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The Anchor: 1972 The Anchor: 1970-1979

2-7-1972

The Anchor, Volume 84.15: February 7, 1972

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 84.15: February 7, 1972" (1972). The Anchor: 1972. Paper 4. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1972/4 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 84, Issue 15, February 7, 1972. Copyright © 1972 Hope College, Holland, Michigan.

This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the The Anchor: 1970-1979 at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Anchor: 1972 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hope reveals fees hike of $125 for 72-'73 year Hope's tuition will be raised Handlogten said, and the Board of $125 for the 1972-73 academic Trustees tentatively set the year, bringing one year's tuition amount at $125 in October. to $1895 and total fees to $2960, Finalization of the increase was Executive Vice President Clarence delayed because the administra- Handlogten has announced. tion lacked clear information on The increase, which is the the price commission's attitude seventh in seven years, is only half toward cost increases in higher as large as last year's $250 hike. It education. amounts to seven percent of Handlogten said that all par- present annual tuition charges and ents will be informed of the , about 4 /2 percent of present total tuition hike by letter this week. fees. The 41/2 percent figure remains The letter states: "...all of us within the general federal price who are involved with Hope Col- increase guideline of five percent, lege are pleased to see the college progress. To do so in this econom- Handlogten said. It is well below ically volatile time is no small the 7.3 percent average annual task. increase at Great Lakes Colleges "We wish to receive only those Association schools for the past six years, he added. amounts needed to provide a qual- ity education and careful projec- Handlogten said that the hike tions are made each year. Efforts "comes awfully close to just to control inflation have not elim- keeping up with inflation. Four inated cost increases, and we and a half percent is about what simply must plan on greater reve- inflation is running, and since nue to keep Hope College viable. Volume 84-15 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 student fees represent 80 percent February 7, 1972 The Board of Trustees has decided of our total revenue, the increase that an increase of $125.00 per won't put us ahead much." year is necessary.. " 876 received so far However, he added that a slightly increased enrollment next year The letter also says that the should help the college's financial college is attempting "to improve position. the financial aids program and to The preliminary decision to help students as much as posssible Applications peak this year raise tuition was made in August, in their financing problems."

More applications for admis- represents an 11 percent increase added that Western Michigan Uni- sion will be received this year than over last year, and six percent versity's applications are down 40 any other year in Hope's history, over the year before, which had percent from last year, and Calvin Winter Carnival week begins; according to Tom LaBaugh, direc- previously been Hope's best in is "holding even." tor of admissions. terms of applications received. STATISTICALLY, the admis- LA BAUGH REPORTED Fri- HE ALSO SAID that the num- sions office has handled applica- numerous activities scheduled day that 876 applications have ber of applications from women is tions from 402 men and 474 been received to date, an increase about the same as last year, but women. LaBaugh said 703 of Hope's 1972 Winter Carnival p.m. in Phelps dining hall. Pizza of 1 75 over last year's total at this the admissions office has received these have been accepted, 19 ac- officially began yesterday with and soda will be offered free to time. "This figure greatly sur- 30 percent more applications cepted tentatively, pending the commencement of the snow boarders. Winners of the snow from men than last year. passes the number of applications summer trial program, and four sculpture competition, and a var- sculpture competition will be an- we had expected to receive by this Hope also ranks ahead of most have been rejected. iety of activities have been plan- nounced during the evening. other Great Lakes Colleges Asso- point in the year," he said. Students accepted tentatively ned for the remainder of the Free movies will be shown in ciation schools, with Alma receiv- must attend classes during the week, according to carnival chair- Physics-Math 118 featuring W.C. Admissions counsellor Bart ing 30 percent fewer and Albion summer and perform satisfactorily man Molly Gates. Fields, Laurel and Hardy and other Merkle indicated that this figure five percent fewer. LaBaugh academically before they will be A BROOMBALL tournament favorites. allowed to enter classes in the fall. will begin this afternoon at 4 at AT 9 FRIDAY night students MINORITY GROUP members Van Raalte field. Teams from the will gather in front of the health 'anchor' poll finds many accepted thus far number 29, La fraternities, sororities and several clinic to participate in a Volks- Baugh said - five blacks, four wings of Kollen Hall will meet wagen push. Points will be a- Chicanos, four Indian-Americans daily from 4 to 5 p.m. in single warded in the competition for the student voters register and sixteen oriental-Americans. elimination competition. The continued on page 2, column 3 LaBaugh noted that the college is champion men's team will face Few Hope students have regis- enfranchised voters have regis- planning a "Black Experience the women's champs Saturday at tered to vote in Holland, but the tered to date, with a total of 60 Day" in the spring for newly 1 p.m. Trophies will be awarded Farrar to publish percentage of Hopeites who have percent predicted to register for accepted black students. to the winners. registered in their home towns is the general elections in November. Twenty-five percent of the Snow sculptures must be com- greater than the percentage of REGISTRATION drives have 'Opus' in February prospective feshmen are members pleted by Thursday, Miss Gates 18-20 year-olds who have regis- been made by two groups in of the Reformed Church, La said, when a panel of faculty Opus editor Steve Farrar, re- tered nationally, according to an Holland. A registration rally spon- Baugh said, 55 percent belong to judges will determine the winner cently returned from a semester in informal poll taken by the anchor sored by the Second Political Party other Protestant denominations, from entries by fraternities, soror- New York City, has announced last week. Jan. 16 elicited a "very poor" 12 percent are Catholic and one ities and residence halls. that the Opus will be published THE SURVEY indicated that response, according to party percent are Jewish. CAMPUS GROUPS may also sometime in February. 56 percent of the students have leader Ernie Harris. He said that LA BAUGH STATED that he enter an art contest continuing Farrar is now in the process of registered, but only eight percent only a few people were registered, expects the class of '76 to be as throughout carnival week. En- finalizing the technical details for of the students polled had regis- and that college and high school academically strong as any class trants are assigned a window in publication. He plans to publish tered in Holland. students were notably absent. Hope has ever had, since most the Kletz which they must fill the Opus either in newspaper or According to a national survey The League of Women Voters accepted applicants rank in the with original painting. The paint- magazine form. Some preparation conducted by the Youth Citizen- is planning a registration drive for 81st percentile of their graduating ing will be done in poster paint for publication was carried on by ship Fund, 36 percent of newly the week of March 6. Publicity for class. and those wishing to sign up for a Martha Mulder in Farrar's absence. the drive will be directed at Hope "We are very impressed by window may contact Kathy Students interested in con- students, according to Mrs. Jer- these statistics," he said. "Frank- Hoops, extension 2435. tributing stories or poetry to the ome Counihan, a member of the ly, 1 am extremely enthusiastic A pizza-eating contest is sche- Opus should contact Farrar or Annual delayed League. about the next freshman class." duled to take place Thursday at 9 Miss Mulder. UPCOMING elections in which two more months registered students will be allowed to vote include a school board Will play in Center election in June and a possible Hopeites will have to wait at Michigan presidential primary in least eight more weeks for the May. The Michigan Senate passed 1971 edition of Hope's yearbook, a bill Jan. 31 providing for a The Milestone, according to editor primary May 9, and the bill is now Gillespie to trumpet Sat. Barbara Barta. awaiting action in the state house. The appearance of The Mile- The presidential primary would Trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie will stone has been delayed this year give voters a stronger voice in the be the featured artist in a jazz by a number of technical prob- national conventions by providing concert Saturday at 8:15 p.m. in lems as well as an insufficient for the assignment of convention the Holland Civic Center. staff. Miss Barta said that for delegates to candidates on the Gillespie, who is considered one some time she has been the only basis of their showing in the pri- of the great jazz pioneers, will student engaged in preparing the mary election. appear with a quintet comprised yearbook. However, most of the IN ORDER to vote in the of pianist Mike Longo, drummer yearbook has been laid out and primary or the school board elec- Mickey Roker, guitarist Sonny the publishers indicate that the tion, students must be registered Henry and bassist Sam Jones. book may be ready by mid-April. at least five weeks prior to the Dizzy and his unique "bent-to- The '71 yearbook, when com- election date. the-sky" trumpet have appeared plete, will appear in two parts, Registration in Holland is open in well-received concerts around Miss Barta stated. One section will to all students who fulfill the the world. Gillespie, along with contain pictures of students and six-month residency requirement saxophonist Charlie Parker, is college groups, while a second will who live within the city limits. credited with launching the jazz feature photographs of various Students may register at the City musical revolution of the 1940's. activities recorded throughout the Clerk's office from 8 to 1 2 a.m. Their hit recording Groovin ' High year. and 1 to 5 p.m. weekdays. was considered the manifesto of ANCHORED INSIDE the "be-bop" era. The concert is presented by the Mathews on politics of American youth .. . .page 2 Holland Concert Association GVSC approves dorm drinking page 2 which represents a merger of the former Holland Community Con- Survey shows frosh religious and smart page 3 cert Association with the Hope College Great Performance Series. HRC considers minority affairs director page 3 Hope students will be admitted Conservative Michigan senator to speak here page 6 free with LD. A limited number of single admission tickets will be Phys. Ed. building in holding pattern page 7 sold at the door 15 minutes be- Flying club taking off page 7 fore the concert to those of the general public who do not hold season tickets. JAZZ TRUMPETER DIZZY GILLESPIE Two Hope College anchor February 7, 1972 anchor essay . Politics and American youth: fruits of apathy

