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The Anchor: 1967 The Anchor: 1960-1969

5-19-1967

The Anchor, Volume 79.27: May 19, 1967

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 79.27: May 19, 1967" (1967). The Anchor: 1967. Paper 16. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1967/16 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 79, Issue 27, May 19, 1967. Copyright © 1967 Hope College, Holland, .

This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the The Anchor: 1960-1969 at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Anchor: 1967 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Accepts Position at North Carolina Mathis Resigns Dean of Academic Affairs Post

Dr. William S. Mathis, Dean of Academic Affairs, has resigned from his position at Hope Col- lege, announced President Calvin A. VanderWerf today. Dr. Mathis' resignation will be- come effective July 1. ; He will assume the position of Chairman of the Fine Arts De- partment of the University of ja n nm North Carolina at Charlotte. IN MAKING the announce- ment, President VanderWerf said: "It is with regret that I must an- nounce the resignation of William S. Mathis as Dean of Academic •> mm* Affairs at Hope College. "Dean Mathis has accepted a position as Chairman of the Fine Arts Department of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. His post as Chairman of this new Department, encompassing the areas of music, art and drama, will enable Dr. Mathis to devote DR. WILLIAM S. MATHIS his time and energies to his own particular specialty much more arts which I feel is unique. The closely than has been the case challenge and the opportunity pre- in his post at Hope College. sent an imperative. "ALTHOUGH DEAN MATH- 79th ANNIVERSARY - 27 Hope College, Holland, Michigan May 19, 1967 "We shall maintain a keen affec- IS' stay at Hope has been a brief tion for Hope and shall follow one, he leaves behind many with interest her continuing de- Homes Resigns friends—students, faculty and ad- velopment." ministrators. We all wish him and his family well as he returns to a DR, MATHIS EARNEDabach- career in the area of his special elor of music degree from Stetson Five Faculty Members Hired interest." University, a master's from the Dr. Mathis said, "The year in , and a Holland and at Hope has been Ph.D. from Florida State Uni- fessor of English, is taking an Middle Ages to the 20th century Dean for Academic Affairs Wil- a rich and rewarding experience versity . official leave of absence for one and he also has a background liam Mathis has announced that for my family and me. It is with Before his appointment to the year to teach at another institu- in Latin American history. Philip Homes and E. Jean genuine reluctance that we leave. deanship at Hope he was dean tion. She has not yet determined Alan Carter will come to Hope Protheroe will not return to the UNC-C holds a challenge to me of faculties of Hardin-Simmons the college at which she will teach as an instructor in political sci- College next year and that five to return to my discipline and to University in Abilene, Tex., and next year. ence next year, enlarging the de- more new faculty members have contribute to the development of also served as dean of the School Coming to Hope as a visiting partment to four members. Mr. been hired. a significant program in the fine of Music there. Mr. Homes announced his resig- assistant professor in history for Carter has an A. B. from Hope nation last Monday. He came to the 1967-68 academic year will College and an M.A. from the the Hope College faculty in 1965 be Dr. Nicolaas Antonius Boots- University of Missouri. and has served as chairman of the ma. Lynn Hoepfinger will serve in Van Voorst to Address art department. Mr. Homes has Dr. Bootsma is currently serv- the chemistry department next accepted a position on the faculty ing at the Historical Institute of year as a GLCA-NSF intern in of Goddard College in Plainfield, the Catholic University of chemistry. Mr. Hoepfinger in com- Europe-Bound Hopites Vermont. He will work primarily Nijmegen in The Netherlands, pleting work for his Ph.D. at Pur- in ceramics at Goddard. where he received his Ph.D. His due University in biochemistry. Bruce Van Voorst, Bureau Chief Mr. Van Voorst, who received Miss Protheroe, assistant pro- field is European history from the Filling the absence in the music in Berlin and Bonn for News- a B.A. in political science from department created by the year week Magazine and a 1954 grad- Hope, also holds an M.A. de- leave of absence by James Tallis uate of Hope College, will deliver gree in political science from the SCSC Groundbreaking will be Robert Thompson, who an address next Tuesday at 7:30 University of Michigan. is presently pursuing a D.M.A. p.m. in Snow Auditorium to the This summer Mr. Van Voorst in organ at the University of Chapel Choir and other Hope plans to host the Hope College Michigan. Mr. Thompson's po- students going to Europe this sum- Postponed, Says Pres. Chapel Choir at a reception fol- sition will be interim instructor mer on the topic "Re-emergence lowing their concert at the Un- in music. of Germany on the European Po- (iroundbreaking for the Student wait until final action has been iversity of Bonn. Barry Werkman has been re- litical Scene." Cultural-Social Center may not taken. This may happen "any tained to serve as instructor in Mr. Van Voorst, who is cur- Prior to joining the Newsweek take place before Commencement, day. The decision may come as economics and business admin- staff, he was Manager of the Amer- according to President Calvin A. suddenly as the approval of the rently on a lecture tour under the istration next year. Mr. Werkman ican Textbook Company with VanderWerf. At Homecoming, the loan for the new Science Build- auspices of the World Affairs is a 1964 Hope graduate and headquarters in Duesseldorf, Ger- President had predicted that ing," the President said. Council will discuss the role of holds an M.S. from the University German Chancellor Kiesinger many and also served as Political ground would be broken "before If approval is not given before of Michigan. He is currently teach- and the question of German-U.S. Affairs Officer at the U.S. Em- the summer break." Commencement, the ceremony ing at Ferris State University. relations in his talk. bassy in Ethiopia. He cited two reasons for the would be put off until another postponment. First, the final blue- appropriate occasion. However, prints have not been returned. Dr. VanderWerf noted that the Commencement, Baccalaureate Architect Charles E. Stade is now date is subject to approval by the revising them in accordance with Board of Trustees. reactions from students and the ACCORDING TO Director of Board of Trustees. The original Business Affairs Clarence J. Mrs. Romney, Thomas to Speak blueprints were drawn in Febru- Handlogten, the other major ary, taking into consideration re- source of funds for the SCSC is commendations of a combined the Capital Funds Drive now be- Lenore Romney, wife of Mich- where she completed the usual erous churches and as an army student - faculty - Administration ing conducted by the Reformed igan's governor, will be the speak- four year program in three. A chaplain during the Korean War. committee. Church in America. The antici- er at the graduation of Hope's former Hollywood and New York His service on the front earned HOWEVER, the major cause of pated income from this is $2 mil- 102nd class at the commencement actress, she is a veteran performer him the Bronze Star. the delay, said Dr. VanderWerf, lion. Private contributions for the ceremonies on June 5 at 10 a.m. before an audience. She often is the fact that the college has not structure totaled $150,000 at in the Holland Civic Center. Rev. shoulders part of her husband's REV. THOMAS has earned de- yet been awarded the $708,000 Homecoming. Norman Edwin Thomas, Pastor speaking load and is an exper- grees from Rutgers University federal grant for which it has Mr. Handlogten also an- of the First Reformed Church in ienced campaigner. and New Brunswick Theological applied. The application has been Albany, N.Y., will preach the bac- Seminary. He has conducted post- nounced that plans are presently Governor Romney reiers to her approved by the state of Michigan calaureate sermon to the class of graduate study at Union Theo- being made to remodel Voorhees as his "secret weapon" and says and is now awaiting favorable 1967 on June 4 at 2:30 p.m. in logical Seminary. Hall. This is a change in the Mas- that no one "anticipated a woman action in Washington. Dimnent Memorial Chapel. Chairman of the 1967 Com- ter Plan unveiled at Homecoming, could be so effective a political According to Dr. VanderWerf, MRS. ROMNEY is a graduate mencement and Baccalaureate which called for the razing of the speaker." the application will be denied if dormitory. of George Washington University, Committee is Russell De Vette. groundbreaking takes place be- It is hoped that a working dia- Mrs. Romney pinch hit for Gov- fore the grant was actually award- gram of the changes will be sub- ernor Romney at Wednesday's ed. Therefore, the ceremony must mitted to the Administration to- Tulip Time luncheon in the Civic day so that bidding may take Center, when he was delayed by Frats, Sorority place next week. Planned improve- a committee meeting. She spoke ments include enclosing the in- for 25 i^inutes "off the cuff cov- Help Muscular terior stairwells, installing new ering topics ranging from religion window sashes and replacing to civil rights, delinquency, youth Dystrophy Drive much of the heating electrical and and women. Mrs. Romney plumbing apparatus. blended a series of Biblical and Five social fraternities and The work will be completed this classical quotes into her speech. one sorority have made do- summer if all the preliminary pre- parations go as planned and if nations to the Turtle Interna- SHE COMMENTED "I've al- the needed equipment is readily tional Muscular Dystrophy ways had a lot to say, but no available, according to Mr. Hand- Drive. The donations, along one wanted to listen until George logten. with the other money collect- became governor." ed from the competition, will MR, HANDLOGTEN said that go to further research and construction of the new dormitory Rev. Thomas will preach on the treatment of the crippling di- on the corner of Ninth St. and topic "The Dimension of Life." sease. Columbia Ave. is going "very Campus contributions came well." Construction is proceeding He has served as president of from the Arcadian, Centurian, a week ahead of schedule and the General Synod and the Board Cosmopolitan, . Emersonian he has every hope that the build- of World Missions of the Reformed fraternities, the Fraternal So- ing will be completed by the pro- Church in America. In addition ciety and the Dorian sorority. jected construction date of Sep- to his present position in Albany, tember 9. REV. NORMAN THOMAS Rev. Thomas has served in num- MRS. LENORE ROMNEY Page t Hope College anchor May 19. 1967 45 Seniors Receive Help Grads Aided at Many Schools

Forty-five of Hope College's neth Keegstra received one to the of Michigan Dental School, and graduating seniors have been ac- University of Colorado. Randall John Zimmerman at the College cepted and have received either Bos and John Tan is received the of Veterinary Medicine at the Un- fellowships or assistantships to a NDFA in physics. They will con- iversity of Illinois in Urbana. variety of graduate schools across tinue their studies at the Universi- LARRY VANDE HOEE, a the country. tv of Missouri and the University math maior, has received an as- of Iowa, respectively. Four Hope College seniors have sistantship in Economics and Bus- been awarded three-year Ford RANDALL MILLER received iness Administration at the Uni- Foundation Fellowships to do the NDFA at Ohio State Univer- versity of Wyoming. Gerald graduate work at the University sity to pursue his study in history, Auten, also in Business Adminis- of Chicago, Dr. Clarence T. De and Robert Donia received a fel- tration, will attend the University Graaf, professor of English and lowship to Indiana University to of Maryland. Hope College coordinator for the study Russian history. John Mul- Albert Brunsting and Edward Ford Program announced. der received an NDFA for study Chang, physics majors, both re- THE STUDENTS include Gor- in philosophy at Wayne State Un- ceived assistantships in physics don Korstange, John Cox, Ruth iversity. Mulder has turned it and will attend the University of Ziemann and Wes Michaelson. down and will be attending Prince- New Mexico and Pennsylvania HOLY ELECTRiCUTION—John Cage is shown composing one of his Korstange and Cox were award- ton Seminary. State University respe\ ively. works at the lecture-recital as presented at Hope last Thursday. Shown ed fellowships in Fnglish; Miss Rick Rietveld will attend Colo- IN CHEMISTRY, Don DeMas- is Jast a sample of the paraphernalia used to create his sounds. Ziemann received one in German rado State University with an ter received an assistantship to and Michaelson received his in assistantship in speech. the University of Nebraska, Hen- philosop hy. Three students were awarded ry Dykema to Western Michigan Cage Forces Awareness Michaelson also received a fel- the National Science Foundation University, Ronald Mathews to lowship from the University of Traineeship and Fellowship in Indiana University, W. Freder- Kansas in American Studies and the field of chemistry. David An- a Rockefeller fellowship for a derson will go to Northwestern ick Oettle to the I niversity of Kan- Of the Form of Music sas, Martin Ondrus to the Uni- "trial year" in seminary. He has University, Paul Schaap will at- "Unusual" is the adjective and listen to sounds in groups versity of Iowa, Howard Tige- turned down the University of tend Harvard University, and which would describe the lecture which make up compositions. We laar to the University of Illinois, Kansas and Ford fellowships and Frederick Van Lente will attend and concert by John Cage in Dim- must be made to listen to in- and Timothy Su to the University will be attending Princeton Semi- ''rinceton University. nent Chapel last Thursday. This dividual sounds. nary under the Rockefeller. of Kansas. was not a concert in the accepted FRANK BARRON, who re- DR RIDER expressed surprise The National Defense Fduca- David Noel, a history major, sense of the word but rather a ceived a National Institute of Men- that two-thirds of the audience tion Act Fellowship was awarded received an assistantslr i to at- "listening experience." tal Health Fellowship in psy- did not walk out. He said that to six students. In chemistry. Ken- tend Toledo University to pur- MR, CAGE attempts to force chology, will attend Boston Uni- the length of the concert prevent- sue his study of American his- people to listen and to become versity. Hal Huggins, who is also ed Mr. Cage from achieving the tory. Two political science ma- aware of the form of music. He Chapel Choir a psychology major, received an desired effect. jors, Robert Bosnian and Mari- describes his music as timeless. assistantship from State Uni- Mr. Cage's music, which is frag- lyn Hoffman, will attend Albany It has no beginning or end yet Offers Concert versity of New York in Albany mented and difficult to listen to, State University and Toledo Un- it can be recognized as having and one from New York Uni- seemed to make each selection end- iversity respectively. some form. He wants to bring This Sunday versity. He is as yet undecided lessly long. According to Dr. Rid- forth new sounds and evoke a The Hope College Chapel Choir as to which one he will accept. AN ENGLISH MAJOR, Susan er, there has been a great deal of response from his audience. will present its 15th annual home Scholarships were awarded to Fenigenburg, received an assis- reaction against Mr. Cage simply According to Mr. Cage, we are concert Sunday afternoon at two other Hope students, David tantship to attend the University because people do not understand 3 p.m. in Dimnent Memorial Tubergen, a music major, will of Arkansas. conditioned to classical music what he is attempting to do. Chapel. attend Yale University tor grad- The varied program will include uate study in performance, and Final Performance Tonight selections from the 16th century, Oegema will attend the Universi- including works by Tom as de ty of Michigan for graduate study Victoria (1549-1611) and Pier- in chemistry. luigi da Palestrina (1524-1594). Opera and Concerto Offered Besides these early composers, A NUMBER of teaching assis- the concert will include a modern tantships were awarded, which in- selection by Ralph Vaughan Wil- clude a few from each depart- The final performance of the available from the Business Office. liams. The choir will also sing ment. The biology department NEW YORK designer Richard program produced by the Hope Lead roles in "Down in theVal- pieces arranged by Normand has 1 1 awarded students, includ- Cassler is responsible for the sets, College speech and music depart- ley"are played by Andrea Martin Lockwood and Roben Shaw. ing George Hungerford, Robert and his assistant is Tom Coleman. ments will be given tonight at as Jenny Parsons, Tom Griffen as A very unique aspect of the Lootens, and Preston Maring, Maxine De Bruyn is thecorreogra- H:15 in Holland High School Aud- brack Weaver, Dirk Walvoord as concert will be the variety of for- who will attend the University of phy director, and Dr. Robert Cav- itorium. The program will include Thomas Bouche, and Harvey Lu- eign languages in which the choir Michigan Medical School. Cornel- anaugh and Joyce Morrison are Johann S. Bach's "Concerto for cas as The Leader. will sing. Three numbers will be ius Agari-Iwe and Pierre Sende vocal coaches. Two Harpsichords" and Kurt George Ralph, assistant pro- sung in Latin, one in German were given assistantships. They Lighting for the play was de- Weil's opera, "Down in the Val- fessor of speech and associate and one in Hebrew. will attend Howard University signed by Mike Vogas, and the ley." director of Little Theatre will di- Dr. Robert W. Cavanaugh, di- Medical School. stage manager is Jane Riso. Her HOPE STUDENTS will be ad- rect "Down in the Valley." Mu- rector of the Chapel Choir and Charles Walvoord has been ac- assistants are Sherry Van Fenwyk mitted free to the performances, sic for the opera will be provided head of Hope's music department, cepted to Northwestern Universi- and Donna Davidsmeyer. but they must obtain the compli- by the Hope College orchestra anticipates a large turnout Sun- ty Medical School in Chicago, mentary tickets from the Business under the direction of Dr. Mor- day afternoon, not onfy because Theodore Van Dam at Californ- Office. Tickets for people who are rette Rider. The opera's chorus Dr. Victor Hill of the popularity of this concert ia College of Medicine, James not affiliated with Hope are also will be directed by James Tallis. in the past, but also because the Klein at University of Illinois Presents Recital concert coincides with the end of Medical School, Dale DeBoer and Tulip Time in Holland. Gary Garwood at the University At Hope Church

