The Anchor, Volume 63.10: March 1, 1951
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Hope College Hope College Digital Commons The Anchor: 1951 The Anchor: 1950-1959 3-1-1951 The Anchor, Volume 63.10: March 1, 1951 Hope College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1951 Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 63.10: March 1, 1951" (1951). The Anchor: 1951. Paper 4. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1951/4 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 63, Issue 10, March 1, 1951. Copyright © 1951 Hope College, Holland, Michigan. This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the The Anchor: 1950-1959 at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Anchor: 1951 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HOPE CDil u // LXIII—IO Official Publication of the Students of Hope College at Holland Michigan March 1, 1951 FINAL //I/I / NIGHT PLANS ALL SET VanderJagt, Lumsden Wind Instruments Foreign Holidays Featured In First Are Planned For Eighth Annual All-College Sing Bring Fame To Hope All-Wind Festival '51 International Will Appear On Calendar Soon Hope's music-lovers and inter- What may be an unprecedented event in the history of Michigan Nite Celebration ested townspeople were in for a For eight years the All-College Sing has been one of the major Intercollegiate Speech League debate competition occurred last Satur- special treat when during the as- The Alcor Society is presenting events of the college calendar. This year it will be held on Friday day, February 24, at Michigan State College in East Lansing when two sembly hour, Tuesday, February a new and sensational International evening, March 9, at 7:30 in the chapel. debaters from the same college took both first and second places in 27, they attended the presentation Student co-chairmen for this year are Ruth Koeppe and Phil Feens- contention for individual honors. Night banquet to be held in the Jul- of the "Wind Concert." Under the tra. Elaine Bolthouse is in charge of programs, Del De Young will Hope College's Guy VanderJagt, who last year as a Freshman took iana Room of Durfee Hall on direction of Mr. William Drucken- direct the ushering, and Mary Zweizig and Harry Visscher are in second place with a total of 89 out miller, this wind instrument festi- March 3 at G p.m. The members charge of chapel accommodations. of a possible 90 points, this year Ver Beek Plans val promises to become another of have been hard at work planning Mr. Harvey Davis has been ap- has been officially recognized as the Hope's many loved traditions. a delicious banquet and an elabor- Musical Arts pointed as faculty advisor. Other colleges offer similar pro- best debater in the state of Michi- Senior Recital ate program featuring holidays in Each society is rated by points grams annually, as a means of ex- gan, emerging from the State Tour- various countries of the world. Joins National Jeanne Ver Beek, music major, pression for wind instrument en- on such items as tone, interpreta- nament with a total of 88 points. and pupil of Mr. Kooiker, will pre- sembles and solos. Colorful decorations lending a Federation tion, technique, direction and gen- VanderJagt was presented with a The brass sextet, directed by Mr. festive atmosphere and authentic sent her senior piano recital The Hope College Musical Arts eral effect. The evaluation of these gold MISL key as a symbol of his Druckenmillcr, opened the program costumes worn by Alcor members Tuesday evening, March 13, in Club has been accepted as a Chap- qualifications will be determined by superiority. Guy, who is one of the with "Dramatic Prelude," by Mc- the Hope Memorial Chapel. and foreign students will add an in- ter of the Michigan Branch of the three judges from Grand Rapids Kay. Members of this group are: home-grown variety, hailing from Included in the program will be: ternational touch. Even the menu National Federation of Music Clubs, Robert Albers and Irma Smith, and Holland. Cadillac, Michigan, is numbered according to Mrs. Harold Karsten, Invention No. 4, Bach playing cornets; Kaye Don Hoog- will be disguised with Spanish, The order of the program is not State Chairman of the" Student among the best known personali- Etude Opus 25, No. 7, Chopin erhyde, french horn; James Dyke- French, Dutch, Hungarian and Division of Michigan. decided until just preceding the ties on campus, prominent in foren- Prelude Opus 28, No. 24, Chopin ma, baritone; and Harold Van Zoe- other foreign names for the deli- Members of the Chapter will be performance, when each song direc- sic activities through debate and ren, bass. Waltz Opus 18, Chopin cious American food. All this for entitled to participate in State and tor draws for the position their