10-29-1965
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v-
t
anc I OPE COLLEGE
hor IOLLANO, MICHIGAN
78th ANNIVERSARY - 7 Hope College anchor October 29, 196")
Mom & Dad's Weekend Offer's Open Classrooms
Monday in Civic Center
Back Porch Majori ty to Sing Mom and Dad ' s Day is being
expanded into Mom and Dad ' s
Weekend this yea r . F r iday of the
Nov. 5 and 6 weekend all c lasses
will be open to visi tors and ex t r a
cha i r s will be m a d e ava i lab le .
An in format ion table in Van
Raa l t e lobby will di rect p a r e n t s
to c l a s s r o o m s F r i d a y and to facul-ty off ices S a t u r d a y morn ing , when
pa ren t s m a y m e e t wi th t e a c h e r s individually f r o m 9:30 a . m . to 11
a . m . F r e e coffee will be se rved
to pa ren t s in Phys ics -Math lobby,
the Music Building, Van R a a l t e
Hall, G r a v e s Hall and the Science Building.
E n t e r t a i n m e n t planned for the
weekend inc ludes the choral d r a m a , " C i r c l e Beyond F e a r . " which will be p resen ted at 7:30 p .m . in t h e Lit t le T h e a t e r . Last y e a r Hope College s tuden t s
toured su r round ing cit ies with this
d r a m a and the cast will reuni te
F r i d a y for the special p e r f o r m -
ance. Two one-act p lays , "A Very
Cold Nigh t " and "S t . Fel ix and
His P o t a t o e s " will also be pre-sented.
The annua l var ie ty show, fea-
tur ing Hope ta lent , will be pre-
sented twice Sa tu rday night in
Snow Audi to r ium; once a t 7:30
p .m . and aga in at 9 p .m . J e n n i f e r McGi lvray will be mi s t r e s s of cere-monies at t he SCSC - sponsored
event , and admiss ion of $.50 per
person will be cha rged at the door. Following the p r e c e d e n t of e a r
l ier yea r s , p a r e n t s will be al lowed
f r e e admiss ion to S a t u r d a y ' s foot-
ball g a m e at 2 p.m. in Riverv iew
P a r k 'w i th special sect ions set a p a r t for p a r e n t s of the p laye r s
and m u m corsages for m o t h e r s of p l aye r s >.
The Mom and Dad of the week end will be n a m e d at half t ime dur-
ing the g a m e . The couple will s t ay
a t the Alumni House and will be
t rea ted to the Mom and Dad ' s Banquet Sa tu rday night f r o m 5-7 p .m.
The P r e s i d e n t ' s Recept ion will be held f rom 4 until 6 p .m. The re will also be open house in all d o r m s f r o m 2 until 6 p .m . and a
buffet d i n n e r at Phe lps f r o m 5 until 7 p .m .
Cor sages and t ickets for the
S a t u r d a y evening mea l c a n be
o rdered be fo re the weekend . Sign
up shee t s will be posted in the
do rms . P a r e n t s can also e a t in
Phelps S a t u r d a y noon f rom 11 a . m . to 1 p .m.
Severa l s t u d e n t s a r e working
for the event u n d e r c o - c h a i r m e n Ruth M e y e r and Bob Dahl . They
a r e Helen and Louise Ver Hoek.
in c h a r g e of co r r e spondence ; M a r y Van Pe rn i s , handl ing pub-
J ic i ty ; Roy Anchor and Ellen Oos-
t e rhaven , set t ing up the pa ren t -
facul ty mee t ings ; J a n Thompson
co-ord ina t ing ' the Slater m e a l s ;
Dennis J o n e s working on the chor-
al d r a m a and P e g W e l m e r s or-ganizing the var ie ty show.
The Student Sena t e p r e s e n t s The
Back Porch Majo r i t y as p a r t of
the Student E n t e r t a i n m e n t Ser ies .
The g roup will a p p e a r this Monday
Night . Nov. 1 at 7:30 in the Civic Center .
The M a j o r i t y combines h u m o r
and a var ied mus ica l r epe r to i r e o( b l u e g r a s s . r a g t i m e , coun t ry and wes t e rn , and bal lad music .
All s tuden t s will be admi t t ed by
concer t t ickets , ob ta inab le in Van Raa l t e until Monday 5 p .m. , and
at the Civic Cente r Monday nignt . S tudents with Student En te r t a in -
ment Ser ies t ickets a r e asked to pick up concer t t ickets in Van
Raa l t e by showing their s t a m p e d ac t iv i ty c a r d s .
G e n e r a l admis s ion t ickets , fo r tiiose wi thout Student En te r t a in -ment Ser ies t icke ts , will be avail-
able in Van R a a l t e and at the Civic Cente r for $1.50.
m •:
THE BACK PORCH MAJORITY
Next in Entertainment Series
VanderWerf Heads Centennial Series: Science as a Human Enterprise' "Sc ience as a Human E n t e : -
p n s e . " an a d d r e s s by P r e s i d e n t
Calvin A. VanderWerf will in i t ia te the Centennia l Lec tu re Se r i e s in
Educa t ion next Tuesday at 10:30 a . m . in D imnen t Chapel
According to Dr . Rober t De
Haan . c h a i r m a n of the educa t ion
DR. CALVIN A. VANDERWERF
d e p a r t m e n t , the se r i e s of l ec tu res for the 1965-1966 y e a r has " T e a c h -
e r s : a g e n t s of R e n e w a l " a s its
t h e m e . College facu l ty and admin-
istrat ion personnel will de l iver the l e c tu r e s t h roughou t the s e r i e s on topics re la t ing to leach .ng . t h r i s -
t i an i ty and the l iberal a r t s .
Dr. V a n d e r W e r f ' s Tuesday lec-
tu r e will include a por t ra i t of the
h a l l m a r k s of sc ience . P r e v i e w i n g
his speech , Dr. VanderWerf sa id .
We will cons ider the qua l i t i es
that c h a r a c t e r i z e imag ina t i ve and
c r e a t i v e sc ient is ts in their highest
m o m e n t s , in o r d e r to c a p t u r e a
feel ing of the scient i f ic sp i r i t . " Calling sc ience a c r e a t i v e a r t . Dr .
VanderWerf sa id . " T h e exh i la ra -
tion of the scient is t at the m o m e n t of d iscovery is the s a m e as that
of a c o m p o s e r f inishing his sym-phony . "
A 1937 g r a d u a t e of Hope College. Dr. VanderWerf received his Ph .D.
in c h e m i s t r y f rom Ohio S t a t e Uni-
vers i ty in 1941. Before becoming
the e igh th pres iden t of Hope in
1963, he w a s the c h a i r m a n of the
c h e m i s t r y d e p a r t m e n t at the Uni-
vers i ty of Kansas , a position he
rea l ized in 1960. The 47-year-old
Hope p res iden t has se rved a s chair -
m a n of the division of educa t ion
of the A m e r i c a n Chemical Society,
and a s a visi t ing scient is t for the
Nat ional Science Founda t ion . In
.'953 he lec tured on te levis ion 's
Cont inenta l Class room in chemis-t iy.
Short ly be fo re leav ing the Uni-vers i ty of K a n s a s . Dr. VanderWerf
was given an unsolicited $.50,000
g r a n t f r o m the P e t r o l e u m Re-
s e a r c h Fund of the A m e r i c a n
Chemica l Society in recognit ion of
bas ic r e s e a r c h in that field. P re -
vious r e sea r ch deal t with petro-
leum. reac t ion m e c h a n i s m s and t ranqui l iz ing medic ina l s .
Facnlty Recital
Slated Sunday
Hope facul ty m e m b e r s will pre-
sent var ied works for the i r fall
reci tal Sunday a f t e rnoon at 4 p .m.
in Snow Audi tor ium.
The Hope Str ing Quar t e t , com-
posed of violinists M o r r e t t e Rider
and J e a n Jonoski . violist Wanda
Nigh Rider and cellist Deanna Mit-
chell. will p e r f o r m M o z a r P s
"S t r ing Quar t e t K 589 in B f l a t "
King of P r u s s i a ' in four move-ments .
P ian i s t J a n t i n a Hol leman and
cellist Deanna Mitchell will then
p e r f o r m Bee thoven ' s " S o n a t a , "
Op. 69 in A for cello and piano.
The Hope Woodwind Quintet ,
composed of f lut ist Dwain Mitchell ,
oboist Gail W a r n a a r . c la r ine t i s t
Ar thur Hills, hornis t Rober t Cecil
and bassoonis t Leroy Mar t i n , clos-es the p r o g r a m wi th two se lec t ions by J o s e Se reb r i e r . " P e q u e n a Mus-ica" <1955» and " S c h e r z o . " Op. 4h (19501.
No 1 uition Hike,' Board of Trustees Decides The annua l fall mee t ing of the
Hope College Board of T r u s t e e s
took p lace on October 21 and 22.
A decision to hold the year ly tui-
tion fee at $850 for the a c a d e m i c
y e a r 1966-1967 was the m a j o r out-come.
The Board , for the second con-
secut ive y e a r , dec la red . " W e feel
tha t any inc rease in tuition would
s ignif icant ly a n d subs tan t ia l ly
change the c h a r a c t e r of the col-
lege as we have known it for a
c e n t u r y . " The decision w a s m a d e
in view of the fact tha t present ly Hope College s tudents a r e pay ing
86.3% of the cost of educat ion at
Hope, while the nat ionwide aver-
age is 26'( and the cost born by
the combined Re fo rmed Church
schools is 75%. In addit ion, a s the tuition r i ses the p e r c e n t a g e of Re-
formed Church s tudents enrol led
is dec reas ing . To c ross the $1000
m a r k would in the opinion of the
C o m m i t t e e of Higher Educa t ion in-ev i tab ly pr ice our college out of
the r each of the a v e r a g e R e f o r m e d Church fami ly .
In view of the decision to re ta in the tuition at $850 the problem
a rose of how we will offset the ris-ing cost of educat ion. The budget
of Hope College includes m o r t g a g e
debts , o p e r a t i n g fees , expans ion
fees and facul ty s a l a r i e s . The
Genera l Synod of the R e f o r m e d
Church p a y s T / of this cost . " T h e
r e m a i n d e r of the money c o m e s
f r o m a lumni , f r i ends , bus iness and
the c o m m u n i t y . " s ta ted P re s iden t
VanderWer f . The Standing Com-
mi t t ee on Higher Educa t ion a sked that " e v e r y m e a n s be sought to e n l a r g e the fund by m e m o r i a l g i f t s ,
individual d o n o r s. individual
chu rches and all o thers who might
be i n t e r e s t e d . " P re s iden t Vander-Werf added that " a t e a m of con-
su l tan t s f r o m the A m e r i c a n Asso-ciation of Colleges, headed by Dr.
Deane W. Malott , w a s r e c o m m e n d -
ed to m a k e a s tudy of the needs ,
func t ions and p rospec t s of Hope.
Centra l and Nor thwes t e rn col leges,
a s was r eques ted at the Genera l Sena te Meet ing last J u n e . "
Secondly, the Board s ta ted tha t
" t h e R e f o r m e d Church in Amer-
ica is proud of the excel lence of
her ins t i tu t ions of h igher l ea rn ing
and in tends to r e m a i n with t hem
at all cos ts in the work they a r e
do ing . " It f u r t h e r s t a t ed tha t " t h e
f u t u r e of the R e f o r m e d Church is u r t h i n k a b l e without her co l l eges . "
At p resen t 1707 s tudents a r e en-rolled at Hope. This is the l a rges t
en ro l lmen t in the history of the
col lege. "If we a r e to cont inue p r o g r e s s . " said P res iden t Vander-
Werf . " w e must expand to m e e t
the needs of the s t u d e n t s . " The
Board a n s w e r e d this s t a t e m e n t by app rov ing a cont inuous develop-
•ment p r o g r a m and approv ing the
col lege ' s aopl ica t ion for an Edu-
cat ion Fac i l i t i e s g r a n t for a
new t each ing building. The Board
au thor ized the re tent ion of a m a -
jor a r c h i t e c t u r a l f i rm to s tudy land
usage and cons ide r the building
r e q u i r e m e n t s pointed out in the
s tudies . P res iden t VanderWerf ad-
ded tha t , " f i r s t a m o n g the new
buildings will be the Student L n i o n . "
Re la t ing to Hope 's off ice and
r eco rds s y s t e m s w a s the recom-menda t ion of a s tudy of m o r e ef-
ficient m a c h i n e sys t ems appropr i -
a te to s ave g r a d i n g and reg i s t r a -tion t i m e for f acu l ty .
Before closing, the Board slated
a m e e t i n g of the Execu t ive Com-
mi t tee in D e c e m b e r to cons ider
Hope College g rowth , facu l ty sal-a r ies for next y e a r a n d the pre l im-inarv r epo r t of a r ch i t e c t s fo r t h e c a m p u s .
