05-15-1970

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anc \ I OPE n COLLEGE or OLLAND, MICHIGAN Hope given $500,000 Kresge < challenge , grant i < IL. I I y i >i H2nd Anniversary -25 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 49423 May IS. 1970 CLH decides today Compulsory chapel may end by Clarke Borgeson anchor Managing Editor Compulsory chapel is expected to be abolished by the Campus Life Board at its meeting this afternoon. IN A STRAW vote taken by the anchor Wednesday, 13 of the CLB's 16 members said they were definitely in favor of the non- compulsory chapel plan. Three board members abstained until today's meeting. The proposal recommends that "the present plan of compulsory worship for freshmen and sopho- mores be discontinued at the end of the present school year," and that "a committee made up of the chaplains and three students, ap- pointed by the Religious Life Committee, be instructed to pro- vide students and faculty with the opportunity to worship daily dur- ing the 1970-71 school year." THE PROPOSAL further asks that "a series of six convocations be planned for the 1970-71 term, which would be non-compulsory in nature," and that S4500 be provided the Religious Life Com- mittee for the purpose ol planning the 1970-7! series ol convoca- tions. The non-compulsory chapel proposal was originally started when a group of students pre- sented a petition to the RLC earlier this year. Ihe petition asked that the College require- ment of chapel attendance of twice a week for freshmen and once a week for sophomores be dropped. IN THE RATIONALE for the proposal, the RLC stated that there are many ways in which the Christian faith touches the lives of Ihe students and faculty at Hope College, and that one of these ways could be a series of convoca- tions which is "designed to expli- cate the Christian faith in the twentieth century." (ConlinucJ on [hj^c 7. column <) By Garrett DeGraff anchor Assistant Editor A $500,000 challenge grant lor the proposed new academic sci- ence center was awarded to Hope College by the Kresge Loundation of Detroit Monday. UNDER THE TERMS ol the grant, the College must match the kresge funds. No date has been set for construction to begin, al- though in lis proposal to the Kresge loundation, the (oliege reported that construction would begin in December, 1970, and be completed by September, 1972. With the grant the College is now approximately $250,000 short ol the S4 million estimated cost ol the building, making it Ihe single largest project in Hope's history. ACCORDING TO President Calvin VanderWerf, construction ol the science center will begin when the remaining sum is ob- tained. Anticipating this, the Col- lege is now seeking a site lor the building and an architect to draw Ihe final plans. College ollicials feel Hope should have no problems raising the lunds, as the Kresge grant would stimulate further contribu- tions. Dr. William DeMeester, Special Assistant to the President for Planning and Development, said that when the College re- ceived the grant approximately $250,000 had been raised by the College in addition to a SI million federal grant and a S2 million lederal low-interest loan. EXTENSION OF the April construction deadline for use of the federal monies is currently being sought by the College. De- Meester lelt Ihe Kresge founda- tion grant would improve the Col- lege's chances of having the exten- sion granted by the Department ot Health, Education and Welfare. Ihe Assistant to the President stated that "We're eneouraged about receiving the extension. 1 he College has shown progress in that two ol the three buildings for which we were to receive federal lunds are now under eonstruc- I ion," DeM LESTER ADDED thai "the Kresge grant helps our posi- tion even more because now it indeed looks like we will raise the necessary funds." Clarence Handlogten, College I reasurer and Business Manager, sa i d that $500,000 should be raised before the College begins construction. "We have already committed ourselves to the De- Witt Student Cultural and Social (enter and the addition to the music building," he said. Because ol current economic trends^ throughout the country, we may be foreed to raise additional funds to complete those struetures. If we begin const met ion of a third building without proper financing, we might be overcommittmg our- selves." HANDLOGTEN added that site location and naming of an architect would take time. "At best we could have final plans for the building m six months, and constructions would take a year- and-a-half. It would be extremely optimistic to expect occupancy of the academic science center by September, 1972." President VanderWerf noted that Handlogten has been inter- (Continucd on page 1(1, column 3) Trustees to diseuss construction financing by Tom Donia anchor Editor l inancing for major changes and additions to the physical plant and overhauls in College policy will be discussed by the Board of 1 rustees at its meeting May 27-30. THE BIGGEST i|ueslion lacing the Board will be the naming ot an architect and site selection for the proposed academic science center. A special subcommittee is ex- pected to be named to recom- mend a site for the building, and the Board will consider methods for raising the necessary $250,000 in order lo mateli the recently- announced Kresge Loundation grant and complete funding ol the structure. OTHER TOPICS ol discussion during the extended weekend meeting will be finances for the DeWitt Student Cultural and Social Center presently under con- struction. Because ol the lengthy slack m the stock market. College securities have been declining in value, putting the amount ol lunds earmarked for completion ol the Center in question. The Board will also have to answer some tough questions con- cerning remodeling and the im- mediate and long-range future of Van Raalte Hall. State lire olli- cials have demanded that the Col- lege comply with fire regulations concerning the building. THE BOARD will consider a proposal drawn up by College Treasurer and Business Manager Clarence Handlogten for remodel- ing in order to comply with the state demands. If the proposal is approved, it will go to the state fire marshall for further negotia- tions. In addition to problems involv- ing the physical plant, the Board will be faced with several far- reaching questions of College policy and governance. The ad hoc committee on gov- ernance will recommend to the Board that two faculty members be given seats on the Board. The (Com mucJ on [>a^c I I , column I) & THE REFORMED SHREW-Katharine (Deborah Noe) instructs the other wives in obediance to their husbands in a final scene of "The Taming of the Shrew." The Shakespearean play will be presented tonight and tomorrow night at 8 in the Little Theatre. Festival draws crowds Holland blossoms out at Tulip Time by Horace VanGoldsmith ace anchor Reporter Wednesday marked Ihe open- ing of I he 4 I st 1 uhp 1 line Les- tival m Holland. Ihe week's events are designed to capture "a bit ol old Holland" and "a bit ol the old pay check." THE THEME OE this year's celebration will he centered, oddly enough, around "Lnviron- mental Pollution." Holland busi- nessmen were so firmly implanted with the idea of pollution by ( O n g r e ssma n VanderJagt's flowery speech at the Civic Center lasl Saturday that they voted to "(11 AN UP" this year. I his year's theme reflects the community's budding concern for pressing social issues. Among the many breath-taking displays are the floating pickle and garbage display in beautiful Lake Maca- tawa and 15b vendors pedalling authentic Dutch cotton candy. The festival was kicked off by the traditional Klompen dancers, Volks parade and street scrubbing. The rest of the week's events included a wide variety of exciting things such as more Klompen dan- cers. more parades and more street scrubbing. THE KLOMPEN d a nee is will perform tonight at 7:15 in Cen- tennial Park Square. Saturday's climatic events include tour per- lormances ot the Klompen dancers, a super street scrubbing and a 1 wo-and-a-hall hour band review lor those fortunate enough to be outside Ihe three mile hearing range and thus un- able to follow their ears to the concert, it begins at 11:45 m Riverview Park. I his year's Tulip Tune officials were again kind enough, for the convenience of Hope students studying for final exams, to direct the parade route that includes more than 50 marching bands, directly past the majority of dormitories so the students, too, can enjoy this wonderful event. lulip Time appears to be on its' way to becoming another suc- cess, thanks to the thousands of people who don't know what the Dutch are really like. TULIP TIME ATTRACTION—Samuel Williams, Jr., son of Rev. Samuel Williams, assistant chaplain, enjoys the tulips. Holland's children are just one of the multitude of blooming attractions to the thousands of people who come to Holland for the annual festival.

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Transcript of 05-15-1970

Page 1: 05-15-1970

anc \

I OPE

n COLLEGE

or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

Hope given $500 ,000 Kresge <challenge ,grant

i — <

IL. I I y

i >i

H2nd Anniversary - 2 5 Hope College, Holland, Michigan 4 9 4 2 3 May IS. 1970

CLH decides today

Compulsory chapel may end by Clarke Borgeson

anchor Managing Editor

Compulso ry chapel is expec ted to be abol ished by the Campus Life Board at its meeting this a f t e r n o o n .

IN A STRAW vote taken by the anchor Wednesday, 13 of the CLB's 16 m e m b e r s said they were def in i te ly in favor of the non-compulsory chapel plan. Three board m e m b e r s abstained until today ' s meet ing .

The proposal r e c o m m e n d s that " the present plan of compulso ry worship for f r e shmen and sopho-mores be d i scont inued at the end of the present school yea r , " and that "a c o m m i t t e e made up of the chaplains and three s tuden t s , ap-pointed by the Religious Life C o m m i t t e e , be instructed to pro-vide s t u d e n t s and facul ty with the

o p p o r t u n i t y to worship daily dur-ing the 1970-71 school y e a r . "

T H E PROPOSAL fu r the r asks that "a series of six convoca t ions be p lanned for the 1970-71 te rm, which would be non-compulsory in n a t u r e , " and that S4500 be provided the Religious Life Com-mit tee for the purpose ol planning the 1970-7! series ol convoca-tions.

The non-compulsory chapel proposal was originally s tar ted when a group of s tuden t s pre-sented a pe t i t ion to the RLC earlier this year . Ihe pet i t ion asked that the College require-ment of chapel a t t endance of twice a week for f r e shmen and once a week for s o p h o m o r e s be d r o p p e d .

IN THE R A T I O N A L E for the proposal , the RLC s ta ted that there are many ways in which the

Christian fai th touches the lives of Ihe s tuden t s and facul ty at Hope College, and that one of these ways could be a series of convoca-tions which is "designed to expli-cate the Christian faith in the twent ie th c e n t u r y . "

(ConlinucJ on [hj^c 7. column <)

By Garrett DeGraff anchor Assistant Editor

A $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 challenge grant lor the proposed new academic sci-ence center was awarded to Hope College by the Kresge Lounda t ion of Detroit Monday.

UNDER THE T E R M S ol the grant, the College must match the kresge funds . No date has been set for cons t ruc t ion t o begin, al-though in lis proposal to the Kresge l o u n d a t i o n , the (o l i ege reported that cons t ruc t ion would begin in December , 1970, and be comple ted by Sep tember , 1972.

With the grant the College is now approx imate ly $250 ,000 short ol the S4 million est imated cost ol the building, making it Ihe single largest project in Hope's history.

ACCORDING TO President Calvin VanderWerf , cons t ruc t ion ol the science center will begin when the remaining sum is ob-tained. Ant ic ipat ing this, the Col-lege is now seeking a site lor the building and an archi tect to draw Ihe final plans.

College oll icials feel Hope should have no prob lems raising the lunds , as the Kresge grant would s t imula te f u r t he r contr ibu-tions. Dr. William DeMeester, Special Assistant to the President for Planning and Development , said that when the College re-ceived the grant approx imate ly $ 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 had been raised by the College in addi t ion to a SI million federal grant and a S2 million lederal low-interest loan.

EXTENSION OF the April cons t ruc t ion deadl ine for use of the federal monies is current ly being sought by the College. De-

Meester lelt Ihe Kresge f o u n d a -tion grant would improve the Col-lege's chances of having the ex ten-sion granted by the Depar tment ot Health, Educa t ion and Welfare.

Ihe Assistant to the President stated that "We're eneouraged about receiving the ex tens ion . 1 he College has shown progress in that two ol the three buildings for which we were to receive federal lunds are now under eonstruc-I ion ,"

DeM LESTER ADDED thai " t h e Kresge grant helps our posi-tion even more because now it indeed looks like we will raise the necessary f u n d s . "

Clarence Handlogten , College I reasurer and Business Manager, sa i d that $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 should be raised before the College begins cons t ruc t ion . "We have already commi t t ed ourselves to the De-Witt S tudent Cultural and Social ( e n t e r and the addi t ion to the music bui ld ing," he said. Because ol current economic trends^ th roughout the coun t ry , we may be foreed to raise addi t ional f unds to comple te those s t rue tures . If we begin const met ion of a third building wi thout proper f inancing, we might be ove rcommi t tmg our-selves."

H A N D L O G T E N added that site location and naming of an architect would take time. "At best we could have final plans for the building m six months , and cons t ruc t ions would take a year-and-a-half. It would be ex t remely opt imist ic to expect occupancy of the academic science center by September , 1972 . "

President VanderWerf no ted that Handlogten has been inter-(Continucd on page 1(1, column 3)

Trustees to diseuss construct ion f inancing

by Tom Donia anchor Editor

l inancing for major changes and add i t ions to the physical plant and overhauls in College policy will be discussed by the Board of 1 rus tees at its meeting May 27-30.

THE BIGGEST i |uesl ion lacing the Board will be the naming ot an archi tect and site select ion for the p roposed academic science center .

A special s u b c o m m i t t e e is ex-pected to be named to recom-mend a site for the building, and the Board will consider m e t h o d s for raising the necessary $ 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 in o rde r lo mateli the recently-announced Kresge Lounda t ion grant and comple te fund ing ol the s t ruc ture .

O T H E R TOPICS ol discussion during the ex tended weekend meet ing will be f inances for the DeWitt S tudent Cultural and Social Center presently under con-s t ruc t ion . Because ol the lengthy slack m the s tock marke t . College securit ies have been declining in value, pu t t ing the amoun t ol lunds ea rmarked for comple t ion ol the Center in ques t ion .

The Board will also have to answer some tough ques t ions con-cerning remodel ing and the im-media te and long-range fu tu re of Van Raalte Hall. State lire olli-cials have d e m a n d e d that the Col-lege comply with fire regulat ions concern ing the building.

THE B O A R D will consider a proposal d rawn up by College Treasurer and Business Manager Clarence Handlogten for remodel-ing in order to comply with the state demands . If the proposal is approved , it will go to the state fire marshall for fu r the r negotia-tions.

In addi t ion to p rob lems involv-ing the physical plant, the Board will be faced with several far-reaching ques t ions of College policy and governance.

T h e ad hoc commi t t ee on gov-ernance will r e c o m m e n d to the Board that t w o faculty member s be given seats on the Board. The (Com mucJ on [>a^c I I , column I)

&

THE R E F O R M E D S H R E W - K a t h a r i n e (Deborah Noe) instructs the o the r wives in obediance to their husbands in a final scene of " T h e Taming of the S h r e w . " The Shakespearean play will be presented tonight and t o m o r r o w night at 8 in the Lit t le Thea t re .

Festival draws crowds

Holland blossoms out at Tulip Time by Horace VanGoldsmith

ace anchor Reporter

Wednesday marked Ihe open-ing of I he 4 I st 1 uhp 1 line Les-tival m Holland. Ihe week ' s events are designed t o capture "a bit ol old H o l l a n d " and "a bit ol the old pay c h e c k . "

THE THEME OE this year ' s ce l eb ra t ion will he cen te red , oddly enough , around "Lnvi ron-mental Po l lu t ion . " Holland busi-nessmen were so firmly implanted with the idea of pol lu t ion by ( O n g r e s s m a n V a n d e r J a g t ' s f lowery speech at the Civic Center lasl Sa tu rday that they voted to " ( 1 1 AN UP" this year.

I his year 's theme ref lects the c o m m u n i t y ' s budding concern for pressing social issues. A m o n g the many breath- taking displays are the f loat ing pickle and garbage display in beau t i fu l Lake Maca-tawa and 15b vendors pedall ing a u t h e n t i c Dutch co t ton candy .

T h e festival was kicked off by the t rad i t ional Klompen dancers, Volks parade and street scrubbing. The rest of the week 's events included a wide variety of exci t ing

things such as more Klompen dan-cers. more parades and more street scrubbing.

THE KLOMPEN d a nee is will pe r fo rm tonight at 7 :15 in Cen-tennial Park Square . Sa tu rday ' s cl imatic events include tour per-l o r m a n c e s ot the Klompen dancers , a super street sc rubbing and a 1 wo-and-a-hall hour band r e v i e w l o r those f o r t u n a t e enough to be outs ide Ihe three mile hearing range and thus un-able to follow their ears to the concer t , it begins at 11:45 m Riverview Park.

I his year ' s Tul ip Tune off ic ia ls were again kind enough , for the convenience of Hope s tuden t s s tudying for final exams, to direct the parade route that includes more than 50 marching bands, directly past the major i ty of dormi tor ies so the s tudents , too, can en joy this wonder fu l event.

l u l i p T ime appears to be on its' way to becoming ano the r suc-cess, thanks to the t housands of people who don ' t know what the Dutch are really like.

TULIP TIME ATTRACTION—Samuel Williams, Jr . , son of Rev. Samuel Williams, assistant chapla in , en joys the tulips. Hol land 's chi ldren are just one of the mu l t i t ude of b looming a t t r ac t ions to the thousands of people who come to Holland for the annual festival.

Page 2: 05-15-1970

Page 2 Hope College anchor May 15, 1970

By order of Fire Marshall

Van Raalte to be renovated By Tom Donia anchor Editor

A proposal to renovate Van Raalte Hall will he considered by the Board ol" Trus tees and the o f f i ce of State Fire Marshall soon .

THE P R O P O S A L is in response to demands by fire off icials to comply with fire regulations. If approved , the proposal would call for major renovat ion and redesig-nated use of the building.

According to College Treasurer and Business Manager Clarence Handlogten , an aba temen t o rde r was issued by the State Fire Mar-shall in December . The order gave the College thir ty days in which to comply with fire regulat ions.

THE C O L L E G E asked for an ex tens ion of the deadline so that the Board of Trustees could con-sider possible ac t ion . The ex ten-sion was gran ted , and the Board evaluated its response to the o rder .

At that t ime, the Board felt that major renovat ion of Van Raal te Hall for use as a classroom building would be as costly as replacing the s t ruc tu re , Handlog-ten repor ted . A team of negotia-tors , headed up by Board secre-tary Willard Wichers, was ap-

pointed to meet with State o f f i -cials.

F O L L O W I N G cor re spondence and several meet ings , the College decided that the fire off ic ia ls would hear f rom the Board in the fo rm of a proposa l .

"We began to realize that fire off ic ia ls were no more interes ted in litigation that would close Van Raalte than we were. They s imply wanted to do their j o b in en fo rc -ing the law,V Handlogten said.

THE P R O P O S A L that will go lirst to the Board for approval at the end of this m o n t h , and then to the state tire off icials , calls for " i m m e d i a t e changes at critical po in t s to decrease risks," Hand-logten said.

"These changes are not cos t ly , but bear heavily on the safety of the bu i ld ing ," he added. Such safe ty f ea tu res included in the immedia te plans are crash bars on doors and spr inklers on the f o u r t h f loor . Handlog ten emphasized that before any part of the pro-posal can be ini t ia ted, it must receive approva l of the t rustees .

O T H E R MORE major changes in the bui lding would redesignate por t ions of Van Raal te as o f f i c e space. Fire regula t ions for o f f i c e space are not as d e m a n d i n g as

j l - - i - -

VAN R A A L T E U N D E R F I R E - V a n Raalte Hall, which has been a t t acked as unsafe for c lassroom use since 1967 by the s ta te fire marshall , will have addi t ional sa fe ty fea tu res added this s u m m e r .

Music faculty members

to give recital Sunday Joyce Morrison, assistant pro-

fessor of music, will present a recital Sunday , May 24, at 4 p .m . in Dimnent Memorial Chapel .

