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The Anchor: 1969 The Anchor: 1960-1969

11-7-1969

The Anchor, Volume 82.09: November 7, 1969

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 82.09: November 7, 1969" (1969). The Anchor: 1969. Paper 21. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1969/21 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 82, Issue 9, November 7, 1969. Copyright © 1969 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: 1969 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hope College fees hiked $250

Board of Trustees at its meeting by Tom Donia "it is our hope that the in- $200. Fees for the 1969 school aid. Based on an enrollment of Monday. A letter signed by Hand- creased provision for financial aid year were increased $200. The 2,000, this means that students anchor Editor logten was distributed to parents will enable every student desirous 1969 price hike was announced receive an average of $143 each in Tuition, room and board fees of students t^ same day. of a Hope College education to last year in a letter to parents with funds from the College. for the 1970-71 academic year come here and complete his pro- almost identical wording as the IN THE LETTER Handlogten will be $2,585 College treasurer gram," the letter continued. 4Tf letter explaining the latest in- said, ''While we regret having to Compared to Hope's $2,335 and business manager Clarence the increase creates undue hard- crease. costs for the current academic make the increases, we can do so ,, Handlogten announced Monday. ship for you, please let us know. year are Great Lakes Colleges As- without apology. We know of no At present, student fees pay 78 sociation members Kalamazoo TUITION WILL be increased other institution that has achieved THE FEES HIKE is the fifth in percent of the actual operating College at $2,730, by $200 to $1,650. Fees for room a comparable level of academic five years, representing a total of cost of the College. This compares at $3,000, at will be increased from $370 to standing with so carefully allo- $850 in increased fees. At the with an average of 33 percent for $390, and board will be up $30 to cated financial resources. We in- beginning of 1966, students payed colleges and universities nation- $3,000, 's $3,120, Ohio Wesleyan at $3,500, $530. The cultural affairs fee will vite a comparison of our costs an additional $100 for room and ally. The balance of the operating remain at $ 1 5. with those of other colleges of hoard. In 1967 tuition was in- budget is provided through gifts at $3,165, De The new rates were approved comparable stature and perfor- creased by $100, and in 1968 from alumni and friends of the Pauw University at $3,200, F'arl- by the executive committee of the mance." total fees were raised another College, grants and income from ham College at $3,275, Antioch V\ endowment. College at $3,350, Kenyon Col- zsrrrmii lege at $3,275 and Oberlin at PAUL KLEINHEKSEL, direc- $3,500. tor of financial aid, said that al- though the financial aid budget President Calvin VanderWerf for the 1970-71 academic year has said of the fee hike, "You can't not been prepared, aid to students argue with facts, in order to im- will increase in proportion to the prove the stature and the excel- fee hike. During the current year, lence of Hope College as an aca- approximately $286,000 will be demic institution, the fee increase disbursed to students in financial was essential." Contracts awarded tor DcWitt Cultural Center

by Tom Donia According to VanderWerf, anchor Editor "This is the largest building pro- Contracts for construction of ject in the history of Hope Col- i mmiwwti h the DeWitt Student Cultural and lege, both in terms of financial Social Center and the Wichers commitment and added space for addition to the Nykerk Hall of College activities." Music will be awarded Wednesday THE CONTRACTS which will noon, Hope College President Cal- vin VanderWerf announced today. be awarded Wednesday do not 82nd Anniversary—9 Hope College, Holland, Mich. 49423 November 7, 1969 FINAL APPROVAL of the include furnishings, certain addi- bids and the go-ahead on con- tions to the buildings and such struction were given Wednesday items as theater rigging and light- Speech draws response by the Office of Health, Educa- ing. "These items can be added tion and Welfare of the Federal latter as additional funds become Government. The decision to re- available," Handlogten said. quest final HEW approval came Estimates made by the treasur- from the executive committee of er's office show the College is Support 'overwhelms' Nixon the Board of Trustees Monday. approximately $388,000 short of The construction price of the the total price of the two build- President Nixon said Tues- NIXON BLAMED the failure two buildings is $2,544,496. The ings. "Once construction begins, day that he was overwhelmed by of the peace talks entirely on the total price, including architect's donors will be anxious to get on the public support shown for his enemy, and he specified how the fees, landscaping, equipment and the bandwagon to make up the plan to get out of Vietnam in war nevertheless had been scaled furnishings, will be close to deficit," VanderWerf said. "We response to Monday night's na- down by both sides. $2,800,000, according to College will offer to prospective donors tionally televised speech in which The President outlined the treasurer and business manager the opportunity to name sections he had called for support from steps he had taken to end the Clarence Handlogten. of the building, as well as other "the great silent majority" of conflict or, alternatively, disen- ERHARDT CONSTRUCTION incentives for giving to the pro- Americans. gage the , asserting Co. of Grand Rapids was the low ject," noted Handlogten. THE PRESIDENT, surrounded that he had decided last January bidder on the general contract for WHILE THE DATE to begin by stacks of telegrams, stated that that unilateral withdrawal of all the DeWitt Center at $1,530,900. construction is in the hands of the "this demonstration of support U. S. forces "would be a disaster Parkway Electric Co. of Holland contractors, VanderWerf said he can have more effect on ending not only for South Vietnam but won the electrical contract at hoped "excavation could begin as the war sooner than the most for the United States and for the $ 182,266. Holwerda-Huizenga Co. soon as possible, probably before skilled diplomacy, military tactics cause of peace." of Grand Rapids will perform the winter sets in." Overseeing the or training of South Vietnamese mechanical work for $427,100. forces." SUCH A COURSE, he de- construction will be architect The Wichers music addition Charles Stade of Park Ridge, ill. White House Press Secretary clared, would result in "massa- cres" in South Vietnam and a will be built by Martin Dyke and Ronald Ziegler said the out- Sons of Holland for $264,260. "The responsibility of the ar- pouring of wires of support, "collapse of confidence" in the chitect at this point is to protect United States throughout the The mechanical contract will be which he estimated to number in the interests of his client and to world. signed by Vander Waals-Troske the "high thousands," appeared to Co. of Grand Rapids for $72,923, check on the quality of the job be a direct, quick response from "Our defeat and humiliation in and the electrical contract will go performed by the contractor," the "great silent majority" sup- South Vietnam," Nixon said, to DeFouw Electric Co. of Hol- VanderWerf stated. "Theoreti- porting the President's course. "would without question promote land at $37,000. cally, at least, the architect and RICHARD M. NIXON NIXON SAID Monday that his recklessness in the councils of CONSTRUCTION OF the the client are in partnership. Stade Administration has "adopted a those great powers who have not music building addition is ex- is a very exacting overseer." he plan which we have worked out in yet abandoned their goals of added. Nixon disclosed Monday that pected to be completed by Sept- cooperation with the South Viet- world conquest. This would spark he had undertaken several con- ember of next year. The DeWitt VanderWerf also mentioned violence wherever our commit- namese for the complete with- tacts with North Vietnam to try Center will be built in 620 days that Stade said the DeWitt Center ments help mantain peace - in drawal of all U. S. ground combat to break the stalemate in the according to the terms of the was the finest building that the the Middle East, in Berlin, even- forces and their replacement by peace talks. These included a per- contract. architect has ever designed. tually even in the western hemi- South Vietnamese forces on an sonal letter to the late Ho Chi sphere. orderly timetable." The rate of Minh in which Nixon urged "an American withdrawal can become early resolution to this tragic "ULTIMATELY this would greater as the South Vietnamese war." This, like all other ap- cost more lives. It would not bring forces become stronger, Nixon proaches, failed, he said. peace but more war." said. He stated that U. S. action will also depend upon progress made in the Paris peace talks and the rate of enemy action. The President said that negotia- Board awards Rusk 'kr- tions would move faster "in a direct relation to the support of the people of the United States." renovation contract In Saigon, President Nguyen The awarding of a contract to Co., is presently being used by the Van Thieu of South Vietnam said remodel a section of the Rusk College maintenance staff. Fire the speech was one of the greatest Building for use by the art depart- prevention officials ruled that the by a U. S. president and the ment was announced Monday by building could not be used as an Nixon policy was one which he the executive committee of the instructional area without renova- and Nixon "completely agreed Board of Trustees. tion. upon." The renovation is scheduled to BOTH THE VIET Cong and begin immediately and will be Under the terms of the con- North Vietnamese representatives completed in 60 days. Contracts tract, the southeast section of the in Paris condemned the speech as totaling $30,020 have been nego- building will undergo remodelling portending American plans to pro- tiated with Vander Hulst and to comply with fire regulations. long and intensify the war. Henry Branderhorst Construction Co. The art department requested that Cabot Lodge, the U. S. ambas- and Reimink Plumbing and Heat- no extensive refurbishing be car- sador to the Paris talks, called the ing Co., both of Holland. ried out so that it could be free to MUSIC HALL ADDITION- Pictured above is the architect's drawing Communist response disap- The Rusk Building, formerly experiment with such art forms as of the Wichers addition to the Nykerk Hall of Music to be located on pointing. owned by the National Biscuit painting and sculpture. the east side of the present music building. Page 2 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969 Urban work-study programs provided by GLCA

