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The Anchor: 1970 The Anchor: 1970-1979

11-4-1970

The Anchor, Volume 83.07: November 4, 1970

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 83.07: November 4, 1970" (1970). The Anchor: 1970. Paper 20. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1970/20 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 83, Issue 7, November 4, 1970. Copyright © 1970 Hope College, Holland, .

This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the The Anchor: 1970-1979 at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Anchor: 1970 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ANCHORED INSIDE: In search of the immaculate perception BULK RATE Hope may offer extension courses in California page 2 Can Allende's Socialist regime work in Chile? . .page 7 NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE Up-to-the-minute, complete election results Some Hopeites are among few students who campaign . ...page 8 Permit No. 392 Hallelujah "shouldnot be missed"- review Koljevich says U.S. has no culture-and that's good . .page 9 HOLLAND. MICHIGAN 49423 Fees hike revealed; no amount given

The decision to raise total fees our hope that the increased provi- among the areas of tuition, room said, "There is such a document." years from 1970-71 to 1975-76. for fhe 1971-72 academic year sion for financial aid will enable and board. But the council is He cautioned that continued in- "1 am somewhat critical about was made yesterday, but no offi- every student desirous of a Hope reviewing the possibility of re- creases would be necessary only if raising the costs," Handlogten cial hike has been announced as of College education to come here structuring the fees and possibly attempts at economization failed. added. "1 think there are areas this morning. It was speculated and complete his program." How- to form a fourth fee. In response to a question about where we can economize." He that the increase would amount to ever, college Treasurer and Busi- Such a practise is common at the total cost of the increases in pointed to the s.tudent faculty $250. ness Manager Clarence Handlogten many other schools. Both Antioch the plan, Handlogten replied, ratio of 14-to-l as being an expen- It will be the sixth fee hike in reported Friday that there was no College and Kalamazoo College, "You can figure it out." Project- sive one. Calvin College, he noted, six years. If the total increase is increase in financial aid. for example, require a large "ac- ing trends shown in increases over as a ratio of 21-fo-l. The total $250, tuition, room, board dnd The announcement of the in- tivities fee." the past six years, fees would be cost of attending Calvin was $190 required fees will amount to crease was postponed because of This fee increase may not be raised by nearly $1,000 in five less than Hope for 1969-70. $2,865 next year. the failure of the executive coun- the last. In fact, costs may rise by S3.000 Last year fees were raised cil to agree Tuesday on what form as much as $1,000 in the next five ?,900 $250, and a letter to parents the increase will take. In the past, years. Asked if there was a "mas- explaining the move stated, "Ft is fee increases have been divided ter plan" to raise fees, Handlogten

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RISING COSTS OF COLLEGE—Hope is catching up to the average cost of attending other four-year private institutions. An increase of $250 in next year's fees would put Hope College slightly above projected costs of other private schools. (Source, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare; Hope College)

Draft loophole for high lottery number holders revealed by Tarr

(AP) Draft Director Curtis W. THE PROCEDURE also would Tarr has offered a possible way to be "helpful in gaining an accurate 83rd Anniversary—7 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 November 4, 1970 duck military service for some picture of the nation's manpower lucky ticket holders from the situation," he said. nation's first draft lottery. The dodge won't help ticket Women to compete HE ESTABLISHED a policy holders from the second draft last week that permits men who lottery last July, however. They drew numbers over 195 in the will be in the first-priority group December 1969 lottery to drop facing the draft next year and Nykerk to be held Saturday their student, occupational, shifting to the IA category would fatherhood or hardship defer- merely expose them all year. ments and declare themselves 1A But they could wait until late The classes of 1973 and '74 Fran Hooper and sophomore PRESIDING AT THE event before the year ends. in 1971, determine their number's will compete Saturday night for Phyllis Accocella. Saturday night will be Nykerk probable safety and then volun- the coveted Nykerk Cup when the For their dramatic perfor- Chairman Jan Luben. Judges, who Exposure to the draft for any tarily join the IA manpower pool. 34th annual Nykerk Cup Com- mance the sophomores will pre- are members of the community part of the year counts for the THE POLICY STATEMENT petition is held in the Civic Center sent an adaptation of Little Wom- selected from the public school entire year, Tarr said, and the also asks local draft boards to give at 8:15 p.m. The female counter- en. Members of the cast are Sue system and local churches, will be candidates are then moved to a prompt consideration to requests part of the Pull, Nykerk enables Ellen Wise, Marilyn Blaisdell, announced at that time. less vulnerable category in 1971. to drop deferments and be re- the freshman and sophomore Loree Schuster, Sally Hiddinga, Nykerk was created in 1937 by classified as draft-eligible. women to compete in the areas of Marianne Stokes, Debra Dolph Dr. Nykerk of the music depart- Tarr said number 195 "has been Tarr warned deferred men that drama, music and speech. Each and Vicki TenHaken. Coaching ment. Originally a touch football projected as the highest number they must give proof in advance class presents a play, a choral the sophomores is senior Sharon game was held between the which any local board can reach" to their local draft boards if they selection and an oration. Tucker, and the technical and women of the two classes, but Dr. in 1970 and higher numbers ap- want their student, occupational, LAST YEAR S VICTORS, the lighting director is sophomore Pat Nykerk decided something more pear safe as the Vietnam war agricultural, fatherhood or hard- class of '73, will attempt to recap- Pavel. cultural was needed. de-escalates. ship deferments renewed. ture the cup this year. Giving the oration is sophomore Barb Larsen, THE SOPHOMORE chorus will who must write her own speech sing "Let. There Be Peace on and present it completely from Earth, and Let It Begin With Me," memory. She is coached by senior directed by senior Lynda De tinners. Sophomore Gloria Vandelloef is the assistant coach, Blood drive Marianne Meyers is the accompan- ist and Lynn Walchenback is the sophomore class representative. to be sponsored Also assisting are seniors Betty Tanis and Carol Leimbach. Challenging the sophomores is by A Phi O the class of '74, whose orator is Debby Baar. Her coach is junior Carnegie Gymnasium will be Becky Shadwell, with Marcia the scene of the annual Red Cross Dykstra, a freshman, assisting. blood drive from 10:30 a.m. to The speech can be no longer than 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. 1,400 words, or approximately 10 Sponsored by Hope's national minutes in length. service fraternity, A Phi O, the drive is an annual event, pitting THE FRESHMAN PLAY is Hope against Alma College in a entitled Low Bridge and is a situa- friendly effort to boost the num- tion comedy .with a cast of four. ber of pints given. According to A They are Debby Bian, Patti Ross, % Phi O member Vern Roelofs, Marjorie Barrowman and Nan De Hope has yet to collect more pints Vries. Junior Karen Kent is the than Alma. director, assisted by stage manager Individuals over 21 who wish Kathy McGlocklin and technical to donate their blood may do so director Con nee Turose. without making prior arrange- I he freshman chorus will sing ments, Roelofs stated. "If its "Don't Rain on My Parade" from human and over 21 years old, we the musical Funny Girl. They are can guarantee that it won't be directed by junior Jan De Vries, . . turned away at the door!" he il'iS'^U' ^0r^s^0S» Sharon TWO 10GETHER—Sipka (Paul Bach) and Nanita (Deborah Noe) discuss the futility of their existence in a declared emphatically. i n i . y VanderMolen. scene from "Hallelujah." The prize-winning Yugoslavian play made its English-language premier in the Little Donors under 21 must present Lnula bush is the accompanist Theatre last week, having been translated by visiting Yugoslavian faculty member Nicola Koljevich. In its last a permission slip signed by a and bherry Meengs is the tresh- week, the production will run tonight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, with the curtain rising at 8; IS parent. man class representative. p.m. Student tickets are $1.50 each. Page 2 Hope College anchor November 4, 1970 Trustees approve leaves for six faculty members Sabbatical leaves for six mem- of next year to pursue research bers of the Hope College faculty and study for the publication of a were approved by the Board of textbook on the Intertesta- Trustees at its meeting Oct. 23. mentary lira, focusing on the Dr. Anthony Kooiker, profes- period from 538 B.C. to 4 B.C. sor of music, was granted leave for His work will be conducted in the second semester of 1970-197! various research libraries. to study the French piano works Robert Cecil, associate profes- ot the twentieth century with sor of music, was granted a full several French composers. year leave for next year to con- Dr. James Prins, professor of duct advanced study in ele- English, was granted leave for the mentary music education at the second semester of the forth- Dalcrose School in Geneva, Switz- coming academic year to do re- erland. search in tluT^ork of Charles Dickens at the British Museum in London. Deb a tors score Dr. Leslie Beach, chairman ol the department of psychology, four victories was granted leave for the second semester next year to do advanced in season opener research in the behavioral sciences at the National Training Labora- The Hope debate team took * 3r tory. four victories and two losses in SIGN OF THE TIMES-Early morning chapel-goers were somewhat startled to find that Halloween at Hope Dr. Jay Folkert, chairman of Saturday's season opener at Kel- brought out witches, goblins and freshmen. the department of mathematics, logg Community College. was granted leave for the first The affirmative team of Chad semester of the forthcoming year Busk and Vicki TenHaken came Appoints faculty reps to pursue advanced studies in away undefeated and received a mathematics at Florida Atlantic Superior Novice Debating award. University. Also participating in the tourna- Dr. Henry Voogd, chairman of ment was the negative team of the department of religion, was Joan Lautenschieger and Paul Board receives extension plan granted leave for the first semester Bach. Hope's teams scored victories The Hope College Board of people interested in taking such Haan to the church relations com- over Eastern Michigan University, Five Hopeites Trustees decided at its fall meet- courses have no opportunity to do mittee; Dr. Norman Norton and Macomb Community College, Kel- ing Oct. 22 to consider the possi- so. The academic affairs and stu- student Jane Leismer to the plan- logg and Taylor University. The bility of offering extension dent life committee of the board ning and development committee; receive sentence debate coach is M. Harold Mikle, courses in religion at Garden will look into the possibility of and Dr. David Klein and student associate professor of communica- Grove Reformed Church in Ana- offering two courses, taught by a Bob Scott to the business and tion. The national resolution for in court action heim, Calif. Hope professor, beginning next finance committee. debate is federal wage and price Rev. Robert Schuller, minister Five Hope College students year. controls. at Garden Grove, requested that ADMISSIONS DIRECTOR were among six persons who Charles Curry and Registrar Jon Saturday the teams travel to Hope offer the courses because THE TRUSTEES ALSO ap- pleaded guilty to charges of dis- proved a recommendation that Huisken submitted to the board a the Goshen, Ind., College tourna- the state-run schools in California orderly loitering in District Court Hope become the agent college ment. offer no religion courses and report which projected an enroll- Oct. 13. Fach received a $53 fine, for the Great Lakes Colleges Asso- ment of 2,114 students for the plus a ten-day suspended sen- ciation's Philadelphia Urban 1971-72 academic year, 43 more tence. Semester program. The program is than the enrollment this year. Another student, an 18-year Hope receives $1,800 an experimental approach to edu- The board also adopted a reso- old freshman, had originally been cation in an urban setting, in lution commending Dr. Calvin charged with possession of mari- which participants are assigned to VanderWerf for his tenure as the juana, a felony. He was re- professionals engaged in improv- eighth president of the college, arraigned on Oct. 21 and his Sears Foundation grant ing the qualities of urban living. charge was reduced from posses- and adopted a committee for the In other action, the board purpose of finding a new presi- sion to illegal use of marijuana, a Hope College has been awarded and universities in Michigan this elected Dr. John W. Hollenbach, misdemeanor. He pleaded guilty a $1,800 grant by the Sears- year. dent. The committee, which in- chairman of the English depart- to this charge, and will return to Roebuck Foundation. cludes faculty members, students, The Michigan colleges and uni- ment, and Dr. Arthur 11. Jentz, District Court on Nov. 5 for sen- Norman R. Hield, manager of alumni and churchmen, will rec- versities are among more than 975 associate professor of philosophy, tencing. the Holland Sears-Roebuck store, ommend to the board candidates private, accredited two and four- as the first faculty representatives The charges against all seven presented the grant this week to for the presidential office left year institutions acrosss the to the board of trustees. Hollen- persons were connected with ar- Hope College Chancellor Dr. Wil- vacant by the resignation of Van- country which are sharing in bach will serve a two-year term rests made at Lincoln Elementary liam Vander Lugt and college li- derWerf last June. $1,500,000 in Sears Foundation School Oct. 9. brarian Edward Whittaker. and Jentz will serve for one year. funds. The board had voted at its May, Mrs. Norman Vincent Peale of A portion of the grant is to New York, one of the trustees, supplement the college library 1970, meeting to permit faculty "We sat entranced" Nationally, private colleges and will serve as chairman of the book acquisition program while representation. London Sunday Times universities will receive committee. Members will include the remainder maybe used at the $1,000,000 in unrestricted grants The trustees accepted the rec- "Fialka and hjs company are Rev. Lester J. Kuyper, president college's discretion. and an additional $500,000 ommendations of the faculty and marvelous." Marcel Marceau ot the Reformed Church General Grants totaling more than through a Sears Foundation pro- Student Congress for the appoint- Synod; Marion de Velder, general $33,000 have been distributed to gram to assist college and univer- ment of liaison persons to the secretary of the Reformed 23 privately supported' colleges sity libraries. standing committees of the board. Church; Dr. Paul Fried, chairman Those appointed were Lamont of the department of history; Dr. Dirkse and students Allen Smith David Marker, associate professor and Keith Lammers to the aca- of physics; alumni association demic affairs and student life president Frederick Vandenberg committee; Russell DeVette and of Grand Rapids; alumnus Dr. student John Boonstra to the spir- Paul J. Brouwer of Cleveland, itual life committee; Dr. Elton Ohio; and students Didi Stewart Bruins and student Barbara De and David Breen.

