8
Sororities, Fraternities Enter Musical Contest The Civic Center will be trans- formed into a music auditorium on Saturday, March 20 at 8 p.m., when the fraternities and sorori.ies compete in the All-College Sing. Each fraternity and sorority will sing a song of its choice, and the best presenta'.ion will be rewarded with a trophy. Each of the competitors will be directed $Occ^ and accompanied by one its members. The sororities, their chosen songs and (heir directors and ac- companists are: Sibylline—"Milk and Honey," Janiece Smoll, Gloria Langstraat; Dorian—"My Favorite Things," Kit Jansen, Caron Vandcr Hoek; Kappa Chi-"The Sleigh," •Betty Lou Dietch, Evonne Taylor; Delta Phi—"A Bird Flew," Louise Voorhorst, Rosemary Hekman: Sorosites—"Love Makes the World Go Round," Sharon Dyks ra. Cheryl Defendorf; Alpha Phi "Charlottown," Linda Tiezzi. Fraternities will enter into the competi ion with the following songs, led by their directors and accompanists: Knickerbocker — "The Whiffen- poof Song," John Versteeg, Tom Mazur; Arcadian "Joshua Fit De Battle of Jericho," Harvey Lucas, Loren Meengs; Cosmo- politan "Black is the Color of My True Love's Hair," Chuck Walvoord, Doug Smith; Fraternal "Rock-a-My Soul," Jim Bekker ing, Gene Pearson; Emersonian "Cool Water," Mark Lemmenes, Kelly Bakker. The All-College Sing has been planned by co-chairmen Gail Gro- tenhuis and Jeff Muller. Mr. and Mrs. James Tanis are advisors for the event. No admission will be charged. Sophomore Dance Saturday, 8 p.m. Carnegie Gymnasium anc OPE COLLEGE or OLLAND, MICHIGAN 77th YEAR - 20 Hope College, Holland, Michigan March 12, 1965 II 'Modern Man's Dilemmas' SCHOLARS—Vice-president Dr. John Hollenbach congratulates the finalists for the Woodrow Wilson Fellowships. They are (from left to right): James Boeringa, James Ronda, Paul Hesselink, Pam Dykstra, Marjorie Gouwens, and Carole Timkovich. Not pictured is Ron Mulder. Wilson Foudation Gives Aid For Three Seniors' Study The three Hope recipients of the Woodrow Wilson fellowships were announced today by Dr. John Hol- lenbach. The recipients are James Boer- inga, a psychology major from Oak Park. 111., iMarjorie Gouwens, Giant's Party Honors Champs Saturday the Hope College MI A A champion basketball team will be honored at the all-college dance, "The Jolly Green Giant's Birth- day Party," to be held in Carnegie Gymnasium at 8:00 p.m. The dance will fea'ure the "Late Knights" and various other talents of the sophomore class will pro- vide entertainment. The highlight of the program will be a presen- tation of .he Hope basketball team by Coach DeVette. Dress is casual and the cost is 50c per person. The all-college dance is spon- sored by the sophomore class. Co- chairmen are Gwenn Dacus and Randy Miller. Other chairmen in- clude: Cindy Clark, refreshments; Ellen Folkert and Brad KIow, tick- ets; Sherry Chapman, en ertain- ment; Carole Fields and Carol De Young, publicity; and Marcia Newhouse and Joan Medema, dec- orations. Tickets are on sale in Van Raalte and also through dorm represen- tatives. a German literature major from South Holland. 111., and Carole Timkovich. an English major and a native of Lansing. Illinois. Of the 11,000 faculty-nominated college seniors who competed, only 1.39o students received the award. The fellowship, designed to re- cruit new college teachers, con- sists of full tuition and fixed fees with $1800 living expenses at the graduate school of the student's choice. Honorable mention was given to Pamela Dykstra. English; P^ul Hesselink. English; Ronald Muld- er, history and James Ronda history. "Honorable mention winners are expected to receive alternative awards from other sources by cir- culation of their names throughout the graduate schools of the U.S. and Canada by the Foundation," said Sir Hugh Taylor, president of the Foundation. The program is the largest pri- vate source of support for adv vanced work in the liberal arts. It has been financed by two Ford Foundation grants, totaling $52 million. The program is in its twentieth year of awarding fellowships. Last year Hope College had seven re- cipients of the award. President Dr. Calvin Vander- Werf said, "These fine young people and others in the past well represented Hope in this Founda- tion Program and we expect to continue our efforts in producing excellent under-graduates during Hope College's second century of progress and growth." Harris To Discuss Modern Man Sydney J. Harris, columnist and drama critic for the Chicago Daily News, will speak to the campus next Tuesday in the Chapel at 10:30 a.m. on the topic, "The Dilemmas of Modern Man." Mr. Harris began his career of journalism while still in high school, as a copy boy for the Chi- cago Herald and Examiner. He held this job through his college years and majored in philosophy at the University of Chicago. For a year he was editor and publisher of his own magazine, "The Bea- con," and later worked for an en- cyclopedia company and for the City of Chicago Law Department. In 1941, h e became a reporter and feature writer for the Chicago Daily News, and three years later he began his editorial-page column, "Strictly Personal," which is now distributed to some 100 newspapers in the Western Hemisphere. In 1945, Harris gained his post as drama critic for the Daily News which he still holds. Harris has been described by Time Magazine as "the most - quoted newsman in Chicago." He has won a number of prizes for journalism, and is the author of four books: "Strictly Personal" (1953); "Majority of One" (1957); "Last Things Firs." (1961) and "On the Contrary" (1964). SIDNEY J. HARRIS Academics Investigated in Terms of Religion Impact, a series of discussions on the relationship of fact and faith, was launched Tuesday with e 1 e v e n departmental seminars meeting in classrooms throughout the campus. "Our discussion was truly re- warding." said Wes Michaelson. chairman of the psychology dis- cussion group. "The interest of he faculty members was most encouraging. I feel we got a good Ken', Meyerson Quit Berkeley After Incidents of Obscenity At a news conference held Tuesday. Presiden Clark Kerr and Chancellor Martin Meyer- son of the University of Calif, at Berkeley announced that they would submit their resig- nations to the Regen s meet- ing to be held on March 26. Both men have refused to in- dicate the reason for their resig- nations, but the c mpus abound- ed wi h rumors. The predomin- ant feeling, according to As- sociated Students President Charles Powell, is that the res- ignations were occasioned by the presence of a few obscene signs during rallies staged dur- ing he past few weeks. The speakers at the rallies, said Powell, phced "no inhibition on four-letter words." There are no regulations con- cerning political activity now in force by the university, ac- cording to Powell. The Chancel- lor was to establish a set of in- terim rules, but no effort is being made to enforce them. Most organizations have set themselves up at various places where they seem to be most effective. Several students have been arrested for charges connected with their participation in ob- scene rallies, but heir cases are in State of California courts and not the disciplinary process of the university. The resignations brought quick responses from the As- sociated S udents (the official student government) and the Free Speech Movement, which organized the first semester protest demonstra ions. Both expressed regrets over the res- ignation and urged the two men to reconsider. The Associated Students commended Presiden. Kerr for his fine service to the school. J - The Free Speech Movement (FSM) Steering Committee is- sued the following statement on Wednesday: "The prospec s (for restoring harmony) have never been better. Only in the recent controversy over ob- scene words can students be said to have not acted respon- sibly. FSM did not ini iate or support this controversy . . . The problem is now in the courts where it belongs." FSM held a demonstration Wednesday for the dual purpose of protesting he Selma, Ala. situation and urging the recon- sideration of President Kerr's resignation. One to two thous- and persons participa ed, in comparison to one to two hun- dred in the "risque" demon- strations, according to Associ- ated Students President Powell. start in discussing some basic is- sues and I am mast optimistic about the future." Not all the meetings were un- qualified successes. Music-art and philosophy mee ings were poorly attended, although the leaders of those expressed the belief th.t time conflicts may have been at fault. Said Al Wilson of .he Music-Art seminar, "We will continue to meet and to look for a new approach to our common problems." The groups were set up to explore the problems arising be- tween major fields of study and Christianity. "We are .rying to discover the dynamic aspects of Christian belief," said Paul Rans- ford, chairman of Impact. The discussions were planned to be informal so that spontaneity would replace any sense of a class- room situa.ion. "We want to avoid getting into any artificial rut," commented Bob Anderson, history discussion leader. "Each group is setting up its own schedule and topics according ..o its own wants and needs." Future dates and times of each group will be announced, with each discussion continuing to meet weekly. Students are invited to a tend whichever sess.on interests them. The discussions were character ized by strong faculty interest in most departments and student in- terest that ran from very strong to almost nil. "We hope that those groups which were poorly attend- ed will run stronger next week," said Ransford. "Interest gener- ated so far provides a strong basis on which to build an ever broader base of support," he said.

03-12-1965

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: 03-12-1965

Sororities, Fraternities Enter Musical Contest The Civic Center will be t rans-

formed into a music auditorium on

Saturday, March 20 at 8 p.m.,

when the f ra terni t ies and sorori . ies

compete in the All-College Sing.

Each f ra tern i ty and sorori ty

will s ing a song of its choice,

and the best presenta'.ion will be

rewarded with a trophy. Each of

the competi tors will be directed

$ O c c ^

and accompanied by one its

members .

The sororities, their chosen

songs and (heir d i rectors and ac-

companis ts a re : Sibylline—"Milk

and Honey," Jan iece Smoll, Gloria

Langs t raa t ; Dorian—"My Favor i te

Things ," Kit Jansen , Caron Vandcr

Hoek; Kappa C h i - " T h e Sleigh,"

•Betty Lou Dietch, Evonne Taylor;

Delta Phi—"A Bird F lew," Louise

Voorhorst, Rosemary H e k m a n :

Sorosites—"Love Makes the World

Go Round," Sharon Dyks ra .

Cheryl Defendorf; Alpha Phi —

"Char lo t town," Linda Tiezzi.

F ra te rn i t i e s will en ter into the

competi ion with the following

songs, led by their d i rec tors and

accompanis t s :

Knickerbocker — "The Whiffen-

poof Song," John Versteeg, Tom

Mazur; Arcadian — "Joshua Fit

De Battle of Je r i cho , " Harvey

Lucas, Loren Meengs; Cosmo-

politan — "Black is the Color of

My True Love's Hair ," Chuck

Walvoord, Doug Smith; F ra te rna l

— "Rock-a-My Soul," J im Bekker

ing, Gene Pea r son ; E m e r s o n i a n —

"Cool Water , " Mark Lemmenes ,

Kelly Bakker.

The All-College Sing has been

planned by co-chairmen Gail Gro-

tenhuis and Jeff Muller. Mr. and

Mrs. J a m e s Tanis a re advisors for

the event. No admission will be

charged.

Sophomore Dance

Saturday, 8 p.m.

Carnegie Gymnasium anc OPE COLLEGE

or OLLAND, MICHIGAN

77th YEAR - 20 Hope College, Holland, Michigan March 12, 1965

II 'Modern Man's Dilemmas'

SCHOLARS—Vice-president Dr. John Hollenbach congratulates the finalists for the Woodrow Wilson Fellowships. They are (from left to right): James Boeringa, James Ronda, Paul Hesselink, Pam Dykstra, Marjorie Gouwens, and Carole Timkovich. Not pictured is Ron Mulder.

