11-07-1969

8
Hope College fees hiked $250 by Tom Donia anchor Editor Tuition, room and board fees for the 1970-71 academic year will be $2,585 College treasurer and business manager Clarence Handlogten announced Monday. TUITION WILL be increased by $200 to $1,650. Fees for room will be increased from $370 to $390, and board will be up $30 to $530. The cultural affairs fee will remain at $ 1 5. The new rates were approved by the executive committee of the Board of Trustees at its meeting Monday. A letter signed by Hand- logten was distributed to parents of students t^ same day. IN THE LETTER Handlogten said, ''While we regret having to make the increases, we can do so without apology. We know of no other institution that has achieved a comparable level of academic standing with so carefully allo- cated financial resources. We in- vite a comparison of our costs with those of other colleges of comparable stature and perfor- mance." zsrrrmii "it is our hope that the in- creased provision for financial aid will enable every student desirous of a Hope College education to come here and complete his pro- gram," the letter continued. 4 Tf the increase creates undue hard- ship for you, please let us know. ,, THE FEES HIKE is the fifth in five years, representing a total of $850 in increased fees. At the beginning of 1966, students payed an additional $100 for room and hoard. In 1967 tuition was in- creased by $100, and in 1968 total fees were raised another V\ i mmiwwti h 82nd Anniversary—9 Hope College, Holland, Mich. 49423 November 7, 1969 Speech draws response Support 'overwhelms' Nixon President Nixon said Tues- day that he was overwhelmed by the public support shown for his plan to get out of Vietnam in response to Monday night's na- tionally televised speech in which he had called for support from "the great silent majority" of Americans. THE PRESIDENT, surrounded by stacks of telegrams, stated that "this demonstration of support can have more effect on ending the war sooner than the most skilled diplomacy, military tactics or training of South Vietnamese forces." White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the out- pouring of wires of support, which he estimated to number in the "high thousands," appeared to be a direct, quick response from the "great silent majority" sup- porting the President's course. NIXON SAID Monday that his Administration has "adopted a plan which we have worked out in cooperation with the South Viet- namese for the complete with- drawal of all U. S. ground combat forces and their replacement by South Vietnamese forces on an orderly timetable." The rate of American withdrawal can become greater as the South Vietnamese forces become stronger, Nixon said. He stated that U. S. action will also depend upon progress made in the Paris peace talks and the rate of enemy action. The President said that negotia- tions would move faster "in a direct relation to the support of the people of the United States." In Saigon, President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam said the speech was one of the greatest by a U. S. president and the Nixon policy was one which he and Nixon "completely agreed upon." BOTH THE VIET Cong and North Vietnamese representatives in Paris condemned the speech as portending American plans to pro- long and intensify the war. Henry Cabot Lodge, the U. S. ambas- sador to the Paris talks, called the Communist response disap- pointing. RICHARD M. NIXON Nixon disclosed Monday that he had undertaken several con- tacts with North Vietnam to try to break the stalemate in the Paris peace talks. These included a per- sonal letter to the late Ho Chi Minh in which Nixon urged "an early resolution to this tragic war." This, like all other ap- proaches, failed, he said. NIXON BLAMED the failure of the peace talks entirely on the enemy, and he specified how the war nevertheless had been scaled down by both sides. The President outlined the steps he had taken to end the conflict or, alternatively, disen- gage the United States, asserting that he had decided last January that unilateral withdrawal of all U. S. forces "would be a disaster not only for South Vietnam but for the United States and for the cause of peace." SUCH A COURSE, he de- clared, would result in "massa- cres" in South Vietnam and a "collapse of confidence" in the United States throughout the world. "Our defeat and humiliation in South Vietnam," Nixon said, "would without question promote recklessness in the councils of those great powers who have not yet abandoned their goals of world conquest. This would spark violence wherever our commit- ments help mantain peace - in the Middle East, in Berlin, even- tually even in the western hemi- sphere. "ULTIMATELY this would cost more lives. It would not bring peace but more war." Board awards Rusk renovation contract The awarding of a contract to remodel a section of the Rusk Building for use by the art depart- ment was announced Monday by the executive committee of the Board of Trustees. The renovation is scheduled to begin immediately and will be completed in 60 days. Contracts totaling $30,020 have been nego- tiated with Vander Hulst and Branderhorst Construction Co. and Reimink Plumbing and Heat- ing Co., both of Holland. The Rusk Building, formerly owned by the National Biscuit Co., is presently being used by the College maintenance staff. Fire prevention officials ruled that the building could not be used as an instructional area without renova- tion. Under the terms of the con- tract, the southeast section of the building will undergo remodelling to comply with fire regulations. The art department requested that no extensive refurbishing be car- ried out so that it could be free to experiment with such art forms as painting and sculpture. $200. Fees for the 1969 school year were increased $200. The 1969 price hike was announced last year in a letter to parents with almost identical wording as the letter explaining the latest in- crease. At present, student fees pay 78 percent of the actual operating cost of the College. This compares with an average of 33 percent for colleges and universities nation- ally. The balance of the operating budget is provided through gifts from alumni and friends of the College, grants and income from endowment. PAUL KLEINHEKSEL, direc- tor of financial aid, said that al- though the financial aid budget for the 1970-71 academic year has not been prepared, aid to students will increase in proportion to the fee hike. During the current year, approximately $286,000 will be disbursed to students in financial aid. Based on an enrollment of 2,000, this means that students receive an average of $143 each in funds from the College. Compared to Hope's $2,335 costs for the current academic year are Great Lakes Colleges As- sociation members Kalamazoo College at $2,730, Wabash College at $3,000, Albion College at $3,000, Denison University's $3,120, Ohio Wesleyan at $3,500, College of Wooster at $3,165, De Pauw University at $3,200, F'arl- ham College at $3,275, Antioch College at $3,350, Kenyon Col- lege at $3,275 and Oberlin at $3,500. President Calvin VanderWerf said of the fee hike, "You can't argue with facts, in order to im- prove the stature and the excel- lence of Hope College as an aca- demic institution, the fee increase was essential." Contracts awarded tor DcWitt Cultural Center by Tom Donia anchor Editor Contracts for construction of the DeWitt Student Cultural and Social Center and the Wichers addition to the Nykerk Hall of Music will be awarded Wednesday noon, Hope College President Cal- vin VanderWerf announced today. FINAL APPROVAL of the bids and the go-ahead on con- struction were given Wednesday by the Office of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare of the Federal Government. The decision to re- quest final HEW approval came from the executive committee of the Board of Trustees Monday. The construction price of the two buildings is $2,544,496. The total price, including architect's fees, landscaping, equipment and furnishings, will be close to $2,800,000, according to College treasurer and business manager Clarence Handlogten. ERHARDT CONSTRUCTION Co. of Grand Rapids was the low bidder on the general contract for the DeWitt Center at $1,530,900. Parkway Electric Co. of Holland won the electrical contract at $ 182,266. Holwerda-Huizenga Co. of Grand Rapids will perform the mechanical work for $427,100. The Wichers music addition will be built by Martin Dyke and Sons of Holland for $264,260. The mechanical contract will be signed by Vander Waals-Troske Co. of Grand Rapids for $72,923, and the electrical contract will go to DeFouw Electric Co. of Hol- land at $37,000. CONSTRUCTION OF the music building addition is ex- pected to be completed by Sept- ember of next year. The DeWitt Center will be built in 620 days according to the terms of the contract. According to VanderWerf, "This is the largest building pro- ject in the history of Hope Col- lege, both in terms of financial commitment and added space for College activities." THE CONTRACTS which will be awarded Wednesday do not include furnishings, certain addi- tions to the buildings and such items as theater rigging and light- ing. "These items can be added latter as additional funds become available," Handlogten said. Estimates made by the treasur- er's office show the College is approximately $388,000 short of the total price of the two build- ings. "Once construction begins, donors will be anxious to get on the bandwagon to make up the deficit," VanderWerf said. "We will offer to prospective donors the opportunity to name sections of the building, as well as other incentives for giving to the pro- ject," noted Handlogten. WHILE THE DATE to begin construction is in the hands of the contractors, VanderWerf said he hoped "excavation could begin as soon as possible, probably before winter sets in." Overseeing the construction will be architect Charles Stade of Park Ridge, ill. "The responsibility of the ar- chitect at this point is to protect the interests of his client and to check on the quality of the job performed by the contractor," VanderWerf stated. "Theoreti- cally, at least, the architect and the client are in partnership. Stade is a very exacting overseer." he added. VanderWerf also mentioned that Stade said the DeWitt Center was the finest building that the architect has ever designed. 'kr- MUSIC HALL ADDITION- Pictured above is the architect's drawing of the Wichers addition to the Nykerk Hall of Music to be located on the east side of the present music building.

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Transcript of 11-07-1969

Page 1: 11-07-1969

Hope College fees hiked $250 by Tom Donia

anchor Editor

T u i t i o n , r o o m and board fees

for t he 1970-71 a c a d e m i c year

will be $ 2 , 5 8 5 College t r easure r

and bus iness manage r C la rence

H a n d l o g t e n a n n o u n c e d M o n d a y .

T U I T I O N WILL be increased

by $ 2 0 0 to $ 1 , 6 5 0 . Fees fo r r o o m

will be increased f r o m $ 3 7 0 to

$ 3 9 0 , and board will be up $ 3 0 to

$ 5 3 0 . T h e cu l tura l a f fa i r s fee will

r ema in at $ 1 5.

T h e new rates were a p p r o v e d

by the execu t ive c o m m i t t e e of the

Board of T r u s t e e s at its mee t ing

M o n d a y . A le t t e r signed by Hand-

logten was d i s t r ibu ted to p a r e n t s

of s t u d e n t s t ^ same day .

IN T H E L E T T E R H a n d l o g t e n

said, ' 'Whi le we regret having to

make the increases, we can do so

w i t h o u t a p o l o g y . We k n o w of no

o the r i n s t i t u t i o n that has achieved

a c o m p a r a b l e level of a cademic

s t and ing wi th so ca re fu l ly allo-

ca ted f inanc ia l resources . We in-

vite a c o m p a r i s o n of ou r costs

wi th those of o t h e r colleges of

c o m p a r a b l e s t a tu re and per for -

m a n c e . "

zsrrrmii

" i t is ou r h o p e that the in-

creased provision f o r f inancia l aid will enable every s t u d e n t des i rous

of a Hope College e d u c a t i o n to

c o m e here and c o m p l e t e his pro-

g r a m , " the le t ter c o n t i n u e d . 4Tf

the increase c rea tes u n d u e hard-

ship fo r you , please let us k n o w . , ,

T H E F E E S HIKE is the f i f t h in

five years , r ep re sen t ing a total of

$ 8 5 0 in increased fees. At the

beginning of 1966 , s t u d e n t s payed

an add i t i ona l $ 1 0 0 for room and

hoa rd . In 1967 tu i t ion was in-

creased by $ 1 0 0 , and in 1968

to ta l fees were raised a n o t h e r

V\

i mmiwwti h

8 2 n d Anniversary—9 H o p e Col lege, Ho l l and , Mich. 4 9 4 2 3 N o v e m b e r 7, 1 9 6 9

Speech draws response

Support 'overwhelms' Nixon Pres ident N ixon said Tues-

day tha t he was o v e r w h e l m e d by the publ ic s u p p o r t s h o w n for his plan to get ou t of V i e t n a m in r e sponse to M o n d a y n igh t ' s na-

t ional ly televised speech in which he had called fo r s u p p o r t f r o m " t h e great s i lent m a j o r i t y " of Amer icans .

T H E P R E S I D E N T , s u r r o u n d e d by s t acks of te legrams, s ta ted tha t " t h i s d e m o n s t r a t i o n of s u p p o r t can have more e f f ec t on end ing the war sooner t h a n t h e mos t skilled d i p l o m a c y , mi l i ta ry tact ics or t ra in ing of S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e fo rce s . "

White House Press Secre ta ry Rona ld Ziegler said t h e out -pou r ing of wires of s u p p o r t , which he e s t ima ted to n u m b e r in the " h i g h t h o u s a n d s , " a p p e a r e d to be a d i rec t , qu ick r e s p o n s e f r o m the "g rea t s i lent m a j o r i t y " sup-por t ing the P res iden t ' s course .

N I X O N SAID M o n d a y that his A d m i n i s t r a t i o n has " a d o p t e d a plan which we have w o r k e d out in c o o p e r a t i o n wi th the S o u t h Viet-namese fo r t he c o m p l e t e with-drawal of all U. S. g r o u n d c o m b a t f o r c e s and thei r r e p l a c e m e n t by S o u t h V ie tnamese f o r c e s on an o rde r ly t i m e t a b l e . " T h e rate of A m e r i c a n w i t h d r a w a l can become grea ter as the S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e fo rces b e c o m e s t ronge r , Nixon said. He s ta ted tha t U. S. ac t ion will also d e p e n d u p o n progress made in the Paris peace talks and the ra te of e n e m y ac t i on .

