Maine Campus April 01 1982 Maine Campus Staff

Maine Campus April 01 1982 Maine Campus Staff

The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Maine Campus Archives University of Maine Publications Spring 4-1-1982 Maine Campus April 01 1982 Maine Campus Staff Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus Repository Citation Staff, Maine Campus, "Maine Campus April 01 1982" (1982). Maine Campus Archives. 1219. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus/1219 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine Campus Archives by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Maine at Orono the daily student newspaper aine since i 8 -5 am us vol.90 no.42 I Thursday, April 1,1982 Disarmament group stages demonstration by JoAnn Park, ork. I wish people would take the Staff Writer ideas and those people more seriously." Local marchers led by members of the World Peace arch staged a brief Jim Beaulieu. 21. a senior zoolog, demonstration on the steps of the major said he was disappointed in the Memorial Union yesterday after walk- number of people that showed up to ing from Indian Island in Old town. watch the demonstration. He said he The march. and others like it across hoped that the number was not the U.S.. was intended to call reflective of the general popularity of attention to the United Nations special the group. session on disarmament this summer. Lams Dansinger. state coordinator Caroline Curpino. 20, of the Men- of Clergy and Laity Concerned, a tally Retarded Adults of Orono said. nation-wide organization begun dur- "I'd like to walk with them. I admire ing the Vietnam War to organize what they are doing. I think more peace rallies, said the purpose of the people in this country should take march was to gain support for the notice of what they're doing and act on removal of nuclear weapons and to it .'• increase au areness of the U.N. special session June 7. Members of the World Peace March felt differently about the number of A group of 50-n0 students and students that were present at the faculty stopped to listen to the demonstration. Dansinger said the demonstration. Cheryl Spencer. 22. a number of people at a demonstration senior plants and soils major. said. "If is not most important: the commit- I didn't have a mortgage. I and my tment to disarmament is a growing Local demonstrators, led bv two Japanese Buddhist Monks, mark hid trum Old husband would be marching to New concern in the U.S. and the world. low n to he Mrrnorial l'nion to call attention to a U.N. special session on disarrnamunt this summer. I inscoit photo) Political analyst to speak on Reagan foreign policy by Ed Manzi upon the German nation," he said. Staff Writer "Most of my boyhood years were spent fleeing from Nazi terror. I have The Distinguished Lecture Series will always been haunted by the personality present John G. Stoessinger who will of Hitler and driven by a need to speak on "Crisis Areas in the Reagan understand his demon." Administration Foreign Policy" Commenting on the history of the tomorrow night at 8:oo p.m. in Hauck Vietnam war, Stoessinger said, "In no Auditorium. war did personalities play a greater role Dr. Stoessinger is an internationally than in Vietnam. 1 believe that in the recognized political analyst course of a single The Marshall I miser Band and Tom Chapin ;ill perform tonight in the and prize- generation, five winning author of ten American presidsents fieldhouset sponsored hi add ihi I Slam, F rairrnots in the leading books on based their Mine( ampui 11agaztne. world politics. policies in Indochina not on Asian John Philbrick, co-chairperson of realities but on their fears and, later, the Distinguished Lecture Series, said on their hopes.•' Marshall Tucker he feels students, faculty and local Band attendance will be good. "It's a big thing for those concerned to rock field house with the course of the Reagan administration," Philbrick said. do another on Greek "It's Weekend. The attractive not only to students ID) Rubin Stoutanier fraternity board but also was allotted money it should attract Staff Writer for a concert local politicians as last year (from student well." The Marshall Fucker Band will government) and it is using it for Philbrick said the lecture offers an perform in the fieldhouse tonight Marshall Tucker," he said. at 8 objective format and said he thinks p.m. with Tom Chapin. Green said the Marshall This will be Tucker Stoessinger will not take any Marshall concert cost side on Tucker's only Maine SEA and UMFB about Reagan's performance 828,000, on foreign appearance. 