Dr. Victor Hill, organist and harpsichordist, will present an or- gan recital at Hope Church to- morrow at 1:30 p.m. He will play "The Art of the Fugue" by Bach. "The fugue is of a profound and an extraordinarily complex 1 structure," stated Dr. Hill. SHIRTS As Bach's last major work, the composition consists of twenty fugues based on a single subject. The last and the longest of these 25c Each For 4 remained unfinished at Bach's death in 1750, Dr. Hill said. Dr. Hill is the assistant pro- Or More With Dry fessor of mathematics at Wil- liams College . Dr. Hill has studied under or- Cleaning Order. TRUE LOVE NEVER RUNS SMOOTH - Dirk Walvoord (left) as ganists such as Vernon deTar of Thomas Bouche and Tom Griffen as Brack Weaver fight to the finish Union Seminary, New York City, Folded Or On Hangers over their true love Jennie Brown in Hope's presentation of Kurt Weil's James Evans of Pittsburgh and "Down in the Valley". Paul Jones of the University of Wisconsin. Cash & Carry

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( May 19. 1967 Hope College anchor Page I Three Named Professors Maggie Fills Many Jobs Fourteen Faculty Promoted As Dorm Cleaning Lady

Fourteen Hope College faculty the psychology department, has fessor. Included are two mem- For twenty-one years Mrs. Mar- members have received promo- Deen a member of the faculty since bers ol the art department—Stan- garet Wolters, better known as tions effective Sentemhpr 1Q67-68, 1959. He was graduated from ley Harrington and Delbert Mi- Maggie, has been serving Hope President C.A VanderWerf an- Hope College in 1955, received chel. Also promoted were R. Dirk College. Besides her job as clean- nounced today. his A.M. and Ph.D. degrees from Jellema, English and Andrew ing lady, Maggie is seamstress, Three faculty members have Claremont Graduate School. Vander Zee, library. chauffeur, nurse, disciplinarian, been promoted to professors. Dr. Dr. Weller joined the faculty MR, HARRINGTON, a 1958 substitute-mother and friend to Eva Van Schaack will become a in 1962. He received his A. B. Hope College graduate, joined the men of the fraternity houses professor of biology, Dr. Gerhard degree from the University the faculty in 1964. He holds and Kollen Hall. Megow a professor of German and of Michigan in 1956 and was an M.F.A. degree from the State She has even assumed the role Dr. Joseph Zsiros a professor of awarded his A.M. and Ph.D. de- University of Iowa. of an alarm clock for one sleepy Greek. grees from Indiana University. Frater who would never make it Dr. Van Schaack joined the Mr. Michel has been a mem- to chapel without her aid. MR, MIKLE received his A.B. Hope College faculty in 1956. ber of the faculty since 1964. H( degree from Western Michigan She received an A.B. degree from was awarded an A. B. and a M MAGGIE WORKED in Hope's University in 1931 and an A.M. Hope College in 1929 and com- F.A. degree from De Pauw Un World War II barrack dorms and pleted graduate work at Johns degree from the University of iversity. in several girls residence halls Michigan in 1940. He has been Hopkins University in 1937. Mr. Jellema holds an A. B. de- before acquiring her present posi- a member of the Hope faculty DR. MEGOW has been a mem- gree from Calvin College and a tion in men's housing. Maggie since 1962. ber of the Hope faculty since 1959. M.F.A. degree from the Universi- said she has enjoyed all the places Miss Bailey has served as ref- He received his bachelor, master ty of Oregon. He joined the Hope she worked but admitted, "1 like and doctorate degrees from In erence librarian for the college faculty in 1964. my boys the best." diana University. since 1954. She received an A. B. Her "boys" are not always MRS. CLEAN—Mrs. Margret Dr. Zsiros joined the Hope Col- degree from Monmouth College Mr. Vander Zee has served as angels but this presents no prob- Wolters, substitute mother for lege faculty in 1947. He was in 1925, an A.M. degree from the catalog librarian since 1963. He lem to Maggie who remarked, Hope's males for the past 21 University of Wisconsin in 1928 awarded his Th.D. degree from received an A.B. degree from Cal- "When they are naughty, I go years, feels there just "ain't no and was awarded a B.S. degree Tisza Tstam University inDobre- vin College in 1933, an A.M. de- right after 'em." such thing as a bad boy." in L.S. from Western Reserve in cen in 1931. gree from the University of Mich- 1941. Promoted to associate pro- igan in 1942 and an A.M. in ACCORDING TO Maggie, the buttons on their shirts or lending : fessors are Dr. Norman Norton, Four faculty members have L.S. degree from Western M chi- 'naughty" tricks the boys are her car out ior "special" occa- been promoted to assistant pro- biology; Dr. Douglas Neckers, gan University in 1962. liable to get bawled out for in- sions. clude "borrowing" brooms and chemistry; Dr. Arthur Jentz, phi- Last year Maggie was made an losophy; Dr. F. Phillip Van Eyl, mops for extended periods of lime, allowing white mice to "accident- official pledge of the Arcadian psychology; Dr. Hubert Weller, RLC Defines and Amends fraternity and at the same time Spanish; M. Harold Mikle, speech' ly" run out into the hall directly in the path of an on-coming clean- was "pinned" to Roy Anker. She and Miss M. Lois Bailey, library. ing lady and not keeping their own recalled this happily, "They gave CHAIRMAN of the biology de- Chapel Alternative Proposal rooms clean. me roses and sang to me. It was partment, Dr. Norton joined the really nice." Hope College faculty in 1964. He " I told one boy he had more of a mattress under his bed than on She and her husband Henry live received his B.S. degree from The Religious Life Committee in procuring 24 top-notch lectur- it, because of all the dust there," quietly at Route 1 West Olive Southern Illinois University and amended and defined some of ers each year. she said. where they sharethesamehobby- his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the mechanics of the chapel al- THE COMMITTEE also sug buggy and cutter riding. Even the University of Minnesota. ternative proposal at its final gested that a five-member com- WHEN NOTbeing teased by the while out riding, Maggie may Dr. Neckers, a 1960 Hope Col- meeting last Monday afternoon. mittee be established to choose boys, Maggie is usually giving see several of her "boys" who lege graduate, joined the faculty The amendment provided that lecturers. The committee would them advice on a birthday gift greet her with a cheery "Hi, in 1964. He was awarded his the lecture plan consist of eight consist of the chaplain, two stu- for mom or girlfriend, sewing Maggie!" Ph.D. by the University of Kan- lectures each semester. A student dents and two faculty members. sas. choosing this plan instead of chap- The chairman would be a facul- Dr. Jentz has been a member el would be required to attend all ty member and would receive sec- of the faculty since 1962. He was eight lectures. Originally the pro- Rider Receives Grant retarial help. The student mem- graduated from Hope College in posal called for 12 lectures, nine bers would be appointed by the 1956, was awarded a B.D. de- of which the student would have Student Senate President. gree from New Brunswick Semi- to attend in order to fulfill the It was also decided to ask the To Continue Studies nary in 1959 and received his requirement. Dr. Elton Bruins, Administration for $3,200 per se- Ph.D. degree from Columbia Un- chairman of the committee, said Dr. Morrette Rider, director of University. He will remain a mem- mester to pay for the lecturers. iversity in 1965. that this was done because of instrumental music at Hope, has ber of the Hope faculty on leave However, it was stipulated that all DR, VAN EYL, chairman of the practical difficulties involved been awarded a F'ord Founda- during that year. lecturers would not receive the tion grant through the American Dr. Rider is one of about 30 same fee, allowing funds to bring Council on Education for the college professors throughout the nationally known speakers into academic year beginning in Sep- Band and Dance Group United States who have been se- the program from time to time. tember 1967. lected for this program. He is a IN ADDITION, the RLC sug- He has been assigned by the graduate of the University of Present Outdoor Concert gested that the decision whether Council as Administrative Intern Michigan and holds a Ed.D. de- to attend chapel or lectures must to the Provost of the University gree from Columbia University. The Hope College band, in con- tin, Tim Crandall, and Jack Rit- be made at registration. The com- of Washington in Seattle where He is past president of the Mich- junction with the Hope College sema will be the soloists in Leroy mittee stressed, however, that a he will observe and study the igan String Teachers Assn. and Modern Dance Group and ARA Anderson's "Bugler's Holiday." student choosing chapel will be administrative operation of the the Michigan Orchestra Assn. Slater food service, will present "Dimitri Shostakovitch's "Fes- permitted to attend the lectures the year's final concert at 6 p.m. tive Overture, Op. 96," will pre- and vice versa. next Tuesday in the Pine Grove. cede the featured number, Vin- The entire proposal now goes Dinner for boarding students cent Persichetti's contemporary before the faculty. Administration will be a barbecue. Faculty and "Masquerade for Band," which and the Board of Trustees. townspeople may purchase tick- presents the debut of the Hope In other action, the committee ets for this meal in the music College Modern Dance Group. accepted a suggestion from Dr. building office for $1.50. MAXINE DE BRUYN,director Irwin Brink to have Chapel Board AFTER DINNER, theband will of the group, choreographed this members appointed this Spring to help avoid some of the diffi- NOTICE begin the evening's entertainment interpretation of the "Mas- with von Suppe's "Poet and Peas- querade." Concerning the symbo- culties experienced by the board ant Overture," followed by the lism of this work, she comments, at the beginning of this year. "Ballet Music from Prince Iger" "Man has many masks. Ours are OF DISSOLVEMENT by Borodin. Trumpeters Ken Aus- shyness, guilt, and joy. Our con- temporary society is striving mightily for the latter. For some Hope College this is easier to acquire than Dyno- Vybe Enterprises others." tfcofl i/ffcJc On Gets Federal The dancers are Elaine Franco, Mary Ann Gilder, Amy Johnson, ij/tna/x DYNO VYBE DIVISION Science Grant Sue Neher, Jackie Nyboer, Gretch- * en VanderWerf, Sue Van Wyk Hope College has been award- 9ie Wou Jirt <%ea* GASSMEN DIVISION ed a matching $47,396 federal and Helen Ver Hoek. They are grant for the financing of lab- divided into two groups which symbolize Shyness and Guilt. A oratory and other special equip- As of June 3, 1967, Dyno Vybe Enterprises will no longer soloist possesses contentment and ment, the U.S. Department of be available for entertainment services in Western Mich- Health, Education and Welfare joy and tries to share it with the VEURINK'S igan. The last two years have been very successful, and we announced. others. wish to thank the following organizations for making it The grant, one-half of a $94,788 project plannedby the college, was possible for us to serve them: awarded under Title VI of the Higher Education Act of 1965. Hope College is among seven col- THE STUDENT OftlRCH leges and universities in Michi- Hope College Student Senate gan sharing $177,979. Corporate Worship at 10:45 a.m. Projects on the Hope College Classes of '69 and '70, Hope College campus benefitting from the fed- Sunday* May 21 Alpha Phi Sorority Fraternal Society eral grant include the expansion Delta Phi Sorority West Ottawa of an all-campus audio visual aids center, the enlargement of Dimnent Chapel Kappa Beta Phi Sorority Junior High School an all-campus statistic laboratory Kappa Chi Sorority Zeeland High School and the improvement and expan- Participating as leaders in worship: Sigma Sigma Sorority Zeeland High School sion of the existing language lab- Arcadian Fraternity Theater Club oratory. DICK SHIELS, worship leader The college also plans to ob- CHAPLAIN HILLEGONDS, preaching Centurian Fraternity Ron Harper's Teen Chalet tain interview equipment for the MR. ROGER DAVIS, organist departments of education and psy- Alpha Gamma Phi will usher chology, audio reproduction and Boh Schroeder playback equipment for the music Sermon subject: "Man, havo you been bom again?" Gary Peiper department and new laboratory equipment for the chemistry de- partment. May If, 1967 Page 4 Hope College anchor editorials