Editor's Note: This is the second they serve" according to a pro- article in a series on the Great gram spokesman. Lakes Colleges Association and "The Urban Se- the opportunities it provides for mester is not limited to education students. This week's article ex- students," emphasized Clark. amines the Philadelphia Urban Work also exists for students of Semester and the New York Fine religion, the social sciences and Arts Semester programs. the humanities. HALF OF THE Philadelphia by Sarah Penny program involves a work project anchor Assistant News Editor with professionals in the com- munity. Students are expected to The Great Lakes Colleges As- sociation offers two opportunities discover responsible solutions to for off-campus study in this coun- problems. They are considered try: The Philadelphia Urban Se- responsible to members of the mester and the New York Arts Philadelphia School Board, which Program and International pays them a token payment of Studies. S40 a month. THE GLCA, IN cooperation Teaching and classroom work with the Philadelphia Board of are possibilities. In the past, stu- Education, initiated the Philadel- dents have also worked with ur- phia Urban Semester "in order to ban planners, sociologists, school give students direct participation psychologists, city councilmen in the social changes that are and air pollution experts. occuring in urban areas," accord- Students have served in church- ing to a GLCA official. related projects, in creative drama and film making for schools and Organized during the l%6-67 neighborhood centers and as ad- school year, the Philadelphia pro- ministrative assistants to school gram accommodates 80 students and community officials. At the per semester. Participation in the Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric junior or senior year is best, said Institute students tested patients Dr. David Clark, program repre- and organized programs for wards. sentative at Hope, because stu- STUDENTS ARE involved in dents are then considering career goals and are ready for advanced language arts film making, reading study. Students are responsible labs, computer assistance instruc- HELPING HAND-Hope '69 graduate Steve Lundquist helps two high school students in the prepara- for their own housing. Although tion, closed circuit television, a tion of their student newspaper. Lundquist was a participant in the GLCA Philadelphia Semester program. no one school acts as "agent" for transitional kindergarten and the program. Dr. Robert De Haan school and community news- GLCA STUDENTS have met are not about to go back to being nel," stated Delbert Michel, dir- of Hope's education department is papers. mixed reaction from the German- passive learners," stated Clark. ector of the program at Hope. the program director. Students also participate in a town community. Last year, black PENNEY MORSE, who partici- "We do not simply transplant NO PARTICULAR field or study seminar for analyzing work militants met students at the air- pated in the Philadelphia Semes- Hope to New York City," he experiences. All students are re- major is required for participation port and demanded they return ter. now works with the Com- emphasized. "New York is a com- quired to attend a Seminar on the in the program, hut courses in home. "Some dislike the idea of munity Action House in Holland. pletely different environment." City, in which they examine wel- urban sociology, psychology and white liberals solving black prob- "In Philadelphia, 1 was challenged fare institutions, police depart- The course of study has three political science are recom- lems," stated Clark. Nevertheless, by other institutions," she said, ments. poverty, local government parts. A seminar on arts enables mended. Students direct tfieir many black leaders welcome the "and 1 was forced to confront and educational institutions. students to attend art exhibits, own education by choosing in- program. "Schools have extended myself. 1 developed a new aware- Major emphasis is placed on the theater, dance and music produc- dividual areas of work and study. great cooperation to the GLCA. ness. By applying my education, 1 problems of racism. In addition, tions on a daily basis. Students Participants earn 16 hours of They appreciate the enthusiasm actually challenged it. Philadel- special seminars are held on White and freshness of students," Clark attend weekly discussions on what credit from their home campus. phia reinforced my belief in the Perspectives of Afro-American his- continued. works they have seen. A second They are discouraged from taking need for education and a degree. tory and film making and simula- Since students hold responsible division enables students to serve courses at local Philadelphia uni- One of my biggest challenges now tion workshops. "All these pro- positions, they become part of the as apprentices in museums and to versities. "Students learn while is to carry my enthusiasm and grams are designed to meet college team, rather than just "learners." individual artists. Museum work dedication hack to Holland." requirements, further independent As a result, their attitude and involves curatorial positions with A second GLCA program, the slide and photography collections, study and facilitate personal de- motivation is changed. They resist Arts Program in New York, was restoration of art works and in velopment." said Clark. the patterns of the campus. "They inaugurated the second semester shipping departments. Private ap- t t 2 for YOU of the l )6S-6 ) school vear. prenticeships help students ex- "THE GLCA ARTS program in plore new concepts in art. "The New York was designed to pro- value of the apprenticeship pro- vide especially rich opportunities gram is in the contact with ideas, • MEDITATIONS for students seriously interested in works of art and artists them- IN UNI VERSE the arts," according to a GLCA selves." stated Michel. spokesman. Ohio Wesleyan is the Paul Monka INDEPENDENT STUDY, the TE agent school. Approximately 25 third area, is directed from the students, preferably juniors or se- A unique blend of East- home campus. This work is plan- niors majoring in the arts, may ned before students embark on ern and Christian in- K they mean participate each semester. Partici- the program and should necessi- sight permeates these pants receive 16 hours credit. tate residency in New York. Stu- The GLCA rents a classroom- fresh meditations. anything to you, dents may take course work at a social center for seminar meetings. New York institution if such In a finely balanced WLA/FM Students are responsible for their study is not available at the home relationship, spare verse try LOVE. own housing, but the directors campus. offer assistance. Often students and striking color illus- pass housing along to new stu- "We hope to gather feedback trations impart to each dents, thus forming a housing on the program from returning page a growing depth network. participants," said Michel. "We and significance. $3.95 THE COURSE STRUCTURE hope students have developed new is designed "to give students the insights, a new awareness of what W opportunity for concentrated and is going on in fields of art by STEREO 97 ' ONE CIRCUS intensive work in fields of art. being part of what is going on." 3 RINGS, FOREVER New York City, as the cultural Progressive Rock and More center of the nation, offers muse- AND EVER, HOORAY! ums, libraries, theater and musical Hope debaters Joseph Pintauro productions plus artist person-

This is a book of songs finish first and poems that splash IN THE NOVEMBER ISSUE OF in five-way lie themselves across these pages in brilliant color, CONSUMER REPORTS Hope College finished in an it is a song of hope that unusual five-way tie for first place THE AIRLINES in a debate contest held at Kellogg dances over the debris What they don't advertise . . . what are the rights of the ticketed Community College Oct. 25. of the past. It is the passenger? Debaters from Hope, Grand hardest song for man to CASSETTE TAPE RECORDERS Rapids Junior College, Henry The cassette system of tape recording looks like the wave of the Lord Community College, West- sing because it is a song ern Michigan University and host future. But is it good enough now? Eighteen portable models are of compassion for his rated. Kellogg all finished with 3-3 re- world as it really is, a cords after the daylong competi- DURABLE-PRESS SHIRTS tion. stockpile of silly gods How well do they do what they're supposed to? Fifteen broadcloth The Hope negative team of and silly systems that shirts and seven oxford shirts are rated. senior Tom Mara tea and senior bruise his soul. HOT PLATES Steve Harms received an "excel- The electric hot plate is an important appliance in the lives of many lent" rating by winning two of $3.95 students. Several of the hot plates tested for the report are poten- three debates. tially hazardous—they might give you a lethal shock. The Hope affirmative team of CHAMPAGNE junior John Windover and fresh- Is a $15 bottle really worth more than a $7 bottle7 Expert tasters man Lynnae Riemersma, won one BAKER who didn't know what brands they were sampling provide the of three. answer. The Hope debaters were ac- companied by M. Harold Mikle. BOOK HOOSE Plus reports and brand-name Ratings on freezers, stain- chairman of the department of communications and debate 48th E. 8th St. less-steel flatware, toasters and melamine dmnerware. coach. Downtown, Holland The debate team will travel to Ann Arbor tomorrow for debate competition. November 7, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 3 For graduate study 4 A11 approves Chem. course

