02-04-1970

12
Hope must raise funds to keep Federal monies 82nd Anniversary-1 5 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 February 4, 1970 Limits visiting times CLB passes parietal proposal by Lynn Jones anchor News Editor An amended version ot the parietal hours proposal was passed 8-5 by the Campus Lite Board at its meeting Jan. i ). The amended version may be reviewed by the Board ot Trustees tomorrow. THE PROPOSAL now states that inter-room visitation will be allowed I'riday and Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnight and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Hie original proposal specified two weeknights with hours 7-11 p.m., two week- end nights with hours 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. and Sunday from 1-5 p.m. Discussion of the proposal cen- tered around the question of pri- vacy for the roommate and the lack of sufficient supervision for such a policy. Many faculty mem- bers of the Board felt that some responsible person should be pre- sent in the living unit during the specified times. Roger Rietberg stated that the Resident Advisors and house parents are gone many evenings and so could not enforce the rules. STUDENT BOARD member John Boonstra stated that as with the problem of supervision and enforcement of the drinking rule, the RA is not always there. He felt that specific students other than the RA could take the re- sponsibility of enforcing the rules m his or her living unit. Student Board member I ran Hooper stated that parietal hours is not a rule but a privilege and should be treated as such. The question was raised if there were a need for supervision and enforce- ment in view of the policy rules. The proposal states, ll lf any resi- dent of the unit witnesses a viola- tion of the rules, it shall be his responsibility to immediately re- port the violation to one of the officers." BOARD CHAIRMAN David Marker questioned whether or not fraternity members would accept the responsibility for the rules. With strong fraternity loyalty, he doubted if any one member would "turn in" another member. Miss Hooper remarked that with such a policy, greater em- phasis should be placed on indi- vidual student responsibility. Dean of Students Robert De- Young questioned whether the school could "risk another en- forcement problem if students can't obey the drinking rules." Boonstra stated that it is a min- ority of students who cause the problems and that it is wrong to defeat a new privilege because of a very small minority. CLB STUDENT member Mar- shall Anstandig questioned whether or not the school was ready to "face the consequences" of the parietal hours plan and stated that this was the "big issue." He suggested that the Board should consider "what everyone had been thinking about but no one had brought into the open." lie stated that the plan was a moral issue. Faculty Board member Russell DeVette felt that the proposal was not a moral issue inasmuch as what it was concerned with were already commonplace activities. Board member Hlton Bruins stated that it was very much a moral issue. ANSTANDIG COMMENTED, "Ninety percent of the kids will (Continued on page 10, column 3) by Tom Donia anchor Editor The deadline for use of federal monies designated for construc- tion of a new science building at Hope College will expire March 1, and an extension of the $3 million appropriation may not be ap- proved. ACCORDING TO Dr. William DeMeester, Special Assistant to the President for Planning and Development, the College must demonstrate to the Federal gov- ernment that it is making "signifi- cant progress" toward raising its share of the $4 million needed to build the structure. Otherwise, the government might not extend the period for use of the grant and the $2 million low-interest loan. Under the terms of the original agreement with the Federal gov- ernment, Hope College would match the grant money with SI million of its own. To date, less that $100,000 has been collected by the College for the science building. ROBERT CRAMPTON, asso- ciate of the firm of Stade, Finer- son and Doyle, the architects for the building, said the grant and loan may be in trouble following President Richard Nixon's recent veto of the Health, Fducation and Welfare bill. Crampton said, "The veto rescinded all funds for such construction projects." Crampton added, "The College has tempor- arily halted all work on plans for the proposed science building." DeMeester said he was hopeful that a compromise bill in Washing- ton would provide greater availa- bility of funds. "If Congress finds Nixon's veto unacceptable, it could re-write the original bill, cutting out those programs to which the President objected, and adding to items like the Title HI funds for construction of new facilities." DEMEESTER ALSO SAID the College will ask for an extension on the government funds whether or not it reaches its goal of $500,000 by March 1. " W e are talking with several prospective donors at the present time. We have also asked for foundation support. If we were to get 100 percent return from all prospective sources of money, we would have $6 million, but that is highly unlikely. In any case, it doesn't hurt to ask," DeMeester added. President Calvin VanderWerf noted that, "We are working on many donor prospects, but we don't have a long history of culti- vating these people. Fund-raising is not easy. People who talk about faith don't know what faith is until they are in this fund-raising business with Hope College." VANDERWERF ALSO said, "At many colleges where fund- raising campaigns are begun, the Board of Trustees start out by having a $1 or $2 million kickoff of their own. That is not the case at Hope College. If we had that our problems would be solved." VanderWerf stated that the College has not ordered final plans for the building because, "there are many major donors that won't touch the thing unless they can have the fun of playing with the blueprints, cutting out this and adding that, making changes, and calling up the architect and telling him he's a bum. "OTHER DONORS want to name the architect. For instance, there is one many who, if he gives money for a building, he gives money for the whole thing. He says, '1 will name the architect.' The science building was orgin- ally included in the $10 million, 10 year Master Plan unveiled in October, 1965. The $1 million grant for the structure was ap- proved by the government in April, 1967. The $2 million loan followed the grant in May, 1967. The building was to have been erected in the fall of 1968. IN FEBRUARY, 1968, the anchor reported that the science building plans were being re-de- signed tc permit a lower-cost building with greater use and effi- ciency. The federal monies were to have been reduced in propor- tion to the actual construction cost. To highlight carnival Denver to perform Friday Former UCLA standout is new football coach Former U.C.L.A. stand-out Ray Smith has been appointed assistant professor of physical education and head football coach at Hope College, according to Dean for Academic Affairs Mor- rette Rider. SMITH, 31, presently head football and baseball coach at Antelope Valley College in Lan- caster, Calif., will succeed Russell DeVette, who announced his resignation as coach after 15 years in that position. At U.C.L.A. Smith played three years of varsity football. He was selected as the team's best blocker and tackier his junior and senior years, and was selected most outstanding and most valu- able player during his last season with the team. AS A SENIOR, Smith cap- tained the Bruins when they cap- tured the Pacific-8 championship. He was the stalwart of the team, averaging 41 minutes of playing time per game while playing of- fensive fullback and defensive halfback. He climaxed his collegiate career by being named U.C.L.A.'s Athlete of the Year and was one of the 20 graduating seniors to receive an Outstanding Graduating Senior award for academic ac- complishment. SMITH RECEIVED honorable mention on the All-American selection and played in the Fast- West Shrine game and the Hula Bowl before becoming a pro-ball player. FOR THREE YEARS Smith played with the Saskatchewan Roughriders in Canada, but was forced to retire after he sustained an injury. t' RAY SMITH Smith holds a B.S. degree with a major in physical education from U.C.L.A., did graduate work at the University of Redlands and holds an M.A. degree in adminis- tration from Pasadena College. A concert by folk singer John Denver will highlight the 1970 Winter Carnival to be held this weekend. DENVER, FORMERLY of the Chad Mitchell Trio, will entertain in Dimnent Memorial Chapel Fri- day night at 8:15. He was a popular solo performer before the Brothers Four recommended him as Chad Mitchell's replacement. Denver is also an accomplished composer with the big hit Leaving on a Jet Plane to his credit, and has recently released an album of his own entitled Rhymes and Rea- sons. Tickets for this event are on sale in Van Raalte Hall at $1.50 for Hope students and $2.50 for general admission. THE WEATHERMAN will be co-star of the week's activities, for most of the fraternity and soror- ity contests can be held only if there is an abundance of snow, l or the past two years the Winter Carnival has been plagued by safe walking and driving conditions due to uncooperative weather. If there isn't a repeat of last week's tropical heat wave, the scheduled outdoor activities will take place. Today and tomorrow the wo- men's hroomball semi-finals will be played. Broom ball rules are similar to those of women's field hockey, only the players use brooms and a volleyball. THIS EVENING, Ski Nite at Carousel Mountain will provide an excellent opportunity for begin- ning skiers to get a little more experience at half the regular price. The final athletic events of the week are the fraternity ski tourna- ment tomorrow night at Carousel Mountain and the dog sled races and broomball finals on Friday afternoon at Van Raalte Field. For those unmoved by such rigorous athletic competition, the Pizza Fating Contest on Thursday night may provide some interest. In this event the hungriest member of each fraternity consumes all of the Saga pizza he possibly can for a half hour, and the final victor is deter- mined by how much he eats and holds. ON SATURDAY NIGHT, dur- ing half time of the Hope-Denison basketball game, prizes will be awarded to the winners of the week-long snow sculpture contest and the other activities. After the game, there will be a dance in Phelps cafeteria,where Winter Carnival week will officially come to an end. A GUITAR AND A SONG-Folk singer John Denver will highlight Winter Carnival weekend in a concert in Dimnent Memorial Chapel Friday night at 8.15 pm.

description

 

Transcript of 02-04-1970

Hope must raise funds

to keep Federal monies

8 2 n d A n n i v e r s a r y - 1 5 H o p e Col lege , H o l l a n d , Michigan 4 9 4 2 3 F e b r u a r y 4, 1970

Limits visiting times

CLB passes parietal proposal by Lynn J o n e s

a n c h o r News Edi tor

An a m e n d e d version ot the par ietal h o u r s proposa l was passed 8-5 by the C a m p u s Lite Board at its mee t ing Jan . i). The a m e n d e d version may be reviewed by the Board ot T r u s t e e s t o m o r r o w .

T H E P R O P O S A L now s ta t e s that i n t e r - r o o m vis i ta t ion will be a l lowed I ' r iday and S a t u r d a y f r o m 7 p .m. to midnigh t and S u n d a y f r o m 1 to 5 p .m. Hie or iginal p roposa l speci f ied t w o w e e k n i g h t s wi th h o u r s 7-11 p .m. , t w o week-end n ights wi th h o u r s 7 p . m . to 1 a .m. and S u n d a y f r o m 1-5 p .m.

Discussion of the p roposa l cen-tered a r o u n d the ques t i on of pri-vacy fo r t he r o o m m a t e and the lack of su f f i c i en t supervis ion fo r such a po l icy . Many f acu l ty m e m -bers of the Board felt t ha t s o m e respons ib le pe rson should be pre-sent in the living unit du r ing the spec i f ied t imes . Roger R i e t b e r g s ta ted tha t t he Res iden t Advisors and h o u s e p a r e n t s are gone m a n y evenings and so could not e n f o r c e the rules.

S T U D E N T B O A R D m e m b e r J o h n Boons t ra s ta ted tha t as wi th the p r o b l e m of supervis ion and e n f o r c e m e n t of the d r ink ing rule , the RA is n o t a lways the re . He

felt that spec i f ic s t u d e n t s o t h e r than the RA cou ld t ake the re-spons ib i l i ty of e n f o r c i n g the rules m his or her living un i t .

S t u d e n t Board m e m b e r I ran H o o p e r s t a t ed that par ie tal h o u r s is not a rule bu t a privilege and should be t r ea t ed as such. The ques t i on was raised if t he re were a need fo r supervis ion and en fo rce -ment in view of t he pol icy rules. The p roposa l s ta tes , l l l f any resi-dent of the unit wi tnesses a viola-tion of the rules , it shall be his respons ib i l i ty t o i m m e d i a t e l y re-port t he v io la t ion to o n e of the o f f i c e r s . "

B O A R D C H A I R M A N David Marker q u e s t i o n e d w h e t h e r or no t f r a t e r n i t y m e m b e r s w o u l d accep t the respons ib i l i ty fo r the rules. With s t rong f r a t e r n i t y loya l ty , he d o u b t e d if any one m e m b e r would " t u r n i n " a n o t h e r m e m b e r .

Miss H o o p e r r e m a r k e d tha t with such a po l i cy , g rea te r em-phasis should be p laced on indi-v i d u a l s t u d e n t respons ib i l i ty . Dean of S t u d e n t s R o b e r t De-Y o u n g q u e s t i o n e d w h e t h e r t he school cou ld " r i sk a n o t h e r en-f o r c e m e n t p r o b l e m if s t u d e n t s can ' t o b e y the d r ink ing ru l e s . " Boons t r a s t a t ed tha t it is a min-or i ty of s t u d e n t s w h o cause the p r o b l e m s and tha t it is wrong to

de fea t a new privilege because of a very small m i n o r i t y .

CLB S T U D E N T m e m b e r Mar-s h a l l A n s t a n d i g q u e s t i o n e d w h e t h e r or not t he school was ready to " f a c e the c o n s e q u e n c e s " of t h e par ie ta l h o u r s plan and s t a t ed tha t this was the "b ig i s sue . " He suggested that the Board should c o n s i d e r " w h a t eve ryone had been t h i n k i n g a b o u t but no one had b rough t in to the o p e n . " l ie s t a t ed that the plan was a mora l issue.

F a c u l t y Board m e m b e r Russell D e V e t t e felt tha t t he p roposa l was no t a mora l issue inasmuch as w h a t it was c o n c e r n e d wi th were a l r eady c o m m o n p l a c e activit ies. B o a r d m e m b e r Hlton Bruins s t a t ed tha t it was very much a mora l issue.

A N S T A N D I G C O M M E N T E D , " N i n e t y p e r c e n t of the kids will (Continued on page 10, column 3)

by Tom Donia anchor Editor

T h e deadl ine f o r use of federa l mon ie s des igna ted for cons t ruc -t ion of a new science bui ld ing at Hope College will exp i re March 1, and an e x t e n s i o n of the $3 mill ion a p p r o p r i a t i o n may not be ap-proved .

A C C O R D I N G T O Dr. William DeMees te r , Special Assistant to the Pres ident f o r Planning and D e v e l o p m e n t , t he College mus t d e m o n s t r a t e t o the Federa l gov-e r n m e n t that it is mak ing "signif i-cant p rog re s s " t o w a r d raising its share of the $4 mil l ion needed to build the s t r u c t u r e . O the rwi se , the g o v e r n m e n t might not e x t e n d the per iod fo r use of the grant and the $2 million low- in te res t loan.

U n d e r the t e r m s of the original a g r e e m e n t with the Federa l gov-e r n m e n t , Hope College would match the grant m o n e y wi th SI million of its o w n . T o da t e , less that $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 has been col lec ted by the College f o r the science bui ld ing .

R O B E R T C R A M P T O N , asso-ciate of the f i rm of S t a d e , F iner -son and Doyle , t he a r ch i t e c t s for the bu i ld ing , said the grant and loan may be in t r o u b l e fo l lowing Pres ident Richard N i x o n ' s recent veto of t he H e a l t h , F d u c a t i o n and Welfare bill. C r a m p t o n said, " T h e ve to resc inded all f u n d s fo r such c o n s t r u c t i o n p r o j e c t s . " C r a m p t o n a d d e d , " T h e College has t e m p o r -arily ha l t ed all work on p lans for the p r o p o s e d science b u i l d i n g . "

DeMeester said he was h o p e f u l that a c o m p r o m i s e bill in Washing-ton wou ld prov ide grea te r availa-bility of funds . " I f Congress f inds N i x o n ' s ve to u n a c c e p t a b l e , it cou ld re-wri te t h e original bill, c u t t i n g out t h o s e p r o g r a m s to which the Pres ident o b j e c t e d , and add ing to i tems like the Ti t le HI f u n d s f o r c o n s t r u c t i o n of new fac i l i t ies ."

D E M E E S T E R A L S O SAID the College will ask fo r an e x t e n s i o n on the g o v e r n m e n t f u n d s w h e t h e r or n o t it r eaches its goal of $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 by March 1. " W e are ta lk ing with several p rospec t ive d o n o r s at the presen t t ime . We have also asked for f o u n d a t i o n

s u p p o r t . If we were t o get 100 p e r c e n t r e t u r n f r o m a l l p rospec t ive sources of m o n e y , we w o u l d have $6 mil l ion, but tha t is highly unl ike ly . In any case, it doesn ' t hu r t t o a s k , " DeMeester a d d e d .

Pres ident Calvin VanderWer f n o t e d t h a t , " W e are work ing on m a n y d o n o r p ro spec t s , but we d o n ' t have a long h i s to ry of cult i-vat ing these people . Fund- ra i s ing is not easy. People w h o talk a b o u t fa i th d o n ' t k n o w what fa i th is un t i l they are in this fund- ra i s ing business wi th Hope Co l l ege . "

V A N D E R W E R F A L S O said, " A t many col leges w h e r e f u n d -raising campa igns are begun , t he Board of T rus t ee s s tar t out by having a $1 or $2 mil l ion k i cko f f of their o w n . Tha t is n o t the case at Hope College. If we had tha t o u r p r o b l e m s wou ld be so lved . "

VanderWer f s ta ted tha t t he College has no t o r d e r e d final plans fo r the bu i ld ing because , " t h e r e are m a n y m a j o r d o n o r s tha t w o n ' t t ouch the th ing unless they can have the f u n of p laying wi th the b luepr in t s , c u t t i n g ou t this and add ing t h a t , making changes , and calling up the a rch i t ec t and telling him he ' s a b u m .

" O T H E R D O N O R S want t o n a m e the a r ch i t e c t . F o r ins tance , t he re is o n e many w h o , if he gives m o n e y for a bu i ld ing , he g ives m o n e y fo r t h e w h o l e th ing . He says, '1 will n a m e t h e a r c h i t e c t . '

The sc ience bui ld ing was orgin-ally inc luded in the $ 1 0 mil l ion, 10 year Master Plan unvei led in O c t o b e r , 1965 . T h e $1 mill ion grant fo r the s t r u c t u r e was ap-proved by the g o v e r n m e n t in April , 1967 . The $2 mill ion loan fo l lowed the grant in May, 1967. T h e bu i ld ing was to have been e rec ted in the fall of 1968 .

IN F E B R U A R Y , 1968, the anchor r e p o r t e d tha t the sc ience bui ld ing p lans were being re-de-signed t c permi t a lower-cos t bu i ld ing wi th grea te r use and ef f i -c iency . T h e federa l m o n i e s were to have been r e d u c e d in p r o p o r -t ion t o the ac tua l c o n s t r u c t i o n cost .

To highlight carnival

Denver to perform Friday

Former UCLA standout is new football coach

F o r m e r U.C.L.A. s t a n d - o u t Ray Smi th has been a p p o i n t e d assistant p ro fes so r of phys ica l e d u c a t i o n and head f o o t b a l l c o a c h at H o p e College, a cco rd ing t o Dean fo r A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s Mor-re t te Rider .

SMITH, 31, p resen t ly h e a d foo tba l l and baseball coach at A n t e l o p e Valley College in Lan-caster , Cal if . , will succeed Russel l D e V e t t e , w h o a n n o u n c e d his res ignat ion as coach a f t e r 15 years in tha t pos i t i on .

At U.C.L.A. Smi th p l ayed three years of varsity foo tba l l . He was se lec ted as the t e a m ' s best b locker and tackier his j u n i o r a n d senior years , and was se lected most o u t s t a n d i n g and most valu-able p layer dur ing his last season with the t e a m .

AS A S E N I O R , Smi th cap-ta ined the Bruins when they cap-tured the Pacif ic-8 c h a m p i o n s h i p . He was the s ta lwart of t he t e a m , averaging 41 m i n u t e s of p l ay ing t ime per game while p lay ing o f -fensive fu l lback and de fens ive h a l f b a c k .

He c l imaxed his co l leg ia te career by being named U .C .L .A . ' s A t h l e t e of the Year and was o n e of t he 20 g r a dua t i ng sen io r s t o receive an O u t s t a n d i n g G r a d u a t i n g Senior awa rd fo r a c a d e m i c ac-c o m p l i s h m e n t .

SMITH RECEIVED h o n o r a b l e m e n t i o n on the Al l -Amer ican se lect ion a n d p layed in the Fas t -

West Shr ine g a m e and the Hula Bowl b e f o r e b e c o m i n g a pro-bal l p layer .

F O R T H R E E Y E A R S S m i t h p layed wi th the S a s k a t c h e w a n R o u g h r i d e r s in C a n a d a , but was fo rced to re t i re a f t e r he sus ta ined an i n ju ry .

t '

R A Y SMITH

S m i t h ho ld s a B.S. degree with a m a j o r in phys ica l e d u c a t i o n f r o m U.C.L .A. , did g r a d u a t e work at the Univers i ty of R e d l a n d s and ho lds an M.A. degree in adminis -t r a t i o n f r o m Pasadena Col lege.

A conce r t by folk singer J o h n Denver will h ighl ight the 1970 Winte r Carnival t o be held th is w e e k e n d .

D E N V E R , F O R M E R L Y of the C h a d Mitchell T r io , will en t e r t a in in D i m n e n t Memor ia l Chapel Fri-day night at 8 : 1 5 . He was a p o p u l a r solo p e r f o r m e r be fo re the Bro the r s F o u r r e c o m m e n d e d him as Chad Mi tche l l ' s r e p l a c e m e n t .

Denver is also an a c c o m p l i s h e d c o m p o s e r wi th the big hit Leaving on a Jet Plane t o his c red i t , and has r ecen t ly released an a lbum of his own e n t i t l e d Rhymes and Rea-sons. T i cke t s f o r th is event are on sale in Van Raa l t e Hall at $ 1 . 5 0 f o r Hope s t u d e n t s and $2 .50 f o r general admiss ion .

THE W E A T H E R M A N will be co-star of the w e e k ' s activit ies, fo r mos t of t h e f r a t e r n i t y and soror-ity c o n t e s t s can be held only if t h e r e is an a b u n d a n c e of snow, l o r the past two years the Winter Carnival has been p lagued by safe walk ing and dr iv ing c o n d i t i o n s d u e to u n c o o p e r a t i v e wea ther . If t he re isn't a repeat of last w e e k ' s t rop ica l heat wave, the schedu led o u t d o o r ac t iv i t ies will take place.

T o d a y and t o m o r r o w the wo-m e n ' s h r o o m b a l l semi-f inals will be p layed . B room ball rules are s imilar t o t hose of w o m e n ' s f ield h o c k e y , on ly the p layers use b r o o m s and a vol leybal l .

THIS E V E N I N G , Ski Nite at Carousel M o u n t a i n will provide an exce l len t o p p o r t u n i t y for begin-ning skiers to get a l i t t le m o r e e x p e r i e n c e at half t he regular pr ice . T h e f inal a t h l e t i c even t s of t h e week are the f r a t e r n i t y ski t o u r n a -m e n t t o m o r r o w night at Carouse l M o u n t a i n and t h e dog sled races and b r o o m b a l l f ina l s on F r iday a f t e r n o o n at Van Raa l t e Field.

F o r t hose u n m o v e d by such r igorous a th l e t i c c o m p e t i t i o n , t he Pizza Fa t i ng C o n t e s t on T h u r s d a y night may provide some in te res t . In this event t he hungr ies t m e m b e r of each f r a t e r n i t y c o n s u m e s all of the Saga pizza he poss ibly can fo r a half hou r , and the f ina l v ic tor is de te r -mined by how m u c h he ea ts and holds .

ON S A T U R D A Y N I G H T , dur-ing half t ime of the H o p e - D e n i s o n baske tba l l game, pr izes will be a w a r d e d to the w i n n e r s of the week- long snow s c u l p t u r e con t e s t and t h e o t h e r act ivi t ies . A f t e r the g a m e , t he re will be a d a n c e in Phelps c a f e t e r i a , w h e r e Winter C a r n i v a l week will of f ic ia l ly c o m e to an end .

A GUITAR A N D A S O N G - F o l k singer John Denver will highlight Winter Carnival weekend in a concert in Dimnent Memorial Chapel Friday night at 8 . 1 5 pm.

Page 2 Hope College anchor February 4 , 1970

Student Bookstore competes with Blue Key by Rob Benchley anchor Reporter

Bare lights hang f rom an aqua-marine metal ceiling and large p lywood tables s tand on a c reaky w o o d e n f loor . S t and ing against a wall are two old re f r igera to rs , and metal racks d raped with coun t l e s s n u m b e r s of wire coat hangers .

O N E W O U L D N ' T want to live here, but i t ' s a nice place t o visit and a great place for a s t u d e n t books to r e .

Because of increasing oppos i -tion t o the Blue Key Books to re ' s r epo r t ed "h igh p r ices" , many stu-dents wan ted to f o r m a s tuden t -r u n b o o k s t o r e . With a few m o n t h s ' p lann ing , Hope sopho-mores Bob Tanis and Ron T u c k e r opened the D o w n t o w n S tuden t Books to re last Wednesday on Eighth S t ree t . Tanis , the Down-t o w n B o o k s t o r e ' s manager and " f o u n d e r " said t h a t a surpr is ing n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s had c o m e in t o buy and sell the i r b o o k s in spite of the c o m p e t i t i o n wi th Blue Key .

"We t h o u g h t the re ought to be a l i t t le f ree c o m p e t i o n . " said Tanis, " a n d m a k e it possible for the s t u d e n t s of Hope to choose where t o buy thei r books . We feel we can give s t u d e n t s a be t te r deal on used b o o k s than Blue Key. It also gives R o n and myself a chance to m a k e a l i t t le m o n e y . "

T H E P O L I C I E S of t he new b o o k s t o r e are qu i t e s imple com-pared with those of the Blue Key: a s tuden t wishing to sell a book or pape rback sets his o w n price. His n a m e and price are r e c o r d e d , and when the book is sold he receives cash, less ten pe rcen t . If a book is pr iced by a s tuden t at $4 and the book is sold, he co l lec t s $3 .60 , and the s tore keeps the $.40. However , it the book isn't sold it is r e tu rned J o . U i e s tuden t unsold .

Tapis t r ied tb get a b o o k list t r o m / D u f f i e l d W i d e , the manager of tlW B l u j ^ K e y B o o k s t o r e , but Wade refused to give h im one. Tan i s then c o m p i l e d a list by asking each p ro fe s so r what books were being used in his course . A l though Tanis had his o w n list, it d i d n ' t necessarily mean tha t he had the books . T h e b o o k s that were available were on ly those that the s t u d e n t s b rought in to be sold.

