<<

Hope College Digital Commons

The Anchor: 1969 The Anchor: 1960-1969

5-9-1969

The Anchor, Volume 81.24: May 9, 1969

Hope College

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1969

Part of the Library and Information Science Commons

Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 81.24: May 9, 1969" (1969). The Anchor: 1969. Paper 11. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1969/11 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 81, Issue 24, May 9, 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 OPEo COLLEGrE $CCC1^ OLLAND, MICHIGAN

8l8t ANNIVERSARY — 24 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 May 9, 1969 Academic Dean Reveals New Faculty Selections

Dean for Academic Affairs Mor- Bachelor's Degree from the Cleve- rette Rider has announced a par- land Institute of Art and a Master tial list of new faculty members of Fine Arts in Printmaking from for next year's Hope College staff. Tulane University. Including additions only to those departments which have Charles McBride joins the staff completed full staffing for next of the biology departmentcoming year, the Dean announced the from Harvard University where appointment of 13 new faculty he is in his second year of post- members, four returning pro- doctoral study. Dr. McBride is a fessors and three part-time instruc- graduate of the University ofMis- tors who have become full-time souri and was awarded the Doc- faculty members. torate from Missouri in 1967. Elton Greij returns from leave DEAN RIDER SAID that "a granted him for graduate study great many other" appointments at the University of Iowa and have been made in various de- will assume a full time role on partments, including economics, (Continued on Page 3 ) education, English, history, mathematics, physics, psy- chology and sociology. These ad- Four Additional ditions would be announced as soon as staffing in these depart- Hope Educators ments was completed, he said.