4
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P a ^ e 2 Hope College anchor October 29, 1965
Ensemble to Perform Nov. 11
C L U B & CAMPUS FASHIONS
By CHIP TOLBERT, ESQUIRE'S Fashion Editor
INDIAN SUMMER b e g i n s t o f a d e , a n d a u t u m n a r r i v e s i n a b l a z e
o f c o l o r . C h a n c e s a r e , t h o s e c h i l l y a f t e r n o o n s w i l l f i n d y o u r u m -
m a g i n g t h r o u g h l a s t y e a r ' s s w e a t e r c o l l e c t i o n , h o p i n g t h e m o t h
b a l l s d i d t h e i r w o r k . L e t ' s b r i n g y o u r F a l l 'G5 s w e a t e r w a r d r o b e
u p t o d a t e w i t h t h e t w o n e w k n i t w e a r t r e n d s f o r c a m p u s .
THE COMPETITION STRIPE, a d a p t e d f r o m
t h e s t r i p e s t h a t i d e n t i f y t e a m p l a y e r s in c o m -
p e t i t i v e s p o r t s , c o n t r i b u t e s a r e f r e s h i n g , c o l o r -
f u l look in c a m p u s f a s h i o n . T h e p l a c e m e n t of
t h e s t r i p e s i s a l l - i m p o r t a n t — a n d t h e c h o i c e i s
a l m o s t l i m i t l e s s . T h e y c a n b e c h e s t - h i g h h o r i -
z o n t a l s c l e a r a c r o s s t h e b o d y a n d s l e e v e , o r
b r o a d v e r t i c a l s d o w n o n e s i d e . D o u b l e a n d t r i p l e
s e t s o f n a r r o w s t r i p e s c i r c l e t h e s l e e v e , o r s t r i p e
i t s l e n g t h f r o m s h o u l d e r t o c u f f .
CONTRAST IS THE THING . a n d t h e b o l d e r ,
t h e b e t t e r . L o o k f o r r e d - h o t c o m b i n a t i o n s l i k e
r e d w i t h b l a c k a n d g o l d s t r i p e s ; o r b l u e w i t h
r e d a n d w h i t e ; in b r o w n w i t h g r e e n a n d g o l d ,
o r b l a c k w i t h r e d a n d w h i t e . A n y t h i n g g o e s f o r
t h e s w e a t e r b e n e a t h t h e s t r i p e . P u l l o v e r s o r
c a r d i g a n s , c r e w - n e c k s , V - n e c k s a n d t u r t l e n e c k s ,
a l l c o m p e t e f o r t h e C o m p e t i t i o n S t r i p e . T h e y ' l l
b e f o u n d in f i a t a n d b u l k y k n i t s , m o h a i r s a n d
r i b b e d o r c a b l e k n i t s , a s w e l l .
P r o M u s i c a Plays A n c i e n t M u s i c
SCOTS in c a n n y p l a i d s p r e s e n t a n -
o t h e r t o p c h o i c e in c a m p u s s w e a t e r s . T h e y
i n c l u d e t h e w h o l e p a n o r a m a o f p l a i d s . . . t r a d i -
t i o n a l t a r t a n o r c l a n p l a i d s , s m a r t a r g y l e d i a -
m o n d s w i t h c r i s s - c r o s s o v e r m a r k i n g s , a n d n o v e l
d i a m o n d p a t t e r n s t h a t e x t e n d t h e a r g y l e i n n e w
d i r e c t i o n s .
THE LOOK OF LUXURY i s u n d e r s c o r e d in a
b r o a d r a n g e o f f l a t t e r i n g t e x t u r e a n d s u r -
f a c e v a r i a t i o n s . L o o k f o r c l a s s i c S h e t l a n d s i n
b r u s h e d t e x t u r e s , m o h a i r s , a n d fiber W e n d s of
al l k i n d s . S t y l i n g d e t a i l s a g a i n a r e w i d e o p e n t o
s a t i s f y i n d i v i d u a l t a s t e s . S t i l l , h i g h c r e w n e c k s
a n d t u r t l e n e c k s , b o t h t h e t u r n o v e r t y p e a n d t h e
" m o c k " t u r t l e , w i l l c o p t o p h o n o r s .
THE GOLDEN TOUCH i n l u s t r o u s g o l d c r o s s w e a v e s f r e q u e n t l y
a p p e a r s in b a c k g r o u n d o r in a c c e n t t o n e s . T r a d i t i o n a l h e a t h e r
m i x t u r e s a n d n a t u r a l t a n s a n d b r o w n s o f f e r a s m a r t , c o n s e r v a t i v e
a p p e a r a n c e . T h e m o r e i n t e n s e c o l o r s — g r e e n s , r e d s , a n d b l u e s — a r e
o f t e n f r o s t e d w i t h w h i t e f o r a n e w a n d u n u s u a l l o o k . B u t b o l d o r
b l e n d e d , m u t e d o r b r i g h t . G r e a t S c o t s a r e d e f i n i t e c a m p u s s w i n g e r s
f o r ' 65 .
THE GAMUT OF GOLD s p a n s e v e r y i m a g i n a b l e s h a d e in k n i t t e d
o r w o v e n s p o r t s h i r t s . F r o m l i g h t a n d b r i g h t t o t a w n y t o n e s ,
t o u c h e d w i t h o r a n g e , a n d on t o c a m e l c o l o r s , t h e i m p a c t of T h e
G o l d e n T o u c h w i l l b e a p p a r e n t t h r o u g h o u t y o u r c a s u a l w e a r w a r d -
r o b e . M e l l o w g o l d e n t o n e s a d d f r e s h s p a r k l e in i n t e r w o v e n a c c e n t s
t o e n r i c h t h e p o p u l a r p l a i d s a n d s t r o n g s t r i p e s i n s h i r t s , s w e a t e r s ,
v e s t s . . . e v e n in r o b e s a n d p a j a m a s . I t b l e n d s p e r f e c t l y w i t h o t h e r
c o l o r s t o c r e a t e u n u s u a l h e a t h e r s a n d m i x t u r e s s h o t w i t h g o l d , a n d
a l s o p r o v i d e s a v i v i d a c c e n t w i t h s o l i d s h a d e s . I n T h e G o l d e n T o u c h ,
f a s h i o n h a s d i s c o v e r e d a r e a l g o l d - m i n e w i t h v i r t u a l l y u n l i m i t e d
a p p e a l o n t h e y j a t i o n ' s c a m p u s e s .
FOR A PARTING SHOT, a w o r d a b o u t h o s i e r y . I n t h e s p o r t s
c a t e g o r y , y o u ' l l find a w i d e v a r i e t y o f t e x t u r e d k n i t s , o f t e n i n
h e a t h e r s h a d e s . B r u s h e d t e x t u r e s a n d r i b t r e a t m e n t s c o n t i n u e a s
c a m p u s f a v o r i t e s . F o r m o r e f o r m a l o c c a s i o n s , l o o k f o r t h e p r a c t i c a l
a n d f a s h i o n a b l e o v e r t h e c a l f s o c k . I t ' s a s u r e w a y t o k e e p t h o s e
" h a i r y l e g s " o u t o f t h e p i c t u r e .
NEXT MONTH f w h i l e t h o s e n i p p y a f t e r n o o n s a r e g e t t i n g n i p p i e r ,
w e ' l l s u r v e y t h e o u t w e a r s c e n e . S t a d i u m c o a t s , B i k e c o a t s , s k i v v e a r ,
k n i c k e r s a n d r a i n w e a r w i l l a l l c o m e u n d e r t h e f a s h i o n e y e . S e e
y o u t h e n .
© 1965 by E S Q U I R E , I n c .
M a n y mid w e s t e r n m u s i c love r s
will h a v e the i r f i r s t c h a n c e to h e a r t h e N e w York P r o M u s i c a , " o n e of the l e a d i n g c h a m b e r un i t s
on t h e s c e n e " ( J a y H a r r i s o n , New
York H e r a l d T r i b u n e ) on T u e s d a y . Nov. 11. at 8:15 p . m . in the Dim-
nent M e m o r i a l C h a p e l on the Hope College c a m p u s . In t he w o r d s of
H o w a r d T a u b m a n of the New York
T i m e s , mus i c love r s will f ind it to be " a r a r e a n d r e w a r d i n g ex
p e r i e n c e . " The New York P r o M u s i c a ,
f o u n d e d by its m u s i c a l d i r e c t o r .
Noah G r e e n b e r g in 1952, h a s per-
f o r m e d t h r o u g h o u t the c o u n t r y , c o n c e n t r a t i n g on t h e m u s i c a l m a s -
t e r p i e c e s of the R e n a i s s a n c e a n d p r e - R e n a i s s a n c e e r a s , e n c o m p a s s
ing t h e mus i c p e r f o r m e d d u r i n g
t h e B a r o q u e pe r iod at t he c o u r t s of F r a n c e , Spa in and G e r m a n y ,
and the lusty songs and m a d r i g a l s
of E l i z a b e t h a n d a y s . T h e e n s e m b l e h a s m a d e t w o
tours of E u r o p e . In 1960. a u g m e n t -
ed to a c o m p a n y of 37. P r o Mus ica
p r e s e n t e d p e r f o r m a n c e s of t he
" P l a y of D a n i e l " in L o n d o n ' s
W e s t m i n s t e r Abbey and in t h e old-
est c h u r c h of P a r i s , St. G e r m a i n
des P r e s . T h e s e w e r e t he f i rs t sh w i n g s of t he m e d i e v a l m u s i c
d r a m a ou t s ide of the a c c l a i m e d New York r e v i v a l s t h a t P r o Mus-
ica h a d p r e s e n t e d d u r i n g the las t
s v e r a l C h r i s t m a s s e a s o n s . In 1963
the e n s e m b l e n l aved the f e a t u r e d
c i rcui t in H o l l a n d . Spa in , I s r a e l and Y u g o s l a v i a .
C o m p o s e d of e l e v e n m e m b e r s ,
t he N e w York P r o Musica i n c l u d e s
in its vocal g r o u p two s o p r a n o s .
a c o u n t e r t e n o r , a t e n o r , a b a r i t o n e a n d a b a s s , a n d f o u r i n s t r u m e n t a l -is ts who h a v e m a s t e r e d such r a r e
i n s t r u m e n t s a s t h e viola da g a m ba . the f a m i l y of f i v e r e c o r d e r s ,
t he k r u m m h o r n s , p o r t a t i v e o r g a n
a n d the h a r p s i c h o r d . T h e P r o Musica h a s b e e n a c
c l a i m e d for i ts p e r f o r m a n c e s at N e w Y o r k ' s Town Ha l l . The Met-
ropo l i t an M u s e u m of Art , in t he F r i c k Col lect ion S e r i e s and a t t he Clo i s te r s , w h e r e it a t t r a c t e d na-
t i o n w i d e a t t e n t i o n for its p roduc-t i ons of " T h e Plav of D a n i e l " a n d
" T h e P l ay of H e r o d . " It h a s a l so p r e s e n t e d u n i q u e and
e n t e r t a i n i n g p r o g r a m s at such m u s i c c e n t e r s a s W a s h i n g t o n ' s Li-
b r a r y of C o n g r e s s a n d the F o l g e r S h a p e s p e a r e L i b r a r y , a n d h a s
b e e n a f e a t u r e of A m e r i c a ' s m a j o r
m u s i c f e s t i v a l s at V a n c o u v e r . Ra-v in ia . A s p e n . T a n g l e w o o d , P r ince -
ton U n i v e r s i t y , Y a l e a n d S t r a t f o r d -
C o n n e c t i c u t . a s wel l a s t h e S t r a t -f o r d - O n t a r i o S h a k e s p e a r e F e s t i v a l .
T h e N e w York P r o M u s i c a ' s
w o r k is now a v a i l a b l e exc lus ive ly
t h r o u g h D e c c a Gold L a b e l r e c o r d s .
T h e g r o u p h a s a l so b e e n a c t i v e mi t e lev is ion with a p p e a r a n c e s on
N B C ' s O m n i b u s a n d t h e Today
Show.
T h e m e m b e r s of t h e New York
P r o Mus ica a r e : N o a h G r e e n b e r g ,
m u s i c a l d i r e c t o r ; La N o u e Daven-po r t . r e c o r d e r p l a y e r ; E d w a r d
S m i t h , h a r p s i c h o r d i s t - o r g a n i s t ;
A r t h u r B u r r o w s , b a r i t o n e ; E a r n e s t
M u r p h y , c o u n t e r t e n o r ; Shelly Gru-
skin w h o p l a y s t h e f lu te , r e c o r d -
e r s and k r u m m h o r n s ; E l i z a b e t h
H u m e s , s o p r a n o ; She i l a Schon-b r u n , s o p r a n o ; J u d i t h D a v i d o f f ,
viol ; Ray DeVoll . t e n o r ; and Bray-
ton Lewis , b a s s .