T h e Pres ident said tha t negotia-t ions would move f a s t e r " in a direct re la t ion to the s u p p o r t of the people of the Uni ted S ta t e s . "

In Saigon, Pres iden t Nguyen Van Thieu of S o u t h V i e t n a m said the speech was one of t he greatest by a U. S. p res iden t and t h e N i x o n policy was o n e which he

and Nixon " c o m p l e t e l y agreed

u p o n . "

BOTH T H E V I E T Cong and N o r t h V i e t n a m e s e r ep resen ta t ives in Paris c o n d e m n e d the speech as po r t end ing A m e r i c a n p l ans to pro-long and in t ens i fy the war. Henry C a b o t Lodge, the U. S. ambas-sador to the Paris ta lks , called the C o m m u n i s t r e s p o n s e disap-po in t ing .

R I C H A R D M. N I X O N

N i x o n disclosed M o n d a y t h a t he had u n d e r t a k e n several con-t ac t s w i th N o r t h V ie tnam to t r y t o break the s t a l ema te in the Paris peace ta lks . T h e s e inc luded a per-sonal l e t t e r to the late Ho Chi Minh in which Nixon urged " a n early r e so lu t i on t o th is t ragic w a r . " T h i s , like all o t h e r ap-p roaches , fa i led, he said.

NIXON B L A M E D the fa i lure of the peace ta lks en t i re ly on the e n e m y , and he speci f ied how the war never the less had been scaled d o w n by b o t h sides.

T h e Pres iden t ou t l ined the s teps he had t a k e n to end the conf l ic t or , a l t e rna t ive ly , disen-gage the Un i t ed Sta tes , assert ing tha t he had dec ided last J a n u a r y t h a t un i l a te ra l wi thdrawal of all U. S. fo rces " w o u l d be a disaster no t only fo r S o u t h Vie tnam but f o r t he Uni ted S t a t e s and fo r the cause of p e a c e . "

SUCH A C O U R S E , he de-clared, wou ld result in "massa -c res" in S o u t h V i e t n a m and a "co l l apse of c o n f i d e n c e " in the Uni ted S t a t e s t h r o u g h o u t the world .

" O u r d e f e a t and humi l i a t ion in S o u t h V i e t n a m , " Nixon said, " w o u l d w i t h o u t ques t i on p r o m o t e recklessness in the counc i l s of those great p o w e r s w h o have not ye t a b a n d o n e d thei r goals of world c o n q u e s t . T h i s would spark violence wherever our c o m m i t -m e n t s he lp m a n t a i n peace - in t he Middle Eas t , in Berlin, even-tual ly even in the western hemi-sphere .

" U L T I M A T E L Y this wou ld cost m o r e lives. It would not bring peace but m o r e w a r . "

Board awards Rusk renovation contract

T h e award ing of a c o n t r a c t t o r e m o d e l a sec t ion of the Rusk Bui lding for use by the art depa r t -men t was a n n o u n c e d M o n d a y by the execu t ive c o m m i t t e e of t he Board of Trus tees .

T h e r enova t ion is s chedu led to begin i m m e d i a t e l y and will be c o m p l e t e d in 60 days. C o n t r a c t s t o t a l i ng $ 3 0 , 0 2 0 have been nego-t ia ted wi th Vander Hulst a n d B r a n d e r h o r s t C o n s t r u c t i o n Co . and R e i m i n k P l u m b i n g and Heat -ing Co. , bo th of Hol land .

T h e Rusk Building, f o r m e r l y o w n e d by the Nat iona l Biscuit

Co. , is p r e sen t ly being used by the College m a i n t e n a n c e s taff . F i re p reven t ion o f f i c i a l s ruled that the bui lding cou ld not be used as an in s t ruc t iona l area wi thout renova-tion.

Under the t e r m s of t he con-t rac t , the s o u t h e a s t section of the bui ld ing will u n d e r g o remode l l ing to c o m p l y with f ire regula t ions . T h e art d e p a r t m e n t r eques ted that no ex tens ive r e fu rb i sh ing be car-ried ou t so tha t it could be f ree to e x p e r i m e n t wi th such art f o r m s as pa in t ing a n d scu lp tu re .

$200 . Fees fo r the 1969 school

year were increased $ 2 0 0 . T h e

1969 price h ike was a n n o u n c e d

last year in a l e t t e r to p a r e n t s with

a lmost ident ica l word ing as the

let ter exp la in ing the la tes t in-

crease.

At present , s t u d e n t fees pay 78

percent of the actual ope ra t i ng

cost of the College. This c o m p a r e s

with an average of 33 pe rcen t for colleges and univers i t ies nat ion-

ally. T h e ba lance of the ope ra t i ng

budget is p rovided t h r o u g h gif ts

f r o m a lumni and f r i ends of the

College, grants and i n c o m e f r o m e n d o w m e n t .

P A U L K L E I N H E K S E L , direc-

tor of f inancia l aid, said tha t al-

t h o u g h the f inancia l aid budget

for t he 1970-71 academic year has

not been p r e p a r e d , aid to s t u d e n t s

will increase in p r o p o r t i o n to the

fee h ike . Dur ing the c u r r e n t year,

a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 2 8 6 , 0 0 0 will be

d isbursed to s t u d e n t s in f inancial

aid. Based on an e n r o l l m e n t of

2 ,000 , this means that s t u d e n t s

receive an average of $ 1 4 3 each in

f u n d s f r o m the College.

C o m p a r e d to H o p e ' s $ 2 , 3 3 5

costs fo r t h e cu r ren t a c a d e m i c

year are Grea t Lakes Col leges As-

soc ia t ion m e m b e r s K a l a m a z o o

College at $ 2 , 7 3 0 , Wabash College

at $ 3 , 0 0 0 , Albion College at

$ 3 , 0 0 0 , Den i son Univers i ty ' s

$3 ,120 , O h i o Wesleyan at $3 ,500 ,

College of Wooster at $ 3 , 1 6 5 , De

Pauw Universi ty at $ 3 , 2 0 0 , F'arl-

ham College at $ 3 , 2 7 5 , A n t i o c h

College at $ 3 , 3 5 0 , K e n y o n Col-

lege at $ 3 , 2 7 5 and Ober l in at

$ 3 , 5 0 0 .

Pres ident Calvin VanderWerf

said of the fee hike, " Y o u can' t

argue with facts, in o rde r to im-

prove the s t a tu re and the excel-

lence of Hope College as an aca-

demic ins t i tu t ion , the fee increase

was e s sen t i a l . "

Contracts awarded tor DcWitt Cultural Center

by Tom Donia anchor Editor

C o n t r a c t s for c o n s t r u c t i o n of the DeWitt S t u d e n t C u l t u r a l and Social C e n t e r and the Wichers add i t ion to the N y k e r k Hall of Music will be awarded Wednesday n o o n , Hope College Pres iden t Cal-vin VanderWerf a n n o u n c e d today .

F I N A L A P P R O V A L of the bids and t h e go-ahead on con-s t ruc t ion were given W e d n e s d a y by the O f f i c e of Hea l th , Educa-t ion and Welfare of t he Federa l G o v e r n m e n t . T h e decis ion to re-ques t f inal HEW approva l came f r o m the execu t ive c o m m i t t e e of the Board of T r u s t e e s M o n d a y .

T h e c o n s t r u c t i o n pr ice of the t w o bui ldings is $ 2 , 5 4 4 , 4 9 6 . T h e to ta l price, inc lud ing a r c h i t e c t ' s fees, landscaping , e q u i p m e n t and furn ish ings , will be close t o $ 2 , 8 0 0 , 0 0 0 , accord ing to College t reasurer a n d bus iness manager Clarence H a n d l o g t e n .

E R H A R D T C O N S T R U C T I O N Co. of G r a n d Rapids was the low b idder on the general c o n t r a c t f o r the DeWitt C e n t e r at $ 1 , 5 3 0 , 9 0 0 . Parkway Elec t r ic Co. of Hol land won the e lectr ical c o n t r a c t at $ 182 ,266 . Ho lwerda -Hu izenga Co . of Grand Rap ids will p e r f o r m the mechan ica l work for $ 4 2 7 , 1 0 0 .

The Wichers music add i t i on will be bui l t by Mart in D y k e and Sons of Ho l l and fo r $ 2 6 4 , 2 6 0 . T h e mechan ica l c o n t r a c t will be signed by Vander Waals-Troske Co . of G r a n d Rap ids f o r $ 7 2 , 9 2 3 , and the e lectr ical c o n t r a c t will go t o D e F o u w Electr ic Co . of Hol-land at $ 3 7 , 0 0 0 .

C O N S T R U C T I O N O F the music bu i ld ing a d d i t i o n is ex-pec ted to be c o m p l e t e d by Sept -e m b e r of nex t year . T h e DeWitt Cen te r will be bui l t in 6 2 0 days accord ing t o the t e r m s of t he con t r ac t .

A c c o r d i n g to VanderWer f , " T h i s is the largest bui ld ing pro-ject in the h is tory of H o p e Col-lege, bo th in t e r m s of f inanc ia l c o m m i t m e n t and a d d e d space for College ac t iv i t ies . "

T H E C O N T R A C T S which will be a w a r d e d Wednesday d o not include furn ish ings , ce r ta in addi-t ions to the bui ldings a n d such i tems as t hea t e r rigging and light-ing. " T h e s e i tems can be a d d e d lat ter as add i t iona l f u n d s become avai lab le ," Hand log ten said.

Es t ima t e s made by the t reasur-er 's o f f i c e show the College is a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 3 8 8 , 0 0 0 shor t of the t o t a l price of the two build-ings. " O n c e c o n s t r u c t i o n begins, d o n o r s will be a n x i o u s to get on the b a n d w a g o n to make up the de f i c i t , " VanderWerf said. "We will o f f e r to prospec t ive d o n o r s the o p p o r t u n i t y to name sec t ions of the bui lding, as well as o the r incent ives for giving t o the pro-j e c t , " no ted Hand log t en .

WHILE THE DATE to begin c o n s t r u c t i o n is in the h a n d s of the c o n t r a c t o r s , VanderWerf said he h o p e d " e x c a v a t i o n could begin as soon as possible, p r o b a b l y b e f o r e win te r se ts in . " Oversee ing the c o n s t r u c t i o n will be a rch i t ec t Char les S tade of Park Ridge, ill.

" T h e responsibi l i ty of the ar-chi tec t at this point is to p ro t ec t the in teres ts of his client and to check on the qua l i ty of the j o b p e r f o r m e d by the c o n t r a c t o r , " V a n d e r W e r f s ta ted . " T h e o r e t i -cally, at least, the a rch i t ec t a n d the cl ient are in pa r tne r sh ip . S tade is a very exac t ing oversee r . " he a d d e d .

VanderWerf also m e n t i o n e d that S t a d e said the DeWit t C e n t e r was the f inest bui lding tha t the a rch i tec t has ever designed.

'kr-

MUSIC H A L L A D D I T I O N - P ic tu red a b o v e is the a r c h i t e c t ' s d rawing of the Wichers a d d i t i o n to the N y k e r k Hall of Music t o be loca ted on the east s ide of the presen t mus ic bui ld ing .

Page 2: 11-07-1969

Page 2 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969

Urban work-study programs provided by GLCA Editor 's Note: This is the second article in a series on the Great Lakes Colleges Association and the oppor tuni t ies it provides for students. This week's art icle ex-amines the Philadelphia Urban Semester and the New York Fine Arts Semester programs.

by Sarah Penny

anchor Assistant News Edi tor

T h e Grea t Lakes Col leges As-socia t ion o f f e r s t w o o p p o r t u n i t i e s for o f f - c a m p u s s tudy in this coun -try: T h e Phi ladelphia Urban Se-mester and the New York Ar t s P r o g r a m a n d I n t e r n a t i o n a l S tud ies .

T H E G L C A , IN c o o p e r a t i o n with the Phi ladelphia Board of E d u c a t i o n , in i t ia ted the Philadel-phia Urban Semes te r " in o r d e r to give s t u d e n t s di rect pa r t i c ipa t ion in the social changes tha t are occu r ing in u r b a n a reas , " acco rd -ing to a G L C A off ic ia l .

Organ ized du r ing the l % 6 - 6 7 schoo l year , t he Phi lade lphia pro-gram a c c o m m o d a t e s 80 s t u d e n t s per semes te r . Pa r t i c ipa t ion in the j un io r or senior year is bes t , said Dr. David Clark , p rogram repre-senta t ive at H o p e , because stu-den t s are then cons ide r ing career goals and are ready for advanced s t u d y . S t u d e n t s are r e spons ib l e for their o w n housing. A l t h o u g h no o n e school ac ts as " a g e n t " for the p r o g r a m . Dr. Rober t De Haan of H o p e ' s e d u c a t i o n d e p a r t m e n t is the p rogram d i r ec to r .

N O P A R T I C U L A R field or ma jo r is r equ i r ed for pa r t i c ipa t ion in the p rog ram, hut c o u r s e s in u r b a n soc io logy , p sycho logy and p o l i t i c a l science are recom-m e n d e d . S t u d e n t s direct tfieir own e d u c a t i o n by choos ing in-dividual a reas of work and s tudy . Pa r t i c i pan t s earn 16 h o u r s of credi t f r o m the i r h o m e c a m p u s . T h e y are d i scouraged f r o m tak ing cour ses at local Phi ladelphia uni-versities. " S t u d e n t s learn while

2 for YOU • MEDITATIONS

IN UNI VERSE

Paul Monka

A unique blend of East-

ern and Christ ian in-

sight permeates these

fresh medi tat ions.