Assisting her will be Harr ison Ryker , violinist, and Jamta Holie-m a n , harpsichordis t . J o a n C o n w a y is to a c c o m p a n y the soloist. All the pe r fo rmer s are of the Hope music facul ty .

The first por t ion of Miss Morri-son ' s concer t will include selec-t ions f r o m Magnificat, by J o h a n n Sebastian Bach; Lungi dal caro bene, by Guiseppe Sarti , O Del mio Amato hen and Vaghissima Sembianza, by S t ephano Dan-audy .

For her second g roup of songs. Miss Morrison will pe r form Schu-ber t ' s Fruhlingsglaube; Die For-elle; Litanei; and Fredr ic Delius 's Drei Lieder: Speilman; Die Vugel-weise; Wiegenlied.

Other songs p e r f o r m e d will be Sweet Music by Karol R a t h a u s ; Serenade by Paul N o r d h o f f ; Mist by J o h n Klein; and Fox-gloves and Beloved by Michael Head.

Aria; "II est doux, il est hon" ( f r o m Heroduide) wr i t ten by Mas-senet will be the f inal number .

Miss Morr ison holds a Bache-lor 's and Master ' s degree in per for -mance f r o m the American Con-servatory of Music, Chicago, where she is a f o r m e r s tuden t of Donna and Theodore Harr ison, Jeanne Boyd , Leo Somerby and Max Zinzhe imer .

She credi t s over 32 o r a t a n o and canta ta roles to her reper to i re and has coached extensively in opera and ora ta r io with the late Paul Ulanowsky .

Miss Morr ison has appeared as a f r e q u e n t soloist wi th such organ-izat ions as the Tri-City Orches t ra , Davenpor t , Iowa; The Bethany Messiah Festival , Lindsliarg, Kansas; a n d the Chicago Sym-p h o n y Orches t ra .

The vocalist has sung this year in the Duru f l e Requiem and wi th the Hope College S y m p h o n e t t e in the Scarlat t i Christmas Cantata.

Miss Morr i son , w h o has been a member of the H o p e facul ty for eight years, came f r o m a teaching posi t ion at Whea ton .

those for c lassroom space, and thus renovat ion could be less ex-tensive and less cost ly wi thout compromis ing sa fe ty .

The snack bar and books to re will be moved to Ihe DeWitt S tudent Cul tural and Social Cen-ter upon comple t i on of that build-ing. Two main ob jec t ions to salety p recau t ions now in Van Raalte are the books to re and snack bar. Handlog ten no ted .

ALSO, A D D I T I O N A L class-room space will be available in the academic science cen te r when that s t ruc tu re is c o m p l e t e d , thus re-lieving ove rc rowding in class-rooms.

The a b a t e m e n t of order was the most recent ac t ion taken by the fire off ic ia ls . In 1967, the s tate o f f i ce asked the College to make i m p r o v e m e n t s in Van Raalte. "We really d idn ' t do any-thing then , but we did ask for more t i m e , " Hand log ten said.

During the fall of this year , the fire marshall told the College that it must act immedia te ly . The Board of Trus tees ques t ioned at that t ime whether or not to keep the building, and t h e prospect of turn ing it to o f f i c e use did not seem advisable.

Al te r add i t iona l pressure f rom state off icials , however , the Board and Handlog ten re-evaluated their decision to comple te ly phase out use ol Van Raalte. The proposal to remodel Van Raal te for some off ice space was the result of that re-evaluation.

H A N D L O G T E N c o m m e n t e d tha t , " V a n Raalte is probably safer now than when it was origin-ally cons t ruc t ed . Several changes have been made since that t ime. The addi t iona l changes will put the building in comple t e compli-ance with fire I J W S . "

The proposa l inc ludes plans for o t h e r c a m p u s buildings m addi-t ion It) Van Raal te . Included in the repor t is a r e c o m m e n d a t i o n for the site of the proposed science center .

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H

i <• i l

REV. F R A N K L I N H I N K A M P DR E U G E N E VAN T A M E L E N

Four to receive honorary degrees at commencement

Hope College will award fou r honora ry degrees dur ing its I 0 4 t h c o m m e n c e m e n t exercises, Presi-dent Calvin A. VanderWerf an-nounced .

HOPE WILL award bachelor of art and music degrees to 4(34 seniors dur ing the J u n e 1 exercises in the Holland Civic Center .

C o m m e n c e m e n t speaker Dr. J o h n A. Hannah will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Let-ters degree while bacca laurea te preacher Rev. David Poling will be awarded an hono ra ry Doctor of Divinity Degree.

THE C O L L E G E will con fe r an honora ry Doctor of Divinity de-gree upon Rev. Frankl in John l l i n k a m p , long-t ime minister and leader in the R e f o r m e d Church of America. A 1^31 Hope g radua t e . Rev. l l i n k a m p is minister at the F o u r t h R e f o r m e d Church , Pough-keepsie, N.Y.

l l i n k a m p served on the R.C.A. Board of T ducat ion 27 years and was the first cha i rman of the d e n o m i n a t i o n ' s Nat ional Y o u t h Central C o m m i t t e e . He is a past president of the Albany and New

York Synods and has served on several R.C.A. c o m m i t t e e s .

AN H O N O R A R Y Doctor of Science degree will be awarded Dr. Fugene F . van T a m e l e n , a l l )47 Hope g radua te and present ly professor of chemis t ry at S t an fo rd Universi ty.

Dr. van Tamelen is interna-t ionally recogni /ed for his achieve-men t s in the d e t e r m i n a t i o n of the s t ruc tu re of c o m p l e x natural pro-duc t s .

IN 1968 HE was elected to the Nat ional Academy of Sciences in recogni t ion of dis t inguished and con t inu ing ach ievement in original research and earlier this year was presented the Amer ican Chemical Society Award for Creative Work in Syn the t i c Organic Chemis t ry .

A m o n t the research " f i r s t s " to his credit are his synthes is of chochic ine , an ex t rac t of the col-ch icum plant useful in the t reat-ment of gout and rheuma t i sm, and the synthesis of yoh imb ine , an alkaloid e x t r a c t e d f rom the Afr ican yoh imbi tree used in the t r ea tmen t of i m p o t e n c e .

Scientist addresses convocation

Hope lauds Loren Eiseley by Sarah Penny

anchor Feature Writer

Famed an th ropo log i s t Loren C. Fiseley was awarded an honora ry Doctor of H u m a n e Let te rs degree at a Hope College convoca t ion Monday . Fiseley addressed the stu-den ts on the subjec t " T h e Last Magician."

EISELEY T R A C E D the devel-o p m e n t of man th rough t w o menta l and two physical worlds . In the first menta l world, man emerged f r o m the "cave of sha-d o w s . " As he crossed to the second wor ld , man received wis-d o m . Pic tures preceded the devel-o p m e n t of the a lphabe t . Eiseley considers language, which may have been the last deve lopmen t , to be the "c rad le of the human universe ."

Physical ly, man was created for life in the first wor ld . He en te red the second world when he left the ear th . Man desires t o t ranscend his origins, and he main ta ins an inter-est in the cosmos .

MAN LIVES within the " in-spirat ional l ight" of Chr is t ' s b i r th , " an event that opened up the human sou l , " according to Ei-seley. Science is n o w man ' s ma jor religion. Man has tu rned to ou t e r

L O R E N EISELEY

space, to the p h e n o m e n a of f l ight , lor answers to c o n t e m p o r a r y problems .

Man pursues " w o r l d s b e y o n d the w o r l d " in o r d e r to escape f r o m his " cosmic p r i son ." Never-theless, he ques t ions his " r igh t to b e " in a secretive wor ld . He hides f rom the past by dwelling in

David Marker is winner of 1970 H.O.P.E. award

Dr. David Marker , associate professor of physics and execut ive di rector of the c o m p u t e r cen te r , has been selected as recipient of the 1970 H O P E, award .

Selection of H o p e ' s Ou t s t and -ing Professor E d u c a t o r is made annual ly by the g radua t ing senior class. Cri ter ia includes personal and profess ional character is t ics which make one individual facu l ty m e m b e r o u t s t a n d i n g in the minds of the g radua t ing class.

As the H.O.P.E. Award recipi-

ent , Marker will speak at the Senior H o n o r s Banquet May 31. The banque t will also include pre-senta t ion of facul ty h o n o r s to seniors and service awards.

Marker jo ined the Hope Col-lege facul ty in 1965. He is pre-sently head resident at the Knick-e rbocke r F ra t e rn i ty house.

Marker received his B.A. f rom Grinnel l College and his M.A. f r o m Pennsylvania State Univer-sity. In 1966 he was awarded a Ph.D. f r o m Penn S ta te U.

cities. Man shuns the "wor ld of the sunf lower f o r e s t " which is suff ic ient to nour ish him. Man t reats the ear th "casual ly ra ther than as a j e w e l . "

EISELEY C A L L E D for "a greater sacrif ice, the act of a magic ian ." to t r an s fo rm the cur-rent a t t i t udes of men . He rejected the idea p roposed by a NASA scientist that man must leave the ear th since the con f ines of this planet will des t roy him. Ins tead , said Fiseley, man th rea t ens to des t roy ear th . " T h e d is tances of the two worlds separate m a n . "

For man 's s a f e ty , he must pre-serve and re-enter his old , first world , lor the second world will not sustain him. In fo rmu la t i ng a new ethic , a third world combin-ing the e l emen t s of the first and second may be f o r m e d . "Man must be his o w n last magic ian ," conc luded Eiseley. " H e must find his own way h o m e . "

CALVIN V A N D E R W E R F , President of H o p e , charac ter ized Eiseley as "a h u m a n i s t , scientist , a u t h o r , man of le t ters , lover and poet of n a t u r e , " whose " m i n d vaults over the barr iers of t ime and space ."

T h e hono ra ry degree cited Eiseley for his " razor-edged mind which reaches out to the galaxies and back to the ice age, yet never loses touch wi th (his) c o n t e m p o r -aries; for the b rea th- tak ing beauty of (his) writ ingsT-c«vering the im-mense j ou rney that begins and ends with the u n e x p e c t e d universe that is the h u m a n soul , f o r the ex t raord ina ry capacFfy to bridge the two cu l tu res of science and the humani t i es and to inspire in ( m a n ) a richer apprec ia t ion of kinship with na tu re ; for (his) innate ability to perceive deep and lasting t r u th s in the s imple, natural p h e n o m e n a su r round ing all men in their daily lives; and for (his) religious sense of w o n d e r and awe before the U n k n o w n and U n f a t h o m a b l e . "

Page 3: 05-15-1970

May 15, 1970 Hope College anchor Pa8e ^

AAB gives cursory consent to requirement proposal by Jean DeGraff anchor Reporter

A proposal providing for major changes in the general College r equ i r emen t s was approved " in subs t ance" at the Academic Af-fairs Board meet ing Wednesday.

f rom the four areas, the proposal provides for an in t roduc t ion to liberal s tudies course of eight to ten credit hours required of all fresh men.

T H E LIBERAL studies course will not be ident i f ied with any one exist ing d e p a r t m e n t of the

THE P R O P O S A L was original- College. According to the proposal ly presented to the Board at its meet ing April 28. At the meet ing Associate Dean for Academic Af-fairs J o h n Stewar t said that the proposal was not in its f inal form. He emphas ized that " m o r e in-f o r m a t i o n and ideas can be fed into the p roposa l . "

The proposal was approved by the Board with the clar i f icat ion that " t h e AAB fully recognized that the s u b c o m m i t t e e that sub-mit ted the proposal genuinely solicits facul ty and s tudent com-ment and a m e n d m e n t . "

A C C O R D I N G TO the pro-posal, a s tudent will not be given a list of specif ic required courses. The s tuden t will choose his re-quired courses f rom any course in four areas of the curr iculum.

The proposal states that every s tudent will take "at least three courses of at least three credit hours each in each of the four fol lowing areas; the Inher i ted World (generally the humani t ies ) , the Behavioral World (generally the social sciences including physi-cal e d u c a t i o n ) , the Natural World ( including the natural sciences), and the Symbo l i c World (a com-posite division comprised of some courses in the foreign languages, ma thema t i c s , music, art , and com-m u n i c a t i o n s ) . "

" O N E O F THE courses in the natural world area must include a labora tory exper ience and no more than one course f rom the physical educa t ion d e p a r t m e n t can be c o u n t e d toward fu l f i l lment of the behavioral world require-m e n t , " the proposal added .

Dr. Huber t Weller, associate professor of Spanish, said that " t h e d e p a r t m e n t would be markedly a f f ec ted by the changes in the cu r r i cu lum." Lor example , a course in e lementary G e r m a n would be listed under the " inhe r i -ted Wor ld , " while a course in G e r m a n l i terature would be listed under the " S y m b o l i c Wor ld . "

DR. LESLIE BEACH, chair-man of the psychology depar t -ment , s ta ted that the physical educa t ion d e p a r t m e n t will have to do major revamping. As part of the "Behaviora l Wor ld" they will have to "p resen t three hour courses that will compe te with the o the r social sc iences ."

Besides the 36 credit hours of courses the s tudent will choose

the course is " b y def in i t ion inter-discipl inary."

The proposal calls for the Dean for Academic Affairs , in consulta-tion with the AAB, to create a separate depa r tmen t to adminis te r this program. The depa r tmen t will have one cha i rman and a commit -tee of three faculty member s chosen f rom each of the divisions.

A C C O R D I N G TO the proposal " t h i s should be the most provoca-tive course in the ent i re curricu-l u m . "

The course is "des igned to teach s t u d e n t s how to create and respond to ideas, how to const ruc-tively criticize ideas, and finally, how to c o m m u n i c a t e ideas ."

T H E P R O P O S A L f u r t h e r states that " t h e course ought to provide a brief ou t l ine of the part icular Christian world-view that this Col-lege s tates in its ph i losophy . It is not " t o be conceived as a pre text for proselyt iz ing, but ra ther as a ser ious e f fo r t to unde r s t and a viable and intel lectually coherent religious t r ad i t i on . "

in add i t ion to the divisional curr iculum proposal , the subcom-mit tee r e c o m m e n d e d that a con-tract cur r icu lum pa t te rn be estab-lished for those s tuden t s w h o wish to pursue an independent pro-gram.

T H E C O N T R A C T curr iculum will be held to a l imited enroll-ment . A s tuden t who wishes to be responsible for his own educa t ion must apply for admission to the cont rac t curr iculum program.

in apply ing for the cont rac t curr iculum program, the s tuden t must seek out one facul ty mem-ber who will act as his " m e n t o r " for a period not to exceed two semesters. Toge the r the s tudent and the m e n t o r will p ropose a cont rac t which out l ines a course of s tudy to a facul ty c o m m i t t e e of three which is appo in t ed by the Dean for Academic Affai rs .

DR. IRWIN BRINK, professor of chemis t ry , said thai he had " t r o u b l e accept ing the phi losophy of educa t ion as out l ined in the p roposa l . "

He said that " t h e program lacked moral force. We have to c o n f r o n t the s tudent so that he ac ts moral ly . That is what a Chris-tian e d u c a t i o n is all a b o u t . "

HE A D D E D T H A T " t h e stu-d e n t s are t ry ing to tell us some-

thing about a liberal e d u c a t i o n . " He said that " t hey are sick of this t ru th and error bit and want to be mo t iva t ed . "

Stewart responded that Brink 's opinion was " n o t at all ou t of flavor with what the c o m m i t t e e was talking a b o u t . "

THE MOTION approved by the Board fu r t he r " recognizes that the final and tota l endor semen t of the revision of the curr iculum will come only a f te r Part V of the proposal is accompl i shed . "

Part V of the proposal recom-mends that an outs ide consul tan t be employed to evaluate the pro-posal. it f u r t he r stated open hear-ings dur ing the m o n t h s of Sep tem-

ber and Oc tobe r will be held for all interested facul ty and s tudents . Af te r the hearings and consulta-tion, the commi t t ee will recon-vene to rewrite the to ta l proposal . The commi t t ee will then submit a revised edi t ion to AAB by Novem-ber I, 1970.

IN F U R T H E R act ion the Board approved a proposal for a communi ty semester program.

The program provides for a s tudent to gain six hours credit for working with a professional person in the c o m m u n i t y on a project similar to the person 's vocational aim and major course s tudy, in addi t ion to the project a s tudent is required to take a three

credit hour seminar related to his c o m m u n i t y project .

THE PROGRAM will first be o f fe red on an exper imenta l basis in the spring semester of 1971 with an enrol lment limited t o ten s tudents .

The Board also approved an Oak Ridge Science Semester . This program provides any s tudent in the sciences the o p p o r t u n i t y to receive f i f teen hours credit for independent research projec ts at the Oak Ridge installation in Ten-nessee.

The Oak Ridge Science Semes-ter is a Great Lakes Colleges As-sociation sponsored program.

To meet here June 8-13

RCA Synod to discuss unity by Andy Atwood

anchor Special Reporter The General Synod of the Re-

fo rmed Church in America will debate many familiar issues, a long with some ticklish new ones, when it mee t s in Holland J u n e 8-13.

CONTINUING A years-old de-bate, a significant n u m b e r of people at the meet ing will want the R e f o r m e d Church to alter its p o s i t i o n regarding bo th the National Counci l of Churches and the World Counci l of Churches . The a t tack will come almost entirely f r o m the churches in the Midwest , part icularly Michigan.

Cri t icism of NCC is similar to that of WCC. For example , the Zeeland Classis has requested the Synod to wi thdraw RCA member -ship f rom the World Counci l on g r o u n d s of " d e p a r t u r e f r o m Christ ian principles in doc t r ine and social a t t i tudes and the making of political p ronounce -ments in areas in which the WCC

York met ropol i tan churches have also ob jec ted .

THE P R O G R A M , which is scheduled to go into full e f fec t in S e p t e m b e r , would completely el iminate the t radi t ional three-year B.D. program from both seminaries by Sep tember , 1971.

Criticism of the plan centers on its inconvenience. S t u d e n t s must spend the first two years at New Brunswick Seminary in New Jer-sey and the second two-year term at Western Theological Seminary in Holland.

IN THE MID-WEST many churches have ob jec ted that the biblical and doctr inal emphas is would be lost in the new program. Some churches have also ques-t ioned the cost of an addi t ional year of s tudy .

A major topic of discussion at the Synod meet ing will be uni ty within the denomina t i on . The C o m m i t t e e of 18 which wases tab-blished at the 1969 General Synod meet ing with the purpose

has no c o m p e t e n c e and does not of de te rmining if reconci l ia t ion is reflect the feelings of the Re-fo rmed Church c o n s t i t u e n c y . "

A NUMBER of people want the RCA to remain in bo th church council organizat ions, and they are expec ted to agree on a p ropo-sal f rom the Classis of Wisconsin which would allow both WCC and NCC membersh ip to be on a v o l u n t a r y basis ra ther than assessed by General Synod .

A new point of c o n t e n t i o n within the church is the seminary "bi level -mul t i s i te" program. Criti-cism of the plan has been ex-pressed mostly f rom the Western churches , a l though several New

Pan Hell passes proposal

Dorians to get sorority house the ra t ionale of the College 's Kappa Beta Phi soror i ty has

been granted the use of Kleis policy prohibi t ing soror i ty houses Co t t age as a soror i ty house begin- on campus . T h e main reason the ning next fall , according to As-sociate Dean of S t u d e n t s J e a n e t t e Sprik.