Frosh. Soph Women Train
For Nykerk Cup Competition P l a n s for th i s y e a r ' s N y k e r k
con te s t be tween f r e s h m e n and
s o p h o m o r e w o m e n on Nov. 14 a r e
p r o g r e s s i n g with r e c o r d t u r n o u t s
for t he f rosh and so^h d r a m a t i c
p roduc t i ons .
The r e h e a r s a l s fo r both t he p lay
and the s ing s t a r t e d M o n d a y , Oct .
25. E a c h c lass ' r e h e a r s a l s h a v e
been well a t t e n d e d and much
s p i r i t h a s been s h o w n by both
Meet \ our Friends
Bring 1 our Date
To the
POCKET BILLIARDS
BILLIARDS - SNOOKER
SNACKS - SOFT DRINKS
i m
Br ing Your Date and Ment ion T h i i ad and Play at
H A L F PRICE
River Ave at 1 1th St. Above Reliable
Use Rear Entrance
FREE PARKING
THE GLATZ ETEN House Restaurant
Luncheons — Dinners (No A l c o h o l i c B e v e r a q e t S e r v e d — Ju i t G o o d F o o d )
14 Varied Noon Day Specials Everyday
At $1.00 or Less — You Can't M i n
Y o u r H o s t s : J O A N & H A R R Y G L A FZ
( F o r m « r O w n e r t a n d O p e r a t o r s ol ' GLATZ R E S T A U R A N T "
Famfly Style Dinners Served
Take Out Service Available on A l l Menu Items
W e Welcome Small Private Parties
c l a s s e s , r e p o r t e d L o u i s e V o o r h o r s t .
th is y e a r ' s M i s t r e s s of C e r e m o n i e s
fo r N y k e r k .
T h e s o p h o m o r e o r a t o r is K a r e n
Swe t s c o a c h e d by T o m m i e Leen-
hou t s . T h e s o p h o m o r e p l a y , t i t led
" S t . G e o r g e and t h e D r a g o n . " is
d i r e c t e d and w r i t t e n by J e n n i f e r
M c G i l v r a y .
The c a s t i nc ludes : Carol Buch-
a n n a n a s Gillian St. G e o r g e . Do-
lo res F loyd a s D r a g o n , Chr i s Nage l
a.-. M a r i e St. G e o r g e , M a r g a r e t
Lene l a s Aun te . M a r y Beth Horn-
b a c h e r a s T i t a n i a L a n d o w s k a . and
1(> t r e e s . The t r e e s i nc lude
the fo l lowing: A s h ^ K a t h y Boeze-
m a n ; B i rch . K a t h y Olson; Thorny
Bush, M e r r y l S c h a e f f e r ; B e r r y
Bush . J o Ann D u n n i c a n ; Ginko.
K a r e n K e k e m e i e r ; H icko ry , J a n e
Riso ; K u m q u a t , Sue A l b e r s ; Lin-
den . C a r o l R o w e ; Maple , Glor ia
R e n k e s ; Oak . S a n d y T o m l i n s o n ;
S y c a m o r e , Dot t ie M a n u e l ; and
Willow, J o a n V e d d e r . Je f f McGil-
v r a y e x p r e s s e d t h e fee l ing of the
s o p h o m o r e p l a y e r s in s ay ing ,
" W e ' r e all e x c i t e d . "
The f r e s h m a n o r a t o r is Ann
S l a u g h t e r c o a c h e d by Lois H iem-
s t r a . " T h e P r o j e c t , " by L o r r a i n e
Bag ley is t he f r e s h m a n p lay which
is d i r e c t e d by B a r b a r a Brunson
and h e r f r e s h m a n a s s i s t a n t Lyn P o p p i n k .
The c h a r a c t e r s a r e s ix e a r t h -
w o r m s , p l ayed by Bonnie Thoben
a s Myr t l e , L inda Nelson a s Del ia .
Robin H u y b r e g s t e a s Luci l le .
Sha ron Z a w o d s k y a s G e r t r u d e ,
Shi r ley L a w r e n c e a s Be l inda and
M a r i a P i z a r r o a s I m o g e n e . Com-
m e n t e d d i r e c t o r B r u n s o n . " I t is
a ve ry exc i t ing p lay full of fun
and f a n t a s y and I ' m on ly s o r r y t h a t
e a c h of the 37 g i r l s who t r ied out
could not h a v e h a d a p a r t . I w a s
real ly f loored w h e n so m a n y g i r l s
t r i ed out and s h o w e d such in ter-e s t . "
The s o p h o m o r e s , u n d e r t h ^ di-
rec t ion of L inda Tiezzi . will be
s ing ing " C h i m Chim C h e r - e e "
f r o m M a r y P o p p i n s and the f r e sh -
m e n . d i r e c t e d by C h e r y l D e f e n d o r f . will s ing " I n t o t h e N i g h t . "
J o a n W o g n u m a n d Ca ro l F o l k e r t
a r e g e n e r a l c h a i r m e n of t h e sopho-
m o r e s a n d f r e s h m e n , r e spec t ive ly .
P a m V a n d e r m a r is t he s o p h o m o r e
c l a s s c h a i r m a n a n d B a r b a r a S m a l -
l egan is c h a i r m a n of t he f r e s h m a n c lass .
THE SIZZLER G r i l l e d L e a n T e n d e r R i b - E y e Stea lc S I . 4 5
( I n c l u d e s ) Hot roll & b u t t e r , c h o i c e ol p o t a t o e s , c r i s p ( jreen
l e t t u c e s a l a d , a n d c o f f e e o r t e a .
OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY
The Glatz Eten House 138 Holland1"' ''Across The Bridge'' — Telephone EX 6-8266
rfea/ . A /ft/vn
BOONE'S
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October 29, 1965 Hope College anchor Pne s
Student Senate Discusses Chapel,
Assemblies, Group Co-ordination In its f irst meet ing of the y e a r ,
the Student Sena te dea l t with an admin i s t r a t i on proposal concern-ing chapel and the a s sembly pro-g r a m ; commit tee repor t s and gen-era l organiza t ion .
T h e adminis t ra t ion submi t ted to the Sena te a suggest ion tha t Tues-day chapel s tuden t s be allowed to a t t end the assembly p r o g r a m in p lace of c h a p e l . The opposition to t h e proposal was that t he Sena te was not in a position to b a r g a i n with the spi r i tua l va lues of t h e ca mpus .
F r o m the S e n a t e floor c a m e the suggest ion that the a s s e m b l y pro-g r a m be m a d e compulsory , how ever , it was felt t ha t too many even t s -on c a m p u s w e r e a l r eady
i m u l s o r y . The Sena te resolved that an *UMnpt be m a d e to pub-licize the assembly p r o g r a m m o r e in t h e fu tu re .
Ruth Mcyi r p resen ted a repor t on Mom ami Dad ' s Weekend in which she announced that this yea r p a r e n t s will be allowed to a t tend c lasses on Fr iday and have in-fo rma l conferences with facul ty m e m b e r s on Sa tu rday morning.
T h e SCSC report was given by J im Boelkins who expla ined that the Student Union has not been
Poet Hechl Will Recite
At Hope Nov. 2 Anthony Hecht . poet in res idence
at Ba rd College, will be a guest on Hope's c a m p u s for a genera l a s sembly as well as question and
answer sessions next Tuesday . Heading his poems and lectur ing. Mr. Hecht will speak in Graves at 3 p .m. and he will be in Phelps
to cha t informally at 7 p .m. A na t ive New Yorker who grad-
uated f rom Kenyon College, Mr . Hecht has wri t ten a book, "A Summoning of Stones ," which w a s published by Macmil lan in 1954. Many addit ional poems h a v e since been published in magaz ines such as the Meridian anthology, "New-
Poets of England and A m e r i c a , " and the Penguin anthology, "Con-
t e m p o r a r y Amer ican P o e t r y . "
Studeirf Concert
Next Thursday A student rec i ta l next T h u r s d a y
at 7 p .m. in Dimnent Memor ia l Chapel will f ea tu re four s tudent
a r t i s t s singing and playing piano
and organ . P ian i s t Char l ine Leong, a senior
f r o m Wailuku, Hawaii, will p lay "Voi les" f rom Claude Debussy ' s
" P r e l u d e s , " No. 2. Soprano Susan Jalving, a sopho-
more f rom Kalamazoo, Mich, will sing Phil ip Rosse te r ' s " W h a t Then is Love but Mourn ing?" and
T h o m a s Ford ' s "Now I See Thy Looks Were Fe igned . " She is a
s tudent of Miss Morrison and will be accompanied by B a r b a r a Kol-
len. P ian i s t Scott Cutting, a sopho-
more f r o m P a w Paw, Mich., will p e r f o r m . 13 scenes f rom Robert S c h u m a n n ' s "K inde r szenen" (Scenes of Childhood' Op. 15. He is a s tudent of Roger Davis .
Organis t Car l Van Noard, a
junior f rom Ja m e s tow n , Mich., will p e r f o r m Marcel Dupres ' "Cor-tege et L i t an ie , " Opus 19, No. 2. He is also a s tudent of Roger Davis .
MEENGS & DEBOER Standard Oil Products
iiTi STANDARD
16th and River
EX 2 - 3 3 5 3
open because of lack of funds and d responsible person to run the union full t i m e . Boelkins also re ported that fo lders expla in ing SC-SC a r e being sent to f r i ends of the college. T h e var ie ty show dur-Mom and Dad ' s Weekend will be used to ra i se more money for the new union.
Suggest ions w e r e also m a d e to sell SCSC but tons to the F r e s h m e n and to open the Kletz in the eve-nings. The problem with opening the Kletz is t h e lack of exper ienc-ed help to o p e r a t e the ven tu re .
Mari lyn Hoffman repor ted that the Student Life Commi t t ee w a s s tudying proposed changes in the smoking regula t ions for women and asked tha t sena to rs ga the r opinions on t he se proposals .
In the P r e s i d e n t ' s Repor t . Wes Michaelson s t ressed that a co-ordinat ion-cooperat ion policy will be ca r r i ed on between the Sena te and other c a m p u s o rgan iza t ions and s tated that unofficial represen-tat ion would be given to the cot-t ages until t he const i tut ion could be changed to allow for more per m a n e n t s ta tus .
Before the meet ing was adjourn-ed. Sue Sonneveldt and Rich Val-
a n t a s i s w e r e elected recording s e c r e t a r y and t r e a s u r e r respec-t ively .
Sena te p res iden t Michaelson closed the mee t ing by ask ing that all s ena to r s repor t back to their const i tuents .
Diane DeWitt Seriously llnrt In Car Crash
Diane DeWitt, a senior f rom Spring Lake. Mich., was seriously in ju red in an auto accident last Sa tu rday short ly before noon, when the wind blew her ca r out of control and into the meta l guard-
rai l on Route 31. She was on her way to the dent is t in Muskegon.
As of publicat ion t ime on Wed-nesday . 'Miss DeWitt was still un-conscious and Hackley Hospital l epo r t s that Miss DeWitt suf fered
a skull f r a c t u r e , broken r ibs and
in ternal injuries . Miss DeWitt. who is presently
s tudent teaching in Grand Haven, will g r a d u a t e this J a n u a r y .
Bloody Good Challenge Student Body Pres ident
Albion College Albion. Michigan
Dear Student Body Pres iden t ,
Last y e a r both Hope and Albion par t ic ipa ted in t h j blood donation campa ign for the Red Cross. Of course, this worthy cause
dese rves our "who le -hea r t ed" support .
This y e a r , the Hope s tudent body chal lenges the Albion s tudent body- to compete against us in a blood donation drive. We a r e confident that a g r e a t e r pe rcen tage of Hope s tudents and facul ty can be encouraged to donate blood than f rom Albion.
W*; propose that the competi t ion should be on a pe r cen t age bas is f rom three ca tegor ies , namely , m a l e s tudents , f e m a l e stu-dents and facul ty. The pe rcen tage of the total m e m b e r s h i p donat-ing blood f rom each ca tegory will be ma tched and the school which h a s the g rea tes t pe rcen tage f rom two ' o r all t h r e e ' ca tegor ies will be dec la red the winner , receiving specia l recognit ion f rom the Red Cross.
So Hope chal lenges Albion to a blood donation drive. We t rus t you will mee t this chal lenge, thus serving a worthy cause. And because of ou»' last football g a m e with you. we ' r e ready for blood.
Heart i ly yours .
Wes Michaelson
Student Senate Pres iden t . Hope College
MODEL LAUNDRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING
Daily Stop at All Dorms
97 last 8th Street Phone EX 2 - 3 6 1 5
TRINITY REFORMED CHURCH Welcomes Yon
Morning Service at 9 :30 A.M.
