. 14 Herald - Lanlern - Dispatch 8 )anuary 86
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Support Unit Meets Jan. 14 COURT HOUSE - The Cape/ Atlantic Head Injury Support Group will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday. Jan. 14. at Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital here. A panel of six headinjured victims will discuss 1 the topic. "Life After Head i Injury Is Never the Same". New Voice Club Meet RIO GRANDE - There will be a meeting of the _ New Voice Club of Cape May County 7:30 p.m., Monday. Jan. 13, in the unit office of the American Cancer Society, 15 Delsea Dr. Robert G. Beitman. M.D., will be guest speaker. The public is invited to attend.
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• Dorif Ward BUSS. BUSS — Along with being reelected freeholder goes the opportunity to be sworn into office and kiss the ladies. James S. Kiipatrick Jr. seems to enjoy that perquisite with Rosalie Sturm, left, wife of Freeholder-Director William S. Sturm Jr.. and Angela Pulvino, . the county clerk who administered his oath of office.
From The Principal By Stanley Kotzen Printip.il. lower C jpc May Regional High School
If the world has become a Global Village, then the Village Psychopath is on the loose. To the world's horror, airport terminals have become nothing more than so many forums for international terrorism and places of death and suffering for innocent bystanders in a political lunacy that mars our lives. When students returning home from study abroad are indiscriminately" slaughtered it is time to evaluate our stance on student travel and the broadening effects that visiting another country provides for these youngsters fortunate enough to share in that opportunity. THE EASTER vacation is a prime time for student travel programs, but this year parents and schools face a staggering dilemma Now that we have been told by our Department of State that Americans travelling abroad must consider themselves "at risk", we have to face a very difficult decision. Do we seize the opportunity to visit foreign countries and experience a newculture in spite of the threat of violence in ah air-^ port where a suicidal at-' tack cannot be stopped, or do we cancel our plans and surrender to the extortion of terrorists who prevent us from finding international understanding? Either way our lives have been drastically changed by those Christmas week attacks in Rome and Vienna, and the futile comments by security personnel who fell all over each other trying to deflect blame and responsibility. FOREIGN TRAVEL has always been one of those very special carrots ^available, particularly to language students, who generally plan to save their money for a European vacation in their junior or senior year. Air terminals at the start of Easter vacation each year are crowded with youngsters from all over the country on their way to Spain, Rome, France, England — this year things could be different. Perhaps the most frustrating element of this delemma is that ignorance and violence are affecting our decisions about education and understanding. If we avoid international travel, we have succumbed to the most irrational kind of extortion, but we are
making j. rational decision abou; ou- own safety. It would be wonderful if we could face the terror of the bully's threats and deal with them in some back alley, but when the bully is suicidal, his weapons are grenades and machine guns, and the alley is an air
terminal, our choices are very limited. There is a wonderful song from "The King and I" that Rogers and Hammerstein entitled "A Puzzlement". It has an all new meaning for students and their parents planning to travel abroad this year.
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