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The Anchor: 1967 The Anchor: 1960-1969

4-28-1967

The Anchor, Volume 79.24: April 28, 1967

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 79.24: April 28, 1967" (1967). The Anchor: 1967. Paper 13. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1967/13 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 79, Issue 24, April 28, 1967. Copyright © 1967 Hope College, Holland, Michigan.

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79Ui ANNIVERSARY - 24 Hope College, Holland, Mlchigaa April 28, 1967 Lectures to Count RLC Votes Chapel Alternative

By Ken Nienhuis ed to attend nine. Those who elect "the many and varied aspects of chapel would attend twice a week The Religious Life Committee Christianity which should be of as all students now do under the concern at a Christian institution yesterday afternoon recommend- present system. ed that next year students be al- of higher learning," said the com- lowed at the beginning of each mittee. semester to choose between attend- THE RECOMMENDATION also suggests that the lectures be Committee members stressed ing a series of compulsory lect- held from 9:;3() to 10:20 on Mon- that this proposal, if put into effect, ures and compulsory chapel. day mornings, with first hour be- would be on a trial basis; it would Either choice would fulfill the re- ginning at 7:30. On Tuesday be reevaluated continually next quirement now being met by com- year with a full reevaluation due pulsory chapel. through Friday, chapel would be at 10 a.m. with classes starting from next year's RLC in the The recommendation, which at 8 a.m. spring. now goes to the faculty, admin- LIGHTNING STRIKES—One of the contestants for Hope's first Inter- istration, and Board of Trustees, 1 he lectures would be given THE COMMITTEE is meeting national Turtle Race is pictured above in his starting position. Funds suggests that there be 12 lectures by members of the faculty and next Monday to work out details from the event will go towards the fight against Muscular Dystrophy. per semester. Students who elect administration as well as outside of statement and to come up with the lecture plan would be requir- speakers and would deal with a full rationale. The RLC did feel however, that this plan does Organizations Ready Turtles respect the religious feelings of all Increased Alumni Giving students and at the same time maintains the right of the college to expose all its students to the For Tonight's Big Race Christian faith. Wins Grant for Hope Hope College is staging a re- toise brought in the winning laur-" At its meeting Monday, thecom- vamping of Aesop's fabled race els. Hope College was awarded a bers of the campaign's National mittee had examinied the results between the turtle and the hare This year will bring entries from second place in competition by Committee met on campus this of the questionnaire prepared by tonight at 6 o'clock in Carnegie 85 colleges and universities in the the American Alumni Council for week. Dr. Robert DeHaan which was to Gym. Hope's race will involve U. S. as well as turtles from Rus- improvement in alumni annual have helped them gauge student only turtles and they will be in sia, West Germany, and several donations. The College received THE FORMATION of an opinion about compulsory chapel competition for Hope's entry into other countries. $211,949 during the 1965-66 Alumni Drive National Commit- the Turtle International, which THE COMPETITION at Hope campaign. tee is a first for Hope College. It proved to be of little value, will be held in Washington, D. is becoming fierce as the turtle The grants are made annually Co-chairmen of the campaign are however. Dr. DeHaan reported C., on Saturday, May 6. promoters fight to make their ter- as Alumni Giving Incentive A- Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Yonkman that "it was almost impossible to THE TURTLES, water terra- rapin earn the checkered flag. wards by the American Alumni of Madison, N. .1. The National summarize" the results of the ques- pins (the male painted pond var- One sorority is feeding its turtle Council, through financial sup- Committee, representing Hope tionnaire. He said that it would iety), will be entered by the 12 Fig Newtons, and another is pack- port from the United States Steel Alumni from across the nation take "a great deal of time to e- Hope fraternities and sororities, ing the stomach of its Chelopus Foundation. Hope will receivethe is meeting for a series of discus- valuate them." the freshman class and Taylor guttatus with peanut butter. competition's Mobius Strip award sion and instruction group meet- Cottage. Steve Larkin, chairman Fraternities are not far behind and a $3,000 cash grant. ings. THE ONLY conclusions that of the event, said in describing the in the training. One fraternity IN ORDER to be eligible for The $300,000 goal is reflective could be drawn from the survey water terrapins: "They're the coach is spurring his protege to the top awards, an institution must of the College's plans for its Cen- are that chapel is ranked behind sprinters." greater speeds by daily drafts of have placed first among institu- tennial Decade 1966-1976. The bull sessions, reading, Student The Turtle International is be- beer, and Taylor Cottage is hold- tions of its type. The first place College has undertaken a ten mil- Church and classwork as an aid ing held to promote contributions ing time trials for its racer. in improvement was awarded to lion dollar Master Plan that stres- to spiritual growth. Also the to the Muscular Dystrophy Fund, One coach, who is a psychology Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y. ses controlled expansion of the questionnaire pointed to a wide and donations.will be accepted at major, is employing a "condi- A record $300,000 goal was student body from a present enrol- variety in the religious perspec- tonight's race. Last year's compe- tioned response" method. The set for Hope College's 1967-68 lment of 1,700 students to an en- tives of the 180 people who com- tition across the world raised $2, coach heats a pin, rings a bell, Alumni Fund Campaign as mem- rollment of approximately 2,500. pleted it. 000, and Tufts University's tor- sticks the turtle with the pin and watches him go. By tonight he hopes to have him ready for the 'Rooms Are Not Sacred Ground' opening gong. The turtles will be racing on a 30-foot long wooden track with five by six ridges for each lane. Dormitories Searched for Stolen Goods Hope's winner will be taken to Washington by Larkin and Barb Timmer, who will also promote By Glenn Loom an possessed firecrackers. However, According to a member of the FACULTY' MEMBERS and the race on the nationwide Don Firecrackers not only make the search led to the discovery maintenance department, a "row downtown merchants were ques- McNeill Breakfast Club next Fri- noise; they also draw a lot of of numerous other "foreign ar- ol furniture approximately 30feet tioned about the problems they day morning. attention. According to Michael ticles" in the students' rooms. long has been recovered." He have had with shoplifting and THE FIRST SHIPMENT of Gerrie, head resident advisor of also commented on the number of thievery and how much of this water terrapins, reported Larkin, Kollen Hall, the recent rash of AMONG THE ARTICLES missing articles which have been petty theft involved Hope students. suffered an ill fate at the hands explosions has led to a general iound in the search being conduct- reappearing as of late. The general comment was that of the Post Office and most died. search of the men's dormitories ed by the maintenance department One R. A. in Kollen said that, shoplifting was a problem but was Another shipment was flown in on Hope's campus. are signs from the campus and "Apparently, students have be- done mainly by the area's high from Wisconsin, and Larkin says, The search, which was author- community (including the "Keep come a little wary of the goings "The Blue Angels are working ized by Henry Boersma, Purchas- Off the Grass" signs), furniture on and have started to ditch their (Continued on page 3) out diligently." ing and Properties Supervisor, from the lounges and the faculty possessions." and Robert De Young, Dean of storage rooms, and a hand sewn Men, was begun to discover who American flag. ACCORDING TO Chief of Po- lice Les Van Bevern one instance Tonight Features Last occurred in which a few students were not too successful in their attempt to "get rid" of the signs Chance Talk by Prins and other articles they had in their possession. Dr. A. James Prins, a mem- Three male students, in an at- ber of Hope's English depart- tempt to rid themselves of the ment and last year's recipient signs, were seen by a janitor, who of the HOPE award will pre- notified the police. "They were sent this year's Last Chance held for questioning but were not Talk this evening in Dimnent charged because it was obvious Memorial Chapel at 7 p.m. they were victims of circumstances The annual event, sponsor- and that other students were also ed by Mortar Board, gives a involved," stated Chief Van Be- member of the faculty a chance vern. to present what he feels his last thoughts and reflections on Mr. Gerrie stated that numerous earth might be. students have come up to him and said that they felt it was "dirty Speakers in the past years pool" to search the rooms. But, include Dr. Lars Granbergand according to Mr. Gerrie, "Wehave Dr. Arthur Jentz. no choice now; the administration Dr. Prins, who has taught has demanded us to search." at Hope for the past 21 years, earned his M.A. in English and He also made the comment that Ed.D. at the University of Mich- students' rooms are not sacred TOTE THAT BARGE!—Two residents of Kollen Hall are seen moving igan. He presently teaches Eng- ground and that in spite of opin- lish, American and European a piece of furniture back to the lounge. Similar instances occurred ions to the contrary the dormitor- novels courses and a course throughout the past week due to the searching of various students ies are run along the lines of a in world literature. DR. A. JAMES PRINS rooms. hotel or motel. April 28. 1967 Page 2 Hope College anckor Holleman Leads Meeting Senate Passes Budget Proposal