WHILE THE S T O R E was open last week, Tan is asked fo r co-o p e r a t i o n : "We ' r e tak ing a great risk h e r e , " said Tanis , " w e need s t u d e n t s u p p o r t to keep going, and so far we've d o n e real well ."

T h e d o w n t o w n s tore had been t ak ing any book in any c o n d i t i o n . " A s a m a t t e r of f a c t , " added Tanis , " s o m e o n e came in here a while ago and bough t a ra t ty old pape rback tha t isn't even used at H o p e ; s o m e o n e else jus t made a q u a r t e r . "

SCHOOL SUPPLY AND GREETING CARO

CENTER HOLLAND

S T A T I O N E R S

H O L L A N D , M I C H I G A N S E R V I N G WESTERN M I C H I G A N SINCE 1900

DOWNTOWN NEXT TO PENNEYS

• GIFTS

• PLAYING CARDS

• CHESS

• POSTERS

COME IN AND BROW# AROUND . . .

\NE HAVE SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE.

the student chupch

will wopship

S u n d a y

DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL, 11 a.

CHAPLAIN HILLEGONDS, PREACHER

m,

HOLY COMMUNION

S t u d e n t s were able to r e tu rn wrong or u n w a n t e d b o o k s up un-til ye s t e rday when the s tore closed for the season, w h e r e u p o n they wou ld get their m o n e y back . I he b o o k s t o r e will open again in S e p t e m b e r .

THE S T U D E N T S T O R E had been do ing well, and D u f f y Wade-said, " N a t u r a l l y this s t u d e n t - r u n b o o k s t o r e conce rns me , and I 've made a few a d j u s t m e n t s to com-pensate . T h e s t uden t s are m o r e pr ice-consc ious these days a b o u t books , and I've b e c o m e m o r e liberal as a r esu l t . "

Blue Key usually b u y s b o o k s back f r o m s t u d e n t s at 60 pe rcen t of the m a r k e t cost , d e p e n d i n g on the b o o k ' s cond i t i on , and re-sells t hem at 75 percen t of the marke t cost . But because of the Down-town s tore Wade has lowered the resale pr ice on a few of the " m o s t w a n t e d " books .

" J U S T F O R THE r e c o r d , " said Wade, " i n spite of the s tuden t s tore , this semes te r I 've bought 25 percent m o r e used b o o k s than last semester . But na tura l ly it still upse t s me when s t u d e n t s com-plain because they feel I 'm ' c h e a p and un fa i r . ' These s t u d e n t s most likely d o n ' t k n o w the policies on used b o o k s . "

The used books at Blue Key have been put in to f o u r cate-gories. A " s o u n d " tex t is o n e which is a fair ly late ed i t ion and is used by m o r e than one t eacher fo r more than one semes te r . These Blue Key will buy cons i s t en t ly at 60 pe rcen t .

A " R I S K Y " T E X T is o n e tha t may b e c o m e over s tocked or a new edi t ion may c o m e o u t . T h e s to re will o rd ina r i ly pay 50 percen t fo r these used b o o k s and less than 50 percent if t h e book is o v e r s t o c k e d .

As for pape rbacks , the price d e p e n d s mos t l y on the c o n d i t i o n of the b ind ing , and par t ly on the c o n d i t i o n of the cover. T h e f o u r t h

C H E C K I N G P R I C E S — S t u d e n t s look over used b o o k s and mate r ia l s on sale in the s t u d e n t - o r g a n i z e d used b o o k s t o r e located o n Eighth S t ree t .

t ype of b o o k , those d r o p p e d and not used at Hope , the Blue Key will buy as a favor t o the s t u d e n t at the Used Book Co. ca t a logue price, which is usual ly 25 p e r c e n t , and s o m e t i m e s $ .25 .

" I ' m not t ry ing to m a k e a f o r t u n e , " said Wade, " I ' m t ry ing to m a k e a business , and I 'm not ou t to gyp a kid. 1 wish the s t u d e n t s wou ld c o m e to m e ; I'll talk a deal with a n y o n e w h o t h i n k s that Blue Key is unfa i r . A big deal is m a d e a b o u t b o o k s because the re is a high m a r k e t for b o o k s , bo th used and new , and s o m e people d o n ' t realize this. Th i s is p r o b a b l y t rue of b o o k s m o r e than a n y t h i n g .

" A S F O R T H I S S T U D E N T b o o k s t o r e , " Wade c o n t i n u e d .

men s..

women...$20.00 BY

Bass W^EJUNS"

21 West 8th

" I ' m not really scared by it; I don ' t really k n o w how they are ope ra t ing , nor d o I k n o w how they are doing, bu t 1 do k n o w that a b o u t 9 0 pe rcen t of the s t u d e n t s a p p r e c i a t e Blue K e y . "

Most of the s t u d e n t s k n o w that the Blue Key B o o k s t o r e isn ' t the most spac ious m a r k e t place in Hol land , but par t of the Blue Key 's p r o f i t s are going t o w a r d s the m u c h larger book s tore that will be in the DeWitt S t u d e n t Cul tura l and Social Cen te r .

" T h e system I have set u p , " says Wade, " w h e r e my crew gets the b o o k s for t he s t u d e n t s is the only leasable way to o p e r a t e ; if the s t u d e n t s were t o c o m e in here and get the i r requ i red b o o k s themselves , it w o u l d be sheer bed-lam in here . We jus t d o n ' t have the space to o p e r a t e in such a w a y . "

T H E D O W N T O W N S T U D E N T B o o k s t o r e has" a m p l e space, but the se lec t ion of b o o k s is on the scant side. Besides the t ex t s , Tanis had tor sale a c o m p l e t e line of A m w a y p r o d u c t s , inc lud ing the n a t i o n w i d e favor i t e s Tonga Af te r -shave, and " n o - m u s s " Silver Surf Af t e r shave . He a lso o f f e r s , for a meager pr ice, to have y o u r dr iver ' s license and u n b u r n e d d r a f t cards p las t ic -coa ted .

I he Blue Key B o o k s t o r e w o n ' t go out of bus iness because of the D o w n t o w n S t u d e n t B o o k s t o r e , and Wade said, " W e give service;

as long as I 'm here we'l l give serv ice ."

" W e may or m a y not be do ing well, said Tanis of his en te rp r i se , " b u t we are e n j o y i n g ourse lves . "

GIRL'S $2.25

WHITE

BLOUSES

NOW...HALF PRICE

$1.12 REG. $3.75

BLUE

SHORTS NOW...HALF PRICE

$1.87 at your

BLUE KEY BOOKSTORE

February 4 , 1 9 7 0 Hope College anchor Page 3

Hope coed killed in auto accident

H o p e College f r e s h m a n J a n e E l i zabe th D e J o n g e was killed and her g r a n d m o t h e r ser ious ly i n ju r ed in a two-ca r a c c i d e n t s o u t h of Zee land J an . 14.

T h e 18-year-old coed f r o m Zee land was p r o n o u n c e d dead o n arrival at Hol land Hosp i ta l .

A c c o r d i n g to d e p u t i e s , R o b i n -son was e a s t b o u n d on M-21 w h e n Miss DeJonge , dr iving s o u t h on Fai rv iew, r e p o r t e d l y failed t o yield the right of way at t he m a r k e d i n t e r s e c t i o n . Her car w a s s t ruck h e a d on by the R o b i n s o n car, o f f i c e r s said.

Miss DeJonge was a Zee land High Schoo l g r a d u a t e and ac t ive in m a n y high schoo l act ivi t ies . Fune ra l services were held at Firs t R e f o r m e d C h u r c h wi th Dr. J a c o b P n n s o f f i c i a t i ng . Burial was at Zee land c e m e t a r y .

Clara Ward featured

Gospel singers to perform

JANE E DEJONGE

CLB approves changc in sign-out procedure

by Jean DeGraff anchor Reporter

The C a m p u s Life Board passed a m o t i o n to change the p r o c e d u r e for s igning in and signing o u t in w o m e n ' s res idence halls at its m e e t i n g F r i d a y .

THE NEW P R O C E D U R E pe r mi t s w o m e n to leave the r e s idence halls w i t h o u t s igning ou t the i r exact d e s t i n a t i o n . W o m e n are re-qui red t o check the " o u t " squa re when t h e y leave the bu i ld ing and check t h e " i n " s q u a r e w h e n t h e y r e t u r n . W h e n signing o u t on t h e overn igh t shee t , t he w o m e n are t o use the s a m e p r o c e d u r e .

T h e p roposa l s ta ted that t h e w o m e n will have t h e o p t i o n to inc lude the i r exac t d e s t i n a t i o n if t h e y wish to be c o n t a c t e d . T h e p roposa l f u r t h e r s t a t ed the use of

t he s ign-out card is necessary " s o tha t t ne d o o r s can be locked at closing wi th all r e s iden t s p resen t w h o i n t e n d e d to r e t u r n . "

C L B S T U D E N T MEMBER Bonnie Brooks said tha t she t h o u g h t t he p roposa l was a " g o o d idea . " She s ta ted tha t t he s ign-out p r o c e d u r e now in use was a " n u i -sance because y o u d i d n ' t a l w a y s k n o w exac t ly w h e r e you were go ing . "

T h e m o t i o n to a d o p t the pro-posal was u n a n i m o u s l y passed.

In f u r t h e r a c t i o n the C L B a d o p t e d on a t e m p o r a r y basis a

r e c o m m e n d a t i o n f r o m the Stu-d e n t C o m m u n i c a t i o n C o m m i t t e e tha t a f i f t e e n pe rcen t c o m m i s s i o n be a w a r d e d to sa lesmen of W T A S for adver t i s ing tha t they c o n t r a c t .

DR D A V I D MARKER s ta ted tha t W T A S " d o e s have d i f f i c u l t y in ge t t ing a d v e r t i s e m e n t s and it is a r ea sonab le c o m m i s s i o n . "

He suggested tha t the r e c o m -m e n d a t i o n be a d o p t e d on a t e m p o r a r y basis so tha t a s t u d y can be m a d e of the salaries paid t o s t u d e n t s w o r k i n g f o r the s t u d e n t

medias .

Clara Ward and her Gospe l Singers will p e r f o r m M o n d a y at 8 : 1 5 p . m . at t h e Hol land Civic C e n t e r . It is p r e sen t ed by t h e H o p e College Grea t P e r f o r m a n c e Series.

GOSPEL SINGING is o n e of the o ldes t f o r m s of fo lk mus ic , having its r o o t s in t h e re l igious and t r iba l c e r e m o n i e s of Cen t ra l Afr ica . T h e h a u n t i n g c h a n t s and r h y t h m s were b r o u g h t t o t h e shores of this c o u n t r y in t h e early days of A m e r i c a n h i s to ry and are the basis of m u c h of o u r m o d e r n jazz.

Clara Ward and her Gospe l Singers p e r f o r m in a w ide l ange of s tyles, m a n y w i t h percussive ef-f e c t s - c l a p p i n g and f o o t s t o m p i n g , a c c o m p a n i e d by t a m b o u r i n e s , d r u m s , gu i ta rs and h a r m o n i c a s . There are s h o u t i n g songs t h a t bring peop le t o the i r feet and the re are songs that are sung qu ie t ly . S t r i den t gospel songs call on s inners t o r e f o r m , while o t h e r s t r anspose scenes f r o m the Bible i n t o m o v i n g , col loquia l and magn i f i c en t l y d r a m a t i c n u m b e r s .

THE SINGING g roup was d r awing a u d i e n c e s of 2 0 , 0 0 0 nearly 20 years ago, and m a n y of t o d a y ' s good gospel singers were t ra ined u n d e r Clara Ward. A l i t t le w o m a n wi th a big voice . Miss Ward s t a r t ed singing in the cho i r of Ph i l ade lph ia ' s E b e n e z e r Bapt is t C h u r c h w h e n she was only five years o ld . S o o n she was singing in a tr io wi th her m o t h e r and sis ter . In 1941 she f o r m e d her o w n g r o u p , wh ich b e c a m e f a m o u s all over t he U n i t e d S ta tes , E u r o p e and J a p a n .

T h e B r o a d w a y show " T a m b o u -rines f o r G l o r y " s ta r red Miss

G R E A T P E R F O R M E R S - C l a r a Ward and her gospel singers will present an evening of Gospel singing in a concert sponsored by the Hope College Great Performance Series Feb. 9 at the Holland Civic Center.

Ward. She has a p p e a r e d as a fea-tu re e n t e r t a i n e r on n u m e r o u s tele-vision shows , inc lud ing the " T o -night S h o w " , t h e " T o d a y S h o w " , " T h e D a n n y T h o m a s S h o w " , " H o o t e n a n n y " , and t h e " S t e v e Allen S h o w " .

MISS WARD has jus t r e t u r n e d f r o m e n t e r t a i n i n g U.S. t r o o p s in V i e t n a m , and last y e a r she per-f o r m e d at t h e a n n u a l j azz fest ivals

in Ant ides , F rance , and N e w p o r t , R . l .

H o p e College s t u d e n t s , f acu l ty and staff may a t t e n d the c o n c e r t f ree of charge w i t h H o p e I .D . cards . All o the r s are S2 .75 fo r adu l t s , and $1 .75 for s t u d e n t s . T i cke t s may be purchased at Meyer Music House in Hol land the the H o p e College S t u d e n t Activi-ties Of f i ce .

Takes rightist stance

NCAA blasts black militant groups T h e Na t iona l Col legia te Athle-

t i c A s s o c i a t i o n recen t ly de-n o u n c e d black mi l i t an t organiza-t ions as " d o i n g a great disservice t o black college a t h l e t e s . "

IN A D D I T I O N TO c la iming t h a t the Black P a n t h e r p a r t y and Black S t u d e n t Un ion " a r e des t ruc-tive fo rces i n t e n d i n g to use a lmos t any device to d i s rup t and des-t r o y , " the D e c e m b e r , 1969 , NCAA News s ta ted tha t " m a n y i n n o c e n t par t i es are being swept up in the o f t e n m a n u f a c t u r e d inc iden t s , t h e r e b y giving such oc-c u r e n c e s the add i t i ona l pub l ic i ty the mi l i t an t s des i r e . "

Three new professors appointed to faculty

T h r e e new f a c u l t y m e m b e r s were a d d e d to the t each ing s t a f f . D e a n f o r A c a d e m i c A f f i a r s M o r e t t e Rider a n n o u n c e d re-cen t ly .

Carl F. S c h a c k o w will be assis-t a n t p r o f e s s o r in e d u c a t i o n . S c h a c k o w received his B.S. degree f r o m Wi t t enbe rg Univers i ty in 1959, his M.S. degree f r o m N o r t h -ern Il l inois Univers i ty in 1963 and is soon to be a w a r d e d his Ed . D.

f r o m Miami Univers i ty . New to the p h y s i c s d e p a r t m e n t

are Dr. J a m e s Seeser and Mr.

J a m e s Toevs , w h o were a p p o i n t e d assis tant p ro fessors . Dr. Seeser re-ceived his A.B. degree f r o m Drury Col lege in 1965, his M.S. degree f r o m the Univers i ty of Missouri in 1967 and his Ph .D. f r o m the Univers i ty of Missouri .

Mr. Toevs received his B.S. deg ree f r o m the Univers i ty of C o l o r a d o in 1964 and is work ing t o w a r d s his Ph.D. at the Ca l i fo rn ia I n s t i t u t e of T e c h n o l o g y . He t augh t at Ca l t ech b e f o r e c o m i n g to H o p e .

T h e ar t ic le calls t he S t u d e n t s for a D e m o c r a t i c Soc ie ty and the Black P a n t h e r Par ty " m o v e m e n t s which have d i rec t c o m m u n i c a t i o n wi th C o m m u n i s t - o r i e n t e d , revolu-t iona ry g r o u p s in o t h e r n a t i o n s . "

THE ARTICLE f u r t h e r s ta tes , ^ I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e a th le t i c s is a p r ime ta rge t and vehicle for (The P a n t h e r s and t h e Black S t u d e n t U n i o n ) because of t he pub l i c i ty value i n h e r e n t in spor t s and the fact t h a t the Negro or black a th l e t e involved in a mild d isorder will be a s u b j e c t of newspr in t f r o m coast t o coas t , whe reas the ac ts of a less-publ ic ized BSU p a r t y m e m b e r may o n l y be r e p o r t e d in the c a m p u s p a p e r . "

T h e NCAA art icle also charged tha t " t h e d e m a n d s (by black a th l e t e s at va r ious colleges) are so s t r u c t u r e d and r epe t i t i ous as t o clearly ind ica t e cen t ra l i zed distri-b u t i o n . "

THE ARTICLE c o n c l u d e d tha t "d i s cou rag ing p r o b l e m s e n c o u n -tered by the black a t h l e t e should and can be best resolved on a personal basis wi th in the exis t ing f r a m e w o r k of ins t i tu t iona l per-sonnel and p r o c e d u r e s . "

N C A A ' s execu t ive d i r ec to r is Walter Byers, w h o insisted tha t " b l a c k a t h l e t e s are n o t t r ea ted any d i f f e r e n t l y than any o t h e r col legia te a th l e t e s . If they have p r o b l e m s , the i r whi te c o u n t e r -par t s in the same schoo ls have the same p r o b l e m s . "

THIS REPORT " h a s t h rus t t h e s u p p o s e d l y apo l i t i ca l NCAA in to a f i rm s tance on the e x t r e m e r i g h t , " acco rd ing t o Newsweek magaz ine .

H o p e is a m e m b e r , along wi th the o t h e r Michigan In te r -co l leg ia te A t h l e t i c Assoc ia t ion c o n f e r e n c e schoo l s , of the N C A A . Th i s e n a b l e s " a l l i e d m e m b e r s h i p " w i th in the c o n f e r e n c e , acco rd ing to G o r d o n Brewer , d i r e c t o r of t he a th l e t i c d e p a r t m e n t . Brewer repre-sen t s t he College at the annua l N C A A mee t ing in Wash ing ton , D.C.

HOPE HAS NOT m a d e a s ta te-m e n t c o n c e r n i n g the s tand by the N C A A . A c c o r d i n g to L o r e n z o H o w a r d , the black a th le tes will not pressure the College a th le t i c d e p a r t m e n t t o d e n o u n c e the ar t ic le . " T h e p ressure is jus t n o t h e r e , " he s t a t e d . H o w a r d a d d e d , howeve r , , t ha t t he b lack a t h l e t e s " a r e c o n c e r n e d wi th the N C A A p o s i t i o n . "

M r . Brewer descr ibed the a r t i c le ' s s tand as " o p i n i o n " and expressed c o n c e r n over the issue. He a d d e d t h a t because of the i m p o r t a n c e of the c o n t r o v e r s y , it

will " m o r e than l ike ly" be dis-cussed in t h e nex t H o p e a th l e t i c c o m m i t t e e mee t ing .

THEY WILL HAVE p l e n t y to talk a b o u t , for t h e N C A A also p r o d u c e d a s p e c i a l o n e - m i n u t e spo t wh ich was a i red du r ing t h e Nov. 15 O h i o S t a t e -Pu rdue game . As some 250*,000 peace m a r c h e r s mobi l ized in Washington to pro-test the Vietrmm war , the N C A A message, wr i t t en f o r the occas ion by Byers, expressed the Associa-t i o n ' s " d e e p l y felt a p p r e c i a t i o n to the present and p i^ t m e m b e r s of the a rmed f o r c e s . "

T h e spo t c o n t i n u e d , " T h e men of Amer ica have carr ied th is na-t i o n ' s flag wi th o u r allies in m a n y areas of the world t o p ro t ec t all of us . . .and f o r that m a t t e r , t o m a k e it possible for t h o s e w h o c h o o s e to carry on their dissent in un-paral le led f r e e d o m . "

B Y E R S , E X P L A I N E D the t iming of the message by saying, " O h i o S ta t e was having a half-t ime show in recogn i t ion of Ve te r -a n ' s Day. T h e y J l e t us k n o w and we t h o u g h t it w o u l d be well to have our o n e - m i f t u t e spot in keep-ing with tha t pa r t i cu la r o c c a s i o n . "

100 Year Old Remodeled School House

15 miles east of Holland on Adams (16th St.) third stop sign from

US 31

Need two roommates $ 3 5 m o n t h ,

u t i l i t i e s i n c l u d e d

Will require

transportation

to school

Call Mon., Wed., or Fri.

af ter 6 p.m. 8 9 6 - 9 9 6 8

K E N T D I C K I N S O N JAMESTOWN, MICHIGAN

The FIIS EST in Traditionnl Mens Clothing

For the pacesetter or the style-conscious follower

FARAH CASUAL SLACKS VAN HEUSEN 417 SHIRTS

McGREGOR SPORTSWEAR H.I.S. OUTERWEAR

ALLIGATOR RAINWEAR HICKOK BELTS A ACCESSORIES

MENS SHOP

A m t — Q o o d lOiU

Those who know...

8° to the 'CROW...

even in the Snow!

T H E 0 1 0 C R O W SAVGArVCK...NOW OPEN

EVERY SATURDAY

FEATURING

THE FABULOUS...THE FLUID OUNCE

Coral Gables SAUGATUCK

Page 4 Hope College anchor February 4 , 1 9 7 0

A look at history

Hope College has had a distinguished history, and the last decade, wh ich brought new buildings, new faces and new policies

to the inst i tut ion, is not outside this t radi t ion.

New buildings include Van Zoeren Li-brary and the Physics-Math Bui lding, the

f ratern i ty complex w i t h f ive do rm i to r y units and Gi lmore Hall, all constructed

under the Admin is t ra t ion of President Ir-win Lubbers. Dykstra Hall and the Brumler

Apartments were added to the physical plant dur ing the Presidency of Calvin Van-derWerf, and construct ion has begun on

the DeWitt Student Cultural and Social

Center and the Wichers add i t ion to the Nykerk Hall of Music.

•f ' * •-> '' . Vj .1. .

New faces on campus included a new College President, and w i t h h im numerous

and frequent changes in administrat ive personnel. The facul ty has grown, and the

student body has increased in size f r om 1,550 to 2,000.

New policies changed many aspects o f the social l i fe of Hope students. The chapel requirement was altered, and the commun-ity government concept was recently initia-

ted. A Profi le Commit tee repor t in 1965 provided some indicat ion of how Hope

could best cope w i th fu ture demands and problems.

In spite of the myr iad problems which

have t rad i t ional ly plagued Hope, educa-tional programs cont inue to improve in

imagination and qual i ty , social pol icy

changes have enabled students to formula te

their own goals and to reach them w i t h

mature att i tudes, commun i t y government

has helped breach the gap between the

various segments of the Hope commun i t y ,

and some o ld problems have found new solutions.

Yet dur ing the past few years a feeling

of discontent and dissatisfaction has been evident at Hope College, manifested by

students, facul ty , administrators and alum-

ni. Rising fees have raised the cost of

Readers speak out

attending Hope nearly $1,000. Endowmeht

has showed no signif icant increase. Stu-dents are expected to cont r ibu te 80 per-

cent of the expense of their education, making Hope one of the few schools that asks so much of its students. Con t inu i t y of

Admin is t ra t ion has been a near impossibi l i ty as tens of d i f ferent people have f i l led varying administrat ive jobs in the last seven years.

A t the same t ime there is increased distrust and bitterness among the students and facul ty . There are symptoms of a

serious problem, one which cannot help but have a damaging effect for the students which Hope is commi t ted to educate.

Conf l ic t w i t h in any inst i tu t ion is heal-thy and promotes growth, bu t when that conf l i c t takes the f o rm of division and

fact ioning, there can be no doubt that

instabi l i ty and bickering wi l l soon take the

place of u^iity of purpose and effective teamwork. The characteristic which distin-

guishes strong leadership and executive

prowess in any organizat ion is the abi l i ty to at t ract and maintain a solid, competent

administrat ive team. But the internal con-

f l ict wh ich has characterized the Hope College administrat ion has led to no such

team; rather, instabi l i ty , lack o f con t inu i ty and distrust have resulted. In far too many

cases, the source of that conf l ic t has centered around the President.

Students have become frustrated w i t h

the Admin is t ra t ion because they cannot

get straight answers to their questions.

Mis informed or misleading statements have given students false hopes. Faculty mem-

bers have been embit tered because proper

channels of communica t ion have been mis-

used or over-looked and proper author i ty

has been usurped. Personal battles have been waged w i th the Admin is t ra t ion , and resignations have been alarmingly frequent.

The t ime has come to re-examine the relat ion of the President to the rest of the

College commun i t y , and to give serious

consideration to what ever steps may be

necessary to insure that leadership, conti-nu i ty and stabi l i ty are returned to Hope College.

A tribute to DeVette In the past several weeks since Russ

D e V e t t e a n n o u n c e d his res igna t ion as head f o o t b a l l c o a c h , I have had the o p p o r t u n i t y to re f lec t o n what Russ m e a n t t o H o p e College f o o t b a l l and how he a f f e c t e d me as a p layer and later as an ass is tant coach under h im.

With his res igna t ion , H o p e f o o t b a l l has lost an in tangib le qua l i ty tha t will be very d i f f i cu l t to replace . T w o a t t r i b u t e s of Coach D e V e t t e s tand ou t in m y mind as being par t i cu la r ly s ignif icant in c o n t r i b u -ting to tha t q u a l i t y , especial ly in light of the e m p h a s i s placed on winn ing in m o d e r n day college foo tba l l .