Attention Students.. . It is with great pleasure that we present the convenience of washers and dryers to you in your dorm basement. With good care they should not give you any trouble. If there is a problem, use the card left in the' foundry room. Fill in address and cause of trouble, and your money will be promptly refunded to your mailbox.

WASHERS ARES 25 PER HALF HOUR DRYERS ARE $ .10 FOR 20 MINUTES

$4.50 and $5.50 Phone 392-9240 in case of emergency

For dry cleaning we have Hope College apothecARy Great Performance Series Qlft shop HOLLAND HEIGHTS Presents

The Internationally acclaimed LAUNDRY THEATRE ON THE BALUSTRADE 765 E. Eighth Street FROM PRAGUE (Two blocks east of the US 31 Bypass) Starring Ladislav ( Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fully attended. FIALKA Closed Sundays DRY CLEANING: 8 LBS. FOR $2.50 Also single prices: skirts, sweaters and slacks $ .30 Sat. Nov. 14 each; two-piece suits (ladies or men's), $ .75 each. Phone 392-9240 November 4, 1970 Hope College anchor The vote in Michigan . Milliken reelected; 18-year old vote rejected Gov)V.. SeemQppm-- thoe vote\ir\i»>sc tallied. Failurec„;i s i•n thale. v incumbent had a comparatively ingly survived a Democratic tide punch card systems used in easy time winning. to emerge today as the only Re- Detroit and Genesee County were Only one of three constitution- publican to win major office in responsible for much of the delay. Michigan. al amendments found favor with Elsewhere in Tuesday's elec- the voters. But while seeking his first full tion, Democrats retained the at- Michigan voters approved a term as Michigan's chief execu- torney offices of U.S. Senator, controversial ban on public aid to tive, Milliken was locked in a taut attorney general and secretary of private and parochial schools, des- struggle with state senator Sander state while apparently picking up pite the opposition of major can- Levin. two seats on both the Michigan didates in both parties and confus- With 57 per cent of the vote Supreme Court and the State ion over the measure's full mean- counted, Milliken clung to a 54 to Board of Education. ing. 46 per cent edge. The count was Only in the Congressional con- 889,983 for the governor and tests did Republicans hold their With 63 per cent of the state's 759,764 for Levin. own. 1 he state's 12 GOP members 5,944 precincts reporting, the pro- But counting the statewide of the House gained re-election as posed constitutional amendment races limped into the early morn- did the seven Democratic incum- to prohibit parochiaid led by ing with less than 60 per cent of bents. In each of the 19 races, the 960,771 to 723,095 in a heavy turnout by proposition B, which would have allowed 18-year-olds to vote in Michigan, was losing 722,231 to 431,807 with 55 per GOV. WILLIAM MILLIKEN SEN. cent of the votes still out. i And Proposition A, calling for attorney from Grand Rapids, in Republicans were battling to a $100 million bond issue to winning election for the fourth preserve their 20-18 edge in the time. Kelley had an 832,998 to provide low cost housing, lagged state senate. Early morning re- 546,695 edge over his GOP chal- 669,066 to 410,545 on returns turns showed the GOP ahead in lenger with just over half the vote 20 districts. from 43 per cent of the precincts. in. U. S. Sen. Philip Hart piled up In the Michigan House, Demo- In the Secretary of State race, the widest margin of any candi- crats stood a good chance of Detroit Democrat Richard Austin date in Tuesday's election while holding their four-vote edge. Early led state Sen. Emil Lockwood of winning his third term. returns indicated the GOP lost Elm Hall 690,840 to 596,569 Hart led Lenore Romney, wife one seat in a Lansing district and with 47 per cent of the ballots of former Gov. George Romney, another in the Upper Peninsula counted. was endagered. by more than 400,000 votes with Two former Democratic gov- 57 per cent tabulated. Hart's lead ernors, John Swainson and G. at that point was 1,029,111 to Menne Williams, led the race for ALL VOTE TOTALS 591,887. Supreme Court berths. Swainson Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ran more than 100,000 votes AS OF 5 A.M. TODAY ATTY. GEN. FRANK KELLEY RICHARD AUSTIN handily defeated William Farr, an ahead of the other candidates. The vote in the nation Democrats maintain majority in Congress

(AP) - Democrats renewed ernorships, from a slim minority has come about in the Senate BUCKLEY'S WAS the pat- their grip on Congress today and to a potential majority in a single San Jose. Republican Sen. George regardless of party," Agnew said. ented administration campaign: surged to a startling State House election. Murphy made the most of it, But Democratic National law and order, loyalty to the comeback in midterm elections Nixon personified the issue and In the biggest states. New York Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien White House, foreign policy sup- that brought Republicans Senate the incident. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller won said the returns were a victory for port. gains in Tennessee, Connecticut Republican re-election to an un- his party. "We are a national party But with 8 per cent of the vote and Maryland but cost them seats precedented fourth term; Califor- with our head high," he said. It led Vice President Spiro T. tallied, Tunney had 54 per cent. in Illinois and California. nia's GOP Gov. Ronald Reagan "Tonight, we find the Democratic Agnew to renounce Goodell, term Murphy 44 per cent. CBS pro- THE DEMOCRATIC defense was comfortably in the lead. Party a majority party in Amer- him a "radical liberal," and help jected a Tunney victory. produced a divided verdict on BUT DEMOCRATS had won ica." raise funds for the Conservative Rep. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. won President Nixon's law-and-order Republican governorships in Penn- O'BRIEN POINTED to the lev- entry. And it led the White House the three-way Connecticut race, campaign thrust, and dashed his sylvania, Nebraska, Wisconsin, erage the new governorships to declare that while President while Stevenson carried a noted Nixon would make no endorse- fragile hope that Republicans New Mexico, Ohio, Minnesota, would give Democrats in the com- Democratic name to a landslide might take over the Senate. House Florida, South Dakota, Arkansas, ing process of reshaping congress- ment in New York, he appreciated victory over GOP Sen. Ralph T. Buckley's support. control had never been in doubt. Idaho and Oklahoma. ional districts to match the 1970 Smith, a hard-line law-and-order campaigner. But the battle for the governor- Republicans took over cur- census figures. Republican Rep. J. Glenn Beall ships produced a Democratic rently Democratic State Houses in The national picture: Jr. defeated Sen. Joseph D. Democrat Reubin Askew sweep of unsuspected propor- Connecticut and in Tennessee. Senate (at stake 35, majority Tydings in a Maryland upset. It ousted Florida's Republican Gov. tions. Their candidates turned out Democratic candidates were 51): Republicans had won 8 and was a night of political revenge for Claude Kirk, and Democrat Mil- Republican governors in an array leading in efforts to take over had 33 holdovers, for total of 41. Beall, who won back a seat his ton Shapp captured the governor- of state including Pennsylvania, GOP governorships in Arizona, Democrats had won 20 and had father lost to Tydings six years ship of pivotal Pennsylvania for Ohio, Minnesota and Wisconsin- Alaska and Nevada. 32 holdovers, for total of 52. ago. the Democrats. Democrat John J. vital political building blocks for Independents won 2. Net gain 2 Gillian swept to victory in the THAT TOTALED A net gain the 1972 presidential campaign. Republicans with 5 contests un- But if administration campaign race for governor of Ohio, while of nine governorships for the DEMOCRATS WON 226 decided. tactics scored a triumph in New Republicans cracked the Demo- Democrats, with three more pros- House seats and were leading for House (435 seats, majority York and a success in Tennessee, cratic hold on the state houses of pects-and the possibility of a 30 others. Republicans captured 218): Republicans had won 156 they did not appear to be suc- Tennessee and Conneticut. 30-20 statehouse margin. Republi- 150 seats and were leading for 29 seats. Democrats 228. Net gain 6 ceeding in California, where Dem- Gov. Ronald Reagan of Califor- others. This meant Democrats can now govern 32 of the 50 Democrats with 81 undecided. ocrat Tunney faced a late verbal nia moved quickly ahead of were on the verge of expanding states. Governors 50, at stake 35: Repub- barrage, prompted by the rock Democrat Jess Unruh. The Na- their House majority by about 10 President Nixon was described licans had won 10 and had 8 and egg throwing incident that tional Broadcasting Co. project- seats. by aides as pleased that Republi- holdovers, for total of 18. Demo- marked Nicon's campaign visit to ed a Reagan victory. James L. Buckley, the Conser- cans had "turned the trend of crats had won 18, and had 7 vative Party nominee who was tradition" with their slender Sen- holdovers. Net gain 9 Democrats, embraced by the administration, ate pickups and the near standoff with 7 undecided. won a three-way New York race, in the House. THE THREE-WAY New York with Democratic Rep. Richard In the past two decades, the Senate race had been closely SCHOOL SUPPLY AND Ottinger his closest challenger. party of a president has lost an watched. Sen. Charles E. Goodell, the average of three seats in the Sen- While Buckley's cloak was con- Republican liberal the administra- ate, 29 in the House. servative, his commitment was tion renounced, trailed far behind. Republican. He defeated Rep. GREETING CARD VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Richard Ottinger, a Democrat, REP. WILLIAM E. Brock HI Agnew, Nixon's chief campaign and far outdistanced the appoint- ousted veteran Democratic Sen. deputy, said "the President will ed incumbent. Republican Sen. Albert Gore in Tennessee, another have a working majority in the Charles E. Goodell. victory savored by an administra- Senate." CENTER It was Buckley 40 per cent, * tion which had campaigned hard "It is importatnt to note that Ottinger 36, with 83 per cent of there. an important ideological change the New York vote tallied. Rep. Lowell P. Weicker J. emerged on top of a three-way HOLLAND race in Connecticut. But Adlai E. Stevenson HI This is the final weekend of withstood a tough law-and-order attack to sweep Illinois. JOHN V. TUNNEY comfort- STATIONERS ably ousted Republican Sen. hallelujah HOLLAND, MICHIGAN George Murphy in California SERVING WESTERN MICHIGAN SINCE 1900 despite a Republican law and by Djordje Lebovich DOWNTOWN order campaign that got a late NEXT TO PENNEYS dramatic boost when demonstra- tors threw eggs and rocks at Presi- dent Nixon's motorcade in San Presented by the Hope College Theatre • GIFTS Jose. Rep. Robert Taft Jr. was ahead • PLAYING CARDS of Howard M. Metzenbaum, the Nov. 4, 5, 6, 7 Admission $1.50 • CHESS Democratic choice to defend an Ohio Senate seat. Rep. J. Glenn • ETC. Beall Jr. scored a Republican Tickets available in the back of Van Raalte upset over Maryland's Democratic COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND . . . Sen. Joseph D. Tydings. or at the door THE UNEXPECTED: the WE HA VE SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE. massive Democratic swing in gov- Page 4 Hope College anchor November 4, 1970

