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The Anchor: 1968 The Anchor: 1960-1969

3-1-1968

The Anchor, Volume 80.18: 1, 1968

Hope College

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Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 80.18: March 1, 1968" (1968). The Anchor: 1968. Paper 5. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1968/5 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 80, Issue 18, March 1, 1968. Copyright © 1968 Hope College, Holland, Michigan.

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: 1968 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. •vi Plans for SCSC, Music Addition to be Finalized

Authorization has been given by Dr. Joan E. Mueller, associate the Executive Committee of the professor of English, plans to Hope College Board of Trustees complete analyses of Shake- to proceed with final architectural speare's "Hamlet" and the plans for the proposed construc- English letters of the sixteenth- tion of the College's Student Cul- century humanist teacher and re- tural-Social Center and an addi- former, Sir John Cheke. tion to the Nykerk Hall of Music. DR, ROBERT F. De Haan, THE EXECUTIVE Committee, chairman of the department of which met on the campus last education, will continue his work Thursday and Friday, authoriz- as director of a Great Lakes Col- ed the architectural firm of Stade, leges Association project in Phila- Dolan and Emerick of Park Ridge, delphia. The project, which was 111., to proceed with final drawings begun this past February,enables and specifications, according to college students to develop an President Calvin A. VanderWerf. intensified concern for urban pro- The buildings are part of the blems through their experiences centennial decade Master Plan in the Germantown area of Phila- which was initiated by the Board delphia. of Trustees during the fall of 19(j(). Dr. David Klein, associate pro- Final authorization for the start fessor of chemistry, will study of construction will be considered chemical oceanography under a by the Board of Trustees at its National Science Foundation fa- 80th ANNIVERSARY — 18 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 March 1, 1%8 meeting during May. culty fellowship at the Scripps PRESIDENT VANDERWERF Institution of Oceanography in apprised the committee of the La Jolla, Cal. Has Controversial Image plans for the symposium on the MICHAEL PETROVICH, in- urban crisis which will feature structor in history, will complete controversial comedian Dick Gre- course work towards a doctoral Gregory Will Speak Thursday gory. degree in Russian history at the The Executive Committee also University of . Petrovich gave final approval to the Board also plans to visit major libraries Comedian and controversial of "The Wall Street Journal," re- All of the fraternities are spon- reorganization plan, which will in Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Ru- civi! rights activist Dick (Jregory porter David Garino stated: soring panels in relation to the go into effect if approved by the mania this summer. will be the main speaker at the "When the time comes, write this Symposium next Friday night General Synod this spring. In other action, the Executive Hope symposium on "The Crisis epitaph for Richard Claxton Gre- from 7:30 - 9 p.m. The topics THE DELIBERATIONS of the Committee approved the transfer in our Cities." Mr. Gregory will gory: 'He Put His Money Where will be: Arcadian - "Lessons on Blue Ribbon Committee on the of a $237,000 Ford Foundation speak in Dimnent Memorial Cha- His Mouth Was.' Many people Summer Riots," Centurian - " Pan- question of compulsory chapel grant to the unrestricted endow- pel next Thursday at 8:15 p.m. still think of the 35-year-old Ne- el on Negro Militancy," Cosmo- were reported to the Executive ment fund. The grant was pre- gro as a full-time comedian and politan - "Fmploymentfor Minor- Committee by Dr. Kenneth Well- sented to the college in 1958 with MR. GREGORY has been criti- part-time civil rights activist. Act- ity Groups," Emersonian - "War er, secretary of the Blue Ribbon a stipulation that its annual cized for radical comments in his ually, it is now the other way on Poverty," Fraternal - a panel panel. interest be designated for faculty speeches. The president of St. around, and the switch has cost on "Civil Rights," and the topic The Executive Committee also salaries. The College intends to Mary's College in San Antonio, the comic dearly." Mr. Garino at the Knickerbocker House will approved leaves of absence for continue using the interest from Tex., recently charged him with also stated that Mr. Gregory is also be the "War on Poverty." four faculty members. the grant for this purpose. unfairly attacking esteemed insti- "the most prominent lone wolf tutions, like the American flag. in the ." Attempts have been made by MR, GREGORY'S involvement Begins Thursday in civil rights began in 1962 when he began to wonder if he "really had it made" when so many of his people were suffering. Since Symposium Probes Urban Crisis then he has become a vegetarian and a pacifist and has spoken "The Crisis in Our Cities" is posium will include U.S. Con- On Saturday a play The to as many as three college audi- the topic of a three-day sympos- gressman John Conyers, Jr. of Aquarians" by Gerald L. Wal- ences in a . v,le day. "That's ium beginning Thursday and run- Detroit, Negro comedian and civil lace will be performed by the M where the action is, and nobody ning through Saturday, March 9. rights activist Dick Gregory, and Underground Theater of Chi- knows it," he says. A series of keynote addresses Kenneth Howard of the Industrial cago. At a recent engagement at Ken- and panel discussions will seek Relations Division of the Eastern The play is a satire on ra^eand dall College in Evanston, 111., to focus on the factors behind ur- Kodak Corporation. social conditions of all ages of Mr. Gregory shouted: "Two col- ban unrest in the United States. Gregory will speak on Thurs- man. The action involves three lege students burned their draft Topics to be discussed include day at 8:15p.m. Conyers is sched- people who are left living in a cards, and it took Congress two employment for minority groups, uled for 4 p.iu. on Friday and cave after an atomic war. Each weeks to pass a law making it Negro militancy, the War on Pov- Howard will befeatured Saturday of the people has prejudices that illegal to burn a draft card. We erty, summer riots, fair housing at a noon luncheon center around the zodiac signs have waited one hundred years and civil rights. "The Troublemakers," docu- under which each was born. for a law to make lynching ille- The symposium is co-sponsored mentary film record of the frus- Dr. David Clark, assistant pro- gal. The white system puts more by the Commission on Race of trating course and final failure lessor of history and coordinator value on two pieces of cardboard the Reformed Church in America, of a two-year effort for community of the symposium, said that news- than on my mother's life -- And the College Cultural AlTairs com- progress in a black ghetto in Ne- paper clippings and articles are we are going to take this country mittee and the Holland Human wark, N.J., scene of violent racial available in seminar room 203 apart, house by house, brick by Rel a t i o ns C o m m i ss i on. conflict last summer, will be shown of the library for student reference brick!" DICK GREGORY Key speakers for the sym- each day during the symposium. in preparation for thesy mposium.

Hope College to investigate the Texas charges and, according to President Calvin A. VanderWerf, Once Was Not Required the charges were all unfounded and based primarily on racism. PRESIDENT HARRY Manly of Muskingum College recently in- Chapel Problem Has Long History formed Dr. VanderWerf about a speech by Mr. Gregory at that school. "His disjointed speech in- By Jan Dzurina "Christian college, that it has in cluded salient points our students anchor Reporter its faculty men of strong and would hear from a person close constant principles, and that the to the problem," President Manly The question of required chapel exercises of each day are begun commented, also observing that is not as strictly contemporary a by a sincere devotional service." reports of Mr. Gregory's use of problem as it sometimes seems; ANOTHER VALUE OF daily blasphemy and obscenity were its history goes back over a half- chapel worship was social, it con- without sound bases. century. tinued. The editorial noted, "the In the December 4, 19G7 issue A 1912 anchor article stated, characterizing principle ol chapel "Although attendance is not com- worship does not lie merely in Dean's List pulsory, nevertheless the students that it is devotional: that can be are earnestly urged to come." attended to individually. It rather Achieved by The article further stated that since lies in this, that students and pro- "some students appear occasion- fessors gather lor worship as a 496 Students ally," it is then the responsibility college. . .And even apart Irom of the students "to do all in their these religious connections, theso- The Dean's List of students in power to stimulate an interest in cial considerations play a large high academic standing has been chapel and set an example." part: for herMS'the only place announced this past week. Four- MISS JANET B. Mulder of the . . .where the college gathers to- hundred-ninety-six students at- Library Archives Department not- gether as such and manifests it- tained the honor for the fall sem- ed that, according to the 1884-85 self as a unified and interrelated ester. College Catalog, an excuse from . . .body, thus differing in prin- In order to be placed on the the President was needed if a stu- ciples from the university." Dean's List, a student must carry dent could not attend Sunday wor- The 1929 Hope College Cata- a 12-hour subject load, and have ship services. Each student at that log noted, "the program of each a grade point average of 3.0. time was expected to attend morn- day begins with prayer in Wi- Seniors dominated the list with ing chapel each morning in addi- nants Chapel at 8 a.m. On the 45 per cent of the senior class tion to Sunday worship services. Sabbath, every student is expected maintaining a 3.0. The juniors An anchor editorial, dated Oct. to worship regularly in one of the listed 35 per cent of their class, 20, 1915, stressed the two values churches in the city or vicinity." sophomores rated 25 percent, and of daily chapel worship: the reli- IT WAS NOT until 1929, when the freshmen placed 21 per cent of gious value and the social value. the Dimnent Memorial Chapel was their students on the list. Approxi- The editorial stated, "thereligious erected, that daily chapel atten- mately 30 per cent of the campus value is hardly appreciated to the dance was required of all students. attained a B average, with women Jull extent by us students." It Until 1929, each student was ex- 'HILLEGONDS' GOONS'—Bob Graham distributes chapel slips outnumbering men by a signifi- continued that Hope should be pected to attend daily chapel ser- to students at the 8 a.m. service. Students have been required to at- cant margin. profoundly grateful that it is a (Continued on page 6) tend chapel since 1929. Page 2 Hope College anchor March 1, 1968 Reaction Varied -row Faculty Considers Trimester