Monday, as President Craig Kallemyn, added two stipu- reduced, the budgets of anchor Holleman presided over his first lations. Milestone, Opus and WTAS would 4 official meeting, the Student Sen- THE FIRST stipulation was be returned to the Communi- ate amended the new budget pol- that the anchor. Milestone, Opus cations Board for specific reduc- icy statement in regard to stu- and WTAS would be exceptions tions. dent communications organi- to the new policy. Their budgets JIM O'NEIL noted that the am- zations, and discussed the turtle would be sent by the Communi- mendments were really returning race and the coming senator-at- cations Board to the Student Sen- the budget handling to the way it large elections. ate; then these budgets would be had been before the new policy. forwarded to the Administration. The budget policy statement, Fditor John Mulder, representing before it was amended, said that The second stipulation regarded the anchor at the meeting, said that he had been in contact with the Student Senate would receive possible reductions in the student budget statements from the var- budgets. The proposed amend- the leaders of Milestone, Opus and WTAS, who agreed with him ious student organizations. The ment said that if the general bud- amendments, proposed by Jane get of student organizations was that the ammended policy would be better for their operations. The proposed ammendments were passed almost unanimously. OLD—NEW—At illumination night, last Friday, Gene Pearson (left) Baroque and Woodwind In other business Steve Larkin this year's Student Senate president is shown shaking hands with Craig reported that the first shipment Holleman (right) newly elected President for next year. Other win- of turtles for the coming race for ners announced at the event were: Senate Vice President Gretrhen the muscular dystrophy drive had VanderWerf; Senate treasurer Don Luidens; Bmce White, senior class Recital Offered Sunday arrived, but most of the turtles president; Ron Hook, junior class president and Mark Vandcr Laan, had died. He said that anyone The Hope College Baroque Kn- mento No. 13 by Mozart; and whose turtle had died or had just sophomore class president. semble and the Hope College Quintet for Winds, by Jean refused to run anywhere should Woodwind Quintet will present a Francaix. contact him and he would make concert this Sunday at 4 p.m. The members of the Baroque sure it would be replaced when in Snow Auditorium. Four Sr. Art Students Fnsemble are Le Hoy Martin, the new shipment arrives. The first portion ol the program on recorder, Gail Mitchell oboe, will include Trio Sonata No. 1 Deanna Mitchell on cello, and DAVE ALLEN reported that his in F major for recorder, oboe James Tallis on harpsichord. turtle had webbed feet. He said, Exhibit Work in Library and continuo by Loeilletand Trio The Woodwind Quintet includes "I suppose webbed feet help il in V major for recorder, cello Dwain Mitchell on flute, (Jail War- when it's swimming, but not when Hope's four graduating art ma- who is presently teaching at Fer- and harpsichord. Sonata in (i naar on oboe, Joseph Nelson on it's trying to run." Another dis- jors will exhibit their selected ris State College. Minor for oboe and continuo, clarinet and Robert Cecil on horn. gruntled senator voiced his won- works for The Senior Art Fx- The event will be held during all by Tel em an n Both these groups have been der over whether the type of tur- hibit May 2 through June 8 in May to coincide with Tulip Time The Quintet will present the sec- playing young-audience concerts tle purchased was the fastest run- Van Zoeren Library. The exhibits and other local andcollegeevents. ond portion consisting of Diverti- throughout western Michigan. ning turtle possible to buy. He will include paintings, drawings, was assured by various members etchings, sculptures and ceramics. A( ( ORDING TO Delbert Mi- ol Senate that it is. THE STUDENTS, Nancy chel, Hope art instructor, these in further business Sue Sonne- Newman, Mary Ksther, Dave students are among the best art- BEST BOOT BUY veldt noted that the Senator-at- Courtney and Rein Vanderhill, ists ever to graduate from Hope. Large elections are just two weeks will select examples which repre- Rein Vanderhill of Holland, IN TOWN away and said, "Anyone who sent their best work. Mich., has been accepted at the wants to run for senator-at-large The art department will also I 'niversity of Wisconson, the I'n- should pick up a petition at Does- display the work of John Kill- iversity (ff Iowa and Cranbrook burg." master, a former Hope student, Academy of Art as a graduate student. From Cranbrook he also X If received $500 from the Michael • •> • sill A. Ciorman Scholarship Fund. Carleton Analyzes Effect Vanderhill plans to teach on the mL college level. Nancy Newman from New Jer- Of Abolishing Required Chapel sey has been accepted at Oberlin College near Cleveland, Ohio. Miss Newman plans to teach on a As Hope College finds itself in requirement was made by a Fa- secondary level. the midst of turmoil overtheques- culty Committee on Religious Af- tion of compulsory chapel. Carle- fairs. The committee announced MARY ESTHER from the Phil- •xv-x-xw: ton College, in Northfield, Minn., in 1963 that "the issue (if the re- ippines plans to join the Peace is evaluating the results of a de- quirement concerns the very na- corps. Dave Courtney of Mon- cision made in 1963 to abolish ture of the college," which" is, mouth, Illinois eventually plans their policy of compulsory chapel. among other things, related both to attend graduate school and DESPITE THE ABOLITION to its historical traditions and to teach on the secondary level. three years ago, religious wor- its present constituency." John Killmaster is also working ship at Carleton continues with David Maitland, college chap- towards his B.A., which he will 15-20 per cent of the students lain, stated that the present free- receive from Hope in August. attending Sunday chapel. It has dom enjoyed by the students is From there he will go to Cran- been estimated that five hundred more honest to both the tra- brook Academy of Art and in the students participate each week in dition and the present con- future teach on the college level. some organized religious activi- stituency. "Compulsion is alien ty apart from classes, and enroll- to the very Congregationalist tra- .viili ment in religion classes has been dition in which Carleton was es- College Chorus increasing steadily. tablished, he said. The chaplain According to a story in the col- called the abolition of the require- Will Present lege publication, the Carletonian, ment "an acknowledgment of, and "the abolition of the chapel re- indeed, an embracing of, a plura- French Requiem quirement came only after three listic campus community." years of student agitation and af- THE RESULT has been an in- "Requiem" by Maurice Durufle ter ach a ngeofcollegepresidents." crease in student initiative in re- for choruses, soloists, organ, Former Carleton president ligious affairs and a much broad- brass, strings and percussion will Laurence Could strongly favored er spectrum of expressed beliefs. be performed Sunday, May 7, the requirement because of the 1 he Carletonian has concluded 1967 at 8:30 in the Chapel, by "educational value of exposure" that the value of freedom and the College Chorus under the di- to the music, liturgy, and ideas initiative outweighs the value of rection of Roger Davis. of the Christian tradition. the exposure which occurred un- Maurice Durufle toured the I'ni- THE DECISION to abolish the der the old rule." ted States last fall. At present he is the organist at Saint-Flenne- du-Mont and professor of har- HOLLAND NOW PLAYING mony at Conservatory. He HOLLAND • PHONE EX 2-2653 has composed a number of sig- DOORS OPEN 7 P.M. - SHOW AT 8 P.M. SAT. MATINEE nificant organ works, a cappella 2 SHOWS SAT. AT 1:30 P.M. AND 8 P.M. ADULTS $1.00 motets and various instrumental Boots in the lightweight model; unlined and orchestral works. He completed this requiem in and made of soft brushed leathers. WINNER OF 6 ACADEMVAWARDS! 1947. The piece is built entirely from the Gregorian themes of the Come in Soon — You'll See Mass for the Dead. The organ why they are the i intervenes to underline certain MEIRO rhythms, rather than to support Best Boot Buy at $11.00 GOLDWYN- the chorus. AccordingMo Durufle MAYER it "represents the idea of comfort, PRESENTS of faith and of hope." ACARLOPONTI PRODUCTION

