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Homecoming court from which the queen will be chosen Friday includes Jonelle Olson, Phyllis Nelson, Darlene Palermo, Andrea Richardson, and Phoebe Netterlund. Volume XLi—No. 3 Bethel College and Seminary, St. Paul, Minn. Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Alumnus Award Being Planned As Part of Weekend Activities 1964 Homecoming Queen Judy Van Wambeke teaches little subjects at Falcon Heights Elementary School. Homecoming: 'Past Is Prologue' Weekend Theme Offers Historical Commentary A "Past Prologue" of Bethel's development will be presented Fri-day, October 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse Auditorium as part of the 1965 Homecoming activities. The program, staged by Mr. Rott and speech students, attempts to help bring about an understanding of the present by selecting mile-stones in Bethel's history and either commenting on them or allowing the situations to comment on themselves. "By understanding the past, we know the present," explained Miriam Carlson, co-chairman of the Homecoming activities. This year's program is unique for a variety of dramatic techniques are being used. The opening scene will feature a narration by J. David Patterson and Bernard Johnson. Following will be speech choruses, pantomines, other narrations, drama scenes, oral interpretations, projective slides, music, and tape recordings. These will be interwoven throughout the program to provide variety and change of pace. Using these media, comments will be made on Bethel's academic history, campus development, and equisition of property. A commen-tary on different periods of national stress, such as the post-Civil War era, will be made, with reflection directed also on cultural and moral changes throughout Bethel's history. Specific scenes will portray the first seminary student, the college's first president, the starting of a co-op food service at Bethel, and the moral issue of the 1920's con-cerning the length of women's hair. The presentation of the Home-coming Court and the coronation of the queen will be integrated in-to the program. The program will be followed at 9:00 p.m. by a campus pepfest to be held at the south end of the fieldhouse. Alumni Banquet Saturday Night "Past Prologue" will be high-lighted by the Homecoming Ban-quet. Rev. and Mrs. Featherstone will be host and hostess. Special Music will be presented by the Chrismon Quartet. This weekend will see many of Bethel's almni returning to campus for the Homecoming festivities—a time of renewing old friendships and reliving memories. Host and hostess for the activi-ties will be Rev. and Mrs. Robert Featherstone. R e v. Featherstone was appointed host last July by Bethel's Alumni Council and has been preparing programs with the Senate Homecoming Committee, Alumni Affairs Office, and Par-ent's Council. His main functions this weekend will be welcoming alumni and Library Policy Gives Discounts parents to the Homecoming cha-pel service and coffee hours and emceeing the banquet on Sat-urday night. Rev. Featherstone graduated from Bethel seminary in 1955. In his senior year at the seminary he was Acting Dean of Students for the College and went on to be Stewardship Director for the Bap-tist General Conference. He is now pastor of the first Baptist Church of Rochester, Minnesota and is a member of the Alumni Council. Beginning alumni activities will be the Homecoming chapels Fri-day morning. Rev. Featherstone will speak at the college and Bill Starr, Executive Director of Young Life, also a Bethel alumnus, will speak at the Seminary. Following Friday night's pro-gram and pepfest, the alumni and parents will get together for their traditional coffee hours. President Lundquist will speak briefly at the informal gather-ings. Highlight of the weekend will be Saturday night's banquet. Of special interest at the banquet will be the announcement of the first Alumnus of the Year. The selection is made by the Alumni Awards Committee composed of three members of the Alumni Council, three alumni-at-large, and one faculty member. The Alumnus of the year is chosen on the basis of the follow-i n g considerations: outstanding achievement within the alumnus' chosen field of endeavor, signifi-cant contributions and public ser-vice benefitting his community, continued interest and loyalty to Bethel. Rev. Akenson, Pastor of the first Baptist Church of Minneapolis, will keynote the Banquet with his din-ner address. He is a former Presi-dent of Northwestern Bible Col-lege and is presently Chairman of the Board of Northwestern Bible College. All students, whether they at-tend the banquet or not, are invited to hear this dinner address at 8:00 Saturday evening in the Fieldhouse. Business will be keyed to the Alumni. Rodney Erickson will pre-side. Alumni news will be re-ported to the Alumni Association. As the program is a special alumni event, the ticket sales will be split in half between the stu-dent body and alumni. New Seminary To Be Dedicated October 17, 1965, marks the dedication, throughout the Baptist General Conference, of the new Arden Hills campus of Bethel Theological Seminary. Each Con-ference church throughout t h e world has been requested to par-ticipate vicariously in its own ser-vice of dedication. At three o'clock the program will begin at the Arden Hills Cam-pus with the Ceremony of the Keys, where the keys for the buildings will be transferred from Ragner Borg, Contractor, to President Lundquist. Greetings by Governor Karl Rolvaag of Minnesota will be fol-lowed by the Act of Dedication led by Dean Gordon Johnson of the Seminary. During the Act of Dedication, the faculty will pro-cess and a Bible will be placed in the entry pavilion. The Male Chorus led by C. Howard Smith will present two numbers, "All Blessing, Honor, Thanks and Praise," and "I Will Extol Thee, 0 Lord." The flag and flagpole, a gift to the Seminary by alumni serving as Chaplains, will be dedicated by Major Carl J. Bergstrom, assisted by Chaplain Bruce Herrstrom. The Promise of the Foundation will begin with a pledge led by Lloyd Dahlquist, General Secre-tary of Baptist General Con-ference. Following this Dolan Toth, treasurer of the Board of Education, will lead the congre-gation in prayer. An offering will also be taken. The final part of the ceremony will be the Rite of Occupation. During this time all guests at the service of dedication are invited to join in a precessional through the buildings, entering at the rear pavilion and following the markers and Seminary student guides. The libray has initiated a change in its fining procedures. Fines are now collected at the circulation desk. If the student pays the fine when he returns an overdue book, fifty percent discount is allowed. However, if the library must bill After the Alumni Lettermen's the student for the fine, the entire breakfast Saturday morning, the fine is charged. parents and alumni will have the Fine rates are 5 cents per item opportunity to attend one of two per day for general circulation functions of the Alumni-Parents books or pamphlets, 25 cents per College. Described by Dwight Jes-hour or fraction thereof for two- sup, Director of Alumni and Par-hour reserve books, 25 cents per ent Affairs, the purpose of this day or fraction thereof for one- first annual activity is "to acquaint day reserve books, and 50 cents alumni and parents with important per day for recalled books. aspects of Bethel's program." Reserve books circulate for the Those going to the Seminary period of time arranged by a will be conducted on a tour of the faculty member w h o requested facilities by Dean Gordon Johnson, the reserve. This time is indicated who will also speak later in the in the upper right corner of the morning. Those who come to the reserve book cards. One-day re- College will hear Dr. Dalphy Fla-serve books and two-hour reserve gerstrom and Campus Pastor Al books that are checked out over- Glenn, who will speak about Beth-night are both due back in the el's developing spiritual life and library at nine the next morning. his role in the college. #rk.p-tfiret- 7,4ede AO. 411•11, American 'Containment' Policy Called Contributing Factor In Asian Conflict This is the second in a series of two articles by college senior David Beek on the India-Pakistan Dispute. He has recently returned from a year of study and research near Hyderabad, South India. by Dave Beek The United States' foreign policy in Asia has been more responsible for the recent conflict between India and Pakistan than most Americans realize or are willing to, admit. After the tragic events accompanying partition, India and Pakistan turned to the urgent problems of nation building and domestic development. The domestic needs were so momentous that neither could afford diverting resources for defense pur-poses. By following a "non-aligned" policy in the bi-polar world, they sought to reduce the tension between themselves and to avoid becoming involved in the Soviet-American duel. The United States, in self-interest, was urging the non-aligned Asian countries to accept American military aid and to join security pacts for protection against Communist aggression. Nehru asked the United States not to give military aid to either India or Pakistan; he warned that this would eventually be used, not against Russian or Chinese aggression, but against each other. The United States ignored his plea. India resisted American pressures until after the Chinese invasions of 1959 and 1962. Pakistan, due to its more Islamic, militaristic tradition and to its felt inferior position, having only one quarter the population of India, yielded in 1954 by accept-ing American armaments and bases and by joining SEATO and CENTO. Indian-Pakistan and Indian-American tensions rose sharply. India was forced to seek protection against Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Ban-tan Books, 1946, pp. 177 (paperback; $.60). Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis. Macmillan, 1947, pp. 121 (paperback, $.95). Utilitarianism and theism are strange bed-fellows, but Huxley and Lewis belong side by side on your book shelf. Lewis' starting point is an Eng-lish reader which he calls The Green Book by Gaius and Titius. His theme is the total absurdity of the current theory, "all statements of value are totally subjective." Therefore "mother" is of no more or less value than God, pleasure, treason, objectivity, or life. "But this is not necessarily a refutation of subjectivism about values as a theory. The true doctrine might be a docrine which, if we accept, we die" (p. 39). Lewis criticizes the subjectivists further because, "However subjec-tive they may be about some tradi-tional value, Gaius and Titius have shown by the very act of writing The Green Book that there must be some other values about which they are not subjective at all" (p. 39). So where do they find non-sub-jective values—in some statement of fact? But how does 'ought' come from 'is'? Perhaps instinct is a proper base. But our instincts are very much at war. Which ones? Unless we admit that there are some values which need no ra-tional defense—which are the very foundation of all reason— we shall be totally at the mercy of our desires. Lewis argues that the result of man's conquest of nature is the dehumanization of man. Man is regarded as an animal fit for the dissecting table or for laboratory experiments. The government will be able to condition man as the psychology department conditions pigeons. In other words, a sort of Brave New World. If there is no value how shall the conditioners choose to mold men? They do as they wish. "We find ... (the Conditioners) subjected to that in themselves which is purely 'natural' — to their irrational impulses" (p. 80). "It is not that they are bad men. They are not men at all" (p. 77). The case is clear. Unless there is some eternal good, true, and beau-tiful (which he calls "Tao") we face meaninglessness. The modern world trades the threat of hell for the certainty of non-existence. Huxley sees the same vision of man's predicament. Man is con-quered by men who use science as wizards use magic—as an instru-ment of personal power. Men sacrifice their freedom and art for stability and contentment. Society is sterile and antiseptic without purity. Science is not for man, but man for science. In the foreword to this edition Huxley gives an alternative to Washington President Johnson's surgery Fri-day for removal of his gall bladder was termed a "complete success" by attending physicians. The sur-g e r y announcement brought a slight hesitation in Wall Street trading during the week. Jarkarta Turmoil reigns in Indonesia fol-lowing Moslem reaction to last Brave New World. "Science and technology would be used as though, like the Sabbath, they had been made for man ... Religion would be the conscious and intelligent pursuit of man's Final End, the unitive knowledge of the immanent Tao or Logos, the transcendent Godhead or Brahman. ... the first question to be asked and answered in every con-tingency of life being: "How will this thought or action contribute to, or interfere with, the achieve-ment, by me and the greatest possible number of other indi-viduals, of man's Final End?" (p. ix.) The resemblance between Huxley and Lewis is elusive. Both use the term "Tao" for the universe's non-personal moral order. Both charge scientism with abolishing man. Neither holds with the confident intellectual climate of the day. But to try to make Huxley a Christian apologist is to fail. He proposes to substitute Brave New World for a pure atheistic humani-tarianism. Nevertheless, we would do well to notice that two of the most ar-ticulate men of our time have rec-ognized the same self-destructive tendencies in our society. Shall we hear them? How shall we respond? by Mustapha Mond week's revolutionary attempt by anti-Sukarno militarists. Later re-ports said that the desire to rid Indonesia of Communists h a d spread from the capital of Jakarta on Java Island to the other large islands of Sumatra and the Celebes. Karachi Pakistan officials accused India Wednesday of cease-fire violations in the Kashmir border dispute. They claimed 2400 Indian troops had launched an attack in the Mendhar region, but were beaten back by Pakistanis. Indian leaders in New Delhi countered by accus-ing Pakinstanis of beginning the offensive. London Ian Smith, Prime Minister o f Rhodesia, after failing to come to favorable terms with British leaders over the status of his nation, said Friday that he be-lieves his people will soon sep-arate from Britain by declaring independence. Miami Refugees had started to leave Cuba in response to Fidel Castro's promise to throw open exit gates even before the October 12 open-ing date had arrived. The United States has asked Castro to plan an orderly procedure for exiles' leav-ing so that the number entering the U. S. via Florida will not be impossible to handle. New York British Foreign Secretary Mich-ael Stewart proposed Wednesday that both sides stop fighting in Viet Nam, and that the United Nations administer a program of repair in the war-ravaged nation. Minneapolis In a press conference Friday Governor Karl Rolvaag said that he has made a decision about run-ning for re-election in 1966, but will not announce it yet. Moscow Russian scientists admitted Thurs-day that they had failed to soft-land the rocket Luna-7 on the moon because some operations needed further development. Fur-ther reports stated that a mis-timed retro-rocket caused the failure. Consequently, we responded to international crisis as if violence and force were the only effective solution to world problems. Solv-ing political problems through the principles of Force, Truth, and Nonviolence were considered by some, not only to be heretical, but concilitory to the "evils of the world". Gandhi based his principles on the belief that all men were united by an underlying spiritual substance and that the application of this Satyagrahn or "soul force" would confront one's evildoing with a moral force. His successful application of these principles in the struggle for Independence and in pre-senting an outbreak of Hindu-cont'd on page three giollaifteCOMinf • • . Friday, October 15 9:45 a.m.