10-03-2007
DESCRIPTION
ÂTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
!!!ANCH V O L . 1 2 1
N O . 5
OCTOBER 3. 2007 • SINCE 1887 S P E R A I N D E O " H O P E C O L L E G E • H O L L A N D . M I C H I G A N
Student Congress gears up for new academic year Kara Shetler G U E S T W R I T E R
Matthew Oosterhouse C A M P U S N E W S EDITOR
A new school year means
new represeniatives, leaders and
goals for Hope College's Student Congress. While executive board
members and representatives of
the sophomore, junior and senior
classes were elected last spring,
elections for dorm and cottage representatives took place on
Sept. 13 and 14. The new Student Congress
president. Jay Gibbs ( '09),
has goals for reevaluating and
strengthening various aspects of
the organization this year to make
its operations more effective. "This year. Student Congress
needs to do a little bit of remod-
eling and maintenance work / '
Gibbs said. "We've had a lot of programs that have been running
for a long time and need to be re-
vamped and need to be tailored
more to the whole student body." Gibbs has a clear vision for
how these changes will take
place. "My specific goals lie within
programming. As president, I
have a more managerial role in this congress and so my goal is to
see every program that comes out
of Student Congress is the best
that it can be and be tailored so
that Hope students want it and are interested in it," Gibbs said.
This is no small undertaking
considering the breadth and in-volvement of Student Congress
operations. According to the S E E CONGRESS, P A G E 10
SWEAT AND TEARS
IJil
PHOTO BY DAVID MOORE
B R O T H E R S I N A R M S — Odd Year Pull t eam members, Andrew Napoli ( '11), le f t , Gabe Ruble ( 1 1 ) , and Isaac Bennet t ( '11), r ight, embrace in ce lebrat ion upon learn ing of the i r t eam 's v ictory over the Even Year
team. The Pull went the fu l l th ree hours w i th Odd Year w inn ing by 30 feet , 1 1 inches. See fu l l story on page 2.
i & H H H H 8 p m - M i d n i g h t
H o e d o w n atTues lnk 's Farm
Line Dancing, Food, Hay Rides
(RAIN locaUon:Maas Aud)
Transportation: 2 buses wiH shuttle every 1/2 hour
f s
1:00pm H o m e c o m i n g Parade around campus, then to Municipal Stadium
2 :00pm
Hope vs. A lma Footba l l Game
Holland Municipal Stadium
8 : 3 0 p m - l : 0 0 a m
H o m e c o m i n g Dance (semi-formal)
Swing Dancing til 11 Popular Hip Hop music after
Haworth Inn (connected to Cook Hall)
10:00am
Homecoming Worsh ip Service
Dimnent Chapel
Events set for Alumni Week Shannon Craig N A T I O N A L N E W S EDITOR
Homecoming is providing Hope
College students, faculty, staff and alumni with a "passport to the
world" this weekend, Oct. 5-7.
Highlights of the upcoming festivities include the 30th annual
Run-Walk, a parade, a football
game against Alma College, a student dance and a special
worship service Sunday morning. it is expected that hundreds
of alumni will travel back to Hope's campus for homecoming
weekend as, in conjunction with the weekend's events, the classes
of 1987, 1992, 1997 and 2002
will be holding their reunions. Student organizations
will decorate cars and create makeshift floats for the traditional
homecoming parade. The parade
will start at 13th Street and
College Avenue on Oct. 6 at 1 p.m. and wind its way through
campus until it reaches Holland
Municipal Stadium. Alma College will be at
Hope on Oct. 6 to chal lenge the Flying Dutchmen in the
Homecoming football game at 2 p.m. Half t ime festivit ies
will include the presentation
of the 12th annual "Favori te
Faculty/Staff Member Award," as well as the coronation of the
Homecoming king and queen. Theannualhomecomingdance
for students will be held Oct. 6 at the Haworth Inn and Conference
Center. The dance will feature a
live swing band from 8:30 p.m. until 11 p.m. Tickets cost S7 in
advance at the Student Union Desk and $ 10 at the door.
W H A T ' S I N S I D E
NATIONAL i VOICES 8
ARTS 5 SPORTS 11
Budget crisis— Lack of f u n d s force brief
s t a t e gove rnmen t shu tdown Page 3
Hope exchanges immigration stories Katie Harper G U E S T W R I T E R
Members of Hope College's campus community
have been using the past weeks to share in an im-
portant, yet often untold story. While this year 's Critical Issues Symposium on
Oct. 2-3 examines the issue of immigration, many
students, faculty and community members have
taken advantage of the weeks prior to the sympo-sium to learn more about the topic. Several events
recently offered on campus have served as prepara-
tion for the upcoming immigration discussion. From Sept. 20-27, the Knickerbocker Theatre
showed the award-winning film "Crossing Ari-
zona." The film depicts the struggles related to
the nearly 4,500 peo-
"Today's first
generation im-
migrants need
to attain what it
took European
immigrants sev-
eral generations
to achieve."
— Alejandro Portes,
sociologist
pie that illegally cross
Arizona's border each day. It examines the is-
sue through the eyes of
frustrated ranchers that have to clean up the
property damage often
associated with the il-legal traffic, humanitar-
ian groups working to
prevent the deadly bor-
der-crossing dangers, farmers that depend
on the illegal migrant
workers and the newly formed Minutemen that = = = = = = =
patrol the border. " 'Cross ing Arizona' examines the crisis through
the eyes of those directly affected by it," a Hope
College press release said. "It shows how we got
to where we are today." The film has been shown at the Knickerbocker
before, but was this year presented in conjunction
with the Critical Issues Symposium. Dan De Vivo, the film's director, and Mike Wilson, an activist
featured in the film, are participating in the sympo-
sium on Oct. 3.
Pre-symposium speaker spoke on second-generation immigrat ion
Campus and community members were also in-
vited to pre-symposium speaker Alejandro Fortes' presentation. His address entitled "Segmented
Assimilation: Prospects for the Immigrant Second Generation" was held on Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 4
p.m. in Maas Auditorium. Fortes is a Cuban native who became a U.S. citi-
zen in 1968. Today, he is a well-known sociologist
at Princeton University and the director of the Cen-
ter for Migration and Development. He has also
authored several prestigious articles and books. S E E C I S , P A G E 1 0
Coming h o m e - Hope football to play Alma
th i s Sa tu rday Page 12
Got a story idea? Let us know at [email protected]. or (^11^^53^3952787^
![Page 2: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
2 T H E A N C H O R CAMPUS O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7
T H I S W E E K AT H O P E
Thursday Oct. 4 Meijer Runs Sponsored by Student Congress Vans will run from DeWItt Flagpole to
Meijer on 16th Street 8 p.m. - 1 0 p.m.
Saturday Oct. 6 Relay For Life P a n c a k e Break-fa s t Sponsored by Chem Club. $5 for adults and $3 for children.
All proceeds go towards Chem Club's
contribution to Relay For Life.
10 a.m.
Monday Oct. 8 "Can I Kiss You?" Mike Domitrz
Knickerbocker Theatre. 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
I N B R I E F
DO YOU SEE ORANGE?
On Friday, Sept. 28, 160 Hope
students and faculty members wore orange T-shirts printed
with the word " O R P H A N " to
raise awareness of the HIV/
AIDS pandemic. The number of
volunteers on campus reflected the 5 percent of children in sub-
Saharan Africa who are AIDS
orphans. The "Do You See Orange?"
campaign was organized by
the Hope chapter of Acting on Aids, an organization supported
by World Vision that aims to
promote HIV/AIDS awareness
and activism on college campuses
nationwide. The event at Hope joined similar events at 36 other
campuses in conjunction with the
first-ever Acting on Aids National "Do You See Orange?" Week.
Several other events
accompanied the "Do You See
Orange?" campaign at Hope.
A team of 17 Hope students
participated in the Grand Rapids AIDS Walk on Saturday, and the
HIV/AIDS documentary "ACloser
Walk" was shown on Monday
afternoon in Dimnent Chapel.
CAMPUS MINISTRIES HOSTS LECTURE ON WAR
On Monday, Oct. 8, at 4 p.m.,
Hope College Campus Ministries
is sponsoring a lecture entitled "Augustine, The Just War Theory,
and The War On Terror" in Schaap
Science Center room 1019.
The lecture, given by Dr.
Jason Byassee, assistant editor of the Chicago-based magazine,
"The Christian Century," is part
of a series of "World Christian
Lectures" that Campus Ministries is sponsoring, in efforts to bring to
Hopethoughtfulandintellectually-
engaged perspectives that focus
on issues in the world faced by
Christians. Byassee will present his lecture
from the standpoint of Augustine,
a Christian theologian in the 4th
and 5th centuries who developed the Just War theory.
The lecture will focus on the issues surrounding Christians
going to war, the tensions between the authorities of the stale and
the church, the Just War theory's
effect on and application to the Iraq War, and the usefulness or
limitation of Augustine's theory
in the present day.
Legendary: Freshmen blast '10 Kevin Soubly STAFF W R I T E R
Alex Quick G U E S T W R I T E R
Matt Gosterhouse C A M P U S N E W S EDITOR
"ODD! YEAR! ODD! YEAR!
ODD! YEAR!" was the cry. bel-lowed by the surging crowd sur-
rounding the freshmen team at
Saturday's 110th Pull across Hol-
land's Black River. The mottled sunlight shown down through
the trees onto the Ml Pull team,
glistening off the sweat beaded on
the warriors' painted faces and il-luminating their eyes - some tired
and drained, others sparking with
fierce determination and pain.
Each member wore the Odd
Year uniform: boots, white jeans,
their trademark maroon and gold shirts, and a mohawk haircut.
Their bodies were painted with
war paint - accenting their facial
features and making their gri-
maces of pain ever so more grue-some. Their feet strained against
the wooden board at the foot of
their pit, which was itself painted
in yellow with the word: "WAR."
Heavily favored to lose - as in most years - the class of 2011
came out aiming to be not just the
average freshman team.
"We set the bar high, we worked
them real hard and they gave us everything. They cried in practice
- and that brought them together.
Today, they showed up as a team
and did what needed to be done.
Odd Year family, that's = = = = = =
what it's all
about," said
Matt Griffin
( '09), Odd
Year's an-
chor coach. As the _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
clock ticked down to the final minutes, the pile
of excess rope behind the anchor of
the Odd Year team spoke of victory,
and the energized crowd sensed it.
The coaches began gathering at the
head of the line and became a wall
"In the end, I love my team
and they are my family!1
- Nick Vanderhovel ( 1 0 ) ,
Even Year Puller
NOT JUST ANY TUG-O-WAR t i ces leading up to Pull day.
of support for their team. And then
the call began again: "More rope!