The right-angle rut

The timely arrival of fall with its concerned) forced to accommodate smothering blanket of leaves has four "lanes" of converging traffic in served to deliver the campus from an amount and concentration that full knowledge of the tortured condi- exceeds the ridiculous. The simple tion of one of Hope's hard facts of addition of a diagonal walkway cut- life - its maverick walkways. ting across the library lawn to the A strip-miner's delight, these steps would divert 90 per cent of the hard-pressed waste lands are hourly westbound traffic to Physics-Math or thronged by time-conscious students Van Zoeren off the street sidewalk, who daily seek to set records for the leaving it to handle primarily east- bound pedestrians alone, during the class-change onslaught. With slight anchor editorials modification, the same simple plan could easily be adapted to the situa- ¥: tion on the Graves Hall lawns. Like it or not, the time has come fastest Kletz-Van Zoeren passage by to discard the notion that the aesthe- foot or bicycle. tic beauty of the right-angle means The sad fact of the situation is that it and only it must be the that there exists just too much traf- guideline for laying out human walk- fic on campus sidewalks after the ways. The tired arguments against time of the bell. Hope's enrollment the possibility of diagonal walks be- has swelled, out-pacing the capability cause of some mystical need for and efficiency of its right-angle- cosmetic simplicity in campus layout geometry system of sidewalks. no longer hold any water. Hardly anyone connected with When the Turf-Vac has finally the college is unaware of the Graves done its job and un-zipped Mother Place-College Ave. phenomenon. Earth from her leafy comforter, the art buchwald Whereas the sidewalk paralleling dirty fact of her linear exposure will r Graves Place by Van Zoeren should be shamelessly exhibited to all, at least be made one-way, it is marking yet another helpless victim 1 impossibly (and unfortunately for all of the population explosion.... A Halloween brew w Readers speak out p by Art Buchwald o 0 It was Halloween and all the pols were "THAT'S WHAT I SAID," the Chief Pi An acknowledgement standing around the large iron kettle, wait- Taster Dick said. tc ing for it to boil. Spiro, the chef, was Spiro the chef and three of the witches adding some spices. grabbed Charlie Goodell and threw him in 01 Your article in the October 19th anchor original nomination a successful one. The "A dash of nattering nabob, a cup of the pot. cl regarding the grant given to me by the liaison between Hope and the Foundation radiclib, and three tablespoonfuls of law Goodell screamed and thrashed around ju Dreyfus Foundation was appreciated. Your by Mr. Lee Wenke of the Development ai and order." as everyone clapped their hands and sang: coverage of this news item was certainly Office was extremely important, as was a cl EVERYONE CLAPPED his hands. "Oh, "Charlie Goodell is stewing in the pot. more complete than that of your local seconding of the nomination by my Ph.D. si this is going to be delicious," someone Charlie Goodell is stewing in the pot. Poor competitor, the Holland Evening Sentinel. supervisor, W. A. Noyes, Jr. of the Univer- m cried. old Charlie's stewing in the pot, as Buckley tc However, you did omit part of the news sity of Texas. Finally, my colleagues in the The Chief Taster Dick took a wooden marches on." I) release prepared by our Public Relations chemistry department have provided an spoon and tasted it. "It's missing some- Spiro the chef stirred and stirred and tc atmosphere which organizations such as Office and it is for this reason that I am thing." the Dreyfus Foundation recognize as being then he gave the spoon to the Chief Taster He passed the wooden spoon around to Pt excellent and as being conducive to scho- Dick. his advisers. They all agreed, and sang rc larly activity. Without such an atmosphere "THAT'S BETTER," HE SAID, smack- together; Sc the grant would never have been made, in ing his lips. "But it still needs another dear editor "It's missing something. It's missing my opinion. Republican." something. Oh what, oh what is it miss- Thus the efforts and support of many "Another Republican?" everyone ing?" writing. I hope to relay the essence of the people were important factors in this gasped. "1 know," someone cried. "It's missing omitted material to the anchor readers. award. Hopefully, my utilization of the "Throw in Lindsay," cried a goblin chopped rhetoric. No recipe is complete Many people were responsible for my grant will substantiate the confidence that named Martha. without chopped rhetoric." selection as a Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar these people have placed in my abilities. "Lindsay, Lindsay," everyone yelled. 4X)F COURSE," SPIRO the chef said. awardee and they should, 1 believe, be Needless to say, I sincerely appreciate their "The stew needs some Lindsay." And he took a large box of rhetoric and publicly acknowledged. In particular, efforts. They heaved in Lindsay and added poured the entire contents in. former Hope president Calvin VanderWerf Sheldon Wettack water to the pot. Someone threw some wood on the fire played an essential role in making the associate professor of chemistry SPIRO STIRRED AND seasoned it with and the brew started to bubble. a bowl of pornography, a pan of marijuana, Cartoon to the editor.... The Chief Taster Dick took his wooden a handful of media and a gravy of student spoon and everyone held his breath. Dick unrest. made a face, "It's flat. It needs more The pot was really boiling and everyone Democrats." was licking his chops. THEY RE REALiy PRETTy EVERYONE JOINED HANDS and "Has there ever been a political brew danced around the kettle chanting, "It NICE GUVS, BUT like this?" cried one of the elves. needs more Democrats! It needs more The Chief Taster Dick went back to the THEY'RE ALSO GREEKS' ! Democrats!" pot and stuck his spoon in. Everyone Spiro the chef finally said, "We've watched. thrown in all the Democrats. We have none "IT'S ALMOST PERFECT. All it needs left." is a little more extract of fear." They all cried in despair: "We have no Spiro added several gallons of fear and TROOLOOYTES Democrats left. We have no Democrats then the Chief Taster Dick smacked his lips left." and said one word: "Perfect." "Oh, what should we do? Oh, what They all clapped and cried, "Let us taste should we do?" it! Let us taste it!" I The Chief Taster Dick stared at the pot, But Spiro the chef slapped their hands "Start throwing in Republicans." with the spoon and said angrily, "Nobody There was a gasp from the witches, gets to eat unless they pay 5250 a plate." "Republicans?" Copyright 1970, Los Angeles Times anchoOM COLLEOrE OLLAND, MICHIGAN PRt SS

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Hop^College ^ ^ ^ ^ n0t neccssarily thosc of thc student body, faculty or administration of C BOARD OF EDITORS k. Editor Tow Donia Managing Editor Dave Dust in* Advertising Tim De Voogd Business Manager Ron Deenik i I November 4, 1970 Hope College anchor Page S