T H E IDEA F O R a soror i ty house originated during a discus-sion on the need for soror i ty un i ty at a Dorian l i terary meet ing several weeks ago.

Associate Dean gave was tha t the c a m p u s is so small tha t with houses , the sorori t ies might tend to b e c o m e cliques and to become isolated t o the*house.

MANY MEMBERS of the so-ror i ty felt t hey needed m o r e com-mun ica t i on with each o the r arW m o i e - J ^ ^ c r e t a n d i n g of their indi-vidual in teres ts and d i f fe rences , according t o Beth Maassen, soro-

S o r o r i t y m e m b e r Laurel Dekker asked Miss Spr ik , the guest speaker at the meet ing , for rity vice president .

T h e y needed a place where they could also feel at h o m e to talk and work toge the r . Miss Maassen s ta ted . A soror i ty house could give them this . T h e main ob jec t ion t o the soror i ty r o o m idea was t ha t it mainly tu rned the soror i ty in to a g roup which met o n c e a week for a business meet ing and then dismissed, Miss Maassen said.

OBJECTIONS TO the house t ion of Universi ty Professors for were also voiced by several mem-

Robt. Coujihenour elected AAUP president

Rober t Coughenou r , associate professor of religion, has been elected pres ident of the College's chap te r of the Amer ican Associa-

the 1970-71 academic year. O t h e r off icers-elect are vice-

pres ident Co t t e r Thar in , associate professor of geology; secretary Lynn Hoepf inger , assistant profes-sor of c h e m i s t r y ; and t reasurer

bers w h o s ta ted tha t if the ent i re soror i ty were to live in the house , they might indeed b e c o m e iso-lated f rom the rest of t h e campus .

Member Marianne Schaefe r t hen suggested a plan which is

Edward Whittaker, College librar- used on other campuses where the ian. house holds only a part of the

The AAUP has a membership sorority and housing is on a rota-of approximately 8500 college ting basis so that each member has and university faculty members, the opportunity to live in the

house . T h e house can-also be used for meet ings and s tudy by all members .

THIS PLAN met with approval by the major i ty of the soror i ty member s and a grtrop of s t u d e n t s presented a wri t ten proposal to Dean of S t u d e n t s Rober t De-Young. T h e proposal \ was dis-cussed fo r feasibility by the deans.

T h e Dor ians met with the Pan Hellenic Board to consider the react ion of all the sororit ies.

T H E PAN Hellenic Board , a f t e r consu l ta t ion with m e m b e r sorori-ties, voted t o allow Dorian t o have the exper imenta l cot tage fo r one year , a l though many of the o the r sorori t ies did not feel the need or desire t o have a soror i ty house of their o w n . T h e board in general unde r s tood the immedia te needs of the Dorian soror i ty ' s r eques t .

At the end of the expe r imen ta l year , the Dorians , the Pan Helle-nic Board and the College deans would review the co t tage sys tem as t o workab i l i ty , and f u t u r e plans would be made regarding t h e con-t inuance of the system at that t ime.

Speaking for the soror i ty , Miss Maassen noted that t h e Dor ians realized ful ly that t h e idea of a co t tage could fail and tha t the system would be d ropped at the end of t h e exper imen ta l year if it did so.

possible is expec ted to give a positive repor t suggesting "pro-cesses" leading toward reconcilia-tion.

IF THE COMMITTEE were to give a surprise negative repor t , ano the r commi t t eewou ld be estab-lished to dissolve the RCA.

The issue of uni ty will cer-tainly be u p p e r m o s t in every dele-g a t e ' s mind. T h e d i f ferences within the denomina t i on never looked so sharp as they did last June . The Festival of Evangelism in Detroit several weeks ago might have generated some hope, but the real trial will come in the Synod meet ing in J u n e .

T H E SPLIT IN the RCA is basically ideological, with a "con-servative West" oppos ing a "l ib-eral Eas t . " Di f fe rences within the church have become so pro-nounced that heated discussions have openly d isrupted regular denomina t iona l meetings.

One focus of the problem will come in discussion concerning the Particular Synod of New Jersey. Tha t governing body has estab-lished a " U n i t e d S y n o d " with the Synod of New Jersey of the U n i t e d P r e s b y t e r i a n Church , U.S.A. The RCA cons t i tu t ion does not forbid the " U n i t e d S y n o d " consuma ted in New Jer-sey.

THE AUTONOMY of the chur-ches will be maintained u n d e r the New Jersey plan, and the " U n i t e d S y n o d " will be at the state level, involving such areas as programs and mission.

Most of the RCA churches outs ide the New York area have raised ob jec t ions to the New Jersey plan on the g rounds tha t it would impede any sort of recon-ciliation within the RCA.

ON THE O T H E R hand . New Jersey maintains that its plan is an excellent way of establishing unity in the church because the New Jersey churches want to "move ahead . " Those churches feel that if they were "he ld b a c k " by the rest of the denomina t ion there would be large disagreement t h roughou t the d e n o m i n a t i o n .

T h e 5 8 , 5 5 3 total com-munican ts in the RCA in New Jersey are greatly o u t n u m b e r e d by the United Presbyter ian ' s 207 ,587 , a greater membersh ip than the ent i re RCA nat ional ly . Such a "un i t ed S y n o d " would greatly increase available resources provided it did not become a source of hostili ty within the RCA.

ONE F I N A L issue will bring about deba te . Many of the laymei. feel that the clergy are " r u n n i n g off with the bal l ," and they will be request ing lay representa t ion on the decis ion-making boards and agencies of the church .

A secondary issue will be the possible increase of y o u t h repre-senta t ion , particularly at General Synod meetings.

DRY CLEANING 20% Discount Cash & Carry

SHIRTS

LAUNDERED

30c each

College at 6th

SHIRT LAUNDRY

imm Holland, Michigan

Page 4: 05-15-1970

Page 4 Hope College anchor May 15, 1970

Groups and housing In the past t w o w e e k s H o p e ' s s t u d e n t

b o d y has p r o b a b l y been involved in t h e

biggest d e v e l o p m e n t s in recent years,

namely t h e sur fac ing of racial t ens ion and

the g rowth of s t u d e n t ac t iv ism. In light of

these d e v e l o p m e n t s and thei r o b v i o u s im-

pl ica t ions , t he r eques t of t h e Dorian Soror-

ity fo r separa te o n - c a m p u s College hous-

ing and the s u b s e q u e n t approval by the

Dean of S t u d e n t s ' O f f i c e and Pan Hellenic

Board seem ill-advised.

If o n e lesson has been m a d e o b v i o u s by

the recen t a c k n o w l e d g e m e n t of racial ten-

sions, it is tha t social g roup ings of p e o p l e such as f r a t e rn i t i e s and soror i t i es in t ime

aiicl|or editorials

gain an a m o u n t of loya l ty of wh ich they

are to ta l ly undeserv ing . This loyal ty o f t e n

w o r k s to fos ter rivalry and dis l ike of

individuals because t h e y are m e m b e r s of a

rival g roup . In recent w e e k s f r a t e r n i t i e s in par t icu la r have s h o w n tha t as a g r o u p each

o n e seems to s t r eng then t h e c o m m o n

biases of its m e m b e r s by r e in fo rc ing those

beliefs. T h e living s i tua t ion of t he f ra ter-

ni ty h o u s e is especial ly condus ive to this

t ype of p r e j u d i c e r e i n f o r c e m e n t .

The second lesson tha t is o b v i o u s is that

f r a t e rn i t i e s and soror i t i e s d e m a n d energies

f r o m thei r m e m b e r s tha t c o u l d be d i rec ted

in m a n y o the r and m u c h m o r e w o r t h w h i l e

d i rec t ions . T h e ene rgy these social organi-

za t ions r equ i re of individuals cou ld m u c h

be t te r be spen t str iving to break d o w n t h e

art if icial , g r o u p - o r i e n t e d bar r ie rs to real

c o m m u n i t y . Again it is t he g roup d o r m -

itory s i tua t ion tha t m o s t fos t e r s t h e t ype

of loyal ty tha t r equ i res tha t energy .

H o p e ' s f r a t e rn i t i e s have ex is ted in their

own d o r m s m a n y years w i th f r a t e r n i t y

rivalries do ing thei r usual a m o u n t of

damage . H o p e ' s so ror i t i e s have been fo rced

to live apar t and th is has been to t h e

bene f i t of t he en t i re col lege c o m m u n i t y . It

is u n f o r t u n a t e tha t this pol icy is being

changed . What ever t he d i f f e r e n c e s that

exist b e t w e e n t h e f r a t e r n i t y and the soror

ities s i tua t ions , t he e x t e n t of their simil-

ari ty in light of r ecen t c a m p u s devel-

o p m e n t s seems to s h o w tha t it is best not

t o pe rmi t art if icial g r o u p s to live toge ther , for the loyal ty b e c o m e s t o o s t rong and is

o f t e n sh i f t ed to o t h e r areas b e y o n d t h e

c o n f i n e s of ha rmles s in te r -g roup rivalries.

MISS TOTAL W i T K P R A W A L

o p rfVO > n m M >

i olZ ^ i \ Ac i

" S o they f inal ly f o u n d a way to get the i r point across in this ( o w n ! "

The new requirements This week t h e A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s Board

gave t en ta t ive approva l to the largest curri-

c u l u m re fo rm, a n d w h a t c o u l d p rove to be

the mos t cont rovers ia l , in t h e h i s to ry of

t he College.

T h e r epor t reveals t h e h o u r s of work

tha t w e n t in to its p r e p a r a t i o n and c o n t r a s t s

wi th the r epor t of t h e ad hoc ca lendar

c o m m i t t e e in t h a t t h e c o r e c u r r i c u l u m re-

por t answers near ly all of its o w n q u e s t i o n s

and even prevides a t i m e t a b l e f o r a c t i o n .

Basically, t h e proposa l inc ludes t w o

ideas. First , it es tab l i shes t h a t no o n e

course w o u l d be requi red of all s t u d e n t s

wi th the e x c e p t i o n of an i n t r o d u c t i o n to

liberal s tud ies cou r se . T h i s in itself is an

i m p o r t a n t move . S e c o n d l y , t h e plan recom-

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

Th i s c o n t r a c t idea is r e v o l u t i o n a r y . It

begins wi th the p remise t h a t s t u d e n t s can

best fu l f i l l their e d u c a t i o n a l goals, a n d are

m o s t mo t iva t ed t o w a r d c o m p l e t i o n of

t h o s e goals, if t h e s t u d e n t s t hemse lves set

t h e goals in t h e f i rs t p lace . This is d o n e

a f t e r c o n s u l t a t i o n wi th a f a c u l t y m e n t o r ,

and u p o n approva l of a f a c u l t y review

boa rd . T h e p roposa l t h e n a s sumes t h a t

s t u d e n t s should no t be h inde red in

reaching t h e goals they have set by c o u r s e

r e q u i r e m e n t s , g rades or h o u r s t ipu la t ions .

Final ly , t h e plan a l lows fo r such f lex ib i l i ty

Readers speak out

t ha t no s t u d e n t can say he w a s " h u n g u p " by the " s y s t e m . "

Of course , t h e c o n t r a c t p lan could have

d i sadvantages f o r s o m e s t u d e n t s . It cer-

tainly a l lows for a f lex ib i l i ty tha t the

present sys t em d e e s no t , bu t at the same

t ime it d o e s n o t have the buil t - in pro tec-

t ion the p re sen t sys t em has. At any t ime a

s t u d e n t cou ld fail to fulf i l l o n e of t he goals

he has set f o r h imsel f , and the conse-

q u e n c e s of such a fa i lure c o u l d be b o t h

u n f o r e s e e n and grave.

But t h e risks involved in the c o n t r a c t

pa t t e rn are jus t i f i ed by t h e many-s ided

advantages . A s t u d e n t may c h o o s e to per-

f o r m a w o r k - s t u d y p ro j ec t ( some th ing he

can on ly d o n o w u n d e r special circum-

stances) , he m a y elect t o s t u d y off c a m p u s

f o r e x t e n d e d p e r i o d s ( some th ing rarely

app roved now) , or he may s t u d y indepen-

d e n t l y f o r e n t i r e semes te r s (a p rog ram

usual ly reserved f o r very f ew s t u d e n t s

u n d e r t h e p r e s e n t s y s t e m ) .

We hear t i ly s u p p o r t t he ad hoc c o m m i t -

t ee proposa l as being wel l -p repared , care-

fu l ly cons ide red a n d t h o u g h t f u l l y pre-

sen ted . We e n c o u r a g e the en t i r e c a m p u s

c o m m u n i t y , m o s t especial ly s t u d e n t s , t o

react and lend thei r s u p p o r t t o t h e plan

w h e n o p e n hear ings begin in Fall, 1970.

ort buchwold

Applebaum's latest plan by Art Buchwald

Student supports Nixon I would like t o d i rec t this l e t t e r t o s o m e

of t hose w h o pa r t i c ipa t ed in t h e p r o t e s t fo r peace on T u e s d a y , May 5. What s t ruck me the most a b o u t th i s d e m o n s t r a t i o n was the c lenched fist t ha t was used as a s y m b o l . I can ' t really see h o w such a s y m b o l cou ld have been used t o r ep re sen t a p ro t e s t fo r peace . All it mean t t o m e was a s y m b o l of ha t red and violence .

It appea red t o m e t h a t t h o s e p e o p l e and pos te r s wh ich d isp layed this s y m b o l were no t really s incere in the i r e f f o r t for peace , bu t r a the r were t ry ing in s o m e way to assert the i r o w n desire f o r or feel ings of

dear editor

power . I d o n ' t m e a n t o accuse those p e o p l e of ins incer i ty . I have n o t h i n g on w h i c h to base such a rash j u d g m e n t . I w o u l d jus t like to say tha t this is how it c a m e across , at least t o m e . S o m e o t h e r m o r e a p p r o p r i a t e s y m b o l cou ld have been used .

I mysel f did n o t pa r t i c ipa t e in T u e s d a y ' s d e m o n s t r a t i o n , n o t because I d o n ' t w a n t peace , b u t because I d o n ' t really fee l 1 k n o w enough to m a k e a j u d g m e n t on w h e t h e r t h e P res iden t ' s dec i s ions are r ight or wrong . 1 p re fe r t o t rus t t h e Pres iden t of t he Un i t ed S ta tes ins tead of a g r o u p of s t u d e n t act ivists because 1 feel t ha t he does k n o w a bi t more a b o u t t h e s i t ua t i on t h a n they do .

My po in t is t h a t t h o s e of us w h o did no t pa r t i c ipa t e in T u e s d a y ' s d e m o n s t r a t i o n s are

not really a p a t h e t i c as s o m e have accused . I would even go so far as t o say tha t s o m e of us are m u c h , m u c h m o r e c o n c e r n e d t h a n s o m e of t h e T u e s d a y p r o t e s t o r s .

Carr ie Krahe

Seek retraction We are wr i t ing in r e sponse to the ar t icle

in the May 8 ed i t i on of the anchor, c o n c e r n i n g a Miss Barbara C o l e m a n and her alleged assai lant . G a r r e t t D e G r a f f , assis tant ed i to r t o the anchor s t a t ed , " W h e n the coed had f in ished e x a m i n i n g t h e f r a t e r n i t y g r o u p she told V a n d e r Wei tha t she had ident i f ied a Knick as the pe rson w h o allegedly p o i n t e d the r i f le at h e r . " Since no posi t ive i d e n t i f i c a t i o n or cour t ac t ion has been t a k e n , we as individual m e m b e r s of t he f r a t e r n i t y involved feel th i s s t a t e m e n t is unnecessar i ly d e t r i m e n t a l t o the charac-ter of K n i c k e r b o c k e r F r a t e r n i t y and re-ques t a pub l i c w i t h d r a w a l or f u r t h e r clarifi-ca t ion of t he issue. Men of K n i c k e r b o c k e r T o m Vickrey Mark R o b e r t s Bud Veazie Ar lan T e n Clay Steve S t ruck K e n n e t h Gra low Pat Hynes Michael Peuc David Van Pame len Al f red Q u a l m a n D e m i T h o m a n J. Michael D o r n a n A1 Beau leaux Bill Bauer R o n Mosier Dick N o r d s t r o m T h o m a s B o n n e t t e R a n d y Cain Evan G r i f f e n Allen R u f f G e o r g e Chr i s t i an T i m o t h y Pleune S t e p h e n V a n Pelt Je r ry Rosa

J o h n DeMees te r

Despi te Pres ident N i x o n ' s and Vice Pres ident A g n e w ' s a t t e m p t s " t o br ing us t o g e t h e r , " the c o u n t r y still seems to be divided on the V i e t n a m and C a m b o d i a issues.

THERE IS, a m o n g y o u n g peop le , a lack of c o n f i d e n c e in Pres ident N i x o n ' s m e t h o d s of disengaging us f r o m S o u t h e a s t Asia. On the o t h e r h a n d , the ma jo r i t y of A m e r i c a n s still s u p p o r t the P re s iden t ' s hard-l ine s t r a tegy , par t icu la r ly since they d o n ' t have to go.

P ro f . Heinr ich A p p l e b a u m , of the Insti-t u t e of R e t r i b u t i o n & Conc i l i a t ion , has f o r m u l a t e d a plan tha t may sat isfy b o t h g roups in th is c o u n t r y .

T H E PROFESSOR told me, " M y s tud ies show that t he re are far m o r e p e o p l e in th is c o u n t r y w h o are fo r w h a t N i x o n is do ing in V i e t n a m t h a n are o p p o s e d . "

" T h a t ' s w o n d e r f u l . " " T h e on ly t r oub l e is tha t t he p e o p l e

w h o are the P re s iden t ' s s t ronges t suppo r -ters are t o o old to be d r a f t e d in to t h e A r m y . "

" I T F I G U R E S , " 1 said. " W h a t is y o u r p l a n ? "

" M y plan is very s imple . We must m a k e it possible fo r those w h o are f o r us being in I n d o c h i n a to go the re and f igh t , and t h o s e w h o are o p p o s e d to us being the re to c o m e h o m e . "

" Y o u mean we shou ld raise the age l imit for men to be d r a f t e d in to the se rv ice?"

" N O T RAISE IT . Abol ish all age re-q u i r e m e n t s so a n y o n e w h o believes in the war can ship o u t i m m e d i a t e l y . "

" W h a t an ingen ious p l a n ! " " M y s t u d i e s , " the p ro fe s so r said, " h a v e

indica ted tha t the re are h u n d r e d s of t h o u -sands of p e o p l e w h o have said to o u r

y o u n g c i t izens , T only wish I were y o u r age so 1 could f igh t . ' T h e A p p l e b a u m plan makes it possible fo r these p e o p l e t o get the i r w i s h . "

" B U T M A Y B E t hey d idn ' t mean i t . " I pro t e s t ed . Maybe they just said it t o m a k e the kids feel b e t t e r . "

" O f course they mean t it. D o you k n o w of one pe rson w h o w o u l d n ' t give up his so f t j o b if he could slog t h r o u g h the rice padd ies of t he Mekong D e l t a ? "

" T H E B E A U T Y of my plan is t ha t y o u wou ld have a tough d e t e r m i n e d t y p e of soldier w h o wou ld go right i n to the b r e a c h , w i t h o u t q u e s t i o n . "

" J u s t as in the Charge of the Light Br igade ," 1 said exc i t ed ly .

