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The Anchor: 1969 The Anchor: 1960-1969

10-17-1969

The Anchor, Volume 82.06: October 17, 1969

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 82.06: October 17, 1969" (1969). The Anchor: 1969. Paper 18. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1969/18 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 82, Issue 6, October 17, 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]. anc OPE oCOLLEGrE Qccci^t OLLAND, MICHIGAN

82nd Anniversary— 6 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 October 17, 1969 Ponder says moratorium "time for commitment'

by Tim Seise the amount of success is measured anchor Reporter in the number of dead enemy bodies remaining on the battle- Rev. Raymond J. Pontier field. "Are we so self-righteous called the Vietnam moratorium "a that we cannot see the immoral- time of commitment and a cry of ity, the inhumanity of this?" he conscience against the false asked the audience. national idols which demand that * we worship at the altars of death The war as viewed by Rev. and not healing, of hate and not Pontier "has been a moral dis- love." aster. both for the people of Vietnam and for the people of He spoke to an audience of America. Our getting out of Viet- nearly 900 students and facult> nam will not suddenly solve their members in Dimnent Memorial problems- but our staying in con- Chapel Wednesday morning. tinues to compound them. It has divided the country, alienated the The Clifton, N.J., minister's young, prevented the national ef- address was part of a campus fort to remedy the ills of the program in connection with a cities, corrupted scholarship, and nationwide moratorium calling for poisoned the whole of society all i an end to the war in Vietnam. .1 of these without accomplishing m ItW # Rev. Pontier said that war is a . y.. denial of humanity, "with the war in Vietnam the present and visible expression of man's inhumanity." He added that he couldn't buy the reasoning of those "who would put Christ into uniform. Not, at least, without parking my faith at the door of the recruiting office." / Rev. Pontier declared the day as "a product of the vision and QUEEN REIGNS-1969 Homecoming Queen Eileen Reus (seated, far right) reigns over her court composed idealism and the sense of justice of (first row, 1. to r.) sophomore Jane Decker, junior Susan Reus, senior Barb Ryzenga, freshman Stella of young people" and those older Crawford; (second row, 1. to r.) freshman Jean Klooster, sophomore Des Hurley, sophomore Carol DeLong persons who had re-examined and junior Nancy Johnson. their priorities and goals of life. He felt that local churches have attempted to tame and domesti- Rules Homecoming cate the "Jesus who 'made waves,' who stuck his neck out for the underdog and the outcast" and Eileen Reus elected Queen that they get "much more excited over deviation from a traditional doctrine and falling Sunday atten- REV. RAYMOND J. PONTIER by Clarke Borgeson munity," said Student Congress Liggett will serve as Master of dance-than over what is happen- anchor Reporter president Tim Liggett. Ceremonies for the evening. ing, or what they should be doing, the purposes for which we claim- This afternoon bids for the The Hope College Stage Band, to 'the least of these' trapped in ed to have gone into Vietnam in The coronation of Queen Ei- De Witt Student Cultural and So- directed by senior David Dieven- some ghetto or in that far-off land the first place." leen Reus last night in the Phys- cial Center will be opened by the dorf and coached by Mr. Cecil will called Vietnam." Rev. Pontier pleaded for a ics-Math Arcade marked the of- architect at a formal presentation also perform. basic change towards the ideals of ficial beginning of Homecoming In his speech, Rev. Pontier at 2:30 in Phelps Hall. life. In speaking of the primary 1969. Also featured in the Kletz Con- attacked President Nixon and his At 3 p.m. Hope's soccer team goal of the Vietnam moratorium, Attending Queen Eileen are cert will be Terril Zylman, an administration for "tokenism will play Wheaton on Van Raalte he expressed the hope that "it will senior Barb Ryzenga, juniors alumnus from the class of 1959. made largely to cool the heels of field, located two blocks east of go deeper-The time is long past Nancy Johnson and Susan Reus, Mr. Zylman, who has performed his critics. The teams of Johnson the campus. due that we affirmed life instead sophomores Carol DeLong, Jane extensively in Western Michigan and Rusk, Nixon and Laird have of death. Let this Moratorium Decker and Des Hurley, and fresh- Tonight the Fifth Annual Kletz both as oboist and saxophonist, gone in so many directions in this Day be the beginning of a time of men Stella Crawford and Jean Concert will be held in the Hol- will play saxophone in tonight's war that the counsels of 'trust us' commitment." Klooster. land Civic Center at 8:15. The performance. Mr. Zylman is cur- and 'have patience' are no longer Hope College Band, directed by rently the band director in credible," he said. Rev. Pontier said that the role The traditional Saturday morn- Robert Cecil, along with the Nu- Sturgis, Mich. of each individual was to take ing parade has been replaced by a ance Society, directed by Norman He denounced the utilization action within his local church, "be new format. "Come See About Jennings, will combine talents to Cider and doughnuts will be of weapons such as napalm and instruments to confront the war, Us-Hope College the perform selections from Broad- served during the concert. Ad- called the presence of U.S. troops the military, and affirm life, not theme of this year's Homecoming, way shows. (continued on page 9, column I) in Vietnam an "invasion" in which death." calls for a calendar of events that its planners hope will be more meaningful for students and re- Over 1500 participate turning faculty alike. "Our design is to show alumni and friends the Hope students of today and what makes them ac- Moratorium observed for Vietnam peace tive members of the College com- An estimated 1,500 students Rev. Raymond Pontier in Dim- Buttriok to be participated in activities Wednes- nent Memorial Chapel. Nearly 900 day on the Hope College campus students and faculty members in observance of a nationwide heard the peace advocate term the Student Church Vietnam moratorium. moratorium "a day of commit- ment." He also demanded an THE DAY BEGAN early as ^uest preacher immediate halt to the war in more than 50 students dressed in Vietnam with its "continued kill- army uniforms went through mili- Dr. George Arthur Buttrick, ing and devastation." considered by many as one of the tary maneuvers at 6 Wednesday morning in the Pine Grove. The outstanding spokesmen of paci- Afternoon events included a 50 enacted "war games" through- fism, will speak in Student Church faculty forum, theatre department out the morning, rallying under Sunday morning. readings from "The Ultra-Resis- flags of South and North Viet- Presently professor of preach- tance" and a debate between Rev. nam. A major offensive was • ing at the Northwestern Univer- John Winter, a Grand Rapids Epis- mounted at 11:30 a.m., ending sity Divinity School, Dr. Buttrick copalian, and Jack Holmes, assis- with the death of every "soldier." served as minister of the Madison tant professor of political science. Ave. Presbyterian Church in New Medics and generals piled all York City for 28 years. He is the bodies in one mound. Then APPROXIMATELY 20 stu- Chaplain Emeritus of Harvard. the students involved began to dents picketted the U.S. Post Dr. Buttrick is the author of make simple wooden crosses, Office and Federal Building. The several books and numerous arti- which were planted in the Pine building is headquarters for the cles. He served as general editor of Grove. The scene was ended at U.S. Army recruiting office. Sev- the Interpreter's Bible. about 1:30 p.m. as nearly 350 eral high school students joined "Dr. Buttrick is recognized as crosses marked the "graves" of the Hope students and at least one one of America's greatest preach- the "dead." older woman also participated. HONOR "DEAD"—Constructing a cross after the final "major offen- ers," according to Chaplain OTHER ACTIVITIES in the Post Office employees and some sive" is Maggie Beretz (center), one of approximately 50 students who William Hillegonds. morning included an address by (continued on page 10, column 4) participated in the "war games" Wednesday. Page 2 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969 SCSC bids opened Library suspends fines Master plan in third year for book 'homecoming by Tom Donia Werf stated that "we expect the and low-interest loans in the anchor Editor The period beginning yesterday the individual. After an appropri- plans to be approved very soon, amount of $2 million will supple- and ending Thursday at 11 p.m. ate length of time dependent Homecoming 1969 marks the possibly even before bid ment the $1 million still to be has been declared "Homecoming" upon the type of material over- third anniversary of the unveiling opening." raised before construction can be- for overdue library materials. due, a service fee of $2.50 plus of the 10-year, $10 million master gin. THE FUNDS FOR construc- replacement costs will be billed to plan for the Hope College campus ALL MATERIALS will be ac- tion of the DeWitt Center were PRELIMINARY IDEAS for the individual through the busi- cepted with no charges and no of the future. As part of this raised over a four-year period, the planning of the new physical ness office. year's1 Homecoming activities, the climaxed by the gift of $600,000 education building will be pre- questions, according to head li- opening of bids for the DeWitt by Jack and Dick DeWitt of Zee- sented tomorrow at the H Club brarian Edward Whittaker. "If stu- 'The purpose of a fine is not dents have anything that is over- Student Cultural and Social Cen- land. The cost of the building is luncheon. Dr. Robert Visscher, a to punish the person with the ter will take place at 2:30 today estimated at $2,040,000. The ar- member of the committee of stu- due, now is the opportunity to overdue material but rather to return the books, magazines, etc. in Phelps Conference Room. chitect has guaranteed that all dents, administrators and faculty encourage him to return material TO DATE, ONE of the eight bids for construction will be with- members in charge of planning the And, if students have material promptly in order to make it that has not been signed for, again proposed buildings included in the in five percent of that figure. building, will present some basic available for others," noted Mr. plan has been constructed. The Bids are also expected from functional concepts for the pre- no questions asked," Mr. Whit- Whittaker. taker said. master plan was developed by the contractors on the Wichers addi- liminary planning stages. architectural firm of Stade, Dolan Starting Thursday, the library tion to the Nykerk Hall of Music. The committee has decided "WITH A MONTH loan period and Associates of Park Ridge, 111., will initiate a new fine system. Contractors were given the option that the physical education build- for books and with the circulation The new fine charges will be $.10 and was revealed Oct. 15, 1966. of bidding on both buildings in ing should be mainly for the use of bound and current journals, the a day for all non-reserve material Dykstra Hall, the only building one inclusive bid, or on each of physical education classes rath- library has tried to make its re- constructed under the plan so far, (books, journals, pamphlets, etc.), building separately. Construction er than serve as an arena for sources available to students for $.25 a day for all open reserve was not designed by the Illinois of the Wichers addition will be spectator sports. According to Dr. out of the library usage. But with architect. 44 material and $.25 an hour for all made possible by a $100,000 Visscher, the building is still in more emphasis on readings in the The master plan, originally esti- closed reserve material. pledge from the Second Reformed the dreaming stages" and will not courses, we must have access to t4 mated to cost $10 million, called Church of Kalamazoo. be ready for construction for a WHEN MATERIAL is overdue, these items as soon as a loan for the construction of a new ACCORDING TO President long time." there will be only one notice to period is completed," he said. science building, the DeWitt VanderWerf, there are sufficient Center, a physical education monies to construct both edifaces. building, a library addition, the "If the bids are high, we'll have to To review collections Wichers addition to Nykerk Hall hit the road and raise more of Music, an international educa- money. Its too late to redesign tion center and a dormitory addi- the buildings," he said. tion to Gilmore Hall. At its meeting yesterday and AAB endorses library survey Although contractors have sent today, the Board of Trustees has bids for the construction of the by Garrett DeGraff rium will be made for courses been discussing the proposed sci- ommended that the matter be DeWitt Center, plans for the anchor Assistant Editor presently being taught. Other ex- ence building. The trustees must referred to the Curriculum Com- building have not yet received give the go-ahead before the $1 ceptions are to be made by the mittee. final approval of the office of million still lacking for construc- The Academic Affairs Board librarian upon request. THE BOARD ALSO agreed to state fire marshall or the City of tion can be secured. Federal endorsed a request Tuesday from The new art course is a survey hold a joint meeting with the Holland. President Calvin Vander- grants amounting to $1 million librarian Edward Whittaker for a of the major art-producing tribes Administrative Affairs Board Oct. three month moratorium on li- of sub-Saharan West Africa. The brary orders during which a criti- 27 to discuss possible special pro- course is to be offered on an grams to aid marginal students. cal survey will be made of library alternate-year basis beginning sec- holdings by each department. Dean for Academic Affairs Mor- ond semester this year. The new rette Rider stated that the joint The Board also approved a new offering will be taught by Robert course in African tribal art. meeting is necessary because the Vickers, associate professor of art. issue involves both academic and WELCOME MR. WHITTAKETTin 11/\ivc,iRv saidu thme iinn - THE AAB REFERRED a rec- admissions matters. crease in faculty and courses has 0"imendation of the Student Stand- Dr. Jentz read a statement made it impossible for the library inS ancl Appeals Committee study from Dr. J. Dyke Van Putten, to purchase all publications re- language requirement to associate professor of physics, quested by the faculty. Thus, he the Curriculum Committee. Board BACK chair which suggested that the Adminis- requested that each department man Dr. Arthur Jentz, associ- trative Affairs Board should be determine its greatest need so that ate Pressor of philosophy, read the source of action on changing a priority list can be obtained. a rationale of the language re- quirement prepared by Dr. Ezra the academic calendar on the basis REMEMBER "To continue buying publica- Gearhart, chairman of the foreign that changing the calendar would tions without examination is what language department, which sug- require major administrative "uI /question, »u n " u Mr. Whittaker said gested that the language require- changes. "Witithn all the new courses ana d ment should not be considered professors, there is a real dangedan] r apart from other curriculum re- US? of things growing topsy-turvy." quirements. Education dept. THE PROPOSAL STATES Dr. Jentz stated his support for OF COURSE NOT. that exceptions to the morato- Dr. Gearhart's position and rec- sponsors institute

