and Lev/isLewis Powell, a millionaire southerner 'whosewhose recent statements on wiretapping and the new left J, Edgar Hoover liked so much he had them reprinted in the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, There's always the danger of idolizing the greatness of a liberal Sup- reme Court without realizing hoi^how limited its influence is. The Supreme Court can make all-incompassing decisions on issues but can't enforce them. It takes years of hearings and trials. It can't do much in^the short range and that doesn't make a black person who is trying to get into des- egreated housing happier to know that they'll be able to get in five years latter, especially if they need housing now. YeNY.'-W if von think what the court could be like (one cartoonist drew each ...... , , , . the fixer page 6.6 . (Supreme Court cont.cont, from page 5) black robe filled by a Nixon) it makes you see how bad things could be. "It is my firm conviction that Lewis Powell and William RehnquistEehnquist will dedicate their lives to the great goal of building respect for lawlav.7 and order and justice throughout this great land of ours."ours," —Richard M. Nixon "In the area of public law, disobedience cannot be tolerated, whetner it be violent or nonviolent disobedience, if force or threat of force is required to enforce the law, wevie must not shirk from its employment. —William William Rehnquist_Eehnquist Campus distrubancesdlstrubances will continue as long as university administra- tors lack the willingness to use "appropriate force "against lawlessness iti( rather than "supine toleration of marching mobs of mindless demonstrators, —Lewis Powell Though Powell and RehnquistEehnquist represent two different kinds of images (Powell, a dignified southern gentleman and Eehnquist,Rehnquist, a hard-driving young campaigner) they couldn't have been closer if Nixon had ,loldedmolded them fifomfrom clay hxnisslf»himself, _ , . EehnquistRehnquist was bornbom in Milwaukee, and after taking up law, he moved to Phoenix with his wife Natalie,Natalie. She was employed by the Central Intemte .1-i- ^ ^ gence Agency (CIA) when theymet and for weeks would not tell him where sue worked. . a.,,1 u-. . v, Phoenix was a very comfortable place for Eehnquist.Rehnquist. He threw his e ergics into Goldwater's campaign in 196^ where he worked under Eiciiara.Richard Kleindienst —his boss and Mitchell's right hand man in the Justice DepJep^. . (Eehnquist*s(Rehnquist's friend Goldwater sat by his side at the Senate hearings on his nomination to the court.) _ ._ . t-4-- i Though EehnquistRehnquist managed to make friends in right-wing^politicaright-wing poiitica cles in Arizona, favorable opinion of him was hardly unanimous,^unanimous.^ _ State Senator Cloves Cambell, who is black, sayssa3rs that Behnquis^Rehnquis^ is a "John Bircher." Rev. George B, Brooks of the Arizona^Arizona NAACP saidsal^- tha RehnquistEehnquist "was the only major person of stature in the state who oppose the Arizona civil rights bill in 1968." . no/rs v.-. v,, Trrtl1TJ EehnquistRehnquist opposed the passing of two Phoenix laws m 1969 have desegreated public accomodations and schools. In a letter t Phoenix RecordEecord he said;said: "The schools' job is to educate chilaren.children, y should not be saddled with a task of fostering social change which may. y lessen their ability to perform their primary job.1 When his old boss Kleindienst came to join John Mitchell in Was ^g after Nixon was elected, EehnquistRehnquist also was asked and became what iMixon1 describes as the "the President's lawyer's lawyer". ^ *• Powell was born in Suffolk, Va., went to college at Washington and Lee in Lexington, Va.,Va,, and left the state only long enough to get his master s degree at Harvard Law School, Since 1937 he has been part of one 01 Vir- ginia's oldest law firms—Hunton, Williams, Gay, Powell and Gibson. Powell, (who is on the board of directors of 11 large corporations; with his wife and his 19 year -old son owns stock in 38 corporations in- cluding AT&T, Chesterfield, Eastman Kodak, General Electric, IBM, Phillipinillip Morris and Xerox, All together the three won stocks worth ^2,7^2,378.