Russ D e V e t t e d e m a n d e d m a t u r i t y f r o m his p layers . Many f r e s h m e n could no t hand le this , f o r they were a c c u s t o m e d t o having high school coaches avai lable t o hold thei r h a n d s (and to kick their res-pect ive seats) . S o m e men cou ld not yet handle the respons ib i l i ty to be m a t u r e when t h e y were seniors . Th i s was indeed u n f o r t u n a t e , for t hose w h o did accep t it made thei r e x o d u s f r o m H o p e b e t t e r m e n because of their expe r i ence w i t h Coach D e V e t t e t h a n they w o u l d have been wi th-ou t this m e a n i n g f u l contact with him.

dear editor S e c o n d l y , Russ D e V e t t e real ly t o o k his

Chr i s t i an i ty o n t o the f o o t b a l l f i e ld . Living a Chr i s t ian life in the violent world of foo tba l l is a d e m a n d i n g t a sk , bu t 1 have never met a n y o n e w h o d o u b t e d fo r an ins tant tha t Russ did it. T o d a y m a n y college f o o t b a l l p layers a re t a u g h t techni -ques of tackl ing and b lock ing tha t are designed to d o phys ica l h a r m to the op-p o n e n t . With the pressures exe r t ed o n coaches t o win , this is a lmos t inevi table . Coach D e V e t t e w a n t e d t o win f o o t b a l l games as bad ly as a n y o n e , bu t I bel ieve he wanted footbal l p layed because it was f u n It is a very di f f icult thing to h i t a m a n wi th every o u n c e o f s t r eng th y o u have and to love h im whi le you a re doing i t , b u t this is the kind o f - footba l l D e V e t t e a d v o c a t e d .

Even when we lost (du r ing m y p lay ing years th is was f r e q u e n t l y ) C o a c h D e V e t t e d e m o n s t r a t e d a posi t ive Chr i s t i an a t t i t u d e .

G o o d n e s s k n o w s 1 have n o t been in a g r e e m e n t wi th h im at all t imes dur ing t h e past eight years , b u t whenever I have asked myself u n d e r wha t k ind of m a n w o u l d I want a son of mine to play f o o t b a l l , t h e n a m e tha t appea r s in my m i n d is Russ D e V e t t e .

J i m Bekker ing Class of 1 9 6 5

Moment of t r u th

Unti l the d ra f t l o t t e ry of Dec . 1, 1 was sure of where my c o m m i t m e n t s lay; I was out to make the world a b e t t e r place t o live in. But then 1 b e c a m e n u m b e r 288 and s u d d e n l y , fo r a m o m e n t , the world was a b e t t e r place t o live in - - f o r me. I t ' s f r i g h t e n i n g to th ink my on ly conce rn was for myse l f . Pe rhaps it still is.

But 1 really d o n ' t t h ink I 'm a lone in this p o s i t i o n ; I 'm a f r a id , n o t fo r myse l f , bu t f o r all t h e o t h e r " r evo lu t i ona r i e s ' 1 b e t w e e n the ages o f 19 and 26 w h o sighed with relief w h e n thei r n u m b e r s fell b e y o n d 250. F o r a f r iend said, " N o o n e is safe un t i l we a re all s a f e . " Th i s is the spirit of t he m o v e m e n t , but w h e r e is my spirit n o w ? Jus t h o w high d o e s self c o m e w h e n we are asked to list these th ings we value? How m a n y of us, b o t h w h i t e and black, are really w o r k i n g to change the wor ld , o r just o u r pos i t i ons on the s t o m p i n g pile? T h i n k a b o u t it! I 'll by the f i rs t to a d m i t 1 feel good a b o u t being n u m b e r 2 8 8 , but w h a t such a fee l ing has s h o w n me a b o u t where my pr ior i t ies real ly lie, I f ind t o some degree d i f f i cu l t t o a c c e p t .

Mark O l t h o f f 2-S and 2 8 8

IVot'cP Yoo U/ALK A

ro A^-£ia/

s e n , frjoj^s AT >0ViL js€ 0 F

couf-c

oovjw pf*K4' fer K) f&tenj ffciccs /

COM iu AMP Louise! \ I N£cv:

y o o f i L

"Well, I w o n all m y t e x t b o o k s in a p o k e r g a m e at Michigan S t a t e . "

The solution to pollution by Art Buchwald

T h e big p ro te s t m o v e m e n t of t he Seven-ties will c o n c e r n itself wi th p o l l u t i o n . S t u d e n t s , t eache r s , conse rva t ion g roups and publ ic -sp i r i ted c i t i zens are r eady to wage war to improve t h e e n v i r o n m e n t , and we can expec t t o see s o m e very tense scenes b e t w e e n t h e a n t i p o l l u t o r s and t h o s e fo rces in the c o u n t r y w h i c h are suspec ted of p o l l u t i o n .

WHILE THE ANTIPOLLUTION pro-tes te r s are just t ry ing to get o rgan ized , t he p r o p o l l u t i o n p e o p l e have a l ready hired a lobbyis t to head an o rgan iza t ion called the A m e r i c a n P o l l u t i o n A n t i - D e f a m a t i o n League .

T h e l obby ing g r o u p has a budge t of $25 mil l ion to s tar t w i t h , and it will w o r k to pe r suade Congress and t h e pub l i c tha t po l lu t ion is no t as bad as e v e r y o n e m a k e s it ou t t o be.

Mr. Caleb T e r g e n t , execu t ive sec re ta ry of t he A P A D L , to ld m e in his o f f i c e s in Wash ing ton , "We are p rov id ing all t h e good th ings in life t o t h e A m e r i c a n peop le , and we can ' t provide t h e m if we are c o n s t a n t l y being harassed by p e o p l e yell ing f o r clean air and clean w a t e r . "

"YOU FEEL T H A T THE a n t i p o l l u t i o n peop le a re being unrea l i s t i c t h e n ? "

' T h a t ' s p u t t i n g it m i l d l y , " Tergen t said. " T h e k e y s t o n e t o A m e r i c a n indus t ry has been its abi l i ty t o get rid of its chemica l was te t h r o u g h t h e skies a n d the s t rpams . When y o u cr i t ic ize p o l l u t i o n in A m e r i c a , you are cr i t ic izing the A m e r i c a n way of l i f e . "

" M r . Te rgen t , are y o u saying tha t t he C o m m u n i s t s are b e h i n d t h e a n t i p o l l u t i o n campa ign in the Un i t ed S t a t e s ? "

"LET'S JUST S A Y t h e y ' r e not u n h a p p y t o see A m e r i c a n i n d u s t r y shackled by unrea l i s t i c laws a n d o r d i n a n c e s tha t can

on ly a f f ec t p r o f i t s as well as t he gross na t iona l p r o d u c t . What b e t t e r way to d e s t r o y f r e e en t e rp r i s e than t o d e m a n d res t r i c t ions on the g rea t A m e r i c a n indus-trial e m p i r e s ? If t he C o m m i e s a r e n ' t beh ind it, t h e y ' r e cer ta in ly cheer ing f r o m the s t a n d s . "

"Wha t p r o j e c t s has the A P A D L b e c o m e involved i n ? "

" W e are invest ing a great dea l of m o n e y in research . Of the $25 mill ion set aside by the league, we are spend ing $ 5 , 0 0 0 to f ind ou t wha t causes p o l l u t i o n . T h e rest of t he m o n e y will go fo r campa ign c o n t r i b u t i o n s to m e m b e r s of Congress w h o are s y m p a -the t i c to o u r c a u s e . "

"WILL Y O U T R Y t o tell y o u r side of t he s tory to the p u b l i c ? "

"Yes , we will. We have set u p a pol lu-t ion e d u c a t i o n ins t i t u t ion w h i c h will in-f o r m the p u b l i c w h y a n t i p o l l u t i o n restr ic-t ions will e n d a n g e r t h e i r p o c k e t b o o k s and cause higher prices a n d in fe r io r m e r c h a n -dise. We m u s t be ce r t a in that t h e A m e r i c a n peop le a re a w a r e t h a t they will on ly be hu r t i ng t hemse lves if t h e y k e e p insist ing o n i n d u s t r y c lean ing up t h e e n v i r o n m e n t .

" T h e r e has been a great deal of mis-i n f o r m a t i o n on po l l u t i on which we h o p e to dispel . F o r e x a m p l e , in tes t s we proved t h a t h u m a n beings live on a g rea t deal less o x y g e n t h a n t h e y t h o u g h t t h e y cou ld . We was te a lot of clean air when w e b r e a t h e . We believe po l lu t ion l imits can be raised w i t h o u t e n d a n g e r i n g a n y o n e ' s h e a l t h . "

" B U T IS T H A T y o u r on ly s o l u t i o n ? " I a sked .

Te rgen t said, " N o , t h e real so lu t i on to po l lu t ion is f o r e v e r y o n e to b r e a t h e less and on ly w h e n a b s o l u t e l y n e c e s s a r y . "

C o p y r i g h t 1970, T h e Wash ing ton Post Co.

OWE COLLEGE

anchor OLLAND, MICHIGAN P R E S S

P u W i s b e d w e e k , y d u r i n g t h e c o l l e g e y e a r e x c e p t v a c a t i o n , h o l i d a y a n d e x a m i n a t i o n p e r i o d s by

a n d f o r t h e s t u d e n t s of H o p e C o l l e g e . H o l l a n d , M i c h i g a n , u n d e r t h e a u t h o r i t y o f t h e S t u d e n t C o m m u n i c a t i o n s B o a r d .

S u b s c r i p t i o n : $ 5 p e r y e a r . P r i n t e d : T h e C o m p o s i n g R o o m , G r a n d R a p i d s , M i c h i g a n .

M e m b e r . A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P ress .

O f f i c e : G r o u n d f l o o r o f G r a v e s Hal l . P h o n e : 3 9 2 - 5 1 1 1, E x t . 2 2 8 5 .

T h e o p i n i o n s o n t h i s p a g e a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y t h o s e o f t h e s t u d e n t b o d y , f a c u l t y o r A d m i n i s t r a -t i o n o f H o p e C o l l e g e .

BOARD OF EDITORS

Editor Tom Donia Assistant Editor Garrett DeGraff News Editor Lynn joncs

Assistant News Editor Sarah Penny Managing Editor Clarke Borgeson

Advertising Dave Die vendorf Business Manager Mien Pedersen

DEPARTMENTS

Critiques Robert Kieft Columnist Drew Hinderer. Dob Vandenberv Cartoonists Greg Phillips,

Debbie Yoch, Gene Haulenbeek

Layout ?. . . .Janice Bakker Headlines Dave Dustin Photography . . . Dan Barber, Angie Kolster Joyce Maurus, Jeanne Salbert, Louis Schakel,

Rob Benchley, and Steve Vandermade.

REPORTERS

Phyllis Accocella, Rob Benchley, Dave Boersma, Jim Brainard, Jean Degraff, Bill Hoffman, Elaine Kidd, Andy Mulder, Robin Pearce, Pete Struck, Dave Thomas, Bev Unangst, Rich Van Doren, Nancy Warner, Gail Werka and Charlotte Whitney.

February 4, 1 9 7 0 Hope College anchor Page 5

A frightening view of a desperate society Edi tor 's note: This week's re-

view is wr i t ten by anchor Criti-ques Editor Robert K ief t . He re-views Crybaby of the Western World by John Leonard (Double-day and Co.; $4.95).

by Robert Kieft anchor Critiques Editor

" F u n n y , " said G o n g o r , at the whee l . " T h e c h u r c h e s look like a i rpo r t s , and the high schoo l s look like f i l l ing s t a t i o n s . "

" T h e r e is n o t h i n g f u n n y abou t i t , " said S t a n h o p e . " L o n g Beach is a k ind of s t r ip min ing of the s o u l . "

MUCH V E R B I A G E and edi-torial wind are e x p e n d e d these days in the a t t e m p t t o d e f i n e the n a t u r e and c h a r a c t e r of A m e r i c a ' s late l 6 0 ' s and early 4 70 's .

P o n t i f i c a t i n g f r o m thei r several pu lp i t s , those w h o m a k e it their bus iness to talk a b o u t such things have var iously desc r ibed m o d e r n A m e r i c a , a m o n g o t h e r th ings , as a new G o m o r r a h , a neo-fascis t Nazi-d o m h a u n t e d by the spec t re of the "s i len t m a j o r i t y , " and a new U t o p i a basking (or ce r t a in of its i n h a b i t a n t s , a n y w a y , basking) in the ben ign and b e n e f i c e n t rays of the mys t i c , c rys ta l sun of Aquar -ius.

J O H N L E O N A R D in his recent novel Crybaby of the Western World calls it " L o n g B e a c h . " No " h a r m o n y and u n d e r s t a n d i n g " a b o u t in this Long Beach, how-ever; ne i ther are t h e r e the ex-pec t ed fire and b r i m s t o n e falling on its roofs nor the goose -s tepp ing c o l u m n s of n o t - s o - c r y p t o , b r o w n -shi r ted soldiers m a r c h i n g t h r o u g h its s t ree ts .

N o n e of these , and ye t some-how p r o b a b l y involving e l e m e n t s of all, Long Beach is a cynical b lank c rea ted in the c a r t o g r a p h y of h u m a n e x p e r i e n c e by the geo-g r a p h e r of Nul l i ty .

AMERICA AS Long Beach, pos i t s Crybaby p las t ic a n d neon q u e e n of t he oi l-r ich, smog-e n s h r o u d e d , S o u t h e r n Cal i forn ia c o a s t ; Long Beach of t he t w o d i m e n s i o n s . L o n g Beach f l a t l a n d ; L o n g Beach the listless and fu t i l e and poin t less , t he u l t i m a t e lassi-t u d e of the h u m a n spirit and great d r o p p e d o u t ; Long Beach t h e c o s m i c n o t h i n g , the f ina l nega-t i on , the t o t a l v o i d - d e a t h at t h e

end of h u m a n e n t r o p y ; Long Beach, " t h e cloaca of t he Western World. . .a t u b f r o m which t h e plug has been pulled and we are, all of us, go ing d o w n the d r a i n . "

I n t o this mae l s t rom of life-consc iousness being sucked d o w n this garbage disposal of h is tory is born S t a n h o p e C r o n o p i o s , a he ro -of sor t s . Of himself and his early years , he says; " I was b o r n in Long Beach , in a t ract h o m e , under the b r o k e n wall and b u r n -ing Span i sh tile. Fa the r l e s s chi ld . Sly spy in baby fa t , my vi r tues eels of s t r a t egem coiling and strik-ing f o r my m o t h e r ' s h a n d . Weak-eyes, graceless u n d e r t y k e . w i t h o u t f r i ends , w i t h o u t t enn is sneakers . Under t h e steel pa t io umbre l l a , c h e a t i n g at sol i taire as sol i taire had c h e a t e d me. Self c lu t ch ing hydra mat ic g r i e f -ch ick . "

S t a n h o p e tries t o p a t t e r n his life o n the ma le -o f -Long Beach no rm. But his pape r r ou t e fails; he can ' t d o Kara te ; he doesn t m a k e as a m e m b e r of the high school l e t t e r m e n ' s c lub ; he loses himself in a jungle of ado lescen t F r e u d i a n sexual c o n f u s i o n .

HE B E C O M E S a poet ot the void t o which all th ings in Long Beach t e n d . He e n t e r s college and b e f r i e n d s a p ro fe s so r of intell-ec tua l h is tory ( " S e l e c t e d Prat fa l ls in the H u m a n M e t a c o m e d y " ) . He pa r t i c ipa t e s in the mys t ic r i tes of the sur fe rs .

Even tua l l y , he b e c o m e s in-volved in a d r e a d f u l tangle of Soviet , Chinese , and FBI agents . His o n l y t rue love is d o n e in by his m o t h e r , a f o r m e r T r o t s k y i t e who , because she is mar r ied to her b r o t h e r , her son ' s unc le , w h o m she a lso disposes of because is is a Soviet c o m m u n i s t , is, in rea l t iy , also his a u n t ! H o w ful l of qu i rk s is

life! THE COMPLICATIONS con-

t inue t o m o u n t and thr ive . Long Beach all the while suck ing h im to Void and the despai r of t he u t t e r f u t i l i t y of ever p e r f o r m i n g a m e a n i n g f u l act .

F ina l ly at t he last d i t ch , in St. T h e r e s a ' s Li t t le Ashram of Ecu-menica l O m , which is Long Beach the T r i u m p h a n t U l t ima te Drop-ped O u t , S t a n h o p e acts . Causing his m o t h e r ' s more- than-s l igh t ly b izar re d e a t h . S t a n h o p e escapes

VanderWerf to declare construction financing

G r a n t s and m o n i e s fo r the De-Wit t S t u d e n t Cu l tu ra l and Social C e n t e r , the Sc ience Building and o t h e r c a m p u s p r o j e c t s are ex -p e c t e d to be a n n o u n c e d to t h e Board of T r u s t e e s t o m o r r o w by Pres ident Calvin V a n d e r W e r f .

T h e Gulf Oil F o u n d a t i o n do -n a t e d $ 5 , 0 0 0 t o w a r d c o n s t r u c t i o n of the $4 mill ion Science Building d u r i n g D e c e m b e r . T h e Xe rox F o u n d a t i o n a p p r o p r i a t e d $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 to be used in pu rchas ing micro-f i lm suppl ies and e q u i p m e n t f o r V a n Zoe ren L ib ra ry . Also an-n o u n c e d was a $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 Sk i lman F o u n d a t i o n grant t o s u p p o r t w o r k - s t u d y p r o g r a m s on c a m p u s .

An un re s t r i c t ed gif t of $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 f r o m a f r i end of t he College will go i n t o the o p e r a t i n g b u d g e t , and t h e a l u m n i giving f o r 1969 is e x p e c t e d t o to ta l a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 2 1 5 , 0 0 0 . J ack and Dick DeWit t have p ledged $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 and C h a i r m a n of t h e Board of T r u s t e e s Hugh DePree has

p ledged $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 . Both pledges were m a d e in D e c e m b e r , 1969 .

In a d d i t i o n , the U p j o h n Com-pany F o u n d a t i o n has pledged $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 for c o n s t r u c t i o n of the new Science Building d u r i n g the 1970-71 academic year .

Women's cottages

win food drive T h e w o m e n ' s co t t ages won the

Assoc ia t ion of Women S t u d e n t s toy and c a n n e d f o o d dr ive, ac-c o r d i n g to the AWS of f i ce r s .

Phe lps , G i l m o r e and Dyks t ra hal ls came in second , th i rd and f o u r t h respect ive ly . O t h e r resi-d e n c e s c o n t r i b u t i n g t o the drive were Dur f ee , Van Vleck and the Arcad ian F r a t e r n i t y .

T h e C o m m u n i t y A c t i o n House d i s t r i bu t ed the c o n t r i b u t i o n s t o n e e d y famil ies in the Hol land area .

The Best of Peanuts

t he seemingly ine luc tab le a t ten-t ions of t he Long Beach nul l i ty . In act , he re fuses the life of Void and m a i n t a i n s his in tegr i ty and m a y b e even the abi l i ty t o be a l i t t le h a p p y .

S T A N H O P E T H E poe t , the ar t is t , w h o alone can escape Long Beach because in the act of art which is c rea t ion he can re -make it and t h e r e b y cope wi th it. sur-vives! It is a m a j o r v ic tory f o r the h u m a n spir i t .

He wr i t e s his m e m o i r s and shows the manusc r ip t t o pub-l i s h e r ' s - r e present a tive ( i o n g o r . T h e r u b of it all is, t h o u g h , that th is inva luable d o c u m e n t is not

p r in ted on ve l lum, s l ipcased, and sold at e x h o r b i t a n t pr ices f o r all the wor ld ' s in sp i ra t ion , but is in-s tead, in this age of M c L u h a n , t o be p r in t ed as a c o m i c b o o k . At this p o i n t , S t a n h o p e perceives his t rue d e s t i n y - " T o be, forever , a banana peel on the stage of His-t o r y . " Thus , e n d e t h . Sic t rans i t .

IF ALL THE above seems a tr if le c o n f u s i n g , d o n ' t be u n d u l y a l a rmed ; Crybaby is much easier read t h a n t a lked a b o u t in Master-plots-TinieidsWion. I t s p lo t and s i tua t ions are c r ea tu r e s f r o m a n igh tmare a c c o r d i n g to l onesco with rhe to r i c by T o m Wolfe, ob-scuran t i sm by Sontag , word play by N o b o k o v and sets and special e f f e c t s by M c L u h a n . T h e reader of th is ar t icle will begin to see some of the d i f f i cu l t i e s involved in ta lk ing a b o u t the vo lume .

Ye t , for those of reasonably stout hear t and sense of h u m o r , Crybabv will he an e x t r e m e l y rewarding expe r i ence . Mr. Leon-ard hand les his language wi th vir-tuoso skill. He has a gift for ep igram and ph ra se -mak ing that would d o jus t i ce t o Oscar Wilde. He is a s u p e r b imagis t , c o m m u n i -cat ing his vision of the hell of Long Beach with f r igh ten ing , sur-prising and unfa i l ingly original clari ty.

HIS ABILITY t o verbal ize in

the most c o n c r e t e and e c o n o m i c a l t e rms his o b s e r v a t i o n s on the con-

t e m p o r a r y scene is a cons t an t w o n d e r ; t he re is s o m e t h i n g on a lmos t every page that makes one linger and wish tha t one had seen a n a said it his way.

All of which is by way of c ap tu r ing in pr int one way (and a very valid way) of l o o k i n g at Amer ica in the Age of Aquar ius , an Amer ica tha t is fast b e c o m i n g " m u s c l e - b o u n d by the ca l i s thenics of de spa i r . " Long Beach does exist (if it d i d n ' t , Leona rd would have had n o t h i n g to wr i te a b o u t ) , and we are all of us walking its s t ree t s (which we can, bu t may very well no t , escape) . Does it look famil iar?

" L O N G B E A C H ! " G o n g o r sneered . "1 have seen the wor ld , and it is Long Beach. On a Fr iday night in any ci ty in this na t ion a r o u n d the bars and movie houses and all-night ca fe te r ias , t hey are wait ing, their h a n d s in the i r poc-kets and their bra ins in their shoes. They are wai t ing slung in d o o r w a y s , hung f r o m s t r ee t l amps , lying on the h o o d s of a u t o m o -biles, in six packs , bored b e y o n d tears , hurl ing course images of b ru ta l i ty and viola t ion at bassers-by. They ha te every th ing , even sex. Queens , eun ichs , bullies, t ransvest i tes , dwar f s , in ternal ref-ugees, twi tch mach ines , the self-dispossessed, the living dead , t he plast ic m e n . . . ! "

" L o n g Beach is a kind of s t r ip min ing of the sou l . "

Q u e s t i o n s t o f a c e by Drew Hinderer

T h e loudes t voice in c o n t e m -pora ry Amer ica is tha t of t h e midd le class: it is a d e m a n d f o r s tabi l i ty t h a t t h r e a t e n s t o d r o w n the long s t i r r ing seeds of change . T o those s t u d e n t s involved here in wha t t h e y h o p e to be g r o w t h , t h e ques t i on is posed : " W h y d o y o u t a m p e r w i th our c o n t e n t i n g and peace fu l o r d e r ; th is is o u r H o p e College: Love it or leave i t . "

I PROPOSE TO t ake t h a t ques-t ion ser ious ly : why do I, w h o dares t o speak fo r s t u d e n t opin-ion, cast t he fo l lowing w o r d s a-gainst wha t is in the n a m e of " G r o w t h " : vvhat bus iness is th i s of mine , t h a t 1 here advise those w h o have Admin i s t r a t ive p o w e r in the exerc ise of the i r responsibi l i -ties?

I who le -hea r t ed ly believe tha t as a s t u d e n t my bus iness is t o learn. It is my fondes t h o p e t h a t the A d m i n i s t r a t i o n of th i s College might r un so s m o o t h l y that it would never i n t e r f e re wi th t h a t learning. But th is hope has n o t been rea l ized; I am con t inua l l y a f f r o n t e d by Admin i s t r a t i ve fail-ures tha t d i rec t ly cheat me of a full and c o m p l e t e e d u c a t i o n .

INSOFAR AS THESE fa i lures impinge on me, because I love the p romise of Hope College, it is my ob l iga t ion to speak o u t against t h e m , and call those fa i lures t o q u e s t i o n , wan t ing n o t h i n g m o r e than tha t they might no t recur .

T w o large-scale fa i lures presen t t hemse lves t o me wi th s ickening f r e q u e n c y : the i n a d e q u a c y of mater ia l s and faci l i t ies necessary

for learn ing , and the all bu t un-

bearable f inanc ia l s i tua t ion tha t causes these huge inadequac ies .

THE RECOGNITION of these p r o b l e m s as real and i m m e d i a t e is itself a r ecogn i t ion tha t the re-sponsibi l i ty fo r t h e m has n o t been met wi th the sure leadership t h a t they d e m a n d . A n d tha t l eadersh ip is the di rect respons ib i l i ty of the Pres ident of th is College.

T h a t , f o r e x a m p l e , t he science facil i t ies of H o p e College are u n d e r e q u i p p e d is easy t o ve r i fy , t h o u g h they are by far super io r t o the c o n d i t i o n s in which the hu-mani t i es mus t labor . Where is the new h u m a n i t i e s c o m p l e x tha t re-places the Van Raal te f ire t rap? Why are h u m a n i t i e s p ro fe s so r s less p r o n e to f ire in V o o r h e e s t h a n s tuden t w o m e n ? Why were music s t u d e n t s den ied prac t ice r o o m s for so long b e f o r e the i r needs were recognized? Such q u e s t i o n s have gone en t i re ly u n a n s w e r e d if not ignored . T h e cry for a d e q u a c y is a just one , yet Pres ident ia l leadership in the ach ievement of r easonab le c o n d i t i o n s has n o t been f o r t h c o m i n g . Why n o t ?