We weren't here before . We're Extra Large An institute for the "Under- standing, Evaluating and Educa- unique, and unique in both senses ITALIAN or BEEF SAUSAGE ting of Children with Perceptual Handicaps" will be held at the Gold Estate Monday and Tuesday of the word. We've only been open Sandwiches sponsored by the education de- partment and the American Insti- p| for a month or so, but already $1.10 ... half .60 "«Tax tute for Development Education. Dr. Morrette Rider, Dean for we are known for the high • Sandwiches Academic Affairs, and Lamont VON INS Dirkse, chairman of the education Fried Chicken Dinners department, will join Dr. Virgil quality and distinctive fashions Henry, educational director of • Fish AIDE, and Jay M. Yanoff, a school principal from Louisville, we carry. So we're unique in • Shrimp VIZZA Kentucky, as officials of the con- ference. th G sense that we're young and Delivery Service WAGON The conference will consider FREE DELIVERY for the characteristics of children more important, unique in the with perceptual handicaps and Orders $2.50 or Over the causes of such handicaps. Lec- kind of shop we run. Stop by and turers will also discuss the role of parents and teachers of children with perceptual handicaps and the see us. Oh - have a great Home EX 6-5632 problems they face. Finally, the conference will focus its attention upon community programs for coming. 102 River Ave. Open Sun. 5 p.m. - 1 1 p.m. the perceptually handicapped child.

IN SAUGATUCK and GRAND HAVEN it's CORAL GABLES

FOR — LEISURE DINING — BANQUETS — SNACKS

SERVING ANYTIME THE DELICIOUS a clothing establishment IL FORNO'S PIZZA and SUBMARINES Phone Saugatuth UL 7-7167 or Grand Haven 842-3510 for Reservations AT FIFTY-SIX - EAST EIGHTH STREET, HOLLAND October 17, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 3 aelson aides Senator Hatfield

by Sarah Penny After graduation from Hope, Michaelson to meet with younger anchor Reporter Michaelson attended Princeton members of the Party who are in Theological School, intending to staff positions similar to his own," Wes Michaelson, former Hope earn a Divinity Degree and an stated the Senator. College Student Senate president eventual doctorate in interna- Since Michaelson is involved and a 1967 Hope graduate, is tional relations. At Princeton he with foreign policy, currently working as special aide met Sen. Hatfield. Michaelson discussions with Soviet govern- to Senator Mark Hatfield (R-Ore). mentioned that he had written a ment officials responsible for MICHAELSON, WHO is Sen. lengthy paper on Vietnam, and East-West relations in Europe, Hatfield's research assistant in the upon request, sent it to the Sena- U.S.- U. S.S.R. policy toward area of foreign affairs and defense tor. Sen. Hatfield invited Michael- China, the Middle East and Viet- policy, is a member of the Senato- son to join his staff, and Michael- nam will be included in the tour. rial staff "Whiz Kids," youthful son became an aide on a perma- aides who research information nent basis in December 1968. MICHAELSON IS interested in for Senate challenges to the Pen- matters of defense policy, such as MICHAELSON FEELS well- tagon. This type of staff work was the strategic arms limitation and equipped for his job. "We're really previously done by members of international disarmament posi- talking about what kind of world the regular military committees, tions. International treaties, in- we're trying to create. They aren't but the young aides have taken cluding the peaceful use of the technical questions," he stated. He over. Sen. Hatfield said of the ocean beds and the chemical- believes that bureaucracies such as "Whiz Kids," "We couldn't func- biological warfare ban will also be MOVING IN—Hope alumnus Wes Michaelson helps Senator Mark tion without them. I find that the Pentagon are accustomed to discussed. justifying their actions instead of Hatfield move into the Senator's new office. Michaelson is currently they have an enthusiasm which Sen. Hatfield hopes that employed as research assistant to Senator Hatfield. translates itself into ideas." asking why they have acted in a certain manner. Michaelson will be able to meet with members and representatives To advise librarian Michaelson is the leader of the of the Supreme Soviet and with Senatorial staffers who work to members of the Soviet Press. challenge Pentagon programs, according to the Washington Fost. "AT THIS POINT in history it AAB creates new committee His duties include researching is particularly crucial that con- material for and writing parts of tacts be expanded between the the Senator's speeches. He has Russian people and the American by Jean DeGraff and needs, and as the interpreter icies dealing with library opera- worked on speeches involving the people," stated Sen. Hatfield. "It anchor Reporter to the entire academic community tions." The structure of the com- of the library's policies, services mittee was changed according to urban crisis, welfare and social is my hope that Michaelson's time and needs." unrest, the defense budget, mili- in the Soviet Union can be a The Administrative Affairs Dr. Hollenbach's suggestions. The Library Committee was tarism and Vietnam, universities unique exposure to the people Board created a new student- HE SUGGESTED THAT the placed under the Academic Af- today, student activism and vio- and culture. faculty standing committee under Library Committee membership lence, the space program, taxes fairs Board as that board deals the Academic Affairs Board to include three faculty members, "These experiences will be just with the curricular and instruction and domestic sanitation problems. deal with library policy at its one from each major division of as important as the opportunities program of the College, including meeting Monday. the College curriculum, three stu- SEN. HATFIELD has arranged to discuss matters of mutual con- the library. As a standing commit- The request for a library com- dents and three administrators, for Michaelson to take a month- cern with members of the Soviet tee the Library Committee will mittee was made by new head the Associate Dean for Academic long tour of the Soviet Union in government. It is my hope that work under and be responsible to librarian Edward Whittaker. Affairs, the head librarian and order to become acquainted with Michaelson's time in the Soviet MR. WHITTAKER stated in a head reference librarian. the Academic Affairs Board in the Russian people, their culture Union can be a blend of these written request to the Administra- policy matters. and their political life. He will experiences." tive Affairs Board that he has Dr. John Hollenbach recom- THE ADMINISTRATIVE Af- spend several days in Moscow and "been confronted with a number mended that the committee in- fairs Board also discussed registra- Leningrad before going to Tash- of current and long range library clude two faculty members from tion procedures for second semes- kent and Novisibersk. At Novi- Robert LeFevre policies which affect both the the humanities division instead of ter. sibersk, Michaelson will board the library and the entire academic one, since "the committee will be Kenneth Vink, Registrar and Trans-Siberian railroad and travel to speak today community of Hope College." dealing with the library's hold- Director of Data Processing, said to Irkutsk and Khabarosk. Sen. ings." Mr. Whittaker requested that a that there will be no pre-registra- Hatfield has requested that Robert LeFevre, president of tion this semester. Instead, regis- library committee be established DR. HOLLENBACH also sug- Michaelson meet members of the Rampart College, Santa Anna, tration will probably be held as ''advisory to the librarian on gested that the committee have an Moscow Institute for American Calif., will present an address on during a three week period before matters of library policies, services added function of "initiating pol- studies and members of the Insti- "Economics and Society" this Christmas vacation. He added that tute of International Affairs and afternoon at 2:30 in Winant's each student will be designated a World Economics. Michaelson Auditorium. His topic will be "A specific date and time to register. hopes to discuss the world situa- Little Matter of Stress." Nationwide participation Seniors will be the first to register. tion with Russian intellectuals, Mr. LeFevre has been an ex- DEAN FOR ACADEMIC Af- including university students, ponent of laissez-faire capitalism fairs Morrette Rider said that he writers and artists. Meetings with and human liberty at all levels marks moratorium activities supported a three-week period for active religious groups such as the since the I940's. He has devel- registration because when one Baptist congregation in Moscow oped and taught intensive one and Americans showed opposition a crowd of 1,000 that "anyone course is being quickly filled up, may also be arranged. two week courses and speech sem- to the Vietnam war on Wednesday who says this demonstration is he will be able to talk to the inars in the philosophy of free- with noisy rallies and silent unpatriotic, does not know the chairman of the department to see MICHAELSON WILL repre- dom and free market economics. marches that spread from college history of his own nation. This if new sections can be organized sent Sen. Hatfield to representa- While at Hope, Mr. LeFevre campuses to city street corners. form of dissent is the highest form or more openings made. He added tives of the Central Committee of will meet with students and also College and university cam- of patriotism." The Mayor also that "once a course is closed, it the Communist Party. "It would with the chairmen of the business puses were the center or starting ordered City flags to be flown at will remain closed." be especially desirable for Wes and economy departments. point of most Vietnam morator- half-mast. There was evidence that There will be one new feature ium activity. At many campuses not all supported Lindsey's pol- to registration this semester. A classes were cancelled and atten- icy, as the flags at New York student will be able to indicate on dance was down. At the Univer- City's police headquarters and a special IBM card any course that sity of North Carolina and Duke Shea Stadium were not lowered. he wanted to be in, but was University, officials reported that Support for the Administra- unable to enter because the sec- slightly more than half the stu- tion's policy was also evident, but tion was filled. Dean Rider said dent body went to classes. was not as wide-spread as the the purpose of the tally was to There were no official esti- demonstrations against the war. help the department chairmen mates of the number of partici- Alabama's largest newspaper, judge the number of sections pants in the demonstrations. The the Birmingham News, emblazed needed for each course. largest single crowd reported was across the entire front page a red, CLARENCE J. Handlogten, 15,000 in Cambridge, Mass., white and blue American flag with Treasurer and Business Manager, 10,000 at a rally in the United a message from Gov. Albert said payment of fees will be held Stations and the same number at a Brewer declaring "that peace in a two-day period in January JtUULHY rally at the University of Minne- without honor and justice is no before the beginning of second Dependable Jewelers for Over a Quarter Century sota. These demonstrations were peace at all." semester. led for the most part by college 6 West Eighth Street students. HOLLAND, MICHIGAN The crowd outside the United Nations had been billed as a busi- nessman's rally, but the majority of those attending were young people. The moratorium reached even the student chupch the World Series at Shea Stadium in New York City. About 200 youths stood outside the stadium will wopship on distributing anti-war leaflets. 15c The demonstrations were gen- 15c erally peaceful, with scattered sunCuy, GctOBeR 19 DRAFTS DRAFTS minor incidents reported. There was a flurry of violence 11 a.m. in front of the White House when a group threatened to push its DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL way onto the grounds. Police "HAPPY HOUR" made several arrests. DR. GEORGE BUTTRICK Such incidents, however, were FORMER CHAPLAIN AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY at the few and relatively mild. The Pen- Preacher tagon civil service command post HOLIDAY INN called the national situation "gen- CHAPLAIN HILLEGONDS. Worship Leader erally quiet," but said that army troops were made available as a THE CHAPEL CHOIR FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 precaution in Boston, Fort Dix, DR. ROBERT CAVANAUGH. Director N.J., and near the Rock Island, 111., aresenal. In New York City Mayor ROGER DAVIS John Lindsey proclaimed the day Organist 15c 15c one of observance and had the DRAFTS DRAFTS City Hall draped in black and purple mourning. The Mayor told Page 4 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969 Time and pressure