ed out that in some courses it is also prove valuable. Independent By Ken Nienhuis advisable to have a longer per- research would be possible in anchor Reporter iod of time to allow more oppor- many fields. However, Dr. Doug- PEACE During the course of the past tunity for material to soak in las Neckers of the chemistry de- ONC several years many colleges and and "digest." partment indicated that one month universities throughout the Uni- Few faculty members seem to would probably not give science ted States have abandoned the favor a strict trimester program, students sufficient time to com- EC traditional two semester academic in which the entire calendar year plete most projects. But he did year in favor of a quarter system, would be divided into three tra- say that one month might be trimester, or other types of col- ditional length semesters. better than nothing. lege calendars. Although opinions Difficulties are foreseen in at- IN ADDITION, Coach Russ are varied, several Hope College tracting enough students or fa- De Vette, of the physical educa- faculty members have indicated culty to make the summer session tion department, indicated that they would favor a change in worthwhile. In addition, with the if a change in the calendar were Hope's calendar. winter-spring semester ending by to be made, the four-one-four One of the chief criticisms of the May 1, the spring sports program would probably least interlere two semester system is that the might be curtailed or even elimi- with the intercollegiate athletic vacations are inconveniently nated. program. spaced. The Christmas break us- MORE ENTHUSIASM is gen While the one month period of- ually falls about three weeks be- erated by the possibility of "four- fers many possibilities, it could fore first semester final exams. one-four" program, such as the also provide many problems. The DR. DAVID MARKER of the one adopted by Calvin this year. greatest of these, according to Dr. physics department said that these In this type of program the first Fried, is insuring that education weeks are characterized by a "lack semester begins in early Septem- really takes place. Some colleges of inertia." By the time students ber and ends at Christmas. A with this type of program find and faculty have readjusted to student concentrates on only four water or snow skiing among the academic life, exams are given. •courses during this term, which most popular types of student After exams, another short break should be only slightly shorter projects. PEACE TABLE—Several Hope students organized a Peace Table occurs. Dr. Marker said that he than the present Hope semester. It is also difficult to insure fa- across from the Army recruiter's stand on Wednesday. The students personally felt that it would be After Christmas break, one culty supervision for all the ac- distributed literature to interested students urging that the war in desirable to "quit for Christmas month is devoted to concentrated tivities students might wish to en- and be done." This opinion is study on one project. During the gage in. Vietnam be halted. shared by many other faculty second full semester students members. again take four subjects. The Passes Dress Policy However, Dr. Marker said that academic year ends at approxi- the present system should be main- mately the same time as the pre- tained if students who have exten- sent one. sive long-range assignments or The one month concentrated term papers feel the vacation is study period offers many possi- Trimester Viewed by Senate necessary to complete their work. bilities for creative educational In addition, Acting Dean for projects. Dr. Paul Fried, Hope's By Tim Liggett Sunday dinner should remain a PETE SMITH POINTED out Academic Affairs William Vander Director of International Educa- anchor Reporter dress-up meal. that if work began right away Lugt said the Christmas break tion and history depcutmentchair- In a very brief meeting Monday The Senate passed White's mo- something might materialize be- presently gives students a chance an, said that groups of students evening the Student Senate passed tion to accept his committee's pro- fore the fall of 1969. The Senate to crystallize their thinking in all could conceivably engage in a a motion concerning the dress pol- posal. The committee asked that passed the motion and the Senate courses. meaningful foreign experience icy in the dining hall and decided students still maintain clean and Educational Policies Committee during this time. By also mak- to look into the possibilities of a neat appearances at all meals. will look into the plan. ANOTHER COMPLAINT about ing use of Christmas vacation, a trimester form of academic year. A1 Pedersen presented a pro- Glenn Pontier asked the corres- the traditional system is that stu- total of up to six weeks could be BRUCE WHITE, chairman ol posal asking the Senate to look ponding secretary to write a letter dents take too many different spent overseas. the Dining Hall Committee, re- into the advantages and disad- to the students of Calvin College courses at the same time. Dr. John ported that his committee had dis- vantages of changing to a tri- inviting them to hear Dick Greg- Hollenbach, chairman of the Eng- STUDENTS WOULD be able cussed the possibility of removing mester type ot plan. It was dis- ory on Hope's campus March 7. lish department, said that he felt to take advantage of winter rates specific dress regulationsfromthe cussed immediately instead of He felt that the fact they could not that taking "six or seven courses and would not have to give up a dining hall with the Saga Food waiting for the usual week-long have him speak on their campus was too much fractioning." summer's earnings to participate Service. They had agreed that delay before a motion can be was no reason not to invite them A possible solution to this prob- in a foreign experience. this \Vas a feasible idea but that voted upon. to hear Mr. Gregory here. The lem is the "three by three" pro- According to Robert Cecil of Senate agreed. gram which will be put into ef- the music department, a GLCA In other action the Senate sup- fect at Central College next year. proposal now under consider- ported the proposal by the AWS ation, which would provide for Under this program, consisting to end curfew hours for senior of three ten or eleven week terms, semester study in New York, could Class Withdrawal Period women. Carol Schakel read to students would be allowed to con- also be modified to make a four the Senate the revised plan which week stay possible. centrate more on their courses. will allow senior women to re- HOWEVER, DR. Marker point On campus experiences could Extension Passed by EPC main out beyond closing hours with certain restrictions. The Educational Policies Com- drawal. Withdrawal after the tenth CAROL GAUNTLETT report mittee voted Wednesday to extend week would be recorded as a ed that she was writing a letter to the class withdrawal period for failure. former Senate President Wes Mi- chaelson asking for his signature Attention Candidates for Teaching Positions all students to two weeks after the In response to general discus- release of mid-semester grades. sion on the questions of a longer on a letter which will allow the in Chicago Public Schools semester break and free days be- Senate to remove the Hope-Hot- Committee member Irene Ed- fore the beginning of second se- land-Hamlet funds from the Sai- brooke emphasized that this revi- mester, Chairman William Van- gon branch of the Chase Man- sion would not affect the usual National Teacher Examinations der Lugt suggested that member hattan Bank and apply them to drop-add procedure. Students Peter Smith introduce the recent aid the Vietnamese people insome for Elementary (K-8) would still be given two weeks at Student Senate motion concern- other way. the beginning of each semester to ing extension of semester break and Selected High School Areas drop or add courses. However, the at the next meeting. committee's suggestion extends Storuska Speaks The National Teacher Examinations will be administered The question of trimester was the period in which a student may also discussed. Dr. Vander Lugt April 6,1968 on 400 college campuses withdraw to the end of the tenth On Prevention reported that President Calvin A. week of classes. Chicago Public Schools will use the scores VanderWerf had suggested post- Of Assaults as part of their 1968 certificate examinations for: Dr. Joan Mueller noted that a poning discussion of the issue "W" would be recorded onthestu- until the return of Dean for Aca- Kindergarten-Primary Grades 1-2-3 High School Mathematics Frederick Storaska, a student (N.T.E.-Early Childhood Education) (N.T.E.-Mathematics) dent's transcript, and interested demic Affairs Morette Rider, who of abnormal psychology and so- Intermediate and Upper Grades 3-8 Art-Grades 7-12 parties, such as employers would be involved in the con- cial psychology at North Caro- (N.T.E.-Education In the (N.T.E.-Art Education) or graduate schools, could inquire sideration of this revision of the lina State University, will speak Elementary School) Homemaking Arts-Grades 7-12 as to the reasons for the with- school calendar. on the topic "Prevention of As- (N.T.E.-Home Economics Education) High School English saults on Women" next Sunday (N.T.E.-English Language and Industrial Arts-Grades 7-12 evening at 9 in Dimnent Memo- Literature) (N.T.E.-lndustrial Arts Education) rial Chapel. All Candidates Must Take the Common Examination OPUS is COMING Mr. Storaska has spoken to and the Teaching Area Examination Relevant to more than 60,000 women on col- the Certificate Sought lege and university campuses, helping them to understand all Applicants for teaching positions in the the factors and conditions inher- Chicago Public Schools should: ent in a situation of this kind. His speech was heard by the 1. Register with the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New AWS Council last Tuesday night Jersey to take the common examination and the relevant teaching Final deadline Dean of Women Mrs. Isla Van area examination. Registration closes March 15,1968. Eenenaam commented, "The af- 2. Indicate on the N.T.E. form, line 11, that scores should be sub- for contributions fair is sponsored by the AWrS mitted to the Chicago Board of Examiners, Chicago Public Schools. and the College and is a lecture 3. File application for certification examination (form Ex-5) with no woman can afford to miss." the Board of Examiners. The following credentials should accom- March 22 pany the application (Ex-5), if not already on file: official copy of % STAMP IT! birth certificate, official transcript of aM college work attempted. IT'S THE RAOE Credential Assembly Deadline Date: REGULAR Tuesday, April 2,1968, Noon C.S.T. MODEL ANY Q For additional information: Board of Examiners, Room 624 3 LINE TEXT Th# finut INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL Chicago Public Schools POCKET RUBBER STAMP. ^ " I 2". Send check or money order. Be 228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601 sure to include your Zip Code. No or the Office of Teacher Recruitment, Room 1820 postage or handling charges. Add sales tax. or details in the Teacher Placement Office Prompt shipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed THB MOPP CO. P. 0. Box 18623 Lenox Square Station ATLANTA, CA.£ 30326

