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The College of Wooster Open Works The oV ice: 1981-1990 "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection 11-30-1984 The oW oster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1984-11-30 Wooster Voice Editors Follow this and additional works at: https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1981-1990 Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "The oosW ter Voice (Wooster, OH), 1984-11-30" (1984). The Voice: 1981-1990. 96. https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1981-1990/96 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of The oC llege of Wooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in The oV ice: 1981-1990 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Justice... is the --condition Try not Do or do not There whereby the freedom of each is is not try.-Yo- da in The Empire conditioned upon the freedom Strikes Back of others.-Emman- uel Kant WOOSTER, OHIO, FRIDAY, NOVEUBER 30, 1184 VOLUME CI NUMBER 11 J S A ADOPTS R U P US BN1 K wv amy cultural journal "Tarbut" and tary secrets." tjlncer Associ- RpLnik" ilthe term an-- arranging seminars on Jewish The Jewish Students - - your help. ated to Soviet who subiects- Vladimir was arrest- tion is asking for All STlS cm 7Zl ed in March 1971. when he and you have to do is stop by one of SKf up the authorities and freauenUy other activists were sentenced the tables which will be set Z1 JSffiSK?" to 15 days imprisonment so in Lowry and Kittredge during Tq?. Monday, People areTeniedx!t vfcas for could not interfee with the lunch and dinner on - 24th Congress of the Commu-tv- " Dec. 3 or Tuesday. Dec. 4 and variety of reasons, "securi- your a .x f beine among the most nist Party of the Soviet Union, sign name to Chanukah f lunula? , and again in May 1872 when card. These cards will be sent Ws-WASHINGT- ON to It costs fall of 1982. at the president Nteon ma4e his Mikhail Prestin. In the visit to Moscow He was nothing and will take less than 1 conference. a your delegates voted to urge Jewish ls0. V"Psned f.rteg minute of time. student organizations to take J111? SiSii? S action in aiding refuseniks to "1?, gftn'19?? i?h obtain their visas. This action rt..XS .SILJiS Gene Hare with characters Tiny Tim and Ebenezer Scrooge from the puppet production of Dickens' "A - Association at the Lb,!f- Christmas CaroL" Photo courtesy of Gene . ' ish Students u"5?,fJe m f BY CHUCK CRAIG Hare. College "adopted" a 20-- hit has to jw ffStfgS This evening. Friday, Nov. year-Sl- d refusenik named Mik- - i-- 30 tenor David Gordon will ii Tr.ct;n ?harrassment.HSr Their i.iS2apartment ui.i,,t searched, papers present a concert at a.io p.ra, Misha the son of activists is routinely Popped f Perf is and manuscripts are confiscat- - in Freedlander Theatre for the ora Vladimir and Elena Prestin. benefit of the new music build-- Vladimir Prestin worked in ed and their teleDhone has been .7ritv installations disconnected. Ironically, the ing. He wiU be accompanied Dy ii "closed security installations not. of thetw Mp. naniel Winter. Kettering 1969. then he was em- Prestins are citizens "A eiirioSiiiGS QFOI until state-th- ey Professor of Music and chair- Geo-Physic- Soviet hold Israeli ployed at the al In- of papers. person of the Department . stitute and was forced to resign citizenship From the mouths of cloth, front desk and the Alumni Emigration from the Soviet Music. stick and paper mache puppets House and are 82 for adults, $1 in 1970. In September 1970. the Gordon, a 1969 graduate of - Union is at a virtual standstill. will sound all the lively dia- -' for children under 12 years. Prestin family- applied for exit were the CoUege of booster and one sponsored Dy . only 1315 Jews we . PAhmamr 1071 tho In 1983. ioglie from Dickens "A Christ The show is -- I. l-:::.-p- I-- I corartry.'-the-inos- t accompIishel,aiKl-rta- r AlUQCi, emitted tcr the- Cartjr by Land o Scots reque -1 leave preseiMd Xes Collese' ws uuu.u v.v. -- Dolication for an exit visa is versatile jenorstenors in tnethe mumusical petites Amies Puppet Company Club, encompassing Wayne and e w- : - A - - r : . a a acrainsL-e- -. tne woria iuuuj, i am CititFtav TVw Ka maWKami VT.1m 4rMmHft- This 1079 Cinoa I ffl (9if - crime . i a i.-.-i Ihll . stu-- mand as a soloist in traditional . I e.n.,.w-AA.- government For college Qoaeg9 of Wooster. is the second year the club has ere dents, the situation is axsas-- ana coniemporary ojr-u- e, Simply constructed, but near-- brouch t the puppet mow to au"rr.J.r.rL.rr--security reaauua.