The Academic Affairs Board school seniors for college or uni- attitude of the North Central continued to discuss possible versity anywhere, whereas the Association, which determines means of assisting Hope students summer trial program was de- Hope's accreditation, toward admitted with inadequate educa- signed to prepare students speci- Hope's "rather piecemeal" offer- tional backgrounds at its meet- fically for Hope. ing of graduate credit courses. ings Oct. 28 and Tuesday. Rider also said the Upward THE BOARD decided to ac- IN OTHER action Oct. 28, Bound summer session involved cept transfer credits for corres- the Board approved a new high school students of several pondence courses from many ac- chemistry course to be taught levels, and did not necessarily credited institutions and the on the graduate level to area lead to enrollment of those stu- United States Armed Forces In- chemists, agreed to accept trans- dents at Hope College. He noted stitute. This decision reversed fer credits for correspondence that it was a federal program the past policy that Hope did courses and approved a series of under separate funds and direc- not accept transfer credits from proposed courses in the depart- tors. He stated that Upward any correspondence course. The ment of communication. Bound could not become a part action of the Board came in res- The Board heard Dr. Leslie of the total summer program ponse to requests to transfer corre- Beach of the department of because of federal restrictions. spondence course credits. psychology and a director of THE BOARD will further The new courses approved by FRESHMEN CAPTURE CUP - Alice, right, played by Sally Hid- the summer trial program in dis- study the question of incorpora- AAB in the department of com- dinga, listens attentively to the Knight, center, protrayed by Debbie cussion Tuesday about making ting the aid program for Brew- the summer program more valu- munication are "Broadcasting in Dolph, in a scene from "Through the Looking Glass," the freshman ton students with the summer Contemporary Society," "Theo- able to students with weak edu- trial program at a later meeting. dramatic presentation at last Saturday's Nykerk Cup Competition. cational backgrounds. ries of Interpersonal Communi- In action Oct. 28, AAB ap- cation," "Theories of Mass Com- The Horse is composed of Barb Darge and Sue Hendricks. The Several Board members noted proved a graduate chemistry munication" and "Social Impact freshmen won the competition, which consisted of a choral selec- that there were actually four course. The new chemistry of Mass Communication." tion, play and oration. summer programs in effect last course, which is not available to summer. One program was de- undergraduate students, will signed specifically for students carry three hours of graduate Congress meets from Brewton, Ala. A second credit. The proposal for the set-up was the regular summer course came in response to trial program. A third was fund- numerous requests from area ed and directed by the Federal chemists working in industry Government's Upward Bound Open dorm policy discussed who wished to improve their program. The fourth summer ses- knowledge of modern develop- by Bev Unangst was met with opposition by Glenn sion was funded by the State of ments in chemistry, according to and final exams and during vaca- anchor Reporter tions when there may be no repre- Lowe, who felt that inter-visita- Michigan for Michigan students. Dr. Douglas Neckers, associate sentatives to enforce conduct tion could only be tested fairly in professor of chemistry. Inter-dorm visitation was dis- THE BOARD asked Beach if rules. all residences. According to Stu- the four programs could be DEAN RIDER noted that at cussed at Tuesday's meeting of THE CONGRESS discussed re- dent Congress president Tim Lig- united into one unit. Beach present Hope has no definitive the Student Congress. strictions such as signing guests in gett, the many faculty members pointed out that the program policy on offering courses for THE CONGRESS evaluated a and out and keeping a record of and Administrators feel that the for Michigan students had as its graduate credit. Rider expressed system of parietal hours which is violations of the rules. Congress privilege of inter-visitation should goal the preparation of high particular concern about the currently in use at Rutgers Univer- member Drew Hinderer felt that be limited to upperclassmen. sity and discussed the possibility with too many restrictions, indi- A special meeting of the Stu- of bringing such a program to vidual responsibility was taken dent Congress was scheduled for Flutist Barbara DeHart Hope's campus. away from the students. However, today to draw up a proposal on Under the system at Rutgers, Dale Reed, who attended a leader- parietal hours to be presented to each dormitory is divided into ship conference at Rutgers, the Campus Life Board. to present recital Thurs. units. Fach individual unit sets up pointed out that this precaution the hours and days for visitation was removed after the first few within over-all limits already pre- Senior music major Barbara months of parietal hours. "This scribed by the University. DeHart will present a flute reci- restriction is really a test to prove tal Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in THE RULES SET by the Uni- student responsibility," he said. Snow Auditorium. Miss DeHart versity involved open doors, light- "If student conduct remains with- will be accompanied by (llenn ing in the rooms and student in the rules and there are few Pride. conduct which may be checked at violations, the rules could eventu- The program will consist of any time by the Resident Advisor ally be liberalized." five major works, including or by representatives elected by Reed suggested that a program Suite in A Minor for Solo I'lutc the units. Violations of conduct similar to the one at Rutgers by Johann Sebastian Bach. rules may be taken before the could be tried at Kollen Hall. He I'ocni by Charles Griffes, han- Rutgers Judicial Court. felt that if it proved to be success- taisic by George Hue, I'iccc cn Visiting hours at Rutgers close ful, it could be adapted to meet i'onuc (/c Habanera by Maurice down one week before midterm the needs of the entire College. He Ravel, and Conccrto No. I in (1 by Wolfgang A made us Mozart. Miss DeHart is majoring in choral education and will gra- duate in January of 1()70. How- ever, she will continue her stu- dies at Hope until June. She plans to enter graduate school, but has no definite plans con- cerning what school she will attend. BARBARA DE HART & sale oi f Oh What a Lovely War' HOPE COLLEGE to be presented tonight, Sat. PHELPS HALL LOUNGE Oh What A Lovely War will be Anne Walvoord, Kaye Hubbard, presented by the Hope College Diane Parker, Joanne Kornoelje, by THURSDAY theater department for the last Rudy Howard, Brad Williams, Bill Chagall, two times tonight and tomorrow Schutter, David Oosting, Ralph Baskin, NOVEMBER 13 Rouault, at 8 in Snow Auditorium. Van den berg, Louis Schakel, Daumier THE PLAY, a pierrot show, Robert Kieft, Mike Boonstra, & many 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. consists of a succession of theatri- Dean Howd and Dominic Defaz- others cally presented events which zio. G. Bonno Van Dijk, visiting occurred during World War I. assistant professor of history, is Arranged by Donald Finn, instructor in the- also a member of the cast. Ferdinand Rolen Galleries. ater, is directing the production. Tickets for Oh What A Lovely Baltimore Md In imitation of the circus style War are S1.50 for students and of a pierrot show. Oh What A staff members of Hope College Lovely War is being produced in and S2 for others. arena style with the audience sur- rounding the stage on four sides. The performance is a multi-media production with slides and a film- strip in addition to the musical IN SAUGATUCK and GRAND HAVEN it's and dramatic production. THE PLAY will be available for tour Jan. 26 through March 25. During the next two months CORAL GABLES Finn and the cast will condense the play to be suitable for tour. The set for the play was de- fOR — LEISURE DINING — BANQUETS — SNACKS signed by David Smith, instructor in art. Harrison Ryker and Robert Cecil, both members of the music SERVING ANYTIME THE DELICIOUS department faculty direct the stu- dent orchestra. Richard Angstadt designed the lighting. Mary IL FORNO S PIZZA and SUBMARINES Schakel designed the costumes used in the play. STUDENT CAST members of Phone Saugatuck UL 7-2? 62 or Grand Haven 842-3510 for Reservations Oh What A Lovely War are FIFTY-SIX EAST EIGHTH STREET Marilyn Ray, Margaret Rose, Debby Noe, Nancy Meeusen, PHONE 396-3647 Alberta Tilendis, Linda Boven. Page 4 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969 Moratorium letter-in