4 « March 1, 1968 Hope College anchor Page 8 Barbara Kollen to Give Only 32 Apply # Senior Recital Tuesday Vienna Applicants Down 60 /o

Barb Kollen will present her sen- applied to several schools, and Only students have applied mer program has not yet beende- The Vienna scholarship pro ior piano recital on Tuesday at hopes some day to be able to for admission to the 1968 Vienna U'rmined by Dr. Fried. gram is also being opened to stu- 8:1") p.m. in DimnenI Memorial teach music or piano in a private Summer School, less than 40 per Present plans call lor intensive dents with a grade point below a Chapel. studio or high school situation, cent of the applications received study tours of Italy, Germany 3.3. the previously announced This will be the first solo recital while still having a M.A.T. degree at this time last year. and Russia before the academic minimum for eligibility. Due to for Miss Kollen, who will offer a in (lerman. Seventeen of the applicants are session begins. "I'm not planning this change in policy, the dead- program consisting of Bach's Pre- Irom Hope College. Last year to eliminate any of thetours now." line for scholarship applications lude and Fugue in l-" Minor, Beet- 47 Hope students attended the Dr. Fried said; but he warned that has been extended to March 15. hoven's Sonata in K Minor Op. six -week academic session in Vi- a tour or tours might eventually This action is also the result 90. Debussy's Three Preludes - enn.i. Austria. be dropped. The Russian tour, of the greatly reduced number of " Le Vant Dans La Plaine," "Min- however, will definitely be retain- applications for the program. Dr. Dr. Paul Fried, director ol the strels." and "(ieneral La vine," ed. he emphasized. Fried reported. Because ot the summer program, expressed Kent Kennan's Three IVeludes, The academic session in Vienna fewer students applying, fhe num great concern over the lack ol and Samuel Barber's "Souvenirs will probably remain largely un ber of applicants over a 3.3 was applications. "1 can't explain it." Ballet Suite Op. 28" - a duet in affected. "Perhaps the intensive likewise reduced. he said. "The academic program which Miss Kollen will be accom language courses won't be oiler "We should first make every is better this year than ever be- panied by Miss Dianne Hagle. ed," Dr. Fried said, "especially effort to meet the needs of super- fore." Miss Kollen, who is a music if we have only four students en- ior students and then consider minor and is presently studying Dr. Fried, who serves as Direc- rolled for them." the needs of others who may not under Dr. Anthony Kooiker. stud- tor ol International Hducation. In light of the decrease in ap- be as highly qualified academ- ied abroad last summer and took said, however, that the proposed plications. Dr. Fried announced ically-. but who would also be one course in music while in Ku- travel tax might have had a lot that the deadline for applications able to benelit from the program." rone. She said thai she lound to do with the reluctance of stu- has been pushed back "into Dr. Fried said in explanation ol this study "really interesting, dents to apply. April." the new scholarship policy. really enjoyable. There are "Apparently this is 1.iking place many artists there, just hanging everywhere." said Dr. Fried. He out in the open; you can go hear commented that transatlantic RLC Votes One Week them lor $.")() or so." travel accommodations are Although her major is (lerm.m. easier to secure this year than Mis> Kollen does plan tocontinui- ever before. both her studs ol music and Crer The exact effect the decrease in Without Required Chapel m.m in graduate school. SIr- has BARBARA KOLLEN applications will have onthesum By Tom Donia ence entitled "What Does It Mean Assistant News Editor to be a Christian?" The confer- Courses Little Help The Religious Lite Committee ence will focus on Christian ethics decided Wednesday to recommend in business and politics. that voluntary chapel services be MR. JACK STEWART, a fac- held at 10 a.m. during the week ulty member of the RLC. com- Student Teachers Challenged l>elore Spring vacation. mented on the lack of color in COLLEGE CHAPLAIN Willi- Dimnent Memorial Cha[)el. He am Hillegonds proposed to the said. "1 personally can't stand By Pat Canfield venture. "Once the first-day fright "once vou talk to the kids in- committee that chapel attendance those bare 25 watt light bulbs anchor News Kditor was over, getting to Know and dividually- and really get to know be voluntary during the week of on those little light stands on help m\ students presented no hem. you not only win their re A rubber band whi/zes across April 1. Monday through Thurs- the sides of the chapel. They would great difficulties." affirmed a tilth -pect but also their attention." tlu* room and lands with a snap day- chapel services would begin be less offensive if they were shap- grade teacher. Linda Vander "Naturally, the kids will try directU on target. The surprised •it 10 a.m. The plan was unani- ed like candles and flickered or Laan. teaching at Lincoln Fie .vou." observed a ninth grade Fn- victim swittly turns around and mously approved by the Religious something." Chaplain Hillegonds ment.iry School, noted that she glish teacher, "^'ou are new and demands, "Who did that?" Lile Committee, lithe Administra said he would look into the mat- was showered with Valentines they want to see just how much Thirty innocent faces stare >i- lion approves the move, morning ter. Irom her "new" students. Merryl they can get away with. 11 you U-ntly in her direction, waiting lor classes will be re-scheduled to be- Schaefer. who teaches biology at are lirm, without being dictator- the impasse to br resolved. "All gin at 8. (irand Haven, considered disci ial, the major problems will College Woodwind i i}jhi. the entire class sta\ s alter Chaplain Hillegonds made the pline as a problem, but stated. straighten themselves out." >( hool unk'ss II ind out u h(» shot proposal inconsideration of the Quintet to Play thai rubber band." Twenty-nine fact that students will be on vaca- an using lingtTs point to the ( ul- tion during Holy Week. He asked Chamber Music pnt. who nervously drops his re- that the services be made volun- maining weapons on the desk. tary as part of a special effort The Hope College Woodwind "I 1)11) IT. teacher." to observe Holy Week. "I'm a Quintet will be presenting a I acuity "Well, see thai it doesii t happen bit restless about passing out tick- wind recital Sunday in Snow Au- again." The hum ot classroom ets and collecting them during ditorium at 4 p.m. activity reMimes. An Academy these special services." Rev. Hil- This recital will be thelirst lull Award winning picture? A new legonds commented. "However, length concert by the quintet, Broadway hit? No. just another let me make it clear that this whose members are Helen Dauser. occurence in the daily routine ol a does not represent a step toward flute; Joseph Nelson.clarinet; (lail Hope College student teacher. abolishing compulsory chapel." Warnaar. oboe; Robert Cecil, This semester 84 students a iv SPEAKING IN THE chapel horn; and LeRoy Martin, bas- participating in the student leach during that week will be Rev. soon. in}j program .it .i number ol area Dean Dykstra. The Friday cha- First on this program will be schools. Cnder this program.>tu pel service will begin at 8. and "Variations on a Folksong" writ- dent> are arbitrarily assigned to a c ha|K'l slips w ill not be distributed. ten by .Ian Pieters Sweelinck and school .iiui a supervising teacher, In other action. Dr. Flton Bruins arranged by- Frnest Lubin. This but are given a choice ol grade commented thai chapel slips will will be followed by " La Cheminee level. I pon successiul completion be given out at Friday- services du Roi Rene." composed by Dar- ol a teaching semester, students beginning March 8. This extra ius Milhaud. After intermission, receiv e eight hours ol credit. day ol compulsory chapel will the Woodwind Quintet will play FOR THK MOST part, student enable students to be given credit "five Bagatelles" by Wolfgang teachers lind the pre requisiteedu lor attending the Friday services. Fortner. cation courses ol little or no help The RLC also moved to or- The program is free ol charge in .ictual classroom experiences. gani/e a committee which will and o|k1 n to the public. Clint Blood, who teaches Amer- make plans tor a Fall conler ican Histoid at Holland High, noted til .i I "teach ing is such a pel' 0 son.il thing that, although edu Even if you aren't pledging c .ition c ourse ^ show you how to STIIDKNT TKACHKR—Hope education student and pradice work, it i- the actual classroom teac her Pat Canfield reads to her Zeeland High School class trom c (intact w hu h is nx»st \ alu able. " one ol Thornton Wilder's plays. Many student teachers feel that but want to look grubby anyway — A student teacher ot algebra at college education courses do not prepare them lor the challenges Hamilton High. Sue Achterhol. of the classroom. eommented. "Kduc.ition courses we have the latest styles in grubbies are lacking in practical value." Another student lamented the tad that she had to wait until the sec ond semester ol her senior year to work with kids and suggested that real classroom experience come prior to education courses instead ol vice versa. "Vou would understand more ol theeducation- al ideals and philosophies if \ou had already been given a class C. I issic good looks room responsibility." she ex ind contemporary comfort . plained. Bass Weeiuns" tnoccas STUDENT TEACHING is m i choice ol both a challenging and enjoyable styles and colors for men