Wednesday Hope College students changes in Vietnam policy. This fact has participated in the nationwide moratori- served to discourage many people about um for peace in Vietnam, or perhaps the chances of unilateral action by the more correctly for the removal of United States in Vietnam while President American interests from the originally Nixon is in office. i civil war in South Vietnam. Nationally, Though the prospects for an immedi- the moratorium brought together over a ate change in America's position are million people in a concerted effort to dim, there is little to indicate that Mr. Nixon believes that unilateral action is anchor out of the question. That he has refused to yield to public opinion to date shows editorials little more than his awareness of the ficklenature of public opinion. And Presi- have the policy of the American govern- dent Nixon has gone to great lengths ment changed. to emphasize the Vietnamization of the /: Yet in spite of the October 15 mora- war. 1= torium and a massive march on Washing- What these facts seem to point to is ton planned for November 15, President an awareness that if America continues Nixon has made no major policy to participate in a limited Asian war up changes. Though he has pushed for to the next presidential elections, Mr. changes in the Selective Service System Nixon would be wise to retire as Presi- to make it more just, and has fired Gen- dent Johnson did. eral Lewis Hershey, moves that have The task, then, is to maintain public been seen as attempts to placate Ameri- pressure upon the administration to end can youth, he has made no substantial America s role in South Vietnam. An anniversary art buchwald

This week marks the third anniversary But they were often led to believe that of the unveiling of the masterplan. Origin- their efforts would soon be rewarded. Ever ally scheduled to be completed in ten since President Calvin VanderWerf told the years, the master plan may take much student body in 1964, "We'll have a longer for completion. student center so fast it'll make their heads by Art Buchwald To date, one of the eight buildings of swim, up to "Groundbreaking" cere- the plan has been constructed. However, monies and beyond, students have been There has been a great deal of discussion that building, Dykstra Hall, was built by a told that the SCSC was right around the A girlfriend finally produced a bottle of concerning sex education in the schools. contractor working independently of the corner. the mouth-wash, and on the very next architects of the master plan. Actually children are getting more sex outing her date refused to let her leave We certainly rejoice that bids are being education in one week's viewing of televi- This afternoon, bids will be opened for him. opened today for the building. But we sion commercials than they'll get in four two more parts of the plan. The DeWitt must also caution all those who have been years in the classroom, and most of this ONCE AGAIN I COULD see the sub- Student Cultural and Social Center and the waiting for so long that this is only one TV-type sex education can become very teen-agers trying to figure it all out. By Wichers addition to the Nykerk Hall of more step in the master plan. distorted. rights, the proper thing was for the girl to Music represent a large investment of mon- be left at the door. But the mouth-wash Perhaps it is time to reevaluate realis- FOR EXAMPLE, THE other evening 1 ey for the College. But even more, they guaranteed nothing but trouble, and when tically the basic presuppositions of the was watching a commercial for a 1970 represent a large investment of time and I made the comment that it was better for master plan. It is not impossible to com- automobile. The girl announcer challenged hope for thousands of students at Hope a girl to have bad breath than for her to get plete the schedule called for on the one the virility of the TV viewer and wanted to into this kind of situation 1 was hooted College. They have been inspired and dis- hand, but on the other, we must not be led know if he was man enough to drive it. If down by everyone in the room. appointed numerous times on the question astray by the consistantly overly-optimistic he wasn t, she said, then he obviously of the SCSC. statements made about the progress of the wasn't man enough to get her. Later on, a blonde beauty was throwing The students who originally labored for herself all over a man who had been plan. Well, 1 frankly didn't care that much wearing a certain kind of after-shave lotion. the construction of this building are no We urge each student, and even more, about the girl because her legs were too The man had it made in the commercial. I longer students at Hope College. They each alumnus of Hope College, to carefully skinny. But I could see the effect it was tried to warn the young men in the room spent months and years trying to persuade having on several subteen-agers in my living consider the future of our institution. For that wearing after-shave lotion was no and trying to raise funds for the building. room. only by working together and planning guarantee of success when it came to All along, they were given encouragement together realistically can we achieve the IT'S TOUGH ENOUGH getting through blonde beauties. 1 pointed out that before 1 by the Administration of the College. goals before us. puberty, but when you have to prove your was married 1 had used the very after-shave manhood by first purchasing a $4,000 lotion advertised and was slapped in the Readers speak out sports model, you might as well throw in face six times before I decided to go home. the towel before you start. ONE OF THE MEMBERS of the young The next commercial showed a couple group retorted that my experience took walking through high grass hand in hand. place before there was television. They obviously were up to no good and The final commercial had to do with A lack of dedication were looking for a clear area to spread out shampoo. The young lady was shown Our own little event called the morator- their blanket. But before they got down to shampooing her hair in the shower. After Vietnamese people mainly over the past 5 business, the man lit a cigarette and then ium, although a very excellent topic, will years. Even with the signs of a pull-out, that it had become so silky that her escort handed it to the girl who took a puff and probably melt away into meaningless after for the evening could do nothing but run U.S. intervention and occupation seems looked at the guy as if the deal had been the original shock wave has died down. his hands through it all night long. 1 made inevitable for at least another 5 years. made. Just as has happened before, our meek and the observation that running your hand mild campus will go back to its Puritanical But this time can be drastically short- NOW ONCE AGAIN 1 wasn't moved by through a girl's hair for any length of time ways with the fond memories of the ened if U.S. students throughout the na- this, mainly because I have a fear of snakes. was not only bad for her scalp but became victory won that day. tion are willing to demonstrate their feel- But 1 could see the kids watching this scene very tiring. Go down to your alleged Coffee ings to Washington. I'm sure that 7 million and believing that an act of love had to be Grounds some night and listen to the hotly telegrams would get Nixon off his can and preceded by both parties first smoking a But 1 couldn't seem to get the message discussed topics that are spoken. One will get his rear in gear. But it takes action not cigarette. across. In less than two hours the subteen- middle class indecision. The time is here to 1 tried to explain to the subteen-agers agers had been educated to believe that if fight, but all that I've been hearing is you drove a sports car, smoked cigarettes, dear grumbling. that this was not true and in manv cases could cause unnecessary fires in bed. used mouth wash and after-shave lotion, 1 must commend Mr. Vander Laan for not to mention shampoo, you would editor A little later we hit a mouth-wash eloquent statement on the terrible menace, achieve the final act of bliss. Are these kids moratorium. It took courage and especially commercial. The girl was stunning, but in for a surprise. very easily pick up commentnike/^ok audacity to verbalize his time honored when boys took her home they just left her at the moneymaker on that girl. Or, yeah, words. To him, 1 salute in the only proper at the door without kissing her good night. Copyright 1969 I'm concerned with poverty but not way. enough to campaign against it. Yeah, we Of course, we can always stan in Nam should get out of Nam but I can't help OH COLUOI anyway." 1 wish the College would publish and lose. Maybe then we would shake what recent grads are doing. It would be enough drawers in this country to get on the move. morbidly interesting to see how many anchor Norman Ochelski Hope grads are in the Peace Corps, the OLLAND, MICHIGAN Teacher Corps, VISTA or any other social agency. I wonder if the total amounts to Published weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by and for two. Board S 6 ^ Ho,land' Michigan, under the authority of the Student Communications One word can describe the majority of Hope students. That one word is uncom- Question motives mitted. You can also refer to this term as Subscription: $S per year. Printed: The Composing Room, Grand Rapids, Michigan. undedicated, unaware, lackadaisical, pomp- The events of the moratorium prompted Member, Associated Collegiate Press. ous, heart to heart lovers of the Christian me to ask these questions. doctrines of Social Darwinism and the Are you against the war because it is Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 392-51 1 1, Ext. 2285. Protestant Ethic. immoral or because you are the one going There are only a few students on this The opinions on this page are not necessarily those of the student body, faculty or Administration of to fight it (and maybe get killed)? Hope College. campus that are dedicated. One of them Does the peace you are shouting for BOARD OF EDITORS started the Coffee Grounds. One of them only mean total withdrawal from Asia? Layout Janice Bakker burned a cross. One of them got busted in a Have you thought of the consequences Copy Lynn Jones. Kathy Smith Greek bordertown for possession. Another Editor Tom Donia Headlines Dave Dustin of pulling out of South Vietnam as soon as Assistant Editor Garrett DeGraff was kicked out of school at the beginning Photography . . .Dan Barber.Angie Kolster, possible? News Editor Lynn Jones Joyce Maurus, Don Page. Jeanne of first semester for smoking weed. The Does a war fought for existence mean A d vertising Dave Die vendor) Sal berg. Louis Sehakel most fortunate one, even though I hate to anything to you? Business Manager Allen Pedersen Rob Benchley, and Steve Vandermade say it, is the president of the student body. Is it all right for a couple of million REPORTERS Even one freshman girl is totally commit- people, Asians, Africans, etc., to die fight- DEI'A R TMENTS Clarke Borgeson, Jim Brainard, Jean DeGraff. ted. When asked for a date she responds, ing for existence as long as they are not "Are you a Prater?" Of course we must Jan Dzurina. Bill Hoffman. Beth Maassen. Americans? Critiques Robert Kieft Andy Mulder, Robin Pearce. Sarah Penny, not forget all the girls here that are trying Are you very sure that this war is not a Columnist Drew llinderer Barbi Shostal. Pete Struck, Dave Thomas. Bev to get married. war of your freedom and also South East Cartoonists . . . .Grey Phillips. Debbie Yoch Unangst, Bob Vanderberg, Nancy Warner. We all know the atrocities afforded by Asia's freedom? Proof Lvnn Jones, Jan Dzurina Gail Werka and Charlotte Whitney. the U.S. Pigs to the NLF and the North D. Huang (Malaysia) Color photography by Richard Angstadt October 17, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 5