Editor's note: This week's anchor Unfortunately, the rather dubious tate morality. The poor class in always led to a rapid decline of essay is written by anchor editor- result of all of this has been the America is essentially still at the those sensibilities. In the past this ial assistant Ryan Mathews. He apparent loss of interest in pol- mercy of the monied classes. The has only been destructive to the examines the present political atti- itics. minorities of this country and the persons involved. The world today tudes of American youth. HOWEVER, the war in Indo- world are still abused and held in is growing too small for this intel- china is still in full swing, there a patronizing parody of freedom. lectual luxury. American youth have been are still poor people in America, asleep: a sleep in the form of OBVIOUSLY, the solution to Joe Hill, the radical immortal- and Richard Nixon is still involved political apathy. The political con- these problems is not the wonder- ized by Joan Baez, wrote to his in his messianic vision of a red, science of young Americans has ful world of Charles Reich or the friends as he awaited execution in white and blue eternity for the passed from puberty to impo- ever-charming grin of Richard Salt Lake City, "Don't waste time universe. tence, and the result is not pleas- Nixon. It is not the rain chants of in mourning, organize!" The mes- Perhaps people are bored. Per- ant. At one of the most critical Woodstock or the tickertapes of sage is clear. The reality must be haps the youth of the country moments in our history the Amer- T Wall Street. It is not the commune faced. If the youth of this country would enjoy a new war to protest, ican people are remaining mute. or the psychiatrist's couch. It isn't are concerned about their future or possibly a full-scale investiga- MIDDLE CLASS youth's reac- even sex. they must organize politically to tion of their campus by the F.B.I, tion to the state of the world It is reality. Yes, that long- face that future. I state this in the followed by the public assassina- produced an unparalleled level of forgotten concept must be taken firm conviction that it will not be tion of an entire fraternity for not done. national and personal anxiety in drinking enough beer. I am quite out and dusted off. One of the the sixties. However, such anxiety sure that something could be ar- radical writers of the twenties, TO ME IT IS paradoxical that is antithetical to the nature of the ranged to please people. admitting personal defeat at the middle class individuals who parti- hands of a left he could not a generation so firmly committed cipated in that reaction. APPARENTLY youth's politi- understand, said, "Think back on to the pursuit of its own pleasure While apparently protesting cal action was not a burst of RYAN MATHEWS us." Perhaps we should. If we did thinks so little about its future. such noble causes as peace, truth-seeking, but rather exactly we would see that the lesson of The world could soon become a brotherhood, and unity, these what its older and more cynical The world is still a frightening American radicalism and liberal- very unpleasant place, the kind of youth lost all the political energy critics proclaimed it to be: the place. Wars are still fought, people ism is clear. place in which it is very hard to be they possessed. Now convinced latest (and perhaps most danger- still starve to death, and money satisfied. Yet we are satisfied in that reform outside the system is ous) new fad to assail a class THE EMOTIVE upsurge of America today, so perhaps the ,, and the power it brings still dic- as ineffective as reform inside the which thrives on "fun. political sensibility in America has future won't be so bad after all. system, they have decided to Politics is not fun. Acting abandon political action. against imperialism and genocide is an unpleasant and certainly an Approves goal for '73 NOW THE SITUATION is dif- unrewarding task. There are no ferent than in the sixties. There more rewards (and never should are no Kent States, no recent invasions, no domestic riots. The have been any) for being a veteran Black Panthers have laid down of Washington, Chicago, or GLCA offers urban studies their guns. Jerry Rubin has failed Columbia. The glory has been to gain support in California. In taken out of "fighting a revolu- by Marjorie DeKam schools prepare their students to seminars and research facilities. short, the Woodstock conscious- tion." live in an urban world and This fall the GLCA will offer ness that propelled Charles Reich ONE REASON for this is that The Academic Council of the developing facilities for more students a European term of to proclaim that bell bottoms and there never was a revolution. The Great Lakes Colleges Association urban studies. Comparative Urban Studies. beards would save America has "revolution" was a product of the endorsed goals for an Urban A recommendation from the Those involved in the program finally withered away. same system it opposed in theory. Studies Program and approved Urban Studies report for faculty will study cities of the Nether- Essentially this is a positive The revolutionaries were merely two urban projects at its January development was also accepted. A lands, Yugoslavia, Sweden, Fin- step. Political activity does not young people confronted by a 14-15 meetings. committee was set up to explore land and Great Britain. evolve out of fantasy or music. world that frightened them. THE COUNCIL considered a further areas in faculty develop- THE PROGRAM is designed as report by a GLCA Urban Studies ment. an introduction to the compara- Task Force and accepted portions HOLLENBACH SAID other tive study of urbanism, focusing of it, including the statement of recommendations which weren't on city and new town planning. Grand Valley revises goals, explained professor of Eng- acted upon by the council might Third year students are eligible for lish Dr. John Hollenbach, a Hope be included in faculty develop- the European semester. representative at the meeting. ment. Such areas would be a The GLCA is also sponsoring a in-dorm drinking policy These goals call for helping GLCA Media Resource Center, faculty Faculty Summer Seminar on New Towns for 1972. This program Grand Valley State College has hibited consumption of alcohol, will study Columbia, Maryland, joined the ranks of Michigan insti- even by "legal" 21-year-olds. where Antioch College built and tutions revising student drinking This policy revision came as Hope Winter Carnival planned a village, as well as other policies as a result of the 18-year- the result of a request by the npw fownQ old age of majority. college's community council, a ALSO, FACULTY members The college now allows stu- group representing students, fac- may travel to Washington, D.C. to dents to consume alcohol in dorm ulty and administration, that the to feature Mardi Gras study first-hand government steps rooms, according to Dr. Kenneth college board of control review to correct urban problems, ac- continued from page one Vandebush, GVSC vice president. regulations which prohibited con- dents wearing costumes will be cording to Hollenbach. If funding The college had previously pro- sumption of alcohol in dorms. number of students riding in or on admitted free. Free cake and fails, the seminar will be held in The board voted unanimously to the vehicle, number of people punch will be served in the Kletz 1973. remove the restrictions. over 10 needed to push the car, at midnight and a continental A Social Sciences Conference and the time needed to traverse breakfast is planned for 2 a.m. in was approved by the council and a Only one state school, Michi- the course from the health clinic Phelps dining hall. The Mardi Gras committee was formed to plan its gan State University, permitted to Kollen Hall. A S25 gift certifi- will end at 3 a.m. activities. Hollenbach described consumption of alcohol on cam- cate redeemable at Skile's Tavern the purpose of the conference, Dogsled races and a snowman pus before the new age of major- will be awarded to the winners of entitled "Philosophy of Social contest are planned for Saturday ity law took effect. However, un- the competition. Science," as "an opportunity for morning in the Pine Grove. A der pressure from new adults At 10:30 Friday night a "Mardi faculty to discuss aspects of candlelight dinner will be served eager to exercise their rights, Gras" will begin in the DeWitt teaching social science, its role, at Phelps dining hall. Ferris State, Western Michigan, Cultural Center. It will feature a various issues associated with that and the University of Michigan basement casino with card games area, and the prospect of bringing have revised their rules and now and a roulette wheel provided by Bergman series teachers closer together." allow students to drink in their the Math Club, booths, games and The council decided to meet living quarters. musical entertainment on the first twice next year and added three State law presently prohibits floor and a dance held in the will commence members to its executive commit- the sale of alcohol on the cam- ballroom. tee, including Dr. Sheldon Wet- puses of state-supported colleges ADMISSION to the Mardi Gras tonight in DCC tack, associate professor of chem- and universities. will be one dollar, but those stu- istry at Hope. ST A series of seven films by Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, presented by Hope's Society for Hope professors The Christian Science the Educated Eye, will commence DON'T with the showing of "The Seventh Monitor. Facts. Ideas. receive grants FORGET Seal" tonight at 7:30 in the Solutions. That's what theater of the DeWitt Cultural to study abroad the Monitor is all about. J MONDAY Center. The series, which continues Dr. Earl Curry, associate pro- To prove this to yourself, IS LOVE DAY. through Feb. 29, will feature fessor of history, and Robert Grant, instructor in library science send us the coupon. "Through the Glass Darkly", Feb. FEB. 14TH 9; "Wild Strawberries," Feb. 15; and humanities librarian, have We'll send you the "Winter Light," Feb. 17; "The been awarded fellowships by the free copies without Remember Magician," Feb. 21; "The Sil- Great Lakes Colleges Association obligation. with Hallmark ence," Feb. 23 and "The Devil's to participate in the third annual Valentines. Eye," Feb. 29. faculty seminar in Yugoslavia Bergman, recognized universal- during the summer of 1972. (Please print) ly as a giant among film makers, Curry and Grant will spend the has produced 26 films in 20 years full summer with faculty members Please send me some free after making his debut in 1945 from other GLCA schools work- copies of The Christian with "Crisis." ing on projects concerning urban Science Monitor In his films he has explored the development in Yugoslavia, ac- crises encountered by man in cording to Dean for Academic Name. . I When you care enough. search of meaning and faith. Affairs Morette Rider. Address. The Society for the Educated The program is part of a larger From the I Eye was reorganized on campus GLCA project in comparative this fall by the late Dr. Robert urban studies, for which Hope Melka. Guy THE acts as the agent institution. HOLLAND A series ticket may be pur- Several other Hope faculty Slate Zip chased for all seven films at S3. Z4SEA MICHIGAN THOUGHTFULNESS members have participated in the 49423 Admission to individual showings program in recent years, and THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR SHOP" will be offered on a space-avail- professor of English John Hollen- PC Box 125, Astor Station ability basis at SI per person. bach and assistant professor of Boston, Massachusetts 02123 STATIONERS Downtown Holland Tickets are available at the stu- history Michael Petrovich have dent activities office. served on its staff. February 7, 1972 Hope College anchor Three Director considered Minority studies discussed

