German Week continued from page 1 i vie based on "Professor Unrat" by Heinrich Mann, will be shovm at 8 p.m. in Avinger Hall. It was the first real classic of sound film and made Mar lene Dietrich a star. Monday Night in the Arts gets in on the act with the opening of an art exhibit of some 24 black and v^ite drawings billed "The City: German Caricatures." On loan from the Goethe Institute in Atlanta, the sketches were done in 1897 to 1985 by architects, cartoon ists, graphic designers, and illustrators in West Germany. The exhibit opens at 7 p.m. Monday and thereafter will re- Mzala Still Speaks continued from page 3 and cannot even run for government positions only because thoy are black. The message is you are nobody if you are not white. This is a heresy worthy of international repudiation and harsh punitive measures. Laws after laws are passed by the South Af rican regime to reinforce their its power and pri- viledges. People are re settled according to their races. Peoples' private lives are regula ted by laws v^ich make it a serious crime to date or marry across the color-bar, living togeth er as different races, riding in the same public transport, going to the same school, restaurant or theatre. Although some of these useless sic in Avinger beginning at 8 p.m. The St. Andrews music faculty will per form the works of J.S. Bach, Beethoven, Schu mann, Brahms, Richard Strauss and Hindemith. On Thursday and Fri day, the St. Andrews' Highland Players perform the play "The Deadly Game." An adaptation of the novel "Trapps," by Friedrich Duerrenmatt, the play is about three retired lawyers on a re mote mountain who amuse themselves with prosecu ting a stranger who drops in. Tickets for each of the 8 p.m. productions cost $4. [see boxed sto ry. ] The week concludes on Saturday with the "mini- Oktoberfest," featuring German music, dancing. laws have been scraped, the most fundamental ones still stinks in the South African statutes books. The cost of putting these laws into practice is un thinkable, both economic ally and in the misery they create. Thousands of people die in opposi tion to i^rtheid, some are exiled while many languish in the regimes' horrendous jails. Today the sad story is that not only Nelson Mandela and his comrades are in jail (they have been jailed for life 25 years ago), but also about 8 000 little child ren have been detained without charge. Most are said to be 'a threat to the state'; v^at an al legation for an 8 year old kid. Imagine if it is your little brother or continued from page 3 from London University. However it is disclosed that Robertson actually only took an art course there one spring semester before he graduated. Would any of you people out there who studies du ring winter term at the University of St. Andrews graduated? Let us hope not. Robertson also con tends that he has had ten years of formal educa tion. If that is so, then why tell a lie about graduating from London University? He obviously feels that an American education is not good enough for him. There fore, is Pat Robertson a true patriot or is he willing to sell his country out to a one se mester art course at London University? It sure does not sound like anyone that I would want leading my country. My last comment on the subject is this: Pat Robertson has joined the lifestyles of the hypo critical and the scanda lous. His comrades are the crafty and very igno rant Joseph Biden, Gary Hart, Admiral John Poin dexter, Oliver North, and yes, your favorites and mine...Jim and Tammy Bak- ker. Will someone please stop the madness; this is getting ridiculous! Bobby C. Simpson sister, how would you feel? Ironically the jails that are supposed to quell down the quest for freedom are vigorously fanning the fires for Liberation. The non violence strategies em ployed by both Chief Al bert Lutuli (the 1961 No bel Peace Laureate) and Archbishop Desmond Tutu (the 1984 Nobel Peace Laureate) are rapidly losing ground. The mili tant youth, seeing that all legitimate avenues for peaceful resolution are closed, is swiftly turning to the worst vio lent means yet practiced in this century. The question remains, can a peaceful resolution ever be reached? We will look into that in our next issue. Tataa! the U.S. defense budget. U.S. investors by 1981 made twice the rate of return on their profits from investments in the developing coiintries than in the industrial coun tries (22.5 to 11.5 per cent). Nevertheless, de veloping coiantries suffer from trade tariffs and quotas designed to keep out their products from competition in the "open" U.S. market. Though U.S. aid helped establish a cotton glove manufactur ing plant in a Latin Am erican country, it later placed a quota of 20,000 pair, jamming the oppor tunity for that comtry to realize substantial profits. Now, North Am ericans pay more money for their gloves. South Americans still go hung ry, and American busi nesspeople are able to postpone the restructur ing necessary for a mo dern economy. The consen sus among most economists is that in the long run, protectionism hurts ev eryone. With our votes, we should vote against protectionist candidates. No matter how many cans of food we pile up in Belk Center, we will not make as positive an impact as we can with our citizenship. We can vote and we can write letters. Bread for the World (BFW) executive director Arthur Simon illustrated the po wer of politics by point ing out that in the face of a threatened $15 mil lion cutback in U.S. con tributions to UNICEF in 1982, rapid mobilization of BFW members in key states probably swayed Congress to preserve funding, an action v^ich dwarfed the efforts of hundreds of thousands of citizens v^o raised $2.2 million for UNICEF in a later fund drive. A Bread for the World club meets on campus ev ery two weeks or so to organize legislative ac tion we can take. The next meeting is Tuesday at 10:00 in the Medita tion Room. Dave Snyder Credit for the lead goes to Arthur Simon. October]:), 1987 page 12 THE LANCE Robertson Hunger main open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Friday, Nov. 14. On Tuesday, Herr Ec- kart Goette, an honorary consul of West Germany, will be speaking on in ternational business at 7 p.m. in the Vardell Audi torium. In town that night, the Lutheran Church of the Living Word will show two films deal ing with Martin Luther and the Reformation. The program will start at 7:30 p.m. On Wednesday, German conposers will be cele brated in a night of mu- food and beer. A special alcohol license was ob tained to permit limited drinking. The oortpahpah music and dancing will be provided by the Little German Band and Dancers from Raleigh, who were sponsored in part by the Scotland County Arts Council and the Grass roots Fund of the North Carolina Arts Council. A general admission ticket will cost $3, a ticket with food $6.