Wilson Foudation Gives Aid For Three Seniors' Study

The three Hope recipients of the Woodrow Wilson fellowships were announced today by Dr. John Hol-lenbach.

The recipients are J a m e s Boer-inga, a psychology ma jo r f rom Oak P a r k . 111., iMarjorie Gouwens,

Giant's Party

Honors Champs Saturday the Hope College MI A A

champion basketball team will be

honored at the all-college dance,

"The Jolly Green Giant 's Birth-

day P a r t y , " to be held in Carnegie

Gymnasium at 8:00 p.m.

The dance will f e a ' u r e the "La t e Knights" and various other ta lents of the sophomore class will pro-vide en ter ta inment . The highlight of the p rogram will be a presen-tation of .he Hope basketball t e a m by Coach DeVette. Dress is casual and the cost is 50c per person.

The all-college dance is spon-sored by the sophomore class. Co-chairmen a r e Gwenn Dacus and Randy Miller. Other chairmen in-clude: Cindy Clark, r e f reshments ; Ellen Folkert and Brad KIow, tick-ets ; Sherry Chapman, en ertain-m e n t ; Carole Fields and Carol De Young, publicity; and Marcia Newhouse and Joan Medema, dec-orations.

Tickets a r e on sale in Van Raa l t e

and also through d o r m represen-

tatives.

a German l i te ra ture m a j o r f rom South Holland. 111., and Carole Timkovich. an English m a j o r and a nat ive of Lansing. Illinois.

Of t h e 11,000 faculty-nominated college seniors who competed, only 1.39o students received the award.

The fellowship, designed to re-cruit new college teachers , con-sists of full tuition and fixed fees with $1800 living expenses at the g radua te school of the s tudent 's choice.

Honorable mention was given to P a m e l a Dykst ra . English; P^ul Hesselink. English; Ronald Muld-er, history and J a m e s Ronda history.

"Honorable mention winners are expected to receive a l ternat ive a w a r d s f rom other sources by cir-culation of their n a m e s throughout the g radua t e schools of the U.S. and Canada by the Foundat ion ," said Sir Hugh Taylor, president of the Foundation.

The program is the larges t pri-vate source of support for adv vanced work in the liberal a r t s . It has been f inanced by two Ford Foundation grants , totaling $52 million.

The program is in its twentieth yea r of awarding fellowships. Last year Hope College had seven re-cipients of the award .

Pres ident Dr . Calvin Vander-Werf said, " T h e s e fine young people and others in the past well represented Hope in this Founda-tion P rog ram and we expect to continue our effor ts in producing excellent under -g radua tes during Hope College's second century of progress and growth ."

Harris To Discuss Modern Man Sydney J . Harr is , columnist and

d r a m a cri t ic for the Chicago Daily

News, will speak to the campus

next Tuesday in the Chapel at 10:30

a .m. on the topic, "The Di lemmas

of Modern Man."

Mr. Harr i s began his ca ree r of

journalism while still in high

school, as a copy boy for the Chi-

cago Herald and Examiner . He

held this job through his college

yea r s and majored in philosophy

at the University of Chicago. For

a y e a r he was editor and publisher

of his own magazine, "The Bea-

con," and later worked for an en-

cyclopedia company and for the

City of Chicago Law Depar tment .

In 1941, he became a reporter

and fea tu re wri ter for the Chicago

Daily News, and three yea r s la ter

he began his editorial-page column,

"Strictly Pe r sona l , " which is now

distributed to some 100 newspapers

in the Western Hemisphere. In

1945, Harr is gained his post as

d r a m a critic for the Daily News

which he still holds.

Harr i s has been described by

Time Magazine as " the most -

quoted newsman in Chicago." He has won a number of prizes for journal ism, and is the author of four books: "Strict ly P e r s o n a l " (1953); "Major i ty of One" (1957); "Las t Things F i r s . " (1961) and "On the Con t ra ry" (1964). SIDNEY J. HARRIS

Academics Investigated in Terms of Religion Impact , a series of discussions

on the relationship of fact and faith, was launched Tuesday with e 1 e v e n depar tmenta l seminars meeting in classrooms throughout the campus.

"Our discussion was truly re-ward ing ." said Wes Michaelson. cha i rman of the psychology dis-cussion group. "The interest of he faculty m e m b e r s was most

encouraging. I feel we got a good

Ken', Meyerson Quit Berkeley

After Incidents of Obscenity At a news conference held

Tuesday. Presiden Clark Ke r r and Chancellor Martin Meyer-son of the University of Calif, at Berkeley announced that they would submit their resig-nations to the Regen s meet-ing to be held on March 26.

Both men have refused to in-dicate the reason for their resig-nations, but the c mpus abound-ed wi h rumors. The predomin-ant feeling, according to As-sociated Students Pres ident Charles Powell, is that the res-ignations were occasioned by the presence of a few obscene signs dur ing rallies staged dur-ing he past few weeks. The speakers at the rallies, said Powell, p h c e d "no inhibition on four-letter words ."

There a re no regulations con-cerning political activity now in force by the university, ac-cording to Powell. The Chancel-lor was to establish a set of in-ter im rules, but no effort is being m a d e to enforce them. Most organizat ions have set themselves up at various places where they seem to be most effective.

Several s tudents h a v e been ar res ted for charges connected with their par t ic ipat ion in ob-scene rallies, bu t heir cases a re in State of California courts

and not the disciplinary process of the university.

The resignations b r o u g h t quick responses f rom the As-sociated S udents (the official student government ) and the Free Speech Movement , which organized the f i r s t semes te r protest demons t ra ions. Both expressed regre ts over the res-ignation and urged the two men to reconsider . The Associated Students commended Presiden. Kerr for his fine service to the school. J -

The F ree Speech Movement (FSM) Steering Committee is-sued the following s ta tement on Wednesday: "The prospec s (for restoring harmony) have never been better. Only in the recent controversy over ob-scene words can s tudents be said to have not acted respon-sibly. FSM did not ini iate or support this controversy . . . The problem is now in the courts where it belongs."

FSM held a demonstra t ion Wednesday for the dual purpose of protest ing he Selma, Ala. situation and urging the recon-sideration of President Ker r ' s resignation. One to two thous-and persons part icipa ed, in comparison to one to two hun-dred in the " r i s q u e " demon-strat ions, according to Associ-ated Students Pres ident Powell.

s t a r t in discussing some basic is-

sues and I a m mast optimist ic

about the fu tu re . "

Not all the meetings were un-qualified successes . Music-art and philosophy mee ings were poorly at tended, although the leaders of those expressed the belief t h . t t ime conflicts m a y have been at fault . Said Al Wilson of .he Music-Art seminar , "We will continue to meet and to look for a new approach to our common prob lems . "

The groups were set up to explore the problems ar is ing be-tween major fields of s tudy and Christianity. "We a r e .rying to discover the dynamic aspects of Christian bel ief ," said Paul Rans-ford, cha i rman of Impact .

The discussions were planned to be informal so that spontaneity would replace any sense of a class-room situa.ion. "We want to avoid get t ing into any art i f icial r u t , " commented Bob Anderson, history discussion leader . " E a c h group is sett ing up its own schedule and topics according ..o its own wants and needs ."

Fu tu re dates and t imes of each group will be announced, with each discussion continuing to mee t weekly. Students a re invited to a tend whichever sess.on in teres ts them.

T h e discussions were c h a r a c t e r ized by strong faculty in teres t in most depar tmen t s and s tudent in-teres t that r an f r o m very strong to almost nil. "We hope that those groups which were poorly at tend-ed will run s t ronger next w e e k , " said Rans fo rd . " In t e r e s t gener-ated so far provides a s trong bas is on which to build an ever b roade r base of suppor t , " he said .

Page 2: 03-12-1965

Page Z Itope C«Uefe aackor March 12. 1%5

Senate Plans Elections; Nominations Due Monday

"New Great Concept of God'

Brinig: 'Wonders Through God's Will' The Student Senate Tuesday

night d i s c u s s e d forthcoming elections for Student Senate of-fices and class presidents.

The Elec'ions Committee has set the ca lendar in the following manner : nominations will have to be turned in to the Student Senate by 5 p.m. March 15; there will be a mee ing of campaign managers March 16 and petitions will be available the same day; Campaign Week will run f rom April 19-23 with April 20 being the day for speeches by candid-ates; election runoffs will be held on April 22 and final election on April 23.

The AWS board reported their recommendation tha : girls be al-lowed to wear bermudas a f t e r sup-per every day, all day Saturday including in the library, language laboratory and music building, but no bermudas will be allowed on Sunday.

The mat t e r of pink slips for excuses f rom chapel remains in a subcommittee of the Religious Life Commi tee and no fur ther action could be taken on this issue.

Gerry Auten presented a re-

port on the Tal ladega College stu-dent exchange p rog ram and the upcoming trip over spring recess, ex^ 'a nin«? f hp puTvose of he d~o-g r a m and the progress attained at that t ime. (See additional story on page six.)

It was decided that there will be no all-college formal this year be-cause of lack of space on the social ca lendar .

Also discussed was the manner of honoring the Hope M1AA champion basketball team. This ma t t e r was referred to co-chairmen Anita awad, Pa t McEachron and Joel Monsma. They have since decided to honor the team at the all-college dance at Carnegie Gym tomorrow. Mrs. Harold C. Brinig

Symphonette to Play The Hope College Symphonette, under the direction of Dr.

Morret te Rider, will appear in a concert series sponsored by Oakland University in Rochester, Mich, today.

The Symphonette, with Robert Cecil, hornist, as soloist, will play he Fou-th Horn Concerto in E-flat by Mozart. .James Tallis. harpsichordist , will present a variety of solo works for harpsichord in addition to joining the Symphonette in the pe r fo rmance of the Twelfth Concerto Grosso by Corelli.

Other portions of the program will be devoted to the Fifth Symphony of Schubert, the ballet music of Gretery and works by F a u r e and Strauss.

f

If everybody and his

duck-billed platypus phones

Long Distance at 9 P.M.

Why don't you phone

earlier-or later?

[THLEPHD Nte

D r o p a t

Like, say, anytime between 8 P.M. and 4:30 A.M. week nights, or anytime (day or night) on Sunday.

Those are the times when the lowest

station-to-station Long Distance rates are

in effect. They never get any lower!

By the way, station-to-station calls be-

tween points in Michigan always cost some-

what more when you call "Collect." But,

you don't have to wait 't i l 8 P.M. to phone

because the lowest rates for "Collect" calls

start at 6 P.M. week nights. And they are

also in effect every weekend-al l day Satur-

day and Sunday.

So avoid the rush. There's plenty of t ime

to call Long Distance and still get the low-

est rates. Long Distance is the next best

thing to being there.

Michigan Bell [ik w I /TmiTJ

Part of the Nationwide Bell System

"Each of us can help to cure the wq-H's disease by formu1ating an adequate philosophy of l ife."

This was the analysis of our generat ion 's basic role and our personal significance in achieve-in? th s goal given by Mrs. Harold C. Brinig at last Tuesday 's as-sembly. Mrs. Brinig is a fo rmer Pit tsburgh parole officer, Chicago youth wo.ker and leader of youth education at Marble Collegiate Church, New York.