by Molly Gates academic affairs Morrette Rider to HRC is not sure that a minorit discuss the feasibility of having a studies director is needed hert, Hope's Human Rights Council black studies director. According she added. is considering the possibility of to Miss Manus, associate dean for However, the HRC is very requesting that the college hire a academic affairs John Stewart is concerned with the disparity black studies director. technically responsible for hand- between the number of black AT ITS DECEMBER meeting, ling new study programs, but students enrolled and the number Dr. Rhonda Rivera, assistant pro- Hope has no one in a position who graduate. Miss Manus gave Tessor of economics moved that comparable to the minority her own class as an example. "I the HRC set as a goal "the studies coordinators at other would estimate there were at least obtaining of a director, at least GLCA schools. 50 blacks enrolled in the class of part time, for the coordination Miss Manus stressed that the '73, but we will graduate 10 or and implementation of black HRC investigation is primarily fewer. We don't know why, and studies at Hope College." concerned with Hope's needs for this indicates a need for further The motion was the result of such a coordinator and is not study of the problem." discussion at a GLCA conference interested merely because "it MISS MANUS did not know if on black studies held in Ann seems like the thing to do now." a minority studies coordinator Arbor. Dr. Elizabeth Reedy, pre- She continued, "Our"goal is to would be the answer, but she felt ceptor in English, and junior Rose make others realize that need and that Hope must show concern for Manus represented Hope at the whatever we can do to help the the minority students they are conference. Miss Manus then present program." planning to enroll. She remarked, agreed to take leadership in SHE CITED a need for a "If they are planning to get more developing a rationale for the program of study which would DEN UYL GRANT RECIPIENT IRWIN BRINK minority students, then they will motion. include courses to enable the have to plan to fulfill these SINCE THAT time, the motion minority student to broaden his students' particular needs. The has been broadened to include all total Hope experience as well as Irwin Brink receives minority student wants to learn minority studies, and the group courses that present a minority about his cultural background, an will first investigate Hope's need viewpoint. Miss Manus suggested opportunity of which he has for a minority studies director. courses in Black and Indian Den Uyl fellowship generally been deprived in earlier Miss Manus said that the council is religions, ghetto economics, and schooling." Dr. Irwin Brink, professor of The Den Uyl Fellowship was now trying to define the role of Black history. She felt Hope's chemistry, has received a Den Uyl established in 1958 by Dr. Simon such a director in order to Black Lit. and IDS 18 (Study of SHE FELT that fewer students Fellowship, the highest award D. Den Uyl, member of the class evaluate Hope's needs and goals in American Black Culture) courses would take interest in the urban given a Hope faculty member by of 1919 and chairman of the this direction. She added that are a step in the right direction. semester program if more atten- his colleagues. Brink is the fif- board of the Bohn Aluminum Hope and Wabash are the only "WE NEED more electives that tion were given to the problems of teenth faculty member to be Company of Detroit. His gift schools in the GLCA which do give greater cultural background urban areas on Hope's own named a Den Uyl fellow. provides an annual income to not have a staff person designated but HRC has agreed that at this campus. She also mentioned a loss The terms of the fellowship fund the fellowship program. as responsible for minority studies time Hope should not have a of minority as well as other emphasize the recipient's estab- development. Black Studies major or minor students in the GLCA enrollment lished record as a teacher of "The impact of the Den Uyl "But," she said, "it's not really because we are not capable of race as a consequence of the lack marked distinction, and require Fellowship Program has been clear whether we need such a offering all that is needed for such of attention paid to minority that he present "a proposal of great at Hope College and has person here. It depends on Hope's a program." For this reason the study programs. considerable scope" promising provided unusual opportunities goals and the needs which it can future benefits to the college. for faculty members to engage in presently fulfill for its students- Den Uyl fellows must devote studies complementary to their both minority and majority." their full summer's activity to the development as effective teachers, TO BEGIN THEIR investiga- Myers awarded $30,100 grant projects which they have outlined. and to acquire knowledge in many tion, HRC has sent letters to the Brink will spend the summer areas, leading to an improvement GLCA schools asking for job completing his in-progress re- in the quality of liberal educa- descriptions from their minority to study attitudes and behavior search in the study of heat tion," stated Dr. Morrette Rider, studies coordinators. Miss Manus Dr. David G. Myers, chairman capacities of various chemicals. dean for academic affairs. has also met with dean for two academic years. Several of the of the department of psychology, seven publications arising from has been awarded a $30,100 re- this work during the past two New Hopeites religious search grant from the National years have been co-authored with Science Foundation to continue student associates, and the new his experimental studies of social grant includes nearly $5,000 to attitudes and behavior. support continued student in- Survey finds frosh smart The goals of the research pro- volvement. ject include development of a Hope students have contri- theory to explain some social in- buted to several of these studies A survey on the attitudes of had graduated from high school. tion as the most important rea- fluence effects discovered in re- by participating as subjects in the freshmen at 481 schools in the Over 30 percent of their fathers sons for attending college. More cent experiments and to extend research. This has usually been U.S. shows that Hope freshmen are businessmen. than two-thirds of the respon- this theory and research to new done in conjunction with a labora- are much more religiously-minded Nearly two-thirds of the new dents indicated that they would experimental situations, according tory demonstration of social than students at other schools. Hopeites ranked in the top quar- seek degrees beyond the bachelor to Myers. psychology for students enrolled THE SURVEY, compiled by ter of their high school class, of arts. The current grant brings to in Introduction to Psychology, the Cooperative Institutional Re- considerably more than the na- More than half of the students $50,000 the amount of support Psych. 15. search Program of the American tional average. Their average grade said they sought an active social received for this research since Myers, presently in his fifth Council on Education, contains a in high school was a B. life and 67 percent felt it 1968. The new grant will release year at Hope, is a graduate of summary of responses of new NEW HOPE freshmen in- important to have friends differ- Myers to devote half of his Whitworth College and the Uni- freshmen at the 481 institutions. dicated a greater interest in ent from themselves. Sixty per- time to the project for the next versity of Iowa. The survey was prepared for extra-curricular activities than the cent want to raise a family. college administrators and infor- national average. They also re- HOPE FRESHMEN appraised mation is broken down by sex and ceived more scholastic and athle- themselves as able to excel aca- intended major. Listings for both tic awards while in high school. demically, having a high drive for Hope artist-in-residence the national norms and the The new freshmen expressed achievement and good leadership individual college are provided. concern about financing their abilities. Only 25 percent felt The survey indicated that new education and 35 percent said themselves popular with the oppo- Hopeites came mostly from Pro- that they would seek scholarships site sex. Twenty-nine percent to play in 'Merry Wives' testant homes (87 percent) and and grants. Most said they would considered themselves confident Jon Cranney, the last in a series the Shrew," "A Man's Man," and that 75 percent professed a rely heavily on parental aid. in social situations. of six artists in residence, arrived "Misalliance." personal religious faith. More than MOST STUDENTS said they The A. C. E. survey also sought In the past year he did a half declared their parent's in- chose Hope because of its good students' opinions on a variety of on campus Thursday. one-man touring production of come in excess of $15,000, reputation. The new freshmen subjects. Most Hope students "A Christmas Carol," as well as slightly above the national aver- cited better job opportunities, criticized government policies re- Cranney will remain on campus appearing in "Le Bourgeois Gen- age. opportunities for meeting new garding the war and expressed for eight weeks and be involved in tilhomme" at the Minneapolis Art ABOUT HALF of the respon- people and discovering new inter- concern for equal job opportuni- the theater department's upcom- Institute and "A Flea in her Ear" dents indicated that their parents ests and gaining a general educa- ties, consumer protection and ing production, "The Merry Wives at the Chanhassen Dinner Theatre. pollution control. More than half of Windsor," as well as in various "The artist in residence series felt that racial desegregation pro- teaching activities. has been very successful in pro- grams were progressing satisfac- Professor of religion viding contact with a variety of torily. Over 30 percent advocated Cranney has been affiliated professional theatrical people and the legalization of marijuana. with the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis for five years. Dur- it is hoped that Cranney will be retires from faculty HOPEITES' RESPONSES were ing that time he served as produc- very available to students during consistently more conservative tion stage manager for eight his stay," said Donald Finn, assis- Dr. Bastian Kruithof, professor Review and the Sunday School than the national average and 60 shows, including "The Taming of tant professor of theater. of religion since 1957, has retired Guide. percent indicated that they were from the full time faculty of the He is a member of the either middle of the road or college. His retirement became Theological Commission of the conservative on political issues. ARE YOU CALLED effective at the end of the fall Reformed Church in America, and Forty-four percent of the new TO THE SERVICE OF JESUS freshmen sought the abolition of semester. was honored recently with a as pastor? counselor? youth director? missionary? urban Before coming to Hope, Kruit- Distinguished Alumnus award grades and 75 percent said they ministry? teacher? hof served as pastor of the First from Calvin College. would like to help evaluate Reformed Church in Holland. His faculty members. Few of the Scores of men with an urgent sense teaching has been concentrated in Kruithof has presented papers respondents felt that the college the areas of Christian classics and and conducted conferences for had the right to ban speakers from of God's call are studying this year at ethics, but he has also taught in ministers and teachers throughout the campus or regulate student WESTMINSTER SEMINARY the fine arts and philosophy. the country. publications. Kruithof received his B.A. They come from thirty states and a dozen foreign lands from Calvin College in 1927, and Call Me Ishmael 'Bookstore in Saugatuck and over eighty colleges to a school where the Word of God was awarded a master's degree offers a 10% discount to is applied to all of life and thought by a faculty skilled in from the University of Michigan HOPE COLLEGE STUDENTS & FACULTY in 1933. He completed his Ph. D. at the Scriptures and concerned that the gospel be made the University of Edinburgh in On Its Entire Stock of New, Used and Rare known to this generation. 1955. Kruithof was also awarded BOOKS Write for information and a catalog to an honorary doctorate by Hope Nearly 10,000 Titles in Stock, Robert G. den Dulk, Dp. C College in 1951. Complete Search and Special Order Service Westminster Theological Seminary In addition to publishing six * * * books, Kruithof has contributed Chestnut Hill, Phil a., Pa. 19118 articles to Christian Century, the Open Every Day until 6 p.m. 349 Culver St. Ph. 857-2913 Church Herald, the Reformed Four Hope College anchor February 7,1972 Using the vote