11 Important production, 'Hallelujah' achieves merit

Editor's Note: This week's aA7c/7o/* imminence of his creator, per- women play this well on stage, the review is written by Critiques ceived as a catastropic spring of next thing they'll be demanding Editor Gerald Swieringa. He re- destruction. His inability to re- will be a female Petruchio. spond to the image (he can no views the theatre department's John Conatser plays the color- i longer speak the Hebrew prayers production of Hallelujah by Yugo- ful Man With A Pipe while the of his childhood) is compensated nurses are handled by Scott Len- slav playwright Djordje Lebovich. in an altogether human empathy heises and Robert Bruinooge. The The production will be performed with the suffering and the dead. guard is played by David Beattie again tonight, Thursday, Friday THROUGHOUT the play he is and the Sargeant is Steven Evans. and Saturday nights at 8:15. the most compassionate toward Tickets are $1.50 for students. men, the most adamant toward THOMAS STAAL PARTAKES God. Bazaz's performance lacks of the Major while the four boys by Gerald Swieringa some of the strength that his in the play are portrayed by Jack character obviously possesses. Holt, Jeff Hem well, Len Hem well As it lies there, with cold feet protruding from a coarse shroud Hunched over, hands idly at his and Daniel Haveman. side, he does not give the picture of military issue, accepting both John Tammi's direction of Hal- of a man who has cursed God to the jokes and the sobs, the corpse lelujah is well done throughout. his face but rather of one who, in of Yoyo is a most pathetic pro- Except in several scenes, such as / a moment of weakness, has made tagonist. Yet by its most irrever- the coffin heist, where the con- the decision to submit. In actu- ent posture, its most senseless ventions of the Little Theatre are ality, he has made the bravest of presence, Yoyo's corpse poses the simply too limited, he has his decisions - to rebuild what his question at the heart of Hallelu- players move and speak in believ- God has destroyed. jah: how does one dispose of able creations. Tammi succeeds in TO SIPKA, THE END of the death without the accompanying shaping the play's optimism in war means not only a burying of sacrifice of one's humanity? spite of its realism, and in cultiva- THEATER PRODUCTION-Moishe (Greg Bazaz) and the Major (Tom the dead but a burying of those THOUGHOUT THE WAR, ting amongst the bricks of St. Staal) engage in a philosophical conversation in this scene from haunting experiences which have when humanity was not only sac- Raphael's a garden for the chorus divorced him from the world of "Hallelujah." rificed but slaughtered in clandes- of Hallelujah. the gentle. He is realistic, knowing The costumes of Marilyn Ray tine ignominy, the disposal of The English translation of Hal- that the price of the living is to and Deborah Vandermar are death was accomplished in a MICHAEL GRINDSTAFF de- lelujah was done by Nicola Kolje- forget, to begin anew. Yet he is simple and expedient fashion - signed the set, which contrasts the vich. If his work suffers at all, it is simple and effective. Bland and the pits were, filled. And now, also wary, with a conscious harsh reality of stone with the from a lack of acquaintance with shapeless, they embody the after the war, when the camps are knowledge that history may re- ominous black shrouds of the the. American idiom. At times the notion of foetal man being reborn hospitals and the prisoners pa- peat itself and that he, like all wings. As characters enter and language is stilted and ponderous, after his death in the war. tients, does it seem so strange to men, is only mortal. He may one depart from the blackness offstage but in his capturing of the spirit, want to regain that which was day have to answer in agony for Zero's words, "We are all dead the optimism with which Lebo- Altogether the production is a lost, to heal that which was the pleasures offered him today. men," are visibly framed before vich writes, it is a most worthwile meritous and important one, and maimed, to bury in the earth that Paul Bach in playing this role the audience. achievement. should not be missed. which was before bleached in the contributes an excellent perfor- sun? It did not seem strange to mance. His refusal of Nanita, Djordje Lebovich, but rather played by a typically exceptional seemed necessary, seemed human. Deborah Noe, reveals him as a Facing the question are six mature actor well in control of the conflicts inherent in the char- inmates of St. Raphael's Hospital. There is Pip played by Gary acter of Sipka. Vander Ven who gives the part a CHAIRMAN OF the burial Mastering the draft naive, childlike aura. It is the committee of St. Raphael's is response of innocence, pre-guilt, Yustus, played by David Oosting. by John Striker and and Vander Ven plays it con- A former lawyer, he approaches Andrew Shapiro sistently and believably. this position with the tact, the Copyright 1970 by John Striker and Andrew Shapiro THERE IS ZERO, who per- morals and the logicality acquired through the practice of his profes- i haps more than any other char- the mystery of the heart of them, sion. Yustus is efficient, Roman- A Secret C.O.'s "Religion" warned in Seeger, "the claim of acter knows the impact of death. the essence of being alive, and my esque in his execution of duty. Many young men are secret. the registrant that his belief is an He is a lame duck, sentenced by respecting and loving this living- For him the burial of Yoyo is an C.O.'s. Unfortunately the secret is essential part of a religious faith his fellows to die for his role in ness in other objects and human assertion of collective humanitari- kept even from themselves. While must be given great weight." the war. And yet, he exerts upon beings. ... I suppose you could anism, where the personal tragedy their beliefs are "religious" ac- Of course, the registrant's them a strange, almost moral call that a belief in . . . God. These of Yoyo is obscured behind the cording to current law, the secret claim, while persuasive, is not force, a conscious reminder that, just do not happen to be the more glorious emancipation of C.O.'s remain needlessly hung up determinative. A far more objec- I "We are all dead men." words I use." on the word "religious." tive test was announced by the Doug Neumann's portrait of man. DESPITE THE WORDS Peter Supreme Court in Seeger. Under Zero is one of the outstanding Oosting gives a strong perfor- THAT WORD IS still very this test, the requirement of "reli- did use, his beliefs were held to be performances in the play, lie man- mance that achieves in the guise much a part of the law. The gious training and belief" can be "religious" under the Supreme ages to effect both the resent- of a realistic protrayal those Selective Service Act requires that fulfilled by "a sincere and mean- Court's definition of "religious ments brought on by his aliena- symbolic elements that lift the conscientious objection to parti- ingful belief which occupies in the training and belief." In part of the tion and the ambitions that ac- drama from narrative to experi- cipation in war in any form must life of its possessor a place parallel Seeger opinion, the Court decided company his desire to be ac- ence. He moves freely through a exist "by reason of religious train- to that filled by the God of those that Peter's beliefs occupied in his cepted. His scene with the coach- role that demands both the rigors ing and belief." This key phrase admittedly qualifying for the own scheme of things a place man is especially impressive. of authoritarianism and the gentle- has been interpreted broadly by (C.O.) exemption.. .." parallel to that filled by the God THE CHARACTER of Zola, ness of compassion. the Supreme Court. WITH THIS FORMULA in of a more traditionally religious played by Paul Christenson, is an AMONG THE LESSER roles, Five years ago, in United States mind, consider the beliefs ex- person. embodiment of the sharpest of Timothy Walters performs mag- v. Seeger, the Supreme Court de- pressed by one Forest Peter, a Last June the Court took the emotions, whetted in the war, and nificiently as both the coachman clared that a draft board's central co-defendant with Daniel Seeger same approach again in the Welsh now subject to the pacification and the priest. His versatility as an task is "to decide whether the in United States v. Seeger.'"Since case. Elliott Welsh's beliefs also that must accompany a post-war actor has never been more appar- beliefs professed by a registrant human life is for me a final fulfilled the Seeger test. In so existence. His temper is quick, his ant than it is in Hallelujah. He has are sincerely held and whether value," Peter wrote in his C.O. finding, the Court ruled: "If an insight limited, and caught be- mastered the dialect of the coach- they are,-in his own scheme of questionnaire, "I consider it a individual deeply and sincerely tween the two iiis adjustment to man.and gives the part an authen- things, religious." violation of moral law to take holds beliefs that are purely the role of civilian is enacted ticity that lives far beyond his few "The reference to the regis- human life. ... In so far as this ethical or moral in source and within the uncertain trauma of moments on stage. As the priest trant's 'own scheme of things,' " conviction is religious, it has been content but that nevertheless im- fear. The knife in his pocket is he craftily portrays the eccen- observed the Court this year in best described ... as follows: pose upon him a duty of con- only a metaphor for the blade in tricities and the foibles of the Welsh v. United States, "was in- 'Religion is the consciousness of science to refrain from participa- his heart. Christenson plays the role cloth with a grace effeminate that tended to indicate that the central some power manifest in nature ting in any war at any time, those unevenly. In the scenes of open, is at one both comical and bitterly consideration in determining which helps man in the ordering beliefs certainly occupy in the life albeit stylized conflict he per- satirical. whether the registrant's beliefs are of his life in harmony with its of that individual 'a place parallel forms well, riding the crest of his As was previously mentioned, religious is whether these beliefs to that filled by . . . God' in tra- Deborah Noe's Nanita is excep- demands... (it) is the supreme subject's emotions in a heightened play the role of a religion in the ditionally religious persons. Be- tional. She creates a warm foil to expression of human nature; it is state of nerve-shortened paranoia. registrant's life." cause his beliefs function as a Bach's Sipka, and when the two man thinking his highest, feeling But in other scenes, when his religion in his life, such an indivi- are together on stage they create a TO MAKE THIS determination his deepest, and living his best.' " emotions are subliminal, he seems dual is as much entitled to a presence that is seldom ap- a draft board can first listen to the At his trial (for refusing induc- unsure of his character, doubtful 'religious' conscientious objector proached when they are absent. registrant himself. If he uses the tion) Peter testified: "I think my of his presence. exemption ... as is someone who THE ONLY OTHER female word "religious" to explain the actions are probably motivated Gregory Bazaz's Moishe is a derives his conscientious opposi- role. Bertha, played by Brenda nature and role of his beliefs, he is most thoroughly by a feeling of humble man attempting an ar- tion to war from traditional religi- Page, is given the power it de- declaring, in effect, that his be- relationship and love (toward) rogant stand against a new and ous convictions." serves in a humorous portrayal. liefs, no matter how unorthodox, other living objects in the world, awesome revelation ot his God. So you can see that whether or Miss Page's Bertha is the bitch- do, in fact, function as his "reli- and in- seeing these other living Where others of his caste have not your beliefs are "religious" is • loud, domineering, the arch-typal gion." "In such an intensely per- objects. I can narrow it down rejected even the existence ot purely a legal question. feminist. Chauvinists beware, when sonal area," the Supreme Court closer; I can define it as a belief in < such a one, Moishe reasserts the The Best of Peanuts