More rope! More rope!" And so the coaches motioned to "HEAVE," the
moralers chanted the call, and the
pullers gathered their last ounces of
strength and pulled - once again. When the foghorn blew, sig-
naling the end of the three-hour
contest between classes. Odd Year
claimed victory with a final gain
of almost 31 feet - an astounding
371 hard-earned inches. Jeff DeYoung ('11), a Puller
on the Odd = = = = = Year team,
was en-
t h u s i a s t i c about the
team's vic-tory. "They
said we
couldn't do
it! (Even
Year) thought that they 'd just win
automatically - that 's just not
how it happens." Michelle Jule, mother Odd
Year puller Austin Jule, was just
as animated.
PHOTO BY KEVIN SOUBLY
— A Puller displays the bl isters the rope gave him in the prac-
"It was amazing and very spir-
itual. I didn't think the freshman had a chance, but I knew the guys
would give it their all."
"Congratulations brother, you
had a good team," said an un-known Pull observer, on the Even
Year side of the Black River, into
his cell phone to someone on the
opposite shore. The reality of the situation
had just set in moments before; the Odd Year freshmen had taken
more than 30 feet of rope from the Even Year sophomores. A wave
of heavy-heartedness flooded the ' 10 pits and sidelines upon the an-
nouncement of the results.
"Last night we talked about
the different shades of red," Pull Coach Matt McCabe ( '08) said to
pullers and moralers, announcing
the defeat. "Right now, I 'm wear-
ing a very, very brown shade of
red." Matt Van Oostenburg ( '10),
a puller on last year 's Even Year
team, expressed a sense of sym-
pathy for this year 's Even Year
Pull team.
"It hurts because we lost last year," Van Oostenburg said.
"They didn't get to experience the
joy of winning."
Despite the loss, the even-year team took pride in completing the
physically grueling contest of the
pull. Last year 's Pull was called
early due to medical concerns
about the health of the even-year
team. "Our 2010 Pull team came
a long way from last year," said Haleigh Heneveld ( '08), an Even Year Pull representative. "We
were on the rope for the full three
hours and that in itself is an ac-
complishment for all Pull teams in general... I have never been so
proud." Above the loss and the physi-
cal torment stood the relation-ships formed in the muddy pits
by the Black River.
"In the end," said Puller Nick
Vanderhovel ( '10) , "I love my team and they are my family and
win or lose, I 'm proud of what
we have come together and have
done in the past three weeks."
Perfect for Homecoming dinner Saturday night!
till midnight
Dis t inc t ive d in ing for
any occasion.
White linen casual in our dining rooms, or
Cafe, deli, bakery & wine bar
2 4 t h at L incoln,
in the Baker Lofts.
R E S E R V A T I O N S : 6 1 6 - 3 9 2 - 6 8 8 3
Take ou ts ava i lab le ; w ine and beer, too !
C A N 1 K I S S
vmiv Featuring Mike Domitrz, one of the leading
experts on healthy dating, consent, date
rape and sexual assault awareness. -jT.
M O N D A Y , O C T . 8
F R O M 7 : 0 0 P . M . - 9 : 0 0 P .M.
I N T H E K N I C K E R B O C K E R
T H E A T R E
F r e e a d m i s s i o n ' i & p
Sponsored by the Counsel ing Center a n d S tudent Development
![Page 3: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
NATIONAL O C T O B E R 3 . 2 0 0 7 T H E A N C H O R 3
Percentage of the $1.75 bill ion covered by...
43 .7% = income tax increase
35.1% = sales tax increase
25.1% = spending cuts
Holt perter\Uor« f t tuvd on hgure* « AvtooKrO PreM "(X-Tn, and lf*«* do not •<« up to 100*
3 5 . 1 %
GRAPHIC BY G I N A HOLDER
Bridging the $1.75 billion gap Michigan Legislature narrowly avoids disastrous, prolonged shutdown Laura Stritzke G U E S T W R I T E R
Michigan's new fiscal year started
Monday, Oct. 1, and Michigan lawmakers reached a deal with Gov. Jennifer Granholm
barely in time to prevent a potentially disas-
trous statewide government shutdown.
In her Sept. 21 radio address Gov. Gran-holm said, "We need a comprehensive (bud-
get) solution by Oct. 1 when the new fiscal
year begins." Granholm stayed true to her demands,
ordering a full-government shutdown Oct. 1 at 12:01 a.m., when 35,000 government workers were threatened with temporary
layoffs. Crisis was averted when the state Senate
voted on tax cuts, which allowed a 30-day
extension of the current Michigan budget. Democratic Lt. Gov. John Cherry cast
the deciding vote of 20-19 at 4 a.m. The de-cision was then brought to Granholnfs of-
fice and all government services and func-
tions were reinstated. Among the changes voted for by the Sen-
ate are the expansion _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of the 6 percent sales
tax to various services
and to raise the 3.9
percent income tax rate to 4.35 percent.
These tax increases will generate $1.35 billion in additional = = = = =
revenue for Michigan. Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop
said that lawmakers were now going to be-
gin the task of cutting $435 million from
slate spending in order to fix a permanent
should eliminate the projected $1.75 billion
deficit. "This budget agreement is the right so-
lution for Michigan," Granholm said. "We
prevented massive cuts to public education, health care and
"This budget agreement is
the right solution for Michi-
gan:1
- G o v e r n o r Jenni fe r G r a n h o l m
public safety while
also making exten-sive government
reforms and pass-
ing new revenue." D e m o c r a t i c
leaders hailed the = decision as a "re-
sponsible compromise." Many Republi-
cans, however, noted the increased tax on
Michigan's already struggling workers, with a current unemployment rate of 7.4 percent
and the recent strike involving the United
2007-2008 state budget. These tax increases Auto Workers and General Motors Corp.
Ahmadinejad addresses U.N. Jon Parrish G U E S T W R I T E R
Amidst waves of protest, Ira-
nian President Mahmoud Ahma-
dinejad visited New York this week to address the United Na-
tions. Speaking before the Gen-
eral Assembly, Ahmadinejad denounced attempts by the U.N.
Security Council to place sanc-tions on his country, saying that
the nuclear issue in Iran is "now
closed." Ahmadinejad stated that all
monitoring of Iran's nuclear pro-
gram should be done "through its appropriate legal path." the Inter-
national Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog agen-
cy. While Ahmadinejad did not
mention the United States by name, he criticized the actions of
"arrogant powers" that "exten-
• I N B R I E F
sively violate" human rights by
abducting persons and holding
"trials and secret punishments without any regard to due pro-
cess." Iran has been charged with
many of the human rights con-
cerns that Ahmadinejad raised. "The General Assembly is
the theater in which Ahmadine-jad and others perform" former
U.N. Ambassador John Bolton
said, according to the Associated Press. Bolton went on to describe
the United Nations as a "Twilight
Zone" that gives a platform to
"tinhorn dictators." In response to Ahmadinejad
taking the stage, the United Slates delegation is reported by the As-
sociated Press to have promptly walked out, leaving only a low-ranking note-taker to record his
statement. This was done "to send S E E COLUMBIA, P A G E 4
V - 1 fr
§ 7 >
V
A P P H O T O / S T E P H E N CHERNIN
CONTROVERSIAL SPEAKER- Iranian Presi-dent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad waves prior to speak ing dur ing the 62nd session of the United Nations General Assembly, Sept. 25 . His s top at the U.N. was a part of his controversial vist to New York City.
U.S. firm Blackwater kills Iraqi civilians
Brian McLellan S E N I O R S T A F F W R I T E R
The founder of Blackwater USA, Erik Prince, testified Tuesday before a House
Committee on the accountability of private
security contracters in Iraq following a Sept. 16 shooting which killed 10 Iraqi civilians.
Prince is a Holland native and former Navy
SEAL. On Sept. 16, Blackwater, a private secu-
rity contracting firm, was escorting a United
Slates Stale Department diplomatic convoy
in Baghdad when it became involved in a firefight in Nisoor Square, located between
the Sunni neighborhoods of Mansour and
Yarmouk in Baghdad. The details of this battle are not known for
certain, but at least 10 Iraqis died in the fight-ing. The deaths of these people caused an
uproar among Iraqis and prompted the Iraqi
Interior Ministry to shut down Blackwaler 's
operations in Iraq. This suspension was not necessarily meant
to be permanent but was to remain in effect for some lime, pending an investigation into
the incident. U.S. Secretary of State Condo-
leezza Rice, in addition to offering her condo-lences for the lost lives, promised a "fair and
transparent" investigation so that "such acts
will not be repealed," stated the office of Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. Blackwater claimed that the dead were
armed insurgents and had provoked the firm's employees into opening fire. "(Blackwater
employees) acted lawfully and appropriately
in response to a hostile attack. ... The Civil-ians' . . . were in fact armed enemies and Black-water personnel relumed defensive fire," said
an official Blackwater statement.
Iraqi officials wil l f i le charges
An Iraqi official disputed Blackwaler's state-
ment, claiming that the Iraqi government was in
possession of a videotape that showed Blackwater
employees opening fire unprovoked on Iraqi civil-ians. Testimonies of eyewitnesses were also gath-
ered by Iraqi investigators as evidence for the case. After reviewing the evidence presented to
them, investigators came to the conclusion that
Blackwater employees had been unprovoked in the Nisoor Square incident and that the case would
be sent forward to the Iraqi judicial system. According to Iraqi officials, formal charges
will be filed against the Blackwater employees
involved in the fighting. However, it is unclear how the men will be brought to trial, as Or-
der 17 from the Coalition Provisional Author-
ity grants private security contractors such as Blackwater immunity from Iraqi laws.
However, Iraqi government spokesman Ali
al-Dabbagh does not agree that private security contractors should have this immunity, staling
that "an Iraqi law should be implemented on
everybody. Now (that) Iraq is under a sover-eign government, they have the liberty to lake
any action and any steps against any security company as long as they are not complying
with the Iraqi regulations and the Iraqi laws." Whether the Blackwater employees in-
volved in the Nisoor Square incident are
brought to trial for their actions or not, the company has been allowed to resume its op-
erations within the borders of Iraq.
SENATE VOTES FOR MORE FUNDING FOR IRAQ WAR WASHINGTON (AP) —
Senate Democrats helped pass a
defense bill authorizing another $150 billion for the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Monday's 92-3 vote comes as
the House planned to approve sepa-
rate legislation that requires Presi-
dent Bush to give Congress a plan for eventual troop withdrawals.The
developments underscored the dif-
ficulty facing Democrats in the Iraq debate: They lack the votes to pass
legislation ordering troops home
and are divided on whether to cut money for combat, despite a man-
date by supporters to end the war.