Robert Vickers has been ap- Plan To Leave pointed associate professor of art Four faculty members will be THE FLOWERS THAT BLOOM IN THE SPRING-Tourists of all varieties flock into Holland for and chairman of the department. leaving the teaching staff at the Tulip Time, the annual festival of Dutch culture. He brings to the Hope campus end of the year in additiontothose some 20 years of experience in mentioned in the anchor last week. Annual Study-Breaker the field of art, including 14 years Ronald Dwelle, instructor of on the faculty of Ohio Wesleyan English, will be an assistant pro- University and two years at Ohio fessor of English at Grand Valley University where he is currently State College. Barry Werkman, professor of art history. He has instructor in economics and busi- Tulips and Tourists in Bloom degrees from the State University ness administration, will be the College of New York and Colum- Assistant Business Manager of bia University, with extensive ex- Hope College. By Mark Rockley through Saturday, climaxing at But it does seem somewhat perience in the Academies at Paris anchor Reporter 3 p.m. with the Parade of the ironic for the conservative town and Fontainbleau. Mr. Vickers Miss Judith Whren, instructor Bands. of Holland to receive suchaboost is a specialist in African art. Stemming from a proliferous in German, will also be leaving HIGHLIGHTING THE festi- from flower power. Or maybe it growth of tulips and prices, the the faculty and plans to be mar- val will be the Klompen dancers, is not at all ironic. Maybe Hol- A SECQND appointment to the interests of numerous tourists will ried in August. Dr. Irwin Miller, most days at 2 and 7:15 p.m. land is wising up to the potential art department is that of Bruce be attracted to Holland this week, chairman of the sociology depart- Street scrubbing will take place at of the flower and like the rest of McCombs, who is currently on for this is the season that the Hol- ment, will be leaving the faculty 10 a.m. Thursday, Friday and America it would seem, is also the faculty of Muskingum Col- land markets and buds come to at the end of this year. His future Saturday along with band pa- going to pot. lege. Mr. McCombs has his full bloom. plans are indefinite. rades in the early evenings. The Special attractions, to lay it on tulips and the windmill at Wind- the line, will feature Holland's mill Island will be major tourist beauty-laden Klompen dancers, sights throughout the festival as Two Week Stand a windmill propelled by great will the tulip gardens in the area. quantities of hot air, and thestreet- washing ceremony. During the festival, at some op- A SIDE ATTRACTION for the portune time, it is safe to assume Spoon River' Opens Tonight delight of the many intellectuals that most tourists will attempt the on campus preparing for exams feat of wearing some wooden the following week will be the shoes, and thus, along with a few By David Thomas their own epitaphs, discovering A LONG PROCESSION of marching bands, also propelled illegally picked tulips, a pair of anchor Reporter and confessing the real motiva- character sketches could easily by great quantities of hot air, wooden shoes will also ac- tions of their lives; they reveal become tedious, but"Spoon Kiver along with some lively drummers company most tourists as they "Spoon River Anthology," a the secret steps that stumbled them Anthology" seeks to remain alive whom you just can't beat for that leave Saturday after the festival provocative dramatization of the to failure, or raised them to il- and captivating throughout. Al- soul rhythm. has wilted to a close. character of the Midwest, will be lusionary triumphs while alive; though each actor plays at least This, the 40th annual Tulip THE HOLLAND b usinessmen presented tonight by the Hope it is as if the darkness of the grave five different roles in the course Festival, beginning Wednesday, will then be rich, the tourists poor College theatre department. granted them reveletory eyes for of the play, the two-act presenta- with a flower show at the Armory, and the Hope student, knowledge- a recognition of their own souls." tion moves quickly. A DRAMATIC adaption of Ed- a band concert at Centennial Park able as he is, a little frustrated but In his poems. Masters depicted gar Lee Master's poem cycle, and a vocal concert, extends still above it all, somewhere. Over 60 different characters are a wide range of typically Mid- the play will be presented on con- presented by the nine actors fea- western characters, drawing on secutive Friday and Saturday eve- tured in the play. This rapid-fire his own boyhood experience in nings at 8 in the Little succession of different characters a small Illinois town. Theatre. Tickets are on sale in Student Church Begins demands a great deal of both the Van Raalte for $ 1.50. actors and technicians as it at- ADAPTED FOR drama by The director of the play is John tempts to recreate the character Charles Aidman, the play was Fund Raising for Biafra Tammi of the theatre department. of Spoon River. first performed in 1963. The actors include David Cro- The Student Church is spon- THE STUDENT Church is thers, Jim Piers, Mike Boonstra soring a task force to raise S2,500 sponsoring the drive out of con- and John Lucius. The actresses to be used to send ten tons of food cern for thelargenumber of deaths are Nancy Meeusen, Joanne Kor- to needy areas in Biafra. in Biafra due to starvation. The noelje, Kay Hubbard and Diane The Biafran task force will seek Biafrans are engaged in a civil Parker. to raise this money on campus war with the federal government Also in the cast is Billy Meyer, * £ and in the town of Holland begin- of Nigeria, from which they se- a versatile musician who provides ning today and lasting through ceded last year. accompaniment with banjo, gui- next week. Military demands and a land tar, harmonica, and recorder. The r*\ d blockade created an acute food assistant director is A1 Ver Schure. THIS YEAR'S LAST Coffee crisis in Biafra, at the height of Grounds program tomorrow which approximately 6,000 Bi- THE SET, DESIGNED by Don- night will include a filmstrip and afrans died each day. The situ- ald Finn of the theatre depart- film depicting conditions in Biafra ation remains critical today, al- ment, is complemented by light- V at the present time. though a conglomeration of re- ing effects designed and executed Theatre students will put on a ligious and secular organizations by Richard Angstadt. Basement Upstairs program next have been operating a nightly air- The play is a procession of Friday, proceeds of which will go lift to bring in food and supplies. scenes in which the inhabitants to the Biafran fund. Snow Audi- THE RELIEF organizations of the Spoon River cemetery torium will be the scene of this are working together to ship high- gather and view their lives in benefit, featuring modern dance protein food and supplies into Bi- retrospect, revealing through routines and a sound and light afra and needy areas in the federal songs, dramatic monologues, and show. republic. The groups include the vignettes, the rich texture