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F M a f T Y I 0 , R "S AMBASSADOR VEURINK'S $18.00 Shop \ ml m Page 4 Hope College anchor March 1, 1968 ancljor editorials Lent and Dick Gregory

HIS WEEK marked the beginning ness, He turned His back to Selfish concern T of the 40-day period of Lent for and lovingly devoted His entire life to His the Western Christian Churches. fellow man and God. Marking the temptation of Christ in the This Lenten period should be a time wilderness, this should be a time of intro- when every member of "diis community spection tor every individual on this cam- 0 should re-evaluate his relationship to those pus. outside this litde world of tulips and text- In the 40 days ot repentence, each books in light ot the life of Christ. Christian is charged with the task of ex- amining his relationship to his God and HE HOPE COLLEGE Cultural Af- fellow man to see the ways in which he tairs Committee, in cooperation has fallen short of the example set by T with the Commission on Race ot Christ in the wilderness and the garden the Reformed Church in America and the ot Gethsemane. Holland Human Relations Committee, has This task has never been more im- provided the campus with an excellent portant lor Americans than during this opportunity for just such a re-evaluation. Lenten period. The present domestic and "The Crisis in Our Cities," is a three- foreign crises facing the United States re- day symposium which will attempt to make present the greatest challenge to American an in-depth probe ot the racial conflagra- stability and progress since the Civil War. tions which swept our urbancentersduring 'These house parties are sure more fun than I thought they would be Embroiled in a seemingly endless blood- recent summers. bath on the Asian continent and facing the possibility of a comparable tragedy in Featuring Negro comedian and civil its own cities within die next ten years, rights activist Dick Gregory, this sym- Art Buchwald America must rely on the leadership of posium would seem to be out of step with one ol the most unpopular Chief Execu- the generally pious tone of Lent; Mr. Greg- tives ot its history. ory has taken a militant stand on the civil rights question and has a reputation of IVING IN such cataclysmic times, being a volatile and controversial speaker. The Computer Failed L there is a great temptation tor every individual to withdraw intotheshell ot his own little world of self-esteem and N ADDITION TO Mr. Gregory, the private concern. "Let somebody else worry symposium oilers the College an ar- M A few weeks ago David Brinkley re- 1 ray ot talented speakers and pane- "It's not my fault those people don'i about it,' is the cry. "Tin too busy." ported that a scientist had programmed lists who will discuss the different aspects think like a computer." This lack ot concern Ls a common all the pertinent military information about of the urban crisis in detail. TM NOT CRITICIZING you. Fm malady among the students ot Hope Col- the United States and North Vietnam and just trying to find out where you made fed it into a computer, raising thequestion. lege.- There is a great tendency here to I his symposium is an opportunity your mistakes. How do you explain the make college a tour-year escape trom the "When will the war be won and which side tact that despite the fighting and the vic- which every Hope student should seize. will win?" realities of society and confine one's thought tories the Americans have amassed over It can give each Christian a chance to THE COMPUTER ANSWERED that and concern within a selfish litde cocoon there, the Viet Cong was able to launch probe into his relations with his fellow the United States had won the war two a drive on the cities?" bordered by 8th Street and River Avenue. man in this most vital of national con- years ago. The computer shuddered. "That was The average Hope student's interests are cerns. 1 decided to go see the computer to find not my error. I just accepted the body generally limited to course work, dating out what went wrong. counts of the last five years, ran them and traternities or sororities. He would Instead ot "giving up" somediing tor The computer seemed very annoyed through and, on the basis of my figures rather throw a snowball than read a news- Lent this year, why don t we do something when I fed it the question. It replied on the came to the conclusion that every Viet paper. in terms ot Christian commitment to the tape, "Nobody's perfect." Cong was either dead or had defected. As "I'm not trying to criticize you, Sir, rest ot humanity? Let's get out of our sel- a computer, I can't very well go around I his was hardly the example otChrist. but it does seem that the results do not counting bodies mysell." fish ruts and start caring about the world jibe with the facts." Tempted by self-glorification in the wilder- in which we live. 'That's true. Now, I understand one "There are a lot of unpredictable fac- ol the reasons you came to your decision tors in this that I can't be responsible for. was based on captured enemy documents. All I was doing was computing relative How did you err there?" strengths of the United States and North "SOMEBODY CAPTURED the wrong Salute to the Champs Vietnam military, enemy troop moralefac- enemy documents. Look, I'm just a ma- tors based on CIA reports, information chine. You can't lay all the blame at my gleaned from defectors, pacification results, feet." Gen. Westmoreland's optimism and the Yes, but there are thousands of com- NOTHER MIAA basketball champ- Floyd also is a good bet to reach his high esteem the South Vietnamese people puters like you, and it every one of them A ionship has been added to the Hope 2,000th career point tomorrow night at hold for their government. If you had di- comes up with the wrong answers, we College trophy case. This one hap- Olivet. gested all these facts, you would have come could be in a mess, couldn't we?" ens to be the seventeenth tide for Flying up with the same answer." Only if there is a credibility gap some- Dutchman basketball teams, and it also Certainly, Brady was the key tactor "THEN YOU DID NTT include any in- where along the line." formation out of Hanoi?" happens to be the ninth in the last twelve in Hope's title conquest. But something 'Have you made allowances for that?" "Why should I? The State Department yea rs. should also be said for Coach Russ De- "I'm. a loyal American computer, and told me not to believe anything Hanoi il 1 made allowances for a credibility gap, The two men most deserving of recog- Vette's fitteendi season as Hope's basket- says." ball coach, and in that time, his teams 1 u only be giving aid and comfort to the nition for the latest MIAA crown are Floyd "Did you take into consideration the enemy." Brady and hiscoach,RussDeVette.Brady, have won nine MIAA championships. Go- American bombing of North Vietnam?" "WELL, SINCE YOU goofed so badly possibly the greatest player ever to wear ing into tomorrow night's season finale, "Of course I did. Why else would I on the last go-round, when do you think a Hope uniform, has had a remarkable Mr. DeVette's Hope ball clubs have won have said the United States had won in the war will be over now?" 1^66? Everyone knows that if you drop season. He has broken the following Hope 213 games while losing 110. That's a win- That's not up to me. That's up to a certain ratio of bombs on a given coun- records: most points in a single game, ning percentage ol .659. Hanoi" try during a given time, that country has Copyright (c) I 968, The Washington Post most tree throws in a game, most points in to surrender." a season, most tree throws in a season, Co. Distributed by Syn- ORDS OF PRAISE should also "But they didn't." dicate. highest average per game, and most points W be heaped upon departing Hope in a career. players Gary Rypma, DaveUt- zinger, and Tom Pelon. Bruce Van Huis, RADY ALSO BROKE the record tor Barry Schreiber, Bill Bekkering and Randy B most career points by an MIAA Adolphs also deserve credit, as do Ted OPf COUIOI player. Tomorrow night, he will Zwart and John Leenhouts, tor making probably break Warren Vander Hill's re- 1967-68 another memorableyearfor Hope anchor cord ot 236 field goals in one season. College basketball. OUAND, MICHIGAN