" E v e n t u a l l y , t he U.S. Army wou ld o n l y be c o m p o s e d of peop le w h o s incere ly believed tha t what we were do ing in I ndoch ina was c o r r e c t . "

YOU C O U L D call it the 'Love A m e r i c a or Leave It Br igade , ' " 1 said. " H o w do y o u plan t o recrui t these people o n c e the age r e q u i r e m e n t s are w a i v e d ? "

"We' l l ask f o r vo lun tee r s . If t ha t d o e s n ' t w o r k , we'll go t h r o u g h Pres iden t N i x o n ' s mail . A n y o n e w h o w r o t e s u p p o r t i n g his policies wou ld au toma t i ca l l y be d r a f t e d . "

"PROF. A P P L E B A U M , y o u have c o m e up wi th the mos t bri l l iant so lu t i on t o an u n t e n a b l e s i t ua t i on . T h e way y o u desc r ibe it ind ica tes tha t no o n e could ob j ec t t o y o u r p l a n . "

" I t ' s f o o l p r o o f , if I mus t say so m y s e l f , " said Prof . A p p l e b a u m . "Wi th the men w h o s u p p o r t N i x o n mann ing the f r o n t lines and the men w h o o p p o s e h im back here in the s ta tes , we cou ld stay in V i e t n a m f o r 2 0 years , and no o n e would give a d a m n . " Copyright 1970, The Washington Post Co.

OH COLLiOI

anchor OLLAND, MICHIGAN P R E S S

l n d l i f n r ' d t h W C ^ l y H u " ^ e X C e p t v a c a t i < , n ' h " l i d a y "nd e x a m i n a t i o n p e r i o d s by

C o m m u n i c a h o n s B o a r d " ^ H O " a n d ' M i C h i 8 a n ' o f ' h e S , u d e " ,

S u b s c r i p t i o n ; $5 per yea 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 Rap ids , Mich igan . M e m b e r . Assoc ia t ed Co l l eg ia te Press.

O f f i c e ; G r o u n d f loo r of Graves Hal l . P h o n e ; 392-51 11, Kxt . 2 2 8 5 .

T h e o p i n i o n s on this page a re n o t necessar i ly t h o s e of the 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 ion of H o p e Col lege .

BOARD OI- hDITORS

^it0* Ton] Donia Assistant hditor Carrot! Dcdraff News l-.d,tor , vlin j J ^ Managing hditor Clarke Borgeson

iJvernm!f Dave Dievendorf Business Manager Al Pedcrscn

Dt.PA R TMT.N IS

Robert Kieft Columnist Drew Hinderer.

Boh Vander herg Cartoonists dreg Phillips, Debbie Yoch

/-,•,»» , Dave Dmtin

'holography Hoh Hcnchlcv. Jeanne Salherg, Louis Schakel

and Steve Vandernwde

REPORTERS

Phyllis Accocella, Steve Berry. Rob Bench ley, Dave Boersma, Norma Brown, Jean DeCraff Bill Hoffman. Ken Janda. Sharon Mekjean, Robin Pearce, Pete Struck, (ferry Swierenga, Dave Thomas. Bev Un-angst, Rich Van Dor en, Nancy Warner and (Iail Werka

Page 5: 05-15-1970

May 15, 1970 Hope College anchor Page 5

anchor review

Coover's fiction probes inward toward mental reality Editor's Note: This week 's aA7c/?or essay is written by anchor Criti-ques Editor Robert Kieft. He re-views Robert Coover 's Prick songs and Descants (E.P. Dutton, New York; $5.95)

by Robert Kieft

" . . .haven ' t I heard them all my God and smelt his hot brea th in the singin? Yes 1 know him can see him now lickin his hairy chops and composin his po lyphonies o u t a dread and appet i te and whisperin his eclogues sprung f r o m disaster croonin his social e n t e r t a m m e n t s yes I know him well and I tell her but Granny says y o u don ' t unders tand the t imes are d i f ferent there ' s a whole n e w - "

THINGS ARE d i f fe ren t in the 6 0 , s and TO's, and proper Virgil, t he decorous and jus t , had not known those swea ty , semen-stuck pastorales. And even this cen-

tu ry ' s Granny must find incom-prehensible the erot ic undula t ions of their melodic lines, for the Arcadia is most part icularly the

" w h o l e n e w - " and the sheep bleating in its meadows are gravid

with mockeries and grotesques of the f ragmented modern Ulysses.

Fict ion becomes a d i f fe ren t , new word in the generat ion of the 6 0 ^ . With the advent to wide inf luence and even popular i ty of the neo-absurdist fantasies of Nabokov, Borges, Barth, Henry Miller, Joseph Heller, et. ai, the decade sees American f ic t ion to en te r reborn into ano ther world.

THE 60,S SEE the evolut ion to t r iumphan t first f ru i t s of the fic-t ion of the new reality, the reality of the fantast ic , the " i r re levant , " the self-indulged; the reality of the complete ly invented that th rus t s down its roo ts only at the edge of the universe man seems to live in and bears its fruit in the reality of its own def in i t ion .

The new f ic t ion ceases to care for the repor t ing of " n a t u r a l " events and interpret ing t h e m ; it ceases to be concerned with the humanly probable , the " r ea l , " and has turned to the seldom-said, tangential ly possible.

THE NEW f ict ion moves beyond the literary convent ions of time and space to the realm of pure mind and invent ion. It is aware of place and set t ing mainly as ve-hicles for event and act, which, in turn , are occasion for the abstract gymnast ics of thought and word.

The new f ic t ion becomes the ana tomy of a mind at work , the

s t ructure of a psyche spinning subtle s t rands of its own art to-gether into an art i f ice divorced f rom most of the concretes and givens of 2 ,500 years of Western literary t radi t ion.

The new fict ion is completely in t rover ted; it is the sole reason for its own existence, it is mimet-ic of nothing outs ide of itself and points inexorably inward to an o f t e n dark and terr i fying un-reality of mind that bypasses the convent ions of space and time in the depths of the manipulat ive and freely associating and con-struct ing brain of the au thor .

THE 6 0 ^ ARE embodied in the new fict ion. It is l iberated, rather selfish, and ex t remely complex . In its violation of the t radi t ional proper t ies of polite society regard-ing language and the t rea tment of certain themes, the new fict ion seeks to shock its reader 's aware-ness into new paths.

Through its o f t en purely formal and complicated s t ruc ture and its concern with the present and immedia te in thought and act ion, the new f ic t ion seeks in the paralysis of thought and action in word to f ind new modes of expression and sensation for the age of McLuhan.

ROBERT COOVER S new col-lection of " f i c t i o n s , " Phcksongs and Descants, is a work in this growing t radi t ion. T h e variations on the erot ic conta ined in its pages are lyrical digressions in to the strange and removed, the absurd reality of universes cons t ruc ted with regard only to the pleasure of their aesthetic and their whim.

Coover 's reader is cont inual ly baffled with mirages of reali ty, is never qui te sure what in the stories is unrealized though t and desire and what is actual event. Coover 's is a very self-conscious art , conscious of itself as created artifice, as fabr icat ion of the author ia l intelligence.

AND THE reader is made to be aware that he is par t ic ipat ing in an illusion about illusion, in an ex-perience which has no pretense to the descript ion of " r e a l i t y " be-cause it is so obviously the pro-duct of a series of very del iberate aesthet ic choices.

As the vo lume ' s title suggests, the stories included in it are like musical s t ruc tures erected around variations of the male-female erotic theme. Two major fo rms emerge f rom the col lect ion.

THE FIRST might be called a fantasia, a r ichly- textured , poly-phonic compos i t ion that moves roughly linearly through the dialec-tic of though t - reac t ionand action-

Greek studies cluster to be introduced in fall

The cluster concept of the study of Greek civilization will be in t roduced in the fall semester of the 1970-71 school year. This concept will co-ordinate many di f ferent aspects of Greek cul ture into one semester of s tudy.

The program is designed to serve s tudents majoring in classics, history, ph i losophy, thea te r , art and comparat ive l i terature. It con-sists of 22 hours of credit , taken during several semesters, in Greek studies. This will include history, art , language, ph i losophy , myth-ology and l i terature, all of which will center a round the Greek civil-ization and cul turc .

S tudents may elect a full or partial program. S tuden t s major-ing in o ther areas than the ones ment ioned may enroll in these individual courses.

This concept of s tudy is set up to be an interdisciplinary learning experience. S tuden t s may consult with Dr. Wilson Strand of the history d e p a r t m e n t or their indivi-dual facul ty advisors for addi-tional i n fo rma t ion .

Presently a Roman civilization cluster is being planned for the spring semester of the coming school year.

The Best of Peanuts

event, of mind and external reality, to reach a more or less defini te conclusion. Examples of this writing would be the death eclogue Morris in Chains, The Elevator, The Romance of the Thin Man and the Fat Lady and /I Pedestrian Accident.

The second major fo rm used by Coover might be called fugue. Stories such as The Babysitter, The Magic Poker, Quenby and Ola, Swede and Carl, construct their narratives (if that word can be used t o describe a non-spatio-tempora l ly or iented collection of word-events) by assumpt ion f rom many s imul taneously expressed a n d ind iv idua l ly incomple te points of view or test imonies.

THESE F U G A L stories consist of shor t , disjunct paragraphs which report the minds of the several characters. Skipping randomly among the intelligences which he

has created for his manipula t ion , Coover presents a slide show of only vaguely ordered mind-events and physical even t s -des i res and h a p p e n i n g s - t h a t when pieced to-gether in the mind of the reader give a larger picture of what actu-ally occurs in the story or, rather , what might have occurred ( for one can never be sure).

Out of this r andom collection of discordant e lements and pieces of sensa, there emerges a pat tern of narrative held together , like a fugue , by the rearrangement and rei terat ion of several word, image, or thought - themes , most of which revolve back around the central inciting factor of these stories, sex.

THE FUGAL STORIES, then , become almost pure abstract ions, unconvent ional and unreal fabrica-t ions of huge and complex imagina-tive cons t ructs upon a short , given theme. They are read almost more for the pleasure of their form rather than their con ten t .

The tour de force of this type of writing in the book is The Babysitter. In the thi r ty-odd pages which the story runs, the reader is bombarded with an avalanche of data f rom past and present , mind and event, desire and " r e a l i t y " -all f rom the brains of the individual characters in the s tory , each of w h o m brings his own unique, though incomple te , knowledge to the story and all of whom are linked by their sexual appeti tes.

THE STORY is fascinating and brilliantly suspenseful as it moves rapidly f r o m mind to mind and f r o m past to present to desired f u t u r e - a l l to an ext remely am-biguous conclusion that may be a

real happening or may simply be the grotesque mirage of a possible o u t c o m e .

Robert Coover 's new fictions are, finally, celebrations of pure invention. They are the art and unnatura l art if ice of the carefully s t ructured possible, of the ordered and formally unified authorial whim.

THEY ARE hard, tough,s tor ies , merciless, o f t en grotesque, and always blatantly erotic. They are not easy stories to read or under-s tand, but they are extremely rewarding. They are obscure, but rich in exper iment and formal and technical innovat ion; and one sus-pects, because their fo rm is so clear, that the seeming obfusca-tion of content is more a result of one 's own unfamil iar i ty with their landscape than anything else.

In the Dedicaton y Prologo to his Seven Exemplary Fiction's, Coover addresses the seventeenth-century revolutionary author of the Novelas Ejemplares, Cervan-tes, on the character of his own exemplary new fict ions. He says:

"THE RETU RN to Being has re-turned us to Design, to microcos-mic images ot the macrocosm, to the creation of Beauty within the confines of cosmic or human necessity, to the use of the fabu-lous to probe the phenomeno-logical, beyond appearances, be-yond randomly perceived events, beyond mere history. But these probes are above a l l - l ike your Knight 's sal l ies-chal lenges to the assumptions of a dying age, ex-emplary adventures of the Poet ic Imaginat ion, high-minded jour -neys toward the New World and never mind that the nag's a pile of bones . "

of know

Wrapping it up by Drew Hinderer

It is with no small amoun t of joy that I note that this is my last co lumn, and I am sure that my joy is shared equally by many of those who have been o f fended by what I have tried to do. If there are misgivings mixed with my feelings, though , it is precisely because I feel the joy of release, a final escape f rom a messy busi-ness, and no sense of security that would have accompanied clear success

WHAT I WANTED to do seem-ed uncompl ica ted in September . Everybody knew, I thought , that Hope College is not wi thout prob-lems, and that these problems were or could easily become ser-ious dis t ract ions f rom our real concern , academic excellence. But many of the problems I saw as most serious were being buried by p redo m men tly well- intentioned people in the apparent hope that they would quiet ly die if covered up.

By bringing them to the at ten-tion of the c o m m u n i t y as a whole, 1 had hoped that a wider-scaled corpora te wisdom might be ap-plied to their solut ion, that com-municat ion might thus be opened between the facets of the com-muni ty to deal creatively with new problems that arose, and that

Hope could get on with the busi-ness of teaching and learning in an open , undis t rac t ing environment .

I DISCOVERED, however, that 1 had made some assumptions in that analysis with which not everybody agreed. 1 was ignorant that many of the members of the College conceived of Hope not as a communi ty , but as a family, and that one no more appropr ia te ly ques t ioned the decisions of its fa ther(s) than one would con-demn the decision of one 's own fa ther at home.

And I discovered that , as in one ' s own family, the dist inction between a man, his position and his acts is almost impossible: to call an act into quest ion was to call a man into quest ion, and my a t t e m p t s to call for corporate wisdom became, in the minds of some, more character assassina-tions. That realization was very painful , and I regard my ignorance as a very great failure because of the ill-feeling it occasioned.

I ALSO LEARNED, like Oedi-pus, that bringing one ' s true situa-t ion to light is o f t e n to create a s i tuat ion more intolerable than the problem with which I had hoped to deal. Somet imes at my prompt ings (I guess) the potent ia l for communica t ion and wisdom

was lost by division, and not rat ional discussion, but mindless slogans took the place of the buried problems. That , too, was a singificant failure whenever it happened.

But Hope has unques t ionably made great progress this year in re-thinking its political order, and in recognizing the wisdom of all the parts of its c o m m u n i t y . The communi ty government has begun to become effect ive; new and ex-citing programs have been enacted in the academic area; communica-t ion has opened up considerably between s tudents , facul ty and ad-ministrat ion. Those, 1 think, are remarkable successes.

WRITING A co lumn is rather like saying a prayer. One has no clear way of knowing that anyone is listening, or if those who might be listening are in agreement with one ' s peti t ions, or are willing to grant them, even if they could.

Yet, if only because one is commit ted to keeping his pro-mises, one cont inues his talking. And when progress happens, one can only hope that his voice con-t r ibuted in some way to its actu-alization, cheer on the successes, apologize for his ignorance, and go on.

P F A N L T S VAMPIRES ?i '/OU 6UV5 ARE AFKAIP OF

VAMP1RB5 7

P S Y t M l A T R l C

HELP

rue DOC Toll

15 0 v/2^^ U

5URELV V0U MUST REALIZE THAT A FEAR OF VAMPIRE5 16 REALLY A PSYCHOLOGICAL PR06LEM..

FRANKLY I P0UBT IF EITHER ONE OF VOU EVEN ^N0U)$ WHAT

A VAMPIRE L00K$ LIKE...

Page 6: 05-15-1970

Hope College anchor May 15, 1970

anchor essay

A plea for effective Student Congress utilization Editor's Note; This week's^7c/?or essay is written by Student Con-gress president Marshall An-standig.

by Marshall Anstandig

The past two weeks of activity and dialogue need no fu r t he r re-i terat ion. However , we canno t overlook the implicat ions of these significant days.

NEVER BEFORE has Hope College witnessed such a display of suppor t for world issues by the s tudent b o d y . We have placed ourselves on the line, t aken a stand on issues, and worked for the realization of certain goals which our c a m p u s deemed , at last, immedia te and necessary.

For some s tuden t s , the change f rom college s tudies to the wor ld ' s p rob lems was spon taneous ! Many felt unprepared t o listen, speak, and deal wi th the activities which o thers had in i t ia ted . The long, over-due shock that Hope College is not truly representa t ive of the world outs ide tinally hit the campus.

FOR A BRIEF m o m e n t , we felt a part of a b roader p ic ture in which we were compel led to par t ic ipate and sympa th ize , or at least go th rough the mot ions , wi th a certain a m o u n t of conf idence in knowing that we had a " c a u s e . "

Our activities were impressive, somewhat he lpfu l , significant to some and very insignificant to o thers . Al though we exper ienced an upsurge of emot ion dur ing

these weeks, especially on the day of the march for peace and on the day of the mass racial con f ron t a -t ion , I c a n n o t help believing that these c o m m e n t s have already lost their spark for en thus iasm and are set to regain their posi t ion in the familiar shadows of the backs of o u r minds.

THIS, OF COURSE, d e p e n d s on each individual ' s motives for jo in ing the " m o v e m e n t " in the first place.

1 suppose it boils down to tha t popular word " c o m m i t m e n t . " Some of us feel it qui te s t rongly , so much so that we cannot escape it and the only way to live wi th it is to deal with it. But many of us, u n f o r t u n a t e l y the major i ty , just think we feel it.

IT IS EASY t o tell which people are really c o m m i t t e d and which may only wish they were; c o m m i t m e n t is an obvious pro-posi t ion which is revealed s imply by drawing the line be tween the doers and the fol lowers. Yes, it 's the same old s tory and these past t w o weeks bear n o excep t ions . T h e proof lies in the days that fo l low the a l l -campus act ivi ty.

1 have already seen most fac-t ions of Hope sett le back in to the same c o m f o r t a b l e rout ine and con t inue exist ing as if no th ing had ever happened . Though the ex-perience was felt m o m e n t a r i l y , it may on ly serve as a handy recall when , and if, the guilt of passivity ever i n t e r rup t s the daily pa t t e rn s of living.

the student chupch will WORShlp

on Sunday, mayiz

11a.m. DIMNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL

CHAPLAIN WILLIAMS, PREACHER

SERMON: "I WISH I WERE YOU?"

COLLEGIUM MUSICUM SINGERS

JOY CRAWFORD, WORSHIP LEADER

HOPE'S NEW BOAT-Dr. Carl Klein, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Water Quality and Research, receives a bottle of Lake Macatawa water from Dr. William French, assistant professor of geology. The sample was taken from the aqualab, a research boat recently given to the College by Thermatron, Inc., for study of environmental pollution. Seated in the boat with French is a representative of Thermatron, Inc.

THE SENSATIONAL RANGE A L L E N SINGERS

will be presenting the Very New Gospel Sounds

Saturday 6-8 p.m. May 16 Pine Grove

N o t e If ra in ing , c o n c e r t w i l l be h e l d in Graves

• • • Don't Miss These Sons of Soul • • •

Their records are being distributed around the campus

by some of the Black students.