anchor review 'Midnight Cowboy9: a depiction of emptiness Editor's Note: This week's anchor neon night, the fearlessness dis- review is written by anchor cri- Forty-Second Street to the War- able. One of the highpoints of the solves into the Tear that creeps tiques editor Robert Kieft. He hol people and the lonely conven- film is his treatment of the final silently and insidiously from the tioneer, the film is undeviatingly reviews the John Schlesinger- scene, in which the silence of his dark of the hungry stomach and faithful to its vision of life and the face's expression of an unknown Jerome Hellman production of the aloneness of a sea of pitiless forces in the City that combine to and unnameable fear and helpless- The Midnight Cowboy. faces. change and almost, ultimately, de- ness burns itself indelibly into the feat Joe Buck. The way in which memory. by Robert Kieft GONE, GONE FOR him the the film itself is put together-the sunlit blue skies and golden The Midnight Cowboy is a de- way in which it selects and pre- Hxamine for a moment, if you dream-idylls of youth, gone the grading film. It shows us the sents its material-creates a world will, the American Dream. Con- gold-bright visions of the crystal sordid and despicable emptiness for the viewer that, by the end of sider the bright-with-promise city and its towers to be tamed. of our humanity-our selfishness the film, becomes unbearably pre- misty golden shadows of its Now he is the child of the fumes and greed and apathy. It shows us sent and real. youth, the shining eyes of its and neon, spawned in the crush the hideous, nightmarish realities wishes, the thrilling optimism of and heartlessness, the indifference THE BATTLE RAGES as to of psychological and moral de- of the City of Death and Fear, the its red cells. Turn your back on which of the two leading actors is struction which the Dream of American Nightmare. the sick Old World and go West, the better. It is, of course, a America and her culture have In trying to talk about The young man and old alike, to the question of taste and one which created. And it leaves us little Midnight Cowboy it is almost new Eldorado, the glorious anti- doesn't have to and really can't be hope. impossible, for this reviewer, any- thesis that negates all the sordid, answered. But were this reviewer way,to say anything without launch- BUT THAT IS not to say that ugly and dead-end old and makes faced with the necessity of de- ing into panegyric. It is a brilliant it leaves us with none at all. The all things new in the sunlight and cision as to whose performance he film, brilliantly conceived and ex- vision and romance are gone for- blue skies of its speculations and most liked, he'd side with Jon fondest wild designs. his dreams and the creature of his ecuted and brilliantly acted. It is a Voigt. ever in the bitter irony of the confident hand. film to see several times with dead body behind a window that CONSIDER FOR a moment, if Dustin Hoffman has to play a increasing appreciation of its art, reflects the Florida that we you will, the young man, the Hail, the conquering Hero sick man, and he does so superbly. and one to remember with deep dreamed and that might have vision of our hopes. Note the comes! He arrives in a bus, chew- But Mr. Voigt, is faced with play- pleasure. saved us. blond halo falling on his brow, the ing gum rather obnoxiously, but, ing, simply, a man: a man who clear blue of his eyes, the square ah the insouciant magnificence oi The Midnight Cowboy is a during the course of the portion There is something in the face his smile! The streets of gold turn of his jaw, the unsullied whiteness magnificent study in cinematic of his life which we see is faced of Joe Buck, however, that says of his teeth. He is a young man of out to be paved with drunks as naturalism. The film's hypersensi- with some drastically new situa- that even though the American well, but oh, well, lie is taken by dreams and aspirations and pro- tivity and perfect recreation of tions and makes a major decision Dream of our innocence and the fatty, brassy middle-aging grams for the future, a young man the environment, of the vast and about the kind of person he is. hoping young will is dead and our yenta in her vulgar purple pent- who can imagine seeing a bliss of complex personality which is New ability to believe almost mortally his own design in his lifetime. house with the black sheets. He is York City, is uncanny. From the IT IS FOR BRINGING off the hurt, there is still the chance that taken by the derelict, by the faggy He is the man-angel, the ro- deserted subway platform to the "education of Joe Buck" that Mr. we shall survive and bring what mance and hero of our vision; in little high-school brat, by the crea- mouse-woman to the pleasures of Voigt's performance is so enjoy- joy we can to the Nightmare. the pride of his youth and the joy tures and denizens of the city of his manhood, in the pleasure he who, somehow, seem more con- takes in his strength and in his cerned with themselves than with confidence, he goes out into the service to the Hero. world to carve out his place in the STRANGE: THEY don't fall at Black And Beautiful sun and write his name across the his feet and beg on their knees for face of heaven. his favor; they don't pry up the golden paving stones from the THE GREAT CITY is his goal; streets and pile them at his door. there, on the New Frontier, will Eldorado is tarnished gold, hardly White folks listen! he prove himself. There, where fourteen karat; maybe it's even the streets are paved with gold the gold of fools. and the gutters running with nec- His Dream becomes his Night- by Reginald Cohen tar; there will he make his success. mare. The hopes die, and the The men will defer to him and the speculations collapse, and the cept one wise old man, who being victimized by the white women creep adoringly to his bed; visions and bright eyes of youth edited by Alice Stephens walked away shaking his head and racist government of America. We all that lives and breathes or is are buried in the rubble at the The following excerpts express muttering, Tool, Fool! Who the will protect ourselves from the inanimate there will be his for the back of a condemned tenement. various moods and opinions held f— cares about sitting on the force and violence of the racist asking. For he is the strength of His romance is gone; mere survival by "aware" black people of toilet next to a black man.' That's police and the racist military, by determination and fearlessness, is the paramount question. The today! all Integration is, civil rights in the whatever means necessary. and the city is the frontier land of old confidence ebbs out into the INTEGRATION s—house!" "We believe in an educational "A small colony, sole survivors THE ART OF ARSON system that will give to our people of WWII, established a new civili- "The black man is constantly a knowledge of self. If a man does Dykstra to present zation on a small island in the subjected to empty words, empty not have knowledge of himself Pacific. There were many races dreams, and hollow promises. and his position in society and the represented, but blacks pre- Black America is subjected to world, then he has little chance to piano recital Sunday dominated and composed the these fruitless promises because relate to anything else." ruling class. Also on the island whitey cannot be reached thru ON OPPRESSION were large numbers of pale- talking, one man to another. Dr. Brian Dykstra will present "To die for the fascist imperial- skinned sub-human-type beings White America understands nei- a piano recital Sunday at 3 p.m. in istic war mongers of the U.S. and Dimnent Memorial Chapel. who were excluded from the main ther the urgency of black de- others in the world; to die for the colony. mands nor the seriousness of our The recital will include two oppressive ruling circles of the "They were relegated to a poor plight. He cannot "feel" the prob- preludes and fugues from the capitalistic, aggressive, inhumane, under-developed area and were lem in other words. Well-Tempered Clavier by Johann atrocious, genecidal regimes is a allowed to enter the civilized area "There is, however, an artistic Sebastian Bach, Sonata in C death lighter than a feather which to work and then only during method by which black people Minor, opus 1J1, Maestoso and a destructive windstorm can blow certain hours. Using these sub- can relate to honkies the necessity Arietta by Ludwig van Beethoven, about at random will." humans for manned and menial for direct action now! This meth- and Olivier Messiaen's "Regard du labor the other race was provided od is quite simple and inexpen- "True freedom cannot begin to Silence" from Vingt Regards sur ample leisure to become cultured sive. To create this work of art, all be bom until all police and repres- I'Enfant Jesus. Dr. Dykstra will and refined. the materials needed are a Coke sive forces of the state are con- conclude with his Sonata for "One day a spokesman for bottle, rage, gasoline, match and a trolled by the people." Piano, 1968. these second-class sub-human white establishment. Somehow Yours in Blackness Dr. Dykstra received his B.S. beings went to the black rulers to this crude art makes a believer of degree from the Julliard School of plead for their civil rights. The foolish and backward whites. SEE to present Music in 1964. In 1969 he re- black rulers were very sympa- "White folks listen: I MAKE ceived his D.M.A. degree from the thetic to the "problem" and NO HOLLOW PROMISE. THE t , Eastman School of Music. During agreed that whites should be REVOLUTION COMETH AND Viri(^iaIla Oct.22 granted their civil rights. And the 1967-68 he studied in Salzburg, AS THE PHRASE GOES "YOUR VIndiana, a film by Luis Bu- best way to gain these was to Austria on a Fullbright Fellow- ASS IS GRASS." The only way nuel, will be shown in Snow Audi- ship, appearing in solo recitals and sanction "Integration." That out is right, and whitey doesn't torium Wednesday at 7 p.m. would make everything all right. chamber music concerts at the know the meaning of right. Stand Mr. Bunuel is a famed Spanish "The white leader of the white Mozarteum Academy of Music. warned, my art will be your ruin, director. His film, Viridiana, is a people was elated and immedi- DR. BRIAN J. DYKSTRA your despair my justice." comment on Roman Catholic ide- Dr. Dykstra, the son of Dr. and ately went back to the ghetto to WHAT WE BELIEVE ology. Mrs. D. Ivan Dykstra, attended At Wooster, Dr. Dykstra has tell how he had flat-a—d told that "We believe that black people The film is one in the series Hope College for two years, appeared in chamber music con- dumb black just what he wanted should not be forced to fight in presented by the Society for the studying under Dr. Anthony certs with violinist Michael Davis, and how the black had given him the military service to defend a Educated Eye. Admission is $1 Kooiker. Presently he is an assis- a winner of the Carl Flesch Com- not only civil rights but Integra- racist government that does not without a membership card. Such tant professor of music at the petition and participant in the tion, too. protect us. We will not fight and cards admitting students to the in Wooster, 1962 Tchaikovsky Competition in "All white sub-human, second- kill other people of color in the remaining 16 films may be ob- Ohio. Moscow. class citizens were over-joyed ex- world who, like black people, are tained at the door for a fee of $4. The Best of Peanuts