Pubhstird weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of the Student Readers Speak Out Communications Board. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan, 49423, at the special rate 0lP^\ange PTOVlded 1or in Section 1103 0f thc Act 0f Congress, Oct. 3. 1917. and authorized Oct. 1 J P 1 I / • Subscription: $3 per year. Printed: Zeeland Record, Zeeland, Michigan. Dear Editor. Member, American Collegiate Press Assn. Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 396-2122; 396-4611, ext. 285. 1 am a ministerial student at Camp- should be used for self delense and not tor BOARD OF EDITORS bell College at Buies Creek, N.C. I am what it is being used tor now. There are Copy Beverly Glas writing you concerning the U.S. involve- also many ways in which to subdue com- Editor George Arwad Carolyn Latham ment in Vietnam and the present world munism which would be less immoral than Editorial Assistant . . . Tom Hildebran Photography Don Page Managing Editor .... Richard Angstadt crisis. the present war we are fighting. An example Roger Plaxton News Editor Pat Canfield Larry Erikson A MINISTER at the church I attend ol this would be to help underdeveloped Asst. News Editor Tom Donia Sue Telman brought up the idea that we should pray countries out of their drastic situation lor the Vietnam situation and other world through such means as the Peace Corps. DEPARTMENT HEADS REPORTERS crises. He also urged us to write colleges V I URGE YOU, the faculty and stu and other institutions ot learning in the Features Janice Bahher Rosezina Bard, Ruby Beatson, Jim Bechering, to pray that the and c hopes that we might inspire concern in Critiques Bruce Ronda Bob Block, Barbara Boos. John Clevering, may eease. them for the atrocities being committed in Sports Bob Vanderbcrg Garrett DeGraaf, Jan Dzurina, Nancy Flier, National News Harold Kamm Fern Frank, Peter Hoen, Ron Hook, Rosalie Vietnam and other parts of the world. I Thank you for reading my letter and Columnist John Nivala Hudnut, Lynn Jones, Tim Liggett, Don mysell have had a godly compassion to please do not bother to write me back. I Headlines Ken Nienhuis Luidens, Norm Mol, Penney Morse, Laura write chaplains and presidents of many hope that what I have said has been of Cartoonists Mark Menning colleges about the present world situation. Mumford, Ken Nienhuis, Doug Nichols, Mike some benefit to you and your institution. Greg Phillips O'Riordan, Mark Rockley, Barry Schreiber, Sincerely Yours, Proof Lynn Koop I believe that the U.S. involvement in Madeline Slovenz, Linda Stutznem, Sharon Jan Dzurina Tucker, Carole Vander Broek, Wayne Vander the Vietnam war is unjust. Our military Douglas S. Bryan Rewrite Carol Koterski By I, Peg Yntema. March I, 1968 Hope College anchor Page i

The Sandbox

- The Seedling

By John Nivala

In a land which is so far away the sunlight, it rapidly developed As the trees looked on, the man that it seems to exist only into a flower. inched ever closer to the flower. in dreams, there was a grove This development did notescape His groping hand closed around of tall, stately trees. It was a se- the notice of the trees. They were its stem, and he instinctively pull- cluded place which had never wit- very surprised (or maybe ed it from the earth, roots and all. nessed a disturbance. In the shocked) to see what was happen- Not being able to see the beauty middle of this grove, beneath a ing in their grove. Against a back- of its petals, he tossed the flower layer of rich soil, lay a small ground of black decaying leaves, to one side and continued on his seed implanted there by a whim the ancient ones noticed the emer- way. of nature. gence of the green seedling which The flower did not long keep its THIS SEED was untouched and disturbed the uniformity of their beauty. The trees shook their unseen by any living thing. It world. limbs with joy as the colors left slowly gathered strength from the AS THE SEEDLING reached the petals, and the stem turned to earth which cradled it. When its maturity and became a flower, brown. In a few days, the flower needs demanded more nourish- the trees' surprise easily develop- had assumed the same colors as ment, it passed a long root deep ed into anger. They felt that the the leaves upon which it lay. WAITING FOR GODOT—The student-directed tragicomedy "Wait- into the soil. flower had no right to intrude There was nothing in the grove ing for Godot" will be presented in the Little Theater tonight and Inevitably, the seed began to upon their world and try to esta- which mourned the death of the tomorrow at 8 p.m. Cast members are Dave Van Heest, Alan Ver- develop. It was a process of min- blish a position there. It did not flower. Finally, everything was se hu re, Glenn Van Noord and Ho sea Stevens. The play is directed ute changes which always matter that the flower was merely the way it had been, and all was demanded more of its environ- a product of nature as they were. good. by senior Joe Favale. ment. The one root began to send They would abide nothing that out many liny branches which intimated that there was any exis- drew upon the unused resources tence outside of their own. ISumerous Opportunities which surrounded it. The flower now became a con- As time passed, the little seed stant source of irritation to the began to extend itself upwards trees. It flourished in their midst, growing straight and unfolding European Semesters Offered trying to break out of its dark existence. Almost imperceptibly, itself to reveal beautiful white petals tinted red at the edges. It it edged toward the surface until Editor's Note: This article was pean universities. The University fraus" or landladies. These wo- was too much of a contrast, and it finally emerged into the quiet written by senior Nancy Aumann, of Salzburg charges $16 tuition men clean and air their hoVnes the trees tried to spread their leaves of the grove. who spent last semester studying for a semester for a foreign stu- every morning, although baths to eliminate the light and thereby FORTUNATELY, THE light at a university in Salzburg, Aus- dent - compared to $8for an Aus- are limited to one per week. destroy the flower. However, their which the towering trees allowed tria. She discusses the opportuni- trian - while tuition at the Univer- Outside the home and the lecture attempts to rid the grove of the to pentrate their limbs was suffi- ties open to Hope students who sity of Vienna averages between hall, the American student finds flower were futile for the flower cient for the little seed (now right- wish to study for one semester $10 and $20. These low tuition that he must make many other had no desire to relinquish its ly called a seedling) to continue or one year in Europe. Future rates plus lower prices for hous- adaptations. The Austrians, es- position. its growth. Compared withitsear- articles will deal with other for- ing and food, when compared pecially the Viennese, are conser- ONE DAY, THE trees' prayers lier progress, the seedling practi- eign study programs. with American costs, cut the ex- vative and very proud of their were answered. A man, lost and cally exploded into the middle of pense of foreign study con- history, both political and cul- obviously blind, crawled into the By Nancy Aumann the grove. Drawing sustenance siderably. tural. Consequently, they tend to grove on his hands and knees. anchor Reporter from the soil and energy from Whereas instruction at the other frown on pants-clad girls, loud :X: It is quite difficult for an Ameri- l.E.S. centers are in the language clothes, and large groups of noisy can student to fully experience of the particular country, classes Americans. another culture if he is immersed at the Vienna extension are con- THE VIENNESE also find it Review of the News X; in it for only a few weeks. For ducted in English, although abhorrent that many visitors have *£; him to more completely under- taught by Austrians. Participants never heard of the Hapsburgs, in this program must take a six- Sacher Torte, or the Turkish seige otian forces fighting North Vi- stand another culture, what is be- By Harold Kamm X; hind it, and what makes it differ- hour German course during his of 1683, or that tourists neglect etnamese and Laotian commu- the opportunities offered in the •$ ent from his own, he should spend first semester and a three-hour nists seeking to' expand their Vietnam $; as much time there as possible. program during the second se- museums and concert halls scat- bases for infiltration of South South Vietnamese troops of X; This is one advantage that the mester. tered throughout the city. Vietnam. This is the first time the Black Panthers Company •X many semester European study American students enjoy great- The pace of life in Vienna is the U.S. has given direct air much slower than in America. stormed into the Imperial Pal- programs offer. er freedom in these programs than support to forces of neutralist ace compound in Hue this There are many opportunities they might at home in that day- This feeling of ease, paired with but pro-western Laos. week, throwing hand grenades •X of this type. The new Hope pro- to-day assignments do not exist. the usually jovial personality of Washington and shouting an exultant war X; gram for study in Grenoble, The professor provides a biblio- the Austrian, is called "Gemutlich- In an unexpected move, Mich- cry. North Vietnamese troops •X Franee, is only one of these. Others graphy and expects the student to keit." igan Governor George Romney who had occupied the area had •X are provided by the Institute of reach independently throughout One can sit for hours in a Vien- withdrew from the race for the retreated and there was no re- X; European Studies, which has the semester. "The axe falls" at nese cafe and read newspapers, Republican presidential nomi- sistance. The capture of the pal- study extensions in Madrid, Nan- the semester's end when a compre- talk with friends, or write letters nation. In an announcement ace seemed to signal the col- •X tes, Paris, Freiburg and Vienna. hensive final exam is given. for the price of one cup of coffee. to the National Governor's lapse of heavy enemy resis- £ IN ADDITION TO these Amer SINCE MANY PROFESSORS This "Gemutlichkeit" plus a love Conference, Romney said the tance in the 24-day battle for •X ican-sponsored programs, a stu- who teach at l.E.S. also have of nature accounts forthefrequent failure of his candidacy to the city. dent can enroll in an established classes at the University of Vi- use of the three city parks. gather nationwide appreciable As the war continues in Viet- J; European university. By doing enna, the Europeaneducationsys- But an article is almost as use- support prompted him to make nam, the government in neigh- •X so a student is in direct contact tem, with the exception of a mid- less in communicating a culture this move, which opens the way boring Laos is pondering the with the native students and peo- term is an aid for for the Ameri- as a two week visit. For the real for action from the Republican meaning of new Communist X; pie, and is in a position in which can student. thing, information and applica- Governors in support of some tions can be obtained from Dr. militancy in this landlocked •£ he must use his second language All l.E.S. students in Vienna moderate Republican. "This is Paul G. Fried. kingdom. In the past few weeks, every day. are placed in the homes of "haus- not my last press conference," units of the Communist Pathet X; In recent years the quality and answered many questions as to Lao, augmented by North Vi- ;X quantity of European programs Mr. Romney's future role in etnamese troops, have moved •X have been increasing while the French Comparative Lit politics 19G8. The Governor aggressively on a number of X- cost has steadily decreased. In plans to lead the Michigan dele- posts and towns held by the ;£ many cases, such opportunities gation to the National conven- government. Although there •X cost only as much -- sometimes Is Topic of Dr. Joyaux tion in August, and to continue has been a routine, seasonal even less then ~ a semester at an striving for support of the issues Pathet Lao offensive, this year s S American institution. Dr. Georges Jules Joyaux, pro- 1945 as graduate assistant in he has outlined in his cam- action has given amuchsharp- •X The least expensive I.E.S.study fessor of French and comparative FVench, he became a full pro- paign. er edge to the Communist facilities are those in Vienna, literature at Michigan State Uni- fessor in 1960. Joyaux was vis- iting professor at the University of thrusts. Reportedly, the south- Princeton, New Jersey which cost $2,390 per year and versity, will speak in Winants Aud- ern town of Saravene has sus- Richard M. Nix on has drawn •X $1,625 per semester. The most itorium Thursday at 4 p.m. Arizona from 1964-65 and was tained mortar and small arms even with President Johnson in X- expensive program offered by the Dr. Joyaux, a specialist in 20th the director of the French program in MSU's Justin Morrill College fire, and it is felt that if the the latest test of election •X Institute is in Paris, where the fees century literature, will interpret Communists should seize Sara- strength, according to the Gal- •X are $2,785 per year and $1,750 Samuel Beckett's play "Waiting during 1966-67. Born in Nice, France, Dr. Joyaux was awarded vene, this would disrupt the del- lop Poll. The former Vice Pres- X; per semester. Included in these for Godot," according to Mrs. a Guggenheim Fellowship in icate arrangement by which ident trailed the President by a •X costs are room, five-day board, Beulah Maris, instructor in 1957. war in Laos has been kept in sizable margin in a survey con- tuition, language training and ori- French. He will answer questions at the end of the lecture, to which The multi-linquist has interests low key. ducted before the recent Viet- X; entation, transportation from in 20th century French literature American planes are bomb- Cong attacks on the cities of •X New York City, and at least one the public is invited. Dr. Joyaux once taught elemen- and civilization, comparative lit- ing Laos to support the La- South Vietnam. X; field trip. S MUCH LESS MONEY is need tary school in Menton, France. erature and teaching foreign lan- ••X ed to attend the regular Euro- After joining the MSU faculty in guages. The Best of Peanuts Reprinted by permission of the Chicago Tribune PEANUTS |oTm ttg U S >ot OM —AM Sr-rfwoingKii '•"'••# i«