Democratic leaders say they will renew their fight when Con-
gress considers the money Bush
wants in war funding.
SUICIDE BOMBER ATTACK IN KABUL KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
— A mother and her two chil-dren boarded a police bus only
seconds before a suicide bomb-
er detonated his payload inside, an attack that killed 13 police
and civilians Tuesday, the sec-
ond such bombing in Afghani-
stan's capital in four days, po-
lice and witnesses said. Four children were among
the 13 killed. Ten people were Wounded in
the attack.
![Page 4: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
4 T H E A N C H O R NATIONAL O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7
Ahmadinejad visits New York, speaks at Columbia • COLUMBIA, from page 3
him a powerful message" State
Department spokesman Gonzalo
Gallegos said. While the U.S. remains one of
the strongest opponents of the Ira-
nian nuclear program, many other countries voiced their concerns.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel both spoke to the General
Assembly about the danger of
Iran acquiring nuclear weapons and threatened tougher sanctions
should Ahmadinejad continue his
ambitious nuclear policy.
So far, the Iranian president has defied two Security Coun-
cil resolutions demanding that
Iran suspend enrichment. While
these resolutions have increased sanctions on Iran and its nuclear
program, Ahmadinejad has made
it clear that he will not stop what he defines as a peaceful attempt
to provide nuclear power to his
country.
The U.S. and key European countries fear that, despite claims
to the contrary, Ahmadinejad 's
program is merely a smokescreen behind which Iran is attempt-
ing to obtain nuclear weapons. A third resolution with tougher
sanctions is currently being dis-
cussed and the U.S. has refused to take military action off the table if
Iran fails to comply.
Trip s p a r k s o u t r a g e
Ahmadinejad 's visit to the
United States has sparked outrage in New York and across the coun-
try. ' T h e Evil has Landed' ' ran
the front-page headline of New York's Daily News, highlighting
American hostility toward the
Iranian president, who has denied the existence of the Holocaust
and has said that Israel should be
"wiped off the map." Citing rea-
sons of security and construction. New York police also denied a
request by Ahmadinejad to visit
the World Trade Center site of the
Sept. 11 attacks. U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice said on Monday that it would have been
a travesty for the president of a country that is known to sponsor
terrorism to visit the site.
C o l u m b i a Universi ty visit cr i t ic ized
Prior to the U.N. General
Assembly, Ahmadine jad was
invited to speak at Columbia University. In response to this
invitation, the institution has re-
ceived criticism f rom all sides. Columbia should not be ' 'roll-
ing out the red carpet for the
leader of a terrorist-sponsoring reg ime" said senator and presi-
dential candidate John McCain .
New York City Council speak-er Christine Quinn also urged Co-
lumbia to cancel Ahmadinejad 's
planned speech, citing that while
universities should be a forum for a healthy exchange of ideas, there
are limits. "An exchange of ideas should
not include state sponsored terror-
ism and hate speech. He can say whatever he wants on any street
comer, but should not be given
center stage at one of New York's most prestigious centers of higher
education," Quinn said, accord-
ing to Reuters. Despite allowing Ahmadinejad
to speak,
the presi-dent of Co-
lumbia Uni-versity Lee
B o l l i n g e r
pulled no
p u n c h e s when lead- -
ing the forum. In his introduction, Bol-
linger called the Iranian president
a "petty and cruel dictator" and said that denying the Holocaust
is either "brazenly provocative or
astonishingly uneducated."
"I feel the weight of the mod-em civilized world yearning to
express the revulsion at what you
"In Iran, we don't have homo-
sexuals like in your country"
— Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
stand for," Bollinger said to loud applause of about 700 students,
many of whom were wearing
"Stop Ahmadinejad's Evil" T-
shirts. In his reply to a question about
the recent execution of two gay
men in his country, Ahmadinejad was reported as saying, "In Iran,
we don ' t
" have ho-
m o s e x u a l s like in your country."
T h i s
c o m m e n t
provoked a
= = = = = = ^ = strong re-
action from
the crowd, resulting in a mix of booing and laughter.
"This is a sick joke," said Scott
Long of Human Rights Watch as
reported in Reuters. Long went on to say that Iran
tortures gays and punishes homo-
sexuality between men with the death penalty.
Iraqi prime minister pans Senate partition proposal al-Maliki responds negatively to suggestion that Iraq be divided between Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds
Qassim Abdul- Zahra ASSOCIATED P R E S S W R I T E R
BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq's
prime minister told The Associ-ated Press on Friday that a U.S.
Senate proposal to split the coun-try into regions according to re-
ligious or ethnic divisions would
be a "catastrophe."
The Kurds in three northern
Iraqi provinces are running a vir-tually independent country within
Iraq, while nominally maintaining
relations with Baghdad. They sup-
port a formal division. But both Sunni and Shiite Muslims have
reacted with extreme opposition
to the U.S. Senate proposal.
The majority Shiites, who
would retain control of major oil revenues under a division of the
country, oppose the measure be-
cause if would diminish the ter-
ritorial integrity of Iraq, which they now control. Sunnis would
control an area with few if any oil
resources. Kurds have major oil
reserves in their territory.
The nonbinding Senate reso-
lution calls for Iraq to be divided
into federal regions under con-
trol of the three communities in a power-sharing agreement similar
to the one that ended the 1990s
war in Bosnia. Democrat presi- = = = = =
dential hope-
ful Sen. Joseph
Biden was a
prime sponsor of
the measure. "It is an Iraqi
affair dealing
with Iraqis," Prime Minister Nouri al-Ma-
liki told AP on a return flight to
Baghdad from New York where
he appeared at the U.N. General Assembly. "Iraqis are eager for
Iraq's unity. ... Dividing Iraq is a
problem, and a decision like that
would be a catastrophe." The comments were al-Mali-
ki 's first since the measure passed
the Senate on Wednesday.
• Iraq's constitution lays down
"Iraqis are eager for
Iraq's unity. "
- Nour i al-Maliki,
Iraqi Pr ime Minister
a federal system, al lowing Shi-
ites in the south, Kurds in the
north and Sunnis in the center
and west of the country to set up regions with considerable au-
tonomous powers. Never theless ,
ethnic and sectar-ian turmoil have
snarled hopes
of negotiating
such measures, especially given
deep divisions
on sharing the
country's vast oil
resources. Oil reserves and exist-
ing fields would fall mainly into the hands of Kurds and Shiites if
such a division were to occur.
So far there has been no agree-
ment on a broader sharing of those revenues, one of the several
U.S.-mandated benchmarks the
government has failed to push
through parliament. On Sept. 27, Iraqi Vice Presi-
dent Adel Abdul-Mahdi, a Shiite,
said decisions about Iraq must
remain in the hands of its citi-
zens. And a spokesman for radi-
cal Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr demanded the al-Maliki govern-
ment reject the proposal. "We demand the Iraqi govern-
ment to stand against such a proj-ect and to condemn it officially,"
said Liwa Semeism, the al-Sadr
spokesman. "Such a decision
does not represent the aspirations of all Iraqi people and it is con-
sidered an interference in Iraq's
internal affairs." A spokesman for Grand Aya-
tollah Ali al-Sistani, the Shiite
spiritual leader, dismissed the
proposal during a Friday sermon
in Karbala. "The division plan is against
Iraq's interests and against
peace in a united Iraq," Sheik
Abdul Mahdi al-Karbalaei told worshippers. "Any neighboring
country supporting this project
will pay the price of instability
in the region."
Nouri al-Mallki
Biden argues that the U.S. has
focused too much on trying to
prop up a strong, central unified
government in Baghdad. But it is unlikely the Bush ad-
ministration will alter its policies
on Iraq as a result of the resolu-
tion. Secretary of State Condo-leezza Rice said Tuesday that the
administration supports a federal
Iraq, but it is a "sensitive issue best left to the Iraqis to address at
their own pace."
o p e n m i c n i g h t ! w e d . o c t . 3 8 5 3 0 - 1 0 p m . m u s i c , p o e t r y , c o m e d y . b t o r y . e t c .
• • H / r W i . - ' B r - w e k n o w j a c k s o h
r o s e « k W i l l i a m s o h ,
3 • -3 0 p m . 1} 5
upcoming shows
t h « f A m p l o d e s m a t t I " b i a s c o m a n a g a i n s t s b c H a t y . M O c t . ^ 1 2 8 : 3 0 p m . - , 5 3
O s ^ i s c h l J c k e r
- j e f f i b o d k i n s . " o c t . , 1 8 8 p m . S 3
L _ _
coffee music.life
l e m o n i e n o s 61 e 9tfi street, holland, mi lemonjellos.com
Information Meeting
Tuesday, October 9 6:00 PM Maas Conference Room
800.424.8580 www.peacecorps.gov
![Page 5: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
ARTS O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7 T H E A N C H O R 5 'Nothing left to lose' artist to give Hope performance Julie Kocsls GUEST W R I T E R
Mat Kearney, a Nashvi l le-
based s inger-songwri ter , will be
pe r fo rming this Monday, Oct . 8th
at 8 p.m. in Dimnen t Chapel .
Kearney released his first C D ,
"No th ing Left to L o s e " in April o f
2006. F r o m this C D he released
the title track "No th ing Lef t to
Lose , " wh ich gained immedi -
ate success and popularity. His
newly-re leased song "Unden i -
ab le" is currently on Bi l lboard ' s
Top 40 Char t s and V h l ' s Top 20
Coun tdown . In April of 2007,
one year a f te r re leas ing his debut
a lbum, he released an iTunes ex -
clusive EP. This EP consists of
four songs f rom "No th ing Lef t
to L o s e " that have been "str ipped
d o w n " to acoust ic form.
Kearney certainly has a style
all his own, mix ing h ip -hop beats,
p o p choruses , acoust ic fo lk and
even spoken verse. His lyrics are
also very m u c h an important part
of his music .
" W h e n I set out to write, I wan t
to wri te someth ing that will rip
your heart out and connect with
you. Great songs connect beyond
genre and s tyle ," Kearney said.
" M y artistic goal was to write
someth ing tha t ' s one hundred per-
cent real and true to m e and to this
world. I tried to touch on truths
that really connect with people
f rom every avenue of l ife."
A song of which Kearney is
proud is "Breathe In Breathe Out ,"
which he describes in his online
journal as "one of the best songs I
have written in a long t ime."