Using examples of people she has worked wi h in her varied careers , she went on to explain what she considers to be an "ade -quate philosophy of l i fe ." "People should ask themselves who they are, where they are, and what is their purpose ." Out of the an-swers 'o these questions comes philosophy of life which includes: (1) "a new concept of the world" '2t " a new great concept of self" and <3> "a new great concept of God."

For Mrs. Brinig, "life is a victory to be won, an adventure in creat-ing something." This urge to crea e has been responsible for most of the advancements of society. If we would allow this divine urge for social bet terment to take prec-edence over self advancemen , we would take the first step towards

a better world, continued Mrs. Brinig.

But if we consider ourselves in-capable of affect ing the world, this life ?oncep. is of little use. "You must have also a new great concept of yourself ," according to Mrs. Brinig. "The world's disease isn't poverty, war, sex, or cheat-ing. These are only symptoms. The disease is ha te , fear, jealousy and dishonesty. These all fal l un-der the re .1m of personal mora ls . One either follows a good moral code and aids in the cure, or p a r tially follows rules of honesty, etc. and adds to the world's d iseases , she s ta ted.

The most important concept needed .o adequately cope with society is the "new great con-cept of God." continued Mrs. Brinig. "God wants to cure this diseased world and wants to make it beautiful, hrough the unique plan he has for each of our lives. With a philosophy based on hon-esty. self-less fr iendship and considering God's will in each of our lives, we will be able to achieve wonders in solving the world's d i l emma . "

Mrs. Brinig closed with the Bib-lical quote: "You have not chosen me. but 1 have chosen you, and ordained you to go and bear f r u i i . "

DeValois Discusses Marriage As Mutual and Spontaneous

"Personal happ ness should not be the pr imary objective Ln m a r -riage. Such happiness is a by-product of m a r r i a g e , " said Dr. Bernardine De Valois in her first lec ure last Monday night on the topic. "Are You Fit to be Tied?" The program was sponsored by AWS.

"To try and achieve a perfect 50-50 equality in mar r iage rela-tionship is impossible," said Dr. De Valois, who believes that " m a r -riage should be mutual and spon-, taneous." She then enumera ed the various problems that should be solved before marr iage , such as in-laws, money and church at-tendance.

Speaking on planned parenthood Mrs. De Valois said, "The num-ber of children should ibe dee ded by the parents ' ability to give love and support to the children."

Dr. De Valois concluded her

lecture by saying, " M a r r i a g e in-creases the joys of life and de-creases the sor rows."

Questionnaires were distributed on the topic, "Holding the Line Steady," which will be discussed March 15 in student discussion groups led by facul .y and min-isters' wives.

Peace Corps Halsey and J a n e Beemer , re-

turned Peace Corps volunteers who served in the Philippines, will visit t he Hope campus next Fr iday, March 19. They will be available for consultation with stu-dents concerning opportunities in the Peace Corps.

Anyone wishing to speak with them should sign an appointment list available in Dean Hi lmer t ' s office, according to Marsha Hend-ricks, who will co-ordinate the visit of the two volunteers.

Westrnte's Ladies Apparel

15 West 8th Street

Dresses, Skirts, Slacks

Sweaters, Suits, Blouses

by

Junior House, Jantzen

Koret of California, Shapely

FOR A CLEAN WASH

TRY

WALT'S ECONO WASH

COIN OPERATED - SELF SERVICE

LAUNDRO-MAT Corner 1 7th St. and Columbia Ave.

Only 4 Blocks South of

KOLLEN HALL

THE NEW

WINDMILL RESTAURANT Formerly "THE GLATZ"

Good Food at College Budget Prices

More News To Come

Page 3: 03-12-1965

(?

Speed Reading

Course Aids Reading Skills

ARTHUR LITTLE LEONARD C. HOLVIK

Earlham Professors To Lecture On Japanese Music, Drama

J a p a n e s e music, d r a m a and dance will be discussed and demon-strated on campus by two guest lec turers Tuesday.

Professor Leonard Holvik, cha i rman of he music depar tment and director of the concert choir at Ea r lham College, and professor Arthur l i t t l e director of Drama t i c productions at lEarlham College, h ve been

C u l t u r e 1 0 a n d b y t h e H o p e f a o u l t y semina r in J a p a n e s e History and

During their visit to the campus they will take par t in classes. A special J a p a n e s e dinner planned by Dr. and Mrs. Masanao will also t ake place during their s tay. A public p rog ram in the Snow Audit-or ium will be held Tuesday eve-ning at 8:45 p.m.

Professor Holvik, a native of Minnesota, received both his B.S. and M.A. f rom H a r v a r d Univer-si y where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and also served as a teaching fellow following his grad-uation. He came to E a r l h a m Col-lege in 1949 and has since held two Ford Foundation Facul ty Fellow-ships, one for study in New York and another, in 1962-63, to J a p a n .

Professor Ar hur Little, who teaches speech and di rects dra-ma t i c s at E a r l h a m , joined the col-lege staff in 1947, spent the sum-m e r of 1962 in J a p a n taking par t in a faculty semina r on A s n n ar ts and culture, and then remained in the country for the academic year .

While on Hope's c a m p u s Profes-sors Holvik and Little will meet with Dr. Van Pu t ten ' s F a r Eas t students 'Tuesday, 4th hour, Chap-el 14—up '.o 25 guests can be ac-comodated) and with Dr. Kano 's

class in J a p a n e s e history and civ-ilization (1-2:30 p .m. ) which will be moved to the Carley room in the l ibrary . La te r in the af ternoon

•they will meet wi h m e m b e r s of the Facu l ty Seminar '5:30 p.m., Pres ident ' s Room, Graves ) .

The evening p rog ram, to which students and the public are in-vited. will include a short movie on various fo rms of t hea t r e and dance, followed by live illustra-tions on the koto and a recorded per formance . Par t i cu la r emphasis will be given to the role of the Noh Drama . There will also be a displ y of musical ins t ruments , books of pictures and no ations. pictures and records.

Students in Dr . Kano ' s J a p a n e s e history course will have an op-portunity to see an hour-long film on the J a p a n e s e Doll Theat re 'Bunraku) which is in Japanese , but will be na r ra ted and com-mented upon by Professors Holvik and Little. This event, too, sched-uled for 1 p .m. in Van Zoeren Library, will be open 4.o the public.

The Internat ional Relations Club has cancelled its regular meet ing scheduled for March 16 and is re-placing it with the p rogram on J a p a n e s e music and d r a m a .

"1 used to take all afternoon just to read the Holland Evening Sentinel—now I whip through the New York Times in just a few minutes. 1 can do all my classwork with plenty of t ime for extra read-ing besides."

The above testimonial f rom a satisfied s tudent was elicited by Mrs. Helen Schoon's " Improving Reading Skills" course, a non-credit six week study designed to aid s tudents in developing g rea te r speed and comprehension in read-ing.

"This is not a ' reading clinic' or a remedia l course ," Mrs. Schoon emphasized. "We do not not teach people how to read, but how to perfect adult reading skills necessary for college reading.

"Most people who take the course have a re ding ra te of 250 o 350 words per minu te , " said Mrs. Schoon. "They usually increase their ra te to around 1000 words,

.although we once had a student who was reading 5000 words. We also work on comprehension im-provement and vocabulary l is ts ."

An army of machines is em-ployed in the course, including a " reading control ler ." which f lashes a reading selec ion. line by line, onto a screen at a fixed ra te . " I t ' s fun to read—" says the f i rs t se-lection, appropriately.

A " read ing acce l le ra to r" pushes the s tuden . to read rapidly by means of a bar which inexorably moves along the page, fore ng the reader to keep ahead of the bar or lose the sense of the passage.

"Most s tudents read words, not

phrases , " according to Mrs . Schoon. " T h e tachistoscope f lashes digits, phrases and finally sen-tences on a screen for one one-hundreth of a second, convincing the viewer that he doesn't need to read in the left- o-right word-by-word method he has been us-ing."

Not all s tudents at the reading center are f reshmen who fail the

grammar c o u r s e , said Mrs. Schoon. S e n i o r s contempla ing graduate study also register.

Why can't college students read faster? "When 1 ask them, they say, 'I never read anything but my a s s i g n m e n t , ' " said Mrs. Schoon.

Registration for the next session of the reading course will be taken in April.

BEAT THE MACHINE—Anna-Marie Fisher improves her rate of reading by keeping ahead of the machine which moves down the page.

A & W ROOT BEER

Good Food To Go With An Already Famous Drink

Just past the corner of 8th and Columbia

MODEL LAUNDRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING

Daily Stop at All Dorms

97 East 8th Street Phone EX 2-3625

Bu/ford Stuc/fo

Portrait Photography

SO East Eighth Street Telephone EX 2-9608

JACK PLRCELL P. F. TENNIS

A R C H - G A R D 9

Cvthiont the foot c !

oil 3 vital point;

$7.50 Jack Purcell

For fast breaks, action and top performance.

Jack Purcell Molded crepe sole for plenty of traction. Loose duck lining for foot comfort. Rugged, light-weight, tough!

HeviL B O O T E R Y

Q i i d S J i o i t J ' U J t t t S &

Open Every Day 'Til 5:30 P.M. (Including Wed.) Man. and Fri. 'Til 9 P.M.

Page 4: 03-12-1965

Page 4 Hope College anchor March 12, 1965

Off The Cuff

•' Foreign Policy Needs Rethinking by Robert Donia

IRC sponsored a very worth-while panel l as t Sa tu rday night on U. S. policy t oward E a s t e r n Eur -ope. Most of the pa r t i c ipan t s spent their t i m e in a t t ack ing the cu r ren t policies of both pa r t i e s concerning E a s t e r n E u r o p e and p lead ing for f r iendl ie r re la t ions with those Communi s t l ands .

The panel discussion a n d subse-quent ques t ions and answer s r a i sed some vital and f u n d a m e n t a l prob-lems re la t ing to A m e r i c a n fore ign policy. In the give and take of day-to-day deve lopmen t s in Eur-ope, V ie tnam, the Congo and oth-er t rouble a r e a s , many of us over-look or forget some of the basic pr inciples upon which our policy is based .

Many would l ike to believe tha t our sole basis f o r action is a vig-orous idea l i sm, but unfor tuna te ly Amer i can p r a g m a t i s m en te r s into the p ic tu re at l eas t as m u c h . Ac-tually, a un ique and a m b i g u o u s combinat ion of ideal ism and real-ism en te rs the pic ture and some-t imes, as was the case recent ly with r e f e r e n c e to Vie tnam, even the P r e s i d e n t and S e c r e t a r y of State s eem to d i s ag ree . We s tand for f r e e d o m , p e a c e and self-deter-minat ion for all nat ions on an ideal level . P rac t i ca l ly , we pro-mote our own sel f - in teres t with pa r t i cu l a r a t t en t ion to mi l i t a ry super ior i ty and defense of our home shores . At present , this means that we do eve ry th ing pos-sible to oppose aggress ion by the other powerful mi l i t a ry bloc in the world today , t h a t under the influ-ence of Communis t ideology.