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9-23 Page 6 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969

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/ October 17, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 8 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969

Holland Day Care Center hel^

Cecil. They occupy five rooms by Jan Dzurina composed of the parents of child- plus office space in the education- anchor Reporter ren involved in the program elect- al building of Hope Church on ed to this position by the parents. The Holland Day Care Center East Eighth St. A 10-member Policy Advisory serves over 40 children of working Committee meets at least once a THE 46 CHILDREN, aged parents in the Holland communi- month to decide upon staff and to three to five years, were referred ty. The Center is a full-day full- write the annual program. Five to the Center by the Ottawa time Headstart program. parents serve on this committee. County Health Department and The children who attend the The two Spanish-American Department of Social Services and center often come from broken community aides function as a the Holland public schools. homes where there is only one liason between the children and •i parent, or where there are special There are certain restrictions their families and the available problems of a physical or econom- on the admission of children at health, housing and legal services ical nature. the Center. Designed for lower in the area. The community aides, AS THE DIRECT result of income families, the Center ad- who are non-professional social investigation into the needs of the mits children from families with workers, visit the homes of the Holland community by Help and an income lower than that defined children, acquainting the families Services (HANDS), a service or- as the "poverty line". The poverty of the help offered by such agen- ganization of women associated line for a family of four, for cies as the Holland Human Rela- with several churches in Holland, example, is S3,300. tions Commission, the County the Holland Day Care Center be- Health Department, the Headstart gan operation in February, 1966. TEN PERCENT OF the total program and the County Depart- The women of HANDS formed enrollment may include children ment of Social Services. They also the first Board of Holland Day from families that do not meet inform parents of the government AIDS CHILDREN— One member of the 11-member staff at the Care Center and filed applications the poverty-line qualifications. food stamp program and plan the Holland Day Care Center, instructs several children during a class for funds. They received support However, children from these fi- weekly parent-staff meetings. from Michigan Migrant Opportun- nancial backgrounds must show "ANYTHING THAT affects session. ity, Incorporated; however,that extreme sociological, psycholog- the families affects the children, Before lunch the children play guidance is not confined to the agency withdrew support in the ical or physical need. so we cannot ignore health, hous- out of doors for about one hour. structured teaching period each summer of 1966. The Center then ing and legal problems," said Mrs. After a hot lunch the children morning, but continues through- sought and received financial sup- Mrs. Cecil noted that one girl Cecil. She finds that the inter- nap in two rooms especially re- out the meal times and play peri- port and services from the state whose family's income exceeded dependency of the agencies in the served for this purpose until their ods," she added. and the community. the poverty line was admitted community is necessary and bene- 3 p.m. snack time. The last busload of children PRESENTLY, 24 PERCENT because her parents were both ficial. "We are not a baby-sitting of the Day Care Center's budget is deaf. As a result of her home "It is not unusual that we help leaves the Center at approximate- service," a volunteer from the met by funds from the Headstart environment her speech and her the parents of one of our children ly 4:30 each week-day afternoon. Center said. "The Center is not program of the Office of Econom- ability to form mental concepts solve a problem related to a legal "Our goal is to help the chil- a place for mothers to leave ic Opportunity, 40 percent from were severely handicapped. contract or search for available dren feel good about themselves, their children. We perform a the State of Michigan Day Care housing for a family which has other children and adults," Mrs. real service to the children and Services funds and 36 percent is APPROXIMATELY 20 of the just been evicted from its home," Cecil said. "This teaching and their familie " children in the program come contributed by the community in Mrs. Cecil noted. the form of the use of the educa- from homes in which Spanish is tional building of Hope Reformed spoken. Each of these children has A typical day at the Center Church. a different level of English profi- begins at 7:45 a.m. when the first Hope chapel violators "In 1966, we began with 30 ciency, thus, a Spanish-speaking busload of children arrives. After children, two teachers, one cook, staff member must be in each a hot breakfast, the children par- one room and myself," said Mrs. classroom. The teachers primarily ticipate in an activity period attend other colleges Dorothy Cecil, director of the use English in teaching situations; which consists of painting, work- however, they revert to Spanish ing with clay, listening to stories program. Most of the students suspended Five of the nine contacted had when explaining difficult or emo- and learning number concepts and THE HOLLAND DAY Care by Hope College for excessive not planned to return to Hope tionally charged concepts. the basics of language. Center now has a salaried staff of chapel cuts last spring are now this year when they accumulated eleven persons, including two A 30-member Board meets This morning activity period is attending other colleges. their chapel cuts last spring. These community aides, three teachers, four times a year to execute the sometimes devoted to taking field A total of 14 students were students stated generally that they three teachers' aides, a cook, a legal aspects of the Day Care trips, such as walking tours of suspended by the College in the did not attend chapel because part-time bus driver and Mrs. Center. One-third of the Board is Holland or going to Carousel spring. Of the nine students con- they found it worthless knowing Mountain to look for and identify tacted by the anchor, seven are they were not returning. The FINEST in leaves and picking blueberries, ex- now attending school full time, plained Mrs. Cecil. The children one is attending part time and one The students who had planned Traditional Mens Clothing will visit a cider mill next week. is out of school. to return had not attended chapel because of what one student des- For the pacesetter cribed as an "inability to get up in or the style-conscious follower the morning." None of the students has had FARAH CASUAL SLACKS any trouble with his draft board VAN HEUSEN 417 SHIRTS to the present. The two students McGREGOR SPORTSWEAR who are not attending college full H.I.S. OUTERWEAR time did express concern over the ALLIGATOR RAINWEAR Tastes So Good possibility that they might get HICKOK BELTS & ACCESSORIES bimbo drafted, however. Featuring There was no feeling among any of the students that they had 100% Pure Beef been treated unfairly by the office of the Dean of Students, which MENS SHOP was responsible for determining Hamburgers who would be suspended. One former Hope freshman did feel Atett Qood WiU 94 DOUGLAS AVE. 393-8369 that the Dean's office could have ACROSS FROM THRIFTY ACRES been more considerate of each student's particular situation.