DAVID '^ce BOOTERY LEAN'S FILM (oa/ (H'SW-'Ufcttgfct OF BORIS PASTERNAKS Open Every Day Til 5:30 p.m. (Including Wed.) DOCTOR Zlli\:\(,0 Mon. and Fri. Till 9 p.m. SCOT EN PVAY BY OiR€CTlOHY VEURINKS ROBERT BOLT-DAVID LEAN „ PANAVISION* and METR0C0L0R ©MGM April 28, 1967 Hope College anchor Page 9 Pearson Address: Clark Awarded Th.D. Key to Leadership Is Love By Harvard Last Week David Clark, assistant pro- By John M. Mulder and saying he had "no opposi- for its relation to something." lessor of history, was awarded a anchor Editor tion to change per se," he dis- Change by default occurs, he said Doctor of Theology in history tinguished between "positive" and when students fail to take an in- "I've worked for the College; from Harvard University Thurs- "negative" change and "change terest in what their government I've worked for the Senate; and day, April 20. He will receive by default." "Positive change," is doing, here posing "a threat with all my heart I've tried to the degree at Harvard com- he said, "evolves from an analy- to representative government." work for you. Thank you for mencement ceremonies June 15. sis of the present situation as com- Pearson closed by admonish- the opportunity." Dr. Clark's dissertation was en- pared with the alternatives." ing the student body to "take And with simple resume, Student titled "The Altar Controversy in pride in what this College repre- Senate President Gene Pearson NEGATIVE CHANGE "re- Farly Stuart England." It con- sults from objection to the present sents even if the community can- stepped down from the presidency cerned opposition to high church- situation without serious regard not adequately reflect it in all last Friday at Illumination Night. men reviving altars in ceremon- of its aspects." Administrators His words brought him a stand- ial worship in 17th century Eng- and faculty "are not out to get ing ovation from the students land, and why the controversy be- students," said thedepartingpres- gathered in Dimnent Chapel, and came a vehicle for political con- ident. their applause brought from him flict. HE ADVISED the new President his characteristic smile. Dr. Clark received his B. A. from that the "key to successful leader- PROLONGING the tension for Vale in 1954 and his B.D. from a few minutes more, Pearson ship was not speed, but love," and further encouraged him in his Episcopal Theological School in paused and announced that Craig Cambridge, Mass., in 1957. Dr. duties by saying: "Take pride in Holleman had won the Student Clark began his graduate work at Senate's highest post for the next yourself and in the efficiency and effectiveness with which you un- Harvard in 1960 as a teaching year. fellow and assistant to Christo- dertake your duties, but don't Pearson, in his ex augural ad- pher Dawson, a well known Eng- fail to take pride in others or in dress, cited some of the accom- the College." lish historian. DR. DAVID CLARK plishments of the Senate during the past year. PEARSON CONCLUDED that Communications Board: this substantiated his belief that "if students are willing to meet together, to think together, and Disagree With Opus Censorship to work together, there is little they rannot achieve." Pearson sounded a note ol warn ing, however, as he turned over At the Communications Board sorship had gone outside of the the student government was es- meeting of April 20. a motion the gavel. Noting that "change "chain ol command." Dirk .lel- sential to "protect free journal- was adopted encouraging the ad- lema pointed out that the action has become the campus word" GENE PEARSON ism." It was pointed out that mittance of anchor reporters to showed "no respect for the Opus "students are in majority control" meetings of student-faculty com- editors and advisors." of the Communications Board mittees. the Opus censorship and JAMES DURAM described the and the appropriations would Dormitory Rooms Searched organization was discussed, and censorship as a "violation of due thus still be determined by stu- the Board expressed an opinion process." Members of the board dents. that the communications' budgets pointed out that it would have Other upcoming Commui.i- should not be under direct Stu- been possible to have the matter cations Board considerations are For Various Stolen Articles dent Senate control. referred to the Communications the appointment of the editorial THE BOARD unanimously re- Board before the holiday. boards and editors of Milestone. ( Continued from page 1) ter the students went home for the commended that "a policy be es- Although the committee dis- sum mer. Opus and WTAS. Chairman Bob tablished that all student-faculty agreed with the way in which the Thompson said that any students school and junior high school "1 would like to compliment committee meetings be open to Opus was censored, Mr. .lellema interested in these posts should students. the students here at Hope," he anchor reporters except when an thought that the literary maga- submit applications to him. A spokesman for Woolworths stated. "There's a lot less stealing executive session is necessary." zine "should be open to censor- stated that they had problems here than at the state school 1 was The Communications Board re- ship by its advisors before going but that he could remember only at before 1 came here." cognized that there are situations to print." This censorship, how- one incident in the past few years, ON THE QUESTION of whe- AWS Elects Misses when "personalities are liable to ever. should be exercised "not which involved a Hope student. ther or not the biology and chem- be hurt " and committee members out of political considerations, but istry departments had troublewith Sebans, Chapman ALSO QUESTIONED was "intimidated" by the presence of on the basis of literary merit." equipment and chemicals being ta- John K. May, Hope College li- the reporter. According to the re- Mr. .lellema was appointed to ken. Dr. David Klein, chemistry brarian. Mr May commented that commendation. however, no re- prepare a statement "viewing the And McNamara professor at Hope, stated that Hope s library had a temporary porter could be excluded except Opus censorship with alarm" for although it is pretty well known The new officers for AWS have loss of books but the permanent by a majority vote of the com- the Board's consideration at its been announced by Carol Schak- that chemicals were taken, it would mittee. loss was not that large. He felt be difficult to say exactly to what next meeting. Mr. .lellema is also el, this year's acting president Turning to the problem of the that the problem was "sadly ex- extent since there is breakage and preparing a proposal forchang- and the newly elected president Administration's censorship ol the aggerated" and stated that, com- waste in the lab itself. ing the entire organizational set- for next year. paratively speaking, Hope Col- Opus, the board felt that the cen- up ol Opus, also to be considered The office of vice president will lege students on the whole should at the next meeting. be filled by .Ian Sebans with Can- be commended for their responsi- THE COMMUNICATIONS dy Chapman serving as secre- ble actions concerning the use of Winters Addresses' Crime Board then discussed the senate tary. the library. debate over who should control The tie between Lynn Wyman Fldon D. Ankrum. Director of the purse strings for the campus and Peg Mc Namara for the post Food Service at Hope, was asked And Counseling'Thursday communications media. The of treasurer was broken when Miss whether or not he had problems board unanimously agreed that a Wyman withdrew from the com- with silverware, trays and other Dr. Carl S. Winters will speak separation of those budgets from petition. articles being taken. He said that on "Crime and Counseling" next such things as salt and pepper Thursday evening at 8:15 in Dim- shakers and silverware did dis- nent Memorial Chapel. appear but that the majority of articles were returned or found af- Dr. Winters, a member of the lec- The Students of Hope College ture staff ol (icneral Motors Corp.. anually travels a quarter ofa mil- lion miles and has recently re- PRESENT A SMASH Annual May Day turned from speaking engage- ments in London. Cairo. New Festival Will Be Delhi, Tokyo and San Francisco. COMEDY HIT! Dr. Winters devoted a great a- Next Friday mount ol his time and energy to MAY 11-13 $1.50 9:00 P.M. the problems of crime prevention A "Chanson de Mai" will be and rehabilitation. He was chair- sung on Hope's campus next Fri- man of the Michigan Crime Com- CASTLE PARK AMPHITHEATRE day for the 31st annual May mission. an advisor to the Cook Day festivities. County Juvenile Board and The May Day queen and her Chairman of the Skid Row Com- court will reign over the day's mission. He has been an advisor activities with the coronation ol to Nathan Leopold and has re- the queen being the highlight of cently returned from a conference the celebration at 4:30 in the Pine with the paroled murderer. Grove. The queen will be select- DR. CARL S. WINTERS ed from junior women next Mon- day and Tuesday. The scholastic trophies for first semester will be awarded during THE STUDENT CHURCH the coronation ceremony, and junior class women will be tapped Corporate Worship at 10:45 a.m. for Mortar Board. Classes for the day will be dis- missed at 12:20 p.m. There will Sunday, April 30 be a picnic at Kollen Park from by Aristophanes 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. The day's Dimnent Chapel sports events will begin at 12:30 p.m. with the women's Softball games. At 1:45 p.m., the men's Participating as leaders in worship: sports competition will begin. The men of the various fraternities and GEORGE SHEFFER, Chicago Young Life Staff, Preacher the independents will engage in ROGER DAVIS, Organist track and field events at the track. WES MICHAELSON, Worship Leader A banquet honoring the queen The men of Emersonian will usher. and her court is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at Durfee dining hall. 7:00 P.M. in Graves Auditorium. The day will culminate with a Worship service using folk music . . . Rick Rietveld, casual dance from 8:30 p.m. un- Jackie Nyboer and company. til midnight at Phelps. Round Trip Busses for Every Performance April 358, 1967 Page 4 Hope College anchor anchor editorials On Building Hope