The nega t ive i m a g e of the Unit-ed S ta tes in neu t r a l and allied nations of the world i s - l a r g e l y a result of our policy in s i tuat ions which do not fit into this basic power s t ruggle . It s eems tha t we don' t know what to do when Com-munism isn' t at s take . Many ex-amples could be cited, but par t ic -ularly the in t e rna l s i tuat ion in South Afr ica , the African colonies of Por tuga l and the A r a b situa-tion s tand out a s pr ime e x a m p l e s of incongrui t ies which cannot be explained a w a y by the under ly ing principle of A m e r i c a n foreign pol-icy.

The ideal foreign policy is one which r e t a ins the long-range ideal goals of our policy as s ta ted above, ye1 one which prudent ly and pro-perly uses power to p romote those goals . Our present position finds us as a nat ion doing th i s with r e g a r d to the Communi s t bloc countr ies . However , we a re not doing this in deal ing wi th situ-ations in which the conflict with Communism is not the dominan t considerat ion. We have fai led to recognize the essent ia l d i f f e rences of these cases and failed r e m a r k -ably in our abi l i ty to dea l with t h e m .

This philosophy is in d i rec t con-t r a s t to those who today a r e advo-ca t ing a "neo- iso la t ionis t" posi-tion. Wal ter L ippman , in discuss-ing this new philosophy which he clearly suppor ts , s t a t ed , "Whi le we h a v e i m p o r t a n t in te res t s on the Asian and Afr ican cont inents , they a r e not vital in te res t s which would jus t i fy a uni lateral Amer i -can c o m m i t t m e n t of our mi l i t a ry forces. In these a reas , which a re beyond the l imi ts of ou r vital s t ra teg ic in te res t s , the sound pol-icy is to rely on collect ive secur-i ty . "

Mr. L ippman has a point in op-posing un i la te ra l mi l i ta ry commit-ment but the dis t inct ion be tween "vi ta l A m e r i c a n s t r a t eg i c inter-e s t " and just p la in " i n t e r e s t " is indeed a ques t ionable one. In p rac t ica l t e r m s , wha t h a p p e n s in Saigon is of vi ta l s t r a t eg i c inter-est to all A m e r i c a n s .

F u r t h e r m o r e , "neo - i so l a t ion i sm" would rule out such h u m a n i t a r i a n and ideal is t ic ac t ions as the Congo rescue mission and any ac t iv i t ies c a r r i e d on at t he reques t of o ther g o v e r n m e n t s . And probably the most impor tan t aspec t of policy to re ta in , to somewha t p l aca te our consc iences and ma in t a in our mo-ra le , is some s e m b l a n c e of ideal-i sm.

We find ourselves, then, ground-ed on f i rm underp inn ings in our present foreign policy. What is needed is an infusion of a bit more idea l i sm and rea l i sm combined : we need to regain a vision of the goals and t h e cou rage of our con-vict ions and s t reng th to put some of ou r idea ls into ac t ion. This is pa r t i cu la r ly t rue of a r e a s which do not fit into the ove r r id ing con-s idera t ion of the cur ren t in terna-tional s t ruggle be tween t h e f r ee world and C o m m u n i s m .

Hope Delegation to T allegada To Survey Civil Rights Issue

During the spr ing recess seven Hope s t uden t s and three facu l y m e m b e r s will spend a week on the c a m p u s of Ta l l adega College in p repa ra t i on for the for thcom-ing s tuden t e x c h a n g e p r o g r a m planned between Hope and Tal-ladega.

The s tuden t s w e r e chosen through in te rv iews given by sev-e ra l facu l ty and s tudent l eade r s of the project . Facul ty l e ade r s a ccompany ing the s tudents will be Dr. J e n t z of t he Philosophy and Religion d e p a r t m e n t s and Dr . Wil-l iam Bar low and Dr. David Powell of the his tory d e p a r t m e n t .

Ta l l adega College, located in Ta l ladega , Albania , approx imate ly 100 miles f rom Se lma , A l a b a m a , is a l iberal a r t s institution founded in 1867 and has an en ro l lmen t of 385 s udents . The school will or-ganize the p r o g r a m for the Hope visitors, including visi t ing of class-rooms, f o r m a l and in formal dis-cussions.

The purpose of the t r i p is to

orient Hope s tuden t s into the func ionings of a southern Negro communi ty . Dr. Powell s ta ted tha t "We a r e just going to observe life at the college and to try to gel to know the s tuden ts . We a r e not going as a mi l i tan t or activist g r o u p . "

To gain m o r e insight as to the social conditions in the South, all appl icants h a d read many recen t a r t i c l e s and books on the rac ia l crisis . They have also met with all Hope College facul ty m e m b e r s who have lived in the Sou h to d i scuss what can be expected at Ta l ladega . Dr. Powell warned tha t even af te r ex tens ive read ing , "We can ' t feel we are expe r t s in the South. We h ven ' t been engaged in the civil r ights issues and we a re ignorant of conditions. But we will l e a r n , " he added.

The t r ip to the A l a b a m a college will be followed by a r e t u r n visit of five Ta l l adega s tuden t s to Hope ' s c a m p u s la ter his spr ing repor ted G e r r y Auten. s tudent co-cha i rman.

Student Group Sponsors Travel The USNSA (Uni ted S ta tes Na-

tional Student Associa ion) is spon-soring for in te res ted s tudents a Student Leade r Delegat ion to be held in J a p a n . Korea , and Hong Kong f r o m June 7 to July 10. Six s tuden t s will r ece ive scholarships for the p r o g r a m . These s t ipends will include a pa r t i a l a l lowance for mea l s plus comple te p a y m e n t of t r anspor ta t ion expenses . The deadl ine fo r appl ica t ions is April 1.

The de lega tes will mee t with Asian s . uden t s in the i r own en-

The Students and Faculty are invited to worship on the Second Sunday of Lent in Hope Church.

Morning Worship at 9:30 and 11:00 with Mr . Hil legonds

preaching at both services. The Chancel Choir sings at 11:00.

The School of Christian Living meets at 6:45.

A THOUGHT FOR LENT: When God took a handful

of clay and hid in It the very torment of eternity, he

got him a turmoil out of it. And why not? But the

birds of heaven and the beasts of the field looked on

with wondering eyes; for this strange creature had its

heart among the stars, and its head was only a l itt le

lower than the angels! There was a man.

HOPE CHURCH

77 W. l l t h Street

v i ronmen t to gain a be t t e r in-sight into the Asian mind and the position t h j t Asia occupies in the world today.

Before leaving for their as-signed a rea , the re will be a brief-ing session for the group given by exper ienced personnel f r o m the gove rnmen t and USNSA. T h e s e p rehens ive knowledge of the a r ea mee t ings will give the s tudent com-he will be visiting.

Applications a re ava i lab le f rom T o m Ogren in Arcad i an Hall .

Smoking Clinic

To Be Offered

By Doctor Team F r o m Sunday through Thursday , .

March 18, Hope College will hold its f i rs t smoking clinic. S m o k e r s will m e e t in the Car ley Room f rom 6:30 to 7:30 p . m . on e a c h of the f ive nights.

The clinic w a s developed by t h e Seventh Day Advent i s t Church and has been of nat ional in te res t . The clinic has been r epo r t ed a s ove r 509f success fu l on the na-tional level.

The clinic a t t e m p t s to p r e s e n t the f a c t s about smok ing in t e r m s of heal th but also tying it into a spi r i tua l con tex t . D r . E a r h a r d of the Lans ing a r e a is the m e d i c a l expe r t who will work wi th the group. A pas to r f r o m this a r e a will aid h im . The f i lm, which will s t a r t off the clinic Sunday night , is " 1 to 10,000," a f i lm about a lung opera t ion . Many such f i lms a r e u sed by the cl inics.

DELEGATION TO YUGOSLAVIA—The GLCA delegation to Yugo-

slavia met at Hope last weekend in conjunction with the Michigan

IRC conference. They are (standing, left to right): Claude Lancome,

Earlham; Bruce Bigelow, Wooster; Fred McEIdowney, Albion; Ken

Jaros, Wabash; Bob Donia. Hope; John Taggart, Kenyon; Jan

Strasma, DePauw; (seated, left to right): Nancy Vogeler, Denison;

Linda Donnely, Antioch; Craigen Wall, Oberlin; and Donna Garrison,

Ohio Wesleyan.

IRC Symposium for Professors

Concludes Yugoslav Seminar by Paul Verduin

Presen t United Sta tes policy toward E a s t e r n P^urope and suggest ions

for improvemen t were the subjec t of a sympos ium of college p ro fesso r s

at the Michigan In te rna t iona l Rela t ions Club Conference, held he r e last

S a t u r d a y in conjunct ion with the Grea t Lakes College Associat ion

Seminar , to be held in Yugoslavia next s u m m e r .

The s y m p o s i u m on E a s t e r n E u r o p e was held in the Dur fee Hall T e r r a c e Room immedia t e ly fol-lowing a banque t for a tending s tuden t s f r o m Aquinas College, Cent ra l Michigan Univers i ty , and Hope. Also a t tending were the twelve GLCA Yugoslav S e m i n a r s tudents .

Members of the panel included Dr. I rwin A b r a m s , professor of his o ry at Antioch College, who ac ted as m o d e r a t o r . Dr. Mor r i s Branch , professor ot economics al Albion and Dr. Milton Yinger , pro-fessor of sociology at Oberl in. Also on the panel were Dr. John Hollenbach and Dr. Calvin Vander-Werf of Hope. All of these m e n excep t Dr. VanderWerf will a t tend the Yugoslav S e m i n a r .

The presen t U.S. policy ^oward E a s t e r n E u i o p e . accord ing to Dr. A b r a m s . is based on the fact tha t comple te so l idar i ty no longer ex-ists within the c o m m u n i s , em-pire. " T h e concept of the iron cu r t a in as a closed off section, fo rmula ted by Winston Church. l l . is no longer the c a s e , " he said, ad-ding that " t h e younger generat ion in E a s t e r n Europe is e s t r anged f r o m the g o v e r n m e n t , and the gove rnmen t l eaders know i t . "

A b r a m s cal led our p resen t pol-icy " a n enlightened one c o m p a r e d to .ha t of John Fos te r Dulles dur-ing the E isenhower y e a r s , " and descr ibed it a s "bui ld ing b r idges" to close the gap of mis t rus t be-tween the U.S. and E a s t e r n E u r o p e in o r d e r to s t imula e the growing d i f f e r ences between the E u r o p e a n communis t nat ions . This is ac-complished through economic aid, t r a d e and cu l tura l exchange .

Dr. Abrams voiced disagreement with the U.S. policy o build up West G e r m a n y as a mi l i t a ry power and as a nat ion, say ing tha t E a s t -ern Eu rope still f e a r s a s t rong , agress ive G e r m a n y . (West G e r m -any s t i l l c l a ims her fo rmer ly-he ld ' e r r i t o r y e a s t of t he Oder-N.esse line, a c la im which the U.S. h a s not fo rmal ly opposed.) "As long as the United States lets its policy toward E a s t e r n E u r o p e be influ-enced by the West G e r m a n s , we turn the E a s t e r n E u r o p e a n powers into the hands of t he R u s s i a n s , " said A b r a m s .