DRY CLEANING HOPE COLLEGE GREAT PERFORMANCE SERIES 20% Discount presents a performance of the Cash 8c Carry pequiem by Maurice Durufle — Featuring — MAURICE DURUFLE, SHIRTS GUEST CONDUCTOR MARIE-MADELEINE DURUFLE-CHEVALIER GUEST ORGANIST LAUNDERED THE HOPE COLLEGE ORATORIO CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA JOYCE MORRISON, 30< each SOPRANO SOLOIST NORMAN JENNINGS, BARITONE SOLOIST THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23 - 8:15 P.M.

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HOPE COLLEGE STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF College at 6th LEAN EPS FREE ADMISSION WITH I.D. CARD Holland, Michigan PICK UP FREE COMPLIMENTARY TICKETS IN VAN RAALTE 102 October 17, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 9 The Fredric^ to play Durufle to direct Queen Eileen to reign over hall Hope musicians (continued from page 1) of Oh, what a Lovely War at 9:30 Homecoming Ball, to be held to- Maurice Durufle, French com- tain rhythms...It represents the mission is $.50 for students and and again at 11 a.m. morrow evening at 8:30 at the poser and organist, will conduct idea of comfort, of faith and of $1 for adults. The Hope College art depart- Holland Civic Center. Music for the Hope College Oratorio hope." Tomorrow morning at 9:30 the ment will exhibit student and the occasion will be provided by Chorus, Orchestra and soloists in The Requiem is in nine parts Stage Band will hold an open faculty art work in the Pine Grove The Fredric. Tickets are available the performance of his Requiem and uses an orchestra of triple from 9:30 until noon. rehearsal in Snow Auditorium, the in Van Raalte Hall at $4 per Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in Dimnent \ winds and brass, strings in five Five members of the Student Coffee Grounds will be the scene couple. Memorial Chapel. parts, harp, celestra, percussion Church Board of Trustess will lead of discussions and films, dormi- The Student Church Home- and organ, mixed chorus and a discussion concerning the role of tories, fraternity houses and soro- coming worship service will be MRS. MARIE Durufle will also mezzo-soprano and baritone solos. the Student Church at 11 a.m. in ity rooms will be open and alumni held in Dimnent Chapel at 11 perform with her husband. She Winants Auditorium. THE MOST RECENT record- and students will be able to meet Sunday morning. The preacher has been co-organist with him at ing of Durufle's Requiem, made in and talk to professors in the In morning sports activities the will be Dr. George Buttrick-, Saint-Etienne-du-Mont and she Hope College cross country team the church Saint-Etenne-du-Mont, Kletz. former chaplain at Harvard Uni- has herself composed several will meet at 11 on versity. Jhe Chapel Choir will sing pieces for piano and organ. was awarded the Grand Prix du Also at this time, five students Van Raalte Field. and Chaplain Hillegonds will be When she and her husband first Disque by the Charles Cms Acad- emy. who have been involved in a se- At 2:15 p.m. Hope will play its the worship leader. visited the United States, they mester of the Philadelphia Pro- Homecoming football game At 3 p.m. Sunday Dr. Brian J. were invited to appear at the Those Hope College students gram will explain the program in a against Olivet at Riverview Park. Dykstra, an alumnus of Hope Col- National Convention of the Amer- wishing to attend this concert panel discussion in Winants Audi- At half-time the Queen and her lege and presently assistant pro- ican Guild of Organists in Phila- must pick up complimentary torium. Court will be presented and the fessor of music at the College of delphia. Mrs. Durufle's perfor- tickets in the Student Activities The Little Theatre, located on Hope College Band will perform. Wooster in Wooster, Ohio, will mance was unanimously praised Office in Van Raalte 102. the fourth floor of the Science The Queen and her Court will present a piano recital in Dimnent and quoted as being "the un- Building, will present a rehearsal reign over "Kismet," the 1969 Memorial Chapel. questioned highest point of the entire convention."

The first part of Thursday's performance will consist of Mr. Homecoming 1969 and Mrs. Durufle playing several organ pieces. The second half of FRIDAY. OCT. 17 11:30 a.m. H CluD luncheon the program will feature Mr. Du- Durfee Hall rufle directing his Requiem. Ac- 8; 1 5 p.m. Kletz Concert 11:45 a.m. Kappa Chi luncheon cording to Mr. Davis of the Hope Civic Center Warm Friend Hotel College music department, "it's 12 noon H Club Wives Luncheon almost like having Handel here to SATURDAY. OCT. 18 Phelps Conference Room direct the Messiah." 9 a.m. Mortar Board Alumnae Tea Alpha Phi luncheon THE THEMATIC material for Van Raalte's Restaurant Phelps Conference Room Requiem is drawn from the Cath- Delta Phi luncheon olic service for the dead. At the 9:30 a.m. Stage Band Rehearsal Van Raalte's Restaurant same time the composer combines Snow Auditorium Sibylline luncheon with this a contemporary official Coffee Grounds Program Jack's Restaurant and harmonic palette. Mr. Durufle Durfee Hall Dorian luncheon says of his work: 4kAs to the Panel discussion Warm Friend Hotel musical form, it is dictated simply 77)e Philadelphia Program 2:1 5 p.m. Hope vs. Olivet by the form of the liturgy itself. Winants Auditorium Riverview Park The organ plays a merely episodic After-game Open house Kletz open role; it intervenes not to support in all residences Meet favorite teachers the chorus but to underline cer- MAURICE DURUFLE Art department exhibit Coffees- Pine grove Arcadian Centurian Portions of Spoon River Anthology Cosmopolitan Little Theatre Fraternal 4th floor Science Hall Open house Knickerbocker Dorms, fraternity houses. 4 p.m. Homecoming Buffet Sorority rooms Phelps cafeteria 5:1 5 p.m. Fraternal Dinner 11 a.m. Chapel Choir rehearsal Holiday Inn Dimnent Memorial Chapel 6:30 p.m. Emersonian 50th Anniversary Dinner Panel discussion Carousel Mountain Lodge Student Church 8:30 p.m. Homecoming Ball Winants Auditorium Civic Center Art department exhibit Pine Grove SUNDAY. OCT. 19 Portions of Spoon River Anthology 11: a.m. Student Church Little Theatre Dimnent Memorial Chapel 4th floor Science Hall Dr. George Buttricks, preacher Coffee Grounds program Chapel Choir singing Durfee Hall 3 p.m. Piano Recital Sigma Sigma luncheon Dimnent Memorial Chapel Blue Room, Warm Friend Hotel Brian Dykstra. Guest Pianist

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Open Rehearsing *~-fFrT O (1CCCR SATURDAY 9 30 a.m. SNOW AUDITORIUM

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^ Price $22. "big band jazz is back" StVvL 21 West 8th BOOTERY Page 10 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969 declamation of know Local moritorium Who are the trustees? shows student concern (continued from page 1) quested a parade permit to march pedestrians verbally harrassed the down Eighth St. to Windmill Is- by Drew Hinderer picketters. land. The request was granted The moratorium day was cli- with the stipulation that each maxed by a peace march at 6:30 marcher must pay the regular ad- This weekend, an exciting book T/ie Trusteeship of Colleges brothers' generous gift, and the p.m. The marchers left from the mission charge to the Island. event will take place. I'm not and Universities is a study of start of construction on the new Pine Grove and walked to the In Centennial Park, nearly 350 refering to homecoming, although trusteeship, the usual Board of Student Center. And of course, at corner of River Ave. and Ninth St. marchers were addressed briefly the fact that it, too, is going on is Trustees is predominently male Homecoming.) Here about half of the 700 not unrelated to the event in (85%), over forty (99%), white by Rev. Pontier. In Windmill Is- Oh noble Board of Trustees, do marchers turned to march down land Park, his son, Glenn Pontier, question. The SDS describes such (98.7%), Protestant (82%), Re- not think that no one cares about River to Eighth St., while the addressed the marchers there. In events this way: "Once more the publican (66%), monied (over who you are and what you are other half continued toward addition, Chaplain William Hille- fat corporation executives and S30,000 per year, 87%, and over doing. We are concerned about Kollen Park. gonds spoke to the group at the lying politicians are getting to- 550,000, 69%) and spends less our ridiculous endowment per stu- POLICE INFORMED members Windmill. gether for a ruling class festival... than twenty hours a year in rais- dent of slightly over a thousand of the first group that they were STUDENTS HAD removed the they'll sit back watching this game ing funds for their colleges (72% dollars (ridiculous by comparison marching in violation of their par- the same way they oversee (the to 84%,). wooden crosses from the Pine to, say, Oberlin's at a cool five- ade permit, but the group began Grove and planted them along the rest of your life)." The Board of Trustees feel that students who figure number starting with singing, "We are marching to the road at Windmill Island Park. Trustees of Hope College is meet- "actively disrupt the functioning three). We are concerned about Windmill." Many lit candles or said short ing. of a college should be expelled or your unquestioning stance in Two other times during the prayers. They walked silently THIS MEETING represents suspended (71%), but they feel favor of in loco parentis. We are route down Eighth St. to Wind- back to the Hope campus using one of the two "festivals" held that faculty members should concerned about your willingness mill Island the marchers were told the sidewalks. every school year under normal "have the right to express their to ignore administrative bungling. by police with loud speakers that According to junior Jim Ru- circumstances, meetings about opinions about any issue they We are concerned about your pati- they were breaking the law. The bins, every Friday through Nov. which the student body knows wish without fear of reprisal ence with regard to your Student second group, which was march- little or nothing. What does go on (78%)." They also favor by large 15 a group of students led by Center while it is we who must do ing under the protection of a at a Board of Trustees meeting? majorities that "the college should students from Western Theolog- the waiting. So let me join you in parade permit, was led to Centen- I only wish 1 could tell you. I continue to have a large role in ical Seminary will march down hoping that your upcoming meet- nial Park by a police escort. have sought the answer all over the development of the personal Eighth St. to protest the war in ing might be fruitful. And let us THE STUDENT organizers of Van Raalte Hall, and while 1 values of its students, and favor Vietnam. The total number of know how you come out. the march had originally re- discovered lots of interesting the continuance of an in loco marchers will equal the number of things (like a wild flurry to get the parentis role for the institution." American deaths in Vietnam the books in order and an unwilling- THEY FEEL that the legiti- previous week. A parade permit ness to let me see them), no one mate body for making all rules Library periodicals for today's demonstration has al- would divulge anything about the decisions on student affairs is the ready been obtained, Rubins upcoming meeting. administration, with students noted. IT IS CLEAR from all the "divorced from the actual deci- The Coffee Grounds, center of frenzied business going on there sion making." All in all, Mr. Rauh being reclassified much of the activity during the that something frightening (at concludes, "the survey suggests entire week of the Vietnam mora- least to some people) is coming; I that trustees would grant very All periodicals and microfilms dent will be able to find all the torium, is continuing to observe have heard all sorts of rumors, for little authority to students." in Van Zoeren Library are in the materials he needs on a given the moratorium tonight. John example, about fear that the mor- I think that most of these process of being reclassified ac- subject in one section of the Boonstra, manager of the atorium might explode into vio- conclusions are not likely to cording to the Dewey Decimal library, Mr. Whittaker said. Grounds, announced that films lent protest while the Trustees are arouse great disagreement among System and will be placed on the All periodicals are expected to will be shown tonight along with here (making some people look our board. But then, that is only library shelves with the proper be reclassified and moved to dif- programs of protest music and very bad). But as to the exact conjecture, since 1 have never had books. ferent shelves by Christmas vaca- other special events. Tomorrow nature of what the powers of that the opportunity to talk to a mem- Head librarian Edward Whit- tion. Information about the re- night the Grounds will be closed group of people is, 1 could learn ber about his ideas and decisions. taker said that the purpose of the alignment of the periodicals will in observance of the last day of nothing. AND THAT, TOO, is not sur- reclassification project is to make be posted at the reference desk. moratorium week. So 1 am left to conjecture. I prising, considering they are not research easier for the student. Mr. Whittaker also announced During most of the day Wed- thought it might be interesting to usually present in an official capa- Presently, a student has three that he is examining the possiblity nesday, American Friends Service examine the roles of the trustees city more than twice a year, and places to look for materials in the of having a smoking lounge in the Committee counsellors advised elsewhere and draw some infer- then their meetings are closed. library - the book shelves, the library. Before a smoking lounge students of facts relating to the ences about what ours must be (They do appear briefly at various periodical section and the micro- can be made, a room must be Selective Service laws. According doing. other important functions how- film room. approved by the fire marshall and to Boonstra, the counsellors WHO ARE THE trustees? Ac- ever, like the acceptance and After the periodicals and mic- proper ventilation installed, he "couldn't believe the student reac- cording to Morton Rauh whose thanksgiving party for the DeWitt rofilms are reclassified, the stu- said. tion."