Editor's Note: The following is a letter re- the post office. If the majority of the ceived by the anchor for publication. The public conveyed its true convictions con- editors agree with its concept and contents. cerning the Vietnam war at one time by writing the President one letter a day for The Oct. 15 mourning demonstration, one week, the commonwealth of our con- "Moratorium," emphasized an essential cern for peace would be substantially aspect of the personality of our times; we communicated without the fear that the live in an age when we must question our good will of our personal opinions would be politics. We have discovered new sensibili- overlooked or lost in the words of a ties, new emotions, new involvements, and n spokesman for the crowd or of our elected they have expanded into social movements representatives. I protesting race relations, poverty and war. We have sat, picketed, marched, hoped The timetable for the protest is to mail a and prayed for peace between all breeds of letter daily beginning Nov. 9 and continu- men, and this we have clearly conducted ing through Nov. 15 to Richard M. Nixon, with the underlying belief that the pen will President of the United States, 1600 Penn- sylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20006. On Nov. 12 the bulk of the opinions will reach and pass through the doors of r't-i the White House. The letter-in can be an toridjs impetus to the march, perhaps be even • M * more effective. The White House staff will open each of the letters and our beliefs will "1 brought you here tonight, Sylvia, to break the bad news to you. I'm going to have become mightier than the sword. America be noted. An estimated sixty million letters to drop out of school because I can't swing the new tuition hike." is engaged in a war in Vietnam, a war will arrive at the White House on Wednes- which she did not intend to become so day, the first day of protest. massively involved in; and it is this war Use the following procedure in mailing which we question most in our age of the letters: 1) Type the address. Use the inquiry. Zip Code. Business and institutional envel- art buchwald Political and social protest in the United opes may be used. 2) Use first class States is for the most part channeled along postage. . . special delivery and even better, the limits of our Constitutional rights as registered mail (it must be signed for) will citizens. More often we have gathered our insure faster delivery. Success syndrome bodies in protest than our beliefs. A President Nixon may never read our spokesman for a crowd often clouds our letters as such but he will be intimately by Art Buchwald own beliefs and leaves us more dismayed reminded of our convictions for peace. We than convinced by our involvement. Ameri- have a message to give to President Nixon. cans have not availed themselves of one of Let us be united in a common effort to their most effective channels for protest. express our beliefs as Americans. 1 know no one will believe me, but "Wasn't Prof. Alger the one who came you're just going to have to take my word out first with the success syndrome for it. I met a college student the other day theory?" who said that all he wanted out of life was "THAT'S HE. His story floored me. I Toward disengagement success and financial security. mean a whole new world opened for me, HE ASKED ME not to use his name and I knew no matter what the con- because he didn't want to embarrass his sequences were and no matter what other A front page picture of President weight from the delicate balance of power. parents, so 1 shall call him Hiram. people thought, I was going to work hard and become rich and successful. Life Richard Nixon in Tuesday's Grand Rapids The problem, then, is getting out, as the "Hiram," 1 asked him, "why did you finally took on some meaning for me, and Press has underneath it the outline "Presi- American public demands, without leaving decide to take this revolutionary attitude for the first time 1 felt like a free man." dent Nixon: He Stated His Case/' Hope- behind an American created monster that toward society?" "What did you do then?" fully in Monday night's speech Nixon did could devastate the whole of Vietnam and "1 don't know exactly when it happened. "I discovered through this girl that there not completely state his case, being aware possibly more. Nixon's public solution is to I was like most of the rest of the students. 1 were other students on campus who felt that the best way to get out of Vietnam is maintain the balance of power in Southeast wanted to tear down the school, the the way I did-not many, but there were not to disclose specific plans to do so. Asia by slowly withdrawing American society, the Establishment. I was just an- enough. So we formed a group called the This is not to say that President Nixon troops that are replaced by South Vietnam- other conformist, and 1 never questioned 'Students for a Successful Society.' At first does intend to withdraw troops no matter ese forces, with the option of putting why I was doing all the things that were we had to go underground, because the expected of me. what; he did not say that. But it is hoping America's forces back in if the situation administration wouldn't acknowledge us as a legitimate campus organization. But as that he does, and that he is smart enough "demands," This option hopefully is a "THEN ONE DAY I thought to myself. more and more students heard about us, not to say so. The President is in difficult ploy to pacify the Communists into avoid- There's got to be more to life than getting I the SSS kept growing. We've been able to situation. ing situations that would "demand" hit over the head by the cops.' looked around me and saw nothing but sheep. radicalize at least 200 students who would He is faced with an American public American troops. During this period, Every student was doing his thing because rather be rich than do their thing." that is not willing to assume the burden Vietnamization of the fighting could occur someone else had done his thing, and no "WHAT ARE SOME of your activities seemingly interminable of a limited ground and perhaps some degree of stability could one was doing or saying anything new." to get more supporters?" war in Asia. This hopefully he knows; if he be achieved in the government of South "We sell the Wall Street Journal on "So you decided to drop out of the does not, then he is a much poorer judge of Vietnam. campus. We've opened a coffeehouse where student movement and become a million- American public opinion than the Commu- you can read back copies of Fortune. We If these two things can be done in South aire?" nists who have known this for years and have a stock market ticker tape in the back Vietnam while America is pulling out, the "Not at first. But 1 met this girl. She of the room, and on weekends we have have acted accordingly. He is faced with a American created monster may not ever was really way out. She wore a cashmere readings from the National Assn. of Manu- vociferous and seemingly large group of ravage Vietnam. sweater, a plaid skirt and she had on shoes facturers Bulletins." Americans who are demanding disengage- and socks-I couldn't believe anyone would "Hiram, 1 know this all sounds great. ment now. And he is faced with a situation This should be Nixon's plan. It is better dress like that. But I got to talking to her, But is it possible that this success syn- in South Vietnam, largely created by the than the immediate pull-out or definite and she started making sense. drome movement is just a passing fad?" massive infusion of military aid, which date plan which would rapidly destroy all "SHE SAID IT wasn't enough to lock "No, it isn't. I know everyone calls us could rapidly disintegrate into a bloodbath balance of power in Vietnam. Hopefully yourself in a building or go on a hunger kooks and weirdos, but no one is going to as the President himself intimated if the President is not stating his case, at least strike in your dorm. If you really wanted push us around. We've already had in- to change the world, you had to make a lot quiries from other campuses that want to America were to suddenly withdraw its not all of it. of money, and then people wouldn't tell set up similar chapters, and 1 wouldn't be you what to do." surprised in the next few years to see what Readers speak out "That's radical thinking," 1 said. is now a minority movement become the "Then she gave me a book by Prof. strongest force in the country. After all, Horatio Alger, and 1 guess no book 1 ever nothing succeeds like success." Students not apathetic read has had more of an effect on me." Copyright 1969, The Washington Post Co.