A Time for Concern

HE TIME HAS COME for con- But let's stop kidding ourselves. A T cern. The resignation this week good number of highly qualified men of Dr. William S. Mathis as have left this College because of in- Dean of Academic affairs came as no ternal conflict within the administra- surprise to the majority of the campus. tion. The source of this conflict in The news had been widely circulated nearly all cases centers around the J before President VanderWerf's official President. announcement, and the reaction on the We have always maintained that part of students, faculty and adminis- a degree of conflict is a healthy char- trators was and continues to be one of acteristic of the educational process. profound disillusionment. However, when conflict results in a Last September Hope College be- breakdown of communications so se gan the year with three new men in vere that men have no other choice three of the most important positions than to resign, that conflict is destruc- of the College administration: Director tive to the very educational process of Development, Dean of Academic we are all seeking to maintain and im- Affairs, Director of Business Affairs. prove. Because of the present situation, Not even nine months later, William stability, continuity, and leadership Hender, the Director of Development, have become desirabldesir: e but rarely and Dean Mathis have resigned, leav- found. ing only Clarence Handlogten, the Di- rector of Business Affairs, remaining ROM DEAN MATHIS during the Art Buchwald with the College. past year has come some of the leadership, especially in academic If these two resignations were un- affairs, which Hope College so despar- usual incidents on Hope's campus, we ately needs to insure the stability neces- might not be so concerned. However, sary for growth. He has won the confi- Too Old to Work the four years of President Vander dence and loyalty of the entire faculty Werf's administration have marked a and many students. We do not blame turnover in personnel that can only him for leaving, for there is a point be- impeed the progress of this school and yond which any reasonable man can- The trouble wim the American Dream Applicant: "I appreciate your thinking, damage the educational process. not go when he finds himself in an in- these days;is that there has been such an but I can assure you I can do anything tolerable situation. He simply must get emphasis on youth in our country that a a 21 year old can do. I'm still very strong. out. URING PRESIDENT Vander man can be washed up at the age of 40 I play tennis twice a week. I'm in ex- D Werf's administration, we have The gravity of the present situa- and not even know it. I didn't realize how cellent health and I was even captain of witnessed the resignations of two tion demands that the present state of serious it was getting until I started trying my football team last year." Deans of Men, two Vice Presidents for instability, bred by the conflict within to find some jobs for friends who were victims of The World Journal Tribune P.M.: "SIR, 1 DON'T doubt every- the administration, be subject for great Academic Affairs, one Business Man- closing. thing you say, but we can't judge you as ager, one Director of Public Relations, concern on the part of students and The first question people would ask an individual. Statistics show your age one Assistant to the President, one Di- faculty. The relationship between the me was, "How old is he?" If I said he group is prone to colds, backaches and rector of Church Relations, one Dean President of Hope College and the rest was 40 or older I'd get a shrug and some bursitis. Even if we wanted to hire you, of the College, one Dean of Academic of tht College must be examined, and comment like, "He's too old for us." our group health insurance advisers Affairs, one Chaplain, and one Direc- concrete steps must be taken to pre- IT SEEMS TO ME that if the trend wouldn't let us. They can't afford to take tor of Development. Surely some ad- vent the present situation from con- continues the age gap is going to be one the risk with a 23-year-old man, no matter ministrators from the preceding Lub- tinuing. of the most serious problems this country how healthy he may look." faces. It's quite possible in another 10 Applicant: "But if I can't get a job bers administration were expected to If instability is allowed to continue or 15 years that the following scene might now that I've finished college, what am resign so that President VanderWerf as the distinguishing characteristic of become very oommon. I going to do the rest of my life?" would be able to find his own group of the leadership of Hope College, it can Personnel manager: "I see your quali- P.M.: "Why don't you retire and move men with whom he could work. Some only have a damaging effect for the fications are in order except for one thing." to Florida?" may have been unsuitable. students it is committed to educate. Applicant: "What's that?" Applicant: "What the hell am I going Personnel manager: " I'm afraid you're to retire on if I never worked?" too old for the job." Applicant: "What do you mean, too old P.M.: "THAT'S not our fault, is it? for the job? I'm 23." Don't forget, this company is in a fiercely P.M.: "Yes, I see that. We don't hire competitive market and if we hire older anyone over 21 years of age." people like yourself we'll have to explain On Hope's Theater Applicant: "But I just got out of col- it to our stockholders. Besides, it looks lege. I've never had a job. How can I be bad when a customer comes in and sees too old?" a 23-year-old man hunched over his desk." P.M.: "ACCORDING TO our pension Applicant: "I hate to beg, but I really need this job. This is the fourth company HE HIGH QUALITY of the stu- weeks, the feeling about recent plays planners who have the final say as to how I've been to which says I'm too old. Please, dent production "The Clouds," has been insignificant. old our employees should be, anybody T mister, give me a chance. I still have 10 above 21 years of age is over the hill." appearing in Castle Park Amphi- If students are to benefit from Lit- good years to me." theater last weekend, points to a void Applicant: "How can I be over the tle Theater efforts, they must be ex- hill if I've never been on?" P.M.: "I'm sorry, sir. I don't wish to that has come into life at Hope College. posed to works that exemplify the prin- P.M.: "There's no reason to get testy be cold hearted about this but I think you Once common near-professional theater ciples of good theater. How an English about this. We have nothing personal should face reality. You're washed up. You ofterings have of late been conspicuous teacher could effectively illustrate a against you. It's just that we have found should have planned for your old age years ago." by their absence, much to the detriment point with reference to "Queen After through experience that men of your age of our college education. Death" is difficult to say. That it would really don't do their best work when they Applicant: "Let me ask one moreques- Viewed as a part of the educational reach 23 or 24 years of age. Oh, there tion and then I'll go. How old are you?" be easier using "The Master Builder" Personnel Manager: "13." process, which theoretically almost all is obvious. have been exceptions, but on the whole extra-curricular activities are, the Little we'd rather take our chances with the Copyright (c) 1967, The quality of the performances younger man who can stand up under the Theater has lived up to neither present has also been deficient. In almost all Co. Distributed by physical and mental pressures of the job." Syndicate. expectations nor past achievements. It cases the direction has been inadequate i has done little for either the particia- and the acting sub-standard. If the pents or the audience. plays were to be salvaged at all, it ON COLUOI Part of the problem lies in the would have to have been with superb plays chosen for production. In years to interpretation of the works. Unfortun- anchor come pieces such as "What Say They?" ately we have not seen this. OLLAND, MICHIGAN and Motherlant's "Queen After Death" may be recognized for their lit- HE LITTLE THEATER has not Publ hed week, duri erary and dramatic merit. But for pres- T been without bright spots. The " y "S colleSe year except vacation, holiday and exam,,,at,on periods by ent collegiate audiences they are not as program of bringing professional and to, the students o/ Hope College, Holland. M.chigan, under the authority of the Student valuable as more established works. technical advisors to assist in lighting Communications Buard. and set design is one of the most ambit- There is a wealth of dramatic lit- Entered as second class matter at the post ofrce of Holland, Michigan, 494ZS. u< the special rate ious in the country. But even this has erature that can be tapped for college o/ postage provided for in Section 1103 o/ Act of Congress, Oct. 3, 1917, and authorized Oct. theater performjances. For examples we not improved the dramatic and educa- need only t^rrt to the plays produced tional value of the productions, and at by the Little Theater last year. "Hip- times has merely served to accentuate Subscription: $3 per year. Printed: Zeeland Record, Zeeland, Michigan. polytus," "The Fantastiks" and Ibsen's other deficiences. A beautiful, realistic Editor .... "The Master Builder" are recognized set is only "putting new patches on the Jonn M. Mulder Copy . Janice Bakker, Carol Koterski, Editor-Elect . . classics which can be put on the college old garments" of inappropriate plays Tom Hildebrandt Assistant Editor Lew Vander Naald stage. It seems that they would also and inadequate direction. George Armady Headlines ji p i News Editor m ofl teach the actors more about the West- Despite the fact that it is not a Glenn Lopman roo Layout Editor P f Bette Lou Smith ern dramatic heritage and the subtle- Palette and Masque product, "The Dick Angstadt Advertising Manager Photography . . Donald Page, Don Gunther, ties of acting than do the lesser known Clouds" is a step in the right direction. Bob Schroeder Business Manager Suzette Luckhardt But more must be done. The College Jim Marcus pieces we have seen this year. Such Columnist Qordy Korstange plays, however, have not been selected. is preparing to invest a considerable Cartoonists . Muck Menning, Greg Phillips sum of money for new and improved Board of Editor* Reporters . . Ruby Beatson, Jane Becksfort. N UNFORTUNATE result of theater facilities in the long-promised Editorial Assistants . Bob Donia, Bruce Rondfi A this has been an appreciable loss Student Cultural-Social Center. If this Janice Blakely, Rob Branch, Bonnie Features Pat Canfield of student enthusiasm for the is to be a profitable expenditure, the Everts, Sherman Farber, Mike Fitney, Critiques John Cox college productions. When compared to Little Theater must again be made a Marion Greiner, Tom Hendrickson, the fervor that preceeded and followed valuable part of the social and cultural Sports Bob Vanderberg Glenn Looman, Don Luidens, Ken "The Fantastiks" and "Hippolytus" for life of the college. National News Dick Kooi Nienhuis, Madeline Slovenz, Neal Rewrite Harold Kamtn Sobania, Sharon Stoats, Al Wildschtf •# May 19, 1967 Hope College Page 5 Donia, Mulder Reflect on 4 Years at Hope

