i lid 0/-\ I l WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1981 f-cig*; O Liddy: US must face reality By M. WALTER CARROLL Battalion Reporter G. Gordon Liddy, mastermind of the Watergate break-ins, told an audience at Rud der Auditorium Monday night that the United States and its people are engulfed in a world of illusions. Liddy’s speech on “A Retrospect of Ameri can Politics” was sponsored by MSG Great Issues. He said illusions that Patrick Henry had warned the American people against are now deeply embedded in American politics and society. would have said it. Liddy also painted a dim view of the U.S. role in world politics, saying that today “the world is a bad neighborhood at 2:30 in the morning.” The United States is now taking the role of the “little old lady” in world politics, he said, whereas a few years ago it was the “270-pound Philadelphia Eagle offensive tackle.” An illusion, Liddy cited, is the fact that citizens of the United States are looking at the world not as it is, but as they would like to see it. People are not looking at situations realist ically, he said. Liddy said people are turning away from the harsher aspects of life. Examples he cited were using euphemisms such as underprivileged and sanitary workers for the poor and garbage collectors, respec tively. He blamed the abolishment of effective intelligence gathering as a factor contributing to the demise of U.S. power. The top 15 friendly nations to the United States have recently shut our country off from any clandestine information, Liddy said, be cause of indiscriminant leaks of top secret information to the press and other sources. Intelligence gathering is a norm of interna tional politics, Liddy said. “Spies are the na tions eyes and ears, and without them you are blind and deaf.” These examples, Liddy said, are how the public has lost its sense of reality. Liddy said another illusion is how the words of Thomas Jefferson were taken out of context and placed on his memorial. The peo ple rearranged Jefferson s words, he said, be lieving that if he was alive, that is how he He said a spy’s job is to discover the capa bilities of other nations, and decide what these nations’ intentions are. Another aspect which has added to this country’s decline in world power is its loss of military prowess, Liddy said. He said today’s all-volunteer army is a “hol low army” because of the low-quality serviceman. He added that many of those in the army now are in the lowest I.Q. range allowed. Liddy said it is unfair to the country to populate the armed forces with these people and expect them to defend it properly. He said the country must have intellectual sol diers like those of the Soviet Union. Man cannot be taught how to use a firing mechanism, controlled by laser, if it had ta ken him two weeks to learn how to brush his teeth, he said. Consequently, Liddy said, you can count on the draft returning. The American public cannot continue to turn its back on reality. He said the American people must be ready for war and if the country is powerful, others will not “mess with it.” Liddy said comparison of the United States to the Soviet Union is an illusion of equality and will not work any longer because of the U.S.S.R.’s dominance. He said the only way to rebuild the Ameri can people’s outlook on this society is to bring the country back to its respected position. But, he said, “There’s no cheap way to get away from illusion.” Liddy told the audience that during the time he was on trial for his part in the Water gate break-ins, and afterwards, he kept quiet and refused to cooperate with prosecutors because he was “the captain of the ship. ” He said he felt nothing could be done if only those below him on the ship spoke out. Liddy said he “believed in the presidency of Richard Nixon” at that time and still does. BUY. im.TWAPt QW WENT TMftOOOH TRE Staff photo by Greg Gammon tudcnts asking questions and seeking auto- Msc whcre a b|!c r tk>n was l, cW for ttphs mob C. Cordon Liddy Monday as he him f „i|„ winK , lis specch . alks from the Rudder Auditorium to the entors taught how to counsel students to By NANCY WEATHE RLE Y Battalion Staff [Texas A&M professors became jdents Tuesday as they listened I a psychologist from the Person- Counseling Center explain lys to detect and help students Bering from stress. The psychologist. Dr. Nick Bobrovolsky, was a guest of the ■niversity Mentors Program — a ■rogram in which faculty mem bers volunteer to counsel stu- l|ents about academic and person- al problems. * A professor should try to place imself in the student’s shoes hen counseling, he said. “A counselor needs to become mphathetic towards the person ith a problem,” Dobrovolsky aid. “Listen to what the person is lying and then paraphrase it ackto them.” Paraphrasing puts the problem n a different perspective for the indent and enables him to con- entrate on it, he said. But, he uggested, “Allow the person to Ik; you can't be an over- istener.” Dobrovolsky said some conn- ion symptoms of stress include inexplained weeping, withdrawl md inability to sleep. He suggested several simple dutions to help alleviate stress mce it is dedicated. “A common nethod is deep relaxation,” he aid. “At the Personal Counseling inter we have tapes students epttol an listen to so they can relax. ” Dobrovolsky demonstrated the class# :a P es ' messages by hypnotizing lisaudience for 10 minutes. The process involved making the pro fessors aware of their breathing habits and the way their bodies felt while they relaxed. “Relaxation is very important,” he said. “Stress builds up and then something makes it break, sometimes so severely the person might consider suicide.” In a second part to the meet ing, Ed Guthrie, assistant direc tor of academic services, pre sented 10 students who talked to the professors about situations they encounter at Texas A&M which have been stressful and frustrating to them. 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