—HOMECOMING CHAPEL, Field-house Auditorium 7:30 p.m.—"PAST PROLOGUE: Bethel, 95 Years in Retrospect" featuring the Queen Coronation, Fieldhouse Auditorium ($1 each) 9:00 p.m.—CAMPUS PEPFEST 9:30 p.m.—ALUMNI COFFEE HOUR, Bodien Residence PARENTS COFFEE HOUR, Edgren Resi-dence Saturday, October 16 8:00 am.—ALUMNI LETTERMEN'S BREAKFAST, President's Dining Room, Bodien Residence (75c) 10:00 a.m.—ALUMNI-PARENT COLLEGE College Library Dr. Dalphy Fagerstrom: "The Library—A New Concept in Collegiate Education" Campus Pastor Al Glenn: "Growing Spir-itual Dimensions at Bethel" Arden Hills Campus Dean Gordon Johnson: "Seminary Archi-tecture— an Expression of Theological Ob-jectives" 10:30 a.m.—OPEN HOUSE, Student Residences 12:00 Noon 1:30 p.m.—VARSITY FOOTBALL, Bethel vs. U. of Minn.—Morris, Midway Stadium ($1 each) 6:30 p.m.—HOMECOMING BANQUET, Dr. Curtis B. Akenson, Speaker, Fieldhouse Auditorium ($2.50 by advance reservation) Sunday, October 17 3:00 p.m.—DEDICATION SERVICE, Seminary Academic Complex, Arden Hills Campus the CLARION Published weekly during the academic year, except during vacation and examination periods, by the students of Bethel college and seminal y, St. Paul 1. Minn. Subscrip-tion rate $3 per year. Volume XLI No. 3 Editor-in-Chief Bill Swenson Assistant Editor John Halvorsen Senate Columnist Bernard Johnson Cultural Columnist Stan Olsen Sports Columnist Jim Brand Layout Editor Judy Malm Layout Staff Anita Palm, Karen Bergstrom, Connie Jo Doud, Dave Fredine, Jeff Loomis Copyreader Jackie Sherman Typist Nancy Ballantyne Circulation Linda Burgess Photography Hans Waldenstrom Advertising Manager Fran Malmsten Advertising Assistant Vic Van Campen Business Manager Gene Peterson Adviser Wallace Nelson Opinions expressed in the CLARION do not necessarily reflect the position of the college or seminary. Page 2 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Recent College Changes Reflect 'Prologue' Spirit Homecoming 1965 will go down as a major step forward in the unification of the Baptist General Conference with its institutions of higher education. Seminary Dedication Sunday morning will dawn upon the unique occurance of pastors around the nation leading their congregations in simultaneous words of dedication while in St. Faul the capstone of our educational program is realized. Meanwhile, alumni, parents, and friends of Bethel con-verge on the college campus to consider the next seven years on this campus as a special prologue, in the context of the past, to the erection of the new college complex in the Centennial Year. Several bright spots of the recent past spring to mind: The, continuing strong relationship between college and seminary in this first year of separation, college library improvements in space and planning, and the institution of a summer Student Missionary Program. And if these gains of the past year or two are indicative of the type of growth to be expected in the seven year Prologue to the new Bethel College, the future of Christian higher education in the evangelical tradition of our Swedish forefathers is bright indeed. The incorporation of greater numbers of qualified sem-inarians into the college educational program as instructors and discussion leaders is to be applauded. May it be followed by upper division inter-disciplinary seminars which ultimately find their connecting links in de-votion to the same Truth—perhaps through the leadership of men thoroughly trained in theology and Biblical studies as well as advanced study in their chosen discipline. The provision of more floor and shelf space in the college library as well as the creation of the joint cataloguing system are worthy of praise. May they be followed by increased co-operation and working relationships among the private colleges of the Twin Cities, such as inter-college borrowing cards. Macalester, Hamline, St. Thomas and St. Catherine's, for instance, now share supporting resource facilities for their newly inaugurated, co-operative area studies program. And the purchase of a card catalogue listing the main holdings of the James Hill Reference Library can be seen in the light of convenience for advanced research on this campus, and good stewardship and planning for the Arden Hills campus. The Chapel Committee, too, deserves praise for the various successful ventures of the student missionaries. May the pro-gram be expanded in coming years to other hemispheres, per-haps with tuition breaks for returning missionaries and more systematic back-to-the community reporting of projects. And may a large advance orientation period in the history and culture of the respective countries, as well as more solidly defined academic pursuits in the countries, yield opportunities to introduce the new Bethel College to potential foreign students around the world. Pakistan by accepting British aid. As the arms race between the two countries quickened, it became increasingly difficult to settle the Kashmir problem peacefully. Nehru's prophecy was fulfilled, when during the recent Indian-Pakistan conflict, the massive military aid was used against each other. When assessing American foreign policy during the fifties, one wonders what blinded the American people from seeing these realities of international politics. A major factor was a schizophrenic view of the world: the extremes of pessimism and optimism, the paradoxical concentration on certain facts, on the one hand, and complete disregard for certain facts on the other hand. The simple, single tracked Ameri-can mind related the major evils of the world to Communism. On the one hand, our optimism saw an ideal world rid of the major evils with the destruction of Communism. Our faith in the peace loving nature of countries absent of Communist influence overrode entirely such inescapable facts as the Hindu-Moslem conflict in 1947 which killed a half million persons and displaced ten million more in the two countries. On the other hand, our overly pessimistic view of the world led many Americans to believe the non-American countries confronted by a Communist power were essentially puppets of a Satanic power. A large portion of the American people believed that they were a chosen people, the chosen guard-ians of the good in the world. This self-conceit, no doubt, grew out of being over-awed by our military power. Lewis-Huxley Comparison Yields Elusive Resemblance of Thought Howie Reed of the Los Angeles Dodgers pauses in the St. Paul Hotel to sign an autograph for senior Gloria Thompson. She was among thirty Bethelites to encourage the team after the first disap-pointing Series game. Bethelites Greet Dodgers After First Series Game Missionary-In-Residence Edwards Teaches Seminary During Furlough Rev. Paul Edwards, missionary from India, will teach in Bethel Theological Seminary both winter and spring quarters. Rev. Edwards holds a B.A. de-gree from Wheaton and a B.D. from Bethel Seminary. He also has a M.A. from George Washington University, where he studied Com-parative Religions. Bethel College alumni will re-member Rev. Edwards as a Bethel Bible teacher and basket-ball and baseball coach from 1944-1950. It was in 1950 that Rev. Edwards left for India where he has con-tinued to serve. His work has included both educational and ev-angelistic ministries. Mrs. Edwards is a medical doctor and has faith-fully served with her husband on the mission field. They are now back in the States on their second furlough. The two classes that Rev. Ed-wards will teach in the Seminary are Challenge to World Missions and Challenge of Non-Christian Re-ligions. These will be taught win- How to Become a Bishop Without Being Religious by Charles Merrill Smith. Doubleday, 1965 ($3.50). This latest "success manual" is a tragedy. It claims to give the single sem-inarian the steps to success in climbing the clerical ladder. It ana-lyzes the proper methods of letting sleeping congregations lie and overcoming the antagonism or com-peting clerics. Charles Merrill Smith is pastor of the Wesley Methodist Church in Bloomington, Illinois. He "has a lover's quarrel with the church" and HOW TO BECOME ... is both the better and the worse for it. First, the virtues of this book: its satire is to the point—and the right points too. There are several subtitles from Chapter Four, "The Administration of a Church, which is a polite phrase for raising mon-ey: The status church ... Picking the right Negro ... The men to cul-tivate." "Selecting the Clerical Wife" would seem to be a vital chapter for the single theologue. Smith argues here that the prospective minister MUST marry; secondly, that he will be well advised to avoid certain kinds of girls; third, that he ought to seek one who wants to marry a minister. Therefore "the proper se-quence of events is to select a girl who meets the predetermin-ed specifications and then fall in love with her, rather than allow your romantic fancy to light upon just any young female who happens to appeal to you for ir-relevant reasons" (p. 21). Smith also jibes at subject-cen-tered worship, provides a key to properly "spiritual" words, and outlines "the techniques of being unmistakably clerical!) The breadth of Smith's discus-sion includes all the appropriate concerns of a "standard-brand" minister: choosing a car, non-of-fensive art, and "making the major leagues." His perception is acute, but his satire is merely broad. This is the principle artistic attempt to satirize all the aspects of clerical life makes this appear ter and spring quarters, respective-ly. Rev. Edwards hopes to encour-age the Seminary students to be-come more deeply involved in the global outreach of the church. He wants the students to be aware of the problems of reach-ing a foreign culture. He is greatly concerned about the sta-tistical decline in applicants to the mission field, and envisions Of the 351 students enrolled in Freshman English 103, 158 demon-strated a satisfactory mastery of the principles of English grammar and usage by earning a score of 85 or above on the entrance exam-ination. Those who failed to do so will stand a retest on October 18. This examination was carefully compiled from the standard test-ing materials of the widely used programmed course, English 3200 by Joseph Blumenthal. Student scores have been compared with brutal. But we can't charge Smith with bitterness — his is a lover's quarrel — not a cynic's. A devoted pessimist would hard-ly have risked "Christian back-lash" for the sake of such hyper-bole. Beneath the veneer of scoffing lies solid-grain concern. I suggest the following procedure for read-ing; ministerial students will read the book and laugh—the rest will read and weep. No one ought to ignore it. — by Jim Keim European Study Plan Announced Miss Barbara Weiss, field repre-sentative of the Scandinavian Sem-inar, visits Bethel campus Wednes-day, October 20, to interest stu-dents and faculty in a new educa-tional adventure. The program she promotes pro-vides students with the opportunity to attend school in Denmark, Fin-land, Norway, or Sweden for nine months while living with a native family. Information on location and time will be posted when estab-lished. Requests for personal in-terviews with Miss Weiss are handled through the Student Service office. The nine-month study program, from August to May, is open to stu-dents without previous knowledge in the language. The applicant re-ceives appropriate instructional material upon acceptance to ac-quire workable skills in the lan-guage. With a grasp of the language and a feeling for the Scandin-avian world, the student benefits from the FOLKEHOJSKOLE'S presentation o f Scandinavia through lectures, discussions, seminars and tours. The Scandinavian Seminar or-ganization makes scholarship loans available to students needing finan-cial assistance. The interest-free loans are payable three years after termination of the student's study year. part of his task here as recruit-ment. Rev. Edwards' presence on the Seminary campus is viewed as a definite aid to the students by pro-viding a meaningful encounter with the problems and challenges of the mission field. He will be a signifi-cant asset to the kind of prepara-tion that is being fostered by the Seminary educational program. their performances on the verbal section of the Scholastic Aptitude Test, and sufficient correlation ex-ists to demonstrate the validity of the examination. A mastery of the content of this program affords the student a minimum comprehension of Eng-lish grammar and usage essential to his performing acceptably in college work. Inasmuch as the English Depart-ment is insufficiently staffed to do remedial teaching and inasmuch as the material can be mastered with greater facility by the pro-grammed approach, no portion of the classroom time of the course is allocated to teaching from this textbook. Six special help sessions, how-ever, have been scheduled either on Saturday mornings or on free periods during the week to deal with student questions. The in-structors in the English Depart-ment are also available to give individual help. Registration for Freshman Eng-lish 103 is considered probation-ary until the student demon-strated his minimum proficiency in the rudiments of English grammar and usage. Hence, those whose scores were poor on the first examination must perform satisfactorily on the retest in order to validate their registra-tion in the course. Students who are unable to do so will be asked to drop Freshman English 103 and may not register for Freshman English 104. by Bernard Johnson The floor of the senate this week was clogged with a number of touchy issues as well as the usual number of not so touchy issues. One, a motion to have the student lounges in the college building open Friday and Saturday evenings until 12:00 p.m. as couple's lounge was passed 8-5. As usual, however, this only means that this will become a pro-posal to the administration who can in turn be counted upon to act within the full convictions of their conscience. Don't count on a couple's lounge. J. David Patterson submitted a report from t h e Publications Board in which he recommended that one representative of the CLARION be sent to the Asso-ciated Collegiate Press conven-tion this year and that this per- Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Staunch Dodger fans gathered at the Hotel St. Paul to greet the players as they returned from the first and unsuccessful Series game. Many of the approximately thirty Bethel students were native Calif-ornians. They wanted the team to know there was an enthusiastic, if small, group of fans even in the Twins' own territory. The escapade began when fresh-man Barbara Elliff called the hotel early Wednesday morning to arrange an appointment for an interview. She talked first with Johnny Roseboro, whom she had awaken with the call. He referred her to Wally Moon, Dodger player representative. Barb told him that even though the group of supporters was in the minority, they were "pluggin' all the way." "That s right ma am, everything is going to be all right!" The students, congregated in the lobby of the hotel at four-thirty with souvenir baseballs in hand. After a forty-five minute wait, the players arrived and though