of their Students will solicit contribu- Catholic Relief Fund, Church past lives. EYE EXAMINATION—Dippold, the optician, played by Dave Crothers tions for Biafran relief in each World Service and CROP. (second from right) tests the vision of (1. to r.) Diane Parker, Mike dormitory Wednesday through A new organization called Joint- "FROM THEIRgraves," writes Boonstra and Nancy Meeusen in a scene from "Spoon River Friday. (Continued on Page 3) critic Mary Swenson, "they speak Anthology," which opens tonight in the Little Theatre. Paget Hope College anchor May 9, 1969 Boiling Hopeful New Interdisciplinary Peace Possible in Mid-East Course Views Culture By Charlotte Whitney main points are: I. Withdrawal of ment and whether the countries of The Department of Interdisci- cussions, students will examine anchor Reporter Israeli territories occupied since the Middle East can come to such plinary Studies under the direc- the responses of experts and be the June war. 2. Respect for and an agreement. tion of Dean Morrette Rider will encouraged to articulate their Earlham's President Landrum acknowledgement of sovereignty, offer next fall a new four-hour own. Boiling affirmed that peace is still territorial integrity, and political PRESIDENT BOLLING noted course aimed at introducing stu- Individual projects, which possible in the Middle East despite independence of every state in the that a U.S.-U.S.S.R. agreement is dents to someofthecentral aspects might take the form of filmmak- overwhelming odds in a speech feasible because neither power is area. 3. Guarantee of freedom of of the cultural crisis of con- ing or field study, will give each Monday in Dimnent Memorial navigation through international anxious to become involved in temporary American society. student an opportunity for learn- Chapel. such a major Mid-Eastconfronta- waterways. 4. A just settlement of INTERDISCIPLINARY Stud- ing at first hand the complexi- President Boiling said there are tion. Both powers also have com- the refugee problem. ies 35: Perspectives on the Present ties of social issues and some two crucialconsiderations in mak- mitments in the Middle Eastern "Such a formula must start with will focus upon those problems of the problems encountered in ing such a peace agreement. First, countries. While U.S. policy Is not the reassertion that Israel has a which pose serious threats to the the search for solutions. a comprehensive settlement must dictated by oil Interests, the Mid- right to exist," said Mr. Boiling. realization of those programs and be made with the vital interests of dle East is yet a strategic area to aspirations which have been asso- both countries recognized. Se- JERUSALEM, NOW entirely the U.S. and a cross-roads of Student Board condly, he stated that such a peace under Israeli control, presents the world trade, he stated. The Soviet ciated traditionally with the must be sponsored by the great most difficult problem in the Union, which has supplied the American Dream. It will confront Election Results powers-specifically the United solving of boundary problems, Arabs with arms, also has a vested the Issues of the city, the poor, States and the Soviet Union. Mr. he said. Mr. Boiling suggested interest in the area. minority cultures, the natural en- Boiling emphasized that it cannot that the city be united in an inter- vironment, the student revolution, Are Announced In analyzing the Israeli attitude be an imposed peace, but that both national condeminium, perhaps the body politic, and media in an toward such a peace formula. Boi- In the election for student re- the Arabs and Israelis must reach with Israeli and Arab boroughs. effort to stimulate awareness, con- ling noted.that Israel doesn't ac- presentation on student-faculty a basic agreement for a peace for- He also noted that Israel should structive response, and self- cept the idea of surrendering terri- boards held Wednesday, fourjun- mula. accept a token Arab group back direction. tory taken during the recent way. iors and one senior were elected MR. BOLLINGmaintainedthat into Israel as restitution to the re- "We see tnis course as the kind to the Campus Life Board and the U.N. Security Council Resolu- fugees. "The Israelis didn't accept the of preparation which could prove U.N. Resolution in fact, only the three seniors and one junior were tion of November, 1967 is the The fundamental questions are invaluable to our students, who principles and objectives of it," he elected to the Academic Affairs best formula for such a peace. whether the U.S. and Soviet Union have consistently been attracted stated. Board. Not yet implemented, its four can agree to such a peace settle- to socially responsible vocations "SECURITY IS THE number such as teaching, medicine, so- On the Campus Life Board for one consideration of the Israeli cial work, the church," said Dean next year are senior Jerry May state," said Boiling. After two- Rider. and juniors Marshall Anstandig, Women Approve AWS John Boonstra, Bonnie Brooks thousand years of struggling to JOINTLY PRESENTED by survive the Jewish people are not staff from the several disciplines and Fran Hooper. prepared to throw away that as lecturers or discussion lead- On the Academic Affairs Board Constitutional Changes chance. On the other hand, he no- ers, the course will be in part for the coming year are seniors ted that justice is the prime concern supported by a subsidy from a r Judi Cooper, Chuck Lieder and A Women's Inter-Residential this constitutional change," AW S of the Arabs. The Arabs feel a deep GLCA-U.S. Department of La- Mark Vander Laan, and junior Council and Activities Council President Debbie Delp noted. The bitter sense of personal Injustice bor project presently being di- Deb Fosheim. were created last week when the House boards will deal with minor over the creation of Israel. Thus, rected by Dr. Joan Mueller of the women students supported the As- infractions of college policy, such both nations will have to make Department of English. Applications for committee ap- sociation of Women Students'con- as problems with senior keys, concessions in order for a peace Through major critical docu- pointments are due by May 14 stitutional change with a vote of sign-ins and sign-outs and com- formula to work. ments, films, lectures and dis- to Tim Liggett or Jane Selfridge. 506 to 23. mon courtesy. Major violations of college policy will be handled The AWS Council felt the student by Student Court. government structure would be The Activities Council, com- Black And Beautiful simplified next year because the posed of elected representatives — new WIC would have no judi- one from each class, one from r ciary power. W IC will serve as a each of the women's organiza- means of communication among tions and one from non-resident s the Resident Advisors and dormi- women students, will be responsi- tory presidents who constitute the ble for the women's activities pro- Meeting Student Needs Council. gram. This was previously the "House boards will have more function of the AWS Activities Edited by John Brown judiciary power as a result of Board.

