day, Noveniii®'November 8 MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA Page Three ^Jlsberg Views Governmental Discrepancies ,(ici (cont. from p. 1) in Congress. There is of fortune the country who has not he house wins *at deal to learn from these ay. I L ' by that I mean to in- Brman Club ws* the President, and former ut on this you can get* tiieappoinfed to hear Secre- nation. Rusk a week or two p.m., the MH “'ey had come out say that he s when the yet had time to look at the will 5®' omedy deals >■ t” magazine ^"wer to end the war. Congress wholesome 9 ^td I’m very anxious that the on often ggvt,^-|^.or Q{ Congress change in re- !n Mad Joe i Ken’s been I has* *iH It is obvious from the Papers that a small circle I, '®t!ords. tadio WKKE « M old S'®**'® ** I, p ®tic and military advisers itenna, you 6d advice to the President on Rangefi his decisions. What alter- ® nouid be developed to allow develop — creative forms Which might save thou- ne lan AnneXi supper to tha ut at the wa er first; low iance, or in ^ ;es MHC to appointed W * Early, SGA P list submitt® datives vary the students bice. This is Slover, Jerry V has a in them - and head you diehard®, than 17-years ry medicine, inistration, 5®cretary Rusk no longer has the information that is in sands of lives In the near future? Along these same lines, what is your feeling on the mass civil dis obedience during the early part of last May, the Mayday actions. ELLSBERG: The individuals who man the posts in the executive branch are human beings much like the human beings in Congress, and outside the government. I think that the soiution to the problem of the behavior that has led us so far into this war is not to find some new breed of official, or some strain of saint with which to man these posi tions, but it is to take very seriously the advantages implicit in the Con stitution of pitting one set of in- dividuais with certain institutional in centives, a certain power base and certain responsibiiities to the public against other very comparable in dividuals in the executive. That’s the meaning in the constitutional provision of separation of powers. The Grecian Roll toi by Ed Sams jjatulations to Delta Phi Zeta formal Winning the Gamma Beta jiue. M"'' • irorvL, — these 13 com^',k^y this year. Those busy Meg Rock®*^' fy ^ ® have not stopped there. olley and ® mby, and L.e® , .^rd" bulletin board to be *** as public area and be own, and 7 ®°aimunication device to ego^, Charli®for those who need bins and J®®,those who can give Joyce Ff®® '*8 a - ^ has also spon- lough, Betty ^ nusic, Vicki sical educati® chards; and )avid Gaspers®: h, Scavenger hunt for cast-off needy Madison County ' New girls joining Delta I ®ster are Ruth Gellerstedt, “anieis, “Ali” Trout, Karen mvu Edwards, Maxanne acle Sam wa®\;'n, Lynn Meeson. Marin® .r' j.. hi Omega had their “hell bars 'isg Week preceding Home- ,'*h their road trip Home- *Kt| ^'3ht, Oct. 30. For Home ly Parade, they had a car . Parade, they had ust be i^iai®r’fj|is5^ fraternity sweetheart \ Q d riding on it. ji' - !» , '®ron had their private health; must SPledges Jenny Culler, a U.S. citi7®'JT'9le ®rid Jenny Blythe and Then you 9®* ig the summ®'^' ere who Io'T® singing “Bacj*, 3ter in ’72 witj. iterested 9®* .ji y Stern for ® event of Hor®* lege book st®'^^ irranged to im during th® aerialists W® , friend Ken “ |j' like to t®**® jarachutists r: iplete Madis®y out, arrivin9 ng the guri- le forgot to tjn' e position th® s the inteilo® urn bed to th® wd and hav®' Bster MHC ■ ,S> •ge Peery arr' le roles in th® ss to head J ,, he whole iuhV fort, and ason. afterwards, Sunday. The initiation was held in the faculty parlor of the Fine Arts build ing at 2:00 which was closed to the public, but the musicale 3:00 in Spainhour Hall was open to friends and relatives. There was a recep tion afterwards. Kappa Phi Theta had their "hell week”, the week of Homecoming with Friday night as the night of the road trip to Craggy Gardens for pledges Mark Faulconer, Danny Miller, Steve McSwain, Tim Glatsau, and Ed Sams. The formal installa tion was Wednesday, Nov. 3. F.T.B. Sigma Kappa Lambda celebrated Homecoming with their second an nual “crush” at the Downtowner Motel at Asheville, Saturday night, Oct. 30. Sigma Alpha Chi added greatly to the Homecoming festivities with their perennial corsages, their spirit but tons, and “Happiness” song at the pep rally. It was these “spirited” girls who added to vistas of MHC with their painted lion paws from the caefteria to Spilman porch. ^^/-72 MHC ^^ketball Schedule 28 ^C'5 Tusculum King Catawba A.S.U. Lander Tournament Carson-Newman Wofford Erskine Gardner-Webb Tourn. Guilford Lenoir Rhyne A.S.U. Catawba Gardner-Webb Presbyterian Western Carolina Carson-Newman Erskine King Western Carolina Lenoir Rhyne Wofford Presbyterian UNC-A Guilford UNC-A Here Bristol, Tenn. Here Boone, N. C. Greenwood, S. C. Here Spartanburg, S. C. Due West, S. C. Boiling Springs, N. C. Greensboro, N. C. Here Here Salisbury, N. C. Canton, N. C. Here Cullowhee, N. C. Jefferson City, Tenn. Here Here Here Hickory, N. C. Here Clinton, S. C. Asheville, N. C. Here Here It’s not the provision that leads to proficiency per se, but it is meant to protect the freedoms of individuals. I think that the answer has to be not centrally performed in the execu tive branch and the courts. I might add that the courts are to be criti cized in their past behavior for avoiding the basic responsibility of addressing very profound iegal ques tions connected with this war, just as most Congressmen have failed to do what they could in line with their own Constitutional functions. GREER: I think that the issue of personal responsibility in taking that kind of further action is important