hroughout this academic paralleled success in fund-raising this T year it has been the pleasure of year. Throughout the year theie has this newspaper to record a con- been a greatly increased number of in- tinuing stream of financial aid flowing dustrial grants, as well as great success WHAT? into Hope College from a variety of in obtaining funds from the govern- friendly sources. We would like to take ment and non-profit foundations. this opportunity to salute the people The College received a $375,000 both on and off the campus that have grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foun- accomplished so much for our college dation for an interdisciplinary program rV v.v j community. in science and mathematics and a o/, v* V» w/' On the front page of this issue is $1,000,000 grant from the Department a story which announces that Hope of Health, Education and Welfare to- College has received an award for the ward the erection of a new science second greatest increase in alumni do- building. nations during 1965-66 of any college In a time when some people laud of our type in the nation. This is a the financial benefit of being unaffiliat- far cry from a few short years ago when ed with a church, the Reformed the alumni fund drive was something Church in America has embarked on less than a gold mine. a S6,000,000 campaign to aid its three Special commendation must go to affiliated colleges. As the anchor goes Mrs. Marian Stryker, Director of Alum to press this week, some two-thirds of ni Relations, and to the scores of vol this money has been pledged. unleers across the nation who have worked so hard to meet and surpass IRECTOR OF CHURCH Rela- Art Buchwald demanding goals and quotas. The De- tions Stuart Post deserves the velopment Office, responsible for all D plaudits in this area. He has ex- facets of fund raising, and the Public cited interest in Hope College in the Relations Department have also turn Church to the point that applications ed out yeomanlike work during the Yes, We Have Bananas lor admission from high school seniors past year. in the Reformed Church has increased significantly. HE TREMENDOUS success of Everywhere you turn, the financial the 1965-66 campaign has contin- fortunes of Hope College seem to be T WASHINGTON—It's very hardtobea "Take trips where?" ued with this year's surpassing of on the rise. The new women's dormi- parent of a teen-ager these days. You have "Wherever bananas will take them."' that record increase. Now a goal of rory going up and the Student Center to keep on your toes all the time, .lust the My wife looked scared. "Are you feel- S300,000 has been set for the 1967-68 and Science Building slated to soon fol- other morning 1 walked into the kitchen ing all right?" drive. We extend our best wishes and low are concrete manifestations of these and 1 caught my son taking a banana out thank Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Yonk rising fortunes. They are also a tribute of the fruit bowl. "WHY DOES EVERYONE think I'm man in advance for what we are sure to the fine, selfless work of the people "What are you doing with that ba- crazy because 1 don't want my kids to nana?" 1 shouted. will be another successful campaign. mentioned in this editorial and hun- smoke bananas?" I cried. . It is not only in alumni relations, "I'm going to cut it up and put it on "Well, if you feel that strongly about dreds of others. Once again, we salute my cereal," he replied. however, that the College has seen un- vou. it." she said, "1 won't buy any bananas "A likely story," 1 said. "You weren't again." going to smoke it, were you?" "Sure, and then they'll sneak up to the "Smoke the cereal?" fruit store and buy them behind our backs. "NO, SMOKE THE BANANA, smart At least this way we know they're getting Off the Grass aleck. 1 read all about you kids going good quality bananas." around smoking bananas behind your Why don't we let him smoke a banana parents' backs for kicks." in front of us to get it out of his system?" He became very interested. "How do my wife suggested. you smoke a banana?" he wanted to know. "1 don't want to smoke a banana," my "Vou don't smoke the banana. You son yelled. "In fact I don't even want to eat smoke the skin." my corn flakes." He looked at me in amazement. "What 1-hat's a good idea. We'll all smoke have you been smoking?" bananas together and that way we'll know "Now don't try to be smart with me," what the kids are experiencing. You're 1 said. "You know very well what I'm lucky you have modern parents." talking about. You take the skin and scrape it out and then make a paste out of it and I STARTED S( RAPING out the skins then you bake it and then you smoke it." and making a paste. Then I baked it and "What for?" then I chopped it up and passed out three "So you'll have hallucinations, that's pipes. what for. First it was marijuana, then it The three of us sat around the floor of was LSI) and now it's bananas. Don't the living room and started to puff. you kids have any shame?" In about 10 minutes 1 asked my son "Look, all 1 want to do is have break- what he saw. fast. I'll eat the fruit and you can keep the "1 see Mom getting green." skin if it bugs you that much." I hat s no hallucination," my wife "How do 1 know you didn't scrape said. off the skin before 1 came in?" 1 said. Vou don't look so good yourself," ... "Search me," he yelled. my son added. JUST THEN MY WIFE walked in to "Maybe I didn't bake it long enough," find out what the commotion was all about. 1 said. "1 caught him eating a banana," I said. Five minutes later we all retired to our "Well, what's wrong with that?" she respective washrooms. This was the "trip" demanded. that everyone was talking about. "Don't you read the newspaper? Kids ( opyright (c) 1967, ITH or without the signs, it's still a good idea. all over the country are smoking bananas Co. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syn- so they can take trips." dicate. Readers Speak Out anchoCOUIOrI Dear Editor .., PMCSS I OLLAND, MICNIOAN Both sides are presenting good argu- Published weekly during the college year except vacation, hoi,day and examination period, by HOWEVER, I must point out that the ments on the chapel issue. One side states and lor the students oj Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority / the Student administration also has a responsibility 0 that worship should be a free response to Corn in u nicatiuns Buard. to the welfare of it's subjects and is obli- od- The other side states that if you don't gated to provide Christian instructors and hke it, leave; that's a good argument be- Entered as second class matter at the post ofrce o/ Holland, Michigan. 49423, at the special rate Christian activities to the benefit of the cause the Administration says it is. The of postage provided for in Section 1103 / Act of Congress. Oct. 3, 1917, and author,zed Oct. student's spiritual life which College spon- 0 whole issue gets bogged down in these 19, 1917. sors and parents see to be so important. valid but opposing arguments. I would like If Chapel is operating to the detriment to suggest a reconciliation. Subscription: $3 per yrar. Printrd: Zetland Record, /.eeland. Michigan. of the student's life or to the middle ground THE IDEAL behind worship is cer- of wasting his time, the Administration tainly a free response to God, and to accom- Editnr John M. Mulder should drop chapel and try something Copy . . . Janice Bakker, Carol Ko ter ski, odate this, the College offers an unpredic- Managing Editor .... George Arwady else. If Chapel helps the student, keep it Lew Vander Naald table Wednesday evening service, a medi- News Editor Tom Hildebrandt 00 c ape and improve it. The Administration has the Headlines jim Po/,/ pk ^ ^ Student Church, and almost power to do anything it feels like doing, layout Editor Dick Angstadt Christian instruction and counseling. Stu- Proof Bette Lou Smith. but it has the responsibility to do what is Advertising Manager ... Bob Schroeder dents cannot blame the College fornotpro- Photography . . Donald Page, Don Gunther. best for the students. Business Manager ]i Marcus viding opportunity. Yet, Chapel seems al- m Suzette Luckhardt most superfluous m relation to the other . .... Gordy Korstange tour I have just mentioned. I CANNOT believe that the Admin- Cartoonists . Muck Menning, Greg Phillips How can Chapel itself be justified? istration is blind or deaf to honest pro- Board of Editors Simple. The Administration has the power tests, nor that it would assert it's power, Reporters . Ruby Beatson, Jane Becksfort, to require all students to attend daily chap- which it may do legally, without an honest Editorial Assistants . Bob Donia, Bruce Ronda Janice Blakely, Rob Branch, Bonnie el services. This power stems from the fact and ethical appraisal of its own actions. Features Pat Canfield Everts, Sherman Farher, Mike Fitney, that Hope College is not a society nor a The question is: Will the Administration Critiques y0/m Cox Marion Greiner, Tom Hendrickson, aemocracy but an institution under an ad- be a benevolent dictatorship or another Sports Bob Vanderberg Glenn Looman, Don Luidens, Ken ministrator who is not elected by the stu- Castro. National News DUh Kooi Nienhuis. Madeline Slovenz, Neal dents. Jack D. Ritsema Rewrite Harold Kamtn Sobania, Sharon Staats, Al Wildschu' M