"Brea the In, Breathe O u t " can
be heard on his M y S p a c e page
a long with his v ideo for "Un-
den iab le" and t w o o ther songs,
"No th ing Lef t to L o s e " and "Girl
A m e r i c a . "
Tickets are $ 2 0 for the general
public and $10 for s tudents with
a Hope Col lege I.D. Tickets for
the show are avai lable onl ine at
HopeTickets .com and by phone
at 616-395-7890 .
All eyes on
(I ran into them
there), and I
was thinking,
/ 1 played that
with the orches-
tra back at the Uni-
versi ty o f Illinois and
here I am sitting with m y
s tudents w h o are the same
age as 1 was . Not only that,
but the pianist w a s pe r fo rming
a S c h u m a n n p iano concer to and
I had d o n e that as a young per-
son and have taught it m a n y t imes.
I could kind o f see m y whole l ife
s t retching before me whi le si t t ing next to
these young people , and knowing that I had
pe r fo rmed all this mus ic back then. I t ' s very
mov ing . I t ' s very special .
Dalcroze
Kat ie Bennet t A R T S E o r r o R
Q l W h a t is this I hear about you leading the
h o m e c o m i n g parade on Sa turday?
A : ( laughs) Well yes I 'm the g rand marshal .
T h e y ' r e honor ing m e I guess for all those
years o f service to Hope College. Forty-f ive
of them! A lot of wa te r has passed under the
br idge in those years .
Q z I bet! W h a t are your responsibil i t ies as
grand marsha l?
A L Waving and smi l ing ( laughs) . My par tner
Chris is going to sit in the front seat and Mar-
cella Mascor ro wil l sit in the back with me.
S h e ' s been a c lose f r iend of ours all her life.
Q l So 45 years ago you started leaching at
Hope. Did you a lways want to teach here?
What made you decide to come to Hope?
A I Well I ' l l tell you there w e r e a f ew possi-
bilities af ter I comple ted m y mas te r ' s at Yale.
I had applied for a Fulbright, but that did not
work out. And then I w a s applying to the
Universi ty of Nigeria at the N e w York off ice ,
and then Hope College. And i t 's interesting
that the j o b descript ions were the same: Pia-
no teaching, class p iano teaching, and theory
teaching.
Q t N o w you a lmost pursued oboe instead
of p iano?
A I I played both instruments th rough college.
To this day when I hear beaut i fu l o b o e playing
it really touches a very sensi t ive part of m e and
I have a great yearning for it. Lis tening to the
Dvorak N e w World S y m p h o n y done so wel l
by your West Shore S y m p h o n y last Saturday
night with that beaut i ful English horn solo,
w a s just so touching and moving . And I sat
there with Chris and Sam and Isaac and Lisa,
. . .Charles Ascnbrenner
Piano prof reflects back on years well spent ^ (I ran into them degree as w e know it today. I bel ieve our first
• there), and I generat ion graduated in 1970 with Bache lo r ' s
r VVAQ thlnkino of Mus ic degrees. It was one of the reasons
perhaps w h y I wanted to stay here. The de-
par tment w a s g r o w i n g and becoming more
profess ional in a sense. So then of course in
' 7 1 , 1 wen t on sabbat ical and then y o u ' r e kind
of hooked. You have tenure, and then here
you are 45 years later. I love the co l lege I
love the area w h e r e w e are. and watching the
changes occur not on ly in the col lege and in
the mus ic depar tment but in Holland.
* ! Rhapsodies in Blue V
Q : Was it last year or the year be fo re that
you pe r fo rmed " R h a p s o d y in B l u e " with the
orches t ra?
A t I think that w a s the spr ing of '06 . Tha t
w a s the second t ime in recent years, but I have
revived it a lmost every decade ( laughs) . I first
d id it with (orchestra conductor ) Moret te Rid-
er w h e n he w a s doing a television series on
mus ic for public television, and that w a s in
the late 60s . I t ' s one of m y most played piec-
es. I ' ve also m a d e o ther appearances with the
orchestra. I pe r fo rmed = the Mende l s sohn G
minor , the Bee thoven
G major , the Gershwin
concerto, which w a s a
lot o f fun .
^ Q ! Is there any chance
that you ' l l still pe r fo rm
with the orchestra af ter this year?
A t I d o n ' t know, you ' l l have to talk to Mr.
Pi ippo!
Q t S o m e of your s tudents want to know:
what is your favori te color?
A I You m e a n they don ' t know that it 's blue?!
But not orange unfor tunate ly! So will 1 be
wear ing an orange and blue tie on Sa turday?
I d o n ' t think so.
Q t What animal would you be?
A : What would I be? Oh m y goodness . Well
m a y b e a koala. Someth ing cuddly.
Q l Which is your favori te graduat ing class
of all t ime?
A t Well this one of course! ( laughs) Every
year is a favori te class it 's very interesting
h o w that goes, and you deve lop very special
re lat ionships with students and y o u ' r e sad
to see them go and yet another crop of stu-
dents comes a long and fills their shoes. And
you think oh I ' l l never have another s tudent
as good as this s tudent , and then low and be-
hold, you do. It 's impossible to pick a favor-
ite class.
Q : You also teach Dalcroze eurhythmics-
w h e n did you in t roduce this course?
A t It w a s about 1975 before 1 started intro-
duc ing it here at Hope . It wasn ' t a lways a
self-contained course .
Back then, I s imply in-
tegrated it into mus ic
theory. Eurhy thmies is
the s tudy of express ive,
and I stress express ive,
musical rhythm through = = = = =
body movement . And I
c a n ' t think of a bet ter w a y to present mus ic on
all levels. So m u c h of our mus ic teaching is
geared to the reading o f music , to reading the
symbol on the printed page.
Q t What is it like teaching both music stu-
dents and dance s tudents eurhythmies?
A t I like to expla in it this way : w e ' r e all in-
volved with cutting up space and t ime. Danc-
ers are mov ing in space and they need to real ize
the rhythmic implicat ions of movement . And
m a n y of them need to learn rhythmic notat ion,
whereas music s tudents c o m e with t raining
and rhythmic notation but without unders tand-
ing of the feel ing behind the notation. So i t 's
interesting to have both types of s tudents in
the class together. T h e dancers of course can
mode l good movemen t for the mus ic s tudents ,
which is desirable. And the mus ic s tudents are
m o r e skillftil at reading rhythmic notat ion, so
it works out qui te satisfactorily.
Q t H o w has the music depar tment changed
over the years?
A t A big quest ion. When I c a m e to Hope Col-
lege all those years ago, it w a s strictly a Bach-
elor of Arts degree. S tudents could get majors ,
you could have an educat ion ma jo r in mus ic
but it w a s n ' t a Bache lor ' s of Mus ic Educat ion
"I could kind ojsee my whole
life stretching before me... It's
very moving. It's very special.'
T H I S W E E K I N A R T
Wednesday
Ballet Club Dow. 8 p.m. -10 :00 p.m.
Nykerk Women 's Rally Dimnent, 9 p.m.
1 0 / 3
1 0 / 4 Thursday
MENC Meet ing Nykerk 100, 5:30 p.m. Jim DeBoer
will lead a discussion on the chang-
ing voices of elementary and middle school students.
Friday 1 0 / 5
Campus movie, "Ratatoul l le" VanderWerf 102, 7 p.m.. 9:30 p.m.,
12 a.m. $2.
Symphonet te concert Dimnent, 7:30 p.m. Admission is free.
"The Nina Variat ions" DeWitt studio Theatre. 8 p.m., 9:30 p.m. $4 for students.
10/6 Saturday
Homecoming Parade 1 p.m.
Campus movie. "Ratatoull le'" VanderWerf 102, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m..
12 a.m. $2.
Sunday 1 0 / 7
Campus movie, "Ratatoul l le" VanderWerf 102. 7 p.m.. 9:30 p.m..
12 a.m. $2.
Monday 1 0 / 8
Mat Kearney and Meiko concert Dimnent, 8 p.m. $10 for students.
Tickets available at Devos Ticket
Center. Doors open 7:30 p.m.
I N B R I E F
S Y M P H O N E T T E O P E N S N E W
C O N C E R T S E A S O N FRIDAY
Gaber ie l Johnson GUEST W R I T E R
A f t e r a ve ry success fu l Eu-
ropean tour this pas t spr ing, the
S y m p h o n e t t e Orches t ra has re-
tu rned , eager to kick o f f thei r
n e w concer t season .
T h e o rches t r a has r ece ived
t w o o u t s t a n d i n g r e v i e w s f r o m
G e r m a n M u n i c h n e w s p a p e r s
a n d is a l r e a d y p l a n n i n g fo r
the i r next sp r ing tou r of the eas t
coas t , i nc lud ing s tops in P e n n -
sy lvan ia , O h i o , N e w J e r s e y and
N e w York.
The i r first concert is set for this
Friday, Oct. 5, 7 :30 p.m. at D im-
nent Chapel . The program will
open with the "Over tu re to the
Pirates of Penzance , " by Gilbert
and Sull ivan. The Concer t will
a lso include works f r o m " S y m -
phony no. 2 " by Franz Schuber t
and " C h o r e o g r a p h y " for Str ing
Orches t ra by Dello Joio.
When asked about favorite piec-
es and memor ies spent conduct ing
the orchestra, Conductor Richard
Piippo said that every piece and
every memory made with the or-
chestra was his favorite.
T h e Symphone t t e will be per-
forming three to four more con-
certs on campus and plans to play
of f campus this year as they have
in previous years .
"The Symphone t t e perfor-
mances o f fe r a wonder fu l diver-
sion f rom everyday l ife," Pi ippo
said.
The concert is f r ee and open to
the public.
![Page 6: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
6 T I IF. A N C H O R
5L^
A-
y>
'Zr •c» i
S I
/d
mm
#
/ i
s^?
![Page 7: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7
PHOTOS BY KEVIN SOUBLY, JOSH W A R N E R AND PHOTO EDITOR D A V I D M O O R E
![Page 8: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
8 VOICES T H E A N C H O R O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7
In pursuit of knowledge m a v
Evelyn Daniel
A moral question When you think about the immigration
debate, what first comes to mind? Is it an
image of politicians attempting to win votes?
Is it a complaint about Congress ' failure to
act or the lack of adequate law enforcement?
Is it ever morality — religion?
In February 2006, Cardinal Roger
Mahoney of the Catholic Archdiocese of Los
Angeles spurred intense controversy and made
national headlines when he announced that
he would encourage Catholics in his diocese
to ignore provisions of immigration bill HR
4437, if the legislation was ever passed.
The bill, which passed in the House
but failed in the Senate, would have made
it a criminal act to of fer any assistance to
immigrants who were in the United States
illegally, among other provisions. As the
cardinal interpreted it, this would prohibit
anyone from offering immigrants food,
clothing or shelter without asking for
documentation of their citizenship status.