- ' aiS. ior nnii.,HAn sufficient aionu. caaiuuM " iy flawless in authenticity. : the wooster. iast years snow was WOrKS spanning nearijr eiKui mlnm,t sold OUt. - and the settinra of the centuries and as many lan- story of Scrooge and Tiny Tim i Before the evening show. The guages. Anarew roner 01 me were careuiiy selected and out Wooster Brass, brass choir U HWW t .w ic ncuallv rnnscrinted New Yorker has Singlea mm t...!),., Ttun ra mnr than under the direction of facultr On December , 23, 1976, rested. r into the army, rendering him out as one of the outstanding 50 puppet, and 13 different sett member William Fay. will per-t-,; the Prestin SrihiS singers our time, January her ineligible for emigration for Wagnerian of for one production, it takes form seasonal carols. There by the KGB and in en years. Two of those ana ne is consiaerea 10 oe , company of ten to run the will also be music prior to the yew ta tte senrice wiUlout 01 s"w.. matinee, -- .Vu1 house arrest, viaaimirir hmnas aiso ". n tha wnrVc nf Jnhann"T?-Sebastian- i :m w t . a 1. --mt activist ' i. m. k. been involved in other additional five yearsM K.a,.ibecause s Bach,Baeh. havinehaving soloed at the mm. i r..n iM rhiriAHnr Rn !!SLS!ii:aeSSS ".....'he may haVC aCqUired "mm- - Continued on Page 8 Freedlander' Theater. TickeU Hare has been the production i h i hi i i i i i i !! i are on sale at Lowry Center designer for the Ohio Light U"rHtSiBiii Opera at the College of wooster since 1979. In addition, he teaches theater arts and stage design courses, at Cleveland State University. h. Jim Kapp. head football coach at the College of - Charlotte Hare is the design- 'Wooster for four seasons, resigned for personal reasons er of all the detailed costumes a effective at the conclusion of the 1984-8-5 academic year. for the puppets. Her interest in A 1982 Wooster, Kapp returned to his graduate of : costume design led the Hares alma mater in 1981 after eight years at Michigan into puppetry. Technological University in Houghton, Mich., where he "My wife and I got started in compiled a 41-36- -2 record as head coach. puppetry while teaching at the In four years as head coach at Wooster, Kapp's teams Laurel Summer Theatre School were 8-2-8. including an 0--9 slate this past season. come years ago," said Gene "I felt that this was the time to make a clean break." Hare. "We had a costume de- said Kapp. "I want to see the program do better, and I sign class where our 'students will in whatever way I can to ensure a smooth assist . designed puppet costumes, so transition." that they wouldn't be involved Kapp, a native of East Liverpool. Ohio, played in creating an entire garment. football at Wooster as an undergraduate before an injury Of they at- He his B.A. in physical course became ended his career. earned tached to their creations - and education and health from Wooster and his master's wanted them to perform. v- - degree in education at Eastern Michigan University puppet Kapp one ever Hence, the theater was. "Jim is of the finest individuals I've born.!' worked with at the College of Wooster," said athletic The Hare family has always X5 director Al Van Wie. "During his four years as head loved the Dlcken's classic, and v : . v ! football coach, he has had a genuine concern for his it was a dream come players and the physical education program." for them -- " 134-183- 5 Cootinoed oa Page , Coach Jim Kapp, retiring at the end of the The search for a successor will begin soon. f academic year. Photo by Mike Schenk t : THE WOOSTER VOICE. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 30. 1SS4 EDITORIAL Last Thursday night I sat down in front of a television after having eaten turkey, stuffing and the trimmings that accompany a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. As I sat there saying I would never be able to eat again, the national news came. on... starving children, parents walking to relief shelters ' and having to leave their children on the side of a road to die when they no longer had strength enough to walk, eight Red Cross nurses responsible. for the care of thousands of refugees in one camp- -' screaming, crying and death. Watching that story made me really think about how lucky we are to live where and how we do. We, who stice complain when chicken is served BOOK BOARD ire .-ju- a week BY Kent IfcNickle m three times within Almost everyone has some BY ANGELA MARKER course not.