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The oV ice: 1971-1980 "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection

2-21-1975 The oW oster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1975-02-21 Wooster Voice Editors

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Volume XC Wooater, Ohio, Friday, February 21, 1975 Number 15 uoneressman admonishes priorities (v'Vi by Todd Fackler necessarily apply., it makes no Multi-later- al food aid to the Are we willing to give up dlffernece how much money you rest of the world Is a concept some of the luxuries powered, ' have, mere are certain things devised which would combine the by oil In order that we might , that can't be purchased. Gas- wealth of the Arab states with better be able to feed one oat; oline shortages , shortages of the food producing capability of ' of six person s in toe world certain types of foods, and the the United States. This plan would who are going to bed tonight conscience of our country has be managed by the United Nations. hungry, who live on a diet that become frustrated and tb some But, can the major powers keep is substandard and In many parts extent aroused. People are up with the food demands of an of the worU win be dead by asking ' questions about where Increasing world population? , morning? ; We've never been we've been and where we're go- he asked. "We're Just one jump forced to make such choices ing." . ahead of catastrophe and I don't before in this land of honey. ' During the 1950s and 60's, know If the world has the abil- .Most of thought that we could America gave away food sur- ity to produce a reserve. The take these things for granted." pluses to underdeveloped nations. World Food Conference was the So addressed Rep. Robert Ber- But as U.S. demand for oil in- beginning of an attempt to see gland (D-Mln-n.) referred to by creased, as U.S. oil reserves .what can be done and I think Sen. Walter Mondale fD-Mta- n.) depleted, Americans were forced It was a step In the right dir- m

I 'I I mi l as" "my spare tire, patched up to sell their grain to oil holding ection", Bergland said. - Jcmmnm-- . m ' Hi . but always full of wind," on such powers and. aid to lesser de- Bergland lives in Roseau, Photo by Ken Myrn occasslons as the world food veloped countries was cut by Mum. has a Ford with a 400 Rep. Bergland spoke on the "World Food Crisis" in place of pre. crisis lecture In MeGaw ChapeL. half. In 1973, America no longer cubic Inch engine, a wife and viously scheduled Sen. Mondale. ; Wednesday Feb. 19, when, the had the ability to feed the world. seven cBildren. Senator could not make an ap- pearance. As a member of the Minnesota Farmer's Union, the National Wasserman revolutionizes Revolution Farmer's Organization and a 1960's) both culminated -- have taken leading roles, the farmer In his own right, Bergland by Bill Henley mocracy that was only partially In the and completed. In episodes wherein soldiers war was actually won by the spoke an experienced manner. . " in group efforts of lower-cla- ss farmers "We've grown accustomed to . "in 1376 the fat 'cats and To Wasserman, the Revolution fired upon an angry; of; . who took arms to defend their enough lmperalists of America will was neither a triumphant move- citizens and killed four of them, having enough oil and of ' cause own areas of the country from almost anything mat we wanted celebrate the bicentennial of the ment from hopeless tyranny to resulting In a national anti-imperia- the British. list ultimate freedom, nor at the celebre Tthe Boston Massacre In mis land. We've become ac- world's first successful conflicts With other extreme viewpointa mere and Kent State.) , the war, class customed tor a notion...that If we revolution." Having dis- that statement, Harvey Wasser- "transfer of power" from one (Here "Wasserman made an really surfaced. have money we can btrc almost placed the British, the farmers anything. And key to happiness man, radical historian and or- set of "fat cats", to another. It Ironic comment on the use of the -- a new revo- ganic began on did eliminate one group of op- such events for propaganda pur- were ready to start In our society was to make a lot farmer, his talk the native "A Revolutionary View of the pressors, and It significantly in- poses. "Sam Adams and his lution against of money.- - And following that, upper and middle clas- American Revolution" a view creased the degree of democracy agitators made, a lot of mileage American of course, were the pleasures orphans In Massachusetts, It took money of the Revolution as a class In the nation, but it was aborted out of the widows and ses. that can buy. Suddenly man- the form of Shay's Rebellion, struggle and de-- before It could reach the "second of the murdered men they we find that that principle doesn't battle for . and dis- stage" of all-o- ut popular aged to conceal .that everyone which closed courts revolution against the upper killed In the Boston "Massacre rupted government through most one classes, - was a bachelor.") of the state. Ironically, of Wasserman began by pointing Commenting on the destruc- the leading figures in the sup- Raitt seeks new role out that the Bicentennial shows tion of tea In Boston harbor as pression of that rebellion was signs of being a rather"sterile" an ultimate Insult to the British Sam Adams, the revolutionary celebration of events that were Imperialists ("Property Is the agitator of earlier years. for Biblical ethics actually ''extremely violent, ex- most Important god of. Imper- The real "counterrevolution" by Stuart Brown - eentury America. The dilemma, tremely ugly" pointing to tor- ialists") Wasserman compared against the American Revolution how of the adoption of the therefore, Is to determine tures, destruction - of property the Boston Tea Party to the act consisted wit- In 1781, according "That person next to you Is to have an "effective moral and cut-of- fs of vital supplies of one of his friends In chopping' Constitution a sacrament God has put there." ness" .to contemporary society as measures that are usually down a weather tower that was to Wasserman. A decentralized,' In these few words Dr. Tom while maintaining biblical moral associated with modern revo- part of a projected nuclear plant weak, democratic government Raitt, Professor of Old Test- norms. . lutionaries and terrorists, but he considered dangerous. "I favored by the common people em- re- ament at the College of Wooster, . Raitt placed considerable which were used by the American went to the local Bicentennial was replaced by a stronger, captured the essence of the mes- phasis on the place of the com- Revolutionaries against their Committee and suggested they actionary one that better served dealing the purposes of the upper clas- sage he brought to the fifth ses- - munity In with this "counter-revolutionar- y" en- -. put . up a plaque, at the spot. ; ' Individua- - "The Constitution was ston of ' the Wooster Clergy dilemma. America's . - For some reason- they weren't ses. emtes. people Academy of Religion on Tuesday listic orientation stands In sharp Going Jnto the origins of the very thrilled with the idea." foisted on the American in Wishart Hall. Jtaltt used these contrast with the Israelite em- Revolution, he called the act of Describing the role of Mas- by a minority." Once estab- -- , corporate di- provided a strong words to pointing to the Insep- phasis on the moving from England to.Amer- - . sachusetts Colony in sparking lished, it which begins, with the ex- weapon for the upper class arable relation between faith and mension . revolutionary act in it- the Revolution, Wasserman ' lea "a ethics as he and Dr. T. Arthur community discerning mat "God and described some of the plained that Massachusetts was against further attempts at "se- self" popular revolution. Balrd, C.O.W. Professor of New . is Lord over an of life.'; IThe issues which primed colonists probably the "most democratic cond stage" Testament, addressed the topic contract to support one another for further, more direct revolt. of the" colonies, with Its "town Against the Whiskey Rebellion, lnteg-rety- to muster "The Biblical Ethic In the Mod- In living out an ethical ," He pointed out some alleged meetings" mat Involved most of Washington was able - -. - - provides the Individual government. 15,000 troops more than he ever - .- between the slowly the community In ern World." parallels one V Raitt sought to develop a with a "whole host of silent building revolt In the 17608 and "Then George in. really blew" had at his command at time foundation for personal ethics communal supporters.", We need the revolts of the 1960's. Both It be revoked the Massa- during the actual Revolution. up to Was the American Revolution based on the Old Testament, . a structure which will bold decades saw fiery campus re- chusetts charter. From 1773 to us our own commitments and hold a failure, then? Wasserman con- : giving particular emphasis to volts; bom saw "class violence" 1776 Massachusetts was a per- com- that It was a me prophetic tradition. He be-- , us accountable for those of the poor striking out against ' fect grassroots decentralized de- cluded no. significant blow for the people's gan by acknowledging the beauty, mitments. . :.'J?' ... the rich; , both found an Issue In mocracy. It was great!" ffaeo-cra- freedom "but much was left of the Israelite Ideal of a tlc the forcing of unwilling men Into Speaking of the Revolutionary model of community, but Raitt went on to explain mat a the service of the government War itself, he pointed out that undone. We still have another to fight." - model sim- second major Issue relating In upper-cla- ss representa- revolution concluded mat mis Is ' ("Impressment" of sailors while . continued on page 5 ply not valid for' twentteth- - .. continued on page 8 the 1760's and the military draft tives such as Washington may Friday, February 21, 1975 Page 2 VOICE