HOPf - 6£A/£^( After several months of enfranchise- only three months a year in his home ment for 18-20 year-old voters, the time is community. Sine^this is the case it would fioofcT STofi.6. approaching when the student vote will appear that a student's interests rest pre- "alms!" cease to be an abstract privilege that dominantly in the Holland area. merely helps to fill a psychological need Students who are concerned about for a feeling of adulthood and will become problems of Holland such as housing or a potentially active force in the political discrimination against minority groups will process. find that there is now a vehicle available to The proposed May 9 presidential pri- them for possible correction of these prob- mary and a Holland school board election lems. In terms of the national or state situa- tion the effect of the new age of majority bill is obvious. For the first time the , * A majority of undergraduate students will be allowed to actively, engage in the political process on the level that in the end is in June are the first two contests in which responsible for change. the student vote could be positively felt. So far the number of Hope students The prospect of voting in a local school who have registered is fairly high. This is board election may not enthrall Hope not enough. Since almost all students are students, and many students feel it is in eligible to register it seems evident that the their interest to register in their home percentage registered should be higher than communities. This idea appears to make it is. Hope students have the opportunity sense. However, the average student spends to effect change. The question is, will they almost nine months a year in Holland and do it? Status and quality

A series of news developments in the neither excessive nor unfair, it has a dis- past week relating to the attitudes and turbing correlation with the admissions ill social composition of Hope's student body report and the results of the freshman invites some interesting generalizations survey. about trends in the composition of the The two latter sources paint a picture of student body and about the likely effects a student body that has little real element of such trends on the college's educational of diversity and is moving gradually up- program. ward in social composition. In spite of The Admissions Office has revealed that reassurances that financial aid programs Nixon's horse sense the number of applications received so far still enable any student who really wants to by Art Buchwald this year represents a record high for this attend Hope to do so, the effect of a cost Copyright ©1971, Los Angeles Times Syndicate point in the year, with 876 applications increase can only be to reinforce an up- submitted. The success of the admissions ward trend (however slight) in the social Now that the football season is over, could help you win the Santa Anita drive is also impressive in that most of the status of students attracted to the school. President Nixon is starting to talk to Handicap. Would you care to hear them?" applicants rank in the eighty-first percentile The result of fee increases would appear horses. The other day he congratulated "Neighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh." or higher in their high school class. to be a student body that is increasingly Black Jack, the riderless horse in President "GOOD. Now here's my game plan. The Kennedy's funeral entourage, on his 25th race is a mile and a quarter, so you don't On the heels of the admissions report uniform in financial status. The A.C.E. birthday. want to go out in front or some sprinter have come the findings of an American survey and presumably the admissions re- KNOWING the President's penchant for will try to tire you out. I'd say you lay Council on Education survey on the social port provide evidence that this uniformity sports, it wouldn't surprise me if Mr. Nixon back about third or fourth, five lengths standing and opinions and attitudes of extends to political and religious orienta- telephones Ack-Ack, who was just chosen behind the second horse. When you get to present Hope freshmen. The survey indi- tion as well. It may be that general Horse of the Year by the American Turf the three-quarter post, start perking up. cates that the majority of them come from inflation erases the effect that fees hikes Writers. Try to get to the outside by the time you families with an annual income of $15,000 would appear to have on the degree of The call could go like this: reach the mile post. Lay back about second or more, that most have a personal reli- heterogeneity in the student body, and it "HELLO, ACK-ACK. This is President or third, no more than four lengths off the gious faith, and that the majority are either may be that some members of the college Nixon calling. 1 wanted to congratulate leader. Are you with me?" "Neighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh." middle of the road or conservative in their community have no desire for greater you on being named Horse of the Year. I think I can speak for every American in "NOW YOU START picking up four political orientation. diversity. However, experience has demon- this country when I say how proud we all lengths, three lengths and at the final eighth A third development that seems in a strated that diversity is vitally necessary. If are of you. Hello, Ack-Ack, do you believe pole you make your big move. The beauty sense to parallel the admissions report and the college accepts this, it must give serious me?" of my plan is that if you follow this the A.C.E. survey was the coincidental consideration to trends in the social com- "Neighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh." strategy you can win by a length and your announcement of a $125 tuition hike. position of the college and the possible "AS PRESIDENT of all the people, as jockey won't have to lay a whip on you. Although the increase can be termed effects of cost increases on such trends. well as all the horses in our great country, 1 What do you think of it?" can tell you that I have been watching you "Neigh." for a long time, and I admire you not only "OH, I KNOW what you're going to say. for being Number 1, but for the way you You're going to say 1 gave the Redskins a Black studies have run in the face of great adversity. I've play and they lost 1 3 yards, and I gave Don been in a few horse races myself and I Simla a play and Miami lost the Super know what it is like to finish out of the Bowl, and I gave Pakistan a play and they The Human Rights Council, as its first segment of its student body, it should find money. You, of course, remember what lost half their country. step in considering whether Hope should out what those needs are, why it is not happened to me in California?" "But this time I'm sure my plan will hire a minority studies director, is investi- fulfilling them, and what can be done to 'Neighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh." work. Will you at least give it a try?" gating the college's need for such a staff alleviate the situation. Then it must take "BUT THE LAUREL wreaths go to "Neigh." person. According to a motion passed by positive steps in that direction. Does Hope those who say, 'Just because I lost is no "OH, BY THE WAY Ack-Ack. Mrs. the HRC at its December meeting, the want to admit, educate and graduate blacks reason to give up horse racing.' It's that Nixon and I would like to ask you to a will-to-win that has made American Presi- special prayer breakfast for horses at the director's task would be to coordinate and who are aware of their culture and heri- dents and American horses admired White House next Sunday. I've invited implement a black studies program here. tage, and who are prepared to live in a throughout the world. Are you still there?" Black Jack, Tom Fool, Native Dancer, Because Hope has neither a black studies society comprised of both whites and "Neighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh." Canonero II and all the U.S. park police major or minor, there is some doubt as to blacks? "I'M NOT SURE if you're aware of this horses in the Washington area. whether a black or minority studies direc- If the goal of the college is to enable or not, but I used to do some horseback "Billy Graham will conduct the service tor is really needed. However, some recent- both black and white students to graduate riding when I was in the Navy. Not at sea, and his sermon is titled, 'What Good Is It ly revealed statistics indicate that there is a with a general awareness and a sense of of course, but when I got shore leave. And to Win the Kentucky Derby if the Devil Is need for such a person. self-worth that they perhaps could not I believe I have some ideas for you that Waiting for You in the Paddock?' " First, according to HRC member Rose attain elsewhere, the hiring of a minority