^2,7V2,37J. Powell is an old member of the Country Club of Virginia and the Common- wealth Club of Richmond—neither of which find it suitable to admit blacks. He was head of the state board of education in Virginia and in fact there is a suit right now which accuses him, among others,with doing very little to desegreate Virginia schools since 195^« At the request of the Virginia governor, LinwoodLinuood Holton and the Virginia Attorney General he wrote a 28 page "friend-of-court" brief last year which was submitted to the Supreme Court when it deliberated the constitutionality of bussing kids. ■* -jf * "If you start talking about legislative restrictions on what information can be gathered, you have the problem that it may just become a kind of happy hunting ground for criminal defendants." —William--William RehnquistEehnquist "The outcry agai wiretapping is a tempest in a teapot. There are 210 million Americans, There are only a few hundred wiretaps annually,^ and these are directed against people who,seekvjho.seek to subvert our deomcratic form of government. Law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear,"fear." --Lewis Powell Sister Jogues Egan wasims subpoened by a grand jury which was to issue the indictments for the Berrigan case. She refused to testify on the gr- ounds that the questions were based on illegally procured electronic ^ surveillance. Since the government refused to admit it used illegal wire- '■"■.nr: >..? won the case and didn't have to testify,testify. (cor''- 7) ....the thefixer fixer ...... page page 7 (Supreme Court cont-fromcont.from page 6) The government appealed it to the Court of Appeals and they again ru- led in fV/orfavor of her. The Supreme Court is expected to hear a case on the legality of wiretapping whichwhick will include whether she is forced to tes- tify when she refuses, goes to jail, . , John Sinclair, Pun Plamondon and Jack Forrest, all of the BaincowBainbow Peo-^e0~ piesples Party went to for conspiracy to blow up a secret CIA headquarters ^ (which they didn't even know about) in Mich, last Feb. The defense asicedasKeo. the judge to order the government to turn over all of their wire-tap evi- dence, ihen the judge granted that motion, the government appealed it to the US Court of Appeals in Cincinatti which also asked the government to turn it over. When the Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of01 surveillance, what do you think William Eehnquist or^or^Lewis Lewis Powell will have to say about it? Or about capital punishment which goes before the court this T'^snr?'y03.r? Still another issue which tends to raise the blood pressure of hothtioth pressure of both Eehnquist and Powell is the Miranda Decsion--tneDecsion~-tne l/ol/co •Supreme Court decision which said that each defendant had to be told tn-th- eir rights (like(nke having a lawyer present or the right to remain siienc;silen ; before they can be interrogated. The Miranda decision has been the oasis for a number of cases being thrown out because supposed "confessionsconfessions have been coerced by the police or prosecutor,prosecutor. _ .• 4- ^ a+. Last year at a speechspeoch at the University of Arizona, Eehnquist sai would not be "at-:at all unreasonable" for the Justice Department to asask . 101 the Supreme Court to reverse the Miranda decision. .< _ Tto,to,r vnPn Powell, who wasxvas a member of President Johnson s Commission 0 „ " ~ forcement and Administration of Justice, joined a dissenting gpS P . . Commission which said that Supreme Court decisions limiting p rogation and confessions had tilted the balance of Justice vor on the defendants.defendants, „ . r^n^-Mv,. Or as he said in the article printed in the Law Enforcement Bulletin. "Bather than 'repressive criminal justice',justice , our sysuemsystem subord ^, . safety of society to the rights of persons accused of crime. x ^ n„ for greater protection-~notprotection--not of criminals but that law-abidilaw-acidi g , Vc ^I c Nixon, answering questions from reporters that perhaps ,rciXv,c too old to be on the Supreme Court: "Ten years of him is worth J jy

of most," the president said with emphasis, . c«v,a+-0 As for Eehnquist, Senator John Tunney (D. Gal.)Cal.) who ^ on Judiciary Committee pointed out that at ^7, the now-Assistant Att General might well still be sitting on the court in the year 2,h, . "At a time whenX'Jhen slogans often substitute for rational thougnt,tnought, ic .ls fashionable to charge that 'repression' ofcf civil liberties 13is widespwl^esP ?® • This charge--directedcharge—directed primarily against law enforcement is standstandar^ r " ist prcpap;anda.propaganda. The charge of repression is not a rifle shot at occ s. c. aberrations. Bather, it is a sweeping shotgun blast at the system >» ~ ich is condemned as systematically repressive of those accused oi criicriii - , minorities, and of the right to dissent." --Lewis Powell "Police officials have the authority to detain individuals during the perion of an evergcncyevergency without being required to oring them before mittingraitting magistrate and filing charges against them. _ —vJilliam Wi11i am BohnquistEehnquist "I believe the peace forces must net beoe denied the legal tools they need to