that tney pay put up and left undis- demands met without ques- Seriously, maybe Chuc service is is Gaver can find better out- for an average amount of turbed, it takes drivers tion. food eaten per student, per a while to become accus- The Miller Manor Inci- lets for his writing talents - quarter. When free meals Stop sign tomed to its being there. dent is not a symptom of in the future. and con- "ignorance and hostility" Mary Woodall are given to friends Think of the added food is wasted or stolen, rip-off- s . of seeing it one day toward gays, but rather a are fusion mounting the prices for everyone and not the next! This con- symptom of the end up of large num- rip-oiT- s rise. The students not uncommon fusion can kill. frustration a Food - ripping off themselves and The reason for the sign, ber of students with the homosexuality their fellow students. Dear Editor, and whomever my friend said. Is a law flaunting of cost more There has been some else it may concern: requiring traffic on a pri- by gays. If gays continue encourage al- suggestion to the fact that As I was driving south vate road to come to a full to ."sexual than guessed poorly cooked or "bad" on College Avenue from U-rave- rsity stop before entering public ternatives" and strive for instead of To the Editor; food is the cause of caf- St. this morning, thoroughfares. The section "liberation" eteria waste. No doubt this Feb. 12, I discovered the of College Avenue between seeking the professional College food services St. they so despar-ate- ly generally have a long his- Is, to some extent, true. stop sign for College Ave- University St. and Pine help that However, a large percen- nue at. the Intersec- a private road, hence need, the incidents tory of petty theft and traffic is by the stu- tage of food is wasted be- tion of Pine St. was the stop sign. The City of of ridicule and hostility enormous waste simply take un- portion surely continue and dents who eat within their cause students missing. This is not Wooster gave this will too much. The other day . back to possibly The Food Service common, at least hot in of College Ave. quite increase. midst. while cleaning tables in recent months the sign the COW several years ago. Joe Hudson, at the College of Wooster no exception. Although Lowry" I came across an keeps disappearing and re- My friend also said that Is entire bowl of mustard and if were-someone- 's would be replaced many campaigns have been appearing as it the sign cur- around twenty, some un- yo--yo or jack-in-the-b- ox. the Traffic Com- Is Chuc's initiated in order to because waste used wasted cookies. This This is at once mission requires it to be tail massive theft and uncom- con- Lowry and Kittredge di- occurrence is not both humorous and dan- there. So, to save us Society column in mon. Sign-thi- ef- who- -. ning halls, the problem still gerous. Some Individual(s) fusion. Of course, all good Wo- evidently doesn't want the ever you are please quit all? remains. relevant to I suspect that most stu- oster students know about COW or the City to tell your thieving ways! such things as inflation and him when to stop, and, dis- dents who rip off Food Ser- To the Editor: vice feel that they paid for famine. Perhaps they Just liking the inconvenience of Sincerely, don't see direct relation- .stop sign, has brought While I am sure that it, and they have a right the Matthew Sharp. everyone relieved to take How often have ships between their glut- about change with a min- Is to it. and world And know that "classy" parties you heard the old line: tonous habits imum of red tape. break-fast- One day soon per- naturally we goodnatured-l- y are not extinct from the 'Well, I didn't eat i" crises. C.O.W. campus, I doubt Without consuming son X, Wooster graduate, applaud this person's Gays need will step yout Into the world the general VOICE . breakfast, they feel that - success...as long as it that a- pecan readership is all that In- they are entitled to steal a and pay 950 for seem8 harmless enough from roll and: stop to think how. and especially If we, too, liberation terested in learning about comparable amount offood. the particulars of these The problem is, however, good he had it way back are annoyed by the same And perhaps he will Uly sign. But I have quit their ways events. I refer specifically that six boxes of cereal when. to an article which ripped off for late night not to waste what he applauding. Soon after the To the Editor, Hopefully, he will re- yo cam- appeared in the February snacking more than the has. yo-- routine began I called The gays on tills is spect things the good a friend at the WoosterCity pus do not need to be lib- 14 issue of the VOICE (and student would probably the which appeared eaten if he reported Lord gave him. Maybe then Service Building to i find erated to pursue their another have January 17). to Lowry at 8:00 am sharp he will share with his out the reason for the sign. homosexual ways, but around stealing be- If the author rates nearly every morning. friends rather than Although I disliked it rather need to be liberated don't from them. - . ways. Homo- half a page in which to What most students ing there, I wanted the FROM those Karen McClintock' sign to be up or down sexuality is unnatural. entertain us (the uninvited, realize about their food permanently. Someone can Gays are people who the class-le- ss masses) easily be hurt when one need psychiatric help. with details of guests' driver expects another to The recent practical Joke modes of : transportation, Will it be stop and the other doesn't involving Miller Manor attire, comments, etc., stop. In tills case a driver cannot be condoned, but from only ONE party, per- on might easily neither can the degree to haps, he should be given Ford in '76? Pine enter Maybe tiie Intersection expecting which tills campus tol- more- - space still. by Tom C ashman icy instead of by individ- a driver on College to stop. erates the activities of the we of the non-el- ite set uals running for cover to A pedestrian may cross gay caucus. It is a sad day . should demand full "cover- President Ford has been escape prosecution, every 2:00-A.M.-st-udy ' the street in front of a car, Indeed when gays are not age of in office now for more than Few certainly question again expecting it to stop. only accepted as normal break-over-popc- orn six months and one could the honesty of .Mr.Ford-th- ere Even when a traffic sign people but also have their basn on campus. say that thus far be has are no worries of performed his duties ade- "skeletons" in his closet. quately. However his term He has conducted the office in an of pleasantness year esospt Member of United Stata a Frees Association and is beginning to get rough air Published weekly during the academic with obstacles which will ' and unlike his predecessor, holidays and examination parloda by tha etodente of Ohio Newspapar Aaeociation. Entered aa sacond he has held frequent news Opinion, expressed la ad- - class matter in tha Poat Office. Wooatar. Ohio. Sub-- decide his future. tha College of Wooeter. In assessing one conferences. He has also Itorlals and features are not1 necessarily those of tha scriptlon rates: $6.00 per year, second class; $9.00 Ford, -- not resorted to "executive representing par year. First Class. . must first of all take into staff and should not be construed aa k ' privilege" in. covering up policy. ' ' account how he became administration . President. Gerald Ford as- the revelations the illegal of the CIA. Most National Advertising Representative: National This' newspaper welcomes signed letters to the sumed tiie helm of a gov- activities doubl.-pace- d , and complete dis- of all, tiie President has Educational Advertiaing Service. . editor. Letters should be typed, ernment in -- courage preferably under 300 words. Address all Carres poo-dan- ce array, unparelled in Am acted with political do- The offices re located on the bottom floor of to VOICE, The College of Wooater, Wooster, lean history. His problems in not portraying our