disap-pointed with the results of the game, stopped to sign autographs. son be the person tentatively considered as the next editor. One gets the feeling after at-tending a few senate meetings, that the majority of items each week mold themselves into a tow-ering monument of indecision. They tell me this is a hazard of democratic government. Perhaps postponement of issues is a good thing since it gives sen-ators a chance to think things through. As a matter of fact, this very thing is written into the rules of order. Only when one leaves a sen-ate meeting in a state of utter confusion does he question whe-ther or not democracy is func-tionally adequate in all situa-tions.. One thing is certain, however, and that concerns the matter of disappearing trays. The snow isn't even flying yet, gang; let's eat on trays at least until that time! Jim Lefebvre, candidate for Rookie of the Year of 1965, quipped that it was "just one of those days." Later in the evening Wally Moon spoke to Barb Elliff, Cindi Weddle, Lyn Eichenberger, and Anita Palm in a personal inter-view. Knowing the mechanical responses to the game already, questions were aimed at finding deeper feelings. He said the team morale was not like a college level team spirit that must be worked up every Friday night. After a period of time, a player on a professional level learns to always be "psyched" for a game. Venturing deeper, it was asked, "What is the religious spirit of the team?" In answering, he said sev-eral of the men on the team were "deeply religious" although the subject was rarely discussed. He himself is a Methodist and a member of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes with about five other team members. Reli-gious influence, he felt, w a s best seen in each player's re-action to practice and game sit-uations. Self-control is probably the hardest virtue to come by and is "a real test of religious training." Having this insight of a baseball team and having briefly glimps-ed its members, in a once in a lifetime experience, the weary Bethelites returned to campus to write jealous brothers and friends. AsianlMisuse cont'd from page 2 Moslem violence in Bengal was overlooked by most Americans. America's policy of relying on military force in South Asia de-feated America's goals, by aliena-ting, first, India and more recently, Pakistan. More tragic yet for the entire world, it forced India to forsake a possible spiritual answer to international problems. Whether or not China would have invaded India in 1959 and 1962 had India been allowed to follow her own conscience cannot be determined. Political realists and cynics would probably disre-gard the possibility. To those who believe in an universal spiritual force, history may have been chang-ed and India may have emerged as the guiding spiritual light in a dying world. the CLARION Page 3 Bishop' Smith's Assay Hits Seminarians Hard `Engiish 3200' Students To Face Grammar Retest Senate Cynic: Observer Again Rethinks Decision-making Process Snelling Avenue at Highway 36 Party room for groups OPEN Fri. - Sat. til 3 a.m. most of the subjects involved will have changed since that 1914 date. The banner to be hoisted now boasts 50 stars instead of 48, and the scene is no longer Snelling Avenue, "across from the fair grounds", but a site five miles north of this, Bethel's new cam-pus. Though fifty years have elapsed since that first dedication, one per-son remembers it well. He is Ma-jor C. J. Bergstrom, a retired Army chaplain and Bethel seminary alum-nus, who not only was present at the dedication in 1914, but assisted in the flag-raising. Since that time, he has held a number of Conference church pas-torates, and during the war years, 1942-1947, was a chaplain in the army. His last pastorate was at the Ogden Avenue church in Super-ior, Wisconsin. Major Bergstrom now resides in Tampa, Florida. As a military man, Mr. Berg-strom was particularly concern-ed that the new Bethel campus would be properly equipped with a flag and flagstaff. He contacted other military chaplainS, also Bethel seminary graduates, and thereby, raised sufficient funds for the equipment. Climaxing his efforts, Mr. Berg-strom himself will be present to assist in raising the flag at the October 17 dedication service of the new Seminary. Page 4 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Defensive Alignments New Seminary Structure and Setting Head Coach Dave Cox and Defensive Captain Jim Brand dia- Ex press Theological Objectives gram basic Bethel strategy for Homecoming fans. (11)2,1V8 HV BO Dr. Gordon Johnson is Dean of Bethel Theo-logical Seminary. by Dr. Gordon Johnson Our tradition has made it difficult for many of us to admit that buildings say something. But we must admit it—whether it be a shack or a cathedral the form expresses something to every person who looks at it. Several years ago when we began planning for the new campus we were keenly aware that the buildings would express something to all who would see them. To conceive the proper form for these buildings took time, energy and considerable inter-action. We believe the new seminary campus does express itself in ways that are exceedingly meaningful. This campus says something about God. Our God is characterized by power, eternalness and the Creator of beauty. As one approaches the buildings, the appearance of the brick walls, the deep set win-dows, the brown hue in the color, and the solidity of the setting suggests that our God is strong. They also say that He endures because these buildings are likely to endure. There is beauty in the whole setting. The buildings fit in the environment. Some of us wanted the buildings on the tops of the hills to overlook all the beauty that we saw around us. We forgot that that would destroy the very beauty we admired. The natural beauty is retained and even increased by the contrast that is observed. The rolling hills remain; the trees are there; the ruggedness continues; the buildings are set in the midst of it. The carefully It was a recently-adopted 48-star flag which, on November 22, 1914, was initially unfurled during the dedication service of the newly built Bethel College—then consist-ing of only one building. Similarly, fifty-one years later, on October 17, 1965, another flag-raising and dedication service will take place, although the scene and Varied Activities Mark Halftime The traditional halftime dash to the refreshment stand will be ignored by the many spectators Saturday at the Bethel-Morris foot-ball game. Their attention will be turned to a full roster of Home-coming events scheduled for the mid-game break. The Homecoming queen and her court will ride onto the field in open cars, making a tour of the gridiron. The queen will then be presented a football, autographed by members of the Royals football squad, by Student Senate President Bill Madsen, master of ceremonies for the afternoon. Announcement of awards for Homecoming decorations will fol-low the football presentation. Both dormitories and classes will be competing. Bodien, Hagstrom, and Edgren residents will be vying for a trophy, while the four classes will be decorating their way to-wards a $25 prize. Saturday is also Fathers' Day for the football squad. All "Dads" in attendance at the Bethel-Morris game will be recognized from the audience as part of the halftime activities. The college band, di-rected by Julius Whitinger, will add brilliance to the afternoon. Phyllis Kredit, college senior, is chairman of the halftime program committee. MUMS BUY YOUR DATE A HOMECOMING MUM They go on sale at 9 a.m. Sat. in the Coffee Shop Come Early First Come--First Served landscaped area will be a contrast to the natural, rugged beauty. These buildings also say something about com-munity. We desired a continuing experience of Koin-onia or fellowship. That is discovered in a number of different ways. Spaces are provided for good con-versational activity in an informal atmosphere. Some of these areas are carpeted and furnished with easy chairs. An open view to the outside beauty through large windows is evident. That openness is further expres-sed in the areas where one may look two floors up to the roof line. That atmosphere makes one feel ready to be open to other persons. An excellent esprit de corps will be possible for the total community of faculty and students alike. An atmosphere of recep-tivity and friendliness is created by the very form the buildings have taken. These buildings further express some of our academic ideals. The seminary student must become a mature student. He must become a capable thinker and leader, for he will lead other people in thought and life. He must discover his own capacities of personal study and community sharing. In the light of this our buildings have been built. With the exception of two classrooms we have departed from the traditional. That was done to encourage dialogue and interaction. The two-level classrooms make possible a class as large as thirty-five to get a feeling of thinking together with one another and the professor. That experience is also possible in the other classroom on the first floor as well as in the sem-inar rooms on the second floor. Each has a different plan and form. The library is geared to independ-ent study. There are no large ta-bles for study in large groups. In some areas there is more of the cloistered experience that would suggest, "Now is the time for work and study." The faculty offices are of such size that four or five students may meet with a faculty member for discussion. Several conference rooms are also available in the library for simi-lar activity. Our campus suggests our mis-sion. Our task is to communicate the Word of God to a world in need of that Word. We must train men to become the bridge between the biblical world and the contemporary world. The location of our campus is ideally situated to suggest that very thing. We possess a sense of iso-lation for solid biblical study in our location, but it is also very conveniently located within easy reach of the whole metropolitan area. trust it will always be used to the glory of our Lord. Our campus does say something, and it says it significantly. It ex-presses that which we believe and feel. It will become one of the beauty spots of the area, and we vS CILD IB E.. \ G G V VO 0 O ® O 0 OE' CD 0 0 0 0 Four-four defense. The guards (G) are responsible to stop running plays to either side of them. Also the ends (E) must be able to stop off tackle or end run plays. The inside backers are responsible for runs anywhere to their side. They serve as a second assault wave after the big front four hit. The cornerbacks must make sure no end run gets outside them. They are to force a runner back towards their teammates. The halfbacks and safety are insurance against any runner going for a TD. If the opponent passes, the front four (E's & G's) rush the quarter-back and the others cover for passes in the areas marked by circles in the diagram. HB V rB Is E T V 6 V T E V V V V 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Five-four defense. This is generally known as the OKLAHOMA 5-4. The biggest difference here is that there are five men in the front line, but one less pass defender. Lettermen's Breakfast Honors Former Athletes coach Bill Adams, the Bethel Indians engaged Arch Skalbeck as head coach and played the initial game on September 19, 1947 against Rochester. Throughout the season the In-dians lost three games and tri-umphed once as co-captains Roy Nelson, Warren Palmquist, a n d Douglas Garvey sparked the team. Bethel fans of the last few years will quickly recall the easy vic-tories over Jamestown College. Such was not always the case. The 1954 football team, captained by Duwayne Pople, opened the sea-son with a favorable 6-0 victory over Itasca, only to be mauled 46- 0 the next weekend by what the St. Paul papers called "a strong and formidable Jamestown eleven." In 1959, on a cold, drizzly, windy day at Plattville, Wisconsin, the Bethel Royals became Badger- Gopher conference champions by defeating Wisconsin Tech 19-0. Captain Stu Luckman revealed after the win, "I'm the happiest guy in the world." It was terrific to be captain of such a trmendous team. I was proud of the terrific team effort and each guy did his part well." That was a big year for the Royals as they accomplished their first winning season since 1950 with a 5-3 record. The 1960's after a slow start, saw the advent of a new coach, Owen Halleen, and the tide began to turn more favorably for Bethel. The last three years as head coach, Halleen's teams racked up a whop-ping 21 wins out of 25 games played. Cumulatively, his record of 27 wins and 14 losses over a five year period marked a new turn toward winning at Bethel. Seminary Dedication Includes Flag-raising KB V GB V C8 V by Ron Harris The annual Alumni Lettermen's Breakfast will be held Saturday, 8:00 a.m. in the President's Dining Hall. Featured as part of the Home-coming festivities, the oldsters will recall and relive those ancient days of Bethel athletics. Friendships that were born out of hard knocks, long hours of cross-country running and consis-tent efforts of making a basketball team "jell' will all be renewed. In 1947, regular college confer-ence football became a colorful part of Bethel athletic life. Nestl-ed as a dream by the former car Zthbep • • • The 20th Century Church is a well organized body. In order to obey the Lord's command to "go into all the world . . . " we have created a machine of bulk and magnitude that would have left the early apostles breathless. Our evangelistic boards send men around the world preaching the gospel. Radio stations, printing presses, airplanes, and hypodermic needles all are put to use in order that men might hear. In the United States, almost every special interest group from children to housewives to businessmen, has a Christian organization geared to reaching it with the gospel. Certainly the casual observer would be impressed with our zeal. The Church is talking, it is singing and preaching its message, doing what the Lord has commanded. But many fear for the Church—that it has forgotten something im-portant. It has forgotten how to be still and listen. We have become a Church that is talking, talking, talking. But we don't listen, we don't hear the cries of despair from our world. The world is rushing along without really knowing where it is going, and we are rushing right along with it, with two cars in every garage and tight slacks. Often all that makes us unique is the poetry we quote along the way. Our world has a "New Morality" which the. church condones. What is old is often considered not "with it" in the church as well as out. We need desperately to take a stand on the principles that our Lord has revealed. The Christian gospel can bring renewal and health to all of society, But, oh how the church needs to sit down and listen. It needs to listen to its world and its God. Your Banking Needs! Paencel, peA4cwial (n4 rait Keed4 az DROVERS STATE BANK South St. Paul Member FDIC Phone 451 6822 Bethany Baptist Church 2025 W. Skillman at Cleveland St. Paul Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. College-age class Morning Worship, 11 a.m. Evening Service, 7 p.m. College-age Fellowship After Evening Service Albert Windham Dennis Smith Pastor Youth Pastor (Bus leaves Bodien at 9:30 a.m. — cars at 6:45 p.m.) Wednesday, October 13, 1965 the CLARION Page 5 Offensive Pattern s Harriers Drop Ri•ver Falls Meet; First Bethel Man Finishes Third by Lantz Leonard The Bethel cross country team again added to their 'unblemished' record last Friday, by outscoring a strong River Falls State team 45-18. River Falls took first and second places over