HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN, NOVEMBER 15, 1971 -- PAGE TWO Editorial comments So you think it's an easy thing to write a newspaper editorial? Try it sometime. Lide right now, with a deadline looming on the horizon. If you won't take my word for it, ask Me. or Rich. They go thru the same problems. There are a number of things to take into consideration. For instance, subject, relevance to current campus atmosphere, style, length, etc. But for now, let's just worry about a subject. We could write about apathy. It seems that apathy, or some reasonable facsimile, has returned to Highacres for this term. It is hampering the efficiency and endeavors of several campus groups, most notably, the staff of the New Horizons Literary Magazine. As it stands now, the entire staff of the publication could be counted on one paw of a three-toed sloth. If you happen to be interested in helping with the literary magazine, and we hope you are, see Tom Winters or Rich R ocknian, co-editors. Another thing we could write about is the upcomeing Student Government election. Would pinochle or ping-pong or something. Ten or twenty paces from the ballot box and not so much as a second thought about voting. How many of you know that Highacres is now a member of the National Student Lobby. SGA President Paul Yanoshik pushed for it and SGA finally voted in favor of our joining. His is certainly a worthwhile project. For more information ad Yanoshik's open letter in an adjoining column on this page. Or better yet, talk to Paul yourself. One thing that bugs me, too, is the outright disconcern by a few students when it comes to keeping our campus clean.... everyday one sees empty soda cups, vapkins, papers, and various and sundry other litter scattered about the place. There are plenty of trash cans and receptacles located at strategic points of traffic. Use them. There are many more points that could and should be brought up here and now. But late hours hinder the mind, as do many other things. Understand? ~~~. =SIM 'Relax...if there's life on Earth we'd have known about it long ago !' lifr• Eigigtarti Tollrgian The Collegian office is located in the Memorial Building Office hours are Monday thru Friday, 1-4 p.m. John Roslevich, Jr E. J. Pietroski T. W. Heppe Richard Campbell STA F NEWS: Arnim. Cumsky, Cindy Lonoconus, Margaret Grega, Anne Mckinstry, John Mertz. ENTERTAINMENT: Jean Yese!ski, Leßoy of Warrington. SPORTS: Craig knouse. editor; Jack McCulcheon. ADVERTISING: Bob Allison, manager; Gloria .11aksima/•. COMPOSITION: Lorraine Drake„Anita Thomas, I)eb Soroka, Thomas Heppe, JoAnn Depretis. PIIO7'OGR A PII Y: Charlie Fox, Gary Welsh, Paul Pianovich. EDITORIAL WRITERS: Mel Mundic, Richard Rock man. Letter Policy Opinions expressed in The HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN are those of Individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the official views of The COLLEGIAN. Unsigned editorials represent the official opinions of The COLLEGIAN. Responsible comment to material published in The COLLEGIAN is invited. All letters must be type-written and signed. Faculty members are students are invited to submit articles to be published in a special section of The COLLEGIAN entitled 'lmpact.' Articles and other material (poems included) should be no longer than 400 words and must be typed. • Target BOARD OF DIP ECTORS Location . . . between longitudes 178 degrees 37 minutes E ~..,,,.. . 4,,, c. . 1 5......... a 2 n t d 179 t dees frieesd2s9lmdinutes egrees 3 E 9 and . betwe es enlatitudes 51 degrees romarii Description ... an island, forty-two miles long, that varies from two to four miles in width. Habitation . . . only two land dwelling mammals, rats and Editor-in-chief Business Manager Production Manager Faculty Advisor "For this food, we thank Thee, Lord. Amen." "Amen," Mr. 452's family replied in unison to emphasize the sentiment. The 21st Century family was seated around a large dinner table in their sub-basement. On the table was a delicious looking Thanksgiving dinner. There were dishes of corn, tomatoes, and cranberry sauce adorning the traditional Thanksgiving bird. Mr. 452 and his wife began to eat. Their young son and daughter joined in with an exuberance they could not hide after their parents had begun eating. They had been anticipating the joys of Thanksgiving for months. Hardly had they begun eating when, suddenly and unexpectedly, the underground dining room became stifling hot. The lead-lined wall which fortified the hidden door began to glow crimson. "What is it? " cried Mrs. 452. If Mr. 452 suspected, he said nothing. All at once the door melted away and two uniformed, helmeted men armed with laser weapons rushed in. "The...the Brain Police!" Mr. 452 shouted in disbelief. Mrs. 452 screamed with tears running down her cheeks, her face turning pale in the iridescent light. The children sat at their seats and watched in amazement. "Don't move! This is a raid! Line up against that far wall, All "Don't move! This is a raid! Line up against that far wall, all of you! " ordered the senior officer. "What do you mean by this outrage? ! " Mr. 452 exclaimed. "We were doing nothing but celebrating..." "I'll say you were celebrating!" replied the senior officer. "You're all under arrest. The charge is overeating. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say may be used against you. You have the right to have a lawyer. If you can't afford one the court will appoint one for you." "Officer!" Mr. 452 resounded, "We...we were merely EATING!" "Oh, come now," the policeman snickered. "Don't make me laugh by pretending you don't know the law. Every child in school knows that the eating, buying, selling, and possessing of food has been illegal for decades. Ever since the world's population became so large that every available acre of land had to be used for housing, farming has been outlawed and "food-subs" in pill form have taken the place of natural food. "And besides that, the Chief Surgeon has determined that eating food is hazardous to your health. You watch the news, mister. You must be aware that our doctors and scientists have reason to believe that over-indulgence in food may cause brain damage!" "But, it hasn't been proven," retorted the anguished father. "People have been eating for thousands of years and it has never affected their brains!" "Really? " replied the police officer. "Don't you think SOMETHING must have been wrong with their brains all those years to get us into so many messes? !" "He...he's got a point, Father," his small son meekly ventured. "Quiet, boy! Whose side are you On, anyway? !" "Not only that," the armed law-enforcer added, "but there is reason to believe that eating may become addicting. In fact, preliminary investigations show that the soft stuff you have on I hate to say, I told you so, but... How do you like it so far? Pretty dull stuff, eh? Megaton Cannikin. Gotcha! All oHow do you like it so far? Pretty dull stuff, eh? Then let me add the magic words. Amchitka. Nuclear. Fellow Students: Joining 5-Megaton. Cannikin. Gotcha! All of which means we can get on the National Student Lobby on with this editorial. Oct. 29, we as a Campus began Question . . . Could the Supreme Court,- the Senate, the- our representation to the demonstrations or the petitions, letters and telegrams, of legislative body of the United concerned American and World citizens have stopped the nuclear States. Our vies and the views test? The answer, of course, has already been given. They could ,of other concerned students not. Even a ten-time multiplication of their efforts would not 'will be represented by the have changed the decision. No way. It was never in doubt. Never. lobby organized for students. I have always believed that expert opinion is just that .. . The procedure for acquiring expert. After all, this is the technology that conquered polio; the student views used by the NSL technology that created the transistor; the technology that put is done in a most democratic man on the moon. manner. A referendum is sent Why then, such dedicated opposition? Didn't the experts out to all member Campuses assure us that everything was cool? Did someone know something with a list of the most crucial the experts didn't know? issues of our time. These issues If the world was to come to an end at 5 p.m. E.S.T. are to be merited as to Saturday, why study for Monday's Anthropology exam? opinions and priority. It is I looked for reassurance, and found it in a 41-page report necessary that each and issued in May by the Atomic Energy Commission, I grabbed my trusty dictionary (rule one in digesting any government report) and began to read. I found that Project Cannikin was the result of four full years of intensive study. The study was made by scientists and technicians in the fields of oceanography, biology and ecology, geophysics and geology and hydrology and seismography. After two years of research, their preliminary evaluations were tested by a 1-megaton blast on Amchitka on October 2, 1969. The Milrow test verified the advance evaluations and predictions. Everything boiled down to one brief statement. The' 5-megaton nuclear explosion would have "no significant import on man, animal life or the environment." The experts said that everything would be cool. Everything was cool. With my faith in expert opinion re-inforced, I should be happy. I am not. The real question was not the possible adverse effects on the