Evening Service at 7 :00 P.M.
-••r &
College-age Sunday School class conducted by Rev. Van
Oastenburg immediately fo l lowing morning service.
College Youth Fellowship
Following 7 P.M. service
Rev. Gordon Van Oostenburg, Pastor
Rev. Wilbur Daniels, Associate Pastor
20th and Central
Scott Carries Hope Out of Financial Crisis
By Joyce Pollitt During f inancial ly crit ical
y e a r s a quiet, s teady life em-erged at Hope College under the gu idance of Dr. Char les Scott. He descr ibed this college as he viewed it then; '''We have no sightly hal ls ; no a rch i tec tu ra l ad junc t s , with their cost of
thousands and tens of thousands -of ttqllars; but we h a v e just
those things which God has
brought to us. as hidden jewels, and which will grow up under His shaping hand into an edu-cat ional p a l a c e . "
Rev. Giles H. Mandevil le of Ru tgers and New Brunswick
b e c a m e provisional Pres iden t in absen t i a in 1878; vice presi-
dent Scott a s sumed president-ial dut ies on the c a m p u s . Dr. Mandevi l le r ema ined in the
east as a f inancial agent , col-lecting funds for Hope College.
In 1895 an honora ry doctor of law degree f rom Hope College was bestowed upon Dr. Mande-ville. whose se rv ices had been g ' v e n for ten y e a r s without sa l a ry .
u r . Scott b e c a m e the second pres ident of Hope College in 1885. se rv ing faithfully, until
1892. His devotion to this col-lege w a s es tabl ished when he
b e c a m e professor of chemis t ry and the na tu ra l sciences . He taught a wide r a n g e of subjec t m a t t e r , including history, phil-
osophy. m a t h e m a t i c s , constitu-tional law and as t ronomy. He
was also a l ec tu re r in theology. His p r i m e purpose w a s
s t r eng then ing the scholast ic value of the school. He achieved this by br inging in t eache r s of high qual i ty fand by broaden-
ing the curr ic i i lum. A scientist
DR. CHARLES SCOTT
of no smal l a t t a inment , his scient i f ic spiri t has left i ts m a r k on the college to this day .
He had won highest honors at Ru tge r s and received his Doctor of Divinity degree f r o m
•vv York Univers i ty the s a m e
yea r he was pres iuent of the Genera l Synod of t he Re fo rmed Church of Amer i ca .
His f r i ends knew him as
" t h e soul of integri ty, gent le and kindly, a lways helpful on
the c a m p u s and beyond i t . " " H e has smoothed the pa th
of m a n y a widow and o r p h a n . "
said Rev. J . W. Beards lee . "doing it all so quietly, so reg-ular ly . so out of the real full-ness and vigor of his own spirit-
ual life that we have ha rd ly noticed i t ."
Twenty-seven y e a r s of his life given to Hope College. Dr Scott quietly s t rengthened th is
institution which we now at tend.
H O P E C H U R C H
invites you to worship
DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL
of Hope College
Service at 11:00 A.M.
Rev. Walchenbach, Preaching
meet
us
at the
ambassador
s h o p . . . today
A
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Page 4 H t f e Ca l l eg t Oc tobe r 2 t , M l
Leap of Faith
1 Review of the News Edited by Jack Schrier
The n e w s focus th is week
t u r n s once a g a i n t o w a r d s La t in
A m e r i c a . In the Domin ican Re-
public, San to Domingo w a s oc-
cupied a g a i n by an in ter •
A m e r i c a f o r c e ; this t i m e a t
P r e s i d e n t Ga rc i a -Godoy ' s re-
quest . I t w a s m a d e in an at-t e m p t to end a w a v e of v io lence
in Santo Domingo which h a s
resu l ted in the dea th of nine
civil ians. T h e violence s t a r t e d
with the f a t a l shooting of a con-
s e r v a t i v e pol i t ical l e a d e r Oct .
16.
ID England P r i m e Minis te r
Wilson left London by jet for
t a lks in Rhodes i a , He is at-
t emp t ing to p r e v e n t R h o d e s i a ' s
Ian Smi th f r o m uni la te ra l ly
dec la r ing independence f r o m
Bri t ian . P r i m e Minis te r Smi th
did not bo the r to h a v e the
cour tesy to m e e t Mr . Wilson a t
the a i rpor t . However , he did
condescend to m e e t Wilson at
i a recept ion on Monday .
Indonesia still boils with pro-
! b lems . S u k a r n o is P r e s i d e n t but
| doesn ' t s e e m to be wielding the
E power. T h e A r m y , s t rongly anti-
\ c o m m u n i s t , led by G e n e r a l Su-
E ha r to , is p r e t t y m u c h runn ing
i things. Still , a pu rge of Indo-
e nes ian C o m m u n i s t s f r o m gov-
E e r n m e n t a g e n c i e s and cab ine t
| min i s t r i e s r ece ived the suppor t
| of S u k a r n o when h e issued an
| o r d e r b a c k i n g the a r m y ' s re-
1 mova l of al l e l e m e n t s involved
| in the u n s u c c e s s f u l coup of
| S e p t e m b e r 30. Suka rno ' s de fense
1 min i s t e r w a n t s h im to t a k e e v e n E m o r e s t r i ngen t an t i - communis t
= m e a s u r e s .
i
anchor editorial
God or Mammon?
Gemini 6 was canceled when = -
the usua l ly re l iab le Agena
rocke t fai led to go into the de-
s i r ed orbi t . Since the ob jec t of
Gemin i 6 w a s to h a v e h a d the a s t r o n a u t s rendezvous with the m
Agena rocke t and all p l ans had =
been m a d e for connec t ing up on |
a p lanned orbi t , off ic ia ls im- e media te ly cance led the f l ight of
the a s t r o n a u t s . | The endless trials of the Ku |
Klux Klan went on in Washing-
ton this week. So did the end-
less hiding behind the 5th |
A m e n d m e n t . However , a few |
f a c t s b e c a m e qui te ev ident . One | w a s t h a t a g r e a t m a j o r i t y of | -
Klan off ic ial m e m b e r s w e r e rel- |
a t ively unsuccess fu l a t any |
o ther job. Another is t h a t they | a r e m a k i n g a dandy prof i t out e of Klan m e m b e r s h i p . An exam- E pie w a s quoted w h e r e a m a n E m a d e $2,766 in 1963. joined the |
Klan, b e c a m e g rand d ragon of |
Nor th Caro l ina and m a d e $8,923. |
In Vietnam the news h a s been e the a t t e m p t e d relief of a Special |
F o r c e s c a m p 210 m i l e s nor th- |
e a s t of Saigon. A relief fo rce |
w a s a m b u s h e d by the VC on its |
way but a counter a m b u s h e d r o v e off the a t t a c k e r s and |
wiped out 250 guer i l las . T h e a r - e r iva l of these forces , added to | those of the Special F o r c e s |
p lu s the South V i e t n a m e s e |
R a n g e r s d ropped on the c a m p =
las t T h u r s d a y , a p p e a r s to h a v e | caused the VC o f fens ive aga ins t =
the c a m p to h a v e col lapsed. In sports, the schools of the =
day a r e N e b r a s k a , A r k a n s a s e and Mich igan State , the t h r ee |
top r a n k e d footbal l t e a m s in ^
the coun t ry . =
LA S T T n i l R S b A V at t h e S u i d e n t Sen-a le ' s hrst m e e t i n g o l t h e year, a n A d m i n -
i s t r a t i o n p r o p o s a l was p r e s e n t e d lor the
S e n a t e ' s a p p r o v a l . 1 h e p r o p o s a l s l a t e d t h a t
T u e s d a y c h a p e l s t u d e n t s be a l l o w e d t o a t t e n d
t h e T u e s d a y m o r n i n g a s s e m b l y in p l a c e ol
c h a p e l tha i m o r n i n g . T h e S e n a t e t o o k n o
a c t i o n o t h e i t h a n t o r e c o m m e n d that t h e
a s s e m b l i e s he b e t t e r p u b l i n / e d in t h e l u t u r e .
1 h is p r o p o s a l s t e m s I r o m ' a c o n c e r n that
s t u d e n t s c o n s i d e r t h i r d h o u r o n T u e s d a y a
t ree h o u r to s t u d y o r d r i n k co t i ee or c a t c h
a n a p — a n y t h i n g b u t an h o u r t o a t t e n d a
l e c t u r e b ) a n o u t s i d e s p e a k e r or a c o n c e r t
by a c a m p u s or a n o u t s i d e m u s i c i a n . 1 he
c o n c e r n is j u s t i f i e d , l o r a t t e n d a n c e at t h e
T u e s d a y a s s e m b l y h a s b e e n m i s e r a b l e , w i t h
t h e e x c e p t i o n o l t h e o p e n i n g c o n v o c a t i o n at
w h i c h Dr. J o h n K i l l i n g e r s p o k e .
T h e b l a m e lor t h e p o o r a t t e n d a n c e c a n
b e p l a c e d in d i t l e r e n i areas — t h e a s s e m b l i e s
c o m m i t t e e lor n o t p u b l i c i z i n g m a n y o l t h e
a s s e m b l i e s a d e q u a t e l y or s t u d e n t s tor the ir
a p a t h y a n d lack o l in teres t . It m i g h t e v e n
b e p o i n t e d o u t tha t t h e s p e a k e r s w h o h a v e
c o m e h a v e n o t b e e n , in s o m e cases , o l t h e
q u a i i t y that s t u d e n t s c a n e x p e c t . W e rea l ize ,
o l ( o u r s c , tha t t h e a s s e m b l i e s c o m m i t t e e w o r k s
w i t h i n a l i n a n c i a l s t ra i t - jacket , w i t h a very
l i m i t e d b u d g e t , a n d as a re su l t are u n a b l e
t o b r i n g t o p s p e a k e r s to t h e c a m p u s e a c h
w e e k .
HO W T V L R , D K S P I T E A L L T H E P R O B -LF.MS i n v o l v e d , we react v i o l e n t l y t o
a n y m o v e to m a k e a T u e s d a y a s s e m b l y
at w h i c h a n i ce , h u m a n i s t i c i e c t u r e is d e l i v -
e r e d , e q u i v a l e n t t o a c h a p e l w o r s h i p serv ice .
T h e S e n a t e s e e m e d t o t h i n k s o too . S e n a t o r s
a p p a r e n t l y ie l t t h a t t h e y w e r e in n o p o s i t i o n
t o n e g o t i a t e t h e c o l l e g e ' s s p i r i t u a l v a l u e s . Is
t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ?
W e h o p e n o t . A T u e s d a y a s s e m b l y a n d
a c h a p e l w o r s h i p s e r v i c e , w h i l e o n t h e s u r f a c e
r e m a r k a b l y l ike at t i m e s are n o t t h e s a m e .
W e a r e n o t a d v o c a t i n g h e r e a s e p a r a t i o n of
the s p i r i t u a l l i i e I r o m t h e a c a d e m i c or cul -
tural I l i e ol t h e c a m p u s , a n d w e s u b s c r i b e t o
t h e r e l e v a n c y o l t h e C h r i s t i a n t a i t h t o a l l
a s p e c t s of l i t e .
H u t there c o m e s a p o i n t w h e n h u m a n i s m
a n d C h r i s t ' s h u m a n i t y b e c o m e d a n g e r o u s l y
con f u s e d , a n d t h e C h r i s t i a n r e s p o n s i b i l i t y for
the d e v e l o p m e n t o l o n e ' s m i n d a n d s h e e r
i n t e l l e c t u a l s t i m u l a t i o n b e c o m e e q u a t e d . C a l l
ii a f a i t h p e r s p e c t i v e o r w h a t y o u w i l l , b u t
s o m e h o w , just b e c a u s e s t u d e n t s arc n o t at-
t e n d i n g l e c t u r e s w h i c h are w o r t h w h i l e , t h e r e
is l i t t l e r e a s o n t o sacr i f i ce a n i m p o r t a n t sp ir i t -
ual v a l u e - w o r s h i p of G o d — l o r for c o n v e n -
ient e x p e d i e n c y .
TH I S W K t K A R t P R S K N T A T l V E of t h e F o r d F o u n d a t i o n was o n c a m p u s t o talk
w i t h s t u d e n t s , f a c u l t y a n d a d m i n i s t r a t -
ors a b o u t H o p e C o l l e g e . In t a l k i n g w i t h
h i m w e were p r a i s i n g s o m e ol t h e m o v e s
A h u h h a v e b e e n m a d e to b r i n g H o p e Co l -
lege o u t oi a l e g a l i s t i c D a r k A g e s of sorts .