Manus, at least 50 black students entered affairs director appears to be a necessary •OPE COLLEGE Hope with the class of '73, yet perhaps less step. Hope at present has only two courses than ten will graduate. Obviously, some- which focus on minority experience: Black thing is wrong. For some reason the other Literature and Study of American Black anchor 40 blacks were either dissatisfied with Culture. Courses that would provide deeper PRtSS loLLAND, MICHIGAN Hope, unprepared for the rigors of aca- cultural background - black and Indian demic life, or both. Hope had failed to religions, ghetto economics and black his- meet the needs of these students. tory are examples - are needed. A minori- Published during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of Second, the admissions office has re- ty affairs director could work to determine the Student Communications Media Committee. Subscription price: $7 per year. ported that only five black students have which courses are most needed and co- been accepted so far for admittance next ordinate the planning and implementation Printed by the Composing Room, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Member, Associated fall. While many black students could of such courses. Collegiate Press, United States Student Press Association. Office located on ground conceivably still apply and be accepted, Secondly, if Hope is serious about re- floor of Graves Hall. Telephone 392-5111, Extension 2301 and 2285. The opinions five is a far cry from the 50 of three years cruiting minority students, it should hire a on this page are not necessarily those of the student body, faculty or administration ago. If nothing is done to reduce the black full-time person in that capacity. Even if of Hope College. dropout rate, Hope could have very few or the college were to develop a better minori- no black students at all in the near future. ty studies program, the attraction of Editor Bob Roos Layout Lynda Hutchings Black high school students (those few who greater numbers of minority students Associate editor Mary Houting Cartoonist Dan Dykstra are aware of Hope's existence) are looking would be unlikely without a more active Assistant editor Gary Gray Columnists Neal Freedman, elsewhere, because they recognize that recruiting program. The coupling of more Critiques editor Kay Hubbard Steve Wykstra Hope cannot fulfill their needs. effective recruitment efforts with a fuller Editorial assistants Garrett DeGraff Reporters Clarke Borgeson, The first thing the college should do is minority studies program might be suffi- Ryan Mathews Marjorie DeKam, Dave DeKok, Molly determine the goals of its minority pro- cient to change the apparent trend toward Sports editor Merlin Whiteman gram. Hope is responsible to each of its narrow homogeneity in the student body Gates, Anita Hamre, Jerry Lauver, Business manager Ned Junor students. If for some reason (as indicated and at the same time provide all Hope Peter Orbeton, Mark Van Oostenhurg by the high black dropout rate), the students with a more realistic educational Advertising manager Richard Lopez Photographers Tom Siderius, institution is failing to meet the needs of a experience. Subscription manager.... Clarke Borgeson Boh Lawhead /

Febnury 7.1972 Hope College anchor Five anclpr review 'A Different Drummer9: courage of renunciation

Editor's note: This week's anchor incident: he must be crazy. But a destroying all that they cannot diary: "He HAS freed himself; review is written by critiques child knows better; there is too carry with them. this has been very important to editor Kay Hubbard. She reviews much purpose in Tucker's action THE REACTIONS to the ex- him. But somehow, he has freed A Different Drummer by William for it to be dismissed as mere odus vary. Some people respond me, too. He is only one man, and Melvin Kelley (Doubleday & Com- & freak ishness. with fear and violence; others this, of course, does not make a pany, Anchor Books edition, The leading gentleman of the laugh hollowly and say in tight reality all the things I had $1.45). town offers the explanation that voices that the state will be "bet- dreamed of doing twenty years Tucker's ancestry is at least par- ter off without them." The weal- ago. But it IS something... The greater part of what my tially responsible for his action. thy leader of the Black Jesuits "Yesterday his act of renun- neighbors call good The story is told of an amazingly understands what the conse- ciation was the first blow against I believe in my soul to be bad, powerful, colorful, strong African quences of Tucker's action will be my twenty misspent years, twenty and if I repent of anything, prince who refused to accept sla- for him and the other word- years I have wasted feeling sorry it is very likely to be my good very. Tucker Caliban is his descen- oriented leaders of the black for myself. Who would have behavior. dant. movement. thought such a humble, primitive What demon possessed me that PHYSICALLY the two men "The day is fast coming when act could teach something to a I behaved so well? chains have nothing in common: the people will realize there isn't any so-called educated man like my- African is always described in need for me and people like me. self? If a man does not keep pace with The dedication gave me some terms of his huge proportions, and Perhaps for me that day has come "ANYONE, anyone can break his companions, pause (Kelley wrote A Different Tucker is always described as al- already. Your Tuckers will get up loose from his chains. That cour- perhaps it is because he hears a Drummer when he was 23; it was most too small to be of any and say: I can do anything I want; age, no matter how deeply buried, different drummer. his first book; his dedication is consequence. What they do have I don't need to wait for someone is always waiting to be called out. Let him step to the music touchingly humble and sincere), in common is a spirit that refuses to GIVE me freedom; I can take it All it needs is the right coaxing, he hears, but the first chapter captured me. to be enslaved, an intuition that a myself. I don't need Mister the right voice to do that coaxing, however measured or far away. By the time I had read 20 pages, I man can and must free himself. Leader, Mister Boss, Mister Presi- and it will come roaring like a had forgotten all of my resent- Freedom is not a matter of words, dent, Mister Priest, or Mister Min- tiger. Henry David Thoreau ment and had opened myself to a or promises, but a matter of ac- ister, or Reverend Bradshaw. I Kelley offers many profound remarkable and prophetic book. tion. In a man's response to his don't need anyone. I can do what- insights in his visionary modern I picked up my review copy of A Different Drummer tells the situation is his capacity to be free. ever I want for myself by myself." parable. There is such economy A Different Drummer with great story of an "East South Central The blacks understand why THE WHITE MAN who lacked and integrity in A Different reservations. The Thoreau quota- state in the Deep South, bounded Tucker leaves, and they decide to the courage of his own convic- Drummer that I think even tion that Kelley uses as an epi- on the north by Tennessee; east follow. Within a week they have tions and has spent twenty years Thoreau would be pleased with graph for his book is one of my by Alabama; south by the Gulf of all left the state, leaving behind or in bitter self-hatred writes in his the choice of epigraph and title. favorites, and I resent all of the Mexico; west by Mississippi" psychedelic posters and plaques where "in June 1957, for reasons that have been screaming, "If a yet to be determined, all the man does not keep pace with his state's Negro inhabitants depar- amerika companions..." ted." By changing points of view, 1 AM DISTURBED that com- Kelley examines the exodus' mercial exploiters have made huge roots, spirit and implications, in profits from the words of a man terms of blacks and whites, young who was fundamentally con- and old, rich and poor, men and A uwrncm, then a mother cerned with spare living, with women. THE EXODUS begins with one economy. I tried to minimize my by Neal Freedman resentment by reminding myself family. Tucker Caliban salts his that the book was written in 1959 fields, shoots his livestock, burns I suppose it is unusual to commence a column JUNIOR NEEDS A NEW pair of shoes-this (before the Thoreau bandwagon his house, gathers his family and with a guest writer. My original intent was to write makes six pair since September. Martie has to have a. developed), but I still began the leaves the state for good. Adults about the women of this country-particularly those new scout uniform because everybody else has one. book an unsympathetic reader. try to explain it away as a freak who are mothers, and specifically mothers who Dad wants Charlie to get a haircut-says he looks belong to disinherited groups. I was going to talk like a girl and his sons are Men! A man, seven years about their plight. One woman and mother, a friend old? of mine from Holland, thought she knew more Frustration, you better know it. Dad earns the about the subject than I. 1 readily agreed. And so pay check-that's what Heinz likes to call it-and I WS/?S peeopd peuiew here is her statement; no one is more qualified to have to make it stretch. Pay the rent (for a shack), speak on the matter. (The editors suggested that she pay the light bill-if you don't the credit bureau gets remain anonymous in order to protect her against your check before you do. The supreme test of the Editor's note: This week's WTAS The stand-out cut of the album the possible wrath of her male acquaintances.). women in this country is to feed, clothe and house a record review is written by station is "," the title track. It N. F. family of nine on $8029 a year and not miss a meal personnel manager Bill DeBlock. is a classic example of the J.A. or get arrested because your kids are indecently He reviews the album Sunfighter style with Paul singing lead and AMID THE PULLING of tiny hands at my shirt exposed. by and on Grace wailing away with the band. tail and the shrill cries of "Mommy, Mommy! WHILE DAD GOES fishing or takes a nap I play Grunt Records. An interesting cut is "Titanic." It Denny's got my horsey!", 1 draw one firm conclu- house. Some play-time: nine bushels of wash per isn't really an instrumental as sion: I am a Mother. I find myself in this position Sunfighter is a new album by week, kids to wash, this to wash, that to wash. Then listed on the album cover, but not because it was my one aim in life, but because it the talented duo from Jefferson 1 taxi around a woman friend occasionally-why?- instead an electronic reproduction was my fate. Airplane, Grace Slick and Paul because my husband works so hard he can't move of the sinking Titanic. The cut I wanted to be a teacher. My mother wanted me Kantner. Along with their friends, an inch. comes off well, and again it shows to be a female saxophone player with my own Paul and Grace have put together Women-who happen to be mothers and mothers what can be done with the moog combo. My father wanted me out of his damn hair. one of the best American rock in my "bracket" as they say-paint rooms, lay synthesizers. Dad won. albums of the '70's. linoleum, put up storm windows, fix broken toys. As a reasonably young mother, but by no means THE MUSIC world still hasn't "LOOK AT the Wood" and We have never complained. But beginning now, an ideal one, just experienced, let me tell you about quieted down since Blows Against "Earth Mother" are very similar in FORGET IT. the Empire, an earlier Kantner- melody, and at a quick listen they it. JUST BECAUSE some flop-eared big-footed clod I AM THE PROUD owner of a large black luxury Slick release in which the message are indistinguishable. "Holding got you in the back of a car one night and said he car. 1 paid $35 for it. Until it kicks off (any day urged youth to lay the ground- Together" closes out the album in loved you. So, you married him. Mainly because now), my car and I travel 93 blocks per day (yes, I work for a free world and also to fine style. Paul does a nice job on you didn't have anything better to do that day. count them) dropping kids off at three different set up plans to. hijack the first the keyboard, with Jerry Garcia While 1 am not a member of organized women's schools and picking them up. Just like the milk- interplanetary starship that the on lead guitar (courtesy of the lib, neither am I a shrinking violet bowing my head United States could send up. man-only he gets paid. Grateful Dead). to my lord-either one- or master thirty-seven times The new album comes up with For three years I have been that very rare article Paul and Grace have one draw- a day saying, "Yes, dear, whatever you say, honey." more suggestions: "The sword of called a "Room Mother." I help at class parties and back: they don't seem to get the The American Woman is exploited beyond beliej. the Lord don't mean nothing to take the kids on field trips. 1 put on my best sheet words to fit the music; musical me if He won't get down on the to play ghost at the spook house on fun nite. And THIS BEGINS AT THE age of three when we get a phrases end before the words do people making such a mess of the I've managed to donate some unscorched cookies to doll for Christmas or play dishes or furniture. All and vice-versa. The same tault can land and sea around me," and the third grade bake sale. so we can learn to cook and clean and babysit. And be found in the Empire album, "Earth Mother your children are FOR THIS (AND MORE) 1 am justly rewarded be "Mommy." Big deal. but it is only a small drawback here all ripped on coke and once a year at P.T.A. 1 receive a white card with a Several years ago (in my generation) the rage for and can be ignored when message candy." gold "Thank you" on the front and twenty-five a "girl" in high school was saving her money to buy means so much to music these THE MUSIC ITSELF has a names inside written in individual childish scrawl. a Hope Chest-a large cedar box greatly resembling a days. Incidentally, the album in- quality to it I didn't ask much-most mothers don't. Maybe coffin. These chests were then filled with linen, cludes a booklet with the words with many free-form piano and an hour at the library once a week or a vacant dishes, cookware, etc. With the hope that some to all the songs. • young man would come along and take you for a guitar pieces. As all of the tunes corner in the laundromat where I can read while the are written by either Paul or If you think about it, the wash is drying. wife-all because of the size and contents of your Grace and the back-up band is album isn't really that radical...it's WHEN'WE MOTHERS-at least the ones that I Hope Chest. primarily made up of the Airplane just a product of our times. Paul know in Holland-get frustrated we take our prob- IT'S GOOD TO SEE some women of today with .enough sense not to be brainwashed like we were ( and Spencer and Grace and the Airplane Gang lems to the bowling alley-throwing that heavy ball Dryden) the sound is definitely of have come up with a superb fol- with all your might (that is, between drinks) helps ten years ago. Motherhood is fine if you dig that sort of thing. I the early Fillmore or Avalon Ball- low-up for their Blows Against the relieve just about anything. Except hernia. don't. I mean, I would rather be known as a person, room variety with new and power- Empire album. Sunfighter is just Marriage and motherhood are all cracked up to a woman-a mother, maybe-but//m a woman, ME. ful lyrics. what the times ordered. be a bed of roses-I got a bouquet of thorns. The Best of Peanuts