environment. The real question was the need for the test in the , first place. President Nixon supplied the answer. He defended his decision to go ahead with the nuclear test when he termed it vital to national security, saying, "Unless we have a program to defend the United States, we won't have any environment to protect." Amchitka is described in the AEC report as a barren island. There are no trees except for a few stunted spruce trees which were planted in World War 11. There are only two land-dwelling mammals on the island, rats ... and man. If you like to deal in the abstract, perhaps you can understand that one can read more than facts into that report Thanksgiving Dinner by Richard,Rockman your table right now may lead to even more addicting foods; foods like..." he looked at the children and then cupped his hands to his visor and whispered into the man's ear, "foods like...pizza! "And, " he continued in his normal tone of voice, "we can't have our labor force cut by people getting into the vile habit of eating, now, can we? Why, our economy would be destroyed if we allowed that to happen." "But, these food-sub pills," Mr. 452 pleaded, "they make me so tense...so nervous. And eating food is so relaxing...it makes me feel good after a hard day at work. It makes me forget all my worries. "And, anyway, I'm sick of being told I can't use what nature offers man from her earth if I want to. We're ALL sick of this oppression!" he cried out, motioning to his family. Mr. 452 looked through the visor of the senior officer's helmet and saw that his pleas had been totally ineffective. Desperately, Mr. 452 tried another tactic, though he knew he was clutching at straws. "Listen, officer...you know in your heart there's nothing wrong with food. Here," he said, lifting a dish of potatoes and gravy from the table, "try some yourself. It'll make you feel so much better. You'll see!" "Now you've done it!" said the officer sternly. "As if possessing and eating food at all wasn't enough, and then passing the stuff around this joint to each other! Now you're trying to incapacitate, corrupt, and bribe a Brain Police officer." He leaned over and looked into the offender's face, "The law isn't going to go easy on you!" "Officer," Mr. 452 said with tears welling in his eyes, "have you no heart? Have you no soul? This is our first offence! Can't you just..." "We know your kind!" the uniformed man broke in. "We've had you under surveillance for quite a while." "But, how? " Mr. 452 cried in exasperation. "We watched our thoughts so carefully! We never thought about food unless we were in this specially constructed, electromagnetized, lead-lined basement. It should have sheilded all our thoughts from the Brain Police." "You didn't count on our new surveillance methods," the upholder of justice said with satisfaction. "Our new Vibra-sensors are designed to cut through all types of artificial thought interference." "But, how did you know to survey our sector? " "Ha! You can't escape the reach of the long arm of the law! We got your name when we raided the headquarters of the Grocer Underground last week! I see you're shocked! You didn't think we knew about the Grocer Underground, did you? Mr. 452 was speechless. A beaten man. The rest of his family huddled together and wept softly. The younger officer broke the silence "We'd better cart these criminals off. I've just been contacted by headquarters via my helmet's built-in communications system. We're needed on another case. It seems our international infra-red scanning device has detected a crop of corn growing illegally in Turkey." "Please!" Mr. 452 cried. "Don't mention turkey!" "You go on ahead," the senior officei - said to his subordinate who began leading the family out of the room. Staring at the dinner table, he said, "I want to stay here awhile and...uh...inspect the evidence." An open letter to all students SUPPORT THE HARRIS PRYOR BILL OF RIGHTS FOR OCEAN MAMMALS BATTERED BABIES. Miss Alice Herrington, Chairman Committee Jo• Humane Legislation, Inc 11 West 60th Street New York, N. Y. 10023 I want to help protect the animals. I enclose $ to CHI.). Please add my name to your mailing list, and send me a mat of this 'advertisement so that I can place it in my local newspaper. STREET & NUMBER by Mel Mundie everyone of us at Highacres fill out our opinions on this referendum Tuesday, Nov. 23. The democratic process, which is still predominant in American government, functions efficiently only under majority participation by the public. To participate it is necessary to have our views taken into consideration for legislation if not into legislation. I urge all students to opinionate the referendum on Nov. 23. Sincerely Paul J. Yanoshik President SGA El=