PEANUTS 10VM \e I D VOTE FOR YOU KNOW ELECTION DAV VOU ANV OM, REGISTERED WHAT TOPAV SWEETIE.. 15 7

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/ \ November 4, 1970 Hope College anchor Page 7 Report controversial AA UP disagrees on evaluation A report by a faculty commit- evaluative process of faculty mem- cisions made about faculty mem- tee on the improvement of college bers was not systematic at Hope. bers, such as promotion. He said teaching touched off controversy Referring to three separate evalua- students also wanted "something at an Oct. 19 meeting of thc local tion forms presently available to they can publish for other stu- chapter of the American Associa- faculty, Giddis said, "There is dents." tion of University Professors confusion as to the forms them- One AAUP member called (AAUP). selves." faculty acceptance of earlier stu- The report, prepared by an He charged that some depart- dent evaluations of the faculty, AAUP committee, said the effec- ments require their members to published by the anchor, "nega- tiveness of the college's present use student evaluation forms, tive, but in varying degrees." system of evaluation of faculty while other departments do not Controversy continued when was "less than optimal" and re- use them. "All evaluation forms Dr. James Van Putten, Jr., profes- commended "initialing a dialogue should be reviewed and revised," sor of physics, objected to the with students for the purpose of he stated. committee recommendation that improving the student operated Dr. David Myers, associate pro- called for the office of teaching evaluation procedure." fessor of psychology, said that by and learning. "You can't do that," It also asked that an investiga- working with students, the AAUP he said. "You would have to have tion be carried out concerning the chapter could devise a student a huge office staff in order to be able to help the faculty with all means of "developing a special operated evaluation which would the different methods of teaching office for teaching and learning be more accepted by faculty which could assist with present members. "Perhaps by working used.'-' Dr. Leslie Beach, professor of courses and in the planning of together we can relieve the 'we psychology, responded, "People new and experimental ones." versus they' feeling." 'Committee chairman Harold who know something about hu- Dr. 1). Ivan Dykstra, professor Bakker, assistant professor of edu- man learning could help a teacher cation, prefaced his presentation of philosophy, cautioned that an who uses any teaching method." of the report by saying, "We evaluation can "become a prison honor teaching more by word that confines the teacher, rather College registry than an emancipating (device) than by deed. We can do more to improve college teaching on this that frees the teacher to do his increased slightly campus." own thing." Dr. William Giddis, a professor Edward Whittaker, director of of education who joined the staff libraries, noted that students were over 1969 figures MARIA SOFIA this year, said that he was sur- looking for "an input into evalua- prised to learn that use of an tive procedures" which affect de- (AP) A national study shows enrollment at colleges has in- creased 4 per cent over 1969 to Maria Sofia to present 8.3 million this year based on estimates from 564 colleges. Dr. Garland G. Parker, provost of the University of Cincinnati recital Friday in Chapel HERS HAI who compiled the study, said it indicated there were 2.1 million Mezzo-soprano Marilyn Sofia Caracas, for two seasons and has been presented with the group in w freshmen, an increase of 4 per will present a recital Friday at WYSAND »IC 1 cent. 8:15 p.m. in Dimnent Memorial the Beethoven at Bay View Col- lege of Music, Bay View, Mich. tu'M 'iniow ot wn i Parker, an authority on college Chapel on the campus of Hope IT 'Hf ;*L enrollments, will publish his an- College, Miss Sofia has sung frequently in 0 •) WORMED CHURCH Of nual enrollment study for the The recital, which will be the area and is a member of the ' ivs -.-v -« UCH COLU educational journal School and sponsored by the music depart- vocal teaching staff. So day in December. ment, is part of Parents'Weekend She has been a featured soloist The names of the colleges re- activities. Admission will be free. with the Mastersinger Choral porting were not named, only Miss Sofia will also present a Group in New York, the Delaware designated as state universities and Masters Class on Saturday from Opera Company and the New private institutions. 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the York Festival Opera Company, •0* The annual study was started Wichers Hall auditorium. where she toured the United at the University of Cincinnati in The Friday recital will include States and Canada for nine weeks I 1919. early Italian songs and arias, Schu- in leading roles. Despite the increases indicated mann's Fraucnliebe und Leben. ds No stranger to musical in colleges, Parker said enroll- well as songs by Obradors and comedy, Miss Sofia has toured 1 ments are "flattening out com- contemporary writers. with Dorothy Raedler's/Iwcno//? LASTING MEMORIAL—Unveiling the plaque in the new Wichers Hall pared to the late 1960's." He Miss Sofia holds degrees from Savoyards doing leads in Gilbert of Music are (1 to r) Hugh DePree, chairman of the college board of predicted continued slight in- Hunter College, New York, and- and Sullivan with Vincent Price trustees; Dr. Wynand Wichers, sixth president of the college for whom creases in the 1970's "but with has done extensive coaching in and has sung roles in Once Upon a the building was named; Chancellor William VanderLugt; and Rev. Jay over eight millions already on opera literature 'with Boris Mattress, Damn Yankees, The Boy Weener, pastor of the Second Reformed Church of Kalamazoo which college cSmpuses, even slender in- Goldovsky and Armando Agnini. Friend, and Bye, Bye Birdie. She gave $100,000 toward construction costs. Approximately 400 persons creases will be massive in their She has appeared with the Ven- is a frequent guest in summer witnessed the dedication during homecoming weekend. cumulative effect." ezuelan Symphony Orchestra, theatre and stock companies. Can Allende-style Marxism work in Chile?

bean Lake" which has been the site of Editor's Note: Dr. Salvador Allende, the America. Political parties arc abundant and most U.S. intervention in Latin America. newly-elected Socialist president of Chile, highly factionaiized. The legislature has an has said he will nationalize foreign com- independent tradition. For example, Chile In the later part of World War 11, the U.S. panies but will not set up a Communist had a parliamentary Republic from 1891 maintained a low profile vis-a-vis Chile's government. Last week he appointed to 1925, a period which featured some 1 21 neighbor, the Axis-leaning government of three Communists in his 15-man cabinet, cabinets. Argentina. Today Washington has a multitude of but kept four posts, including the key Procedures generally have been accepted international problems and is not in a interior and foreign ministries, for his own and followed. Minorities have become ma- mood to make the Chilean situation into a Socialists. jorities. The Chilean military does not problem. Even if it were in such a mood, conceive of itself as the guardian of thc The following article, written by Jack leverage against Chile is lacking. U.S. back- political system as is the case in each of the ; Holmes, assistant professor of political ing of covert activity could make matters countries bordering Chile. II the military science, explores the historical precedents much worse. does move, it will have been prodded. for a leftist government in Chile. The Under President Nixon, U.S. policy has important question he raises is: "Can Political pluralism has functioned within shifted from our dispensing solutions to Allende's Marxist regime guarantee con- the broad confines drawn by the upper internal Latin American problems under stitutional freedoms?" segments of Chilean society. It has done the Alliance for Progress to a more realistic little more than scratch thc surface of basic acceptance of internal Latin American pro- 1 economic and social problems. As late as By Jack Holmes cesses. Dr. Allende's election is a result of 1965, .4 per cent of Chilean estates com- one of these processes. U.S. policy is wise prised 54 percent of the country's farm The crucial issue regarding thc rccent in accepting Chile's decision and attempt- lands. The modernization process has ac- election of an avowed Marxist, Dr. Salva- ing to maintain normal relations. centuated such already existing problems dor Allende, to the Chilean Presidency is The prospects for the same system and frustrated attempts at solution. In- » whether he will keep his pledge to maintain which placed Dr. Allende in office check- flation continues to be a serious problem. , that country's pluralistic political system as ing excesses are good, particularly if he lie strives to solve a wide range of prob- Allende's election can be viewed as the keeps his pledge to avoid authoritarianism. lems. The question of whether the united latest manifestation of a Chilean willing- If he does not, and other Chilean institu- States will exercise appropriate restraint ness to try various electoral roads to the tions remain passive, the Chilean people appears to have been answered in the solution of their problems. In 1952, ex- DR. SALVADOR ALLENDE themselves and not the United States will be the big losers. The world will witness affirmative. dictator Carlos Ibanez was elected with Dr. Allende's election is not all that widespread popular support as the Chilean Dr. Allende will have his share of another example of Marxist authoritarian- surprising. He missed defeating Jorge Ales- people sought a father figure. He was weak problems at the hand of Chile's political ism, this time without a United States scapegoat. Of course, these observations sandri by 1.7 per cent of the votes cast in and ineffectual. Eduardo Freiof the newly system. To begin with, his FRAP does not assume that most of the Chilean right will 1958. This year he edged out Alessandri by popular, reformist Christian Democratic have a legislative majority. A decision continue to strive to avoid undue prodding 1.4 per cent. Dr. Allende was a minister in Party received a majority of votes in 1964, regarding tolerance of opposition may not of Dr. Allende. the 193841 "Popular Front" government the only President to do so in this century. be long in coming. The United States appears to be ad- Avoidance of difficulties has been the ! of Pedro Aguirrc. His program began with fanfare, but was focus of this essay. The possibility of major The Chilean political system is very slowed by lack of a majority in thc hering to a non-interference policy which is in keeping with past U.S. action in South friction cannot be disregarded. But if there pluralistic by Latin American standards. legislative branch. This year, Chilean America and the present world situation. is to be friction, let Chile and not the The President has been dominant to a people opted for Dr. Allende and his Chile is at some distance from the "Carib- United States be the initiator. lesser extent than elsewhere in Latin "FRAP" coalition. Page 8 Hope College anchor November 4, 1970 Political participation falls short of expectations