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r February 7, 1972 Six Hope College anchor Faculty receive awards Senator Robt. Huber slated to address students in DCC Research grants announced

Michigan Senator Robert Hu- for the GOP U.S. Senate nomina- Several faculty members have grants from the Matthew Wilson sor of biology, will pursue re- ber will address students and fac- tion, and he presently opposes the been awarded grants to undertake fund. search in extrachromosomal gene- ulty today at 3:30 in the ballroom renomination of Sen. Robert Grif- research and professional develop- Dr. James Bultman, assistant tics of unicellular green algae. of the DeWitt Cultural Center. fin because of Griffin's liberal ment next summer. professor of education, will use JOYCE MORRISON, assistant Huber is the founder and inclinations. DR. DOUGLAS Heerema, his Wilson grant to do research in professor of music will pursue leader of the Michigan Conserva- The political science depart- chairman of the department of value education at the W. Clement postgraduate studies in vocal re- tive Party, formed to oppose the ment, which is sponsoring Huber's economics and business adminis- Stone Foundation in Chicago. Dr. pertoire at the University of Illi- Republican party, which Huber visit, called him a "strong-minded tration, has been awarded a Eldon Greij, associate professor of nois. Orestes Pino, assistant profes- felt was too liberal. In 1970 he political figure," and reminded Reimold grant for proposed re- biology, will undertake field work sor of Spanish, will undertake ran against Mrs. Lenore Romney students of their personal obliga- search and writing on the indus- in the Florida Everglades in prepa- advanced work in the study of tion "to hear all political view- trial revolution. He will study the ration for a May term field studies Latin American civilizations at points, including those which impact of the revolution on religi- course for Hope in that area. Colorado State University. might oppose" their own. ous values. DR. SANG LEE, assistant pro- Dr. James Reynierse, associate Don't let '68 Huber's record also includes The grant, founded by Mr. O.S. fessor of religion, will prepare professor of psychology, will pre- opposition to forced busing to Reimold II, specifies that the sub- several publications on "Jonathan pare publications on the behavior- achieve racial balance in public ject of the research should be Edwards' Theory of Imagination" istic analysis of the Old Testament happen again. schools, and his stand in 1970 "emblematic of the expression of at the Yale University library. book of Job, applying learning against a federal housing project those spiritual and cultural values Carroll Lehman, assistant pro- principles of behavioristic psycho- in Warren, Michigan. which motivated the founder of fessor of music, will engage in logy to the behavior and conversa- Register to vote. Huber will answer questions Hope College, Dr. Albert Van intensive language study at the tions of Job. after his introductory remarks and Raalte." Goethe Institute in Germany DR. CARL Schackow, assistant will be available to students until FACULTY members from nine throughout the summer. Dr. professor of education, will con- 5 p.m. departments have been awarded Charles McBride, assistant profes- duct an extensive survey of the staffing needs of rural schools in Michigan. He will attempt to as- Library offers sess the potential of Hope's educa- tion department to expand its cassette tapes offerings to fulfill this need. HOPE STUDENTS Dr. Philip VanEyl, associate professor of psychology, will di- for student use vide his time between the Wright Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio The library now has six cas- and the University of Vermont. Get ready for Valentine's day sette players and a number of tapes While at Vermoqt VanEyl will covering a variety of subjects available for student and faculty study spatial disorientation and use. sensory deprivation. by saving on these items: ROBERT VICKERS, chairman The tapes, which may be checked out for two hours, of the department of art, will t4 continue his studies and creative include The Explosive Society" work in an investigation of the by Arthur Schlesinger Jr., "In Quest Of Uniqueness" with Eric pictorial possibilities of crushed 15 OUNCE relief. Hoffer and "Armies of the Night" by Norman Mailer. Dr. Donald Williams, associate SCHRAFTS professor of chemistry, will pur- BRECK SHAMPOO Other tapes are "Racism: The sue work in the area of environ- Roots of Rebellion" by Roy mental studies. Wilkins, "The Sexual Wilderness" Dr. James Zoetewey, chairman CANDY by Vance Packard, "Thomas of the department of political Mann's Europe," "The Role of science, will engage in a detailed 990 the Drama Critic," and others. study of the presidential nominat- The tapes may be checked out ing process as it relates to the HEARTS at the circulation desk of the NORMAL AND DRY 1972 election year. He will study library. Additional cassettes may the two major political conven- be obtained by calling Diane tions and the gubernatorial elec- SAVE 640 DeJonge between 8:30 a.m. and tions during a specific period in 4:30 p.m. daily, extension 2256. the history of Colorado. 500 COUNT FILM AND NOTEBOOK PAPER PHOTO FINISH 440 FAST SERVICE SAVE 45c * wonder VALENTINE AND ENVELOPES i what t ALL-OCCASION 29C skiing I 6 3/4 REGULAR AND CARDS 10" BUSINESS is all SAVE 13c WRITING SUPPLIES about? STORAGE CHESTS Yamaha will pay your first day's rental GIFT DEPARTMENT of skis and poles to get you started! Here's your chance to find out how great - HAIR CARE - skiing can be. Yamaha pays for one day's 99C rental of skis and poles. The rest is up to you. * Bring in this ad and get all the details. REGULAR AND HOUSEHOLD NEEDS Good for one day's rental of Yamaha Skis and Poles UNDERBED (not including boots, bindings). Limit; one free rental TYPE - COSMETICS- per person.

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9 AM—9 PM MON-FRI River Ave., at llth, Holland Between Post Office and City Hall 9 AM- 6 PM SAT I Phone 396-4684 February 7, 1972 Hope College anchor Seven Site not determined Phys. ed. center plans begun