Specifying possible improve-men t s in policy, A b r a m s s t a t ed tha t the U.S. could give up the mul t i - l a te ra l force in E u r o p e as a b a r g a i n i n g point with the Com-mun i s t countr ies .

Calling for f lexibil i ty in .our policy, Dr . Yinger e m p h a s i z e d the

fact t ha t the re a r e impor t an t dif-f e rences within e a c h c o m m u n i s t coun ry. and a r a n g e of policy views. "If we real ize t he re is a range , we should a d j u s t our policy to e n c o u r a g e their most negoti-able one . "

Underscor ing Dr . Yinger ' s s ta te -ment , Dr. VanderWerf r e m a r k e d , "I was s t ruck by the vas . differ-ences in the E a s t e r n E u r o p e a n countr ies 1 visited las t s u m m e r . "

Dr. Branch stated he held to a the viewpo.nt of economics , ques-tioned the a p p a r e n t de t e rmina t ion of the U.S. to " c o n q u e r " Com-mun i sm. "Only with the possible except ion of China does one see a doc t r ina i r e concept of Commun-ism thr iving t o d a y , " he sa id .

Dr. Branch s t a t ed he held to a policy of "huiTLmitar ianism and help.ng na ions achieve g r e a t e r i ndependence" t oward E a s t e r n Europe , as opposed to the Mach-liaveliian "d iv ide ,and c o n q u e r " plan.

Rober t Donia, Hope 's Yugos lav Seminar r ep re sen t a t i ve , asked Dr . Brunch whe the r the basis of our policy now is mee t ing the mi l i t a ry . h r ea t f rom C o m m u n i s t count r ies , and reques ted a persona l c r i t i c i sm of our pol.cy. B r a n c h replied tha t economic aid is the p re requ is i t e for i m p r o v m e n t of Eas t -West re-lat ions, but tha . the U.S. holds " a he te rogeneous collection of polic-ies, of which the power s t r u g g l e p r e d o m i n a t e s . "

Cont roversy over whe ther Uni ted S ta .es policy should be guided by ideal ism or p r a g m a t i s m domina t ed the r ema .n ing discussion. When asked by Hope s tuden t J a c k Cook to ra t ional ize o u r to l e rance of to ta l i ta r ian g o v e r n m e n t s , such as in the Dominican Republic , Yin-ger replied, "We don ' t a l w a y s s tand for 100 p e r cen t pr inciple . We mus t r a t h e r keep in mind the highest g o J s . " Dr . Hol lenbach re-acted ,o this by saying , " U n l e s s we can find s o m e b a s i c end , such as that of the Chr i s t i an t rad i t ion , we a r e rea l ly t ry ing to a t t r a c t un-decided na ions to our s ide for selfish r e a s o n s . "

Commenting on U.S. support of Po r tuga l and South Afr ica , D r . Yinger said, " W e m u s t not be too s y m p a t h e t i c with A m e r i c a n policy in this a r e a , " and cal led A m e r i -can bus iness e n t e r p r i s e s in hose a r e a s i m m o r a l . Dr . A b r a m s syn-thesized by s t a t i ng , "Unless we keep ideals ahead of p rac t i ca l con-s idera t ions , ou r ideal is t ic goa l s a r e not a c c o m p l i s h a b l e . "

Page 5: 03-12-1965

March 12, 1965 Hope College anchor Page 5

Hope Looks Ahead Freshman Study Sessions Data

Pr ins Explores Hope's Future Reveals Good Effects on Grades

by John Mulder

The man who looked more like

a professional football player than

a college adminis t ra tor sat back,

crossed his legs and began to an-

swer questions.

This man was Robert (Bud)

Prins, 1954 g radua te of Hope Col-

lege. formerly an employee of

Michigan Bell Telephone Co., and

the recently appointed assis tant to

the president and head of develop-

ment .

Head of development is a new adminis t ra t ive position created by Dr. VanderWerf. The position is becoming a common one in many colleges and universities across the nation. A bulletin f rom a f irm which t ra ins men in this field has commented on this change in this way:

"The development officer is still a newcomer to the college scene. Fifteen years ago there was only a handful throughout the country. Ten years ago the number was still small. However, the pres-sures facing higher education have brought a new awareness of the necessity for establishing a continuing, long-range, planned program of advancement and de-velopment for colleges and uni-versi t ies ." (Bulletin of Gonser, Gerber, Tinker and Stuhr; Chi-cago, 111.)

This bulletin goes on to state that the position of head of devel-opment is a difficult one to define as far as its responsibilities and the goals of development. • Mr. Pr ins commented that he felt this was the case. He indicated that his job was not a static one but one involving a constant process of critical evaluation. "We must constantly evaluate where we have been and where we are going," he said.

" T h e r e has to be a recognition of the fact that f i rs t and foremost the alumni will continue to be an excellent source of college policy, progress and f inances. This is the one group which is growing in direct proportion to the growth of the college," Pr ins said.

He contrasted the potential alum-ni support with church support. "The church is not growing in di-rect proportion to the college. We must develop in the church the realization that the college needs a grea ter portion of the overall pie, so to speak . "

Contained in all of his r emarks about his new position was the view that the head of development was a man who was concerned with money. That a college cannot grow or develop without money is an assumption basic to his out-

look.

In raising the money necessary for development, Mr. Pr ins point-ed out that three potential sources must be tapped—the alumni, the church and the community . Mr. Pr ins as head of the 1964 Alumnf Fund Raising Drive showed him-self to be qualified in this aspect of his job. The drive went over its goal by bringing in over $127,-000 and by raising the percentage of alumni contributors f rom 17 to 35 per cent .

"The study p rogram had definite beneficial e f fec t s , " said Dean J a m e s Harvey abou . the study ses-sions which were conducted for freshmen last semester .

On the basis of this finding and I he unanimous vote of the students involved, the p rogram will be con-tinued next year, .he dean added.

The study sessions were held four nights a week for three hours a night during the three weeks prior to Christmas vacation. Those freshmen whose midterm average was 1.6 or lower were required to attend three of the four nights and those whose average was 1.6 to 2.0 were invited to attend on a voluntary basis.

According to Dean Harvey the program was an " a t t e n p to help new freshmen who may have made miscalculations about college.'" In

comparing grade point averages f rom mid e rm and finals of 33 students who were required to go regularly, the average of 23 of students went up, nine wen. down and one remained the s.ime. The a rea of voluntary at tendance also had some beneficial effect on grade point averages.

Evaluation sheets which the stu-den s completed, indicated that they unanimously approved of the idea behind the study sessions.

The sessions next fall may have some modifications which were suggested f rom experience with this year ' s program, the dean said, such as the addition of lectures on how to study. Other possible changes are concerned with the sessions themselves such as hav-ing a study room in the library and requiring only the f irs t two of the three hours.

Dr. Robert DeHaan Selected

As Education Department Head

ROBERT PRINS

In the years ahead. Mr. Pr ins expressed the hope that the Alum ni Fund could be raised to $250,-000 yearly and could increase the percentage of contributors.

His job involves more than fund-raising, however. Development must occur within the student body, and thus he will be engaged to a certain degree in student re-crui tment . As the college devel-ops, its name and its reputation must become known to more peo-ple, and so his job involves pub-lic relations as well.

Mr. Prins said, "There is a defi-nite relationship between fund-raising, student recrui tment , and public relations. However, admis-sions must be and continue to be a job for the admissions office. This is true as well for public re-lations. There is an in t e r re l a -tionship only in specific cases . "

Mr. Pr ins ' record as chairman of last year ' s fund drive, as an adminis t ra tor with Michigan Bell, and as a leader in raising mon-ey for the United Foundation in Detroit portends well for Hope's development and future .

X «

i

Dr. Robert DeHaan, currently

on leave with the Great Lakes Col-

leges Association P r o g r a m m e d

Leapning Project , will become

chairman of the Depar tment of

Education of Hope College begin-

ning with the next academic year ,

announced President VanderWerf .

Dr. DeHaan stated that right now he sees the main problem confronting the depar tment as one of staff. With the re t i rement last year of cha i rman VanderBorgh and the approaching re t i rement of two more m e m b e r s of the staff, new replacements will have to be obtained shortly.

Dr. DeHaan has another year on the GLCA Pro jec t and will be splitting his t ime between the project and Hope. During this period he plans to lay the ground-work and integrate himself into the depar tment .

In 1966 he will be relieved of his directorship, and will be able to devote full t ime to the educa-tion depar tment .

Dr. DeHaan stated recently that he sees changes occurring in American education. Teachers are confronted with new techniques for instruction. There is also a growing emphasis on education for the culturally depriver child-ren and an emphasis on increased technology in education.

President Dr. VanderWerf stat-ed. "With the sweeping changes that a re occurring in education, our Depar tment of Education is destined to play a crucial and leading role in shaping pr imary and secondary school education in this region. These new appoint-ments are a imed to strengthen our depar tment to meet the chal-lenges and demands of tomor-row."

S X X X X X « X X X X • • X X X X X X

J E U J E L R Y

Dependable Jewelers for Over a Quarter Century

6 West Eighth Street

HOLLAND, MICHIGAN

SJCXXWHXXXXWCXXXXXXXXXXWXXXXXKXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXtf#

Fris WESTERN MICHIGAN'S LARGEST GREETING CARD DEPARTMENT

Featu r ing : C o n t e m p o r a r y a n d S tud io Card», Ring Book t , P a p e n , Pent

"EVERYTHING FOR SCHOOL"

Downtown — Next to Penne/s

And at our River Avenue Store Office Furniture and Office Supplies

First National Bank

OF HOLLAND

Serving the Holland area since 1872

DU SAAR PHOTO and GIFT

SHOP Everything Photographic

Holland, Mich. EX 2-2230

PLACE

Welcome Hope Students

to

SIRLOIN VILLAGE Aged Choice Sirloin Steaks Our Specialty

$1.25 up

Breakfast — Luncheon — Dinners OPEN

6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Daily Sundays 12 to 3 p.m.

Visit Our Gourmet Table

FORMERLY 833 Washington

"THE FIFTH WHEEL" Phone 396-5333

THE

JOLLY GREEN GIANT

BIRTHDAY PARTY THIS ONE IS GOING TO SWING

SATURDAY NIGHT 8 - 1 2 P.M.

CARNEGIE GYM

CASUAL $.50 PER PERSON

COME AND HONOR THE MIAA

BASKETBALL CHAMPS

Page 6: 03-12-1965

Page 6 Hope College anchor March 12, 1965

anchor Rook Review: 'Ln Jalousie

French Novel Uses Cinematographic Technique

CAROL BEUKEMA

CRITIQUE: The new French novel LA JALOUSIE, by Ala in Robbe-Gri l let, reviewed by Carol Beuk-ema.