In a f ine ly balanced

relat ionship, spare verse

and s t r ik ing color illus-

t rat ions impart to each

page a growing dep th

and significance. $3.95

' ONE CIRCUS 3 RINGS, FOREVER AND EVER, HOORAY!

Joseph Pintauro

This is a book of songs

and poems that splash

themselves across these

pages in br i l l iant co lor ,

i t is a song of hope that

dances over the debris

of the past. It is the

hardest song for man to

sing because it is a song

of compassion for his

w o r l d as it really is, a

s tockpi le of si l ly gods

and sil ly systems that bruise his soul.

$3.95

B A K E R

BOOK HOOSE 48th E. 8th St.

Down town , Hol land

t hey serve" acco rd ing to a pro-gram s p o k e s m a n .

" T h e Phi lade lph ia Urban Se-mes te r is not l imi ted to e d u c a t i o n s t u d e n t s , " e m p h a s i z e d Clark . Work also exis t s fo r s t u d e n t s of religion, t h e social sc iences and the humani t i e s .

H A L F O F T H E Phi lade lphia p rogram involves a work pro jec t wi th p ro fes s iona l s in the com-mun i ty . S t u d e n t s are e x p e c t e d to discover respons ib le so lu t i ons t o p rob lems . T h e y are cons ide red respons ib le to m e m b e r s of the Phi ladelphia Schoo l Board , which pays them a t o k e n p a y m e n t of S 4 0 a m o n t h .

Teach ing and c lass room work are possibil i t ies. In the pas t , stu-d e n t s have also worked with ur-ban p lanners , sociologis ts , school psychologis t s , ci ty c o u n c i l m e n and air po l lu t ion e x p e r t s .

S t u d e n t s have served in church-related p ro j ec t s , in crea t ive d rama and film m a k i n g for schoo l s and n e i g h b o r h o o d cen t e r s and as ad-minis t ra t ive ass is tants t o school and c o m m u n i t y of f ic ia l s . At the Eastern Pennsylvania Psychia t r ic Ins t i tu te s t u d e n t s tes ted p a t i e n t s and organized p r o g r a m s for wards .

S T U D E N T S A R E involved in language a r t s fi lm m a k i n g , read ing labs, c o m p u t e r ass is tance instruc-t ion , closed circuit te levision, a t r a n s i t i o n a l k i n d e r g a r t e n and school and c o m m u n i t y news-papers .

S t u d e n t s also pa r t i c ipa t e in a s tudy seminar fo r ana lyz ing work exper i ences . All s t u d e n t s are re-quired to a t t e n d a S e m i n a r on the C i ty , in wh ich they e x a m i n e wel-fare i n s t i t u t ions , po l ice depa r t -men t s . p o v e r t y , local g o v e r n m e n t a n d e d u c a t i o n a l i n s t i t u t i ons . Major e m p h a s i s is p laced on t h e p r o b l e m s of racism. In a d d i t i o n , special s emina r s are held on White Perspect ives of A f r o - A m e r i c a n his-tory and f i lm m a k i n g and simula-t ion w o r k s h o p s . "Al l these pro-grams are designed to meet college r e q u i r e m e n t s , f u r t h e r i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d y and fac i l i t a te persona l de-v e l o p m e n t . " said Clark .

H E L P I N G H A N D - H o p e '69 g r adua t e Steve L u n d q u i s t helps t w o high schoo l s t u d e n t s in the prepara-t ion of their s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r . L u n d q u i s t was a pa r t i c ipan t in the GLCA Phi ladelphia S e m e s t e r p rogram.

G L C A S T U D E N T S have met mixed reac t ion f r o m the G e r m a n -t o w n c o m m u n i t y . Last yea r , b lack mi l i t an t s met s t u d e n t s at the air-port and d e m a n d e d t h e y r e t u r n h o m e . " S o m e disl ike t h e idea of whi te l iberals solving black p r o b -l ems , " s ta ted Clark . Never the less , m a n y black l eaders w e l c o m e t h e p rog ram. " S c h o o l s have e x t e n d e d great c o o p e r a t i o n to t h e G L C A . T h e y a p p r e c i a t e the e n t h u s i a s m and f r e s h n e s s of s t u d e n t s , " Clark c o n t i n u e d .

Since s t u d e n t s hold r e spons ib l e pos i t ions , they b e c o m e part of t h e t eam, ra the r t h a n jus t " l e a r n e r s . " As a resul t , the i r a t t i t u d e and m o t i v a t i o n is c h a n g e d . T h e y resist the p a t t e r n s of t he c a m p u s . " T h e y

TE K they mean anything to you, try LOVE.

Progressive Rock

WLA/FM

W STEREO 97

and More

are not a b o u t to go back to be ing passive l ea rne r s , " s ta ted Clark .

P E N N E Y M O R S E , who part ic i-pa ted in the Phi lade lphia Semes-ter . now works with the Com-m u n i t y Ac t ion House in Hol land . " I n Ph i l ade lph ia , 1 was cha l lenged by o t h e r i n s t i t u t i o n s , " she said, " a n d 1 was f o r c e d to c o n f r o n t myse l f . 1 deve loped a new aware-ness. By a p p l y i n g my e d u c a t i o n , 1 ac tua l ly cha l lenged it. Phi ladel-phia r e i n f o r c e d my belief in the need for e d u c a t i o n and a degree . O n e of my biggest chal lenges n o w is t o carry my e n t h u s i a s m and d e d i c a t i o n hack to H o l l a n d . "

A second G L C A p rog ram, the A r t s P rog ram in New Y o r k , was i naugura t ed the second semes t e r of the l t )6S-6 t ) school vear .

" T H E GLCA A R T S p r o g r a m in New York was designed to pro-vide especial ly rich o p p o r t u n i t i e s fo r s t u d e n t s ser iously in t e re s t ed in the a r t s , " a cco rd ing to a G L C A s p o k e s m a n . O h i o Wesleyan is the agent school . A p p r o x i m a t e l y 25 s t u d e n t s , p r e f e r a b l y j u n i o r s or se-n io rs m a j o r i n g in the ar ts , may p a r t i c i p a t e each semes te r . Partici-p a n t s receive 16 h o u r s c redi t .

T h e G L C A ren ts a c lass room-social cen te r fo r seminar mee t ings . S t u d e n t s are r e spons ib le fo r the i r o w n hous ing , b u t the d i r e c t o r s o f f e r ass is tance . O f t e n s t u d e n t s pass h o u s i n g a long to new stu-den t s , t h u s f o r m i n g a hous ing n e t w o r k .

T H E C O U R S E S T R U C T U R E is des igned " t o give s t u d e n t s the o p p o r t u n i t y for c o n c e n t r a t e d and in tensive work in f ie lds of ar t . New York Ci ty , as the cu l tu ra l cen te r of the na t i on , o f f e r s muse-ums, l ibraries, t hea t e r and musical p r o d u c t i o n s plus ar t is t person-

IN THE NOVEMBER ISSUE OF

CONSUMER REPORTS THE AIRLINES

W h a t t h e y don't a d v e r t i s e . . . w h a t a re t he r i g h t s o f t he t i c k e t e d passenge r?

CASSETTE TAPE RECORDERS The c a s s e t t e s y s t e m of t a p e r e c o r d i n g l ooks l i ke t h e w a v e of t h e

f u t u r e . B u t is it g o o d e n o u g h now? E igh teen p o r t a b l e m o d e l s are r a t e d .

DURABLE-PRESS SHIRTS H o w we l l d o t h e y do w h a t t h e y ' r e s u p p o s e d to? F i f t een b r o a d c l o t h

s h i r t s a n d s e v e n o x f o r d s h i r t s a re ra ted .

HOT PLATES The e lec t r i c ho t p l a te is an i m p o r t a n t a p p l i a n c e in t h e l ives of m a n y s t u d e n t s . Severa l of t h e h o t p l a tes t e s t e d f o r t h e r e p o r t a re po ten-

t i a l l y h a z a r d o u s — t h e y m i g h t g ive y o u a l e t ha l s h o c k .

CHAMPAGNE Is a $ 1 5 b o t t l e rea l l y w o r t h m o r e t h a n a $ 7 b o t t l e 7 Expe r t t a s t e r s

w h o d i d n ' t k n o w w h a t b r a n d s t h e y were s a m p l i n g p r o v i d e t h e

a n s w e r .

Plus reports and brand-name Ratings on freezers, stain-less-steel flatware, toasters and melamine dmnerware.

ne l , " s t a t ed Delber t Michel, dir-ec to r of the p r o g r a m at Hope . "We do not s imply t ransplant Hope to New York C i t y , " he e m p h a s i z e d . " N e w York is a com-pletely d i f f e r e n t e n v i r o n m e n t . "

The cou r se of s t u d y has three par ts . A semina r on ar ts enables s t u d e n t s to a t t e n d art exh ib i t s , t hea t e r , d a n c e and mus ic p roduc-t ions on a dai ly basis. S t u d e n t s a t t e n d week ly d i scuss ions on what w o r k s they have seen. A second division enab les s t u d e n t s t o serve as a p p r e n t i c e s in m u s e u m s and to individual ar t is ts . Museum work involves cu ra to r i a l pos i t ions wi th slide and p h o t o g r a p h y co l lec t ions , r e s to ra t i on of art w o r k s and in shipping d e p a r t m e n t s . Private ap-p ren t i cesh ips he lp s t u d e n t s ex-plore new c o n c e p t s in ar t . " T h e value of the a p p r e n t i c e s h i p pro-gram is in the c o n t a c t with ideas, w o r k s of art and ar t i s t s them-selves." s t a t ed Michel .

I N D E P E N D E N T S T U D Y , the third area , is d i r e c t e d f r o m the h o m e c a m p u s . Th i s work is plan-ned b e f o r e s t u d e n t s e m b a r k on the p rog ram and shou ld necessi-t a te r e s idency in N e w York. Stu-d e n t s may take course work at a New York i n s t i t u t i o n if such s tudy is not avai lable at the home campus .

"We hope to ga the r feedback on the p r o g r a m f r o m re turn ing p a r t i c i p a n t s , " said Michel . "We h o p e s t u d e n t s have deve loped new insights, a new awarenes s of what is going on in f i e lds of art by being part of wha t is going o n . "

Hope debaters

f inish first

in five-way l ie Hope Col lege f in i shed in an

unusua l f ive-way tie f o r first place in a d e b a t e con t e s t held at Kellogg C o m m u n i t y Col lege O c t . 25.

D e b a t e r s f r o m H o p e , Grand Rap ids J u n i o r Col lege, Henry Lord C o m m u n i t y College, West-ern Michigan Univers i ty and host Kellogg all f in i shed with 3-3 re-cords a f t e r the d a y l o n g compet i -t ion .

T h e Hope negat ive t eam of senior T o m Mara tea and senior Steve H a r m s received an "excel-l e n t " ra t ing by winn ing two of th ree deba tes .

T h e H o p e a f f i r m a t i v e team of j un io r J o h n Windover and fresh-man L y n n a e R i e m e r s m a , won one of t h r e e .

T h e Hope d e b a t e r s were ac-c o m p a n i e d by M. Harold Mikle. c h a i r m a n of the d e p a r t m e n t of c o m m u n i c a t i o n s and deba t e coach .

T h e d e b a t e team will travel to Ann A r b o r t o m o r r o w for d e b a t e c o m p e t i t i o n .

Page 3: 11-07-1969

November 7, 1 9 6 9 Hope College anchor Page 3

For graduate study

4 A11 approves Chem. course T h e A c a d e m i c Af fa i r s Board

c o n t i n u e d to discuss possible means of assist ing H o p e s t u d e n t s a d m i t t e d wi th i n a d e q u a t e educa-t iona l b a c k g r o u n d s at its meet -ings Oc t . 28 and T u e s d a y .

IN O T H E R ac t ion O c t . 28 , t h e Board a p p r o v e d a new chemis t ry course t o be taught on t h e g r a dua t e level t o area chemis t s , agreed to accep t t rans-fer c redi t s fo r c o r r e s p o n d e n c e courses and a p p r o v e d a series of p roposed cour ses in the d e p a r t -m e n t of c o m m u n i c a t i o n .

T h e Board heard Dr. Leslie Beach of t he d e p a r t m e n t of psycho logy and a d i r e c t o r of the s u m m e r trial p rogram in dis-cussion T u e s d a y a b o u t m a k i n g the s u m m e r p rog ram m o r e valu-able t o s t u d e n t s wi th weak edu-c a t i o n a l b a c k g r o u n d s .

Several Board m e m b e r s n o t e d tha t the re were ac tua l ly f o u r s u m m e r p r o g r a m s in e f f ec t last s u m m e r . O n e program was de-signed specif ical ly for s t u d e n t s f r o m B r e w t o n , Ala. A second se t -up was t h e regular s u m m e r trial p rog ram. A third was f u n d -ed and d i rec ted by the Federa l G o v e r n m e n t ' s U p w a r d Bound p rogram. T h e f o u r t h s u m m e r ses-sion was f u n d e d by the S ta te of Michigan for Michigan s t u d e n t s .