81,500 of which is coming policy. SEA has sold 2,300 of the 4,200 from UMFB. these funds will come "However, students should listen available concert tickets. out of SEA's 825,000 concert carefully for a position," he said. Joba C. Sioessiager The concert is co-sponsored by the allotment from student government. As a youth, Stoessinger led an Student Entertainment and Activities "the average cost of getting a bigger From 1967 to 1974 Dr. Stoessingser exciting life that Concert Committee a subcommittee of band to play is about 510-512,000," brought him halfway served as Acting Director of the around the world. On the eve of SEA and the University of Maine Green said. "the total cost Political Affairs Division of the of the World War II he fled Nazi-occupied Fraternity Board. This is SEAs fourth concert is almost doubled when Untitled Nations. Stoessinger is a the Austria to Czechoslovakia. Three major concert since November. costs for stage, university employees member of the Council for Foreign years later he traveled through Siberia Al Green, co-chairman of the SEA that are needed, sound catering Relations. He came to the United and to China, where he served with the concert committee, generator rentals are States in 1947, received his B.A. from said that the added." International Refugee Organization. fraternity board wanted to have He said that he and Doug Grinnel College in 1954, and then a Joseph, In a quote from one of his books concert with SEA on Greek Weekend, co-chairman of the concert committee, received a Ph.D. degree from Harvard entitled Why Nations Go to War April 19-24. try to determine what would be a in 1954. good Stoessinger recalled his childhood in "But, since we got Marshall Tucker act through feedback from students Stoessinger is a professor of political Austria: "I remember well the science at for now, we felt we couldn't afford to (see 'Marshall the City University of New Tucker' p.2) charismatic nature of Hitler's grip York. 2 '.fame Campus. Thur,da,. 4p,11 I. 14S2 ERA legal implications hard to assess say some UMaine Search f professors CAMPUS forestry by Satire Yallely changes in the pattern of American law. professor of political science and pre- CRIER Staff Writer It's hard to project how the ERA law advisor said, "My personal would change issues and laws because opinion is 1 favor it. It is extremely to begin Some UMO political science it would be subject to Supreme Court difficult to argue with the contents of professors agree that it is hard to assess interpretation which could be the proposed amendment: 'rights shall Actors, Actresses wanted for by Ellen York the legal implications the proposed interpretated either narrowly or not be abridged or denied by the summer Children's Theatre Staff Writer Equal Rights Amendment would have broadly." congress or the several states on the company. Audition April 5 and due to the broad power of Supreme Thomson said one of the difficulties account of sex.' The problem is the 6, 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community The process of tel Court interpretations. that the ERA has in gaining support is campaigners for ERA both the Center, 28 Somerset St., Bangor. the new College of . As the proposed Equal Rights that some people feel that the equal opponents and the proponents have Musical audition required. Paid will begin this week, Amendment nears its June 30 deadline protection clause and the due process gone to extremes to promote their positions. For information call C. Bowers, vice presic for ratification some L'MO professors clause of the 14th amendment of the causes often offending as well as 866-4103. affairs. discussed the legal implications the constitution has been providing confusing the public. It's interesting if proposed amendment will face both in Delis ery Miser wattled. Apply in Bowers said he wo protection of rights adequately for you look back in history to the women', terms of whether it is ratified or it's person. Napoli Pizza,()tont', 154 the position filled b; women. suffragette movement, the same sort defeated. Park Si. added it is "most imp Thomson stressed that it is of thing took place. The pro side Robert Thomson, professor of I-louse lot rent. Iwo mile. away. best person for the jo impossible to determine how ERA argued that women were needed to political science, said, "If ERA is Woodstose. June I. Mas 31. to rush it." would affect law because it hinges on purify politics after the mess that men defeated or passed it doesn't seem to 5600i mom It (5500-summer l. 827- how the amendment is interpreted. had made of and the con side areued there any revolutionary 7058.

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