•i 1 '•

P**e I Faculty Focus Life in a Test Tube Challenges Our Society

major upheaval in our value sys- Editor's note: This week's faculty ber of questions. Who will decide tentative and carefully qualified tems. Certainly some far-reach- focus is authored by Dr. Jerry what life will be created or what conclusions as universal certain- ing claims have been made which R, Mohrig, Assistant Professor, genes are desirable? If man can ties; or when we inflate some dis- predict that scientists are finally of Chemistry. Dr. Mohrig receiv- control his own genetic make-up, covery having a definite scope uncovering the nature of life. could not this power fall into the into the Mainspring of the Uni- ed his B.S. from the University Dramatic discoveries in the last hands of men representing pri- ' verse, and try to read in the of Michigan in 1957 and earned two decades have led to an un- vate profit motives? scientist's palm the solutions of his Ph.D. at the University of derstanding of deoxyribonucleic Colorado in 1963. Racists may want to write their difficult problems in other fields- acid, DNA, in transmitting the own special prescription for a ethics, aesthetics, politics, or phi- genetic information of heredity; if! By Dr. Jerry R, Mohrig better class of humans. Even with losophy; then we are asking of of ribonucleic acid, RNA, in di- him things he is in no position A small group of students and the best of motives, we may find recting the synthesis of proteins; to give, and converting his con- faculty has been meeting on cam- it difficult to predict what changes and of the protein enzymes as ceptions into myths." pus lor the past few weeks for the will occur when only some genes fantastically effective biological A scientist who speaks outside purpose of considering some as- are changed. catalysts. These discoveries and his area of special competence de- pects of the relationship of science Clearly we ipust all be aware of others have certainly provided a serves an audience as does any and society. One topic which we the implications of these discov- basis for the expectation that man intelligent person, but he should have discussed is the tremendous eries and be ready to make in- may indeed have some control of not be regarded as an authority. progress in molecular biology. telligent decisions about them. the creation of life within our life- MOLECULAR BIOLOGISTS MANY SCIENTISTS FEEL time. Some understanding of the meth- ods, the framework, and the limi- and indeed a very large major- that the impact of molecular bi- ACCEPTING FOR THE MOM- tations of the sciences seems to ity of scientists believe that the ology upon our society in the next ENT that this can be done, we DR. JERRY R. MOHRIG chemical constituents of cells when few generations may cause a must seriously consider a num- be essential for these decisions. This does not imply, in the least, studied with sufficient detail will that we should all become scien- understand fully a poem by Ro- be found to have the necessary tists. The important problems re- bert Browning, or to apprehend properties which can account for sulting from our technological ad- the full structure of the great Pre- life. In principle there is no ob- Blue Key Taps Sixteen vances will be solved through lude and Fugue in B-minor by stacle in the path to the synthe- study of the humanities and the Bach." sis of an organism, although sci- social sciences. EQUALLY UNHAPPILY, so- entists are far from producing ciety has increasingly looked to a unicellular organism, much less Men at Illumination Night UNFORTUNATELY MANY science for a complete picture of a multicellular one. INTELLIGENT people are all Last Friday at Illumination the world. Stephen Toulmin stat- One image of man which comes volvement in campus activities. too happy to learn as little as Night the 16 new members of ed the problem when he wrote: from the concepts of modern bi- The officers for next year are possible about the biological and Blue Key were tapped. They are "When we begin to look to the ology is that of a complex ma- John Hollenbach, President; Mark physical sciences. It has become Keith Abel, Dennis Farmer, James scientist for a tidy, a simple, and chine whose operation in princi- Menning, Secretary; William fashionable to plead that science Hardy, Fdward Heneveld, Craig especially an all-purpose picture ple can be explained through the Mills, Vice-President; Keith Abel, is really too complex to under- Holleman, John Hollenbach, of the world; when we treat his laws of physics and chemistry. Treasurer; Dennis Farmer, Bus- stand. Joel H. Hildebrand, in his Donald Kroodsma, Mark Men- iness Manager. book, "Science in the Making," ning, William Mills, Robert BLUE KEY is a National Hon- speaks directly to this point. Schwegler, Dennis Van Haitsma, or Fraternity with over 125 chap- "There are others, however, Richard Shiels, Keith Taylor, ters and nearly 30,()()() active who at the mere sight of a math- Carl Tenpas, Kamutondo Sim- members all over North America. ematical or chemical symbol, ex- Review of the News wanza, and William Osterbahn. Each member gives three hours perience a sort of emotional al- THE ACTIVE MEMBERS of of his time every week to work in lergy that prevents them from ex- West Germany eral days. Curran was called £; Blue Key chose the pledges from the Book Store and for this the ercising their true mental powers. Former Chancellor Konrad a "liberal." >;j 48 nominees. They were chosen College gives the fraternity a bud- This need not occur. The fact Adenauer, 91, died as one of At Howard University stu- ;$ on the basis of scholastic achieve- get to spend on social and cul- that a person may not instantly the last great European lead- dents burned an effigy of Se- 5; ment (all of them have al least a tural events. The faculty advisor see clear through a bit of science ers that rose to power after the lective Service Director Lewis >:j 3.1 average and their overall av- for the past year was Dr. Arthur is no more evidence of incapaci- war. Adenauer guided his coun- B. Hershey. f: erage is just under 3.5) and in- Jentz. ty than failure at one hearing to try from destruction and defeat New York to its present position of one At Columbia University g: Poet Snodgrass: of the leading industrial and political giants of the world. some 1,000 supporters and op- ponents of the war in Vietnam £ clashed in dozens of fist fights. U.S.S.R, At Pratt Institute, an estimated The first admitted Soviet Cos- 100 students tried to block Ar- $ Human Relationships Fragile monaut death occurred this my officers from inspecting the <: past week when Cosmonaut ROTC unit. g: Most of the poems besides those 1 curled and slept all day Kamarov's parachute failed By John Cox China 5 in "Heart's Needle" deal with or nursed my bloodless wounds and he plunged four miles to Red China's nuclear facilities £ anchor Critiques Editor until the squares were silent his death. human relationship as well. Often in Sinkiang Province are re- William Dewitt Snodgrass, pre- the poet uses images from the where I could make my tunes ported to be under the control sently with the faculty of Wayne everyday world of his local Penn- singular and violent. California of anti-Maoist forces as unrest $: State University, has achieved un- sylvania countryside: Then, sure as hearers came The United States Surveyor continues in this country. The x- I crept and flinched away. usual critical recognition for a Swampstrife and spatterdock III landed on the moon April rebel regime in the Province And, girl, you've done the same. slim volume of poetry, "Heart's lull in the heavy waters; 19, after two small bounces. has apparently received con- X; Needle" (Alfred A. Knopf, 1961). some thirty little frogs A stray from my own type, Shortly after, it began to take cessions from Mao as a result :v The title poem of the collection spring with each step you walk; led along by blindness, photographs which are now of its establishment of control is a 10-part sequence of shorter po- a fish's belly glitters my love was near to spoiled termed high quality. Later, it over the nuclear installations. X; extended a mechanical claw ems bound together by a common tangled near rotting logs. and curdled all my kindness. Vietnam $; and supported scientists' the- theme: All are addressed to the With directnebS and economy, I find no kin, no child; In a major escalation of the ory, that the lunar surface is poet's three-year-old daughter. "The Marsh" (just quoted) ends only the weasel's ilk. war, American planes bomb- hard enough to permit a land- Most of them reflect the pathos rhetorically: Sweet beast, cat of my own stripe, ed Mig bases a few miles from $; and fragility of human relation- come and take my milk. ing by a manned space craft. Stick in the mud, old heart Hanoi. X; ship: what are you doing here? Texas :v I lift you on your swing and From HEART S NEEDLE Greece After years of side-stepping •$ At midnight, April 21, the must shove you away, MR, SNODGRASS RECEIVED the draft by one means or £: Here in the scuffled dust army seized control of the gov- see you return again, the first Ingram Merrill Prize for another, Muhammed Ali has is our ground of play. ernment of Greece in the name drive you off again. . . " Heart's Needle" and subsequent- been ordered to come face to •£ I lift you on your swing and must of King Constantine. The coup ly was awarded the 1960 Pul- face with the Army on April shove you away, followed months of political itzer Prize for Poetry as well. The 28. He says he will not go and '.v n see you return again, turmoil and a fear that left- THE TITLE is taken from a volume will be available in Van will face the punishment. He >|:' drive you off again, then wingers would take charge of quote in an old Irish story: "An Zoeren and several copies are on faces five years in jail and a >:• the country and depose the only daughter is the needle of the order at the Blue Key Book Store. stand quiet till you come. $10,000 fine. £ heart." The biographical fact of You, though you climb king. Indiana :%• relevant interest behind these po- higher, farther from me, longer, A major conference on ems is the author's divorce which SONG will fall back to me stronger. Washington Christian unity involving re- X; forced a separation from his Bad penny, pendulum, Sweet beast, I have gone prowling, Most of Catholic I'niversity's presentatives of the Roman ;£ daughter. you keep my constant time a proud rejected man 6,600 students and almost all Catholic Church in the USA £ He handles a potentially maud- who lived along the edges to bob in blue July of its faculty staged a boycott and the Disciples of Christ will X; lin theme with reservation and catch as catch can; where fat goldfinches fly over the dismissal of priest- be held probably in the fall. ;j:| delicacy, however, which lifts the in darkness and in hedges over the glittering, fecund professor Charles E. Curran Participants will include clergy, verse from pathos to poetry, from I sang my sour tone reach of our growing lands. which closed the school for sev- theologians and laity. :>• personal tragedy to universal ex- and all my love was howling Once more now, this second, perience. conspicuously alone. I hold you in my hands. The Best of Peanuts Reprinted by permission of the Chicago Tribune '967 b» taKvrt Sr^'co1* PEANUTS HAVE VOU EVER SEEN A CHESHIRE BEAGLE?