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210 RIVER AVENUE TELEPHONE 396 3674 October 17, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 11

'//////S////S////////////////////////////////////////////////////SS///////////////S///////S///////////////S, anchor essay Review of the news Nixon needs to be responsive by Beth Maassen Washington, D.C. Moratorium Day events in Editor's Note: This week's anchor sonal terms. Vice President Moscow the capital included speeches at essay is written by senior history Agnew, in a characteristic display Soyuz 8 went into space various sites by senators and major Mark Vander Laan. of shallow thought, recently Monday to join the other two representatives, a rally at Selec- voiced his opposition to the Viet- Russian spacecrafts already or- by Mark Vander Laan tive Service headquarters, nam moratorium on the basis that biting the earth. The three speeches on campuses and even ships with a total of seven men With the nationwide morato- it was merely an attack on the a children's program complete are on a mission intending to rium on Vietnam past, one natu- President. with dove-decorated balloons. bring Russia closer to its goal rally evaluates the immediate con- The point is that the executive The climax of the day's of building a manned orbiting sequences of United States dis- branch of the United States events was an early evening laboratory. The basic tasks of engagement in that area of the Government is showing a grave speech at the Washington mon- the flights will be maneuvering globe. The discussion is basically lack of judgment in evaluating the ument by the widow of Dr. ships in orbit to check piloted one of foreign policy. Yet with nature of the most significant Martin Luther King, and a si- space systems and testing com- our preoccupation with this inter- public protest in recent times. lent, candle-light march the plex control of simultaneous national aspect of the Vietnamese Rather than showing a responsive- short distance to the White group flight. question, we may tend to over- ness to the outcry, our leaders House. look other crucial political mat- seek to silence it and even accuse it as a dangerous thing. What Washington, D.C. ters. Prague implications this may have to fur- The Supreme Court agreed Alexander Dubcek resigned ONE SUCH MATTER is do- ther dissent is frightening. When a to consider the question of under pressure from the federal mestic in nature. Recently Presi- government fears opposition to whether military draft is un- parliament of Czechoslovakia. dent Nixon made several state- such an extent, how far is it constitutional because it fails This strips him of his parlia- ments about dissent concerning willing to go to silence it? to exempt those who are con- mentary immunity from arrest his Vietnam policy. Briefly, he scientious objectors on non- THE FACT THAT the execu- and trial. The government's stated that he would be affected religious grounds. tive branch is seeing the morato- promise of no political trials no way by the mass public dissent of the Vietnam problem. rium as an assault on the execu- has now been revised to state to his policy. Furthermore, the Throughout his campaign he Saigon tive itself is also somewhat distres- that there may be trials if some President stated that opponents to spoke cryptically about a plan sing. Granted many people are A record 35,000 enemy sol- former leaders broke the law. the war must take the blame for that would end United States upset by the policy which Presi- diers, political cadremen and engagement. Thus far, he has man- the continuing conflict in South- dent Nixon has propounded, sympathizers have defected to aged to recall some American east Asia. mainly in terms of its timing. But the government of South Viet- Tel Aviv troops, and in recent weeks the is not such opposition common to nam this year, according to a Israeli jets attacked Egyp- As Time magazine reported, level of fighting has dropped. any policy of any President? South Vietnamese spokesman. tian military targets in raids numerous Republican congres- Those defecting were mainly across the southern half of the YET THE PRESIDENT now It is probably the wish of any sional leaders followed the lead of Vietcong and not regular North Suez Canal, and struck at Arab shifts the blame of the war's leader to have his proposals ac- their chief executive. Senate Mi- Vietnamese, however. guerrilla bases in Jordan. continuation on the war critics, cepted by the public totally, but nority Leader Hugh Scott, for The United States command The Israelis also fired six and he publicly states that he that is hardly a real possibility example, felt that if criticism were in Saigon announced that rockets into the offices of the will not be affected by dissent to anymore. When a President takes cooled for a period of two American troop strength in Palestine Liberation Organiza- his program. This seems rather dissent as a personal charge, then months, a radically different situa- Vietnam is down to 505,600 tion in Beirut, Lebanon. This inconsistent with the democratic this, too, can signal the possibility tion would develop. Others were men, the lowest since Febru- was the first attack on a PLO framework we have. The President of real problems. With such a condemning congressional col- ary, 1968. There was a pull-out office anywhere in the Arab feels that policy should not be defensive stance, it would seem leagues for vigorously supporting difficult for any political respon- of 4,100 troops last week, the world. The organization co- made in the streets but in the the Oct. 15 moratorium. What, in siveness in future matters. next scheduled pull-out to be ordinates the main Arab guer- essence, the President and his traditional legislative manner of completed by mid-December. rilla outfits fighting Israel. most trusted congressional leaders this country. IT SEEMS APPARENT that '//SS////S///////////////////////////////S/S////////S////////S///////////////////////////////////S///////// were calling for was another sort Very few will disagree with this the Vietnam moratorium has of moratorium, a moratorium on judgment, but the fact that such a shown serious problems beyond dissent. judgment was even made shows a the fundamental question of lack of understanding of dissent in United States withdrawal from IN THE RUSH of other news this case. Elements from all walks Vietnam. For a democracy to and of a busy campus life, the of life are actively protesting to exist, dissent must be allowed to m shuddering implications of such a show a firm conviction in peace exist and exist in its basic form, [iag plea could go unnoticed. What, and a pressing desire to speed up i.e., over matters of policy and then, does it mean? I have no United States disengagement from philosophy. stock answers, but I have ques- Vietnam. When dissent is merely over many tions to raise. Richard Nixon has THE MAJORITY of protest personality, it is weak and narrow, been in office for less than a year centers on the morality of U.S. but when the dissent is of a more and in some respects has shown engagement, the wisdom of pro- basic and responsible nature it tiegiaamts, himself to be a responsive leader. longed engagement, and its inter- must be heeded. Brushing it off as Yet he knew quite obviously national implications. President a personal attack is an evasion of when he was elected that his first Nixon now fails to see such pro- the real controversy and an eva- bat ikm'g major task would be a resolution test as proper, judging it in per- sion of executive responsibility. onCy one

KNOWN FOR ALL STEAK HAMBURGS 'kere s a Lursting cj^ new LuJs in springtime - - LUNCHES • FAMILY SERVICE • PERFECT a roJlinl g llie waves on summer sands . FOR YOUR COFFEE BREAK • ORDERS TO GO HOLLAND / MUSKEGON Tkere s a rustling oj^ dry leaves in autumn winds 3962348 / 739-2214 and tlie snow sweeps down tLe Lills

on winter ni gilts . .

ere s rkytk m in tke slow flight of tLe k eron - - - FOR THE MANY OCCASIONS and Leauty in eack dew drop in tke grass . . THAT JUST DON'T SEEM RIGHT Tkere s music in tke trilling of ike toads and a spirit in tke wildness calling you - - WITHOUT FLOWERS — you can kear it - - -

you can jeel it - - - you can see it - - - SHADY LAWN FLORIST

- - - - if you wi 281 E. 16th St. EX 2-2652

NOTES, BOOKS and STATIONERY by Gl/VEN FROSTIC "Over 3 Generations of Reliable Service"

MODEL DRUG Member F.T.D. Don Vander Ploeg, owner

DOWNTOWN RIVER AT EIGHTH Page 12 Hope College anchor October 17, 1969 Soccer team defeated Homecoming tomorrow by MacMurray, 4-1

by Bill Hoffman MacMurray had already built up a anchor Reporter 4-0 lead.