a wet 4.2 mile course with Berglin taking first in 24:27. Freshman Dick Olson of Bethel became the first Bethel harrier to finish in the top three in the past two weeks by trotting in in the fine time of 25:09. Fourth through eighth places were taken by River Falls; this is where Bethel's domination be-gan. Bob Chryst gazelled across in ninth position, while Leon Ander-son was nipping his heels in tenth. Jim Erickson captured the next Bethel place with a 29:06 clocking and Norm "Better Late Than Never" Kern took the other Bethel place. He was followed by the rest of the River Falls team—Bob "Sog-geyfoot" Dray. Speaking with Coach Glader fol-lowing the meet, this writer in-ferred a general attitude of en-couragement. This was probably because of the fine performance of Olson, and because they had done this well even without one of their fine runners, Steve Roe, who is out with a bad case of the shin splints. Glader is hoping the team will be at full strength by this week-end when the Royals take on an-other strong field including Wino-na, Augsburg and St. Johns Sat-urday, at 10:30 a.m. on the Como course. Fullback off-tackle right. The is the right guard's "trap" block on the is the way we diagram a back in motion center. special feature of this play defensive end. The wavy line before the ball is snapped at Junior Royals Steal Win From 'Penn State' Coifs Quarterback option right. Notice this play looks almost like the previous one. However, the quarterback fakes a hand-off to the fullback to pull in the defense. He then carries the ball to the defensive end. If the end comes for him, he pitches to the halfback. If not, he keeps the ball and runs himself. V vb Halfback dive. It hits very quickly and the key block is the left tackles's. No matter which way the tackle blocks his man; the half back, carrying the ball, is to cut the other way. edyeiaatelt 5501 Chicago Avenue South, Minneapolis Sunday School 9:30 Morning Service 10:45 College CYF 8:30 p.m. Evening Service 7:00 Rev. Ellis Eklof, Jr., Pastor Roberta Yaxley, Dir. of Music Welcome 41amai and theit Bethel "hie d! JACKETS— Coach—the latest-in Navy blue Blast—blue, red & white Skipper—for girls & women-powder blue Windbreakers—oyster, blue & white Melton hooded—Burgundy & Lodan green SWEATSHIRTS—Long sleeve, short sleeve Big letters, small letters, seals Cotton, Kodel, Creslan Many, many, many, colors Kids' SWEATSHIRTS—sizes 2 thru -4—many colors Bibs, Jackets You Are The Best Advertisement Bethel Has! BOOKS —PAPERBACKS—BIBLES—MAGAZINES &Mei Boaz:Leo/us Saturday Stars Fight Valiantly by Tom Johnson For the third consecutive week, Intramural teams clashed for forty minutes of razzle-dazzle football. The weather, although a little chil-ly, held out nicely. Probably the most outstanding show of the morning was the running of Terry Muck, who led the Squires to a 27-0 shutout of the Dukes. Going around end, Terry broke loose many times for good yardage. When the need arose, he also executed the half-back pass with proficiency. The Dukes were able to ad-vance the ball very near the Squire goal line, but were never able to push it over. The Jesters, not playing as usual, overcame the Counts 13-6. Mary Flodin, scoring on a four yard run, collected the first score against the Jesters this year. The Jesters, however, bounced back for two scores and outlasted the determined Counts. The Knights, led by quarterback Mel Fahs, beat the Pages 6-0. The turning point came when Karl Smith broke loose for a long gain. Fahs scored, and the Pages, unable to make a come-back, lost. The standings still show the Squires and Jesters on top with 3-0 records. The Seminary, taking a bye one week, is close behind with a 2-0 record. eapt atervi ea #. II a el2eivled? Ask your eye doctor. If he says you can, Elwood Carlson Opticians will fit your lenses with the extra care and expert attention your eyes deserve. ELWOOD CARLSON OPTICIANS 4th St. Lobby — Lowry Med. Arts CA 4 - 5212 — St. Paul 719 Nicollet Ave. FE 2 - 5681 — Mpls. Call us for further details by Bob Baffa and Ron Harris The Bethel Royals junior varsity team, carrying a two-year unde-feated record lot° action last Thursday, dumped the Penn State Colts of Stillwater, Minnesota, 13- 12 in a closely guarded contest. The Colts, hurt by paroles last year, made use of an excellent national recruiting system to cap-ture their strongest team in his.. tory. Led by a fine "bootleggin" quarterback, Ronnie Holmes, re-cently drafted from St. Cloud, and Steamboat Fulton (class of '83), produced many break-away threats and set up a tally in the first and fourth quarters. The Royals, preparing for their first game, made their battle-cry "Cream the Cons." Paced by Rick Theil (the pulling guard with the killer instinct), Al "Baby-face" Se-lander, and Larry "Fingers" Peter-son, the Royals executed plays like a charge of nitro-glycerine exploding through a bank vault. "Baby-face" plunged over for the first TD in the second period. In the fourth period, the Royals drove to the 35 yard line of Penn State, where Dave "L-lips" Anderson split his way to the five. But a penalty was called back on the 15 for holding up one of the Stillwater 11. As the referee paced off the 15 yd. penalty, one of the Penn State defenders was heard to say, "Man, dat's just like gettin' a reprieve from da governor." The Royals got rolling again and "Baby-face" scored the second TD. "Fingers" then kicked the extra point over the fence and the many Penn State fans were heard yelling, "I'll go get it! I'll go get it!" The final score was Bethel 13, Stillwater State Prison 12. The Royals enjoyed the tough and clean play of the Stillwater men and are trying to arrange another game with Penn State. However, there seems to be a little difficulty because the Stillwater players and coach insist on playing the game away with their fans present. Informed of the impossibility of this, the Royals expressed a de-sire to return. The Colt's reply was, "Don't worry! We'll be here! FINE SELECTION K. C. CORNELIUS JEWELERS 324 KRESGE BLDG. 7TH 5 NICOLLCT MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA FEDERAL 5 -6040 Reasonable Student Rates V V 0 O Watch Next week's Clarkw for a special AililOtiileeffieilll &Mel Batdahvie Page 6 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Varsity gridders are shown resting and waiting for action against Northland. Morris Boasts Husky Front Wall; Winless In Three Western Outings _ — Football is important to me. And like anything that is important to any person, it is, to use the psychologist's term, ego-involving. As a person faces an ego-involviing activity, he naturally experiences some pre-performance stress. For instance, I'll bet music majors have some tense moments before their senior recital. All of us have "sweated out" a test in some certain subject. People face stress in different ways. I suppose my first reaction is to try to escape. Friday night the game is too far away and I can still "escape" psychologically. But by Saturday morning, sometimes as early as seven o'clock, I began to realize that I do, in fact, have a game to play. There is no place to which I can escape. I must play a game and it will require strenuous effort. A little tense knot begins to form in my stomach. Training meal is generally at about ten o'clock. By this time I'm a little more anxious so I gulp my food unless I restrain myself. After the meal the team meets together with the coach who talks over the game plan. Then we break up, tape our ankles, shine our football shoes and pull on our equipment. After dressing we jog out onto the field for pre-game warm-ups. Generally this is when we see the other team for the first time. It's about a half hour before game time. The knot grows a little tighter as I begin to ask myself, "Can you do the job today, Jim?" The last 15 minutes before a game are crucial, for it is here that my attitude finally crystalizes. If I continue to question my ability, I may end up doubting it. To start a game this way spells trouble, for I play in a state of helpless shock while my opponents run over me. Happily, though it happens at times, this is not usually the way I start. Experience has taught me my abilities so that in the last 15 minutes I often feel an "anxious confidence." I'm confident that I can play well and I'm anxious to get started. This anxious desire to play the game is very important. If it grows inside, my whole system concentrates on playing hard. Adrenalin shoots through my body. I'm "high" and want to exert myself. This feeling is the opposite of helpless shock. It's the feeling with which every player, and with which every coach wants his players to start. by Jim Brand PAR TIES! Meet at the Arden Inn ... gathering place for friendly spirits. Mardi Gras Room available for weddings, private parties by reservation. ARDEN INN N. Snelling and Co. Rd. B, OPEN: Sundays noon to 9 PM; Daily 5 PM to 10 PM. Closed Mon. - MI 4-2847 * * * FALCON BARBERSHOP 1703 N. Snelling Avenue Why wail- for a haircut? Call Mi 6 - 2323 tdI kw/len/ban/If Owner Vededem Saftecat &cad 720 13th Avenue South — Minneapolis Morning Worship 10:50 CYF 5:30 Sunday School 9:45 Evening Service 7:00 John Wilcox, Pastor Gary Smalley, Youth Director Charlotte Ransom, Education Secretary Pastor's phone: UN 6-6249 Transportation from Bodien at 9:15 a.m. and 5 p.m. 744414twedd OUR DIAMOND ROOM is equipped with the proper lighting to show true color in diamonds. OUR GEMOLITE shows you the INSIDE of a Diamond. OUR KNOWLEDGE of DIAMONDS is available to you. We can show you Diamonds cut to exact specifications producing for you, more of what you are buying a Diamond for . . . BEAUTY. A properly proportioned Diamond creates a Rainbow for your finger and beauty that is unequaled. PLEASE AVAIL YOURSELF OF OUR SERVICE WE SHALL BE HONORED Student Discount "Guaranteed Watch Repair Done on the Premises" 1548 W. Larpenteur Ave. — Ph. 646-4114 — Next to Falcon Heights State Bank by Tom Cornell The University of Minnesota Mor-ris Cougars invade the familiar confines of St. Paul's Midway Sta-dium October 16, in an attempt to undermine the Royals' "Munch Morris" campaign. Game time for the annual Royal Homecoming clas-sic is 1:30 p.m. Cougar's Coach Rich Borstad brings a formidable cast of nine-teen lettermen and seven seniors to town in an effort to get on the winning track. Winless in their first three outings by scores of 14-7 to Moorhead State, 54-0 to Wayne State (Nebraska), and 34-7 to Yankton, the Cougars seek re-venge for the 33-6 setback admin-istered them by Bethel in 1964. Cougar team captain Dennis Malherek, 6'2" 182 pound senior letterman from Truman, Minne-sota, mans the quarterback spot. Seven other lettermen assume starting roles in an offensive lineup which includes three freshmen, five sophomores, and three seniors. The "all-Minnesotan" starting lineup also includes such stalwarts as center Rick Fluegel, 180 pound four-year man from Donnelly, and guard Bob Albrecht, 185 pound senior from Alexandria. Melherek's passing is comple-mented by fullback Steve Trites' running. Trites, 175 pound hard-nosed sophomore from Henning, is the Cougars' leading rusher thus far. From end to end, the offensive line averages 194 pounds per man, the heaviest of which are Twins' Star At Local Meeting Bernie Allen, second baseman of the Minnesota Twins, will be the featured guest at the kickoff pro-gram at the College and Career group of the Central Free Church Sunday, October 17. He'll give the inside story of the World Series plus his own personal testimony. "10th Inning," as the program is called, will follow the regular even-ing service and will last until 8:30. Also in the program will be special music by the Trinity Brass Ensem-ble of the Trinity Covenant Church of Minneapolis. Transportation to the Central Free Church, 707 10th Ave., Min-neapolis, will leave Bodien Dorm at 6:15 p.m. two sophomore tackles, Ward Werpy and Jim Heikes at 216 and 224 pounds respectively. Other players who are sure to see action on defense include end Roger Young, tackle Tom Beaulieu, safety John Noclander, guards Paul Kopel and Curt Larson, and line-backer Dennis Kellner. by Ralph Sheppard The Bethel Royals traveled to Ashland, Wisconsin, Saturday to battle the ever powerful Northland College football team. The field condition was one not entirely un-familiar to the Royals, as they have been practicing in mud and rain for the past three or four weeks. _Since the muddy playing con-ditions almost halted Bethel's ground game, they were forced to an aerial attack which brought victory within their grasp. Northland scored early in the second quarter on a one yard plunge by Martin Domitrodich, but the extra point attempt fail-ed as the Royals held. Later in the same quarter North-land scored again, this time on a five yard roll-out by Bob Brown. Jim Kangas kicked the extra point, and Northland left the field at half-time with the score 13-0. The third quarter was a stand-off as each team was determined to keep the other from scoring. The Royal defense led by veteran Dave Gehrke succeeded in stal-ling any further Northland threats. The Royals' "never - say - die" brand of football gave them the impetus to score in the fourth quarter. Quarterback Bob Nolin passed to fullback Barnet (Bar-ney) Cox on a six yard scoring play. Larry Peterson added the extra point, leaving the score 13-7 when the final gun sounded. Outstanding Player for the Roy-als was quarterback Nolin who threw 38 passes and completed 26 for 271 yards. His favorite re-cievers were end John Carmean, halfback Don Land, and fullback Cox. The Royals gained 20 first downs to Northland's 11, and gained 336 net yards to Northland's 237. All in all, the Royals left the field knowing that one or two key de-fensive lapses had cost them the game. The Royals are now 1-3 for the season. STRANDQUIST TEXACO SERVICE Hamline and Hoyt Mi 6-9272 Brake and Mechanical Work Towing Service Aerial Attack Outgains Northland; Defensive Lapses Defeat Royals
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Title | Clarion 1965-10-13 Vol 41 No 03 |
Edition (Vol. No.) | Vol. 41 No. 3 |
Date Published | October 13 1965 |
Decade | 1960 |
Academic Year | 1965 - 1966 |
Frequency | Weekly |
Article Titles | Homecoming: Past is Prologue: Weekend Theme Offers Historical Commentary; Alumnus Award Being Planned As Part of Weekend Activities; Alumni Banquet Saturday Night; New Seminary To Be Dedicated; Library Policy Gives Discounts; Recent College Changes Reflect 'Prologue' Spirit; American 'Containment' Policy Called Contributing Factor In Asian Conflict; Lewis-Huxley Comparison Yields Elusive Resemblance of Thought; Missionary-In-Residence Edwards Teaches Seminary During Furlough; English 3200' Students To Face Grammar Retest; 'Bishop' Smith's Assay Hits Seminarians Hard; Bethelites Greet Dodgers After First Series Game; European Study Plan Announced; Senate Cynic: Observer Again Rethinks Decision-making Process; New Seminary Structure and Setting Express Theological Objectives; Defensive Alignments; Seminary Dedication Includes Flag-raising; Lettermen's Breakfast Honors Former Athletes; Varied Activities Mark Halftime; Offensive Patterns Harriers Drop River Falls Meet, First Bethel Man Finishes Third; Saturday Stars Fight Valiantly; Morris Boasts Husky Front Wall, Winless In Three Western Outings; Aerial Attack Outgains Northland, Defensive Lapses Defeat Royals; Twins' Star At Local Meeting; |
Photographs | Homecoming court from which the queen will be chosen Friday includes Jonelle Olson, Phyllis Nelson, Darlene Palermo, Andrea Richardson, and Phoebe Netterlund.; 1964 Homecoming Queen Judy Van Wambeke teaches little subjects at Falcon Heights Elementary School.; Howie Reed of the Los Angeles Dodgers pauses in the St. Paul Hotel to sign an autograph for senior Gloria Thompson. She was among thirty Bethelites to encourage the team after the first disappointing Series game.; Varsity gridders are shown resting and waiting for action against Northland.; |