MARSHALL ANSTANDIG

FOR M A N Y a m b i t i o u s and de-dicated s tuden t s , their e f f o r t s are not in vain. The s teadfas t devo-tion of a small co rps of worke r s is recognized as a mos t encouraging

aspect of the weeks ' events. In taking the pr imary s teps in at-t empt ing to e f f ec t change, some have earnes t ly pledged themselves to a cause.

Those who have chosen to work on the ant i -war movemen t have d o n e a variety of things toward the a c c o m p l i s h m e n t of their goals ranging f rom speeches in high schools to par t i c ipa t ion in the Washington march and direct c o n f r o n t a t i o n wi th United Sta tes congressmen. The i r ac t ion has been posi t ive and cons t ruc t ive .

OTHER STUDENTS feel an immedia te and pressing p rob lem right here on our campus , a prob-lem of which many were total ly

unaware . The e f f o r t s t oward easing racial tens ions have been a long t ime coming. Perhaps it is because many of us were not ready t o admit that a p rob lem even exis ted .

Nevertheless , the need for openness was felt and the first step, cons t ruc t ive dialogue be-tween whi tes and blacks, was pro-jec ted o n t o a hope for be t te r unders tand ing of our own hang-

ups. QUESTIONS HAVE been

raised as t o the purpose of the ant i-war movemen t and the e f fo r t to unde r s t and racial p rob lems . Some are uncer ta in as t o their own beliefs while o the r s cannot make a def in i te c o m m i t m e n t for fear they may become labeled and will lose their individual i ty.

The ques t ion of which way t o go and which m e t h o d to use is a lways a prevalent obs tac le . (1 employ the word " o b s t a c l e " be-cause many of us see it as such and choose to remain behind it instead of a t t e m p t i n g to alleviate it) .

IN SHORT, t he ma t t e r of in-volvement is purely an individual decision which is s o m e t i m e s in-f luenced temporar i ly , bu t is, in fact , made at th is very ins tan t , for we are e i ther " d o i n g " or " n o t do ing . " There seem to be no in-betweens at this poin t .

The re fo re , speaking for myself alone, 1 have a need for self-ex-pression. I believe o the r s have a similar need to c o m m u n i c a t e their ideas to o the r s and to try to make some sense out of the complex i ty of p rob lems which tace us all.

VERY O F T E N we are tu rned off by the " e s t a b l i s h m e n t " which seems t o o compl ica t ing to handle . We seek, ins tead, ano the r means

t o be heard such as the anti-war movemen t and the c o m m u n i t y assembly on racial p rob lems .

Well, where do we go f rom here? We can talk more abou t the p rob lems , as 1 am doing now, or we can bag the rhe to r i c and admit tha t hard, grueling, s o m e t i m e s dis-appo in t ing yet c o m m i t t e d and dedica ted work is the only solu-t ion . We cannot a f f o r d to give up in the face of the p rob lems for fear of being unsuccessfu l .

THE EFFECT of change can on ly be realized if we can divorce ourselves f r o m the emot iona l t r aumas we exper i ence in s i tu t ions like last week , face t h e issues with the conf idence of a c o m m i t m e n t to a cause and not jus t the cause itself, and b e c o m e willing to make personal sacrifices.

As college s t uden t s , we are in a good posi t ion to e f f ec t change . We have easy access to necessary r e s o u r c e s - g u i d a n c e , reseaich and mos t i m p o r t a n t , people! U n f o r t u -nate ly , many s t u d e n t s at Hope believe tha t the college pr ides itself on a static a t m o s p h e r e .

LAST WEEK we proved that this is not so. The S t u d e n t Con-gress can be as f unc t i ona l as we make it. It can mobi l ize s tuden t s quickly and reflect the op in ions of the ma jo r i ty on var ious issues.

But re f lec t ing is no longer enough . The Congress encoruages change and is ready to ins t i tu te proposals and p rograms that will seek the ends desired by the stu-d e n t s who init iate them.

F r o m minor changes like open -visitation to major invo lvements such as ant i-war marches , the Stu-dent Congress is ready to work as a vehicle t h r o u g h which your c o m m i t m e n t s can ope ra t i on . Let s no t hide behind it, let 's use it!

IVlen may si^n up today

Fall housing schedule released The p rocedu re for housing

registrat ion for the 1970-71 school year has been a n n o u n c e d by Associate Dean of S t u d e n t s J eane t t e Sprik.

All hous ing con t r ac t s for next year ' s s o p h o m o r e , jun io r and senior men are present ly available today f r o m any resident advisor or f r o m the Associate Deans ' Off ice . The con t r ac t s must be comple t ed and turned in to the Associate Deans' Of f i ce by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Priori ty for housing re-quests will be d e t e r m i n e d by class s tanding and date tu rned in. The housing contract is considered to be a full year c o n t r a c t .

The policy for ott c a m p u s living will remain the same as last year. "Sen io r s may be p e r m i t t e d to live off c a m p u s to the ex t en t that the n u m b e r does not j eopa rd -ize the College housing p r o g r a m . " For th is reason, seniors shou ld obta in an off c a m p u s card t rom the Associate Deans ' Ott ice and have t h e m re tu rned by 5 p.m. Wednesday . Priority will be given on a f i r s t -come first-serve basis.

The schedule for reservat ions for w o m e n ' s housing fo l lows class criteria. Housing con t rac t s of one full year will be available and signed u p o n reserving a r o o m in person. The schedule is as fo l lows:

oMand lias many

Ziegtau/iante, but tfe/ies onfy one

RUSSIAURANT KNOWN FOR

ALL STEAK HAMBURGS

LUNCHES • FAMILY SERVICE • PERFECT

FOR YOUR COFFEE BREAK • ORDERS TO GO

HOLLAND 3962348 / MUSKEGON

739-2214

Monday ( 1 0 a .m.- l 2 noon and 1-3 p .m. ) Present jun iors re-serve cot tages and Brumler a p a r t m e n t s in Van Raal te lobby. F o r cot tages , individuals must register in person; for a p a r t m e n t s , only lists of fou r juniors are a ccep t ed . M o n d a y - ( 5 : 3 0 - 7 : 3 0 p .m. ) S o p h o m o r e s reserve co t tage spaces in Van Raal te lobby. Residence Halls are signed up

in Head Res iden t ' s a p a r t m e n t s of the hall desired and chosen f r o m available spaces as fo l lows:

T u e s d a y - 1 2 : 3 0 - 4 : 3 0 p .m. ) Present jun iors ; Gi lmore and Dykstra begin at 5 : 3 0 p.m. T u e s d a y - ( 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 3 0 p.m.) Pre-sent s o p h o m o r e s . W e d n e s d a y - ( 6 : 3 0 - 9 : 3 0 p .m.) Present f r e s h m e n . F o u r w o m e n ' s halls and

Columbia cot tage are available to every class. Dykstra will not house f r e shmen next fall. Soror i t ies are l imited t o 50 percen t of the mem-bers in one uni t . Language houses are cleared th rough the d e p a r t m e n t s . Available co t tages wi th capacity and res ident advisor are as fol lows:

Scott (Spanish H o u s e ) - 9 Beck (Carole L a t h a m ) - 10 Gibson (Be th M a a s s e n ) - 1 3 Reese ( F r e n c h House) - 8 Boyd ( Jean S c h o u t e n ) 9 E d u c a t i o n ( G e r m a n H o u s e ) - 1 2 Taylor (Ela ine K i d d ) - 1 3 Columbia (Sher ry Slager and Mary S c h m i d t ) - 2 5 135 E. 10th St. (Barb Micha-l a k ) - 1 0

Five Hopeites receive Vienna scholarships

Five H o p e s t u d e n t s have re-ce ived scholarships for the 1970 Vienna S u m m e r School Pro-gram, accord ing to Paul Kleinhek-sel, Director of F inanc ia l Aid.

Receiving scholarship aid are jun io r s Mary Et ta Buis, Garre t t DeGraff and J o h n Kemink , and s o p h o m o r e s Pat Korp ik and Carol Yf f .

Page 7: 05-15-1970

May 15. 1970 Hope College anchor Page 7

To vole today

CLE may end required chapel

WHY MAN D A N C E S - S t e l l a Crawford d e m o n s t r a t e s one of the m o d e r n dances to be presen ted by the classes of Mrs. Maxine D e B r u y n , instructor in physical e d u c a t i o n , Tuesday and Wednesday in the Litt le T h e a t r e . A short i n t r o d u c t i o n to the p rogram "Why Man Dances" will be narrated by Mike Boonstra and danced by the beginning classes. The int roduct ion will expla in the s ta te of the art in America at the present time and explore the basic e lements . The second part will consist of final projects f rom the in t e rmed ia t e and advanced classes.

Calls march 'moving'

(('oniinucJ Irom fuigc 11

The ra t ionale for the bill also stated "Worsh ip should be so s t ructured as to enable the wor-shipper bo th to seek c o m m u n i o n with Cod and to recognize that service in the world is the result and concomi t en t of this com-munion . Worship at Hope College, seen as the free response to a ( lod who has freely given Himsell to men in Jesus Chris t , should be n o n - c o m p u l s o r y . "

LATER THIS m o n t h the non-compulsory Chapel proposal is ex-pected to go before the Board of Trustees provided the facul ty first approves the bill.

Upon Board approval , the Col-lege for the first t ime in SI years will have a non-compulsory chapel system.

IN A 191 2 article it was repor ted , " A l t h o u g h a t t e n d a n c e is not compu l so ry , nevertheless the s tudents are earnest ly urged to c o m e . " The art icle f u r t h e r s ta ted that since " s o m e s tuden t s appear

Vanderjagt hopes for peace

occas ional ly ," it is then the re-sponsibili ty of the s tuden t s " t o d o all in their power to s t imula te an interest in chapel and set an ex-ample . "

IN 19 29 a t t endance was "re-quired but not c o m p u l s o r y . " The catalog of that year s ta tes , "What with a grand organ. . . and a vested choir of (>() voices... there natural-ly is no lack of /est in chapel worship. Also, since the member s of Ihe general faculty are all pro-fessing Chris t ians there is no lack of variety in the leadership f r o m the p u l p i t . "

In the 19S6 College cata log the s ta tement on the chapel require-ment was changed to r ead , " These services minister to the spiri tual growth of the s tudent and serve as a un i fy ing force among the stu-dent b o d y . "

T H E N IN 1963, as a result of an increased s tudent en ro l lmen t and a l imited chapel capac i ty , morning chapel was required only 70 percent of the t ime of each s tuden t . The s tudent would sign a month ly card stating that he had or had not met the 70 percent requ i rement .

This policy did not prove to be an ef fec t ive way of taking a t t end-ance, and in 1964 the chapel

policy was changed to "each stu-dent is encouraged to a t t end ser-vices each morning and is required to a t t end a min imum of t w o of these services per week . "

IN N O V E M B E R , 1967, the Student Senate passed a mo t ion recommending that the RLC re-view the ent i re ques t ion of com-pulsory chapel . Ihe RLC carried on its dialogue t h r o u g h o u t t h e entire year and finally r ecomm-ended that the s tudent body be given the chance to elect a re-quired lecture series instead ot required chapel .

This r e c o m m e n d a t i o n was de-feated in the spring of 1968 by both the facul ty and the Board of Trustees.

IN THE SPRING of 1968 the " 2 1 0 0 p lan" was app roved . The plan stated that "pa r t i c ipa t ion in morning chapel services be re-quired twice weekly of every s tu-dent of f r e shman s tand ing , and once weekly of every s tuden t of s o p h o m o r e s tanding. For jun io r s and seniors there will be no re-quired par t ic ipa t ion , a l though all s tuden t s are encouraged to partici-pate in the chapel services when not obliged to do so . "

T h e " 2 1 0 0 p lan" is the plan current ly in e f fec t .

by Tom Donia anchor Editor

" 1 h e m a r c h l o r p e a c e ra l ly h a d

a big i m p a c t o n W a s h i n g t o n . "

K o p r e s e n t a l i v e ( i u y V a n d e r J a g l

said S a t u r d a y

"1 G O T T H E i m p r e s s i o n t h a i

t he s t u d e n t s w e r e r e a l l y t r y i n g

wi lh e v e r \ r e s o u r c e I h e y c o u l d

c o m m a n d l o p r e v e n t il f r o m b e -

c o m i n g \ i o l c n l . j m l 1 l l u n k l h a l \

o n e o | i h e r e a s o n s l o i i h e i m p a c t

il h a d . " V a n d e i l . i g t t o l d a g r o u p

o | Mi >pc ( o l l c g e si m i e n I s 1 h e

c 'Mi'i c s s ina n p r e s c n i c d his i c -

i i u i k s l o i h e g r o u p a l l e i Ins j d -

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

.il i tic I l o p e c o n l e r e m e in t h e

( i \ i c ( e n l e i .

\ . i i u l c r J a g t c a l l e d i h e m a r c h

" r e a l K m o v i n g / " Me a d d e d , h o w -

ever . I ha l " y o u c a n o v e r - d r a m a -

l i / e a n \ m c u l e n i . " K e l e r n n g t o

h e s i d e n t R i c h a r d N i x o n s e a r l \

m o r n i n g w a l k a m o n g I h e p r o l e s -

l o r s S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g . V a n d e r -

j ag t r e m a r k e d . " A p e r s o n d o e s n I

c h a n g e h i s m i n d n is t b y g o i n g t o r

a w.ilk

HE T E R M E D N i \ o n \ w a l k

"I i e m e n d o u s i v s ign it i c a n t . " \ s k e d w h e t h e r h e s u p p o r t e d

I ' r e s i den t N i x o n ' s d e c i s i o n l o

send 1' S t r o o p s m l o C a m b o d i a .

V.i n d e r J a g t r e p l i e d . "1 d o n 1

k n o w . 1 h o p e t o r t h e b e s t , b u t

tear t h e w o r s t . S i n c e h e h a s d o n e

it. I s u p p o r t h i m . " In a s u r p r i s e r e s p o n s e t o t h e

s t u d e n l s ' q u e s t i o n s . I h e c o n g r e s s -

m a n sa id h e h a d v o t e d n o o n t h e

m i l i t a r y a u t h o n / a t i o n b i l l . H e

q u a l i t l e d h i s v o l e b y e x p l a i n i n g

tha t he w a s p r o t e s t i n g t h e l i t t l e

l i m e a l l o w e d in t h e H o u s e l o r

d e b a t e o n I h e b i l l , a n d h e w a s n o l

n e c e s s a r i K m o p p o s i t i o n t o I h e

i lsel l I he bi l l w o u l d a u l h o r -s 1 1

Chapel Choir

conccrt Sunday

V A N D E R J A G T Q U E R I E D - G u y VanderJagt , United States Repre-sentat ive f r o m the Ninth Distr ict , answers ques t ions f r o m Hope s tuden t (ill Vernon in an in fo rmal interview last Sa tu rday .

T h e H o p e C o l l e g e C h a p e l C h o i r

will p r e s e n t i t s s p r i n g c o n c e r t S u n -

d a y at 3 p . m . m D i m n e n t M e m -

or ia l C h a p e l . Dr R o b e r t C a v a n a u g h . c o n -

d u c t o r ol t h e g r o u p , will d i r e c t

Ihe p r o g r a m used o n lis s p r i n g

l o u r o f t h e T a s l C o n s i s t i n g ot l ive p o r t i o n s . I h e

r e p e r t o i r e wil l t e a t u r e n o l o n l \ I h e C h a p e l C h o i r , b u t b o t h t h e

m e n ' s a n d w o m e n ' s c h o i r s . M a r \

W e e s s i e s will b e t h e s o l o i s t .

K e n s . D e a n V a n d e r S c h a a t

a n d W e n d y W i n s l n p a r e t o ac-

c o m p a n y t h e g r o u p , a n d ( i w y n n e

B a i l e y a n d D i a n e l l y m a n s a re I h e

o rga n i s t s . C a v a n a u g h . c o n d u c t o r ot t h e

. on

H o p e C o l l e g e C h a p e l C h o i r , h a s

s t u d i e d at I h e U n i v e r s i t y of Wis-

c o n s i n . I h e A m e r i c a n C o n s e r v a -

lo ry ot M u s i c , a n d t h e U n i v e r s i l v

ot M i c h i g a n I us i l o i m n g I h e t a c -

t H o p e m I ' M O . he re-

t or 3 \ e a r s , let t l o e n l e i

Ihe I S M it it a r \ . a n d r e l u m e d t o

an a c h v e r o l e o n H o p e ' s t a c u l l \

S i n c e its o r i g i n in 1 9 S 3 . I h e

( h a p e l ( h o n h a s s p a n n e d i ts p l a n -

ned c o n c e r t s t r o m t h e R a d i o ( i l \

M u s i c Mall I a s t e r l ) a \ S e r v i c e t o

s e v e n T u r o p e a n c o u n t n e s C h o i r

m e i i i b e r s h a v e a l s o i m p r o v i s e d

p e r f o r m a n c e s in s u c h u n p i e -

c e d e n l e d p l a c e s as t h e S t a t e n

I s l a n d T e r r y , t h e C h i c a g o S u b w a \

a n d t h e H o l l y w o o d B o w l .

i / e I h e m i l i l a r v t o s p e n u

b i l l i on d u r i n g I h e v -oming \ e a i .

V A N D E R J A G T .i lso t o l d t h e

s l u d e n l s I h a l h e v o t e d a \ e o n t h e

Teggit a m e n d m e n l t o I h e a u l h o n -

/ a l i o n b i l l . I h a t I l o u s e a m e n d -

m e n l is t h e c o u n t e r p a r t t o t h e

t l a l l i e l d - M c ( l o v e r n a m e n d m e n l m

t h e S e n a t e w h i c h w o u l d c u t o i l all

f u n d s t o r t i u h t i m i in C a m b o d i a .

I h e c o n g r e s s m a n e x p l a i n e d

I h a l P r e s i d e n t N i x o n h a d p l e d g e d

I h a l I S . t r o o p s w o u l d b e w i t h -

d r a w n t r o m C a m b o d i a w i t h i n s ix

w e e k s , a n d I h a l t h e a m e n d m e n t

w o u l d n o t b e c o m e e t t e c t i v e u n t i l

J u l y I V a n d e r J a g t s a id t h a t d a t e

w a s wel l b e y o n d N i x o n ' s t r o o p

w i t h d r a w a l d e a d l i n e , a n d t h u s

w o u l d n o l in e f f e c t i m p e d e mi l i -

t a r y o p e r a t i o n s m ( a m b o d i a .

C o n g r e s s m a n \ a n d e r J a g t sa id

h e w o u l d o p p o s e any a m e n d m e n t

l o cu l o t t l u n d s f o r t h e I ' . S .

m i l i l a r \ in \ ' i e l n a m . Me c a l l e d t h e

q u e s t i o n t h e o r e t i c a l , b u t s a i d .