-- rosy Lowry Center. Box 3187; Phonei (216) 364-123- 4, Ohio'. 44691. ,: were further complicated mestic situation in Ext. 433. by his not being elected, colors. He stated flatly, of the union Rodman, which forces him to operate "the state Ri chord Kiel bowicx...... -.M.E- dl tor STAFF: . Chuc Gaver, Sua Tow, Corrino not good." Shop-por- d. without a mandate and with- is ...Managing Editors Sua F lotto, Nancy Smith, Jim Kioff, Ann Jeff Adair, Bill Henley...... Norma out having an electorate But it is that state of Sports Editor Anno McCuno, Nancy Thompson, Glonn FerbiiinHHHniHiMnMHM Sprang, Nancy K arm an, Bovorly Harrison, David endorse his proposals. It the union and his plans to i ffI c M ana gar J enn a Sm iluwMHwiiHiHiMmmiO Kopponhawor, - Judy Celling, Maria Marapoo, to credit rectify it which have pitch- ' Advertising Manager is the President's Roy Bolos Debbie Davies. Jennifer Robinson, , Liable that he has gotten the gov- ed Mr. Ford into trouble. Kan Myers...... Photo Editor Wright, Sally Webb, Kathryn Jonos,and Nan Secor. ernment moving again.The With industrial production Dion Holt, Cathy Turnor.MMHad Copy Readers now going down and unempioy- - Manager government is being Bobbie BrownM...... Circulation administered . by officials to tho Editor continued on page-- 4 Pawl Kono ...... Assistant concerned with public pol . 4 Friday, February 21, 1975 VOICE PageJ Artists do express their own death wishes By Chuc ization. Remarkable as mat technology that is sealing cultural comment. Note the TOS ( now one of the most may seem coming from an their crypt. Her latest work deaths , of feminist poets popular artists on the ill a . 1 v artist (small "a") there is a sphere made up of the and essayists: Sylvia Plath, Coast). "a" I Vnrtw have cultural are a great many Artists tubular plastic extensions Anne Sexton, and Elizabeth Is a cultural death wish death wishes. Nedra said (capital "A) who conclu- that house a certain brand Gould Davis. I mean you simply a psychotic (small KNOW symptom of these die other night: 'Have I ded likewise.) . of tampons. The sphere even the "Queen" "p") end-of-the-w- people told you my orld encloses a plastic vagina of western morals and Crazy (capital "C") VAN-DERBC- mo- theory?" Having one My friend AVIV A Cooke overflowing with empty manners: MISS AMY LT who paint, dance, make of my own, I was eager is studying sculpture cans of feminine hygiene has even "jump- vies, or construct poems? for another version so and drawing at the Cor- spray. ed" into this form of avant-gar- de Or is the function of art "yes" I said. coran Gallery in Washing- theatre... Other In western culture to alert "Well. I think we will ton D.C. What to do. "creative" people have be- me populace to trends, pat- see, it Nedra said, (we gun to conceive funeral art. terns, and directions in the con-la- st arran- larger society (e.g. the in- being people our age, "see- AVIV A's solution is a Some artists have Note: the 'ritualistic ing it" meaning witnessing ditch attempt to con-- ceived suicide as a form gements of Brazillian structive aims of Greek the end of western civil front Americans with the of personal expression or sculptor JONAS DOS SAN-- theatre)? Or perhaps the pre- dictions of the artists I've mentioned represent only a pessimistic clique in the time artistic "community" (ex- 'Fantasia9 will survive test of tremely small "c")? (No. 6). a very Whichever explanation one by Niall W. Slater PHONY' Here is chiseled from the ing. I found it interesting more o-v- say world inhabited by fauns black stone of the Disney avoids any ert chooses must coal - that one than forgot- unicorns, centaurs, and mountain, the eyes leaking Christian symbolism about each of us It is too often "end-Is-ne- ar" unmls-takea- ble all the ten that the cinema is man' s flying horses, presided the inner hellish fire. The here. There is an over by a gloriously in- piece ends as the tolling religious tone to messages of these artists newest art form .only some combined. 75 years old, while dknQe, ebriated Bacchus, and a bell, from a little church the ending, but it is deistic thundering The cen perhaps . Tennyson's music, painting and sculp- Zeus. scatters the evil spirits, or My hunch is, by the time ture reach back 50 millen-i- a taurs come in all colors, ending the night's revel. higher pantheism. one sorts it all out and at least. We should re- including blue and violet, This segues neatly into the decides whether we are member that 100 years which may cause an un- AVE MARIA in which the (or In a . FANTASIA has closed in dead or alive hence most of the "ma- thinking shudder. Actually, forest,, through . which a state from the one of the Roman poets candle procession Orrville by now, but watch transitory sterpieces" hailed each lit over latter to the former), me year by critics will be (Virgil, I believe) in speak- moves, slowly shapes it- for it at the upon Gol- be- This a answer will be us: forgotten or lost, even as ing of such a pastoral self Into a cathedral spring break. is APOCALYPSE (ultimate den Age, speaks of red, yond which, as we look masterpiece of the cinema hundreds of silent films "A"). . are .now; ,500 years from yellow., and purple sheep through, the dawn is break that everyone should see. now will JC nIZEN KANE grazing t on the hillsides, a symbol tar or . BIRTH OF A NATION, the colors classic by anyone's stan- wealth and splendor. The dards, still be viewed and slender figures of fairies M.D. enjoyed? I don't know. and even fire demons else--' Harvard for consciousness There is one film I am where also show the in- widely acknowledged of sculp- by Bruce Arnold most of us, I think we can all more and unquestloningly sure will fluence classical remember similar episodes. He employed. survive that test of time: ture. feels this Is evidence (although The main problem with his Walt Disney's FANTASIA. Disney's color palette is celebrating - It win serve my purpose 'uat he Is not pretending to labor- book (which he at least doesn't This represents the artis- superbly rich, atory accuracy) of a need, as deny) Is Its placing of so-call- ed then-ne- w as well this time around to re- peak of the Disney the medium of any psychological like meditation tic view somebody else's thoughts basic as other "natural" means, studio's animation work,' Technicolor, but not too to about and Inte- above drug use In exploring this suf- on stoned consciousness, as to drive, learn a classic in its field and . fulsome. There are grate ways of viewing This Is a logical contra- con- go more deeply into my own. alternative area. in the history of cinema ficient monochrome and Interpreting what we call diction of what he says about a grey and white Bur-gene- as a whole. trasts; I have just read, on Bill r's reality. He goes on to do two consciousness expansion, for Briefly, FANTASIA is a snow scene or a lava flow advice (thanks, BinO, things: First, he says that drugs positive drug use as he sees it visual exposition and in- in varying intensities of a very Interesting book called are only a precipitant for these should be just as valuable, and terpretation of music, ran- red, to provide relief and THE NATURAL MIND, by An- other states; that the ability to more accessible, as non-us- e. ging from a Bach cantata maintain interest. drew Well. Well, who has an enter these states Is inherent In Lefs face