Subject |
Bethel Seminary Dedication services |
Digital Collection | The Clarion: Bethel University's Student Newspaper |
Digital Publisher | Bethel University |
Editor | Swenson, Bill |
Contributors | Bibler, Dick (Cartoonist); Halvorsen, John (News Editor); Johnson, Bernard (Senate Columnist); Olsen, Stan (Cultural Columnist); Brand, Jim (Sports Columnist); Malm, Judy (Layout Editor); Sherman, Jackie (Copyreader); Malmsten, Fran (Advertising Manager); Van Campen, Vic (Advertising Assistant); Peterson, Gene (Business Manager); Nelson, Wallace O. (Adviser); |
Location |
United States Minnesota Saint Paul |
Time Span of Publication | Newspaper published from 1921 through present day |
Copyright | Reproduction or distribution of these files is permitted for educational and research purposes with proper attribution to the Bethel Digital Library. No commercial reproduction or distribution of these files is permitted under copyright law without the written permission of Bethel University Digital Library. For questions or further information on this collection, contact digital-library@bethel.edu. |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Physical Dimensions | 17 1/2 x 11 7/8 |
Original Collection | Printed paper copies of original newspaper in the collections of the Bethel University Library and the History Center: Archives of the Baptist General Conferene and Bethel University. |
Original Publisher | Bethel College and Seminary |
Transcript | Homecoming court from which the queen will be chosen Friday includes Jonelle Olson, Phyllis Nelson, Darlene Palermo, Andrea Richardson, and Phoebe Netterlund. Volume XLi—No. 3 Bethel College and Seminary, St. Paul, Minn. Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Alumnus Award Being Planned As Part of Weekend Activities 1964 Homecoming Queen Judy Van Wambeke teaches little subjects at Falcon Heights Elementary School. Homecoming: 'Past Is Prologue' Weekend Theme Offers Historical Commentary A "Past Prologue" of Bethel's development will be presented Fri-day, October 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse Auditorium as part of the 1965 Homecoming activities. The program, staged by Mr. Rott and speech students, attempts to help bring about an understanding of the present by selecting mile-stones in Bethel's history and either commenting on them or allowing the situations to comment on themselves. "By understanding the past, we know the present," explained Miriam Carlson, co-chairman of the Homecoming activities. This year's program is unique for a variety of dramatic techniques are being used. The opening scene will feature a narration by J. David Patterson and Bernard Johnson. Following will be speech choruses, pantomines, other narrations, drama scenes, oral interpretations, projective slides, music, and tape recordings. These will be interwoven throughout the program to provide variety and change of pace. Using these media, comments will be made on Bethel's academic history, campus development, and equisition of property. A commen-tary on different periods of national stress, such as the post-Civil War era, will be made, with reflection directed also on cultural and moral changes throughout Bethel's history. Specific scenes will portray the first seminary student, the college's first president, the starting of a co-op food service at Bethel, and the moral issue of the 1920's con-cerning the length of women's hair. The presentation of the Home-coming Court and the coronation of the queen will be integrated in-to the program. The program will be followed at 9:00 p.m. by a campus pepfest to be held at the south end of the fieldhouse. Alumni Banquet Saturday Night "Past Prologue" will be high-lighted by the Homecoming Ban-quet. Rev. and Mrs. Featherstone will be host and hostess. Special Music will be presented by the Chrismon Quartet. This weekend will see many of Bethel's almni returning to campus for the Homecoming festivities—a time of renewing old friendships and reliving memories. Host and hostess for the activi-ties will be Rev. and Mrs. Robert Featherstone. R e v. Featherstone was appointed host last July by Bethel's Alumni Council and has been preparing programs with the Senate Homecoming Committee, Alumni Affairs Office, and Par-ent's Council. His main functions this weekend will be welcoming alumni and Library Policy Gives Discounts parents to the Homecoming cha-pel service and coffee hours and emceeing the banquet on Sat-urday night. Rev. Featherstone graduated from Bethel seminary in 1955. In his senior year at the seminary he was Acting Dean of Students for the College and went on to be Stewardship Director for the Bap-tist General Conference. He is now pastor of the first Baptist Church of Rochester, Minnesota and is a member of the Alumni Council. Beginning alumni activities will be the Homecoming chapels Fri-day morning. Rev. Featherstone will speak at the college and Bill Starr, Executive Director of Young Life, also a Bethel alumnus, will speak at the Seminary. Following Friday night's pro-gram and pepfest, the alumni and parents will get together for their traditional coffee hours. President Lundquist will speak briefly at the informal gather-ings. Highlight of the weekend will be Saturday night's banquet. Of special interest at the banquet will be the announcement of the first Alumnus of the Year. The selection is made by the Alumni Awards Committee composed of three members of the Alumni Council, three alumni-at-large, and one faculty member. The Alumnus of the year is chosen on the basis of the follow-i n g considerations: outstanding achievement within the alumnus' chosen field of endeavor, signifi-cant contributions and public ser-vice benefitting his community, continued interest and loyalty to Bethel. Rev. Akenson, Pastor of the first Baptist Church of Minneapolis, will keynote the Banquet with his din-ner address. He is a former Presi-dent of Northwestern Bible Col-lege and is presently Chairman of the Board of Northwestern Bible College. All students, whether they at-tend the banquet or not, are invited to hear this dinner address at 8:00 Saturday evening in the Fieldhouse. Business will be keyed to the Alumni. Rodney Erickson will pre-side. Alumni news will be re-ported to the Alumni Association. As the program is a special alumni event, the ticket sales will be split in half between the stu-dent body and alumni. New Seminary To Be Dedicated October 17, 1965, marks the dedication, throughout the Baptist General Conference, of the new Arden Hills campus of Bethel Theological Seminary. Each Con-ference church throughout t h e world has been requested to par-ticipate vicariously in its own ser-vice of dedication. At three o'clock the program will begin at the Arden Hills Cam-pus with the Ceremony of the Keys, where the keys for the buildings will be transferred from Ragner Borg, Contractor, to President Lundquist. Greetings by Governor Karl Rolvaag of Minnesota will be fol-lowed by the Act of Dedication led by Dean Gordon Johnson of the Seminary. During the Act of Dedication, the faculty will pro-cess and a Bible will be placed in the entry pavilion. The Male Chorus led by C. Howard Smith will present two numbers, "All Blessing, Honor, Thanks and Praise," and "I Will Extol Thee, 0 Lord." The flag and flagpole, a gift to the Seminary by alumni serving as Chaplains, will be dedicated by Major Carl J. Bergstrom, assisted by Chaplain Bruce Herrstrom. The Promise of the Foundation will begin with a pledge led by Lloyd Dahlquist, General Secre-tary of Baptist General Con-ference. Following this Dolan Toth, treasurer of the Board of Education, will lead the congre-gation in prayer. An offering will also be taken. The final part of the ceremony will be the Rite of Occupation. During this time all guests at the service of dedication are invited to join in a precessional through the buildings, entering at the rear pavilion and following the markers and Seminary student guides. The libray has initiated a change in its fining procedures. Fines are now collected at the circulation desk. If the student pays the fine when he returns an overdue book, fifty percent discount is allowed. However, if the library must bill After the Alumni Lettermen's the student for the fine, the entire breakfast Saturday morning, the fine is charged. parents and alumni will have the Fine rates are 5 cents per item opportunity to attend one of two per day for general circulation functions of the Alumni-Parents books or pamphlets, 25 cents per College. Described by Dwight Jes-hour or fraction thereof for two- sup, Director of Alumni and Par-hour reserve books, 25 cents per ent Affairs, the purpose of this day or fraction thereof for one- first annual activity is "to acquaint day reserve books, and 50 cents alumni and parents with important per day for recalled books. aspects of Bethel's program." Reserve books circulate for the Those going to the Seminary period of time arranged by a will be conducted on a tour of the faculty member w h o requested facilities by Dean Gordon Johnson, the reserve. This time is indicated who will also speak later in the in the upper right corner of the morning. Those who come to the reserve book cards. One-day re- College will hear Dr. Dalphy Fla-serve books and two-hour reserve gerstrom and Campus Pastor Al books that are checked out over- Glenn, who will speak about Beth-night are both due back in the el's developing spiritual life and library at nine the next morning. his role in the college. #rk.p-tfiret- 7,4ede AO. 411•11, American 'Containment' Policy Called Contributing Factor In Asian Conflict This is the second in a series of two articles by college senior David Beek on the India-Pakistan Dispute. He has recently returned from a year of study and research near Hyderabad, South India. by Dave Beek The United States' foreign policy in Asia has been more responsible for the recent conflict between India and Pakistan than most Americans realize or are willing to, admit. After the tragic events accompanying partition, India and Pakistan turned to the urgent problems of nation building and domestic development. The domestic needs were so momentous that neither could afford diverting resources for defense pur-poses. By following a "non-aligned" policy in the bi-polar world, they sought to reduce the tension between themselves and to avoid becoming involved in the Soviet-American duel. The United States, in self-interest, was urging the non-aligned Asian countries to accept American military aid and to join security pacts for protection against Communist aggression. Nehru asked the United States not to give military aid to either India or Pakistan; he warned that this would eventually be used, not against Russian or Chinese aggression, but against each other. The United States ignored his plea. India resisted American pressures until after the Chinese invasions of 1959 and 1962. Pakistan, due to its more Islamic, militaristic tradition and to its felt inferior position, having only one quarter the population of India, yielded in 1954 by accept-ing American armaments and bases and by joining SEATO and CENTO. Indian-Pakistan and Indian-American tensions rose sharply. India was forced to seek protection against Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Ban-tan Books, 1946, pp. 177 (paperback; $.60). Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis. Macmillan, 1947, pp. 121 (paperback, $.95). Utilitarianism and theism are strange bed-fellows, but Huxley and Lewis belong side by side on your book shelf. Lewis' starting point is an Eng-lish reader which he calls The Green Book by Gaius and Titius. His theme is the total absurdity of the current theory, "all statements of value are totally subjective." Therefore "mother" is of no more or less value than God, pleasure, treason, objectivity, or life. "But this is not necessarily a refutation of subjectivism about values as a theory. The true doctrine might be a docrine which, if we accept, we die" (p. 39). Lewis criticizes the subjectivists further because, "However subjec-tive they may be about some tradi-tional value, Gaius and Titius have shown by the very act of writing The Green Book that there must be some other values about which they are not subjective at all" (p. 39). So where do they find non-sub-jective values—in some statement of fact? But how does 'ought' come from 'is'? Perhaps instinct is a proper base. But our instincts are very much at war. Which ones? Unless we admit that there are some values which need no ra-tional defense—which are the very foundation of all reason— we shall be totally at the mercy of our desires. Lewis argues that the result of man's conquest of nature is the dehumanization of man. Man is regarded as an animal fit for the dissecting table or for laboratory experiments. The government will be able to condition man as the psychology department conditions pigeons. In other words, a sort of Brave New World. If there is no value how shall the conditioners choose to mold men? They do as they wish. "We find ... (the Conditioners) subjected to that in themselves which is purely 'natural' — to their irrational impulses" (p. 80). "It is not that they are bad men. They are not men at all" (p. 77). The case is clear. Unless there is some eternal good, true, and beau-tiful (which he calls "Tao") we face meaninglessness. The modern world trades the threat of hell for the certainty of non-existence. Huxley sees the same vision of man's predicament. Man is con-quered by men who use science as wizards use magic—as an instru-ment of personal power. Men sacrifice their freedom and art for stability and contentment. Society is sterile and antiseptic without purity. Science is not for man, but man for science. In the foreword to this edition Huxley gives an alternative to Washington President Johnson's surgery Fri-day for removal of his gall bladder was termed a "complete success" by attending physicians. The sur-g e r y announcement brought a slight hesitation in Wall Street trading during the week. Jarkarta Turmoil reigns in Indonesia fol-lowing Moslem reaction to last Brave New World. "Science and technology would be used as though, like the Sabbath, they had been made for man ... Religion would be the conscious and intelligent pursuit of man's Final End, the unitive knowledge of the immanent Tao or Logos, the transcendent Godhead or Brahman. ... the first question to be asked and answered in every con-tingency of life being: "How will this thought or action contribute to, or interfere with, the achieve-ment, by me and the greatest possible number of other indi-viduals, of man's Final End?" (p. ix.) The resemblance between Huxley and Lewis is elusive. Both use the term "Tao" for the universe's non-personal moral order. Both charge scientism with abolishing man. Neither holds with the confident intellectual climate of the day. But to try to make Huxley a Christian apologist is to fail. He proposes to substitute Brave New World for a pure atheistic humani-tarianism. Nevertheless, we would do well to notice that two of the most ar-ticulate men of our time have rec-ognized the same self-destructive tendencies in our society. Shall we hear them? How shall we respond? by Mustapha Mond week's revolutionary attempt by anti-Sukarno militarists. Later re-ports said that the desire to rid Indonesia of Communists h a d spread from the capital of Jakarta on Java Island to the other large islands of Sumatra and the Celebes. Karachi Pakistan officials accused India Wednesday of cease-fire violations in the Kashmir border dispute. They claimed 2400 Indian troops had launched an attack in the Mendhar region, but were beaten back by Pakistanis. Indian leaders in New Delhi countered by accus-ing Pakinstanis of beginning the offensive. London Ian Smith, Prime Minister o f Rhodesia, after failing to come to favorable terms with British leaders over the status of his nation, said Friday that he be-lieves his people will soon sep-arate from Britain by declaring independence. Miami Refugees had started to leave Cuba in response to Fidel Castro's promise to throw open exit gates even before the October 12 open-ing date had arrived. The United States has asked Castro to plan an orderly procedure for exiles' leav-ing so that the number entering the U. S. via Florida will not be impossible to handle. New York British Foreign Secretary Mich-ael Stewart proposed Wednesday that both sides stop fighting in Viet Nam, and that the United Nations administer a program of repair in the war-ravaged nation. Minneapolis In a press conference Friday Governor Karl Rolvaag said that he has made a decision about run-ning for re-election in 1966, but will not announce it yet. Moscow Russian scientists admitted Thurs-day that they had failed to soft-land the rocket Luna-7 on the moon because some operations needed further development. Fur-ther reports stated that a mis-timed retro-rocket caused the failure. Consequently, we responded to international crisis as if violence and force were the only effective solution to world problems. Solv-ing political problems through the principles of Force, Truth, and Nonviolence were considered by some, not only to be heretical, but concilitory to the "evils of the world". Gandhi based his principles on the belief that all men were united by an underlying spiritual substance and that the application of this Satyagrahn or "soul force" would confront one's evildoing with a moral force. His successful application of these principles in the struggle for Independence and in pre-senting an outbreak of Hindu-cont'd on page three giollaifteCOMinf • • . Friday, October 15 9:45 a.m.