H e s a i d to us, a n d h i s t h o u g h t is w o r t h y of
r o n s i d e r a t i o n , tha t p e r h a p s H o p e , in a n e f for t not t o be a B i b l e C o l l e g e , w i l l l o s e its u n -
i q u e n e s s a n d f e r v o r of its f o u n d i n g f a t h e r s
a n d o f the o r i g i n a l C h r i s t i a n s .
P e r h a p s t h e r e is s o m e o t h e r j u s t i f i c a t i o n
for t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n p r o p o s a l t h a t w e d o not see . H o w e v e r , if it is a n a t t e m p t t o
s i m p l y get m o r e s t u d e n t s at t h e a s s e m b l i e s , w e
are s h o c k e d at its e x p e d i e n c y a n d its i m p l i -
c a t i o n s . For v hat it i n d i c a t e s is a p o s s i b l e
w i l l i n g n e s s t o sacr i f i ce s p i r i t u a l v a l u e s w h i c h
have g u i d e d a n d d i r e c t e d H o p e . M a y b e T u e s -
day a s s e m M i o a n d c h a p e l a r e n ' t as i m p o r t a n t
as s o m e o t h e r t h i n g s , b u t w e d e p l o r e t h e
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ' s p r o p o s a l . W e o n l y ask;
" S p e r a in D e o ? "
Dear Editor Readers Speak Out
O o • e o
anchor OLLANO, MKMWAM
A few weeks ago t h e r e was a n a n n o u n c e m e n t m a d e t h a t the stu-dent union would be open. It w a s not . due to r e a s o n s " b e y o n d our c o n t r o l . " I would like to ask jus t how much can get out of con t ro l? Our union has been open for a to-tal of an hour and a half all yea r .
T h e night th ings got "beyond o u r con t ro l " I not iced tha t D u r f e e w a s still in tact and the l ights w e r e on. which m e a n t tha t t h e e lectr ic-ity had not been knocked out . Th is l e aves only a need for a r eco rd p l a y e r , r eco rds and people . T h e f i r s t two a re ve ry eas i ly ob ta ined . J u s t a sk anyone for t h e m . Having o b t a i n e d the f irs t two. I am s u r e the l a t t e r would f ind their w a y . W h o e v e r is head of t h e union h a s obvious ly shown tha t he is total ly i n c a p a b l e of s u c h respons ib i l i ty a n d should def in i te ly be rep laced .
T h e r e is no r eason why the union should not be open both weekend n igh t s . It would be one th ing if w e w e r e located in an a r e a w h e r e t h e r e we re th ings to do. I ha rd ly cons ider " B i l l i e " and " P e y t o n P l a c e " a w a y to spend a week-e n d . In a town a s cu l tu ra l ly and socia l ly dep r ived as Holland it is to ta l nonsense not to h a v e a union o p e n e v e r y w e e k e n d .
I a m not ta lk ing abou t s o m e new l a rge SCSC bui ld ing . I a m ta lk ing about one s m a l l room which is e m p t y . I h e a r a few stu-d e n t s say ing , " T h e union is so c rowded and h o t . " Well i t ' s hot b e c a u s e t h e r e a r e peonle in it.
" S h e p h e r d ' s " in New York c h a r g e s
$4.00 a head to le t peop le in a hot and crowded room to d a n c e to r e c o r d s . They h a d l ines of u p to 1000 people wa i t ing to get in .
Published weekly of the college year except vacation, holiday and exam-
ination periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland,
Mich., under the authority of the Student Senate Publications Board.
Entered as second class matter at the post office of Holland. Michigan,
4942J. at the special rate of postage provided for in SecUon 1103 of Act of
Congress, Oct. S. 1917. and authorized Oct. 19, 1917.
Subscription. J 5 per year. Printed-. Iccland Record, Iceland, Michigan.
T h e school c l a i m s locus pa r -en t ! ove r the s t u d e n t s . With 'h is
c o m e s responsibi l i t ies . The re fo r e
' fee l this r id i cu lous s i tuat ion sh™ild be t aken c a r e of immedi -
te ly .
Jerry Dykstra
To the Student Body, F a c u l t y and Staff of Hope Col lege:
Dear F r i e n d s , Hope ' s H o m e c o m i n g l a s t week
was spark l ing , e n t e r t a i n i n g and
thoroughly e n j o y a b l e . This is the h a p p y v e r d i c t 1 h e a r
on eve ry h a n d — f r o m a l u m n i , par -
en t s and f r i e n d s . E v e r y o n e s e e m e d to be hav ing
a g r a n d t ime — to be en joy ing t h e weekend to t h e hilt.
F r o m t h e open ing whis t le of the
socce r g a m e unti l the f ina l cu r few a f t e r the big p a r t y S a t u r d a y night , e a c h event w a s superb ly p lanned and m a s t e r f u l l y e x e c u t e d .
So m a n y of you pa r t i c ipa t ed t h a t
it would tax o u r s e c r e t a r i a l staff unduly to convey my t h a n k s to each of you in a p e r s o n a l le t te r , but 1 do want you to know t h a t you have my d e e p apprec ia t ion— and that of al l the h u n d r e d s of r e tu rn ing a l u m n i .
Snecial t h a n k s a re c e r t a i n l v d u e to Homecoming C h a i r m a n T o m m i e
Leenhou t s and Dave V a n d e r W e l . and to Mrs. M a r i a n S t r v k e r and Robe r t P r in s of the a l u m n i off ice . P r o f e s s o r Cec i l ' s F r i d a y night Kle tz Concer t w a s a s u p e r b new idea . T h e c h a r m i n g s t a g e c o a c h , imag ina t ive ly des igned bv C a r y Carson and p r o d u c e d bv t h e f rosh-m a n class , p rov ided t h e b a c k d r o p for the most w i n s o m e in t roduc t ion of a queen and he r cou r t that I
h a v e eve r s een at anv H o m e c o m -ing a n v w h e r e . And who can e v e r
fo ree t t h e A r c a d i a n F o u r ! Mv s ince re th^nk*; to all of vou
whose snir i t . e n t h u s i a s m and co-o n e r a t i v e e f fo r t m a d e tb i^ onp of the f ines t H o m e c o m i n g s in H o n e ' s
o n e - h u n d r e d - v e a r h i s t o r v . I a m proud to be r s s o H a t e d wi th you.
Cordia l ly ,
C. A. VanderWer f
We a r e al l one in t h e SCA as
I unde r s t and i t . and a s one of t h e
one, I would h u m b l y confess our
associat ion h a s m o r e than once
t e m p t e d me to court rather ag-
nostic t endenc ies . P e r h a p s m y
sense of the s a c r e d is too easi ly
o f fended , but might i ly of fended it
is.
N u m b e r one th is y e a r w a s the
b l a t a n t l y loud sign outs ide the
medi ta t ion chape l d e m a n d i n g AB-
SOLUTE S I L E N C E . Is this to
k e e p the worldly s m o k e r s f r o m in-
t rud ing upon the v a c u u m which
s e e m s to be a requis i te for p r iva t e
p r a y e r ? And I s e e m to reca l l t ha t " g o into y o u r closet and p r a y "
m e a n t " d o not be os ten ta t ious
about the f ac t t ha t you a r e pray-
ing , " not " u s e the c loset because
it 's n ice and quiet in t h e r e . "
N u m b e r two was one of the
"devo t i ons" which a r e p laced on
the dining room tab les " t o be used
a g a i n . " This p a r t i c u l a r one w a s
very sweet and quite un-Chris t ian.
"A fa i thful soul a l w a y s p r o s p e r s
no m a t t e r w h a t m a y c o m e . . .
"When skies a r e d a r k and d r e a r y
and bad luck m a r s the view,
" I t ' s fa i th a lone tha t helps us on
to w h e r e the skies a r e blue.
" R e a l fa i th is t ru ly power , wi th
it we can ' t go w r o n g . "
And while I ' m on th ings senti-
m e n t a l , t he re is the newes t decora -
tion g r ac ing the window of the SCA
off ice (a window, by the way , al-
w a y s kept c a r e fu l l y cu r t a ined—a
symbol of the holy of holies pe r -
h a p s ? ) . Th is decora t ion ecs ta t ica l ly
d e c l a r e s " I love h i m ! " to which
p h r a s e one ' s f i r s t r eac t ion is "Oh ,
how nice! Are you p i n n e d ? "
I a m led to the conclusion t h a t
the mind behind the s ign is e i the r
a disciple of St. B e r n a r d or a high-
ly impres s ionab le s w e e t young
th ing .
T o the m i n d behind the sign m a y
I s ay I a m glad you love h im. Bu t
w h a t about the r e s t of us out h e r e
beyond t h a t c e r t a i n t y . Some of u s
could not c a r e less who you love.
Some of us a r e j ea lous?
J e n n i f e r E . M e G i l v r a y
(Con t inued on P a g e 5)
![Page 5: 10-29-1965](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022042604/568c4d871a28ab4916a44dbc/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
—
October 29. 1%5 Hope College anchor Page 5
Faculty Focus
Letters to the Editor
Editor's Note—Dr. Norman J. Norton is presently assistant pro-fessor of biology at Hope College. Dr. Norton received his B.S. from Southern Illinois University in 1958, his M.S. from the University of Minnesota in 1960 and his F'h.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1963. Dr. Norton joined the Hope faculty last year.
By Dr. Norman Norton
Dur ing the a c a d e m i c y e a r 1964-
65 the biology d e p a r t m e n t of Hope
Col lege es tab l i shed a l a b o r a t o r y of palynology-. Pa lynology is a sub-
division of biology concerned with
the s tudy of pollen g ra ins and
spores . Spores , except those of
fungi, a re one-celled r ep roduc t i ve
bodies that give r i se to the game-
tophyte genera t ion of p lan ts . They
a r e produced by non-f lowering
m e m b e r s of the plant k ingdom, such as m o s s e s and fe rns . '
Pol len g ra ins a r e m i c r o g a m e t n -
phytes and a r e produced by g y m no-
s p e r m s 'p ines , e tc . ) and angio-
s p e r m s ( f lower ing p lan ts . ) Palyno-
logists use the t e r m p a l y n o m o r p h
to r e f e r to both pollen g r a i n s and
spores . Both pollen g r a i n s and
s p o r e s a r e involved in the repro-
duct ive life cycles of p lants . Pol-
len g r a i n s in p a r t i c u l a r a r e pro-
duced by the thousands in the m a l e
r ep roduc t i ve s t r u c t u r e s of f lower-
ing p l a n t s - a n d a r e t r a n s f e r r e d to
the f e m a l e r ep roduc t ive s t r u c t u r e s
by var ious m e a n s , t he m o s t com-
mon of which is the wind. Dur ing
pollenat ion. the t r a n s f e r of the
ma le r ep roduc t ive s t r u c t u r e , t he
m a j o r i t y of these pollen g r a i n s will
e s c a p e into the a t m o s p h e r e or fall
to the ground where they will be
incorpora ted in the soils and var-
ious k inds of s e d i m e n t a r y deposi ts .
Palynomorphs Are Unique
The most unique a spec t of paly-
n o m o r p h s is tha t d i f f e r en t species
of p lan ts produce morphologica l ly
d i f f e ren t types of p a l y n o m o r p h s .
This unique c h a r a c t e r i s t i c enab les
tne palynologis t to r e l a t e a palyno-
m o r p h to the ex tan t p lan t t ha t pro-duced it. Fo r e x a m p l e , oak pro-
duces a pollen g ra in wit|i t h r e e
slits and a n u m b e r of sma l l g ran-
ules on its su r f ace . No o t h e r p lant
p roduces this type of pa lynomorph .
The s tudy of p a l y n o m o r p h s m a y
t ake m a n y r e sea r ch avenues . In
the l abo ra to ry at Hope, w e a re s tudying p a l y n o m o r p h s tha t occur
in s e d i m e n t and r e p r e s e n t p lan t s
that lived in pre-h is tor ic t imes , as
well a s p a l y n o m o r p h s recovered
f rom the a t m o s p h e r e , which rep-
resen t p lan ts that live in the Hol-land a r e a .
Our s tudies concerned with pres-
ent day vegeta t ion a r e cen te red
a round the possibili ty tha t ce r t a in
spec ies of p lan ts m a y cause var-
ious types of hay- iever . Specif ical-
ly. our s tudies a r e conce rned with
s a m p l i n g the a t m o s p h e r e in the
geograph ic a r e a of Holland. We
then r e l a t e the concen t ra t ion of
va r ious types of p a l y n o m o r p h s to
the incidents of hay - feve r .