^Continued from page 1 ) he had, or had not, met the 70 year by both the faculty and the ix'r cent requirement. Board of Trustees. vices, but attendance was not This policy did not prove either Student protests against chapel taken. feasible or effective, so in 1964 filled the spring months last year. In 1929 attendance was the chapel policy was changed to The main demonstration was the "required -- but not compulsory." "each student is encouraged to withholding of chapel slips by The 1929 catalog stated, "What attend services each morning and 40 students to show their discon- with a grand organ. . .and a Ls required to attend a minimum tent with the compulsory ap- vested choir of 60 voices. . .there of two of these services per week." proach to worship. naturally is no lack of zest in This policy is still in effect. THIS YEAR the chapel ques- chapel worship. Also, since thc THE CURRENT CHAPEL tion has filled the pages of the members of the general faculty controversy began in November anchor and the conversations of are all professing Christians," the of last year, when the Student much of the campus. lYesently statement continued, "there is no Senate passed a motion recom- the question is in the hands of a lack of variety in the leadership mending that the Religious Life special Blue Ribbon Committee from the pulpit." Committee review the entire ques- appointed by President Calvin A. ATTENDANCE AT daily de- tion of compulsory chapel. The VanderWerf. Reportedly, this votional services was required l ive RLC carried on its dialogue committee is currently favoring times per week until 1963. "These throughout the entire year and ul- making a recommendation to the services," according to the state- timately recommended that the Board of Trustees that the school ment of chapel policy in the 1956 student body be given the chance adopt a graduated system ofcom- catalog, "minister to the spiritual to elect a required lecture series pulsory chapel which would make growth of the student and serve instead of required chapel. This chapel attendance optional for up- as a unifying force among the recommendation was defeated last perclassmen. student body." Then, in 1963, CONCERT—Thc Shinglebolt ^rcek Philharmonic Society will pre- mainly as a result of an increas- sent a concert in Dimnent Memorial Chapel tonight at 9:30. Society ed student enrollment and a limit- members Mike Oonk, Ken Feit, A1 Wilson and Bob Lucas will play ed chapel capacity, morning cha- Symposium Schedule folk and early classical music as well as original compositions. A pel was required only 70 per cent special art exhibit will be on display in the Chapel lobby during ol the time. Kach student would Lessons from Summer Riots Charles Mitchener. Youth Op- intermission. Admission to the concert is $.75. sign a monthly card stating that March 8 at 7:30 p.m., Arcau- portunities Program. Grand ian Hall Rapids March 9 at 10 a.m., Physics- Civil Rights—Progress ol Stale- Math 1 18 mate? Robert Tindal, Detroit March 8 at 7:30 p.m.. Fra- NAACP ternal Hall Dr. Matthew Holden, Wa yne March 9 at 10 a.m.. Graves State University Hall Mrs. Mary Valentine, We5t loin a firm that'll Ihe Hon. John Conyers. Jr. Central Organization, Detroit Thomas .Johnson, Michigan Dr. James Jackson. Physician M uskegon Civil Rights Commission, De- troit John Martin, Michigan Com- mission on Crime, Grand Ra- give yon executive Negro Militancy: A Threat or pids a Gain? What's Happenen to the War March 8 at 7:30 p.m.. Zwem- on Poverty? er Hall March 9 at 10 a.m., Physics- March 9 at 10 a.m.. Phelps Math 1 1 7 responsibility your Hall Flla Sims. Franklin Hall Dr. Henry Holstege, Calvin Complex. Grand Rapids ("ollege Demitro Saenz. Cristo Rev Carl Smith, "Black People's Center, Lansing Free Store," Grand Rapids Wendell Verduin. Kent County Mervin Hill. "Black People's Community Action Program first day at worlL Free Store." Grand Rapids Douglas Glasser. O. K.O. Tu- Employment for Minority torial Assist.inee Center, fni- Groups verMiy ol Illinois. Chicago Fair Housing Legislation— March 8 at 7:30 p.m.. Dur- Bold Step or Too Little Too lee Hall Late? March 9 at 10 a.m.. Durfee March 8 .it 7:30 j).m.. Snow Hall Auditorium Geraldine Bledsoe. Michigan March 9 at 10 a.m.. Snow Employment Securities Com- Auditorium mission. Detroit Ihe Hon. Melvin DeStigter. George Branston. Lear Sieg- Michigan House of Repre- ler. Inc.. Grand Rapids sentatives. H udsonville Wm. Farrell. Grand Rapids Ihe Rev. Arthur Brazier. Chamber ol Commerce V\oodlawn Assoc. Chicago Kenneth Howard. Kastman John DePuyt, Michigan Real Kodak Corp., Rochester. N.Y. Kstate Assoc.. Grand R |)id; •HHHMBflHHHBHBBMMB Your Career's At Stake!... . Talk it over with the

Now, that's a pretty funny thing for a "I civilian firm to say. A boss? Right out of college? The first day? United States Air Force representative But the Air Force can make such offers. Box A, Dept. SCP-82 on campus As an officer in the world's largest Randolph Air Forcc Base, Texas 78148 technological organization you're a leader. Engineer. Scientist. Administrator. March 6th

Right where the Space Age break- NAME AGE throughs are happening. PLEASE PRINT Or how about the executive respon- Opportunities sibility of a test pilot clocking 2,062 mph COLLEGE GRADUATE DATE in a YF-12A jet? are available for: That could be you, too. MAJOR SUBJECT But you don't have to be a pilot in the PRODUCTION SUPERVISORS -PLANT ENGINEERS Air Force to move fast. With your college •ACCOUNTANTS ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS degree you zip into Officer Training INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS •DESIGN ENGINEERS CAREER INTERESTS School, spin out an officer, speed on •CHEMICAL ENGINEERS •PACKAGING ENGINEERS your way as an executive, in the fore- •CHEMISTS •SALESMEN front of modern science and technology. HOME ADDRESS Right on the ground. •MAINTENANCE SUPERVISORS The Air Force moves pretty fast. Locations at Chicago, Illinois; New Brunswick Think it over. A man's career can CITY STATE New Jersey and Sherman, Texas sometimes move pretty slow. An Equal Opportunity Employer

T March 1. 1968 Hope College anchor Page 7 Saga Service Operates 575 Will Enroll Koffee Kletz at Night Enrollment Situation Clarified