My study has shown tnat the another, and this is where free- is the only reason for living to- history of student unrest and ri- dom, in the sense of education, gether, but it is one of the rea- r Extra Large oting in the university goes back stops for blacks. W e do not have sons lor each others company. to the beginnings of the institu- the optiontochoosetostudy about Let's face it, to find a person who ITALIAN or BEEF SAUSAGE tion in the Middle Ages. Students our own heritage, nor do we have is really sincere and in sympathy have protested through the cen- a representive social center, nor a with your problems Is hard, es- Sandwiches turies, on and off the campus, for place to conduct academic re- pecially in this type of environ- good and for bad causes, for and search into our culture. This is ment in which too many people against freedom. However, there not saying we should not study P|U1 Tax are "digging" on only their own $1.10 ... half .60 seems to have been an increase English literature, German his- personal values. in the unrest on the campuses tory or biology. But, within the IT IS HARD for a white stu- throughout the last few years, par- educational setting, the freedom dent to talk to a black student. • Sandwiches VON INS ticularly with the black protest to learn about ourselves must be How much harder is it for a white and black student movements. present. student to come into a black stu- • Fried Chicken Dinners dent's room just to bull-around "WHAT DOES THE black stu- BASICALLY, BLACK students or listen to records? How much • Fish dent want?" "Why does he con- are interested in a quality educa- harder is it for the white student tinue to confront the administra- tion. When a black chooses to go to sit at the same table with black • Shrimp V/ZZA tion?" "Why does he go to a pre- to the predominantly white col- students? If a black student can dominantly white school any- lege, he does not go there with Delivery Service WAGON not develop relationships, why way?" These are questions that the intention of changing it or of must he have to go on beinglone- the institutions are asking. The producing new patterns in any ly, frustrated and weighted down demands of black students in sense. He goes there for an "ed- FREE DELIVERY for with problems he can not handle many cases gobeyond thebounds ucation." The things that come by himself. Orders $2.50 or Over of what college administrators about and turn him on while he might consider good sense, main- is there are the social and acad- When the white students have ly because their concept of educa- emic experiences he goes through. a real problem they can go to a tion is only reflective of their cul- And let me tell you, in some ways faculty member or the psychology EX 6-5632 tural values. they are not satisfying exper- department for help. iences. Thus, blacks begin to at- Blacks can really go to no one; 102 River Ave. Open Sun. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m, Education also implies the free- tempt to deal with these hostile a sense of trust does not exist. All dom to choose one discipline or conditions. blacks get from certain depart- Now with the matter of the ments is: "Your culture is ma- special housing requested by a triarchal." Other departments group of interested individuals on make futile attempts at recogniz- Hope's campus, who are black ing our historical contribution. women: alleviating some of their Thus, we must look to each other unsatisfying experiences can for support. Our lives and black REMEMBER YOUR MOTHER come about with them living to- preservation depend on a collec- gether. I am not saying that this tive community, in proximity. With A Gift From The Apothecary Shop

HOLLAND

MICHIGAN 49423

STATIONERS

GREETING CARD CEISTER

LARGEST SELECTION IN WESTERN MICHIGAN 9

Hope College anchor PtgeS KMM Interdiscipline Stressed Religion Major Shifts Emphasis

By Jean DeGraff study to advanced students. The Dr. Voogd emphasized that the anchor Reporter student would "not be held back religion major program can be by the classroom setting." He used as preparation for graduate The religion and Bible depart- added that the tutorial program study in social work, law, journa- ment has revised its major's pro- is "excellent training for gradu- lism or college teaching as well gram by placing greater empha- ate school." as theology. sis on interdisciplinary, tutorial The religion and Bible depart- HE ALSO SAID that the new and independent study. ment also offers an independent program was the ideal program The new emphasis on interdis- research seminar for its senior for pre-theological work. There ciplinary study gives a student majors. The interests of the indi- was a time when theological the opportunity to take philo- vidual determines the topic for schools preferred a student not the research. sophy, psychology, history, Eng- to major in religion, he said, lish, speech and natural science Dr. Voogd stated that one re- since the student would only be ligion major who is interested in courses as part of his religion taking religion courses in semin- elementary education is doing re- major. The student must take a ary. Dr. Voogd said that this was search on "How to Teach Child- minimum of 21 hours in religion now "an outmoded view." He ad- ren to Pray." Another religion courses and a specified number ded that 65 percent of the current of hours in other fields. major, interested in psychology, class of students at Yale Divinity ( ORONATION Mary Rynbrandt (left) places the crown on May Day is doing a paper on the "Psycho- School majored in religion as logy of Conversion." Queen Cindy SonnevelHt as Mrs. Helena Post, honorary court member DR, HENRY VOOGD, chair- undergraduates. (third from left) and court members (I. to r.) Bonnie Brandsma, man of the department, stated that THE SEMINAR research pro- There are presently 24 students Sharon Staats, Jill Nyboer, Jan DeBoer and Ellen Heath look on. Also the new studies program is "very gram can be part of a semester majoring in religion at Hope. Dr. study at Hope or at one of the watching are Mortar Board members Hillary Everett (below I.) and flexible" and "willbebuiltaround Voogd said that the number of special semester programs in students majoring in religion is Julie Morgan. Queen Cindy was crowned during ceremonies in the the interest of the students." If a Philadelphia or abroad. increasing each year. Pine Grove Friday afternoon. student is especially interested in psychology, the program can be adjusted so the student can take more courses in psychology and Black Writers Course fewer courses in another area. Dr. Orchestra, Symphonette Voogd added.