•• The U S is o n a c o u r s e ot g e t t i n g

o u r t r o o p s o u t ot \ i e t n a m r igh t

now

H E A D D E D , "I d o n ' t t h i n k

t h a t l o g i s t i c a l l y w e c a n w i t h d r a w

450. ( ) ( ) ( ) p e o p l e in l i ve m o n l h s .

e v e n it t h e \ w e r e t o u r i s t s a n d

t h e r e w e r e n o e n e n u I d o n ' t l ike

I h e i d e a ot lust l e a v i n g all o t o u r

w e a p o n s t o sii o n t h e g r o u n d a n d

h e t a k e n o v e r b \ t h e N o r t h \ ic t-

n a n i e s e t o b e u s e d a g a i n s t t h e

S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e . I t h i n k v e r y

l ike ly H w o u l d b e a t r e m e n d o u s

b l o o d b a t h . "

V A N ZOEREN L IBRARY BOOK RETURN

NO FINES

Monday , May 18th th rough t Saturday, May 23 rd wi l l be

NO F INE W E E K . If you have overdue books, br ing them

to the c i rcu la t ion desk in the l ibrary so that we may clear

the records. If y o u have returned books w i t h fines due,

stop at the c i rcu la t ion desk and tel l us so, we w i l l vo id

any out-standing fines. Please re turn any th ing you have

or know of f r o m the l ibrary that is not signed o u t No

questions w i l l be asked.

•y <.>

raduate

real teeth. S e t y o u r s i g h t s on th i s : T h e c o m p u t e r i n d u s t r y

is only l i f t een y e a r s old a n d a l r e a d y t h e r e

is 15 billion d o l l a r s w o r t h of c o m p u t e r e q u i p -

m e n t in u s e . By 1975, tha t will d o u b l e , c r e a t i n g m o r e

t h a n 500,000 n e w c o m p u t e r - r e l a t e d j o b s .

H o n e y w e l l c a n p r e p a r e you for th i s b r igh t

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s p e c i a l i s t . W e h a v e t h e on ly p r o g r a m lhat s e x c l u s i v e l y

for c o l l e g e g r a d u a t e s And b e c a u s e w e m a k e

c o m p u t e r e q u i p m e n t , w e re pa r t i cu l a r l y wel l -

q u a l i f i e d to t e a c h you w h a t c o m p u t e r s a r e

all a b o u t . C l a s s e s for t he nex t s e s s i o n a r e f o r m i n g

r ight now. This c o u l d b e your big c h a n c e .

P o u n c e on it. S e n d t he c o u p o n .

V /•' (* 11 I' " • • ' W" I Ml- M • H'. t'1

Mit ld M" ' ''I.i'1 I il J''-' iUU • I w o u l d l i k e a d d i t i o n a l i n f o r m a t i o n on y o u r

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Page 8: 05-15-1970

Page 8 Hope College anchor May 15. 1970

STUDENT EVALUATION OF FACULTY The anchor, in conjunction with the Student Con-

gress, is sponsoring the second Hope College Student Evaluation of Faculty. In order to make the evaluation fair and accurate, we are asking your help in answering the following evaluation questions. Complete one column for each teacher you presently have, and return the form to your Resident Advisor before Wednesday, May 20. If you live off campus, please submit the completed evaluation to the anchor office.

If you need assistance in completing the form, ask your Resident Advisor. The results of the evaluation will be published in time for distribution before final registration in Fall, 1970.

Questionaire Instructions: First answer the General Questions below. Then put an "X" through the answer which you feel best describes your teacher. Be sure to fill out the line at the top of each cokimn asking for the name of your teacher. Answer the questions only for teachers you presently have. If you cannot answer certain questions because of the nature of the class, leave the answer space blank.

GENERAL QUESTIONS:

I. What is your class standing?

Name of Professor You Are Evaluating

YES NO

1.

2,

3.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

la)

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YES NO

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Name of Professor You Are Evaluating

YES NO

1.

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Name of Professor You Are Evaluating

YES NO

1.

2.

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4.

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7.

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[a]

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YES NO

1.

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YES NO

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]a. Freshman j b. Sophomore jc. Junior ]d. Senior

Select the choice which approximates your own over-all grade point.

1 a. l b . l c . I d , le.

1 . 5 - 1 . 9 9 2.0 - 2.49 2.5 - 2.99 3.0 - 3.49 3.5 - 4.0

Is the course taught by this professor in your major area? (circle one)

EVALUATION QUESTIONS:

1. How would you rate the teacher and the way he handled the

material?

a. extremely interesting and stimulating

b. fairly interesting

c. of some interest

d. boring much of the time

e. boring almost all of the time

2. The teacher grasps the point of the students' questions and answers

them clearly and understandably.

a. almost always

b. most of the time

c. sometimes

d. rarely

e. never

3. How eager is the teacher to speak to students after class?

a. encourages outside meetings

b. will meet at your request at a mutually opportune time

c. will see students only during office hours

d. discourages outside meetings

4. In my opinion, how well does the teacher seem to know the course

material?

a. in complete command of subject matter and related materials

b. in command of course material '

c. in poor command of course material

d. is frequently stumped by questions on course material

5. How fair a grader is your teacher?

a. very fair

b. fair

c. unfair

6. How often is your teacher well organized and prepared for class?

a. always

b. most of the time

c. sometimes

d. rarely

e. never

7. How often did your teacher stimulate your intellectual curosity and

possible independent thinking?

a. almost always

b. most of the time

c. sometimes

d. rarely

e. never

8. How tolerant is your teacher to other points of view?

a. almost always

b. most of the time

c. sometimes

d. rarely

e. never

9. How important was memory for your exams?

a. extremely important

b. somewhat important

c. unimportant

10. In determining your final grade, how important is writing good

papers?

a. always extremely important

b. somewhat important

c. unimportant

Page 9: 05-15-1970

May 15, 1970 Hope College anchor Page 9

Dean Rider names honor and award recipients Recip ien t s of h o n o r s and

awards at H o p e College for t he 1969-70 schoo l year were an-n o u n c e d Wednesday by Dean fo r Academic Af fa i r s M o r r e t t e Rider .

R E C I P I E N T S O F Ath le t i c Senior Blanket A w a r d s are Bill Bekker ing , Dan C o l e n b r a n d e r , J o h n Debrecen i , J im D e l l o r n , Rich F rank , Bruce ( i e e l h o e d , Bruce Heust is , Bob K idd , Doug Myers, Harry R u m o h r , Ralph S c h r o e d e r , Paul S t e k e t e e , Dave T h o m a s , T o m T h o m a s and C h u c k Van l ingen .

The J o h n Richard VanderWil t Award f o r p romise of a d e d i c a t e d service as minis te r or miss ionary se lected by t h e religion depa r t -men t f acu l ty has been a w a r d e d to Ron F r a n k l y n . The A m e r i c a n Bible Socie ty Book Award has been received by L e a n n e l la rm-se n.

M A R Y Z A N D E E has been a w a r d e d the Del ta Phi A l p h a Cier-man Book Prize.

In the his tory d e p a r t m e n t , the Metta J. Ross His tory Prize has been a w a r d e d to J u d y R o o s , the Phi Alpha The t a Book Prize for a s o p h o m o r e to Allen S m i t h and the Phi Alpha T h e t a Book Prizes fo r f r e s h m e n to Te r ry K a m e r r a a d , Eric Brown, Bruce S m i t h and Mary Veld hot".

T H E MUSIC d e p a r t m e n t has a w a r d e d the Grace Marguer i te Browning Scho la r sh ip in Voice to Barb Traas , t h e Cla ryce Roze-b o o m Scho la r sh ip in Organ to Dean V a n d e r S c h a a f , t he Jun ior -Senior Scho la r sh ip in P i ano to F r a n R i n k u s and the Jun ior -Senior Scho la r sh ip in Ins t ru-men ta l Music t o Luc inda Koeh le r and J i m M o r e h o u s e . R e c i p i e n t s of t he Post J ewe l ry A w a r d for Chape l Choi r go to K a t h a r i n e Bacon , G w y n n e Bailey, Carol Davis, Bev Gree r , T o m H e n d e r s o n , Diane H y m a n s , T im Ligget t , Ken Mol, Mike O o n k , Roger P l a x t o n ,

J o n Proli , E d i t h Rens , Laurie Roz-enda l . Barb Ryzenga , J ean T a y l o r and Bennie Van L ie rop .

T h e F r e s h m a n C h e m i s t r y Book A w a r d has been m a d e to Don D e B r u y n and the S o p h o m o r e Chemis t ry Book A w a r d to Gor-d o n Renkes . T h e A m e r i c a n Insti-t u t e of C h e m i s t s Scho la r sh ip Award has been p r e s e n t e d to Wen-dall Wierenga.

T H E M A R G A R E T O t t e De-Velder Prize for P romise in Politi-cal Sc ience has been a w a r d e d lo Travis Kraai . T h e S t r inger Mem-orial Psychology Award fo r a j u n i o r s t u d e n t has been given lo George Bishop.

T h e George B i rkkof f Prize for t he best scholar ly work in the field of English a n d A m e r i c a n L i t e ra tu re is a w a r d e d to Rober t Kief t by ac t ion of t he English d e p a r t m e n t .

T H E BLUE K E Y F r a t e r n i t y has a w a r d e d its s cho la r sh ip to A n d y S h e r m a n .

T h e Pe te r Bol A w a r d is given to the underc lass s t u d e n t w h o has made a single c o n t r i b u t i o n to counse l ing and gives p romise of a career in service t o y o u t h . Fo r 1960-70 , it has been a w a r d e d to R o b b A d a m s .

F O R E N S I C A W A R D S and h o n o r s inc lude a s econd place in the S t a t e Peace O r a t o r y C o n t e s t by Nancy W a r n o c k ; f inals in the S ta te O r a t o r y C o n t e s t went to Mark Volkers ; s econd place in the M a n c h e s t e r Individual Even t s in I n t e r p r e t a t i o n was t a k e n by Linda R o w e ; thi rd place in i n t e r p r e t a -t ion t o Philip Drake ; th i rd place in a f t e r d inne r speak ing and an ex-cellent ra t ing in the S ta te Discus-

sion Fest ival and in the Province A f t e r Dinner C o n t e s t all t o Dave P ru im.

Nancy Warnock w o n first place in the Adela ide O r a t o r y C o n t e s t and Mark Volke r s a s econd place in the Raven O r a t o r y C o n t e s t . Pi

Kappa Del ta won an excel len t r a t ing in the Province Sweeps t akes at A k r o n Univers i ty .

F A C U L T Y H O N O R S are con-fe r red u p o n a select g roup of sen iors not exceed ing ten percen t of the g radua t ing class, who have a cumula t i ve grade po in t average of 3.5 or be t t e r , a n d who give p romise t h r o u g h the i r academic ach ievemen t of service to the Col-lege and of success in the i r chosen p ro fess ions .

Rec ip i en t s of f acu l ty h o n o r s in the class of 1970 are Jane Bene-dic t , Nancy Brown, Brian Clap-ham, Dan C o l e n b r a n d e r , Bev Glas, Dave G o u w e n s , T o m H e n d e r s o n , Marcia l l e r r e m a , Diane l l y m a n s , Rober t Kie f t , A n n e Larsen, Char les Lieder , Mary Luckey , Donna Minet , George Mulder , Helena Pos t , Dave Rigg, Char les S c h o e n e c k , Barb S k i d m o r e , Paul S t e k e t e e , Mark V a n d e r Laan, Wendell Wierenga, Mary Z a n d e e , Dar lene Bush, Jud i C o o p e r , Sha ron Weaver R e y n e n , Jill Risser, J ean Tay lor , Lois t e n l l o o r , C a r o l y n T o b e r t , K a t h y Miller and Caro l Kotersk i .

HOPE S E R V I C E Awards have been c o n f e r r e d u p o n Marshall Ans t and ig , Andy A t w o o d , Barb Barta , J o h n Boons t ra , T o m Donia , T im Liggett , Jerry May, Jane Self-r idge, Judi C o o p e r , Barb Ryzenga , J ean Taylor and Ellen Hea th .

New m e m b e r s in d e p a r t m e n t a l h o n o r socie t ies were also an-n o u n c e d .

SPANISH H O N O R S m e m b e r s are Laurie Lovell, Pain Parker , Lynn Gonza les , A n n e Larsen , Ca ro l Pearce, Sue Wierda Bol ton and Barb Es ther .

I n d u c t e d into the G e r m a n H o n o r Soc ie ty were Nancy Walco t t , Caro l Yf f , L y n n e G i r o d , Sally P lagenhoef , G lenda TenClay and K a t h y J o u s m a .

T H E H O N O R A R Y medica l and den ta l socie ty Alpha Epsi lon

Delta has accep t ed Steve Baker , B o b Bates, Blair Eraser , Bev Glas, Tom Harmel ink , T o m H e n d e r s o n , G e o r g e Mulder , Virginia Sull ivan, T o m T h o m a s and Paul VanPern is .

Tri Beta , h o n o r a r y biological s o c i e t y , has h o n o r e d Vicki Det le fs , Bev Glas, George Mulder , Doug Westveer, S teve Baker , Bob Bates, T o m K o o i k s t r a , Virginia Sull ivan, T o m T h o m a s , Paul Van Pernis , T o m Harme l ink and Ca thy Kleyn .

THE H O N O R A R Y English soc ie ty Lambda lo t a Tau has h o n o r e d Deb F o s h e i m , Kathy J o u s m a , Rober t K ie f t , Na th lee Roe lo f s , Jean T a y l o r , J ane Self-ridge and Nancy Walco t t .

In i t i a ted into C a m m a O m i c r o n C h a p t e r of Phi Alpha The t a Inter-na t iona l , honor s soc ie ty in his-t o r y , are Ken Bradsell , Kei th Browning , Dave F o l k e r t , Rich H o u s m a n n , Laurell Haines, Bob G r a h m a n n , Andy Mulder , Barb Pr ime , J im Rub ins , Ray Schol-f ie ld , J u d y Roos , Sandi Pickut a n d Carol Kearney .

NEW M E M B E R S of the fo ren -sics h o n o r f r a t e r n i t y Pi Kappa Delta are Nancy Warnock , Debbie

Y o c h , L y a n n e R ie r sma , George Lee, J o e Del l ly , S teve Harms , T o m Maratea , Cha r l e s Rowel l , Phil Drake , Linda R o w e a n d Dave

Pru im. I n d u c t e d in to t h e H o n o r a r y

Psycho logy Soc ie ty are George Bishop, Kirk Br ink, J u d i C o o p e r , Lynn Davis, L y n d a D e t h m e r s , Ter ry G a r d n e r , C o r i n n e Havinga, Debb ie Moore , G i n n y Mrizek, Dan Picker ing, Hendr ika V a n d e K e m p , Kendra V a n d e n b e r g , Sue von Ber-gen and Barry Schre iber .

T H E F E D E R A T E D G a r d e n Club of Michigan S c h o l a r s h i p s are a w a r d e d to Barb Michalak and F e r n S te rk .

T h e Herd m a n ' s C o m p e t i t i o n , sponso red by the College l i terary magazine Opus, was won by Nancy Flier. She will receive a $ 5 0 first prize fo r her p rose en t ry Hack Yard. H o n o r a b l e m e n t i o n in prose went to Dona ld S tee le for Memoir and to Drew Hinde re r for Snobs.

A $ 5 0 first prize in the F.erd-m a n ' s C o m p e t i t i o n in Poe t ry was won by William S c h u t t e r fo r his p o e m I rom Here. H o n o r a b l e men-t ion went t o Lois ten Hoor .

Hope's graduating seniors announce further study plans

T o this d a t e , t he fo l l owing 56 seniors have been n o t i f i e d of the i r a c c e p t a n c e fo r g r adua t e s t u d y , a c c o r d i n g to t h e d e p a r t m e n t c h a i r m e n . T h e list is a lso i n c o m p l e t e as t o n o t i f i c a t i o n of f inancia l ass is tance d u e to la te no t i ces . T h e g r adua t i ng class tis yea r is t h e largest in the h i s to ry of t he Col lege , wi th 4 0 4 sen iors re-ceiving b a c h e l o r of art and music degrees in c o m m e n c e m e n t exe rc i ses J u n e 1 in the Hol land Civic C e n t e r .

A n d y A t w o o d - W e s t e r n Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y Ken A u s t i n - Y a l e U n i v e r s i t y - g r a d u a t e scholar-

s h i p - m u s i c G e o r g e A v e r y - B o s t o n Univers i ty Law S c h o o l Brian B a i l e y - W a s h i n g t o n S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y - a r t J a n i c e B a k k e r - U n i v e r s i t y of M i c h i g a n -

counse l ing R o b e r t B a t e s - Y a l e U n i v e r s i t y - U n i v e r s i t y fel-

l o w s h i p - b i o l o g y J i m B e k k e r i n g - N o r t h w e s t e r n U n i v e r s i t y -

business a d m i n i s t r a t i o n C h u c k Bigelow - N e w Brunswick Theo log ica l

S e m i n a r y

J a n i c e B l a k e l y - A e g e a n I n s t i t u t e - A t h e n s , G r e e c e - G r e e k d r a m a

Dick B o r s t - W e s t e r n T h e o l o g i c a l S e m i n a r y Roger Br ink - Iowa S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y - g r a d u a t e

ass i s t an t sh ip - c h e m i s t r y Carol C h a p m a n - W e s t e r n Michigan U n i v e r s i t y -

sociology Brian C l a p h a m - U n i v e r s i t y of M i c h i g a n - h i s t o r y Dan C o l e n b r a n d e r - U n i v e r s i t y of R o c h e s t e r -

t each ing ass i s t an t sh ip in c h e m i s t r y and will c o n t i n u e s tud i e s in phys ics

J u d i C o o p e r - C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y - p h y s i c a l t h e r a p y

David C o r l e t t - N e w Brunswick Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y

Manue l C u b a - U n i v e r s i t y of C a l i f o r n i a , Berke-l e y - e c o n o m i c s

Sco t t C u t t i n g - U n i v e r s i t y of I l l inois J e r ry C r i p e - A r i z o n a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y - r e s e a r c h

a s s i s t a n t s h i p - g e o l o g y Vicki D e t l e f s - S t a n f o r d U n i v e r s i t y - t e a c h i n g

i n t e r s h i p - b i o l o g y Bonn ie E v e r t s - U n i v e r s i t y of C h i c a g o - a r t his-

t o r y and a r c h e o l o g y Blair F r a s e r - P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y -

g r a d u a t e a s s i s t a n t s h i p - c h e m i s t r y

Cecile G a i l l a r d - E a s t e r n Michigan Univers i ty

- E n g l i s h Bev G l a s - U n i v e r s i t y of I l l inois , Medical

S c h o o l , d e p a r t m e n t of a n a t o m y - u n i v e r s i t y

f e l l owsh ip Linda G l e n d i n g - M i c h i g a n S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y -

psycho log ica l m e a s u r e m e n t Dave G o u w e n s - Y a l e Univers i ty Divini ty

S c h o o l - $ 7 0 0 g r a n t

T o m H e n d e r s o n - U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan Medi-

cal Schoo l Caro l H o o g s t r a - M i c h i g a n S ta t e U n i v e r s i t y -

English Diane H y m a n s - Michigan S t a t e Univers i ty Kei th J o n e s - U n i v e r s i t y of Minneso ta Law

S c h o o l R o b e r t K e i f t - S t a n f o r d U n i v e r s i t y - f e l l o w s h i p

fo r s t u d y in d r a m a t i c l i t e ra tu re J i m K o s t e r - N o r t h w e s t e r n Univers i ty

bus iness a d m i n i s t r a t i o n Caro l K o t e r s k i - U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan Schoo l

of Social Work Jul ia L a m - U n i v e r s i t y of C o n n e c t i c u t - g r a d u a t e

ass i s t an t sh ip and research fe l lowship-c h e m i s t r y

A n n e L a r s e n - C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y - 3 - y e a r g r a d u a t e f e l lowsh ip in F r e n c h with one year s t u d y abroad