& t) J Pagti Hope College anchor April 28, 1967

The View From Here Student Politics in Colombia-II CLU & By Webster Brewer Editor's note: This is the se- are more than a diversion, they has been demonstrated in Russia, cond of two columns written by too can become a channel for the and more recently in China and senior Webster Brower about his students' "fire and steam." Cuba. These backward nations CAM PUS experiences in Colombia, South POLITICAL AGITATION by with stagnant economies and de- America during his sophomore students has been credited with plorable social conditions have year. This is his analysis of the a major role in the downfall of been transformed by efficient or- underlying causes of the facets the dictator Kojas Piniela. It is ganizations which are capable of FASHIONS of student life at a Colombian no wonder that the students feel effectively mobilizing the human university which he described last that the future of their country is and natural resources of a na- week. BY CHIP TOBERT in their hands and are tempted tion. ESQUIRE'S FASHION EDITOR Colombia is a country of eno^ to take an active part in the po- An articulate leftist can present mous differences between rich and litical life of the "shattered show- his argument persuasively. He poor, educated and uneducated, case of South America." knows "all the facts" and he tells elite and masses. These discre- Nobody can deny that many them with authority. The way in THE COUNTDOWN TO SUMMER is felt from one corner of the pancies are expressed in the dif- reforms are needed in Colombia. which he makes his presentation ferences between the student body Three per cent of the population campus to the other. The race is on to finish papers, cover the terms discourages careful analysis. of the state-supported Universi- owns fifty-five per cent of the land; Conflicting ideas are drowned out work and find something to do this summer before the semester dad Nacional, where I studied, less than five per cent of the pop- in emotional appeals to justice and ends. So with sights on splitting the campus scene let's check out and that of an affluent private ulation takes in forty per cent of references to "Peace-Corps-CIA your warm weather wardrobe for Summer '67. university such as the Universi- the national income. Infant mor- spies." dad de los Andes, also in Bo- tality is over ten per cent. When Muniproc, "moderate" gota. Sixty-eight per cent of the pea- organization of professors and 1 he students of the Universi- sant dwellings have dirt floors, university students, appealed to dad Nacional are drawn largely ninety-eight per cent have no run- the students to support a literary MAKE A BIG SPLASH with the latest look in swim suits. For the from the poor segments of the ning water, and eighty per cent campaign, the response was weak. population. The tuition for eighty uninhibited set, there's nothing better than the Tarzan style loin- have no sanitary facilities what- Although the aims of the group per cent of the student body is soever. cloth swimsuits we highlighted in the February column. For more were well received by the student the minimum fee of $7 per year. THESE ARE BUT a few of body, only thiry-six students and conventional good looks, we like the new lightweight quick-drying Students must find housing on the conditions with which the Co- professors bothered to show up cotton corduroy swim-play shorts. Style runs the gamut from ex- their own. In order to economize, lombian students have to live. at the group functions which fo- tension waist band to belted models and from brief to surfer length some commuting students catch a Honest cries of indignation call cused on Colombia's socio- bus to class in the morning and for an improvement of housing, leg. Bright color is the keynote for '67. Yellow, green and gold economic ills, their causes, and walk for hours in the afternoon, economic progress, clean govern- realistic solutions. bathing trunks are getting the biggest play and the multi-color to save the I'^c. bus fare. ment and guarantees of consti- THE MOST VOCAL and the stripe straight hanging jersies are a natural to top them off. The IF THE STUDENTS imagine tutional rights. most active demonstrators, how- colorful cover-ups are not only smart looking but tailor made to themselves to be the guardians of The Colombian political scene ever, seldom participate in com- the nation and the spokesmen of suit every taste. You can choose anything from a cool, sleeveless is dominated by two traditional munity development projects, al- the poor, it is because they can parties which trade executive re- boat neck to a free swinging mock turtle neck shirt with % length though one outspoken student did identify themselves very easily sponsibilities every four years by something; he joined the K. L. sleeves. with the poor people of Colom- a long-standing agreement. I X. guerillas in the mountains of bia. heard it once said that "Colombia Colombia. A typical Nacional student has is the only Western nation where The stones thrown by the stu- all the energy of youth but few one knows sixteen years ahead dents in their ever-recurring de- means of expending or diverting of time who will be president." monstrations remain a symbol it. Most students have little or MARX 1ST-LENINIST con- of their inability to cope effec- no money for entertainment. The cepts are considered more than tively with the nation's interest GO NATIVE in this season's Mexican, school has very few female stu- doctrinaire statements by frustra- groups in the building of sound Aztec or African inspired print button dents. Although political activities ted students. For them, their truth political institutions. down collar sport shirts. Solid color slacks or walk shorts in bright shades The Fifth Column handsomely accent the bold shirts. Or. reverse the order and sport the colorful native print slacks with a solid shirt. A m a couple of pairs of western style jeans or chinos round out the basic casual equip- Just Passing Through ment.

By Gordy Korstange f ^ w: THE SOCKLESS LOOK and common sense have come to terms. It was an unusual group of ex- than time and could be symbol- ian after two years of imbibing While we like the look of bare ankles with certain casual clothes— otics who passed through lower ized by the four whom philosophy at Yale, was here to we know it's harmful to feet and murder on shoes. So, we recom- Graves this week. Three of the I have known, Jim Michmerhuiz- con his father out of a new car. suckers who wrote this column be- en, Dave Von Ins, Don Kardux, mend you slip on the new mini socks that preserve the naked look "WE SIT AROUND," he said, fore me somehow found their and Rob Werge. and offer protection at the same time. For sportswear you can't go and say 'yup' to each other, paths converging toward their old M. A.'D AUNTIE MAUI) and then he asks how much mon- wrong with the new smooth leather reverse suede casual shoes in pen-and-paper battle grounds. (Werge) came zooming along in ey I've got. That gives him 500 either the slip-on or eyelit tie model. Color is generating a lot of Perhaps I should first explain his rented Mercury Cougar with points, and I have to spend the why 1 chose the title for this week- fold-in lights. Two months offree- excitement in daytime footwear. Choose from a wide range of tan. rest of the weekend making back ly farce. One reason is that I am dom before Peace Corps training gold, pastel green, blue or burgundy. Other newsworthy footnotes the points in order to get the car." in sympathy with the enemy—the had just begun, and he was in are the easy going sandals in a wide range of leathers and colors. We drifted down to Skiles (where enemy being anyone who attempts high, Scandanavian spirits. all columnists receive inspiration) to overthrow the archaic and hyp- "I think," he said, "that throw- and were joined by Von Ins, now ocritical aspects of this place. ing the bull around in the column a Saugatuck teacher. The other reason is admittedly was my best preparation for grad- Michmerhuizen spoke: "The ANYTHING GOES during the day but when the sentimental. I see this year and uate school." first time I talked to Von Ins I sun goes down there are plenty of places, even on my class as more or less the end When asked how long he was found that he knew more insig- of an era (every senior undoubt- going to stay on his visit he said, the casual summer circuit that won't let you in nificant trivia than anyone 1 had edly does). What constituted that "Until the place gets boring." without a coat and tie. The look we like best is a ever met. I immediately knew that era 1 am unable to specify. It He left after three days. he was destined to be a columnist." navy or medium blue double breasted blazer with probably consists more of people Michmerhuizen, now a librar- white stitching. Tie on a printed silk tie in the new "SAY," SAID Dave, " I bet you didn't know that Lars Hansen wider widths and you're ready to do the town. If played Papa on the old 'I Re- this summer will see you making an important member Mama' series did you? entry into the business world, a lightweight wool Or that Thomas Wolfe was six- and polyester suit in any of the new lighter colora- feet-eight and did all his writing on the top of an ice box? Why tions will see you handsomely through the hectic don't we go to the Saugatuck fire days ahead. And for the avant garde, a double house where I usually do my breasted or |-button model suit is an excellent Steatawrant drinking?" choice. Michmerhuizen looked around at the crowd of students. "This place certainly has changed. Why, In The at the end of World War II the vets came back to Hope and found Heart Of they couldn't smoke on campus. Chip Tobert's So they used to go across the street and line up on the curb column brought Downtown in front of the seminary. "They threw their butts all over to you by the grass until the rule was chang- HOLLAND ed. And we used to have to sneak off somewhere to drink all the time. Remember Notolos Ceme- tary?" Serving Food at Its Finest "YEAH," reflected Dave. "I've got an idea, why don't we AMBASSADOR go. ..." in a Pleasant Atmosphere They both got up without a word Shop and filed out to Michmerhuizen's car. "You can't miss it," they 28 W. 8th St. Tel.: 392-2726 said. "Just look for the tomb- stones." April 28, 1967 Hope College anchor No One Off Campus Next Fall Frosh Will Live in Cottages