Offered Here Next Fall Under the new program the re- Present Final Concert ligion and Bible department will The Hope College Orchestra The Hope College Orchestra A course devoted to the large- such writers as James Baldwin, give tutorial privileges to any and Hope College Symphonette and Symphonette will have pre- ly unsung black writers of Ameri- Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes, qualified student in any upper will present their final concert of sented a total of twenty-two con- ca will be offered for the first and Gwendolyn Brooks in our class religion course. Instead of the school year on Tuesday at certs in 15 cities during the cur- time next fall by the English de- traditional American literature taking the course in a classroom 8:15 p.m. in Dimnent Memorial rent academic year partment. offering, we are pleased to be able situation, the student will study Chapel. Although English 91: Advanced to give them attention in this more independently by using a bibli- Robert Ritsema is conductor of Billed as a "Tulip-Time Kick- Studies in American Literature specialized course," said Dr. ography prepared by the pro- both groups. off Concert," the program will is usually limited to English ma- Reedy. fessor under whom the student will feature as soloists ten student in- study. The student will receive the jors, this course is designed for strumentalists. Dr. John Hollenbach,chairman same number of credit hours as if Student Church the general student, according to Soloists in the Corelli Concerto Dr. Elizabeth Reedy, who will be of the department, indicated that he had taken the course in a class- Grosso, Opus 6, No. 10, will be directing the course. the course would continue as a room situation. Starts Campaign Susan Bosman and Frank "The place of black writers in regular part of the English offer- DR. VOOGD SAID that the pur Leese, violinists, and Barbara American literature is undeniable. ings so long as there is a recog- pose of the program was to give To Aid Biafrans Mackey, cellist. Trumpeters Bruce L'ntil we can properly incorporate nizable need for it. an opportunity for independent Formsma and Tim Crandall will (Continued from Page 1) be featured in the Corelli Concer- churchaid U.S.A. coordinates the Partial List tino for Two Trumpets. program and has bought several Miss Carol Gauntlett will be C-97 Globemaster planes from the flute soloist in the first movement U.S. government to fly food into of the Mozart Flute Concerto in the Western Africa locale. New Faculty Choices Revealed D Major, while the Mozart Sin- THE MONEY RAISED at Hope fonia Concertante will feature so- will go to CROP, a volunteer loists Barbara Walvoord, oboist; agency which attempts to supply (Continued from Page 1) ORESTES PINO, who current- Zoetewey, who is currently on par- Julie Kooiman, clarinetist; Thom food to the neediest areas through ly teaches one course in the Hope tial leave for doctoral study from the Hope faculty along with Paul Working, hornist; and Drew Hin- missions and mission schools College Spanish department, will the department. Van Faasen who currently holds derer, bassoonist. These soloists which have been converted into become a full time member of the No changes in staff in the de- a part-time appointment in the will be accompanied by the Sym- food distribution centers. The food staff in September. Mr. Pino holds partment of physical education department. phonette. is already availabletobeshipped, a Master's Degree from Colorado are anticipated. IN THE DEPARTMENT of The orchestra will open the pro- but funds are needed to pay for State University, from which he ROBERT COUGHENOUR, a chemistry. Dr. Douglas Neckers gram with the Overture to "Rus- the expensive and dangerous also graduated in 1966. member of the staff of Westmin- returns from a year's leave in sian and Ludmilla," by the Rus- flights into Biafra. Mrs. Gisela Strand will join the ster College for the past seven the Netherlands in exchange with sian composer Glinka. The major Presently about 200 tons of food staff of the German department. years, will join the faculty of the Dr. Kellogg. David Klein re- work on the program will be the per night is shipped into Biafra, Mrs. Strand is a graduate of St. department of religion. Mr. turns from leave for a year of Symphony No. 1, Opus 1, by Igor but an estimated 1,600 tons of Ursula School in Hanover, Ger- Coughenour is a graduate of In- postdoctoral study and research Stravinsky. This is the earliest imported food per day is needed many and holds a Master's De- diana State Teachers College. He at the Scripps Institute in Califor- extant work of this 20th century to prevent starvation in the pre- gree from the University of Chi- holds a Bachelor of Divinity De- nia. Dr. Donald Williams, cur- composer, and it will be receiving dominately Catholic secessionist cago. Robert Voss has been gree from Pittsburgh-Xenia Theo- rently associate professor of its first Holland performance. state. designated the Great Lakes Col- logical Seminary, a Master's De- chemistry at the University of leges Association Associate in gree from Western Reserve, and Kentucky, and a graduate of German for next year. Mr. Voss is currently completing his Doc- Muskingum College, will complete holds the Bachelor's Degree from torate at Case Western Reserve the staff of the chemistry depart- Ohio State University and the University. Steaks, Seafoods ment. Dr. Williams holds the Ph.D. Master's Degree from the Univer- John Hopkins will become an from Ohio State University. sity of Cincinnati where he is assistant professor in the newly currently completing work on his created department of com- Appointments in thedepartment Doctorate. and Gourmet Table of foreign languages include Dr. munication. Mr. Hopkins grad- LANCE STELL, a 1966grad- John Creviere and Mrs. Judith uated from Marietta College in uate of Hope College who is cur- Vickers in the area of French. Ohio and holds a Master's Degree rently completing doctoral study Dr. Creviere is a graduate of the from Ohio University where he at the in the areas of oriental philosophy College of St. Thomas and holds is currently completing his doc- at the will Masters and Ph.D. Degrees from toral studies. join the staff of thedepartment of the University Laval in Quebec. philosophy in September. JAMES MALCOLM, who has Hotel Warm Friend Dining Room He is presently assistant profes- In political science Jack Holmes, been on leave from the Hope sor of French at the University a graduate of and faculty for several years for doc- of Missouri. Mrs. Vickers is a currently completing his Doc- toral study at the University of graduate of Purdue University, torate at the University of Den- Minnesota and for work in the FREE! holds a Master's Degree from the ver, and Robert Elder, a graduate Tyrone Guthrie Theatre in Min- University of Illinois, and a Di- of who will be neapolis, will return to assume plome in Contemporary French granted the Doctorate from Duke the chairmanship of the depart- Literature from the University of this summer, will assume full time ment of theatre held by George GARMENT STORAGE Paris. teaching roles along with James Ralph in Mr. Malcolm's absence.

We will pick up your storage at your dorm IN SAUGATUCK and GRAND HAVEN it's at your convenience. CORAL GABLES Phone: EX 6-4697 We will refund the dime for your call

FOR — LEISURE DINING — BANQUETS — SNACKS Pay nothing until Fall

SERVING ANYTIME THE DELICIOUS IL FORNO'S PIZZA and SUBMARINES SHIRT LAUNDRY

Phone Saugatuck UL 7-2162 or Grand Haven 842-3510 for Reservations College at 6th LEAN ECS Holland/ Michigan Page 4 Hope College anchor May 9, 1969 andjor editorials On A.W.S.