(AP) The number of students what happens at elections and some 400 colleges and univer- who participated in fall election what may happen to make it fail. sities, and dozens considered pro- campaigns did not measure up to Furthermore, personal uninvolve- posals for a fall recess to accom- expectations generated during the ment results in the disintegration modate students who wanted to campus strikes last spring after of an institution. Mediocre men campaign. About 30 ultimately U.S. troops entered Cambodia. make mediocre institutions." rearranged schedules with plans to But that doesn't necessarily mean Mediocrity and uninvolvement make up the lost class time and youth's political activisiTv4G a flash are what many students ran into many more left room for informal in the pan. while campaigning. Senior Ginny arrangements such as moratoriums 4i on quizes and term papers. THE FIRE BURNS while hot Mri/.ek stated, "Campaigning for The campus-based Movement for short periods," said a Yale the Democrats was not what I for a New Congress, which was history professor whose classes expected. They are sadly dis- born and grew to a nationwide wore not thinned by students de- organized here. People are satis- coordinating organization during parting for campaigns. Others, fied with putting in little more the spring, claimed an 800 per however, say the flame is intense than the minimal work which is cent victory rate in primary con- and enduring but is, and has al- necessary." Her views were slftred tests over the summer and hoped ways been, small. by others. Janet Camp ran into for 100,000 student volunteers "It's turned out just about as I some embarrassment because of this fall. expected," said Princeton senior the disorganization. "The name But MNC had to cut its esti- John Slifko, who is writing a book lists were so old. At some houses mate of participants by half. . about the strike on his campus. "I we learned that the persons we PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, don't think that anybody who meant to contact were either dead birthplace of the MNC and the had a reasonable perspective in or had moved away some years independently promoted "Prince- May expected any. more." ago." OUT OF ELDER'S class of ton Plan" for fall recess, had only 400 to 500 of its 3,500 students THERE WERE SOME reasons over 30 students, only about five for expecting that the feeling would have become involved on working in November election aroused by the U. S. action in their own accord. The general races. Cambodia and the student deaths attitude after this campaigning ex- The MNC said recessed schools at Kent State in Ohio and Jackson perience was one of disappoint- did not seem to turn out signifi- State in Mississippi would have an ment.-Many students agreed with cantly more volunteers than impact on political activity. Sarah Baas: "Working at the polls schools where other arrangements Thirty-nine per cent of 820 will be more interesting. I think — or none - were in effect. The students questioned in a nation- that I will be of more help there amount of participation at such wide poll released in July said than knocking at doors distribu- institutions was harder to measure they planned to work for peace ting bumper stickers." but definitely below expectations candidates this fall. Of the number of students of politicians and school officials. AT HOPE, MOST of the stu- working under Elder's instruction, WHY AREN'T THE students dents active in politics for the none had been influenced by the working? One school of thought BELL RINGERS—Hope students Brian Boeve (left) and James Staal November elections were from student strike last year. This may includes apathy, boredom, des- gather together election material and campaign flyers in preparation Robert Elder's Political Science be because many were freshmen pair, fickleness and aversion to for door-to-door canvassing. Both students are members of Robert course. Elder's idea for involving who would have been unaffected unglamorous work. Elder's political science course. students in Republican or Demo- by it while still in high school. "Sure students want to help cratic campaigns stems from his THE STRIKE FOLLOWING out. They want to be advisers, do who wins, and "the few kids who Princeton's Slifko said he and belief that "People should know the Cambodian action spread to research. All talk, no show," said participated were the 'do- history Prof. Frederick Starr Barry Wood, an aide to Colorado gooders' and the professional looked over the campus the first congressional candidate Craig liberal politicians." of June and concluded that al- Survey indicates one in ten Barnes. OTHER OBSERVERS of the though Princetonians voted 3,300 Andrew Strauss, vice president student political movement made to 181 to strike last spring, only of the University of Wisconsin two points: Much of the disap- 400 to 500 students actually high school youths smokes pot student government, said many pointment stems from inflated ex- spent time working on system students believe elections are pectations, and those who worked politics - about the same number meaningless because government were worked hard and took large who participated during yester- (AP) Only one in every 33 high cent approved and 5 per cent policies won't change no matter amounts of responsibility. day's election. school students contacted in a failed to answer the question. national survey approved of stu- Twenty-four per cent of the dents using hard drugs but one in students ducked the question every 10 said they personally used when asked whether they had Effective in six months marijuana. participated in sexual relations. More than 22,000 girls and Of those answering, 16 per boys 16 to 18 years old, top cent said they had and 60 per cent scholars in 18,000 public, private said they had not. Nixon signs revised drug law and parochial schools, responded THE SPONSORS SAID nine to the 70-question survey distri- students put together the 70 ques- (AP) President Nixon last week drugs, tightened restrictions on probation, parole or dismissal of buted by Merit Publishing Co., tions that ranged from Vietnam to signed a drug bill aimed at drug their legitimate sale and manu- charges in cases involving first Northfield, 111. drug use and national politics to and narcotics pushers, asking facture and armed federal nar- offenders. , ecology. ASKED IF THEY approved of public support for an all-out fight cotics agents with "no knock" Casual distribution of mari- » The students split almost the use of LSD, speed or heroin, against drug use by young people. search authority. juana, as typified by passing a evenly on whether they would 96 percent said no, 3 per cent Enforcement tools provided by INCLUSION OF THE no- reefer among friends, is con- consider an interracial marriage. approved and 1 per cent failed to the new law, plus the support of knock provision, which allows of- sidered a misdemeanor. All Forty-nine per cent said 'they answer. Three out of four ex- all citizens, may "save the lives of ficers with a warrant to enter a changes in penalties take effect six would, 48 per cent said no and 3 pressed the belief that marijuana thousands of young people who premise without announcing months hence. per cent failed to answer the use could lead to the use of other might otherwise be hooked on themselves, sparked a minor fili- Education, treatment and re- question. A substantial majority, drugs. drugs," Nixon said. buster in the Senate and a fight in habilitation programs for drug and 84 per cent, said they would move In answer to another question "IN ORDER FOR the laws to the House during the year and a narcotics users are given an extra into an integrated neighborhood. on drugs, 75 per cent expressed mean anything they must have the half the bill was before Congress. $26 million under the new law. On national politics, 52 per disapproval of marijuana use by support of the public," he said. On final passage, less than a The measure brings under strict cent said President Nixon was high school students but 10 per The drug bill eases somewhat month before the congressional federal control the previously un- doing a good job and most felt cent said they used marijuana now the penalties for narcotics and elections, the President got what regulated distribution of tran- that ending the Vietnam war is and 21 per cent said they would drug users, stiffens penalties for he wanted. quilizers, pep pills, sleeping pills the nation's No. I priority. use it if it were legalized. professional, drug traffickers and Included in the law is a pro- and similar drugs. Eighty-five per cent felt .that re- extends federal controls over pre- vision for a study of marijuana ON SEX RELATIONS, 53 per spect for this country had suf- viously unregulated drugs. effects federal officials hope will dent expressed disapproval of pre- fered because of the Vietnam con- Nixon, addressing himself to be given the same respectful re- marital sexual intercourse, 42 per flict. Ann Arbor artist "all of you who may be seeing sponse as the 1964 surgeon gen- this signing ceremony or hearing eral's report statistically linking it," said drug use among people is cigarettes and lung cancer. charged with IBIIIITIIN CdUSUI.M, IMMATIOI a major national crisis. UNTIL THAT REPORT is in, THE CEREMONY took place one year from now, the Nixon flag defilement at the downtown Washington administration remains, in the I mi IUhiihil Nenms headquarters of the Bureau of words of Atty. Gen. John N. (AP) An artist from Ann Arbor Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. Mitchell, "diametrically opposed" has pleaded guilty to a charge of The new law de-emphasizes to any relaxation of laws prohibi- defiling the American flag with an Abortions up to 24 weeks of pregnancy are punishment of drug users in favor ting possession and use of mari- exhibition he entered in an art ' now legal in New York State. There are no of educational programs aimed at juana. show in Grand Rapids. residency restrictions at cooperating hospitals preventing a person from taking The same study commission is David Gasowski, 25, a striking up the habit. It reduces the crime required to present within two and clinics. Only the consent of the patient General Motors worker, entered of possessing marijuana from a years a report on causes, of drug the plea last week. He was freed and the performing physician is required. felony to a misdemeanor. abuse. on personal recognition until But senators and representa- POSSESSION OF marijuana, sentencing November 19. tives, with White House backing, If you think you are pregnant, consult your previous^ a felony under federal Gasowski submitted a work en- ) wrote in stiffer penalties for push- law, is reduced to a misdemeanor. doctor. Don't delay. Early abortions are titled "J. Edgar Hoover, All i ers of narcotics and dangerous Judges are empowered to grant simpler and safer. American Crime Cleaner" for a showing at the Grand Rapids Museum. The exhibit is an upright If you need information or professional assist- vacuum cleaner with a pig's head ance, including immediate registration into on its base and an American flag available hospitals and clinics, telephone: To Thc Women Of The Class Of 74 forming the bag. f The exhibit was confiscated by i police Friday after a woman Tne Immt bnuuTiii torn, he. called police to complain. 160 WEST 86th STREET We Want That Cup!!! KENTUCKY NEW YORK, N.Y. 10024 FRIED CHICKEN 212- 873 -6650 Love, of HOLLAND 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M. MORALE MEN OF 74 40 W. 16th St., SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Telephone No. 396-1471 F

November 4, 1970 Hope College anchor Page 9 Hallelujah' tianslator: Koljevich finds absence of U.S. culture enjoyable by Eileen Verduin "America is a great country for KOLJEVICH, A PHIL- tone, not a strictly Yugoslavian foreigners, as it has very little OSOPHY professor at the Univer- slant, according to the translator. culture!" declared Nicola Kolje- sity of Sarajevo in Yugoslavia, is "Nicely situated on the shores of vich, a visiting consultant to the living in Holland this year with his Lake Michigan, > 1 was able to Great Lakes Colleges Association family. "There are four of us, complete the work in about two in Eastern European studies who including myself as boss!", he weeks," he recalled, leaning back is spending the year on Hope's pronounced with a smile. His in his chair. campus. main preoccupation thus far has Koljevich admitted surprise at been organizing a GLCA Balkan the enthusiasm generated by the Although the statement would studies program. The work has play among those involved. "After seem to contain implications of afforded a great deal of visitation admonition, Koljevich insists that all, in strictly realistic terms, it is to the various campuses involved. only a college production in a it is a compliment to the liveliness "It is a very interesting experi- small theater. But I was pleasantly of the American style of life. ence, as it allows me to better surprised at the way the boys up differentiate between what is ^CULTURE, AFTERALL, there got so involved in the American about Hope, and what consists of patterns of behavior," thing." he explained. "When traveling a- is Hope-ish about Hope," he ex- broad, you don't know the intri- plained. "THIS GENERAL SENSE of cacies of each particular country's KOLJEVICH IS ALSO re- involvement in the States is just culture and are always being re- sponsible for translating Hallelu- great," he continued. "Often, minded that you're 'out of it.' " jah, the currently-performing pro- there are silly frameworks duction of the theatre depart- Since the cultures are so pat- for action, such as a ment. "Hope is really using me," terned, the attitudes of the native cocktail party. 1 can't he smiled. "Use - now that's a population imply things which are bring myself to be very strange word," he mused, outside the tourist's comprehen- serious in this situation, but the pressing his fingertips together American can - and I take this as "IF I HAD TIME, 1 would put "I am just beginning to be sion range, Koljevich maintained. under his chin. "It rings a bell of my disadvantage." all my impressions of America in bothered by a difficulty created "One is unable to respond with manipulation - 1 am very amused When asked if he thought the writing, now, before I become by this great American zeal for assurance to even the simplest by linguistics. For example, I adjusted to things and stop seeing action," he went on. "It leaves human reactions, such as a glance American's ability to earnestly as- noticed that the Free University their uniqueness," • Koljevich little time to entertain the Ameri- or a gesture." similate himself into such a cir- offers a course entitled, The Art cumstance was a genuine re- stated. One of the many phe- can dream. A dream demands the "In the States, however," he of Violence' - a very unusual sponse, Koljevich responded in- nomena he has been perplexed by projection of one's self into the continued, "the patterns are combination of words!" stantly, "I don't care if it is or since his arrival is the fact that future in terms of a vision, and loose, and you can be yourself. Setting Hallelujah into English isn't! Life here is based on action, although Americans generally up- this type of projection takes time Barriers can be approached in presented few linguistic problems, and by simply behaving with ser- hold Marshall McCluhan's belief and sensitivity," he concluded. terms of individual responses, not as it deals with elemental prob- iousness, one must eventually he- that the individual is strongly in- inbred cultural values." lems and therefore has a universal come serious." fluenced by his culture's com- munication media, yet the coun- try broadcasts "such awful T.V. shows" and produces so many poor films.