It, meditation takes and fugue to Stravinsky's FANTASIA has not been M.D. from Harvard, has been the human mind, and not In the years; LSD is available today. RITES OF SPRING. Disney universally acclaimed. Involved In drug research since drugs themselves. To support This Is not to say that LSD is simply played the music Strauinsky particularly the early 1960's. On this, and this, he points out the use of a shortcut; any given individual for bis artists and told -- disliked the interpretation on bis own experience, is mis physical exercise and meditation has Just the same problems fac- them to draw what they of his. RUES OF SPRING book based. In Asia to accomplish this air ing him no matter how he chooses are awe- which he wrote as a ballet. teration. He then claims that " to deal with it. The logical ex- saw. The results argument some. Though the pieces The original was a pagan His thesis Is mat man has a It Is the Integration of the' new treme of Weil's for non-dr- ug the inanity usecL for FANTASIA do not rite welcoming the spring need to experience other states awareness that Is the key to the methods is with a sacrifice. In FAN- than the or- Issue, not the experience Itself. .of Ed Rosenfeld's "250 Ways specifically interrelate, of consciousness hope of TASIA it becomes the story, waking, dreaming, You will recall In my last col- to Get Htgh," of which I certain elements the dinary three: superfic- am umn that I placed the emphasis all present saw the Disney style are pro- of the earth's evolution. and non-dre- sleep. He Illus- such Of course, it s unlikelymat by pointing out the on the fact of having stoned or . iality. nounced throughout, trates this not as the anthropomorphism any Interpretation would use In almost every culture of straight consciousness, and non-us- e) of drugs. Next week I'll look Into one natural suit Stravinsky as well as consciousness-expandin- g drugs, on the use (or and the recurrent thing, system of positive drug use, romantic his own. and In our own culture the ten- He says much the same settings. The -- terms one that should fulfill Well's view of nature, trans- FANTASIA closes with a dency of kids to experiment with In such strikingly similar ferring flowering thistles pair of expertly contrasted this through whirling, hyperven- that I would be guilty of plag- criteria more than adequately. pieces, choking each other iarism had I read the book before- For nowj I would like to sum- sky's tilating, or -- into Russian folk dancers Mussor gives examples of thought were the for Tchaikovsky's NUT- NIGHT ON BALD MOUN- to black out. He traces his own hand. He next marize what I mush- TAIN and Schubert s" AVE experience, progressing from societal problems , unsolvable In Important themes of his book; CRACKER SUITE or context, which could that stoned rooms into graceful Orien- MARIA. The Mussor sky tbe dizziness of childhood play- the current I mink, like Well, one of piece a strict adaptation grounds to the sniffing of ethe- be positive forces If viewed from consciousness Is a demonstrable tal chorus, is the is perspective. For In- need; that It may well great charms of the Disney of the scene the composer rise substances, to the use of a different human and hallu- stance, the "drug problem" prove to fulfill societal needs style lists, a witches sabbath aUohol, marijuana, drug Moun- cinogens to .produce altered would be no problem at all, If as well and mat rational There a strong class on the top of Bald tool is of Although Instead of attempting to stamp use can be a very useful icizing tendency, too, par- tain. The giant demonic states consciousness. and over Dr. Well is perhaps more aware out use and users, the benefits In discovering the nature ticularly obvious in the se- figure which presides of positive means of using the application of this Beet-Vnre- n's one of of what be' was doing, and why,' quence portraying the revelries is the "problem drugs' were to be PASTORAL SYM most powerful in the film; In these early experiments than Friday, February 21, 1975 Page 4 VOICE THE Ford has some '76 roadblo clis continued from page 2 his" recently concluded 17 of the population. . conservative friends. in the how- : . budget outrage SHOP meni at 8.2 and rising, They have acted as though elections. ; . . The critics on both sides of the he has given his long time Liberals " and most De- ever, was the request for an additional half billion In th Hills Shopping fence nave termed his bud- friends a slap in the face. mocrats are also upset by Coll9 Gntr corrupt gov-erm- ent 262-8S4- pro-- to Phon 6 get wits its $51 billion Sen. Goldwater has called the President's budget r dollars the in South Vietnam. , deficit "a rearrangement die deficit intolerable and posals. Although not con? of the chairs aboard the Sen. Howard Baker of Sen- sisternly averse to deficit This amount Is above and Those Titanic." ate Watergate Committee spending, they do like to see beyond the $1 billion alr- Comes Conservative disenc- fame is now testing the. some positive programs eady appropriated. Pres- 'Cotton hantment with Ford stems Presidential waters. for the cost. There, are no... ident Ford .still fails to To Harlem' from a number of things. Last weekend a group of new significant social pro- see-that-- we as Americans and--o- enough Their first gripe was over both in ut grams outlined in the bud- have paid a high cops are at conservatives, gov- it his amnesty plan for Viet- of government, met to get. There is a plan to cut price to the dictatorial - . again i nam draft dodgers and de- decide if the time was right the amount of aid . to the ernment of President serters. The appointment for the launching of a third aged. There is a mammoth Thieu . including 50,000 of the "liberal" Nelson party. Ronald .Reagan ap- defense proposal of $94 lives. Rockefeller to the Vice-Preside- ncy peased the group, at least billion and there was an With' all of these'clouds did little to temporarily, to stay and attempt to raise the price of doom for Mr. Ford, he two-pa-rty gone of wayto soothe . their consciences work within the of food stamps which would has out tie either. Most of all it is structure - and work out affect 17 million needy A-mer- lcans, make it that no matter the budget which has hurt their differences. that was quickly what, state the nation is in the President. - Some Republicans feel and overwhelmingly de- next year, he will be a The deficit does not sit that by' the time the pri--. feated by the Congress. candidate for president. To well wim the ideology of begin to heat up, Further upsetting to his do mis, Gerald Ford will maries to improve his re- President Ford will be a opponents were the Pres- have -. pushover. Even worse from ident's requests, for tax lations with- the Congress ; public by taking.' position, if the do- cuts for the major com- - . and the their ' mestic situation continues panles --and his rebate pro--, into greater consideration th-- needs of the public. ro;:dy to deteriorate, . the GOP gram which will currently will meet even greater dis- funnel 43 of the total re- CLEANERS aster in 1976 than they did bate back to the wealthiest 236 S. Marfcat EELock & Jim Buckley Present A Mammoth Films Release STUDENTS! Special to 4 I I v3fV t-t- V M TV t BACK College of J CHARLESTON Vooster ELU2 Students I : I & ATS AN OUTRAGEOUS PAROOV SLEEPING BAGS x. i7 j iriirmraR