When asked about encouraging civil
disobedience among Catholics, Mahoney told
CNN, "We give aid and assistance to anyone
in need. We have never, ever been required
to ask people for documentation before we
feed the hungry, clothe the naked or visit the
prisoners or sick. And we ' re not about to start
now. That 's just crazy. To say that someone
who helps give someone medical care is
committ ing a felony is ludicrous, because it
is not going to resolve any of the immigration
issues before us at all ."
The documentary "Crossing Arizona,"
shown in the Knickerbocker Theatre last week,
offers a depiction of the thousand or more
immigrants estimated to have died crossing
the Southern border since the mid '90s.
As author Byrd Baylor said in the film,
"I don ' t believe in the death penalty for
anything, so I certainly don' t believe in the
death penalty for trying to walk across the
desert to look for better life for your family."
Anyone who writes off the immigration
issue as merely political would be sorely
mistaken. It is saturated with intensely
personal moral questions, the answers to
which are critical to our individual identities.
How, for example, will w e balance the
need to maintain security and rule of law
in our society with the biblical command to
love our neighbors? When do w e allow our
religious views to dictate how w e vote or
how we govern, and when do w e keep church
and state distinctly separate, even in our own
minds? When, as in Mahoney ' s case, is civil
disobedience justif ied?
I fear that on Thursday, it will be tempting
to walk away from CIS unchanged. Many
of us will go listen to the speakers and
panelists. But af ter it's over, how many of
us will actually take a stand? Will any of us
be confident enough in our opinions to take
action — to seriously begin to take part in the
debate in the ftiture?
Immigration is indeed a societal problem
that requires immediate government
attention. Nonetheless, if we as individuals
overlook its significance as a moral dilemma
by making it the government 's problem rather
than our own, this entire symposium could be
considered a failure.
By the time this newspaper hits the stands,
nearly all of this year ' s CIS will be over. The
outcome of the immigration debate, however,
remains critical for Hope College, for Holland,
for Michigan and for the entire United States.
We are a nation defined by our people — by
our immigrants — many of whom come in
search of freedom and opportunity. What
kind of a people do w e want to become?
Evelyn was amused to learn this week
that an Illinois middle school banned hug-
ging. The principal was concerned that
excessive hugging led students to be late for
classes and caused crowding in hallways.
L E T T E R S T O T H E E D I T O R S
Students should show more community To the E d i t o r s :
I 'd like to see students out of their dorm
rooms, out of their busy-as-heck lives, away
from all of the meetings and activities, out
of their residence halls, to see them all meet
each other in DeWitt. You know, the Stu-
dent Center which is far from being the stu-
dents ' center. T h e situation right n o w feels
unfair. I 've attended Hope for three years
and barely know people from m y own class
outside of the humanities departments. I
know a handftil of athletes. I 've met nurs-
ing students more regularly off campus, in
other towns, than on campus. Three years!
T h e c a m p u s feels d ivided. It isn ' t in-
tent ional ly cl ique-ish, but it is — by your
category, by y o u r dorm and gender , by
sorority and fraternity, by your academ-
ics and activities, by everything. It beg ins
w h e n y o u ' r e put into Kollen or Wyck-
off . Van Vleck or Dyks t ra and con t inues
when you go to your first class. It figures
into w h o m you sit with in Phelps for three
years and the people you go (or d o n ' t go)
to H o m e c o m i n g with and s tays this w a y
until you graduate .
I feel no community outside m y close cir-
cle of friends. It gets harder and harder just to
meet them on a day-to-day basis unless we
make plans to do something grand. Where
I hang out regularly change each semester,
following whoever I know best. There 's no
continuity. It just doesn' t do it for me.
Eve ryone needs a place, a g roup of
people they visit, see, hang out with on
a m o r e casual , in formal basis . A g r o u p of
people that you spend s o m e t ime jus t talk-
ing with. Hav ing fiin with. Unorganized ,
unhindered and unplanned fun . Imag ine a
night at the bar, jus t wi thout the beer and
the bel l igerence o r a party wi thout be ing
illegal or s tupid. Tha t doesn ' t m e a n that
these people you know aren ' t impor tant
to you , that you d o n ' t care about them.
Far f r o m it. They check up on you.
You ' l l be missed , whether you want to
be or not . You m a y or m a y not keep in
touch with these people fo rever but you
w o n ' t forget each other. You d o n ' t have
to agree , jus t respect e n o u g h to talk. Ev-
e ryone is included and eve ryone has the
choice to not part icipate. Otherwise it is
oppress ion. I t ' s a bunch of people inter-
ested in each o ther for the sake of each
other, ra ther than by some specific point-
ed interest, wh ich can get ugly. Think
Democra t /Republ ican , or any such binary
on campus .
We c a n ' t talk to each other if w e don ' t
know each other, and w e d o n ' t k n o w each
other if w e never mee t each other. If w e
never talk to each other, no mean ingfu l
d ia logue happens and wi thout that , noth-
ing changes . Th i s is part of the fabric that
m a k e s our bubble .
There ' s a s t igma around having ac-
quaintances or casual friends here. Every-
thing has to be so serious. You ' re ostracized
f rom certain groups if you hang out with
Attack on Nativity Church unknown to many To t h e E d i t o r s :
April 2, 2002: Israel is invading Beth-
lehem, Israeli tanks are l ining up on the
outskir ts of the city and Israeli soldiers
gather ammuni t ion to start an o f fens ive
attack against the city of Be th lehem. At
the s a m e t ime, Palest inian paramil i tary
g roups are prepar ing for an invasion: burn-
ing tires, c losing roads and posi t ioning
themse lves in mul t ip le locat ions a round
town. M o m e n t s be fo re Israel started its
invasion, the Palest inian Police; A r m y ;
and paramil i tary g roups f rom Hamas ,
DFLP, and Fateh were coordinat ing their
de fense points and posi t ioned a rmed men
in f ront of the important bui ldings, one of
wh ich w a s the Nat ivi ty Church .
T h e Israeli force enters the city f rom
multiple points, fac ing heavy resistance,
but with the air support they are not im-
peded. They kill anyone w h o crosses their
path; children, women and elderly were
a m o n g the dead according to an Amnes ty
and T h e Palestinian Academy Society for
the Study of International Affairs count. An
Israeli tank reached the Nativity Church ;
the gunner pointed at the church to destroy
the bell tower and then boom! A Hamas
soldier destroyed the tank; of the 40 Mus-
lim militia men that fought for the church,
only 13 lived; men armed with anti-tank
R P G s and light a rms fights a squadron of
tanks with geographical help.
T h e priests inside the church convinced
the surviving men to take re fuge for the
sake of their lives. T h e priest had thought
that Israel would respect the church ' s
premises and thus gave them refuge. How-
ever, the Israeli soldiers and c o m m a n d e r
do not respect Christianity and started their
assault against Christianity at that point.
They bombarded and shoot at the church
for the upcoming month, nonstop.
Outside, the church was being destroyed
under the eyes of the silent world and the
help of the United States, while inside the
13 protected the church from being robbed
or violated by the other 200 refugees. Later
the Vatican, after pulling a lot of strings,
evacuated the 13 to Cyprus in an effort to
end the besiegement of the church.
Watching these events unroll on T V
coverage, as a Palestinian Christian
shocked me; Israel bluntly attacks Chris-
the wrong people or do the wrong things.
It 's not explicit, the group jus t stops hang-
ing out with you , stops calling you. There
are people that have lost entire groups of
fr iends this way. Everything is so personal,
and it 's not the w a y it should be.
But w e ' r e all too busy, and Hope
m a k e s sure you d o n ' t have t ime to ta lk
to the person next to you. We ' r e cast into
roles, w e ' r e pressured to be someth ing
more , get your n a m e on a commit tee , a
roster, anyth ing . W e ' r e stressed, w e don ' t
s leep, w e worry more about miss ing class
than learning. We replaced c o m m u n i t y
wi th Facebook . We breathe, but w e d o n ' t
all live. We can ' t jus t be ourselves .
C ' m o n guys . Eight hundred people in
each class , 3 ,000 people in the col lege,
and w e c a n ' t have fun ask s o m e ques-
t ions? Let ' s meet together, somewhere
public , and have a communi ty . N o t this
condi t ional f r iendship stuff.
— David Lee ( ' 0 8 )
tianity — besides re- invading Palestine
( therefore breaking every peace accord).
Yet the most disturbing part is the so-called
Christian world standing silent and letting
the Nativity Church face this barbaric ter-
rorist attack, doing nothing at all. Further-
more , the American government shocked
everyone by sending free gifts to Israel
using your tax dollars - smart guided mis-
siles to send into the church.
N o w a d a y s it is annoy ing , wear i some
and f rus t ra t ing that Amer i cans have no
idea of wha t happened then. Educa te
yoursel f about the real events and wha t is
really happening and use y o u r f r eedom of
speech for r ightful cases and not to sup-
port terrorist nations.
— George P. Khoury ( ' 09 )
I ^ A N C H O R L 2 0 0 7 F A L L SEMESTER STAFF
Our Mission: The Anchor strives to communicate campus events throughout Hope College and the Holland community. We hope to amplify awareness and promote dialogue through fair, objective jour-
nalism and a vibrant Voices section.
Disclaimer: The Anchor is a product of student effort and is funded through the Hope College Student Activities Fund. The opinions expressed on the Voices page are solely those of the
author and do not represent the views of The Anchor. One-year subscriptions to The Anchor are available for $40. The Anchor reserves the right to accept or reject any advertising.
Evelyn D a n i e l
Emily P a p p l c
M a t t O o s t e r h o u s c
S h a n n o n C r a i g
L i n d s e y M a n l h e i
Ash ley D e V e c h t
Ka t i e B e n n e t t
N i c k H i n k l e
Ka thy N a t h a n
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
EDITOR-IN-CIIIEF
CAMPUS NEIK EDITOR
NATIONAL NEHS EDITOR
FLITURES EDITOR
ASSISTANT FUTURES EDITOR
ARTS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
STAFF ADHSOR
D a v i d M o o r e
D y l a n a P i n t e r
G i n a H o l d e r
N i c h o l a s Engel
M a g g i e A l m d a l e
B r i a n S t r aw
Kai t l in Kessie
Troy Page
Ben G o r s k y
PLIOTOCRAFHY EDITOR
GRAPHICS EDITOR
ASSISTANT GRAPHICS EDITOR
PRODUCTION MANAGER
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT
ADS MANAGER
BUSINESS MANAGER
BUSINESS ASSISTANT
Al i son Mi l l s
J a y n i J u e d e s
D a n V a s k o
Laura H a u s c h
B r i a n M c C l e l l a n
G o r d i e Fall
S a m u e l B a k e r
Kevin S o u b l v
COPY EDITOR
ASSISTANT COPT EDITOR
ASSISTANT COPT EDITOR
ASSISTANT COPT EDITOR
SENIOR STAFF WRITER
STAFF WRITER
SUFF WRITER
STAFF WRITER
![Page 9: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7 VOICES T H E A N C H O R 9
Where the wind still blows
Stephen Cupery
Remember when you.. . R e m e m b e r w h e n you s tood no tal ler
than your o w n kitchen table and had to
peer longingly up the heights of giants?