—HOMECOMING CHAPEL, Field-house Auditorium 7:30 p.m.—"PAST PROLOGUE: Bethel, 95 Years in Retrospect" featuring the Queen Coronation, Fieldhouse Auditorium ($1 each) 9:00 p.m.—CAMPUS PEPFEST 9:30 p.m.—ALUMNI COFFEE HOUR, Bodien Residence PARENTS COFFEE HOUR, Edgren Resi-dence Saturday, October 16 8:00 am.—ALUMNI LETTERMEN'S BREAKFAST, President's Dining Room, Bodien Residence (75c) 10:00 a.m.—ALUMNI-PARENT COLLEGE College Library Dr. Dalphy Fagerstrom: "The Library—A New Concept in Collegiate Education" Campus Pastor Al Glenn: "Growing Spir-itual Dimensions at Bethel" Arden Hills Campus Dean Gordon Johnson: "Seminary Archi-tecture— an Expression of Theological Ob-jectives" 10:30 a.m.—OPEN HOUSE, Student Residences 12:00 Noon 1:30 p.m.—VARSITY FOOTBALL, Bethel vs. U. of Minn.—Morris, Midway Stadium ($1 each) 6:30 p.m.—HOMECOMING BANQUET, Dr. Curtis B. Akenson, Speaker, Fieldhouse Auditorium ($2.50 by advance reservation) Sunday, October 17 3:00 p.m.—DEDICATION SERVICE, Seminary Academic Complex, Arden Hills Campus the CLARION Published weekly during the academic year, except during vacation and examination periods, by the students of Bethel college and seminal y, St. Paul 1. Minn. Subscrip-tion rate $3 per year. Volume XLI No. 3 Editor-in-Chief Bill Swenson Assistant Editor John Halvorsen Senate Columnist Bernard Johnson Cultural Columnist Stan Olsen Sports Columnist Jim Brand Layout Editor Judy Malm Layout Staff Anita Palm, Karen Bergstrom, Connie Jo Doud, Dave Fredine, Jeff Loomis Copyreader Jackie Sherman Typist Nancy Ballantyne Circulation Linda Burgess Photography Hans Waldenstrom Advertising Manager Fran Malmsten Advertising Assistant Vic Van Campen Business Manager Gene Peterson Adviser Wallace Nelson Opinions expressed in the CLARION do not necessarily reflect the position of the college or seminary. Page 2 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Recent College Changes Reflect 'Prologue' Spirit Homecoming 1965 will go down as a major step forward in the unification of the Baptist General Conference with its institutions of higher education. Seminary Dedication Sunday morning will dawn upon the unique occurance of pastors around the nation leading their congregations in simultaneous words of dedication while in St. Faul the capstone of our educational program is realized. Meanwhile, alumni, parents, and friends of Bethel con-verge on the college campus to consider the next seven years on this campus as a special prologue, in the context of the past, to the erection of the new college complex in the Centennial Year. Several bright spots of the recent past spring to mind: The, continuing strong relationship between college and seminary in this first year of separation, college library improvements in space and planning, and the institution of a summer Student Missionary Program. And if these gains of the past year or two are indicative of the type of growth to be expected in the seven year Prologue to the new Bethel College, the future of Christian higher education in the evangelical tradition of our Swedish forefathers is bright indeed. The incorporation of greater numbers of qualified sem-inarians into the college educational program as instructors and discussion leaders is to be applauded. May it be followed by upper division inter-disciplinary seminars which ultimately find their connecting links in de-votion to the same Truth—perhaps through the leadership of men thoroughly trained in theology and Biblical studies as well as advanced study in their chosen discipline. The provision of more floor and shelf space in the college library as well as the creation of the joint cataloguing system are worthy of praise. May they be followed by increased co-operation and working relationships among the private colleges of the Twin Cities, such as inter-college borrowing cards. Macalester, Hamline, St. Thomas and St. Catherine's, for instance, now share supporting resource facilities for their newly inaugurated, co-operative area studies program. And the purchase of a card catalogue listing the main holdings of the James Hill Reference Library can be seen in the light of convenience for advanced research on this campus, and good stewardship and planning for the Arden Hills campus. The Chapel Committee, too, deserves praise for the various successful ventures of the student missionaries. May the pro-gram be expanded in coming years to other hemispheres, per-haps with tuition breaks for returning missionaries and more systematic back-to-the community reporting of projects. And may a large advance orientation period in the history and culture of the respective countries, as well as more solidly defined academic pursuits in the countries, yield opportunities to introduce the new Bethel College to potential foreign students around the world. Pakistan by accepting British aid. As the arms race between the two countries quickened, it became increasingly difficult to settle the Kashmir problem peacefully. Nehru's prophecy was fulfilled, when during the recent Indian-Pakistan conflict, the massive military aid was used against each other. When assessing American foreign policy during the fifties, one wonders what blinded the American people from seeing these realities of international politics. A major factor was a schizophrenic view of the world: the extremes of pessimism and optimism, the paradoxical concentration on certain facts, on the one hand, and complete disregard for certain facts on the other hand. The simple, single tracked Ameri-can mind related the major evils of the world to Communism. On the one hand, our optimism saw an ideal world rid of the major evils with the destruction of Communism. Our faith in the peace loving nature of countries absent of Communist influence overrode entirely such inescapable facts as the Hindu-Moslem conflict in 1947 which killed a half million persons and displaced ten million more in the two countries. On the other hand, our overly pessimistic view of the world led many Americans to believe the non-American countries confronted by a Communist power were essentially puppets of a Satanic power. A large portion of the American people believed that they were a chosen people, the chosen guard-ians of the good in the world. This self-conceit, no doubt, grew out of being over-awed by our military power. Lewis-Huxley Comparison Yields Elusive Resemblance of Thought Howie Reed of the Los Angeles Dodgers pauses in the St. Paul Hotel to sign an autograph for senior Gloria Thompson. She was among thirty Bethelites to encourage the team after the first disap-pointing Series game. Bethelites Greet Dodgers After First Series Game Missionary-In-Residence Edwards Teaches Seminary During Furlough Rev. Paul Edwards, missionary from India, will teach in Bethel Theological Seminary both winter and spring quarters. Rev. Edwards holds a B.A. de-gree from Wheaton and a B.D. from Bethel Seminary. He also has a M.A. from George Washington University, where he studied Com-parative Religions. Bethel College alumni will re-member Rev. Edwards as a Bethel Bible teacher and basket-ball and baseball coach from 1944-1950. It was in 1950 that Rev. Edwards left for India where he has con-tinued to serve. His work has included both educational and ev-angelistic ministries. Mrs. Edwards is a medical doctor and has faith-fully served with her husband on the mission field. They are now back in the States on their second furlough. The two classes that Rev. Ed-wards will teach in the Seminary are Challenge to World Missions and Challenge of Non-Christian Re-ligions. These will be taught win- How to Become a Bishop Without Being Religious by Charles Merrill Smith. Doubleday, 1965 ($3.50). This latest "success manual" is a tragedy. It claims to give the single sem-inarian the steps to success in climbing the clerical ladder. It ana-lyzes the proper methods of letting sleeping congregations lie and overcoming the antagonism or com-peting clerics. Charles Merrill Smith is pastor of the Wesley Methodist Church in Bloomington, Illinois. He "has a lover's quarrel with the church" and HOW TO BECOME ... is both the better and the worse for it. First, the virtues of this book: its satire is to the point—and the right points too. There are several subtitles from Chapter Four, "The Administration of a Church, which is a polite phrase for raising mon-ey: The status church ... Picking the right Negro ... The men to cul-tivate." "Selecting the Clerical Wife" would seem to be a vital chapter for the single theologue. Smith argues here that the prospective minister MUST marry; secondly, that he will be well advised to avoid certain kinds of girls; third, that he ought to seek one who wants to marry a minister. Therefore "the proper se-quence of events is to select a girl who meets the predetermin-ed specifications and then fall in love with her, rather than allow your romantic fancy to light upon just any young female who happens to appeal to you for ir-relevant reasons" (p. 21). Smith also jibes at subject-cen-tered worship, provides a key to properly "spiritual" words, and outlines "the techniques of being unmistakably clerical!) The breadth of Smith's discus-sion includes all the appropriate concerns of a "standard-brand" minister: choosing a car, non-of-fensive art, and "making the major leagues." His perception is acute, but his satire is merely broad. This is the principle artistic attempt to satirize all the aspects of clerical life makes this appear ter and spring quarters, respective-ly. Rev. Edwards hopes to encour-age the Seminary students to be-come more deeply involved in the global outreach of the church. He wants the students to be aware of the problems of reach-ing a foreign culture. He is greatly concerned about the sta-tistical decline in applicants to the mission field, and envisions Of the 351 students enrolled in Freshman English 103, 158 demon-strated a satisfactory mastery of the principles of English grammar and usage by earning a score of 85 or above on the entrance exam-ination. Those who failed to do so will stand a retest on October 18. This examination was carefully compiled from the standard test-ing materials of the widely used programmed course, English 3200 by Joseph Blumenthal. Student scores have been compared with brutal. But we can't charge Smith with bitterness — his is a lover's quarrel — not a cynic's. A devoted pessimist would hard-ly have risked "Christian back-lash" for the sake of such hyper-bole. Beneath the veneer of scoffing lies solid-grain concern. I suggest the following procedure for read-ing; ministerial students will read the book and laugh—the rest will read and weep. No one ought to ignore it. — by Jim Keim European Study Plan Announced Miss Barbara Weiss, field repre-sentative of the Scandinavian Sem-inar, visits Bethel campus Wednes-day, October 20, to interest stu-dents and faculty in a new educa-tional adventure. The program she promotes pro-vides students with the opportunity to attend school in Denmark, Fin-land, Norway, or Sweden for nine months while living with a native family. Information on location and time will be posted when estab-lished. Requests for personal in-terviews with Miss Weiss are handled through the Student Service office. The nine-month study program, from August to May, is open to stu-dents without previous knowledge in the language. The applicant re-ceives appropriate instructional material upon acceptance to ac-quire workable skills in the lan-guage. With a grasp of the language and a feeling for the Scandin-avian world, the student benefits from the FOLKEHOJSKOLE'S presentation o f Scandinavia through lectures, discussions, seminars and tours. The Scandinavian Seminar or-ganization makes scholarship loans available to students needing finan-cial assistance. The interest-free loans are payable three years after termination of the student's study year. part of his task here as recruit-ment. Rev. Edwards' presence on the Seminary campus is viewed as a definite aid to the students by pro-viding a meaningful encounter with the problems and challenges of the mission field. He will be a signifi-cant asset to the kind of prepara-tion that is being fostered by the Seminary educational program. their performances on the verbal section of the Scholastic Aptitude Test, and sufficient correlation ex-ists to demonstrate the validity of the examination. A mastery of the content of this program affords the student a minimum comprehension of Eng-lish grammar and usage essential to his performing acceptably in college work. Inasmuch as the English Depart-ment is insufficiently staffed to do remedial teaching and inasmuch as the material can be mastered with greater facility by the pro-grammed approach, no portion of the classroom time of the course is allocated to teaching from this textbook. Six special help sessions, how-ever, have been scheduled either on Saturday mornings or on free periods during the week to deal with student questions. The in-structors in the English Depart-ment are also available to give individual help. Registration for Freshman Eng-lish 103 is considered probation-ary until the student demon-strated his minimum proficiency in the rudiments of English grammar and usage. Hence, those whose scores were poor on the first examination must perform satisfactorily on the retest in order to validate their registra-tion in the course. Students who are unable to do so will be asked to drop Freshman English 103 and may not register for Freshman English 104. by