due to one Reverend William Hillegonds, who has a blunt, honest and penetrating and to this College. Whether it has been People, Progress worth it for me, whether it has been worth way of bringing college students into con- The Life frontation with the implications of their it for the College, I do not know. I hope Problems; 4 Years own actions and the impact of the Chris- Of Significant Soil it is true that the most severe critics of tian faith. He has justly earned the wide- Hope may be numbered among those who Of Hope spread respect of the student body. By John M. Mulder love it most. I have criticized because I THE STUDENT CHURCH has con Hope College is an unusual institution, saw things that were wrong, and I spoke By Bob Donia tributed to a voluntary affirmation of the and its peculiarity lies in its name. It lives out because I believe in the possibility of change. When entering this school four years Christian faith. Perhaps, if the Board of in a small, midwestern town in the latter TODAY HOPE IS SUFFERING ago I remember something said by Rev. Trustees agrees to change the chapel pol- half of the twentieth century—a time char- through an identity crisis and I see little William Hilmert—then Dean of Men—about icy, our campus next year can follow the acterized more by despair, alienation, pess- attempt being made to give that crisis Hope College. "We will try our hardest model of Carleton College, whose situ- imism, and futility than by any optimism direction, scope, or solution. I am appalled to help a student get through this col- ation is described by the following head- construed at its extreme as hope. It lives by the disillusionment and disenchantment lege. We won t flunk someone unless he line in their paper; "Religious Interest in a world in which God is dead, or sup- himself isn't trying." Persists Despite End of Requirement." posed to be dead, or as Pogo put it, in the faculty, administration and students. In addition, I find little in the efforts of At that time I viewed this statement This college has moved forward by "merely unemployed." And curiously, this our transient administrations which will as a sign of the college's academic weak- leaps and bounds in terms of almost every College lives—operating on hope and some- provide the stability, confidence, and hope ness—a high drop-out rate was one in- quantitative measurement. Credit for this times precious little else. Its hope is in God, necessary for growth. dication of a demanding program. Since centers on our President, Dr. VanderWerf. and its graduates leave either affirming My opinion of the present state of then I have come to see Mr. Hilmert's Our alumni giving has skyrocketed; our the basis for that hope, denying it, or this College has been the source of some statement as but one expression of an church support has increased substantially; wondering. controversy here, but if I stand by any- attitude which pervades the entire cam- government grants and loans have made IN MY YEARS as editor of this news- thing this paper has asserted, it is that much of our building program possible. paper, many kind words have been spoken But along side of these amazing ad- about the quality of our product. The credit goes to a loyal group of students i vances is a problem of concern to every friend of Hope College. We have sought who each week have contributed time and in the past four years to build up an effort and devotion to a task which often image; and we have, on balance, succeed- seems thankless and insignificant. My grat- ed. Our college can be "sold" to almost itude is certainly given to them, and I anyone, including the government, foun- hope those who have appreciated our pro- dations and alumni. But this college can- duct appreciate the efforts of all. not long exist in pursuit of an image As for the unkind words and the blame, alone; our goals must be more substan- 1 take full responsibility for what we have tively formulated, and the public relations done to inspire them. If the anchor is image must be distinguished from those eventually praised or faulted for anything, ideals to which our faculty and students it is that it has been essentially the vision are deeply dedicated. or lack of vision of one man. My vision THE MOST CRUCIAL PROBLEM has hardly been sharp, nor will it ever facing this college is the lack of leader- be. A journalist is a Heraclitus, observing ship in formulating the future course of the river of change which flows around him Hope College. All too little attention is and by him. His task is one of the mom- given to preserving and furthering "The ent—to state what the river is, where it is nature of the institution as we have known going, and why it is flowing the way it it for a century." Our future as a college is. His purpose is to tell the truth about the river, and if perspective is any aid in rr seems dependent on pragmatic consider- ations without regard for a consistent prob- seeing that truth, he suffers from a lack lem-solving approach, gradualism in of it. change, nor a thorough consideration of THE ENORMITY OF THE TASK is BOB DONIA the long-range effects of on-the-spot de compounded for an editor of the anchor, JOHN MULDER pus. The faculty of Hope College, while a publication of a college which bears c is ions. the personnel of Hope's administration increasingly seeking to stimulate intellec- witness to the intrusion of the eternal in The root of this problem is in our have failed to provide the leadership which tual curiosity in all of their students, have time. His title implies that he is not purely- shifting administration. The rapid turn- is imperative for our present situation. tempered their demands for academic ex- contemporaneous nor are his efforts meant over has prevented the evolution of any Hope is losing its character primarily cellence with concern for their students in to be. Rather, he should be a saint for strong, consistent leadership for our acad- because it refuses to believe in what it "to apprehend a context of mutual human respect. emic program; the result has been frag- really is. The point of intersection of the timeless THIS OVERRIDING RESPECT for mented and widely diffused efforts. The Saying these things has at times put human beings has characterized educa- With time is an occupation for the persistent turmoil within the Administra- me in a situation which I found very tion at Hope. We have seen this in pro- saint." tion continues to cause a pervasive un- difficult to live with, but remaining silent fessors who profess their own deep con- —T.S. Eliot, "The Dry Salvages" easiness and unrest; it certainly does not would have been deadly. One of my con- victions and admit their biases with equal For two years I have stood [fTan inspire confidence in the future of the col- solations is that of an anchor editor of openness. We respect those who, under unusual river which flows in an alien lege. The Administrative crisis, more than some 40 years ago, my father. In his land. As it flows and evaporates, it says some pressure to publish original work, any other situation on our campus, is in last editorial he wrote: believe that for them personally to do so that man is nothing without the beauty danger of doing irreparable harm to Hope "AT TIMES, WE HAVE been antag- of knowledge, that knowledge is the hum- would compromise their effectiveness as College. onistic or destructive, and this was always teachers. We see in our professors a passion anization of man. But the knowledge which We also have a problem of increasing done with the belief that such antagonistic man gains is distorted in a life tainted to make students into scholars. We see communication between the faculty, stu- or destructive attitude was the honest re- by self-concern. Beyond knowledge and in our professors the moral and ethical dents and administration and promoting flection of popular student opinion. Some- the excitement of obtaining it must lie a sensitivity to sharpen our own awareness a sense of community. The faculty meets times this opposition has been rather boldly faith in God who makes clean what is of the problems and dilemmas of our age. at irregular intervals, insisting on the fine expressed and this for reason of sensa- tainted and pure what is distorted. This And we see the atmosphere of our college Medieval tradition that the faculty is the tionalism and snap. . . .In short, any- river Hows in an arid land, witnessing permeated with concern for Hope College, university and that all power short of the thing which may have caused any stir to the beauty of knowledge, condemning its tradition, its present mission and its Board of Trustees is ultimately in their was published for the purpose of making growth into the future. its distortions, and proclaiming that what hands. The Student Senate also meets on the anchor a wanted weekly. And through is wrong can be made right. From this example we have been in- quite separatist terms, overturning "The it all, we have promoted what we believed That is hope, and Hope is a paradox fused with a sense of respect for human in- Administration" and talking of "The Fa- were projects that would make Hope a for its basis is the paradox of death-become- tegrity. Perhaps this, more than anything culty" as entities quite separate and re- better student home. life, of sin redeemed. else we have absorbed in the past four moved. "That was our aim—if we have made IN THE CLASSROOMS teachers af- years, will enable us to walk into the GROUPS WITHIN the decision-mak- friends through it, we are glad. And if world as whole men. firm that life is quality, not a substance, ing process, structured as they are to segre- we have made enemies, we will optimis- and the quality is what we are all seek- The past four years have seen con- gate the sectors from one another, neces- tically regard them as necessary accom- ing. Perhaps this explains the legalism— siderable advances in many areas of cam- sarily determine the categories in which paniments to friendships." the simple desire to infuse quality rather pus life. we all view the campus. The result is the The truth was what we were about than let students find it. However, in the MANY OF THE RESTRICTIONS fragmentation of any idea of "communi- and what we hope the anchor was about. College's attempts to liberalize life here, which have traditionally been associated ty" into at least three sectors, with any 1 hope that those who have read it will it appears that both man and freedom with the church-related college are now politically significant dialogue restricted say of our reporting what Huck Finn have won the hour and 1 hope the day. gone; although many, especially pertain- to small and exclusive student-faculty com- said ol Mark Twain's account in "The Education is a process of finding and ing to wormen students, still remain. The mittees that seem to average one import- Adventures of Tom Sawyer": uncovering, not packaging and deliver- year before our arrival, dancing on cam- ant decision a year at most. "THERE WAS SOME THINGS which ing. In the future 1 hope this College pus was strictly verboten; our sophomore Many faculty members view the Stu- he stretched, but mainly he told the truth." shall pause and remember Eliot's words: year the drinking regulation was modi- dent Senate as a 6:00 Mickey Mouse Club We may not have told the truth; we fied. Women's rules have been slowly but dealing with social trivia. Any members ". . . right action is freedom may have harmed the College; but as I consistently made more tolerable. of that body will readily grant the par- From past and future also. leave this office and the darkened Pine The net result has been a more open, tial validity of such a view; however, I For most of us, this is the aim Grove, 1 leave with affection for this paper, honest atmosphere on campus. The rift refuse to believe that the faculty, in con- Never here to be realized; its staff, and the people of Hope College. between legality and reality has been re- trast, deals with nothing but issues of Who are only undefeated 1 leave with hope, and it consists in this: duced; we feel the pressure of hypocrisy earth-shattering significance. Couldn't we Because we have gone on trying." "We content at the last less intensely. get together and talk over our trivia in —"The Dry Salvages" If our temporal reversion nourish Our approach to Christianity has sim- unison? We might even confront some My trying has been to bring the qual- (Not too far from the yew tree) ilarly improved in spirit. Much credit is bigger issues sooner or later. ity of life to these pages, to some lives. The life of significant soil."

The Best of Peanuts Reprinted hy permission of the Chicago Tribune PEANUTS I DON T THINK I'D EVEN LIKE TO THE FIFTH MAN WILL HAVE A LOT VOOR BROTHER 1$ THE ONLV PERSON MO, IM TO LIVE UP TO BECAME OF (OHAT MOULD WO NOT THAT BE THE $EC0ND„.THE THIRD MAN I KNOO) tOHOLOANTSTOBETHE LIKE TO BE THE BRAVE WILL HAVE QOITE A BIT OF THE OTHERS DID, AND THE SIXTH FORTV-THIRP MAN ON THE MOON I F1R5T MAN ON RESPDNSlBlLITV, TflO, AND THE FOURTH WILL HAVE TO WORK HARD AROUND THE MOON? OJlLL HAVE TO KEEP A LOT OF RECORDS, THE M0ON-6TAT1ON...THE SEVENTH (T]ILL „

[ May 19, 1967 Page 6 Hope College anchor The anchor: The Story of a Wee

And the scene changes from that very small place to other small places around the campus: faculty offices, the Kletz, the President's office, students' rooms and the various Deans' offices, where reporters of various stripes and with differing skills ask essentially: a l "What's happening, baby?" Only more respectfully. The task here is to ask enough questions and the right questions so that the source of the news will give a complete account. Sometimes it's as easy as simply finding out what happened or will happen, but it rarely stops there. The good reporter looks behind the bare facts for an inter- pretation, a reason why things are the way they are. And the goal of it all lies in just this: to tell others about it. The fun and games begin when that cesspool of information, the reporter, sits before the keyboard of a typewriter, and trys to report his story. He cuts, trims, omits, shapes, and orders his story and with a feeling of accomplishment or re- lief, he types that mythical symbol for the end: -30-.

m' ONE BIG, HAPPY FAMILY—See the scowling people around the table. They are copy- readers (1. to r.) Carol Koterski and Janice Bakker. They are scowling because they have H IS TASK IS ENORMOUS and his to find all the mistakes the reporters made. If they miss one, the managing editor, responsibility is overwhelming. Some George Arwady, (standing) gets angry. Now, is that nice? 2,()()() people will depend on his account of an event to form their opinions or order their lives. The relative weight which he By John M. Mulder lines that were butted together onthesports gives to some item of news against another anchor Editor page, we launch into another issue. Tom is a matter of judgment and insight, and Hildebrandt brings in a list of coming the truth is what he seeks to bring to his events on the calendar which he thinks we readers. ought to cover, and then the fires begin O REN KIERKEGAARD has written: Perhaps it's the power of sitting before to flare a little. "The lowest depth to whichpeoplecan that keyboard or the sense of integrity in S The majority of the news which the sink before God is defined by the word bringing the truth or a portion of it to 'journalist.' If I were a father and had a anchor reports is never listed officially others that motivates a reporter. Perhaps daughter who was seduced, I should not on any calendar, and it is the responsi- it's the personal pride ofseeing "my article" despair over her; Iwould hope for her sal- bility of each editor to be aware of what's in print. Or perhaps it's just a job to be vation. But if I had a son who became a happening on the campus. Simple? Try done. journalist and continued to remain one for it. Every conversation becomes a poten- five years, I would give him up." tial story for the paper, for what each article aims at is presenting the total pic- Into the "Very Small Place" Every day for 29 to 30 weeks of the FINAL PRESS RUN—See the man with the scowl on his fee year 30 to 40 Hope students court dam- ture of what happened or will happen. printer, Paul Van Koevering. The press is giving him troubU The power wielded and the job done, nation, and their flirtation is work on the will be late this week. "Say, John . . .!" he brings the article down the stairs into Hope College anchor. Kierkegaard's ad- Hey - What's Happening? the basement of Graves, into a now rather monitions to the contrary, these students dirty, very small place, and announces: may spend as little as two hours in the And so, the conversation will run some- "Where do I put this?" Hilde, who of case of a cub reporter on a minor story thing like this: course has been looking for the article or as much as 55 hours in the case of "Hey, one of the girls in Voorhees ever since Tuesday at 3 p.m., grunts his a member of the editorial board. told me they're going to picket the Pres- appreciation and throws it in the direction And somehow, miraculously, by some ident's house and protest the fire condi- of one of our copy readers: Janice Bakker, divine stroke of Providence it seems, each tions." week 2,200 printed copies of their work Carol Koterski, or Lew Vander Naald. "Well, get back to her and find out appear on the campus on Friday at 2 p.m. The day is Wednesday and the hour when they're going to do it and we'll is approximately 8 p.m. The office is a The whole job is a kind of hell, a hell send Satch (one of our photographers grotesque, chaotic combination of Roller in a very small place—the anchor office. with the likely last name of Page) to get Derby with Angstadt on his layout chair Each member of the staff is racing to beat ff Were it left to me to decide whether we should a pix." and the tuberculosis ward of a hospital a deadline, and when it isn't made the fires "Did you guys notice that fraternity ernment without newspapers or newspapers withoui and ire grow hotter and stronger in that with Arwady throwing coughing fits. This very small place. rush is down this semester over last year? is the night when the paper is "put to bed" merit, I should not hesitate to prefer the latter. Maybe there's a story there. Perhaps it's but the editors rarely are. Their work be- The only security of all is in a free press. because the students who come to Hope gins at 7 or 8 in the evening and ends Making the Story List aren't interested in fraternities any more. sometime around 4 a.m. "1 bet it's because they're all ineligible. While the editors check the stories to — Tfiorrn The torment begins on Friday after- One of the R.A.s in Kollen told me that make sure that the articles are accurate, noon at 4 when the editorial board meets the guys on his wing really got low grades." readable, and complete, the photographers to prepare a story and picture list for "Well, let's try it. ..." are looking over negatives, printing pic- the next issue and look over the last week's Then as we survey the week before us, tures and contracting a mild case of hys- issue. At this meeting, unless in class or creating in our own minds the Platonic terical claustrophobia in that smallest and asleep in bed, are George Arwady, the ideal of that next issue, we begin making darkest place—the anchor office darkroom. managing editor; Tom Hildebrandt, the assignments. Most of the stories are farmed news editor; Pat Canfield, the feature edi- out to reporters, and the big stories, which tor; Dick Angstadt, the layout editor and will probably go page 1 or which require Wednesday Night Blast chief photographer, and 1. some extra work, are handled by one of Amidst complaints about the missed the board. Wednesday night is the worst stretch typo in the editorial and the two head- News editor Hilde writes notes to each for our band. Stories always seem to break of the reporters, explaining what the story on Wednesday afternoon, so that much is, what it involves, whom to see, and of the evening is spent adding to an al- then with a pessimistic sneer, he writes ready lilled story list or rewriting the story very firmly: "Deadline: 3 p.m., Tuesday." that begins:

m

. ..IV v .