not only to people here in Congress, but also to people in America, many of whom have taken some resistance action in their lifetime, either by re sisting the draft or by some other way of saying that they are not going to go along any longer as part of the war effort. However, many people were look ing for alternatives to Mayday, and 1 think many Americans are still look ing for those alternatives. They feel the responsibility weighing very heavily and yet they look for other paths or avenues to express that or to somehow make an effective re sistance to the war. ELLSBERG: The example of the people who took part in Mayday, which was very creditably non violent, should be an example and a challenge to their parents and to other older people in this country. It is obviously based on a willing ness on their part to take the risks of jail, which was their experience as it worked out. i have found over the fast year a very depiorabie attitude on the part of many adults and older people have been happy to see their sons and other younger people take the risks of carrying on the war. When I asked people, even those in Con gress, how they thought the war was going to be brought to an end, or what would keep President Nixon from invading Laos before that hap pened, or bombing North Vietnam before that happened, or destroying Vietnam before that happened, they tended to say: “the kids” will not allow it. They might say demonstrations will not allow it, but then if you pressed them further — “who is going to do those things” — “the kids”. This really gave me the uneasy feeling that the adults in this country who are against the war were willing to see their children be cannon fodder at the barricades, go to jail, risk their career; just as “hawk” par ents set their children off to die. I wouldn’t be at all happy if the burden of resisting this war con tinues to be on the adolescents and young men in arms while their par- Sounds... (cont. on p. 2) Our house is open and we are eager to get together. If there is a Women’s Liberation group in existence, please let us know. Sincerely, Naomi or Patricia 64S-4383 EDITOR’S NOTE: I was wondering if we’d ever get a letter of this sort. Joe Franklin (editor of the Laurel) said he heard that a women’s lib faction was going to picket the Miss Laurel Pageant. I wonder.... ents and other older people stand back and regard risk-taking as total ly out of the question. NELSON: Would you describe what you feel are the factors that underlie the Nixon administration’s negotiating posture, and how de cisions of what our negotiating posi tion is going to be have been deter mined in the past? In light of this, what do you think of the recent 7- point proposal of the Provisional Revolutionary Government? Could a Congressman exert influ ence in this field? ELLSBERG: Well, I think that our negotiating posture is what is has been in previous negotiations — so called. The posture has not been willing at all to make the kinds of conces sions that were clearly called for five years ago, ten years ago, and twenty years ago, if the war was to be avoided or ended. You have asked a number of ques tions here, which are a little difficult to deal with in one answer. The question arose recently in the hear ings about the volumes of negotia tion in the Pentagon Study. Of course, what those reveal, I think, is what I have just said. There have been no serious negotiations ali this time and the famous private channels have been channels for ultimatums from this government to the other side, calling upon it to sur render, in effect. Ultimatums of which none of our intelligence esti mates ever gave a president hope that they would achieve an end to the war. I do have some hopes right now, and they are in part related that the mood of the American public since the total failure of the Laotion in vasion, and the disillusionment with the effect of the war on our troops overseas — the heroin and corrup tion of the government of Saigon — combined now with the revelations in the Pentagon Papers as to how we got where we got, and as to what the role of the executive has been in misleading the public, may well have give President Nixon the feel ing that it will be much more difficult in the future than in the past to get a tolerant reception from the press, the Congress and the public for further escalation. If Nixon should conclude that he can no longer creditably threaten to destroy North Vietnam because he can no longer count on concealing his intentions from the press and the public, or lying to them in a way which is either effective or accepted, he may decide that he no longer has any cards in his hand with which to pursue victory. I think the threat of bombing was basically what he thought of incor rectly as his ace that might achieve a better outcome. If he concludes that the threat is really not possible, he might decide that he has no choice but to reach a genuine set tlement or to exricate himself. I hope it will go that way. In China, by her willingness to receive Nixon, should offer him a chance to be a peace president rather than a war president, I think it’s not impossible that he might go against his past political record, and take that position even at the price of reaching an end to this war. So I think that there is more rea son to hope at this point than there has been for years. But that is far from saying that one can count on it going that way. Journalism is merely the art of putting white words in black type. I, Corpral Holder FRESHMAN HEADACHE RELIEF?? But . . . Have you tried B. C. Vote Bob Causby - Senator MISS LAUREL PAGEANT November 16, 8:00 P.M. Moore Auditorium #>-riKE For Affecting Leadership Vote LARRY PIKE for Freshman Class President