LIKEWISE, MONIES FOR the ma in t a in ing of colleges are un-den iab ly scarce. But while m a n y small colleges s u f f e r wi th us, mos t have deal t wi th f inancia l organiza-t ions w i t h o u t t he huge m o n e t a r y b u r d e n set so square ly u p o n stu-d e n t s and thei r p a r e n t s tha t H o p e has placed the re . By c o n t r a s t wi th mos t col leges, 80% of all H o p e College o p e r a t i n g f u n d s are de-rived d i rec t ly f r o m s t u d e n t and

pa ren ta l wal le ts . Where mos t G L C A schoo l s can ut i l ize gener-o u s e n d o w m e n t s f r o m co rpora -

t ions and f o u n d a t i o n s , Hope can c o u n t on compar i t ive ly little ou t -side f u n d i n g . ( T h e mos t success-ful ly e n d o w e d of all G L C A schools , Ober l in , can apply $ 9 0 mill ion t o i ts o p e r a t i n g budget b e y o n d fee-derived f u n d s , while H o p e has r ecourse t o less than $2 mil l ion . ) This e n d o w m e n t pover ty bespeaks a u n i q u e fa i lure on the par t of o u r leadersh ip t o tap those sources of f u n d s tha t are available to i t ; c learly it is easier to rely u p o n the e n d u r i n g abi l i ty of par-en t s t o shou lde r th is fa i lure in in-creasing fees, which t h r e a t e n finally t o exc lude m a n y of t hose w i t h o u t wea l th f r o m s t u d y i n g here . Why haven ' t a l t e rna te , ou t -side sources of f u n d s been sought ou t and t a p p e d ? Why hasn ' t l eadersh ip been s h o w n in the suc-cessful ach ievemen t of a d e q u a t e e n d o w m e n t s ?

THESE ARE THE q u e s t i o n s t h a t Hope Col lege 's President will have to face as he c o n f r o n t s t he Board of T rus t ee s w i th his admini -s t rat ive record t o m o r r o w . It will no t be e n o u g h to p re t end tha t t o k e n d o n a t i o n s will insure lasting f inancia l secur i ty fo r Hope Col-lege. These very real and obv ious p r o b l e m s mus t be me t and solved by c o m p e t e n t , decisive leadership for all ou r sakes.

It is n o w abso lu t e ly crucial t ha t the Board of T rus t ees ex-amine hones t ly and inte l l igent ly the pos i t ion of Flope College and its r ecord of Pres ident ia l n o n -leadersh ip in its pur su i t of ade-q u a t e f u n d i n g and facil i t ies, and m a k e wha teve r changes are neces-sary fo r the successful achieve-m e n t of those ends .

P E A N U T S LOOK, FRANKLIN

M WEARING SHOES I

I LEARNEP THAT VOU CAN'T FI6HT GTV HALL; BATTALION HEAPQUARTER5 ANP THE PRE55 COPE

THESE ARE NICE SHOES, BUT I MISS MV SANDALS...... SHIFl

ALL I KNOW IS, ANV RULE THAT MAKES A LITTLE GIRL CRV HAS

TO BE A BAP RULE \

Page 6 Hope College anchor February 4, 1970

Hope College in the Sixt Edi tor 's Note: The fo l low ing is a brief look at Hope College through the 1960's,

compi led by the anchor staff . The review is not complete, for many impor tan t activit ies were carried out dur ing the decade. Rather, the a t tempt is made to

summarize the highlights of the decade--the changes in student body, the growth of the facul ty , reorganization of several College bodies, administrat ive changes, academic revisions, campus newsmakers, increase in faci l i t ies and social rule changes.

Campus rules are liberalized through decade

"Conse^va t ive , , may be a word f re -

q u e n t l y used to descr ibe H o p e College, b u t

" s u b j e c t to c h a n g e " is by no means im-

p r o p e r .

SENIOR WOMEN CAN r e m e m b e r w h e n

slacks were t a b o o on c a m p u s except f r o m

6 : 3 0 p .m. Fr iday t h r o u g h 5 p .m. S a t u r d a y .

J u n i o r and senior w o m e n well r e m e m b e r

t h e d e m e r i t s they received for having male

cal lers in t h e lounge a f t e r 7 : 3 0 p .m. o n

weekn igh t s . And the re was a t ime that even

senior w o m e n were " a d v i s e d " to have the i r

l ights o u t by midn igh t .

But i m p o r t a n t changes have been m a d e -

changes wh ich came a b o u t on ly a f t e r

yea r s of d iscuss ion, d e b a t e and e f f o r t o n

t h e par t of s t uden t s , f a c u l t y and Adminis -

t r a t i o n . O n e of t he mos t con t rovers ia l of

these issues was the progress ive changes

m a d e in the chapel r e q u i r e m e n t t h r o u g h

t h e Sixt ies . At the beg inn ing of t h e d e c a d e ,

chape l a t t e n d a n c e f o r all s t u d e n t s was

requ i red at 70 percen t of the services, o r

f ive days a week .

THE R E Q U I R E M E N T was deba t ed and

eva lua ted dur ing the early part of t h e

d e c a d e in an e f f o r t t o discover a m o r e

w o r k a b l e p rogram and to weigh the reasons

fo r requ i red chapel . Dur ing 1962, f r e s h m e n

were assigned seats in the chape l , sopho -

m o r e s and j u n i o r s had to hand in m o n t h l y

chape l a t t e n t a n c e r e p o r t s and seniors were

held t o the i r h o n o r t o a t t e n d the r equ i red

7 0 p e r c e n t .

T h e nex t semes ter , all s t u d e n t s were

r equ i red to fill o u t a spec i f ic a t t e n d a n c e

r e p o r t . Near the end of the year , t he

sys tem was again eva lua ted and d u e to t h e

low ( 2 5 pe rcen t ) a t t e n d a n c e and dis-

h o n e s t y in filling ou t a t t e n d a n c e repor t s , a

new , s t u d e n t - m o n i t o r e d chapel was sug-

gested f o r t h e fo l lowing school year .

IN 1 9 6 3 - 6 4 , THE r e q u i r e m e n t was

lowered to 40% a t t e n d a n c e fo r all s t u d e n t s .

Each s t u d e n t had to register fo r a spec i f ic

s e q u e n c e , Monday t h r o u g h Wednesday or

T u e s d a y t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y , at the begin-

ning of the semes te r and submi t chape l

slips each day . The limit on chapel cu ts was

t h r e e even t h e n .

Dur ing 1964 a n o t h e r cut in the requi re-

m e n t lowered a t t e n d a n c e to twice a week .

No m o r e s t rong d e b a t e was heard ove r

the issue unt i l 1966-67 when t h e idea of

c o m p l e t e abo l i t ion of r equ i red chapel ap-

peared . O t h e r sugges t ions were chapel at

10 a .m. r a the r than 8 a .m. , and o p t i o n a l

a t t e n d a n c e f o r j u n i o r s a n d / o r seniors . A

s t u d y of c o m p u l s o r y chape l was m a d e

du r ing the spring of tha t year amid p r o t e s t s

against t he cur ren t s y s t e m . T h e Admin is -

t r a t i on t o o k a f i rm s t and fo r t he requi re-

m e n t , however .

THE 1967-68 SCHOOL YEAR saw the twice-a-week r e q u i r e m e n t still in e f f e c t and

the issue still u n d e r d e b a t e . A p roposa l

r eques t ing e x e m p t i o n f r o m the requ i re -

m e n t f o r " b o n a f i de m e m b e r s of a re l igious

b o d y whose bel iefs conf l i c t wi th t h e H o p e

College chape l r e q u i r e m e n t s " was passed in

the early fall of 1967 . A select c o m m i t -

tee of r ep re sen t a t i ve s f r o m all s e g m e n t s of

the H o p e College c o m m u n i t y t h e n began

e x a m i n a t i o n of t he issue. The g r o u p , desig-

na ted the Blue R i b b o n C o m m i t t e e , r e c o m -

m e n d e d the a d o p t i o n of t he " 2 1 0 0 p l a n "

wh ich w o u l d r equ i re chape l a t t e n d a n c e

twice a week f o r f r e s h m e n , o n c e f o r

s o p h o m o r e s and would gran t " v o l u n t a r y

c h a p e l " to j u n i o r s and seniors .

WHILE THIS PLAN was u n d e r con-

s ide ra t ion , t he A d m i n i s t r a t i o n t o o k ac t i on

on t h e f lagrant abuse r s of the chape l

r e q u i r e m e n t by su spend ing m a n y s t u d e n t s .

Th i s ac t ion b rough t the issue to the a t t en -

t ion of t he A m e r i c a n Civil L iber t ies U n i o n ,

wh ich q u e s t i o n e d the legality of r e q u i r e d

rel igious services at a school receiving s ta te

s u p p o r t . C o n t r o v e r s y over the t op i c

t ape red off and even tua l ly the issue was

d r o p p e d c o m p l e t e l y by the A C L U .

in March , 1968 , the Blue R i b b o n C o m -

mi t t ee passed the " 2 1 0 0 P l a n " and it was

sent t o the Board of T rus t ee s . In May , t he

R L C a p p r o v e d chape l at 10 a .m. o n Tues -

day and T h u r s d a y and sent it on to the

C a m p u s Life Board whe re it was passed. It

was later ve toed by a f a c u l t y review.

THE B O A R D OF T r u s t e e s passed the

" 2 1 0 0 P l a n " in the fall of 1968 . T h i s is t he

r e q u i r e m e n t which is in e f f e c t in 1 9 7 0 and

is still be ing d e b a t e d fo r f u r t h e r change ,

change which w o u l d see c o m p u l s o r y chape l

c o m p l e t e l y abo l i shed .

A n o t h e r of the m a j o r changes wh ich has

a f f e c t e d s t u d e n t life has been the c o n t i n u a l

a l t e ra t ion of w o m e n ' s h o u r s , or c u r f e w . In

the span of 10 years , t he " c u r f e w " has

gone f r o m midn igh t f o r all w o m e n on

F r iday and S a t u r d a y to 1 a .m. f o r f resh-

men t h r o u g h j u n i o r s and senior keys f o r

senior w o m e n . T h e key sys t em al lows f o r

v i r tual ly no h o u r s fo r seniors .

CLOSING DURING THE week has pro-

gressed f r o m 10 p .m. Sunday t h r o u g h

T h u r s d a y f o r f r e s h m e n and s o p h o m o r e s

and 1 0 : 3 0 fo r j u n i o r s and seniors to 11

p .m. fo r all coeds . Long m o n t h s of work

are beh ind these changes , t o o . Discuss ion

of the senior keys issue began in t h e fall of

1967 and t h e pol icy was n o t a d o p t e d unt i l

the spring of 1969 .

F r o m senior keys , H o p e has gone on to

d e b a t e , d iscuss and eva lua te i n t e r - room

vis i ta t ion , or " p a r i e t a l h o u r s . " T h i s issue,

begun in the spr ing of 1968 by the

I n t e r - f r a t e r n i t y Counc i l , has appea red in

the f o r m of m a n y p r o p o s a l s and r a t i ona l e s

p r e s e n t e d to var ious c o m m i t t e e s o n

c a m p u s .

S T U D E N T POLLS held in 1968 s h o w e d

s t u d e n t s highly in favor of the po l icy . A

SOCIAL LIFE--Students danced on campus for the first t ime in 1 9 6 3 , after the

measure was approved by the Board of Trustees.

final proposal presented by the Student

Congress to the CLB last semester was approved by the Board and may go before

the Board of Trustees tomorrow. T h e var ious c a m p u s d a n c e s w h i c h are

t a k e n for g ran ted n o w in 1 9 7 0 have c o m e

t h r o u g h the i r " t r i a l by f i r e , " t oo . A l lowing

d a n c i n g on c a m p u s was n o t even d e b a t e d unt i l 1962. Prior t o this t ime , so ro r i t i e s

and f r a t e rn i t i e s held squa re d a n c e s at

par t ies . Permiss ion to ho ld dances on

c a m p u s was first g ran ted in the spr ing of

1963, and the first such event was an

a l l -campus f o r m a l t h a t spr ing .

THE B O A R D O F T rus t ee s ru led in

D e c e m b e r , 1963 , tha t t he dances w o u l d be

l imi ted to o n e per week . A n y o t h e r event

held was t h e n called a " f o o t f u n c t i o n . "

T h e r e was no m o r e m e n t i o n made of t he

issue a f t e r this. G r a d u a l l y , t he n u m b e r of

d a n c e s increased.

O n e of t he m o r e press ing issues wh ich also arose was the " d o u b l e s t a n d a r d " in

s m o k i n g r egu la t i ons on campus . Men were

a l lowed to s m o k e in the i r r o o m s and

a n y w h e r e on c a m p u s , whe reas w o m e n were

a l lowed to s m o k e on ly in the s m o k e r in

Graves Hall. In the spr ing of 1966 s m o k i n g

was " l e g a l i z e d " fo r w o m e n on c a m p u s and

a s m o k e r was p rov ided in the l ibrary f o r

m e n and w o m e n as well as one f o r t he

res idents of G i l m o r e Hall.

IN 1 9 6 6 - 6 7 , p rovis ion was m a d e f o r

a d e q u a t e s m o k i n g faci l i t ies in all w o m e n ' s

d o r m s acco rd ing t o the ru les of t he f i re

marshal l . F inal ly the d o u b l e s t a n d a r d issue

was raised again in 1968 -69 and w o m e n

were a l lowed to s m o k e in the i r r o o m s .

In 1963-64 , in d e m a n d f o r l ibera l iza t ion

of t he rules , w o m e n p e t i t i o n e d f o r change

in the d res s c o d e which s t i pu l a t ed tha t

slacks and b e r m u d a s were a l lowed on ly

d u r i n g the day l igh t h o u r s on S a t u r d a y and

t h e n not at meals. T h e y were g r a n t e d

" re l axed d r e s s " f r o m 6 : 3 0 p . m . F r i d a y to 5

p .m. S a t u r d a y and were held t o the "d ress -

u p " rule fo r the F r i d a y evening meal .

THE 1964-65 SCHOOL year y ie lded

m o r e discussion and m o r e change . C o e d s

w a n t e d to be able t o wear s lacks o n

weekn igh t s , but were o p p o s e d in the i r

e f f o r t s f o r this c h a n g e because this re laxa-

t ion of t h e rules might " c a u s e girls t o

b e c o m e careless in their m a n n e r of d r e s s . "

At the end of the year , s p o r t s c l o the s were

a l lowed o n S u n d a y and were p r o h i b i t e d in

the class r o o m .

More change c a m e in the spring of 1967

w h e n slacks and b e r m u d a s were a l lowed to

be worn all day e x c e p t in class and

A d m i n i s t r a t i o n bui ld ings . A proposa l f o r

s lacks to be a l lowed in the l ibrary was

d e f e a t e d . THE PROPOSAL WAS again raised in

1967-68 , w h e n it was passed, a l lowing

slacks to be worn f o r t h e first t i m e in t h e

d o r m lounges and in the l ibrary . T h e spr ing

of 1968 f o u n d a n o t h e r p roposa l fo r re-

laxed dress b e f o r e the S t u d e n t L i fe C o m -

mi t t ee . T h i s p roposa l r eques t ed s lacks in

the ca fe te r ia . It was tab led unti l t he fo l low-

ing fall. T h e A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Af fa i r s Board

discussed t h e issue and in the spr ing semes-

ter of 1969 the p r o p o s a l was passed al low-

ing w o m e n to d e t e r m i n e their o w n dress

c o d e for classes and in t h e ca fe te r i a .

A c la r i f i ca t ion of t he s t a t e m e n t on use

of a lcohol ic beverages on or o f f c a m p u s

was m a d e in 1 9 6 2 . It e m p h a s i z e d the fact

t h a t no H o p e Col lege s t u d e n t cou ld d r ink

a lcohol ic beverages on or off c a m p u s .

S t u d e n t s 21 years of age were sub jec t t o

the same rule . O f f e n d e r s of the rule were

sub jec t to College d isc ip l ine to t h e poss ib le

e x t e n t of dismissal .

IN 1 9 6 3 - 6 4 , d issent arose over the

pa radox b e t w e e n t h e s t a t e law legalizing

d r ink ing at t he age of 21 and the H o p e

regu la t ion f o r b i d d i n g any s t u d e n t t o d r ink .

T h e College s t a t ed tha t it c o u l d n ' t a l low

s t u d e n t s to d r ink because the f inanc ia l

s u p p o r t e r s of the College would halt the i r

c o n t r i b u t i o n s .

A f t e r a year of d i scuss ion , t he d r i n k i n g

regula t ion was changed to the present

regula t ion which s ta tes that 21-yea r -o lds

can " b u y and c o n s u m e a lcohol ic beverages

o f f c a m p u s , unless engaged in a College-

sponso red a c t i v i t y . "

A QUESTION unde r s tudy at p resen t is

o f f - c a m p u s living. Sen io r men may live

o f f - c a m p u s , bu t a r e q u e s t had t o be sub-

mi t t ed a t t he end of last y e a r . F e w

unde rc l a s smen are a l lowed to live o f f

c a m p u s . Pr ior t o 1963, m a n y m e n did live

o f f c a m p u s because of i n su f f i c i en t College

housing. H o w e v e r , in 1963 t h e y w e r e

x l

" 1

MASTER PLAN--The Master Plan was revealed Oct.

and the addit ion to the Nykerk Hall of Music are pre

requ i red to live on c a m p u s b e c a u s e of

newly acqu i r ed hous ing . Not un t i l 1 9 6 6 - 6 7

was pe rmiss ion g r a n t e d for men to live o f f ,

and t h e n on ly a f e w were a l lowed the

privilege. T h e issue w a s raised d u r i n g the

ear ly par t of t h e 1968 -69 schoo l year .

S t u d e n t s fel t tha t senior s t u d e n t s s h o u l d

be a l lowed to live w h e r e t h e y p leased . In

the spring of t h a t yea r , l imited o f f - c a m p u s

living was g ran ted wi th p r e f e r e n c e given t o

seniors . R e a s o n s fo r res t r i c t ing underc lass -

men to o n - c a m p u s h o u s i n g were the m a n y

vacancies in t h e var ious d o r m i t o r i e s w h i c h

had to be f i l led.

ONE OTHER ISSUE cons idered d u r i n g

the Sixt ies was the r ight of s t u d e n t s t o eat

off c a m p u s . All w o m e n ate on c a m p u s

unt i l t h e second semes te r of t he 1 9 6 6 - 6 7

school yea r . At th is t ime , sen io r w o m e n

were a l lowed to eat o f f c a m p u s .

T h e nex t year , 1968-69 , h o w e v e r ,

j u n i o r s were f o r c e d t o eat on c a m p u s again ,

bu t were given the o p p o r t u n i t y to t ake

f ive-day boa rd if des i red . T h e reason f o r

t he change was r e p o r t e d t o be the in-

creased cost of t he f o o d service.

Physical plant enlarged in fact and in plans

H o p e Col lege ' s phys ica l p lant has ex-

panded over t h e past ten years t o a c c o m o -

d a t e the g rowing s t u d e n t b o d y .

T h e early years of t he Sixt ies were

cha rac te r i zed by rapid bu i ld ing as H o p e

strove to c o n s t r u c t a d e q u a t e faci l i t ies . T h e

bui ld ing p r o g r a m u n d e r Dr. Calvin Vander -

werf , H o p e Pres iden t since 1963 , has been

cha rac te r i zed by p lans for the f u t u r e .

T H E V A N Z O E R E N Library was dedi-

cated on O c t o b e r 8, 1961 , as par t of

H o p e ' s H o m e c o m i n g act ivi t ies . T h i s bui ld-

ing was the tirst s t r u c t u r e inc luded in

Pres iden t I rwin L u b b e r ' s $3 mil l ion cam-

paign " L o o k i n g A h e a d wi th H o p e . " T h e

new l ibrary a l lo t t ed space f o r one mil l ion

v o l u m e s and seats f o r 500 peop le . Dr.

Ger r i t t Van Z o e r e n . t he 1912 g r a d u a t e fo r

w h o m the bu i ld ing was n a m e d , was "dis-

t inguished in b o t h sc ien t i f i c and bus iness

f i e lds , " a cco rd ing to the O c t . 6, 1961 . anchor.

"Rea l i z i ng the need lor b e t t e r faci l i t ies

for s t u d e n t o r g a n i z a t i o n s , f o r cent ra l iza-

t ion of s t u d e n t o f f i c e s , for a m e d i t a t i o n

chapel and to r a b e t t e r lounge env i ron-

m e n t , t he a d m i n i s t r a t i o n has ca re fu l ly

p l anned a b e a u t i f u l f u n c t i o n a l s t u d e n t cen-

ter . I his will be a 2 4 - h o u r a day b u i l d i n g . "

r e p o r t e d the anchor oi Dec. 8 , 1961 .

THE CENTER WAS to be in the basement of Graves Hall, where the publi-

cat ions o f f i c e s and Kappa Chi sorority

room are presently located. Graves Hall was remode led in 1962 , providing new

February 4 , 1 9 7 0 H o p e College anchor

Page 7

ies: A Decade of Change

mm ii

, 1966. The Student Cultural and Social Center ntly under construct ion.

language c l a s s rooms and labs, a s m o k i n g

lounge , and a b lock of p u b l i c a t i o n s o f f ices .

T h e S c h o o n m e d i t a t i o n chape l was dedi-cated in O c t o b e r , 1962.

T h e second s tep in the " L o o k i n g A-

h e a d " p rogram was the acqu i s i t ion by the

College in 1962 of 25 acres of land east of

the c a m p u s . T h e Van Raal te c a m p u s wou ld

be used fo r a t h l e t i c events . Pres iden t Lub-

bers revealed p lans fo r the thi rd s tep in his

p rogram for H o p e ; the Physics-Math bui ld-

ing, t o be c o m p l e t e d in 1962 . T h e

$ 7 5 0 , 0 0 0 s t r u c t u r e was not c o m p l e t e d

unti l 1964 . Loca t ed next to the Van

Zoeren l ibrary , it houses the d e p a r t m e n t s

of phys ics and m a t h e m a t i c s , and has t w o

lec ture halls fo r large classes in o t h e r areas .

G r o u n d was b r o k e n fo r six d o r m i t o r y uni ts in the late spring of 1962 , b e f o r e

Pres iden t L u b b e r ' s a n n o u n c e d his ret ire-

m e n t . Five d o r m s would c o m p o s e what is

now the f r a t e r n i t y c o m p l e x . T h e s ixth

d o r m to be c o n s t r u c t e d was G i l m o r e Hall .

A g o v e r n m e n t loan made c o m p l e t i o n of

these bui ld ings possible by the fall of 1963.

In March , 1963 , a boi ler r o o m a d d i t i o n t o

handle the p o w e r for t he d o r m s was

c o m p l e t e d across f r o m C o l u m b i a C o t t a g e .

EXTENSIVE REMODELING was d o n e

of the P re s iden t ' s h o m e to a c c o m o d a t e the

Vande rwer f f ami ly when V a n d e r w e r f was

a p p o i n t e d to succeed Pres iden t Lubbe r s . A rec rea t ion -game r o o m , a l ib ra ry , an ex t r a

b e d r o o m , a p o w d e r r o o m and a two-car

garage and b r e e z e w a y were a d d e d .

A g r e e n h o u s e buil t fo r t he b io logy

d e p a r t m e n t , c o m p l e t e d new c o n s t r u c t i o n

in N o v e m b e r , 1963. The newly r e m o d e l e d

Jul iana r o o m in Dur f ee Hall was o p e n e d

weekend n ights as a s t u d e n t un ion in

D e c e m b e r , 1963 , as a r ec rea t iona l fac i l i ty

until a p e r m a n e n t s t u d e n t cen te r could be buil t .

THE PROFILE COMMITTEE r e p o r t ,

c o m p l e t e d in t h e fall of 1965 , s t a t e d , " I f an

expans ion to the p r o p o s e d e n r o l l m e n t level

of 2 2 0 0 - 2 6 0 0 was d e e m e d necessa ry , ser-

ious c o n s i d e r a t i o n wou ld have to be given

to bu i ld ing c l a s s r o o m s and res idency un i t s

on the Van Raa l t e c a m p u s " in o rder t o

avoid over -bu i ld ing and cos t ly unde r -

bui lding. Pres iden t V a n d e r w e r f ' s Master

Plan was f o r t h c o m i n g .

T h e Master Plan was deve loped by

Pres ident V a n d e r w e r f and a rch i t ec t Char l e s

S tade of Park Ridge, 111., as a " f u t u r e

p red ic t ion of bu i ld ings which will b e c o m e

necessary as H o p e grows, which houses and

lands a r o u n d t h e c a m p u s it will be neces-

sary to o b t a i n , and how the Van Raa l te

c a m p u s , a few b locks east of t h e main

c a m p u s , will be d e v e l o p e d . " THE MASTER PLAN was unvei led by

Pres ident V a n d e r w e r f and the Board of

T r u s t e e s at a C e n t e n n i a l B a n q u e t on O c t o -

ber 15, 1966. It was billed as t he highl ight

of t h e C e n t e n n i a l H o m e c o m i n g celebra-

t ion .

T h e Master Plan called f o r t he deve lop-

m e n t of eight faci l i t ies in ten years at a

cost of $ 1 0 mi l l ion . A science bu i ld ing

which would un i t e the b io logy , c h e m i s t r y

and geology d e p a r t m e n t s u n d e r o n e roof

w o u l d be bui l t on the corner of College

and 12th s t reets . Plans were or iginal ly

d r a w n up fo r the c o n s t r u c t i o n of an

add i t i on to G i l m o r e Hall , but even tua l ly

evolved in to a separa te s t r u c t u r e : D y k s t r a

Hall. A new d o r m would be c o n s t r u c t e d whe re V o o r h e e s Hall now s tands .

THE LIBRARY WOULD be e x p a n d e d ,

as w o u l d the Nyke rk Hall of Music. An

I n t e r n a t i o n a l E d u c a t i o n C e n t e r wou ld be

buil t in the sou theas t sec t ion of t he Pine

Grove . A new physical e d u c a t i o n fac i l i ty ,

to be c o n s t r u c t e d on Van Raa l t e f ie ld ,

wou ld h o u s e a baske tba l l c o u r t , an i n d o o r

t r ack , an O l y m p i c size s w i m m i n g p o o l and

o f f i ce s . T h e S t u d e n t Cu l tu ra l and Social

C e n t e r was inc luded in the Master Plan.