Bernard Johnson The floor of the senate this week was clogged with a number of touchy issues as well as the usual number of not so touchy issues. One, a motion to have the student lounges in the college building open Friday and Saturday evenings until 12:00 p.m. as couple's lounge was passed 8-5. As usual, however, this only means that this will become a pro-posal to the administration who can in turn be counted upon to act within the full convictions of their conscience. Don't count on a couple's lounge. J. David Patterson submitted a report from t h e Publications Board in which he recommended that one representative of the CLARION be sent to the Asso-ciated Collegiate Press conven-tion this year and that this per- Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Staunch Dodger fans gathered at the Hotel St. Paul to greet the players as they returned from the first and unsuccessful Series game. Many of the approximately thirty Bethel students were native Calif-ornians. They wanted the team to know there was an enthusiastic, if small, group of fans even in the Twins' own territory. The escapade began when fresh-man Barbara Elliff called the hotel early Wednesday morning to arrange an appointment for an interview. She talked first with Johnny Roseboro, whom she had awaken with the call. He referred her to Wally Moon, Dodger player representative. Barb told him that even though the group of supporters was in the minority, they were "pluggin' all the way." "That s right ma am, everything is going to be all right!" The students, congregated in the lobby of the hotel at four-thirty with souvenir baseballs in hand. After a forty-five minute wait, the players arrived and though disap-pointed with the results of the game, stopped to sign autographs. son be the person tentatively considered as the next editor. One gets the feeling after at-tending a few senate meetings, that the majority of items each week mold themselves into a tow-ering monument of indecision. They tell me this is a hazard of democratic government. Perhaps postponement of issues is a good thing since it gives sen-ators a chance to think things through. As a matter of fact, this very thing is written into the rules of order. Only when one leaves a sen-ate meeting in a state of utter confusion does he question whe-ther or not democracy is func-tionally adequate in all situa-tions.. One thing is certain, however, and that concerns the matter of disappearing trays. The snow isn't even flying yet, gang; let's eat on trays at least until that time! Jim Lefebvre, candidate for Rookie of the Year of 1965, quipped that it was "just one of those days." Later in the evening Wally Moon spoke to Barb Elliff, Cindi Weddle, Lyn Eichenberger, and Anita Palm in a personal inter-view. Knowing the mechanical responses to the game already, questions were aimed at finding deeper feelings. He said the team morale was not like a college level team spirit that must be worked up every Friday night. After a period of time, a player on a professional level learns to always be "psyched" for a game. Venturing deeper, it was asked, "What is the religious spirit of the team?" In answering, he said sev-eral of the men on the team were "deeply religious" although the subject was rarely discussed. He himself is a Methodist and a member of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes with about five other team members. Reli-gious influence, he felt, w a s best seen in each player's re-action to practice and game sit-uations. Self-control is probably the hardest virtue to come by and is "a real test of religious training." Having this insight of a baseball team and having briefly glimps-ed its members, in a once in a lifetime experience, the weary Bethelites returned to campus to write jealous brothers and friends. AsianlMisuse cont'd from page 2 Moslem violence in Bengal was overlooked by most Americans. America's policy of relying on military force in South Asia de-feated America's goals, by aliena-ting, first, India and more recently, Pakistan. More tragic yet for the entire world, it forced India to forsake a possible spiritual answer to international problems. Whether or not China would have invaded India in 1959 and 1962 had India been allowed to follow her own conscience cannot be determined. Political realists and cynics would probably disre-gard the possibility. To those who believe in an universal spiritual force, history may have been chang-ed and India may have emerged as the guiding spiritual light in a dying world. the CLARION Page 3 Bishop' Smith's Assay Hits Seminarians Hard `Engiish 3200' Students To Face Grammar Retest Senate Cynic: Observer Again Rethinks Decision-making Process Snelling Avenue at Highway 36 Party room for groups OPEN Fri. - Sat. til 3 a.m. most of the subjects involved will have changed since that 1914 date. The banner to be hoisted now boasts 50 stars instead of 48, and the scene is no longer Snelling Avenue, "across from the fair grounds", but a site five miles north of this, Bethel's new cam-pus. Though fifty years have elapsed since that first dedication, one per-son remembers it well. He is Ma-jor C. J. Bergstrom, a retired Army chaplain and Bethel seminary alum-nus, who not only was present at the dedication in 1914, but assisted in the flag-raising. Since that time, he has held a number of Conference church pas-torates, and during the war years, 1942-1947, was a chaplain in the army. His last pastorate was at the Ogden Avenue church in Super-ior, Wisconsin. Major Bergstrom now resides in Tampa, Florida. As a military man, Mr. Berg-strom was particularly concern-ed that the new Bethel campus would be properly equipped with a flag and flagstaff. He contacted other military chaplainS, also Bethel seminary graduates, and thereby, raised sufficient funds for the equipment. Climaxing his efforts, Mr. Berg-strom himself will be present to assist in raising the flag at the October 17 dedication service of the new Seminary. Page 4 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Defensive Alignments New Seminary Structure and Setting Head Coach Dave Cox and Defensive Captain Jim Brand dia- Ex press Theological Objectives gram basic Bethel strategy for Homecoming fans. (11)2,1V8 HV BO Dr. Gordon Johnson is Dean of Bethel Theo-logical Seminary. by Dr. Gordon Johnson Our tradition has made it difficult for many of us to admit that buildings say something. But we must admit it—whether it be a shack or a cathedral the form expresses something to every person who looks at it. Several years ago when we began planning for the new campus we were keenly aware that the buildings would express something to all who would see them. To conceive the proper form for these buildings took time, energy and considerable inter-action. We believe the new seminary campus does express itself in ways that are exceedingly meaningful. This campus says something about God. Our God is characterized by power, eternalness and the Creator of beauty. As one approaches the buildings, the appearance of the brick walls, the deep set win-dows, the brown hue in the color, and the solidity of the setting suggests that our God is strong. They also say that He endures because these buildings are likely to endure. There is beauty in the whole setting. The buildings fit in the environment. Some of us wanted the buildings on the tops of the hills to overlook all the beauty that we saw around us. We forgot that that would destroy the very beauty we admired. The natural beauty is retained and even increased by the contrast that is observed. The rolling hills remain; the trees are there; the ruggedness continues; the buildings are set in the midst of it. The carefully It was a recently-adopted 48-star flag which, on November 22, 1914, was initially unfurled during the dedication service of the newly built Bethel College—then consist-ing of only one building. Similarly, fifty-one years later, on October 17, 1965, another flag-raising and dedication service will take place, although the scene and Varied Activities Mark Halftime The traditional halftime dash to the refreshment stand will be ignored by the many spectators Saturday at the Bethel-Morris foot-ball game. Their attention will be turned to a full roster of Home-coming events scheduled for the mid-game break. The Homecoming queen and her court will ride onto the field in open cars, making a tour of the gridiron. The queen will then be presented a football, autographed by members of the Royals football squad, by Student Senate President Bill Madsen, master of ceremonies for the afternoon. Announcement of awards for Homecoming decorations will fol-low the football presentation. Both dormitories and classes will be competing. Bodien, Hagstrom, and Edgren residents will be vying for a trophy, while the four classes will be decorating their way to-wards a $25 prize. Saturday is also Fathers' Day for the football squad. All "Dads" in attendance at the Bethel-Morris game will be recognized from the audience as part of the halftime activities. The college band, di-rected by Julius Whitinger, will add brilliance to the afternoon. Phyllis Kredit, college senior, is chairman of the halftime program committee. MUMS BUY YOUR DATE A HOMECOMING MUM They go on sale at 9 a.m. Sat. in the Coffee Shop Come Early First Come--First Served landscaped area will be a contrast to the natural, rugged beauty. These buildings also say something about com-munity. We desired a continuing experience of Koin-onia or fellowship. That is discovered in a number of different ways. Spaces are provided for good con-versational activity in an informal atmosphere. Some of these areas are carpeted and furnished with easy chairs. An open view to the outside beauty through large windows is evident. That openness is further expres-sed in the areas where one may look two floors up to the roof line. That atmosphere makes one feel ready to be open to other persons. An excellent esprit de corps will be possible for the total community of faculty and students alike. An atmosphere of recep-tivity and friendliness is created by the very form the buildings have taken. These buildings further express some of our academic ideals. The seminary student must become a mature student. He must become a capable thinker and leader, for he will lead other people in thought and life. He must discover his own capacities of personal study and community sharing. In the light of this our buildings have been built. With the exception of two classrooms we have departed from the traditional. That was done to encourage dialogue and interaction. The two-level classrooms make possible a class as large as thirty-five to get a feeling of thinking together with one another and the professor. That experience is also possible in the other classroom on the first floor as well as in the sem-inar rooms on the second floor. Each has a different plan and form. The library is geared to independ-ent study. There are no large ta-bles for study in large groups. In some areas there is more of the cloistered experience that would suggest, "Now is the time for work and study." The faculty offices are of such size that four or five students may meet with a faculty member for discussion. Several conference rooms are also available in the library for simi-lar activity. Our campus suggests our mis-sion. Our task is to communicate the Word of God to a world in need of that Word. We must train men to become the bridge between the biblical world and the contemporary world. The location of our campus is ideally situated to suggest that very thing. We possess a sense of iso-lation for solid biblical study in our location, but it is also very conveniently located within easy reach of the whole metropolitan area. trust it will always be used to the glory of our Lord. Our campus does say something, and it says it significantly. It ex-presses that which we believe and feel. It will become one of the beauty spots of the area, and we vS CILD IB E.. \ G G V VO 0 O ® O 0 OE' CD 0 0 0 0 Four-four defense. The guards (G) are responsible to stop running plays to either side of them. Also the ends (E) must be able to stop off tackle or end run plays. The inside backers are responsible for runs anywhere to their side. They serve as a second assault wave after the big front four hit. The cornerbacks must make sure no end run gets outside them. They are to force a runner back towards their teammates. The halfbacks and safety are insurance against any runner going for a TD. If the opponent passes, the front four (E's & G's) rush the quarter-back and the others cover for passes in the areas marked by circles in the diagram. HB V rB Is E T V 6 V T E V V V V 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Five-four defense. This is generally known as the OKLAHOMA 5-4. The biggest difference here is that there are five men in the front line, but one less pass defender. Lettermen's Breakfast Honors Former Athletes coach Bill Adams, the Bethel Indians engaged Arch Skalbeck as head coach and played the initial game on September 19, 1947 against Rochester. Throughout the season the In-dians lost three games and tri-umphed once as co-captains Roy Nelson, Warren Palmquist, a n d Douglas Garvey sparked the team. Bethel fans of the last few years will quickly recall the easy vic-tories over Jamestown College. Such was not always the case. The 1954 football team, captained by Duwayne Pople, opened the sea-son with a favorable 6-0 victory over Itasca, only to be mauled 46- 0 the next weekend by what the St. Paul papers called "a strong and formidable Jamestown eleven." In 1959, on a cold, drizzly, windy day at Plattville, Wisconsin, the Bethel Royals became Badger- Gopher conference champions by defeating Wisconsin Tech 19-0. Captain Stu Luckman revealed after the win, "I'm the happiest guy in the world." It was terrific to be captain of such a trmendous team. I was proud of the terrific team effort and each guy did his part well." That was a big year for the Royals as they accomplished their first winning season since 1950 with a 5-3 record. The 1960's after a slow start, saw the advent of a new coach, Owen Halleen, and the tide began to turn more favorably for Bethel. The last three years as head coach, Halleen's teams racked up a whop-ping 21 wins out of 25 games played. Cumulatively, his record of 27 wins and 14 losses over a five year period marked a new turn toward winning at Bethel. Seminary Dedication Includes Flag-raising KB V GB V C8 V by Ron Harris The annual Alumni Lettermen's Breakfast will be held Saturday, 8:00 a.m. in the President's Dining Hall. Featured as part of the Home-coming festivities, the oldsters will recall and relive those ancient days of Bethel athletics. Friendships that were born out of hard knocks, long hours of cross-country running and consis-tent efforts of making a basketball team "jell' will all be renewed. In 1947, regular college confer-ence football became a colorful part of Bethel athletic life. Nestl-ed as a dream by the former car Zthbep • • • The 20th Century Church is a well organized body. In order to obey the Lord's command to "go into all the world . . . " we have created a machine of bulk and magnitude that would have left the early apostles breathless. Our evangelistic boards send men around the world preaching the gospel. Radio stations, printing presses, airplanes, and hypodermic needles all are put to use in order that men might hear. In the United States, almost every special interest group from children to housewives to businessmen, has a Christian organization geared to reaching it with the gospel. Certainly the casual observer would be impressed with our zeal. The Church is talking, it is singing