44j w An the States yon can Most modern American novels, however, are very good, Koljevich be yourself. Barriers can be approached argues. "A psychological preoc- cupation with the individual here ill terms of individual responses, not is emphasized. This gives thc moral chance to show the draw- inbred cultural values." backs of a civilization. The typi- cal, middle-class American is simply not aware of the things that are missing, and the novel often helps point these out."

KOLJEVICH SPOKE with 9 earnest interest of the role of the Halts speaker 'blacklist youth movement in today's world. "Basically," he contended, "the European and American movements are based on the same Judge bans report printing premise - an unwillingness to become adjusted to the human implications of an industrial (AP) Congress and the courts ment," Gesell wrote. "If any of blocked official publication by society. The college community is appear headed for a showdown them are listed in this report, our Congress of a report. the least corrupted element in a over a federal judge's landmark Constitution nevertheless pre- society - students are at the age decision that an official House serves their right to speak even The report concludes the of greatest sensitivity, and they are less biased. They have no jobs report is a "blacklist" of radical though their acts may be re- campus speaking circuit is a signi- and no families, and therefore campus speakers and cannot be strained." ficant money source "for the pro- don't have to abide by middle- publicly printed. AMERICAN CIVIL Liberties moters of disorderly and revolu- THE HOUSE INTERNAL Union lawyer Lawrence Speiser, tionary activity among students" class values. This leaves room for Security Committee which issued who won the order, said it is the and gives the speakers a platform moral consciousness to develop." the report promptly announced first time in history a court has to radicalize students. NICOLA KOLJEVICH last Wednesday it will appeal the decision in line with Chairman Richard H. Ichord's vow to chal- MSU students split on question lenge the courts' power to issue PARents' sunCuy such an order against Congress. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Gerhard of coed dorms; parents opposed A. Gesell ruled the report has no in the proper legislative purpose and was "issued solely for sake of ex- (AP) Students at Michigan that would permit coed dormitory posure or intimidation." State University have mixed feel- floors fon students over 21 or student chupch GESELL PROHIBITED of- ings about new, more lenient students with parental permission ficial public printing or distribu- dormitory regulations but their to reside under such coed condi- tion on grounds the report vio- parents, predictably, don't like tions. novemBeR 7 lates the free-speech rights of the the new rules. Students voted 63 per cent in 65 campus speakers it identifies as An MSU student-parent survey favor of allowing men on-campus members of radical, militant, ex- shows 50 per cent of the students housing without closing hours or IN DIMNENT CHAPEL AT 11:00 A.M. tremist or Communist-oriented who answered the poll favor men limitations on guests. But only 31 Chaplain Hillegonds, preacher organizations. and women living in alternating per cent believed women should The College Chorus rooms or suites on the same floor. get the privilege. He declined to block distribu- Roger Davis, organist tion of the report by" individual However, parents polled voted 93 Parents overwhelmingly chose congressmen. per cent against the coed floor the stricter options in the survey, WORSHIP IN THE GROUNDS AT 7:00 P.M. "There are undoubtedly indi- plans. including dormitories with viduals who would destroy our MSU TRUSTEES recently ap- definite closing hours and no coed "We who are Christians stand on the perilous institutions and form of govern- proved an "experiment in living" visiting. edge of things, not knowing if God will be kind to us, as we say, or to anybody else; take care of our feelings, see to it that we profit or enjoy ourselves! We're here to be his people. 11 YOUR BLOOD CAN SAVE A LIFE That puts every lower motive in its place, throws our weight where it belongs. Who knows what we'll encounter anywhere? And GIVE TO THE RED CROSS TOMORROW AT CARNEGIE GYM who cares-if some gleam of that Eternal Splendor comes to dwell in our faces, and 10 A.M. - 4 P.M. God's creative compassion for all the tired and I ! battling souls of men begins to find its way SPONSORED BY A 0 0 out through us into human life." Page 10 Hope College anchor November 4, 1970 A weighty problem ART BOOKS The Night of the Okra' (AP) "It you're looking to save on bins were overflowing. He put the O'Connell's purchasing decision your vegetable outlays," the food ^ rest behind the "bar in the cellar eventually became the subject of * * salesman told James Joseph and raced to find the kitchen much criticism among the house GREAT MUSEUMS O'Connell, "buy some okra-1 can cookbook. members, who nicknamed him give it to you half price." James The book told him that okra "Okronnell." National Museum (Tokyo) Joseph mulled over the offer. He was cultivated widely throughout So James Joseph came up with had just been appointed financial the world. Its pods were the only an idea for getting rid of the by Prado (Madrid) secretary of his fraternity and had edible part and were used for such now detested vegetable. promised to tighten thc budget. things as stews, soups and some- Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam) "I'll take 500 pounds," he told thing called gumbo. The book said "LET'S HAVE AN okra party," he suggested enthusiasti- the man. that occasionally, and only oc- Vatican Museums (Rome) cally to the membership. THE MAN TOOK out a small casionally, okra was served as a The party was scheduled for Egyptian Museum (Cairo) yellow pad, moistened a stubby side dish. the following Saturday and the lead pencil and wrote down the "HEY, O'CONNELL, what's Louvre (Paris) order, smiling vaguely. "You'll get all that green stuff in the vege- whole campus was invited. Guests were given okra as party favors at the delivery tomorrow," he said table bins?" asked the cook enter- British Museum (London) the door. Okra hung from the handling O'Connell a receipt. • • ing the kitchen. ceiling as decorations. To eat O'Connell was relaxing the "Okra," O'Connell replied. Art History Museum (Vienna) there were okra dips and okra next day in the livingroom when a "But what are we going to do petit fours. To drink there was a Museum of Fine Arts (Boston) friend named Harry burst ex- with . . .?" . concoction called hot buttered citedly into the room and "Don't ask," O'Connell said, okra. The fraternity even staged a Pinakothek (Munich) shouted: "Somebody just dumped cutting off the cook and pointing playlette called "The Night of the two tons of a strange-looking to the spot he was reading in the Okra." plant growth near the kitchen cookbook. By the end of the night, the door and now he wants seventy- The house sat down for dinner okra was gone. five bucks from us - I suspect that night to spaghetti, meatballs, * * A TREASURY OF ART About a week later, (hat food you,O'Connell." and a side order of okra. salesman stopped by the house. JAMES JOSEPH sighed uncon- For breakfast the next^jiorn- MASTERPIECES, cernedly. "Oh," he said off- ing, the house had bacon, eggs and "WHAT DO YOU need?" he handedly, "that must be our okra. For lunch, chicken gumbo asked James Joseph. RENAISSANCE okra." soup, hot dogs and okra. That "I can tell you what 1 don't O'Connell walked casually out night the cook came up with need," said James Joseph bitterly, TO THE PRESENT of the livingroom, then ran something called okra a la king. "okra." through the kitchen and looked MEALS THAT FOLLOWED "Couldn't get it if you wanted out the back window. On .the included chop suey okra, steak it," said the man, " There's been a ground were maybe 50 big plastic- with okra sauce, noodles okra, big run on the stuff. Seems some £ACH,„$I0,00 bags, filled with little, oblong welsh okra, chipped okra on toast house threw a party with the stuff green things. and pizza with mushrooms, peper- a while back and it was such a O'CONNELL PAID the man oni and okra. success that every fraternity on and began loading the okra into But the cook's offerings of campus wants okra. * * PROFESSIONAL ART the kitchen vegetable bins. He got cherries okra and okra a la mode "Can't keep up with the INSTRUCTION GUIDES about half the load in before the were not well received,, and orders." FOR EVERYONE IN THE FAMILY / /' / Cartoons, Printmaking, Lettering, Drawing Trees, Watercolor, Drawing Faces, Realistic Abstract Art, etc. EACH...M.OO * * GROSSET ART LIBRARY

Including Rubens, Pollock, Giotto, Durer, Gains- borough, Renoir and more.

'iiiiu EACH..,SI.50 * * OTHER FASCINATING BOOKS Readings in American Art since 1900 Greek Art Epocks of Chinese and Japanese Art The Art of Africa Notes for a Young Painter "Yes, It's okra. And you thought college Pop Art kids were still into grass?" The New Art Happenings A Pictoral History of Western Art The History of Western Art Art, An Introduction oR0 ROUNd ^ * HQpf

FOR ONE OF THE WIDEST SELECTIONS OF ART BOOKS IN WESTERN MICHIGAN, SHOP fine togs Becausc thc quaint little Campus Shop has a

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• November 4, 1970 Hope College anchor Page II Campaigns in Chapel Tower stumps for Lenore Weakening of American mili- tary defenses would lead to economic and political inferiority. Sen. John Tower of Texas told an estimated 600 persons in Dimnent Memorial Chapel Oct. 27. Campaigning for Republican Senate hopeful Lenore Romney, Tower said that "economic isola- tion" would result from military inferiority to Russia. If that happened, the U.S. "wouldn't be able to feed our poor people or put roofs over their heads," Tower claimed. The conservative senator argued that liberals who claim that money freed by defense cut- backs could be used to solve social problems would be right "if wc could, assume that the Soviets would not use this power in an abusive way." . 1.ENORE ROMNEY SEN. JOHN TOWER DEFENDING SPACE program anarchy." He urged that the individual should obey an unjust expenditures, Tower said, "All the youth of America continue to use law. "When can an individual money in the space program legal institutions for effecting decide whether or not a law is wouldn't make a dent in the social change. unjust?" he replied. "If we problems." He added later that t4 E VER Y WORTHWHILE could, we would have anarchy." education is the key to solving reform, has been accomplished America's social ills. While espousing the "Conserva- through orderly legislation or tive Philosophy of Government." Underlining his-emphasis on through the courts," Tower de- Tower stated that he was not 'Maw and order," Tower told the clared. In the question and answer opposed to change:"The dogmas gathering that "there is no excuse NEW MEDIA CENTER—Visitors to the new VanderBorgh Instructional period following the speech, of a quiet past are inadequate for for violence. It only leads to Media Center inspect some of its new equipment after dedication Tower was asked whether an the stormy present." ceremonies homecoming weekend. Located in the basement of Van Zoeren Library, the facility of the education department contains a reading area stocked with professional education books and periodicals, a graphic arts area containing various equipment to be utilized in the State schools best bargain preparation of visual aids, and a listening-viewing area with equipment to enable the previewing of films, filmstrips, videotapes and recordings. Tuitions expected to rise AAB approves plan to bring (AP) State universities and col- At the normally smaller re- "The reasons behind the boosts leges offer the best dollar bargain gional universities and state col- paint a much gloomier picture," for the college-bound student but leges, resident students got by for the joint report added. noted alumni to Hope campus even here the cost of a college a median $1,215 while the non- "The low-tuition principle, education has risen 30 per cent in resident had to come up with which has enabled more and more A proposed plan to bring dis- relate with students," said Dr. the past five years. And it is going $1,689. young people to obtain a college tinguished alumni to the campus to continue to rise. John Hollenbach, professor of ACTUALLY THE RISE in education, has been guarded by as consultants in residence was English and a member of the most student charges was not as THESE WERE AMONG con- these institutions since their approved by the Academic Affairs board. dramatic this year as in the past, clusions of a joint report of the founding," the report said. "The Board Oct. 28. "We might be surprised to find the two associations said, but they American Association of State financial realities of the seventies, how many of our alumni are in THE VISITORS WOULD make Colleges and Universities, repre- found little encouragement in however, are making this tenet high positions," noted Associate this. available to students information senting 275 schools, and the more of a dream than a reality." Dean for Academic Affairs John about the field which the alumnus National Association of State Uni- ^fewart. represented. As consultant in resi- versities and Land Grant Colleges, THE PROPOSAL was passed dence, he would "provide for'all representing 113 of the nation's students ... evidence of the on to the department chairmen biggest state schools. quality of life which he leads and and Alumni Office for implement- the relation of his overall phil- ation. The report indicated it is get- osophy to his vocation," accord- In other action, the board ting tougher and much more ex- ing to a statement of the plan. voted to break down the Plula- pensive to enroll as a nonresident No-fee would be paid to the delphi Urban Semester program student in the tax-supported insti- visitor outside of travel and into specific course offerings. In tutions. lodging expenses. He could make the past the program was worth 16 hours of credit, all offered as THE MEDIAN COST at a big a formal presentation on a topic state university for a resident stu- ot interest, attend classes and con- one course title and -with one grade. dent ran SI,376 this year for ferences and "share his expertise tuition, board and room. For an Under the newly-approved and his way of life . . . with the out-of-state student it was S2,01l>. college." plan, which will go into effect the second semester of this year, stu- MEN FROM BUSINESS and dents will enroll for specific industry, as well as individuals courses ranging in credit from from various professions and voca- four to eight hours. Grades will be tions, would be invited upon given independently for each sponsorship by the Alumni Office course. The classes are the same as and academic departments. "Wc those presently offered in Phila- want to attract persons who can delphia.