MAYBE IF I . . .—See the man with the ruler and the scowl on his face. He is Dick Angstadt, the layout editor. He de- cides how the stories will fit on each WRITING IT UP—See the man at the typewriter with the scowl on his face. His name page. He is scowling because he has to is Glenn Looman. He is a reporter. He is writing up something that has happened on squeeze 800 inches of copy into 640 inches campus during the week. He is scowling because if he makes a mistake, the copyreaders of space. Sometimes he can't do it. will get angry. Isn't working on a newspaper fun? WHAT THE . . .?—See the two men with the icowlt m editor Tom Hildebrandt John if ashing Tom whal a

1 May 19, 1967 Hope College anchor Page 7 kly Hell in a Very Small Place

That talenled and lamed v irtuoso on layout sheets. In Zeeland the type is set tlu1 violin, Lawrence F. (ironknortseL will on a offset type-setting machine which ex- wield his bow tonight with the Hope Col- poses the letters on photographic paper. V lege Orchestra within the resounding walls The long galleys of type are cut apart V. of IHinnent Memorial Chapel." and pasted dow n on large sheets ot paper, provided they have been read, corrected rn and okayed by one of our hawkeye prool readers. Till' . CI L\( )S ol thescene ha.s somecomic Keith Van Koevering. Paul's brother, reliel. l-'or example, there was the fresh is another part ot the 1 amil\ dynasty w hie h man who dropped down to the offici.* and runs the Zeeland Record Co.. and he sets asked il we needed an editorial writer. 1 most ol the headlines and cutlines and informed him thai usually a fellow Marls editorial on the Imotxpe machine. This 1 as .i reporter and moves into editorial wri machine produces lead copy trom which ting Liter. His response: "Well, that's o- proofs are made and pasted into the p.iper. kay. I just wanted to know il you needed His favorite pasttime is writing letters to me." the editor on the linotype machine and then I here s always a couple pictures which tr\ ing to tit it into the paper w ithout some are laughed at lor various reasons and one seeing it. then duly tiled away in the "Moralit.\ " file Both Keith and Paul's ties with the or dubbed "Ogre of the Week." "Panda" anchor and Hope College are strong, tor Arwady has the all time record as the ogre they are alumni and have been printing the tor all weeks with a reign of some six paper for .it least six years. Kach has a months. master's degree in t\ pography and print ing from Carnegie Institute ol Technology and utilizes that knowledge each tall in Layout, Heads and Cutlines explaining to another new member ot the anchor staff how the paper is printed. At approximately II p.m. Angstadt Their brother in-law. Roger Heekman. starts the layout, and I tell him what slor photographs all the pictures and reduces ies ought to go on page one. what stor them to the size which they will have in TYPE-SETTING—See the man with a scowl on his face. He is linotype operator Keith ies ought to he featured, and which stories the paper. I report to Zeeland at 10:30 Van Koevering. He is preparing the linotype to set the editorial. He is scowling because have to go into the paper. A secondary a.m. and check in with the patriarch ot he does not like the editorial. He will also s<'t a letter to the editor about it. He won't category are the stories that "would be the operation there. CorrieVan Koevering. be the only one! nice" but don't have to run. who is editor ol the Record and Paul and Mis job is to lit more than 800 inches Keith's lather. of copy, pictures, ads. headlines, and cut- Alter raising rhetorically the (inestion that goes into details. The proofreader The joys of the day in Zeeland are lines into ()4() inches of the paper. The ads ot why newspaper work is so hectic, he corrects "judgement" to read "Judgment manifold and profound. Kither the stor- are furnished dutifully each week by Hob counsels me with the admonition that il I and "theatre" to read "theater." When 1 ies are too short or too long or an article Schroeder, who sells the gullible merchants don't like to work. I shouldn't be in the leave, I must make sure that all the head- isn't set or a tremendous front page story of Holland an ad twice the size they really work. ()n the morning alter the night before. lines are in place, articles are not pasted breaks on Thursday morning or the small need. Advertising takes up approximately I'm always slightly inclined to agree with into the page out of order or crookedly, place has simply been transported 10 miles with us, and I work with the feeling of 100 inches each week, and Angstadt sits him. and with the final okay the pages are w ith ruler and pencil and plent\'of layout photographed. impending disaster. sheets and tries to fit the stories in some- The negatives of the pages are used Kventually the paper is ready to go Attention to Details to press, and the proof readers and I where. to make offset plates which are charged When he finishes a page and selects a with electric current in such a way that leave for the campus and the bliss of type face for each headline. .lim Pohl and The day in Zeeland is like Wednesday when the plate, paper, and ink meet, it realizing that it is finished. t. He is the Arwady take over and begin the headline night in the tremendous amount ol energy produces greys, whites, and blacks. The paper writing. Hilde writes cutlines for .ill the pictures while I read all the cop\read articles and discover that they haven t O \ FRIDAY MORMNC. the anchor been copy read. is printed, folded, and trimmed, and barring Some major crisis usually occurs about a catastrophic breakdown of the press, 2:30 a.m. Kither we don't have a story the paper is in the lobby of Van Raalte which we absolutely must have or a story before '1 p.m. There students swarm to is woefully incomplete or we lose a story pick up their own copies ol the anchor, or Angstadt runs out ol cigarettes. lUit and if there is any tribute to the work of the slowly the anchor goes to press. 30 to 4(1 students who spend at least 200 hours in preparing each week's issue, it is Joy in the Morning that Friday two o'clock traffic jam.

pave .i gov- The joys ol those earh morning hours are few: the honor ol picking the Peanuts The Reincarnation of Hell a ''ovcrn- cartoon lor the week. Muck Menning bring- For two hours the entire stall exists ing down his contribution to the lighter in limbo, but at 4 p.m. the same crew >ide of the anchor, telling stories, or w a tell- assembles in that very small place again ing the sun come up. And tinally. with the for another shot at that next issue. The last of the stories about the "netmen. hell begins again, with new stories, new- ]c "'rrson "hoopsters." anil "silksters" is put in place pictures. new work, and with the same and crow ned w ith a head, the weary crew goal: to bring the complete news, written staggers out of the otlice through that clearly and displayed attractively, to you. eorridor ol darknes> between Van Kaalte l-'or tho>e two bright, shining hours on and the Chapel, illuminated only l)> the Friday between two and four, it is Came- li^ht in the otlice ot Western seminary. lot; and then it's back to the salt mines As we part, we yawn. sa> -atirically. m again. "^-re you m chapel, and probe thesadisin He it masochism, a Freudian death u! the mind that started classes al 8:30 wish, or rebellion from a kind ot • 1 . I I I. Kierkegaardian parental authority, welike Al 7:3(1 a.m. Paul Van Koevermg Irom it here, even in this hell in this very small tiie /eeland Record visits the scene ot the place. night that was and picks up the cop; and

SHOOTING THE PIXKS—See the man with the scowl on his face. That is Roi? Beekman operating the offset camera. He is reproducing Muck Menning's cartoon. He is scowling because he does not think the cartoon is funny. Who asked him. anyway? $

ff The lowest depth to whieh people ran sink before God is defined hv the word ' |t)m nalist.' ... 11 1 were a lather and had a daughter w ho was seduced, 1 should not despair ovei hei, 1 would hope lot her sahation. l>u( it 1 had a son who became a jou ma list and (ontinued to remain one lor five vears. 1 would oive him up.

—Snrcti Kierkegaard

MAKING PRINTS—See the man in the darkroom. He is Don Page, the photog- rapher. He is enlarging pictures. He is the only one who is not scowling. This is because he goes to bed before dawn on Wednesday nights. About 4 a.m. the facet. They are (L to r.) editor John Mulder and news editor wishes he were a photographer. U all about Tom doesn't know. Page 8 Hope College anchor May 19. 1967 How Much Freedom? Hope Committed to In Loco Parentis

Editor's note: This is the second of two placed the Hope College agreement be- crticles written by Bruce Ronda dealing with tween student and college under the con- the issue of college authority based on in tract theory. Matriculation means accep- loco parentis. tance of the rules, and this much is By Bruce Ronda acceptable to even the most vocal critics of in loco parentis. But contract also im- anchor Editorial Assistant plies equal bargaining power, and, if the The Mope College admimsiration posi- analogy to labor-management is pursued, tion on in loco parentis is by no means the presence of an indifferent third party unified. While Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, Pre- to adjudicate disputes. Finally, contract im- sident of the College, Henry Steffens, plies that the agreement cannot be changed Treasurer and Vice President, and Acade- without the consent of all the agreeing mic Dean William Mathis all agreed that parties. the school does stand in loco parentis, a position especially useful when a student II is in legal difficulty, there was some Obviously the question of in loco par- disagreement over further extensions entis has become a legal one. The court of the policy. cases dealing with in loco parentis have dealt, in the main, with state colleges and WHILE DR, VANDERWERF and Mr. universities. In a 1902 ruling, Goldstein Steffens noted the need for rules to aid V" York University, the court ruled in the maturing process, Dr. Mathis pro- that " I he relationship existing between posed that rules themselves are the worst a university and a matriculated student way of encouraging maturity. The Acade- thereof is contractual." This was further mic Dean further suggested that the ques- clarified in the 1913 case of Gott v. Berea tioning of rules is educative, and never College: the rules themselves, although they may act as catalysts in the attack. "COLLEGE AUTHORITIES stand in loco parentis concerning the physical and moral welfare and mental training of the pupils, and we are unable to see why to that end they may not make any rules or regulations for the government or better- ment of their pupils that a parent could NEW PRIVILEGE—Students are pictured enjoying a dance in the Julianna Room. A for the same purpose. . . .The courts are long-standing rule prohibiting student dancing was modified in 1952 to permit off-campus not disposed to interfere, unless the rules dancing supervised by the college and was aboUshed in 1%3, as evidenced by the Student and aims are unlawful, or against public policy." Life Committee proposal for dancing in the temporary student union. The years following the early 1900^ and Social Freedom." reflects a new stu- the freedom it grants faculty and students saw a refinement of in loco parentis court dent interest in becoming a part of the rule- is a part of the necessary climate of learn- rulings. In Ingersoll v. Clapp (1928) the making activity: ing. . . .? Institutions will have to recog- court observed: ". . . The enforcement "In so far as the doctrine (of in loco nize that more and more, they must achieve of the disciplinary rules of the state uni- parentis) removes responsibility for per- their goals through consensus rather than versities is committed to the officials there- sonal decision-making from the individual fiat." The American Civil Liberties Union of, and unless they are palpably unrea- student, it weakens and distorts a signifi- echoes Kauffman in saying: "We cannot sonable or in enforcing them they act cant phase of the educational process. The arbitrarily, courts will not inferfere." wrap the student in cotton wool to protect unexamined acceptance of authority which him against the hazards of freedom and Civil Rights activities by college stu- is often appropriate to the child-parent at the same time habituate him to the mak- dents compelled the courts to rule in 1961 relationship must be replaced by the en- ing of intelligent choices among policies." ( Knight v. Board of Education) that: ". . . couragement of a critical and dialectical The consensus among student organi- the authorities uniformly recognize that relationship between the student and his zations and professionals points toward a the governmental power in respect to mat- community. The range of inquiry within replacing of the traditional in loco parentis ters of student discipline in public schools or beyond the classroom must not be re- with an incorporation of all elements of is not unlimited and that disciplinary rules stricted out of paternal considerations but the academic community in its decision- must not only be fair and reasonable but must be opened out of educational ones. . . making activities. Ideally, the university they also must be applied in a fair and paternalism induces or reinforces immatur- reasonable manner." is composed of a number of scholars, ity, conformity and disinterest among those all of them teachers and students to vary- Does a different relationship exist be- whose imagination, critical talent and capa- ing degrees. tween a student and a private institution cities for integrity and growth should be than that which exists between a student encouraged." (p.42) and a public college or university? While THE TENSION AND CONFLICT Hope College, according to Henry Stef- implicit in such equality is far preferable PROFESSIONAL EDUCATORS and fens, has never been involved in litiga- to the apparent harmony of government other organizations as well as students tion with any of its students, the following by in loco parentis fiat. As Dr. Mathis have called for a reexamination of in loco statement by Michael Johnson in Texas has pointed out, such harmony, such fa- BRUCE RONDA parentis. Dr. Joseph Kauffman asks: "Is Law Review is relevant to the problem: cile solutions to our difficulties means a it now time for colleges and universities All three agreed that the constituency loss of freedom to someone; real freedom to remind legislators and benefactors that of the college (townspeople, church mem- "THE EDUCATION OF A substan- in academia is synonymous with conflict. bers, parents of students, and alumni) tial portion of our public is surely not play a large role in the maintainence of an essentially private function even when a complex and extensive set of rules, but it is conducted by privately owned and Dr. Mathis said that all we (the college operated universities. The federal govern- community) really owe our constituency is ment has recognized the importance to the responsibility of setting people free the public of the role played by these in- from stifling legalism and intellectual stitutions by extendingsubstantial amounts stagnation. in form of financial aid and scholarships Mr. Swan's Song Ideally, the administrators noted, the to persons attending them. By analogy to rules under which a student places him- the development in other areas where the self upon agreeing to attend the college services in question were impressed with should be determined by a continuing a deep public interest, it is entirely possible By Gordy Korstange three way administrator, faculty, student that the activities of private colleges and uni- conversation, but Dr. Mathis pointed out Bam! The rubber stamp slaps "Grad- versities will be held to fall within the but at Hope we try for a fresh view of that in reality both regulations and acad- limits of the P'ourteenth Amendment." uated" on your forehead, and as you ride Christian life. Don't you agree?" emic freedom on campus are determined (XL 11, 1964; 350) off into the sunset your eyes turn once Quickly, quickly, the time draws near. through a series of compromises and eva- again to the white beaches and friendly This position is further clarified and Has the river risen yet? Will the freshmen sions between college and constituency. made more specific by Dr. Kenneth Mar- Dutch girls who have made your visit so pull the win? Two squirrels are chasing pleasant. cus, writing in the Illinois State Univer- each other in the Pine Grove. How com- PERHAPS THE MOST REVEALING sity Vidette: !• our years in a cocoon! Colleges, towns fortable to perch on the railing when no- statement of college policy concerning the "The First Amendment of the U. S. and minds can all be cocoons. Life itself agreement made between student and Hope one is around and reflect on what these Constitution made applicable to the states may be a cocoon from which a butterfly buildings mean. College can be seen in the letter sent to through the Fourteenth Amendment does may or may not be born. Flying is dan- HAVE WE TURNED IDEAS into a some of the Chapel Slip Retainers who not grant freedom of speech, assembly, gerous. paying form of tourism? All these people were protesting compulsory chapel this religion and press just to adult American After that brilliant metaphor you pro- from the Fast, why do they come here? semester. In part, the letter reads as follows: citizens. It grants these freedoms to all bably think I m going to launch into senti- "You are aware that Hope College The tinkle of a harpsichord from the room persons. What the Constitution grants to mental memories of life and times at an next door. is an independent college, a community the people, the college administration can- institution of higher learning "We are gathered here in the Kletz with which individuals of their own voli- not take away." "THEN THERE WAS THE TIME today to celebrate that immortal American tion associate themselves. The College as they put the row boat in the old Opus rite, the coffee hour, and do you think the an entity has the responsibility for esta- THE OATH TO SUPPORT this Con office; and time Bryce went swimming in blishing its purposes, procedures, rules, stitutional heritage, Dr. Marcus says, "is Administration is your parent while you the nude at Kollen Park, 4 a.m.; and that sip votre cafe?" and regulations for stating these clearly violated everytime an administrator tells certain professor with baggy clothes who My mommy went here and daddy too, for the perusal of those interested in affil- a college newspaper editor he cannot pub- always looks despondent; and the New and my teachers also, and I know almost iating with the College. . . . lish an item because it is controversial. Year's eve we did the town, the day we all of them and they're very nice'people. "A student who registers at Hope Col- It is violated everytime a key is turned tore the goal posts down. ..." The winter snows really pile up around lege voluntarily commits himself to the in a dormitory room without consent and That kind of "moments to remember" this area makes for red cheeks and mit- legal and moral commitments of the Col- the room is searched without warrant. It thing is not antithetical to my present tens. What shall we do this weekend be- lege. In short, the student and the College is violated everytime students are told state of mind, but I rejected it, deciding sides listen to the alma mater which often enter into an agreement that the College they cannot assemble to petition for re- that Hope relies too much on the past will fulfill its responsibilities and that the dress of grievances." (Nov. 7, 1963) already—the great paradox. lumps in my throat but not in my mind. I wonder who lives in the tower above student will expect the College to do so. . The Moon is a clown, the Moon is a Nullifying the agreement that the student m clown, the choir of the chapel—better there than in Kollen Hall. It was a good lecture be a part of the College community, its What these conflicting perspectives Walking the baby upside down. but not a great lecteur, and with a little policies, procedures, rules and regulations, point to is essentially a crisis in values. Better get moving if I'm going to make work. . .Four years I've walked this side- can only mean that the student is no longer As pointed out at the beginning of this chaps—they'll close those big, thick walk, every crack is a chasm. No. Yes. a part of the College community, that he study, in loco parentis was feasible as doors. . .The campus is very beautiful is. operating outside the sphere of those long as the presuppositions of the entire Arrested! You can't take me but I want today, perhaps because of the sunlight to go. things that make for community. . college community remained homogen- and the crispness of the air. Too cold for eous, as long as students remained willing the beach. THE LIGHTS GO ON as the shadow ACCORDING TO AN ARTICLE in to stay outside the decision-making activi- on the chapel lengthens. The sidewalk "Our older universities still painfully Moderator magazine, February, 1962, the from Graves to Van Raalte is empty and ties of the university structure. But a Policy try to extract from art some shadow of rationale developed in the preceding letter from a distance a sound is heard, the Declaration of USNSA, "Student Conduct justification for their own way of life. sound of a string breaking, dying away.