and preaching its message, doing what the Lord has commanded. But many fear for the Church—that it has forgotten something im-portant. It has forgotten how to be still and listen. We have become a Church that is talking, talking, talking. But we don't listen, we don't hear the cries of despair from our world. The world is rushing along without really knowing where it is going, and we are rushing right along with it, with two cars in every garage and tight slacks. Often all that makes us unique is the poetry we quote along the way. Our world has a "New Morality" which the. church condones. What is old is often considered not "with it" in the church as well as out. We need desperately to take a stand on the principles that our Lord has revealed. The Christian gospel can bring renewal and health to all of society, But, oh how the church needs to sit down and listen. It needs to listen to its world and its God. Your Banking Needs! Paencel, peA4cwial (n4 rait Keed4 az DROVERS STATE BANK South St. Paul Member FDIC Phone 451 6822 Bethany Baptist Church 2025 W. Skillman at Cleveland St. Paul Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. College-age class Morning Worship, 11 a.m. Evening Service, 7 p.m. College-age Fellowship After Evening Service Albert Windham Dennis Smith Pastor Youth Pastor (Bus leaves Bodien at 9:30 a.m. — cars at 6:45 p.m.) Wednesday, October 13, 1965 the CLARION Page 5 Offensive Pattern s Harriers Drop Ri•ver Falls Meet; First Bethel Man Finishes Third by Lantz Leonard The Bethel cross country team again added to their 'unblemished' record last Friday, by outscoring a strong River Falls State team 45-18. River Falls took first and second places over a wet 4.2 mile course with Berglin taking first in 24:27. Freshman Dick Olson of Bethel became the first Bethel harrier to finish in the top three in the past two weeks by trotting in in the fine time of 25:09. Fourth through eighth places were taken by River Falls; this is where Bethel's domination be-gan. Bob Chryst gazelled across in ninth position, while Leon Ander-son was nipping his heels in tenth. Jim Erickson captured the next Bethel place with a 29:06 clocking and Norm "Better Late Than Never" Kern took the other Bethel place. He was followed by the rest of the River Falls team—Bob "Sog-geyfoot" Dray. Speaking with Coach Glader fol-lowing the meet, this writer in-ferred a general attitude of en-couragement. This was probably because of the fine performance of Olson, and because they had done this well even without one of their fine runners, Steve Roe, who is out with a bad case of the shin splints. Glader is hoping the team will be at full strength by this week-end when the Royals take on an-other strong field including Wino-na, Augsburg and St. Johns Sat-urday, at 10:30 a.m. on the Como course. Fullback off-tackle right. The is the right guard's "trap" block on the is the way we diagram a back in motion center. special feature of this play defensive end. The wavy line before the ball is snapped at Junior Royals Steal Win From 'Penn State' Coifs Quarterback option right. Notice this play looks almost like the previous one. However, the quarterback fakes a hand-off to the fullback to pull in the defense. He then carries the ball to the defensive end. If the end comes for him, he pitches to the halfback. If not, he keeps the ball and runs himself. V vb Halfback dive. It hits very quickly and the key block is the left tackles's. No matter which way the tackle blocks his man; the half back, carrying the ball, is to cut the other way. edyeiaatelt 5501 Chicago Avenue South, Minneapolis Sunday School 9:30 Morning Service 10:45 College CYF 8:30 p.m. Evening Service 7:00 Rev. Ellis Eklof, Jr., Pastor Roberta Yaxley, Dir. of Music Welcome 41amai and theit Bethel "hie d! JACKETS— Coach—the latest-in Navy blue Blast—blue, red & white Skipper—for girls & women-powder blue Windbreakers—oyster, blue & white Melton hooded—Burgundy & Lodan green SWEATSHIRTS—Long sleeve, short sleeve Big letters, small letters, seals Cotton, Kodel, Creslan Many, many, many, colors Kids' SWEATSHIRTS—sizes 2 thru -4—many colors Bibs, Jackets You Are The Best Advertisement Bethel Has! BOOKS —PAPERBACKS—BIBLES—MAGAZINES &Mei Boaz:Leo/us Saturday Stars Fight Valiantly by Tom Johnson For the third consecutive week, Intramural teams clashed for forty minutes of razzle-dazzle football. The weather, although a little chil-ly, held out nicely. Probably the most outstanding show of the morning was the running of Terry Muck, who led the Squires to a 27-0 shutout of the Dukes. Going around end, Terry broke loose many times for good yardage. When the need arose, he also executed the half-back pass with proficiency. The Dukes were able to ad-vance the ball very near the Squire goal line, but were never able to push it over. The Jesters, not playing as usual, overcame the Counts 13-6. Mary Flodin, scoring on a four yard run, collected the first score against the Jesters this year. The Jesters, however, bounced back for two scores and outlasted the determined Counts. The Knights, led by quarterback Mel Fahs, beat the Pages 6-0. The turning point came when Karl Smith broke loose for a long gain. Fahs scored, and the Pages, unable to make a come-back, lost. The standings still show the Squires and Jesters on top with 3-0 records. The Seminary, taking a bye one week, is close behind with a 2-0 record. eapt atervi ea #. II a el2eivled? Ask your eye doctor. If he says you can, Elwood Carlson Opticians will fit your lenses with the extra care and expert attention your eyes deserve. ELWOOD CARLSON OPTICIANS 4th St. Lobby — Lowry Med. Arts CA 4 - 5212 — St. Paul 719 Nicollet Ave. FE 2 - 5681 — Mpls. Call us for further details by Bob Baffa and Ron Harris The Bethel Royals junior varsity team, carrying a two-year unde-feated record lot° action last Thursday, dumped the Penn State Colts of Stillwater, Minnesota, 13- 12 in a closely guarded contest. The Colts, hurt by paroles last year, made use of an excellent national recruiting system to cap-ture their strongest team in his.. tory. Led by a fine "bootleggin" quarterback, Ronnie Holmes, re-cently drafted from St. Cloud, and Steamboat Fulton (class of '83), produced many break-away threats and set up a tally in the first and fourth quarters. The Royals, preparing for their first game, made their battle-cry "Cream the Cons." Paced by Rick Theil (the pulling guard with the killer instinct), Al "Baby-face" Se-lander, and Larry "Fingers" Peter-son, the Royals executed plays like a charge of nitro-glycerine exploding through a bank vault. "Baby-face" plunged over for the first TD in the second period. In the fourth period, the Royals drove to the 35 yard line of Penn State, where Dave "L-lips" Anderson split his way to the five. But a penalty was called back on the 15 for holding up one of the Stillwater 11. As the referee paced off the 15 yd. penalty, one of the Penn State defenders was heard to say, "Man, dat's just like gettin' a reprieve from da governor." The Royals got rolling again and "Baby-face" scored the second TD. "Fingers" then kicked the extra point over the fence and the many Penn State fans were heard yelling, "I'll go get it! I'll go get it!" The final score was Bethel 13, Stillwater State Prison 12. The Royals enjoyed the tough and clean play of the Stillwater men and are trying to arrange another game with Penn State. However, there seems to be a little difficulty because the Stillwater players and coach insist on playing the game away with their fans present. Informed of the impossibility of this, the Royals expressed a de-sire to return. The Colt's reply was, "Don't worry! We'll be here! FINE SELECTION K. C. CORNELIUS JEWELERS 324 KRESGE BLDG. 7TH 5 NICOLLCT MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA FEDERAL 5 -6040 Reasonable Student Rates V V 0 O Watch Next week's Clarkw for a special AililOtiileeffieilll &Mel Batdahvie Page 6 the CLARION Wednesday, October 13, 1965 Varsity gridders are shown resting and waiting for action against Northland. Morris Boasts Husky Front Wall; Winless In Three Western Outings _ — Football is important to me. And like anything that is important to any person, it is, to use the psychologist's term, ego-involving. As a person faces an ego-involviing activity, he naturally experiences some pre-performance stress. For instance, I'll bet music majors have some tense moments before their senior recital. All of us have "sweated out" a test in some certain subject. People face stress in different ways. I suppose my first reaction is to try to escape. Friday night the game is too far away and I can still "escape" psychologically. But by Saturday morning, sometimes as early as seven o'clock, I began to realize that I do, in fact, have a game to play. There is no place to which I can escape. I must play a game and it will require strenuous effort. A little tense knot begins to form in my stomach. Training meal is generally at about ten o'clock. By this time I'm a little more anxious so I gulp my food unless I restrain myself. After the meal the team meets together with the coach who talks over the game plan. Then we break up, tape our ankles, shine our football shoes and pull on our equipment. After dressing we jog out onto the field for pre-game warm-ups. Generally this is when we see the other team for the first time. It's about a half hour before game time. The knot grows a little tighter as I begin to ask myself, "Can you do the job today, Jim?" The last 15 minutes before a game are crucial, for it is here that my attitude finally crystalizes. If I continue to question my ability, I may end up doubting it. To start a game this way spells trouble, for I play in a state of helpless shock while my opponents run over me. Happily, though it happens at times, this is not usually the way I start. Experience has taught me my abilities so that in the last 15 minutes I often feel an "anxious confidence." I'm confident that I can play well and I'm anxious to get started. This anxious desire to play the game is very important. If it grows inside, my whole system concentrates on playing hard. Adrenalin shoots through my body. I'm "high" and want to exert myself. This feeling is the opposite of helpless shock. It's the feeling with which every player, and with which every coach wants his players to start. by Jim Brand PAR TIES! Meet at the Arden Inn ... gathering place for friendly spirits. Mardi Gras Room available for weddings, private parties by reservation. ARDEN INN N. Snelling and Co. Rd. B, OPEN: Sundays noon to 9 PM; Daily 5 PM to 10 PM. Closed Mon. - MI 4-2847 * * * FALCON BARBERSHOP 1703 N. Snelling Avenue Why wail- for a haircut? Call Mi 6 - 2323 tdI kw/len/ban/If Owner Vededem Saftecat &cad 720 13th Avenue South — Minneapolis Morning Worship 10:50 CYF 5:30 Sunday School 9:45 Evening Service 7:00 John Wilcox, Pastor Gary Smalley, Youth Director Charlotte Ransom, Education Secretary Pastor's phone: UN 6-6249 Transportation from Bodien at 9:15 a.m. and 5 p.m. 744414twedd OUR DIAMOND ROOM is equipped with the proper lighting to show true color in diamonds. OUR GEMOLITE shows you the INSIDE of a Diamond. OUR KNOWLEDGE of DIAMONDS is available to you. We can show you Diamonds cut to exact specifications producing for you, more of what you are buying a Diamond for . . . BEAUTY. A properly proportioned Diamond creates a Rainbow for your finger and beauty that is unequaled. PLEASE AVAIL YOURSELF OF OUR SERVICE WE SHALL BE HONORED Student Discount "Guaranteed Watch Repair Done on the Premises" 1548 W. Larpenteur Ave. — Ph. 646-4114 — Next to Falcon Heights State Bank by Tom Cornell The University of Minnesota Mor-ris Cougars invade the familiar confines of St. Paul's Midway Sta-dium October 16, in an attempt to undermine the Royals' "Munch Morris" campaign. Game time for the annual Royal Homecoming clas-sic is 1:30 p.m. Cougar's Coach Rich Borstad brings a formidable cast of nine-teen lettermen and seven seniors to town in an effort to get on the winning track. Winless in their first three outings by scores of 14-7 to Moorhead State, 54-0 to Wayne State (Nebraska), and 34-7 to Yankton, the Cougars seek re-venge for the 33-6 setback admin-istered them by Bethel in 1964. Cougar team captain Dennis Malherek, 6'2" 182 pound senior letterman from Truman, Minne-sota, mans the quarterback spot. Seven other lettermen assume starting roles in an offensive lineup which includes three freshmen, five sophomores, and three seniors. The "all-Minnesotan" starting lineup also includes such stalwarts as center Rick Fluegel, 180 pound four-year man from Donnelly, and guard Bob Albrecht, 185 pound senior from Alexandria. Melherek's passing is comple-mented by fullback Steve Trites' running. Trites, 175 pound hard-nosed sophomore from Henning, is the Cougars' leading rusher thus far. From end to end, the offensive line averages 194 pounds per man, the heaviest of which are Twins' Star At Local Meeting Bernie Allen, second baseman of the Minnesota Twins, will be the featured guest at the kickoff pro-gram at the College and Career group of the Central Free Church Sunday, October 17. He'll give the inside story of the World Series plus his own personal testimony. "10th Inning," as the program is called, will follow the regular even-ing service and will last until 8:30. Also in the program will be special music by the Trinity Brass Ensem-ble of the Trinity Covenant Church of Minneapolis. Transportation to the Central Free Church, 707 10th Ave., Min-neapolis, will leave Bodien Dorm at 6:15 p.m. two sophomore tackles, Ward Werpy and Jim Heikes at 216 and 224 pounds respectively. Other players who are sure to see action on defense include end Roger Young, tackle Tom Beaulieu, safety John Noclander, guards Paul Kopel and Curt Larson, and line-backer Dennis Kellner. by Ralph Sheppard The Bethel Royals traveled to Ashland, Wisconsin, Saturday to battle the ever powerful Northland College football team. The field condition was one not entirely un-familiar to the Royals, as they have been practicing in mud and rain for the past three or four weeks. _Since the muddy playing con-ditions almost halted Bethel's ground game, they were forced to an aerial attack which brought victory within their grasp. Northland scored early in the second quarter on a one yard plunge by Martin Domitrodich, but the extra point attempt fail-ed as the Royals held. Later in the same quarter North-land scored again, this time on a five yard roll-out by Bob Brown. Jim Kangas kicked the extra point, and Northland left the field at half-time with the score 13-0. The third quarter was a stand-off as each team was determined to keep the other from scoring. The Royal defense led by veteran Dave Gehrke succeeded in stal-ling any further Northland threats. The Royals' "never - say - die" brand of football gave them the impetus to score in the fourth quarter. Quarterback Bob Nolin passed to fullback Barnet (Bar-ney) Cox on a six yard scoring play. Larry Peterson added the extra point, leaving the score 13-7 when the final gun sounded. Outstanding Player for the Roy-als was quarterback Nolin who threw 38 passes and completed 26 for 271 yards. His favorite re-cievers were end John Carmean, halfback Don Land, and fullback Cox. The Royals gained 20 first downs to Northland's 11, and gained 336 net yards to Northland's 237. All in all, the Royals left the field knowing that one or two key de-fensive lapses had cost them the game. The Royals are now 1-3 for the season. STRANDQUIST TEXACO SERVICE Hamline and Hoyt Mi 6-9272 Brake and Mechanical Work Towing Service Aerial Attack Outgains Northland; Defensive Lapses Defeat Royals |
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