T H E B O A R D asked Beach if the f o u r p r o g r a m s could be un i t ed in to o n e un i t . Beach p o i n t e d out tha t the p rog ram for Michigan s t u d e n t s had as its goal the p r e p a r a t i o n of high

schoo l sen iors fo r col lege or uni-versity a n y w h e r e , whereas t h e s u m m e r trial p r o g r a m was de-signed to p repa re s t u d e n t s speci-fically fo r Hope .

Rider also said the U p w a r d Bound s u m m e r session involved high schoo l s t u d e n t s of several levels, a n d did not necessar i ly lead to e n r o l l m e n t of t hose s tu-d e n t s at Hope Col lege . He n o t e d tha t it was a f ede ra l p rog ram u n d e r sepa ra t e f u n d s and di rec-tors . He s ta ted tha t U p w a r d Bound cou ld not b e c o m e a part of t he to ta l s u m m e r p r o g r a m because of federa l r e s t r i c t ions .

T H E B O A R D will f u r t h e r s t u d y the q u e s t i o n of i n c o r p o r a -t ing the aid p r o g r a m f o r Brew-ton s t u d e n t s wi th the s u m m e r trial p rog ram at a la ter m e e t i n g .

In ac t ion O c t . 28 , A A B ap-p r o v e d a g r a d u a t e c h e m i s t r y c o u r s e . T h e new c h e m i s t r y cou r se , which is no t avai lable t o u n d e r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s , will car ry t h r e e h o u r s of g r a d u a t e c red i t . T h e p r o p o s a l f o r t h e course c a m e in r e sponse t o n u m e r o u s r eques t s f r o m area chemis t s w o r k i n g in i n d u s t r y w h o wished to i m p r o v e thei r k n o w l e d g e of m o d e r n deve lop-m e n t s in c h e m i s t r y , a c c o r d i n g to Dr. Douglas N e c k e r s , associa te p rofessor of c h e m i s t r y .

D E A N R I D E R n o t e d that at p resen t H o p e has no de f in i t i ve pol icy on o f f e r i n g cour ses fo r g r adua t e c red i t . R ider expressed p a r t i c u l a r c o n c e r n a b o u t the

Flutist Barbara DeHart to present recital Thurs.

Senior mus ic m a j o r Barbara DeHar t will present a f lu t e reci-tal T h u r s d a y at 8 : 1 5 p .m. in S n o w A u d i t o r i u m . Miss DeHart will be a c c o m p a n i e d by ( l l enn Pride.

T h e p rog ram will consist of f i v e m a j o r works , inc lud ing Suite in A Minor for Solo I'lutc b y J o h a n n S e b a s t i a n Bach . I 'ocni by Char l e s G r i f f e s , han -taisic by G e o r g e Hue , I'iccc cn i'onuc (/c Habanera by Maur ice Ravel , and Conccrto No. I in (1 by Wolfgang A m a d e us Moza r t .

Miss DeHar t is m a j o r i n g in chora l e d u c a t i o n a n d will gra-d u a t e in J a n u a r y of 1 ( )70 . How-ever, she will c o n t i n u e her s tu-dies at Hope unt i l J u n e . She p lans to e n t e r g r a d u a t e schoo l , but has no d e f i n i t e p lans con-cern ing what schoo l she will a t t e n d . B A R B A R A DE H A R T

fOh What a Lovely War'

to be presented tonight, Sat. Oh What A Lovely War will be

p r e sen t ed by the H o p e College t h e a t e r d e p a r t m e n t f o r the last two t imes tonight and t o m o r r o w at 8 in Snow A u d i t o r i u m .

T H E P L A Y , a p ier ro t show, cons i s t s of a success ion of theatr i -ca l ly p resen ted even t s which o c c u r r e d dur ing World War I. D o n a l d F inn , i n s t ruc to r in the-a t e r , is d i rec t ing the p r o d u c t i o n .

In imi ta t ion of t he c i rcus s tyle of a pierrot show. Oh What A Lovely War is being p r o d u c e d in a rena style wi th the a u d i e n c e sur-r o u n d i n g the stage on f o u r sides. T h e p e r f o r m a n c e is a mu l t i -med ia p r o d u c t i o n wi th slides and a fi lm-s t r ip in a d d i t i o n to the musical and d r a m a t i c p r o d u c t i o n .

T H E P L A Y will be avai lable for tour J an . 26 t h r o u g h March 25. Dur ing the next t w o m o n t h s Finn and the cast will c o n d e n s e the play to be su i tab le fo r tour .

T h e set f o r the play was de-signed by David S m i t h , i n s t ruc to r in ar t . Har r i son Ryke r and R o b e r t Ceci l , bo th m e m b e r s of the mus ic d e p a r t m e n t f acu l ty direct the stu-den t o rches t r a . R ichard A n g s t a d t d e s i g n e d the l ighting. Mary S c h a k e l des igned the c o s t u m e s used in the p lay .

S T U D E N T C A S T m e m b e r s of Oh What A Lovely War are Mari lyn Ray , Margaret Rose, D e b b y Noe, N a n c y Meeusen , A l b e r t a T i l end i s , Linda Boven.

A n n e Walvoord , Kaye H u b b a r d , Diane Parker , J o a n n e K o r n o e l j e , R u d y H o w a r d , Brad Will iams, Bill S c h u t t e r , David O o s t i n g , Ralph V a n d e n b e r g , L o u i s Schake l , R o b e r t Kie f t , Mike B o o n s t r a , Dean H o w d and D o m i n i c Defaz-zio. G. B o n n o Van Dijk , visiting assistant p ro fes so r of h i s to ry , is also a m e m b e r of the cast .

T i c k e t s for Oh What A Lovely War are S 1 . 5 0 fo r s t u d e n t s and s t a f f m e m b e r s of H o p e Col lege and S2 fo r o thers .

a t t i t u d e of the Nor th Cen t ra l A s s o c i a t i o n , wh ich d e t e r m i n e s H o p e ' s a c c r e d i t a t i o n , t o w a r d H o p e ' s " r a t h e r p i e c e m e a l " o f f e r -ing of g r adua t e credi t courses .

T H E B O A R D decided to ac-cept t r ans fe r c red i t s fo r corres-p o n d e n c e courses f r o m m a n y ac-c r e d i t e d i n s t i t u t i ons and the Uni ted S ta tes A r m e d Forces In-s t i t u t e . T h i s decis ion reversed the past policy that H o p e did not accept t r ans fe r c red i t s f r o m any c o r r e s p o n d e n c e cour se . T h e ac t ion of t he Board came in res-ponse to r eques t s t o t r ans fe r cor re-s p o n d e n c e course credi t s .

T h e new courses app roved by A A B in the d e p a r t m e n t of c o m -m u n i c a t i o n are " B r o a d c a s t i n g in C o n t e m p o r a r y S o c i e t y , " " T h e o -ries of I n t e r p e r s o n a l C o m m u n i -c a t i o n , " " T h e o r i e s of Mass C o m -m u n i c a t i o n " and "Soc ia l I m p a c t of Mass C o m m u n i c a t i o n . "

Congress meets

FRESHMEN C A P T U R E CUP - Alice, right, played by Sally Hid-

dinga, listens attentively to the Knight, center, protrayed by Debbie

Dolph, in a scene from "Through the Looking Glass," the freshman

dramatic presentation at last Saturday's Nykerk Cup Compet i t ion .

The Horse is c o m p o s e d of Barb Darge and Sue Hendricks. The

freshmen w o n the compet i t i on , which consisted of a choral selec-

t ion , play and oration.

Open dorm policy discussed by Bev Unangst anchor Reporter

I n t e r - d o r m visi tat ion was dis-cussed at T u e s d a y ' s m e e t i n g of the S t u d e n t Congress .

T H E C O N G R E S S eva lua ted a s y s t e m of par ie ta l h o u r s wh ich is cu r r en t ly in use at Ru tge r s Univer-sity and discussed the poss ibi l i ty of br inging such a p r o g r a m to H o p e ' s c a m p u s .

Under the sys t em at Ru tge r s , each d o r m i t o r y is divided in to un i t s . F a c h individual uni t sets u p the h o u r s and d a y s fo r v is i ta t ion wi th in over-all l imi ts a l ready pre-scr ibed by the Univers i ty .

T H E R U L E S SET by the Uni-versity involved open d o o r s , light-ing in t h e r o o m s and s t u d e n t c o n d u c t which m a y be c h e c k e d at any t ime by the Res iden t Advisor or by r ep re sen t a t i ve s e lec ted by the uni ts . V io l a t i ons of c o n d u c t rules may be t a k e n b e f o r e the R u t g e r s Jud ic ia l C o u r t .

Visi t ing h o u r s at Ru tge r s close d o w n o n e week b e f o r e m i d t e r m

and final exams and du r ing vaca-t ions when the re may be no repre-sen ta t ives to e n f o r c e c o n d u c t rules.

T H E C O N G R E S S discussed re-s t r i c t ions such as signing gues ts in and ou t and k e e p i n g a record of v io la t ions of t he rules. Congress m e m b e r Drew Hinde re r felt that wi th t o o many res t r i c t ions , indi-vidual respons ib i l i ty was t aken away f r o m the s t u d e n t s . However , Dale Reed , who a t t e n d e d a leader-s h i p c o n f e r e n c e at Rutgers , p o i n t e d ou t tha t this p r e c a u t i o n was r emoved a f t e r t he first few m o n t h s of par ie ta l hou r s . " T h i s res t r ic t ion is really a test t o prove s t u d e n t r e s p o n s i b i l i t y , " he said. " I f s t uden t c o n d u c t r e m a i n s with-in the ru les and there are few v io la t ions , the ru les cou ld eventu-ally be l i be ra l i zed . "

Reed suggested that a p rog ram similar t o the o n e at Ru tge r s cou ld be tr ied at Kollen Hall. He felt that if it p roved to be success-ful , it cou ld be a d a p t e d to meet the needs of the en t i r e College. He

& sale oi

by Chagall, Baskin, Rouault, Daumier & many others

HOPE COLLEGE

PHELPS

HALL LOUNGE

THURSDAY

NOVEMBER 13

10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

A r r a n g e d by

F e r d i n a n d

R o l e n Ga l l e r i es .

B a l t i m o r e M d

IN SAUGATUCK and GRAND HAVEN it's

C O R A L GABLES fOR — LEISURE DINING — BANQUETS — SNACKS

SERVING A N Y T I M E THE DELICIOUS

IL FORNO S PIZZA and SUBMARINES

Phone Saugatuck UL 7 - 2 ? 6 2 o r Grand Haven 8 4 2 - 3 5 1 0 for Reservations

was met wi th o p p o s i t i o n by G l e n n L o w e , w h o felt tha t inter-visita-t ion c o u l d only be tes ted fairly in all res idences . A c c o r d i n g to Stu-den t Congress pres ident T i m Lig-get t , the many facu l ty m e m b e r s and A d m i n i s t r a t o r s feel tha t t h e privilege of in ter -vis i ta t ion should be l imi ted to u p p e r c l a s s m e n .

A special mee t ing of t he Stu-dent Congress was schedu led f o r t o d a y to draw u p a p roposa l on par ietal h o u r s t o be p resen ted t o the C a m p u s Life Board .

FIFTY-SIX EAST EIGHTH STREET

PHONE 396-3647

Page 4: 11-07-1969

Page 4 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969

Moratorium letter-in Editor's Note: The fol lowing is a letter re-

ceived by the anchor for publication. The

editors agree wi th its concept and contents.

The Oct. 15 mourning demonstration, "Morator ium," emphasized an essential aspect of the personality of our times; we live in an age when we must question our politics. We have discovered new sensibili-ties, new emotions, new involvements, and they have expanded into social movements protesting race relations, poverty and war. We have sat, picketed, marched, hoped and prayed for peace between all breeds of men, and this we have clearly conducted wi th the underlying belief that the pen wi l l

r ' t - i

toridjs • M *

become mightier than the sword. America is engaged in a war in Vietnam, a war which she did not intend to become so massively involved in; and it is this war which we question most in our age of inquiry.

Political and social protest in the United States is for the most part channeled along the limits of our Constitutional rights as citizens. More often we have gathered our bodies in protest than our beliefs. A spokesman for a crowd often clouds our own beliefs and leaves us more dismayed than convinced by our involvement. Ameri-cans have not availed themselves of one of their most effective channels for protest.

the post office. If the majority of the public conveyed its true convictions con-cerning the Vietnam war at one t ime by wri t ing the President one letter a day for one week, the commonwealth of our con-cern for peace would be substantially communicated wi thout the fear that the good will of our personal opinions would be overlooked or lost in the words of a spokesman for the crowd or of our elected representatives.

The timetable for the protest is to mail a letter daily beginning Nov. 9 and continu-ing through Nov. 15 to Richard M. Nixon, President of the United States, 1600 Penn-sylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20006.

On Nov. 12 the bulk of the opinions wil l reach and pass through the doors of the White House. The letter-in can be an impetus to the march, perhaps be even more effective. The White House staff wi l l open each of the letters and our beliefs wi l l be noted. An estimated sixty mil l ion letters wi l l arrive at the White House on Wednes-day, the first day of protest.