Men will occupy the fourteen In any case, the Administration having their own lounge and bath- residence cottages on the Hope is trying to avoid having cot- room facilities. The possibility ex- College campus next year, accord- tages occupied only by freshmen, ists of having the women's lang- ing to Dean of Men Robert De- V/ according to Dean De Young. It uage houses transferred into one Young. The majority of their oc- is hoped that upperclassmen liv- of these clusters. cupants will be freshmen in order ing with them will exert a positive Applications for all rooms can- to develop a "sense of identity influence on the freshmen. be obtained in the office of the within the class," he said. HE EMPHASIZED that no men Dean of Women or the Dean of In addition, each freshman cot- will be taken out of Kollen Hall. Men. Contracts must be signed tage will have a sponsor from the However, no men will live in the this year and the $25 deposit Administration or faculty with Warm Friend Hotel and only com- will be held in escrow for room whom the students will meet from muting and married students will damage, fines given by R.A.'s time to time. They are not intended be permitted to live off campus. and library fines. It will only be to replace the academic or resi- Each cottage will be coded and applied to the next year's deposit dent advisors, said Dean De- given a number so that reports THE CLOUDS—Madeline Slovenz (left) and Martha Jennings (right) and is refundable when the student Young, but hopefully will "make and academic ratings can be ob- leaves Hope and his financial are shown in their roles as members of the chorus in Aristophanes' the entering student aware of the tained from them more easily. record is clear. It will not be "The Clouds". The play to be presented May 11-13 is being directed resourses available to him on This way freshmen who are hav- applied to the cost of rooms. by Michael Vogas, senior speech major. campus." ing trouble can be spotted early According to Dean De Young, and given help. this is done because the College "WHEN THE FRESHMAN The women who would have often spends more time and mon- gets to Hope in September," he 'The Clouds' Opens Next lived in the cottages will be ac- ey in collecting these fees than commented, "he finds the campus comodated by the new dormitory they actually collect. Henry Boers- segregated into fraternities, sor- now under construction on the ma, Purchasing and Properties orities and other activities. Con- corner of Columbia Ave. and Supervisor, gives $6,000 as a Thursday at Amphitheatre sequently, he is very often left Ninth St. According to Dean De- conservative estimate of the de- out of many things. We hope to Aristophanes' burlesque satire of Van Kaalte, and there is bus Young, the work is a week ahead liberate damage done to college develop an espirit de corps within on education, "The Clouds," will service provided for those with- of schedule and will be completed property each year. the class with this new plan. n open a three-night run at the Cas- out automobiles. In case of bad before school opens in September. THE DEADLINE for applica- tle Park Amphitheatre on Thurs- weather, alternate performances There also exists the possibility THE DORMITORY is designed tions is May 15 and they will day, May 11 and close on Satur- have been scheduled for the fol- of having language houses for on the cluster system, with sep- only be valid when the deposit is day, May 13. The show is pre- lowing Monday and Tuesday. men, depending on the response. arate groups of 12-14 women paid, said Dean De Young. sented by the students of Hope Socrates is played by Frank College and the proceeds will be Hine, with other major roles channeled into the building fund played by Dave Crothers, Mike for the SCSC. Vogas, Bonnie Tompkins, Diane William Arrowsmith's modern Parker, Jeff Lambkin and Tom translation of the original Greek Woo. The Chorus members in- is being used. Producer-Director, clude Jed Green, Bonnie Everts, Mike Vogas, comments that this Caroline Latham, Martha Jeen- particular translation "makes ings, Vicki Detlefs, Jane Ann Ard- -J Aristophanes read like Edward apple and Madeline Slovenz. Albee." Costumes are designed by Anne Curtain time is at 9 p.m. Tick- De Velder, set by Jed Green, lights ets are on sale in the basement by Mike Vogas. Open Mon. & Fri Nights 'til ,,9" AWS Votes Total Support Of Hour Extension Proposal

The extension of weekend clos- The Council has agreed to do ing hours until 1 a.m. for upper- this at their next meeting. They class girls appears imminent af- i are making a survey of freshmen ter a vote Tuesday night by the girls to determine whether they AWS Countil. The question of feel that next year's incoming allowing freshmen coeds the same freshmen coeds will have the need- hours will be considered next ed maturity. The question will be Tuesday. decided at Tuesday night's meet- On Tuesday evening, the Coun- ing. cil voted unanimously to extend Friday and Saturday night closing hours for all women un- Eerdman Prize til 1 a.m. Dean of Women Isla Van Eenenaam, however, had To be Awarded been unaware that the question was coming up for a vote. For Best Writing The next day she expressed op- The William B. Eerdman Pub- position to a 1 a.m. extension for lishing Company in Grand Rap- freshmen and sophomores, feel- ids is giving Hope College $ 100 ing that 12:.'3() would be more to be awarded to the students appropriate. She asked the Coun- contributing the best prose and cil to reconsider their decision poetry. The committee to select on underclassmen. the winners consists of Dirk Jel- lema. Dr. Henry Ten Hoor, and Mrs. Nancy Taylor. Music Department Fifty dollars will be given to the student whose poetry the com- mittee considers best. A student Gives Workshop may contribute as many poems as he wishes. For Instruments I' ifty dollars will also be given for the best prose. A student may The Hope College music de- also contribute as much prose partment will present a workshop as he desires but this is to be recital for instrumental ensembles fiction prose and not essay. next Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. in Students may give their ma- Snow Auditorium. terial to any faculty member, r The program includes six en- preferably a committee member, sembles, starting with the according to Mr. Jellema. The "Blues" movement from the deadline for submitting material "Suite" by Darius Milhaud play- is May 1. ed by Glenys Davidson, Julie Kooiman and Zaide Pixley. The "Madrigal Sonata" by Martinu Concert Series will feature David Tubergen, Car- ol Gauntlett and Scott Cutting. Presents Robert TUBERGEN AND CUTTING will then be joined by Paul Lein Shaw Chorale and conductor Dr. Morrette Rider The Robert Shaw Chorale will in a performance of Toshiro present a concert next Tuesday at Mayuzumi's "Metamusic," which the Civic Auditorium in Grand i emphasizes visual acoects rather Rapids at 8 p.m. than the sound produced. The 40-member chorus will per- Following this will be two Wood- form works of Paul Hindemith, way-out weather-proofing! wind Quintets by Alvin Etler and Arnold Schoenberg, Charles Ives, Franz Danzi. These will be played Claude Debussy and Alberto Gi- our young fashion shorty coats by Miss Gauntlett, Barbara Wal- n as ter a. voord, Miss Kooiman, Thom Admittance will be limited to Spritely cover-ups for sudden downpours' Brisk, breezy Working and Lein. members of the Holland-Muske- shorter-than-full-length coals of crisp Avril?' rayon-and-cotton THE LAST ENSEMBLE, the gon Community Concert series. poplin! Really right with slacks and shorts . . . and they've "Gordon Jacob Scherzo for brass New members buying tickets for quartet" will be played by Bruce next year will also be able to at- got roomy pockets to hold lots of important miscellanea Formsma, Alan Bilyeu and David tend. No individual tickets will be Both in navy blue or oyster beige. Sizes SML Dievendorf. sold. Hope students may obtain The last part of the workshop tickets from the office of the music will feature the Hope College Stage department by presenting their Cardigan coat, 6.49; Balmacaan, 5.98 Band directed by Robert Cecil. ID cards. Page 8 Hope Coltege anchor April 28. 1967 Cop Eleven Firsts Hope Trackmen Beat Albion