R e m e m b e r w h e n the backyard tree w a s not
an object to manicure or graceful ly m o w
around, but a soar ing novel ty of c l imbable
branches and h ideaway niches? R e m e m b e r
w h e n y o u r broken jous t ing stick or injured
fist left you red-handed in the fight of the
century behind that overrun di lapidated
b a m or schoolyard al leyway. R e m e m b e r
when you . . . wel l , I could probably go on
endlessly. S o m e days those long-forgot ten
memor ies swirl back from s tagnant past
ages as 1 s top mid-s t r ide to observe a
certain ch i ld ' s luxurious f r eedom of
adventure and exci tement . Adventure
such that you were t ransported into the
s torybook pages of D e f o e ' s ' 'Robinson
Crusoe , " Verne 's "Ten Thousand Leagues
under the S e a " or pe rhaps S tevenson ' s
"Treasure Is land." M y personal favori te for
emula t ing the characters o f and imagined
scenes with brother and ne ighborhood
cohort was, with no contest , Mark Twain ' s
"Huck leber ry F inn . " This tale in part icular
seemed a lways to elicit a thoroughly real
complex ion of exper iences relatable with
and deemed wor thy fo r reproduc ing in our
backyard creek.
Even though w e may still have a m e m o r y
of our youth , is it too much to suppose that
most of us have forgotten how to return
there on a whim into terri tories bordered
by wonder , curiosity and unl imited play?
W h e n 1 cross pa ths incidental ly with
kids rambl ing outs ide in pursuit of n e w
discovery and unhindered explorat ion, the
appeal to t ranscend these adult conf ines by
learning anew what m a y have been already
seen, heard or touched resonates s t rongly
in m y sub-conscious .
To be a ch i ld aga in i s n ' t j u s t a fu t i l e
a t t empt at c o n j u r i n g up a sense of
nos ta lg ic s e n t i m e n t a l i s m . I t ' s an abi l i ty
to v i ew p e r s p e c t i v e s d i f f e r e n t l y - ups ide -
d o w n , b y each e x a m i n e d ang le or even
f r o m w i t h i n . I ask myse l f s o m e t i m e s if
re f lec ted w o n d e r has b e c o m e so e lus ive
n o w a d a y s b e c a u s e o u r a t t en t ion is c a u g h t
in a c o n t a g i o u s m e n t a l i t y of s u p p l i e d
i n f o r m a t i o n . You see , w o n d e r o f t e n
e v a d e s de f in i t ion p rec i s e ly b e c a u s e it
is the h igh poin t of a w a r e n e s s b e y o n d
l anguage .
Maybe it 's not exact ly a comfor t ing
indulgence to feel ourselves, our identities,
our whole purposefu l exis tence called
into quest ion. But , this fear aside, there 's
no deny ing w e are still caught t ransfixed
at odd moments by the as tonishment of
a painting, the intr icacies of a season ' s
change , forest shadows , taste or any vivid
d isp lacement . In such m o m e n t s w e see
how habit and famil iar i ty have c logged
our direct awareness and muff led our
spontaneity. It is as if w e cannot a f ford the
luxury of get t ing lost, and yet, get t ing lost
in m o m e n t s of wonde r is, perversely, wha t
w e mos t value.
Stephen shouldn't be the first to admit he
still avidly skips stones, jumps in leaf piles,
frolics in mountain meadows or rolls down
hills.
From the inside out
Ashley DeVecht
More to the Pull?
Maybe. People of ten ask me w h y I tried out fo r
the Pull. They think I ' m crazy for devot ing
20-odd hours a week to pract ice and for
spending m y hard-earned cash on supplies .
They th ink i t 's r id iculous that I ' ve become
obsessed with odd number s and gotten rid
of a lmost all o f m y red clothing. Maybe
they ' r e right. Maybe I a m crazy.
1 tried out for the Pull m y f r e shman year
because I d idn ' t think I could do it. By
the looks of me , mos t people wou ld think
I ' m a natural athlete — I ' ve got long legs
for running and I ' m the perfect height fo r
sports like basketbal l or volleyball . But
looks can be deceiving.
At my fifth grade field day I was so excited
to run the 500-meter relay that as soon as
the whistle blew I fell flat on my face . . . in
front of every other fifth grader in the district.
Maybe that left a permanent scar, or maybe I
just wasn ' t cut out to be an athlete.
W h e n I arr ived at Pull pract ice on the
first day a f r iend I had k n o w n s ince midd le
school looked at me in shock and asked,
"Ash ley? W h a t are you doing he re?" I
dec ided then and there that I w a s going
to prove to mysel f , to m y fr iends, and to
anyone else that 1 was capab le of more than
I, or they, expected .
Pract ices were hard . . . I had never run
that m u c h in m y life. I hated c o m i n g h o m e
dirty every day, and I wasn ' t s leeping more
than five hours every night. M y f r iendships
w e r e going d o w n the drain. Yes, there
w e r e m o m e n t s I cons idered quit t ing. But
I wasn ' t a quit ter; if I gave up I would jus t
be conf i rming m y worst fear about myse l f
—tha t I d idn ' t have what it takes.
On Pull day m y f r e shman year I w a s
jus t wai t ing for it all to be d o n e — I jus t
wanted to survive. As w e marched to the
pits the banners read, "Th i s is War," and
" W e l c o m e to the Trenches . " I felt like a
Greek god prepar ing for battle.
Maybe I ' m being a little melodramat ic .
Maybe compar ing Pull to war is polit ically
incorrect and offens ive . But I ' v e never
sweat or bled for m y country. I ' ve never
s tood bes ide m y fe l low Amer i cans and
upheld the honor of our nat ion. I ' ve never
fough t to the death for Amer ica .
So for m e . Pull is the c losest I ' ve ever
gotten to war. And sure, the w a r w e fight
on Pull day i sn ' t a w a r against terrorism o r
c o m m u n i s m or the axis of evil. I k n o w I
wou ldn ' t have the strength or courage to
fight that batt le — and 1 wou ldn ' t deserve
the honor to do so even if I could.
Af te r t w o years as an '09 mora ler I think
I finally get it. T h e war w e rage on Pull
day is against our o w n wills . T h e batt le w e
fight is m o m e n t o u s not because winning
means a bonfi re celebrat ion af te rward ,
but because the ou tcome def ines our self-
image. Th i s battle d raws out the valued
virtues of our character : perseverance,
honor, and kinship.
I love this war. I love being a part o f
something so much greater than m e — m y
'09 Pull family and the Odd Year Pullers and
moralers that have come before me. I love
leaving every ounce of energy on the rope,
knowing that I fought to the finish. I love
the glory of swimming in the Black River,
m y teammates surrounding m e in complete
euphoria — heroes, legends of our era.
So m a y b e I am a bit crazy, taking this
whole Pull tradit ion too far. But anyone
w h o has ever scored a touchdown, k icked
a goal or won a tournament unders tands in
their o w n way. Maybe, jus t maybe , w e ' r e
all a little crazy.
Ashley would like to dedicate this article
to the Pull paticipants — odd and even
alike. May the tradition live on.
Brian Straw
Budget brinksmanship On Monday morn ing , Mich igan ' s
government shut down. It w a s n ' t for long,
but it shut down. T h e shutdown, had it
lasted, would have left 35 ,000 Mich igan
workers unemployed . It wou ld have meant
that 100,000 low- income households
wouldn ' t get their child care subsidies. It
would have af fec ted the l - in -7 Michigan
residents w h o need Medicaid . It would
mean the 90 percent of the state pol ice
force would be kept of f the streets.
I w a s c o n f u s e d at first. I kept a s k i n g
m y s e l f , h o w cou ld the " r e s p o n s i b l e
a d u l t s " that w e send to L a n s i n g a l low the
s ta te to go w i t h o u t a b u d g e t ? T h e s la te
wr i t e s and i m p l e m e n t s a budge t eve ry
year . T h e b u d g e t is a l w a y s requ i red
b e f o r e Oc t . I . Th i s yea r the b u d g e t a l m o s t
d i d n ' t get done .
W h y ? B e c a u s e po l i t i c i ans in Lans ing
w e r e d o i n g w h a t po l i t i c i ans do bes t ;
p l ay ing pol i t ica l g a m e s . T h o u g h Gov.
G r a n h o l m first a d d r e s s e d the $1 .75
b i l l ion def ici t that the s ta te w a s f a c i n g
th is sp r ing , the Leg i s l a tu re s i m p l y
b o u n c e d unrea l i s t i c b u d g e t so lu t ions
b a c k and for th unti l M o n d a y .
G r a n h o l m set an initial b u d g e t d e a d l i n e
of Ju ly I. T h i s is because a l though
the s t a t e ' s b u d g e t does not need to be
c o m p l e t e unti l Oct . 1, s choo l s ac ross the
s ta te are r equ i red to have the i r b u d g e t s
by J u l y 1. T h e s e s choo l s re ly on s ta te
f u n d i n g to s tay af loat .
If you wou ld expec t that once a
dead l ine passed , as the July I dead l ine
d id , l a w m a k e r s wou ld rea l ize they had
to focus on get t ing a workab le proposa l ,
you wou ld be wrong . Fo l lowing the Ju ly
I dead l ine Republ ican l a w m a k e r s in the
s tale Sena te dec ided that a t w o - w e e k
vaca t ion wou ld be nice .
A s w e entered Augus t and l awmakers
realized that they had t w o months to fix the
budget , a couple of proposa ls were bandied
about . Democra t s wanted to raise the
income take to ear l ier levels of 4.6 percent
f r o m the current 3.9 percent . This would
a l low all s ta te- funded activities to cont inue
unabated. Republ icans countered with
their proposal to cut $1.75 billion f r o m
the state budget .
Of course, both s ides realized they
wou ld have to compromise to find the
proper end result, right? Apparent ly not.
Though reports in early Augus t suggest that
party leadership on both s ides had c o m e to
a deal. Republ ican leadership backed away
f r o m it at the beginning of September .