Use the fol lowing procedure in mailing the letters: 1) Type the address. Use the Zip Code. Business and institutional envel-opes may be used. 2) Use first class postage. . . special delivery and even better, registered mail (it must be signed for) wi l l insure faster delivery.

President Nixon may never read our letters as such but he wi l l be int imately reminded of our convictions for peace. We have a message to give to President Nixon. Let us be united in a common effort to express our beliefs as Americans.

Toward disengagement A f ront page picture of President

Richard Nixon in Tuesday's Grand Rapids Press has underneath it the outline "Presi-dent Nixon: He Stated His Case/' Hope-ful ly in Monday night's speech Nixon did not completely state his case, being aware that the best way to get out of Vietnam is not to disclose specific plans to do so.

This is not to say that President Nixon does intend to withdraw troops no matter what; he did not say that. But it is hoping that he does, and that he is smart enough not to say so. The President is in di f f icul t situation.

He is faced wi th an American public that is not wi l l ing to assume the burden seemingly interminable of a l imited ground war in Asia. This hopefully he knows; if he does not, then he is a much poorer judge of American public opinion than the Commu-nists who have known this for years and have acted accordingly. He is faced wi th a vociferous and seemingly large group of Americans who are demanding disengage-ment now. And he is faced with a situation in South Vietnam, largely created by the massive infusion of mil i tary aid, which could rapidly disintegrate into a bloodbath as the President himself intimated if America were to suddenly withdraw its

Readers speak out

weight from the delicate balance of power. The problem, then, is getting out, as the

American public demands, without leaving behind an American created monster that could devastate the whole of Vietnam and possibly more. Nixon's public solution is to maintain the balance of power in Southeast Asia by slowly withdrawing American troops that are replaced by South Vietnam-ese forces, w i th the option of putt ing America's forces back in if the situation "demands," This opt ion hopefully is a ploy to pacify the Communists into avoid-ing situations that would "demand" American troops. During this period, Vietnamization of the fighting could occur and perhaps some degree of stability could be achieved in the government of South Vietnam.

If these two things can be done in South Vietnam while America is pulling out, the American created monster may not ever ravage Vietnam.

This should be Nixon's plan. It is better than the immediate pull-out or definite date plan which would rapidly destroy all balance of power in Vietnam. Hopeful ly the President is not stating his case, at least not all of it.

Students not apathetic in your last issue's black and beautiful

column, Reginald Cohen tried to documen t the idea that many Hope s tudents are apathet ic toward bringing about s tudent part icipation in Administrat ive affairs. He stated that a " c o m m u n i c a t i o n b l o c k " exists be tween the s tudents and the Ad-ministrat ion. I disagree with him.

In my opinion, there is no such problem at Hope. We s tuden t s are not apa the t i c as

dear editor

Cohen charged; we are merely satisfied with ' h e concept of s tudent-Administra-tion relat ions as they stand. Isn ' t it t he Adminis t ra t ion ' s job to administer , and the s tudents ' job to be s tudents? And just what is this " c o m m u n i c a t i o n b lock" that he thinks the Adminis t ra t ion has built up? Doesn ' t he know a b o u t the fou r s tudent members of the Administrat ive Affa i rs Board? Doesn ' t he know that President Calvin VanderWerf welcomes s tudents into his home to discuss any matter with him personally? T h e Deans of S tuden t s are always available for discussion as well, and we s tudents have no f iner people to take our problems t o than Chaplains Hillegonds and Williams.

Cohen fu r the r charged that the only contact be tween s tudents and Adminis tra-tion is of a "man ipu l a to ry na tu re . " Tha t is hogwash. The Adminis t ra t ion is not mani-pulating us. Ra ther , it is sett ing down needed guidelines and rules for s tudent and academic affairs. We as s tudents must abide by their decisions.

In my opin ion , Cohen is seeking a solution to s tudent problems f r o m the wrong direct ion. The idea of having stu-dents actually participate in the administra-tion of Hope College is paradoxical to the defini t ion of "admin i s t r a t ion . " Instead, s tudents must use the channels open to them to f ind solut ions to their grievances, like S tuden t Congress and the s tudent-faculty commit tees .

Eric Peterson

'anchor9 fails IRC The mock UN General Assembly session

was held by the In ternat ional Relations Club on UN Day, Oct . 24. We regret ted that the session was not covered by the anchor. Such behavior by the College organ 1 hope does not ref lect the apa thy of the s tudent body. 1 hope the s tuden t s show more interest in world affairs which are very real and impor t an t to them. 1 hope this behavior by the anchor is no t repeated.

David Huang

n I

"1 brought you here tonight , Sylvia, to break the bad news to you . I 'm going to have to d rop out of school because I can't swing the new tui t ion h ike . "

art buchwald

Success syndrome by Art Buchwald

1 know no one will believe me, but you ' re just going to have to take my word for it. I met a college student the other day who said that all he wanted ou t of life was success and financial security.

HE ASKED ME not to use his name because he d idn ' t want to embarrass his parents, so 1 shall call him Hiram.

"Hi r am," 1 asked him, " w h y did you decide to take this revolut ionary a t t i tude toward soc ie ty?"

"1 don ' t k n o w exact ly when it happened . I was like most of the rest of the s tudents . 1 wanted to tear down the school, the society, the Establ ishment . I was just an-other conformis t , and 1 never quest ioned why I was doing all t he things that were expected of me.

"THEN O N E DAY I thought to myself . T h e r e ' s got to be more to life than gett ing hit over the head by the cops. ' I looked around me and saw nothing but sheep. Every s tudent was doing his thing because someone else had d o n e his thing, and no one was doing or saying anything new."

" S o you decided to d rop out of the s tudent movement and become a million-aire?"

" N o t at first. But 1 met this girl. She was really way out . She wore a cashmere sweater, a plaid skirt and she had on shoes and s o c k s - I couldn ' t believe anyone would dress like tha t . But I got to talking to her, and she started making sense.

"SHE SAID IT wasn' t enough to lock yourself in a building or go on a hunger strike in your dorm. If you really wanted to change the world, you had to make a lot of money , and then people wouldn ' t tell you what to d o . "

" T h a t ' s radical th inking ," 1 said. " T h e n she gave me a book by Prof .

Horat io Alger, and 1 guess no book 1 ever read has had more of an effect on m e . "

"Wasn't Prof. Alger the one who came out first with the success syndrome theo ry?"

" T H A T ' S HE. His story floored me. I mean a whole new world opened for me, and I knew no mat ter what the con-sequences were and no mat t e r what o the r people t hough t , I was going to work hard and become rich and successful. Life finally t o o k on some meaning for me, and for the first t ime 1 felt like a f ree m a n . "

"What did you do t h e n ? " "I discovered through this girl that there

were o ther s tudents on campus who felt the way I d i d - n o t many , but there were enough. So we formed a group called the 'S tuden ts fo r a Successful Society . ' At first we had to go underg round , because the adminis t ra t ion wouldn ' t acknowledge us as a legit imate campus organizat ion. But as more and more s tudents heard about us, the SSS kept growing. We've been able to radicalize at least 200 s tudents who would rather be rich than do their th ing ."

"WHAT ARE SOME of your activities to get more suppor te rs?"

"We sell the Wall St reet Journa l on campus. We've opened a co f feehouse where you can read back copies of For tune . We have a stock market ticker t ape in the back of the r o o m , and on weekends we have readings f r o m the National Assn. of Manu-facturers Bullet ins ."

"Hiram, 1 k n o w this all sounds great. But is it possible that this success syn-drome movement is just a passing f a d ? "

" N o , it isn't. I know everyone calls us kooks and weirdos, but no one is going to push us around. We've already had in-quiries f r o m o the r campuses that want to set up similar chapters, and 1 wou ldn ' t be surprised in the next few years to see what is now a minori ty movement become the strongest force in the coun t ry . Af t e r all, nothing succeeds like success." Copyright 1969, T h e Washington Post Co.

OPf COUIOE

anchor OUAND, MICHIGAN P R E S S

Published weekly during the college year except vacation, holiday and examination periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland, Michigan, under the authority of the Student Communications Board.

Subscription: $5 per year. Printed: The Composing R o o m , Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Member, Associated Collegiate Press. *

Office: Ground floor of Graves Hall. Phone: 392-51 1 1, Ext. 2285 .

The opinions on this page are not necessarily those of the student body, faculty or Administra-tion of Hope College.

BOARD OF EDITORS

Editor Tom Donia Assistant Editor Garrett DeGraff News Editor ; Lynn Jones Assistant News Editor Sarah Penny Advertising Dave Dievendorf Business Manager Allen Pedersen

DEPARTMENTS

Critiques Robert Kieft Columist Drew Hinderer Cartoonists . . . Greg Phillips, Debbie Yoch Proof Lynn Jones, Jan Dzurina Layout Janice Bakker

Copy Lynn Jones, Kathy Smith Headlines Dave Dustin Photography . .Dan Barber, Angie Kolster,

Joyce Maurus, Don Page, Jeanne Salberg, Louis Schakel, Rob Benchley,

and Steve Vandermade.

REPORTERS

Clarke Borgeson, Jim Brainard, Jean De-Graff, Jan Dzurina, Thorn Gartner, Bill Hoffman, Beth Maassen, Andy Mulder, Robin Pearce, Barbi Shostal, Pete Struck, Dave Thomas, Bev Unangst, Bob Vander-berg, Nancy Warner, Gail Werka and Charlotte Whitney.

Page 5: 11-07-1969

November 7, 1969 Hope College anchor Page 5

Lovely War:9 eloquent contrasts used effectively Editor's Note: This week's review is wr i t ten by senior history major Charles Schoeneck. He reviews the theater department production of Oh What A Lovely War presented last weekend and to be presented tonight and tomorrow night in Snow Auditor ium.

by Charles Schoeneck

I a t t ended the opening night of the theater depa r tmen t ' s produc-tion of Oh What A Lovely War, directed by Donald Finn. My c o m m e n t s here are to he under-stood in the context that no two per fo rmances are ever alike, and in this respect, some of my re-marks may not be valid for o ther performances .

IT IS NOT MY in tent ion , fur-thermore , to either defend the play or to lauch a full-scale a t tack upon it: a work of art must be able to speak for itself, rising or falling on its own qualit ies. My job is to evaluate how the cast "brings it o f f - h o w the actors and technical people, under F inn ' s direct ion, use the script by Charles Chilton to create an art form.

Oh What A Lovely War is a "musical d o c u m e n t a r y , , (as my ticket described it) of the First World War. Through many short scenes and musical numbers , the audience is exposed to a view of war that is hardly monol i th ic . In-deed, the contrasts manifest in the various scenes have the overall effect of giving us an all-inclusive pic ture of man in war.

AND FINN S resources include not only a large cast , but also extensive technical, musical and choreographical innovat ions. T h e latter elements, especially lighting, sound and numerous projected slides, serve to complemen t the actors, adding to the emot ional ly-charged, tense a tmosphere that cont inuous ly as tounds and con-f o u n d s the audience. Once we are in the play 's grasp, it moves on and on, never releasing us.

The play 's great s trength is its contras ts , and the circus theme is excellent for this. The a tmosphe re of a circus is ever-present. There are all sorts of acts suited to varied tastes: a song for mo the r , some trench-life ant ics for grand-pa and the exci tement of bat t le for the children.

THE P I E R R O T cos tumes , too , add to this effect of a circus. We are t rea ted , f u r t he rmore , to ingen-ious props, like that clever little biplane made f r o m a wheelbar-row.

And the presence of unreal i ty heightens the drama and impact of the play. In this circus a tmos-phere, we watch the play un fo ld , with its extreme emot iona l con-trasts in the scenes which fol low each o t h e r rapidly. Because of the play 's irregular emot iona l develop-ment , t he audience cannot cate-gorize it as " s l i ck" or "c lever ;" even "an t i -war" is meaningless in explaining it.

THE C O N T R A S T S are success-fully treated by the d i rec tor to produce an internal uni ty . We are c o n f r o n t e d with ac tors dressed as clowns, playing the part of sol-diers: yet reality burs ts u p o n the scene when we see newspaper headlines flashed upon the two project ion screens grimly an-nouncing the war dead.

Even during the more humor -ous scenes, we observe pro jec ted overhead: "1916—Verdun—Tota l L o s s - O n e and One-Half Million Men." And at the beginning of the

second act , when a more sobering a tmosphere is qu i te apparen t , the cast sings the tit le song Oh What A Lovely War to the visual accom-paniment of headlines announc ing the British losses in the war.

THE TECHNICAL e f f ec t s are used bril l iantly. As the British GHQ is out l ining its strategies fo r the war, the Navy and the Army discuss how England can best de-feat G e r m a n y . The Admiral , of course, wants to give priori ty to the bat t leships, and to this the General objects . In response to the Admira l ' s query, "Have you got a p lan?" , t he General simply stares at him while the t w o projec-tion screens are s imultaneously bathed in red light. " O h , of course , " replies the Admiral .