TECHNICOLOR From Warner Bros. "?S1 CLEANED... A Warner Cornrnuneawjns company $ A you BE Friday 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $3.50 THEJUDGEI in Matr (Offr good through March) College expenses can be paid safely and surely with N'T if: u) cctca NOT TO BE CONFUSED .a low-co- st WITH THE ORIGINAL . 2J "FLASH GORDON" Store Honrs: Mon. thru Thur. 9:30 to 5:30 NOW IN ITS 2ND IT'S SATIRICAL! WOOSTER THEATRE PERSONAL (J CHECKING ACCOUNT T01 CAMPY! Friday and Saturday Night 9 SMUT FILLED WEEK! IT'S 211 E. LIBERTY ' r.

; .-- PLUS "CRUNCH BIRD"! IT'S SEXY! 264-33- 46 . OR You can take chances by COMPLETE STOCKS making payments with los-ab- le cash or expensive OF money orders. ; cuff: -- Judge for yourself and r open your ThriftiCheck Personal -- Checking Ac- Men's & Women's count today. CHECKS ARE Clothing PERSONALIZED - FREE ' NO MINIMUM and , BALANCE IS Furnishings REQUIRED ; Amm Including cotton denim Hares with bottor front or zipper styles. i mum DESIGN YOUR RINGS....

Good UmtuaOm Oar 1H PubBe Hoar W . Ohio AT WHITE JEWELERS Friday, February 21,J975 VOICE PageS

sligh view history When a Lady is applauded of by million 30 people, - In an continued from page 1 Interview, Wasserman as- - eernlble cycles and that the It wouldn't make a good story at she owes them an encore. how serted that "the two go hand cycles are getting increasingly an. - human race an Asked be came to assume - The has the role of in band; organic farming is as ' shorter, portending a period of almost unlimited capacity for aTadlcalhlstorian", -- ' Wasserman said oat he started . radical a political" issue as any massive change coming soon. adaptation; it will be tested, but oat as a" conventional history other in a. lot of ways our sur- "All history is the story of it win survive." . vival depends on He changing student, bat realized, the rela- it." . human consciousness. Wasserman's historical , that using chemical I - tionship between history and Periodically the human . method involves trying to take political views after he met hls--, fertilizers on- - soil is "like : system' is faced with the choice sources from the common peo- tortan Daniel Boorstin, described heroin to a junkie they destroy of collapse or qualitative ple "In general written ma- the natural fertility of the : -- by Wasserman as a "walking soU." change." Soon the choice win terial, which is the base of most come again, "and the change product mid- war crime". - ' that. history, is a of the The between the hu-mohg- In difference win be required will be of ous dle so you have to work addition, he commented, "i standard approach to history and classes, ran Into some really potent hash- magnitude; perhaps as harder to find the people's view- his "radical" approach, Was- ish in Istanbul 1967 and significant as the change from point. I take the things poor in It serman said. Is mat while ' really colored my views of his- ape to man. As ape advanced people say seriously. What they ' " standard historians study so- --. . ,. to man, man will be forced to say and do the most important tory." - ciety the top down" Is He told "from become something higher than thing." In writing his history, of his Involvement concentrating on Presidents and man. . to make understand- with the Liberation News Ser- conspicuous he tries it other "leaders" ' vice "the Associated Press of ' able by the people, avoiding the be to focus upon . the underground newspapers") tries "the He believes that the occult obscurity he feels some histor- Winirr Brae movements of the vast bulk of sciences and gifts, such as as- again pmcnu and now - the collapse of that ians adopt for Its own sake. people". : somewhat chaotic trology aM .clairvoyance, win In .closing, he commented estimable bat general, Presidents have change. My organization - eventually fb In be part of this "Soon briefly on his campaign against led been a poor reflection of human may his becoming an organic farmer astrology be as Important the dangers of nuclear power. consciousness." and respected nu- Fair in - a science as "Nuclear power is totally un- Massachusetts. "The Vietnam war was en- clear physics." ' Asked bow . organic farming necessary, ecologically insane, Lady we were taken for your and radical history fit together, dedor rather Asked whether be believed the utter disaster to health and out of It by the people, not by human race might fail to make safety, and a fast road to ruin WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDS people BTAMMrMO Nixon. The made the the necessary changes and per- in economic terms." New Deal, not FDR." ish Instead, Wasserman said he AUDREY HEPBURN REX HARRISON Sierra slates his- Wasserman believes that does not believe mis can TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION' - GOLD STAR energy tory is a series of clearly dls- - happen "it would be unesthetic. talks STORE147 The Sierra Club is sponsoring Saturday 7:00 & 9i30 p.m. two different programs during Aquarium Supplies... In Mataar the coming week. The first will - r orring ii...Mtxd Nuts be Alternate Energy and V mmm J Sources " - mm is scheduled for Monday Feb. 24 at 4:30 p.m in the Pit. Profes- ... about saving your f - Introductory offer to all... sor Elwell, from the Physics -- COLLEGE OF WOOSTER STUDENTS " Department, and OsO money Professor with a I 10 OFF with this coupon on or before - - good, from the Geology De-- ; f March 15 JA daily-rat- ' partment, will speak about e " the0 5 ? globe's resources of fossil ' ft GIFTS FURNITURE! WROUGHT IRON -- ! - fuels - oil, natural gas,andcoal-an- d ,savings account BASKETS what the alternate sources . . .. J ' BEAUTIFUL..,. DISTINCTIVE,,. UNIQUE.. of energy are. . The advantages I and problems of solar, geother- - and DIFFERENT mal, nuclear, ' and wind power will be discussed, and mere win - THE WOOD SHOPPE -- be a chance for questions and First Federal answers. The second program is a slide talk on Stxipmining by senior Annie Brlggs. She will speak about strlpmlnlng practices, the . ecological dangers Involved, the need for regulation and legls- - -- lation, alternate methods of Singers, musicians, extracting coal, and will show dancers, technicians, slides on strtpmined areas of The program will be pre-- magicians, banjo Ohio. players, acrobats, . seated twice - in Douglass lounge on Tuesday, Feb. 25 at 4:30 'ROFFLER,TRAINED HAIR STYLIST" piano players, p.m. and in Babeock lounge on yZ7S puppeteers, MEN'S HAIR STYLING Wednesday, Feb. 26 at the same novelty acts . . . 7 time. - , it takes all kinds of

V talent to entertain Cedar Point's 2.500.000 summer of... PETES ' BARBER SHOP guests, and the search is on. So, check the audition schedule, polish up your act and come show us your Men's hairstyling talent. Technicians, come for an interview with Cedar Live Shows. YOU'LL COME ALIVE IN '751 rj " Point's WORLD-WID- relaxing E Hair AUDITION AND INTERVIEW SCHEDULE