In p lace of the bipart isan deal, the
Republican proposal of $1 .75 billion in
cuts came back. These cuts are truly awe-
inspiring. They would result in losing a
$290 mil l ion increase to K-12 educat ion.
Unde r the Republ ican proposal , a $35
million increase would not be given to
Mich igan ' s col leges and universit ies. An
addit ional $71 million in increases would
be wi thheld from communi ty colleges
across the state. T h e s e increases were
barely enough to keep up with inflation.
In a state that is suf fe r ing f rom a loss of
manufac tu r ing jobs , it is prepos terous to
think of cut t ing educat ion.
Finally, a f t e r taking the ma jo r i ty o f the
year d i scuss ing wha t the budget w a s go ing
to look like, a deal w a s s t ruck . It w a s
imp lemen ted in the p re -dawn hour s of Oct .
1. Mich igan has a weak e c o n o m y and the
worst u n e m p l o y m e n t ra tes in the count ry
and o u r l awmake r s play with a potential
g o v e r n m e n t shu tdown . Mich igan needs
o u r l a w m a k e r s to help spark the economy.
Instead those legis la tors threaten to
shut it d o w n . Brian Straw is a senior political science
and philosophy major. When not absorbed in
political blogs or arguin the purpose of the
federal government with Professor Polet, Brian
enjoys cooking, ploying raquetball and watch-
ing the West Wing with his girlfriend.,
Letter Guidelines: The Anchor welcomes letters from any-one within the college and related communities. The staff reserves the right to edit due to space constraints, personal attacks or other editorial considerations. A representative sam-ple will be taken. No anonymous letters will be printed unless
discussed with Editor-in-Chief. Please limit letters to 500 words.
Mail letters to The Anchor c/o Hope College, drop them off at the Anchor office (located in the Martha Miller Center) or e-mail us at
Advert ising Policies; All advertising is subject to the rates, conditions, standards, terms and policies stated in The Anchor's advertisement brochure. Any advertising placed on behalf of an advertising agency
or other representative of the advertiser is the responsibility of the advertised and the advertiser shall be held liable for payment.
The Anchor will make continuous efforts to avoid wrong insertions,
omissions and typographical errors. However, if such mistakes occur, this newspaper may cancel its charges for the portion of the ad if. in the publisher's reasonable judgment, the ad has been rendered
valueless by the mistake.
Advert isement Deadlines: All ad and classified requests must be submitted by 5 p.m. Monday, prior to Wednesday distribution.
Contact Information: To submit an ad or a classified, or to request
a brochure or other information, contact our Ads Representative at [email protected]. To contact our office, call our office at
(616) 395-7877 on weekdays between 10:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
![Page 10: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
1 0 T H E A N C H O R NEWS OCTOBER 3, 2 0 0 7
Student Congress plans for new academic year • CONGRESS, from page 1
Student Congress websi te , the or-
ganization is divided into a num-
ber of task force groups that deal
with different campus issues. Fur-
thennore , at least one Congress
m e m b e r sits on each of about 20
govern ing commit tees that advise
the president of the college on
different topics.
More successful program de-
velopment first requires closer re-
lationships between representatives
and constituents before anything is
discussed in a committee meeting.
"This year, an emphasis will be
placed on making sure that every
representative is in touch with the
people they represent." Gibbs said.
Already, Student Congress has
been developing and implement-
ing immediate plans. Sarah Mejia,
Student Congress vice president,
hopes that some current Congress
goals will soon become a reality.
"We are remodel ing the stu-
dent organization area in DeWitt
with new carpet, paint ings and
paint and also t rying to get four
more plasma screen T V s for
Cook, Phelps and the (Student
Union Desk) ," Mejia said. "An-
other (goal) is to set up a memo-
ONGRESS
PHOTO BY JEFF VREDENBURG
V I S I B L E R E P R E S E N T A T I O N — S tudent Congress pres ident , Jay Gibbs ( '09), works In his of-
f ice in t he Dewi t t Center. This year, Gibbs is p lac ing an emphas is on s t rong c o m m u n i c a t i o n .
rial fo r s tudents w h o have died
whi le at Hope . "
One issue that will g a m e r the
attention of Student Congress
this year is the developing role
of Hope ' s new mascot character,
"Du tch . " Accord ing to the web-
site of the Mascot Character Proj-
ect and a college press release,
this new representat ion of the
official Flying Dutchman mascot
was developed through the e f for t s
of a Student Congress commit tee
beginning in early 2005. The new
character was introduced at a pep
rally last winter.
While the mascot project has
been met with some opposition on
different fronts and for different
reasons, the next step to take amid
the conflicting views is forward.
"At this point ," said Gibbs ,
" the mascot is here, w e ' v e spent
a lot of money on it, and how we
got it is irrelevant. N o w it be-
comes a quest ion of s tewardship.
How can w e best use it to serve
Hope Col lege?"
Dutch is expected to be an as-
set at var ious c a m p u s events as
well as athletic compet i t ions .
" T h e mascot is a program that
has a lot of benefits, especially in
a public relations sense, for Hope
Col lege ," G ibbs said.
According to Gibbs, other ath-
letic support groups such as the
Dew Crew and the cheerleading
squad do not need to feel threatened
by the new role created by Dutch.
"We are working very closely
with these other groups so that we
form a unique role for Dutch," he
said. "It would not be right for us
to put him in the place of some-
one else, and there shouldn ' t be
anyone feel ing that there ' s any
danger of that ."
For more information and Con-
gress meeting minutes, students
can access the website at www.
hope.edu/student/congress.
Hope shares immigration stories through different methods • CIS, from page 1
"We wanted him to be one of
our C I S keynote speakers, but he
was not able to c o m e on those
days ," said Sympos ium Co-Cha i r
Derek Emerson. "However , he is
such an important voice in this
discussion that w e asked h im to
c o m e earlier and help build the
base for future discussions ."
Portes ' talk was based on the
recent Children of Immigrants
Longitudinal Study. The study
examined the assimilat ion and
adaptation process of children
w h o immigrated to the U.S. at a
young age or w h o have at least
one fore ign-bom parent.
Portes addressed the issue of
downwards assimilat ion, or the
negat ive paths on which many
children of immigrants find
themselves . Accord ing to the
study, Mexican immigrants in
Ca l i fomia are most affected by
d o w n w a r d s assimilat ion. Of ten ,
second-generat ion immigrants
have higher high school drop-
out. teen pregnancy and unem-
ployment rates. Portes b lamed
the U.S. labor market for part of
the d o w n w a r d s assimilat ion.
"The U.S. labor market has
changed f rom a pyramid to an
hour g lass ." Portes said. "To-
day ' s first-generation immigrants
need to attain what it took Euro-
pean immigrants several genera-
tions to achieve."
With the recent surge in immi-
gration levels, Portes argued that
second-genera t ion immigrants
have a significant a f fec t on the
ent ire Amer ican society.
Students, staff and facul ty
members have also been invited
to share their personal ized immi-
gration stories over the past few
weeks . Sixteen videotaped im-
migration stories of Hope com-
muni ty members are available
onl ine at the C I S website.
" T h e purpose of videotap-
ing the immigrat ion stories of
members of the c a m p u s com-
muni ty was to m a k e us all more
aware of the diversi ty or origins
that we have here on c a m p u s
and the exper iences that some
of us or our famil ies have had in
coming to and adjus t ing to the
United Slates ," said Prof. Chris-
tine Swain , a CIS commit tee
member . Swain said that many
people on c a m p u s are unaware of
the cultural heritage present on
campus , .
Professor Gloria Tseng pro-
vided her immigrat ion story on-
line and shared the diff icult ies of
starting school in the U.S. with
minimal knowledge of the Eng-
lish language.
" In sharing my past . 1 am
opening mysel f up to the Hope
communi ty and taking part in it,
not crusading for a cause ," Tseng
said. "Students like stories, and I
am shar ing part of m e with Hope
s tudents ."
Barbara Rubio ( ' 0 9 ) shared
her immigrat ion story onl ine as
well. Rubio said that her parents
immigrated to the United States
f rom Chile and integrated Chil-
ean culture into her upbringing.
She was glad for the opportunity
to tell her immigrat ion story.
"Divers i ty is all around us ,"
Rubio said. " F r o m students to
faculty and staff, w e all have a
story to tell ."
To view the immigration sto-
ries, visit www.hope.edu/cis.
Join us at Grace Episcopal Church for an ecumenical
Taize Service first Sunday of every month
at 7 : 0 0 p m
Simple Chants, Silence and Prayer
Grace Episcopal Church 5 5 5 Michigan Ave ( 3 9 6 " 7 4 5 9 )
Substance Abuse
Awareness Group Support group for
Mope College students oul'y!
Starting Tuesday, September 18
Location: Hope College
Dewitt Counseling Center
TUESDAY 11:00 am
THURSDAY 7:00 pm
for more information contact:
Ton Zita at Jon at dan. z i ta @f\ ope. eau
630-3191407
![Page 11: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
SPORTS OCTOBER 3, 2 0 0 7
T H E A N C H O R 11
Fab four golfers take last stand T H I S W E E K I N S P O R T S
Nick Hlnkle S P O R T S EDITOR
With putters in hand, four
f r iends practice on the put t ing
green whi le jok ing and laughing.
An onlooker would not real ize
they were preparing for a M1AA
tournament like they have done
so many t imes before .
Seniors T o m m y Yamaoka,
Ryan Sheet , Matt Lapham and
Steve Mart indale have been the
core of the Hope Col lege m e n ' s
go l f team since they were fresh-
men, helping the team win three
M I A A championsh ips and earn
t w o N C A A appearances . Cur-
rently, the team is five s t rokes
ahead of Ol ivet Col lege for the
M I A A title with one tournament
remaining.
Last season Hope w o n the
M I A A by 70 shots though the
t eam has struggled this year.
"Las t year w e were set t ing re-
cords almost every t o u m a m e n C
Mart indale said. "We c a m e in
this year and thought w e would
automatical ly take the confer -
ence. We needed to adjust our
at t i tude."
In addi t ion to s o m e possible
preseason overconf idence , the
t eam has not been able to put
together four solid scores on the
s a m e day.