by Clarke Borgeson cation Department, has not yet be comprised of two large gym- met and probably will not meet nasium spaces, each containing A planning committee for the until a suitable site for the struc- two basketball courts, two tennis proposed physical education cen- ture is found, according to profes- courts, two volleyball courts, ter was recently appointed to dis- sor of physical education Dr. eight badminton courts, and a cuss with the architects the pro- Lawrence Green. part of the 220-yard track, which posed layout of the building. Barry Werkman, Hope business will circle the entire field house The committee, which consists manager, stated that Van Raalte area. of members of the Physical Edu- Field is a possible site for the center, but Green indicated that Werkman said that the commit- "we want the center to be in tee hopes to determine a site for Biblical scholar proximity to the campus area, so the center by summer. Asked that everyone will have an oppor- about the cost of the facility and to speak Feb. 14 tunity to use it." the availability of funds, he said The proposed center, which is that at present no definite cost in Wichers Aud. part of the 10 year $10 million projections have been made. Some master plan, would include a field money, he said, has been received Biblical scholar William C. house, a swimming pool, office from private contributors, and Brownlee will lecture on the topic and classroom space and related will be used to pay architect's "Justice in the Middle East" Mon- facilities. The field house would fees. day, Feb. 14, at 2:30 p.m. in Wichers auditorium. Brownlee, professor of Bib- lical Studies and Archeology at Meeting set to organize Claremont Graduate School in Claremont, Calif., will visit Hope in commemoration of the 25th flying club on campus anniversary of the finding of the Dead Sea Scrolls at Qumran. AA meetino o • t rw^g Tfo r~\ r aloil l •thos ri /^v o en tinter rA • r* - ofI fth" r> eO airplane, tiroitrweathew r hazards, Brownlee, one of the men ested in organizing a college flying and the reading of flight terminol- who first discovered the scrolls club will be held tonight at 5 in ogy. EXPOSITORY ECSTACY-Oblivjous to the Friday night din at the and recognized their importance, room 211 of the DeWitt Cultural Films, records and lectures Hollander Pub, Gerald Swieringa recites poetry in an attempt to bring will speak out of his wide exper- Center. would be employed in the instruc- some cultural sophistication to Hopeite's customary weekend recrea- ience in Jordan and Israel over the John Brower, president of Bur- tion, Brower said. Written and tion. Other poetry readers were Martha Mulder and Steve Farrar. past 25 years. gess Aviation of Holland, will dis- operational tests would be ad- cuss with interested students and ministered, on which students faculty a proposed pilot's course would have to score at least 70 Complete theses to be offered here. The course, percent to obtain a license, he which would lead the student to a added. pilot's license, would offer two daily flights and two weekly Join the flying club Professors awarded Ph.D.'s ground classroom sessions. The course could be completed in Associate professor of religion the work and passed the tests for Lee, who did his degree work three months, according to Robert Coughenour and assistant the degree, it will not be officially at Harvard under the advisorship Brower. professor of religion Sang Lee awarded him until commence- of Dr. Richard Reinhold Niebuhr, The pilot's course now costs recently completed studies for the ment exercises take place at the completed tests for the degree Burgess' private students $800, doctoral degree. Harvard Graduate School of Arts Feb. 3. His thesis is entitled "The but Brower stated that the fee Coughenour was awarded the and Sciences in June. Concept of Habit in the Thought would be discounted to $600 if Ph.D. degree Jan. 7 by Case West- Coughenour's thesis, entitled of Jonathan Edwards." Its con- 25 or more Hopeites enrolled. He ern Reserve University in Cleve- "Enoch and Wisdom," discusses tent is related to Edwards' theory noted that the course would offer land. Although Lee has completed the relationship between apoca- of the imaginative power of the all the minimum flight times re- lyptic literature and wisdom. It mind and its implications for his quired by law and that classroom represents an attempt to "assess views of experience, being and sessions would provide instruction Theater dept. the worth of apocalyptic litera- God. on the construction and operation ture and to get a handle on holding tryouts contemporary futurist writings," THE UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION Coughenour said. However, he « special tied agency of the United Nations dedicated to peace for next play added that the thesis focuses on a and piece of Jewish literature written THE STUDENT AID SOCIETY about 95 B.C. Hope's theater department is a non profit non-potitical organization dedicated now casting roles for its next to helping students to help themselves major production, William Shake- offer speare's The Merry Wives of Wind- $6 value STUDY ABROAD sor. John Tammi, assistant profes- New 19th Edition Paris, France, 1972 Each copy is trilingual 644 Pages sor of theater, has announced that in English, French and tryouts for the play will be held Spanish Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the theater of the DeWitt Cultural Center. The most complete scholarship directory in the world lists more than 234,000 scholarships, fellowships, loans and grants in more The tryouts, Tammi said, are open than 129 countries or territories! Tells who is eligible, fields of to the entire Hope community. study, financial assistance, HOW, WHEN AND WHERE TO He asked that anyone unable to APPLY! Reflects the latest scholarship approach costed by attend contact him for an ap- financial need! pointment at another time. Guest artist Jon Cranney will $1.50 value VACATION STUDY ABROAD portray Shakespeare's most fam- • Each copy is trilingual in English, French and Spanish ous buffoon, Falstaff. Tammi re- More and more Americans are flocking overseas for summer marked that many good roles are vacations, and an increasing proportion is young Americans! With yet to be cast. the price war now raging on overseas airfares, record-breaking Cranney is an actor and stage numbers of young Americans will surge across Europe this manager with the renowned summer! VACATION STUDY ABROAD tells how qualified Tyrone Guthrie Theater Company people will go free! Provides information on short courses, in Minneapolis, Minn. He is pre- The American Red Cross seminars, summer schools, scholarships and travel grants available sently on campus as artist-in- each year to students, teachers and other young people and adults residence and will remain here planning to undertake study or training abroad during their vacations. These data were provided by some 500 organizations in until the play ends March 25. $ S value 54 countries! STUDENT AID SOCIETY membership dues. Services offered: • Scholarship information service. Answers questions concerning scholarships worldwide!, • Travel service. Plans interesting tours to exotic lands! • Reference Service. Drafts term papers, essays, book reports, theses, etc. frequently using primary sources available only in the Library of Congress! We do not actually write the finished HOLLANDER HOTEL assignment since that would deprive the student of valuable educational experience and defeat the very purpose for "Your reference service writing for oneself in the first place. We will provide saved me much valuable background information and bibliographies which rank time which i put in on with such tools as the College Outline Series and encyclo- other subjects. Result: 5 paedia reference services available only with expensive sets. As and 1 B." Limit of one draft at small additional charge, per semester m.l.s.i. CN, Ann Arbor, Mich per student in good standing. We cannot answer any "The Vantage Point" is a question which we feel requires the advice of a doctor, lawyer, architect, engineer, or other licensed practitioner, Multiple Leisure Services Inc. book put together by 5 ghost writers and edited nor can we advise concerning your financial investments. by LB J. Your reference Neither can we undertake market research or surveys or service is almost like my provide home study courses. A DRINKING ESTABLISHMENT own personal ghost writer. I LC, Gainesville, Fta. Student Aid Society, PO Box 39042 | Where There's Always Something "The 3 reference books j Friendship Station, Washington, D.C. 200161 Happening of which every student I Gentlemen: I enclose $6 for Study Abroad, needs personal copies [ Vacation Study Abroad and annual dues. are Study Abroad, a good dictionary and I Name j 8th Street thesaurus. / got a $10,000 j Address i 4-year scholarship from Holland Study Abroad." I City, State. Zip. AR, Berkeley, Calif. I Eight Hope College anchor February 7, 1972 Cagers lose to Alma, Calvin; beat Kazoo 77-44