in your last issue's black and beautiful Cohen further charged that the only OPf COUIOE column, Reginald Cohen tried to document contact between students and Administra- the idea that many Hope students are tion is of a "manipulatory nature." That is apathetic toward bringing about student hogwash. The Administration is not mani- anchor participation in Administrative affairs. He pulating us. Rather, it is setting down OUAND, MICHIGAN PRESS stated that a "communication block" needed guidelines and rules for student and exists between the students and the Ad- academic affairs. We as students must abide Published weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by ministration. I disagree with him. by their decisions. and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of the Student In my opinion, there is no such problem In my opinion, Cohen is seeking a Communications Board. at Hope. We students are not apathetic as solution to student problems from the Subscription: $5 per year. Printed: The Composing Room, Grand Rapids, Michigan. wrong direction. The idea of having stu- dents actually participate in the administra- Member, Associated Collegiate Press. dear tion of Hope College is paradoxical to the * definition of "administration." Instead, Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 392-51 1 1, Ext. 2285. editor students must use the channels open to The opinions on this page are not necessarily those of the student body, faculty or Administra- them to find solutions to their grievances, tion of Hope College. Cohen charged; we are merely satisfied like Student Congress and the student- with 'he concept of student-Administra- faculty committees. tion relations as they stand. Isn't it the Eric Peterson Administration's job to administer, and the 9 BOARD OF EDITORS students' job to be students? And just what Copy Lynn Jones, Kathy Smith 'anchor fails IRC Headlines Dave Dustin is this "communication block" that he Editor Tom Donia Photography . .Dan Barber, Angie Kolster, thinks the Administration has built up? The mock UN General Assembly session Assistant Editor Garrett DeGraff Joyce Maurus, Don Page, Jeanne Salberg, Doesn't he know about the four student was held by the International Relations News Editor ; Lynn Jones Louis Schakel, Rob Benchley, members of the Administrative Affairs Club on UN Day, Oct. 24. We regretted Assistant News Editor Sarah Penny and Steve Vandermade. Board? Doesn't he know that President that the session was not covered by the Advertising Dave Dievendorf Calvin VanderWerf welcomes students into anchor. Such behavior by the College organ Business Manager Allen Pedersen REPORTERS his home to discuss any matter with him 1 hope does not reflect the apathy of the DEPARTMENTS Clarke Borgeson, Jim Brainard, Jean De- personally? The Deans of Students are student body. 1 hope the students show Graff, Jan Dzurina, Thorn Gartner, Bill always available for discussion as well, and more interest in world affairs which are Critiques Robert Kieft Hoffman, Beth Maassen, Andy Mulder, Columist Drew Hinderer we students have no finer people to take very real and important to them. 1 hope Robin Pearce, Barbi Shostal, Pete Struck, Cartoonists . .. Greg Phillips, Debbie Yoch our problems to than Chaplains Hillegonds this behavior by the anchor is not repeated. Dave Thomas, Bev Unangst, Bob Vander- Proof Lynn Jones, Jan Dzurina berg, Nancy Warner, Gail Werka and and Williams. David Huang Layout Janice Bakker Charlotte Whitney. November 7, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 5

Lovely War:9 eloquent contrasts used effectively

Editor's Note: This week's review second act, when a more sobering widely differing scenes and musi- is written by senior history major atmosphere is quite apparent, the cal numbers following each other Charles Schoeneck. He reviews the cast sings the title song Oh What in close succession-enables the theater department production of A Lovely War to the visual accom- audience to grasp and experience, paniment of headlines announcing in a very real and graphic way, the Oh What A Lovely War presented the British losses in the war. utter senselessness of war. last weekend and to be presented THE TECHNICAL effects are Internal unity, on which the tonight and tomorrow night in used brilliantly. As the British play's success partially depends, is Snow Auditorium. GHQ is outlining its strategies for brought off well indeed; the many the war, the Navy and the Army contrasts are used to make a by Charles Schoeneck discuss how England can best de- unified whole. Contingent upon I attended the opening night of feat Germany. The Admiral, of the play's success also is a neces- the theater department's produc- course, wants to give priority to sary dynamic cast spirit; there can tion of Oh What A Lovely War, the battleships, and to this the be no slow moments at the wrong directed by Donald Finn. My General objects. In response to time that might weaken the pace comments here are to he under- the Admiral's query, "Have you or dampen the enthusiasm. stood in the context that no two got a plan?", the General simply AN? HERE AGAIN, the cast performances are ever alike, and stares at him while the two projec- has done excellently. The added in this respect, some of my re- tion screens are simultaneously fact that each actor must assume marks may not be valid for other bathed in red light. "Oh, of many roles in two hours increases performances. course," replies the Admiral. the degree of difficulty. Con- IT IS NOT MY intention, fur- There are some very human nected with this is the necessity at thermore, to either defend the touches in many of the scenes, as times of delivering lines rapidly to play or to lauch a full-scale attack in the "Christmas in the Cook- keep the momentum up; on the upon it: a work of art must be house" vignette, where a brief and whole, this comes off well, al- able to speak for itself, rising or rather tense feeling of comrade- though there were a few moments falling on its own qualities. My ship develops between some where diction was poor. job is to evaluate how the cast British soldiers and a German sol- The cast, then, functions with "brings it off-how the actors dier, who remains offstage. the technical crews as a unit. And and technical people, under Finn's THERE IS, ON the other hand, most important, the players cer- direction, use the script by the sinister scene, which Brecht tainly believe in themselves in Charles Chilton to create an art would love, where the war-profi- their various roles, and we are form. teering capitalists meet to discuss thus enabled to believe in them. Oh What A Lovely War is a business over a grouse-shoot. The "musical documentary,, (as my war, it seems, is going well, and ticket described it) of the First the munitions and chemical indus-

World War. Through many short tries are booming. There have • scenes and musical numbers, the been, however, "two peace scares a audience is exposed to a view of in the last year," but with French war that is hardly monolithic. In- pacifists being executed, every- deed, the contrasts manifest in the thing should turn out fine. various scenes have the overall The climactic scene, near the Fee increase not justified effect of giving us an all-inclusive end of the play, involves a French picture of man in war. commandant urging his men into by Drew Hinderer AND FINN S resources include battle; they eventually advance, not only a large cast, but also bleating like sheep. They are all extensive technical, musical and cut down by machine gun fire With all due respect to Clar- creditable performance on their gan. 1 decided to come here be- choreographical innovations. The which is synchronized to a strobe ence Handlogten, I must disagree parts. cause the advantages of Hope latter elements, especially lighting, light, in the most striking visual with his statement to parents of I think that one very viable could be had for only a very few sound and numerous projected scene of the play. Hope students. My disagreement alternative to the raising of stu- hundred dollars more than the slides, serve to complement the SLOWLY, THE dead soldiers comes on several grounds, most of dent costs is a greatly increased . Now the actors, adding to the emotionally- rise to sing a few songs, almost in which I will discuss here. I simply effort on the part of our Board to difference is fantastic, at least charged, tense atmosphere that relief but utterly melancholy in do not feel that the $250 increase locate and tap other sources of with regard to my family's means. continuously astounds and con- nature. Finally, the entire cast is justified or can be met by the money which do not depend on And the advantages of Hope are founds the audience. Once we are does the title song Oh What A means of most parents. our already straining parents. beginning to seem a great deal less in the play's grasp, it moves on Lovely War again. All in all, the AS I HAVE indicated in the HANDLOGTEN HOPES that important to me as the cost of and on, never releasing us. last ten minutes of the play has, past, I feel that it is the business "the increased provision for finan- them continues to rise. The play's great strength is its embodied within it, the supreme of the Board of Trustees to supply cial aid will enable every student WITH THAT FACT in mind, I contrasts, and the circus theme is contrast. the monetary needs of the Col- desirous of a Hope College educa- feel that I ought to point out excellent for this. The atmosphere The actors are remarkably ver- lege. Handlogten said "the Board tion to come here and complete another alternative to paying the of a circus is ever-present. There satile and dynamic, and 1 will of Trustees made a decision that his program." I am considerably $250 increase. Such schools as the are all sorts of acts suited to single out only a few of them: had no viable alternative." Yet less optimistic. Characteristically, University of Michigan, realizing varied tastes: a song for mother, Robert Kieft plays a French gen- President Calvin VanderWerf has the scholarships and grants Hope that the impersonality of their some trench-life antics for grand- eral with great relish; G. Bonno said with regard to the proposed College is asserted to have avail- campus life can be a real detrac- pa and the excitement of battle Van Dijk is marvelous as Sir Doug- Student Center, "There will be no able to students have been, if not tion to their educational pro- for the children. las Haig, who is convinced that delay in construction for lack of impossible, then very difficult for grams, have established small col- THE PIERROT costumes, too, God and King will prevail; and funds. If we run short, we'll just a student from an average, middle leges within their larger university add to this effect of a circus. We Louis Schakel, as a simple soldier, go out and raise more." class background to obtain. framework, which offer many, if are treated, furthermore, to ingen- has some real gems that the audi- It seems to me that if funds Moreover, they have most not all, the advantages of such ious props, like that clever little ence must be attentive to catch. can be so easily raised for the often been granted with the idea small colleges as Hope, while add- biplane made from a wheelbar- THE SEEMINGLY irrational Student Center, such funds are that most students do not mind ing the advantages of a large cam- pus. row. organization of the play-its also worth consideration /or keep- going into debt to pay their fees. And the presence of unreality ing the costs of Hope College Such an idea is hardly an accurate These programs are called Resi- dential Colleges, and cost no more heightens the drama and impact within the reach of most of its appraisal of the situation. Yet the Arkies, Cosmos, than the usual fees of the Univer- of the play. In this circus atmos- students. At the very least, this present increase will almost cer- sity of Michigan while offering a phere, we watch the play unfold, statement implies that there is tainly insure that a far greater small college atmosphere in the with its extreme emotional con- Emmies hold money available that the Board of number of people will be starting context of the larger university. trasts in the scenes which follow Trustees should have attempted to life in debt than ever before. And with all due consideration for each other rapidly. Because of the open houses Sat. tap before saddling the student HANDLOGTEN, AS well as the academic excellence of Hope play's irregular emotional develop- body and its beleaguered parents most of those in positions of College, it can hardly be denied ment, the audience cannot cate- The Arcadian, Cosmopolitan with its inability to find sufficient responsibility in our Administra- that the U of M has an "eminent gorize it as "slick" or "clever;" and Emersonian will funds. tion, has compared our costs with position among American colleges even "anti-war" is meaningless in each hold an open house Saturday I DO NOT believe that the the costs of other GLCA schools and universities." explaining it. night from 8:30 to 12:30. Board of Trustees has spent suf- to find them lower, and has con- IN THE FACE of such in- THE CONTRASTS are success- The Arkies are sponsoring an ficient time or effort in finding tinued to assert that "we know of creases in Hope's costs as this one fully treated by the director to all-campus dance with a live band. outside sources of funds for the no other institution that has of $250, I would certainly con- produce an internal unity. We are The Caste will perform, and re- College. Several weeks ago, 1 achieved a comparable level of sider the possibility of transferring confronted with actors dressed as freshments will be provided. cited statistics from a book by academic standing with so care- to such an inexpensive but excel- clowns, playing the part of sol- The Cosmos will have a coffee- Rauh on The Trusteeship of Col- fully allocated financial re- lent school which offers such a diers: yet reality bursts upon the house-type atmosphere. Folksing- leges and Universities which sources." By their own admission, program as the one I have out- scene when we see newspaper ers, both members and pointed out that in all likelihood, the costs of other GLCA schools lined here. And I urge the various headlines flashed upon the two off-campus singers, will provide members of the Board spent less are very high. Thus, I wonder if academic counseling offices of projection screens grimly an- the entertainment. than 20 hours a year in raising they are the appropriate standards with which to compare our pro- Hope to prepare a series of alter- nouncing the war dead. The theme of the Emmie open funds for the college. native colleges to which students Even during the more humor- house will be Playboy at Dusk. 1 have heard no refutation or gram. I know that when 1 was con- unable to shoulder or stomach the ous scenes, we observe projected The emphasis will be on meeting disagreement with this statistic, so sidering which college to attend, I failure of our Board of Trustees to overhead: "1916—Verdun—Total the members of the fraternity, I shall assume that the members produce funds might consider Loss-One and One-Half Million according to Steve Markel, vice of our Board are not exceptions was comparing Hope to such schools as the University of Michi- transferring. Men." And at the beginning of the president of the fraternity. to this rule. This is hardly a The Best of Peanuts PEANUTS I HATE, rr's WWINE ME CRAZV !!! A« SOON AS I LEARN I FINALLY LEARNEP WHERE I'M ONE TWINS, •raei'SO OHSUPPOSE D TO EAT LUNCH, ANP SCHOOL! N0UJ THEV EXPECT ME TO KNOW TO SOMETHINS ELSE! liOHERE MV PE5K 15