Cha r l e s L i e d e r - S t a n f o r d U n i v e r s i t y - g r a d u a t e ass i s tan tsh ip , N S F fe l lowship , W o o d r o w Wil-son d e s i g n a t e - c h e m i s t r y

Mary L u c k e y - U n i v e r s i t y of Ca l i fo rn ia , Berke-l e y - g r a d u a t e t r a ineesh ip , W o o d r o w Wilson d e s i g n a t e - c h e m i s t r y

M a t t h e w M e s c h e r - H a r v a r d U n i v e r s i t y - N I H t r a i n e e s h i p - c h e m i s t r y

Don M i l l e r - M c G e o r g e Schoo l of Law, Sacre-m e n t o

G e o r g e M u l d e r - Univers i ty of Michigan Medical S c h o o l

Ern ie O t t o - U n i v e r s i t y of U t a h - g e o l o g y Steve P a r k e r - I n d i a n a U n i v e r s i t y - g r a d u a t e as-

s i s t a n t s h i p - c h e m i s t r y Ken P a u l s e n - V i r g i n i a I n s t i t u t e of Mar ine Sci-

e n c e - r e s e a r c h ass i s tan t sh ip D o u g R o z e n d a l - W e s t e r n Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y Cha r l e s S c h o e n e c k - N e w Brunswick Theo log i -

cal S e m i n a r y

Ra lph S c h r o e d e r - U n i v e r s i t y of N e b r a s k a - a r t B i l l S e l a n d e r s - T u l a n e U n i v e r s i t y - a s -

s i s t a n t s h i p - a r t Paul S k e k e t e e - U n i v e r s i t y of M i c h i g a n - $ 2 4 0 0

Michigan Col leges f e l l o w s h i p - m a t h Alice S t e p h e n s - U n i v e r s i t y of I n d i a n a - t e a c h i n g

a s s i s t a n t s h i p - p s y c h o l o g y Fred Van C o r - U n i v e r s i t y of I l l i n o i s - g e o l o g y Rich V a n d e r B r o e k - B o w l i n ^ G r e e n , O h i o - a r t Mark V a n d e r L a a n - U n i v e r s i t y of M i c h i g a n -

h i s to ry Mary V a n d e r L i n d e - U n i v e r s i t y of M i c h i g a n -

h i s to ry Linda V i s s c h e r - W e s t e r n Michigan U n i v e r s i t y -

h i s to ry Wendel l W i e r e n g a - S t a n d f o r d U n i v e r s i t y -

g r a d u a t e a s s i s t a n t s h i p - c h e m i s t r y S t a n Y o n k e r - W e s t e r n Theo log ica l S e m i n a r y T e d Z w a r t - M i c h i g a n S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y -

business administration

USED BOOK POLICY The bookstore will soon be buying back books for next semester (fall). It is the policy of the Blue Key to pay 50% to 60% of purchase price on most (not alt) hard cover texts — paperbacks less and resell at 75%.

EXAMPLE: WORLD LIT. TEXT, sells for $8.45 - we pay $5.10 we sell for $6.25 (12% - 76c Cost of doing business our profit 44 c.)

What You Should Know Q. Why doesn't the book store pay 60% on all

used books?

A. Certain books carry a great risk. A text may be worth $5.00 today and tomorrow if the publisher announces a new edition this same

$5.00 book is worthless.

0- How are books classified?

A. Usually five classes.

1. Sound: Fairly late edition, used by more than one teacher for more than one semester. Those are all 60% books.

2. Risky: We may become overstocked. A new edition may come out. These are 50% books, if we become overstocked

then less.

3. Paperbacks: Price of these depends on

the quality of the binding.

4. Books dropped or not used here: We buy these as a favor to the student at the Used Book Co. Catalogue price. Usually 25% sometimes only 25c. We never encourage students to sell their books at these prices, especially 25c.

5. Old edi t ion-wor th less .

OUR PLEDGE TO YOU: We will always advise you to the best of our knowledge which books to "sell," "hold," or "don' t sell" whichever is best to your advantage.

We will be buying 1st semester books as soon as we get the fall order from teachers.

DO NOT WAIT unti l near fall to sell your books (we cannot buy books during the fall book rush).

BLUE KEY BOOK STORE

Page 10: 05-15-1970

Page 10 Hope College anchor May 15, 1970

4 4 1 colleges affected

Strikes shut down 250 schools Hopeite to offer concert

of own compositions ( C P S ) - T h e n a t i o n ' s largest-

ever s t u d e n t s t r ike in i ts first week a f f e c t e d 4 4 1 colleges and univer-sities and shut d o w n a lmos t 2 5 0 of t h e m , as well as the en t i r e Ca l i fo rn ia publ ic h igher e d u c a t i o n sys t em.

MORE T H A N ONE mil l ion s tuden t s , f acu l ty m e m b e r s and ad-minis t ra t ive staff m e m b e r s s t ruck the week of May 4 over t h e g o v e r n m e n t invasion of C a m b o -dia, t h e c o n t i n u i n g war in S o u t h -east Asia, t h e killing of f o u r s tu-d e n t s at Kent S ta te Univers i ty in O h i o by Nat iona l G u a r d s m e n a n d , on m a n y c a m p u s e s , over govern-m e n t repress ion of pol i t ical dissi-d e n t s such as the Black P a n t h e r Pa r ty .

T h e r e was violence coast to coast and g o v e r n m e n t pa rano ia and repress ion w h i c h b r o u g h t Na t iona l G u a r d s m e n to d o z e n s of c a m p u s e s and caused pan icked gove rnor s t o cancel the i r na t i ona l R e p u b l i c a n G o v e r n o r ' s c o n f e r e n c e this past weekend .

MUCH OF THE v iolence was of t he new breed of d e s t r o y i n g speci f ic targets . S t u d e n t s and o t h e r s t r ikers set ablaze R .O.T .C. bui ld ings in a dozen s ta tes and in New York smashed an A t o m i c Fne rgy C o m p u t e r .

G o v e r n m e n t r e sponse to the s t r ike inc luded Na t iona l G u a r d s -men kill ing fou r s t u d e n t s at Kent S t a t e Univers i ty , G u a r d s m e n b a y o n e t t i n g seven s t u d e n t s and f o u r n e w s m e n at the Univers i ty of New Mexico , pol ice using b i rdsho t to break up rallies at S t a t e Univer-sity of New York at B u f f a l o and pol ice and G u a r d s m e n ca r ry ing loaded w e a p o n s o n t o c a m p u s e s across the c o u n t r y .

I N A N G R Y r e sponse t o gov-e r n m e n t - p o l i c e repress ion and in angry mi l i tance over the invasion of C a m b o d i a , b o m b i n g of N o r t h V i e t n a m , c o n t i n u a t i o n of t he war in V i e t n a m , and g rowing repres-sion of t he Black P a n t h e r Pa r ty , t he s t r ike snowbal led d u r i n g the week .

S t r ike rs are a t t e m p t i n g to organize thei r c o m m u n i t i e s to c rea te a general s t r ike in t h e na-t ion , and even a New Jersey d ra f t board has gone on s t r ike .

A N A T I O N A L S T R I K E steer-ing c o m m i t t e e is m e e t i n g May 13-15 at Yale Univers i ty t o co-o r d i n a t e e f f o r t s t o build the s t r ike . Every c a m p u s on s t r ike has been asked to send t w o de legates to Yale, where the first s tr ike began th ree weeks ago.

At P r i n c e t o n , whe re the s t r ike has been 100 pe rcen t e f f ec t i ve , a na t iona l an t i -d ra f t c o n f e r e n c e has been called fo r May 19-21. The

mee t ing is o p e n to the publ ic and is s p o n s o r e d by the Union for Na t iona l Dra f t O p p o s i t i o n .

I N T H E PAST week , more than 6 , 0 0 0 d ra f t cards have been t u r n e d i n t o the Un ion with a pledge of more t h a n 1 ,500 to come . Several d r a f t cards also were t u r n e d in and bu rned at the Wash ing ton mob i l i z a t i on May 9.

D o z e n s of the s choo l s on str ike have been shut d o w n for t he rest of the academic t e r m , a l t h o u g h s t u d e n t s are d e m a n d i n g the cam-puses r ema in open fo r s t u d e n t s to ho ld teach- ins and to d o com-m u n i t y organiz ing and s t r ike sp read ing work .

MOST OF T H E f i res were a imed at the mi l i ta ry on c a m p u s of the Univers i ty ' s compl i c i ty

FOR THE MANY OCCASIONS

THAT JUST DON'T SEEM RIGHT

WITHOUT FLOWERS —

SHADY LAWN FLORIST 281 E. 16th St.

EX 2-2652

"Over 3 G e n e r a t i o n s of Rel iable Service"

M e m b e r F.T.D. Don V a n d e r Pfoeg, o w n e r

with the g o v e r n m e n t and mi l i ta ry . S t r ike leaders on mos t c a m p u s e s have asked tha t the str ike no t be a imed at the c a m p u s e s per se bu t against the g o v e r n m e n t oppres -sors.

M a m m o t h d e m o n s t r a t i o n s a-gainst the war and in s u p p o r t of the s t r ike have been held in San Diego, Los Angeles , Minneapol i s ( 4 0 , 0 0 0 ) and New Y o r k , as well as in Washing ton where a lmos t 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 rallied. Over 4 , 0 0 0 dem-o n s t r a t e d in A t l an t a , Georg ia , and colleges in S o u t h Carol ina exper i -enced thei r first c a m p u s v io lence ever as s u p p o r t g rew for t he s t r ike last week .

Senior Greg Phil l ips will pre-sent a conce r t of his c o m p o s i t i o n s Tuesday at 8 : 1 5 p .m. in H o p e R e f o r m e d C h u r c h .

T h e music , all of which was c o m p o s e d wi th in the last year , inc ludes w o r k s for cho i r , vocal solois ts , v iol in , t r u m p e t and o rgan . P e r f o r m e r s will be H o p e mus ic s t u d e n t s , including a cho i r m a d e up of singers f r o m the Chape l Cho i r and the Col leg ium Mus icum.

Organist Barbara V e u r i n k will p e r f o r m the open ing w o r k . Tocca-ta, Alleluia and Fugue, and will a c c o m p a n y f o u r vocal so los by Nancy P e t e r s o n and J o h n Lyons .

College receives grant

from Kresge Foundation (Continued from page I )

viewing a rch i t ec t s fo r the cen te r . " A n y new a rch i t ec t may want to start near ly f r o m scra tch on the p l a n s , " VanderWerf said.

THE O R I G I N A L c o n c e p t of the bu i ld ing came in the Master Plan a d o p t e d by the Board of T rus t ees in 1966 . R o u g h plans were o u t l i n e d by a rch i t ec t Char les S tade a n d Associates . A c c o r d i n g to V a n d e r W e r f , " I t would be ex-t r eme ly d o u b t f u l tha t S tade wou ld be the f inal a r c h i t e c t . " VanderWer f n o t e d p r o b l e m s wi th the S tade f i rm in mee t ing dead-lines fo r t he DeWitt C e n t e r plans.

With the new grant t he Build-ing and Planning C o m m i t t e e of t he Board of T rus t ee s is now w o r k i n g to f ind a site f o r t he p r o p o s e d bui ld ing and an archi-t ec t . A c c o r d i n g to VanderWerf and Hugh DePree , cha i rman of the Board of Trus tees , t w o si tes are cu r r en t l y be ing ser iously con-s idered, t he presen t site of Voor -hees Hall and a loca t ion on East T e n t h St . across f r o m Van Zoe ren

Library a n d Physics-Math Build-ing.

DEPREE A N D V A N D E R Werf n o t e d t h a t o t h e r poss ib le s i tes are still being cons ide red . VanderWer f said t h a t p o r t i o n s of t h e East T e n t h St . site are n o t o w n e d by H o p e and w o u l d have t o be pu rchased . Co l l ege -owned bui ld ings s t and on all of t he o t h e r si tes being cons ide red by t h e Col-lege, DeMees te r said.

The Building and P lann ing C o m m i t t e e met y e s t e r d a y to t ry t o decide on a site t o r e c o m m e n d t o the Board of T r u s t e e s at its s u m m e r mee t ing the end of May. DePree was n o t sure w h e t h e r t h e c o m m i t t e e wou ld m a k e a deci-s ion .

A c c o r d i n g to V a n d e r W e r f , t h e a rch i t ec t se lec ted by the Board of T rus t ee s will n o t be able t o begin f ina l p lans unt i l a site is s e l ec ted , a n d this, t he Pres iden t s p e c u l a t e d , might n o t be until the beg inn ing of Ju ly . He t h o u g h t t h a t t h e Board 44very l i ke ly" will a p o i n t at i ts May m e e t i n g a special c o m m i t -t ee t o select a site.

jeuui fcY Dependable Jewelers for Over o Ovorter Century

^ West Eighth Street

HOLLAND, MICHIGAN

Barbara Boer will be violinist in Coral Reef, a c c o m p a n i e d by Miss Pe t e r son on t h e p iano . T h e com-pose r ' s second Symphony for Organ will fo l low, p e r f o r m e d by Mrs. V e u r i n k .

Mrs. Veur ink and William C h a n d l e r will a c c o m p a n y K e n n e t h Aus t in , t r u m p e t e r , in the Con-certo for Trumpet, Organ and Chimes.

T h e conc lud ing c o m p o s i t i o n will be Who is This That Dark-eneth Counsel, a choral work based on the Book of J o b . The choi r and solois ts will be con-d u c t e d by the c o m p o s e r .

Phill ips, an art m a j o r , has been s t u d y i n g c o m p o s i t i o n indepen-den t ly fo r nine years. Before com-ing to H o p e , he had recorded and d i rec ted p e r f o r m a n c e s of works for cho i r and s y m p h o n i c b a n d , as well as solos fo r var ious instru-men t s .

Upperclassmen

lo advise frosh

sought by Dean A p p l i c a t i o n s fo r upperc la s s as-

s i s t an t s to f a c u l t y fo r academic advis ing d u r i n g f r e s h m a n orien-t a t i o n are available in the o f f i c e of Assoc ia te Dean fo r A c a d e m i c Af-fa i rs J ack S t e w a r t .

Each fall o n e u p p e r c l a s s m a n is assigned to t en or f i f t e e n fresh-men t o help the new s t u d e n t s wi th class se lec t ions and regis-t r a t i o n p rocedu re s . Dean S tewar t desc r ibed the p r o g r a m as l lvery benef ic ia l to new s t u d e n t s . "

Uppe rc l a s smen of all a cademic d isc ip l ines involved in the pro-gram will be e x p e c t e d to be on c a m p u s by Sep t . 14 and be avail-a b l e f o r a c a d e m i c advising t h r o u g h Sep t . 16. R o o m and boa rd are p rov ided fo r t h o s e stu-d e n t s pa r t i c ipa t ing .

I n t e r e s t ed s t u d e n t s may pick up an app l i ca t ion f o r m in Dean S t e w a r t ' s o f f i c e . Van Raa l te 107.

I like to walk on the grass

because it has

no cracks in it

i t 's wet and

jus t the right color,

because it 's sof t

and we are a l i v e -

Rod McKuen

JOIN THE...

anchor EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

JOB DESCRIPTION: Involves writing, editorial decisions, some meetings, assistance Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday. Should be familiar with layout, pasteup, editing, reading and writing. Hours weekly: 30. Salary: $200*

MANAGING EDITOR

JOB DESCRIPTION: Should be familiar with layout, photo selection, possibly pasteup. Member of editorial board. Wednesday. Thursday. Hours weekly: 15. Salary: $200*

NEWS EDITOR

JOB DESCRIPTION: Head of reporting staff, responsible for coverage on all campus news, sets and maintains deadlines. Should be able to do some writing, rewriting. Member of editorial board. Tuesday, Wednesday, possibly Thursday. Hours weekly: 15. Salary: $150*

PHOTOGRAPHERS

JOB DESCRIPTION: Take pictures and perform lab work. Should have some prior experience or knowledge of photography. We will train for lab work if necessary.

.. . AA/D LEARN, GET EXPERIENCE IN JOURNALISM,

GET PAID FOR MANY JOBS, FIND OUT ABOUT YOUR COLLEGE

SHARE THE FUN!

Talk to Tom Donia, Editor; Garrett DeGraff, assistant editor; Lynn Jones, news editor; or talk with present staff members.

ADVERTISING MANAGER

JOB DESCRIPTION: Solicit and prepare ads. Must correspond with national agencies as well as spend time in local area. Commission: 10 percent (average of $250-400).

SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER

JOB DESCRIPTION: Solicit and be responsible for weekly mailing of newspaper. Involves some time at beginning of year in organization, as well as about one to two hours weekly.

BUSINESS MANAGER

JOB DESCRIPTION: Keep accounts, prepare monthly advertising statements. Involves about two to three hours a week. Has responsibility for monthly budget statements to editor.

CRITIQUES EDITOR

JOB DESCRIPTION: Must have experience in reviewing and/or literary background. Has charge of weekly review (which he may write or ask others to write). Reviews books, plays, movies and records.

COLUMNIST

JOB DESCRIPTION: Writes weekly opinion column. Should be experienced writer, willing to do research for columns.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL EXTENSION 2285 OR 2301

FEATURES EDITOR

JOB DESCRIPTION: Should be experienced writer. Contributes articles such as personality profiles, some investigative reporting.

HEADLINE WRITER

JOB DESCRIPTION: Writes all headlines, should have adequate vocabulary. Wednesdays only.

REPORTERS

JOB DESCRIPTION: Positions available for many different types of reporters: investigative reporting, straight news reporting, "beat" reporters for specific interest areas, etc. Opportunity to advance to editorial position. Contact editor for specific information.

SPORTS WRITERS

JOB DESCRIPTION: Positions available for any or all sports coverage. Experience helpful. Duties often fitted to individual interests. Contact editor for specific information.

TYPISTS

JOB DESCRIPTION: Re-typing stories and other work. Number of hours weekly to fit your availability. Many openings are paying positions.* *

*Ett>blM>«d by Campus L i f t Board **Wagn wi l l ba datarminad by qualH teat tons and axpartanca. Nagotlattons for ax act amount undarway.

Page 11: 05-15-1970

May 15, 1970 Hope College anchor

Hope students take part in D.C. peace rally Editor s Note: The fol lowing arti-cle is wr i t ten by freshman Bob Gabler, one of the participants in the Washington peace march and rally. He discusses the events Saturday, and what part Hope students played in the peace movement.

by Bob Gabler anchor Reporter

Close to 100,000 young people gathered in Washington Sa turday to p r o m o t e peace in Indo-China.

AMONG THE young people were 29 Hope s tudents .

The young people came to a t tend a mass peace rally held at 1 p .m. in the Ellipse, a large park located just south of the White House.

The crowd began gathering be-fore 10 a.m. Roads were block-aded in a three or four hJock radius a round the park. Police were lined 10-15 feet apart along the curbs near the park to keep the crowd on the sidewalk.