T h e drive fo r t he SCSC was b o r n in

O c t o b e r , 1964 , wi th s t u d e n t c o n t r i b u t i o n s .

Each year , a l t hough the goal of $2 mil l ion

d rew nearer and the fac i l i ty was p r o m i s e d

to the s t u d e n t s in the near f u t u r e , t he

ac tua l bui ld ing r e m a i n e d a d r e a m . F ina l ly ,

in 1968 , a gift of $ 6 0 0 , 0 0 0 f r o m Dick and

Jack DeWitt enab led g r o u n d - b r e a k i n g cere-

m o n i e s du r ing H o m e c o m i n g w e e k e n d , 1968.

ALTHOUGH PRESIDENT V a n d e r w e r f

a n n o u n c e d tha t a lmos t all the f u n d s had

been p ledged , b ids fo r the c o n t r a c t s were

de l ayed unt i l a year later . C o n t r a c t s fo r t he

SCSC and the a d d i t i o n to t h e N y k e r k

bui ld ing were a w a r d e d in N o v e m b e r , 1969 ,

and c o n s t r u c t i o n began later tha t m o n t h .

When bui l t , the DeWitt S t u d e n t Cu l tu ra l

and Social Cen te r will inc lude fac i l i t ies f o r

f o u r bowl ing lanes, a Lit t le T h e a t e r , a

Kletz- l ike snack bar , r e c r ea t i on r o o m s in-

c lud ing poo l and p ing-pong tab les , a

l ounge , a music l ib rary , c l a s s rooms , o f f i c e s

and an e x p a n d e d b o o k s t o r e .

CONSTRUCTION OF THE D y k s t r a

res idence hall was begun in March , 1967 ,

and c o m p l e t e d in S e p t e m b e r of tha t year .

A l t h o u g h a c lu s t e r - type d o r m i t o r y was

inc luded in S t a d e ' s Master Plan , D y k s t r a

hall was e rec ted by an i n d e p e n d e n t archi-

tect and c o n t r a c t o r .

T h e College had been aware in 1966

tha t V o o r h e e s Hall did no t mee t sa fe ty

s t a n d a r d s . A new d o r m was p l a n n e d fo r

t h a t si te. O n N o v e m b e r 29, 1966 , coed

r e s iden t s of V o o r h e e s se renaded Pres iden t

V a n d e r w e r f wi th C h r i s t m a s caro ls and

c h a n t s fo r a f ire escape . Plans were m a d e to

r e m o d e l the s t r u c t u r e , but a lack of m o n e y

p r e v e n t e d the r enova t ion of this bu i ld ing

to c o m p l y wi th f i re sa fe ty s t anda rds .

THE REMODELING would have m a d e

the bui ld ing " f i r e - s a f e , " especial ly a r o u n d

s ta i rwel ls , a cco rd ing to a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f ic ia l s . An electr ical f ire b r o k e o u t in

F e b r u a r y , 1969 , b e f o r e r e m o d e l i n g could

begin . Displaced coeds were h o u s e d in t h e

Warm Fr iend Hote l , the A l u m n i House ,

Graves Place Co t t age and Reese C o t t a g e .

An a p a r t m e n t bu i ld ing was p u r c h a s e d

by the College wi th f u n d s d o n a t e d by the

F i f t h R e f o r m e d C h u r c h of G r a n d Rapids .

B rumle r A p a r t m e n t House was d e d i c a t e d

in O c t o b e r , 1969. T h e bu i ld ing is n a m e d in

h o n o r of Miss Harr ie t B rumle r , a c o m m u n i -

can t of tha t c h u r c h and a R e f o r m e d

C h u r c h miss ionary to India. B rumle r

A p a r t m e n t s provide fu l l living faci l i t ies f o r

4 0 senior w o m e n .

IN A U G U S T , 1969 , a seven-and-a-half

acre e s t a t e on Lake Maca tawa su i tab le f o r

use as a c o n f e r e n c e cen te r was d o n a t e d to

H o p e College by Miss Mary J a n e G o l d .

Marigold Lodge , the main bui ld ing on the

G o l d p r o p e r t y , will r equ i re ex t ens ive reno-

va t ion b e f o r e it can be used. T h e College

has not set a da t e fo r c o m p l e t i o n of t h e

r e m o d e l i n g because f u n d s are not avai lable.

A $1 mil l ion grant f o r the p r o p o s e d

Sc ience Hall was received f r o m the federa l

D e p a r t m e n t of E d u c a t i o n in Apri l , 1967. A

$2 mil l ion loan fo l l owed the or iginal grant

in May, 1967. T h e Sc ience Bui lding was to

have been e rec ted in the fall of 1968.

F u r t h e r p lann ing for this bu i ld ing has been

ha l ted by N i x o n ' s ve to of t he recen t

Hea l t h , E d u c a t i o n , and Welfare bill, ac-

c o r d i n g to the a r ch i t ec t .

THE BIOLOGICAL field s t a t i on was

d o n a t e d to H o p e by the Hol land Hi tch

c o m p a n y in 1966. T h e Hol land Rusk bui ld-

ing, acqu i red by the College in O c t o b e r ,

1968 , for use by the art d e p a r t m e n t , may

be in use later this s emes t e r w h e n r e m o d e l -

ing is c o m p l e t e d .

In add i t i on to these new s t ruc tu res ,

u n d e r the Master Plan , Van Raa l te would

be r enova t ed f o r admin i s t r a t ive o f f i ces , t he

old science bui lding wou ld be conver t ed

fo r use by o the r discipl ines , t he Carnegie

g y m n a s i u m would be used solely by t h e

w o m e n s physical e d u c a t i o n d e p a r t m e n t ,

and Van Vleck Hall wou ld be conver t ed i n to a H o p e College m u s e u m . T h e Master

Plan also calls fo r t h e acqu is i t ion of m o r e

land fo r add i t i ona l m e n ' s do rmi to r i e s .

T o da t e , no bui ld ings have been c o m -

ple ted u n d e r the original Master Plan of

Fall , 1966 , a l though Dys t ra Hall replaced

the original S tade-des igned s t ruc tu re .

F o r the first f o u r years of t he decade

the re were more w o m e n in the f r e s h m a n

classes t h a n men . In 1964 the f r e s h m a n

w o m e n o u t n u m b e r e d the m e n 2 1 9 to

209 . F r o m 1965 t h r o u g h 1967 the ra t io

of men to w o m e n was near ly o n e to

o n e , t h o u g h the men slightly o u t n u m -

bered the w o m e n each yea r . T h e f rosh

w o m e n o u t n u m b e r e d the m e n by 29 in

1968 and by 50 in 1969, to bring a b o u t the present ra t io .

Faculty doubles size to handle

Total enrollment new courses increases; sex ratio reverses

Between 1960 and 1969 there were

th ree m a j o r changes in the s t u d e n t person-

nel at H o p e - t h e s t u d e n t en ro l lmen t in-

creased by nearly o n e - t h i r d , t he pe rcen tage

of s t u d e n t s a f f i l ia ted wi th the R e f o r m e d

C h u r c h dec l ined , and the percen tage of f ema le s t u d e n t s increased.

THE FIRST FIVE yea rs of the decade saw n o en ro l lmen t g r o w t h ; in fac t , t he

to ta l e n r o l l m e n t of 1462 in 1964 was the

lowest of the decade . A f t e r 1960 ' s large

f r e s h m a n class of 5 37, wh ich raised the

t o t a l en ro l lmen t to an al l - t ime high of

1546, t he f r e s h m a n class f o r each of t he

next f o u r years was no t above 4 3 8 . It was

th is series of small f r e s h m a n classes t h a t

p r o d u c e d the low e n r o l l m e n t f igure of 1964 .

T h a t p a t t e r n was b r o k e n in 1965 w h e n 546 f r e s h m e n enrol led and t h e to ta l ful l-

t ime s t u d e n t en ro l lmen t reached an all-

t ime high of 1672. T h e f r e s h m a n enroll-

m e n t has n o t fal len be low 500 since 1965 ,

and each year since 1965 the to ta l enrol l -

m e n t has increased to the p resen t f igure of 2 0 1 4 .

THOUGH THE T O T A L en ro l lmen t

has increased , the n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s

a f f i l i a ted wi th the R e f o r m e d Church has

r ema ined nearly c o n s t a n t . In I 9 6 0 the

n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s a f f i l i a ted with the

R e f o r m e d Church was 1 0 1 4 , ^ 6 6 percent

of the to ta l e n r o l l m e n t . In the fall of

1969, wi th the to ta l e n r o l l m e n t to ta l l ing

over 2000 , the n u m b e r of R e f o r m e d

C h u r c h s t u d e n t s was 9 5 9 . or only 48

pe rcen t of the to ta l .

Meanwhi le the n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s

f r o m nearly all o t h e r f a i t h s was increas-

ing, leading to a grea ter a m o u n t of reli-

gious diversi ty on c a m p u s . Fo r e x a m p l e ,

the re were seven R o m a n Ca tho l i c stu-

d e n t s enrol led at H o p e in I 9 6 0 , and 56

in 1969 .

THE THIRD MAJOR change is that

t he re are now m o r e w o m e n at H o p e

than the re are men for t he first t ime in

m a n y years . Of f i ca l f igures ind ica te that

in the tall of 1969 the re were 1001 men

and 1012 w o m e n at Hope . In I 9 6 0 ,

the re were 884 men and 6 6 2 w o m e n .

Expans ion of the curr icula and addi-

t ional d e p a r t m e n t s called f o r progressive

increase in the f a c u l t y du r ing the Sixties.

IN 1960 THERE was a to ta l of 73 p ro fe s so r s divided a m o n g 18 d e p a r t m e n t s .

T h e largest d e p a r t m e n t s were the English,

foreign language and music d e p a r t m e n t s .

T h e year 1969-70 has seen a ful l and

pa r t - t ime facu l ty of 162 teach ing in 20

d e p a r t m e n t s , the largest still being the

English, foreign language and music depar t -

men t s , wi th the e d u c a t i o n d e p a r t m e n t also being fu l ly s t a f f ed .

Desp i te the large increase in n u m b e r s ,

t he percentage of d o c t o r a t e s held by H o p e

p ro fe s so r s has r ema ined at a p p r o x i m a t e l y 4 6 pe rcen t .

THE NUMBER OF H o p e g radua t e s w h o

have r e tu rned to H o p e to t each has de-

creased n o t a b l y over the past decade . In

1960 u n d e r 30 pe rcen t of t h e t each ing staff received thei r degrees at Hope .

Several d e p a r t m e n t s have main ta ined a m a j o r i t y of Hope g radua tes , however . T h e

physical e d u c a t i o n d e p a r t m e n t has been

c o m p o s e d of g r a d u a t e s of H o p e dur ing

near ly all ten years , and the rel igion depar t -

m e n t has ma in ta ined a b o u t a 75 percent

level un t i l recent years . T h e chemis t ry

d e p a r t m e n t also was c o m p o s e d of m a n y

H o p e g radua te s un t i l t he past t w o or t h ree years .

ONE OF THE d e p a r t m e n t s with a lmos t

c o n t i n u a l change in staff was the art

d e p a r t m e n t . In the early Sixt ies , the de-

p a r t m e n t had a staff of two. Each year one

p rofessor would change. In the midd le

Sixt ies , the staff increased to three and

f inal ly in the last t w o years has increased

to a wel l-establ ished staff of seven full and

pa r t - t ime ins t ruc to r s .

T h e o n e o u t s t a n d i n g d e p a r t m e n t is the

chemis t ry d e p a r t m e n t which- lists ten pro-

fessors w h o each hold a d o c t o r a t e . T h e r e is

no o the r d e p a r t m e n t at H o p e which has

such a record . Since 1965, at least 90

percen t of that d e p a r t m e n t ' s m e m b e r s held d o c t o r a t e s .

T h e largest d e p a r t m e n t on c a m p u s is the

English d e p a r t m e n t wi th a ful l and part

t i m e staff of 19 this yetir. N o t a b l y , of

these . 1 1 have d o c t o r a t e s and eight hold

Master ' s Degrees. In 1960. the d e p a r t m e n t

had only ten m e m b e r s , gf which f o u r had

d o c t o r a t e s ar^I six had Mas te r ' s Degrees. «

it

F A C U L T Y - D u r i n g the Sixt ies the number of faculty more than doubled at Hope.

Faculty additions were made in all 21 of Hope's academic departments .

Page 8 Hope College anchor February 4 , 1 9 7 0

New President heads long list of administrators

T h e r e t i r e m e n t of Dr. I rwin L u b b e r s as

President of H o p e College and the sub-

sequent a p p o i n t m e n t of Dr. Calvin Vande r -

Werf as Pres ident was the most s ignif icant

change in admin i s t r a t i ve pe rsonne l in the

Sixties.

T H I S E V E N T WAS the focal point of a

shift f r o m an Admin i s t r a t i on in the early

Sixt ies m a r k e d by bo th s tabi l i ty in organi-

zat ion and pe r sonne l and tha t of t he late

Sixt ies d i s t inguished by n u m e r o u s changes

in o rgan iza t ion and admin i s t r a t ive pe r son-

nel.

Dur ing the first t h r ee yea r s of t he

Sixt ies , unde r Lubbers , there were few

T H E 1964-65 school year had few admin i s t r a t ive changes . In J a n u a r y , Rein

Visscher , Business Manager fo r t he College since 1949, re t i red .

T w o m o n t h s la ter Pres ident VanderWer f

a n n o u n c e d the a p p o i n t m e n t of R o b e r t

P n n s as Assis tant to the Pres ident and

Head of D e v e l o p m e n t , a new post c rea ted

by VanderWer f . Prins, w h o was g r a d u a t e d

f r o m H c p e in 1954 , served as an admin is -

t rat ive o f f i c i a l wi th Michigan Bell Tele-p h o n e for ten years in D e t r o i t .

A MONTH A N D a half later Pres iden t

VanderWerf a n n o u n c e d th ree sh i f t s of stu-

dent pe r sonne l a d m i n i s t r a t o r s . Dr. J a m e s

Harvey, Dean of S t u d e n t s since 1961, was

a p p o i n t e d to the newly-c rea ted pos i t ion of

Di rec to r of G u i d a n c e and Counse l ing . Rev.

William Hilmer t was a p p o i n t e d to a n o t h e r

new pos i t ion . Di rec to r of F inanc ia l Aid.

F o r m e r l y Hi lmer t had been Dean of Men.

is.

. • m '"Vi'

T H E P R E S I D E N T - D r . Calvin A. VanderWerf a p p o i n t e d Pres ident of t he College in

1963, is p i c tu r ed above wi th his w i f e and f ami ly in t h e P re s iden t ' s h o m e .

admin i s t r a t ive changes . In 1962 , REv.

A d e l p h o s A. Dyks t r a was named Di rec to r

of D e v e l o p m e n t . Before the beg inn ing of

the fall semes te r of 1963, Dyks t r a was

redes ignated Direc tor of C h u r c h Rela t ions .

T H E O N E O T H E R change tha t oc-

curred unde r L u b b e r s was the a p p o i n t m e n t

of Dr. J a m e s Harvey as new Dean of

S t u d e n t s .

O n Feb . 1, 1963, L u b b e r s o f f ic ia l ly

s t epped d o w n as Pres ident of H o p e

College, a pos i t ion he had held for 18

years. L u b b e r s had de fe r r ed a decis ion to

ret ire for several years because the Board

of T r u s t e e s had desired that he r ema in to

care fo r t he expans ion p rog ram at H o p e

dur ing the late F i f t i e s and early Sixt ies .

AT T H E T I M E his a p p o i n t m e n t was

a n n o u n c e d in the s u m m e r of 1962 , Presi-

dent VanderWerf was c h a i r m a n of the

chemis t ry d e p a r t m e n t of the Univers i ty of

Kansas. VanderWerf had been at t he Uni-

versity of Kansas since 1941 when he had

received his Ph D f r o m O h i o S t a t e Universi-

ty. He had ea rned a B.A. f r o m H o p e in

1937.

V a n d e r W e r f s a p p o i n t m e n t b e c a m e ef-

fect ive July 1, 1963, five m o n t h s a f t e r

L u b b e r s res igned . Dur ing the f i ve -mon th

in t e r im. Dr. J o h n H o l l e n b a c h , A c a d e m i c

Vice Pres ident of Hope since 1957 , b e c a m e

Ac t ing Pres ident of t he Col lege.

IT WAS D U R I N G H o l l e n b a c h ' s adminis -

t r a t ion that Miss L.mma M. Reever t s , Dean

of W o m e n since 1947, a n n o u n c e d her

r e t i r e m e n t . Also dur ing H o l l e n b a c h ' s presi-

d e n c y , Roger Rie tbe rg of the music depar t -

men t was named Assoc ia te Di rec to r of

Admis s ions to replace R o b e r t B r o w n , w h o

moved to t h e psycho logy f a c u l t y .

T h e f irst a p p o i n t m e n t m a d e by the

VanderWer f A d m i n i s t r a t i o n was tha t of

Mrs. Isla Van E e n a n a a m as ac t ing Dean of

W o m e n in t h e s u m m e r of 1 9 6 3 .

T H E S E C O N D semes te r of the 1963-64

schoo l year saw a c o m p l e t e r ea l ignmen t of

the Admis s ions O f f i c e fo l l owing the resig-

n a t i o n of Alber t T i m m e r as D i rec to r of

Admis s ions , a pos i t ion he had held fo r 16

years . Roger R ie tbe rg was a p p o i n t e d t o

head the Admis s ions O f f i c e .

L a r r y T e r Molen was a p p o i n t e d

Assis tant Di rec to r of Admiss ions . Ter Mo-

len, a H o p e g r a d u a t e , had received a

mas t e r s degree in pol i t ical sc ience f r o m t h e

Univers i ty of Michigan in 1962 .

A f o r m e r counse lo r at Ho l l and High

Schoo l , T h o m a s Carey , was also des igna ted

an Ass is tan t Di rec to r of A d m i s s i o n s fo l low-

ing T i m m e r ' s r es igna t ion .

T h e third a d m i n i s t r a t o r t o a s sume a new

pos i t ion was T h o m a s C a r e y , w h o was

a p p o i n t e d to fill the pos i t ion of Dean of

Men vacated by Hi lmer t . Carey had been at

H o p e since 1964 as Assis tant D i rec to r of

Admiss ions .

IN MAY O F 1965 , A c a d e m i c Vice

Pres ident J o h n Ho l l enbach was g r a n t e d a

leave of a b s e n c e to serve as c o o r d i n a t o r fo r

the Great Lakes Colleges Assoc ia t ion j u n i o r

year ab road p rog ram at t he A m e r i c a n

Univers i ty of Berui t , L e b a n o n , fo r t he

a c a d e m i c year of 1965-66 .

T o rep lace H o l l e n b a c h , Dr. Lars Gran-

berg was a p p o i n t e d Act ing A c a d e m i c Vice

P res iden t . G r a n b e r g had been p r o f e s s o r of

p sycho logy and staff p s y c h o - t h e r a p i s t in

charge of s t u d e n t counse l ing at H o p e since I 9 6 0 .

O T H E R NEW a p p o i n t m e n t s m a d e in

the s u m m e r of 1965 inc luded tha t of Rev.

William Hi l legonds as College Chap la in to

replace Rev. Allen B. C o o k . Hi l legonds ,

w h o was g r a d u a t e d f r o m Hope in 1949,

assumed this pos i t ion a f t e r five years as

pas tor of the Hope R e f o r m e d C h u r c h of

Hol land .

Henry S t e f f e n s , w h o had been T r e a s u r e r

at Hope fo r more t h a n 18 years , was

named Treasu re r and Vice Pres ident of

F i n a n c e at this t ime.

ALSO A N N O U N C E D by Vande rWer f

over the s u m m e r of 1965 was the a p p o i n t -

men t of William L. Wilson as Business

Manager fo r H o p e College.

Larry Ter Molen was m o v e d f r o m his

pos i t ion as Assis tant Di rec to r of Admis-

sions to the post of H o p e ' s Eas te rn Repre-

senta t ive .

T h e f inal admin i s t r a t i ve c h a n g e s m a d e

in the s u m m e r of 1965 were the a p p o i n t -

en t s of J o h n P. Tysse and J a m e s Bekke r ing

as Admiss ion Counse lo r s .

N E A R T H E END of the first s emes t e r

ot the 1965-66 school year , in J a n u a r y ,

1969, Robe r t Prins resigned as Ass is tant t o

the Pres ident and Head of D e v e l o p m e n t , a

pos i t ion to which he had been a p p o i n t e d

on ly ten m o n t h s b e f o r e . I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r

leaving Hope on F e b . 1, 1965 , Prins as-

sumed the pos i t ion of c o m m e r c i a l manage r

fo r t he Wash ing ton , D.C. , C h e s a p e a k e and

P o t o m a c T e l e p h o n e C o m p a n y .

T w o weeks a f t e r t he Prins r e s igna t ion ,

two o t h e r H o p e a d m i n i s t r a t o r s t e n d e r e d

their res ignat ions . Rev. A.A. D y k s t r a , Di-

rec to r of C h u r c h Re la t ions , and Char l e s S.

Rock , Di rec to r of Pub l ic I n f o r m a t i o n , b o t h

res igned. R o c k a f t e r o n l y o n e yea r wi th Hope .

P R E S I D E N T V A N D E R W E R E an-

n o u n c e d in F e b r u a r y , 1966, t h a t Dr. Wil-

liam V a n d e r Lugt wou ld leave his pos i t i on

as Dean of t he Col lege and had b e e n

a p p o i n t e d to the newly c rea ted post of

Dis t inguished Professor-a t -Large at H o p e

College.

A p p r o x i m a t e l y t w o weeks a l t e r t h e

res ignat ion of Rock as Di rec to r of Pub l ic

I n f o r m a t i o n . President VanderWerf an-

n o u n c e d tha t Wilma L. B o u m a had as-

sumed the posi t ion of t e m p o r a r y D i r e c t o r

of Publ ic Re la t ions f o r H o p e Col lege .

B E G I N N I N G M A R C H I , 1966 , S tua r t

Post b e c a m e the new Di rec to r fo r C h u r c h

a n d C o m m u n i t y R e l a t i o n s .

T w o m o n t h s la ter , VanderWerf an-

n o u n c e d that G r a n b e r g , Ac t ing A c a d e m i c

Vice P re s iden t , would re tu rn to full t i m e

l each ing for the 1966-67 schoo l yea r .

VanderWerf also a n n o u n c e d at this t i m e

that t h o u g h John H o l l e n b a c h , w h o had

been A c a d e m i c Vice President p r ior t o

receiving a leave of a b s e n c e to c o o r d i n a t e a

G L C A program in Be i ru t , L e b a n o n , was

r e tu rn ing in the fall, he would not a s s u m e

the vice p res idency .

T H E WEEK A F T E R . VanderWerf an-

n o u n c e d that Hol lenbach w o u l d a s s u m e

the pos i t ion of c h a i r m a n of t he I nglish

d e p a r t m e n t and d i rec to r of t he h o n o r s

p rogram for the next school year . Hollen-

bach filled the vacancy c rea ted by the

res ignat ion of l)r C la rence DeGraaf .

Dur ing the fo l lowing w e e k . President

VanderWerf a n n o u n c e d two m o r e admin is -

t rat ive changes . Larry Ter Molen . w h o had

served as I-astern Rep re sen t a t i ve fo r t he

prior year , was a p p o i n t e d to the newly

c rea ted post of Di rec tor of F o u n d a t i o n and Business Rela t ions .

A L S O A N N O U N C E D at th is t ime was

the a p p o i n t m e n t of Rober t De Y o u n g as

Associa te Direc tor of Admiss ions . De

Y o u n g , a 1956 g r a d u a t e of H o p e , c a m e to

H o p e f r o m Grand Valley S t a t e Col lege ,

where he had served as associa te d i r ec to r of

admiss ions since 1964 . Two weeks la ter ,

VanderWerf a n n o u n c e d the res igna t ion of

William Wilson as Business Manager fo r H o p e College.

T H E SUMMER of 1966 saw Pres ident

VanderWerf a n n o u n c e five a d m i n i s t r a t i v e

a p p o i n t m e n t s . Dr. William S. Mathis be-

came Dean of A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s , fi l l ing the

pos i t ion lef t vacant w h e n f o r m e r A c a d e m i c

Vice Pres ident J o h n H o l l e n b a c h was ap-

p o i n t e d cha i rman of the English d e p a r t -m e n t .

Mathis c ame to H o p e f r o m Hard in-Sim-

m o n s Univers i ty , T e x a s , w h e r e he had

served fo r f o u r yea r s as Dean of F a c u l t i e s

and six years as t he Dean of t he S c h o o l of Music.

A L S O A N N O U N C E D dur ing the sum-

mer was t h e a p p o i n t m e n t of William R.

H e n d e r as Di rec to r of D e v e l o p m e n t , a

pos i t ion o p e n e d t h e prev ious win te r wi th

the res ignat ion of R o b e r t Prins. F o r six

years b e f o r e c o m i n g to H o p e , H e n d e r had

w o r k e d f o r K e t c h u m , Inc. , of P i t t s b u r g h ,

the n a t i o n ' s largest p ro fess iona l fund-ra i s -ing f i rm .

Serving unde r H e n d e r was a new Direc-

tor of Publ ic Re la t ions , George Wallace.

B e f o r e c o m i n g to H o p e Wallace c l a imed to

be a p rofess iona l c o n s u l t a n t in the f ie ld of

hosp i ta l and college d e v e l o p m e n t and pub-lic re la t ions .

V A N D E R W E R E A L S O a n n o u n c e d at

the end of June t h e a p p o i n t m e n t of Clar-

ence J H a n d l o g t e n as D i rec to r of Business Af fa i r s .