By Lynn Jones be french fries, if a deep fr^er can By Laura Mumford fall at an average rate of nine THE PROJECTED full-time en- anchor Reporter be acquired, and several flavors anchor Reporter per cent "This means," stated rollment of 1,900 might be exceed- of ice cream. Mr. Roger Rietberg, Director of ed if the other projected figures Along about 9 p.m. as you're According to Saga officials, the Hope College expects to enroll Admissions, "that we can expect are met and if more transfer stu- diligently doing your calculus, Kletz has been unable to secure approximately 575 freshmen next that 1,325 full-time students will dents enroll at Hope next fall. English, chemistry or German, additional help in order to extend year in order to bring the full- return in the fall." This figure Said Mr. Rietberg, "We are act- don't you get that gnawing sen- the hours of the Kletz operation. time college enrollment to 1,900 includes anticipated transfer stu- ively recruiting students from jun- sation in your stomach, or that Saga is presently interviewing stu- students. This large freshman dents. ior colleges. Hopefully we will dry, cottony feeling in your dents in an attempt to hire the class is necessitated by an average In addition to these returning get more than the average of mouth? necessary additional personnel. attrition rate of nine per cent students, a freshman class of 575 50 to 60 transfer students." IF YOU DO, there now is a The Kletz will also be used for LAST WEEK the anchor is necessary in order to reach the This "active recruitment of jun- change of pace from the stale more special events such as the observed an apparent discrepan- projected full-time enrollment of ior college students" could also candy bars and broken pop ma- post-game party Feb. 21 at which cy between the number of new stu- 1,900. The anchor reported last infer that fewer freshmen would chines; you can trot over to the President Calvin A. VanderWerf dents and the projected enrollment week, however, that a freshman have to enroll in order to meet Kletz for coffee, a coke and a provided free pop and potato for the College. class of 600 was desired. the projected full-time enrollment. little socializing to break up the chips, Mr. Boyer commented. The anchor stated that "unless ORIGINALLY, 600 freshmen study routine. The Kletz is now Saga is anxious to make the there are many more students were needed to reach the 1,900 PRESENTLY, ABOUT 630 open from 8 a.m. until 10:30 Kletz what the students want it transferring out of instead of into mark. Now second semester sta- freshmen have been accepted, and p.m. each week nigh L to be, and to satisfy-everyone, he Hope, the 1,900 and 600 figures tistics require a class of only 575. about 350 have replied with their Through student surveys. Saga said. Student suggestions are al- would seem to be in conflict." Since mid-year, 93 more students deposits. Last year there was a Food Service, which is in charge ways welcome, he added. Noting that "full-time enroll- enrolled, and the second semester 30 per cent rate of cancellation, of the Kletz, has endeavored to AT PRESENT, the Kletz aver- ment at mid-year totalled 1,688 attrition fell to less than one per li the rate is the same this year, find out exactly what the students ages about 150 customers per students, 270 of whom were sen- cent, as compared to six per cent then a total 750 freshmen must desire in the way of food and night. According to Mr. Boyer, iors," the anchor observed that last year. be accepted. This would require what their complaints about the these students come basically to "if the projected class of 600 were It is anticipated that of these the acceptance of another 120 Kletz are. The biggest complaint socialize and to get something to to be enrolled, it would seem to 575 full-time freshmen, 30 will students. was about the slow service during drink. With the proposed addi- project total full-time enrollment be students from the expanded The projected student enroll- the noon rush. This has been alle- tions, Mr. Boyer hopes the Kletz to 2,018 - well over the 1,900 summer trial program. Twenty ment of 1,900 students does not viated, according to Saga, and will provide a closer and more full-time student projection." other students will be participants include part-time students. Thus, one should be able to get food convenient place to catch a bite THIS STATEMENT is clari- in the "Upward Bound"bridging the total enrollment will be greater more quickly. Another gripe stu- to eat or quench a terrible thirst fied when the rate of attrition is program. than 1,900. dents had was about the quality in the warm spring months to considered. Past years indicate of the coffee. This, too, has been come. that students do not return in the changed, the new food service re- ports. At present, the Kletz is not pro ON SUNDAY, MARCH 3 ducing « a significant profit for GLCA Sociology Center Saga, according to officials of the Food Service. An advertising campaign has been initiated, and Uses 200 Hope Students THE STUDENT CHURCH business is expected to increase as more students become aware Approximately 200 Hope stu- lessen the research gap between of the new hours. dents are participating in a pro- the small college and the univer- ject sponsored by the Great Lakes sity. Most small schools do not WILL WORSHIP Saga is also considering open- Colleges Association's sonology have the facilities or resources ing the Kletz on Saturday morn- research center. necessary for meaningful faculty ings and Sunday evenings. Addi- Randomly chosen, the students research. The Center is an attempt tional staff must be hired before are being asked to complete ques- to increase research possibilities In Dimnent Chapel at 11:00 this step can take place, however, tionnaires dealing with their atti- by making available to member and administration approval is tudes toward Vietnam, civil rights, schools the data of a population still pending. the war on poverty, and other cur- sample of 2,000 (200 from each rent issues. The responses will be of the 10 participating schools.) Kletz 7:00 p. m. Grill hours presently are 1 1 a.m. added to those of faculty, stu- The idea for the center, develop- to 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 8:30 dents, and administrators from ed by the Wooster Sociology De- p.m. Hopefully, according to Mr. the participating GLCA schools, partment, was first presented to Preacher: Chaplain Hillegonds Boyer, the grill can be opened and will form the basis for the a meeting of GLCA sociologists until 10:30 at night. at Denison University a year ago. Behaviorial Research Center at Sermon: ''The Big Parade." SAGA WOULD also like to see Wooster College. The program is intended to be an extended menu, Mr. Boyer add- The Center, part of a three-year self-supporting through an initial ed. A few of theadded items would pilot program, is designed to fee from each participant. How- Spoken word by Rick Veenstra. ever, the GLCA is soliciting a $39,000 gift from the National Michigan Daily B ases Editorial Science Foundation. On Hope 'Panty Raid' Letter

The University of Michigan stu- of Hope students to the "rare and dent newspaper last week ran the bloodless. . .attempts at reform" full text of the letter sent by Hope seen at the University of Michigan. [Iiiternotional Centerj^cadettik JResearr.H"^ College Dean of Women Isla Van The editorial said that "the ma- Eenenaam to Hope coeds con- jor concerns of students are still 1492 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE cerning the recent panty raid. .beer, graduation, and BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02135 The letter appeared in an edi- eventually the quiet home in the torial entitled "Plaintive Message suburbs." It remarked that the From Hope." It was prefaced by University student is more seri- several paragraphs of a satirical ous than its small collegecounter- '1 lu- International Center tor Academic Research, alter exhaustive studies, is nature written by U of M student p art. a hie to give a complete mone\ bac k guarantee: 11 al ter following instruc tions Urban Lehner. The editorial offered comfort to the University by observing Liithlully yon have not increasecl your scholastic standings noticeably, your The "Michigan Daily" editorial "it is nice to know that our offi- mnnev will be complclcly refintdccl. comments which preceded the cial rhetoric occasionally focuses printed letter noted that "the Uni- on serious concerns." The letter versity is a dead place" when one from Dean Van Eenenaam was Special introductory offer expires May 1, 1968. compares the wild demonstrations then reprinted. Price thereafter $3.95 per course.

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nship With Victory Over Kazoo

By Pete Struck The Hornets led at 13:45 by Brady, who drove the base line anchor Reporter one, and after Hope managed to and tied the score with just 28 stay even for three more minutes, seconds remaining. The Hope College Flying Dutch- pulled away to a 49-44 lead. Fine In his scoring effort, Brady was men clinched their ninth MIAA individual effort by Brady charged with an offensive foul, basketball title in the last 12 years enabled the Dutchmen to keep and, that being his fifth, had to by nipping Kalamazoo in over- pace with Kazoo until the five- leave the game. Trenary hit a free time Saturday night. minute mark, but Hope was still throw and then, with just 13 The final score was Hope, down 53-49 when Kalamazoo be- seconds left, Barry Schreiber lied and Kalamazoo 60, but the gan to freeze the ball. In order the game at 58 all with a charily Dutchmen's route to victory and to force Kazoo to give up the loss. Kazoo failed to score in the the MIAA crown was hardly a sim- ball, guards Rypma and Utzinger remaining seconds and the game ple one. were lorced to foul. went into overtime. IF ONE REMEMBERS a rainy Craig Vossekuil was the first to SCHREIBER SENT the Dutch- Saturday night in January, he will be fouled and he converted both men ahead in the overtime period recall that this same Hornet squad his charity tosses. I'tzinger then with a free throw and Gary Rypma humiliated the Dutchmen 11AV1 .it took the ball do wncourt a nd drove followed with a lay-up to give Kalamazoo. The Hornets have through the Hornet defense to cut Hope a 61-58 advantage. Ralph what is perhaps one of the best the Kazoo lead to two. Wellington ol the Hornets came delenses in the league and a bi- downcourt and hit a 20-footer to IT WAS ANOTHER basket by zarre talent for shutting off the pull his team to within one, with I'tzinger at the one-minute mark high scoring ol Hope superstar 1:20 left to play. Rypma brought that kept the Dutch alive. Kazoo \_ Floyd Brady. the ball across the time line and i took the ball downcourt again The first ten minutes of the game threw the ball away while trying and il became apparent that the showed little scoring by either to pass to I'tzinger, giving the Hornets would be quite content team, and this was to be the trend Hornets possession with 54 se- to freeze the ball tor the remain- throughout the game. Hope did conds remaining. ing seconds. manage to build a seven point KalanuLZoo failed to score, and Hope countered this "defensive" lead behind the deadly shooting after Rypma added another point tactic by fouling Bryan Vossekuil, ol 1 reshman Randy Adolphs, and to the margin of victory, I'tzinger a freshman who scored 2 6 points led the Hornets by a score ol 30-2 1 knocked away a last effort pass. against Hope in the two teams' .it the two-minute mark. Then The buzzer sounded, and Coach first encounter. Bryan failed to things began to happen. Russ DeVette was being hoisted convert the charity toss and Hope The Hornet defense really tight- to theshoulders of his elated MIAA rebounded and passed the ball to ened up and lorced the Dutchmen champions. to make mistakes. Twoquiek lield goals by sophomore Tim Wil- liams and a driving lay-up by guard Bob Trenary sparked the Kalamazoo offense and cut the Hoik.' lead to three at intermission.