The re are some very human touches in many of the scenes, as in the "Chr i s tmas in the Cook-house" vignette, where a brief and rather tense feeling of comrade-s h i p develops between some British soldiers and a G e r m a n sol-dier, who remains offs tage.

T H E R E IS, ON the o ther hand , the sinister scene, which Brecht would love, where the war-profi-teering capitalists meet to discuss business over a grouse-shoot. The war, it seems, is going well, and the muni t ions and chemical indus-tries are booming. There have been, however , " t w o peace scares in the last yea r , " but with French pacif ists being execu ted , every-thing should tu rn out f ine.

T h e climactic scene, near the end of the play, involves a French c o m m a n d a n t urging his men into bat t le ; they eventually advance, bleating like sheep. They are all cut down by machine gun fire which is synchronized to a s trobe light, in the most striking visual scene of the play.

SLOWLY, THE dead soldiers rise to sing a few songs, almost in relief but u t ter ly melancholy in nature . Final ly, the ent ire cast does the tit le song Oh What A Lovely War again. All in all, the last ten minu tes of the play has, embodied within it, the supreme contras t .

T h e actors are remarkably ver-satile and dynamic , and 1 will single out only a few of them: Rober t Kieft plays a F rench gen-eral with great relish; G. Bonno Van Dijk is marvelous as Sir Doug-las Haig, who is convinced that God and King will prevail; and Louis Schakel , as a simple soldier, has some real gems tha t the audi-ence must be at tent ive to ca tch .

T H E SEEMINGLY irrational o rgan i za t i on of the p l a y - i t s

Arkies, Cosmos,

Emmies hold

open houses Sat. T h e Arcadian, Cosmopol i t an

and Emersonian f ra te rn i t ies will each hold an open house Saturday night f rom 8 : 3 0 to 12:30.

T h e Arkies are sponsor ing an all-campus dance with a live band. The Caste will pe r fo rm, and re-f r e shmen t s will be provided.

T h e Cosmos will have a coffee-house- type a tmosphere . Folksing-ers, both f ra te rn i ty members and o f f - campus singers, will provide the en te r t a inmen t .

T h e t h e m e of the E m m i e open house will be Playboy at Dusk. T h e emphasis will be on meet ing the m e m b e r s of the f r a t e rn i ty , according t o Steve Markel, vice president of the f ra te rn i ty .

widely differ ing scenes and musi-cal numbers fol lowing each other in close success ion-enab les the audience to grasp and experience, in a very real and graphic way, the ut ter senselessness of war.

Internal uni ty , on which the play's success partially depends, is brought off well indeed; the many contrasts are used to make a unified whole. Cont ingent upon the play 's success also is a neces-sary dynamic cast spirit; there can be no slow m o m e n t s at the wrong t ime that might weaken the pace or dampen the enthusiasm.

A N ? HERE AGAIN, the cast has done excel lent ly. The added fact that each actor must assume many roles in two hours increases the degree of d i f f icul ty . Con-nected with this is the necessity at times of delivering lines rapidly to keep the m o m e n t u m up; on the whole, this comes off well, al-though there were a few m o m e n t s where dict ion was poor .

The cast, then , func t ions with the technical crews as a unit. And most impor tan t , the players cer-tainly believe in themselves in their various roles, and we are thus enabled to believe in them.

a

Fee increase not justified by Drew Hinderer

With all due respect to Clar-ence Handlogten, I must disagree with his s ta tement to parents of Hope s tudents . My disagreement comes on several grounds, mos t of which I will discuss here. I simply do not feel that the $250 increase is just i f ied or can be met by the means of most parents .

AS I HAVE indicated in the past, I feel that it is the business of the Board of Trus tees to supply the mone ta ry needs of the Col-lege. Handlogten said " t h e Board of Trustees made a decision that had no viable a l ternat ive ." Yet President Calvin VanderWerf has said wi th regard to the proposed Student Center , "The re will be no delay in cons t ruc t ion for lack of funds. If we run short , we'll jus t go out and raise more . "

It seems to me that if f u n d s can be so easily raised for the Student Center , such funds are also w o r t h considerat ion /or keep-ing the costs of Hope College within the reach of most of its s tudents. At the very least, this s ta tement implies that there is money available that the Board of Trustees should have a t t empted to tap be fo re saddling the s tudent body and its beleaguered parents with its inability t o find suff ic ient funds .

I DO NOT believe that the Board of Trus tees has spent suf-ficient t ime or e f fo r t in f inding outside sources of funds for the College. Several weeks ago, 1 cited statistics f r o m a book by Rauh on The Trusteeship of Col-leges and Universities which pointed out that in all l ikel ihood, members of the Board spent less than 20 hours a year in raising funds for the college.

1 have heard no r e fu ta t ion or disagreement wi th this statistic, so I shall assume tha t the members of our Board are not excep t ions to this rule. This is hardly a

creditable per formance on their parts.

I think that one very viable alternative to the raising of stu-dent costs is a greatly increased ef for t on the part of our Board to locate and tap o ther sources of money which do not depend on our already straining parents .

HANDLOGTEN HOPES that " t h e increased provision f o r finan-cial aid will enable every student desirous of a Hope College educa-tion to come here and comple te his p rogram." I am considerably less opt imist ic . Characterist ically, the scholarships and grants Hope College is asserted to have avail-able to s tudents have been, if not impossible, then very dif f icul t for a s tudent f rom an average, middle class background to obta in .

Moreover, they have most o f t en been granted with the idea that most s tudents do not mind going into debt to pay their fees. Such an idea is hardly an accurate appraisal of the s i tuat ion. Yet the present increase will a lmost cer-tainly insure that a far greater number of people will be starting life in debt than ever before .

H A N D L O G T E N , AS well as most of those in posi t ions of responsibility in our Adminis tra-t ion, has compared our costs with the costs of other GLCA schools to f ind them lower, and has con-t inued to assert that " w e know of no o ther inst i tut ion that has achieved a comparable level of academic standing with so care-f u l l y a l l o c a t e d f inancial re-sources." By their own admission, the costs of o ther G L C A schools are very high. Thus , I wonder if they are t h e appropr ia te s tandards with which to compare our pro-gram.

I know that when 1 was con-sidering which college t o a t t end , I was compar ing Hope to such schools as the University of Michi-

gan. 1 decided to come here be-cause the advantages of Hope could be had for only a very few hundred dollars more than the University of Michigan. Now the d i f ference is fantastic, at least with regard t o my family 's means. And the advantages of Hope are beginning to seem a great deal less impor tan t to me as the cost of them cont inues to rise.

WITH T H A T FACT in mind, I feel that I ought to point out another alternative to paying the $250 increase. Such schools as the University of Michigan, realizing that the impersonali ty of their campus life can be a real detrac-tion t o their educational pro-grams, have established small col-leges within their larger university f ramework , which of fe r many , if not all, the advantages of such small colleges as Hope, while add-ing the advantages of a large cam-pus.

These programs are called Resi-dential Colleges, and cost no more than the usual fees of the Univer-sity of Michigan while offer ing a small college a tmosphere in the con tex t of the larger university. And with all due considerat ion fo r the academic excellence of Hope College, it can hardly be denied that the U of M has an " e m i n e n t posit ion among American colleges and universit ies."

IN THE FACE of such in-creases in Hope ' s costs as this one of $250 , I would certainly con-sider the possibility of t ransferr ing to such an inexpensive but excel-lent school which of fers such a program as the one I have ou t -lined here. And I urge the various academic counseling off ices of Hope to prepare a series of alter-native colleges to which s tuden t s unable to shoulder or s tomach the fai lure of o u r Board of Trus tees t o p roduce f u n d s might consider transferring.

The Best of Peanuts PEANUTS

I HATE, SCHOOL!

rr's WWINE ME CRAZV !!!

i / ' ,

A« SOON AS I LEARN ONE TWINS, •raei'SO OH TO SOMETHINS ELSE!

I FINALLY LEARNEP WHERE I'M SUPPOSED TO EAT LUNCH, ANP N0UJ THEV EXPECT ME TO KNOW liOHERE MV PE5K 15

to

T

Page 6: 11-07-1969

Page 6 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969

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R e u i ' e u ) of the News Head coach for 15 years

Washington, D.C.

Senate and House negotia-tors agreed Tuesday on a $20.7 billion military weapons bill that gives the Defense Depart-ment everything it asked for, including the initial authority to start construction of the safeguard anti-ballistic missile. "There is no m^jor weapon that's left out of this bill," John Stennis, D-Miss., chair-man of the Senate Armed Ser-vices Committee told news-men, "and none that's severely restricted. The bone and mus-cle is still in there."

New York

Mayor John V. Lindsay won re-election in New York, pull-ing liberal Democrats, liberal Republicans and independent voters under his Independent Party. The mayor won a second four-year term by de-feating Democrat City Comp-troller Mario A. Procaccino and Republican State Sen. John I. Marchi. The mayor pulled 42 percent of the votes, Procac-cino 38 percent and Marchi 23 percent.

Cleveland, Ohio

St rong suppor t f rom white voters re-elected Mayor Carl B. Stokes , the first black mayor of a major U. S. city to try fo r

a second term. Only 3 ,182 votes separated Stokes from his Republican challenger Cuya-hoga County Auditor Ralph J. Perk, in the Tuesday election. Unofficial estimates indicated Stokes pulled an average of 24 percent of the nearly all-white ^pte on Cleveland's West Side. The black vote on Cleveland's near East Side gave Stokes nearly 97 percent of the vote.

Chicago, III.

Bobby Seale, leader of the Black Panthers Organization was sentenced, in a surprised move by U. S. District Court Judge Hoffman, to four years in prison for contempt of court charges. Judge Hoffman, in an hour and half report cited 16 cases during the riot con-spiracy trial of eight men that Seale had been contemptuous. After reading this report and passing sentence. Judge Hoff-man declared a mis-trial on behalf of Bobby Seale and ordered a new trial for Seale.

Jerusalem

Israeli officials warned Le-banon Tuesday to expect speedy retaliation for any Arab guerrilla attacks launched from Lebanese soil as a result of the new agreement between the Lebanese government and guer-rilla chief Yasir Arafat.

DeVette resigns football post

" / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / S / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / S / / / / S / / / / / / / / / / S / / / / / / / .

by Bob Vander berg anchor Reporter

Russ DeVet te , head foo tba l l coach at Hope College since 1955, has announced his decision to relinquish his duties as head coach upon comple t ion of the current season.

D E V E T T E , whose footba l l teams have posted a mediocre 61-64-1 record in 15 seasons, also indicated that he will remain at Hope as head coach in basketball , where he has compiled an impres-sive record over the years.

According to President Calvin VanderWerf , DeVet te ' s decision to step down was not the result of pressure s temming f rom a recom-mendat ion adop ted by the Board of Trus tees last February . The r ecommenda t ion , o f f e red by a special a thlet ic commi t t e e headed by Trus tee A. Dale Stoeppels , s tated that " n o person should be the head coach for more than one spor t . "

DeVette stated that his resigna-tion was the result of two factors . Most impor tan t was the decision of the Board of Trustees to permit the athlet ic depa r tmen t to hire ano ther staff member to pe r fo rm teaching and coaching duties. "This seemed like an o p p o r t u n e t ime to resign," DeVet te said, " so that the person we hired could be a foo tba l l coach.

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"TO SOME DEGREE my deci-sion was based on the repor t of the special c o m m i t t e e on athlet ics of t h e Board of Trus tees , " the coach said. This report suggested to tha t " n o person should be the head coach for more than one s p o r t . "

COMMENTING ON a possible replacement for Coach DeVet te , Athlet ic Director G o r d o n Brewer remarked that " m a n y names have been tossed a round , but i t 's really too early to men t ion any specific names ."

In his 15-year tenure as head footbal l coach, DeVet te experi-enced only five winning seasons. His greatest success came in 1957-59, when he led Hope to records of 7-2, 8-1, and 8-1. Since 1961, however, DeVet te ' s Flying Du tchman squads have recorded a dismal mark of 25 wins, 47 losses, one tie and two snow-outs . RUSSELL DEVETTE

Dr. Georg von Pirch to speak Thursday

Dr. Georg von Pirch, Consul General of the Federal Republ ic of Germany in Detroi t , will de-liver a talk on the topic "Poli t ical Impact of the Federal Elect ions in G e r m a n y " Thursday at 3 :30 p.m. in Winants Audi to r ium. A discus-sion will fo l low.

According to Dr. Gerhard t Megow, professor of G e r m a n , " T h e topic should be of t imely and acute interest to all politically alert and internat ional ly con-cerned Amer icans . "

Megow added , " F o r the first t ime since World War I I , t he Feder-al Republic of Ge rmany , mainly the creation of strong man Conrad Adenauer and his conservative Christ ian Democra t ic Union , is in the hands of the oppos ing par ty , the more liberal and socialist or iented Social Democra t i c Party which also has a record of espous-ing a more conci l ia tory political course towards the Communi s t b lock . "

T h e lecture is open to the public.

t h e s t u d e n t c h u p c h

w i l l w o p s h i p

o n s u n f u y , n o v e m B e p 9

11:00 A.M.

D1MNENT MEMORIAL CHAPEL SERVICE

JACK BUTEYN, PREACHER

ANDY ATWOOD, WORSHIP LEADER

ROGER DAVIS, ORGANIST

7:00 P.M.