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T Page 6 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////s/////////////////////////////////////////////////Head coac/ h for 15 years Reui'eu) of the News Washington, D.C. a second term. Only 3,182 DeVette resigns football post Senate and House negotia- votes separated Stokes from his tors agreed Tuesday on a $20.7 Republican challenger Cuya- by Bob Vander berg "TO SOME DEGREE my deci- billion military weapons bill hoga County Auditor Ralph J. anchor Reporter sion was based on the report of that gives the Defense Depart- Perk, in the Tuesday election. Russ DeVette, head football the special committee on athletics ment everything it asked for, Unofficial estimates indicated coach at Hope College since 1955, of the Board of Trustees," the including the initial authority Stokes pulled an average of 24 has announced his decision to coach said. This report suggested to start construction of the percent of the nearly all-white relinquish his duties as head coach to that "no person should be the safeguard anti-ballistic missile. ^pte on Cleveland's West Side. upon completion of the current head coach for more than one "There is no m^jor weapon The black vote on Cleveland's season. sport." that's left out of this bill," near East Side gave Stokes DEVETTE, whose football COMMENTING ON a possible John Stennis, D-Miss., chair- nearly 97 percent of the vote. teams have posted a mediocre replacement for Coach DeVette, man of the Senate Armed Ser- 61-64-1 record in 15 seasons, also Athletic Director Gordon Brewer , III. vices Committee told news- indicated that he will remain at remarked that "many names have men, "and none that's severely Bobby Seale, leader of the Hope as head coach in , been tossed around, but it's really restricted. The bone and mus- Black Panthers Organization where he has compiled an impres- too early to mention any specific cle is still in there." was sentenced, in a surprised sive record over the years. names." move by U. S. District Court In his 15-year tenure as head According to President Calvin New York Judge Hoffman, to four years football coach, DeVette experi- VanderWerf, DeVette's decision in prison for contempt of court enced only five winning seasons. Mayor John V. Lindsay won to step down was not the result of charges. Judge Hoffman, in an His greatest success came in re-election in New York, pull- pressure stemming from a recom- hour and half report cited 16 1957-59, when he led Hope to ing liberal Democrats, liberal mendation adopted by the Board cases during the riot con- records of 7-2, 8-1, and 8-1. Since Republicans and independent of Trustees last February. The spiracy trial of eight men that 1961, however, DeVette's Flying voters under his Independent recommendation, offered by a Party. The mayor won a Seale had been contemptuous. Dutchman squads have recorded a After reading this report and special athletic committee headed second four-year term by de- dismal mark of 25 wins, 47 losses, passing sentence. Judge Hoff- by Trustee A. Dale Stoeppels, feating Democrat City Comp- one tie and two snow-outs. RUSSELL DEVETTE man declared a mis-trial on stated that "no person should be troller Mario A. Procaccino and the head coach for more than one Republican State Sen. John I. behalf of Bobby Seale and sport." Marchi. The mayor pulled 42 ordered a new trial for Seale. Dr. Georg von Pirch percent of the votes, Procac- DeVette stated that his resigna- Jerusalem cino 38 percent and Marchi 23 tion was the result of two factors. percent. Israeli officials warned Le- Most important was the decision to speak Thursday banon Tuesday to expect of the Board of Trustees to permit Cleveland, Ohio speedy retaliation for any Arab the athletic department to hire Dr. Georg von Pirch, Consul Megow added, "For the first guerrilla attacks launched from another staff member to perform General of the Federal Republic time since World War II,the Feder- Strong support from white Lebanese soil as a result of the teaching and coaching duties. of Germany in Detroit, will de- al Republic of Germany, mainly voters re-elected Mayor Carl B. new agreement between the "This seemed like an opportune liver a talk on the topic "Political the creation of strong man Conrad Stokes, the first black mayor Lebanese government and guer- time to resign," DeVette said, "so Impact of the Federal Elections in Adenauer and his conservative of a major U. S. city to try for rilla chief Yasir Arafat. that the person we hired could be Germany" Thursday at 3:30 p.m. Christian Democratic Union, is in "///////////////////////S/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////S////S//////////S///////a football coach. . in Winants Auditorium. A discus- the hands of the opposing party, sion will follow. the more liberal and socialist oriented Social Democratic Party According to Dr. Gerhardt which also has a record of espous- Megow, professor of German, ing a more conciliatory political "The topic should be of timely course towards the Communist and acute interest to all politically block." alert and internationally con- The lecture is open to the ^ TWO cerned Americans." public. the student chupch