" T h e bo t tom line is w e need to
win tournaments and w e a re not
S m muc mu
at the corner of 8th & River
3 9 2 - 4 7 0 7
Honors most Insurance
Cards and
f i n d g r e a t
j e w e l r y a t t h e
A p o t h e c a r y
G i f t S h o p (nestled
in the back of the
Model Drug Store)
Mon-Wed 9:30-8:00pm Thur-Fri 9:30-9:00pm Saturday 9:30-6:00pm
Closed Sunday
www. mode ldrugs tore . com
PHOTO EOITOR DAVID MOORE
F O U R F R I E N D S — Sen io rs ( l e f t t o r igh t ) Steve M a r t i n d a l e , Tommy Yamaoka , Ryan Sheets
and M a t t L a p h a m h a n g ou t d u r i n g p r a c t i c e in p r e p a r a t i o n for t h e i r f i na l MIAA t o u r n a m e n t .
doing tha t , " Yamaoka said. " N o
one is scoring; w e are j u s t p laying
med ioc re golf ."
Hope will play its final tour-
nament on Oct . 6 at the Zol lner
Go l f Course at 1 p.m.
"It (Zollner) is fair ly easy but
(we) still need to play well to
shoot the number s , " Lapham said.
" I t is a key tournament for us. N o
lead is really safe ."
, In addi t ion to thei r exper ience .
they have bonded on and of f the
course, which has buil t trust over
the years .
"The re is defini tely t rust ,"
Lapham said. "I feel like when I
am not playing m y best someone
can pick up the s lack."
Travel ing to and f r o m tourna-
ments and trips such as the t e a m ' s
tour of Scot land this s u m m e r have
provided plenty of t ime for the se-
niors to get to k n o w each other.
" N o doub t w e feel comfor t -
able a round each other ," Sheets
said. " I t is a lmost like w e are
brothers ."
Look ing back at their four
years at Hope , the players will re-
m e m b e r winn ing with teamates ,
but their f r iendships created will
probably be the mos t valuable.
"Gol f is only four years but
our relat ionships will last a long
t ime," Yamaoka said.
Sponsored by Chem Club All proceeds go towards
Relay for Life
$5 for Adults & $3 for Children
Saturday, October 6 lOam-Noon
Schaap Science Center Atrium
Wednesday
Men's Soccer Away vs. Tri-State at 4 p.m.
Oct. 3
Thursday Oct. 4
Volleyball Away vs. St. Mary s at 6:30 p.m.
Friday Oct. 5
Volleyball ^ Illinois Wesleyan Inv.
Women 's Golf MIAA Championships at Bedford Valley
Golf Course at 1 p.m.
Saturday Oct. 6
Volleyball Illinois Wesleyan Inv.
Men's Golf MIAA tournament at Zollner Golf
Course at 1 p.m.
Women 's Golf MIAA Championships at Bedford Valley
Golf Course at 9 a.m.
Men's Soccer Home vs. Alma at 2 p.m.
Women 's Soccer
Away vs. St. Mary's at noon
I N B R I E F
W O M E N ' S GOLF
T h e Hope Col lege w o m e n ' s
golf team w o n the Hope Invita-
tional on Tuesday. Cass ie Sneller
(MO) led the team shoot ing an
80.
Other H o p e scores includ-
ed Julie Hoogerhyde ( ' 08 ) 87,
Cass ie Hidebrandt ( ' 0 8 ) 94, Kat ie
Blodget t ( ' I I ) 90, Clare Hubbard
( M l ) 97, Jori N i e m a n n ( M l ) 87
and Brit tany Posma ( ' 09 ) 97.
M E N ' S GOLF
T h e Hope Col lege m e n ' s golf
team moved into first p lace in the
M I A A on Oct . I with a 301. T h e
Du tchmen are five s t rokes ahead
of Ol ivet Col lege with one con-
fe rence tournament remaining.
Matt Lapham ( ' 08 ) led H o p e
scores with a 73, which puts h im
into a tie for seasonal medal is t
honors . Other Hope scores in-
c luded T o m m y Yamaoka ( ' 08 )
75, Don Schol ten ( ' 09 ) 75, S teve
Mart indale ( ' 08 ) 78 and Ryan
Shee ts ( ' 0 8 ) 79.
W O M E N ' S SOCCER
T h e H o p e Col lege w o m e n ' s
soccer team won against Tri-State
on Tuesday 6-1. Hope has a con-
ference record of 2-1 and an over-
all record of 6-6.
T h e Dutch w o m e n will play at
Saint M a r y ' s Col lege on Oct. 6 at
noon .
M I A A PLAYERS O F THE WEEK F R O M HOPE COLLEGE
Footbal l :
Chr is B o w e n
Senior kicker
M e n ' s Soccer :
Dan Tresslar
Senior midfielder
![Page 12: 10-03-2007](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022042617/568c533d1a28ab4916b9f88c/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
1 2 T H E A N C H O R SPORTS O C T O B E R 3 , 2 0 0 7
Hope football returns to winning form Flying Dutchmen win first conference game against Albion; anticipate Homecoming matchup with Alma College
Gordie Fall STAFF W R I T E R
After three losses, Hope Col-lege's football team rebounded at
Albion College last Saturday to
break multiple losing streaks.
The team won its first game of
the season, a 42-35 win at Albion, improving to 1-3 while starting
conference play at 1-0. The win
at Albion marked the first Hope
football road victory at that school
since 1982. The 42-35 win was the highest-
scoring game in matchup history
and was senior tailback David
Booko's season debut, which he
celebrated with three touchdowns
and 197 rushing yards. This win seems to establish
the pattern since last year, where
Hope lost every non-conference
game before running the table for its conference schedule. Com-
ing up next week, Hope will host
Alma College at Holland Munici-
pal Stadium. Like Hope, Alma is
1-3 and coming off a conference
win. When asked how he felt about
coming back, Booko said, "It was
a great experience, and always great to have a game like that
(statistically), especially my first
game back." He added, " I 've just been itch-
ing to get back out and play some ball. A lot of things went well for
me, my offensive line blocked
great, and they opened up a lot of
holes to make my job easy."
Hope is now 1-3 and at full
strength heading into this week's
conference home opener. "Everybody was excited to
get the whole team back," Booko
said, adding that "the best thing to do is just put those non-confer-
ence games behind us."
This year 's team "feels like it 's very similar to last year, the tem-
po of practice has been great, and
it 's a really great group of guys,"
Booko said.
This Saturday for its home-
coming game Hope will play
Alma College on Saturday at 2 p.m. Last season, the Dutchmen
defeated Alma away 49-43 in
overtime.
PHOTO BY ALEX QUICK
U P FOR G R A B S — Hope's Jack Kiefer ( '08) a t tempts a re-cept ion in the Central Iowa game.
30th annual Homecoming run/walk set for Saturday Grace Denny GUEST W R I T E R
For the 30th consecutive year,
Hope College is hosting its annu-
al Homecoming Run/Walk. Free
to faculty, staff and students, the
event hopes to attract a large
crowd. This event will be held on Sat-
urday, Oct. 6 in conjunction with
this year ' s Homecoming festivi-
ties. A Health Fair will
be going on in the De-
Vos Fieldhouse from
8:30 to 10:30 a.m. and will focus on educat-
ing people about diet
and nutrition, exer-
cise and decreasing
stress. The 5k run
around Windmill
Island and the 2-mile walk
around the
B u y s
A t h -
letic Complex will begin at 10
a.m. and students, faculty and
staff are able to register for this
event for free. Participants will
be awarded prizes based on how
close their finishing lime is to the time they predicted in advance.
Hope Col-
lege kine-s i o 1 o g y
p r o f e s s o r and head
coach of
H o p e ' s
men's bas-
ketball team Glenn Van Wi-
eren has been the
d i r e c t o r
of the
e v e n t
s i n c e
t h e b e g i n -
ning. "It started
as an out-
growth of
Hope 's Health Dynamics pro-
gram and used to be
held at the Dow Cen-
ter," Van Wieren said. "The purpose of the
event is to promote
wellness and health to our com-
munity in a way that's positive." Van Wieren also notes that the
Annual Homecoming Run/Walk
has seen many changes over the
past 30 years. In the past, biking
and swimming were include. At one point, around 1,200 to 1,500
people were able to compete. Now, due to safety reasons
and an ef-
fort with •
the Hol-land Police
D e p a r t -
ment, the
event only
consists of
a run and walk and
hopes to at-tract 400 to = = = = =
500 people. "It represents who we are,"
Van Wieren said. "I t ' s an awe-
some event on campus. It 's been
a really nice thing for Homecom-ing and a lot of alumni get in-
volved." Another staff member. Pro-
fessor Deb Swanson, is getting
involved in the event as well. Swanson has been leading an
FYS class this semester called
"Walk the Walk," and she and
"The purpose of the event
is to promote wellness and
health to our community in a
way that's positive.91
- Glenn Van W i e r e n ,
Kinesiology professor, coach
her students lake walks together
when the weather is nice. Swan-
son is encouraging the students in the class to do the race and
notes that Hope College's well-
ness program is also encouraging
the staff and their families to get
involved. "1 am looking forward to do-
ing an activity outside of class
with slu-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ d e n t s , "
S w a n s o n
said. She is
also ex-
cited to see all of
the alumni
p a r t i c i p a -
tion, and = = = = = her daugh-
ter 's Girl Scout troop will be handing out
snacks as well. On the impact that the event
has on the community and the
campus Swanson said, "It con-tinues to tell students that part of
being a well-rounded student is
being physically active." She also believes that this
event is something that is need-
ed. "Walk to stay healthy," Swan-
son said. "It is a good lesson to
learn and something that you can
do all your life." Lots of students are plan-
ning to get involved in the event
as well. Members of the men's basketball team will be running
the race in addition to a run-ning group led by Blair Williams
('10). " I 'm really excited in seeing
who all comes out to compete for
it," Williams said. To get ready for the event Wil-
liams, along with several other
students, are getting together and running after class three days a
week. They have been working
on speed and also longer endur-
ance jogging.
"It 's been a really good expe-rience and it 's helped me to feel
connected to people I 'm going to
be running with," Jaynie Lunger
( '10) said. For a lot of the students it will
be their first 5k race. Registration can be done in ad-
vance through the DeVos Field-
house ticket office or also before
9 a.m. on the day of the event. Showers and locker rooms will
be available in the DeVos Field-
house to participants and refresh-
ments will be provided as well.
Did you know?
... Our reference s taff
CHATS!! AOL: askvanwyten Yahoo! Messenger: askvanwyten MSN Messenger: [email protected] Google Talk: [email protected]
On the Web at
http://www.hope.edu/lib/services/reshelp.htmlffchat
Van Wylen Library - reliable - definitive. Check us out! www.hope.edu/lib
H O P E C O L L E G E
A N C H O R
141 E 12TH S T
P O Box 9 0 0 0
H O L L A N D , M l 4 9 4 2 2 - 9 0 0 0
N o n - P r o f i l
Organ iza t ion
U.S. Postage
PAID
H o p e Co l l ege