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"rrv."j ,-..(- Scot Grapplers stage; Ireyraere setira defeating nationally ranked Wahash 114-11-1

Se-br- on (NEWS SERVICES) A team "Everyone gave U0V ex-clai- med 134. Bill Reese took fourth at fourth at 167. Senior Paul desire can win. When everyone, Ober-lin- 4- -0 to 's Including gave up came of age. . an ecstatic assistant 142 while Kevin Walton won lost a close match this writer, on to In one of the most stunning coach Gary Fowler. "When the over Russ Plscus for third at Leo Sanulk at 190 finish them, they didn't give up on world was crumbling around them 150. second. themselves. upsets In Wooster College mat everyone the Fighting Scot grap- earlier in the year, they Just At 158 Dean Walker finished The Scots proved to Friday, the Scots host Capital. history, and plers edged nationally .ranked kept In mere shooting and wrest- fourth and Mike Serrin took Saturday that determination It win be a good match, Wabash College 114-1- 11 to take ling. the Wooster Invitational Wrest- "This team has the most po- - ' ling Tournament Saturday. tentlal I've .seen while at Wo- two, drop one 12- win Mighty Wabash, sporting a -4 oster," he continued. "You Scotties might find ' other teams with shooters scored 12, and Kim Fischer dual meet record entering the by Janet Smelts treble self, the outside ' tournament, was picked by all more Individual skills but mere found their marks. Wooster's tossed In 10 points. Wooster to win the seven team event. isn't another team In the nation Three more games under the offense slipped back into taking maintained a 2--3 defense, po- Wooster had won only one dual that has more desire." varsity Scotties' belt, one loss, fewer shots, but turnovers were sitioning for the rebounds,and meet all year, the partial result Wooster's victory proved just against Mount St. Joseph, 64-4- 6, down and passes and teamwork adjusted well to the Wittenberg of their opposition forfeiting five mat. and two wins. Last Saturday were working, for the Scotties,. defense. weight classes. Every Scot finished in the top the women beat Wittenberg for Neither the varsity nor the jay- Two In a row put the Scotties To look with hindsight on the four places with Bovers and 177 the first time ever on Witt's vees were able to do much back In the plus column again, tournament, one could say the pound Karl Lohwater taking home court,' and then followed against Cincinnati's Mount SL as Monday's victory against OWU Scots were ready when Chuck first. Lohwater defeated pre- with a.Monday night victory over Joe, but Wittenberg was defi- makes the varsity record 5-- 4. Snyder (126) opened the meet for viously undefeated Daryl Smith Ohio Wesleyan, 62-4- 3. nitely a different story. Wooster with a 7- -0 decision over of Oberlln in an overtime ref- The junior varsity hasn't been The varsity faced a Witt team Flexibility Is the key word for to make the fi- Sab Megwa of DePauw. eree's decision as lucky. First, a bad loss to that has been basically the same the Wesleyan game, and the Scot-ti- es With heavyweight Bill Bovers'. nals. ML SL Joe, 67-2- 5. But in- - the for the last three years, Its had to be flexible to get pre- championship victory over Wrestling against Wabash's next game the offense came prime feature being a 64" around the confusion of Wesley-an-'s Gregg Kallfut the Lohwater viously undefeated Pat Rale in finals, through on the side of consis- player. alternative 2--3 and player-to-play- er 8- a-lot- -3 championship. ,' . of Kenyon, the seeming miracle won for bis tency as they downed Wittenberg "We knew they'd use her defense. became reality. Bovers victory At 118, Ken Frankel defeated 41-3-L reports Coach Nan Nichols. 7-- gave the Scots the three point Spencer Craln 4 for third. "The big difference was that "Due to our coverage, they Scoring high in the OWU game . win. Snyder lost 6--4 in the finals to we attempted more shots,' said couldn't feed the ball to her as was Sue Welch, with 14 points, But it was a team effort and Kurt Roscow to be runner-u- p at Coach Nlkki McCarthy. "We had much as they wanted to. She Brenda Meese with 13 points, had led the 126. mostly, on re- where individuals the . momentum, too, from the scored. 24 points, and Kim Fischer with 12 points. Scots In their previous matches, Rob Seltz won 6--0 against Wa- middle of the first half to the bounds, but last year she scored group mat they won. at ; was a bash's Rick Aten for third . game Frlday,when it as end of the game." Teamwork 34." . .. Next is mis and aggressive rebounding were The Scotties' shooting per- the Wooster women travel to also aids to the Scotties. centage was up in the Witt game, Columbus to play Ohio Domin- double- -- game . Monday night the jayvees lost and four Scotties managed a ican. .The last, home will -figure - - a close,: one to Ohio. Wesleyan, . performance. Sue be a toughie nemesis Ashland 3 5-3- 1.'. , "Although the Wooster Welch scored 20 polnts,Brenda and the Scotties clash on Febr- defense was Its usual impene- - Meese and Evelyn, Campbell uary 24. Sports, Society Wrestlers by Glenn Forbes they are becoming much velopment in terms of the more competitive, that the previous development of The Fighting Scot wres- old "social activity" at- men's sports. The women tlers deserve a great deal mosphere is leaving' wo- Involved will decide if they of praise for their accom- men's sports probably for want high powered pro- plishments of last week- good. Women's sports, it grams and all those pro- end in defeating nationally . seem 8, are moving very grams entail or if they ranked Wabash in the Wo- quickly along the same road want to try to avoid the oster Invitational Wrestling that men's athletics have difficulties this type of de- Tournament. The Scot followed. velopment has brought to grapplers, who had had a V Title DC of the Ed- the men. disappointing season up to ucational Amendment Act that time, came out ready is interpreted to mean mat, to wrestle and showed the for example, women should Personally, as much as rest o f the tournament redeve as much scholar- I deplore the state of high pretty money any powered men's collegiate that they were a ship as men at so do I hope good bunch of wrestlers. given university, the wo- athletics, that Things are definitely look- men's basketball team at that women's athletics ing up for wrestling at UCLA will most definitely don't follow the same pat- Woo. have to produce. The tern. On the other hand, coach's job will be on the though, it wouldn't be so line and she will probably bad to be (in the tradition turn to the same recruiting of Florida's "Gator Ge- While I was in Chicago practices as the men's tters") a "Scottie Getter." doing the research for the team (arid- - possibly the feature story on the U. same abuses). of Chicago which appeared Women's sports have a In 1898 the world land was last week, I talked to wo-- v. somewhat unique oppor-- . speed record 39.24 3f(c men's athletic director tuMty to monitor their de-- miles per hour. Mary Jean Mulvaney about some of the changes taking Tickets (or the OAC Basketball Tournament are on sale place in women's sports. in the Physical Education Office., Tickets for the Fri- She pointed out first that day night game at Kenyon will be on sale until 4:00 p.m. on Friday - advance price $1.50 (2.50 at the door). THE BEVERAGE CENTER Tickets for the Saturday night game at Wooster will be 927 E. Bowman on sale until 5:00 p.m. on Saturday general admission 50, reserved $24)0 in advance ($2.50 and $3.0U at the OPEN! 9 AM. 10:30 P.M. SI. HON. THRU THUKS. door). All students, faculty, and administration must 9 A.M. tli30 PJi. purchase tickets for this event since it is not a College 200 W. LIBERTY FRIDAY. SAT. event. ' Friday, February 21, 1975 VOICE Page 7 Tankers streak stopped at ten by Grove City