so- oratory. The clarinet quartet composed of Sonata K57G, Mozart only $1 for boarding students and national contests in all solo divi- Robert Kamphuis, John Sloan, Don- ciety will hold. The Hopeives, under Second best disputant in the Children's Corner, Debussy $1.25 for town students and faculty sions as well as in composition ald Van Dyke, and Frederick Rein- the direction of Elsie Adelberg will state of Michigan is first year de- Chaconne in D Minor, Bach- competition. This year's auditions stein presented next "Scarf Dance," members. again conclude the program while are to be held in Detroit on March bater Roy Lumsden, an equally Busoni by Chaminade and "Clarinettes Under the leadership of president 30 and 31 with a state award of the audience is waiting for the well known campus figure. Roy, A student from town, Jeanne Joyeaux," by Byron. Connie Shilling the following chair- twenty-five dollars to winners in judges decision. who received a silver key in recog- Ver Beek is a member of Sorosis Robert Brower, senior music ma- men of committees are: program, piano, violin, voice, 'cello and or- Gene Bont will lead the Arcad- sorority, the Chapel Choir, and the jor, then played a baritone solo, nition of his efforts, compiled a Nancylee Corp, Jeanne Ver Beek; gan. Winners who progress from Women's Glee Club. "Andante Cantabile," the second ians, the Cosmos will be led by total of 87 points during the course decorations, Eleanor Robinson; the state to the nationals will re- movement of Haydn's Cello Con- ceive an award of $1,000 or a Stuart Noordyke and the Emmies of the competition. Strictly speak- publicity, Nancy Vyverberg; food, certo, in special arrangement for New York Town Hall recital. There by Paul Vander Woulde. John Van ing, he is a foreign element within baritone. Gladys Keiser accompa- Dalman Presents Dee Freyling; and tickets, Connie is an award of $1,000 to an organ Eenenaam will direct the Fraters the ranks of the MISL; Roy is a nied him. McConnell. winner. Other possible awards are and Ken Smouse will again beat the native of Niagara Falls, N. Y., but Sr. Organ Recital Ruth Druckenmiller, flutist, Rich- for a year's contract with the Na- tempo for the Knicks. with the marked good judgment ard Zeidler, clarinetists, Kaye Don tional Concert and Artist's Corpor- Joseph Dalman, music major, which bespeaks his other capabili- Hoogerhyde, french horn player, ation or a solo appearance with A.S.A. will be directed by Helena and pupil of Mrs. Curtis Snow, pre- Nickel-A-Meal Plan ties, he prefers to be regarded as Carl Kleis, oboist, and James Ben- orchestra on the NBC network. Tinklenberg, Delta Phi by Nancy- sented his senior organ recital, a Michigander. nett, bassoonist, forming a Wood- It is hoped that the State Presi- lee Corp, the Dorians by Dot Fen- Tuesday evening, February 27, in Hope entered teams both in the wind Quintet, offered four num- Proves Successful dent, Mrs. Oscar Hutchinson of nema and Sorosis by Dot Ten Hope Memorial Chapel. bers: "Allegro Concertante" by Brink. Cathy Sharp and Gladys league and tournament sections. The Nickel-A-Meal plan adopted Muskegon, will be present at an Students who represented the col- Included in the program were Mozart; "Three Short Pieces," early meeting to address the Hope Keizer will direct the Sibs and The- by the Y's in connection with Reli- lege there were: Margaret Feld- chorale preludes by Brahms and Ibert; "Ballet of the Unhatched Club. saurians, respectively, for the sec- mann, Jerry De Graff, Richard Bach, and a "Prelude and Fugue" Chickens," Moussourgsky; and "Pa- gious Emphasis Week this year, Musical Arts Club activities are ond year. Kruizenga, Charles Wissink, Dave by Bach, as well as lighter, more vonne," Gould.. turned out to be very successful. guided by Jack Boeskool, Presi- Each year finds that the differ- Hager, Chester Veldhuis, Edith modern compositions. These in- A special number was "The Ash Approximately $140 was received dent; Nancy Lee Corp, Vice Presi- ence between the societies grows Teune, Guy Vander Jagt, Mary cluded "Caprice," by Banks; "The Grove," arranged especially for to be .contributed for Korean re- dent; and Alicia Van Zoeren, Sec- smaller and smaller. Last year the Olert, James Blane, Alexander Mc- French Clock," Bornschein; "Ron- Woodwind trio by Mr. Druckenmil- lief, as announced by chairman Bob retary-Treasurer. Faculty Sponsors first place winners of the coveted Millan, Gail Van Zyl, Roy Lums- do" (Concerto for Flute Stop), ler, and presented by Ruth Druck- Peverley. The spirit and enthu- are Mrs. W. C. Snow and Mrs. cups were the Sorosis Sorority and den, Carl Schroeder, and John Rinek; and "Toccato" (Gothic enmiller, Richard Ziedler, and siasm of the students in partici- Norma Baughman.