L V

May 19, 1997 Hope College anchor Page 9 Poetr Opus Works Sucre

Editor's note; This year's Opus the pathetic fallacy (which pre- is reviewed by Dr. Stanley Wiers- sents the poet's own mood reflected ma, professor of English at Calvin in nature: the moon seemed to College. Dr. Wiersma is an alum- turn to blood while I lay beside nus of Calvin and received his the wreck, wounded) and apocal- Ph.D. from the University of Wis- yptic imagery (which presents consin. what the Bible says will happen By Dr. Stanley Wiersma at the end of time: the moon, for These were my instructions from one thing, will turn to blood). "critiques" editor John Cox: . . Part I of "Violence" annoyed we'd like to see a discussion ori- me at first because of the pathetic ented to the pieces themselves ra- fallacies: the rainwater and eggs ther than an essay which concen- are amazed, the pavement experi- trates a great deal on its own ences anguish, the grass registers integrity." I have taken him shock and outrage. literally. Part I struck me as sentimental. Peg Welmer's poem on the un- Then in Part II the imagery turn- tapped subconscious ("Some- ed apocalyptic for me: stones where Deep in dreaming minds") speak at a final judgment as pas- has a delicate, mysterious tone sion and terror dissolve. In memo- that charmed me, until I discover- ry, even the images of Part I ed that her poem on giving and turned hard and apocalyptic as receiving ("Far, half-remember- soon as I got to Part II. When ed") has not only the same deli- reality comes apart at the final cate, mysterious tone, but also judgment, eggs and rainwater the same color imagery and the. may well be amazed, pavement same vaguely sentimental moral. may well experience anguish, and The moral: "happiness for two grass may well register shock and worlds" in the first and in the outrage. In the light of Park II second "Where a gift is received/ and its apocalyptic violence, the When Finian sleeps, the peacock by Anne De Velder. It is the most memory of her father and mother, which is part of the giver." Miss sentimental imagery of Part I is sings and preens. The strategy of ambitious piece because it the first glimpse we get of them Welmers obviously must work at metamorphosed into a minor apo- the whole poem is sure, and there attempts a short story with a child (p. 29), contains no hint that expanding her range. Even in calypse. is no waste image in it. at the center of consciousness. The the father is dead. She would not fantasy, one's manner must not The single sustained image in opening child's chant, the hair- have forgotten, surely, or if she THAT STRATEGY, planned or become a mannerism. "A Negro Mother's Prayer" balls in the stomach, the imagined has, such forgetting should be accidental, is good. The reader makes it Alan Jone's best poem. Mister are all the kind of detail made credible. When we are told BRUCE RONDA'S poem "Do begins thinking of civil rights as a The excessive alliteration in the that I wish I could think of— and later that the father is dead, that You Remember When" has a firm sentimental cliche. He meets an first stanza of "Annunciation," then handle as well as Miss De fact seems to contradict this mem- narrative structure: a riot takes apocalypse in Part II. In the light the verbal cuteness of the third Velder. ory. The story needs at least an- over a city. The tone is well- of it, he modifies his sentimental stanza ("graced fullfingers," It is the most exasperating piece other rewriting. sustained fantasy (children are response to Part I. Perhaps the "temble"), and the uncontrolled in the book because of its many I hesitate to bring up Jane Bou- the rioters), and the image for strategy would be helped by a Freudianism of the last mar a adjectives ("littleballedfist,""soft man's "Absurd." If the chair is morning is the most inventive title which does not give the poem poem which is salvagable. mellow thud," and "frustrated hy- an unresponsive male, and if the image in the book: "day light away and by a brief Part III, "PRAYER AT the Font" suf- sterical wail"), because of its lack breast stroke is what I think it is, knocked submissive on potted ger- made up of images of Part I, fers from triteness ("awesome of focus and because of its vacil- and if Granny is the old morality, aniums." forcing the reader to reinterpret shudder") and from more thea- lating center of consciousness. I like the poem for its cleverness. My only objection to that image them as only apparent pathetic trics than so slight a poem can Even the imaginative little girl BECAUSE COX instructed me is that it does not relate to any fallacies, and giving the poem a bear. More than anyone in the would not think that her mother's as he did, these are my rough other idea or image in the poem. satisfying A-B-A structure. book, however, Jones is inven- speeches were "gnats ofthought," notes for a review. Like many It does not work. In fact, the poem Ronda's "A Birthday Verse" : tive and skillful with images. His or thatherfather"interposed (odd pieces n Opus and Loci (the lit- has no structure of images at all, has an unconfused structure, al- major weaknesses are verbal and Latinate word) grunts of indif- erary magazine of my school), and hence there is no principle though it exploits confused sea- technical. ference," or that her "paramount" these rough notes would have im- for including or excluding any sons, confused images and con- I find Richard Boese's " Rain- attention was engaged. If the cen- proved with rewriting. Just as I image: volcano, tide, ant-hill, war, fused identities. His "A Sequel" drops" as tediously opaque as I ter of the story's consciousness find more to say because some knocking at doors, hide-and-seek, does not work at all. Why only find his "Upright Man" tediously were a lady of sixty with a Ph.D. pieces in Opus and Loci are not and floods (all seven images ex- three examples before Dedalus, obvious. Delwyn Sneller's sonnet in archaeology, paramount might rewritten often enough, so I hope traneous to the narrative) are and why those three? Why not "One Boy" is obvious too, but be the best word. you will find more to say about evoked in eight lines without any three others? Why not seven? Or interesting because of its abun- AT FIRST, outside of the home, my notes than if I had rewritten attempt to relate any of the images twenty-two? The poem suffers dance of concrete detail. Gordon the child seems unhappy because them. I hope that the chief thing to each other or to anything else from the same ailment as "Re- Korstange's attempt at pastoral both parents ignore her. Later, you miss in this non-review is in the poem. There are enough member": it has no plan. is no more than an exercise. Greg architecture—deliberately missing images in this one poem for Ron- inside the home, the child is un- I FOUND Ronda's" Finian and Phillips' "Gastropoda" suffers because of instructions given me. da's first book. happy because her father has died •he Peacocks" the most satisfying from adjectivitis: "verdant and her mother is in grief. Grant- But like my own students who BECAUSE OF the loose ima- poem in the book. The peacock is breath," "mighty/Booming ed, her own inordinate grief and write in Loci, you who write in: gery in "Remember," I much pre- an academic abstraction as FMni- voice," "deep twisted catacombs," her mother's may be traced to a Opus must be reminded that with- fer Ronda's "On Violence Done to an muses at the beginning. As "thick green fathoms." neurotic family pattern even when out architecture—without deliber- Chicago Civil Rights Workers Finian approaches sleep, the pea- THE MOST exasperating and the father was alive, but then the ate order—not all the flair for Summer 1966." To explain why cock becomes a simultaneous most ambitious piece in the an- situation is far too complex to words and images will ever make I like it, I must distinguish between symbol of success and violence. thology is "They Can Wonder" explore in five pages. The child's your poems and stories whole. Two Faculty Members Honor Retiring Colleagues

tive obscurity in the late forties Teaching Skills Dr. Yntema Aided to its present level of effective- ness and recognition. He has Made Challenging In Establishing served with distinction in three areas — faculty leadership, re- By Helen Schoon Hope's Reputation search and teaching. FACULTY LEADERSHIP: By John Ver Beek By Kenneth Weller Never flamboyant but always in- Helen Haberland Schoon join- The year 1946 marked the end formed, never aggressive but al- ed the Hope College faculty in of a war and the beginning of a ways determined, he has given 1946 when her husband, the late new era for Hope College. Enroll- solidity and purpose to faculty Rev. Henry Schoon, became a ment tripled as men released by government. He has dominated member of the Hope College staff. the armed services and encour- no one but counseled many from IN 1948 Mrs. Schoon joined aged by the G.l. Bill of Rights the President and Vice President the education staff, and in 1949 descended on the campus in to the lowliest freshman. In the she was appointed Director of droves. presence of wild ideas he has the Reading Center. She has serv- Faced with the task of as- thrown the cold water of analy- ed in this dual capacity up to her sembling a faculty to teach these sis and a sure sense of the wel- retirement In fulfilling the goals students, the President recognized fare of the College, but in the of the Reading Center she has a great new interest in economics face of time-consuming discussion helped scores of college students and business. The appointment of and pedestrian thinking, his mind In developing both speed and com- a department chairman in this has often produced the new in- prehension in their reading habits. area was a crucial concern. sight, the fresh approach, the new As a member of the education DWIGHT B. Yntema seemed way to attack an old problem. When he spoke the faculty listened. staff she was able to apply her MRS. HELEN SCHOON a logical choice for the position. DR. DWIGHT B. YNTEMA keen insights in the area of read- An outstanuing student as an un- Research: At a time when faculty ing in preparing elementary teach- pitality. Her home on the lake dergraduate at Hope and in his research was rare at Hope Col- level courses, and finally into the ers, and challenged them with a has been the scene of many Stu- doctoral program at the Univer- lege, he pioneered in personal re- competitive world of graduate comprehensive and thorough dent Education Association and sity of Michigan, he had distin- search on taxes and in directing school and the market place, he study of the field. faculty gatherings. guished himself as a professional a major study of unemployment is increasingly aware that he has A firm believer in the theory She is an ardent traveler, hav- economist in Washington. compensation which was request- studied under a great teacher. that learning must be an inte- ing visited many countries in He knew and understood the ed by the Michigan Senate and fi- It has been said that the ac- grating experience through tech- Europe and Asia. As an excellent constituency and the objectives nanced by the Merrill Foundation. curate appraisal of teaching takes niques such as unit teaching, she photographer, she has an exten- of Hope College. His father had TEACHING: In contrast with place at alumni meetings, not in has many disciples in the public sive slide library of her many served as a professor of science teachers with whom continued ex- freshmen dormitories. On this school classrooms of this gene- tours. As she enters retirement at Hope for many years and his posure creates disenchantment, score Dwight Yntema scores well. ration who are highly regarded with her sister, also retiring this brothers and sister were highly his relationship with students is He is remembered by thousands in the teaching profession. She year, we can anticipate that more respected members of the alumni. characterized by a constantly of alumni with gratitude and af- was able to combine a personal travel will be in store. The wisdom of that decision two growing appreciation for high fection. His active teaching may interest in her students with a We pay tribute to the dedicated decades ago is obvious today. quality scholarship and the value be concluded, but his influence challenge to them to become teach- service Mrs. Schoon has rendered Dr. Yntema has played a key of education. As the student and his reputation will continue ers with proficiency and skill. through Hope College for these role in bringing the College proceeds through the mysteries to grow wherever his students MRS. SCHOON excells in hos- many years. through the perilous years of rela- of sophomore economics, upper may be found. Page 10 Hope College anchor May 19, 1967 jSf..N..s...... vs 1 i Review of the News 1 'Valley' Called 'Dated' Washington hero here, and was carried Bach More Timely Than Weil Two incidents involving U.S. about Lima on the shoulders and Soviet warships heightened of friendly Peruvians. Though incongruity and plati- tensions between the two coun- By John Cox Dr. Hill go a long way toward proving that dates mean little, tudes mark the Weil production, tries. Florida The music and drama depart- however, when one is dealing with they are not sufficient to spoil Last Wednesday, a Soviet de- Conservation officials say ments are cooperating this week genius. Whatever Kurt Weil's tal- the pieces by J. S. Bach and Wil- stroyer, the Besslednyi, scraped that for more than three months in a venture at Holland High. ents may have been, "Down in liam Boyce which precede the against the U.S. destroyer southern Florida, including the It includes a presentation of Kurt the Valley" is not the product of musical. In all its fragile perfec- Walker, which was on maneuv- 1.4 million acres of the Ever- Weil's opera, "Down in the Val- genius. tion the harpsichord concert alone ers in the Sea of Japan. The glades National Park, has had ley," which is preceded by a pro- Tom Griffen's fine tenor and makes the evening worthwhile. next day the Walker was struck no rain. As a result, Florida's gram of chamber music played Andrea Martin's prim comple- again by another destroyer famed wildlife refuge may be by the symphonette. ment certainly give the tip to our from the Soviet Union. faced with extinction. At this point it appears to It is perhaps unfortunate that musicians when the total evening observers that these incidents what we associate today with Bir- is considered. Harvey Lucas leads were designed to underline California mingham jail provides a rather the chorus with a sufficiently warnings to the U.S. about After nearly four months in bitter contrast with pastel skirts resonant baritone to provide a the Vietnam situation office, California Governor on poor white southern belles — better contrast with the orchestra Ronald Reagan rates a higher Selective Service figures show to say nothing of the unadulterat- than does most of the dialogue score in the all-California poll that draft violations are in- ed version of "Roses Are Red." which too often cannot be heard. on the way he is handling his creasing as a form of protest I had forgotten that the ditty ever Dirk Walvoord deserves recogni- job than his predecessor ever against the war but have not really ended with anything but a tion for exceptional projection. achieved. reached the Korean war level. kind of absurdist reasonableness THE SET, as always this year, A federal survey has listed the — something like "Coconuts are is appropriately designed and well top five most air-polluted cities France brown; bananas are yellow." The executed. But its light, suggestive in the country listed in alpha- Great Britain's hopes for original was shockingly nice. quality cannot counteract a betical order: Chicago, Cleve- gaining admittance to the Com- "Down in the Valley" is, in short, certain monumentality in the act- land, Los Angeles-Long Beach, mon Market were shaken by dated; like red ruby lipstick and ing. The chorus is particularly New York, Philadelphia. French President Charles De full, starched crinolines. static and one is glad to see that Gaulle's statement that British HARPSICHORDS ARE dated its members can indeed move Peru support of United States policy •y too, of course — and so is Bach. when they do a neatly choreo- Former Vice President Rich- in Vietnam may lead to the The symphonette, Mr. Tallis and graphed square dance. ard Nixon was greeted as a denial of a request for entrance. Theater Group Offers Three German One-Act Plays Today