With the res ignat ion of T h o m a s Carey

f r o m the post of Dean of Men to b e c o m e

d i r ec to r of counse l ing and gu idance f o r t he

Hol land Publ ic Schoo l s , R o b e r t De Y o u n g

moved f r o m his post as Associa te D i rec to r

of Admis s ions to t h e pos i t ion of Ac t ing

Dean of Men. He b e c a m e Dean of S t u d e n t A f f a i r s in 1968.

TWO M O N T H S I N T O the 1 9 6 6 - 6 7

schoo l year . Pres iden t Vande rWer f an-

n o u n c e d t h e a p p o i n t m e n t of William K.

A n d e r s o n as the head of t he newly c rea ted O f f i c e of A c c o u n t i n g .

In F e b r u a r y of 1967, Vande rWer f an-

n o u n c e d the a p p o i n t m e n t of T h o m a s Ren-

ner , J o h n Tysse and Larry Ter Molen to

new pos ts on the H o p e admin i s t r a t i ve s t a f f .

T e r Molen was p r o m o t e d to b e c o m e

Assis tant Direc tor of D e v e l o p m e n t f r o m

his pos i t ion as D i rec to r of F o u n d a t i o n and

C o r p o r a t e Re la t ions . T y s s e , w h o had

served as c o o r d i n a t o r fo r t he c e n t e n n i a l

H o m e c o m i n g , was also a p p o i n t e d Assis tant D i rec to r of D e v e l o p m e n t .

A NEW M E M B E R of the H o p e s t a f f ,

R e n n e r would serve as S ta f f Wri ter and P h o t o g r a p h e r .

O n e m o n t h later V a n d e r W e r f an-

n o u n c e d t h e res ignat ion of William H e n d e r

as D i rec to r of D e v e l o p m e n t e f f e c t i v e Apri l

30 , 1967. H e n d e r had been wi th the

Col lege fo r less t h a n o n e year . Lar ry Te r

Molen was p r o m o t e d t o A c t i n g D i r e c t o r of

D e v e l o p m e n t t o rep lace H e n d e r .

T H E R E S I G N A T I O N of a n o t h e r of t he

S u m m e r , 1966 , a p p o i n t m e n t s was an-

n o u n c e d by Pres iden t VanderWer f May 19,

1967. Dr. William Math i s resigned as Dean

fo r A c a d e m i c A f f a i r s to accep t t he pos i t i on

of C h a i r m a n of t he F ine Ar t s D e p a r t m e n t

of t h e Univers i ty of N o r t h Caro l ina at

C h a r l o t t e . Dr. M o r r e t t e Rider was a p p o i n t e d t o

rep lace Mathis as Dean of A c a d e m i c A f f a i r s

in the s u m m e r of 1967 . Rider , w h o had

been a m e m b e r of the H o p e f a c u l t y s ince

1947, was a p ro fe s so r of i n s t r u m e n t a l

music prior t o a s suming his new pos i t i on .

T h e new dean took a leave of a b s e n c e

du r ing the 1967-68 schoo l year and Dr.

William V a n d e r L u g t , Dis t inguished Profes-

sor-at -Large, served as ac t ing Dean of Aca-

d e m i c Af fa i r s in R i d e r ' s absence .

A NEW M E M B E R of the A d m i n i s t r a -

tion a n n o u n c e d by Pres ident Vande rWer f

was Dr. R o b e r t Riekse as Assoc ia te Dean

of A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s and Regis t rar .

J a m e s Bekke r ing , w h o served as an

admiss ions counse lo r s ince 1965, was ap-

p o i n t e d Di rec to r of F inanc ia l Aid to re-

place Rev. H i l m e r t . w h o resigned to d e v o t e

full t ime to t each ing .

In N o v e m b e r of 1967 , Lee Wenke , a

I 9 6 0 g r a d u a t e of H o p e , was a p p o i n t e d

Assistant D i rec to r of D e v e l o p m e n t .

F O U R M O N T H S L A T E R the resigna-

tion of the man Wenke was w o r k i n g u n d e r

was a n n o u n c e d by V a n d e r W e r f . Larry Ter

Molen resigned as d e v e l o p m e n t head to

accept a pos i t ion in d e v e l o p m e n t at S o u t h -

ern M e t h o d i s t Univers i ty in H o u s t o n . Tex-

as. He was the second Di rec to r of Deve lop-

m e n t to leave in t w o years .

R e t i r e m e n t b rough t to a close the ad-

minis t ra t ive career of Mrs. Isla V a n Fene-

naam in May 1968 as Dean of W o m e n . Mrs.

Van E e n e n a a m had held the pos t s ince

1963. She was rep laced by Miss J e a n e t t e

S p n k , w h o b e c a m e Associa te Dean of

S t u d e n t s in the s u m m e r of 1968 .

S E V E R A L O T H E R a d m i n i s t r a t i v e

changes were made in the s u m m e r of 1968 .

Char les C u r r y was a p p o i n t e d D i r e c t o r of

Admiss ions t o rep lace Roger R i e t b e r g , w h o

was assigned as associa te p ro fe s so r of mus ic

and resigned to t e ach fu l l - t ime .

Michael Gerr ie , f o r m e r l y Di rec to r of

Men ' s Hous ing , was p r o m o t e d to the posi-

t ion of A c t i n g Assoc ia te Dean of S t u d e n t s .

A N O T H E R C H A N G E m a d e in t h e sum-

mer of 1968 was the a p p o i n t m e n t of Rev.

S a m u e l Wil l iams as Associa te Chap l a in .

Will iams is a g r a d u a t e of Cen t r a l College

and Western Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y .

Philip R a u w e r d i n k was a p p o i n t e d to the

newly -c rea t ed post of S t u d e n t Act iv i t ies

C o o r d i n a t o r at th is t ime . He is a 1968 g r a d u a t e of H o p e .

In F e b r u a r y , 1969 , Dean Rider an-

n o u n c e d the a p p o i n t m e n t of J o h n S t e w a r t

t o the post of Assoc ia te Dean f o r A c a d e m -ic Affa i r s .

F O U R M O N T H S L A T E R , J o h n Tysse

a n n o u n c e d his res igna t ion f r o m the post of

Assis tant D i rec to r of D e v e l o p m e n t to t ake

a pos i t ion wi th a local rea l ty f i rm .

Several m o r e a d m i n i s t r a t i v e changes

were a n n o u n c e d th is fall by Pres iden t

V a n d e r W e r f . Of s ign i f icance was the ap-

p o i n t m e n t of Dr. William DeMees te r as

new D i r e c t o r of D e v e l o p m e n t t o fill t he

pos i t ion lef t vacant s ince the r e s igna t ion of

Te r Molen in March , 1968 . Dr. DeMees te r

c ame to H o p e f r o m Lea Col lege , Alber t

Lea, M i n n e s o t a , w h e r e he served as cha r t e r p res iden t .

B A R R Y W E R K M A N , an i n s t r u c t o r in

H o p e ' s d e p a r t m e n t of e c o n o m i c s and busi-

ness a d m i n i s t r a t i o n since 1 9 6 7 , was ap-

po in t ed Ass is tan t Business Manager .

Also, Paul Kle inhekse l , p rev ious ly an

admiss ions c o u n s e l o r , was a p p o i n t e d head

of f inancia l aid in the newly-a l igned O f f i c e

of A d m i s s i o n s and F inanc ia l Aid . Kle inhek-

sel rep laced J a m e s Bekker ing , w h o res igned

to do g r a d u a t e work at Michigan S t a t e Univers i ty .

D e c e m b e r saw th ree m o r e changes in

the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . S t u a r t Post res igned as

D i rec to r of C h u r c h R e l a t i o n s e f f e c t i v e J an .

1, 1970 , t o a s s u m e the pos i t ion of D i rec to r

of D e v e l o p m e n t of t h e R e f o r m e d C h u r c h seminar ies .

T H O M A S R E N N E R a n n o u n c e d his re-

s ignat ion as D i rec to r of Publ ic I n f o r m a t i o n

e f f ec t ive Dec. 22 to f o r m his o w n pub l i c

re la t ions f i r m . R e n n e r has r e m a i n e d wi th

the Col lege , h o w e v e r , because t h e Col lege

has not f o u n d a r e p l a c e m e n t .

T h e last a p p o i n t m e n t t o d a t e is t ha t of

J o h n N. T i m m e r t o t h e post of D i r e c t o r of

A l u m n i a n d C o m m u n i t y R e l a t i o n s at Hope .

February 4 , 1 9 7 0

Many notables come to Hope during Sixties

In the past t en years H o p e has b e e n host

to m a n y c o n t e m p o r a r y f igures in all f ie lds ,

and varsi ty t e a m s have u p h e l d H o p e ' s

r e p u t a t i o n as a tough o p p o n e n t and a c o m m o n winne r .

THE Y E A R 1961 b r o u g h t m a n y well k n o w n visi tors t o the c a m p u s . A m o n g the

speakers tha t c ame to H o p e was Drew

Pearson , a t o p Washing ton c o r r e s p o n d e n t

w h o had r ecen t ly r e t u r n e d f r o m Moscow

where he had an in terv iew with Niki ta

Khrushchev . T h r o u g h e f f o r t s of t h e Col-

lege's cu l tu ra l p rog ra m , m a n y f a m e d musi-

cians c a m e to the Hope c a m p u s . Piet Kee,

Du tch organis t and c o m p o s e r , and Rise

Stevens , i n t e rna t iona l ly f a m o u s star of the

Me t ropo l i t an O p e r a , were f e a t u r e d d u n n u 1961.

H o p e ' s varsi ty baske tba l l and t rack

t eams t o o k c r o w n s in Michigan In te rco l -

legiate A t h l e t i c Assoc ia t ion c h a m p i o n -

ships in 1962. Again speake r s f r o m across

the c o u n t r y and ab road c a m e to talk t o

the s t u d e n t s . Dr. Herbe r t H. S t r o u p , a

g o v e r n m e n t consu l t an t to Middle Hastern

Af fa i r s , c a m e to talk wi th s t u d e n t s and f acu l t y .

C O M M E N C E M E N T IN 1962 was high-

lighted by the f a m o u s a u t h o r and lec turer

N o r m a n V i n c e n t Peale. T h e cu l tu ra l pro-

gram again b rough t var ious mus ic ians to

p e r f o r m , inc lud ing classical gui tar is t Alir io

Diaz, and f o r m e r d i r ec to r of the Vienna Boy ' s Cho i r , Fel ix Molzer .

In 1963 H o p e ' s varsity baske tba l l , f o o t -

ball, basebal l and t rack t e a m s all t ook

Ml A A c h a m p i o n s h i p c r o w n s . More celebri-

ties visited H o p e ; a m o n g these were

journa l i s t Lou i s E. L o m a x and Israeli pian-ist David Bar-Il l ian.

T H E B A S E B A L L A N D T R A C K c r o w n s

were kep t at H o p e in 1964 as H o p e ' s spring

spor t s t e a m s d o m i n a t e d the M l A A . Sir

M u h a m m e d Zaf ru l la K h a n , f o r m e r U.N.

assembly p res iden t c ame to H o p e , and

la ter , a s t r o n o m e r Dr. Har low Shap ley and

Swiss e c o n o m i s t Alber t H u n o l d visited the c a m p u s .

In 1965 baske tba l l and t rack again t o o k

MI A A c r o w n s . T h e big event of t h a t year

was the d e d i c a t i o n of Windmil l Island by

the Pr ince Bernhard of t he N e t h e r l a n d s .

Dur ing the f o r m a l c o n v o c a t i o n , at which

the Pr ince s p o k e . Pres iden t VanderWer f

a n n o u n c e d the e s t ab l i shmen t of t he Prince

Be rnha rd Scho la r sh ip F u n d . Q u e e n Ju l i ana ,

His R o y a l Highness ' s wi fe , was also present

at the d e d i c a t i o n .

Hope College anchor Page 9

Fin i sh ing u p t h e decade , 1969 m a r k e d

the beg inn ing of t he DeWit t Cu l tu ra l Cen-

ter , and Russel l D e V e t t e re t i red as head

f o o t b a l l coach . T h e f u n d s f r o m the Hol-

l and -Hope -Hamle t drive were f ina l ly pu t t o

use last yea r as a k inde rga r t en was buil t in

Le Loi , S o u t h V i e t n a m . T h e f u n d s were raised by H o p e s t u d e n t s back in 1966, b u t

the c o n s t r u c t i o n was de layed because Le Loi c a m e unde r the h a n d s of t he Viet Cong .

Organizational restructuring aids decision making

T h e past decade was a decade of admin-

istrat ive pol icy change as the Board of

I rus tees was r e s t r u c t u r e d , c o m m i t t e e

g o v e r n m e n t b e c a m e c o m m u n i t y govern-

m e n t , and the Profi le R e p o r t of 1965 ou t l i ned the f u t u r e of H o p e College.

S T U D E N T G O V E R N M E N T u n d e r w e n t

c o n s t a n t revis ion, beginning in May, 1963,

w h e n s t u d e n t s approved a new c o n s t i t u t i o n

fo r t he S t u d e n t Counci l . T h e c o n s t i t u t i o n

changed r e p r e s e n t a t i o n in the Counci l .

F o r m e r l y , soror i t i es and f r a t e rn i t i e s were

r e p r e s e n t e d in s tuden t g o v e r n m e n t . U n d e r

the new se tup , r ep resen ta t ives would be

e lec ted by individual living un i t s , wi th

s o m e rep resen ta t ives e lec ted at large.

Spr ing of 1969 was the t ime of the next

ma jo r change in s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . A

c o m m i t t e e of s t u d e n t s f r o m what had

b e c o m e the S t u d e n t Sena te , f acu l ty m e m -

bers, and a d m i n i s t r a t o r s had worked fo r

over a yea r on a new c o m m i t t e e s t r uc tu r e

for all Col lege pol icy mak ing . T h e " F i n a l

R e p o r t of t he Special C o m m i t t e e on C o m -

m i t t e e s " was a p p r o v e d , and S t u d e n t S e n a t e b e c a m e S t u d e n t Congress .

U N D E R THIS P L A N , each m e m b e r of

S t u d e n t Congress also serves on o n e of t he

Col lege ' s dec i s ion-making b o a r d s or c o m -

mi t t ees . T h r e e main b o a r d s h a n d l e adminis-

t ra t ive , c a m p u s life and a c a d e m i c decis ions ,

and each board is fed p roposa l s by s t and ing

and special s u b c o m m i t t e e s . A Cabine t of

the S t u d e n t Congress d i rec t s s t u d e n t -

or ig ina ted p roposa l s to the p r o p e r board or

c o m m i t t e e . Cabine t m e m b e r s are s t u d e n t s w h o also serve on o n e of t he t h ree main boa rds .

R e s t r u c t u r i n g has t a k e n place in o t h e r areas of the College as well. A r e c o m m e n -

d a t i o n a p p r o v e d in O c t o b e r , 1967 , pro-

vided fo r r eo rgan iza t ion of t he Board of

T r u s t e e s and the e s t a b l i s h m e n t of a Board

of Advisors . A c c o r d i n g to the plan, t he

Board of T rus t ee s was r educed f r o m 55 to

26 m e m b e r s over a three year per iod .

C O L L E G E NEWS--Dr. Chr i s t i an Barna rd , w h o p e r f o m e d the first success fu l h u m a n

hea r t t r a n s p l a n t , c a m e t o H o p e College in 1968 and addressed a c o n v o c a t i o n in

D i m n e n t Memor ia l Chape l . Dr . Barnard was a w a r d e d an h o n o r a r y D o c t o r of Sc ience

degree .

T H E F O L L O W I N G Y E A R gave H o p e

t w o m o r e MIAA t i t les in baseball and

t r ack , and 1967 b r o u g h t t o H o p e t w o m o r e

MIAA c r o w n s , again in basebal l a n d basket -

ball . A m o n g H o p e ' s v is i tors in ' 67 were

Dave B r u b e c k and Pul i tzer -Pr ice winner

Har r i son Sa l i sbury .

Again H o p e baske tba l l re igned n u m b e r

o n e in MIAA in 1968 . In N o v e m b e r Dr.

Chr i s t i an Barnard c a m e to H o p e and ad-

dressed a c o n v o c a t i o n in D i m n e n t Memor-

ial C h a p e l , w h e r e u p o n he received an hon-

ora ry Sc .D. f r o m H o p e .

T H I S S A M E W E E K , p r o m i n e n t black

legislator Ju l i an Bond s p o k e in t h e C h a p e l

a b o u t t h e rise of t he New D e m o c r a t i c

C o a l i t i o n .

T h e Board of Advisors were to include

o n e m e m b e r f r o m each of the 45 Classes of

the R C A . T h e advisors would e x a m i n e the

faci l i t ies and p rog ram of the College and

have d iscuss ions wi th s t u d e n t s , f acu l ty and

a d m i n i s t r a t o r s . T h e Board of Advisors

wou ld mee t on the c a m p u s o n c e a year and

serve as laison b e t w e e n c h u r c h and College.

R I S I N G C O S T S F O R C E D o the r admin i -

s t ra t ive decis ions dur ing the Sixties. Tui-

t ion soa red f r o m $ 3 5 0 per semes te r in

1961 to $ 8 2 5 in 1970. T o t a l fees were

near ly d o u b l e d , f r o m $ 1 , 4 0 0 a year in

1961 to $ 2 , 5 8 5 in 1970. It b e c a m e obv ious du r ing the past

d e c a d e tha t se r ious p l ann ing would have to

be d o n e if H o p e were t o real is t ical ly c o p e

wi th t h e f u t u r e . In Fal l , 1965 , t he Prof i l e

C o m m i t t e e r e p o r t e d on w h a t it cons idered

to be the goals and p u r p o s e s of t he Col lege,

its e c o n o m i c and e d u c a t i o n a l f u t u r e , and

wha t speci f ic p lans wou ld be necessary if the College were t o c o n t i n u e t o e x p a n d .

O N E OF THE MAIN q u e s t i o n s raised

by the Prof i le C o m m i t t e e r e p o r t was t h a t

of size. T h e r e p o r t o f f e r e d th ree a l t e rna-

tives: H o p e could level o f f its admiss ions at

a r o u n d 1 ,800 s t u d e n t s , it cou ld expand to

2 , 2 0 0 s t u d e n t s or it could con t i nue t o

grow to 2 , 6 0 0 or m o r e s t u d e n t s by 1975 .

T h e C o m m i t t e e itself basically favored the second a l te rna t ive .

T h e repor t made several r e c o m m e n d a -

t ions conce rn ing e x p a n s i o n of physical

p lan t , sources of e c o n o m i c s u p p o r t , g r o w t h

of f a c u l t y and e d u c a t i o n a l p rograms f o r

each of t he th ree size a l te rnat ives .

U N D E R T H E H E A D I N G of " F i n a n c e s "

the r e p o r t also r e c o m m e n d e d that e n d o w -

m e n t be increased by a m i n i m u m of

$ 5 , 8 5 0 , 0 0 0 . T h e r epor t s t a t ed , "Unless th is

is a c c o m p l i s h e d , the add i t i ona l costs mus t

be b o r n e e i ther by the s t u d e n t , his p a r e n t s

or d o n o r s , or any c o m b i n a t i o n of t h e m .

T h e t e m p t a t i o n on the par t of m a n y

college a d m i n i s t r a t o r s is to add this cost t o

sums fo r tu i t ion and fees wi th the resul t

that cos ts t o s t u d e n t s rise at an a la rming

r a t e , and even to a po in t where some of t he

y o u n g people the College was designed to

serve are denied the privilege of a t t e n d i n g

because of f inancia l c o n s i d e r a t i o n s . " En-

d o w m e n t has r ema ined s t eady at a r o u n d $2 mil l ion since the r epo r t .

The C o m m i t t e e also r e c o m m e n d e d

several p rogram changes , including the

o rgan iza t ion of larger un i t s of ins t ruc t iona l

t ime. A d o p t i n g a ca lendar which uses the

en t i re school year as t he unit of ins t ruc-

t ional t ime , the r epor t n o t e d , would enab le

s t u d e n t s to mas te r and t rans fe r skills and

k n o w l e d g e f r o m one sub jec t to a n o t h e r .

T H E C O M M I T T E E also r e c o m m e n d e d

tha t course h o u r s be rep laced by un i t s of

credi t rough ly equiva lent to six hour s of

the present s emes t e r -hou r credi ts .

A n o t h e r p r o g r a m r e c o m m e n d a t i o n

asked that " t h e f acu l ty and A d m i n i s t r a t i o n

organize and cor re la te cogna te courses

f r o m var ious d e p a r t m e n t s in to mean ing fu l u n i t s or p r o g r a m s . "

A few of t he r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s of t he

C o m m i t t e e have a l ready been included in

College policies and p lann ing , and some are

p resen t ly u n d e r f u r t h e r s t u d y . Many o t h e r

r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s , howeve r , have gone largely u n n o t i c e d .

Sixties marked by renovation in academics

A c a d e m i c changes in the Sixties have

revealed the decade to be o n e of the most

progressive pe r iods of r enova t ion and inno-

vat ion wi th in the a c a d e m i c life of H o p e College.

IN 1964 NEW r e q u i r e m e n t s were es tab-

lished fo r the H o p e College B.A.Degree

p rog ram. T h e r e q u i r e m e n t s were as fol-lows:

1. I n t r o d u c t i o n to Liberal Studies : eight

semes te r h o u r s of f r e s h m a n courses in

reading, wri t ing and speak ing .

2. Cul tu ra l Her i tage: 12 semester h o u r s of h i s to ry , l i t e ra ture , music and ar t .

3. Social Sciences: six semester h o u r s in course work .

4. Na tura l Sciences and M a t h e m a t i c s : 1 1 semes te r hours .

5. Fore ign Language : eight s emes t e r hours .

6. Bible and rel igion: six semes te r h o u r s

of O ldand New T e s t a m e n t of the Bible.

7. Senior seminar in religion and the

Bible: three semes te r hours .

8. Physical e d u c a t i o n : two semes t e r hours .

T H E S E NEW r e q u i r e m e n t s marked a

change in the na tu ra l sc iences and m a t h e -

mat ics course work f r o m t h e eight semes te r

h o u r s requi red in I 9 6 0 . T h e new requi re-

m e n t s left o u t t he Bible p ro f i c i ency test

requ i red of all t r ans fe r s t u d e n t s . T h e six

semes te r h o u r s in Bible was made a manda -

tory r e q u i r e m e n t and the Bible requi re-

m e n t could no longer be waived. T h e new

r e q u i r e m e n t s of 1964 also saw the a d d i t i o n

of t w o semes te r h o u r s of physical educa-t ion .

T h r o u g h o u t t he S ix t ies this f o r m a t of

r e q u i r e m e n t s has been changed only twice .

In 1968 the I n t r o d u c t i o n to Liberal s tud ies

was a l tered by d r o p p i n g the f r e s h m a n

Speech 11 r e q u i r e m e n t . Also in tha t year

Ph i lo sophy 13 was changed f r o m t w o

semes te r credi t h o u r s to three h o u r s of

c red i t .

T H E MUSIC D E P A R T M E N T in O c t o -

ber , 1966 , o f f e r e d th ree d i f f e r e n t mus ic

degrees. U n d e r t h e new plan s t u d e n t s a re

o f f e r e d an A.B. in music t h e o r y , or an A.B.

in mus ic his tory and l i t e ra ture in add i t i on

to a bache lor of music in p e r f o r m a n c e , a

bache lo r of music in vocal music ieduca-

t i o n o r a bachelor of music in i n s t r u m e n t a l music e d u c a t i o n .

In 1963 and 1964 , new d i m e n s i o n s in

Liberal S tudies were invest igated. F r o m

this invest igat ion a basic a s sumpt ion was

a d o p t e d in the fall of 1964 as to the

mean ing of a liberal a r t s e d u c a t i o n . T h e

a s s u m p t i o n reads: " S i n c e a liberal a r t s

college is conce rned pr imar i ly wi th devel-

o p m e n t of persons , the po in t of beginning

is the general charac te r i s t ics of an intelli-

gent adu l t , ac t ing creat ively and responsi-bly in the world of t o d a y . "

A F T E R T H E F I N D I N G S of the investi-

gat ion were comple t e it was dec ided tha t

e x p e r i m e n t a l cur r icu lum changes would be

made in the f r e s h m a n Liberal S tud ies

p rogram so that Liberal S tud ies would

include " t h e whole of life as perce ived ,

evalua ted and o rde red by the mind of the s t u d e n t . "

A n expe r imen ta l f r e s h m a n English

course , English 15, was deve loped in the

spr ing of 1968. T h e idea of a revised

f o r m a t for the English d e p a r t m e n t segment

of the I n t r o d u c t i o n to Liberal S tud ies

p rogram grew ou t of an analysis of t he

p rogram last spring by Bruce H a y w o o d ,

Dean of the facu l ty at K e n y o n College.

IN N O V E M B E R , 1967 , the pass-fail

sys tem was approved fo r jun io r s and sen-

iors in non-requi red courses . Under this

sys tem jun io r s and seniors can choose to

take one course each semester in which

they receive a mark of e i ther pass or fail , but no let ter grade.

In J anua ry of 1967, a $ 3 7 5 , 0 0 0 grant

was given to Hope College by the Al f red P.

Sloan F o u n d a t i o n to ini t iate p rog rams

wi thin the science d e p a r t m e n t s which

would improve science cur r i cu lum and

f acu l ty . During the next year course curri-

cu lum was discussed by the f acu l ty of the

chemis t ry , b io logy, phys ics and m a t h e m a -

tics d e p a r t m e n t s , and in the fall of 1968

the Sloan p rogram was o f f e r e d f o r the first

t ime to prospec t ive f r e s h m a n science ma-jors.