COFFEE GROUNDS SERVICE

7:15 A.M. WEDNESDAY

PRAYER AND HOLY COMMUNION IN

SCHOON CHAPEL

WHY PAY MORE? 20% OISCOONT

CASH AND CARRY . . . ONE DAY SERVICE MONDAY thru FRIDAY

College at 6th

SHIRT LAUNDRY

LEAN EPS Holland, Michigan

Page 7: 11-07-1969

November 7, 1 9 6 9 Hope College anchor Page 7

On becoming luhite by Claudine Moore

Pcale will match gifts

to Capital Funds drive

When an i n s t i t u t i o n does no t c o n c e r n itself w i th t h o s e w h o are d i f f e r e n t , t ha t i n s t i t u t i on has fa i led. " H o p e College is not t he place fo r a black s t u d e n t t o learn to live in a black c o m m u n i t y . R a t h e r , it he lps a black person to live in the w h i t e c o m m u n i t y , " s ta ted Dean M o r r e t t e Rider .

HOPE HAS F A I L E D black and whi t e s t u d e n t s . Fo r a so-called " i n t e g r a t e d " l iberal a r t s ins t i tu-t ion to de -Af r i can ize and de-black its black s t u d e n t s and to Anglo-S a x o n i z e all o t h e r m i n o r i t y g r o u p s is not the ladder to success . T h a t , my dear wh i t e l iberals, is Rac i sm.

T h e H o p e Col lege is respon-sible to each s t u d e n t and obli-gated to p rov ide e d u c a t i o n tha t enab les h im to deal e f fec t ive ly wi th his soc ie ty - b l a c k , whi te , yel-low or red. Each black s tuden t is being e x p l o i t e d by the Col lege. We are fu l f i l l ing the q u o t a , giving most wh i t e s tha t " e d u c a t i o n a l " black e x p e r i e n c e , leading in t h e m o v e m e n t f o r p r o d u c t i v e change , but receiving n o t h i n g in r e t u r n e x c e p t , of cou r se , e x p l o i t a t i o n .

A R E L E V A N T e d u c a t i o n f o r a black s t u d e n t is an e d u c a t i o n fo r a good living. An e d u c a t i o n f o r a good living d o e s not imply a t y p e of c u r r i c u l u m tha t is o b n o x i o u s to the s t u d e n t s . It does imply tha t the e d u c a t i o n at H o p e College should r ad ia t e the m o d e s and k inds of learn ing tha t can be recognized as g o o d f r o m the s t a n d p o i n t of t he n e e d s of each s t u d e n t .

Th i s e d u c a t i o n p laces great em-phasis u p o n respect fo r each indi-

vidual in all his d igni ty and w o r t h . It has a c o m m i t m e n t t o seek changes in the courses of s t u d y which will p rov ide f o r a d e q u a t e s t a n d a r d s of learn ing fo r all and not e x p l o i t a t i o n of s t u d e n t s by the school .

IT IS VERY CLEAR t ha t t he ach i evemen t of the wh i t e Amer i -can in recent t imes has s h o w n itself in his c ivi l izat ion. His aggres-sive a t t e m p t s t o exp lo i t t he m i n o r i t y and e t h n i c g r o u p s w i th in his c ivi l iza t ion, basing his e f f o r t s u p o n his super io r i ty in t e c h n o l o g y and pa r t i cu la r ly the i n s t r u m e n t s of fo rce , have given h im a sense of super io r i ty wh ich he e m p h a s i z e s in every A m e r i c a n school of t h o u g h t .

T h e A m e r i c a n e d u c a t i o n a l sys tem and its schoo l s p e r p e t u a t e lies and c o n t r a d i c t i o n s a b o u t inde-p e n d e n c e , f r e e d o m , ju s t i ce , capi-tal ism and a b o u t life in genera l . T h e evils of these racist a t t i t u d e s have been m a n i f e s t e d at H o p e Col lege .

SINCE HOPE Col lege in its origin focused itself on t h e n e e d s and desi res of t he w h i t e s o c i e t y , H o p e ' s e d u c a t i o n is no t re levan t t o the black s t u d e n t . In a re levant e d u c a t i o n he learns t o re la te t o his black c o m m u n i t y , t o th ink f r o m the s t a n d p o i n t of his race and to have sound social feel ings so that ac ts a re to be deeds and not misdeeds . T h e black s t u d e n t is en t i t l ed to an e d u c a t i o n tha t will r egu la te his ins t inc t s to the social ends of his soc ie ty .

A relevant e d u c a t i o n fo r b l acks is o n e tha t r ecogn izes that a Black

Applications for Japan study program due Nov. 15

A p p l i c a t i o n s fo r the G r e a t L a k e s C o l l e g e s A s s o c i a t i o n ' s J a p a n S t u d y P rog ram must be s u b m i t t e d to p r o g r a m d i rec to r Dr. F . F . G e a r h a r t by Nov. 15.

T h e G L C A has a c o o p e r a t i v e a g r e e m e n t wi th Waseda Univers i ty in T o k y o w h e r e b y G L C A s t u d e n t s may enrol l in the I n t e r n a t i o n a l Division fo r a s i x - m o n t h or a t w e l v e - m o n t h p r o g r a m . Ins t ruc -t ion in the p rog ram is in English, but s t u d y of J a p a n e s e is r equ i red dur ing the s t u d e n t ' s s tay in the Far has t .

P reced ing t h e a c a d e m i c yea r , a s u m m e r p r o g r a m is held involving a p p r o x i m a t e l y two weeks of U.S. o r i e n t a t i o n , f o u r weeks of lan-guage s t u d y in J a p a n and fou r weeks of work e x p e r i e n c e in rural J a p a n .

I n t e r n a t i o n a l s t u d y b r o c h u r e s and a p p l i c a t i o n s arc available

f r o m G e a r h a r t be tween 8 : 3 0 a .m. and 1 0 : 3 0 a .m. M o n d a y t h r o u g h Fr iday in V o o r h e e s Hall or by a p p o i n t m e n t .

History dept. to sponsor open d i scuss ion Wed.

T h e h i s to ry d e p a r t m e n t will sponso r an o p e n discuss ion of se lec ted top ics c o n c e r n i n g h i s to ry , c u r r i c u l u m changes and social issues Wednesday at 8 p .m. in the geology lab on the first f loo r of V o o r h e e s Hall.

T h e discussion will be the first in a series of d iscuss ions for which s t u d e n t s f r o m his tory classes will suggest topics . The d i scuss ions are open to all i n t e re s t ed s t u d e n t s and f a c u l t y .

CAMPUS PACS ARE HERE ....

^ COUPLE 'BITS' GETS

A COUPLE 'BUCKS' WORTH

Is there a CATCH? YES . . .

WE HAVE ONLY ENOUGH FOR ABOUT

ONE-THIRD OF THE STUDENTS AT THE

BLUE KEY BOOK STORE

N O W IN STOCK! A FINE SELECTION OF CHRISTMAS

CARDS INCLUDING HOPE CARDS

Stud i e s P r o g r a m , a special tu to r ia l p rog ram for t hose " h i g h r i s k " black s t u d e n t s , a black s t u d e n t u n i o n , as well as guaranteed posi-t ion f o r black s t u d e n t s on all govern ing levels of the Hope Col-lege C o m m u n i t y (b lacks c a n n o t a f f o r d t h e risk of being e l e c t e d ) ; all are na tu ra l stages of the cul-m i n a t i o n of a black s t u d e n t ' s lib-eral e d u c a t i o n .

HOWEVER, THE fact is t ha t H o p e College denies every b lack his right to " c u l m i n a t e , " to en-hance his i d e n t i t y , t o b e t t e r his s e l f - concep t , t o raise his- self-e s t eem. T h e College w a n t s every black s t u d e n t t o b e c o m e invisible, i.e.. invisibly whi t e . We re fuse .

Dr. N o r m a n Vincen t Peale, pres ident of the G e n r a l S y n o d ol the R e f o r m e d C h u r c h in Amer ica , will d o n a t e $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 to the RCA Capital F u n d s campa ign if a pri-vate individual will m a t c h his con-t r i bu t i on .

Dr. Pea le ' s cong rega t ion , the Marble Col legia te C h u r c h in New York Ci ty , will give an add i t i ona l $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 if a n o t h e r c h u r c h will match the a m o u n t .

Rec ip i en t s of the to ta l S6 mil-lion Capi ta l F u n d are Hope, Cen-tral and N o r t h w e s t e r n Colleges, New Brunswick S e m i n a r y , the Board of A m e r i c a n Missions, the Board of World Missions and the Board of Chr i s t ian I d u c a t i o n .

H o p e will receive S2 million to go t oward the c o n s t r u c t i o n of the

DeWitt S t u d e n t Cul tu ra l and Social C e n t e r and the Nykerk Music add i t ion . Hope has need of a third of the total f u n d since it is a larger school than the o t h e r col leges and has o lder buildings, a c c o r d i n g to S tuar t Pos t , assistant d i r ec to r of d e v e l o p m e n t at H o p e .

" T h e campaign is progressing ( jui te well, but it will r equ i re some

f ew T h e not Re-was had

now

ex t ra e f f o r t in the next m o n t h s , " s ta ted Mr. Post . to ta l goal of $6-mil l ion has yet been real ized. S ince the l o rmed-P re sby t e r i an merger d e f e a t e d , many chu rches thai not previously pledged are giving, a c c o r d i n g to Mr. Post . " W e h o p e more chu rches will p ledge now. C o n t r i b u t i o n s can still be des igna ted to a par t icular area of the Cap i ta l F u n d s C a m p a i g n . "

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Page 8: 11-07-1969

Page 8 Hope College anchor November 7, 1969

Soccer team loses final game to Lake Forest

by Bill Hoffman anchor Reporter

Last F r iday t h e D u t c h trav-eled to Lake F o r e s t , 111., for their final soccer con tes t of the year . A l though the D u t c h re-t u r n e d d e f e a t e d 4-0 , t he game was a m u c h m o r e even con tes t than indica ted by the score .

ALL F O U R O F Lake For-est 's goals were scored in the first half. Brian P o r t o , t h e best of fens ive p layer in the Michigan-I l l i n o i s - I n d i a n a C o n f e r e n c e , k icked t w o goals t o boos t his total for t h e year to 20 . T h e "c loseness" of t he game can mos t easily be seen by the n u m -ber of sho ts on goal . Hope had 21 and Lake Fores t 27.

Typica l of t he ent i re year , Hope was just unab le to score goals, in league c o m p e t i t i o n , the D u t c h m e n scored only fou r goals while giving up 21 . The over-all resul ts were not m u c h b e t t e r ; Hope scored 9, giving up 31, with fou r of these c o m i n g in the first game of the season

Adrian defeats

harriers, 15-45 The D u t c h m e n closed out the

MIAA dua l meet cross c o u n t r y season last S a t u r d a y with their f i f t h loss of the year . T h e 15-43 loss t o Adr ian lef t the D u t c h with a 1 -5 league r eco rd .

T h e Bulldogs t o o k the first five places, wi th Neal Kingsberry and Roger Kingsberry ty ing fo r first wi th a t ime of 2 1 : 1 5 . 5 . F r e s h m a n Brian C lax ton f in ished first for the Dutch wi th a t ime of 2 2 : 0 6 . Seni ro cap ta in Bruce G e e lhoe d f inished nex t for H o p e . J im Matt i-son , Gene Hol lenbeek and Bob Sco t t f inished the scoring fo r the D u t c h m e n .

T o d a y t h e D u t c h will be run-ning in the MIAA meet at Adr ian . T h e r e are f o u r t eams in pr ime c o n t e n t i o n for f irst place in he MIAA m e e t . Firs t place Adrian will have t o really hust le t o beat Albion and Alma.

b e f o r e the r e t i r emen t of Manuel Cuba and Phil S l agboom.

ONCE AGAIN W h e a t o n was Mil c h a m p i o n wi th a r eco rd of 5-0-1. MacMur ray , E a r l h a m and L a k e Fores t f inished beh ind W h e a t o n in tha t o rde r . These f o u r t e a m s c o m p l e t e l y o u t -c l a s s e d C a l v i n , H o p e a n d Wabash , as indica ted by thei r t w o lone victor ies . Lake F o r e s t ' s Brian Po r to a c c u m u l a t e d m o r e goals th is season than the en t i r e H o p e t e a m .

A l t h o u g h Hope ' s 3-7 record is not impressive, the season was not w i t h o u t its br ight spo t s . H o p e ' s de fense was good con-sidering the a m o u n t of t i m e the ball spen t in the Du tch half of the f ie ld . T h e f r e s h m a n p layers did a good j o b filling t h e vacan-cies c rea ted by the loss of play-ers.

WITH THE A D D E D experi-ence of this season and the re-t u r n of several l e t t e r m e n , H o p e ' s soccer f u t u r e can be viewed with cau t ious o p t i m i s m . T h e b o o t e r ' s f u t u r e in the Ml! has not ye t been d e t e r m i n e d . H o p e initially p lanned to t r ans f e r t o t h e M i c h i g a n I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e A t h l e t i c Assoc ia t ion , w h i c h will inc lude soccer as a league spor t next year . However , p lans have not been f ina l ized , and the re is a possibi l i ty the D u t c h will c o m p e t e in b o t h leagues.