Three one-act plays will be pre- Members of the cast for " In der sented today by the Hope Col- Gondel" are Phyllis Peacock, Lin- lege German Theater Group at da Deurwaarder, Susan Van 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the Little Koevering and Linda Weessies. Theatre. Give our used VWs Cast members in "Anatol, The three contemporary plays Weihnachtseinkauge" are Margo o good inspection. to be presented will be "In der Naber and David Duitsman. WHERE CAN IT BE?—-Tom We did. Gondel" by Hans Bender, Deanna Gross, Barbara Kollen Griffen portrays Brack Weaver "Anatol, Weihnachtseinkaufe" by and Susan Achterhof will present in Hope's presentation of "Down Arthur Schnitzler and "Die "Die Rache." In the Valley". Rache" by Kurt Goetz. Director of movements for the plays is Menno Kraai. The pro- duction staff includes Mark Men- Annual Honors Assembly WILLARD MOTORS ning, stage manager; Virginia 23 West 7th Street Hager, lighting; Pat Canfield, cos- tumes; Judith Lindauer, makeup; Holland Phone 396-3525 Will Be Tuesday Morning Brian Gibson, properties and Pa- tricia Wood, publicity. The annual Honors Assembly essays on foreign missions; the will be held next Tuesday at 10:30 Peter Bol Award will go to the a.m. in Dimnent Memorial upperclass student who has made Chapel. signal contributions in counsel- Scripture will be read and an ing underclass students and who anthem will be sung by the Cha- gives promise of a career of ser- pel Choir. Dean of Academic Af- vice of youth. The William B. SUMMER JOBS fairs, Dr. William S. Mathis will Eerdman Poetry Prize and the then distribute special awards. Eerdman Prose Prize, the Metta Among these are the Patterson J. Ross History Prize, and the Rolf Memorial Prize in biology, the Italiaander Prizes for history or FOR STUDENTS A. A. Raven Prizes in oratory, political science will also be the Adelaide Prize in oratory and awarded. All of these are cash Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major the junior, sophomore and fresh- awards. corporation. Students 18 yrs. of age & over wanted to learn man Biblical prizes. The Sloan- New members of the honorary Stegeman Prizes will be given to fraternities on campus will also marketing, sales promotion, & brand identification techniques the two students writing the best be announced. during summer period. High level executive management training courses given to qualified applicants. Salary$105 Ton're under 25 per wk. for first 3 wks. $13U per wk. plus bonuses starting bat yon drive like an expert. 4th week. Why should YOU have to pay HIGH PAY SCHOLARSHIPS extra for your car Insurance? earn at least $1,500 for the win one of 15 $1,000 summer student — make Sentry says you may not have to. Sentry's scholarships $3,000 and more. own Preferred Young Driver program may save you up to $50 or more. All you do is fill out a simple questionnaire to find out if you qualify. It's not a test of driving TRAVEL SEE EUROPE skill. And . . . there's no penalty for young men who do not qualify. Work anywhere in U.S. or Win all expense paid holi- Here's your opportunity. Kenneth J. Etter- beek invites you to attend one of these Canada. Qualified students day in Europefor an entire sessions: may work overseas. week. SMtry Insurance Preferred Yeong Driver Programs Best Positions Going Fast! to be held Call Today For Appointment ' Wednesday, May 24 3 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. 9:00 A.M. — 1:00 P.M. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. & IND. ... Mr. Schmitt . . . A.C. 616 459-5079 VR-304 MILWAUKEE, WIS. A IOWA Mr. Bergman A.C. 414 276-4119 CHICAGO LOOP & SO. ILL Mr. Vass A.C. 312 346-6108 CHICAGO LOOP A NO. ILL Mr. Anderson A.C. 312 782-4362 rov

Wo have offices located in most cities, however, please contact our district offices listed above for an appointment. SENTRY. INSURANCE The Hardware Mutuals Organization Hope College anchor Page 11 Student Court in Review Dr. Weller Appointed Econ Dept. Chairman Rapport Developed With Deans By George Arwady Eenenaarp and the Assn. of The appointment of Dr. Ken- anchor Assistant Editor Women Students' Judicial Board. neth J. Weller as the new Chair- What has the Student Court been The Court eased the punishment man of the Department of Eco- doing this year? This query usual- on an appeal from Sharon Dyk- nomics and Business Administra- ly engenders a blank stare from stra, ruling that her disobedience tion at Hope College was an- Hope College students. of signout procedure was a "pro- nounced by Dr. William Mathis, ONE OF THE LEAST known cedural offense" which had been Dean of Academic Affairs. but most important organs of the punished beyond the scope called The appointment is effective with College's student government, the for in the AWS Handbook. the start of the 1967-68 academic Student Court has dealt with a Another controversial case in- year. Dr. Weller will succeed Dr. variety of cases during the f volved the procedure for appeal- Dwight B. Yntema who is retir- 1966-67 school year. Under the ing decisions of the Student Court. ing at the end of the present school leadership of Chief Justice Jim The system this year gave appel- year. Dr. Yntema has been a mem- Klein it has avoided the jurisdic- late jurisdiction to the Nexus Com- ber of the Hope College faculty tional disputes which made it a mittee, a high echelon student- since 1946. source of controversy last year faculty committee chaired by the and developed a better liason with College President. Two cases were Dr. Weller has been a member the Deans. appealed to the Nexus Committee. of the Hope College faculty since According to the Senate consti- In one, the decision of the court 1949. tution, "The Court shall have was upheld, in the other a Nexus He received his A. B. degree from original jurisdiction and penalty vote resulted in a deadlock, the Hope College in 1948 and was levying powers in all matters per- matter was referred back to the awarded his M.B.A. degree from taining to the regulation of student Student Court and the Court re- the School of Business at the Un- ethics and discipline at Hope affirmed its original decision. College." iversity of Michigan in 1949. THE LATTER CASE high DR. KENNETH WELLER IN CONJUNCTION WITH CHIEF JUSTICE JIM KLEIN lighted the difficulty of the appeal Dr. Weller received a Danforth was the recipient of a Ford Foun- these powers, the court has Another case drew an acquittal system working through the Crant for doctoral study in 1955, dation grant for study in 1957-58. handled 16 cases thus far this when the driver of a car dis- Nexus Committee. In the new Stu- was awarded a Rackham Pre- He received his Ph.D. degree year. Twenty-nine students were claimed ownership or even know- dent Senate Constitution, appel- doctoral Fellowship from the Un- from the University of Michigan involved in these cases, nine of ledge of the beer cans discovered late jurisdiction passes to a com- iversity of Michigan in 1956 and in 1961. which involved drinking. Themis- mittee of the three Deans: Dr. use of meal tickets in three cases, under his car while he was park- ed on a date in a wooded area. William Mathis, Mr. Robert De two cases of theft, and two appeal Young, and Mrs. Isla Van Ee- cases comprised the rest of the In the cases when the court Nine Faculty Members Given nenaam. court's docket during the year. ruled the defendent guilty, thecor- The problem of jurisdiction in In addition to the Chief Justice, rective measures levied by the disciplinary cases which confront- six juniors and seniors served court varied. The majority of pun- ed the court last year has been Summer Study, Research Grants on the court this year: Dick Shiels, ishments placed the offender on solved by a "gentleman's agree- Brad Race, Dennis Farmer, Bill social probation. In one case, A grant has been awarded to ment" between the Court and the Nine Hope College faculty mem- Mills, Ruth Zieman and Jan Kem- students were suspended from Dr. Allen Brady, assistant pro- school for a week. Other penal- Dean of Men. Klein and Dean De bers have been awarded summer mink. fessor of biology, to continue re- Young discussed every problem grants for study and research pro- In all but two of the court's ties exacted were fines, work as- search on the spider family as it arose and determined whether jects. cases this year, the defendents signments around campus, and Dr. Anthony Kooiker, professor Oxyopidae and a complete mono- the Court should deal with it. pleaded guilty. In the two the writing of papers. of Music, has been awarded the The Chief Justice said, however, graphic revision of the genus instances when the defendent THE PUNIhHMh.ivrS meted $1,000 Simon Den Uyl Award. that a "more stringent policy" Hamataliwa. claimed innocence, the court out, however, were designed as Dr. Kooiker will study piano and concerning which incidents should agreed and acquitted the student. much as possible to apply to the become matters of Student Court piano literature with Frank Mann- DR. DAVID MARKER, assis- THE COURT ACQUITTED a individual case at hand. Justice concern was desirable. heimer at the University of Min- tant professor of physics, has been girl on drinking charges because Shiels pointed out that the court nesota. awarded a grant for the continu- of a lack of evidence. She had was "not concerned simply with KLEIN SAID that two pro- JUDITH WHREN, instructor ation of the work done for his had alcohol on her breath, but punishing, but taking corrective blems which faced the Court this in German, has received a grant doctoral dissertation on the cal- explained that the peculiar aroma measures that make the student year were the prompt handling of for independent study in Southern culation of proton-protonbrems- was picked up osculating her es- think." With this thought, offen- cases as they came up and the Germany, Salzburg and Vienna. strahlung cross sections. cort, who is over 21. ders who had expressed distrust follow-up on a punishment to see The .lulia Reimold Award has of the police were assigned to work that it is enforced. The Court took been awarded to Dirk Jellema, with policemen and others who steps to improve enforcement instructor in English. He plans Synod Meets in June demonstratea resentment against through enlisting the cooperation to complete a novella, revise and the College and Administration of residents and advisors. rewrite four short stories, outline were made to work in the Dean's One of the Court accomplish- and organize a novel and write office. ments this year was a move to- a synopsis of a project novel. To View Church Merger Chief Justice Klein pointed out ward the creation of flexible Dr. Ezra Gearhart, professor The Reformed Church Synod the three Reformed Church col- that the factor that made some guidelines in the handling of pun- of German and chairman of the will meet this June in Briston, leges, if approved, will call for cases difficult was the desire to ishment for certain offenses. The German Department, has been Tenn., in order to discuss the the schools to seek to "inspire "do two things at once — be court created several precedents awarded a grant for independent proposed merger of the R.C.A. their students to a life of contem- fairly consistent in meting out to guide its successors. A fine of study and travel in Europe. with the Southern Presbyterian plation and self-giving" and en- punishments and do justice to $25 was levied for misuse of Sla- DR, ARTHUR H. Jentz, Jr., Church and other pressing issues. dow their education in the liberal each individual case." Klein noted ter meal tickets. Another prece- assistant professor of religion and The Southern Presyberians will arts with "a mature understand- that social probation can mean dent, stemming from the case Bible, has received a grant to be meeting during the same week ing of the sources and resources a great deal to one student and which resulted in a deadlocked study aesthetics and musicology in Briston, and the Synod will of the Christian heritage." virtually nothing to another. He Nexus Committee, holds that a at the University of Michigan. meet with their General Congress proposes that the term of "social student over 21 who is caught Charles Aschbrenner, assistant on several occasions. The merger IN THE COVENANT, the pro" be done away with next drinking with minors is subject professor in music, has been proposal was made several years Church will promise to give its year and leave it up to the court to college discipline as responsi- awarded a grant to study piano ago by members of both denom- "whole-hearted interest, favor and to "spell out what a student can ble for the others' actions. with Stanley Fletcher at the I ni- inations. financial support" to Hope, Cen- and cannot do." SHIELS POINTED OUT that versity of Illinois. THE SOUTHERN Presbyter- tral and Northwestern Colleges. THE "MOST EXCITING" case students often are in "double jeo- ian Church is a denomination of The covenant will also assure the of the year, according to Shiels, pardy" with the local police and approximately one million mem- schools "full freedom to pursue was the Student Court's reversal the College. Six of the cases in- Classes Choose bers who broke away from the all truth." of a decision of punishment pass- volved the police during the past United Presbyterian Church dur- Another proposal which may ed by Dean of Women Isla Van year. Next Year's ing the Civil War. Their doctrines come before the Synod is being are similar to those of the Re- worked on by a Reorganization Officers formed Church. of Structure committee headed by- Elections for the class offices Another topic scheduled to be Max DePree. This committee is of vice president, secretary and discussed at the Synod meeting considering a revision of the num- treasurer for 1967-68 were held BAY VIEW SIMMER COLLEGE will be a proposed "Covenant ber of members on the Boards last week. The results of this and of Mutual Responsibilities." This of Trustees of the Reformed of the previous presidential con- agreement between the R.C.A. and Church Colleges, including Hope. Education Recreation tests are as follows: senior class officers for next year are Bruce plus White, president; Richard Apple- ton, vice-president; Bernie Brunst- 1967 Session June 26-August 18 ing, secretary, and Al Kinney, treasurer. MODEL LAUNDRY Those elected to offices for next For Catalog and Information Write: year's junior class are: Ron Hook, president; Lad McQueen, vice-pre- LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING sident; Julie Morgan, secretary; Dr. Keith J. Fennimore, Dean and Jane Breckenridge, treasurer. Filling positions in the sopho- Daily Stop at All Dorms more class for next year are: Albion College Albion, Michigan Mark Vander Laan, president; Andy Mulder, vice-president; Mar- 97 East 8th Street Phone EX 1-3635 ilyn Jones, secretary; and Jim Bekkering, treasurer. AMBASSADOR J Styles In Accordance With The Tastes of Discriminating Young Men Shop Page It Hope College anchor May IS. 1967 10-1 Season Record Hope Sweeps Two From Adrian