HE STORY IN this issue concerning The new structure is not entirely with- T the restructuring of the Association out merit. The Activities Council will, as of Women Students documents per- it has in the past, add much to the life of haps the greatest wasted effort on Hope's women at Hope College. And the removal campus this year. While it is laudable that of legislative and judicial power from AWS the organization sought to streamline its is a significant improvement over the operation, this particular attempt has present structure. treated the symptoms of the problem, not the cause. HESE ADVANTAGES notwith- standing, the effect of the new struc- Perhaps the most serious problem for T ture will be the same as the old, women at Hope is the existence of an namely to saddle Hope women with an organization specifically for them. Its very organization which perpetuates the double being is an expression of the double standard. If Hope coeds really object to the standard against which Hope coedsloudly double standard and the accompanying protest but which they refuse to fight effec- rules, the wise choice would be to abolish tively. No such body exists for men; for all of AWS except the Activities Council the most part the College Administration and depend on the College decision-mak- Art Buchwald deals with disciplinary matters concerning ing process to hear their argument. The them. There is no particular reason why recent history of AWS strongly suggests this cannot be the case for women as well. that the existence of the organization is The existence of a women's governmental a real hindrance to progress in this area. organization implies that women need dif- Goodby to De Gaulle ferent protection and rules, which Hope women supposedly do not want. by Art Buchwald On Support In addition, no advantages are ap- The first person I called when I heard Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises. Can't you still parent to compensate for this. There seems De Gaulle had resigned was my Aunt be mad at him now that he is out of office?" to be litde or no reason for the existence of " It would be a waste of time. The appeal The Hope College community regular- Molly in Brooklyn, If you recall, Aunt a Women's Inter-Residential Council, or of disliking De Gaulle was that he was a ly gives less than adequate support to Molly was so mad at De Gaulle about a any such organization. Why must there be year ago that she wouldn't make French know-it-all. He was always sticking his campus cultural and social programs. This a separate organization to "interpret col- toast or buy French mustard or eat French finger out on television, and I used to yell problem, nothing new at this school, has lege policies specific to women and women's fried potatoes. To show how really angry at him, 'Don't stick your finger out at me, recendy become more acute. residence halls?" Why should there be a she was, she cut off all of the French cuffs Charley-boy.' 1 won't get a chance to do that on my uncle Phil's shirts. any more." WIC to "observe the conduct of women I THOUGHT SHE'D be overjoyed by within their residences?" Are not these the A cosdy Ian and Sylvia concert could the news that De Gaulle was out of power, "PROBABLY NOT," I admitted. "But functions of the resident advisor and the fill only one-third of the Civic Center. Two but she wasn't. As a matter of fact, she you're going to have to find somebody else student court? fine speakers on the Mid-East drew con- sounded as if she had been crying. to vent your anger at. What about Castro?" siderably less than overflow crowds. A "Well, AuntMolly," Isaid. "You finally "Don't you dare mention him in the same breath with De Gaulle." T SEEMS THAT WIC exists only to noted theologian recendy found a sea of got rid of him. I guess you're happy now." "I'm sorry, Aunt Molly. What about discuss problems concerning resi- 24 faces to greet him. The last Litde Theatre Mao Tse-tung?" 1 production played to less-than-capacity "It's funny. I thought I'd be, butsome- dence hall rules. But what possible " It's not the same thing. Mao Tse-tung how I'm sad." purpose could that serve since the body crowds in small Snow Auditorium. never attacked the American dollar." "But why, Aunt Molly? You were so has no legislative or judicial power? Fur- "He would if he could," I said. mad at him all the time." thermore, why should a student group "Please. Don't try to cheer me up. A Such lack of attendance is a real tribute "That's just it. Who am I going to be De Gaulle comes only once into a person's concern itself with College rules which the to the self-centered dedication of students mad at now?' lifetime. I'll never forget when he an- students supposedly dislike? The whole who desire no more from life than a good "There will be another French presi- nounced France was getting out of NATO. concept of WIC appears to be almost a dent." date or an afternoon on the beach. It is I was aggravated for a month." complete waste of time. also a telling indication of the hypocrisy "A pipsqueak compared to De Gaulle," of faculty members and administrators who Aunt Molly said. "De Gaulle had breadth, height and majesty. When you were mad at "AND WHAT ABOUT when he said But if women insist upon having a preach community by day but who would separate organization, they must be cap- him, you knew exactly who you were angry Quebec was part of France?" not be caught dead at a campus cultural or "Oh," said Aunt Molly, "what nerve able of devising a better proposal than the at. There will never be another Frenchman social event at night. that man had. And what about when he one approved in the referendum. Too many in his class." "YOU SURPRISE ME, Aunt Molly. wouldn't let the British into the Common provisions are unclear for the structure to I thought you would be celebrating." Market? I was furious, and I'm anti- The complacent attitudes of selfish non- operate properly. What, for instance, does British." involvement which lie behind the program the stipulation that the executive board is "Those were the days," I said nos- "responsible for unified organization attendance problems must be altered or "What's to celebrate? Tomorrow morn- talgically. ing I'm going to pick up the newspaper, among councils" mean? What is "an effec- education will become a mockery at this "Do you think there's a chance he and there's going to be nobody there. At college. The opportunities are there if you might come back?" Aunt Molly asked tive House Council structure for residence least with De Gaulle we had some excite- will take them. Two fine programs are wistfully. halls" which WTC is to establish? What, ment." sponsored by the music department this specifically, are "the general duties of an "There are always the Soviet leaders. "There's always a chance," I said. executive" which the AWS president is to week, and tickets are on sale for a major Aunt Molly." "But I wouldn't count on it. You're going perform? The proper construction of these Litde Theatre production which already has "Name one," she said. to have to find somebody else to get mad and other clauses should have been es- involved over 2,200 man-hours of "I can't name them offhand. But I'm at." sure there is a Soviet leader you can hate." tablished before the structure was adopted. preparation. How about a little support? I COULD HEAR her crying on the "No one could get my blood boiling phone. "It isn't that easy. Last Sunday like De Gaulle. I owe him everything. He France only lost a president, but we Amer- personally made me into a Francophobe." ican French-haters lost a way of life." Readers Speak Out "THAT'S HIGHPRAISEcomingfrom Copyright (c), 1969, The Washington Post you, AuntMolly. Butdon'tforgetDeGaulle Co. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syn- Dear Editor isn't dead. He's alive and well and living at dicate. Off COLUOI I was really glad and even a little main on campus weekends to receive those surprised about last week's anchor edi- meals, should justify a free dish of sherbet. torial. It's not that I am advocating sep- Maybe Hope College should be less con- anc aratism or segregation, but I feel that these cerned about impressing dignitaries and OUAND, MKNMAN women are justified in their request for bigshots with steak dinners, while a visiting Published weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by black housing. student, who may be a dignitary himself and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of the Student As Jackie Barker's column stated, the someday, cannot even have some sherbet. Communications Board. black women have a deep bond between This incident also raises the question Entered as second class matter, at the post office of Holland, Michigan, 49423. them, the bond of blackness. I think that as to why Calvin College, which is also if living together will help them function served by Saga Food Service, gives re- Subscription: S5 per year. Printed: Zeeland Record, Zeeland, Michigan. more competently and adequately as per- bates, or refunds at the end of the semester Member, Associated Collegiate Press. sons and help them enjoy their stay at to all students who leave campus on week- Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 396-2122; 396-4611, ext. 285. Hope, they should be housed together. ends. Sincerely yours, I would like to hear comment on this The opinions on this page are not neces- Harold R. Hilliard matter. sarily those of the student body, faculty or Sincerely, administration of Hope College. Judy Koster I am writing in regard to an incident BOARD OF EDITORS Sports Pete Struck that occurred Sunday night, April 27, in Editor George Ancncly Layout Janice Bakktr With reference to your editorial column Copy Lynn Jones, Kathy Smith Phelps Cafeteria. A freshman girl, who has Assistant Editor Tom Hildebrandl and the Black Coalition column on April Headlines Don Luidcns visited her boy friend at Western Michigan Managing Editor Richard Angstadt 25, 1969, we the undersigned support the Photography Don Page, Larry Erihson, University almost every weekend, invited News Editor Garrett DeGraff right of a group of interested women with Asst. News Editor Lynn Jones Jeanne Sal berg her boy friend on campus that night. After a common culture, in their endeavor to Advertising Dave Dievendorf the girl had her tray.^e got her boy achieve living conditions together. Business Manager Allen Pedersen friend two dishes of sherbet. Her guest did REPORTERS not pay, feeling that it was not worth $1.00 Jacqueline Barker, Charles McGill, Barbara Barta, Clarke Borgeson, Jim Brainard, to pay for the sherbet. Lorenzo Howard, Kenneth Hendrix, Peggy DEPARTMENT HEADS Barb DeHaan, Jean DeGraff, Tim De Voogd, Pickering, Robert Blanton, Charlie Mc- Jan Dzurina, Lynn Koop, Tim Liggett, Don Mr. Boyer came over to the table and de- Critiques Bruce Ronda manded that he pay $1.00 I can imagine Carvey, Allen M. Smith, Jr., Milton Trotter, Luidens, Candy Man, Debbie Miller, Norman what this visitor's present opinion is of Joanne Reese, John Lewis Brown, Rosezlna National News Harold Kamm Mol, Barry Schreiber, Ric Scott, Bill Schutter, Columnist Dave Allen, John Brown Barbi Shostal, Sam Simmons, Kathy Smith, Hope College. Bard, Kathy Taylor, Dolores Watson, Cartoonist Greg Phillips, Debbie Yoch Dave Thomas, Nancy Warner, and Charlotte. The fact that the girl has to buy a 7- Richard Brunson, Alberta Love and Alice Proof Jan Dzurina, Lynn Koop Whitney. day meal ticket, and that she does not re- Stephens. May 9, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 5