The Dutchmen traveled to Hope scattered a mere nine Jacksonville, Illinois last Saturday shots on goal throughout the four to meet MacMurray College in a quarters, while MacMurray kept Michigan-lllinois-I ndiana Confer- steady pressure on the Dutch de- ence Soccer match. Hope was fense with 25 shots on goal. defeated 4-1 by the "keyed-up" MacMurray booters before their The loss gave the Dutch a 2-4 Homecoming crowd. season record and a 2-2 league The Dutch were scoreless until tally. With a tough Wheaton team John White managed a fourth to be played tomorrow, the Dutch period goal; however, the effort are virtually out of the Mil cham- was too little and too late as pionship race. Dutch will meet Olivet in Homecoming contest

by Pete Struck collegiate Athletic Association anchor Reporter this year with the apparent excep- tions of Adrian and Hope. Well, the Hope team's "golden opportunity" has The Comets have won a game arrived at last! That means that this year though, They accom- Hope has its best chance to finally plished (hat feat last week by win a football game tomorrow edging the Bulldogs of Adrian, when (hey entertain the Olivet 30-27. Co mets.

OLIVET IS PROBABLY the FACTORS FAVOR A Dutch worst team in the Michigan Inter- win Saturday. First of all it is Homecoming and the Dutchmen usually fire-up for that game. And Sorority rush secondly, the Hope offense looked pretty good in the second half of the Alma game which nets thirty-two FUTILE EFFORT—Hope defensive end Ted Albrecht makes a diving attempt to catch Alma's quarterback might mean that the team has Tom Jakovac. Hope lost the game, 42-18. new pledges recovered from their devastating loss to Kazoo two weeks ago. Following the teas and tensions of fall rush, 32 new upperciass The Hope offense features one Hope still winless sorority pledges were chosen. of the best pass combinations in the league with junior quarterback Alpha Phi's new sisters are Groy Kaper and senior All-MIAA Beverly Cooper, Barbara Fergu- end Bill Bekkering. Scots defeat Dutchmen, 42-18 son, Debby Northrup, Kay Oae, Jean Potter and Tish Price. KAPER AND Bekkering have by Pete Struck plunged over for his first of three Dutch offense gave their oppo- touchdowns. John Fuzak added Pledging Delta Phi are Susie combined thus far this season for anchor Reporter nents all the breaks they needed. the point after and Alma led 7-0 On Hope's first offensive play, Buckman, Kira Burdick, Kann 368 yards and 25 completions. Hope's bid for their first foot- Hansen, Mary Jalving and Debbie Two of the passes were good for ball victory of this season was with nine minutes left in the first the snap from center was fumbled Yoch. touchdowns against Alma. thwarted once again Saturday as quarter. and Alma's Jim Dohm recovered the Alma Scots romped over the on the Dutch 43. The Hope de- The Alma defense held the New additions to Kappa Beta The success of Hope's running hapless Dutchmen, 42-18. fense held here, but Pete Grimes Dutchmen on their next series of Phi are Bette Gaydos, Sarah attack depends chiefly on the THE DEFEAT WAS the fourth fumbled the Alma punt and Frank downs and Hope punted to the Humphrey, Beth Maassen, Sharon effectiveness of junior fullback for the Dutch against no wins and Jeremy recovered for the Scots on Alma I 2. Mekjean, Barbara Paul, Mary Pon- Bob Have man who leads the team one tie. Alma's record is now 3-2 the Dutch 10. From that point. Alma quarter- IT TOOK ALMA four downs stein, Marianne Schaefer, Janice in rushing yardage with 267 yards overall and 2-0 in the Michigan back Tom Jakovac moved his to score as Clark finally went over VanderKuyl and Nancy Warner. in 68 carries for an average of 3.9 Intercollegiate Athletic Associa- team 88 yards in 11 plays to from two yards out. Fuzak's kick yards per carry. tion. Louise Hughes, Nancy Jonker, Once again it was the big mis- paydirt. The big play was a 52 was good and the Scots led 28-7. Nancy Sterk and Nancy Wallendal yard run by Jakovac around right Alma scored again on its next OLIVET QUARTERBACK take that turned the tide against are the new pledges to Kappa end for the touchdown. Fuzak's offensive series after Steve List Eric Witzke will direct the Comet Hope early in the contest. Delta Chi. conversion was good and Alma led ran back a Hope punt 25 yards to attack. The senior signal-caller With a fourth and eleven situa- tion on their own 29 yard line, 14-0. the Dutch 45. Larry Hourtienne Sigma lota Beta has accepted should turn the contest into an the Dutch were forced to punt. AFTER TWO punt exchanges. scored the touchdown on a one- Debbie French, Joyce Mead, Mary aerial duel between himself and Center Jim DeHorn's snap went Alma scored again in the second yard dive. Jakovac kicked the Schmidt and Julie Sevener. Kaper. sailing high over the head of pun- quarter with 3:49 remaining. extra point and Hope trailed 35-6. HOPE LOOKED like league The new pledges of Sigma Before the season began, the ter Doug Smith and Alma recover- The Scots drove 73 yards in 12 Sigma are Pat Ferrell, Johanne Ml A A coaches picked Hope and ed on the Hope five. plays with Clark picking up his champions on their next offensive Huizenga, Gail Parker and Gret- Olivet to battle for possession of IT TOOK THE Scots one play second score on another five yard set of downs as they moved the chen Tellman. third place in the league. to score as tailback Chris Clark run. Fuzak's kick was good and ball 82 yards in nine plays. The the Scots were leading 21-0. second Dutch touchdown came Because of the score and the on an 11 yard pass from Kaper to stubborn Scot defense, Hope Bekkering. The two point conver- quarterback Groy Kaper was sion attempt failed. forced to go to the air. Starting The Dutchmen scored again from the Dutch 24, Kaper hit two with five minutes expired in the quick passes to end Bill Bekkering final stanza. Harry Rumohr scored and flanker Rich Frank. for the Dutch on a two yard run. A touch of optimism THEN ON THIRD and four, The big plays of the 60-yard Kaper tossed a little square-out drive were a 35-yard pass from pass to Bekkering. The senior end Kaper to Bekkering and a clutch by Bob Vandenberg threw a nifty fake at the Alma fourth down 23-yard pass to cornerback and broke free down Frank. The extra point attempt Hundreds of Hope alumni, The Dutch, of course, have lost Tomorrow's opponents will be the sideline all the way for Hope's was wide of the uprights. along with a few hundred curious some heart breakers in that those same Comets, led once again first score. The play covered 69 ALMA CONCLUDED the students, will descend upon River- stretch, by such scores as 45-0, by quarterback Eric Witzke, a fine yards. game's scoring after a 64-yard view Park tomorrow afternoon at 54-13, 40-7, 23-14, 31-0, and passer. Thus far. Olivet has fash- Hope's defense didn't give up a march climaxed by a 14-yard about 2:15. 42-18. A 13-13 tie with Franklin ioned a rather poor 1-4 record. first down to the Scots on Alma's touchdown pass from Jakovac to OTHERS, LESS fortunate and mars the otherwise unblemished first two offensive series of the Rick Manzardo. Jakovac's kick unhappily shut-in, will be unable record. In the second half of the Alma second half, but unfortunately the was good for the 42 point. to attend; doubtless, they will flip game last Saturday, Coach De- their radio dials to 1450 to hear INCIDENTALLY, IN the past Vette's crew looked as if it was the colorful voice of Rick London seven games, Hope has been out- finally starting to put it all togeth- upsets and his exciting play-by-play scored by its opponents 248-65. er. The offense's 82-yard scoring description of the Olivet-Hope Still, I am confident of victory drive was particularly pleasing to football game. tomorrow. For one thing, percent- the eye. In fact, that ball game What will this huge throng at age is on the side of the Dutch. could have been much closer, had Dutch harriers, 15-49 Riverview see? it not been for a bad snap from You can't lose 'em all. by Bill Hoffman Dutchman to cross the finish line, center and a fumbled punt. What will this vast radio audi- Furthermore, tomorrow is anchor Reporter improved his time by better than ence at home hear? Homecoming, and Hope has had a MAYBE TOMORROW all the two and a half minutes over that The answer--a win! remarkable ability to win Home- pieces will fall in place for the The Dutch harriers lost another of the Calvin meet. Yes, a win! Tomorrow, the coming games the past few years. Dutchmen. And maybe, just may- MIAA dual meet Saturday, their Gene Haulenbeek bettered his Flying Dutchmen are going to win In 1966. first-place Albion came be, we'll be able to see Carlton second upset in three league out- Calvin time by 18 seconds, yet he a football game. into Holland without a defeat. Golder back deep on kickoff and ings. The Alma Scots, a strong was out performed by both Matti- The fired-up Dutchmen, however, punt returns. contender for the cross country son and Bruce Geelhoed. Bob AND fT'S ABOUT time. After knocked off the Britons, 1 2-9. championship, defeated Hope by Scott ran his best race chopping all, the Orange and Blue gridders TWO SEASONS ago, Hope de- 1 am so confident that Hope a score of 15-49. 48 seconds off his time in the of Russ DeVette haven't won a fenders intercepted seven Adrian will defeat Olivet tomorrow that I Calvin meet. If Hope had run as football game since October 26, passes at Homecoming and the am going to make this solemn The score, however, was not well against Calvin, the harriers 1968, when the aroused Dutch- Dutch beat the Bulldogs, 19-7. vow: If the Dutchmen lose, I will indicative of the Dutch perfor- could have broken two or three men fought off a late Kalamazoo And last year, Jon Constant came hurl myself flaming and naked mance. The last dual defeat suf- runners into the top five places. drive and whipped the mighty off the bench to replace the in- from the roof of the Emmie fered by the harriers was against Hope has a chance to even (even thi n) Hornets, 7-2. jured Groy Kaper and led the House immediately following the Calvin, 15-48. Though the scores their MIAA record tomorrow with Since then, Hope has gone Dutch to a 33-28 triumph over game. Hopefully, the Dutch will are similar, the times weren't. Jim a Homecoming victory over seven games without a victory. the Olivet Comets. come through with a victory. Mattison, who was Saturday's first Olivet.