Closing out the 1967 season in sent Krueger up to bat for Denny Krueger's game-winning blow. typical fashion, the MIAA cham- Farmer. The lefty-swinging junior Kroodsma gave up seven hits, pion Hope College hardballers drilled the first pitch on a line struck out ten, and walked four took a pair from Adrian last into rightfield to send Pelon across en route to his fifth victory of the Saturday, 5 - 4 and 6 - 1. the plate with the winning run. year. His earned run average for The sweep gave the Flying HOPE OPENED the scoring in the season was an impressive Dutchmen a final league record the very first inning when Troost's 1.06. The Dutch batters collected of ten wins and one loss, for a single drove in Langeland, who nine hits, sparked by Troost's percentage of .910, highest ever had walked and moved to second three safeties. by a Hope baseball team. The on Pelon's hit. Scoring three times LEFTHANDER Gary P>ens .910 percentage was the best in in the second on hits by short- scattered six hits and fanned six the MIAA since 1957 when Alma, stop Harry Rumohr and pitcher as he pitched a 6 - 1 triumph in an eight-club circuit, finished Don Kroodsma and two costly in the nightcap. Frens and Adri- 13 - 1 for a .929 mark. Adrian errors, the Dutch moved an's Maugherman, who struck CHARLIE LANGELAND, out to a 4 - 0 lead. out ten and deserved a better hard-hitting Dutch third-sacker,, In their half of inning number fate, dueled each other through went 2 for 6 in Saturday's twin five, the Bulldogs pushed across five scoreless innings. Then in bill to end the season with a .459 two unearned runs, aided by the Hope half of the sixth, the batting average. Official league errors by Langeland and first- roof caved in for Adrian. statistics had not been released baseman Bruce Van Huis and a Dave Abel, leading off, topped as the anchor went to press, thus wild pitch. Adrian's Dickey scored a roller in front of the plate. leaving the MIAA batting champ his team's third run an inning Maugherman came in fast off the as yet uncrowned. later when he singled, stole se- mound, pounced on the ball and The hero of the first game was cond, moved to third when cat- fired it past the firstbaseman's pinch-hitter Dan Krueger. With cher Pelon threw the ball into out-stretched glove. The speedy the contest tied 4 - 4 in the last centerfield, and scored on pitcher Abel scampered all the way to WITH EASE—Mike Paliatsos breaks the tape to give Hope first place of the seventh, catcher Tom Pelon Anderson's hit. third as the ball rolled down the led off by reaching first on an in the mile relay. Two college records were broken as Hope defeated MAUGHERMAN of Adrian led rightfield line. Frens reached first error by Adrian shortstop Grand Rapids Junior College in the meet, 83-52. off the seventh with a free pass and safely on a fielder's choice while McPeek. Centerfielder Don Troost advanced to third on two infield Abel scored from third to break followed with a sharp single to outs. Leftfielder Walter "No- the deadlock. center, his third hit of the game. Neck" Smith then drove a single HOWEVER, the rally was far Trackmen Fell Records; At this point. Coach Glenn Van to right-center to bring in the tying from over. Langeland hit an 0 - 2 Wieren went to his bench and run, thus setting the stage for pitch to the left-centerfield fence on one bounce for a two-bagger Sprint Past JC, 83-52 which sent Frens to third. Pelon Floyd Fanner Presents followed with a sacrifice fly to Hope College's cindermen, inches eclipsed his previous record 1 make the score 2 - 0. Troost primed for MIAA Field Day to- of 13 feet 2 /4 inches set this sea- walked and Van Huis reached morrow, ran by Grand Rapids son at the Great Lakes Associa Voice Recital Monday first on an error to load the bases. Junior College 83-52 at Van Raal- tion meet. With two out, Rumohr lined his te Field on Tuesday. WALT REED, Dave Thomas, Floyd Farmer, baritone, will Assisting Farmer will be David second double of the game into Two Hope College track records Paul Sloan and Jeff Kling started present his senior recital next Mon- fell in the long awaited warm Tubergen and Glenys Davidson left-center to send in two more the Flying Dutchmen on their way day at 8:15 p.m. in Snow Audi- playing violin, Lynda Brown on Hope runs. spring weather. Steve "Spud" to capturing 12 of the 16 possi- torium. A lead-off hit by Smith eventu- Reynen erased the 880 yd. record viola and John Renwick on violin- ble first places in the 440 yd. Farmer is a senior voice and ally blossomed into a run in the set at 1:57.8 by Jim Rozeboom cello. Kenneth Bruggers and Kar- relay. percussion major. He is a member on Vanden Hoek will accompany sixth for Adrian. Frens'fine pitch- in 1961 by turning the track twice The "Dynamic Duo" of Doug of Motet Choir and director of Farmer on harpsichord and ing earned him his fifth triumph in 1:57.3. Bill Bekkering set the Formsma and Rick Bruggers music at the First Presbyterian piano, respectively. of the campaign and lowered his other record for Hope in the pole teamed up to place 1-2 respectively Church in Holland. ERA to 2.31 in M IAA competition. vault. Bill's vault of 13 feet 6 THE PROGRAM will begin with in both the mile and two mile Henry Purcell's "Nymphs and runs. Third place went to Paul Shepherds" and "An Evening Arkies Are Second Hartman in the mile and to Dick Hymn." These selections will be Bisson in the two mile for a clean followed by " Recitative and Aria" sweep of both events. Formsma's from J. S. Bach's "Ich habe times were 4:23.4 in the mile and Fraters Win Intramural Trophy 9:45.3 in the two mile. genug." After intermission Farmer will TIM BARTNIK of GRJC cap- sing Robert Schumann's "The After an impressive win in May 72. The Cosmos clinchtci third Kollen Hall wing 1-B reigns tured one of the Raider's four Last Toast," followed by "The Day and a first place tie in soft- with 68 points, followed by the as the new champion of the Kol- first places in the 440 vd. dash. Omnipotence," by Franz Shubert. ball, the Fraters have clinched Arkies with 62, the Emmies with len Hall Basketball League. It Walt Reed was a double winner Ralph Vaughn W'illiams'songs, another all-sports trophy. The 46, and the Knicks who failed to was an exciting race this year, for the Dutchmen, breaking the "The Call" and "I Got Me Flow- race was especially close this year score. and the championship was not tape at 10.4 in the 100 yd. dash ers" are the next selections. as the Arkies and Independents The Fraters had to be content decided until the final game and 22.7 in the 220 yd. dash. CONCLUDING the program were still in the running until the with a tie for the Softball champi- between 1-B and 3-B. Both teams Larry Wilkerson of JC beat out is a group of three songs by Sam- P'rater sweep of May Day. The onship this year as the Arkies had battled to 9 - 2 records, but Jeff Hollenbach of Hope for first uel Barber: "Church Bell at Cosmos snatched up the fourth dumped them 9 - 0 in the last in the final game 1-B used super- place honors in the 120 yd. high Night," "The Crucifixion" and position, followed by the EmmieSj game of the year to gain a share ior outside shooting and board hurdles covering the distance in "Sea-Snatch." Knicks, and Cents. . of the title. Denny Weener, a stand- control to earn a 57 - 41 deci- 15.3. Dave Thomas' fine perfor- DESPITE THE FRATER vie out all year, fired a no-hitter at sion. In the evenly balanced mance in the 330 yd. intermedi- tory in May Day, the Independents the hapless Fraters and also hom- league, 2-A tied with 3-B for se- ate hurdles gave Hope another Netmen Sweep managed to steal much of the ered to pace the win. There was cond place behind the champions first with a time of 40.8 seconds. glory as they set two meet records. also a tie for second place as of 1-B. THE MILE RELAY team of Ralph Schroeder anchored a the Emmies and Independents bat- BACK TO FRATERNITY Frank, Reynen, Thomas and Pal- Adrian, 5-1; Will record-breaking mile relay team, tled to identical 4 - 2 records. competition, the Arkies, led by iatsos rounded out the running and Herm Kuiper leaped 6' % " LED BY AN undefeated Wed- Bob Donia and Ron Visscher, events with another first for Hope. to lead the attack on the old high nesday night team, the Arkies continued to monopolize the ping- Face Kalamazoo Their time of 3:25.3 was a season jump mark. However, the Fraters edged out the Fraters to capture pong action and finished with a low for the Hying Dutchmen. In their last meet of the regular had tremendous depth, especially the basketball trophy. Competi- perfect record. The Fraters again JC made its best showing in the season, the Dutch netmen easily in the sprints and hurdles, and tion was keen in the well-balanced fipished a strong second but were field competition, taking two first rolled over their Adrian oppo- were not to be denied. They totaled league as the independents scored pushed hard by the Emmies, Cos- places out of a possible six. nents by a score of 9 - 0. Singles 82 points, 10 more than the several upsets to capture the third mos and Independents in a tight stars Doug Barrow, Craig Work- second-place Independents with position. race. LES COLE'S toss of 132 feet man, Ron Visscher, Craig Holle- The remainder of the tennis sche- 2 inches gave him first place in man, John Schadler and Tibor dule has been completed after cold the discus. Burgess was second Safar backhanded and smashed weather suspended action last fall. and Taibi Kahler was third. A their way to triumph, staking The Independents proved to be throw of 183 feet 10% inches gave Hope to a 6 - 0 lead going into surprisingly strong and captured Doug Nichols first in the javelin the doubles. their first championship of the followed by Morse of JC and Kah After posting an excellent 5 - 1 year. The Fraters proved that con- ler of Hope. record in the MIAA, Hope Col- sistency is the secret of their suc- NORM KLEIN sprang to a lege's tough tennis team will seek cess as they edged out the Arkies 21 feet 6 inches win in the long to dethrone defending champion for another second place finish. jump for Hope. Fultz and Wilker- Kalamazoo at the MIAA Field THE FRATERS captured the son of JC followed Klein for sec- Day festivities today and to- volleyball and bowling champi- morrow. onships. They were seriously chal- ond and third. All the action will take place at lenged in bowling by the Emmies, Calvin College's Knollcrest Cosmos and Independents who Aquinas Golf Campus. finished in a three-way tie for the The Barrow-Workman, Jeff runner-up position. The volley- Team Slams Green-Holleman, and Safar-Tom ball competition was also very Thomas duos swept through their close with several teams bunched Hope, 15-0 matches to complete the triumph. behind the leaders. The Aquinas College golf team In the last of the ten inter-fra- downed the Hope College and ternity sports, the Independents Grand Rapids Junior College edged out the Arkies for the Hand- Slater Sponsors teams in a triangular meet held ball Championship. The consis- Tuesday at the American Legion tent Fraters secured the third Waitress Contest Country Club course. position edging the Cosmos and Slater Food Service is run- The hot shooting Aquinas link- Knicks who tied for fourth. ning a contest for the best wait- sters scored a 15-0 victory The following is the final stand- ress and waiter to be elected over the Hope squad. The Tom- ings of the fraternities in the com- by the boarding students. Votes mies were paced by George Alks- petition for the all-sports trophy. will be cast Monday at the nis with a 73 and Ed Kropicwkz Fraters evening meal, and the winning L07 with a 74. Arkies 87 employee will receive $10. Junior George Cook led the Independents 73 Raymond Herringshaw, Sla- Hope team with a 77. Willy Jack- Cosmos 65 ter's District Manager, has do- son, Fred MuIIer, Denny Bobel- MAY DAY—Bob Essink, Emmie, is shown clearing a hurdle during Emmies 55 nated the award money for dyk and Chuck Lieder followed one of the events in Hope's annual May Day track meet. The Fraters Knicks 24 this year's contest. with scores of 81, 82, 85 took the contest, sweeping the majority of the events. Cents 9 and 85 respectively.