Seminary dean to present lecture

Rev. A n d r e w J. Bands t r a , asso-ciate p ro fe s so r of New T e s t a m e n t and Dean of S t u d e n t s at Calvin Theo log ica l Semina ry in G r a n d Rapids , will present a l ec tu re en-t i t led " P a u l and an A n c i e n t In te r -p r e t e r " T h u r s d a y at 1 1 : 1 5 a .m. in Mulder Chape l .

T h e r e will be no cha rge fo r t he lec ture .

Rese rva t ions for the l u n c h e o n fo l lowing the lec ture may be made by sending $1 t o Western Theo log ica l Seminary b e f o r e nex t T u e s d a y .

RUMOHR HAS I T - H o p e halfback Harry Rumohr tries plunging through the Adrian defense in Saturday's game. Hope won the contest , 29-12. Rumohr and fullback Bob Haveman led the Hope of fense , compiling

253 yards rushing in 39 carries.

Second season win

Dutch down Adrian, 29-12 by Pete Struck

anchor Reporter

T h e H o p e College Fly ing D u t c h m e n f o o t b a l l t e a m f inished Michigan In t e rco l l eg ia t e Ath le t i c Associa t ion play S a t u r d a y a f te r -noon by d e f e a t i n g the Adr ian Bulldogs, 29 -12 , at Riverview Park b e f o r e a large P a r e n t ' s Day c rowd.

THE VICTORY assured H o p e of a f o u r t h place f inish in the MIAA with a c o n f e r e n c e record of 2-3. H o p e ' s overall r ecord is now 2-5-1 wi th o n e game lef t t o p lay . Adr i an , winless in the MIAA, had its overall m a r k lowered to 2-5.

T h e key to the D u t c h vic tory Sa tu rday was the o u t s t a n d i n g g round a t t a ck of r u n n i n g b a c k s Harry R u m o h r and B o b Haveman . T o g e t h e r t h e y c o m p i l e d 253 y a r d s in 39 carries. Haveman easily be-came H o p e ' s leading scorer fo r t he season as he crossed t h e Bul ldog 's goal line t h r e e t imes in the con te s t .

Football outlook 1970 by Bob Vanderberg

Maybe it 's t o o early to look a h e a d to next yea r ' s f o o t b a l l sea-son. Af te r all, t h e r e ' s still one game to be p layed this year . But i t 's more e n t e r t a i n i n g to look ahead t h a n to look b a c k - e s p e -cially when y o u ' r e looking back on a 2-5-1 campa ign .

HOPE'S FOOTBALL f o r t u n e s for 1970 have a l ready improved 100 percent merely with the an-

Schneider takes

first in state

karate competition Ernes t Schne ider and Jim

K n o t t r e p r e s e n t e d the H o p e Col-lege Karate Club last S u n d a y at the Sta te of Michigan Karate C h a m p i o n s h i p s p o n s o r e d by the T a e k w o n d o Organ iza t ion of Mich-igan at the Lans ing Civic Aud i to r -ium, Lansing, Mich.

Schne ide r t o o k the first place c h a m p i o n s h i p in the heavy weight Blue Belt c lass i f ica t ion wi th Knot t placing ou t in the first el imina-t ion.

Accord ing to club m e m b e r Dan B o u w m a n , the Kara te Club had its beginning a m o n t h ago when sev-eral s t u d e n t s in the YMCA kara te c lub t hough t such a g r o u p would be of interest t o s t u d e n t s at Hope .

T h e g roup m e e t s M o n d a y and Wednesday f r o m 6-8 p .m. in the ba semen t of C e n t u r i a n Hall and is accep t ing new m e m b e r s . Cur-ren t ly the c lub is in the process of d rawing u p a c o n s t i t u t i o n in o rder to be r ecogn ized of f ic ia l ly as a College o rgan i za t i on .

n o u n c e m e n t that the re will be a head coach next fall. A n d this is not a slam at Coach Russ De-V e t t e . Asking Coach D e V e t t e to head up b o t h in tercol legia te f o o t -ball and basketbal l is ask ing too m u c h . T h e new coach, whoeve r he t u rns ou t t o be, will be responsi-ble fo r foo tba l l a lone , and this in itself should greatly aid the foo t -ball p r o g r a m here.

But the o u t l o o k fo r 1970 is bright also because of the n u m b e r of p layers who are e x p e c t e d to r e t u r n nex t S e p t e m b e r . As the a th le t i c d i rec tor said this week, " T h e new coach will be s t epp ing in to a p r e t t y nice s i tua t ion , what wi th two e x p e r i e n c e d qua r t e r -backs in G r o y Kaper and J o n C o n s t a n t , an excel lent r u n n e r in Bob H a v e m a n and an e x p e r i e n c e d o f f ens ive l ine . "

THAT IS VERY t rue . Kaper will be back fo r his th i rd year at the c o n t r o l s of the o f f e n s e , and he is capab le of having a m u c h be t t e r season t h a n he has had in 1969. Haveman has come i n t o his own this year and has to be o n e of the f inest o f f ens ive backs in the s choo l ' s h i s to ry . C a r l e t o n Go lde r will p r o b a b l y move in to Harry R u m o h r ' s spot at the o t h e r run-ning back pos i t ion a n d , t oge the r wi th Haveman , could f o r m a de-vas ta t ing 1-2 backf ie ld p u n c h .

T h e o f fens ive line shou ld be a good o n e , despi te t he loss of cen te r J im D e H o r n and guard Dave Pru im. Both s t a r t i ng tack les Jer ry Swierenga and Bart Merkle will r e t u r n , a long with gua rds Bill H o n d o r p a n d Pete S e m e y n . In all l i ke l ihood , next yea r ' s cen te r will be Merlin Whi t eman , a f r e s h m a n

f r o m C o l u m b u s , Ind . , the same town that p r o d u c e d P u r d u e ' s All-A m e r i c a n q u a r t e r b a c k , Mike Phipps . J im Lamer will r e tu rn at his tight e n d pos i t ion .

THE TWO O F F E N S I V E spo ts , then , which need to be filled are split end and f l a n k e r - p o s i t i o n s now played by seniors Bill Bek-ker ing and Rich F rank . Brewer ind ica ted tha t these spo t s could be filled by two of this t r io of f r e s h m e n - T e d A l b r e c h t , Dana S n o a p and J o h n Wyns.

Defens ive ly , H o p e should be improved over this year , desp i te the fact t ha t l inebacker and cap-tain T o m T h o m a s and tackle Bruce Heus t i s will g r adua t e in June . F r e s h m a n e n d s Albrecht and Dave Gosselar f igure to be be t t e r a f t e r one year of exper i -ence. Kei th Van T u b e r g e n , a stal-wart at tackle for th ree seasons now, will be str iving for a final crack at a w inn ing season.

LINEBACKERS KARL Nadol-sky and Doug Nelson have been impressive on several occas ions this season. N a d o l s k y could be the man to fill T h o m a s ' shoes as capta in of the ' 7 0 squad . Go lde r , Doug S m i t h , Dave J o h n s o n , Craig S c h r o t e n b o e r and J im L e e n h o u t s all should be back for du ty in the defensive backf ie ld .

As far as the k icking game is c o n c e r n e d . Smi th will p robab ly be the s q u a d ' s p u n t e r , while Mike Hinga will hand le the place-kick-ing chores .

All to ld , as m a n y as 25 le t ter -men many r e tu rn next S e p t e m b e r when the n e w coach begins drills for the 1 9 7 0 campa ign . It pro-mises t o be an exc i t ing , winning season, for a change .

THE DUTCH scored first in the con tes t t he first t ime they had possession of t he foo tba l l . Adrian q u a r t e r b a c k T o m Bell f u m b l e d the ball while h a n d i n g o f f t o Vic Wolven, and T e d Alb rech t covered the ball fo r t he D u t c h on t h e Adr ian 45-yard line.

O n H o p e ' s f irst o f f e n s i v e p lay , q u a r t e r b a c k G r o y Kaper handed off t o R u m o h r w h o s campered f o r 11 yards . On t h e nex t play Have-man got the call and t h e j u n i o r fu l lback went t h r o u g h a hole in the right side of t he line 34 yards fo r the score. Mike Hinga ' s kick made the score 7-0.

A D R I A N CAME r ight back wi th a scoring drive of the i r o w n , march ing 80 y a r d s in 10 plays . R o n Labadie scored f o r t h e Bull-dogs on a n ine-yard r u n . Bell 's convers ion a t t e m p t was wide .

T h e f i r ed -up D u t c h c o u n t e r e d Adr i an ' s t o u c h d o w n wi th a n o t h e r one of their o w n . Kaper moved the D u t c h m e n 61 ya rds in jus t f o u r p lays wi th H a v e m a n scoring his second t o u c h d o w n of t he a f t e r n o o n on a 25-yard spr in t . J o n C o n s t a n t ran the ball in or t h e two-po in t convers ion and H o p e led, 15-6.

NEITHER TEAM cou ld man-age a score in the second q u a r t e r , t hough the Bul ldogs c a m e close twice.

Once Adr ian had t h e ball on H o p e ' s 32-yard line. O n first d o w n Bell passed to end J im Wallace in the end z o n e f o r wha t looked like an easy score , only t o have the play called back on a five-yard p r o c e d u r e p e n a l t y .

With one m i n u t e r ema in ing in the half , the Bul ldogs f o u n d t h e m -selves deep in Du tch t e r r i to ry again, but wi th the h e l p of a 15-yard o f fens ive ho ld ing pena l ty the H o p e d e f e n s e was ab le to ho ld on their own 20.

THE DUTCHMEN scored again mid-way t h r o u g h the th i rd pe r iod .

T h e Adr ian de fense had appar -ent ly s t o p p e d H o p e on their o w n 38 w h e n a rough ing- the -k icker pena l ty gave the D u t c h a first d o w n on the Adr i an 24 . Kaper hit Bill Bekke r ing wi th a 14-yard pass at t he 10. O n the nex t play H a v e m a n scored his th i rd t ouch -d o w n . Hinga ' s kick was good and H o p e led 22-6.

H o p e picked u p its f inal score of t h e a f t e r n o o n wi th 8 : 2 8 re-ma in ing in the game. A 16-yard run by R u m o h r , 31 ya rds by Haveman and a 14-yard pass f r o m Kaper to Rich F r a n k pu t H o p e on the A d r i a n 25. On first d o w n senior Pe te r G r i m e s powered his way t h r o u g h t h e Bul ldog d e f e n s e all t he way fo r t he score . H inga ' s kick was good .

A D R I A N SCORED in the f inal m i n u t e s of play a f t e r C o a c h Russ D e V e t t e had e m p t i e d his b e n c h . T h e score came on a th ree -ya rd p l u n g e b y f u l l b a c k S t e v e Ru lewicz .

H a v e m a n w o u n d u p wi th 135 ya rds in 17 carr ies for the a f t e r -n o o n . R u m o h r was close beh ind with 118 ya rds in 22 tries.

Adr i an r u n n e r s c o m p i l e d 2 1 0 ya rds in the c o n t e s t . T h e y were paced by Labad ie w h o had 105 ya rds in 22 carries.

KAPER HAD a n o t h e r bad day passing fo r the D u t c h . He com-ple ted th ree of n ine a t t e m p t s f o r just 36 yards . O n e of his aerials was i n t e r c e p t e d .

Tra i l ing the who le game . Bell went t o the air o f t e n for t h e Bul ldogs. He c o m p l e t e d 16 of 38 passes fo r 251 yards . He was i n t e r cep ted twice , b o t h t imes by f r e s h m a n Dave J o h n s o n .

T h e D u t c h will f inish up their 1969 f o o t b a l l c ampa ign t o m o r -row when they travel to Upland , Ind . , t o play the T r o j a n s of T a y l o r Univers i ty . T h i s will be the first g r id i ron c o n f r o n t a t i o n in he h i s to ry of these two schools .

Fullback Haveman named

MIAA Back of the Week Jun io r fu l l back Bob Haveman

was n a m e d T u e s d a y as the Michi-gan In te rco l leg ia te A t h l e t i c Asso-c ia t ion ' s Back of the Week for his p e r f o r m a n c e in S a t u r d a y ' s 29-12 t r i u m p h over Adr ian .

The 5 ' 8 " , 1 7 0 - p o u n d e r en-j o y e d his best game of t he season last week, as he carr ied the ball 17 t imes fo r 137 ya rds and th ree t o u c h d o w n s . Haveman scored on runs of t en , 25 and 34 yards .

H a v e m e n ' s t h ree t o u c h d o w n s Sa tu rday moved him i n t o scor ing leadership for the F ly ing D u t c h -men this season. T h e ha rd -h i t t i ng fu l lback also leads all H o p e r u n n e r s in ya rds ga ined . So far th is season Haveman has gained 5 9 4 in 136 carries, averaging over f o u r yards a car ry .

Craig Cossey of A lb ion a n d Chris Clark of Alma were runners -up f o r Back of the Week honors . BOB H A V E M A N

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