(NEWS SERVICES) ' "Grove Grove's J. Drummond and Mount Union swam only half from Batavla, N.Y., broke the (G), 2, Wilson (W), 3. Tim City was do than us, they 50-ya- better Wurl led Wolverine scorers with of the total events. Accordingly, school record in the rd 2:07.01. Just had better times," said 10 points each. Drummond took they had difficulty collecting freestyle (22.89). It was mis Diving, One Meter - Wurl (G), coach Jim Stauffer explaining first place finishes in the 50 em- qualified 'aim Di- - Schoen-fel- points necessary to avoid time mat for . won, Hadden (W), 2, d me College 100-ya- rd of Wooster swim and freestyles and Wurl, barrass meat. vision m championships. Wilson (W), 3. Points: 244.55. team's 72--41 loss Saturday likewise, on the one and three-met- er Wooster deeply felt the losses swam his fastest time this sea- 200 Yard Butterfly - Frey (G), noon. This double-du- al 1000-ya- meet boards. of Scott Schwelger and Bob Clark son In the rd free. The won, Dursteln f.G), 2, Hardy action In Armlngton ended the Grove Cltys excellence also ' to Illness. Schwelger, who us- Scots also crunched . the pool (W), 3. Time: 2:06.57. - Scot winning 10. to 200-ya- 400-ya- streak at enabled them shatter- four ually collects firsts in the rd record In the rd free re- 100 Yard Freestyle - Drummond Mount Union, la Its first year pool records. Drummond made fly, was out with the flu. lay (3:30.48). . (G), won, Hammond (W), 2, come-from-behi- nd of collegiate swimming, was de- co-capt- a fabulous Clark, a Scot aih, was Saturday; the Scots will enter- Halom (G), 3. Time: 50.18. molished from all sides as Wo- victory over Wooster s Ted struck by mono. tain the Hiram Terriers in an 200 Yard Backstroke Wilson oster 100-ya- rd and Grove City clobbered Hammond to fracture the "We have no excuses," said OA.C dual meet. It Is scheduled (W), won, Fisco (W), 2, Bar- the Purple Raiders 98-- 9 and free standard (50.18). P. Stauffer. "This was a good meet to begin at 4:00. ton (G), 8. Time: 2:06.4. 95-- 5. ' These two losses dropped DeMerritt, an able distance for us, simply because you can't GROVE CITY 72 - WOOSTER 41 500 Yard Freestyle - Bralnard 0-- their record to 3. Wooster is . man, displayed tremendous en- continue to swim against weak 400 Yard Medley Relay - Grove (G), won, Griffith (W), 2, now 14-- 3. durance as "he clipped five teams and hope to improve. We City (Tomalewskt,Keiser,Freyf Boaworth (W), 3. Time: 5:24.3. (11-- 1000-ya- Grove City 0 boasts one of seconds from the rd free won't meet a better team than Drummond), won, . Wooster 200 Yard Breaststroke - Weston 200-ya- top college rd -- the division teams in record (10:51.5). In the Grove City. But I thought we (Fisco, Harlng, Hardy,Marks), (G), won, Clark (W), 2, Kelser the nation. Their versatility was IM, R. Dursteln captured did a heckuva job! Everyone 2. Time: 3:49.8. ' (G), 3. Time 2:27.2. evident as they placed 11 firsts first place In record time (2: did their best times. What else 1000 Yard Freestyle - DeMerritt against Wooster and 12 against 07.1). And finally, a combined could you want? I felt Hammond (G), won, Brunk (G), 2, Wilson Mount. Quality, --depth, and a team effort shed four seconds and Fred Wilson were really (W), 3. Time 10:51.$. Diving, Three Meter - Wurl'G) balanced attack appeared to be in the" 400-ya- rd medley relay, outstanding today." 200 Yard Freestyle - Vanslckel won, Hadden (w), 2, McLaugh- their specialties. (3:49.8). Hammond, a Junior co-capt-ain (G), won, Bosworth (W), 2, lin (G), 3. Points: 246.65. Bralnard (G), 3, Time 1:51.88. 400 Yard Freestyle Relay -- Wooster 50 Yard Freestyle - Drummond (Hammond, Each, Bos-.wor- th, (G), won, Hammond (W), 2, Clark), won Grove City Harriers top Kenyon, Oberlin Hanlum (G), 3. Time: 22.8. (DeMerritt, Webb, Fenton, 200 Yard Individual Medley -- Tomashewskl), 2. Time: 3:30. (NEWS SERVICES) The when Scot Ned Compton finished Of coarse we have quite a Dursteln (G), won, Weston . 49. Wooster Fighting Scot track ' fourth in the 55 yard dash with bit of talent in those upper team evened Its dual meet a time of 6.2. The winning time grades with Troy Schmidt, Fred 2- -2 OHIO record at here Saturday by was 6.3. The 55 yard dash was Jones, Glenn Toothman, Rick CONFERENCE BASKETBALL STANDINGS topping Kenyon and Oberlin. The run in three qualifying heats with Day, Paul Cope and our NCAA . (through games February 15, 1975) final score was Wooster 80, Ken- only the winner advancing to the competitor from a year ago,