protect the innocent from criminal elements." —Bichard—Richard Nixon - 00 o - TIIUTin FIISRFTZUR AHDA1TD TZUT: FACULTY17 r .CULTT Physics 377% A number of the ad- "Y ^ . misistration also receive copies. In a recent quesxionarequestionare sent,sent to -140 re- ofOf 270 sent outjout, we liadhad 140 re- all teachers to determine if they ^iiepliesS of which only 5 were 1T0,HO, would like to recieve a copy of TheThe, -someome resultingresuiting from the wording Fixer each week, thetne following per-per— o;^ our letter, VTiere is j^our de— ea of our letter, 'There is 3-our de- cencagescentages of eachch departmentdeparcment replied •nartment'spartment's head at? V/lio is the YDS:TLS: History 57f»j57^J Speech and Drama Aheadead of your department? Does o 37/oJ37/^; hathi.atn 537°;53/ J Business —d.xiiiistra—Administra- your department have a head ? tion and Dconomicseconomics 20^j207o; School of f/e Vive'the Art and Fnglish- dept- ,/e give" the Art and English- dept- SducationEducation 35y;357^; SpecxalSpecial ?jdu.cationuducabion artment our FFO rateing. Service Department jyM G-eology . n Service^ Department 337°; Geology• , -I , -1 x. (W> • Jin, 1.11 mil II-J. «III l ain ^ 0\J 60%' Home Economics 3 77% English 607°; s xxome ^conomics 37/'"; Jnglish poFFOR S/iLF:SALE: Two, Sears Dynaglas sn-sn— 65^5 polcticax Science and Geogra- , 6.50 x 13, with wheels, 657% Polotical Science and Geogra- ovrfciresovrtires, 6.50 x 13, with wheels, phy 54/";547% sociologySociology 50;%_50, , IlusicLusic_6/ 67%, (Dodge Dart r66), Brand Hew Gur- o f 0 (Dodge Dart '66), Brand Hew Gur- Psychology 58/0558>% ArtAid oO^;807% Foreign ^ * still good 070 complete, natee still good. 070 complete, LanguageLangu-age 277%^5 ChemistryChemi stry 1677;16^; Call 4061406I -or leave note box 375,375. 1'""1 207%. PhyaloalPxiyni oal Itflucati-onJvbj.oe.+.T on 337^5337°; •She page 8 . . (Bobby Pisdier-cont.)Pischer-'cont») IS RELIGION A CRUTCH? situation, Boris Spassky, the man Fischer v/illwill play for the champion- Every cause has an effect and ship, is quite a renegade himself, every effect has a cause. We are hu 'hree■hree times he's been suspended gry because we need food. We are from playing chess outside of the tired because we need sleep. We nee JSSR for "misbehavior" and once he God because we were made in his oublicly denounced the Invasioninvasion of image,image. ,. dzecholovakia. It is really funny Yes, we doJo need him, but we di that both countries should have to not invent him.him any more than we in- pin their "national pride" on their vented food because we were hungry.hungry- local renegade. Remain Holland, in his letter I I have personally taken great his friend Sigmund Freud, wrote a- Joyjoy in seeing Fischer single-hand- bout a peculiar feeling which he edly crumble the Russian chess himself is never without, which he dynasty, the same way I enjoyed supposed is present in many people*people. watching Muhammad Ali vanquish the It's" a feeling which he would like t Sonny Listenliston or Joe Namath call a sensation of "", a Tumblerumble the Baltimore Colts. Not feeling as of something limitless, just because of his ability (I think unbounded—asunbounded—-as it were "oceanic. ie's the best chess player in the This feeling he adds is a purely orld today) but also for his icon- subjective fact not an article of oclastic personality. Anyway, the faith, it brings no assurance of_ /inner of the Fischer-Spasskyhischer-Spassky Immortality..." Paul writes in his matchnatch willv/ill certainly go down in letter to the Romans, "For the truti chess history along with such as is known to them by instinccinstince _GodGod Morphy, GapablacnaGacablacna and Botvinnik, has put this knowledge in their It may be the match of the century. hearts." Real assurance of personal If Fischer wins, you'll get to read immortality, beyond vague sensation, about it on the front pages of the comes from having a personal rela- -ewspapers,■ewspapers, more than likely. If he tionship with Christ. He affirms loses, I .supposesuppose all those editors our feelings about life after death will//ill blissfully forget how to and by feeling his living presence spelljpell chess again. in our lives. He fulfills our soul- ishness and lifts our spiritual the great speckled bird binders. Nothing comes from nothing and nothing ever will.THE ^LIBPRAICrLIBERATCr — 0 by the Jesus .—people „ of Madison,Maranatha!S The Madison College Chess Club ' ' ,_Thr:" at PQP $ 204. Maranatha! ; meets every Tuesday at 7:00 PM in Ef£ meeting room A of the campus center, .0Pp. BYOB Jm (Bring,(frin^ Your Own Board) 'h v" i if*' •vV y Wx\W\ ■ ■■**-*£ ~- r* ' —=• —• ' - .. „ ■r

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