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Dancing Every Saturday Night time is money Chill-chasing knit hi+s ... our ....111(1 you don'l want lo waste at the Crow Bar money, so why waste imu^ heavy ribbed knit pohy lai I cop Start your life insurance pro- gram now-when your premi- and mittens of mochine washobk ums are lower and your (ash value builds longer. Build your lulure with the Norlhweslern Creslan acrylic. Fehcrman'S Mulual. May we give you some those who know..., ol our lime? or lively green. One size f i+s NORTHWESTERN MUTUAI LIFE MILWAUKEE all. 7.00 Set- Gloves Street F|oor. {Klkyll There is a difference ... go to the 'CROW'... VIL and the difference grows GARY C. HOLVICK DICK WINDEMULLER 392-2454 steketee' s

I Paye 12 Hope College anchor November 4, 1970 Downed by Bulldogs i

Dutch loose MIAA chance 1 The Hope College Hying Dutchmen lost their chance for taking I heir lirst Michigan Inter- collegiate Athletic Association football title since 1963 when Ihe Dutch were defeated by the Adrian Bulldogs, 21-7, Saturday. THE DUTCH travelled to Adrian alter an impressive 42-14 homecoming victory over the Albion Britons, last year's MIAA champs. It marked the sixth straight time that Hope was vic- torious in a homecoming duel. The highlight of the game was freshman tailback (Ireg Voss, who became the all-time single season rushing leader in the MIAA. POUNDING THE TURF—Fallen leaves and soft shadows go unnoticed Playing only three quarters of the by anxious cross country runners Nick Kramer, Marty Stark and Gene Albion game, Voss rushed for a Haulenbeek as an Albion runner tries to keep pace. Hope lost the Oct. total of 151 yeards. His season 24 meet, 20-39. record before the Adrian game was 675 yards, set in only four games. The previous record, set 1 5 Harriers lose to Adrian years ago, was tallied in six games. THE UNSTOPABLES-Hope's Barry Brugger carries for attack on HOPE SCORED EARLY in the Albion's territory as Greg Voss (30) gives support. homecoming affair on a five-yard run by Voss to gain a lead the homecoming ceremonies as queen the score 35-7. Albion was able to for fifth conference loss Susan Reus was crowned by her add seven more points on a short Dutch never lost. Shortly after, The Hope cross country team formance did not measure up to sister, last year's queen, Eileen. touchdown pass, but it was the Voss scored again on a one-yard suffered its fifth conference de- Claxton's effort, however, as the The Hope College almost- Dutch who finished off the day's carry to make the score 14-0. In feat Saturday, 18-45, at the hands Dutch went down to defeat, marching band entertained scoring with a halfback pass from the second quarter thc Dutchmen of the Adrian Bulldogs. The loss, 20-39. enthusiastic alumni and students Bob Lamer to Ted Albrecht. increased the score on a short along with an Oct. 24 loss to The regular season is over for packed into Riverview Park. With the Dutchmen in a tie touchdown pass from (Jroy Kaper Albion College, left the harriers Hope College, but there are two The fourth quarter was a with Alma for first place, they to Jim Lamer, making it 21-0. In with a 1-5 final season record in post-season meets. The first is the breath of fresh air for Hope as entered the Adrian field with a was late in Ihe second quarter the Michigan Intercollegiate Ath- MIAA conference meet which will Bob Lamer scored early on a winning attitude. before Albion got on the score- letic Association. lake place Nov. 1 1 at Albion. The one-yard plunge. Not to be out- THE DUTCHMENscored in the board on a short touchdown pass top seven runners from each team done, sub-quarterback Jon Con- first quarter on a four-yard run by Tim Schrock of Adrian was the to make the halftime score 21-7. will compete. stant ran a short bootleg to make Voss, and Mike llinga kicked the winner with a time of 22:31. Ilalftime was reserved for the Don Yehle of Alma is the extra point to give Hope a 7-0 Adrian secured seven of the first defending champion of last year's lead. eight places to win easily over the THURS., FRI. MIAA conference meet. The second half was a disaster hapless Dutch. Brian Claxton of The second post-season meet for the Dutch. On fourth down Hope finished third with a clock- SATURDAY is the Small College National Meet with fourteen yards to go, Adrian ing of 22:53. Other Hope runners at Wheaton, 111. on Nov. 14. Ron runner Ron Lavity ran 24 yards were Jim Mattison, ninth; Marty ONLY Stonnitch of C. W. Port College into Hope's end/one for a touch- Stark, tenth; Nick Kramer, llth; will be back to defend his finish down. Minutes later the Bulldogs Ron Bultema, 12th; Bob Scott, of lirst last year. Don Yehle of recovered a Hope tumble and 13th; Gene Haulenbeek, 14th; SKI SALE Alma finished ninth in the Nation- took advantage by scoring again, Rian Southworth, 15th; Bruce al Meet last season. Hope College, CLOSEOUTOF ALL this time on a four-yard run by, King, 17th; and Eric Peterson, as well as all other competing Lavity. Adrian was ahead to stay, 18th. 1969-70 MERCHANDISE and Hope's chances to rally were schools, will send only their top thwarted when a Kaper pass, Brian Claxton took a first Oct. five runners. The field for the WE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR NEW intended for Jim Lamer, was 24 in the Albion meet with a time National Meet will consist of picked off by an Adrian defender. of 20:15. The over-all team per- about 400 runners. MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY. Face Calvin for title •SKIS Reg. NOW 4 pr. Hurt Metal . . .$115.00 79.97 17 pr. Volkl Tiger . . . . 45.00 29.95 25 pr. Volkl Derby . . . . 35.00 25.00 Booters in first place 1 pr. Miller Wood (205 cm.) . . . . . 29.95 10.00 The Hope College soccer team Calvin's shots on goal were wide John VanDeursen scored for Hope 2 pr. Rossiqnol Strato . . . .170.00 153.00 found itself basking in the glory or high, and the first quarter unassisted on a long high blooper of top contender for the Michigan 1 pr. Dynastar (207 cm.) ...... 180.00 90.00 ended without score. which dropped over the goalie's Intercollegiate Athletic Associa- head into the goal. 1 pr. Rossignol Stratix . . . .150.00 129.00 tion title last week when it scored THE SECOND quarter saw The fourth quarter was by far 10 pr. Yamaha All Rd. 1 victories against three schools. A two quicker teams. Hope control- the roughest quarter, beginning match at 3:30 this afternoon led the ball more and took more with Hope's Dave Clark and a 130-140-150 cm .... 59.00 49.00' between Hope and Calvin will shots on goal while Calvin ob- Knight tripping over each other's decide who wears the crown. viously felt the loss of their key legs. A violent effort to untangle See our Demo Closeouts-SAVE $$$$ The squad shut out Calvin's player, Jim Johnson. Six minutes themselves led the referee to stop Knights two weeks ago with a into the quarter senior Art Hudak the game in order to speak to the score of 2-0. The first quarter booted the ball past the Knight's pair. Later in the quarter the same *SKI BOOTS Reg. NOW began with both teams looking goalie ..on an assist from Manuel Calvin player was warned by the Cuba. somewhat lethargic. The play referee to moderate his exuber- 9 pr. Mens 5 buckle Plastic $59.95 29.95 picked up later in the quarter as The second half opened with ance or risk leaving the game. Calvin putting pressure on Hope. 6 pr. Mens Humanic Coverite .... 90.00 69.00 Calvin made several deep penetra- In a non-league contest, the Minutes into the third quarter 2 pr. Ladies Koflach Furlined .... 60.00 49.95 tions into Hope territory. All of Hope booters lost to a tough Wheaton College team Saturday. 2 pr. Mens Humanic Silver ...... 80.00 45.00 The 4-1 Crusader victory drive 6 pr. Ladies Koflach 5 buckle .... 50.00 39.95 began as forward (Jotaas scored. (Very Insidious Plan Gaining momentum, Wheaton Reg. $30 to 55. Lace Boots to Push P'lZZii) came back when Sherman scored to make it 2-1. Now $10.00 to $15.00 In the third quarter, Hope's John White scored, but Wheaton's See The New Humanic Foam Fit and passing and ball control prevailed as forwards Piepgrass and 1-rick- Rosemont Custom Fit son scored fourth goals to ice the i game at 4-1. *SKI POLES In other non-league competi- 1 tion, Hope posted .victories over One group Ski Poles /2 PRICE Purdue Calumet, 7-1, and Mary- knoll Seminary, 4-1. *STRETCH PANTS 80 pr. Mens and Ladies Reg. $35.-$45. NOW $19.95

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The referee stopped the game for a fight like this.