THE HORNET OFFENSE came on strong again as_ the second hall began. Twoquick baskets by Williams and forward Gene Xussbaum tied the score at -'JI all. Dave Utzinger hit a free throw and seconds later a ten-foot jumper to build the Dutch lead to three again, but the Hornets came back with fine ollensive work, feed- ing the ball to Xussbaum a nd Tre- LAY UP—"The brady-guard goes drive and score" as Hone win^ nary, enabling them to score easy MIAA title. lay-ups. Grapplers Fifth Adrian Wins MIAA Ton rney

Adrian College's powerful Individual standouts for the freshman lost a tough 1-0 deci- wrestling team won six individual Dutchmen were freshman Carl sion to Tharp, who went on to weight-class titles en route to the Xadolsky. junior Kick Vanden- pin Adrian's Tim Acklin in the MIAA championship last Satur- berg. and sophomore George Av- title match. day afternoon. ery. Xadolsky lost to Adrians Other championship round re- The Bulldog grapplers amassed Steve Fuquban, 8-2. in the title Milts: Adrian's 123-pounder Stu 92 points in the league meet held match to take Hope's only second- Redpath decisioned Albion's.lohn in Kalamazoo's Tread way Gym. place medal. Vandenberg, at 1 bl) Cameron. 14-2; Olivet's 130- pounds, and Avery, at KiT, each pound entry. Jim McCloughan Deiending champion Kalama- placed third in their respective beat Albion's Steve Middaugh, JUMP SHOT—Freshman Barry Schreiber jumps for two points in zoo placed second this time In- weight classes. 5-2; at 137, Adrian's Mike Smith Hope's losing rally against Wheaton College Wednesday night. scoring ()4 points, farbehind Adri- Hope heavyweight Keith Van shut out Kazoo's Frank Vaskelis. an. Olivet wasthird-Mrifh48points, lubergen. despite finishing 4-0; Ivan McKenna of Kazoo Albion fourth with 42, and Hope fourth, gave the eventual winner, stopped Olivet's Ed Kellogg, 4-1 trailed with 23. Calvin and Alma Steve Tharp, his toughest com- in the 145 class. Hope Drops Last Home did not field teams. petition of the day. The Hope Adrian's 160-pounder Bill Wut- ke won5-2 over Kazoo's Bob Cur- tis; at 1 ()7, Albion's Bob Cossey Game to Crusader Five pinned Olivet's Brad Jefferson; Adrian's 1 77-pound entry, Howie 1 he Wheaton College Crusaders ish the evening with 38 points. World Sports Thorkilson decisioned Kazoo's came into the Civic Center Wed- Jauchen paced Wheaton's hot first Tom Lukomski, 7-2; and at 191 nesday night and handed Hope's half with 24 points. PRO BASKETBALL BASEBALL g pounds, Adrian's Steve Rulewic/. Flying Dutchmen a sound defeat Wheaton's captain, Jeff Jons- in their final non-league game. hi NBA action. Wilt Cham- 36-year old Mickey Mantle S won a 5-2 decision over Olivet wold, played his usual steady X; berlain scored his 25,()()()th ca- signed his 18th Xew York X; football star Karl Wilson. The orange and blue-clad Illi- game and added 14 points to the reer point last Frid ay night Yankee contract Tuesday in S nois team shot at a red-hot 55 winning cause. Arlyn Westergren, S leading Philadelphia to Fort Lauderdale. The contract per cent clip from the floor as who led the Crusaders to a 102- a 136-117 win over the De- called for a salary ol $ 100.000. X Jayvee B -Ball they ran up an insurmountable 98 overtime win over Illinois Wes- troit Pistons. The 7-foot, 2-inch Mantle, after signing, predicted x halftime lead of 62-44. Hope, un- leyan Saturday by scoring 40 v! center is easily the top scorer that he would hit 30 homers Tern a Romps able to catch up, lost the game by points, was held to : .st seven. g: in the history of the XBA, with for the Yanks in 1968. ^ a final score of 99-90. It hardly made a dill ere nee, ;]:• the second-leading scorer. Bob Oddsmakers in Los Vegas S To Easy Wins SENIOR FLOYD BRADY con- though, as Jauchen, Dykstra, and Petitt, far behind with 20,880 have installed the St. Louis S tinued his drive tgward 2,()()() Pierucki picked up the slack. Coach Glenn Van Wieren's X; points. Cardinals and the Detroit Tig- X Using a tough zone defense, freshmen cagers upped their sea- career points by scoring 31 points Philadelphia, by winning lb ers as the pre-season favorites x W heaton never trailed in the game. son's w on-lost record to 10 6 Wed- in his last appearance at the Hol- lust 19 games, is well in their respective penant races. Ihe closest the Dutch got was nesday night with an easy 99-48 land Civic Center. 1 heChicagoan g; ahead of the second-place Bos- 17-15 with fifteen minutes left in COLLEGE BASKETBALL triumph over Grace Bible College now has a total of 1,97 6 points •g ton Celtics in the NBA's East- the first half)From that point on, It was announced that XCAA 5 of Grand Rapids. in his fabulous 4-year career at g ern division. The St. Louis Hope. it was all Wheaton, as the visitors regionals will be held at the S In Wednesday's "game, ' Hope Hawks have a comfortable lead ran off nine straight points to up following locations: Far East led by just ten at halftime, 4 2-32. Gary Rypma, playing in his in the Western division. their lead to 26-15 at 11:43. Alter at Raleigh, X.C.; Mid-East at S But the Dutchmen outscored Grace final home game also, got off to trading baskets for the next four g HOCKEY Lexington, Ky.; Mid-West at S Bible, 47-16, in the second half a rather slow start, pumped in minutes, the two clubs remained The Montreal Canadians, Wichita, Ka.; Far-West at Al- g to wrap up the verdict. Pacing eight baskets in the second half 11 points apart at 36-25. From g despite a 6-1 loss to the New buquerque, X.M. The region- :$ Hope was 6-1 forward Ric Scott. to wind up with 22 markers. that point until the close of the York Rangers, still held a 7- a Is will be held on March 15 X Scott lired in 25points, w hile Bob- V\ heaton, a fine team which has point advantage over second- by Blanton tallied 20. all five starters averaging in dou- half, Wheaton outscored Hope, and 16. The NCAA finals will 26-19. gj place Chicago as the NHL be held at Los Angeles on Last Saturday night, the frosh ble figures, got good scoring from The defeat dropped the Dutch- swung into its final five weeks March. 23. >:• demolished the Kalamazoo fresh- its two guards. Sophomore Tom men's won-lost record to 16-6, v: of play. Right now, it would The Kentucky Wildcats, with v men, 80-54, to avenge January's Dykstra scored 2 1 points while with one game remaining on the vi appear that Montreal, Chicago, three sophomores in the start- X; 69-66 loss at Treadw ay Gym. junior John Pierucki added 17, schedule. Wheaton now has a 15- x.: New York and Boston will be ing lineup, clinched the South- :£ Scott again was the leading scor- 15 of them in the opening twenty 10 mark, il their loss to American vj the four Eastern division teams eastern Conference title Mon- er with 21 points, getting help minutes. Athletes in Action, a Cam pus Cru- $; to obtain Stanley Cup play- day night by beating Auburn, X from center Darryl Hilbrands, BUT THE BIG gun for Coach sade team consistingofformer Big off berths. 84-53. X; who scored 17. Also hitting in Lee Ptund was 6-5 senior center Ten stars Larry Tregoning and double figures were Blanton with John Jauchen, who combined 17 Ken Gustafson, among others, is 15 and Lon Eriks with 11. baskets with 4 free throws to fin- included.

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