Hope's tracksters picked up second in the shot put, as Joe Albion when Tom Gerow fired eleven first place finishes at Al- Fisher flung the shot 45 feet, one the discus 122 feet, 4 inches. Sec- bion Wednesday as they rolled and a half inches. Neil Warrin- ond place went to Hope's Taibi to their third straight MIAA dual ger, the Briton's six-foot nine- Kahler while Warringer grabbed meet victory. The final score was inch basketball center, took run- third. 84-52. ner-up honors, while Hope's Les Highlighting the meet was the Cole placed third. THE BRITONS took a first fine performance of sprinter Ray and a second in the long jump Cooper. Cooper, who was ham- DOUG NICHOLS of the Dutch as only John Tysse was able to pered in the Calvin meet by a pull- won the javelin throw with a heave place for Hope. Jim Batti won ed leg muscle, ran to victory in of 171 feet, 2 inches. Turner of the event with a jump of 21 feet, 1 both the 100-yd. dash and the Albion and Dave Duitsman of 9 4 inches. Floyd Brady leaped 220-yd. dash. He ran the 100 in Hope were second and third, re- 6 feet, one inch to finish first in 10.1 and the 220 in 22.8, which spectively. the high jump. Robb Adams of was his best time all year in that With Bill Bekkering and Ken the Orange and Blue took third event. Feit both recovering from slight in this event. injuries, Duitsman came through Coach Gordon Brewer's charges OUT—Hope's Boyd Rasmussen is tagged out at second base by Calvin's THE DUTCH SWEPT the mile for Hope and won the pole vault travel to Wabash, Ind. tomorrow first baseman Steen, in Wednesday's ga"ie betweenHope and Calvin. run with Doug Formsma, Rick event with a jump of eleven feet. to participate in the Great Lakes The Dutch won a doubleheader, 3-1 and 2-0. Bruggers and Paul Hartman fin- Jerry Poortinga finished third be- Colleges Association track meet. ishing 1-2-3. Formsma's winning hind the Briton's Doug Vance. Hope will host the Alma Track- time was 4:25.9, with Bruggers Another first was recorded by men here Wednesday afternoon. Dutch Win Doubleheader; close behind at 4:27.7. Hope's 440-yd. relay team of Walt Reed, '3ave Thomas, Paul Sloan and Electronic Music Explained Become First in MIAA lay Cooper was also victorious, By Bob Vanderberg tinishing the race in 44.7 seconds. IN THE NIGHTCAP, Gary Mike Paliatsos of Hope won the anchor Sports Editor Frens pitched another masterful Vou could have called them the 440-yd. dash over Albion's Don By Melvin Powell Wednesday game for Coach Glenn Van Wier- Jenson with a time of 52.2 sec- "Hitless Wonders" the way they en, as he fired a four-hit shutout onds. The Dutch's Bill Cook took Professor Melvin Powell, direc- the machine. played Monday at Calvin, but, at Calvin. The fire-balling lefty a third in this event. tor of the electronic music depart- hitting or no hitting, the Hope fanned 1 1 men. Dr. Powell, who has received Flying Dutchmen are looking Turner of Albion won both the ment at Yale, presented a lecture numerous awards, including a The Dutch threatened in the first more and more like flag-winners high hurdles and the 330-yd. in- last Wednesday evening in Snow Guggenheim Award, has recently every day. inning when Cotts opened with a termediate hurdles, winning the Auditorium entitled, "Electronic been honored by having one of single and advanced to secondpn The Dutch managed to collect former in 15.8 and the latter in Music: a .Composer's Outlook." his compositions selected to be a sacrifice by Frens. A wild pitch only six hits all afternoon at 40.9. Hope placed second in these According to Dr. Powell, elec- played at the Austrian Music Con- moved Cotts to third with only Knollcrest, but behind the fine events, with Thomas in the highs tronic music is "steady state mu- vention. one out, but both Langeland and pitching of Don Kroodsma and and John Hollenbach in the in- sic." It is non-motional in the sense Pelon popped out to end the threat. Gary Frens they swept a pair termediates. that a progressive rhythm pat- Students to Vote from the hard-hitting Knights. Hope broke the scoreless tie in tern is non-existent. He stated that HOPE, GOING INTO the sixth its half of the fourth. With one STEVE REYNEN, Rich Frank electronic music, which originated and Dan Colenbrander finished On Preamble and inning trailing 1-0 and managing out, Langeland singled, and mov- 20 years ago, is in no way con- 1-2-3 in the 880-yd. run. The win- only two hits off Bruce Bode, ed to second as Pelon bounced nected with the more "kinetic mu- ning time, although not as good Senators-at-Large finally got things going when out to third. Troost then knocked sic of Austro-Germanic back- as in the Calvin meet, was a re- * Wayne Cotts led off by walking Click Groot's first pitch over the ground." Next year's senators-at-large, spectable 2:02.7. on four pitches. Frens pinch-hit fence to bring in the only runs of DR. POWELL, using a tape class officers, and the new pre- Formsma won the 2-mile run for Dave Abel and sacrificed Cotts the game. recorder to present examples of amble to the Student Senate Con- with a mark of 9:49.7, while to second base. Charlie Lange- the music, showed that there has stitution will be voted upon next The doubleheader victory gave Bruggers was runner-up. Hope's land coaxed a free pass out of been a steady development of this Thursday, according to Susie the Dutch a 4-0 record in MIAA relay crew of Paliatsos, Reynen, Bode on a 3-1 pitch, and a passed sort of music. According to Dr. Sonneveldt, Vice President of the competition, putting them in first !• rank and Cooper won that event ball put him on second and Cotts Powell, this sort of music has Student Senate. place a game and a half ahead in 3:31 flat. on third with one out. been developed not merely as a This year's elections will be of Albion. Albion grabbed a first and a At this point, Calvin coach Jim result of the computer age, but somewhat different, stated Miss Czanko, instead of giving Hope's earlier composers also tried to Sonneveldt. Students will once RBI-leader Tom Pelon an inten- give this "non-motional" effect again be allowed to cast eight tional pass, chose to pitch to the Track Meet Highlights to their music. votes for senators-at-large but will heavy-hitting catcher. Czanko's He explained that the unusual be allowed to give each candi- decision proved to be fatal, as sound of the music is due to the date only one vote. Pelon, with two strikes on him, May Day Events Friday fact that this type of music uses Candidates for the position will drilled a triple to left-center to the pitch state all at once rather be in the Kletz next Monday One of tne big events of the 480- yd. hurdles shuttle relay, will drive in the tying and go-ahead than in a steady progression. He through Wednesday to answer year at Hope College, May Day, get under way at 1:45 p.m." runs. also said that the unique sound questions that students may have. has finally arrived and the track THE MEDLEY relay, the 440- Don Troost followed Pelon's was due to the rapid speed with According to Miss Sonneveldt, the and field competition shapes up yd. relay, and the mile relay will blow with a long fly to left, which which a computer can reproduce gathering will serve about the as one of the more exciting meets provide entertainment until 2:45 sent Pelon into the pay station the sounds. same purpose as the campaign in many a year. At that time, the frats will com- with an insurance run. THE PRINCIPLE behind elec- speeches held earlier this year, Field events, consisting of the pete in the 480-yd. low hurd- Kroodsma scattered five hits tronic music, he stated, is the use but they will be less formal. high jump, broad jump, and shot le shuttle relay. and struck out nine Knight bat- of computers, which record and Copies of the new preamble are put, will open the festivities at Closing out the afternoon ac- ters en route to his first MIAA tape various sounds, which the posted in Van Raalte and will be 1 p.m. next Friday afternoon. The tion will be the Sprint Medley victory of 1967, 3-1. composer has programmed into there until the elections are held. running events, beginning with the relay, the Distance Medley relay, and the 880-yd. relay. Each contestant may run a total Three Eating Plans Accepted; of 1,000 yards and compete in as many events as is possible without going over the yardage Juniors May Eat Off Campus limit.

A. R.A. Slater Food Service has He also announced that meals Student Recital accepted a number of new pro- would be available under three SHIRTS posals to improve the dining sys- different plans. The first is the Features Nine tem at Hope College, according present system by which a stu- to Dean of Men Robert De Young. dent pays $500 each semester and Thursday Night First, Slater has accepted the obtains all his meals at Slater. 25c Each For 4 plan of the Student Life Com- Under the second plan, seniors Hope College's Music Depart- mittee that the right to eat off and juniors only may pay $180 ment will present a Student Re- campus be extended to all sen- each semester and get 15 meals cital in Dimnent Memorial Chap- Or More With Dry iors and juniors regardless of Monday through Friday and be el Thursday evening at 7 p.m. sex, but that all freshmen and permitted to eat at home on week- Gwynne Baily, an organ stu- sophomores be required to eat ends. Finally, a meal book con- dent, will begin the program, play- Cleaning Order. at college dining facilities. taining coupons worth $15 to be ing Hermann Schroeder's Prelude used in lieu of cash when buying in B Minor, Opus 9 and "In THIS IS DONE partially for a meal at Slater canbepurchased thee is Gladness" by Johann Se- financial reasons but also to keep for $13.50. The coupons can be bastian Bach. Folded Or On Hangers freshmen together and "develop used at any time. This plan is The second selection will be the an espirit de corps within the also limited to juniors and sen- first movement of Hummel's Con- class," said Dean De Young. iors. certo for Trumpet in Fflat, played Cash & Carry by Alan Bilyea and Edith Rens. Following Hummel's Concerto, Hope Dumped by Calvin; Mary Beth Hornbacher, soprano, and Judith Holesinger will present Haydn's "With Vendure Clad" from the "Creation." Alma Invitational Today After a short intermission the program will begin again with Hope College's young golf duffers are still looking for their two selections by Alice Stephens,, team, still attempting to get on first triumph in league competi- pianist. She will play "Pastorelle" the winning track, will compete tion. After being beaten badly and "Le petit ane blanc" by against 17 other schools today in by Kalamazoo two weeks ago, Jacques Ibert. SHIRT LAUNDRY the Alma Invitational Tourna- the Dutch entertained Calvin last "Aus meinen Grossen Sch- ment at Alma. Friday at the American Legion merzen" by Franz and "Zueig- Such schools as Michigan State, Course. The Knights completely nung" by Richard Strauss will University of Michigan, Ferris dominated the action as they won then be presented by Jennie State, Detroit School of Business, the match, 14-1. Brown, mezzo soprano and Wil- liANERS and Aquinas will be entered in Hope's lone point was picked liam Wilson, pianist. College at 6th HOLLAND, MICH. the tournament. In addition, all up by Denny Bob^ldyke, who The program will conclude with of the MIAA schools will be re- shot a fine 75. Other leaders were Bach's "Fantasia and Fugue in presented. George Cook, who shot an even G Minor" by organist Carl Van Speaking of the MIAA, Hope's 80, and Freshman Fred Muller. Noord.