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Send in a plain brown wrapper, please MONDAY • Regular • Super thru FRIDAY Name. (please pnni) Addrp^e; SHIRT LAUNDRY Citv SfatP Zip Mail coupon to: International Playtex Corporation. Dept. WV, 350 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. Offer expires December 31, 1969. Please allow four weeks for delivery. College at 6th LEAN EPS 1 Holland, Michigan tPlayte* is the |f»demark ol Internat.onal Pl»,te« Corp.. Dover. Del. o 1969 Inlernatioml Playtex Corp. November 7, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 7 Pcale will match gifts On becoming luhite to Capital Funds drive Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, DeWitt Student Cultural and president of the Genral Synod ol Social Center and the Nykerk by Claudine Moore the Reformed Church in America, Music addition. Hope has need of will donate $10,000 to the RCA a third of the total fund since it is When an institution does not vidual in all his dignity and worth. Studies Program, a special tutorial Capital Funds campaign if a pri- a larger school than the other concern itself with those who are It has a commitment to seek program for those "high risk" vate individual will match his con- colleges and has older buildings, different, that institution has changes in the courses of study black students, a black student tribution. according to Stuart Post, assistant failed. "Hope College is not the union, as well as guaranteed posi- director of development at Hope. which will provide for adequate Dr. Peale's congregation, the place for a black student to learn standards of learning for all and tion for black students on all Marble Collegiate Church in New to live in a black community. governing levels of the Hope Col- "The campaign is progressing not exploitation of students by York City, will give an additional Rather, it helps a black person to lege Community (blacks cannot (juite well, but it will require some the school. $25,000 if another church will live in the white community," IT IS VERY CLEAR that the afford the risk of being elected); extra effort in the next few match the amount. stated Dean Morrette Rider. achievement of the white Ameri- all are natural stages of the cul- months," stated Mr. Post. The HOPE HAS FAILED black and can in recent times has shown mination of a black student's lib- Recipients of the total S6 mil- total goal of $6-million has not white students. For a so-called itself in his civilization. His aggres- eral education. lion Capital Fund are Hope, Cen- yet been realized. Since the Re- "integrated" liberal arts institu- sive attempts to exploit the HOWEVER, THE fact is that tral and Northwestern Colleges, lormed-Presbyterian merger was tion to de-Africanize and de-black minority and ethnic groups within Hope College denies every black New Brunswick Seminary, the defeated, many churches thai had its black students and to Anglo- his civilization, basing his efforts his right to "culminate," to en- Board of American Missions, the not previously pledged are now Saxonize all other minority groups upon his superiority in technology hance his identity, to better his Board of World Missions and the giving, according to Mr. Post. "We is not the ladder to success. That, and particularly the instruments self-concept, to raise his- self- Board of Christian I ducation. hope more churches will pledge my dear white liberals, is Racism. of force, have given him a sense of esteem. The College wants every now. Contributions can still be The Hope College is respon- superiority which he emphasizes black student to become invisible, Hope will receive S2 million to designated to a particular area of sible to each student and obli- in every American school of i.e.. invisibly white. We refuse. go toward the construction of the the Capital Funds Campaign." gated to provide education that thought. enables him to deal effectively The American educational with his society -black, white, yel- system and its schools perpetuate low or red. Each black student is lies and contradictions about inde- being exploited by the College. pendence, freedom, justice, capi- We are fulfilling the quota, giving talism and about life in general. most whites that "educational" The evils of these racist attitudes black experience, leading in the have been manifested at Hope movement for productive change, College. but receiving nothing in return SINCE HOPE College in its except, of course, exploitation. origin focused itself on the needs UUhcrc 90 the boots? High up the leg, stalking A RELEVANT education for a and desires of the white society, black student is an education for a Hope's education is not relevant good living. An education for a to the black student. In a relevant straight to the knee for a lean, leggy look. The good living does not imply a type education he learns to relate to his of curriculum that is obnoxious to black community, to think from greatest way to go in Fashion with short, pleated the students. It does imply that the standpoint of his race and to the education at Hope College have sound social feelings so that skirts, argyle wrapped cardigans that run hip- should radiate the modes and acts are to be deeds and not kinds of learning that can be misdeeds. The black student is recognized as good from the entitled to an education that will length a la 1930 and long, long scarves that swing standpoint of the needs of each regulate his instincts to the social student. ends of his society. wide around the neck. This education places great em- A relevant education for blacks phasis upon respect for each indi- is one that recognizes that a Black Applications for Japan study program due Nov. 15

Applications for the Great from Gearhart between 8:30 a.m. Lakes Colleges Association's and 10:30 a.m. Monday through Japan Study Program must be Friday in Voorhees Hall or by submitted to program director Dr. appointment. F.F. Gearhart by Nov. 15. The GLCA has a cooperative History dept. agreement with Waseda University in whereby GLCA students to sponsor open may enroll in the International Division for a six-month or a discussion Wed. twelve-month program. Instruc- tion in the program is in English, The history department will but study of Japanese is required sponsor an open discussion of during the student's stay in the selected topics concerning history, Far hast. curriculum changes and social Preceding the academic year, a issues Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the summer program is held involving geology lab on the first floor of approximately two weeks of U.S. Voorhees Hall. orientation, four weeks of lan- The discussion will be the first guage study in Japan and four in a series of discussions for which weeks of work experience in rural students from history classes will Japan. suggest topics. The discussions are International study brochures open to all interested students and and applications arc available faculty. I 1

CAMPUS PACS Raleigh in Antique Tobacco ARE HERE .... glove leather uppers ^ COUPLE 'BITS' GETS A COUPLE 'BUCKS' WORTH Is there a CATCH? YES .. . WE HAVE ONLY ENOUGH FOR ABOUT ONE-THIRD OF THE STUDENTS AT THE Corral in Centurion 5'POO,h BLUE KEY gather upoery BOOK STORE NOW IN STOCK! A FINE SELECTION OF CHRISTMAS 21 West 8th BOOTERY CARDS INCLUDING HOPE CARDS

flu Page 8 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969 Soccer team loses final game to Lake Forest