Ancient Sediments One of our most in te res t ing stu-
dies jus t comple ted involves paly-
nomorphs recovered f r o m ancient
sed imen t s . Several mill ion y e a r s
ago a sea covered m o s t of North
A m e r i c a . Var ious k inds of sedi-
m e n t a r y rocks were deposi ted by
this sea and incorpora ted in this
s ed imen t we re p a l y n o m o r p h s f rom
the p lan ts tha t we re living on the
cont inent con temporaneous ly with
this sea . The s ta te-of Montana has
an unusual ly thick deposi t of sedi-
m e n t a r y rocks, a n d . t he re fo re ,
r e p r e s e n t s a comple te sequence of
•upper Cre t aceous s e d i m e n t .
The Cre t aceous per iod of geolog-
ical t i m e is espec ia l ly in te res t ing
to biologists because it is in Creta-
ceous s e d i m e n t a r y rocks tha t the
r e m a i n s of the f i r s t f lowering
p l an t s a r e found. Not only do the
a n g i o s p e r m s have the i r beginning
•in Cre t aceous t ime, but the dino-
sau r b e c a m e extinct at the close
of the Cre taceous period. This,
then, c a u s e s one to specu la te that
the r ise of the a n g i o s p e r m s had
some inf luence on the ext inct ion
of the d inosaur . Severa l s u m m e r s
were spent in Montana collecting
upper -Cre taceous s^t l iment with
the intent of recover ing the paly-
nomorphs deposited by these ea r -
lier a n g i o s p e r m s and reconst ruc t -
ing the vegeta t ion tha t covered the
s ta te of Montana con temporaneous -
ly with the d inosaurs .
Tropical Plants in Montana Tho resu l t s of our s tudy c lear ly
indicate that t ropical p lants ex-
isted in the s t a t e of Montana dur-
ing the Cre taceous period. Sub-
sequent invest igat ions by our group
have r evea led that t hese Cre tac -
eous t ropica l p lan ts exis ted also
in Europe . Siberia and Aus t ra l ia . r lhe t ropical p lants that were in
Montana now exist on the e a r t h
p r imar i ly in southern South Amer-
ica and sou theas t Asia .
Recent ev idence has disclosed
that these Cre taceous t ropica l
plants we re rep laced by p lan ts
more to lerant to a cooler environ-
ment . It is at this t i m e tha t the
grea t d inosaurs b e c a m e extinct .
There fore , the re is the possbiility
that the total change in environ-
ment ' c l i m a t e and p lan t l i f e ' m a y
have been at least pa r t ly responsi-
ble for their ext inct ion.
Cooling Tre-nd
We have pos tu la ted s eve ra l
theor ies to account for the cooling
t rend. At the close of the Cretac-
eous period the Rocky Mounta ins
were being fo rmed . The magn i tude
of this mounta in r a n g e could cer-
tainly have inf luenced c l ima t i c
conditions to the ea s t .
P resen t ly we a r e inves t iga t ing some p a l y n o m o r p h s f rom m u c h
older s ed imen t than the Cretac-eous . These p a l y n o m o r p h s a r e be-
ing recovered f r o m sed imen t of
Devonian Age. Dur ing this age the
cont inent of North A m e r i c a was s u b m e r g e d by a s ea . and m a r i n e
s ed imen t can be found in Iowa. Michigan, Ohio and o ther mid-cont inent s t a t e s .
Other s tudies , s o m e t i m e s smal-
ler in scope, a r e being conducted .
When these s tudies a r e pieced to-
ge ther , a b road p ic tu re of the
vegeta t ion of Nor th A m e r i c a dur-
ing past geological t i m e will be seen.
Garbo Stars In 'Camillo''
Morta r Board will p r e s e n t the
fi lm " C a m i l l e " s t a r r i n g Gre t a
G a r b o tonight at 7p.m. and 9 p .m.
and tomorrow, S a t u r d a y , at the
s a m e t i m e in Snow Audi to r ium.
A love d r a m a , the fi lm has won
seve ra l a w a r d s . The fi lm is based
on the novel and play " L a D a m e
aux C a m e l i a s , " by Alexander
Dumas . Also f e a t u r e d in the play
a r c Rober t Taylor and Lionel B a r r y m o r e .
(Cont inued f r o m P a g e 4) I would like to quote a group of
words r a t h e r f a m i l i a r to all of us who a r e pr ivi leged to e a t in the
c a m p u s dining ha l l s :
" I n these d a y s of f ea r and doubt .
So few things to smi le about .
Living under such high pres -su re e v e r y day.
1 a m tempted to give in.
And jus t dr i f t along in sin,
But I h e a r in fa in tes t whisper someone say .
'When you ' re t e m p t e d to give in.
J u s t r e m e m b e r w h e r e you 've been.
And you'll fail to be d i s cou raged in these days . ' "
This del ightful gem w a s com-
posed by one of our most ou ts tand-
ing wr i t e r s . Helen Crowl . with
whom I a m s u r e we a r e all thoroughly f ami l i a r . Her p ro fund i ty
of con templa t ive thought is only s u r p a s s e d by her s p a r k l i n g imag-e r y and m a s t e r f u l man ipu l a t i on of poetic f o r m .
Needless to say , these f ac t s a r e ha rd ly of any in teres t to the aver-
age Sla ter diner . When we . in tidy
groups of eight or m o r e , p r e p a r e
to give our c u s t o m a r y (and often
too fo rmal ized 1 vote of aT>nrecia-
tion for what we a r e abou t to en-
du re we bare ly pay a t ten t ion to
the excel lent and r e v e r e n c e -
inspir ing l i t e r a tu r e we f ind nea t ly pr in ted before us .
Our thoughts r o a m e l s e w h e r e a s
these immor t a l words flow elo-
quent ly over our e m p t y wait ing
p la tes ; p e r h a p s w e think of this
a f t e r n o o n ' s touch football g a m e o r
the stifl ing volume of s e c u l a r world
l i t e r a tu r e we h a v e ye t to a t t e m p t
to a b s o r b before t o m o r r o w ' s e x a m .
I would like to speak out aga ins t
those who ignore (as much as this
is possible in the f ace of g rea t
l i t e r a t u r e ' or a t t e m p t to ignore
g e m s of inspirat ion such as Helen
Crowl 's . 1 would like to ch ide those
whose eyes w a n d e r a imless ly , who
fidget or e x c h a n g e g l ances with
their f r i ends du r ing the r ead ing of
such soul-rending and a r t fu l ly ex-ecuted thought .
I would also l ike to d i s a g r e e with
those who sugges t tha t we utilize
the so-called vas t supply of so-
called good l i t e r a tu r e (whether s ecu l a r or rel igious) wr i t ten by
those so-called good w r i t e r s of h is tory .
Those who pro tes t tha t the utili-
zation of works of this qual i ty by
the school is an act of negl igence
of our a c a d e m i c c o m m i t m e n t a re
en t i r e ly over looking the i r Chris-
tian c o m m i t m e n t . And those who
p re fe r that si lent devot ions be held
•under the p re tense , tha t he p r a y s
best who p rays within h imse l f ) in-
s tead of a well o rgan ized and in-
sp i ra t iona l poetry r ead ing a re fool-
h a r d y and un reasonab le .
Alan Jones
What Halloween Used to Be By Gordy Korstange
Halloween is a night when
chi ldren ac tua l ly t ake par t in
their d a y d r e a m s . T h e child-
hero of f an t a sy b e c o m e s a my-
s ter ious and fea r l e s s real i ty,
ven tu r ing into the a w e s o m e
night in s ea rch of g r e a t adven-
ture . This sp i r i t of d a r i n g never
real ly leaves a person once he has expe r i enced it.
Do you r e m e m b e r the thrill
of a Halloween night when you
s tepped out of a sa fe , s ecu re
home bent on some wild esca-
pade? The e v e r y d a y scene
a round you was t r a n s f o r m e d by
imagina t ion into a d a r k night
in the Black Fores t . S t range
f igures lurked behind bushes
while yellow eyes winked f rom
forb idden mans ions . T h e r e w a s
an a t m o s p h e r e of exc i t emen t and expec t a t ion as shouts w e r e
h e a r d in all d i r ec t ions and m a r a u d i n g t r ick - or - t r e a t e r s
scur r ied f rom house to house.
E a c h unknown bui lding loomed
as f ierce a s D r a c u l a ' s cas t le .
Vou were not only imagin ing
these th ; ngs . you we re experi-encing them.
T h e r e were those who t r icked
but did not t r ea t . T h e s a m e
spirit that provokes w a t e r f ights
on c a m p u s s t a r t ed m i n i a t u r e
w a r s . Smal l g roups of b r igands
ror .med the s t r e e t s engag ing in
sk i rmi shes with o ther bandi ts .
The ba t t les were fought with
tomatoes , squash , pumpkins ,
toilet pape r or any th ing handy.
It was a f an t a s t i c g a m e of hide
and seek , for real . Back alleys
b e c a m e secre t pa ths on which
the hun te r s ta lked his p rey . A
s u r e a r m was the only weapon,
and he who had the b igges t veg-
e tab le supply usual ly won. And
in the p rocess the s t r e e t s began to look like S l a t e r ' s f ru i t sa lad .
In this p r e s su red socie ty of
our t imes Hal loween is high a d v e n t u r e . No m a t t e r how
¥
sophis t ica ted a m a n m i g h t be-come he still looks back on his
dare-devi l d a y s with sa t i s fac -
tion. Adven tu re and e x c i t m e n t
a r e a par t of e v e r y o n e f rom
the t ime they a r e old enough
to r ead their f i rs t " R o v e r
Boys" book. But w h a t ' s to be
done these days when p rop r i e ty
f rowns upon the v a g a b o n d with a y e a r n i n g for act ion?
Juven i le Del inquents , those
image - sha t t e r ing t e e n a g e r s , a r e
a d v e n t u r e seekers . Whe the r out-
side c i r c u m s t a n c e s force t hem
into rebellion or whe the r t he r e
is someth ing within t hem that
just can ' t s tand the m a t e r i a l i s t ' s wavs . t h e s e la ter dav "Bil ly the
Kids" devote their ex i s tence to
f inding adven tu re . On the o ther
end of the intel lectual sca le
s t and E r n e s t Hemingway . J a c k
Lonuon. N o i m a n Mailer and
others . H e m i n g w a y was a con-
s t an t s e e k e r of d a n g e r , w h e t h e r
in the bull ring or the jungle .
His philosophy m a d e it i m p e r a -t ive tha t a man tes t himself and his cou rage th rough adven -tu re . P e r h a p s he was tes t ing himself the day he " a c c i d e n t a l l ' ' " shot himself .
These men and boys play
Halloween on b igger sca les and
for h igher s takes . But the aver-
age m a n and kid can ' t find real a d v e n t u r e a n y m o r e . Psycholog-
ical da r ing is rep lac ing phys ica l
cou rage in the minds of young-
s te r s . And now Halloween is
losing its effect also. M o t h e r s
d r ive the i r chi ldren f r o m house
to house in au to s to g u a r d
aga ins t any t r a u m a t i c exper i -
ence which the little ones might
have. Dances and p a r t i e s t ake
the p lace of n ight- t ime wan-der ings .
The spirit of a d v e n t u r e is bur-
ied unde r the pseudo-sophist i-
ca ted absurd i t ies of television.
It s e e m s that society is bent on
dr iv ing the s t ake into Hallo-
ween and a d v e n t u r e ' s h e a r t ,
l eav ing only ghos ts d r agg ing
the i r spu r s in s e a r c h of adven-
tu re .
The Best of Peanuts Rcpyintcd by permission of the Chicago Tnhiine
T T a r r T
1.W WD£PRE$5ED,„X
LIM6 16 MAO AT ME BECAU561 DON'T BELIEVE IN THE
WMPK1N"
D O N ' T B e T O O D E P R E ^ E D ,
C H A R L I E B K O t M . . . B E E T H O V E N
A L ^ O M A O P R O B L E M ^ . , ,
U J H A T ' 6 T H A T 6 0 T
T O D O L J l T H I T ?
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N 0 T H I M 6 ( I 6[)£S6..
I T J 0 6 J C A M E
T O M V M I N D , .
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Page i Hope College anckor October 29t 1965
Off and on the Campus
Where the Dollars Are
By Dick Shiels
GLCA Anthology Arouses
Excitement in Rev. Hillegonds
It m a k e s no m o r e sense to beg for money f r o m a college or a s im ilar non-profit organizat ion than to ask for a ha i rcut in a g rocery s tore . And whereas there h a v e been s tudents known to confuse their butcher with their b a r b e r . I do not m e a n to suggest — and did not mean to in my last co lumn t h a t the s tudent tu rn a lways to t h e school foh addi t ional funds .