(Edi tor 's Note: Miss Beukema if a senior majoring in French. The new novel JALOUSIE was publishecJ by Evergreen Books, Grove Press Inc., and is available through the bookstore. Other Robbc-Grillet books are IN THE LA SYRINTH, VOYEUR, and LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD. )

Alain Robbe-Gri l let announces a new trend in French fiction which," b reak ing a w a y f rom t h e t rag ic t h e m e s of w a r t i m e ex i s t en t i a l i sm , in or about 1955, in t roduced what is known as the "an t i -nove l" or t he " n e w nove l . "

His app roach is ent i re ly di f fer-ent f rom anything a t t e m p t e d be-fore . Robbe-Grillet has del iber-ately rep laced the world of m a n by the world of ob jec t s , forcing the r e a d e r to accept ins tead of the rea l i ty of psychological analy-sis, a real i ty as it is c inemato-graphica l ly r ep re sen ted—very ob-jective, r eg i s t e r ing only the reac-tion to a c e r t a i n incident itself. It is the a u t h o r ' s position that feel-ings a re not expl icable in causal t e r m s and t h a t sub jec t ive ana lys i s has been ecl ipsed by objec t ive as-sociations which const i tute a world that is m o r e solid and im-m e d i a t e .

Because t h e r e is n e v e r any at-

t empt to ana lyze and ra t ional ize an expe r i ence , a s r e a d e r s , we a r e neve r qui te ce r t a in of a cha r ac -t e r ' s s ta te of mind . All the clues we a r e given a r e to be found in the objec ts upon which the eye of the n a r r a t o r rests , the g e s t u r e s and m o v e m e n t s he t akes into ac-count , and much of the t i m e we a re left bewi ldered as to which associa t ions a r e val id . This, how-ever , is purposely in tended by the au thor who carefu l ly avoids let-ting us unde r s t and , or guess , the feelings of the c h a r a c t e r s .

If. by chance , one has seen the movie adapta t ion of Robbe-Gril-let s Last Year at Marienbad (19(51) this point becomes c l e a r e r . We f ind that the c a m e r a eye shif ts f r o m one scene to ano ther—we t ake in the decor , the ges tu res , we h e a r a few w o r d s spoken, but yet we a re never allowed to know what the c h a r a c t e r s think, feel, or even who t h e y a re . This tech-nique p roduces , on one hand, a hypnot ic e f fec t , but on the o the r hand it can be f rus t r a t ing .

Robbe Gri l let 's whole contention is that ge s tu r e s and ob jec t s a r e the re be fo re a mean ing is as-signed to them. The r e a d e r must then go one s tep f a r t h e r — h e must first " r e a c t " as does the na r r a -tor, then re la te , i n t e rp re t and judge , and last ly m a k e a choice. While the t rad i t iona l psychologi-cal novels leave the r e a d e r to m a k e only a choice in some cases , the modern r e a d e r is asked to ex-ert his imagina t ion a little more and play the role of t he judge .

In one of his most recent nov-els the " o b j e c t i v e " technique of Robbe-Gril let is beaut i ful ly illus-t r a t ed . "La J a l o u s i e , " which can be t r a n s l a t e d in two w a y s as e i ther " j e a l o u s y " or " b l i n d s " ( e a c h im-age impor t an t to the total evalua-t ion) is based upon a s t a n d a r d theme—the jealousy of a husband over his wife . The plot could not be m o r e s imple o r m u n d a n e , which is one of the ma in r ea sons why the violence of the jea lousy is so heightened.

On a r a t h e r sec luded banana plantat ion p r e s u m a b l y in the West Indies, a husband begins to sus-pect his wife A . . . (not ice how she is t r ea t ed like an ob j ec t ) of inf idel i ty , bas ing his jealousy

U of M Ethnomusicologist Malm

Schedules Lecture for Sunday P r o f e s s o r Wil l iam Malm of the

Univers i ty of Michigan, e t h n o m u -sicologist and specialist in Orien-tal music , will give a l ec tu re -dem-onst ra t ion Sunday at 4 p .m. in Snow Audi to r ium.

Intensely in t e re s t ed in Orienta l mus ic . Malm spent an a c a d e m i c yea r 1963-64 in J a p a n sponsored by a g ran t f r o m the A m e r i c a n Council of L e a r n e d Societ ies and the Univers i ty of Michigan.

Malm rece ived his Bache lor and M a s t e r ' s d e g r e e s in Music f rom Nor thwes te rn Univers i ty and his Doctor of Phi losophy d e g r e e f r o m the Univers i ty of Cal i fornia in Los Angeles .

F r o m 1955 to 1957, Malm was a

Ford Founda t ion Fellow in Tokvo, J a p a n . On re turn ing f r o m J a p a n , he was a l ec ture r at the Univer-sity of California until 1960.

Malm has rece ived the Mono graph Pr ize in Humani t i e s f r o m the A m e r i c a n A c a d e m y of Ar ts and Sciences in 1960. He is a m e m b e r of Pi Kappa L a m b d a . Amer i can Musicology Society, So-ciety of Ethnomusicology and Association for Asian Studies.

He is the au thor of two books, " J a p a n e s e Music and Musical In-s t r u m e n t s " and " N a g a u t o : The Heart of Kabucki Mus ic . " In ad-dition he is the d i rec tor of the Univers i ty of Michigan J a p a n e s e Music Study Group.

on two m a j o r a s sumpt ions (1) that his neighbor, F r a n c k , has made too r egu la r a habit of " v i s i t i n g " his house a n d (2) tha t F r a n c k and A . . . we re forced to spend a whole nighl toge ther in town b e c a u s e of car t rouble when they should h a v e r e t u r n e d f rom doing " e r r a n d s " by evening .

The intrigue centers a round the husband (never desc r ibed in the s tory except for his shadow which crosses the d o o r w a y ) who r ega rds his wife ' s every g e s t u r e , every word with the naked eye of the c a m e r a , picking up seemingly dis-cordant s ignals f r o m the mono-tone of their dai ly rout ine. A hand placed upon the a r m of the cha i r , the position of four cha i r s on the t e r r a c e , a glass set down, a look, a laugh, A . . . 's brushing h e r hair , the m a r k of a cen t ipede on the whi te wall—all of these images in ter twine , over lap , change , yet re-iain the i r ident i ty .

One object is enough to br ing to mind a ce r t a in scene and the n a r r a t o r f l a shes back in his mind f rom one image by which he is obsessed to ano the r — dis tor t ing what he sees and o v e r h e a r s . Our g r e a t e s t p roblem is to d iscern what exac t ly took place be tween F r a n c k and A . . . and to untangle the s t r ing of e v e n t s we m u s t be a w a r e of Robbe-Gri l le t ' s use of the " r e l a t i v e " point of view.

Since the husband never passes a judgment upon wha t he over-hea r s or sees but only r eg i s t e r s each incident equal ly in his mind, we mus t take into accoun t the way in which he sees th ings and w h a t he sees. E v e r y window he looks out of. we look out of .Nevery object he selects we. too. s tudy m o m e n t a r i l y . We see only through his eves and. as his gaze constant-ly shif ts , we mus t be a w a r e of what room we a r e in or w h e r e the ob jec t s a r e ; o therwise it would be a lmost impossible for us to de-tect w h e r e and when the s tory be-c o m e s d i s to r t ed . To aid us, Robbe-Gril let has p r e f aced the s tory with a detai led plan of the p lanta t ion and house .

Two i m a g e s r e o c c u r f requen t ly —the m a r k on the wall where F ranck has killed a cen t ipede and

the b rush ing of A . . . 's ha i r . In a jea lous mind which is easi ly p e r v e r t e d by the sl ightest suspi-cion or possible associa t ion , the black m a r k left by the d e a d centi-pede b e c o m e s assoc ia ted with A . . . and la te r b e c o m e s a sexual symbol , r e f e r r i n g at first to the s imi la r i ty in the m o v e m e n t of A . . . 's filed f ingerna i l s when she c lasps the brush and the move-ment of her hai r dur ing the brush-ing p rocess with the legs and an-t ennae of the cen t ipede and the c rack l ing sound it m a k e s . When the husband con ju re s up the pos-sibility of F r a n c k and A . . . 's spend ing the night toge ther , in his mind F r a n c k kills a cen t ipede be-fore' c o n s u m m a t i n g the a f f a i r .

The " ja lousies" or blinds be-come a pe r t inen t i m a g e . When the husband surveys his wife on the v e r a n d a with F r a n c k through the bl inds , his vision is l imited and d i s to r ted—cut up into smal l sect ions. This is just how the s tory p rogres ses ; bits and snatch-es which lead the husband in all d i rec t ions , never to a coherent whole. In this type of s tory the dev ice is ideal ly suited because a jealous mind o p e r a t e s along this pa t t e rn—ir ra t iona l ly , see ing rela-t ionships, p e r h a p s not in their p roper pe rspec t ives but in pieces, each leading to a d i f fe ren t ver-sion of the s a m e incident .

We notice too that the husband is not ve ry s u r e about what he has seen—he unconsciously i n t e r j e c t s a " s e e m s to , " " p e r h a p s , " " a s i f " which leads us to Believe that he is not too c l ea r in his own mind whether he h a s r eg i s t e red the im-pression proper ly . This juxtaposi -

tion and confusion of events reach-es a c l imax then descends to a ca lm in which the husband de-scibes the n ght and the si lence.

T h e r e is. however a b izar re par-a g r a p h t o w a r d s the end in which I he husband con t rad ic t s each s tate-ment he m a k e s . Whe the r or not the r e a d e r will in te rpre t this as a basis for the discount ing the hus-band ' s p rev ious asser t ions is up to h im—he mus t dec ide .

Some cri t ics feel the Robbe-Grillet h a s complete ly d e h u m a n -ized the novel by placing the em-phas i s upon ob jec t s , that in t ry ing to avoid pass ing j udgmen t he has produced a l i t e r a t u r e of evas ion . 1 bel ieve that Robbe Grillet has achieved his pu rpose in e f fec t ing the tension in a jea lous mind in an undeniab ly powerfu l and unus-ual m a n n e r . It m a y be tha t we a re unaccus tomed to viewing the human s i tuat ion in such a de-tached m a n n e r . Wha teve r our opinion, one thing r e m a i n s cer ta in —"La J a l o u s i e " makes for excit-ing and p rovoca t ive reading .

Spanish Fraternity Begun At a banque t held in Phelps

Confe rence Room last Sa tu rday evening , Epsilon Pi was ini t iated as Hope ' s new chap te r of S igma Delta Phi , the national honora ry Spanish f r a t e r n i t y . Off ic ia t ing a t the insta l la t ion and initiation cere-monies was Dr . F . Dewey A m n e r of Kent S ta te Univers i ty , the Na-tional execu t ive s e c r e t a r y of the f r a t e r n i t y .

The s tuden t s ini t ia ted into the c h a p t e r w e r e Marion Hoeks t ra , F r a n Ha la , B a r b a r a M o m e y e r , Mar ia Toy and Ina ra Bundza . Dr. Ralph P e r r y , Dr. Huber t Weller , and Mr. Mar t in Ralph b e c a m e

EASTER RECITAL—The symphony and chapel choir under the

direct-on of Dr. Cavanaugh presented an Easter recital of Faure's 'Requiem' last Sunday in Dimnent Memorial Chapel. Also performed

were two Faure orchestral works by the symphony under the direc-tion of Dr. Morrette Rider.

honora ry m e m b e r s . The bas is for m e m b e r s h i p includes the s t u d e n t ' s a c a d e m i c exce l l ence and in te res t in the Hispanic l anguage and cul-ture .

The c h a p t e r o f f icers a r e Presi-dent , F r a n Hala , and Secre ta ry-T r e a s u r e r , Inara Bundza , with Dr. Huber t Weller as the organi-zat ion 's sponsor .