yon . 50, Oberlin 2. . finals.' The second place fin- Forrest Merten.' Conference Games All Gaines Two Scots were double win- ishers ran in a consolation finals. Day Won Won ners. Senior Rick set a Compton finished second in his The Scots mile relay team of Lost Pet Lett Pet new school 'record while win- qualifying heat. Both he and the Day, Toothman, Cope and Mer- Marietta 11 2 .846 18 2 .900 ning the . mile at 4:22.2 and he winner were clocked In 6.2. So ten finished the day on a high Wittenberg 10 3 .769 14 7 .667 took- - top honors to the two mile the senior moved Into conso- note Capital 4 .692 17 5 the at the Knights of Columbus .9 " .773 with a time of 9:50.0. Forrest lation finals. He won mat race Meet at the Richfield Collestum Denison 8 4 .667 14 5 .737 Merten won the 600 yard run with another 6.2 'effort. The with a third place finish. "There Muskingum 7 5 .583 14 8 .636 and came within five tenths of aa winner of the finals ran a 6.3. was some top flight competition Heidelberg 7 6 .538 13 9 .591 second of . setting a Kenyon pro- Mount - i 13 . Scot coach Tom Kaiser up mere and we are real happy Union 6 6 .500 9 .591 , Fieldhouse record In the 880 tested the procedure, but his to have taken third place," said Kenyon 6 6 .500 12 10 .545 with a ttme of 2:00.0 protest was overruled. Kaiser. Otterbein 6 7 .462 10 10 .500 Paul Cope won the 100 yard Ohio Northern 4 8 .333 11 12 .478 run for the Scots and finished Wooster 4 8 .333 10 12 .455 The-tea- second in the 300. Fred Jones Kaiser is excited about his . m now has a two week Oberlin 3 7 .300 10 9 .526 1 won . the 55 yard high hurdles 1975 team. He cited the rea- break until March when they ! Baldwin-Wall- ac 3 10 .231 5 17 .227 to and was beaten for first place sons for the team's recent suc- travel Granville for the GL ; Ohio Wlyan 2 10 .167 3 16 .158 In a photofinish In the 55 yard cess as being " the talented CA Conference meet. "We have dash. freshman class working with our work cut out for us," the Troy Schmidt paced the shot Juniors and seniors, who have coach said. "We have had some put field with an effort of 40--6, tremendous leadership qualities. success, but we still have a long Dave Brown won the pole vault "Freshmen Willy Grimes, King way to go. We win have some with a vault of 12--0 and Willy Lewis, Nat Wlmberly, Mike general conditioning for a few Grimes ran a 35.4 300 to win Schroeck and Pete Moore have days and men next week we will that event. especially been valuable for us," intensify our workouts to try to Controversy hit the meet Kaiser said. peak for the GLCA." Scots lose to Capital 66-5- 9 by Glenn Forbes Wolfe, then picked up the pace would not be able to play "run and had a five point halftlme and gun, catch-u- p" basketball. Capital (28-2- The Crusaders spoiled lead. The score 3) be- big story Capital was regular The for the last season home lled some very close statistics. the play of Gene Caslln who led game roundbal-le- rs for senior Seot . Both teams had shot from the all scorers with 28 points. Lead- last Saturday night by field and attempted . four shots ing Scots in the scoring handing the Coach Al Van Wle's at the line. department' was Don Calloway troops a 66-- 59 defeat. . The Crusaders kept their mo- with 15. , The Scots Jumped out to an mentum in the second half and , The Scots will now play at early lead but by the 7:07 mark the closest the Scots could come Kenyon .Friday night in their in the (44-4- first half, Capital had was three points 1) with Just first OAC tournament game and trimmed mat lead to one point, ' over ten minutes left to go. Any if they can come away with a 18-1- 7. hopes flie Scot fans had for a victory, they will return to Tim-ki- n - Capital, led as they were all late comeback were dashed as . gymnasium for the rest of night by Gene Caslln and Vie It became apparent that the Scots their divisional playoffs.

To all those interested in trying out for football cheetieoding: f 0&4 rrynA Tryout. will beheld March 5 in the PEC A dinic will b HMOR W J GRACE'S WINE SHOP - Held 7:00 pwn. 27 and 7:00 March ' r at Feb. p.m. 3 -- I in the PEC i ecoKD yp fry 3 &Tt- - f A list of requirements and obligations can be picked up in the-- T FREE DELIVERY (PEC office. You must attend on clinic or talk to: Pott i I W.00 MINIMUM Sloan (ext. 414) or Molly Mage (ext. 396). If you need more V o,.o I information pleas contact Linda Dixon ext. 414. Box 1474. I 248 W. NORTH STREET jr. 262-58- 66 i Friday, Page 8 VOICE February 21, 1975 Raitt seeks union offaith and, ethics FLAIR TRAVEL continued from pogo 1 bellion against God and sins are in developing a seventh feature. picture of the mature Christian C0I1SULTAUTS the things which . result from "One Is not reborn full-blo- wn life which Jesus described to . the OJd Testament to contem- that rebellion. Moral absolutes as an ethical person." Thus a -- -- the Sermon on the Mount, we the and not an of "mid- porary ethical questions is He In the area of Sin Christian ethic is ethic of need the assistance 346 EAST BOWMAN ST. tension between "continuity" and sins. maturing; ' it Involves a con- dle axioms" which serve to ap- "Innovation." The prophets dis- Balrd outlined nine basic tinuing process of growth toward ply the norms of toe Christian play both a "radical faithfulness" features of a New Testament greater maturity.' "Therefore life to particular situations. to the Israelite faith and a "ra- ethic. First of all, such an I am not so concerned about "We need a lot of help to this For Your Convenience " -- dical Innoratlveness" In applying ethic Is a "product of relation- what is right or wrong but about" area." ; - that tradition to the contemporary ship with God," an "outgrowth what is more or less mature ..Finally, a Christian - ethic Just Off the College setting. of a personal religious exper- to love.". " , must be an ethic of redemption. . For All The Christian church needs to ience." "The fruits - of the Eighthly, a Christian ethic must It must push beyond "academic Campus get beyond "blbliclam" and Spirit are fruits of a relation- describe a particular " kind of decisions" to the determination .. Your Travel Inquiries "scholasticism" and to dis- ship with God." life. In striving toward the of what win serve to redeem cover biblical "paradigms and Secondly, this ethic requires people and situations. . "What and Needs, principles In areas of applied man to reflect the very nature 'Gifted, Black is right is that which redeems church needs the example, God de- people." " - , ethics." The of God. For ' courage to speak authoritatively mands of us Justice because and Female Balrd eapsulized the thrust CALL to contemporary- - issues. The Justice Is basic to His own na- of his address to saying, "Ethics church should be ' exercising ture; "Each ethical moment Is : "To be Gifted, Black, and Fe- means the implementation of toe "stewardship of the presence of a wherein we must re--, male" is the title of a lecture Justice of God." crisis given by Annetta of to be Jefferson 2C4-G5- 05 God's authoritative Word." fleet the nature, God." p.m. Liberation from "sterile leg- next Thursday at 4 In Lean Thirdly, Raitt pointed out the Lecture Room of Wlshart Hall. understanding the alism" and "loving enslave- VITAL VITTLES importance of Ms. Jefferson Is an assistant and ment" to Christ were the third relationship between faith professor of English at the Col- NATURAL FOODS ethics. Israel saw these two as and fourth features of the New TREASURE HOUSE HOBBIE! lege end has won Emmy awards 264-97- Testament ethic which Balrd. 226 S. Market 50 - inseparable. The fatth relation- for her work in television. 236 West Liberty ship with God and the ethical re- described. Fifthly, there Is the question Crafts and lationship with other people are 'Long Day's 10:30-5:-30 - Mon. - Sat. tightly connected. This is the of priorities. The priority .of Wednesday Hobbies a ethic to love God Closed "absolute moral principle" Christian is V from A to Z which led Raitt to claim mat and one's neighbor as oneself. Journey9 ma there is a "sacramental con- Furthermore, this requires a Upcoming events to the new person: complex in- nection" between our relation- commitment of the total Freedlander Theatre Chemistry Majors -P- remeds-Financial assistance; $4000 plus ship with God and our relation- heart, soul, mind, and strength. clude O'Neill's LONG DAY'S all tuition as Graduate Associate, is available for stud to- ships with our fellow human "The priority Is God." A JOURNEY INTO NIGHT tonight, ward MS and Ph.D degrees -- in all areas .of chemistry. - Write ethic on the tomorrow night and Sunday night beings. . Christian is based Graduate Chairman, Dept of Chemistry, Ohio University Athens, Balrd began by drawing an ''sovereignty of God in the lives at 8:15 . This is the first pro- Ohio 45701. c Important distinction between of men". duction to the experimental the- "Sin" and "sins." Sin is re Balrd spent considerable time ater and admission win be $L T

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