anchor review Opus: At Fast's End, An Aesthetic Feast

Editor's Note; Dr. Francis Fikeis need of the child to work out her THE ARRAY OF poetry in this "Freeway," which captures in associate professor of English at loss in her own way and at her issue offers enough variety to sat- in powerful and precise language Hope. He received his A.B. from own pace. The reader concludes isfy nearly everyone. Even the the drifting life our commuter civil- Duke University, B.D. from that there is an inseparable bar- short poems deserve careful at- ization leads. The other poem in Union Theological Seminary, rier between the points of view tention. Sue Jalving's two haiku this group, "Gifts," although in- M.A. and Ph.D from Stanford Un- of child and adult: despite her manage that syllabic form well, teresting in subject and detail, is iversity, and previously taught at own memory of childish confus- although one would like to see in a bit too privately allusive to Cornell University. ion about death, she bludgeons them even more compression of achieve complete effectiveness. the child with reality disguised meaning and intensity ofemotion. THE REMAINING poems add By Dr. Francis Fike as doctrine—in the middle of the William Schutter's "Vigil" further variety of theme and tech- Those who have endured an night!—and leaves the child not comes close to being the most nique. A1 Ver Shure's "Where aesthetic fast through the year consoled and edified, but with perfect poem in this issue, except Spring Hasn't Been for a Long awaiting the annual spring feast "an empty and spiritless look in for the last line, which could be Time" is a spring-fever poem will be happy to know that it is her eyes." The story finally ap- improved metrically. which to the casual reader will time to dine: Opus is out, and it pears not so much a story about Steve Wykstra's "At the Passing appear obscure, but to the careful was worth waiting for. The editors the child as about the narrator, of a Paradigm" is compact, and, exegete will yield detailed mean- have served us two ambitious who becomes through her exper- for the most part, competent, ing. prose pieces, an admirable array ience painfully aware of the though it leads the reader into Janet Hildebrand's "Waterfall" of poems, and have garnished danger in treating a child as a interpretive quandaries which are experiments with onomatopeia in these literary delicacies with de- stereotype and not as a person. not easily resolved. strict meter and rhyme, and al- lightfully impressive paintings, though it is reminiscent of Robert DAVID ALLEN'S "The Eagle" woodcuts and photographs. I Southey's "The Cataract at Lo- is an imaginative description, JON PHILIP SMOKER'S leave to more competent gour- "Walks" gives us a melancholy dore," it avoids Southey's ted- from an eagle's point of view, mets the task of commenting on but honest look into the interior iousness and achieves a more of an eagle's day, night and sub- the art; here I must confine my- life of a married man who is dis- satisfying conclusion, though it sequent dawn. It is somewhat self to the main courses of prose contented but acquiescent in mar- falters occasionally in diction and reminiscent in method to Sally and verse. riage. V meter. Carrighar's writing in such books LOIS TEN HOOR has given us Two of Charles Schoeneck's Jared Green's "River Trouba- as "One Day on Beetle Rock." a well-written story about the di- free-verse poems are satires; one dour" is a similar experiment with One admires in this sketch tne lemma faced by a babysitter: deals with a super-patriot, one word music, somewhat obscure in capacity for empathic imagina- should she tell her six-year-old with a self-righteous do-gooder. narrative but masterful in the tion, but misses the quality which charge that the child's dead Neither poem is totally satisfy- management of sound. distinguishes Miss Carrighar's mother will never come back, or ing, but both are interesting and WE OWE A debt of thanks and work: namely, her ability to sat- allow the child to enjoy a con- ambitious. His other poem on admiration for the work which isfy and delight our aesthetic and solatory illusion? It is a real and Joseph Mary Plunkett, the bespec- Bruce Ronda and his fellow ed- imaginative needs even as she pro- moving dilemma, and Miss ten tacled, tubercular Irish poet and it is clear that the scene is a itors have done to provideus with vides accurate natural history. Hoor has portrayed it with depth revolutionary, is the best, and bombed cathedral, and that the this year's Opus. The measure of David Allen's eagle is an and sensitivity. Despite the vivid achieves a voice that is convinc- bombing has put in question the their achievement (and ofthewrit- ethereal fellow, who "dares" the recollection of her own childhood ingly moving. efficacy of the religion which built ers' and artists' who contributed) tempest "to beat him to the filthy experience of death, the sitter pro- THREE OF BRUCE Ronda's the cathedral. "Museum of is our lament that Opus appears earth below" (which he has "never ceeds insensitively to force euphe- four free-verse poems are effective Natural History" is an incisive so infrequently. A year is a long touched")—a bird one cannot pic- mized orthodox doctrine upon the comments on life in the modern portrayal of modern civilization's fast between feasts. At any rate, ture eating a dead fish on a littered little girl. The child's problem is world, achieving their meaning reduction of nature to its own grey let us hope along with the Editor beach or trying hard to nail a the unreality of death, which only quietly and by indirection. "Nur- reality, and laments the difficulty in his "Introduction" that Opus bounding jack-rabbit amid sage- time and experience, not adult emberg" is partially obscure; one of maintaining the human imagi- will "look forward to a more brush and boulders. He soars doctrine, can alter. has difficulty assembling all the nation in such a world. The best of active role in Hope's artistic com- above it all, and weeps when night- details into a coherent picture, but this group of poems, however, is munity." THE WRITER manages well fall furls his wings. Enchanted as a flashback into the narrator's the reader is by the imagined de- childhood, and we learn that her tails of a soaring eagle's world, own confrontation with death one is disappointed not to be able On The Wall had been marked by her parents' to relate what one knows to the unwillingness or inability to sym- portrait. We do not learn whether pathize with their child's point the bird is Bald or Golden, nor of view. It is thus ironic that the what he eats. Sunshine and fresh narrator, who had been treated air aredoubtless invigorating, but God's Li'l Acre unsympathetically by adults, now they are scarcely nutritious as adult treats a child in the same enough to sustain a carnivorous fashion. The babysitter, in her bird! In the end, our aesthetic en- By Dave Allen zeal for truth and reality (lack- joyment is qualified by our sense ing, she apparently feels, in her of being deprived of the comple- "Now alotofguys'llthey'lltry'n sandy soil 'n plant som worthless urly they wasn't even in 'gree- own childhpod), fails to honor the mentary reality. tell yeh how they sawed it, but me, migrants on it. Now thes' mi- ment with each other all th' time, I'm th' only one what knows grants they claim its theh own but they hed to do sumthin' 'bout 'zakly how it went, 'cuz I been land since their kin-folk onct lived these migrants). Next thing yuh here th' whole time 'n I make it heah, but thet ain't 'zakly th' point. know this league thet the farmers Review of the News a rule nevah tuh mistake nuttin' Natchurly the folks want rightly form 'cides to lay down some I see, honest now, you ken trus 'serve to live on this land, we'll shootin on the migrant's acre. me. they go 'en git quite hot'n both- S'prisingly 'nuf thoes migrants on thet little bit 'o ground simply By Harold Kamm North Korea. Chaffee said Now I ain't no incompletent ered over th' whole sitiation. Whut kaboozeled thet band 'o farmers Washington, D.C. neither individual discipline story teller like some guys niether, else you 'spect, I mean any var- to no end. Calling hunger in America nor "any other interest requires so I'm a gunna set th' wholescene mints whut try tuh camp on my for yeh now. Now these farmers they tried "intolerable," President Rich- further legal proceedings." land, we'll thet ain't jes right. WHUT WAS EVENmoreworse tuh 'tack them couple more times, ard Nixon asked Congress for was thet these migrants, they wur but each^ time they got more ka- new laws to provide poor fam- THE WHOLE THING hap given 'bout the best section'o land boozeled 'n generally they wur ilies with enough food stamps Washington, D.C. en'd in my state here, Pennsyl- by this dad burn corporation. th' lafin stock 'o th' whole state. to buy a nutritionallybalanced Supreme Court Justice Abe vain-ia, which is in the mid- Now it wur only an acre, but NOW MAYBE I don't know diet. Families at the lowest in- Fortas once again is involved eastern section of this here booti- thet was a good section. Had a nuthin' for shure but from th' come level would receive food in a storm of controversy after ful country. The 'zack location river runnin' right thru it, 'fore looks 'o things these migrants is free, and no recipients would Life magazine said he accepted was 'tween Bethlehem and Naz- it got into the farmers' lands so heah tostay'nthosefarmersknow pay more than 30 percent of and then returned a $20,000 ereth which are pretty big towns, natchurly thesefarmers wur 'fraid it but thet don't bother 'em half their income for the stamps. In check from the Wolfson Foun- some folks like ole Jake Stonely these migrants might try tuh block 'es bad 'es the thought 'o them a message to Congress, Mr. dation. Financier Louis Wolf- who owns a piece 'o land neah it or somethin', 'n they hed good migrants deciding thet they want Nixon said his proposal would son was fined and sentenced to mine 'siders'em cities even. solid duht roads for gettin'round. some more land. 'N thet big cor- cost "something in excess of" a year imprisonment for selling Any how it happened 'tween $1 billion a year beyond unregistered stocks. Justice these two cities, (I'm saying that poration whut planted those mi- grants there seems to hev lost present food-aid spending. Fortas said he didn't believe for Jake's sake). Now this land Now these migrants called the the fee was tendered with any weren't no good any how, jes' land God's Li'l Acre 'n no matter touch with 'em on' generally got Washington, D.C. hope it would induce him to kinder sandy, rocky soil, 'bout how thes farmers round 'bouts no control over them. Declaring that"theyhavesuf- intervene on Mr. Wolfson's be- a thousand acre I 'spose, and them tried they couldn't get to Now thet's th' story as it is an' fered enough," Navy Secretary half, but was offered the fee in yet there was a might lot uh know 'em 'cuz they was kind a you people can 'cide for your- John Chaffee reversed the Navy 1966 to do. studies connected people what was settled down here, uppity all the time 'n sum people selves who's right and whose wrong, only I'm tillin you this— court of inquiry's recommenda- with the charitable foundation 'n the way I figger it they loved you jes can't stand 'n you can't those band 'o migrants 'n their tion of a general court martial established by Mr. Wolfson. this barren ole land, 'n you'll 'splain why, only that they're bit 'o ground is gunna cause for commander Lloyd Bucher There were immediate Con- see what I mean. kinda 'noying 'nd generally nox- ious, so yuh hafta hate 'em. quite a stir like you an I never and intelligence officer Lt. gressional demands that Jus- SO WHAT HAPPENS is that SO WHUT THESE farmers did seen and I'll bet ole man God- Stephen Harris for the loss of tice Fortas resign, and some one day this big corporation who was git theirselves tuhgether 'nd frey who lives on the hill ain't the intelligence ship Pueblo to called for an investigation. don't own th' lan' or nuttin"cides to teach off a bit 'o this heah formed a league, (course natch- nevah seen in his day neither. The Best of Peanuts Reprinted by permission of the Chicago Tribune