Newspaper Fund Selects Mulder For Internship

John Mulder , anchor news edi-tor, has been g r a n t e d one of ap-p rox ima te ly 50 s u m m e r in tern-ships for t ra in ing in journa l i sm by the N e w s p a p e r F u n d , Inc., of New York City.

The Newspape r Fund . Inc., cre-ated in 1962 and f inanced by the Wall St ree t Journa l , places se-lected col legiate journa l i s t s in s u m m e r positions with m e m b e r newspape r s . S tudents a r e paid by the individual newspape r in ad-dition to rece iv ing $500 f rom the Fund at the s u m m e r ' s end .

This p r o g r a m is un ique b e c a u s e its in te rnsh ips go only to s tuden t s at small l iberal a r t s col leges where j ou rna l i sm p r o g r a m s a r e seldom ava i l ab le .

Mulder b e c o m e s the four th anchor s taff m e m b e r to r ece ive this honor. Ger r i t Wolf, '62 and '63 edi tor , worked for Chicago ' s Amer ican and Char les Menning, present edi tor , spent last s u m m e r with the P i t t sbu rgh Press . J i m Michmerhu izen ( '63) a lso rece ived an in te rnsh ip .

Mulder will work for t h e Cleve-land b ranch of the Wall S t r ee t Journa l .

The Best of Peanuts Reprinted by permission of the Cmcago Tribune

o

s ,

i \ N-\

1 ^ V '

3 . _

T", U. S O*—AM nqMi C*f> by Uo-ud l<K

d- /-y

Page 7: 03-12-1965

>

March 12, 1965 Hope College anchor Page 7

A m ' f

n r n i /

d. iScussion oix rnwuacj of Cfir/siianf/y

H . S O T U E S -p r e s e n t e o B y

n c

COMING EVENTS SATURDAY, MARCH 13

Sophomore Class Dance, Car-

negie Gymnasium, 8 p .m.

SUNDAY, MARCH 14

Smoking Clinic, Carley Room,

6:30-7:30 p .m.

Lecture on Japanese Musical

Instruments, Snow Auditorium, 4

p.m.

MONDAY, MARCH 15

Smoking Clinic, Carley Room,

6:30-7:30 p .m.

Winter Sports Banquet

Dr. DeValois, Winants Auditor-ium, 7-8 p .m.

Chapel Choir Pa r ty , Juliana

Room, 8:30-9:30 p.m.

TUESDAY, MARCH 16

Smoking Clinic, Carley Room, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

Dorians ' Ice Cream Social, Juli-ana Room, 8-10 p .m.

Lecture on Japanese Music, Theater and Dance, Snow Audi-torium, 8:45 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17

Smoking Clinic, Carley Room, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

Pan Hellenic Open Rush Meet-ing, Graves 102, 6:30-7:30 p .m.

THURSDAY, MARCH 18

Smoking Clinic, Carley Room, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, MARCH 20

All College Sing, Civic Auditor-ium, 8 p.m.

P R E S S anc

Ion coumi

OLLAND, MICHIOAN

Published weekly of the college year excel,! vacation, holiday and exam-

mat,on periods by and for the students of Hope College, Holland

Mich., under the authority of the Student Senate Publications Board.

Entered as second class matter at the post office of Holland, Michigan, at

the special rate of postage provided for in section 1103 of Act of Con-gress, Oct., 3, 1917, and authorized Oct. 19, I9IS.

Subscription: per year. Printed: Zeeland Record. Zeeland, Michigan.

Member: Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Collegiate Press Ass.

Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Office: Ground Floor of Graves Hall. Phone 396-2122.

EDITOR-CHARLES MENNING

FACULTY ADVISOR-DR. E. E. BRAND

BOARD OF EDITORS N.exo* JnhTl MuMer Proof Nancy Erickson Academic Paul Hesselink sports James Mace Critiques Alan Jones Headlines Maren Kiefer Editorial Assistants ..Nina Bos-senbroek, Kathleen Verduin.

Photo Tom Renner

Business Jack Koch

Advertising Boh Schroeder

Copy Mary Hakken

Columnists . Robert Donia, Don Kardux, David Von Ins. Cartoonist Mark Menning

The Crisis of Freedom TH I S W E E K P i c s i d c i u K e r r a n d C h a n -

( c l o r M e y e r s o n of t h e U n i v e r s i t y of C a l i f o r n i a a n n o u n c e d t h e y w o u l d re-

sign t h e i r pos ts . T h e i r r e s i g n a t i o n s , a l o n g wi th t h e c i r c u m s t a n c e s w h i c h led u p t o t h e m , ( a n y i m p l i c a t i o n s lor every A m e r i c a n col-lege c a m p u s , i n c l u d i n g M o p e .

As i n d i c a t e d on p a g e o n e of th i s issue n e i t h e r m a n w o u l d e x p l a i n h is r e s i g n a t i o n , hu t t h e c o n s e n s u s on t h e B e r k e l e y c a m p u s is that t h e a c t i o n s were t h e r e s u l t of r i s q u e words a n d pos t e r s w h i c h a c c o m p a n i e d sma l l d e m o n s t r a t i o n s d u r i n g t h e p a s t lew weeks . I hese c a m e a b o u t in a s i t u a t i o n of g r e a t

l i e e d o m b e c a u s e of t h e lack of u n i v e r s i t y e n l o i c e m e n i o i " i n t e r i m r e g u l a t i o n s . " T h e d e m o n s t r a t i o n s have b e e n d e n o u n c e d by b o t h the Be rke l ey s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e I ree S p e e c h M o v e m e n t , p r e v i o u s l y t h e or ig i -n a t o r ol p r o t e s t ra l l ies a g a i n s t p o l i t i c a l re-s t r i c t i ons .

It is not o u r i n t e n t i o n to b l a m e any g r o u p , i n c l u d i n g the F S M , lor t h e o b s c e n e a c t i o n , al-t h o u g h c lear ly t h e i n d i v i d u a l s i n v o l v e d a c t e d wi th u t m o s t d i s r e g a r d f o r c o m m o n sense a n d m o r a l i t y . I h e p o i n t is t h a t t h e r e is a lesson to be l e a r n e d - b y t h e sma l l c o l l e g e as we l l as the " m u l t i v e r s i t y . "

IN A N Y G E N U I N E A C A D E M I C C O M -M U N I I Y, w i d e l a t i t u d e is o f f e r e d t o t h e m e m b e r s t o act a n d speak as they see fit.

Such is c u r r e n t l y the s i t u a t i o n a t Berke ley as well as H o p e C o l l e g e . B e r k e l e y s t u d e n t s h a v e the f r e e d o m t o o r g a n i z e a F r e e S p e e c h M o v e -m e n t : a very f e w of t h e m - i t is e s t i m a t e d t h a t on ly o n e or t w o h u n d r e d a t t e n d e d t h e r a l l i e s

h a \ e a b u s e d f r e e d o m w i t h o b s c e n e s igns a n d l a n g u a g e .

H o p e s t u d e n t s h a v e m a n y f r e e d o m s also. A p r i m e e x a m p l e is t h e l a t i t u d e g iven by t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n to the I n t e r - f r a t e r n i t y C o u n -

cil—in s p i t e of a r a t h e r p o o r p e r f o n . ar .ce last year . So f a r t h e 1FC h a s n o t c o m p l e t e l y p r o v e n its r e s p o n s i b i l i t y a n d r e l i a b i l i t y , fo r m a n y i n i t i a t i o n p r o c e d u r e s b e t w e e n first a n d second s e m e s t e r w e r e p o o r l y o r g a n i z e d a n d ine f l e ( l i ve ly c o n t r o l l e d .

Each i n d i v i d u a l f r a t e r n i t y m e m b e r has a spec ia l o b l i g a t i o n t o a b i d e by t h e l e t t e r a n d sp i r i t of t h e I F C po l i cy a t p r e s e n t . T h e p h r a s e " T h e r e wil l b e n o h a r a s s m e n t of p l edges at a n y t i m e d u r i n g t h e p l e d g i n g pe-r i o u is a m b i g u o u s , b u t as a t Berke ley com-m o n sense will p l a c e m a n y r e s t r i c t i o n s o n a n y r e a s o n a b l e p e r s o n .

MA N Y H O P E S I U D E N T S h a v e u n f o r t u -n a t e l y d e v e l o p e d a n e g a t i v e a t t i t u d e t o w a r d o t h e r sec tors of t h e a c a d e m i c

c o m m u n i t y . T h e i dea is a b r o a d a m o n g s o m e s t u d e n t s t h a t e v e r y t h i n g t h a t c o m e s f r o m t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n is by d e f i n i t i o n evi l a n d to be f o u g h t w i t h f u l l f o rce . S u c h a n a t t i t u d e is u n h e a l t h y ; it r e p r e s e n t s a f a i l u r e of c e r t a i n s t u d e n t s to d e v e l o p a p o s i t i v e a n d r e s p o n s i b l e a t t i t u d e in an a t m o s p h e r e of i n c r e a s i n g free-d o m .

anchor

editorial

T r a g i c s i t u a t i o n s c a n d e v e l o p w i t h a l i t t l e care lessness a n d by i g n o r i n g a few s i m p l e t h i n g s . Be rke l ey is n o w r e a p i n g t h e r e su l t s of i r r e s p o n s i b i l t y by a sma l l m i n o r i t y o l s tu-d e n t s . H o p e s t u d e n t s will d o wel l t o n o t e t h e lessons of B e r k e l e y a n d d e v e l o p a n a t t i -

t u d e of r e s p o n s i b i l i t y c o m m e n s u r a t e w i t h in-c r ea s ing p e r s o n a l l i be r ty .

A Step Towards Voting Rights • I . . \ k J i « I b i s past W e d n e s d a y , M i c h i g a n A t t o r

ney G e n e r a l H a n k Ke l l ey p r o p o s e d a m o v e t h a t is long o v e r d u e . H e a n n o u n c e d p l a n s to seek a c o - o p e r a t i v e l awsu i t by 12 M i d w e s t -e m s t a l e s to r e d u c e i b e A l a b a m a C o n g r e s -s iona l d e l e g a t i o n f o r d e n y i n g v o t i n g r i g h t s . His p l a n s ( ju i ck ly r ece ived t h e s u p p o r t of ( . o v e r n o r R o m n e y , w h o h a d j u s t m a r c h e d in .i p r o t e s t ra l ly in D e t r o i t p r o t e s t i n g t h e cur -ren t s i t u a t i o n in Se lma , A l a b a m a .

Kel ley ' s p l a n s h i n g e o n a l i t t l e - k n o w n pro-vision of the F o u r t e e n t h A m e n d m e n t , pa s sed in I8()8, wh ich s ta tes t h a t " w h e n t h e r i g h t to vote a t a n y e l e c t i o n . . . is d e n i e d , .

tiie bas i s of r e p r e s e n t a t i o n t h e r e i n s h a l l be

l u l u c e d in t h e p r o p o r t i o n w h i c h the n u m b e r of such m a l e c i t i zens sha l l b e a r t o t h e w h o l e

m n n b e r of m a l e c i t i zens t w e n t y - o n e yea r s of age in s i u h S ta t e . In ef fec t , t h i s m e a n s t h a t a s t a t e s C o n g r e s s i o n a l d e l e g a t i o n may b e re-

d u c e d on p r o o f of large-scale d e n i a l s of t h e vote .