by Merlin Whiteman were major reasons for the out- win for the Dutch could not have come. Hope was as cool as the made up for a losing season, but it Ground Hog Day proved to be other side of a pillow, connecting certainly could have sweetened an dark and gloomy for the Hope on only 29 of 84 from the floor otherwise sour basketball cam- College Flying Dutchmen. The for a dismal 35 percent. Alma hit paign. Dutch lost their fourth conference an even 50 percent. Hope could HOPE HIT the Knights quick game of the year to long-time sink just 1 3 of 1 8 free throws for and hard, jumping out to an early rival Calvin, but not before giving 72 percent, as opposed to Alma's 7-0 lead. At one time, Hope en- the visiting Knights quite a scare. 27 of 32 for 84 percent. The joyed as much as a 13-point lead. Saturday night the Dutch blas- Dutch did out rebound the Scots, However, Calvin whittled the lead ted a stone-cold Kalamazoo Col- 58-44. Hope now boasts a defen- down to five, and trailed by only lege to win league game number sive average of 90.7 points a game. five - 37-42 - at the half. Hope two. In three games prior to the Marty Snoap led the way for dominated play in the first half, Calvin loss, Hope beat Trinity the Dutchmen, hitting nine of 14 outshooting the visitors 61 per- Christian and Lake Forest, while from the floor, and one of two cent to 43 percent, and outre- losing to league foe Alma. from the line for 19 points. He bounding them 23-13. in parti- THE DUTCHMEN soared over was followed by Shinabarger and cular, Dan Shinabarger's hot the 100 point mark for the second Hankamp who had 17 and 12 shooting and Marty Snoap's hustle time this season when they respectively. Hankamp led the were big reasons for the lead. trounced Trinity 110-96 Jan. 19. team in rebounds with 13 points. In a game played Jan. 1, Hope JAN. 29, the Dutch axed the Calvin came out in the second trimmed Trinity 1 14-89. winless l.ake Forest Foresters, half and outscored the Dutch 12-7 Dan Shinabarger had another 98-70. Hope jumped on the Fores- to tie the game up with a little less outstanding night, singeing the ters early, leading at the half, than 16 minutes left. Hope cords for 45 points. In the pro- 55-29. The visiting team was out- worked the lead back to five cess, Shinny moved into fifth manned, and only one of the Lake before Calvin tied the game up place on the all-time Hope high- Forest players, Ed Cochran, once more. scoring list, passing Clare Van scored over six points. From that point, until a basket Wieren who previously held that Coach DeVette emptied the with 1:20 to go made the score spot. bench early, and every Dutch 80-76 Calvin, the contest was still JUNIOR CENTER Tom Wolt player racked up at least two in doubt. With the score tied ers took second place honors with points. Shinabarger led the scoring 76-76, the Knights reeled off six 17 markers, while collecting 13 with 16 points, but was closely straight points to wrap it up, and rebounds. Jack Hankamp had 13 followed by Loren/.a Howard who treat the Dutch to their fifth points and a game high 19 re- had 12, and Hankamp and Tom consecutive loss at the hands of Calvin. bounds. Hope's fourth player in Van Wieren who managed ten double figures was Marty Snoap points apiece. Hope out reboun- HOPE TIRED noticeably in with 12. Over all, Hope enjoyed ded the Foresters, 55-51, but did the second half. Snoap's fourth their best night from the field, not have one player with over foul early in that half was also a hilling 43 of 75 attempts for a eight caroms. big factor. If not for the brilliant torrid 57 percent. FRESHMAN Ed Cochran shooting of new addition Lee Hope was collared for their proved to be a one-man team. In Brandsma, the game might have eighth loss of the season, and their the first half, he collected 21 of been out of reach much earlier. third in conference play, when his team's 29 total points. Coch- Playing in his first varsity tilt this they went down in defeat at the ran canned 11 field goals and 14 year, the 6'2" junior went 7 of 9 DUTCHMAN TOM WOLTERS goes up for a shot in Wednesday's losing hands of the Alma Scots, 101-71. foul losses to give him a total of from the field, and scored one of However, Shinabarger did move bout with the Calvin Knights. Jack Hankamp (34) and Dave Harmelink 36 points. He also pulled down 21 two from the charity stripe to (44) look on. up into fourth place on the all- missed shots to lead both teams in tally 1 5 points. lime Hope scoring list in that scoring and rebounding. Shinabarger tallied 23 points on total 24 points. Shinny remains three minutes remaining, started a game's action. Only Jim Vander The league-leading Calvin 10 field goals and three free the league's leading scorer with a Dutch splurge that gave Hope a Mill, Paul Benes, and Floyd Brady Knights came to the Holland Civic throws. Game honors, however, 27.6 average. 3 1-20 halftime lead. liave posted higher career totals. Center on Ground Hog Day to went to Calvin's smooth Tom BESIDES SHINABARGER Hope came out and put the A PRESSING DEFENSE and win by the skin of their teeth, Veltkamp who collected nine and Brandsma, Snoap and Tom game away in the second half. The cold Dutch field goal shooting escaping with an 82-78 victory. A fielders and five charity tosses, to Wolters hit for double figures. first ten minutes' action saw Hope Snoap scored 13 points, while hit 12 of 19 field goal attempts, Wolters, in addition to his team- while Kazoo was frozen out. Win over Albion leading 11 rebounds, bagged 12 Shinabarger and Brandsma spear- markers. headed the rout, which ended Kalamazoo College experi- with coach DeVette clearing the 4 enced an exceptionally cold bench. Hope grapplers defeat K' shooting game Saturday night, en- TEAM SCORING honors were abling Hope to wallop them, shared by Shinabarger and Brand- 77-44. K-College could connect sma who had 14 points apiece. In wrestling action over the back in the 126-pound division, last match of the afternoon. Ed on only 21 percent of their floor Dave Harmelink, in a relief role, past two and a half weeks, the Hope's Ken Gralow turned in the Chavez was the hero of the day, as shots, while the Dutch were hit- had 10 points to be the only other Hope College grapplers defeated first of four pins that the Dutch he pinned his man to give the ting 45 percent of their fielders. Dutchman to collect double fig- two league opponents, while managed. In quick succession, Dutch their slim two-point margin. BOTH TEAMS were very frigid ures. losing to defending conference Kevin llolleman and Rick Vander- The meet started off very slow- in the first half. Hope hit for 32 Hope plays Adrian College at champ Adrian. lind both pinned their men, to ly for the Dutch. The Hope percent, however, outdistancing home Wednesday. The Dutch de- THE DUTCH wrestlers main- make it three straight. wrestlers could manage only one Kalamazoo's 25 percent. After 10 feated the Bulldogs earlier in the tained their unblemished confer- Three matches later, Dan win in the first five matches, a minutes' action the score was only season 79-69. On Saturday Hope ence record and raised their sea- Dykstra copped a big win, as he forfeit awarded Kevin Holleman 10-8. A three-point play by Lor- travels to Olivet to face the son record to 4-4 in turning back won by a decision 10-3. The when the Britons failed to fill enza Howard with a little less than league-leading Comets. Kalamazoo College 31-21. Six clincher was Kevin Boerman's 5-0 their 142- pound slot. Dutchmen chalked up wins to winning decision in the heavy- HEAVYWEIGHT BOERMAN lead Hope to their second confer- weight class. brought the crowd to its feet ence victory. SATURDAY Jan. 22, Hope when he claimed Hope's second Jayvees defeat Calvin, Fd Chavez was the first Hope lost to the defending conference victory of the afternoon. Kevin victor, winning by forfeit in the champs 34-9. The Dutch could pinned his opponent in 4:27 to 1 18-pound class. Following a set- manage only three winners in remain undefeated in league com- their loss to the Adrian Bulldogs. petition. dump Alumni All-Stars Gralow, wrestling in the Hope's next victory came on a History prof. Shocked by a loss to the Alma pumped in eight straight points to 134-pound division, won by a 6-4 forfeit granted to Eric Bratt who jayvees, the Flying Dutchmen jun- start the second half and lead the decision. Hope's second win was has recently returned to school. ior varsity cagers came back to Knights 35-34. Calvin then put on from Western notched by junior Rick Vander- Seconds after reversing his man, lind who shut out his man 8-0. whip three straight opponents. a spurt of their own, and went the match was stopped at the AFTER LOSING to the Alma The third and final victory was request of the Albion wrestler. A ahead 46-39. Once again the Scots a week earlier, Hope de- to speak tonight turned in by freshman Boerman leg injury made it impossible for Dutch streaked, this time to cop a feated the Alumni All-Stars, 47-46 lead with 8:40 to go in the Dr. Stanley Walters, professor who, in a close one, outpointed him to return to action giving Eric 89-72, on Jan. 29. Hope led all game. At this point the game of Near Eastern studies at Central Ralph Lawn 4-2. Both Vanderlind the win and the team six big the way and recorded its sixth leveled off to a tooth and nail Michigan University, will meet and Boerman have excellent 8-1 points that made the meet score victory against three losses. fight to the finish. records. 18-19 in favor of Albion. with interested history students Brian Vriesman led the surging HOPE DEFEATED Albion today to discuss graduate oppor- THE HOPE MATMAN up next jayvees with 19 points. He was WITH FORTY seconds left in College 24-22 this past Saturday, tunities and fellowships in history. lost by a decision, making the followed by Jim Nienhouse, Willie the game, and the score 66-65 in in a meet that was decided in tho He will also lecture on the score 18-22. Chavez, wrestling Cunningham and Greg Slenk who Hope's favor, Calvin threw the 4t topic, The Relevance of the last, was then faced with the had 15, 14 and 13 points respec- ball away. Taking an in-bounds Study of Ancient History." The necessity of a pin in order for tively. Leading the All-Stars were pass, Vriesman was fouled and meeting will be held at 4:15 p.m. Hope to win the meet. Eddie, a Dan Edwards with 22 markers, awarded two shots, both of which in the President's Room. 118-pounder, normally wrestles and Bruce Van Huis with 21 he promptly sunk. Calvin cut the Walters' visit is sponsored by lead to one point once again, this The Hope College anchor first, but this year in league ac- points. time with only 12 seconds remain- Phi Alpha Theta, the history hon- tion, a pre-meet draw determines SATURDAY NIGHT, the ing. Hope's Jim Hickman brought orary society. The professor is the order of wrestling. Dutch polished off the Kalamazoo scheduled to attend the chapter's the ball down the floor and was lacks depth, objectivity, Chavez took a 5-0 lead and the jayvees 95-58 to register their spring initiation buffet dinner to fouled. Jim made two free throws vocal backing of the crowd into eighth victory of the season. How- be held at 5:30 p.m. today in the to win the game, with the final the second period. While the buz- ever, the big game for the junior President's house. Later this score 70-67. professionalism zer took a pin away from him at varsity was Wednesday night evening Walters will be present at Vriesman led the way for Hope the end of the first period, he was against Calvin. an informal gathering of history with 18 points, but was closely not to be denied in the second. Hope avenged an earlier loss at students at the home of Miss followed by Jim Nienhouse who and reporters. With 39 seconds gone he pinned the hands of their Calvin counter- Fvdokia Carayanni, assistant pro- had 17 markers, nine of which his man and gave Hope the win, parts, and thus set the state for a fessor of history. Miss Carayanni came on perfect free throw shoot- securing a tie for second place in rubber match scheduled for Feb- studied with Walters last year. ing. Hope's 6-5 center, Willie Cun- the conference. ruary 26. The Dutch won a close Walters holds a Ph.D. degree ningham, added 10 points to the WEDNESDAY, the Hope one by the score of 70-67. from Yale University and a Master winning cause. wrestlers visit neighboring Grand THE DUTCH looked sluggish of Theology degree from Prince- Valley State College in a meet in the first half, and found them- THE DUTCH jayvees will meet ton Theological Seminary. During scheduled for 7:30. Saturday, the selves trudging to the locker room the tough Aquinas College junior the academic year 1969-70 he was Dutch face league foe Olivet at at the half seven points behind, varsity this Wednesday at home. a visiting fellow at Mansfield Col- Join the anchor. home at 2:00. The season-ending 34-27. Saturday they will visit Olivet, lege, Oxford University in Eng- MIAA meet will be held in Hol- The frosh fired out of the where they will play jayyee bas- land. land on March 1. dressing room, and quickly ketball at 6:00.