by Bill Hoffman before the retirement of Manuel anchor Reporter Cuba and Phil Slagboom. ONCE AGAIN Wheaton was Last Friday the Dutch trav- Mil champion with a record of eled to Lake Forest, 111., for their final soccer contest of the 5-0-1. MacMurray, Earlham and year. Although the Dutch re- Lake Forest finished behind turned defeated 4-0, the game Wheaton in that order. These was a much more even contest four teams completely out- than indicated by the score. classed Calvin, Hope and ALL FOUR OF Lake For- Wabash, as indicated by their est's goals were scored in the two lone victories. Lake Forest's first half. Brian Porto, the best Brian Porto accumulated more offensive player in the Michigan- goals this season than the entire Illinois-Indiana Conference, Hope team. kicked two goals to boost his Although Hope's 3-7 record total for the year to 20. The is not impressive, the season was "closeness" of the game can not without its bright spots. most easily be seen by the num- Hope's defense was good con- ber of shots on goal. Hope had sidering the amount of time the 21 and Lake Forest 27. ball spent in the Dutch half of Typical of the entire year, the field. The freshman players Hope was just unable to score did a good job filling the vacan- goals, in league competition, the cies created by the loss of play- Dutchmen scored only four ers. RUMOHR HAS IT-Hope halfback Harry Rumohr tries plunging through the Adrian defense in Saturday's goals while giving up 21. The game. Hope won the contest, 29-12. Rumohr and fullback Bob Haveman led the Hope offense, compiling over-all results were not much WITH THE ADDED experi- 253 yards rushing in 39 carries. better; Hope scored 9, giving up ence of this season and the re- 31, with four of these coming turn of several lettermen, Hope's in the first game of the season soccer future can be viewed with cautious optimism. The Second season win booter's future in the Ml! has Adrian defeats not yet been determined. Hope initially planned to transfer to Dutch down Adrian, 29-12 the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association, which will harriers, 15-45 by Pete Struck THE DUTCH scored first in The Adrian defense had appar- include soccer as a league sport anchor Reporter the contest the first time they had ently stopped Hope on their own The Dutchmen closed out the next year. However, plans have possession of the football. Adrian 38 when a roughing-the-kicker MIAA dual meet cross country not been finalized, and there is The Hope College Flying quarterback Tom Bell fumbled the penalty gave the Dutch a first season last Saturday with their a possibility the Dutch will Dutchmen football team finished ball while handing off to Vic down on the Adrian 24. Kaper hit Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic fifth loss of the year. The 15-43 compete in both leagues. Wolven, and Ted Albrecht covered Bill Bekkering with a 14-yard pass Association play Saturday after- loss to Adrian left the Dutch with the ball for the Dutch on the at the 10. On the next play a 1 -5 league record. Seminary dean to noon by defeating the Adrian Adrian 45-yard line. Haveman scored his third touch- The Bulldogs took the first five Bulldogs, 29-12, at Riverview Park On Hope's first offensive play, down. Hinga's kick was good and places, with Neal Kingsberry and present lecture before a large Parent's Day crowd. quarterback Groy Kaper handed Hope led 22-6. Roger Kingsberry tying for first THE VICTORY assured Hope off to Rumohr who scampered for Hope picked up its final score with a time of 21:15.5. Freshman Rev. Andrew J. Bandstra, asso- of a fourth place finish in the 11 yards. On the next play Have- of the afternoon with 8:28 re- Brian Claxton finished first for ciate professor of New Testament MIAA with a conference record of man got the call and the junior maining in the game. A 16-yard the Dutch with a time of 22:06. and Dean of Students at Calvin 2-3. Hope's overall record is now fullback went through a hole in run by Rumohr, 31 yards by Seniro captain Bruce Geelhoed Theological Seminary in Grand 2-5-1 with one game left to play. the right side of the line 34 yards Haveman and a 14-yard pass from finished next for Hope. Jim Matti- Rapids, will present a lecture en- Adrian, winless in the MIAA, had for the score. Mike Hinga's kick Kaper to Rich Frank put Hope on son, Gene Hollenbeek and Bob titled "Paul and an Ancient Inter- its overall mark lowered to 2-5. made the score 7-0. the Adrian 25. On first down Scott finished the scoring for the preter" Thursday at 11:15 a.m. in The key to the Dutch victory senior Peter Grimes powered his Dutchmen. Mulder Chapel. Saturday was the outstanding ADRIAN CAME right back way through the Bulldog defense Today the Dutch will be run- There will be no charge for the ground attack of running backs with a scoring drive of their own, all the way for the score. Hinga's ning in the MIAA meet at Adrian. lecture. Harry Rumohr and Bob Haveman. marching 80 yards in 10 plays. kick was good. There are four teams in prime Reservations for the luncheon Together they compiled 253 yards Ron Labadie scored for the Bull- contention for first place in he following the lecture may be in 39 carries. Haveman easily be- dogs on a nine-yard run. Bell's ADRIAN SCORED in the final MIAA meet. First place Adrian made by sending $1 to Western came Hope's leading scorer for the conversion attempt was wide. minutes of play after Coach Russ will have to really hustle to beat Theological Seminary before next season as he crossed the Bulldog's The fired-up Dutch countered DeVette had emptied his bench. Albion and Alma. Tuesday. goal line three times in the contest. Adrian's touchdown with another The score came on a three-yard one of their own. Kaper moved plunge by fullback Steve the Dutchmen 61 yards in just Rulewicz. four plays with Haveman scoring Haveman wound up with 135 his second touchdown of the yards in 17 carries for the after- afternoon on a 25-yard sprint. Jon noon. Rumohr was close behind Constant ran the ball in or the with 118 yards in 22 tries. two-point conversion and Hope Adrian runners compiled 210 led, 15-6. yards in the contest. They were Football outlook 1970 NEITHER TEAM could man- paced by Labadie who had 105 age a score in the second quarter, yards in 22 carries. though the Bulldogs came close KAPER HAD another bad day by Bob Vanderberg twice. passing for the Dutch. He com- Once Adrian had the ball on pleted three of nine attempts for Maybe it's too early to look nouncement that there will be a from Columbus, Ind., the same Hope's 32-yard line. On first just 36 yards. One of his aerials down Bell passed to end Jim ahead to next year's football sea- head coach next fall. And this is town that produced Purdue's All- was intercepted. Wallace in the end zone for what son. After all, there's still one not a slam at Coach Russ De- American quarterback, Mike Trailing the whole game. Bell looked like an easy score, only to game to be played this year. But Vette. Asking Coach DeVette to Phipps. Jim Lamer will return at went to the air often for the have the play called back on a it's more entertaining to look head up both intercollegiate foot- his tight end position. Bulldogs. He completed 16 of 38 five-yard procedure penalty. ahead than to look back-espe- ball and basketball is asking too THE TWO OFFENSIVE spots, passes for 251 yards. He was With one minute remaining in cially when you're looking back much. The new coach, whoever he then, which need to be filled are intercepted twice, both times by the half, the Bulldogs found them- on a 2-5-1 campaign. turns out to be, will be responsi- split end and flanker-positions freshman Dave Johnson. selves deep in Dutch territory ble for football alone, and this in now played by seniors Bill Bek- The Dutch will finish up their HOPE'S FOOTBALL fortunes again, but with the help of a itself should greatly aid the foot- kering and Rich Frank. Brewer 1969 football campaign tomor- for 1970 have already improved 15-yard offensive holding penalty ball program here. indicated that these spots could row when they travel to Upland, 100 percent merely with the an- the Hope defense was able to hold be filled by two of this trio of Ind., to play the Trojans of But the outlook for 1970 is on their own 20. bright also because of the number freshmen-Ted Albrecht, Dana Taylor University. This will be the Schneider takes of players who are expected to Snoap and John Wyns. THE DUTCHMEN scored again first gridiron confrontation in he return next September. As the Defensively, Hope should be mid-way through the third period. history of these two schools. athletic director said this week, improved over this year, despite first in state "The new coach will be stepping the fact that linebacker and cap- into a pretty nice situation, what tain Tom Thomas and tackle Fullback Haveman named karate competition with two experienced quarter- Bruce Heustis will graduate in backs in Groy Kaper and Jon June. Freshman ends Albrecht Ernest Schneider and Jim Constant, an excellent runner in and Dave Gosselar figure to be Knott represented the Hope Col- Bob Haveman and an experienced better after one year of experi- MIAA Back of the Week lege Karate Club last Sunday at offensive line." ence. Keith Van Tubergen, a stal- the State of Michigan Karate wart at tackle for three seasons Junior fullback Bob Haveman Championship sponsored by the THAT IS VERY true. Kaper now, will be striving for a final was named Tuesday as the Michi- Taekwondo Organization of Mich- will be back for his third year at crack at a winning season. gan Intercollegiate Athletic Asso- igan at the Lansing Civic Auditor- the controls of the offense, and he LINEBACKERS KARL Nadol- ciation's Back of the Week for his ium, Lansing, Mich. is capable of having a much better sky and Doug Nelson have been performance in Saturday's 29-12 Schneider took the first place season than he has had in 1969. impressive on several occasions triumph over Adrian. championship in the heavy weight Haveman has come into his own this season. Nadolsky could be the The 5'8", 170-pounder en- Blue Belt classification with Knott this year and has to be one of the man to fill Thomas' shoes as joyed his best game of the season placing out in the first elimina- finest offensive backs in the captain of the '70 squad. Golder, last week, as he carried the ball 17 tion. school's history. Carleton Golder Doug Smith, Dave Johnson, Craig times for 137 yards and three According to club member Dan will probably move into Harry Schrotenboer and Jim Leenhouts touchdowns. Haveman scored on Bouwman, the Karate Club had its Rumohr's spot at the other run- all should be back for duty in the runs of ten, 25 and 34 yards. beginning a month ago when sev- ning back position and, together defensive backfield. Havemen's three touchdowns eral students in the YMCA karate with Haveman, could form a de- As far as the kicking game is Saturday moved him into scoring club thought such a group would vastating 1-2 backfield punch. concerned. Smith will probably be leadership for the Flying Dutch- be of interest to students at Hope. The offensive line should be a the squad's punter, while Mike men this season. The hard-hitting The group meets Monday and good one, despite the loss of Hinga will handle the place-kick- fullback also leads all Hope runners Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. in the center Jim DeHorn and guard ing chores. in yards gained. So far this season basement of Centurian Hall and is Dave Pruim. Both starting tackles All told, as many as 25 letter- Haveman has gained 594 in 136 accepting new members. Cur- Jerry Swierenga and Bart Merkle men many return next September carries, averaging over four yards a rently the club is in the process of will return, along with guards Bill when the new coach begins drills carry. drawing up a constitution in order Hondorp and Pete Semeyn. In all for the 1970 campaign. It pro- Craig Cossey of Albion and to be recognized officially as a likelihood, next year's center will mises to be an exciting, winning Chris Clark of Alma were runners- College organization. be Merlin Whiteman, a freshman season, for a change. up for Back of the Week honors. BOB HAVEMAN

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