S E V E R A L F A C U L T Y were added to

each d e p a r t m e n t . Courses wi thin the m a t h -

emat ics , chemis t ry , physics and biology

d e p a r t m e n t s were set up in such a way that

courses taken f r o m any one d e p a r t m e n t

cor re la ted and util ized mater ia l s learned

f r o m a course in a n o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t .

THE SIXTIES saw t h e beginning of the

Latin Amer ican p rogram. T h e p rogram

o f f e r s a S u m m e r Session at G u a n a j u a t o ,

Mexico, and a fall and spring t e rm in

Bogota , Co lumbia . In all t h r ee of these

p rograms s t u d e n t s live with Mexican or

C o l u m b i a n famil ies .

New d e p a r t m e n t s crea ted in the last ten

years are the in terdisc ipl inary s tudies , thea-

tre, c o m m u n i c a t i o n and geology depar t -men t s .

THE T H E A T R E d e p a r t m e n t was es tab-

lished in 1968 wi th several p ro fesso r s f r o m

the speech d e p a r t m e n t . The d e p a r t m e n t cur ren t ly has a staff of f ou r .

T h e fo rmer speech d e p a r t m e n t b e c a m e

the c o m m u n i c a t i o n s d e p a r t m e n t last spr ing

and has a staff of two . At that t i m e courses

of the old speech d e p a r t m e n t were re-

vamped and several o t h e r course o f f e r ings

were added to the d e p a r t m e n t .

T H E I N T E R D I S C I P L I N A R Y s tud ies de-

pa r tmen t was crea ted by the f a c u l t y du r ing

1968-69 to crea te o p p o r t u n i t i e s for experi-

m e n t a t i o n and innova t ion . T h e d e p a r t m e n t

o f f e r s no m a j o r nor has speci f ic f acu l ty

assigned to teach the f o u r courses wi th in

the d e p a r t m e n t . In te rd i sc ip l inary s tud ies

provides a s t ruc tu red means fo r the focus-

ing of the diverse assets of H o p e College

u p o n liberal e d u c a t i o n , c o m m o n cen t ra l ob jec t ives and crit ical issues.

In the spring of 1969 the geology

d e p a r t m e n t first o f f e r ed a ma jo r wi thin the

field of geology. Prior t o tha t t ime geology

was included in the cu r r i cu lum of the

physics d e p a r t m e n t . Cu r r en t l y the geology

d e p a r t m e n t has a s taff of t w o .

IN D E C E M B E R , 1969 new requi re-

men t s and a new c o n c e p t i o n of m a j o r

s tudies in the d e p a r t m e n t of ph i lo sphy

were a n n o u n c e d . U n d e r the new plan a

s t u d e n t may o b t a i n a m a j o r in p h i l o s o p h y

in any one of six ways. R a t h e r than

major ing in p h i l o s o p h y , a s t u d e n t will

choose t o ma jo r in p h i l o s o p h y in a r t ,

ph i losophy of science, ph i lo sophy of the

social sciences, ph i l o sophy of h i s to ry , phil-

o s o p h y of rel igion, or p h i l o s o p h y as a liberal ar ts ma jo r .

Within the Sixt ies the c u r r i c u l u m has

seen the add i t ion of more than 158 addi-

t ions in course o f fe r ings , as well as c o u n t -

less course revisions in vi r tual ly all 21 academic d e p a r t m e n t s .

Page 10 Hope College anchor February 4, 1 9 7 0

Students to present recital Thursday

Board alters proposal

CLB okays parietal hours T h e H o p e College music de-

p a r t m e n t will present its m o n t h l y s t u d e n t rec i ta l t o m o r r o w at 7 p . m . in D i m n e n t Memoria l Chapel .

Inc luded in the p rogram are organis ts Douglass Dyks t ra , w h o will play Chorale by Joseph J o n -gen and Herman S c h r o e d e r ' s Little Prelude1, and Glen Pr ide , who will p e r f o r m Variations on America, by Char les Ives. T i m Liggett , lyric ba r i tone , will sing Song of Vanity Fair, by Ra lph Vaughn Williams.

M e z z o - s o p r a n o M a r y L o u Weesies will p e r f o r m Roger Quit-ter ' s By a Fountainside and Stride la Vampa, an aria f r o m Verd i ' s opera , II Trovatore. Bo th vocalists will be a c c o m p a n i e d by Sharon H o f f m a n .

C o n c l u d i n g the p rogram will be violinist Philip DeHaan , accom-panied by Kenne th Volkers . De-Hann will p e r f o r m the second m o v e m e n t of Max Bruch ' s Con-certo No. I in G. Minor, Op. 26.

• CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN • BIG M

•CABERFAE

JUST MINUTES FROM...

GABLES m m • HOTEL •SHOWBAR • I L F 0 R N 0 RESTAURANT

• INDOOR POOL • S A U N A • DANCING

SPECIAL HOPE WEEKEND PACKAGE • TWO NIGHTS L O D G I N G • 3 -MEALS • D A N C I N G

• SWIMMING • SAUNA. . .FUN. . .FUN. . .FUN. . .

...ONLY $24.50 PER PERSON

PH. (6161 723-9944 FOR R E S E R V A T I O N S OR WRITE

C O R A L G A B L E S , M A N I S T E E

use the privilege fo r talk. Are we against t h a t ? " S t u d e n t m e m b e r Jer ry May s u p p o r t e d Ans tand ig r emark ing t h a t the c a m p u s has a lack of i n t ima te a t m o s p h e r e . This lack was visibly real ized, he said, in t he a f f i rma t ive r eac t ion to the C o f f e e G r o u n d s which provides a m o r e relaxed and i n f o r m a l a tmo-sphere for conve r sa t ion .

S t u d e n t Congress pres ident Tim Liggett , a guest at the meet-ing, s ta ted tha t the re was a higher mora l issue involved. " D o e s the CLB have t h e right t o p ro tec t s t u d e n t s f r o m themse lves?" he asked . It is i m p o r t a n t for college s t u d e n t s t o c o m e to grips wi th c o m p r o m i s i n g c i r cums tances , per-haps to face moral ques t ions , said Liggett .

T H E R O O M M A T E s i tua t ion , he fe l t , was crucial , but because it w o u l d l ead two people to c o m m u n i c a t e the i r views and to learn to c o o p e r a t e , it was help-ful. If the issue were d e f e a t e d , he a d d e d , they wou ld be denied this.

Bruce l leus t i s , a n o t h e r guest at the meet ing , agreed with Liggett and added tha t the rules did not give the c a m p u s a Chr is t ian a tmo-sphere , but r a the r the s t u d e n t s themselves . T h e a t m o s p h e r e is not up to the A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , he said. " Y o u can ' t change a pe r son ' s mora l a t t i t u d e by a l aw , " s ta ted l leus t is . He added tha t s t u d e n t s

will learn f r o m these mis takes . T h e school would like t o p ro t ec t t h e m f rom these mis takes , bu t it can-not .

C O M M E N T S F R O M o the r guests at the m e e t i n g emphas i zed the s t a t e m e n t in the " P h i l o s o p h y of O p e n H o u s i n g " which read :

" R e c o g n i z i n g tha t the H o p e College s tuden t is respons ib le for his social life, and recogniz ing tha t it may be hea l th ie r t o he lp de-velop and f o r m u l a t e social ma tu -ri ty amid the c o n t e x t of a Chris-tian college, t he S t u d e n t Congress of H o p e College p ropose s t o make social respons ib i l i ty a necessary fact , placing increased c o n f i d e n c e and respons ib i l i ty with the indivi-dual s t u d e n t . "

B O A R D S E C R E T A R Y William Hil legonds moved at this po in t to adop t the p roposa l with the a-m e n d m e n t wh ich would limit vis i ta t ion to t h e w e e k e n d only and change the hour s on Fr iday and Sa tu rday to midnigh t instead of 1 a .m.

The a m e n d m e n t was passed and the proposa l then passed 8-5 with o n e a b s t e n t i o n . T h e six stu-dent m e m b e r s , Hi l legonds and De-

V e t t e v o t e d fo r t he p r o p o s a l . As-socia te Dean of S t u d e n t s Jean-e t t e Sp r ik , D e Y o u n g , Richard V a n d e r V e l d e , Bruins and George K r a f t o p p o s e d the p roposa l , and R ie tbe rg abs ta ined f r o m vot ing.

THE S T U D E N T Congress had p re sen t ed t h e original p roposa l t o t h e CLB at its Nov. 25 mee t ing , at which t i m e the bill was tabled f o r f u r t h e r s t u d y . T h e Board again discussed the bill at i ts mee t ing Dec. 5. Reac t ions f r o m admis-sions, a l u m n i o f f i c e and f acu l ty were hea rd .

A c o m m i t t e e was f o r m e d at t he m e e t i n g to m a k e a " p r o g r e s s r e p o r t " o n the o p e n vis i ta t ion p roposa l . It s tudied the q u e s t i o n s tha t were raised a b o u t the new pol icy and r epo r t ed on the objec-t ions t o the s t r e n g t h s of the policy. T h e final c o m m i t t e e re-por t was given to all CLB mem-bers b e f o r e the C h r i s t m a s vaca t ion fo r s tudy be fo re the vo t e Jan . 9.

A s u b - c o m m i t t e e was ap-po in t ed J an . 9 t o be p repa red to presen t a ra t ionale t o the Board of T rus t ee s t o m o r r o w if the t rus tees dec ide to review the p roposa l .

Interested wives act as academic advisors

A C T ! V I T I ES

NEW SHIPMENT

OF FRINGED

LEATHER JACKETS

-10% OFF BOOTS-

WARREN'S WESTERN STORE

622 W A V E R L Y RD.

F E B R U A R Y , 1 9 7 0

A g r o u p of nine w o m e n , wives of f a c u l t y m e m b e r s and Adminis-t ra to rs , has been organized to serve as Associa te Academic Ad-visors t o Hope s t u d e n t s .

Accord ing to Associa te Dean f o r A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s J o h n S tewar t , the Associa te A c a d e m i c Advisors are available to any stu-dent w h o is seeking f u r t h e r aca-demic ass is tance. S t u d e n t s may con tac t e i ther Associa te Chapla in Samuel Williams or Mrs. Richard V a n d e r V e l d e , c o o r d i n a t o r s of the p rog ram, t o be d i rec ted to the

Associa te Advisor " w h o is mos t c o m p e t e n t to deal wi th thei r p r o b l e m , " S tewar t said.

The Associa te Advisors , w h o are s anc t ioned by the Of f i ce of t he Dean fo r A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s , will have full access t o s t u d e n t pe r sonne l records . T h e w o m e n will p rov ide some t u t o r i n g service, will counse l s t u d e n t s c o n c e r n i n g s t u d y t e c h n i q u e s , and will r e fe r s t u d e n t s t h e y c a n n o t aid to o t h e r c a m p u s service agencies , such as the counse l l ing c e n t e r and the reading and writ ing cl inic.

C A L E N D A R S U N D A Y

1 Student Church, Rev.

Wi l l iam Hi l legonds, Chapel 11 a.m.

M O N D A Y

2 Snow Sculpture Begins, 8 a.m. Broomba l l - Van Raalte Field, 4 p.m.

T U E S D A Y

3 Broombal l - Van Raalte Field, 4 p.m.

W E D N E S D A Y

4 Broombal l -Van Raalte Field, 4 p .m. Ski Night - Carousel, 6 p.m. Wrestl ing, Ol ivet, Home, 7 :30 I n d i a n a p o l i s S y m p h o n y , C i v i c C e n t e r , H o p e Students Free w i t h I .D.. 8 :15 " N a n o o k of the N o r t h " , S.E.E. F i lm , Chapel, 7 : 3 0 Basketball , Lake Forest, away

T H U R S D A Y

5 B r o o m b a l l , Van Raalte Field, 4 p.m. F r a t . Sk i T o u r n e y Carousel, 4 p .m. P i z z a E a t i n g Contest, Phelps, 8 p.m. Student Recital , Chapel, 7 p.m. " T h e Hun te rs " , S.E.E. F i lm , Chapel, 8 :30 p.m.

F R I D A Y

6 Van Broombal l Finals

Raalte Field, 4 p.m. Greek Dog Sled Races -Van Raalte Field, 4 : 4 5 John Denver Concert -Chapel, A d m . $1.50, 8 :15

S A T U R D A Y

7 Snow Scu lp ture Ends, 1

p .m. J V B a s k e t b a l l , Calvin, Home, 6 p.m. B a s k e t b a l l , D e n i s o n , Home, 8 p.m. Dance featur ing " A Long T i m e C o m i n " , Phelps, 75C Couple, 50C Stag, 10 p.m.

8 9 10 11 12 13 14 S t u d e n t C h u r c h , Rev. W i l l i a m H i l l e g o n d s . C o m m u n i o n Service Chapel, 11 a.m.

C l a r a W a r d and Her Singers. Civic Center -Hope Students, Facu l t y , Staf f - Free w i t h I .D. -Pr e s e n t e d by G rea t Per formance Series, 8:15 p.m.

Wrestl ing, Calvin, Home, 7 :30 p.m. Basketball , Calvin, Away , 8 p.m. Jean-Paul Sevilla, Pianist, Muskegon High School, Free Tickets for Hope Students, Van Raalte 102 Ash Wednesday

" S k i The Wi ld M o u n t a i n " , Ski Club Movie, Winants Aud . , 8 :00 p.m. L inco ln ' s B i r thday

Wrest l ing , G L C A Meet, Oh io Wes. Last Day to Enrol l & Drop Courses

Wres t l ing , G L C A Meet, Oh io Wed. Basketbal l , O l ive t , Away Va len t ine 's Day Dance, featur ing "B lack S p a r r o w " Phelps, A d m . 50C, 9-12 p .m.

15 16 17 18 19 20 21 S t u d e n t C h u r c h , Dr . No rman Thomas, Dean of N e w B r u n s w i c k T h e o l o g i c a l S e m i n a r y , Chapel, 11 :00 a.m. M a r k Westcot t , pianist . Chapel, 4 : 0 0 p.m.

Basketball, Kazoo, Home, 8 :00 p.m. Wrestl ing, Kazoo, A w a y

Al l College Assembly - Col. Frank Borman, Apo l l o 10 As t ronau t , Sponsored by Soph. Class.

Sorosite Formal S t u d e n t Un ion Dance, Phelps "Wai t Un t i l D a r k " f i lm Snow Aud . , A d m . $1.00, Sponsored by Delta Phi Soro r i t y , 7 : 0 0 & 9 : 0 0

Kappa Chi Fo rma l Wrest l ing, A l b i o n , Home, 2 : 0 0 p.m. Basketbal l , A l b i o n , A w a y

22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Student Church, Mr.

Wesley Michaelson, '67 Staff Assistant to Senator M a r k Hat f ie ld , Chapel, 11 :00 a.m. Washington's Bi r thday

F ra te rn i t y Rush Begins "Ju l ie t of the Sp i r i t s " S.E.E. F i lm , Chapel, 7 :30 p.m. Basketball , U. of Wis. -Parkside, home, 8 : 0 0 p.m. Wrestl ing, Adr ian , A w a y

Senior Recital, Carol Davis, Soprano, Winants Aud . , 8 :15 p.m.

A W S B ig L i t t l e Sis Weekend Wres t l i ng , M I A A Meet, A l b i o n , 11 :45 a.m. Basketbal l , A l m a , Home, 8 : 0 0 p.m.

Winter Carnival

F e b r u a r y 2 - 7

A R T E X H I B I T I O N Van Zoeren L ib ra ry

Feb. 2-28

Rubber, Bronze, and Assembled Sculpture by David Sm i th Greenwood, A r t Dept. — Hope College

Opening w i t h A r t i s t , Sat., Feb. 7, 8 p .m.

f

February 4 , 1 9 7 0

i .

j <

Hope College anchor Page 11

Hopeites compete in England Barry Schre ibe r , n o w at Dur-

h a m Univers i ty , Eng land , fo r his j u n i o r year , was se lected to play baske tba l l o n the English Univer-s i ty A th l e t i c Union all-star t e am f o r play in the Uni ted Kingdom T o u r n a m e n t at L o u g h b o r o u g h Univers i ty Dec . 16 t h r o u g h 18.

SCHREIBER, WEARING his H o p e College l e t t e r m a n j a c k e t , was a p p r o a c h e d by the cap ta in of t he Scotch t eam d u r i n g a pre-t o u r n a m e n t mee t ing , w h o asked if he were f r o m Hope College.

T o the j o y of each , t he cap ta in f r o m Sco t l and was n o n e o t h e r t h a n Norm Madsen, H o p e '66 , and

b r o t h e r Arcadian w h o is cu r r en t l y a f o u r t h year divini ty s t u d e n t f in ishing post g r a d u a t e work on his B.D. degree at E d i n b u r g h Uni-vers i ty .

IN T H E CHAMPIONSHIP game be tween E U A U and Scot-land, Madsen on the Sco t ch team d e f e n d e d Schre iber on E U A U . Five m i n u t e s b e f o r e the half the score was 23-23, but E U A U pul led ahead seven p o i n t s at the half. T h e linal score was E U A U 68, Sco t l and 52. Madsen scored 16 p o i n t s fo r Sco t land and Schrei-ber scored 14 p o i n t s fo r E U A U .

COMMUNICATING—John Hopkins and M. Harold Mikle discuss new courses o f f ered this semester by the recent ly revised department of c o m m u n i c a t i o n .

Communication dep't seeks more relevancy

Indianapolis Symphony

to perform tonight

T h e recen t ly c r e a t e d depar t -m e n t of c o m m u n i c a t i o n has a d d e d several new c o u r s e s in an e f f o r t t o m a k e t h e c o m m u n i c a -t ion p rocess m o r e re levant to con-t e m p o r a r y e d u c a t i o n .

" H I S T O R I C A L L Y , the depar t -m e n t of speech e n d e a r e d itself to the t r ad i t i ona l or classical s tudies of oral c o m m u n i c a t i o n , " said de-p a r t m e n t c h a i r m a n M. Haro ld Mi-kle.

With the change in n a m e f r o m d e p a r t m e n t of speech t o depar t -m e n t of c o m m u n i c a t i o n in March, 1969, the d e p a r t m e n t ' s realm of inves t iga t ion e x p a n d e d . " ' C o m -m u n i c a t i o n ' p rov ides a b r o a d e r i n t e r p r e t a t i o n which inc ludes stu-dy of the mass m e d i a - r a d i o , tele-vision and j o u r n a l i s m , " said J o h n H o p k i n s , ass is tant p r o f e s s o r of c o m m u n i c a t i o n .

BOTH MIKLE A N D H o p k i n s fee l t ha t a s t u d y of the c o m m u n i -ca t i on p roces s is necessary fo r every s t u d e n t . " M o s t p e o p l e th ink t h e y can c o m m u n i c a t e e f f ec t ive ly , b u t this is not a lways t r u e , " n o t e d I lopk ins .

A c c o r d i n g to Dr. M o r r e t t e Ri-de r , Dean f o r A c a d e m i c Affa i r s , t h e Col lege real izes tha t t he re is a need (o e m p h a s i z e and u n d e r s t a n d var ious a s p e c t s of mass c o m m u n i -ca t i on . 11 T h e d e p a r t m e n t is essen-tially an in t e rd i sc ip l ina ry depa r t -m e n t , w o r k i n g wi th o t h e r depar t -m e n t s such as English and phi loso-p h y , " said Rider .

THE D E P A R T M E N T of com-m u n i c a t i o n still o f f e r s the tradi-t iona l pub l i c speak ing courses , but is b r a n c h i n g o u r i n t o f ie lds tha t are new to the College.

C o m m u n i c a t i o n 21 : C o m m u n i -ca t i ons Process , has been o f f e r e d fo r two semes te r s . H o p k i n s calls s t u d e n t r e sponse t o t h e course " f a v o r a b l e and q u i t e encourag-ing ."

A p p r o x i m a t e l y 50 s t u d e n t s were enro l l ed in c o m m u n i c a t i o n courses last s e m e s t e r , i nc lud ing d e b a t e . T h e t w o - m a n d e p a r t m e n t has four ma jo r s .

SENIOR COMMUNICATION m a j o r J o a n ( I r a n z o w felt tha t

YOUR BLUE KEY

the re has not been a dras t ic change in the d e p a r t m e n t this y e a r . 44 Essen t ia l ly the same courses a re being o f f e r e d th is sem-ester , wi th some expans ion in to c o m m u n i c a t i o n , " Miss G r a n z o w n o t e d .

J u n i o r c o m m u n i c a t i o n m i n o r Mary Pons t e in s t a t ed tha t the a d d i t i o n of the new c o m m u n i c a -t ion c o u r s e s is a " s t e p in the right d i r e c t i o n , but t he re is still need to enlarge the d e p a r t m e n t . "

A N O T H E R C O M M U N I C A t ion m a j o r said, " t h e a d d i t i o n of a y o u n g e r f acu l ty m e m b e r wi th new ideas is de f in i t e ly benef ic ia l to t he d e p a r t m e n t . "

" I th ink the d e p a r t m e n t is un-d e r s t a f f e d , " said Miss G r a n z o w . The t w o t e a c h e r s have to spread themse lves t o o th in to deve lop any d e p t h in the d e p a r t m e n t and ex t r a cu r r i cu la r ac t iv i t i es . " she no-ted.

MIKLE IS HOPING fo r a s taff of t o u r or five p r o f e s s o r in the f u t u r e in o r d e r t o teach c o u r s e s in l inguist ics , rad io , television and speech sc ience.

Dean Rider n o t e d t h a t , " t h e d e p a r t m e n t has t o es tabl ish itself b e f o r e any f acu l ty m e m b e r s are a d d e d . " T h e n u m b e r of new facul-ty m e m b e r s will be based on s t u d e n t e n r o l l m e n t in c o m m u n i c a -t ion c o u r s e s and the f inanc ia l sit-u a t i o n of the College, a cco rd ing to Rider . T h e Dean e s t ima ted that t h r ee m e m b e r s wou ld be a d e q u a t e for t he d e p a r t m e n t in the f u t u r e .

The Ind ianapo l i s S y m p h o n y Orches t r a will p e r f o r m ton igh t at 8 : 1 5 at t he Holland Civic C e n t e r in c o o p e r a t i o n with the C o m -m u n i t y C o n c e r t Assoc ia t ion .

Under t h e d i rec t ion of Izler S o l o m o n , t h e p rogram will in-c l u d e the O v e r t u r e t o G i o a c c h i n o Ross in i ' s La Gazza Ladra , F r a n z J o s e p h H a y d e n ' s Symphony No.

Dutch to face

two non-league

teams this week H o p e ' s baske tba l l t eam will

t a k e a break f r o m Michigan In ter -co l l eg ia te Ath le t i c Assoc ia t ion ac t i on t o d a y and S a t u r d a y . To-night the D u t c h will travel t o Lake Fores t and t h e n host Deni-son S a t u r d a y .

Last m o n t h the D u t c h m e n de-f e a t e d t h e Fo re s t e r s of Lake For -est by a landsl ide score of 111-71. T h e Dutch should have little t rou -ble r epea t ing the win.

Denison Univers i ty could p rove to be m o r e of a p r o b l e m for the D u t c h m e n . Big Red is a pe renn ia l O h i o C o n f e r e n c e p o w e r led by h i g h - s c o r i n g h o o k - s h o t art ist C h u c k Clagge t t . Last yea r Denison d e f e a t e d H o p e by a score of 81-75 .

S o p h o m o r e guard- Dan Shina-barger c u r r e n t l y leads the H o p e scor ing wi th a 17.3 scor ing aver-age. J u n i o r Ric Sco t t has been filling in f o r the in jured Ken Hendr ix a n d has d o n e a great j o b . T h e 6 ' ! " f o r w a r d is n o w averaging 7 . 6 po in t s per game.

HOW TO GET A DOCTOR OF DIVINITY DEGREE

Doctor of Divinity degrees are issued by Universal Life Church, along with a 10-lesson course in the procedure of setting up and operating a non-profit organization. For a free will offering of $ 2 0 w e will send you , immediate ly , all 10 lessons in o n e package along with a D.D. certif icate.

UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH BOX 6 5 7 5

H O L L Y W O O D , F L O R I D A 3 3 0 2 1

Extra Large

ITALIAN or BEEF SAUSAGE

Sandwiches

$1.10 . . . half .60 plu'Tax

• Sandwiches

• Fried Chicken Dinners

• Fish

• Shrimp

Delivery Service

FREE DELIVERY for

Orders $2,50 or Over

EX 6 - 5 6 3 2

102 River Ave.

V O N I N S

P/&A W A G O N

Open Sun. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.

MS in H-Jht and Aaron C o p l a n d ' s hi Salon Mexico.

F o l l o w i n g the in te rmiss ion S o l o m o n will c o n d u c t Adagio for Strings, c o m p o s e d by Samue l Bar-b e r and Sir E d w a r d Elgar ' s Enigma Variations.

F o u n d e d in 1930 by F e r d i n a n d Schae fe r , t he e n s e m b l e has had on ly th ree c o n d u c t o r s ; S c h a e f e r , 69 w h e n he f o u n d e d the Orches-tra, held the pos i t ion unt i l 1937 w h e n he re t i red at t he age of 76 .

Fab i en Sevi tzky was his succes-sor, and held the post f o r 18 years , unt i l 1955 . It was du r ing this per iod tha t t he Orches t r a c a m e to be recognized as o n e of t he m a j o r s y m p h o n y o rches t r a s in the c o u n t r y . Izler S o l o m o n was n a m e d mus ic d i r ec to r and con-d u c t o r b e g i n n i n g wi th the 1956-57 season .

In the seasons since S o l o m o n has m o u n t e d the p o d i u m , t h e O r c h e s t r a ' s act ivi t ies have m o r e t h a n d o u b l e d . T h e O r c h e s t r a plays a p p r o x i m a t e l y 150 c o n c e r t s each season f r o m S e p t e m b e r t o May .

