Goshen College - Maple Leaf Yearbook (Goshen, IN)

 - Class of 1984

Page 11 of 184

 

Goshen College - Maple Leaf Yearbook (Goshen, IN) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 11 of 184
Page 11 of 184



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Page 11 text:

61094 6 Dr. Marcy first told me the news. I probably wouldn't have picked it up from the radio. It seems that a carload of journalists, including three Americans, was blown up by a Nicaraguan mortar . . . Sadith listened to Nicaraguan radio and said their version was that the Americans were with the Sandistas, thus Hondurans blew up the car. Who knows? When I read the newspaper covering the incident, I started to side with the Americans . . . They were my people and thus my country that the Sandinistas at- tacked. How would they feel about me? Am I just another Yankee? Heidi Ulrich, Honduras SST jour- nal A question arises in my mind about the cost of preserving the freedom we do have . . . Do we have to act the way we do las a countryj to preserve middle-class freedom? Freedom. Shouldn't it come from within? If that's the case, the peo- ple of China can be just as free as the people of the United States and perhaps can find that freedom ea- sier because finding freedom with us in the United States is clouded by the almighty dollar and false se- curity. Jon Rudy, China SST journal It's really annoying how we of the Western culture feel that only our part of the world has a history. We think that civilization only lies in Europe and America. We have completely ignored other societies. Because we don't know about the advances in other civilizations, we think there are none. I had never heard of all this mixing of cultures and conquering by tribes in Africa. I just assumed that Africa hasnit changed at all since the stone age. Gwen White, Books and Ideas I participate in some bad systems. Yet, I don't consider myself a bad person. The American fast food in- dustry is a bad system. Three- fourths of Central America's for- ests have been destroyed for pas- tureland to produce beef which is exported to the United States where most of it is sold to fast food chains. I even worked for a fast food chain, it was a job and I need- ed money, not because I supported what they were doing. Beth Preheim, Books and Ideas Akron Beacon Journal cartoonist Chuck Ayers tbelowj shakes hands with Goshen resident after his presentation, On Saying What Can't Be Said. The Oct. 4 lecture was one of the closing of Nuclear War Study Days. -Jef xg.. -E5i:- . . . , ' -x'9fFfss:QxgXMm ' 1 ' I V - r. 't X 3? ', ' . . , 1 iii, . I f 5 I .X - Q' X 7 X 1 t N . f K X xg? . x xx Q i. ,.. I S -.,.. N 3 xii 1 I X es.. x X 'Sy' A X Q -nun. I. . CR X, id'l 2 .L- --y.. 'Vi-'C Q' I . :1.f:, K iii .Y :,..:.:gxk , .Iss . . x N 1 ' N' ' - . F . 9' -, ffl-. A I , -I . 3.5. Y gf . E ' 1 Q I X Ax 'wg'

Page 12 text:

GC students respond to The Day After, a movie aired by ABC on Nov. 20 that depicted the possible event of a nuclear war: Are we so inflexible and uncaring that we would rather die than change or does the attitude that you can make everyone else change and be dogmatic about it come with the acquisition of power? Is it really true, 'fBetter dead than redm? I'm sorry, but I would much rather live with communism or socialism. Lori Ann Rusterholtz I also watched the panel discussion following the movie, and it was in that context that my hope was re- newed . . . Carl Sagan was the only voice in the group who said, Hey, nuclear weapons donit have to be a reality. We can do more than learn to live in a nuclear ageg we can move out of this age. He read a quote which said, in effect, that there may come a day in which the people of this earth want peace so badly, they will demand it of their leaders. For me, this movie helps to redefine what immorality really is. Sin isn't the young girl defying taboos by making love with her fiance two days before the wedding. Sin is even daring to contemplate the cre- ation of technological mosters with the capacity of total destruction. If Christians want to campaign against sin, I think our traditional approach needs to be redirected! Lois Shetler As part of the Frank and Betty .Io Yoder Public Affairs Lecture Series, Latin American news correspondent Penny Lernoux, fabove, rightj speaks on In Banks We Trust: American Pocketbooks and Human Rights in Latin America. Lernoux said in a convo address, People who want to become better informed about Latin America will learn more by seek- ing out alternative sources of information. Un- fortunately, most of what you will get in your local newspapers, on the six o'clock television news and in Time and Newsweek Qand I hap- pen to write for Newsweekj is either very gen- eral, simplistic or manipulated - I don't sup- pose consciously, but manipulated to fit the American cultural baggage. Another lecturer in the same series, Robert Kaiser trightj associate editor of The Washing- ton Post, discusses U.S.-Soviet relations with students John Bixler, Eric Wenger, Bill Stauffer and Nabil Oudeh. He stated in his Nov. 15 address, I don't think we're on the verge ofa catastrophe with the Russians, I just think we've let things get way out of hand.

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