A MOAT-LIKE ring of 59 city buses, parked bumper to b u m p e r along the oppos i te side of 17th St., separated the demons t r a to r s f rom the White House and Presi-dent Nixon , who remained inside af te r making an early morning trip to the Lincoln Memorial and talk-ing to a g roup of you ths .

Though only a por t ion of the crowd could see the White House, there was constant communica -tion across the buses. Members of the White House staff mingled with the crowd and the White House press room was open to edi tors of s tudent newspapers .

WHEN THE ANTI-WAR pro-gram got underway at 1 p .m. , the t empera tu re was 90 degrees in the shade and the c rowd, as a result , was somewha t languid. Some of the demons t r a to r s splashed in the foun ta in and two you ths were

Trustees to deal with building

finance problem (Continued from page I)

r e c o m m e n d a t i o n comes as the re-sult of a proposal f rom the Pro-fessional Interest C o m m i t t e e and the facul ty as a whole .

A similar proposal f r o m the S tuden t Congress that would place s tuden t s on the Board will also be on the Board agenda. The c o m m i t t e e on governance has made no r e c o m m e n d a t i o n on that proposal yet .

THE INTER VISITATION bill, passed by the Campus Life Board earlier this year, will be up for considerat ion at the May Board meeting. If it passes, the policy would go in to e f fec t in Septem-ber.

Final ly, the Board will un-doub ted ly discuss the results of a weekend retreat which begins to-mor row. The re t rea t , scheduled to include s tudents , facul ty mem-bers, admin is t ra to rs and trustees, has been planned to increase direct communica t ion among those groups represented .

Charles Lieder given natT chem

Merit Award Senior chemistry major Charles

Lieder has been selected as one of 12 winners of a Chemical and Engineering News 1970 Merit Award.

Chemical and Engineering News, the weekly news journa l of the Amer ican Chemical Society, annual ly selects the 12 outs tand-ing seniors in the nat ion who are major ing in chemistry or chemical engineering.

The awardees, selected this year f r o m 129 nominees , are chosen on the basis of academic achievement and par t ic ipat ion in ext racurr icular activities. A May issue of the journa l will carry a s tory and pictures of all the Merit Award winners.

Lieder also has received a Na-t ional Science F o u n d a t i o n fellow-ship and is a Woodrow Wilson Designate.

arrested for removing all their clothing. About 50 persons were carried trom the crowd and treated for heat pros t ra t ion.

Among the speakers were Dr. Benjamin Spock, who told the c rowd, "We are here to find out what we can do . " Jane Fonda , ano ther speaker , said, 'Tt is easier to kill Viet-Cong when they are known as 'gooks ' .^and it is easier to kill s tudents when they are known as ' bums . ' "

ALSO PRESENT at the really were Beulah Sanders, Coret ta King, Alan Ginsberg, David Liv-ingston, Phil Ochs, Judy CoUins and Dave Dillinger of the "Chi-cago Seven."

Miss Sanders asked for draf t cards to be passed to the f ron t , and several young men burned theirs. Dillinger posed the ques-t ion " H o w can you love G o d , whom you have not seen, if you canno t love your bro ther , whom you have seen?"

AT ONE POINT, a you th rushed Dillinger and, as a wave of tension covered the c rowd, he pleaded, " D o n ' t hurt him. Don ' t hur t him. He's only afraid of the t r u t h . " The composure of the group was immediate ly regained.

Several groups arrived, carrying banners displaying the words

Canada is Here" and "Federa l Employees for Peace."

THE C O N V E R S A T I O N S , atti-tudes and talk from the p la t form showed an under tow of deep re-sen tmen t , perhaps more so than in any of the many ant i -Vietnam demons t r a t ions staged in the Capi-tal since 1965.

At 3 p.m. the program ended and the c rowds dispersed. But two groups of several hundred mili-tants , some wearing hard hats, fo rmed at intersect ions near the White House and con f ron t ed the police.

THEN FOLLOWED a series of skirmishes that pit ted the police and the "Mobe marshals" against mil i tants who let air f rom the bus tires, crashed the barricades and threw missiles. As one group marched toward the Just ice De-par tment building, the scene of violent demons t ra t ions last Nov.

15, the police fired tear gas to break them up.

Throughout the evening, a few minor incidents involving small individual groups breaking win-dows took place throughout the city.

THE 29 HOPE s tudents who traveled to Washington were in most ways typical of the people who gathered there. They were dedicated, angry, concerned and were not going just to "play games." It was a trip not just to show concern , but to gain new direct ion.

Arriving in the late hours of Friday night and early hours of Saturday morning, they met at the Union of American Hebrew Congregations on the corner of N.W. 21st St. and Massachusetts Ave. The group, composed of 700-900 s tuden t s f rom Oberlin College, who had offered their hospitali ty to the s tudents of Hope College, was stat ioned there .

THEY WERE treated to re-f reshments and a snack and then given places to spend the night. After meeting back at the Center at 8 :30 a.m. they were given instruct ions on what to do if gassed and told to avoid possible violence. Emeregency phone num-bers were wri t ten on a rms in case of arrest.

THE SERIOUS tone of the

speakers added a note of urgency to the feelings of Hope s tudents . After the rally, they returned to the Center . The evening was filled with discussions and ideas regard-ing what had been said.

At approximate ly 9 p.m. a group of between 100-200 you ths came down the sidewalk towards the Center . As a police car ap-proached, a few members of the group began to throw bricks and rocks. The patrol car turned around to avoid any immediate con f ron ta t ion .

WITHIN TWO minutes , two police wagons and four patrol cars had blocked the crowd into the street down which they had turned . The reaction of most Hope s tudents was disgust and anger at the action of that small group.

WHj T»t lyl} HOHEl I N o w l

Ei A l l

RALLYING FOR PEACE— Nearly 100,000 young people gathered in Washington D C. Saturday to p romote peace in Indo-China.

Short ly a f te r , as 14 of the s tudents began to return to Hope, they could see several individual t rouble makers breaking store windows only a block away.

J U S T BEFORE they pulled out , a man and a woman ap-proached and asked for refuge in the van. They were invited in and the woman told how she had just

been picked up into the air and hit on the back by two pol icemen.

As the t ruck started o f f , ap-proximately 20 police armed with riot shotguns and tear gas walked past. The couple was taken a few miles away to their apar tment and the Hope s tudents began their long trip back to Holland.

Final student recital to be Thurs. in Chapel

Wierenga receives first

prize for chem paper Senior chemistry major Wen-

dell Wierenga was awarded first prize for overall research perform-ance and presenta t ion of a re-search paper at the 21st annual s tudent symposium sponsored by the Chicago Section of the Ameri-can Chemical Society, held this year at Loyola University May 9.

The prize includes $75 and a plaque which will be formally presented in Chicago in June . Wierenga was in compet i t ion with s tuden t s f rom Nor thwes te rn , Pur-due, Indiana, Notre Dame and the University of Chicago.

Wierenga presented a research paper on his work to the Michigan

Academy of Arts and Sciences April 3, and gave a seminar at Hope April 27. He will be the first s tudent f rom the College to pre-sent a paper at an American Chemical Society Regional Meet-ing June 4-6 at Columbus, Ohio.

He was chosen by the chem-istry depa r tmen t to be the recipi-ent of the American Inst i tute of Chemists Award , given to a super-ior chemistry major. He was a-warded a summer research posi-tion at the DuPont laboratories where he will work in the Central Research Division. This fall he will begin graduate work at Stanford University.

The Hope College music de-par tment will present its final s tudent recital Thursday, at 7 p .m. in Dimnent Memorial ChapeL

Organist Glenn Pride will play Improvisat ion of Victimae Pas-chali by Charles Tournemire . George Bishop, pianist, will per-form Polonaise in A flat Major, Opus 53, by Frederic Chopin. A french horn quar te t , consisting of Daniel Edwards, James More-house, Sue Windover and Philip Drake, will per form the first movement of Concertino for Horn Quartet. Sally Korstange, soprano, will sing Heiden-Roskin by Frank Schubert and Voce di Primavera by Johann Strauss. She will be accompanied by Sharon H o f f m a n .

Cecila Hogenboom, organist , will play Carillon by Louise Vierne. Morehouse, f rench horn-ist, will pe r form Sonata For Horn and Piano by Bernhard Heiden. He will be accompanied by Anita Killen. Organist Dean Vander Schaaf will play Toccata Adagio and Fugue in C Major by Johann Sebastian Bach. To conclude the program the woodwind octe t will play Serenade Number 12 in C Minor, Andante H, Allegro I by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

The members of the woodwind octe t are Barbara Walvoord and Jeanne Jensma, oboe; Prudy Tower and Janine Sonnega, clari-net ; Drew Hinderer and Mary Schmidt , bassoon; and Sue Wind-over and Dan Edwards, f rench ^orn.

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Page 12: 05-15-1970

Page 12 Hope College anchor

Olivet takes Satur t - . r M

leheader, 8-5, 3-2 by Mark Van Oostenburg

anchor Reporter

The Hope College baseball team sustained a double loss here Saturday at the hands of Olivet by scores of 8-5 and 3-2.

THE LOSSES dropped Hope into the Michigan Intercollegiate Athlet ic Associat ion cellar and three full games back of f ront-run-ning Calvin. Hope is in a virtual tie, though, with Adrian and Al-bion.

The Dutch j u m p e d off to a 3-1 lead in the first inningof the first game Saturday as J o h n Womack tripled with the bases loaded. Womack singled in the four th run in the third inning also. Hope 's final tally was scored by Rob Cooper in the seventh on an error .

THE O L I V E T Comets pecked away at losing pi tcher Dick Nord-strom (5-4) for single runs in the first and third and a pair of runs in the fou r th inning.

Nords t rom made his exit in the f i f th inning when the Comets scored the go-ahead on an error and two hits. Bill O 'Connor fin-ished the f i f t h inning with no fur ther scoring^and blanked Olivet in the sixth. Don Remo pi tched the final f r ame and gave up Olivet's last three runs, a l though one was unearned . The final score was 8-5.

OLIVET SQUEAKED out a 3-2 win in the second game. Hope used all four of its pitchers in an

e f for t to s top Olivet. Lon Lriks started and was charged with all three of Olivet 's runs. O 'Connor , Remo and Nords t rom held the Comets scoreless for the balance of the game, but the Dutch could not catch up.

Hope scored in the fou r th inning on singles by John Pink and Rob Kidd, a walk to pinch Dave Macias and a f ielder 's choice by Cooper . The Dutch rallied but fell short jn the top of the seventh.

A F T E R SCORING on singles by Cooper and Harry Rumohr , Hope left the winning runs on base. R u m o h r and Pink led the Dutch with two hits a piece. The loss left Hope with a 2-4 record in the MI A A and a 10-13 over-all showing.

Hope has two regular hi t t ing over .300. Cooper is hit t ing a phenomena l .457 and Harry R u m o h r an impressive .333. Dick Nords t rom, a l though not at bat as o f t e n , is also bat t ing at a .333 clip.

RUMOHR AND JIM Lamer lead the team in runs bat ted in with 13 and 11 respectively. Lamer has also slammed two home runs, while R u m o h r has hit one. Womack has the most extra base hits on the team with four . These statist ics are based on Hope 's over-all season.

The Du tchmen will finish their season at Kalamazoo against the Hornets t o m o r r o w .

S T R E T C H I N G - B o b Zilinski reaches high to re tu rn an Olivet shot as his partner , Gordy McDonald, wa tches f r o m back cour t during Hope ' s victory over Olivet last Sa turday .

Tennis team wins over Olivet Comets

The Hope College tennis team rolled to an 8-1 victory over the Olivet Come t s last Sa turday , bringing Hope ' s Michigan Inter-collegiate Athle t ic Association re-cord to 2-3.

In first singles Todd Kraai de-feated Umur Yildiz of Olivet, 6-1, 6-1. Gary Teall defeated Zane Kolstrock, 6-4, 6-3, in second singles.

Craig Sch ro t enboe r defea ted Bob Moon, 1-6, 6-4, 6-3, and Russ Kiefer, playing f o u r t h singles de-feated Steve White of Olivet, 2-6, 6 - 1 , 6 - 1 .

Freshman Chuck Luyendyk , playing f i f t h singles, de fea ted Dick Gary in a tough match, 6-8, 7-5, 7-5, and ano the r f reshman, Hope 's Rick Smi th , whi tewashed Joe Chi t t ide of Olivet, 6-0, 6-0.

In the doubles matches, Luyen-dyk and Kiefer defea ted Yildiz and Chi t t ide , 7-5, 6-0. Hope ' s only loss came when Marty Begley and Jim T icknor of Hope lost to Moon and Kols tock, 6-4, 6-4. In the final doubles . Bob Zilinski and Gordy McDonald defeated Gary and White, 8-6, 6-4.

The Dutch were scheduled to meet Adrian at Adrian Wednes-day, but the meet was rained out . Weather permi t t ing , the meet was to be held yes terday. The Adrian meet is Hope ' s last dual meet of the season.

T o m o r r o w the team will parti-cipate in MI A A Field Day compe-t i t ion at Kalamazoo. According to Coach Dr. Lawrence Green, a good por t ion of Hope 's chances for success t o m o r r o w rest with the draw to de te rmine o p p o n e n t s for the players.

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P I C K - O F F ATTEMPT—Hope 's p i tcher Dick Nords t rom moves to first in an a t t emp t to pick-off an Olivet player in ac t ion last Sa turday at Van Raalte field. T h e Dutch lost bo th ends of the doub leheader , 8-5 and 3-2, with Nords t rom taking the loss in the first game to bring his record to 5-4.

One meet left in season

Trackmen down Olivet 89-52 by Dave Boersma anchor Reporter

The Hope College track team took an 89-52 decision over Olivet last Sa tu rday , giving the squad a 3-2 Michigan Intercollegiate Ath-letic Associat ion record , with one league meet remaining.

THE DUTCHMEN took 12 firsts in thei r v ic tory. Cliff Haver-dink won the 100 and 220 yard dashes wi th respective t imes of 9.7 and 22.7 seconds. The 9.7 t ime was a school record . Because of the s t rong wind fac tor , how-ever, the t ime was not given re cord status.

Dave T h o m a s and Bill Bekker-ing also captured two firsts. Thomas won the 120 yard high hurdles in 15.3 seconds and the 4 4 0 yard in te rmedia te hurdles with a t ime of 58.7 seconds. Bekkering took the shot put with a heave of 4 0 , 3 " and also pole vaulted 1 1 feet for the winning height.

O T H E R FIRSTS for Hope were Doug Fruech ten ich t in the mile with 4 : 4 1 . 2 , Brian Claxton in the two-mile run with 10:40 .2 , and Dave Rater ink , Bruce Geel-

hoed, T h o m a s and Haverdink taking the mile relay in 3 : 2 9 .

Also winning top spo ts were Steve Van Pelt in the tr iple j u m p with a dis tance of 2 8 ' 6 " , Gene Haulenbeek in the high j u m p with a leap of six feet and George Bennett in the javelin with a throw of 1 5 0 ' 1 0 " .

COACH G O R D O N Brewer c o m m e n t e d that Haverdink has qualified for the NCAA meet in the college division to be held at McAllister College in St . Paul the first weekend of June .

Coach Brewer noted that Haverdink has not yet lost in the 100 or 220 yard dashes this year .

THIS WEEKEND Hope will part icipate in the M1AA Field Day at Kalamazoo College, with the preliminaries being held today and the finals t o m o r r o w . Coach Brewer s tated that Alma College is practically a sure bet to win the

meet , but the compe t i t i on will be keen for second and third places.

On Tuesday , the team rounds out the 1970 season with a meet here against Adr ian .

Brewer expec t s to see several Hope t r ackmen do well in Field

Day c o m p e t i t i o n . In addit ion to Haverdink in the 100 and 220 yard dashes, T h o m a s is expected to be the man to beat in the 440 yard in te rmedia te hurdles, a race he won at Field Day last year. According to Brewer, Alma's Steve List is T h o m a s ' most serious challenge.

Hope ' s 4 4 0 yard relay team of Haverdink, Thomas , Hudson and Luyendyk is ano the r strong Dutch entry. This team lost only twice this year when they were disquali-fied in races they otherwise would have won.

Pole vaul ter Bekkering is also in a posit ion to win. Brewer said. Bekkering, who won the event last year at Field Day, has not been defeated this year. In the 880 yard run . Brewer said, Geelhoed is expec ted to be a con tender .

Urban study program

in Washington planned Hope College will o f fe r a new

urban program in Washington next year.

D I R E C T E D BY the Wash-ington Counci l for Metropol i tan Studies, the program seeks to ex-plore the meaning of " u r b a n " in the context of the liberal arts.

Object ives of the program, as stated in a letter to Dean for Academic Affa i rs Moret te Rider, are to create a disciplined and sustained dialogue around the ques t ion . How can liberal educa-tion best prepare s tuden t s for effect ive lives in an urban society?

THE YEAR-LONG field exper-iment will test the ideas that emerge f r o m this dialogue. Em-phasis will be placed on testing the implicat ions of the project for the campuses f rom which the stu-dents come and to which they return.

Included in the project is a plan to provide s tuden t s with f u n d s to visit their home cam-puses f r equen t ly for purposes of repor t ing and interpret ing the pro-jec t ' s findings.

TWENTY-FOUR liberal arts colleges have been invited to nom-inate one j un io r s tudent each with high academic and leadership qual i f icat ions. From this list eight persons will be selected to spend the 1970-71 year in Washington.

Each par t ic ipat ing s tudent will receive $ 2 , 5 0 0 fo r his year ' s work. He will pay his home college's tuit ion for the year. The program will carry a full year of academic credit in the social sciences and humanit ies . American University may handle enro l lment and credit t ransfer .

P R O J E C T D I R E C T O R S Elden Jacobsen and Parker Palma say that present u rban programs lack the corre la t ion with school cur-riculum to make them as worth-while as they should be.

"Our observat ion is that too many urban programs simply channel s tuden t s in to the city for a term, then channel them back to educat ional s t ruc tures which do no pick up or sustain their newly-acquired insights and en-ergies," said the directors .

T H E EMPHASIS on social service exper ience does not pre-pare s t uden t s for the larger role they will eventually play, that of the citizen in the 'knowledge so-c i e ty ' , " they con t inued .

Jacobsen and Palma hope that through their program new ways of incorpora t ing the urban pro-grams in to the overall curr iculum will be f o u n d .

In teres ted s tuden t s may con-tact Rider for addi t iona l in-fo rma t ion .

C L I F F H A V E R D I N K

Hope's <;oll team

suffers defeat against Olivet

Hope College's golf team sul-fered its f o u r t h defeat in five starts last Sa tu rday , losing to Olivet, 9,/2-61/2.

Olivet 's Jim Byrne was medal-ist for the day a f t e r shooting 75. Hope ' s T o m Page was close be-hind with a 76 to lead the Hope golfers. Tim Jalving followed with a 79, Chuck Lieder with an 80, Drake Van Beck had an 80, and Rick Hine closed out Hope's scor-ing with an 85.

The regular golf season ended at home yesterday against Adrian. Today is the Michigan Intercol-legiate Ath le t ic Association tield day, in which each man on each team plays 36 holes. With a good showing, Hope could end up in four th place in the final MIAA standings.

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