T h e e n s e m b l e was f e a t u r e d in Carnegie Hall 's I n t e r n a t i o n a l Fes-tival of Visi t ing Orches t r a s in Nov-e m b e r of 1965 and 1966 , and p layed again at the same Festival in March of 1969 .

H o p e s t u d e n t s , f acu l ty and s taff are invi ted to t h e conce r t f r ee wi th I .D. ca rd .

In t h e semi-f inals , Schre iber scored 26 p o i n t s in play against O x f o r d . The early p l ay -o f f s in-c luded t e a m s f r o m N o r t h e r n Ire-land, Wales, S c o t l a n d , as well as C a m b r i d g e and O x f o r d . Schre iber and his t e a m m a t e s were awarded gold meda l s for the c h a m p i o n s h i p game.

BOTH MADSEN A N D Schrei-ber have been selected to play on the Uni ted Kingdom squad tha t will t o u r Hol land , Belgium and L u x e m b o u r g du r ing spring recess.

Dur ing the r e m a i n d e r of Chris t-mas recess Schre iber and fe l low Ins t i t u t e of E u r o p e a n S tud i e s stu-d e n t s spen t t ime at Gei lo , Nor-way. F r o m there he p l a n n e d to travel n o r t h w a r d in to the Arc t ic circle " t o see wha t i t 's l ike , " he said.

Heustis, Bedard

named to student government posts

I he vacancies on the C a m p u s Life Board and the Judic ia l Board have been filled by senior Bruce l l eus t i s and j u n i o r Pam Bedard , respect ively .

l l eus t i s was recen t ly e lec ted in an a l l - campus e l ec t ion . He is fill-ing the pos i t ion vacated by Fran H o o p e r , who is pa r t i c ipa t ing in the Ph i l ade lph ia Urban Semes te r .

Miss Bedard was a p p o i n t e d t o the Judic ia l Board by S t u d e n t Congress Pres iden t T im Ligget t . Miss Bedard is rep lac ing Jan Dzu-rina, w h o is also s t udy ing in Phila-de lphia th is semes te r .

Pollution... DO YOU

CARE

ABOUT YOUR

ENVIRONMENT?

TEACH IN GHANA OR NIGERIA? Yes - If you

1.Have a B a c h e l o r ' s Deqroo preferably a Masters Degree.

2. Have at least 30 semester hours credit in one of these:

a. physics, b. chemistry, c. b io logy, d. mathematics, e.

industrial arts, f. French, g. geography, h. home economics, or i. business education.

3. Desire to leach at the secondary school level.

4. Are in good health; single, or married (wi thout chi ldren). Both spouses must teach.

W R I T E : T E A C H E R S F O R W E S T A F R I C A P R O G R A M E L I Z A B E T H T O W N C O L L E G E , E L I Z A B E T H T O W N , PA . 1 7 0 2 2

Winter Carniual

Concert FEATURING

10HN DENVER IN CONCERT

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1970

8:15 P.M.

DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL

HOPE STUDENTS...$1.50

TICKETS ON SALE: VAN RAALTE LOBBY

PRESENTED BY THE

HOPE COLLEGE STUDENT ENTERTAINMENT SERIES

^ a g e ^ H o p e Co l l ege anchor February 4 , 1 9 7 0

Dutch suffer hard times in MIAA competition by Bob Vanderberg

anchor Repor ter

S i n c e t h a t t o u g h 9 1 - 8 9 over-t i m e loss to Calvin D e c . 10, C o a c h R u s s D e V e t t e ' s F l y i n g D u t c h m e n have spl i t even in a d o z e n g a m e s , ta i l ing i n t o the s e c o n d d iv i s ion of t he M I A A .

T H E D U T C H M E N , d o w n a f t e r the Ca lv in d e f e a t , shut o n l y 29 p e r c e n t f r o m t h e f l o o r at S p r i n g A r b o r , d r o p p i n g t h e Dec. 13 con-t e s t , 9 7 - 8 1 . ( i e r a l d Byrd t o p p e d all s c o r e r s w i th 31 p o i n t s , whi le Mar ty S n o a p had 13 and Dave ( l o s s e l a r 10 f o r t h e D u t c h , w h o t ra i led at h a l f t i m e , 5 2 4 7 .

T h e O r a n g e a n d Blue re-b o u n d e d f r o m t h e S p r i n g A r b o r d e b a c l e t o c a p t u r e t h e c o n s o l a t i o n b r a c k e t t i t le in t h e Q u a n t i c o i n v i t a t i o n a l T o u r n a m e n t Dec. 18-20 . A f t e r an o p e n i n g loss t o

N e w Y o r k I n s t i t u t e of Techno l -o g y , 7 1 - 6 5 , H o p e k n o c k e d o f f O h i o D o m i n i c a n , 8 2 - 7 1 , ra l ly ing f r o m a 3 3 - 3 1 h a l f t i m e d e f i c i t . G o s s e l a r p a c e d t h e D u t c h m e n w i t h 2 0 p o i n t s , wh i l e D a n Sh ina-ba rge r a n d Dana S n o a p c h i p p e d in w i t h 17 a n d 13 m a r k e r s respec-t ive ly .

H O P E F O L L O W E D u p th i s win by d e f e a t i n g the t o u r n e y h o s t s , t h e Q u a n t i c o Mar ines , 9 3 - 7 0 . Ken l l e n d r i x led t h e w a y fo r H o p e , n e t t i n g 17 p o i n t s .

M o u n t S t . M a r y ' s w o n t h e j ou r -ney c h a m p i o n s h i p .

R e t u r n i n g t o t h e Civic C e n t e r J a n . 3 , I he D u t c h fel l to power f ul S t . J o s e p h ' s ( I n d . ) , 8 0 - 7 2 . T h e tall P u m a s had just c o m e o f f a o n e -po in t v i c t o r y over D e P a u l in Chi-cago . H o p e , t ra i l ing 3 4 - 3 2 at t h e h a l f , s h o t o n l y 3 3 p e r c e n t , w h i c h

Fouls mar game

c o n t r i b u t e d t o t h e D u t c h m e n ' s d o w n f a l l . G o s s e l a r led H o p e wi th a m e r e 12 p o i n t s , and M. S n o a p and D y k s t r a b o t h p u t in 10.

T H E D U T C H r e t u r n e d t o MIAA a c t i o n t h e f o l l o w i n g Wed-n e s d a y at T r e d w a y G y m in Kala-m a z o o , l o s ing t o t he H o r n e t s , 7 9 - 5 9 . A f t e r be ing tied at in ter-miss ion w i t h K a z o o , 3 5 - 3 5 , H o p e shot o n l y 27 p e r c e n t in t h e sec-o n d ha l f . S h i n a b a r g e r was t h e lose rs ' l e ad ing s co re r w i t h 16 p o i n t s , 14 of t h e m c o m i n g in t h e first ha l f .

H o p e p i c k e d u p i ts f irst MIAA v i c t o r y J a n . 10 , edg ing A l b i o n in o v e r t i m e , 1 1 2 - 1 0 7 . T ra i l ing 4 6 - 4 2 at t h e half a n d 96 -91 w i t h less t h a n a m i n u t e r e m a i n i n g , t h e D u t c h m e n ral l ied t o tie t h e g a m e 9 6 - 9 6 o n t w o f r ee t h r o w s by H e n d r i x w i t h f o u r s e c o n d s t o go .

Dutch edge Adrian, 83-82 by P e t e S t r u c k

a n c h o r R e p o r t e r

H o p e ' s b a s k e t b a l l t e a m emerg -ed f r o m the d e p t h s of t he MIAA cel lar S a t u r d a y as t h e y e d g e d the \ d r i a n Bul ldogs , 8 3 - 8 2 , at (he

C I V I C C e n t e r . Tlie D u t c h n o w have .i 3-4 c o n f e r e n c e r e c o r d a n d are 7-8 overa l l .

T H E D U T C H M E N s c o r e d first and a f r e e t h r o w m a d e it 3 -0 in f avor of the h o m e tc. m. T h e n t w o

b a s k e t s by the Bu l ldogs gave t h e m a 4-3 l ead . A d r i a n k e p t t h a t lead imti l t h e f inal m i n u t e of p l ay .

A d r i a n j u m p e d t o a 2 3 - 1 8 lead w i th n ine m i n u t e s r e m a i n i n g in the h a l t , but t he D u t c h c a u g h t up

and a baske t by R i c Sco t t t i ed t he sco re at 29 all. T h e Bu l ldogs c a m e back w i t h five s t r a igh t p o i n t s and led at h a l f t i m e , 3 8 - 3 3 .

C A P T A I N T O M D y k s t r a got the D u t c h o f f t o a g o o d s ta r t at t he b e g i n n i n g of t h e s e c o n d half

as he s c o r e d t h e f i rs t f ive p o i n t s fo r H o p e by h i m s e l f . With 1 5 : 3 5 left in the g a m e t h e D u t c h m e n t r a i l ed , 4 8 - 4 4 .

T h e n again , j u s t as H o p e was g e t t i n g c lose , A d r i a n put t o g e t h e r a s c o r i n g spree a n d bui l t up a 10 -po in t lead, 5 8 - 4 8 .

H O P E C A M E B A C K and c losed the gap t o jus t t h r e e at 6 9 - 6 6 w i t h a b o u t six m i n u t e s re-m a i n i n g , but o n c e again t h e Bull-d o g s pu l led a w a y w i t h five s t r a igh t p o i n t s t o lead by e i g h t .

By th i s t ime h o w e v e r , p e r s o n a l f o u l s w e r e b e g i n n i n g to t a k e t he i r toll on t he A d r i a n s t a r t i n g l ine-up . G u a r d K i m R a n k f o u l e d o u t wi th 6 : 4 0 l e f t on t h e c l o c k . F o r w a r d S teve Ba lyo had f o u l e d o u t ear l ie r in t h e ha l f . J a c k Kaiser a n d Gary Barcus were e a c h p l a y i n g w i th f o u r f o u l s ap iece .

IN T H E N E X T c o u p l e of min-u te s , H o p e m a n a g e d t o get back

to w i t h i n f o u r p o i n t s a n d t h e n t h r e e w i t h 3 : 1 0 l e f t in t h e g a m e .

C i u a r d D a n S h i n a b a r g e r b r o u g h t t he f a n s t o t he i r feet as he hit a 15- foo t j u m p sho t t o cu t t he A d r i a n lead t o o n e .

H o p e ' s d e f e n s e t h e n f o r c e d a t u r n o v e r and S h i n a b a r g e r was f o u l e d . He c o n v e r t e d o n the b o n u s s i t u a t i o n t o pu t t h e D u t c h a h e a d f o r the f i rs t t i m e s ince t h e o p e n i n g m i n u t e s .

C a p t a i n D y k s t r a t o o k c o m m a n d of t h e g a m e in t h e o v e r t i m e ses-s ion , s co r ing eight k e y p o i n t s .

S H I N A B A R G E R , s e t t i n g a new p e r s o n a l s c o r i n g r e c o r d , p o u r e d t h r o u g h 37 p o i n t s t o lead all s c o r e r s . D y k s t r a w o u n d u p w i th 22 , a l so a c a r e e r h igh. M. S n o a p , G o s s e l a r , a n d H e n d r i x s c o r e d 15, 14 a n d 1 3 p o i n t s .

E v e n i n g t h e i r l eague r e c o r d at 2-2 , t h e D u t c h w a l l o p e d A d r i a n , 9 8 - 8 8 , on t h e lose rs ' f l o o r f o u r d a y s la ter . Led by S h i n a b a r g e r , t he v is i tors p o s t e d a 4 9 - 3 9 half -t i m e a d v a n t a g e a n d t r a d e d b a s k e t s w i t h t h e Bu l ldogs d u r i n g t h e sec-o n d ha l f . " S h i n n y " led H o p e aga in w i th 26 p o i n t s , w h i l e D y k s t r a w i t h 17 a n d M. S n o a p w i t h 16 s h o u l d e r e d m u c h of t h e s c o r i n g l oad . G a r y R a n k ta l l ied 24 in a losing c a u s e .

A L M A , C H A L L E N G I N G Cal-vin f o r t h e M I A A t i t le , h a n d i l y w h i p p e d t h e D u t c h m e n , 7 6 - 6 2 , at A l m a J a n . 17. T h e s c o r i n g of C h a r l e s H u d s o n and t h e S c o t s ' s u p e r i o r r e b o u n d i n g p r o v e d t o be t o o m u c h f o r H o p e .

L a k e F o r e s t l o o k e d l ike any -t h i n g but a b a s k e t b a l l t e a m w h e n the ["ores ters visi ted t h e Civic C e n t e r t h e n igh ! of J a n . 2 4 . T h e

D u t c h ro l l ed t o a r i d i c u l o u s 111-71 t r i u m p h a f t e r p i l ing u p a 5 9 - 3 5 h a l f t i m e lead .

S H I N A B A R G E R f i r e d in 22 p o i n t s in t h e first h a l t , bu t sal on the b e n c h mos t of t h e s e c o n d

h a l f , w i n d i n g u p w i t h 2 4 . Ric S c o t t , s t a r t i n g in p lace of t he s ide l ined H e n d r i x , d u m p e d in n ine f ie ld g o a l s and f o u r f r e e t h r o w s f o r a t o t a l of 22 p o i n t s .

E d w a r d s , p l a y i n g m o s t of t he f ina l 2 0 m i n u t e s , c a m e u p w i t h 16 m a r k e r s .

O L I V E T D E A L T t h e D u t c h a big b l o w last T h u r s d a y by d o w n -ing H o p e on its h o m e f l oo r , 9 6 - 8 4 . T h e C o m e t s hit 4 8 p e r c e n t of t he i r f ield goa l a t t e m p t s , wi th 6 -7 Mike Maciasz and 5-8 Benn ie B e n f o r d l ead ing t h e w a y w i t h 28 a n d 2 6 p o i n t s r e s p e c t i v e l y . Mac iasz also p o p p e d in 12 s t ra igh t f r e e t h r o w s t o h e l p t h e Olivet e f f o r t . T h e C o m e t d e f e n s e did a f ine j o b o n S h i n a b a r g e r , w h o was he ld t o j u s t 1 1 p o i n t s .

D o w n 4 0 - 3 6 at t h e h a l f , t he D u t c h , led by D V k s t r a ' s s h o o t i n g , t ied t h e s c o r e at 4 4 - 4 4 , t h e n

t r a d e d b a s k e t s w i t h Ol ive t b e f o r e t a k i n g a 73 -72 l ead . H o w e v e r , t he v i s i to r s t h e n o u t s c o r e d H o p e 10-1 in t h e nex t t w o m i n u t e s t o t ake an i n s u r m o u n t a b l e 8 2 - 7 4 advan -tage .

H e a d i n g the s c o r i n g list f o r t he losers we re D y k s t r a w i th 18, I).

S n o a p wi th 15. a n d Gosse l a r wi th 14 p o i n t s . 1 he D u t c h m e n arc cur-r e n t l y in s ixth p lace in t h e MIAA w i t h a 3 -4 r e c o r d . All h o p e s f o r an MIAA t i t l e have p r e t t y m u c h g o n e by t h e b o a r d . O n e m o r e league loss w o u l d k n o c k t h e D u t c h out of t h e race .

Grapplcrs placc third

in Lake Forest meet

• J ® ' WZT ; ^

. / • s

L I K E E L Y I N G - T o m D y k s t r a d e m o n s t r a t e s w h a t is m e a n t b y t h e

F l y i n g D u t c h m e n as h e s c o r e s a f i e ld goal in H o p e ' s v i c t o r y over t h e A d r i a n B u l l d o g s last S a t u r d a y at t h e H o l l a n d Civic C e n t e r , 8 3 - 8 2 .

H O P E G O T A N O T H E R big b reak w h e n G a r y B a r c u s was ca l led f o r an o f f e n s i v e f o u l a n d had t o leave the g a m e . T h e 6 ' 2 " f r e s h m a n h a d s c o r e d 3 0 p o i n t s b e f o r e e x i t i n g .

T h e Bu l ldogs missed o n t h e i r n e x t s c o r i n g o p p o r t u n i t y , a n d H o p e c e n t e r Dave G o s s e l a r p u l l e d d o w n t h e r e b o u n d . G o s s e l a r t h e n pu t t he g a m e on ice f o r t h e D u t c h

as he p u t in t w o f r e e t h r o w s t o p u t H o p e a h e a d , 8 3 - 8 0 . J o h n O k e n k a hit a last s e c o n d f ie ld goal t o m a k e it a o n e - p o i n t v i c t o r y f o r t he D u t c h m e n .

D u r i n g t h e past m o n t h - a n d - a -half t he H o p e Co l l ege w r e s t l i n g s q u a d has p a r t i c i p a t e d in six m e e t s . In t h a t p e r i o d t h e D u t c h g r a p p l e r s m a n a g e d t w o wins , f o u r losses , and a t h i r d p lace f in i sh in a f o u r - t e a m m e e t S a t u r d a y at Lake F o r e s t .

T h e losses c a m e on D e c . 10 t o V a l p a r a i s o U n i v e r s i t y , o n Dec . 13 t o a very s t r o n g G r a n d R a p i d s J u n i o r Co l lege t e a m , on J a n . 7 t o S o u t h w e s t e r n Mich igan Co l l ege , and o n J a n . 14 t o M u s k e g o n C o m m u n i t y C o l l e g e . T h e t w o D u t c h v i c t o r i e s w e r e r e c o r d e d in a t r i a n g u l a r m e e t o n J a n . 10 as t h e H o p e w r e s t l e r s d e f e a t e d b o t h K a l a m a z o o a n d G r a n d Va l l ey Col leges.

In t h e m e e t S a t u r d a y , t he D u t c h m e n s c o r e d 54 p o i n t s t o p lace t h e m t h i r d b e h i n d F l m h u r s t C o l l e g e w i th 81 p o i n t s a n d Man-c h e s t e r Co l l ege wi th 8 0 p o i n t s . R o u n d i n g o u t t h e s la te of f o u r t e a m s was t he hos t s c h o o l of Lake F o r e s t w i th 32 p o i n t s .

T a k i n g h o n o r s f o r t h e H o p e g r a p p l e r s at t h e Lake F o r e s t mee t w e r e Rick V a n d e r l i n d at 134 p o u n d s . Rick H i n e at 142 p o u n d s and Kar l N a d o l s k y at 1 5 8 p o u n d s . Each i nd iv idua l s c o r e d t h e t w o v i c to r i e s n e c e s s a r y t o win t he i r r e s p e c t i v e we igh t class.

T h e D u t c h m e n ' s n e x t m e e t will be at h o m e t o n i g h t aga ins t Ol ive t .

Optimism and disappointment by Bob Vanderberg

S C O T T , W H O F I L L E D in at f o r w a r d f o r the i n j u r e d K e n Hen-d r ix , led H o p e w i t h 19 p o i n t s . S h i n a b a r g e r and D y k s t r a c a s h e d in f o r 18 a p i e c e . G o s s e l a r h a d 1 2.

D o u g S h u l e r k f o l l o w e d Ba rcus in s c o r i n g fo r t h e Bu l ldogs w i t h 13 p o i n t s . O k e n k a and G a r y R a n k s c o r e d 12 and 10 p o i n t s respec-t ive ly .

J £ 11ULR.Y Dependab le Jewelers for Over a Quarter Century

6 Wei* Eighth Street

HOLLAND, M I C H I G A N

P r o b a b l y t h e biggest n e w s h e r e s ince t h e e n d of t h e s e m e s t e r was t he h i r ing of f o r m e r U C L A s t a r

R a y S m i t h a s H o p e ' s new f o o t b a l l c o a c h . T h e m o v e c e r t a i n l y l o o k s like a s t e p in t h e right d i r e c t i o n . T h e 3 1 - y e a r - o l d S m i t h , w h o h a s b e e n c o a c h i n g j u n i o r co l l ege f o o t -ball in C a l i f o r n i a t he last t w o s e a s o n s , b r i n g s s o m e i m p r e s s i v e c r e d e n t i a l s t o H o p e .

S M I T H W A S P I C K E D as t h e

B r u i n s ' best b l o c k e r and bes t t a c k -ier in b o t h his j u n i o r a n d s e n i o r yea r s . His t e a m m a t e s s e l e c t e d h i m as the i r c a p t a i n a n d as t h e s q u a d ' s o u t s t a n d i n g s e n i o r and m o s t valu-ab le p l a y e r . T h a t year , 1 9 5 9 , t h e U C L A n s w o n t h e Pac i f ic -8 f o o t -ball t i t l e . S m i t h k n o w s w h a t it m e a n s t o be a w i n n e r .

S o m e t h i n g else a b o u t H o p e ' s new c o a c h c a u g h t my e y e . In t h r e e y e a r s as a B r u m f u l l b a c k . S m i t h w a s t h r o w n for losses t o t a l -ing o n l y 41 y a r d s . In f a c t , he w e n t t h r o u g h his e n t i r e j u n i o r y e a r w i t h o u t o n c e b e i n g b r o u g h t d o w n for a loss. T h i s is an i n d i c a t i o n of t h e m a n ' s d e s i r e and d e t e r m i n a -t i o n .

H O P E F U L L Y , S M I T H will be a b l e t o insti l l s o m e of th i s des i r e in his f o o t b a l l p l a y e r s n e x t fa l l . T h e t a l en t s h o u l d be t h e r e , e spe -cial ly if a c o u p l e k e y j u n i o r s (mi s s ing th i s pas t s e a s o n ) d o de -c ide t o r e t u r n t o t h e g r i d i r o n , as is r u m o r e d .

1 d o n ' t rea l ly k n o w h o w t h e rest of t h e c a m p u s fee ls , bu t I ' m a l i t t le d i s a p p o i n t e d w i t h t h e way t h e b a s k e t b a l l s e a s o n has prog-ressed t o t h i s p o i n t . H o p e n o w has a 7 -8 r e c o r d , a n d t h e D u t c h we re l u c k y to get t h a t s e v e n t h win S a t u r d a y n i g h t . M a y b e I 've over-r a t e d the t e a m , but 1 still t h i n k t h a t C o a c h D e V e t t e ' s s q u a d s h o u l d be b e t t e r t h a n 7-8 .

O F C O U R S E , C o a c h D e V e t t e s h r u g s it o f f by s a y i n g t h a t H o p e ' s o p p o n e n t s a r e b e t t e r t h a n t h e y w e r e a yea r ago . He k e e p s t a l k i n g a b o u t h o w m u c h s t r o n g e r t h e M I A A is t h i s y e a r . Well, 1 d o n ' t k n o w . 1 see Ca lv in in f irst p lace w i t h a 5-1 l e a g u e r e c o r d , b u t t h e n

1 see a n o t - s o - s t r o n g W h e a t o n b l o w Calvin o f f t h e f l o o r - n o t o n c e , bu t t w i c e - a n d t h e n 1 have t o s t a r t t o w o n d e r : Is t h e M I A A real ly so s t r o n g a f t e r all?

Jus t b e c a u s e a l eague is well-b a l a n c e d d o e s n o t m e a n t h a t it is s t r o n g . In b a s e b a l l , t h e Pacific-C o a s t L e a g u e a l w a y s ha s a c lose p e n n a n t r a c e , w i t h severa l con -t e n d e r s b a t t l i n g f o r t h e t i t l e . But t h a t d o e s n ' t m e a n t h a t t h e P C L is s t r o n g e r t h a n , s a y , t h e A m e r i c a n L e a g u e L a s t , w h e r e B a l t i m o r e c o m p l e t e l y r a n a w a y f r o m t e a m s l ike D e t r o i t a n d B o s t o n . T h e PCL m a y be b e t t e r b a l a n c e d , b u t cer-t a i n l y n o t s t r o n g e r .

A N Y W A Y , T H E s e a s o n has been a n e x c i t i n g o n e f o r t h e f ans . All of t h e h o m e g a m e s , e x c e p t f o r t he l aughe r s w i t h C o n c o r d i a and Lake F o r e s t , have b e e n c lose , see-saw b a t t l e s . A l r e a d y H o p e has had t w o o v e r t i m e ga les . T h i s is q u i t e a c h a n g e f r o m t w o a n d t h r e e yea r s ago , w h e n F l o y d B r a d y & C o .

ru led t h e M I A A . In t h o s e s easons , H o p e ' s h o m e g a m e s n o r m a l l y we re 1 5 -20 p o i n t v i c to r i e s .

T h e o n l y rea l ly e x c i t i n g h o m e g a m e s I can r e m e m b e r f r o m t h o s e t w o y e a r s w e r e t h e ' 6 7 Lake Fores t g a m e - w h e n Car l Wal te r s c a n n e d a j u m p e r f r o m t h e c o r n e r as t h e b u z z e r s o u n d e d f o r a 5 9 - 5 8 w i n - a n d the ' 6 8 K a l a m a z o o g a m e , w o n by t h e D u t c h , 6 2 - 6 0 , in o v e r t i m e t o c l inch t h e MIAA c h a m p i o n s h i p .

A P P A R E N T L Y , S C O R I N G t h e h u n d r e d t h p o i n t in b a s k e t b a l l g a m e s is a t a l e n t w h i c h r u n s in t h e L e e n h o u t s f a m i l y . J i m , a g u a r d o n the f r e s h m a n t e a m , t u r n e d t h e t r ick S a t u r d a y n i g h t . His o l d e r b r o t h e r , J o h n , a f o r m e r vars i ty p l a y e r , did it t w i c e .

T h r e e yea r s a g o , in a g a m e wi th A d r i a n , H o p e led b y s o m e t h i n g like 9 8 - 5 5 w i t h 2 0 s e c o n d s l e f t . J o h n w e n t t o t h e f r e e t h r o w l ine w i t h a o n e - a n d - o n e , a n d s ank t w o p r e s s u r e f r e e t h r o w s . T h e n e x t s e a s o n , he c a m e t h r o u g h in t h e s a m e s i t u a t i o n as H o p e e d g e d L a k e F o r e s t , 1 0 0 - 6 3 .