T h i s r e p i e s e n t s o n e a l t e r n a t i v e to mas-sive f e d e r a l i n t e r v e n t i o n in t h e S o u t h to g u a r -a n t e e N e g r o v o t i n g r i gh t s , a l t h o u g h i t d o e s not p r e v e n t o t h e r p o s i t i v e m e a s u r e s f r o m b e i n g t a k e n . I ts a p p l i c a t i o n w o u l d d e m o n -s t i a t e t h e t r e m e n d o u s m o r a l i m p e r a t i v e fel t

TSeus from Other Cam pi:

by the g r e a t m a j o r i t y of A m e r i c a n s t o w a r d t h e t r ag i c s i t u a t i o n in S e l m a a n d i n d e e d t h r o u g h o u t t h e S o u t h . Yet it w o u l d a v o i d t h e b r u t e f o r c e of f e d e r a l o c c u p a t i o n o r coer-c ion a n d s u b s e q u e n t ill will w h i c h m u s t nec-essar i ly a c c o m p a n y t h e a p p l i c a t i o n of f e d e r a l force . .

I he m a i n r o a d b l o c k to t h e e n f o r c e m e n t • of th is C o n s t i t u t i o n a l p r o v i s i o n is legal , f o r

it will be n o easy task to p r o v e in c o u r t t h a t t h e vo le is a c t u a l l y b e i n g d e n i e d . I n m a n y s o u t h e r n c o m m u n i t i e s t h e m e t h o d s of w h i t e s u p r e m a c y a r e ex t r a - l ega l , u t i l i z i n g m o r e in-t i m i d a t i o n t h a n law. A n d w h e r e t h e l a w is used , t h e l aws t h e m s e l v e s a r e n o t d i s c r i m i n -a t o r y b u t m e r e l y t h e i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of t h e m . I h is m u s t necessar i ly be s o m e w h a t a r b i t r a r y

a n d lef t to t h e d i s c r e t i o n of t h e local official in c h a r g e .

l*or these a n d o t h e r r easons , t h e s u i t pro-posed by Kel ley s h o u l d no t b e c o n s i d e r e d t h e f ina l s o l u t i o n to t h e v o t i n g p r o b l e m in t h e s o u t h . B u t t h e idea is a s o u n d o n e a n d 85 yea r s o v e r d u e . It dese rves t h e s u p p o r t of e v e r y o n e as a p r a c t i c a l a n d e f fec t ive way of e x p r e s s i n g c o n c e r n over v o t e r d e n i a l s a n d as a c o n s t r u c l i v e m o v e t o w a r d r e m e d y i n g t h e s i t u a t i o n .

Boaz Finque Is A Frustrated Man (Editor's note: The following

article appeared in the Earlham Post and was written by Post staff member, Boaz Finque.)

Man, like, I mean it's really gettin! bad. I mean like sick, man, sick. I mean, the protection of propriety is great and all that, but so is self-preservation? Like, I been protecting it for the pas^ month with tooth and eyeball (as the bard sings), but to no avail . . . myself, I mean.

Like take last Saturday night. No Suzie all week and now I'm free. Dad, free. We bug out to the ol' burying ground. We get there. Great, moonlight, starlight, gas-light, redlight. I'm froze. My feet are froze. My hands are froze. My nose is froze. All is froze. I speak.

"Suzie sweetie . . ." Nothing. She's froze! So what to do. I pick her up,

balance her on the shoulder bone,

and back to civilization. The thaw is always the worst part.

So all right. So awright already. S'okay. I got the right friendly hihihi spirit. I grin and bear it.

But it wouldn't be so bad if the cold was the only problem. It ain't. Like last Wednesday.

Carpenter Hole. Late. D a r k / Quiet. Warm. We sneak through dimlit halls. I force the door to Goddard. She darts in. I give a quick look around, slip in after. Dark. Quiet. Warm. We sit down.

"WHADDYA IN MY COTTON-PICKIN LAP FOR?"

People? "WATCHYER ELBOW, FEL-

LA!" Suzie with a bass voice? I jump

up. We move. We sit. Quiet. Dark. Warm. I pull her close. Soft hair, soft cheek, soft ear . . .

"Not the ear, fella, not the ear." This is too much. We go.

So all right. So awright already. S'okay. So now my Friendly hihihi spirit is bent a little, but Suzie i s , pacific (Malibu) and cools it. I cool it. We all cool it. In fact the raw cool is about the only place left.

. So like I sez, it's gettin* bad. Real bad. I mean like, it ain't healthy. Read Freud (pronounced Prude, as the bard sings it) Read Jung. Read the Bible. I mean, like, there never was any place to do any good, healthy, now-we-are-young -and -redblooded-american-youth loving around here and now with all the windows in the doors and the doors all locked every-where and the night blotch'em with all the keys and the college with the propriety . . . well where? I mean it's depressing. Worse, it's disgusting.. Worse still, it's repres-sing. Bad for pimples. Bad for family relations.

I .

Page 8: 03-12-1965

Page 8 Hope College anchor March 12, 1965

j

THE PIN—One of the m e m b e r s of the Hope wrestl ing team brings his opponent to the mat in a f lurry of a r m s and legs while the referee looks on for a successful pin.

CHARGE—Elaine Danhot of Calvin tr ies to fight her way through Hope defenders Norma Kens (right) and Delia R a e Kuiper (left) .

Hone Wrestlers Pinned Twice Fifth Defeat by Calvin

Hope's first year wrestling team finished its season with back to back defeats at the hands of the Kalamazoo Hornets and the Olivet Comets in the final week of Feb-ruary to finish its campaign with an 0-7 record.

Although the Flying Dutchmen failed to win a meet this past season they showed signs of real progress, and the 26-6 loss to Kal-amazoo was not indicative of Hope's t rue potential, while the 18-16 loss to the Comets came about due to two forfeit wins for the host squad.

Against Kalamazoo Hope was

forced to forfeit three matches due to injuries and the absence of one man who had an evening class. This allowed the Hornets to pick up 15 points, and even vic-tories by Dutchmen Danny Howe in the 137-pound class and Chris Miller in the 157-pound division were not enough to offset the forfeitures.

In the match between the Com-ets ancl the Flying Dutch at Olivet, Hope again had to forfeit in the 123-pound and 147-pound classes and subsequently was un-able to make up the 10 points.

Howe and Miller again captured

THE FINEST HOURS—Hope cheerleaders and fans had many

moments such as this during the basketball season. In recognition

of the t eam ' s winning the championship, the dance tomorrow night

will be held in their honor. The dance is sponsored by the sophomore

class and will be held in Carnegie Gymnasium. In addition, next

Monday night a banquet will be given in honor of the basketball

and wrestling teams. The speaker at the banquet will be Mr. John

Erickson, head basketball coach at the University of Wisconsin.

their matches by decision in their respective weight classes, while Bernie Brower and John Wormuth pinned their men in the 167 and 177 - pound classes respectively. Mike Vogas, making his first ap-pearance in the heavyweight class, was decisioned, while Dave Lub-bers was pinned in the 13(>-pound division.

Junior Varsity

Loses to K-Zoo The Hope J.V. basketball squad

rounded out their season on Feb. 27 with a contest with the Kala-mazoo Hornet J.V. squad.

Having split two previous con-tests, both teams played their last game with great enthusiasm. The Little Dutch however, ran out of s team at the end and ended up on the short end of a 79-71 score.

Mike Paliatsos, Tom Pelon, J im Thomas, and Ed Heneveld all ac-counted for 11 points to lead the Hope balanced at tack. Jeff Hol-lenbach followed the leaders close-ly by scoring 10 counters.

The Kalamazoo at tack was led by Ralph Wellington, who bar raged the ne. for a total of 24 points.

Coach Siedentop's squad finished with a 7-win, 10-loss record this season. Leading the way in scor-ing for the J .V. 's throughout the season was Tom Pelon. Pelon and crew did a very commendable joD for Coach Siedentop, especially considering the loss of two s a r te r s to the varsity during the season.

Wisconsin Coach

To Deliver Speech

At Sports Banquet Monday evening the varsity

basketball t eam, the junior varsi ty basketball t eam, the wrestling squad, and their respective coach-es will attend a banquet given in their honor.

The highlight of the banquet will be a talk presented by Mr. John Erickson, the head .basketball coach at the University of Wiscon-sin. Mr. Erickson is also very active in the University of Wis-consin chapter of the FCA, Fel-lowship of Christian Athletes.

Area high school basketball coaches will also be attending the-banquet. The coaches will bring with them players who might at-tend Hope in future years .

All a rea FCA members a re also invited to hear Mr. Erickson's speech.

Hope's WAA basketball squad dropped its fifth game in six tr ies when it lost a 49-26 decision o the girls from Calvin on Feb. 17.

Dee Vander Vlucht, who tallied 10 points, led all the Dutch scor-ers , while Elaine Danhot scored 16 markers to capture game hon-ors for the Knights.

The loss was Hope's second to

the Knights, Previously Calvin had t: ken a 48-20 tr iumph at Knoll-crest in Grand Rapids. Calvin's victory gave the Knights a 7-1 rec-ord for the season with their only loss coming a: the hands of the Michigan State women.

Hope finished its season yester-day with a contest against the Western Michigan University wo-men.

4i:h%M

SCHOLARSHIP—President Dr. Calvin VanderWerf accepts check f rom George (Joey) Bosworth for the establishing of a scholarship for athletes. Bosworth, a former Hope student, is presently playing for the Kansas City Athletics.

Bosworth Donates Scholarship George (Joey> Bosworth, fo rmer

Hope College student, expressed his thanks for his education at Hope recently with the presenta-tion of the Bosworth Scholarship to President Calvin VanderWerf.

Joey completed two years at Hope before being chosen to be a member of the U.S. ama teu r base-ball federation that played in Pap-an durin gthe Olympics. Ultima ely offered a position with the Kansas City Athletics, he signed a bonus contract Dec. 23. 1%4 for an esti-mated $35,000.

In a le ' ter to Bruce Neckers, Bosworth s tated that as a newly enriched basebal l player he decid-ed to present a gift to his a lma ma te r . This resulted in the for-ma ion of a unique scholarship to Hope College. The scholarship, donated by a young m a n who re-ceived a scholarship himself for his education, will support the needs of other deserving scholar-athletes.

"An unusually thoughtful and generous act in helping the col-lege that had helped him in the pas t , " r emarked President Van-derWerf . "This is a shining exam-ple of a high regard for education and education at Hope, under-scoring his own determinat ion to finish college."

" I t is my intention to complete my A.B. degree. I'll study in the fall and play baseball the balance of the yea r . " Bosworth s tated. The owner of the Kansas City A hletics, Chuck Finlay, encourages him in this endeavor and his bonus money will provide the means.

Knowing Joey more intimately and having viewed his great po-tentials as an athlete and an all-around personality, Mr. Sieden op, Hope's baseball coach, s ta ted that he was "not surprised, just pleased" over Bosworth's gift , ad-ding " I ' m going to miss him." Bosworth won ail-MIAA honors last spring in leading Hope tO the MIAA championship.