Another "non-prof i t organiza-t ion" comes to mind however that might be probed—the national gov e r n m e n t and some of its founda-tions. Tha t ' s where the dol la rs
a r e and this we ought to know
about . Dollars for Science Students
Twenty-two hundred g r a d u a t e
fellowships of f rom $2,400 to $2,800 a y e a r will be awarded by the Na-
tional Science Foundat ion fo r next Sep tember . Such fellowships will
be m a d e for " s tudy or wx)rk lead-ing to m a s t e r ' s or doctoral de-grees in ma th , physics , medicine ,
biology, or engineering, anthropol-ogy, economics, geography, lin-
guistics, political science, psychol-ogy and sociology."
Applications for these g r a d u a t e fellowships must be in by Dec . 10 and an e x a m i n a t i o n must be completed by the end of this y e a r . Informat ion and applicat ions a r e
avai lable f rom the Fel lowship Of-fice, National Academy of Sciences
Constitution Avenue. N W., Wash-—National Resea rch Council, 2101
ington, D.C. Funds for Foreign Study
Eight huiftlred American g rad-uate s tudents will be given op-portuni ty to s tudy in f i f ty-f ive
foreign countr ies under State De-p a r t m e n t funds provided by tho Fulbr ight-Hayes Act. This is one facet of Washington 's educat ion
and cul tural exchange p r o g r a m . Mr. Ronald Ber ry , the c a m p u s
Fulbr ight advisor , has the avail-
able information on this possibil-
ity. He r eminds the c a m p u s tha t Hope had a Fulbr ight scholar just
two yea r s ago. Suggestion to the School
Two five million dol lar nat ional endowments—one each for the a r t s and the human i t i e s—prov ide the backing for the Nat ional Founda-tion for Arts and Human i t i e s es-tabl ished by P re s iden t Johnson on Sept. 29. The money will go to provide for " g r e a t ar t is ts on c a m p u s . "
Jus t what that m e a n s will be de-cided by a Fede ra l Council on the a r t s and h u m a n i t i e s which will dole out the funds. So far $300,000 has been put aside to support
" t r a in ing insti tutes to s t rengthen the teaching of the a r t s and h u m
ani t ies in e l emena ry and second-ary educa t ion . " These institutes will be establ ished on various ex-ist ing campuses .
ici i million dol lars for a r t i s t s on campus , five hundred thousand for es tabl ishing inst i tutes on cam-pus—this is someth ing to know
about . This would definitely be someth ing for Hope College to look into.
So you see not only am 1 not suggest ing that s tudents ask for money f rom the school, but I a m advocat ing the school itself, as well as the s tudent , asking for money. But we 've got to ask the right people, the people who a r e in the right places. We've got to go " w h e r e the dol la rs a r e . "
By Barb Kouw The o ther morning as I walked
into the anchor office, a cup of
Kletz coffee in one hand (the m a -chine in the basement of Graves still insists upon producing a thick
black fluid resembl ing the muck that one finds in a Hudsonville
celery field • and the c rumpled re-ma ins of a suga r donut in the other hand. 1 happened to ca tch the tail end of a r e m a r k by Reverend Hille-
gonds.
" . . . expect ing a naked Muriel
to answer the door" w a s his sub-
ject of contemplat ion, and 1 as-sumed immedia te ly that he w a s consider ing the Biblical implica-tions of such a si tuation for a chapel message . As I inadver tent ly
sat down on the e lect r ic typewri te r , which happened to be turned on. I ventured to ask him about Muriel.
Seeing the neat row of typewrit-
The Changeling
The Real News
Am print ing a le t ter I got this week f rom my Auntie Maud. She is such a s c r e a m . At 94 she still d r ives the f a r m t r ac to r . ( T h e last t ime she peeled out. she har-vested two chicken coops and par t of the barn.> The le t ter begins:
"How a r e you 0 I a m fine even
though the cold isn't much good f o r my liver, nerves , or digst ive
sys t em. Here ' s the news. " M a r y Finkel bought a new dog
and is call ing it 'Albert . ' Since
'Albert ' is also her husband ' s n a m e , the re is some talk of the i r m a r r i a g e going downhill. And you
r e m e m b e r Alice Appleseed: she ' s the Catholic. Well she had ano ther baby last week, her eighth. I wish that ecumenica l council thing
would decide someth ing about The
fcS
'Romance in Din ing"
DINNERS DE LUXE
Served Daily f rom 5 P.M.
Sunday f r om 1 2 Noon
Four Miles West of Hol land
Just off O t tawa Beach Road
2091 Lake Street Ph. 3 3 5 - 9 3 4 3
Everything For The Total Man LEVI'S STA - PREST ' ARROW
PURITAN * WALES * ADLER
JANTZEN * BOSTONIAN
PENDLETON * MALE CASUAL
OF HOLLAND
w (14-16 West Eighth Street)
USE YOUR COLLEGE CREDIT CARD
By Rob Werge
Pill. I t 's a shame . I keep on telling
Alice it would save her a lot of money to convert , but some people a re just s tubborn.
" T h e r e ' s been a beer riot not f a r f rom here. About 15,000 stu-
dents mobbed into Dunns ville pop. 33*)i to 'work out their f rus-
t ra t ions . ' T h a t ' s what their dean called it; everyone else f igured they c a m e to have a riot. When the local bar closed, they r a n
amuck . Zelda F la tbush was the re and said it was like a s t a m p e d e of c razed moose. The county survey-or s a y s there is so little left he may have to take the town off the
m a p and m a r k it an historical monument .
"But . glory be. you'll be 21 this month. I can r e m e m b e r the 21st b i r thday par t ies we had as kids. It would usually be a hot-chocolate social and eve ryone would wind up
around the piano singing the latest hymns. The only big exc i tment we
eve r had was once when Gary Ga tes a te 572 m a r s h m e l l o w s and had to have his s t omach pumped.
"And now the re ' s all this drink-ing and what-not. Even about our foreign policy; t ha t ' s awful. It
used to be if you had a war, you really had a WAR. Everyone got s t a m p s and s ta r s and put out the f lag and it " f e l t " like a war . Now everyone just s i ts a round and
doesn ' t open mail f rom the d r a f t boards . I tell you. it never would
have happened if we'd have kept this country God-fear ing and Re-publican.
"This yea r half the f a r m is in the soil bank and the other half has just been condemned for a super-highway. I know folks have to dr ive their cars s o m e w h e r e but why do they have to do it on top of my old pear o r c h a r d ? I t 's not tha t I 'm ant i -Progress . I 'm just not an t i -pear .
" M a r y Ellen got a p a r r o t last week. She calls it 'Congress Bird '
and every t ime it says 'Grea t So-ciety . ' s h e give it a c r a c k e r . Poor kid. she ' s only 12 and a l ready a political cynic.
"Bu t winter is closing in and I 've got to do the chores . We're
giving the cows a new food this yea r m a d e by DuPont ; i t ' s fo rmed f rom chemicals , t ree mold, and old l iverwurst sandwiches . It
doesn ' t look bad. but if I were a cow 1 sure wouldn't ea t it.
"Try and come out for Thanks-
giving if you can. There ' l l be a tu rkey and a f ire in the f i replace . It will be a good t ime if the high-
way depa r tmen t doesn ' t get he re f i rs t .
"Your embi t te red Auntie M'aud " P . S . Am enclosing some hot
chocola te mix. Happy B i r t h d a y . "
WTAS pre-game 1:45
game time 2:00
Hope vs. Kalamaxoo
Saturday, Oct. 29
ten question m a r k s on the back of my skir t , he sensed tha t my in-qui ry was in ea rnes t . He sugges ted that I find a seat e l sewhere , and I found a comfo r t ab l e p lace on
the floor u n d e r n e a t h , a desk. At this point he began his two hour
exegesis .
" I ' v e been r e a d i n g . " he said,
"a most fasc ina t ing story. I t ' s cal led 'Rober t & Muriel or . If You Think of the Girl You Love Too Much as Somebody Being Bald.
You Can Always Remain A l o o f ' "
" O h . " I answered , and the force df my r e m a r k caused m e to c rack my skull agains t the bottom of the
top of the de.sk.
The Chaplain reached into J u s pocket, took out a Band-Aid, stuck it to the bot tom of the top of the desk, and proceeded wih his ex-planation.
" T h e s to ry , " he said, " i s found in this book." He held before m y crossed eyts a copy of T h e G r e a t Lanes Anthology No. 2—A Collec-tion of U n d e r g r a d u a t e Crea t ive Writ ing. ' 'Robe r t & Mur ie l . ' he s u w s t e d . " is undoubtedly one of the most c rea t ive contr ibut ions in
this an tho logy ."
As I s ta red nebulously a t m y re-flection in his Hush Puppies , he
pointed out seve ra l ins tances of l i te rary c rea t iv i ty in the s tory . "Not i ce . " he sa id , " t h e subtle use oi a l l i terat ion. Here ' s a good ex-
a m p l e : 'Reuben ' s had cheesecake and was very. very, ve ry , very ,
very. very, very , very, very, very , very expensive. ' Isn' t tha t abso-lutely marve lous? ! Why. r ead ing
that sentence aloud is just like sit-ting right t he re in Reuben ' s and experiencing the mand ibu la r ac-
tion of chewing chunks of cheese-c a k e ! "
" Y a . " I said, sal ivat ing. Noticing my en thus ia sm, he
continued for ano ther hour . When he had finished. I was so exci ted that I ran r ight down to the Blue
Key Book Store and purchased a copy of the anthology.
Upon leaving Van Raa l t e . I t r ip-ped over a br ight ly colored aut-
umn leaf that someone had failed to sweep f rom the s idewalk. De-ciding that this was as good a spot as any. I opened my anthology and began to read .
Imagine m y delight at discover-ing tha t Hope College is a m o n g
the contr ibut ing schools! I swelled with pride and read on until a bell
r ang announcing the end of a c lass period. Shocked out of my t r ance , which at this point w a s bo rde r ing on a myst ica l exper ience , I j e rked
my head up, only to behold a scene which I shall sure ly neve r forget .
F loat ing above m e , moving
gracefu l ly down the s t eps of Van Raa l t e and in the direct ion of the Pine Grove, w e r e hundreds of stu-dents, thousands of s tudents , each one of them ca r ry ing a copy of " T h e Grea t Lakes Anthology No.
2," and some even had with them " T h e Grea t L a k e s Anthology No. i r
" H e h s a k e s , " I m u t t e r e d . My joints creaked as I got up, and as I f loated toward the chape l door (I w a s anxious to repor t to Rever -end Hillegonds all tha t had t rans-pired since we had p a r t e d com-pany) , I noticed on the s idewalk outside of Van R a a l t e a nea t row of b a c k w a r d question marks and wondered how they h a d gotten there .
Illllil=illllll
Twelfth and Pine
STUDENTS
you are invited to worship with us at
THE THIRD REFORMED CHURCH
3 blocks west of the chapoi
Morning Worship — 10:00 a.m.
Post High Church School Clasi — 11:20 a.m.
Evening Worship — 7:00 p.m.
Russell W. Vande Bunte# Minister Roger J. Rietberg, Organist-Director
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October 29, 1965 Hope College anchor
C o l o r o f P a r a i k H i ^ h l i ^ h t s H o m e c o m i n g
I its#*
AN( HOR DKDK ATED—Hope Collc^r s anchor, presented by the
Al[>ha Phi Ome^a fraternity, was dedicated to the memory of thi*
iaU- Dran Milton L. Hinga, 193I-1%Q. by (h-ft t4) right) State Senator
• VanderJa^t '53, Richard Dickson. President Calvin VanderWerf
and M'S wnd Mifc. Clarence Kleis. Mr. Klels was a member of th^
Hopr faculty from 1921 to 19^1. ^ i >V1AA T y f J l h r n U ^ \ 4 . c ^ WLN'NING F R A T K R M T Y FLOAT—A week's e f for t s proved suceessful as the Arcadian Fraternity ' s
float, "Spe..k Softly hut Carry a Bi^ Stick," retired a first place trophy.
• i
:
\ *
aV
i • " v
v : ; \ ^
% ;0
HER MAJESTY Queen (aro l Borst descends from her carriage,
built by the Class of 69, to reign over the weekend and the Home-coming Ball, "A Night in Arms."
> - vr*'*" '
FIRST HOPE COLLEGE KLETZ CONCERT - T h e humor ot Pete Paulson and
cart (center photo) entertained both alumni and i tudenu Rie non-conductoi
"Bushkin" Dykstra (top. left) "Van Carnegie" Green 'top, right) "Victor Paui
lefl) and "Flambeau" Sheiburne (iM)ttom. right) was won by the latter.
M B
Ur« of Bill Carth
• on test between
iranberg (bottom.
WINNING SORORITY FLOAT—The Sorosis Sorority won a first place in the float compeUtion with
"His Master's Voice." The floats paraded down Eighth Street last Saturday.
THE ARCADIAN FOUR—A campus quartet popular in the '40's,
consfstkig of Warren Hietbrink, Bill Miedema, Ken Leetsma and
Bob Schuler, all Reformed Church ministers, harmonized for students and alumni at the first Kletz Concert.