Tin. Ma. U. I. ta. Off PFANUTS yucuLO

2 -/% Page t Hope College anchor May 9, 1969 Jump to MIAA Lead s Dutch Sweep 2 Doubleheaders

By Bill Hoffman changed hands several times. ings and two more in the sixth. anchor Reporter Frens, strong in relief coupled O'Connor * started the second with another good offensive drive, game and gave up three runs on The HopeCollegebaseballteam gave Hope a sweep. The final sever! hits before he was relieved swept doubleheaders from Kala- score was 6-5 with Jim Lamer mazoo and Calvin Colleges to by Nordstrom in the fourth inn- going three for three. hoist themselves into first place ing. After giving up a hit to the Hope traveled to Calvin in the Michigan Inter-collegiate first man he faced, Nordstrom Wednesday where they continued retired the next eleven men in a Athletic Association. "Major" league play, winningthe row to end the game. THE DUTCHMEN opened first game, 1-0, and the second, league play Saturday as Gary THE DUTCHMEN host Frens picked up his first two vic- 8-3. Hope's defensive play was Adrian Saturday at Van Raalte tories of the season. Frens started excellent. Frens' five-hit shut-out field, beginning at 1 p.m. the first game but was relieved by was backed by flawless defense Bill O'Connor. Frens returned to and one first inning run. the mound after O'Connor gave THE BATS BECAME more •Op era Portraits' up three successive hits and active in the second game as Hope pitched his way out of the jam jumped to a quick 4-0 lead in the Presented This yielding only two runs. The final first inning. Cooper opened the score was 6-2. game with a single. Terry Stehle Week in Chapel Hope's offense was impressive was hit by a pitched ball and both as Bob Cooper, Bob Kidd and runners advanced on Kidd's The Hope College music depart- Marty Snoap each collected two sacrifice. Lamer tripled home ment will present its second annual hits. Cooper and Stehle and later production of "Portraits in 4 DICK NORDSTROM started scored on Ken Otte's home run. Opera" Thursday and Friday at the second game and was relieved The Dutchmen added single 8:15 p.m. in Dimnent Memorial by Frens after the lead had runs in the third and fourth inn- Chapel. The program is under thedirec- NEW RECORD—Mike Brown puts the shot Wednesday against Calvin. tion of Miss Joyce Morrison and His performance broke the shot put record set by Ekdal Buys 32 Norman Jennings, both assistant years ago. Team Takes professors of music. Eleven scenes from nine different operas are scheduled. Opening the program will be a sextet Trackmen Beat Hornets Calvin, Loses to Kazoo from "The Marriage of Figaro" By Bob Scott The Dutch, however, have held by Mozart, followed by a duet, anchor Reporter down the second place spot for "Parigio Cara" from Verdi's" La And Then Bow to Calvin the past 11 years. Traviata." In their first MIAA competition A portion of the Christmas THE MAJOR PROBLEM facing By Pete Struck Reed also won the 100-yard dash of the 1969 season, the Hope Col- opera "Amahl and the Night Visi- the Dutchmen, as Coach "Doc" anchor Reporter with a time of 10.3 seconds. lege tennis team fell victim to a tors" by Menotti will be per- Green stated, is that they have two Thomas and Folkert finished powerful Kalamazoo team 8-1 formed, followed by a duet from The Hope College track team good players in Doug Barrow and first and second in both hurdle in a meet at Kalamazoo last Sat- Puccini's "Madam Butterfly" split its first two Michigan Inter- Visscher but not a great deal of events for the Dutchmen. Thomas' urday. and two scenes from "The Barber collegiate Athletic Association depth. Coach Green is presently winning times were 15.6 seconds The team then defeated Calvin of Seville" by Rossini. meets, defeating Kalamazoo Col- experimenting with his singles in the 120-yard high hurdles and College in a meet here Wednes- The second half of the program lege on Saturday and losing to players: Visscher, Barrow, Travis 57 seconds in the 440-yard in- day, taking two of the three will include a quintet and the Calvin College on Wednesday. Kraai, Russ Kiefer, Jeff Green, termediate hurdles. doubles matches and four of the Card Scene from Bizet's "Car- The win over Kalamazoo was and Craig Schrotenboer, to find Rick Bruggers placed first in six singles matches. men," the Barcarolle from "Tales decisive. The Dutchmen swept five the strongestcombination fordou- both long distance races. He won of Hoffman" by Offenbach and events and placed first in ten others The only Dutch point came as bles play. the mile run in4:24.7 seconds and a duet from Massenet's "Thaies." to make the score a demolishing senior Ron Visscher won 6-2, 0- The Hope tennis team's next the two-mile run in 10:05.7 Concluding the program will 1 18-23. 6, and 6-1 in his second singles meet will be held tomorrow seconds. Hope ended the meet by be the second half of Puccini's BOB LUYENDYK, Mike Oonk match. against Adrian at the Hopecourts. winning the mile relay, as the comic opera "Gianni Schicchi." and Steve Van Pelt swept both the KALAMAZOO IS THE peren team of Bruce Geelhoed, Warren, long jump and the triple jump. nial M IAA champion and a repeat Haverdink and Schroeder posted Luyendyk took the first event with performance is expected this year. a 3:33.9 second mark. a leap of 19,6,,, while Oonk Only once since 1932 have the Praters Take May Day jumped 39,11,V to win the HOPE COULD NOT continue Hornets failed to win the title out- second. its winning ways, however, as right. That was in 1962 when they Bill Bekkering paced the field Rudy Vlaardingerbroek led the were limited to a tie with Hope. Track; Arkies Second in the pole vault with a 13I6M to a 90-55 win The Fraternal Society, cap- points. The third-place Pommies performance. Doug Nichols and over the Dutch. Calvin swept one Golfers Defeated turing first places in most of the had two firsts, one second, one Karl Nadolsky of Hope placed event and took 12 firsts en route running events, won the May Day third, one fourth and five fifths behind him. to their victory. By Kazoo, Later track meet held last Friday after- for 24 points. The Indies were Cliff Haverdink led a Hope Vlaardingerbroek broke three noon in Van Raalte field. in fourth place with 20 points, sweep in the 440-yard dash as he Van Raalte field records by throw- Vanquish Calvin The Arkies took second in the the Cosmos in fifth with 19 and won the event in 50.9 seconds. ing the javelin 2 16l4,f, putting the competition among five of Hope's the Knicks last with 14. The Cen- Steve Warren and Ralph Schroed- shot Sl'S'/i", and throwing the In their first MIAA competition six fraternities and a team of in- turians did not participate. er placed second and third, re- discus As if that weren't the Hope College team lost dependents. spectively. enough, he went on to win the to , but came THE ARKIES PLACED first TWO NEW RECORDS were set HOPE ALSO took all three 120-yard high hurdles with a time back to defeat Calvin College in in the broad jump and highjump, by the Fraters. The new mark in places in the 220-yard dash, Walt of 1.5.4 seconds. a meet played here last Tuesday. while the Emmies took the shot the medley relay is now 2:40.3 Reed took the event with a time of Mike Brown broke a 32-year In the Calvin match. Bill Forbes put and the high hurdles. The and the record of 54.9 stands for 23.2 seconds, and was followed old Hope record by throwing the ,, 11 , M shot a 77, Rick Hine a 79, Tom Fraters, however, took firsts in the 440-yard low hurdles. The by Luyendyk and Haverdink. discus 46 /2 , besting the45 10 Page an 80, Fred Muller a 71, each of the seven remaining races. Fraters also tied the old mark of Hope's A1 Folkert won the high mark set by Ekdal Buys, Sr. in and Chuck McMullen an 82. The Fraters had seven firsts, 47.0 in the 440-yard relay. jump as he cleared 5' 10". Nichols 1937. He finished second, behind In MIAA competition Hope is two seconds and two thirds for a The results of the meet will be added another first by winningthe Vlaardingerbroek. in a four-way tie with Kalama- total of 49 points. The Arkies counted towards each fraternity's javelin throw with a 185'10"toss. BEKKERING AGAIN pole zoo, Albion and Calvin. Each had two firsts, six seconds, one total in the race for the All-Sports Kent Candelora finished behind vaulted 13,6" to take that event team has one loss and one win. third place and a fifth for 38 Trophy. him in second place. for Hope. Other firsts included Candelora and Mike Brown Bruggers' victories in both the added eight more points to Hope's mile and two-mile runs. His times total as they finished one and two were 4:22.5 seconds and 9:35.2 in thediscus. Candelora's winning seconds, respectively. f 1 distance was 125 5 /a". Dick Frank and Geelhoed CARL GOLDER, Dave Thom- placed one-two for the Dutch in as, Haverdink and Reed won the the 880-yard run. Frank's THIS IS THE PLACE 440-yard relay in 46.5 seconds. winning time was 1:57.7 seconds.

• • nice 1 because there's only one standard of courtesy of thoughtfulness THE STUDENT CHURCH here, and it applies to patrons and employees alike. tvill ivorship

Sunday m in Dimnent Chapel

Preacher: Chaplain Hlllegonds POINT WEST Sermon: "On Honoring Poronts if /

f i