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Page 8 H«pe College aacftier October 29. 1965
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OFF A N D RUNNING—Charlie Langiand (43) finds daylight as he begins punt return. Joe Kusak (86),
John Huisman (76), Jim Holtsclaw (23), and Roger Kroodsma (84) block out would-be tacklers.
Win Evens Dutch Record
Dutchmen Roll Over Scots By J a m e s Mace
Cheered on by 2200 H o m e c o m i n g fans , H o p e ' s H y i n g D u t c h m e n added up n e a r l y 500 y a r d s in to ta l o f fense and rolled over t h e Alma Scots 48-6 in the p rocess at River-view P a r k las t S a t u r d a y .
Bill Keur , a senior ha l fback who missed the f i r s t two g a m e s of the season , scored four t i m e s to f e a t u r e t h e Dutch runn ing a t t a ck , while fu l lback Char l i e L a n g e l a n d d rove into payd i r t twice. The final touchdown w a s scored by f r e s h -m a n end J i m Hol tsc law.
Keur Leads MIAA Scoring
K e u r . who added his H o m e c o m -ing ta l l ies to th ree previous scores , now leads t h e MIAA in scor ing with 42 points on t h e s t r eng th of his o u t s t a n d i n g runn ing in the past four g a m e s . He opened the scor ing with a one-yard p lunge ear ly in the f i rs t q u a r t e r a f t e r a 13-play, 98-yard m a r c h .
P a u l W a s s e n a r . a rugged defens-ive end . r e c o v e r e d an Alma f u m b l e on the Hope two-yard line and the Hope o f fense took over . K e u r drove out to the 23 and two p lays l a t e r Tom D e K u i p e r b las ted for 40 y a r d s up the middle to put
the ball ins ide the Alma 30.
K e u r ' s p lunge put the Dutch on
the s c o r e b o a r d and the locals c a m e back for m o r e of the s a m e right a w a y . Again Keur and De-Kuiper picked up the big y a r d a g e for Hope. D e K u i p e r , a senior full-back. c r a c k e d ofi t ack le for -31 y a r d s and K e u r m a d e a nif ty dash of 23 y a r d s into the end zone to
cap t h e d r ive .
Langeland Scores
Leading 13-0 in the second per-iod. t h e F ly ing D u t c h m e n d r o v e inside the Alma 10 aga in , and Keur m a d e it n u m b e r t h r e e with an e igh t -yard c h a r g e off t a ck l e
for the score . K r o o d s m a ' s conver -sion m a d e it 20-0. Hope took ove r quickly a f t e r the kickoff and C h a r -lie L a n g e l a n d m a d e his f i rs t j aun t into touchdown land with a 47-yard run up t h e middle . He re-ceived t r e m e n d o u s blocking f r o m the in te r io r of the Hope line and burs t into t h e c lea r at the Alma 35.
J o h n Milks, t he Alma fu l lback , f in i shed off the lone Scot d r ive of the g a m e a f t e r the Scots took the kickoff w h e n he burs t t h r e e y a r d s into the end zone for A l m a ' s score . Hope t h e n took the kickoff with less t han a minu t e to go in the half and brought it up to t h e i r own 32 yard l ine.
Screen Pass Pays Off
A play l a t e r H a r l a n Hyink con-nec ted with L a n g e l a n d a t the Hope 40 wi th a beau t i fu l s c r e e n pass and the Muskegon bull b roke off on a 68 ya rd touchdown gallop. Hyink then f i red to end Roger
Kroodsma for the two point con-
version and Hope led 34-6 at in-t e rmiss ion .
Hope was b lanked in the th i rd period but Keur c a m e back with his four th score with less t h a n a minute in t h e four th q u a r t e r . On a double r e v e r s e , Keur took the second handoff and r aced 21 y a r d s into the end zone. Again Hyink hit Kroodsma with a pass for the two point convers ion .
Bench Sees Action
With the score r e a c h i n g as t ro-nomical heights , coach Russ De-Vette empt ied his bench and al-lowed all 42 hea l thy m e m b e r s of the squad to play. Two f r e s h m e n , q u a r t e r b a c k Clint Schi l s t ra and end J i m Holtsclaw. took a d v a n t a g e of the oppor tun i ty to score the seven th and f ina l Hope touchdown.
On his f i rs t p lay f r o m sc r im-mage , Schi l s t ra hit Hol tsc law with a pe r fec t 24 y a r d pass for the tally. Hope ' s a t t empt to r e a c h 50 points failed but the m a r g i n of victory was t h e largest eve r in a Hope-Alma g a m e .
Keur , in addi t ion to his four six-po in te rs , r a c k e d up 112 y a r d s rushing , while DeKuipe r ca r r i ed five t i m e s for 72 ya rds . Lange l and ran for 57 y a r d s in five t r i es , not including his 68 ya rd run with Hyink 's pass , and G a r y F r e n s to-ta led 33 ya rds in three a t t e m p t s .
Dutch Offense Goes 460 Yards
The Dutch p icked up 285 y a r d s on the ground whi le the a i r a t t a c k accoun ted for 175 m o r e y a r d s .
Overal l t h e Dutch picked 460 y a r d s total o f f e n s e to only a q u a r t e r of that for the Scots . Led by J o e Kusak , W a s s a n a e r and K r o o d s m a the Hope d e f e n s e thoroughly throt -tled the Alma pass ing g a m e and thereby r u i n e d t h e visi tors .
K r o o d s m a , the Hope co-capta in , also had a f ine day on o f f ense wi th a 41-yard pass recep t ion f rom Hyink t h a t set up K e u r ' s last touchdown in addit ion to his two. two-point convers ion c a t c h e s .
Bruce Menning , senior end f r o m Grandvi l l e , left t he g a m e ea r ly wi th an i n j u r y , while Ken Fei t , Allan Kinney and Don K r o o d s m a missed t h e en t i r e g a m e with in-ju r ies .
Hope w r a p s up its 1965 MIAA season t o m o r r o w a f t e rnoon at Kal-a m a z o o aga in s t the second p lace Horne t s with a c h a n c e to tie for
second p lace in the loop.
MIAA Football
Standings
W L
Albion 3 0
Ka lamazoo 3 1
Hope 2 2
Olivet 2 2
Adrian 1 2
Alma 0 4
Milestone and Wiegand
Present New Format Work on the 1966 Milestone h a s
begun under the l eadersh ip of
edi tor Jon Wiegand and his re-
cently organized s t a f f .
Wiegand has announced his s taf f
as follows: a s s i s t an t ed i to r , P a u l
Chr i s topher ; layout edi tors , Bar-
b a r a Fugazza t to and D e a n n a
Gross : senior edi tors , J a n K e m i n k
and Ron VanAuken; unde rc l a s s ed-
itors, R u t h Ann Sjolin and Nancy
B a k e r ; facul ty ed i tor , Ruth Zie-
m a n and business m a n a g e r K a t h y
Wilson.
In o ther ed i to r ia l positions a r e
P a t Holcombe, P a t Irwin, Caro l ine
E s h b a c h , Marc i a Miller,"" G a r y
P a r k e r , Diane Spi t ters , M a r y Kooi-
m a n . Nelda P r o t h r o and D e a n n a
Wilkens.
Changes planned for the Mile-
stone include the publ icat ion da t e .
This y e a r the Milestone will be
published in the spr ing , a r r i v ing
on c a m p u s about two weeks be fo re
final e x a m s , p r e d i c t s edi tor Wieg-and.
Another change m a d e r e g a r d s
senior p ic tures . This y e a r e a c h
senior will choose his own photo-
g raphe r , and will m a k e his own
a r r a n g e m e n t s with the s tudio for
si t t ings, e tc . The p ic tu res will then
be supplied di rec t ly to the Mile-
s tone by the pho tographer s .
The pa r t i c ipa t ing pho tographers ,
all of whom a r e local, will se t up
a display on Oct. 27. T h e sen iors
will then be able to choose their
pho tog raphe r on the bas is of p r i ce
and quali ty of the f inished p ic tures .
" T h e goal of the s t a f f , " said
Wiegand, is " t o m a k e t h e 1966 Milestone a f i t t ing c o m m e m o r a t i v e of the 100th y e a r of Hope College.
In order to accompl ish this goal,
the Milestone staff will need the
cooperat ion of m a n y p e o p l e , " he
added .
Those s tuden t s who a r e inter-
es ted in helping he asked to fill
out and r e tu rn to specif ied people
the fo rms which were placed in
c a m p u s m a i l b o x e s . Also, if a n y stu-den t s h a v e t a k e n p ic tures of cam-pus act ivi t ies , espec ia l ly of the
Geneva R e t r e a t , or ienta t ion or
r eg i s t r a t ion , Wiegand asked tha t
they submi t t hem to the M i l e s t o n e
Hartman Paces Harriers
To First League Victory Sophomore P a u l H a r t m a n , m a k -
ing his second a p p e a r a n c e of t h e season in Hope silks, c a p t u r e d second p lace in last S a t u r d a y ' s c ross coun t ry mee t wi th the vis-iting Alma Scots and led the Fly-ing Dutchmen to a 24-31 t r i u m p h .
In winning the i r f i r s t of f ive league dual mee t s , the Dutch cap-tured f ive of the first s e v e n p l a c e s and c a m e h o m e the v ic tor even though they did not t ake f i rs t p lace . Ed Feg ley , the top man on the Alma squad , won the r a c e in the t i m e of 23 minu te s a n d 28 sec-onds.
H a r t m a n was clocked in 23 min-utes and 51 seconds fo r his run-
ne r -up spot . Co-capta in Clay B e r r y for the Hope t e a m w a s f o u r t h , whi le W a y n e M e e r m a n , D a n n y Howe a n d Rich Bisson took t h e
fifth through the seven th p l ace s respec t ive ly .
T h e vic tory on the four -mi le Van R a a l t e Field c o u r s e g ives the Dutch a 1-4 r ecord in t h e MIAA with one m o r e m e e t to be r u n . T o m o r r o w the Dutch t a k e on the K a l a m a z o o Horne t s a t K a l a m a z o o in the f ina l dual m e e t b e f o r e the MIAA Meet a t Calv in on Nov. 9
Hopq ' s most cons is ten t r u n n e r , Cal O s t e r h a v e n , did not run nor did o the r t e a m co-cap ta in G a r y Pe iper , who has m i s s e d t h e en-tire s eason with a v i rus infect ion.
GOAL SHOT—Hope's Fred Schutmaat (dark jersey, left) and Al
Griswold are unsuccessful in scoring on corner kick as Wheaton
goalie makes save in 3-2 Hope defeat.
Whea ton Edges K ickers;
Goshen Contest Tomorrow Hope fell to a 2-4 r e c o r d in t h e
f i rs t H o m e c o m i n g g a m e 3-2 to t h e C r u s a d e r s of Whea ton .
P lay ing its f ines t g a m e of the season both of fens ive ly a n d de-fensively was not enough as the Hope soccer e leven d ropped i ts Midwest Col legia te Socce r L e a g u e with the loss and a 3-4 r eco rd overa l l with two g a m e s left to play.
Wheaton scored first in the f i rs t • q u a r t e r and both s q u a d s ba t t led th rough some f ine d e f e n s i v e play until Doug Nichols c o u n t e r e d for the Dutch with only m i n u t e s to go be fo re the half ended . Wheaton upped the count to 2-1 in the third per iod but Hope c a p t a i n J a i m e Zeas evened t h e g a m e a t 2-2 with a penal ty kick. He was a w a r d e d the kick a f t e r one of t h e Whea ton
men c o m m i t t e d a foul in the pen
al ty a r ea in f ron t of his own goal .
With ten minu tes to go in the g a m e , Wheaton scored the decis-ive goal but Hope p l a y e d 10 min-utes of its f ines t s o c c e r in an a t t e m p t to get the ta l ly back . Z e a s again w a s a w a r d e d a pena l ty kick but the C r u s a d e r goa l ie m a d e a f ine s a v e to foil t h e t ry . Hope kept t h e p r e s s u r e up but the Wheaton d e f e n s e w a s too tough to c r a c k and the Dutch d ropped the con tes t .
Hope p lays Goshen College a t Goshen. Ind iana , t o m o r r o w a f t e r -noon and then f in i shes its s eason aga ins t Oakland Un ive r s i ty . Af te r compil ing a 6-1-1 r eco rd in its in-itial season t h e Dutch h a v e fal len a bit short this season but with v ic tor ies in their f inal two g a m e s they c a n finish above the.500 m a r k for the season .
R e s t a u r a n t
In The
Heart Of
Downtown
HOLLAND
Sermig Food at Its Finest in a Pleasant Atmosphere:
28 W. 8th St. Tel.: 392-2726